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Monday, December 5, 1~·

Poineroy-MICfdleport, Ohio

Plge-1D-The Deily sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Raiders
defeat
Chargers

Pick 3:

741
Pick 4:

5113

Buckeye 5:

Page4

TOTAL CUSTOMER SATISfACTION -

•7 •

Vol. 45, NO. 151
Copyright 1994

Wc;ascg!UJrnc;w M~rno9JLE~ WDJ @m[bc;
99

By ALAN FRAM
Alsoc:llltecl Praa Writer
WASHING10N- Wbite House officials don't like Rep. Newt Gingrich's remarks about drug use by aides to President Clinton. But dle
incoming House speaker and bis Republican team have a message for
lhem: Get used to it.
The Georgia Republican defended bis earlier accusali011 that up to ouefounb of dle Wbite House stair had used drugs in lbe four a five years
before joining dle stair, saying Monday that hardball politics is a solid
American tradition.
"I'm a bistorian," be told reporters Mooday. "JeffelliOD IUld Hamilton
eacb subsidized papen to smear Jbe Oilier. Trying to lead America bas
always been a tougb busillcss and even Wasbingtoll occasiooally got hiL ••
. A Gingrich ally, Rep. Bob Walker, R-Pa., also jumped in, saying,
"This Wbile House is going to have to learn thal dley DO longer have lap

Gallon Jug
'

Pre·Prlced 5.49

Review
of Meigs

,C,OMPA,RJ
,it .5 A IY E

2. 00 Mail•in Rebate

Your Final
Cost After
Mail·in
Rebate

,,

liOO IQI'· Its burial;-- - ··- -- ... ·

·

IIIJiirOilriale time for di ging

Gallon

Jug

le Dryer

eels
100 Ct.
Box

2.39

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...
,.,.

L.........--~--------------.;------~----------------------~~~~----------------~~.~--~--------------------------------------------~:­•
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Levy's renewal allows purchase
of fax, refrigerator for Eastern

I

Pre·Priced

fo~ward-looking

Pomeroy Council takes option
on lease for new well location

eac

~~ ~

•

t

0

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Slalf
The Eastern Local Board of
Education purchased new equipment--:- specifically, a new facsim·
lie machine and refrigerator - at
ils rust regular meeting since tbe
levy was renewed, according to
scbool offiCialS.
RcaideDIS ill tbe Eastem district
V01ed f&lt;I a 4.4-mlll. two-year COD·
tinuing operating levy 011 Nov, 8.
The levy will raise $154,689.
The acbool board bought a $500
fax machine for tbe treasurer's
office from WaiM.-t after acceptins bids and shopping around·,
Board President Riy Karr said.
The district previously a private
' · fax machine, Karr said. Today' s
Instantaneous communication
DQeds demand Ibis type of leCbnolt
yl

changing dle shape of dle government" be told dlem.
..
Gingricb touched off tbe dispute over drug use on a televixillll news
show Sunday, attributing dle information to a senior law enfon:ement
offiCial wbom be did not name. He provided DO furtber debils.
In response, White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said Mooday
that Gingrich's accusations wen: ID\true, and tbat tbe fierCe conservative
was "bebaving like an out-of-control radio talk sbow bost."
He added, "We cannot do business bere widllbe speaker, we cannot
do business with lbe speaker of dle House wbo is going to engase in these
kinds of unfounded allegations.''
That comment drew scoffs from Gingrich and his allies.
"His comment was nonsense," Gingrich said "I am c:oosti1utiooally
going to be lbe chief legislative otTICCf of the House. I don't blow wbo
be's going to be chief of staff for if be doesn't want 10 negociale with dle
speaker of dle House."

In the holiday spirit- Middleport kept

the
capsule would be 201~. the 'TOOth
anniversary of dle county. As for
Remembering tltat neryone needs remembered during tltc holidays, participants in Meip
its CODteots - minutes of dle com·
Industries
and Carletoa Sotbool are preJIU'inll'rult bukell for residents of area elder and nuning
mittee's meetings, a copy of the
care
fadlides.
Here, clockwise, Artllur Rceva, Sarah Mc:Cuty, Lonnie Rush and Linda Montcommemoralive publlcatiOII of 1be
nn
buketl
for naning home res'ldentl.
gomery
Daily Sentintl, a listing of events
blgbligbtinll the year. pictures or
tbe "big snow" and pictures of
events directly relating to tbe
observana: - will be included.
Tbe committee will accept for
possible inclusion snow and event
pictures, such as special floats or
other activities carrying out the
anniversary lbeme.
'·
Mayor 1o1m Biaettnar said be is acquisitions at Monday's meeting.
The Jan. 7 recepti011 will be beld By JIM FREEMAN
Council also discussed a sign
Sentinel
News
Slalr
excited
about dle prospect of getat lbe courtbouse from 11 a.m. to I
belonging to A. Jackson Bailes,
In
what
is
considered
an
importing
new
we
lis
and
anticipates
p.m. with recognition of groups
optometrist. wbo recently opened a
wbo promoted the anniversary tant step (Qward improving water looking for well sires "as soon as clinic on Main Slreel.
quality
in
the
village
of
Pomeroy,
possible."
.
tbeme in lbeir activities and others
The problem, according to
members Monday agreed
He said plans call for two largewho made a significant contribu- council
Biaettnar, is that the villase bas an
10 accept an option to lease a
diameter
wells,
allowing
plenty
of
tion to tbe celebration. Groups
water for future expansion of tbe ordinance forbidding businesses
qualifying as contributors to the potential site for new water wells.
from placing signs over the sideThe
potential
new
well
field
is
anniversary celebration are asked located on 10-1/2 acres along dle water system. Lines will be run walk
as part of the ongoing revitalfrom
dle
wells
to
tbe
existing
treatto contact Margaret P:uter at dle Obio River behind the old state
ization.
In addition, sigps must also
ment
facility,
be
added.
museum. Refreshments will be park in Syracuse, on property
Drilling new wells is dle least- comply with design review comserved.
belonging to Jack and Judy cost option to improve tbe village's mittee guidelines, be said.
It was reported thal dle commit- Williams, Council President Jobn
Council agreed to send a letter
water, be said, estimating lbe total
tee bas been given a dlree-foot, sixMusser said.
cost at around $400,000, compared to Bailes requesting tbe sign's
inch in diameter slainless sleel cap"We have a 12-month period to to other options - $4 million for removal and noted that additioual
sule f&lt;I the project.
execute
that option and look for starting a new wa:ler district and legal sleps may be required if dle
The success of lbe coverlet sale -water," be
said, If water is found. $1.5 million for a new treatment sign is not taken down.
·
and odler fund-raising projects was dle village may lease dle land for facility for the existing water sup"If you Jet lbat slide, you'll have
reported on by the Rev. William
a monlb. Ttle vi!!g~ is also ply.
. to let every one else slide," said
Middleswartb, .treasurer. He note-d $1,000
"This we can afford," be said, Councilman Wiiliam Young.
looking
for
grant
fundmg
to
assist
dlat of the 525 coverlets ordered,
process.
adding that be does not anticipate
Council also agreed 10 send a
445 bave been 110ld. 1be coverlets in tbe
Musser said new wells may belp village water rates will need to be letter to CellulaiOne ou lighting the
are still for sale at $50 eacb, as are relieve current water problems in raised at Ibis time.
tower on Breezy Heights.
175m anniversary mugs at $6 eacb. the village,
"We
may
bave
bigb
qualily
The company recently leased
A report was given on the
"We have a problem with man- waler as soon as dle end of 1995," dle tower and installed a cellular
anniversary signature quilt wbicb is ganese in tbe water," be said. "('lbe . be said.
telephone booster: Earlier, compaDOt yel complete. It was noted lbat water) is bard; I think we can get
The action followed an execu- ny representatives told council dley
50fter water."
(Continued on Page 3)
tive session to discu ~~ property
(Continued on Page ~)

..

.64 oz. Jug

A Multlmtdlelnc. Newap~per

vision: Dooley

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel New. Slalr
Burying a time capsule on tbe
Meigs County Courthouse lawn on'
Jan. 7 will complete dle obselvance
of dle 175dl anniversary of Meigs
County.
Meeting Monday at the Meigs
Museum, the committee discussed
plans fa a fmal anniversary event,
a reception to be beld in the courtbouse in conjtiiiCii011 with the time
capsule burial. items to be included
..,i9J!!i.~,ule~ and a ~rajlle l!!Ql·

'

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dogs on Capitol Hill."
·
The verbal duel ensued as giddy House Republicans gathtzed Monday
to crown lbeir new leaders for the 104dl C011gress, wbicb coo'l!eues Jan. 4
under GOP dominalioo for the first time since 1954. They will be making
decisions about House rules, committee sttucture and committee assignments through Wednesday.
Gingrich; unopposed, was chosen to be the uext House speaker by
acclamation, a selection the House will formally ratify on its rust day.
Rep. Richard Anney, R-Texas, was named majority leader and Rep. Tom
DeLay, R-Texas, was elected majority wbip, dle No. 3 job.
Glngricb promised Republicans would dig right in on their "Conttact
Widl America. •• lbeir campaign promises to cut taxes, pass a constitutional amendment requiring a baliiJ!Gld budget, and pan: lbe size of government
"We have an oppMUnity Ibis spring and summer to begin decisively

Time-capsule set
to be buried on
courthouse lawn

.·' Jt wu lleaelliiY decided that dle

Final Touch
Fabric Softener

1 Section, 10 Pagea 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 6, 1994

Unrepentant .Gingrich named new speaker

'
I
Less

*

en tine

·a

Sale Price 3.99

Low lolll&amp;lllla ...........
WedalldaJ, rala.HJP Ia

•

THAT's :A BIG BI:AR HuG!

Prices Effective December

'

5-8-24-30-36

ogy, be added. Bids ranged from
$500 to $1,200.
The board also bougbt a new
refrigerator from Montgomery
Ward for about $500, Karr added.
The bigb school bome economic
department bad gone without a
refrigerator since tbe beginning of
dlis scbool year since dle old ooe,
won: OUL be added.
In other operating cost decisions, tbe board renewed a oneyear contract with Carl E. Smith
Petroleum IDe. This company .supplies natural gas for the schools
through an 011-site well, Karr said.
Last year, dle district shifted
from beating oil' to natural gas,
wbicb, over time will save Jbe
schools. enersy costs, be added ..
Tbe board also announced dle
bid winners from tbe Nov. S auc-

tion. Also, tbe board paid $1,000
for new stage curtains at Cbester
and Tuppers Plains elementaries.
Principal Donald Sbue said tbe new
curtains may be installed by the
Christmas sbows.
•
In persDilllCI meum, lbe board:
• named Sheryl Rousll to a oneyear contract as National Honor
Society adyisor, previously a volUnteer position. The general (und
, will cover costs.
• chose Scott Wolle as lbe bisb
school rural demoostration srant
coordinator. The positioo IUld projec• are paid COr by state Bf811lS.
• selected 10111 Codner to /wist
in coaching the boys basketball
te,am 011 a volunwy basis.
. • listed Herllert J. Pcdman as a
substitute teacbef f&lt;I dle 1a1 ol tbe
(Colltinued oa ,... 3)

Subscription
price slated.
to rise Jan. 1
The subsaiption price ot The
Daily SentineVSunday TimesSentinel will rise for the first
time in nearly four years, from
$1.60 to $1.75 per week, effective Jan. I , 1995.
v .
The increase in lbe suosaiption rale · reflects bigber
newsprint, postage and other
pul&gt;!lsbing costs. While lbe mail
subscription rare will rise proportionalely, tbe sinple copy
prices, 35 cents daily and $1
Sunday, remains unchanged.
You th carriers and motor
route drivers will receive a sig·
niflcant portiou of dle increase.
The Daily Stntit~el last raised
subscription prices in Marcb
1991.

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Slalr
Middlepon bas succeeded in
auracting new businesses and orga·
nizing special eveniS because of its
spirit of cooperation, said Tom
Dooley, president of tbe village' s
Community Association.
As Ibis year draws to a close,
Dooley recapped 1994's accom·
plisbments while looking abead to
~ext year's cballenges, Dooley will
step down as president of dle group
at Ibis month's eo4. 1be new presidenl and officers will be elected at
5:15 p._m. today at the Peoples
Bank in Middlepat.
Dooley said lbe association bas
developed strong ties between dle
village government and the Middleport Arts Council during bis two
years atlbe belm.
Also, Middleport bas worked
witb surrounding villages and even
witb Big Bend neighbors in tbe
Mason, W.Va., area. be added.
"However, wben we bave setbacks - such as the loss of tbe
revitalization grant - Middleport
bas kept its vision," Dooley said.
"They don' t let the setbacks deter
their progress. '1
For the last two years, Mi~dle­
port bas sought state revitalization
grant funds . This year, Pomeroy
received about $750,000 in funds
to enhance tbe downtown business
disllict
While some Middleport businesses bave departed, others have
moved in to fill their storefronts,
Dooley said.
"It's encouraging 10 see new
businesses in tbe COf11111UDity. They
inust have faith in Middleport's
economy," be said.
New or relocating businesses
include The Obio River Bears,
Counlry Naturals, Countryside
Ceramics &amp; Gift _Shop, Middleport
Trophies &amp; Tees, AB Cuning Cellar, Western Auto and Johnson's

vanecy Srore.

.

More businesses can still be
added, but tbe communily needs to
reach oul more lo existing businesses. Dooley added.
"Meigs County bas everything
you need," be said. "When you
take your money out of tbe county,
it's lost Shop local ftrsl"
Unless people support local
stores, lhe stores cannol return tbe
favor tbrougb donations to schools
and cburcb groups. be said. A centralized doilation syslelll was started more dlan a year ago and bas
sue&lt;:eeded.

TOM DOOLEY
Also. 36 merchants will give
away $3,000 in goods before the
holiday season ends as part of a
weekly event, Dooley said.
Tbe community association consisting of merchants and concerned citizens - bas maintained a
consistent level of members, be
added. In dle caning year, Dooley
said be hopes dle group will grow.
Tbe group's s1rengtb bas been
its demOCJatic approach to decision-making, be added.
"You have to listen to everyooe.
No ooe is more important than dle
nell guy," Dooley explained. ~You
can't say yes 10 everyone so you
rely on tbe group's decision."
Atcas that can still be improved .
include:
• more participati011 by eUsting
members;
• coutinued visibility of ·village
council members in stores;
• more cooperation belween tbe
group and its counterpart in
Pomeroy;
• consistent use of Dave Diles
Park;
• continuation of tbe farm-en·
marltel; and
• ensuring dle annual Fourth of
July celebratioo is a full-day e~&lt;enL
Dooley said be appreciated all
tbc merchants· belp and continues
to appreciate the donations by Don
Tare Motors for tbe annual River
Festival.
While tbe owner of dle Middleport Department Store may be stepping down, be emphasized be will
remain active in tbe group.
· "I just think it's time for someone else to take over," be concluded.

Shortfall may prompt hike
in gas tax, license tag fees
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state
is considering increasing lbe gasoline tall and the cost of license tags
to generate ranotber $150 million a
year and avoid delays in highway
constrUction, The Columbus Dispatch reported tocJily.
William E. Davis, chief finance
officer for dle Ohio Oep.tment of
Transportation, said dle cOIIstrUction program could be balled widl·
in two yean if mor-e money is 1101
raised.
Tbe department bas spent an
average of $82.5 million a year in
state and federal money 011 highways since 1991, Davis rsaid Moo-

day at a meeting of tbe Obio Contractors ASsociation, However, be
estimated spending fer fiscal year
1996, wbicb begins July I, at $821
million and spending tbe following
year of $795 million,
The bigbway sbare of the 22cents-a-galloo gasoline tax is being
eroded by tax credits for ethanol
and inaeasing C0f1S of supportillg
tbe State Highway Patrol, Davis
said.
Gordon D. Proctor, ODOT's
adminiSUat&lt;I ol planning lind cuvirbruneotal services, said 179 hiabway projects eslimated to cnst $3.2
billion are scbeduled f&lt;r next ye~r.

�·commentar
The· Daily Sentinel
111 Court B*'"t
Pomei'O)', Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publl!lller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Geaenl Manager

LI!'ITI!RS OF OPINlON m welcome. They lbould be less than 300
words long. Alllellln m subject to editing and must be signed wilh n1111e,
lld&lt;hu and telephone number. No uuigned Ielterl will be publiJbed. Lettert
lboulil be in good lUte, llddmoing iu1101, not penooaiitioa.

GOP habit could
cause a backlash
By'WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Conwpondeat
WASHINGI'ON - As the outsiders in Congress, Republicans often
turned up tbe volume, tried to make up in JOt"'neBS wJI8l they larked in
votes. That babitcould be a beadacbenow that they're l'lllllliDg the show.
Indeed, it coald be ovCitill, risking a hackl•sh that conld boost tbe
sagged political kll of President Qlnton and tbe outnumbered Democrals.
Even in the minority, then: will be more Democrats in the House next
year thaD the Republicans bad in any but two of tbe pior 20 Congresses.
So oothing is 111tomatic. And the strains
are showing. A mandale for change is DOt a license for piling on; even if !bey oppose the president, most AmericaDs treat the presidency witb dclen:oce and respect
1bat doesn'tlit Sen. Jesse Helms e.ly pnliiOUIICOIIICts as tbe incoming chairman of tbe Senate ForeiSJI Relati0111 Commllliee. "Mr. Clinton
bad bella' walc:b out if be comes down here,'' the North Carolina senator
said Nov. 21. "He beuer have a bodyparcl."
.
He said his comment to the Raleigh (N.C.) News &amp;: Observer was
casual. oftband, never meant to be taten lita'llly, only as a remark about
Clinton's unpopularity with tbe military. Next day, be called it a mistake
be wouloo't repeaL lle bad earlier remarked on television that be dido 't
think CliniOD up to tbe job of commander in chief, and neither did people
in the armed forces.
Sen. Bob Dole, tbe incoming majority leader, said be'd bad a talk with
Helms wbo now understands that there are some things a committee
~ shouldn't be saying, even in jest After all, it was enough to
Jllllllll!( 1 brief, mlni-ioquiry by tbe Secret Service.
'lblt'a Dot bad advlcle for rank-and-file ~blicans, 100.
•'Careful of this iDflammatory lan~e,' Rep. Robelt H. MicheL the
departing House GOP leader advised hu successors. "It gets to be an
impedimenl from time to time, eventually, to gelling what you want"
By 1ben Speakcz·to-be Newt Gingrich bad called ClintoD and his wife,
Hillary "~terc:ulture McGovemicks," both veterans o(tbe 1972 presidendai campaign of Democrat George McGovern. The White House, be
said, was ,calred by "left-wing extmnists."
·In Oingrldl' s ·proposal for breaking tbe dependency cycle of welfare,
~es and private cbarilies would take over the burden of caring for
theadiest ehildren and families, wbile tbe able go to Work. ''Our goal
sbould be to create enough jobs to mop up tbe unemployed," be said in a
TV Interview
.
..
"Well, 1 think orphanages would be going a btl too far, Dole

alreadr.

~ly, Gingrich seems to be talking a hit more somy- changing
in tooe, DOt substanee - as tbe

man who soon will be carrying a big

ga~

.

