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'

'

.. . . ..

-'

·Corn Belt beef
marketers look
·t o stay on top

v'f'· DON

•

By ANNE FITZGERALD
The Des Moines Register
. DES MOINES, Iowa - Beef
produced in the western Corn Belt
has long been known as " 1-80 beef"
- unequaled for the rich, juicy cuts
that come from the cattle fattened on
cmn raised in the region.
· · Now Iowa cattle producers are
tryong to cash in on their decades-old
•eputation.
_:sometime next year, the hoxes
and packages that contain their beef
may bear lahcls that identify it as a
•orn-fed, hi gh-quality product.
High standards
.A plan hy leaders of the Iowa Cattlemen's Association calls for the
laheling of meat from cattle that
meet standards in sul'h areas as

genetic composition , feeding history and carcass performance.
The project is aimed at consumers who are demanding safer,
higher-quality food hoth here and
ahroad - especially in Japan , the
single- largest export market for U.S.
beef.
h also is intended to stem the beef
industry's loss of market share to the
pork and poultry sectors - more
than I0 percentage points, to less
than 50 percent, in just the past 15
years.
As much as anything, though,
industry oflicials said, labeling is
meant to put more money in cattle
producers ' pockets.
Proponents say it could boost the
income of everyone in the beef sec·
wr, from hrecdc rs and producers to
parkers and processors .

. "The thing has no lim its on il as
far as it could go," said Alan
Al~nght, a cattle producer and fore
mer cha1rman of the Iowa Beef
Industry Council.
More Profits?
But others remain skeptical that
producers will see additional profits.
At the Iowa cattleman's annual
meeting in Des Moines earlier this
month, someone asked Albright
whether any of the e&lt;tra earnings
linked to labeling would go to producers.
"That 's the whole goal for me as
well as for you." he said.
As the industry moves to greater
differentiation between products,
producers will find increasing opportunities to tailor their beef to specific market demand, said Chuck Lambert, staff economist with the
Natrona! Cattlemen's Association in
Denver.
''Instead of just having one
generic product that we throw in the
case and call hecf," he said, "we've

got a consumer target and a system
designed to deliver a product to meet
that target ."
But he also said the bene !its of
labeling beef c.ceed the bottom
line .
"Someti me s the payback isn 'tto
put more money in your pocket," he
said. " It 's the opportumty to be 1n
business at all."
While labeling beef - or its
cousin , branded beef - may be no .
cure-all for what ails the cattle
industry, it's far more than a BandAid. industry e., pcrts said.

Certified Quality
The American Hereford Association started a cert1fied beef program
two years ago, labeling qualifying
beef as having superior quality, lla-

anymore.

Long-runnmg respiratory infec tions may have other causes, Paula
M. Siegel wrote in an article in the
current issue of Rcdbook, and you
may be ahlc tv short-circuit thelf
mrsery.
Colds arc caused by several types
of Yiruses, the mo~1 ~.:ommon being
lhe rhinovirus. Dm:: turs arc nol sure
why. but roughly 25 percent of
those infected with the rhinovirus
won 'r develop cold symptoms.
, There Is no rea l cure once you
come dnwn with a cold . Your body
just has to fight off the infection.
which usually takes seven to I0
days . Some basic treatments can
help reduce your misery.
Taking I gram ( 1,000) milligrams) of vitamin C within 24
hours of the onset of cold symptoms
can decrease the cold's severity,
according to a study in the British
Journal of Nutrition. After the first
day. the vitamin becomes less effective-.
Be sure to drink at least one extra
glass of liquid three rimes a day and.
if possible, usc a humidifier. When
you have a cold you tend to hreathe
through your mouth. which dries out
the respiratory tract an~ diseasefighting ci li a that line 11.
You won ' t make your cold worse
by getting chilled.
''Viruses made you sick whether
you ' re warm or cold,' ' said Dr. John

I'

W. Williams Jr. , assistant professor
of medicine at the University of
Texas Health Sciences Center in San
Antonio.
Nor do you have to stay home in
bed.
More than 90 percent of the time,
a cold will go away within a week.
If it doesn't, the infection may have
spread from your nose and throat to
other tissues in your airways, leaving you open to developing more
severe complications, Williams said.
These secondary infections include:
• Acute sinusitis. "Normally, the
sinuses are sterile and clear." said Dr.
Jack Gwaltney. head of the diviSion
of epidemiology and VITOiogy at the
University of Vlfginra School or
Mcdic~ne. "But when you get a cold,
secretions get built up. If bacteria arc
trapped in there, too, ·you can wind
up with a sin us infection."
Once a sinus infection develops it
should be treated with antibiotics or
it could hang on for weeks . A dccon- .
gestant and a mild painkiller may
relieve symptoms. Steam from a
shower or hot drink wi II help drain
the sinuses.
• Middle-ear infecti on. Sometimes the eustachian tubes in the ears
fill with fluid during a cold, creating
an o[nimal place for bacteria to
breed. Like sinusitis. untreated middle-ear infections can in rare
instances lead to more scflous problems.
• Acute bronchitiS. This occurs
when a virus directly invades the linin~ of the bronchial tuhcs .

Super Lotto:

10-27-28-32-35-39
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Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
9-1-4-8

Sports on Pages 5,7

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35 cenhl
A Gannett Co. N-apeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 26, 1995

2 Sections, 12 Pages

Budget foes return to table Wednesday
By FRED ANKLAM JR.
USA TODAY
WASHINGTON- The budget impasse between President Cli~ton and
Republicans in Congress entered its lith day today. But Congress Chnstmas break means there won't even be more talks un!il Wednesday.
Before leaving Friday.the Senate passed a bill declaring a11260:000 fed eral employees now furloughed to be essentral employees. The b1ll would
enable them to return to work while budget details are resolved.
But prospects for the bill are uncertain when the House returns Wednesday. There is no assurance that lawmakers will vote then.
.
The legislation also provides for the workers to be fully pard at a later
date despite the time oil
"We're go ing to pay the federal employees," Senate Majority Leader Bob
Dole said. "It's no fault of thelf own they' re not working."
But conservative House members have taken a tougher stance.

They have blocked several recent efforts to reopen the government, arguing that it should remain partially shut until Clinton agrees to derails of a
plan to balance the federal budget by 2002 .
The partial shutdown is estimated to be costing the government about
$40 million a day.
Congressional and White House staff members Wednesday will renew
the talks that recessed on an optimistic note last Friday.
The talks arc designed to bring the two sides close r before Clinton sit&gt;
down again Friday with House Speaker Newt G1ngrich. R-Ga., and Dole.
R-Kan.
Congress passed, and Clinton signed, a temporary spending measure lor
payments to 33 million veterans and dependents and 4.7 million welfare
families.
Six of the 13 annual spending bills, as well as the overall seven-year bal anced-budget bill, arc unfinished because of the struggle between the White

Ohioans to retain
special memori~s
of Christmas 1995
Alberto Klaas, didn't think it would
By The Associated Press
be possible for 6-montl1-old Kevin to
Christmas may be over for
be baptized at the church. But the
Ohioans, but the memories remain.
Mary Helen Algeo. 86, received
priest said they could join another
a hot meal, a warm greeting and a scheduled that day.
While there, they met Arafat's
caro l, one of about 550 Summit
wife, Suha; and got some pictures.
County residents and another 76 in
Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Portage County who received homeDayton held its last Christmas Mass
delivered meals from Mobile Meals
al'tcr I00 years: It is closing weekInc. volunteers on Monday.
"I thought it was lovely," she end and holiday Masses at the end of
May because operating costs and
said .
,
Leuer carrier Jan Haag went to repairs are too costly for the church's
work surprising people in Akron, 50 members.
'"No one of course likes to close
delivering express and priority mail.
"I fee l like Santa Claus," she churches, and it's awful to think of,
said . "People are real happy to get to say it, but a lot of times, it does
their packages."
come down to money," said the Rev.
Dr. Ted Silberstein and hi s wife, Ed.ward Trippel.
In West Toledo, the Damask famJackie Mack, worked the lobby ·
es•;ort desk at Bethesda North Hos- ily is ce lebrating an anonymous ~ift
pital in Cincinnati so Christian vol- of 20 wrapped presents , two filled
unteers could spend the day with stockings and gifts for the dog left on
their porch about a week ago.
their familie s.
The family, natives of the PhilipThey were among the I06 Jewish
volunteers who helped at II hospi- pines, moved to the United States in
tals and related institutions . SilberOctober and didn' t have enough
stein, a University of Cincinnati Colmoney to buy gifis for their boys, II
lege of Medicine professor of radiand 7.
ology and medicine, said it brought
"The boys had stopped believing
in Santa." Eric Damask said. "But
hack memories.
" I haven ' t pushed wheelchairs
now, they believe again.
since I was an undergraduate at
Grace New Haven Hospital in New
Haven, Conn .," he said. " It's a lot
more fun wheeling patients out than
wheeling them in ."
Two people were killed in an
Art Gish, a farmer from Athens, accident ~onday evening on State
was among the 40,000 visitors from Route 2 near Apple Grove, W.Va.,
throughout the world in Bethlehem, according to the Mason County
dancing and singing amid fireworks, Sheriff's Department.
Palestinian nags and pictures of
Gordon M. Sebrell II, 47, SouthPLO leader Yasser Arafat.
side, W.Va., and Vada Nease, 81,
''It felt like the Fourth or July. Kenova, W.Va., were killed in the
This year you have the celebration or 5:40p.m. wreck, deputies said.
Christmas and of liberation , which is
. A passenger with Sebrell, Kathy
what Christmas really should be,"
Woyan, 40, Southside, was injured in
Gish said .
the accident, but was not seen at
Columbus native Sophia Twarog Pleasant Valley Hospital or Holzer
turned a business trip to Jerusalem Medical Center, hospital spokinto a baptrsm Saturday in Bethle- erspersons reported.
hem in the church built over the grotA sheriff's spokesman said Nease
to where it is saitl Christ was born.
was southbound· when her 1990
Twarog, 3 I. is a United Nations Oldsmobile dropped off the right
economic affairs officer stationed in side of the road.
Geneva. 1\varog and her husband,
Whensheattemptedtosteerback

House and the Republican-controlled Congress over tax cuts. health-care
spending and related policies.
That means federal dcpartmems for health. education, housing, veterans
affairs , commerce and justice, as well a~ :..~gcn c i es for environmental protection and space ex ploration. arc operating rm ly the most essential services.
Repu~li c ans blame Cli nton felT vetoi ng spending bills and halking at balanced-budget goals .
" ll was the president that shut down the govern ment ," said Sen John
Warner, R-Va.

The promise of even tual pay also went to 500,000 other workcr.s in nine
Cahinet departments and other agcnl' ic~ who were declared ex empt !'rom
layoffs and have remained on the joh even though their organ11.ati ons ha ve
no budgets in place.
Dole 's proposal was designed to address a legal road~loc k that forhiJ s
furl oughed workers from returning to their johs even on :1 vo lun tary has1~.

Former investigator
announces intention
to seek sheriff's post
Pmncroy area resident Michael R.
Canan announced today he is seekin g the Republican nomination to
run for the office of Meigs County
sheriff.
The 43-ycar-old veteran of the
,Columbus Police Department who is
making hi s fi rst foray into elected
politics said he wants to put his experience into use by serving the pub1ic

"I think I can build a better
mousetrap." he said.
Canan worked in the Columbus
Police Department from 1973 to
1991. serv ing eight ~ears in the
department's narcotics bureau and as
an in structor for the Columbu s
Police Department Academy.
He also has specialized training in
SWAT, Drug Enforcement Admintstration , IRS . pol1ce photography.
sex crimes and robbery/surveillance.
Most recently he served as an
investigator for former Prosecuting
Attorney Steve Story and as a child
abuse investigator for the Meigs
County Department of Human SerVIces.

CHRISTMAS UPSIDE DOWN - .Laura Evans, with her sons
Ryan, 14 months, and Clayton, 3, admired the upside down Christmas tree at their Akron home. Laura and her husband, Steve, decided to suspend the five-foot tree to keep it away from the boys. (AP)

An avid hunter and fisherman, he
is a member of various organizations
including the National Rine Association and the Fraternal Order of

MICHAEL R. CANAN
Police . He is a participant in the Ohio Tree Farm Program and is
director of the Ohio Valley Soap Box
Derby in Middleport.
He attended Sinclair College in
Dayton, and the Columbu s Police
Academy. •·
He resides in Salishury Township
with his wife. Vicki. and daughters
Melissa. 17. and Kelly. 13.

Christmas Day crash in Mason County leaves two dead
~·

the road, she lost control in
snow and ice. The vehicle slid sideways across the center line and
directly into the path ofSebrell, who
was driving Wayan's northbound
1993 Ford.
Both vehicles were listed as total
losses .
In other area accidents investigated over the weekend, a three-car
accident at the intersection of State
Route 7 and County Road 5 (Bradbury) on Sunday sent three people to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment of injuries, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
Transported were driver Valerie
C. Hawkins, 24, No . II , 530 Laurel
St.,

Middleport;

Karissa

M.

New law forces state lobbyists
to conduct business differently

Novl 16 959

Cloudy tonight, lows in the
teens . Wednesday, clloudy.
Highs in the 20s.

en tine

1-800-837-1 094

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Doctors advise to watch
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From REDBOOK
Doctors say if a cold lasts ionger
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Reduction Sale

vor and consistency.

At this p&lt;1int . more tha . 150 feedlots , primarily in Iowa and Nebraska. are feeding about60,000 head of
cattle for the program. Monfort 's
packing plant in Des Moines is processing about 80 percent of the
beef.
People in the beef business often
cite the American Angus Association's Certified Angus Beef program
as an example of the merits of labeling beef.
The program began in the late
'70s. In the year ended Sept. 30, the
program labeled meat from more
than I million head of cattle slaughtered at more fl1an 30 packing plants
around the country, ~ncluding Monfort's plant in Des Moines.
The Iowa Cattlemen's Association has taken its cue from such
developments.
In October, the group appointed
a task force to explore the possibil ity of a cattlemen ~ spo n sored labeling
program.
Label Design
First, it must decide on a design
for the label that would he attached
to bo&gt;es and packages of Iowa bed.
The task force also has to figure out
how to finance the effort.
Nebraska already has a labeling
program. Sponsored by the state's
Department of Agriculture, with
linancing from the Nebraska Corn
Boar&lt;! and the Nebraska Grain
Sorghum Board, the program identifies meat sold in grocery stores and
restaurants as " Beef from Nebraska."
The major,meatpackers have dabbled in labeling beef, and some arc
working with trade groups and producer groups to explore greater use
of labeling.
Industry oflicials look for their
participation to grow.
Monfort in Des Moines, in fact ,
may be the pilot location for the
Iowa cattlemen labeling project, said
Mark Fischer of the Iowa Beef
Industry Council.
He also said the cattlemen Iahti
could be used with the Angus or
Hereford certified beef label s.
He and others said the effort is a
long-term venture.
As much as anyone, they said,
consumers will dictate the outcome.
"What's happening in the beef
industry is the realization that the
packer isn 't our buyer and the feed er ISn't our buyer, but that the consumer is our buyer," said Dave
Nichols, an Anita cattle producer and
co-chairman of the Iowa cattlemen
labeling task force.
" I think we realize now that we
can't go alone and that we need all
of these entities, or we're going to be
.out of business . ... It's just that simple," he said.
"We're not unlike the Big Three
car companies, only our competition
isn't from Japan. It 's from Arkansas
in the form of chickens."

TATE MOTORS

1995 After Christmas In~enfory

I

Ohio Lottery

Magic, Spurs
post holiday
victories

COLUMBUS (AP)- Lobbyists
and legislators are thinking twice
about meals, gifts and speaking
engagements because of a year-old
ethics law.
"Very few people are doing entertaining anymore," 1obbyist Thomas
C. Green said. "''m not doing anywhere near what I was."
Green said the rules are compli.-&lt;:~~ted under the new law.
· - "They don't know what they're
~pposed to do so they don 't do it,"
lie told The Columbus Dispatch in a
story published on Sunday.
"There is either a coolness or a
strangeness between the legislators
: and the lobbyi sts," said lobbyist
: Vince Squillace. "Each one is afraid
· they are going to get the other one m
; trouble. Establishing good relation: ships has been more difficult."
: The law requires lobbyists to
: report spending more .than $75 on

.

food and beverage for a single legislator during a calendar year. Lobbyists also must report any gift of
more than $25, and are prohibited
from giving a lcgisl!tor anything
wonh more than $75 in a calendar
year.
The reporting threshold has a
chilling effect. Lobbyists say they
will not go higher than $50 for fear
of embarrassing a legislator by having to list his or her name on a financial disclosure form.
Rep. Johnnie Maier, D-Massillon,
said lawmakers and lobbyists are
wary of how such a report could be
used in a 30-second political advertisement, but they also are afraid not
to report .
Maier said he attended a reception and later disclosed that he
received an 80-cent cup of coffee.
Sen. Alan J. Zaleski, D-Vermilion, said a group left its annual cal-

endar in his offke with the $5.45
price tag auached in case he wanted
to list it.
Senate President Pro Tempore
Richard H. Finan, R-Cincinnati. paid
a meeting host $1.75 for hi~ coffee
and doughnuts and asked for a
receipt.
"You don 't know who's there,"
he said. ''I've brought my own coffee cup a couple of times:"
Media reports have said a
Franklin County grand jury is uncovering more examples of high-ranking
lawmahrs failing to report multiple
speaking fees they received from
some lobbyists in the early 1990s.
Although the fees apparently
were below the reporting threshold
of the time -$50 I -the grand jury
could return indictments for "stacking" the checks to avoid reporting
them. The new law made all speaking fees illegal.

Hawkins. no age and address listed,
a passenger in Valerie Hawkins' car;
and Rashcel L. Rowe, 20, 50003
Dailey Road, Racine, a passenger in
a car driven by Kevin R. Whobrey,
19, 34510 Crew Road, Pomeroy.
All were treated and released
from the VMH emergency room. a
hospital spokesperson said.
Troopers said Valerie Hawkins
was stopped on Bradbury Road at
5:06 p.m., and then pulled onto 7
into the path of Whobrey's northbound car and collided. A southbound car driven by Wayne A. Dent.
30, 137 N. Second St., Middleport,
went off the -right side of the road
and struck a ditch to avoid collision.
Damage was severe to the

H;~:;;;;b;~:~:and

atterpairtlees
regional facility
CHILLICOTHE (APJ - Two
inmates at the Ross Correctional
Institution escaped but were caught
about 1-1/2 hours later, the state
prison department said .
Marshall Carroll, 31, and James
Wells, 38, were reported missing
about 9:37 p.m. Sunday, the
Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction said in a news release.
Prison employees found the
pair about 11:15 p.m. along the
Scioto River near Mound City, the
department said.
No infonnation about how the
priSoners escaped was available
Monday.
Carroll, 31. was serving a 10-to25-year sentence on a rape charge
from Warren Co~nty. Wells, 38,
was serving a 10-to-25 sentence
for aggravated burglary from
Greene County.

moderate to Dent's car. Hawkins was
cited for failure to obey a traffic control device, and Whobrey was tickcted for no seatbel.t.
Minor injuries were also reported
by the patrol in a two-car crash Monday on SR 124 ncar Rutland.
Because the accidont was still
under investigation this morning, 11
was not immediately known if the
inj ured were treated at the scene or
transported .
According to the report, Angela
D. Powell, 1,8, Rt. I, Mrddlepon, was
westbound at 3:20 p.m. when she
was unable to slop in time for a
stopped car ahead of her, slid left and
collided head-on with an eastbound

car driven by John R. Hill , 18. Syracuse.
Both drivers were reported
injured, along with a passenger in
Powell's car, Tara D. Fitchpatnck,
18, Rutland , troopers said.
In other accidents investigated
over the weekend, the patrol cited a
Middleport youth for failure to control in a one-car accident late Saturday on SR.684.
Troopers said William E. Johnson, 17,65 Elm St .. was northbound
in Scip1o Township at II :25 p.m .
when he failed to navi gate a curve.
went off the right side of the road
and struck a guardrail.
Damage Jo the car was moderate,
troopers said.

Money transfer may
allow for jail funding
COLUMBUS (APJ - A proposed regional jail in northern Ohio
would be the biggest winner from a
state agency's plan to make an extra
$5.5 million available to help build
local Jail s.
The Office of Criminal Justice
Services wants to transfer money
from an account intended to help pay
for jails that hold only misdemeanor
violators. The money instead would
help build full -service jails that hold
felony offenders.
About half of the proposed $5.5
million transfer would allow the state
to pay 50 percent of the cost of a
regional jail to serve Marion, Wyandot and Hardin counties.
The rest of the money would help
~over cost overruns in other building
projects that may take several years
to complete.
Marion County Sheriff John Butterworth said the 177-bed jail would
cost about $9 million. The project
has a completion date of July 1997.

"It's am hjliou~ hut we think we
can get it done," Butterworth said.
Marion County agreed to build a
new jail to sett le a 1992Iawsuit over
conditions in which prisoners were
housed.
"If the state did not participate in · ·
these proJects then obviously there
would be a huge burden that would
have to be shouldered by the residents who need that expanded corrections facility," Butterworth said.
The Office of Criminal Justice
Serv ices said it wanted to transfer
$5.5 million originall y set aside for
minimum security jails.
. Doug Moormann, chief of leg1Slauvc and community amrirs. said
those jails were proposed in 1984
primarily for drunken drivers.
"It 's become clear to us that
counti es and other jurisdictions have
priorities other than misdemeanants," Moormann said tn an
interview.

�Commenfar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITERS 01' OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and mu ~l be s i gne~ with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wrll be publrshed. Letters
should be in good taste. addressing issues. not pcrsonahlles.

