<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9939" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9939?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T19:18:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20379">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2e8c5d6fbce04f4d7ad4112ca7a76c99.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fccbdb6b8e96415daca5cfd0cf3d4e8d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31795">
                  <text>'

.•

I

'Lost Generation' revived · · t
with publication of rec·ipes 1
By MJCRF.fJ,E LOCO
book still elliatcd, albeit under a
Alloellted ,._ Writer
_ cWfamt name.
OAKLAND, Calif. - Ernest
Sbe !Mid a friend wentlbele and
Hemlnpay waa rllk says autbcl' Oldered die -roaat chicRn tbat
SIJZIIIIIC Rodrlpez-Hunra Parla 11 the characters Jake and Bill
a movable feast. Sbe'a 'sot tbe enjoyed In tile book. lllppCd off by
rcciJ)es 10 prove it.
lbc same walk.
From Papa' a favorite rout . "It waa Just wmderful.lt waa ~
cbicbn 10 GirtrDcle Stein'a tea par- 1f we were dlnlna wltb them,
ties to Josephine Balter' a naked Hunta said
IDDch Hunter baa researched and
From tllere came the Idea of
rccreited menus of tile e~ finding refcrencca to food In tile
Americana In Paria for her boot, fiction or memolra of the cl!pltriForwl Meall of the Lon Ge~~era- ares !!lid m!!!d!IIJI tbat to n:clpes of
tile time.

tioll.

Pan chatty history, pan c;ootboot, Found Meall Ia a tasty read,
mflectlng tile lllaty appedtes of tile
c;oteric of writers and artists who
went 10 France In tile 19201.
For Hunter, an Oakland tree- lance writer it waathe cnJmln•don
School, and her llllldenta, Mandy Foat and Scott
of a fasclnailon witll tbc JCIIellllon
MEIGS MINES AND EDUCATION- Dllft
sbc firal Jead about u an 18-ywl..ong. Foater will - her SOCCO mini...... to
Baker, far left, • - n raoiii'CCI -~~~~~er for
bay
fur
them..
old
In Hemingway's A Movttlblt
ScMatlltna OWo eo.I Co., ,wu Bette Foaer, a
Ftasr
IUa IJ'IIde te~er at AUennUle Ele. .ntary
· •'I. malized that tllere WCII! all
tbese people wbo lived out lbele ill
a way 1 didn't know ellialed. They
sinned. And they lived to teD the
tale " sbc said
Hunter ~~on to apend a yell!'
in France wbell! abe found herlelf
visiting 'ber Idols' homes and
·teachers at Rutland Elementary haunts
WILKESVILLE - Soutllcm celebrate Appalachian history, lit- School Tbe program uses tile JoaiTbe Idea for the
came
Obio Coal Co. funded II projocts erarure and culture.
.
c;a1 p~nic;a aystenl to supplCIIIClDt
while she waa
San
!II 111!1 acboolll tbil year, acrordlng
A.banc;Js~ 8piKOIIch to saencc · and reinforce phonics stU1a alona Also Rises, and
rcatau·
to a news release from Amcric;an also 15 bema taken bY Carol Evans, with regular reading instniCtion.
rant Hcminpay wrote about in tile
Electric Power.
a fourtb grade teacher at Rutland
Tbc mini-lllllts arc given IIIIIU· Elementary School.
any aa I*' of tile company's P.t"I have not bad tile money to .
nersblpsln fldlJCllliolll'logllllll. To · develop a bands-on approac;b to ·
date $36 000 bas been awarded, learning in science," Evans staled
funding oW:r 90 projects during die in ber grant applicadon. "The won·
program's uiDC ycus. This year's dcrful activities materials and tits
cub awarda range from $ISO to tbat I have listed are self contained.
$400.
Everytlli.ng Is provided. I don't
"They arc Intended to provide have to track down materials and
private funds for innovative and worry about tbe eipense."
Cll!llive projeas Initiated by teacbThose items inducle "Scicnce in
ers for wbich school disttict funds Action" l&lt;its, wbich teach students
are not available," said Dave about plants and animals, electrlciBater SOCCO human resourc;es ty, oc;eans, simple machines,
·manaier and coordinator of the weather, rocks, mineraia and 111118mini grant program.
nets. "I'm roovlnced· tbcsc materiSOCCO, wbich supplies c;oalto ab would help my students discov·
Oblo Power Co.'s Gavin Plant, er bow wonderful tbe world tlley
operates two underground mines live in can be," abe said.
and a coal prepuation facility,
Students in Pamela Crow's fifth
employing more IbiD BOO indlvidu- grade cws at Salisbury Elementary
ala from Meigs and surrounding School in Pomeroy willlcam more
c;ounties.
about tile world around them
·Proposals for tllla year's mini- tbrousb some new, blah-quality
grants came from schools in the videos purchased witll their
Vinton County School District, SOCCO minl-&amp;rant. Tbc videos
Meigs Loc;ai School District and tate students on 10UII of the U.S.,
Alexander School District. The Europe and Aaatralla, aa well aa
projocts were selected by a special Civil War battlefield&amp; and Kins
SOCCO review commluee, con- Tht's Tomb.
sistilia of one reprcsentatlve from
"1bbs project will 11clp OlD' atueac;h ac;hool district and three clenll kcome literate in ICOJI'8PIIY
SQCCO employoea: Janet Duffy; -and- biatory, 10 that they can
human reaoarcca; Cindy Peuce, become productive members of
maiu,.ance ~· and Bud society wbo know bow ibc world is
~of die Me
Mine No. 2.
put tosetber and bow tbc lessons of
. F'cir Cllllllple. ·
Lowery, tile put can help tbcm make tbil
a flflb grade teacher at Pomeroy world a better place," Crow said
Otller fl!O}eds funded tbrougb
Etemrnwy School, wants her students to be proud of their tllis year s SOCCO mini-grants
Appala.·cbian background. Her program include "Effective Pbon·
· socco mini-grant will be ~ to ics Insuuction," awarded to Saunpun;baae a variety of books til at dra Tillis and Kristin Jungbana,
·

am-:..-

Southern Ohio Coal funds
aid educational process

Lesbian officer tells
story in new volume

-

By UM L MILLS
Aiaad..,.. rr- Writer
. WASHINGTON- Sbe II lbe
blsbcat-raaklna soldier ever to
cballcnge ~ben on says in tile
miUtlry. Blliln Sttclaand Just fin!abed lbootin&amp; a TV movie about
licr life, atarrln.l Glenn Close and
Judy Davia. Stnm11cn walt up to
her on tile atrcct, bug her and say
tblmb.
But Col. Margarclbe CammerII1C)'CI' waall the World to know sbc
la not unique.
•'Of the h~ of pcopiC that
I've ~ 111 in the lui ~ ~
there ui ao many almilultlcs
between my journey and tllein,"
Cammermeyer says. "And the lettera that I've rccclved from ~lc
wanting to share that tbey ve
lllalted In my lllOCS -. tbcy're glad
to bear that thCII!' a IOJDCOIIII else
wbo baa beelllbele witb tbcm and
would perbapl understand tile difficulties tll!cY've been tbrouglt."
('tn!!Nsmep- Greta. to her
friencb- chlliled the c;ourae of
that journey In April 1.989 when
abe 1~ tile woola, "I am a lcsblan, 10 a iDililary lnveltigaiOl' at
a security cl!;aance lnlmview. Sad·
dcnly, an CliCIIIillarY 26-year Army
cucer, wblcb lncillded a Bronze
Star ouncd In VIetnam, meant
·uothlnJ. Cammermeycr, who
tllou1bt abc wu on bcr way to
becoming cb_lcf nurae for the
Natloaal 0u1n1. WI!' iDstcad ~
up befcR IDveatipdve boll'ds _.
llripped her of her l'llit, her uniform. licr very lclendty.
Sllc c;heltensed the Army ill tedcrll CIDiilt. mel 'NOlL Cunallly, \be
Juallce Dcpartmeut Ia dcc;ldinJ
whether to appeal to the U.S.
Sui' 'C Court
Ca,mmcrmc~ baa ~~-II~
lilllld a IJobt
her
·
Senlilfl ill Sikll«, It dmlldel bcr
odYif!C7 from dutifal Army nunc,
wife .and aOtber of four boya to
dlvotced lciblaD tlld hero of the
eft~ to end the prohibition on

gays In tile military:
In tile boot, she desaibes herself u a private person. Now, her
life Ia Cllposed to tile. world, and
Cammermeycr admits she'·&amp;
ullllOIIIfonible.
"It's very awkward," she said
discussing tbe book on a recent
afternoon. "But it needed to be
done and I pll!teDd tbat tile boot Is
about sOmebody else...
Cammenneyer was born In 1942
in Norway during tile Nazi occupalion, and says her first mlliwy
OPCialion was aatunlling succcu;
lfer mother lll!!!&amp;&amp;lcd auns to tile
.resistance past Nazi beadqwKiers in
Oslo in ber baby curiage, wltll
Greta in IL
..
Her fatller, a neuropatbolopat,
and mother, a nurse, emigrated 10
tile United States in 19S 1. Cammermeyer attended tile University
of Maryland, where abe had
planned to study medicine. But
after a difficult (Iahman yeu, sbc
turned 10 nunlna. In 1!161, a yeu
after becominaa U.S. citizen,
Cammetmcycr joined the Army.
Camnw meyer iiiWIR lbll tbc
book and the IIIOVic, wllldl Ia alll·
ed to air. euly ncllt year, have
eliJ)IIIcled her opportanltica to tell
her atory.

•

"It seems 10 impoltantto like
advantqe of the manc:nt, eapecial·
ly when you believe tbat your job
is supposed to be what mine baa
bcQOIIIC risht now and tbat Ia ll'yina
to c;bangc the stcreOtypC that baa
been promoted tbrou.ab otbera'
defining ua," abe said. "And I
don't mow • e1sc to do It otbcr
than through ellamplc, tbrouah
taltlng, tllmuJil e4ucallOD and try·
iqtoprovldcaclillcmltJmqe."
em..,. meyer aid the aovem·
met~tllld her ~~~m~eya have been
di'CIIIsinl a ICUJement of her c;aac. .
But JIVeD that abe baa beell rein·
lllliCd llld illefVID&amp;in the Nltional ,
Guard in Waahln&amp;IOII state, Cammermeyer said abc did not know
wbat waalclt eo settle.

.. s··

~- ,.

-

-· • .r" •·-- · ··

·-

· ·Power~

a -

ster.
::
"Why all the fuss?" Bator
wrote. "It didn't take Ions to pti
oo MY costume."
·~
Found Meals Ia published 1Q'
Faber mel Fiber, Inc., witb a
gested mtall price of S21.9S.

sue•

8-15-24-19-34-41
Kicker:

Pap4

l5l730

•

en tine
•

VoL 45, NO. 150
Copyright 1994

Pension fund shortfall jumps 34 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
lbortfa1l between penaion benefits
promiacd to AmcriC:an wCRcn and
retirees and tbc money set liSide to
pay for tllcm shot up 34 pcn:ent
last year 10 $71 billioo.
.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Cclrp. said today lbat underfUnded
llagle-etnployer pension plans bad
usets of just $316 bUllon to pay
$387,billion In beaefit1iaNiitles at
tile end of 1993.
The federal pension Insurance
qency said 8 million wortcn and

mtirces arc c;overed by the underfunded plana, but cmpbasizcd tbat
7S percent of the shortfall Ia In
plans stonsored by financially
bealtlly 1stncsses.
.
About $18 billion of tile underfunding Ia In plana aponaoll!d by
C&lt;lllpauics witll below investmentgrade bond ratings, It added. The
plaQs rover about 1.2 millioo people.
.
Tbc PBGC noted tbat ConSII!II
C&lt;lllplCted action last week on legislation deais!Jed to ll!duce under-

funding by more than twO:.tlliida lbe deal for workers who have
over tile DCllt IS ycm. The biD also COUIIIed on and earned tbc Amtiriwill ellmlnatc witbln 10 yean tile can dream of a securc lditcm.:nt,"
agenc;y' s deficit, which atood at be added.
$2.9 billion at tile end of 1993.
Although people In 11101t uncler"Wilb c;on811!181onal paaaaac of funded plana 1ft rovercd by PBGC
the administration's pension insurance, many remain at risk
reforms, we can now begin to because tlle_IIJCIIcy's parantec Ia
mvcrse tile trend tbat poled a riat limited to $2,SS6.82 a 111011tb, often
to workers and retirees," said less than tile promiacd benefit. The
Labor Secretary Robert Reicb, .annually a4jlllled payment will be
chairman or lbe PBGC boud of . $2,S73.86 a month Delli year.
dirccton.
'
The underfunded p)Ua ll'C COD'' A solid penaion will be pan of ceobaled In a mlatively amal1 DIDD"

pnjec:t.

IIWII- 'IICIEVY WE' 'II
•Ill

4MPICI!ItUH,_
• - Slolfill • c.- Ooll-

·-•IW Ani-loci&lt;·1.3~-

·SiooiBeloc!To•

••11
-

. . BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) President Clinton today called on
the leaden of more than SO DMions
.to strengtllcn Europe's rollective
capacity to curb etllnic c;onfllcts
like tbe one tearin&amp; Bosnia ~
"We must act on Its leasona. ' be
decia'cd.
As be spate to I

F.uloPcan security conferenc;e, however, the
bloodshed In tbe former Yugoslav
republic; waa defying diplomatic
formulas, prompting a fiery Republica~ 8l11ldt on Clintal' a peace pol·
icy.
Clinton lent his support to
upgrading tile peacetecplng func·

-

s...ta -

to to- to visit
wltll tile yo•n1er clllldren,
t••re wa1 m•rlc by a band
••••mble l'rom Mei11 Rl1ll
Sdaool, -

dloral •lectlom

Slello

Doorlod&lt;o • c.-~-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
ntDDber of violent aimca reported
to police dloppod 4 percent in tbc
tint sill months of 1994.CODipDCI
wilb tbc I8DIC period Iaat year, witb
a 2 percent decrease In murdcn,
tile FBI says.
OvaaU aime during tbc period
dropped 3 perc;ent, tile same percentage decline .-eporled fer tile C.
more numerous ~perty aimes,
according to pll!luninuy fincllnga
mlcasod Sundly.
At tile same time, tbe FBI Uaued
its fmal report on crimes reported
10 Jaw cnfiJI'OCIIICDI last year, findIng thai violent aime fell 0.4 percent even u tbe number of boml~
cides rose 32 pcrcen~ to 24,530.
"I tbint it's good neWs overaD,
but tbcll!'s bad news bidden witll·
In," said James Alan POll, delll of
criminal justice at Nortbeaatem
University in BOSIOII.

CAB PICKUPS!

'10,788** '

'16.988
•L!Tiim

Ani-loci&lt;-

·-Siollill

fully fancied. witb usets of $6()3.
10 cover pension lilblliua
of S518 biDion.
'

billiol1

that Ravenswood Aluminum is
ellperiendng some very positive
fundamental
changes,"
Ravenswood AlumintDD President
Gerry Meyers said. "1bbs rootract
between Ravenswood and the
USWA is a c;onc;rcte example of
that."
The rootract rovers nearly 1,700

hourly workers attbe Jackson

County aluminum fabrication plant.

·--

•IMFIISiooo

•

Al•unin1un and aeate1 the ltlbillt)'
in tile c;oa;paay's buaiiiCH, whkll:
is so important to everyone'•
future," said union District 2J
Director Jim Bowen.
:
The agreement CODtruted wllb·
tbe dispute of 1990 wbell'
Ravenawood hired more tbln 1,000:
non-union wcxttii to ·nm Ill plant
during a 20-mooth labor diJp¥ . . ~
A federal judge this fall
approved a $3.9 million scalemen«
between Ravenswood and 160 fermer mplacement worters.
The n!piacement wortcrs WCII!
fired when Ravenswood and tbe
union agll!ed 10 a rootract In June
1992.
'
The WOlken wbo sued COIIICnded tbey sbould not have 1lccn fill!d
because tlley were classifiCd as perIJiliiCIII employoes.

lions ot lbe 51-natioo Confercnc:c
on Security and Cooperation in
Europe. "Etllnic batted thrcatenJ
peace and toleranc;e,'' be said.
"Change everywhem is causing
r~ and insealrity ...
Allotting only about seven hours
In this picturesque former COIII!qU·
Dist apital. Clin1011 gave brief but
high-profile aaentioa to tile seucb
for new security urangements in
post-Cold Wt11 Europe.
He also was presiding over a
ceremony marking a signlflc;ant
mvcrsal in nuc;lear weapons stoc:kpiling.
Clinton c;alled Bosnian Serbs,

wbo are rcsistlng a peace plan and
pn!SIIag tbcir drive "&amp;•in" Mnalinl
· enclaves, aurcasora. He ursed
tbem 10 agree to a ceaac file and 10
seuie dilfCICIICCS wid! Muslims and
. CroalJ in tile former Yagoalav
republic.
"We tnow tbat Conner cnrmies
can realllcile,' ' be Slid.
Clintal said tile ~2-nalion aecurity conference hu tbe "ullique
tools" 10 foster European intepatioo.

Speal&lt;ing after Clint011, Ruuila·
Pll!sidcnt Boris Yeltain voiced--cems about a U.S.-IIIJIPOited pia
toexpandNAlO.

.

