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                  <text>Pllgl 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Daughte~

explains why she won't
worry about ·her f'lther at Christmas
Dar Au I 1nden: You ubd
why cllildren WOUld igncn • 84year.OOS ,.all who says. "I did my
best. • Well, hele'1 why I igncn my
84-year-old fllhlec.
When I wa5 12. my falber""' ¥ted
the family should 1110ve 111-. nic:«
holue 50 miles from his job. The
move was an expensive. one and
Mom had 10 go to wort. Dad bought
a new car for Clllllllluting while Morn
walked a mile to the bus stOp.
Dad spent his weekends at lhC
II'BCk, playing the hones. If one of
us was sick, dial was Mom's responsibility. If the plumbing broke, it was
our fault My sistm and I worbcl
our way lhrough college. Dad neve3'
gave us a dime.
Mom got cancer afew yean after
Dad retired, and everylhing lhat
needed doing fell on me. He neve3'
lifted a finger. W)len Mom died, he
found himself a girlfriend, bought a
new car and had no time for our
phone calls. The last time I called
and asked, "What have YQU been
doing lately?" He replied, "That's
none of your business.•
This Christmas we won't worry
that Dad is alone because he has a
new car and a girlfriend and lots of
stories to tell about how rotten his
daughters are.- CAROL IN CALIF.
DEAR CAROL: The mail on Ibis
subject has been depressing. So
many family members are at each
other's throats and have no intereSt
in making amends. Read on:

unlit it was dart oullide. He bepft
"' .
Ill hit him widl his fiSIS and woul*'t
••
stOp even lhouP my brother's 1101e
.
was bleeding and he could blrely
stand up. I srepped in and gave mv
ANN LANDERS
fllher a lOck 1111 the jaw dial iiCIII
"1!191, LooAapleo
him
rcclina. He never laid a hand
~.,
Tloaeos,-011 any d us lf1ec lhat.
Crelllon SJD&lt;!iule''
Todly none of his sons has
anything
10 do with him. We fiJUre
De.- Au: This is why one child
he
has
camcd
his loneliness.
(me) wants IIOihing to do wilh my '
Los
An&amp;eJcs:
My motlltc, who is
84-year-old parent. You asked,
now 81, wu alwt)'S so J*lialto my
"How is this possible?"
older
silla it was humiliating. She
We sec mother twice a year. The
would
Ill)' in front of peOple, "Poor
woman is a hypochondriac, a
'Lenore'
(me) is going to have a lwd
whiner, a congenital pessimist, •
time
in
life because '1~' (my
inveterate nitpicker, a habitual
sister)
is
so much prettier. We will
cmm:tor, a gossip, pushy, critical,
oulrageously demanding, conii'Olling probably have to buy Lenore a
buslwrxl.• I grew up feeling ugly and
and rRIOipulativc. She is IOtaUy self·
unwanted
It took years or therapy
ccnlered and never did one damn
to
rebuild
my self-csreem. I have
thing for us tids. My Calha, who
forgiven
my
mother but I no longe3'
lived wilh hec for S2 years, was a
sec
her.
The
pain of the past is too
saint. - RICHMOND, VA.
intense. I hope one day I can handle ,
From Kansas City, Mo.: You
it
but for now it's more Ihan I can
can't understand why a child would
bear.
ignore an 84-year-old parent Maybe
Drugs are everywlrlre. They're
I can explain by telling you what
easy
tc get, easy to ~ IJIId even
my father is like.
ea.sier to ,etlrooked Oil. I/ you have
He came from a family wilh
queslions abolll drugs. you ~teed Ann
money and snubbed my mother's
Landers'
booklet, "The Lowdllw11 on
people who were of modest means
Dope."
Send
a self-addressed, h111g,
but much fmcr lhan his clan .. a
bUJine.u·siJt t11w:lope and a.check
bunch of drunks. He was vf:ry hard
or money order for S3 .65 (this
on us kids and would knock us
includes
postage and luwJJjng) to:
around for the slighleSt infraclion.
Lowdow11,
c/o Ann I.mtders, P.O.
Once I became ineensed at the way
Box
11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611·
he beat my 11-year-old brother be0562.
(In
Ctllllllla,
send $4.45.)
cause. he had stayed at the library

Ann
Landers

Buckeyes
defeatOU
Bobcats

.

&amp;
~

The receni Presidential election . makes it possible for teenagers
and Thanksgiving holiday are only from around lhe world to spend a
two of lhe countless thiQgs that semester or a full school year living
make living in America truly spe- wilh American families and learncial. These and many olhcr every- ing firsthand about the customs,
values and lifestyles. Students
day events can hold a brand new
meaning when shared wilh a young attend local high schools, participate in community and family
boy or girl from anolher country.
Shirley Coleman ·serves as local activities and develop friendships
coordinator for one of America's that last a lifetime.
most well-respected student
Mrs. Coleman now has applicaexchange programs, Academic tions of boys and girls who will
Year in America. This program, arrive in January and would like to
sponsored by AIFS Foundation, spend lhe second semester in Ohio.

A family need not have teenagers
of lheir own to host. Single ~nts
and retirees are also invited to
apply.
The sooner you select your sbldent, lhe sooner you Cl!D begin to
get to know each olher. All AY A
host families receive a travel scholarship which enables a member of
their family to travel or study
abroad on a pro~ sponsored by
AIFS. Opponuntties include weCic
long tours to Europe and campus
prograins in many different countries.
To receive more information or
to arrange for a host family inter·
view, contact Shirley Coleman at
614-742-2125. Lynne David,
regional director in the AY A
national office in Connecticut, can
also provide information about lhe
program in Ohio. He can be
reached 81800-322-4678.

.•

YoL 43, MD. 155 .
' ca,ilglilld 1112

largest, was sponsortcl by the P!l!Deroy Mer.
chants AISDCiatlon In eonj111Ction with Christ·
mas open house.

MEIGS BAND • The award wianing Mei11
High School Marching Band, under tbe dlrectioa or Toney Dingess, playtcl lor sever111 hundred people along tbe streets or Pomeroy on
Sunday afternoon. The crowd turned out lor one

Duke Lech Walesa?
He called Wierzchowski" a
Some monarchists have come "self-appointed regent who has no
up wilh a fresh approach for restor. right to give aristocratic titles, as
ing the monarchy in Poland _ · only ruling monarchs are entitled to
bestow noble titles on people of do Ibis."
·
merit, notably lhe president
Krasicti said lhere are several
However, the Regency Council hundred acthe monarchists in
docs not plan to l'ropose Walesa Poland. Wicrzchowsti's group in
for ting. The time 1sn't yet ripe just lhe soulhcm city of Sosnowiec is at
yet for Poland-10 become a consti- odds wilh ochers because it claims
tutional monarchy, said its leader
to be a sole representative of lhe
Lcszek Wierzchowsti. He consid: Polish monarchist movement, he
ers himself lhe prince regent
said.
The presidential press office
Krasicti says he and his friends
said Walesa learned about the title do not want to restore a monarchy,
from news reports and has no com- .but to promOte conservative values.
incnt
·
The Polish nobility.numbered
_. The handing out of titles docs about 200,000 before World War
not sit well with other active II. Many w~re tilled by lhe Germonarchists. "I lhinlc what Wierz- man occup1ers-, and then by the
chowski did was simply stupid "
communists. Others were forced to
said Kacper Krasicki descend;nt emigrate after the communists
of a Polish noble family.
deprived lhem of their land, nation.
alizing it after the war.

•

No Place Like Home!
As the saying goes, "There's No Place Like Home" and did you
know that Veterans Memorial Hospital has a long-established,
efficient Home Health Service which enables you to stay in your
home and still receive care?
I
If you feel you're a cani:lidate for the service, check with"your
physician or give us a call.

We're
lo-sing starry nights, say astronomers
.

\

.

unkJI)wa...

'

The scientists' lonely, campaign

~h:'t lhey ~all light poUutton IS gatrung a Wider audience as
others realize that shading the
lights can save money as well as
heavenlY. views.
Over the past few de~ ades
wban glare expanded wilh Ailleri:
can cities. Even in their isolated
observatories, astronomers noticed
lhe difference.
ReleQtless light from surrounding cities has effectively shut down
lhe ~gcst telescope at Mount Wilson m Southern California and
olher observatories are ~ed
Crawford said.
.
'
· Many amateur astronomers
mus~ travel an hour.or more to fmd
a swtably dark spot to sec the alan
particularly on the East Coast'
"From a place like Boatob, you'd
~ve to go 60 or I 00 miles. By that
lime, you're in anolher urban
area," Crawford said.
The International Dark-Sky
Association, which Crawford
founded four ycarw ago u "a IOI't
of a nighnime Sierra Club "
doesn't .adYOCate pulling the pl~g
on outdoor lights. Instead, the
I ,200-mcmber group wants to
make them cheaper and more cffi.
cienL

t? C!!fb

•

Kroger, director of the CDC.'s harassment, loss of insurance or
ByLAURANNEERGAARD
National AIDS Information and loss or lhcir jobs, experts say.
Associated Press Wfiler
• The CDC counters that it takes
ATLANTA- Federal heallh Education Program.
"The CDC also will publish ads about 10 years for most people
officials marked World AIDS Day
today with a new ~ to help to P.ush -the message that AIDS infected Wllh HIV to develop fullblown AIDS, and during that time
businesses educate lhell' employees isn t spread in offices.
About I million Americans are lhey should be treated as any other
about AIDS and keep lhose wilh
the disease working as long as pos· infected with the HIV virus lhat worker wilh a long -term illncss.
causes AIDS, and people aged 25"Havin~ the facts about HIVsiblc.
·
·
44
who
make
up
most
of
lhe
AIDS
contributes to a calmer, more
·"Business Responds to AIDS,' '
nation
'
s
workforce
are
most
productive
and supportive worksponsored br lhe Centers for Dislikely
10
be
infected.
place
when
emplolees learn of
ease Contro and Prevenu"on, will
"For
Ibis
reason,
among
olhcrs,
mfected
co-workers,
'.said Jo-Otis
help corporate America establish
lhe
worliplace
has
an
increasingly
of
lhe
American
Red
Cl!&gt;ss, which
workplace AIDS policies, train
.
important
role
to
play
in
the
is
participating
in
lhc
program.
supervisors to deal wilh infected
Kroger said it would be difficult
eml'loyees, educale employees and nation's response to lhe HIV and
AIDS
epidemic,"
Dr.
William
to
put
a price tag on the program.
lherr families and encobrage comRoper,
the
CDC
director,
said
.
"What
we are doing is putting
munity service and volunteerism.
Monday.
togelher
pieces
lhilt were already
"What we are offering is a one.
Although
federal
law
prohibits
out lhere and consolidating lhem,
SlOp service to businesses so lhcY.
can initiate ~s lhey haven t job discrimination against HIV • and drawing on non -federal
done preVIO\Jsly ," said Fred infected people, . many report f'CSOW'CCS, •' he said.

_ __...People in the news _ _

By ANNE STUART
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON - As cities brighten
lhc sky with outdoor lights, people
are losinj! lheir view of lhc heavens. WJthout controls, some
astronomers say, old-timers will
someday reminisce about ni~hts
when you could see the Milky
Way.
"If things keep going lhe way
they are; the only place you'Dsee a
really dark sky is a planetarium "
said David Crawford
~n
astronOmer at Arizona's IGti Peale
National Observatory and founder
_or lhe International Dark-Sky
•
· -Association.
: While astronomers have long
:said that artificial light lhreatens
Jheir ability 10 study lhc stars, some
~ now saying the glowing glare
ihreatens everyone else's view.
"The absolute majesty the
Incredible power or a truly dark,
star-packed sky was part of the
experience of all or humanity
lfu;ouabout all of human history,''
Jatd Alan MacRQbert, associate
editor of Cambridge-based Sky &amp;
Telescope Magazine. "Now in
developed countries, it's practically

The parade was spcliiSOI'e!l by the Pomeroy Merchants Association wbicb also observed open
house.

CDC launches ·program to educate
employers and workers about AIDS

The annual Christmas dinner for
American Alloys employees,
retirees and their families will be
beld at the USWA 5171 local ball
on Saturday, December 5 from
II :30 A.M. to 7:00P.M.

BUILD INTERNATIONAL FRIENDSIDPS! • AIFS exchange
_studeDII are currently seeking American host families ror a five.. moatb ally beginaing in January. For more information, call 1·
800-312-4678 or Shirley Coleman at 614-742-2125.

ol Pomeroy's lai'Jest-eVer Cbrlstmu parades. .

"Th~ee-fourlhs of the lighi in
lhe sky JS c~ by ~Y designed
and ba~ly msta)led hght fixtures
that pomt up inst~ad of down,"
MacRobert SBJd. Lights wilh visible bulbs also conrribute to glare
. Shielding lights so that lhey il·lummate lhc ground, ralhcr lhan lhc
sky. cuts the overhead glow, proponents ¥Y· Because lhe downward
beam is more concelllrated, the fixture can provide the same amount
or ground light wilh a lower-watt
bulb, savihg e-gy and money.
They say energy savings quickly
outstrip modifJCation cost.s. "In lhe
United States, we probably spend
$2 billion a year just to light up the
· sky," Crawford said.
· Such efforts are already under
WIY in IICverai Slates. In Maine, the
state legislature passed a law last
year ~uirina new stile-financed
street lights to be shielded and
aimed downward. The l1w also
requires officials to conljc!er allernativea 10,new highway li&amp;hll, such
as lower speed limits, reflectors
· and lines.
In Arizona, uppaded lipting in
about SO communities hu deepened the darkness 11 Kill Puk,
Crawford said.

Beary Christmas Contest
Pl.... enter my name In the di'IIWiilg for the 12 costumed Teddy
Bears you are giving away at Vetet'llna Memorial Hospital.
NAME-------------------------------ADDRESS----------------------------PHONE-----------------------------(Mall ~ Veterans Memorial Hospital Bear Contaat, 115 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio, 457611 by Die. 15 or depoalt In hoapltallobbr
box.)

{i0fETEUNS
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
_1y_n_j
1111........ Drive
Veterw. ........ HoiPital

.
i

-

.

·-I'OJ '

992·2104

2 5ee11ono, 16 P•ue• 25 centa
A llulllmedla Inc•. .._.,..,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 2, 1992
...

Cli CLUB • Tbe Bid Bend CB Club participated iD Suaday's annual Christmas In r..eroy
witb this float. The parade, one of Pomeroy's

Lciw tonight ln mid-lOs.
Thursday, Chance ot snow 40
percent. High ln mld·JOs.

.

-

Wright regains board
seat after emergency stay

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

By MINDY KEARNS
OVPNews Stair
Qlston 0. "Nick" Wright
returned to his seat ·on lhe Mason
Coimty Board of Education Tues·
day .evening wilhout much fanfare,
after a Kanawha County judge
granted Wril!ht an emergency stay
to prevent focal board members
from ·naming a replacement
Wright had earlier been
removed from office by State
Supmntendent Hank Maroctie for
refusing 10 attend seven hours of
clasSes required by law of all board
members. Wright maintilined that
lhe legislature made lhe law after
he was electc.J, making him exempt
from having to take part.
On Nov. 20, lhe court granted
Wright a stay 10 prevent lhe local
board from namitl$ a replacement
until a full heanng is held on
Wright's petition to void lhe state
superintendent's order.
ing. State SQperlntendent Hank Marockie
BACK IN THE $ADDLE AGAIN • Olston
Mason County Superintendent
removed Wright from office lor refuslna to
... : . 0. "Nick" Wrigbt, rigllt, was back In hiS seal as
of
Schools Grant Sheppard read a
attend seven hours or classes required lor board
: a m-ber or tbe ~ County Board or Eduletter
from Marockie during lhe
members. Also pictured is Superintendent
.. catloa Tuesday eveni111 after a stay was granted
meeting,
which said the petition to
Gra11t Sheppard. . ·
. In KIIII8Wba Coonly preventing the local board '
void
lhe
order
has been assigned to
f'rcm naming a replacement, pe~~dinl a lull bearJudge McQueen of Kanawha
County.
'
"He will schedule in the near
future a hearing on lhe merits to
'
'
determine if lhc State Superinten·
"Put toy safety on the top o,f in ·cQopera_~lon with the '?hio soft cork tips, rubber sucuon cups; dent's order removing Mr. Wright
your- holiday list 'this year" urges Department of Health, provided or other eye protecting tips.
was a proper exercise or lhe State
Norma Torres, R. N., nursing guidelines for purehasing toys for
Noise Hazards. Toys making Supenntendent'·s authority,"
director at the Meigs County young children. They are:· .
loud noises or using caps may darn• Matdctie wrote.
All toys are not lor all cbll· age a child's hearing. Watch for
Health Department
"Until the Circuit Coun hears
Chances are that Ibis· holiday dren. Look for age and content. warninv: labels which state for usc the case on Mr. Wright, the
season most parents and others will . labeling, like "Not recommended only outdoors.
.
Novemller 20 ruling means that
be buying toys for the children they for children under age lhree; may
. Electric Toys can shock or Mr. Wright continues to be a memlove, so, says Torres, "when you contain small parts". Toys wilh bum. Improperly manufactured or ber of the Mason County Board of
make that selection, make sure you small, removable parts are espe- wired elecb'lc toys may shock or Education as if the order of the
check it twice by keeping safety in cially hazardous to children under bum children. Electrically operated State Superintendent had never
mind."
lhree years old.
toys wilh heating elements are rec- existed. Tbaeforc,heisentitledto
Be a label reader. Look for key ommended only for children over back pay for m~tings he attended
The nursing director said that
the U. S. Consumer Product Safety words such as "nontoxic"for lOy eight years old.·
and to be seated on the board,"
Commission estimated that surfaces; "flame resistant/retarAs a fmal word on toys, Torres Marockie wrote 10 Sheppard.
163,600 toy-related injuries dant" for fabric products; "w~h­ advised lhat several precautions be
Point Pleasant Hi~h School stu·
occurred nationally last year. able material" for stuffed toys and taken - always read lhe directions,
About half were to children under dolls, and "U.L. approved" fQr keep toys for older children away
five and 80 percent were to chil· electric toys.
from smaller c~ildren who rrtighl
dren tmder age 1S. Almost one-half
These thinp avoid for infants choke on small parts, always superinvolved children choking on bal· and toddlers. Avoid toys with vise young children, regularly
loons, small balls and toy parts, small parts which pose a cholcing inspect new and old toys for broken
according to Torres.
hazard, long strings, cords or rib· or missing parts, and follow buying
"Most of lhesc incidents involv- bons lhat may create a strangula- guidelines.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi"With increased concern for
ing young children are pre- tion hazardl.
vcnt.ilble" said Tones. "Careful toy
Look tor sale construction. safer lOy buying Ibis holidaY.-sea- dent-.elect Clinton's economic·
selectiQD and piopet supervision of Toys for children under eight son, we hope lhat many children stimulus program will provide a
children at play are .the best ways should be free ot sharp edges and will avoid needless injury from small boost to lhe economy next
to pro!cct children from toy-related points. Choose new toys that are new toys over ~e holidays and all year, enough to make only a tiny
dent in lhe unemployment rate, the
injuries, she said. She advised par- well-constructed, durable , and year long," concluded Torres. ·
nation's top business economists
made
or
safe,
non-toxic
materials.
ents and Olhel} 10 but toys lhat are
predicted
today.
Eye Injuries. Nearly 14,000
apP.ropriate for lhe individual
While
Clin10n has promised to
chtld's age and development, and children received toy-related eye
focus
like
a "laser beam" on ·lhe
not be tempted to give toys which injuries last year. Toy guns and
economy
once
in office, lhe survey
the child can "grow iniO."
toys that ftrC projectiles can cause
by
the
National
Association of
Today the Meigs County Heallh serious e:r-e injury or the loss of an
Two people were injured TuesBusiness
Economists
found lhat
DepartmentJS;AFE ~s Coalition, eye. ProJecti c toys should have day morning in an accident on
analysts
at
some
of
lhe
country's
State Route 7 near the intersection
largest
companies
held
decidedly
ofS.R. 143.
Kevin A. Lambert, 17, 39002 low-key expectations for what lhe
S.R. 143, Pomeroy, and Lisa J. incomin$ president will be able 10
·
Willinghurst. 26, Reno, were trans· accomplish.
The
association
said
the median
ported by Meigs County Eme3'genexpectation
of
41
_Pn!fessional
fore·
cy Medical Service to Veterans
casters
surveyed
m
lale
November
Memorial Hospital where they
was that Clinton's prograln would
were ll'Cited and released.
According to lhe report, Lam· result in a slight, 0.2 percent
bert was nortllbound when he lost increase in econotnic growth next
control on an ice-covered bridge year when compared with what
and slid into lhe soulhbound lane they would have expected had
and struck broadside a vehicle driv- President Bush won re-election.
While Clinton is still formulat·
, en by Willinghurst Bolh vehicles
ing
his shon-terrn economic pro·
were knocked off the roadway
gram,
he has indicated lhat two key
struck guardrails off their respcc·
elements
will be jnvestment tax
tive lanes.
· Lamben was cited for driving credits for businesses and a boost
left of center. Bolh vehicles sus- in spending .on roads, bridges and
tained heavy, disabling damage and other public works projects of
around $20 billion next year.
were towed from the scene.
In a $6 trillion economy, such a
package would represent only a
small dose of fiscal stimulus, ana- ·
lySIS said.
But the bu$iness economists
grolf said It h~ Ointon wOuld
not listen to advJSCrs owho are urgTOLEOO, Ohio (AP) - A man ing him to take a bolder approach
convlctCd in one of tbe nation's in an effon 10 get the unemploy~
1argcs1 food stamp frlud cases was ment rate down quicker,
hospi!a(iztcl one day belen he was
''Our advice right now is to be
scheduled 10 be sentenced.
· · cautious," said asioclati!ln PresiMichacl Hebeka, S9, was ~n deQt Joseph W. Duncan, the chief
to St Charles Hospilal on Monday statistician at Dun &amp; Bradstreet
night complaining or chest plins.
COrP. ''Clinton needs to maintain
This is the second time he has the confidence of business and the
CHOOSING SMI TOYS • Here ftft-Jtll'- SoMy Fallller . been hospitalized just·befcn sen- markets."
klob Oftl' a ftl'leiJ fll t!lyl wWdl are IIPIII'GIIItale far her 1p as
tencing in U.S. District Coun in
Dimcan said an old-style Demoher •odler, Carol Folller, ~ o.rwwu plii'CII-. l'lr·
Toledo. He was hospitalizcd wilh cratic public works spending pro·
nts IJ'e belq eKOilraged b' tbe Melal Couaty Healtb Depart·
chest pains on May 19, one day gram lhat would in{lare the already
before he was to he sentenced.
huge federal budget deficit would
-~ Ia P!ll 111J safety at the lap fll tbeltltollda, 1fst.
.
. .
.