Power seemed to temper Dole wben Republicans took over.the Senate
in 1980 llld be served first as chairman of tbe Fmance Committee, then
as tbc .MJmty leader. He's no less a tough, political infighter, bis wit as
biting but not as bluer as earlier in his congressimal career.
~ saya thai as speaktt, be'II be tbe bead coacb, not the middle
line
of bis days as tbe minority wbip. "You bave a more cautious
penon who Is oow about to become Spealcef of tbe House,'' be said in a

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Today . in history
By Tile AlrOclated Press
.
,
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 6, tbe 340tb day of 1994. There are 25 days
: left in tbe yeiW.
Today' s Hig.6llght in History:
On Dec. 6, 1889, Jefferson Davis, the fust and only president of tbe
Confederate Stales of America, died in New Orleans.
On this date:
In 1790 Congress moved from New Yorlc to Philadelphia
In 18M, Anny engineers .completed construction of the Washington
Monument.
1
I

'

OHIO Weather

--Area deaths-...... Meigs County Court

Wedne~day, Dec. 7

will

President Clinton
bold to
his "get things done" legislative
strategy for tbe last two years of bis
term, aides say, by offering to
cooperate with the Republican
majority In Congress on many
issues and by meeting frequently
with GOP leaden.
But be will "dmw tbe lill9" on
other issues, especially any tax cuu
or speoding proposals that threaten
his record as a deficit-cuuer.
Clinton has been advised to
"embrace" incoming Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., by calling
him daily and by enlisting his
cooperation wherever possible, as
bappened previously on NAFfA,
GATT, and the upcoming hemispheric summit.
The White House is used to con·
ferring with incoming Senate
Majority Leader Bob Dole, R·Kan.,
but sources say !bey think bipartisan coopemtion will be more difti.
cult if "confrontational" Sen.
Trent Lou (Miss.) beats Alan
Simpson (Wyo.) for the post of
GOPWhip.
·
On policy, Clinton appears COD·
vinced that tbe message of tbe 1994
elections was not that his "patting
people first" 1992-94 agenda was
wrong-beaded, but that he didn't
produce enoa*h change and that
his message didn't get through to
tbe public.
As a result, Ointon seems likely

cautioned by Chief of Staff Leon Republicans bave pranised to pass.
Panetta not to discuss tbe decisionHealth reform is another area of
making JIIOilC8I With the press, but . possible cooperation, assuming
it's possible to put together a gen- Clinton drastically strips bis 1994
· era1 outline of the direction Clinton proposal down to Insurance reform
to be taking.
plus subsidies to provide coverage
Morton Kondraclce seems
Political reform appears to be to ebildren and/or pregnant women.
In addition. the administration
dent AI Gore's "reinventing sov- Clinton'a mal« new emphasis for
emment" initiative and, possibly, 1995. The Wbite House reportedly anticipates being able to complete
accelelated decentraliUtion of fed- feels liberated from the need to leftover business from the 103d
eral programs to state and local yield to Democratic Hill leaders on Congress in a bipartisan basis,
reform issues and instead can pre- including Superfund reauthorizaauthority.
A White House task force oper- sent proposals that cballenge tion and telecommunications
ating under White House planning Republicans.
reform.
Some top Democratic congresWbere Clinton will ''draw the
chief Mark Gearan prepared a strategy option paper that senior policy sional aides may move into White line'' - and use bis veto, if neces- '
adviser George Stepbanopoulos House or 1996 ce-ell:ction cam- sary - is on tax cuts that violate
delivered to Clinton during his paign jobs. Those especially his deficit reduction strategy and
· esteemed in the Wbite House on especially drac:onian GOP welHawaii vacation.
Clinton and bis top aides bave ioclude Gecqe Ktnvlanis, outgoing fare proposals, such as blanket
been working on strategy ever Speaker Tom Foley's, D-Wasb., denial of benefits to illegititnate
since, and one aide reported that top aide, and Steve Schutt, chief of . children and establishment 9f
·
Clinton may unveil bis plans before staff to defeated Sen. Harris Wof- orphanages.
The White House Is convinced
Christmas - and before tbe 11art of ford, 0-Pa.
Clinton aides say that tbe that Republicans cannot possibly
tbe Republican 104tb Congress and
bis own State of tbe Union address. admlnistnulon Ulldereslimated dis· fulfill tbeir promises to CUI capital
Final Clinton decisions are content in the countey over the gains taxes, provide a middle-class
being delayed, sourres say, by sev- insecurity tbal worting-dass fami- tax cut, increase defense spending,
eral factors: cootinuing shock over lies feel in tbe new globalized and and still reduce the deficit without
cutting Social Security or Medithe extent of Democratic election blgb-tecb U.S. economy.
Job training is one area that care. Clinton aides say they will
losses; the fact that congressional
Democrats haven't chosen new Wllite House aides say it may be not permit tbe GOP to try to do so
leaders with wbom the White possible to work cooperatively with through "dynamic SC«iog" of tbe
House can strategize; and the com· Republicans in the next Congress. budget.
Clinton's own budBet strategy is
plexity of the task, which requires Another is the line-item veto, a
juggling ~et, political and poli· Clinton campaign objective that among the most closely held
Clinton gave up in deference to · secrets in the White House, but
cy considerations. .
White. House aides bave been Democratic leaden but whicb indicaOOna we dial it will be more
a "political"· document setting
forth Clinton'sloog-eerm aims than
a proposed auide for spending,
since Republicans are expected to
vJtiY aRe
THeRe.
treat it as "dead on arrival" in
You caRRYiNG
iS No
Congress.
THaT GUN? _.-l----....1 INFLaTioN.
Clinton Is also expected to fight
GOP attempts 'to gut prevention
pogmms and gun control measures
in this year's crime bill.
~e!
ScaRe
While confrontation witb
it4FL.aTioN.
iT
Republicans is inevitable, Clinton
reportedly understands that be can't
win with a veto strategy - indeed,
be criticized bis predecessor,
Georgll Bush, for his frequent
vetoes.
A strategy.of maximum cooperation will require a change in attitude on the part of some of Clin·
ton's most partisan advisers including bis wife. But be appears
to understand that.be's got to "get
things done" in a hostile GOP
environment even better than be
did in the ostensibly friendly envi·
rotmlent of 1992-94.
Otherwise, 1996's election
results will be even worse thait this
~&gt;reiN'''~
year's.
~ foltfN.I\ieWS ·t\Jea
(Morton Kondracke Is executive editor of Roll CaD, the newspaper of Capitol mD.)
to push bard for a polidcal reform
agenda that includes campaign
finance and lobbying reform, plus
stepped-up action on Vice Pres!- ·

To
awaY

WORI&lt;S!

Angry readers nominate their OPs
articles, S."
Really, people. .I know anger is
in vogue this year, but a lillie perfunctory politeness would make the

Joseph Spear
world merrier.
One good thing about tbe Great
Snit of '94, though, is that nominalions for the Spear Foundation•s
sixth annual OP award have been
pouring in at an unprecedented
rate. Scores of you have tired of
Rush Limbaugh's egomaniacal
scbtick and proposed bim for OP
honors. Other nominees include
Bill &amp; Hill, Parson Pat Robertson,
Alfonse D' Amato, Pbil Gramm,
Joycelyn Elders, Jerry Falwell,
Garry Shandling.
·
Among tbe lesser tnowo candi·
dates are these:
- David May, a city official in
Buffalo, N.Y., who resigned after
admitting be bad swiped some
$200,000 In public funds, then
asked for $8.~001D payment for'SO
days of unused time off.
8- Dr. Raymond Sattler of
Wilmington, N.C., a neurosurgeon
wbose license was suspended wben
be left a patient' a brain exposed
while be took a 2S-minute lunch
break.

- Donna Bray of Bowie, M;d.,
founder of an organization called
tbe Defenders of tbe Defenders of
Life, which offers moral and fmancial support to those wbo murder
people wbo perform abortion p·
vices. Such force is "justifialble,
and we will not condemn it," she
told tbe Baitimore Sun.
The OP judges are admittedly
biased in favor of prominent personalities, however, on tbe grounds
that it is more fun to honor someone we know something about. It is
with sublime pleasure, therefore,
th81 we accept the I!OOiinatioos of
such luminaries as old huff 'n' puff
Limbaugh and l'a1on Pat and that
utterly !hameless solon from New
York, Sen. AlfonseD'Amato.
We are delighted to see that
people were offended by the antics
of Madonna, wbo went from risque
to rank in a few short minutes on
the David Letterman show, and
Burt Reynolds, who ripped up an
, Interviewer's notes, then g_ro~d
tbe piC~:CS iniCMbe carpet w1th his
booted beels.
We II!C ~ety pleased to accept
tbe nomma11011s of ~ouse Speaker
de facto Newt GinJ11ch1 who suggested tbe South Carolina mother
who drowned her children was tbe
victim of Democratic values; of

Sen. Robert Byrd, the West Virginia Democrat who did not like
being questioned by reporten and
suggested · a Constitutional
"amendment guaranteeing citizens
freedom from tbe press"; of Sen.
Jesse Helms, the North Carolina
Republican wbo said Bill Clinton
"bener have a bodyguanl" if be
visits any military bases in North
Carolina. If there is a bigger jerk in
public life than Jesse Helms, I bave
yet to meet him.
Mail your OP nominations to
me care of Newspaper Enterprise
Association, 200 Park Ave., lllew
York, NY 10166. The contest Is
open until the ball fails on New
Year's Eve. Remember: No foreign
nationals, no groups and no Joe
Spear nominations (sorry, J,R,). 1
appreciate tbe bouqnets, but I must
consider my dignity. It would be
impolite to accept a prize in my
own contcst.
JOHpb ~J!'a[ k a vodka~
writer for Newwpaper ntet .. lw
Auodalion.
(For Information on llow to
communicate eleclroltlcally wltb
thb columobt and others, coo·
tact Amerka Online ~y calling 1IONrl-6364, e:d.l317.)

This time it's men in the beauty cult
When Ruth Sewanl took a fac.
tory job in tbe summer cif 198S, she

down at them from bilJboards and

was annoyed by the pictures of

The male form is suddenly
everywhere. And while women

scantily clad women that lined the

factory walls. But rather than
whine about tbe injustice of it all,
Seward enacted a more direct retaliation: At her work station she
placed a small black-and-white picture of the SoloOex man, tbe muscular btmk used In tbe body-building macbl!'e advertisements.
Her co-workers were not
amused. "They just revolted. They
couldn't believe I'd do that, and
they plastered tbe walls with even
more women," says Seward, now a
grants coordinator In a Seattle
AIDS clinic.
These days, Seward's former
colleagues bave a Jot 11101e to con.
tend with than the Soloflex man.
Now !bey' ve got a naked Sylvester
Stallone on the cover of Vanity
Fait. They've got a luscious construction. worker taking it off in
Diet Coke ads. They've got Marty
Mark's washboard abs starins

bus stops.

Sara Eckel
may be enjorbll this celelndon of
the V-shaped cllest and the eight•
pack stomach, it's maldni lOme
men a liUie nerv0111.ID (act. ADler·
ican men are frettlns about tlaeir
bodies in ' way we'Ve never seeo
before. Gym ~embenhlp IIDODI
American men is up JO pen:cot lD
tbe last s1x yan, llllCOI'Cinato the
research firm American Sports
Data. The Wall Street Journal
reportS that sales cl Bcly Buster, a
men's product that clalma to dis·
solve fat ct:lla, rar OUtpD die sales
of"'- similar product for women.
And Dr. JOiqlh Pober, a New York
· City plastic surgeon, says be has
seen an increasing number of betermexual males enterlnJ his office.
Currendy 20 to 2S pen:ent of his
patienu are male, up from 13 per·

tent in 1992 and 10 percent In Hara Marano, is its defining char1990. Pober also notes that meo's actedstics. "These women are
financially secure, independent,
reasons for getting plastic surgery confident,''
says Marano, who
are changing.
believes
tbal
alncc
taliKJP!k inde"Traditionally men have bad
pendence
is
a
relatively
new pheplastic IWJicry for businesa pwposnomenon
amona
middle-class
es," says Pober. "They want to
·'make tbeir eyes look more alert or women, this trend will pow. Now
tbeir jaws look more powerful in thai men .-en't needed for money,
order to keep or advance in.their she says. "Iota of other characteris·
come into the picture, and body
jobs. Now younger men are look- tics
is
me
of them," she saya.
·
ing at picl.iles of Marty M.t and
It
would
be
easy
lb.
gloat
here.
the Diet Coke suy and tbinking 'I
After all, men have been judginll
want to look like thai, 100."'
If men DOW w.u to look like tbe women by their lot*s for c:enturlea,
hunb in underwea' ads, they have and, as many readers have told
Marano, "turnabout is fair play.~ .
SODIC pretty good reasons. At least
that's wbat a recent Psychology And, if women are beginniDI to
Today Jta'Vey on male appeaance select mates based on physical ,
found. Though. personality and appearance, rather than fmanciljl
intelligence still rate highest on prowess, that's not an entirely bad
wcmen's lists of wba! they desire thing for men. "I'd much rather lie
in a man, tbe survey found that a' valued for my personal btauty 1118J1
small but slanificaot number of the amOUDt of money in my blnlt
8CCOUDI," sayu1111111 know.
:
WODICII place a vay high value on
Sara
Eckel
11
a
1yndlc:ate~
pbyalcai llt1ndiveneas.
.
What mates tbla group sigoifi. writer for Newtp~per Eala
cant, says Psychology Today editor Auodalion.

P."tlf

('
\'

PA.

.,

,,

The following cases were
Walter H!~~JY II, Middleport,
resolved recently in the Meigs drivins under suspension, $2po
County Coon of Judge Palrick H, plus costs, two years pobation, six
months jail suspended to 30 days
Lueille M. Duke, 80, of Salem, died Monday, Dec. 5, 1994 at Salem O'Brien.
Ftocd
wen::
Frank
M.
Bosworth,
with tbe option of horne confine·
Community Hospital Skilled Nursing Facility, following an exteoded illWayne, speed, $30 plus costs; ment, forfeiture of tbe motor-vehiness.
Born Nov. 20, 1914 in Portland, Ore., tbe daughter of the late Charles Michelle L. McCoy, Syracuse, cle; speed, $26 plus costs; DUS,
and Lois Gandee Circle, sbe was a Sears employee and worked at the speed, $30 plus costs; Mark C. S1SO plus costs. two yean proba·
Cbllrch Budget Office in Salem. She was a member of tbe Country Gar. Warner, Pomeroy, driving under lion, six months jail suspended to
den Club, Farm Bureau, and a 50-yesr Perry Grange member, as weD as tbe influence, $500 plus costs, 10 30 days concurrent with lint DUS;
days jail suspeudcd to three·days, speed, $49 plus costs; fleeing, $100
attending the Salem Fu:st United Methodist Church.
Sbe is survived by daughters and sons-in-law, Dolores and James UlO-day opmtor's license suspeu- plus costs, two yean pobation, six
Campbell and Patricia Swartz, all of Salem, and Denise and Raymond sion, one yesr probation, jail and months jail suspended to 30 day's
$250 of the fine suspended upon concurrent with other charges;
Bryan of Homeworth; six grandchildren; and seven greal·granddtildren.
Virgil Jacks, Pomeroy, seat belt,
Sbe was preceded in death by ber husband of 52 years, W. Oliver completion of residential treatment
Duke; son, WIUlam Oliver Duke Jr.; sister, Faye Newhouse; and brothers, progmm; left of cer.ler, costs only; $25 plus costs; Margaret Cox,
seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Cheshire, complicity, costs, three
Milton and Joseph Circle.
.
.
Michael
A.
Frost,
Pomeroy,
days jail ~uspended. one year proServices wiD be at 1:30 p.m. Friday in the Arbaugh-Pearce-Greenisen
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Jane Ann Clarke offteiating. Burial wiD fol- DUI, $1,000 plus costs with $500 bation; Pamela Fitzpatrick,
low in the Grandview Cemetery. Friends may call at tbe funeral home of tbe fme forfeited to tbe Meigs Pome~oy, littering, costs, three
County Court Jail Fund, six months days with litter control office; Dar·
between 7 and 9 p.m. Thursday.
jail suspended to 30 days, OL SUS· Jene K. Older, Pomeroy, om, ssoo
pended indefmitely, 180-day vehi- pl:•s costs, 10 days jail suspended
cle immobilization, two years pro- to three days, 180-day OL suspenbation, alcohol assessment; leaving sion, jail and $250 of tbe fine sustbe scene of an accident, costs, 30
Word bas been. received bere of tbe deatb of Manila M. Grady Emer- 'days jail coocurrent wilh om. two . pended upon completion of residential treatment program;
son, 53, of East liverpool, who died Wednesday, Nov. 30. 1994.
years probation; failure to control,
Larry R. Wise, Greenfield, seat
She was born Jan. 18, 1941, daughter of the late ODie A. and Estle E. costs; driving the wrong way on a
belt,
$25 plus costs; Jerry Dale
Walls Grady, in Racine, wbere she was reared.
one-way street. $50 plus costs;
Mason,
Williamstown, W.Va.,
Sbe is survived by her husband, Keith A. Emerson; daugllters Candy,
George G. Warner, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Bruce G.
Estie and Tina Joy, and by a son, Johnny Joy. Also surviving is a daugh- DUI, $750 plus costs witb $250
ter Susan; a son, Keith A. Emerson Jr.; sister, Francis Parsons of Paduc- forfeited to tbe Meigs County Baird. The Plains, speed. $30 plus
Ky.; brothers, Hollie Grady of WellsviDe, Raymond Grady of Racine, Court Jail Fund, 30 days jail sus- costs; Salvator Emanuel Viviano,
Sterling Heights, Micb., speed, $30
and Delmar Grady of Reedsville.
.
pended to 10 days, one year OL plus costs; Kimberly S. Walker,
She was preceded .in death by ber fJrSt husband, Charles Joy; an infant suspension, one year probation,
Radcliff, speed, $30 plus costs;
twin sister, Mary; two daughters, two sisters and four brothers.
alcobol assessment; failure to drive William R. Burge Jr., Newmt, seat
Services were beld Saturday in East Liverpool with burial in East Liv· within marked lanes, costs only;
belt, $25 plus costs; Christy K.
erpool.
Matthew J. Cayones, Lewisburg, Ward, Langsville, speed, $30 plus
W.Va. speed. $30 plus rusts; Vir· costs; seat .belt, $25 plus costs;
ginia C. Kasler, Millfield, speed, Thomas W. Miller, Ons, La., seat
$30 plus costs; Thomas J. Greene belt, $25 plus costs;
.
(Continued from Page 1) · $33,441.63;
cemetery
Jr., Elyria, speed, $30 plus costs,
Erin H. O'Bryant. Cbatsnortb,
would put llghts on the tower, but $13,745.50; water- $10,421.09; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Ga., speed. $30 plus costs; Linda J.
bave ~tly retracted on their sewer- $63,086 .96; guaranty
Edwanl R. Harris, Frenchburg, Foreman, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25
meter- $18,746.49; utility offer, said Blaettnar.
Ky., knowingly transport or bave a !'Ius costs; James E. Dowell Jr.,
Although the tower is Jess than $4,927 .69; ftre truck - $279 .93; firearm in a motor-vehicle, $60 Charleston, W.Va. speed. $30 plus
200 feet high and not required by perpetual care (cemetery) plus costs; Gary Shrout, French· COSlS;
Jaw to be lighted, F'tre Chief Danny $7,212.77; cemetery endowment burg, Ky., knowingly tnmsporl or
Forfeiting bonds were: Cbaun
Zirlde indicated that the unlighted - $38,118.57; police pension- bave a fii'Carlll in a motor-vehicle, Jie Bi, Athens, failure to control,
tower may be a bazard to heli- $980.95; building fund- $14.35; $60 plus costs; Michael Perry, $70; Jeffrey Allen, Syracuse,
copters approaching or departing recreation- $2,512.89; permis- Frencbliurg, Ky., knowingly trans- speed, $90; Ira Van Cooney,
the belipad at Veterans Mem.orial sive tax- $3,913.34; law enforce- port or bave a firearm in a motor· Ptmleroy, passing bad dlecks, $75;
ment - $1,068.62; . total Hospital, Blaettnar said.
·
vehicle, $60 plus costs;
Council also recommended $299,080.68.
Kenneth A. Johnson, Pomeroy,
In other business, council:
Blaetrnar contact the Federal Aviareckless openttion, $100 plus costs;
An article in last Thursday's
• Authorized ViDage Adminis- left of center, costs only; seat beft,
tion Administration on tbe matter.
Council also approved ordi- trator Jobn Anderson to fmd a truck $25 plus costs; Harold L. Wbit· Daily Sentinel misconstrued infornances giving the Obio Department or van to replace an aging village tekind, Pomeroy, Dm, $750 plus mation about an Alfred boy's fJrSt
of Transportation responsibility f~r truck at a cost of not more tban costs with $250 forfeited to the deer. John White, father of J.T.
nine signs along U.S. 33 (Mam $2,200.
Meigs County C&lt;iurt Jail Fund, 30 White, was Openlled on to remove
Street) in Pomeroy and placing out• Gave a fJrSt reading 'to a citi· days jail suspended to 10 days with a kidney and stop cancer from
standing cbecks more than a year zens participation plan in accor- option of bome confinement, one spreading, but chemotherapy was
dance with 1974 Housing and yesr OL suspension, one yesr pro- not required.
old (totaling $12.45) into escrow.
Also, council gave final Community Development Act.
bation; Vivian A. McCann, Dexter,
approval to Cbristtnas bonuses for
• Agreed to continue its health DUI, $750 plus costs with $250
· employees totaling $5,000. Fu~J­ insurance policy for village forfeited to the Meigs County
time salaried employees w1ll employees with The Wiseman Court Jail Fund, 30 days jail susreceive $200 while active, part- Agency of GaUipolis and liability pended to 10 days wilh tbe option
time employees, and new or limited insurance through Downing· of borne confinement, one year OL
part-time employees will get $150 · Cbilds-Mullen and Musser of suspension, one year probation, 9().
and $50 respectively.
P001eroy. Councilman Jobn Musser day vehicle immobilization; no OL,
Clerk•treasurer Kathy Hysell abstained from voting.
$100 plus costs, 30 days jail susreported tbe following balaoces for
Attending were Blaettnar, pended to 10 days concurrent with
the month of November: general Hysell and councilmen Scou Oil· om :
fund - $58,125, 16; safety Jon, BiD HaptonstaU, Jobn Musser,
Raymond J. MichaeL Racine. no
$6,407 .71; street- $28,152.26; Larry Wehrung, George Wright OL, $150 plus costs, three days jail
state highway- $7,924.77; ftre- and William Young.
and $75 of the fine suspended if
valid OL presented within 90 days;
Kevin W. Payne, Pomeroy, mishandling of a firearm in a motor·
at the museum. At that time, selec- vehicle, $40 plus costs; Michael W.
(Continued from Page J)
tion will be made on wbat is to go Clark, Rutland, failure to control,
tbe 400 names on tbe quilt are into
the time capsule.
being embroidered now. Rosalie
$35 plus costs;
Story is cbairman of that project
According the treasurer's report,
income bas been $20,057.25, and
expenses, $15,235.36. It was determined that about $7,000 will
remain once all expenses of the
anniversary celebration are paid,
and all mugs and coverlets are sold.
Tbe commiuee agreed to purchase a micro-copier for the museA Sentinel subscription is the P.erfec t gift. It's useful and fit s eve ry size and taste. Ju st fill
um research library at a cost of
out the coupon below, and you ' ll get 20% ofT the subscription cost.
$3,100 as a 175tb anniversary
But hurry. this offer ex pire s
memorial. A decision on bow the
rest of tbe money will be spent will
Dece mber 31. 1994'
be made later by the committee.
•
Final planning session for the
reception was set for Jan. 3 at noon

Martha M. Emerson

.: Entire state expected to get
·.· taste of winter Wednesday
· By The Associated Press
The mil_d weather may be ending. .
A winter storm watch is in
· effect for the norlhem tliird of Ohio
• for tonight and Wednesday. Cities
' in tbe watch include Akron, Cleve. land, Canton, Findlay, Mansfield,
: Toledo and Youngstown.
'
A low pressure system was
· expected to move into the Obio
Valley tonight, bringing rain. COld, er air also will arrive, and tbe rain
• will mix with sleet before cbanging
· to snow.
Lows tonight will be in the
·: lower 30s. Highs Wednesday in the
•· southern regions of the state will
· remain steady in the upper 30s to
: lower 40s under rainy skies.,
In tbe northern counties, snow• ' • fall will taper to flurries Wednes·
day afternoOn. Highs will be in tbe
· lower to mid- 30s.
: The record bigh temperalllre for
· Ibis date 81 the Columbus weather
- station was 70 in 1956. The record
. low was J. in 1977. Sunset tO!lay
· will be at. S:06 p.m. Sunrise
• Wednesday will be at 7:40a.m.