'

'94 AND '9511500 EMNDED

•IW

piau.
.
.
It said tile vast majority of tile:
ainJic-aDploycr plans It~ ll'C"

FBI states
..-----Local briefs-violent crime
. Persons sent to prison
County fuJitlve began serving bis S-yar sentmce wbell
down
. 4 percent be AwasMeigs
sentiO tbc Orient Reception Center Friday, IIIXllllding to tile

CHOOSE FROM 20

·"'""*·-Sitllllg ·--

Tile asenc;y said mucb of tile
1993 anderfunding Increase was
due to historically low intereat
rates, which reduced pension plan
carulnga. But it added dW even if
rates bad not fallen, lbcm would
have beell no significant improvement in underfunding, wbich baa
arown over tile past decade

''Pension underf..diDI bu:
been chronic and pcniatAt uc1:
wiD not go away by illolf," said:
Martin Slate, die 11 . C)'' I cliCCU-:
live director.
·
Tbe PBGC guarantees baaic.
pension bencfitl of 41 million
American wonrn and aetilccs .--:
tic:ipating In about 66,000 peiiiiOII·

President calls on world
leaders to help curb conflicts

were preaented, and the
. Pomeroy Merellanta AIICida·
tlon 1erved llot c•ocolate to
the cWldren in . . mini-part.
Suan Clark repreaentlq
the u.relaanC., aena a cup of
llot chcolate to a kl•der·
. 11arten yoan1ater, Andy
McAn1••· Trl•mtn1 one or
tbe tree1 au atadenu l'rom
Mr1. Tammy Chapman's
. ldDderprten c~a~~;

·-- ·~

·--

ber of oomamiea. tile PBGC said.
More tb1m half of tbe ondclfunding
lain lqe pension plana, primarily
in the-steel, auto, tire and airline
iDdastrica.

Creating festive atmosphere---. Steelworkers ratify new contract ·:

Pollltroy took oa a more
r.tlft atmoll....... Prlday a
UU..n of tH Po-I"'Y Elellltntary Se.ool came down
to- to ileeorate tile Cluilttreei wlllell line Second,
Covt _. Main Streeta.
For tile put aeYeral yean
tile achoof ••• joined the
P-roy Mercllanta Auoda·
tlo• In t•e tree decoratln1

$1&amp;888

•• rto.'BIIMI
- Slollill

·•'-Dilrl*
· ~~&amp; . . . . ~ •!11!111:..

1 Section, 10 ..... · - - ;
A lllultlmedlll Inc. N.. rp p II ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 5, 1994

It includes wage inc;rcases of 30
cents an bour in 1996, 2S , 'lilts an
bour in 1997, and 30 cents an bour
said.
in 1998, tile c;ompany said.
The· oontract will ellplre May
Tbc CODtract also includes tbrce
31, 1999. The old c;onttact, wbicb pension inc:rcascS in addition to a
took nearly two yean 10 reach, wu $1,000 lump payment to cac;b
to expill! May 31, 1995.
hourly employee, tile company
Negotiators be'gan working ou said.
tile new COIIIrl1Ct in August.
"This is a major ac;c;ompllsh"Wc have slated for some time ment for everyone at Ravcaswood

'1Q988**
•-

·-

SuperLouo:

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
-:- Ravenswood AIUDiintDD Corp.
avoided tile labor strife of the past
few years 11 tbc OllllpaD)' and tile ,
SteelwCI!ren anion ep:cd 10 a new
4-112 year oonlr.ICI.
~ Tayb, prcalclent of tile
local
, said botb tile union and
tile company wanted to demonSlraleaCW!!!!!itmenttothefuture.
"This c;ompany abd our members have been l!!n!ug!J aomc bani
times, but we have cbosen to look
to tbe future, not tbc past." Tayler

·MIIIIC..
•11

• -Door lod&lt;l

recipe die provide• for the malfl
dilb appell'l flldlful ., die m.m.l
- abCIJued It on a recipe by Hail
de Touloule-Launc:.
A macb quieter affair II ._
description of a ~ Lana•lO!!
Hashea ahued wltb 1111 loves;.
Mary, on their ... Diabt Dptbc:r. '
ltupca- ODC of .evaal blact
Americans wbo fmned I llpifllo
c;ant c;ommunlty of their on lp
Paria durin&amp; the 19201, clraVIII ~
ly by tile IIIIX of JICialiJinien, •
He had to work as 1 Diptd~
diahwasber, a lowly position tbtt
prompted Mary's fatller to ordtf
her bac;k bome to London.
.
There was time for ooe laaL
romantic repast, desc;rlbed bt
Hushes In his autoblopapby ~
start - wine and
to fiDisll
- wild lttiWbc:irles bousht on ...
way bome and ea1e11 In a~
scat wbllc "sadly 'llllldllng the aut .
set over Parla."
'
Josepblne Baker rccaUcd in lllf
autoblosraphy bow ber habit dl'
lying low to avoid fans led a•
alarmed stage manager to bunt lntp'
her dresllag room, afraid abe Wll
m. Instead, be found Baker. anve.:
well, totally nude and catina loll:

Pldt3:
138
Pldt4:
0:1.61

with management at Ravenswood •

·-Doll!*

·-Sioomo

1

Southern
defeated
•
mopener

HURRY
IN NOW!

OVER20CHM
.URBAI4x4's IN STIK!

Meigs County Sheriff's Department repMS.
David M. Pcnons, of Long BOIIOIII, recently wu sentenced fer
felony fleeing, felony tlleft and felony escape in tbc Meigs County
Common Pleas Comt.
Also transported to tbe reception center was Bobby Vance.
Vance was sentenced on traffickinglcultlvatloa cbuges, rcconls
sbow.

Pomeroy

man chaTged with DUI

A P0111eroy man faces ntDDCIOUS charges - includina clrivin&amp;
under lbe infliiCIICC - after bis c:. sailed off stale Route 338 tile Ravenswood bridge, bit a tree and tbeo bacted into llllllher tree
Friday nigh~ acc;ording to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department

repoN.
.
Odrcy Reed, (]old Ridge Road. Pomeroy. waa cbalged wilb DlJI,
driving under suspension, failure 10 maintam control aDd lcavin&amp; the
scene of an accident. leclll'ds sbow.
Reed was driving east on Ibis highway wbcn be lost COIIIrol in a
sharp curve aboulll :30 p.m. Friday and was arrested bY tile Meiss
County Sberllf's 1Je4atment later. rep!XtS sWDd.

Scipio trustees to discuss park
are

The"scipio Township Trustees
Uying 10 build a recrca1i011a1
p11t and play ground at the Pagcville toW115bip lot, aocordina 10 a
relcasc from tile 1n15teCS.
Tbc t:nJSteCS wUI meet II 6:30 p.m. Wednesday • tile Pqeville
Townsbip building rcr its regullr meeting. Aft« tile mcctinaa C&lt;lll·
munity discusaion wUI be beld to get ideas lboat tbc project.
,

'Pomeroy reports fender-benders
Two minor aocidcnt.s oc:aarcd in l'llmeroy Sllllday,ICCOrdinato
tbc Pooleroy Pollee Dqlll1mcnt ft:IUIS.

_

"
II

"I j•t Jead ~~~~ I could
get my hands on, she said.
Hunter r~aeucbed more tllllll'
IWO dozen satberiDJI, providin&amp;
scttlnas. guest llats, oonveraation
a!!d recipes tea ted In her own
l&lt;i!d!cD.
Tbc book beainl wid! a famous
1908 banquet l&gt;icaaao tbrcw for
painter Henri Rouaaeau, then an old
man who waa s-allY saJnllld by
tile offldal art flOOd.
Tbc blmquct was IIUppOICCI10 be
a stately eveninS f$1U1in&amp;a "riz a
Ia Valendennea" (a sophisticated
paclla) witb a Juesl 1iat tbat indaded Stein and her new frielld, Allee
B. Toklas.
A wild Dipt enaucd, c;omplete
with a aate-crasblng donkey.
Hunter admits what really happeued 1bat eveDina II bani to aueaa;
a quandty C?f booze waa quafled
and gueat accounts COIIfllct. The

·-·--

·~Cardbl

Ohio Lottery

".

&amp;~I,,. t.s224f17•

m·• •au 5tlf1 •422-11151

. ANTIQUE TOYS ENJOYED- M'lan,

wt, 111111 La. . llarrtloa, mldna of . . . . . .
J.....r llaaTIIon, O ........ tllllo,...t DOt DIIIJ
tH ~ dilplay of a..w. dalll at tH Mtlp

COtmty M.....i ope• · - $• IIJ, hilt aliO
tH anttq• to,. Dll alllblt.lhn IIIey a ' I w..
antlqtie wicker baby biiiiJ Uti a
rocldDt! llone cllalr. .
.

•ucr-.

----

Dec. S

20shopplng
days to Christmas

At 11:38 a.m. Sunday, a Gallipolis woman's van bumped
Pmlcroy Mayer Jolm BIMIDil'a GMC truct ill the BDOuc , __
lag lot cauaing moderate damage to tbe tnM:t'a driver' a aide,

rccoots sbow.

Cynlbia Tayklr. 39, rl Gaiiipolis, bad ligbt damiJe to die ... of
her 1994 Chevrolet Aatro van. No dllliona wae ialt1Cid in dlillnd·

deal

I

At 2:~ p.m. Sunday, a vebic:lc ckivlng Clll 08 Eut MaiD SIII!Ct
Continued on
3

�Cnmmentar

•
-

The Daily Sentinel

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio-:.
Monday, December 5, 1894 .

- -

Monday,

Moving day approaches
for House members

The war

Today in histo-ry

. al Guard Outreach Program in Los .
' Angeles. About $1 million will
· flow this year for the improvcmcn(
of navigational cbartll for die lower
Mississippi River, and it will cost
$5 millloo to rebUD excess JDCdieal
supplies and equipment from
Europe to the United States for
· "use by Native Americans, local
governments, and otller deserving ·
groups." Another $8 miUion bas
. been appropriated for incentive
payments to subcontractors under
the Indian Financing Act, wbile die
Hawaii Small Business DeveloP.ment Center will receive $5.4 million In this year's budget.
Republicans will call for any
Pentagon budget reductions to be :
reallocated for military readiness, ·
as tbe White House Is already on :
the defensive for allowing the :
armed forces to become stretched ·
too thin In worldwide peaceteeplng :
operations.
.
President Clinton's recent generosity toward the Pentagon Is
unlikely to result in any lasting
peace with the new Republicancontrolled Armed Services Committee.
WHITE HOUSE WATCHWhite House officials are lhinldng
about finding President Clinton a
part-time job.
Actually, the idea is one of
many under review by staffers who
are searching for more innovative
ways Clinton can communicate and
relate with the American people.
Under this proposal the president
would serve shifts 011 the assemblyline at Boeing, the bolder patrol In
Texas, a bog--cutting plant In Iowa
or a police shift In New York.
"The bubble of the presidency
is something be, like most p~evlons
presidents, Is fighting," said one
senior While House official.
Although Clinton Is eager to break
out of the "COCOOD" of being ccmmander In chief, this official noted
that die president doesn't suffer
from his predecessor's "grocerystore scanner proble!D.'' Former
President Bush was dogged during
the 1m campaign by the perception of aloofness, symbolized by
his apparent bewilderment at the
sigbt of an ordinary supermarket
scanner.
Jack Aadenon anll Michael .
BlnsteiD are wrlten for United :
Feature Syndicate, Int.

,.
'
.,

'
'

I

~~

·,

' \

,
'

•As a matter of fact, I'm an eccentric, ousted
· congressman with one of· those hefty pensions: · '
I

•

•

When it COOICito Ametican pol•
icy toward Boanla, Waablngton bas
sunlt Into a plt of big evailons and
bigger lies. It may console some
that In doing so the Uniled States
has closed ranks with Its chief
European allies, but it abouldo 't.
Appeasement ia appeasement, no
lll8lter bow it is portrayed, and Its
consequeilcel are and will be horrendous.
WbUe even its chief ~f!*
concede that the Clinton
istratiOD'a Bilanla policy bas been an
inconsistent patchwork of fits and
starts, au now stoutly Rrotest that
the only way to "save • Boanla is
to acquiesce In Its destruction. To
do anything else, lbey say, is to risk
tearin' down NAtO and being
drawn iDIO a Balkan quagmire from
which dlere would be DO easy exit.
Between thoae extremes, we are
told, there are no reuonable
options, !hough In tmlh we have
yet to try vigorously any of tbe
many that have been suggested.
IIi pursuit of !heir new "realism," the president and bia advis;
· ers have become 1111111:11 of disln.formation and deceit. They . _
of the Bosnian civil war and Ita
"factioqJ," They attempt to ~le' gate a clutch of recent United
Nations
Security CouncJlllld
Gen·
.
'

eral Assembly resolutions they
once wumly c:mlnced to the ash·
biD of history. In deeming NATO's
preservation the be-aU and end-Ill

Hodding Carter Ill
o~ America's Europe111,1 policy,
v1tal to future European security
against unspecified tbre4ts, they
gloss over the iDCODVeDieDt fact
that NATO is OUDtlng die only real
security test It is lltely to face In
the foreseeable future.
Wont of all, IIIia admlnlt!zaliOD
bas easentlally clcdded tbat the viclim state, Bosnia, Ia no lonjer
worth the candle. FrOm here 011, the
point of the exercise will be to
force the Bosnian govemmeat to
capitulate atad accept _,., • ..,..,t
clismembcnnenL
.-·. Such Ia the llllDre of peace ill
our time.
But before we lDm off the set,
put the newspaper aside and go m
to other concerns, we onght to
pause for a brief expresalon of
shame. It Ia a~~ In
Alnericlll llisiOry,
even more
so by the transparency of our
hypocrisy. AJ we wash our banda
oflloeilia, let us admit .dial we 1re
accessories after the fact to aeno-1
c:lde, puaive ~In the

1ce

J

't,'=:

•

40~rorecut

Tuesday night. .. A chance of
freezing rain or snow uorth ... A
chance of rain south. Lows ranging

Cloudy

-Area deaths-Kate Parker
Kate Parker, 88, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Dec. 3, 1994, at Veteraos
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy.
A homemaker, abe was born June 26, 1906, lo Berlin, Germany,
dauabter of the !ale Ernst and Margarete Dobung. She allended the Laurel
Cliff Free Metbodill Church.
Surviving is her busbend, Thomas Parm; a brother-in-law and sistersin-law, nieces and nephews and a special friend, Ann Colburn of
Pomeroy.
She was preceded In dtadl by her fii'St husband, H. Bwmeister.
Servicca wiU be held Tuesday at I p.m. at Ewing Funerai Home in
Pomeroy with die Rev. Pete Tremblay officialing. Burial wiD foUow in
Roc:k S~s Cemccery.
Friends may can at the funeral boioe one hour prior to servicca.

June Wyant
June Wyant, 66, Racine, died Saturday, Dec. 3, 1994, at her residence.
Born Sept. 23, 1928, In Logan, W. Va, daughter of die late App and
Iva Hale Dyer, she was a IDDemakn a IJ!tliDber of the Praise Cathednl
Church.
She Is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, David and Barbara
Vujaldlja of AtbeDS; a daughter and SOD-in-law, Kay 8Dd RoUle Hemsley
of Racine; a daughter, Vlcltl Carpenter of Gallipolis; a stepson, Chris
Wyant of Pickerington; a stepdaughler, Kathie Wyant of Newark, Del.;
five grandcbildren.
Also surviving are three sisters, SaUy Neff of Columbus, Ann York of
CottageviUc, W.Va., and IvoneUe Stout of AsbJoDd, Ky.; two brothers,
Bob Dyer of Huntington, W.Va., and Kent Dyer of Columbus; and several
nieces and nephews.
She was preceded In deadl by a husband, George A. Wylllt In June and
by two brothers, Charles and Vickers Dyer.
Services will be held Wednesday at 11 a.m. a1 FISher Funeral Home In
Middleport wilh Pastor Jim Dale offiCiating. Burial will follow in Meigs
Memory Gardeos.
Friends may can from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday a! the funeral home.

Sisson says new
standards should be
considered at OSU

four years.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (A:P) Students used to be reQUired to
Ohio State University should con- complete oo more than lgO credit
sider reducing the number of credit boors to graduate. The university
boors required to graduate and cre- increased the number to 196 hours,
ate p¢()!111l1DCC standards for tm- adding several required courses In
feasora, the provost said.•
general studlea.
Provost Richard Sisson on SatStudents earn a certain number
urday told the Univenlty Senate of credit hours per class, averqlog
that It is "simply not acceptable" about four credits. Aoy011e taking
that less than 25 percent o( OSU' s more tbaJ;J 12 credits worth of
undergraduate students graduate in . classes per 10-weet quarter is considered a fuU·time student; 15 cred·
its is avel'll8e.
The Daily Sentinel , "With such demands, it is little
wonder dial less than 25 percent of
(VSI'IIlJl.MI)
our students graduate in four
years," Sisson, a native of Galla
l'llbl~
...,. - - · · ......., ........, ;
Prldly,
Ill• court
51., I'OifoOIOJ, 01110, by ll&gt;e • County, said.
Olllo Vol.., Pllbllilli. 0.-yiMulllmedla .
He said die univenlty should
Joe., ,....,,. Olllo 41769. I'll. PPl-2156.
consider reducing the number of
1'0..-oy,allo.
required credits.
'lbo __.....
ll&gt;e (JIIo
•'Tbe budget Implications of
N.......,. "nclr'~ L
such a change are very complex,
I'IJn1(oU'IDJ llllcl......, ........,u to
but the goills compelling: We
no Dolly SeaUool, Ill Court St.. · mast retum the four-yw degree to
45769.
just that - a four-)'I!IW degree," be
IIIJIICIIPI10N IAlU
..sald.
· Ooo w...
· a;.............................
Canlor • - - .1
-... .. .......... $1.60
Ooo .............- ..................................... $6.95 .
Now Open For

•
:
·
.

:

•

•
•

Olo Y• .... r..,.-.........,.......................... 51!.20

-Ia-o. . .---lo·-

liouy ......................,_,,...................... !.!C..

.

