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.

•
. ..... . 1~1lle

Animal abuse is symptom
of mote serious prob-lem ·
Ann
Landers
DWAaa Laaclen: Recenlly, you
responded to a reader from San
Anlllllio who was concetned because
her S.year-old nephew had choked a
rabbit 10 deiJh IJid it WIS known lhat
be bid been cruel ·to other animals.
Your ...wcrwas right on, Ann, but I
do wish you had said mort on the

subject.
The American Humane Associa. lion is this counlry's oldest child and

llliinal prolleelion organization. We
have chected out incideniS tbal are
hair-nising. It It frightening how
often children 1nd animals arc
victims in dyafunctional family
situations where spouse abuse, sexual
molellalion Jlld other brutalities are
cvuyday occumnces.
We are well aware that.children
who ue cruel 10 animals are in
desperlle need of help. One of the
mOlt dramatic examples of what can
happen i,( animal abuse by a child is
overlooked toot place in NewYOIIc
1t11e Jaa yeat A 13-year-old boy was
chaqecl wilb the murder of a 4-)'CIJ',old child. The small community was
in ahodc. Yet one year earlier, tbat
.neboyhadchokedaneighbor'scat
with 1 hose j:lamp, and 'Jiothing was
done about iL

· People still shrug off abuse to
animals. "It was just an animal,'
"Boys will be boys• and "It's just a
phase" are classic phrases heard from
the judicial benches across the
counlry. But cruelty speaks volumes
about the pcrpetralo~ no mauer if the
victim is human or animal.
~ Please belp us get the word out .0
parents, law enforcement olfteerS,
teachers, prosecuting attorneys and
other professionals who can help us
break the cycle of violence to
chil~n and animals. SINCERELY
•• MICHAEL E. KAUFMANN,
COORDINATOR OF EDUCATION,
AMFRICAN HUMANEASSOCIATION
DEAR MR. KAUFMANN: You
are right when you say chis problem
should be looked into and these
children need help. It is also true lhat
children often abuse animals to
release aggression chey feel toward
abusive adults. But merely knowing
WHY they do ·it is not enough.
Society also needs protection against
these sick kids.
I do thank you, however, for
givinc me the opportunity to shine a
spotlight on a problem chat needs a
great deal more visibility.
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
in response to your miserable answer
to "Stumped,• who asked what to say
to her 17-year-old pregnant relative.
Her comment was 'I cenainly can't
say'Congratulations.'"Your advice to
remain silent was not much help.
As a childbirth ec!ucator, I have

----Honor ,.,.,.,.,...-...

end

.

Ohio Lottery

Southern

·•

REDUCTION

dealt with a great many pregnant '
teens. The last thing they neecHs
stony silence. True, tbis may not be a
situation wh_ere congratulations are in
order, but how about saying: "I'm sure .
this wasn't planned, but I'm here to ·
help you make tbe beat of it"? -LAKE OSWEOO, ORB.
DEAR OSWEOO:I gotcl&lt;lbbaecl
from all sides for my JUy-Uvered,
no-braincr reipoiiiC. Thanks to all
who SUJ8ested tbal I wlkc up llld
smen the coffee.
Dear Ann Landen: Our 7·year·
old son loves to visit Ilia gnndmodler
and sleep ovemighL She hu a ODebedroom apartment, and when
"Danny" Slays there. they sleep in the
same bed.
I feel tbat Danny is too old to be
sleeping with his grandmotber and
that he should be on the Couch. My
husband thinks I am "evil-minded.•
At what age should a child no Jonaer
sleep with a relative of tbe oppcllite
sex?- RHODE ISLAND
DEAR R.I.: Experts disagree on
Ibis point, but I say 4 years of age il
the cut-off poinL

races past

N-Y quintet

'. "'

·E

Page4

Vol. 45, NO. 162

1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

7

\n stoc"

$185

An alcohol probkm? How CG/1 ',ou
help yo~~rself or SOmtOM you love?
. "Alcoholism: How to Recogniu II,
'How to Deal Wuh It, How 10 Con·
quu It" will give you the tiiiSWU'S.
Sendaself~ssed, ltmg, bulilteusiu envelope IUid a checlc or IIIOMJ
oi'IUr for $3.65 (this illclllllu poll·
age IUid handling) to: Alcohol, do
AM l.antkrs, P.O. Box 11562, Cldcago, Ill. 60611-0562. (Ill CtJNJila,

I

'

Finance $8995 for 60 mo.@ 8.'75%

1994 BUICK CENTURY

1994 GRAND AM COUPE
OILY

$23712 .
PER MONTH
Vol, tift, crulu, CIIHite,
Power wlndowl, etc.

Auto, A/C, UH, cruiM, CIU lilt, Rl. dlfog
I

1983 CHRYSLER 5TH AVE.

The body of an exhumed infant ·Gilmore Cemetery on Forest Run
is on irs way to lhe Franklin Coun- Road.
The disinterment is part of an
ty Coroner's office for a complete
autopsy, investigators said Ibis ongoing investigation that drew
regional publicity when an extenmoming.
Lisa Faye Rose died Oct. 7. sive search was conducted for bOd1984, at two months of age, ies behind a Racine farm last
according to Meigs County Prose- month.
Family members of 54-year-old
·cutor John R. Lentes.
Meigs County Coroner Douglas Rose told authorities remains may
Hunter and investigators with the bave been bUried oo the Mile Hill
·Bun:au of Criminal Investigations Road property behind sOme sheds
-and Identification unearthed the and barns, Lentes said.
Autop~y results could be
infant. lhe daughter of Harold Rose
retony4
jn-l!boul three weeks. but
Sr. and Mary Rose on Tuesday,
charges,
If
ally are tO"be made, may
~tes· n~JIO!led.~ : ~. . ~
. · At tbat time of her death, tho Ifill be filed soon since auilrocrities'
coroner ruled tliat the cause WIS are investigating all"inConn\uion in
crib deatb. 1'be llurialtook
in Ibis complicated case, be added.

f~G~Dr~~,champayne se1ge wM '2495......................................... .Now '$1488

·· ld~Yrfm ~1~'At'c· Car~ Owne~.. ........................ ~............:.....................................$1888
'3995-::·· ...........,........... ~ ....................................,.NOW $2980

.· ... ~~~f~Atrz...............

l. .. ...... .. ....... ..... .. .................... .. .. . ... ...................... $3995

&lt; filllNW~r•e-me, PW, PL. One owner W/IS $6995..................................... $4888
·• ·• t59imtWfila?.'WA-~r&gt;·))~lx

. e·tj'o~~- .............................................................Now ss990

.. V--6 S

&amp;f.m ~~f-~rs·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NOW $6200

Exlnl

1987 ~~AN

1

· ~ ~l{rf ~&amp;1f~Fv~ll1'• sunroof, power windows, aluminum wheela ................$6500

place

. . • .Local trade-Shows T.LC., lilt, cruise, C81881te, duel tanks, only 84K, Extra Clean
,
·. ~ ~Y'Slt:l!!'N~W\iOl!!I&lt;~A· · ···~ ............ ..... ....................................... ~ALE AT_$6870

· · ~~cl!ffi-l'6'fM~A"f~NBiue cloth lmerior,locally owned. Priced right to movel .........$6990
.

.

Southern Board gives
-nod-to budget, pact

.

2

~ ~ ~passenger, wM $8995.......................................'....................... "ow $6900
· · Just lrlded on .-- Grand Prix, Platinum Beige finish, 561&lt;,
• .
.. v8B2sme,~~equlpped, ........... :!.............................. ,......... ....................... PN LY $7200

1
•_14arPb'ift'l~lll'cfi1flB- ~ln'tfe; super clean, 301&lt; W/IS $8995 ..................NOW $7400
·. 18~!1 ~f11\'d'fiLM.Jn 'ff~\lo,m ............... .:................ ................ PUR PRICE $7800

tom' photo) were, front row, Connie Pooler,
Melissa Dempsey, Laure• Young and ·Brlan
· Bowen; middle row, Jesslc:a Karr, Brandl ·
Reeves, Robert Murphy, Rebecca EYIDIIDd
Jennifer Mora; and back rQw, Heidi Nelaoa,
Amy Redovlaa, VIc VanMeter, Suaa Brewer,
Julie Brown aDd Heather Well. Tbe (II'Oup will
bold a food drive tills sprina 111111 will eoatiDue
other seniee projects, sucb u pllmtln&amp; llowen
near tlae building at bomecomlag, Roush nld.
(Seatlnel J!hotol by George Abate)

fNA'§ ~&amp;ROYR~'miJ'W&amp;'B!=~' ~·cruise, 24K W/IS $9900 .....CLEARANCE AT $7999
Scarlet &amp;Gray exterior, dual tanks; color TV. &amp;VCR, Ilk, cruise, casaette, pow.- windows &amp;loclul --~

~ \i~fBk-R'OAfiMAS'f~-~- ........... ................................................................. "ow ·~

. Only 34.000 low mlle_S. We sold ~ neiv, leather trim &amp; full luxury equlpmem
·
. ~~&amp;YlfiA~-~r-tANfi'Pl!!I);('S~'OAN"'"'""'""""'"'" """"'""""REDUCED TO $1 3,500 ·

t
f'll
b
k
t
f
h
h
.
•
er
a
IS
s
·
1
as
e
s
or
t
e
o
1days
I
H b
1
homemade foods basket.

Points to rtmember wben doing
a gift basket are consider lbe person who will receive the basket and
persooalizc it to them. Pick a central tbeme and build around it, use
big baskets and other non-uaditional containers for flair, use plenty of
filler, line your baskets and tie on
large festive bows, she said.
Linda Mc:Coy reported on berbof-lhe-month, mistleroe, noting tbat
tbe main uses of mistletoe arc to
lower blood pressure and as a sedative. Mistletoe acts to slow tbe
heart rate and dilate the arteries,

~o, ~·
~ogger,
·199"i&amp;lf.lPJh"A·...-s·2·t&gt;oe)lnr4·r&gt;e)b~s
......................................................Now sto.~
power windows &amp; door locks, rear

thereby lowering blood ~ure. It ~

28K, bal ol36136 warranty

, " .

V-6 engine, auto, A/C, tih, cruise, 23K, ONLY $218.40 per montll with $500 down 6Q mo. @9.25
·.
10
1993"SUICKU·s·iern~tCO'SlO'M""'':'........................ ::............................. $ ·900 ~ale price ..

::r~::: s~:~~~~:ee:~~~ ~~ti'::

~~~ ~=e~~-~~~~~::~~tst:x~

.

effects on lhe liver. Indeed, there is
evidence tbat mistletoe may bavc
anti-tumor activities, said McCoy
cautioning tbal tbe berries are bighly poisonous, and bavc been claasi·
~~;!:~!~~!:~~nd Drug

~'ft~Cf~lnf4~·Jii(S~d~ew/IS$15,900 ..................................NO\Y $1 3,850 -. •
Loaded, tih, cruise, C8118lte, power windows, dual air baga,much more, WAS $14,11QD

·

. ·. i9!M'Cfi~V:·A'S't'AO'VA'tf"'"'""""'"""': ............................................. ,......f' STEAL AT$1 2,990
8 passenger, lUI, cruise,

pOwer windows,

4:9 t, V--6 engine, auto, AJC W/IS SJN~Bt

. i994'~0m'IAC'BO~N~'illtl.:~ ..........

exJ:~g:!n~~~i: ~~~':

+.................:............. . . . . ...

~~O''fe)'~n;101)'

.··. Dual ailbaga, power seat, pow8r windows, tih, cruise, casaette, loaded, 20,000 .low miles
· 1~ tfuft!kPARKAVENUE""· ................................................................... ~OW 15,740

evening. In January tbe steering
commiitee will be meeting to plan
~ 1995 calender.

&lt;

Power seat, pow.- windows, tih, cruise, ~· air big, antilock brakes. 31n lltOck

-----Community calendar------ ·-._ 1~~Bft:·A·~~lcsr:cecr·s~:R~...................................................... FRo_~ Tlae eo-nlty c.JeDr II
pabllllled at a free aenlce to
aoD•prolit aroupa wlalalal to

•r.•::

BEDFORD - Bedford Township Volupteer Fire Departmein
Commluee meeting 7, p.m. Tucs~y ill lbe town ball.

promo e •a ea or
of any type. Item•

POMEROY - Fralemal Order
of tbe
Auxiliary, pizza

:::.:~1-:."c'!i:~!~

. .•·- fm·~~~Jf'd~l~f~wildowa, IIUnrun wheels, 8KIOcll1 - - ~~··"·· ..,...,.

RACINE - First Baptist. .
~
Church, Racine, children's pro·• ~fl!' ~-Expect the~- ·
zram, 7 p.m. Wednesday. One aervice on Christmas Day at the · .· ~1ftf-~ wheels, Sharp "Black"

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,
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~
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m
~
.
~
~~~~~:~~
~
. •O

in Middleport,
WEDNESDAY
· I p.m. Wedlleaday at~ cbun:b.
MIDDLEPORT - Bennett '
TUISDAY
. . Bennett -Post 128, American
TBUilSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Special Legion, 6 p.m. WednesdAy for a
MIDDLEPORT- Live n=·vi
meetlDJ, Middleport LodJe 363, Chiislmal dinner followed by sack
th H
Au...a. c
·
,
L u1
m ....___..... y Mi...
m' • ""-'--·· -.l....oy.
. -. scene -at e ope """~""'t
30
7
.. '-"'.........,.......
on Grant Street in Middleport,
F......... : P· · • ,....,. • udleport MIIODic Temple. Wc:.t in
Thursda
d Frida 7 t0 9
BA~
POMEROY- Alzbeimers IBid eacb ev~.
y,
p.m.
Related
Disordem
support
group,
I
'
BASH.A.N - Home Scbool pm. Wednesday. Senior Citi~ens . TIJPPERS PLAINS - 'I'unxn ,
Sll)iport Orouf meetlug, 7 p.m. Center. Dr. Richard Boone, psy- ,Plains Veterans of Fi&gt;reign Wars
Tlllll1ly, 2147 Bllblll Road F!l( chologist, 10 speak.
·Post 9053 meetin&amp; Thursday, 7:30 ..
. • ~ Clll949-3119.
p.m. a1 post home.
of 4aYL

! ·~

I

'

1.

•..!

to run • '
•:

4/ •.

.

,.

graphic equalizer, A/C, lilt, cruise, FOITlllt

G111n.

1

A 1995 budget of more than
• · $5.5 miUiou was approved, as was
• a two- year contract between lhe
Southern Local Teachers Associa• lion and the Soulhem Local Board
: of Education at Monday night's
• · board meeting.
.
·
' · The section of lbe budget dealing wilh the district's general operating expenses IOialed $3,704,872.
: The remainder of lhe $5.5 million
: includes funding for luncb rooms,
. state and federal programs, activity
: and athletic funds , and retirement ,,
· program funding, according to
: Treasurer Dennie Hill.
·
:
The. board also approved an
· advance draw of $300,000 from lhe
; county auditor on lhe February tax
' settlement for January and Febru' ary's operating expenses.
' : Tlie contract between lhe board
, ·and lbe teachers association will be.
, :in effect until July I, 1996, Super. · intendent Bob Ord said. No salary
·increases were included in the con: :tract and lhat mosl other provisious
· ·remained lbe same as lbey were in ·
; •lhe previous contract, he added.
;~
By a vote of 3-2 , the board
; :approved dismissing school on Fri. :day because of lhe Cbrisbllas boli: -day, wilh the makeup day to be
: :negotiated between lbe board and

lhe teachers.
Approval of several fields for
soccer, kindergarten through sixth
grade, was given by che board.
,
Brandon Floyd was accepted as
an open enrollment student, and
Mary Felts, William L. Gee, Joseph
Hall Jr., Melissa Heiser, Janelle
Hineman, Jennifer Martini, Tonya
Meadows and Melanie Van Meter
were hired as substitute teachers.
Tina Young wu employed as a
substitute cook..
·
The board accepted tbe organi·
zations of the Syracuse, Letart
'Falls-Portland and Raclne elementaries' PTOs, the Soulhern High
School Alhletic Boosters and the
Southern Junior High Athletic
Boosters so IIley can qualify for Jia.
bility insurance under the board
program. Fees for coverage are to
be paid by lhe organizations.
The board's organizational
meeting was set for Tuesday, Jan. 3 ·
at8 p.m. at the high school.
Attending were Tom ~Rosellerry,
president; Joseph Thoren, vice
president; Susie Grueser, Marty
Morarity, and C.T. Chapman,
board members; Ord, Jfillies Ray
Lawrence, superintendent pro tem,
and Hill.

Low tonlghtiD 301, .,...Uy

cbudr.Thu~y. pard7
cbadJ. High In 501.

2 Secllollll, 16 Pagee 35 cents
II Multimedia Inc. Nwapljlar

A TIME TO RELAX AND READ - ''Tbe Nlgbt Before
Cbrlstmu," written by Clement Clarke Moore In 1870, Is a
poe_m that e.Voys JIOJ!ularlty year after year, without getting old
Ia the sense of hnlng been beard many times. Julie Hubbard of ·
Syracuse relues Ia ber rocker with 4-year-old daughter, Sarah,
for a reading of the holiday perennial.

Fed delays action
on interest rate hike
11y JAMES H. RUBIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Higher
interest rates are on lhe way early
next year, analysts say, even
though the Federal Reserve bas
decided not 10 play Scrooge during
lhe Cbrisanas seasOn.
Private economists disagree on
the size and frequency of future
rate increases. But they say the
economy is too strong and the dan·
ger of inflation too great for central
bank policy-makers to remain on
lhe sidelines for long.
':T,!IeY. c)10se, wisely in my
opirilOil; to leave monetary policy
unchanged for a time," said
economist Eugene Sherman of the
New York investment firm M.A.
· Schapiro &amp; Co. after lbe policy-set·
ling Federal Open Malt:et .Commit·
tee adjourned Tuesday without
boosting rates.
SbeiUlan predicted the central
bank would resume pushing inter·
est rates higher on Feb. I , at lhe ~
conclusion of lhe next meeting of
the 12-member FOMC. He said be
e~peciS four interest rate increases
in 1995, each one a half-percentage
point.
But economist Stepben Roach
of Morgan SlaDley &amp; Co. in New
York City said rates could be near
their peak during lhe current cycle.
"Unless I'm wrong on the inflation risk, the Fed has very lillie
tightening to do, •• he said.
David Jones of Aubrey G.
Lanston &amp; Co., a New York government securities dealer, speculat·
ed the nex1 increase in rates. could

come as early as mid-Januaryeven before the next FOMC meeting at lhe end of lbe month.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan may have been given
aulhority Tuesday by lhe commitlee to "pull lhe trigger again
lhen,'.' Jones said, if inflation figures are worrisome.
Fed "actions will be very sensitive 10 price increases from now on
to stifle any expeCiations of infla·
lion,'' be said.

The Fed, which has boosted
rates six times since February, held
!l.ff m.Pviog again ailllt meeling in
private for nearly four hours Tuesday.
The .decision to remain on lhe
sidelines during lhe Cbrisbllas season came as no surprise. Only five
weeks have passed since the central
bank· s last rate increase - a whopping three-fourths of a percentage
point jump on Nov. 15 tbat was lhe
largest in 13 years.
· " The Fed made a bold move a
month ago," said Roach. " We
have yet to see anything close to
tbe .full impact from the earlier
increases. The Fed-waniS to mbve
in more measUred steps.'·
The stock market initially was
heartened by the Fed's decision, as
prices moved up after the
announcement. But stocks sank
later, with tbe Dow J,ones industrial
average down more than 23 points
at lhe close.
Beginning in February, the central bank ·reversed its five-year
course of lower or stable sbort-tenn
interest rates.

.Shell expansio-n prompts new rail car order
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP)
- Shell Chemical Co. in Mason
County is expanding and bas
ordered 100 new rail cars from a
Huntington manufacturer, officials
said.
Tbe cars were ordered from
ACF Industries to handle shipments of raw materials and finished
products, said Barry Cristea, a
spokesman for Shell's Apple Grove
plant

The plant makes polyester resin

pellets, which are used in plastic
containers such as soft drink bottles, peanut butter jars and
microwave food trays.
The company is building an
addition to increase irs production
capacity by orie-lhird, 10 800 mil·
lion pounds a year, by 1996.
"I think Jan. 15 is lhe first date
of our cars coming off the line,"

Cristea said. "The re'll probably be
another order when lhe expansion
comes tbrougb."
ACF, which will retain ownership of lhe cars, will lease lbem 10
..Shell.
Dennis Nib ert , manager of
ACF' s Humington plant, said the
order won' I mean new jobs. The
plant will continue 10 complete
about six cars a day, be said.
But lhe order is a plus for lhe

busy plant. Nibert said.
"We're booked out rigbt now
lhrough three quarters of '95,'' he
said.

Because the Shell plant is only
aboul 30 miles away, Shell and
ACF are cooperating in lhe order.
Nibert said.
.
Shell employees will lour the
ACF plant 10 see bow the cars will
be built.

~Officials

defend use of force after
iattack_
er shot near White House
..
· · By NANCY BENAC
: Associated Press Writer
,;: WASHINGTON - Federal
: : offiC~ are ~efending lhe shooting
, . of a kmfe-wtelding homeless man
~: outside lhe White House as a justi; : fi_ed use o'f force because lhe ~
-did not follow orders to give up liill

; :lions have been ·
light
: :Of a string of recent incidents, but
~ ;POlice rejected any suggestion IIley
; .were more prone to shoot.
::· :'They rook the appropriate
; acuon under the circumstances,"
:Park P~l.ice spokesman Maj.
} l.obert Hmes said Tuesday. "If
:they were not quick to fire, we
; J;ould have an officer over there
:~tb a knife wound." '
·. Hines said the officer who fued
!be shots wu a seasoned employee
·who would ~ assigui:d to adminislrallve duty mkeeping with roul)Il~

procedure. The officer was not Secret Service officers before lhe
shooting.
identified by name.
Extraofdinary video· footage
The alleged attacker, Marcelino
Cornie!, 33, was in very critical from the Conus television service
condition at a local hcispilal after shows lh~t in tbe fmal moments of
being shot twice by a Park Police lhe confrontation, Cornie! stood
offtcer during the sidewalk slaDdoff practi'cally motionless facing four
on P-enqsylvania Avenu e. He officers. one of whom . then
undersent surgery twice, the second advanced and fued.
one
·
12
after
Witnesses said officers had
four hours until &lt;hnorllv
a.m. lilts morning.
Prosecutors planned to charge
·
Cornie! with assaulting a federal
officer, said Monty Wilkinson, a
spokesman for lhe U.S. attorney's
office. Additional charges could be
added later, investigators said. The
assault charge carries a maximum
penalty of 10 years in prison.
Wimesses said Comiel ·cbarged
across Pennsylvania Aventie from
Lafayeue Park armed wilh a knife
and menaced Park Police and
II

r

f'(lli TU
:Jl

r: u J:

· made in 1990 while campaigning," Story said. "It's been designated ~ as a
Ibis in lbeir lifetime," she said.
.
.
t&lt;:okosing Construction Co. of Fredericktown beat out five other con- major corridor in Obio."
The project bas succeeded because of the collective commitment from
tractors witb a bid of $12,320,373.45, Collins said. The olher bidders
were, in descending order of bids, Geupel Conslruction, Elmo Greer &amp;. numerous counties.and across state bounllaries, be added.
"It's 1101 everything we need, but it's a start," Stoiy said.
Sons.. Beaver Excavating, Marshall C. Rardin &amp; Sons and Shelly &amp;
About 3 million cubic yards of dirt will be moved on Ibis project,
Sands.
Five of the six contractors were under the slate estimate, which means Yoacbam said.
"This is a high priority pr()je~:t or il wouldn't have been funded," she
lhe project remains feasible, be added.
Kokosinc spokesman Dan Compston said bis company can't wait to said. "'fbe remaining portion of the connector is also a high priority."
The rest of lhe interslate connector is divided into lbree projects. The
begin moving dirt.
ne~t section from the Ravenswood bridge to Rolandus could be sold by
The fum bas complell:d numerous projects for public and private entities over 40 years. Area projects included continuing conslruction of the lhe beginning of 1997, Yoacbam said.
Pending federal approval. lbe next phase could be designed in-bouse to
Gavin Power Plant saubbers and work on U.S. 35 in GalliaCounty.
The company employs about 1,000 workers each year, wilh at least 50 save time, she added. H this isn't accepted, lbe project must be approved
by Slate, re~ional and then federal highway offiCials in Washington.
employees devoted to che intenlate cor1Declor sile, he added.
Soil bonngs and aerial photos will likely be done this spring for the
·~we're always concerned wilh the safety people near tbe site," Compne~t phase, Yoacbam said.
ston said. "We don't mind sidewalk superintendents from afar."
About $1.3 million in federal highway dcllars were raised by outgoing
Local connci:tor coordinator Steve Story bailed lhe sale of the project's
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland this year. This money wiU be spent on the prefmt phase.
"II shows Gov. (George) Voinovicb is trying to honor the promise be
(Continued on Page 3)

·Autopsy slated ,....-- Christmas is... for infant's body

,•

Finance $11,490 for 60 mo.@ 8.75%

ALL CARS PRICED FOR CLEARANCE!