N-prsing director urges toy safety

Chrisbnas dinner
scheduled

WARSAW, Poland (AP) -

Pick 3:
387
Pick 4:
1738
Buckeye 5:
11-12-14-16-32

Page·4

AIFS seeks host families in Ohio

CHICAGO (AP) - · Though his
rchabililllion isn't complete, Ben
Vereen can walk again and has
regained usc of his right arm. For
that, he says, he has the almighty to
thank.
'_'I'm lhankf~ lhat God hi:S once
agam ~en bunsclf 10 be miraculous,' he SBJd. " I say when you
sec me, you sec God in his workshop."
The _Tony- and Emmy-winning
entenamer wl!s critically injured
June 9 after bemg struck by a small
truck 1!5 hew~ al~g a hi~hway
near hJS home m Malibu, Calif.
Vereen, who played Chicken
G~~rg~ ~~.the 1?,77 television
muuscn~ Roots, talked_Sunday
about h1s recovery at Chnst URI·
versal Temple.

0 hio Lottery

dents' are once again dismissed
from classes today due 10 furnace
problems. Sheppard repOrted durmg the meeting lhat lhe school sys1em· had no alternative but to
replace lhe furnace.
He said he had been in contact
with Columbus Heating and Vent·
ing Tuesday afternoon, and piping
was to be received Wednesday
morning. Sheppard told board
members he would know more
details Wednesday afternoon,. but
students could possibly be out of
school until Monday.
The superintendent noted lhat
lhe furnace had not been inspected
in IS years, according 10 Columbus
Heating.
Students were dismissed last
Wednesday, a day earlier than
expected for lhe Thanksgiving holi·
day, due to lhefumace problems.
Sheppard reported lhe furnace
system at Wahama is running, and
students are back in class, after
lhey were dismissed Monday.
George Mille3', assistantsuperintendent, brought board members
up-to-date on the building programs throughout lhc county.
He stated bolh the Beale and
Roosevelt additions were completed, adding the Beale project was
completed at $788 over budget
after revisions, and Roosev.elt
$·1,200 over budget after revisions.
The Ashton job is still ilngoin~,
according to Miller, who said It
looks as if the project is going to be
approximately $40,000 under budget. Also ongoing are lhe Ppint
Pleasant Junior High School music
complex and Wahama High School
addition. Miller noted bids are still
out on lhe Wahama project, which
is expected 10 cost approximately
$845,000.
·
· Tom Nunnery, Ashton Elementary principal, spoke to the board

members regarding bus routes. He
said some children are arriving at
lhe school at 7:15 a.m., having to
wait an hour and 10 minutes before
classes begin. He added lhe same
children are not getting home until
between 4:30 and 5 p.m.
(em)Board President Harry Siders
asked Sheppard 10 look into lhe sit·
uation.
Also speaking to lhe board was
Jonnie Meadows of Citizens for
Mason Colinty. Meadows said she
had encountered no business, organizati1,m or individual who had
given proxy to the delegations
speaking at lhe last meeting. Two
delegations had attended giving
support to lhe board in naming a
reptacemcnt for Wright The delegations added they were representing businesses, organizations and
individuals.
MeadoWs also.spoke on consolidation. She said lhe .P_COple of lhe
county voted consohdauon of the
lhrec high schools down twice by a
3-1 majority. "The million dollar
question 1s: How can you vote to
overturn the will or the people?"
she asked the board members .
Meadows was referring 10 priorities
set by the board in requesting
School Building Authority funds
for local projects.
Member Paul Docffinger told
·Meadows consolidation was on Iy
one of sbt priorities submitted 10
RESA. ''Even though we submitted
lhe projects, there is no guarantee
lhey will get funded," he said.
Board members entered into
executive session for approximately 45 minutes to discuss personnel
matterS. When they returned, members voted to delete the position of
· coonlinator of financial affairs, and
post a position of accountant II. A
special meeting was set for Dec. 9,
5 p.m., to discuss personnel.

Economists see minimal benefit
from Clinton's stimulus program

Two injured in
Rt. 7 accident

Man bospitalized

·before sentencing

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end up causing more harin than
good because it woi.Jld push longtenn interest rates higher.
Even wilh an expected modest
stimulus package, the forecasters
said lhe budget deficit will be $16
billion higher next year than if
Bush had won re-election.
They projected lhe deficit total
at an all-time high of $340 billion,
compared with an· imbalance of
$290.2 billion in the fiscal year that
ended Sept 30.
But the added stimulus program
will have only a moc!tst impact on

the nation 's unemployment rate
lhe business economists said:
predicted the jobless rate would
average 7.2 percent during 1993
only slightly below the current 7.4
percent level.

They

Part of lhe reason for the expectations of only a modest pickup in
growlh is a widespread belief lhat
the country 's trade performance,
which has been one or the few
bright S{J?lS for lhc economy, will
begin widening Ibis year and deteriorate even furlher in 1993.

Home sales down 10.3 percent :
WASHINGTON '(AP)- Sales
of new homes fell 10.3 percent in
October, the first drop in six
monlhs, lhe government estimated
today. Analysts noted, however,
that preliminary sales reports
throughoui th is year have been
underreported and subsequently
revised upward.
The estimated decline was
spread throughout each of the
country's four regions. If it is not
revised, it would be the largest
drop since sales plunged ll .5 percent last March.
The Departments of Commerce
and Housing and Urban Development said sales totaled 600,000 at a
seasonally a d
·usted
= annual rate,
down from a s
ly revised 7 per·
cent gain, to 669, , a monlh car·
liec. The government initially estimated September sales had fallen I
percent
In advance or t!te report, .many
analysts had predicted new honre·
sales.had risen slightly more than I
percent in October.
The Commerce Department has
said the revisions occur because the
preliminary reports often are based
on just 60 percent of the data
sought and then updated as the
remainder of the information
becomes available.
Adren Cooper, a department
s)l?kesman, explained lhat the ini-·
ual estimate is based on applica·

•

lions for building permits and later
revised wilh actual sales information. Until recently, lhat resulted in
relatively small adjusuucnts.
But the problem has worsened
recently because economic weakness and ti!lht credit conditions are
causing builders to pos1p0ne filing
applications until after lhcy actually have made a sale, Cooper said.
The result has been a consistent
bias toward underreporting.
'

days until·
Christmas

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-::~ommentary
.~·

The Daily ·Sentinel

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111 eo.t street
,__.,, Oblo

wvorm TO . . - IR'niiDTII Ol' not IIDtlGS-IIAIIOif AREA

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and
Michael Binstein

ROBERT L WINGETT
Pllblllller

.
PAT WJID'EIIEAD

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

•lt:mt~r

General M1111ager

I.I!Tl1!RS Of OPINION are welc:ome. They sbould be less lban 300

• .·

'IIIOI'dl. All ldl&amp;n are oubject to edilill&amp; and must be signed wilb name,
llldoeu and •loP-.,. nlllllb&lt;r. No wuigned Ietten will be pub7isbed. Leiters
oboilld be iD aooci tal1le, odclreuiD&amp; illuea, oot penonalities.

...
: : :~ouse
~

Republicans are
: ;;~ggressive after election wins
.

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By JOHN CHALFANT
•: · .
AJ&amp;oeiated Pnss Writer
. •./ COLUMBUS - R~ublicans in the House of Representatives who
. ."developed some muscle m last month's election now are talking as if they
• illtcnd to exen:ise iL
. ·, · ·. The aggressive talk was heard as the 46 Republicans who will serve in
.. · the House starting in January met to choose their leaders for the two· year

.~ .IC$Sion.

•

. •: ·· They elected Rep. JoAnn Davidson of Reynoldsburg as minority lead·
·• •er 10 succeed Rep. Corwin Nixon of Lebanon, who .did not seek another
.:..reno in the House.
·
·' · ' · Nixoo, a longtime friend of House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelers' - burg, had been c;riticized for a leadership style that avoided confrontation
: ollr challenge to Democratic power.
•. ~ Republicans~ eight seats in the 99-member House as a result or
;. tile Nov. 3 electioo. Democrats will control the chamber 53-46 starting in
.· .. ~anuary, compared with the6l-38 edge they now hold.
Republican leadm chosen last week said their increased ranks ought to
, .p..npt Demoerats to make some changes in the way the House is run,
,· cwecial~Y in the number of GOP seats on committees.
, ••· "We feel our representation on the committees should be at a higher
•: ,percentage than what it has been because we have a bigger proportion of
&gt;· _lhe members," Ms. Davidson said.
·,., • Rep. Randall Gardner, R-Bowling Green, who will be minority whip
• ,.Rp:l year, wants Republicans treated more fairly.
., · ,· "We need to fight ... for fair rules in the House of Representali ves.
.• ·I:!ecanse ii it's truly to be the people's house we must fight for fair rules .
.... SQ that we can all represent our distticts , our constituents, fairly," Gard•. ·.IJilf said.
.
.
':.• :- Rep. William llatchelder ol Medina, the new assistant minority leader,
... 5l!id the House was more open when he fust arrived in 1968.
·: .; . "It did not ha~ hidden cilmmittees on conference, we did not have
-..e,ders coming down from up above. If they had come down they
··.wouldn't have been obeyed by those old committee chairmen,"
::. ~atehelder said.
.
- , .. "I hope we Cllllead the way to a restoration of that open system that
, _will indeed give the people of Ohio once again the feeling that they are
.- t!ic- impw- ~heft, and not the special interests,'. be said.
·•. Rep. Thomas JohnsOn of New Concord, who wiU be assistant mmority
.. whip, sought GOP unity in '!'Diking toward a goal of winning ·control of
: .t!Je House by pi&lt;:king up four more seats in 1994.
..'· .,. "No mauer what, all nf us worlting together for the future to get tbe
,·~ in 1994, that is our gcal. And it will take every and each one of
: 'us, • Johnson said.
· ~·· Cliff T:k:ens, a spokesman for House DemoeraiS, downplayed the
..•llold GOP .
. ' : "It was their 15 minutes of fame with all the media gathered·in there,
... 111ld rm ~ .there.was ~certain amount of strutting that was going on,"
.;·:rreyens SBid 10 an mtemew.
., _, .
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. Be·rry' s World
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WASHINOTON -. Defense Tell them you Slw somebody deal- · 'criminal, i_llepl fllC81111s." After
giant General Dynamics thought it ing guns. Or lcnow about armed learning of the arm-twisting, some
·was performin- a communil)l ser- drug or gang activities. They take lawmakas were livid, and phoned
· General Dynamics to pledge their
vice earlier thiS yesr by donating over from there.''
$300,000 to fund an ad campaign
by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
Tneral Dynamics continued
funding the ads for the ATF hoiand Firearms against illegal guns
and gangs in the nation's capital.
line, which today has received
The campaign revolved around
nearly 600 calls rrom D.C. resi·,
dents. But (or those who have
a simgle 1011-free phone number.1·80 ·ATF-GUNS. Violence·
watched the politically potent gun
weary D.C. residents c9uld repon
lobby bottle up reforms over the
tips about the guns and gangs that
years - from bans on domestic
NRA officials complained to assault weapons 10 bans on cophave turned Washington into the
murder capital of tbe United States. General Dynamics, and their con- kiUer bullets - the episode repreATF and General Dynamics gressional allies joined the fray. sents just another chapter in the
dido 't expect the vublic-spirited Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, who rancorous relationship between law
campaign - designed to give as ranking Republic;an on the enforcement and the NRA.
·
"frightened neighborhood resi- Defense Appropriations subeomThe NRA has long regarded
dents a way to fight back against miuee was well acquainted with ATF as its nemesis in these batdes.
the violence" -to provoke a fire- General Dynamic;s, summoned •'Over the years the NRA has been
fight with the National Rifle Asso- company officials for a private fundamentally opposed 10 some of
ciation. A similar program in New meeting. "His only criticism in a the laws we enfon:e," sayS an ATF
Orleans had resulted in 122 conVic- polite way was that there could spokesperson. Former ATF Directions.
have been a little more streSS:.:t of . tor· Rex Davis goes flirther. "My
But the NRA toot umbrage with ... the illegality - iUegally d ·ng v!ew was th8t while w~ had serious
the wording, which they ·regarded guns," a Stevens spokesperson told 1differences. there certainly ought to
.
as a threat to legitimate gun-deal- our associate Dean Boyd.
be .areas where we could cooperl'he NRA says it called the com- ate," he told us. "But I soon found
ers. The ad read: "Tap into a special team of federal agents. You pany to suggest,"minor changes to out.that the NRA would do anydon't have to tell them your name. future ads to better foeus on the thing in furtherance of its objec-

By Jack Anderson

''

•'

By Tile Alloelilted Pra1 .

caadilionsand

~Sf€iN''z
~I&lt;'{ "'"" .
Ne\.&lt;1&lt;: · N&lt;?a

We F"ii'J~~LY
GoT a PR~SiDeN'T'

aND a Co/IIGI?~SS
WHo'Ll. WQI?K
ToGe'T'IieR!

• MY GoD,
WH~T

Have

we DoNe?

lives. ... A W&lt;Xting relalionship I don 't think that's Ill all possible."
A decede ago, with the blessing
of then-President Reagan, the NRA
tried dismintling A1'F altogether.
In a 1981 NRA documentary, Rep .
Jo!l_n Dingell, D-Mich., a diehard
NRA supporter, c;al!ed the qency a
''jack-booted group of fasCists who
are perhaps as large a danger to
American .soeiety as I could pick
today."
.
Ironically, the NRA describes
its relationship with ATF as "cordial" and poruays itself as a prolaw enforcement organization, one
that lobbies for tougher prosec;utors, P!lnalties and prisons. "Such
efforts could hardfy be called an
impairment of any law cnf«eement
agency," says NRA spokesperson
Ed Klecka.
But. thanks in part to the NRA's
antipathy, ATF ~been doomed to
.the stone-age of law enforcement,
Banned by Congress from creating
a computeriz.ed database of gun
purcha$es (which the NRA argued
would violate a gun owner's privacy), ATF a$ents trace weapons
today by tedious searches over the
phone or by sorting through paper
slips in boxes. Computer searches .
could be instantaneous.
In 1986, NRA-inspired laws
passed by Con,ress curtailed the
ATF' s inspecuon of gun-dealer
records. The laws also forced ATF
to restore gun rights to felons specifJc;ally those cOnVicted of gunrelated crimes - ·after tbeir seli·
tence had been served and provided
~Y passed a background chllck by
ATF. ATF officiafs were relieved
when, earlier this year, Congress
tilled the program which had
diverted as muclt as $4 miUion a
year from more fruitful investiga·
lions. .
Though the NRA is claiming
victory in Congress with the election of more pro-gun ¢andidates.
President-elect Bili 'Clinton is on
'record favoring stricter gun c0111rol.
Senate Judiciaty Chairman Joseph
BideR, D·Del., believes the Ointon
win augurs well for the ATF,
which he says "will receive the full
support and respect they deserve."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

IToledo!34· I.
I

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"is to show that he had the i.ntem . . As it happens, the 1een-aged girl
that murder requires, which i~ pur- 1s not Gonzalez's lone victim. In
posely or knowingly seeking to ldll - October of last yesr, the Portland
the woman with whom he had mljll pleaded no contest to charges
of assault. and reckless endangerment for having unprotected sex
wjth two other· women whom he
intercourse. Secondly, any auempt iqfected with AIDS. One of the
charge has got to involve an ele- women, 24-year-old Shawn Hop,
l]as since died from the disease.
1 of proximity." In other
Gonzalez got off with an unconds, the young woman •s death
sc;i9nably
light sentence consider1 have come soon after the
ing
the
gravity
of crimes. He was
ged crime was committed.
placed
under
house
arrest for. six
The third diffJc;ulty," the pro'llonths
and
told
to
wear
an elecfessor. related, "is very simply that
tronic
bracelet
(a
slap
on
the
wrist).
consensual intercourse takes two
And,
oh
yes,
he
was
ordered
to
people. And while (Gorizalez) may
abstain
from
sex
for
five
years.
not have disclosed to Ibis woman
that he had HIV, if she ~ read a ,. Is this justice? Hardly. Here we
newspaper or watched television had a man who knew he had a
even once in this decade, she had to deadly disease that is transmitted
through sexual contacl Not only
know the risks."
did
he fail to inform his sexual
LaFrance's legal opinion may
partners
of such , he did not even
be entirely correct. And the jliry in
trouble
himself
10 use a condom.
Portland may fail to convict oo pre·
Since he knew there was a very
cisely those grounds. But that does
not negate the fact that Gonzalez real prospect that he might pass
willfully and knowingly placed the along the AIDS virus to his sexual
young woman in· harm's way. If partners, he surely must be guilty
she contracts AIDS as a result of of premeditated murder. It matters
their sexual dalliance, he will be not that his victims consented to
responsible for her death just as sex. They did not consc;nt to be
surely as if he had shot her in cold infected with a deadly disease.
The issue here is responsibility.
blood, and she died immediately.
If a person drives drunk, the law