The IRS smiles

· Page 2

Disabled vet fights just to get by
WASHINGTON - The joys of
the holiday season are not brightening the home of Sam Salop, who is
uncertain whether there will be
someone lo help him dress, eat and
: use the bathroom.
That 's been So lop's lot since the
day his 26-year-old daughter, who
had been his main care-giver. died of
.breast cancer nearly two years ago.
She had assumed many of those
duties from her mother, who died of
the same disease in 1979.
Fur the second Christmas in a
row, the 73-year-old Salop - a
severely disabled World War II veteran - has been alone. A lesser man
might succumb to self-pity. But his
sorrow seems reserved not for his
nightmare but for his daughter's.
"The worst tragedy in the world
is to watch your child die and not be
able to do anything." he says.
" When a child says to you, 'No
hope , Daddy' ... I wanted to kill
myse lf. "
Wracked with pain. she always

kept her father foremost in her
thoughts. '"Who'sgoing to take care
of you, Dad?'" Solop recalls his
daughter asking. " H'How are you

By Jack AnDerson
and
Michael Binstein
going to get along.' I tried to reassure
her. She had enough worries. "
To get along, Solop depends on
various government age~fies. He
heaps creQit on Veteran s AffaJTs
Secretary Jesse Brown, a disabled
veteran himself. who has befriended
htm and taken a personal interest in
h.ts case. But Solop says Brown has
his hands tied. Under existing law,
Salop doesn't qualify for the "aid-inattendance" benefit that would pay
for a full -time , live-in house-keeper,
and he can 't personally afford it.
Back in 1941, the only benefit
that the 18-year-old Solop sought

w:u a four-year scholarship he won
to study fine art al Carnegie Mellon
University. Then a draft notice
arrived. " I got in touch with !be
school and they sent a letter to the
draft board, but they wouldn 't let me
out," he said.
Carnegie Mellon even invented a
euphemism - "ceramic engineering" - hoping that would wtn a
draft exemption for 'an aspiring art:sL
Finally, he left for war. believ ing hrs
scholarship would be waiting for
him.
Solop served as a ~ight cngmeer
aboard a B-24 bomber in the Philtppincs. He was only weeks away from
returning home when a colonel asked
him to go on a security patrol mission. His plane was only 15 fee t off
the ground when it was brought
down by Japanese gunfire . Solop
was .able lo pull his navtgator out of
the burning plane. but suffered massive burns in the process .
After 21 days in a tent hospital
where both of his arrns were ampu-

I

a

Ll I

I

,II

!

ROBBY
!NAUGHTY

I

I NICE ..J

tated above the elbow, Salop was
sent home to begin a year-long rehabilitation program . Although he was
fitted for artificial arms and trained
in their use, he is still unable to perform many of the chores of everyday
living.
It was July 1947 when Solop
returned to his native Brooklyn. He
had no hands, but he had a big heart
and a booming voice. "I tried to use
my singing as a way tn make a living, but that didn 'tlastlong. because
a guy with both arms off isn't well received for show business," he
said. ,
Although Salop loathes the idea
of living off the government dole, he
has no choice but to accept a $3,000
check each month from the V.A. to
cover all of his expenses. While congressional critics of the VA. may
think Salop is part of the entitlements
problem. it's imponant to remember
that congressional pensions average
more than $5,800 a month.
One of Salop's largest expenses is
the $300 a week, plus room and
board, l1e pays for a housekeeper.
But there arc huge gaps - such as
weekends and holidays - when a
housekeeper is often away, and very
few are willing to engage in the
unpleasant everyday work of helping
the disabled.
Solop thought his search for the
perfect custodian and companion
was over when he hired a Polish
woman for the job. But her own family ordeal forced her to return to
Poland four years ago. She is now
seeking to return 10 the United States
to help Solop, but her application
was rejected because she overstayed
her visa last time. Solop has been
told that he might obtain a visa if he
agrees to marry the woman within 90
days of her return .
Meanwhile. he is despairing over
a more pressing predicament: Will he.
have a helper on Christmas? ''I'm
uncertain every day, because I don't
know day to day whether a person is
going to show up." he says. "I fall
through the cracks."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

1995 and the Waldholtzing of America

Berry•s .World

grunt led postal employees with organizational skill s, and we could have
an end to Western civilization as we
know it.
1995 GRAB BAG - Ariana

wi!J? Alii want is a $2 shin '
MOVIES - "Father of the Bride
II" was released, a remake of a pal try Spencer Tracy vehicle, and incited critical discussions about whether
the Martha Stewart-ness of its design
detracted from its bland Hollywood
message. A "Sabrina" remake also
Buffington started an organization opened, leadmg me to wonder once
called the Center For Effective Com- again why the idea of a 50-plus man
passion. Kurt Cobain's autopsy pho- falling in love with a 20-year-old
tos can be downloaded from the woman is not considered, um,
Internet. William Bennett's new creepy.
anthology is called "The Moral
CRITICAL VISTAS - Some
Compass: Stories for a Life 's Jour- reviewer from The Interview Factoney " (you ' ll never need another ry Entertainment Network called
book!). A prize in a promotion for the movie "Jumanji" : " A ttmeless
Sinatra's 80th birthday was a free trip masterpiece' Sensational' You've
lo Hoboken (wow!). "Supermodels never seen anything like it. " No
in the Rainforest" is the name of doubt encouraged hy this. I went to
something or other; I know it's real. see "Jumanji"; it seemed very much
but I don't remember whether it's a of its time, and not a masterpiece.
video, CD-ROM or charitable orga- [' ve also seen many movie:; like it:
nization. Does it matter?
"Jurassic Park," "Wizard of Oz, "
CD-ROMS - They contrnue ':I]'Y "Tarzan" ~ick, any Robin
their inexplicable infiltration of pop- .Williams flick. and any nick with
ular culture, even though they're children and wise-cracking women
either buggy, impossible to install, in it. It was, however, sensationaL
boring, or all three .
What is The Interview Factory
CHARITABLE ORGANIZA- Entertainment Network anyway7
TIONS - Charities, mysteriously, Does it have subsidiaries? The Blurb
are suddenly asking us for our Warehouse Amusement Chain, The
"unwanted car, boat, orr. v." In 1996, Flack O'Malic Shack and Miniam I going to have to wade through Mall, or The Meaningless Rave
unwanted boats at my local Good- Chuckle Hut?
OUR COARSENED CULTURE

/an Shoales

ACTION SUIT..."

- The movie " Money Train" was
held responsible for the murder-by- .
arson of a Manhattan subway
employee. The movie remains at
large.
POLITICS - Newt Gingrich
continues to urrdermine his own
agenda, while Bill Clinton continues
to ovcrmine his, whatever it is.
THE WAR ON DRUGS Heublein , the maker of Jose Cuervo
Tequila, sued E&amp;J Gallo. charging .
that its apple-wine and malt-based
margarita cooler was not a true margarita because it did nol contain
tequila. Gallo countercharged thai
Heublein itself once marketed "The
Club 'Garita," which used wine, and
also the Moscow Margarita, which
used vodka. (I tried to market a
" Beergarita" back in the '80s. I lost
a bundle, and must therefore recuse
myself from any opinion on this
ongoing controversy.)
ENID
WALDHOLTZ
Enough' Remember: If you can't be
compassionate effectively. forget it.
And have yourself a merry little
Christmas.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.)
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
.writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Is old segregation alive ih new year?

As for the future, Gary OrfieldIn January 1963, Alabama Gov.
Meanwhile. there are black lead- by the current trend toward largely
director of the Harvard University
George Wallace thundered, in his ers who are giving up on the possi,
separate schools. ascribing it to res- Project on School Desegregation inaugural address: "In the name of bility of integrated schools. Edward idential patterns and black parents'
the greatest people that ever trod the J. Newsome , a member of the resistance to busing their children. says that the continuing retreat from
integrated classrooms "threatens to
earth.! draw the line in the dust and
He added that integrating schools "is get us lo a level of segregation we
toss the gauntlet before the seat of
an ideal and optimal situation to
haven't seen since before the civil
tyranny. And I say ... segregation
strive for" - but he implied that it rights movement."
now ... segregation tomorrow ... Kansas City, Mo .. school board. has is not an urgent present priority
A glimmer of resistance to this
segregation forever."
P~ice stressed the openings being
spoken for a growing number of
rising
black movement for separate
By that point. to an increasing black educators and black parents : "I made for integration at Fortune 500
schools
comes form the new head of
number of Americans, Wallace think desegregation is dead and companies and 31 colleges. But what
NAACP.
On National Public
the
appeared to be a segregationist should have died a long time ago, if of the millions of kids locked into a
Kweisi
Mfume w:u asked
Radio,
dinosaur doomed lo extinction. In the focus is on trying to have a phys- growing numller of ghetto schools
about
those
black
activists who are
time. he saw himself that way, and .ical mixing of the races."
- dismayingly and hauntingly
convinced
that
all
the attempts to
asked for redemption.
In Bergen County, N.J ., the pres- described in Jonathan Kozol's book, integrate schools have not worked,
Now, however, the briginal
"Amazing Grace: The Lives of Chilident of the NAACP chapter there.
George Wallace does not seem to be
dren
and the Conscience of a and so the thrust must be on making
has declared: "Racial balance is not
black schools better.
all that outside the present American
'
the important factor here; equal and Nation."
Said Mfume: "If we continue to
mainstream with regard to desegreHow many of them, lost in these
quality education is."
and believe, as I do, that young
insist
gating the nation's public elementary
Hugh Price, the crisply articulate demeaning schools, wi II even think people deserve the right to have an
and secondary schools.
president of the National Urban of going to college?
·ability to matriculate with others of
In the courts - including the
In some black neighborhoods, it
League, is not a separatist He made
different races and different reliSupreme Coun - a series of decithat clear when he addressed the may be possible for parents with suf- gions, not necessarily through busing
sions in recent years is leaving more
National African-American Leader- ficient political clout to .gather the but through the opponunity to at
and more segregated schools without
ship Summit at Howard Un-iversity. . resources to make separate schools least attend the same schools, then
judicial remedies on the ground that
Commending Louis Farrakhan for , actually equaL Thurgood Marshall, there is a great deal of value and
residential patterns, not. laws, cause
the Million Man March, Price went · however, condemned this separatist worth in that, because the real world ·
the racial separatism.
· on to say, "We African-Americans approach to education.
looks like that"
__
But, as Thurgood Marshall used
"Unless our children begin to
cannot, should not and need not go
Nat
HentoiT
is
a
nationally
.to say from the bench, "Those
it alone." Yet, during a conversation learn together," he said in 1974, renowned authority on the '·F irst:
schools are still segregated, aren't
Hugh Price and I had on National "there is little hope that our people Amendment and the rest of the BW
they? Is that constitutional?"
Public Radio. Price was not alarmed will ever learn to live together."
of Rights.

NatHentoff

"When we sat on Santa's lap we were scared
and we cried. We want to bring a CLASS-

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

EMS units
record 24 calls
-- --- ·-···--

Tuesday, December 26, 1995

Jly JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - Charity and self-interest might seem opposites on the
scale of human values but they blend well during the holidays or. in fact ,
at any time of year. Proof' That old grinch,the IRS. smiles on the odd duo.
· A smile . as the Internal Revenue Servtces sees 11. "a tax break for grving to a charitable cause. That' s not all : .The gift can mean more spendable
Income. elimination of estate tax and avutdancc of probate too.
. A golden age couple. 70 yems and 65 years, had earnings in excess of
· 8 percent on their $100,000 in sav ings a few years ago. Now they 're down
lo 6 percent. In a 36 percent tax bracket, they have $3.840 left after taxes.
· They place a charitable gift annuity of $100.000 wtth a favonte chanty.
reccivrng a life income of $6,100 a year, paid quarterly. The taxable income
drops to $3,484 from $6,000. Their annual income tax is $1,254, not $2,160.
That leaves them with spendable income of $4,846 rather than $3,840, and
charitable income tax deduction of $39.746, which could result in the total
· return of $6,100 heing free of taxes, and thus spendable.
: · The funds aren't taxed at death by state or federal regulations, and the
funds aren 'I exposed to probate costs. Not included in the estimates is the
. value of the gift to the charily and its bencricmries.
' '
'
· While $100.000 is a sizable gift for almost anyone. Joe Mtntz uses tt as
. an illustration because all those zeros make for easy mental calculations.
: But something of the sort occurs with donattons of almost any size ..
· : For $3 he will send you postpa1d hiS computenzed lllustrattons for sev. era! ages and incomc-taz rackets. (Joseph A. Mintz. PO. Box 12066, Dal: las, Texas 75225).
· Mintz is a septuagc~a ian , longtirne insurance prao.:titioncr, needier of the
financtal and insurance lrades. consultant to rinancral advosers, congresSional ·
(estrrier, and a fellow who has to watch hrs dollars
These and other qualtflcallons mcludmg a great deal of cunosoty, keep
Joe busy at hts computer. turn1ng out pamphlets of practical tnformation
:about how to not to get bamboozled by numbers, especrally when they
: involve dollars.
Some of what he dredges up about charitable giving is new, and some
known but hardly promoted by the charities who stand to benefit so much.
:Such as the charitable remainder trust for getting the most out of appreciated assets.
It isn't at all uncommon, for example, for small investors to have had
-seen the value of their stocks multiply three or four times . To sell means to .
:pay big capital gains taxes. To donate to charity means you do not.
. If your purchase of $5,000 of stock has now grown to a market value of
·$25,000, the capital gains taxes, should you sell , would be based on the largSCANDAL OF THE YEAR- I
:er figure (minus initial cost and buying-selling commissions).
nominate
Enid Wa1dholtz. She does· · By transferring to the trust such appreciated assets, you remove them from
n't
have
the
flash ofTonya Harding,
your taxable estate and receive an immediate charitable tax deduction . With
thrill
of
the
Bobbins. or the intri the
. the proceeds, the charity pays you tncome for a term of years, at the end of
cacy
of
Whitewater.
but we haven't
which the trust assets go to the chanty.
had a name in the media that's as
_· Most well-know chanties provide potenual don~s wJth pnntouts of dolfun to say aloud since Joey
:ku advantages, although such data sheets carry the usual caveat of check- much
Buttafuocco.
(Try it 1 Enid Waldholtz,
·iilg with financial planners, trust officers, accountants or tax advisers.
Enid Waldholtz. Enid Waldholtz.
: · There are wonderful opportunities to make money giving it away, Mintz
OK.
that's enough. Stop now. I
:~ays. And you can thank the grinch for making it possible.
mean it.)
TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT - In Southern California, a
four-lane toll road was built on the
meridian dividing a public highway.
_ Today is Tuesday, Dec. 26, the 3601h day of 1995. There are five days
Developed to ease rush-hour flow,
-left in the year.
people
will be charged for the priv: · Today's Highlight in History:
ilege
of
dnving it.
·: On Dec. 26, 1944, in the World War II Battle of !be Bulge, the embatPREDICTIONSThe next tar:Oed U.S. 101st Airborne Division, surrounded by Gennan forces in Beifor
privatization?
Not
the post
get
:SitDII, w:u relieved by units of the 4tb Annored Division.
guess.
though!),
but the
office
(good
' ' On Ibis date:
lines
we
stand
in
there.
To
speed
up
- . In 1776, the British suffered a major defeat in the Battle of Trenton
the process. a new line will be set up
:during the Revolutionary War.
that will run between the public
- : In 1799. the late George W:uhington was eulogized by Col. Henry Lee
lines. Those customers who want to
:as "ftrSt in war, farst in peace and ftrSt in the hearts of his countrymen."
stand
in it will pay to do so.
: . In 1893, Chinese leader Mao Tse-tung was born in Hunan province.
Unfortunately.
these paying lines
In 1941, Winston Churchill became the first British prime minister to
·address a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress.
will become so popular that they'll
In 1944, Tennessee Williams' play "The Glass Menagerie" received
become slower than the non-paying
·its ftrSt public performance at the Civic Theatre in Chicago.
lines. The schmoes in the latter will
· In 1947, heavy snow blanketed the Northeast, burying New York City
taunt the suckers of the former. The
under 25.8 inches of snow in 16 hours. That same day. Los Angeles
former will foster resentment in its
1eacbed a high temperature of 84 degrees.
.
bosom, and before you know it, we'll
In 1972. tl)e 33rd president of the United States, Harry S. Truman, dted
have class warfare right there in the
in Kansas City. Mo.
holding area. Throw in a few disIn 1975, the Soviet Union inaugurated the world's first supersonic
transport service witb a flight of its Tupolev-144 airliner fwm Moscow to
Alma-Am.

:Today in history

Tuesday,Decernber26, 1995

Ronald L. Gotthardt
Ronald L Gotthardt, 88,Columbus. died Saturday, Dec . 23, 1995 at his
re siQence.
Son of the late Edward and Katherine Gotthardt, he was a 41-year memhcr of the Walnut Hill United Methodist Church and was retired from Adria
l.ah (Warren Teed) after 41 years .
1\ U.S. Army veteran of World War II. he was discharged as a captain
on May 17. 1946. He was also an official at Scioto Downs and the Little
Brown Jug, Delaware.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth Morgan Gotthardt; a son and daughterin -law. Bruce and Michelle Gotthardt; and three grandchildren .
He was preceded in death by a sister, Eva Gotthardt; and a brother.
Howard Gotthardt.
Services will he 10 a.m. Wednesday in the Graumlich &amp; Son Funeral
Home, Columbus, with Pastor Thomas Knauff officiating. Friends may call
one hour prior to services.
Graveside services will I p.ll). Wednesday in the Riverview C:emetery,
Mrddleport. The family requests no flowers. Those who wish may donate
to a charity of their choice.

Clara Milhoan
Clara Milhoan, 75, Long Bottom, died Monday, Dec. 25. 1995 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home . Pomeroy.

Arnold Ray Thomas
A memorial service for Arnold Ray Thomas. 46, Ravenswood, W.Va .,
husband of Leslie Ingels Thomas, will be II a.m. Friday in the First Baptist Church, Ravenswood.
He died Dec. 18, 1995

.....--Local News in Brief:___,
Police probe Pomeroy crash
Pomeroy Police investigated a Christmas Day accident in which
one driver was issued a citation, according to Police Chief Gerald
Rought.
The accident occurred at 12:52 p.m. on the Pomeroy-Mason bridge
underpass .
lames D. Stewart, 19, of Middleport, was traveling east in a 1987
Ford truck, when he hit a patch of icc and the vehicle slid around .
Christopher What!, 19, of Middleport, was also traveling eastbound,
striking the front of Stewart's vehicle with his 1988 Toyota truck,
according to a police report .
Both vehicles received moderate damage. Stewan was cited for fail ure to assure clear distance .

Minor accident investigated
Middleport Police investigated a minor two-car accident Saturday
evening. according to a police report.
According to reports. the accident occurred at 7:53 p.m. on the
Super America parking lot. Bonnie S. Denney, 31 , of Pomeroy, was
backing her 1987 Dodge Daytona from a parking space, when she
failed to sec a 1989 Dodge Ram driven by Emmitt A Rawson, 68. of
Middlepon. according to the report.
Rawson was also backing from a parking space, when he wa' struck
by Denney. Damage to hoth vehicles was light. No citations were
issued.

units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 24
calls for assistance over the holiday
weekend, including six lransfer calls.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
II :50 a.m. Saturday, High Street.
Lettie Young, Veterans Memorial
Hospital ;
5:05p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squad to motor vehicle accident at intersection of Bradbury Road and State Route 7, Kev in
Whobrey, Valene Hawkins, Rasche!
Rowe, VMH, Pomeroy squad assisted;
9:21 p.m . Sund ay, Bradhury
Road, Freda Vanlnwagcn , Hol zer
Medical Center:
II :28 p.m. Monday. Diamond
Stroot, Floyd McClelland, VMH.
POMEROY
4:40a.m. Saturday. volunteer fire
department. Condor Street , smoke
odor at the Laurie Graves residence;
4:47 p.m. Saturday. Laurel Cl iff
Road , Steve Ehlin , VMH :
9:56 p.m. Saturd ay. Maples
Apartments . Helen Smith . VMH .
RACINE
2:37 p.m. Saturday. SR 338.
Wiley Ours, VMH .

Announcements

RUTLAND
4:41 a.m. Monday, Leading
Creek Road, Patricia Day, VMH;
7:30 a.m. Monday, Happy Hollow Road, Scarlet Lyons. HMC:
12:05 p.m. Monday, SR 124,
Benjamin Barrett, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
3:28p.m. Monday, volunteer fire
department and squad to motor vehicle accident on SR 124, Tabby Powell. Randi Hill , Ryan Hill , Altara
Fitzpatrick and Angie Powell. VMH.
Pomeroy and Middleport squads
assisted;
8:25p.m. Monday, volunteer fire
department and squad, Weber Road,
electrical fire at Nancy VanMeter
residence, no injuries ;
II :27 p.m. Monday, SR 124,
Mildred Ingram, HMC.
SYRACUSE ·
8:54a.m. Monday, U.S. 33, Elvin
James, VMH;
9: I 0 p.m . Monday. Seventh
Street, Ray Cunningham. VMH .
TUPPERS PLAINS
II :45 a.m. Monday, Taylor Road,
Clara Milhoan, VVH ;
II :41 p.m. Monday, SR 681 East, ,
Levina Brannon. Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospttal.

Today's
livestock

New Year 's Eve service
Hil lsi de Baptist Chur..:h. State
Route 143, Pomeroy, will hold a
New Year' s Eve serv ice starting at H
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indianap.m. featuring special singing by
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
The Partakers. The Hood Family,
buying points Thursday by the U.S.
Mrs. Sandy King and more. SpeakDepartment of Agriculture Market
ing will be Dr. James R. Acree, Rev.
News:
Henry Hoppe , Ron Clonch, Dan
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
Hood . Joe Hutnphrey and Mr.
cents higher; demand moderate.
Charles Willett . Guest appearances
U.S. 1-3. 230-260 lbs . 43.50will be David Johnson from Pen 45.00. a few 45.50-46.50; plants
saco la, Fla., and Ryan Clonch from
Pontiac , Mich. Dr. Acree invites the . 44.75-46.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 38 00-publi c to attend. Refreshments will
43.00.
be served.
Sows: genera ly steady
Letart trustees to meet
U.S. 1-3. under 500 lbs. 2700The Letart Township Board of
30.00; over 500 lbs . 31 .00-33.00, a
Trustees will hold its end-of-year
few up to 35.00.
meeting rriday, 4 p.m. at the townBoars: 24.00-25.00.
ship office building.
Estimaled receipts.: 36,000.

R 0 II I \
,\ I I I I ' I, \

"' 1"1· ,,..
vw~

12 Months-

... "'..J.w.

FREE

Deputies probe three accidents
The Meigs County Shertfl's Department (nvestigated several.
weather-related accidents during the Christmas holiday weekend,
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby. No citations were issued in
the separate incidents.
Sunday at9 a.m., Nichola D. Pickens, 21, Columbus, was travel ing west on Texas Road when she lost control of her 1991 Olds Cutlass Ciera on the snow-covered roadway. Pickens crashed into a ditch.
C!\Using moderate damage to her vehicle.
Monday at 2:35 p.m. , Herman C. -Michael, 77, Pomeroy. was
pulling from a driveway at41903 Kingsbury Road when .he stated that
he failed to see a 1986 Dodge, driven by Hem1an Reeves, 64, Columbus.
Reeves, who was traveling cast on Kingsbury Road, went off the
right side of the roadway to avoid Michael, striking a ditch and being
struck hy Michael's 1986 Ford in the left rear fender, the report stated. Damage to both vehicles was light.
Monday at 2:40p.m., Gene A. Yeager. 64, Enon. was traveling east
on State Route 124 when he lost control of his 1992 Buick on the
snow-covered roadway. Yeager struck a ditch , causing heavy damage
to his vehicle . .