Weather forecast:
Today ...Cloudy witb areas of
drizzle. Rain becoming likely late
northwest. Temperatures fallin~ to
the upper 30s northwest and !Dto
the 40s elsewhere.
Tonight .. .Periods of rain north
early... Mixing with sleet before
changing to snow. Periods of rain
south. Lows around 30 north to tbe
lower 40s far south.
Wednesday .. .Snow
north
early ...Tapering to flurries ill the
afternoon. Rain lilcely south. Highs
from the lower 30s north to the
lower 40s 5outh.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday nighl..A chance of
rain or snow south. Mostly cloudy
north. Lows 30 to 35.
Thursday .. .A cbance of rain.
Highs in the 40s.
Friday... A chance of rain. Lows
mid 30s to mid 40s. Highs in tbe
50s.
Satnrday...Tuming colder with a
chance of rain or snow ... Except
periods of snow developing north·
east. Lows in tbe 30s. Highs 35 to
40.

·. Meigs land transfers posted
The following land transfers
were recorded receatly in tbe offtce
of Meigs County Recorder Emmo-

Columbia parcel (two transactions);
Right of way, SOCCo to LCCD,
Salem parcel (II transactions);
Deed, Janet Roberts and Anna
Frank to Cindy Jacks, Salisbury,
,
·2.43 acres;
Deed, Arthur M., Mildred, John
E. and Julia Shumway to same,
Bedford tracts;
Deed, Frances E. Marlin to
Edwanl Michael and Colleen C.
Martin, Chester tracts;
Deed, Edwanl M. and Colleen
C. Martin to Frank R. and Anna V.
Nelson, Chester, 1.025 acres;
Deed, Roger K. and Rose Elaine
Stewart to Tom E. and Connie L.
Roush, Salisbury, 1.439 acres;

. gene Hamilton:
Deed, Evelyn A. and Edith
Bresler to Michael and .vicki
Blake, Bedford, 40 acres; .
Certificate, Irene Myrtle Artis,
deceased, to Rbojean V. McClure
and Carma Sue Petenon, Middle. port parcel;
. Deed, James H. and Carla N.
· Large and Thomas A. and Mary F.
. Crisp to Glen T. and Jacqueline R.
Crisp, Salem parcels;
Deed, Southern Obio Coal
-Company to Billy J. and Antonia
-M. Goodman, Salem parcels;
· Deed, Jerry L. and Phyllis M.
. Cline to William D. and Sharon S.
· Stewart, Rutland parcel;
Rlgllt of way, Eric Facemyer to
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis. trict, Salem, 99.842 acres;
(Continued from Page 1)
Right of way, Jobn B. and Clau- .
dia Hale to LCCD, Salem, 112.67 year.
• approved substitute custodians
· acres;
. Right of way, Carol A. Phillips Randall J. Wilson and Lois J. Wil. to LCCD, Salem, 74 acres;
son.
• honored bus driver Sandy
· Right of way, William E. and
.Dorothy Cray to LCCD, Salem, Cowdery's request for unpaid leave
not to exceed one year.
: 78.69 acres;
• named Kay Gillilan as a sub· Right of way, Ronald S. Rife to
stilllte bus driver for the rest of Ibis
-LCCD, Salem, 35.65 acres;
Right of way, Ronald S. Rife to school yesr.
• approved a job description for
LCCD, Salem, .75 acres;
• Right of way, Gerald L. and anew nnor.
• Swanbilda A" Burgeon to LCCO.
• lisll:lled to cheerleader adYisor
• Salem, 80 acres;
Lori Hensley and teachers Steve
Right of way, James R. and Mil- Weber and Joe Balle;, discuss bigb
. drcd W. Blanton to LCCD, Salem, · school progmms.
· 2.25 acres;
• accepted substitute cook Linda
Right of way, SOCCo to LCCD, Edwards' resignation.
• approved tbe Ol!:ster Elemen·
tary volunteers.
other action, tbe board slated
The Daily Sentinel thisInyear's
graduation for 6:30.p.m.
(USJ'S Zll-Ht)
May 28, 1~5. at tbe bigh school
gym.
.
Publllhed eW)t)' aflerooo11. MODday throuah
The next board meeting wiD be
friday, Ill Court St ., Pou....y. Ohio, by lhe
Ohio Vallo)' l'libli&amp;.'ilaa eo""""y/Multimodio
at6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 21 at
lac;., Pomoroy, Ohio 4!769, Pll. 992 ·21l6.
tbe bigh _school library. Tbose
SICOIId cl111 - · pold .. Pomeroy, Obio.
attending last month's meeting
included: Karr; Vice President Jim
Me.Wa The Aaoocioted - · IIIII lit&lt; Ollio
NcwiJIIIPCI' AllociaUoL
Smith;
and board memben Greg
I
Bailey, Ron Eastman and Mike
POS'I'MASTER• Seod addrcu eorrec:lioDI to

Levy's renewal ·

· The Dally Seatiul, 1t1 Court St ..
Pom«oy,OIIlo 4$769.
I

IVISCRIP'I1011 JIAT!!Il
11 Crrior•Mcii•Koulo

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---G-c-17

52 Weob..........- ....................................$14.76

·~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::::::~~:;:

52 w-.....;........... ,.........................~...511.40

•'

Lucille M. Duke

Clinton's new plan: 'get things done'

1Yghten your belt

us.

u.sday, December 8, 1994

11le Dally Sentlnef-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Accu-Wealhet" forecast for

.: Letters to the editor

They are propolinl to cut the
Now 1 besrd this person ridicule
llliCI on pdlity compmies, who are and downgrade Mr. Strickland say·
already the richest ones in ~e ing be said "We may bave to raise ,
COUIItty. 'lbey already pass tbe r&amp;IS· some taxes" not once, but three
es of COliS on to the consnmer DOW. times.
They want to add the costs of
Now it these were dirty words
theac cull to the .consu~er by before election time, then !bey we
put11Datue&amp; on food, raising tbe now.
wes tax, Income tas and taxing The Democrats are not buried
odlcrDilftCIIIII.acrvlees.
yet, and they are already plueking
· W6y dO you suppose this report tbeir wings.
wu beld tU until after eleclions?
Looks like "tighten your belt."
f aaw the governor publicly
Vqil WRacinealker
1i11i11one this ~ and said "I

&lt;·Tuesday, Decembitr6, 1994

-·

One of the most memorable put· •
doWns I ever received came from a
kindly woman wbo wrote In
response to one of my tirades, tbe
CNN loterview.
subject of which I cannot recall:
Tbere' s no caution in tbe House Republican agenda, witb its contract "Remember your dignity, Mr.
plecige of action in tbe fust 100 days on 10 major proposals to cut taxes,
You must retain your digniremodel welfare, and much more. The incoming majority leader, Rep. Spear.
ty."
Dick Armey, said if it takes 20-bour sessions I!Cveo days a week, that s
Her admonishment comes to
wbal they'D do.
mind at this moment because 1
He and Gingrich also II!C emphasizing that tbey didn't promise to get bave been reading your Outrageous
all tbal Jllllled. only to get it to a ltouse vote.
Personage nominations, and
That ca_. may not be so clear to voten who thought !bey were being frankly, some of you bave lost your
told wbat would change, not about parliamentary procedures. And
of dip!ity.
1J11n1boa ICSIIons under Republican management may DOt seem all that sense
"I oommate tbe infamous 'Wild
different from the endlels hours of bickering anti gridlock the GOP Bill' Clinton as Outrageous Person·
minority filnled prior to the electloos, especially in tbe Senate.
age of the Year for his steely eyed
Oiosrid! sees the risks.
and Jack-jawed (?) impersonation
"If this )ust de&amp;enerateS ... back into tbe usual baloney of politics in as the commander in chief of the
Washington and pettiness in Washington, then the American people I U.S. armed forces," writes RJ. of
believe will move toward a third ~ in a massive way,'' be said
Diclcioson, Texas. "Ton (expletive
Or even back to the one that s suddenly second. The Democrats are deleted) to go, but brave enough to
amelY wounded, but tbey wen 't dead.
send olbers."
"I would like to nominate
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice praldent and colum- Josepb Spea-," writes J.R. of AUieaJat for Tile -AsiOCiated Press, lias reported on Washington and boro, Mass. "I know you wrote
•tioaal politics for more than 30 yean.
~media jerks' were not eligible, but
I thought you sbould be the excep-.
lion."
"For OP honors, I nominate
(Slick and Hill) the Clintons!"
writes S.M. of Cambridge Springs,
Pa.
"They are both crazy, crooked,
De.- Eclita,
need bim in Columbus to work
no
good
11an! 1 am one of tbe mil"Reid my lipl."
·
with me to beuer tbe lives of pealions of Clinton balers! Love your
l believe we Ill remember the pie in southern Ohio."
pn......,.saying tbese words.
·
Now if these recommendations
Now the aovemor'a tax and are followed, I don't believe these
atudy .-cJ Ia making its rec:om· good things are going to baAien to

.ma·••m.

Page 2--11le Dally Sentinel
Pomero~lddleport, Ohio

Martin.

Couples issued
marriage.licenses
The following couples received
marriage Jic~nses recently in the
Meigs Couoty Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Shawn David Cremeans, 19,
Middleport, and Bonita Faye Barley, 16, Rutland; Leonard David
Blosser, 28. and Llurie'Kay Deal,
23, both of Pomeroy;
William Robert Priddy, 30, and
Penny Sue Wolfe, 30, both of
Racine; Dale Emerson Lilly, 24,
and Jody Renee Smith, 20, both of
Shade; Jack Maynard Braley Sr.,
53, Pomeroy, and Brenda JiB Templeton, 53, Portsmouth.

.
'

ah:

Pomeroy Council takes

Clarification

Time capsule set for burial

One Size Fits All

Stocks
Am Elel'.,.er ........................Jl 7f8
Akzo ....................... - ...............!5 1/4
Alhlud ou ............................313/4
ATI&lt;T .....................................47 1/l

B... k One .........:::::...........::.:::.u IN
Bob Enu .............................. .lO 3/4
Champion Ind . .............................l5
Cbllfllllag Skop ........................6 318
City Holdtng .................................Jl
Federal MC1J1ul ........................l0 518
Goodyear T&amp;R ........- ........... .33 1/l
K-mart ...................... - ............ 13 7f8
Landi Elld .............................. 15 111
Limited 1~~&lt;. ................ ,_......... 19 1/l
Multimedia iac:..................... .l8 114
Point &amp;...corp .......... _.................. 19
Rell~~ac:e Electric ................... .30 7f8
KobbiDI A Myers...................16 1/l
Royal Dutcb .......................... J06 1f8
Sboaey'slnc........................... 13 1/l
Star Bank ...............................34 518
Wendy lnt'l............................ 14 1/l
Worthiaatoa lnd .................A.19 1/4
Stucl reporllue lite lt:3G Lm.
quotea provided by Adnal o

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Christmas Trees
For the loved ones • ·
Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
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Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio

992-5776
Open Daily 9-5
Sunday 12~5

12 Months $66.56_
START DELIVERY DATE' _ _ __ . _ _

(•

The Daily Sentinel .

·,
I

.i
I

I

�Tueac:tay, December 6, 1994

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - The
Rev. Jesse Jackson is lbrealeoing to
drum up a boycott of the University
of Colorado for what he calls "a
blatant example of racism" in biring Rick NeubeiBel as bead football
coach over assistant bead coach
Bob Simmoos.
In' a letter to university president
Jlldilb Albino daled Dec. 2, Jadeson and Charles Farrell, coalition
national director, asked to meet
with university officials after
charging that Albino ''aided and
abetled'' lbe allegedly racist hiring
ofNeubeisel.
The Nov. 28 hiring, according
to tbe letter, is ''proof tbal the good
oi' boy system continues to lbrive.
Only Ibis time tbe system was
aided and abetted by you, a woman
who must know what it is like to
try and succeed in a white male
dominated environment."
Neubeisel is white, and Simmoos is black.
"It's unfortunate tbal Rev. Jack·
son bas made Ibis statement wilbout ftnt looking into lbe record of
our program," Albino said after
seeing the letter. "To jump to Ibis
conclusion demonstrates a fonn of
bias itself. I hope to respond to
ltev. Jackson directly as soon as
possible."
The coalition's letter cites statistics showing that minorities are
badly under-represented in college
albletics acbninistratioo and claims
lbat racism influenced the university's decision to hire Neubeisel.
Neubeisel, 33, bas been wilb the
CU football organization for nine
moolbs after coaching quarterbaclts
and receivers at UCLA for six
years . Simmons, 46, bas been a
college coach since 1975 and bas
been wilb CU for seven yean.

Page--4

By breaking 14-14 tie in prime time,

Raiders beat Chargers 24-17

'''•·

~-il:li~~~-'fr

·- -~···~

•' .1

... '

Rlcblll'dlln the aec:ood quarter of Monday mpt's

CATCHES TOUCHDOWN PASS- Loa
An&amp;eles Raider wide receiver Raalalb Ismail
(rlpt) pulb In VInce Evaoa' lllx·yarcl touclldowo
pua In rroot or Sao DJeao deteodve IIIK:k Stanley

AFC West matcbup In' Sao Diego, where the
Raiders cracked two Ues In the fourth qulll'ler to
winU.17.(AP) ·
.

Scoreboard
Two-Pal Amoricae56. Samlordl4
'1\!lue ll, Old llomioioDIO (01')

Ba s k etball

Monday's aeon

L.A. Aalden 24, Sao Ili... 17

VL CCiamoawealth 67, Teu.-MII1iD

60

NBAstandings

"--

Mldweal

li:... . . . . . . . . . lf \ Wl
.643

Now Yort... .............9 l
B -......................7 I
6 9
.l 1
Now ltnoy ..............7 II

.319

9 •.301

6.5

.&gt;167

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

-

......................4

Sil
2
4.5
l.!l
l.!l
6

"'''"""'ph'• .............

.&gt;100
.31l

C..troi1Ddialla .....................9 l .64]
CU!VI!LAND .........9 6 .600
Cborlotle .................. l 7 .5]3
Dllrvlt ..................... l 1
Cllic:IIO....................I I .lOO
Allala .....................6 9 .«10

t.s

2

l.l
4.l

Mltw..mo ...............s 10 .m

----

li::
... '"' '"''"' "'" ~ ~
1lUh ...................... .10 6 .62l

Jil

6 $71
6 .531

2.5

IJ

3
3$
l.l

S.. ADIODio .............7 7 .500
M.._ ................ l 1l .111

.................. 11

Seoltle ................... IO
LA. . . - ...............9

l

Do,..•

Miami [Oblo)ll,
72
Mlc:lti&amp;aDI7, DolloH 76

NEilllJoilll, Wii.-Mil-*ee·76

SL LDui172, S. lillDoil6l
Toledo 15, N. lteotuck]' 63

.611

y'•-

M......

Ncw Yor\ 101, flhn t 's*'• 96 (OT)
Now- 99, ClliaiF94
Oll!loiiO Ill, LA. C.,..l3

Laaw 67, Sant llo-a SL 62

Jlriirie View Ill, Failb JllotiJI97
ltloe 72,llouo!oa B - 6~

StepHa P. AutUD 126, Texu We~ ­

kyaD 73

Alrl'oo:e9l , AdaaSt. 73
Coiifonldl, SID l'nD&lt;ioa&gt; l9
Nwe Dainl76, Loyola...,..,.DI7l
(OJ')

S. Ullb 17, Clevdall&lt;l SC. 12
Wob« St 16, UC Devil 59

Ohio U.S. girls' Scores
Cutoa So•tb !13, Sudy Valley 41

llallllurJ l2, Woodwwd 41 .

Fort ll"lo II, CaldweillO
llldiaDVIlley 52, Cooboc&lt;oo 3l
!6, ~ Poirllold 29

Ncto&gt;EM&amp;.W.l7,v.'-&lt;O

Oat Hil179, WetiJioD 31
Olloftlle 46.Fort- 4l
Triway 46, Smltbvilk Tr
Tutearawu Catbolie 63, Co11ot1oa_
Valley ll
Wll&amp;erfcri·59, Sbeau~Nb 42

Football

Oll!loiiO lllltab, 9 p.m.

OoldCI Sllte ll L.A. LU.. ., 10:30
p.m.
-·-··•o:30p.m.

Wedlltlday'o p AUIIU llloltOII, 7:30p.m.
OEIELAND II~. 7:30pm
l'bllodelpltla 11 Miami. 7:30 p.m.
Mitwllllee 11 L.A. Clippen. 10:30
p.m.

Major men's
college scores

NFL standings

Eut
-~­

Ita

T....,l Slit,
VIJIJIIIIA 71
ViliiiOva PI, Setllllfl1175
Wali-74,CUiliuo60

Sooalll

=:;c•Jt.~. flol70

---96.flcnd1Memo-

eo.- St u.-.. sc.

Oomooa70,.,._51

Louirrille 101, w.c..u .. 76

n

Nlrylaacl 102, Md.·Bol!lmore Coolly
......, SL 16, Aloonl SL 70
N. Cnllaa St 96. a.l-1 Sooall-

. . 1!1

N.C. a..tolto 70, ,.._52

NW~19.-SI.76

1Uclu0Dad66,Radr...t64

no-Stl6,11f~7l

BuiToio.............. 7 6
............... ... 7 6
N.Y. leta ........... 6 7
I!Mliaoopolio ...... 6 7

0 .531 297
0 .l31 369
0 .462 241
0 .462 774

c..trolllly..Jitallllqlt ...... 10 ] 0 .769
CLEVI!LANIL 9 4 0 .692
CINCIIINA11 .. lll 0 .154
- · ............ I 12 0 .077

214
279

2l7
277

2ll 187
779 I 64
li6 321
179 29l

w-.SIDDt,.. ......... 9 4 0 .692 lOI

a-w

wmcctinas.

collrld.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Rei....t
Kovio J(odolol:i, Ol!tlieider.
MILW AUitEB B11EWEIIS: l!xlo!ldecl
tbe coatrw;:t of fbU 0...., IIIUllfCI". two

yenllllcuflibel997,_•·

TEXAS RANGERS: A1re0&lt;1 10 t&lt;r1111
witb [)ave Valle, Cllcber, OD I two-ye.COD.ttacl. Reaniaaed Joe Mac to, home
clubbouH maucer. to vilitiDa t:lubbo\llt

e~P

beats junior high
Tornadoes In twlnblll
Bidwell-Porter's jl!ni~r !!igb
boys· baskelball teams knocked off
the visiting Soulbem Tornadoes in
a season-opening doubleheader
Monday night at Bidweii-Poner
Elementary.
The seventh-grade contest saw
lbe Pirates win 37-34. Ty Johnson
and Steve Conley paced lbe hosts
wilb 17 and 12 points, respectively.
Russell Reiber led lbe Tornadoes
wilb 13.
The followio&amp; eighth-grade
game saw B-P win 60-47. The
Pirates' Joey James led all scorers
wilb 33 points. Ty Johnson led
So. :bern wilb 14.

easy sioce they finish wilb home
games against S111 Francisco (11-2)
and Pittsburgh (10· 3) wrapped
around a road game against the
New Yodc Jets (6-7).
Jeff Jaeger kicked a 43-yard
field goal on lbe f1tst play of lbe
fmal quarter to give the Raiders a
17-14 lead, but Andre Coleman
returned the ensuing kickoff 68
yards to lbe Los Angeles 24.
Tbe stBge was set for another
fourth -quarter disaster, but lbe
Raiders didn't fold. They held lbe
Chargers to a 24-yard field goal by
John Carney to tie the game at 17,
then moved 81 yards on nine plays
for the winning toucbdown.
"There's no question about it,
the fourth quarter bas been our
Achilles heel so far," Raiders cornerback Albert Lewis said.
"Today, we finally made up our
minds defensively that we were
going to getlbe job done."
That they did. ,llle Chargers
didn't threaten to 'se'!&gt;fe on their
three possessions following
Hostetler's go-ahead touchdown
pass. So lbe Raiders won lbe fourth
quarter 10-3, giving tbein their
fourth win in the lasl five yean at
Jack Murpby Stadimn.
"We missed out on a golden
opportunity," Cbar&amp;ers coach

--Sports briefsBuebau

NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball's expansion commiuee will
meet next Wednesday in Chicago
wilb lbe Orlando, Fla. group headed by Nonon Herrick. The meeting
ccmes about 6 weeks after presen;
tBtions from Phoenix; Sl. Petersburg, Fla.; and two Virginia
groups.
FootbaU
DENVER (AP) , John
Elway's left knee injury isn't as
serious as first thought, and the
Denver quarterback intends to play
Sunday against the Los Angeles·
Raiders.
Doctors said Elway strained a
muscle and mildly stretched liga·
ments on a run late in the Broncos'
20-17 overtime victory at Kansas
City on Sunday.
·
t'ootbaU
KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) Seatlle quarterback Rick Mirer will
miss the final lbree games of the
seasoo after undergoing surgery oo
his bi'oken left lbuml). Mirer, who
is rigbt-banded, was injured in the
Scabawks' loss to Indianapolis on
Sunday.