Joseph Perkins

••

•
••
••

There are certain rites of passage: It is a bit bracing to note, for
example, that three of the senators I
first interviewed upon becOming a
Washmgton
correspondent are
.
build mgs now.
Richard Russell of Georgia.
Everett D~rk~en of Illinois, Philip
Hart of Mich1gan - they stood tall

don't sense how quicldy Washington can·wind urrunningtbem.
Indeed, Bil Clinton's best and
••
brightest may be committing some
of 1he same errors we ' ve seen
•
,repeated
in the recent trUe transi•••
lions of power: in 1968 (Johnson· .
Nixon), 1976 (For~·Carter), ·and
;
1980 (CIIf(er-Reagan).
,
~~a~h; ~;,~a~~~~~~ ~Jn:~i~u~~~~ hair and a potatoesque face who · These errors occur becau~e
•was always hovering, ever-eager to advisers who spent a year thinking
...
Avenue today, as e official names . please. I never bothered to even about campaign tactics haven't·'
~
of the Senate office buildings.
101roduce myself to Fulbright's go- shifted gears as fast as official
@ 1992 by NEA. Inc
But big news was also made fer: Bill Clinton, who was then Washingtoli has. Clinton's advisers
'1-----.....;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __::__ _ _...J back then by another 'senator who mauiculating at Georgetown u.
t be
t'llg a tho h
is not yet taken fo~ranite: J.
seem o
opera I
s
ug
William Fulbright of
. His
And it is beyond bracing to they are still ruiming a campaign
observe that, while Clinton's boss - thinkinll about how to raise (or
~
.·:~
historic televised foreign relations was unmasking an administratioo's not raise) "expectations." how to
. "
committee inquiry into the Vietnam "arrogance of·power," another fel- . •·•spin" the Boss' every pronounce- ·
·~War produced a public grilling or a low who is now a great power- ment. But official Washington
-~ ,
As!ocillled Press
.
secretary of state; ·Dean Rusk pro- George Stephanopoulous, the presi- ( h' h · 1 d
h
d' ) ·
.i......,_..Today
is Wednesday,
. 2, the 337tb day of 1992. There are 29 days fessed to see no wrong in a ~ d
w IC mc u es I e me 1a IS
Ia ..... ; : .
that had gone very wrong 1.n
. ent-elect's director of communi- already paning every word and
, .,.•_:,
· ..,.....:.,:
·
cations - was matriculating in wink from Clinton and his adv1·-.......
• li... m
,_,. 1 - ·· •-1
Fulbright called it."the arrogance
·
-·
.
·.':~-a.
Dec.
2,
1942,
a
nucl.c;hain reaction.was demonstrat- · of t'wer."
.
kindergarten.
as
policies for running the COIDIII'y.
,_"._,
.
. It is gr~nd that we will soon
·'rhat•a why the presidenl-elect
:: .•eel
~dale by a group of seientisls at the University of Cbicago.
t 1s even more bracing to recall have, not just a new team but a new made news three times so far, with011
how, as a wizened 25-year-old cor- generation, running things in out achieving the emphasis he
·: · Ia 1104, liJialecll- aowned emperor of France in a gliuering cererespondem for Newsday, I made it Washington. But it will be a shame - --"·
'• '·
lithe c ¢ I alofNocre Dime in Plm.
my business to 'get to know all the if, because of eagerness, comClinton wanted to sig1816. the finl savinp '**in the United States, the Philidelphia _im..:po_rtan_t=:-peo....:..pl_e..:.(F:..
_ulbrigh_.::...:.l.:_his_·_to..:P_!::PO:.:u::n::de::d:..b:::;y~in:,::e~xpe~n:'e:nc:e::.·~'h::e:!..y • na1 ~ BriJht New Day and wound

.-

....
.~

aides, etc.) -hut! never botltered
to trifle with anyone so unimportant as the committee's young messenger, that kid with Beatle-like

Martin Schram

.

·-·..110 day ID
• h IStory
•
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. B6ecne

:1,

;.-ma;:r

w•i'Eimcs.

~J:.~~=~~ his~

·?'.5a:f12'r#.
opposing Euro:•,pean t011V •m·a die Weslall Hemisphere.
: 1a II', •Pi 7 lllalitioniat John Brown was hanged for his raid on
-~~'sPiriY dlljierioul Oc?obeJ'.
~":&lt;Jia.Jif2,100,...11Do
finlnl;
.
ier Jay Gould died in New York City.
.....,, Fold Mol« Co. 1IIIYCiled its Model A automobile, the succes·
Ia 17"''
fJ·
!J
.

___ __

sor to its Model T.
.
In 1939, New York's La Guardia Airpon began operations as an airliner from Chicago Ian~ at12:0l a.m.
I~. 1954, the
Senate,
·. voted to condemn Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy,
·R-WlS., for what 11 called ·conduct that tends to bring the Senate into dishonor and eli .......,~ , ,
- .... ~

u:.s.

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sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

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C111112Accu·Woalhor,ln&lt;:.

------Weather----Soatl-Ceatnl Olllo
Touigbt, variable cloudiness.
Chance of IIIOW early. Low in the
mid-20&amp;. Chance of snow 40 percent. Thursday, variable cloudiness. Hi&amp;h 35-40.
Enelided forecast:

,.

Friday tbroqb Suday:
Friday, a chance of rain or
snow. Lows in the 20s. Hi1hs in
the 30s or low 40s. Saturday,
chance of snow. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 30s. Sunday, fair.
Lows in the 20s. Highs in tbe.30s.

deaths· --

~-Area

William Stewart

William D. Stewart, 80, of
Racine, died Tuesday, Dec. l,
1992, at the Holzer Medical Cen-

7«, Oallipolis.

Born on Sept. 30, 1912 in
Pomeroy, he was the ooly child of
Daniel A. and Flora Smart Stewart.
He was a araduate of Racine
High School and aaended the UniVef11ity of Cincinnati before serving
in the U. S. Army during World
War II. He was a decorated noncommissioned officer in North
Africa and Italy having been
awarded three bronze stars and a
Jrulyil Spe~Jce
purple heart. He was a charter
member and past commander of
Evelyn Spence
Racine Post 602, American Legion.
Mr. Stewart was employed at
POINT Pl.BASANT - Evelyn E.
Ohio
Univasity f« 25 years before
Spence, 82, of Point Plewnt. died
retiring.
He was actively involved
Tuesday, December l, 1992, •
with
the
Boy Scouts of America
Pleaslnt Valley Nursing Clre Unit
and
Little
~ ' an active memin Point PleasanL
.
IB
of
the
Rscme
United ,Miitbodist
She mid;-llfiU 37 yeaiS, as a
Church,
i
member
'and paSt master
teiCher for . the Mason County
of
Racine
Lodge
461,
F&amp;AM, past
. BOird of Education. She was a
1
high
priest
o1
Athens
Chapter,
. member of the SL Paul United
Royal
Arch
Masons,
past
of
.. .Methodist Church and also a mem- Adiens Royal and Selectmaster
Masons,
ber of the N.E.A., the W.VJ!..A.,
and the local Retired 'n:achers As- and past p111r011 of the Eastern Star.
He was alio a member of the Scot,, soeiation.
·
Rite and Knights Templar,
;:
Born Auiust 8, 1910 in Hender- tish
.
He
survived by his wife,
son, she ~ 1 dlulhter of the late LouiseisLewis
Stewart, Racine;
'' Alonzo c. llld cor. c. (Laywell) three sons, James and Roben of
Kclly. In ·addition .10 her parents, Athens, IDf EdwiW of Columbus;
. , she was also preceded in death by and
six grandchildren. .
. her two husbands, Wesley Spence
IIClvices wiU be held at
Funeral
and Joseph Rife; two brothen,
1
l
p.m.
on
Friday at the Fisher
LoweD C. Kelly and Lawrm:e E. Funeral Home
in Middleport with
l:/~ and a sister, Maggie H. Me· the Rev. Roger Grace officiating.
Burial will be in Greenwood
She is survived by two sisters, Cemetery,
Racine.
Mrs. Robert (Gladys E.) Darst llld
FrieJids may c;a1! at the funeral
.. Mrs. Williain (Vivian C.) Balter . home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Sr., both of Point Pleasant; 1
Thursday.
.. brother, Marvin L. Kelly of Mid- on Masonic
Rites will be held
dleport; several nieces and Thursday at 8:30 p.m.
· Memorial eonttibutions may be
will be 2 p.m. Thursday, made to tbe United Methodist
December 3, at the Crow-HusseU . Church in Racine.
• Funeral Horne, Point PleMant, with
Rev. Oilben Brewer ofBciating.
Burill will follow in SUIICial
- Veterua Me_.lal
" CemePay in Point Plealant.
TUESDAY
ADMISSIO
VISitin&amp; hours will be held at the
funeral home today (WeG!eaday) Donia Cnlle, Middleport, and
Zimmennan, Middlepon.
, from 4-9 p.m.
TUESDAY DISCHA ES John Klein.
AA to meet
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
POmeroy group of AA will meet
Discharges, Dec. l - Brenda
at 7 p.m. at Sacred Hclrt Catholic.
Mer~bon,
Nola Thacker, Richard
Church, 161 Mulberry Avenue in
,Fitcb,
Oral
Green, Mrs. Larry
Pomeroy 011 lbuntlay at 7 p.m. For
information, c;a1! 992-5963. .
Davis and dauahrer. Mrs. Timothy
.
Wllllh and daughter, Mrs. Charles
.
McG"ulre and son, Homer
McQuaid, Melioda Beaver, Leda
'1\e Daily htinel
Kracu~. Mn. Dennis Taylor and
~~
daughter, Opal Fyffe, Ina Jones,
PUit.W :::.'{ ar.a ••· ......,
Jamea Pauley, David Good, Victo~I'IWq, Do.liLj&gt;P
.,;
Ollie
1M
O?do
.\WioJ
?II
H,.
ria Mo~ohan, Ronda Tabor, and
'•
' ~.,. . . . 7Mi'o!ii .,.
Eilein Coduau.

h.olds them responsible for their
actions if they injure or kill someone. Similarly, if a person has
AIDS, the bubonic plague or !lOme
other lethal disease, the law should
hold them responsible fo.r their
actions if they pass the disease on
to an unsuspecting victim.
·
State criminal codes do not
specifically ad!kess the matter of
willful transmission of infectious or
deadly diseases. But in these times,
with sexually transmitted diseases
running rampant, this seems a logical, albeit lamentable, progression
of criminal law.
Maybe if AI berto Gonzalez
knew that it was again~ the law to
expose a person to his disease without telling them, that he could be
conyicted of attempted murder, that
he might serve hard lime for his
reprehensible behavior, he might
not have willfully infected his vic·
tims with the AIDS virus.
Maybe Shawn Hop would be
alive today. And maybe a frightened teen-aked girl in Portland
would not be wondering today
whether she will live to see her
20th birthday.
Joseph Perkins Is a coiWDnlst
for The San Diego Unlo•-Trlbuae aDd a writer for Ne,..paper
Eaterprise Assoc:illtion.

~

Hospital News

advisers. These could have been
anticipated and resolved in the
original announcemenL
2. Gays in the military. Clinton
must lceep his campaign promise,
but he didn't have to make this
issue the first coniroversy pf ·his
yet·to·be-installed administration.
Prudent consul.tation with military
leaders should have preceded his
public comment, not folll!wed 'iL ..
3. Haitian refugees. Again, a
promise must be lcept. But lately,
Clinton has sounded like he mipt
renege on admitting the refugee
s
into the United Stites. Statements
made in advance of a fully prepared program inevitably trigger ·
s~ries ab~ut wavering and waf.
nmg, as Cl10ton's quiet comments
d1d
•
.
- , ,
These missteps weren t caqsed
by an arrogance of power The"·
.
.
· • ' .-~
~ted
m
an
~l!CC
of
powa;.anda
naivete about1mphed power
how quickly it sbifts here. And
they can be easily COII'CCted, once
the Clinton Clan grasps the uruq
· ue
essence of national governance.
II is ·washington's strange rite
acts as though the transition is
already complete.
Martin Schram Is a sYDdlcltecl
tntero1
writer for Newspaper nterprlse
Aasoeladon.

I

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\

Correction
Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. 0 'Brion set Linda Harman's boad at $50,000 at her
arraignment bearina on Monday.
· Hannan, who Is accuaed in the
murder of her hUiband, Michael,
lilt weekend, iJ incln:eraeed iD tbe
Athena County Jail. Tbe bond
Uloult - inconectly reported in
The Dilly Sentinel on Tueidly.

c..

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Look For 01r
-. .
hJ
" Advertisement
In Tomorrow's
•• '*
:::.-·......'= ~:!
.Paper
w·
Crooll\ wt?lllo

No

lf~.!~~~!l~ew:.:: ~:r::::.: ro~~993 t_woth~~~;

tighter-than-ever guidelines for
transition aides. But aides seemed
'sed hen r po te
k d
su,.,n
w
e r rs as e
obVlDIIS, legitimate questions abQut
special interest ties of Clinton's top

I

•'

Knowingly,passin.g AIDS . is .crimin·aJ.,...J,
She had just turned 17 when she
met Albeno Gonzalez. He was 10
years her senior. He offered her a
marijuana joinL She smoked iL Got
a little high. He asked ror se~. She
demurred at fust, but relented when
he persuaded her that they
"wouldn't do anything you don't
want to do already."
.
Gonzalez knew at the time of
this sexualtheencounter
that he
carrying
AIDS ·virus.
Butwas
he
didn'tlet on. Had the teen-aged girl
been the wiser, she undoubtedly
would have resisted his sexual
advances more vigorously. She
almost certainly would have insist·
ed that he at least wear a condom.
So it is that Gonzalez now finds
himself on trial in Portland, Ore.,
on charges of attempted murder
for having unprotected sex with h~
unsuspecting victim while fully
knowledgable of his HIV status. He
is believed 10 be the ftrst such prosecution in the United States.
At least one legal expen familiar
with the case doubts that Gonzalez
will be convicted. "There at least
three difficulties," said Arthur
LaFrance, a professor of criminal
law and bioetbics at Northwestern
School.of Law in Portland, Ore.
"One," the professor explained,

I

IND.

·'

Clinton's worry? Sins of transition

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Accu-Weather• forecut for

NRA goes after GeneraJ Dynamics, ATF ads

11

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.111e Dally senti

rt,Ohlo

Northeastern Ohio expectlng more snow tonight

Thunday, Dec:. 3
I\IICH.

•
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Page-2-111e Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednelday, December 2,1992

.

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p

W *tiiiSIIf D1cema. 2, 1 -

7

.... .. .. .....- ...

LOCIII2.9/
,IHI SHOI PUCI

A winter weather advisory
remains in effect today for all of
Ohio.
By evenina snowfall should
range from near an inch in the
southwest to near 4 inches in the
extreme nortbcasL
Snow is lilcely tonight in the
nonheast, 'with variable cloudiness
southwest. LOws falling into the
20s. There will be Vlriable cloudi·
ness Thursday. along with a chance
of m!!_nly momin• flurries north·
east. HipS will be 10 the 30s.
, The ~ high on this date in
Columbus .was 72 In -1982. The
record low was 1 in 1886.
Sunset tonight at 5:07 p.m. Sun·
rise Thursday at7:36 a.m.

AroUDd die natloa
Snow from a llrODg jet stream
dislurilaDce blanke&lt;.ed much of the
Midwest and· Great Lakes region
early today.
The disDirbance was expected to
dump snow today in thote areas
and parts of the Appalachians, with
snow mixed wit&amp;-rain along the
rniddle Atlantic seaboard.
A warm rront pushing north
through the Northwest and clashing
with cold air there was expected to
cause snow in the northern Rockies.
.
Winter storm warnings were
IX'!!t.ed for today .over parts of Idaho
8nd Oregon. Winter storin watChes
were posted in portions or Mon·
tana, Utah and Wyoming.

Tuesday night, snow was .scat- eastern Soutb Dakota. Wind-

tered from nortbem New England whipped snow forced the Nebruk.a
across the Great Lalces and upper State Patrol to close a .41 -mjle
Miuissippi Valley. Snow in the stretch of state Highway 71 ·in
northern Rockies and coastal Western Nelnska.
;

m~n.tains of Oregon changed to
ram 10 lower elevations of. the
Pacific Northwest. Rain was scattered over eastern Missouri and
.much of illinois; along the central
Atlantic Coast and the centlal Gulf
of Mexico region.
In Page. W.va:, a preJnan t
woman who was helping vicums of
a i;ar accident on a snow-covered
road was hit by another car and
killed, police said.
Snow~ec! by wind gusting
u to 60 m forced tbe closure or
5~ miles o Interstate 29 in north·

Highs today were expectcd'·to
reach the 20s m Minnesota, norihern Michigan and the northe:rn
Rockies; 305 in nortbem New England, the Midwest, ncrthcm Plains
and the inland Northwest; 4Qs'•in
the rest of the NIXlheast, the cential
Plains and tbe NClrtbwest coast; fls
in the Appalachians, the south~
Plains mid nOrthern California; 60s
in mos~ of the Southeast, Texas a'lxl
southern California; and 70s ·in
southern Florida and the Sour.hwest.

Fifty-two cases processed in Meigs County Cour~
Meigs County Court Judge
Patric;k H. O'Brien processed 52
c~s last weclc.
.
Fined were: Christy Johnson,
Albany, speed, $27 and costs;
Clarence E. Might, Vinton, failure
to s~op, $10 and costs; Larry S.
Slathers, Washington, W.Va.,
speed, $23 and costs; Natoma D.
$tevens, Wellington, speed, $22
and costs; Gerald Maddox, Long
Bottom, seat belt violation, oosts
only; Carol Johnson, Long Bottom,
seat belt violation, CQSlS only; Gre·
gory Davis, Pomeroy, speeding,
$23 and costs; Delmar D.
Williams, Athens, seat belt viola·
lion, costs only; Frank P. Smith,
Middlepon, speed, $23 and costs;
Debbie M.. Bustle, Cincinnati,
speed, $27 and costs; Jerry D.

