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                  <text>Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Ohio

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PageS

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1994 FORD
T-BIRD LX

1994 FORD
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station Wagon, 4 cyl.,
air cond., AM/FM
atarao, cruiH control,
IUQIIIIII• I'ICk, rear wiper,
air Illig.
Only 3,000 mllaa.

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crul118 po- INt, PS,

Vol, 45, NO. 154
Copyright 111114

PW, power door
IIOC:KI, mora.

Only 8,000 mllll.

Cremeans named to two committee posts
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Aslocllted l'l:al Writer
WASHINGTON - Closed-door meetings by a
small group of HOUle Republicans ended Thursday
with a bonanza for Obio.
Rep. Rob Portman won a seat on the tax-writing
Ways and Means Committee; Rep. Martin Hoke
sccuied a seal on lbe JUtticiary Committee; and the
sta~·s four congressmen-elect all got desirable

THE WALLS CAME
DOWN • A Uttle dter !I a.m.
WedBtldltJ, tiM ..til power·

bMM at 1M r - Wilt Vlr&amp;lllla OrdullCe Wow ,..
'mplode«L n toot 11e IJOIIIIdl
fllap...... to .... tie-..... ~rlclt llrDct•n to tile
....,... Ia /1 few ........ Pic~ . . . . . tle .,..........
pllait flltleln4o&amp;aalaa s-Ite
......... ftlled ............
b•lldiDI cr•mbled. To tile
rlallt. worlten looll oYer 1M
dellltl• ..., ...,..e l'or ....
cln•·•P· Ia late Nonmber
tile IODtll po..,erlloue wa1
I
W. Tlte r-al flltlte
1a • para or ...
Aray Corp• or lqlaeen
deu-Dp elfort at tlJe fonMr

DSSignmeii!S•

The state did well for two reasons: With 13
Republicans, it's a big delegation. What's more, it
had a seat at the negotiating table, with Ohio Rep.
Ralph Regqla tepr senting the ~gion covering Ohio,
Michigan lild Indiana.

993
FORD
•
TAURUS GL SEDAN

••1 ....
,._aw

:UL v-e, automatic, air
cond., AMJFM c:uaatte,
power aeat, PS, PB, PW,
power door kickl, air bag,

more. ,

wvow.

cy's board to vote on making lbe
recommendation aboul the
reconless to the Federal Aviation
functions.
Adminlstradoo, which orders airAnd if a newet, more sophisti- Une safety improvements, Benson
caled kind had been instaUed on said.
·
US Air Flight 427, attem_pts to
Tbe teCilldet 011 Flight 427 kept
determine the cause of !be Sept 8 coded .Information on 11 aircraft
crash would be moving akllg iDDCJI functioDs. It. met the requlteuients
more quietly, acc:onlln&amp; ID Nllliotl- for lhe type of Boeing 737-300 that
a1 Transponation Safety Board crashed but fell far short of what
spoteaman Michael Benloo.
reconlen installed on new planes
"We are still in lhe fact-flndlng are n:qulied to doclimcnt.
stage of this accident,"· Benson
· Tbe aviatioo Industry traditioosald Wednesday. "With better ally baa opposed uPdated lMliden
bladt boxes, we would have beell on older 7'!i7s becanse of CX&gt;St.
much fat1her advanced."
·~ -· 1)te NTSB illvcstipton also .-e
As a result, !be NTSB Is consld- considerina recommending conerlng reamunendins new rules to lamination standards for aircraft
improve black boxes - also bydtaullc fluids.
·
~wn as flight data recorders Af~ discovering cootaminatioo
ooolderairplancs.
in the plane's rudder · control
lnvcatipton may ask the aaen· bydtaullc fluid, investi&amp;ators found

Jail tenses
for trouble
after brawl
LEBANON (AP) - Oflidals at
the Warrea Corteclloaai lnatiludoo
planned to have extra staff members on duty todly because of a
lunchtime flJht in which ~ree
inmates w= injmed, a spoteamu
said.
There were no addldoaal inci- ·
dents W~schy night and no special p~cautlons wete necessary,
said Lawtenee Mack, deputy warden of popama lillie prison.
About 20 inmates were confined
to isolated segregation units
Wednesday afternoon so they muld
be questioned about !be ftgbt, aaid
Sandy Clawford, an aide ID w.dcn
. AntbOily Brigano.
It was not clear how many
inmates were fightina. PRsonr.rs
gave inveatiiP'nra several vcnloas
of how dlefigbt llarteCI. abe Wd.
No prison employees were hurt.
'fbc fight oocuncd ill I COIDmOII
livina area between cells ia the
prison's Unit 28 compound, Ms.
Cmwfonl wd. The area can bold
as many u 130 inmatea
No weapons were
and
oo dlarges
filed Wednesday.
Mack old 1111 IDvesdaation could
be complcled today.
Dennis Ea&amp;llltld, 34, .wlto is

w•

lbat apparently no standards for the
purity or maintenance of lhe fluid
exists once It leaves lhe manuflic~-

'

One of lhe theories on lbe aash

is that contaminated fluid contributed to a malfunction of the
rudder or other control sutfacea.

Authorities are also conslderiDg
wbelber an outside sial 011 lhe lead-

Two lntDMtl llaled at the .
Lr:D
iaflrmary for bnilaea and
eyea. Tiley were ldettdfied •

Fist Folia', 26, wlto II aesvlq I
liCe lliiD for DBder aod qpaVIftld
robbery from Hamlltoa-Coanty,
. .oot..y Iprmty, 31, aav~n1 14
10 50 )'aD for JQ""'sfoo of aim!·
1111 tools aod qgravlled burglary
fran Moe..,.......Y Couoty,
The prt1011 laad 1,S29 lntDates
· tllla week. It 1111d the aearby
~nC~wmalln~rodoo

are cloae-securlly lnstltutloaa,
meaninJ lbey are ouc step below
.mM!miiDIICICIIIity.

\.

. will supply ana pee!lllOau w1t1t eq_uiJ!m~nt !lnd supplies lnclud111&amp; beaten, plaltk for .....-=ei, IDjettiOD pumps, water ltoscs,

Rftft....~-~­

in&amp; ed&amp;e of the left wing could
have become partially detached, ~ Cut Christmas~~
· Premium Ohio Grown .:_:.
conlributin&amp; to the Boeing 737's
6' to 7'
sbatp ron to the left.
1'be Boeing 737 baa thta: slats.
40% off Regular Price :
each about 8 feet loo&amp;. on the froot
~ow '12 - '18
••
edge of each wing, between the
.·· Open 9 a.m. • 5 p.m. daily ·:
wingtip and lbe engine pod. In lbe
· 12 noon - 5 p.m. Sunday •.
Aight 427 wreckage, all the slats
seemed to be in !be proper position
·•· Hubbard's Greenhouse ·..
except the outside left slat, wblch
was so severely damaged that ~ Syracu~ . . .. 992~5?7!a'
investigators could not determine N~&amp;•&amp;e - .

.-

out the coupon below, and you'll get 20% otT the subscription cost.
But hurry, this offer expires
·'
December 31 , 1994!

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The Dail Sentinel

nesses key, he added.
"I see the growth in this industry

as non-stop and particularly in this
area," Zala said. "We realize the
quality of the plant market is definitely on the up-swing. The number
of growers will increase and the
number of sq~ feet use for production will increase also. You'll
see pun gteenhouses."
Zala emphasized the company
will not sell any retail items. To
make any purchases, an individual
must have a vendors' license and
set up an account.
·
!!We wanl to thank the local
grower for all the suppon they've
given us over the years. They are
the main ~n we're he~." Zaia
said, adding he appreciates the
work of county economic develoDmcnt director Julia HoudasheltThonnton and Jeff Harris Farms.
BFG will provide any equipment and supplies a local grower
might need. Inventory includes:
heaters, plastic for greenhouses,
injection pumps, water hoses, all
the chemicals - Fafard, Scotts,
Peters Excel fertilizers and Pro·

TOLEDO. Ohio (AP) - The for a story published today that the ' skull,"·sbe said.
His lawyer, William Todd, said
State Medical Board hu decided death of the baby, Amanda, has
.
Swann was a resident at the time of
against disdplininll an obstetrician haunted him.
"To Ibis day, it bothers me. the births and was acting under the
even though be provided substandard care that may bave injured How can you not be bothmd by orders of another doctor.
"We reaUy look at Ibis as a victwo babies and contributed to the something like this?" Swann said.
"lt
buns.
I'm
a
human
being,
and
tory,"
Todd said. "What the board
death of a third.
·
those
people
I
take
care
of
are
concluded
was ... it wasn't his med1be board Wcdoesday decUned
buman
beings,
and
it
buns."
ical
decision.
At that point in bis
to take action against Dr. Gary
The baby's grandmother, Dom training, be was acting at the direcSwann of Toledo because at lbe
time of the deliveries be was a Lincoln, told The Blade that she lion ofthe'attending physician." ·
A ~ident is a t»cent graduate
"doctt-in·tralnlng wbo was asked was di~inted that lhe board did
of medical school wbo ·is lillining at
to perfOIID well beyond his level of not discipline Swann.
''I think a slap on the wrist is a hospital.
competence." ·
Board spokeswoman .Lauren
Swann faced three charges of not enough for him," sbe said '.'1
know
what
went
on
in
that
delivezy
Lubow
said tbe board, in mating
not meeting minim•! standatds of
room
....
That
was
very
shabby
·
its
ruling,
'accepted the JP1X!P'ii"''l~- The DtaXimiiDI penalty could
dation of ID investigator, witb a
have been loss of his medical medical ~-"
"There were bruises all ovet her few modifications. The bOard did
license.
Swann did not Rturn a phont face. Sbe had a full bead of hair, so not ~lease !be names of lbe babies'
they we~ probably on ber skull, parents.
call seeldng tWJtneDt Thursday.
The tb_!'CC babies we~ born in
But Swann, 38, told The .Blade too. I mean, sbe bad a fractured

pali0,949

Subsaiptlon ordc~ by:

By GEORGE ABATE
_
"We located in this couoly
Sentinel News Starr
· because of a heavy poclcct of grow·
· BFG Supply Co. founder John ers in Me.lgs County,~ Zala said.
Gander is ~nuning to his Southeast "We want to draw fintn the immeOhio rootS.
diate area and also outside of this
· A native of McConnelsville, ares."
·
Gander opened his ninth horticulThe 6,()()().square-f&lt;i0t buil~
tural wholesale opemtion in Port- and 1,800-square-foot loading
land yesterday establishing a at Harris Farms w= perfectly fit~gional base for his business.
led for the company's needs, Zala
With $30 million in sales last said. BFG will strictly ~nt space
year, BFG Supply Co. is the lead- from Harris Farms _;with the posing greenhouse supplier in the Mid- sibility that with enough growth a
west, said Chuck Zala, a BFG sales separate warehouse could be built
representative. Holding its grand later, he added.
opening yesterday, the one-man
"We have a minimum•of a fiveoperation had its ftrst day of busi- year commitment to this facility,"
ness.
,
Zala said. ''We hope to be here for
The Ponland warehouse- the 20 or 30 years. We're definitely
companies' ninth -will serve a here to slay."
125-mile mdius in Southeast Ohio
The firm already has a strong
and clear to Charleston, W.Va., relationship with local growers,
Zaia said. BFG already bas ware- Zala said, adding they supply mo~
houses in Ohio, Michi&amp;an, New than 50 percent of the area growers.
York and Pennsylvania and
"We're not coming into the area
empiO)'S ~ut 110 employ~
and getting new busi~ess. We're
BFO got Its s181t as a retail flow- just doing this as a semce to grower shop - shifting strictly to ers," Zala said.
wholesale about 20 years ago, be
Ellceptional service in supplying
added.
products on-time remains the busi-

Mix din - greenhouse structures,
seeds for poinsettias, annuals,
ferns, new guineas, impatiens,
marigolds and dallias, tubs and pot·
ted plants, Oats, trays, and hanging
baskets. 'The warthouse can access a catalog with more than 6,000 products, Za1a said.
Bill Hupp - the sole local
employee- wiU manage the operation. This site is the third pick-up
warehouse in the chain and requires
fewer employees since it does not
deliver.
The wholesaler will be open
from 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday,
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday;
8:30 am-11:30 a.m. Saturday; and
will be closed on Wednesdays. For .
more information, call 1-800-8432830.
"When growers come in our
door they can expect the best service and best product variety available," Zala said. "There's no disputing !haL We've eslablished ourselves all these years as number

one."

.Medical board avoids disciplining doctor

4 cylinder, IUiomlltc, air
conditioning, AM/FII Iter10; PS,· PB, air bag, 7-

ADDRESS

a full Une fll dtemk:all ud lledding COiltainers. Pictured from lert
are BUI Hupp, Cliff Boaner, Brian McCaffrey, Wayne Capka,
Dkk' Dupll!r, 11m Smltll, Clluclt Zilla, Tony BGrlln ud Don Hor·
Ii8k. Tlie - - Melp opa atloa wW be run by BDI Hupp. (Sea·
tine! pit~ by George Abate)
·

Greenhouse suppl-ier opens Meigs business

tlbll, 11.0 V-1, II lpeed,
cond., AMJFM eau., PS,
PW, ' PDL, lilt, cruiH, more.
Only 22,000 mllee.

·-·

seninl! a 1(). 10 40-~ ICDtence

=t..:n

NEW GREENHOUSE SUPPUER- BFG Supply Co; opened

aew warellouse Ill Portl8lld Tltursclay. The wholesale wareholllil!

I

1987 at the now closed Parkview
Hospital. Swann now practices
obstetrics at Riverside Hospital."
In one case, Swann used a forceps to tum the baby into the correct position and attempted delivery tbat was ill-advised, a board
investigator found.
·
"As a result of the forceps procedure, the infant suffered serious
injury wbicb very lilc:ely contribut·
ed to ber death approximalely eigbt
bours afler birth." the investigator
said.
In another case, Swann improperly used forceps during a delivery
that ··~suited in sevm injury fu
!be infant," the board said
Swann was training under Dr.
William Mooney, wbo now lives in
Colomdo and faces similar board
Continued on page 3

Gallia man bound over to .grand jury on charge
A Gallipolis man accused of
, murdering his wife waived his right
to a preliminary bearing this morning and was bound over to !be neXl
sessioo of the Oa1Ha County gtand
jury.
Johnny R. White, Jr., was scbed·
uied for a preliminary bearing at 1
p.m.,today, but waived the bearing
Ibis moruina Ia the GalliN8!:
M1miclpll Court of Judge W
·

'

S. Medley. Bond was continued at
$200,000 cash. .
The grand jury Is scheduled to
meet Dec. 16.
'
White swrendmd 10 aulhorliies
Dec. 2 at a ~ladve'a bome after
holding police and sheriffs
deputlea at bly for more thm four

('botbam Avenue residence. Bonne

L. White, 32, died of multiple gunshot 'IIOIIIIIIs.
White also faces charges In
Malon Ccunty, W.VIL, for a sbootlng and atltlllpted robbery.
After allesedly shooting Ilia
wife, White ~ponedly travded 10 I
houn. .
bar in Hmdencll. W.VL, Bod shot
Pollee be&amp;IID searcbln&amp; for Ills cousin, Doaald White, 37, of
.
While lbonly after midnight wbeo . Apple Grove, W.VL
his wife's body was found Bl their

I

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·
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•

·
.

·
•
•
•
•
•

;
•

West Virginia officials·
fight extra dioxin testing

V-8, euloiMIIc, 11r condlltt•~na. AMIFM Clllllte, powHat, PS, PB; PW, power
locke, ·ttl!, cruiH, dUll ..,

3.8L v-e, 1uto., air conditioning, AM/FM cae111t1,
power 1111, PS, PB, PW,
power door locke, lilt,
cruiH.

ways to do progtBiiiS than it is to find ways
to cut spending."
Ohio Rep. Paul Gillmor, with m~ seniority than
Portman, consicleted seeking a Ways and Means seat,
but bowed out to present a united front for Ohio lild
to ~e his seniority on another powerful pand,
the Commen:e Committee.
In addition to handlin~ taX policy and trade, Ways
and Means will be handling welfR ~form - one of
the fust-100-days promises of the GOP "Conb:aCt
With America."
"I think welfR ~form is 'oing to be the most
controversial issue we deal w1th .in the committee
over the next three months," Portman said in ID
interview from Cincinnati. ''This is w~ a lot of the
policies will he initially fonnulatcd."

1

:I ' ~HO, Jl-.{'t CO/L R

11

A Sentinel subscription is the perfect gift. It's useful and fits every size and taste. Just

ftlCOV=

for felonioltl auault aod auravat·
ed robbery coavlctlolla from
Franldia Coullty. - tnocted out
fl&amp;bt
aod - H01pltal
llaledfor
at
Dbglollal
head cuts. He wu returned to the
E::C::r'ay 1fta11ooo, M~.

whether it mlgbt have become
during Wght
· Normally the slats extend for·
ward and down during a landing
8lllllll8Ch to provide exlilllift uodet
t6e Winl! as the plane slows.
·

c~tive

Coast Guard, making LaTOUI\llle an important figure
for Ohio from his first day on lbe job.
The Ways and Means Committee seat won by
Portman followed intense behind-the-scenes maneu·
vering. The panel is a prized plum in the House, and
when Republicans ~ in lhe minority Ibm we~
few seats to go around.
· Portman speculated that competition was great
because of lhe change in atmosphere that wiU make
the other highly prized job - Appropriations Committee -·a place that's less likely to generate easy
porlc for the home districts.
"Ways and Means was ~ly popular," he said.
' 'The Appropriations Committee is a little tougher
place to be now,! think, becanse it's more fun to fmd

1993 FORD
T·BIRD LX

~ched

One Size Fits All
·

Two Ohio incoming freshmen, Frank ~means of
Gallipolis and Bob Ney, will serve on the House
Banking Canmittee.
Cremeans in addition will serve on the Public
Lands and Resources Committee, and Ney on the
Veterans committee.
Rep.-elect Steve LaTourette will serve on the
Transportation and Government Refonn committees.
The transportation panel will handle all public
works, including lhe Army Corps of Engineers and
• 1.. ·.,;,N "1\ll.t,. !'i

Crash probe prompts call for· better 'boxes'
PITTSBURGH (AP) - It's
known as lbe "black box," and it
records information from airplane

"We got somebody on almost every committee,"
Regula said Thunda . "We did well."
Rep.-elect Steve ~habot did particularly well for a
freshman. He will serve on lhe Judiciary, lntemation.al Relations and Small Business committees.

$13I ·949 ..

•

2 Secllona, 12 Pegee 35 centa.
A Mulllmedil Inc. NIWI!l4IPI'.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 9, 1994

Donald White survived ,the

shooting.

I

Tbe murder suspect is also
believed to have attempted to rob
Soutltside, W.Va. residents at gun• .
pcinL Tbe residents ~PonecuY beat
White and be fled lhe !Cei!F·
· Alll:r his arrest, While Was treated for a fractured ankle and multiple lacerations received during the
alleged robbery attempl

Morris also .ordered the state
The Capenon adminlslilltion is
Division
of EnvilonmeDtal Procecfighting fedmtl cff!XU to delermine
how much dioxin is in lbe Ohio tion to n:quire Panons .t WhiucRiver before _permittiDil the pro- more, Inc., parent company of
posed Apple Grove Pulp aod Paper Apple Grove Pulp and Paper, to
Mill, accordin&amp; to • report in cooduct more extensive IDOIIiiDriiiJ
of !be proposed mill's dioxin distoday's Charleston Gaunt.
DioxiD would be ~leased by the charge~~.
In a letter stamped Nov. 30,
mill's chlorine dioxide pulp and
Morris
Slid DEP must bold IDOCber
paper bleadting process.
A preliminary U.S. Eaviron- public bearing on tbe cbanges In
mental Pro!CCtion A&amp;ency report mooitoriDJ and any olber c:blnges
lbat result from lbe dioxin testJ.
~leased in September concluded
DEP Director David C.
that even tiny amounu of dioxin
Callagban
responded to Morris last
caa cause cancer, reproductive
problems and developmental disor- week, arguing tbat the federal
agency bas no autbority to tevlew
ders.
AI Morris, director of water or approve tbe mill permit, the
management for EPA Regioo m in Gaoellt nated.
Calla&amp;ban. in a Dec. 2 leta tq_
Pbiladelphia. told Stale officials lasl
week that federal scientists would EPA Region Ill Admiaistrator
conduct a comp~benslve test of Peter Kostmayer, rejected futtber
dioxin background levels in the dioxin testa, other EPA-proposed
Oblo. Morrison said without a bet- changes, and the scbedulins of
.
ter sense of background dioxin lev- another public bcarillg.
Callaghan
charged
that
a 12els, it is not possible to koow
year-old
EPA
agreement
with
the
Whelber the wrrent permit limit is
state
does
not
allow
the
federal
acceptable, or whai an acceptable
permit limit should be.
Continued on page 3

·236 U. S. soldiers are
injured in Panama riots
NUEVO EMPERADOR, Pana·
rna, (AP) - A "tense calm"
returned to Cuban ~fugee camps
after at least 236 U.S. soldif:rli were
wounded by rock-throwing
protesters angry about the slow
pace of efforts to find them penna·
nenthomes:
At least 17 Cubans w= reported wounded in lbe rioting, which
began Wednesday and was brought
uqder conlrol a day later.
It was~ worst outbrealc of violence since President Clinton
ordered U.S. wmbips to intercept
Cuban refugees at sea in August.
About 8,500 refugees have been
held at camps in Panama under

U.S. supervision since September.
More than twice that many are
detained at lhe U.S. naval base at
Guantanarno Bay, Cuba.
Vice ~ident Gore said today
· that the riots would not fon:e any
changes in U.S. immigration poli-

cy.

.

.

"We're taking a lot of steps
including actively seeking thud
countries for them to go to," Gore ·
told CBS Morning News. "We R
also IICtively ~viewing humanitarian and hardship cases ... and we R
improvin~ the conditions tb=.''
A milttary spokesman, speaking
on condition of anonymity, conContinued on page 3

Local briefs:-church B&amp;E investigated
An electric guitar and ID amplifier w= ~potted stolen froa! lbe
Pentecostal Assembly Chun:h on state Route 124 near Racine.
According to a ~pon from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Pastot Bill Hoback found Thursday morning that the
cbun:h had been enlered through a window on lhe lower level of the

cburcb.
An investigation is continuinJ, Soulsby Slid.

Criminal damaging probed
Deputies of the Meigs Couaty Sberitl's Department R investi·
gatin&amp; the breaking out of the front door at Eastern High School
sometime Tuesday evening.
A school custodi;ut was notified of the dama&amp;e at 6:SO p.m.
Tuesday, accmling 10 a slteriff's repon.

Arrests, citations issued
Tbc followln&amp; arrests or citations were issued

~cently

by

deputies of !be Meigs County Shcrifr s Departmelit
·
James Eddy, Reedsville, was cited to Meigs COUIIty Court 011 a
charge of drivina unclel tioaocial ~ponsi~ action su.,.,Woo
after being stopped on state Route ·124 near
ville.

Mike Stanley, 28, Gold Rid&amp;e Road, was arrested for driving
under lbe influet1ce and no operator's license after bein&amp; stopped oo
Mud Sock Road near Harrisonville. He was placed in the Mei&amp;s
County Jail.
·
·
A passengec in Stanley's vdlicle, Sieve Hanning, was anesledoo
a char&amp;e from Athens County. He was transported to .the county
line.
'
Jobn Hayes, Middleport, was arrested ThW'Sday night on a WII'IIIDt from the Meigs Couaty Coon of Common Pleas fll' failute to
appear for a probaliOD violation beltring. ·
•
Editor'a note: AU u-, ... ud lldctr...,. pwNII id •
listed In law tDfo.,_nllltld otller olllc:W nportl.

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Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

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sidetracking a c:oqKnte cbcck as It
moves through tbe clearing 'pro· ·
cess. Tbe ~eck is photocopied,
and tbc aCcount is verified 10 make

'

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein

sure it bas a ,large balance. Tbe
copied cbeck is then turned over to
tbc gang.
Gang members then scan the
check into a computer using equtpment lbat can be purchased in most
office supply stores. "Qoce in tbe
computer, the cbeck c:ao be easily
manipulated to change account\
information, the bank name and
logo or anything printed on It/'
accmling 10 lbe fraud alert. F'mally, the new forgeries are prinled out
on high-quality laser printers that
use tbe magnetic encoding that
appears on tbe face of lbe check.
Jesse Wood, a Secret Service
agent based in .Charlotte, N.C.,

'
where the gaoa recedly struck. told ~. .
Tbc first order of ooRru in a
our as&amp;OCiate Jan Molter that the
forgeries an: o~ as good as tbc new dty ~ IP obtlin a sia idelltl·
originals. "Ill many cases·, tbe ficadoo tlld for eacb of die Bibles.
quality can be better than lbe oosl· "Tbc bandlers tbiln ~ .the mqles
.Dal cbeck," be said. 1n the (88e of .to braoCI!es or the bank on wbich
the Vietnamese gangs, the cbectJ .. ibe cbecb are drawn, because it
~.!c&amp;nerally corporate payroll · won't~ necessary to. bave an
, normally in tbc amOUDt o( · account there to casb a payroU
check," according to the fraud
$80().$1,000 eacb.
.
.Once the pbon.Y cbecks are com- Alert. Tbc cells work quickly,
pleted, \be gang win dispense a sometimes bitting dozens of
''ocll" of associates 10 a given city branches in a5 little as two days
to cash them. Accordin&amp; to Wood, befoo; beading ~ 10 tbelr base in
.
a cell usually consists of three or c,Iifomia
Although pollee til Cbarlot~c
four American "muleS," often
with prior criminal convictions, have indicted 32 people Cor )181tia·
who bave been hired by the gang to paling ~n the scbeme, the actual
actually casb tbe cbecks. Tbe gang members remain elusive
Americans wi!J be ~panled by · bealuse lbc mules have. little ioforail equal number of gang as&amp;OCi~ 11181ioQ about their ~....,llli'S. Of tlie.
ates, wbo orl!anize and monitor · 32 people Indicted, oply. JO )IVcte
lbelr activltic!s. The lilri:d bands Vietnaoiese, but law enforcement
generally bave scant knowledge of officials believe it's·not tbe last
their bosses, often knowing lbem we've seen ot tbelc gags." ·
JUST DESSERTS - Altbollgh
solely by "Americ:ao" monikers
be
1181'19wly lost bls bid for re-elec·
ratbcr than their real Vietnamese
names. The mules normally will tiai, Sen. Harris Wolfcrd; D-Pa., Is
stay 11 a separate botel from lheir looking forward to getting bis' just
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Liberals are missing the point of
lion, with all Its altendant benefits
in tbc fOIDI of more jobs, etc. Tbis
is 1rue even if it is spent on yachts,
as the ulttallberal Sen. Mitchell of

William A. Rusher
Maine discovered accidentally
when be Imposed a heavy luxury
tax on yacbts and inadvertently
wiped outlbe Maine yacht-building
industry.
·
1n otbcr words, before tbere c:ao
be employees there must fust be
employers. This seems obvious
enough, yet liberals scoff al it aS
"the trickle-down theory," and
SotDebo'w mana'e to love employ·
ees dearly wb1le despising and
doing tbcir best to hamper employers.
I bave seldom seen this intellec•
tual inconsistency displayed more
vividly than in a recent column by
one Bob Herbert. Herbert is one of
two new ooiUillllists recently added
to the regular stable on Tbe New
York Times op-ed page to tilt it
still further to the left. Recently it
occurred to blm to compare tbe
businessmen wbo triumphed in tbc

GA1T hatdc in Congress wilb the
economically deprived denizens of
the BrownsviUe section of Brook·
lyn.
.
Brownsville's residents, Herbert ·
snarled, "will never be mistaken
for the dlampagne-drinking, limousine-riding lobbyists who are
swanning all over Capitol Hill in a
gaudy display of corporate muscle
on bebalf of GA1T.... Wbal these .
soup kitchen clients have in cornmoo is an economic predicament
so dire they cannot be sure from
one day to tbc next lbat they will
eat. Tbis Ia not easily understood
by c:ongmsme.n, senarors and presideots who bavc trouble buttoning
their jllcbts over lbeir ample mid·
sections. Hunger is alien to lbem."
We are being invited to join
Herbert in bis balred of lbese businessmen,llld of the politicians who
passed GATT at their behest. I~
simply never crosses bis liUie libera! mind that the wbolc Jloint of
GATT is to expand economic
activity, whicb will inevitably
result in the creation of new jobs
for many of those who need tbcm,
and ptore tall revenues lbat can be

.

