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r 91
!Jumper
citrus
..
~rop predicted .

Nowmber 29,1882

D8 8undey 11m• Sentinel

S&amp; WCD contest open to all Gallia ·high school students
B:rCONSTANCES.WHrn . dooliiiOWo.
GALLIPOLIS • lt's time for
Now ill ilsllidi ,ea-. lk _ ,
high scbool lludeDII dmHJpo.t o• M lfiiCb ID &lt;+ 1 M I ,...,
Oa1lia r .....ov10 .a.rpeulleir ~ adoiiiiD •
-~• ....,._for

Ciis ...u .......... ....,..

I

••~

•

. . -4£
__.
.

iM'
-

**
· •
.
.~~lilllw...-..

Eaays are judled on the county,
-...a IIIIIC!evel Five- willDell from aFIIId the SIIIC wiJlsh.
be awdtcl $200. from.. these 8lell
wiuers, one overall winner will
Ja:eite - additional $300. On the
• • ty level, the top essay winner
wiD be awadot SSO.
•
AR:a and State awards will he .
lllllde Ill tbe OFSWCD's Summer
Me Ji•c iD ~wood (eteveland)
aeu Jllly. Cash awards are made
possible by the Support of Farm
ud Dairy DIIJIZine. Robert W.
Teater and the Ohio Farmers
U•ion. We encourage all high
ICIIOol Eagl!sh, Science and Vo-Ag
· ~Ds~nK:IDrl to make this informatiOn IYiilable to their Sllldents and
to IKe a la'ious loot at this excel-

·-·

GM to

=-. •. ·;::;6 ; ;.

SOOjobs in

Defiance

Browns top
Bears 27-14;
Bengals lose

lent prop8IIL
This year's conteSt asks IIUdenll
10 dilcuss who should pay • «!!Il
of IJ8riculmr.l polllllioo peO"CDtiOII
and cleanup and why they think
their's is the right solution. The
deadline for submitting essays is
March 1. 1993.
Conservation Essay enuy. forms
and complete contest details can be
6blained li:om Connie White at the
Oallia Soil and W~~« Conaervlllion
District office. at our new address
of 111 JackscmPike. Suite 1569
(next to lhe Fair Grounds) or call

cw ill -.a w
&amp;
from 1991·'92 and prices of fresh- to earn cub. aw..ts iD 1M wads ..a •
in
the
1993
~
&amp;.y
iq
IIJdr
adiJI'I*ICmarket oranges will remain
Conlelt.•
lila
lower," it said. ·
SJIO.IIIOn'd
by
tbe
Ohio
Fbkaa-,
AcconliJJ&amp; 10 PMJ »--.
Near-record production of Florition
of
Soil
and
Wilier
On
I ta• c-.. cl lk (jel!ia SoilMd
da glllpefruit is eltpected to boost
wllliua o· id. de
U.S. production and lower prices, tion Dislricii{OFSWCD)7dieCOD- Waa C
test is ~ ID all Sh"' nes ClllOIIcd o
.
_
.
aa
Ill ..,... • oldie
the report said.
in
grades
9-12
for
the
1992-93
..,...
he •*• '"Dis f*UiiW
The lemon crop is forecast up school year ill 111y public or pi¥111: rc ,.- J
10 u.aase dJeir
12 percent from 1991•92, the report
Q.
. .....
~Yiic:al
said.
.
446-8687.
add
.
It also said favorable weather
Constance S. White Is pro·
also olfen aiiDI:Iift a:asli
increased U.S. apple. pear and
; Cl1itomia
citrus
production
was
gram
admiDistrator for tile Gal· ·
'
!ill Couaty Soli aDd Water Coa,
:Jonx;ast ~ 4" pen:ent. it said. Texas grape crops ill 1992, puttin~ downD'_._.ct.
.
·.eillus OUI(!Ut was expecled to be the ward.pressurc on grower pnces.
servadon "'"'
"The
fmal
foecast
of
the
1992
e.hipest S1DCe the December 1989
1~_ _ _ _ _____:_ _~
' " - . but the forecast was only 25 U.S. apple crop was 4 percent more
~c~-~i
~·~rr-~o.~
than
1991
production
.
.'
'
Appl~
:pen:eot ci pre(Ieeze production.
DEFIANCE, Ohio {AP) ;. "Citrus fruit prices, at both prices were at record highs unul
DevelopmenL
.
.
dampened
br,
the
new
crop,
the
General
Molars Cxp. willllld SOO
•power and retail levels, have been. report said. ' Large 1992-93 crops
On 'rliursclay, the Labor .Department reports
jobs at il$ local J)luJt om' lbe Dexl
.. well below year-earlier prices for
weekly jobless claims and productivity for the third .
are
eltpecled
to
provide
ample
fruit
ihree years, 1 bcf~ance Couty
'AIIIIIlci 1992," lbe report said.
quarttt,
Commcn;e reportS factory onjels for Octoand lower prices.''
development official said.
', Florida's orange crop is forecast supplies
ber,
and
North American automakers report NovemHowever, decreased peach proTbe auimiW,. has applied for a
,up 33 percent, the report said.
ber
sales.
·
duction in the Easrem and Southern tax break on $30.8 miDjm .in po.;-''Lqer IUPPlies will move prices parts
On
Friday,
Labor
reports
on
November
employof the country reduced the posed improvements 10 it14S-~­
iof p•caasin~ oranges and orange 1992 crop.
menl
And suawberry produc- old Powea bain Division pilllt just ·
ijvice Iowa',' it added.
TICKER:
tion
was
expected
be .dowa 7 east of the nort1astem OWn city,
; Plentiful supplies of fresh-mar· percent from lhe 1991torecord.
E1115t &amp;. Young agreed 10 pay a record $400 milRon Kusina, the~ oo••11ic
lion to seu1e charges that the accoiUJiing firm inade1lcel oranges are expecled, the repolt
development
director, said Friday.
;Slid, due to an 8 percent larger CaJ.
quately audiltd four S&amp;Ls that later failed at a cost .
Probatiotl removed
Tbe new jobs are CXJ]CCICd ID be
:ifomia oavel crop. Valencia pro·
of
$6.6 billion ... Moody's Investors Service Inc.
WASHINGTON (AP)- The offered to thole laid OffiliileCOIIIf h01klii, however, is expecred to be Agriculture
downgraded
about $70 million worth-of General
Department has pany's national restructwing, be
'down 3 percenL
Motors
Corp.'s
dcbL ..Sales of U.S. built cars and
1 · "Overall, 1992-93 California removed a prohibition on importing said. Tbe plant now employs 3.870
trucks
rose
4.8
percent
in mid-November... Boeing
;&lt;nnge output will he up slightly seed potatoes from Prince Edward people.
Co.
is
cutting
prcxllietion
of its 757 and 767 jets by a
Island and Omario, Canad!L
GM 111110U11CCC1 earlier tblt lad
' third and may lay off as many as 2,500
castings work from Saginaw,
workers ...Russia repaid its overdue loans after _the
Mich., would be shifted 10 Defi·
AgriculUtre Department suspended it from a governance by the summer of 1994, and
ment eltport proglllm for nonpa)UIIent... Dcbt-mired
work from a castings plant iD SL
real estate developer Olympia &amp; York's U.S. unit
Catherinescq, Ontario, would be
struck a deal with a creditor... Honda Motor Co. was
uansfened by 1995, when that
evicted by U.S. car makers from the Motor Vehicle
plant cloees.
•
Manufacturers AssoCiation, their main trade.
Kusina
said
the
lias bcciJ
;.. · WASHINOTON (AP) - The
The response overwhelmed the
· gmup...Tbe FAA fined Delta Airlines $2 million for
:Apulture Department was del- agency. Johnson said. The lottery negotiating with G~ for
faili11g to follow proper maintenance
:u1ed with applications when it had to be postponed for more than several months over the t.erms of
proccdures. .. OPEC ministers agreed to cut the car·
·announced a louery to select 13 a month 10 allow the applications to · the proposed talt breaks, whic:b
tel's oil oroduction by 400.000 barrels a day, with
would c:ut the COIRJlllly's tax bur:new facilities for the importation . be ~essed properly.
most of tfJc reduction apparently coming from lllln.
den
on the improvcmcnu by 75
;and quarantine of ostriches and
'Each applicant could bid on
'limi1ar birds;
each of the available 13 openings, percent over 10 years.
~ "The response doubtlessly was so about 2,000 persons were
:Cueled by the current boomlet in responsible for the 20,000-plus Key Centurion annnounces January dividend
lEW AT
uading of eggs of osuiches and · applications received.'' the servic;e
CHARLESTON - Tbe Iloanl of .the c• 11iJ•J7 c:aJCIIIly .-b lint
Directors of Key Cenlllrion Bane- or SCCODd in awht slaare or
;ocher large, flightless birds, known said.
u ralites," said Billy Johnson,
When additional stations are shares, Inc:. (NASDAQJKEYC) • dqnsi!S iD fiw: cl Was V"qim's
dqluty administrator for veterinary needed, APHIS plans to use a less West Virginea's largest bank hold- six larJest cowuies ruled by
lCI'Yices in the Animal and Plant cumbersome selection system. ing company, has declared a quar. dqnsi15
Health Inspection Service.
Johnson said.
terly dividend of 17 cents per
Privately run, government· share. Tbe dividend, declared at the
:. Importers and traders believe
there is a developing market for supervised q~tine stations were Board's November 23 monthly
ostrich meat and hides. .
instjtuled when demand for import· meeting, will be paid on JanU8}' 1,
. Tlte inspection
service ed pets and exotjc birds far out- 1993, 10 shardlolders of record on
IIIIIIOUIICed plans for the 13 private- stripped available government December 11. 1992.
llnlutc gu
ly run, government-inspected facilities about 15 years ago. About
Key Centurion, with $3 billion
Import l!ld quarantine facilities in 30 stations are operating. The 13 in assets and $314 million in share81U, ..cl dMn
S!ytM
tbe 1u_ly 29 Fodera! Register.
new stations approved will be in holder equity at September 30,
~ .... lllclod, he.....,.. 2 ..cl 3-tldlcl, .....
Florida, Texas, California, New 1992, bas a market capillllization
_
Jersey, Arizona; Oklah.oma and exceeding $490 million. ~.
c'1 • • IMIIMefta.
.
. .... .... 0'0111 toe.
New York.
:- W ASHINOTON (AP) - Tbe
· cilrul crop for 1992-93 is expecled
·.40 be lhe largest in 13 years, the
~Department says.
FIOOda citrus productioo is projected to increase 31 percent
because ci favontble weail!er and a
larJer number of bearing trees,
;jccmliog to a rea:nt situation and
:"'!"J!Ioo!r SWIIIIIIr)' on fruit and tree

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

191
Pick 4:
1035
Super Lotto:
11-12-lS-30-3144
Kicker:
417766

PageS

•
•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday; November 30, 1992

Vol. 43, No. 153
Copyrlghl8d 1H2

Corporate...

Sonle fear Clinton presidency will doom ARC
PIKEVILLE, Ky. - A Democratic president created the
'Appalachian Jl.egional ComiOission
21-years ago. And the last two
Republican administrations have
'tried to either cut or kill the agency.
: For the first lime in 12 years, the
".country has another Democrat in
·the White Hoose - Arkansas Gov.
Bill Clinton. But instead of tcviv·:ing the 13-state agency, ·Clinton
.might end .up finishing it Off, a for'

!USDA ostrich farm lottery
;draws heavy response

mer top ARC offiCial says.
"What is Gov. Clinton, who
really has very limited resources, ...
going to do about a commission
that certainly never did anything
for Arkansas?" asked Kentuckian
AI Smith, who was federal cochairman of the agency for three
years under the Carter and Reagan
administratiolls.
"A Democratic p~~~~:,
tum out to be
il

ARC ... than the two Republican
presidents."
The ARC was created in 1965
as part of President Lyndon B.
Johnson's War on Poverty to build
an infrasbUcture in the mountainous regions of 13 Appalachian

states.

Since then, the agency has
pumped about $6 billion into 399
coumies in portions of Alabama,
Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland,

....,.,
....
,
c..,...

...lba--...
,,,..,,.

: · MARIETTA - The Board of
' Dbeclon of ~les Bailcorp Inc.
;decllred a quarterly dividend in the
:. .ount of $0.26 per share for
~ Stock. The dividend will
1;c paid on January 4, 1993, to
- ~"'lkkm of record on December 15, 1992.
, ·~ ~ BIIIICOIP has two major
, ~ projects: a seven-lane
·llli*Jr bloking facility in Marietta
:aM 111 addition to the historic
w.riella Office on Putnam Street.
Tile automobile office was com. __, in mid.october and opened
· ~fo£ business October 26, 1992.
: Cc 1 1 iiCtion of the Marietta Office
: •MifMI!JI is progressing according to
· ' jldledule, with the outer strucrure
"iilollly fmisbcd and interior work
: iecelldy beginning. The addition
; *"1M be compleled in mid-1993.
• • ~ Bancorp Inc. is a South: jj n m Oliio bank holding compa: n.y with headquarters in Marietta.
: Brii'lli offJCeS are also in Athens,
: Jcpe.Caldwell, Chesterhill, Low·
· ell, McConnelsville and Nel: IOIWille.

...
,. '.

!.!',..."==-=

Milk production up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Milk
production in the 21 major states
during Octolx7 totaled 10.6 billion
pounds, 3 percent more than pro·
duction in the same states during
the same monlh last year.
There were 8.25 miUJon cows,
98,000 less than in October 1991.
The 21 major states produced 32
billion pounds of mille during the
July-September period.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK. MARKET, INC.
Mineral WeDs, WV
'
November 21, 1992
, 'S'IOCK STEERS:
80.00-105.00
. 300-under
70.00-98.00
300-SOO
- S()0-700
. 65.00-84.00
; II(Xk)ver
70.00-77 .so

•HEATING
•HOT WATER
•COOKING

\

The WMIIllh Of wood.,.
the convenltnce ot gu.

=:m~

179.95NAT
281.86 LP .

.

18" &amp; 30" •llo available

SEE US FOR
FUll,
BUSINESS·AND IIDISTIY·

•d
IV &amp; IPPLIIIICI
R1 enours •• a111a ·
985·3307

CIISIEI

199•95 NAT

Glo Fire Deluxe
f~ Oak
24 Set

318.115 LP
11" ........ .

69.00-89.00
68.00-84.00
56.00-77.00
S4.00-72.00

; S()0-700

• . II(Xk)ver

- 'STOCK BULLS:
300-under

90.00-107.00
70.00-100,00
. 62.00-82.00
47.00-56.00
425.00-870.00
40.()().61 .00
350.00-5700.00

·~soo

'S()0-7()()

'Slaughter Bulls
Cows &amp; Calves BH
:Bled Cows By II
Bftld Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
• Hi~ Dressing
Utliily

44.00-50.00
40.00-44.00
33.0041.00

CI!IDer &amp; Cutler

VEAL:
. ·. Oioice
Medium

91.00-116.00
87.00-94.00
70.00-86.00

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
"BEST LITTLE LUMBER YARD IN TOWN"

AT

AVE.

•

STREET THIRD
GALUPOUS 446-1276

ST.

634 E. MAIN
POMEROY 1182-66011

HERE COMES THE PARADE· Hundreds
or people turned out ror the annual Christmas
parade In Pomeroy on Sunday aheraoon. The
theme or the parade, spoasored by !be Pomeroy
Merchants Association, was "Home Along lbe

-()ood

,LAMBS:

Ewes
-811Gb
'Peel'tn

25.00-31.00
22.00-32.00
S4 .()().61.00

45.00-130.00
46.00-60.00

·Biby Calves BH
-HORSEScwt
Panies B.H.

·HOGS:
••200-250
:300-SOO
· Male Hogs

I:Pt,s .

75.00-210.00
38.00-SO.OQ
27.0049.00
22.00-33.00 .
5.00-30.00
25.00-65.00

.

•ao.ts
.
'J1Jerc will boa sale November 28, 1992.

92 ROADMASTER STATION WAGON wwtewilhwoodgraii..-SAVE $4382
'

$

92 BUKK REGAL 4 DR. i.I.,•---·------..SAVE 3000
92 ROADMASTER SEDAN..._,..~
- - - ·....-.....--....-..SAVE s4095
92 PARK AVENUE ea..,.,..
, •o '~•••• ..........;; .......---··--SAVE $8000
\

...,..,.,.estl• ¥••

'
$
Pkg.-.- ..........SAVE

3800

River "92" and several of the entries created
theme related noats. Also duriDg the aflernOCHJ
shoppers enjoyed browsing throuah their
favorite dowutowu businesses which were
observing open bouse.

::Retailers encouraged
:by,Jirst weekend results
,'

:. NEW YORK (AP)- Ameri; cans shopped enthusiastically at
· malls and stores during the Thanksgiving weekend, showing signs or

And the man whose ideas led 10 the
ARC says the agency's approach
migh~st t1Je toollhe president·
elecJtohn D. . Whisman ,. 12 • of
Winchester, Ky., fli'SI broached the
idea of a regional development program for Appalachia in the late
1950s. His plan led to the 1960
ConferenCe of Appalachian Oovernors, which helped develop the legContinued on page 3
.

'

'

The approval of an $8,800 Issue
Two water project application was
discussed recently when Racine
Village Council· met in recessed
session.
The project will allow the village to raise its water well casings
above the ·flood plain and for construction of a well house. Environmental Protection Agency regula- .
lions require that the well casings
to be above the flood plain so that
ground water cannot enter the supply. Othe:rWise, the viUage would
be classified as having ground
water as a source aod a treatment
plant would be required.
The villalle matching share in
lhe project will be $5,100. Bids on
the project will be opened at a spe·
cial meeting Monday. ·
Discussion on the sewer project
manholes needing attenJion was
held in light-of the completion of a
paving project. Cooncil feels that
the sewer district should be respon, sible for raising the manholes, and
Mayor Frank Cleland reported that
the district supervisor has b.een
notified that the work would be
done.
Olen Rizer, street commissioner, reported that the Community
Development Block Grant project
of tying in water lines from Vine 10
Main and to the water main on
State Route 124 by lhe high school

.

has been completed, with ·minor
clean-up being the only work
remaining.
Several new fire hydrants were
installed in the project and some
residents could rece~ve a reduction
in their fire insurance now thai they
are closer 10 a hydrant. Residents
are urged to check with lheir insur-

anceagenl
Cleland discussed a recent meeting he attended at the courthouse
concerning money available for
misdemeanant jail facilities. He
reported lhat because of lhe lack of
jail space, he is having a difficult
time m enforcing the law, especially charges of driving under the
influence, where a three-day jail
sentence is required.
Council approved the renewal of
a fife protection contract with ~ut·
ton Township for (hree years.
Accrirding tp the terms of the cootract, Racine and Syracuse both
received 40·perccnt of the townShip
fire funds, while Bashan Fire
Department received 20 percent.
Lebanon Township's fire contract
is also up for renewal and action is
expecled in December. A five-year
contract with Letart Township is
not up for renewal at lhis time.
Council passed an emergency
measure authorizing the Board of
Public Affairs 10 spend money over
$1,000 for cleaning and emergency

repairs to the water well.
Council also approved a measure authorizing the Board or Public Affairs to have work done on
the aerator building, replace piping,
and other work. in the amount of
$3,500.
Councilmen Ron Clarl&lt; and Jeff
Thornton will contact the residents
who live along a private road running from Main Sueet to John
Dudding's residence. 10 see if they
will deed their sections of the roadway to tbe village. With the village
not owning the roadway, it is illegal for the village to spend tax
money oli maintaining and/or
paving the private property.
It was noted that all of the village streets have been paved with
hot mix with Issue Two and viUage
street maintenance funds since ·
1989. Cleland reportecj, that since
t!Je village first recelved_lssue Two
funds in 1988, the v11Iage has
received $97,013 in state money
while matching it with $41,319.39
in viUage money to hot mix village
streets. Total paving funds spent
are $138,332.39.
Cutrently, lhe village expects 10
receive $8,800 in Issue Two money
· and match it with $5,100 to lllise
the well casings and construct a .
well house on each casing. This
makes a ootal of $105,813 received ·
Continued on page 3

'

Chester teaching staff discusses
programs with Eastern board
Meeting in regular session last
week the Eastern Local Board of
EduCiilion heard presentations from
the teaching staff of Chester Elementary School regarding various
progwns IDICicrway there.
Ron Hill, head teacher, introduced members of the staff, who
then gave presentations to the
board. Pat Shrivers, fifth grade
teacher, discussed the school's
involvement wilh lhe Martha Holden Jennings Ocant, as well as olher
programs, such as book club, student council, parent volunteer propam and a writing and mathematICS grant.
Joyce Hill, first grade teacher,
discussed programs develo11ed
from the Rural Demonstrauon
Model Project Grant. Among the
programs discussed were the 100
Percent Club, Chester Pride, computer U'aini~g. ~irthday recognition,
and upcommg m-seMCe programs.

Mike Will, sixth grade teacher,
presented information regarding
lhe Lead Teacher Project, and the
attendance of staff at the National
Council of Teachers of Mathematics Conference. Superintendent
Richard Smith praised the Chester
staff for taking a "proactive leadership role" in the programs.
Smith mentioned the State
Financial Conference on December
9 at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus. He discussed the
pessibilities of the superintendent
and any board members interesred
in attending the conference; ·smith ·
also discussed the "real potential"
for state funding cuts in January.
Dorothy Bentz and D. Michael
Mullen were employed as sqbstitute teachers 10 be used on an asneeded basis only for lhe remainder
of the school year.
The board approved the notice
of commendation resolutions for

the students who have made the
honor roll for the first nine-week
grading period.
The disposal and/or sale of an
old well pump IJld water soflening
tank at Tuppers Plains Elementary
School was approved. The board
also approved amendments to
appropnations and transfers into
the lunchroom fund and uniform
supply flUid.
The board passed a resolution
employing the firm or Means,
Bichimer, Burkholder and Baker
Co., L.P.A., as special counsel
regarding a personnel issue.
The date of December 17 at
6:30 p.m., was set as the date and
time of the next regular meeting of
the board, to he held at the high
school.
Present, in addition to Smith,
were Board President Ray Karr.
Vice President Jim Smith, and
members Ron Eastman, Bill Hannum and Mike Martin.