Swanz, Middleport, failure to dis- Fife, Middlepon, seat belt viola·
play valid registration, $10 and . tion, $25 and costs ; Richard F.
costs; Robert D. Smith, Marietta, Smith, Pomeroy, seat belt violaspeed, $25 and costs; Andrew J. tion, costs only; Deborah S. Blazer,
Keller, Pittsford, N.Y., speed, $30 Gallipolis, speed', $21 an~ costs;
and costs.
Davi4 C. Lambert. Pomeroy, inseSteven R. Weintraub; Colum- cure load, $25 and C:osts; Connie L.
bus, seat belt violatioo, costS only; Rankin, Tuppers Plains, sjleed, $23
Tammy Weintraub, Columbus, seat and costs; Vincent E. Knight. Jr.,
belt violation, costs only; Cara Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs;
Cooper, Findlay, speed, $25 and Roland E. Goodwin, Middlepon,
costs; Jeffrey A. Soben, Erie, Pa., seat belt violation, $25 and costs;
speed, $22 and costs; Jason C. Paul Wilson, Shade, resisting
Theobald, Newport. speed, $26 and arrest. 90 days, suspended to l 0
costs; Paul Smith, Jr., LOng Bot- days, costs, two years 1,1robation,
tom, seat belt violation, $25 and aggravated menacing, s1x rnonths
costs; James J. Jeffers, Langsville, in jail, suspended 10 10 days, conspeed, $24 and costs, expired current with other charge, costs,
hcense plates, $10 and costs; two years probation. ·
Robert C. Fife, Middleport, seat
Robert L. Riffle, Pomeroy, DUI,
~It, Sl5 and costs; Jacqueline D.
•

Deputies investigate several accidents
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reported Wednesday that
the department had re&lt;:endy mvesligated several acc;idents.
At 1: 10 a.m. on Sunday, Bron·
son Laudermilt of Middleport lost
control of his 1979 Chevrolet when
he lost control in the Pick and
Shovel parking lot at Salem Center.
He was cited to Meigs County
Coun on a cbarge of failure to
maintain controL
.Richard Blankenship was travel·
inj.east on Sunday on U.S. Route
33 when he killed a deer that ran
Into the path of his vehicle. Light
darilage was reported to his 1989

Dodge.
On Sunday at 11:40 p.m., Amos
B. Cross, Jr., of Langsville was
northbound on State Route 7 nesr
Silver Run in his 1985 Freighdiner
when he strUck and killed a deer
that ran into the path of his 1985
Freightliner. Moderate damage was
reported. ·
Mary Bradford of County Road
35 reported that on Monday at
11:45 a.m., she was eastbound on
State Route 124 when ·she strUck
and killed a deer. Moderate damage
was sustained by her 1989 ChevroleL
On Monday at 3:45 p.m.,

- ·Meigs announcements-trustees

ScipiO
to illed. .
' The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at
the Pageville Townhall.
Meeting postponed
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club has poS1poned its meeting and
blood pressure clinic set for Tuesday, until Jaii..J2 at the townhouse.
'lbe blood pressure clinic will be
held weather permiuing. Those
auending are to bring a covered
dish
·
Museum open house
Christmas Open House at the
Meigs County Museum will be
sunday from t2:30-4:30p.m.
Displays and trees depicting
"Christmas Around the World •
Traditions of Our Ancestors" will
be featured and traditional sweets
wiD be served throughout the after- ·
noon. Nearly SO Madonnas from
the collection of Betty Dean will be
on display for the open house and
throughout the Chrisunas season.
An advent wreath contest will
be sponsored for the general public
and a Christmas card contest for

Meigs squad
runs announced
Meigs Emergency Services
answered the following calls: Tuesy, 11:05 a.m., Syracuse squad 10
Lee Circle, Maxine Philson 10 Vet·
erans Mem!lrial Hospital; l: 17
p.m., Rutland unit to Salem Street,
Ethel Grueser to :Veterans: 3:41
p.m., Middleport squad to
Stonewood Apartments, Belly
Pugh to Veterans; 5:S7 p.m., Tuppers Plains, Rsy Smith from ~um­
ber Nine Road to Camden ·Clark
Memorial Hospital; 6:10 p.m.,
Middlepon sq1,1ad to Old Lower
Route 7, John White to Holzer
Medica,! ~enter; 7:53 p.m.,
Pomeroy urut to Mulberry Avenue,
Cash Zimmerman to Veterans; 8: 13
p.m.. Middleport unit to Lincoln
Street, Alfred Roush to Holzer;
8:20 p.m., Racine and Syracuse
units to SPate Route 338 for a rue at
the Reba Mcrrison residence; 6:41
a.m .. Wednesday, Rudand unit to
College Street, Kethel Hatfield to
Veterans.

school children. Prizes will be
awarded for both contests. ·
~ adve!'t wreath. may·be r_nade
of hve or dried material and w1U be
judged 011 originality and correctness of usage. Entnes should be
brought to the ~usc:um by .Saturdl!r.
!lftemoon for JU~"mg. Wmners m
both contests w1 I be announced
dunng the open house.
.
Further mformauon regardmg
the c:ontests or ~pen house msy be
obtained by c;al!mg the museum at
992-3810 or stopping by during
business hour.;, 1-4:30 p.m. Toesday through Saturday.

Pomeroy Court
Six were fined and six others
forfeited bonds in the court or
Pomeiuy Mayor Bruce Reed Monday nighL
Fined were Kendall Lemley,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, driving
under suspension; Roland Landaker, Middlcpon, $63 and ccists, no
operator's license; Mark Haley, Jr..
Pomeroy, costs only of $25, railure
to appear; Terry Rhoades, Middleport, $88 and costs, open flask, $63
and costs, disorderly conduct;, $88
and costs, consuming alcohol under
age 21, and $63 and costs, failure
to comply with a court order; Alma
Queen, Pomeroy, destruction of
property, $313 and costs, failure to
haul garbage and traSh from property at 105 Wolfe Drive, $63 and
costs; and William E. Eakins,
Pomeroy. $113 and costs, public
intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were Ann
McDonough, Columbus, $100,
reckless operation: Jason Hysell,
Pomeroy. $80, disorderly conduct;
Aaron Davis, Middleport, $67,
speeding; Matthew Thompson,
Ashville, $79, speeding; Dana
Clark, Orville, $80, expired plateS;
Bobby J. Rupe, II, Pomeroy, $82,
speeding; Todd Allison, Convoy,
$61, speeding.
·

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446

4~14

.

7

HUlBARD'S GREENHOUSE
I,
Is IIW I~ fer tH ,
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9115MH.·Sot.
' 11155=.

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alon,

117

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For •••rllllland OilS:""'
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HUIIAID'S, fJ76u,
'

H2·5 76

Pamela I. Cashin of Cheshire was
traveling no{th of State Route 7
when she struck and kiUed a deer
that ran into the path of her vdticle.
Light damage was reported.
At6:35 p.m. on Monday, Merte
Fe,rrell of Beaver Creek was southbound on State Route 7. He reponed thal he slowed when he
observed a vehicle along tlie Iert
side of the roadway with flashing
lights. He said he was blinded by
an oncoming vehicle and did not
see a semi tractor backing out onto
the roadway, operated by Troy L.
Kiule of Henager, Ala.
·
Heavy damage was lisled to Fer·
rell's 1988 Ford pickup and light
damage to the trailer.
·
On Monday at ll :55 p.m.,
~lyde Hupp of Trimple was fC!veling on a Southern Ohio Coal Company raodway in his 1992 Dodge
when he kiUed a deer that ran into
his path. Damage was listed as
moderate.
'

Stocks
Am Ele Power....................31
Ashland Oil........................ 25 1/8
AT&amp;T........... ......................47 1/4
Bank One........................... 48 114
Bob Evans .........................20 118
Charming Shop..................36 118
City Holding ...................... 18
Federal Mogul................... .l6 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................73
Key Centurion ...:...............20 3/4
L8nds End................ .......... 25 1/4
Limited Inc....................... 25 3/4
Multimedia Inc. ..................27 1{1.
Rax Restauranl.. ............... 1/4
Reliance Electtic............. .. .l8 1{1.
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 15
Shoney's Inc................ ...... 24
Siar Bank ... ........................ 34 1/4
Wendy Int'l... ............... ... .. .l3 I/8
Worthington Ind................ 21 718
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

six months in jail, credit for time
served, $500 and costs, operatcir's
license suspended indefinitely,
treatment with Health Rec~ery
Services, driving under suspension,
six months in jail, concurrent with
other charges, costs, five years f!m.
bation; Craig S. Johnson;
Willcesville, reckless operation•,
$100 and costs, $200 forfeiture to
the Law Enforcement Trust Fund,
· failure to control. $100 an4 costs,
no registration, costs; Richard A.
Peyton, Dexter, seat belt violation,
costs only; Frank M. ColweU, Vinton, railure to control, $20 .and
costs; Charles D. ·Reitwill ,
Pomeroy, speed, $23 and costs;
Shawn C. Maicinko, ~cine, failure to control; $10 and costs ;
Harold A. Kent, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., speeding, $23 and casts;
Peggy Davenport. Pomeroy, speed·
ing, $22 and costs; Christopheii R.
Sloan, Pomeroy, speed, $2S:and
costs.
Theresa L. Rider, Rutland, dtiv·
ine; under suspension, three days in
ja1l, suspe11ded with valid opera·
tor's licenses in 90 days, $75·lnd
costs, expired registration, $1()'land
costs, seat belt violation, $25 and
costs; Ernest Smith, Middleport;
speeding, $21 and costs; Mark
Schartiger, Middle~rt. crimfual
mischief, 30 days in Jail, suspended
to five, costs, two yeats probation',
restitution; Terry Cupp, Wellston,
no operator's license, six mootbs in
jail, suspended to five days, $100
and costs, two years probation;
John Kearns III, Pt. Pleaslll\t,
W.Va .• passing bad checks, ·$25
and c;osts, restitution; James Leslel',
Langsville, driving under suspension, 30 days iii jail, suspendcc1' to
I0, operator's license suspended. '
Larry Harmon, Columbus, our.
$450 and costs, 30 days jail, ·sus;
pended to 10 days; operator's
license suspended for one year;
one year probation, s~ng, . $23
and costs, seat belt v10la1ion, $25
and cost; Michael Brewer, MHon,
W.Va., DUI, $350 and costs, I0
days in jail, suspended to three,
operator's license suspended for' 90
days, one year probation, upon
enrollment and comytetion onpe
RTP school, $150 o fine and jail
time will be suspended, assurtd
clear disi8Dce ahead, $30 and"CIJStS;
Jason Hysell, Pomeroy, leaving ~
scene of an acci4ent, 30 days Sn
jail, SI!SJICDded to three, $100 and
costs, one year probation, failure :to
control, Giles L. Hysell, Racine,
DUI, $350 and costs, 10 days ~n
jail, suspended to three, operatot's
license suspended for 90 da~s.
upon enrollment and completion bf
the RTP school, $150 of fmc aod
jail time will be suspended.
•
Forfeiting bonds were: Jolin
Maurer, Nelsonville, speed, $5)l;
Michelle Anderson, Wortbington,
speed, $85; Paul Edwards, WeUston; speed, $65; Charles Sulliv~.
West Columbia, W.Va .. spee&lt;t·
$85.
:•

SANTA ARRIVES IN
MIDDLEPORTf

CHRISTMAS PARADE
THURSDAY~

DEC. 3 · ·6:00 P.M• .
VIsit the Following Businesses
Open Until 8:00 P.M.
For Your Shopping Convenience:
DAN'S
INGELS FURNITURE • INGIU' CARPET
VIDEO TOUCH
MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
IAHR CLOTHIERS • WESTERN AUTO
HUMANE SOCIETY THRIFT SHOP
DAIRY QUEEN • PEOPLES' BINI
JOHNSON'S VARIETY STORE
LOCIER 219/IHE SHOE PUCE
,.
MIDDLEPORT IRIS COUNCIL
· D. I. FA.._ IOYS CIT OVIIft 1111111 SHOP) . ·
.

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

PRISCRIPIIOI SHOP
liNG SERVISTIR co,.. U.tl 7:00 p.&amp;)

Ola.

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Sports

·.

The Daily Sentinel

-•

Wednuday, December 2,1992

versity suffetina '27 lllniCMn mel
Ohio State winning despite miiiiDa
60 peree111 of its shots in the aec:onil
half and getting Olllrebounded by a
smaller team.
"It was real rag-tag out tbere,
but that's what young teams will
do,'' said Bobcat coach Larry
Hunter.
· ·
Not until the game was threequarters over did the Buckeyes with four new swtm from a year
ago- discover~ F~

was lbeir ace in the hole.

Witb the score tied at SO and
9:53 remaining. Obio State coach
Randy A,yeu called • timeout.
"We had just had a chance to
make I bustle play at halfcourt and
we just atoocl around and didn't
make iL So we cliscuSied ~ durin&amp; tbe 'timeout," Ayas said with a

blush.

.

After tbe critical timeout, Ohio
State went inside to Fundeltlurke, a
6-foot-9 junior wbo is the only

St·ot·choat·d .

·Jn tbeNBA ...

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· .EASTERN CONFERENCE
.

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- -~ ........... .7 7 .500
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By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gallia A~ademy players Bryan
J11U. Chad Barnes and Tim Slone
aDd River Vllley's Aaron McCawty
+ere among·31 soulheastem Obio
high school fOOiball pla)'CIS named
t0 this year's Divisicln m all-Ohio
team by The Associaled PresS.
Here'• the AP 1992 Division m
team, telectecl on the R!COIIIIIIendaqons of aSlate panel of sports writ-

~.. Poltlaad

' GoldeB State

S
~4

·,

:J' "

·-·-..5 · I

.315

The University of Rio Grande
men's basketball team survived a
narrow halftime ICad to break out
for a wide.scoring margin Monday
on its way to a 96-73 defeat of
West Virginia Wesleyan.
The Redmen, held down in its
scoring in last week's loss to West
Virginia State, did whatever '1/tey
wanted to do with the ball 11nd
closed Wesleyan out of the inside
with a balanced game plan in the
game's latter half.
Led by Matt Powell's n.point
performance and a 21-point, 11rebound showing by senior co-captain Jeff Brown, Rio Grande outlasted a similarly balanced attack
from the hosts, in which leading
scorer Kenny Smitb bested all scor. ets with 25 markers. While Wesleyan edged Rio Grande on the
~ by five (37-32), the Redmen
advanced on their shooting from
both the floor and at the free throw
line.
·
The advantage allowed Rio
Grande to break out for 53 points
in the second period 10 Wesleyan's
34. All of the Redmen starterS jiOl
into the ·act, as well as LaMont
Harris, Tim Christian and Jason
Cunis, who came in off the bench.
Helpinl! matters was Rio GrBDtic's
limttaUon of t,urnovers, holding
their possession losses to 13 while
Wesleyan suffered 21:

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Adaola 19,-.107
&lt;UIVEIANDIII,-101
llalvor 1 1 2 , - Ill!
IJtolo 116, Dollu I 01
PbOeniJ. 109 Qadoae 90

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WALES CONFERENCE
T-

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Meigs County reports 1,165 ·
deer kills in season's first days

~AMPB~'*"~CE
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Transactions

11 611l6

B•sebeQ

TuadiiJ'IICOnl
M'
Aut

,

t::'.:;

Lob Cadoalio, "f-5, 210
Sftor, O.od
aut, Willud. 6-l.175, ~- 0 T Ra R.ozllllll, tnt.n.. 5-9, IIO,Ir.; S.. Midaee&amp;, 0111:
- r . 5·11, 211, Sr.; 1•dt MoCloUurd. N•w
Caaoatd1cloo01aur.4-3, 22S,Sr.; Will
~=~·"'·W.Sr.;BrioaTillallo,
~3. 262, Sr.; Doo Holian, Lob
~ 6-3, 23S, Sr. QuutGbwi-Pete Jaluric,

DoL..
v.......-.

-t«Loloo ~ ~. 195, Sr. a~

Ilal. Lcadon, 5·10,.110, Sr.; Chril HOliflold
ROoifao&lt;l. S-9, 171, Sr.; Jw www.. u.....;
...._,,5-9, 170, Sr.: Dladl....,.,...; a.v..

.lMd BmricriDO. ~11, 115, Sr.; Jenn• iacb.,
,,.,.._, '-" 111, Jr,i Lou Maapuel, Alblllda
- · :1-1, 110, Sr. !Gcbr-J...., Manto, Con·
.., Caalrll c.diolic,tl-2.175, Sr.
' DEFBNSE: 1 '
m s~oa.O'Damell,Mm·
"*LolooColholio, 6-2.1!10. Sr.; 0.. c..finon, Sl
PiD1 On1oom, 6-3, 235, Sr.; loy Hoey, t...doo, 6. 2. 215, Sr.; N'd: Scuoo, c..... C-.1 Colholie
6-1, 235, Sr.; Bdon
ClMiond

c..-.

Y~ IJau1lrre, 6-0, :1;11), Sr.; lcorryR--

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A-Loopo
BOSTON RBO SOX - Aarood to
tam1 wilh S.. Fillet., ~. ma a
two-,., OGriiiiOL
SEATTLE MAIUNERS - Nomtd
Powluld vioe pno;- &lt; t - •

t l,ODiwtl
IF7,N.Y.III.IDIIIIri:3 . _.,

New 1iiii!IMJ' I, Torarto 3

• ... Louio .. Haofool4
Lcoo Aaploo 6, Q.iooao_3
F+- m nl.Sin.JaeOt

~ IWIOI!IIS -N.....S Pony

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LOS ANGELES DODOEJlS -

ourfiold.

PITI'IJUaGJI I'lL\TIS - Namtd
BID IIJit IIJ'OII!d - . , tloo _..,.

DoMn-..

na,.m.-t; ... lo. l&amp;.a ••• Kevin

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Nl!'lll ENGLAND PATitOTS -

_ . . . . . , . . . . , , - . .... Ia.

J; ~ lipodl.. W.O..om,

M:•...,
. , . , , _ • •JI

co

0

-

First teom
OFFI!NSE: Eodo---Juoo

·'
•

Senir, Muk Hcrraa, Y~own Qaacy, 6-l,
16ol, Sr.; Lance HaniCID, J.Aili Clcvcrlet(, S-11,
1,, Sr.; Aloozo Edmonda, Dayton Chantinade-lulilmne. 6-1,195, Sr.l.Jilemen O•uck .Aadric:U,

.,

Columbu1 Brookhavca, 6-2, 215, Sr.; Chris
DtSb;dd• 11o1oit W•t Braoclt. 6-4, 2SS, Sr.; Du·
aae Battle, Elyria Weal. S-9. 205. Sr.: Alan
Fitt&amp;ertld, Younanown Rayon, 6·2, 240, Sr.
()lutaback--Oamon Moore, Foatm:il, 6-1, liS,
Jr. Backa-Chll'lu Honloy, Columb~a

IS YOUR
,,·
HOUSE READY
FOR WINTER? '.•
WE CARRY:',, '
Insulation for :r
Pipes, Window
Ktts, Heat Tape
and Weather .
Stripping.
,

w....,.

w.

I

IBAmB li!AHAWD- Pl"od
J-. J• ...., mw' t Oil iQJwM

WITH FIIES •••••• $2.44

Tu=-·

ADOLPH'S DAllY VALUY

w., ... ,_., •• a• •uaa"

......,,, o•

Mulk:itlaum; Ric:b Theil, St. ClauaviUe; Owen
Walke, Byesville Meadowbrook; Jotb L\ICU,
MuUna Fwry; Mike Call. Bcllain; Mtu Alhkct·
tlo. Gn•. .luaun ladian Valley: Darryl Lane,
Zue~rille MtyiVillc; Malt Schchl, ByeavUl•
Moa4owbroak; Tcny Jonea, Cothoctoo· Scott
Poderf'Jeld. SL Otirtvill~; Bob Jet~e.. Lisbon
Beaver; Scan Kamttx, Richmolld EdlJoa South;
E.J. Holub. Byeavllle Meadowbrook~ Lute
Pad&amp;olet. Man.iat.Ferry: S~ Hom. Millcnbura
Wott. Holmu: Bnan McWhoJtet, New Cancota
John OleM; Mitt Dctick, Byesville MeadoW·
brook; John CaU.oun, Bellaire; Bob Fon;man

a.,-

u.-.