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· Wofford joked with aide&amp; last
week tbtlt tbc heartache of. defeat
pales in comparison to .the slam·
ach.· adles be bad 10 endure 10 keep
bis waistline in campaign sbape.
After years of resisting temptaliOD
at the Demdi:rats' weekly caucus
luncbeon, Wofford ce~brated bis
new-found freedom last Friday'
"For three and a balf yean I've
only ~ able to ~ allbe pecan
pie," Wofford said at a farewell
party Friday evening. "Today I ate
a slioc."
As Wofford made these comments, be sipped from a bcittle that
contained anotber forbidden
delight: beer. Wofford claims be
lost 10 pounds during tbc campaign
by not drinlring beer. But be also
indicated that be doesn't plan to
stay fat for long, DotiDg tbat feUow
Petmsylvaailao Sen. Arlen Specter,
R·Pa., reocndy launched a bid,fOI'
the 1996 GOP presideiltiai nomination. "If be wins there will be a
special election," Wofford said
with a smile. "ADd if !here's OIIC
tbiog we know bow to do, .it's win
a special electl011."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blnsteln are writers Cor United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

ATT
used to belp the rest.

Such subtleties an: lost on Herbert. He can see only an 0111rageous
maldistribution of wealth, and bis
remedy for it is straightforward: tall
tbese plutocrats until their pips
squeak. and tum tbc money over to
tbc needy of Brownsville. Tbe fact
that this would cripple efforts to
create new jobs, as well as limit
future tax revenues, whizzes right
past bis ear.
.
One wonders bow leftists maoage to sustain tbeir highbrow repu·
tation. Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.,
in one of his letters to Harold
Laski,
!bat it seemed 10
blm tbat socialism ''never got far
beyond 'Look al lbe big bouse and
look 11 lbe liUie one."' Or look a1
CapitQ} Hill and look at
Brownsville.
Wlillam Rusher Is a Dlstln·
gulshed Fellow of the Claremont
Institute ror the Study of Statesmanshlp and Political Phlloso·
phy.
·
(For Information oa .how to
communicate electronically with
thla columnist and others, con·
tid Amertca OnUne by camng I·
800-8l7-636t, ellt. 8317.)

remarked

Family customs spark C~ristmas spirit

tl\0~€.
e-M~II.. ·

SOMt::

It wouldn't be Christmas at the
WaiiODS' without Mama Walton's
applesauce cake.
So in "Tbe Hotnea!mlll&amp;," die
annual boliday 1V special, we see
Mn. Walton take a few of the pen·
nics sbe bas set aside for Cbriatmas
in !bat blea!r; Depression year to go
10 the general store and buy sugar
for tbc cake.
There is a doll on the counter .
that kindly Mr. Godsey, tbc store·
keeper, offers to sell ber for 6S
cents - just what be paid for it.
Ally one of the Walton girls would
love it, but it is out of the question.
It will still be Christmas in tbe
Walton household withont tbc doU:
But not witbout the applesauce
cake.
Cbriatmas customs are like tbllt:
Tbey take on a hallowed assoclalion. Tbat is wby the way you cele·
brate Cbristmaa al your bouse isn't
as importaiU as cei~B It~~~
ly 1be same way each year.
Arm Landers lliYS that tbc first
Cbris~ after a couple gets married is often tbc most diff'ICUIL 'The
wife com~ to it with ber sacred set
of Christmas customs wbile the
groom remembers with fo11dness
and affection bow tbcy celebrated
al his bouse through ik years. .
Unless lbey incorpcnte some of
tbc traditions of each of their back·
grounds, it may not seem like
Cbristmas to them al all.
·
Wbile Cbristmas cusllms tbem·
selves are often more imJXXIIDtiO

the spirit of the day than c..:tulstmas and putting the presents under it. God's never-dying love for
gifts, many Yuletide customs bave Tbc general practice is for tbe chil· mankirvl.
grown up around tbe ·practice of dreo to stay upstairs in their rooms .
Legend ascribes to Martin
gift-giving. In this country S.anta wbile the parents belp the Cbrist Lulber tlie fant decorated Christchild arrange the gifts.
mas tree. Tbe story goes that &amp;'I be
.
Wben
everytbiog
is
ready,
a
lit·
walked alone in lbe ·snowy silenoc
Georf'e
P.1agenz
:;;!
tie bell is rung and the children on Christmas Eve, be came upon a
Claus is the legendary bringer of enter the room where all the pre- tree, its needles reflecting tbe
gifts. In many households be is alao sents are spread out before their moonlight.
the leading character in tbc Cbriat· shining eyes. Wbere is the cbild
He was so impressed witb. the
mas story.
Jesus? He bas aln:ady left with bis sight lbat be brought a tree into bis
Some families wisbing 10 bring angels for some olber home.
home and decorated it with can·
up !heir cbildreo with a more rell·
This custom. de8cribed by Fran- dies, telling bis children that the
gious interpretation of Cluistmas, cis X. Weiser in bls "Christmas lights· were spartling reminders of
but not wanling to jealson tbc bet· Book," still survives in some parts tbc starry heavens wbenee lb~ liUie
ter parts of tbc Santa Claus legend, of Germany, Austria and otber Lord Jesus bad come.
have tried substituting SL Nicholas countries of ocntral Europe.
George Plageoz Is a syndical·
Tbe evergreen tree Is a symbol eel writer for Ne'II'Spaper Enter- .
for Sanra Claus.
•
St. Nicholas Ia said to bave been of Christmas adopted from 'the prise Aaoclatlon.
(For Information on how to
a bishop in the cburcb in Asia pagans wbo used greens in their
Minor in the fourth ceutury. Evi· winter festivals as a symbol that COIIllllunlcate electronically with
dently an immanently wealthy life in nature does not die. To tbc thla colamolst and others, concburcbman, be was credited with Cluistiaos the evergreen stood for tact America OnliDe by calllni lbelping those in need -lllways in
800-8Z'7-636t, ext. 8317.)
secret, however.
· But once be was caught wilb a
paa of glfta on bis back and the
secret was out. Later, whenever a
gift came to someone from an
uokoown souroc, people would sav,
By The Alaodated Prell
.
.
"It's probably from SL Nlchobii.''
Today Is Friday, Dee. 9, lbe 343rd day of 1994. Tbere are 22 days left:
Parents came to give credit to St.
Nicholas for ~t~: tbat w.erc in the ye..
Today's Hllbllgbt in Hlstay:
.
delivered 10 die
on Cl!rilt·
On
:Dec.
9,
1854,
Allied,
Lord
Tennyson's
fiiDOIIS
poem,
"Tbc
Cblrge
mas Eve.
.,{the Ught Brigade." - puNished in Enslalld.
Anotber tradition arew up in
. On Ibis dale:
.
European counUies wbere die clrikl
1 tn 1608, Eogllala poet John MillO!! was born in Loudon.
Jesus Ia the gift-briDger. Tbc chil1n 1892, lfidowtr.r' Houses, George BerDard Sbav,:'a fint play, opened
dren believe be comes with angels
al
the
Royalty Tbcater iD London. . .
dwinl die night, trimming tbc tree
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Today in hiStory

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Rain turns to ice in northern Ohio·

tO ...

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The rule makers

HANG otJ~
1-\e~~ c.oMe.s

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to;. ca$~ ]n .
\11. tnamese gangs use hig·h~tech
.

WASHINGTON - Organized
crime bas entered tbc IDformatiOII
age.
Using a&lt;ioe of tbc tools of mod·
ern communications - color
copiers, computer scanners and
computer graphics r,:ograms - a
, well-organized 'Vietoameso
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
gang" bas been casbing counterfeit
hbllsber
corporate cbecks at banks across
• tbc country. According to federal
investigators, tbe fake checks
•'provi4e a graphic example of
CIIARL~ HOEFLICH .
MARGARET LEHEW
bow easily tecbnology c:ao be used
Genenl Manager
Controller
to defraud fmancial institutions."
Soura:s estimate tbe total losses in
tbc tens of millions of dollan.
LIITillRS OF OPINION are welcome. They tbould be le11 than 300
Tbe scheme is detail ed In a
wonk loo&amp;. Alllouen ~n aubje&lt;t 1o ediliD&amp; lllld mual be signed witb name,
soon-to-be-released "fraud alert"
llkhu 111&lt;1 lelepbone numb«. No Wlli&amp;ned lotten will be published. Lette11
abould be in &amp;ood 111111, lllcW•Iin&amp; iu-, 1101 pcnonalitlca.
being distributed by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. to the
nation's top bank executives.
According to the fraud alen, and .
interviews with goveflllllent investigators familiar with tbe gangs,
their scheme bas already proved
remarkably quick and effective:
.By WALTER R. MEARS
·
The process begins with a bank
AP-sped81 Correspondent .
.
employee,
or a recipient of a cbeck.
WASHJNGTON- Whatever tile game, tbe rule makers decide bow it
is going to be played. wbidl is exa:dy wbat House Republicaos are doing.
' ADd !here's bard ball cilmlng up wbeo tbe Republkan 104111 Congress
meets in a IIIODib, with tbe promile of its House leaders to act wilbin 100
days on 10 major bills, among them tax cuts. defense increases and wei·
fan: rd"OIDI.
Republlcans are pledged 10 do it under open rules, pennittiog amend·
mc:nts ali the measures are debated, iDsteaJ of tbe restricted procedures
lbat bad become alaDdard under J:&gt;emoaatk: CODirol.
That 'will tate time and will be fit more difficult than stifling or
sbarply IIJJiitiDg dissentlDg efforts to change them.
R~blicaos demanded that right - to no avail - during their 40
years m the minority. Now in dlarge, they say tbey will grant wbat they
were denied.
. Revenge isn't on the agenda, tbe ineomiog majority leader, Rep.
Ridlard Amley of Texas, bas said.
. No viodictiveoess, says Rep. David Dreier of California, overseeing
tbc reorgaolzalion of House committees·in the new Congress. He'd 'been
worlring on a bipartisan reform effort for two years. but its work was
SCDpped even though the Democrats voted 10 undettate it in lbe fust
place.
The·cllaoges coming DOW 911 open rules, proxy voting in committee
and GOP decisions to drop committees and realign the duties of others
sound like Beltway insider stull. But tbc process shapes tbe product, espe·
cillly in ' divided government in which a DemOcratic president will bave
to sign what a Republican Congress does if it is to become law.
Tbc most drastic changes an: coming in the House. Republicans ron·
lrOIIcd tbe Scoale for six years, untill986, so they've been on top before.
But DO GOP member of tbc new House ever bas been part of the majority.
- Irooical1y, some of tbc things lbat are being changed DOW an: the back·
fired baodiwork of an earlier generation of Democratic refOIDiers.
Twenty years ago, they took away the power of the House Rules Committee to send bills 10 tbc floor under closed rules that eilber prevented
IIQICI!dments ilr detennined in advance wbat could be proposed and wbat
couldoot.
.
· 'lblt was a revolt against bolb tbe Rules and Ways and Means commit·
tees, tbe tall·wriling panel that was aut001••ically able 10 bar changes in
wllat it bad drafted.
.But the minority Republicans 11000 apolll:d tbc opening, and began
• olferiDg
amendment after amendment 10 slow tbc Democratic measures
One of the basic differences
they ladred the votes to stop. To oounter tbat, Democrats turned to wbal between liberals and conservatives
they adled the modified closed rule, limiting and specifying amendments CODCerDS the origin and distribution
that could be offered.
,
of wealtb. To liberals, life is a zero.
It worked, and there's DO guanmtee it won't wodt next year against the sum game in wbicb the gross
Democrats, DOW lbat tbcy're on tbc-oiltsidLI. S~·to-be Newt Gingrich national product is divided up
says be W811111to go back to the style of Sam Rayburn, tbc Mr; Speaker of among us. Some get more of it,
another era. who ran. tbc show without bars against dissenting amend· others get less; and those who get
mtJIIS.
more are necessarily depriving tbc
· • "We wiU have open rules for the fust 100 days," Gingrich said, rest of tbcir fair share. This excites
euept on tall bills, 011 which amendments will be limited, but Democratic tbc liberals' compassion, and lbey
leaders will be entitled to seek and get votes on (I'O(IOSCd changes.
spend tbeir time trying to redis·
Not easy, aiveo the ~blkan )JIODlise of action- although not nee· tribute the wealth more equally.
cuarily passage- 011 thell''lop 10 bills during the weeks a new Congress
. Conservatives, analyzing the
usUIIly spemds just gCIIiog started.
generation of wealth, have con"If we get deliberately dilatory baloney lriDd of tactics, then I tbiok cluded that in a
society it is tbe
you'd sec us being forced into a modified open rule," Gingrich added in a procluct of tbc ons of individu1V Interview.
als, working lone or together.
. Proxy v~g in committee always bas been a minority gripe; it enables
ese efforts (called "jobs") are
the dlail'mailto collect votes from absentees and use lbem 10 shape a bill. fin ced b people wbo already
GOP ref01111ers say tbcy'll end it. But lbat is going to aeate SotDe logisti· bave money, and tbc Iauer do Ibis
cal ~lcms, given tbe intense tiolerable the Republicans pledge and the either directly (as in the case of
compecillg demands on 0011gressiooal tiole. .
·
entrepreneurs) or indirectly,
Scrapping three House committees may irk some Republicans wbo through bank deposits, stock pur·
tbOOght they'd fmally be chairmen.
chases and tbc like. There is almost
· Comfortably on the sidelines, the retired GOP le~r. Rep. Robert no way in wbicb acc:umulated pri·
Michel, said tbc dispossessed aren't going to be bappy about it. "At the vate money can avoid being used
very I8IDC tiole you're auemptiog 10 bave everybody pulltogetber, practi· CODSb'Uctively.
cally walking in lockstep because of the rigid schedule," be ,said, "Well,
Tho investors naturally bope for
you can't afford 10 alienate many people."
.
a profit on lbeir investment. If tbey
succeed, the profit is plowed back
EDD'ORtS NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice presldent·and cobun- into a new round of wcallb genera·
nllt for The A11oclated Pre11, haa reported on Washington and
national polllkl for more than 30 yean.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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OHI O Weath et

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111 Cout Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

Berry•s World

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.117 ~ Alloelitecl Preis ' .
Numerous fcnder-benden were
reported acrQss northwest and
ll~?.tql Ol)io tllis JDOrlling 8$
mn. shckencd•bridges and &lt;ivor·
:, J)aisca. •
'' . ' .:.
• · ·And tbe J'latloaull Westhcr Ser.,,poe Jiredicted·JDQre of the same on
' :Satlliday morning, except snow
..mty fall on •top· of. tile ice soine
J)laces in northern Ohio, Elsewhere,
:•ihe'~Pitatioit ·will be limited 10
. '• raill, . ·' '. .
.• .
· .· · , Lows-·toni,ht wUI:(8118C' from
· · ·ll!e·.mid-20s' an tbe ntlrthwest to

around 40 in lbe southeast, fore-

castcn laid.
the preei 'lation wiD gtadually
cnrt across :g'e suue fiom west to
cast Saturday afternoon. Highs
across the noitb will be in the mid·
30s with readings in the low to
mid-405 expected cbcwhere.
The record-hlgb•temperii!Ure f()r
Ibis date at the Colllmbus weatber
station was 66 dearcea in 19S2
while the record low was ·8 in
1!117. Sunset tonigbt will bell S:06
p.m. and suilrise Saturday al 7:42

a.m.

Around the nation ·

R.ain fell acrois pirta of the
Mldwtlll tOday and eeaiODibly cool
tanpentures covered mucb of the
l1llion.
Li&amp;bt - was expecJ.ed across
central and northern Michigan,
wblle a tbin bend of icc was likely
10 ltretcb from nortbem lllinois 10
southeast Michigan.
Farther soudl, rain was expccled
10 cover tbe middle Mississippi jllld
Ohio valleys and stretch from
Arkansas 10 central Texas.

Light snow and sbowers were
likely across western New York
and Ptnnsylvanis, and snow show·
ers and a few squalls were expected
in lbe nortbern Rockies.
· Temperatures were expected In
the 30s for most of the country,
dropping into the 20s in the North
and reaching the 50s and 60s in the
Soutb and Soutbcast
.
The nation's hot spot Thursday
was Cotulla, Texas, al 90 de~
The cold spot was Yellowstone
Park, Wyo., al minus-20.

:. f!~· ·S,. ·troops. Meigs County Court fines levied
pap

· , Continued from
1··
Jerry L.Jacks Jr., Pomeroy, fail.
The followioa cases were W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
ure
10 COIIlrol, $30 plua IXIIU; seat
· ftrrleat!Uii ~gas wai ~at one resolved Wednesday in tbc Meigs Maury S. Mittleman, Atbens,
belt,
$25 plus costs; Michael D.
~r&gt;' ·Thunday aftemOOI ID quell Couni'J Court of Judge Patrick H. speed, $30 plus costs; Brian S.
Balcb,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
notiilg. ~ said aboqt 1.000·ll'llops O'Brien.
Hackney, Ciocimari, seat bell, $2S