'

ending their long Christmas
drought and giving retailers an
encouraging start to the holiday
season.
·
.
Several big storeowners said
Sunday their business lhis weekend
was up sharPly from the depressed
levels of a year ago. But they also
noted that sales remained weak in
California, which has lagged
.behind the rest of the country in
recovering from the recession.
"We expecled strong sales for
tl!e post-Thanksgiving weekend
and 11 was Stronjl. with the exception of CalifOFII," said Kenneth
Macke, chairman of Dayton Hud-·
son Corp.
At Sears, Roebuck and Co ..
"The. buying mood was more
upbeat than It was the last two
years," said Mau Howard, senior
vice p!eSident for nwtcllng. 'JWe
were quite pleased wilh the busi·
ne8s. It was a very Aood kickoff for
tbe holiday season.
And Duncan Muir, a J.C. Penney Co. Inc. spokcS111BD, said slore
managers he spoke to were pleased

with their results.
Yet despite the season's auspicious start, the refailers remained
wary, perhaps remembering the
disappointing holiday seasons of
1989, 1990 and 1991. "At this
point, we're still cautiously optimistic about lhe balance of the season," Howard said.
That caution is understandable
- there are still signs that many
consumers, while feeling bet.ter
about the economy and shopping
this Christmas, are again working
within a tight budget:
. Dayt"n Hudson's strongest
business was at its lower-priced
Target
discount
Stores,
spokeswoman Ann Bartelew said.
The company's Mervyn's clothing
stores did not fare as well, but its
most popular items included gifts
within a specific price range, such
as under $10 or IDICicr $20.
There also were signs that
augured well for the season.
Sears had good s81es in most of
its merchandise lines, including
" big-ticket" items·
·

MADD KICK OFF • Tbe Meigs Count7
Chapter of Motbers Alalnst Drunlr; Driving
kicked off MADD'au1ual red ribbon campalp
on Saturday. Here, R111 Flsller, MADD Vice
President,
to ollk:lall, law enforcement
omcersaod memllera rl !be publk wbo attended

speau

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92 BUKK SKYLARK 2 DR. Wlilsw/.-rocce~tpaint.~---..SAVE s250Q

92 LeSAIRE CUSTOM

1992 Heritage Queen for tl!e Pomeroy Mer·
chants Assoclatloa. The tblldreu visited Mr.
Claus Ia tbe mial-park oa Court .Street. (See
additional parade pictures ou page 10).

348.115 LP

~;

STOCK HEIFERS:
·300-onder
: -300-soo •

A VISIT WITH SANTA - Greg MU5Ser was

nrst ID !IDe to sit on Santa's lap 'QQ Sunday •fter·

:noon rollowina I be Cbrist~as parade In
:Pomeroy. Santa Was asslstfll by April Hudson,

229o95 NAT

gan and Bush administrations.
When Smith took office in
1979, the ARC had a $381 million
budget. But Reagan consistently
refused to include money for the
ARC in his budgets, and Bush tried
to cut it almost in half.
The last two years, the commission has operated on $190 million.
clinton has talked about
rebuilding the countty's infmbUctore and ''investing in growth.''

Racine council reviews progress
on Issue 2 grant applications

.

O'DEll$

Farm wages up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Average wages paid by U.S. farm operators this year were $6.06 per hour,
compared wilh $5.79 during 1991.
There were 3.25 million people
working on the nation's farms and
ranches durin$ the week or Oct.
11-17, the Agriculture Department
said in a report this month on farm
labor. That compares with 3.29
million during lhe October survey
week last year.
Benefits such as housing and
meals were provided to 39 percent
of the hired workers during the survey week, compared with 37 percent in October 1991.

Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, Ohio. Pennsylvania, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Virjlinia and
West Virgiriia. West Virgmia is the
only _SUite fully within lhe climmission's cove111fie area.
Tbe ARC has helped build miles
of badly needed roads, sewer and
water lines. and clinics, in addition
to educational and other programs.
But the ageney has had to fight for
its very existence during the Rea'

..

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1 Section, 10 P'l!" Z5 C.Cta
A MuiUmedU. Inc. ...._peper

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..Peoples Bancorp
InC. annOUnCeS
quarterly dividend

La.. tonlgblln upper 201.
Tuesday, cloudy. Hlgb uou.cl
40.

the ceremony, held al tbe Pomeroy parkiD!llot.
Tbe tradltiOD of ''tyiol oae 011 for safet)'" begin
In 1986. The reel rlbbool are tied ollto car aerial
anteDDie ill snpport or sober drlviDg durin&amp; the
holidays and throughout the year.
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MOnday, November 30, 1992

Commentary
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Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Monday, November 38, 1992

'

Wbel! I ,..u a boy, JQ.Ws rook it
for gran-.1 tllll a lot of Americans
didn't Jikc·aa and wilbecl we'd go
·
r ...,. o111o
back to where ·we came from. In
~••o•m
iN laura or 1D !IBIC!S M'W'I'I Alt.BA
the colleges, there were Jewish
quotas. They didn't Wlllt 100 many
.,
·
of
~s. We might take the place
.. •
over, they said. And it was almost
illlpO,Wble back lhcn for.a Jew even
thflo_ugh be had li!Bdualild from
ROJEJT L WINGEtT
1ght law scnool - to be
a
top. 'Pidlllllaer
hired in a major law firm.
Jews were frozen out of bankCIIAltUNE BOEFLlCH
PAT Wllll'DIIW&gt;
ing, despile the myth !hat we were
A 'l1111t~
G-nl Muager
powerful international bankers.
One of the liiOSt popularradio commentators - the . late Father
LJn"l1!llS OP OPINION 11e "'"b:ome. They lbciuld be leso than 300
Charles Cl)ughlin - insisted we
•, • words.. All Je-.. n 111~ to editiDc od mUll be lienee! wilh n~me,
were both intcmalional bankers and
, , lddRu od lo~ lllllilber. No urwj~ letlon will be publilbed. LetterJ
, lbOuld be in aooct
11111,
&gt;ddre.
·nc
luuea.
IIC)tpenoDililiel.
leaders
of the Communist Party,
. .
.
bOth here and in ~ussia. My father,
however, was neither. He was a
traveling salesman - bats and
sportswear in all colo~s. no! just

~ &gt;.

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officials reject amnesty ·
as a revenue producer,

re&lt;l.

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\ By JOHN .CHALFANT
:·, .
·Asaoeiated Praa Writer
• :COLUMBUS - Tax amnesty programs adopted by at lcasl 31 states
tO boost sovemment income wiD oot be ~ommended to help solve
~·s ~problems, advism to Gov. Georlle VoinoYich said.
: ·. Slale Tax Conunissioner Roger.Tracy ssid olrerins pardons to individual~ llid bulinesses w)lo failed to pay their 111xe11
consideted last year
bUt rejccled unwise.
.
.. "I peas our jUdgment was, based. on the .experience of Olber staleS,
tl)la it doesn't wm so well," Tracy said
: · ~ "The bia majOrily of the taxpayers ... pey their taxes e:f year. do it
~ ri&amp;ht way, llid want to do it the right way. So we deci
against the
dinnesty:. he said
.
.
·• .Tracy, who headS the Ohio Department of Taxation, said amnesty like'lY would not raise a ~iflcant amount of money but probably would
'dlmace Credibility of di tax collectiool PIJSllllll.
·
A survey coriducted by the FederBiion of Tax Adminislralon in 1990 .
'SiiOwed tllll pevious amnesty programs in 31 ~ and the District of
~olumbia boiJ81ed collections by a combined $1.5 billion.
' " New York claimed the biggest pin of $401 million from past-due
,inl;ome. c&lt;rparate. sales and other taxeS. California's amnesty gCIICillled
'$198 million,llid MichiJan $109 million.
·
•• Patricia Rupich, the departmenl's head of legi•lation and communica- .
questioned the amounts iqlOlted.
.
.
.
· . "StaleS always say they're very s~ 'l'bete's a feeling out there
Jimons revenue folks !bat rc:ally, in the 19Dg ~it's hurlins things. You
'illisht set some up front, bl!l 11 hurts compliaitce down the rosd," Ms.
.Ru ich said
·
. ·
· · ··§be said some .smres with successful atnnesty programs had lax collec.
'~ enfmcemenL Ohio strengthened its enfon:ement in recent.years.
: ; 'Ms. Rupich said former Gov.'Richard Celeste recommended a narrow
B)Jines!)' in 1987 IS pert of a Stalt budget bilL
·
.
,. "Anybody who we hadn't caught yet,~~ ~w they had back taxes
~ Wllltcd to come clean, could have come m under this amnesty. There
~ be no penalties imposed. but they would still owe interest,•' ·Ms. ·
RWich said in an interview.
·
· •·&lt;:::e~Cs~e's poposal was ~ to genmate $20 million. The House
expanded the idea to include claopping penalties fot people already idenlified II! ddinQuent, a chause that was expected to produce an additional
$33 million. (ot a 10111 of $53 million.
Alilnesty was dloppcd froni the bill in the Senate, and it never resurfaced. ~. legislilors gave the dqlartment min money ror enfoo:e·IJICIIL ,
.
.
.·. ·"Ai'l amnesty, sets a bad prece&lt;!ent. basically. You're telling people,
·'We're soins to let y0u off even though oWt5 are paying theirs, • " Ms.

'

In my neighbor!tood in Boston
in the lille 1930s and early 1940s,
Jewish kids were foolhardy to go
out afler dark alone. Bands of teen-

.

was

u

at Hento•~"~'

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111 eo.rt ibeet

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'JJ

agers, out to avenge the killing of
Chri.tt, they said, ofttn beai up any
. Jews they could rm4. includiDg me
once. But 1 was lucky. A kid up the
street bad an ice pick buried in his
head. He was never the same after
lhat.
.
.
As the years went on, it seemed
to me lhat American and-Semilisrn
was diminishing. A.few colleges
still hac! q~otas, alt!tough they
claimed they dido '.L But most CliJ!I·
puses evaluated applicants on the
merirs. And most of the p-ofessions
that used to exclude Jews opened
up.
,·
But anti-Semitism had not
entirely disappeared by anY means.
There was and ill the exceedingly
. dangerous Aryan Nation. And
often at Christmas time, when
some Jewish lawyeQ went to coun
to claim tbat creches and crosses in
public buildings violate the SCJ!ID·
tion of church and state, ailli·
Semites took to the phones of tslk

i$~~

.ua...

~hlaid.
.~ :She cbllMI

whether amnesty now would p-oduce even the 1987 pro··jcction «$53 million, becanse of progress made by the stale since then in
~tina back taxes.

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Berry's World

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shows and sent leuen ~ntins mining the degree l)f anti-Semitism
that, as one m. them 111111 it, "Hitler in those JllllVCY«l "Only about one
in 10 college gtaduales (12 perdidn't finish thejob.'
·
cent)
are aQiong the most antiStill, I was s~rprised and disSemitic
Americans while one in
maycd at the results of a new Annfour
citizens
with a high_school
Defamation League poll on the
education
or
less
(26 pen:cnt) are in
presence of anti-Semitism iii these
the
most
anli-Semilic
group. •'
United States. The experienced
·
Does
it
help
to
know
a Jew or .
Boston law firin of Maruila &amp;
two?.
Well,
at
depends
; "The
Kiley surveyed 1,101 Americans
atnount
of
contact
an
individual
has
across the l!lnd. The poll revealed
with
Jews
in
day-to-day
life,"
says
by extripolation lhat neatly 40 mil·
lion adults - one in five Ameri- · the ADL, "or the factlhat a person
can$ .., hold strongly anti-Semitic has Jewish friends or relatives.
appears to have no bearing on ~
view5. . _
.
, The ADL reports that "those person's )l{Opensity to hold antiwh&lt;'l are the most anti-Semitic are Semitic beliefs. Among bl!lcks,
older - over 65 years ot age - · however, greater contact and close
have a high school education or friendships with Jews seem to bear ·
less, and are blue-collar workers. · some connection to less accep1ance
Black Americans (37 percent) are of anli-Semilic beliefs. ••·
Also, there is a correlation
twice as likely as whites (17 peramcing
blacks between occupation
cent) to fall mto the 'most antilind
anti-Semitism.
"PrOfessional,
Semitic' category," But l(le poll
!al.$0 showed that among whiles, mana~ and while-collar blacks
· ''there is a high correlation are Significantly more likely than
between inti-Semilism and racism their blue-collar or semi-skilled
coun1e~ to reject anti-Semitic
and xCJ!OPhobia lind intolerance.''
Education is a factor in de~Qr- beliefs.
Again, education has a marked
effect on the extent to which blacks
or whites become anti-Semitic.
Abraham Foxman, national
director of the ADL, emphasizes:
"It is distressing lhat the stereo~ so alive ill the 1930s" - tbat
Jews have too much power, use
shady practices to get what they
. want.- "stcreotypes which led to
horrific cqnsequences, did·not 'die
in the ashes of Europe, but have
found a ~ in Alilerica todar,.
. We find 1t Sin1Sier and dangerous. '
Some public achoolli are illuminating anti-Semitism and racism
through books and films. But many
d6 notbins to set kids to ts1t about
prejudice and what it leads to.
Where does anti-Semitism come
from? Tile same place as racism .
At the dinner table. That's &lt;one
f~mily value the nation can do ·
without.
Nat Hentorr is a nationally
renowued authority oli the First
Amendment and the rest of tile
Bill of Jtlghts -.ad a syndicated
writer for Newspaper EnterpriSe ·
AssoclatloD.:
&gt;

•

IUilty to the misdemeanor ()f with- parties, and peijJetuatcd by the natThe period between Election
Day and Inauguration Day is no
holding information from · ural desire of the Democrats to
.•
Con~ llfld.that's all.
keep the ahow soing as long as
fun for a defealed president, and
But
Mr.
Walsh
has
one
last
there are any Republicans left uninone could fiqive George BOsh for
feeling rebelliously unwilllng to do tras (assuming it ever occurred) hope, bef1n his invesli$8lion goes dieted, unimpoverislled, 8Jlll undcanybody any favors just now. But was : 'illegal' • QDiy if l)ne relies on down the tube. Discovenng tbatthe famed, can be broiJght to an end by
there is one great act of healing a series of ielf-conndictory laws . personal IKIIlls of Reagan Defense George Bush wilh a stroke of his
which is .within his power, and (the "Boland amendments") Secretary Caspar Weinberger, pen.
.
.
which would conclude his presi- passed by Congress -laws wh&lt;'lse which Weinberger bad voluntarily
WIW does he llave to lose? The
dency with a sesture lhat hiStory seriQaaneas .can be gauged by the turned over to the Library of DemocratS and their pit bulls in the
would deem profoundly wise. That fact lhat Congress fiC8)ected to pre- Congress, contain comments on liberal media will yowl bloody
would be to pardon Cap Weinberg- scribe any penalty for violating eitecudve branch conferences deal- . "murder l)f course•. charging that
.
ing with the arms sales, Walsh has Bush is tryinS to conceal his own
er and all others charged with them.
Yet the Democrats have insisted indicled Weinberger for failing to complicity in the arms sales. But
offenses in connection with the
Iran-Contra affair.
on trealins the whole affair, and the bring these records up during inler- W,alsh and. those same media bave
Let's begin by remembering . failure .of officials of the executive {Ogations by his office. The irony is' been trying to demonstrate that
what all the shooting was about. branch to tell diem aU about it, as that the notes demonstrate .t hat complicit.y for well over six years.
The Democrats, naturally , pro- some sreat lesion in the constitu- Weinberger himself strongly How milch longer do they want us
fessed to view the sale of a limited tional obligations of the executive opposed the very sales that, Walsh· to wait?
number of arms to Iran, in violation branch to a Congress of the oppo- has tried so long (and so unsuceessDoes anyone think less of OCrfully) to criminalize.
-aid Ford for having pardoned
of our public posiure against bav- site J!ar!Y.·
So now Ca~p~r w.ein~erger Richard Nixon, who was guilty of
ing anything to do with the regime, . Sigmficantly, despi~ the desas somehow profoundly evil, perale efforts of special prosecuur must,find the millions 11 w11l take wrongs far worse than any alleged
though in fact it was at worst sim- Lawrence Walsh to salvage SOllie· to tound out tawr~nce Wals.h's against Caspar Weinberger or
ply a well- intentioned mistake, thing from his six-year. $40 million 1 recor.d as a total .failur,e. or stand George Bush? It was a ~ital slep in
occasioned by President Reagan •s rwco; not. a sin.glc person. has )ICt conv1c~ of havmg t;n~ to con- a great h~~ process that this
desperately; And
deep concern fiB' the plight of our beeJ1 qmvtcted m connecaon with ceal h1s own opposition to the countrY n
either the orijinal arms Illes or the alleged misdeeds that Walsh was pardons for Weinberger and similar
hostages in Lebanon.
,
victims are another. ··
·
Even the diversion, unknown to alleged diversion. A handful of assigned to invesligale.
· This pathetic farce, born of the
William Rusher Is a llylldlcatMr. Reagan, of part of the proceeds small fry, faced with ruinously
of the sale to the Nicaraguan Con- expensive legal bills, have pleaded inevitable conflict between presi- ed writer lor Newspaper Enter·
dents and Congresses of different . prise Aasodatloil.

WiUiam A. Rusher

What Jehovah's Witnesses ·believe
.

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Time magazine has call~ the
Jehovah's Witnesses one of the
"most colorful creeds" to appear
on the American religious scene in
the 20th century.
But it bas predicled that the sect
will be "tiny or extinct" in the
next centuty, al011g with the Christian Scientisls.
· _
Rl.ght now, though, ...
u"'_ w.·mess
es are do;"g
w• well w1'th 4 million
members throughout the world.

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.';. ;·;.,__________ Today
In H.ISt ory
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Bj Tile AIIOClated Press

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·

: · Today is Mrlnday, Nov. 30, the 335th day of 1992. There are 31 days
leltinthe=
: ·Today'• ' ' in'Hiltory: ,
·
On Nov. 30, 17 , the Uuiled Swes lnd Britain signed preliminary peace
aniclellD Pais, cndin&amp; the Revolutionary War.
.
: Ontbild8:
..
i ~ 1D 1803, Spain !XlJIIPic:aed the np~noc""~'"'ll o_f ~ ln•.isiana to Prance.
' . ... 1804, the lint U.S. Supreme Court JUSiiCC to be impeached. Samuel
ct-.
- t ODirial. (He
I In 1835, S.UuellangMnle
- betler.knowus alllhor Mark
was born in Florida, Mo.
'
~-874, British Sllll:lillllll Sir Winsum OUIChill was born at Blenbcim

rw.m-

was::=.!

·• .

· ., ID 1m lrisluuthor o.:. W"llde died in Paris.
. In 1YJO. London's famed Cryllal Pllace. constructed for the InremaCioilal Bxldbilion of 1851, was desaDyecl lD afire.
·
·
· "Iii 1939. the RIUIIO-Pinnllh W• bepi as Soviet troOpS invaded Fin-

