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.

Pag&amp;-ES..Sunday nmes Sentinel

December 19, 1991

POmeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

r..
•

..·-'
S.t udents must cope with 'daily
fear of being harmed,' study says •l••
•

•

WASHINGTON (AP)- Eleven
percent of ~eachers and 23 percent of
their students have been victims of
violence inorneartheir publicschools,
according to a survey that suggests
schools have become a place where
children " learn to cope wilh the daily
fear of being harmed.''
Thirleen percent of the students said
!hey had carried weapons to school at
one time, mainly to impress others
and make !hemselves fee l impofUinl,
according 10 !he Metropolitan Life
Survey of the American Teacher.
" Whelher it is the shooting death
of an associate principal in a Wisconsin high school, !he self-inflicted
wounds of a nor!heast D.C. teen-ager
who carried a gun into school, or the
stabbing death of a Manhattan student over a p(lir of sunglasses. there
seems to be no~efuge from the culture
of violence," said Harry P. Kamen,
chairman of MetLife.
There were 33 homicides in schools
or on school grounds last year. So far
!his year, there have bein six, according to William Modzeleski of the
Education Deparument.
Though the survey found violence
to be widespread. 11 said it occurred
predominantly in urban sc hools and
in those with poor academic stanON VIOLEN CE- Attorney General Janet Reno speaks during a conference on school violence in Washington dards.'
Teachers and students said the most
last week. Reno told the conference that incident~ among school children cannot be addressed without looking
frequently
reported violent incidents
at society as a whole.
involved pushing, shoving, grabbing,
slapping, verbal insults and slealing,
according to !he study .
AtlDflley General Janet Reno told a
daylong conference on school violence that incidents among schoolchildren cannot be addressed without
looking at society at large.
WASHINGTON(AP) - The typi· male that more than 110,000 acts of no olher course.
Women more often have friends
cal workplace killer is a middle-aged workplace violence occur annually, "
and
outside support groups, while men
Runyon
said.
The
Postal
Service
has
man, probably a loner frustrated by
problems at work and with few rela- suffered 10 incidents over a decade, may identify comple1ely with a jo~.
In addition, he said the modem tenclaiming 34 lives.
tionships away from !he job.
Johnson
told
the
meeting
that
a
dency
to ex1emalize blame increases
That profile was presented Thursstudy
of
125
cases
of
workplace
VIOthe
chance
of violence as people no
day by Dennis L. Johnson, president
of Bc!lavior Analysts and Consult- lence found 97.5 percentofthc people longer see themselves as personal! y
responsible were men. The average responsible for their problems.
anL~ of Stuart, Fla., and an expert on
This tendency to blame others, or
age
was 36, he said, and firearms were
violence in the workplace.
_bosses,
or society, leads to a sense of
used
in
81
percent
of
the
cases.
" Threats and violence are becomIn nearly one-founh of the cases, injustice when individuals face probing a common experience in corporate America," Johnson told a Postal the person who committed the vio- lems,heexplained.lfthey feel someService-sponsored forum on violence. lence then wem on to kill himself, one is threalening a job they are "entitled" to, violence can be !he result. ,
Murder has become !he third ranked Johnson added.
"
If
you
don't
value
your
own
life,
Adding to the problem in some
cause of on-the-job death - No. I for
women - PosunasterGeneral Marvin you're not going to value the lives of cases is a ''toxic work environment' '
fostered by aulhoritarian managers
Runyon said in opening !he session. other people," he said.
who exen too much control and re- :
Johnson
said
men
more
of1en
tum
Mo!Dr vehicle and machinery accito
violence
because
the
loss
or
threatmove the individual worker' s sense
dents rank first and second.
of
dignity and accomplishment, he
ened
loss
of
a
job
seems
a
thre;~t
to
" Some 750 people were murdered
their
very
existence
and
they
often
see
said.
on the job last year, and experts esti-

Workplace killers: lo~ely,
frustrated middle-aged men

Housing project gun ban taken to court
PORTI.AND, Maine (AP) - Life
has gotten better in the projects since
the early 1970s, when the post office
refused to deliver mail and firetigh1ers
wouldn't enter without police escort.
Now some tenants fear lhings will
deteriorate if a 1975 ban on guns in
the projects is struck down.
In a case !hat could have implications far beyond Portland, the National Rille Association is challenging !he ban on behalf of a couple from
Sagamore Village, one of the city's
10 projects.
'The NRA con1ends !he Ponland
Housing Authority rule discriminates
against people simply because they
are poor.
Af1er !he lawsuit was filed, the housing aulhority conducted a door-todoor survey in the projects and found
that 83 percent of the households questioned supported the ban . Among
those in favor was Tammy Wolf, who
helped conduct the survey.
Clutching her 4-month-old son,
Martez, she said she fears for the
safety of children in the projects if
~enants are again pennitted to possess
guns.
"lt'schanged here, forthe betler,''
she said. " Hopefully, we can keep 11
that way."
Anolhertenant, Tammy Rice, said
she, too, worries about accidents in·
volving children and about neighbor·

hood disagreemcms that could escalate and end in tragedy if guns are
readily available .
ButCharlesSinclair. who stayswith
friends in Sagamore Villageon weekends, said gun ownership is a basic
righl Tenants " should be able to have
a gun in !he house if they think they
need it to pro1ect lhCit family," he
said, an NRA cap on his head.
Sagamore Village, built during
World War II to house shipyard workers, has 200 units housing about 520
people. Most heads of households are
female.
Tenants are required to sign a lease
provision that bars guns on housing
authority property. They can still own
guns as long as they aren't stored at
the city' s projects, which house
roughly 2,700 of Portland 's 62,000
residents.
The clause was introduced in response to a surge in gang activity
during the early 1970s.
According to testimony last week,
assaults, arson, vandalism and other
crimes in the projects escalated to the
point where mad carri ers and
firefighters feared for their lives.
The authority has argued the ban is
a reasonable measure intended to provide safe and decent housing .
Housing off1cials testified the ban
may have helped cut the crime rate.

i

taking small groups of people into !he
Peruvian Amazon each winter,' ' says
Miller, a lean, middle-aged man who
sports a ponytai I and wears a monkey-tooth necklace !hat he says was a
gift from a tr1balleader.
"For some of the people who come
along," he adds, " the trips are son of
vision quests. Others just want to experience the jungle, and look for mushrooms and medicinal plants. "
An _accomplished mycologist mushroom expert- Miller also is a
talented artist and a gourmet chef. He
frequently features mushrooms in his
creations, whether ori !he canvas or in
rhe kitchen. •
··I grew up in East Haddam , but left
after high school," he said recently.
"llaler lived in New Mexico and on
the West Coast, among other pla~s.
and got an advanced art degree from
the Univcrsity of Califom,ia at Berkeley."
" !was at Berkeley in the '60s," he
adds.- telling his story while foraging
for mushrooms on a mossy bank be-

Coroner asks BCI to ;·,.
probe hospital deathS};

..K-

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) coroner has asked state investigatorS::
to review some dealhs that ocourrect:;
at Community Hospital in the 1980s.~
Clark County Coroner Dirk W~
said last week he asked the Bureau of..
Criminal Identification and lnvesti -~
gat ion to step in because of persistent.':
rumors and questions about the death ~.
and because a previous investigation:was found to be "somewhat want-;:
ing. ''

Pick 3:
437
Pick 4:
7276
Super Lotto:
11-12-14-34-36-39

game

Kicker:

Page6

6-0-7-6-5-9

l/ol 44, NO. 166
Muldmedla Inc.

WASHINGTON (AP) - As ment of Defense," Inman said.
Bobby Inman ponders the moves
Inman is known as a strong
he would make as defense secre· advocate for overhauling the way
tary, he may be thinking of Japan the Defense Department buys
-not so much the U.S.·Japanese lhings, and how it deals with the
. defense alliance as the unusual lhousands of U.S. com~ies that
. cooperation between Japanese gov- form the defense industnal base.
emrnent and private industJy.
These issues are of growing
Inman, a retired Navy admiral, importance as the government
is known to believe the U.S. gov- struggles to keep a stroilg supplier
emrnent could benefit from imitat- base while cutting defense purthas·
ing aspects of the Japanese govern- es and research spending. Some
ment's way of doing business.
fear the United States' military
. "Some people joke that! see . technological edge over other
·the Defense Department as some nations could be one of the eventuform of MITI," Inman told Fortune al victims of the Cold War's end.
magazine in 1986, referring to
One of the most notable state. Japan's Ministry of International ments in his White House address
_ Trade and Industry. which helps was this:
~ies develop new products.
"The public is less concerned
"l'ni OOt-so.s[jir.J disagree."
about what we're doing overseas or
Inman isri 't likely to reveal our commiunents than whether we
many of his ideas on defense policy are getting a dollar value for a doluntil his Senate conrumation hear- lar spent in defense."
ing next month. But some of his
The budget issue will confront
~t statements suggest he'll put a
Inman from his rtnt day on !he job,
heavy emphasis on changing the assuming he is confumed as is
way the Pentagon does business.
widely expected. The administraInman touched on the subject in lion is now putting together its proremarks at the White House on posals for the federal budget for
Thursday when President Clinton ftSCaii:J95 .
announced his choice to replace
The current PentagOn budget of
J;&gt;efense Secretary Les Aspin. $261 billion is smaller than the
Inman spent 31 years in the Navy $300 billion-plus bud~ets that taxand the past decade in private busi- payers supported in the mid- and
. '
ness.
late-1980s. But Aspin and many
"In these last 10 years I've others are worried that the sums
HANGING STOCKINGS BY THE CHIMNEY WITH CARE
learned a lot about how business alloued 10 tbe Pentagon in corning
-Ia hopes that St. Nicholas will soon be tbere, two-year-old Eliza.worb,andJ wOuld h\lPC ID mMda years will be 100 small -~B,sustain
llslb Yo\Uia gfNew Haveq, W:Va., troat, and Chelsea Freeman, 3,
J4,my''tim~ otf ll~ingiili'l!lJ'l.:.:· theadriiiitfslnitlQil''s~dtl(~~~stliie: .,. ·or POmeroyI IWif~twCtlrlstmas' stocklngs.
- ·
busmess practices to the bepart•
Continued on Page 3
·
· ·"
- -

A Multimedia Inc. New•P"I*

CINCINNATI (AP)- Three day; about 50 protesters showed up
Ku Klux Klansmen this morning on the square then, but !he Klan did
erected a white wooden cross amid not
.
!he shouts of ~tors on downGamble, a truck driver from
town's Founwn Square.
Covington. Ky., and Ron Lee, who
Police put barricades around !he lists a post ortice box in Ross as his
square just after 5 a.m., and the address, are behind the current
three men arrived about an hour Klan controversy.
later to assemble the cross, which
"The Knight Riders, which this
bore a biblical reference.
new group calls itself, is no more
Tony Gamble of Covington , than five to 10 people," said Alan
Ky., who identified himself as the Katchen, regional director of the
imperial wizard of the Klan's Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana office of
Knight Riders, told WLW radio the B'nai B'rith's Anti-Defamation
that the $roup's message was to League , which monitors Klan
''put Olrist back in Olristmas."
activity. " It' s basically Ron Lee,
About 12 protesters stood near- who....nulled a few people with
by chanting for the Klan to " go hi m.
home.''
Tbe · ADL estimated that last
The Klansmen left after putting year' s sponsoring group, the U.S.
up the cross, but police remained Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, constanding by.
sisted of no more than 25 to 35
The small group has managed to people led by Pete Collins of
get a large amount of attention for Hamilton.
!he second holiday season in a row.
Lee said in an interview that
Last year, a Klan group based in Klan members broke off from
Hamilton erected a cross, which Collins' s group and formed The
was knocked down repeatedly Knight Riders.
under a glare of national media
Cincinnati rejected the Klan's ·
covemgc.
application under a new ordinance
That group disintegrated, but prohibiting displays on the souare
this year a splinter group applied !hat include ''fighting words."
for permits to put up crosses on
But U.S. District Judge Carl
Fountain Square and m the suburb Rubin ruled at a hearing Thursday
of Loveland.
that the atlempt to ban the display
Both were rejected, but the violated the Klan's First AmendAmerican Civil Liberties Union ment rights.
took the case 10 the fedetal courts.
The city said Friday it would not
A U.S. District judge in Cincinnati post a 24"hour :guard at Fountain
said tbe display could go up Sun- Square if the Klan put up a cross.

,.---Local briefs:----. Search for MIAs ends with mixed results
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - The
fust coordinaled U.S.·VietnameseLaotian search for Americans miSsin$ in action ended Sunday with
miXed results.
Searchers discovered new
remal'ns and helicopter wreckage
but they were able to complete only
about two-thirds of their cases
because of three tropical storms
that battered central V1emam.
The 44 Americans working bolh
in Laos and Vietnam headed to
Bangkok for a brief stopover
before moving on to their home
base in Honolulu to celebrate
Chrisunas with their families. They
are members of the Joint Task
Force Full Accounting based at
Camp H.M. Smith in Hawaii.
Even as this operation was end-

Vada Smith, State Route 325, Langsville, was arrested on
shoplifting charges for allegedly stealing a $2.19 box of ginger at
2:15 p.m. Friday from the Powell's Super Vatu, Second Street,
according to Pomeroy.Police repons.

-Middleport man causes accident
A local man was charged with failing 10 yield right of way after
he caused an accident at 8:09 p.m. Sunday on Hartinger Parkway,
according to Middleport Police reports. Crystal Wright, 16,
Langsville, was traveling west on Hartinger Parkway and Clarence
Continued on Page"3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Environmentalists and leaders of
the coal, oil, timber and gas indus·
tries are strug~ling for control of
tbe Wayne Nauonal Forest. ·
The forest designation was created by the government nearly 60
y~ ago to restore and preserve
~theast Ohio's woodlands.
· Part of the dispute is over the
U.S. Forest Service's decision not
to fully' implement its 1987 mana~emC!It plan, which would allow
umber cuuing. The Ohio Sierra
Club chapter has filed a lawsuit
claiming the plan violates federal
law by not proteCting the forest.
U.S. Distritt Jud,t~e James Graham in Columbus ts expected to
rule on the lawsuit soon, The

DAYS
~BBISTMAS

Columbus Dispatch reponed Sunday.
But another issue centezs on the
Forest Service's decision in January to switch adminisuative conuol of the forest from the Hoosier
National Forest in Indiana to an
Athens-based supervisOr.
The Indiana supervisor, Frank
Voytas, opposes most timber sales
in national forests. Enviroruqentalists liked his views and opposed the
change.
"We have to stop thinking of
the forests as wood factories."
Voytas said. "If you look at the
forest as an ecosystem, managing
for biodiversity means looking
beyond forest boundaries and looking at the limited amount of forest
lands in Ohio. Who's going to provide the continuous forest habitat?"
But coal miner Tom Belville,
who went to court to win !he right
10 sltip mine Plft of the forest, said
· environmentalisis were making too
much of the Issie.
"This is all·bologna land down
here, and they're trying to make
filet mignon out of it," Bc:lville
said.
There is no simple solution to
th~,reglon's liigest ~ntroversy,
said U.S. ~-Ted Strickland for·
. est expansion and management
' switchel ~~e !luning local govern·ments and schooli.
"I represent a district with the
highest rate of U!lemployment in
Ohio," he siid. "Southeastern
Ohio has been consi"'nd diJpens·
able by peoplo who dol\'t underatand our problems· and don't

care."

ing, U.S. military spokesmen
announced that the biggest search
ever since the Vietnam War ended
nearly 20 years ago will be
launched in Vietnam on Jan . 6.
More than 80 Americans and four
excavation teams will take pan,
twice !he number in !he operation
just ended.
"This Will be our most ambitiou s yet," said Army Lt. Col.
David L. Fredriksen.
Fredriksen said search teams
also would resume operations in
Laos beginning Jan. 12.
But these operations in Vietnam
and Laos next month will be independent of each other, unlike the
one just com:rleted where the
Americans an their Vietnamese
and Lao counterparts met at the

border three times to exchange
information.
The Americans excavated a site
in Xepon District of Savannakhet
Province in Laos and uncovered
human remains and wreckage of an
Air Force search and rescue helicopter that was shot down with five
men aboard in 1970.
On the Vieblam side of the border, a witness led the investigators
to what he said was the burial site
of an American in the A Shau Valley, a major North Vietnamese base
west of Da Nang during the war.
An excavation team dug up the
remains and Fredrikson confirmed
!hey are believed to be of an American.
Fredriksen said helicopter
flights were cunailed by the weath-

er and the American teams were
able to check out only roughly 40
of the 56 cases tbey had set out to
investigate.
"It's a brealcthrough," he said.
" The cooperation on the part of
both governments was quite
encouraging."
He said more coordinalcd threecountry opemtions would be carried out m the future along the
Vietnam-Laos border to finish the
cases that the Ameriean teams did
not get to and to look into scores of
others. He gave no timelable.
President Ointon has made the
fullest possible liXXIWiting of MIAs
a condition for fully lifting a 19year U.S. trade embargo and establishing normal relations with Viet-

nam.

Church pantry demonstrates the giving spirit

Sides battle over Wayne
Forest's timber, minerals

.,.

1 Section, 10 PllgM 35 c.,ta

Defense nominee
..--Christmas is... - . Among protests,
favors government,
Klan erects cross
industry cooperation
-in Cincinnati square

Woman a"ested on theft charges

side a hidden brook near East Haddam .
"It was back then !hat I first got
inlerested in the Amazon.
"About25 years ago, I went down
to Peru to try to get to know some of
the Indians in these remote tribes. I'd
read about them, how they were frerce
headhunters, but I found !hem to be
very gentle and friendly people. I've
gone back every year since then.'' .
Miller says his maternal grandmolherwasaPeruvianlndian,amem·
ber of !he Shura tribe.
' ' I initially wrnt down to the Amazon to see where my grandmolher
came from," he says. "lstarted~­
ing time with a lot of different slijlmans in the jungle, learning about
medicinal plants and mushlboms.
·• "The shamans woilld feed me these
unusual-lookingmusltr00msf111d 'we'd
travel on the astral plane and meet
. spiritual figures who would give us
knowledge. I didn't realize it at fttst,
but what! was lk)ing was studying to
!)ecome a shaman myself.''

Low tonight In low 301. Rain
changln&amp; to snow. Tuesday, blgb
near 35.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 20, 1993

George W. Pierce, Locust Drive, 'Pomeroy, reponed someone
stole an $825, 24-inch Husqvama orange chain saw from the·back
of his truck, while it was parked in front of The Fabric Shop, West
Main Street, between Friday and 3:55 p.m. Sunday, according 10
Pomeroy Police reports.

But they admitted the drop also was
affected by better efforts to evict
troublemakers and screen housing
applicants and by police community
projects to fight drugs and build rapport with youngsters.
PoliceChiefMichael Chitwood 1£5tified the ban has also increased the
safety of officers who patrol !he
projects, which he said still have a
disproportionate share of !he city's
crime.
"! believe that !he ban is working," said !lie veteran of nearly 20
years with !he Philadelphia police.
The case was heard last week in
state Superior Court and is awaiting a
decision from a judge.
Jt. federal court in 1991 upheld a
similar l&gt;an in Ril!hmond, Va., but the
Portland case is seen as a more challenging test because of an unequivocal 1987 amendment to !he Maine
Constitution that says a citizen's right
to bear ftrearms shall not be questioned.
If the ban is upheld in Maine , lawyerssay, it has a good chance of being
upheld in stales with less strong positions on guns.
The lawyer for the unidentified
plaintiffs said they have three guns,
two for hunting and a service revolver
that was owned by the man 's father,
who was a policeman.

'

most frequently ciled locations w~
hallways and public areas. Studen~·
indicated that a "significant propor~·
tion'' of incidents took place in bath~·
rooms and locker rooms.
:
Despite the reponed violence, 7"~
percent of teachers said they felt ' 'veJl
safe'' at school and22 percent "some•
what safe.'' However, the proportion·
of teachers who felt "very safe" fel~
to 44 percent among those who con:
sidered !he quality of education at
their schools fair or poor.
~
Students generally were less secur¢
than 1eachers - 50 percent felt' 'vel')l
safe" and 40 percent "somewhal
safe.''
~
A random selecoon of I ,000 publiC:·
sc hool teachers of grades three to 12t
I , 180 students in the same grades anc(
I 00 police officials were surveyed
from Sept. 22 to Oct. 5. Adults were!:"
mterviewed by telephone; studen~
filled out questionnaires. Results half
a margin of error of plus or minus 3;:
percentage points for the teachers ana,·
students and I 0 percentage points fo~:
the law enforcement officials.
•·
•

Southern
wins first

Pomeroy man's chain saw stolen

Jungle high: a different type of trip
EAST HADDAM, Conn. (AP) Gerry Miller runs a different sort of
travel agency . one that specializes in
journeys to the Amazon, to get high in
an esotcnc way.
·'Take the shamanic voyage of dis- ·
covery up !he Peruvian Amazon,"
urges one of his brochures.
Miller and his wife, Christian, opera!£ an antique-curio shop in East
Haddam during the summer months.
But in January !hey closeup shop and
tum their auention to "The Wild
Mushroom Traveling Road Show."
'The " sl10w" actually is a tour, one
lhal fC81ureS two weeks of travel 11J1 ·
and down the Amazon - exploring
die flora and fauni of the jungle plus visits to remote villagCJ.
And, for those wbo are interesll:d,
rhe Millers offer all-night;~yahuasca
sessions. These ceremonies are con- ·
dueled o~yha·ng. netive sllaml!ls.
or medicine
, who concoct potiOns !hat · ce intense P,ychedelic visi s.
•
· "Forse
~earsnow,we'v~been

"What good does all the work of
the schools do if they go to the world
of violence in the aflemoon?" she
asked. "What good does all the supervision in !he day mean if they go to
a world where there is no supervision,
no parent and no structure?''
She said parents, educators and
community leaders must work together. ''We've got to ~each children
now that you don't solve problems by
guns and fists and knives,'' she said.
The study said 6 percent of the boys
and I percent of the girls had threatened someone with a knife or gun in
or around school. Those with poor
grades were more likel y to make the
threats, the survey said.
Five percent of the students - and
2l percent of those with poor grades
-said they had threatened a ~eacher.
Teachers and police officials attributed the problem to a lack of supervision at home, lack of family involvement in schools and ex posure to
violence in the media.
Students said violent acts occur
most oflen because of provocation
from olhers, trying to impress friends
and jealousy over a boyfriend or girl friend.
Students committed 95 percent of
the violent acts agamstteachers, according to the survey.
,
The survey said ~eachers more likelyto have been victims of violence were
those who believe their school provides only a fair or poor education and
those who leach at schools wilh mos~y
minority students.
There was a consensus that violent
acts were more likely to occur outside
the school building.
For incidents inside the school, the

,0 hio Lottery ~

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-SentiDel Stair

.

Stooping over, silver-hairc:d
Joyce Hoback dt opped another can
of food into a brown grocery bag.
Mrs. Hoback summed up the
one hour she and 25 other volunteers spent Friday into one word:
giving.
"Giving for somebody else.
That's the joy of Chrisunas," said
the Pentecostal Assembly member
of Racine. "We'd like to see more
people give more of themselves."
During this giving season, community and church members will
donate about $8,000 in canned food
in 250 bags to !he area needy, said
Rev. Keith Rader, an organizer for
theevenL
· "You do what seems right. It's
worth the effort, the time and even
the complaints." said Rader, the
minister for three local Methodist
churches. "I feel I have been called
by God llld I 11y to be an example
or Cllrist. He fed the masses and
preached 10 them.•
About half·of !he recipients are
not oil Welfaro, despite what some
people would think, said Kenny
Baker, dircc!OI' of the Meigs County Cooperative Methodist Parish.
Many are aenior citizens.
"Somo of tho~ you .have to
·seek out, ~lilly some of the
ek!erlypooiJio who with ~ir pride
have \Y&lt;Jdred all lholr lives to provide for themiiOivcs," Balter said.
"You pt smUoa, thank yous and
som~·
es • .• ·
The
emxt Ia 10 meet
the
oltho 'Cilllre ,._, not

GIVING - Sarab CalclweU, rlabt, aets her
bag IIUed whit food by Joyce Hoback, dur1D1 aa

how much we have," Balter said.
"My needs are always met. I'm a
millionaire compared to some of
lhese people."
Area low-income residents had
to sign up during the first three
days in December to be eligible,
~ said. The parish had to tum
30 families.
i:::b!~B':,~nour· away
· Methodist churches wac not the
"It meaaa we ue anteful for 1101e provlders, it was a commwlity
'

'

effort, Rader added.
"If it wasn't for tho Catholics,
Pentecostals, Nuarenes, others,
and it's not just the-churches, it's
the banks, the Boy and Girl Scouts,
it's local grocers ... we couldn"t do
it without the help of the canmunity," he said.
The lfOUP gives help throughout
the yeat and always has an emergency fund available for people

who really need it, he added.
Sara Dill, who also helpod IDid
the packages, said that die llllllly
hands filled with
and lat.....
made the work easter.
·
"When you're sitting at home
with your gifts and )'OU knoW oth.
ers don't have my, 1t ~tho joy
out of It, • 11:'-id Dill, a member of
the Enter{lnse Methodist ·C "-th ·
who lives tn Pomeroy.

Joy

I.

lb

\0,

;

�•

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

-

111 Court Stftet
Pomeror, Oblo
DEVO'BD TO THB ll'ITERJ:81'8 OF'J'HB IBJG8-IIA80N AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETJ'ERS OF OPINION ate welcome. Tbey sbould be less tban 300
wolds. All letters ate subject lo editing and must be signed witb name,
address lllld telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
•bould be in good las..,, lllldro11ing issues, not personalities.