-~&lt;fiE~-~~/IS

~-, , .~.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 21, 1994

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentlael News Staff
Meigs County celebrated a milestone Tuesday as iiS.fmt stretcb of new
highway in more than 25 years is being JRpared for construction.
A 2.25-mile section of lhe U.S. 33 connector was sold to an Ohio fum
for about $12.3 miUion, more than $2.5 miUioo under lhe state's estimate,
said George CoUins, spokesman for the Ohio Deparunent of Transportation Districl 10 office in Marietta.
"It's a big day for Meigs County and would be for any county to have
a project of this size," said CoHins, who bails from Meigs County and bas
worlced on Ibis project since lhe early 1970s.
"Our future depends on this," be added.
Tbis first phase of lhc connector, between Rock Springs and Five
. Points, may be underway by February once the contract Is signed and
could be ready for use by tbe spring of 1996, said Nancy Yoacbam,
ooor spokeswoman.
· The 1.8.6-mile connector - wbich is divided into four sections from Rock Springs to lbe Rltcbie Bridge a1 Ravenswood. W.Va., is scheduled for completion by 2000, Yoacham added.
''lbere are people in Meigs County who lhought they would never see

Finance $10,490 for 60 mo.@ 8.75% .

send $4.45.)

~

CQnnector's first phase sells for $12.3 million

1994 BUICK SKYLARK

ONLY

.

en tine
Copyright 1994

.Finance $11,490 for 60 mo.@ 8.75%

Denise Arnold presenltd a program oo bOiidlly Blft ba8kcts when.
tbe River Valley Herbalists met
recently at Seyler's House of Treasures for a holiday dinnea' party.·
Tweuty-Four members and
guests, Sharon Toothman of
: Ravenswood and six members of
the newly formed Gallia area interest group, joined the Herbalists for
lbe dinnct party.
Arnold displaying many baskets and gave suggestions on bow
to fill tbein. There was a soup bes~ket. a gardener's buket, a fresh
Jab basket. a cookie basket and a

•

On January 1at, 1995 our entlraliwentory Ia subJect to peraonal property tu:...
In order to lower the tu: we mu~ reduce our entire atock of new I uaecl C.nl

.

EASTERN ELITE,.._ Eutern High School
IDcluctH Ita National Honon Sudety membets
Jut WMk. ne lltudents Jllllllt demoiBtrate oer•
Ylce, la!denlalp, dander ud .tcholanlllp to be
noml•ted, ad'Wtlor Cheryl R-h ald. Selllon
IDdllded last year (top pboto) IDdllde, trom left,
· hlltorlan, Jeulca Chevalier; treuurer, Ryan
Bacldey; prealdeat, CbarUe BlueD; sec:retary,
D.vld TOIIIIdu; and Ykle l:.ealdeat, Jeaka Rad·
toni. Studeata Inducted r tile lint tiJM (bot-

Pick 3:
833
Pick 4:
. 8680
Buckeye 5:
5-18-21-25-30

l'j

the knife, which it turned out was
taped 10 his band.

Hines said lhere was no doubt
the suspect posed a threat. "The
fact tbal be bad the knife taped to
his band, what does tbat teD you?
He wants to use it. He wants to get
at them,' · Hines said.
·
In Anaheim, Calif., police Sgt.
Mike Hannah said relatives who ·
filed a missing persons report on
Corniel on Aug . 26 notified 'him
that be was the man shot in fronl of
the While House.
·

SHOOTING-SCENE- tvlde~ teclmldluu
examlaed the scene of 1 sllootlag outside the
Wlalle a - Tuesday. A mUJ, said to have been
rllllllintl toward the White Boase bnndlsbinl a

lmlfe 01' machete, WIIS shot by police Ia the tJaJrd

slaootlai laddeaht or near the Wlalte Boase Ia
two IIIOIIths. (AP)

1

'

�~commentar

Wednesday, Dec:ember 21,1994

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy;......Middl~port, Ohio
· Wednesday, .December 21, 1994

•

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:r-------------------------------------------~
••

The Daily Sentinel

••
I

••
••

Ill coart Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

••
•
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••

•'
ROBERT L. WINGB'I'T
Publllher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Geaenl Ma-cer ·

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LET11!RS OP OPINION ..., welcome. They lbould be less than 300
All lella"l ore oubjcct ro editios and 1111111 be signed with n101e,
-.khu llld lelepbono numbol. No llllligned lelten will be published. Lettm
lbould be in Jood tute, oddmliog i.uuea, not penonaliliel.

wordlloaa

'

;Government going
lbroke;
strong letter follows
.
/

I

:By WALTER R. MEARS
Spedal Correspondent
: WASHINGTON -The government may be going broke in 35 years
•or so. Suong letter follows.
: That's about tbe message of a cominission that spent a year looking for
:U.Swers to tbe long-term problem of entitlements - automatic govern:ment spending on payments to individual Americans- but couldn't set'tle on a detailed plan 10 cope with tbe prospect of worse woes ahead.
• And not for lack of effort Sen. Bob Kerrey, the Democralic cbainnan
:Of tbe panel, tackled tbose politicaUy perilous issues, including cbanges in
:Social Security, while he campaigned and won re-election in Nebraska
; Now. Kerrey said in a telephone interview, be intends "to build a
mini-crusade" to gain public understanding and support for action, for
steps the commission couldn't agree upon. A taU order, Kerrey acknowl·
edges, but a problem Utat can only deepen unless something is done.
He bad hoped for a consensus to put the commission behind a specific
set of proposals on entitlement and tax changes 10 r~in in deficits and. keep
both entitleinents and general government solvent, 1f less generous. m the
21st cenwry.
Instead, the members of the commission voted to send a letter to President Clinton and the leaders of Congress warning that "tough action is
needed sooner rather tban laler."
It isn't the first time a high-powered panel bearing a presidential seal
bas tried JO chart a course out of tbe swelling entitlement costs and budget
deficits facing tbe nation in the decades ahead. President Reagan bad one;
it ended in deadlock. Indeed, Clinton beld a summit on entitlement costs
earlier in his term, in keeping with a pledge he'd made for a vote on his
budget.
.
Again, the upshot was talk, not action.
Indeed, the new Republican leaders of Congress insist that Social
Security cbarlges are off the table, although tbey seek tO' curb entitlement
spending on items .Jike Medicaid and food stamps. ·
.
.
Nor is the Wb1te House about to take on long-term Soctal Secunty
reform, despite the warnings of the system's trustees, tbree of them Cabinet memliers, that the trust fund will be exhausted in 2029.
White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said the president bad made
.Clear that he was not going to touch Social Security, "and we're not.'·'
: Clinton created tbe Bipartisan Commission on EntitlementS and Tax
~form at the urging of Kerrey, .who delivered the vote that saved his
•1993 budget and taX plan in tbe Senate.
; It got the franchise to seek solutions, and a year Ill do it, but Kerrey
bid it got no real push, from the White House or Congress. The cliche is
That Social Security is the "third rail" of politics: Touch it and die. Ker' :teY did, and won in Nebraska, with 55" percent of the vote in a Republican

:AP

Allied forces In half and retake tbe
great Belgian port of Antwerp, the
liDcbpin of Getmaoy's supply line.
Basto~ne was the hub of a road
.

By Jack Anderson
•~•

and
h / B• • •

11111C

86

. lnSa'8ln

network that the Germans needed
to coiurol. ·
Thus the orders for Maj. Genera1 McAuliffe, acting commander of
the !Olst Airborne Division, and
his elite paralroopers were simple:
to bold Bastogne no matter what
the cost. So wben the Germans
demanded they surrender, his irrev·
erent, one-word response made tbe ·
history books: "Nuts."
Now is an appropri~te time to
remember those men and ·tbat mission, and be gillteful. It is .plirticularly poignant for us because in
1964 we llllcompanied the general
as the sole joumali~ts on his ftrSt
return to the battlefreld.
·
It was a bittersw.eet return for
McAuliffe. One historian calls Ute

six-wee~ Battle of the Bulge "the
b1ggesl battle the U.S. Army ever
fought.' ' It cost more than 80,000
Ameri1;311 casualties- dead, missing or ·wounded - and I 00,000
German lives.
Wben we walked the battlefield
with Gen. McAuliffe and his wife,
Helen, he sliD bad a soldier's bearing, though the color was fading
from his bristling eyebrows. His
quiet manner was merely the moss
on a character of granite.
tfe remembered the most desperate day as Dec. 22. Ammunition
was in such short supply that his
men were down to a:s little as 10
rounds each. The sky was heavily
overcast, making an air drop
impossible. He bad to board every
roun~ven letting good tatgets go.
This was tbe moment the Ger·
man commander, Gen. Heinrich
Luttwitz, selected to issue his ultimatum. The Nazi demand was
delivered by a major and a captain,
wbo were led blindfolded into
McAuliffe's headquarters. Tbey
banded .over a formal parer, threatening complete desttuction of the
American forces and appealing to
"weD known American humanity''

MARE YOU rotN6 HERE
AND Nor UP NORTH

DOIN~~ING.9111T
THIS ~E~ ~NOER

SKORw;&amp;r

acceded to a $231 million cut in
funding for drug treatment and prevention programs, including a
"drug-free" schools program.
As if these actions were not
Joseph Perkins · damaging enough to national
efforts to stem illegal drug use, on
•
What has happened in the past several occasions last year adminisfew years that bas reversed the tration officials made public
\rend of declining drug use among remarks suggesting that law
enforcement autborities ought to no ·
Alna'iCillt'teens?
Clintlln administration officials longer punish drug offenders.
Indeed, at a national drug con-like Health and Human Services
Secretary Donna Sbalala and Edu- ference last year, Attorney General
calion Secretary Richard Riley Janet Reno proposed that people
seem to agree that the entertain- arrested for illegal drug use be
ment. industry bears much of the "counseled" rather than jailed. Of
blame for glamorizlng drug use in course, by removing the threat of
incarceration for doing drugs, drug
movies and song lyrics.
But Hollywood is only partly use would be effectively decrimi'
culpable (after all, drugs bave been nalized.
Recently
deposed
Surgeon Gencele)lrated in films and music for
decades, and not just in recent eral Joycelyn Elders -whose own
years). 1be ultimate responsibility son was convicted for drug traffor tbe disturbing rise in teen drug ficking last year - would have
use resides with Washington, gone a step further. "I do feel that
specifically those charged with we would markedly reduce our
crime rate if'drugs were legalized,"
waging the war on drugs.
It seems clear that the Clinton she told a National Press Club
adminis!!'3lion really does not con- audience.
The White House was careful to
si&amp;r the" war on drugs a national
priority. Last winter, the Wbite . distance itself from Elders' and
House announced an 83 percent Reno's remarks. But it is almost
staff reduction in Brown s drug certain that at least a handful of
policy office, from 146 employees folies on tbe president's staff secret·
to 25. Meanwhile, the president ly share the sentiment that drug use
should be decriminalized or even

na ·use in 1994, nearly hl\lf'eventu·
ally will become regular users of
sucb hard-core drugs as heroin,
cocaine and LSD.

First feline shrJuld lend ~ .·paw

..! •

. "

to ~ve the ~vil~s of ~as~.,,
I ~ad 11 and JUSt said, ·~~ts,
McAubffe recalled_!~ .us, That
sentence about tbe CIVIlians irritated me. The Germans h~ sbown no
conc.~rn for the c1v1hans up to
then.
.
The next day, the skies suddeolx
cleared and down came tbe ammunition on colored parachules. It~
a real Cbnstmas present. Saad
McAuliffe 10 us: "The air drO!J was
t~e .mos~ tremen~ously excumg,
exbii~Ung expenence I ~ve ever
had. McAuliffe a~d bts troops
were saved when lDIIts of the U.S.
Thlfd An'ny, commanded by Gen.
George Patton, breached th~ German h~es the day after Cbnstmas
and relieved the defenders.
. McAuhff~ tO I&lt;! us be thought
b~story h~ gtven. too much empbas1s to hu clasSIC, no-surrender
reply. But words- even a .fourletter word -can change h!story
when they express tberesoluuoo of
death before surrender.
. .
At '?"e pomt dunng ~e VISit,
McAuliffe slOpped 10 remm~sce at
the scene o~ the blood~ Christmas
battle. Seeking permtSston 10 stroll
over the battlefield. we slOpped at
the farmhouse of Raymond
DuMont, a husky young man with
a two-day stubble of beard. A wide
grin spread across DuMont's face,
and be called the news to his wife
Juliette.
She hesitated, then cried:
"McAuliffe! Impossible!" Sbe ran
towards the General, recognized
him as the man she bad seen as a
child. She burst into tears, covering
her face with her band. Then she
rushed back into the bouse to return
carrying ber 13-year-old daughter.
She explained that the girl, Beatrice, was recovering from an
appendix operation, but this was a
"moment du histllrie." The other
DuMont children gathered around,
and Juliette even bailed a passing
motorcyclist to come and meet "le
General McAuliffe." ·
McAuliffe cleared bis throat,
then turned aside to us and whispered huskily: "These people were
worth saving, weren't they?"
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

White House disarms war on drugs

1be nation's wm.. on drugs has
taken .a tum for the worse. Two
separate surveys released this week
show that an inaeasing number of
American teen-agers have fallen
prey to mega~ oarcotics.
~~·ot he could gain no such mandate on the commission, where it would . Nearly one in tbree high school
seniors bas used marijuana at least
:!lave taken 20 votes o~ the 32 members to come up with a specific set of
once in tbe past year, according to
'teCOmmendations for entitlement and tax changes.
the University of Michigan's lnsti~ Instead. the product was a multiple choice of rival proposals as time
f-an out and the commission shut down on Dec. 15 - that and the leuer 10 tute for Social Research. And ooo-in six eighth-graders, aged 13 or
!:linton saying that few easy or popular decisions are available to deal
14, bas smoked grass. .
~ith a budget crunch that will only worsen after the tum of the century. It
Some may not find marijuana
sJid make one lairly specific recommendation - that major spending and
' use among teens particularly disWt decisions should be looking toward the impact well bey.ond the custressing. After all, many baby
lomary five-year budget window, to a 30-year time frame.
boomers smolced pot at some point
• That's far short of what Kerrey and tbe Republican vice chairman,
or
another in their youth - includ~retiring Sen. John Danforth of Missouri, wanted. They advocated a graduing the president of the United
al increase in the Social Security retirement age to 70, curbs on the
States, the new speaker of the
i!rowlh of both Utat program and Medicare, limits on popular tax deducHouse and at least one Supreme
lions, and other stiff steps for long-tenn solvency.
• That doesn't resemble the political agenda for 1995. Clinton and the · Court justice.
But Lee B,rown, director of tbe
~ew Republican leaders of Congress are advocating competing tax cuts,
Office
of National Drug Control
for immediate impact, not solutions a generation or more away. .
Policy,
cautions against a cavalier
; Ironically, the commission that couldn't settle on proposals was all but
attitude
toward pot smoking. He
~nanimous on an grim interim report warning tbi!t by 2012, entitlement
,00 intereSt spending will consume all tbe revenues the government takes notes that the madju~na on tl!e
streets today - which tS known m
111, and by 2030. entitlements alone will take it all. Without action, the
rap culture as "the chronic" - is
j,anel said, the deficit would swell from th~ current 2.3 percent of the
up to 10 time~ more potent than the
llation's economy to 18.9 percent.
. .
strain
tbat was available 10 teens a
~ "This is an issue where it's only a matter of time," Kerrey said.
generation
ago.
i•Tbere are a lot of issues you can sort of avoid. This one you can't."
That
is
why
Columbia Universi~ ; So Kerrey is making it his cause, without much encouragement. "This
ty's Center on Addiction and Subi'.s a presidential commission," he said. "I'm still trying to schedule a
stanc~ ~buse predicts. that o~. the
~Jteeting with the president to report the results."
1.8 ooUton teens reportmg manJua: .EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist (pr Tho Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
O.tloija( politics for more than 30 years.

Berry's World

OHIO Weather
Tburslay, Dec. Z%

Connector's first phase

Local -News in Brief:

Ar:cu-~ forecast for

(Continued from Page 1)
liminari design for the seven oillcs of the next phase, he said.
Additional environmental work on the remaining phases became necessary wben Columbus Southern Power decided to iillow ODOT Ill build
the highway across power COlllpany property at Great Bend, Yoacbam

Stolen car located

No one hurt in accidents

Thefts, vandalism reported

Remembering the sacri~ice at _Bast.~.gne .
WASHINGTON - The sky
was not blue nor were the fields
green in late December 1944. The
little market town of Bastogne, oes·
tled amid the pastoral bills of ceo·
tral Belgium, was drapedin. a
shroud of snow, the sky heavy w1th
more snow to rome. All arQund.lay
the rubble and stench of war.
Christtnas day 50 years ago,was
not betaldod by the chime of bells
but by the angry rumble of
artillery. It seemed that tbe spirit of
Christmas and good will to all men
bad vanished forever.
The dead lay where they bad
fallen , frozen into grotesque
shapes. A German soldier stretcbed
balf out of his blackened 13\!k. the
horror of his dying stamped rigidly
on his face. German infantrymen,
snared on a farmer's barbed wire
fencc and caught in murderous
crossfire, remained like so many
terrible, stiff scarecrows. An American GI sprawled in a foxhole
clutched at an agony be could no
longer feel.
A week earlier, the ·Germans
bad launcbe\1 a sudden, surprise
offensive. Hitler was staking everything on a desoerniP. Jlriv• ,,., ""' rh"'

Dear Socks - I'm writing to
wish you a merry Christmas, but
ftrst I have to get a few things off
my fuzzy chest.
.
1 guess the first thing I should
do is refresh yoll1' memory. I am
Samantha, a six-year-old female
tabby, 311d !live with the character
· th'1~ column. He call s
wbo wntes
himself a CurmUdgeon, but truth be
told, I taught him everything be
knows.
I am quite put out by you, Mr.
Ftrst Feline. I was among the very
ftrst to write to you, back wben you
were in Little Rock with the Chief

witb a Litter Changer nainCd Phil
Pastoret in Willowick, Ohio. They
even told me a joke: In cat heaven,
the mice move around on roller

before writing Ill' Socks became all
tbe rage. I've written 10 you twice
but did I

are kind to their furry little friends.

legalized.
' · · ·
That's what the brouhaha reaDy
was all about when Newt Gingrich
said recently that up to a quarler of
the White House staff bad used
illegal drugs. White House Chief of
Staff Leon Panetta responded that
no one who worked for the presi •
dent uses drugs. But he did not say
that no one who works for the president has used drugs in the past five
years.
When you add all of this up the decimation of the drug policy
office staff, funding cuts for drug
treatment and prevention programs,
ill-conceived remarks by administration officials and suspicions of
drug use by White House staffers
in the recent past ,- a picture
emerges of an administration that is
far less committed to fighting the
drug war than the previous two
administrations.
It is this ballbeaned effort, more
so than the glamorizing of drugs by
Hollywood, that explains why drug
usc among American teens is going
up in the 1990s rather tban down.
Joseph Perldns is a columnist
for The San Diego Union·Trl·
bune.
(For Information on how to
communicate electronically wit\
this columnist and others, con·
tact America OnUne by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

skates. 1be cats call !bern Meals on
Wheels.
Another thing, Socks, I think
you are destined to be remembered
just like the other 12 First Cats
have been- which is to say not at
all. Why do you lie around the
Wb1'te House all day, baking· your
brains in the boiler room? With

I've beard about a woman in the
Sarasota, Fla., area who bas rescued hundreds of abandoned cats.
How about a Cool Cat award for
her? ,You remember that cat
Tabitha, the one who got lost on
the jumbo jet wbile flying from
New y ork to Los Ange1es..? How
about a Cool Cat award for her
human, who refused to give up the
search? And another for the psychic who divined Tabitba's hiding
place?
' I read about a poll that showed
64 percent of the cat lovers in

By the way, if you're tired of
shredding the old man's documents
and are looking for sometbiDg new
10 irritate him with, try chewing the .
ChriStmas candles . I've been ·
chomping down on them the last:
couple of days and it's driving my ;
humans nuts.
S,peak'mg of Cbnstmas,
·
1'f you ·1
can •dump your Secret Service •
detail for a couple of hours, I'd like :
you to come over to my place for a:
little nog. Actually, Big Guy, if you •
did manage 10 get here,~ it would be :
a two-cat party. I never
did like .'
crowds.
•

mention the Chief Litll!r Changer,
you could do so much for cat caus·
es.
brutalize cats all the

feline companions than their
lovers. Wby not Cool Cats for the
whole U.K. I

every toy you asked for "under the :
I want a copr of "Socks Goes ·
' but my Litter :

Joseph Spear

MICH.

said.

IND.

=·

·,

No.

cats

roam the streets, but do you speak

up for the homeless? No. Heck,
I've read wbere Uiurists see mice in
tbe White House all tbe time.
You're not even earning your keep,
lazy boDes!
Hl'fe're two ideas on what you
could do for your own kind:
- Stari bandiJ!g out COOL
CAT awards to human beings wbo

\

"How maf!Y teftTIS have YOU s~rved?"'

Thought for. Today: "Rosiness Is not a worse windowpane than
gloomy pay wliCII vlewlog tbe wodd." - Grace Paley, AmericaD writer
(1922- ).
.

DOG ·
to the rotten people another one of
cablip 1
wbo mistreat cats. l'·m talking mo.uses bC gets at the grocery store.;
about the so-called scientific If be does, I'm going to disgorge a •
researchers who say cats might be hair baD right on his Christmas tie. l
spreading bubonic plague. Give
Yours for peace on ~th, from :
S
'em a Dirty Dog. rm talking about your friend, amantha.
:
tbe dodos on the town touncll In
JosephSpear Is a syndicated ,
Piscataway, NJ., wbo passed a cat writer for Newspape~ Enterprise :
leash law this year. What kind of Association.
•
boor is It thanhinks you can
a
(For Information on bow to,
CAT around on a string? Canines, ,eoll)D1unlcate electro!l~lly wltll :
yes. Felihes, never! Dirty Dog tbls columnist and others, con··
awards to leash-law propon ~rits tact America OnUne by caiHng 1· :
everywhere.
800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.:

'cad

l

•

•

.

No injuries were reported in a.m. when be struck and killed a
accidents investigated recently by deer tbat ran into the roadway .
the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart· Damage to his 1988 Dodge was
menl
listed as heavy.
At 4:25 p.m. Friday, Pom~roy's
Annette D. Johnson, Middle·
Ralph Q. Jones was stopped in traf- port, was southbound on SR 143
Columbus
fie waiting for another vehicle to around 1 a.m. when she hit a deer
tum left onto Pine Grove Road that ran into the path of her 1993
wben bis car was sttuck In tbe rear . Chevrolet Cavalier causing moder•
by a vehicle driven by Judy ate damage to the car's left-front
Roberts, Racine, records show.
fender.
Roberts' 1988 Ford pickup truck
Lonnie Doles, Ray, was westsustained
ligbt
damage
while
bound
on SR 325 at 4:20 a.m .
W.VA.
Jones' 1984 C!Jevrolet station when be struck a deer causing
wagon was heavily damaged.
moderate damage to his 1994
At 4:40p.m. Friday, Beckie Chevrolet pickup truck.
Amos, Racine, was westbound on
Deborah J. Toundas, Pomeroy,
County Road 30 when sbe lost con- was westbound on Pooaeroy Pike at
trol of her 1990 Geo, wbich slid off 11:33 a.m. in her 1988 Oldsmobile
the left side of the road. Tbe car Cutlass and struck a deer, causing
bad light damage to the left front moderate damage to tbe car. The
wbeel.
deer ran off.
At 4:50p.m. Friday, Russell
Monday afternoon at 3:30p.m.,
Spencer, West Shade Road, vehicles driven by Vickie L. BarPomeroy, was traveling south on nett, LangsviUe, and Bert G. Mash,
SR 7 near Tuppers Plains when his Pomeroy, collided on Laurel Cliff ·
vehicle struck and killed a deer. Road near the Pamida store. Bar·
His 1977 Ford van was heavily nett's 1992 Chevrolet sustained
station was 64 degrees in 1967 damaged.
moderate damage while Mash's
while the record low was -11 in
A tractor and semi-trailer truck 1978 Ford suffered only light dam1942. Sunset tonight will be at 5:10 got stuck in tbe yard of a Syracuse age.
p.m. and sunrise 1bursday at 7:50 residence Saturday night while
Deputies are still investigating
a.m.
attempting a tum, deputi~s reJJ:Ort· an accident early Tuesday morning.
Weather forecast:
ed. Jeffrey L. Maynard, Racme, A 1972 Oldsmobile owned by
Today ... Mostly sunny and was turning of~ Dusky Street on James Eddy, Coolville, and repon·
unseasonably warm. Highs in the Karr Street at the time.
edly driven by Patricia J. Rood,
lower to mid 50s.
Four deer-vehicle collisions struck a highway sign at the interTonight. .. Mostly
clear were reported Sunday morning.
section of state routes 7 and 681 at
north ... Witb increasing clouds
Dallas D. Sayre, Middleport, Tuppers Plains. The car sustained
south. Lows from near 30 north to was southbound on SR 7 at 12:40 moderate damage.
the middle 30s south.
Thursday .. .Partly
sunny
north ...Mostly cloudy south. Higlls
around 50.
Extended forecast:
Friday and Saturday ... Fair.
Lows 35 to 40 and highs 45 10 50.
gency landing or was shot down.
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) Cbristmas ... Fair west witb a
Hilemon died and Hall was taken
North
Korea
agreed
today
to
chance of rain east Lows 35 to 40
release
the
body
of
an
American
captive.
and highs 45 to 50.
Citing humanitarian principles,
pilot killed when his helicopter
North
Korea said through its offiwent down in the communist country four days ago. But the North cial Korean Central News Agency
said it will continue holding the today that it bas "decided to ll'llmfer the body of David Hilemon
surviving co-pilot
North Korea apeed Ill return tbe soon to the U.S. Army."
It said Hall was "now in good
body during a long meeting with
health"
and that its investigation
U.S. officials at the Korean War
truce village of Panmunjom, where was completed, ' 'a step will be
the repatriation is scheduled to take taken according to the relevant
place at 10 a.m. Thursday (8 p.m. legal procedures of our army.''
EST today), U.S. military
. U.S . official&amp; said . the~ .were
spokesman Jim Coles said. Army
hopeful
Hall woulll be released
generals led each delegation.
Cbief Warrant Officers Bobby soon.
"Wbat I've been told is that the
Hall of Brooksville, Fla., and
Korean
People's Army is going to
of
Clarksville,
David
Hilemon
_
Tenn., were flying along the demil- keep him until their investigation is
itatized zone that sepa111tes the two comP.Iete, and we're hoping that
Koreas on Saturday when their won t be long," Coles said. "They
U.S . Army OH-58C helicopter said they're not going to give us
strayed into North Korean territory. any infortnation on him or allow
The helicopter made an emer- any contact in the meantime.''