limcL

1D 1949, .
1954,

George R. Plagenz

Who' ·'"- boss? Jeho ah' w·

ncsses f!:ldu.t

keeping~ h.!b~~

happy, raising well-behaved children and maintaining a well-kept
house must come before anything a
They are srowing paniclilarly fast woman does outside the hOme . .
in Europe, Japan and the Third
1be haaband is theTU181 authoriWorld.
ty in the family, but the wife is fJee _
I have
h•
If to her husband
ah'
w· always found the Jeho. · to exoress· .,...rse
v .s amesses movement 1nler- and· '~help him come to the right
esbng.
· ""l 0 I'IIUstrale Whf, here are decision.'
some facts and anecdotes:
. Women Witnesses are told lhat
their mode of dress shOuld be gov- .
erned by the standards of what is
~~~!: tasteful and weu-

. •
In 1967, Julie NiXon and David Eisenhower announced their engagemenL
·
·
In 1981, the United States and the Soviet Union opened negotialions in
OCncva aimt;d at reducing nuclcsr weapons in Europe.
· ~en years 88!': President Rooald Reagan arrived in Brasilia, Brazil, to
~ a four-natioo tour of Latin America. The motion picture •'Gandhi,..
Kingsley as the spiritual leader who led India to indepen~
Britain, had its wodd premiere in New Delhi.
.Fav~ years BSO: In an in1erview broadcast by NBC, Soviet leader
~I S. ~orbacbcv acknowledged. that his country was engaged in
Saar Wars · -related research, ~~ wd there were no plans to build a
space-Paullllled system lg&amp;inst nucleir aaact. Author James Baldwin died in
SL Pal de Vence, Fumce, at age 63.
~ year 1180: ~ Yeltaln'a Russian Federation agreed to bail out
Miltbail S. Goibachev s central Soviet governrncnt f'ronl a budget crUis
lhat tbreatened to cut off the salaries of millions « workers and pailllyze

slllnUll!:

the COUIIIr)'.
·
. T~y's Bil1hdays: Actress Virginia Mayo is 72. Actor Efrem ZiJnbal-

ast lr. 11. 69. Former New York cougressv,oomm Shirley Chisholm is 68.
Actor Richard Ciauia is 65. TV personality and ~uccr Dick Clark is
63. Convicled Waterpte defendant G. Gordon Liddy is 62. Playwright
David Mam~ Is 4.5. Si!Jger Billy Idol is 37. Football ahd baseball player
Bo Jackson 1130.
.
·
· Thought for Today: "Keep away from people who try 10 belitdc your
ambitions. Small people always do that. but the rc:ally great make you feel
m.t vou, too, can become llfCBl" ~Mark Twain (1835-1910). .

you can be sure it wias not a Jehovah 's Witness who killef;[ your

son.''

•

After Arinageddon. The Book
of Revelation speaks of "a new
heaven and a new earth" that will
replace the present order afrer the
battle of ArmBSeddon·
The new heaven, according to
Witnesses, will be occupied by
144,000 of God's closest and best
who will be resurrecied as spirit
creatures.
(The figure 144,000 is Uiken
from Revelation 14:1: "Then I
looked and on ML Zion stood the
Their clothing should ' 1not call Lamb and with him were.
atten~ion to the more intimate 144,000." The number was arrived
· parts" of the body.... It is not only at by multiJl.ly!ng the 12 tribes of
1mpoi'lllil\ what yl)u wear, but how Israel by 12,000.}
you weat it. YI)U must not attract
Ul!iike the new ~~Caven, the new
the type of attention lhat is not in earth won't be a spirit world.
keepang with your Christian callIt will be one beautiful park,
ing.''
alive with colorful varieties of ani"Thou shalt not kill." Jeho- mals and birds. Instead of growing
vah's Witnesses do not participale old, citizens of the new earth will
in war or serve in the armed forces. grow progressively younser. We'll
Thousands !Jave gone to jail as con- all be as we were at age 33• .
scientious objecton. Their stand on
"Never~,'' says a Witness
war also brings th~ much abuse publication, 'will there be a need
when they do their door-to-door for policemen or for locks and
missionary wort.
keys. You wlU lalow tllll ~
Gene Tenke, a Wimess minister knocking on ~ door is a friend.
in Lakewood, Ohio, recalls that Nevermore will111yone be afraid to
once he rans the doorbell of a stroll throu&amp;b a part at ni&amp;bL"
woinan: who had lost a son in
It bellS a heaven olllCidy gares
World lNar D. She became angry . a~d solden streets wliere all we
with him over the Witnesses' wtll,oo al! day 11 sing h)'llllll.
refusal to take pt in the w8i lhat
I ill s1gnang up for the new
cost her boy's life.
.
earth.
"I can understand hqw you
George PlageiiZ II a llyllcUclt•
· feel," Tenke said he told her. Then ed wrlter .ror Newspaper Eaterhe added, "If it's any consolation, prise Alloclatlou. .
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this dale at the C9lumbus weather
station was 11 degrees in 1934 .
while th.e record low was 4 below
zero in 1958. Sunset tonight will be
at 5:07 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at
7:35a.m.
Around tbe nation
Winter weather was the rule
across the nation today, as frost and .
freezing lemperatures stretched
into.the South and snow showers
moved across the Pacific Northwest and upper Midwest.
Only along the southern border
were temperatures expected to
reach abOve 60 today, with highs in
the 70s predicted for the desert

By Tbe Aaoclated Press
A cold front will bring snow to
eastern Ohio tonight and flurries
elsewhere, th~ National Weather
Service said. Overnight remperatures will drop to 25-30.
Skies Wilf become deceivingly
sunny on Tuesday whUe the mercury probably won't climb out of
the 30s, fcncasters said.
Weather conditions aren't
expected to chanse much through
the rest of the week, althouglt it
could be a little colder with a
chance of snow on Friday.
The record-high lempelllture for

•

Jrotedo! aao I

•I Columbus!37" 1·

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Southwest and SOUthern Florida.
Clouds and fos blanketed cities
from Portland, Maine, south to
Chattanooga, Tenn., and west to
the Great Plains early today. ·
freezing rain and snow advisones were up today tor parts of
e11stern -oregon and the Cascade
Molantains. Cloudy skies were predicte4 for much of the Northeast,
the Great Lakes region, and the
NonhwesL
A. cold .front moving across the
central United. States on Sunday
~clouds from TelUIS to the
• Light snow was reponed
Sunday night in the Dakoaas,

Nebraska, Minnesota, Iowa. and,
Wisconsin.
.
.
Skies also were generally over- :
cast from tbe upper Ohio valley.;
and the lower Gielt Lakes to New.,
England and New Jersey. Rain and~·
snow feU 6n parts of Pennsylvania,':
New York and Washingtm stale.. :
High lemperatures were only iri:
the 50s Sunday across northern ·
Florida, and the fair skies and light!
winds allowed the mercury to drop;
rapidly.
·
The high fot the nation Sunday:; .
was 78 degrees at Coronado, Calif.,.;
· and Pasadena, Calif.
.
·.

Carjackers kill two, leave witness ·: ·

Simy

•

&gt;

Snow or flurries likely tonight in eastern Ohio::·

OHIO Weather

Anti-Semitism flourishes in America.

The Dally Sentmel

..

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pte:z.

=·

...

--------Weather--.;.._-South,Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
chance of flurries. Low in the
upper 20s. Chance of snow 40 percent. Tuesday, mostly cloudy. High
near40.
Extended rorecast:

Wednesday through f'riday:
Wednesday, a chance of rain or
snow north, fajr elsewhere. LQws
25·30. Highs 35-40. Thursday, fair.
Lows in the 20s. Hish$ around 40.
Friday, a chance of snow. Lows 2530. Highs 3().35.

. ANTHONY FAIELLA

, KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) - ·A
. gang of gun-wielding carjackers
may have been trying to make a
statement when they forced a
woman to warch as they shot three
of her friends, killing two, authorities said.
·
But they don't know what the
stalement .was meant to be.
· Tile gunmen commandeered the
vehicle tlj.e four were riding in
early Sunday and drove them 10 a
remote pasture. They ordered the
three men and a woman to strip,
then made the woman watch while
her friends .were executed.
. Two men were killed. The third,
Michael Re!ltas• played dead and

~scaped

with a gunshot wound to
the hand, police said.
Investigators were following
leads early today but had no suspects, said Regina Vanover of the
Osceola County sheriffs office.
But the fact the killers left
Tammy George, 25, as a witness ·
"gives the apjlearanee (the killers) .
were making a statement. They
weren't joking around," said sheriff's commander Jack Pate. "Is it
drug -related? Is it race-related? Is it
hate-related? That, we have not
been able to pin down:··
Rentas, 20, and Anthony Faiella, 17, of Kissimmee, drove to a
nighicllih outside St. Cloud 10 pick

up Anthony ~Iifton, 20, of St!
Cloud and Mass Georse, from
Kissimmee, police 11rid the s11r."
vivors said.
Afler Faiella turned off a hilel''
way toward Clifton'shouse. a rtid
pickup bumped the rear or his.vehicl~ and he pulled over to check (1:1{
damage, the survivors said
· •
The pickup pulled alongside.
Rentas remembers lhat one of five
or six men in the truck, probab!)'
between the ases of 18 and 2~.
asked: "Is everything all right?" :
. Then, Rentas said, .someone"iri
the pickup called out, "Not ~r ;
and aU of the passengers drew Pl'·
tols.
.
.
Miss George said two men with
pistols forced het group into ~
back of their own vehicle al)f,l
drove
away, followed by the piCK.
,
up.
The)l went 10 miles, past,.a
police stalion, to the pasnlre SO!Ifla
of Kissimmee.
•
The attackers f!lade the th~~
men lie on the ground with tl!elr
hands on their heads. Rentas vliiS
struck in his right hand.
., , '
"I just laid there and woul®:t
move because I didn't want to be
shot again,' • he said throUgh ~.
He said be remembered one' of
the gunmen saying repeatedly: ';If
you guys ain'! got no ~o~rr~.m
the mood 10 kill ... ton1ghL
·, ·...:
One of the armed men taunted
Miss Geilrge, who is black, Jo1 . .
hanging out with three wh'fie
friends. All of the gunmen ww:
black, the victims said.
"
Faiella's car was found abiU!doncd in central Polk Count}', \he
sheriffs office repoi:ted. It wiiS )illl
only thing ta1cen other than the victims' clothing.

..

'

- ., Meigs
announcements.
.

State Roule 684. The Rev. John
Gospel concert
The Spencers, a gospel music Neville invites the public to attend.
family from Mansfield, will perI
form Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Good ·
Lod'e lo meet'
:
Shepherd United Methodist Church
Harrisonville Lodge F&amp;AM 411
in Flatrock, W.Va. Public inviled.
will meet ·saturdity at 7:30 £.m.
Open in~tilin of·bfficers will be .
Revival
beld for ~ comins year. Installing ·
Revival at Hillside Baptist officer wall be Roger VanDyke,
.Church will be Dec. 6-9 at6 p.m. 32nd Degree. AU masrer masons,
nightly. Dr. Kenny McComas will wives and friends invited. Refreshbe the ~uest prl*:her. Dou~ McCo- . menrs will be Served.
mas wall be music evangelist. Also
performing will :be God's Little
\Vlaners announted
Lambs, Blood Covenant Singers,
The Middleport Arts Council
Children of God, Partakers, has announced prize winners from
Redeemed Quartet.
the open house and country sift
shop on Sunday afternoon. Door ·
prize winners are: Jenny GwezTomeet~&gt;ec7
dowski,
ear rings; t&gt;reama Knight,
Board of Trusrees of Columbia
VISIT. SIT.E • MelliS County Commissioner people iii Southeastern Ohio, and is expected to
bear
ornament;
Sara Bailey, stockTownship will meet Dec. 7 Ill 7:30
be completed In tbe sprlag. Commissioners l'rom
Manulng K. Roush, thlrd from len, ani( Comp.m. at the fue station in Carpenta-. ing ornatnent; Susan Tracy, zucchian 11-county area met lo tour tbe raciUty and to
missioner-elect Robert Hlll1enbach, second f'roin
ni bread; Nellie lerkle, party mix;
len, recently atteaded a meetin' regarding the give input on its development plan. Also pie.
Millie Duncan, lrinket box; Donna
Hoc;king Valley Community Residential Center,
lured are, rar left, Ohio Department or Youtb
Rutlaud trustees lo meet
Boyd, Virginia Reed and Merri • currently under construction in Nelsonville. The
Sei':'Cite~ Planner Ken Ball, Architect Mike Noel
The Rutland TownshiP Trustees Amsbary, earrings. Vicki Ault won
and Board Director Jim Bowser.
center is planned to keep adjudicated young
will' meel"fluil'$day at 6:30 p.m. at the gtapevlne baskeL Tile couhtry
the Rutland Fire Station. Public store will be open Thursday from
0
Continued from page 1
invited.
noon to 8 p.m.
"I'm afraid I'm talking abOut a
islation Johnson signed.
and focuses too much on road
Granges to meet
· model that has no messenger at the
Whisman said the ARC is building.
Star Grange and Star Ju11ior
unique in that local, state and fedWhisman said the ARC moment," he said.
Vetenus Memorial
Grange wiU meet Saturday at 7:30
And Smith said the agency is
era!
offiCials
act
in
concert.
approach
was to focus on "a careSAnJRDAY ADMISSIONS p.m. at the grange ball near Salem
facing an immediate threat.
Local
officials
make
up
a
"wish
fufly
selecled
combination"
of
proCenter."Poduck refreshmenrs will Harry O'Dell, Pomeroy.
U.S. 'Sens. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.,
SATURDAY DISCHARGES· . list" and send it to tl!eir stales' rep- . grams and development prQjects to and.Pele Domenici, R-N.M., were
follow the meeting. All members
resentatives.
A
governor
designated
improve.
the region. ·"The old bunBeuy Martin.
alld candidates urged to aucnd.
co-chairmen of a Center for Stratefrom aml)ng the 13 casts one vole die of sticks," he said.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS gic International Studies commison
the
commission.
and
a
presiden''This
is
a
wonderful
model
for
Johnny Klein, Tuppers Plains, and
Duc:e pialllled
sion that recOillmended the ARC be
liai
_
a
ppoinree
such
as
Smith
the
kinds
of
things
that
Clinton
is
Gallia Twirlers Western Square Kelly Counts, Syracuse.
· controls the other.
talking about doing," said Ann phased out over three years, Smith
. SUNDAY DISCHARGES Dance Club will hold a dance SatThe states "are in direct partner- Johnson, director of the West Vir- said. But he noted that any atlempt
urday from 8-11 p.m. at the Hen- Milton Hood.
to kill ARC will have go through
ship with a representative of the ginia Development Office.
derson Communitr Cen1er in Henpresident," said Whisman, who
But Whisman said budget cuts some preuy powerfUl people from
derson, W.Va. Bil Bush'will be the HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
served as·representative for all 13 forced the agency to "go under- the region.
calli:r. Public invited.
U.S. Sen. Robert Byrd, D· Discharaes. Nov. 27- Clifford stales in the agency's beginnings. ground with much smaller proOberholzer, Brian Doss, Mrs. "You h!ave to create a linkage from jects?' .And he said no one has W.Va., and U.S. Rep. Jamie WhitMissionary service
Lloyd Kille and daughrer, Velma the local level to the presidenL"
"taken · the lead" to push this ten, D-Miss., are chairmen of their
The Re~. and Mrs. Philip Knis- Parish, Mary Beauy. Alicia Henry •
chambers' respective appropria"It's a bizarre, Byzantine sort of approach with Clinllln.
ley of the Society of Indian Mis· Brenda Roberts, Virgie Ours and syslem ... but the damn thing worlcs
tions committees. Also, Kentucky's
sions, Noms, S. D., will be speak- Sheila Miller.
·
Wendell
Ford is the second-ranking
preUy well," Smith said, despite
ers at the missionary service to be
Discharges, Nov. 28 -James charges tbat it promores cronyism
Democrat in the Senate, and U.S.
held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Kemp, Virginia Shepherd,
Rep. Tom Bevill, D-Ala., has both
CLEVELAND (AP) - There seniority and clout in the House.
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel, Gertrude Spriggel, James Sbaver,
were no tickets sold naming all six
Lucy Detty, David Dunn, Michael
One hope for the agency is that
Units
of
Meigs
Emergency
Sernumbers selected in Saturday's
Scott, Michael Patterson, Mrs.
Vice President-elect AI Gore is
Scott Janey and son, Mrs. Michael vices answered the following calls · Super Lotio drawing so Wednes- from an ARC stale - Tennessee.
Kinnison and dapghler, Rebecca for assistance over the weekend: day's jackpot will be $8 million, Gore has been a staunch ARC supRoy Sayre
Harder, Daisy Boyer and Carrie Saturday, 5:26 p.m., Rebecca the Ohio Lotrery said.
porter in the U.S. Senale, but TenRoush from the Racjne station to Pick 3 Numbers
Roy Allen Sayre, 64, of Tack- Vigliotti.
nessee's state representative .10 the
1-9-1
erville Road, Racine, died ThursDischarges, Nov. 2!1- Aubrey Vererans Memorial Hospital; Suncommission
isn't sw;e how that will
(one, nine, one)
day, Nov. 26, 1992, at his residence Hollingshead, Tracey Pettit, Ryan day, 4:07 a.m., Pomeroy unit to
play
in
decisions
about the agenDavis, Travis Strange, Sandia Sny- U.S. Route 33, Rod Brewer refused Pick 4 Numbers
in Ruskin, Fla.
cy's
future.
1-0-3-5
He was head Iockman at the der, Shirl~ M9Carty, and Kathy treatment; 1:31 p.m., Rutland unit
"It can't hurt," said Mike
to
Main
Street,
Bernice
Nelson
to
(one,
zero, three, five)
Peterson.
Belleville Locks and Dam,
McGuire,
assistant commissioner
Births, ,Nov. 28- Mr. 'and Holzer Medical Cenler; 6:02 p.m., Super Lotio
Reedsville. Born on Aug. 20, 1928
for
the
Tennessee
Division of
11-12-15-30-31-44
at Racine, he was the son of the ¥rs· Jeffrey Golden, son, Gallipo- Racine squad to Bashan Road,
Community
Development.
"But
(eleven, twelve, fifreen, thirty,
late Cecil Leroy Sayre and Anna liS; Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hendershot, Johnny White to Veterans; 9:33
Gov.
Clinton
needs
to
decide
how
p.m., Racine 10 Third Street, Emma thirty-one, forty-four)
Neigler Sayre. He was a member of daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Lyons
much
money
the
government
can
to Velerans; Monday, 7:23 Kicker
the Racine Gun Club and Masonic Charles McGuire, son, Crown City
afford
to
invest
in
community
and
4-1-7-7-6-6
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, Racine, and a and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Schrock, a.m., Racine squad to State Route
338,
Johnny
Johnson·
to
Pleasant
(four, one, seven, seven, six , economic development programs.''
son, Rutland.
Navy veteran.
.
Whisman has hopes that Clinton
six)
·
Births, Nov. 29 - Mr. and Valley Hospital.
He is survived by his wife,
will not only rejuvenate the ARC,
Emileen McCloud Sayre of Racine; Mrs. Larry Davis, daughler, Point ·
but also reproduce it in other
two daughters and sons-in-law, Pleasant, W.Va., and Mr. and
regions. But Smith is not so optiBrenda and Clarence (Sonny) Ran- Mrs.Timothy Waugh, daughter,
mistic.
dolph, Racine; and Sanely and Mike Aoole Grove.
Davis, Gallipolis; a ion and daughrer-in-law, David {Pele) and Roma
SATURDAY
By The Associated Press
Sayre, Racine: four granddaughMADISON - Scott M. GockThe State Highway Patrol
ters, Kim and Katie Sayre and
Am
Ele
Power,
....
:
.............
.31
erell,
18, of Madison, driver of a
counted 10 traffic fatalities over the
Kristi and Angie Davis, and two
pickup
truck hit by a train on Ohio
Ashland
Oil...
...............
,
.....
24
3/4
long Thanksgiving weekend grandsons. Brian and Jimmy RanAT&amp;T
.................................
47
318
528
in
Lake
County.
dolph; a sister, Helen Hill, Long
double lastl.ear's lOll for the 102Bank
One
...........................
48
1/8
FRIDAY
hour perio . The count included
Bottom: two brothers and sistersJEFFERSON- Michael W .
Bob Evans ............. ;........ ~ ..20
three young men killed in a Medina .
in-law, Gerald and Mabel Sayre,
36, of Dorset, when his
Chamra.
Charming
Shop
.......
,
..........
37
118
Duj'ham, N. C., and Don and Betty
County crash.
.
car
crashed
into a ditch along an
City
Holding
......................
18
The patrol counted holiday trafSayre, Middleport, a sister-in-law,
Ashtabula
County
road. .
~
MQgUL
.................
17
fic fatalities from 6 p.m. WednesBetty Sayre, Racine, several nieces
ooclyear
T&amp;R
..................
69
3/4
DELAWAREJeffrey S.
day to midnight Sunday.
and~ws.
Lloyd,
25,
of
Delaware,
passenger
Key
Centuriorl
...................
2()
SIS
The
dead:
'
..
Besides his parents he was prein
a
pickup
truck
crash
&lt;in Ohio
Lands
End
.........................
24
7JBI
1
ceded in dea.th by a brother, the
SUNDAY
Umiled
Il)C
...............
:
.......
26
3/8
203
in
Delaware
County.
. CINCINNATI....:. Troy Famble,
Rev. Guy Sayre.
FREDERICKTOWN - Kevin
Muldmedia Inc......:...........27 1/4'
31, no hometown available, in a
Funeral services will be held
S.
Bates, 27, of Fredericktown,
Rax
Resraurant
.................
l/16
·
one-car crash on a Hamilton CounTuesday at J p.m. at the Ewing
driver
in a one-car ctash on a Knox
Reliance
Electric
............
,
...
17
SIB
Funeral Home. The Rev. Raben E.
ty road.
'
.
County
road.
RobbinsctMyers
................
15'
MEDINA - Randy Fortune,
Smith will oft1ciate and burial will
TOLEDO
Melvin B.
Shoney's
II)C
......................
23
1/2
be in Greenwood Cemetery where ·
21, of Chippewa Lake, Thomas
Koester,
37,
of
Toledo,
driver in a
Slar
Bank
...........................
34
military riles will be conducted by
Scott, 19, of Medina, and David
one-car
accident
on
a
city
street.
Wendy
Int'l
........................
l3
118
Racine Post, American Legion.
Rangel, 18, of Briarwood Beach,
THURSDAY
.
.
Worthington
Ind
...............
:.21
3/4
Friends may call at the funeral
when a vaJ~ Fortune was driving
CLEVELAND
Misty
C.
Stock
reports
are
tbe
10:30
overturned on Ohio· 3 .in Medina
home today (Monday) 2 to 4 and 7
Kindt, 21, of Cleveland, driver in a'
a.m. quotes. provided by ·Blunt
to 9 p.m. Masonic services will be
Countv.
one-car
accidel)t on a city street.
Ellis
and
Loewl
ol
Galllp1111&amp;.
held at 6:30p.m. tonight.
.

S me•••

Hospital news

,~

Lottery numbers

EMS units busy

Area death

Ten killed on Ohio highways
during long holiday weekend

Stocks

.

.

')

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.•,.' ..'

Racine...

Continued rruin PBSe 1
'.
from the state and. matched with
$46,419.39 in local tax moneys to
complele the projects.
,•· ·
· In other financial matrers, coiliicil members were reminded that in
1992, a down payment of $31 ,593
was paid on a new fli'C departniciit
tanker truck as was $21,500 paid
on the used compactor truck. No
money had to be bOrrowed.
Councilman Henry Bt;ntz made
a motion !bat an ordinance be pepared so tbat in the event a mayor's
court clerk be "required, that an
ordimince would be in place. The
motion passed. but in discussion, it
was noted that the general fund,
from which the position would be .
paid, can not fund the position.
Atlending were Cleland, Rizer,
Thornton, Bentz and Clark, councilmen Scott Hill, Bob Beegle and
Carroll Teaford; Clerk Carolyn
Powell; and Marshal Don Dye.

Charges dismissed

_

Charges of aggravated burglary
and theft against Kenneth Carpenter have been dismissed without
prejudice in Meigs County Common Pleas CourL
In an entry of nolle prosequi
filed last week, Carpenter was
ordered to pay $500 to the clerk of
courts as costs of prosecution, and
ordered to atlend AA meetings and
receive assistance from Health
Recovery Services.

Th.e Daily Sentinel
(VIPSIII-110)
· Published every afternoou, Monday
lhloulb Friday, ID Coan 81., Pao!eroY
Oh•• by lhe Ohio Valley Publiahlal
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy
Oblo 4~769, I'll. lltla·U&amp;G. Secoad clul
poatap paid ··-~w. Oblo.
Me!llbor: The -lod Prooo Uld 111e
Ohio Nowapoper -.lion/Nail~
Advorllalna Ropnot~~ladve. Bna!wit
Newapo,_ Boloo, 758 Thin! ...
N.,.Yod:, N..r1iilrlll0017.

.
'
~ tPOSTMABt'ER: Bood- ...._ li&gt; .
The Daily Bonllne!, Ill c..,rl Bt., ·
OHio 46768. '
lt1IIIICJIIP'I1N 8.\TDJ

POirw&amp;Oj,

I ..

B:rCanieror_llool..

•

OM Weolt ............................:............... l.BO
OM Mmlh ........................................:au~
OM Yur.. ....iiiNoi:B'coPii:.___ ..aas~.

!'BlCll

. :·•

Daily...... .......... ,........................_ ss Ct!it.

"""

Sabacn'ben DOl deairi!W Ia (Ill)' the c:ani- .
er may nmit in ·llllnAIDI dtncl \o Tile
Dally Bondnel '"' a .lhne, m or I~
lbO!llb buia. Credll will be .........~-

.... -

./

..

..........

No albaipdoM by !Mil 'pormit.lod Ia ·
areu wbe~ home earrier ae~Yiee 11
aYailable.
·
llalJ B•beoitiiJ'tloM
J• t
.
laoldo Molp eo...,.
:
13 Wooka ....... ..................................tl1.84
26 Weeka ..:.............. ....... ,.. ........ ....... $43.18,

e··

52 Wecb .......................................... $84.78'
, · Out.tde Metp C01aaty
•

uw..ka ..........................................

ssw.............................................. .ao ·

aaw..............................................

.40 ·

�•

•

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Mondlly, November 30, 1992
; PIQI

Southern fall athletes honored
Members of the volleyball
By SCOTf WOLFE
squad bono red were Andr.:a
Senlinel CQII'flllloedt•l
Members of the various fall Moore. Man:i Malbllws, Jodi Caldsports leBIIIs and cheetleadcrs were weU, Raschel Rowe. Brandi Mallohonc.ed Sunday afternoon with an ry, Tabitha Willford and Jenny
excellent potluck dinner and Hill. Senior members honored~
awards ceremony in S()uthem's Mepn Wolfe_ Kim Jenkins, Christi
Charles W. Ha)'I1UI!I Gymnasium in Maidens and An~e Swiger.
The Most I'Umrs Sco!ed award
Racine.
Southern athletic booster presi- went to Christi Maidens with 97
dent Donald ShaiTer gave the wel- points scored on the season.
coming address and served as mas. Rasche! Rowe was named the Most
ter of ceremonies, while the Rev. Improved and Megan Wolfe, Most
Charles Norris gave lite inv~: Ourstanding Hitter with 186 of 220
Co-adviser Sandra Baer presmt- completioils and 681dlls.
Wolfe also received honors as
ed members of the reserve and varsity cheerleading squads their ali-Dislrict 13, Division IV "Player
awards and recognized the senior of the Year." She was nominated to
members for their years of service. ·play in the state ell-Sutr and DisSenior members honored were trict 13 all-star matches, while
Christi Maidens, Julie Hill, Rabena earning SVAC honors as freshCaldwell, Nikki lhle, Valerie Con- man , sophomore and junior. She
nolly and Tamara Hayman. Con- was named all-District 13 as a
nolly 1111d Hayman were recognized sophomore, junior and senior.
lJl the absence of golf coach Jim
as all-American cheerleading nomAnc:terson,
who was tending to
inees.
opeJi
house
at his Anderson 's
· Jenni Couch then recognized
0
members of the reserve volleyball Home Furnishings store, athletic
director Howie Caldwell presented
team.
· Southern varsity volleyball the golf awards.
Caldwell cited the golf team for
mentor Suzanne Wolfe then honored members of this year's 6·14 irs 50-18 overall record and second
volleyball squad. After 13 years as place record of 42-14 in the Trithe Southern volleyball mentor, Valley Conference. Southern was
Wolfe is retiring. Wolfe's teanis the only team to defeat state-bound
claimed four Southern Valley Ath- Meigs in the TVC, ~realdng their
letic Conference titles in that span. 76-game lesgue winnmg streak.
.The golf team placed third in the
three sectional titles and two dislrict runner-up honors. Wolfe was sectional, just one strok~ a":'ay
also named SVAC ''Coach of the fro!ll ·advancing to the diStrtct.
Y.ear" and "District Coach of the Senior Bracken McFann advanced
on the individual level, where he
Year.~
Team members and the athletic participated at Lancaster. McFann
boosters on separate occasions pre- and Michael McKelvey were
sented Wolfe awards for her years named to the Tri-Valley Conferof service, prompting a long stand- ence all-league team.
ing oYBiion in bet honor.

a

.;..

Held football ooacll David Gaul
then hollorM the members of his 5S squad, which Gllll oraised f&lt;J" irs

success against "the sch()ol' s
IOWibestscbcduleever."
Southern posted 206 poi~ts
offenSively during the season while
giving up 196, the highlight of the
season being a huge win over Division ill entry Che•apMke.
Senior Nick Adams and junior
Trenton Cleland received honor·
able-mention all-District 13 honorS,
while first-team honorees recognized were .Michael Evans, Russell
Singleton and Jeremy Dill. Singleton was recently named Division
IV•"Backoflhe Year."
Receiving senior awards, with
each player's career statistics
engraved on them, were Evans, ·
Singleton, Dill, Adams, Glenn
Young, Unai Aldama-Elorza,
Robert Kimes and Kyle Wickline.
Evans was praised for his 139
for 187 passing accuracy and 1,320
passing y;uds. Dill grabbed 48
receptions for 882 yllrds, while
Adams tallied 118 tackles on the
season.
Singleton rushed 180 times for
1,024 yards, seven rushing touchdowns, U6 tackles and 94 yards
receiving. Young had 83 tackles,
and Aldama-Elorza, affectionately
known ~s "&lt;!us," was 1~.-17 in
extra pomt kicks and 4-S m field
go.al auempts, with the longest
· hemg a_41-yarder.
.
A kmdly gesture fr_om semor
le8lll members resulted m the team
presenting Aldama-Elorza with a
football autographed by the seniors
and Elorza's helmet
Rev. Norris gave the benediction 10 close the evenL

SHS VOLLE\'BALL AWARDS - Wlulng
special honon at Southern's ran sporta blmquet·
were th~ nve young ladle&amp; Piclured are senior
team members and special award winners.
Standing are (L-R) senior Megan Wolle, Dlvl·
slon IV District 13 !'l.yer al the Year IUid Best

Hitter award winner; .senior Christi Maldeu,
all-District 13 aild Most Pohits Seored award
winner; Rasellel Rowe, Moat Improved Player
award; ADgle SwJcer, senior award; and Kim
Je~~ldns, sen1or award.
SOUTHERN LETIER WINNERS - This
youn11o bul hustllag IJ'OUP were letter wlnnen
rrom last year's ca1e campal11n. Sealed are

Cleve.Iand beats Chicago 27-~4
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns welcomed
Bernie Kosar back the best way
they kneW how.

.,. - ----

In the NFL ...
T-

--

W L T I'd. PrPA

Milnol ............... ' I 4 0 .Mil :112:117
lnd!uupotia ...... S 7 0 Al3 163266
N.Y.
3 9 0 .250 t732A9
Now&amp;alond ..... 210 0 .167 162294

r.u .........;..

·c..lral JlhoW..
9 3. 0 .7~ 247162
......... ........... 7 S 0 .SI3 2'10211
CLI!VEI.AND ... 6 6 0 .!00 194190
CINCINNATI... 4 I 0 .333 :IG6269

!'jlllboqb.........

w-.111.-

~t.aa ChJ ··-··

I ~ 0 .6GP
- -.............. 7 4 0 .636
$Ia
1
o .m
LA. ~Wilen .._,. s 7 0 .417
s..at. ..•·-···-···· I 10 0 .G91

Diooo..........

I

SENIOR GRIDDERS HONORED - These
eight young men represent the nrst c:lass that
head football coach David Gaul has aurtured
rrom lreshmea to senlon. They received plaques
with their career accomplllhments on them. Pk·
tured are (lront row, L-R) Nkk Adams, Uul

Aldama-Eiorza "nd Jeremy DIU. Behind them
are Robert Kimes, Mldulel Evans, Russell Singleton, Glenn Younaand Kyle Wk:kline. Singleton, Evus and DIU were •B·Distrld 13 honorees
and Adams received honorable mention.

By SCOTI WOLFE .
Fifteen players are vying for school record as top reboumler.
starting positions on the 1992 _93
Because of the losses, Eastern
Eastern Eagles girls' varsity bas- will ~e ~acin~ a rebuildin$ year.
ketball squad, which opens irs sa- Only JUmor pomt guard Jamte Wilson tonight in Racine against the son returns from last year's squad.
.Southern Tomadoettes.
Wilson iso::Jood ball handler, good
• The Eagles will be coached by driver, g
hustler and good outthe scribe, who assumes the helm side shooter. She will be joined by
:rrom Dawn Heideman, who moved another junior, Penny Aeiker, wbo
jnto the Athens coaching position saw limtted action in the post last
after two years at Eastern. He is as- season.
sisted by Paf Brannon.
Aeiker is quick, arid has filled in
• Last year, Eastern went 15-7 at the post quite weD in the preseaoverall. winning a .sectional cham- son. She will be joined at the other
pionship after a second-place finish post. by senior Stephanie Otto, who
1n the Southern Valley Athletic returned to Eastern after a year in
Conference with a 9-3 mark.
Texas. Otto was a top scorer and
Gone from that sectional cham- rebounder in her sophomore year at
pionship team are Senior graduates Eastern.
Tabby Phillips, Jennifer Roush,
Otlo's rebounding and post play
Ruby Burke, Tiffany Gardner and should open up a potentially rough
Lee Gillilan. Another valuable inside-ourside game for the young
component from that team, Eagles.
MicheUe "Shelly" Metzger, uans- · "We have three upper classmen
ferred to River Valley. Gardner and and the remainder of our player~
Metzger were all-District 13 hon- are sophomores and freshmen. Our
orees. and Gardner claimed the older players are doing a nice job,

.
I

'

21~112

179198
73211

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

w=...

T-

W L T Pet. PPPII
-~~~2 0 .133 293165

Dollu .....•....•..... 10
7
---..:.. ...... 7
N.Y. ow.......... s
l'lrooni1............. 3

' 0 .!113 .219190 .
' 0 ' .!113 269111
7 0 Al7 251279

9 0 .250 117:112

NewOdouu ..•.• 9 3 0 .7~ 23SIS4
AllaDI.o ............. 5 7 0 Al7 234:1.96

LA. Ru11a •••••••• 4 I 0 .333 217264

........... pb,Gfbcrdl

Tbunday's scores

.
they lead by piaying hard, but they
need to become vocal leaders as
weD. We need a few you'nger players 1o step up and pick up the slack
both as starters and off the bench. .
"We've spent a lot of our time
working on fundamentals. I've
been frustrated, because many of
our players didn't even blow how
to pivot, b&lt;ix out, or protect the
ball. You have to know these
things a1 the varsity level. These
are areas we must improve in, and
areas we've made great strides in
so far. Our hustle has made up for
ourlack.ofslcillincertainareas. ·
"We're young, but I don't expect anyone to "feel sorry for us. By
mid-season I hope we can be competitive with anyone we play. I'm
looking for, aqd lam seeing improvement every day.
"At litis stage, freslllnan Jessica
Karr will most likely anchor the
for their earning all-Distrkl13 honon. Pictured
ALL-DISTRICT HONOREES - This trio
l¢ft wing, while sophomore Amy
are Michael Ev.ns, RusseU Singleton ud Jerewas recognized at Southern's fall sports buquet
..l'edovian will play the right wing.
my DiU.
Sophllmore players Michelle
Schultz, Tara Congo and Jessica
Radford, and Meliua GliesS will be
"Early on, Eastern's sopho- need to shoot the ball the same way Jaime (wilson) get frustrated be- :
top candidates to come off the mores
probably do double duty every time. It's just a mauer of rep- cause we can't free them up or get ·.
bench, while ariy number of flesh- on the wiD
reserve and varsity to gain etition and doin.,B things right over them the ball when they're open. ·
men may get a shot at some varsity
"They're used to having experi· .
andovera~n.
·
some experience.
time.
·
Eastern
s
wealcnesses
are
irs
reence people getting them the ball, ;
"Overall, Eastern's shooting is
good. However, we have to keep ·bounding, going after the loose and all of our componenrs haven't ·
Eastern girls'
practicing the fundamentals. We ·ball, fundamental skills and lack of always been able to do that yet. We ;
experience.
are getting better in· this area, and :
basketball schedule
. Eastern's strenghths are its de- when we =Jass consistently ·
fense, hustle and attitude.
we'll be su
w."
:
Date
Opponent Eastern girls'
''The
ltirls
have
had
a
great
attiEastern
will
run
various
offens·
Nov. 30 ......................... at Southern basketball roster
tude
and
they
reaUy
hustle.
They
es
and
wiD
switch
between
man-toDec. 3 .................................Fairland ·
are willing to put forth that extra man and zooe defensively.
Dec. S........................ Unioto-1 p.m. No.-pla;rer:pos.
Ht. Yr. effort to learn something new.
Eastern opens tonight at SouthDec. 10 ........................81 Waterford 24-Stephanie Otto-C ........ S-10 Sr.
Stephani~
(Otto)
and
Sometimes
em
in Racine. ·
DeC. 12 ..............at Federal Hocldng 34-Jaime Wilson-G ............ S-4 Jr.
Dec. 14 .............................. at Belpre 30-Penny Aeiter-F.............S-7 Jr.
I&gt;ec, 17 ooo tooouoooooooooooouooooooooTrimblc 23-Tara Congo-C ...............S-9 So.
Jan. 4 .........................Warren l..&lt;Jcal 22-Amy Redovian.O .........5·7 So.
Ian. 7...........................River Valley 13-MeUssa Guess-G ...........S-8 So.
Jan. 9 ........ ~ ............at Meigs-3 p.m. 32-Michelle Schwtz-F ...... .S-9 So.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALLERGY
Jan. 11 .••••....••......••....-..•....•Southem 12-Jessica Radford-G.........S-3 So.
Jan. 16 .......Federal Hocking-1 p.m. 33-Jessica Karr-F,{l ...........S-7 Fr.
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
Jan. 21 ...•................•........Waterf0rd 14-Nicole Nelson.O ........... S-4 Fr.
.Cue For Your Faml
Jan. 23 ........................Miller-1 p.m. 10-Rebecca Evans-F .......... S-5 Fr.
Jan. 27 ......................•............ Belpre 11-Beth Bay-F .................. ,5-6 Fr.
Jan. 28 .....................at RivCI" Vllley · 44-Lauren Young-Ftc .......5-6 Fr.
Feb. l ............................. .al.Trilnble I~-Krist! Warner-G ............S-3 Fr.
Medicare &amp;
Assignment Acc1epte~d
Feb. 4 ............................ .at Fairland 12-Crystal Morris-C ........... S-9 Fr.
~· 6 .........................Mcigs-1 p.~.

· Cb. IS ......................at South Pomt
·--

s

w-.111.•.s.. F -. 10 2 0 .133 339196

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.

LONE SENIOR - Steplwlle Otto returns to Eastern's atria'
bUkethD team after ........ the Jut Khool year mTuu u the
team'• 01111 •!l!or. Sbe wiD 1eH the EaRles inlo action at Racine
tonlpt •p!M Southern. (PIIoto by Steve Bowen)

251179
175207

C..lniDMIIoo
- . . . ...•.•.. 9 3 0 .750 301191
a.- Bay........ 6 6 0 .soo 117232
l:bicqo........... 4 "I 0 .333 241218
T - Bay ...... 4 I 0 .333212275
Doaitit. ........- .•.• 3 9 0 .250 217253

Eastern girls' basketball team
_to open ionight against Southern
.

-

defense and specialleBIIIs produced
a 27-14 victory over the struggling
Chicago Bears.
David Brandon returned an
interception 92 yards for a first-

Head coac!l- Scou Wolfe

--·-· ---:..........-

SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
I

-

14. • ...,.............. - .... 9-3.()
IS. OHIO ST .............. a.2·1
16. u...... Cdlop .......Z.l
17. T -........... J.Hl
11. w~ sc..... B-3-0
19. ~ ..... ......... 3-0
20. Nonh Corolino ......11-3.0
2l.PeanSL .................7-4-0
22. Arizono ....•..•.. ..•..•. ~.
23. s....... Col ....... -~1
:!4.Mioli,.iPOISL ...•.•7-4.Q
2.5. BriahwYoun1 ,.• l-4-0

Saturday'siCOreo
Hanranl4,llaouln3(01)

Bolrlla.............. 9 3 0 .7~ 314199

lured are (front row, L·R) Nicole Nelsoa, Jessk:a
Karr ,, Amy. Redovlan, Stephanie Otto, Penny
Aeiker, Tara Congo and Jaime Wilson. I• the
l)ack row are Kristi Warner, Rebecca Evans,
Lauren Young, Crystal Morris, head coach
Scott•Wolle, Beth Bay, Melissa Guess, Michelle
Schultz aild Jessica Radford. (Photo by Steve
Bowen)

"It was probably one of the few
games I've ever playt:d in where
we didn't have til do much offensively to be part of the win," Kosar
said Sunday after the Browns'

quarter IOUI:hdown, and Eric Metcalf returned a punt 75 yanls for a
third-quarter touchdown. Kosar had
little to do but watch, as he had
done the previous 10 weeks while
tecupeniting from a broken ankle.
"We just wanted to eat up the
clock a little and really let our
defense control the game," KoSar
said. "We were just trying to be
smart with it offensively."
Cleveland (6·6) sent the Bears
(4-8). to their fifth straight loss,
their longest skid since they closed
the I 989 season with six consecutive losses.
Kosar's contribution was minimal. He completed 8 of 17 passes
for 59 yards, completing only one
pass longer than nine yanls, while
Cleveland's running game account-

St'ot·eboar·d
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

11192-93 EASTERN GIRLS VARSITY- The
Eastern prls' v.rslty baskethall team opens its
season tonight against Southern In Racine at
5:30. Ellsteril wDI be lacing a rebuilding season
after wlnnig the sectional lasl year with a 15-7
. record. Eastern lost &amp;lx players from thai club,
but Is optimistic aboul the upcoming season. Pic·

SOUTHERN SENIORS - These lour young
ladles w1U be the leaden uf this year's Southern
squad. Pictured ar.e team members Cecilia

Aimu Mills, Jenniler Cross, and Amber
Ohlinger. Standinc are Christie Cooper, ADdrea
Moore ud Jesslka Codner. ·

:14, Douoit21

Newl-6.~3

=t'w'~3

Vancouva" 6, Man&amp;nd 5

l!dononlao4,T..... Boy3(01')
Chioop s, Colai1T1
MioMoaulO,!onl-3

T......,3,LGIAoJ.... 1
Dobal2. Sc Loaili 2, lie

Sunda)"s score

Fotc11t 3, Winoil

Toolcht'sg~es

Buffdo ot Mao..t,NO p.m.
- - o t N.Y. Ron...,, 7:&gt;10p.m.
llcmlil, 7~p.m.

Southwest

n-o SL 43, r.....mPuota

HOUitm 61, Rice 34

FarWell
Howaii 38, TldH 9
Miomi 63, Son Diop SL 17
Ndnt o.mo l l , - Col23

EASTERN CONFERENCE
A.Ualdlc Dlvllloll

W L

Pet.

3 .727
5 .615
7 . .500

I
I
9
I

.315
.333
.301
.273

GB
I

:u

College basketball

.750
.531

CJarisiiiiiiS

Tournaments

Greetin,
Editic.n

Pwduo 73, c~ fD

5

G.... A l - . - 1
Tldrdpllce
Vondmbih 13, Oqm II

CtatniiMYIIkln
Cbicqo. ..... ,..........9 3
.750

Mllwookoo ...............9 3
Cbodoae .•.•.•.•.....•.7 6
Allot&lt;o ...................6 6
lndlooo ....................6 6
CLIM!LAND .........6 7
Douoil. ................... 3 9

East

4

4.S
5

.500
.500
.462

l5
3
3
3.5

.2!0

6

WFSTERN CONFERENCE

::~r.r2~l~·r,·~
TODI&amp;bi'ICMII

'llelm:lr at Soaale.. 9 p.m.

Fu~IIJIIII

.636
.513

.5

6

.4$S

1

CINCINNATI it CLEVBLAND, I
p.n;t.
o.wil¥'1. ar-., Ba7at Milwauk-, 1
p.m.
wum : alit a~Ncw, l p.m.
Milll 'II.
• 1 p.m.
N.Y.fta11Bull'alo, p.m.
S.lllo .. - . . . •• , ....

- · -·41'.10.

. c-. Chr at~- JtaiUrl." p.m.
Mimi 111 Saa Pnr ·
4 p.m.
Soli .,... lll'lloollil, 4 p.m. .
Wnh'. 'atN.Y.Oialll,4p.m.
LA. Ram~ at Tampa Bay, I p.m.

.

. Ftllll pbOI

,
Ala.·Birrnift&amp;bom (;1, UT.Qouonoop

TJaursda~,

52

Deeem1JerZ4

... .

-~~~
WLT .... GFGA

94

6
9
_,....., ........ 12 10
~;,!:J;e::
10 13
9 10
N.Y. IIIiadoa... 9 II

3
3
0
2
4
3

r1
Zl
ll4
22
22
21

-

s3

:15 Ill 71

-2
4
I
I

31
21
ll4
I!
S

114
92
71
19
91
19

II
74
II
98
91

112 92
92 79
112 II
62101
52121

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

.. -~~~-

,_ .
WLTI'li.GPGA
~ DolloiL .............. 14 tO ·t 211 113 ~
t2 10 3
t2 9 3

T.................... ll93
T-Bay ........ 10 IS )

..,..._...

St.!Aplo ...........

I 12 4

1.G1 Aoptoo ...__ 16 7 2

27 16 7S
27 14 79
2!72~

22. 93 'Y1
211 141112

9 2
t4 9 2

34 112 II
30 101 16
30112 12

W................ I 13 2
5 II I

II II 94
II 66113

CoJeu7 ·-···-·- "

v
--··
·81
X ,.,,_,..
S.JOoo............

2
3

'

5

112 ..

Alhl«i~· AIIOCi.alian

20 71102

mte football play·

o0'1:

III-I
Cleve. Sl. lpall\ll 31, Younanown
Auttintown Filda 1
Cin......U SL X"'ia: 30, Plquo 7
JlhoW..IV

w...... x..u..cty rt,Humn o

Cincinnati A.ca.dsny el P.B. 17, BarncavillGO

Finals

111"-....1

At Ca-. Jawatt sa.•u•
O.cvc. St. JpatWt (1).0) v1. Cincin·
nati SL Xavier (13·0), Saturday, 11 :30

.

.....

Tpsa.ta

Footoria (13'0) ... SL Moqa Manariol
(11-1), Frioloy, I pm.

-m

AtM ...... Pa.aarowa

TpSIMI-

Mauor l.oko COlboUc (13-0) ....
"""·
1
ton (U.f). Sabll'daly,l p.m.

w.,. Xonnody (12-1) "'· Oocinooli
AoodanyofPB. (12-1), Soturdoy, 3 pm.

Odando at S•tdo,lOp.m.

N..,o•l&lt; Codiolio (13-0) "'- Sl. H...,
(13-0), Frioloy, 3 pm.

A&amp;M....aao.Pa.ta,.,...

'flctrSIMI-

Datv•.