·wi!re suiD!J!ODed to restore c.alm
Fined were: Riclwd E. Pinker· plus costs; Darley Caldwell,
and wete welding· 19Bethcr large ton, Ashland, Ky., seat belt, $2S Paneroy, failure 10 yield, $20 plus
scetions of ·barbed' w~ fencing plus costs; Odrey Reed. Pcmeroy, cmts:
knoeked 9YCr by ~~~e. riocm
driving under the ·influenoc, $500
Jacqueline M. Duber, Bedford,
. :HeliCopteg could be ~ fly· plus costs, SSOO forfeiture to lbe s~ $30 plus costs; Jeffrey W.
· ing l)ver tbe Jungle ~!!!. ~n tbe . Meigs Cotinty Jail Housing Fund. Ohlinger, Pomeroy, scat belt, $25
Panama Canal zone l8te 11Jorsday five year opc:rator' sliocQae suapen· pius costs; Theodore K. Sauber,
night.
.~
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sion, six milatbl jail suspended to Athens, speed, $30 plus costs;
"There's a tense calm," Lt. ·30 days, two yeaQ probati011, laG- Henry E. Todd, Nelsonville. speed.
. •., .
• John Thomas told The.AIQ:isted day vehicle immobilization; lcav· $30 plus costs; Shawn P. Doyle,
.
......._ .....~.,._Pniss.
ing the scene, $200 forfeiture to tbe Findlay, speed, $30 plus costs;
·,
where. . .. · . · .. .~ . · . .; · Soldiers liit ~y rocks in .the jail bousina fund. six months jail Lora L. Boring, Pomeroy, unsafe
Soutll.Ceatili Obin
.
T
· head, ~.and legs Suffered mmor . suspended to 30 days, costs and veblcle, $20 plus costs; Sbirley K.
. • b·
Sun d ~JJ.,
.... . ~ . ance. o : 11J,O!f injurieS', said Lil,iana . Levi, two years probation; driving UDder Rose, Milford, scat belt, $1 S plus
TonigbL;.OCcasional rain. Low
around 40. North winda 5 to 10 showers mainlY. n~~·.~b"ll 1r ·spokeswoman Cor Operation Safe financial responsibility action sus- costs; Alfred Duff, Albany. seat
mph. C!J8Dce ci rain near 100 per- elsewhere. ~!lll!iDIY 111 """ 3QI.., HllveiJ, the U.S •.milita'y mission in pension, six months jail suspended belt, $2S plus costs; JOiqlbine CloM~oday ...l\ . ~~·nc~ of Sllow. 'Charge of ibe four cam;r
· · in Pana· 10 10 days, $100 forfeiture to jail rao. Ironton, !peed. $30 plus COlli;
CCDL
Lows
m
the
:ZOS..Higtis
m
tbc
30s.
Tb
·
d'
f'
Saturday...Occasionillllin. Higlt
.e trooP.s 1 · not ue housing fund. costs and two years Larry 1. Hall Jr., Verdunville,
Tucsd ay ... A c··haacc of''snow' ..ma,
in the mid 4(1s. Cbanc:o of rain is mainly
"""""""' said mill""-·
-"'"-·~­
no~t. F~: etsewbcrc: ··-r--•.
. \"'.1·
"1"""':""~"· probation; failure to CODttol, costs W.Va., seat belt, $15 plus costs;
·near 100 patenL
.
'tb
.
.
'dill
.
._..
.....
an
Melanie
Reeder.
.
.
only;
Terence S. Staus. Athens, $2S
Coldet WI 1DWI ml P ...,..... ..,
Tw 1· ·ld'
h 'tal
Extended lortrall .
Mary Jeffers, Middleport, two plus costs;
Saturday nigliL;,s.row sbowers m~ddlc 20s. Higbs 'IPPCr 20s to izcd~,l!'!:L. ospl · • charges of passing bad checks, $25
Freddie M~ Rose, Milford, seat
Trciops set .up roadblocks around plus costs lnd restituti011, $100 plus belt, $2S plus costs; Norman M.
developing n~east. Fair else- middle 3~.
tbc camps, 12 miles west of Pana· costs and restitution, I 0 days jail Didion, Mierlball, Pa., speed, $30
ma City, to searcb for about 100 suspended to two days; Tamara plus costs; Jerry G. Wysong,
refugees wbo escaped in the riot· Stout, Pomeroy, DUI, $500 plus' Tbomville, speed, $30 plus costs;
ing. Thiny others who escaped costs, 10 days jail suspended to Thomas R, Moran, Marietta. speed,
were·caught and being held by three, 180-day OL suspensi011, one $30 plus IXIIU; Glenn F. YOUDg Jr.,
Panamanian police, 11iomas said
year probation, jail and $250 of Racine, failure to transfer registrafine suspended upon completiOII of tion, $20 plus costs; Harold L.
New dog licenses
residential treatment program; fail· Nuu, Columbus, speed, $30 plus
Roscoe W. Edwards, Jr., 68, ofCliftoo, W. Va,dicd Tuesday, Decem· go on sale Monday .
ure to drive within marked lanes, costs; Darrell Jenkins, Pomeroy,
ber 6,1994, Ill Vccenn's Medical Ccoter in Huntington.
.
costs only; seat bell. S2S plus costs; parked on roadway, $20 plus costs;
Born FebnJa'y IS, 1926 iD Middleport. be was a 110!1 of die laic Roscoe
.
·
Doug Bums. Pomeroy, domestic
W. ·Sr. aild Viola B. ((.laueti) Jldwlgds, He was an eleclricilll and a life·
~ and ~~ li~ for lbe violence, six months jail suspended Anna J. Slaler, Albany, speed; $30
time member oldie Disabled American Veterans.
·
_ commll year wall be available on to three days, restraining order plus costs; Arlene K. Barnes,
Racine, driving under sus~nsion,
HC was also~ b1 ~by a brother, Cbarles'Wdllim ~ards. Monda&amp;:ciss ~oonty Auditor issued,
one year probation, costs;
SurVIvors IDtluck two .dauJ!ltas and a soo-in·law, Sandli JIJDISOn of NS'i! rem&amp;!:~:dogy. Sbonda Kelly, Rittman, seal belt, $150 plus costs, 10 days Jail sus·
pended, two years proballon. plales
CoiUlllbul and Amelia and Fte'd Fortin of Columbo~; two l!liiS and a
$2S plus costs; Kevin Hutton, Rut· and registration to be ~livered to
daughter-bi.laiw, R~
llid Marietta Edwards m of Columbus; and =• fs'.o'rl:~~~~'!:; land, seat belt, SIS plus costs; Ethel
'lbomas Clart·F.dwal!ll ot ~; sisters and brotbcn·in-law, Hilda lnd Code 8l8teS that every pcram who Adkins, Racine, seat bell, $25 plus tbe coun within three days until
Otvillc JIIITCll of Columboa; Henrietta Stephens011 of Mansfield, and ~.keeps or latxn a dog more costs; Sherm!ID Gerlock, Letart. valid licel1se obtained;
Vinida l8ld George ~ .or New ijaven; a.brother l8ld Jlater·in·law. than three mootbs of oae,
Samuel and VIolet Tuct« of New Haven; 13 graDdchildla1 and eight
...,
great-grandcbildren. · · ·
.
.
chase a llocnsc for tbat dog ore
Graveside ·servioc will be
. ·at ;2 p.JD8turday. December 10, a1 the tbc 20th day of January of eacb
cal program.
Zedle Cemetery wilb Rev. Rankin ~fficiatiog. Burial will follow.
~The cost of each dog liocDae is Christmas play slated
A
Christmas
play
will
be
beld
There wiU be Do visitaliori 8l!d arraogemellts an: under die direction o~ $4 and kcllilelliccaaes are $20 per
Concert to be presented
Foglesong Funeral HOllie; ~·
kennel If pon:based after the dead· Wednesday, Dec. 21 al 7 p.m. al
Tbe River Valley Boys will perRutland Freewill Baptist Cburdl.
·form in 0011cen at 6:30 p.m. Sun·
day at tbe Carmel United
Garden club sets date
Tbe Middlepon Amateur Gar· Melbodist Cburdl.
nel.1
den Club will meet at 6 p.m.
A
.
Wednesday a1Jean Moore's borne Revival senices announced
A youtb revival witb Chad
Meigs !)&gt;unty Courthouse, Mon- for a potluck dinner.
Emerick,
16 year old evengelist,
byproducts
conlaininf
cblorine
and
day
through
Friday,
8:30
am.
to
4
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)' benzene.
Tbc
EPA
s
three.year
p.m.
or
by
using
tbc
publisbed
will
be
held
at tbe Faitb Full
Tbe u.s. Environmental Prolcction
Llkrary Club to met
draft
study
saYi
incineration
is
the
application.
Gospel
Cburcb,
Route 124. Long
Tbe Middlepon Uterary Club
Agency has not found evidence
main
producer
of
dioxin,
although
Bottom,
Dec.
16.
There will be
dull there is any safe level of dioxwill met Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
special
singing,
and
a dinner fol·
tbe
production
of
pulp,,
paper,
plas·
•
the
bome
of
Mrs.
Dewey
Horton.
in, but it is ,not ruliDg dull out.
tics
and
diesel
fuel•oombustion
also
IIIII
•
•
•
lowing
the
servioc.
Tbe coDIDlittee wiD present a musiDioxin, whicb causes health
Contlnllld from pilge1
problems from reduced testo~­ can cRate diOxin.
The study was discussed.
terone levels to cancer, accumuWednesday
at a meeting with charges.
lates as the body ages, said Linda
Mooney could not be reached 10
Birnbaum, director of tbe EPA's opponents and proponents of incin· coouni:ot. Tbe city be lives in could
_ Continued from page 1
by two days.
Environmental Toxicology Divi- erators, trasb-burrung power plants, not be determined and a phone
aKeocy
to
review
the
mill
penoit.
Tbe Charltston Gazettt
and paper and pulp miUs. It was
sion.
number
could
not
be
found.
·
Callaghan
wrote
that
EPA
and
DEP
obtained
bOth letters Thursday as
"The problem witb dioxin is one of seven meetings planned
Mooney's
lawyer,
Paul
Accettofailed
to
designate
tbc
mill
permit
lbe
result
of a request filed earlier
dull it is.extremely persistent," she nationwide-over the next two la, told The Blade lbat birth traUJDa
as
a
"major
discharger"
to
be
in
die
week
under tbe federal Free·
weeks.
said.
reviewed
by
the
federal
agency.
dom
of
Information
AcL State offi.
did
not
cause
Amanda's
death.
He
John Estenik of tbe Ohio EPA
Dioxin is a.-group of chemical
Such
a
designation
is
required
cials
tried
to
block
EPA's release
said
she
bad
a
severe
infection
an&lt;!
said tbc draft report is con1roversial
under a 1982 memorandum of oftbedocuments.
·
and that there are many unan· "lbat poor.infant was doomed in
understanding
between
the
agenCallagban
wrote
in
bis
Dec.
2
utero
and
bad
DO chaoce.' ' .
Ions
3 calls · swered
questions and ootes in the
cies, Callaghan said.
letter that "DEP is 0011vinced that
c;,m.
16.
research. A final report is to be
Under
lbe
1982
agreement,
DEP
existing
background dala. including
Units of the Meigs County issued.in the fall of 199S.
bas
primary
authority
to
issue
and
full
tissue
samples and water col·
The Columbus trash-burning
Emergency Medical Service
enforce
such
permits,
even
lbough
umn
samples
taken as late as
responded to three calls for assis· plant recorded some of tbe highest Am Ele Power ........................33 lll
the
permits
are
issued
under
the
November
of
this
year,. demontance Tbunday. Units responding dioxin emissi011 le.vels in tbe coun·
Abo
.....................................
.53
7/8
federal
Clean
Water
Act.
Federal
strate
that
dioxin
is
non~ble
try. The plant is closing this montb
indncled:
Allllud
OU
.............
--........
.32
V4
law,
bowever,
gives
EPA
authority
in
tbe
water
column."
becallse of financial problems.
MIDDLEPOR.J'
AT&amp;T .........................- .........41718
for general oversight of state action
"Moreov.:r, the backgr~und
But the largest source of di~xin lluk 0tM...............................25 318
2:36 LID., Middlqxxt Volunteer
involving water permits.
level of dioxin can~t be saad to
Callaghan also argued in his let· violate any water qualtty standards
Fire Department to Sbon Fourth in humans comes from contammat· Bob E....................--...-....19 111
tbal
'f EPA bad authority . promulgated by lbe West Virginia
Street, smote odor al Eula Je(fers ed food, especially meat, fish and Clwaploa 1Dd...................... .l411l
dairy products, Birnbaum,said.
· missed Environmental Quality Board,"
Ch-ma Sllop ...........................6 . ter . even 1 ·
residence;
City HllldiD&amp;...........- .......... .30 1/l I) to reVIew lbe pemut, Morns
· 3:~8 p.m., Holzer Oinic, Homer
Federal MCJR111 .........- .... _ ....18 SIB
a 90-day deadline for such review Callaghan wrote.
Bailey can sit in
Baxter, Holzer Medical Caller;
Goodyear 'l'a:R ....·-··--•-.32 314
10:47 p.m., state Route 7, Steve on election recount
K-lllart ---·--·--.............. -.13 5111
Arwood, Veterans Memorial Hos·
Ludl Elld .......... - .............- .14 5111
Lltalted lllc. ..... - ........ _ ......... 11 5111
VETERANS MEMORIAL
pilai.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
Multlllledla lac.
113
Thursday admission. - Cora
- A Huntington Circuit Judge
Polalllu..... .............................19
Webb, Middleport
Cabell Counlf Commissioner
RellaDCie E1i1c1rk ....................30 718
The Daily Sentinel ruled
Thursday discharge - Mae
Bob Bailey can sn on the panel
Robbltll It Myerw.................. t6 1/l
Lynch,
Middleport
.
conductiDg his election recoUDL
ltoyal Dutdl ..... - ........................ 105
!USPS 113-9601
Sllolley'• lac....... _ ................. l3 1/l
Judge Johri Cummings on
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Published e"Wery aftcmoon, Mond11y throua;h
Star Bent ···-.. --.................34 511
Thursday
denied
a
petition
filed
by
friday, Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the:
Bailey's Republican challenger to • Weady lat'L .............. _ ...............14
Ohio Valley Publisb.in&amp; Cogtpany/Mullimedio
DK. 9 diKbargel - Justin Con·
Wortblqtoa lad .. ....---·---.. 19
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45169, Ph . 99 2-2 1~6 .
bar Bailey from sitting on tbc
Stock reportl are tbe 18:30 a.m.
ley,
Wilma Jennings. Juhe Wtse·
Second clus, po~t~~c paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio .
three-member Board of Can·
quota proYillod by Adn.t of .
man. GarnetJCJIIe$ and Mrs. Mark
vassers.
Mmbtr: The Associated Pless, and the Ohio
G.Wpolla.
Hurlow and daugbter.
·
Newspaper Association.
Bailey has an obligation under
(Published with permlllloD)
lbe state constitution to sit· on tbc
POSTMASTIR: Send addrels corm:tio1s to
panel and his vote might be needed
Thl! Dally Scolinel, Ill Courl St .,
Pomeroy,Ohio 4S769.
to break a tic on a deadlocked
issne, Curnrnin~ said
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
"I find there ts a distinct dilfer·
11 C.rrltr or M - Routt
One Woek .............................................. .... $1 .&lt;10
encc in a voluntary decision to
~~~:::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::: ::::~ recuse and an order to do it," Cum•
mings said.

- -· Area .death~.-·.-

·Roscoe w~ Edwards, Jr..

9

w:

sballbe\:·

Meigs announcements

~~t=::.=s%~ae::

Dioxin dan.gerous,
'
d
?
but how · .~·gerous

lbe ~~~c:~~uct=~~c::

•edl·ca·l

WeSf Virginia officials

0

eus

Stocks

speed. $14 plus costs; Sharon K.
Farley, Langsville, Dill, $500 plus
costs, $2SO forfeiture to Meigs
County Court Jail Fund. six IDOIIlba
jail suspended 10 10 days, ooc yrp
OL suspension, 90-day vehicle
immobilization, two ycm proba·
lion; driving under FRA IUIJICII·
sion, $200 plus costs, six months
jail suspended to 10 days to coo·
seculively, 90 day vehicle immcbi·
lization to run CODsecutively, two
years pmbatiOII; left of center, CXJIII ,
only; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Timolhy E. Davidson, Pomeroy,
DUL SSOO plus costs, S2SO forfei·
turc to the jail fund, 30 days jail
suspended to 10 days, one year OL
suspension, two years probation,
vebicle forfeiture; drivin&amp; under
suspension, $100 plus cosu, 30
days jail suspended to 10 to ron
concurrent, two years probation;
Sam McCloud, Middlepm. aiminal mischief, costs, 60 days jail
suspende&lt;\ 10 3~ days, restitutioo,
one year probati011; Robert L. BoJ•.
ing, Syracuse, disorderly conducl,
$100 fine suspended, costs, one
year probation, restraining order
issued; Jason S. Wells, Reedsville,
failure 10 coottol. costs only.
In addition, the following were
fined for bunting violations:
Richard K. Dailey, H91land, bunt·
ing wilb illegal firearm, $80 plus
costs; Jdm A Mclntyre, Coolville,
improper tagging of deer, $60 plus
costs; Steven T. Burke, Mineral
Wells, W.Va. buotiDg deer al iiJe.
gal time, $40 plus costs; John G.
Hudson, Gallipolis, bunling deer a1
illegal time, costs only; George R.
Douglas Jr., Stewart, bunting on
lands of another witbout a valid
1994 special deer penoit, $40 plus
costs; BiU Burcbeu Jr., Virgie, Ky.,
bunting deer al illegal time, $40
-plus costs; Brian Burchett Jr., Virgie, Ky., procure an Obio buoling
license by misrepresentation or
false statement, $110 plus costs; ·
Jerry Burcbett, Virgie, Ky., bunting
deer at illegal time, $40 plus costs;
Frederick Davenport, Kissimmee,
Fla., bunting without a non-resideot
license, $90 plus costs; bunting
outside of legal bours, $60 plus
costs; bunling without special deer
penoil, $20 plus costs.
Forfeiting bonds were: Marlin
Mitchell, Rutland, disonlerly wbile
intoxicated, $115; Molly Toban,
Pomeroy, speed, $90; Darry
Micbael, Tbe Plains. speed, $90;
Stacey Barnett, Ripley, speed, $70;
Marvin Quisl, Tampa. Fla., speed,
$90; Brian Hackney, Cincinnati,
expired registration, $70; Marianne
Gevirtz, Ciociooati, speed, $90;
Darrell Mitchell, Point Pleasant,
speed, $90.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS
MACAULAY CULK

IN

446-0023

Hospital news ·

·--····--.U

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

Invite you
to shop

.
progressive

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Doily .. ............ ,.................... .................Jl Cenu
Sublcriben noc deairina to pay the carrier may
mnilln advance difeclto The Gallipolis Daily
Tribupe on a three, six or 12 .montb bult.·
Oedit will be pveo carria each week

"Say Love With
Flowers From!"

INTERVIEW WiTH
TH&lt;VAMPIRf

..,
--···-····-

.......

PUDAY . llOO , hJO
IA't. hlO, 7:G0, 9tJlO

No subiCripdon by null permiutd in areas
where home cwricr service it available.

1t OO,l l lO,l t OO ,t:JO
-

FLOWER SHOP
I()6 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

(614) 992-6454. '.
(800)433-6203

t
• •

f'IIUI; . l!H t :lO

....TliE.,.,
Stwi'A, CLAU~
,

..

7:lO , t : H DAILY
M!l .... IAT I lUI
11 0 l 15

Middleport
Sundays
this
Holiday.
Season

�••
.

The Daily - Sent~el

Sports

•

Belpre girls down Eastern 72-32·
Belpre defeated Eastern 72-32 :
in a glfls varisty basketball game
Thursday night
Eastern fell behind 22-6 in the
first period as Belpre's press
proved to be too much. At the half
Belpre (3·0) led 43· 12. Belpre
eased off the press in lhe second
half as Eastern (2-2) succumbed to
a S4-17 tally after lhrce and then
the 72-32 fmalc.
Sophomore Martie Holter led
with eisht poiniS, Jessica Karr bad
seven, Nicole Nelson and Rebecca
Evans six each, Patsy Aeiker lhree
and Tracy White two.
Kalhy Coyner had 2S for Belpre
and Jaime Colebanks bad 18.
Eastern goes to Hemlock to face
Miller on Monday, Dec. 12.
Reserve notes: Belpre defeated

'

Eastern 46-30 in lhe rescrv ; game
after Eastern cut lhc lead to 28-26
in the early pan of lhc final round.
Michellc Caldwell led the East·
em gals wilh 14. Teammate Crystal
Holsinger had eight, while Joanna
Oumpf had four. Susan Carmichael
had 17 for Belpre and Crystal Goin
had nine.

__..__.._._
Eastem

(6-6·5-15=32)
Jessica Karr 2-0-3=7, Nicole
Nelson 2..()..2=6, Rebecca Evans 2·
0-2=6, Patsy Aeiker 1-0-1•3,
Tracy White 1-0·0=2, Martie
Holter 1-2-0=8. Totals: 9150·215·
8116: 32
Total field goals - 11 -SS
(20%)
Rebounds - 29 (Redovian It

.,,

December ·e, 1884

In the NBA,

Friday, Qecember 8, 1884
Plgl 4

'

: '"'

Aeikcr 7 each)
Asslsts-2
Steals - 11 (Karr 4)
Turaoven- 35
Foulll-9

..

'

By Tbe ~lated Prell
Halteem Olajuwon was back
with the Rockets, and so was
Kenny Smith's shooting touch
Denms Rodman was still abseni
from lhe Spurs.
Olajuwon, who bad missed the
Rockets' last game wilh a wrist
injury that had hampered him in the
•

~.

' l '. .

·

h•1 r1 ng practices·
.• n colle·ge football
.

ByCHUCKSCBOFFNER
, DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) The Black Coacbes Association,
:Wbicb last season threatened to
.boycott college bl'hlball 11ame&amp;
·over scbolanlllp reduction, Is loot·
Jng into biriog practices in colle,
·football.
Charging that major college
football bas the "worst record iD
·hiring minority coadles," the BCA
~d it will investigate the hiring of
coaches at 10 universities and will
repoJt any tbat an: deemed unfaii to
minorities.
·
The BCA said in a news release
it bas sent letters to tbe schools
advising them of Its action. ·
"We will talk to each candidate
that comes on your campus for 811
interview in order to determine if
tbe process was fair and not racial·
ly tainted," said the BCA. wbose
executive director is Dralte basket·
ball coach Rudy Washington.
"At the CODCiusion of our Investigation, If It Is determined your
process was racially tainted, we
wiU take action to expose your uni·
versity's biring practices."
One of the schools receiving the
letter, Stanford, apparendy Is about
to hire a black coach. The San
•Francisco Examiner reported

Ad.Ok-

ra. a

J .Ill
5 .6fil . 2.5
9 .471
5.5
9 .431
'
1 .429
6

New Yort ;.............IO

w......,... . .-.. ..

pblladelphl• ..... - ......7
.6
Now J.noy ...... - ......7 13
Wlomi ......................4 10

.350

I

.216

I

. C.Inl-------------------10 5 .6(;/
Clwlolte ..................9 I ..1:!9

2
2

CU!VI!LAND .........9

I ..129
Cbicqo.................... l
I ..100
llolrofL .....................1 I ..100
Allull .....................7 10 Al1
MIJwauille ...............5 12 .294

2.5

:1.5
4

6

Football

NFL leaders
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

~ Lto.:mlal.

!Ia.

M1rt11o, MIL ...... ..I13 !17 J70l 21 17
Bl_Wif_._Del. ........&lt;l76 :!97 3314 16 9

BLAKH. CIN.... .199 Ill 1566 9 5
IColly, Bur... .....-.422 270 2941 20 16

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MWw.aiMTWM

X..

:!: L lsi.

llo1Mioa ................. 11

5 .7(16
7 .611
6 .600

Ullh ....................... 11

Deuwr ....................9

lllllM ....................... J

ill
1.5
2

7 .5!3
s.n An1Dolo .............7 9 .431
M - ............... .3 14 .176

3

4.5
9

~o .................... 11

I. A. Labn ............ IO
Sao:nmoo!D ..............9
Ooldeo Slate ............ !
PortWid ..................7
L A. Cllpp&lt;n _.........1

5 .706
6 .647
6 .62S
7 ..163
I ..100
7 ..100
16 .059

I
1.5
2.5
3.5
3..1
II

Tbunday'• ICOns
l'boellll I!!, Nowllftey106
llowtcolOI , Owlotlo9l
Wublllpo 124, Doll• 121 (00')
Ulob 117, S.. AIIIDIIIo 114 (lOT)
s-to10J,5eoalo91

ToaJDt'op-

CI.£VI!LANfi

•
'•'
•

IDdlaDa at PhiliiSc1phja,
Or1111do 1111. Mlami,"7:30 p.m
New Yorlt • ~ 7::Jl p.m.
Ollcqo "DelroiL I p.m.
Oolclell Sllla" l'lrrtlud.tO pm
LA. Cllppen at L.A. Labn. 10:30
,p.m.

Slltunla1'• 1ama

Pllllldelphla II New Yart. 7:)3 p.m.

•
t

Booooa• Nowl....,,7:!0p.m
· .. Orludo, 7:!0 p.m.
Delroil" ClJ!VI!LAND, 7:!0 p.m.
Mlaml " lodl- 7:30l.m.
Phoenlx•Mtu--. p.m.
OII-11Mll-8:30p.m.
OUrlotte II Doii•.I:!O p.n
So,Antonio at Houlton. 8:30p.m.
WMhlaatoD II. O.wr, 9p.m.
LA. Lale" "Uhh, 9 p.m.
Seolile " LA. Cllppen. 10:30 p.m.
Ooldeo State 1t Sacramento. 10:30

•

t'•'

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i
•
!

It

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p.m.

•

, _ , . ,. PottluodlOp.m.

Major men's

'• college scores

'•
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Eut
Amt"" 7l, Clid: Uol•. 51

••

••
•
••
••
••
•

•••
'•

•'
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BoooooCollep64,F......,60
llroodeil 104, Sul!olk 69

llrvWII6l,lloly Crou60

Bullalo 71, Nlapal7
,Clroqlo-Mellool6, Juotlll 56
Columbian. Army 76
amy lOS, Nichola 16
llel-9l,W-61
Dlclliuoa61,ldotllab51
Frllltli• a ldarWII n, Yart. Po. ow
Qallaudct 71, Sallobwy St. 75
Ooucl&gt;orll. ~61

75

II 15

2113
ldooai,S.Il........ JIO 1142
l'llllk. Jad...........l64 lOIIi

4.5
4.1
4.1
3.1
3.1

T.1ho-. Buf..247 930
J. lcboooa.NYI ..lOI no

·-

1
9
II
7
90 2

41
2S
j2
29

• Lto. 6uJ&amp;III.

eo-. N.B...........I2 1021

12.5 62 5·

Rood.llll'..............79 IIJ2 14.3
1ltan. bf. ..........73 1044 14.3
Blldoo. II&amp; ......... .61 1107 13.3
loloorD,NYJ ......... .67 194 13.3

13 I
4J I
4l 4
41 6

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

~ Lto.:mlal.

!Ia.

s. v-.s.P..... JI1

Alau,lloi...... .:ZI6
Pam, 0.8 ..........&lt;171
l!tlcboa. T.B .....Jil
Wlllll, 011. ......- .254

1E7 :w1 29 9·
Ill :WI 12 I
291 3020 ll II
110 1UO 12' 7

166 1614 9 1

~6uJ&amp;III.

...

SIDd4n, DoL .....

.m 1594

s.s-.llll......:m 1291

5.7 ., 5
4.0

46

19

- · - ...... .213 947 3.3 t9 - J
Al1oo. ..............206 us u 45 6
lllllpoa. NYO ..254 147 '3.3 27 4

·-

Meigs Rotary Invitational
scheduled for Saturday
The Meigs Rotary lnvitatiooal
Warm-up Tournament will be held
Sawnlay at Meigs High School
Wrestling starts at 11 am., with
the finals set for approximately at 4
p.m.
.
Eight teams will tske pan in lhc
tournamelll including Ashland Paul
Blazer, Soulh Point,Jacksoo, Trim·
ble, Federal Hocking, Athens,
River Vallcy and 1hc host Maraud·
ers.
Five leuermen led lhe Maraud·
ers into lhe 1994-95 season. They
including Josh Wandling (130),

· .. - """-4p.m.
· 4 p.m.
W.........
New Odoau" Al1ulla, I p.m.

MoDday, Dec. u
-City .. Mlaml, 9 p.m.

..

Transactions

...._.._

BuobaD

OAJa.AND A'IHLI!11CS: Fro-..!

of.,..._

N-..._
HOUSTON ASTROS: Named Tim

'if:w

YORJ: JoiSTS: N-.1 Toby
--ofl-lkollllo.....,..
UOOII~

PIITSliURGH PIRATBS : Silled

Todd Probwlrlh aa4 Durio Wlalloa.
~ 1o wltb Calpry o! lbe
SAN~lN"!i;co OIANTS: Ao--....,.
-·
iDIIIIIIr lor lbe'lrill..ulalllo1995 - 1 .

lluketbaD

N.al-.11-..wA
' of&amp;o.
GOLDEN ST ATB WARRIORS:
NIUIIed ltodJ DuU&lt;Il ,.....,... ""' clllof _
opontiq olflcor, elfectift.lao. ...
'

-Boo·

- SACtAMENro J:JNOS:
ry 'l'urllor, rortrlld. 01 tbo ~ Ull. lor,
d..ud Doua 1M. ...,.t. tbo llljurOd
liiL

......

FOOCINIII
...._
._
CINCINNATI BBNOAl.S:

AD·
. . . - . . ,,..
'o!Tim J:namrio,
.. - . _
.... lllo""" or

_.,....._

- tho-