Hospital n~ws-Mark Frost and son, Amo Arbaugh
VE'l'ERANS MEMORIAL
Mrs . Ron Grate and daughter, John
Saturday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - Harry Dow.
Discharges Dec. 24 - Mrs.
Clark. Racine .
Raymond Gandee and daughter,'
Sunday admissions - none .
Keith McCarty, Mrs. Daryl Caldwell
Sunday discharges - none.
and daughter.
Monday admissions - none.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Monday discharges - none.
Caldwell, daughter, Vinton ; Mr. and
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Mrs . Benjamin Hamilton , daughter,
Discharges Dec. 22 - Glendon
,
Vinson, Ru sse ll Reiber, Cli'nton Coalton.
Discharges Dec. 25 ~ Mrs .
Swrsher, Mrs. John Roberts and
Rubert Caldwell and daugh ter.
son, Mrs. Jam es Hannon and daughMelissa
Williams, Mrs . Benjamin
ter, Mrs. Phillip Pope and daughter,
Hamilton and daughter. Anthon~
Landonna Mintz .
Korec, Carl Stewart, Jackie Parsons.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Frost, son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs .
Turner,
son, Gallipolis .
Daryl Caldwell. daughter. Vinton;
(Published
with permission)
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gandee.
daughter. Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Discharjles Dec. 23 - Mrs. , : ••••••••• 11&amp;!f!11•*•

The Daily Sent:U,el
(USPSllMIO)
Pllbii shed every afterftil:on, M(ladtty through

Friday, I ll Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio. by the

Ohio Val ley Publishing Company/Ganneu Co..
Pomeroy. Ohio 45 769, Ph . 992-2 t .'\6. Second
p.Ud m Pomeroy, Ohio

da~ s po~ ta gc

Mtmbtr: The A~~ociated Pri!u, and the Ohio

Newspaper A!;~iation .

I'OSTMASTER: Send nddreat coMictions to
The · Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769

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Tuesday-Wednesday
Thursday-Friday
8 a.m. til 8 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. til 5 p.m.

Iii

Ill

I YISAI

t...............................~··············-~ ..--------------~------------.J

�OHIO Weather
WednESday, Dec. 27
AccuWeather® forecas t for daytime cond itions and high temperatures

W.VA.

Show9rs T-storms Rain

Flurries

Snow

leo

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Via Associ;;Jted Press GraphicsNet

Little snow accumulation
expected in region tonight
By The AssO&lt;iated Pnss
Another 2-4 inches of lake-effect
snow fell on northeast Ohio
ovcrni~ ht. Meanwhi le, the snow
cndcJ across the rest of the state and
skies cleared over southwest and
ce ntral Ohio, all owing temperatures
tu dip in to the teens and single dig-

• us.

•

.

An approaching low pressure
system will bring more snow to the
stale toni ght, the National Weather
Serv ice sa id . Accumulations are
likely. espec iall y in central Ohio.
Lows will be 15-20.
High pressure will begin to build
on Wednesday, but cloudiness will
persi st, forecas ters said. Scattered
flurri es arc likely. Highs will be in
the mid - to upper 20s.
The record-high temperature for
thiS date at the Co!~mbu~- weather

station was 62 degrees in 1982
while the record low was 5 below
zero in 1983. Sunset tonight will be
at5 : 12 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday
at 7:52a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Cioudy. A chance of
snow with little acc umulati on
south ... Scattered flurri es north.
Wedncsday ... Becoming mostly
cloud with scattered flurries. Highs
in the mid and upper 20s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday ... A chance of snow
north .. .Fair south . Lows 15 to 20.
Hi ghs 25 to 30.
Friday ... Fai r. Lows in the teens
and lower 20s. Highs mid 20s to
lower 30s.
Saturday ... Fair. Lows 20 to 25.
Highs in the lower and mid 30s.

.Holiday weekend leaves
.eight dead on state roads
By The AssO&lt;iated Press
Eight people died in Ohio traffic
acciden ts ove r the long Christmas
' · weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said today.
The patrol counted fatalities during the 96 hours from midnight
Thursday through Monday.
The dead:
MONDAY
William
SPRINGFIELD Huffman, 25, and Joyce Zornes, 43,
'· both of Springfield, in a two-car colli sion on Ohio 41 in Clark County.
ASHTABULA - Matthew P.
Cheney, 17, of Ashtabula, in a twocar wreck on Ohio 84 in Ashtabula
County.
SUNDAY
JACKSON- Carle E. Burt, 56,

a new course .

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..............................40
Akzo ........................................57 1/2
Ashland Oil ..................................36
AT&amp;T .....................................661/2
Bank One ............................... .37 118
Bob E.ans ............................... 17 3/8
Borg·"' arner ................................3 J

Champion Ind ........................22 3/4
Charming Shop ........................ 3 1/4
City Holding ...........................22 3/4
Federal Mogu1 ........................20 3/4
Gannett ...................................60 3/4
Goodyear t&amp;R ......................44 3/4
: K·mart ...................................... 7 1/8
• Lands End .............................. 141/2
• Limited lnc ............................. 16 112
Peoples Bancorp ........................... 23
Ohio Valley Bank ..................35 1/2
One Valley ..............................311/8
Rockwell ....... ,.............................. 52
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 28 112
Royal Dutch/Shell .....,.......... t3~ 1/2
Shoney's Inc . ............................9 1/2

~~:J~ki;i:· ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::ro·i~
n lnol .................... 18 718
•••

County road .
FRIDAY NIGHT
Samuel D.
MARIETTA Alexander, 42. of Warner, driver in
a one -car accident on Ohio 821 in
Washington County.
TOLEDO - Kelly R. Ettcmiller,
14, of Napoleon. passenger in a twocar acctdent on a Lucas County road.

Birthday celebrant drowns in pool

immune sys tem , leavin g victims

McCONN ELSVILLE - A man has been arrested on charges he
killed hi s wife and started a fire at their home.
Bobby C. Walkup, 56, of Stockport, was charged with murder.
aggravated arson and assaulting a law enforcement offi cer. the Morgan County Sheriff's Department said .
.
He is accused in the death of hi s wife. Ellen Walkup, 58, at the1r
home in southeast Ohio. Firefighters found the body in her hedroom
about I0 p.m. Saturday.
.
A witness reported hearing gunfire followed by a woman yellmg
that she had been shot .
Deputies took Walkup into custody as he tried to leave the burning house, the sheri If's department said. He was being held Ill the cou nty jail on $500,000 bond.
McConncl sviUc is 65 miles cast of Columbus.

Lucas County had the highest rate
of HIV infection among Ohio
women having babies, at 14.7 births
per I0,000. Cuyahoga County's rate
was 12.8 and Franklin County had a
rate of 8.6. The counties with the
lowe st infecti on rate were Summit
and Portage counties at 0.8 births per
10,000 women. Hamilton and Butler
counties had a rate of 3.2.

Hurry in.to RadioShack and save ·30 to 60°/o

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ter was hi s last of the ni ght. Scott
rebounded the All-Star cen ter's airhall wi th 24 seconds left. scu in g the
stage fur Hardaway.
The All -Star pnin t guarJ let the
shut cl ock run Uown to six seco nds
before startin g from the top of the
key and !THw in g toward the right side

or the basket to nsc ahove Houston's
Mario Elic.

The ball h11 the run . banged off
the glass. rolled around and fe ll in.
,; It was a gift . h was a 111 ugh shut
by a tough player." Houston's Sam
Casse ll sai d. "It rolled around the
riil1 and we nt in . Yo u don ' t sec many
of those. That's why I call it a gift.

It coul dn ' t have come at a better
time
Robert Horry ·s three-poin t
attempt at the huzzer bounced off the
rim for Houston. which led 80-72
before O'Neal. who played the last
4 37 with fi ve fouls, and Scott
brou"IH Orlando back.
n1c VICtory ex tended the NBA's
longest r cg ul ar~ ~c a sn n home win ning streak to 22 games, includi ng 15
straight th is season. The Magic lost
twice to Houston at homl' durin g the
Final s.
" We JUSt wa nted to win to keep

4uarter. but we pla yed great defen se
in the fourt h quarter. At the end . that
was just a grea t shot by Penny ...
Scott fini shed with 19. including
a thrcc- pomter that tied the game at
90 wit h 1:25 left O'Neal had 18
rebounds and Hardaway fini shed
wi th I0 asststs and seven rebounds
for the Magic.
Hurry and El ic each scored 15 for
the Rockets. who played without
Clyde Drex ler, sidelined with a
brui sed shin .
Olajuwon said the ball slipped out
of hi s hands on the miss that led to
Hardaway 's third game-winner of
the season.

ou r homcs tant.l going," O'N~.:a l said .

"We slipped there a litt le in the third

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Dale MeWhorter 0-0-2=2, Steve
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Ty ler Barbcrc 3-0- 4= 10, Greg Schader 2- 1-2=9. John Danickc 2- 12=9. Mike Reed 1-0-0=2, Jeremy
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their fingers."
In Monday's on ly other NBA
game, San Antonio won I05- I00 at
Phoenix.
Hardaway and Shaq uillc O'Neal
each had 22 points for Orlando.
which blew a 13- point lead and fe ll
he hind by eight in the fourt h quarter
before ove rtak ing the Rocke ts.
" We 'll take a wi n any way 11
co mes, but I was a li ttle disappointed," Hardaway said. " We had them
down and they carne back. It seemed
like deja vu from the Fin als ...
Hakeem Olajuwo n led the Rock ets wit~ 30 points. but hi s basket m
the openin ~ minute of the fina l quar-

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Rutland Furniture

" It was just another ba sketball
game to me," Hill said after Anfernee Hardaway's clutch jumper with
3.1 second s remaining gave th e
Magic a 92-90 victory.
' 'I'm being honest with you." the
coach added. " It 's nice to represent
the league on Christmas Day on
national TV and all that. but it 's just
one of 82 games."
Hill 's players expressed the same
sentiment.
"One game is not going to make
or break our seaso n." forwa rd Denni s Scott said. "And it 's not revenge,
because the bottom line is they've
still got the (c hampionship) rings on

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{19- _ • 8= 0)
R
N 16· 17 1 7_
·
0· 0- 1- 1 1amoe
yan
Evans 2_0 _10orns
Ma~nard _
= , Jesse
14
3
_ = IO . Spike Ri ze r _ _ = . Jay
04
40 1 9
McKel vey _ _ = IO. John Harmon
2T 1. 3 B ·kl 2 0 1'1....4
2
11
-0-0=
2
yson =uc ey - - v - .
~
. : _I
1
24
1
9125 70
ota s.

rounfs, SHS led 52-46. With 4:45
nadocs play two tough non-league
lefl1· the game. Ross cut the lead to schools in Newark Catholic Wedncs57-~, but SHS called tim e to make day and ret urn home for undefeated
some adJustmen ts. lly the 1:30 mark
Chesa peake on Friday. CHS defeat·
SHS had reb uilt a 64 -54 advantage . cJ Vt nton County 10 1-60 on Fnday.
Sou thern head coac h Howte
rhe Chesapeake ga me IS SouthCaldwe ll said, "We played with total ern's first horne. and perhaps fortriv con fidence tonight and played very,
ia buffs, the first time ever Southern
very wel l. The hench du.l a ni ce JDb.
has not hnsted a home game before
It was good 10 get a monk ey off our
Chri stmas.
back. We've lost to so me excepti on- ·
Reserve notes: Southern lust the
ally good hall clu bs. and we arc get - reserve game 32-30 on a b st second
ting hetter as a team. ·n11 s was a good
shot. J.T. Flowers led the wrnnns
win and we pl ayed wtt h muc h com- with sc,c n while Ty Jolm sun sparked
posurc"
SHS with 9.
Southern 's sc hedule doesn' t get
-•- · much better any too"" "' The TorSOUTHERN

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The most important thing in life is
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•••
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had nme pomts and etght rebounds .
· 1 16
.Rod J ones pace d Ross wu'
pornts. whrle Tyler Barbere had 10.
So uthern JUm ped out to a 2-0
lead, and led the cntore game, however, Ross rnade severa1 b'd
' s 1·or thc
top spot that kept the game tntcrest ·
mg to the fin al buzzer. Southern took
a 19- 11 fi_rst penod lead, then held on
to a 35-28 lead al the half . . .
Southern got 111 so me nuld lou I
trouble m the second half. espccrnl ly at Spike Ri zer's pos t. Ryan Norns ove ntuolly foul ed ou t after ;rn
aggressive game, but the Tornadoes
were able to endure. After three

NO RAINCHECKS

Detects X, K and Ka bands

Everyone has a
useful
purpose in life, even if it's only
to serve as a horrible
example.

By FRED GOODALL
ORLANDO, Ao. (AP) - The
Orlando Magic are still drawin g on
a lesson learned in the NBA Final s.
Regular-season success against
the Houston Rockets is nice, but it
doesn't guarantee anything again st
the two-time defending champions
when the games count most.
Orlando won both regular-season
meetings between the teams last wmter, only to lose four straight to the
Rockets in the final round of the
playoffs. So coach Brian Hill and his
players talked about "perspective "
instead of "revenge" when the teams
met again Monday night.

CHILLICOTHE - About 12,000 customers of the Ross County
Water Co mpany were asked to conserve water while crews tried to
fix a water main hurst.
The company hoped to have the problems corrected today, said
George Vandemark, director of the Ross County Emergency Management Agency.
Crews had fixed a break in one major water mai n but fo und anoth er Monday, Vandemark sa id.

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Magic slip past Rockets 92-90; Spurs beat Suns 105-100

Water conservation requested

The repenoire of beluga whales
includes chirps, croaks, burps,
grunts, squeaks, moos , mews,
screams and yaps.

PageS
Tuesday, December 26, 1995

By s.COTT WOLFE
four games. Sometimes the TornaSentinel Correspondent
,
does looked grand. and sometrmes
Th..eo ld adage "Chnstmas
·
·
came thcy looked hke
10-cent costume
early was proven true as Southern Jewelry. Saturday, the dtamond m the
.
coach Howte Caldwell receoved a roug'hcame. out.
welcommg Chnstmas present at the
Thos sen be has often saod that
· Ca ldwell would eventually
. Sout hern ·fornadoes Howoe
hands of hIS
who defeated the Ross-Southeastern whip the Tornadoes into shape. Not
Panthers 70-61 Saturday night at many in Southern land expected
Rtchmondale.
magic .
The win was Southern 's first of
Southern placed four men in douthe year at 1-4, while Ross drops tu ble figures, including senior post
4-2.
John Harmon, who had a career
A fledglin g Southern club had game of 22 points and nine rebounds.
struggled early in the year, playing Jamie Evans canned 14 points, and
spot basketball throughout its first Jesse Maynard and Jay McKelvey

Husband held in alleged killing

women .

The Daily Sentinel

Southern beats Ross SE 70-61 to get season's first win

MOUNT STERLING- A boy celebrating his 12th birthday at a
convention with his father drowned in an indoor swimm ing pool.
James Pettaway of Toledo was pulled from the bottom of the pool
at Deercreek State Park Lodge Saturday night, Pickaway County Sheriff Dwight Radcliff said.
.
James was taken to Children's Hospital in Columbus, where he dted
just aftc'r midnight.
.
Jame s had been swi mming with a group of other children wl1en
an adult noticed that he was on the bottom of the pool in water about
8 feet deep. Rescue workers estimated that he had hccn under·, .ater
for 20 minutes. Radcliff said .
The boy and his father, Jamcel , were attending a convention at the
lodge in Mount Sterling, about 20 miles southwest of Col umbus.

susceptibl e to a wide variety or
infec tions and cancers.
In Ohi o, 4,723 have died as a
result of AIDS : nati onally, nearly
300,000 have died .
New AIDS cases appeared to hit
a peak 111 1993. But the large
increase that year was due largely to
a change in the definition of AIDS to
e ncompass more conditions that
indicate the onset of the di sease.
A s~ rvcy of 237 ,506 births
between 1992 and 1994 showed thai
6.6 Ohio women tested HIV-positi vc
for every 10,000 births. The national rate is 35 births per I0,000

Sports

Prices Good Wednesday December 27th, ONLY

30%0FF

By

Tuesday, December 26, 1995

Ohio News in Brief:

haps lO percent if they get on medication s. But it takes education."
Diagnosing women with AIDS
continues to be difficult because they
do not always have the same symptoms as men and do not get tested,
Thompson said.
Acqui red immune deficiency
sy ndrome attacks the body's

CINCINNATI (AP) - AIDS
counselor~ arc turning thei r attent ion
to sexuall y reckless youths, hetcrosex.ual woman and minorities as the
number of new cases declines. the
Ohio Department of Health sat d.
For each of the past two years, the
number of new cases has dropped by
half. There were I ,9 16 reported cases in 1993, 9 16 in 1994 and 413 in
1995. the report said.
Gay men cunti nue to be most at
risk. but AIDS coun selors also arc
turning their attent ton to others.
"Gay men are payi ng attention to
the disease and doing something
about it." said Chuck Albrecht. executive director of AIDS Volunteers of
Cincin nati .
Kathryn Thompson, educati on
coordinator for AIDS Volunteers of
Cincinnati, said reaching tce n -a~c rs,
women and bl acks poses the next
challenge for AIDS agencies.
" We're teachin g youths that their
tee n-age yea rs arc hi gh risk tim es.
We reach them not to make mi stakes
that may cost them their lives," she
sa id .
AIDS ex perts say the dtseasc is
on the ri se among heterosexual
W(ll1lCn who often get the disease
fmm men. The disease is spread
more easily from men to women.
anJ pregnant mothers often pass on
tbc disease to their babies, Thompson s;r id .
"A woman who .is HIV-positive.
has a 25 perce nt chance of passing
it on to her baby," Thompson sa. d.
"Thro ugh education, we have been
able to reduce 1t considerably, tn per-

a onc. vchiclc accident· on a Ross

. • Worthin

.

H·ealth agency reports
decline in AIDS cases

of Jackson, the driver in a one-car
accident on Ohio 93 in Jackson
County.
SATURDAY
WOOSTER - Tobin J. Grim .
24, of Dalton, a passenger in a car
that collided with a pickup truck on
U.S. 250 in Wayne Cou nty.
FRANKFORT - Richard A.
Robinson, 43, of Frankfort, driver in

Housing '
proposed
for Athens
ATHENS (AP) - A housin g
development proposed for Athens
County also could serve as a learning center for Ohio Umvcrsily students .
The development could get under
way next spring or summer and
tncl udcs several hundred stngleramily homes, multifamil y apart·
ments and condom iniums.
A proposed retirement center
wou ld include apartme nts but not a
ski lled nursi ng center.
Professors and other uni vcrst ly
employees will be in the target market for the proposed homes, and the
golf teams Wi ll practt cc and play on

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 27, 1~ ON~J

...

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December 26, 1995

ibt'I\!Hzt'I\IW'I\Iib''l\lil"'frilt'fritz'*ilt 'frl 'friW''fritr "':bt'l\l:t 'l\l:bt•:•tr.:...:.. 'fr··'fril 'frilt1t'tz''fr'l 'frilt'fribt'frl IJW.. 'friW'*U 'fribt'fribt ~
2

2

1

2

Tuesday,Decernber26, 1995

2

WELLSTON, OH
POINT PLEASANT, WV
HUNTINGTON, WV
GALLIPOLIS, OH

NITRO, WV
PROCTORVILLE, OH
ATHENS, OH
BELPRE,OH

WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST!

,;Your Hometown Pharmacy"

lARGE SELECTION

I

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OUR COMPLETE STOCK

NICE SELECTION OF

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CLOSEOUT OF SELECTED

AMERICAN GREETINGS

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Atlantic Diwislon
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Holida~ Entertaining!

AL·LCHRISTMAS TRIMS

RUFFLES POTATO CHIPS
9 oz.

REG. $1.99

ALL VARIETIES

2 LITER

COKE, DIET COKE
OR SPRITE

79c

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

COKE, DIET COKE, SPRITE

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For Holiday Entertaining!

TROPHY NUTS
12 Oz. Cashew Halves Both 20% More
13~ Oz. Mixed Nuts
Bonus Sizes

2FOR

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BOOKS offers • wondrrful
of book~ for yur round hmdv tn)oym~n l'
~d(tUon

Quality Choice I'll"
40 Count Foam

7JI

12

1
12
12

~ 20
~tXJ

2
75
K

12
10
5

11
14
19

4RO
417
208

85
10
15

B
I~

n

11 5
Ill
161

f.ll.

Gil

7
9

708

5

654

I5

17
7 17
. 4 2]

.292
292
.148

105
10 5
15

680
621
l1b

11

II

8

704

14 .440

7

7

Pucific Division

Scauk ..

Sacramento
LA Lakers
Porthuul ..
Golden State
LA Cl1ppc=rs .

17
ll

~

y

11
II I)
II 14
10 II
10 16
II

II

' ·'
'"
400
7
440

6

J8S

7l

Monday's scores
San 'Anlomo 105, Phoenix 100
Orlando 92, Huustou 90

8

I M.t5S.tdlu:&gt;etts (58)
2 K ~ nluc k y (JJ

'Memph1s( l )
4 Kansas.

5 CINCINNATI (IJ
0 George town
7 Connec ltl:ul( l)
K V t ll ,uJU~,, .
9 Anzona

for New fear's Entertaining!

oz.

DELICIOUS
SNACK CRACKERS
8 oz.
•Garden Vegetable
•Wheat

9-1 1.224
!!·I l ,l.'i l
8- 1 l.liU

wm

2

4
'i
I

9
6

S
7

19

12
IJ
18
16
15
17
20
22
21

41, Boston College J9. Stanford ~ 9 . Vanderbilt :\6, Cahtorma JJ , MI AMI COH IOJ
J I, Wa shmgton St JO, Arkansns 29.
Mur)litnd 26 Penn St 21. Louisville 20.
Allburn 19 Georg111 Tech 17. Purdue 14,
Santa Cl.ua 12, Oklahoma St I I, TexilS
8, Iowa St 7, Ark.·Ltllle Rock. 6, OHIO
ST fl. DePaul 5. Oregon 5. N Carolina
St. J, Oklohoma 2, Alobnma I, Gcorge
Washington I.

NHLslate·

.
&gt;

625
56J
56J
'\75
188

Crntra l D1visicm
ll -Pm sbtJrgh . II l 0 1)89
CINCINNATI
7 9 0 418
Houston
7 y 0 438
CLEVELAND 5 II 0 J IJ
Jacksorl\'ll le . 412 0 210

er

]50
]11
J9H
294
211

rA

~]5

]16
JJ2
l77
1R4

••

407 J27
149 174
J4R J24
289 ]56
27l 404

+

Wtslem Division
~ -K amas

Cuy . IJ 1 0 81J .158
y 7 0 ~6.1 lZI
y-.~an D•cgo
Scalllc
R 8 {) '00 16l
Den ver .
8 g 0 )00 188
Oakl.md .
8 8 0 j()() ]48

241
121
166
Wi

lJ2

W L I flL ff I'A

x-Dallas
..... 12 4
y-Phtladelphm . 10 6
Washington .
6 10
NY Giants
. 5 11
Anz01m
4 12
Ct&gt;ntral
x-G recn Bay . II
)·Detrmr
10
Chtcago
9

0
0
0
0
0

?:'iO 4J5 291
61.'i ~ 1 8 D3
J75 ~26 359
Jn 290 ~40
250 275 422

Division
5 0 689 404 J l4
6 0 625 4J6 JJ6

7 0

~6J

W2

~60

R 8 0 :'iOO 41 2 J8~
7 9 0 418 238 JJ~

Mmnesnra.