1.-tbonllltdolillllloJIIIYlbt-aay .
diroclto 'lbo Oolllpdllllolly '
1\'lb... oo
ala or llmootll b....

Cllclllrillboal- - - - No ouboerttll•• by moll pormlliOII lo • •

M.W.IIIJISCIIPI10NI

...... O..CouiJ

.•·--G..

J3W--------··---·---·-----------------------.s21.14
l6W---··-·--·:.......-.......... -..- -S4U6
:

-.

Heavy raiD fell this mcnillg in
F1mida and up the. East a-t u a
cold front fueled .....aacd thJmcltr11011111 from l..ollislana to Pemlaylvanla.
A blast of Arctic air drifting
acroas the Plains sent temperatures
plummeting, with fleczinl drizzle
8Dd lightSDOW falling io Iowa.
The cold air was ellpected to
reacb central Texas and the Ohio
Vauey by this evening, with SDOW
forecast from lower Michigan
southwest into tbe Texas panban·
die. ·
Tempemtures were expected to
dip well below zero In Wyoming,

day at 6:30 p.m. at die home of
Charlotte Elbedeld. Members to
take items for Serenity House.
Meetin&amp; plamed
The fee access (alternative
income meeting) scheduled for
Dec. 6 and 13 bas been canceled
and wiD be reschedoled at a later
dale
Booaten to meet
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
will meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
Eastern High School.

Lod3e to meet
Regular meeting, Middleport
Lodge 363, FctAM Tuesday, 7:30
Masonic Temple, Middleport.
Installation of new officers.
Refreshments.

Units of tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medic:al Service reported 15 calls for assistance Saturday
and Sllnday. Units responding
Included:
MIDDLEPORT
5:06 a.m. Saturday, Middl~
Police Department, Barney Hiles,
Veteraos Mem&lt;Xial Hospital;
8:44a.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Mae Lynch, VMH;
· 1l:~S am. Satunlay, volunteer
fire department, Jerrico Road,
brush fire on Ohio Power property.

SYRACUSE

RACINE

'

I.

!2W------·--·---·-------·-·"'"""""-...SI4.76 I
C.., .$23.-«J
. I S -...............................................

l 6 - -·-···-·--·--·----·"'""""""'"'"''"'$4S..!O :
5 2 -.... -----·-........................... Jll.«&lt; ;

'

· Christmas Season
Poinsettias-6 colors
Poinsettia Baskets
Foliage Baskets
Christmas Trees
For the loved ones Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
Grave blankets.
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio
992-5776 I
OSun Daily 9-5
unday 12-5

.

9:36 a.m. Saturday, Fourth
Street, Racine. Shirley Pyles,
HMC.

2:02 p.m. Saturday, Elm Street,
Laura Green, VMH;
2:~4 p.m. Saturday, Flatwoods
Road , Nelda Wyant, dead on
arrival; ·
12:56 a.m. Sunday. state Route
124, Everett Homer, VMH.
REEDSVlll..E
9:36 a.m. Sunday, state Route

TUPPERS PLAINS

11:47 p.m. Saturday, Number
Nine Road, Ken White, HMC;
11:56 a.m. Sunday, state Route
7, Doris Goodrich, St. Joseph's
Hospital.

COLUMBUS, Ohio ('AP) Ohio direct bog prlcea at selected
buyin&amp; points Monday by the Ohio
Department of Agrirulture:
Barrows ancf gilts: unevenly
stesdy; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-2fl0 Ibs., country
polnta 26.50-27.SO, a few 28.0028.25; planll27.50-29.25.
u.s. 2-3, 230-2ll0 lbs., COIII!.III

points 23.50-26.SO.
Pricca from The Produccrl Livestock Aasoriation:
Cattle: steady to 2.00 Iowa'.
Slaughccr steen: choice 62.0070.10; select 54.00-64.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice l!O.~ ·
69.00; select 55.00-64.00.
Cows: lleady to 5.00 higher; Ill
cows 53.00 and down.

HC?:J:Ital
news
HO
MEDICAL CENTER
Dee. 2 dllclllarae. - Deanna
Womeldod, Jobo Mullin, Vicky
DanfooJ. Mlldrcrtzie Halley, Mark
Zillinlki, Genevieve Barnhart alid
Janet Peazley.
Dec. 2 blrtlal - Mr. and Mrs.
Mic:bacl Myers, daughter of Gallipolil.

Dec. 3 dl~ellaraea • Mrs.
Michael Meye~s aod daughter,
MoUy Staggs and Julia Long.
Dec. 3 blrtlt - Mr. and Mrs .
CbJwlea Crabcree, 1011, of Oak Hill.
Dec. • dlscltarau : Noelle
PickeDs, Vivian Richards, Ashton
Riddle and Gertrude Ma11D.
Dec. • births - Mr. and Mn.
Greg Cnnoiugbam, daughter, of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy
McNerliD, dlllgha, of Oak Hill
(P11Hkhhrl6 peml don)

Stoc
Ala Ele ..._..

·-------32 ,,.w

Am
·--..
--..--..--.51
A+I•M
OD·--..
________
_._.D711

~
Oae.----·-------E..u-----------M·

AT&amp;T----------

liMit
3M
Bob
Cltaaopiollbld. _ _____ _.M _l ll

__ ---··------"·.

...., ,_
CltJ Holdltta-··------ - - . . . "'-r

I

fedenl MOIIII.----..
Gootl,_.fta.____

'U

.. . .
33111

K.....-t---------1"
Ut
u.dl Ead ---16 Ut
lalt8d lao:.------•' ,.
M•tt . •11 lao:. - - - ---211/J
roteta.-.------•'
......_ Eledrle------.31711
Roltblao a Myon----16 IJJ

ROJIII ......---------11'7

s....,•.~ao:. ·-----13 511

Star lluk ---~

H

W

W..tylat'L -------···3M
Wartlllapla lad.- - - - ·lUII
!iCack ...... - tloa t•.ll
••otes pro~lded bJ Adult o
G. .polll.

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGSCOUNn
SINCE 1868

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

---Local briefs... - Contlnwd from page 1
puUed to the right side of the road to avoid another car and was
rear-ended by another vehicle, reports stated.
Morris Wallace, 47, Racine, was charged with driving without
Insurance and his 1965 Ford bad li~bt damage to the rear, records
show. Roy MIKsball, 37, also of RaciiiC, was charged with failure to
maintain CODUOl after his 1995 Chevrolet truck bit Wallace's car.
Marsball's truck bad moderate damage to die passenger side door,
· records show.

Southe8st. the 30a tbiOUgb the 501
in die NcxtbeUI, the 2llland ~ Ia
the l'lclf'IC NOitbweat 1114 the 601
and 70. In die Southwest.
The nation's bot spoil SUDday
were In Flarida, where bolh Lllleland and Fort Myers hit 87. The
low of 21 below zero came ia
Glendive and Sidney, both in Montana, and ia WiUiston, ND.

Today's livestock-report

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturnday admissions - Mae
Lynch. Middlep&lt;Xt
Saturday discharges - DOIIC
Sunday admissions - Mary
124, Melvin Smilh,liMC.
McAngus,
l'oml:roy; Ada Keesee,
RUTLAND
.
·
7:22 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy Pomeroy
Sunday
discharges
-DODe
Police DepartmeDt, RicbanJ Stewart, VMH;
8:~1 a.m. Sunday, Nye Avenue,
DOWNING CHILDS
BessJC Landaker, VMH;
1:04 p.m. Sunday, Enterprise
MULLEN MUSSER
Road, Lena Nesselroad, VMH;
1:54 p.m. Sunday, Condor
INSUUNCE .
Stteet, Lisa Haggy, VMH;
111 Second SL, Pomeroy
3:32 p.m. Sunday, Hysell Run
Road, Ada Kllesee, VMH.

John A. Wade, M.D.
.

Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Ple88Bnt, B'V.

CaD 304-675-1244 for Appt. or Information
"ember of Aetua PPO A Fe.leral M

PPO

Sheriff responds to complaints
ComplaiDts caUed In Friday were b!IJ!Illed by deputies, according
to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department reports.
Arlene BIKDCS of Racine was cited for driving a without a valid
llceuse. CoolviUc's Shawn RoUIDs was charged wilh OODtributiDg to
the delinquency of a minor.
Terry Bogart, Nease Hdlow Road. stated overnlgbllbursday an
unknown vehicle backed into bia gate, leaving behind a tail light
and side trim.
Peggy Proffitt, Yellowbash Road, Racine, reported sometime
Friday evening someone knocked her mailbox off its post, records
show.

Deer-car accidents probed
Two deer-car accidents were investigated Friday eveniog,
County Sberift's Depanment reports.
WiUiam. A. Elam, Pine Grove Road, Pomeroy, was driviog
soulh m state Route 7 when be suuclt a deer about 6 p.m. Friday,
records show. Elam's 1977 Ford bad moderate damage !0 die front .
BDd driver's side fender.
Glen Young Jr., Racine, was driving south 011 county ~ 35
near Liege HiD Road when be swerved to miss a deer, spun bia car
in die road and then plowed through T0111 Theiss's fence al 7 p.m.
Friday, records slated. Youna was cited for failure to lranSfer his
registration.
~_j to ~Meigs

Bob's Market
and Greenhouses, Inc.
wi 11 be closing

Tuesday at 4 p.m.
-for the annua1
employee
Christmas dinner
'

-

-Christmas
~pecial

_.,.,(JIIo

IIJIICll.l roPI' IPIUIS

:

Around the nation

Moolana, North Dakota, and Soulh
Dakota apin tonight.
In the wesccrn.atatea, rain and
SDOW were blowing tbrough Nevada and Utah, with up to 8 incbes
poaaible In the mountalna of Idaho.
In South Fkrida, 12.5 iDcbea of
rain feU overnight in Belle Glade.
Tempelllllrel were expected to
reecb Into the 20s and 30s In die
Plains. the 60s and 70s in tbe

EMS logs 15 calls

SIOODd.._,.......,....
-.1114

Bon-

•

C~o~Jq~

The Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge
Muonlllllltall
olllcen
164 FctAM wiD lnstaU officers at
its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at die Middleport
lodge. Refreshments wiD follow.

Truateea to meet
Chester Township Trustees will
meet 7 p.m. Tuesdayat Cheater
from the mid 20s northwest to the Town Hall.
upper 30s southeast.
Wednesday ... A chance of ·DoiA to meet
rain ... Freezing raio ... Or snow
Chester COUDCil 323, Daugblcrs
nortb. A chance of rain south. of America, wiD meet Tuesday at 7
Higbs in the 30s north and 40s p.m. at the ball. Quarterly binbdays
soudl.
to be observed at potluck.
Tbursday ... A chance or rain.
Lows in the lower 30s to lower 40s. Chrllltmu party set
Highs mid 40s northeast to near l!O
Preceptor Beta Beta Cbapter,
far south.
Bets Sigma Phi Sorority, annual
Friday ...Sbowers likely. Lows In Christmas party to be held Thursthe 40s. Highs In the 50s and lower
60s.
.

South-Central Ohio
Tonlght. ..Cloudy wilh a cbaDCe
of nin or drizzle. Low 40 to 45.
West winds 5 to 15 mph bccuning
11011bwest. CbaDCe of precipitall011
30percent.
Tuesday ...Ooudy with a chance
of raiD or drizzle. Colder widl the
temperature nearly steady between
40 and 45. Cbana: of precipltall011

posters, what are they afrilld of?·"
she asked. "They have the numbers, they have die money, ,they
bave the Supreme Court. What
harm can our posten do to them7" ·
"Your posters are offensive In
the worst way," IIOld her. "They
may produce ,unt. like die Life is a ·
Beautiful Cbo1ce TV ada.''
. An egregious example of offen- ·
siveness !hat bad to be removed ·
root and branch from the Hempfield Area School District in Pennsylvania was a selection frO'm
Ralph EUisOD's "Invisible Man." .
Ellison bad actually used the word
"nigger," In a section from his
book included in the anthology
"Literature in Society."
The teachers' union bas filed a
grievance, and the National Coalition Against Censorship bas told
the superi!ltendent of schools that .
his community wiU be "publicly
embarrassed bl this rash and uninformed action. ' But some ICIISitive
folks an:n't easUy embarrassed.
.
Nat Benioff II a nationally
renowned authority on the Flnt .
Amendment aDd tile rest of the
BWofR!pll.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronleaJiy with
thla columnist and otlaer.a, con·
tact America ODllne by calllita 1IJ00.8l7~ ext. 8317.) . .

':t '"""'

&amp;nnr Pl.

station wa:a 67 dcarees In 1909
while the record low wu8 In 1976.
SUDSet IDDiaht wiD be II S:06 p.m.
and siDise Tuesday at 7:39 a.m.

Meigs announcements

- - - - - - Weather - - - - - -

''The people wbo tear down my

murder of an independent nation der, systematic rape, inhumane
and knowing participants In the incarceration and die fOitled evacureductiOD of NATO and the United Ilion or a letrorized populous could
NatiODs to utter irrelevaDcy.
not be so easily aanltized. Over
We are DOt dtallng witb ancient 200,000 ~ most of them civUhiatory here. The t~ts are w~ll . laos, lost die llves.
known. Bosnia played by aU the
Against that background, lhe
rules on Its path to independence U.N. belatedly tonk action. U.N.
d
be sbi I th U N ·1 peace-keepers, ultimately totaling
an mem r P 0 e ' · 0 23,000 were sent Into 'Bosnia to
early 1992. It created a multlpilrty, guarantee hiiiiiiUiitariaD reUef and
multireliglous democratic state and to protect the besieged Bosnian
choee-a govemmeat In 10 electiOD "safe areas." S0111e ODC-thlnl Came
opca
to Ill CODte:Dding
parties.
It wu-1v
lltiiiCJccd
by Ser- f rom Franee an d Great Br Ilain,
.-........~
wbile the United States under Pres.bla, whose attempt to lmpoae Its · ideDts Bush and CHnKIII refused to
bcgcmony over Ill of the former
lb
d c
Yugoslavia wai the proximate contr ute 4DY_ Jr9UD orces.
"'-iDle
Repeatedly, die U.N. pused resof Y -'•via' 1 ....
CIUie o ••--HC8fBlulinns demandinf.c:tlw tbe.Sel:bs
,tjm in the flnt place. The iiiVIding
--a down ftcim
ir
I ....o
Serbian
y
and
ISINUII _,..
B
accept a variety of peace plana. The
plied OIDiaD
Ctoatlan S
Serbs just .u repeatedly refUsed,
- ~~the~
thoaafl earlier this year Serbia
Since virtually all of tle heavy , made a tactlc:al dec:isJooto dole ita
borden to aaflic with the
weapons and taDb of the old Settl In 80 effort to ...ve -a U.N.·~.':£'alavlan arm'y were In the -Imposed • = o lifteit.I'JATO
.
of Sedlla. die aggressor~ hljd huffed 1114
. Del hadled -•:
the IIpper hiDd troD the beginDIDg.
- .. .
.
. "'''
But the Scrbl were 110t coatent -.. Hciildina Carur m, for-r
with merely winning a wir ·of State Departmea_t.lpcikeamaa
aggression. In the name of old md awanl-lllillnina reporter, edlarievancea and a search for new tor·and ,.bllaller, It puddent ol
tcrrit«y, they Initialed a poUcy of · MaiDStnet, • W~ J1.C.QJcutaled gSIOCide. They called It ~ tele.uioa production _ .
"edmic cleansing,'' but mass DIID'- puy.

:rated

By The A.ociated rrWet weather will continue
across Ohio tonight and Tuesday.
In the DOltb, the raiD could bUD to
sleet and mow.
Lows toniaht wiD vary greatly,
from around ~ In die nordlwest 10
45 In die soutbeaaL
Temperatures may !Jerome cold
enough In the northwest by late
Dllgbt for a changeover to fleczlng
precipitation and cold enough f&lt;X
snow to mill In with the freezing
raiD Ill Tuesday.
The cbaDCe of freeziDI raiD &lt;X
snow wiU continue Into T~
night and Wedllesday in the
with a cbanoe of rain In the soudl.
Highs Tuesday will be in the
low 30a In the nordl and the mid·
30a to around 40 in the SODtb.
The record·high 1CIIIper'llUI'C for
this dale at the Columbus weather

•--iiii!iii---·

Bosnia's loss, America's disgrace_....;·-- - - - - -

Berry's World

Rain will con'tinue around Ohio

Accu-W~ fOieellt for daytime conditions and

offensiveness ___________
.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Dec. 6

Pentagon_!pending comes under the microscope

u.-.

1994

OHIO Weather

.