·-=-~5

PITTSBURGH PIRATES Si1aed
Fraaciaco Mttot, IDOeldu, to. a miDOf•
leque coatract.

0 .l31
0 .462
0 .462
0 .154

262
221
184
267

24l
262
235
3l7

c..trii-

Mi.-......... I $ 0 .615 29l 242
Cbl""" ............ 1 l

o .615 m

241

Dotroit .............. 7 6 0 .531 271 219
a.- Bay......... 6 7 0 .462 217 241
T-llay ....... 4 9 0 .301 191 289

w-.•-S.. FnadaoD II 2 0 .146 411

241
~ .........:.... 6 7 0 .462 770 329

1 o .315 m !35
LA.- ........ 4 9 0 .301 231 290

Newort-.....

s

1-c:liM:Mil d1Yilt01
y..-p~ayo~r

3 '/. miles pas t
Southern High School
St. Rt. 124 Racine. Oh

(Tuesday)."

614·949-2682

BuketbaU

Nolloaol....._"-lalloo
NBA: Filled Houatoll auard Ven~on
MuweU S$,000 lor faHiDJ to leave the
court la • timely maDDer ud verbally
abwiDI Dffitilll aCtcr he W'U ejected in
!he fourtllljUIIIa' of a 1ame apiDit Gold·
tD Stile OD lb\l'ldly.
WS ANGELES CUPPERS: Placed
Elmore Spencer, center, oa the injwed
lilt. Activated Bob Mania, ce11ter, from
the iojllftd lilt.

Double Incliner Sectional

Pillow Arm
Or Colonial

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""""''· - · UIII'Ielllt&lt;l~lftlpilloii. IOI&gt;t

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Sofa

Loveseat

5

289

5

259

Sleeper
Only 5498

198

2·Way
Recliner

ofoulohHK"Inhth-M""'

,....,,,, &lt;nl•~4t''""l' II ,rtl'lodtl

....

remain on the major league roster
next seasoo or be offered back for
$25,000.
NEW YORK (AP) - Olympic
star Kristin Otto and other Eilst
Getman women's swimmcn were
put of a systematic doping proaram. accordins to secret police
reeords publisbed in the Dwmber
· iuue of Swimming World maga-

sass

s

Action Lane.
Recliner trom

_,..,J · t

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"', ,. .,;. . t
I

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I

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com~e

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I

r, f'r •;rT

•llf.' '""SI• ptrvrnh d t•r&gt;/llllq

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to Serve You
Better!

,;

'

. . .. .

. .

·
'~

'ebrOf/11.

(.,81

_,c,

v
!!:

4J

»'

0

~

~

..,

By

Dave
·Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture
We owe it to ourselves to
become successful . Once
successful, we owe itto the IRS.
0

••

Any event, once il's happened,
can be made to seem inevitable
by a good historian.

2,116
1.645
688
2,477
3,336
1,546
280
1,227

2,260
773
487
218
254
678
481
429
2,741

...

Patience: what you have when
you don't know whal to do next.
•••
Socrates was a philosopher who
went around giving people good
advice. They poisoned him.

...

It's Our Way of Saying Thank Youl

With automatic transmissions,
we've all forgotten how to shift
for ourselves.

Stop in during business hours
December 5th - 9th...

* Refreshments
* Register for daily give-a-ways and drawings
* See the ' Dress-A-Doll" entries on display

69

287
2,648
113
1,803
741
3.340
2,335
105
384
2,063

991
1,353
659
363
265

I.I91
252
1,186
1,763
1,113
3,153
2,219
212
342
2,067
991
915
309
436
496
2,029
600
730
248
386
1,117
916
3,292
363
525
1,488
188
3,009
2,185
322 Warren .......... 377
280
73 WasbingtoD3,823
3.089
296 Wayne ........... 596
367
589 Williams .... .l,l85
633
501 Wood ............ .394
233
169 Wyaodot ........ 797
534
1,336 Tolab 119,943 104,540 96,250
278

7SIIOWIIOOMS

II WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, R•tluil, Oh.

Member F.D.I.C.

742·2211

•.
-+

DIAHOliDS
9 ., __
_ _ ., . ., Q

'~IIIUI O

,CMAU;I

J
J
J
J

' " ,. "'

C&amp;J FURNITUR-E

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

r!ef"l1 f. .

· Fiee removar or your Old T\1 Of
appbaJ"ICe
• Wrele serectron ot ramoos Dr anCIS
·Factory rrarned s ~rvrce
• Sr · r~rr.P. afll!f rhe sale

I

992-7508

28001 State Route 7
Just below Hobson

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE • MIDDLEPORT, OHJO 45760
(~14) 992-2635 • TOLL FREE SOD-426·5581

.·

'

.

. , .. Jon &amp; Carolyn Jacobs • Owners

Makes Hasy!

'

'

Open Mon.- Fri. .
6 pm. 9 pm
&lt;
Sat. .10 am_ 3·Pfll ...• •, . •

~·
~..&amp;. . .iSlti#atia&amp;a&amp;Atia~~·~•a

90DAYS

.

I
..... ......

311
172
2.817
762
335
3,419
439
'1h9
447
2,710
224
1,223

• Coffee &amp; ·End tables • Couches
• Curios
• Re~liners
• Kitchen Sets
• Entertainment Ceriiers ·• Crafts

•Lamps
• Sleep Sofa's
• Dinning Room Suits
• Grandfather .Clocks

HOPE CHESTS

\

"

1,223
369
1,129
1.709
2,642
378
2.468
1,004
469
1,846
806
371
921
486
1.586
3,282
460
35
428
816
651
250
1,241
416

I

Stop In And See
Our Selection Of

From 5

Layaway
For Christmas

fn1urance ,Companie•

1m

l22l

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• Rose Hill
• Brooks
• England/Corsair • Bassett
• Handsford House Bedding
• Sauder Cabinets

• Futuristic
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• Ridgeway Clocks

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''"'"""'~g.' "'" r!o;t.r

Let us tell you just how
much your savings can
be.

~Stat~Aufo

Here are county-by-county
figures showing preliminary fi8ures
for the total number of deer killed in
this year's deer gun season,
compared wilb official figures for
1992 and 1993:

242
470
3,376
743
441
3,435
341
460
647
3,109
405
1,289
2,649
1,498
1,130
2,397
3.218
2,113
203
1,782
2,262
1,032
610
176
443
575
487
482
2,987
336
353
2, 741
164
2,192
867
3,556
2,500
165
516
2,315
698
1,467
648
482
311
1,131
2,617
429
1.006
742
535
493
230
1,215
2,930
530
277
2,912
428
2.749
471
1,253
403
890

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S&amp;W Guns, Pomeroy: 197
Sun Funl&gt;eonzoil, Racine: 161
In addition, Wood also checked
in four deer.

Frantlio .........395
Ful1011 ............432
GALLIA ....4,355
Geau11a ..........853
Greene ...........670
Guernsey .. ..4,396
Hamilton ....... 563
Haocock ........486
Hardin ...........827
Harrison .....3,482
Henry ............423
Higbland .... 1,749
Hoclting ...... 3,222
Holmes ....... 2,169
Huroo .........I,I03
JACKSON .3,483
Jefferson .....4.204
Knox .......... 2, 779
Lake .............. 316
LAWRENCE1,857
Licking .......3,217
Logao .........l,133
L0111in ............589
Lucas ............. 297
Madison ........481
Mabooing ......739
Marion ...........731
Medina .......... 578
MEIGS .......3,668
Metter ...........362
Miami............329
Monroe ...... .3,262
Mootsomery .300
Morgan ...... .2,204
Morrow ..... .1,195
Musldngum4,755
Noble ......... .3,040
Ottawa ...........204
Paulding .... ....424
Peny ...........2,935
Pickaway ... .1,337
Plke ........... .l,752
Portage ..........666
Preble ............ 510
Putnam ...... ... .370
Richland .... .1,354
Ross ...... ......3,140
Sandusky .......520
Scioto ........ .l.l83
Senea ...........766
Shelby ...........853
Stark .......... .l.258
Summit.......... 312
TNDibull ... .l,377
Tuscarawas 3,860
Union ............906
Van Wen ....... 291
VINTON .... 2,578

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Perez 10 Clllfornia. riaht·haoder
Rafael Reyea to Milwaukee, left... jpDcler Micbael Mimbs to Pbilade1- tibia 81111 oulficklcr Kevin Norlbnlp zinc.
io the New York Meta. MontreBI
l'be masazlnc carries results
selected ahonatop Chad Fonville from the Staal, the East German
Cnm S111 FIIIICiiiCO.
IICQ'Ct pollee, showing Otto. winner
Playera, drafted off minor of aix gold medals In tbe 1988
league rosten for SSO,OOO, must Olympics.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio hunters ldUed a record 129,943
deer during tbe six-day firearms
season last week, according to lbe
Ohio Division of Wildlife.
Hunters in Meigs County kiUed
3,668 deer during Ohio's wee1-loog
deer-gun season compared to 2,987
last year, county game protector
Keilb 0 . Wood reponed.
According to Wood, Meigs
County deer cbeck stations reponed
tbe following numbers:
Baum Lumber Company,
Chester: 504
_
Chancey's Food Mart, Syracuse:
77
Eber' s Citgo, Racine: 480
Forked Run State Park,
Reedsville: 230
Harris Farms &amp; Greenhouse,
Portland: 138
Hawk's 76, Tuppers Plains.: 428
Jeffs Carryou~ Pomeroy: 170
Joe' s Country Markel, Rutland:
628
O'DeU's Lumber. Pomeroy: 267
Pick &amp; Shovel Grocery, Salem

cessor. But McCartoey said Mooday be bad recommended two
CGIICbes.
"I noromm~nded Elliot Uzelac
and Bob Simmons. I made it clear
to Bill (Marolt, Colorado's athlclic
director) that I felt eitber one wu
fully ~ualified to be tbe bead
coach,' be said.
·
In a press release dated Dec. 5,
the Rainbow C'oalitioo led by Jacksao threatened "to disaMlfllle albletes from attending (Colorado)"
as pMt of an ''initiative to address
the shortage of minority representation in albletics administration
positioosatNCAAinstitutioos."

· ~r~~~··YS~YS~~~"~~~~"~~"~'i

F09tbaU
National Football Le-.ue
CINCINNATI BENGALS' Placed
David Bruton, linebacker, on injured reacrve. Slaned Jim Ballard, quarterback,
udJe!rH.lll,widereceiver.
·
DALLAS COWBOYS: Placed D&lt;nici

Lulie, Nnnloa bacl, on injured reaerve.
Acti\'ltc4loe Filhbacl, oafety.
MINNHSOTA VIKINGS : Placed
Adria11 Cooper, tlaht end, 011 injured r~
IU"VC. StaDCd Rlctwd Brown, linebacker.
NEW ENGLAND PATRiaTS: Placed
11m Oold, ucxe tactJe, on injured reserve.

considered to fill coacb Bill
McCartney's shoes after be
shocked Colorado by resigning
Nov. 19 after completing a 10-1
season. The fourth-ranked Burfaloes are headed to the FieatB
Bowl to play Notre Dame oo Jan.
2, McCanoey's Jut glll!e u bead
CGIICb.
The other candidates were
offensive coonlinakr Elliot Uzelac,
53, a two-year Colorado CGIICbiog
veteran who besan coaching in
1968. He previously wu a bead
coach at Navy and Western Michi·
gao.
Also being considered was
defensive coordinator Mike Hankwitz, 46, who bas been at Colorado for 10 yean after beginning a
CGIIChing career in 1974. Both men
an: white.
The Rainbow Coalition letter
repeated a report !bat McCartney
- who as Colorado's winningest
football coacb won a national
championship in 1990- tBgged
Simmons as his choice for a sue-

Ft·nal deer· kt.ll lt•st •·

Removing lbe herniated discs
relieved pressure on nerves, wbicb Adam~ ........ 1,450
was the source of Daugherty's Allen .............524
Ashland ...... 1,638
pain. Boltlman said.
.Ashtabula
...2,1 08
In addition to rep~oving two herATHENS
....
3,866
niated discs, Bohlman also
Auglai2e
........
364
removed a thickened bone fian the
Belmont..
....
2,543
base of lbe spine.
The Cavaliers said lbe 29-year- Browo ........ 1,253
old Daugherty would be out for lbe Buller ............594
rest of the regular season. There is Carroll .... .... 1,660
a remote chance be could return for Champaign .1,242
lbe NBA playoffs, wbicb begin in Clark .............677
Clermont .... l,412
ApriL
CliniOII ........ ..841
Columbiana 1,852
Daugherty, a five-time all-star, Coshocton ..4,085
missed lbe final 29 games of last Crawford ..... :.668
season and hasn't played at all Ibis Cuyaboga ...... ll9
season. An offseason rebabiliration Darke.. ' ... ... " ..496
program seemed to bave taken care Defl3llre ........81 0
of the problem, but it flared up Delaware .......830
again when he bent over to pick up Erie ................ 250
· a sneaker after working out a few Fairfield...... 1,751
weekS before training camp began. Fayette ...........495

I

-7 6
6 7
6 7
2 II

"There were no unusual findings," said Dr. Henry Bohlman,
wbo performed lhe surgery Monday at Universily Hospitals of
Cleveland. "Everything went very
smoothly. Hopefully, Mr. Daugherty will be on bis feet tomorrow

KAREN$
GREENHOUSE

mwatlcDCD~ ~~.,.~

I

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve·
land Cavaliers center Brad Dangberty bas bad two herniated discs
removed from bis lower back to
relieve pain lbat has kept him off
the basketball court for nine
monlbs.

1,ODD to choose from .
Christmas Trees, Bulk
Candy. Crafts . Amish
Jelly, Apple Butter,
Candy &amp; Jelly Gifts.
Handmade Baskets

Nllioaoi"'FLORDJA MARliNS: N - Deloa
WlboiiMiiltlat ol bueball opentloDI.
MOl&gt;I1'REAL EXPOS: P1acod Freddie
BeDIYide&amp;, lllflelder, OD Wlh'CI'I (or the
=~ or lhiDJ bia uacoaditiooal re·

Both Simmons and Neubcisel
were out of town on recntiting trips
and could not be reached for romment
Colorado spokesman David
Grimm defended the school's Bff11mative action record in. albletics
and said Albino bas been a leader
in hiring minority coaches and
acbninistrators in ber career.
''Since 1990, (CU) bas hired
moce black coaches lbao any other
Division I school in tbe country,"
Grimm said.
Two of !bose coaches have gone
on to coach Division I football
teams, be said. Ron Dickerson is
currenlly bead coacb at Temple
University and Jim Caldwell is
bead coach at Wake Forest.
• 'For them to have auacked
(Albino) on this issue is outrageous,"· Grimm said. "She bas
pushed harder for Ibis nationally
lbaojust about anybody in the business."
Neuheisel and Simmons were
among four in-house candidates

Daugherty to sit
out remainder
of regular season

Poinsettias

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

goj.l;li~:J2l~4:_2~79L-1--r::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;-:l-ll-----:::

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l! L I ll PA I'd.
l •Dolloo ........... II 2 0 .146 l66 198
Pl!iiodolphio .....
N.Y. GIIDII .......
1\rimDO........... c.
Wl!lbllpo ......

BObby Ross said "You've got to
give the Raiders an awful lot of
credit They whipped us. They heal
us in just about every fashiOn.''
' !We didn't make mistakes in
lbe fourth quarter," said Hosteller,
who completed 22 of 29 passes for
319 yards, wilb one interception.
Ismail also caught a six-yard
scoring pass from Vince Evans in
lbe second quarter, while Hostetler
was · out of tbe game briefly
because of an injured left band.
Hostetler's first throw of the
game was a !bing of beauty - a
76-yard bomb to Alexander
Wright. giving lbe Raiders a 7-0
lead after just 1:10 of play.
The Chargers tied it less than
lbree minutes later on a 29-yard
pass from Stan Humphries to
Shawn Jefferson.
The Evans-to-lsmail pass early
in the second quarter gave tbe
Raiders a 14-71ead. but lbe Cbarg·
ers tied it wben Gale Gilbert
became the fourth quarterback to
!brow a touchdown pass, booking
up wilh Tony Martin on a 16-yard
play wilb just seven seconds left in
lbe half.
Gilllert was in the game because
Humphries suffered a bruised right
lbumb wilb 30 seconds left in lbe
balf. Bolb Humphries and Hosteller
came back quickly after tbeir
injuries and played the entire secon6balf.
Humphries was 17 of 33 for 202
yards without being intercepted.
San Diego's Natrooe Means was
held to 41 yards on 18 carries, his
WGISI output of lbe season, and lost
a fumble at lbe Raiders' 20-yard
line late in the third quaner.
to.

maon!:Omo BLUE JAYS : 'lndcd Rob
B\ltler, ouiDeldcr, to the Philadelphia
Pbillioa reo a pla)'11 10 be !IIIIIOd lll&lt;r

Doev8'
..............
7 6 0 .531 217 301
LA. 11oldon
..... 76:.

Sports b r l e f s - - - -

· DALLAS (AP) - MOIIlleallllll
four prospects from Triple-A
()Uawa In die three-round R~ 5
illljor 1e1pe dllft during die wm-

tw~)'MI'

l! L I rf PA r.t.

NA'DONAL CONFERENCE

~13,~ 13

St. lob'oll,

terllll with Rex Hudler. Infielder. on 1

Miami ............... I l 0 .61! lli 269

WUoae71,Co-ia7S

M"*"'• 7:!, RWor 61
.,..,.102, Glllylblq 65

Ceat

--

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

221
~City ..... 1 6 o .lll 141 23l

~·Uaiv . I7.N«tttT-6l

79

•'

Touo AAM 76, SW Louioiaoa 69

Tuelday'•a--

ao.toa ll New Yort. 1:30 p.m.
· - Ieney, 7:30p.m.
l'boeDIIIIWMillq!OO,
7:30p.m.
ort- .. Cl.ll\'Cl.AND, 7:30p.m.
Dolloitll~ 7:30p.m.
DeaYer • Mia-.a~&amp;. I p.m.
"""""" 11 Stell' I p.m.
Doilllll s.. Alloeio,1:30 p.m.

ri116l

" ....... I.e. . .
BOSTON RED SOX: Requested
waiv. . oa. Carlot Rodripea, infielder,
and Ricty TrUed~.• pitdler, Ia order to
JI'UilheirUDCODditiouJ RlmKI.
CAUFORNIA ANGI!LS: AIIJeed IO

(~• !I, MmoD Cllhoiic 49

5 .667
.5
6 .600
IJ
~s...............l
7 .53! · 2.5
......... """""'""""' 7 .lOO
]
..............7 7 .lOO
3
LA. Cllppn ...........0 16 .000
11

'

EXECI1I1VE COUNcn.: Auolll!&lt;:ed
thlt Rictw4 Ravitcb, ptctldent of the
player relatioot committee, will lean
bl&amp;eblll wbn lUI coatnct npiret oa
Dec. ll, 1994.

·FarWI!It

~RNCONFKRBNCE

-

lluebaU

6. Mid!JPD 71, N. Mid!ipa 71
ID!ooio 76, ~ SL 19
-9i,CoooiDSL 69

Soulhweol

.5
1.5

.m

.DDolloo
o•-......................
.......................7

Transactions

Viraioia Tecllll, Xaricr (QUo) l5

By JOHN NADFL
,
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Finally,
tile Los Angeles Raiders plaled
well in the fourth quaner. It s a
good !bing, because lbeir seBSGn
was riding on il.
Jeff Hosteller's six-yard touchdown pass to Rocket Ismail midway lbrougb the.fourtb period gave
lbe Raiders a 24-17 vtctory over
the Sao Diego Cbargen on Monday night, keeping them solidly
enll'ellcbed in lbe playoff race.
Things looked preny good for
the Chargers when the teams
entered the·fourth quarter tied 14all. After aiL lbe Raiders bad been
outscored 98-49 in lbe fourtb periods of lbeir previous 12 games.
The Chargers, meanwhile,
missed a cbanl:e to clinch their second AFC West championship in
tbree yean before a raliCOUS crowd
of 63,012 - largest ever at Jack
Murphy Stadium.
"To win in December is really
important," Raiders coach Art
SheD said. "We've bad to play in a
championship mode for lbe last
four or five weeks. We want to go
to the playoffs."
A loss might have· wiped out
such an opportunity. But lbe win
enabled tbe Raiders to join four
other AFC leams wilb 7-6 n:cmls.
"You lose, you're &lt;iut, for us,"
Raiders defensive tackle Nolan
Harrison said. "Everyone knew
lbat going into lbe game."
After losing for the fourth lime
in seven games followin&amp; a 6-0
start, the Chargers (9-4) have to
wait to celebrate.
All the Chargers need is one
more win to clinch the division
tillt, but that doeso' t figure to be

The Dilly Sentlnei-PIJI 5

Minister threatens boycott of Colorado ·after Neuheisel's hiring

· TUesday, December 6, 1994

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

·'

'

I

••

2dltlo11

. • Advertising Deadline.:
• • • Monday, December 19th, 5
.. ..
. .... To Place Your Greeting
Call Dave o~ Bob
at 992-2155

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

• ••

•
PM • _. •

....
.
.. . . ..
•.
·
...
•
•
•• •..... . . . • • .. . . .. ••
....