Tnn•pa Bay

lnd•an~pohs

+

10, New England 7

Sunday's scores
Green Day 24, Putsburgh 19
Houston 28, Bultalo 11
Kansas City 26 Seattle 1
Jacksonville 24. CLEVELAND 21
Arlanln 28, San Fmn~,;tsco 27
Clucugo 20, Phllrulelphm 14
New Orleuns I 2. NY Jets 0
CINCINNATI 27, Mmneso rn 24
Washmg!on 20. Cnrolma 17
Denver J I, Oakland 28
Mmm1 41, Sr lou1s 22

Monday's score

Dall ns J7. Anzona l.l

J
10
II
14

Other rcuiving votes: Marquette''·

Hockey

0
0
0
0
0

DetroJt J7. T~mpa B:iy 10

·re"as Tech 51. Temple 46. New Memo

c
•

1593

150J
7-0 1.164
7- 1 I. ' 48
7-0 1,21U
7- I

K- 1 I .024
10 Iowa
10- 1 UH I
II North Cmolrnu . 8- 1 991
12 llhn ms
9-0
960
IJ Syracuse
9-0
915
14 Wak.eFor~sr
. 6-l
~R6
l.'i Utah . .
7-2
640
16 Georg1a...
8- 1 '164
17 MI SSISSII)JllSt
. 6- 1
)5 1
18 Mi ssoun
7-2
507
19 Mich1gan .
9-2
498
20 Duke .
7-2 .'12
21 VnguuuTCl:h
4-1
174
22 Vugmi:t
4·2
191
2.1 UCLA ..
6·3
142
24 Clemson
8-0
80
25 Tulsa
:'i-0
66

•Bacon •Cheese
•Zesty Nacho

•

7-0

L I &amp;

Saturday's scores

l.11st

.nJd &amp;

n

K-8tJffalo
10 6
y-lnd irmapohs
9 .,
y-M1:m11
9 7
Ncw England
6 10
NY Je ts
. I I)

Sun Otego Z7. N Y Grunts 17

The lull 25 r~ :um 111 The Assuc mred
Pl\: s.'' me n's college baskclball poll , ~llh
lust-place votes m parelllht!scs. reClltds
through Dec 24. total pomt s based on 25
p(IJIII !i for i l lirs l-p]al: C \Ole lhrough On~
poun lor n 2.'i th ·rlar.:e vote, .md prcv1ous
rat1k111g

:r...o

Eastern Division

:r...o

Westnn Division
x-San Frandsco II 5 0 688 457 25W
y-Ar lanta
? 7 0 56 ] 162 J49
St LoUJs . . ..7 9 0 4J 8 J09 4 18
Carohna .
7 9 0 4:\8 289 12:'i
New Orll'ans
7 9 0 4J8 119 l4H
x ..:hnchcd dms10n t!lle y-~,;hn r.: hcd play·
oft benh

AP Top 25 men's
college poll

{'tT,_•z••

DINNER PLATES ,BEVERAGE CUPS

NFL final standings

Ead•rn Division

Wednesday's games

AA Or W (Four Pack)

51 Count Foam ·

+

+

Football

Iwn

I. A Cli ppers at Char lolll;~ . 7 JO r m
Golden Siate at Washington. Rp 111
Mll watJkee at Mwnesota, 8 p m
PhJI.Jddphm at Phoen1x, 9 p m
Boston at Portland , 10 p m
Denver at Scm tle. I 0 p m •

sz4a

For Rolida, Entertaining

me the ch.mcc to return to my root s

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Milwallkce vs. Toromo at Hunullon,
OntllrtO, I.JO p m
New Jersey at Miami. 7 JO p.m.
LA . Clippers at At lanHl, 7 ~0 p m
Golden Sl:ate at Detrotl, 7 J Op m
Chtcago at lndtana. 8 p m
Vam:ouver at Houston, 8·]0 p m
Dallns &lt;~I Denver, 9 p m
Pur11and at Utah, 9 p m.
Boston at L A Lukers I0 10 p m
San Antomo a. t Sacramento, I() lO
prn

C Or D(lwo Pack)
Or 9 Volt

~OFF

Wednesday's games

11
II

" We go! a hulc bit of help yesterday, and we were able to take
advamage or It Now IS what we've
hecn playu1 g for al l year long , and
now the rea l season heg1ns lor us ,"
Aikman said .
W1lliams dosed IllS third year m
the league wnh a career day - nine

Donnan's totuliS at the \Vest Y1r ·
gmia school hold an overall record
of 64-21 and made live consccullve
appearances m !he NCAA DIVISI&lt;&gt;n
1-AA playoffs.
" I can'! say how excited I am
aboul whal I consider !he opporlunily of a li fetime," smd Donnan, who
is from Burlmglon, N.C "Gcorgw
has one of !he riches! foolhalllradi lions in the co untry and il also g1vcs

Ottawa at Buffalo, 7 lOp m
N Y. Islanders m Nt=w Jersey, 7. lO
pm
Toronto :ll Calgary . 9 10 p m
Phrladelph•~ at Edmonton, 9 JO p m
Analtctm at Los Angeles, 10 JO p m

10

L

19
17
17

FROM EVEREADY

CHOIC£ I,.,
BOOKS.

Buffalo a1 P111sburgh. 7 30 p m
Bos10n at N Y Islanders, 1 JO p m
Ouawa at N Y Rangers. 7 JO p n~
Momrea l at Washmglon, 7 ~0 p m
St Lotu s ,u Detroit. 7 ~0 p m
Dallas,,, Cht~ago 8 '0 r m
Calgary ul Vumo u v~: r 10 ~0 p m
Culuradu at S:m Jc.sc, 10 JOp 111

95

more wms

Marion gave the Cowboys a 140 lead in !he fir s! four mlnules ol
play when he p1ckcd off a pass by
Dave Kneg and returned 11 for !he
score Chns Bon10l added f1eld goals
for Dallas of 39. 23 and 24 yards.
larry Ce nters and Aeneas
Williams, lwo of Afll.ona's four Pro
Bowl seleclces, prov1ded what hlllc
relief !here was for the Cardmals (412).

Centers caught 12 passes lo sel
!he NFL season record for recepuons
by a running hack. He finished !he
game with I 01. surpassing Roger
Cra1g 's I0-ycar-old standard of 92.
And Willi am.s go! !he only An·
zona touchdown Wllh a 48-yard
mterceptl on return.
Cc mers set up Greg Dav1s · 2 1yard f1eld goal m !he second quaner
w111i a 29-yard catch of a pass from
Dave Kneg Dav1s' 23 -yard f1eld
goal in !he lh1rd penod followed
Centers' h1ghli gh1-ree l vaull over
Dallas· larry Brown. lurnmg a shorl
hallbac k pass from Garns on Hears!
mto a 16-yard ga1n to !he Dallas II.
" h reall y hasn't hit me ycl, due 10
the diS!ractwns of a diSappointmg
year." CentGrs said " It 's really kind
ol taken !he nm out of !he whole
lhing. ll's heen a blllcrswcel -eason "
Davis' second k1ck lightened !he
s&lt;orc to 24- 13 as 1hc Cardinal s wok
advantage of two Dallas turnove1s tn
the f1rs16 13 ollhc third quancr.
Butlhe Cowboys ' defense choked
off the ral ly and lo ok !he f1 ght oul of
the Cardmals

gm

2 .920
II

Midwest Division

(

Sl4.99
$5.99-$15.99

Donnan has led Marshall lo 64
victories and one Division 1-AA
national championship ( 1992) !he t
pas! six years. Marshall was nation al runner-up !his season.
·
"Marshall has been the dominant
l-AA leam of !he 1990s," Dooley
sa1d "Coach Donnan know s how lo
coach fnnlball , know s how lo wm,
and we arc all excited aboul whal he
can hnng lo !he Umversily of Geor-

aged aflcr lcad111g the Cowboys 10
their founh slralgiH season of 12 or

catches lor 203 yards.
They were hiS f~rst sconng catches since hiS 1993 rook1C year. when
he had lwo. Last season . William s
walchcd and rcl urncd kicks while
Al vm Harper look advantage of !he
allcn l1on pa1d 10 M1chael lrvm and
led !he NFL hy averagmg nearly 25
yards per duch
" It 's hccn a lon g season for me .''
Williams s.ud. "Try1ng 10 replace
him , and w11h all the cnllc1sm I''c
been takm g - I wasn'l b1g enough ,
I was too short and all the different
lhmgs people ha ve been saymg. You
go oul tom orrow and ask !hem how
big my hean IS ..

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

ENERGIZER BATTERIES

INSPIRATIONAL PUBLICATIONS

19

WESTERN CONFERENCE

• ''ant pnnt rd,tKtns for Jduhs Plus! A u lrction of inspinlional ud
to dchghtfully tl luurmd story devotional pa~rbiCJr.s! Olhrr gift items too'
boob for child ren, CHO ICE

!ill

Tonight's games

GIFTS
WITH
LASTING
VALUE
Adu.ll Giant Pnnt Bible
for many yu.s to come From ChiJdrm J Bibles

786

542
CLEVELAND . IJ 12 .120
Charlolle
. D 14 481
All wun .
.12 JJ 480
Detrou .
12 14 462
M1lwaukee . . .. 9 ll .175
Toronto .
8 20 .286

c

,,ft tlu.t w, I bra fnrnd

6

Central Division

Phllt!mx

PRICE

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.

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Mt. Dew

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L f.ll.

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Boston .
Wushmgton

2 PRICE

n

22

New Y ork .
MHmu ..

AMERJO\N GREE1lNGS

control of !heir destiny when Allanla
upset San Franci sco on Sunday.
"It's been what? Thirty hours? "
Dallas owner Jerry Jones said "So
we've had !he mosl dramati c change
conce ivable - from not even w1n ·
nmg !he d1viswn and having lo go
mlo the playoffs as a wild card lo
winning !he whole lhmg."
Jones ha s defended coach Barry
Sw1t zcr Since an Ill-fated dec1s1on to
run Sm11h on fourth -and-a-foollwo
weeks ago agamsllhe Eagles In !he
lnlCfllll , !here have been call s fo r
Sw11zer 's ouster, and A1kman has
smd he might con s tdcr retirement
after the season

- in !he Soulh "
Before going 10 Marshall. Donnan was offensive coordinator a!
Oklahoma from 1985-89. The Sooners won 49 gmncs in those five years,
includmg 27 s lr~ighl Big Eighl
games and !he 1985 national championship. HIS 1986 Sooners offense
led !he nalwn in rushmg and sconng
and finished second m lotal offense.
The 1987 squad led !he nation in
bolh lotal ullc nsc and rushing
offense.

Tonight's games

NBA standings
Iwn

I

Seleclio• Will,Y~ry I• Eacla Store!

Basketball
EASTERN CONFERENCE

1

made up his mind . He sa1d he was
firm . Allhal poinl all l could say was
!hal I respected his decision ."
Donnan was a top contender lo
replace !he fired Ray. Goff before
Dooley announced he h1red Mason
on Dec. 18.
After gelling !he call from Mason
on Monday, Dooley said he conlacled Georgia preSident Charles Knapp,
and he approved !he dec ision lo hire
Donnan.
"Coach Donnan had been a leadmg candidate 1n the in111al search and
I am tota lly conridenl he ~an do !he
job here al Georgia," ,Dooley sa1d.
"I have known Jim since 1967
when he was named mosl valuable
player aher quarterbacking h1s N.C.
Slale !cam lo a victory over our
Georg1a !cam 1n the L1ber1y Bowl. I
have followed his career as he served
un !he staff al Nonh Carolina under
my brother, Bill, for several years"

Scoreboard

IN OUR GIFT DEPARTMENT

(Single cards not included)

OFF

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) - Jus! hke
!hat, Glen Mason was ou l and Jim
Donnan was m at Georgia.
Georgia alhlcl 1c d~reclor Vince
Dooley go! a Christmas shocker
when Mason called 10 say he
changed his mind about coaching a!
Georgia and would remain al
Kan sas.
Mason , who led Kansas In ll SilO VIClory over UCLA in !he Aloha
Bow l m Honolulu on Monday, said
he made !he sudden switch m !he
mleresb of his family and career. He
did no! elaborate.
"I profoundly apologize and beg
forgiveness," he said.
Donnan, of Marshall , was lo be
introduced loday as Georgia's new
foolhall coac h
Dooley sa1d he lric(l In change
Mason's mind .
"[ lried lo gel him lo reconsider
or a! leas! wail until after !he game,"
Dooley said. "But he said he had

GIFT ITEMS

•Christmas Party Supplies ·Gifts and Ornaments
•Boxed Christmas Cartls

ground - and I knew I wasn '1 over
il," sa1d Sm11h, who broke a tackle
allhe two-yard hne before sconng.
Smnh. who had !he ru shmg lllle
wrapped up before !he game. has I 00
touchdowns for his career, tied for
ninth on !he NFL list His 96 rushing touchdowns, including all 25!hiS
season. have him fifth m !hal category, 10 behind career leader J1m
Brown.
The Cowboys ( 12 -4) earned
home-field righls throughout the
NFC playoffs after thinking the y
blew il bv losing lo Wash1ng1on and
Philadelphia m back-to-back games
earl:er this month. They regained

Donnan named Georgia football coach

For New Year's
Celebration
:=:::=======;

2 PRICE

mlerceplion return. The two !ouchdowns by Williams were his firsllwo
of !he season, and he fimshed !he
year with a flourish . catching 19
passes in his last three games, compared with 19 1n his firs! 13 games.
''I'm glad alllhe guys sco red, and
I didn ' I recommend lo anyone logo
out of bounds all he one-yard hne on
my accoun!," Smith said. Bul he
acknowledged !hal he wanted badly
lo pass !he record of 24 touchdowns
!hal John Riggins scored for Washmglon in 1983.
"The only lhmg I cou ld see was
!he goal line - !he slppes on !he

Aikman was much more encour-

'/ Fireworks

SELECTION WILL VARY
IN EACH STORE

1

MINERAL WELLS, WV
MILTON, WV
MIDDLEPORT, OH
WAVERLY,OH

/;&lt; ~ffi\'l: Seleetion

CLOSEOUT
FRAGRANCES
I

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - With the
clock windmg down in a lopsided
game, Emmill Smith of !he Dallas
Cowboys was gelling impatient
"You have a tendency lo think
!hal it 's never gomg 10 happen ."
Smilh said after selling an NFL
record for touchdowns in a season
wilh 25 when he scored standing up
with 5:49 left m a 37-13 Dallas viclory over !he Arizona Cardmals on
Monday mght
Earlier. Troy A1kman lhrew for
350 yards. with sconng slnkes of 25
and 48 yards lo Kevin Williams. and
Brock Marion scored on a 32-yard

'

HURRICANE, WV
WINFIELD, WV
CHARLESTON, WV
SPENCER1 WV

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7 :

Smith among factors in·Cowboys' 37-13 win over Arizona
By MEL REISNER

PRICES IN EFFECT
DEC. 26TH THRU DEC. 31 sr, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1

Transactions
Baseball
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Agreed to
terms wrth I:J•Ily Rtpk.en, 1nlle lder. on a
m1nor-lcague ~unrrac r
BOSTON RED SOX Agreed to tcnns
wnh Dwayne Hosey. outfielder. on a twoyear contract
MINNESOTA TWINS Agreed to
terms wllh Dave Hollins, thml bascmon,
on a on~-yc.1r conlmcl
TEXAS RANGERS · Agreed to term ~
w11h Bobby W111 , p11cber. on a one·year
comr.u.:t

Nalional Leagul'
ST LOU IS CARDINALS Agreed to
terms wuh Ron Ganr, otJtfu: ldcr, on ;1
five -year wntracl and Andy Benes. plldl·
cr. o.&gt;n lliWo-year contract

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Basketball
Nalional Baskttholl Association
C HARLOTTE i-fORNETS l' l ·• ~e d
Khaht.l R..-cvcs. gtJ;ud . on tht' ltiJUred lts l
S1gRt.-d Curey Beck. guard
PH ILAI&gt;ElPH lA 76crs Act1 Villcd
Richard Dumas. forward. from the injtJred
hsl Released Trev{n Wilson. lorward
SAN ANTON IO SPURS · Acttvated
DrmJ Lohau5, fllrward, from th~ IOJU!cd
hsr Placed Dell Demps. guard. on 1hc IllJured hst

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For the Rite Aid Pharmacy near
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Beverage ilems plus applicable !axes and depos1ls.
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�Page

8 • The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December

26, 1

·: Tuesday, December

26, 1995

The Dally Sentinel • Page .9

:·DAR tours Pomeroy Library .
Members of the Return Jonathan
: . ·Meigs Chapter. Daughters of the
: · American Revolution . were given a
· tour of the 'Mc•gs County Public
Library. Pomeroy. by tour guides
Norma Hawthorne and Kristi Eblin
dunng their December meeting at the
library.
·
Mrs. Eblin said the Pomeroy Public Li brary dates back to 1914 when
the building was completed with
Carnegie Foundation funds . The
Middleport Library was completed in
I'I 12 als o with Carnegie funds. When
the sc hool diStricts combined in
1966. she sa1d. the lihraries became
one administrative unit known as the
Mc1gs Local School District Library .
In August of 1980 the library became
a county library and became known
as the Mc1gs County Public OIStrtct
Library. In September. 1989, the
library moved from the Carnegie
building into the new facility.
Mrs. Eblin noted that county
library plans include a lihrary to be
located at Racine in the near future .
The average daily circulation at
the Pomeroy Library is approximately 600, Mrs. Eblin reported .
Library holdings total approximately 55,599 volumes and includes a
genealogy section where Meigs
County census records arc housed

with a reader-printer available .
i
The Meigs Library subscribes to
local newspapers and most popular
magazines. the tour guides said . Also
h9used is a large collection of back
issues to assist students with research
projects. A collection of large print
books is available for those woth
restricted vision and patrons with
physical disabilities or limited vision
may re ce ive the Talking Book equipment directly from the library. Chil dren 's programming is av ailable
throughout the year as well as during
the summer.
Another important feature of the
library is the availability of a group
of volunteer tutors to help adults wtth
readin g problems. Trained tutors and
matenals arc available free of charge.
Homebound Service , Books hy Mail
and Bookmobile Service arc also
important services offered by the
Library, Mrs. Eblin said. All afea resident s may register as patron s of the
library. free of charge, by completing
the required form. The Return
Jonathan Mei gs Chapter, OAR,
placed the newly published four volume edition of the Revolutionary War
Patriot Index in the Meigs Library.
Mi ss Eleanor Smith donated an
Ameri can llag to the Pomeroy Public Lihrary to he placed in an indoor

location .
Mrs. Patricia Holter, reg~nl, conducted the business meeting at which
time delegates and alternates to the
OAR State Conference and the DAR
National Centennial Congress were
elected. For the State Conference,
Patricia Holter. Pauline Atkins, Anna
Cleland and Rae Reynolds were
elected as delegates; alternates were :
Mary Powell , Clotine Blackwood For
the National Centennial Congress,
delegates elected were: Rae Reynolds
and Pauline Atkins ; alternates elected were : June Ashley and Grace
Warner.
Mrs . Rae Reynolds, chapter
National Defense Chairman. presented a review of the publication,
"The Last Great Victory: The End of
World War II" by Stanley Weintraub .
Weintraub also produced a commemorative study of Pearl Harbor Long Day's Journey Into War: Dec.
7, 1941, which was widely and justifiably acclaimed when published
four years ago.
The Last Great Victory is more
than simply a fine book, Mrs.
Reynolds said; it is one of the best
single studies on an important aspect
of the Second World War written by
~n American historian in the past I0

•

WICKS
HAULING
(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
HIOO
650-1234
TOUR LIBRARY - DAR members touring
1
the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy and

years.
Researched from informat ion
mined from a mountain of global primary and secondary sources, The
Last Great Victory is an intricately
detailed , day-by-Jay, rig orously
chronological history of the last
month of World War II. The author 's
most notable achievement is to
enable us to understand why using
the atom1c bombs was an understandable decision, reached by

ed in a display at the library during
the month of December. Patricia
Holter displayed and talked about
two instruments in her collection - a
dulcimer and an African Thumb
P1ano.
Officers and Commillee Chairmen
will meel at the Pomeroy, Public
Library on January 12 to complete
yearly reports. No regular meeting
will be held in January.

Mrs. Mary Rose chaired a presentation on music boxes. Members
also broughttheiT favorite mus1c box
or sharing. The boxes will be includ-

Who is eligible for Social Security benefits for the terminally ill
By ED PETERSON
Social Security manager in Athens
Caring for a terminally ill patient
can be a difficult and stressful task.
The stress can be eased, somewhat,
if the patient has hospice coverage
under Medicare. The special service,
available only once in a lifetime, pro- .
vides the highest degree of comfort
care and convenience to the patient .
and his/her family.
The hospice benefit provides cov- ·
erage for a variety of services not !
usually covered under Medicare. ·
There arc no deductibles and
Medicare pays for services provided
every day by a hospice . This benefit
. also permits a hosp1ce to provtde
appropriate personal care, includmg
homemaker services and counselmg.
In other words, it's the special type
. of care that a terminally ill person
needs.
A hospice may be a public agency
or a private organization that provides care for terminally ill patients.
It is not a hospital. The terminally ill

patient can be cared for in their home .
or as an inpatient at the hospice. The
hospice also provides respite care for
the patient. so the home care giver,
usually a spouse or relative, can have
a few days off. Respite care is limited to no more than five days in a
row. There is no limit to the number
of times resptte care can be used during an illness.
A terminally ill patient can qual ify for the hospice benefit and
Medicare Part A will pay for hospice
care if all three of the following conditions arc met. I. A doctor certifies
that the patient is terminally ill. 2.
The patient chooses to receive care
from a hospice instead of a hospital.
3. Care is provided by a Medicare participating hospice program .
In addition to doctor and nursing
services , the hospice provides other
Medi care covered services including
medications, home health aide and
homemaker visits, medical social
services. medical equipment, shortterm inpatient care (including respite

care), and counseling for the patient
and the care givers.
The hospice benefit covers a seven-month period. This time can be
continuous or, if the patient chooses,
may be used in two 90-day periods.
and then a 30-day period. If necessary, this time can be extended. Tile
patient may stop the hospice benefit
period, return to regular Medicare
coverage, and then start the hospice
benefit again, if another benefit period is available.
The patient pays $5 toward each
prescription, and 5 percent of the
Medicare-allowed rate for respite
care, approximately $5. If a patient
needs treatment for a condition not
.related to the terminal illness,
Medicare continues to help pay for
all necessary covered services under
the standard Medicare benefit program .
If you are caring for a terminally
ill person and have any questions
about Medicare and the hospice
benefit, visit or write the Athens

Social Security office. You may also
call our toll-free number, 1-800-7721213. Our busiest times arc early in
the week and early in the month. If
possible, it is best to call at other
times .
Because Social Security touches
the lives of everyone, directly or
indirectly, it has generated a number
of scams from those who recognize
that many people simply are not

Securi ty record. or get a Social
Security number for a child for a fee.
These services are not on ly free from
Social Security, but they can generally be obtained just as easily as they
can from the advertiser.

aware of their rights and responsibilities under the program. They
become prime targets for those who
pitch convenience and economic
security to sell them services they
can obtain free from Soc1al Security.
Typical scams are those that use
"official" letterhead stationary offering to provide a replacement for a
lost or stolen Social Security card,
have a name change on a Social

rI ------------, Under New Ownership
Don and Beth Stivers

II

Tony~

11

Carry Out

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

I

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1

Open New Years Eve until 8 p.m.