154• I

•I

Winter arrives tonight, but
.daily highs more like spring
By The Associated Press
Winter officially arrives at 9:23
tonight, but you would never know
it The weatl&gt;er across Ohio will be
more springlike, with highs around
SO through Christmas Day, fore.casters said.
That means, of course, Obioans
·can forget aboot a white Christmas.
Eastern Ohio could get some rl\in
on Sunday.
Temperatures will dip into the
30s tonight under mostly clear
skies, the National Weatber Service
. said.
The ttend of unseasonably warm
temperatures will continue through
the end of the week, with bigbs
near SO and lows only in the upper
30s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

Dean Rusk
deadat85

N. Korea will repatriate
remains of 'copter pilot

ATIIENS, Ga. (AP) - Former
Seaetary of State Dean Rusk, who
went "eyeball to eyeball" with
Moacow during tbe Cuban missile
crisis and helped oversee America's ill-fated buildpp in Vlemam,
diedat8S.
· Rusk. tbe soo of a poor Georgia
farmer who became the nation's
highest Cabinet officer in the
Kennedy and Johnson administrations, died Tuesday night at his
borne in Athens, the University of
Georgia said today. He taught at
·the university's law school after
leaving Washington in 1969. ·
He had suffered from heart disDEAN RUSK
ease In recent years.
Rusk was appointed secretary of
state by President John F. Kemedy cy on Vietuam so suongly that be
in 1961, enforcing the young presi- became a favorite target of anti-war
dent's Cold War policy of contain· . lawmakers and student protesters.
ing communism. After Kennedy Even his son, Richard, called his
was assassinated in 1963, President father "an architect of a war that
Lyndon Johnson insisted Rusk stay killed 58,000 Americans and nearly
on, and Rusk remained secretary a million Vietnamese." ·
Rusk defended his role in the
until the end of Johnson's term in
1969, despite criticism for Viet- Vietnam War in his son's 1990
book, "As I Saw lt."
nam.
"Because of this nation's com·
Former Defense Secretary
· Robert McNamara, who served mitments, I had a duty to perform;
with Rusk and was also vilified to try to prevent North Vietnam
over Vietnam, today praised him as from overrunning South Vietnam
''the most semess, devoted servant by force. That was my job and I
of our nation tbat I've ever tried to do it,'' Rusk said.
Johnson later credited Rusk with
known.''
Johnson's widow, Lady Bird, developing the prDPQsal that led to
said today that Rusk "was one of the unconditional iialt of bombing
the greatest men of my lifetime and of North Vietnam in March 1968.
The world held its breath wben
one of my dearest friends.''
In his eight years as secretary, Kennedy ordered Soviet leader
Rusk presided over four major Nikita Khrushchev to dismantle
global events: the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban missile sites aimed at the
Cuban missile crisis, the signing of United States. Kennedy's advisers
a nuclear non-proliferation treaty were sJ')it between reacting harshly
with the Soviet Union and the Viet- or cautiously if IOlrusbchev failed
nam War.
to respond.
Rusk supported Johnson'~ poliWhen he sensed that
Khrusbcbev bad begul) to back
down, Rusk summed it up with his
The Daily. Sentinel quotation: "We're standing eyeball
to eyeball, aM the other fellow just
(USPS liJ-%0)
blinked.''
Publi.t"d ••ery w«moo,, Mondoy &lt;h•ough
Friday, I II Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio
Volley Publisbi"g Compony/Multimedia
Inc . Pomemy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-: :56.
Second closs po•"B•paid" Pomeroy. Ohio.
Member: 111e As""'i"cd p,..,,ond the Ohio
Am Ele PO..er ........................33 Ill
Newspape• Aasociotion.
Alao ....................................... -55 V4
Alhl1111d
OU ............................33 511
POSTMASTER ~ Send 11ddr6~ conections 10
AT•·T
"'
........................................
,...."I
The Daily Sentinel , Ill Court St. , PoJfiCroy,
BaakO
.J5314
Ohio 45769.
ne...............................

..~ f~~~~::~~--'t;--··L~i t ~e~r~C~h~a~ng~e~r~-e~le~c~t~.T~h~a~tiw~a~s~iy~ou~r~a~c~ce~s~s~to~th~e~m~ ed~i~a,~n~o~t~to~ B~n·~tai ~n~w~o~u~ld~r;a~th;e~r;cu~d~d~le~ thei~r~~W~e~l~l,~go~t~IO~ru~n.~I~b~o~pe~yf:o~u~fi~m~;d-·-~~ llSJ~~~~~s~.~~~~Bob~E~.~ns~ 1
. that drops a
gets a postcBfd
with a picture of you and a paw· print autograph. But I, Samantha,
among the very fast of your corre·
spondents, get diddly-squat. Per•
' d • lik
(' · 1
haps you' on t ~ .my po
am~uite tbe libertarian, you· 'I'·
' ot that I care what you think. I
, have many other friends . Once
wben I published a letlft to you, 1
heard from ·Faye alld Mu, wbo live ·

Page 3

The Dally s.ntlne~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Yu~O::':~:o~~.

C One Week ······················ ··· ··· ···········
One

· · · ...... ··· · ·

"

... . . . ..

~7

111

::j;:::::::::::::::::::::::'-6~

· ... s

SINGLE COPY PJitCI!
Dnily. ················ ............................ 3SC.nu
subl&lt;rlbe" , 01 de&gt;iring to paythe,.,;., may
mrut in oovance direct to The D~ly Sentinel
on atbRe,si&gt;Or 12monthbllsis. C«&lt;&lt;it will be

K-mut .................................... 13 Ill
Land. End .................................... 14

No subtcrip&lt;ion by m~l penniued in.,..,
wheR home ..m.. ""'ice ;, •••iloble.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnoldeMrlpCwnty
13weeu .................................................
S2IS4

Royal Dutc:b ..........................107 111
Sboaey'olnc.................... ,.....,ll314

Limited fao. ...................,........ IB7 111
114
Mulllmtdla Inc ......................1

Polat Bancorp ..............................19
RellaoceElectrtc ................... .30711
Robblno a Myen .........................17

givenconiereach-k.

Ottw..u ................
w..u ...:.............................................
Rllrl

Mrlp Counly

tl
!................................ Sll40
26
$45.50
SlW..b ................................................. $8&amp;40

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 12 calls for assistance
Monday and Tuesday . Units
resjx&gt;ndiog included:
MIDDLEPORT
8:54 a.m. Monday, North Second Avenue, Rhonda Stover, Vet-

Clarification
1be Danny Darst referred to In
the Dec. 18 article in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel aboot tbe probation
denial of Brijln Simonaux of
Pomeroy, wbo is confined to the
Lebanon Correctional Institute, is
not the Darst who lives at Laurel
Cliff Road, Pomeroy.

Hospital news
VEI'ERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - Rick
McChristian. Shade; Lola Clark,
Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
. Discharges Dec. 20 - John
Bay, Albert Gunnoe, Oather Helm,
Ora Hoffman, Ollie Conn, James
Dailey, Mrs . James Dillard and
son.
Births - Mr. and Mn. Randy
Baisden, son, Coalton; Mr. and
Mrs. Orvil Hill, daughter, Chester.
(Published with permission)

·fRflltTI(

~a" ·

..... Tfl .

.

erans Memorial Hospital;
.._
10:25 p.m. Monday, Sycamore
Street, Gail Dailey, who was not
transported;
9:05 p.m. Tuesday, Middleport
Police Department, William Roush,
VMH.
POMEROY
4:42a.m. Monday, Nye Avenue.
Rena McDaniel, VMH.
5:53 p.m. Tuesday, Enterprise
Road, Michael Crump, VMH;
10:33 p.m. Tuesday, Gail Dai ·
ley, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RACINE .
9:27 a.m. Tuesday, State Route
124, Blythe Theiss, VMH.
RUTLAND
8:01 a.m. Monday, Main Street,
Dolly Cleland, Holzer Medical
Center.
1:09 a.m. Tuesday, New Lima
Road, Franklin Casto, HMC;
10:47 a.m. Tuesday, state Route
684, Lola Clark, VMH;
1:49 .p.m. Tuesday. Carpenter
Hill Road, Edward Maksimczak,
HMC;
.
5:38p.m. Tuesday. State Route
124, Greg Sears, HMC.

11

Bank .............................. .36 511

";:,;~'rtl·•b·~la~j;t',;;L,~
...~...~...:;...::
...............I4111
··

ltod ................... .%0 311

• •

THIS FRIDAY
DEC. 23rd

I p111 • 12 pm
S..OurAdln
Frldaya Dally Sentinel

Deputies of the Meigs County Sberift' s Depanment an: investigating several COlllplaints made to tbat department
Rick Lunsford, Shade, reported Tuesday tree ltand was stolen
from a wooded area near tbe Athens-Meigs county line shortly after

'
'

'

a

deer season.
Larry Anderson, Charleston, W.Va., reported Saturday a barn
and boose be owns on Jones Road was entered sometime early Saturday. S~me bousebold items and tools were reported missing.
The Sign at Rivemew Elemeotary School, Reedsville, was vandalized over the weekend. Acconling to a sheriffs report, the sign
was pulled down. Anyone with information is asked to contact the
school or the sheriffs department.

Grand jury venire posted
The followlng Meigs County citizens were selected as potential
jurors for the January 1995 term of the Meigs County Grand Jury:
Kenneth L. Byer, Middleport; Rebecca Kay Edwards. Chester;
Robert Edward Lee, Racine; Amanda L. Stobart, Racine; Sandra F.
Philson, Syracuse; Pamela Sue Humphrey, Middleport; Mary K.
Rose, Long Bottan; Ricky E. Hoover Sr., Middleport; Lyle Claremont Balderson, Reedsville; Luella M. Powell. Racine; Jackalyn
Kay Frost, Long Bottao; Thomas R Roush, MiddteJxn;
. Linda Joan Ainn, Portland; Linda L. Sommers, Rutland; Beuy
V. Vanmeter, Syracuse; Mary E. Hobsteuer, Rutland; Rose EDen
Harris, Portland; Michael Arthur Weber, Pomeroy; Francis Leroy
Thompson, Coolville; Tina A. Hendricks, Syracuse; David Mark
King, Pomeroy; Misty Kay Porter, Racine; Sberwood Collier, Dexter;
Mark Anthony Reese, Racine; Charles Lewis Shain, Pomeroy;
Mary Louise Scarberry, Tuppers Plains; William G. Murphy, Portland; David D. Campbell, Pomeroy; Harry L. Barton. Pomeroy;
Jobn F. Dudding, Racine; William E. Kennedy Jr., Pomeroy; Ruby
Hysell, Pomeroy: Paul Lacy Chadwell. Middleport; Franklin D.
Jarvis, Vintlln; Charles W. Aldridge, LangsyiUe.

.

'

Meigs announcements
Conservancy District will be closed
Friday and Monday so that
emplo·yees may enjoy the Christmas holiday. Emergencies will be
handled by caUing 742-2597.

Shoot to take piKe
The Forked Run Sportsmen' s
Club will have a muzzle loading
gun shoot Friday, 6:30p.m.

Trustees to meet
Bedford Township trustees wiD Christmas Eve service
Heath United Methodist Church,'
bold their end of year meeting Dec.
South Third Street. Middleport,
31 at 2 p.m. at the town ball.
will have a candlelig.bt Christmas
Eve
service at 7:30p.m. The public
Christmas services
is
invited
to attend.
'
On Christmas Day , Sunday
school at tbe Asbury United
Methodist Church will take place Llbnry meeting anno•nced
The Meigs County Library
8:45 a.m. A worship service will be
held at the Forest Run Church at 10 Board will meet Thursday, Dec. 29'
at I p.m. at Ute library.
a.m.
Office to close
The office of tbe Leading Creek

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
direct bog prices at selected buying
points Wednesday by tbe U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to
mostly 50 cents lower; demand .
light.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs:, country '
points 32.00-33.00, a few 33.50;
plants 33.0Q.84.7S.
·
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 28.00-32.00.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 75 cents lower to higher. I

Thomas P. Price , M.D. DABOG,
·FACOG, FACS announces the relocation
of his office from the Holzer Clinic to
the Medical Plaza, 936 State Rt. 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio after January I, 1995.
He will be associated there with Drs.
Abels, Subbiah and· Vallee. He will
continue his hospital practice at the
Holzer Hospital. Medical Plaza offers
laboratory, X-ray. . and A.C.R.
accredited and FDA approved
mammography. Appointments can be
made by calling (614) 446-9620.

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOCIATES INSURANCE
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU
TO SHARE IN THE SUCCESS OF OUR "TWO YEAR NEW"
ANNIVERSARY ·
at our SECOND ANNUAL

..............................
·~..~· :;:....;;:....;;:....;;:....;;:...;...;.:.;;:...~...:~·.JY:I:I-+-~~t';OPPI ~~ - -l!-1- -li--tn-"-

160

~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:~:

EMS units·answer 12 calls

A 1968 Chevrolet Nova reported stolen last year was fOIIDd
stripped and abandoned in a wooded area off Titus Road in R11tlaod,
Meiss County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported this IIIOI'IIing .
The car was reported stoleo Jtme 30, 1993, by Wetzel Bailey,
Langfville.

..

OPEN HOUSE!

.

HUJ~IJJAY- DECEMBER 22ND: 8:30AM . "'-"'.I

FRIDAY· DECEMBER 23RD: 8:30AM· NOON

Refreshments** Door Prizes **Special tokens of Appreciation
HAPPY HOLIDAY61

'

~~s {/;si:IA·'/;;'}992-3985)

108 MECHA.NlC STREET ••• POMEROY, OH

'

�•
•'
••

~Sports

The Daily Sentinel
'

·

l

· By SCOTI WOLFE
• Sentinel Correspondent.
In somewhat of a p1ecemeal
v.ictory •. Southern put togetbcr the
: ng~t p1eces and rece1ved strong
. fimsbes from Ryan W1lhams and
. M~n Fisher en route to a 70·58
: To-Valley Conference v1ctory over
· the Nels~~~il.le- York B~ckeyes
, Tuesday mgot 10 Southern Charles
: W. Hayman gymnasiUm.
' ' Nelsonville bad .the thorough. breds; Southern had tts usual scmp--

Page 4

boys clai~ _ 70-58 victory over Nelsonville~Vork lllll\le

iness, but again Southern did not
get into a groove until the latter
stages of tbe game.
Soutbem (3-2 overall :ffid 3-1 in
the TVC's Hocking Division) was
led by senior Ryi!D Williams, who
put together a fine game, ending
witb another double-double night' a
25-point Ially witb 13 team-leadi~g
rebounds. Despite struggling early,
Williams bustled his way to anoth·
er good offensive output with a
couple key steals as well.

Ma5on.Fisher cracked the Buck·
eyes {1-5 &amp; 1-3) in the Iauer stages
of the game with ·a multi-faceted
barrage of steals, rebounds and key
buckets. Fisher ended tbe game
witb 14 points, bad seven rebounds
and a couple pivotal steals. Jeremy
Hill added 10.
Nelsonville was led by Jeremy
Tbrapp's 18 and Jason Gail's 12.
Gail and Mike Lewis put Netsonville up 3-0, but Williams hit a
corner jumper and Fisher a free

throw to de, before Hill hit a three
pointer~ ~ive SHS its fJISt lead at
6-3 . W1lhams made it 8-5, but

Soutbern lost its edge and faltered
to 11-10, before Fisher bit a pair of
free throws to regam the lead. N-Y
went fo~ !be last shot and got a follow-up Jumper from Tbrapp to lead
13-12 at tbe initial buzzer. .
. If Southern could have bJt one
10 a bamell they could .have easily
led by 15 at the balf. Instead, the
fiesty Tornadoes scrapped to a 24-

Torn.adoes win .•._&lt;_Co_nu_·nu_ed,....fro-m_P_age_4_)- - - - - - -

Wednesday, December 21, 1994

•

~ Southern

December 21

21 advantage after a steal and 'layin by Williams. Gail bit .a pair of
free throws for a one-pomt game,
tben Williams milled another laneside j~per for a 26-23 tally.
Janue Evans drew a key charge
to give SHS the ball and lh.e ~sts
went for the last sbot. W1lhams
threaded the needle to Keyin lble at
tbe buzzer for tbe basehne lay-10
and SHS led 27-23 at !be half.
S_ou!iJern tw~ce led by as much
as s1x m the third frame, but each

time-lQOk ill-adv~ shots or
the tum~ver. ~eajlmg 43:37. N-y
scored s1x stnUgbt on a Gail bu~t
and four free throw~ for a43-43 .ue.
S.HS repeated lis ~alf-endmg
scormg play from W1lii8DIS IP lble
to regain the lead 4S-43, but the
Buckeyes ran off another string to
lead 48-46 on a 1brapp goal at the
buzzer.
The seorewas tied tbre times in
the final round before SHS took
{See TORNADOES on P9 5)

advantage of 6-8 tries at the line
and a momentum sblfting follow·
. , up book by Williams on Hannon's
missed free throw. Still N-Y lay in
wait to make lbe score 59~56.
Mason Fisher took over, scoring

six in a string of eight points, then
on the follow-up possession South·
em spread 1be floor and Flsber hit
Jeremy Hill with an open lay-up to
make i.be score 67-56.
SHS then coasted on to the win.

;Miller weathers Cleland's offense to get past Meigs 83-78
By DAVE HARRIS
··Sentinel Correspol)dent
Ryan Merkle and Bill McGrath
. axnbined for 51 points to lead tbe
: Miller Falcons to a 83-78 victory
over Meigs in Tri-Valley Confer·
: cncc basketball action Tuesday
"'

:Ibe win made tlie Falcons 2-5
overalJ are 2-2 in the TVC's Hocking Division and. The Marauders,
on the other band dropped their
third game in a row and are 2-3
overalJ, and 1-3 in the TVC's Ohio
Division.

fast bebind tbe scoring ofMerkJe
and opened up a 23-13 lead at the
end of one period. Merkle poured
in 15 of the Falcons' 23 points in
tbe period.
In the second period, tbe
Marauders started to get into tbe

.

'

17 to pull. to within 40·35 at the
balf. Trav1s Abbott scored seven
for Meigs in the period, wbile
Benny Ewing added five. MerkJe
continued with the bot band for
Miller, the 6-2 senior forward
added eight more points, while

.

'

'

sco~ all17 second period pc)ints
for Miller.
.
Just as in last ~nday's ga~e
with Wellston, Me1g.s came out m
theseco~d baJf a diffe!ent team.
Me1gs With a 26-19 sconng advantage went on top 61-59 beadmg

Cl~land scored 12 ~ints in the
period to help get Me1gs ~tracked,
Gary Stanley. add,ed e1g~t for
Co~ ~eff S~nner s team m the

.

_._._

pcnod mclud10g two long range
bombs.
.
~~ER~ ab: to go

&amp;:

I

NBA standings
•

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fsl.
Orlllldo ......•........... .1!1:
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Cle. Haye~70, Cle. Science Jl
Cle. HeiatJta17, Pllrma Valley Fette

72

UC Irvine 19. Oreaoa St 73
Utalt lOS. Olloaao St. 38

72

Tournaments
Alohoa-k
Eut Carolina 78, N. Arizo01 S6

~RNCONFERENCE

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L.A. Laic.. 101, Millo-. !IS
Dollso 110, Ooldeo Sllle 107
s.cramento lOS, WMilillllOD 102

· Toalgbt'o games

· DetroitatNewJeney, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukeeiii:MianU, 7:30p.m.
Oticqo lllDdiaDa, 7: 30 p.m
San Anloalo at Oen¥11', 9 p.m.
Orlando II L.A. Oippm,I0:30 p.m.

Tbuflldoy'o gomes
CLEVElAND It New Ycrk, 7:30 p.tn.
Atiladelphla at CharlcUe, 7:30p.m.
1
Utah at Atlknta, 7:30 p.m.
Aloenix at Houston, 8 p.m.
Dallas at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Wa1hing1on at Ooldcn Stale, 10:30
p.m. ~

MillDCSOIIat Saaameolo. 10:30 p.m.

Major men's
college scores
East
Anny 79, Oan.mouth 7S
Temple 67. Tew Tech 64 (2 0'1)
Youngalown St. 78 , Niagara61

Soulb
Clem&amp;On 75, Miami SS

Manhattan 70, Fla. lotemitlional S1
Miuissippi7S, Delaware Sl. 61
N.C. Ouvlone 92, Appalachian Sl. 61
Sooth Alabama lOS, Ala . ·Birmia~UTI
86

South Carolina 80, O.arleaton South·
era 65
Southern Miss. n ,NE Louisiana S6
Sletson 87, RadFord 11
Uf..Chananooaa &amp;8, Alabama Sl. 61
Wake Forest 81, CitadelS I

1\lldwi!SI
CokJrado Sl. 90, SE Miii0Url70
E Micltipn 81.lll&lt;boD St. 68
. DL.Oicaao67,Marquettt:6S
Iowa 8S, W. Carolioa 60
Ku11180, Saola Clara 1S
Michiaan·St. 79, Teuneasee 68
Toledo 74, Sacramento St. 64
Wichita St. 63, Evan.ville 61

Southwesl
Colorado 88, North Texu70

6'

COIIilocloD 74. Claymoal71
Cro~~~&lt;&gt;ldo au. 96. M&lt;lpk&gt;no au. 41
Coyahop Vol. Cbr. 79. Sllee&lt;sboro 41
Dalton 91, Strubwa 40
Day. Jellenon 8l. Day. Plllerloo 71
O.y. StebbiD16l, ~oMoruoeS6
Della 61. Soyka-48
Do"' SO, New PhlladdjX!Ia 4l
E. Clevtlmd Shaw 75, Cle. Keunedy

7l

UNOO-

E. Lherpool 19, Wheeliaa (W.Va.)
Pork 84
-S7.Wooclm&lt;n46
Jld&amp;""'a91,N. C-69
Blyrla Finl Bapt. 80, Oc. llailqe 44

Jinlr-.1

New0rleaD172, WIUiama Mlry61
Nortbc..tcrn _12, B~ey n

Ohio men's
college scores

2.5
3.S
S.S
6
10
IS

Clear fiX'k ,9, Me&lt;Uoa Buckeye 3S
a..vlew
Flrtlllllll 62
Cell. Miffiia 66, Col. S.tmoor 62
Col. St. O..la 79, Col. Wlltcnoll62
Col. WeaUIIIIIIS, Col. BriiiP l8
Colutmla .59, Brooklyn 52
ColuiJt,iaDI Crcatvlew 71, Lowellville

Champloalblp

Ita........................1!1:
fsl.
Ulab
l7 "I .680

Elyria W. 90, Avou 47

BvetpeD 71, 0Uawallilll63

Fairfield S2, Mllfocd l3
Fairfield UDioo 46, Bloom-Carroll 4l
Falrlalld 72, Cbolhlre Rlver Val. 67
Falrleu 7(), ladlall Val. 41
Foirport .. 88,
Cit. 46
FairVIew 61, Lib&lt;t1y CeDI« 5l (01)
Fayellel:l,lliebville 3S
FcdeniHoctiac 12. Belpre ss
field 17, Ravenua71
F•hor Calh. 63, H&lt;llh 60
Fo• Frye 13. Shonaodooh 46
Frantlin Furnace Green 52, Coal
Gro.. 42
.
Oalllpoili 61,Jacbon SS
Oarretuville 66, Middlefield Cardilll
60
O..oo63, N - S O
OiblollbWJ 72, ICaDo• LWca 61

Noa-cx~afereace octlo•
Late Erie S9, Blullloo Sl
OllioNDI1bcniOO,WIImiDatoo63
OIUO 14, W. VIROINIA 70
Toledo 74. Cai·SaaameDio 64
YOUipiOWD St.78,Niaaara61

Noa-cx~Dference IICiloD

Atrolll9, YouoptoWD St S6
Blulloa 61, I ' '1 'b•1 53

Capilal81, 1bo-Mon66
CeDI. Mldllpa n, Dayl0a67
Dellaote 61, Blkhri.D.Wallaee 64
RD&lt;IIay 60, ll!aloDO 27
Loulal.,a Tech 91, OIDO ST. II
7') RIO ORANDE 13. lnd.·Pur.·IDdpla.