,_

....

'

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�·.
'
(

By The Bend

1Uasdlly, DeCember 6, 1994

Pomeroy-MiddiJ.,Prt, Ohio

The Daily Sentiitel

.
PagH

1\Jesday, December 6, 199f
.

.,

:;

Panel recommends diet programs disclose effectiveness..,;
.

WASHING'ION (AP)- Amf.:r.
icans spend more than $33 billioa a
year 10 lose weight and yet a third
of adults are still roo fill, accanliDs
to scientists who say tbe weight·
loss indus tty needs 10 sbape up.
The scientists, who have produced new guidelines iln safe and
effective dieting, are urging the
indusrry 10 disclose tbe true etfec·
tiveness of everything from diet
guidebooks to Jenny Craig pro·
grams.
"The cum:nt system is cbaos,"
said Dr. Arthur Frank of George
Washingtoa University, co-author
of tbe guidelines. "None of these
programs gives any informatioa.''
The Institute of Medicine, an
arm of the National Academy of
Sciences, assembled a panel of
. experts to study obesity. The COD·

elusion: 35 percent of women and
31 percent of men are obese,
despite spending over $33 billion a
year on weight-loss products and
programs.
The few who complete weight·
loss programs lose 10 percent of
their body weight, tbe ·panel report·

weight within one year and almost
all within five years, tbe expert
panel reponed.
"We have an epidemic of obesi·
ty in Ibis countty among adults 8nd
children," said panel chairwoman
Judith Stem of the University of
California, Davis. "They need
tools for making better decisions
about bow to lose weight."
The panel called on weight-loss
programs to issue comprehensive
data about who tbey serve and what
results they acbleve so dieters can
pick the best program for them·
selves.
But Frank, who wants such programs to go a step further and be
accredited, acknowledged the
request is purely voluntarY because
the weight-loss iodustty is largely
unregulated.

ed.

Even that small an amount is
healthful, said former Surgeon
General C. Everett Koop, who
today was launching a "Shape Up
America!" campaign tbat aims to
sell Americans on the benefits of
even modest losses.
"Eat sensibly. Exercise regular·
ly. Drop a few pounds. Shape up,"
Koop advises.
The problem is, Americans can't
keep the pounds off. The average
dieter regains two-thirds or lost

·"

,'

·\ . -

. Aaron Kelton, formerly of
· Meigs and Gallia Counties, at last
. has been discharged from tbe bos'.pital after a rather lengthy bout
; with illness and injuries.
: ' He is now at the home of bis
:daughter, Kaaron Austin, and is
·anxious to bear from his friends
: here. Cards and letters will reach
him at 7319 WiUson Road, Rich·
mood, Va., 23231.

Loretta Beegle, Pomeroy; l''raoces
Roberts, Racine; Mildred Milburn.
Middlepon; Jan A. Ours~ Middlepan; Rita Wbite, Cheshire; Don L.
Snyder, Athens; Betty Curfman,
Syracuse; John V. Story, Pomeroy;
Pauline Wolfe, Racine; Gussie
Hostettie, Pomeroy; Ardella John·
son, Middlepon; Bill Ault, Middle·
port; Ruth Young, Middleport; and
Bonnie VanMeter, Racine. Inciden·
tally, Bill Ault and Frances Roberts
Thanksgiving time held a nice earlier bad each named another
family reunion for Cbel and Annie tune COJTectly and their names were
Knight of Legion Terrace in not in tbe list of those "do in'
Pomeroy.
good".
Their son and daugbter·in·law,
.Winner of tbe $5 prize for blOc
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Knight and 18 is Gussie Hostettle, 134 Laurel
daughter, Amanda, of Benton, Ky., St., Pomeroy.
came for a two week stay and on
And bere are the clue lines for
Thanksgiving weekend tbey were tune 19:
joined by lbe Knights' other son
"We're cbildl:en, needing olber
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. children;
Terry Knight and son, Steve, of
• And yet letting our grown up
Marion. On Friday, Annie served a . pride;
big dinner to all of tbe guests
"Hide aU the need inside;
which also i_qcluded Marie Hauck
"Acting more lite children, than
and Bill Matlack.
children".
J
Tbe tune was copyrighted in
Oops! Those impressive statis· · 1963.
lies I gave you recently were not on
Just send your guess to Tbe
the Mississippi Queen, which we Daily Sentinel, 111 Coun St., Box
aU know about, but the new Ameri· 729-B, Pomeroy, or drop it by the
can Queen wbicb will be passing Sentinel Offioe.
our way next year.
Tbe new boat is 418 feet long
Aren't Anderson's front win·
with a 375 foot bull. It is 54 feet · dows, E. Main St., effectively doae
and six decks bigh, ~eighs 4,700 for the holiday season. J'd say we
tons and has twin Huted stacks 109 can probably thank Becky for the
feet above the river level and these biggest pan of tbe attractive wincan be retracted down to 40 feet.
dows whlcb would "Oy" anywhere.
Very nice 10ucb.
Seventeen of you correctly iden·
tified song 18 in tbe Wbatsa Name
And it's the time of the year
of That Song contest
wben we aU-with enough exten·
The correct title was sion cords-become electricians.
"Cbatanooga OIOo Cboo" and get· What keeps our houses from burn·
ling tbe correct title were Louise• ing down as we light up tbe Christ·
Glocctner, Pomeroy; Marie Boyd, mas holiday season, I' II never
Racine; Mazie Hannahs, ~y; know. But do keep smiling.

-

'

\

,• '

\~·

.,;t "/ ?
·,?{

SIERRA KEARNS

Bib announcement .
George and Christene Kearns
announce the birth of their daughter,
Sierra Gayriell Kearns. Sierra was
born at St. Mary's Hospital on
November 3.
She is the lOth grandchild of Harry and Betty Kearns of West Columbia and the 17th grandchild of Jack
Lively of Point Pleasant and the late
Shirley Lively.
Sierra also has two more grand·
parents in West Columbia, George
and Judy Starcher.
Her great-grandparents are Mary
Kearns, Gaynelle McAbee of West
Columbia and Mary Starcher of
Pomeroy.

Honor roll is
announced
Honor rolls for the Fellowship
Christian Academy for the first
nine weeks grading period have
been announced.
Tbe following students have
been listed on the honor roD:
Pastor's Honor Roll: Josh
Adams, Stephanie Baker, Sarah
Boston, Kayla Gibbs, Joseph
Howard, Holli Masters, Amanda
Maynard, Richard Misner, Derek
Putman, Jimmie Putman, Mathew
Putman, Joshua Wilfong, Francis
Wood.
Supervisor's Honor Roll:
Autumn Bussey, James Childers,
Ashley Gibbs, Sari Putman, -Cory
Sargent, Jacob Wilson, Abigail
Wilson.

Better health Club
plans Christmas dinner

.

, ../""'

:l·
::..-.

--

The annual Christmas dmner
wiU be beid Dec. 19 at noon. It will
consist of a potluck and a $3 gift
exchange. Trays for the sick and
shut-ins will be prepared at that

Dieters can choose from do·it·
yourself efforts that coasist of diet
boots and suppqrt groups, non·
clinical programs sucb as Jenny
Craig that use counselors to teach
weight loss and nutrition, or cllni·
eal programs where licensed doc·
tors may offer drugs or surgery. ·

'

by Bob Hoeflich
"

SlOD.

essary.

Different patients require differ·
ent care, and currently have little
guidance, the panel said . A 26·
year-old in good beallb who just
wants to shed I 5 pounds could do
fine with a do-lt-yourself program
or a non-clinical program, Frank
said But a 33(}.pound person with
diabetes and heart disease "bas no
business going to Jenny Craig," be
maintained.
The panel urged that:
-Dieters carefully assess their
individual needs and pick a pro·
gram with a matching consumer
proftle.
-Companies publicize patients'
long-term weight loss, improve·
ments In obesity-related co-dis·
eases and improved health prac·
tioes so dieters can compare results.
-Companies require tbatlactat·

time.
.
A donation was given to the Sal·
valion Army and Christmas Seals.
Tbe program was prepared by
Barbara Fry: Agnes Dixon, vita·
mins and minerals are needed;
Meigs immunization
Dorothy Jeffers, jokes and riddles;
Nancy Morris, wbeel of mi.sfor·
dates are changed
tune; Frances Goeglein, early treat·
ment of shingles; Helen BlacksiOn, · The Meigs County Health
riddles on Thanksgiving: Nancy - Dijlartment bas cbangeCI tbe regu·
Morris, five grains of com.
larly scheduled immunization days
from Dec. 13 and 27 10 Dec. 13 and
The contest was conducted by 20. The hours are from 9 a.m. to 11
Dorothy Jeffers and won by a.m. and from 1 p.m. 10 3 p.m. No
Frances Goeglein and Agnes appointments are necessary. Cbll·
Dixon. The meeting closed with the dren' s immunization records are to
benediction and refreshments were be presented at tbe time tbe lmmu·
served.
nizations are given.

Heather Lynn F'mlaw, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Finlaw,
Long Bottom, and Joseph Alan
Synder, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Snyder of Pomeroy, exchanged
wedding vows in a double ring ceremony on Sept. 10 at the Middle·
pon Church of Christ.
The cburcb was decorated with
large fireside baskets or silk ivory .
and coral roses, gladioli, ivy and
natural baby's breath. Coral can·
dies accented lbe organ, piano and
churcb windows.
Ivory bows and ivy marked lbe
family pews. The altar was decorat·
ed with .two seven-branch gold can·
delabra with coral candles, ivy and
ivory satin bows. There was also an
ivory lace-covered table displaying
the unity candle, which the couple
lighted following their vows.
Ministers AI Hartson and Tom
Runyon officiated at lbe 2:30 p.m.
wedding, wbicb followed a half·
hour of special music performed by
the bride's aunt, Kathy Johnson.
Special music during lbe c.. remony
was by Jared Stewart, singing "I
Will be Here" during the lighting
of the unity candle.
Escorted to the altar by ber
father and given in marriage by ber
parents, the bride wore an off·the·
shoulder gown of ivory cbarmeuse
with an overlay of ivory lace. It
featured shoulder drape sleeves,
sweet-heart neckline, a deep V•
waisted full skirt with a chapel
length train. Sbe carried a bouqnet
of silk ivory lilies, coral roses
accented with ivy and pearls. Her
fingertip· length veil featured an
ivory nowered headpiece with a
ivory tulle. Her jewelry Included
pearl and diamond earrings, pearl
choker ~ith pearl and diamond
enhancer and her engagement ring.

Maid of honor was Amy Mur·
pby, Cincinnati, friend of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Christi Collins,
Syracuse, friend of lbe bride and
Katy Wight, Vermont , cousin of
lbe bride. There were attired in tea·
len~. flared dresses of coral silk
wbtcb bad a scoop neckline, sbon
cap sleeves and princess seams.
They carried ftreside baskets filled

Pearl Harbor observance, Wednes·
day, 11 a.m. at Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, Mid·

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

Feeney Bennett
Post 128
SHOOTING MATCH
BAILEY RUN RD
ITh"'•' 1:00 p.m. Dec. 11
Choke Guns

dleport

PAGEVILLE- Scipio Township Trustees meeting 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at tbe Pageville Township building.

•

8

8,481
Aerostar Conversion van,

~-----Names

air, 4 captain's chairs.

8

4,888

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Burt
Reynolds is pleading poveny, but
Lonl Andmon's lawyer isn't b!!Y·
'in- It
gReynolds and bis ex-wife met in
court Monday to determine bow
cblld support be sbould pay
.for tbcir ldopted 6-year-old son, ·
QulDioll. Reynolds baa been paying

MJ~IIrtTIIC__
Parisienne Wagon,

••

7,8811

8

automatic.

•ucb

M~~amootb~atem~

Grand AM, 2 door, 1ed,
automatic. air.

CJRier,
· Reynoldl daimed in coun docu·

8

'debt Andetloa•a aaomey produced

meDII that be wu $2 million In

4,889

c:::s

huge cardboard blow-ups of a
f!JMDdal
Reynolds sub,llllacd in y saying bis net wortb
was $7.6 mnnon and that he bad
earned M3.4 millioa in tbe laat six

air, automatic ..

88 MERC. CULl
4 Door, read,
loaded ..

8

3,119
I

Cars·

810 E. STATE ST. - ATHENS, OHIO
.
'
.NEW CAR DEPARTMENT,
US~D CAR DEPARTMENT
.

I

~

594·8555

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
WEDNESDAY
Plains Post 9053, Thursday, 7,:30
MIDDLEPORT- Rcm~mber pm. at post bome.

Jean•

881

·At,enS

TlllJRSDAY

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbl
Sorority, aanual Cbtistmu party,
Thursday at 6:30 p.m., home of
Charlotte Elberfeld. Members to
take itemS for Serenity House.

.

.

594·21 '14

.

·. •. r

'\

·.

·. ·.

I

~(

...

·,

.,

·;

I

in

Joe I. Seyre

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

SAYRE TRUCKING

614·992'7643

614·742·2138

(No Sunday Calls)

E

211"""""

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Ona St•p C•mplete Aut• B••Y Repair

.PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Cundiff's
.Custom
Cut

Call949-2734

Morrison's Heating &amp;Cooling

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sal.

Salts, Service &amp; Installation
Call Today for Free Estimate

FREE ESTIMATI:S

Janice Lawaon Zwilling,

S/16/IM TfN

BINGO

INVITATION TO BID
The V111age ot Syracuse
w111 accept sealed bids until
Monday, December 19,
1994, at 12 o 'clock noon , for

a 1995 model 3/4 ton pick·
up, 4 wheel drive, heavy

plow,

minimum 350 CID, .a
eyclinder engine , heavy
duty
automatic

caught oa videoiape in a fur protest
and then chatted with David Letter·
l!!ll!l about ber adventure, pleaded
innocenllJOnday to trespassing
and criminal mischief.
Late, ber husband and 13 others
were arrested during tbe Nov. 14
protest at fashioa des:e;:r Karl
onslnl·
Lagerfeld' s offsce. The
tors ransaeted lbe JRmises and put
anti·fur stickers on waDs and furni·
ture before chaining themselves
together, police said.
.
Late, 26, appeared before Cnm·
ina! Court Judge Michael Gross,
who scheduled a bearing for Jan. 5.
Late faces up to a year in jail if
convicted of tbe misdemeanor
charges.

m

plate, mud and snow tires,
limited alip differential,
heavy duty tronl axle and
suspension.
Bldo are to be In a 1ealed
envelope marked "NEW
PICK-UP TRUCK BID" and

Pomeroy, Ohio

O&amp;E

Janice Lawson Zwilling,

sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
-We have even beHer
and quicker se rvice.
·Over 10 yrs
experience
· Service on all system
types.
· Best prices all around
the area.
992·2903 or 992-6320

•

Interior &amp;
Exterior

I·'

Teb tho pain out of
plinting. Lot uo do It lor
you. Very rauonablti.
Free Eotlmalea
Before 6 p.m. leave
menage.
_____Affer i (!.!!!.
614-985-4180 ........

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Llgl\t Haul,ing,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mis. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·}2'....
69-----INSULATE NOW!

Tree Trimming and
Removal· Yard Ca re
Free Es11mates
614·992-4447

Up to 800 Sq . Ft of 6
Blown ·in Owen s-Corn ing
Insulation $192.00.
Att• c s. Walls. Crawspace
BROOKS INSULATION
985 -4345

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS

. AMBERWOOD

Cocker~~~~!~
Bred for

Ready Nov. 23
$10 &amp; Up
Open 10 am • 9pm

Quality and

Te~ramenl

·Ball Snowden's Lot
U.124
Rutland, Ohio.
614-742·3051

s,iec:ializing in Part:colors
lor sl'ow and companions.
Stud OIINica &amp; puppies,
young a&lt;illts lor sale.
48750 Milt HIQ Rd.
Racine, Dh
&amp;14-114W487

~::;=====:::::

Starting SIWg
Matches
friday, Nov. 11
6:30
Sunday, Nov. 13
1:00

FRESH CUT TREES AVAIUBLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

GOILrrY WIIDOW SYS I EMS

F&amp;A Tree Service

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB .\

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BRADFORD'S

Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33, turn East
Sat Darw1n onto At. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Ad, 1 1/2 miles to tree farm .
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til dart&lt; Nov. 25.1hru Dec. 24
Wa on rides Fri. Sat. Sun.

LINDA'S
. PAINTING &amp; CO•

LONDON (AP) - Sir Andrew
Lloyd Webber is already looting
forward to bis fmt meal after an
ulcer in bis esophagus landed him
in the bospital.
Lloyd Webber, 46, is the composer of such musicals as ''The
Phantom of the Opera," " Jesus
Christ Superstar," and , most
recently, a stage version of tbe film
classic "Sunset Boulevard."
He bas been fed intravenously
since being hospitalized Friday,
according to a statement issued by
Lowe Bell COnsultants.
. " It is just the case of sitting
around with a tube in my ann until
I can bavc my fust consomme,"
tbe sta&amp;emenl quoted Uoyd Webber .
. usayiog.
The statement said be was suf·
Cering from acute ulcerative
esophagitis, or inHammalion and
an ulcer of tbe csopbagus. The ail·
ment, usually caused by acid regurgitated from tbe ~tomacb, apparent·
ly resulted from treatment of aootb·
. ct unidentified illlless.

ELE~1.,RI~

For lhe best in satellite

915·4473

Just another night tor Mrs. Don·
aid Trump?
No, she was tryin~ ber hand at
being the Queen of ean - por-lnlying hotelier Leona Hll\IDSley in
a benefit play.
Mrs. Trump appeared Monday
in "Boy Meets Girl," a sbon piece
by Wendy Wasserstein, in a benefit
(or tbe En Garde Arts theater com·
pany. Her co-stars for the evening
were Michael J. Fox, Sarab Jessica
Parter and Madeline Kahn.

mo.

Oltcw.!tfn

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Clerk· Treaauror, VIllage of
Syracuse, P.O. Box 266,
Syracuse, OhiO 45779.
Tho VIllage of Syracuse
reserves the right to reject
any or all bids.
Janice Lawson Zwilling,
CLERK· TREASURER
6, 13; 2TC

1111
1 11

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair A·lso
992-5251
992-7162
John

~ Complete

or

m

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PU:r YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

•Now Homes
•Garages

submitted In person to

105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.
(above Bank One)

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

transmission,
power
brakes, power steering, skid

mailed

AnORNEY AT LAW

BESJ RECEPfiON

Racine American ·
Legion Post 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ad for 1 free care!.
949-2038 or 949·2044

PubliC Notice

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
•New Garage•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.&lt;;. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

949-2168

Clerk-Treasurer, V111age ot
Syracuse, P.O. Box 266,
Syracuse, OH.
Janice Lawson Zw1111ng,
CLERK-TREASURER
(12) e, 13; 2TC

be

DENISE L.BUNCE .

1111102

any or all bldo oubmltted.
Further, the above vehlcleo
will be oold In their preotnl
condition with no expre11ed
or Implied warrantleo given.
Bids are to be In a oealed
envelope mar~ed "1981
DUMP TRUCK BID" or
"1971 PICK·UP TRUCK BID"
and are to be mailed or
oubmltled In person to

to

ANNOUNCEMENT
Now Accepting New Clients

Aathoriud Amnlean Stanard .O.aln

Howard L. Writesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters .
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

1-110()..486.1590
Bus. (614) 446·9971

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

(614) 992·7434

PubliC Notice

are

Kenny's Auto c.n•r
264 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Low Rate - Financing Available

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade
·992·2060 101511 mo

anow

We lta11e C11rs and V11nsf

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer

1-6

with

Kenny's is the place to co••
when you need a car rental.

10121/MIIIn

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

20
992-3954

Kenny's Auto Rental

~~

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

lenct

old &amp; B ded

Em crqency Phone 985-34 18

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

Maplewood Lake
St. At. 124
Racine, OH

duty,

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; ponable tolleta rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Silel' Family Reunionl" Pllllel
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULI ~I G
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE
U

tWIMMin

the news--

Reynolds became agitated wben Eels: Allo on sportlliiMii
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) uted about the discrepancy. "I
don't want to talk about Ibis in For Micbael Jordan. charity begins
'
liOnt or these cameras and tbe $15 atbome.
The basketball Star and baseball
M!lllioo tbal another business manbench-warmer is bringing bis
IIU took from me.'' be testified.
He testified lat« that be owed Chicago-based Michael Jordan
$IS million to a creditor. It was FoundaJioa for needy children to
anelea" if that wu tbe $1 S million bis home state. He celebrated tbe
lae claimed wu taken by tbe man· · expansion into the Carolinu at a
luncheon Monday.
IIU·
.
.
"This Is home," said Jordan,
Andetsoa appeared 10 avoid eye
coatact with lt"eynolds, wbo wu wbo grew up In Wibningtoo. "We
tlllly 1 few feet away. Afterwards, wanted to extend our bands f~
Reyaolda acknowledged be bad into other communities in tbe
nation. Wbere would be better to
~~- I poor perfOOJIIIICC.
"I clldn't loot too good," be sllrt thaD Nordl Carolina and South
told tepcliUI'I. "I'm not an accoun· Carolina?"
tanL I'm aniCior."
NEW YORK (AP) - Marla
NEW YORK (AP)- Apparalt· Maples Trump piled up her bloode
l7 abc camera lied about Rlcti hair, tloaned a sllnky black evening
gown and sUpped on a buge dia·
l.:ab.
Tile lilt allow boslcss, wbo wu mood ring.
ll

l

Reaso•altle Rates

Lose Weight

Corolla, 4 door, red,
air, automatic.