Looking for political
credit when the
economy improves
An AP News Analysis
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
wASHINGTON (AP) - Heading into a campaign year with
economic signs poinung up, President Clinton is telling Democrats
thal his policies turned things in the right direction, but they' ll have
to wait a while for the political credit
Next fall would be fme with them.
''There is a lime lag between when things happen and when they
are perceived to have happened.'' Clinron said. Nobody knows that
better than lhe man he defeated, George Bush, with the economy as
a cenrral issue and the impact of the 1991 recession burdening the
Republicans.
Thai cycle worked 10 Democratic advantage and if current trends
hold, it wiD happen again in the 1994 campaign for stale and congressional elections.
Ironically Bush spent most of his 1992 campaign arguing that
economic rCc:overy was coming soon, and didn't start off~ring
changes until il was too late 10 do him any good. Bush losl, Clmton
wo.n. and within a month, the economic indicators showed that
things had been improving.
A year later, CliniOn says there is sustained and steady recovery,
even !hough it is slow to be reflected in the public opinion polls on
his job performance in the White House.
·
"There are a lot of things that are happening that are good, but
there's always a time lag," he said.
.
Thill's the flip side of Bush's lament when he was seeking reelection and struggling 10 counter Democratic complaints that he
had no policies 10 deal with the stalled economy. "A lot is happening not all of it good, but a 101." Bush said at the time.
When there were post-election signs of economic upturn, Clin10n
responded.cautiously, saying there were 20 years of problems 10 be
oven:ome. After all, he'd been elected to fix the economy and
hadn't yet SWied. Democrats said the economic mood had been
buoyed by the prospect of change to Clinton's new leadership.
. Clinton now says that the discipline of his deficit-curbing budget
is one of the things making economic $f0Wth possible.
•'With the reduction of the deficit and the other actions, we see
inflation down, interest rates down, job creation up, personal
income up," Clinron told a business audience last Tuesday. "We
see things moving in the right direction."
Consumer confidence is up, he said, retail sales improving, man~faclllrin~ expanding, 5 million homes refmanced.
In addition the unemployment rate is at 6.4 percent, down from
7 2 percent the month Clinron was elected. Business economists
think it will hold Ill about that level during 1994, and that the overall
economy will expand at a higher rate than in 1993.
"We're on our way 10 long-lasting economic growth," he said.
. Along that way, Clinron proposed but couldn't get a $20 billi~n
program to spur the economy; thal would have added 10 the defic1t
His broader economic plan empltasized def'JCit reduction.
He now says that policy encouraged low interest Cales thatin turn
soarked the economy. Long-term rates hit a 30-year low in March:
!flat was the !II:IISOII when the new adminisuation shifted from complaints about the economic woes it inherited 10 boasts. of'the economic pr~ess it was generating. Those rilles are even lower now.
Clinton s concem Ill this J!Oint is short-term interest He said the
other day that it would be mappropriate for the Federal Reserve
Board 10 pusb those rates up when the nation needs growth and
·jobs. al'ld iRflatioo is in check.
"I believe that by and large, our cotmtry is going back in the
right direclion economically, and with all of our difficulties, and
Lord knows there's plenty, we are now the envy of all the other
advanced industrial countries," Clinton told a Democratic diMer in
New York Monday night
At the same time, Republican Jack Kemp was convening an
"Empower America" conference of conservatives who, predictably didn 'I see it that way. Kemp said CliniOn 's policies, especially ori taxes and health-care reform, will mean growth in government. not in the private economy.
He said the Federal Reserve. not the administratioo, shaped the
policy that is keeping inlereSI down, markets up and the economy
powing;
. allengers rn
. th e 1996
Kemp, on the roster of likely Clinron ch

camplign ac:knowled~ that if the numbers were down, Republi·
cans woold be blammg the president, just as Democrats once
blamed Bush,
.
· "'11ill's life in Washingt(lll," he said.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Wl!lter R. Mean, vlee president and
ecnmlllll fer Tile Auodated Prell, ha reported oo Washing- uc1 utloul polltlci for IDOre than 30 years.

Berry's World

"WHEW! When you announced in the toy shop that

yo{J ....,. .thinking.of downsizing,

we thought... •

Ambassorships still patronage. posts
WASHINGTON - U the Senate confirms Larry Lawrence next
month as the next ambassador to
Switzerland, our man in Bern will
be learning on the job.
A long-time friend of and campaign contributor 10 President Clinton, Lawrence seems more up to
speed with campaign fmance than
foreign affairs . Since 1988,
Lawrence and his wife, Shelia
Davis Lawrence, have doled out
S136,000 in political contn'bulions;
accordin~ to Federal Elections
Commisston reports. Democrats
have been the overwhelming beneficiary of Lawrence's largess.
According to the Foreign Service Act of 1980, ambassadors
should have "a useful knowledge
of the language... and tmderstand·
ing of lhe history, the culture, the
economic and political institu·
tions" of their host country. It
adds, "Contributions to political
campaigns should not he a factor.''
Three languages in addition to
English .,e spoken in Switzerland
- German, "Italian· and French.
Lawrence's linguistic skills are
limited to a month of French.
His limited knowledge of Swiss

J!Oiitics has also proven embemlssmg to some career diplomlllS .. At
his Senate confirmatton heanng
last month, Lawrence singled out

Ambassador in Bern.

Switzerland is the wrong spot
for the unseasoned diplomat,
acccrding to career diplomats. It is
currently mapping out its future
relations with the United States,
Asia and Ellrope, and is Ill a turning
point whether to maintain its hisIOric independence or to join the
European Community. As one of
tl!e ri!Wicial capitals of the world,
Switzerland is a nerve center for
Switzerland - despite its 500 tracking narcotics trafficking and
years of strict neutrality in foreign terrorism.
affairs - as •'importantro us as an
These are among the reasons
ally in Cenrral Europe."
why Lawrence's nomination is in
"Larry Lawrence has no qualifi- trouble. Last month, the Sena~e
cations 10 be an ambassador," one Foreign Relatioos Commiaee split
career_foreign service official told 10-10 on Lawrence nomination,
our associate Andrew Conte. which the full Senali will vote on
"Having people who are not quali· next month. Sources say the White
fied hurts U.S. foreign diplomacy ... House plans to make the nominathey either embarrass the United tion a top priQrity. Three
States or have to be carried by Democrats on the Foreign Relacareer foreign service officials. tions Committee voted against
That doesn't make~...
Lawrence - including Sen. Paul
Lawrence was unavailable for Sarbanes, D-Md., a long-time critic
commenL He rold the Senate that of the political spoils system for
he would apply his "experien~;e in · ambassadors.
business, government and civic ser"I really don't thinlc this thing
vices, as well as familiarity with 011ght to be simply a patronage
Switzerland, to the role of U.S. thing," said Sarbanes during one

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

~tle.I'J aRe We GoNNa

l.e.aRI-1? iF eVeRYBoDY oN
ilfaT TRaiN fl'lD BoP'/ 'lRMol?
2ND .e.NoU~H FiRe.- PoWeR,

TJ{i$ Ne.Ve.R WoULD
HaVe. HaPPeNeD!

~

committee hearing. He added tha~
the United States no longer has the,
· ' luxury of ambassadors whu ~
not truly fully contributors to the&gt;'
work that we are charged with.l
doing."
:
Sarbai!es should have soulmates)
within lhe·Ciinton administration. ~
Secretary of State Warren Christopher promised the Senate earlier.
this year: ... Recommendations for
ambassadorships will be based
upon qualifications that extend
beyood campaign participation ~d
will require some real e11peruse ·
with respect 10 the appointment." ·
However, nearly one out of five
Clinton appointees to ,foreign ·
embassies have been political, not
career ambasSadors, according 10
Congressional Quarterly. ·That's
lower than the 29 perc~.nt ..registered by lhe Bush administration. :
Nothing in Lawrence's record
suggests that he will be "" laugh- .
able as some previQUS ambasSI!dors :
· in Republican adminisll'ati6ns. For 1
example, Nixon's .ambassador to I
Jamaica was sent packing by thatl
country in 1973 after be called· the ,
Jamaican Primll t.f.inistcr an ; •errti&gt;- ;
lienal yo-yo" leading a nation of l
"children.~· A. Jimmy Carter !
appo• 10 lhe post in SingapQIC l
Jcnew so linle of Asian histofy ·that :
he did not knoo,y .who Chiang Kai- :
shek or Mahalni8 Gandhi were and ·
:
onceaske!l, "Wha~s Islam?''
A friend of Senate Minority;
leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., who was.
uipped for ·an ambassadorsl)ip in ;
the Bahamas during the Bus~ '
administration told the Senate: "I :
am sUre I will feel at hOme ·in the !
Bahamas. I understand it's a nice •
lifestyle. I love golf, and they have :
a lo&amp; of nice golf courses and good •
fishing." The Bush appointee to;
Great Britain llJl!l personal.friCIIj! of :
the president graced the front lawrl •
of the embassy there wjth a wood• ;
en Hereford cow and bale of ~~ : .
ton~ a flag .pole which fie"( •
the stare flag of Texas. .
"We feel every foreign countrj :
is important ·t oday," said and ;
career foreign service,oJ.ficiall ;
"Since the fall of the Sov~I..Union, :
we don'i know from, c!ay-10-day 1
who's our friend and who's our •
foe. Uncle Sam has 10 survive by:
his wits: ~·
~
Copyright 1993, United Fea; l•,
ture Syndicate, Inc.
. I

i:

Don't let the Gri-nch ·stea·l ·,rGh~ristmas .
With the holidays upon us. we
must try to remember those who
have not had an opportunity to
enjoy the things we often times
take for granted. Things like: a
decent lunch or dinner, clean clothing, and decent housing or simply
someone 10 talk to.
Many of us have these things
and forget to appreciate them.
While those who do no~ look upon
them with wanting eyes. With that
in mind, I want 10 encourage you
and yours 10 not forget those who
are m need and to reach-out to
them.
Lend a hand, when you are able
and Jcnow that in helping-out in
these troubled times, thal you are
doing it 10 better their future. And
in doing so, you will hopefully see
that you are bettering yourself as
well.
We have to remember that in
these cold days and nights ahead,
the rate of hohday depression tnlces
a heavy llJll on many folks. In fact,

it is in these limes that society
faces its highest rare of depression
and suicide.
I am told that this is often

you're feeling like you're at your·
wits end. These folks lll)l,there to
help, but they cl.n only ·do~that if
you are willing io let !hem.
So if ypu feel the pressure of the
ho!ida~s beating you down, .srop .
for a ~Ond and pick up the phone.
The$e folks.might be able to help.
because the expectations of a "pic- · Remember folks, there is no
ture perfect" holiday, slips away shame in having .a problem if you
with the warm weather and the lack: are ad!Wssing iL The shame comes
when you Jcnow'·you have a probof family relations.
If you 111)1 feeling depressed this lem, but you arc not willing to
holiday season, talce a moment and addressiL
try to put things inro perspective.
That is a fac.L The problem may
This is often more easily said than be alcohol, drugs or JUS! the bali··
done, but you should try.
day blahs, but those probi~:~~~S can
However, if you just can't seem he conq~ if Ohly Y9U make th~
to cope, please remember thatlhete .decision 10 reach out to let someare folks out there who do care and one helP..
·
are availabl!' to help. I have providWhtle I have your attention,
ed an 800 number below for the
's not forget about our elderly
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs Board of
t-ins. These folks have every, if
Mental Health.
more right, to enjo 'a joyous
They can be reached 111 1-80().,
iday. season. But o1ten times,
252·5554 and you might want to
ir famUy is not abli to care for
keep on hand for the holidays if them or have moved out of the

Rep. Mark Malone

area.

University of New Hampshire
English professor Tom Carilicelli
recently noted, in the course of a
lecture, '!This way r,ou get '111ore
bang for your buck. • He heard a
female student I!BSD,
"I said· to ~f.'• Camicelli told
Clare Kittredge of the Boston
Globe, "what's the matter? Did
you thinlc that was a sexual reference?"
When the student no44ed, the
professor told her that the~phrase is
derived from milillry sJang about
explosives.
. · ·
Several University of New
Hampshire profes.aon are cummtly
being charged with .sexual harassment by students. A count againSt
one of those professors, reports
Kittredge, is that he complimjlnted
a student in his clasa .on her new
blazer. Also, !herO .are anonymous
c~es that he ~ pomQgraphy
in hts classroom. 'ntey are books
on art. The professor teaches
graphics.
·'
Accordingly, Professor Carnicelli took his student's misapprehension of "mOle bani for your
buck" quire seriously.
"I was really shaken by thai."
he says. "If .1 hadn 'I beard het
gasp, she iniKht have dtought it was
a sexual reference and aecrelly
reported me, and lftight have been
under a cloud.~'
·
•
At the Univenlty of Nebcuka.
profeasor David.Mollunan, preai·
. dent of tho Academic Freedom .
Coalition ·of Nebrukl, has IICIIt a
memorandum to lhe Academic.
Sewe citing some of the fears of
professors and instructors in thaJ

'"I
. ;'
'

It's therefore important for us td j'
not only lmow who lhey are, but
also do what we can to make their ,
holidays more enjoyable. You can !
do this by working with your area l
Senior Centers or by slOpping in on. 1
your, elderly neighbors to make :
sure they llfC all right .
I think you .might be smpri!ied at
how happy they will be thit you
have shown concem, and hopefully; .
their ltiiJpines! will help to bright- .
en your iioliday' seasorru well.
, Here's the bottom line here.
folks: It's easy to paSs-by the problems other encounter and CQ~ttinue
on with the pitth of least resiStarice.:
·But in these times when pclople are ·
sufferin!l (mentally, physically I!Dd ,
economtcally), we· musl mil}ce thlu
extra ·effort to be an outreached .
hand ·
·
·
Because if we could only reael{
out 10 those ip need early on, we !
could possibly SlOP ·!hem frOm hav·
ing problems down the road. ·
.I

'J

.{

Fear invad:e s the .ivory ;,toWer

...•
\

demio Senate, professor Moshman :~ied rape victim from being
told of Toni· ,B lake's case and
marape trial.
;1
added:· "I have heard re~ of
~ 'Why not ask the woman'.' ~ i
three (other) cases in whteh Uni- Duncan summarized ·defense
versity of Nebraska ·faculty appar- lawyers' opposition to (llpe shieJcj,,
ently deleted units (Jom their regu- laws - ''i.f she is in the habit of)
Jar courses dW lhey feared might leaving a bar with a dilferent man,.
include or elicit slatements offen- every night?"
,.;
addresses, a stQdent may lind (or sive to some lllldents; The deleted
But there are professors, Duncan ,
claim to lind) aspects of her teach: topics were ,rice, gen~er and points ou~ who are afraid of being ·
ing offensive on the basis of his or rape .... I fear they may represent c~arge4 w!Jh sexism:and maybe :
her 11ender, sexual orientation or just the lip of the ~ of chilled woth creat1ng a hoshle learning ~
relig1011."
. expression at the Untversity of environment if they include that ·
She has been advised to take Nebraska."
argument even in a class on pimi~ ;
precautions. But •'she sees the sorts
~Duncan, a law ·professor at nallaw. "So; some or them," ·he :
of curricular revisions that might that university, has never been . says, "do not mention !hal argu· •
protect her agailist such charges as known to ailow his expressiqn 10 ment or no longer teach rape law aJ. :
mconsisrent with her professional be chilled. A pro-lifer, he teaches all."
.:
responsibilities." ,
constillltionallaw and his seclion·.i_s
Self-censorship among profes·· •
When she asked administrators usually tho 'largest one in that sors is ~ardly. limited to Nev.:: :
"about the likelihoOd and coose- coursc'even though !11981 of the stu· Hampshtre or Nebraska. ColleJe l
quences of a .sllldent chlltgin' her dents are for abOrtion ri$h1B. They administrators, afraid of potentfi{ ,
with sexual harassmcn1,.' the apparently appreciate hts honesty . lawsuits by students, seldom talk, :
responses "have not been reassur· and hill insisJ.CilCe on presenting all about academic ~ 10ymore. •
ing."
sides of an 'issue.· ·
· And college presidents are 011111is- :
I know an inattnctor in human
Likb 'a number or1aw professors ing money.
.
: t
sexuality at the University of I've lliiked with at other universiNat Hentoff os a nationally •
Nebraska..w,ho bas indeed been ties, J)uncan explains that some renowned authority on the First I
charied willi sexual harassment. teachers of criminal law are reluc- Amendnient and the rest of the Bill ;
Toni Blike - conducting a stan- 1101 to •preaent in class a defense of Rights.
,
dard demonstration - with a lawyer'• argument against llallltes· · CopyrJalttl993 NEWSPAPER. I
banana- on the proper applica- ihil prevent·the sex!Jil hls!OJ)' or an ENT~SE ASSN. . -. ..., ; I
lion of a c:oDdOOi. A male swder11
'' 'I
claims .he J!as been sexually
.. I
~arulled , by her liecause she so
•
"Objectified" the~ • to create
t
a hOstile academic envilolllll!lllt for
.' I
,. I
him.
By The Allodated Prell
. I
TQ!Iay II~. Dec. :lq, the 3S4th day of 1993. There are 11
"I'm no1 Pf to-" human
.,
I
sexuality again, • Bllke 10ld me.
days Iefl
Today's Hi
tin HistorY: · .
"No&amp; it the 11a1e of Nebraska. I'm
On Dec. , 1 3, lhf Loulsiana Purchase wsa completed. as•
not going to so thr9ugh that
again."
ownership of the ~ - fonnally transferred from France to
~·
In his memorandum to the Aca·
the Uniled Sllltll during ceremO!Iies in New Orleltis.

citadel of higher learning: "An
untenured instructor who regularly
teaches about human sexuality is
concerned that, given the topics she

NoJ 1/entoff

.Today.ln h.istory
.

inn
· .' '
~ .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-~ r-Co"-nt-lnued-.,-rom- Page-1-

Weather

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ;
Monday, December 20, 1993
.

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Dece!)'lber 20, 1993

!:I

-

--

Th41 Dally Sentinel

Hayman, 26, Middl~rl, pulled out from Beech Streel, hitling
Wnght's 1991 Poor.iai: in the left rw.

Tuesday, Dec. 21
Accu-Weather" forecasl for daytime conditions and

Christmas play to be presented

ueea before landing on its top ·in a ditch.
Shuler was also cited for speeding. He speed prior to the accident
was estimated 11180 miles per hour.
The vehicle sustained heavy, disabling damage and was towed
from the scene.

Faith Full Gospel Chuich of Lliill Boaom will ha LONG BOTTOM • The Faith Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a
Ouistmu play Wednesday Ill 7 p.m. Ill the church: There will also
be special singing and a communion service. Pastor Steve Reed
invi~ the public. There will be no service Ill the chwch on Friday
evenmg.

•

IToledo 133' I

·

..
W.VA .

The Leading Creek Conservancy District will be closed Thursday and Friday for the Christmas holiday. Any emergencies can be
handled by callina 742-2597. Normal offICC hours will resume on
MOnday at8:30 a.m.

The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol and the Middleport Police,cited a rota! of four men over the weekend for driving
under the influence.
··
Cited by the P8trOI were Colin R. Mai4enJ, 20, Racine, Saturdsy
evening for out and speeding and Kelly 1. Powell, 18,47478 Slate
Route 338, Racine, early Sunday morninjl for DUI, possessiOh of
drug paraphernalia and possession of ll)ari.JU81l8.
Cited by the MPD were Clifton C. Grose Jr., 29, State Route
338, Racine, for DUI Friday, and Jeffrey L. Thomas, 38, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy for DUI, no opera1or' s license and going the
wrong way on a one-way street

Man injured in DUI accident

Youths charged with thefts

A Pomeroy man sustained minor injuries and was cited for driving under the influence Sunday ~~ when his vehicle ran off the
road and landed on its top, the G
Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Steven R. Shuler, 1?, 40780 State Route 681, was reportedly
tran~rtcd by Meigs County Emergency Medical Service 10 Holzer
Medical Center, but the hospital did not have a record of ~unenL
According 10 the accident report, Shuler was westbound on State
Route 124 in Salem Township when he drove off the right side of
the road and struck a guard rail. The vehicle continued on, striking
an embanlcment and 'becoming aittlorne. The vehicle struck several

.' ' • . &gt;1\

..

.

FhJrries

las

Sunny Pt. Clovdy Clovdy
C1993 kcu·W.alh•, Inc;,

· Via Aslociared Pres, GraphiciNet

.Rain changing -to snow
:forecast for tonight
By The Associated Press

Colder air was forecast to blow
. Tonight. .. Rainorsnow.changing to all snow . Lows around 30. through the southern Plains into Texas,
· Tuesday ... Snow tapering 10 and snow showers were expected in the
nurrie.l ip the east. Mos~y cloudy Great Lakes stares.
, elsewhere . with a chance of
Dry weather was forecast to conflurriesmainlyinthenlOming.Highs tinue in the West. with mostly sunny
near 35.
skies and some low clouds in central
:&gt;outhern Ohio
California and parts of the NorthWest.
Tonight. .. Rain . ., Possibly
OnSunday,separatesrormsspread
changing to snow toward daybreak. up to 8 inches of snow on parts of the
!..ow around 30. Winds becoming northern Plains and the Northeast, and
northwest at 10 to 15 mph . Chance blizzard conditions socked the peaks
of precipitation is ncar 100 percent. of two of Hawaii's volcanoes.
Tuesday,.. Mosllycloudy.Sr;atA storm system sweeping south
tercd llurric~ in the morning. High outofCanadathrewsnowacrossnonharound 35. Chance of precipitation em sections o( the Rockies and the
· 5(J
.
ts percent.
Plruns.
F
d ~
.xten ed orecast...
Snowfall was heavy across parts
Wednesday...Chance of snow. of the Bla~k Hills in western South
Lows upper teens JO lower20s. Highs Dakota, wit!l 6 10 8 inches repotled
lower 10 mid 30s.near Lead and Deadwood. Ijl cenrral
Thursday and friday ...Chance Wyoming, 2 to 5 inches of.snow fell in
of snow. Lows in the teens. Highs the Big Horn Mountains,
mostly in the 20s.
In Hawaii, blowing snow and
Around the nation
freezing rain created blizzard condiSnowhitpansoftheNortheasL lions above. the 10,000-foot level or
Midwcst-'ll¥ •§!.orthwest early to-J Mal!flli•KeaandMaunatoaotrHawaii
. day, while skies were mostly clear Island.
,;:
· ovci the PlairL~ and West.
The nation's high temperature
Snow blanketed Buffalo, N.Y., Sunday was 82 at Fon Lauderdale
Detroit, Minneapolis and Spokane, Beach, Aa.
Wash;; rain fell in New Orleans and Today's highs were forecast in the
Fon Wonh, Texas.
30s and 40s for the Northeast, Plains
Showers and thunderstorms and much of the Midwest, 50S in the
were expected 10 move inro the South,SouthwestandWestCoast,and
Northeast later today from the Mis- some lOs and 20s for the upper Great
sissippi Valley, and across the Gulf Lakes states.
states and
of the South.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 36 7/8
Ashland Oil... .. ....... ............31 7/8
AT&amp;T ...................... ... .. ., ...54 5/8
Bank One .... .................. .....39 1!8
Bob Evans ..........................21 7!8
Charming Shop ....... ..... ...... ll 5!8
Champion Ind .......................... 16
City Holding .......... ..................30
Federal MQgul ............ .... .. ....... 29
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... ............ 44 518
Lands End ....... ...................45 1/4
Limited Inc. ······················· 17 114
Multimedia Inc ................. f..... .34
PointBancorp ...................... .... l5
Re1·tance El ectnc
· ....... ........ .17 5/8
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .. 17 1!4
Shoney's Inc . ...... ...... .... ...........23
Star Bank .................... ...... .35 1/4
Wendy lnt'l... .................. ... 17 1!8
Worthington Ind . •.................... 19
Stock reports are the 10:30 .
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis,
·

The Daily Senlioel

213-Hf)
.Publilhed ev«r(IJSPS
atleraooD, Moaday

lhrOUJ,h

l\1doy, Ill Court SL, Pomoroy, Olllo by lho
Olllo Volley Poblloblq C.-yiMultl_,.
lnc., Pomon&gt;y, Oltlo 45769, PI!. 992·2156.
Secood c,_ poltfl• pllld,. """""''· OI!Jo.
Me.- The APocillecl Preol. aod lhe Oblo '
Newap~per Alloclllioa, Natioul AdvertjaiDJ
Rtpr ...;tallve, Bruham NoWJplpW Sala,
73) Tbl.rd A:~e11.ue , New York. New Y«k

10017.

POSn.IASTl!lt: Sml ............. to 1bt
IIUIIScaJPIION RATU

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Doe Week.....•...••.. ., •••...•••..•.••., ............ .,..,.$1 .60
Olle MoDib. ••...•..••.•...•••..•.••.•....•.•.•••..••••.. .$6.95
Olle YOit.•..••....••• ., .................... ., ••• - •.$83.20 ·

446·4524

.

1

.....

---

.... ..... ,p4L.

......... CotloiJ

I

7

1te11

.

O..WeMeitoC..I7

13 Weolo •.••......•..•.•...•....•....••..•.......••..$23.40

211-........................................145.50

62-........................................$88.40
'•

HOMES
1-800-466· 76 71

$130.00PER
Ill% APR
LOCATED All HE JUNCTION OF RT . 33 &amp; 595

BECWEEN tllGAII &amp; NElSONVIllE

on• - T·FMIAY 1,3u :oo
1:30.1~

OV.ER
25 ManulfiCIUrt!CI
Homes On Display

....