Onlwn94,MWniB.

n

Orovepm S4. Upper Atllllaton Sl
Hamiltoo 91, Middlctowo 84
Hunibal River 76, Mapolla, W.Va.
74
•
Huoverton United 71 , Canton Her.
itqeau.SI
Hemlodt Miller 83, Melp71
llillillld l9. Oalwml Sl
Howland Chi 80, Voulli. CbriJtlau 49
Huber IIU. Wayne S9, C..I«Yillo 46
Hudloo 74, Kem Roolevelt S6
IDdillJI Creek til, Ric:hrmnd Editon S7
IDdiau RiYer 62, Akroa ICemnore 57
J,.bon Ceol« S8.llldiOD J..ake S2
John GleiUI66, Ooobvllle 49

.{ ,.

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Akron Ct~Yenlry 73, Sandy Val . 48
Al1oo Eliel84. Tallmadie 38
AtronHoban7~. Young.4Mooooy71 .
Akron MaachCIIct 80, Tualaw 48
Allilllce S4, Muaillon Perry 4S
• Amelia 61, Glen Este 64
Amherst 64, Bay ~3
Ar~um 60, Bethel 46
Aurora 82, Luthcnn W. 62
AUilintowo.Filch 74, Cle. EutS~
Avoa l..ab n, Fal~iew Sl
llead!;.,;,Jsa, Coya~~c&gt;aa ""· S3
Beavmrcek Sl, Kettering Fairmont47
Bedford S8, Euc,lid H
Bedford, Mich. S7, Fotloria 50
Bellefontaine S8, Spring. Northweatern
38
Bettin Center Western Reserve 50, Sebring 29
Berne Union 74, Onnville62
BloOmfield SO, Mineral Ridge 42
Bridaepxt SS, Uaioa Local SO
Drootfidd 93, DadJer SI
BrooUide 7S, Oberlin 66
Bucbye Trai174, Barnesville 6S
Cambridao 76, St. ClairiYille 63
Cual Wlac:he.tcr .SS, Amanda ~
ClearaeetS3
Canfield 74,Louisvtlle .58
Catdinatou 79, Buckeye Val . S9
Carey 18, ~tlawk sa
Carlisle 71, Fraaklln 66
Centetbura 96, Northridse 62
Olwdon 63, Wickliffe 49
O.iUioothe 62 , Wc:uter Sl
Cin. Colerain 64. Cin. Western Hills
l4
Cin. MtNichola 65, Cia. Roger Bacon 56
Cin. Moont Healthy 67, Cln. Aiken 64
Cia. Princeton 64, W. O!ester Lakota
62 (0'1)
Cin. Purcell Marian 49, CoYington
(Ky.) Ca!h. 43

lO

Racl.ne Soudwa 70,
l8

Reyuoldab,.l 69, Delawlre 46
Ridunollll Dale SB 104. BooVI!f l!aJI.

Rldunoad Hts. 64.1Ddep&gt;adellCO 48
Ri""' View 64, Pl1llo Sl
Rivenlde 61. Falrboobll
Sanduatv 82, Mldview (OT)
Sbod}lide !IS, BcaiiJYUie 79
Sh.Wr Hta. 9S, PlrmaNormoody l6
Soloo 63. Oroqo Sl
Solllhlofoa&lt;l&gt;alk« 11,Newbuty 44
Speii&lt;IOYIIJO 71, Fori ReeoVI!fy 63
Sprlq. ND111179, SJiriDio So~ 7S
Syt11110106i, Uma Sr. l9
Teaya Val. 72, Lopn Blm44
T - 64, Oneaoa6l
no .... WorthiDiloD 73. Col. lode·
peodeoco 66 (OT)
Tlpp City 76, Doy. M.»wdale 7l
Tol. Cllbollc 69, Tol. Ubbey Sl
Tol. l!malluel Bap. 62, Tol. Olriltlan
47
Tol. Scott11, Toi. Bowaila'41
Tol. Sl. Frucla 13, Tol. Walle41
Tol. Sllrt72, Tol. WoodWordlO
Eda........ 79, Doy. Convll 76

n

Tri·VIIIoy~l,=64 (OT)

Tri·VIIIqel9,N OIIIITriiiS2
Triad 7S, Mec:halllcsbla-&amp;68
Triway 70, Bla&lt;t Riva- Sl
TL&amp;ICitiWU Cllb. .59, Couottoll Val.
ll

~Val. 66,E. Caalo• 59
TwiDJb,.l 68, a...tn Falla S8
UrtllU SS, Sprtq. No-I«D49
Valley V~~l. W. Carrollloa 68

w.........................II·J.O

s. E. x.-ty .............l().).()
6. MeN- SL ............1().).()

I
4

7.liDI Madiloo ....... .IQ.J.O
'1.1dabo ..........................9·l.O
9. AI&gt;J&gt;alodllall St .........~
10. JIOoloa Uoiv........•....9·J.O
11. NOitbern Iowa .........1....0
12. Troy SL ....................I-4-0
13. Newfknl&gt;lbl....... I0-2.0
14. PwaYivlllia. ...........9.0.0
ll.NodhTeuJ .............7+1
t6. Mlcldle TCDD. St •.....I·:J.I
17. &lt;lnm&gt;IIDI SL ....••....9·2.0
II. Ak:onl SL ................1-l· l
19. William .t Maoy •.....8.3.0
20. Ceolnl Plortda. ........7+0
21. SlepheD F. AulliD .••6-).2
:n. Holalrl .....................l·l· l
23. Soulb C..IIDa SL ...!).).()
24. W.llliDoii ...............I·J.O
2S.N. Arlzooa ........... ....7+0

13
6
17

4.

Footbnll
'

Sports Network's
NCAA I·AA final poll
IRJNI1NODON VAll.I!Y, Pa. (AI')
- 1b.e top lS tea1111 Ia tbe final Sportl

NclwOf&lt; Dlvilloai·M loolboll poll, witll
.. 111111- IDd prevlolilrutiJIIJ'

10

12
14
II
15
1
ll
19

20

21
23

:n
24

2.1

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3
2

3. MARSHALL ...........IH-0

Wlledoo 62, Windtwn:40
Wa~ly 77, Lucuville Val. 56
Way...tidd 64, BelljllliD LojJ11162
Waynesville 62, Cedmle n
WelliaJloa ll,MaraDabaChr. 38 ··
Welllton 71, Ale110der 65
Wellavllle67, SteubeDVUieCIIIh. 59
W..UU.l4. N. OIIlllled44

Lilboa60, Lilbcla Be.wr 46
Lopn 73. AllleDJ 63
Lorain Clearview 61, Hearletta Flre-

.

~

VIOIIdaJie.BIIII~&lt;7Z.M111o•UIIIolll6

Vlfllillet 5.5, New Bremea 40
ViDcolll W1m11 6 0 . - 53
ViDIDD Co. 78, Trimble 61
W.Oeoup6S,Kooltoa42
.
W. Ubeny Salem63, Rld&amp;emoDI S2
W. Mu.tl""m6S, Maysville 60 (OT)
WldowOIIh 6S, Orrville S4
Wopokooda 47,LimaCIIh. 46
Worrell QwnpioD 74, Lab,..l9

Lalbam W....,n 70. Fay.tteville S2
Lebanoa.51, Muoa 3.5
'
Liberty Ualon61, Ucti.DaHtl. 58

'

2. Bolae SL ................. 12-2.0

-rr-.

Ken I~ Rklae 81, Sprin.a. ShaWIIee 52
Keyatoae 48, WelUDilOD 4S
l..akcwood 60, Mea tor S9

1-62(01)
LonJaow1110, Vienna Mal.h.C'N167
Loudonville64, W. Holmra .53
LoWville Aquinu44, Atroa N. 34
Lucu 71, Jotwtowa S7
MadiiOD·Piairu: 14, Clintou-Masie 63
Mansfield Chr. .56, Col. Northmor 47
Maplewood Sl, Pymatuaina Val. 46
Martins Fury S9, Bellaire St. John• 40
MarysVille 71, Watkin&amp; Memorial 66
Mayfield 13, Eutlake N. 70
McComb 66, Arcadia S.S
McDerroott NW .59, PorufTlQII.lh W. .56
Miamiab'"l 60. Troy l7 (01)
Middletown Ou. 73, Yellow Sprinp
53
Millmpon S!l,New Albany 46
N. Canton 74, Cantoa Oleo0at.S6
NopolooD 69. Tol. Whllmer 64 (01)
New Lelingtoa 80, Sherid&amp;DS6
New Rte1eJ 61, VuJue S9 ((]f)
New•t 69, Col. Celllenni.ll 47
Newark Cath. .56, Col. Ready 43
Newton Fall• 74, Hubbard 62
Nonlonia 74, Lylldhurlt Bruah 60
Dfletlia7S, Lorain Broobide 66
Oberlin Keyltoae 68, Wellinaton 4$
Old F&lt;lrt 86, N. Baltimore 68
OIR15ted faJII60, Rocky River SO
D11Wio 79, f«deriektown 72

Nelaoavill~Y«t

... u

Onoo••

Ohio women's
college scores

Tiffin 76, Notre Dame (Ohio) 38
Wallh Ill, J..ake Eriel8 .

Pwmy 79, Uma T!"'\'!!Cir· 61
Parmo 63, o.!leld IIU. lo
1'1rm1 Padua S6, Cle. M...atall42
Pictoriqtoo 69, FnntliD IIU. SS
Polllld !4, Y..... UnuUoe 47 (OT)
Ponanllle (Pa.) Cbr. 74, ViCU&gt;ry Chr.

Cle. Benedictioe 80, Mentor Late
Cath. 70

~.......... st .....~

Wbltcball.54, Mount Ven.oo 51
W~lloy S. 72, M..,lei!U. S8
W
79. Mopdore 71
WOOIIer 6, UlllooloWD Lab 73
World Hane~t 10, Mount 'VeraoD
Acad Sl
WOIIhiqtonChr. II.O..vlllel6
Wyuld 68, Rivadale S I
Xema80, Falrboro 69
Y011J18. Cwley 83, NU• 62
You'i. Lib&lt;t1y 70. Cortlml Labvlew
S9

Ollaw•Olllldorf70, Bryu S8
Paillesvllle lbrvey 7S.Itittland 63

Cin. 1\l.rJiin 51, Goshen 41
CitclcvUlo Sot,lbmllton Twp. 44
OayiOD N&lt;11!1m&gt;Dl 80, Piqua S9
Oe. AtU S2, Cie. AdcWns 4S

Arizona St. 91, Cal Poly-SLO 43
Ca1 St.-Fullerton 13, San Dleao St 13
(01)
LoyolJI Mlryrooun! 80, WllhiJI81oa61
Moo- SL 19,S. Ulab81
Nevada 79, San Diqo 54
New Mclico St. 102. TeDI·Arllagt.on
63
Sootll Aorida 73. P&lt;ppadiDC 60
Sootherll Csl 12, Mo.•Kazuao Cily14
St. Mlry"o. Cal. 88, lJC Sula 8..-bn

Wheelonl&gt;ura 76, Oolt llill72

Orwell Clrud Val. 60. Aaltabulallar·
bor41
01aeao 6&lt;5, Bl""'ood 47

ColleaeHill67

For West

Allonii&lt;Diriolao

Now Yort ............. 12 10 .l4S
New kney .......... .. II ll .423

CiD. Se"" Hilla 67. Bllnla66 (01)
Cio. St B"""d l4, Clll. Locllilld 46
Cin. St Xavier 56, Hamiltoa Badin 47
Cin. Sumndl COuntry Day 72, Cin. N.

Jamea Madiloa 70, Arbnlu St. 52
Lamar 64, St Edward's, Tnu .57
Oklahoma Still . Um 67
Texu 9.5,Stephea F.Austia !U
Telu-E) Puo 113, CardiJIIJ Stritc:h 61

STAIIT DEUVERY DATE---·-·--

.....:._

NELSONVILLE·YORK
{ll-111-17-10::58)
Jeremy Tbrapp 6-6=18, Mike
Lewis 2-0-4=8, Jason Gail 5-0·
2= 12, Adam Nolan 1-0-0=2,
Richard Coe 1-0-1=3, Tad Stenbrecl: 2-0-3=7, Jason Waite 1-00=2, Sbaun Six 1..().0=2, Matt Call
1-0-2=4. Totals: :Z0-0-8/%3=58

Scoreboard
Bnsketbnll

Southern bead coacb Howie
Caldwell said, "Yes, it's another
win, but this was a game we sbould
bave won big and bad some fun
with. I keep waiting for us to step
up to the next level and play like a
typical Southern team. We bave
some big games ahead."
· Southern hit 22-76 including 2-8
treys and was 2A-28 at the line, an
area SHS killed its opponent,
wbicb went 8-23. SHS gmbbed 41
rebounds, led by Williams, Fisher
and Harmon witb 13, seven and six
respectively. SHS bad seven steals,
13 turnovers and 20 fouls.
N-Y bit 20-53 and was 0-7 on
threes with 31 rebounds {Gail 7),
10 steals, 21 turnovers and 31
fouls.
Southern will bost Ross-South·
eastern Friday.
, Reserve notes: Nelsonville won
the reserve game 4 I· 39 led by Josb
Swope's 10. Ryan Norris bad 13
and Adam Rousb bad 12 f~ Southem.

YOUR MOVE- That's what the unldentlfted Nelsonvllle-York
eager (rJaht) seems to be teDin1 tbe llnldentlfled Southern player as
SOUTHERN
the Tornado seels to make his move during Tuesdi!Y night's TVC
(12-23-11~24=70)
· game In Radne, where the Tornadoes won 70-58.
Jeremy Hill 1-1-5=10, Ryan
Williams
8-1·6=25, R.yan Martin 0·
4
&lt;continuedfromPage &gt; 0-1=1, Jamie Evans 1-0'0=2, Spike
Rizer 1-0-1=3, Jason Shuler 1·0. ahead in the fourth period and win is off until January 6, when the Fal- 0=2, Mason Fisher 3-0-8=14, John
Harmon 3-0-1 =7, Kevin Ihle 2·0:the game at the foul line. Miller cons will tangle with Trimble.
·connected on 13 of 17 from !be
In other TVC action Tuesday 2=6. Totals: 21·2·24138=70
:free throw stripe in tbe period to evening the Federal Hocking
:hold off the maroon and gold. Tim Lancers proved they are for real
Fulk and Merkle added seven with a stunning 72-55 win over
points each for Miller in tbe final Belpre. Southern defeated Netperiod. Cleland added nine for sonville-York 70-58, tbe Buckeyes
Meigs in tbe period, but the played witbout Justin Gail wbo bas
maroon and gold fell short.
decided to quit the teaJil. Vinton
Merkle led all scorers with 30 County defeated Trimble 78-68 and
points on 12-of-14 shooting from Wellston banded Alexander a 7!tbe floor. McGratb added 21 for tbe 65 loss.
Falcons, and teammate Scott
Reserve notes: Robert Qualls
.Decore joined the pair in double driUed a three pointer from deep in
figures witb II. Miller shot 68% tbe comer with just 3.9 seconds
from the floor bitting 31 of 46 from remaining to give Coach Rick
tbe floor to go along witb 18-of-30 Edwards and tbe Little Marauders a
shooting from !be line for 60%. 4847 win.
Miller pulled in 23 rel)ounds, witb
Jeremy Pierce and Josh WithJeremiah Keller and McGrath ercll led tbc way witb 10 points
~dded seven each.
each. Shawn Neal and Nick Altier
Cleland led Meigs witb a career led Miller witb nine points each.
high 27 points, with 21 on those Meigs bad a 27-17 lead, at tbe balf,
coming in the second half. Travis but Miller outscored Meigs 30-21
Abbott added 14 for Meigs and in tbe second half to make a game
Paul Pullins 12. Meigs bit 28 of 67 of it
from tbe floor for 42%, including
-•-•-•~even otl7 from three point range.
MEIGS •
Eleven of those three-point
(13·22·26-17=78) .
attempts came in tbe final minutes
Gary Stanley 1-2-0=8, Cass Cle·
in desperation.
land 9·0-9=27, .Paul Pullins 3-2Meigs cashed in on 15 of 24 0=12, Benny Ewm~ 1-2-0=8, Brent
from the line for 63% . Meigs · Hanson 3-0:2=8, N1ck Hanmg 0-0·
pulledin33rebounds,witbCleland . 1=1, TraviS Abbott4·1-3=14,
grabbing 11.. and 13 steals, witb . Totals: 21-7-15=78
Cleland and Pullins getting three
Mll.LER
each. Tbe Marauders had 14
(23-17-19-24=83)
assists, with Pullins getting four
Rob Jenks 1-0-0=2, Tim Fulk 2and Cleland and Stanley getting
0·5=9,
Bill McGrath 6·2·3=21,
,. three ·each. Meigs committed 20
Jeremiah
Keller 0·0-2=2, Ryan
•· turbovers.
Merkle
12-0-6=30,
Scott Decore 3. Meigs will travel to Point Pleas· .
···ant Thursday evening before taking 1-2=11, Chris Thompson 4-0-0=8.
rest of tbe holidays off. MiUer Totals: 211-3-18::83
,~-the
..

Marauders lose...

UNDEFE!lTI~D EAGLES- Eastern's junior
blgb girls' basketball team recently beat
prnlously undefeated Melas 44-16 ·tast week to
boost Its record to 5-0. Pictured are {front row, L·
R) Stephanie Evans and Lori Harris. Seated are

. Eastern junior high girls' squad unbeaten
Eastern's junior bigb girls" basketball team is
currently enjoying another fine season with a 5-0
mark. Eastern recently beat previously undefeated
Meigs 44-161ast week.
In tbat game, Jessica Brannon led Easterll witb 25
points and 20.rebounds, while Valerie Karr bad 14
points and 10 rebounds. Stephanie Evans and Ann
Wiggins each added two points, and Juli Hayman
bad one.
Wiggins and Hayman were credited .with great
defensive games.
.
·
Eastern led 34-10 at the half. Tricia Davis bad
four for Meigs, along witb B. Vaughan and T. Miller.

B. Smilh bad two and M. Werry two.
In the seventb-grade scrimmage {Eastern .bas no
full 7th grade team), Meigs defeated Eastern 35-14.
Tangy Laudermilt bad .23 for the winners, wbile
Cbasatie Hollon led Eastern wilh six, Heather M001
bad five , Amanda Wbeeler bad two and Leah
Sanders bad one.
Eastern also defeated Fe¢ral Hocking 47-18 led
by Brannon's 18 points, Karr's 12, Hayman's six,
Evans' five and two each from Mary Styers, Lori
Harris and Leab Sanders.
K. Trudo bad eight from Federal.
Eastern will play Soutbern tonight.

r

'

LNelsonville-York girls post
~ 56-34 victory over Southern
Southern's Tornadoes fell to
.-Nelsonville-York 56·34 in a Tri·
; Valley Conference girls' basketball
' game played on Dec. 15 at Net: sonville, according to a report subemitted today.
• Nelsonville Jed at the half 24~ 16, then opened up a close game
·: with a 12-6 third quarter and 20-12
•assault m tbe fourtb.
; Southern was led by Becky
•Moore's II points. Nelsonville was
: led by Jill Shafer's 16.
' Brianne Proffitt led Southern
·&lt;with I I rebOunds and Moore bad
"nine of Southern's total 39. N-Y .
:bad 40, led by Shafer's 10.
· Southern bit 15-73 for 20.5%,
·-was 4-14 at the line, bad 13 steals
(Sisson, Moore, Proffitt tbree each;
-. 16 turnovers, eight assists (Turley
.)UKI Proffitt tbree) and fouls.
·. N-Y bit 18-58 for 31 % and was
·l7-22 at tbe line with 40 -rebounds,
O)ix steals, 23 turnovers, 11 assists

and 19 fouls.
N-Y won tbe reserve game 4127 led by Arnie Adams with 16,
McClelland eight and Johnson
eight. Southern was led by E.
Amott with 17 points and Jenny
Friend had five.
Southern will host Meigs Thursday.

-·-·-·Southern

{6-10..6-12=34)
.. I
Jonna Manuel I "0·0=2, Renee
Turley 3-0-1=7, Bea Lisle 3-0-0=6,
Brianne Proffitt 1-0-0=2, Jess Codner 1-0·2=4, Becky Moore 5·01=11, ,Sammi Sisson 1-0-0=2.
Totals: 15-0.4114=34
NelsonvUle-York
{ll·ll·ll-20=56)
Sarah Ogg 3-1-{1;9, Jill Shafer
5-0-6=16, Heatber Cagg 2-0-4=8,
Lindsey Shumway 5-0·5=15, Monica Johnson 1-0-0=2, Sydney
Brooks 0-0.2::2, Arnie Adams 2-00=4. Totals: 111-1-17122=56

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.
~ Louisiana Tech women get
;ss-81
win over Ohio
State
'
.
''

COLUMBUS. , Obio (AP):Louisiana Tecb .coacb Leon Bar·
more .said ·be expected the Lady
'Tecbsters to tire in the second half
:Jgainst Ohio Suite.

Debra Williams with 31,' Vickie
Johnson with 26 and Kendra Neal
with 20.
"I think Louisiana Tecb showed
why IIIey are lbe tliird-ianked team

..mrr. Your 'D'ue Voice:·

---~~i·~·.··~t:real~~ly;~~~::~i:n~tb~e~seco~
nd --s~oo~~~-~mibltio~Lrnlio~i~u:-1
in !be
They
on a
af~
--on the road.
we
poorly and they would
us," Barmore said.
But lifter a 12-6 lead early in the
Jist half Tuesday, Ohio State never
sangbt up and No.3 Louisiana Tech
won 98-81.
~ "We certainly belong to be
(llentioned with the top two teams
.In the country but we bave to
temember what got us bere," Barmere said.
· What got them there agaiast
Obio State? Three players who
scored more than ZO points. cacb:

-----

COilcb

Obio State {6·3) bad a 12-6 lead
wben Lisa Negri scored wltb 17:05
left. But Tech's Amy Brown bit
two three-pointers to tie the game
at12. ·
Wil~ams scored four points in
an 18-6 nm that put the Lady Tech·
sters abead 30-18 witb 8:30 left in
the balf and tbey led 49-37 at inrer-

missioii.
.
Darscb said tbat was the turning
point of the game.

~ on bill s of 525 or less. Compariron to 6hi.o Hell'~ tol l
schedule 8. Subje&lt;t to billing avaibbiiil): NOI " ' ilable i~ Mt \\!rnoo.
lit&lt;lericktown. Danvilk:. pambier. Martinsburg Utica. Hom&lt;r and
Cenoerbu'l! """" Promotioo ex!Cnded through VJI/9)

•Save

II

I·

Chasatle Hollon, ·Leah Sanders, Becky Dnlt,
Amanda Wheeler and Mary Styer. In the bad
row are coach Paul Brannon, Ann WlgliDI,
Heather Mora, Jessica Brannon, Valerie Klll'r,
Angle Wolfe and Juli Htlyman.

~-~----

---~----

----

-

--------..