Corolla, 4 door,
automatic, air, gold.

Umestone
&amp; Gravel

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

1112Mfn

12,188

The name of Bethany Amberger, a third grade student at tbe Syra·
cuse Elementary Scbool, made tbe
honor roU for tbe first nine-week&amp;
grading period~

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

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Jacqueline Rapp
Cue No. M-CV·22t
NOncE FOR
Rodenbeck
by Christmas
PUBUCATION
Dec be 6 1994
lllci-S181e Truet, 11
em r ·•
·
~.eo• GH&lt;II roollllttn!
Ptalntm,
Now that you've
All Natural 446-3896
Vo.
grown older and
Clerenct LH, Et AI,
I h
Ilk
Dafendante
w se1 ope you e
· Clarenc• L" end Ro..
my nice Surprise!
lllen
LH
will
take
notice
Mom &amp; Dad_.1 ________
Public Notice _
lh•t on the 8th day of 1'--...;;,;;.;.;.;....;......-_
October, 1tl4 the Plaintiff
or formerly owned by Clara
hlld 1t1 complaint agaln•t
Public Notice
·M. Dow: thence In a North
you In the Court of Common
and E11terly direction along
IIIHe ollhlge County, Ohio
Clara M. Dow' a line Jo a
raqu..llng the .Court to lor all p•rtlnent purpo111.
point where e line running
III'IIIIIUIII eny lnler"l thet . PARCEL TWO: Sltuat• In S. 26' 15' Eaot w1111nteroect
rou hav• In the premia" tho VIllage of Pom•roy, eald Chiller Road 70 feet
tlncrlbed at followa:
Sellobury Townohlp, Malgo Northelllorly from the
PARCEL ONE: Situate In County, Ohio: BEGINNING ploca of beginning; thence
1111 Townahlp of Sallabury, 11a point N. 61' 30' E11164 S. 61' so· Wilt along 1ald
County of Melg1 and Stat• loot from the S.E. corner of rood to the piece of
of Ohio: BEGINNING at a 1 I Acre lot on the North BEGINNING end containing
point loeeled In the aide of tho Cheater Road 1/2 Aero, mora or loll, t/4
Northerly edg• of .Chllltr (SIIte Route 7) In tho Vlllege Aero thereof being oltuate In
llold (S.R. 7), eald point of Pomerqy conveyed by th• V111eg• of Pomeroy and
king N. M' 37' E. 152.21 Ellzebeth Joy end Mortln 1/4 Aero In the Township of
t..t fnHn the S.E. corner of Jey to Ge.orge Jey by d•ed Sellobury, Meigs County,
~ 1 Acn lot owned by w.c. rteorded In Vol. to, Pg. 157, Ohio.
FOR LAST SOURCE OF
end Th•lme Hermen, Melgo County D.. d
"BIItey'e 1 Acre Lot", " Rtcordo, reftrtnce to which TITLE SEE D.B. 296, Pg. 325
recorded In Vol. 1811, Pg. Ia har•by mode lor e and D.B. 297, Pg. 50, Melgl
ZOO; lhtnet~ from Nld point deocrlptlon thereof; thence County, Ohio Recorda of
ilf Hglnnlng and pe..lng N. 61 ' 30' East along .. ld Deod1.
through prop•rty ownld by North eldo olaald rood 87.5
Parcel
No a. 16·
Kethy And•r•on ae toet; thence N. 26' 15' Weal 019464.000; 16·01963.000,
"~!!r~td In Vol. 288, Pg. to land now or formerly 111-01965.000, 111-019647.000
311S, N. 27' 52' W. 12.52 tail owned by Clara M: Dow; end 16-019648.000.
to 1 Ill" -1 Iron ptn 111; thence South along Claro M.
The Plaintiff requuts thot
u..nc. continuing N. 27' 52' now'o line to the eald promlaeo be oold, your
w. 101.27 fill to alii" 11111 corporation line to the N.E. lnternl therein loreclooed
tlfn Mt; lhence S. 112' 07' W. corner of a 0.25 Acre lot end lor ony other rel!el aa
aGO~~ a point; thence d•~erlbld In · daed from ohall be ju~ and equitable.
H. 21' Ill' W. 10.12 fill to a Emntlne Partlow to Velvey . You are required to
r oint locelld In th• Key• dated October 25, anowor the said complelnt
oorporellon lint of th• 1848 end reeordtd In D.B. by tho 4th day of February,
Vlllllge of Pomeroy; th•nca 162, Pg. 327 of the
1995 or Judgement by
11ong with uld corporation County D11d
Default will be rendered
tine, S. •• 15' E. 124.53 fill lhenco S. '36' 30'
ogolnot you.
to 1 point. being common tho E11l lin• of oeld Kayo
David H. McCown,
lomtr to Kathy ~ lotto the place of Beginning
Reg. No. 0008600,
and Robert D. 'Fila; thence end c:ontolnlng 0.50 Acree,
Attorney lor iPialntllf
liang with property line In more or te ... 0.40 Acre• (11) 29;
common with the above ·th•rtof being In tho VIllage (12) 6, 13, 20, 27; (1) .3: 6TC
lllrtltl, S. 26' 15' E. 47.10 of Pomeroy ond 0.10 Aer11
lilt to a 5/8" oteel pin oat: baing In the Townlhlp ot
PubliC Notice
u..nc. c:onllnulng s. 26' 15' Sallobury, Melga County,
:t_ 71.18 fllllo a 5/8" IIIII OhiO.
)In 111; thenc• continuing
PARCEL THREE: Situate
PUBLIC NOTICE
;a, 26' 1·5· E. 11.77f•at to a
Sallobury Townohlp,
Nollco 11 hereby given
'llolnlln the Northerly line ol
0 hI o: that
tho VIllage of Syracuse
.l:helltr Road; lhonco olong
150.5 w111 oceopt
sealed bid~ until
:wtlh uld Chiller Roed, S. teet along the Cheoter Ro,od
Mondey,
December
19,
~ 11' W. 70.117 feat to the (S.R. 7) from the S.E. corner
at
12
o'clock
noon,
to
1tl4,
)llco of BEGINNINQ end of a 1 Acre tract or lot on
'Containing 0.265 Acr11. the North aide ot 11ld Road ,.II a 1981 International
)nore or 1111, 11 dtelgnotod conveyed by Eliza both Jey dump truck and a 1974 Ford
vn "Mop Showing Survey and Merlin Jay to George Plck,-up with utility bed. The
'or Kathy Anderaon, Jay, September 29, 1911 , truck• can be viewed at the
Municipal Bulldlf~D parking
allualld In tho Vlllago of Vat. 107, Pg. 157, Melgo lot
or at the water
Jtomtroy,
S 1111 b u r y County, Ohio Deed Recorda
building
Townohlp, Melgo County, to which reference Ia dopertmentotorage
lot
on
W.
College
Road.
J)hlo, Sc:olot" + 4 40', delld hereby 1111de lor a
Vlllog•
'
of
Syracuoe
. ., 21. 11115," reference to dtlerlptlon thereof; thence rtllrYII the right to re)ect
-.ld mep being mad• her•ln N. 26' 15' Weal to land now

8

Makes honor roll

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS

Public Notice

Sable GS, 4 door. while,
automatic, all power.

~!'!!'!!'

J&amp;D FLEA
MARKET

MODEll SUI!Iftll

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

71:t11t1 TFH

NOW OPEN

with silk ivory lilies, coral roses
and gladioli, and natural baby's
breath and ivy. They wore gold and
pearl drop earrings, gift of tbe
bride.
Flower girls were Cbelsea King,
cousin of the bride, and Merissa
Snyder, niece of lbe groom. Their
dresses were of ivory cbarmeuse
•
Continued on page 1o

POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, 7 p.m. dinner at
Stowaway, Gallipolis.

POMEROY Pomeroy
PClMJiROY - Fraternal Order Masonic Lodge 164-F&amp;:AM will
of tbe Eagles Auxlllary meeting, 7 install officers ai its regular meetp.m. potluck, 7:30 p.m. meeting, ing at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at tbe
Tuesday. $S Christmas dln.ner Middlcpon lodge. Refreshments
will follow.
deposit due DOW.

CHESTER - Chester Council
323, Daughtm of Amaica, 7 p.m
Tuesday. Quarterly birtbdays 10 be
observed.

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

FRIDAY

TUESDAY

CHESTER - Chester Township TrusteeS meeting 7 p.m. 1\Jes.
day at Cbcsla' Town Hall.

'!t

MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH A. SNYDER

--Community calendar-Tbe Community Calendar is
publisbcd u a free servia: to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
caleadar is not deaipcd to pomote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
ItemS are J~Pntcd • apace permits
and caoDOC be guaaleed 10 nm a
specifiC IIUIIIber of days.

\ \:.

ing women, c~ilcU:en and pat!¢ntst
with any chronic disease undei1atc,
weight loss only under some medi-;
eal supervision.
:
-Dieters ask a trusted health ,.
care provider if the program lsl
sound and appropriate. Check thel
required die~ which should contain;
enough protein to maintain nitro· •
gen balance and limit the loss ofl
lean body mass. Exercise should{
gradually progress up 10 an hour of·
moderate-intensity activity a day.
-Dieters remember that:pro·
grams promising results without I
dieting and exercise won't wort. I
-Dieters carefully assess tbeir!
beallb before and during weight
loss. Even healthy people who lose 1
weight too quickly on very low-fat I
diets run a risk of sucb problems as:
gallbladder disease.
I

Heather Finlaw, Joseph Snyder exchange vows

Beat of the Bend ...

Plans· were made for the annual
Christmas dinner at a recent meet·
ing of the Rocksprings Better
Health Club hosted by Phyllis ·
Skinner and Nancy Grueser.
Tbe meeting was opened with
the Lord's Prayer and tbe Pledge of
Allegiance. The secretary's repon
and roU call were read by Nancy
Moms with the treasurer's repon
gjven liy Fran«s-fioe~lellr. Dew·
tions entitled "A Thanksgiving
Story" were given by Helen Black·

Jenny Craig, oae of the largest
weight-loss organizations witb 820
centers worldwide, labeled the
report "a liational caU to action,"
but said it would do no good unless
every c001pany complied.
Jenny Craig wouldn't say if it
would release the type of success
data the Institute of Medicine
wants. But it said it already careful·
ly screens patients' health to ensure .
it enrolls them in proper programs,
under a doctor's supervisioa if nee·

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Speclallzlng In Cu1tom
Frame Repair
NEW I U.SED PARTS FOR
ALLIIAKES &amp; IIODELS
U2-70U OR
tt2-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-&amp;0o-141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

I

WEill'S
CHRISTIUS
TillS
RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carelully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up witb
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742·2143 or ,
742·29791

l •Custom Made

l

Solid vinyl
replacement ·
windows
• Free Estimates
1 $200 Installed
~ Gall For Det11ils~~ ~---=..;;::: """"""-"
1

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Pom!!~.oy, Oi\~

"Look !or the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tro- Ow.., 1-800..291-5600
Announcements

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cut your tree .
(or we'll cut it lor you)
Riggs Tree Farm .
39507 RockSpnngs Ad.
(at oorner of US Rt. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs
11!21!94

3 Announcements
Ellocllvo lmmodlllolr·

no
1-ulng on Ev- and
' Lulhor Smfth F.,.., G"""' Ad., Ai.Otand duo to hu,...., lhoft
Gl
proporty. AIIwtfnon ....... owo

ond-

ClnceUedl

MEET NEW PEOPL£

THE FUN WAY
~y

1·IIOQ.32NGOO Ell. :not, -

a. 11 ,,. sut ""' lltn. Proo.ll
CO. I02-8M-'11211.
No

hunting of ony

ldnd

form on lllleholl Rd.,

an "'Y
Redni.

______
.
,
;
,
"
"'
"
'
DII'S
~-~· •.:. ~
Connie Enalen, owner.
Proc 1-g

IPPLIIICI.

IDIICI

For All .~...
• . . . . I""

UHII .........
a • ..n..ICel

.... Slle .
ell

614-992·5515

.__ _ _ _ _':.;:"'~":,:::"":;...~

~:7~::··

4

o-t

"'"..-. wv. .

Giveaway

z puppiH,
~~ a

-.... ""' ..., ·
Sl - . &amp;

*

'11tH T•m.ro. ~~~~..
I 112 V_,. Old,

Appro&amp;.- old port . . . . t..ll

- - · -7JI.UA
Cliii'OI*W- ...
no c:o11t otter lprn.
••5:30pm.

. I

·~

.._1

.

�'

'TUesday, December G, 1994

'

Pomeroy-4JIIddleport, Ohio

The Dally SentiMI P~~!l

· Pomeroy-MI~dleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December 6, 18M

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

47

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

_.. A-n

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

,:;r;-d,
Willi

1tt0 Ctoyton lllcbllo 14170 2 lodroom.. 2 .......
F~, Tclll Efoclrlc, Willi
c.ntroJ Air, $11,000, l14-441o
0832.

f'lr1~11111-.l bl.-...
1,buff,
a.3aa..

71

3 A_, Fumllflod A~t~., All
LHIIMIM
Pold.
DoWnOtllro

w.IGIJIJ.
!'?,
- · ...,

t235111onth. ... . _ Avo.,
Oolllpollo ·~MI.

1184

IIIII 14&gt;':o1 lncl- oldrto
'"~• • - ~
-ko, 1 Md
par
homKta:••
1

I.Qst &amp; Found

6

FREE 101 rllll Only
$120 and $114 por .....
-

Found: block lomole C8l
wloflgne
30WI2-3411.

Cd1~31.

-ko.
Foundo _,.., Doa,
YlclnHr; flocc:_, Rood, c.u A,:

34

" ' . P.lll14-441-t341.
l.ool: Pwld._ Whlo- 10
Y-.a ,
Hu Tl!l With Tho

114 1•• 1325.

- w-.
COIIntry -

~-. z loci-

1NIIulc• .,.,_...

171-11111.

1 EnctoHin

51!=-.

sr.c'
1 Small hole

53 FuroONrlng
. animal
57 Hefedllary
factor•

1

~ 1813 ·

7 ·

Fumlohod I -

l

lath,

Cloon, No Polo, Rofeow100 I
Dopooll Roquhd. l144flo1811.

Buslneu

Good Condblon, 1850, IM-31)'
71'12,-

Buildings

123243&amp;1 . CoH IM-IIUalt.

1181 Fanl P - Block Rod

EOH.

"What's the use saving for college? They're
raising !UIIIon faster lhan I can shovel snow 1"

35

Loll &amp; Acreage
,;_-:-:-....;.;;.;.;;~;;.,.;;,--. ~---.:_----.,...--------l311oc.o10oc. """ v.lml. , _
·- " ' · 131,500, ... . . - .
Clwb CNol lml. :104-11133BSS.
,Gallipolis
11 Help Wanted
18 Wanted to Do
· &amp; VIcinity
4011 Addl1011 Plko.~, CarEblln'o Pula l s.vtco, 252 - Of PoMum Tral And
ALL Yll!l BalM IIUII 8o Pilei In
Third A...,~, Ootllpollo, OH Rood, $14,000,114-31lo71tl.
Ad-. DEADIJNE: 2:00 p.m.
114-441-01711 110ft -Sot 8-5, 11
In
Yoor11 Exporlonce. (Fonnerty ..._rly ........ 112 tho dai'
tho od .. to "'"·
S....., odlllon
2:00 p.m.
Oolllo Ccuntr NCI!Ihu~,
With Elltaa ~).
Cullom codal log homo, ou
Eriday. •llondoy oclllon o 2:00
114--7.
p.m. SIIIOrdoy.
lntorlc&lt; Pointing One Or
'Yard Sale

---

Pl,a

ll. · ·

"""' .,.

-

Cl 1994 bV NEA, Inc

.... ollilng

FtVE CLUBS

t•
2"

BEATS YORE PAIR!!

3•

,1

1112 Fanl T_,_PS,
POL. IUicmollc, '"'• ,..,

ll'llf&amp;.,Q.'1

South

·· BARNEY

Slklltl Dllltl(ll To Fronl Fender,

t2.10D,I,......IIZ.

poyen 1

,

o

,, PEANUTS

Complolo Houoio ' Ouollly Work
R-crwbly Prlco, F- Eotlmot-, 114 Ul 1331.

[ ~EEL SORR'r' FOR T~OSE SANTA CLAUSES
W~O STAND ON TJ.IE SIDEWALK HOUR AFTE~

D

140UR RINGING A BELL ..

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
II ...,_,... llollonl 4 ...ncloi,
outo, now ev, eiWii!t....,.,

Rlok ,..,_, AuollcnCompony,

Auc:l-

Rentals

Col. Oocor E. Click,

:104oiiW430.
LJc:enlo • -

41

W.ntod to liuro 'II or Clooilco, m,.. bo
llriiuahomo or Ll, Vol, lcMidod, 4

-·--*~co

Ill. lruelc bod 3333.

HOU888 for Rent

· 3Q4.N2o

• -·

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

I,

MC Roalllllod Chow Chow

:::.=-:._"'= ~.:,r-::
NO l Up, 114 Ill 1431.

....

BORN LOSER

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is subject to

the Feoerat Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes ltt•egal
10 advertise "arYf preference,

2 .......... 127&amp; por tncinlh
12110. _...., dopoall. 2 -

This newspaper will not
knowlingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In viol811on of the law.
Our readers are hereby

Informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal

opportunity basis.

COIIIIUNITY CABLE

EHTRY LEVEL-. WonTY!* 01
· CAlL£ TV . . , _

loll. M ''llolllol ' All

W. Wll pay Ycu E- Wlillo
T........ For A lllglify Paid SofM

con..- ·

To WOIII 2:00

llallvllod

Slor1 $lUI IHr. For Eum And
o\otlllcollon Into. c:atl (21111 ~ Ext. 0HU1, t A.ll. -4 P.ll.,
S..n.fol.

-of-.

~ 30441Mm '"" l :oo LodJ

'-"Y
Clonlo
!lrPn · -.....
·
DGIIIInl
oondtt~.z_ei!'.!_!l
............._ v a l l o r
I:GOpnl.

2 Bodrcom Apor1monl Ad~
To Un-y Of Rio Clrondo,

Splnol.c.r.lo plano. -tel,

114-24WIII; Abor I Col 114245ol812.
Z lodroom llcbllo - . AI. 7

Um•:u:::
........
-

1n Tho Ooltlpollo

Loovo

en,

2411 Ho Ano.

A n d - No.

2 ....._ mcblfo homo,
llocloon Aft, dotioill, JOU poy
~.

Q-··*-· 12 Sodroom Traitor

In

Rio

Ko.....,. W-. uc.
- · · $150 111m. 304471-1314.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolo homo fumlollt~~g~.
Houre: -.al, N. 114-441o
0322, 3 mlloo cut Bulavlllo Ad.
F1111 Dollvory.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NoiOo\lood
No applancee_ Houllholcl fur.
nlohlng. 112 101. Jorrlcho Rd. Pt.
PI-nt, WV, coR 30W75-1410,

31

Homes for Sale

213 acre · lind 1111110 hclaa,
tl\000 flmi. 30WI2-ml

8WAW
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 1Z
Olivo Sl., Golftpcllo.- l Uood
fumft&amp;n, - " ' · Wlllom l
Work bccl-. 114-441o311!1.

Vf'RA FURNITURE
4 lllloo Out AI. 141
114-441-3151

Lovol I Acrllo 1 112 Y10r11 Olcl,
213 !IOjilo Grow Rood, ..,,000,

·~·

Ouol"y Hqjlolholcl F~
And Appllincoo. lloa- Solo o

.... ........ lloo ....... 101 .....
rllnt, ,....._ l d-'1, AI lo
52 Nollh, Lacuot Rd. on right.
:l!!Y11.1Qll,
.

=

For 1111'11 2 '*'-m lrolfor In
Rodno -,11WI2ol031.
Fumlohod IIOOIIIo. -

1300

~~-lomoktlow
~--Boo

Farm Suppltes
&amp; L1 vestock

....00;

~.

Living Room 81.

0

61 Fann

,_,,
91.
Rolrlgorllon o
W.olion .uryo,.

o

.

.........

32

81

campers&amp;

llt't . NOW WMIT 1&gt;- NIIN\JTt · ·
.140¥.J 1&gt;10 THIS GU IN 14tRE .' ..

..
'

Home

.•

•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•ohlna-ond _.....homo
rapolr. For lrao ~~~~- coM
Choi,IIWI2.aH.

\

Ron'oTV8oMco,_....,....

:e~
~-

In bnllh aloo .......... moil
clhor brando. · ~ 1o

.

.·

·

.

r

ctbu'Birthday•

Heating

l
l
I

Will

lloko

Doololl1--7110 Nowll

1·

I

Pass

Pass
2t
Pass
All pass

30 Epic 1101111
32 Urolne aniiMI

...... 01'1·

Pass
tNT
3t
Pass
Pass 4 •
Opening lead: • K

!TUESDAY

::ROBOTMAN

-

41111 And lOtr1H,

1•

HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CLASSfiEDS.

CIC
Oonont
llolnl...,... wollpopor, • - . , NOting, whtowo, -

..... ltdlftP.IIIMI Bollltool
lldao ...... DoO 21111. - .

28W.......

STRIKE A BLOWN THE WAR ON

lllll4.