~effllle Wst M~; Keith Wtli.er,.MU:
tW Fcny; Micah Whitduir. New Concord John
Gl""'; Aaron a.......,IJluidiMllo C:.ymom;
Frank Alkillson, Wa~ll Court House;
M.U Snodar•, WaYerly; JuoaiCalaht, Pike.

um.na, 6-1, 2.SS,.Sr.: lCwtt Peter&amp;, UhriebiYille,

•

htot; SliaH Wlllla- Mlo-

Hoa10; Cll•l Hauer, Jaekaon; Ta.111o7 Hill,
J•tboll• Alldy 114:Ma, McArtb•r VInton; Nick
Tolh, The Plaint Alhena; Duaty Adama,
Mo:Artltur VIa..._
hatiiGrt Floot, MuyoWII; 1"'"" tyoclt, Warthinaton Kilbourne; Joe Bulow, Colwnbwl ·DoSale~; Jlm Oa!Ct, Columbua Northlmd; Mall Vtr·
milion, WorthiaJten Kilboume; Mike Coc;:hnn,

10, 110..:. S~.; NiCk Mont, Frantlin, ·6-0, l95 ,
· FJWh.; wvid Sc:bemsr, OU'otd Ttltwlllldl, S..ll,
190. Sr.; Hamon ........ y..,.~towo Ra,..., 61, 19S, Sr.; Cory Cab..,, Lodi Clovod,.f, •2.
215, Sr. Kicltcr-lobo
Solon. 6-0, 170. 'Ir.;
Kylt JKbcll, Modilool, ~. 20:5. Sr.; lim Willi,
•2. 175, Sr.
DEFENSE: Linanat-Mtll Amold, Holland
Sm.&amp;6eld. 6-1,215. Sr.; Jlym Fali.er, Cincinzuli
\tllnim Wood1, 6--3. 240, Sr.; Tony Geor,e,
Cia.ciaDii&amp;i Wintoa Wooda, 6-0, 170, Jr.; 1uliut

s-.

l.emao·-

Williamt, O.ytm Chamilltdc-Julicznc. 6-4, 258,
~!-.i Sb.wn Htrria, Columbu1 Brookhaven, 6-ot,
N&gt;, Sr.; S... J..oilptnilh. llillobon&gt;, 6-2, 200, Jr.

Linoblcken-Sl8VC Dewberry, Defiance, S-10,
11~. Sr.; Aleb 1\nerblulb, Da~ Ch~do­
JIIlienn.o. 6-3, 22S, Sr.: ~Lippe, UIUontown
Lake_ 6-2. 211, Sr.; Shawn hvlovich, Avon Lake.
6-1.11!§, Sr.; SteVe MitroW:h, Connealll, 6-1, 195,
Sr. Bacb-JD. Waaoner, Hilllboro, S·lO, 16S,
Sr.; Robert R.auah, Raylaod Buckeye. .5 -10, 185,
Sr.; JJ. F.llcm, CcmDcaut. 5·10. 162. Sr.; Lcatwm
Smith, Colwnbu&amp; Btookhavl!l'l, S-11, 18.5, Sr.; Rob
Miller. Columbua WattersOn, 6·1. 181. Sr.
Punter-SieVe Brown. Columbut OeSalea, S-11.
185, Jr.

J•••

Nowodt .~

v.u.y; N - Mdlah, Mmm

Riv« Volley. Brion R - Moolnt OO..d; looh ,
Pean., WilliJ,mapon We~tf.t,U; Bnnd~ McO.el·
!md Mwni Gile.d· Nick
Dcbw.,. audte)'O V.u.y. Jacm TUllier Col~bul BCDCiu:raf\;
Kenyqa. ab,u. Bloanl.C~ Joo Green, Ht::brm
Lakewood; JcmDy&amp;ailey. Mount Oilcld; Shawn
Emmell, JW:nn Lakewood
Todd Cortiln Willald; iyanP'rmrt, Wauaeon;
Slaffen Jlitten~. Sw•nton: TI'O)' Burkhardt,
On~ Van Spna. Lima Bttb; Jdf'Bowcr, Uppw Suuluaky; Ry111 Holmaa, Upper Suuhllky~
Milch Hom:t, Uma Bath· Sam Ullery OU Hubor. Dtmit Smim. u~ Sanduatcy; ~ Blalino
Cuttli• M•raareua; J ..on Neuenac:bwandcr,
Wauaoon: Jo&amp;b T1ylor, Onurio; Ben Brunner,
C.aulia M:arasroua: Jak• P~nell, Uppcl' San ·
d\Jsty; Charlie Woyer, Ctltlli&amp; MI~B.an:t:ta; John
Voacl, Willard; Matt Ebbotkotte, Lim• Bath;

s-.

Doua Wil.l.imu Swanton.
·Ru H\l!C~an, Bellbrook; Ore1 Jenkin a,
Goahon; Brad Mitchell, Tipp City Ttppccanoc:

Moa SWialto ~ Al""' NolhonlAmb, M.,.
row Little Miami; J11on OqlclberJ, Hamlllon
Badin· Bf)'an\ Mc:CoMcll. Dayton. Nonhrldac;

Jeff Bw.. ~ AI""' Jolin I.Du.Ucrt. Kinp

~~F~;E:J"~~;

BWr, w...,.,_, Cowt"""'" MiiiDi ...., :s9, 165, si. -~ Sylvotkrr ht&amp;GD, YOUDpawn
Ottne,, 5·1, 170, Sr.; Jucn Doop, FMMit, 5·

Lo•laville, 6-1, 196, Sr.'r· Terroll

- J· '

Briaa
· , Wi!"t W.rall; ChriJ
Spoon. Dolawan _ . , . V.UO)': lmmy To..,

f.'m, TwintbllrJ Ch•mbcrlin: SLeve Severino,

McArthur Vl•toa; Larrr Rttft"•rtr, Jaduon;
Joba Goddnd, PortJII'Io"lh; Doua Oordon,
W11binaton Cou11 House; Ja10a N•w•ome,

lon Aljooci•,

Aaroo Mit:i.~C11o11o1n at-11 Volle)" Chad
• .,.., Go
' Golllo

~~~Y~*F.:.~~::R::d::

· 2, 256, Sr.; Miko BOMly, Lemon· Moatoe, 6-2.
175, Sr.; Jlea·I:Ciiloy, MaryM1le. 6-1, 250, Sr.; Vic
Guida, Ne:w Philadolpllia, 6-::Z, 210, ,Sr.'; Jetf.
Corl~le, Jo-. 6-1, 251, Sr. Quot&lt;aboob-

,

•

OFPENSE: llodo--liJ. - · Dollaaoo, 5·1,
150, Sr.; Todd M. Luoiu1. Fooloria, S-10, 160. Sr.;
Btod 1oa- Abat F ' - "3,1!10. Sr. Uoo-'
mm-IJtie Db, Da)101_1 C)•iNdn.Julialnc. 6-

Mc:Arlllur Vla1oa; Brandon Jack•on,

Portlll'loalh; Bill Coape:r, WaahinJtOII. Court

w.-.. ,

V'illaJC Bt)'; Nic:k DeVito, Hwuin&amp; Valle)' Univcn:ity Sc:hool; Chris Andenon, Huntina Valley
Univenity School; Todd BLllh, Chaglin Falls Ken·
non ; Chril Pelto, Hunting Valley Univenh y
Schoot;·Ju.stin SWord, Ormge; Anmw Christ,
Bay Village Bay: C.J. Piro, Twinlburg Chamberlin.

~":::::~~~~=~~~:...
OPEN HOUSE!
SAT. &amp; SUN., DEC. 5 &amp; 6
12:00·5:00 P.M.
FREE REFRESHMENTS AND DOOR

' PRIZES

.· ~'
oi

..,. '

,•

FOR YOUR DEPARTED LOVED ONES WE FEATURE
._. WREATHS, SPRAYS, VASES and GRAVE BLANKETS.

'''

,.

'10

(Former School of Nursi•g)

FIRST AVENUE
DOWNTOWN, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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NJ
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Saturday, December 5, 1992
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Sunday, D~~~mber 6, 1992
12:00·noon'!4:00 p.m.

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'r,.
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Spo•sored ., the HMC
·
E•ployee Activity Associatioa

South; Rob Scbtfot, M1dit9D: Brian Vou,
Afllbe:m S.to; Mite Laut. Oim.&amp;ad F•lla: Dm

Lcindecltor, Nooth Koyolton.

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HoWna. Camtwidp; Milr.o Gi11aDd. New Pbiladef..

.......lady CopleJ, Por•••; Jl-J Pierce;
V....ol

.._

Worn~[.Duol

'•

Pw...oolh;

BiD wm.-id .. wuhiaatoe COIU\ Roue; Pat

McH•all. Tltt Pllll•l Allltlll JtiOI B•War.

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Find Something You'll
Really Fall For In The
~unltalJ ~imts• itntintl
Sunday, December 6th
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ALL NEW
TV GUIDE
SUPPLEMENT

•I

You will find it all - weekly
TV listings, cable, crossword puzzle, Horoscope,
word search. plus much
more. This is a complete
guide for your television
viewing. Don't miss it receive it fr~e every week in
your

•••

~unb~

~'

?J

•

DAVIS HALL 8UILDING

Solon; Luan Tncc, E)'rit We~~~; Cka:w.e Orlando,
Willoupby South: Phil Pavltoky. Willou1hby

..L

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tii.uu~~tiliadlli~ds&amp;a~~~lt

'mimes .. ientilul

ol

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·. ::HUBBARD'S SYRACUSE, 08.•992·577.60: : ~

· •'

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na.on.

B k eyes .

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Free 12 oz. Jar of Smuckers Jelly wltlt a
,
SI 0,00 or more purchase.
.
.
For your. holiday gift aiving WI have
::.
:Poinsettias in 7 colors, holly trees, poinsettia:,
·· hangina hskets, and live and cut trees. · · .·

3rd Annual Holida~
.Craft Show

T.O. Hicka, Circleville; 1uoa Leo, Pttulr.ala
Walkilu Mnorial; Lllct&amp; Wmkman, Colwnbla
St Chtrlea.
Sam Lybuae:r, Shelby; Owc::k Nudina, Celina;
Tim CannCIIly, St Marya Memorial; Dan Fnnb,
Clyde; Ben Obce. Maumee: Sha~ Lamb. St.
Marya Memorial; Man Graat, Bellevue; Brian
QU&lt;oo, B""7NO; Doon Milia, Sl Moryo Manorial; Shnm Nye. F91torla; Keith Taylor, Cl~e; la·
Kll R.ide:r, Msumee; M.uk GUc:lr.. Napoleon; Tmy
Hammond. Foatoria; Aaroa Goldstein, Holland
Sprlnsf'ltld; lobo Spono, Sy1.W. Sctllltview.
Doua Hoo~oan. IWnillm ...., ......., Dollba"· Gnoenville; ChriJ Ella!, Lobonon; O.vid· H..t&gt;bord, Norwoool; T,.. Macle&lt;;d. Da,... Cb1mi·
nodo-llllieonc; Milk Eldridp. o....vl!lo; T'Ooo.it Dtvil, Clnqianati Sl. Bemu4·R.-r B1con;
Brian Budm. Lanan·Monroc; Phil File, Mourn
Drab Weswn Brown; Matt Sc:hipf«, Oreanvillc;
Dll1u Smilh, Mount Onb Woatan Brown.
KcviD Haq.ud,. Rocky Jtiver; Bob Hower,
Welllalr.e: DaYld Cuter, ~aple Heiahta; Selh
HOUIWJD, Avun Lake; 'Rob SnydCI', Solon; Brian
Scbmid1.• Bay Vlllaae Bay; Jam• Homaki.
Gnllan Midvitw; Scott a..pao, Lodi ~.
Juatil'l Beuley, Olmatcd Falll; Ohria Ridclick,
O!afton Midvi&amp;w; Teny
Alht.tbWa; Sc:d.t
Cnn.. Grafton Midview; Elic Sc:ht.uucher, Avon
Lalr.110 Rob V~yJaklij•, Madiaon; Kevin Snyder,

University of Rio Grande center turnoverS to 2U and inflicted 22 on
Lori Hamilton pumped in 23 points ~~te hosts.
.
·
and teammate Tricia Collins had 11
Central State (5-1) enters a tourrebounds against Central State, but nament this weekend at Edinboro
the host Marauders employed their (Pa.), while the Redwomen (5-2) ·
high-pressure game to hand the travel Friday to Lake Erie and on
Redwomen a 79-681oss Tuesday.
Saturday to Notre Dame (Ohio).
· In the first of a three-game road Box score:
schedule for the Redwomen, the
CENTRAL STATE (79)team stayed close on Central Lynette Jackson, 1-6-8; Deetra
State's heels and trailed by five at Berry, 3-3-9; Kim Williams, 2-0-4;
the half to the traditional power in Mona Shennan, 0-1-1; Meriama
District 22 women's basketball. Kamara, 3-3-0-15; Rona BenderHowever, veteran Antoinette Vin- son, 1-0-2; YaNennah Njai, 3-2-8·
son fired in 26 markers and eight Janice Tillntan, 2-2-6; Antoinetre
boards to keep the Marauders Vinson, 12-2-26. TOTALS 27~3abead of their guests.
I6-79.·
Nearly all of the! Red women
RIO GRANDE (Ill)- Kim
bench got in on the ·liCtion, but only Sowers, 2-0-4; Gena Norris, 1-2-4·
Hamilton and forward Stephanie Stacey Ritter, 0-1-3-6; Michelle
Gudorf broke into the double-digit · Crouse,-1-2-4; Tricia Collins, 1-1- '
range. At the same time, Dave 3-8; Stephanie Gudorf, 4-3-2-19·
Smalley's defensive plan aii!O made Lori Hamilton, 8-1-4-23. TOTALS
just Vinson and Mcriama Klmara 17-6-16-68.
the high scoring·teaders for Cenllal
Hatftim, score: Central State
State. .
34, Rio Graade 29.
The Marauders ou'trebounded
the Redwomcn 44-37 to gain the .
UC
WJn • •·,
offensive upper h_and, aided by a
(Continued from Page 4)
48.4 !XIrcent showmg on field li08I Gary Trent, dunked to c 1 th lead
shooUng (30-6;!, three of five tJom
.
u c
the three-point range to Rio 10 5 4 -~2. ~tuo State scored t_he
Grande's 43.4 percent (23-53, six next stx potnts ~n _a three-pomt
of 14 from the outside for 42.9 per- field goal_by Davts, a rebound fatcent). Both teams netted ·the same l~w by Rtckey Dudley Blld a foul
amount of successful free throw 8 ot by Funderburke for a 60-52
shots - 16 - on 25 attempts each lead.
for 64 percent Rio Grande held its
. ~ Bobcats got no closer than
·•
.
•
SIX potnts the rest of the ~ay.

.'

•

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

Colwrobuo
T... ~l;..Potukw
Wolitino Mamoriol: John -.r,
boa Eut;

Central State holds off
R.edwomen to post win

Hardware

s1.79 ·

v.r-

Wmen ~Dwayr~e Thamu, y~wn
• Mooooy; A&gt;u~n;Howard, Orrvillo; Craia Villwock,
w..... q,.mp;.a;JJouUoo YoDIJm, Ouvillo; Don
' Horpa-, ,.,..., Cnotwood; ~Dillon, Commd
~ Ha~ Mmm"•. Oinrd; Jerel W'~a.ma.
Y - w t Ubofty; OW p.., Paiao14 s.m;,.,y.
. c ...y M:yas, OD.tdenhutte:n. Indian Valley·
BUl Wolfe, !4Wenbura Wcat Holm~; Sc:otl
Coy~ BellllJ'O_; DCil ~edc:r, ~e West

w--.... ,.;...._

Secoadteam

'

~~

S.;--

!ANord, -

Ca-.

Pickens

SIRLOIN STEAK

Semndteam

, OFFENSll: P d Bd LaFoUco. Blocm..C.
roD, 5·10, 170, Sr.; 1 - a-..oo, 11: ........
AM&lt;, 6-3, tas. Sr.: Roo "'*-llwllioJ
t•r lloiVIII'IIty Scbool, "2. 110, So. UoaDatBnod MUdloll Tipp City Tippeconoo, "5· 195,
Sr.; loob Wrii),i.·H...n.., Bidin, 6-1,230, Sr.;
Kllldal -rur-, C-buo Brlao. 6-1, 294, Sr.;
c,.y Thamu,- Ollood, ~1; 197, Sr.; Nil·
aon Ea.n bn.. ~Lop. Elm, 6-6, )46,
Sr.;
-.m, Huwoy, 6-2. 200. Sr.
~ro.,-6-6,212. Sr.;
Du. Smidl, 0...
WD VaDey Vaow, 6-3, 205,
Sr.; J.T. Th :wm, WiJtiamapnrt WellftU. 6-l,
165, Sr. Bacb-laeca
CIII&amp;GWil Miami
Edt. 5-9. 159, Sr.; David 1tau, Lewiatuwa R~
Jdll.olte, 6-1,211, Sr.; 1_, &amp;-. c.,loy, ~.
170, S&lt;; Sa..U. Butlor, iflmlioc V.U.,. 11alwnity Scbool. 5-S, 110, Sr.; Camtion llaQuo, Mtottor
Lako Catholic, 6-0, 110; Sr.; Ca•J 'N•na•ter,
Naa...an...Yerk, S.t, 211, Sr. Kicker-Doua
Willi.uns, Swantan.6-0, 173,Jr.

s."s-..
--.

'l

Special of the Week!

lliiUiiao; lolf FW.., Alll.uoco1oluli..-: Seoa
fruoltiOborl, Pol,ond Seatiaory; Ed Holbrook ,

w...,

r+....

,~

"•

.

Ibm

~ Ba. ..t'J:d: ~ Starlhili..Y::plO.,_,; ~~:'u.'i'~~~='t=i

195, Sr.; Mlchiii 'Ptrt., Portnto.lh, J.t,
Sr.; Kim Hcniaa. Sa&amp;oa, 5-11,1.91, Sr.; BD.·
an Beatty, Louiavilfo, 5·11, 119, Sr. KiotorSpecial moalloa
Cni&amp;N~YforthinatonXilb rr S-10,US0.1r.
Bob B~ Louimllc; Bnd l'ackton, Akton
DI!FI!NSE: U..
Do,.. Bollloo, Da,... . f " - MibiJilliaan. &amp;bbud; I"""' !ladan.
Dunbu, 6-3, 215, Sr.; llomy llkl; El!do
6C..... South; Melvin Bh&gt;c, Abatlludud; Kevin
3, 250, Sr.; 11my ~r·:; A ........ ~. 2111.
TNitt. Akron B~~c:htel; Todd Uahtaor, picbfi•ld
Sr.: Domat Ri&lt;lp.-6-2.
Rev.u.: Tim. Orwi1, W~tren llowland; Tom275, Sr.; Emyao . _ _ Abat Bucblll, 6-2.
Weter, Y CNDrlOwn Chaney: NWa Head.rb.
190, Sr. Uoebackcn--Rogie Olllloell, ~
Hll6butl; Ric Lcmoo, Nil.. MeKIIII•Y: Kyl•
aucblol, •2. 220, Sr.; T"')', Sloabmvillo,
s-.Jiichfiold R - .
6-0.
So• 1w Ndo.
X:tMa )fiddl......,, Philo; 111M Spmc:rz, Me·
~. 190,
El"t W111, S-10.
CaanelniDe Morpn; Bnd Scwud, Philo; A11m
210. Sr.: T•- SaUdi.
S..ll,
Waaoo. o...lee T'd·Vollty, Moe McNeil, O..a;
260, Sr. Bd:a tfto liMa. k W.,. w-ori·
Cui Mil olcb, St.oubaovillo; 1&lt;1! Baa, c....
a1, 6.5, 215, Sr.; Aadr.My OwiiUI., Colr.&amp;mbua
briqo; Milto HooU., Roylud B.....yo; Sbione
s-.-~~ot.tao.
spdoaNal•p•. Sleu.beavWe:
Alderman. Me·
....,, ~. 210. Sr.; 1enJ
Abat Nadb. 5·
Con.aoltvillo Maran; Tyrono .Rotobeny.
10, 110, Sr. Puatet-E.ri.c Weider, Cincin.n•ti
S~ville; ChriJ r.tina, New Philadelphia:
, Twpill, 6-3, 170,1r.
Trevor C•in, Mc:Connehville Maraan; 'todd
lackl of lk• JUI'I Mert Edward~_ Nor·
PbiJo; David Lomatrice, SIOIIbenv!llo;
weod; ClaarlelllealeJ, Coa-11• .,....,. ...
Moll lloodloy, . - , Td·V.U.,.; IWpb Sonp.
Lin•••• of llle Jear: leaaM Garaell, C•mbridao: Jlat. RoiNon, R•yland lluclr.eye;
Alroollodllel.
Thyoo aotlcb•. Pllllo; l111aa Waw.t. Dover;
c-or .... ,_, Rldt cnoUp, LooloYIIIL
Claria MayJe, M:c:CoaDClavillo Mora••: CrUa

.,. R•lbfn
.,,,...,Gift _
c.rtfffem
:: ~ ·:;
~·II· ttl·itii· tit &amp;Ht·9ii·..Uf¥ts.fti ILii~ •a

~,

Kiot.,2l"i•ohio
.....
2pouroclo.

c..... ...._MiomiT....,6-roo&lt;-

tHURSDAY, DEC. 3-6:00·8:00 P.M.

ccmlnCil.

HOU~ASTIOS - A - - ' to