13 - ...•........, •..........•................... J2t .l4
:16 Weolo ••••••••...••• •••••••••••••.••••••••••••••.$&gt;1!.16
w..................................................$14.76

n

NEW HOMES

-·---- -

_ , . , . DOl deoidq,. P'J tile~ IDlY
malt lo id,_ diltcllo'lbo Dolly S.l&amp;ol
oa 1 - . ..... u .... biola. c..dlt will be

--~-~l¥111able.

i

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

Doily......................................... _ _ 3$ Celli

No ""'ICtlpllou by 01111 petiii(Ood II

Make Yor Dream Home
A· Realty .At Riverdale!

r···-··········-·········---------·-···--•-----

SINGL&amp;COPY
PRICE

,

Ho$_pltal news -

·"~""'---------.a.._..;·"--;...--•''•··-···-----------------------...,~

Dally SeDliDel, 111 Cowl SL , Pomeroy, Ohio ,

1J c.n. er McMor R..t•

both on the commercial and the
Because the administration has defense rnarkels.
boosted its origin,al estimate of .
inflation for ruture years. and because Congress approved a 1994
military pay raise that Clinron had
Vetera111 Memorllll ·
opposed, the Pentagon may need
Salurday admissions- none
another $31 billion or more over
Saturday discharges - Mary
the next five years just to pay for
Kopczinski,
Pomeroy; Goldie
the kind of programs Aspin
Lighlfoot, Middlepcn
sketched out.
Sundl admiuiou - v· · ·
Pentagon purchasing rules
Michael,~
.
orguua
sometimes make it hard for AmeriSunday discharges- No dl•·
can companies 10 adapt new tcehcharges
·tiologies' to products they can sell

gy.

WHY RENT?

UIUODAY

Katurah Kimble, 81, of Warsaw,
Med Dec. 19, 1993, at the West
N · Ce
· w
Lafayette 11!"510g ntcr m est
Lafayette.
'
She was born May 24, 1912, in
Mason, W. Va, the daughter or the
late John and Stella Fields Kavlor.
'
She is survived by five sons,
Gerald Jr. and Harold of Colorado
Spnngs,
·
Cl
o o., Roger andJ
· ames,
both of Brunswick, and Thomas of
L.ltc h6eld; elg
. ht dalUghtees: Joanne .
Cole of Coolville, Fleda Reinbeau
of Frazyburg, Janet Fortney of
Warsaw, Phyliss Monow and )une
Fenton of Cleveland, Jeanne Miller
of Millersburg, Pamela McDonnell
. of Redford, va., Viclcy Pellini of
Garrettsville; 33 grandchildren, 23
great grandchildren and three greatgreat grandchii!Wn; three brothers,
John Kaylor of Arizonii,,.Eimer
Kaylor of Tuppers Plains and
Edward Taylor of Missouri: and
one sister, Cordelia Lamb~rt of
Arizona.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Gerald Kimble, one
infant son, two sisters, one brother
and four grandchil!Wn.
Funeral services will be held at
10 a.m. Wednesday at White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev. Helen Kline officialing.
Burial will be in the Troy Baptist Cemetery.
Friends may call between 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

4$769.

Continued from Page 1

fault crushed some of the machinery, Smith added.
"It's a localized problem and we
may have less production," Smith
said. "Apparently it's a localized
geological fault .... This occurs in
underground mining."
None of the Wilkesville-mine's
workers had 10 stop working, she
added.
Smith would not say how severe
the damage was and would not
label the incident serious or minor.

Katurah Kimble

· Rhea A. Deem, 46, of MiddleP.Ort, died Sunday, Dec. 19, 1993 al
Ohio Stare University Hospital in
Columlltts.
; Born on Sepl. 4, 194 7 at
Pomeroy, she was the daughter of
Reed and Mildred Hawley WUI of
P,omeroy. She was a member of the
.: •• Churc
·h
Calvary Bap....
·
. · In
addiuon to her parents
she is
'ved
bv
"•r
husband
Roger
v
Survl
&lt; •"Deem, Mtddl~ort;
a. 'daughter,
Teresa Deem, ddleporl, a sister,
Clarinda Theiss, Racine; a brother;
Sean Will, Pomeroy; and several
aunts, ancles, nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday Ill I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev.
Alan Blackwood will officiate and
bltrial will be in Bee~h Grove
Cemeterjr, Pomeroy. Friends may
call at th~ funeral home Tuesday 7
to 9 p.m.

Defense.• _______

Slip to slow work at mine

---Area deaths--Rhea Deem

Three local juveniles were charged in the Sunday thefl of Christ·
mas decorations from in front of the home of Wayne Divis, Mulberry Avenue, according 10 Pomeroy Police reports. The lltieves
stole an unknown value of green light sockets, two green spot!~
and one light-socket with a cool, according to police recordl.
of ~ youths will also be charged in thefts at JOhn Krawc:iwyn,
Unton Avenue, Pomeroy. Krawczwyn reported IOliiCOIIC stole SSO
of two flood lights and two 12-foot extension cords at6 p.m. :Friday
from his front yard.

4'; ,' · · ~

Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Mine 2 suffered a slip in the
ground Saturday !hit will slow production for the next few days,
-American · Electric Power
spokeswoman B.J. Smith said
Monday.
No one was injured but some of
the equipment was affected when a

•

Four cited for DUI

LCCD to. close for holiday

• IColumbus !35' I

3

Local briefs- - -- - -- -t

OHIO Weather

MICH.

P8G•

••

1
I

�Page

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlej)ort, Ohio

Monday, December 20, 1993

.....'\

•

•."·

::'

UGLES

THIS WEE

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 14....................................... BELPRE
DEC. 17...................................AT MILLER
DEC. 21 ............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 7..............................·••••• ~ SOUTHERN
JAN. 11 .................................. WELLSTON
JAN. 14 ................... FEDERAL t10CKING
JAN. 15 ............................... AT OAK HILL
JAN. 18................... AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 21 ................................ AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 25 ................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 28 ..................................... AT MEIGS
FEB. 1..................................AL~DER

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
DEC. 21. - Waterford - Home
JAN. 7 - Southern • Home

FEB. 4...........................................MILLER
FEB.
FEB.
FEB.
FEB.

GIRLS
DEC. 20 - Southern - Away
DEC. 23 - Waterford - Away
JAN. 3 • Wellston • Away
..

EuLern Dl\'l&amp;k»n

Tum
W L T PeL IF PA
Buffalo ... ....... I0 4 0 .714 283 218

FEB. 10 ................................ AT TRIM,BLI!

Miami .... - .........
N.Y . Je&amp;&amp;... ........
Indianapolis ......
Ne.w F..r~jland ....

BOYS
DEC. 21 - Nelsonville·York • Away
DEC: 28· Chesapeake • Ho-.e
DEC•.30 • Coal Grove·· Away
GIRLS
DEC. 20 - Eastern - Home
DEC. 30 • Waterford • Home

1993-1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE
.

DEC. 1-3 ............................... ALEXANDER ·
DEC. 16................. NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 20 ..................................... EASTERN
DEC. 30...............................WATERFORD
JAN. 3.......................................AT MEIGS
JAN. &amp;..................................... AT MILLER
JAN. 10 ....................................... BELPAE
JAN. 13 ................... FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15.......................AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 22 ..........................AT WATERFORD
• ·""""· 24 .................................. WELLSTON

4 0
Pi.t~rgh ........ II 6 II

.•..

CINCIN~Al'l ..

.·•••
•.
•.

·...

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 14 ............. AT FEDE;RAL HOC'i(ING
DEC.· 17 ................................. WELLSTON
'
DEC. 21 ..............................~ ......... ·I~R
JAN~ r4~:••••·....~:••:.·.~:.. :....... AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 8.............._.............. :.......... WAHAMA
JAN. 11 ........, ................... AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 14.................................. AT BELPRE

'

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

..·=·

Team
W L T PeL Pf PA
y·N.Y. GianLS .. . 10 1 0 .769.245158
)'·0111&amp;1 .... ..... 10 4 0 714 321213

.,•'

Pbil.dclptu..... 6 K U .429 219 2SS
Phoenix ........... . .~ 9 0 .JS7 282253
Wuhingwn ., .. 4 10 0 .2S6 211129]

•

Cllnlul Division
Grocnll-y ........ K fl tJ .5712922.52
Dclmil ...... .... . .. !\ (i {) .571 2411 2411
MiMe&amp;oll ...
7 7 0 .500 233 271
0J iCI&amp;o .- .
7 7 0 .500 214190
·rampa Day ....... 4 10 0 1.286 203 334

Wntern

..,
1~

DEC. 21 ~ Miller·- Ho111e
JAN. 4 • Alexander • Away

JAt4. 18' _,;.,,.•,., ..............................1'RIMBLE

JAN. 21 .....;.................. VINTON COU"'!TY
JAN. 28 .................. :.................. EASTERN
JAN. 29 .......................,.... RIVER VALLEY
FEIS. 1 ................... NEI-SONVII,LE·YORK
FEB. 4.............................. AT WELLSTON
~B. a................... AT POINT PLEASANT
FI:B;11 ............."'.............~ ............BELPRE
FEB. 15....................... AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB: '18.........:......... AT VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 19 ................................AT WAHAMA
Coach -Jeff Skinner

GIRLS
JAN. 3 • South•rn • Home

DEC. 13............................AT WEY.,STON

DEC. 16................................,, ..A,T MILLER
DEC. 18~...........................
RIVER
.
-, .
. VALLEY
JAN. 3.................................... SOUTH-=RN
,JAN. 6 ......................................... BELPRE .
JAN.10 ................................ ATTRIMBLE
JAN. 13..~................AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN.17 ................................ GALLIPOUS
JAN. 20................................ALEXANDEFI
JAN. 24 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 27............AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 3 1 ................................. WELLSTON

FEB. 7.................................·... AT'BELPRE
,FEB. 9 ............................AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 10 ........................
VINTON COUNTY
.
FEB.17 .......................AT RIVER VALLEY
Coach- Ron Logan

.

Dlwls~

x·San fnncisco 10 4
New Orlean-..... 7 fl
Allanll .............. 6 &amp;
LA. R1m1 ........ 4 tO
J.·dinet\ed divi~inn title
y·clinct\ed playoff hcM.h

:-~

~~

......

.',./

...-.

0
0
0
C)

.VI4
.S38
.429
.2.K6

19. IUin&lt;KJ .......... .., .. ., .. ... S-l
20. CINCINNATI ... :, ..... 7-2
21 . Syraeu~e ...................6- I
22. Oklahoma St. ............ &amp;-2
23. G. Wa~hinSlon .. ... .... 5·1

24 . Marquette ................. S-2
25 . W. Kcntuck y ............ l · l

'Stj~·

t

"Famiiy Qu.ned and Operat~dfor 48 Ye~rs"

8AUM LUMBER
915·3301

I·NGELS F.URNITURE &amp;
JEWElERS
·
.
AND UDIO.SHACK
•

'

'

'··.

·.'•
'·'

106 N. 2ND

MIDDLEPORT, OR.
992-2635

•

.,r"
:-~
,..,

....
~
~

:.-

't'.'
r

,.,.

..

Pt. Pllaat, W.Va.
304-.75· T121

'

W.r Will Take Care Of All
Your .l~iaranee ·Needs!
DOWNIIG-CHILDS·MULLERN
'
,MUSSER INSUUNCE
.
.

.·,...

Hou:~ tnn

...

19

Win-

Tcnncueo S• 74, N. Cuolino A.tT S9
W. Kenwcl:y 11. Souill """""' 71

Washingtcm 11 D11lu, 4 p.m.
K11n~11S thy 11 Mini1Ciiou , II p.m.

MIMI4tty,ll&lt;c. 27
Miami
It San Dmt.o, 9 n..m .
~
. ......., .
!

Basketball

::!o

...,
••

NBA standings

Wii.·Gnoen Boy 6&lt;1, ~ao%

Xavier, Ohio 8S. Viqirua Tech S2

EASH:RN CON.'ERENCE

~;

Southwat

All1nlk Dlvidon

Team

''
•,,

W L

Pet.
5 .150

New Yort ....... ...... !~
Orl•ndo ................. I] 9
n~leln ....................11
12
M.i•mi. ................ : .... 9 II
New Jcncy .............. 8 14
l'hilldc1phil ....... JI 14
Waldling\.On .............. 6 If!

~~

••

~
I'
,.

,.,.

CJ

.591

3

5.s

.47&amp;
.4.50
.364
.364
.27l

6
8
K
10

..

•

~·

Nice 64, Colondo St. 63

76

Central Division
.. ..... 16 5 .762
Allin'-- ..
Chicagn ...... .. ...... ... 13 K .619
Ctlllrlfl\l~ .. .
.12 10 .545
lnd !anl ............ .10 II .476,
lklrnil..... ....
.. JI 11 .lXI
CIJ:VEI.A:\0 ...... 1! I:! . 3(~
Milwaukuo: . . .. 'i \II 11J

~·
•••
•

Atk.·UnleRock 101,AlcomSt.50
Atka,IM1 96, Jac:i10n St. 10
Arkanu1 St. 97, AJUtin Pcay 80
Northweatem 67, Teus A4M 411
Oklahoma 91 , Lamar 87
Oldahoml SL IS. UC Davi141
Oral Robcl\a 83, lndi1na St 73

'

~

110 SECOND AVE. ·
992·2342

POMEROY

W
_21
l hah ...
..... .. 17
San An\01'\io .......... \,
1-lnu.~tnn

.-:

Dcnwcr .......

'555 Pill n.

•
, .•

VAL,J,EY LUMBER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6611

105 MUUERIY AVE.
992·2121

Ari2.onll9, Santa Clara 63
Frano St. 74, &lt;Maon s. .'62
Gonu11 97, W. Mmllna SO
Idaho 71, WallhingiOn SS
tdaho St. 113, ColOrado Min•79
l..ouilvillc 72, Wyomina.5.5
NE Jllinoia 71, Arizona S1. 15
Ne.w Me11.ico 90, Teut·P.n Amaic:an

STIHC. .

--l::llliii!lel~
6TIHL •• ·+

SAUS • SERVICE • PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
tiJ.JJOI

CHESBI, OHIO

1. 2nd AYE.

IIIDDUPORT
992·56tt

'

7

9 .625
13 .409

12

13
20

.364

.045'

PhoeniA.. ............... \6

4 .1100
Penland ................. 14 10 ..513

New""- w.·va. ·

Golden Sute .. .... ... 12
I..A. Cll~n ...........9
1..1\. Laktm ..............8
Sacramcntn ........ ......5

304·8f2·2136

10 .545
12 .429
16 •. 333
17 .227

6..5
7.5
10
11.5
14..5

l Juh 102. Wuhinsl01'196
Miami Ill. Phil1delptl la 90
Atl1n\l I 02. Dcnvo96
o.tro;198, CLEVELAND 92 (01')
lndill'\1 108, New Jency 98
Otiuao 102. San Anl.onio 90
Houstm HM, 0.UU 93
Pbomh 116,l..A. CliJ'PCft 109

KFC~

So•lh
D1vidaon 12, Clcm•on 79
Wake Forell 83. AppaiJchian St. 78

11

HOME

•.
....-.

Pre,scription
Shop

.
..
-•:•.. ...:

253 N. SECOND

.

992·6669

;.

~
~

"

(

~

MIDDUPORI, 08.

~~,~

...

~·
~

Cluomplouhlp
Linco ln Mcmona l 77, Lenoir· Rhyne

63

The 1op 2~ 1c.am ~ 1n The Auociated
l'rcu cull egc hukctblll poll , with finl·
plac e wote~ in p.arcnthetcs, record•
lhmush Dec. 19. 10111 .,Oin~a bucd on 2l
polnLA. fnr a rint· pl1ce vote throultt one
pOint (or 1 25th·place vote. 1nd previoo•
rol\kjnp ,

•

~.

Tournaments
tlolldiJ lnn-Coca·Col• Clualc

\

-

Teua

w.L

IMI

Pta•.Wttlt

1. Arllanau (50) ............ 6-0 I ,601
2.Nao1hComlino(9) .... .8·1 1~26

I
2

3. Duke (3) ............... ..... l·O 1,49!

3

1~31

4
5

4. Te&gt;mple (2) ................ .4-0
S. Kcntucky ................. ..4· 1
6. X•nlls .............. .... ..... 9-i
7. Michipn ............. .... .5·1
a. Mauaeh\llctll ...... ..... 1· 1

1.30.5
1,264
1,170
1.140
9. UCLA (l) .............. .... l ·O 1,130
10. Purdue ................ R·O 9.57
U . l..oW•vU! e ............... 4-l 9S4

6

7
8
9
II
10

Third pl•cc
WinaateS9, OisL ~Columbd 54

Kettny Kmt Shootoltl
Ch•mpiONblp

Mo. Sou\hem 103, S. lndi1n1 95
Third pllct
SW lbptiat 86, Grind Valley St 14

Ohio men's
college scores
Saturday's action
OhJo .Conferet~et

B1ldW1n·W1Uacc 79, Maricaa63
John C.rrollll, Ouabein 79
Moont Union 76, HrliddbeJ'a 7.5
Muskinaum IS, C1pilal 81
Ohio Nonhcm ?0, Hinm 53

Tournaments
USA.IrCt. .k

Ridae&amp;Je (IJ, River Val. 4.5
Rivenide 74, Neehoniablq 3S
Shu.r H10. 45, O.rfid4 Hu. 30
Sheridan 61, Mcqan 41

Edon 34, Edt- 31
EJaio 6S' Mount OiJood 64
Elytio W. 32, a..u.;.w 29

F1)'011C Tl, Wayac Taa SO
Flndloy47,0..... O.y40
Firelondo 39. W'ellin.... 32
JinlamcSI, Akron Manche&amp;tu 41
fort.........., S2. Minoler ll
O.nway 63.SauburJ45
Gaob,.. SO, Norwood+!
Gnnvill&amp; 64, Pioll« C.lh. 30

Ham ilton Twp. 46, Amud1 ·
Quf"CI'Ce"ll 39
H..nnib.l Riv.47, SICUbfnville46

Heolll

l'rinil y 95, Holy Name 38
Tuslaw 68, Rittmln 23
Uniontown L1kc 57, M111illon J1ck ·

I

...,49

NHL
EASTERN CONFEitENCE
.

N.Y. Ranacn. .... 23 1 3
New Jency ....... 19 10 4

ftliladet,nia ...... 18 15
Wuhina:&amp;on .... .. 14 16
N.Y. Ialandcn .. IJ \5
florida ........... 12 IS
Tamp~lhy ...... 10 \ IJ
l"it!Jhur~h
S.~m

4912414
42 117 17
2 31 134132
2 .. 30 tOt lo:"i
3
29 11510fl
5
29 18 9S
4
2A 12103

.. ··- 16 9 1

W 1171 1H

............ . 16 10 7

39 110 98
3l Ill 99
34 IOZ 19
33 121 115
23 91 I 1.5
17 IOZ 170

Butfaio............ .. 16 15 3
Monuul. ........ .. 14 12 6
Qucllo&lt;.... .. .. 14 14 S

Hanford .......... . 10 19 3

an... .....

7~

Teom

3

W L T

Toronr:o ............. 21 9 S
St. l.ouio ........... 17 II S

.... GFGA
A1 125 96

o.u.. ................ 16

39 I 05 I06

12 7
Oclroit .............. 17 13 2

39 Jl4,1l4
36 11P Ill

Winrupq .......... 12 II .5

29 117140

ChieoJO ......... 16 10 4

36 96 79

hdlk: DIYIIiM
Calpry ..... .... !9 10 S
43 1lOIQ7
Vancouwcr ........ 17 16 0
34 10'7101

SanJo.: ............ ll 19 5
A.n•hmm ... ........ 12 lO 2
t..o. Anple~ ...... I I 19 2
Edmmton ......... 122 S

UliCI 74, Nonhridae 26

V11. forsell , Shaw43
W. Branch 46, Aleron SprinJ. 44
W. Gc:au .. 72, LakewoOd 6l
W _Holma 78, Medin~ Buckeye 17
W. Liberty S•lcm 49, Ba1;.min Lopn

Mansfield Ou. 32
Fumeytown 34

AU.Mk ..•W.
W L T h . CPGA

Tull'l

Unioto 59, Piketon 31
Upper ArlinJm 63, Northland 40

Milllortpert 32

.

CtotniDI&gt;-

44

Green63,Non.n•s
HamUtoa &amp;actin 73, Orlord T•lawanda

:Z.,.Ville ROIOCr•n• 62, Col Hattlcy

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Sprins. Soulh 70, Huber Htl. W1yne
58
•
SL JOKph Acad. S3 , ~IP &lt;46
St. ~ 47, Span. Hil)\l•nd 44
St. Url\lla 62. Cin"Andc:acln 36
Steubenville 61 , Mll'tina Ferry 39
Su-on&amp;~villc 6.5, Brt:eluville 34
T1Umadgc 41, Rcvcn: 45
Teays Val. 72, Circleville 23
To!. N~ D~mc 47; Chardart NJ)..Q.

34,

66, Trimbl.ll52
ltc:Uhrook 75 , llclhcl41
Ben:.¥7, Normandy 64
De~ ley 6S, Ulic1 41
HIC'Mlm·Canoll SM . Fisher Calh. 23
Ulomtnctd 70, Jamestown , Pa. 56
Boardm1n 66, Salem 51
BmokfiiCid XU, Sh1rm, P1 . 10
llrookvillc 84, Fnmldin· MO!U'fiiC 76
Buckeye Local 63 , Uampshirc Co ..
W.Va . 5~ (OTJ
Can1nn CJlh. 61 , Cantm S. .SK
Camoo llcritagc 65, Yoona. Caivuy
Cudi nt~-Ultl t.~. Hudu.:yc Val. 34
C:edarvillu 76, l&gt;a y. Chnsti11n S9
Celin1 (J3. Grcawillc :\11
Ccntcrbufl\ 69 , \1anslield .56
C'haricl 61, 1.nu1~vill~o: Aquinls 55
Ch~h1n: Ki~cr V1l . 77. Chesapeake 64
Clew . Calholic 79 , Cicv. Sl. Edward 66
Clev . l-iciW!LS 71 , Clcv. S1.lgnatius68
Col. Academy 59, H1wkcn 43

Col.

s~\h R9. o~cu,61

Coldwlter63 , W1yne Tucc 48
Columbian~ fli, McDonald 58
Conouon Val. 60, Caldwell Sl
Contincnul 75, Antwerp 42
Cory ·Raw~on 63, Bettsville 44
CovinJI.OI'I 6S, FOn Loramie 63
Crestline 69, Galton 52
Crestview 67, Fon Recovery M (01')
01nvilh: 66, Liberty Ctu. 60
Day. Cn loncl White 107, Whit.eland.
lnd . !O
Day. Northridge 71 , Twin VaUcy S. 70
I&gt;diance 72, Bowlin&amp; Green 60
Dixie 73, Wa
wille .55
0oy1ato'lm
Kidron Cor. 46
Dupont, W.Va. 70, Lancaster 67
Eutwood 74, Otqo 12
Eatm 70, An:am&amp;m 6S
Elsin l6. M...,, OO..d S I
Euclid 78. Qcv. Eut61
f1irvicw 1.5, Bry.n 6\
Findlay 72, Elida 65
1-'on Jennings 77, New Knot.villc 70

27

1.5.109

26 15105
24 IlK 133

21

96124

Saturday's scores

Okaco 2, Pbiladd~ ia 2 (tie)
New kney 6, Quebec 2
Hutford oi, WalhiniLOft I

lloolnn S, To"'!" aoy l
MonU'OII I. Detroit 1
'l'omnto 4, 1...01 A.nJCic&amp; I
c.a1.,. s. Winnirea 4&lt;OT&gt;

•

1ft

•
·t n
•
e1s

9'4:"

(OT)

Go.:t101 74, Gibaonbw"g 72
Gnham 75, Fairlawn 34
Hamil~a~ R01s 72, Cin. Hanison 61
Hilltop 59, Delli 51
Holga.tc61, Liberty Center 49
Jackson· Millon 61, YOWlJ· Chaney 66
Kolid• SO, Delpl1co JeffCISOII 46
Kcntm 59, Hardin Nonhrm 42
Lakota 11, Elmwooci7S
l.oeobWJ Foidield 13, Adau 64
Lcipcic 48, Ayerwille 43
L1bcTty Renton 67, Old Fort 57
Licking Val. 52, Gnndview 51
l.ima Calh. 85 , Otuwa·Olandorf .58
Uma Shawnee: 60, Troy 33
Lincoln Bapl. 59, Temple Olr. 48
l.ondon 8-6, 1oMstown 54
i.flfaln 72. Clev. Eut 1'cch .53
l.onm Soulhv icw 74, Oydc 70
i.U(: a~ 113, Mandicld S1. Pc:te11 tiJ
l.ulhcr E 0.11 67, Un 1vmity 60
Mansfield Sr. 18. Tol.l.ibbey &amp;I
Marim River Val. 62, Ridaodalc 48
Mus illon Perry 70, Mauil iOfl 67 (2

OT)

.

McClain 78, Hillsboro 65
Mcadowbroc:t 64, Lins ly, W.Va . .56
Miami E. 53, Piqu1 SO
Middletown 72, Cin. Winton Woocil
72 (01')
Mdl•wk 81 , Musarata 66

Jg

N. Canton 71, Akron Spring. 67
Nortlunont81, Milton· Union 45
Norw11i 73, Huron 42
Oak Glenn , W.V1 . 80, Welllville 76
Olentangy 59, W. Jcf£erson S5 (2 OT)
Onville 76, W1yncdlle 66
Ouovillc 68, Lima PciTy 52
l'alrick llenry S7. Tino~ 40
l~ t.is villc 69, Montpelier 66
Pike•on .59. l'onsmOlnh Notre Dame

Thla Ia Your Invitation To Sell Any nem For $100.00 or Less
rUid Advertlle n FREE.
Simply Clip Thla Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mall n To Us or Drop n Off At OUr Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

l'lc.uo~nt 90, N. UnuYI S]
Plymouth 6.5 , Sew Lt~ndon 52
Pon.Jmoulh w 61 , Nock Hill 49
Preble Shawnee .59. Tn ·County N. 43
S. Ccnliiii 81, Mon10evillc 62
S. Oiule~ton SE 57, Oreenevicw 47
Sa lem Real Lite 74. Ot-anao Ou. 73
S• ndullcy St. Marys 69. Seneca E. 66
Sa ndy V1 L 51, C1dir. 44
Shelby 87, Lcltington 86
Spring. Soulh 86, TrotwoocU•i•dison

fo'.r Wtat
lbw11i P1cific 9K . Rio Gr1ndc 14

AP Top 25 college poll

~.

For All Your Prescription and SWidry
Needs - See Us!
'
.