1m ~" 12110 woldrtlng.
.....-, and •lfllnl mocltlni,
MIOO. 1414-77NNL

:zeo.-

East

33-.._
34Grdld

-

311,':'.11fdryl
3t Dlflla t.mily
41 Couple
42Zodlac: ....
43Trwattlle
birch llmlly
45Cifumny

48Unlteplr-

50 Sllort jltcfllt

.,._

52~

-·
__

54AogNI
55 Profit on IIMtll
58 Paid no4lcee

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Luis
...by,_,....,,._,..,
.......
Campos

'-~_

.........

Eld'lletleiintne Cipher llln.1l fOr anolher. rocMy't cA.Ie: R~ P

'Z

NCFG

HVG

BVGA

ZH

I. C .

RTSSIG . '

Z '0 G

BVGA

E. AJB

· ND

ACNG

Z X

Z A

LKJXXeJKF

HZNGX
-

KGCIID

(UKCFD

UTALV'X)

G 0. G

RfTNIT'":./
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don't know about you, but I'm mora of a
strike lan than a hockey·strike fan." - Conan O'Brien . .

bllebal~

"f.. ....

'::~:~;~' S@ \\~1A-

~s·

- - - - - - Uile~ ~y CLAY I. fiOUAN
letters of
0 Reorronge
four scrambled words

wtU

fhe

be·

low to form four WOfds

I

PULSPY

5 WY N E

1:!:

"If you are a lazy person,"
daddy said, "you won't do too
much wrong. But, if you are up
r--=-.,.....,,...,,....,.:-:---, and doing something then you
FL Y 0 U J
~must watch
o!"

R0 0 MT

1 1• _
I. .I 1
. . .
_
0

5

0

0

•

0

••

0

PRINT NUMBERED

lE TTERS IN SQUARES

I

I

I

II

I

I

I

I

Ironic • Gauge · Unwed - Kimono • GROWING

~ - _,., N3llcn. 14.21
tom,
114-1114611
1:1111. "--aftor
- Loria
Round 1o1M 01 Nov For Solo,
120 EMit, Ill Fct All, 11W71-

·for Sale

mlnullly
21 Aroblln

A friend sat in the dark lamenting the fact that she was

D'

Improvements

Mobile Homes

20E....,_

SCRAMUTS ANSWERS

!

Ace Tno 8orvlco. ~· ....
:10yro. orp. llnoUNd, ....
.......... -o11t1.

_...

bolore
Chri-

12Ambueh
15ASiooga
17Aeggect

23 Drlnlla lfOWiy

8 ~~~~:RMBlE FORI

82 . · Plumbing &amp;

Do

IV-tllenlglll

koybon

North

rn.-....,

·~.11W1to~.
'
..tot.. - . . Tranomlellon And
Sorvloa, Fllloon Yoon 01
r~:- lnollllna Uood An!!
Tnnomlootono, 01~
8or¥1ooo
lncluclo:
Clulcli,

-'mOOIS, wv

Wanted to

•

u....

,_._~

Servtces

Autos for Sale

11

West

UootJ I roliull, ilfl If~ 11!11t

.'t..Cior Cliopolllood,

71

movement

5 Flnlahod llrol
&amp; llohlmmedln
prayer leader
7 Burdened
a Opponent
10Shideii'MS

44 COOkS sloWly

8

Hourt lion. • Sol. N Wod. N;

Tra nspottatton

46Norml-

4 8altet

will

Don, Forgot OUr REPO. 8oc'

'

.. .
•J 8

Auguste Cornie, the 19th·century
French philosopher and sociologist who
founded Positivism, wrote, "Love our
principle, order our foundation,
progre~~ our goal."
A good place to lay the foundation for
progress in card·play is with English·
"man Danny Roth's book "Groundwork
in Play and Defence" (800·274-2221;
$24 .95&gt;. Published by Robert Hale, it
contains 60 declarer-play and defense
problems that range from intermediate
to tricky. My main reservation is that
several auctions are dreadful.
I particularly liked this deal from the
book because I'm sure many players,
including some experts, would go down.
Against four hearts, West leads the dia·
mond king. How should South plan the
play•
Probably your first thought - if you
haven't studied all 52 cards - is Ill ruff.
play a spade Ill dummy and lead a trump
toward your hand, just in case East has
the singlellln ace. However, with this Jay.
out, you should fail. West takes the trick
with his trump ace and switches Ill the
ace and another club. A third round o(
clubs from .East promotes West's heart
nine Ill the setting trick.
Whal's lhe solution? AI trick one,
don't ruff. Instead, discard one of those
unavoidable club losers. Ruff the sec·
ond diamond and proceed as above. No,
don't discard both club losers, because
the defense will play a third round of di·
amonds. Then, when you lose a trump
Irick to West's ace, Wesl
lead a
fourth diamond, which East will ruff
with his lrump 10. This uppercut gener·
ales a trick for West's heart nine.

lion.

--~1 ~ahbOrtlaa•.
Cal
· - - Daft: Or 1144411452E¥onlngoiW....,

•AJ1094
•KQJ762

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Motor Homes

Con-

-naaermug

31MaryTyler40KIIn
41Fedet'ategcy.

4WD port._ 30W'IS+I04.

79

Houoo . Far SOlo 11J OWnor.
~Metod AI II Hldl .::::.

35Sianu

I

R Auto, RIPIIY, WV. l72oll33 or 1-27):113Zt,
'.
Wo Buy c.ro. Anr ~
114-4*PART or 11UI8 8012. .

$3To.00;
Rongoo •

II::~.~·*

8prl!tg Yllt.r

76

Ole.

$141.00;

•KI0653

ine cnuckle quoted
.
•
•
•
•
.
by ldl•ng tn the mts.stnQ words
L-....1.-.L.......L-.L......L.....J vou develop from ltep No. 3 below.

I " tonko, 0111 len lrudl
..-.
.....toro,- ......

oi2H.00LIIocl-

31 Capable of Cltf·
lfOI'Izallon

1--.,,7r'Tola;-r,-r,-r,._ O Complete

Upon Aoquoot C.oh And ~
Tranam-..... 114-3714213.. 1

Llvl"' Room Sulloo $200, 114371-mG AFTER I P.ll.
'-or Oraon, Eloolrlo, £xM.
font ConciRion IJUO, 11W71272DAFTERI P.M.

• Q8 2

•a s 2
., 0 4

Phillip Alder's new book, " Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon request, for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Ros1yn
fits., NY ll577·0169.

Shoolio, 'IU..Upo And Bratu,.;

F....,._

,..,..............
r':i Vory

Equipment

1 Tiny
2 Grain
3- Llnguo
Calrllnel

25=-:::on

Motorcycles

luclaol Prlcod

52 Sporting Good1
""' and lnd..try. Aoolll In ... 3 lodroomo, .Z lllho, lloll
317 IIAGNUII CHROIIE t400,
ponOion of ·=~ lnduotry. Pump, Goo Fumoco, 1 Acrt, Nloo 2 .. ' bodrocm moblto ·~&amp;81381.
IIUII hno u
oncl
Acldlocn
.....
N2.000.
In lllddfopcrl, · 111151.
wrttt.n communlcldon aldlte, •
o7217.
Coil AR-11 11-Bor rlllo • ' odlnlnlotllllvo and....._,.
• lllnlmum two yoore 4 -oom, 2 F"l lalho, 10 11on1 cr 8oft On Land Contnoci 2 mount
5311. • · - • • 1104-n.
88di'OOio~at
Nllural
Gee
Fur....,.. In Emnomlc Acrlll, ....... 8101!111 lulldlngo,
naco, In Dolltlollo.114 411 2003
.. ri,_ll~. lUll- ~CNol
54 Miscellaneous
-ton .. oquty. .._od Righi 011 211. Cliif. Orl-1401, 1-7 P.ll.
olonl
oJqllllonco.
SubmM
Merchandlae
Or
"""""
with
oolory
qu-o: lo1 Co30, c/o
Faroololn-Ho~twcbodo
P I - Roglotor, 200 lloln
rMm hoUoo, coR I
.a12 or
Pt. PiMUnt, WV 211110.
IIWI2-1211.

0=.

'-fly.

614 4t8 1141.

0711.

3 lodroom · Ronch Stylo On

Ston """ -Inola ot.
Nglonal,lnd .....
orp!lzallont. IAclllo now - .

74

room 1200. "" month $150.

-urlly dotioill. T""" pold, No

2 lodroomo Fumlohod 1200.t1o.
$100 Dopcolt~Wotor,Trah Fwo
•"""!..,....
No Dol Rolwo · - 1
IIHo

Real Estate

POSTAL JOBS

:iiLE.NT PNffil,ER 1

1111 C1tovY 414 Ploko
Up 37.000 lllloo, 1 OW.., Uko
- he- aaoe.Tlroo, ·~7717,.
111

Mobile Homes
torRent

llm~atlon or cuscnminatton
based on race, color, religion,
seK familial status or national
ongtn, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.•

Employment Servtces

42

,..
lDa.ICCD TO
MAA£ Hill\ 1\

Ooldollrmlcrwo~llil
llko now....!71 080.
orl'll'to,.,

D

27 Blemloh
28FIImlng

EAST

By Phillip Alder

1'!....

lui tlmo ouct-. oomplolo
ouctlon
-..
Llco •ood
IM,Ohlo l Wll1 vtrpn!o, 11041'73-571L

DOWN

Order out for
bridge success

•-r

8

24 Brood of

7 4 2

·Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: West

Strlpoo, Laodacl, EIC81fonl Condillon, 11,100, ·~2350.
1110 ....... ~ 4 Doar,

bulkl... brick,
n., on 21c. 101.,
!IOCwliy
.......
$181,000 -1104·
llnonclna. J.H. 8omom1IO,
1171-3030"ar171o4232.

tJ7 5 43

.

om/1m- .. Pl. P!,.o ·.:::r POL, etancfard, 12000, ......w-1114.
1117 Pont. Tnno Am Loodod,
13,000, ·~,... ......... 4 8cood,

labrlce

eecurely

SO liTH

ollvor

P.ll.

metala
600ponwork

22CioMI

WEST
• 7 6 3
•A 9 3
tAKI096
•A 9

-.:104-

58 Soil
51 Unrellrlld

18 ....
11 Notation
19 Mao - -tung

us

•Q

-

1111 PmConquMI Turbo,

~ IMIOoq.

Nomo S""'lo F - . Ylclnlly:
1Awi11 Rqod, Off 01 211, _ ,

Clllllon,

0
"'""' 1 and
,_, o.-r1II 2
Vllllao
llonor
ond
111vwt11ao
Allo~"*111 In lllddfoiiOI'l From

eon.,_..,

O!'.!t

good - · ·

11114 1000 sw ti.!JI!,
Clll l144flo71101, Allor I """

11ryw llook.Up,
Court. Phone 111 441 1101, IMoa CA, P40111c. Doped
Roqulnil.
-771I
114-441o0772 . . . _ 2 P.ll. l I

-

Chovy

12·6-94 '

•K Q

oonct•• VI, tlbao. 30MJ'S..aft7.

room.

Tclll Eloctrfc, Unclorplnnl"', Aoocly To 11c.. lnlo On
Comor Lac .Poll! Lono llobllo

NORTH

11114 llulcll llogol, 4dr., M;, PW,

11111 Rodman 141114, 2 loci-

-

Autolfor 8818

.,...,.!nation

4111om811 olllc:lal

12 Female
13 IDooldly
14 Wrwth

Hoo Boon Spodo,
Kldo, l14-25f.l3114.

t

Wednesday . Dec. 7, t994
•
h
I bl sh a
In the year ahead you mtg I es a '
I
telattonshtp wtth an tmagonaiiVe tnd•v•dua,
whose tile views are un•que. He/she wtl
broaden your outlook.
SAGITTARIUS. (Nov . 23·D&amp;c . 2~~
flunning errands mtghl help soothe yo h·
reslless spirit today. Target several netg
'-~--•
· 1and pay bnef v1S1ts.
""'"""" desttna tons
d
Know where to took lor romance , an
you'll lind it. The Aslro·G~aph Matchmak~•
Instantly reveals wh•ch sgns are romanl
cally perfect for you . Mall $2 tc

Matchmaker . cJo this newspaper. P.O . accomplished.
GEMINI (lllay 21-June 20) Your 1magtna·
Box 4465, New York, NY 10163.
liOn and experience are more valuable
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22.Jan . 191 11 would today than the tdeas ol others. Focus on
behoove you to shop carelully \oday. You your viston instead of theirs.
might not find the best price at the first CANCER (June 21·July 22) Gtve your
store, but try a second or :hird. Spending lime and talents unselfishly today II some ·
some shoe leather could save some dol- one needs assistance rectifying a malter

..

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. -·

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. II) Under your LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Generating coop·
de« management today, situations lhal eration in your associates today will not
could cause problems wilt be handled be difficult if you oonvince them that. what
effectively . You will know exactly how to you intend to do •s as good lor them as it
apply your skills.
is lor you.
·
PISCES (Feb. ZO.March 20) You Will per· VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) This can be a
form most effk:tently today tl you work al roductive day lor you II you establish a
an even tempo. Take ll.me I~ sludy your ~pace. Do not tel anyone set up your
moves inst&amp;ad of acllng •mpulstvely. .
• schedule lor you '
A~IES (!larch 21-Ajlt'U 19) There wtUbe UBRA (5ept. 23-oct. 231 Pleasant SOCial
an opportunity to become beHer acquatnt· ex riences are likely today. A generous
ed with someone today. You will dtscover co:::'panion mtghl even pick up tile lab at
that this person has much 10 common wtlh
• "'
1unc11 or u.nner .
you.
SCORPIO (Oct 24oNov 221 Having a
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20) If you truly lew friends ova," at our place is likely to
dedicate yourself to yOur Obiecltves today, make you happie/than going out and
something or real signtllcance can be
d'
·
,
·
spen tng money .

,,

turning fifty . "You don't just ·grow ·old." her husband
consoled her, "you get old by not GROWING."

DECEMBER 61

�.

Page-1D-The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Ohio Lottery

'

One strike and he's out, Virginian says
asked me not to tell our adopted
parents, whom I consider my real
Mom and Dad, and I promised I
wouldn't I believe he doesn't want
them to know because he is afraid his
name will be removed from the will
if they find oul Aclllally, this is more
a concern of his wife's than his. She
really hates my folks.
Our folks aren't rich, and I don't
give a damn about the will, but I do
care about my parents' feelings. This
news will cenainly tear them up. If
my brother wanted to change his
name. he should have been upfront
about it with the folks and willing 10
live with the consequences.
Don't they have a right 10 know?
This is a tough spot for me 10 be in.
What he did was not righl I need
some advice.·· MR. "Q.T."
DEAR MR. Q.T.: I agree lhat your
parents should be told that your
brolher changed his last name, but the
news shouldn't come from you.
If he doesn't have the guts to tell
them, they'll find out through an
acquaintance or another relative. He

Ann
Landers
"1994, Lot Angeln
llma Syndic-'e and
CreMOI's Syndiclle"

Dear ADD Landers: My brother
and I were both ldopted ·when we
were infants. I was 9 months old, and
my brother was 2.
.
We were adopted by an army
couple stlllioned in Prante at the time.
Dad was hard-boiled and strict while
Mom was very sweet and loving.
Between the two of them, we turned
out preay wen.
1Wo years ago, we located our birth
mother, who introduced us to several
aunts and uncles in Germany. As time
went on, more contacts were made,
and subsequently, my brother's wife
talked him into changing his last
name to our natural mother's name.
She then persuaded him to change the
names of all their children.
When my brother told me about the
name changing, I was very upset. He

cannot keep this from them forevet
Meanwhile, stay out of it Sometimes
when people don't lili:e the message,
they kill the messenget
Dear Ann Landers: I IOially agree
with your advice about violent men.
You said, "One strike and he's out" I
learned this the hard way.
The first time my alcoholic exhusband hit me, I left him. He begged
me to take him back, saying the kids
needed both parents and promising
with his hand on the Bible lhat he
would never strike me again. He even
agreed to go with me for counseling.
A few weeks later, he had one too
many beers and beat me black and
blue. I med for divorce.When he was
served with the papers, he got so
angry he nearly killed me.Thank the
good Lord I was able 10 get out of
the house and run to a neighbor who
called the police. My husband was
arrested, and I am luclcy to be alive
10 tell this story.
Ann, I am not an ignorant woman.
I have a master's degree in sociology
and know all the pitfalls of domestic

PICTURE YOUR CHILD·
AMONG THE ...

violence, but I didn\ believe it could
blppcn to me. Please repeat your
ldvic:e to the women out there. If he
.bits you even once.lcawl and don't
look back. -- GRATEfUL 10 BE
ALIVE IN VIRGINIA
DEAR GRATEFUL: Thanks for
the documentalion. Too many women
want so desperately to keep their
Jamily together lhat they will put up
with anything.
A man who hits his wife, drunk or
sober, will almost always do it again.
A slap or a punch can easily escalate
to a beating. I repeat my admonition
- "One strike and you're out"
Lousome? Talct charge ofyour lifo
alld 1ur11 it aroUild. Writt for A1111
Landtrs'lltW booklet, "How to Malct
Frit11ds a11d Stop Being Louly."
Stnd a st/f-addlrsstd, lo11g, busilltss·
si:e t11velope and a chtck or mouy
ordtr for $4.15 (litis illcludu postage and handling) ro: Friends, clo
A1111 Landtrs, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago; 111. 6061UJ562. (/11 CaNJda,
send $5 .05.)

Our special page(s)
(lc years of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 23RD
.
t

Aated If be Iw a problem witb
wbat Waabington is doing, Geauga
County fanner D. Kevin O'Reilly
said: "How mucb time do you
· bave?"

PINN tncloN ttll·oddmotd,
...mped onvolopeto rotum your

phoio

O'Reilly operates a 200-acre
grain and sbeep ·farm
tbe nonbH in
said
· cast Obio county. e
be was
frustrited
by
tb4!l
govCIDDICIIt
aoo and doCa DOl ....,;ci...,•• inyears
fru'.
...
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Arrangements were discussed
for serving tbe canteen. at tbe
American Red Cross bloodmobile.
Nancy Morris and Peggy Harris
were oo-cbairmen.
A thank you note was received
from Darla, Scottie, Kaylee and
Clarice Kennedy for being invited
to tbe children's Halloween party.
Mrs. Kennedy is an honorary mem-

A project of helping a needy
family for Christmas was discussed
at a recent metins of tbe Middlepon Cbild Conservation League
held at the Rock Springs United
Melhodist Cbun:b.
Presents will be given to the
cbild in tbe family and food will be
donated to tbem fa Ouistmas dinner. This is an annual project of tbe
organimti011.

bcr of lbe organization.

Plans were made for a potluck
holiday dinner at 6:30 on Dec. IS.
There will be a homemade ornament ellcbanged and tbe decorated
packages will be judged for the
prettiest, most original and most
unusual.
Kitty Darst presided at the meet·
ing wbicb opened witb the pledge

tbe·Kountry Kitcben Restaurant in
Racine.
Kathryn Hart presided at tbe
meeting during wbicb time it was
noted that tbe holiday home deco~ raling contest will be _beld Dec. 13

Heather Fin/a w... continued rrom Page
and featured princess seams and
lace-edged collar. They eacb carrled natural baskets filled witb
ivory and coral rose petals, and
accentuated witb ivory and coral
satin ribbons and flowers.
The groom \Yore black tails witb
ail ivory shirt and black vest an!J
tie Best man was Cbuck Pullins ot-f
cOlumbus, and groomsmen were
Allen Beit of Hartford. W.Va., and
Donnie Fry of Pomeroy. Usher and
acolyte waa Matt Fin law of Long .
Bottom, brotber of tbe bride. Evan
King cousin of tbe bride, was the
rinJ·bearer and be carried an ivory
saun l!!ld ,Jaa: pillow. The groom's
party Wore: black tails, identical to
tbe groom. and Ivory and coral
boutoonieres.
For ber daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Finlaw wore a long-sleeved
ivory ahd peacb floral droppedwaist dresS wilb lace trim and pearl
jewelry. Mrs . Syl!der was i~ a
turquoise and wbite tapestry pnnt
ensemljle.

&amp;

A reception was held in tbe
cburcb fellowship ball rollowing
the ceremony. Tbe wedding cake
was a seven-tier design done in
ivory witb sotas lacework and
pearls. It featured a glass cross and
beart cake topper witb lace and
tu!le. There were ivo!Y and coral
mmiature roses and tvy between
the tiers. The cake knife used by
the couple was tbe same one tbe
bride's parents used at tbeir wedding.
,
The bride's gown, as well as
tbose of lbe bridal party, were all
made by the bride's mother and all
of tbe flowers were arranged by
Carol Adams, Syracuse.
Servers at the reception were
Carol Brewer, Pam Crow and
Marge !Jarr. Re~isterin~ tbe guests
were Lindsey Wi~t, NICOle Meekstrotb andJemca Johnson, all
cousins of lbe bride.
.
' The. coupl~ ~pent tbetr honeymoon .m V~rgmm Beacb and now
res111e m Columbus.

from 6 to I! p.m. Out-of-town
judges will select the tbree winners
and prizes of $50, $30 and $20 will
be awarded. Tbe winners will be
announced in The DaUy Sentinel, it
was decided.
It was reported tbat tbe new season's greetings banners will be
bung rigbt away.
·
Cbristmas in lbe Park is scbeduled for Dec. IS beginning witb a
candlelight walk and caroling. Kris
and Paul Harris, representing
RACO will recite "The Nigbt
Before Christmas" during tbe program . Tbe Racine American
Legion Post 602 Aulliliary, and the
RACO will provide candy treats
for Santa to distribute, and a live ·
manger scene with ligbted tree,
bonftre and display of a miniature
Racine Village will be included in
tbe festivities. Refreshments will
be provided:
.
Donations of homemade cookies are needed and anyone wisbing
to donate is asked to contact Marilyn Powell.
in otbet business Mary Ball and
Flllllk and Delores Oeland's pb'one
numbers will be provided to tbe
Travel and Touriam Office. Information may be obtained by calling
the members. regarding the second
annual RACO flower festival set
for April 22.