_easier for a RepubUcan or DemoWASHINGTON - In a bid to Republican cloaboom.
111 Cout Street
pre-empt RepubUCIIIII In Congress,
Undoubtedly, many of these cratic president to cut pork from
President Clinton aald last week expenditures Include programs the Pentagon's $264 hllli011 budgeL
Pomeioy, Oblo
that be wiU seek an llddlliODal $25 with redeeming public policy
According to Internal working
biUlon In defense spciDdillg over the
documents, Republicans will pronext six years. But that won't avert
pose
$772.1 odllion In recisions
a sboot-wt over why the Pentagon By Jack Anderson· from the 1995 defense budget. A
Is squandering money on civilian
total of $29 billion might be saved
and
sporting
eveuts,
executive
jilts
and
over
the next five years by elimiROBERT L. WINGETI"
wild·borse I'OUIIdupe.
nating
programs Michael Binsteln including14 theseparate
Publlaber
These are just a few examples of
Seawolf submarine.
· the budget-busting waste going ro virtues, and reflect certain value Here are some of the olher proat the Department of Defense. judgments by the GOP - for grams pegged for elimination,
MARGARET LEHEW
According to a recent study by the example, some lawmakers W8llt to along wilh tbelr projected savings
Cootruller
Congressional Research Service, cut SS biUioo In fUture spciDdillg for over five years:
over the last five years the Pen- defense environmental programs.
tagon bas plowed an eJtim•ted $~2 But much of the spending simply
M-1 tank upgrade ($2.1 billion);
LBTI1!RS OP OPINION ue welcome. They Jbould be le11 Ibm 300
bUUoo Into programs and projects reflects the growing problem of defense environmental programs
wollk loac· Alllellln are 111bjoct to ~ IIDCI must be 1iped with oame,
tbat have no direct bearing on Pentagon pork.
($5 billion); excess National Guanl
lldchu Ill!' tellpbooi number. No 111111
!etten will be publilbed. utte11
natimal defense.
As one Republican member of and reserve forces ($2.1 billion);
lbould be m &amp;oocllllte, lddrulin&amp;
mt pcnooaliliea.
Senate Armed Services Com- the Senate Armed Services Com- sbriHmgand~lngtheDOD
mittee staffers have drafted a hit~ mittee told us: •'They {Democrats workforce ($10.6 billion); execulist of expenditures that could be and ~bliCIIIII) stuff It In because tive jets ($11 million); defense conpared frool the Pentagon budget In it's tbelf pork. 1'bere may be a cou- version programs ($1.~ billion);
the next several years and reaUo- ple of things in there that are medical and uulvenlty research,
cated for military readiness. They important. But also you'U find dial mOlt of which is DOt defeose-speplan to press the case with the GOP a lot of appropriations were stuffed cific ($ U bllli011); PentagOD supleadelsbip, and In a letter to Presi- In the budget behind closed-doors port for the Olympics ($f5.4 mil!lent Clinton later this week. with no one knowing wbat was liOII In 1995 alone).
By PAUL SOlJIIIlADA
Because some of the cuts will going on." This senator also specuDubious appropriations in the
~eted rr- Writer
offend
Republicans
as
much
as
lates
that
many
of
his
colleagues
1995
budget, which Republicans
COLUMBUS- ThiDk moving a household is lOUgh?
Democrats,
the
issue
bas
the
potenwill
retreat
from
backing
the
line·
wiU
try
to cut through recisions,
lmq!M moving I wllole block all at mce.
tial
for
being
divisive
Inside
the
item
veto
because
it
would
make
It
include
$10
million for the Nation'lblt' a almUar to what' a In store for members of the Ohio House,
wbic:b for die first lime In 22 years will be OODtrolled by Republlams.
err~~r ctott~ FO~tr W~~Rn~ ~·"'E'Ei'""'
Republiam leaden are setting the stage for a big same of musical
HUlME
cbaln In die Vem Riffe Cenccr for Govemmeot BDd the Arta, wbele rqxcICIIIIIi- have their oflicca.
Laltr IIIia 1111111dl or early next, Dtmoaats and Republlallla will swiiCh
f10on and Rl:publiall leaden will lake over the floor held by·outgomg
Speaker .Vem lWfe and bia leadelsblp team.
AfiCr working so long under a Dtmocratic majority, both sides are a
little Ullllll'e of bow to proceed.
"It bun't been dooe for so long, you reaDy don't have much of a
frame of reference," said Cliff Treyens, communications director for
House Democrllll.
RiiJe, of Wbcelcrsburg, _bas pledged to make the move as smootll as
possible, but it's up to Republicans to work out die details, Treyeos sald.
." It's ~tty much a loglslical nightmare," said iDcomlng Speaker Jo
Ann Davidson, of Reynoldsburg.
Ordinarily, a postelccti011 move is simple- usually done by pages and
staffers.
This time, the breaddl of die GOP victory and the capture of the maj&lt;XIty mean professional help probably wiD be needed, DavidsOD sald.
"Some of it wiU be a couple of doon down &lt;X a couple of OO&lt;XS up or
a couple of floors down,'' she said.
That's because senior members get dibs on prime offi~ space, which
can set off a domino effect through the l'llllks.
View is an important amsidenlion, she said. Corner offJCCS, which are
biq,er. are also In high demand.
'The freshmen kind of get what's left' over," Treyens observed.
Not everyone is excited about the prospect of a new address.
"I think It's totally UIIIICCCssary," said Rep. Robert Netzley, of Laura.
Netzley said be wants to keep his lOth floor office, even !hough the
senior Republican could have any office be chooses.
'"There's no reason for us to move 31 people ofl the lOth floor and
uproot everybody," be said.
·
He guessed the move wiU cost between $10,000 and $20,000, not
ag~inst
counting the expense of switcblng everyone's phones arotmd.
"If this was a business, they wouldn't do it this way."
Rick Guy is _a member of Syra"I was very upset," Su••nn•h ing classes and adoption couosel. Heck. when Netzley came in 1961 Republicans picked up 23 seats, cuse's Commoo COUDcil and when facltson said, "dlat people rejected ing. Each time the billboard was
CODiprred wilhjustlO last month.
be was a student, be bad been elect- him as a speaker because of his attacked, the phone number was
Back then, representatives didn't have offices. They worked ou~ of ed to the National Honor Society. views." She ldded dlat ber choice crossed out.
flip-top desks m the House floor. _
Accordingly, die council member
And each time the billboard was
"We didn't have a file cabinet," bC said "We bad one drawer iDa file , was Invited to be the keynote
Nat
Hentoff
defaced. there were reports In S&lt;XDe
cabinet.
speaker at Nottingham High
of die local papcn of wbat the van''There was 110 problem. The c1ests were already dlere. We just moved School's National Honor Society of spealter would have been roo- dalizersbaddone andmODOycame
the aiale."
induction dinner. Susannah Jac:k- tlnely accepced -It be or she bad In to repaint lh~ billboard from
SOD, vice' president of the society -at "the same beliefs as our mem- people whom the Feminists for
tbe high schODl, bad the authority ben." In lhe aame Post-Standard Life chapter bad never beard of. So
to choose a speaker and thougbt story, Rick Goy noted that his far, $2,500 bas been sent, an unexlhere would be no controversy.
rejection iUusttated what man)' of pected amount for a very ecooomiSbe was wrong. Some students the young are being taught about c:illly depressed area.
·
at
Nottingham
have
apparently
die
value
of
free
speech.
He
went
While
at
·a
college
In
upstate
By Tbe Allodated Press
Today is Monday, Dec. 5, the 339th day of 1994. There are 26 days taken ~n a~v.anced-placement on to say that "many of 'the same New Ytxt,1 met a professor who is
course m political correctDess so folks (wbo bar blm from spealdng) very active in FemiDists for Life
left in the year.
they can move smoothly into col- would be the first to amue me of which opposes aU violeDCe, lnelud:
Today's Highlight in Hist&lt;Xy:
lege.
The Po~t-Standard, a Syra- intolerance."
· inr.:capltal punllhment. She aurOn Dec'. 5, 1933, national Prohibition came to an end as Utab became cuse newspaper,
reports
that
Rick
Also
In
upstate
New
York,
a
me by saying tbat wbCII she
the 36th state to ratify the 21st Amendment to the Constitution, tbereby
Guy bas been disinvited twanse of biUboard high above !he ex)lreass away from. her pro-life associrepealing the 181h Amendment.
·
his conservative views, among way has been vandalized four ates, she Is careful Dot to reveal her
On this dale:
.
In 1776, the first scholastic fraternity in America, Pili Beta Kappa, was ~~.opposition to ~on and · times. The intensity of the petpetra- views on abortion, particularly In
his cnucwn of homOICltuality.
tors' desire to censor was imprea- social contexts She feels guilty
. organiwi at the College of William and Mary In WiUiamsburg, Va,,.
"People,"
says
Snuooah
Jacksive
as they found pc:rilous ways to that she Is afnid to but, she told
In 1782, die fii'Sl native U.S. president, Martin Van Buren, was'born in
son, "thought be would be offen- climb onto that billboanl.
me she doem't wu'it to be ostra, Kinderhook. N.Y.
sive."
There is a growing demlllld
The
defacers
were
abortionc~
In 1791, composer Wolfgang Amadeus MOlal'l died in Vienna, AusIn
many
areas
of schooling - to riahts activiSts sc:andalized by the
Ai another college, where I was
tria, at age 35.
.
cleanse
language
and
ideas
of
effrontery
of
the
Western
lliew
talking
about the dimensions of
In 1792, George Washington was re-elected president of die United
''offensi~ness
..
''
Y
or1t
Chapter
of
Feminists
for
Ufe
free
speech,
a young woman, a stu,
StateS; John Adams waS re-elected vice president.
At-Nottill~
High
Scbool,_dle
in
puttiDg
up
this
message:
"Ab&lt;Xdent,
asked:
"Can you tell me why
In 1831, former President John Quincy Adams took bis seat as a memvote
In
the
National
HODOI'
SocJCty
lion
bas
two viclims - one dead, every time I put up po-life posterS
ber of the U.S. House of Representatives.
·
In 1848, President Polk lriggered the Gold Rush of· 49 by conf11111ing chapter on whether Rick Guy one wounded." A phone number at the college bookstore they're
might be too offensive for these was added, and It provided, as torn down7 But just about any
that gold bad been discovered in California.
In 1932, German physicist Albert EiosteiD was granted a visa, making bright, you~g students ~o endu!C alternatives to abortion, accesa to other kind of poster is allowed
was: 23 agamst his coiiiiDg; 20 m eigbt different agencies providing there, and none of tbem get
it possible for him to travel to tbe United StateS.
favor;
and 30 students .,staining. prenatal aue, housing, free finan- deliroyed.
In 1955, the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of IndusWhat
were
the abstainers afraid of? cial and nledic:al.lll!a!itanac, Jllllllt.
trial Orpnizalions merged 10 form lhe AFL.CIO under iu first president,
George Meany.
·

Dece~ber· s,

Perms ..••......•......530 Reg. $35
Spiral Perm ....................540
Prices qood untll12117

Tanning Bed 12 visits 512
$2.00 off any lotion

Straigfit- tfuck.f-r &amp; !l(pusfi

. Prlc•• good unti1121311

1'unera£ Jlome

ACUT ABOVE BEAUTY AND
TANNING SALON

RaveniWOOCI, WV- (304) 2'73-2152
Prenaed- Atneed- Postnaed
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNllES
ROUSH

I

3rd St.

949-2817

Racine

It

•

•

• • · - ,#

�Monday, December 5, 1994

Sports

Scoreboard

'1he flist game of tbe regional. East

returned four players to this year's
team aod added a 6-foot-8 tnmsfer.
Soutbcm (0-1) beld close ID tbe
fall 67-60 to Portamouth East Sat- first period, but trailed throughout
urday momiog ID the McDonald's as the frame ended 19-15. In the
Holiday Classic B1 Obio Universi- second round, Southern fell to
ty's Chillicothe brancb.
deficits of eigbtto 10 points before
Southern got the opening lip, resliilg at the balf Bl3S-2S.
but missed allowing East (1-0) to
Southern made some headway
drive down tourt and take a 2-0 towards tbe end of tbe frame wbeo
lead. After a SHS turnover, Barry it cut tbe lead to seven, 47-4(1, wilb
McGraw drilled a three pointer to 45 seconds left in the tbird round.
give tbe derendiDg distria cbampi- The period ended 49-42.
ons a S-0 score. East, 22-4 last
Southern bead coacb Howie
year, lost to Division IV state run- CaldweU said, "We bad so many
ner-up Wortbington Cbrlslian in

Sentinel Cornlpllllleat
Soulhem dropped behind early
but rallied ID tile final muDd ooly to

OppMunlties to CUI into tbeir lead,
but dido' 1. Southern teams bave

traditionally made tbe big play' but
today we did not capitalize. I can
see this club coming tbrougb in sit·
uations like Saturday's a couple
more games down 'tile road. SBlUrday, we just didn't get it doner•
Witb I :45 left in tbe game,
Southern trailed 58-48, but rallied
to 59-53 by tbe one minute nwk as
Ryan Williams, wbo made his 4Sth
varsity stan, drilled a lbree-poioter.
Southern fouled and East bit the
free throws. Unfortunately, SHS
fouled Chris Boggs wbo bit 5-7
going down the stretdl in the fmal
round.
Ryan Martin's lbree-pointer nar• rowed the gap to 62-57, setting the
stage for a steal on the in bounds
play, but SHS again did not capitalize as time ran out.
Southern bit 16-44 two-point
tries and 5-18 treys while bitting
13-17 at the line. East bit 18-43
twos, 2-4 treys and was 15-39 at

--

Southern bad 24 rebounds, led
by Fisber, Williams and Rizer getling tbree eacb. wbile East bad 36,
led by Strickland's 12. SHS bad
four steals, eigbl turnovers and 29
louis. East bad two steals, 14
turnovers and 20 fQU!s.

FIRST KILL- Llada Worbnu o1 Poawoy proudly dllplays ber
lint deer. nil llnt-tm. deer ltunter I!Olo eJ&amp;bt-polnt buck. Work·
mu •ld Iter ltubud taught Iter laow to shoot • gun ud bow to
lau~
·

Iowa beats OU 91-75
in Hawkeye Invitational
championship game
By GREG SMrrH
.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- Jn
lbe final minutes or Iowa's 91-75
blowout over 14th-ranted Oblo
University in the cbampionsbip
game of tbc: Hawkeye Jnvitalion•l,
the Carver-Hawkeye Arena aowd
tid up -cllanL
. "Ovemsed. Ovenaled."
Iowa coacb Tom Davis said it
was the only bad moment in an
Olherwise perfect weekend for tbe
ltawkeyes (4-0), wbo domlnatccl
tllc: Bobc:ats from tbe start in ra1a1ng
tbcir toumamc:nt reoord to 25-1 uld
winDing the tide f« tbe 12th time
iD 13 years.
· Ollio wbicb lost at Kentucky
last TueSday dlopped two or lbree
r« t.bC wc:c:k and fc:llto 5·2.
8:ames
"I bate tbat, tbe crowd shouting,
'overrated,' " Davis said. "That
almost makca us look bad. That's
ope tbiog I bope I never hear again
iD c.ver-Hawteyc: Arel1a."
"Tiley'~ a terrific ball club,"
be said of tbe Bobcats. "They
deserve their ranking. Losing at
~:entucty was no embarrassment
and I bope losing to us is not ao
embarrassment"
· Obio University coach Larry
.Hunter saw his team wilt under
Iowa' a full-court pressure defense
iDd llad a simple assessment of tbe
a~Pc:·

"Tbey got some easy buckets
and got the crowd Into it." be said.
'i!!We never m:overed."
Iowa's Jess Sedles made sure of

chat

· Settles, tbe tournament's most
valuable player, scored ·26 points
iAd arabbed a game-bigb 12
teboundi to pace a well-rounded
apaet tbat saw four other
lliwkeyc:s In double Ogures. Set·
des also ICOI'ed 20 points io Frl. "•y'a flnt-IOIIIICI victory over Pep...,.
~'"Pa1clo&amp;lly,
I love players lite
dill. ConstPt motion. He's a buUdos." Hunter Slid.

"I was really im~ressed with
Setdes' game both 01gbts. He's a
versatile player. A bard woriter,"
Hunter said. "I think Setdes is a
warrior."
Obio's standout forward, Gary
Trent, wasn't exactly chopped
liver, scoring 31 points aod snaring
I 0 rebounds In tbe tide game 10-go
witb bis 25-point, 14-rebound ics
Sbumway and Shafer led tbe
eff~ inCal-afirslrvt~rouridFo~da win
llJIIIIISt
me on
y.
.
combined for 35 points and 29
_ But Trent,_ named tbe most valu- rebounds to pace tbe winners.
able player m tbe Preseason NIT Sbumway dumped in 21 points and
Tournament. bad little l!elp against pulled in 16 rebounds, Sbarfer
I
the Hawkeyes.
Geno Ford, Ohio's 5-root-8
guard, and bactcourt mate Gus
Johnson bad trouble all nigbt
against Iowa's pre~. wbicb ~orced
17 turnovers. When they d1d get
the ball past balf court, the two
guards rarely bad a good look at
Ford bit only one or six sbots
the floor wbile Johnson

~~five~ seve~ shots.

They d1d a mce job on our
guards," Hunter 58!d. "They di_d
not ~ve many sconng Opportunl·
des.
The Hawkeyes opened a 45-34
balflime lead and_ pulled a~ay _in
tbe second balf wub near pmpomt
three-point sbooting - II or 20 for
the game - and ferocious
rebounding. Iowa collected 38
rebounds to Obio's 29 for tbe
game.
Meanwbile, Trent. named by the
media to tbe aU-tourney team while
recc:~ving. one MVP vote, took the
loss m stnde.

"Anybody can step up and burt
you If you don't play like you're
supJ!!&gt;sc:cJ to; We just d,i,dn't ~et
after It lite we needed to, be S81d.
"Iowa's a good team. They came
out on us early aod we JUSt never
nx:overed.''

-·-·-·-EAST
PORTSMOUTH

···-~"

. ·; ·. Cut Christmas Trees~
~ Premium Ohio Grown

.,,

6' to 7'
: 40% off Regular Price ·.•.
·
Now 112 • 118

Will be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD

"

~ ~

C..W•=T0o::::::C..

.Iii

6 .611

IJ

2-'

Oooeval4, Oblo

3

H

..

1.!

.!
1J

2.s

....

Ohio women's
college scores
Saturday'• adloa

"• ,._..

eo.-..............

Nelsonville·YorA:

(ll-11·11-1~)

Sarab Ogg 0-0-4=4, Jill Shafer
3-1-5=14, Heather Cagg 1-0-0=2,
Lindsey Shumway 7-0-7=21,
Amanda Hall 1-0-0=2. Tolllls: 121-16=43

I
3

9

193
13$

6
16
II
U
10

614

II

n

nJ

!42

511
439
351

m

'ill
261
262
255
llO

12

M

19

22
23
14
11
17
:14
21

Cl)

t.·
l

It

M~or college scores

c

r:
~e,:,

Q

Cr:a::

~0

l

I.