4.9°/a APR

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• Power Brakes

•Custom Cloth Interior
· W~IEqui~l

ISave '21061

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•Automatic &lt;Nerd&lt;ive
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• TiH steering
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• 4 Captain Cha~rs

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p~

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Berth Sea~

ISave '29471

•Chrome Rear
Stepllomper
• Aluminum Wheels
• WeU EQIJilped!
1+o Doc Fees. Oeliwted'

Usl"""' .

.. 120)111
T"' PoOeo Oisalull . . • $1,830

Lisl Poce ............ $22,480
()pion ~ D"""" . . • $8!IJ
TOO\ Pooeo Disoottll .. • $1,640

Saie Pri"'

Sale Price

BRAND NEW '96 BUICK REGAL SEDAN
• Power Brai&lt;es
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1 Saw'183o 1

$19,950
BRAND NEW '96 CHEVY BLAZER 2DOOR 4x4
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• Power Brakes · Rear Locl&lt;ing
•AMJFM Stereo Differential
· Delay Wipers · Well Equipped!
·Consolo

Bra~es

1Save 12530I

No Doc Fees. Oehera:r •

PUBUC NOTICE
Saturday, December 30,
1995, at 10:00 a.m. the·
Home National Bank will
offer lor aale at public
auction on the Bank
Parking lot the following:
1967 Kenworth Model 204
Serial 11204082
1984 Plymouth Reliant ·
_Serial
#1 P3BP21 C8EG 175264
1985 Mercury Lynx
#1 MEBP5424FW631478
1988 Hyundla Excel GL southeast corner of a two
sere tot formerly owned by
Serial
George Woodard, which lo
#KMHLF22J1JU436648
1990 Dodge Daytona the above described lot;
thence north 3·112 degrees
Sorlal
eaat 2 rods and 20 links
#1 B3XG24K3LG419118
1994 Pontiac Sunblrd along the David Archer line
to the center of the road;
Serial
thence south 15 dagreu
#1 G2JB148XR7578734
west t2 rods t2 links along
1987 Ford Bronco II
the county road; thence
#1 FMCU14T5HUA36729
460D
Farmatl south 23 dagreaa aut 6
rods and 24 links down Wolf
International Farm Tractor
Pen
Creek to the school lot;
. The terma of the aale are
· cash. Home Netlonel Benk thence north 53 degrees
· roservea the right to bid at east 1t rods and tO links
; [he sale or to remove any or down the creek along the
' all Items from ihe ·iale et school lot to the place of
beginning, containing 7/20
: any time.
of
an acre, more or leas.
•(12) 12,14,19,2t,26,28;6TC
Reference Deed: Volume
•
329, Page 459; Volume 300,
Page 233; Volume 224, Page
:Public Notice
671; Volume 203, Page 653,
'•: IN THE COMMON PLEAS Meigs County Deed
:COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY, Records.
.
OHIO
EXCEPTING from the
. · THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
obova described real estate,
.
SAVINGS
.96 of an acre conveyed to
"COMPANY,Ptalntlll,
Charlie D. and Naomi G.
Smith by warranty Deed
.
vs.
dated May 12, 1989 and
. GARY A. JONES, ET AL.,
·
Defendanta
more particularly daacrlbed
In Volume 314, Page 273 of
Case No. 93-CV 280
the Meigs County Deed
LEGAL NOTICE
Records.
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
AudHor'a Parcel No. t4·
REALESTATE
· As Sherltl of Meigs 010t6
Said real estate was
¢ounty, Ohio, I hereby offer
for sale at 10:00 a.m. on appraised at 22,000.00.
Sale of said real eatata to
-friday, Jan. 26, 1996 A.D.,
;pn the front _steps of the be lor not te11 than two·
"'alga ·C~JuntV Courthouae, thlrda . (2/3) the aforesaid
"Pomeroy,
Ohio,
the appraised value. Cash In
)allowing described real hand on date of sale.
Said sale Ia subject to
-.istete:
approval by the Common
~- The following real estate
elluated In the Township of Pleas Court, Meigs County,
Salisbury, County of Meigs Ohio.
:and state of Ohio: Baing In
James-M. Soulsby, Sheriff
-section 35, Town 2, Range
Meigs County, Ohio
) 3 of the Ohio Company'• (t2)t2, t9, 26, 3 tc
.Purchase, bounded end
"described as lollowo:
Public Notice
:Seglnning at the aouthweet
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
-eorner of a lot formerly
STATE OF OHIO
:Owned by D.W. Archer In
DEPARTMENT Of
-said Section 35, thence
TRANSPORTATION
)Iouth 53·113 degrees weet
Columbus, Ohio
-11 rods and tO links; thence
Office of Contracts
'north 23 degrees west 27
:rods 3 links to a stake; Legal Copy Number 96-029
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
1hence south 87·tl2 degreea
jtast 20 rods and 18 links to Mailing Date 12/15195
Sealed proposals will be
~he west line of the said
from
all
p .w. Archer lot ; thence accepted

• The annual Christmas party of
' the Modern Woodmen of America,
: camp IO'I(XJ. was held recently at
:the Coolville Lions Club.
Martha Elliott, Alfred, opened
; with prayer. The group followed
:with the Woodmens Creed and
:singing. Santa had treats for the chil'dren who then thanked the camp by
:singing "Up on the Housetop."
: The camp's "Good Neighbor"
:activtty for 1995 is construction of
:an access ramp the disabled into the
·coolVIlle Area Museum. Their
:..Care and Share" activity involves
:distribution of canned food, fruit and
:candy to the needy.
· The 1995 recipient of the MWA
:community Service Award were
'Robert Eichenberg and Tum Grady
of New Marshfield and Robert B.

TOlL FREE 1-800·822·0417 • 372·2844

344·5947 • 422·0756

Tuesday· Saturday: 9 om· 9 pm

Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY

...

112/tfn
.. .

.... ·- - ........ -,

UP·TO-DATE

SPORTS

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

STOCKS

Garages • Replacement Windows

i

AND MORElli

Room Additions • Roofing

t

1·900.378·1800

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

614-992-7643

Call

Ell. 3140
$2.99 par min.
Mllflt be t8 yre.
Touch tone phone
required.
Serv·U (614)645-6434

$300&amp;

up
Lessons on
Piano,
Guitar &amp; Drums
6g N. Locust St.
Cheshlre,Oh.
614·367·0302
Roger Walker
11124/9511 mo.

prequatlfied bidders at the
Office of Contracts, Room
118 of the Ohio Department
of
T ransportation,
Columbus, Ohio, until 10:00
a.m. Wednesday, January
10, 1996 for improvements
In:
Meigs County, Ohio lor
Improving sections MEG·
689-0.000; VIN-689·2 .446,
State Route 689, by
resurfacing with asphalt
concrete.
"The date set lor
completion of this work
shall be as set forth in the
bidding proposal." Plans
and specifications are on

lila In the Department of
Transportation.

JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(12) 26 (1) 2 2TC

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Henry of Amesville .
Camp officers for 1996 arc Garner Griffin, Alfred; John Breedlove
and George Gilbert, Coolville; D.C.
Elliott, Guysville, and Donald Dunfee. Little Hocking.
The group moved to the
Coolville Area Museum in the Old
Town House to view a display of
toys, books, pictures and various
treasurers of the past including an
I R80's Christmas tree decorated
with popcom,tensil. colored trinkets
and candles .
Members showed toys and gifts
g•ven to them or their ancestors and
told of related historical events in the
Coolville area.
· Names were drawn for prizes and
cards and fruit plates were taken to
shut-ins.

Columbus, Ohio
Office of Contracts
Legal Copy Number 96-027
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Date t2/t5195
Sealed propoaale will be
accepted
from
all
prequalified bidders at the
OHlce ot Contracts, Room
It 8 of the Ohio Department
T ransportatlon,
o1
Columbus, Ohio, until 10:00
a.m. Wednesday, January
10, 1996 lor improvement&amp;
in :

Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
Vinton Counties, Ohio lor
improving sections ATH-32·
0.000 and various, State
Route 32 and various,
Village of Albany, by
mowing.

Public Notice

.

Public Notice

"The date set for
completion of this work
shall be as sat forth in the
bidding proposal." Plans
and Speclficatl'ons are on
file in the Department of
Transportation.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(12)26 (1)2 2TC

Members of the Alfred United
'Methodist Women held !'1eir Chnst:mas supper and gift exchange on
;Dec. 19 at the church. Thelma Hcn:derson asked the blessing before the
•supper.
: During a brief business meeting.
:68 friendship calls were reported for
·November and December. Names
;were d~awn for secret pals, servings

and programs.
Nellie Parker had the prayer calendar and chose Judith Dye who
works in laity in Nebraska. The society signed a birthday card for her
and Christmas cards for Emma Lou
Finch, Alma Swarts, Eleanor
Boyles, Kate Rodehaver, Janet
Evans and June Stearns. Mrs. Park-

6°

1212311 mo

....q ··· ·· ·

dine out on Jan. 2.
WHO'S WHO
Desiree Clemons, Shade, a junior
at Meigs High School, was recently
named to the Who's Who of High
School Student in America.
ALFRED NEWS NOTES
The church and community

8. D. CU NS1'R/ICTION

Equ1pment

Siding. P TJrdtes·
DN~·s. Home

Dutributed bJ

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.
water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate In a free , no obligation. compreh ensive water

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call RainSoft at 992-4472 or 1-800-606·3313
to set up your free water analysis. 1~"""
J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

g49·2512

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
Cheaper Rates
WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

SAT., 6:30 P.M.

$20.00/HR

12 Guage

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(6141 949·3013 Phone
(614) 949·2018 FAX

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32 00/HR

Factory (hoke Only
Bashan Building

t___::::·::::::·~------J(!6t~4~);59~4:·2~00~~~-N~~~~~T~--J· i•L.----------~'~·'2r71~''-"~"

BINGO

Laurel Limousine Service

Racine American

"Ride in a Chariot of Luxury"

Legion #602
Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Door80pen
4:30P.M.
Bring ad for Free Card
Phone 949-2044
949-2685
1112M511 mo

F-REE
Pick·Up discarded
washers, dryers, not
water tanks, stovas,
furnaces, and any
metal material.
Call 992-4025
between 8 am - 8 pm
. Mon thru Sat.

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

Water CoMMioal•t
Bob Davia
oSolteners oflltara

•Rever•• Osmosis

44lHl72t ·
9104 St. Rl 7 So., Gllllpolla

Public Notice

WATKINS
PRODUCTS

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
Solo &amp; Reliable Night Out on the Town
Owned &amp;
Service with

~c~::.rv

0

(Stock up on your
holiday baking
supplies}

Operated by

(614) 992•4279 Jo~~.:~~::~

&amp;

614·949·3027

33058 SA 33 • Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
12111U1mo

11/ 2919511

One· Stop Complete Aulo .Body Repair

Rt. 33

limestone &amp;Gravel, :
Septi' Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.:
Reasonable Rates :
Joe N. Sayre .

Ohio

SAYRE TRUCKING :

614-992-6223

Chuck Stotts

Free Estimates

•

Insurance Work Welcome
.rj-~ ; ...
• ......,..,.. ..

1 •

rl _~J'

t.

- ,-

-...~

State

'. ~-·­ Darwin,

· - _...ot - ·

614-742-2138

10/21/Mitfn

110\\':\HI)
E\C\\'.\Til\(;

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

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,

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

Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

,~~~~''t

mo. pd.

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION-:

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Purchase of School Buses
For Free estimate call 949-2512
lor
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
REASONABLE RATES
"""""
OF EDUCATION
Sealed proposals
will be
received
by the Board
of ,..----------------------------------,
Education of the Eutern
MODERN SANITATION
Local School District of
POMEROY, OHIO
Reect.vlll,, Ohio, by 2:45
·
Trash
removal
·Commercial or residential.
p.m. on January 2, and at
that time opaned by tho
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Treasurer of aald Board as
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rales.
provided by law lor aa many
as (3) 7t·72 passengsr
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
school buses according to
specifications of said board
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal&amp; Water
of education.
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Speclfl cations and
instructions to bidders may
DOLL'S TALE - The sto·
be obtained at the office of
ries· that toys could tell. Here,
992-3954 or 985-3418
the Treasurer, Eastern High
Ida Livingston tells the history
School building.
and travels of her doll, a gift to
A certified check payable
to the Treasurer of the
her when a child from her par41bove Board of Education
ents in Cottageville, W.Va., at
or a satisfactory bid bond
the annual Christmas party of
executed by the bidder and
STATE AT. 124
the Modern Woodman of
the surety company In en
WELLSTON. OHIO
America Camp I 0900.
amount equal to submitted
Wrecker
Service
(614) 384·6212
with each bid.
Said Board of Education
Lump &amp; Stoker
reterves the right to waive
Hours:
lnlormalltlea to accept or
er th anked all who worked to make reject any and all or parta of
7-4 Mon . thru Sat.
the meeting a success and those who · any and all bids.
Heal Vouchers Acc epted
No bids may be
(614) 992-6643
took the gifts to community shut-ms. withdrawn for at teaat thirty
We Will Deliver
23 Cottage Drive
Present were Rev. Sharon Haus- (30) deya alter tho
2 To n Minimum
Middleport, Oh. 45760
man, Florence and Richard Sp_cncer, scheduled closing time lor
Call for Quote
IVMI51mo.
racalpt
of
blda.
Nina Robin son, Martha Poole, Sarah
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Caldwell. Martha and Warren
OF EASTERN LOCAL
END YOUR
ElliOtt, Mrs . Henderson, Osie and
SCHOOL DISTRICT
TREE TRIMMING
Clair Foil rod. Mrs. Parker. Charlotte
Eloise Boston Treasurer of
LONELINESS NOW!!!
Eallern Local Schools
AND REMOVAL
and Wanen Van Meter.
There is someone for
389QO.SR7
everyone. Whatever
Light Hauling,
Reedsville, Ohio 45n2
your preference
4, 11, t8, 26
Shrubs Shaped
Nationwide or Right Nelct
Door.Don't
Waste
•
and Removed
Anoiher Minute
extend sympathy to the family of
Call Nowlll
Misc. Jobs.
Floyd T. Avis who died Dec. 10.
1·900-255-5454
· Carl Dorst returned from Holzer.
Ext. 4375
$2.99 per min. Must De 18 yrs.
Medical Center on Dec. 18. He will
Touch-tone Phone Required
return to the hospital for surgery latSeiV-U (619) 645-6434
'
1ZNIII1 mo.
er. .
June and Rick Avis and family
You Don't Hove To Loo• (or
returned to the area after spending
To Spy I he 8e51 8L"YI In
several years in Florida.
thr Cloni(red1 .
Don't get stung by high priCes!
Shop the classified section.

BRAMHIINC.

Car/Heavy Tntck
Repair

Bill Slack

.

I mprovemertts,
Remmleling,
Add•On :, , flnofing. ·
S utisfnr 1iou
GuurnutPed
Bill Dvt•rfer
(614) 992-2979

The

)'-----Society scrapbook
•CHATTER CLUB
; The Chatter Club Christmas par~ty and meeting was held at the home
'of Isabelle &lt;;ouch.
: Members played bingo and the
hostess s~rved dinner. Christmas
gitis were exchanged by each member.
: This year's officers w~re reelected for 1996 and pl~ns were made to

Free Estimates
Qtudity Work

Water
~ Tre~t1nent

'

RARftVILL.
ROUSE
REG. HOURS
Mon.·Wed. 11&gt;-4:30
Fri.·Sat. 10.4:30
Closed
Thurs. &amp; Sun.
102 East Main
Pomeroy
992·7696

614-949-2512

21 12192/tln

~
~

GUITARS

Middleport. Ohio
Party all
New Years Weekend
Live Music
Friday, Saturday &amp; Sunday
Featuring
"THE CHAIN GANG"
Fri. &amp; Sat. 9:30pm till 1:30am
2.00 cover
"NEW YEARS EVE PARTY"
Sunday, Serving
Beer and Coolers
Free Food &amp; Party Favors
Live Music
9:30pm til 1:30am
Cover $10.00 per person
$15.00 per couple
Open Christmas Day 6:00pm

( No Sunday Calls)

-"""" --

-~

STAR GUITAR

Public Notice

IT -· Ro~~d -

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

FlllliiCE

Alfred UMW hold Christmas dinner

•

...., Vilflin!q.·'t• " ~ Olds,
Pollficx, lluidr, Geo an/"
Custom Mrn Dealer.

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbiny
• Roo_fing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·62t5
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

Public Notice
south 2·tl2 degrees west t8
rods to the place of
beginning.
Excepting therefrom a
parcel of land heretoforo
coveyed to Charley DaJ'·
.Smith and Naomi Smith by
John F. Husaell and Mary E.
Hussell by deed recorded In
Vol. 160, Page 7 of the
Meigs County Deed
Records, aald excepted
parcel being described aa
follows; Beginning at the

Woodmen meet
.
~for Christmas party
0p1on Pi&lt;g. o,scouro

•DrivO"s Slle Air Bag
•Rear Ann-Loci&lt; Brai&lt;es
•Power Steering

Public Notice

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

· Cuotom Building a Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
i614i 992·2753

~Modern

NTHS ON SELECIED MODELS
'-----------1

614-992-3470
'

sharing the history of music boxes were, from left:
Grace Warner, Bernice Carpenter, Abby Stratton,
Mary Rose, Anna Cleland and Frances Roberts.

responsible leaders. seeking to end a
terrible conflict quickly, while saving
as many American lives as possible.
Following the meeting , members
were entertained with Christmas
music by Mrs . Laura Gutherie at the
piano and vocally.

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

·-· . - YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

·-

(Lime Stone Low Rales)

992·2269

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp; '
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios '
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call Wayne Nell 992·
4405
For Free Estimates
I

..

rl

4/13195

~(

I/
RACINE
.

GUN CLUB
Gun Shoots
Sun l pm
12 gauge

Factory Choke Only
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

FR~E ESTIMATES
985-4473

.

..

�.Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December 26, 1995

,,

'

J ~Tu~e~s~d~ay~·-De~ce~m~be~r~26~·~1~99~5~----------------------------~P~o=m~e~ro~y~·~M=i~d~dl~e~po~rt~,~O~h~io~------------------~T~h~e!D=a~llylSe~n=tl~n:ei~·~P~~Zge~11
: . ALLEY OOP
,
.&lt;
,..,
NEA Crossword Puzzle

"

• !

~·

,,'
....,.

320

ANNOUNCEMENTS

PHILLIP
ALDER

Mobile Homes
for Sale

: 30

Announcements

Spec1al year end reduc11on
2Bx60 Brookwood dtsplay, 3bed
room, 2baths, den wffireplace, 2X6
walls, tnsulated wtndows, plush
carpet. oak cabtnets Prtce reduced $4,000 Mountam State
Homes, Pt Pleasant, WV 304
675-1400

Look 1ng for old piCtures taken at
C Claybank's Speedway Pomeroy, to make cop1es of call 614
992 7349

.40

Giveaway

2 Year ld Cocker Span1ef To
Gooa Home Has Papers Neu
tered 614 446 7221 , 614 245

Beautdul long haned black and
while Angora- type cat, neutered
dectawed and housebroken 6l4
992 7574

Console ste reo w1th arnlfm rad1o

330

...

good shape Ca n be seen at 665
Beech Street, M1ddleport

Free. part English Setter pupp1es,
4wks old, to good home 304-675--

"She gave me these rnstead of the

6588

nose harr tnmmer I asked for

"

&amp;0

POSITION AVAILABLE IMME
DIATELY
Are You An Advocate For Ch1 ld
ren? Do You EnJOY Flex1b1hty And
Vanety In Your Work? Apply For
Ow Pos1t10n As COORDINATOR
OF THE GALLIA JACKSON
AND MEIGS FAMILY AND
CH ILDREN FIRST COUNCILS
Respons1ble For The Coordtna \lon. AdmmJstratton, And lmple
mentation 01 Ptann1ng ActiVllles
Of The ColJnc1ls Also Respons1
ble For Coordmauon And Admm
1stra110n 01 Funct1ons 01 The Gal
l1a, Jackson And Me1gs Clust9fs

R ck. Pea rson Auct1on C
Ill! t1me auctioneer, co
auct1on
serv 1ce
L1cens ed
#66,0 n1o &amp; We st V1rgm 1a 304
773 5785 o, :ll4 773 544 7

90

Wanted to Buy

Ant1ques . collectables. estates
R1venne Ant1ques Russ Moore
owner 614 992 2526

Qualtltcauons Masters Degree
Preferred In Behavtoral Health
Public Admm1strat1on, Education,
Or Related F1eld Excellent Wn t.
ten And Oral Commun1catton
SK1IIs As Well As Knowledge Of
Galha, Jackson, And Me1gs Ch1ld
Ser\lll'lQ Sys tems Experience
Wofklng In One Or More Chi ld
Serv1ng Systems Preferable
Knowledge Of Issues Allectlng
Chi ldren And Fam1l1es Knowl ·
edge 01 Developmental Is sue s
And Needs OJ Chtldren Excellent
Organ1zat1onal Skills Area A
Requ1s11e

Cle an La le Model Cars
Trucks 1987 Model s Or Newer.
Smith Bu1cK Pont1ac 1900 East
ern A.;en1.. ~ Gall1pohs

J &amp; D s Auto Parts Buy1ng sal
vage veh1 cle s Sell1ng parts 304
773-5033
Top Pnces Pa1d Old U S Co1ns,
Sll\ler Gold D1amonds. All Old
Colle Ct ible s PaperwellJhfs Etc
M T S Co1n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue Gallipoli s, 614-446-2842
Used lurntture ant1ques one
p1ece or complete es tates Osby
Marun, 614-992 7441

Excellent Frtnge Benel1t Package
Salary Range - Low To M1d $30's
Submll A Resume And Three lei·
ters 01 Reference To Search
Committee, Fam1ly And Children
F1rst Councils, PO Box 514 Gal lipOlis, Oh1o 45631 By Wednes
day, January 3, 1996 EOE

Wanted To Buy Lillie T1kes Toys,
614-245--5887
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Business
Opportunity

1NOTICEI
OHKJ VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bustness w1th people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
matl until you have m"llesltgated
the offertng
Investment Property In Galhpohs,
OWnef May Be Able To Help Wtth
Some F1nanc1ng Call 614 -797
4345 Aher 6 PM

Farms for Sale

450

110

ROOFERS/LABORERS needed 1n
Columbus area Work avatlable
every day, weather perm1ttmg
AGENT AVON SALES
Earn $8 $t5 1Hr At Work Home Weekends optional Must have
Benefl! sl D1scountst F tex1ble reliable transportation Tra"llel and
wor11 partner a plus For more ·mHoursI No Inventory Reqwed
rormatlon call 614 -529 -0303 bet1 800 7t.2 4738
ween 6pm 1Opm

REAL ESTATE

Help Wanted

·310

Homes for Sale

2 Bedroom Bnck Home In
1
poll s, In cludes Garage Cen
A11. LR, K&lt;1chen And Ba1h, 61
446 8578

-;;;~;;;;;;;-;;~~bu;b.d;~~~

tHICK THI CWIIfiiDS FOR 11 YOUR KillS!