OOIINJ!CI1CIIr OOYO'I!S: Named
Rlct Buflll.oo ooacb Iiiii 4fraclor ol

pa.,wpw

•,,

1994 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD
4 Door, auto., air, stereo.

$9499or
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1-992-66411-800-8237·1094

SO DownS

MINNIISOTA TWINS: Si&amp;oed Man
Merullo, Cllc:b.-, 10 I miaor~ llllpe COD·

..... SL7f.Bucbo11l5
Pride 60, SL 5!1

W

~ -

The townamcnt is sponsored by
the Pomerqy-Middleport Rotary
Club. AdmiSsion is $2 for adults
and $1 for students.

Suaday, Dec. 11

A1u Lod!onl, Yloe pnoiopontio•. .. ...-~...... ....-..

ScniiiDI 60, Momiu Jl
SL l..awreDc:o 17. CJaoboD 61
W. Mloylud 11 . St. Mory'o, Md. 66
W. VlriJioloToc:b 121, Whlllloa107
w=~ 76, E. O»pwtjn• 53

Jerod Cook (140), James White
(145), Shannon Staats (171), Mite
Parker or Pat Young (189). Other
possible starters include Shawn
Michael. (103), Adam Thomas
(112), Scott George (119), Allan
Lee (125), Kevin Neel (135)~
.
Ault (1.52)', Roy Powell (
), ·
Adam Sheets (21 S) and aig
Knight (heavyweight).
.

Slltunlay

bdloupolii•New l!qlud, I p.m.
LA. Romo•'hq&gt;IBay,l p.m.
-·~.I
p.m.I p.IL
JlbQ"'eepp'l• It P1D11Kqb.
Deowr II LA. Raidon. 4 p.m.
Saa lftodaco II S.. Oieao. 4 p.m.

itel

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GRANDAM SE
2 Dr., Quad 4, auto., air,
Spoiler. Sharpl

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Includeo Undor 30

1995 CHEVY
S-10 414

Jenni Roush's Southern Torna·
does pounded Tri·Valley Confer·
ence Hocking Division favorite
Trimble 44-30 in girls' high sdlool·
basketball action on Dec. 1
Soutborn (1-1) was led by ninepoint efforts from Brlannc Proffitt,
Sammi Sisson and Jonna Manuel,
while Becky Moore and Bea Lisle
turned in strong perforR1811CeS wilh
seven and six respectively. Jess
Codner added fpnr.
Trimble (0·3) was led by
Tammy Lenigar' s nine, , Be_th
Koons' seven, Tonya Trace s siX,
. Misty Lent's four and ~wo-point
efforts from Kim Pallo and Shelly
Hardy,
A close flfSl quarter evolved as
lhe combatants went tooth and nail
throughout the frame. Southern
held a 14-13 edge when the buzzer
sotinded. ·
Southern opened the game up
with an aggressive defensive
assault and great o~ensive o~urst
sparked by six pomts from L1sle,
-f1ve from Proffitt and four from
Sisson. Manuel had a big threepointer in the fray to lead SHS to a
32-23 halflime lead.
The third quarter was _basically
null as only seven pomts wre
scored. four by Trimble and three
by Soulhem as the frame ended 35:
27 SHS.
Southern nearly shut out the
Tomcats in lhc fmal round by a 9-3

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with the purchase
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V-8, air, stereo,
tilt, cruise.

$17,995

12/8194 thru 12/11/94

CARS &amp; 'l'RUCKS
1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 2 Door, v-e,loaclecl...........,......................'12,995.00
1989 CHEVY 8-1 0 BLAZER 4X4 V-8, Tahoe.......... ..............................110,995.00
1993 CHEVY LUMINA Z-34 BriQhHICI, 23,ooo m11e1, 11ocat owner.......*14,995.00
1991 GMC SONOMA s a--.llr, 1tereo.........................................
'5,995.00
1990 CHEVY Yz TON P.fCKUP v-e, auto., atr................................................'9,995.00
1991 BUICK PARK AVENUE ULTRA.................................................*12,999.00
1993 GMC, Ya TON 4X4 PICKUP Auto., etr................................ ............115,995.00
1991 CHEVY CORSICA v~.- euto., air .......
'6,995.00
1991 FORD THUNDERBIRD auto., alr, v-e .............................~.......................... $7,995
1991
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SALES &amp; SERVICE

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

204 Condor Sl
.. toduler.

Tax"&amp;-not
included.

Pomeroy, OH.

FILL &amp; WINIIR HOURS

' All f)l1c8o lncludl

-

Brianne Proffitt scored seve!)
points each for Jenny Roush's Tor·
nadoes. Southern tied the game at
40 heading into the fmal quarter.
Blackwell led both teams in
scoring wilh 17, while Compstoo
added 16. Meigs hit 24 of 66 from
lhe floor, including one of seven
from three·,POint range wr 36%.
Meigs bit SIX of 10 from lhe line
for 60%. Meigs had. 30 rebounds,
wilh Compston grabbing eight llld
Blackwell getting ~~:. Meigs turned
lhe ball over 12 umes llld had 13
assists wilh Blac1twcll and CllcirYI
Jewell getting four each.
Manuel and Proffitt ted South·
em wilh 14 points each, and Moore
_added II. Soulhern bit 22 of 56
frorii lhe floor, including six of 16
from three point range for 39% .
Soulhcm cashed in on four of eight .
from the line for SO%. Soulhern
had 27 rebounds, witb Proffitt's
eight leading the way.
. Reserve notes: Meigs won the
reserve game 30.22. Carissa Ash
led Meigs wilh 10 poiniS. Cynlhia
Caldwell scored 11 for Southern.

The plan is still being completed. Among its elements:
- A payroll tax, probably
between four and six percent, to
generate money for small-market
clubs. 1bc·cuct numbers, howcv·
er, have not beep detmnined. union
bead Donald Fehr stressed to
agentl.
- A multimillioo-dollar fund to
promote baseball in an:as such as
mternational play an4 inner-city
development. The money could
come from the union's licensing
contracts, which aencrates more
dull $SO million a year.
·
- Playl:i participalion in major
mi!ement decisions, such as
ch sinR a commissioner and
ex ion. The union will ask tO be
included in several owner commit·
tees, a new concept to baseball.

•

I
t
I

•

CLOSED MONDAY
TUE.·FRI. I:Q0-5:00;
SAT. s:Q0-12:00

TIE

B au•v
SYStEM

- No change in eligibility for
free agency or salary wbitration.
"The goal was to find somelhing lhat addressed the concerns of
~wing lhe 11ame without retreat·
mg on the pnnciples on which this
union was built," agent Randy
Hendricks said. "If they accept this
framework and bargain. tb1s can
lead to a deal. U they reject it out of
hand, it will show their goal is to
defeat the union."
The proposal does not include a
salary cap, which teams demand.
Owners an: likely to say the offer
doesn't address lheir problems and
impose i cap when they meet next
Thursday in Chicago.
"Thele is an assumption on the
pan of the agents that the owners
will implement no mauer wha! we
do." Fehr said.
If owners do go ahead with a

lJy RICK WARNER

NEW YORK (AP) - U history
is a good guide, Rasbaan Salaam
wiU win the Heisman Trophy.
. The Colorado tailback is the
fourlh Division 1-A player to rush
for 2.000 yar.:s in a season. The
other lhrce - Marcus Allen, Mike
Rozier and Barry Sanders - woo
lhe Reisman.
"I think Salaam clinched it
when he got 2,000 yards,'' said Lee
Corso of ESPN, which wiU televise
the Reisman armouncemcnt Satur·
day night from the Downtown Alb·
letic Club. "It's a marlc of excellence that fans can relate to,''
Salaam, who led lhe nation in
rushing (2.055 yards) and scoring
(24 touchdowns), is favored to beat
out Penn State teammates Kerry
Collins and Ki-Jana Carter and
Alcorn State quarterback Steve
McNair.
Salaam went over lhe 2,000·
yarn mark in his fmal regular-season game, a 259-yard effort against
Iowa State. It was his fourth game
over 200 yards, including a career·
high 317 against Texas .
"Everyone else who's $ained
2.000 yards has won the Reisman;
I don't see why he should be any
different," said Mark Blaudschun
of the Boston Globt. "He not Qnly
gained 2,000 yards, but he did it
against top competition."
Six of Colorado's opponents an:
,going to bowl games, including
top-ranked Nebraska, No. 11

margin, wilh lhe Tomcats' only
tally coming from Tonya Trace's
tme pointer.
Tnmble was 12·S2 from the ·
floor, 5-18 at the line, had 24
rebounds, five blocked shots, seven
steals, IS turnovers and 29 fouls .
The winners hit 17-63 for 27 percent hit 6-23 at the line, grabbed 47
rebounds, four steals, 22 turnovers,
10 assists (four by Manuel) and 20
fouls.
Sisson, who had 15 rebounds,
was followed by Codner's 11 and
Manuel's eight. Lisle had two
steals. Reserve notes: Southern
dro()Jled a 28·19 reserve game led
by ·Erica Arnott's seven, Jenny
Friend's four. lhRe-point efforts by
Darlene Flowers and Jenny Roush
and two by Cynthia Caldwell's
two. Caldwell had 10 rebounds.
Trimble was led by loy Pettit's
eighL

"To me, it's a no-brainet," said
Ivan Maisel of Newsday. "When
you get 2,000 yards against lhat
kind of schedule, you should win
lhe Heisman."
Not everyone agrees.
ESPN's 8cano Cook voted for
Collins, who nearly set an NCAA
mark for passing effiCiency.
Collins' greatest moment was
Penn State's 96-yard touchdown
drive against Illinois. He completed
all seven of his passes while leading the Lions to the winning score
in the fmal minute.
"Fifty years from now, the two
things people will remember about
this season are Colorado's Hail

_Penn State's drive against lllinois," Cook said.
Carter made a late push for the
Heisman, rushing for 227 yards and
five touchdowns in Penn State' s
rej!ular-season finale against
Michigan State. He finished wilh
fewer yards (1,539) and one less
touchdown than Salaam, but
Salaam had 100 more carries.
Carter gained almost a yard more
per carry. 7.8 to 6.9.
Because they shared the spotlight at Penn State, however, Carter
and Collins probably will split
much of the Eastern vote, JrCVenting either from winning lhe Heisman.

· · ·~

..

'

'!IIIIOV~ and ICIIt Hornlcdt lo die
line. J:lis two f~ throws l8lll dlo
~ mto ovcnune.
Vmny Del Nesro luld 25 1114.
Scan Elliott 24 fo/ San
Elliott's tbrce·pomter f&lt;

::rat

second o~erlime.

Kmgs 103, SoaJa 91 .
Mitch Richmond's 26 pol!lll
and Seattle's second-half~
drought~ up 10 Saaamcnto I
second _vtctory of lhe season over
the Somes.
Walt WilliB!fts contribu!C4 23
pomts for the Kin~. w~ ~~
as many as 17 pomts.m lhe .......
~uarter
bef~ outscormg the Sc.
ICS 3~- 1 dunng a 12:18_lpllll. .
V mcent Askew finiabed walh a
team-high 17 points, and Shawn
Kemp p_roduced 16 points and a
game-h1gh 19 rebOunds for tbe
SuperSonics. who had won their
last SLX games.

cap, then agents might respl)nd
wilh a boycott During their 4 1/])
hour meeting, they diiCIIISCd a t .
00 aignings that could nnae en.
two weeks to tile day a scttlcmeDl
is reached.
"If they impose, I'm not
opposed to lhe idea of pullina a
freeu on all signin~," ageat Jeff
Moorad said. "I II follow the
union's guidelines.''
Larry Walker, lay Bubner ID4
Bill Swift are among the curralt
crop of free 'agents, a group of
more than ISO. Should owners 10
ahead with their cap, about 80 players would become resttictcd
free agents, meaning lheir current
teams would be able to match'
offers. Marquis Grissom, Jack
McDowell and Jim Abbott would
be among lhat star-swddcd group.

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

.
. . ~·~~·~-·~-·~-·~-*---·--·--·--·--·, •

-+ ..

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("[,he 'Da.il~ Sentinel's

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NOTICE OF DRAWING
JURORS
Aevlnd Code, Soc. 2313.20
Office of Commllllonere
of Jurore, Melga County,
Ohio, December t, 1tl4
To All Whom It lley
Concem:
On Frldoy, the tetll day or
December 11184 at 8:30
o'clOCk, a.m., at the omca or
the Cammlulonere of
Jurare of Melgo County,
Ohio, Jurort will be publicly
re-drawn for the Jenuary
·181111 term of the Common
Pleu court or uld County.
wen- a...dfard
l.O. IIcCoy
- . Cominlaolanera of Jurort
Drawing will be hold et
the llelge County Boord of
Election at 112 Mulberry
Ave, Poineroy, Ohio.
(12) 9; lTC

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. ....

Annual

...
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2dltloh

....

...
•
•. •
.... • •
....
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..... .
... ... ...
...
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-+
...
....
...
Advertising Deadline:
...
Monday, December 19th, 5 PM ... ... ..
.... ..

•

....

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'

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TK, extras.
Many more 4X4's available

Your l.lut Stop

$8995

c:.r...., .

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RIVERSIDE MOftJRS
Acroaa from Super AmerlCilln Pomeroy
Jimmy Deem ,
614-992-3490
Cecil BOIHIIllll

I

...

To Place Your Greeting
Call Dave or Bob
at 992-2155

..

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

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'

.•....•.

,

to win Heisman Trophy
Colorado's Salaam
tabbed
Kansas Slate and No: 20 Michigan. Mary pass .against Michigan. arid

I'

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.

Taxes and title fee not included. ·
All payments subject to,credit approval .

•

·Players plan boycott if owners impose salary .cap

Southern girls beat Trimble
in season's first contest

. 1994_CH~VY

V-6, 5 speed, air, tilt,
cruise and more.
WAS $18,291 •

Now$16

1

Thursday !bat Minnesota Vikings
assistant Tyrone Willingham would
getthejob.
.
He would become the fourth
black among the nation's 107 Divi·
sion I·A bead coacbes, joining
Temple's Ron Dickenon, Wake
Forest' s Jim Caldwell and Eastern
Michigan's Ron Cooper.
.
"NobOdy' s talking about boy· . By RONALD BLUM
cotting or anything crazy,'' Cooper
ATLANTA (AP) -If baseball
said. "All we're sayiag is let' s ownen impose a salary cap ~ext
have a cbance tO interview. That's week, agents may respond wllh a
the biggest thing."
. signings boycott designed to paraLaSt winter, the 3,()()()..member lyze teamS trying to form their ros·
BCA threatened to boyCOU basket· ten.
.
ball gauies after delt.gites at the
Union officials met wilh about
NCAA convention refused to 40 agents Thursday and outlined
restore a 14tb scholarship for - the PJl1POsal they will prese~ t. to
men •s basketball. The tbreat was ownen Saturday when bargammg
called off after tbe BCA received resumes in Rye Brook, N.Y.
assurances that the NCAA would
Pitchers David Cone and John
consider its concerns, wbicb also Franca also auended the session,
include initial eligibility require: the end of tile union's annual four·
mcnts for athletes and job opportu- · day meeting. They said lhe plan
nities for minority coacbes and would addfcss the owners' goal of
administrala'S.
creating a partneiship with players
The BCA's latest action comes .and growing the game.
after civil rigbts leader Jease Jack·
"The players are puuing their
son clllirged Colorado witb racism money where their moulh is,"
in hiring assistant coach Rick Cone said. "Well, here it is."
Neubeisel to succeed Bill MeCartney inste_ad of another assistant,
Bob Simmons. wbo is black.

,By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondmt
Meigs opened up a 20-11 lead
,after one period and held off a
Soulhem comeback and defeated
lhc Tornadoes 56-S4 in girls' Tri·
'Valley Conference basketball
'8Clion Monday evening at Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium.
The Lady Marauders held an
eight point lead wilh 1:30 left in
die game, but junior sharpshooter
1onna Manuel put Soulhem back
iuo.tbe-con&amp;oat with two three
~inters to cut it to a two point
giuDe. The Tornadoes had a cbaDce
to lie it wilh five 'seconds left in tho
game, but missed the frollt end of a
one-on-one. In the fight for lb-.
rebound, the clock ran out, and the
Marauders escaped willi the win.
Meigs jumped out to the early
lead behind the one-two scoring
punch of Amber Blackwell and
'Vanessa Compston. Blackwell
scored 11 fmt-period points, and
Compston added seven in building
lhc maroon and gold to 1hc lead.
Soulhcm pulled to wilhin 28-27
at the half, as Becky Moor~ and

llolrok .. N.Y. IOII,I2:JOp.m. CIJlVBI..AND "lllllll, 4 p.m

CINCINNAn" N.Y. Ofuts, I p.m.

.

. , ujk tW .such a g~· shot, bu' -'11.
1 ~unds in lhe Bullcll' overtime
II s ~ugh~' tho pomt guanlw
Su~ 136,.Ne!i106
. 1VICtory at Dallas. ,
_
.
havmg to dislribute tho ba11111'01111&amp;
Dan Majetle llld Wayman TuRex Chapman s 18-footer w11h
and still get your abols," Houston · dale eacb had 19 points and 29.3 seconds remaining in overtime
coach Rudy Tomjanovich said of Charles Barkley added 18 as broke a tie and Scou,Skiles added
Smith, who doubled his scoring Phoenix cruised past New Jersey.
two free iluows with 11.4 seconds
av~rage before halftime with 17
The Suns, wlio have won lhRe left for lhc win, only the second for
pomts.
of five games on dleir seven-game the Bullets since Webber came
Smith's final lhrce-pointer of road b'ip had seven ptayen in dou- over in a ttade from Golden Slate.
the night put Houston back on top ble fi~.
Jamal Mashburn scored 45
for good, 91·90, wilh 2:07 remainPhoenix led 84~ in the lhird points and Jim Jackson added 26
ing.
period, and the Nets didn't get for the Mavericks, who had won
The Rockets led by IS points closer lhan 14 poiniS lhc rest of the four of their previous six g&amp;I!ICS.
early in lhe third quarter, but the way.
Jazz 117, Spurs 114(2 OT)
Hornets came back to take an ~I·
New Jersey, which has lost six
Jeff Hornacek's 26 points and
1S lead early in lhc fo'!flh penod of it last seven games, w~ led by free throws down the ~h lifted
on consecutive lhrec-~t ba~'3 Derrick Coleman's 27 pomts and Utah over San Antomo m double
by Dell Curry, who fmishcd Wllh 10 rebounds. It was the Nets' overtime.
21 points.
fourth straight loss at home.
Karl Malone scored 28 points as
.In other NBA games, it was Bullets 124 Mavericks 121 (OT) the Jazz outlasted the Spurs.
Phoe~ix 136, New Jersey 10~;
Chris W~bber is starting to gel
A basket by David Robinson
Washmgton 124, Dallas 121 m with his new Washington team- gave the Spurs a 95-93 lead with
overtime; Utah 117, San Antonio mates.
36 seconds left in regulation, but
114; and Sacramento 103, Seattle
He had 23 points and 14 Avery Johnson committed a

:Meigs edges Southern 56-54

NFL's Week 15 slate

MkldleiNry 79, s.v.._, 11
Mlacrlccrrdla76. Delawin: Vtl. l5
N.Y. MariU. . 64, YcobinSI(OT)
Nyocl61, BlooDield 66
alio Vttlleyi9, CIDctoJtttlj Bible 70

Rldorii,~UIIIY. ,J

•

Sllon&gt;o.O.B. - .......75 161 11.6 41 12
Rood.MJo. ...........70 995 14.1 l9 3

NEW YOU YANDI!S: Auouoced .
lbe .,...,._ ol Iact Lowo. d&gt;lef o! opllllioa

QuluJplac 105, s. C o _ IOJ
Rbode blud Coli. 91 , Sal .. Repu

of lle •~rda. Ia froa~ are {L:R) James Wblte
and Kevin Neel. ID lle secoad row are Rotary
Club members LIDda BrlaJe and John Perrba.ID
lle third row are Gulavo Alfaro, Josh Howard,
Adam Sheets and Melp bead ClOilcb Jim Sbeets.

• Lto. 6uJ&amp;III.
Carur,Mio.........!Ol 1041 IO.:Z 6.! 7
- · AIL ...........97 12Dl 11.4 It 10 ,
Rlce. S.P....... .......I7 12DI 13.1 69 II

&amp;Ill

llual&lt;r 70. J:ilaD l'lllll Sl
I.e11aoo11 Val. 72, Unimlo 60
Jllow.•llaJimoutb 101. Won:etllr St.

IJ

WRESTLING AWARDS - Tbe Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary II the spouor for Saturday's
Meigs Rotary Invltalloaal Warm-Up WreatUng
Tournament, wblcb wiD be lleld at Meigs HIRb
SdlooL Pk:tund are memben of the Rotary and
memben of the Meigs Wrestllnateam with some

a.a.o•o.-&amp;ay, I pm
SuacbJ'••-

•

:•

"a-.7:30p.m.
7:30 ,....

m1

6uJ&amp;III.
w-. s.. ..All. Lto.
un

llliDI:
c.

!Ia.

PodlkDtrioloo

P1wcou .................. 12

.....

- . R I I ..... l67 216

·

'

NBA standJngs

a..........................a

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game before that, se«ed 21 poiniS
to help Houston end a two-game
losing sueak.
But Smilh's contribution was
just as importanL He made seven
lhree-pointers in hitting a seasonhigh 25 to rally the Rockets to' a
101-95 victory over the Charlotte
Hornets Thursday night
• ·
·

BCA to I nvestlgate

Belpre
(ll·ll·ll-18=72)
Kim Arnold 1-0-2, Jaimic Colebank 9..().().18, Kadty Coyner 7-2·
s..2s, Crystal Goin 1-0-2, Angie
Haynes 3-0=6, Erin Humphrey 3-1·
2= 11, Kristy Rhodes 4· 0· 0o:8.
Totals: W69-315-7/13=72
Total field goals - 31-74
(41.9%)
Rebouadll- 32 (Colebank 9)
Asslsll - 14 (Coyner six and
Colebank five)
Steall-23
Turnoven- 14
Fouls-21

Scoreboard

r..
:~r
~ ..................13

.

Rockets down Hornets 101-95; Suns and Bullets also w1n

I '

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Ohio

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.of·

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�Pege I f'he Deily Sentinel

PomerO,-Middleport, Ohio ·

Fridey, December 8, 1114' .

Pomeroy-41klcllepon, Ohio

uxley
.es first
n contest

Woman's second time around is just as legitimate as first
Ann
Landers

happy that I had remarried, but a year
af'la' the wedding, my children began
to call Tom "Dad,• Uld that's when
the trouble slllted.
Lila constantly reminds my
childlal lhat Tom is not their ~al
f'ather. Sbc hu, in £act, told her own
lrlda that 'Ibm is not their uncle. She
ortcn makes unkind comments about
Tom in front of her in-laws. I stiU
consider them my in- laws, too, but
she goes liut of her way to make me
look bad in their eyes. Lila claims her
husband feels the 11111e way, but he
has never indicated by word or
deed that he considers Tom an
outsider.
I've had enough of Lila's rotten
behavior. How can I put an end to all

'

Dear Ann Landen: Pivo years
ago, my ('ust husband passed away
very suddenly £rom a massive bean
attack. He was only 38. We had two
young children. Two years later, 1
marriccl a m.-vclous man. "''bm• is
wonderful to my childJm and trea1s
them aa if lhcy WCR his own.
I wu always close to my rust
husband's brother and his wife,
"Lila." At rust. they seem~ very

CDC study finds
high health cost of
poor education
'
By A.J. HOSTETLER
Associated Preaa Writer
ATLANTA (AP) -. Americans
who never graduated from high
school are more likely 10 smoke,
live a sedentary life and be over·
weight than more educated people
- no lll8IICt what their race, feder·
a1 health officials 1111y.
The report.by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention is
the fust major study of education
on the health of all races in the
United States, said Nora Keenan;
an epidemiplogist with the center.
It found that the correlation
between health and education first noted in whites - existed
across the board, Keenan said
Smoking, excess weight and
lack of Cllcrcise put people at risk
0
for heart disease, stroke, diabetes
· and cancer - which account for
about 70 percent of all deaths in the
United States.

And people with less than 12
years of education were most likely
to engage in those high-risk behaviors,the study found.
Keenan said the findings should
alrer how officials develop public
health messages to reach those at
highest risk as weU lis members of
particular ethnic groups. For elWII·
pte, a pilot study to reach overweight black women used ethnic
fonds and materials and had black
women as group leaders, she said.
. Among the findings in the
study, repori.Cd Thursday:
_ For male Asians and Pacific
Islanders, 34.4 percent of those
·th 1 than
h hool eli 1
WI ess
a big sc
Poma smoked, comP.UCC' to 16.3 percent of those w1th more than 12
years of schooling.
_ Among black women lacking
h'gh
1 sc h001eliptorna, so •9 percelll
awere
overweight, compared to 28.9
percent of those with more than 12
years of schooling.

the back-biting wilhout creating a 10 remain here, there was much about
major break? •• PED TO THE · American society and culture they
TEETH IN CALifORNIA
found puzzling. They used your
DEAR TEETH: Lila was column to help theltl undcl!lcand how
undoubledlyvttyfondofherbmlht.f. Americans think about the various
in-law Uld resents lhe fact that y0u dilemmas of life.
have' given his children another
I remember how they would sit
father. This does not, however, around the table with other Chinese
justify her •rouen behavi&lt;W" and ugly . immigrants. One penon would read
back-biting.
a letter addressed to you, and the
DistanccyounelffromLila,andlct others would try to predict your
her know why you no longer choose response 10 it.
to he in her company. Let's hope t1u1
So, dear Ann, not only has your
time will help heal the wounds and column helped people with personal
that one day she will he happy you problems, it has served as a vehicle
were able to rdluild your life.
for helping newcomers to the Unii.Cd
Dear Aan Landen: My parentS States assimilate into American
came to the Unii.Cd States from China culture. Obviously, parents have a lot
in the late 1940s. When they decided 10 do with the way a child grows up,

•

AMS

NEW YORK (AP) _ Whither
"}Jomicide"? ·
"We've had our heartaches, but
three seasons and 19 episodes later,
we're still here," 1111ys Claik John·
son, who plays Detective Meldrick
4wis on. ti!U QIJ!her • Baltimorebased police drama.
·
Somehow, "Homicide" keeps
.__ ·
..
~...,gmg on.
, Grittier than a concrete slab,
"Homicide" debuted in the show·
case following 1992's Super Bowl,
It won the critics' raves, but got
killed in the ratings. It was canceled and finished 99th for the sea,son.