...u

~

·~

Joining the Medical Staff of

CIS

z

PLlASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
rho lomily of professionals

"0
Cl)

CIS

Annual
Percentage
Yield ·

-"'

e,:,

0

u

c

r:a::

0

Cl)

"'

~"'

· VJ

~

"0

c:

CIS

jl,

Cl)

....

~

....!3CIS
c

~·

.....

91. PlrdUol7
LSU 127, a.... -•104
Uborty69, w. ~ ... 63
l\laryialld 102, BucDell 64

0

....bO ~
[/:)

Mcl-1!. Sbani6,-IO
Moqbllll4, - · S t . l!l
Mldllpall, Uf.Qwta-71
Mld&lt;lloT- 7!,L)Ot61
Mlao-91,Sam-tooSL 7!
N. DU..U 1$, T-Tocll74
N.C.-&lt;31
72, Coa.,boU !2
NW Laui1111a n, SE Loolataaa 73
Nldlolla $1; 103. Loulolau tbtlatlaa
I

llch....S105, VMJI$
1\IIUI122. Prairie VIew $1 •
Viqjlla94, T . - SL 66
v.....,.Todl WWiam~Mary !3

n.

The Daily Sentinel
,

·. ,' ..

AboD 016, - · 5 6
-94.-71
1lndloy 64. "'. D1llolo ll

luii«U.It!dl-SL67
Coal. Mlclliaat 57, DooroM 56
Otvolaod Si. '17,1Jid.:PIIt,-R.

111 Court St

Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

..

'I -ontn, OteorilloSt.J5

Mail or brin'g the entli' form to:

These tDs are automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdraw!~~ .
A.P.Y. is available as of the date of this issue, but is subject to change.

w.... South-

O!J--·

I§

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 P.M.

Minimum Deposit: $500.00

103,

Olarl-• South&lt;n ... Cltadel69
Oemao• 91, WIDllwp 71
1!. IW!lllety 7$, CoaL f1cridl 74 (01')
I'lL lllunadoatl 10. fai!WII&gt; DlckiD·
""'61
florida 11 , Wab fonot 70
florida .uM IOO,'W•t Floricla91
florida SL 101, Florldo Alialltl&lt;63
F\ltmiD 69, Woi!OIIIl5
Clo&lt;qlall, Macor71
Cloa-tlaTodllOO,I!III Carollu 74
Clraid&gt;UotSL 109,larvllo.latiall92
latU.Orillc 101, W. Ke•ucty II (2

~

=
....

-u

n. rt

*'•

UC S..taBoob. . !n,llelaware74
TldrdpiMO

w.... stn,w....,,
o•....,.~
Q

I

...

lowa9I,OIDOfs

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

UC lrvioo 7!, PrjlperdiDe 61
MetUI'ea..k

n.-1

*'

sl La ;:8, 12

Su l'rlllciac:o

--a..
.............

- Louiliaoa Tocll63, Col Poly-5W 45
0,

I

#f.

c-!16. 11J..,. n
C....t171,

~:.;.. 74

~~

0.
MiaiJolppl SL

I

*lp

98. MootaDall \2 01')
SALE
PRICE

. &lt;.

.fi,~uu~•u~~~t&amp;iAt~~
•

I

76

lliJIAll 91, M&amp; Vollty IL 16
IJUa70,1111aoio65
ll.llllaola 75, T-..Nallla !2

w.,..

fl. MlcbJpa 12, Waaltlaat•.SL 71 •

999

LESS
IN-STORE.
COUPON

EACH

300

FINAl&amp;"

I .. A--~
Claook
a,

COST

to

New~ls.Can&gt;lloaSt 016

.....-....eootmoD

0..
'0

z
•"'
"0
......c::

PR!CES EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 5 THRU 11, 1994

G•et.oa..ic

&amp;all
Browt16l,Nny S3
CuiWI16. St. .......bn 74
• llrutol e.Mo-.NJ.l3
OWpbWD 74. Dlh.d 61
illmld79,SL-NY61
M•nh""" U, Pcrdblm 41
MOOD! SL Mary'a, !old. 19. Catholic
Uolv. 72
N.C. c.rtoa079, Duq.,... 70
Ncrt
a 71, Howlrd 62
-91.&lt;HOST. 71
-SL9!, Vtllldltrt&gt;lll73
P1tllburll&gt; 7!, Butralo 73
l'lo•ldea:c 10, RbodllllaDdT1
Robert Morrla 76, Md.·Baltlmore
COUtty63
St. - . F L 79.~ SL 61
SL lolm'al9, ~56
SL J6iiFI&gt;'i !1, ~ 31
Vermo• 101, Ula,... 69
Will Vo1hota 132, Alut..fairbaab

Allblmt7!, VL Coi!IIIOawoaltll !7
AuiiiD feay IOI,Sboda"7S

l;l

§

Qaalliao67, Luc:IISI

w~~~~

s.turclay'• lldloll

Sou..

...."'c

Cl)

Sieata7l,

Oooqew....,l.a62.1t. l'Our' o!l

12

•

!lelt.I-Tate 71, aoc._. '2

~7:l,ltdluVaiLS9

Tourummll

M&lt;:N-s~Il::...st 16

Q

--Sclo

Col. Weat 63, W. Uoloo 62
CoL - • 1 9, Cot. w-...17

PbaaBola..ie
a, sl , ,
SW Mlooouri SL 61, Ceaiaary l9

CIS

bO't:)

~

39

T - Sotllboni91,Cotpl017 (01')

........e:&gt;-.

cu::=
-..c::
..c:: u

I.

"·Mount

Ciollal
Ualoll ~~
Olilo Northonl 57, 56
Hlnm 70, Obrrllo ...

Cl)

._."0

Salom-

Bu:aawtS4, CeatenWe42
B~ 61, St Claimillo !5
Belloouc ~. llucynlo 29
Bertillllilllll73,
30
8trDe Uoioo 43. Trumlo 11
Bodlol1!, Yell"" Spriqo «&lt;

cu. ~~~~~- Otr. 102, Oo. a..

ll*dpiMO

c
0
..c::
Q.,

....0

MlrliqtDD 116,

Amlllnt S2.l'.IY!i&amp; Will n
&amp;-..I~ 0.. Eaot Tocll23

Man)u'"" 94, Nollbw." ""' 66

l
4
7
I

911

OW.-c.t-

Up

w-

...- ,s

o.,....p

w-

O.•?MJI

aadr.... lll..l!Jik2
I. Nortb Carolloa (!4) ....~ 1,633
1.501
1,471
1.464
1,371
1.27!
l,a016
1,130
1,1)19
917

AIIOflbeoy64,DoailoDll
Earlliam 64,
!6
Rlldiay 73, Tri-State 60
Onmblloa SL 104, Xavier (Oblo) 61
O..vo City 61, Lalta l!rio 45
KeiO 10, Buobdl44
Mic:blpD 51.91), DlytoD 67

Plnii.Uaa.lc

s.ttuday'olldlaa
Aboo l'lnlo 49. Woodridp 3$
Aboollol&gt;aoll.-Moa11

Cia.-

N•-colll...-.

61

Ohio H.S. girls' scons

modaOtr.U
Cellu 61, 1'lldlay 5$
CcotomUe 91, elL loloelkr 73
Qrill-54,._$1
57, Norwood 36
Clo. bdlao Bill 6!1, Cia. Semi 111111
60
Cill. ~ 71, W. Clm&gt;Utoo 54
Cia. N. Collep ~II 61, Cia. Roser
81&lt;01161
Cill. 64, Cill. 1\l'piA ...
Clo. - · 71. Cllt Oloo Bile 70
Clo. Taylor 79, Cllt lllniaoo 61
Cill. W)0-74, W.U.Oo $1
eto. Baal 90,
1'alla15, J err
C1o. Baal Todl93, - · 91
Cle. lltoollody 64, l.ortla AdiL 1tlq
60
. Oo. -l4.l.ortlo - - 41
ct. forUl,lllabialld $I
Cllatoo-Maal• Q,lkllbroot 46
Col. SL a.toa 71 , WMI:Iu Memorial

Ciao WIIIWD R. . .o !12. Biliary 69

....... .._

z-vllle73.~63

Bruotvlllo8,ArcuiOD59
Caoal
71,lo11111111D Aid«

SUDday'oiiCIIoa

Tcua-Arlillllot! 14, Col St.-l'lillertoo

Wyoloroll9,-41

y- u...tlle 69,Clo. ~ 67

n."""'"

&amp;::: 16

w - N. 96, -llalds.. 62
Wlllfall59, CirdtmUa 33
-....a 6\l, llor:t IIIU 41

Wlllo-llill SCI. Lotltomoat 40
WC&gt;&lt;Mim&lt;n63.-IL.Joaopb61
WoootvwWUoooii,X..Cir. IO

lellolo-4!1, WII&gt;III&gt;D&lt;1141
l1ellmlo
S4
-ll,Uma.....,.,

51

w..... l111111q 100, ea. ~ aa,"
w.... llowlaad 61, K e o t Wllhlqtoa C.ll 70, llooa CanaU

67

-'Iillo-

w:r:brt, 10

N. C.Otw 16,

....-.-llln&gt;uoll

Ar-

71~ DoOallc. 52

0

ll

Setoorcloy'olldloa

T.........tri.Or.ws'

1ht : ; . laiD II 1ht ~latod
- · co
bookolball poU, with llntpiacn- •
Doc. 4, total poilU blood oo11 poiDta (or
• llnl-placo tbrwll&gt; - poiot lor •
lltll·ptacorauiDI'
Laal

2. UCL.o\(5) ...................2-o
'3,
(3) ...............)-1
4. ~ (3) ..................2-o
l.M--·- ............1-1
6. Plarida(I) ..................:J.O
7. 1Wsblcky ...................2-l
I. Arimoa ....................... )-1
9. o.u .....................;.... )-1
10.
:1-0
II. Marylud ..................4-1
11 Mu.-ota .................S-0
13. &lt;DICINNATI ......... )-!
14. w~a&lt;oum ................. :l-0
1!. Mlcbl. . 51. .............1-o
1 6 . - St. .. .............4-1
17. Oocqla Tocll ............~
IS. Oecq«wo ..............l-1
19.s,..... ...................)-l
20. v~ ....................H
. 21. 01110 .... ....................5-2
21Ncw Mellc:o St. ....... 5-I
21 .................... )-2
24. VWuovo ..................)-1
11. Wab- ............. 2·1

VIIIOOoiW~~~a62,l'Ut~51

Aboo Co_, 6!1, S-vlllo lO
AleltiDB 90, "'-""' 44
- 7 3 . N. lldpvlllo 41
An:bbokl 61, ("oat!-tel 4l
AriJaaloall, Ada 42
Allllabula l!dpwood 63, Clo. lobo
MonltiiiS7
-16.
York l!
A""a Lalta 79. El,.ta Cllb. 7!
Beads a cad Sl, ,_, -49
Beo•wawt 17, Tlpp City 44
letlloro16l, a.aiiClala S9

RJoo~f~v.. .__llO

Tuetday'•p-

I

I

7!

a....,-~o

MOIIdllJ'I p -

Official Entry
Form

Vaotuol7.-1Audot4!
Vormlllcio !7, Wtlll- 43

r' •.,

-.~tCr.... ss
Ohio RS. boys' scores

a-.a..._I ..,u
a ..
,.

MlloDe , '

New Yortal RlliatlolpiiJa, HO p.IIL
New lonty at ~.1,30p.m.
Clartoae at LA Clppn, 10,30 p.m

(12-11-9-7::39)

" - Nliafoa 7!1,NtlrarUI
UOo1tao 116, Clo. c.dlc 64
Vu Bono1!,l!lmwood 72
Vu Wort II. Bryat !l

·~a..k

n

"-~ 11polrCiooolc

AP Thp 25 college poD

016

SaadaJ'a ._.._all

--Ju..C-T=

Fordaod106,w-bol03

photo

"·c.. w-. a....

OHIO ST. 7 5 , - , l!l
a11065,QactMCtSt
PlrdUo 7!1. Toledo 54

-94,1:.::!!1

- · at New York, '/,!Op.m.
AlltalaatNcwlonty, ,,JOp.m.
-aiWMhiaii1DG,7:30p.m.
Orl- .. ClJ!VI!LAND, 7:30p.m.
llolrollal~ 7'30p.m.
Deaver llMinwoc., I p.m.
•Hou11o1 tt S.Wc., I p.m.
Dolla .. Su Allloalo, ' ' 30 p.m.
~ ai!JIIb, 9 p.m.
Ootdea State at L.A. Laten. I 0:30
p.m.
Mu-.boat Sacramoato, IO,lOp.m. .

Trt-V~ !2, Nartbrldp 51
Trlony l6, Ttllln ll
T - Wodloooll , SidtaJ 70
Uaia&amp;o74. Her+atr 51

Cevolud SL 91 , fairllald 75

l'blladalpbla Blblo !16. Cillduall Blblo

--

3
3
10.1

SIUIUJ'I""""'

Ploaoe onclott ttll-oddrotud,
tllmptd onvtlopt to rtiUm your

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

a

Ullb f12, Dolla 17
Doover !19, a.-11
Seaale Ill , MUw.Jbo 101
Mluoaota103, LA Cllppera 9!
~Ill, Ooldc.a Slllellfl

Cynthia Cotterill 1-1-0=5,
Amber Blackwc:ll 1-2-0=8, Melissa Clifford 0--ll-1=1, Anne Brown
0-0-1"' I, Vanessa Compston 3·1·
2=11, Kristen Dassylva 0-0-1•1.
Cheryl JeweU 4-0-0=8, Lama Eastman 1-0-0=2, Asllley Roacb 1-00=2, Totals: 11-4-5=39

'·

_

...,,ul

lloftuco 90, S u e - (Iy.) 61

Alltala IITI, U1la&lt;lo liS
l'bllaclolplllal3. CIRVI!LAND 71
llolroh IITI, l'boeolz 97

-·-·-·. Melp

(614) 992-4226

Slllldoy'o_.

N•wl'•_...._
Aboo!S,B-!1

0. &amp;I "f
Mouo&lt;VtnOoN-II,Jtli1D74

~111,-a109

In tbe reserve contest Nelsonville outscored Meigs 18-12 in
the fourtb period and went on to
defeat Meigs 38-33. Amie Adams
led the winners with 16 points,
Candice Miller led Meigs wtth 14.
Meigs will bost Southern
tonigbL

Monday through Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

11111odalo67, Tlma IW1

Emo&lt;y

74

't
'hb62,J' '•kMS4
60, Ooalvtllt 57
Sldtoy ~56,- Local :19
s,-vute67, _ ,
llfrial, Local !0, ea..wt 43
Sfriic. Ncr¢ . . . .. CedlniDe so
Sprl•l· Nordlwe~t«l 67, Wlltoa
Ualoa60
ltroqlvllle 71, N. ~ l!l
T.,. Vall 52, l.abwood 33
ToL St. lobo'o 72, Lot OCMI SL l!d-

....,a..-~

Oaytoo 91, Miaolaolppl V.U.I6
Ketltucty St. 14, Ceo11a1 St. II
Labl!rio !Ill. Pltt-Brodronlll
Peu91,011J)ST. 7l
Tolodo 16, Dnb 61
Wri&amp;btSt 79, ~61
Xavler 16, Loyola, Me( !I

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

,
s-y1J,Willdll6
_ , _ _ ,.__

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

...... TWN ....

w.,..

TOIIlllllaoeBII

-..94,New-yllll

Vanessa Canpston was lbe only
Lady Marauder in double figures
with 11. Meigs bit 15 or 49 from
tbe floor, inclnding four or 20 from
tbree-point range, ror 31%. Meigs
bit five of 11 from the charity
stripe for 46%. Meigs pulled in 39
boards, witb Compston grabbing
nine.

~Syracuse · ~-517-~i*WU'· - .

.333
JOO
AOO
.!!!

s.turclay'•-. .
111, ' k - a !IS

grabbed 40 rebounds.

Office Hours

76

~ Yart

in the

chipped In with 14 pOints and 13
boards. The Buckeyes bit only 13
of 61 sboiS for 21%, including one
of seven from long range. Nelsonville-York sank 16 of 24 from
tbe line for 67%. Tbe Buckeyes

Effictivt Thursdlly. Demnbtr 1

Aboa 66,Ill
· !619
Bhdllm
, OooboD
C1ovoiaD4 Sl. 97.111d.-J'IIr.-R.

"
1J
IJ
2
3J
4J

7 _,,

hdllcDMolao
l'bO&lt;III&lt; .................. II ! .611
Seolllo .................... IO l .667
LA Labra .............. 9 6 .600
Ooldoa s~~~e ............ s 1 J33
Pwtlud ..................7 7 JOO
s...ma.o ..............7 - 7 JOO
LA Olppon ...........o ll .ooo

(16 year; of age or younger)

16-5-1!117=60

·. .· Hubbard's f'--eenbouse .;

u

I

- I L 7l,a-,a...64

N•ewlcNCtiadlea

6J
6J

6 .m
Dolla...................... 7 6 .331
Sao Antollio ............. 7 7 JOO
............... 3 13 .111

Doo...- ................... 1

"For Children Only"

.:. Open 9 a.m. - 5 P;m. daily :
· 12 noon- 5 p.m. Sunday

"

Ullb .................... .. 10

Our special page(s)

(15-1~17-18=60)

Jeremy Hill 1-J-2,.7, Ryan
Williams 7-3-3=26, Ryan Marlin 01-0=3, Jamie Evans 1-0-0=2,
Kevin Ible 0-0-4=4, Jesse Maynard
1-0-0=2, Spike Rizer 1-0-0=2
Mason Fisher S-0-4.. 14. Totals:

7~0

.m

S.a.-.SBSI,.,...__

l1

lllol . . . Clooolc

-SL91.~90

$

--

rc.. . . . . . . . . ~

Cl)

Minimum Deposit: $2,500.00 ·

4J

s. c.nl 95, Old 1111111

Toledo 16. UNLV 79

PIIlcliay 15, Wolob 74

lJ

-71,Ntlr-4D

II

---

II

WESTERN CONFERENCE

SOUTHERN

New Location:
306 Nonh Second Avenue
Middleport, OH

·'

.461

7
7
Allula ...................A 9
Mlhnube .............. J 10

!!!!!!!!!!!!