~~~-.9:30p.m.

L.A. Loken" s........... 10130 p.m.

Tbe Top 25 telftU in The Aaoc:iatal
Prcaa 1992 c:oUcao fOOlbiU poll, with
fitlt-place vo. in ~. recoldt:
lluuu&amp;b N... 28, lOlii poinll t..ool on l'l
pcUw for a finl placo VGU~ ~- one
-for I - ploco ..... ID4 rantJna ll\

loa-'•poll•

Lui

PU.Wook

I. Miomi (61) ..........1144 1,549
1 Abbomo (I) .........1144 1,479

I
2

1Flolillll. ............ ICH.O IAI7
4. T-AAM .........)~ 1,312
!N-0... ...........•9-1·1 1.291
1,151
7.
................9-Z.O
143 1,149
..
..................9-Z.O 1,()19
' · ca
. . n . l o .. .............9-1·1
996
~0. w
9-2-0 911
a.z.o 943
12. Plodolo ...................:J.G uo
13. N. Cllolillo SL ......9-Z.I · 159

3
4

6.=··. . . . .

n.- . ..............
hi

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

..

bullnen wltb you Is oar greatlll tdasure!

.

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 24th.

•DI"-loll V

AIM-Paoli.-.

Tpsa.t-

Transactions

APcollege
football poll

R-.1

wh01eldnd IDIIIIorl we'D alway~ blallll'e.Dolag

-IV

Tuesday's ~;ames
Pofllmlot N'"' YOlk. 7:30 J&gt;.ID·
SooAnlmio at Wul!inaton. 7•30 p.m.
lndi.ma at Allaata, 7:3Cfp.rri.
Boa&amp;m a CLIM!LAND, 7:30p.m.
Houa1Gn 1\
9 p.m.
Dollu at Ullh, 9 p.m.

. Tea•

With wrealbs of holly ad mlatleloe, llocldap h•glly
the lire ud ICIDII •••••11111 wltll~aew, Cllrillmal . .
aco••paaa warmth ad goad cbe• •• we ch...b the :
, bleaiDgl we've lhared lids 11ast Jill. For a lim-• ,
: 1aylng ..tbanb" to you, . , may lrlead1, old IDII new,

III&gt;WMD
AIM-Poll I_,.

No cames tODI&amp;bl

WALES CONFERENCE

CltimF-·············
M'
...........