"When we fust came on the air,
we just knew we had a hiL It was
such a cocky show," Johnson said.
"Everybody was so full of confi·
dence. ... And they canceled us."
But "Homicide" refused to die.
Pressure from viewers and critics

· alike won the show a four-week

tryout last season in the "L.A.
Law" time slot on Thursdays.
"I've never seen anything that
was more clearly the result of great
critical response," Johnson said.
"They were embarrassed to shut us
down."
This season, NBC lu!s expressed
its faith in the series by owning a
piece of iL NBC publicists won't
say how big a piece, but the n.et·
work ordered 13 episodes produeed,then mlered seven more.
· The bad news is that the net. work put "!:fomi~ide" in the ~0
p.m. EST Friday lime slot opposll.e
ABC's "20-20" newsma¥,azine,
rankr.d 19th this season. ' Homicide" ranks 84th.
"And we're up against 'Picket
Fences,' which is a wonderful
show," groused Richard Belzer, a
comedian who broke throul!!t as a
dramatic actor on "Homic1de" in
the role of Detective John Munch.
CBS' "Picket fences" won

RIVERVIEW READil:RS - Riverview Elementary students
recently participated In tbelr anaual "Rig•t to Read" week. From
left tbe following students took part in buddy reading: Cody Bar·
tram, Jessica Hupp, Erik Kofrel and Troy Boggs. Tbe students
learned about Oblo blatory, state government, area veterans, early
trauportatloo, tbe postal service and famous Obloans.

three Emmy Awards this year,
including best drama, and ranks
51st for the season. It attracts
exactly the same kind of viewers
that "Homicide" so desperately
needs.
"Either 'Picket Fences' or our
show is goinS.IO be the most-taped
show in the h\$101)' of television,"
Belzer said .
In fact, NBC says "Homicide"
and "Picket Fences," get about S
percent of their season-to-date rat·
mgs from VCR taping. That's
about average. The most-taped dra·
mas are the Fox network's "X.
Files" and "Melrose Place."
Belzer and Joboson said the
show's prodiJCelS have made a con·
scious effort this season to make
"Homicide" a bit more accessible.
in Belzrl's words, "lighter and not
as scary."
"There's been a certain amount
of compromise," Johnson said.
"But the compromises that have
been made have been 10 the benefit
Df the show."

Executive producers Barry
Levinson, Tom Fontana and their
co-executive, Henry BromeU, have
made the changes very subtly,
Belzer said. ,
"Remember this season's fust
episode? Ned (Beatty, who plays
Detective Stanley Bolander) is
waiChing TV and he says, ·'Produc·
ers make 'em put sex in it.'
Remember?
"That was directed at NBC
because they .wanted more sex and
they wanted more - weU, mostll
sex," Belzer said. "We stiU don t
have any violence in the show.''
So. whither "Homicide," Belz?
"If we can make the show more
accessible without diluting the
im~t of it, then I'm aU for it," he
saJd. "I think we managed to do
that, but it's hlll'd 10 do."
"You want it to be real and serious and dark, yet I think it's fun·
nier and sexier," Belzer said. "It's
still 'Homicide.· We're stiU murder '
police, so there'll always he a dead
body somewhere."

Man says he was fired for being tired
By SONJA BARISIC
Associated Prall Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) -A aouth·
west Ohio man sa71 he was unfairly fared for being~
John Campbell was tired a lot,
and even fell asleep on the job a
few times. But he says the hospital
wherc he was a bill collector had
no rightiO fire him, because he has
a disorder that makes him chroni·
call ~
Campbell, 55, is suing Mercy
Hospital in Hamilton, 20 miles
northwest of Cincinnati, for lost
. wages and uns~ified damages.
He also wants his job back. He had
woated there for IS years.
·
Telephone calls to Charles

Roesch, attorney for Mercy Hospi· Alphonse Gcrhardstein of Cincin·
nati.
tal, were not returned Thursday.
Gerhardsl.ein ackoowledged that
· The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in
the
disorder made Campbell
U.S. District Court, claims Camp·
drowsy, affected his concenuation
hell is a victim or discrimination.
Campbell vhen reached Thun- .and caused him 10 fall asleep at
day at his Hamilton home, said work. But be said Cam{lhell stiU
doctors at a sleep laboratory diag- was able to do the essentials of his
nosed his condition as severe sleep job.
Campbell's condition was diagapnea.
In sleep apnea, an obslnlction of nosed in Aprill992. and the hospi·
the breathing passage causes a per- tal was made aware of it, Gerhanl·
son 10 temporarily stop breathing stein said
while sleepinA, making it difficult
The hospital fucd Campbell in
10 get rest. The condition oft.en is August that year for allegedly malt·
accompanied by snoring, coughing ing some mistakts on the job, Gerhardslein said. He said Campbell
or snorting.
Campbell referred quesUons remains unemployed.
about the case t~ his attorney,

----Community calendar_
--Tbe Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
·nou-prolit 1roups wlsblng to
anuounce meetings and special
event1. Tbe calendar is not ·
deslgued to promote sales or
fuaid nlaen of OJ type. Items
are printed • .,_ pennlts and
cannot be parauteed to run a
speclfte u•ber Ill days.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Prcce.Ptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi
Sorority, annual Christmas party,
Thursday at 6:30 p.m., home of
Charlotte Elberfeld. Members to
· take irems fll' Serenity House.

TUPPERS PLAINS - TupJJC'lS
Plains Poat 90S3, Thursday, 7:30
pm. at poll home.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Orange, Thunday, potluck dinner,
6 p.m with meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Members to take non-perishable
. food items.
· CliESTHR r Shade River
Lodge 4S3 ~&amp;AM reiiD!ar mee'WfThursday, 7.30 p.m. to mstall o a-

cers. Refreshments.

mas dinner, Saturday, 6:30 .p.m.
Turkey. and ham .furnished. 'f1!ose
attending to take covered d1sh.
Santa's coming.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Round and
square dance featuring CJ aod
POMEROY - The National
Country Gentlemen at the old
Legion Hall friday £rom 8-11 p.m. Guard will give $2 pneumonia vac·
Free admission, all welcome.
cines from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday
at the Meigs County Health
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and Department.
Water Conaervation District Board
of Supervisors, 7 p.m. dinner at
SUNDAY
SIOw.away, G~polis.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School concert band will have a
POMEROY - Return Jonathan holiday 1Jlt)lml111 and the National
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the ~ Honor Society an art disJilay
American Revolution, will meet m the East.em High School auditoSaturday at 1:30 at the Pomeroy . rium Sunday at 3 p.m. Ban.d dircc·
Library.
tor is Susan Climer, and the art
instructor is Lolita Mmow.
. POMEROY- Salisbury Town·
ship Tru.stees. friday, 6 p.m at the
CHESlER- Appreciation din·
township hall, Rock Springs.
ncr, Cheater P'ue Department Sunday, fire bouse. Taike a covered
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Pull dish. EVttyone who helped during
Gospel Chwcb, ~ Boaom, din- year's activilica invited to IDend.
ncr and sing friday m~L Dinner at
5:30 p.m.; C1ar:t Famjly singers, 7
MONDAY
p.m:
EAST MEIGS -Eastern Local
I
Board of lljlucation special meeting
SATURDAY
Monday, 6:30 p.m. at the high
BIRMINGHAM - Burlingham schoOl to discuss personnel.
Modem Woodmen, annual Clirist.

SQUDded like one to me. If nothing :
: else, it leis us blow how times have :
-chanpd.

you played in my relalively ~
well~adjusi.Cd life.
Mom passed away several years - A woman aaid to her 5-)'CII'Oid
ago, but my dad remains a regular , 11011, "Stop, already. You IOUIId like a
reader of yours (as am I) and stiU ; broken recoid. • And th~ kid said,
hands IJie clippings of a favorite 'What's a' record?" ·- LOU.Y IN
column from time to time. If you · BOSTON
DEAR LOU.Y: That's a Gem all
could print this letter, rm sure my dad
would enjoy and apprecial.e iL .. righL Thanks for ICIIding it on.
Ann l.allders' booklet, "N11ggeu
HERB INWASHJNGION, D.C.
DEAR HERB: Thank you for one aNI Doozits," lrDs noerythillg from
of the sweetest leoa's rve received the outrageously fulln'y to the
in a long time. It pleases me poig/IQ/Jtly illsiglllful. Selld 11 self
enormously that my column has been ~wd, long, busiMu·siu: tllvt·
such a belp to you - Uld 10 othcn. lope aNI a check or money order for
$5 (IIW incll~Ms rJo.rlagt llllllllall·
How good of you to let me know
Dear Ann Landen: I don't know dling) to: Nuggets, cloAM Lallder~,
whether this is a "gem" or not, but it P.O.Boxll562, ChiciJgo,lll.60611·
0562. (In Cllllllda, selld $6.)

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No link betwe.en
children's height
and social problems

Right to Read Week

After 19 episodes high hopes held for 'Homicide'
!{.~~~!fter

·and I wrir.e to thank you for the part

ByMATTHEWFORDAHL
Associated l'l'esa Writer
CIDCAGO (AP) - Short chil·
dren are no more likely to he shy,
anxious or depressed than taller
kids, according 10 a study that con·
tradicts earlier research.
The smdy, financed by a group
that supports the use of growtb hor·
mones, suggests that parents who
hope expensive hormone treat·
ments will improve their childrcns'
self-esteem may be wasting their
money.
"The strongest case for treat·
ment should ... not be based on the
assumption that if you're short
you're having problems," said
study co-aulhor David Sandberg, a
professor of pediatric psychiatry at
the State University Df New York
in Buffalo.
.
The study, published Wednes·
day in the journal Pediatrics, was
financed in par! by the Human
Growth Foundation, a nonprofit
group that bacb the use of growth
hormones. Foundation members
supported lho study's findings.
The research was based on surveys of 180 boys and 78 girls, ages
8 10 14, who were referred to a pro. gram for treatment of height deli·
ciency. Researchers would not dis·
close the hospital where the program is based,
They found that short boys
desCribed themselves aa less social·
ly active, biJ,t ,did not have more
behavior problems than a group of
average heighL
Older boys who were shorter
than expected tended to show
slighdy more' problems, probably
because they have been living with
their shortness for a longer period .
of time, Sandjlerg said.

tin~~~~~~~=~

-•
'&gt;

assistant professor at Ststc University of New York at Buffalo.
The findings contradict earlier
studies suggesting shorter youngsters are more likely to he malad·
justcd than taller kids.
Jim Weiss, a spokesman for
Genentech Inc., which earned $216
million last year on growth hormooe sales, said the ftndings were
consistent with the company's phi·
losophy.
About 20,000 U.S. children
have taken human growth hormone ..The National lnstitulell ot
Health estimate about 8,000
receive the drug solely for cosmetic
reasons. Doctors say perceived
psychological reasons are frequent·
ly the only problems cited by )1111'·
ents requesting the treatment,
which costs about $30,000 a year.
Many doctors recommend hormone treatment for children only if
it's medically nece~. such as
when lcidney failwc leads to a deficiency in the natural growth hormone.
Otherwise, researchers said, the
treatment may he more traumatic
than wha~tver social problems the
parents are ttying to avoid.
"Having 10 ~o 10 the endocrine
clinics, the da1ly injections and
parental supervision - are these
. ~ ev~ ~~re. ~tressful?" Campos SaJd. ,._,,' . ., ...

'
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:
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:
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6 , to 7'

off Regular Price •·.•.

m~S~e~~c;g~..~~j ~; 'tiy~acu~ :·. ·... , ~92~~77~
co-author Susana Campos, an · .. fj.U&amp;'M'Jia ..

.IMC I
I

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HoHo

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0
DO

iC/ .1

By PETER H. GO'IT, M.D.
DBAR DR. OOTT: I'm a mid·
die-qed male. My wife Uld I have
raised a wonderful family and I stiU
have a strollg desire for sex, even
• though she has no desire at all.
Would a device or procedure he
available for me 10 usc for ejacula·
tion7 MasturtJation cloesn 't seem to

Thil year buy a s;tllhatll
cUllom made for anyone on
your lilt. Willi horne delivery,
aiUblcripllon llldlll for
thoaa wMh a buill-In ourioalty.
Glva a.gifl that c - moN
thin once • year.

•

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DEAR READER: Many men
(and women) whose partners are
unable or 111willing to have sexual
relations find that a vibrator wiU
provide sexual release. Of course,
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If you are involved in a loving
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Send In the following coopon,
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Special Holiday offer ends
December 31, 1994.

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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD
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-ONLY-

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PIHH-,1011-,

IIMIPid on,.lopo to mum your
~

tbe Gallla·Melgs Children's Home and women
al tbe Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended
Care FadHty. Here Linda Mayer, left, and Betsy
Hawtllorne, banlt employee, admire one or tbe
beautiful dolls.

ON DISPLAY - The S4 dolls costumed .
area womea In tbe Farmers Banlt aod Savings
Co. dress-a-dol cllnteat will be on display at tbe
bank through Dec. 17. The following week they
wiD be prepared for ClaristmM giving to girls at

Percent· Pure Vermont Maple
Syrup, Grade A-dark amber. Por a
catalog or to order, call 1-800-275·
3026.
Butternut Mountain Parm in
Johnson, VI., sells the same grade
of syrup for $7.50 a pinL For a cat·
alog or to order, call 1-800-8282376.
.
Maple Grove Farms of Vermont's price for the pint of syrup is
$10.95. They have a big line of
maple items. Por a 1:atalog or to
order calll-802-748-3136. Their
addr~ss is 167 Portland St., St.
Johnsbury, VT OS819.
Coombs' Vermont Natural
Products also has a full line of
maple products, and they charge
$8.6S for the pint of syrup. To
order calll-800-338-1849.
STUMPED: AUTOMATIC,
INDIVIDUAL SPAGHETTI
F.ORKS - Marge Tavenner of
North Aumra, lll, writes: "I have
been looking for automatic, indi·
vidual spaghetti forks. I saw them
on the 'Home Show' over a year
.
.
ago. The demonstrator at that nme

Official Entry
Form

Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nasb-Cummings are co-authors
or "Ask Auue &amp; Nan" (Wbet·
stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
Two Prize Problem-Solvers
Share Tbeir Secrtts" (Bantam).
To order, calll-800-888·1220.
Copyrigbt1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For inrormatiou ou bow to
communicate electronically witb
Ibis columnist and others, COD·
tact America Online by calling 1-

....c::
.§
...

~.£,
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800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

How to negotiate sex in a mature _sexless marriage

.

I&amp;;' .. I

•olds. Tile odler wlnnlnl dolls, piotured left to
rl1ht, were costumed lly Renee Carson, tbe
bride; Deborah C. Kennedy, Pcmeroy, tbe pret·
tlest; and Trbba Johnson, Long Bottom, tbe
1904 style dnll category.

DRESS-A-DOLL CONTEST WINNERS Joanne Wlll181ns of the Farmers Banlt wblch
spo1110red tbe dress-a-doD
displays tbe
wiDnlng dolll. Taltlq tbe
prize
$200
savlnp bGIId waa
or Mklcllejport
who

In a few minutes the yeast
should begin to work. You'll sec
bubbles appear on the surface and
the mixture should sweU. If your ·
yeast doesn't do this, dump ih·
DEAR ANNB AND NAN:
When I was in.the fifth or sixth
grade, back in 191S or 1916, I used
to get some maple sugar patties for
a penny each. They were about I·
1/2 inches in diamer.er and 5/16. inc~ th.ick with fluted edge~. I
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
would 1i10 10 know where I ~ight
NANCY NASH..ctJMMINGS
be able to fmd the S8111e agam, as
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I weU as learn where I might be able
have two pounds of dry yeast in my to find so~e r~al maple syrup.
'freezer, unopened for at least two Because you rem Vc:nnont, maybe
years. May 1 use it or should I you'll be able to give me such
dump it? - ROSB EISENBERG, mformation. - H.R. GRACE,
Lockport. N.Y.
Hastings, Neb.
DEAR ROSE: Yeast generally
DEAR H.R.: We rang up sever·
lasts about a year. If yours has been al different places that sell maple
inasealcdllag,itmaystillheatlvo. products. We couldn't find any of
We always proof, that is ICSI, our the maple sugar patties that you
yeast before we bake anf1h!Jg.
describe, but we did learn thet::
Here's how you do IL Pour the called "Maple CuL" All the p
dry active yeast iniO a 1/2 cup of that we called C8JJ}' maple candy as
warm water (about 100·1.15 weUassyrup.
degrees), add the sugar the rec1pe . The Vc:nnont Maple &amp; Catalog
calls for, stir wcU and 11e1 aside.
Co. charges $6.50 for a pint of.too

.
,
,.
··· Hubbard s Greenhouse ,

lllt-;;,"11 ~
lEtt I

Our special page(s)

ASK .,.NE • NAN

and seemed 10 be better off in some ·
Now 112 • 118
cases. The younger oalrJs - 8 to 12
···· open 9 a.m. · 5 p.m. daa'I y ·•···•·
- described their athletic promise
12 noon . 5 p.m: Sunday ·

and social skills more positively
than even normal-size girls.

AMONG THE •..

By CHARLINE HOEFLICH
Sendnel News Staff
An Indip doll at$ircd in white
lle~::~accented with fur and
i Cl
with feathers took the lOP
prize in the P.mas Bank Uld Sav·
mgs Co. Dreaa-A-Doll contest.
Angela Huxley of Middleport
costumed the winning doll. She
took first place in the characiCr category and then WCI1\ on to win lhe
grand prize of a $200 savings.bond.
Winners in the categones of
prettiest, bridal; characiCr and 1904
style dress each received $100 sav·
ings bond·from the bank. Judging
was based on sewing sld1ls, crcativ.it)', and oripwty.
In addiiiOO to RIWey the other
Winnen were Deborah C. Kennedy,
the pretliest, with a doU auired in a
green satin gown with gold accent,
a matching hat and a fur muff;
Renee Carson Long Bottom, a
bride doll, and Trisha Johnson,
Long Bottom, a doll costumed in
an authentic 1904 designed gown
in brown 11111in with gold braid trim.
The bank was founded in 1904 and
·the category was set in honor of
that.
111e 54 doUa costumed by area
women will he given to girls at the.
Gallia-Mciga Children's Home,
and women residents at VeteranS
Memorial Hospital Extended Care
,facility.
Exceptional creativity was dis·
·played by those who dressed the
. doUs provided by P~ Bank.
· Some WCR costumed in elegant
-fabrics of velvet and satin, while
others were in cotton casuals and
. crocheted clothing. Elaborate hats
and hairdos were featured on some
of the doUa. The bride dolls carried
miniature floral bouquets, the
· angels had halos and one carried a ,
while clove in her hand.
There were clown and orienllll
doUs along with one costumed as a
baseball player.
·
The dolls will remain on display
for public viewing through Dec.
17.

"The bottom line is this,' said
the 5-fook?, ~ifii.~. ;,:,I;&gt;.i w sity !s
part of what i&gt;emg human IS
about."

;=P •·•.40%

PICTURE YOUR CHILD

Public Notice

Public Notice

RESOLimON 15.114
BE n' RESOLVED th1t
the Pomeroy Vlllege CouncA
har1by r11olv11 to .glvt
rnponelblllty
lor
repll-nt 1nd upkHP to
thl Olllo Depertment ol
1'1'1neportelloi'l tor "No
P1rklng• elan• ·within the
VIllage ol Pomeroy,
lnctudiCI 111 the following

13.110 L No P8rklng
Truck• ov•r 1000 1111.
13.211 A HlndlcJppld
Perking .
13.220 L No P1rklng
Truck• over 1000 lb1.
13.2711 A Hendlclpptd
Perking
1U37 L No Plrklng thll
tldl of.._.
14.4711 L No P1rklilg
Anytime
·
Thl1 ruolutlon w••
p1111d at tha ragul1r
mHIInO or Porntroy-VIIIIIge
Council.

ligna:

. 12 Months 188.68_

Pon~~roy•NO
Plrklng ~~~~

US33

START DELIVERY ~TE - - - - - -

12.121 A Pom«&lt;Y·

The .Daily Sentinel

Hlndloapptd

11t COURT ST., PoMEROY, OHIO 457111

affeci.Cd by a hormone deficiency, a
physical disorder (such as lack of
vaginal lumcation), or an emotion·
a1 problem that affects her sexuality and can be cmeciCd by medica·
tion or counseling.
.
To give you more information, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health Report "Where to Find SQ
Information." Other readers who
would like a copy should send $2
plus a long, self-ltddressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention the title.
DEAR·DR. GOTT: With all the
rece11t information regarding the
dangers of lead ingestion, can you
explain if using full lead crystal
glassware is dangerous? We've
been drinking from crystal for a
long period and wonder if our con·
cems are wcU founded.
DEAR READER: Lead is,
indeed, toxic to the body and ~
lead to headache, personabty

PIINCI1~
KIIIIY Hy. .l, Cllrk·TN11.

· . John lluaur, PrMident
(12) II, 11; 2TC

changes, loss of appetile, abdomi· n~l discomfort, and progressive
renal disease.
PETER.
The most common sources of
GOTT,M.D.
lead poisoning are lead paint, rerenlion of metallic lead objects (such
as shot or weights), contaminated
foods.(that have been improperly
stored in lead-glazed ceramic
was
~y~es~.-rc=
ware), inhalation of lead fumes
(from burning lead-painted wood), foods, when stored in lead-glazed
contamination from a cottage conta.iners. can leach the mineral
~ Oeaded glass and so forth) from the vessels and cause lead
and illicit lead-containing whiskey poisoning. Although crystal grassware is made with lead, there are
or wine.
(As an aside, you might be no reported instances of lead poiinterested in learning that the sonin$ from drinking out of such
ancient Romans clarified their red contamers. Rather, workers who
wines with lead, which produced make the crystal arc at risk,
lead poisoning and a form of arthri· because of exposure to lead dust
,
tis caUed "saturnine ~out." This andfumes.
Therefore,
I
believe
that
you
are
was the basis of lhe mJSCOIICCption
safe
to
continue
to
use
your
good
that mOdem wines cause gouL Pre·
sent-day commercial wines do not crystal. For reasons that I men• contain lead and, therefore. do not tioned, you should not store food
- .especially acidic edibles, such
cause lead poisoning or "gout.")
as juices - in lead crystal.

Public Notice

Public Nollce

PROBATE COURT OF
RESOLimON 17.84
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Ea- of H1.rach1l H.
Council ol liM Vllllgt ot . Bldglty, DlcleHCI
Porntroy, 111 member•
C••• No. zma,
IIMmo concurring:
Dockll13, Plflll22
Thll the Clerk/Trneurtr NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
of the Vlllag• or Pomeroy
OF FIDUCIARY
lncr•••• tha lppropf'letlon Rtvlud Codl, sec:. 2113.01
In the Generll Fund by
"On November 2a, 1114,
•23,000.00. Thle will be 1n 11M llllge County Ptobele·
dletrlbutad to v1rlou1 court, Clll No. 21728,1
acllvltlle lh1t nHCIICito Ill Rllph Sedgley, •nH SA
lncrHftd tor 11M o,...euon · ·124, Alcllll, .OH un1 wat
ol culrllll ,.,.,.-.
1ppolnttc1 Admlnletretor ot
PIINCI 11121/M
tha ••,.t• ot Htrschtl H.
Klthy llyMII, Bldglly, diCIItld, 1111 ' ol ·
Cllrk/Trlleurtr Broedway St., Alclne, OH
' J-~n
"" uu...~. Prtlldtnt ·~1 • ' Aoblrl E. DUck,
...
(12) t , 11; 2TC
Probllt Judge
(12) I, 11, 23; 3TC

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GENESIS

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BIBLE STUQY CLASS
Every Sunday Morning

10am ·11 am

Ash .Street
Freewill
Baptist Church
Middleport, Ohio
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.

.Deadline: Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 P.M.
Mail or bring the entfj' form to:

The D.aily.Sentinel
111 Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Teacher Les Hayman

992·7410
,.

'

·u--

,.

•

I

�'
Frld1y, Dlclmber i 1 1914

P11g1 . I The Dilly Senti~

Frfd1y, ~':"ber 8, 1&amp;94

Pomeroy-MiddllpOI't, Ohio

CHURCH
DI
Church of Chr1st

' "

Assembly of God

Hope Baptlol Churdo (Soulloen)
S70 Gran SL, Middlcpon
PallOr. Rev. David Bryan
Sunday achool . 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 pm.
Free
AahWill~~~:~~
&amp;r.ct. '
Paator: l.eJ Haymon
Sllurday Service · 7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wcdncaday Service·7:30 p.m.
RuUand F1rst BopUII Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Poaeror n-It Bapllll
Paator: Paul SliniOD
East Main SL •
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
F1nt Soulbern Bar.~~~!
41872 Pomeroy Pike
PuiOr: B. Untu O'Bryant
Sunday Sol&gt;ool • 9:30 IJD,
Wonhip · 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicea- 7:00p.m.
F1nt BapUII Chord!
6th and Palmer St, Middleport