6~0

I

a.loal ....... ...........7

Joey Boggs 1-0-4=6, Barry
McGraw 2-2-1=11, Micab Hamrick 4-0-3= 11, Cbris Boggs 7-011:26?, Brent Strictland 2.{}-5=9
Dustin Paxson 2-1=6?. Totals: 182-1SI.W=67

"Make The Move With
Quality Healtbaue''

Annual
Percentage
. Yield

....................1
pblbd 'rN• ..........~.fi

llolroli. ..................... l

(19-16-14-18=67)

...u VEG~ -Riddick
Bo!lle, fighting for tbe first time

i:"pted

.Iii

~....................1

...:-Sports brlefs-siJKe losing bis heavyweight titles
to Evllldc:r Holyfield 13 months
IIQ, oolpOinred Iary Dooald In a
12~round unPilllous decision Satu/lta'J night
· Aaother fight almost erupted
lfter tile bout wbeo Donald' • camp
10 serve Bowe p~s
a lawsuit filed Friday iD Los
.o.- cblqiaa bim with aallllllt
aiilfliilterv f« biltlnll JlnnAlfi.At l\

!

Wz
.6U

C.hlllldlua .....................9 ' .643
CU!VI!l.AND .........9 6 .600

Family Praaice

fr~m

~

w.....,.... . . . . .

Thomas R. Spencer, D.O.

tbc: basket

&amp;-...............
Jf
Now Yart ................ l

I

-IL71,,.M

~eo.r-­

I .429
J 1
Nowlonty ... .......... A 11 .3$1
Mloml. .....................4 9 .301

N-Y girls top Meigs 43-39
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Lindsay Shumway and Jill
Shafer eacb bit two fn:e lbrows in
the final minute to give Nelsonville-York a 43-39 win over
Meigs last Thursday in the conference opener ror both teams.
The win gives the Lady Buckeyes a 1-1 mart overall and the
Marauders a 0-2 nwk.
It was a close game aU tbe way,
as tbe score was lied 12-12 at the
end of. the fust period. Shumway
poured in eight of ber game-higb
21 poiniS in the first period to pace
the Buckeyes. Vanessa Compston,
Cynthia Cotterill and Amber
Blackwell each bit tbree-pointers to
pace the Marauders in the period.
Shumway kept liP the pace in
tbe second period with nine points,
wbile Compston added four for the
Marauders as both teams bea4ed
into the locker room with a 23-23
tie at tbe balf.
Nelsonville took a 33-32 lead
beading into tbe fmal period bc:bind
the strength of Shafer who poured
in seven points in the period. The
Marauders used balanced scoring
to stay· within reacb of the host
team. Cheryl Jewell, Laura Eastman, Cotterill and Compston eacb
scored a pair for Meigs.
Tbat set the stage for Shafer's
and Sliumway's fmal-minute hero-

"·,."'d.,..

ft

Coptat13, ...... Uaioo 70
Joba c.nou
s.t
OllloN-.57,-44
Ott8t&gt;dlll6,11hm 10

NBA standings

tbe line.

_C..,._...,'I'aa
__

ow.-eo.r.-

Bn s ke tb a ll

Portsmouth East boys beat Southern 67-60
By SCOTI' WOLFE

The DeJiy Sefttinel . PIJIII 5

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

EACH

FRAGRANCE GIFT SE IS

GIFT BOXES
WHm OR DESIGIIER

Lingerie 4 pack Robe 2 pack Shirt 3 pack

Exclamation I #940 Lady Stetson #917
Stetson #909 Stetson Sierra #903

·~=7"Ta

S; Mtuciwl92.

Tldrdplo&lt;e
F.utlcld 99, Al«m SL 7S
T~tiD

1

F

&lt;&gt; rt *'•
North Carollul6. Cillciooali 76

Te~ 49,=t.=oa44
usAJr" 1aa1,..c-- Clooolc
,. "p
N.t::.-WIImll!JWD II, Mlmy SL 73

BAG OF
BOWS

ASSORIED
CHOCOLATES

27 Count
. Reg. 69c

BYLA

~--

·11b. box

lloHJOIMo

---

JFOR100

N.C.·AIIlevllle ~3, Troy SL 16

Sullday'olldloll
Teueaeell E. TellDeaeeSl 74
1

sw T... SL $4, N. Arimoa 43

Other Ohio men's
college scores

EVEREADY

ENERGIZER
BATI'ERIES .
"C" or ·o· 2 pack

S•IUrday't ..UO.

N- Coaal eo.r._

94,

DtailoD
Al-93
IWI)OD 15, ObloWoileJ11174
Wltleab«a!II,Ob«Uo39 ·
w-..7I,S.U...$!

Poinsettias
1.000 to ch oose fr om .
Chri stm as Trees. Bulk
Candy. Craft s. Am is h
Jel ly. Appl e B utter.
Candy &amp; Jelly Gift s.
Handm ade B as kets

KAREN$
GREENHOUSE
3 ·. m iles pilst
So uthern Hig ll Sc hool

St. Rt. 124 R&lt;IC II1 C. Oh

614-949 -2682

CHRISTMAS
499 UGHTSET
..

Clear or multi-colored ·
. 200 lights
.
Reg. $6.99

CHRISTMAS

9 volt single pack

CARDS
25 Count Bonus Pack
Reg. $2.99

,.......... ,.•....•.•................•...•.••.••
SPECIAL

BUY

Coke /Diet Coke • 99

ADVIL
IBUPROFEII
100 plus 50 FREE

2 Liter

~z~!~'s Pretzels
Plus 11,

.79

a "'• ~&amp;~ca~lr'ld dlpolb ...,. NQUhd

~ MCI:a_,. FQIII NDft

NCW1BI PfiiOOUCTI Ofi..Y

For the Rite Aid Phannacy near
'

(

caii1-800-4-DRUGSTORES

�P1ge ~The Dally Sentinel

The'Deily ·Sentlneil-1-Pa~..,..:

Pomeroy-141ddlepoi1, Ohio

Monday, December 5, 1984

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Unwelcome relative may break up woman's happy home··;
"Nale." then 17, was convicted of
raping and brulally beating a 12-yc»
old girl. His family has steadfastly
believed lhat Nale was innocent, but
be was seniCnc:cd to suve five to I 0 ·
years in prison.
Now Nate has almost finished
serving the minimum sentence and
will be rdeased if he has a place to
live and a job. Nale's uncle will give
him a job. His family wants Jan and
Arnie to give him a place to live.
I know that Jan isn't crazy about
having Nale live here: He's a big man,
over 6 feet tall and 180 pounds •• and
he has been lifting weights in prison.
The family is pulling pressure on Jan
to take him in, and they have even
offered to pay his room and board.
Ann, there is no way I can live in

Ann
Landers
"1994, La. Angela

limes Syndicate ana
Creators Svnctlcate"

Dear ADa Landers: When my
husband died eight years ago, he left
me a house, a car, a modest savings
account and a small income. I
couldit't keep up the expenses for the
house, so I deeded it to my daughre~
•Jan." and her husband, ·Arnie." The
deed included the Slipulation that I
was to live in the house with them as
long as I needed to.
Everything has been fme until now.
Two years ago, Arnie's brother,

the same house with a convicted owe it to you to ensure your peace of
·
rapist I'd be lerrifJCd every lime I was mind.
Dear
Ann
Landers:
My wife and
left alone with him. Jan andAmie like
I
bought
our
dream
home
two years
to take long vacations and shon
weekend trips. My lawyer says I can't ago and invested a small fortune in
stop them from taking Nate in as long plants and perennial flowers to
enhance the propeny. We have spent
as they don't try to put me out.
What am I going to do? •• countless hours digging and hauling
SCARED OUT OF MY WITS IN din, mulch, compost and rocks to
enhance our property. Everyone says
PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR SCARED IN PA.: Make it the gardens are truly beautiful.
To our chagrin, plant thieves have
clear to your daughter and her
visited
us on four occasions and
husband that you are terrified of
helped
themselves
to some of the
being in the house with Nate. Don't
most
exotic
and
expensive
plants. We
be shy about it. Rernembel; it isyoJU'
have
two
large
watchdogs
who
house even though you deeded it to
apparently know the thieves and do
Jan and Arnie.
Ask them to please make other not bark at them.
We can't afford to keep replacing
arrangements for Nate. Doesn't be
have parents or other siblings? They the plants, nor is it feasible for us to

sit up all night guarding the place.We
don't know what to do and would
appreciate any suggestions you might
have. •· E.C. IN LOGANVILLE,
GA.
DEAR E.C. : Under the
circumstances, it doesn't make sense
to keep bq,Ying new plants. What you
need are some new dogs.
Dear Ann Landen:A while back,
you said if a man breaks the
engagement, the woman must return
the ring if it is more than $1,000 in
value. Should the ring be under
$1,000 in value, the woman can keep
iL
Please mail me a copy of that
column so I can show it to my fi8Dce.
We have been arguing about this, and
your column will settle it. •• R.H.H.,

?LANO, TEXAS
.
DEAR PLANO: You aremisiUcn.
I said no such thing. If the woman
breaks the engagement, she gives the
ring back regardless of value. If the
man breaks i~ she keeps the ring.
Gem of the Day: Sometimes what
looks like a light at the end of. the
tunnel is an oncoming train.

Spaclallzlng,Jn Cullom
Frame Jlapalr
IIEW &amp; usEJi PARTS FOR

An alcohol problem? How can you
help yourself or soll'll!ont you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
How to Deal With It, How 10 Con·
quer it" will give you the 11/tSWtrs.
Stnd a stlf-oiltJI!sstd,long. busillussize envelope and a check or money
order for $3.65 (this illcllldts post·
age tllld handling) to: Alcohol, c/o
Ann Landers, f.O. Box 11562, Chi·
cago, Ill. 606/1..()562. (In Canada,
send $4.45.) ·

Instead of filing a repon eacb
calender quarrer and paying tall on
lbe earnings of workers wbo are
paid $SO or more during tbe quarter, no tall will be due unless lb~
earnings are at least $1,000 for the
full year. Tbe tax rate is
unchanged, witb you and your
employee eacb paying 7.5 paeent
of lbe gross eamlngs.
Tbe new tall threshold is effec·
live eases where a bousebold work'
er was employer and employee will
receive refunds for their work wilh
1994 earnings. In lbose paid less
tban $1,000, the sbare of lbe talles.
However, tbe employee woo'tlose
his or ber Social Security credits.
For 1994, you should file lbe
quarlerly form 942 to repon Social

u you bire someone to work in

your bome, a oew law makes it eas·
ier for you to pay Social Security
talles on their earnings. You' D bave
fewer forms to complete and,
depending on bow mucb you
employ outside help, you may pay
tess tall.
WorkeR covcml.by Ibis change
. in tbe law are maids, cbild care
providers, gardeners, and others
wbo provide bousebold suvices.
If tbey are meier age 18,1hey're
exempt from coverage unless
bousebold employment is their
·
main occupation.

Security and Federal tinemploy·
ment tax obligations. Beginning in
1995, you will be required 10 rqx&gt;n
tbose talles on your own Federal
tax return (Form 1040). During
1995-1997, you can pay tbe
employment talles in a lump sum
wben you file your tall return, wilb·
out incurring a late penalty. Begin·
ning in 1998, you will need to satisfy lbe tall obligation by increas·
ing y&lt;iur quarterly tall payments or
increasing lbe tall wilbbolding on
your own wages.
If you bave questions about tbe
changes in reporting household
employment and paying tbe Social
Security taxes on household
employment caU our toU·free num·
ber,· l -8()().772-1213. Our busiest

times are early iii lbe week and
early in lbe month. So, if your
questions can wai~ it's best to caU
at olber times.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Q: Witb tbe snowy weather
expected Ibis wlnler, it will be very
bard for me to get to tile bank to
casb my Social Security cbeck. I'm
ready to sign up for direct deposit.
How do I sign up?
A: You, like maily people, are
realizing tbe benefits of direct
deposit.
To sign up- just caU Social Secu·
rity' s toll-free number 111y business
day between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wbeo you call, lbe Social Security
representative will ask for your
Social Security number, your
address, and lbe D8111e of your bank

and your acoount numbef,

so bave

tbe infonnalion bandy.
Q: My ex-wife died a monlb ago
and I was wondering if our cbil·
dren, age II and 14, would be eligible for Social Security benefit?
A: Possibly. It depends on
wbetber sbe bad enough work credits to be insured. If sbe did, your
children may be eligible for benefits. You should apply for survivors ,
benefits promptly because benefits
are generaUy retroactive only up to
mouths. You can apply by calling
your local Social Security office.
Q: My neighbor. wbo is retired,
told me lhat tbe income be receives
from bis part-lime job at lbe local
nursery bas also &amp;iven bim an
increase in his Social Security benefits. Can.lhat be right?

--------Community calendar-------in Racine, since stale aUditorS will
be using facilities at Star Mill Park.
Discussion on miniature golf
course. Public invited.

The CommoDity Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit aroups wishing to
announce meeUngs and special
events. The c:alendu is not
designed to promote oales or
fund rallen of any type. lle011
are printed as apace permits and
cannot be auaranteed to ran •
speclftc nUDJber of days.

POMEROY - Meigs Higb
Band Boosters, Monday at 7 p.m.
in lbe band room.
RACINE - Advent dinner and
craft nigb~ Moitday, 6:30 p.m. at
St. Jobn' s Lulberan Church. Donations from lbe meal will be used
toward St. lobo Cemelery preser-

MONDAY
. RACINE - Racine Village
Council, 7 p.m. Monday, a1 annex

valion. Public invited.
REEDSVIT..LE - Olive Town·
sliip Truslees will meet Mondsy 7
p.m. at lbe Townsbip buDding on
Joppa Road.
POMEROY - Women Alive,
Christmas banquet, Dale's in Gallipolis, 6:30 Monday.
RACINE - Raclne Chapter
134, OES, installalion of officers,
7:30 Monday. Refreshments.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees will meet Monday, 7:30
p.m. at tbc bome of Clerk Patty
Callaway.
LETART FALLS- Letart·
Portland YI'O, at 7 p.m. Monday,
Letan FaDs Elementary Scbool.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Fraremal Order
of lbe Eagles Auxiliary meeting, 7
p.m. potluck, 7:30 p.m. IQeeting,
Tuesday . $5 Christmas dinner
deposit due DOW ,

Bradford Lydia Council elects new officers, reports on projects
New officets were elected when
Lydia Council, Bndford Olurcb of
Christ met recently atlbe cburcb.
Elected were Karlita Stump,
president; Carolyn Nicboboo, viee
president; Paula Pickens, secretary;
Diane Bing, tr'C8SIII't:r. Nancy Mor·
ris, reportet, Jaoe HyseU, missions;
Beety Amberger, Jlllllller-daugbla'; Prayer was given by Paula Pick·
ens. Officen' reports were given
and a donation ffom Marge Welt
was received to be used for lbe
women's fellowship . A note of
appreciation was read from Catby
and Bill Dyer for a baby shower
given by tbe Lydia Council.
Tbe annual Christmas dinner

bas been cbanged frolit Dec. 12 to
Dec. 13 at Lewis Family Restau·
rant in Jac:bon. Members will meet
at lbe cburdlat 6 p.m. to car pool
or meet at lbe restaurant at 7 p.m.
Several updates on projects
were received. Cookie ministry is
doing weU, it was reponed, and lbe
.cb~ directory will be updated. In
addition, names for a needy family
were selected witb tbe whole
cburch to help wilb lbe food and
Christmas dinner for lbe family.
Tbe visitors list was eassed
around and Paula Pickens will bave
communion in December. Tbe sunshine fruit basket and a child' s
actiVIty basket will be given 10 Ali·

--__
·
·
Tiiilfi5:1.
....

·-CIIo!oo
•My' I • •

.,._

•IIIOT""

IIIII Doln

·--llw

--- -.

··----

·--

·F...._f.....

.......

• UO.I\..,IM

·-·l91·-•fhi1Hcllll

• 2 LMI- AciDn

· ssgg99~-

-

---

·LIII--

1- --I

. .

-

··-·!DO-

l &lt;10'--l.MII

' ·DigiliO.
l'~
·OOI!o
I ·-·

'

••

'

'

. t'
I

I

I

··--. -

l

SALE ENDS
DECEMBER 1OTH

01111 Tr.,

'•

:

MODEL9217

··-- . -• FfW fiM'IIIMI ol "tOW old TV 01

. ..........

.,.._

f4"!"'' ·•SiMoo
..........
&gt;

.

~

.!.~.~ORT_ti SECO~D A\IENUE ·_~ID~L!=PORT, OHIO 45760

=·~ ~~~.

(614) 992·2635 • TOLL FREE 1100-426-65111

..

lllllle 1 EIIYI

·

. Cledil Tlllllii • Lay·A·Y/ttfl• ~'VIM .•

IDDAYSNoiiiTERESTOND/AMONDPREFERREDCHARGEJ .,.,,.
I'OA QIWJI'1ED BUYERS

•

t
I•
I

i'

THE FABRI·CSHOP :J.