-~

·---·,..--

·AtaT
0 1994 AllkT

�·.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 21,19911

~dn~ay,

December 21,.1994 ·

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

In Top 25 college hoops,

Kansas &amp; Michigan State among victors
made a turnaround jumper and
By The Aaoclated Prell
In an age when athletes usually added a free throw for an eightdon't accept criticism and punish- point lead.
"I'd say I made about an 80
ment without objection, Greg
percent improvement,' ' said
Ostertag went another way.
The 7-foot-2 senior center was Ostertag, who started the first
benched by Kansas coach Roy seven games and didn't play for the
Williams for the start of Tuesday first five minutes against Santa
night's 80-75 victory over Santa Clara .
.
. .
Clara because of a poor outing in a
Pearson bad ft ve potnts for
loss to Indiana
Kansas, which committed 22
"I deserved what I got,"
turnovers and couldn,'t shake the
Ostertag said after finishing with Broncos,. who were trymg to extend
16 poiniS, nine rebounds and three their best start since the 1978-79
blocked shots in the seventh-ranked team won 12 of its first 14 games.
Jayhawks' tight win over a Santa
"We thought our kids played
Clara team that was a 20-point hard," Santa Clara coach Dick
underdog. "I played like crap Sal- Davey said. "We had our opportuurday at Indiana, and I dido' t. nitles, but let them get away. Their
deserve 10 stan."
big guys are active inside ll!ld they
Williams didn't start Ostertag or got it inside to them."
•
junior. forward Sean Pearson, who
Freshman Raef LaFrentz hacl-14
also played.'JIOOfiY in the I9-point points an~ nine rebounds for
loss at Indiana.
Kansas, wbtle Jerod Haase, one of
"I didn't want to make a big the two starting sophomore guards,
deal about it," Williams said. "I bad 13 JlOIDIS.
didn't feel thai Greg and Sean bad
Marlon Garnett bad 26 points
played as well as they should. I and Steve Nash 20 for Santa Clara.
didn't feel they were comfortable."
In other games involving ranked
Kansas (6-1) was never really teams .on Tuesday night it was No.
comfortable against tbe Broncos 15 Arizona Stale 98, Cal Poly-San
(6-2), who trailed just 68-63 with Luis Obispo 43; No. 17 Michigan
two minutes left. Ostertag then State 79, Tennessee 68; No. 19

Wake forest 81, The Citadel 58;
and No. 21 New Me11lco State 102,

Texas-Arlington 63.
No. 15 Arizona St. 98
Cal Poly-SLO 43
Ron Riley scored 18 of his 24
points on three-poimers as the Sun
Devils (6-2) made sure they didn't
lose two in a row at home. The
margin of victory was the fourthbigbest in school history and the
Jarpst in 32 years. Arizona State,
upset by Texas-San Antonio on
Sunday night, bad a 50-18 lead at
balfllme. Damien Levesque bad 12
poiniS to lead the Mustangs (0-8),
who are in their first year in Divi·
si111d-A.
Nt!-17Michlpn St. 79
Tennessee 68
Shawn Respen scored 25 points
and OJiinton Brooks bad 17 points
and 11&gt; rebounds as tbe Volunteers
(3·2) lost their 15th consecutive
road game. Michigan State (5-1)
led 60-40 with 13:191eft, but Tennessee closed to 67-63 with six
minutes to go. A basket by Brooks
and two jumpers by Respen boosted the leacl back to 10 within three
minutes alid Tennessee got no closer than eight poiniS. Kevin Whitted
scored a career-high 25 points for

A l=llmiiV Dwnell anti
tJperatell Supermarket
tJHering the best ol ser11iee,
qualitv a1111 Priee, to the
People ol Dur eommunitv

the Volunteers, and f'resbJium guard
Shane Carnes went 8-for-8 and bad
22 poiniS.
No.19 Wake Forest81
The Citadel 58
Tim Duncan scored a career- .
bigb 24 points and grabbed 15
rebounds as the Demon Deacons
prevailed despite losing leading
scorer Randolph Childress to a
· bruised bip with. seven minutes to
play. Wake Forest (6-1) led 61-51
when Childress went out, then went
on a 9-2 run on the way to their
fourth consecutive victory. Moncrier Michael led the Bulldogs (34) with 17 points. Childress is
expected to play in tbe Demon
Deacons' next same, Dec. 30
· against Marsball.
No.l1 New Mexico St. 102
Texas-Arlington 63
Johnny Selvie made all eigbt of
his shots from the field and scored
a career-high 19 points ·as the
Aggies (8-2) surpassed the IOQpoint mark for the first time this
season. New Mexico State closed
the half with a 23-2 run for a 43·26
lead. Tony Williams bad 13 poin(s
for the visiting Mavericks (3-SJ,
who have lost all seven meetin~
with the Aggies.

, At The. Co•ne• of
Gen. Haftinge• Pkwy.
and Pea•l St. • Middleport

In theNBA,

Ceballos and ·Lakers reach milestones

· ROCKIN' THE RIM - Oblo University's Gary Trent (lO) dllllb
,ver West VIrginia's Leon Agnew In the ftrst half of Tuesday night's
pame at the·Convocation Center In Athens, where the Bobcats won
"'"70. (AP)

)n the NHL labor front,

League considering
nixing payroll tax

By The Associated Press
Cedric Ceballos got 50, and the
takers got 2,500.
Ceballos scored a career-high 50
points Tuesday night as the Los
Angeles Lakers beat Minnesota
108-95. It was the 2,500th viccory
for the Lakers' franchise, second
most in NBA history behind the
Bostoo Celties.
But the night belonged to Ceballos, a five-year veteran acquired
from Phoenix in an off-season
trade. He scored 18 pointS in the
fourth quarter, including a threepointer with 5.7 seconds left that
made him the fourth player this
seasoo to score SO in a game.
"I started thinlcing about it with
about two minutes left," said
Ceballos, whose previous best was
40 poiniS. "Tony Smith came over
to me and told me I can't come in
the locker rootn unless I get 50. I
had my clothes and my car keys in
here, and I wanted to come in."
Ceballos made 21 of 31 shots
from the field, including 3-for-5
frpm long range, and was S-for-9
from the free-throw line..
Minnesota's Isaiah Rider scored
18 of his career-high 35 points in
the third period, including three
baskets from three-point range.
Elsewhere, it wa &lt; Utah 91,
Philadelphia 88; Charlotte 99, Indiana 95; Atlanta 115, Milwaukee
97; New Jersey 85, New York 83;
Orlando 108, Portland 104; Seatde
110, Los Angeles Clippers 79; DaJ.
las 110, Golden 1State 107; and
Sacrarnimto 105, WashingiOn 102.
Nets 115, Knlcks 83
Armon Gilliam scored 22
points, including a jumper off a

broken play with 20 seconds left
that put New Jersey ahead for good
at New York.
Palrick Ewing's jumper put the
Knicts ahead 82-81 with 43 seconds remaining. Kenny Anderson
then dribbled the ball off his Coo~
but regained control and fed a desperation pass to Gilliam, who sank
the crucial 18-footer from the cornee.
Hornets 99, Paeers 95
At Charlotte, Alonzo Mourning
and Hersey Hawkins each scored
22 points as the Homers beallndiana for only the third time in 13
meetings.
Reggie Miller gave the Pacers
their iust lead of tbe fourth quarter
with a three-pointer that made it
91-90 with 3:03 remaining. But the
Hornets answered with a 6-0 run to
pull ahead 96-91 with 32 seconds
left.
Jazz 91, 76ers 88
Karl Malone scored 24 points
and Utah rallied in the fourth quarter to win its ninth suaight road
game.
Jeff Homecek scored 17 points
for the Jazz, and Felton Spencer
added 16 points and 12 rebounds.
S~ldom-used Gref Graham bad a
season-bigh 20 pomiS for Pbiladelwhicb led 86-79 wilb 3:57
before the Jazz rallied.

'
Clippers, who bave lost six s1111ig~t
At Atlanta, Ken Norman scored to Seattle over the past two s~28 poiniS and the Hawks broke out sons.
of a shooting slump.
Maverldcs no, Warriors 107 :
Norman hit 10 of 13 shots,
At Oakland, Jamal Masbbu!p
including all four of bis three-point scored 27 points, including conseeattempts. The Hawks shot 57 per- utive three-point baskets in the
cent from the field, breaking ·a final 1:48. as Dallas banded Goldqi
siring of eight straight games under State irs lOth straight loss.
, .
46 percent. It was the 936th career
Jim Jackson's short jumper ga\1:
victory for Hawks coach Lenny the Mavericks breathing room af~
Wilkens, leaving him three short of Latrell Sprewell's bank shot cut tliil
breaking Red Auerbach's NBA deficit to 102-100 with jus.t over :S
remrd.
minute left. Jackson finished wil,)l
Magic 108, TraU Blazen 104
26 poiniS
•
Shaquille O'Neal scored '30
Jason ·Kidd helped the MaveipoiniS as Orlando won Ill Portland. icks snap a 14-garne losing streak
The Magic, blown out by 40 . to the Warriors while making .jl
points two nights earlier in Seattle, successful professional debut in h~
took control wjth a 204 thiid-quar- boinetown. He had 19 points and
ter run that gave them an 85-69 10 assists.
~
lead. But the Trail Blazers nearly
Kings 105, Bullets 102
;
caught up wilb a late rally.
At Sacramento, Mitch RicltO'Neal ~ only two poiniS and mond scored 28 points as the Kin~!!'
one rebound in the first quarter and handed WashingiOn its seventh loss
was 2-for-10 from the free-throw in a row.
\
line in the final quarter. But in
After Juwan Howard gave the
between, be dominated.
Bullets a 102-100 lead on a 15-foQJ
SuperSonics 110, Clippers 79
jumper with 27 seconds remaining;
Shawn Kemp scored 23 J)oints Richmond's .third three-pointer of
as Seattle won its 1Otb straight at · tbe game pushed the Kings back m
the Tacoma Dome.
front 103-102. Walt Williams batJ
Gary Payton added 22 and 19 points for Sacrafueitlo, wlil~
Kendall Gi.. 21 for the Sonics, who shot 70 percent in the third Quarter
have won three
overall. to take an 87 -741ead.
.••
Malik
bad 22
for the
•

Hawks 115, Bucks 1)7

TORONTO (AP) - For tbe and living here in North America
fust time in the NHL lockou~ there stands for."
Defiant players emerged united
could be significant progress in the from
the session, saying it would
dispute.
be
a
gross
miscalculation on the
Sources told The Canadian
league's
part
to think the players
Press the league has made a coottact proposal that doesn't include a would vote to accept .a payroll taX.
Some management officials, and
payroll tax, wbicb bas been a deal·
especially
general managers, have
breaker as far as players are consaid
they
are confident that if a
cerned. ·
secret
vote
was taken, players
Tbe proposal may be too costly
would
accept
tbe owners' last profor tbe players, bUt it will likely be
a starting point for negotiations to . posal.
Tbe league was buoyed by com.restJme, probably next week.
ments
last week by Stetmne RiebUntil now, the league bas proer
of
the
New Jersey Devils, who
posed a number of schemes 10 barsuggested
a majority of players
ness rising salaries, and all have
would
cast
ballots accepting the
included a tax or salary cap unaclast
NHL
.-oposal.
ceptable; to the players. ·
• Rieber ' s comments were
"There have been discussions
Mason Bowling
on how we might procec;d without brought up during the meeting, but
any
flames
of
discontent
were
a tax, but it is a complicated area,"
LeaguE! results
union bead Bob Goodenow said quickly doused.
"If they insist on the tall, that
Tuesday night, the eve of a players
(Resutta as of Dec. 14)
will
kill the year," Larry Murphy
meeting here today. "We were proLeagueEarly Wednesday
ceeding on tbe basis of not having of the Pittsburgh Penguins said. "li Mixed
a tax a few weeks ago, and lhe tax is up to (commissioner) Gary
T - atandlnp- J&amp;L InsulaBettman whether be wanrs to sbut
became an issue."
tion (90-30), Tooy's Carryout (77the
season
down
or
not"
There is to be a general assemThere have been no direct talks 43), Meigs Golf Course (63-57),
bly of the NHLPA today, which
between
the bargaining teams for Banks Construction (58-62), Capmore than 200 players are expected
both sides since Dec. 6, although tain D's (58-62), Thunder Alley
to altend.
Cats (53-67), Court Streel Grill
Earlier. Goodenow was pressed low-level negotiations last week (47-73) and Chainsaws &amp; Roses
whether the players, who have been made progress on the issues of (34-86).
locked out since Oct. I, would salary arbitration, free agency and a
Team high series- Tony' s
accept a tax to save the season. · rookie salary cap.
Carryout
(1901)
No talks are planned, and the
"We bave told them repeatedly
Team
hl11b game - Meigs
that if there is a tax, there wori't be earliest that bargaining can resume Golf CoUrt (669)
a season," said Goodenow, the is Thursday. But considering the
Men
NHL Players Association's execu- logistics of booting fli'hiS on the
Individual bll!h series ...,.
Christmas
weekend,
it
s
unlikely
tive director.
Chuck Burton (566) and Bub
"I don't know what wiU change the two si~ will get IOgether until Stivers (529)
next
week.
their perspective . We have been
Sentry 2 Rec1eive1'/MoJ~itor
Sentry 2 TV with Remote · MTS Stereo with Surround Sound
lndlvldul hiP ~~~~-Speed
The NHL bas gone out of its
very forthright and the soouer they
•
211'
Dilgooiii'IIUt
Russell
(213)
and
Burton
(201)
.• 25' Dilgooll
• 25' Oiogonol Sls1om I
U.S..... TVNav
understand tha~ the better off the way to desalbe its tax as anydling
Women
• -&amp;Old TVNCPI
but a salary cap, but that's exacdy
·-Com!
Coillo- Com!
process will be."
Collie R - C«111oo
Individual
high
ser.les
'Qn.Salonllioply
what
it
is,
Detroit
owner
Mike
•MTSSletlo
• 181 QwiiiOI Capabiliy
The tax issue played a signifi-~Tine&lt;
Shirley Simmons (549) and Betty
• 181 ClinO Clpll&gt;lll1y
cant role in a meeting Tuesday lllitcb said.
• 111 Qwlnoll\nlg
•5£! Audio ...
•Sloe!&gt; Tinet
Smith (548)
"Why
not
just
come
right
our
•Audio\'doo~
l!lght of 49 player representatives,
s.iJou-4
·On~llooo
Individual hll!h game - June
Jodls
• 2SIIIM'~­
• CloUd CI!JIIDn&amp;
assistant player reps and ·Six mem- and say cap now," lllitch said. "I . Mowery (221) and Simmons (208)'
•C1oudC.......
• lilloo Floloil
·-C-SIInd
bers of the NHLPA's bargaining mean it is a cap.
•1/CR SNII
(1&lt;lli20V)
''This is what we are offering
canmittee.
Players are adamantly opposed here. They are using other fancy
terms, but that is what it boils down
to a tax because they feel it aciS as to.'
'
a salary cap.
The five consecutive batters •
ESPN
reported Tuesday night
"Zero chance, " Jeremy
hyCarl Hubbell in the 1934 1----..;,.-----+--~------+--------­
Roenick of the Chicago Black- tbat Goodenow will be given full fanned
Ali-Star Game were all future Hallauthority
by
the
union
to
reject
any
46" Diagonal AVI Color TV
hawks said of the chance of a payof·Famers.
Hi·Fi St~treo VHS VCR
MTS Stereo System 3Remote
roll tax being accepted. "It won't proposal lie deems unacceptable.
·-n~,..·
• 27' DOgonol S,..l
Dettman already bas such
S,..Mh!¥
happen. We will lose the whole
• ""*'*'lniTVfo/av
authority
from
the
owners,
and
be
Coillo
-Com!
.
season.
•MTS- ·
"We are a capitalist society. We has said the season will not go for.-~TVNCAI
""Color,~. .
• 111a.ino!Co!d11
ward
unless
there
is
time
to
play
a
don't live in old Russia where it
!·~­
QIIAWWPMII
COM! -(:Gnhl
was communism. To put a cap on 50-gam~ ~le and a full round
Tift
of
playoffs
bef~ July I.
our Sjilaries, to
a limit ... it goes

.,
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. .
lngel's Furnt

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·---

llings snubbing critics
o.f Crimson Tide's
season
"Wben you~ play 12 or 13

I

TIJSCALOOSA. Ala. (AP) Geae Stallings scoffs at the mere
iUJpslion that this bas been a disI)Jil9inling seBIQII for Alabama.
· . AJt« all, the Crimson Tide is
U -1, ranted si11th and will meet
Qbkf State in the Citru.s Bowl J~.
2/ wl)lcb be figures is more thaD
~til to offset a crushing 24-23
lola to Florida in the Soutbeasrem
Cpiilelence title l[ame.

games a year, they are all goiJ!g to
be important, and the fact that we
lost the last game doesn't take any ·
glilnmrt off this particular ~c,"
Stallings said Tuesday. "I m aot
Z:~g down there with a sad face~

.Now·-,__

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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Participate in community program

----Society scrapbook.----

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2·pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00
3fS1.00 plain

Wednesday, December 21, 1994
Pag&amp;-8

WINNERS ANNOUNCED .
Lora Pettit of Athens was the
winner of a quilt used by the Senior
Citizens Center for a fund raiser.
•
ilia
W
f .L
inner o we ceraouc v ge was
Rosalie Story.
Busy BEES
The Busy Bee Class of the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Cburcb met
recently for a Christmas potluck
and gift exchange In the cburcb
social
room.
A gift
was presented to Jerry
Pullin, teacher. by the class.
Auending were Rosemary Lyons,
Gwinnie White, Miry Brewer,
Marybeth Mitchell, Lillian
Demos key, Ruth Ebersbacb, B
Betty Denny. Dorothy Evans,

Freda Edwards, Katberyn Metzger,
Betty Giltey, and Jerry Pullin.
y FARM
MYSTER
.
Deidra Cross of Langsville was
the winner of tbe Dec. 11 mystery
farm contest co-~ponsored by the
Meigs County Soil and Water Con·
servation District and the Ohio
:V~ley ~~lishing Co. She correct·
tbe farm as tb~t of
c.y Identified
B8 11h
f Br1ar R1dge
urtis
as~r 0
·u
Road, Langsv11le. Cross w1
receive $5 for ber correct response.
HOLIDAYDINNER
.
Members of tbe Rock Springs
United Methodist Women gathered
at the church recentl} for a holiday
dinner party.
Christmas carols were sung by

.

Dally Sentinel-Page . 8

RC COLA
PRODUCTS
24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

STORE HOURS

the group, Rita Radford gave ~~~~ ·
reading, "Jesus Fulfills the Law
scripture was read from Mall: 5 and
tbere was prayer.·
Officers • reports were given and ·
there was a report on sick calls
with Peggy Crane giving prayer.
Pandora Collins reported on cards

The

Motility ... S.llllay
8AM·10 PM
298 ,SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

sen~ans were finalized for the dis·

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC. 18 THRU DEC. 24, 1994.

trt'buu·on of a Christmas basket and ·
gifts 10 be d'elivered 10 a family. It
ported that the annual report
hwasas bereen sent to tbe district presi· ·.
dent
Donations were malade to ~is· ,
sions and severalloc organiZBlions to help provide cbeer for the
holidays. Attending were 14 mem·
bers and Pastor Keith Rader.

7 UP, DR. PEPPER,
HIRES ROOT BEER,
CRUSH FLAVORS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

12 Pl. 12 OZ. CANS

---- - Poe. 's corner-----can,
•
t.

Editor's Note" The poems
To Make a Long Story Short
below were written In the ere·
By Chandra Moon
atlve writing classes conducted
Up clo'se she is a dangerous
by Debra Conner at Meigs character
Junior Blgb Scbool. Conner wu
She got away witb everything
brought to the school by funding
It was love beyond imaginations
from a Ohio Arts CnuneU Grant
She always got her man.
and matching funds from the
Middleport Arts Cnundl.

Theae Meigs band and
vocel atudents presentlllg tra·
dltlonal and contemporary
h!lllday 111111lc: were ..-g the
eatertalners at Monday
nlglat'• "Hometown Chris,. I
mat" program beld on th~ '
Pomeroy stage. The band
ensemble was directed by
Toaey Dlngeas and the vocal
group of junior and senior
high students was led by
Jenlfer Morton. The prop'am
- • a community Christmas
activity of the Pomeroy Mer·
chants Assodation.

Dreams
By Melhsa Davis
A long time ago
Five years to be exact
Came a darJc, dark version
Maybe something priceless
Wbo will ever know?
It was beyond imagination
With dangerous characters.
It was far more than I bad bar·
gained fer.
I wish I were Houdini
So I could vanish it away.
I knew it was dangerous
And just as I began io approacb
It happened
I awoke.

Alfred UMW observes Christmas
Special recognition was given to
the Rl:v. Sbaron Hausman and Nina
Robinson in appreciation for their
wort and dedicalion at the annual
Alfred United Methodist Women's
Christmas dinner held recently at
lbechurdl.
Nellie Paaker made the presenla·
tions with tbe Gift to' Mission
award going to the minister, and
the special missionary recognilion
award to Mrs. Robinson.
Members and guests were wei·
comed by Mrs. Parker, president,
111110 lbank~d the UMW for ~elr
warlc in decorating and preparmg

tbe meal. Charlotte VanMeter dec·
orated tbe Christmas tree and Mrs.
Robinson arranged tbe table and
lighted tbe candles.
·
Names were drawn for 1995
seeret pals., and program and serv·
ing assignments were llll!de. Plans
were finalized for gifts io sbulins,
and Mrs. Parker announced that
two ABC quilts had been sent for
lbe mission ~ect
Thelma Henderson read ·"What
is· Christmu-?'' and Gertrude
Robinson re!ld an .original pollm,
"Christmas." The jiteetlog closed
'

~·\.;1••"1f' ~

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Dreaming of France
By Mu Bratton
I know you are dreaming of
driving to France
All you have to do is
Follow tbe North Star and buy
your license at K-Mart
Tben you'D find yourself
Waking up in Meigs Junior
High in the middle of writing class.

with a gift exchange. Present were
lbe Rev. Hausman, Osie Mae and
Clair Follrod, Florence .Ann and
Richard Spencer, Martha Elliott,
Nellie Parker, Martha and Will
Poole, Nina .Robinson, Melvin
Tracy, Gertrude Robinson, Char·
lotte and Warren Van Meter, Sarah
Caldwell, Thelma Henderson, and
John Taylor, all local, and Janet
Evans, The Plains.
Nellt meeting will be Jan. 17
with Mi'S. Poole to have"ttre ptb·
gram an4 Nin.a )~.obinson. t!llie
fiostess.

ElizabCtb Hayes.

Christmas poems were read by
"Soup;'s Oil" by Lora Damewood; '
"Once Upon a Christmas Day" by
Erma Cleland; "Silent Night" by
Opal Hollon, "Candle" by Elbel
Orr; "Let Us Prayer on Ibis Holy
'Christmas Day" by Thelma White;
"Heaven's Grocery Store" by Eliz.
abelb Hayes, and"For tbe Year
Ahead" by Betty Young.
. There was a gift exchange and
door prizes were awarded to Jo

When Jesus mates his way to
earth,
\
He will on tbjlt day, claim His own.
We will then. all be rewarded,
From lbe seC11s that we have sown.
Seeds of love; that we bad planted,
Tended wilb 'lbe greatest care.
Yielded us a bountiful harvest,
Wilb plenty left, for us to.sbare.
For God · above, He made. a
promise,
That if we chose His stairs to
climb.
He would not forget lbe seeds we
planted,
When it comes to harvest time.
Our reward, would be a mansion,
With our name above the door.
. Wbere we could be with Him for·
ever,
With no worry. anymore.

gain .

Tbe one Jesus promised,
By His death on lbe Cross.
Their life here for Him,
Is not total loss.
To let me show here,
Tlie job they can do.
How tbe cllange in their life.
Can help albers too.

,,

Breast •••••••••••••••••~~•••

'

By Ibis, tbe example,
I have set for lbe lost.
Can't be measured by riches,
For it's free of all cost.

480Z.

CHICKENlEG

Quarters ••••••••••••••••~

And when life.is over,
I can look back and see.
The time I sought Jesus,
And lbe day He found me.
Olen D. Harrison
Pomeroy

Is It' Too Late?

As I stand upon Ibis land
Millions bave already arrived bere
There is enough of me as you .can
see
Take a look at me even if you don't
care

PORK BUn STEAKS OR

Roasts •••••••••••••~~••••••
PORK CUBED

.

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1 Weiners •••••••••••••~!:~;•••·99

$ l9

SUPERIOR'S FRANKIE

·

_

.LB.$189

Steaks •••••••••••••••••••••
U.S.DA..CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

tb.

Chuck Roast ••••••••••••••
ECKRICH SLI(ED

The !bird blrlbday of Lindsay Bob and Flomlce Adams and Rex
Teaford and the sixth birthday of . O'Brien, gteal-gnmdparents.
·
Darin Teaford. wi:re observed wilb
Others attending were Allen,
apartyalibe~eoftbeirj!lmlts, · Carol, Josh, Chelsea, and Adam
Dale and Unda teaford. Racine.
Pape; Jim.O'Brien, Sherry Chap·
A Barney tbemc was carried out man. Susie and Sara Cammarata,
for Lindiay and a Power Rauser Wanda and StePhanie Shuler, Delte
theme for Darin. Cates for tbe and Stepbanie Michaels, Diane and
party were made by Mrs. Teaford Kyle HilL
wbo alto served Olber refresbmenlS
Others presenting cards and
to lbe pt&amp;ll.
·
gifts were Raylliond Adams, De~·
-Attending were Dale and Derek nis, Ellie and Hope Teaford, Erin
Teaford, brolben of
Jacob and Emma
and
Grimm

Bologna ••••••~ ••••••••••• ·

LB••

$
ROSEDALE
PEACHES

Aviation Pioneer
CAMBRAI, France (AP) ·-

Pialcll eoliDcl!r 8lld

avialioD JJio.

Loafs Bleriot (1872-19'36)
balltPriiiCC'a lint Up1aue l'lcay.
Jn 1907, Bleriot ~ I prize lot
tile flilt aoa-coml~fligbt of 25
_.... mwrill&amp; tbc aoce iD leu
- • boat. His peafat feat 10 lly i 5()().poand .,._ ofllil mya
dellp ICI'OII tbc &amp;gllsb Cbamiel
6um CalaU 10 Dover on July 25,
Deer

1!1()1).,

DOWIIING CHILDS .
MULlEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE

•

KRAFT PARKAY

79(

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PEARS

s~~::E:......~~•••••••••~•••$1

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CAlNAn:.::~:::....••~~=~ 2

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thru

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9am·10pm
Cflrlltmll Eve~
10am·5 pm ,
Closed Christmas

'

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

I

For
Mall Glft
Certificates
Call: 592-3574
1002 E. 81ata, Alhlnl

.

lb.

Noon-4Pm

Sun., Dec. 18
10am-9 pm

.

•
Margar1ne •••••••••••••••••

Chr\atmas.., •

11_1 Second St., Pomeroy

.YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGSCOUm
SINCE 1861

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· As Christmas draws ,near, give gifts of cbmfort this year!
Consider a mas.-ger fqr tired muscles. Or ••• slippers to slip
Into, comforters to comfort, woolens to warm them. Still
stumped? .Give Mall Gift Certificates! They're a ~ure fltl , ,

I

INS•1 REG1 SF

·

Pi~c;~Sf ••••••••••!~~!o•••• 99(

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::::THANK YOU CHERRY :: .
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FILLING
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Potatoes ••••••••••••••~i~~:g
VALLEY BELL
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Mon. thru Fr\.
Noon-&amp;Pm
eve·

SHOP

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MUELLERS
CARON I
SPAGHETTI

$149

SAN-w:A
Teafords observe birthdays .