1.5
2

NewYodr.li~OUco
a..,.., 117, PlUlo o7S
• t09
Odondo 95,
93
lndioziol34,Ciuloae 122
1Ulonu112, Miomi tOO
Minnooa&amp;o 12, lldn&gt;U BO
UtoldOII,H'"""" 99
SutAn1atio 104,$eude97
Mllw•ube'YI, WuJUnalm!IS
LA. Q;ppcn 12l,lla!..., I 19
Ooldon ..... 134, l'ho&lt;iaix 131
Now Jeraey 94, Saaamemo 19

IntheNHL ...

········-· 16 6
13 7
· - ···--····· .... 13 7
Blllll'lla............. 10 10
lflllr&lt;IN ....~..... 6 16
Oao.,. .......- ...... 2 22

.315

COLUMBUS, Ohi&lt;&gt;4Ai'l - Here ""
Plirinp for tho 211&amp; ....... Ollio llilltSc!IO&lt;i
lho 1&amp;118 IOnifiDil ICCinl IACI 6ndl

SaturdAy's scores

Sunday's 1e0res

Odc:lp at Hau~~m, 9 p.m.

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

.3-.,

5.5

Ohio high school
football playoffs .

D«roi192, New Yodt 76 .
Ponland 1(fJ, Sac:runento 99
L.A. Loken 114, llolloo IS

M-7,Doc.7

...
I'lL---..-·

I

.,.31

l5
3

Sa.lurday's scores

......,,Doc.,

l'luollurJh ····-··· 17
JI!•Y............ II

I

Sac:ramCil\0 ............. .5

Allalu ol New Odoou, I p.m.

GB

..................? ,4
Utob ........- .•.•.........7 5

Oo1dCIIl Sia~e ............5

n ..riiil,

T-

Ml-lll•llloo
W L Pet.

Dormlr .••.•................S 7 .417
Minn-.. .....•.........• 7 .364
Dollu...................... l 9 .100
Paclllc DtYWion
Panlon4 ...................9 2 .Ill
S..llle ...................... l 4 .6G/
LA. I.okao ..............7 4 .636
-.a ...................7 4 .636
LA. Clippaw ...........7 6

w.....l..3t,LA. IIomol7
SooPnacioco20,1'h"odelj&gt;hi• 14
Soo DioF 27, LA. llold&lt;a 3

I

~

T-29.V-2S

In theNBA ...

s.. Anlllllio............s

.

Florido SL 4!1, Flcri4o :!4
~ 3l,OoollloTeob 17
Miuiaippi 17, hL.iaiwi Sa. 10

If 1 1u10aawi 7~~.
l'llllbu!Jit,llN.Y.IIloodci. ·7~p.m .
TGUDIOaiNawlcnD)'.7:40 p.m.
Harlfonlal St. LaWa. 1:40 p.m.
Llll A.aplcll: vi. Odcato at Milwau•
.kee.,I!J60 p.m.
Ptnn . .., at s.n J010. 10:40 p.m..-

T-

'

Willis drove the Bears to the
Cleveland 10-yard line on their
fll'St series before he tried to force a

Soulb

Tueaday'aaames

Sunday's scores

••

didn't."

l

Dollu 30,N.Y.OW.II 3

aJM!LAND v.~..,
IWouCily ii3,N.Y.1.,7
New Odoa :14,- 13
A - 34, New &amp;pod 0
W·+;,p 41. PboWa 3
-21,0NCNNATI9

Three of the turnovers led to
Cleveland scores .
"To me, it's carelessness:· said
Neal Anderson, who lost both fumbles. "You've just got to be more
careful. I thought I had a pretty
good grip on it. but undoubtedly I

.~

College football

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

saclcs.

pass to tight end Keith Jennings ui
the right 11at on third down. Bran-.
don, a Jinebaclcer, read the play art4.
intercepted the pass in stride with a·
clear Jllth down the left sideline. ·.
The interception return matched
the longest in Browns history.
Bernie Parrish had a 92-yarder
against the Bears in 1960.
"'We've been working on thai:
~lay all week," Brandon said,
'We knew they would try to gc.t
the ball out in the flat. close to the
end zone. I lried to hold back so thC
quarterback wouldn't see me break
on it. and that's what~- " ,
Matt Stover's two fteld goals
made it 13-0, but Chicago scored
20 seconds before halftime when
Willis and Anderson connected on
a 30-yard touchdown pass.

W:~~~~~'~·lfi·
'
~"'·
~
~'
~
"''~"·
~
~ :.
·; ~
·:
.
L.....
.
::

IfAir Pon:c l, Fruno

, Sto~el,RWFSI .

llaoulnot~7il().p.m.

Odudo .................... l
NowYod&lt; ................l
Newlcrooy ..............7
u...........................S
Mi..,L. .............. -.-4
w......................4
Pllilldelpllio ••••.•.•.•3

14
IS
17 .
II
21
24
20
22
23
19
16
25

()therl rec:ehlna •olu: Hawaii 61
BOWLING GREEN 33, Kanuo 10:
Scuthtm Miulai · .S, VirJinia 3, Wake

Bllffdo 5, OliiWI 2

T-

819
702
570
514
415
398
396
293
230
203
199
13&amp;

ed for 131 yards.
The Bears were much more productive offensively, outgaining the
Browns 320-178 as Peter Tom
Willis, getting his fll'St NFL start in
place of demoted 'Jim Harbaugh,
threw for 285 yards. Chi• • however, was intercepted 1w1ce, lost
two fumbles and yielded seven

S
7I

9
10
II

12
6
13

-

-·'-

SEATTLE

Ba.baU

MAltN!IS ~ Sipool

Mike Felder, outfield•, to a twO.JNI

FootbaU

NllloMI Foolllalll.aoa1ot
PITTSBURGH STEJILBaS - Acti·

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR P. J. OR DAVE
992-2156 .

n-

votool Oonlll Williomi,
IO&lt;klo, from
dto iiiJuntd lioL Woi.... !ddt DUiio, tecci.YII'.

Hockey
Nllllollll- ' CALOAltY FLAMES - A ...... to
tem\1 whh 0., Sllltlt, ~an. Oft I
. two-year oontnct.
NEW YORK ISLAND!IItS - c.Jiod
up B...t ~o, riahtwin&amp;. 6tm Cop!·
tal Diltrict of tho American Hooley
lAapt. Stat Tnvit OiMn, oent•, to

:&gt; .

THE DAILY SENTINEL -

,

~~~-·-•~uua~oauutiiaell

C•pitol~

••

l.

'

�.

Monday, Nowmber 30, 1192

By The Bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~----------------~-------------------.

The Daily Sentinel
'

'

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

Monday, November 30, 1992
Page 6

Despite b'oy's tragic death n~ne
other humans received life ,
Dear .U. Laden: I know you
reach millioaa of people, and !hit iJ •
why I'm writing. 1'hiJ me_, Clll
lllCIII the diffCfti!Ce bel ween life and
death 10 • pat many people.

. I wu trelllelldously moved by
this llory and know 1hlt you will
be, too. rm !ltJping and praying
that you will ' help by prinling it
in your column. Thanks for your
consideration ••• A FAITHFUL

Landers
~LANDIIIS

•Im, LooADpho.
n...s,......._.

en.ns,.•r"

READER IN HAYWARD, CALIF.
. DEAR FAITIWUL: I appeciale

Brian's parents signed the permission · form to disc;onnect the
the opportunity to share this life-S!J)lp&lt;lft sysreni. Witllin houn
IOUChins I!IC'np with my reldm. skill~!'~ IUIJlc:aliCal)ls removed biJ
Bless you for lllillding it 011. Hae orpns and tissues and sped them
it is, reprinted with permission or to waitiJ!g recipients. Brian's
from the. uu.t.:-- E Bank and heart went to I 3S·yea--old fl!her
.
··-· Ye.Transplanlltion
Center:
of two. The liver foraWied deadt ·
in a 20-year.oJd college SludeoL
The Story of Brian
One (lf Brian's kidneys went to. a
The death of someone we love is ltacher who had been on. dillysis
one of the hardest things we will for five yean. The other klcJney
eva' have to fac;e. In the consuming went to a young wife and mother of
grief dlat follows, it is e~~tremely three youngllei'S.
·difficult to illllgine 1hlt anything
Brian's eyes wae removed so that
positive could possibly ~L
his~
could 'l'*R !light to two
::t
CHEERLEADING HONOREES - These
nolly (L·R). In tbe back ro,r are Raberta Cald·
Consider
the
elise
of
Brian,
a
17.
blind
people.
donated sllin .
:'It line young ladies are the leaders of the Southern well, Tamara Hayman and Christi Maidens. y~-old lad.who loved buebal1 and helped save theHts
life of a severely
~· vanity cheerleadlng squad. Pictured are senior
Connolly a11d Hayman were recognized as all·
his l().spced bicycle. One evening burned blby. Bone from Brian's legs
•: members Julie HiD, Nikki lble and Valeri con.
American cheerleading nominees.
·
last spring, Brian wu struck by a and hips was removed so dlat a 14car While riding home from ICbool. year-old boy would not have to
He was rushed· to the emergency uridcaao ~m~pulalion of a leg due to
room wit)) severe head· injuries.
bone cancer and another child's .
Emergency SUJ'gely was performed, severely deformed face could be
The Return Jonathan Meigs Grace Eich, Frances Robert, June centennial in the D.A.R.
~ Chapler, Daughrers of the Ameri- Ashley al1'1 Eileen Buck.
. Mary K. Yost presented the fl;~g but later that night Brian ·was ·• reconstructed by a plastic'surg-.
From this single trqedy came
The group will pUrchase a brick fact and Eleanor Smith gave the declared "lnin dead .•
: can Revolution, met recentlY. at the
Brain death is a
in which
• Meigs County Public Library. to be used in the columns at the president general's message.
ldditional ,..a of Ufe, new heallh
: 1'here were 15 members atlending.
Waldschmidt House an\1 will be
This being National .Defense all indications of brain functions and new hope for nine of Brian's
;
The meeting opened in ritualis- dedicated to Ray Reynolds, a state Month, Rae Reynolds spolce on die have permanently cc.-ed Bree!Jring fellow humans and for nine Arneri·
; tic form by the Regent, Anna C~e­ officer.
topic "America, What Went wu mechanically maintained with can families.
.~ land. Prayer was by the chaplam,
Soup labels will be sent to Kale Wrong?"
·
a respirata and his bcart c:onlinued
DEAR READERS: This is a
, Eileen Buck. A salute was given to Duncan Smith SchooL The mile of
The meeting closed with prayer to beaL Brian's pareDI8 and his oldci' wondeiful Opportunity lh ask YOI;l
• .die flag and the American's Creed pennies and stamps were also col· by _the chaplain and the Lord's brolher were grief-strichn, but tile once more to become orpn donors.
'
~ was given in unison. Officers lected.
Prayer in URISOII ,
story does not end here. The Dune
Please write The Uving Bank, P.O.
The Ohio State Regent has
. uports were given by Franc~s
The hostesses served a dessert in the intensive care unit knew BOx 6725, Houston, ' Te:w ·n265,
· Roberts, secretary, and Phy il1s requ.ested that all D.A.R. members course at a decorated tea table with that everything possible had been
: ~tinner, ll'easuret.
Wflle to thc!ir legislators against the Mary Carolyn Wiley presiding. done to save the boy's life. She if you want more illfonnalion, and
be sure to request a donor registra. ; ·; Rae Reynolds was elected as a closing of Fon Laurens and Adena

l voting delegate at the Conlinenlal
, Cpngress. Alternates elected were
.' ,,

Community calendar.

: !:.

i'

~. ~ Community

Calendar items
: ·appear two days before an event
and tbe day of tbat evenL Items
• lllll5t be received weD in advance
: to assure publication in the cal·
· endar.
;
1
MONDAY
; RACINE • Special meeting of
l Racine Village Council, Monday, 7
: p.m., to open bids for Racine ·water
• supply system project

•

;

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
172, OES, Middlepon,
wiD meet Monday at 7:30p.m. All
. .members
urged to allend.
....

1 Chapter No.
~

••

POMEROY • Meigs County
.-veterans Service Commission,
:Monday, 7:30p.m., at the Veterans
: ~ice Office in Pomeroy.

·I•

•

' RACINE • C5APSE 453, Southem Local, will meet Monday at 7
, p.m. at the high school.

I

at Chillicothe.
A specially designed pin has
been made commemoraling Ohio's

.

TUESDAY
: ·.: POMEROY • FOE Ladies Aux: iliary No. 2171, Christmas dinner
: party, TUesday. ·

I

POMEROY - Ohio -Eta Phi
~pter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
i'Will have a pizza pany Tuesday at
:6:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
• Infirmary. Betsy Jones and Kathy
: Haley are hostesses. Bring a bottle
~ of pop or a bag of chips.

Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Peoples
llauk conference room to discuss
tl!e Christmas parade on Thursday.
POMEROY • Salvation ARmy
will be taking applications for food
baskets and toys on Tuesday and
Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon
and 14 p.m. each day.
POMEROY - Post 1942, Meigs
County AmVets and VVA will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Smitty's.
All veterans mvited.
POMEROY - Me·igs United
Methodist C~tive Parish will
be taking apphcations for Christmas food baskets Tuesday throu~h
Friday from 9 a.m. to noon at 1ts
office at 311 Condor Street in
Pomeroy.
'
POMEROY • The American
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
will meet Tuesday at the post
home. DiMer will be at 7 p.m. and
meeting at 8 p.m.

ing at the home of Emma Oatworthy on Tuesday at'6:30 p.m. No gift
exch~Je. Mc;mbers bring Angel'
Tree guts. ' ·
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

34-membCr panel (or ihe Uni~d ·
Hospital Fund, a New York charity
that focuses on health care issues.
The panel of scientists, ethicists
and public health officials also recommended that all TB patients
receive treatment until they arc
completel)l· cured rather than just
no lol!ller contagious.

Hemlock Grange members meet

:

:Group gath(!rs
'~at
. Shoneys
.

'I ~. The W.H.S. Ageless Classmates
lmet Nov. 3 at Shoncys in Point
:Pleasant.
l After a shon program by Mar~jorie . Walburn and devotionals by
)Sylvia Sayre, the following mem•bers enjoyed dinner and fellowship:
i Carol Workman, Shirley Tucker,
L:r.da Russell, Nancy Anderson,
Jlvia Sayre, Emma Lee Kearns,
Betty Russell, Peggy Reitmire,
1Connie Smith, Sue Hayes, JoAnn
lGouiart. Carol Roush. June Maxey,
;Kimona Knight, Peggy Edwards,
Walburn and Sue Al-

Jessie White presented the lilerary program on the theme ''Thanksgiving" at the recent meeling of the
Hemlock Grange with Master Rosalie Story presiding.
Readings included "Let Us Give
Thanks" by Bob Reed; "Everyday
Thanksgiving" by Rosalie Story;
"Thanksgiving on the Farm" by
Sara Collums; and a humorous
reading by Muriel Bradford. A
song "County Your Blessings" was
also sung.
A follow-up report was given on
the electioil.
It wu decided to have a demonstration on sweat shirt designs.

;Marjorie

•tensworth.

: The group will meet Dec. 10 at
i5:30 p.m. at the home of Marjorie
1
~ Dale Walburn, 560 South Third
lmm:t. Middleport, for a covered
Jdish dinner.
~ Any former ·. classmaleS . of
;wabama High School are cordially

COPY DEADUNE

Call992-2156

. Monday Piper
T.-t.y Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

• .w. Olllll&lt;lo ........., ,.... od ............. pnJNiid
-" Rocoi.. clioco•t for odo paid Ia odYO-.
• Fno Ado: Ct_,.., ud Fo...d ado ....r.r 15 word. will ..

. .

-so~a,............

• Prico of od lor al capitol to&lt;Mn io doablo price of od cool

• 7 poiBt liaol)'pe ooly uood
• S...tlaol io ~ ...
for OlTOn altor r.... day (chock
lor....,..flntdayod .... Ia pepor~ C.UWon2:00p.a.
day altor pulllteatloa 10 . . . . - t l o •
• AiL tha.t .iu.t be pU:I U. ad.nace •n:
Card of'l'lwob
lhppy Ado
Ia M-oriooa
Yard s.r..
• A cluoilloclod•-..t plueol Ia doe Collipolio. Dolly
Trihaoo ( _ . Cluolllocl Dlaplay, B • ' - Car&lt;! or Lip(
Notiooo) willoloo oppoor Ia tM Poiat Plouoat Ropter ud
... Doily S...tiDol, . . .hi.. ONr 18,1100 .._

,....u.r.

Columllue,Ohlo
.....,_ _ 13, 111811

•

I

Refreshments for the next meeting will 'include sandwiches and
salad.

Repons were given by the home
economics committee and special
committee.
Rosalie Stcl')' and Helen Quivey
won the contest on the grange.
The meeling closed in regular
form with 17 membera present.

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

Is lOW~ fortH
Grlst111111 Sea101.
~ to 5 Mo~o·Sot.
. llo-55•:
Feohrll/c PoiiHH s II 7 .
oiiHHia
lasktts, Holr Tl'ltl, F
·
lasbts, Lin IIIII C1t Trees.
for tlepjll'teclloved OHS: PI
•la•kils,.wreot~s, sprays •d
vo-.s.
HUBIARD'S,
Oh. .
992·5 76

-11,

CALL:

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE
113 W. 2nd SL
Pomeroy, Oh.
882-64711

H•=-

UNIT PAle&amp; CONTRACT
IINied propoaala wHI be
r.oelved al lhe ollloa ollllo
dlrootor of tho Ohio
DepartMent of Tr-por. ·
tatlon, Columbua, Ohio,
unUI 10:00 ..m., TueedJ!y,
December I, 1112 (or
IMprovomoilta In: Molga
C:O.ty, Ohio tor Improving
State Route 111, SooUon
o.oo; by gu•r*•ll tooon·

'

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
DRAWING OF JURORS
Ollloo of Camml•lon..
01 JUI'Of8
lhlga County, Ohio
November 23, 111112
To All WhOm n
May ConDom•

olructlon.

Bldclng n: Bidding on
lito pro)oot Ia r..trlotlcl to
Minority lluoii)Ma Enter•
prl•• (MBEe) .rt~ned •
MBEo In aocord.inco wllll
llocUon 123.151 ('&amp;~~ of
lho Ohio Rovloed
by
tho Stela Equal Employment
Opportunity Coordinator
and quallfted to bid wllll
OOOT under Chapter 5525
Of ..... Ohio Rovloed Coda.
Tha date oot tor
completion ol thla work
ehal[ be • nl lorth In lho
bidding propout.
Plane Md llpeclllcallona
. . on lloln lho o.,.rtmant
· of TrMeportoUon Md tho
olllco of lho Dlatrlct Deputy
Dhotor.
.
JERRY WRAY,
DIRECTOR Q.F
· TRANSPORTAION
(11) 23, 30, 2ID

Public Notice
tho Vllliogo of pomeroy,
I~~etor lhuum MO,aoo.oo
ThouHnd Dollara)
GMaral Fulld to
tho Street Fund for tha
operation of .current
expena•.

·

PASSED: Nov. 11, 11112
Bruoa J. Reed, Mayor
Kalhy Hpal~ ClorkiT...,
IMry Wehrung, Pneklonl
Pom-y Vlllllgo c-ol

On Moncfloy, lho 7lh clay ol
December 1tt2, at 8:30
o'clock .A.M., at lho ollloe of
the ~omml.. lonere ol
Juror8 of Melga Coun= (11) 23, 30, 2lc
Ohio, Jurora willie pubUc
drawn tor the ....,uary 1
PubliC Notice
T- of tho Common Pte.
Court of ..rd ~ounty: to
PUBU~ NOnCE
Include two (2) a,..clal
NOTicE. IS HEREBY GIV·
venlroa, • roqqlred In EN: to el In,..._lad peri(M.
lloollon 2845.18 O.R.C.
On November 2, 11112 tho
Walt- Brll&lt;llonf Oranoo Townehlp TrueLO.MoCoy of llalga County volacl lo
CommluloMN of Jurora Inform tho public that they
(11) 30,111:
DISAPPROVE OF DISPOS.
AL OF SALT . BRINE
WATER on -nahlp roldl.
Public Notice
SURFACE APPUCATION
OF SALT BRINE WATER
· IESOWTION
FOR ousT AND ICE
1117.12
CONTliOL IS DISCONBE IT RESOLVED, by lho TINUED EFFECTIVE IllCounaU .of lllo Vlll"tt• of MEDIATELY.
Pomeroy, aim-bore:
(11)27,21,30,3tc
That the Vlll•o• of 1-----~-:--P-wor hor•y euppono
Public Not'-lho IICUon of tho Extended'~--------NM T,..
......ono Sorvloo lor ,...,...
BIDDERS
toll tree loool phone
NOTICE TO
betwoon 112,
TholloordofEdooollllonoC
•, oxoh•noo
PomONY-IIIdcllaport,
771,
Looal Sohool
' u-,wv,~.._HIIven
doelr• to reoolv•
' __. u .....onl,
• Thlolocal
bide lor fleet
. . .u
, ph- uohanoo would be
oovo r1 ng oa1•n·
• benallalal to all com· wy-1113.
' munltlealmiolvod.
In orclorlo be ooneldored,
· PASSED: Nov. 16, 111111
1111 toaled blda •h•ll be
Bruoa J. Road, Mayor rocolved by tho T,__.,
; Kalhy ttpll~ ClorkiT..._
office by 12:00 noon on
•
Lany Wehrung, PrMklonl Dooombor 11, 111112, and will
: Pomeroy VUtago Councl be opened Ill that Urno.
: 111) 21, 30, 2111
Tho Board of EduaUon
---::::~~~::--- ; . . - lho right to aoaepl
Public Notice
andlor rojaol any and •II
_ _.:.:.;;.;;.:_:...;.;.:;;;.__ p - of any lllld all bldl.
llolrdofEduollllon
RESOWTION

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

$ .20

Zl- 11u1a- OpponuDiiJ

$30

22--M-rrol.ou
2S- PJ.olo.ioMI s.m-

$ .42

$1:30/day

992-lllcldle..Orll

67 5-PI. Pl. .oat

c......
256-G.r•• Dloi.

Pom.eror
985 G ter

458-Looa
S7~Apple Grove

845-Ponload
24 7-l.etert Folb

775-Moooa
882-NowBo..a

643-Anlolo DloL
379-Wolr.t

949-Raehle
742-Ratload
667-CooMIIe

895-Lotart
937-JI.IFolo

367-Choololn
~Vbdo.

245-lllo

56.-ol'eto for Solo
57-M•Ioalt..58-- Fnoite A V....... loe

I \I,\ I 'I 1'1 'I II '
,, I I\ I ' I ' " k

$.05/day

61
qul..62- .... ...~ ... Buy

171-- AuiiOo for Sale

41- Ho- for Heat

1- Cud of Tlu.ko
2-laM.....,.
3-- Amlouac«uaeat.t
4--Ci-woy
!&gt;--- Happy Ado
6- Loot ODd Fo...d
7- Loot ODd Fo...d
II- PubiW: Solo A
AuctiOil
9-- W..,ted to Buy

11:!--- T•uelu for Sale
42- Mobile H-eo for Heat ,..__ v. __ 4 4 Wo
43- Far. . for Rent
MotorcrciM .
Apa,_.t fO&lt; Re~~t
Boote A Moton lor Sale
45-- Funoiollod ROOIOU
Porte, 4 Ace....•
ri•l
46- Spue 1.. Re~i
Repair
47- 1Vontod tD Rent
C...... Equl_.t
48--- EqllipBiea.t for ReDt

11-lhlpWoatod
12- Situatlo,. Woated

~Forl..-oe

l~(DIW'I!Mle ·

14- Jluelnea Tr•iaiDS
15- Schoolo A IDitructioa

16- Radio, TV A CB Repair
17~ Miocolloaeouo
18- WoatedTo Do

51- H-hold Good.
52- Sportias Goode
53-Aatiqueo
~ Mioc. Mercbondloe
55- Bui~"!! Suppli•

Bl'LLETIN B&lt;&gt;ARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

· OILER'S DEER SHOP
St. Rt. 325 Langsville, Ohio
614-742·2076

1--------·

··l

.

Skin,

BP OIL CO.

WEBERS
CHRISTMAS TREES

HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

Homegrown·
Carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; Whitt Pine
4' &amp; Up with a graat
selection of larger
tiM I.
Cal1742·2143 or
742•2979

We Deliver In•••
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

Cut, Wrap, Freeze

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

1:00 P.M • .
Factory 12 · ·
Gauge Choke .
·

11127

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157
We

ORDINANCE 1113
An Ordinance to provide
eddlllonal _,penallllon lor
Vllogo Emp.ooloy-tor IWL
BE IT ORDAINED by the
Countoll
oC tho vu•-of
..,..
P•••~ two-thlr• of ell
•••bore
concurring
thareto:
IECTION i: lhat lor lho
1 - lho VIII- hall
yoor •-.
-..-- •
,..
..t1
In acllva
OIDploymant •• of
November 2, 1112, each
omployH In department
manag-ont Ill• oum of
Three Hundred Dollar•
(S300.otl), MOll employ• In
activo tu ..u... -ptoymont
tho aum of TWo Hundred
Dollare ($200.00), "ch
em(llopo In octiwo pert·Um•
employment the eum of One
Hundred. Flfly Dollar•

-ploy•

Aatlgna of Edward Cond.,
Addr..•• Unknown; Sedle
Garrlaon Conde, AddrUnknown; tho Unknown
Helre, Next of Kin,. Devl·
•••• • Legate
.. , Adml
n1Execulora
and
~~~~ 01 Sadie Garrlaon
lho Unknown Haire,
Next of Kin, Davl..ea,
Leglll!tH, Admlnlttratora,
Encutora
Aaalgna
of
Ked• Guth,and
ooc..
eed, and

u-•

Vouchers ·

D,K••S

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or . .