*'""-.... ..,AI .... INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY, INC.

.

.

' .In 5 County .
·· ' •·· :
Area '

••

POMEROY, OHIO • 992·2284
OPEN 9 TO 5 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

*QuaiHied Applicants

·

~
~

iiWIPI
I
~ ·

.

j

I

·.· .
,.;.::···' ·

.~tli._.u,.,~.,utlltiJA.uuuutsi~uil.
.

•

Second StrHI
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTAC'r.
Mlchaol K. Buckley, P.E.,
PubUc Notice
Chief
·
PubUc Notice
Hozard
Identification
PROBATE COURT OF
Brooch ·
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
tho propooed bile (100..
Mitigation Directorate
ESTATE OF NOM E.
yaar) flood elavatlona
Ftdarol Emorgoncy
Neloon, DeceaHd
ohown In your community'• Managamonl Agency
C..H No. 21707 Docket 13
preliminary Floocllnaul8nce
Woahlngton, DC 20472
..... 511
(202) 141-2766
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT St d
Fl 0 d I • nee
d
u Y an
naur
SUPPLEMENTARY
OF FIDUCIARY
Rete Map. The ball (100. . INFORMATfON:
Rev!Hd Code, S.C. 2113.01 yaar) flood tlavatlona are
The Federol Emergency
"On November 17, 1114,
the
boala
lor
the
floodplain
Management
Agency glvea
lllltle Melga County Probate me1111gemont m..aurea that notice of tho
propoaed
Court, CaN No. 21707, Pal th
IIY I1 roq Ulr.d detarmlnatlona of b11o
•
commun
&amp;tory, Margaret Storyeither adopt or ehow (IOO.y..r) flood elevatlona,
Schweb, Steven Story, and to
evidence of being already In
effect In order to qualify or In accordance wlltl Section
~am11 D. Story, C/O 513
South Third St., Middleport, remain qualified lor 110 of the Flood Dla11tar
OH 45710, were appointed parUclpallon In the Natlolllll Protection Act ol1873 (Pub.
co-axecutora of the eatate Flood lneuranco Program L. 83·234), 87 Stat. 980,
which addod Section 1363
of Nona E. Nelaon, (NFIP).
to the National Flood
lltceaaecl, lett of 111 Union DATES:
lnauranco Act of 1968 (Title
Ave., Pom,roy, Melga
The .period lor comment XIII of the Houalng ~ and
County, Ohio 457a."
will be ninety (10) daya U b D I
IA I f
Rllllert E. Buck, following the aecond
r an evo opmen c 0
d
1
Ill
(Pub.
L.
90..448)),
Probete Judge pu bllcall on of I hiI propoae U.S.C. 4001·4128, and 42
44
(t2) 5, 12, 11; 3TC
rule In 1 nawapaper of local. CFR 17A(a).
circulation In the
Then
elevaUona,
Public Notice
community.
together with the floodplain
ADDRESSES:
menagoment m.. aur..
· Federal Emergency
Study and mapa ahowlng required by Section 10.3 01
Menagement Agency
the propoaod baoe flood the progrom regulation a,
FedHal tnauronca
elavaltOfll and thalr ero the mlnlnium that are
Admlnlltnllon
delineation
available for required. They ahould not
PropoHCI i'lood Elevation
rev It w
et
I h•
be construed to mean the
Delermlnatlona
Comml .. tonera Office, community muat change
Fe d e r a I Cou..IhouH,
Second Street, eny existing ordlnonces that
AGENCY.·
n
Emergency Managament Pomeroy, Ohio.
ere more atrlngent In their
Agency
.
Send commonta to:
·
ACTION: PropoHd rule.
Mr. Fred Hollman
floodplain management
requlremonta.
The
SUMMARY:
Prealdent, Melga County
community mey at eny lime
Technloal Information or
~=~t!~~:"'mlealonero e1111ct atrlcter requirements
c_o_m_m_llll_•_•_,._•o_ll_ct_t•_d_o_n_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ on Ita own, or purauant to
1 poll~; Ill .. tabllshad by
Real Estate General
other Federal, State , or
regional
I
propoaed onlltleo.
elevation•Theae
will
aloo be uaed to celculated
the appropriate flood
ln.urance premium retoa
tor the new buildings and
their contenta.
Purtuanl to
the
provlalona of 5 USC 605(b),
the Admlnlatretor, to whom
eulhorlty hn b.. n
delegetad by tho Director,
Federol
Emergency
M1 n 1 g • m• n I
Agency,
haraby cartllfoa that the
propoaed flood elevation
datermlnatlona,
II
promulgated, will not have •
algnlflcent economic lmpeet
on 1 aubatantlel number of
amall entltlta. A flood
elevation determination
under Section 1363 forma
the b11l1 lor now focal
CHESTER· SR 248- This beautiful 1 noor Stooenrame home
on 4.3+ acres Includes .3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 car
garage, 3 decks, family room, fireplace, hot tub, disposal ,
partial basement, heat pump w/C.A.. triple payne windows,
carptelwood flooring, C&amp;S electric and TPC water.
ASKING $94,900
NEW HOPE ROAD- Nice 1 floor frame home that includes 2·
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 car garage, out buildings. fenced yard .
garden area, blinds, NC , paneling. carpet, electric he~t
pump, and cellar.
ASKING $35,0110
•
IIIDDLEPORT· Third Street· 2 s1ory frame homo with a.
bedroOmS. t bath, relrtgerator &amp; range. replaced roof,in 1986,
newer warm morning gas stove 1987.
,
NOW ASKING $9,500.00
lriiDDLEPORT· Two unit Apartment building. Both units
eurrenfly rentedl Great rental opponunltyl Good monthly
fncomel
ASKING $13,0110
lriiDDLEPOAT· Bra4bury Rd. . 2 story frame home on 5
Krea. Horne Includes 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, double hung
wlndowa, carpel and wood ftooring , N.G.FA heat, C&amp;S
eiectrlc LCCD water, partially remodeled and free gas
·
ASKING $35,0110

I

•

. ,_~ll'ld~cnrnoll

by Christmas

'I

..l.

......

Lose Weight

OFFia 992·2259

i

·"'- .

1112Mfn

-================:::;!

·-Dollooll!y

Cut

Middleport
Hours: 10:00A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Dally

are

1 WEEK
...
ONLY

•O.ICU. fl~

GAl

1•1-ru.rPUtQI

(614) 992-6454 e
(800)433-6203

•40WIJITIIIIJ~

·i\4-

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS

°

I06 Buuernut Ave. Pomeroy. OH

:

:
•
I
•

/

RACINE· Sharon Hollow Road· Secluded hunflng cabin on
approXImately 20.05 acres. 40x28 cabin has W.B. Stove,
some furniture, no water or electric. Driveway to cabin alSO
carport. This Is perfect DEER and Turkey Areal Great
location tor tha HUNTER , or LOVER OF THE OUTDOORS!
ASKING $17,0110
fiiOIIEROY· Older home with 3 tots loCated on Cote Street In
l"omeroy. Home haa 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. This
home needs ll&lt;lrM repair, good fixer upper for a,new couple.
·.
ASKING $9,500.00
HENRY E. CLELAND........................................... 992-6181
TRACY DRINAGER..............................................948-2439
SHERRt HART. ..................................................742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 11...............".........~..........:992-6181
!CAntY CLELAND...............................................992-6181
OFFICE.................................. ............................ 992·22511

614·992~7643
(No Sunday Calls)

011

Step C.11plete Aute

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt.124
Racine, OH

8t~f

Kenny's Auto c.n•r

·-

Onemlleout

Sales, Service &amp; Installation

992·2060 1

AnORNEY AT LAW

m

51 1 mo.

Howard L Wrltesel
ROORNG
, PUDUC SALE
NEW-REPAIR
ltema awarded to VIllage
of Middleport from File
Gutters
Ca11 will be told 11 VIllage
Hall on Saturday, Dec. 10,
Downspouts
1994 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00
Gutter Cleaning
P-~~ma will be aold "AS IS".·
Painting
VCR'e, TV'a, Chaln Sewe I
Mlac. Toole.
FREE ESnMATES
"NO GUNS"
949-2168
(1 2) 4, 5; 2TC
PubliC Notice

_ _ _ _,;.__ __
Public Notice

11111/84 TFN

BINGO

Ita...,.,.

CLUB

.S••HJ,

I

(above Bank One)

s:+l

General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business

Dc•ln
11M2

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Adclltlona
oNew Garagot
eElactrlcal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
ofnterlor &amp; Exterior
Pilntlng alao concrete
work
.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG Ul
992-41215
Pomeroy, Ohio

1111111

mo.

O&amp;E ELE£1.BI£
OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK •
Resident and Small Electri~al Repair
(Lamps Welcome) ·
Home Repair Also
992-525!
992-7162
John

lf1ft2fn

BEST RECEPTION

For the best in satellite
sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
·We have.ll)len better
and quicker service.
· Over10yrs .
experience
· Service on all system
types.
· Best prices all around
the area.
992·2903 or 992-6320

CHRISTMAS TREES.
•

BRADFORD'S

FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

Craft Shop
}
Located on Chetry Ridge: From Rt. 33, tum East
Sat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles to Che rry
Ridge Rd. 1 1/2 miles to tree farm .
WATCHFOR SIGNS. 10:00 am tit darft Nov. 25 thru Dec. 24
•
Wa on rides Fri . Sat. Sun.

.,

·- ·~ ....__

LINDA'S
PAINnNG CO.

105 Second St, Pomeroy, OH.

·-'I)...L.~ Tel. No. (614) 992-5730 -'I)...L.~

(614) 992·7434
Alllhfc•n

ANNOUNCEMENT
Now Accepting New Clients

DENISE L.BUNCE

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate
Aut~~er~u•

1· 800-4116-1590
Bus. (614) 446.gg71

264.Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Morrison's Heating &amp;Cooling

•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade

when you need a car reatal.
. We llave Car~ anll Vantl

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
Hi
• Craftsman Tools
•Toys

rnPrq£ nr \o Pho 1P 9Wl i 11 '1

Rtptlr

614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

CaU 949·2734

143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.

•'

992-3954

Chuck Stotts

custom

. .

cled 20

Kenny's
Auto
Rental
PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
lenny's is the place to come

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Racine A111erlcan
STATE OF OHIO
Legion Post 602
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Now having Bingo
Columbua, Ohio
every su·nday Night
Bureau of Contract Seln
· ~Ianing 6:4S'Jiri1 ·
Legal Copy Number94-883
Oooill
open 4:30 pm
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
The
more
people
Mailing Date1111B/94
Nll-1(179)
playing the bigger
Sealed propeaals will be
the pay-off.
accepted from all pre·
1111
d
bldd
t
th
Seve
ad
for 1 free card.
qua •
ere a
e
Bureau of Contract Sales,
949-2038 or 949-2044 ·
Room 118 of the Ohio
D ePa r t m a n t
oI
Tranoportatlon, Columbue,
·
ROBERT BISSELL
Ohio, unt11 10:00 a.m.
Tueaday, December 20,
CONSTROOION
19941or lmprovemento In:
Melga County, Ohio for •NawHomaa
Improving oectlon MEG-7·
· 8.89, State Route 7 In •Garagaa
Sallabury and «;hester
&lt;Compte•
Townohlpa,
by
grading,
draining , pevlng with
Remodeling .
asphalt concrete on a
Stop &amp; Compare
bituminous aggregate ball
and by constructing: Bridge
FREE ESTIMATES
No. MEG·7·0895 • a three
span contlnuoua reinforced
915-4473
concrete alab on capped
pile abutments and cap and
. .
column piers (spans 31 '-6"·
45 '·0"·31 '·6" center to
center bearings; roadway
tell bridge 54'.0" toe to toe
&amp;
of parapets and right bridge
l•terior &amp;
42 '·0" too to toe of
par 1 p at s 1,
over
Exterior
tntersectolon "B",
Taira the pain out of
The Ohio Department of pelntlng. Let 111 do It for
Tranaportetlon hereby
you. Very _
.....le.
notlllea all pre-qualified
Frw Eatlma1ea
bidders that deltdvantaged
Balore 6 p.m. leave
business enterprises will be
afforded lull opportunity to
fiiHNII8.
submit bids In reoponoe to
Atrer6 p.m.
J!! !llnanca~, wl! l ~!&gt; . If thia Invitation and will not
--614-118~180 _...
adopted by ·• focal be dlocrimlnated against on
community, will govern the grounds of race, color,
future conatructlon within
.
the lfoodpleln areo. The or national origin In
F&amp;A Tree Servke
elevation dotermlnetlona, conalderatlon lor an award.
Tree Trimming and
however
Impose no
Minimum wage ratoa lor
reatrlctl~n unloll tnd until thla project have been
Removal- Yard Care
the foeti community predetermined as required
· Free Estimates
voluntarily
adopt a by taw and are aet forth In
the bid propoaal. "The date
614-992-4447
floodplain ordlnoncea In sat for completion of thla
a9cord with th oao work shalt be aa set forth In
elevation a. Even II the bidding propoul."'
CHRISTMAS
ordinance• are adopted In Pla1111 and Sepeclllcttlons
compliance with Fedora! are on file at tho
TREES &amp;
atandarda, the elevation a De p a r t m e n t
oI
preacrlbe how high to build Transportation.
WREATHS
In the floodplain and do not
Jerry Wray
prohiiiH davafopment. Thua, Direct lor of Tranapoitatlon·
Ready Nov. 23
lhlo action only forme the
(11) 28, (12) 52 TC
$10 &amp; Up
boolo lor future local
actlo.na. H lmpoaea no new
Open·10
am· 9pm
PubliC Notice
requlrament; of lteeH It has
••• S1owda•'• lot
no economic lmpect.
Saturdoy, December 17,
L•••••• and ownera of
S.R. 124
real property In the 1994, ot 10:00 a.m., the
Rutla11d, Ohio
Unlncorp~ratad Areaa of Home National Dank, Third
Melga County,
are Street, Racine, Ohio, will
614·742·3051
encouraged to review tho offer lor 11le at public
auction,
on
the
Dank
preliminary Flood tnaurance
Study and Flood lneurance perking lot, the following:
1991 Ford AeroSI8r Van
Rata Map tvallabfe at tho
FORKED RUN
Strlal Number
eddreoa cited above .
1FMDA31 X8MAB01957
Propooed bue flood
SPORTSMAN
Terms of the aale are
elevatlona along flood
oourcea otudlecl In dotal! are euh.
The Home National Dank
ahown on the flood profiles
In thl lludy. Tha flood 1811rvea the right to reject
Startl•g Sl•g
eourcee studied In detell any or all blda or to rwnove
any unit from the eale el
Mate•••
lrl:
·
Source of Flooding, anytime.
Friday,
llov. 11
In ordet to lnepeot any of ·
Renge of Due Flood
EIIV.,IOnl I Depth In fell the ebove property prior to
6:30
above around. "Elevation In the ute •"•naementa lillY
be · made by calling 148llov. 13
fell (NOVO).
2210.
J
OhiO River, '1174 • "103.
hOO
.. (11) 28 (12) 5, 12,3 TC
(12) I, 12; 2TC
, I

•

. FREE ESTIMATES

E:.

Cundiff's

Public Notice

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·.

614·742·2131

MARKET

•

:. e

Joel. s.,n
SAYRE TRUCKING

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

r-•·ee..u , ...........
All Natural 446-3896

REG. •699.99
•&amp;49.99 VALUE

._c..-

•I....._T. .

=

marketplace

With Purchase

..........
·MIIII-

:

your

•&amp;Dtllp170.."'

·
~·~c:r-.

l':

...............
&amp; Gravel

IIOWOPIII
J&amp;D FLEA

711 South Third

Blg.,Load Laundry Pair ·

19 Cu. Fl Refrigerator

·-Ciooo
•1'1111.-

-

I: I • • • •

Uinestone

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable tollatl ranted.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental ........
Job sllel' Camp Sites • Family lleunlonl &amp; P....
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULIIJ G
Llmeatone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· I TOP SO IL FOH SA LE

· · New Homes e VInyl Siding New
Garages e Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

7131111 TFN

:; lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll r.

.

Compact Mlcl'OWIYe
•I C; . QIIUt&amp;

Flowers From!"

Stump and Catby Dyer. Present Amberger, Diane Bing, Nancy
eta Werry.
On Nov. 18, several members of were Suzie Will, Gelr}' Lilbtfoot. Morris, Carolyn Nicholson, Hantbe cburcb bad tbeir anoual Cherie, Jared and Caitlin nab and Andrew Stump, Madeline
'I'IIanb&amp;iving program atlbe OOUD· • Williamsm, Delores Frank, Beety Painter,. Jane Hysell and Paula
ty infumary. Fruit baskets pepared
Pickens.
by Gelr}' Lightfoot were presented
to each patron. Madeline Painter
was in charge of lbe program.
There will be a Cbristmas pre·
sent party for lbe ~urcb. 1bis will
be for supplies needed for tbe
'l/llfi/HINHIIIIIVIII/IIIIIfHN/111111/NIINIIIIIIII/IIIImt/HIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHIIIIIRIIHHHIIIIHHIIHIII(i
cburcb.
Women's feUowsbip will be at
tbe Bradford Cburcb on Dec •. 1.
Favors of angels were displayed
and·tbese wiD be made in a workshop atlbe meeting.
Devotions were by Karlita

Quality Appliances!
•Z1!4. . . C.....