·cREAM

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VISIT

DARIN TEAFORD

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2/ 1

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KRAFT

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LINDSAY TEAFORD.

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TodaY

WESSON
COOKING OIL

•

My Daily Goal

Ann Baum, Ruth Smilb, Dorotby
Myers, and Erma Cleland
Others attending were Cora
Beegle, Marcia Keller, Margaret
Amberger, Goldie Fredericlc lnzy
Newell, Faye Kirlchart, Mary K.
Holter, Charlotte Grant; Mary Jo
Barringer, Pauline Ridenour, Laura
Mae Nice, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek, Ella Osborne, and Ester
Sniitb, and guests, Shirley Beegle,
Opal Eichinger and Shirley Summerfield Rousb of Florida.

99(

SPLIT CHICKEN

'

For everyone of me you get
I will come back double
You better fmd a way.
That's why I work and tend my Because I'm going to cause you
trouble
garden.
And tbe seeds I planted there.
.
.
.
.
.
For when its time to reap tbe 11¥· Trymg 10 get nd of me IS a big task
.
• , • , ... I .am OI!IWail,you I laat.llld last. , .,
. . .. . . ,. . --. - Polluted ;--· .... ..
,..., ~ vest.
I welcome sill more of me
By Jennifer Ramey
, 1 want Him 10 see, I did my sbare.
Olen D. Harrison To get rid of me Is to llrealc the cast
AI the shopping mall
Pomeroy
lbe.IM,IJlllllian De_vil' s mor~·
You see me everywhere you go
me'lif
·
On land and streams and lakes
Destroyed the shadows tbe cbair
Some lime I travel by plane
made
.
In cars from state to state
By jumping on it and crusbing it
into a heap.
Get ready for soon I will cover
They be learned lbat he bad ere· God, grant me lbe power,
your land
To do every day.
ated
And not by root or seed tbat Oy
Pollution
Good deeds to others,
So
you better talce a strong stand
I meet in life'~ way.
If you bury me I still won't die
, TheWtr
To tell tbem of Jesus,
By JelfBrown
We move mostly by darlc
Who gave us His life.
Tbe ldds spotted
As we travel mostly with men
Signs all around.
To free lbem !'rom Salan,
Hen:
I welcome 12 more of us
: ·
And a world Qf strife.
Back to Vietnam
ALUMINUM;
Welcome
brother
The war bas started.
.
beer cans
But when we sent in more To sbowr b~;r:~ple,
Frank.Drehel:
troopse
• The joy 10
Middleport;
W
out wllb less. . At the

Chester D of A enjoys holiday party
A gift excbange and Christmas
readings were features of the Pasi
.Councilors Club of Chester Coun·
cil 323, Daughters of America,
annual holiday party at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy.
The dinner was served by lbe
women of the church with Erma
Cl~land giving lbc blessing. Jean
Fredericlc opened tbe meeting witb
a readiag of Lute 2. The Lord's
Prayer and pledge to the American
Flag were given in unison. Reports
were given by Thelma White and

Work Helps

In lbe hon.e they

GEl ONE ~.~i~g;,~n :1
.fREE ~=RV
ster, NY ::

FOOOS II
1 P17·12-19912M27303M 199
11
1
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24,ttiM 1l 11 OltwQoociOec.11tiiNDec. 24,11M 11

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BEEF'

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�..
Page-1~The

Wednesday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

Decem!Mr ~1, 1994

~ Wedl\eaday, December 21,1994

The Dilly SentlrJel Pagl 11
COPIRIQHT 11M • THE KIIOGIII CO. rn.- AND PIIICII GOOD ~
aECS t!R 11, liiiiOUCIIIIATUIIDA'I', '?I'
P 24, 1,.. II ~.

Another chance to sign up for Medicare

·-..••,
..
·~

•
••
••
••
'

.
....
..
••

. ,.'

,.

MR. AND MRS. BRIAN WARDEN

j~Hill, Warden exchange vows
Joe Rousb of Ravenswood, W.
Va. was best man, and ushers were
Aorian Kopyar of St. Clairsville,
John Coppola, Bluefield, W. Va.,
Ty Brinager ,of Portland, Bill Hupp
of Racine, Randy Green of Vincent, Doug Warden of Racine,
brother of the groom, and Michael
Hill of Racine, brother of lbe tiride.
Ring bearer was Cameron Btinager,
Penland, and tbe flower girl
::Racine.
:: Attendants for tbe bride were was Ashley Life, Pomeroy.
A reception was beld at Royal
: •Tracy Hupp of Racine, maid of
~honor; and Dina Guarnieri of Chill- Oak Resort immediately following
icothe, Rachael Roy of Racine, the ceremony. Guests were regisDonette Dugan of Reedsville, tered by Jaela Hall and Stacey
Wendy Thomas of Middleport, Warden.
Tbe couple took a honeymoon
• Annette Porter of The Plains, Dina
trip
to Mexico. Tbey reside in
Weiss, of Columbus, and Erica
Pomeroy.
Guinther.

; : RACINE - Dolly Renee Hill
;: and Brian Mitchell Warden
:: exchanged wedding vows in a dou·
:: ble ring ceremony at tbe Racine
.. United Methodist Church Sept. 17
::at 2:30 in the afternoon.
:: The Rev. Ken Molter perfonned
; :the ceremony for tbe daughter of
••Michael and Mindy Hill and tbe
::son of Bob and Kay Warden, all of

ByEDPETERSON
Social S«urlty manager, Athens
If you're age 65 or older and
don't have Part B Medicare coverage, you' 11 have a chance 10 sign up
for the covemge during tbe 1995
annual emoUment period.
Every year, tbe government
offCJ:S a tbree-montb general enroll·
ment period from January 1 to
March 31. Tbis period is to give
you a second chance if you didn't
enroll when you were first eligible
· or you dropped your coverage. If
you emoll during the current sign·
up period, your coverage will begin
July 1, 1995."
For 1995 the cost for Part B
coverage is $46.10 per month.
Most beneficiaries wbo delay
enrollment pay a I 0 percent sur·
charge for every 12 months tbey
could have been enrolled but
weren't.
Part B coverage, also called
"medical insurance," helps pay for
doctors • care, outpatient hospital
visits, and other medical services.
People are offered the option of
signing up for Part B at the same
lime they are automatically
enrolled in Medicare's Part A pro.
gram. Part A belps pay for inpa·
tient hospital care and certain other
services and is paid for by the
Medicare tax you paid while work·
in g.
·
People who want to sign up for
Part B Medicare coverage should
call tbe Athens Social Security

office (614-592-4448) or call retirement benefits is 10 years. The. tbe Nation's workforce. It is wbat
Social Security.' s toll-free number, credits stay on your Social Security every woman should know. This
1-800-772-1213, between 7 a.m. record for life and go wilb you new booklet tells bow work may
affect a woman;s benefits if sbe is
and 7 p.m. any business day. Tbe from job to job.
divorced, widowed, or a widow
-SQCial
Security
benefits
are
lines are busiest early in the week
caring for her deceased spouse's
designed
as
a
base
of
retirement
and early in tbe month; so it's best
preschool or school-age children."
income
on
which
you
can
buDd
10
to ·c:aJt other times. •
It tells bow her military service
suit
your
own
lifestyle
tbrougb
pri·
&gt;*c&gt;Benetits to Increase
Socull Security and Supplemen- vate insurance, savings; invest- may count toward Social Security,
tal Security Income (SSI) benefits ments, etc. The benefits replace and explains how a government
will increase 2.8 percent. beginning about 42 percent of tbe preretire- pension may affect ber Social
with tbe payments that Social ment income of people with aver- . Security benefits. Social Security
answers these and other questions
Security beneficiaries receive Jan. age lifetime earnings.
-Anybody can get an estimate she may bave about its programs in
3 and SSI recipients receive on
Dec. 30, 1994. The automatic cost· of the Social Security benefits they tbis new publication.
The infonnation in tbe booklet
of-living adjustment is made annu- can get wben they retire by calling
tbe Social Security Administration recognizes tbe changing role of
aUy.
For Social Security beneficia- (l-8Q0.772-1213) and asking for a women, especially tbe increase in
ries, tbe average monthly benefit Personal Earnings and Benefit Esti · tbe number of women in the
amount for all retired workers wlll mate Statement. The statement Nation's workforce. For example,
rise from $679 to $698. The maxi- should arrive about two weeks after the booklet explains tbe protectiop
a working woman and her family
mum federal SSI monthly payment you send in the application form. '
-Benefits increase with age. have if she becomes disabled ot
to an individual will rise from $446
to $458. For a couple, the maxi· The longer you delay applying for dies or when she retires. It also
mum federal SSI payment wiU rise Social Security benefits, tbe higber explains wbat benefits a wife or
from $669 .to $687. Some states the benefit you eventually receive widow and ber children can get on
add a supplement to the federal will be. People wbo retire before tbe basis of her husband's work
age 65 receive reduced benefits. record and bow remarriage or
payment.
Social Security wid SSI benefits People who keep working and divorce affects benefits.
increase automatically each year retire after 65 have "delayed retireThis booklet is not intended to
based on tbe rise in tbe Consumer ment credits" applied to their bene- provide a complete explanation of
Price Index for Urban Wage Earn- fits. The benefit increases between the Social Secmity program. It's a
. ers and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) age 65 and 69 by as much as 15 guide to those provisions that are,
from the third quarter of one year percent for those attaining age 70 or can be, of particular. interest to
through the corresponding period in 1994. Those attaining age 70 in you and every woman.
of the next. This year's increase in future years can get larger increas·
This new booklet is avaijable at
es
the CPI-W was 2.8 pereenl
tbe Athens Social Security·office ·
. New booklet on women's issues
Do you know
or, caU Social Security's toll free
This free booklet is not just for number, 1-800.772-1213, between
-The most work you need 10
be fully insured for Social Security tbe more than 60 million women in 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on business days
and ask 10 have a copy sent to you.

Gift
Certificates
for Holiday
Giving.

See your h'1••n,..
Kroger store or
call 1·SOG-409-GIO

LAND GAP WHOLE
14·17-LB. AV~. CUMBERnele55

·
sem•·B0
smoked
Halll
pound

Diet tips for Christmas .holiday eating
Dieting can be discouraging,
especially during tbe holidays
wben parties and foods bigb in fat,
cbolesterol, and salt surround us.
Weigbtloss and weight eonttol
.can be less cballenging. as long as
healthy Americans eat right and
exercise regularly.
According to tbe American

-

•

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT· -:: Bennett
Bennett -Post 128, American
Legion, 6 p.m. Wednesday for a
Christmas dinner followed by sack,
ing
candy.
. Christmas
.
'
POMEROY - Alzbeimers and
FOUR GENERATIONS GATHER- Four generations of the
Related Disorders support group, I
family of Josephine Knopp Justice, center,gatbered at her home 1!1 pm. Wednesday, Senior Citizens
Clifton, W. Va. on Thanksgiving Day. They lncllided Mrs. Jus· Center. Dr. Richard Boone, psylice's daughter, Julia Knopp Darst, Clifton, W.Va., her grand· chologist, 10 speak.
daughter, Ginger HOI Doerfer, right, and her great-granddaughters, Josle Doerfer, left, and IsabeUa Rose Doerfer, right, all of the
RACINE - First Baptist
Forest Ran Road, Racine.
/

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post borne.
RUTLAND - Christmas program at tbe Rose of Sharon Holiness Cburcb, 7 p.m. Thursday. Pastor Dewey King invites the public.

New FFA officers installed
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medici~e

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O. ·
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
create cookies of festive and artis•SPRINGERLJ;: COOKIES :TAKE TWO AND CALL ME IN tic designs.
I use a carved rolling pin that
MORNING
imprints
a design on tbe dougb creIn tbe spirit or good Christmas
ating
a
series
of cookies about I
'cheer, I've decided to give my
a break from our usual dis· 112 inches square. They aren't as
:Cussions of buman ailments and elaborate as tbe cookies created
health care concerns. For lbe using one of tbe intricately carved
lhird year in a row, I'll take off my European molds, but they look ri~
white lab coat and put on my cbef s and taste just as good. If you don't
bave a specially designed mold or
. hat for a special Christmas coluom.
rolling
pin, cut the dough into I
This year I want to share with
you a recipe f~I one or my favorite inch by 2 incb rectangles.
Spriolde anise seeds on a piece
holiday treats - springerle cookies. Yes, these light-colored anise of wax paper. Tben, ·gently press
flavored cookies, like most cook· tbe shaped cookies onto tbe seed
ies, have more sugar than I'd rec- covered paper to embed a few
ommend for a regular diet. But, I seeds into the bottom surface of
offer them as. a prescription for each one. Leave tbe cookies on tbe
JOOd holiday eating, as IQng as you paper to dry for 12 hours.
Bake tbe cookies on an ·.
don't exceed the recommended
dosage: one bak:h - shared tiber· . ungreased cookie sheet at 300
degrees. Bake until tbe bottom
ally with Others- once a year!
edges
just begin to tum color ~
I'll give you the ingredients
about
15
minutes. Don't over bake
tint:'4 eggs I pound of powdered
these
cookies
I .Cool on tbe sheet
sugar 1. teaspoon balcing powder 1
llefore
removing.
Once cool, these
pound flour (reserve 1/3 cu_p) 2
.Tablespoons melted butter 4 dropS cookies will keep for weeks if
tadse oil anise seeds. · ·
st~~~~!i.~n. an alr-tigb.t container.
wben I'm around, they
Beat the
until very ligbt H
:i-o--Aortl-fo:aJD'II';-'1
pually wbile beating. Continue anyone 10 worry about
.
·
be!lting until creamy. Add 112 of , stale.
Springerle cookies are r;~ther
die flour, aUoftbe bakjllg powder,
melted butter and anise oil. Beat bard. I enjoy their crunchy texture
until smooth. Add tbe remaining and sublle anise flava: most when
flour while reserving 1/3 cup. Mix consumed with a aiass of milk or a
well, then chill the dough cup of coffee. I alio think tbcy are
best served to. good friends with
ovtmigbt. .
Role tbe&lt; chilled dough on a accompanying bollday cheer.
"FIIIIIily Medicine" ilia weekly
noured pastry cloth to 1/2 inch
column. 'ro submit questions,
.L · drickness ..The cloughJlOW needs to
be shaped into traditional springer- write to Jolin C. Wolf, D.O.,
le ·.shapes. In Europe. from at least Ohio Unlvenlty College of Osteo- .
the 17tb century to tbe present, ,.thle Medlclne, Grosvenor Hall, •·
.
el ~ mOlds have been used 10 Athena, Ohio. 45701.

umrtone
please

Heart Association, being over- impa:taotiO be at your best weight.
-Try not to eat second portions
weight can I~ to bigb blood presTbe AHA suggests you see .a during meals. Put your fork down
sure, a major risk facta: in~velop­ doctor before starting a weight between bites and drink water
ing heart and blood vessel disease. reduction .or exercise program. often.
In addition overweight people tend Then, follow these tips:
-If you ani eating with albers,
to have increased levels of cboles·
-Think about wbat, other than try your best to be tbe last one to
terol in tbe blood which is another hunger, motivates you to eat Keep finish, get up from the table as soon
risk factor for beart disease. Thus, a written record of wbai and when as you are done.
tbe AHA emphasizes that it is · you eat -especially snacks. Tben
-Brush your. teeth or eat an
avoid those situations wben possi- artificially sweetened mint right
ble.
.
after meals. Tbat will help curb
-Detennine your calorie intake your desire for snacks ..
-Avoid taking coffee breaks at
Church, Racine, children's pro-. per day ro lose one to two pounds
gram, 7 p.m. Wednesday. One W· per week. Most women can do this vending machines and happy hours
vice on Christmas Day at the by consuming I ,200 to I, 150 calo- that serve food. Take a walk, exer.
ries a day. Men can usually lose at else or read until you can control
church, 10 a.m.
tbe same rate by consuming 1,800 your craving.
In general, tbe AHA suggests
MIDDLEPORT- Christmas to 2,000 calories a day.
that
you exercise aerobically 30-60
Eat
no
more
than
6
ounces
of
program, Asb Street Free Will Baplean
meat
fish,
or
poultry
per
day.
minutes
three 10 four times a week.
tist Church in Middleport, 7:30
Use
chicken
or
turkey
without
tbe
Aerobic,
or dynamic, exercises
p.m. Wednesday at the church.
include bicycling, jogging, swimskin or dish in most of your meals.
THURSDAY
-Limit cholesterol intake to ming, even wallting. These kinds of
MIDDLEPORT- Live nativity · less than 300 milligrams per day exercises work large muscle groups
scene at tbc Hope Baptist Church and limit total fat intake to 30 per· and belp you get in $bape by rais. ing ~lood flow 10 the .\wiidng olus·
on Grant Streel!' in Mfdiileport, cent of to!al calories.
cles for an extended time.
Thursday and Friday, 7 to 9 p.m.
eacb evening.

Community calendar-

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

:TilE

WIMMIME THE IIIOHT 10 ~ CII.IANmiES.IIOIIIIOUI 10 DIAL !I

New officers were installed at
tbe recent meeting of the Meigs
District Future Homemakers of
America beld at Eastern High
Scbool. The theme, "Fifty Years
arid Still Spreading the Magic,"
was carried out.
Installed were Amy Smith, East·
ern; president; Bridget Varney,
Southern, vice' president; Shelly
Sinclair, Meigs, secretary; Crystal
Smith, Eastern, treasurer; Mary
Chaney, Southern, competition
chairperson; Todd McDade, Meigs,
news reporter.
Advisors are Becky Baer, Kathy
Reed, Diana Rice, Gloria Van

Reeth, and Janice Weber.
Tbe meeting opened with tbe
presentation of tbe colors by tbe
Eastern FHA, tbe thought (or tbe
day and roll call by ~eigs and tbe
relaxer by Southern FHA.
Christmas crafts and food were
demonstrated and made under tbe
supervision of Cindy Oliveri and
Becky Culbertson, borne economics extenslon agents. '
Southern FHA bad charge of the
name tags, cookies, candy, and
Christmas ornament contests, 31\d
the door prize .drawings.
Refreshments were served.

.

•

,

•

' .

•

1/2-Gallon

•seer •line •lllers
•Chips •Dip •Partr Trays

Festive refreshments of candy,
cakes, c'bokies, nuts, punch and
coffee rounded out the afiemoon .
Guests were Phyllis Atkinson of
Parkersburg, sister of tbe hostess,
Emma K. Clatwortby, a former.
member; and Debra Conner of tbe
Ohio Arts Council who described
her two-weeks experience as writ·
er-in-residence at Meigs Junior
High School. Mrs. Conner also
read one of ber original poems.

·cakes •Pies

REGULAR OR DIET CANADA DRY
GINGER ALE, DIET NJP OR

..,., Lo~Wl· -

7-Up

Flowers From!"

•

2-Liter ·

POMEROY .
'
FLOWER SHOP
106 ButtemutAve.}'omeroy, OH

RED OR WHITE

(614) 992-6454.

Deeor11IIH PoiiJSeiiUis

_(800)433-6203

6-InthPot

•s••
oiUU.y Need&amp;
. •,..
I= 'I''

specialists in obstetrics and gynecology.
•
. Left to right are Jack Chan, D.O., Kenneth
Glinter, D.O. (Jeated) , Catherine Coats, D.O.,
and Jack Ramey, D.O. For more
information pi~ call

·-

..

tJub

Ollio
UnMnity

.,.

................. 1&amp;0Z.

O•u)lllhic

Mldcet

en.

Family Size Turkey Dinner

. . . . . t&lt;t

~

•10 -12~b. Turkey (pre(()()ked)• Old Fashioned Dressing
•Tltkev Clavy •Creen Beans or SWeet Potatoes
· • Snowflake Rolls or !lnner-~~--.~~~~·------~,·--·-~~~F~

·""·"·"·15«
FROZENK~

'--·---=

jead . .

"*' IGI5·...

Heat&amp;. Serve ... $25.99

. ,..

·--·S+Ib.LalfS
~ '

.

.

sur one·Get·One

•Boneless Hams

W . r e pleased to annouhce our

'

12-Ct.

•Oysters·•Shrimp

:other

'.

ASSORTED, KROGER

1D-Lb. Bag

Mrs. Horton hosts party

The home of Mrs. Dewey Horton was the setting for tbe annual
Christmas party of the Middleport
Literary Club with the hostess
greeting each member witb a was- .
sail.
The musical program was followed by each person sharing a
Christmas "gem\" in the fonn of a
.poem or story wbicb recalled memories of the iieason.
The music committee consisting
of Martlia Qoover, Clarice Erwin,
Pat Holte.r and Jeanne Bowen
planned tbe program. Betty Fultz
and Pauline Horton joined the
singers wilb Clarice Erwin and
Phyllis Haekett as accompanists.
Martha 11oover and Pat Holter
we1e soloists. Selec'tions included
old favorites like "0 Holy Night"
;md "It's.Beginning To Look A Lot
Like Christmas" as well as a less
familiar set of American spirituals.
The presentation concluded with
tbe reading of a Christmas prayer
and group singing of selected car-.
ols."
·
. •J', ... ... ., :r,. •.

.,.,

,..,.,.
Donald Duck
seedless
Brown
'N
"""""PMn's
ro
orange
Juice
serve
Rolls
Navel oranges
,.,••,:
113-SIZE CALIFORNIA

:readers

(614) 593-2398.

rour

CHmt CWmhm to qJou cmd qJomg
· ffim ffi~iday geagon. . ·

-

aac

25-0l. , . , .

• I

•

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,

.,

I

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Page-,-12-The Dally Sentinel

r-4 .