Nme room hou se bur
newly remodeled
bath, new carpet1ng, large
lot, $28,000 614 -992· 6173 0
614 992 2015
alter 5pm
-

Three bedroom home 1n coun try,
Wh1tes H1ll Rd. Rutland, ono bath,
In -ground pool, 614-992-5067

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1986 G randvrll e 14x70 2 Sed .
rooms F1replace To tal Gas Un derplnnmg,
16x 12
Deck
$11,500, 614 ·36].()429
l1m1ted Offer! 1996 doublew1d e,
3br. 2ba1h, $1799 down , $2751
month Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Hom es, Nttro
WI/ 304 755·5885
Prtce Buster! New 14x70. 2 or
3bt Only $995 down, $1951mon1h
Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nnro WV 304755·5865
Save S1 ,000 Spec1al reduction
on new 1996 Commodore 16x80,
3bedroom, 2baths Best buy m
town, mcludes deltvery &amp; set up
Mountain State Homes, Pt P1easan1, WV 304-675 1400.

You'll build o big nest egg when
you save with the clossifieds
•

Year end sale 28x60 Henderson,
3bedroom 2batt1s. great room WI
fireplace, plush carpet Btg reducuon for qu1ck sale, reduced
$5,000 Moun1a1n S1a1e Home~ Pt
Ploasan1, WV 304.875- 1400

Furnished

_ _ ___':R~o~o~m~s~---

Rooms lor rent or month
S1ar11n 9 at S120tmo Galha Horel
614-446-9580

730

Vans

+A

&amp; 4-WDs

t-----------ir-----------1
540

Miscellaneous

Sleep1ng rooms wtth cook1ng
Also tra iler space on ri\IOr All
hook· ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304·773-5651 MasonWV:

460

Space for Rent

Trailer Space For Rent OJ Whue
Ad, $100/Monlh. Days 614· 446
4111 Evemngs614-446 7157

lntertherm &amp; M11let "ob1le Home
m
Furnaces. Gas, Otl S. ElectriC In
Stock Large D1str1buter Buy Out
of New Mob1le Home Furnaces
Bank Fmanctng Ava1lable, Call
Bennetts Mobtle Home HTG &amp;
CLG At 614 446-9416 or 1-800·
872-5967

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

3pc hvmgroom su11e, $500. Con
sole lloor model TV, ltke new,
$200 304-675-1446
Appliances
Recond1t10ned
Washers Dryers, Ranges, Relr1
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Mayrag, 614 -446
7795
Automatic Kelv1nator Dishwasher,

2 Years Old, Whne &amp; Black,
$175, Mag1c Chef Elec~rc Range,
Not Very Old. Whtte Wtth Black
Fran~ $145 614-379- 9061
Country Furniture 304-675-6620
R1 2 N, 6m11es. PI Pleasan1. WV
Tues Sa! 9-6, Sun 11 -5
GOOD- USED APPLIANCEE
Washer s, dryers, refrtgerators,
ranges Skaggs Appltances. 76
Vme Street. Call 614-446-7398,
1-800-A99-3499

Mitchell Road Area, Gall1pol1s,
$310/Mo Water, SeptiC, Trash
Patd, Oeposii/Relerences 614 ·
643·2916 Alter 4 P.M

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home furntshmgs
Hours ~on -Sat 9-5 614-446
0322, 3 m1les out Bulavtlle P1ke
Free Delivery

N1ce 2 bedroom mobtle home m
Middleport, Oh, 614·992 5858

PICKENS FURNITURE
New /Used
304-675-1450

N1ce 2 Bedroom Mob1le Home For
Rent, 6 M11es Out State Route
218, Gallipohs, $210/Mo + Oe pOstt, References, We Allow Petst
614 44tHI172, 614-256-6251

Grey Used So la WHh A Wall RE
chner, Rocker Recliner &amp; love
Sear6 14 446 11 71

Two and three bedroom mobile
hLomes startmg at $240 -$300
sewer, water and trash mcluded,
614·992·2167

VI'RA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Oualny Household Fvrnuure And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carryt RENT 2-0WN
And layaway Also Available
Free Oel1"11ery W11h1n 25 M1les
Washer &amp; Dryer Matchtng Set
Kenmore $95 Each , Wh 1rlpool
Washer $125 Cur To $95, G E
Washer $150 Cui To $125,
Whir lpool Washer $95, Kenmore
Dryer Heavy Duty $95, May tag
Washer l1~e New $250, Kenmore
Washer Ltke New
Pnce Reduced To $205
Range 30 Inch White $95,
erator Adm1ral Almond ltke
$350, S1de By Stde Aelngerator
White. N1ce $350. G E Relngera
tor 19 Cu Ft Green $150, AU
These Are Fully liuaralnU&gt;edq
S~aggs Appttances, 76
Street, Galltpoll s 614-446- 7398
1-800-499 3499

Apartments
for Rent

Furntshed Efflctency, 607 Second,
GallipoliS, Shate Bath, $1651U1rl1
t1es Pa1d 614-446 · 4416 Alter

7pm
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur
ntshed and unfurniShed, secur1ty
depostt requtred, no pets , 614
992·2216
1 bedroOm apartment 1n Middle port, avatlable December 1, all
utilities patd, $250 per month,
$100 deposrl, Bam to 5pm 614
992-7806

Washer, Oryor, Chest Freezer
Car Batteues Color TV 614
256 1238

530

2bdrm apts total electrtc, appliances lurntshed, laundry room
factltt1es, close to school tn town
Apphcauons avatlaDie at V1llage
Groen Apts #49 or call 614-9923711 EOH

Antiques

Buy or sell
Ant1ques,
1124 E Mam
on At 124
Pomeroy Hours
T W 10 00
am to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 614 992· 2526

2bedroom. all electnc. carpeted .
appltances, turmshed, water &amp;
trash pa1d, on ·stte management,
close to store s and schOols Lau
reland Apartments, 6th &amp; George
St, New Haven 304 -862-3716 or
TTO -TTY 1 800-982-8771 Equal
Opportuntty Hous1ng

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

12x12
I Built 3
Montns Old,
Btl! T1ller
6 Months Old $400, 614-446
8457, Alter 5 PM. Wo rk 614 ·
446-9372

35 WES I · 2 BR BRICK TOWN
HOU SES - 1261 Jack son P1ke
Across From C1nema $295/Mo ,
Dep For Rental Appltcattons Call
614-446-0957 614· 446 -0006
614-441 16113 Or Wrue PO Box
994, Gall1pol1s, OH 45631

15Ft StocK Tra1ler H1Usboro
5 PM 614-446·2163
1966 Ford Taurus. tully loaded
VB $1,200 1984 Ponuac Frato
pw, 4cyl, 4spd, runs great, $1 000
GE almond stove &amp; re!ngerator
304-675·4496

456 112 Seco nd Ave 2 BR, AC
appliances $400 month Utrltues
pa1d $200 depos1t Referen ce s
614-446-2129

Concrete B Plastic SeptiC Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprtses Jackson, OH
1·BOQ·537-9528

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Dnve
!rom $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; movtes Call 6 14-446 · 2568
Equal Housrng Op!X)rrunn;y

Electric Range 30 In ches $50
614-446-8251
Electnc Wheelchans /Scooters,
New /Used, Scooter /Wheelchair
Lifts. Sta1rway Elevarors. l1ft
Cha~rs ; Bowman's Homecare,
614·44&lt;;.7283

Beech St Middleport 2b r lur
n1shed apt ut11111es pa1d, dep &amp;
ref 304-882 2566
Country Stde Apartment, Large 1
Bedroom, $290/Mo DeposH 513
922-0294

Ftrewood $40 Ptck Up Load 614·
368·9265
Great ChriStmas G1f1s Boots By
Aedwmg , Chtppewa, Tony Lama
Guaranteed Lowest Prtces At
ShoeCale

Furn1shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downstairs, Ut11it1es Furmshed,
Clean, No Pets, Reference. Deposu ReqUired, 614-446-151 g

Hedstrom Sw1ng Set Wtth Slide
l1ke New, Make Oller 614 ·441
1702

Grac1ous ltvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtliage Manor and
A1"11ers1de Apartments 1n Middleport From $232-$355 Call 614·
992·5064 Equal Housmg Opper

Must Sell Rambow Vaccum
Cleaner, W1th All Attachments
Less Than 1 Year Pa1d Over
$1,200, $475 F&lt;rm, 614-256-8369
Queen Stze Water Bed Wtth
Drawers $300, Stngle 314 Wa·
terbed With Drawers $150. Bunk
Beds S200, Pmg Pong Table
$125, 3 Wheeler $300, Avant1
Dorm RefPgerator $100, 614·446·
9618
Relngerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Aecond1ttonec
And Gauranteed1 $ 100 And Up,
W1ll Deliver 614·669-6441
Sam Somerville's regular Army
camouflage by Sandyv1lle Post
Ofltce, Fn-Sun 12noon 6pm 304
273·5655 Junror srzes Ex
change Items to be 1n by Decem
bet31, 1995
Santas Chrtstmas Trees, State
Roule 850 Between At 35 and
Rodney, We Will Cut 614-245
5595
Schwmn S1erra 18 Speed All Ter
ram Btcycle, Excellent Cond1t1on.
614-446-0070
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upnght, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Oh1o, 1-1100·537-9526
SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS Commercral Home un1ts
!rom $1'99 Buy factory d1rect and
SAVE I Call TODAY lot NEW
FRE E color catalog 1-800·462
9197
Topper For Mazda B2200 Truck
Wedge Topper, Chaco Grey 3
Years 01~. $750 New. $450 Now
614 ·446-9465

550

Supplies
Block, bock, sewer pipes. wmd
ows. lintels. etc Claude Wmters
Ato Grande, OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Newly redecorated, nrce c lean
2Dedroom ground floor, wid hooK
up References Depos1t No pets
304-675-5!62

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, N&lt;M &amp; Aebuil1 In SIOci&lt;
Call Ron Evans, 1-600-537-9528.

N1ce one bedroom apartment for
rent m Pt Pleasant , 614· 992 -

5858

~~

Farm Equipment

All" Chalmers 190XT 2WD 95HP
turbo d1esel w1th AC519 end
I d
80 b k
b I
oa er,
~ uc et, separate a e
spear 4665 hours. 90% rubber
on 18 4x34 11 res, excellent condltton, $8900, tractor only, $6500,
6 14 .698-6228

WEST

EAST

•K4
•92

•76 52
•K6 5

+KQI04
.. 109863

+9876 53
..
SOUTH

.. Q J 9
•AQIOS43
•J 2
.o.Q 5

Massey Ferguson 180 Tractor.
$5,950, Massey Ferguson 175
$5,800, Massey Ferguson 135
Dtesel $5,495, Ferguson T020
With Bush Hog &amp; Blade $2 650.
614-286--6522

AKC German Shephard pupp1es
$150ea 304-675·7771
AKC Regtstered Chmese Sharpe1
pupptes, wormed and hrsl shots,
excellent bloodlme, 614-949
2126
AKC Regtstered Dalmatian pup
ptes . 5 left, shots &amp; wormed
S125ea 304-773·9122
AKC Regtstered Pug Female 2
Years Old, Very Gentle House
Tratned, Very Healthy, $300, 614
441·1667
AKC Yellow lab Pups, Ready For
Chnstmas, $300 . 614·256~336,
AnerB ~1.1
10gal tank set up spec1a ts F1sh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Po1nt Pleasant, 304·675
2063

Nearly new (169 hour s) Rayco
RG 1635AISA 41 hp atr cooled
Deutz dtesel stump cutter. two
sets ol teeth, used ono year to
clear farm ftelds, cost ellecttve
over htrtng a dozer for such work
MSRP $14 600, yours lor $11,500.
614-698-6226

630

Livestock

Chestnut Htll ltmoustn Dispersal
Of Enttre Full Blooa Cattle Herd,
614-256·1959

640

Hay

&amp;

Grain

TRANSPORTATION

71 o

'95 Bu1ck Regal Custom. V-6 au ·
tomat1c, all power, smoky
amethys~ 10,500 mtles, w1ll sell or
can take over payments, make
offer on pnce, 614-985-3362
1969 Ford Galaxy Con"llert1ble
Runs Good, Needs Body Work,
$900 OtTrade, 614 256·6369

1987 Chrysler Srh Avenue. V-8,
Automatic, Full Power, Vory N1ce
Car, $3,000 OBO, 614·256- 6867,
Alter 5 P.M
1990 Oldsmobile Royale 88 Garage Kept, Excellent Condition,
614-446-1211
t990 Ponuac Grand Am 2 Dr,
Atr, Auto, Ttlt Crutse Stereo Cassette, New Battery, 63,000 M1 ,
Exc Condl Outck Salet $3,995,
614·379·2967
1991 Dynasty Light Blue Wtth
Cosmetic Upgrade, V-6, Excellent
Cond111on, Fully Equipped, $4,000,
614·3/9-9061
1991 Ford Escort GT, black, 5
speed, crutse, PM, amtlm cassene, ale, h1gh mtleage and light
!ront and rtght damage, $4700
614·992-5524

Bad Cred1t, No Credu? Establish
and Restabltsh With Guarmee
Bank Ftnancmg lor Used Cars
Call Au1h, 614 ·446·2897

Fender Squtre Strat &amp; Fender
Stdek1ck Amp Good Condition,
614·448.0070

Street stock '83 Monte Carlo 955
eng1ne, been bat , TC trans, Ford
9~ rear end, dtsc bfakes, every thng almost new. $4500, call 614742·2323

2323

720

351m , AUTOMATIC, BEDLINER,
TOOL
BOX,
ALUMINUM
WHEELS, GOOD CONDITION
CALL BRIAN AT 814 256 6391
IF NO ANSWER, LEAVE A
MESSAGE

FARM SUPPLIES

610

Farm Equipment

12)155 lrB11er frame, tongue, axles
and lites, $275 090, 614-992·
3016

1992 Ford F· 150 XC 6 Cylinder,
A/C Bedhner, Good Condi!JOn
52,500 M1 les $10,000, 614 441
1417
1992 Ranger XLT, 51 ,000 Mtles,
Match1ng Topper, Excellent Con dtton, $6,400, Or Trade, 614-446

6890 Anyl1!"8

BORN LOSER

16ft car tra1\er, 1yr old, ts titled
$1,200 304·675 3824

790

Campers

.~

Pass

4 NT
5 NT

a

Pass

6•

Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

K

As you arc probably aware, thr s rs
Boxmg Day rn some counlrres It rsn 'I
th e day on whrch people tradrtronall)
clrmbed mto the rmg to settle th etr drf
fcrences Instead, rt refers lo feudal
limes, when the lords of the manor gave
grfls m boxes to their serfs
Today's deal feature s a brr l ha nt de
fense by Italian natrve and ~'Ianda r es t
de nt Benrto Garozzo Yel h rs exce ll ent
play bore frurt only b ecause rt occurred
during a patr event, whr·re every trrck rs
V1tal

~

TIS THE.~ 10 ('£ XQYI

~

Philltp Alder's IJook. 'Ge l
Smarter at Bndge." ts avmlable ,
autographed upon requ est , }or
$14 95 from P 0 Box 169, Roslyn
Hts , NY 11577-0169

Yellowstone 23 sell-contained
camper ask1n9 $2500, 614 -949
2716

years'"
43 Likewise
44 Russian

veto word
46 Adam·s
47 Mormon State •
48 High plateau
49 Ending for

auction or
profit
51 Tropical

I

cuckoo

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

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebr•!y C1pher Cl)'plogram s ar&amp; cre ated from quolahons by tamous people past and
Each leller 1n lhe apher slands lor anolher Today s clue D equalS 9

P UP C L 0 XS L
RKBV

M

( 0 E

SXKN

SPYCXOV

presenl

OB
wcxv

FONMVPEY

VP S 0 XAC 0 Y L . '
AX MAG)

EOM)

V G P

JKFFPS

JOaYXE

AXFFOEB.

P REVIOUS SOL UTION ' Pos1-fame was d1H1cult because 1! wasn't )US1 fame, 11
was super·lame ol a k1nd thai few have '-Donovan

r:~~:t:~' 'O~r\t~}A-ltt-~s~~

WOlD

GAM I

ld11od by CLAY R ~Oli.AN

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

the
ba-

low to form four words

UNVAEE

~-M-¥-0-D-0~, ~

I I I' I .:

Overheard
rng \me

rn

a book srgn -

"A book can

be con.

srdered a true success when

. - - - - - - - - - - - , people who haven't read rt

1--~Y,........:.N_T__,:;E....:G:,....::.L~-11· · · · · - - they have "

16 I

17

I I

L _.J._..L._J.._.J.--L.__J

&amp;

Motor Homes

8

BIG NATE

O

Comple1e the chuckle quoted
by fdlmg 1n the miS$1n9 word~
you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS

IN THESE SQUARES

HELL0 1

YEII.H, ~HE I~
.lJSI II. 5E.C.

SERVICES

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

810

Home
Improvements

STRIKE ABLOW IN THE WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1tronal lilet1me guarantee
Local referen ces lurmshed Call
(6141 446 0870 Or (6141 237
0A88 Rogers Waterprooftng Es
tabhshed 1975

ITUESDAY

Appliance Pans And Serv tce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
penence All Work. Guaranteed,
French C1ty Maytag, 614 446
7795

...,.,,..,,-&lt;

B1ll Ornck's Home tmprovementsaddtl1ons remodeling roof1ng,
Sldmg, plumbmg etc Insured, cal!
8111 Omc~. 614 992 4240

1 '~

Outlet . Whtsk - Inlet - Unload · SWELLED
A new colleague seemed very self assured and over
con fident "He's not so great," another calleaguegrrnned,
" no brg rdea wrll come from a SWELLED head "

DECEMBER 26 I

Wcll 1HTI-ItR MYPDW&gt;I&lt;'S
DII\'\INISt\EI&gt; OR l ~Cl'e
_,.,. WHOEVER SOUE&gt;HT NIE

TillS

\141"G KePT 11-11:: RECE\I'T

C&amp;C General Home Matn tenence - Pa1ntmg, vmyl s1dmg.
carpentry, doors, wmdows, baths,
mob1le home repatr and more For
free est1mate call Chet 614-992
6323
Earl's Home Mamtenance, vtnyl
s1dmg, root1ng ex tenor and mtenor patntmg, power washtng, room
addi tions Fre e Est1mates, 614
992 4451
Ron s TV Semce, spectahzmg m
Ze nll/'t also serv1cmg most other
brands Hou se calls, 1-800 79 7
0015, wv 304·576·2398
Roohng and gutlers- commerc1al
and res1den11al m1nor repatrs 35
years expe n ence, B&amp;B ROOF
lNG, 614 992 5041

620

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating

ltucks for Sale
···r961 FORD F-150'..

LIVESTOCK

Auto Parts &amp;

New gas tanks , one len truck
wheels, radiators floor mats, etc
0 &amp; R Auto. R1pley, WV 304-372
3933 or 1 600·2 73 9329

7g Z-28 Camaro and '80 Z 28
Camara, both $250, call 614-742-

&amp;

Must Sell 1989 24 Ft ArfiVa
Speed &amp; Ski Boat. 454 Bravo Motor. Wtth Bravo 1 Outdnve, Power
Rack &amp; Pen1on Steertng, Thru
Transom Exhaus t, Tandem Trail
er, Wnh Brakes, Too Many Extras
To LISII $15.000 OBO, 614 441 1975, 614·256 6369

1985 Camaro Z 28, V 8, auto w/
overdnve, new t~res, runs good,
$2,500, 614-742·2357

Pass
Pass

plannmg to finesse "" queen If rt lost,
dummy's heart pck wou ld take c are of
a dramond return And after any swttch.
declarer could draw trumps a nd run the
clubs Al so, rf th e heart lin esse won , de
clarer would ruff the dramond Jack and,
hopefully. lo se at most one trump trr ck
Frne - untrl Garozzo p l ayed the
h ea rt kmg on dummy's se v en Takmg
thrs card at face valu e, South sa w an
overtrick rn hr s future After wrnnrng
wtth the ace , he played a heart lo dum
my's jack and a club to\\ard h1S hand
Drsaster' Garozzo ruffed and led a dra·
mond to hts partner' s queen fo r one
down

1993 201 Pro XL, 20 Strutos
bass boat, 200 XPHP 614 -6677347 or 614-91\9 2879

t 9Q3 Cutlass Brougham all elec·
InC, V6, good shape, $1500 304 ·
675·1448

Alvarez acousttc guttar Dove
Edd11 , like new. $350 00 614-4466591 .

Peavey 6 channel PA system. wf
lp· 2 speakers. $795.00 614·446·
6591

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Boats &amp; Motors

Accessories

Premlnger
19 Tardy
21 Writing fluid
231V host,
Tom24 Replete
25 Seed
covering
27 American
patriot
Nathan28 Jacob's son
29 Tennis-court
divider
30 Recent (pre!.)
34 House broker
35 Wild perty
36 Patched
38 Astronauts'
all right
41 Forearm bone
42 Youthful

East
Pa ss

After wmmng the first trrck wrth dum
my's dramond ace, declarer was tempt ·
ed to run the heart Jack But rf rl won,
\\hat then ? A hea rt to the queen would
be fatalrf West suddenly pt·oduced th e
king and cashed the dramond queen
Perhaps you would play a club to the
queen for an rmmedrat e dramond ruff.
but that isn 't wrth out 1ts nsks
At the table. South led a low trump ,

Motorcycles

Black Tonneau cover (hke new) ,
l1ts 88-96 Chevy/GMC short bed
$150 304-675 1974 after 6pm

Auto loans Deater wtll
nancmg even tf you have
turned down elsewhere . Upton
EqUipment Used Cars 304-4581009

New Eptphone electronic guitar,
275 watt amp w/4 12 mch speak.
... $650 00 e14·446-6591

TI-lE SKINN'I' ONE

6RAMMA5
SHOULD 1-lAI/E
NAMES LIKE
PEOPLE ..