, r:; • •

A: People who return to work
after lbey start receiving benefits
may be able to receive a bigber
benefit based on those eilrnings.
Tbis is because Social Security
automalically reeompures lbe benefit amount afler lbeaddilional earnings are credited to tbe individual s
earnings record. Tbe earnings (811
be an advantage as long as tbey!do
not exceed tbe annual exempt
amount.
Q: I've beard that there fs a
maximum family benefit under
Social Security. Does, Ibis mean
lhat ooce the maximum is leaChed,
some family member won't &amp;et
benefits?
A: No. Under Social Security,
·eacb family member entitled' to
receive a monthly benefit will
receive one . Tbe total benefits
received by lbe family, bow~ver
cannot exceed lbe family maximum
amount. Tbat amount is divided
among ail entitled dependents. Tbe
Qlore dependents wbo receive benefits on lbe worker' Social Security
record, tbe lower lbe benefit
amount will be for eacb depeodent.

"S.y U.o Woh

IU-71laOR
.ftZ-5551 OR
TOLL FREE 1·100·141·0071
DARWIN, OHIO

TUES.&amp; WED.
DEALERS WELCOME

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Remember
Pearl Harbor observance, Wednesday, II a.m. at Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, Mid·
dlepon.

LETART - · Letan Township
trustees will meet Monday 6 p.m.
atlbe offiCe building.

ALL IIAKES l IIODELS

NOTICE: Starting Dec. 2, Pt.
Pleasant Flea Market will be
open Fri. thru Sat., 9 am-7 pm.
Tickets will be given away with
each purchase for drawing
each week until Christmas.

New law makes it easier to pay ·household workers' Social.Security taxes .
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Mrn•11er In
AtiM..

MODDI lUI iii ill '

BISSELL IUILDERi, INC.

TREE TRIMMING
· AND REMOVAL
Ugt,\t Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack .
992·2269

.~
~~~
aunrrY
..... m a i:
.I

a••

~custom Made

•

{

j •Solid vinyl

replacement

••
•
'
I I,

windows

• Fre.e Estimates

....'

• $200 Installed
Call For Details

'

,.

•

INSULATE NOW 1
Up 1o BOC Sq. Ft of 6 .
81own-m Owens-Corn1ng
ln su i &lt;Jt10n S192.00.

A1t 1cs. Walls . Craw spacc

BROOKS IN SULATI ON
98S·-l J 45

..

' .•

•viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Po~::ov. ORio

-

"Look for the Red and White Awning'~
'
a;...,;9,;::92~-4.;.;11.;.;9Al;;,.li;.;ro;.;;;n•;;;.
· O,;.;w;,;;;rler~l-1;.;.0..~2-9_1·5;..;.600.;..;.....,~. ::

••

Announc emen h

AMBERWOOD
Cocker KENNE~
Spaniels ·
Bred for
Quality and
Temperament
SpeGialzing In Part-oololl
lor ohow and companions.
Stud •Me. &amp; puppies,

young aclllll lor sale.

48750 IItle Hill Rd.

RIG&amp;S
CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cut your tree .
(or we'll cui it for you)

- - - -- ·
3 Announcements
~

lmJMd!otlelr-

Elfrctlys

R&amp;allnd IIIII to a1ob &gt;
huhloro,1heft and 1 - · ol 1

Gro.. Rd.,

Riggs Tree Farm

propsrty. Allwrlnrn ....... csncelled t

39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at comer of US At 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

'

~~~;-;;; ·

t•lfll.na1 be ravru ' I lor ..., ;
debt• ot ..r than ..,. own. ..

Gtotvo -her.

~·

IIEET NEW PE01U

!_

THETOOAY
FUN ""''

»,.

11uo11 t
Br 18 Yra $2.111 Pw lllln. Procal ";i;
co. 802-154-ll120.
•
No hunting ol ony ldnd 1M .., ;
t· 1100-32t-5000 Ell. 110\

fi nn on llflcholl Rd., AacltMi. •

WEill'S

CHIISTIW
TIEES

Connle Enlltfl, owner.

!'

NO huri:lng_ or tn'tW • • •

•
¥

onytlme on Olsrtn YoM Fwills.
-

.

!

Mtl
Luthrr Smhh Fomw, ...... ,-

114-14114487

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Whit!l Pine 4' &amp; Up with.
a great selection of
, larger trees.
Call 742·2143 or

"" l

t..,psalng on -

11121!9C

Raclne,Oh

•,
·,

Pr :

Cloln/5511. Fry,
-tonl'o

I 11

-

o.t .1

It
' II 0...
o-y,
.........
W'f.

~~~.

4

.•

. ..,., &lt;~

GlvNWIJ

'

!

~~t~.=a ~t

·•75-ma.
'

~ ~!.~.~=~IIIlo
I

.t

�r.
Pomeroy-MI~~Ieport,

Monday, December 5, 1994

Ohio

Monday, December 5, 11M.·_

Ohio

BRIDOI ·

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.-

PHILLIP

ALDER
BEATTIE BLVD.'M

by

Bruce Beattie

~..,.\ChOW .......

•Q J 8 4
.9

a-n • .........., eo. Puppy.

oA10984

114 M&amp;ttM.

•Q J 4
EAST

~ALI2£ "flJAT
~AI{~~ IIJ 1tl£ '5(1i'X)L')
HI&gt;S l£)') "0 00 I.UTH

'rW

Lolt &amp; Found

6
Found

.a

•Q 10 8 7 6 5

~--·

H3
.10 '985

IItle " " ' - 11Ma1o.

..,_,..oollor,~

Found:

-k

-

·

SOUTH
•K10753

...

w/ontgne .,.akl. 104 •1411.

Found: , Port

~·

•J 3

,,._,....loF-=
~to A~

7

34

17 Arabian
garment
19 Secluded
valleya

Low, high, low:
Kill the contract

!I
Help Wanted

11

By Phillip Alder
How mu~h do you think you could
about a simple takeout double?
...::.;....;;:;,o:::::::.;.Ji 'J Five, maybe 10 pages? Include some
::
examples and a quiz and you get up to
20 or 30 pages. Sound like a lot? Well,
Michael Lawrence has just written a
book totaling some 230 pages on the
WHAT IF I
MA'&lt;BE I'LL
LOOK, I JUST DISCOVERED
subject ! "The Complete Book on \1.-'-"--'--'I-IADN'T
JUST 61VE I-IJM
I WA5 HOLDIN6 YOUR
Takeout Doubles," published by
TWO WEEKS'
DISH UPSIDE-DOWN~ NOTICED IT?
Magnus Books, is available for $14.90
NOTICE ..
from The Bridge World, 39 West 94th
Street, New York, NY 10025-7124.
Here is a great deal from the book.
Lawrence was sitting East, partnering
Eddie K;mtar,
Most Souths would open one spade,
not one club. It would then be danger·
'L
NMO'W
YOMC
RSMDW
OMD,
ous for West to double because he
would have to correct clubs to dia·
SOW
L ' E
EMXV
MH
A
SRPVSRUU·
monds at whatever level partner bids .
the suit. (Many experts, however, .
FRANK &amp; ERNEST
PWXLYV
HAD
WZRD
A
ZMTYVOwould indeed double, laking that risk.
Sometimes it is safer to take action
PWXLYV
HAD . ' .::_
TMORD M'SXLVO.
than to pass.)
· Lawrence's Lbree-heart bid over.Lhe
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "You know times are tough when Smokey Beer to..
redouble showed a weak hand with a
his midde name to government cutbacks.' -Katherine PoehlmaM.
long suit: playing strength without defense. Confident the opponedts could
make a game, Kantar apptied pressure
wilh his jump to five hearts. ·
Having got them to five spades,
- - - - - - l~lto4 ~. ct.AY I . POU.UI _.;;..,._ _ __
Kantar still had to find the defense to
,,
Rearrange letten of the
beat Lhe contract. He led his singleton
four .:rambled worda
club. Declarer won with dummy's jack
low to form four words.
--....:==========:ci~~:::.;-;:.::=:::'!~~~~~~~~..:..i-.::..
...,J . and
called for the spade queen .
Wanting a signal from his partner,
INCORI
Kantar ducked. On the se. ond round of
BORN LOSER
1
spades, Lawrence discarded the dia2
mond three. Kantar won with the spadll
5PUT FEA50UP COIIII~ Ill\lt.IK You&amp; 1\~ I:&gt; WNrTIU. '&lt;00 ~'(
ace and led a low heart. Lawrence won
with the queen and gave his partner a
~TU£'... 001'5! liN&gt;
T~TaE:&gt;~!
/A.Y 50UP!
club ruff: one down.
CJ.\01(£ loJOR[)5!
3
GIG A
How did Kantar know Lawrence had
tbe heart queen? Because with only
#
low hearts, Lawrence would have dis·
carded his lowest heart, not a diamond.
N E WU D
I:::,'
A friend sal in the dark

=-~~~· ..:.'E ·.:r:~olr.

~~ CIJdo

Pas_,-=,
PubllcSale

To oolllo - · ol ' - n .._
toz .Ill ocro an Ill. 31, Lot
12. PlinY, WV. A~ 18,300.

ooldng sa.aoo. •- ~

lulltlmo - . U1111111d0
auction
MMoe.
....
Ohio • vqtnlo, 77W7IL

Rentals

E.
Click,
......,.
'
a
lloMM,
301-.

- - Col. -

Wented to Buy

Cloon Lido llodol Coors Or c-1011 Air .,.... .. Haw
Truclla, tlll7 11oc1ot1 Or ""'!!!,
Bmfth lulok ~ • Eallom Allenue, a.lllpallt
........... Alllllr
In AI
243 1hlnl
Qolllpollo,
Ohio,
No _ ......
_Collo-

t:e•.:a.e:'!r-..,..!: '::d

·=-==.........
- .......
-. .....,_

WARM
MITTENS!'!

FREE% IN'
OR NOT

&amp;Auction

9

I'M WEARIN'

OL' BOSSIE!!

YaniSale

w-. .,..

Aid!

:i!oon

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West North East
DbL
RedbL 3 •
All p8B8
s• 5 •
lead: •6

BARNF.V

MILKIN' TIME,

ALL VIlli Soleo lluol Bo Pold In
~. PEADUNE: 2:GO p.m.
tho cllly bolors tho Ill .. 10 run.
SUnciiiY
·- , - • Z:OO• p.m.
Frldoy; _
2:110
p.m. Soturdoy.
AroVIIo Floo ........, Wed I
Thuro,_441-4:1111, Ill 141 1171.

8

Buslnea

on 01211,

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

,._
581nd
P11D Hot* gill · 1-.ment
IIIIUed
• Abeolule
A-*
7 Fututw IIIIa.
...,.....
I FIWICIIaummer
C*tl 1 Feat llrcratt
111M11 whlcle
Clblt
10
, Youtll org.
pt~riiH
3111ro.dway
11 Moat MrYOUI
mu~l
1:l Hlllly volume

•A K 7 3 2

~

Lool: ...
~ Wll1to- 10
Yooro
Tog Willi Tho

NomoS

3Qoglna.rtletd
E..-ty
4 Unolayecl golf
Did • math talk
hofe

•Q

Fe. .lo

• - Willi Whlo On
,_ a Till.
Yoltowlawn Aood. ......._I
Wooko Old, •~*tlllti ·

Puppy,
.,..,.,

~=:::

Dlootallllll-... - · COIIIIUNITY CABLE
morrtl41...oldold
....
..........
fumftoro. AElmiY LEVEL- ll!fiO W..

lJ.S.

..... w. ...,... .u tW&gt;oo or

-·

- C A l L I TV~
W.WIIParYouE--

PO IT

Trolnlng FciO' A H1tNr Po1d-

EARN FROII 12110 -11110 PER
WEEK TO ITARTI

Of fiG~

FlllJilCial

'::!~~, S©~uillA-4£~s·

0

______

L

........

-[

ri

I I I 1I
1 I' I~ I

e»rt-----..

rTI---rl~rs
_ -,r--~-1

___
v..z.: ...............

Oek H11 ' IMIII TIUOllng &lt;:-.
11MW ..... 111:11 'Ml UTA
~~~~- 0.. T• ~­

.._.,

!!

W I i01o

=...

41'-"'**IIIJ ..,.,.,,1111
Fer .....-~:..t-­
PI llltlartlll
. . . Toke - I n , _
Jo1oo And ..... T o - For A

DIDin••llll Glewlna Drtver
Orlontlll Conler. Cool' f14.e8lo
4113 . _ I P.M.; AI« I P.M.
CIIIIIW4Io1*'

......... Clint_......
............... -

dlpfolno

00111 • 111ro er ........ w1I!IM to
-~wllli
. . . - In. .-. cleo
wlttt.cMIIDprM

. . .
I.__...__.....____._..__-'

All real o&amp;tata advortlalrig In
lhls neWSI)Bp8r I&amp; subJect to
lhe.Federal Fair HouBing Act

r

to advsrtlsa 'any prefarance,
limitation or dlacrimi'lation
118sed on race, colo&lt;, 1911gton,
se• lamiUal status or national
or1gkl, or any Intention .to
make any sucn pretarence,

'(IIF . I CAN

BAlANC-E A
IALL 011 1'\V
HeAl&gt; Rill A
FU\.l fiVE
Sf&lt;.OND5o 1

limitation or discrimination.'
This nOWSI)Bp8r will not
knowllngly accept
adVertisements for raalntale
which Is In vlolallon ollhelaw.
Our readers are hereby
lnfonned that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal

TAAT 'S

•

NOT AL.l!
loi'INNA
SEE t1E

opjllloolloil

us-. Clnll
.......llaCiulln,
..,_ eon.
-

-

1'1'(

No$E?

-Fervor - Hasty- Envoy - Weakly - LEFTOVERS
•A large family has one very big advantage,' the
mother of six children sighed. "I never have to worry
• about what to do with the LEFTOVERS!'

opportunity 118sls.

Real Estale

.._ F1rn1 loofdna Ful
'limo IOn Cotl1 Ctoonlntl "T-

=I A

d1bk,

~·~~=r~••~e c~..ld.td. S:

- - ToiCCS P.O.Iollll,
Kon,01141141.

84

Hly &amp; Gl'lln

Oetegating ~ to someooe else at the midnewspaper, P.O. Bo&gt;~, 4465, Now Vork, · way point coukl be disastrou~.
NY 10183. Be sure to state the zodiac GEMINI
(May
21·Juno
20)
BERNICE
sign(s) ol your choice.
Unfortunalely. you might not find reliable
BEDE OSOL CAPRICORN (D•c. ~ 2 - Jan . 19) help today with a complex development
unexPected changes might lhrow you off Proceed rather than wait for aid .
course today . Adjust to conditions as . CANCER (Juna 21-July_22) Clearly
they shift or your odds lor succesa will gc; spell out the numbers In ltnanctal com·
down stgnHicanlly.
. mitments today. They might be thinking
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Ftb. 11) Your bell of a larger sum than you had in mind.
asset today is your ability to simplify LEO (July 23-Auo. 22) Resist the urge
complex developm_ents . Thera i.s a to lind scapegoats lor your problems
chance this gift might be requir«t more tOday. When you start blaming others ,
than once before the day Is over.
they will be&lt;:ome very angry .
PiSCES (Feb. 20-MIIrch 20) Your initial VIRGO (AUO- a-s.pt. 22) The methods
Tuesday, Dec. 6, t994
.,
assessment of a work problem could be you are tempted to usa today may
Try to establish a savings program for erroO.ous. To get the true picture, take a destroy your llhances lor success. Use
lhe year ahead. 11 you tucf&lt; a lillie away hard second look and perhaps even a more certain procedures.
each week , the accumulation might third.
·
UBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 28) Oo no1 make
amaze you later.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 18) Once you impulsive financial ll*:ilions today: they
SAGmARJUB (Nov. 23•0.C. 21) Try . get in gear today, you'll w_ork very pro· might stem more from emotion than
nol to repeat a mistake tOday that you ductively. HoW..ver, you mtght waste so Iogie. Take atlequate time to study pro.
made recently in ·a complicated matter. much time getting started, you won'l posals.
.
Profit lrom experience, dOn't relive it. have -enough time tell to accomplish SCORPIO _(Oet. 24-Nov. 22) Timing IS
A t ·Qraph year· ahead prediCtions much.
extremely Important today. Persistence
m~~~ wonderlul Chrtslmu stocking I T,t.URUS (April 2D-May 20) If working will give you an edge, but lack of· PriPI·
atuffers lor all signs of lhe zodiac. M&amp;JI on a critical assignment today, make ralton and tmpulaiveneN m.y llptll laH·
$f.25 ~Qr each to Aatro·Graph ••clo lhis ' sura you see it through to completion. ura.

I

52 Sporting Ooodl

~~

:117 MIIOWoJII CIIROMI MOO,

Apartment

I'IWII JilL

.

torRent
1 ""'2 t , _
turnlohool ..... ...............

.......................
~

.... tf4.tiN2i&amp;

'

I - 1110;
TliloUndor
1 llioh
. .Ci!lntor
......
Tho
DlwiM..._, ... I111•1tM.

=..... ....,._
fT . .

ClnlwiiJ ..... - ·
. . . .:00

-

PRINT NUMBERED lETTUS
IN IHESE SQUARES

SCitAIMETS ANSWERS

31 Homes for Sale

. ,,

by flll•no •n the missino word1
you develop lrom stop No. 3 below.

01\INK

lor.

nlclllll. Mtal . .

,--l, t;::~;,~~:;::o~h~::.:~:~

61-'TOIUIDE
Tl-f!OJGH

- - . . . . . . . . .. .ly

hlng ...... ,.,

1

o..,,~

-'TM_r_,...N_K,... ......
16 __.__--'·
__,__ _.__..,__..,
... 1 1

of 1968 wt&gt;ch makos HIllegal

lamenting the fact that she
was tuming fifty. 'You don't
just grow old.' her husband

0 I
0

,,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="368">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9740">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31797">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31796">
              <text>December 5, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6329">
      <name>dohung</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3762">
      <name>dyer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="467">
      <name>parker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3493">
      <name>wyant</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