~~~~~- .. o..w

'

s.,.
2•,

15%.20%.25%

CINCIHNATI lEOS - Clalmtd

...-Yarlt; Cllool a..-. Rodt Jill;

Polud ~- Sho

Portsmouth. 's Parker among 16
·area D-11 all-state football players

BrOokhtv•, 5·11, 114, Sr.; )6n, Edward., Norwood, •2. 220. Sr.; am w-. Roylmd audt.,.,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -J. At season and that as many as 100,000
least four pe9ple were injured on deer will be killed. Last year,
the first day of the deer frreanns hunters killed a record 92,823 deer.
season when a record 33,761 deer
The state's deer population is
were killed, the Ohio Division of between 230,000 and 325,000. The
Wildlife says.
.
1
largest pan of the herd is in easrem
Among the injured Monday ·was and southeastern Ohio.
a motorist who was hit by glass
after a bullet passed through a deer
and went through the window of
bis car.
:
The Jefferson County Sherlfrs
Det:ment said Brent Mouo of
Bri ' I in eastern Ohio was driY·
ing on Ohio 7 when glass on hiS car
shattered from the impact of the
bullet, which did not hit him. He
was tteated for cuts.
Division spokesman Paul SqhitT
You Select Your Discount on Regularly
said Tuesday at least three h1111ters
Prlctcl Merchandise
accidentally shot themselves.
Among the four shootings, one 1
hunter was shot in the bead, and
another was hit in a hand and ~ip.
Schiff said. He said he hac! no
information on other shootings.
for Mf4M1qort •
Schiff said the division does not
believe any of the shootings were
Gfv•·Awa~
related to an investigation or a seri- ~:.
al killer who is believed to have
shot five outdoorsmen in eastern
Ohio between Aprill989 and April
1992.
..
Last year. two hlUiters were shot ·
on openmg day.
The six-day hunting ~ ends
Saturday.
Last year, 24,983 deer 'lliere
killed on opening day. The ~vi­
ous ope~ing-day record of 28,781
wassetm 1990.
i
The number was higher this ~ear
partly because the weather 'f.as
cold and dry, tho division a~id.
Rain last year !educed the number
of deer rakeil the fint day, ofticiala
said.
'
GuemteT County had the 11101t
deer~ and cbeckocl at 1,347,
tile divtsion said. Mus~
..1,,..
County foUowed at 1,278:
PL "2·2556
ton, 1.242:
1,209: Jefferson, 1,168; , 1,165; Harrison, 1,148; Gdla; 1,121i.Aibena.
1,106; IIIII Wllhinp!ll1,U'I2.
The dlvllion expects about
350,000 huntera will be out this

Special moalloa

Lt. Leo

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Sixteen
high school football players from
southeastern· Ohio teams received
Division II all-Ohio honors from
The Associated Press for 1992,
with Portsmouth tailback Michael
Parker the only man among them to
make the first learn.
Here's the Division II all-state
team, selected on the recommendations of a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters.

I

Korttioo

a.....UC:
DEFENSE: l.iMmori-Wot RooL. Gcrmlli·
tine, 6-3, 215, $r. ~ci:----.1.-a wuu..m..
.,... v.u.,. Vn, 6-3, 200,1r.; s-

RIO GRANDE (!Ill)- LaMont
Harris, 6-1-13; Jack MoJ;gan, 1-23-11; Matt Powell, 3-5-2-23; Jeff
Brown, 4-1-10-21; Troy Donaldson, 2-3-7; Walter Stephens, 2-2-212; Tim Christian, 4-0-8; Jason
Curtis, 0-1-1. TOTALS 22-10-2296.
Halftime score: •lo Grande
43, West Virginia Wesleyan 39.

\

,_.,.ou&amp;ll

Pint team

~ OPPIHSB: 1D41-Joo 111n¥icl&amp;ll, Me~uor

LOCATED IN
MASON, W. Va.

t-.............

laAqaloo ...... 17 7 2

Overall, the Redmen were SI
percent on field goat-shooting, netting 32 of 63 attempts, including I 0
of21 tries rro.m the three-point
range for 47 perecnt. Rio Grande
also received liiClre opportunities at
the line tban their opponents, sinking 22 of 28 for 78 percent, with
Brown canning all 10 of his
attempts. Powell 'and Walter
Stephens went"' the line twice and
connected on each try.
Wesleyan, which went to 0-2,
was 37 percent from the floor (2875, six of IS from the 'three fa 40
percent) and connected on 11 of 18
aaempcs at the tine for 61 percent.
Chris Men:aldi connected on all
four or his rout shots, as did Marlin
McKinney on his three.
The Redmen (S-1) travel to
Catawba College (N.C.} on F~day .
for a tournament and will face High
Poinl (N.C.) in the opening round.
Other teams in ~ invitalional are
the host school and Concord
(W.Va.).
Sox score:
,
WEST VIRGINIA WES·
LEY AN (73) - Clvis Mercaldi, 4- .
4-12; Kenny Smith, .7-3-2-25;
Stephan Clay, 1-0-2; Ortez Vandross, 2-0-4; Marlin McKinney, t2-3-11; Brian Smith, 0-1-0-3;
Wayne Pinckney, 4-2-10; Darren
Clausen, 2-0-4; Mike McNeil, 1-02. TOTALS 22-6·11-73.

Cllymaa&amp;. .5-9, 110. h . UWw*• 'David Bald.· ... IHJ lrlu Warrea, Nellloa•IU..,Y....Il i R71a
will, DelawAN Olaltu&amp;J, 6-1. 201, Sr.; B!iua Deldlat,
Wt111 Daa Sltlr.,., Me.
..._, X..U.., 6-3, 215"; Sr.; Pu1 Boob, )b. o..aa Neraw•t; . _ , Ga11Pn7. Plbloll i
IOWLkllel&amp;mi.6-2.211. Sr.j kictTa~Nowut ..... Clf'IW, Ntkoa•llle-Ycft; Eel Ka...-d,
LkbJa Valloy, 6-0,200, Sr.; Bill B__.., Bel· Nlw 1 •«' I'MJJuoai:Jantl. nonwtiii:SJMrt.
mDe 0.. FcO, 6-0., ll5, Sr. 8 a+s Matt Wal· ~MMil lwl~ W•.,...,J Grll ~
looo, Tlpp City Til I
o, 6-0, 175, So.; NotO !._ ••HJPUI'l )brlt--.SI -GoiiiPolpolollt;GMiaHII
P&amp;J¥o.Oilsaac-1Catbatic 6-3 tiS Sr · Tom ......., lleloll; u• OM,
a l
Gabram Cltaltla P.U.
's-9 ' 11o So . .\.-JI Ta4 illolobrloll, N _ ..I... Yarlt;
Jor-.y '.rccr.u., Wiattrsvillo' r,.o' 11s' s;· Brad Bro-. ac-tield McCWa; ,Julll: IMII,
Pwtter---~.0. l'locl&lt;, willlamlp&lt;wi w0:tf•U.' 6-3. Tlton- - 1 .Joo 1A1t1t, ~too; MIM
23S, Ir.
'
Wltlle,Pa
••rolrU.ohTaoy~

cnand~.

Powell, Brown help push Rio to win

•
·..

Ptdlk ......
............9 ' 3 .150
: s-ate
- -·-·· ..·' • .692
•: ~
.......-.1 4 .WI
• LA.~ ......7 5 .513
~ LA. ~ ....- .7 6 .531
.o S.U
•
·- ·-·6 I 1 .42.9

returning sraner frQm last year,.s
26-6 team that made it to the
regional finals.
"Coach was stressing to get the
ball inside· and our players did a
good job of getting the ball to me."
Funderburke said.
Ohio State also won last year's
meeting against the Bobcats by 16
points, 7g-62, but those were the
days when two-tiine Big Ten Conference player of the year Jim Jackson was in the lineup.
"There was no Jimmy Jackson
on the floor and that was the big
difference for Ohio State. But in
the second half, Ohio State found
its go-to man is Lawrence Funder·
bwlce," HlUiter said.
The Buckeyes' only seniors,
Alex Davis and Tom Brandewie,
added 12 and 10 poinis, respectively.
The Bobcats, who IIJiled 36-35
at the· half, pulled even at SO Oil a
. three-point play by freshman Gus
Johnson will: 9:53 remaining.
But then Funderbwke. who hit 9
of 12 free throws, put in a pair of
foul shots and then foUowed with a
shot inside, ending a cold streak
where the Buckeyes had missed
eight of nine shots from the field.
"Sometimes we're just not
mentally in it and we weren't lUitil
the 32-:ninute marie," said Funderburke. "Then.we just worlted hardOUARDS OPPONENT- Oblo State's Chal'les Macon (33) stays
close to O~lo Unlvenity's Mille Reese 11 Reese looks ror the open
er and it paid off."
Mter another Bobcat freshman, man d11ring the first half or Tuesday night's game in Columbus,
whlcb the Bucteyes won 77-61. (AP)
.·
(See BUCKEYES on rage 5)

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-6..

Four Gallians on D-Ill all-state team·

Wedne8day, December 2, 1992
Pea• 4

Ohio State quintet hands OU 77-61Ioss
By RUSTY MD I.ER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Both teams were trying to find
themselves, but Ohio State picked
the perfect time to make a discovery.
'
Lawrence Funderbwlce scored
23jloints - including eight during
a second-half 20-8 spun - as tbe
inc;xperienced Buckeyes held off
th' green Bobcats 77-61 Tuesday
nijhL
;It wasn't pretty, widl Ohio Uni-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Loqk For It This Sunday

•I

I
!
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•
I

.•I
•
j

••'
•

�••

•

/

~

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•

r

••
•

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy~ddleport, Ohio

Wecii'Miiday, December 2, 1

All The fbdn's for Your .
FOODLArlD SPECIAL COUPON

T.,

~·
FOODLAND
pure

SUGAR
1

~

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L

FOODLAND

x:tra fenc
tp anulah•d

5 LB.
BAG
Limit 1 With Coupon and $10.00 Additional Pun:hase

--------------------Good thN Saturday,

December 5, 1992

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
.J

EASTMAN'S

GALLIPOU$ FOODLAND • 614·446·9764
OHIO VAlLEY FOODLUD • 614-446·4008
BIG BEND FOODLUD • 614·992·2891

.'

ODL
Your

Minded

San
Francisco
Giants
appoint
Quinn
GM,
fire
manager
Craig
.

r'

Are On Sale This Weeldll

r~

'

:~

•
By WENDY E. LANE
Giants tp a group of Florida
investors m ~ 'l1lll dell was
• SAN FRANCISCO (AP) : Even though their pun:hase tsn't rejected by Nlliollal Lequc own·
: yet offtcial, the new o~ of the ers last month; it was widely
San Francisco Gianu put their elQletted dill Craig. who bas a year
; mark on the franchise Tuesday lelt011 his contraCt. would be oust·
': when they tired manager Roger ed bl, Magowan's poop.
,, Craig and hired Bob Quinn u gen• He was exttemely gracious,"
t: eral~~U~~~a~er.
Magowan said. "You couldn' t
I"
Peter Magowan, head of the have uted for a beUer response for
. group that has agreed to buy the someone who has been in a diffi·
i, Giants from Bob Lurie, took the cult positi011, not knowing what his
' • fust major steps towanl revamping fuwre would be.••
the team he saved foi' !he city. He
Craig, who became manager in
~· told the 62-year-old Cmig he will
September 1985, led the Giants to
•; be replaced and also hired CBS an 807-804 record and the 1989
:; executive Larry Baer as executive National League pennant. but San
~; vice pfesident. ·
·
Francisco fmis'hed 72-90, 26 games
•: Baseball owners are scheduled out of fust place in the NL West
;; to 'vote on the $100 million sale to last season.
.
•. Magowan and other San Francisco
, Cmig; who cOuldn't immedialc:: inv~tors at their winter meetings ly be reached for comment, was
&gt; next weelc at Louisville, Ky.
hired by A1 Rosen, who resigned as
·: Craig's future had been unclear general manager Nov. 20.
:: since Lurie proposed selling the
"This was not an easy decision

I

SUGAR

Pomefoy-Middleport, Ohio
'

•

115

PURE CANE

.Weclnelday, December 2, 1992

The Dally sentinel Pa~7:

to mab. as Roser bas c0ottibuted
so much to this organization over
the last seven yean," said
Mapan, adding that Craig would
be offered another job in the
•.
nivl!im "Roger is not only
manager, but an extraordinarily
fiiiC penon .. well ...
The man !apollSible for fmding
a new manager is Quinn, fued as
genml !IUIJI8&amp;Cl by the Cincinnati
Reds last RIOIIth. He said he will set
up an inu:rview with Giants coach
Dusty Baker as soon as possible
and mentioned he had drawn up a
short list of candidates already with

:fe

~ organizalions.

"Naturally, you'd like to have
; (a !Ranager) by the winter meet·
ings. but I'm not going to set that
kind of timetable becaitse I want to
be as thorough in this process as
the ownership team was" in select·
ing ?- genml manager, Quinn said.

~~ Melsop almost back to pre-surgery
condition
.

Quinn also pledged to resurrect
the Giants' depleted farm system
and foUow the lead of the Houston
Astros in focusing on player devel·
opmenL
"I must say I feel the San Fran·
cisco GianiS are a beaer club...than
what we saw on !he field last season," he said during a news conference at Candlestick Park. "I am
an SDSD,guy: scout, draft, sign
and develop. I was born, bred and
raised on the imponance of scouting and player development and to
that end I want to commit myself
immediately to finding the best
persdnnel available to help restrue·
ture our scouting and play~ development deparUnenL"
Quinn. given a .three-year ton·
tract, brings extensive experience
to the Giants. After joining the
Reds in October 1989, he engineered trades that brought reliever
Randy Myers, infielders Hal Mor·
ris and BiU Doran and outftelders

·..

Priced
4-7 LB. AVEUGE
HAll &amp; WAIEI PRODUCI

WILSON 95% LEAN
CORN KING

LB~

there, you could see him doing like comparing apples to oranges,
::
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ;; Billy Melsop bas a hunger that no thin~s. not just fiJihting, hut box· but •like comparing slightly green
apples to ripe apples,'' Melsop
•: amount of koliday c&amp;ories can kiU. ing, ' McCauley said.
said.
Then came !he knee injury.
:•
'·'I'm really hungry, I'm pumped
"I .understand this is a busirf'ess
Zolkin, who had an extensive
' ~ up, I want to get back in 'the ring
:; and start winning a~ain,'' the Ohio amateur career as a fighter in the first, and our primary concern is
t• heavyweight boxmg champion former Soviet Union, has bios· getting our team to the point where
&lt; said. "I like the training, I like somed ·into a world-ranked con- we're making some money so we
can k!leP having these shows," he
:: being in shape. I want to get back tender.
Based on their experience, com- said. "If that means puttin~ Alex
:• in there and go at it. I'm hungry."
;;
He'll be one of the featured paring Melsop and Zolkin is ''not out front, that's OK with me. '
•: fighters Thursday in !he Ohio Cen' • ter, when undefeated heavyweight
·= Alexandre Zolkin of COACH Box· - - - - - - Sports briefs - - - - - ~ • ing goes for his 14th win and the
victimizing Greg Maddux of the
Svare youngest
~' National Boxing Association Con·
Cubs.
CINCINNATI (AP) - ' When
· tinental Americas title against
Ken Griffey Sr. hit a four-hag·
Michael Greer of M:emphis, Tenn. Dave Shula tooi over as head
ger
in the 1980 classic against
Melsop's foe is unaetermined.
. coach of the Cincinnati Bengals at pitcher
Tommy John. The senior
Melsop (13-2), also a COACH the start o~ the 1992 NFI. season,
Griffey
was named the MVP of
• heavyweight, was out for six he became the third youngest coach
that
game.
' months because of complications in the league since the end of
World War II. When Shula took
; after arthroscopic knee surgery.
Early rising
··
He was riding high after taking the helm he was 32 years and 7
PONTE
VEDRA, Fla. (AP) ; · the Ohio title in the spring. But the months old.
There
are
many
differences for a
The youngest man eVer to take
' surgery was required for • canilage
man
between
being
single and mar. ·; tear in hi~ht knee. It wu much charge of an NFL team in !he years ried. Pro golfer Roger Maltbie
: • like that
onned on his left knee · since the war ended was Harland
Svare, who was named head coach commented on one of them.
·; in 1989.
·
"Now that I have two kids,"
·
"I was back to work after that of the Los Angeles Rams in 1962
Maltbie
said. "I like a 7:45am. tee
operation in four days," Melsop at the age of 31 years and .11
time.
When
I was single I preferred
. said.
months.
.
This time, the doctors told him a
The Second youngest was John· to sleep until noon."
:. staph infection developed in the ny Micllelosen, who moved into
'
Pressure play
the pilot's seat at PitiSburgh in
·: knee.
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) .:·
"It ballooned up as big as a 1948. He was 32 years and 2
Playing
on the Senior PGA Tour
.~ watennelon,'' he said. "They had .months at the time.
changed
Lee Trevino's leg·
hasn't
·: to put me on intravenous antibi·
endary
ability
for
winning a touma·
;• otics for about four weeks ... and I
Flying Lofton
ment
in
a
close
pressure-packed
•: went from 215 pound$ to 189 in
CLEVELAND (AP)- Clevefinish.
:: about 10 days.! was in sad shape.'' · land Indian manager Mike HarHe was asked about that after a
:• Eventually the infection was grove wu amazed w1Jen he gOt-his
number
of scrambling victories 011
: cured and Melsop started the climb fusLiook at the team's flyina center
...
' ..r- ' "'""
776 ..&amp;0111'.
~· baCk into't'lghtingShiiie.
.
·· ' fielder, Ktimy Loftori. ,,.. , - the 1"""
"I didn't think I bit the ball any,• "Physically I'm about 80 per·
"He's the fairest thing I'~ ever
where
as well as I did in 1990,'' .
h :ent of what I was. At that pomt I seen in a basetiall uniform," Hir·
was in the best .shape of my life,'' grove said. "Ron LeFlore could Trevioo said. "But whal I did Was
• he said. "One of the tough parts 1um it on when he first came up to make the crucial chip. second
.l was puttiQg the weight back 011. It and Mickey Rivers also could run. shot or putt when I had to have it to
'• had talren me a loilg time to get to But neither was u fast as I:.ofton, win. Maybe I wasn't stroking the
\ 215, but I'm back there now."
who must have what they call ball as well but I won a lot and
that's the bottom Hne."
-~
COACH trainer J.D. McCauley world class speed."
:&lt; said Mel sop, before the injury,
..:·__
Costly yearling
.i finally was rounding into form.
Grllrey homers
NEW
YORK (AP) - One of
"\ After he had only a handful of
SEATILE (AP)- It seems that
the
riskiest
ventures in sports is
; amateur fights, the early stages of the Griffeys, father and son, never
'; Melsop's pro career were punctual· · stop malcing baseball news. ·
. laying out a lot of money for a
'' ed by occasional awkwardness and
They are the only son-and-father thoroughbred yearling. who is not •
11 a general lack of confidence.
duo to have homered in an All-Star eligible to race until one year later.
';
"The last couple of fights, game. Ken Griffey Jr. connected
The all-time record for pun:has·
': though, he was taking charge in for the circuit in July of this year, ing a yearling was established on
July 23 , 1985, when a bay colt
'
named Seattle Dancer went to
Robert Sangster of England for
$13.1 million at the Keeneland
Sales.'
·
:~
Seaule Dane~ did not race until
'
5-0-3= 13, Lee Henderson 1-0-1"'3, he was a three-year-old in 1987.
·:
ByDAVEHARRIS
Lori
Kelly 7-0·0"'14, Katarina That year he JaCed five times, win,
Sentinel Correspoodeat
Turner
3-0-0=6, Joy O'Brien 1-0- ning twice, fmishing second once
Meigs outscored Federal Hock·
·.: ing 32-10 in the second half and 6=8, Missy Sisson 1-0-0-2, Chris· and third once. His total earnings
·: roUed to a 58-29 win over the Fed· sy Taylor 4.(}-0=8, Heather Hudson came to less than $150,000. He was
'• era! Hocking l.anCCJS iri girls' Tri- 1-0-0=2, Vanessa Compston 1-0- then retired to sllld. .
: Valley Conference baskeiball 0=2. Totals -24-0-19--58
Federal Hocking (29) - Katie
: action Monday evening at Stewart.
• It was the season opener for Max well 7-0-0= 14, Erin SRedder TODAY'S BARB
1-0-1=3, Tracy Bentley 1·0·0=2, BY PIIIL PASTORET
. ·! both teamS.
: Lori KeUy led a blllaneed Meigs Jennie Kibble 1·0-2a4, Jane;;e They say our natioa's a mellinl pot,.bul
• attack with 14 poiniS. Vema Ccmp- Starlin 0-0-2=2, Allison Pierson 0- we have !be feellnc soine of us got into
!be oven and came out half-baked.
: ston added 13. Joy 0 •Brien and 04=4. Totals -10-0·9=29
', Chrissy Taylor scored eight each,
·• Katarina Turner six, Lee Hender'1 son three and Missy Sisson, Vanes·
: sa Compston and Heather Hudson
added two each. Henderson was
~ also credited with playing ail out~1 standing floor game.
I• Meigs hit 24 of 56 from the
r~ floor for 43% 311d 10 of 20 from
~ the line for 50%. Meigs outre~ bounded the Lancers 22-21, with
, Kelly and Hudson grabbing four
1i each. Vema Compston was out·
•
rl standing defensively, with nine of
!· the Marauders 20 steals. Meigs had
•' 10 assists, with O'Brien getting
:.. five.
·
·; Max well led Federal Hocking
:; with 14 points. Federal hit 10of26
·• from the floor for 39% and nine of
: 12 from the line for 75%. Alison
:' Pierson led the L&amp;ncers with seven
:' rebounds.
·• In the reserve contest. the Little
Lancers defeated Meigs in overACCO~D
.: ~ time 29·27. Alica Haggy led Meigs
5 speed, air, power windows and locks. cruise,
·: with 12, and Anne Drown added