..
..-•..
.•

a.... sa

43

Alhcn~

Mldwt'lt

Monl.lnl 67, Creighton 58
Kocky Maunu in 99, Mary 78
Wuhinston SL. 79. E. Michis1n 64

..... l4
MI!Jiret1161, Sanduaky St. Mil)'' •tl
M.lnon C1th. 35, Wellinpn 32 (011
Marlin&amp;\Ofl47, Can&amp;On s·. 31
Muon 56, Sprin...... 35
Muaillon 59", Camoo Timken 31
Maysville SO, Tri-Valley 33
Medw 13,
Mcias 61, Chahirc R.iw.r Val. 47
Mcn10r 54, Oeve.lln4 H.ta. l7
N. C.nl0rl61, New PhiladclpNa 49
N. Royalton 45 , BnNwic:k,..
N. Unim 56. Pleaaant52
Oak Hill 61 , Chcupc.akc. 33
Oberlin 42, A~ton 39
OlnuiCd Falls 51, N. Olmlled 33
Ont.ario49. 1-!tcdcrickLOwn 29
Orrville S4, N«WI)'t'ICI 34
Padua 40, Lake Calh. 31!
P1int Vat. 67, Z.ne Tratc 52
Pony 62, 11edtohlro
PickCfin«&amp;on 75 , Odawarc 38

YounJ. Mooney 75, Woodnnw Wiltoo

30

64

IUinou !h. 74, N. low1 61 ·
Minncsou 79. W. Carolina 61
Mis101.1ri 64, Coppm S1. 63

New York 11 New Jmcy, 7:30p.m.
L.A . l.akcrt 11 Orl1ndo, 7:30p.m
Utah at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Ch1rloi.LC It Detmt, 7:)0 p.m.
Hou&amp;lon at San AnlOr\lo, 11:30 p.m
Phoenix 11 Denver, 9 p.m
Ponland at Oolden S111e, 9 p.m.
lnd i1n1 at Suttle. 10 p.m

.·.. ·

Saturday's boys' action

Uc:kina. Htt. Sl, Ncw-Alban)' 41

Lima 1.\h 60, Coldwt\Q" 58
Lim• Sr. 77, PoirfiCI&lt;I 47
l.iule Miami 42, Kinu 40
Lopn 71, Ndaonvilfo-Y&lt;rl 36
Lopn Elm 79, Flirlidd Union 31
Lorain Calh. 53. Oilmour 36
L..ouilville 43, Cat~o~l fultt~n NW 42
Lowellnd 44, CUI. Twpin 42
MlarUf"lcaJ 60, Solon S4
Maruftcld Sr. 70, Gahanna 64
Manlfidd St Petctl 46. Sp.ll\1 Hiah·

so

Eo10n72,funktin· Monroe70(0D

WarmuviUe '6, Notm1nd7 42
WallhltlllM C.H. SJ , 0~U¥C City -iS
Woyn..r..W 66, Foill&gt;onllo 49
WCilllkc. 64, Rocky Riwer 19
Wic&amp;lift'c S.S, WiJJou&amp;hby S. 46
Willard 47, TiftUI COI~biuu 32
WooGa 74, A.Uitnce 42
X...io Sl, SpMJ. Norlh •s
YeiiD• SJIMI' Sol, 0........ 29,

u;p.;. "· Pondon-Oilbao 42
l..ibeny Union 59,Bcme Unim 47

Dovc40, Berlin HiluuJ 36

l7

32

Ledpnmt41, Newbury 31

Dubijn69, Newut Sol

Ac1dcmy .59, Gmllt Mill~ H1wkcn 43
AICJ11ndcr 101. Millet 5.5
An11nn li 59, Parkway ~ 1
Anthony W~ync 67, Tol Wnodwud

St. Fnnci•, P. . 86, Canlliua 71
VirJinia Union 89, Claflin 68

New York,'1:30 p.m.
Dctroi111 Pkiladelphil , 7:30p.m.
Washing10r111 MinnCIOLI, II p.m
Chu!otw 11 Cttic110. K:30 p.m .
Ind iana IL Phocnb•• 9 p.m.
Milwaukee ll L.A. Clippera . 10:30
p.m.

..

Ohio H.S. scores

Marisl 101 , Army 89
Miun i 63, Buffalo .57

TonlghJ's 2ames
D1l111

Michig1n St 70, DaytOn 62
Rio Grande 98, W, Virginia Tech .59
Shawnee St 76, Marian, Ind. 6\
Xavier, Ohio Rl , Oevchad St. 66

Maine 112, E. filinois 82

Portllncl93. Milw1ukoc 81

-·2

Caul ConrentKe

(Of)

F.ad

a..EVEI.AND 12l,I. A. LWn 92
Orlando 97, Sacramtftlo 91

Cot w...."' 76,Ncw.uk Cath.. 36
Col. Weot6S,I'nntlin llu. 61 (011
c.lonel Cnwfard 50, Cnollne 2A
ColambU S9, ClaY. LWtenn W. 46
e.pr.y 57, WwW11l111 31
c..ct.viUeH~.
s.o:Sol, lndepaldenee 42
Cuyohop
Cuyohop VoL Cltr. Sl. Ki-%
c.s.- 43. Roody 3S

Honp11 for tl•bllll Cl•ulc
Olivut M, W1l~n 61
\111lnn e Ktl. Gr•cc 71'1
].lid)" ,)liCk\'! f:lll!i.lit·
Ch11mplun11hlp
Ocfianc~.: 75, 11iram li4
Third plact'
DePauw 63, Albion 54
Nun ·cuoferentc a~:tlon
Man cheste r 93 , Ohio Northern 8&amp;

Comcll99, Cortland St. 63
Harvard 92, Vennont 64

Sunday's ocores ·

a..... n

play

Tournaments

.- Sunday's action

s..ulel26, Golden Su~e 111

Cin. McNicholll SO, Cin. Seton 44
Cin. Readin&amp; 50, Cin. Lockland 39
Cin. Summi151, Pul Tudor41
Clev. Catholic 44, Chlnel43
aev. Hay 71. S.ndulky .52
Clear Folk 43, Triw•y 42
Clover\e~f70, Midp.~rk .51
Col. School for Girls 51. H1th1w1y

Winmbc.ri, 71 , WOOI~er42
Ohkl ConiCrenee
lhldw in WaUacc 72. Muicu• .59

Ctuomplolllhlp

X1nsu St. 65 , H1w1ii 61 ·
Third pl~c:e
SW Tc~u Sl. 69. Mercer .51
USA.Ir Cllult
ChlmploiUhlp
NJ.: LoW.1i1na 91, Wri&amp;ht Sl. 79
Third pi•«
Troy St. I 04, Ptame View 91

20

Saturday's action

~orlh

Championahlp
N.C.-WilminBlM 70, South Florid• 62
Third plac:e
Gcoraia St. 77, Oramblins St. 64
llawall Festival

2.!

Cin. Olen Este 73, Cin. Win10n Wood.

Youn$1lnwn SL. ti5 , A.kroo 60
M.iamt, Ohio 78,lllinols 66
Ohio St. lOS, K1Rsu'SL 70

Tournaments

Saturcluy's scores

992·5432

~on - conr~rence

Ealll Coul BukC!Lb•ll Cl••k

Padfk: Dlvllktn
Scaulc ................. 19 2 .905

5TH STREET ·

- Owner/Oper1tor

Dealer

7

GO

17

college scores

S.n Diego 83 , Pacific 66
Soulhem C1l 84, Sacramento St. 64
UC S.n Diego 92, N. Ari2.onal2
UCLA IOO, l.SU 80
UNL Y 93, Loyola Marymount 77
Uun 76, Cal St.· Fullcrt.cl'l 73
Utah SL. 66, Lewis &amp; Clatk .53
Wcbc:r St. 97, llof\J1nd 10

Portland 105, MinnCIIOta 95

POMEROY

JUSTDO IT.

955
7011

Cudinll 51, Pymawn.ina Val. 33
Curollton 55, Minerw1 35
Cin. Coumty D1y .57, Lan4mari Ou.

Ohio women's

7l

TueRdBy's games

EetabU.h 1913

Your local

Pet.

l

Minncsau .... .........8 14
o.ua...................... .. J 21

FAMILY RESTAUUNT·

!Ill~

.. ...9

I.

Chria~i1n

FtrWut

J
4.:'i
(,
II
X-5
12

WESTER IIi CONFERENCE
Tc•m

.Tcus·EI P11o 80, Abilene

47

w.
"""""""' 49, J.... a- 16
W1~ Hudina SO, Y~na. Otane.y

" " - " '·8 - 4 6

Bot.rdman 56, Cuyahoca Falli -"
llrillol M . Kirtland I I
Brooklyn 50, Ricnn;md Hu. 23
ltuckcyc call. 59, CuclinJIOn 38
Bucyru1 42, Shelby 29
CilniOn Cath_12, Akron Elms 38
c~nton OlenO.k 59, M.auillon Perry

Kunt S3

Sunday's action

Jeweu.-Sc:io61, La.kcland 51

rca.- SO, Bedford 40

32

E•hlbllion
,
Clc"'elsnd St. 89. Clc.vel1nd AAU 80 ..

l2

Mid welt

Akron 59, N.lllinoUSI
B~dley 71, Florida Adanl.ic 46
Ci.ncinn,ti 9S. Younastown St. SS
Dc&amp;roit Mercy 65 , Califomil, Pl. 62
Evansville 86, Kcnl 53
lllin~ 12·1, Chicaao SL 52
Indiana 91. E. Kenwcky 80
Iowa St 115. Teus-ArlinJlm SS
Ncb{Ub 14, Nichiam St. R1
Oollind, Mid. . 16, TOW.~
Punlo&gt;e 97, Oeorp Soulhem S9
SW MiaiOW'i St. Sl, Widlita SL 41
Valp&amp;niao 100, n.tmouth S4
W . Illinois 90, Da)'lm 12

T•mpa llay n DonvCr, 4 p.m.

...•.•

Oc:P.ul 90, Jacttonville 13
E"t Cuo1ino 75, Cnp0dl72 (0'1')

C.....,,

S11urday
~~ S11n Frar1e1~n . ~ : JO p.m.

N.Y. Jw 11 Duffaln, I p.m.

~

A•bum 101,014 Dominion 17
ConWI'Iaey 102, l.ou.i.siana Tecll 72
Clemson 76, Citldel64
Coutol CoroliM IS, 5. C...rim S• 14
Coil. of Ol1rle1ton 106, Mouat Olive

AoridoSL6!1,FloridoS9

Pit\lburgh 11 Scau lc, 4 p.m.
CLEVElAND atl- 1\. R1ms, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Gianl$ at Phocni~ , 4 p.m.

••
u"

E'f'lftiVIII~o:l!li,

Findlay 94 . Ohio Wealc}'an til
Nonh Carolina 81, Ottio St.at.e 68
S1. Thomu , Aa. 90, Mount Vemon
Nauraw: 73
O.ak.land, Mich. 86, Toledo65
W. Dlinois 90, Da)'10n 12
Wat. VirJinia 90, Olt.io II
WooaJ.Cr 71 , Scranton 60
X1vier, Ohio 15, Virginia Tech 52

South
Ala.·Oirmingham 76, Miu. V•Uey St.

Fuiman I 03, CharlatM SoulJvm 91
a..o.p Tooh 86, V""'abil' 77 (01')
Koniul9, Oeonaio 79
Libcny 96. Avereu S6
MomphU St. 86, Fla. lntcmuimal69
Middle Taln. 82, M0.-KIMII City 67
M.issisa:ippi 7&amp;, Soutlxm Mill. 74
M&gt;ooiuippi So. 12. T.U.e 78
N.C.-AohiM!Ie 74, E.ttw.6S
NW ~anal9, SB Louisiana 112
North
ll,(lllioS• 61
NO!theut&lt;m 64, llowud U. 62
Rodfard 104, W. Mof)llond 62
Richmond 76, V1. Cunmonw~lth 61
Somlard 90,
57
SL Lou.is 92, Murny ~t: 19
Stetson 19, Weli Florid• .66

Sunday,lkoc. 16
Albnu II CINC:JNNA'I1, \ r .m
llcunil s1 Otic1an. l p.m.
lndianapoti~ 111 New f:ngl1nd. I p. m.
I..A . N•idcn 1tOrcen lllr ~ 1 p.m
New Ori~:~IU 11 Philadclphia, 1 p.m.

•••

CRow~s
. .
228 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY

92

n

Regular·seiiSlln nnales

.;;:

Ewing Funeral Home·

•

••

1·800·837·8217

Malfii,W.Ya.
304·773·5514

Ill

Penn 114, H1vcrfotd 73
Piwburg!117, OuQuane 66
Prin~loo 95 . Wuh . &amp; Jeff. SO
St. Hnnavcnturc 86. Niagara 69
St. John '1 93, Ponihafn
St. l&gt;c~.~:r's 90. American Unill . 711
Syracw;c 1011, Md.-E. Shore 71
Vlll1n0011 89, St. Mary 's, Cal. 78
Wagncr97 , lon1lll
We&amp;t Virgmia 90, Oh1o 81

N.Y. &lt;iian~ 11 New Otlcans. 91'J.m.

)

•

•

742-2211

JACKSONAVL

2A2

22
23

291

66

Tonight's gam'e

...

3 LOCAtiONS
SECOND STREET

21

19
11

EMI

Sunduv's scures

~

Bank

317

II

At.boma 96, Florid• A.tM 58

Wuhington )O ..A LI•nt• 17
llu1Taln47, Miami 34
Hou111on 26,1)]usburglll7
CINCINNI\lllS, LA. Rtms 3
Mimcsot1 21 1 Green B1y 17
Ne"' £nsllnd 20, CLEVELAND 17
Phocni• 30, S.tllc 27 (01')
Kanlaas Cily 28, San Diego 2A
San Franeisoo 5.5, Detroit 17
L.A. Raidcn 'l7, Tampa Bay 20
Philadelphia 20, lndianapolis I 0

~t

Peoples

20

Troy S1. 104, Pnirte View 91
Hoop~ ror Habllll C la•k
T1ylor1l, Walth 69
Ma lone 101 , Oracc 12
Non-eonfertau adion
1\kron ~ 9 . N 1\linoi• 5K
C: •nro:IMIIU9 S, Y nung~wwn St. 55
Clan 1n KO. Ct:ntrll l St. 611
l)cfi•ncc 82, Olivet 79
lkrnaon 17, C.mc:g.c·Mo.:llon liJ

ll

George Wuhinaton 66, Pap,xtdinc 59
Gcorsctown 93, UC ~c-64
M•nhauan 7.5, Hofttra 59
Morg1nSL 7S,LonahlandUniv. 70
Mount St. Mary's , Md. 74, Bucknell

l:knvcr 11, Chic;yu l
l)allu 2X, .\ .Y. J~ s 7

"Dipit~ abd Service Alwa~.t"

•

•

I

BOTTLE ·GAS .

'

CIUIII

..

•

AND.

"
FrJnable spas
Where America Goes 'lb Relax··

..

•

S&lt;Tl
443

Tttlnlp....

-siifurday's acUoa

57

}

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~41!!1
.

,

14
16

Avon Lake 63, Amhent32
Aytnvillc SA, N. Centn.l 22
Bcacbwood 54, AlUOnl 48
Beauft'OnlSI , la~J 22
JkiJc[onWne S I, K.cntaL 33
Bellevue 47, Upper SlnduU.y oi l
Rl1ck River 51 , IAI.dmvill&amp; 40
Uloom Carroll 34 . C1nal Winchcatcr

NE l...ooisiln• 91, Wriaht St 79

13

703
685
642
544

363

Ctootoplailohlp

12

Major college scores

.~

Put One Under Yo•r Tree This
Chrlst•as

1611

Olhtn rccelwlna wote•:· V1ndcrbilt
90, C11ifoml1 19 , LSU 41, Wukinaton
Sa. 31. Florida St. 29. Virsinia 2~ .
XI\ VI E[{, OHIO 24, Ala .-Birminah1m
20 , Penn 14, Ok.11homa 12. Muyland It,
V1. Commonwe~hh 9, Oecqia I. Sllnford K. Missouri 6. lowa St . .5, New Mcx1 ·
co St 5, OIDO ST. S, Villanova S, New
Orlean• 4 , M.L.ail•ippi St. 3, St. Louis 3,
Baylor 2-, Ocorgct.own 2-, WEST VIR·
OJNIA l, NorUnv'OMCm I. Old Dominion
I. VT-Chauanooaa I, W~ St I.

432248
257 269
21!9 337
l R7319

SwlurdM\1 1S scnres

: •'

:.~

16. Mulm:t0Lil
.. .. ... 6-2
I 7 . Wiscon~tn ............. .... S-0
1M . H011on Collcae . , __ ___ (,..0

1&amp;0

£•tern Dlwldon

~,

JAN. 29 ............................ RivER VALLEY
'
.
JAN. 31 .......................... AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 3 ................................. AT EASTERN

1993·1994 GIRLS' SCtfEDULE

284 237
273268
333 234
24S 253
240 274

•

:.~
::.

MEIGS MARAUDERS

2 12 o .143 1!13 282

Walern Dh•l1ion
X1nsa1 City ...... 1fl 4 0 .714
LA. R1iclcn ..... 9 ~ 0 .643
Don...........
9 l 0 .643
S1n Di.cJO ......... 6 8 0 .429
Setttlc. .............. .5 9 0 .3.57

·:.

,.i"

FEB. 10.............AT FeDERAL HOCKING
Coach -Jenny Roush

714 334231
S1J 286 2S6

CLEVEL\Nl&gt; .. 6 II II A29 253271

•••

JAN. %7 ...................................... TRIMBLE

FEB. 7...........................................MILLER

H 6 0 .571 256207

4 10 0 .286 179 310
3 II 0 .214 1672.59

a - Hnu~ton ......... IO

••~
'''•'J

· Coach- Scott WoHe

9 3 0 .643 302273

Centull)hlslon

~-1

DEC•.14 .......,;............... VINTON COUNTY
DEC.17 ..........................AT ALEXANDER
DEC.18 .................................... AT UNICO
DEC. 21 ... ;....... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 28 .............................CHESAPEAKE
DEC. 30 ........................ AT COAL GROVE
JAN. 7....................................... EASTJ:Rf4
JAN. 11 ..............~ ............................ MEI,OS
JAN. 14..............................._
.......... MIUER
JAN. 18..................................AT BELPRE
JAN. 21 ..............AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 28 ........~ ................... ATWELLSTON
FEB. 1 .........................::....... AT TRIMBl-E
FEB. 4..................................ALEXANDER
FEB. &amp;....................................... EASTERN
FEB. 11 ................................... AT MILLER
FEB. 18 ................... FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 1.9 ................................ GALLIPOLIS
Coach - Howle Caldwall

15 . Connecl.i&lt;: u1 .. ..... .... ... 6-0

!1-MERICAN COI'fi'ERENCE

DEC. 13 ........................................ MILLER
DEC. 20 ............................ AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 23 ......................... AT WATERFORD
JAN. 3 .............................. AT WELLSTON
JAN. &amp;................AT FEDERAL.HOCKING
JAN. 10 ........................ VINTON COUNTY
JAN.12 ................................ ATWAAREN
JAN. 13......................................TRIMBLE
JAN. 19...........,................... WATERFORD
JAN. 20............AT .NELSONVILLE·YORK
jAN, 24 ..................................~ ..... ~. MEIGS
.JAN. 27 ............ ;............. AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 31 ................................... AT MILLER
FEB. 2........................................ WARREN
FEB. 3.................................... SOUTHERN
FEB. ? ..................... FEDERAL HOCKING

'

Monday, December 20, 1983

14 . GooJJi• T~Xh ..... , ... ... b-1

1993·1994 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1993-1994 BOYS' SCHEDULE .

The Daily Sentinel
12. lndiln, ................. .....S-1
I J . Ari~.ona ...................6-0

tl,.,

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

BOY~

a .............................. AT SOUTHERN
11 ..............AT FEDERAL HOCKIN!J
18.................................t '''"-' TRIM.,LE
19...........................AT WATERFORD
Coach"" Tony Deem

Sports

ONE ITEM -ONE FREE AD PER WEEK

71

Spnngboro 75. h•nklm 57
St Ucnry 62. W1pU:or~e~.a 47
Stryker 70, Edacn.on 64
lhnmu Worlhm&amp;lnn 69 . Reynold :~: ·
hurg 47
T1pp Ci1y 63, D•y Oakwood 55
Tip~.on . ln d . 62. Adm 1ral Kmg53
Tol . Woodmorc 76. Northwood 54
Lppcr Arl ing 1on 49 . Col. Linde n·
McKinley 37
Van Wet\ 77, P1uldLna 62
Vcrmilim 59, Oearview SJ
W1lsh Jesuit 66, Akron N. 65 (OT)
Wuhingtan C.fl 67, Bi&amp; WalnUI .50
Wooerlord S7. Fedenl !foctJn&amp; S I
Wcat.cm Rcauve 51, S. Rmae49
WllltaviUc N. 73, New1tk 62
We.Lervillc S. 53, Hamilton 31
WilminJ10n 51 , Clinton-Mauie 6.5
WoMinalon On. 76, Col. W1ucnon
Sl
Yowtg. Boardrn~n 66, Salem 57
Z.nc~viUc 67, Asnllnd 35

Saturday's Klrls' octlon

Ae~demy_40, E. KIIOJ. 30

Ad1 49 Kld..,.,ont 46
Ada~ I
Huntinatan N:ou 36
Akmn Ftrononc 51 . Manchatcr 41
AUen E. A9, Botkins 42
Ashland.4.l, myria 21

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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
(Offer Expires January 15, 1994

�Page

:'

6

The Dally Sentinel

S~'ih:;~b~ys post first win

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentillel Correspolldent
: Cbrisunas came one week early
• for Howie Caldwell's Southern
. Tornadoes, as the visiting Meigs
Countians set the early tempo and
· went on to post a 63-61 upset victory over the highly touted UniOIO
Sherman Tanks Saturday night in
boys' varsity high school basket'ball action near Chillicothe.
Southern, now t-4 overall and
• 0-3 in the Tri-Valley Conference,
· goes to NelsonviUe-York to meet
; Tom Riccardi's Buckeyes Tuesday.
· UniOIO falls to 4-2 ovcrall.
. Caldwell said, "I've said all
:·. along, we' ll be a good ball club,
~ when we play four quarters of hard,
' consistent basketball. I've seen
::

) In the NFL,

.

Monday, DecemtJer 20, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

To place an ad
Call 992-2156

of 1993-94 basketball season

some good SiJnS this year, but held the nip.and-tuck advantage to
IOIIight we puttt all together." The the ftrSt period's end, 18-17.
result, of course, was a tough road
The grueling Southern style and
victory for the Tornadoes.
. upbeat tempo took its toll on the
"Everyone was reall)" in to it Tanks in the second round, as
tonight The fans were in to the Southern played more error-free
game and the ltids stayed focused basketball than in its previous
for allfour quarters. This was a big encounters. The result was a 21-14
win for us tonight," said the veter- quarter and a 39-31 halftime
an Southern mentor.
advantage.
The ever-important win breaks a
Southern slipped somewhat durseason-opening sltid, and it Should ing the th ird frame, but managed to
give the Tornadoes some confi- protect its lead, 49-45, as Unioto
dence going into a stretch of three tried to play more control basketmore tough games in the next ten ball.
days. Then, Southern will begin
Southern held a four- to sixmeeting a string of less formidable point edge through most of the
opponents and comparable foes in final round, leading 59-54 with 45
the TVC's Hocking Division.
second!!' left in the game. At this
Southern toOk an early lead and point, Caldwell began a series of

nervous swallows as he watched
his club miss three suaight oneand-one 'ituations. Southern foul
shooting· has been less than par all
season, and instead of being the
game-savers of the past have been
a big part on non-success.
Each hectic &amp;!liP was soothed
somewhat as Southern reco~e.red
the rebound and on each transtllon,
UniOIO failed to score. With 10 seconds left, Robert Reiber clinched
the game by hitting both ends of a
two shot foul to pus'h the score to
63-59.
'
Unioto scored at the buzzer,
making Reiber's aerials all the
more important in the 63-6~ finale.
Southern was led by Retber's _19
points and seven rebounds, whde

kyan WiUiams noich_ed 15 points
and Aaron Drummer had 11.
Mike Fout paced Unioto with
12, while Shan Combs and Matt
Hoops each had II.
Southern hit 21-52 from the
field and was 0-4 from three point
range, hitting 19-28 at the line.
Unioto hit 19-47~ 3-13 threes and
was 14-23 at the !me.
Southern grabbed 36 rebounds,
facing a small38-36 defteit in that
area, which was led by Aaron
Drummer with etght and Mason
Fisher and Reiber ~ith seven.
Cruse had eight for Umoto.
.
Southern had 14 stea!s•.{Retber
4, Dnimmer 3. Ryan Wtlhams 3);
ha~ 21 turnovers and 25 fouls.
Uruoto had 17 steals, 20 turnovers
and 25 fouls.
.