Sunday School -9:IS a.m.
Worthij&gt; - IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m,
Lord'• s--r Ill Sunday of every mcnth.
Wedi.esday Service-7:00p.m.

''f

·'

Rodne F1nt Bapllll
Yooth Pastor. Aaron Young
Sunday School -9:30 o.m.
Wollhij&gt; - 10:40a.m.-, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7:00p.m.
Silver Run BapUII
Putor: Bill Utde

SIDiday School- lOam.
W011hip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnc..fay Servicea· 7:30p.m.
• Ml. Union BopUII
Pastor : Joe N. S1yR:
Sunday Schooi·9:4S un.
livening · 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service• . 6:30p.m.
lldlllth.,. BaPIIII
Racine. Oil
Poator : Rev. Earl Shulor
Sunday Sdlool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 un.
Thunday ServiCOI· 7:00p.m.
Old llelllel Free Will BapUII Church
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middleport

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thunday ServiCOI • 7:30

HUialde BapUst Church
SL Rt. 143 jull oft Rt. 7
Paator: Rev, Junes R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worthip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneacfay SemCOI -7 p.m.
Vktory Bopllol lndpdant

S2S N. 2nd SL Middlt:pOn
PaaiDr: Junes B. K.....,
Wonhip- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioea · 7 p.m.
Follb BopUII Churclt
Railroad SL,Ma1&lt;11
Sundar School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II o.m., 6 p.m. ,
Wedne&amp;doy Servicea • 1 p.m.'
Forat Run BaJ)IIst
Panor : Ariua flurt
Sunday Schooi-IOa.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Ml. Mon .. Baptlol
FOUIIh A Main Sl., Middlepoll

Pusor: Rev. Gilboll Cnia, Jr.
Swulay School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m.
Aalllqul17 Baptlol

SwldaY School · §:30 LID.

Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Thunday ServiCOI • 7:30p.m.
Ru- Free Wll Bap11ot
Sa11111 SL
Putor: ltev- Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Bw:uiai • 7 p.m.
Wecme.dly Servicea • 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Hurt Cllbollc Clluidl

161 Mulbeny Ave.• PCll1lti'O)', 992-SI98
Pusor: Rev. Wal1cr B. Hciaz
SoL Coil. 4:4S-S:1Sp.m.; Mu•· S:30 p.m.
S.... Coil. ·8:4S-9:1S un.•
San. Mus - 9:30a.m.
Doilcy Mua · 8:30a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

c.-=

Swldly School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip. 10 a.m.
Tuesdoy s.,.;- -7:30p.m.

Ep1scopal

=.·1

O.rdt
.
• Pomeroy
RIICIGr: Rev. D. A. duPlllllier
Holy EucltariJt ond Swsdly Sc:hoollla.m.
326 B.

33226 Chilclren'a Home Rd.
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Wonhip -IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Semcea. 7 p.m.

Co«oe..., ro11ow1nc

Middleport Churcll ~ Chrtll

Holine ss

Sth and Main
Paator: AlllarUca
Youlh Miniller: Bill Fruler
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 8: IS, 10:30 a.m., 7 pm.
Wcdne&amp;doy ServioeJ • 7 p.m.

D111.,lleH.,._CII_.
31057 -~ 32S, LlapvUe
Paator: Rev. Rick Maloyod ·
Sunday adlool - 9:30a.m.
• Sunda,Y wonbip • Ul:3S a.m. A 7 p.m.
Chilcbooa cburdt -10:3Sa..m. Yooth 6p.m,
Wednelday prayer senioa • 7 p.m.

Keno Churcb of Chrlot
WOIIhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday SdiooJ • 10:30 LID.

R- of SUnol Hal- Cllurclt
l.codina Creek Rd., Rudand .
Paator: Rev. Dewy KiD&amp;
Sunday JdloOI. 9:30 IJD.
Sunday wonbip .7 p.m.
Wcdnc&amp;doy Jnyermoolina· 7 p.m.

_ . _ Rldirt Cllurclt of Chrlll
Putor: Jaclr. Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOIIhip • 10:30 un.• 6:30p.m.
Wedne&amp;doy ServiCCJ · 6:30p.m.

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncldoy Savi&lt;e · 7:30p.m.
BJIIII R•B.,._CIIIII'Cb
Putor: Robett Manley
s...doy School . 9:30 a.m.

S111day School· 9:30 am.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m.
Youth Mee1iq - S:30 p.m.
Bvenina Semcc • 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Sllldy • 7 p.nr.

Latter-Day Sa1nts

Lllla1J Cllrllllu Cllurds

Dexter
Paator. Woody CaD
Sunday Ew:uiaa ·6:30p.m.
Thunday Savi&lt;e • 6:30p.m.

Pt-. Dawa Spoidlna
Wonhip • 9:30 un.Sunday Sdiool- 10:3o a.m.

•

Olr Sotlour Lullleru Church
Walnut and HenrySU., JlaVOIUWOOd, W.Va.
Reva. Ridtanl A
'Patricia Bonda·Krva
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

eo---:

Wonhip. 11 a.m.

St. Paul Lutbena Churcll
Comer Sywnore A Second SL, Pcmeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School • 9:4S a.in.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

Un1ted Methodist
Graham United Melbodllt
Wonhip · 9:30a.m. (In A 2nd SIDI),
7:30p.m. (3rd .t 4111 Sun)
Wodneaday Semco- 7:30p.m.

MI. M.W. Cll_. ~God
Racine
Pallor: Rev. J - Saaedield
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Bw:uiag -7 p.m.
Wedi!oaday Servicea • 7 p.m.
R•UIId Cll_. tiGoll
,p - . Gsesory L Seon
S1mday Sc:hool · 10 a.m.
WOIIhip • II a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedi!oaday Servitoa • 7 p.m.
s,..... Fin! Cia- or God
Apple and Seoond SU.
Pallor: Rev. David R....U
Sunday Sehool ond Won!Jip- 10 o.m.
BYOIIiJrt Servicea- 7 p.m.
Wedi!oaday ServiCOI • 7 p.m.

a..n:11 of God or l'ropUcJ
OJ. Wbile Rd. df Sl. Rt. 160
Putor: PJ . a.-non
Sunday Sehool- IO a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wedi!oaday Savica -7 p.m.

Wonhip · 9a.m.

Lutheran

Chrrs11an Un1on

Church of God

S'-.tlle

Putor: Flora!ee Smith
S111day School- 10 o..m.

Bolbour

lldGN O.rdo ~ Cllrllll•
ClorlollM Ualoa
Hartford, W.Va.
Paator: Rev. David McMIIlil
Sunday School- II a.ut
Wonllip -9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednclilay Servioea · 7:30p.m.

Sunda.l.:'.i.enina. 7:30p.m.
w
day, 7:30pm.

S1mclaySchool · 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • IO:IS a.m.

St. Job Lulhwu Cltarcb·
PinoO.....

Lanprilo Cllrlad• a....
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semoe 7:30p.m.

H..,_ Cllrlltlu U.loa
Middloport, Obio
Sunday School, 10 a.m. .

Salt111 Cmter
' Putor: Ron Fierce

Recqulled Cordi~ Jeu Christ
of Latter 1&gt;117 Salnll
Portland-Racine Rd.
Putor: Janice Dtnncr
SWlday Sdlool • 9:30 1.m.
Wcnhip • ID-30 o.m.
Wednesday Sorvice1 • 7:30p.m.

Hl&lt;kory HIU. Cbordo ~ Cllrlll
Paator: JOietlh B. l!odtina
Sunday Sc:l.ool • 9 o..m.
Wonblp · 10om., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCOI · 7 p.m.

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonllip Savi&lt;e: IQ-.30 o..m.
Bible Study, Wcdladly, 6:30p.m.

VI~·IOa.m.

_Youlh Fdlowlhip, Sunday . 6 p.m.
RuUIIId
Paator: Anlur CnobtJa
Swulay School - 9:30 un.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Semca -7 p.m.

Rullud c-••IIJ Cllurdl
Pallor: Rev. Roy MtC&amp;ny
Sunday Sol&gt;ool • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Ev~ • 7 p.m.
. Wedi!oaday SorviCOI • 7 p.m.

llrldford Chord! or Chrlll
Comer of St Rt 124 A Bndbury Rd.
Evanaelill: Derek Stump
Youlh MW11er: Mark Notocr
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:00 a.m., I0:30a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servia:J • 7:00p.m.

Paator: Pbilip Stwm

Po.eroy .
Paator: Roben B. RdliiS...tay School - 9: IS o.m. '
Wonhip · IQ-.30 a.m.
BihloSwdy"ruesdoy ·IOun.
RockSpri. .
Putor:Keilh Roder
Sunday School · 9: IS a.m.

Wonllip • I0:45a.m., 7 p.m.
Thanday Service • 7:3" p.m.
Launl Cllr Frw Molllodl• Churdl
P1110r. Pelor Tremblay
s...doy School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday s.imce • T:OO pin.

RuUiud Cburcll or C1oriJt
Pator. Eua..,. B. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30 un.
WOIIhip . ID-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

PallOr: Kamolb Baker
Smday School· 10 un.
Wonllip • 9 un.
Wednesday~ - IOo..m.
Cannel
Putor: Kcmcoh Baker
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (2nd A 4th Som)
Mornlna Sllr

Plllq': Kcnsielb Baker
Swsdly Sehool· 9:45 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 o.m.
Thunday SOmCOJ . 7:30p.m.
Su-

Paator. Ka,lolh Baker
S...tay School - 9:30 o.m,
Wonhip-10:4S a.m. (lilA 3rdSun)
Eutl.allrt
Passor: Ken Molter
Sunday School · 10 IJJL
Wonhip • 9 un.
Wednesday -7p.m.
Radae
Putor. Ken Molter

S111~y School · 10 o.m,
Wonblp • II a.m. ond 7 p.m.

Old Dexter Bible Chrlllllan Church
SWlday School: 10 a.m.
Momina Wonhip: llo.m.
Evenins Wonhip: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semoe . 7 p.m.

Coolvlle Ualted Melbodllt l'lrlill
Paator. Helm Kline
Cool.t• Cllurdo
Main A Fiftb Sa.
Slmday School · IOa.m.
Wonhip • 9 am.
Tuesday Servicea - 7 p.m.
B-.O..rdl
Townahip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 o.m.
Wodncadayscm... - loun.
Hodd._-CIIwdl
Grand Slloll
Suoday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wodneaday Savicea • 8 p.m.
Tordo Cllurdo
Co. Rd. 63
· 9:30a.m.

Ml. 011.. Unlled Mdllodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkeaville
P111or: Rev. Jlalpll Spiru
Sunday Sol&gt;ool • 9:30 l.m. .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thunday ServiCOI • 7 p.m.
Melp CooperaUvel'lrllb
Norlhull Clu.Aifred

PaslOr. Sharm Hauanan
Sunday School • 9:J0 LID.

Wonhip • II o.m., 6:30p.m.
Ch.....Pastor: Sharon Haumon
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
·
Sundoy Sdlool - 10 a.m.
Thunday ServiCOJ -7 p.m.

J... po

Pa-: Bub Jlaodolph
Wonhip . 9:30 un.
Sunday Sdlool · 10:30 a.m.
Lun1ll&lt;lllom

o.m:

Sundly School· 10
WOIIhip • II a.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip ·IOo.m,
Pelri Chapel
Putor: F1ormce Smilh
Sunday Sdlool · 9 o.m.
WOIIhip • IOo.m.

Sunday adtool · 9:30 .....

Pa1tor. Tom Runyon

Flatwoodl
Pastor: Keith Roder

MlaemiUe
Putcr: Deron NOWIIIIII

~Rev. Jam Ntvillc

Brldl&gt;urJ Churcll ~ Cllri.

Enterprioe
Putor: Keltb Roder
Sunday Sehocl -10 o..m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

Heolb (Middlepoat)
Putor: Vemqayo Sullivan
Sunday Sehool· 9:30 l.m,
Wonhip • ID-30 a.m. ·.

Walefulllble Hal- Cll•rcll
7S l'wl SL, Middloport.

Tuppen Pilla Churcll ~ Chrl•
Pastor: Bill Winea
S~mday Sehool · 9 a.m.
WOIIhip· 9:4S o.m., 6:30p.m.

CtnlniOIIIIer
• AJI&gt;UI'f {SJ,..._)
Putor. Dcron Newman
Sunday Sehool , 9:4S om.
Wonhip - II JJD,
Wodncaday Semw . 7:30p.m.

ForatRua
Putor: Deron Newmon
Sunday Sc:bool-10 un.
WOIIhip- 9 a.m.
Thundoy SerVicea • 6:30p.m.

PlneGnwe Billie Bai-Ch.U
1/2 milo off Rt. 32S
Paator: Rev. O'Dell Manley
SIOiday School • 9:30a.m.
Worihip • ID-.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsdoy Servicle ·7:30p.m.

Z1111 Cburdl or Christ
Pomeroy, HanUcnville Rd. (Rtl43)
PallOr. Roser W111011
Smday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
WOIIhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdoy Servioea - 7 p.m.

R...tPole Churcll ~ Chrlll

Sunday Sdlool -10 a.m.
Bvenina7:30p.m.
Tuesday .t Thunday. 7:30p.m.
NUitSelllemeatCllun:ll
Sunday Wonhip • 2:30p.m.; ~
Thundly sorviCOI • 7:30p.m.
Sunday School o.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 un., 7 p.m.
Wodneaday ServiCZI • 7 p.m.

Tuppn Plain• St. Poul
Pallor: Sharon llouiiJIID

Wonbist:Jp.m·
Wedi!oaday
cea • 7 p.m.

Soulb Belbol New TallniOIII
SllverRidse
Paator: Duane Syd&lt;llllrlo:lter
Sunday Sd1ool • 9 a.m.
Wonltip • I0 a.m., 7 P.IIL
Wedne&amp;doy Sema: -7 p.m.

s,._
Churcll ortae N...,..e
Paator: Rev. Ridt Srurpll
S1mday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodneaday ServiCZI • 7 p.m.

Corleton ln-IDadonll Church
Kingahllry Road
Partor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
·Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semoe . 7 p.m.

PomWOJ Churcll oftae N...,..e
P.,.... Rev. 1bcmu McCiuna
Sunoloy School • 9:30 Llll.
Wcnbip • JQ-.30 a.m. and 6p.m.
Wednoaday ServieeJ • 7 p.m.

Freed'"" Gospel Mbaloa
Bald Koob, on Co. Rd. 31
PallOr: Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday Sellobl- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

O..CiawdlofllleNIIInM
Paator: Rev. Hedlorl Ollie
Sundoy Sc:bool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip - 11 a.m.,6p.m.
Weduadiy ServieeJ • 7 p.m.

Fairview Bible Cburch
Le1111, W.Va. Rt I
'
Pallor: James Lewil
Sunday Sdlool • 11 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servioe. 7:30p.m.

Nowlb•• Cllurdo oftae N--.
Paator: Glmdao Slloud
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 LIIL, 7 p.ut
Walnaday ServieeJ • 7 p.m.

Cllv117 Rlble Cllurclt
Pcmeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Paator: Rev, Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip I0:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wedn~y Service. 7:30p.m.

Other Chwcho s

Fallb FollowUip Crulldo for Chrlll
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dio:ltcna
Semce: Friday, 7 p.m.

F.... FIJD Goopel Cll_.
LonaBouam
Paator: Stm: Reed

Sundoy Sehool • 9:30..... '
Wonbip - 9:30 o.m. and 7 p.m.
. VI~ . 7 P:"'·
Fridly , fellowship 10Moe7 p.m.

SUvemllle Ward of Fall\
Putor. David Dailll)l
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
livening • 7 p.m.

Serviea: Wodnaday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday. 2.:30 p.m.

Barrlloll.Uit c--"'17 Cllurdt
Puou: 'l1lenlll Dullum
Sunday . 9:30 IJD, and 7 p.m.
Wedaelday -7 p.m.

Church of J..,. Christ,
Apostolic Fllllll

1/4 mile poll Fon Meig• ~ Now Uml Rd.
PallOr: Willian v.. Md&lt;r
Sunday-710(tp.m.
Wedne~day-7:90p.m.
Fnday-7:00 p:m.

ea..,..ad..ll Cllurcll

P1110r. Rw. Roland Wildmon
Onudt • 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 om.

Clifton Tobtraacle Cburdo
Oillm,W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 un.
Wonhip - 7 P-I'!·
111un41y service -7 p.m.

'l'lle Selvatloll Aray
liS Bulll:mut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School· 10:30 un.
WOIIhip • 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Mkldlepart

.

eo.-al17 Cllun:ll

57$ Pwl Sl., Middlepoll

Putor: Som Andenon
Sunday SehoollO a.m.
Bwnina-7:30 p.m.
Wodnoldoy Savi&lt;e • 7:l0 p.m.

Pentecostal
.

FlllUo TIIHnlde Cllurdo
Bailey Run Rood
Paator: Rev. limmell RawiOII
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Bvsmina7 p.m.
. Thundly Seivice • 1 p.m.

Pen-.A-biT
SL Rt. 124, Racine
Paator: Williom Hohld
Sunday Sdlool - 10 a.m.
Bvenins • 7 p.m.
WednesdlyServii:a. 7p.m.
Middleport Pen-.
Third Avo.
Putor: Rev. 0..111: Baker
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
livenina • 6 p.m.
Wcdnc&amp;doy Servicea ·7:00p.m.

Mldollepon l'relbyterlu
Sunday School • 9 a.m.

Clutotl• Fol....,.lp c .. ter
Salem St, Rullond
Paator: Robett B. Multer
Sunday Sehool • 10 IJD,
Wonhip -II :IS a.m., 7p.m.
Wocb:Jday Servicle • 7 p.m.

WOIIhip-IOom.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Selo-·DIIT Aol-u.t

EdM U•lted Bnllo,.lll C1tr11t
2 lfl milea nordt or ReodJville
.., Slalc a..... 124
Putor: Rev. ltobon Marklll)l
Sunday Sdlool-10 ..... .
Wonllip • 700 p.m.
Wednesday $orvi.., . 7:30p.m.

BILL QUICKEL!
. 992-6677
C\\\;(l 5fretl £Boo~1
93 MHI Str•t
Mldtllepon, Ohio 46760

t82·18117 ~I

v

.;"'·'"~. ;LA~SIFIEDS

991 79SS

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy,

OH.

992-2975

•

Nalionwide Ins. Co .

M
0

ol Columbus, 0 .
804 W. Maon •,
991 1311 Pom n ov

.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
..Di~nit ~· and Sf'rd(·t&gt; Alwa:u ··
Established 1913

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

992 -2121

' 992-7075

I 06 MoAtrry AYI.

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE
1

Pomeroy

ANNOUN.CEMENT

172 North Seund Av e.
Middleport, .Ohio

.

P om er oy

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Residtfnt and Small Electrical 'Repair

windows
I Fre.e Estimates
o $200 Inata lied

(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

rtl

(above Bank One)

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
,

110 Court St. PoJM_r:,oy, ORio -

"Look for. the Red iaild White Awning"

992-4119 AI y,... Owler 1·800.291·5600

Oat

Ste~ Ctm~lett

Autt

Bt~f Rt~alr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

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

MODERN SANrrAftON

· ·

.
11111/1 mo.

Kenny's Auto Centtr

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates. i
Job sites' Camp Sites' Family Reunions &amp; Part!J

~ .Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal

•
PUBUC NOTICE
The Vlllaga of Middleport
public water supply hll
completod tho monitoring
cyclo tor volltllo orgenlc
chemlcelt (VOCo) aa
roqulrod by cheptor 3745-81
of the Ohio Admlnlatrllllve
Coda (OAC).
Upon complotlon ol 11ch
VOC monitoring cycle, stole
rogulatlone olao roqulro tho
ownor o r operetor of 1
public water ' aupply to
notify Itt consumer• of tho
evallobllly of tho VOC
enalyllcal reaulte tor tho
porlod tooted. Peroona
wanting to rtviiW thi VOC .
ro1u~a ahOuld contact:
Vlllogo of Middleport
Water Dtopt.
Superlntondont, Mlko
' Raleton, 237 Roco Street,
Middleport, OH 457&amp;0, (614)
992-55711992-5711' .
(12) S; 1 TC
PubliC Notice .
_ __ _ _.:.;..;.....___

ORDINANCE 628
An Ordinance to provldo
addltlon•l compenoatlon for
Vlllago EmployHa lor 1994.
BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE council of the VIllage
of Pomeroy, two-thlrda of all
membera concurring
thorato:
Section 1: That for the
yoer 1884, the Vlllago oholl
pay uch employH In activo
employmant. •• of Octobor
1, 1994, oach full-time
omployoe end ulary
omployll tho sum of Two
Hundred Dolllfl ($200.00),
oach omployoe In activo
pari·tlmo omploymont tho
oum ot Ono Hundrod Fifty
Dollar• ($150.00), uch
omployao In llmltod porilimo omploymont Fifty
dollaro ($50.00), uch now
omployao omployed tllf!
October 1, 1894 the eum 8f
Fifty doH... ($&amp;0.00). '
SICIIon II: Thlo Ordlnanco
aholl teko offo_ct ond bo In
torco on Decombor 5th,
1894.
ATTEST 1215/94
KlthyHyoell,
C"rk/TroiiUrtr
Vlllego of Pomoroy 1
I
Molge County, Ohio
John Mu•oer; Prealdont
Scott Dillon
Wlllllm Hapton•llll
Lltrry Wehrung
Goorgo Wright
Wllll•m Young
(12) t, te, 2TC

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION, MEIQS COUNTY,
OHIO CASE NO. 28,287
HELEN A. CLEVENGER,
Admx. ot lhe Eotlllll ot
Wllllm Emmett Lltrklns,
dlc..ucl va HELEN A.
CLEVENGER, et tl NOTICE
AND SERVICE BY
PUBUCATION TO:
GEORGIA HENDERSHOT
whose addra11 Ia unknown,
and cannot with r..oonable
diligence bo 11cortalned;
HOWARD'
POWELL,
who11 laet kn-n addr..a
Ia 3213 Murdock Ave.,
Porkoraburg, WV 26101,
who11 extcl addreaa It
unknown tnd connol with
re..oMhle diligence be
atcerllllned;
FINLEY POWELL, whose
laal known addrua Ia
R.D.2, Box 202, Uabon, Oh
44432, whost exact ~droao
lo unknown and cannot with
reaaonable dlllgenco be
aecertalned;
HERMAN LARKINS whoae
last known oddreu Ia
R.D .3, Calcutta, Eut
Liverpool, Oh 43920, whote
exact addreaa Ia unknown

and cannot with reasonable
dllldgencebo aacortalned;
WYNEMA
LARKINS
WATSON PARKER, whoae
leal known eddrn• Ia
R.D.3, Calcutta E. Uverpool,
Oh 43920, whoso IXICI
addre11 11 unknown tnd
cannot with re .. on•ble
diligence be oacertolned;
DAVID DUNHAM, whose
addre11 11 unknown tnd
cannot with reaaonoble
diligence be aacerttlned;
DONALD
DUNHAM,
whooe addrue Ia unknown
and cannot with reasonable
diligence be otcertalned;
The unknown helra,
devlstll,
legattll,
admlnletratora , executors

and/or aaalgna ol GEORGIA
HENDERSHOT, HOWARD
POWELL, FINLEY POWELL,
HERMAN
LARKINS ,
WYNEMA
LA R Kl N S
WATSON PARKER, DAVID
DUNHAM and DONALD
DUNHAM, If decellld;
The

unknown

helra,

devluea ,
legate11,
admlnlotratora, exoculora
and/or aaalgna of OCIE
LARKINS
POWELL,
DECEASED; HARRY H.
LARKINS, DECEASE.D;
MARIE LARKINS DEVINE,
DECEASED; LEONARD C.
LARKINS, doceaaed; LENA
V. LARKINS MASON ,
DECEASED ;
DORIS
DUNHAM, DECEASED ;
MEZENIA FAYE LARKINS
SMITH ,
DECEASED;
WILLIAM
EMMETT
LARKINS, DECEASED ;
MILLIE
LARKINS,
DECEASED;
ELLA
LARKINS, DECEASED; AND
WILLIAM '
EMMETT
LARKINS, DECEASED.
You ere hereby notified
thet you heve bien named
defandanlt In 1 legal action
entitled Helen A. Clevenger,
Admx. of th* Eatete of
Wllllem Emmett Larklna,
11eceoaed plelnllff va Htlon
A. Clevenger, et al ,
defondenta. Thla action hea
bton oaalgned C111 No • .
28,297 In the Court of
Common Plo11, Probelo
Dlvlalon Molga County,
Ohio, Addreoa, Molge
County Proboto Courl,
Court Hou.. , Pomoroy,
Ohlo45781.
Tho oblect of tho
complolnt Ia to atll tho
dtc~ont'o undlvldod ONE-

·
Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33; turn East
8at Darwin onto Rt. 681. Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd, 1 1/2 miles to 1ree farm.
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til dark Nov. 25 thru Dec. 24
Wa on rides Fri. Sat. Sun.
Public Notice

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUOION

FOURTH lnteroot In the
following doocrlbod real
•New Homtls
etlate:
An undivided one-fourth
•Garages
lnterut In the following
doacrlbed raol estate
.Complete
euoiitod In the Township of
Remodeling :
Lobanon, County of Meigs
ond , St•t• of Ohio, and
Stop &amp; Compare
boundod and doacrlbed aa
FREE ESTIMATES
follo.wa:
Bolngln Section 20, Town
915-4C73
3, Range 11 of Ohio
Company'• Putchaat.
BogJnnlng at · a atone
corner to Wm . Clork'a In
center of road on Wells
Run; thenco meandering
aald ,road aouth 5 degroea
weot 18 poles; thenceoouth
21 minutes weal 15 poles;
aouth 41 degreea west 14
poleo; S.28 1/2 degreeo W
77-potea; S 67 dogreea W 8
1
poloa; N 83 112 deg. -w 36 -==C=a=rd=o=I=T::h;:a:;nk:;s:::::;polea; N 53 112 deg. w 11 r
poles to a atone In aald
Many thanks to the
road; thence N 28 112 dog. E
Meigs
Band, Drew
124 poloa to a atone corner
Webster Post 39,
to Wm. Clark; thence with
aald Clerk line N 83 1/2 dog . VFW, OAV, Pre sbyE 48 pole• to tho place of
terian Church, Meigs
beglnlng, containing 41
Junior High , Christcret ond 8 rodo of land.
tian
School of
The purpoao of Uld oolo
Middleport, Ladles
Is to pay the dobtt and
costa of admlnlaterlng the
Auxiliary and the
estate of tho decedent,
men, women and
William Emmott Larkin.
olllces of Feeney
You are roqulrod to
Bennett Post 128 lor
anewer tho complaint
making our Decemwithin 28 dayo etter the lui
publication of thla notice,
ber 7, 1~41 Remem·
which will be publlahed
brance Ceremony a
once each week for elx
success.
Turnouts
conaacutlve woeka. The loot
such
as
this
will
publication will be made on
make people think of
Docombor 9, 1804 end tho
28 doya for onower will
what has been given
commenco on that date.
for . what we have
In caoe of your follure to
today. May we never
enawer or otherwlae
forget December 7,
reapond ao required by tlie
Ohio Rulu of Civil
1941. Our sincere
Procedure, ludgment by
thanks from the
defoult will be rendered
olllcers,
men and
agelnot you tor the rollet
women
of
Feeney
domandld In the Complaint.
Bennett Post128.
J.B. O'Brlon, Attorney for
Holon A. Clevonger, Admx.
ot the Eatate of William
Emmett Lltrklna, doceuod 3 Announcements
100 1/2 Court Slreot
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Feeney Bennett
Lent M. Noaaolroed
Clerk of Court of
Post 128
Common Ptaea
SHOOTING
MATCH
Probate Dlvlalon,
BAILEY RUN RD
Melge County, Ohio
Time: 1 :00 p.m. Dec. 11
(11) 4, 11 , 18, 25;
(t 2) 2, 8; 6tc
Factory Choke Guns

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

~-..~~~4'~'9~-.,,~t:~
.·- ·

~·· Christmas Auction .· ~
Sunday, Dec. 11th, 2:00 p.m.
202 N.Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

fttuction every Friday 6:30p.m~

.· ·••h~l5:1•&amp;'a~ --.

ExteriOr

Llceneed &amp; B d d 20
992-3954
Emerge ncy Ph one

..

985·3~

18

t

r fj

r1n

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

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614·992~7 643
(No Sunday Calls)

Morrison's Heating &amp;·coaling
Sales, Service &amp; Installation
Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate- Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate

(614) 992·7434
Ardlterf:acd A~Mrfcan Sfandani.O.aln
11M2

112·71UOR
112·5553 OR

TOLL FREE 1-100·141·0078
D~RWIN, OHIO
7131111 TFN

HAULING
·Umestone
&amp; Gravel
Roasoaeltle Rates

Joe N.SayN

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

1-

Howard

L. Writesel

ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
DAVE~$

SWAP SHOP
One mila out
1431rom Rt. 7

Tues. • Wed. r Fri. • Sat.
1-6
• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-sell-Trade

992-2060 1015(1 mo.

palnllng. Lat • do It for
you. v.ry
Free EetlmlltM
Before 6 p.m. leave

IIEET NEW PE0PU
THERJNWAY
, TODAY
1.-.-11~S2111NC5000IOI Eat. Zttt. ttv
8o 11YIISZ."Pw...._ , _
co. 102-4154-lll30.

Atrer6 p.m.
614-985-4180-

--·-en.

'

N~w

NEW • uSED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAKES a MODElS

--le.

T.U tho plln out of

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cuaiom
Frame (lepalr

An nou nee me nt"

laterior &amp;

WE HAVE A- 1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

, FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

1· 800-486-1590

Bus. (614) 446·9971

LINDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO•

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BUDFORD'S

Kenny's Auto Re"tal
Kenny's is the place to co••
when you need a car rental.
We """' '"" 1111d V11n•l

-

1012-

~..1..~ Tel. No. (614) 992·5730 ~.J..~
·
·

992·7162

State Rt. 33 •
Darwin, Ohio

m_

·'

Call For Details

-Now Accepting New Clients

105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.

ML Hermoa Uolled . _ , _
i• Cllrlll Churclt
Tau Community off CR 12
..._, Robett Sanden
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 l.m.
Wonblp · 10:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednelolay s.m- . 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sehool . 9:30 a.m. '
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Ctl10'02trn

AnORNEY AT LAW

LonallotDn •
Sunoloy School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wecme.dly 7:30p.m.

a • ..._.... PreobJteai• Clllll'do
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4S o.m.

Dy--.c... ..IIJ Cllordt

·

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT .

Racine American
Legion Post 602
Now having Bingo
every SUnday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Dooril open 4;30 pm
The morit people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save acUor 1 fl'lltl card.
94S..2038 or 949-2044

YOUNG'S '
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Additions
•NewGarag"
•EIIIClrlcal &amp; Plumbing
tRooflng
·
olnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting aleo concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
• V.Cf. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

This Saturday &amp; Sunday
Dec. 10 &amp; 11, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Hundreds To Choose From
6-9 Footers .
College Road, Syracuse, Oh.
1Oth House on
CUT &amp; r'HIJN~

PubliC Notice

OffRt 124
Paator: 1!dsel Hart
Sundoy School-9:30 .....
WOIIhip • 10:30 un., 7:30p.m.

E;;;'liT'S RAINING
·~ ~ARGAINS ...

&amp; BIBLES

BINGO

• Cuatom llade

olld vinyl
1~. • sreplacement

1112Mfn

Of$10-$12

Un1ted Breth1en

.a... c..•uoltJCIIordt

srnnoe Flnl U•lled .,...florlu
Palll&gt;r: Rev. JCri.... RebiftiGI
Sunday Sd1ool • 10 a.m.
WOIIhip • 11 a.m.

~

ITEMS

DENISE L.BUNCE

Flllll GC1t1M1 Cllurdo

w~~7p.m.

Presbyterran

J&amp;D FlEA
MARKET

At The Low, Low Price

r.r- Claapel Cllarclt
!.any Faw, SuperilllcDdonl
Sundoy Jdtool • 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 1 p.m.
Wocb:Jday Service. 7 p.m.

1411 Bricl&amp;eman SL,Syncwc
Pallor: Roy (Mike) Thompon
Sulday Sehool- 10 a.m.

O&amp;E ELE(;1BIC

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

Call949·2734

CHRISTMAS TREES

Mulberry H11. Rd., Pconcroy
Panor: Roy Llwinlty
Saturday ServiCOI:
Sabbalh School . 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

SJ-'MI-·

NOWOPIN
NEW &amp; USED

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Scotch Pine

RESOLUTION 18.94
BE IT RESOLVED by tho
Council of tho Vlllege ol
Pomeroy, all mom b ero
concurring:
Thai tho Clerk/Trooauror
of the Vlllogo of Pomoroy,
chorga oft the following
check from tho booko due
to bolng over ono yoor old.
Tho following llal ot choeka
will ba hold In oacrow II at a
letor dill ony chackl nood
to be roltauod.
3·23·93 Brogen Warner
lne., Genor•l Fund 157928
$8.88.
5·11·93 Ronald A
Shaalfer, Gonorel Fund
158174,$1.47,
, 8.05-83 Toreaa Dlddlo, G.
Moler 158491, $2.1 0.
$12.45
Pa10ed 12-5-94 .
Klthy Hy11ll,
Clark-Treaaurer
John Mu101r, Prttldont
(12) 9, 16; 2TC

Ualled Follll Cbrcll
Rt. 7 .., Pomeroy By-Pasa
Pastor: Rev. Robett B. Smilb, Sr.
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.

•

::

675-5955

PUbliC Notice

ReJoklna Life Cllurdo
SOO ~-2nd Ave., Middlepon
Paator: Lawmt~:e FOR!IIIan
SWlday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wedneaday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Eedtlaae a- otPnt1er
Bur!iJ!ihom dturdl oft ROUI&amp; 33)
Paator: Robert v....
Sunday wOIIhip • 10 a.m.
Weduadiy aemce -6:30p.m.

TriaiiJ

=

EVERY THURSDAY &amp;
FRIDAY IN DECEMBER
Select Members of the
· Female Review
FANTASIA
Will Be Featured At
THE SOUTHFORK I~N
SHOWBAR
Pt. Pleasant, WV

Calv117 PIJcrlm Cluopel
Harriaonville Road
Pu tor: Rev, Vic:lor Rouab
Sunday School 9:30 o.m
Wonhip : 11 a.m., 7:30 p.;.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

'l'lle B•l•..s' FeU-Ip Mlalllr7
327 Medlosill: St, l'amC1vy
Paator: Rev. MoJpm J. RobiniOD

&lt;•

::

Cundiff's
Custom
. Cut

MASON BOWLING LANES
SATURDAY 10th &amp; 17th
7 :30p.m. - Close
Red &amp; Green Pins
Men's League forming for Tues.,
27th. Call now 1·304· n3-5300
o r 614-992-5551 .

w-.,..

FwtludFinl Cll..., ora. N..,.,
,._, Jdlll w. Dooalu
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Wonhip • 6:30p.m.
Walnaday Servicea • 7 p.m.

=

--~· ·

Wlllte'a Chapel
Coolville Road
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 un.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Semoe . 7 p.m.

R • - Cll_. oflloo NIDI'IIIe
Paator: Ssmuol Buy.
Sunoloy Sd1ool • 9:30 Llll.
Wonlip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednoaday ServieeJ • 7 p.m.

MI. Oln c--•IIJ CHn:ll
Palll&gt;r: 1.1......., Blllh
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 a.m.
Bvenina - 1 p.m.
Wcdncday Semce -7 p.m.

Paator. Rev, Charles Muh
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday S.mce•. 7:30p.m.

cur

DEE~
&amp;
WRAP~ED

Fldl Golpel ,.,., ••
33045 Hiland Rood, l"'lmeroy
Paator: Roy Hunter

Putor: Gory Hinoa

"-"1 WllllldtCiuorclt ~Chrlot

H111111ock Grove Cluon:ll
Paator:Gent:Zollll
Sunday Jd&gt;ool. 10::10 o.m.
Wonhip -9:30o.m., 7 p.m.

Wonhip ·ID-.30-a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnoiday Servia:. 7 p.m.

CheMr

l'oalenly Churds ~CIIrlot
212 W. Main SL
Paator. AndiOW MiJea
Sundly School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneiday Servioea . 7 p.m.

. Pom11oy-Middleport, Ohio

FACE LIFT!
Not you . your home'
Will create a new
look for any room
using your
collectables and
treasures.
Bring new warmth
into your homes for
the Holidays.

Phone 247-2206
&gt;I ' ' 1 ~·n r~

DU'S
IPPLIIICI
SDIICI
Forlll•ior
lraau

·Used Appliaacts
forS.Ie
Call
614-992·55 15
1~111rhl

FORKED RUN
SPORTS~N

CLUB
Starting Slug
Matches
Friday, Nov. 11
6:30
Suaday, Nov. 13
1:00
CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS
Ready Nov. 23

s1o a. i.Jp'

Open 10 am· 9pm

' " Saowllo•'• Lot
5.1. 124

R•tleatl, Ohio
614o742·3051

mtllllge.

BEST RECEPTION
For the best in satellite
sales and ser vice contact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
-We have e ven better
and quicker service .
· Over 10 yrs
expe rience
• Se rvice on all system
types.
· Besl prices all a round
the area. ·
992·2903 or 992-6320

No Hunting «

1:::~':.'·

4

1 1/21 ~

TREE TRIMMI~G
AND REMOVAl
Ugtit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

an

I

o..t

-.

......._., wv.

Giveaway

;,z.."Cr.:-..:..~0::..~
llllllly
1yr. old gr~~y 1 whhe ...,..lang
hllrocl llmlll cot, ~ ..
outdoor, moving &amp; _ , " - '

304.-117&amp;-2411.

all btlcll do&amp;
groat wlelllldrwn. ....... r i

3yr. old
...~

•

. 304-t75.2ftl.

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose an d
cuf you r tree .
(or we'll cut it lor yo u)
Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Ad.
(at comer of US Rt. 33)
Pome roy, Ohio
992-5702
Ca rol &amp; David Riggs

li=

lhoRapooilciD.
Now
PI
IFlfli
Cloanlaonlllry, -

c-·-

Fomolo 8 mo old halfC:O. holt

SpilL Whlto I gny loo)l ......
lomall
4
mo
old &lt;ol
lolnon, ~

F...,.ll 1111111 ~ " ' -

Bilek I , T111 To GOod -

Pu=

Ollly, · - -Ill bllldt, ..... Galdon
4
Rol Lilt lind
....... 3 ........ 114 "'Mil

a-.

•

Small pu~~..,
QOOd wnh
to • """"
liorne only, 114-ltiZ .
Ton Booutlful PuDDlao. 4 ..
Wllka Old, 1 -5 Wtio1to ·Old To
Good-· ~'1004.

6

pt=
Poll=

Lost &amp; Found

Found: De-ion
Anlmll Sholw, • Loo1- wlllto ....

AI

Now Uma Ad 'llclnlly, ni1ao
alnco Sat. nle, 114-~

Bill Slack

992·2269

F&amp;A Tree Service
Tree Trimming and
Remo va l- Yard Ca re
Free Estimates

614-992-4447
7

AMBERWOOD

Cocker~~~!~
Bred for
Quality and
Temperament
SpocialiJing in Part..:olo111
lor show and companions.
Stud oa.W:. &amp; puppiaa,
young-acillla for .....
48750 Mile Hill Rd.
Racine, Oh
614-1148-2487

Willi'S

CIIIISTIW
DEES
RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up wi1h
a greal selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or
' 742-2979

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL YoniSoloa- 1e PaW Ill
-· DEAD~· a·eo ....._

,.,. •r ttolon ttoo ..i .- '" .....
SUndar . ldltlon • z:oo ....._

Frlclar. llonclar -ion • 2:00

p.m. Sl!lurdar.

8

PubUcS.Je

&amp;Auction
Rlolt "-,_,Auction Co

�.••
......

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pege-1D-The Dilly Sentinel

Ohio

TheDIIJy
~EA

BRIDOI
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wr!pt

""'*

Dant
WGiklng
Color

llllel Ue Yowllojor

Appll 1011,

T.v:.,

~

NORTH

......... VCII'I, ...........

lHl-94

:,...,eo.c:-=.m:=
Solv._
-.-.--.
...
nwou.

•A J
.. J 10 4
t K Q 10 9
•K J 7 6
EAST
•1087543
•K Q 2
.9 8 7 3
•K Q 2

LIWig
to...,.U..I

t7 6 3
oloA

-Room-·-_...,......,.._

Toolo, Elo. •14-211-12st.
J 1 D'l Auto , _ onc1

lluJint -

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

m.6141 or

.......

t A 52
olol 0 5 2

SOUTH
.9 6
•A 6 5
•J 84
•Q 9 8 4 3

- - . ....... Fred, -

Crossword Puzzle

40 Snick and-

.41 o- (pre!,)

-

42lllwltaer.d

i Actor lkyn4 o.llle fnlly

43 Go on 1 cruloe
{2 will.)

IT-fluid
12 Future IIIII.
13HIIuler
14a15 Eoplonage org.
180td Tnlamont
boQk

17Full
18Houoton
IIIIIpiayer
20in11t11
22Hetpo
21 llelongtng lo uo
29Sorret
.
30Aidand34Uirgelteh

35Chnr
36Actor
Raymond-

37FIIhlngreet
36 Period of time
39 AI- In Spain

481'at

41Chalionga

53 Actor

Sliver

54 Antagonlat
58 Anger

59 Code dol

60 Turkloh decrM
61 Firat number
62 Spanleh chaor
63 Food coneumer
54 Actor Denoon

DOWN
1 Non-profit org.
2 lnform111on
agcy.
3 Future attye.'
exam
4 Character of a
people

6Poueutve
P'Onoun

7 Born
8Po11Ucat

5Court

Vulneral)le: Both
Dealer: East
South
West North Easl
Pass
Pass
t•
Obi.
2•
3•
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • 5

WE'LL HAVE
TO PLAY FER
· FUNSIES !!

The Law, part II
By Phillip Alder

If you were one of the numerous people who bought Larry Cohen's first book
about lhe Law of Total Toicks, you will
probably want to get the sequel.
!Though I suppose you could wait for
the movie') Called "Following the Law,"
it is available for $15.95 from the pub·
lisher, Natco Pre ss, at 181 Longhillll•.......if-+-Road, Building 1-6, Lillie Falls , NJ
07424.
The basic idea behind the Law is that,
in a deal where you are not going to
CELEBRITY CIPHER
game on high-card power, you bid as
high as the number of trumps your side
by Luis Campos
CeleDnty Cipher CtVPtcgrams • rt created !rom QUOtabonl by famous peop., put and~
has in its best fit. So. with eight trumps.
Eactlien« r~ the aphet stands tor another. Todlts ct.w: C tQUM D
bid to the two-level and sell out at lhe
three-level. With nine trumps. bid to lhe
L G
t XW
R MGI
'HSILEN
three-level and sell out higher.
Cohen explains when and why you
I XW
WRAHVVHGGLEN
AFGLEWGG LE
make adjustments to thi• basic plan (for
example. when you have a double fill .
EWUWV
ZEMY
YXWE
YMVDC.
PMF
And, of course. he gives deals where ex·
perts have ignored the Law and done
NMLEN
IM
WHI .' CF'A
PMF'V)'I
badly. One such example is today's deal.
Against three clubs, West led a spade.
IHPDMV .
Declarer won with dummy's ace and
played a trump to the queen and ace. A
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "lillie is too easy. 19f31 crazy . I like coming baCk from
the dead, which I've had to do over and over. - Cher .
·
spade to East's queen was followed by a
switch to the heart nine. However, after
declarer bad ducked the toick to West's
queen, the contract wa s safe . We st
couldn't do better than lead a diamond.
Uho~ ~y CIAT I. I'OIIAN _.:;________
East won with the ace and returned a
heart, but South won with his ace, drew
Rearrange letters of th•
trumps and ran the diamonds. discard·
four ICrombled wordt b..
ing his heart loser. South lost one trick
low to form four word,.
in each suit.
As Cohen points out, West may have
M0 T E E L
opened with a weak hand, but because
1
he knows of a nine-card spade fit , he
should bid three spades. Note that that
contract also makes.

Employment Servtces

MEN ARE FROM
11
AI -•1 AVCII

•m

Chilli._-

III~N!. ll:rtlyn
~or1-~.

Ina ..-.

-n

II1CI ~ ..... Slllllng
;:::;, Cou~ ::::. ~.:::
1:
~=to ~
101 8ocond at, PI Pll, WV. EOE;
Homo 1111. Torrllofy 01&gt;Lubrlcanlo Co. loolc·
lioiiiL lndlp. Rtp. 1-.1112- lng lor 1 In POIIEROY

.

AVCII SELLS ITliELf

4131.
l.¥011

'*'tl

w- lndlvldlllillnlo-

led In Ell'lling Sl ~. No
Door To Oocir. 1 ~
Ind. Rep.
playwondlood guillriltiO
1onn - r y ond rildl bind,
muo1 havo _, oqul...-.
. So- lnqulrloo only. · 11toor~

COMMUNITY CABLE

ENTRY LEVEL- Rope w....
led. Wo llorlool All TrDN 01
CABLE TV 8;11.....
W. Will Ply You Evon Whlll
T!llning For A Highly Pold Sol•

.,,.._ No 11perience nec...ry.
Wrllo P.L. Rood, Bo1 421,

~Do...;yt:...on=,Oh~4.;.114;.;.111.;..- - - -

18

Wanted to Do

Aco T- 8omce. Compllll lrM
• .,., zo,n. ••P· I lnourod, !roo

=lll~llnii;=":;·..:IM;.;.-441-7...:·1~1rt.;.·.,.........,.,.,
Elllln'l 1'1111 • Sorvtco. 212

Third Avon"!', GaHipolt., OH
114-441-G111 MOn .sot. e.e, 11
Yooro Elpo- (F..,...,ty

Wlh Ellloll Appilonce).
Gonorol llllnlononco, Po~
Ylnl WG1k WI- W
Gull... CIHnod Light Houllng,
Com~ llollciOnllol, Sl-:
eon..
· - 1...
EARN FROII t200 -SlOG PER Ooorgoo PO!Ioblo Sowmlll, don~
WEEK TO START!
haul !tOW toa1 lo lhl mill 1...
eoll ~7!1·1l87.
8olol Eo~ IS NOI' 111qulrod. You Hovo Tho f'ol.
10wing:1, 0 p L~lble

-

torSal8
1111, lilt II oom, ....

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080. ~-·:30.

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II: , _ .ON AJIII. Ml or
o111...-.m1. EOH.
.

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12110 - - " " ' u - Plid.
Dooinololr8
IZ3I/IIonlh. nt Ava.,
mochlni, Ckl~
:Oio IM-44HH5.
.
1111 CIQton Tnllllr.l Badraom,

••F rdooll,

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Pontr

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Fumltlllll.

AddMion. lllull'ed on 1 112 -.'l'lllhPold NoPelo,Poo~'!,
OH. Ex- . .- . ... 111 iaaa

.. _

:1113
EVIIIIngl.
c:ondlltoil,
... -

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1M-~..,.,.. ~53--A,.m...,.,...lqu:....,..e_s.,...--

=Buy or Htl. Rl..tno Anllquu,

utltlltoo
t350.
ptuedopootl.
11:111.-11111 Rodllllll 141114, 2 ........ Talal Eloolrto, IJndo!rp!no
Etllc*-,
11311
'!Ina- Alllly To 11ovo lnlo On Lol ,.. Lone lloblto ~
AllllfiUI.
,
Court. Phone 114 441 lUI. 114o 446-niZ

=--GOt-=

· . A LINE-,TtM
VtTO!

'::~:~:~' S@\\c{l~-~r.!rs·

1124 E. llaln llrooL on Rl. 124
Ponwoy. Houri: M.T.W. 10:00
Lm. lo I:OG
Sundoy 1:1111
lo 1:00 p.m. I 11112 21:111.

•

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... .

·'BORN LOSER
Jr.
.

2:1111

I

"

"-

t-10 K1DI&gt;I~6~f.IOW Tl/11£.

, 'tJf\Y,:JOCY r~ . HOlt'£ FOR
·'TIE 1\()..lt&gt;"YS, D\? ~--'-:-'--....

llo4lvlled

I

fOilM 1040 l&gt;OfSN'T tiAVt

11112 -

1 112 IIMho. -

Ft.I~S! ~y ~FOR

A

C lll TNcy AI ~To AJ.
IIngl An
Ill
.......,...
To login Tlllnlng
WlhlnTwoW•If&amp;
·

. .VIIDPII II home, ltlft

,_.,..,...,.,,

Phillip Alder's new book , "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is availal)le,
autographed upon request, for ·
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
Hts., NY 11577-0169.

YE.T ?'

AccesiOrlel

now,

IIIMupptloo,

...

Ill
....... bod - · .,.....
:1331.

oofbony, A 32718
Elporloncod C.ohlor noodod.
304-815-31103.

..._.. Priced Trll• IIIII ...
Uellll nllull, .. "~ ~~~
Ina" ... ,-·-~
~.
114411-2211. .) '

no-obllglllon.
Send SASE: Roglno Corilpony,
Dool. K, P 0 Bo1 180851, C.•

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AI

lowmon'o

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iiiiii_P_

.

21

STRIKE ASLOW IN Tl-£ ~RON
HGH PRICES...SHOP Tl-£ CUSSFIEDS.
.

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO C:O.
,_,.mondllhll you do bull""" wfth poopla JOU kMW lnd
NOT lo Hnd .,_through tho
moll uniM you lnvlllfgoled
lhlotrwtng.

Rental s

campere &amp;
Motor Homes
~- P.IO, ••• 4:1111
Pll, - ~,........... IlL
Lllgo • lmoiL IDW'II-1414.
~ Oraan, Eloolrlo, 1Jroo1.
toni CondRton ~ 114-m-

.

• Moll loll T... Clipped I

, _ 171,
o..·a..; IM-

.....

44ta'IL
.
'71 Clloltllo Cou!1e ell Wit,
1-eldRIITo_,_ 71,000 ...... - . · - · .
ond ............ up 1o .... ?.MQ ..... ~
.... ....... problll\ . . Nooh .......... .u
114 111 me . , 1p111.

=...-==-.... ". ._,

Work,

1177l'onl LTO-.. Cond. ' -

llliolgi.IIWIIoiOIZ
-

Servtces

:----------------.4'
81

uo--

.,

!

IWEIIENT
:
WATERPAOOI'IIIO
"''
ltllllmo ......
loo. l.ooli - .............

Clll IAOO-al'.ctm

Of 11WQ!

12.100. c:ac

llorm

-

........... . . . _ ~

........-... "' I

1Wpotr• .For,_

AndWNio';

~~ Condition, ~

-iial C.lot lloOultln, 104-

=

ASTRO-GRAPH

V...
aor...._
Randy,·-·
=.or;:;..·:::=:··
h..

...... m -

............ For IOIItlotltoil

...._

...

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

c:llll,·m 11112 a
.
lkln'l TV s-too, lp al-._
In ~ .... ltiGIII
a

•Iiiii•

1- Ponl L I IIJiood, ............... ~:..·
-~ · ......
Condition,
·=wv~:.:.::.:=::;..
_
Aok....,.,,
For :-:-~-:':'
82

c:.n-

=--

--

Plumbing &amp;

-Oicto~ • .....,
. cnollor, 4
A-1 -

*· .\n.~r.t""
:;v...--;w
-.

Re al Estate

Heating

1N7 Dodgo Omnl PIG, 114-441-

8111tllllooond_......~

--.--

3t Homll for Sale

1N7

t'lwlwood

~~

......... LII--*,r..-w

lnd .,_,_ ...... In ...

r:.:-'...:' .:= ::'2

........
~

idi&amp;.iiiMtllhM Mid N'11111MUI

.._, ......

I II d,_, Ranoh Stylo On
.._ • 1 112 v... Old,

- - wtlh
oolory ,..
.,.._,.., lol 1:40. ·c/o Pl.
......... tloalolll, 21111 'iloln Ill.,

sPump,
...._
.... ~-~~ Hill
0. ,.,......, 1 Aero,

PI.--.""WY21110.

Holne

Improvement• · ,

........ ~ Condllon,

1N7 PorL ,.... Am Loodod

a.a.111t.....

I

=.s•=

2U lllltptta- Rood, ....ooo,
IIW7MHI.

1711,

o.-. Aclcllon ..... 112,000,
IIWI7·T.117.

I

'

'·

•

84

ElectrtcaJ&amp;

Retrtall'llron

-

~~
Saturday, Dec. 10. 1994

~ ) ucky turn ol events could make the
year ahead a special time lor you. An
afrarlQemenl thai was masterminded by
Olt\&amp;rs may soon be in your control.
MGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) The
s1,rs indicate you might be unusually
l~ky today dealing with large enlefP.rls·
e~ . Things on a large scale will work to
Yu.r bepelil, so don',l back away . Trying
tO' patch up a broken romance? The
Astra-Graph Matchmaker can help you to
understand whallo do to make the rela·

lionship work. Ma11 $2 IO · Matchmaker , late lo ask lor favors from lriends today.
They are in your comer and would enjoy
p 0 Box 4465, New York, NY 10163
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan . 19) You. " an opportunity lo repay you lor your help
hav
nu §LOI good things wor'&lt;ing lo in the past.
'
"
·
your
tage today. butlhey might nol CANCER (June 21-July 22) Conditions
b tmmedialely visible to associates . look very promising today tor you .·
Your
~111 be' revealed as events
Elevate your sights and proceed with the
unfold.
"'-..
confidence of a winner.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Despite LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Involvements
what others think abOut your ideas today . with socially influential people could tum
trust your imagination . Your schemes out a"dvanlage.ously lor you during this _
might seem outlandish to them. but you'll cycle. Make it a point to develop relation·
know how lo make them gel.
ships with those who know how lo gel
PISCES (Feb. ZO·March 20) Focus on things done.
potential money makers Ieday. Your VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Several
instincts lor making financial pla!)S a sue· important mailers lhal have been lett
cess are right on target.
hanging could now be finalized. Make ·a
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Your powers strong push lor lhe finish line.
ol observation are sharp today; apply LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0c,t. 23) Partnership
them. Try adapting the behavior ollhose al'tangements usually work out well lor
you admire to tit your pe~ality .
you and Ieday is no exceptiOn. A tempoTAURUS (April 211-MIY 20} Be patient rary alliance for a specific need will be
today , especially 11 yo~: re involved in successful.
something you can't control. You will SCORPIO (Ocl,. 24· Nov. 22) Your
come pul okay Wyou don't rock lhe boat 1 chances of financial or material increases
GEMINI (May 21.Juno 20} Do nol hesi· look strong today. Give top priority to j
maners lhal can increase your reSO\Irces.
I

...

If

i.

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•

DECEMBER 91

.\

:::t•'" Wllllproollllg, ~

Plymouth

- c:tonr 112 Ton
QBO. Alii For
OOOI.
-

I FRIDAY

'·'

~.,MOO.~' ~~-1171.~~--~­

----dolly

In Ennotnle

bv fdl 1ng m ttle miu1ng words
you develop fr om step No. 3 below .

:::r.· ~~ Wil,,

7t Autoe for Sale

1111 c.. tiiiO
114441 aGO.

,. . . . c...-

.......

Comp le le lhe chuckle quoted

1177 Dodge toO TtldJIIIW!.:!5

Transportal tOn

lilvo High 8ohool dlplomo
ond lot 1hoa or oldll, wUOng lo
... ~ ........ I n ~ wlllt diUIHIIIMIIIII clleo

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llt-lltL VfR'(
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INOTlc:EI

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Wpt .....loiM. &amp;.aNtli niW .....

•

BullnelS
Opportunity

:mo AFTER I P.ll.

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a

Pantry· Testy : Eject, Hooki3d , DESPERATE

-

Aullom - -

I

'

A btllboard read, Avatlable.· The dumb cutie sighed to
her friend , "I haven't been dating much but I hope I never
get that DESPERATE!"

i.OGklng
For
ProDol- W1lo Tlill Prtdlln Tllltr
.Jobo And Wont To Wcllk For A
Dot&gt;ondoblo a-tno Dllvor
Orfonled c:.trlor. Calf IIW82·
1113 llofo&lt;o I P.ll.; Aft• I P.ll.

128-8014,

~

"How do you like retirement?"
I asked my neighbor. "Well," he

"I I I

SCRAM-LETS .ANSWERS

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Eomlngo •

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. llodloll ' Rooollllonlol Applr ...
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tloulo 110, llllllpollo.
0111 tiM 1 - TrucWng c:PMJ Neldl PtaltlllonaJ OTR
011- Duo To Emonciod s.r.

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713, Galllpollo, OH 41131.
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sighed, "the big difference is, that
r--;--,.....,-.,.,.-:--=--.., you don't always get to quit after·
L ANy ET
working • • •

~nlomllllon,

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76 . Auto Parts &amp;

Elm up to $1000 ~ lluHing

....

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Elm _ , . llluftlng ""
" " - · RUlli $1.110 Homo, Add,_. loampod Envelope To:
Holl'o E.._-, P.O. BOx 152,
A9FitgNM~e, WMI VA 25502.

To:

From the Moon

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-II:ID P.ll.
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32 Mobile Homes

Doqs Are From
Jupiter ..Cats Are

THAT'S A GOOD TITLE ..
YOV SHOULD WRITE A
BOOK LIKE THAT ..

MARS, WOMEN
ARE FROM
VENUS"

' I

I'

�2-TheDIIIIf

Frldl!f,

Ohio

,.

Count on chicken for a tasty common cure
IMded and cut Into u-lncltwldl . . . Juice from 5 11mee (llbout "

cup)
2

1

CUPI COiratly chopped,
. cooked whll chlclcen mt11
Sill IIIII JIIPI*, Ill.....
cup CC*Wiy chopped fNih
clllnbo, for gamilh .

cup Mexlcan c - or lOUr
1 ~.

Photo by Paul 0 . Boisvert fo, New England Culinary Institute

MEXICAN CHICKEN

and

Lime Soup features

a tangy

twist of ellrus.

lor gemleh

In a heavy bottomed, 4-quart
saucepan, cook the onion, garlic,
oregano and coriander in the chicken fat (or olive oil) over high heat for
5 to 7 minutes, stirring constantly,
until the onions are just golden, Add
the stock and masa harina and bring
to a boil over high heat. Cook for 5
minutes, stirring frequently.
Add the quartered lime, chilies and
lime juice, and return to a boil.
Reduce the heat to moderate and
cook for 15 minutes. Remove and discard the lime. Add the chicken and
cook for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Season with salt and pepper.
Just before serving, garnish each portion with cilantro and a drizzle of
crema or sour cream.
Note: Masa harina is a corn nour
that has been treated with lime. It is
readily available in health food and
specialty food markets.
Yield: 10 cups.
- Recipe from "The Chicken Soup