Billy Hatcher and Glem B~ to
the Reds, helping them wtn the
1990 World Series. ·
The 54-year-old Quinn also
served u the New York Yankees
general maJI83el after working for ·
several minor league teams.
"We would fust w~t to look at
and evaluate the free a~nu off the
San Francisco roster,'' said Quinn,
adding he was "grossly disappoint·

FRESH LEAN

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''

CHUCK

LB.

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CHRIS~

BAZAAR
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5
AI THE

HOME OF GERALDINE CLELAND
EAST MAIN ST. • RACINE, OH.
. 10:00 A.M. ~ 5:00 P.M.

WAID CROSS'
SONS
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RACINE, OHIO
949·2550
SUPERIOR l·li,PKG.

HOT DOGS

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FROM THE DW- SLICED

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AMERICAN CHEESE

3 FOR

51.89 LB.
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GRAPEFRUIT

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DUNCAN HINES

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ICE CREAM•••••:::~~•••••• 2
$ lt
CREAM SANDWICHES.~. 2
NAIUW ·ROUNDS

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$

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BEANS &amp;
GREENS

CANS

CHICKEN
OF THE 'SEA

· ~ nine.

In other acti011 artlURd the TVC,
; ·Rock1 Hill defeated Alexander in
• the Jackson Tournament 55·50,
: Nelsonville· York slipped past
•: MiUer 42-36 and WeUstoo defeated
;. Trimble 42-33 .
) Meigs will host Alexander
' Thursday night,
..
• Quarter toealll
! Meigs -12-14-14·18=58
t Federal Hocking -7·12-6-4.,29
t Meigs (58) - Vema C0f11pston

MT. DEW, DIET or
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24

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YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'
IN RACINE SINCE 1860

.,

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beat Federal Hocking
58-29 in teams' season opener

1993

TUNA

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CAKE MIXES

ORANGE JUICE

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Open House

'to--·

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.....

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Join us for refreshments
and entertainment. .-·--.,

••• •
•'
••

Th

y, December 3
6:30 ·8:00P.M.
After the parade!

L-

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·-

·-·:

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ATHENS
•rHE ·HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"

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,' .
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UHCI Car

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to the Seattle Mariften.
-· :
Other Giants free agents aie
pitcher Scott Garrelts, outf~eldeCs·
Cory Snyder and Chris Jama, 11!'1short.stop Jose Uribe.
Amons his other duties, Baer
will be charged wi,th developinjl a
plan for a new stadium. whu:h
Magowan called essential to the
futme success of the team.
:

''

s1ggoo;~

-

• •
..
ed" to lo8e outftelder Mike Fc((JC,.

'

~~ Meigs girls

•

·· ~

'•

�••

•

.•

THANK YOU

t

••

'•

CHERRY ·PIE
FILLING

STORE HOURS
MoAday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

''

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34.5 oz.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

JAMESTOWN.

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T·bone Steak.............LB.
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The Master's Messengers, a
puppet ministry sponsored by the
youth of Hope Baptist Church in
Middleport, presented skits and
songs pertaining to the Thanksgiving theme to residents of Overbrook Center.
• The youth group is led by Mark
Michael. The following participated: Chrissy Williams, Nancy Mar·
lowe, Rachel Ashley, Tracy
Grueser Christi Mills and Denise
Michael: There were approximately
50 people in attendance.
Michael also leads the youth in
Sunday 'school and Wednesda ·
evening bible study.
/ .J
The adults of the church delivered food baskets containing tradi·
tiona! Thanksgiving meals with
items donated by members or the
church as part of the outreach ministry. The church will also be distributing food baskets the week
before Christmas.

Another holiday ministry reatured in December i_s the annual
Angel Tree on which tags are
placed. Each tag represents a needy
child for whom the church mem.
bers will volunteer to purchase a
gift. This project is conducted
through the Deparunent of Human
Services.
.
.
Each Sunday morntng m
December a ~ssion's M_arch will
be held to give emphasis on the
Lottie Moon Christmas offering for
Foreign Missions. WMU has set
$800 as the .church's gnal for this
offering.
There also was a traditional
Thanksgiving dinner at the fellowship hall on Sunday.
There will be Chrisbnas carol·
ing on Dec. 17 with those interest·
ed to meet at 7 p.m.
. The children's youth Christmas
program will be Dec. 20 at the
church.

Theater to open
.BRANSON. Mo. (AP) Singer Merle Haggard, whO per- .
formed at Willie Nelson's theater
this season when Nelson wasn't
scheduled, will open his own theater next year, his business manager said.
Haggard hopes to open the theater by July I, manager Peter
Brown said Monday.
:

~

CARNATION

HOT COCOA· MIX
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Chc~pa .....,•••• ,, ••••

u:s. No. I

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,.- bard

BIG BEAR .

~

::Harrisonville news
Several members of · Har·
~ risonville Senior Citizens Club
: attended a performance of "The . •
;: King and I" at the Carousel Dinner
.,. Theacre in Akron. They were Nellie
:. and Ruth Lowe, Ardis Waggoner,
: · Mary Loudner, Hazel Stanley, Vir,:... ginia Gibson, and John and Ann
' Williams.
;. When John and Ann Williams
;; returned home· from ~e C~usel
: Theatre they were surprised to have
~ visitors. Their son and daughter-in·
'::' law anJ two of Mrs. Williams' sis·'
;: tel'S, all from Michigan, who came
:: to celebrate her birth&lt;!ay.
:-- Nellie Lowe visited her son. Pat
;;; and Lowe and wife severnl days in
: Akron.
:
Sandy Bass, Nicholson Road,
-:; visited Louise Eshebnann recently. '
:. John and Ann Williams have
·.: reiUrlled from an 11 day trip to Uli·: nois and Missouri where they visit·
·- ed John's two sisters and other rel:';·auves and friends while there.
.
~: Daianc.and Hazel Stanley visited
:.; her brother, Franklin Townsend
:. and wife in Westerville. Their son,
, Sidney Townsend and wife were
:- also guests for the lunch.
·

16 oz Loaf - Wheat or
Crocked Wheat

•·

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: :. Michelle Ours. daughter of
-. Scott and Becky Ours, r«:(;endy eel·
::; ebrated her ftrst birthday.
·
Attending were Pam Lutz and
·: Dale Riffie, Julie and Eric Stover,
·- June and Leonard Stover, Missy
:: and Marissa Maynard, Christina
:;: and Margret Eynon, Jay Pickens
:. and parents. ·
: , Sending gifts were Edie Hub-

10 LB. PACKAGE

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Olfar Good Nov. 211 thru Dac. 5, 1ill2
Umlt 1 Per CIIMdmar

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Puppet ministry performs
at Hope Baptist Church

Pork·
Loin

•
•

s

$1
$ 9

Frozen Pizza. . . . . .7 oz. ao.x

~=-~-=

1111 •

· ' STUDENTS OF THE MONTH - Pictured are students or the
month for November at Pomeroy Elementary. Front, J.r, Jodi
Reeves, Katie Jeffers and Nicole Runyon. Back, 1-r, Kimberly
McDaniel, Ryan Terzopplous and Jonathan Wyatt. Absent when
photo was taken was MIChael Dent.

Neva Nicholson and Mrs. Cana·
day purchased more bulbs for the
planters at Memorial Park.
Pauline Atkins reported on the
Christmas Flower Show by the
Meigs County Garden Clubs. Neva
Nicholson and Pauline Atkins
wod:ed at the food table. Dorothy
Woodard made the class signs .
Pauline Atkins received a blue, yel·
low artd white ribbon. Pearl Cana·
day received honorable mention
and Neva Nicholson a blue and
white ribbOn.
The Christtnas dinner and meet·
ing will he at the home of Margaret
Belle Weber on Dec. 14. Each
ritem ber is to wear a handmade
evergreen corsage.
Clotine Blackwood was wei·
corned as a new member.
Mrs. Canaday won the traveling
prize furnished by Mrs. Weber.
Ann Webster is to furnish the prize
for the November meetin~.
Neva Nicholson, Paul•ne Atkins
and Pearl Canaday fumished flowers• for
churches and otherI organi.
.
zauons.
.
Dorothy Woodard is to take a
Christmas flower arrangement to
Overbrook Center.
Pauline Atkins had the arrange·
ment for the evening using carna·
tions, mums and freesia. Dorothy
Woodard had an arrangement using
hoUy, yew and dusty miUer.
Eva Robson presented an article
on ." Nature's Greetin!!;s" to ~et

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llOLelE MAIUACI\JlER'S COUPON EVERYDAY. SEE STORE FOR DETAilS.

RED GOLD
TOMATOES

Tomato Juice. . . . . . . . .46

all.front seat passengers of vehicles
opcn1ted in your state (Ohio) and in manr. other stateS. Though
in Olilo il
enforcement officer
will 1101 stop a car because the seat
belts aren't in use, if the vehicle is
stopped for any other reason, the
officer may write an additional
citation for failure to wear ·scat
belts. I believe that the current
charge for that ticket is about $60.
Perhaps thai will convince your
doubti1Jg neighbOr. Question: One
of his excuses is that my c'ar h&amp;S
driver· and passenger-side air bags.
Therefore, he would he protected in
the event of a crash even without
his seat bell. What do you think?
Answer: Your friend has used
accurate information to reach an
incorr«:(;t conclusion. One of the
most effective automobile lifesavers is the. air bag. According to
The University of California at
Berkeley Wellness Letter, up to
10,000 lives a year could be .saved
if every car and truck had air bags
- a 20 percent decrease in highway deaths. However, air bags only
helf. in frontal crashes.
mpact on the side of the vehicle
may trigger the air bag, but the
force on the occupants of the car
throw them 10 the side, not into the
inflated air bag. Seat belts are the
answer. Seat belts restrain the
wearer regardless of the dir«:(;tion
of impact or their seating position
in the vehicle. Air bags supplement
the protection ptovided by seat
belts, they don't replace them.
"Family Medicme" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John · C. Wolf, D.O., 250
Grosvenor Hall, College of Osteo·
pathic Medicine, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

\'I.ENNA

69(
oz.
9.9(

was presented by Pearl Canaday
when the Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the home of Dorothy
Woodard.
Mrs. Canaday stated herbs have
been used for centuries for their
beautifying and cleansing. Natural
herbal cosmetics have a light, delicate scent and a relaxing effecL
The meeting opened with devotions by Mrs. Woodard on "This is
Thanksgiving." The creed and collect were given in unison. Roll call
was answered with "I mulched

members in the Mood for holiday
spruce-ups. For a festive poinsettia,
line a grapevine basket witb tliin
plastic. Place two poinsettias in the
basket and surround with smaller
p&lt;?t.'l of ivy. Fill the gaps .with Span·
Ish moss and attach spnngs of ~
berries.
Ann Webster had the hints for
the evening. She staled ev!%glllCI!s
should get a fmal watering before
the ground freezes. Small ever·
. green bOughs may be set in window boxes for a seasonal effect.
Don't use hemlock because tbe
needles faU off too quickly.
Dorothy .Woodard read "A
Felling for Thanksgiving."
Neva Nicholson won the door
prize.
Mts. Woodard closed the meeting by reading the thought for the
day: "There's Something to be
Thankful For - Blessings Shared
Mean So Much More."

•

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STOKELY

"Make Your Own Herbal Gifts"

•

ARMOUR

$199

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Chicken. . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . ~. LB.
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JELLY

Rutland gardeners get
in the holiday spirit

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associllle Professor
of Palillly Medldne

..
Question: My neighbor, who
~ rides to work with me, and I have
C an ongoing llgUIDCilt about. the use
-:: of seat belts. I always wear mine..., he never wears his. He has a c:ollcc... tions of excuses for his behavior.
:::: When I ask him 10 wear his seat
::'::. belt, he cbooses one of his excuses
• instead. Can you provide some
;; additional pmuasio11 to get him to
:: wear his seat belt?
·.::: Answer: A cominon excuse for
)• not wearing belts is the often beard,
;:. "I'm only going a short di.stance."
:..; I'm sure that this is in your neigh·
:• bor's repertoire of excuses. The
•• problem with this argument is that
:: three out of four fatal car accidents
~; occur within 25 miles of home.
:~ And more than 80 percent of them
... are at speeds of less than 40 miles
·~ per hour. In faci, fatalities have
:· been recorded at speeds as low as
::" 12.miles per hour.
:.
Some people don't wear belts
• · under the mistaken belief that
• they'd be better off in a wreck if
;:; they were thrown from the car. But
::;:, your chance of dyin' is almost 25 '
~ times greater if you re thrown. In ·
:.. almost any collision, you~re better
':" off being held inside the car. Some ·
::. people think if they're held inside
- · the car, they'd get stuck in a fli'C,
_:; explosion, or submersion. The ttuth
• here is that less than a half of 1 per... cent of all injuries resulting from
;i collisions involve fire or submer• · sion. And even then, you stand a
::;.: better chance of gelling out if
'. you're wearing a seat belt, because
·: the belt will keep you from being
:: lcnocked unconscious by the impact
·• of the wreck.
'• Perhaps a more compelling rea:; son fa' your neighbor to wear seat
;; belts is that their use is required for

COFFEE

Pork Roast......................ta.

Page 8

Family
Medicine

~

•
••

POMEROY. OH.

CENTER CUT LOIN

Wednesday, December 2, 1892

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

.

•

c

RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES ·
SUN •• NOV. 29 THRU ·SAT.; DEC. 5, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

•

21 OZ. CAN

298 SECOND ST.

'

By
'
T
be
Bend
.

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Bathroom Tlssuo

lesta Saltines

Angel Soft

13 oz.

16 oz.

Box

Box

6f

4Roll
Pkg.

6f

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A•erlcan
Singles

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14-15 oz.
Cans

12 oz.
16 Slices

Look Who'•
.
In Towa For Chrl•tmas

-

· ... .· In 1927, 'an audience in New
~York saw an image of Commerce
Secretary Herbert Hoover in the
first successful lon,·distance
:demonstration of telcviSIOII.
The World Health Organization
- was founded in 1948.

r

Crackers

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~ewsnotes

99

Bread ·

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We Are Offering a limited Edition
Christmas Dollar adomed with Santa's
smiling lace. It is mint condition .. .legal
tender...both spendable and bankable
C l99i Marbling Pn:xllldion'

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A_l ..ltle • All ••• . . .r
and a11 a-r Plua Sterea

$2
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+tax

.. Clllolly-.

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ol MM!co

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'
••'
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�.

Sentinel

'

'

OhiO

Community calendar

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs United
Melhodist C~ve Parish will
·be taking applications for Christmas food baskets through Friday
from 9 a.m. to noon at its ofTJCC at
311 Condor Street in Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Dr. J . Wilmer
Lambert. former district supcrinlelldent of lhe Central Ohio District
Church of lhc Nazarene, will speak
at the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene Wednesday lhrougb Sunday at 7 p.m. nigbdy and Sunday at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Scott and
Patty Anderson with Lenny the
Puppet will speak and sing. Olher
special singing also, Pastor Olc;n
McClung invites lhc public.
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ser. vices, Wednesday through Sunday,
Middleport Cfiurch of the
Nazarene, 7 p.m. nightly. David J.
Myers, Logan, evan,elist. Public
invired. Lloyd D. Gnmm Jr., pastor.
HARRISONVR.LE- The Rev.
and Mrs. Philip Knisley of the
Society of Indian Missioas. Ncms,
·s. D., will be speakers at lhe missionary service to be held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Harrisonville Holiness Chapel, State
:. Route 684. The Rev. John Neville
:. invites lhe public to attend.
00
0

·,
THURSDAY
:; POMEROY - The Meiss Coun:: ty Senior Citizens Cenrer will hold
:·an open house Thursday from 3-S
: p.m. Music will be provided by
:-The Classics and rcl'reslunents will
-;be served. The memorill tree hon:•oring deceased members of the
::center will be lit at dark. The inside
-:trees featuring ornaments to honor
::relatives an4 friends will be
• !rimmed and lit for lhc holiday sea• SOD. The pub!k is invired.
POMEROY - There will be a
· bake. craft and ceramics bazaar at
lhe MeiJS County Senior Citizens
Center m Pomeroy on Thursday
from IO a.m. to 2 p.m. ·
RUTLAND - The Rutland
:· Township Trustees will meet
-: Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the Rut.: land Fare Station. Public invited.
'·
~: MIDDLEpORT- The MiddlePort Arts Council counby store will
be open Thursday from 110011 to 8
. p.m.
'

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

POMEROY - S111111ld~
Davis, missiolllfies, will
·
Thursdal,.~,!po p.m. at
1r1
Pilgrim
On Sunday • 7:30
p.m. 1 quartet from God's Bible
School will sing. Rev. Victor
Roush invites die public.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
Gospel Ch..-cb, I..oaa Bnqom, will
have JRaCbing and ~g Friday
at 7 p.m. with David Dailey and die
Dailey Family and other local
singers. Pastor Stev~- Reed invites
the public. FellowShip will follow.