Unioto won the reserve game
53-47.
SOUTHERN
_
(18·2~-10-14:6~

i'

The Houston Oilers and San
; Francisco 49ers knew they could
Jclinch division titles with wins. On
• this day, though, they had other
: thoughts to motivale them.
: The Oilers went into Three
• Rivers Stadium wearinJ No. 76
: stickers on their helmets m memo~ ry of the late Jeff Aim, and stood at
f attention 'when his picture was
~ shown on the scoreboard before the
• national.antheni Sunday.
~ Playing for the first time since
: Aim killed himself, the Oilers paid
~ uibute to the: reserve defensive
t lineman the best way they could:
' ShoWing the same intensity he disrplayed, they beat Pittsburgh 26-17
Ifor their ninth straight win and the
::AFC Cential Cl!ampionship.
. "The whole nation was watch! ing to see how we would tespond,"
~Oilers wide iecei~ Ernest Givins
•said. '"We went out and played
!:hard and won•••
~. The 49ers went into their game
;at Petroit remembering liow they
•blew a 17·pointlead in the fourth
;quaner last week in Atlilnta and
:lost a chance to wrap up the NFC
'.WCSL
.
~ San Francisco left no doubt this
·.time, scoring on all"of its first-half
/possessions behind Steve YOU!II
:ror a SS-17 rout of the. Uons. The
•'

49ers won their lOth division title
in 12 years, never punted, and
scored more points than any visiting opponent tn Lions' history.
''Late in the game, Dexter
Carter went 50 yards and 1 think
it's an attitude everyone took
today, that the game' s not over,"
49ers running !Jack Amp Lee said.
"We're still going to be aggressive
and ptar, hard and go to the final
whistle. '
The 49ers and Oilers joined Dallas and the New York Giants as
teams that have clinched playoff
spots. Green Bay and Miami could
have joined them, but both lost
ln other games, Buffalo downed
Miami 47-34, Minnesota beat
Green Bay 21-1.7, Kansas City
stopped San Diego 28-24, the Los
Angeles Raiders stopped Tampa
Bay 27-20, Washington defeated
Atlanta 30-17, New England
topped Cleveland 20-17, Cincinnati
downed the Los Angeles Rams 1.53, Phoenix beat Seattle 30-27 in
overtime and Philadelphia topped
Indianapolis 20-10.
Tonigh~ the Giants (10-3) are at
New Orleans.
In Saturday's games, Dallas (104) beat the New York Jets 28-7 and
Denver defeated Chicago 13-3.
Oilers 26, Sleelers 17
At ,Pittsbui'gh, the Oilers (10-4)

won their second AFC Cenual
crown in three years and sent the
game ball to Aim's parents.

Aim, a fourth-year player, shot
himself to death Tuesday after
being involved in an auto accident
that killed a childhood friend. The
Oilers knew Aim as a driven ,
charged-up player who could laugh
one minute and glare the next
The Oilers won for just the seventh time in 25 games at Pittsburgh . .But Houston lost leading
receiver Webster Slaughter for the
rest of the season with tom knee
ligaments.
The Steelers (8-6) lost their ftrst
AFC Cenual home game in three
years. Pittsburgh was missing running back Bany Foster, out for the
season with an mjured ankle.
4!1era 55, Lions 17
At Pontiac, Mich., San Francisco (10-4) extended its NFL record
of consecutive seasons with 10
wins to 10. Delroit (8-6) remained
tied with Green Bay for the NFC
Cenuallead.
·
Young, !he NFC's leading passer, passed for 354 yards and four
touchdowns, and left in the third
quarter with a 45-10 lead. He connected with Jerry Rice for an SOyard touchdown pass and John
.
Taylor for a 68-yard score.

Bills 47, Dolpblns 34
At Miami. Buffalo won the
l)ighest-scoring NFL game this season.
Mickey Washington returned an
interception 27 yards for a touchdown and Nate Odomes scored on
a 25-yard fumble return. The Bills
(10-4) led ·47-20 after scoring three
touchdowns in the ftrst six minuteS
of the second half.
Miami (9-5), which had th e
league's best record three weeks
ago, has lost tl!ree in a row, all at
home.
Vikings 21, Packers 17
At Milwaukee, Jim McMahon
threw three touchdown passes in
winning his lOth consecutive start
against Green Bay. Minnesota (77) still .has a chance to repeat as
NFC Central champs while Green
Bay missed a cbance to clinch its
first playoff spot in a non-suike
season since 1972.
Scottie Graham rushed for 139
yards for the Vikings. The Packers
(8-6) had won six straight games at
County Stadium.
Chiefs 28, Chargers 24
At Kansas City, Mo., Joe Montana tossed a four-yard TO pass to
JJ. Birden one play after sustaining
a concusssion in the third quarter.
Montana called a 40-second
timeout after Junior Seau flattened

him. Looking wobbly, he put the
Chiefs (10-4) ahead 21-11 wilh his
pass to Birden and then left the
game.
Kansas City mllied from a 17-0
deficit and remained tied with Buffalo and Houston for the homefield advantaRe in the AFC . San
Diego (6-8) has lost eight straight
regular-season games 10 the Chiefs.
Raidera 27, Buccaneers 20
At Los Angeles. the Raiders

: Nelsonville:. York girls notch 52-28 .victory over Southern

1.

'

Nelsonville- York pulled away
' from a 35-!7 halftime lead and
l defeated Southern 52~28 in a girls'
: Tri· Valley Conference game
• ThundaynightinRacine.
: The win booats Nelsonville: York to 4-2 ~ ·ind 2-~ in the
: TVC, while Southern. is ·now 0-5
" overall and 0-4 in the leque.
,, N-Y was led by Susan Crawford's 16 points, while Lindsay
Shumway added 11. Shumwayadded nine rebounds, while Melissa White added eight of the team's

i

'

to181,24.
Aitilee Mills and Brianne Proffitt each had six points for Southem.
Nelsonville shot 23-43 for
53.5%, ·was 3-8 in three,;Poin~
range and was 3-3 at the' line :
Southern was 11-52 and 6-12 at the

Meigs seventh-grade
·gJr/S win flrstgame.s

The Meigs Maraudei girls' -leventh-gmde
te1m is off to
Meigs elghth-g_rade · a fast stan basketball
by winning its fint awo
girls edge FH 29-26
games - a 40-26 win over Gallipolis and a 26-24 victory over
Meigs overtaine a llow Sl8rt and Federal Hocking.
defeated Federal Hoelting .29-U'! in
In the win over Gallipolis,
girls eighth grade basJretbi1l acaon Meigs shot a sizzling 64% from the
recendy.
floor in rolling to the 14-point vicDanieUe Grueser ~all four tory. )'rish Davis poured in 17
of her team's points, as the points (7 of 10 from the floor) to
. Maraudershekla4-31eadaflerone lead the winners. Tracy Co!fey
' period. The Marauders used a bat- added 12 points (six of nine). Other
: ruiced attack in lbe seco11d period 10 scorers for the 1\fprauders were
: open up a 12-S·IiaHiiine lead.
Melissa Werry with five, Rebekah
: But the Laneen CIIIIC ~~ Smith four and Tanya Miller with
: back and opened OJ! a 19-1.8
t-.:o. Alisha Rojas led Gallipolis
, hea_d inJ into the fiita1, penod ~Y wtth 11. .
~ outsconng Meigs 11-3 tn thi:.third .
.In the wm over Federal Hocki period.
'
.
, ing, the Marauders jumped out on
', C11rrissa Ash and Brianna ' top 14-4 at the half and held off a
; Gilmore ~ot the hot hillel for Meip Fedaal HockinJ comeback to post
~ in the fmal period. Ash sc·o red the 26-24 wm. The Lancers
•eight points and G~ ~six outscored Meigs ~-12 in the sec. as the Marauders came from ond half.
' behind to post a 29.26 win.
Tracy Corfey led a balanced
Ash led the Maralidcrs scorers Meigs attack with eight points, and
with 10 points, Gilmore added team mat~ Tonya Miller added
seven. Other Mei~s scorers includ- seven. Rebekah Smith added four
ed Grueser with SIX, Danielle Peck- wilh Melissa Werry, Jennifer Heck
ham with three, Jennifer Husk and Kelly Grueser scoring two
tdded two and Stephanie Burton each. Megan Drummer chipped in ·
-with one. Federal Hocking's Vales .with one. Casto led the Lancers
led all sc:orezs with 12.
with 12.
' Meigs will host Southern
Meigs will host Soutbern
'tonight
tonight

line.
The B uckcyes grabbed 24
rebounds lo Southern's 26, while
also posting 12 assists, seven
blocks, 18 steals, 16 turnovers and
1 fouls.
• · other 'tVC games
•
In other league games, Belpre
remained undefeated with a 57-30
win over Federal Hoelting as Jamie
Colebank grabbed 13 rebounds and
tossed in 17 points. Belpre is 5-0
and Federal is 4-2 in the league.
Meigs, now 6-1 overall and 5-1
in the 1VC, defeated Miller 49-41
behind Vanessa Compston's 16 and
Joy O'Brien's 15. Miller drops to
1-3 and 0-3 in the 1VC.
Trimble improved its record to
3-3 overall and 3-2 in the TVC
with a 35-33 win over Vinton
County, who dropped to 1-4.
Alexander, 3-0-in the league and
4-0, overall rolled to a 47-38 win
over Wellston as Jaime Rolston
poured in·20 points.
In non-league action, Gallipolis,
7·0 defeated River Valley 70-55,
while Don Eichinger, a former
Mei Countian, ccaclJed his Warren ~ Warriors to a 65-46 win
over Athens. Athens, 0-6 is

Smoke
save lives

and mOney.

If )'OUr t.on. is equipped with
a smoke deleclot, Na1ionwide
will discount the cost of )'OUr
homeowners insurance. Smoke
deteclors KIWIIi.es, pocperty,
and naw """"'&gt;'· Cell us today.

coached by former Eastern mentor
Dawn Heideman. Warren is now 43 ovemll.
Eastern wiU go to Racine to face
Southern tonight, while Meigs is
idle until Jan. 3 when its hosts
Southern:· Eastern koes' to Waterford Thursday for a non-league till
Nelsonville·York
(15-20-8-9=51)
Sarah Ogg '3-1-0=9, Susan
Crawford 4-2-2=16, Amanda Hall
1-0-0=2, Heather Cagg 2-0-0=4,
Lindsay Shumway 5-0-1=11,
Melissa White 3-0-0=6. Totals 203-3/3:52

0:::

M~s~n Ft~ho~401-/i ~~~~O~
Wtlhams - · 0 as.
19/28:63

•
•
•

UNlOTO
. (17-14-14-16=61)
Maa Hoops 4-0-3=11, J.T. Harp
1-0-1=3, Mike Fout 4-0-4=12,
Shane Combs 3-1 -2= 11, Jason
Cruse 4-0-0=8, Matt Park 2-20=10, Dan Bowling 0-0-2=2, Brian
Bucnh 1·0·2=4 . Totals: 19-314123=61

•

1

Southern
Seco--'
S
(8-9-6-5=28)
,
111
• t. Po111roy
Amber Ohlinger 1-0-2=4, 1
YOUIIIIDEPENDEIT
1
Aimee Mills 3-0-0=6, Bea Lisle 0AGENTS SERVING
0-1= I, Brianne Proffitt 3-0-0=6,
Jess Codner 2-0-0• 4, Christie 1
MEIGS COUIIn
Cooper 0-0-3=3, Sammi Sisson 2SINCE 1161
0-0=4. Totals 11-0-6/12=28
L..-..:.:;;;.;;:..:.;:.;.;:;__.J

!
1

TIME~ WATCHES
,.,, Jlnl.lf*l•l

Co•P'Iete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Tllroat l•cludlng· ·

.D.
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12.95 to 517.95

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Sundays 12-5

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE

1192·5776

COLOGNES &amp;
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40%0FF
GIFT BAGS
CHRISTMAS &amp;
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RUSSELL STOVER
ASSOITJD CHOCOLATES
IN SANTA 101 1.6 OZ.
REG. 79(

Words

I
3
6

IS'
IS
IS
IS
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Rate

$ .20
$ .30

$9.00

$ .42

Public Notice

. NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propooelo will be
received by the 'southern
loccol Boord Education, Elm
Str..1 47725 St. Rt. 124,
Recine, Ohio 45771 until
12:00 noon, prevailing loccol
lime;, Wedneeday, January
12, 1884 and will be opened
and read publicly
lmmedlelely thoroalter lor
ilhe erecullon ol:
~ Aebeo1oe abetement end
Replacement meterlale at
'Southern Local High
~chool, Elm StrHI 47725

prevailing wage ratea aa

,Oh~
In accordance with the
Plano and Speclllcallono
'prepared by SltoScan, Inc.,
326 Front SlrHt, Marlena,
Ohio, and on tile In the
.onlce or the Superlntondent
at the Southern Local Soard
pi Education.
. Tho total eotlmato lor all
projecto Ia $177,400 ol
which $142,615 lo
aboternen1 coot and $34,785
lo rept.cemenl materllolo.
Bldo will be received lor
oil work Included under I
elngle prime con1ract.
A pre-bid conforence will
be hold ot 10:00 e.m. on
Tu11doy, December 28, 1883
In the cofeterla at the
Southern Local High
School. A tour of lho project
olio will lollow the
q&gt;nferonF,e,..
..
i Copleo ot Plano,
Speclflcellona and Propooal
Forma oogeoher with any
turthar lntormatlon deolred
mar be obtained from
SlteScan, Inc., 326 Front
Street, Marietta, Ohio 45750.
All bidding documents will
be lorworded upon rocolpi
of a dapooll In the amount
ot $50.00 per oeo. Tho
depoalo will be relunded oo

RISIDENnll
CONCROE
WORK

AMBUSH &amp;
TABU COLOGNES

Porches,
· Pattqs,
Sld•walks
j• Q92-7878

ONLY 55 c

PH. 11 Wll M71

-·--- . • tWIOM1WiDE

and

payroll

s ubmittals

are

applicable to ihls project
No bidder may wlohdraw
his bid within slxoy (60)
days alter the actual date ot
the opening theroot. Tho
Owner reserves 1he rlghi to
waive any Informalities or to
reject any or all bl~ o.
By order of the Southern
Local B011rd of Educellon.
(12) 13, 20,27 (1)3: 4TC

1---------------1
Publl NOll
C
C8
PROBATE COURT OF
OHIO

Esr:-l:~f~~NE 11.

CO

,_

·

AUTHORITY
TO SELL
DECEDENT'S REAL
ESTATE TO PAY DEBTS

In Memory of
SYLVIA ZWILLING
who paaaed away
Dec. 19,1986
0 Lord I would preas
on with courage,
Through rugged the
pathway may be,
Sulltillntd and up He
held by the
prom!.. ;
"My Grace Ia
Sufflc:lent For Thnw
Gon• But Not Forgotten
By Husband. Troy Zwilling,
Sono, Dau!lltar~n laws,
Goanddau!llter, Nephews,
and Goandchildoan

IISSILL
COIIniUmOII ·

15·4473
7122/f3

Plumbing

. Extlrlor

Kenneth McCullOugh, .,, I'll, Char!M Rlflle, It I'll.

ROMicl H..,nlnt, R. Ph.
Mon. thru II&amp; 1:00 Lm. to t:OO p.lll.
lluncl.y 10:00 e.m. to 4:00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH.- ill !I
E. 1111~ .
Oh. ·

EITIIA'IEJ) ·

V.C. YOUNG Ill ,
. 892-6215
. ~,'Ohio
•
t&gt;IOC~

"'

•

Tllll••
UIIOYAL .

~IGHT HAUUNG

-FIREWOOD
.' BILL SLACK
•

992·2269

USED RAILROAD TEl
12-30 8l!4n

AJTHl
QIWJ1l PRINT SHOP
QAI!AT
II!
AND
~
VAII!TY OF QUAUTY
IETAL TO'fl. •
Ill 11111:»4IIIDII.-FrL
7414cllo . . . .:00
Hra

........ .... •'

Galy Barry, OwneriTlm FIUII, Man.ger
Certified teohnlcllne on
job.

ChaaMMCI
(or w.'l oulllor _ ,

Rlgga Tree Farm
111507 Roekii!prlngo Rd.
(Ill ........., of Ul RL JJ)
Pomeroy, Ohio
1192.a702
c.rot • Otovkl Riggi

-

FURNACES

11-

'
4
·.. ~
.
'

31904i.e....,
CreekiH•
llhhlleport, "lo

Must be wling _, WOik
7a.m. 1D 7 p.m.
or 7 p.m. kl7 a.m.
Mus! be certified In
Long Tann Care.
Con1acl
Sharon Skidmore,
Dr8C1Dr of NIISing at

4414411 or T• Frw 1-..rl-4117

Daytona Radial 60 and 70 Serlel
•DOZERS
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Specializing In Custom
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IIW&amp; . .INIUfOI '
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Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Sand Hil Road,
I Paint Pleasant, YN 25550

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HEAnNO UD COOLIII

614·992·7144

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• TWo Hong flberglloou bll1l'
• At1111'1181ve traad dll9l
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36970 8al R• ROlli
POIIIII'oy, Ohio
GRAVEl,. SAND,

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LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

Wholeaale
-&amp; Rlllil
up Retail et

992·3470

lnowclen'e lot In
Rutland, OIL
WhoiMIIe $10 et fllrm,

GENERAL
HAULING

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED
ShoUder Mount.. .... '155
Hom MoonL .............. '22
Squirrel ...................... '55

$12 delivered. Retltlllot
wiU be open 8 Lm. to t
p.m. e..Ung Nov. 24th.
T.- are 5' tor.

c.dl&amp;t4-742-so51

Limestone
Dirt
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992-7878

PIERSON
BROTHERS

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l &amp;L nilE IARN
33151 ,... lim• ....
..... ow. 45771
614-992-5344
I-I00-714·nRE

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Reasonablt.Rates
Jot! N. Sayre

FREE card.
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~

Come by and register
for free Battery to be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchase
required to register and
don~ have to be presen1
lo win.

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WtNW . . . . . 100 .....

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f•r•'""'-

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314.193 1 mo.

11124.'a21lfn

J.A.I.

McLendon

CONSTRUCTION

MORTGAGE COMPANY

•Dozer •Backhoe

Now has beaut~ul Cocker Spaniel Puppiee. Also
featuring a 2 ft. common Black Tequ. Layaways are
now avaHable for Chriatmaa. Sale on our entire llock
of large
new ~em1.

sweeper

Parts a Service • Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
Hoover, Eurdta, Tri-Star,
Regina, &amp; most other brands!
Pe11a Shipped UPS
Faat • Dependlible Servlc•l

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs
273-4098

•

NOVEMBER SPECIAl.
(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK47) ............5 180
NORINCO UNI. SKS .........- ............ SCJS
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE ..5 130
CAll ARER 6:00
304-415·7256
11/t:IJII:I , 110.

CHRISTMAS TREES

BRADFORD'S
FRESH CUT TREES IYIIUILE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

oOitcher o0ufl'4) Truck
Land Clearing. Pon&lt;le,
Weier Linea, Saptlc1
UcenH &amp; Bonded
Charlie Hatlleld,
Op•ratar
742·2903

Financing Available

1-800.553-3586

JLII.
Our Business is Security

OH.
Homegrown-carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
WMe Pine 4' &amp; Up wbh
a greal Hiectlon of
larger treea.
Call742-2143 or
742-2979

fire FannDK's

WVII13372
We apeclelb» In:
FIRE&amp;WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS
24Haur
Emergency Service

cut your tree.

Part-time Posltlonl.
12 hour 1hlfll.

.,

oNewHomos

We give carpel end
uphol1tety the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they de 11rvell
*driiP'fY (on •II•)
*fine flibrica
•ge~l cfunlng
*odar treatment

. rlunlJ!Ing

Dog Kt~~els 10' x
Nhe Ute Starting at
Applegcrte Rovld Bell FeiCes &amp; Gates
Horse Tack &amp; Soddles
Wild Bird SHd
White Salt Block SO lbs. $4.25
Trace Mineral Block 50 lbs. $5.00
Muc• More At Lowest Prkes In Meigs Countj

ROOFING

CUUIIII

1

IlKS
CHRISTMAS TREES

Aulstanll Needed.

·· CHAPMAN FEED STORE

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FR'ii ESTIMATES

992·3838

CARPO&amp;

DAYIDSOII'S
PLUMIINti

cASE'NO. Z713D

DOCKET 13 PAGE 4H
N011CE OF FlUNG OF
liP' "'NT FOR

SIIUI&amp;RII

PRICES GOOD
THROUGH
FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 24TH

.

KELLY, DECEASED

7nt

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE
POMEROY, ott. 41788

Rel•llona
record

FREE ESTIMATES

In Memory

THE STATE OF OHIOi
MEIGS COUNTY, COURT Of
0N
p L E •s
COIIII
" •
PROBATE
To John DIVISION
w. c..to whoH
lut known 8Ciclrell woe
1 Sir 1
1120 E..t Man
•• '
Po.,.oy,Ohlo457•anclto
Mark Allen C..to, whoH
laat known addreaa waa
14 th Avenue,
ZUtB
Parkeraburg, Wcoet Vlrglnfa ·l ~~~~~
28101, you are hereby 1,
notlfted thet you hive bali!
· HowriL Wntesel
named Delendanll In 1
III!IIIICiian 1111UIIed Mervin
L Kelly, Plalnllll(ll. Homer
H. C..to, Et AI., Dalenclanta.
NEW-REPAIR
Thla action hll blln
•
aoalgned Ceee Number
GuHers
27830 and Ia penclng In the
Downtipouta
bidders who return the Court of Common Pleea,
GuHer Cleaning
plana and •.peclllcatlono In Probole Dlvlolon ol Melgo
good condition wlihln ton County, Pomeroy, Ohio
Palntl,..
(10) dayo after recelpo of 457611.
FREE ESTIMATES
bldo. The low bidder may The object of the
reoaln ohe plans and Complaint Iaior MJlhorlly to
opeclllca11ons and tho uti decedanfa rul alate
depaoli will be ratunded.
In order Ia pay debla of the
3- 16-83-tfn
Eoch bid mu s t be utall, which rul utate Ia
accompanied by a BID mora partlcui•Ir deocribed
GUARANTY meeting tho In Volume 235, Pcog1 113,
requlrementt ot Section Melga County Deed
GUN SHOOT
153.54 ot the Ohio Revloed Recorda, ralerenca to which
RACINE ·
Code In the amount ol 10% Ia h••by mede.
of lho bid. A pertormonce You are required to
FIRE DEPT.
and payment bond In ohe enawar the Complaint
omount of 100% ot the within 28 claya alter thelloal
EVERY
contract 11 10 be turnlahed publlcetlon of thla notice
by the ioucceaolul blddM.
which will be publlahed
SATURDAY
Blddoro muat bollcenoed once each wuk lor air
by oha Ohio Department ot ouc-olve w-. The lui
6:30P.M.
Health ao Aobeatoo publlcetlonwtlbemedeon
Factory Choke
Abooemono Conoractora.
12127, tii9S .,d the 21 clayo
12
Gauge Shat
lor
Anower
will
comm1111ce
Bid o 1 hal I be sea Ied an d
th .. ~.
Strictly Enforced
moiled
oo
tho on ll!u....
Superintendent'• Oltlco al I In caee ol your failure to
111111i1 mo. pd.
Racine Ohio enower or otherwlee
178
Po
B
' '
OJ
'
rHpond N roqulracf by the
45771 or delivered 10 Elm Ohio Auloo of Civil
Street 47725 St. Ro. 124, Procedure jud ment b
Racine, Ohio 45771 · Each default wlit beg rencterJ .
bidder lo io deolgnato on · egalnat you for the relief
ohe en•elope lha1 II II • clem.,claclln lhco ComplalnL
oeoled bid and oho nome of Dated· Novernber-98, 1119S
the proJect. The name and
· "·- B •
ddrou of 1he bidder aha II
Ro...,, E. uc.., Judge
:lao bo lndlcoied.
Malge Counly Pre:..~
Blddero ·~• advloed 1hat 111122, 2t, (121 8, 13, 20, 27

30%oFF .
113 WElT 2ND IT.

published by tho Ohio
Departmeno ot lnduoorlal

DRI~Afuo
LIMESTONE--lRUCKING

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 1192-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

International Calendar Hunks
Thursday
December 23rd 8:00p.m.
Watering Hole
TICkets on sale now
$5.00 advance- $7.00 Door

2

Public Notice

BVII~MZEP
BACKHOE
and
WOAK
. .
I&lt; &lt;ULABLE.
8EP11C IYI'IEIII,
HOlE liTES end
lliAILER~

ARNOLD'S
PLUMIIIG,
HEATING &amp;
COOJING

Over 15 Words

$ 4.00
$ 6.00

'949-2168

1 2PR1CE

'-JINSU~C,!

'

Berried Holly &amp;
Bile Spnce Trees

MEl'S

. . . ., • 1.11.·12 80011

CARRIERS NEEDED
IN POMIROY AREA
CALL 992·2155· FOR
INFORMATION

DOWIIIIG CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
IIISUUNCE

4.00

Days

St11e Roule 124, Racine ,

;

5

K.K.'a Pelland
Christmas Specials
Iguana. $1 9.99
Black Tegu. $175;
Samoyed puppies, $275;
367-Q117.

10
$13.00
$ .60
· Monthly
$1.30/day
5.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Busine.. Card...-$17.001 ineh per momth
· BuUetin Board••.$6.00/incfh.:.P•.;:r.:d::;ay:....._ _ _ __

.I

10' folaseltia Baskets

is now offering
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with each purchase of

RATES

Louisville, which had been lOth,
led the second 10 and was followed
by Indiana, Arizona, Georgia Tech,
Connecticut, Minnesota, Wisconsin , Boston College, Illinois and
Cincinnati.
The final five were Syracuse,
Oklahoma State, George Washington and !he newcomers, Marquette
and Western Kentucky.
Marquette (5-2) lost to Washington State in the finals of the San
Juan Shootout and was beaten by
intrastate rival Wisconsin-Green
Bay: Marquette has knocked off
two straight Big Ten teams,
though, beating Illinois and Ohio
State, the latter by 20 points.
Western Kentucky (3-1) lost its
opener to then-No. I North Carolina in the Preseason NIT and has
since beaten North Florida, Ball
State and South Alabama.

4• Pollliellfas 60'
6W' Poi1selllas 52.00

rub 3 da11 at no charse.
Prtce of ad for a. ucapital !etten it double price of ad c01t ·
1 poiatline type only uted
Sealinel ia not re.pon~ible for erron afaer fir1t day (check
for error• lint day ad runt in paper). CaU heforw 2:00p.m.
day after publication to malle correction
Ad. that mu.ll be paid i.a advance are:
Card •f Thonb
Hoppy Ado
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
A clauilied ad~ertilement placed in the Tbe Dally Sentinel

(except Clauif~ed Di.tplay, BuJiD.eu Cud or Ufal
NoUcu) willalao appear in the Poinl Pleaunl Regiiler and
the Gallipolill Daily Tribune, reachina: over 18,000 bomea

scored touchdowns on their first
two possessions and held off
Tampa Bay. Jeff Hostetler threw a
27-yard TD pass to Alexander
Wright and Napoleon McCallum
ran five yards for a score as the
Raiders (9-5) kept the pl ayof(
hopes intact.
The Buccanners (4-10) have los~
10 or more games for II straight
seasons. They're dropped 20
straight games against teams from
California dating rock to 1980.