Book," by Janet Hazen &lt;Chronicle
Books, 1994).
·

Wash under cold running water 3
pounds chicken wings or backs (or
"As an antidote for colds and flu, combination of both) 11nd put them
depression, bad report cards, upset into a large pot and cover with 5
stomachs, cramps, political unrest, quarts cold water. Add I whole, un· allergies, bronchitis, arthritis and peeled onion, a bay leaf, a spoonful
hangnails, a bowl of steaming hot of black peppercorns, 2 stalks celery,
ehicken soup is eherished in most 2 to 3 whole, peeled carrots, and a
handful of parsley. Bring to a boil,
every part of the world."
So begins a small but comprehen- and immediately reduce heat; cover
sive volume, "The Chicken Soup and simmer for 2 to 3 hours, skimBook," by Janet Hazen &lt;Chronicle ming off the foam occasionally. Cool,
Books, 1994). !&lt;Down in many parts of strain, and refrigerate overnight.
this country as "Jewish penicillin," Skim off fat and use or store &lt;refrigchicken soup Is popular around the erate up to 5 days, freeze up to 4
world, and Hazen offers more than 50 months). This makes 2 to 3 quarts.
recipes, from the plain to the exotic,
1.
for all the hangnails and allergies MEXICAN CHICKEN ANO LIME SOUP
anyone might ever suffer. And if the
la'ge onions, PM*~. qulltll'ld
recipes don't cure you, the wonder- 2
and cut Into l!-lnciHvldlllicel
fully funky illustrations, by Lilla
clovw garlic, finely chopped
Rogers, are bound to cheer you up. 5
-.poons mted Olagarlo
2
2
Now I don't know many people who
IBIIpoona dried ground co2
1
make their own chicken stock, but
rilndar
3
· chefs will tell you that it is a must.
tlbleapoona chicken fat or
For one thing, canned broth is salty, 3
olive
oil
3
doesn't thicken like homemade stock,
cupa
hlhDIIII1mll •nll ldeall l chk:llln IIIIICk
9
and usually contains MSG and other
or Clmlld chlcllln bnltll
3
additives. Hazen gives sensible
laiMe!l coo• ,_ hlrlnll.1- ~
advice: Use homemade if possible, or 3
nolt)
2
go io a health food store and purlime, qua1lnd
chase canned broth that contains few 1
green Clllfomil or pobllno 1
additives and is low in sodium. Here's 2
chill
peppera, stemmed,
· my simple recipe, if you need one:
By Marialiu Calla

B Rc Scou Rose

~ N~ Chmdl

vay remembrance of HiB awesome

being. God is not detennlned by
what I think, believe or feel. The
God of the Uni~ is withoutlilnits and we blow Him by the evi_dence in scripture and our personal
livel. We need only 10 IUm 10 the
fii'St chapler in the Bible to see HiB
m~-hty
demonslnllcd in fact evi
• No one can do what
God has done in a mere six days cl
creation. We can trust God's ability
to intercede in our lives based on
what He has done in creation.
Man in his sinfulness denies
God's ability and His existence
with theaies of evolution and intinile human potential. These thcories and this denial are ndher new
on the screen of hislay. It was DOt
until the 1Gt ....., of the !9th c:cntur-•
ry with the publication cl Darwin's
'Origin of the Spcc:ics' and the
binh cl'Liberal Theology' thai any
educalcd penon ever doubled the
six 'days' of creation or the existence of God.
In this century man has made
himself iniO God Via the •New Age
MovcmenL' The fact is thai God is
beyond what we can imagine and
unless we humble ourselves and
accept HiB love, we will be bound
to His JudgmenL When I stpdy the
prophecies of the Old Testamenl. 1
see that over 300 about Jesus alone
wen: fulfilled literaDy. Why should
46:9-11
• I think that the rest about judgment
- The fear of God needs to fall wiU be fulfilled any diffem~tly?
upon man again. We need 10 1m11"Repent for the Kingdom of
ble at His Word and also at the God is at hand." Matt 3:2

The awCIOIIIc:nca of God is lost
f
hall
l::,:s~ ~
ow
c~(:P:C,::_
1
power ..__._
will
f
God
cept o
always .....,. ..w••'
the quality of our Christianity.
Gone from the church is the dependtncy upon Him for our IUSit:IIIJJICe
which includes our very breath. ·
"If He should determine to do
so, If He should plbc2' 10 Hinudf
His spirit and HU breath, AU flesh
th
d
· b
uld
:~
10t3:,"
The average Christian realricts
his God t6 the confines of a box,
the dimensions of which will vary
aa:mling to his doctrinal view and
h' 1 1 ff 'th N t 1 •
ts eve o at • o on 'I IS our
concept of Him confined Within the
limits of human minds, He is actu8Jiy expeclcd to perfolm when we
speak. We have reduced the capability and sovereignty of our Creator 10 a form of servitude 10 His
own creation. We have forgotten
God's declared sovm:i~mty over all
creation and history. ..,..
"I am God, and there is no
other; I am God, and there is none
like Me, declaring the end from the
beginning ... My counsel shall
stand, and I wiU do all My pleasure... Indeed I have spoken it; I
will also bring ·it to pass. I bave
purposed it; I will also do iL" Isa.

:d

=

ioi,;:

C

.:fs

Society scrapbook
UGHTING CONTEST
Rutland will bold its annual
Christmas lighting contest fn:m 610 p.m. Dec. 18.
The Rutland Friendly Ganleners
will award d1rcc cash prizes in the
categories of religious, non-reli. gious and doc)lrways. Anyone who
wants to participate sboul~ bave
iheir lights 011 at that time.
· Sponllll'l cl this event include:
•

TREAT SALE
The Melp County Unit cl the
Amcricln CinDer Society (ACS) Is

1!o!c!lna a cootie and casbcw sale.
'l1lc UIIIIIDOilt of c:ookiN COIIICS
in a Currier and Iftl tin witb the
"CcDrrl Plrt in WIDW' ICCIIC and
~reSIOalin.

The casbcwt come In a two
pound~ tin lllC*ItOd witb red .
- JOid. 111o • r~
in •
peeD lift bolt and
for 18.
To p.m..c roo*" or casbcn
CCJ!JII&lt;" die Mei&amp;l Unit ol ibo ACS
It I-80().446.74'79 or IIOp by Banit
Oae and and Farmert Bank in ·
Fomclvy llld People Bank in Middleport .also at tbe Meigs County
Healdt DeparlmenL
'(

the Rutland Volunt= Fue Department, Rutland . EMS squad,
BankOnc Rutland, Rutlimd Depatment· Store. Rutland Mine Supply,
HiU Oil Co. of Athens, Ktogers of
Pomeroy, Pizzi Dan's, Hysell's
Used Cars, Birc:bfield Funeral
Home and Snowden's Christmas
Tree Farm.

·Mining:writing talent -Page as

New student council
.

heat to moderate and cook for 45 minutes, until beans are very tender.
In a saute pan, cook the onion,
· garlic and chili pepper11 in the olive
oij
moderate heat ~.or 10 minutes,
stirring frequently. Add to the pot,
along with the rum. Cook for 10 minutes. Add the chicken and scallions
and cook until ,the chicken. is just
cooked through &lt;about 7 mmutes).
Season with salt and pepper.
Garnish each portion with cilantro
just before serving.
Yield: 6 cups.
- Recipe from "The Chicken Soup
Book," by Janet Hazen &lt;Chronicle
Books, 1994).

~

.

Heisman Trophy winner -Page c1

over

II

I

~

H
~

12

4
2

•

nnts
A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper

1a-ge onion, peeled diced
clove~ garlic·, peeled and
minced
cup oiiiM oil
ll8lpoODS mted tlyme
cup iong-9relned white rice
cupa ~ chlclc8n IIIIICk
or canned chlciCIIn bnllh
la'ge IIJ9I, llghlly belllln
cupa finely chopped, c:ook8d
while chk:llln . cupa freeh lemon juice. to ...
Sill and papper, 10 . . .
cup finely chopped fNih . . .

OPEN
-FRIDAYS

._ s8,788**

· WILKESVILLE- Anew Mei~ mine longwall paneiC1ne of the largest in lhe world - has prepared the
cdmpany for record levels of coal production, according
to a release from American Electric Power's.subsidiary
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
· -This is SOCCO's second longwall panel with a face
more than 1,000 feet wide, said Jeff Rennie, a spokesman
f()T AEP.
'
Employees at the Meigs 31 mine currently an: mining
the first panel in the B Block. The panel measures 1,080
!cct wide and 9,160 feet long. Other B Block panels are
III!Jlroxiniately 1,100 feet wide, ma]png them among the
largest in the world, Rennie said.
·
· ~n addition, employees at the Meigs 2 mine are mining
eoal from .a longwall pa~el measuring 1,050 feet wide.
·: ,"These represent the beginning of the largest longwall
~nels we h~ve ever mined,~ said Hugh H. Lucas, AEP

•Til
, Cruise
•AINFiol Casselte
•Power l'tjndows

• 4.3 V-li Power

·Rear Anli-Lo::k

In.· a
said he
sold the building to Northup
~arli~r this year, but alleges
· Northup backed away from
city filed suit in September to get the Court
Slreet building demolished and assess the cost to the·
gw11er.
· "The besring with the judge will be to determine if
the buildin~ is a safety hazard,'' Cowles·explained.
4W!lat we want to come out of this is an order for the
building to be tom down,lllld obviously, have somebodY pay for it."
·
: Cowles said he had hoped to "arrange something"
wltb Newl!erry's and Northup's attorneys last week,
but the apparent failure of lhe meeting prompted the
flearing request. The hearing has not yet been schedpled, Cowles added.
: Cowles took the action after updating City Maniger Matthew Coppler. Coppler said he directed
Cowles to request the bearing.
·
,_ ''The judge seeiJ)ed very concerned with the building, lnd if he feels then: is a safety factor involved, he
wants to take can: of it right away," Cowles said.
• :The city closed the pollion of Coull Street fronting
th~ lluilding in September when it determined the
~iructure could be a safety hazard. The building was
damaged in the November 1993 fire lhal destroyed
•.
ConUnutd on page A2

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• Air Condftion

• Rear Defroster
• Console
• Cuslom Clolh Buclcet Seats
• Stsel BeHsd Tires
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• Power Door Locks • Loaded!
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·AutomatiC
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I

I

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• 350 v-3 Power • AMIFM Cassetle •Fully Loaded!
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MASON FURNITURE CO.
Masor~
.'

'Two, .

TolfoF811-.

r

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmea-Sentlnel St1ft

. a.c .fu, le~~ slvorc·,tban,thc
that had hem f~:Jred before Pr~i­
decision last week to pump $251ftIlion
morebee!! planned into Pentagon coffers
1
over the next six years.
But some cuts wen: still necessary, Pe11y asserted.
·He said the Pentagon plans to seek an additional $4
billion in savings from other sounces in the coming
weeks as it puts IOgetber its fiscal1996 budget.
Perry ~d the changes mean the military will be
able. to put more money into pay increases for the
troops, expand lraining time and improve programs
that make the qualityoflife better for military personnel.
The deci~ions would:
•Cantel the Tri-Service Slandoff Attack Missile,
or TSSAM~ built by Northrop Grumman Corp., saving $2.1 billion. •
·
Perry said the stealthy missile had significant development problems, and estimates of the cost to
produce the w~apon were unacceptably high. "That
made it th~n a very logical candidate for cancellation," he said.
•Reduce i~e 1996 research and funding for the Air
Force's F-22 fighter, saving $200 million over six
years .
The change in the $70 billion program- the Pentagon's biggest ·
-will mea11 the aircraft's operational debut will be delayed by a few
months. The Air Force plans to buy 442 of the Stealth attack jets, .
built by l.Qclcheed Corp. and Boeing.

House GOP reduces size of
committees; forces Dems off

Ht said Democratic leader Ricltard Gepbardt of Missouri
agreed to the Republican-Democratic ratio&amp; for each committee.
Bul Gepbaidt's office immediately rcl~ased a statement saying
the committee structure shows
the Republicans' "prim~ motivation is, control, l)Ot public
policy."
," By shutting out Dernoc[ats
wilb years of experience on crucial commiltees lhat n:presenl the
v1tal needs and interests of their
districts.- the Republicans 3re
•
.
.
smolbering tbc voice of the
~rican voters themselves," said Gepbatdt.
.
1
• He ack-!'owledged that Republicans, as the majorily party, have a right to a
decisive majority on vinually every House committee." ·

• AMIFM Ca$ette

For Your Shopping Convenience
na-5592

Meigs may ..
pursue state;:
grant for
:
one-county ..
jail facility

~Y-

• Power Door Locks

'TIL 7 P.M.
2n~.St.

Sberfffwlll
mslce aDplfcstlon

• WASHINGTON (AP) - Republicans an: downsizing two of the biggest
and most powerful committees in the House, and Democrats who are on the
losing end of this complain their voice is being smothered
·· The Appropriations and Ways and Means committees are lhe most soughtafter committee assignments in Congress. By reducing their sizes, Republicans will force off some Democrats who have been &amp;erving on them for years.
•Appropriations - the spending panel - will have 32 Republicans and 24
Democrats, fourfewerseatsoverall than in lhe Congress that just
ended.
Ways and Means- which sets
taxes - will have 21 Republicansand 15Democrats,two fewer
members overall than previously.
"We tried to be as responsive as
we could (to the Democrats),"
incoming Majorily Leader Rep.
Dick Armey, R-Texas, said Fri-

'94PONTIAC

• Steel Belted
Tices

vice president of mining operations.
. A total of 43 additional roof support shields were added
to the Meigs 31longwall panel when it began operating in
October, Lucas said. The move to B Block also required
installalion of a new ventilation shaft and a 13.2 kilo-volt
power. distribution system which was needed for the
increased horsepower on·the lar!ler longwall panel: ·
"In the founh quarter of this year we will be in tlie best

_¢ontrot or Dubll~q service?
.'

4.3¥-IPOWER

Jim Tampldna, SOCCO
vice prqtdent end a-rei m1111ger .

·OWDI ·.IhC

for,.. Mil~

'9,.,Doe,__
,888

BRAND NEW '95
CHEVY s-SERIES 4X4 PICKUP

'

Hfn the fourth quarter of this yesr we
will be In the best position to produce
coslst the Me/gs.Divlslon since the second quarter of 1993. •

8y KEVIN KELLY

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• AMIFM SIBISO
•Custom Cloth Interior
• Steel Belted Tires

• POWEI Brai&lt;es
• Custom Ooth
lnlerior

~

Tlme..S.ntlnel Staff ,
.
_
. GALLIPOLIS ....: Oallipolls officials an: asking .
Oallia County Common Pleas Judge Joseph Cain to
Order. demolition of a downtown building lhe cily
considers a safety hazard.
.: City Solicito~ Douglas Co~les said the city _re• quested a heanog before Cam after the deadhne
pat!Seclllllt w·eek for a resolution on responsibility for
demolishing the nearly century-old Newberry building.
No agreement' has yet
been reached between the
city and lawyers for HarQid
Newberry, the Ponsmouth

BRAND NEW '95 G·20 314 TON

BRAND NEW '95 CHM
S·SERIES PICKUP

• 4x4

coal, Tompkins~
said.
The Mei&amp;s 31:
mine began op-:
crating at the
end ofFebruary·
this year after:
being idled'
position lo prosince July 1993:
duce coal al the
when about 800
Meigs Division
million gallous.
since the second
ofwaterfromm
quarter of 1993, •
adjacent min~
Jim Tompkins,
flooded \be opo:
SOCCO vice
eration.
'
president and
During 1993.
·general manager,
SOCCO's'
said.
Meigs Divi&amp;ioO:
The longwall
NEW LONGW ALL • Trimble's Gary Hooper operates a lonpaU ma· produced 3. 7:
machinery re- clline at SOCCO's Meigs Mine 2 in September 1993. A newlonpaU panel million clca.r
tons of coal ftm
moves a block;,.of · was set up in October and is now operational.
coal 1,000 feet
shipment to
'wide by 10,000 feet deep by slicing back and forth Ohio Power Company's Gavin Plant at Cheshir~. Tbi&amp;
between the two shafts removed by continuous mining. year, the divisio~ will produce approximalely 4.3 million
The entire process removes about 86 percent of all the clean tons.
·'
,

City asks court
io order demolition
of downtown buldlng

1.::.1

NDOocF•~

• Rea- AntH.o::k Blakes
• Powec Steering
•Power Brakes

...

Vol. 29, No. 44

·company prepares fo,r record levels of production

In a heavy-bottomed, 4-quart
saucepan, cook the onion and garlic
in the olive oil over moderately low
heat for 10 minutes, stirring fre CUBAN CHICKEN
quenUy. Add the thyme and rice and
ANO BLACK BEAN SOUP
cook I minute. Add the chicken stock
and bring to a boil over high heat.
cup mted black bMnl, 80II8d Reduce the heat to moderate and
and rlnled
cook 15 to 20 minutes, or until the
CHESTER STUDENT COUNCIL - Cheater Elementary
quarll Wlllr
rice is tender but not mushy.
recently
elected Its new student coueO. As part of Its dvlc duties,
la'ge llnolced ham hock, cut
Spoon 1 -~ cups of the hot soup into
the
council
will sel First Aid ldts tbrougll ntcember wltll proceed~
a large bowl. Slowly add the eggs to
Into quarllre
buylnR
c:omputer_pmrs,
playRJOI!lld equipment, art supplla ud a
the bowl, whisking constantly to 'Pre~~~~v-.
set of eneyclopedlll8. The coulldl will allo bOll a craft ud bake
lqe onion, peeled IIIII diced vent the eggs from curdling. Slowly
sale Dec. 21 before tile sdlool Cbrlstmu program and will fiJIOIIIIII'
clove• garlic, peeled and add 1-~ additional cups of"soup from
a skatinR party Dec. 15 for ldnderprten tbroup fourth RJ'Ilde at
minced
the pot to the egg mixture, whisking
the Chester Skat1n1 Rink. A dance for fourtll through sixth
)II1J18110 peppere, llemmed constantly. Now, slowly pour the egggraders wiD be held Dee. 16. (top lroat left) Council mem~s
and minced
soup mixture into the pot of soup,
Include from left: (bact rvw) Jason Reed, Carrie Crow, Krlstf:a
stirring constantly. Add the chicken,
lll'lll!l oor• olive oil
lemon
juice,
salt
and
pepper
and
mix
CbevaUer,
Tiffany Holion, Cbad Nelson and Bee Holter; (middle
cup dll1l "'"'
cupa lllced diced while chicle- well. Heat through.
row) Adam Chevalier, WllltDey Karr and Tlfrany Hensley; (lroat
en lnelt (,..,)
· Just before serving, garnish each
row) Tim Grimm ud Jason Ar1x.. (RJ&amp;ht) Additional cot111dl memportion with parsley.
la'ge bunch 8CIIIIol• (greer!
bers Include bottom from leh: (back row) Ken AnubarJ:.:~an
Yield: 14 cups.
onionl~ minced
Stobart, Jonathan Owen, Rosa Holter and Kusanclra
k;
Sail and pepper, Ill . . .
- Recipe from ''The Chicken Soup , (front row) James Will, Nathaniel Cook, Brlttni Hensley and
cup chopped fNih cillntro, lor Book," by Janet Hazen &lt;Chronicle
Andrea Gruesser; and absent were Brent Buckley and Robert
gami8h
Books, 1994).
. Lawrence.
Soak the beans overnight in 1 - ~
quarts (6 cups) of water. Drain well
and set aside until ·needed.
Place remaining 5 quarts of water,
ham hock and bay leaves in a heavy·
bottomed, a-quart saucepan. Bring to
a boil over high heat. Reduce the heat
to moderate and cook, stirring occasionally, for H hours, or until the ham
hock meat is very tender and falling
off the bone. Add the soaked beans and
bring to a boil over high heal Reduce

By MICHAEL lOLL
Aasoelated l'rel8 Writer
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -From
the snappy quips of Tracy and Hepburn to the IIIOfiOIDIICS of Sylvt.ttcr
Slalloue, the Madison movie theater hail shown it all.
The Madison 'a whittrlight marquee and its extra-cushy seats
uphold the dying lnldilion of oldstyle neighbodlood theaters. Even
its lobby harks back to an earlier
era: PictureS of Hum~ Bogart
in "The Tn:aswe of Stena Madre"
and of Marlene Dietrich and Gary
Cooper in "Desire" hang below a
sign reading "Do You ~emem·
ber?"
It's a question people could
soon be asking about the Madison
and other neighborhood theaten
across America. .
Citing tough conpetition in the
age of multiplexes, the Madison's
ownen are trying to sell the 65year-old dinosaur. A zoning board
recently turned down a potential
buyer who wanlcd to slice the theater into five separate serecning
rooms, but other multiplex developers I'CI11ain inteteslcd.
Once a common pan of Americana, neighborhood theaten like
the Madison are fast becoming an
endangered species.
E~t Data Inc., a California company that tracks the
indusll')', says about 2,!100 sinalescrcen lhealen are left in the United States. Othcn believe there are
fewer. But Clbsenen agree they're
a dying breed.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis·Pt. Pleasant. December 11 , 1994

New longwan panel:

ley

Lights
dimming for
one screen
theaters

.

'

GREEK AVGOLEMONO SOUP
1
4

DetailI
onPageA2

,-·

?

;

POMEROY -In an effort to keep:
its options open for housing prisoners, the Meigs COunty Board of Com-:
missioners Friday afternoon instruclcd&gt;
Sheriff James M. Soulsby to submit a:
state grantapplication for anew single•:
county jail facility.
·
The county is also named on a four-:
counly grant applicalion which would
creale a regional jail for Gallia, Jack-:
son, Meigs and Vinton counties.
The proposed four-county jail may.
be constructed in Gallia County near,
lhe Gallia County Children's Home. :
·Commissioner Janet Howard·
Tackett said applying for the single-.
counly granl will not affect the four-'
county grant application.
Meigs County offiCials have ex-:
pressed disappointment lhat the Gallia
County site wasselecled by the South..;.
eastern Ohio Correclions Commis:
sion over a site in wes1ern Meigs
County while other officials, inc;lud-'
ing Soulsby, are opposed to the regional jail concept.
,
Tacken said the county would likely,
withdraw from the correclions com·
mission if the single-county grant i~­
approved.
•
In any evenl, Meigs County vote..S: .
may someday be asked to support
new jail, possibly lhrough a sales tax,
of 1/2 of one percent ... a proposilion'
Soulsby said Meigs County vote~
would be unlikely to approve for Ill
oul-of~ounly facility.

a

•Restruclure the Army's RAH-66 Comanche helicopter, reducing
it to a protolype program. Only two of the high-tech choppers will
be buill, saving $2.1 billion.
Continued on page A2

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Report: Strickland, Cremeans

Today's Times-Sentinel

6th District race among
costliest in the nation

16 Section. -168 Paces
Business
Calendars
Classilieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
B2&amp;3
D3-7
Insert
A4
A3
A6
Cl-11
Bl
A2

• GALLIPOLIS - Congressman-elect Frank
Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, ran the sixth-besl financed campaign of any challenger in the nation
seeking to unseat an il)cumbent, according to a
report issued by Common Cause, a Washington
watchdog group.
In addition, the large amount of money -exceeding $1 million- spent by both candidates in
the 6th District race wiU likely make itlhe second
most expensive race in Ohio in this year's general
election.
According to Federal Election reporls,
EXPENSIVE RACE - The 6th Congressional District
Cremeans raised $674,353 and spent $521,259 race between congressman-elect Frank Cremeans, left, and
I
through SCptember. Of that amount, $360,000 defeated Incumbent Ted Strickland, pictured here during a
Columns
was borrowed personally by Cremeans. Only campaign debate, was one of the most expensive in the
$53,399 came from political action committees. nation •
Jack Andenon
Defeated incumbent Ted Strickland, DLucasville, ran a campaign that raised $472, 270and spent $366,270during
PUCO staff recommends fred Crow
the same period. Of Strickland's funds, $239,11 5 camefrom PACs, mostly
Iim Sands
rate hike for Ohio Power
labor ~nd education-related groups.
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Chuck Stppe
Cremeans reportedl)' raised only. seven percenl of his finances from
Monthly bills for Ohio Power Co.
c ,..._""" •
PACs, while Strickland's total PAC conlributions accounted for 50.5
residential cuslomer.; would rise an
pencent of his entire campaign war chest.
average of SLI6 if the Public UtilitieG Commission of Ohio accepts a staff
recommendation on lhe ulility 's request for a rate hike.
The PUCO said ('riday the slaff's report will be 'the basis for formal
COLUM~US, Ohio(AP)-Gov, George Voinovichon Friday signed into hearings. The PUCO can rejecl the recommendation. Hearings will be
law a domestic violence bill thai makes it easier for police officer.; to arrest scheduled early rtext year.
The bill for the average reside~lial cuslomer would increase from $34.8Q.
suspected abusers and stiffens penalties for violators of court-issued protec10$35.96, per month, agency spokeswoman Carrie Cunningham said Friday.
tion orders.
,
The calculation is based on the use of 500 kilowatt-hours of clcetrlcity per
The bill immediately became law with the governor's signalure.
monlh.
On Nov. 17, the House passed 86-6thc Senate's, version of the bill .
The staff'report recommended increasing Ohio Power's annual revenue
nle new law establishes a preferred ~I policy for police who have
reasonable cause to believe a crime has been committed. When arrests aren ' t between $20.5 million and$33.9 million, ot 1.41 percent to 2.32 percent over
currenl reyenues .
made, police will be required to write an expianation.

...,,_eo.

Governor signs domestic violence bill

:

I

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