TOYS

FAIRM
Shelfllodele·Collectiblot
'Rider• In etock"
s-111 Elltion· rShow
Seut

PI-•

QUAUTYPRINTSHOP
2561111St.,lliddlo(IIIII,Oh.

11111-33114 Days,
742-31120 Eve.

1·100·137·1460
Lawn Mowlnsi, •
·. Fertilizing, Weeding;
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Remova.l

STIITIIIG DlC. I, I 992

BENNm
SANITATION

Daeombar Spacial
$8.00
sentor CHtans $6.00
II you need traah pick·
up or more Information

Rnldontlol I Com"""'lol
FrH EltlmatH

RREWOGD FOR SALE
&amp;-26-'12~....

call

Tho•••
Whitt
9154352

SHRUB &amp; I'REE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

U-

or Stan lennett

I

eo::•

CHRISTMAS ··

TREES
Fresh Cut Daily
5' • 8' Tall
OPEN 9-7 ,

Bob Snowden's Residence

Rutland, Oh.
742-3051
SR 124
Ready Nov. 26
11-17-82·1

or::o:

r=====:~~~~1~~~Fll

992·2259

•

EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

.IALEII TWP. RED HILL RD. - Lovely brick ,.nch
homo lhal fulur110 a ftA~place, 3 bedroomo, fullllniohed
banmen~ 2Y. batho, alllc opaca, 2 car 11",.9.8•
ll(lllliancoe. PLUS: 22+ acA~o, bam, pond, oxtla II'OIIar
hookup lencod 11Cf88011. GA~at eo~mlrv looallon on pavacl
rood. '
ASICINQ $131,500.00.

J

'fen·s. of thousands
of people will need blood
during the .holidays. ·

POMEROY - Nice elarter home or r.nlllllnvallm8nd 1Y.
llory home wilh 3 bedroom•. and two loll of 50X100
Meh.
ASKING $18,100. IIIla . . off_,
JUST OUTSIDE MIDDLEPORT - 2 elory frame home
'localacl on Lagoon Rd. hu 3 bedroomo, both, encloaed
1nm1 pard!, lntulallon, and a 24x24 garwoge.
ASKING S27,000.

Still-wondering
what to give?

wo~~~'ly
John =..~
Bla lb•

+

llloragalhld.

American Red Cross

.

S21,100.

VINE STREET - Aflorclablo llur·uppo;l Frame homo
with 2 bedroom•. belh, gao ..,..,. hn~ lndudoa 11111111
lhed.
$8,000. o- mar oonaldar onwl

9~ blood ".W'"· ()nee moie wJ/ be felt for alifelime.

THE S BU~K S iTOPI HEREI IF VOU WANT A
HOME THAra "DEAR" TO YOUR HEART,
lEE Ul AT CLELAND REALTY.
WE OFFER QUALITY, AFFORDABLE HOUSINGI
ttENRY E. CLELAND.....................- ...............112..111

l'R.ACY IAIN.AQEA ..........................,.................MN411

.-AN TRUIIELL.........................- .........- .......M.at~D
OFFICE-.... -

,,

.........._..... - .......,.......- ........._ ....2251

NYA HAll

II

IW

a IIIII

Addr•••

Unlrnown

Davia-, -~~~jnl~tiatOr.;
Exocutono 'and Anlgne
Robart c;onde, Aclclr.....
Unknown; Ollie Condo,
Add roo a Unknown: tha
Unlrnown Haire, Nat of Kin,
Dovl•-· L~~t~alen, Admlnlatnotore, E-utora 111111
AHigne of Ollie Condo,
All*••• Unlal-n; Ed·
ward Conc!o, AdchM
Unknown; tho Unknown
Helre, Nul ol Kin, DovleHe, , L"'l•l-, Admlnlllratore, Executor• and

I wish to thank all
who helped In any
way while I was a
patient at St.
Joseph Hospital.
Thanks for all the
calls, cards,
prayers, and gifts I
received; to Drs.
Escandon,
Schwartz and Dr.
Witherell at
Veterans and Rev.
Grace.
God Bless You.
.Mary Easterday

••d VCR REPIIR
AU MillS

lrl~t Ia Or We

POM-POM,
TUMBLING'
BATON TWIRLING

lEN'S APkIIJt.plANCE
Pli
SEIYI ( E
992·5335 or

All Agn Welcome
Spacial Clall H
YNI' Okll
For Mor8lnformetlon
call 30'1-27'3-3·721

915 3561

Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

Factory choke 12

gauge only

(614) 949-2058

STARTS
OCT. 18th

CHARLIE'S

R&amp;C EXCAVATING.
BULLDOZING

•

SMALL DOZER

HAULING

DAVIDSON'S

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

tl'!.'!llng
~~

614·742·2138

mo pd:

GUN SHOOT.
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

$20.00

WORK.
DRIVEWAY WORK

••d

11ME$JONE
DELIVERY SEIYICE
S•all Doztr Work
S25.00 Ptr Ho•r

PLUMBING
.

31904Lead•l

o••

C,..kRoad

Middle~t~rt,

614·992·7144
10/1/92

IWOIIIIll UTES

992·7553

POMIIOY, OH.
11 -13·'92-1 me.

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Colli
LICENSED end BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591 ·
12-5-tfn

C.JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.

·SIZED LIMESTONE

BINGO

$11,000.

MIDDLEPORT - 1 tloor ,...,. homo wilh 3-! bod""'"''·
COipOit, patio, RNplaco, cellar, recon-y ,..,odolod wilh
blown In lneulation. Include• nice fenced yard wilh

••

10 ol
determine
helre,
next
kin andlh•
,..reona
leoti Dillon end lied to the eatate ot
Thomaa Worry K•ll• Gulh, Doc Need. In
William Young order that • dlelrlbuUon of
be made.
Members ol Pomoroy aald
YouNtlote
are can
hereby
r-ulred
VltlaQO Council
., llhen&gt; 23. 30, 2lc
to
anewer
th•
Petition
In twanly-oighl (21) clayawaft.
or lh• Jut publlo•tlon of
thla nodce which will II•
publlahed once a wHk lor
alx (6) auac... lve wuka.
Public Notice
Tho l•t publication will ...
made on lho 7th clay of
IN THE
Jen1111ry, 11113, and the
PROBATE COURT
twonty·olght (28) day1 for
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO aneworlng will comm.,co
PAUL 11. REED,
on lhlll elate. In caM of your
Admlnlotrator WWA
failure to 1n1wer or olheroltha Ealate of .
wl.. r•pond • required
"'-"- Guth "------"
by lh• Ohio Ruloo of Civil
""- '---D'IJIUon••l Procedure, ludgmont by
delaull will be rendered
-v.. ' ·
you lor lh• r8llol
agelnel
LOUISE R. CONDE, ot
dem.,dod In lhle PatiUon.
Dalocl lhla 25th day of
c..
No-b•, 111112.
Docat
~~l&amp;rJcAi[roN
Robert E. Buck,
NOTICE
BV!
Probalo Judge
To: Olano ~ondo, L..t
Lana It NMMiroed, ~lark
Adclr•• BaiUmoro, Mary·
land, Current ·Aclclr... (11) 30; (12) 7, 14, 21, 21;
Unknown: tho _t,!nlc'!_o••~ (1) 4, 6tc
Helre, Next of
1 card of Thanks
Larry

CHEITER -OAK HILL RD.-Approx. 7U3_..wlth
1~ IIIDry home, 3 bed1110ma, eloclrio heal pump/l:onlr.l
alt well and TPC water, indudoe p..lu,., til.tllo and
t.ftcacl acA~aga, pond, ello, bam, ohed, milk houM,
chicken houM, beautiful Ianning al18.

101291'11211 mo.

for $35.00

A8klorDaU•
143-5316
1 /24/'ll'l/1 mo.
the Unknown ...,,., ,..,.. 0 I';:======~
Kin, DovleHe, Legat..a, I I
Admlnl•lr•lore, Execulore , BISSELL &amp; BURKE
GRANNY'S
•LIGHT HAULING
and Aeelgn• ol Auguet .
! : = y nodflocl
CONSTRUCTION
CRAFTS
•FIREWOOD
lhat you h••• bHII named 011 -w lo--s
Need a Gilt?
BILL SLACK
Deloridllnla In a legal acUoh
.....
Rugs, Place mats,
on lilted Paul U. Rood, 06 ar1s11
992-2269
ww• 0 1 th ·'om 1 to'
Qullts, 5 Types
'
Admlnlatralor
"
'""
P
Plllows, Animals,
•
Eatat• of Katie Guth,
ReiiOdllillg
USED RAILROAD TIES
R
V.
.d
D
Lou'..
lot. Of Small articles.
4+92·tla
'
1111.112
e.r.m Looallohool (SISO.OO).
.
c::;:~at ~1 . ,..;,, ..,lion ~ Stop &amp; Compare
soe and up
· BE IT RESOLVED by the
IECTION
II:
Thle
Orcin·
IIHn
a
..
lgnocl
Ceae
No.
FlEE
ESTIMi'rES
381011
; Council ol the Vill"tt• of
anoo ohall lake enact .,d 27,220 llld Ia panclngln lhe
OPAL HOLLAN
' Pom.ay, •II \ me~nbera
985 •4473
Readlvl... Ohio 41772 be In loroo on November 16, Common PI••• Court ol
CHESTER
lheroto concurring:
GRAVE
Elol~.!:':;·4~s7; l~t'l:
Molge County, Ohio,
667·6179
98s..t356
That tho Clark/Tr-uror
(11) 111,21, 110; (12) 7, 4111
Kalhy ~..... Clorlr/T,...,
Pro bale Dlvlelon, Court
2-7-92-tln .
1-1-30-1 mo. pet
- - - - - - - - ' - - - : - - - - - - - -; VlllogooiPomoroy,Ohio
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
~~;=;;;.;;;~:;;:;.• BLANKETS
For Your Lost
Real Estate General
Metga County, Ohio
~~ obJoct ollh• Peuuon
MICROWAVE OVEN

&lt;

s.r. .. T.....

~For

32-- Mobile Do.,.. f•r Solo
33- Forme for Sole
RateS are for consecutlvtl runS, broken up days will be
LiYMt.N:k.
34- Duo~ BuW;,p
a:c..u.
charged for each day u !lef'8rale ads.
35-l.ote" "".....
165-- S.od A FortlliMr
1-----""M;::;-;...-.=:=;;:w;;ww:;;;:F- , - - ---j 36- Real Eotata W... tod

GaWa Co11111y Melp Co11111y M~n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

..
446-G.mpolb

I I\ \ \' I \I

$.60

Clouified pO(fel cover ehe
following telephone excha"'fel...

1--------

r
''

Mont~y

Rate

Contri!Cts.tee

lAM Copy No. 12,1120

IJ,.....,

""'.....
""". .
........

'
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. M!lllday
1:00 p~. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Weclneoday
100p.m. Thunday
' 1:00 p.m. Friday

Wedneeday Paper
Thunday Peper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

t.hru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12

Panel recommends tougher
measures to control TB

i'

•

10

To place an ad

POUCIES

POMEROY - Dr. J. Wilmer
Lambert, former district superin- ,
tendent of the Central Ohio.Disaict
Church of the Nazarene, will speak
at the Pomeroy Church o( the
Nawene Wedilesday through_Sun·.
day al 7 p.m. nightly and Sunday at
10:30 a.m. ancf 6 p.m; Scott and
Patty Anderson with Lenny the
MIDDLEPORT - Past ~ns Puppet will speak and sirig. Other
of Evangeline Chapter 17 ()ES, . special singing also. Pastor Glen
·
will have a Christmas dinne meet- McClung invites the public.

MID.DLEPORT • Middleport
I Community Association will meet

: mas dinner, 7 p.m. on Tuesday.
: Bring items for needy baskets.

MON~

WEDNESDAY ·
MIDDLEPORT • The Middlepan Literary Club will meet at 1:30
p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs. Eldred
Parsons will revie,;.l "The Girls in ·
the Balcon~" by Nan Robertson.
Roll call will be to clip a column
by a woll!80 journalist.

NEW YORK (AP)- Tubercb·
losis patients should be monitored
once they leave the hospital to
make sure they rake their medicine,
say health experts who call for
tougher measures to fi~ht the .dis·
ease, The New York TlRies reported today.
The rewrt was prepared by a

If Auxiliary
POMEROY - FOE Ladies'
2171 meeting and Christ-

tion form. (A dollar or two to
help defray costs would be greatly .

15
15
15
15
15

6

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
lRAHBPOATATION

I

condium

Words

1
3

Public Notice

[";Voting delegate, alternates elected

suggested ~ his parents that a
positive resillt could come· out of
this family tragedy if they would
give permission to donate Brian's
healthy orpns and_ti•PICS to othc!rs
in great need. Both mother and
father agreed. The thought that
something good might come out
of the tragedy gave them a large
measure of comforL

Days

i.DMsotM? .Take cltorge of your
life turd '"!" it arolllld. Write for
AM LlwJers' - boolcltt, "How to
Malt Frielllls alld Stop Bei11g
l.otle/Y. •Send a self-QildnueJJ,/o~~g,
busiMss·siJe e11velope IJIId a clttck
or mo~~ey order for $4.15 (tllis
illclllllu postage lllllll.alldling} to:
Frkllli.r, c/o Alllll.mtders, P.O. Box
ll562, Clticogo,IU. 6061 UJ562. (/11
Cmtada, sefid $5,05.)

..

Other hostesses were Patricia
Holter, Eileen Buck, Mary Powell
and Frances Roberts. Wilma Sargent was a contributing hostess.

RATES

ippl'ecialed.)
.
Gem vi the Day: We /peoo die
fint six yean aching our children
to walk llld lilt. and the next 15
telfint them to shut up and sit dQwn.

Ann

The Dally Sentinel Pege-7

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES CLUJ
Ill POJIEROY

····~

~leiE•IJIIrtl

UOOOPQoH
1hl1 eel ,OCMI for I
fll Carel.
Uc. Ia. 0050.12

TElFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRinMAS SALE

I ~"·20" Off

IIP1morr., Beginner Seta,
Youth Cuatom Drlvora.
l.Maon• Included wMh
pun:h•••·
l.ocltacl on Scout Cll'llp

Rd., Cheater, OH.
11127

FOR.SALE
Call 6 I 4·992~
6637

St. Rt. 7

c•·••ire,

CHRISTMAS
TREES
5' • 7' TALL
WLEY IAHIH

ADS GET

~~ - · RESliTS

LIKE

DIAMaS

IESIDEHCE
U97S Fl11twtd1 lei.

,.._,,ohio

IOCICI 26) '
IEAIOIIAILE

. . ((MRty

11121111 mo.

.,

"

�Announcenwnls
3 Announcements

WIW HI£ '100 :,o ""

No hunting or Ir-Ing on

IW'P11l0Jr' '«l)
DIDM'r

Raymond Smlth'• firm, .Oal-

llpollo Forry, WV. ·

No hunting « U'MpiMing on
Makllmclhl tann, 31000 Carpentor Hill Rd., Doxtor, Oh.
No hunting or lrnpaalna. dly
or night on Chlrtel Y.e: Fume.

Prevfoua permhe are

wokl.

VIolate~ will be pfOMCuted.

Television

"a:wur&amp;
QQIIF

ICMOOC. .

'IMAT,lll£1

OCNI
AU.
11£
PIM5

DCMTL&amp;r
'01 1M
A$DI&gt;/
TMIQil

O four
Roorrongo lettoro of
o&lt;ramblod words

Vie~ing

\'tl.IDO

L.-,!111

EVENINO
1:00 C2le (]) • CJ&gt; •
ceo-.

••
.

® SavtcJ "' lht ...
~ lquatw One TV Stereo.

o§a!Q
! a ·.

Clll Rln Tin Tin, !&lt;-1 Cop Q
1:05(1) ~·· Campany
1:30 C2le 11J1 NBC - . D
® Ed McM.hon'o 8W"
. . .n:h

42 Mobile Homes

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
AILYard Saln Mull Be Paid In
Advance. OeadiiN: 1:OOpm the

d~y boloro tho od lo to run,

s~nday
edition· 1:00pm Frldoy,
Monday
edition
10:00o.m.

tlndad: 100 People l'o

--=&amp;=-=:::"='==-WEEKLY
11

t.o.

Welahl Now. No Wll Power

H lp u•antad

Naoilod. Brond - · tan.

Nat"'"!, O.Urontoocl. Call
303 "" 1213.
Solurday.
Au omblo pooducto 11 home. Will co,. lor oldorlr lruny-.
ln&amp;ide garage salt: loolt, Iota of Easy! No HIIAf.· You're ..ad " r n t' bed
$200-$500

,-llnl ,.....,..

fillhlng
lacklt, Osbomo,
misc. merchln•
dl~o. Harry
34363
e•lloy Run Ad, Pomeroy, Oh.
O~t SA t43 to Ballay Run Ad,
31)1 houso on right. Noon to
6pm, Doc. 3, 4, 5.

a:

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

direct Fully g&amp;~~.raniMd.
FREE.,l....,~~-~4~~·~·~22:7t.~~~~
lnlormotlon~4 hooW hoe(801)37HIIOO.

In my .........

Cop)ll'lglll

i10~H~•48;;:Y:-;DH:;-;-.~·===:-::::::
_

'AVON" ALL AREASIShore ~r 111M P-'1 Day C.. Cordor
. I
limo wHh ... You'N 1ow1 tho WMI 01 HIIC On J a compeny. HIOCI·IIV:I-13H.
Plu lll.f' I A.ll. _.:311 P.ll. II

0uo111r w

E~&lt;por~eo ... ~o · Tho

AVON I All Allot I Shllloy .-r eor-m FOr Y- Qlllcl'o
Speoro, 30U75-142t.
C.... Coli Uo For A VloM. lnlonl
/Todd..,. 114 441 IU7. p,..
Ritk Peal'5on Auction Company, EARN BIG BUCICS FOR ch II a JSchoot Age 114-448-

full lima auctione1r, complett
servlc1.
Uc1nHd
#!jj;,Ohlo &amp; Wool Vlrglolo, 304a~t lon

CHRISTMAS
Sell Avon. 114 44113351.

WE'LL PAY YOU To Trpo HalliN 12110 In Cenllflary, I~
And -tid IIIII FNIII Hamel 4282.
1800.00 l'or1000. Call1400 2 bedroom mobile homo In
w:E IIW11yn.+) Or Racine OIII,II&lt;I-H2-5858.
t3J itt S. Un- , , N. Aunn,ILIICII42.
2 bodroorno 1250. por month
f150. -urlty dopooh, trooh.
18 Wanted to Do
paid, appilcatlono token• no
polo, ~a-3000 till 5:00 Pll.
24 Hour llderlr Corw In My
Homo OrYocn, 114-2111-MJll.
2 BR mobile homo at Evorgroon.
114-m-2171.
Alt... llono: . . . . . . llondlng,
Still Avollobio: 3 Bedroom
114 411 t831.
Trollw, Both a 112, 5 lllnutoo
...., o1 I give quollty co.. ol From Holzar Hoopnal. &amp;14-446piGio,TT50.
~
.
1ll
"",1-.,
..
1.,:.:.::::-,-~,......,:-::c-c:--:-:-:
Conlllod
,_ 3 Bodroomo 1 112 B•th. Total ·
with _ . . hondlclippOcl. 3114- Elaclrlo Addll9fl Aroa, No Polo,

-·= ·

Employment Services

1224
•

. NOTICE ·
CUI 1
-

-nt

r-

.!!!:•Air

..!!

tR,

EIR TREE SERVICE.
Tt ho ...... TNe Removal,
'Mmmlnii. FrM &amp;tlmootool 1
-~JIIIl'"Aior 4j&gt;.m.
Ot ug11t Porliltll . _wmlll, don't
hotol .r- toaa to tho mill juol
call-1117.

HalrotyAot
Naodld:
Paid - o1t1
•- •
Haoodvmon, Odd Joloo, . . _
Vacotlona Gouron- Wogoo. " 1 n,
Castoo full limo oucllonoorl :.
61:.:.
C-4
:.:.46.::..:_72=67.
:.::·_____ $35. Cro~ ;~~· Hon- IOcoldOor
Errondo. $4.DOp., .Hour.
11Wo45o
lletlnoed &amp; bonded IIIIH 0
_
_ -_:_WV
. _ _ _ _ __
1443.
O~ lo &amp; Wost Vlrglnlo, 304·t37·
IIONEY .uoNEY -MONEY
~or 937-212!1.
$400 Wlc. Or lloro llolllng Poll
T,.. topping a trlnomlng uCorell. Stulllng Enn• AI
hi Mllnoatoo, 3114-+-------....1.------~=-..,
, ~,.(
Homo. Rulli $1 I Solt-Addi1111114411.
770·5

785

wraJ:..': '·-·

·

J[I¥,,~![-//.t Allitt liM WAllRUJ

~ppl~~ ar=c;..~

4-------~--~~~

UIU.