Clouout Special

T\JPPERS PLAINS
Baelc obedience,
law enforcement,
per.onel pratectlan,
kennel 18rvice, pupa a
young dog• for Hie.
Roaweller • 811epherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667·PETS

• Ad. oui&amp;Wle tbe countf your ad rua1 mwL be prepaid
• R"ei."'e dllcouDt for ada paid in advance.
• Free Ad. : Civeaway and Fouad ad. under 15 word. wUIH

Arkansas among top nine .
teams standing pat in poll
By JIM O' CONNELL
With Arkansas a solid No. I for
the third straight week, the top nille
teams in the college basketball poU
held their places today.
There were 59me changes at the
bottom, however. as Marquette and
Western Kentucky joined the Top
25 for the first time this season,
replacing Vanderbilt and LSU.
With most schools in final exam
periods, only six of the teams
ranked last week played more than
one game. Arkansas (6-0) beat
Jackson State in its only game of
the week and received 50 firstplace votes and 1,604 points from
the national media panel.
North Carolina (8-1) had nine
first-place votes and 1,526 points
and were foUowed in the top five
by Duke (5-0), which had three
first-place votes, Temple (4-0),
which had two and Kentucky. .
Kansas, Michigan, Massachusetts and UCLA (5-0), which
was No. I '011 Qne ballot, held sixth
through ninth.
·' · ·
The new team in the top I 0 was
Purdue (8-0), which moved up one
spot after a 97-59 victory over
Georgia Southern.

ACADEMY

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

_J~remy ~tjl ?sOi-~ Rt~~
Wtlltams - - ~·
n
_
land 3-0-1=7•
.n
mmer 4
2=1!?, R~bert Retbe~ 5-0-9•1 9 •

6

K·9

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.B-12

tOilers,
49ers
clinch
playoff
spots;
Bengals
shear
Rams
•
By The Associated Press

.

,:Monday, December 20, 1993

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

New Haven W. V. 25265

COMMERCIAL 1111ci.RESIDENTIAL

!WEE ESTIMATES

(304) 882-3336

C~Owners

AIIEIICAN I.EIIEUL LIFE •ntl
ACCIDENt INSUIIIICE COMPANY

TREES

Ute • Medic1re • Cancer • Fire • Heallh •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortg~ge. •

$10.00-h

Open9to6
s dihl•••ldndt:

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 119 ··
Mhltl..port, Olllo 45760
(6'14) 143·5264 fi14.93Mn

loolcti, WhHit •
A...ut. Plnea, I' toW.
tt.ter· liMing,....

dlnDe,lll71 Flalwaad•
Ad,, Pamwot, Ohio
111llt1111o.'pd.

..

IISSELL ·.BUILDERS, INC.

Alann Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras
Cheryl A. James
WilHam C. James

CHRISTMAS

LIMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Tum Eut 111
Derwin onto Rt. 811,1J0 4 mi. to Mllepaet 13. Tum
South on IJI•vel road, 1'-' milea ta grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 '11L DARK

614-992·7643
IIIIo S.IIHy C1llsl

WICKS HAULING SERVICE
36g70 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

.IIOUDAY SPECIAL

$975 A TON SIZED liMESTONE
10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM, ·OWNER
•

�/

a

PI!'Oe

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Announcements

32 Mobile Homes

O.W.II., SS,

-~~~

11173 For- Park, 12&gt;&lt;85 2 Bod·
room, W/1 1 Tolll Eloclrlc,
Range, Porcn., Underpl"':~"l

"Slim" lady

tor rotatlonohlp. !04-675~186 a~

lor 5:30pm llon-Fri.

InclUded. 61 • .Zse-e7U, 81t
8834.

Funlll Sport• Trtvla Glme Fun!!!
HIOO11• 11203 £11. 11045 12.88
Ptlr Min. Mu• Be 18 Yrs. P..:ocaU

4

1/2 Border Collie P up.
51 4 ~ 58-1 558 .

2 liemlj,e p41Jl p lll , lwka. otd,

pricl roducod. 304-882·2547.

one whUe, cane bllck. J04.U2·
3781.

34

5 Ft. Sol Slidi ng Doo,., Rod &amp;
On! pet . 614-388-8780 Ahr 5
p.m .

EstabUahad

Growing ArM. S.rloua Inquiries

Only 11~-446-4500 Aftor 7 p.m.

Christmas

Puppies,

"No wonder I couldn1 find the box of outside

112

t&lt; ... hhound 112 Ckocolate Lab.

Chnstmas lights. I never took 'em down las l year."

614·379-2142.

Two beautif\.11 t.male puppies,
pirt
man

Oobtrman,
Collie t nd GarS
hepherd , 614·992·2608
.

washer,

Dryor,

Rotrlgora1or.

Wu her Works , Dryer Needs
Some Repair 614-446..0936.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Lost. Female Black and .Tan
Beagle With Orange Collar. On
Blacll Hank Rd. Ott Bulavill•
Porter Rd. Reward $40. Contacl
James Gilmore 614-367·0559.
Los t: black a nd tan German

Shephard named Buster. We are
neartbroken. U fo und ca ll 614·

949-2770

7

ALL Yard Salas Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the da y befo,. the 1d is tc run.
Sunday t dltlon · 2:00 p.m.

Friday. Monday

od~;on

· H O

JI.m. Saturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Ric k Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auetlonHr, complete
auction
service.
Licensed

tG&amp;,Ohlo &amp; Wasl Virginia, 304·

m-5715.

9

9

Wanted to Buy

Wa nt ed To Buy : Original Fanlasy Star Game, Sega Master
Sys tem, 614-446-1'911.

Wanted to Buy

Antiques and used turnituru , no
illm too larga or too small , will
buy one plec. or complete
household, also wanted- old
bicycles, ca ll Os by Martin, 614·
992-7441.
Decorated st oneware, wall tale·
phones, old lamps, old ther·
momet• rs, old eloelcs, antiqu•
turnitura. Riverine Antiq ues.
Russ MOOft, owner. 614-992·
2526. We buy .states.

Junk Auto's To Buy Will Pick-Up
Appliances, Any Ol:her Metats
Free, &amp;M-446-71128 Before 9 P.M.
Wanlld To Buy: Ju'*- Cars &amp;
Truck s At Top Price &amp; Res·
torabta Cars, 614-388-9554.

Wantltd To Buy : Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call

Larry Lively. 614·3aa-9303.

Help Wanted

Top Prlcos Pold: All Old U.S.
Gold Colne. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
15'1 Second Avanua, Gallipolis.

Ohio l 11ed Truc k ing Company

Wanted To Buy : St a ~ng Tim·
ber &amp; Pine, Good Prices, 814·
388-9906.
Coin s, Gold Rlnga, Sllvar Colna,

• • ~oe

5236. - ·

Looking For OTR Drlv.ra. S tngla

WANTED: onglno lor 1986 Ford
Fntlva , 4ap., 1.3 llt11, needed
ASAP, call 614-992·2155, 8:30am5:00pm. o r 614-192-2428 after
5:00pm.

Or Tea m Drivers, Must Be Over
25 Yaa r&amp; Old With 2 Years Ex parlence And Good MYR. All E·
quipmemls Late Modal Conventlonal Tractors Wllh RHfar.
Weakly Ply. Hearth lnsurtnce
Avallabte. 1-BOG-437-8764,

Employment Services

Wanted- someone to brush hog
a s mall tot In Racine, 614·94§.:
2940 after 5:30pm.

18 Wanted to Do
11 Help Wanted
==-...,-..,.:,.-,---,--,.,..,- E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
AVON ! All Ama I Shlrtay
sp..ra, ~75-1429.
AVON! All lrHI. Nlld extra
money or Wlnt a ca~~lither

way-call Marilyn. 304
or 1-800.992-6356.

·2645

Trimming, TrM Removal, HtM:Ige
Trimming. FrH Estimates! 614·
367-7957 Aflar 4p m
.

-

Gutters Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commerical, Rasidaintial , Steve :

Full Tlma Position For Lead
laacher In Tht Child Development Canter AI TM Unlvarslty
ot Rio Granda. Degree In Early
ChUdhood Davalopment and
Previous Experience With p,....
School Children R~uired. Send
lnterut Leu., and Aeaumtt
Before the Daadllna of January
3, 1994 to Phr.lll• Mason, PHA,
Personnel Off cer, University of
Rio Granda, Campus P.O. Box
96~ Rio Grande, OH 45674.
EEuJAA Employer.
Nurse Aide Training Program·
Pomeroy
Nursing
t~nd
Rehabilitation Ctntar will ba of·

taring elasus In January, &amp;am4pm. Appllcallona arw naw
bting accaptld at 36759 Rock·
springs Rd., Pomeroy. Clan
s.ze Is limited. No phona ctlls.
Apply lnrrson batwaan 10am3pm, M· . Studenta that succtssfully complete the TCE
cl..a will be eligible to apply for

Mlaa Paullt'a Day Care C.ntar

II·F 6 A.ll. -1:30 P.M. QuoiMy

Laving Cara For All Children
Our 11 Gall. Part·Ttme, Full·

c•--

,_
._n oma In \MIIIIpolla
Close to Riverfront &amp; Bualnen

114-446-1199 Eva. 814-446-9538.
Nice 3 bedroom houH In Pt.

PIMUnl, call61'-992·5858.

Nice 3br. houu, 112ml. from Pl.
Pl~mo. plua dtpot;ll.
304-8

•

Nice~ 2b.!J._houN , Apple Grove.
304-e75-1~tt1 after 5pm.

14X70 mGblle homa, good cond
on 2 acrw Jol, Potter CrNk area,
S300. pr month, 304-675-6986.

Two bedroom tn~il•r In Racine,
call 614-992-5858.
Two

bedroom,

Schoolage,

School,

land~~ng . slump ramoval,
and INt cfNnup. 304-n:J.5902

or 1-81)1)..538-1440.

alectrlc,

21

Business

Altentton :

OpponunHy

recotnm~nda

thai you do busl·

a~ld.

Handiclpped, 0 18--

Senlo,.. Did Vou Know

Thol II You Ara In Hood Of A

llv•ln

AaaiSient,

Mey

You

Quality For A Now 2 Bedroom
Aparlme;nt

A I'll

AI :

Holzer

Aporlmonlo, 553 Soccnd Avo.,
GoNipolla, Call 614 ....1-1800 For

nHI )OIIh pacplo you k - oncl
NOT lo Hnd money thr~ the
mall unUI you have

Information. Equal Housing Op-

tha oHarlng.

I&gt;Orlunlly.

lnveitfQidad

Pika

First
HOlzer
Apartmant:a,
Sacond Avenue, Gallipolis. 114441·1800 Senior, DluiMid, &amp;

to-

Hondlclppad 1 &amp; 2 lloclroom
Unllo. Ranlo ilaoocl On Adlullocl
lncomo. FIIHA Suboldlncf, HUD
Car!IIICIIII Acclptocl. 814-441·
1100 1 Equol Houalng O,.por-

lmlllllon o r - buad on rooo, cctor, rtlglon,
MW tamllalllatus or national
or1gln, or ony lnlordlon 10
mekeony OUCh

tunhtM;,

Furnished EfUcilncy Apartment,
Prl"ate~IM:, C.ntral Heat, Air
Condh
, Privata ' Parking,

pret-.
Thla no,..._

lrnllltlon or - l i o n .•

Good

room apartment• 1t VIllage
Manor
and
Rhteralaa
Apartments In Middleport. From

a&lt;Mr-lorrolfwhlch" In -1111111
low. Our.-.... lioroby

1202. Can 614-992·5859. EOH.

Home for tha Holldaya at Flm
Holz1r APirtrn.nta 553 Second

Wonnedlhlt .. ·~

~lltlltd tn ttw1

ne r•r

· ovo. O.Uipolta1 Oh. 614-441·1800
Senior, Dluorod, Hlndlceppod

- - .... oquo(

IPICII L Enjoy you r
Chrtatm•• In a New •panmant
wllh: carpet, rt~nga, rafrlgerator,
move-In

~-

•It• m.nager. Malnfenanca
l.tundryR.:rl&lt;lng. FIIHAHud In·

coma
6ctecf Equal ttou.lng
OpporiunRy.

Nlclt 2 or 3 Hdroom 1Pfir1mlnt

31 · Hom11 for Sale

In Mlddflporl, 814-992-61158.

Alona Rlvor 3 111111
From GallpoUt, l Acre Land on
Rl. 7, $15~, 114-446-7243 or
614-371-2....

Ont

Old -

13·- - - ---1
14·----~

15·- - - --l

'

192~218.

$50

~rag•

a3

11111

mtn~P::In paid, $300Jmo.,

Two

• .,4...D-2526.

bedroom

apartment

In

Bedroom Ranch, Minut" From

Pcmoroy, coli 614-992·58_58.
Upalllro •Ill romodlod, carpal,
portly tumrSW ciNn, quill,
Ullhfoa lo cablo fllld, $350/mo.
304.fl75-1115.

379... 42.

45

THOUSANDS
BELOW AP·
PRAISED VALUE lmrnoculolo 3

______

12211/mo. lnclucl.. ulllllln, $100
HCurlty dapo~h, no Pll•; 614~

system, 2 car

nlct. Plaau call Somwvllle
Roolly, 304-f75.3030 or 571-3•31.

12 . _ _ _ _-l

aper1manta,

One bedroom turnlahed lpart-

mult ... lo lppNCiate. Extra

- - --l

badroom

Roducocll Two llory, 3br., 2
both, new -Ina &amp; cooling
metal garage, 2 •craa land,

,..:.._

Loclllon, 114-441-2102.

Oracloua living. 1 and 2 bed·

wll,..
linowngly """"f'l

Real Estate

11 .-

Nlca wood dinette s it, A c:halrs,

Naw/Uaad

Houu tlold furnishing. 112 mi.
Jarricho Rd. Pt. PlnHnt, WV,

call304-675·1450.

Holler, On 1.8 Acrn, SSO'a. 114·

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms tor rant • weak or month.
Stal11ng at $120fmo. Galli1 Hotel.

121&lt;55 lrollor wl12x50 oddltlon,

114-446-MIO.

room, dining room, very big
living room, many extras,

Sl•plng room• with cooking .
Also 1raller apace. All hook-ups.

3br.,1 112 bath, ldlchan,utlllty

33f7.

Coli aflar 2:00 p.m.. 304·7735851, ~~~- wv.

Mx70 Total Electric On 1 112

46 Space for !'lent.

reduCed tor f1Uick ula. 304-882-

Aero Lol. 2 111111 From Bklwoll·
Portlr E-ory $20,000 Firm
614-388-8165.

1812 Norrlo 11110 Trollor. H"'"
Spocloul Aooml Whh CIIMil·
rol Callln@ ·Throuahout. Thrll
lloclroom, 1\oo Bit~. Huge qor.
din Tqb In - o r lllfi. OVIr
1200 Sq. F1. l.olo Of Storia-.
Hoo All Tho . E111roa. Livid In
LHo Thin Ono Y11r. E~CIIIont
~. Mllll To AI&gt;-~~~·· c.n &amp;14-24»0:12
~·--II No A/11Wor. ·
Rldm1n Mx70, 3bdrm.,

in:

cludll
oklrllngL otepa, blocke,
5yr. Wlll'8fttY;
. ·, I'IOII'£CAhWII 1ft..
ouranca, ond 1 roet' ot rroe lot
ronl, 111 tor ani• S17lhno., call 1·
800.13J-3238, olk tor lila.
'

'

Mob!.. home

~

IOf' rani In

Po-or. 114-4-15.

lf1 Wanted to Rent
Wlnilna lo ronl· 2 or's bldroom
- · ln clolln ond good corid~
lion, rnflr prlvllo oaltlna, 814t12..Z428, It no enawer piHu
iiiYI IM8IIQI on ~_ttina.

49

Lea"

For
~,_....,.;....,;..;,..:,;;__..,.
Offici or Storo Building on 2nd.
Ave.· In Thl 400 Block fOr "-•• •·
Newly A-lod. Nlco &amp;
Claan, Canlral IIIII 6 Air, CION
to Court

Howe.

1 Large Aoom

2 Olhlro Ph
ro A
.. ·
·
ono ' P"
fiOinl. 114-4•&amp;'1898 or 814·
44...5311.
.
PI

12~·.J-

54

56

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AKC lomoll lllnlolu,. Daolalnd,
block lo len, 6wkl., 1200. :104.575.:.:..:1::.;
758::;.
· - - -- - - -

Glboori GuHor, Harmony GuHor,
Fiddle, Old Montol Clock1 1\oo 11" Ferd -1111-..1158.
AKC Gormon Shaphordl, 6
WNI&lt;o Vel Ch10kld, 111 Sholo,
H11vy duty aleOtrtc motor, 3 Fomoln $125 Eo. 514-:zae.am
doublo pu~lolhby Clbfl, 1 112 (Jackeon).
hp., $75, 6
:-31-ro.
AKC CloiHri Aot-.ro R-y
Jonny Lind loby Bod, Mollruo, To Go By Chrlolmal $1111, Sholo
6 Ploco Molchlng Sat, Folding
loulnatt. Rocking Baby Carrilr !Wonned,I14-3"·28U
Aaglllanod
Amorlcen
All Llkl Now 1114-441-1000, AKC
Cocklr Sliinlol Puptlloo Tolla
LNvtMnuga.
Kenmore Full Slu Mlcrow•v•

Man's aid boota, 811.1 12, like

~
, ~~,!!..very IIUte, nking
••00 • 1~ •••~1131.
M11 II
ory rlllo, aaod condlllon,
llro1150, ca11114'-812·2563.
Now 20.. ~ 5 1 __.
,.....
Mounllln blkl, $ , 61.-f43'5113.
New G11 Hot Wat., HMter,l100,

•5 &amp; 55 Gillon, 614·245-5152 A~
ter 6 P.M.
PolnllttiiS,
Horizona

Ntw
Greenhouua,

$2·10,

2 Bits golf cluba, beGinner Hta

N.w
Polnl 22 Bon Ac11on Rltlo $11500,
All

Point 22 Browning Stylt Aulo

Rlllo, Beautiful Lllllli Guno,l135.

Spacial M-37 Athlca 2 Barrel

H1 rlford

2
WV. 304-11 -3121.
Q111aor floor ...-a COlor T'!,
n - ropolred; 1114-14-.z118o
'

R&amp;S Furnhure. Wa buy, alii and

any amount, largalam~~ll. 505

Second 91., Maori, wv. Ownar·
Rockey Pear10n. 304-7'73.5341.

RtGulltfon .lull llzo pool table
drop pcekll, wllllckl, boll• ;;;;!
rack. 304.f75-1m..
Rlvor Vollay Oak

FumHwo.

Solid ook loblo &amp; choirs, cllr'IICI

gil.. · chino coblnol•,
chelto, oct.hond,....

oak
oak

hem.. 3813 OaDfllll CNek Ad.
Gl11111011o,Oh. PIL114~

Slm Soriie'l'lfnl'l AmiV"lJU;plua,
by Sandyvillo Poll Oftlcl. NOll
week, open noortetpm unlll

Chrlolmn. All 11- JuniorSuprema Gauge Spacial Order Sonier, comllougo
1 lnoulolocl
S850. P. Hock~ 8 Irick Ln., So- COvet'lll11 I'IYIHWible
flight
hind Hutton ~r Wash, ot Call Jockll 531. lll Clirillmll oxBetween 1 and 5 WMkdaya and changH lh by Jon. 2, 11194. 304Solurdoy. All O.v Sundoy 614- 273-5855.
446·1122. •

53

Sea,.. vented klroltnt heattr,

apprax. 55,000 BTU, t?Si antiqua barge· nate• 1 Nd, 1 green,

Antiques

Buy or sail. Riverine Antiquas,
1124 E. Main Slr.tt, on At. 124,
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6 :00 p.m., Sunday 1:00

lo 6:00p.m. 814-992·2526.

54

$150/pr.; 614'4D-2S211.
SPECIALI OnlY $31.15 lor ail
tux. S. Paint ~US tor-rour NIW
YHr'l Tux. 304-17HOI4.

Clt111 IICh,
must like 111, a14-HZ--5282.

50" O.ek. 1913 Olda 08. 814-448-

Trum= IXC cond $2:00. FUll oU
1991 Ford Truck Will Trade For tank 50111 $50. 304-8B2-UI5.
Automttlc.
9
Week
Okt · Two ~Meca orchid dren, mad!eln
Chlhuohua 814-682-7830.
u .s.A .. . oliO 11; ~"::od okln,
pullovar top: U; I
g..2522.
26'inch new 3ap. H-..Hy Blcyla.

9329.

1100.00 614-367·7123

386 SX, 25 MHZ computtr, 8Q
:J8I M1s Co-proeasaor, 4 meg
RAM, 40 mag hard drive, 5 \/4 x
5 112 floppy disk drive , 14" YGH
color monitor, Stir NX 1000

Uaocl co·o- -lllce,lllgodllh,
Alroomhh, Molloy Cruo AC.OO
plul aome counfry and oldies,
$11ea,1 114·1'12-2101.

UHd Lennox Heat Pump, 21,000
BTU1. lnatlllltlan A"ll.. bla, 1·

'PO:c
"":c1::.:
•':.:·304
::.::.:..fl.::,l2
::..:
·3:c71:.:1:...
. -.,--I 800-&lt;87-6301, 814-446-1301.
A vl1lt from Santa in your home,
~ ~. 814·11112-1!103 or 614·

Pomaraftlln, 3moe. old, 1250i
Aullrollon puppfll, US; 114;112-2302.

AKC Aaalatlrod Siberian H..ky
pupploo. 304-175-3526.
AKC R-latlrod
Siberian H..~
pup.,...., Drice down to S '
calllh4-H2-eb73.

AKC
SMta.nd
BhM~1,
"Shlltl•", vet checked, o o,
'hfk8. old, dew clewa removed.
304-'7~101.

Firewood,

~71-2063.

Voung

PaflkHts,

Homlloro, $2.H
&amp;
E¥Orydoy low prlcn

$14.99.

14.99.

·

Hlmalalyan ttud Hrvlce, 614-

UMd Sofa'• $10, 1~52

and blue o.k trim couch, 1100,

·-~··

::_:::,~:-'-'-::'.,--:---::-:-----1
1111 Grand Prix, mo-n, '

Rat·

!lo4475-411115.

on

premiMS.

a-

-t

with lumor t2, mike, $100, 114- 949-3050, luvo mouago.
lora, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114CONCRETE SPETIC . TANKS,
t1 ~ Go lion, 5325; N.w JET 1o1 56 Pets for Sale
111o sand Rnor Aequlrocli ;;;;;;-:;n~~~=p;
$1,415; Ron Evon8 Enllrprlon,
~
.laeklon, Ohio 1-5:iU528.
Groom ond
llwp Pol
Groomtna. All
.
IIYIIICroehol awlller ahowl, oond Julio Wotib. Calllt4 4iii D:lft ' •
130 010illy onlor lo: Plufly'a, 3 malo AKC=- 111,_,
670 Plorl SlrHI, lllddlopart, Shephord
, vii-kid,
Ohio, 44710·
.
llrll-o,l ;112-811.
OP Trim lllllor oldor, $100, 114- 4 HI-·•-.,
304.0II
912-1837.
- :·:--•
'
~
Fl-ood: All lllnfw" do Sptl 5 Year Old ....._ 1,._2_ 2 ,
Doll•- S40 Plcli.Up l.old.
· -·•
114·258-1318 E....,..,
,
114-241-8411.

Iilii-.

For ut.. i 112 yd. blul illn rag. AMii ChWua ~~t;~pplaa, aGO.
rug, SI0.25, 114-;112-2(81 onor ~'::'""• a
~
1:30pm. Nos......,-..::::::•.:.... hold .
~
-·....:~--0, _ .,_ bo~l- oun-. - o n l y
.
lfllr
.bid,
llpm.:
ona nlgllt m~_r!ood
oonciMion,
lll'llf.l-~..,.)iji AKC Gorman lliopliord pup.
ploe,
. . .MOI:Mr/
·
811a11IIOiflllonotly
and Wormed,

';olio,

.........

d-. .

"' - --711
~":.'

on

-~·.

IM-lll2·

ONE OF TME GREAT
·J0'1'5 IN LIFE 15 .
.
DIN6 ON AN
IC't' SIDEWALK ..

1

·

=::---- ----'
72 Trucks for Sale
'81 GIIC Slorra Cflulc 314 Ton. :
A41o $199.5 814-371-2570.
_,

JOE 'ICE FOLLIES:.

I
FordCon
F150 69,1100 lllloa, .
e1984
Xcellenl
dillon $3,500 614- 1
317·7113.

1

1985 Ford 112 lon pickup, XLT :
Lariet EKplorar, like new, 111 ex· ,
lru, low ml~ auto., 302 V-8, ,

$4200, 814-9124719.

',

IW W

.•..

l

11,000 mlleli, blue boot! value f

L

L.

SmMII,

1105 '

73

vans •
01

Ttl~MPIST··

tie 'LAMtS

,
•

I

4 WD's

YOU f'Oil
evt,YTt41NG!

-

1

•

z

.1 FOUNr&gt; Tt4t I'IIC.~ST Ntw

~

Moum~n Circle, 30447!-3222. :

74

I

I

i

• •
••

1

•

~

Motorcycles

AIH I .JU!iT

00

lOY f.

0

0

GeTnt-16
JN THE:
HOLIDAY

0

pint IMc ltap climber. 114-446- )

76

'I

0

'

.

5f&gt;IRIT!

Auto Parts &amp;

~~

0

Accessories

i:

0 ()

I "'-rl'~lCil2

06.11.-Y ~ :

T.Hie

le~Fl ~T

:RJP. 'THE C'O\\tl-6 t-eN Y&amp;IR .'