Wednesday, December 21, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

egion charity---1 Cases c.oncluded in county court
The following cas~ere processed Wednesday in the Meigs
County Court of Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien.
.
. .
Fmed were: Abce L. Wtlliams,
Atbens, speed, $30 plus costs ;
Cbristopber G. Long, Morgantown,
W.Va., speed. $30 plus costs;
Randy W. Bickers. Marietta, seat
be~t, ~25 plus costs; Jeffrey A.
Rettmtre, Pomeroy, seat belt, S.25
. plus costs; Jeffrey E. Basban, Mtddleport, left of c~nter, $20 l,llus
costs; Max E. Htll Jr., Racme ,
sp~ed. $30 plus costs ; Wa!ter A.
Eilts •. Rutland, seat belt, $25 pl~s
costs, Joseph A. Dress Jr., Logan:
W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus costs,
Maunce A. To.ler, Btdwell, speed,
$30 plus costs, Russell J. Bowers
Athens, speed, ~30 pl~s costs;
Jeffrey A. King, Vtenna, W.Va.,
seat ~It, $25 )llus costs; D_ewayne
R: Ftsher, Mtddlepor~, failure to
yteld, $20 p~us costs, Steven. R.
Nevtlle, Racme, speed, $30 plus
costs ; Robert Wayne Blanton,
Shelby, N.C.. seat belt, $25 plus
costs; speed, $30 plus costs; Davtd
B. Johnson. Pomeroy, seat. belt,
$25 plus costs; Brett W. Ktdder,
Toledo, speed.. $30 plu~ costs; G.
Tbomas Fredenck, He~eua, N.Y.,
speed, $30 plus costs •. Tbu~an
Montgomery, Crown Ctty, fatlure

.'

to yieid, $20 plus costs;
suspension, one year probation, jail costs;
Connie G. Collins, Pomeroy, and $250 of fine suspenil~ upon
Jennifer M. Krawsczyn,
speed, $30 plus costs; Gary W. completion of residentiallre!l.tment Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
Hall, Charleston, W.Va., speed, program; cracked windshield, costs Jobn A., Adams, Ewington, speed, •
$30 plus ~osts; Paul R. Stephens, only; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
$.30 plus costs; Laura M. ·navis, ·•
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; • Scott D. Litchfield, Pomeroy, Middleport, s~. $30.plus costs; :
Lord A. Laudermilt, Mason. DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail seat belt, $25 plus costs; Unda C. . •
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; suspended to tbree days 180 day Eblin, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus :
Wayne L. Adams, Rutland, disor- OL suspension, one year Probation, costs; Ricbard E. Pinkerton, Asb- :
derly conduct•. restitution, costs; .
jail and $250 of fine suspend.ed land, Ky., seat belt, $25 plus costs;
. Paul D. M!lcbell. Racme, dnv- upon completion of residenllal Cheryl M. Nogfe, Kettenng, speed,
mg under the influence, .$500 P.lus ueatment program; seat belt, $25 $30 plus costs; WiDiam E. Dennis,
costs, $500 to county Jatl bousmg plus costs; James G. Hysell, Mid· · Georgetown, speed, $30 plus costs;
fund, six months jail suspended to dleport no OL $100 plus costs
Gene A. Swenson ·Miamisburg,
30 days, one year operator's license jail imd $50 of iiJe fine suspended speed. $30plus cos~;
.
su.s~ens10n, one y~ar probaliO~ ; upon presentation of valid OL;
Randall L. Friedman, Vmton, no
~vmg. under financial responstbtl- Elmer F. Harman. Rutland, expired
Ohio bunting license, $3~ plus
~~~ acuon suspensiOn, stx mo.nths OL, $100 plus costs, tbree days jail costs; no special deer pemut, ~
J3ll sus.r:nded to 30 days, forfetture suspended, one year probation; plus costs; Jason Hundey, ~she~. •
of vehtcle, one year probauon and assured clear distance, $30 plus uansporting loaded rtrelum m veht· ·
costs; Howard S. Kiser, Racine, costs;
cle, $60 plus costs; Harold R Dye, . ·
DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
Sbane s. Circle, Racine, speed, Virgie, Ky., bunting at illegal time, :
suspended to three days, 180-day $30 plus costs; seat belt, costs only; $40 plus costs; Curtis .F. Riffle,
OL suspenston ~done year proba- Tanya s. Burt, Pomeroy, no child Pomeroy, taking more than two
uon, scbool opuon; seat belt, $25 resuaint, $10 plus costs; no child deer per license year, $100 plus
plus costs;
restraint, $25 plus . costs; Peggy costs; Kelly Parsons, Racine,
William Kauff, Pomeroy, DUI, Stobart, Albany, disorderly con- improper transportation of a
$500 plus costs, $500 to county J3ll duct, $100 suspended, costs, firearm in a motor vebicle, $50
fund, six months jail suspende~ to resuaining order issued; Steven W. plus costs.
30 days, one year OL suspenston, Basinger, Lima, speed, $30 plus . Forfeiting bonds·were: Tommy
one year probation, 180-day vehi- costs; Judy J. Carte, Cbesbire, fail·. Adkins Portland, bunting d'eerdurcle immobilization; Charles.R. ure to conttol, $20 plus costs; Jerry ing oth~ than legal bunting hours.
Whittington, Long Bottom, DUI, L. Coleman, Rutland, speed, $30 $40 plus costs; Iobn Aubrey, Well$500 plus costs, 10 days Jatl sus- plus costs; Wilda W. Scarberry, ston, speed, $90; Daniel Butler,
pended to three days, 180-day OL Racine, failure to control, $20 plus Hurricane, W.Va., speed, $90.

. .. . . .
·•

M

The following citizens were
Koker Syracuse· Michael Lee
selected as potential petit jurors for Conley, Portland; Webster Clay
the January 1995 term Qf the Meigs Reed, Reedsville; Vienna Marie
County Court:
Rose Racine· Tracy Lynn Brancb,
L1lslie Lanee Qualls; Middle- Reedsville;' Brenda Sue King,
port; PaUicia Anne Weaver, 'MidReedsville"
·
dleport; Brent 1. Finlaw, Pomeroy;
Patricia' Lou Wilson, Reedsville;
TamelaMae Haney, Rutland; Dixie Larry Jo·e McMurray, Rutland;
Kay Wolfe, Racine; E. Loraine Samuel E. Robinson, Rutland;
Veney, Pomeroy; Jam~s .R. Cun- Ricbard J. poulin, Middleport; Carl
nmgbam, Racme; Dme Kate Casto, Pomeroy; Edie G. Roush,
Roush, Racine; Kaaron K. Pickens, Langsville; Bill Brothers, Rutland;
Racine; Roger Cbristopbe Alkire, Marvin R Tolliver Reedsville·
Pomeroy; Jobn William Lowen, Thomas J. :Bartley, vinton; Russeli
Pomer?y; Josepb R. Cremeans. M. Williams,' Reedsville; Roger
Reedsville; Cbarles P. Knopp, Mtd· Allen Ritcbie Reedsville· Russell
dleport; Lori Ann Mondry, L . Carson, Middleport; Barry R.
Reeds~tlle; Carl Lee Barrmger,
Staats, Racine; Kenda K. Williams.
Reedsville;
.
Rutland; Mary E. Russell ,
.Cbalmer B. Oatley. Portla~d; Pomeroy;
Clifford J. Kenn~y. Pomeroy; Ltsa
Audrey B. Haley, Ru,tland; VirAnn Durst, ~tddlepon; Nancy ginia N. Burke, Pomeroy; James
Imogene Blatr, Langsvtlle; Clyda w. Carnahan, Racine; Earl R.
Allensworth, Middleport; Dayton Hunt, Long Bottom; Stephanie Ann
H. Spencer, Long Bottom; George Walker, Albany; Loren Edward
Allen Ebersbacb, Mt~dleport; Benedum, Reedsville; Melvin H.
Frances P. Moore, Racme; Jody Milliron, Long Bottom; Pbyllis
Lynn Custer, Long Bottom; Cyn- Juanita Reed Reedsville· Norma
thiaJean Stanley, Middleport; Louise Jeweil, Pomeroy; Rex F.
Lesste M. Os~me, PoiJ!eroy; Jobn Cumings, Syracuse; Elnora P.
Bryon Harr~son, Mtddleport; Ingels, Middleport; Lorena E.
Emma L. Davts, .Pomeroy; George Rogers, Pomeroy; Robert Lee
J. Netgle~, Racme; Angela Sue Snowden, Rutland; Paul Dean
SeUers, "':'ftddleport;
. Eichinger, Pomeroy; Norman M.
. Denms Lee Roush, Portland, · Presley, Pomeroy;
Rtcbard Lee. Stewart! ~ul~le~ort;
Lucille Braley, Pomeroy; TimeMary Ann Kiser, Ra~ne, Ricbte E. thy Eugene Mullins, Dexter; EYan
Blumenauer, Rutland, Grace Mar· Langston Dickinson, Albany; Gina
guente Stout, Long Bottom; Gre- Marie Birchfield Rutland· Cecil C
gory Engen~ Weddle, Portland: Heillium, Po~y; DavldW. Prof:
Edward Willtam Wells, s.yracuse, fittJr., Racine; Brenda Diane
Ha~y Leffle, ~omero~ • Nancy Leslie, Syracuse; Ruth L. Bennett.
Elame Gard, Mtddleport, Barbara Middleport; Robert Lee Frank,
Albany;· Sandra Leigb Banks,
Pomeroy; Edna R. Wilson, Middleport; Melissa Maynard, Pomeroy;
Darrell E. Norris, Racine; Rel)ecca
The followlnaa.:tions to end K. English, Middlepon; Eunice D.
·
marriage were ibCDided recmUy in · Wilson, Racine;
'
Jerry
E.
Carpenter,
Pomeroy;
the office of Mclaa County Clerk Elizabeth L. Shiflet, Rutland;
Lisa
of Courts Larry Spencer:
Ann
Sellers,
Long
Bottom;
Gladys
D.issolutlon ult:ed - Mary J.
Hawk and wnu.a Hawk. both or
Langsville, Dec. 9.
Divorces asked - Tina M.
Slater, MiddlcPon. from Robin E.
Slater, Langsville, Dec. 7; Linda L.
MIU:bell from MerUn M. Mitchell,
both of Rutland, Dec. 2. ·
Dissolutioo granled- Cathy I.
Tborla and Wllllain H. 'l'borla,
Dec.l2.

7122184

---··

PubliC Notice

Clip

•

Application
HAIR

AGE

Breed
If Known

'I

.I

,.
HoHo
Home
Thll y• buy a gill that 11
cullom made Jor anyoM on
your 1111. With horne deHvety,
·. a~ llldlallor
.
thole wilh a built-In c11·· 'lly.
Give a gilt that c - .,...
IIMin once a Y'- •r.
Stnd in lhelolowlng coupon,
end get 20% oil the
aiiiecriptlon price. :
Special Holiday offer ends
December 31, 1994.

·

,.

Qlft hi: ,

1

~----~------------~~---

AOORESS-:-----------~----

ADDRESS

STATE--ZIP

CITY _______ STATE.--Z1P-----

~E--~------------

~E------------

12 Montha $66.56_

START DELIVERY DATE-----

/.'

IU'I
· IPfldUCI
-IUIJC£
d • ..,
For

·

. ,. . . .

Ult. Ap',lhiiiCU
.
for S.le
Clll
. ._ . •
61 .-992 5515

tcrtt..,

Pubic Notice ·
PUBUCNOTICE
A public hearing will bt
htld on Dtcember 30, 1194,
11 10:00 1.111\, In the
truourer'a office 11 EoatHigh School. Purpoot of the
hearing Ia to review the
1995-86 budget for the
achoot dlalrlct. The budget

The .~aily Sentinel
111 COURT ST~ PoMEROY, OliO' 45781

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS
711 South Third
Middleport
Hours: 10:00 A.M.
to 4:'00 P.M. Dally

~-=.~.~.-=.,.~~~~~~~CI::'I

-

IIIIICI

ofect- Aulhaflzed Peril

-·•
:-'.:0o42Yeora
1
~ 111 Reliable Service

.!

..,.•Waahers- Dryers .. Rangel
&lt;Relrigorotoro ofr_,t
oOithwlallert
oii.W. - ·
&lt;Microwo-oOiapoaala
•Thankt 111
~•
sun(m1~=or
992·5335 1211wn
Public Notice
will be tvollablt lor
lnopectlon. All lntereoted
pertloo ore Invited to attend.
EtoiH Booton, Trtaourer
' Eoatem Locol School
Dl11rlct
38900SR7
RHdavllle, Ohio en2
(12)21;TC

·~ • Cualom

1

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
WhHe Pine 4' &amp; Up wi1h
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call742-2143 or

-·

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

CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut it for you)
Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at comer of US Rl. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

'•
,.

llade

• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows

J Fre,e Estimate~
• $200 Installed
Cal: For Details

11121/!fn

._ -

HAULING

•vJSIT O~R SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Potn!:~y, Ohio -

Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

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

"Look for. the Red iilil White Awnin'
992··4119 AI tro- Owlw l-800..291-56

SAYRE TRUCKING

POMEROY, OHIO
Sep11c tanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental !Ilea.
Job attn • Camp Sites •.family Reunions 6 Partin

;

~

Joei.S.yre

614-742·2138

MODERN SllftlftOI

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULI

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A ·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

One mile out
143 trom Rt. 1
Tuea. ·Wed. • Fri. • Sat.

Ucenoed &amp; Bonded -

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-RoOm Addition•
&lt;:Maw Ganlgtl
-Electrical&amp; Plumbing
eRoofl!lg
Bred for
olnterlor &amp;Exterior
Quality and
· Painting al10 concrete
Temperament
work
Specializing In Part-colora
(FREE ESTIMATES)
lor ohow and companions.
V.«;i. YOUNG Ul
Stud 11rvice &amp; puppies,
8i2-6215
young arulta lor oale.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
48750 Mile Hilt Rd.
Wt!W2tln
Roclne,Oh

-AMBERWOOD

Cocker~~~!~
. ··

20 years experience

992-3954
E,mPrgen cy Ph one 985·3418

Hi

• Crllftaman Tools
•Toys
•Gune
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade
992•2060 1M/1 mo.

11 /21194

Public Notice

O&amp;E

ELE~TRI~

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-5251
992·7162
John
Doug
Better

SIDING

Roofin 'r

&amp;

II(,., .,
~

Licen sed
&amp; Bonde d

SHINGLES

MARCUM'S ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

F&amp;A Tree Service

Solrd Vrnyl Re placement Windows

:: PE CfALfZfNG IN BUIL T UP AND RUBBER ROOFING
Tree Trimming and
Removal- Yard Care
VINTON . OHIO 45686
PUBUCNOTICE
Free
Estimates
Southern Ohio Coal
PHONE
MIKE MARCUM
Compony, P. 0 .. Box 490,
614-992-4447
Free Estima tes ( 6141 245 .04 37
Athena, Ohio 45701 hoo .__ _ _ _ _ __.
1-8 00·377-4477
aubmllted 1 renewal
application lor cool mine _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,
Permit D-0463 to the Ohio
CHRI STMAS
Department of Natural
Ruourcea, Dlvlalon of
TREES &amp;
• · New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Rtclemallon. The permit
orera ere located In VInton
WREAT HS
Garages • Replacement Windows
County,
W llkeavllle
R d N 23
Townthlp, Soctlono 3, 15, 21
ea Y OV.
Room Additions • Roofing
end 12, Township 8N, Rongo
$10 &amp; Up
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .'•
16W and 17W, Fraction• 24, Open 10 am • 9pm
30 and 36, Townohlp IN,
FREE ESTIMATES
Rongo t6W; Meiga County, lola Snowden's lot
Salem Township, Section•
5 1 124
614·992:7643
25, 26, 30 and 32, Township
• •
7N and aN, Range 15W; on
Rutland, Ohio
(Nc:i Sunday Calls)
the property of Southern
2 3051
74
614
Ohio Coat Comp•ny; with
•
'
'
underground worklnga In~=======­
VInton Vounty, Wllkeavllle lP
Townahlp, Sactlono 1, 2, 2E,
LINDA'S
3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 15 ond 16;
ELE~1.,RI~
Froctlona 24, 30, end 36; PI.INnNG &amp;
Township BN, Range 16W
OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
and taW; Meigs County,
l•terlor &amp;
Salem Townehlp, Section•
E:lltrlor
. IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
13, 19, 25, 26, 30, 31, 32, 33
·
I
and 36: Fractlona 7, 13, 19 · Tlk8 the pain out o
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
on·d 25; Townahlp 8N, pointing. Let .. do It lor
(Lamps Welcome)
Range 15W, Gallla County, you. Very ,....NibiL
Huntington Townehlp,
Free Eatlmetaa
Home Repair Also
Section 1, Township aN,
Before 6 p.m. lelve
Range 15W. Tho permit
meaaage.
992-7162
992·5251
contalno ~26.93 ocreo end
lffer 6 p.m.
Doug
John
to loc:eted on the Mulga and ·
IIIHMII
Wllkt1\llllt 7 1/2 Minute,
614-985-4180U.S.G.S. Ouanronglo Mope,~-;;;;;;~:
approxlmotely 2.5 mllto I
l'ft"tro lUI' I;
weal of Wllkeovllle, Ohio.
Tho applicant hao obtolned Not you. your home 1
a rosd perm" to mlno within
Wil l create a new
100 leo! of the rlght-ol-woy
look
for any room
of Salem Townehlp Road
FRESH cur rREES IVIIUBAY
333, ettactlvt November a,
using your
1987; Wllkeovlllt Townahlp
OR CUr YOUR OWl
co llec tables and
Road 4, effective December
Craft Shop
treasures.
12, 1973; an Stolt Route
124, effective Februory 26,
Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt. 33, turn East
Brrng new warmth
1974, which will romoln In inlo your homes for
Bat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
effect until coal mining ond
Ridge Rd. 1 112 miles to tree farm.
the Holiday s.
recltmstlon operttlono are
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am ti l dati&lt; Nov. 25 thru Dec. 24
completed under tho coal
Wagon rides Fri . Sat. Sun .
mining and rtclamotlon Phone 247-2206
operatlona ere completed
under tho coal mining end ...,.._ _ _ _ _ __,
reclamation operatlono are
011 Step Completo Aute Bdy Repair
comptated under the cool
mining pormll looutd
pureuontto thle permit The
AND REMOVAL
rtnowol application will
ollow Southern Ohio Cool
Ugtrt Hauling, ' Chuck Stotts
614-99'2-6223
Compony to continuo the
mining oporotlona on D· Shrubs Shapped
Free Estimates
0463 lor up to live yeero
poet the oxplrotlon date of
and Removed
Insurance Work Welcome
April 8, 1895.
Mls. Jobs.
The appllcotlon le on tile
Slate Rt. 33 •
.
II the oiiiCOI 01 lht Melgl
Bill Sl•ck
County Recorder,
Darwin, Ohio
-County Court ·
992·2269
·
Stconil
1W21Ohio

BISSELL IUILDEIS, INC.

FOOD BASKETS PREPARED- Baskets of
· food have been prepared for 2541 families by vol·
•nteen at the Meigs County Cooperative Parish.
:Each of the baskets contained a variety offoods,
;tndudilll! a three-pound canned ham, all of the ,
-ingredients for Christmas dinner and more. The ·

famUies, already selected on the basis of poverty
guidelines, family size and fixed incomes, are to
pick up tltelr bfiSkets on Thunday or Friday at
the parlsb. Food for tbe baskets was contributed
by many Ofl!lnlzations, churches and business
groups.

•

~If you

•.&lt;

'·

drink, don't·drive

• Today, the decision to drink and even if you're .not ready to pass out years on your ftrSt DUI conviction.
•Auto accidents involving alco'I!Tive bas serious consequences. on the lloor.
•Beer
is
not
a
weaker
type
of
bol
and drugs frequently result in
Not only are tbere beavy legal
alcohol;
neither
is
a
wine
cooler
or
death
or extremely serious injury,
~nalties if your are arrested for
glass
of
chal!lpagne.
A
12
ounce
not
only
to the drinking driver, but
-driving under tbe influence, but
can
of
beer
or
a
four
ounce
glass
of
to
passengers
in !bat car and people
auto accidents Involving alcohol
wine
bave
tbe
same
amount
of
in
other
vehicles.
You may be sued
)ltd substance abuse are responsialcobol
as
a
one
,ounce
sbot
of
for
causing
property
damage to
-ble for many of the fataliti es and
liquor
(whiskey,
bourbon,
scotch,
another
's
belongings.
You may
~evere injuries on our highways
etc.).
Beer
and
wine
act
on
tbe
find
yourself
disabled
from
your
~y.
body
the
same
as
so-called
"bard
own
injuries;
unable
to
work,
sup: With the on ~et of the boliday
liquor."
port
yourself
or
your
family,
or
do
.);eason and its many parties and
•Although
the
Blood
Alcohol
many
of
the
things
you
enjoyed
in
.festiyities, FACTS reminds you of
Concentration
illegal
limit
is
.10
life
before.
You
may
¥0
to
prison
~ome of important information
and above, you can be convicted of for causing anotber s deatb or
'ltbout alcobol, drugs and driving.
: ·•Aicobol and drugs ~ange your DUI witb a lower concentration if injury. You will live with the guilt
:'feelings, perceptions and behavior. other evidence is present to estab~ for the rest of your life. If you live
:You become a poor judge of you lish impairment. If you are pulled tbrougb the accident yourself.
It's easy to say, "It will never
:ability to drive. You can become over by law enforcement officials ·
and
requested
to
take
a
test
for
sushappen
to me." But it can. It bas
~disuacted from you surroundings
peeled
DUI,
and
you
refuse
to
do
happened
than half a mil:ftnd less able to deal with the risks so tbe Obio Bureau of Motor lion peopletoinmore
the
last
decade who
)nd details Of driving.
V~hicles can suspend your driver' s decided to drive drunk and wer.e
' •Eating before or while you are
license,.even if you are not convict- caught and convicted for it. It's not
~~~~~:~will not keep you from ed laterofDUI.
worth it. If you are going to be
:lJ
intoxicated. Food delays
drinking
alcoholic beverages, make
absorption of alcohol. so you
•Only
time
will
get
you
sober
otber
arrangements
besides getting
· feel the effects as quickly,
once
you
are
intoxicated.
Coffee,
bebind
that
steering
wbeel your
you
not realize you are
fresb
air,
or
cold
showers
will
nol
setf.
Call
a
friend
or
relative lo
:l"•·uu••au;u until it is too late to
remove tbe alcohol from your come pick you up and take you
bloodstream. All you will get is a bome. Or designate a non-drinking
wi(Je-awake drunk.
wbo will be witb you 'to
intoxicated. Your personal
and· the legal limit may·be two
)lifferent tbings . Some people can
Oave impaired coordination after
~lnly one or two drinks. Just
~se you're not "legally druoil'
doesn't mean you are able to drive
~......

_.,.y.

:: •Drinking even small amounts
•teadlly will get you drunk,
, liecause alcobolleaves your syste(ll
more slowly than it enters it.
ng a few drinks tbrougbout
e\oeillng can result in impaired
,liDCtioning or legal intoxi~ation,

•Driving under the influence is
breaking tbe law: Those convicted
of DUI are subject to minimum
penalties under Ohio law. These
may include jailtime, driver's
license suspension, and/or fines .
Some COUilS will order you to complete .a·•Driver
al Intervention
. program, .or · cobol educauon and
as~eument of alcobol or drug
dependency problems. Or you may
be ordered to undergo counseling
or ueatment programs as part of 1
your 5entence. I udges can suspend
. your driver's license for up IQ lhrce

I

,

·

J&amp;DFLEA
MARKET

WEill'S
CHIIRIW
TUU

614-NII-2487

'

~E

Oh: U7$9 '

7131111 TFN

AUO, WE ARE GERIIG READY FOR OUR
GIGAITIC YEAR·EID CLEAR THE LOT SALEI
Iff IIIJAY'S PAPII IOIGIIAr JUISJ

Paid

· NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
M~ga
Auditor

TOLL FREE 1·101-UI·IOTI
DA9WIN, OHIO

CHIISTfW WITH 11111 ·.
fAMIIIfS.

• • ~ • ·Holld&amp;)! Glf!.$~~scrlptlon ~Ol!~o_
n ·_.· _· _· •

1: P.1o..aox ·ss1

' ... u.ssu OR

Ill 01111 fOI
fMPIOYfES 10 SHAlf

Fees

arv

IU·ht(Ge

SATURDAY,
DEC. 24 ·

D
DO

lubKrlptlon ordlnd by:

PARTS
Specializing In Cuotom
Frame Repair
NEW l .usWP.UTHOR
ALL IIAK~~ IO,D£116 .

AND

1e::.:.1

Mall

WHALEY'S AUTO

l i t - TFN

'::::======~
·r

IOWOPfl

-·

FRIDAY, DEC. 23

I

~-···································

PUBUC RELEASE
The VIllage of Pomeroy
public woter euppty htt
completed the monitoring
cyclo for volatile orgontc
chemlcolt (VOC'a) u
iequlm by Cheptor 3745-81
of the Ohio Admlntetretlvt
Code (OAC).
Upon completion of ttch
VOC monitoring cycle, 11tle
rtt1UI111ono oleo require the
owner or operator of 1
public woter aupply to
notify Itt contumera o1 tht
evollobltlty of the VOC
analytical rooulta for the
period teattd. Peraona
wonting to rovlew tho VOC
retulta ahould col)liiCI:
John A. Andtroon,
Syltem Operetor
Pomeroy Municipal Building
320 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 802·3121
(12) 21; 1TC

PUBUC NOTICE
Notice Ia hereby given
thot on Soturdoy, December
24th, 11941110:00 o.m., 1
public tilt will bt held at
211 Welt Moln Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Formere Bank parking tot,
to otlllor caah the following
colloterat:
1.113 0 LDs CUTLAS S
S U·P R E M
E
S N1
tG3WH14T2PD373301
The Farmera Bonk and
Saving a
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, roaervttlht
rtghlto bid otthlt oote, and
to withdraw the obove
collaterot prior to aalt.
Further, The Formtra Bonk
and Savlnga Company
rtatrvtt the right to reject
any or all bldt aubmltttd.
Further, · the · above
collatorot will bt told In tho
condition It It In with no
expruted or tmplltd
wanonlltt given. •
For moro tnlormotton
contoct Jeff Gilkey, 11 892·
2136.
(12)21,22,23; 3TC

..

Howard ~- Wrltesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES
9:49-2168

Public Notice

CLOSED

are

.

-complete
Remodeling;
Stoll &amp; Comp11n1
FREE ESTIMATES
915-4471

For As Uttie As
$6 :00 Per Inch Per Day

.ROUDAY HOURs ··

'

IE:;'... I

For the best In sateUite
sales and sen-lee contad
Bryanof
·
Best Reception.
-We have even better
and quiCker service.
·Over 10 yrs
experience
· Service on all system
types.
· Best prices all around
the area.
992-2903 or 992-6320

oGar•gu

M. Blessing, Pomeroy; Cindy K. Pomeroy; Forrest Wbtte, Albany;
Seymour, Langsville; Wanda Jeanne E. Sla~ter, Middleport;
Madaline Blackburn, Long Bouom; Tamara Jean ~tse, Lon$ Bottom;
Eleanor Leonard, Pomeroy; Clark Clara Anna Cnswell, Mtddleport;
D. Baker, Middleport; Billy Joe Mt~dleport; Iam7s L. Hu.pp,
Hatfield, Rutland; ()pal E. Diddle, Racine; Karla J. S~th, Reedsville;
Racine; Sheri LYnn Durst, Racine; Iud~ Mae ~cDamel, Pomero~ ;
Barbara Faye Masters; ReedsviUe; GIIJO!I ~· ~tcltael, Syracu!ie; !~e
Ralpb Herman Ballard, Long Bot- S. Gtlbspte, Pomeroy; BenJamiD
lOIJ!; Ronald E. Di.llon, ~up~rs Jay Fackler, R~tland; Marlene ~·
Plains; Tamara C. Hill, Racme;
De!J!ko. Dexter, Harry Allen Shain,
Genevieve 0. Demoskey, Mid- Racine; Bet~J!my S~ne Arbaugh,
dleport; Samuel E. · Scott, · Tuppers Plams; Wtlham L. Ault,
Langsville; Donna Ruth Oblinger, Middleport; Fred L. Burney,
Pomeroy; George Noab Capehart, Pomeroy; Laura E. Bonecutter,
Pomerov.

Dl•vorces an· d
di.SSOIUtiOnS

"
Dog licenses
required by law. Section 955.01 of the Ohio Revised Code states
: that "Every person who owns, keepa or harbors a dog more than 3 months of age,
:': shall purchase a license for that dog before the 20th day of January of each year."
: New licenses may be purchased at the auditor's Office, Meigs County Courthouse or
· by mall with this application.
The cost of each Dog License will be $4.00 and Kennel Licenses will be $20.00
per kennel. The penalty, If late, will be an additional $4.00 per dog and $20.00 per
kennel. The application below may be completed and mailed along with a check or
. money order to the office of the Melgi County Auditor, P&gt;O. Box 551, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

lEst !IECEPIIOII

ROBERT BISSEll .