::teo:..

do

Wll

ballvaltllflg,

IX•

)lllloiiOOIII -lffod lliY ..,.
pocMtlor, il~o~-JU.acn oor-:

_.__ __
•.....................
.... --.....,
-.lliMll-.

614-3f7-71138.
Exocutlvo moclulor. 3 BR, 2
bath, 1 ocro on river 101. 40 tt.
patio. 15 mlnutoo N. of wlnllold
on AI. 35. $400 mo. ·plu1

ae CIS Ntwa Q ·

® • Ro-nne Stereo. Q

'a&amp;\MIIIt•-

u.
;zt-:~:!

~; lion- ....
114
Cotllplltl
0322, 1 out lulav. . Rd.

FrMIIollnry.
PICKENS FURIITURI
fMw\llld
Hoo oohoed lia'-lg. 112 tnl
Jen1cho Rd. PL PI ··ne, wv.
call :J04.4l5.1410.
SWAIN'
AUCTION • FURIITURE. a
Olin 81., Qallpollo.- !Ia Uood
lurnlt.... ~~J. ~!!h"' •
Worlt llocoiL · -

GUpCiott
0 New Zorrv Q
.
1:35 (]) .Aridy Gritfltll . •
7:00 C2le Stnior EI)IIWUionl

"""'

- ' . S4Go. Calll14 4• 1 I
TWo ......

Building

C.AN t'IA~PLY
. / W,41T TO \Ill ATCH

--you

po you need a start

In life?

~uch aa y'ou want, lull
or part time from your
,_ 1\ome. No cash
lnveatment, be your

'"'-h

0Wn boat, even if

1

v.ou' ra still a atudenl
lhlt Ia Income that
·•1ceep• going even
! when you don't

end

P'LAn~

TO

CARPENTER SERVKE

-4;1oom Addltiona
-Guller Work
-tJaclrlclll and Plumbing

-4oofing

~rtp:t:n:Xtorior

t. (FfiEE ESTIMATES)

; V: C. YOUNG Ill
~ 992-6215
~
•

V.Mitng Route: Loccol. Wo Han
TheN- llach'-, lllklng A
Ntoe. lt!llllr Caelt Jnoome. 1·
IONIHIM.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
·
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESI!)ENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
(No

Pomeroy, Ohio

s.-ay Calls)

2112192/lfn

11

TREES

•
; &amp; CRAFTS

· BRADFORD'S
Fresh Cut Trees
or Cut Your Own.

. CHERRY RIDGE
East of Darwin on Rt.
681 on Grovel Rood
I Y. Milt to Grove.
-WATCH fOR SIGNS

CELLULAR
_...,..
TOTALLY AUTOIIOnVE PERFIIAIIAIICE

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.Been womng foro good reosonto llichase ocellukr jilone?
ro:.~:V't,,
Pootable
LIMITED

....

TIME ONLY

Real Estate

7:05 (I) Ilev..ty HIUbiHiet

TRYING

Jeoperdyl!fu
® flto Jefferaona

7:30(2). iiJ

f'IN~· TUNE

(]) 0 EOJ!!IIUi1111111
Stereo. GJ.

e You Bel ~our uta
ae Wheel of F-.e Q
C e FamHy Feud
•
(J)

Apartment
torRent

pi-· . . . _,

31 Homes lor Sate
1

acre, 2 IR

tlcMAIIn•lcle.
$35,000. 2 batho~ I wlllo garden
tub. Oalllpolle •orry. 304-8757217.
W11 Sq. ·R ., ll aero
2d
walla, 2
loatlta, aonlng
ooono. Mwlng ftoom, 3bdrm., wal~­
ln - . , 1ully ooopotod, 2 poro
- . -ric - . JC .......

tot,:

-plot•

,.friaonolor, ot-iiid. Nome
Nat'fllonlt, RaaJno, OH. 114-114112210.
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Cortw Lot
llaln-..
lt. -Pt. Pllnn·"t,
W.- 111
Ya.
c.mplotoly "-ted: 2 FUll
Ilathoo, I L:argco Bod_,., HVAC,
-'If. 114-4(a.z201
· ·- . Avollable
lmm
......., 81. llldclopcon. ......
1

·~··. -·~·-·

nloe lot
•
112-730l

I nolahl&gt;oohood;
ll4olld-3113, 114.

from $1U5
per ononllt

-Ha-1FRapertment. ilo_. • - 304,.U-25el.

or

TOll FREE

. t·.,,
.•.o,1ow-•liti4,B·0070
OHIO

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOrnE OF LOTION

32.00
Many more specials.
1

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECt GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

FOREVER
BRONZE
lashon Rd., Racine

"-=·
a%

....

bodooom

112

.

45

Furnished

u1:.eaeo.

·

-~ ·
A•cod: All llllda fn

·-.......
....,,.... .............
--- ........
=-end
~

0111•- • Plcolr-up LooM.
,.,
--.-wiiMthor

Reoenetr nmadtltd 2-:J ol...
In " "MUo,
" - ·beautifUl
""'
full horioo
bE II menU
...... flntilaoo, lo
tOwn, Mkl!'l o.t.aoo. 114-112..
'1M2 alorlpott lot- tlotalle.
ThrM led ·oocu Ranch Home
On 110, 114-

47 Wanted to Rent
II•
.... -BlonooLillo
Door,- 110.- S.. AI
Wantocl To Rent: Hoooie 2111o. '"""Aire..llld••paJt.

_ ... "' ..... Couray, row
1

-:----:-:--"J-:-:--

TRY OUR
SOEL INSULIOD .
· RAISED PANEl GAUGE DOOR

-n.

:t:m.•

..........
1111112,
lumltohocl,
- .. lolt, ollllllng, wiU llnonce,
.... - . t l l l l - , 114-1112-

11QtM211Lt

OPEIERI IIRAUED-Yt IP-$200.00 .

1Wit• ,.rcHu of

o,...,

Door Pin
Mir.
...

35 1.ota &amp; Acreege

-

t..-=. 1:it::' L:..lC:::
....
...... _,,- ,......,

- . 11 I I - -

RVIIIAL

ALL SESSIONS GOOD

KJIIf,

[

~

ACM IWICILB:

111111 · ..... Re-o, booulllul
- ; - . ........ and hlllo.
Call . . gcoocl mop. 1..14-lt:I-

FOR 6 MONTHS . 1
11-2:1-'82-tmo.

11141,At- . .

-~I
Jolooolr

I

...

tO

:.

-~----llotl, :

(1 :00)

'Mil~ tlroo
=---~
~
a ....,, ........
_.;··

~.:. ~~:::;,
F.:rm Suppltr·s
,s L•·,i•slock

76

tiD Croolt and CtuoH .

G NFL Mondoy Night
Match-Up •
8PrimoNewtr:;J

.,,.

.."•

0

MORTY MEE:KLE AND WINTHROP
WH.A.T ~ 'tt:u

:' NAKI~ IN

SHOPCI.M&gt;&amp;'i

61 Finn

liN, ......... lt4

For WHitond Trip To Sot.fh
Bond, IN Nov 13•11, Coli Palllol-

448-171!1.

r~erchandrse

51

Household
Gooda

'"' -· ...

"''

...----~-,,..,

r:;J

e

BARNEY
,AWII TRY TO

·~ctltl~lool ...
of Ilea. oloalt, .. .....
'

I Old P~, a5 Each, 4
YMI Old Atplnoi .lilly - . 114IIJ.7114.

~

Ccow • Colt t12S, CoeUr
PujiiiiW MCI1t 1tl tt10.

Bo I lwlng

HDNE

I'LL GIVE

.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

-,

SCJtAM.lETS ANSWERS
" . .,
Jailer - Motif - Spoon - Unlike - NOT that PAIR
1 had put on two different shoes in order to decide
which pair to wear. Asking my husband his opinion hB
peered over his paper and said, "Well, NOT that PAIR."
NORTH

.

"

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST
+KQ,71
.AKJI02

+93652
.Q6
• J 10 8
+6 53

• 93

+71

SOUTH
.... 10
.65
tQ762

+AKI09Z
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

Rita Mae Brow~ once wrote, "One
of the keys to happtness is a bad memory." Well, assutning she plays the
game, she might be a happy bridge
player, but I doubt that her partners
would see it in the same light.
To remember the cards that have
been ·played, say each one to yourself.
· This way, not only will you look at every card, but also you will have the
cards echoing iri your memory.
There are ways to manipulate the
cards to test the memory of ail
opponent.
On today's deal, you reach an ambitious five-club contract. West leads
the heart queen. East overtakes with
the' king, cashes the heart ace, West
following, and plays the heart jack.
You ruff high while West discards a
low spade. How do you avoid the unavoidable spade loser?
You must assume East has the K-Q
of spades and the happiness of a Rita
Mae Brown. Cash four rounds · of
trumps (discarding a spade from dummy) and the Sjlade ace. Next, lead the

Sototb

West

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass

3+
5+

Nortlt

z•

Hay &amp; Gniln

diamond six tO dummy's king. a diamond to your queen and the diamond
seven to dummy's ace. Dummy is left
with the heart nine and diamood five.
East has the spade king and heart 10._ •
You hold the spade 10 and diamond ·
two.
• ·
Now lead the diamond five. East
will probably remember that be bad
the three and that there is one dia.mond out. Being confident that you
are going to win the trick in your band,
he will probably discard his heart
rather than his spade. Tben sit baclt
and savor the stream of excuses that
East offers to account far his erl'!)r. ·

The World Almanac: 111 Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Photocopy
5 Laa~~Jng
actor
9 Mra. In
Madrid
12 Ftlry·tala
creature
13 Church
calendar
14 Short aleep
15 Politlon
16 Eject
17 Period In
hlatorr
18 Secretary
20 Fury
22 -,you!
23 S.ultllrtrle
24LHI
adulterated
27 YOWl
31 Nailhead
32 Oceano
33 Firearm

own•rs' org.

3-4 Malanchalr

35 c....
36 Phoenix
cagera
37 In lllat place
311 Holds atilt for
photo
40 Alware '
(poet.)

41 Actor Alastair
42 ActorO'Toole
45 One who
bringe
happlnna
411- Khan
50 Needle caat
52 Clare Boothe
53 Madam'o
counterpart
54 Cult
55 Ancient
rallglouo
lnacrlptlon
58 Swill aircraft
(abbr.)
57,NoHCH
58 Son o f - -

DOWN
1 Mediocre
2 WHktntlwalcomlng
lbbr.
3 - and craflo
4 Grew molare,
psrhaps

secret.

c-.

~.

ClleABC-y
Nlglol Football Denver
Broncos at Seattle Saahawks
(L) Slereo. !;!
111 •
Mutpity 11n1wn
Murphy shocks everyone by
her attitude toward the new
boss. (AI Stereq. C

.

or..._ ..

...

tiDHashviiieNow

G Off Road Racing Beja
1000 from Baja, Calif. (T) •
8 Lal't'J King LNol ~ .
Fetllar Dowling MMJ1ysJtltettrt-r.aH

8

f-+--+-1--t

8 Solna

ll Dlfllcutty
10 Fad
11 Copycat
18- Ungtj8
2f- Sparta
23 Sharp rabtlltt
24 AHantlonJIItiin8
25 llorm011
State
261mPOIHt
27 Untltllad
Iabortl'
28 Antalopts
28 Set bird
30 lm)IUdt'nct
(II.)
32 Commotlo!t
35F111talt
1ortuMtalltr
38 Alrlclft land
38Dikota
Indian
38 Apple41CUit
42 Go bJ
43 Protec~ton:

....

44D-

ate ae Lovo '

War
Wally introduces Jack to her
overbearing besllriend,
Nlnky. Stereo. r:;J

111. alii

5 Dirty
8 Not faiN
7 Clalltlflad -

IOUftd

Wretlllllll WWF
lnhlrcontinenlal
Championship: Shawn
Michaels vs. Virgil (T)

8-.30

Eut

Opening lead: • Q

0 WWF Pltma nine

year. Send lor Saglttartws's Astro- GEMINI CilleJ ·u.Junt 20) II your lnGraph prodietlona today. Moll S1.25 strucliona aren't delalled '"d explicit,
plus a long, lililf-add,_, stlimped porsons working for you are not apt to
envelope to Aslro-Graph, c/o this do taaics as you would like them done.
._.per, P.O. Box 81428, Clewlend, The lault won't bo entirely theirs.
· OH 44101-3-428. Be aura 10 state your CANCER (.lww 21-.luly 22) Today
BERNICE
zodlec sij)n.
·
. when you make a mistake you're more
BEDEQSOL
CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-.IM. 111 This is likely lo compound H rather than corriO! I QQ!!!! !!@Y !O Ill~ about bullnesl rect or reaoiVe it. This Ia beca1018 you
Even might bo 100 anrtous to try to rid yourmatt. . you with to keep
your closest conlldant might unlnten- sell or unpleaant laalcs.
llonllly let the cat out or the bag.
UEO (.IUIJ 2J.At11- 221 Retolrk:t disAOUAIIIU8
211-Feb. 111 Uauanr agreements bolweeo; you and your
your sense of liming can bo rallad Upon, mate to your housellolcl loday. Matttll'll
but today lhere Ia a chllnce you might could get worse If lhay are discuued In
try to pull! , _ or projects forward front of in-laws or outaklera.
bofote .-ythlng Ia ready.
VIRGO CAlli- . . . . . 22) A sMOUS
PISCU (Fell. 20 M rail 20) &amp;- : Ill In problem could erupt botuen you anci a
your
II J)OIIIble lodoy, pro- co-WOrker·today If you arotoo crnlcal ol
llo¥. 311, , .
vtdad you atlt:k to your orlgiMI game hil or her~. II you can't say
J)WI. Wilen you begin tom- chatngel, aomathlllll c:onatrucllve, lt:a bolt to say
The year aheocl could bo an Import..,! lhey could hOM a OleQMI,.. affect on nothing at all.
one lor you witere friendlhlpa aro con- · -~~~ora.
LIMA (Jiepl ZS.OCL 22) This might nol
cerntd' Your Intimate circle of pall · ARRI (Melcll 21·Apll 111 Thla is not boone or your bolter daya for m...,aglng
cotild bo enlarged and even ponona • the day to offer unsolicited bull.- or · ltOU&lt; penonll financial alhllrs or the
whli dropped oil the board might ,_,• . fintnclll Cldvlce to frlenda. Even If your m.,..... alflirs
elee. Try 1o
.. the plctufe.
. opinion II requeatad, you'll atiU bo held , avoid 1 . - 1 a of thlt natt.n.
IAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 Dtc 21) IICGOUntab4e lor your suggeattont.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. :M-Now. 22) Self-Inter·
G~ agalnat lncllntnlone1oday to tum ' TAUIIUS (ApiiiNiar 20) Where Your •
can be advanced loday anc1 IIIII Is
lnalgnlllcant nega~ve factors Into penon81 performance Is COiicet ned, · well anc1 good, pro•1ded you don't step
IOII)tllllng garganlu..,. If you're QC!Ing you lllould do rather well today, but II on ..,yone•atqea In the pro.-. Unforto bloW ·t h!nlll out of proportion. make there Ia a poulblllty that your compan- tunately. this might be exactly what
lUre they're poaltl... Major changes aro Ions or UIOCIIIAII might make mlfl1ekea · yoio'll do.
'
ahead lor Seglttltlua In the Comlllll 'that will ·11ffec1 you.

I.

Pus
Pus
Pau

4+
Pass

a•

.

11-II·H

tAK&gt;4
+QJB

l

IT MY
'BEST
SHDTII

'-lot-. 210 lo

IOOiot.'IIJWJa.-.

84

MAKE MY SISTER
'lONIE MAE
PEEL' AT

......... - - Todtr
IIi

Tho _ _ .. .....

Young Rldera

I:D6(J) MOYIE: Or. No (2:25)
1:30 W G iiJ BJonom Joey's
job Is threatened by an
18-year-old video store
manager. (A) StereO. Q
(l) 0 (J)
American
ee.....- Ron Brooks
pursues an ·aging drug
dealer, who Ia smuggling
marijuana. Stereo. Q ·
1111•
Hurta Alire
John puts his relatiOnship
with Georgie Anne at risk by
spying on her. Stereo. Q
G NFL Monday Night
Magazine Saanre Sailhawks
former running back Dan
Doornlnk, Saahawks nunning
back John L. WitHams and
Denver Broncos wide
receiver Mark Jackson; 1977
AFC champions.
9:00(2)8 0 MOYIE: 'A Town
Tom -Apart' NBC - y
..
!!fitt at the Movlta (2:00)

a•

,

•

IT leNT~ EASY .Pe
IT MAY SOUND.

A O::W.~INATION
"IRDI-IOI.ISF AND
04.-n:::HER'eMITT.

-IIOrS

· llnALliD PIICII
ta:7-$275.00 16a7-$450.00
Wlh 2 Tninsmltla..

Ill, . . . . . . . . . . . . -

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

Deer Heads.••••••••••;........'19000
..
$
00
Turkeys ........................... 175
Fish .........................5400 per Inch
Call (304) 895-3386

,...._71112..--0

...,. por lnoludlng •
-liMioiiWnll- Wr70,
....._
• Ill up, ollllllng,
1700
1-100-

~"--::====-=-=·==·
:::-:,._.: -: :", :
Itow ~ . • • '·

'fllnoaita 111-7 .............

1 I

''•·

::1...

A ax cod ,_~Oil. 1ft.

trim, . ._
........ - Jtlntj . . Ill
. ..
..
..
-......
......._

Larae ......
Or

for sale

Moton:yciiS

_......., ....
ox 12.100, lcollwatw
..
$22!!/mo. lnclucloo ........... :::::- 11t ... '"" .....
oocurnr c1opoo1, no polo; 114H2-D18.
Ill oloolr, 11110, ,....._
1017.

0ne

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

aft er 5 p.m.
"'":,~,:-._. """'"'"
~----------~~----------~~end~~~ndo.~~---32 Mobile Homes

74

...........
YIOIOiloho JIX.11 . .-.·. " '1111:
....
W1olle Qual .... ..... tiOI.c.ll11t
.....
Pioono: .......1171.

. _ In Ewlngtoco With IJC

Z411UIOrltusu413.
TWo ....,., ono aero,

Herman teaches a subject he
knows nothing about sex
education. (A) Stereo. Q
®. MOY(E: No Mercy (R)
(2:00)
0 CaM CloHd People
hOping to rtght the Injustices
done to them seek the help
of highly skilled private
investigators after failing to
find help witllin the system.

...
end ...
.........
..............
.....,c.a.
-·end -. .......----......7101.
,
.
fGI;,._,_..,
..,.....=-=: . • ·- . .
ec:- ...

Rooms

939·2126

..

()) De GauHe and Franca
The military leader and
president of Free France is
profiled, along with the vast
changes that overtook his
nation in the 20th century.
(3:00) Stereo. Q

Catanlll " In 11 0111 a Papllr.
0338.
Complollf Fumiahod mobile
looonl, 1 m i l l - - . ~~r. No Pale, CA. 114- ~

1111

992·7013 or
992-5553

~

.....

rottl·- or ..anth.
Starting II $120/mo. Ollila Holol.