FUNNY, TI-E l2£5r
OF ITie

campers a.

·

0

0

0

BL.A.NK .

A5 IF ~ DIDN'T"

J

!

Motor Homes

'11 1135 Manay-Ferguaon with
cab, 105 HP, 1300 hours,

I

11116 30' Dodp E-utlve Moloro
$10,000; 614-'742·3034.
. ·- ·-· -·
.
Home, Nn• pel, Interior gooch t
Alllo CINilmoro 1!10 XT S.rln 3 condHion, bGok v.lua aNW"Ox: .......
Trector. WHh Dunt.m &amp; Lear $10,000, uklng 81500 080, coq,..
Loodor1••S7.D50, 5,- Fordoon 114-192-1468, .... tor 8111 . ...
Major ""h ...... $2 350· Choryt.
13f ~ F ·;;.::;., 'uko
New,l4,180;
esd.
"

81

=

Home
Improvements

1881 Dllllol ,......, 4 New Tim.

8CicHia

IMplement~

28 Crlllty

34-=.:u,
38!:r~-

40 Climbing

42~t

43 I•HI'I Golda

44 - Oomtnl
45 Dec. ilolldlly
45Lock .......
47 lrelltlcl

45- "'*'IY
50 Tllll ol

·-t

51"53 DC-~et~Utor

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.Aabrtty Cipher cwyptogr.,. . . ~from (l'aDtallal• byt.mcd paapia, pUI II'ICI preMnt ,
EM:tllatter 1n the et9f* Nndl tor~- r~·· ew.: z «1ua11 c.

DB

'YFBMYFEE

I K M

OMPIFE ;

VMCZMPI

K FE J

PDPMIH
X I K M C

VKHBOZFE . '

o .a

HXLD
YMCCF .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Keep quieti You're alwayo ln1errup11ng me ;n the
middle of my mistakes." - (Director! Mk:liaol Cur11z.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I alwayo like to befriend lhe underdogs, beconoe
I know what ll'o Hke lo be Judged unfairly." - Modonna.

klJIII.

lMtead, you muot apply tbe uiom
that UD!ess you bave something vital
to do, you sbouldll't take an overruff
wltb a card that will alwaY' win a
trick. Here you should dllcard a club
or heart. Then, u partner boldl tbe
aiDCletoo lp&amp;de 10, however declarer
wrillles, be must loae · two spade
tr!cU. Your elgbt will be promoted to

I

DATEBOOK
Dec. 20, 1993

·--

J11).111r.liiiUI

Today is the 3541h
day of 1993 and the
!10th day of jilll.

f,

'
-

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1907, physicist Alb ert Mi chelson
became the first U.S. scientist to receive the Nobel Prize.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Harvey
Firestone (1868-1938), tire manufac·
turer; Walter Adams (1876-1956), astronomer; Branch Rickey 0 881 -19651,
baseball executive; Irene Dunn e
0901 · 19901, actress; Sidney Ho ok
11902-1989) , philosophe r-educator:

I

s fl. :: y I D

A

I

y cuc

I

r

I"

A minor flaw in ourpresenta~ lion lost our company a big

client. "That jus t shows me •
•
sighed a colleague , "that the
r,- - - - -- --,,largest project can be ruined by
1---rr;......:,c,....T....,
rl....:E:,.-:.I-.::--1 the smallest • •••• • • • •

I I 1
'--'-...1....--'-....L•

8

j

•

6

.

•

.

f)

17
.

•

L-...J

Comp l@le the chuck le quoted
b y l1ll mg m the rruss mg wor d s
you deve lop from step No. J belo w.

PRINT NUMBERED LETT ERS 1
IN THESE SQUARES

..

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Stench -Jomt - Image - Orient - NOTHING
English professor to colleague , "If most people had to
rely on their command ofthe English language to get their
point across most of them wou ld be better oft sayi ng

NOTHIN G"

I MONDAY

DECEMBER 20 I

Prlcod To Sell!

IllS.

I
j

. ~

r·-- I

wAf:iiiiOOFINO

.-1

u....,l1lonl! lftolfnw guaran-

til. Local
Cal
1-2174171 Orturilllhocl.
1114-231!?•
0461 R - Wil-ling. IT
tlibllll1ocl 1175•.
Oolllo Sawing lllchlno ~
Vacuum Cleal"'lf Rtp~lr, FrH
Plck-t.ID And o.ll~ Oa:orgM
Creak lload, 114 44N2M.

Ron'• TV Borvice, _...,~
-.
In Zan111i olio - . . ,·
ollior brandt. Houoe c6

=~~=~~54.

S.pllc Tonk Pu""""" . ., Oriflfl
Co. RON EVANS EHTERI!RfiES,
JICIIMn,OH 1-.e374UI.

Wll build polio cowito, deokl,
Good 1400114-24 -a1120 Aok For ocrMnocl r_,., pul up vinyl
lldlng or lrollor ulrtlna. eMil
Miry.
241-8152.
'110 l
~
•.•, Auto, Air
47.000 Mille
• '110 Silo- 82
Plumbing&amp;
ES • ""' 5 .......... 72 000 MilI I
14500.-'ii
CVI.
Heating ·
~~ion~- • ~. AH
81
FrMman'o -Ina And Coiltfng.
....
~ v
fnllolllllon Allcl tllrVIcl. R8Q
11116 Iuick Cahlufy, 1481; 70 Certlf*l. Rltlllant..,, Com,....
~~~ ....... _,k, $400; cfll. lh4-2111-1111. '

=Piii.'Zr:,_

__

.....

.::.:.::.;.:.:..:::;;.:;:.:.::.

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

1878 Dodao Stollon Wogon,
1400 ve14-2'41-1112 Allor 5 P.ll.
1
1110 Cadillac lledan O.VIIto
52,000 nillle, . loarlod, gOOd
Ccnd, 304-1~338.

RHidlnllll or
wiring, nn ·111111r u -

tei0Toyola$upra, lor ...... , Ill
pall a.n1o ctvlollln
School on Lh111· KJ10r c -

85

AOid.

21 -·
Ge!Nifty
22 Clayey lartll
2381111
21 c-nl1lg

Serv 1ce s

'10 SuliiRJ OLF.fil
. 5 Sod. Auno

1m Caprlcl Ctloole, (IOOCI
;;;:. .... "'""' noo, 61..843"

bllllg)

llolltl

Erudition ID tbe .-otlala produces

304- l

79

Pro - (lor

1M 111M

20- cocle

27

proiiJIII.

HAVE CNCUEiH 'TO
'M::lRRY Aearr.

I

$800.00 or kedl for catt ... 114-

11M

21=-

a winDer.

..

.-ppoi-

71 Autos for Sale
=.,...,__;,.;.,;;;.;....:..;:::.;.
__

Pau

Q 0 0

FRIIhlul 3811. lflllild 1raUv :
W/lofl ~\~II D. 30M?S' 1
3ltf'"or
ea.
l

.,...;a

DIDM. ..,._
· 11n1111, •etc. ClaUde' wtn-

Paa

vtew

13Wicle-

J':d

-~ tentw. ON ton truck t
wh
rarlotonr floor -••. I
For allillrado
liar• ....
D A - . R..-Wv.
1200 tb 8 yNr old . bridle 372-3833
or 1..00.m:il2i.

Block, brick, ....,

Paa

Tbe olber night I ate some CbiDese
food. My fort1111e-ro0kle motto wu:
'Apply younelf to tbe bulcl and
gresa will follow.• I never rea
Confucius wu a bridge player. But
Is true - If you apply tbe basics
bridge correc:Uy, you will get at
9~ percent of deab rlpt. Tbe
part, of course. Is applying tbe
bulc at the ript moment.
Take toda~ deal, for eumple. You
are Bitting t. Agalnat four spades,
you lead tbe diamond eipt. Partner
w1n1 with the queen, cubes lbe dla·
mood ace and continues with tbe dla·
mood king, which declarer ruffs with
the spade queen. How do you continue
the defense?
You bave two diamond trlckllln the
bag,110 you need two more trlckll to defeat the game. The powerful dummy
nrakes it clear that these must come
from spades.
Did you overruff with tbe spade
k1J111 and try to pve partner a club
ruff? It mlgbt work, but it ilu't likely.
South started with two dlamoodl.lf be
baJ eleht spades for bls vulnerable
overcall, be cinnot bave four clubs as
well. Also, with a club void, East
should play bls dlamoudlln ascending
order: queen, king, ace; not queen, ace,

&amp; Livestoc k

w-

Eul
It

61 ••
·
u
'12 Ocdae CouGor 37,000 mlloe,
$10,1100 lt4-3711-2726
.11
For ulo or lrade- 1815 FOil(
Tornpc,
running conclllon
IHI ahlrp, $15115, 814'742·2812.. ;

Dfa-.

~·1052

Nor"

By PWUip Alder

AMo Soxopliono, Good Condl· 5 lug Aluminum Turbo - . . _ :
lion 1200 814-387·7182.
1&amp; lriclr lri
11 ......
Bu.ndy Clarinll Good Condition, Wldo, WUI Fll Gonorill MolorC'I
$125. 114-3,..2721.
SIOO 81•·379-2728.
B - Prlcocl Tranomla-.
u..a 1 .-.n, 11 lYon, ...,. ,
FJrm Suppl1es
~~~ 114-245-llll?, r

61 Farm Equipment

Wett

12Tike - -

'91 .=:plrll ES V-8 $5,850',',

~5

Musical
Instruments

,c,A-

;:'"
:,:-:9·-,---,:-:-:--:,.,-,.,--,.- ::

1\oo mlnloturo Dlchohunds, 2 Alllomobllo Bra For Fonl l
montha old,l7!/eil., lor morelnTouN_o.,_&amp;M-441-2288 Dlyo; II+ !'
lormlllon cail614-141-2122.
258-IDt Aftor 7 P.M.
1

57

10~

Go back
to square one

,.::A
Now

Rllllwlflr pupo, axe. 1984 Hondo 110. 3 -lor. ol··l

l)ldk~Ne, ' paNniS

I CIMI.-nlll
I ElerMIIy

17

20TOI

Localoclln G.C. llurph!l Co. Go~ '88 Hondo 250X, 4 Wh., Modlllocl :
llpollo. Now opan. 61•-441.()4(14. $1700 114-446·1118.
.1
AKC

4lngqdlenta

cloof,l

Z:S

Shop.

.

30Footw. .
32 Wom111'1

-AKC champion bloodllrie,- 614· Auto, PB, ~. 114""46-o3184.

Pet

.

8Decore11Ye
lebrlc
I 1181ety IIICY·

Opening lead: t 8

loodld, prico ""'fifiloblo. 304-;
675-&amp;m
. 1
1fiiO.Pontloc Grand Pri1, 4
aUio., vs, Meda &amp;eft ,.., dOor ~
ropanct, USOO. 304-175-3354. J
19110 Pomlae TronSSolo. CINn WHh
F~
Tlr11. Ownor A Non-SmokorJr
Aoldna $12,- . Call 614·2•5- '

-•rd.

Palace

can l1tltlllll

3PIItolllle

Vu!Mrable: Both
Dealer: Eut

-'" Chivy 112 Ton 4 WD, 350, 4 '
Loot: Mlddflporl vlclnHy, ShoHII Sf&gt;d., Lift KH, Now Tim $1150 I1
(mini ColliI, ubltr oncl whho, 4 OBO 614·211.f1711.
,
11101. old. $50
114-192- liH Ford AI
4WO 1 1 j
5181.
..... .........
r,
_,.., - ·
~32 or
Pupplll- - · ' lriyo, block . -~~!14·
._
1nd 1prlcotj IIB&lt;:i 'St...uura,·
mlnlolurn, 1111 ; Ford F-2~ 414, 360 Englno,. J
Puppy

1 Wiele II.
2Topeol

•a

mlln.
cl..nl
15,400.
pb,powar
hatch,
ac. 114-441d
e ...:l
3485
1188 Nluan 200SX Auto, Wh'lf'
Ovordrivo, Air, Sloroo, "-""~'
look: 17,000, Prlco: $5,iMIO, I*

84~526.

687-3404.

_
...
ooM

•as
tu

379-2878.
":
1988 ~-m 1~0 86 u1 0
~·
....
a • pw, ·

10gol. lonk lll·upa, Slt.n . $1,4115.

Oollvorod And Slockod P.U. 114-1112•JW8.
Load 150, 814-266-67e6.
c:==:::::::-:-=7=.:..:::::......,=~
llryor, SfiHCI - · •
Amono 11 FOOl frM Froot With I WI-.
Y11ro Did,
Sll 11400; 114-441lco Makar, Almond, 61• Ul 11537. 11411. Mon-F~ D-5; Saturday e·-- - ·
NoOn.
.
'
.
Avon bottln: electric lool ma•
Hydraulic oii,IO pi t126. Sidoro
uger, ulod ·wlh wotor, loll ol WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch Equl-. , . _ _ , , wv.
mloc 11omo; $100 OBO, 114-992· 200 PSI $1UI: t Inch 200 PSI 30W75-lll21 '!' -.v7-3117.
~164
-2..,
. - - - -....,.-- , - -! 133.10; Ron lnnti lnle...-.,
Ball &amp; Howell movie" DI'OIICtor JHhlon, Ohio.~- · 63
l,lveatock
wllh ocrMn, 150, coli. 114-192- WATER ITOR- TAHKI
1HI AaHA- Geldl/111. 1112
30711 blforo 10:301m.
And Ground FDA AeftA
Incentive Fund Gelding,
::
Bra
:.::.
nd= N=ow.:..:
A::
co=d=om
:.:le
:.....,A_m_or_lce
_ n_ l ~..., For Willi'.
11112 lncontlvo Fund · Filly, 1;'111
Eneyclopodll Ill, $700 VIIIUI, ROn E.... EnltrtlrfiiL , _ lllro, 8y Sonny 0.. Bor, 614·
sail for $350. 304-t75-7730 attar eon, Ohio, '1-D.aloiUtl.
281-1622 ..
5pm.
lind - · loby Holatoin Bull Calvn . 114·
::--:--~-::---:-::--;--::,.-1 .........Flu
IN. 114-1112·2931.
241.0232.
Bronc! now Callor I.D. bo•, 538,
514·182-1166.
Wo!a!rl W/110 lro. Hollllln .HIIIoro 614-24H232.
::-.c.:.7'="-::,--..,.-:::-:--l
Woiilrlo, 1-11on1 ~lion
Buggy Ferlllur Sprwtder, Slain- $51114-317-G131.
.
1111 Slool Ul'll; Dulc64 Hay &amp; Grain
Wood Cool Burner, Calllyllc Zlnllh 211nch Colorocf eor-11
Con-or 8125; Kina -l&gt;ur- T.V. Workl Qoojl, Rolf Prllly Allollo fray, -11-4117.
ner, $150; Coal Stove PO, Pltct Of Fumhure, $110, Pair Of
Chlld'a Aop Koyboord $40, 51•· Clrlilrn ~11'1 Sfzl 31, $21, Ch""- llpaellll 1"- off ell
hay. tlllll bl plcf1od up by Jon.
582-1880.
· Good CondHion.11W12-S131.
1, fiN. 304-41MIIO.
Chromo hoopllll lype bldrollo, 55
Building
adjus ts twin to quHn silt , like
new, $100, 614-ft2-5581.
Tran sportation
Supplies
Cobra biM att11on, -23 channel

!

=··...,..·_·__·___·

PIIHint,

57 Clbllrnd

SOUTH
tAQJH542

wl-.

Point

II IIIII
141 ,..,.. bMcll

tAKQ7U
.QH

B11utllul cr11m Hl""'loyon kh· 1986 Millan King Cab, pickup, :
lon, molo, AFC r-lotared, • -, 51pd., 4WD, dllu1 cab , llkllng,
-·
-~ raor
AC, bid mat, runready to go now or will hold un- nlng bolrda IIC cond no rveP.
!!!..,
~2llol.mu wllh depoal1, 114- ,· ::.304::=:'175-7.-1:.:158
1
-"'....:~'
::
' 1181 Chivy pickup, Sllve.-,
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jocklon Avo. cond. 2/lolo o1 oxlrao, ,

·

Allar 6 P.ll.
4
:::7.;:.:..:.:.::--.,--=:---,- l Vory nlcl Early Arnlrlcan brown
Seasoned

Removed,

AKC Reglltarad mlnlt1urw male

Sluftod bearo, 75

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Tandy 2SG0/3S Compullr &amp;yotern, ltlouM, DMP, COlor Prlnler,
1963 Ford FOOO Dump Trvck. Soflwa,., 4 llonthl otd _tf800
1
Cub Codot Oolool Riding - r l14-258-e572 oriM-258-1....

AAA,

DockH. dew Clawa,

$75, Now 112 HP O..p VQII Bom: 101111H A-y To Go
- · But Wllh
WillDlpoaH,
Hold Stucl
Till
Pump, SIOO, FUll Tank 130, Goo Chrlolmn
Hot Weter Heater, $35, 11•saa. · s.,.lco Aloo Avlfflblo. 114-3718;11..
•.
2721.
Lldlll block llllhor Jackll with AKC
Aaalllonod
Llbtldor
zip out llnor, aiM medium, $100, Rotrlo- · puppfll,
grut
614·992-f&amp;3J.
Chriotmoo gift, 114-'1112-3034. ·

lrodo
onllquo
newluud
houooliold tumlohlngo. Will buy

Special.

Pets for Sale

14fciolllhneH

•a
•10u

19711 Cadillac Braum 79,odb;
Mlln. Foir Condlllon 12200 614-1

t=========::-r-==========i

-.n

EAST

I

614·992...,.,

daye.

Christmn

••

1IU Toyota Coroltl SA 5, 4
cylinder, I _ . t, ...,. good,1
1oo1to good, good goo m~~~oae-&lt;
oro ml!ll highway, air, 1'9;1
ovorythlna ·- . nklng $1200,1

10 Casu Only, 712x39 SKS Gallery /Practice Ammunhlon, 1120
Aounda, $150 lneludn Tax, Also
Small Lot Of Hollow Polnl 6 Soft
Point SIMI Coro &amp; Llld Cera,
Phil Hack, 8 lkch Line, Go~

357 and 38 Spacial Stalnltn
Wanted to do for elderly or dlllcalll14-992-3711. EOH.
Revolver $245. 45 and 9 MM Pisoblocl: hcull ciNnlng, laundry, '
tol New and Uud $125 Up To
lron"-a, cooking, willing to run 2br. all oloclric, oppllanCM fur· $250. 22 and 22 Magnum Atvol·
nlahld,
on
aha
management.
lf'rancfe. wag" nagotlllbft, 114-ver $105. Mosaberg 500 12 ga.
Lauertand Apte., New Havea,
182-1521 M.f.
Vanl Alb $215. Mo•barg 20 ga.
WV. EOH 304-882-3716
Hunter Combo lncludi!JV Sfyg
· F - -·- EllloloncoY,701 , Borrol $266. (Porl,ct Jor · Financial
Fowth, GalliPGIII, Share Bath, Young Hunlers). 3 Only Amk-90
$165/Mo. Utilities Paid, 614-448- $275. Ammo For All. UMd 1100
Romlngton Trap Gaugo 1421.
4416 Aftor 7 P.ll.

CA~H?!!

·--- - --

tar 6 P.M.

w/bag, $100 each. 304"-675-1753.

2bdrm. apt:a., talal electric, appllanCH fumlahld, laundry
room facilhiH 1 cl011 to school
In town. Applications avallab,.
at: VIllage GrHn Apta, 149 or

IIC ,

9·- - - --l
10·-- - ---1

Fiberglass Showers&amp;: Tub, New
3 Pc. Showera, 614-245·5152 At·

llpo11a1 614-445-1822, Noon -5
Wookaayo, All Ooy Sunday.

Apanment
for Rent

B&amp;A

School, 614-446-1224.
T I T Lawn SIIVice, lawn,

total

$225/mo., Pomeroy al'la, 614·

44

..

rataa/

New Fiberglass Showers, New

SWAIN
Home,~ Furnish~. 2 Or,
920 Fourth AYII'Iue, Gllllpotia1 · AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
S3201Mo., 114-446-4416 After 1 Olivo Sl., Golllpolla. Now &amp; Uood
turnlt ura, heaters, WHtam &amp;
P.ll.
Work - ·· 614-446-3151.
Two bedroom mobile homu for
rent, also apatcH for r1nt etart· 52 Sponlng Goods
lng ol S851mo., 614·992-2167.

fant !Toddler 114... 46-622l Pre-

Call I"'r ln"'"""llon Or '11111. In-

AIIIHI--011111ngln
uw. new JIIPII' Ia IUbt8&lt;t to
lho F-.1 Fllr Housing Ad
ol1il68 Which ~ llogal
'llrfpro-.

ar~w...,.,

Living Room Sofa I Chair. Cof·
tee &amp; End Tab11. Two Ttbfe
Lamps $100, 614-446-6130.

882-3711.

2br. fwnlshed epla., utllltin
paid, dap. &amp; rat. 304-882·2566.

CoU OIU" olflu for paid iA

Hours: Mon-SIIt, 0-5. 614-4480322, 3 mlln out Bulavllle Ad.
FJH Delivery.

Super single watarbad, $75. 304-

INCh Sl., Mlddlopcrt, Oh 1 &amp;

Tum your clntter into ccuh,
SeU it the easy way... by ehone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your clauified ad today!
15 word. or le.,, 3 dap,
3 pqper«,$6.00

1589, ooll lor $295, 61•·9492191.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete hom• fumllhlnga.

pall. 30~S.10M .

62 H. Locuat Aa on rtght, no

moviea. Call614-446·2568. EOH .

ant to:
PIN down EXTRA

mantha old, moiled, cOli naw

2 bodroom lrallor1 ret &amp; dep, AI.

536

in the Classlfleds!

- --.. .
Konmoro wu hlr ond dryar, 18

675-7398.
PICKENS FURNITURE

for Rent

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES
AT JACKSON
lr-~:;:::-11111-~~ from
ESTATES
Jackson
si06Jmo. Walk lo ohop &amp;

SAVINGS•••

800-499·34-.
- - -- -

2 loaves, greal shape, S65. 304 -

42 Mobile Homes

::~:.~

•AttQ 2
tJ181
.Ait7U

110 Ford LTD, med. ofzl - {

APPLIANCES

Soc:lion, 3 Boclroomo 6 2 Bllhl

TlmeJ. Fld. Aalatance AVIIlabla.

omploymonl. EOE.

DINO.MITE

Newly Remodllacl 2 Bedroom
Hou11 5 Mlln From Oalllpolla
$250 Month 1100 O.pa;h e14441·1021.
N'-- •
H
A .