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Logan ASCS and SCS oftkes 10 close; duties sbifled to Atbena
County offiCe.

- Lawrence County

Ironton ASCS, SCS offices to close; dutiea sbifted to Gallla
County office.

- Vinton County

M Artb ASCS SCS
· c
ur
'
OITJCCS to close; duties sbifted to Jackson
County office. ·

~--~----------------------------~ fiw~.
paperwork for tbeir federal subsi-

dies.

USDA offices would disappear

frow
H Oeauga, HamUton, Harrison,

"It really isn't too feasible to
maintain
-·-"we bave m'
----- the wbole ...,.,
soutbeaat Obio," Sbeets said. "I
ca
ee · t
'
edu Ctng
·
s•-~s'... JUS reason &amp;Or r
"""
Geoffrey Hammond, a Morgan

~e:;!~':m:= d'!Ytw~

person agricultural office in tbe
c:ounty seat of McConneUsviUe. He
said its staff is efficient and oversees $11 million wonb of fiii'IIICB'
panidpation in programs.
"llhlnlt a lot of people will·quit

'

C. William Swank, tbe farm
bureau' s executive
' VIce
' prest'dent,
said the old system bad its sbare of
fru
·
F ·
·
· StraUons,
too. or tnstance, II
forced rarmen 10 deal witb two or
tbree arms of tbe same federal
~:!mtbaO:.:,~'t communi"The tr'ansition may be awkward and diffieuJL but Ibm bave to
be efficiencies for the farmer and
for tbe gOVCIDIIIent," Swank said.
"We're going to support it every
way we Clll."

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Premium Ohio Grown ,
6' to 7'
• ·

~

Mail or bri11g the enlQ' form to:

40% off Regular Price

The Daily Sentinel '

Now 112- 118

Open 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. daily
12 noon - 5 p.m. Sunday .

111 Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ill. Hubbard's Greenhouse ·
·

BRIDGE DEMOLISHED - Worllen for

... ow. ..... Carpcndon nceatly ............
........ •

Clallllllrtdp or- lhe

011 . . . . . . . . . -

l&amp;' ..... k&lt;;' ..;o;O,I\&lt;;',.,..1\&lt;;',.o;l;, .•

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on tbe proposal after it became
clear tbat several lawmakers from
g·eo,..nbically spread out districu
.,.......
objected. Undtzcurreot JX'(ICCdures.full
.
lawmakers may bire 18 full-time
and
part-time
to
worttwo
in tbeir
offices employees
in Wasbingtoo
and the bome distriels. Wbile SliDe
lawmakers maintain only one
offtce in tbeir district, others feel
tbe need for more.
on1
or twoEwnRepubso,0f:usesa~r ~=

staff allotment, and Gingricb said

---ne would appolllt a task force to
study tbe subject.

Blakes lee bas served on tbe
Area Agency's Regional Advisory
CouncU 011 Aging for all 20 years.
Tbe Council reviews and comments on all community policies
and programs wbicb affect older
Americans. assists the Area Agency staff in assessing needs of older '
adults, and Identifying resources
·available to meet tbesc needs, and
recommends to tbe Executive
Committee of Buckeye Hills programs wblcb sbould be awarded
funding. as well as.funding levels.

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

p-~~!~~!!~
B..

OffiCials said 110 vote was taken

Restaurant Ia Atbens during the
20tb anniversary celebration of lbe
Buckeye Hills-Hocking· Valley
·Development
Regional
District/Area Agency on Aging .

0

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during tbe day to tbe buge, relormmindt!l Dmtocratic fresbman class
tbat came to power in tbe Watergate era'- the caucus decision on
cutting personal staff was a setback.

be bonored Friday at the Sportsman

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If the proposed building sale

was a victory for lbe ftrst-termers
- a group tbat Gingricll compared

C. E. Blakeslee of Pomeroy will

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sis of tbe savings of staff cuts put
into moliOD by lbe GOP. Tbe most
likely building to be offered for
sale is a structure a few blocks
from tbe CapiiOI, and neitber lawmaker offered an estimate of its
value.

Blakeslee to
be.honored

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- Hocking County

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Syracuse . . . 992-577jf

A .separate FmHA office in Atbens to be moved into a USDA
mul~ belldquarten office in Atbeoa.

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Estimates will be obtained for
repair work on tbe women's rest
room at Star Mill Park.
Mrs. Hart appointed Mary Ball,
Ann Zirkle, and Frank Cleland to
tbe nominating .committee. New
officers wUI be elected at tbe Dec.
27 meeting at Star Mill Park.

J

- Athens County

WASHINOTON (AP) - Mov- tinuing tbeir caucus today by for- for a Pennsylvania caucus recepinJ swiftly on a campaign pledge _ mally naming axnmittee cbairmen, lioa to floral, liquor and pas11y bills
of smaller government, House· · · incloding Telllll Bill An:ber at '!be for a variety of groups.
Republicans want to sell one of tax-writina Wavs and Means ComWbile mucb public allflltion bas
·five Howe office buildings and cut mittee and Robert Livingston of been focused 011 the blact caucus,
off $5 millioo in federal subsidies Louisiana as acting bead of tbe tbe two legislative service organ!·
for tbe Congressional Black Cau- Appropriations Committee.
zatious tbat play tbe widest role in
cus and numerous otber groups.
In some cases, Gingrich decided · tbe House are tbe Democratic
"The American people voted to ignore tbe senionty system and Study Group and tbe Republican
decisively Ibis year to cbange elevate junior members be bopeg Study Committee. Botb provide
tbinss,'' Rep: Newt Glngricb of will be more aggressive in carrying . material for Iawmalrers on JegislaGeorgia, tbe Incoming House out the campaign "Contract Witb tiOD pending before the House.
spcwk«, said Tuesday after a puty Americ;a."
Officials for several groups
caueus in wbicb the 72 inooming
Republicans are also expected to JX!llested the move .
fmbmcn played an aggressiw role. formally ratify a proposed set of ·· Wbile tbe "Contract Witb
"'lbey voted overwhelmingly tbat rules cbanges that tbe fuU House America" envisions a tbree·fiftbs
tbia is tbe year to dramatically will adopt in January.
majority to pass a tax increase, tbe
sbrink tbe Congress."
'
Republicans said their plan to leadership now favors applying tbe
In a closed-door caucus tbat cut off funding from so-called leg- tbree-ftftbs requirement only to an
luted muc:b of tbe day, Repubti· islalive service orgaoizati~ would 1naease in inoome tax rates. Aides
ua11 There
• milli
eana atso approved a tbree- term saw $J
011 ann y.
are said the modification is necessary
limit 111 oommittee and suboommit- Dilw 28 sucb groups, including lbe to leave room for raising some
.,e cbalrmen, rejecting a proposal black caucus, tbe arts caucus, tbe taxes wbile towering others as
ID extend tbe time to a fourth tam. populiat caUCUB and .tbe~ cau- Republicans implement tbeir ambi·
. . .eral fu
..,_ tious 100-day agenda.
BlJl de._._
ua•wg to tbe -~-~• ....,. of 1aw- cus. tbat use •&amp;.,..
to IW~
from
Uo
rural
dis
taff
H
om
i
maken
sp11w g,
- s , use ouse
ce equ pment
Tbe plan to sell off one of tbe
tricts, they sbelved a proposal from and make free use of House office buildin'gs tbal bouses con-•ional
.,_,
torie a
in
o-tbc •u ..·termers to orce a 1cut
space.
staff waa pusbed by tbe large, 12pcnmhtaff.
Rep. Scott- Klug of Wisconsin member GOP freabman class.
Republicans will eofm:e a one- called tbese organi7Ji!iMs a "aim- Rep.-elect Sam Brownbeck of
tbird cut in committee staffs and mering scandal waiting to bap- Kansu emerged from tbe caucus to
elimin•le tbree oommittees, stepS it pen.' ' Lawmalrers said tbeir expen- say tbe idea was to beftin mating
Is estimated will save about $3S ditures are rarely if ewr audited decisious oo.a businesslike basis.
milllllla year.
and money cannot be accounted
On
00 b secood fresb
--1-11-~ Witb tbe 104tb Gonjress set-to-· for ..Republicanadiatributed a abeet
am 011 Ya
. •
convene in four weeks. House saying tbeir review indicated IIUIII;"Joe-Scarboro~f Flonda,
Republican lawmakers were oon- expenditures ranging from $9,287 ~~;;::sis and l~.:Y~

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to tbe Oag and tbe Motber' a Prayer.
For ron call members named something for wbicb tbey are tliankful.
Devotions were entitled "Snowman" taken from Ideals and siveo
by Darst
Darst and Linda Broderick were
hostesses. Patti Arnold won tbe
door prize. Sbe and Casi Arnold
were guests.

1

By The Alloclated Prell
NeigblniDg Ollio COODiies wbere tM Department of Agriculture
is closing field offices:

participating in government farm
programs,'' said Glenda Thomas,
wbo operates a dairy farm in Mon-.
roe County.
Agriculture Secretary Mike
Espy said ·he wants to close 34 ·of
tbe state's 109 USDA offices aa
part of an overall plan to elimiDaee
more tban I ,070 offices nation·
~ome Obio cou~ties would' be
affected to a lesser degree, as
p1acea witb men tban one office in
tbe IIIIIIC town or ooun1ry would be
oonsolitlated into ooe-stop service
centers bandling multiple programs,
The CDtire plan Ia designed to
streamline the buge bureaucracy,
· perhaps saving $3.6 billion over

Rilpublicans -m'i:ive -;a··sell off House office building

Article 19 gave nationwide suffrage ·to women. This amendment
was proposed to tbe Legislatures of
tbe several States by tbe Sixty-ftftb
C011gress, baYing been adoJ!!ed by
tbe Howe of Representatives, May
21, 1919 and by lbe Senate June 4,
1919. On August 26, 1920 tbe
United States Secretary of State
procl•i!D"'4 it in effect, baYing been
adopted by three quarters of tbe
Statca. Article 20 sets tbe terms of
President and VIce President to
begin on Janwuy 20; !bose of IICIIB·
tors and representatives on Jan. 3.
Article 21 repealed tbe 18tb
amendment (probibition).
Net meeting will be Dec. 10 at
the Meigs County Library. "Cbristmas in India" will be presented by
Mrs. David Gntbam.

ill

Ohio offices closing down

oclting, Lake, Lawrence, Lucas,
Maboning, Monroe, Morgan,
. =USDA offices oould maJce ='Ie, Summit and Vinton coon. it
for farmers wbo do partieDavid Sbeets, president of tbe
ipalc, be said.
· Hockini County farm bureau, said
Tbe department on Tuesday be understands Washington's
8IUIOuoccd plana to pull olftceS out desire streamline government,
of 13 Ollio oounties, forcing farm- capecially witb tbe numla offannera to go elsewbere to process tbe en di'clin!~S·

'Official Entry
Form

Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughten of t•e
American Revolution. WalcbiDg her spiD. l'tom
the left, are Abbey ·sentton, Grace Elcb, Mary
Carolyn Wiley, and Mary PoweU.

Plans made for home decorating contest

'

are

ones.

CCL plans holiday remembrances at church

Plans for a bome decorating
contest and Cbrisrmas in tbe Park
were made during a business meeting wbicb followed a Thanksgiving
dinner of the Racine Area Community Organization held recently at

CINCINNATI (AP)- Obio
farmers
concerned tbat Washington's plan to close or consolidate some U.S. Department of
Agriculture offices will make it
men of a bassle b fiiiiDelS to get
their paptlWOit processed.
FII'IIICIII inla'Viewed Tuesday at
tbe Ollio Fann Bureau Fedmtion's
annual meeting worried tbat tbe
plan will cause confusion in government proarams, make it more
dlflicult to set belp from county
offices and replace experienced
qriculture agents witb younger

Per Picture Prepaid
'

2 Secllona, 16 P8gM 3 5 A lluiUmldla Inc. Newlplper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 7, 1994

Ohio farmers co·ncerned
about USDA's merger plan

"For Children Only"

$1000

a

9163
Buckeye 5:
l-9-11-33-36

Vol. 45, NO. 152
Coprrtgh11894

-ONLY-

aged balding area, Mrs. Scbul said
IIIey have acquired some excellent
guard dogs, Great Pyrenees, 10 belp
protect their flock from such predators as coyotes, wild dogs, and
domestic dogs. The dog' &amp; size and
manner discourages animals from
trying to enter lbe ftelds wbere tbe
sheep graze.
Mrs. Schul concluded ber presentation witb a demonstration of
spinning on spinning wbeel and
witb a band bekl spool.
Regent Eleanor Smitb conducted tbe meeting with Mary Kay
Yost presenting a flag fact - it
must never touch anything beneath
it,·including tbe ground.
Mrs. Yost also read tbe 19th,
20tb and 21 Amendmenrs to the
Constitution of tbe United States.

Pick 4:

en tine

The Daily Sentinel

ume of wool she now bas eacb year
tbe band washing and combing
processes is very time consuming
and impossible to process a large
volume of wool. However, sbe
said, she holds back a number of
bigb quality fleeces of wool for
processing herself. The wool processed and combed by tbe processing plant is returned to ber in rovlngs or ropes of fleece for band
spinning into slceins ready to create
capes. mittens, sweaters, ek:. These
hand processes IK:count for the bigb
quality yam and increase in cost
compared to ordinary yarn.
Since lbe Jaoob Sheep are smaller tban ordinary sbeep, predators
are a ooncem witb raising this rare
breed of sheep. To belp protect tbe
sbeep, although held in a well man-

499

•

in the

SPINNING - Nam:y Schul talked about
Jacob Sheep, yam 1111d Its uses, and demonslnted spinning at a recent meeting or Return

Pick3:

Pap4

Spinning
Jacob's sheep
wool DAR
demonstration
Jacob Sbeep, rovings, bandspun
yam, spinning wbeels, milteiiS, and
shawls wae the topic of discussion
at tbe reoent meeting of the Return
Jooathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, during
a demonstration by Mrs. Nancy
Scbul.
.
Herman and Nancy Scbul, Tuppers Plains, raise Jacob sbeep on
their farm, sbear tbe sbeep and process the wool for tbeir own use and
for sale. Sbe spins the wool on
spinning wbeels tbat sbe bas collected.
Mrs. Scbul said that tbe Jacob
Sbeep whicb originated in Syria
were farst imported to tile United
States in tbe SO's and 60's for flock
development. Tbe sbeep take their
name from tbe Biblical story in
Genesis, where it is recorded tbat
Jacob worked for bis fatber-in-law
and received all tbe spotted sheep
from tbe flock as payment for his
labor, she said.
The Scbuls are members of tbe
Jacob's Breeders Association and
bave some of their ewes registered
in the .association's flock book.
Tbeir flock increases eacb year
since tbe ewes lamb twice a year
and twins, even triplets are common. Jacob Sheep have distinctive
1118IDngs of bi!K:k and lilac patches
over lbe eyes and· on the muzzle.
1be fiber from a single fleece can
be spun into a variety of shades,
from wbite tllrougb gray/lilac to
black, Mrs. Scbul explains.
By combining colors, be ather
and variegated effects can be
~K:complisbed, sbe noted. In ber
presentation, Mrs. Schul outlined
lbe steps in tbe processing of tbe
finished yarn.
With the size of tlleir current
flock, tbey bire a professional
shearer to shear the sheep once a
year, sbe said. The sheared wool is
then washed by ber or sent 10 a processing plant for wasbing and
combing. Sbe noted that wilb a vol-

Meigs
snaps long
losing spell

._llhw

Ke- Hen. c-ty 119·

•••miD•

Robert Euoa
tile brldp aUt.
Euoa Aid tile $211,HI replacemeat ltrldp
-y be,.. ...... bJ tile ... rtl JMUrJ.
.
DHr

· Tbe contributions of Eleanor
Tbomai, former director of tile
· Meigs County Senior Center, and
Susan Oliver, current director, to
lbe .aing network of Soutbeastem
Obio wm also be aclmowledged
during tbe meeting.

NEW MIDDLEPORT LEADERS- Tlte ~eo­
muulty A.odadon elected new olllcen f..- llll!llt·r-r 81 1b _ . . ,
ly -tbtg 1at ulgbL They are front row, SecreluJ ...tty Aadlr·
11011. Rear. TftU111'ft' Dick 01Na, left, PallldeM Dennk Hnrhwt
and Secretary Patty Aadawo. Hodm•• nc:ceed1 former prealdent Tom Dooley. (Seatlael pllofo by Georp Abate)

Middleport to seek
revitalization funds
•

facades and any oode viollliolls.
By GEORGE ABATE
Altboufh tbe application will
Sentinel Neww Staff
· Tbe Middleport Community require qutle a bit of wort. lltiCII
Association endorsed pursuins bas already been prcpiRld incladstate revitalization srant fundins ins 10 f"0'410111ic imp11ct st•eement.
'
for tbe villaF. at its regular meelinJ sbeadded.
Community .Auociltioa PrW-·
Tuesday nigbl
Middleport 'rants coordinator deDI Tom Doolcf said .tbe sroup
Jean TrusseD said even tbougb lbe needed to COIDIDit to seetin8 the
viJiase's chances for getting fimded grant
"I bate to DOt apply because It
remain slim it sbould still 1ry. 1be
migbt
imply tbll we don't Willi it,"
last two years, Middlqxxt' s efforts
Dooley
said. "If thele's a ~ in
to gain Ibis fiDiding failed.
About $2.3 million will be Ibis county witb a vision it'a us.
divided between about six oommu- Wben we say we'D do sometbilis
nities across Obio, Trussell said. we do it We bave a gOod reputaLast year, Pomeroy nx:eived about tion in tbe oommunity and we need
$750,000 wben counting local to keep il"
Newly-elected president Deania
malcb money.
.
Hockman
said tbis funding lall8lns
Two rounds of funding will be
held Ibis year - one in February imporlant
"The ma;or asset of Ibis town is
and one in October, TrusseD said.
About 25 ~plicants are e~~ted its downtown. l'bat's our mall,"
to vie for this funding - wbile last Hockman said;li"We're sending a
sttong message to council."
year only 14 oompeted. sbe added.
One problem that must be recti"I want to know if you want tbis
and tben I' II lake It to oouncil. I fied in Ibis application is listing
need your suppon in the lead," e.~limates for tbe worlc to be dille,
Trussell said. "We bave to mardi it Trussell added. She said abe bows
dollar for dollar. We're looking f&lt;I StXMliiC wbo will make a free estileverage money now to make us mate f&lt;I busincuea iD IDWD.
In otber IICiiolt, the 8fOUP reportmore competitive."
ed
its November fioanclal stateLast year. a boat launcb grant
was used as mak:hing funds, she ment. Tbe ending balance was
said. This year, the Iauncb will $5,605.26, up from $5,042.51 a
have 10 be spent before the period mootb earlier. F'mal bilb from tbe
when It can be used as matclliog Middlepon River Festival still
~. "
. aren't in 10 an 'lsessmeat of the
But, Trussell added sbe could event's snccesa ~n't be made,
not predict the viJiase' s chances for Dooley added. '
Tile new officcn for nezt year
funding. The Fetxuary session will
likely fail, but October oould suc- inchade Trasurer Diet Owea, Secretary Pltty ADdersoa and Preaiceed. sbe said.
.:rm beartmed by !be business- dent Dennis Hodr:man. Doolev
'
es tbat bave opened in the last rew tJiiiimt lliC pq~ for lhclr
years," Trussell said, adding that during bis ltliure as pmiden~
existing businesses and propeny last two yea.
The next meetins will be beld at
owners can make upgrades to
5:15p.m. Jan. 3.

Local News in Brief:
Youth training providers sought
Gallia-Meigs C'rmmnni!y Action Agency is seeking edooitiODal
institutioos to provide oompctency-based training for at-risk youth,
ages 16-21, in Meigs County. All participating youth must meet
Jobs Training Pannership Aa (ITPA) eligibility.
Training sbould Include pre- and post-testing measurements of
pre-employmeat oompe~encies and job specific skills related to lbe
retail sates industry.
All traioinB sbould be offered during regular scbool boon IDd
should result in tbe acquisitioo of academic mdit per youth tninee.
The training program must consist of a minimum of 60 training
contact boln per studeot.
.
Training instructm must bave a demonstnited pcqormance IDd
cettificalion, where appropriate, for serving at.fist youth. For more
information, c011tact CAA-JTPA, P.O. Box 272, Cheshire, Obio
4S620, pbone 367-7341 or 992-6629 by Dec. 9.

Youth cited in Monday accident
'

'
A Long Bottom youtb was cited for failure
to oootrol by tbe 011lia-Meigs Post of tbe State Higbway Patrol following a one-car
aasb Mooday 011 State Roote 124.
Everette L. Cline, 16, sum State Roote 248, was soutbbnmd 1n
Oliw Townsbip at 8:30 iUD. wbeo be loa! control of lbc car, slid off
tbe left side of the road, and SlruCk a mailbox IDd culvert.
Tbe car was sligbtly damaged, acxordins to tbe repon.

Continued on p~g• 3

..

.

r

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