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

Stories Bluce carpet fibers
prove an i~valuable clue in a
murder. (PI 2 ol 2) Stereo.
·

~~~
'":
II Ilolonoo 7 P.ll. 114-441-

Two looclooom _...... on
Mut:; A'llnue, Polnerori IM-

$6995

$orvlct rtiAII

$1111. Clll114-lla-71U EOII.

Rooma lor

Specl!lilzfng In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

GDMOV. I~:ntoeSwonllnthe
Slont (G) (2:00)
(l) 0 (]) D FBI: The Untolcl

Mualcal
lnatn.unenta

.

By Pltllllp Alder

7:35 (J) Sanford • Son
1:00 W G iiJ Frnlt Prlttco of
Bel-Air Will returns from
Philadelphia In trend%..
fashion. (A) Stereo. J.,!

f

.

tonight

G Scltaap Talk

.-:

_

A sleight
of hand

8 Croaartre

Sf

.

+J3
.974 3

Clll The Wallono

Tt~t ~C.ONOMY!

&amp;-h 81rMt Illddlo)iO{I, Ohio,
.._ _ 1 ar· utlllll•
lne.-, dop I ro roqulrocl,
304-aa-iHI. .
'
Funolaloocl Apt. 107 Second 1112 Flllera- . _ lor II
A...uo, Gollpollo.L 1 Bedroom Contino. ....._ - h3Wo. UIUIIJH l'ald, 114-446- 1100.
)(J. . - - . · 4411 Allor 7 P.llr.
-~~
F....-, 3 Roome • Both,
Cleon, No Polo, Reforonco a IA. --~11roo
ll-7a-11.
IJo-'1 Roqulrocl. 114-441-1518.
A·T, •11LT. Ifll. :r;
Orao:IOCII lvJnco, 1 and 2 bod- 111-101•
room opoll- 11 VII'M•nor
Md
Rtver.lae
Apailononll m llldollaiiOrl. FrOm

·

A Complere rhe chuckle ' quolod
. V' by filling in t.,e missing words
t....-l........JL......L.--1,-.1.--' you develop from step No. 3 below.

I.

BRIDGE

IlliG ceEvenlngSiota

• (614) 378-6153
• ·s-12 and 6-10 pm

YOUNG'S

Edition Q

G SportaCeittar
8 Monaytlne

INOIJCEI
BR apoirtmonL No peto. 30COHIO VALLEY PUIUSHING CO. 1
8'15-1381.
do ......
2bdrm. apta., tohll •*trlc, .,..
wiUt )IICI)IIt .... - loWidry
HOI'
..
the
mall,...l ~ haftln-lgalocl room faciiMIN - t o oc1ooo1
tho --.g.
In tcown. ADDiiciilona avallabla
II: Vllloge ·o..,. Apia. '"' or
call114-182-1711. EOH.
·
~----Eom
l1..aOO WMIIIY, For Quick
.... l-'lfi-11H.
.

f~ yra end up. Earn at

I. 15 16 '· I

·1doesn't seem to be --··--."

· (A) Stereo. Q

A SA)(OPt-ION~

.

llololle Homo 14170, 2 Bed·
.-no, Fumllllod, Central Air I
Hoot. 614-44641115.
Panty tumtohod, good cllln
condition, yard porch, aliove
Haven, At. 33, 30W82-24M
anrtlmo.
Unlia'nlahod, PrivO.o Lot, 11&lt;1Zfii-3CII8, or 814-441-3210.

44

OpportunHy

: YOUNG PEOPLE.

lJ

Business

L A Mc I l

into the life of a black girl. •

~

Ftnancial

21

A N L A T I~
Overheard at party: "Tha
•. I~::.. ....,,~TI-,Ir-TI--1
government keeps saying our
. . . _ .
economy is on the right track. ,
....__._
............~,__..__. = The
·big problem is, lhe train

=:9-niJIC
® • Slltr Trek: Tfit Nelli
~tlo!tC .
.
0 e EootaiUoHUIItnt Tonight
Stereb. C
i1J 'NheeTof Fortuna C
0 Q u a - Ltlp samleaps

· SUppllea

Fumlolood, 2 or 3bdnm., lor rent
In Country llobllo Porlr. .Woohor/
dryor'at.lr3at2MI mon., 814-H2·
5-8221.

I

HEGTI

r - - - - - - - - - ;··.

~=11'/l.lltm
(J) e Ma- ... Willi

do_.. 304-11374313.
2117,

TRivoc -

®~ngW­
Stereo.

(l) 0 In

55

I
I

Sq-. One TV stereo.

... INilll 111c1
Ill; - M uha
.......
...,
I
a .......

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

w-

E

....

for Rent

e

ABC Ntwa Q
CD WheN In lht
to
Sartdlego? Stereo.
(J)

~

'!'
~

OllaoOyv.

(l) 0

!he

low to form four simple words.

8

MQN.. NOV. 30

•

_'_~_.~_::_.~_'_;s_...:(C!~~\-JLt.~s·

4Sc::..
..-+-+--+--1

10:00®New•C

NQr1ham

:a

4e
47 Sllade of tan
48"-tapert
51 Plpa-fltiiota
unit

Exposure Gultt overcomes
Maurice; Holling won'l accept

s~~~ Stereo. Q

~a.=9oontltr

Dlyl
Wltii CltaiJJt o.nJtia Charlie
Daniels, Marty Stuart and the
Nitty Gritty Olrt Band perform
at the lamed Weshlm
lesllvil. (1 :00)
·

G MlcltiiJ Tllotltp~CM'a Oft
Road Champlonlltlp QrancJ

Jllrlot

.

.

- .

ew-o 700 Club llflth Pat .

Dll;YML

'MTMOKJGVK
. JMIXBLM

W 'F

BUWTMOLXIIK

FM

LG
BWEMV.'

RD-Utaon (

10:30()) MOYIE: From Ruatla
W1Ih J.cm (2:30)
1i:OOWe CD illll!l ID •
Ntwa
.
~

.o

AMY MD

VM

TOWML.

· PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There ate on!y lhrse ~ In Hoily'Nood. Y-.
r middle age and: Gee, Bob, you're looking good. ' - Robert F00101ar.

..
•

�...... 10-The Dlllly Sentinel

Monday, Nowmber 30, 1812

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Scenes from Pomeroy Christmas parade captured

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Seattle
upsets
Denver

127

Page4

Vol. 43, No. 154

ciatioo's open house. l'he llollt carried members
or the church as they caroled tor the crowd or
peo1ple that turned out tor the paralle ud shop·

chants Assoelatloil, wu featured In Sunday's
ChristDIU parade Ia Pom~..~~ the daughter or Mary H~ ol
The parade

Sunday's Cln'lstmu p8rade In Pomeroy. Tile
parade and open house, sponsored by the
Ponleroy Merchants Asaociadon, brought sever-·
al hundred people to the buslneas district for
sboppiDg with flmlrlte local merchants.

Your Social S~curity ''
By E~ PETER~ON
Sot1al Secunty ,
Mauger iD Atheos
"Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) bep·
eficiaries will receive a 3 percent
increaSe in the benefit chec;ks that
they ftlCcive oo Dec. 31, " said Ed
Pett.rson. Social Security m311ager
in Athens. "The raise is a result of
annual 'cost-of-living' increases
ICquired by Social Security law."
For inc!ividual Social Security
aelhces. the average monthly benefit will increase from $634 to $653.
Iii a family where bolh spouses are
lltadiciaries, the monthly benefit
'll(ill increase fro~ $1,029 to
~1,106. Average disability benefits
so up from $608 \O $627 per
inoolh...
~ "The maximum monthly SSI
benefit for one person wtil be
increased from $422 to $434 and
the rate for a COU{lle goes up from
$622to $652, " said Peterson.
The annual increase in both
Social Security and SSI benefits is
based on the rise in the Consumer
Price Index .. Other changes that
will become effective January 1.
1993 are based on "automatic
adjustment' provisions in the law
and are tied to the increase in average wages.
• Although lhe Social Security
and Medicare laX rate does not go
up in 1993, the "wage base," the
maximum amount of earnin~s
11xed for Social Security , w1ll
increase to $57,600 from $55,500.
The combined Social Security and
Medicare tax rate remains ·at 7.65
percent for employees and employers and 15.3 percent for lhe self·
employed. ·
• The Medicare "wage base"
will increase to $135,000 from
$130.200. People who make more
11Jan the Social Security wage base
of $57,600 will pay the Medicare
portion of the Soc1al Security tax
on earnings up to the new Medicare
wage base. (The Medicare portion
of the Social Security tax is 1.45

Miami University student with
!'leningitis in critical condition
: MAYFIELD HEIGHTS, Ohio in southwest Ohio about 30 miles
(AP') - · A Miami (Ohio) Universi- nonhcaat of Cincinnati.
ty freshman diagnosed with
Me~ingococcal meningitis is
meningocoa:al meningitis was .in i contqiOUS and can be deadly, but
critical condition at a hospital ' the cfiance of cootracting the distoday.
eMil tluouJh Close COIIIICt is tMc
. Kristin Emmons, of Chagrin i~ 1,000, said Dr.. William Browne,
Fa1iJ. became illlasl week and was .director of ~~ University's Btu·
botpitalized on Wednesday, ~d : dent~th s;erv~
university spokeswoman Claue I Menmglus, an inflammation of
w~. Ms. Emmons' age was not jthe three membranes thai envel~
ava1Jeble.
the brain and the spinal cord, 11
,. Ma. Emmons is a business and cauacd by a bacteria tllat does not
economics major' at the university, survive long outside the body.

they eDJoyed 011e ol Pomeroy's lar&amp;e&amp;t parades
and.shopped with their favorite h!cal merclluts.

'

At Peopies, we welcome loan requests of every
size. While other lenders encourage you to U5e
their high-rate credit catcls. we sdU make
person~ loans In amounts as small as $5001

Applying for a personal loan at Peoples Bank
couldn't be easier. Our staff loves to make loans.
And since they don•t have to make loan decisions
"by the book", they can give your application the
· Individual attention It deserves.

By ftnandng your purchases with a loan
Instead of a credit carcl. you'll have just
one affordable monthly payment to
make. Just think of the extra cash
you'll save by eliminating that
stack of post-holiday bills!

For your convenience, we make loans
at all three Peoples Bank locations.
Or If you prefer, simply
complete the application
below and mall It to:

Peoples Bank,

r.o. Box 518,

Point Pleasant. WV 15550

Most lenders want an upfront,
non-refundable "application ree·
before they'll .even consider your request.

We promise to get back 'to you
.within 24 ho'urs of receiving your request!
'

Not usl It doesn't cost anything to apply
for a loan at Peoples Bank.

lhlPeoplesBa*
~

..

-flliC

And In addition to waiving appllcaHon fees, our
Interest rates are substantially lower than those
•
charged by finance companies.

Mason

Polat Pleasant

773-5514

675-1121

New Haven ,
882-2135

---------------------·---------------------•

Appllc~nt ~please printl

· Co-Applicant Of joint accoun~

$·--~--~--~----loan Amount Reque&gt;led

Name

Address/CIIy!Siate/Zip Code
~ome 1P"'ho
__
ne_________
__)__}_
Date ol Birlh

Social Securily Number

Name

~

~if different from

~~~~~~~~~~

Social Seairily .Number

Employer's Name ·

FlnandallnstltullorJSavlnp Aa:ounl I

Employer's Address/City/SiaJe/Zip Code

AUio Mak6'Modei/Year
Check One: o· Own Home

Occupation/Years Emplo)"'d There

$

$

Morlpae Payment
EmplpYer'•~

Mortaase Ba'-:o

Years AI Present Address._ __

s

applicant)

OaVIIme Phone You May Be Reached At

Home Phone
__:}__:}_
Dale of Birlh

Flnandallnstltullon/Checking Account I

Cl Rent

Years At Present Addms

S

Annuallncome

S·=--,--Qther Income•

.

'Alimony, child MfPO'I:OI...,... fTIIIftlnlne• nMd not be cMidoied ~ ~.:ll..lflM for crwdlt

.

Esl
:-::lm-al-:-ed-:-:-:
Mark
-:-ec""'v""a-:-lue
--,
0""
1,.,-Home

~hank · 'You!
•

. .-

.... - An open house will be held
Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
As a part of the open house, a
memorial tree for deceased members placed outside the center will
be lighted. .
Inside another memorial tree
will be dedicated. On it hangs
wooden ornaments, each one dedi-

ACCESS OHIO plan reviewed
by officials Monday in Marietta
Public offwials and private citizens from the nine counties comprising District 10 of the Ohio
Deparunent of 'Fransponation got
the fust look at the draft plan for
ACCESS OlllO • the Slltc's 30·
year multimodal statewide trans·
ponation plan. The unveiling of the
ACCESS omo draft plan came at
a Monday afternoon public meeting
at the Holiday Inn in Marietta.
Area citizens, including Kenner
Bush; Athens, and Carl Dahlberg,
Wellston, both associated with the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Plan·
ning Commission ' s ·Highway
Users' Committ~, were {!leased
·that four of their high prionty concetns 111e included in the plan. State
Route 32 (the Appalachian Highway), U.S. Route 35, U.S. Route
33 , and U.S . Route 23 are all
included in the first part of the plan

- called the "macro" level. The
macro-level designates the major
transportation corridors in the state.
Many of these macro-corridors,
especially in Southeastern Ohio,
are part four-lane and part tWO·
i!lne. The two-lane gaps on the
major routes· need to be upgraded
to four-lane, thereby completing
the corridors. Although specific
projects and timetables will not
result from ACCESS OHIO, the
goals statewide will be to complete
the corridors as funding becomes
a,vailable. ·
A series of public meetings at
this level are bemg held throughout
Ohio, staring with the one in Marlena.
"If we have consensus on: this
fmt phase, we' Ufinali2e the action
plan," stated John Platt, ODOT's
Assistant Director for Transporta-

--Local briefs----.
Patrol probes three-car wreck
A Rutland woman was injured Monday afternoon in a three-car
Dottie J. ~s. 47, RL 1 Beech Grove Road, Rutland, was
aansponcd by Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where slle was treated and released. CremC'a!S was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Robert E. ciemeans,
49, RL I Beech Grove Road, Rutland.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Mr. Cremeans and Jason T. Hart, 16, Main Street,
Rutland, were westbound when Cremeans slowed for lnlffic and
was struck from behind by Hart.
Hart then bounced off Cremeans and struck a vehicle part:cd on
the right berm. The parked vehicle is owned by Shelv' J."Kennedy,
age WllqlOited, Union Street, Rutland.
No citations were issued. CremC'a!S' vehicle sustained moderate
damage and wu driven from the scene. Damage to Kennedy's vehicle wasllared as light and was driven from the scene. Hart's vehicle
sustained moCiente, disabling damage and remained at the scene. ·

Deer-vehicle wreck reported

,

A Middlepon wonli n's vehicle sustained moderate damage
Monday afternoon when it struck a deer on State Route 124 in Rutland Towosbip.
.
. I
According to a report from the Gallia-Meills Posl of lite State
Conllnued o~ . page 3
'

'

cated to someone special, either invited to either come to·the Center
living or deceased. Names of those to make the donation or mail it in
remembered are inscribed on the · with the name of the relative,
friend, neighbor or church member
colored ornaments.
A donation of $5 is requested 10 be remembered. After the holifor each ornament with all the days, the ornament will be given
money to be used toward providing either to the honoree or the person
meals and homemaker assistance to who make the donatiori. Donations may be maiiC!fto the
lhe homebound elderly.
Anyone interested in participat· Meigs Multipmpose Senior Center,
ing in the memorial tree program is P. 0 . Box 722 , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

wreck on State Rou1e 124 in Rutland Township.

Address/Cky/Stale/Zip Code

~·~~~~~~---­
Daytime
Phone you May Be Reached AI

Senior Clti;r.ellll Center. The personalized orna·
meats, such as the one being put oa the tree here ·
by Eva Rohsoa, are $5 with the money goiDg to
help homebound seniors.

FOR SOMEONE SPECIAL • Many orna·
menta In appreciation or someone special or In
remembrance or a loved one already adorn a
memorial Christmas tree at the Meigs County

tree will be dedicated
· . during ·open house,Thursday ·--

A. HOLIDAY LOAN FROM PEOPLES BANK .
CAN PUT YOU IN THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT!

1 Section, 10 Pa;ea 25 cenla

A Muldmedla Inc. Newspaper

Middleport's holiday shopping

~emorial

I

percent for employeeS, 2.9 percent
for self-employed)
• Currently, the amount of
wages needed to earn one Social
Security "credit" is $570. In 1993,
it will.be $590. Since the maximum
number of credits that may be
earned each year is 4, anyone earning more than $2,360 in 1993 will
receive 4·"credits" for the year.
cro be eligible for Social ~ecu- .
rity benefits, a worker needs a specific number of credits. The number depends on the worlrer s date of
birth and type of benefit involved.
Most people need 40 credits to be
eligible for retirement benefiis, but
some younger people qualify for
disability and survivors benefits
with as few as 6 credits.)
• The maximum amount of
money that beneficiaries between
the ages of 65 and 69 can earn in
1993 without reducing the amount
of their Social Security benefits is
$10,560. In 1992, the limit was
$10,200. For every $3 a person
earns over the new limit, $1 is
withbeld from his or her benefit.
• For individoals under age 65,
the corresponding limit will be
$7,680 in 1993, up from the current
level of $7,440. For every $2 a per·
son under·age 65 earns over this
limit, $1 will be withheld from
benefits. (The earnings limits do
not apply to people aged 70 or
older who contmue to earn wages.)
Social Security and SSI benefits
increase auto11Jatically each year
based on lhe rise in the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI·
W},:-formerly known as the cost·
of-living index." The CPI·W is a
measure or what wage and salary
workers pay for items such as
ho11$in~, food and beverages, transportauon, clothing, and medical
care. It affects more that 100 million Americans, including those on
Socil!) Sec~ty.
· Federal pensions, and workers
· whose labor contracts allow for
such raises.
·

Pamero7. The streets were fUied witll people u

EASTERN MARCHING
• The award
'-ninlnc Eastern Hiah School Man:bln&amp; Band,
. under the dlrecdoll or BW Hall, IIIJ1icbNited In
Sunday's Christmas parade ln downtown

·

season will be ushered in Thursday

1

HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS ·This
• dlte-bellrded red-suited fellow oa th.is slel&amp;h •
better 1u1cno • Santa Cla111 • certainly caucht
the attention of every child who turned out for

upperJOL

Middleport Christmas
parade this Thursday

wu held In conjucdca Wllll the unual opea
llouae olthe Pomeroy Men:llants Association.
Several huadred people turned out for the
pa.-.le and to shop with their favorite local mer·
cbants. .

1992 HERITAGE QUEEN· AprU Hadsa,
1!1!12 Herlta&amp;e Queen tor the Po•eroy Mer·

WtdDnday, doudy. HJab Ia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, December 1, 1992

CoPYrlslh'" 11ft

TRINITY CHURCH CAROLERS • Trinity
· Church or Pomeroy ttealed this attracdve float
ror Sunday's annual Christmas parade held in
. cooJunctiO!,_wl!!l_ the
Merchants Asso-

Low tuniaht .. 3011.

Pick 4:
4537

-

i

\

night at 6 p.m. with a Christmas
parade carrying out the theme
"Avenue of Trees".
.
The parade, which requires no
advance registration. will form on
Front Street, and from there move
ur Diamond to North Second, trav·
e down North Second to Mill, up
South Third to Main, over to South
Second, and dOwn to Diles Park.
Santa wiU then move to the T at
the intersection of North Second
and Mill to give treats to the children. At that site also will be a float
from which the community band
will perform as Santa greets the
children. In the event of rain, Santa
will go 10 the drive-through of Peoples Bank.
Entries in the parade will be
judged with trophies to go to the
winners in lite categories of best
walking unit, best marching unit,
best religious, best Christmas spirit,
best equestrian, and best theme,
The Middleport Community
Association is sponsoring the
event Traffic control and other
assistance.will be given by Middleport village police officers. .
Many of the stores will be open
until 8 p.m. that evening. Popcorn ·
UP GO THE DECORATIONS· Wayne and Debbie Davis or
and hot chocolate will be sold by
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, were amoaa many resldeats wbo look
the Middleport Arts Council outad~antage or Monday's moderate temperature to put up outside
side their headquarters on North
Christmas decoratloDli. Here Debbie bangs one or the 26 wreaths
Second. Inside will be a country
used by the Davis' on tbe windows of their two story home.
store with a variety of candies and
crafts for sale.
Shoppers are invited to sign up
Parking meters have already 75 s:io gift certificates will be
at
any of the IS participating
been "freed" for the holidays by given away. Some weeks there will
be
one
drawing,
others
two,
with
Evening and Sunday hours
stores.
Middleport Village COWicil, and a
merchant promotion is underway. lhe final one to take place on the from now until Christmas are
planned by several merchants.
During .lhe weeks before Christmas Monday before Chrisbnas.

Harman arraigned on murder
charge; hearing December 7

Linda Harman of Pomeroy was by Columbus Attorney William
arraigned on Monday rooming in Meeks.
Meigs County Court. She is
According 10 George McCarthy.
charged with the weekend murder assistant prosecuting attorney for
of her husband, Michael D. Har· Meigs County , Harman faces a
man, 50.
possible penalty of IS years to life
tion Modes, at tlie Monday Mariet·
Harman. 38, is charged with one in prison on the charge, and up to a
ta meeting.
count of murder, a firs t degree $15,000 fme.
Once the macro-level of felony. She is accused of killing
Harman is the fourth person to
ACCESS OlllO has been finalized, her husband at their Kingsbury be chllrged with murder in Meigs
work will begin on the '"micro" Road residence late Friday. Har·
level of tbe plan. the micro-level man's body was taken to the
wiH deJermine the importanl, Franklin County Coroner"s office
smaller corridors . In District 10. for an autopsy immediately after
State Route 78 through Monroe the incident Funeral arrangements
and Morgan Counties is a good are now pending at the Ewing
example of a. micro-corridor. Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
MARlETTA (AP) - AuthoriUpgrading of micro-corridors will
Meigs County Court Judge
ties
aie trying to determine whether
also be a goal of the overall access Patrick H. O'Brien set Harman's
the
deaths qf two young women
Ohio plan.
bond at $5 ,000 cash or property
and
the disappearance of a lhinl are
OOOT officials and consultants bond. She is incarcerated in the
related.
on ACCESS OlllO are about half· . Athens County Jail, since no
The slayings of Terri Roach, 18,
way through lhe two-year time to accommodations are available in
of
Belpre, in 1990, and Ronda
complete the overall plan. Platt the Meigs COWity Jail for women.
Manley,
18, of Marietta, on Aug.
hopes the macro-level of lhe plan A preliminary hearing has been set
not been solved. Patsy
24
have
can be presented to Ohio Governor for December 7. She is represented
Sparks,
19,
of Marietta, has been
George Voinovich and the Ohio
missing
since
she was seen in a
General Assembly by the end of
Parkersburg,
W.Va.,
bar on April
Januruy.
22.
Wben completed, the document
Washington County Sheriff Bob
will be a "vis1on for Ohio's ttansSchlicher
said his department and
pprtation future," said Platt .
police
in
Marietta
and Pan:ersburg
ACCESS OlllO will also ''take the
are sharing information.
mystery out of transportation for
"There is a poSSibility that one
economic development," be added.
or
more
of the cases could be relat·
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
In other words, economic developbut
I
don' t think !here is any
ed,
ers will know exactly where to government's chief economic fore·
casting gauge turned hi~her in evidence that would link them at
expect transportation improveOctober after having fallen m three this time," Schlicher said.
ments.
Parkersburg Police Lt. T.A.
Short-term transportation of the previous four months, the Dent
said: "In my mind, I can't say
Commerce
Department
said
today.
improvements which might result
we're
dealing with the same perThe
Index
of
Leading
Economic
from ACCESS omo could take as
son.''
Indicators
jumped
0.4
percent,
the
little as five years to complete.
Ms. Roach and Ms. Manley
Long-term plans will take Ohio to Commerce Department said in its graduated from the Washington
,
first
post-election
report
on
th(}
the year 2020. ACCESS OIDO wiD
County Career Center, a joint vocaaddress all types (or modes) of index. It had edged down 0.1 per- tiona! school in Marlena in south·
cent
in
Seplember,
revised
from
transportation, including rail .
eastern Ohio. Ms. Spalts attended
water1 air, even bicycle routes. not minus 0.3 pert:enL It fell in August, the school bul dropped ouL
rose
in
July
and
feU
in
June.
just highways,
Ms. Roach' s body was found
The index is inlended to llrecast
ACCESS OHIO will include
just outside Marietta near Ohio 676
economic
activity
six
to
nine
many oth~ goals, including preon July 11, 1990. She died around
serving Ohio's current transporta· months in advance. In the past, June 5 of head injuries from a blunt
lion systems; devising alternative three consecutive declines have instrument, according to the death
methods of funding highway pro- sometimes but not always foretOld · certificate.
·
jects !hit could include the private a recession.
Ms.
Roach,
a
waiuess,
was last
The index's recent movement
sector and toll roads; and meeting
seen
June
28,
1990.
·
the needs of all citizens of the state, . fits with analysts' belief that the
Ms. Manley died Aug. 24. Two
including handicapped and disad- economy still faces a struggle to · boys walking through Oak Grove
vantaged, by providing more public mount a sustainable recovery. They Cemetery found her body about
ttansportatioll.
' . had expected the modest rise in five hours later, Marie!ta Police
October.

County this year. Donald Lindeman of Racine will go to trial later
this month for the June murder of
Long Bottom storekeeper and postmaster Howard Lawrence. Fred
Drennen and William LeMaster are
accused in the 1991 murders of Jeffrey S. Halley and Jeffrey L. Hili·
ley, a father and son from Gallipolis. Their trials are set for next year.

Marietta authorities
hunt link to '90 slayings
Capt. Roger Dutcher said. She was
naked from the waist down, but
Dutcher would not say whether she
was sexually assaulted.
.
The death certificate said she
died of head and chest wounds·
caused by a sbarp-instrwnent.
Marietta police have interviewed 300 people. Blood.samples
have been taken from 50 people
Dutcher said.
'
Mrs. Sparks' ~randmother
Juanita Sparks, sa1d her grand:
daughter was last seen tallting with
someone in a car outside the bar in
~crsburg, across the Ohio River
about ,15 miles south of Marietta
She said Ms. Sparks knew Ms:
Roach and Ms. Manley.

Figures show
U. S. economy
getting better.

·

days until'
Cliristmas

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