•New Homes

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

•lldft .......mailll

.

CONSTRUCTION

Potential petit
jurors .chosen_for court te~m
c.

The Rutland American Legion bas made a series of donadons totaling $3,850. FJI Dennison Post 467 donated $300 to the
vUiat!le's emer11ency medkal services, $480 to the vlllqe for
Christmas bonuses for employees, and a total of $3,150 to the
Rudand Volunteer Fire Department, said Mark Tlllls of the
Rudand posL The ftre department's gifts consisted of $2,8SG for
supplies for a new buDding and $300·for a• Chris~ candy .
giveaway. '1t's for the community. Any time we make money
we keep It In the community," TIUis said. Rudand Vllqe Coon·
cU President Duane Weber uld, "We're Yery grateful for this
and other donations they've made.'' This year, the Rudand Post
' helped pay to demolish the old high Khoo~ repair the d&gt;ic cen·
ter roof and start up the haunted house. TOlls presented checks
to: top photo, the EMS's Marcia Eliott; middle photo, the vU·
lage's Weber; and bottom photo, the ftre department's Ray
WIUford. (Sentinel photos by George Abate)

,

l

,,•

·I

ear keys before

you start
.
. court Houoe, Main
so you wntl't be tempted to driye . McArthur, Ohio 45651, end
later wben your judgment may be the GoUla County Recorder,
cluttered by the alcobol. The choice Galli• County Court Houae,
wbether or not to drink .and drive Locuet Streit, Gelllpolla,
·
beth 10 I'
Ohio 45631 lor public
may be the CbOICe W
er
ave viewing. Written commento
or die. Don't make that cboice irre- or requ 11tstor on tnlormot
sponsibly. You bave too mucb to contoronc• may bt 11nt to
hve for tomorrow to drink and the Dlvtelon ot Rtclomotlon,
drive today.
1155 Fountain Squoro
For more information on this or Court, Building H-3,
·
Cotumbue, Ohio · 43224
any alcobol/drug prevenuon or within thirty doya ot the'leot
treatment program, please feel free dolt ot publlcetlon of thlt
to FACTS at 446-7866 or stop by noltce.
1
the office at1770 J~kson Pike.
. (12) 21, 28; (t) 4, 11; 4TC

CO.

O&amp;E

•

II I

'"

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BRADFORD'S

' "'

TREE TRIMMING

PRECISION. AUTOMO'TIVE

DEER CUT -&amp;
WRAPPED

Kenny's Auto Rental

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

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

Maplewood Lake

St. Rt 124

c•

Racine, OH

949-2734

We lla11e Cars aarl faasl
Kenny'• Auto Center

264.Upper River Rd.
Gal~is.

OH

~1

. 1-800-486-1580
Bus. (614) 446-9971

�&lt;

1994

'

Ohio

NEA Crpssword

BRIDGE

Puz~le

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER .
BEA TfiE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Annou 11 ce me 11 t s

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt
12-21·94

0

0

3 Announcements
REDUCE: bum oil I l l - rou

FNth Phermacr, •*'•II =1t.

4

0
0

0

..._; 'tollo OPAl. - -

•Q 7 6
•Q 3
• 9 8 2
.. 9 8 6 4 3

0

EAST

• 0

Giveaway

10 8
10 9 8 6 4

0

.K 9 5 3 2
•J 7
t K Q 7 4
•K 2

t I0 6 3

Q 10 7
SOUTH

•A J 4
•A K 52
tA J 5
.. A J S

Frwo Ida- s a I _ ... old,
114-1116-4311.
Frwo Pul&gt;llleoill DllmllloM ond

I L.ab/ChO.. I lxiiiWII-10112.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
South
West North East
,.,
Pass I t
••
2 NT
Pass 3 NT
All pass
Opening lead: •10

Kilton, To A Good Homo, - ,

1,..._.2112,

STOP
WASTIN'
MY BAIT
II

Malo doa, Colllo/Coobr ........
mil, Oli"- dog, good - ,
114-112-2481.
Yard Bale • - mutl ...,. tU
colloll8r4pm . ~

Lost &amp; Found ·

6

Found B'-.k Leolt.r CGII ,.Ellzobeth Churoh Iunder Ntghl.

-n

PIHM Cllll 114 441 4121

Found· SA 124 llooclne .....,lly,
11n111
foon8lo Doo-ncl,
around 4
114-1411-2121.

304-1711-11111.

Bun Yatley _ Nurwlly . 8choot.
Chlldctra 111-F ••
Aaw
2-K, Young School Aaa Duii!'D
Bum-. 3' Davo par WHIIIII,.

...,,SOpnt

Loet: Die. 4, VInton 81U,

lmuml~4t1-31117.

Siberian HuokJ ond A-llar.
both lrtandly, but .............
siNid br - · tu10 rWanl. It

=l=~l14

=·

;nt~o;:,: \'•t' ~

,._old,._.._,

By Phillip
r.1 CICh dlld tSe

F..--Homt111ad!Oom, 120 Fouoth A - Npola, IZlllllo. W- Paid,
1141tl tt11U.7RII.
For Nnl 2 •• dNMnl .trdw In
Aaolr'l!l .... 11t - 1011.

l TJ.IOU6f.IT IT MIGf.jT 9S MICE

I

~-

Loet: In Vlclnhy 01 Dry ~
,Ponlll • Gallla. 2 Mola Whlta •
Lamon Spotted Foxhounde, 114-

-..!1 - ·-blo,
aluded.
10 Alhona, . allrtlng

Ft nanctal

211-:lOIIQ.

A

''SIGNORA'? TJ.IEOR'r' Tf.IAT f.jE
MARRIED A NICE

TO DROP A LITTLE NOTE TO
~SANTA ClAUS'S WIFE ..

ITALIAN 61RL ..

1riiJune Pholog..,.,., Avlilablo
for Waddlnaa a Ol..r E.....a
In ... ,- . , .
Call Kevin 114 m ISII Alter I -water, .............
litp.m.

311--

~AVE

.- . .

..

IIZ.:ltn

114-

Nlca 2 or 3 ....,_ -

Business
OpportunHy
I NOTICE!

loll: amoll ........ dog, 151be.
bi..tl ' ..._ W/troy, llyn.
old, PI- ..lp hai gal llame.
Camp Conlay aree. 30Ull-

OHIO V.LLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommendl that YOII do bualwlh peaplo you k.-1 ond
NOl' to Mild -through Ilia
meh until YOII heve ln-lgatad
the oflarlng.
·

57113.

Mloolna: lwlL old Akita puppy.
and hk. old blonde Lab-·
Rllllo lid., Chlld'a pol.
4101.

7

~

......,.

~-1:00pm

......,

4

Friday,
IO:GOa.m.

.......

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

-.,....,

cantor

•..,

,._,.

plus lots morel Ed ~'toiler no.

9

·

Wanted to Buy

!:."
,.::... ~"i'd
111.130.

ow-.

._...,.._,_
.,. -=-'

·--Alta,

....

-Ito.

The Gallla ~ Yetarane lar-

vloe Commlwloil WIU lo 11tJ&gt;.

Help Wanted

AVON f AI Areee I Sllldey

lpearw,104-175-M21.

~

BO.RNWSER

...
~()fl) IJAAT '&lt;OO'R£
60JI.IC. 10 61V£
'£E.IUfE~i1t:R
AA 0\~~\f.V¢?

-:1

P~'&lt;fl.£~1~ 7

YOUC£T~

E......,.

39Bandlncter

Harrle
41 Come Into
view
43 Sleeplng-+---+-i-~
sick,..• fly
45 Eared-1
47 - - pial

48 Smooth .

49 Incline

50 Name lor
Athena

52Actrna

Sue53 Architect
-Saarinen
54 Negative
votes
57 Lubricate

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebnt~ C1prrer cryptograms are created trorn quotahons b~ lamous people, past and vrasent
Eath lener '"me c1ptler stands tor another Today's clue J equals L

' 0 Y

G B

OEB

OEBVOBW

T 0 V•K C L K S

Y K

GYPKOVLK

VKC

OYZ

y M

LT

JLDB

0 E B

TEYPOLKS

F Y. P W

NYKMBTTLYK .' WVPJ
HPJ LV .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Pnson taught me in no uncertain terms to be
responsible lor my own actions." - Tim Allen.

C 1994 by NEA, Inc.

21

'=~~:~' S@lta\llA-"t.tfs·

WDII

lAM I
- - - - - - l~lto4 ~y CLAY I . 'OUAN - - - - - Rearrange letters of
0 four
JCrambled words

the

be-

low ro form four words

I :1

NEBUND

l

II I I I

I

DROWL

3

l 11I I
2

.,.

5

'If

\-6_..;1;-_;~~7-rl-lr--,lr---i

are available on an equal
opportunity boola.

.

_

.

.

.

.

0

.

Complete the chuckle quo ted
by hlhng '" the m•sstng words

.._.....__..___..._.__.____. you develop from step No 3 below.

s

F-3~11ath,

TEA 8 P.ll.

,....,_ Apert-

... I&lt;ND THEN. '¥1rlEN HE
ST,ro.RTED I'OVING HIS
POIII'TY .THtiiGS OVEII.
HER{:. , I TOOl&lt;. t\'(
HOP. 51 E AND....

Bedroom . Houw a 2 Car ClAn, No Pota, Ral'loMIOI l
Gal8ga, F01 Sale In Vllllaa 01 Dapoalt Raqund. _ . . .....
Rio Brande, 114-3'11-2120' AF·

.:'lit PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS I
~ IN THE SE SQUARES

3-.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

=-~...:=

-·-·-port... ,,_

3Pump,
-Gu
-FVnwce,
2 lllho.
llwt
1 Acra,
M;Oila.114 411 tftl Alter? P.ll.
0.18118:. Addleon ""'' 112,1100,
114-317·7211.
.
Ckaeleuallvlng.1~2bed­
3 br., 1 bal!t, lUI ...__ fill
.....
tuver.lila
heel. In lllaa'-'1, coli 114-ft2. ~l!':!f" In
1280. .
iCI'it""' . Cal · - 1111.
Houw For Bale By owner:
Locatad At II Hlldl _D!f_va, ~ .,... Apart- For
FAirview luldvlllon. . lalllnd Raril In Downt- Galllpcttle,
Spring Vella¥
. - . For o\JIIIIIoatlonli Call
venloM. Qu1at
• 114-441·1111 Or Mlilllll.
Cal 114-446-- Daft: Or IMttii412E. . . . . ,:Wn• 1
....... 1 •• · - Apart-,
Racine 1 1t2 .,.,. lumlolwd 01 I'Mt410JIO
unturiilohad, I niOOM ·•nd bath lllodam 2 IR apert-. 114downalalre, aiUmllll!ftl alclng. 4

~

STRIKE. ASLOW IN THE. WAR ON
· HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-f. C~ASSfffD~.

r"if:!.=.,c;«:;

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale ·

··

'

ladv ·to .worl! In prlvlla

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'*

AQUARIUS (Jen. 20•Feb. HI) The
shared objectives ol you and your mate
can only ba reached through harmony of
purpose. If either of you goes off on a
tangent, no progress will be made.
PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Mirch 20) A b'ad atti·
tude toward distaslelul chores will make
th§m even more unpleasant. If you think
something' is no fun looay. you'll prove it
to yourself.
ARIES (Mitrch 21·,1Drll

ties. Do not take good things for granted.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Persons in your
charge can be led today, but not driven.
Belore trying to boss others around, consider their leelings. Treat them as you'd
like to be treated
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do not waste
time today worrying about things that
may Mvar happen, If you .lhink there are
wolves behind
tree,
won't have
lhe courage lo
toresl.

;
her to bail you out of complications you judgment warns you against something
•
Thursday. Dec: 22. 1.994
create-loday. Don't make things.unneces- today. do not cave in to P!er pressure.
Yow ability 10 eam will steadily improve sarily hard on yourself.
.
Be your own person and do that which
in· the year ahead. If a surplus accrues, TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) Do 'not pro- you lhink is best.
think &amp;avings _not spending.
voke a lam11y dispute today. Once stan- SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22)
CA,PRICORN (O.C. 22-Jan. 18) Be cal!" ed, il could prov&amp; difficull to subdue the Occasionally. when you're tired or bored.
ti0ll8 around persons you ~·t know well shOuters.
.
: you cannot decide on a Course of actio~.
tjay
especially
in
your
commerctal
GEMINI
(Miy
21
•Juna
20)
Strtve
to
, Thts could be one ollhose days. Don t
1
a~airs: Select the p8opte you trust care· encourage others today instead ol crlti· '1 walfte.
..
.
fully. Trying to patch up a broken . cizing them. especially il. they are doing ~ SAGITTARIUS .(Nov. 23·Dec. 21) It IS
· romance? The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker !J heir best to help you. Causttc comments higl&gt; t11ne to forg1ve someone who offend·
can help you to understand whal to do to ' could cost you lbeir support
.
ed you I~ the past Nothtng wtU be gs111ed
make the relationship work. Me II $2 to CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you do not by holding a grudge.
.
Matchmaker, P.O. Box 4465. New York, exercise proper se~-dlseipline today, you
et994NEWSPAPERENTERPRISEASSN.
f-1.¥ 10163.
will ~aste yout resources and opportunt·.

lam ......JC!U.fMm.htlflAW - I l l . . . . . . _ =
Rent" Is
- · M 1ntniO!I Propam ap- Yard Warlt . . . _ .
'
lor.....,
n I It ..~t11-d =='tCiuttanJ
_~l,ftllt!~lol
. .....
,..,.....,
Ai hww CountY
. . llllng
~, _.._, . - - - - : - - - - - -

41 Hoti111 for Rent

Plllkm:
- ..,_
.. !leMIIII'GIIIIIIIII_.Ldan,
~

--~..... 14.211 . . be :::1'~~18 ... Mlljtllt

In..,
.. ..., ..,....., 114 -

.,.-+--+---i
-+--+---i

l

advertised In thl&amp; newspaper

Eollfllol-~ Opp:r-

,._ ,., !lw IPID*''"

content•

l

Our readers are hereby

31 Homes for Sale

s-.,

r--D-~-L-,E-EI-'p=-,-

lnforme!l that all awetllnga

Notw 1MillO.
inot-1 -!ng,
.,_
lllo:ka,
weer
hou:aowr-.· ~ arid I
,REE lot I'IIIL Only
1110 dottm lnd liM
mo.
Call-

- -~·. . ..,..
. ,..
' ...........
. . t: ..fiNIIIItiiO.....,...., .......,._.In
llldiJplt,..,

•

eoY:t! ~~T

9 Nooee
· 10 Two-toed
5
sloth
11 Shea Stadium
6
team
19 Has lunch
7
21 Specks
23 Helen ol 8
25 Free theater
ticket (ol.)
~"11'1"'-nrm-., 26 Fencer'a
sword
rr-+--+-1---1 27 - and void
28 Ride the
waves
30 lrrltete
31
32 Chops
35 Harvnt
JBPod
dog
Baaeballer
Gehrig
Toward and
within
Alleviated
(peln)
Actor AI -

It is true that the best things
_ .
_ _ _ .:: in life are free But the way our
. . . - - - - - - - - - , government works they want
DIM pI l
ltofixthat '-····-·.'

-home, ,14-IIZ-1023.

...

II££PWLK
Of TilE:

TI\E.. ~ WilD f\~
. EVE.R.'&lt;Tfllt-1&amp;~

u., ..
=:~=-~
EcJuet

Wantad-

I L:W...,. r:."=1 :""'1

AAYT~It-1&lt;&gt; f1f
~.HE

Oltlo
·Candldlla
- Code.Shell
The 1o
auo.A
Vat-n Or1• ·" A Ouellfltd
'lllllnn II - AVIIIblo, The
. _ _ llunlvlng !lpcua,
Child llr Pa- or A VOtaran.
Aallllcatlone And A Ccntplata
JO&amp; llaacrlptlon
CJb.
~ The Clhlo Job
An
tliiilty

,"

...
!&gt;.~TO

~n..U~tor.

AltJiolnt-L
kl" WI(h
Sactlon tiiiCit.07
01The

11

2

:'.'::.\.r Y"'t!"":
rJr:.
Primary Dutr Will =::...~.=c:r.."r~~ ··~lo The Selo Tranep:rtatiOn 01
'11111-ne To lladloel And Ol..r

Em plo yment Semces

~
®
~
0

knowtlngly aocopt
advertisements for real estate
v.t1lch Is in lllolatk&gt;n ol the law.

-h -

And
- - . . Fiver Traina And lltJ&gt;.
- - · rio. Fled, 112-5201,

STOP''/•

.,

This newspaper will not

Port time wnrlce ataUon anendent.
Send · neuma
of
quellflcetloM and axoartenco
to: The llallf Saoltlnll, P.o. Box
m-o.~- Ohio 457111.

P I - Cari Canter .11 Acctpllng Aaallcatlone · For
Nu- Aida 1ritlnlng Program
ThN Dacambar 22, 1114. The
Ctaoo WIU Run A"""""matoly
Two In Jenuory. Ccntoci
Dooorltadat-ro,•llt- The Awlatant IMrwctor 01 H.,.
............... lomtW. old t'- 1ng AIIM-141-7112 EOE.
- - old - , antique POSITION AVAILABLE; lull-time
lumll-. R - ""'lqun. RN for mldnlaht shift lor t1 bed
Ruee - .
114-112· aldllod n...rna tacllnr. EOE.
2125. Wa buy ...- .
c.Maven al fl'olnt Plousnt At
~a D'a Auto Porta ond Salvogo,
1 Box 121, Polnl - - . WV
, 21110 304-171-S005 a Qlon..,..k
Facllly.
torl'7'S-6M3 01
•
Pollal PoaHiono
12.2Mv. •
Canlant,
W.ntad to ....,. u- ' clorb,
_..., and meinl. )oba.
- . ala, oal Fntd, IM-1112· For axom lnloramtlon a application coli 708-214-11100 ut. 3170,
NOIH.
1110 open evenlnp.
Old clgant1o llghtorw, milk bat·
Sma~
I.Dcal Firm Seeltlna Full
liloo.l..~- pent, ...........
.on Call Cleaning 'Toch. , _ , . , maaazlnn, Time
liar w.. and liar TnJ( fteme; nlolane. llutl . . DtJtjndablo,
Rwp :nalblo, Commltlad, WlllOabr llartln, fiMU.lll41.
1!'11 To lo Trwlned. lionel
W.ntad To luy: ~unk A&amp;ltoo ~~~~~Bo·~
With Or WithoUt llotorw. Call Kt1Y,OH4114S.

u-

GOti'IG TO

11-tlon or dilcnmlnstlon
based on IBce, color, religion,
se• familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
niake any 'SUCh preference,
nmnatton or aiscrtminatlon.•

Carw Or
Trucks, 1117 Or """!!!.
Pontiac, ,...,
Ee..amA- GalilpoiiL

W.ntad To Buy:

rou·,e

All real estate advsrtlslng In
tt;a - r Is IIUbject to
tne FsdeiBI Fair Housing lvlo
at 1968 v.t1lch makes Rilloglll
10 advsrttse "any prefo...-.ce,

ClAn Latta -

Lally Lmly. 114 3111303.

PfOPt..~ ;
w~o TtiiNIC ~

fOil

Cl 199• tly NE'A. I!IC

- - Cot:Oecw E. Ctlc'304-eiii»QD.
Ucanee • ' -·
friday, 7pm,_ MI. Alta -loll,
Rt. 2-33 ~-. Ron
Prlct, Bill - . __...,

~

\r&lt;AIIG5 12-21

w• VI&amp;Vnt8, ao4-

-lonO

'AUTION ... t..OO~ OuT

needed,

~

-..

It

Clvwn ~ ..... .... proiH

Rick Peer-. Auction~.

III,Ohlo a
773-5781.

I.

1
oeii~1.EOII.

lull time auct-r, oomplllt

auction

Apartment
torRent

=-~-~
In town. Ai
'a ..........
-~~·=-to
al:
Yllllao ·On AaiL 141 or

1o Pold k1

AI Yard IIIW -

44

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Rea l Estate

YardSale

;:;:..o.r.:":ci 1:t'.:

home In Mlddlopart, - 1111.
Rant: 2 . . . - . llatunol Gel

=-.:::.=.'\:::--

4 Curly-haired

Aide~

At the bridge table, you can see only
two hands during the play. While read ing this column, though, you can peek
at all 52 cards. It is difficult not to let
this extra information influ once your
thoughts, but... fight against it. Try to
be objective.
Today's deal, from the World Open
Pairs, featured interesting play for
both sides. South started with a
strong, artificial one club and North
res,POnded with a weak, artificial one
diamond. This gave East the chance
to overcall in spades. Against three
no-trump, therefore , We st led the
spade 10: six, five , jack. !Without
East's bid, West would have led the
heart 10, which Is much better for the
defense, attacking dummy's entry before ·the clubs are established .!
Declarer cashed the club ace. West
dropping a deceptive 10. East won the
club -jack continuation with his king
and switched accurately to the dia mond four.
Peeking, you would put in the jack.
continue clubs and win 10 tricks .
However . South. placing East with the
club queen, didn't wan! West to win a
diamond trick and lead another spade
through dummy's queen. So South
won with the diamond ace and led another club.
That looks like it, doesn't it• Now
the defenders can take three- diamond
tricks . But how does West know this'?
Might he not return his second spade?
East, Welshman Patrick Jourdain ,
found the right solution . Under the
club queen he di scarded the spade
king . Grateful for the help, West, Tony
Ratcliff, returned a diamond to defeat
the contract.

-.

4=

Don't look
at all four hands

_11__He...:.lp_Wint
__ed
_ _ 18 Wanted to Do
2br. trailer, also traltar lot for

38 Funeral pile
39 Beaver ekln
1 Oppollte of
40 Mertlnlque
volcano
42 Dedi
movement
44-TH-lung
8 Purple lru~
46 Greek letter
12 Alpe and
47 Percuoslon
SierTII (abbr.)
lnllrument
13 Eugene
51 Actress Barkin
O'Nelll'a 55 Above
dlughter
56 Many (2 wds.)
14 First-rate (2
58 Cry of
wds .)
affirmation o
15 Type of lettuce 59 Wampum
1e Baaebali
60 Old
· stsliatics
Portuguese
17 Outerwear
money of
18 Put up a stake
account
'20 - comllle•
61 Jau player
22 In musfc, high
Kld 24 Actor ·
62 Actress Baxter
Johnson
63 Ivy Lea9ue
25 Mlddloo
univers•ty
29 Jewish bible
64 Slats
33 Musical
compolitlon
DOWN
34 Yours and
1 Non-profit org.
mine
36 - Got a Secret 2 Kind of collar
3 Ailention-get37 Actor,
ting sound
Gibson

1211.

'

'

,.

Follow • Exult • Grind • Notion · TOO LONG
One divorced woman to another "Don't get attached
to animals. they don't last long enough, and don't get
attached to a man they last TOO LONG!"

�.
.
"'
Wednuday, December 21, 1884 ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

.

'

-.

I

EASTMAN'S

Chrislm
'94

FOODLAND

Whole Boneless

'

A FOODLAND
GIFT CERFITICATE

Superior's .Original

Tavern Ham

Available in any amount, Good at
. any of our loc;ations~
•

Asst. flavors

Pepsi Cola Products

c

Limit 1

LB.

12 lb. &amp;up Frozen ·
2 Liter ·

Butterball Turkeys
(

I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

I

Foodland Special Coupon

1

In Shell Diamond
Bagged Nuts

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Maxwell House Coffee .

2bags

Umlt one 36-39 oz. can- Auto-Drtp-French-Ute Caffeine Only

•

·Bob Evons
Farm
Sausa 1 lb. roll

I
I
I

I Good only at Foodland

Umit 1 with this coupon &amp; additional purchase

L--------------------'--------_.; _______ .J Seal test
Velvet
EggNog

QT.

Sherbet
Velvet Frozen Yogurt

/2 gal.

RC PRODUCTS
2 Liter
Bottle

$129 Qt

$299

Velvet Ice Cream Sandwiches 12 ct. $2.19

c

s

79c

99c

..... !'!'~ ~~uy~~,....:

99

'f!•

Maxwell
House

Foodland
Tomato
Juice 46oz.can
Asst.
- Flavor~
Seven Up 2 Liter

~-··················~

FOODLAND VALUABLE COUPON- Effective 12 '18-12,24 94

I
I

12 packs ~2.99
1

-. lb.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
'I

Bottle

Eagle Brand
· Ice Cream'
$
Gal.
1/2

Snyders
$.1 89 Potato
Chips 14bagoz.
b

Plush Christmas
Bears
Markdown!

- Upto
OH!

$2

Asst. Varieties

. • Plain • Self-Risl~.g

· Betty Crocker
Cake Mix

Medal Flour

99c

c

Sib. bag
18 OZ. boX

c----Fruit~ Baske

BEND----~-

99
And Up .

·

-

D

SUPERMARKETS

~~~~~~~~fr·. 25% ,oH
Famous maker watcftea in men's or ladiet
styles including Elgin, Benrus, Jules
Jurgensen, Waltham or Armitron. Reg . 19.99;(1
69.99, Sale 14.99-5.2.49
Stylep, $hewn are ~lltlve of group and may vary by store

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