992·2312.

~~~~~~~~;;;b~~~~:~====ill OHIO VALLEYINOTICEI
PUBLISHING CO.

1....__ _ _ __

USED

NORTH .

l

lcyc, outo, taO. 30W7U41:1.

Bedroom HouM, S.curtty

$450/monlh. 614-446-4118

41 COlli IIIII -

lllrley 40AI=Itler

tm Eocort, AC, . -. 114-iid:
5211.

Storll!'!! At $20.00; lndlona Mony

GOOD

3-4 lA houH elow to Gal·
lipolla. nice
neighborhood.

40 Pelllllt to

ALPER

qual VII .., 114-NI-3383.

Drawer~ $114.15; Car Bed's,
Bunk Bed's, Poater Beds. Full
Line Of Southwe.. em Vat"

Ganaral Mainlenance, Palntlng 1 Mobile
't'ard Work Windows Waahea

Avon Sella HHU At Work Or
Home. Avarage S8 -$14 Hourly. 614-446-1658.
Ooor-To-Ooor Optional. 1-800George~ Portable Sawmill, don'1
'1112-4738.
houl your logo lo tho mill juot
call 304-6'75·1-gs7.

J &amp; D 's Auto Pans and Salvage,

also buying junk cars &amp; lrucl&lt;s.
304·773-5343.

11

Car1111.cf Nursing Assla t• nts
needed. Plrt-tlma positions . 12
hour shifts. Mu.t· be willing to
wortc 7am-7pm or 7pm-7am.
Mus t be certlllld In Long Tenn
Ctre. Conltct Sh1ron Skidmore,
Olrector of Nursing at Pl•aunt
Valley Hospital, Sind Hill Rd.,
Pt. Pleaunl, WV 25550. 304-&amp;75-

hom n . 614-44&amp;4175

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Wroulht Iron Table W/4 Ch.llrs:

r========·==1-==========-l ~H
.::__....::....:::..:...:.:...:..:::.!..--

31 - Y. . .

1

Washera, dryera, refrigerator•,
,rangu. Skag~ ~lanc11, 76
and Rtflrenc•
qulr.d t~H279
Betw•nA•8 Vlna Sti'Mt, Cad 614· 446-7398, 1·
1.m.-10 1.m.
•IJ'

3

Wanta&lt;t to buy: uaad mo!Mia
Yard Sale

41 Houses for Rent

37TNW.Z.d

PHILLIP

11N P-iaO 1000 LE, V.f, 4uto
~
f'W, POL, PI, 12000, or .,.. lor lruck of

FURNISHINGS:

Shape 1 I Slzn sgrtlng AI
$5.00. 2 ~atlona -Bukft ""Auto
Auction Or 4 Mllat Out 141.
Open 9 A.M. To 6 P.M. Man ·Sal .

Rentals

304-675-241 9 .
FrM

Bualneu

ACIIOII

.

Bedding ·T'wln Mitt Sit $89, Full
SH S&lt;il CuMn $141 Sol ; 4

With Potentltl For Expinalon In

Fem111 dog, 111 blac:k, 1 t/2Vrs .•.
looka li ke miniature black lab

---~-- -

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

1882 FORI ira~11110111~utu ~
auto., ioolla and rune
,N
pollee cor, ....._
1
BPI.
-..
.

Fan ack Rocking Chair $58;
Gard•n Arch Wey 'a $121.0()"

Business
Buildings

Small

Black Pup, Part Cocker Spanl al,
6 W• eka Ofd_ AN dy 6l4·256·1m.

Goods ·

OUTSIDE

2 bolh mobil homo, s 112
acrn, CA., 2 c:~r gan~ge , large

9·10

. Household

glau enciOMd aun pcrclt,
Racine, Oh, . . . to appr.clate,

1•x70

VInton. llull Mill *-882-37112.

G iveaway

Wooko Old

tl'lll~r.

Aidman

The Daily

"'

2br,

1888

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1182 . FORI Fair"""" . Can . 1o
8Hn AI 134 Fourth Ave., ~
llpol'-, OH.
...

1181 Whlnpaol llulll-ln dlah·
wu hor, (IOOCI c:ond. 304-1754241.
VI'RA FURNITURE
.
614-446-3158 Or 114-441-4. 21
"tO DAY SAllE AS CASH
OR RENT~.OWN (NO DEPOSIT!

wf7x20 axpando, 3br., 2 bolha,
hRI pump lo oklnlng, locolod In

Co (602i954-lll20.

5I

Monday, December 20, 1993
ALLEYOOP

r.1erch ulld 1Se

tor sa1e

3 Announcements

Monday, December 20, 199a

~J.~rlcll,

........

••

·~

com-..1111'

or ropalral•

IIINI~.:

WV001J301!,.

Gel)8ral ti&amp;UIIng
"•
I Would Ukl ·"-PPa lo KnOJ''
Thol I Ani IIIU ~. Llf01~
Caldwolll14-446-4881.
.. n

and you 'll find il. The Astro-Graph OEMI,. (May 21-Juno 20) A friend mlghl
Matchmaker inalanlly reveals which signs lean on you a bit IOday in hopes of being
are romanlieally pertec11or you. Mail $2 and able to do something h6/she couldn't do on
along, salf·addmBSed, Blamped envelope Ia lhelr own. Aeclpr()(:lly is likely, because.
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box you, in rum, migttllean on someone elsa.
4465, New York, N.Y. 10163.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Where your
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.1111. 18) Your great· career is concerned, there Is something
BERNICE
est&amp;ssettoday is your ability 10 do things for from which you may derive benefils if you
·
BEDE OSOL ofhe111 they cannol do lor themselves. II you could fi gure oul a w&amp;y to change il.
utilize this gift, you can generate a 101 of Fonunalely, concerned associale might do it
good will.
for you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.flb. 1V) Chores of a LEO (July :!).Aug. 22) Profillrom your own
mental nalure will be much a&amp;sler lor you Ia pest experience today and don~ allow yourha~e 1~ t11an phySical ones. II there is
sell 10 be penalized by somalhing lhal
eome 1ype of heavy wo11&lt; tl1al needs doing, penalized you previously. Old mistakes
hire helpers.
don, have to be repeated.
PISCES (Feb. :zo.Mircll 20) If you assert VIRGO (Aug. 23 So pi 221 T~ you may
yourseU today you lhould have a very good be able to do much beller in jOif'JI endeavo11
chance
ot adding to your material than anything you attempt to do single·
•.
TUiodly, Dec. 21, t003
resourcu. Don't be afraid to try to make handed. Look over your agenda of objecw11o wo,Jk1 make an effective
lrf the year ahead you might h&amp;vB s ome money from lhlnga thai w.ren'l profitable tives 1o
previously.
sly.
splendid opportunities to make changes
UBRA ~ 23-0ct 23) You'ro capable
Wlllcll could oiler g,..rer materl&amp;l rewards. ARIES (Mircii21·Aptfl 10) Succa88·ID your
Ey,en ff you don't lnlti&amp;le these endeavors, andaavo,. Is likely today, provided you're of wOOdng very well with otherS IOday on a
vciu'rollkaly to play a role In guldng them fo perrnltlld to usa your ~ Ideas and inltla· one-10-0111 · Thla II becauoe you'm as
live. If lhetla are thw&amp;rtld, Hwill dilute your mucll of 8 giver aa you are 8 taker. Your
fnr111011,
·
U.omAIIIilil (Nov. 23-l)ec. 21) You're a pertormance.
attitlrtlllfl8PirM cooperation.
,
TAURUS
(April
20-IIIV
20) You' re in B . 8CORPIO (GaL :I+Nov; 12) In onler to feel
geod pi'OOIOier anct ulea P"roon today and
you'Ul!lllhiCtively knoW hOW 10 lfOUI8 CUI· 00011 aclllriemant C)'de today, but your Vlc- perlbnally -gretlfled todly, you mual be
engeged In 10m• form of productive pur·
tctner lnttrell In your wares , Yll you may 10~81 may no1 come In ways you lnlll&amp;lly
1IUill t11at prOclucH 1111 blnlllta lor you, as
~ . be aquallj Mlharp In handling money envlelon. Effecllve, last minute changes are
well IS for olhef1.
rnatte11. Know Whtre Ia look for romano&amp; lndlcalld.

,e=--

see

,.

j '

'

'

�The Daily. Sentinel

ByThe.Bend

Monday, December 20, 1993~
.Page-10·

Community
calendar

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
.girls top

Pick 3:
585
Pick 4:
1587
BuckeyeS:
2-14-21-30-34

Southern

'

'

PageS

Low tonight In lOs. Ponly
doudy. Wtdntsday, hlgb In
mld·30s. Snow nurrles.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure pubUcation in the calen·
dar.
MONDAY
. Vol. 44, NO. 11'1

RACINE • Judging will take
place tonight in the Racine Christ·
mas "Show .of Lights" contest
sponsored by the Racine Area
Community Organization.
RACINE ·The Southern Local
Board of Education will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the high school.
POMEROY • The Fraternal
Order of the Eagles Auxiliary 2171
will accept donations of food bas·
kets through Tuesday at the Eagles
Club.

•

KKK cross

,

.
:survives
'

.•.

NOW THAT'S BIG! -Herbert L, Miller or Letart
bad a :
bumper crop or turnips .this year. His biggest one was this &amp;!x ;.
pound, 22 ounce one which be grew from a tiny seed planted 1D : •
July.

RACINE • Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 1
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

PARTNERS IN EDUCATION- Sixth grade
class officers at Rutland Elementary receive a
check rrom Bank ODe of Rutland. Tbe money is
being loaned to the class in order for It to run a
school store. The bank and Rutland Elementary
are participating in tbe coua1y-wide Partners in

Education program. From left to right, Brooke
Williams, Adrianne TiUey, Sara lble and TifFany
Halfhill are shown accepting the check from
Joan May, branch manager of Bank One iD Rut·
land.

Bank One sponsors
mentoring program
By LEIGH ANN REDOVIAN
Sentinel News Stall'
Sixth grnders from Rutland Ele·
mentary are cashing in on experience by learning what it takes 10
start a business with the help of
officials from Bank One of Rut·
land.
Bank One and Rutland Elementary are participating in the Panners in Education program, a coun·
ty-wide program designed to
encourage community businesses
and schools to work together in
educating area srudents.
The class received a $50 loan
from Bank One of Rutland to open
a school store. The store opened in
early November 1993, and through

planning and hard work, the stu·
dents have now made enough profit
to order new supplies.
According to sixth grade teacher
Bettyann Wolfe, the students are
fmding that cooperation plays a big
pan in running a successful busi·
ness.
"The whole class participates in
running the store, from tounting
money, to advertising the store, to
actually selling the products."
Wolfe said. "Everybody's doing
something."
Wolfe also says that she lets the
srudents make their own decisions
about what is best for the store dur·
ing class meetings held each week.
The students are planning a

NEW OFFICERS • Newly elected ofllcers for
. the Lltdles Mlsslonar:y Fellowship Qf the Victory
Baptist Cbnrcb are, from the left, Lois Hawley,

school trip with their overall profits
at the end of the year. They are
also going to leave some money for
next year's sixth grade class.
Bank One of Rutland's Branch
Manager, Joan May .said that the
students went through all the loan
processes beginning with ftlling out
a loan application.
"This is an opportunity for students to meet members ,of the public and to work with them in learning about their future," May said.
Students have written letters to
bank officials as well as visited the
bank to make withdraws and payments.
"It helps us learn more about
what older people do,'' said sixth
grader, Adrienne Tilley.

treasurer, Angle Hall, secretary, Sandy Lauder· .
milt, vice president, and Betty Barker, presi·
dent.

LETART· The Letan Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 6
p.m. at the office building.
HOCKINGPORT · Special
recognition will be given to bands
and others who supported Moriday
night music at the Reynolds build·
ing at Hockingpon, State Route
124, Monday at 6:30 p.m. Take
covered dish. All bands welcome.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE • Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club will
hold a potluck Christmas dinner ,at
noon at the townhouse Tuesday.
There will be a gift exchange. In
the event of inclement weather the
event will be canceled.
BEDFORD • The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depan·
ment committee will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the town hall. Resi·
dents are urged to attend.

The La';lies MissiOD!~fY Fellow·
ship of V1ctory Bapust Church,
Middleport, held its Christmas din·
ner on Dec. 6 at the home of Mrs.
Betty . Barker. Her home w.as
extenstvely decorated for the dtn·
ner which she hosted.
During the evening there was a
new secret prayer pals drawing and
those for 1993 were revealed.
The ladies ai:W made a contribu·
tion to the bwlding fund.

. The past officers were recog-

n~zed for 1993 and they were

Tammy Ball, president: Myrtle
Quillen, vice president; Angie
McClure, secretary and Phyllis
Hudliall,tteasurer.
New officers elected for 1994
were B!ltty Barker, president;
~d.Y Laudennilt, Vice President;
Angte Hall, secretary and Lois
Hawley, treasurer.

Those attending the dinner were
Betty Barker Nancy Larkins Phyl·
lis Hudnall 'Tammy Ball MyrUe
. Quillen , Linda Keesee, 'shirley
Roush, Lois Hawley, Sandy Laudermih Margaret , Nunn sue
Adkins' Verinna Batkman Sherry
Jarvis Wanda Ashley Lu~y Hendrixs, 'Jennifer and Jessica Ashley,
Pastor James Keesee and Herbert
Barker.

\

'·
(

---Christmas is----. Council

OKs
bid for new
water tank

.first day in
:Queen City
By Tbe Associated Press
A Ku Klux Klan cross survived
its flfst day in downtown Cincin·
nati without incident, drawing only
jeers and gawks from Christmas
shoppers.
Meanwhile, in Columbus, .a
state board denied permission for
the Klan to erect a cross at tbe Ohio
··Statehouse.
A Klan group acting UDder protection of a fedeml cowt order put
up the 10-foot-tall white cross
shortly before 6 a.m. Monday oii
Fountain Square, tbe main gather·
ing place in doWntown Cincinnati.
About a dozen protesters taunted
the three Klansmen, but stayed
away from the cross.
Last year, a Klan cross was
knocked down shonly after it went
up on Fountain Square. It repeated·
ly was toppled and defaced during
the holidays, and 81 least 10 people
were charged with disorderly con·
dueL
Police stood guard Monday and
put up metal banicades to keep the
pubhc away from ihe cross.
Passers-by stopped to look 81 the
cross, wh1ch features a Bible verse
but no reference to the Klan.
'
have no respect for
Cinc:in~tti," said
Kirk·
tear

in prole~
· .. .
The city tried to stop the Klan
cross by passing a law that forbids
"fighting words" on the square.
The American Civil Liberties
Union filed suit on behalf of the
Knight Riders, saying the group
was being .fingled out for exclu·
sion, airid u;s. Oistrict' Judge Carl
Rubin granted permission for the
cross last week.
"We wan.t the same rights as
everybody else," Klan spokesman
Tony Gamble said as the cross was
erected Monday momin~ .

KEEPSAKE ~OVERLETS • Coverlets sucb ,
as tbls one used by Chillicothe iD Its bicentennial
celebration may be designed and sold by the
Meigs County 175tb Anniversary Committee.
Tbe coverlets would sell for about $40 and
would depict racets or Mel11s Couo~'s develop·

In an effon to provide our reade.rship wi~ current news, the &lt;;Jal·
hJ!Ohs Daily Tnbune and Senunel
w1ll not accept weddings after 60
days from the date ~f the event
All c.lub '!'eeungs .and ot~er
news articles m the SOCIC\)' secbon
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submiired within 42 days of the
occurence.
:"JI !Mter!al submi~~ for publicauon IS subject to ediUmg.

Social Security Hints for business owners offered
wages and those who are self· level of retirement. Additional evi·
By ED PETERSON
employed.
If you are age 70 qr den~e would be necessary if you
Social Securit:y Manager, Athens
over,
there
are
no earnings limits.
are:
Olrtee
When you work for wages, its
• involved in a family business
easy
for
us
to
detei')Dine
whether
or
another family member is
If you own a business and
you
re
"retired."
Your
earnings
assuming
some, or all, of your
you're getting ready to retire, .
record
tells
the
whole
story.
But
duties.
Social Security has some hints to
• continuing to render services
.help you prepare to me your claim when you are self-employed, it's
not
as
simple.
or
example,
if
you
for
the business at a reduced rate of
for benefits.
decide
to
file
for
benefits
but
con·
compensation.
In taking your claim for bene·
• still the owner, or part-owner
fits, we will need to know whether tinue to work part time in the business,
you
could
be
in
a
position
to
of
a
business and own stock in the
you'll be completely retired or
control
your
earnings.
In
that
case,
business.
splitting wages with
whether you plan to continue some
we
probably
will
ask
you
for
addi·
others
(dividing
former salary
involvementm the business. To get
all of your Social Security retire· tiona! information-such as ta'x between )lOu and your spouse or
ment biencftll, you mutt rewe. or at return• or corporate records. This children, for example).
H~re's an example of a siruation
least reduce your earningi below wiil ~ us 10 decide whether you
cenaillllmill. Othe!rWise,IIOI)Io-or have reduced your services in ,~e that would require an extensive
all-of your benefits will be with· business to match the reduction iD interview and documentation
helci. Here'&amp; how it 1oes: iD 1994, rour i~me. In. other words, th.e because the person is retiring from
if you are under age 6!1. you can. mcome you recetve from the busi· his or her own business. Let's say
earn up to $8,040. For every $2 ness must mardi the'wotk you do. Mr. Davenpon owns and ll)~es
You ~ over this limit, $1 il with· you CIIIIIOl simply pay yourself a a furniture sure. His net profit was
held frOm your benefitJ. For people small lll1ary to stay under Social $6S,OOO last year. He turns 62 in
Security's earnings limits.
· 1994 and plans to me for Social
ag~~6S dlloush fl), the 1994 limit il
When you ftle for Sccial Securi· · Security retirement benefits. He
$11,16a. For every $3 you earn
the busines$,
over this limit, $1 il withheld from ty benefits, several situations decides to ·
require
additional
information
and
namiDg
hi~resjdent,
his
your benelill. 1beae JimltJ apply to
evtdence
to
help
us
decide
your
oldest
son
as
vice-president,
and
everyone: people who work for

'

'
.
kept il silent vigil

Fellowship reveals secret prayer pals News policy .
·

A NICE SURPRISE • Tea year old Kacy Ervin or Racine was
the winner or a pedal tractor and trailer given in a rund raiser by
the Bi&amp; Bead Farm Antiques Club. The equipment was delivered
to Kacy Wednesday afternoon by Dale Kautz, an active member of
the Antiques Club.

declares himself treasurer--jlaying
himself $8,000 so he will he under
Social Security's earnings limit.
But he intends to continue to control and manage the business just as
he did before he incorporated.
While Davenport makes the
arrangements with the best of
intentions, only when he talks with
a Social Se~urity representative
does he learn that his arrangements
may be imprQper. The representa·
live explains that Mr. Davenport
cannot simply reduce his income in
order to receive Social Security
without alao reducing the services
htl provides to the business. Fonunately, Mr. Davenport talked to
Social Security before he }tad to
·file amended laX repons and before
we would have had to.makc adjustments·to his Social Securil)' reCord.
All of these actions could have
delayed the processing of his retirement claim.
, ·
encourage you to check with
tis well before rding for benefits•to
make sure rou are aware of the
documentation you will need for
the interview.

We

State board
approves loan

meat over the past 175 years. Public interest will
determine whether the committee moves forward on tbe project. Displaying the coverlet
bere are tbe Rev. William Mlddleswartb and
Margaret Parker, bicentennial committee om.
cers.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The S1llle Controlling Board unani·
mously approved a $7.2 million
loan to help bail Columbiana
County out of II'Oblcms aeated by
the loss of $10 million in invest·
ments by the former county trea·
surer.
But one board member said
Monday he was concerned that
other governments that had prob·
lem investments would look to the
state for help. ,
Columbiana County Commissioner William Gotschall told
members of the board that the
county government would come to
a standstill in two weeb without
the' loan. He said auditors bad
found the county would be eco·
nomically unsound for the budget
year that begins Jan. 1.
·
Rep. Robert Corbin, R-Day1on,
said approv•l of the loan might
lead other local governments to
look 10 the state for help, haviD~
invested iD similar "interest-only'
securities.

FREEINSPECTI&lt;&gt;N
'

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
Same Day Service
All Parts Extm
lncludcis: Cleaning, Oiling,
Adjustments, Greasing.

TUESDAY, DEQMBER 21, 2:30PM-4:30PM

FRUTH PHARMACY

,

GET ACQUAINTED CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

..

Mlcldleport, o•IO

THill •AYS Olltr

·

.....,,......., • WttiHid•y
Dece....r 20, 21, 22- 1:00 P.M. to 4:00P.M.
. ALUMJN~· CANS 30c PER POUND lilo Dealers.

.

~

Also Buying Cl.n Alumtnum Scrap, Copper, Bra11, Radiators.
Accepting on DoniiiOn: Gl•l, Plastic, Tin Cans, Newspapers,
/
~Paper, Office Peper.
,

Jl.....,
c..............
·
• You n&amp; lfel...., ,.,.,.nr

Ged'• .kiNit ..........

(614) 1112-31184. '
992~3194
CLOSED DEC, 23rd THRU JAN. 2nd

Paige Slnltb Cleek reads the story wbich never
loses Its m:1;.~ for children to ber 13-month-old
dauabter,
nab Elizabeth. The Corbet Cleek
family resides in the Lochary Home on High
Street in Pomeroy.

Seniors still failing state test
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stan
The latest results of the ninth
grade proficiency test show 14
Meigs High School seniors faiUng
one or more of the four parts
required for graduation, Supt. Bill
Buckley told members of the
Meigs Local Board of Education at
Monday's meeting.
The superintendent advised
board members that remedial work ,
is continuing with the srudents on
the parts of the test they failed.
"Those students will have two
men opportunities to take the test,"
Buckler said. He went on to point
out that according to state law, 11
student must paas all four parts to
gJaduate. Math ,is the one section
giving the students the most problems here and statewide. according
to the superintendent
Buckley said he was advising
the board members of the profi·
ciency test status because he
expects that parents will soon be
complaining to them. "But it's a
State law - students cannot grndu·
ate unless they pass all four sections of the ninth grade proficiency
test," Buckley said.
PenoDDel
Certified and non-certified per-

sonnet was hired and parent volunteer lists from two schools were
approved during the lnecting.
Mike Kennedy resigned as head
girls' track coach and was hired as
head boys' track coach.

Sheila Harris, Karlita Stump,
Linda Dye, and Mary Felts were
added to the substitute teachers' list
for the remainder of the year, and
Patricia Baer was hired as a reader
COntinued on Page 3

CHRISTMAS

1
'

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stall'
Pomeroy Village Council
approved a bid for the water
department's new water tank at its
regular meeting Mondar night
Welding Inc. - w1th a bid of
$88,000- bcal out two other corn·
panics for the projett, Pomeroy
May~ Bruce Reed said.
The village decided to replace
the villa&amp;e's old water reservoir on
Lincoln Heights with an entirely
new water tank, Reed said.
''The EPA demanded we put on
a new roof. For the same amount of
money and with Issue 2 monet we
just went with a new tank, he
added.
Th9 two other bids were
$91,230 by Mid-Atlantic Storage
of Washinjton Court House, Ohio,
and $166,932 by United States Fil·
tel' Corp. or warrendale, Pa.
Village council also unanimously accepted bids for insurance.
For health insurance, the village
will continue with its fonuer insur·
er, Wiseman Insurance of Gallipolis, spending $4,688 .38 on a
monthly basis. Reed said.
"We'll renew it on a month-tomonth basis and we expect in a few
mootbs to rebid it," Reed added.
The viilage will continue with
Wiseman until recently-incurred
costs are paid off, Clerk/treasurer
Kathy Hysell said.
Council turned down two other
bids: $3,460.47 per month from
Brogan-Warner Insurance Services
and $2,266 per month from Dennis
Horkman Insurance.
"We knew nothing about that
company (Hortman) and we chose

Clinton's budget may
cut social programs
WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal spending limits arc forcing the
Clinton administration to consider
deep cuts in some programs that
help poor families, such as heating
and emergency food, say advocates
and congressional aides.
The White House and its Office
of Management and Budget are
making the final 1995 budget deci·
sions. The administration hopes to
unveil the budget in early February.
Some programs helping the poor
may not see budgets grow as quick·
ly as Clinton envisioned, according
to lawmakers, congressional aides,
and advocates.
Slower growth is seen in pro·
grams such as Head Stan, an early
childhood development program,
and WIC, a supplemental feeding
program for low-income pregnant
and nursing women, infants and
children.
The budgets of some social pro·
grams were still undecided Monday

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Bob Barton, left, Meigs
Local Board or Editcatloa member ror tbe past 13 years, was rec·
ognlzecl for bls service at Monday nljbt's board meeting. He was
~~ted a plaque by Larry Rupe, president, on behalf of the

'

~

because of disagreement between
departments and the White House,
an administration official said,
speaking on condition of anonymi·
ty.

Because of congressional spending limits, advocates and congres.
sional aides say the administration
must cut in one place if it wants to
increase in another.
Unaffected by the budget caps
arc the country's entitlement programs, such as Social Security,
Medicare and Aid to Families with
Dependent Children, the primary
welfare program for families with
children.
Among the likely budget casualties:
- The Emergency Food Assistance Program , or TEFAP. The
$120 million a year program supplies commodities to food banks,
soup kitchens, rescue missions ,
homes for the elderly, and mealson-wheels programs.

Wayne White, director of the every school in Gallla, Jackson,
Ohio Appalachian Center for High· Meias and Vinton counties by proer Education, recently presented a viding tu10ring, intervention, home
check for $35,0!)0 to Dr. Barry encouragement, ~tention programs
Donoy, pesident of the University and other lltiCessary suppon to eleof Rio Grande and Rio Grande menwy and secondary students.
CommunitY CoJJcie to fiiDd Project
A native of Perry Count~
CHAMP, a community outreach now I resident of Olllipoli1,
program designed to 'increase the has wcrted iD Adult Basic Educa·
college going tara of area youth.
lion, taught and coached in OaiUa
Jake Baru· director or the County schools, taUght at URG and
instructiona media center on the holds graduate faculty status at
Rio Grande camjlus, will coordi· · . Marshall University,
nate Project CHAMJ&gt;. According to
"I am Uvllta proof that a native
Bapst, CHAMP will impact on the of this area can succeed in the
academic careers of students In world with the educatkinal cipportunitlea provided in this area,"

Bapst said.
Area schools should expect a
call from URO in the ne•t month to
establish Project CHAMP pro·
grams.
"We want every child, parent
and citizen in this areilto know that
they are important and can succeed.• Bapst said.
Students and/Or staff and school
administnttn may call 245-73S6
for more iaform8110l1.
The projec~ .il supported by the
Ohio Appalacllian Center for High.
er Education with funds provided
by the Ohio General Assembly and
URG.

christmas paper slated for Friday
The Daily Sentinel will publish its Chris1mas edition Friday. No
Sunday Times-Sentinel will be published.
Offices of the paper will be closed that afternoon and Saturday in
observation of the Chrisllllas holiday.

Middleport man cited for DUI
Gary Michael Smith, 43, Middleport, was cited by officers of the
Middlepon Police Depanment for driving under the influence and
failure to dim lights 11 9:S7 p.m. Monday when he was traveling
nonh on Third Avenue. Smith must appear in mayor's court tonight
on the charges.

Courthouse closed Friday

Offices in the Meias County Courthouse will be closed Friday in
observance of Christmu.
.
Meigs County Common Pleas Coun Judge Fred W. Crow m
noted that the Ohio Revised Code provides tluu, in the event a holiday falls on a Saturdar, as Christmas does this year, it shall be
observed on the Friday unmedia!dy preceding.
In addition, the Meigs County Clerk of Court's office, legal and
title divisions, will be closed Thundly at noon.
The courtbouse wiU be open for business as usual on Monday
between 8:30a.m. and 4:30p.m.

.\

Wiseman because of our currem
health situations," Reed said.
For its general liability insurance, COWJCil chose a private insur·
er over a public ,insurance pool of
viHages despite the increased cost,
Reed said.
The public entities pool would
have cost $13,355 per year, while
council chose Downing-Childs·
Mullen-Musser Insurance of
Pomeroy which charged $20,901
per year.
"There are no funds backin~ the
insurance company while m a
pool," he added.
The only other non-pool bid was
presented by Brogan·Warner Insurance Services, also ·of Pomeroy,
which bid $39,437.95 per year.
"It would maintain a reasonable .
cost and ensure insureability for
everyone," Reed said of why council made its decision.
In other business, council:
- Unanimously promoted
James Stacy from lieutenant to captain in the Pomeroy Police Depart·
ment.
-Moved the Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Depanment's ladder ttuck into
the village's ttuck fund.
·- Bowed their heads in a
moment of illence for the city's
former water clert, Rhea A. Deem,
46, who died Sunday 81 Ohio State
University Hospital in Columbus.
"She will be sadly missed"
Reed said.
'
Attending were councilmembers
John Blaettnar, Scott Dillon,
Thomas Werry, Larry Wehrung
and Bill Young, Reed and Hysell.
N01 attending was Councilwoman
Betty Baronick.

--Local briefs---

URG receives $35,000 grant

MANLEY$ RECYCLE CENTER

soJ Mill s.....,

1 Section, 10 Pagn 35 c..t.
AMu111m.... lnc. NMapoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 21, 1993

Multlm.ch Inc.

\.

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