87 Plymouth Grand Voyager
Auto, A1r, V6, Excel Cond
$4.500.00 614 ·461 0777

1977 Mustang, drag car, needs
completed 304 6 75-6536

Poodle ~upptes - uny toy, males
AKC champ1on bloodline, shots
and wormed, 614-667·3404

Gtbson Les Paul Gutlar, Black
Wtth Gotd Hardware, Hardshell
Case, Perfect CondtiiOnl $700,
614-379-2601

WliiCii 6RAMMA GAVE ME TI-lE
BOOK FO~ Cl-lRISTMAS ..THE FAT
ONE OR. THE SKINNI{ ONE?

I 990 Dodge Ram Van 8 250
72,000 Mtles, $6,000, Can Be
Seen AI Gallipolis Da1ly Tnbune,
825 Thtrd Avenue, Galt1polrs
OhiO

2 Chevrolet 5 In ch Ratley Wheel s
$175. 1 Set 01 Small Block Chevy
400 C I Cylmd er Heads $100
614 441 1053

'85 Mercury Topaz, 4 Door Auto
Good Runmng ConditiOn 614
245-0019 or 614·245·5845

Instruments

PEANUTS

1990 Chevy Van G-2 0, loaded
crest hner, 88,000m1 , $7,800 304
675·2835

760

7 Spoken
8 Forfeit
9 Genetic
material (abbr.)
11 Proclamations
13 Director

grandson
•

Autos for Sale

"89 Thunderbird SC, two door, 3 8
litre, V-6, eltte model turbo, PS,
PB, AC, 5 speed power seats
and locks, ~Great Car,~ $6500
neg, 614-992-7478 or 614-949 2879

- rule
(generally)
18 Slow ones
DOWN
20 Useful
22 Wagon
- out
24 Make obese
(stre1ches)
26 Ah 2 Actress
Redgrave
30 Type of school
31 Ibsen character 3 Inter- (among
32 Actor Wallach
others~
4 More covered
33 Bead
with velvety
37 Earthenware
plants
l•r
39 More uncanny
5 Femln1ne
40 Insult
pronoun
43 Joint between
6 Nasal cavity

! By Phillip Alder

for Sale
I

16 Transmitted

, Bridge players
; slug it out

t976 Jeep CJ 7 V-8, $1200 614
446·6958

750

suffix
54- Oomlnl
55--lsay
56 Spoil
57 Male t1t1e
58 Shlnlo temple

MAW!!

s

740

North
3 "'

Opemng lead · •

1985 Ford Ranger 4X4 6 cyl 5
d
lib
b dl
spee • ro ar, e 1ner 2100 ,
614 949 2249
-

Round Bales Of Hay 614-4461514

For sale, one female mtntature
Collte, ready to go, $150, 614
742-2050

Musical

GOOKIN',

1984 Ford F-150, Very N1ce, 6t4
386- 9811

1995 Yamaha 400 Kodtak "4x-4 4wheeler 500ml . $4 300 304·6 75
3824

CFA RegiStered H1matyan K1ttens
Wtll Be Ready For Chnstmas
Ready Nowl 614-446-1104

570

TATER'S

drtve
body
so ltd614
chrome
$2500
OBO
992
mags tratn,
3016

Hay lor sale 1sf &amp; 2nd cutllngs.
square hales, $1 25 $1 50, call
614·992·5533

1QQ1 Rocket Chassts race car, all
new m '91, Wtlwood, best ol everythtng, weld, three wheels. tues
Neal pedals luel cell, on board
lire system, rolling chassts. $5800
neg Call Scott Wolfe, 614 949
2679, 614-949·2045 Ot 614· 992
6193

SFA Aeg1stered H1malayan Ktt
lllflS, $200 080 614·441·0762

1982 Ford F150 4k4, 300 6 cyl, 4
speed, new c lu ieh, very sol1d

t98Q Chevy 4~4 Ptck -Up v 8
Auto, $6,500, 1991 Fo rd 4x4
P1ck -Up 6 Cyltnder, 4 Speed
$6 500. 1989 Ford 4x4 P1ck Up
$5,700, 1985 GMC H1 S&lt;erra D1e
set 4x4, N1c e B&amp;O Auto Sa les ,
614·446-6865

Anowar to Prevtoue Puzzle

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

I

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop -Pet Groomtng Fea
tunng Hydro Bath Julte Webb
Call614-446;0231

H•-Eflec1ency l P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU 1800 -267· 6308, 614 · 446-6308,
Duct Systems And Atr ConditiOners Free Esttmates

IUI'"IIO&amp;S

Building

610

1 Guido's high
note
4 Future bks.
7 Ancient
10 ActorMaclachlan
12 Toledo's state
14 Actor Silver
15 City In
Oklahoma

17 -

•AKJ742

'78 F-250 Ranger 4x4, 4 speed
transmiSSIOn, 33" BF Goodr1ch
Mud Terram ttre s, Delta tool t&gt;ox
!or the bed. '79 Ford Super Cab
for parts, $3000 000 or trade lor
small car or trucK o1 equal value,
614-742·2050

Merchandise

I

-###

1987 Mazda p~ekup, 4cyl, 5spd,
s1lver extertor. maroon mtenor
n1ce clean wor~ truck Sell 01
trade 304 6 75-3324

BARNEY

Two bedroom, total Btectrtc, $2501
mo plus ullhttes, $150 depostt,
our New L1ma Rd. 614·742·2066

Th1s newspaper wtll no!
knowhngly accept
a1Jvert1semtmts lor real eslate
whtch 1s In "lliolahon ol the law
Our readers are hereby
tnformed that all dwelhngs
adverttsed 1n this newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
opponun1ty bas•s

12 26 95

u3

West
Pass

Two bedroom tratler tor rent, call
614-992-2979 alter 6pm

All real estate advert1smg tn
thts newspaper IS SUbJect to
the Federal Fa1r Houstng Act
of 1968 whiCh makes 11 Illegal
to advert1se ·any preference,
l1mhat10n or dtscrlmmatlon
based on race, color, religion.
sex famlltal slatus or nallonal
ongm, or any tntentton to
make any such preference,
ilm1tal10n or dtscnmmat10n •

1980 Ford XLT 4x4, auto, 302
new ~1chehn radtals, runs good
no rust, $3,000 304 -5 76-2919 or
1-800· 392-3844

1995 Chev P1 ck-Up 1500 Sef1e s
Long Bed V-8, Auto, 4,000 M1les.
$14,900, 614·388-9102

One bedroom furn1shed apart
ment 1n Middleport. 61A -446 30g1
or 614 -992 -5304 or 614 -992
2178

Sacra Oh1o Rtver bottom, block
burldtng lor house tapartmen ts .
40K80 steel bulldtng, mdoor horse
rtd1ng, shop for sem1 1/6acre
paved Can lease 20 more acres

440

1'&gt; /Zfi~P'f.

N1ce two bedroom apartment 1n
F1&gt;me10y, 614-992·5858

Pomeroy,

210

6,~ "ff, IT
Mt~lll&gt; DiNI'I&lt;r'-

Furn1shed Eff1c1ency $225/Mo
Ut1l111es Pa1d, 920 Fourth Avenue,
Ga llipoli S, 614 446 44 16 Aile, 7
PM

Large Alaskan Hu s k~ &amp; Col ll el.:=========~t-:==========-1 Above 1937 flood 70 OOOcu It
Breed Dog , Male, Great W1th f
storage 10m1les S ol PI Pleasant
K&lt;ds, Appco• 1 Yea&lt; Old 614 110
Help Wanted
110 Help Wanted
onRt2 304·576·2894
44 1--{)634
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
S~~~~~~~~~--~ Accept1ng apphcat10ns lor Reg1s Styli st Wanted, Full or Part T1me
.:.
tered long term care Nurs1ng Asaerator, near
Sa lary, Commtss1on, Call Carol At F1ve acres,
SIStant c lass now through De
60 Lost and Found
camber 2Bth Class to begm 614-446-8922 Fmest Styl1ng Sa- Racme,$16,000 can hnance w1th
hal1 down, 61 •·949·2025
k&gt;n
Found Female CocKer Span1el January 8th and endmg February
13th
Po1nt
Pleasant
Nursmg
&amp;
Breed V1c1n1ty 141 614 441Scentc Valley Apple Grove,
Retlabilttallon Center Maqone El
0634
beauttful 2ac lot s, public water,
11ott State Route 62, Route 1
180 Wanted To Do
Clyde Bowen Jr, 304-576-2336
Lost 2 boxes Nlth 4 kitchen Po1nt Pleasant WV 25550 A
Blown
lnsulat1on, Insurance, Excha irS 1n Chester area call 614 Glenmark Assoc1ates Facility
RENTALS
permce, References, Reasonable
EOE
992 5698or614 ·742·2793
Rates, Call For Free Esumates
Los! 3 yr old female Rottweller Seekmg Registered long term 614·245-5755
care Nurs1ng AsSistants for long
41 0 Houses for Rent
.has on choker and Ilea collilr,
term care !acil1ty tor part t1me. Chns t1an CNA Will Care For El !land v1C1n1ry 614-742 1410
derly
In
The
1r
Non
Smok1ng
2
Bedroom Level Lot, Heat Pump,
variable sh1lts Po1nt Pleasam
Home. Days Call614-446-4525
5 Mtles From Town, Deposit &amp;
Lost Between Hanervllle ~
Nursmg &amp; Rehabtltlatton Center
References 614-446-1079
poi1S R1g1d P1pe M3.e; n1n e
Stlte Route 62, Route 1, So~ 326
Do You Need A Helptng Hand
P1pe Cutter, Heward I 614
Pomt Pleasant, WV 25550 EOE
HolJ ses lor rent 1n ReedS\IIIIe,
W1th
Hou
sewo
rk
,
Grocery
's
2233
A Glenmark Assoctates Factltry
Shoppmg, Etc Call Maggte At Syracuse, M1ddleport and Rutland
614-446-2155
areas Contact Dotue Turner Re Lost L1!lle Beagle Dog, Fe male
alty. 614·992-2866
Ha s Brown Leather Collar Flea
Collar Name Jess1e VICinitY N1
AVON 1 All Areas I Sh1r!cy General Maintenance, PatntlnQ.
Yard Work Wmdows Washed Small Unlurntshed 1 Bedroom
day Road , John s Creek Road , Spears, 304-675 1429
Guuers Cleaned L1ght Haul1ng, House Near K-Mart, A1r CondiMercerv ille Are a $50 Reward I
AVON EARN $$$ at hOme-at Commencal, Restdenual, Steve tioned, Gas Heat, Mtcrowave,
614 446 7290 614 446 7551 An
New Patnt. &amp; Carpet, Upstaus
work All areas 304 -882 2645 1- 614-388-0429
yt1me
Storage A"lladable, $325/Mo +
800 992 6356 INDtREP
Georges Portable Sawm1ll, don't Gas Electnc, Call Between 8 &amp; 10
M1 ssmg Cat Black Long Ha1red
Wh11e Spo t On Ches t Wn1 1e On Child Care Prov1der In My Horne, haul your logs to the m1ll JUSt call PM Or Before 9 AM 6 14-446Both Back Feet Answe1s To 2 3 Days Per Week For 2 Ktn- _30_4_-6_75__
19_5_7____________ 1~18=2=2~--------------dergarden Aged Ch ildren Addl ·
Fluffy If Seen 614 446 0264
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleantng Serv1ce
Unlurn1shed two bedroom house,
son Area, 614 367- 7608 , Even
dust1ng, moppmg, Windows and n1ce and clean, deposit requ1red,
mgs Or614-3677132Dars
70
Yard Sale
more Complete serv1ce or touch
no tnstde pelS, 614·992-3090
Ortllers to transport cars to &amp; ups References on request, call
Terry
at
614
·
992
-4232
or
614
We tzgal Street. Pomeroy. WID.
GallipoliS
from auc110ns. call614-992-2806
$35M.4o Oeposll, 513-922-0294
992·4451
_ _ __:&amp;;_V--Ic;_l_n_lt:,:Y_ _ _ Easy Wotkl Excellenr Pay &lt; As
1 semble Products at Home Call Sun Vall ey Nursery School 420 Mobile Homes
·ALL Yard Sa les Must Be Pa1d In Toll Free 1-800 467 5566 EXT
Chtldcare M-F 6am 5 30pm Ages
for Rent
Adva nce DEADLINE 2 00 p m 313
2-K Young School Age Dur1ng
the aay tlelore the ad 1s to run
Summer 3 Days per Week Mtnt- 2 Bedrooms Wall To Wall Carpet,
Sunday ed1non 2 00 p m
Full T1me ActiVIties AssJstant For
mum614-446-3657
Natural Gas Furnace Very N1ce
Monday ed1t1on 10 00 am
Alzhe1me r Un1t At Scen1c Hil ls
614 44&amp;-2003 614-446-1409
:::_:::!;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ N C Appl1cat1on Accepted Thru
Would Like To Clean Homes An1
ytime, 614·446-8124
12129/95 . Scentc H1Us 31 1 Buck
2 Mobile Homes On McCormick
ndge Road, B1dwell OH 45614
Road, 2 Bedrooms 614 446 FINANCIAL
9669
Middleport
Home TypiSts, PC users needed
_ _ _.:.&amp;_V_:ic.,.l_n_it.;:Y_ _ _ $•5 ooo 1ncome potent&lt;al Call 1
1BOO 5t3 4343 EXI B 9366
All Yard Sales Must Be Patd
Adva1ce Deadlme 1 OOpm
Part-T1me AN Needed Call 1 800day before the ad IS to run
506 8773
oay ed1t1on 1 OOpm
day ed1tton 1o ooa m

tot~&lt;

Sl'lot'E" A~4~.-,

Furnished EffiCiency All Ut1ht1es
Pa1d, Share Bath, $145/Mo, 919
Second Avenu e. GallipoliS, 614
446-39A5

Year end sale save $1 ,ooo oo all
n ew smgle sec.Jton homes 1n
s tock lncludmg several 1996
models See at Mountam Sta te
Homes, Pt Pleasant, WV 304675-1400

Chr1tmas K1t1ens Free To Good
Home AOOrable 614 367--0283

WH•u

Furnished Apanment. 920 Fourth
Avenue 1 Bedroom, $265/Mo
920 Foufth A"llenue Gall1pol1s
Oh10 61.4 .446 4416 Alter 7 PM

1995 S~ylme 14K70, three bed
rooms, one bath, heat pump avail able Out ex tra , Wtl l take payoff,
614 992-3891

56/iO

1978 Ford p1ckup, VB, auto, good
cond, $1,400 304-675-2074

Furnished Apartmen~ 3 Rooms &amp;
Bath, All Utthbes Pa1d, Oownstatrs
$250/ Month 919 Seco nd Ave
61.4·446-3945

foot and leg
45 Public hall
49 Bridge expert
- Culbertson
50 Trim
52 Grafted, In
herattlry
53 Language

ACROSS

Freeman's Heattng And Cooltng
lnstallallor. And Serv1ce EPA
Cerbl1ed Restdenllal, Commercial
614-256-16 11

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSE S CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, Atr Condlhontng, if
You Don·r Call Us We Bo1h Los~l
Free Est1mates, 1 800-287-630&amp;,
614-446·6308. wv 002945
Res1denual or comm ercial wlrtng,
new serv1ce or repa1rs M~ster U·
censed electrician. Atdenou.r
Electflcal, WV000306, 304· 675·
178e
"

thc&gt;ughl 1n
so that your populanty
or Circumstances
1
, treat your- ""•""'·•n'•start to s~ud
1
self loa birthday grft. Send for your Aslro·
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Th1s w1ll be
Graph predictrons for the year ahead by
an appropnale t1me to acllvale an 1mpor·
marl1ng $2 and SASE 10 Astro·Graph, c/o
tanl plan you've recently conce rv ed
thiS newspaper, P 0 Box 1758, Murray
Move now whtle cond111ons are work1ng tn
Hrll Stabon, New York, NY 10156 Make
your favor
'
sure to state your zodtac srgn
LEO (Julv 23-Aug. 22) Explo11 shlf11ng
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Thts w1ll
cond111ons 1oday mslead of u01ng 1hem as
be a good day to focus on your frnancral
excuses to explarn why lhrngs shou ldn t
mteresls. You w\11 be more astute than
be done These elements w1ll pul you
usual rn these areas and you could do
over the top
well for yourself
VIRGO (Aug.' 23-Sept. 22) Allow yoursell
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You woll
adequate t1me today to evalua1e an
functron better today when you are rn the
rmportant decrsron Make sure to looK
front ranks rather 1han m the rear If Clfthrngs over from every angle
cumstances requ~re a strong leader, don't
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today you
fear the pressure
should have the paltence and resolve to
ARIES (Merch 21 -Aprll 19) Your ltnan·
handle a testy ~evelopment you've tned
Wednesday,
27,1995
cral prospects took promrsrng today,
to avord Your past attitude has made
especrally
those
that
generated
earnings
'
mattere
worse.
·Your chart indicates that you may devel· :
for
you
prevrously.
Stick
wrth
tha
W1nners
.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You mrght
a broader range of interests tn the :
learn a valuable lesson today from an
year llhead then you have explored rn the ' TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Do not make
unexpected tutor. Keep an open mmd,
past. It looks like you will start dorng, things tougher on yourself today What
you
can't
accompliSh
slngle·handedly
can
and don't resent the lesson or the source
things you've alwaye wanted to try
,
be
achieved
with
the
assrstance
of
strong.
SAGmARIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jan. 19) Use your

-----!I

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Dec

op

\VII and humor when dea~ng with mem·
bars ot the opposition today. ThiS anltude
will anc'ourage them to cooperate once
they -

you are no1 awestruck by events

allies
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 2p) Make sure to
luHrll promises made to others today You
might forget, but they won't Keep thrs

greatest iOY today could come from halping others, especially II they are people
with whom you have strong , emotronal
bonds.
•

'

�~

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

It's a jungle out there
in the work force
1995. Los Angeles

f omes Syndocate .;~nd
Creato rs 5 ',1no&gt;eate ·

Dear Ann Lllhk rs: I rc&lt;td wi! h
interes t the kllcr from "U nL' lllplny.:d
MBA/I D." I wu rk in a law firm. and
her stury i~ onr.: l' v~ h ~a rd hc forl' .
Man y tim e~ . Thl.' market 1 ~ -..~1 ~l u t­
tcJ with la w~· .: r~ th at tl Ur siJl ,tl l fin n
i s ah lc to htr~..· Jn . L ~..·ai.!.UI..' l.!.raduaiL'~

for a~~oL"i atl' pu .~ tlllHh. . In l ~tL' l. tilL- y
an:: heatin g uur dtlor:-. Lhmn
It Lkfi nitL·I y is an ~..· m p l d!l..'r"'

mark...:t. WL· haw n.:n: tH:J &lt;t br ~l'
numht.:r t l f 1\.':. unh.':o. fro m att Prn l'V\
wh o ar~..· ~tp p l ! tng for par:d l· ~~tl flP'-1 ti o n;-. . Th ~..· t r

they

LIJ\'LT

lett er ...... t a l l' th;H

h ~l \' t.' hL'L'Il II ) 1ng l t l f 11H I

ti ons w 1tiH1U!
to work as

:. u~..· ~..· ~..·s:-.

parak ~ab

and
to

the tl om.
T he :li1 Dfi1 L'Y"

cxrc( tl'd to

\ \L'

a r~

d n hire

and he
If the y d on ' t

mca:-; un· up. t il L· ~· don' t last l !l ll ~.
Rl· plart..' lll l'n t:-. arc :1 dim e ~~ dot t..·n.
One

thin ~ ~ ~ l tl l" \ lii"L' -·

cails.
An n. nt y !:!-r :wdrll (l thcr wdl he IJO
1111 -. , ~L·~ u ·. ~ ~ ~ .... ih linl!S and I practi ,,:all ! ~ fl'\\ up \\ llh Grandma, and we
ltnt..' hn ~.k; t rl y. Aunt Di ow ns the

po, t- · .tpartlllL' Ilt•.:o rnp k· .\ \\ hnt..' Grandma
\\ dling
li\L';... and "he rt:fu, l';., In k·t an y l t fu ~
a foo t 111
gra ndt.·hll drL'II come visit now. We

\\'l lll dil i g ~.· ntl y

~xtrc md y l'lllllrc tl: llt.

ness. As my husinL'SS increased , my
~ i s t L' r and aunt hdp.. : d me out. After
:t n1onth ·or t \ \ 11. ";\ unt Di " noti t..:ed
thl' munl'y l \ \ ;t., nu k tng and dtXi d L' Li tP u p~ n h~r tn\ 11 bu st111::-.s. Th ~ ll
\\ ould h;h 1..: hee n O K. hut ~ h t: :-. 1&amp;1 t..' J IP und n l. " ut my (11"11.: ~· ..... S h ~ ...:a ll~d
Il l )' :-. h:.td) l. " ltt..' nt..; and :-.:ud :-. lw cuuiJ
make the pi L'ct::-. J \\ :1.., 111 : 1~ 111 ~ at a
d1capn pncc . Man y 11f ha pi c ~.:c s
\\'l'rl' copil'.\ or my on gin ;d Jcsigns.
\Vht..·n Il l )' hu-.., rnL·ss partner con!ront n.l t\ unt Dt . . lu: ht:came ve ry
angry. l tri L·d tu rt..';t;..,, n wllh her. hut
11 \'&lt;:as usl' IL' .. ;.. . Shr prnn: ~LlcJ to call
1111..' L' VI..' ry n a 111 c 111 the houk. and
!hcn. :-. hc tri cd I n ; tlta~.: k 1l1L' physi -

l

:1 111

1111t

l!!l i ll~ l dt..'ll&gt;.: tl UI":t L'L' Ill\ dll l d rL'Il lt l

he
Lt \\ )~t. ' r :-. . J p)l-.., ar~l' hil.rd ttl f i nd . tlt t. ·
lh l Ur ... Mt..' J ~, n g and th L· pa) i:-. hu:..).
G o ll.d lut..:k IP "U nc mpl ilVI.'d
MB A/I D ... She' " il l1wcJ 11 . -S ); ~,l ­
PATHI ZF H IN D.C.
DEAR SY MPATH IZER Thc· 1uh
111 &lt;. 1rkct is tough not ,m Jy fnr hranJ ncw lawye r:-. hut for lk dg: lin ~ d,lC tors, c n g. in l'L'I"~ and hu . . ines\ schnnl
ll.raduatcs.
... \\'hen yo u11g people wri t~: anJ a\ k
llll.' how I ll finJ cmrluymc nt. I don' t
kn ow what In tell them . A while
hack. a n:adcr from 1:-. aqu :th. Wa sh ..
wrot e ahout how hard it w ~ t s ll&gt; get
i.l joh. I suggt:s ted that perhaps hi s
HL'g ati VI: att ituJc haJ somethin g tu
du with hi s failure to lanJ sonu:thmg
I cau eht unslmted hell for that one.
I will\ hare the fall out with you next
week .
. M) respun sc to rcuplc wil u an:
dcspcrah: for johs is the same a:-.
Tar;.an 's t..'Dilllllcnt to Jane. " It "!-&gt; :l
j un glc (l UI there." I know of no magic word s to open those doms.
Dear Ann Landers: Last Y''"'· I
haJ a ll ouri ..,hing JncU lluwn hu . . i-

Tfll'

0/Jl/"(/~l'OUS/_r ji llll l_\'

10

992-6614

1996 CHEVY SSERIES PICKUP
tWII OR 96 GMC SONOMA

1996 OLDSMOBILE .
tliVI ACHIEVA

t)'pe. Jtems are printed as space
permit' and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days,
TliESDAY
POMEROY - American l.eg10n
Unit l lJ mcc ttn g Tuc sd:t y. ~ p.m . at
t\m cri t..'i lll Lrg ion lwll.

SATURDAY
DARWIN - Bedford Town ship
trustees cnd -of- y~ ar nll'Cting Saturday. I p.m at tilt' 13cdi'&gt;Hd town hall .

WEDNESDAY
ALFRED _:_ Orange Tow nship
BuarJ ofTru.., tCC\ L" nd-nf-ycar meet ing Wednesday. 7::10 p.m . allmme of
Clerk Patt y Calaway.

PORTLAND - Leh&lt;nwn Township tru slccs meetin g Satu rday. 7
p.m. at the township hall.

or :.m)

THURSDAY
POMER OY - Bi g Bend Girl
Scout Scrvirc Unit I.caJcrs meetin g
Thursday. 7 p.m. in the Trini ty
Chun.:h ha s~.: m c.: nt. /\ II troop coukic
chairm t.: n should attend fo r training.
PAGEVII .I.I' - SupH &gt; Tlllvnship Trustees end -of-year mectin!!
Th ursday, 6:311 p.m. at the Pa ~ev illc
T\) Wnship Buildin ~. Organit_ati onal
meetin g to foil, !\\ .
POM EROY - Meigs County
Lihrary Boan.l of Tru stees mee ting
Thursday. 1 p.m. at the lihrary.
POMEROY - R c~ord . . u'mml ss ion meeting Thursday. c :.lll p.m.
at tile offi ce ll f the Mc1gs Count y
Board of C ommi :-;sio n~.::r s in the
Mei gs Count y Courthouse.

Rcsean;h by molecular biologists inJicmes thai the land mamm;~ most akin to whales is proba·
bly ti1c hippopotamus.

We Give Mature

Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

#3513

*4 cyl.

only.

APR
FOR 48 MONTHS

PW,

$10,995

1996 OLDS.
1995 OLDS CUTLASS
CUTLASS SUPREME
SUPREME

2 Dr., V-6, loaded.
V6, auto,
PW,
WAS $17,995 cassette, low mtles.

NOW$17,399

Reg.Cab,2
2 &amp; 4 Wheel

named

4 Dr., auto ., air, stereo.

PL,

$12,995

1986 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

Drive

4.9%

APR
FOR 48 MONTHS

1995 CHEVY LUMINA
tliv.l

$11 995

t--------+----__;;...~--t

tlE'll

4.9% APR
1996 CHEVY S SERIES
tlEv.l
PICKUP
cruise,

Now$30,799

alum.

$12,495
1995 OLDS
CIERA

1995 BUICK REGAL

All power, V6, keyless
V6, auto., cassette, PW
entry, V-6, much more.
#3338
WAS $21,178 &amp;locks ..

NOW$1 869 NOW$19 332
1996 CHEVY S SERIES
tlEVI
PICKUP
WAS $13,052

. , air, c a s s ette .

Ev.l

"

1996 CHEVY S SERIES
"LIKE A ROCK"
WAS $10,774

NOW$9999

1996 BUICK
CENTURY

V6 , auto. ,
equipped .

cass. ,

$12,495

V-6, auto, AM/FM cas. WAS $18,941

NOW$16,999

1993 GMC SONOMA
PICKUP
5 speed, stereo.

'6
1995 TOYOTA

2 Door, auto., air, stereo.

$6,999 Or
$149 Per Mo.

well

NO MONEY DOWN

tlEv.l

1995 CHEVY
IMPALA SS

1995 BUICK
RIVIERA

Brighl
while,
leather, CD player

loaded, Loaded, burgundy, only
13,000 miles, like new.

WA,S $31 ,901

1lEv.l

1996 BUICK
LESABRE

1990 OLDS
98
Super clean, loaded.

$21,995

NOW$27,995
1995 CHEVY FULL SIZE
tlEv.l 414 PICKUP

One owner.

1994 GEO METRO

WAS $18,923

NOW$12,739

tliv.l

1995 GEO
TRACKER 4X4

WAS $;J3,700

Aslr Us About Smart Lease

lilt,

VB,

V6, loaded.

Light teal, leather.

FOR 48 MONTHS

air,

1992 CHEVY
lf2 TON PICKUP

1995 BUICK
CENTURY

1995 OLDS.
AURORA

1992 OLDS
CUTLASS
SUPREME

1995 CHEVY
·coRSICA

$8,995

Auto., air, stereo, air bag,

V6, Auto., keyless entry. ABS.
#3494
WAS $23,888

1992 OLDS
DELTA 88

1996 CHEVY
CAVALIER

1995 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

Loaded, clean.

Our staltsl1cs show lhal mature drivers and home owners have fewer and
less costl y losses I han olht~' age
groups. So 1t's only !au to charge you
less for your insurance . Insure you•
home and car with us and save ever,
more w11h our spectal mullt-policy
discounls.

1995 FORD F150
XLT
Auto ., air, loaded .

to the Unive rsit y

1996 CHEVY
llE'~~
CORSICA
V6, Automatic, more.
WAS $15,330

tlEv.l

1995 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE SE

ABS, 3800 V6, keyless
entry, CD player, more.

1995 BUICK
LESABRE
Loaded, V-6

1990 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME
4 Door, V6 .

WAS $24,569 Hurry!.

$16,995
OGAN c;,,;;;1
~RNER~.::?
nAurance se~,,·

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687
.Auto-Ownen Jruumnce

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and tifle fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 27, 1995

Talks resuming to resolve budget crisis
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Their brief holiday break over, co ngress ional leaders and the Clinton admmistralion are slowly reviving tal ks to end a parti al'
government·shutdown and the nation's worst budget crisis.
Congressional and White House aides were meeting today without their
bosses, a gradual start for negotiations that should involve lop lawmakers
and President Clinton on Friday.
The lower-level talks today will do little to alleviale the anxiety of fed eral workers, whose paychecks will Ire smaller this week : of toorisls. whose
plans were changed with the closure of national parks and monuments; and
of travelers who desperately need passports.
Sensitive to criticism lhat.talks are·moving too slowly. White Hou se press

Rio Grande plans
free tuition for top
Buckeye students

secretary Mike McCurry said loday. " It is an urgent situation but the differences ihat exist between the 1wo sides are very deep, very fundamental.
People who have not followed 1h1 s ... think it's all theatrics, but it's not."
He said the presidenl was meeting brieny today with budget director Alice
Rivlin. whose stall is mcctmg with lower-level congressional aides later
today. Clinton's chief of slaff. Leon Panella. is still vacationing in California and won't gel involved in the talks before late Thursday
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Tem,, chainnan of the House Ways and Means Commlllee, also tried IO•Iurn up the pressure. He said Tuesday the Clinton admin islration may be violating the Constitution by juggling the books to permit
federal borrowing wtlhout congressional approval.
When the Senate on Friday left for a hol iday recess that in other years
would have lasted through much of December, the chamber passed legis-

RIO GRANDE (AP) - The Universily of Rio Grande is offering a
tuition-free. four-year education to Ohio's top high school scholars .
Admission Director Mark Abell said he will be notifying about 1.000
Ohio high schools next week that full scholarships are being made available to their valedictorians and salutatorians.
With its.ncw "Ohio First" scholarship program . the small private school
near the southern lip of the state is hoping some of Ohio 's brighte st students
will choose to earn a degree there.
The university is unique in the state because il shares a campus with the
publicly-funded Rio Grande Community College . University st udents get
the first two years of their ed~calion from the community college and the
next two from the u~iversity.
For those paying tuition, thai means $2,500 a year for the first two years,
$6,500 a year for the next two. It averages out to about the least expensive
private-college education in Ohio.
High school seniors who accept Rio Grande 's offer must maintain at least
a 3.0 grade-point average throughout their college careers, Abell said on
Tuesday.
The program is a way for Rio Grande to increase the number of top scholars on campus, and President Barry M. Dorsey said it 's al so a move to make
sure that talented students don 'l miss a chance lo auend college simply
because they can 't afford it.
"The Ohio First scholarship program recognizes Ohio students by removing the obstacle of eostlo make higher education poss ible for academically outstanding students," Dbrsey said. "This is Rio Grande's comm11men1
to ensure lhal all of Ohio's outstanding high school graduates have access
to a four-year college educalion."
Endowment money will pay for the program.
Abell expects no more than 20 applicants for the fall of 1996, the first
year of the program.
II will take awhile for the word to get out, he said. In addition, the small
campus and rural atmosphere of the Appalachian foothills won't appeal to
all students.
"If we get hundreds, I will be ecstatic. I don't think it will happen, but
if it does, great!" Abell said.
"Simply because of our size and location, which are factors in choosing where someone will go to school. we won't be on some people's list.
For others, it's perfect. They just come alive when they sec it."
It should appeal to many parents, he said.
"A recent survey showed cost is one of the top three factors used to determine where a student will go. And if it's not a factor for the student , it 's
definitely a top factor for the parents who are silling there trying to figure
out how to do it financially."
·
There arc no other string anached to the offer, Abell said.
"If the guidance counselor verifies you have that rank at the end or the
first semesler of senior year, you are in," he said.

Merchandise
prices drop
to salvage
slow season

*All prices
include
rebates to
dealer.

OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5

$5,995

By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Business Writer
From Fifth Avenue to the nation 's
subur,ban mega-malls, shoppers
found big bargains Tuesday as stores
slashed prices in hopes of salvaging
lhe worst Christmas season in years.
· But while many shoppers hunted
for deals, snapped up marked-down
Christmas decorations and returned
gifts, business was brisk but not
overwhelming.
"I don't sec any difference," said
Mary Ann Bacher as she left Lord &amp;
Taylor in Manhattan. "The only
thing thai seems 10 me 10 be really
on sale is the Christmas-related
merchandise."
For many merchanls, this ' has
been the worst Christmas season
since the 1990-91 recession. A
weakening economy, heavy consumer debt and snowstorTI)s in the
Northeast hurt business for storeowners who depend on Christmas
shopping for half their annual earnings. Stores cut prices dramatically
before Christmas.
Nor does the coming ,year bode
well for merchanls, since shoppers
are expected to remain cautious, and
fierce compelition is expected to dri·
ve ·thousands of ~tores out of busi-

Sta~e

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A stalemate in
federal budgeltalks has for the first
time caused Ohio 10 temporarily dip
into state money to make sure January welfare checks get to ahout
235.()()() families on time.
The Ohio Department of Human
Services said Tuesday that Ohio's
Office of Budget and Management
last week approved usc of $80 mil lion in slate money for benefit payments under the Aid to Dependent
Children and Jobs Opportunity and
Basic Skills programs.
CHRISTMAS RETURNS- Customer,; at a Columbus general
merchandise store waited in line to return or exchange Christmas
gifts Thesday. Shoppers from around the nation looked for bargains
as stores slashed prices. (A P)
Many shoppers had clearly wail·
ed until after Christmas to snap up
even bigger bargains.
"Things go on sale, so there's no
poinl in buying that ahead of time, "
said Adriana Centeno, 19, who was
shopping with her mother at Robinson's-May in Los Angeles. "We
bought some shoes that were normally $70. Today they were $35. "
Although the final tally on sales
won't be known until early January,
the Johnson Redbook Service, an
authoritative industry data provider,
said sales rose only 3.9 percent in
1995 vs. last year. When lhe'2.6 percent annual innation rale is factored

\

•

in, sales barely rose.
Officials at three store chains told
analyst Joseph Ronning that business had rebounded some right
before Christmas but that the final
weekend was not enough to make up
for weak sales earlier in the month.
"The stores have themselves to
blame for some of this by having as
many pre'Christmas sales as they
do." said Ronning, a retail analyst at
Brown Brolhers Harriman . "Those
who wait expect lhey'll probably get
an additional 10 or 20 percent off."
In midtown Manhattan, every
other shop had a huge sign in lhe
window boasting of sales of up to 50
percent off.

Ronald Rhodes, human services
deputy director, said the dcci sion to
use stale money came after the Jan uary-March federal quarterly pay ment was delayed.
ADC checks arc due to recipients
at the first of the month, but the fed eral delay would have meant a postponement in this week's mailing .
"We did not have the federal
.funds. If you're a county director,
that means the cliQnts are going to be
calling you," Rhodes said.
"OBM authorized us to use slate
funds to fill the gap. You're looking
at about $80 million for the month
of January," Rhodes said. " What
· we're looking for is to make sure the
client~ get their checks."
Rhodes said he did not know the
specific budget account from which
the $80 million was taken. State rev-

•

Central
Building
condition
studied

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The condition of the aging Central Buildmg in Middleport was one
of the topics discussed by the Meigs
Local Board of Education, which
mel in regular session Tuesday
night.
Superintendent Bill Buckley
explained that the building has been
examined hy the fire marshal's
office, adding that "it is basically a
mailer of time until it gets red tagged."
The district has limited use of the
building to live classrooms with other parts of the building being closed
off. The basement is used for storage hy the maintenance department,
Buckley added.
He pointed out a number of
faults possessed by the building,
including insufficient wiring, structural defects and asbestos.
The district has the option of
repairing or renovating the building,
adding modular classrooms to the
junior high school or doubling up
rooms in the junior high building.
The Central Building has been
used to house elementary sehoul students, but is now pari of Meigs
Junior High School.
Board President Larry Rupe
instructed Buckley to gel fi gures on
what it would cost to renovate the
building.
Buckley explained thai he wasn 'I
making a call fur action, but rather
updating the board on the condition
of the old building.
"We can't du anything now,"
Buckley said.
Also, the board discussed purchasing of items with money from
its permanent improvements levy.
The board voted to purchase four
copier machines for $15,000 and six
cnuc comes llli.Jinly from the income,
high-volume, high-speed duplicators
sales and other taxes .
for $24,000 with leftover funding to
President Clinton on Friday go towards purchase of social studsigned legiSlation Congress sent him
ies textbooks.
to assure that checks would go to 3.3
In addition, lhc board approved
million veterans and dependents, bidding for six new school buses
and 4.7 million welfare families.
, with live of them to be purchased by
levy funds.
That means Ohm will quickly get
In personnel mailers, the board
its $80 million hack from the feder- employed Cindy Rhonemus as treaal government , perhaps as solm ·as
surer on a lwo-year contract starting
this week.
Jan . I. The board also approved hir"That slate money was our way
ing Christi Collins, Margo Florian
of dc&lt;~ling with the federal stalemate . and Faye Tillis as subsJitute teachThe state's not going to be out $80 ers for the remainder of the school
million," Rhodes said.
year.
But unless a federal agreement is
In other personnel mailers, the
reached , the same kind of hudgel
board accepted the resignation of
juggling could reoccur. .
teacher Robert Ashley, effective at
" We could be facing the same sit- the end of the school year, and notuation in February ," Rhodes said.
ed that teacher John Van Recth is on
Rhodes said Ohiv would recei ve sick leave, pending disability retireits $1 billion annual payment for ment.
food stamps because a federal spendThe board also accepted the resing bill was approved in October. An
ignation of Kristen Junghans as a
estimated I million Ohioans usc learning disabilities teacher at Rutfood stamps .'
land Elementary School, effective
. immediately due to her moving outThe state will receive about 60 of-state .
In' other business, the board:
percent of its Medicaid allocati on,
which the department said should
• Approved leak insurance with
the Leading Creek Conservancy
cover costs into February. Medicaid
is the federal -state health care proDistrict at a cost of $24 per building;
gram for the poor.
• Continued membership in the
Ohio School Board Association for
Rhodes said federal money
1996 at a cost of $2.670;
received for social service programs
• Set Tuesday, Jan. 10 at 7 p.m.
should cover foster care and adoption expenses so long as the federal . at the central office as the date, time
budgel impasse did not persist.
(Continued on Page 3) '

uses its own funding
to fill shortfall in welfare

n~ss.

•

lation to return 2KO.OOO furl oughed workers to their jobs by declarin g them
essential.
Sponsored hy Majority Leader Bah Dole , the measure , if approved hy
the House and signed by President Clinton, would last through Feb. 1. How·
ever, workers would be paid only after money was approvcLl for their salaries.
The measure 's fate was un certain in the House. where UOP freshmen
have promised to continue the partial closure until the White House accepts
a seven-year balanced budget plan to their liking .
The House was scheduled to convene early thiS cvcn1ng for what was
expected lo be only a hricf session .
Despite the budget 1mpassc. there were a few bri ght spot s. I 1m Holley.
spokesman for the Department of Veterans Affatrs. said 3.3 million hcncfil checks went out Friday night, just hours after legislation wa s passed to
authorize the payments. "They should arrive on time. " he said.

New patrol post construction on schedule...

0

The foll ow in g Meigs Count y students we re

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

tliVI

1996 CHEVY FULL SIZE
PICKUPS

Vol. 46, NO. 169
2 Sections, 16 Pages

PL. Auto ., air, tops .

WAS $13,995 cruise, tilt

NOW$1 3,499

4.9%

::--d'J~; ~

air,

URG posts
fall honor roll
of Rio Grande's fall qnartcr dean's
honor li st'
De borah A. Alkire . Po me roy:
Lorri A. Burnem, Langsville: Chri sti
A Collin s, Syracuse: Lisa R. Dorst.
Albany: B.J. F1ellin ge r. Pomeroy:
Cath e rin ~ I. Grosve nor. Pomeroy :
James Hay111an. Long Bott(_Hn : Kim berly D. Janey. Langmll c: Mandy J.
Jones . Lan gs vilie :
, Darin P. Logan. M1ddl c ~ o rt ;
Joseph P. McE lroy Pomeroy: Kim berly A. Mi chae l. Racine: Matthew
W. Mi chael . Racine·: l.ce'a N. l'mlfi(! , Pomeroy . /\ my J)~ Hou.se. Middleport: Kathlee n M Rutherford .
Middl eport : V1ck1 L. Smll h.
Lan gsv ilk : Gv.·yndolyn M. Taggart.
Po m er oy ; Rohcn F. T;tg gart ,
Pomeroy: M&lt;ll) J. Wh an . M~tldlc ­
porl : Steve n M. Wood, Mi ddle port .
To he n &lt;l lllL'd to the It s!. stuJcnt s
m:ust earn a 1.75 grade po int avl' ra~;e on a 4.0 sc;de dunn g th e quarter.

ent1ne

1-800-837-1 094

1991 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

1995 OLDS
ACHIEVA
Auto. ,

Auto., air, stereo.

Cloudy with a chance or nurries tonight, lows in the teens.
Thursday, cloudy. High near 30.

•

THE PlACE TO GO TO SAVE YOU DOUGH!

WAS $13,597

FRIDAY
Columbia
C ARPE NTER Townshir trustees cml-nf-yc;Jr llll'Ctin g Friday. 7 p.m. at the fire stati(lll .
O rg anizalionalm c ~t i n g to f&lt; ,ll nw.

mote sulcs or fund raisers

13-18-21-22-24

Sports on Page 5

308 E. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

Th l'

POMLROY - Free eloth111g day
at the Sal vation Arm y. 115 Butternut
A vc ., I 0 a. m. lO noon . All we Icome.

Buckeye 5:

GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON
QUALITY NEW &amp; USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

-Community calendar-The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·

8-5-2-6

Reduction Sale

Aw1 l..tmdl'l".l" · hm1k 11'/. " Nux,r:ers
and /Joo~ ies. " /w.1· n cr.\thillg jimn

poixnanrlr inl'lgllljitl. Se nd a self
addrl'.\".\ t'd. Inn,!!,. lmsine.,·s si:e nn·e'"1'£' wul (/ d1t'd: or !1101/ l'Y ordt't}or
$5.25 ( I hi.\· illl'flllft' J JUH faM e and
handling ) w: Nt~):ge r.v, d o A1111 Lan den . leO. /lo .1 11 562. Cilimxo. Ill.
1&gt;1!1&gt; 1/ -1!51&gt; 2. 1/11 Cmwd11, H ' llli
$625.1

Pick 3:
6-4-8
Pick 4:

t99S After Christmas Inventory

~H"l' ht:~ tnhn1 ke n .

\Vr thin"- what Aunt Di is doing
l !l I IIII' grandmothLT is a di sgrtlCL' . hut
we d o n ' t ~n uw wh:11 to do about it.
I lmpe you print thi s lette r. Do you
h tt VL' i tll ) ' s t.: ~~t..·~ tium, ·.1 - J.F. IN
PHI LADI:I .PHIA
DLAR J.F : /\unt D1 so und s like
.1\\ itdr A..; I!!!" yu ur gr;mdlllillhcr. I S
:-.hL· 11 ! ... tl und minJ ·.1 Art. • yo u and
Hllll ' rhltn g;.. ahll' tu ul ln )' \JUr
!! randm uth.. : r lw u:-. 111 !..! and d&lt;lil v
~~~t~ nt io n '.' 1-lp\\ does~ Grann y fc:l
ahnut h~ m ~ 1\nlatt.'d frnm the rl'st ol
the famil y'! I would need to know the
an swers to t,ht:~e qm· ~ tiun .s in order
to gi\"l' yo u rrac ti l. " til guidance .
I s u ~gcs t that yo u seek the coun se l t&gt; f Slllll C&lt;l nC in authority who
kno w~ Grttndma and mi ght he will in g to help . (iol Hl luck.
Ge m of the l).,y: I fall the world's
economi sts WL'fL' laid end to end,
the y would rlot rl'adJ a e\Jndusion .

Ohio Lottery

Rhodes gets
NFL top
coach honors

DON TATE MOTORS

v:,,

ar~..·

~l't

Tuesday, December 26, 1995

•

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