To place an

ad .·
Call992-2156
POUCIES

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 I adies

• Allloaa,We ... couty your ad I'WUI .....t·t.. prepaid
• lleetiwe dilcouat for Mil paid in adY&amp;DCe,
• r,_.W,, Ci,.way IUid Fouad ado vodoriS wonle will be

Auxiliary will have a round and

GaUla County

ad•-•

eec.

SATURDAY
RUTI..AND - There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Music will be by C.J. and the
Country Gentlemen. Public invired.

BULLETIN BOARD
.4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON
OILER'S DEER SHOP
St At. 325 Langsville, Ohio
614-742-2076

MIDDLEPORT · Teddy Bear
class for kids by Middleport Arts
Council, Saturday, I p.m., for ages
6-12. Cost is $10 and includes supplies. Call992-7733 or 992-2675 to
rcgisrer. Class size is limited.

Skin, Cut,

Wrap, Freeze

for$35.00

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS TREES
All Sizes $12.00

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. ~
Libeny Mountaineers will perform
Saturday at the Senior Citizens
Cenrer in Point Pleasant, W.Va

Warren Connolly, Osbom Rd.
Reedsville- 667-3551

TUPPERS PLAINS · St. Paul
United Melhodist Church, Tuppers
Plains, women's Chris!mas garage
sale, S811Uday, 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m.

Public Notice

lb.
U.S. GRADE A· TYSONIHOLL Y FARMS
BONELESS BREAST TENDERS OR

;
LEGAL NOTICE
·: Final ;a•dlng ol Aerie
l17t Bylaw• and Hou..
Rulu at reguler maaUng,

-lbs.
·

:Jho. 7, 11112, 7:00P.M.
~,2)

GOLDEN RIPE

Boneless Chicken Breast

2, 4, UIIC

0

'

Dole Bananas

'

(
••

Read the

I'

I

'

I

$43,100.00.

X:F.NNY MCCOMAS

•m

'

be.DDIIJ.)!cComas. also of
I

'

"IN THE DELl·
PASTilY SHOPPE" WISCONSIN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE C1WN FED
BEEF, "'UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE
CUT"' f1CH4·LB. AWG.I CAP{)N

Mild Cheaaar

Whole
·Sirloin Tips

Cheese
Pound

Pound

$ Sl

$ gg
FOr
'

•

r

,

LANGBVILLE - How _,lei you ike a 52 ac:ra lann? Wei
hera n lt. Approx. 45 to 50 acm lanced, witn about 10
acrat tillable. Al10 titling on II It a two liaclroom horne
with a ftraplaee, and two car gara!l"!. Hu Ml wallr llal
• hu never gone dry. Even hat a Uttle timbar acraa. Jutt
$41,000.00.

Kroger orange Jui~e

the public.

S~

992-Mlddleporll

3674'7 hire
388-VIDIOa
245-Rio Graado
256-G.yu DiaL
643-.\nWa Dloi.
579-'WW.I

Pomeroy

985-Cbooler
843-Pordud

241-LolutF.U.

675-1'1. Pt......
458-Looo
516-Applo Cro•o
773-M-.oa.
882-New D•na

895-l.oton

949-Roclllo
742-Ratlaad

Card of Thanks

Mobile Homu ror Sale

33- Fanu for Sale
34- 8111i~• Buildinp
3:&gt;- Loto &amp; Ac.....
36- Real Eo1au Woalod

Hay&amp;: Graia
soo'd a Fortiliaer

1\1.\ T \ 1.:'
41- Ho\llel lor Real
42- MobUe Home. for Reat
43- Fume for Rent
44- Apartmeat for Ren.t
46- Space for Rent
47- WantM. to Rent
48- Equipment for Rent
49-- For Le.ee

1-

2- laM-ory
3- AMouocflmenll
4-Ci.-•way
:&gt;-Happy Ada
6-Lootmd Found
7- Loll ud Fout~d
8- Public Solo &amp;

937-B..JI'olo

11-Hclp Wonted
12- SituatloDI Wantocl

\11 1\( .11 \\111:-.1
51- Ho... bold Coodo

1~ lnturance
14- Butineu Tr•iDiDI
1~ School• &amp;: lutructlon
16- Rocllo, TV &amp; CB Repoir

17-

Aucli.on

9- Wmled 1o Buy

52- Sportlns Good.
53-AntlqM-- Miac. Muchandiae
5:'&gt;- Build; "'I SuppU..

MioccllooooUI

18- Wan led To Do

Public Notice

NOnCE TO BIDDERS
BID FOR mucK
Th• Tupp•r• PlaineROBERTL.
. Chaatar Water Dlalrlot Ia
LEWIS, SR.
lnviUng aa.t•d blda lor a
who pa&amp;Hd away ltt3' Pick-Up Truck with 1M
suddenly Nov. 13, lollowlngapeclftcatione;
lnlck -long bed
11182 at work wlllhea .....
4.0 w.. • c:yL engine
to thank every01111 PowarBrakaa
who
Rmllllbered
PowerS~
Aubbet-vlnyt
Aoor Milia
th1111 with the..- prayA.- Slllp llumpar
era, food, tlowera, Hellvy Duty VInyl S.b gina of money, carda
racl
·
and telephone calla. Exterior ahoutd ba rwd In
color
Spacial thanka to the Mud.
Snow nr..
man at work who Dome Light
gave him C.P.R. and AM-AI Alldlo
the E.M.S. aquad, Dr. Cigarette UghW
Biking Window
Patterson and the Rear
lWo blda ..,. requMtad;
Vetenna . Mamorlal on• with two wha.t drlva'
HaapHal and the Md Ilia aaoond with lour
nuraea lor their ldnd- ....-J•ivL
Th• Dlatrlct Ia alao.
neaa. And, to Holzer · trading In a 11181 Chevrolat
Clinic Staff for their &amp;-10 which can ba .... at
thoughtlulnaaa and th•. Dlatrlcl Office at 1:00
A.M. Md 4:15 P.M. Include
tha f11111lly pr~ctlce In
uch bid, th• price lor the
phyalc:lana. .
AIIO lract.ln.
th. .u to Rev. · AI
The blda ; muat b•
Ha!'laon, Rev. Jamaa accompantad by a 100% bid
bond, and parlormanca
Seddon and Rev. bond to the lull UIOunl ol
Jamal KHIH for aach propoaal.
Blda will be opened
their
comforting
O.Cernbar
14th at 2:00 P.M.
worda. Thanks to at th• Dlatrlcl
Oflloe locatad
BNCa and Tony and at 31311 Bar 30 Road,
Tom of Flaher Fun- ReedaYille, Ohio 45772.
The Tupper• Plain•·
eral Home, and we
Cheater Wat•r Dlatrlot
alao want to thank ...arv.. the right to waive
tha American Legion anr lnformaUUu and to
FHnay-Bannatt Poat rlject My/and all bldo.
Tuppora Plalno-Ch•tar
128 of Middleport lor
WaterDiatrlct
the military aarvlcaa.
By: Harold H. Blackaton
PrMidenl
Thanka .a lso to tha
1M Board of Dlractoro
tallow workers who (11)of
25; (12) 2, •• 31c
ware pall baarerl.
Sadly mlased by
Wlfa, Sons ~md
Grandchildren

HOWARD

YOUNG PEOPLE

1111 F1111lly Of

Do you IIHd • atart

In life? .
18 yra and up. Earn aa
much aa you want, full
or part time from your
home. Nocaah
lnvaatmant, be your
own boaa, even If
you"N atllla atudenl
Thla Ia Income that /
kaepa going evan
when you clon'L
(614) 378-6153 .
8-12 and 6-10 pm

GUN SHOOT

~~~~~~:~~

WEBERS
CHRISTMAS TREES

EXCAVATING

' BULLDOZEA,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
mAiLER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-mUCKING

Ruga, Placemats,
QuiHa, 5 Types
Pillows, Anlmala, ,
Iota of small artlclea.5Qeandup
OPAL HOLLAN .
CHESTER
985-4356
'

CHRISTMAS
TREES

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

For Your Lost

5' • 7' TALL

Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

HARLEY HIKING
IIESIDENCE

l.Mwn llowlng,
Fertilizing, WMCIIng,

FREE ESTIMATES .

992·3838

11m

11/281'92/lfn

GRAVE
.BLANKETS

. CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only
STARTS
OCT. 18th

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
Need a Gift? .

liomegrown Carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up whh a great
selection of larger
traes.
Call742-2143 or
742-2979

35975 flatwoods Rd.
Pateroy, Ohio

• $20.00

!County Roatl26)
REISOIIIIU

(614) 949-2058

11-30-11110.~

949·2391er
l-800-137-1460!

· and Seeding.
ShrubandTree ..
Trimming &amp; Removal ,
R..-lala~ .

F,.. Eldlmlll•

RAEWOOD FOR BALE

!:::::::~====~~~~~:::::::::::11:m~~~;::;:;;1:1~~~;1~m~o~.~~ rr.i~~~~~~~,;~~

Real Estate General

CHRISTMAS

TREES
Fresh Cut Daily .
5'- 8' Tall

OPEN !H.

Bob Snowden's
ARu~rai~d,nOc~.
742·3051
SR 124

Ready Nov. 26
11-t7-!12·1 mo pd.

.JAJMAR .

~
_ ...~

1

MOTHERS AT HOME
Chrlatmaalneomel

.:.::~:':~":'art

Quality
Stone Co.

up. Start at once and
you'll never have to

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Ch~=r.:':!.Y

Call 614·992~
6637

agalnllncomethlt
kHpl going when
you can't.
(614) 378-6153
9 am -12 Pll! and
6 pm -10 pm

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

'-----...,lj1f2111~111
n

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SI:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp; ·

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

...floam • 'Silane
-Guitar Work
&lt;Jactrlcat and Pll••tng

:::::::1:'
. Extorlor
Palnlno
j~EE

HOME SITES

EI1111ATES)

HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

V. C. YOUNG IU
992-6215

PH. 614·992-5591

11·2-G

,_.,,,ow.

RAVENSWOOD
NYA HALL

D.K.'s
FARM TOYS

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" CHILLED

~James

I 1 1;11 'I 1'1'1 I I '
,\ I I I I , I I II 1,

OFFICE 992·2886

Gat

•' Hillside Baptist Church will Riuman. Others contributing ., the
·l)old revival Sunday dtrougb Dec. 9 music•will be God's Litde Lambs,
• 6 p•.m. nishtly.
. · · Blood Covenant, Children of God,
', Dr. Kenny McComas, Rlltman, The Partakers and The Rc:deeined
"till be lho evantelilt and gues1
R. Acree Sr. invites

$1.30/day

Mwi!eall•.,......u
F...;u a v...,.utoo
For Sale or T....lo

12-5-tfn

TUPPERS PLAINS - Alee Run Road - tnatanlly
: appMIIng Ia thia .tn,.. bedroom modular with 2 batna.
· You'l love to come home to cook oupp8r in the bHutiful
ldtciMon and then relax in !runt ol the flraplace. Thla Ia
• aiHing on approi. 15 acrea. Waa $45,500. .....,

'

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

~ FuraU!hed Rooma

Retil Estate General

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
· RACINE - LETART - Mw your appointment today m
- thlt th- bedroom hom• with a two car garaga,
~ newer llhin§ea and wiring, a wonclarfut garden opot with
low o1 atrawbeny and blackberry plantt that bring in 111
, !extra riCOIM IIIICh yur. All lhla on approx. 2 ecr.. ol
land. Aaldng $21,1100.00.

'

$ 4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00
$13.00

GET RESULTS ·FAST!

: MIDDLEPORT; Meigs Junior
In 1967, a Russian space probe,
kigh Academic Boosters will meet Venera 4, and the American Mariner
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the.junior ~ arrived at the planet Venus within a
high school. Public invited.
lew hours of each other.

·f!illside Baptist Church
to hold revival Dec·. 9

15
15
15
15
15

Melp Co~mtr Muon Co., WV

446-Colllpolla

Clf\SSIFJED RDS

•

I

1
3
6

- ---l

667~ool&gt;ille

1

TUPPERS PLAINS · Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 and Ladies
Auxiliary will have a Christmas
dinner S811Uday at 6 p.m. for members and lheir families. Santa Claus
will be lhere. Each family bring a
dessen.

Over 15 Words

Rates are lor consecutive runs, broken \IP days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

Area Code 614 Area Cod~ 614 Area Code 304,

dayaflar paW;cadon 1o ...U .......,..,.
• Ad. lhat ....t be.paid iD .d.-uce an:
Card of n....t..
HapPJ' Ado
Ia M-riua
Yard Soleo
• A cio.lflool
ploeed Ill llle Ctdlipolio Doily
Trilla.. (acept Ct...lf"..d llioplay, B•iaeaa Can! or Lept
No-) will alo&lt;! appoor lll&amp;t.o Polloi l'teuul Rcp10r ud
&amp;t.o Doily S...tlll.t, .....hi.. o..,. 1&amp;,000 bom..

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville PTO will have a Christmas auction Friday ai 7 p.m. atlhe
school. Dan Smith will be auctioo-

Rate

. Cltu.ified poses cooe.r the
follou!in6 telephone exchfi"Bel •••

ntll 3 ...,. · · - daarp.
e Price J ad ror aD eapiLaiJelten i.l double price of ad COil
• 1 poialliilo IJpo oaly ued
• Seatiaol i l l - ...,...a.te for enon aftor rani day (cbock
for ....... r.... day ad ......... paper). Call beforo 2:00 p.m.

Hollow Boys. Public invited.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m., grange hall
ne.- Salem Cenla". Potluck refreshments. AU members and candidates
urged to altend. .

Monday Paper
T1101day Paper
WedneodayPaper
Thundl!y Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. thru Fin. 8A.M.-5r.M. - SAT.S-12
·'
· CLosto SuNDAY

square dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. Music will be by the Happy

Words

Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I:00 p.m. Sarurday
I:00 p.m. Monday
I:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE

ENTERPRISE - The Ellla'prise
United Methodist Chun:h will have
its 1111111111 bazaar and bate sale Friday from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Kenny
Utt's building in Pomeroy.
,,

Days

10

.

~~ evanadia for the revival

RATES .

? .

; CHESTER- Chester United
HENDERSON, W.VA.- Ga11ia
::Melhodist Women, annual Christ- Twirlers Western Square Dance
:.:mas meeting Thursday. Potluck · Club will bold a dane~ Saturday
-dinner 110011. There will be 1 $3 gift from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
::Cxchange. Program and short meet- Community Cenla". Bill Bush will
.:ing will follow. All church women be the,callcr.
arc invited.
HARRISONVILLE - Har'
•• RACINE - Southern -Junior risonville Lodge F&amp;:AM. Saturday,
::uigh Boosters will meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Oocn inslallation. Roger
';instead of Tuesday, at the junior VanDyke, 3:2nd Degree,"will install
:bigh school. Public invired.
ofTacers. All master masais, wives
sad friends invited. Refreshments
· · RACINE - Racine American will be served.
Legion Post 602 will meet Thurs_day at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
GALLIPOUS - Members of the
Meigs County REACT Team, Inc.,
:: ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury will have their Christmas dinner
:'Township Trustees will meet Saturday·at 6 p.m. at Dale's Smor-Thursday II 7 p.m. at dJe township gasbord in Gallipolis.
rhall.
Tbe IDDUal Cbristmas dinner for
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers American Alloys employees,
: Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies retirees and their families will be
:Auxiliary will meet Thursday at beld at the USWA S171 local hall
:-6:30 p.m. Bring csndy for treats on Saturday, December S from
·. ::and help decorate for Christmas II :30 A.M. 10 7:00P.M.
befa-e lhe regular meeting.

DOUG MCCOMAS

The

REGULARLY .. . LB. $3.99

•'

I

LONG BOnoll - BASHAN ROAD - If you'N tirad ol
living In laWn, you will wanllo take a look at thla thrae
bedroom, two bath home, with largo lamlly room,
ftraptace, flnlahlld baa,manl and gla...d In pon:h on
approx. 1~ acrae. MS,IOO.OO.

w~'f/l~"gf~t~~~~J5iLSE? ~
SOFT SENSE OR

'

Edge Gel · ....-•
..

Shave cream
7-oz.

$
For

POMEROY - EAS'f SECOND IT. - DEADEND ST. .You,l nNCI to ... to appNCiate thla 2·3 bedroom, 1~
bafl, 211ory home. Ira Wllkhg ~~- to atoraa but not
In the heart 01 town. Could ba uMd lor omall buline•
1110 at lila lOcation. S21,000.00.

.

•

''

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokw........................---11112-1882
BRENDA JEFFERS .......................... - ...·------11112-3056

.

DAAL.INE 8TEWAAT......- ....- ......................J..IIII2.aa5
INIDY ·BIJTCHER.., ...... _, __ .........................t1112-1371

J
,J

OFFICI! .... - ...........................··········----·-·-112·2116

•

•

-

___

JERRY SPAADUNG ......-........................(:104) 11112-34118

•

I
•

_...
"

Sholllodola • Cotllctlbloo
•Ridon In Slock'
Spacial Edition- Sllow P-

992-2259·
EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

SooAt
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
2551111 St.,lllddloport, 011.

IIN3M Dayo, 742-3020 Evt.
I III!H pm W01kd1yo
t om-12 pm Sllluolap untl

· SALEM TWP. RED HILL AD. - Lovely brick ranch
homo thalleatu,.• a fi,.plac:e,' 3 bedroomt, full finiohod
balernent, 2!1, batho, attic apace, 2 car gara9o,
appllancoa. PLUS: 22+ ac,.o. bam, pond, exira t,.rlar
hookup. lenced acr..ga. Groat countJy location on pa·1od
road.
ASKING $131,500.00.

ClvitAtklorDol•

New Cla1111

POM·POM,
TUMBLING,
BATON TWIRLING

232 2ad St.,

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

992·2036

All Agee Welcome
Speelal Claaa 3-6
YearOida
For More Information
Call304-273-3?21

Check with ua for
our Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12-1-2 mo. pd.

MICROWAVE OVEN
.and VCR REPliR

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

JUST OUTSIDE MIDDLEPORT - 2 ttory frame home
localld on Lagoon Rd. has 3 bedrooms, bath, enclosed
fmnl porch, insulation, and a 24x24 garage.
ASKING $27,000.

.

ILL MIKES
lrtng It I• Or We
Pkk Ui!-

Spedallzln!i In Cust011
Fra• Repolr
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODUS

•LIGHT HAULING . KEN'S APPLIANCE
•FIREWOOD

CHESTER -OAK HIL.L AD. - Approx. 76.33 acreo with
1~ atory hOme, 3 bedrooms, olectric heal pump/central
air, ..,11 and TPC water, includos paotura, tillable and
lanced ac..age, pond, silo, bam, ahod, milk houM,
chlckan houM, beautiful fanning oite. ·
$88,000.

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED' RAILROAD TIES . '
4-4·92-1111

MIDDLEPORT- 1 ftoor fr11mo home with 3--4 badrooma,
carport, patio, flteplace, cellar, recon~y romodolod with
blown In Insulation. lncludot nice fenced yard with
llloraga ohed. '
'
'
S21,1100.

CHARLIE'S

,•

SMALL DOZER
WORit,.

VINE STREET - Aftorclable flxer-upporl Frame hama
with 2 badrooma, bath, gaa apace heat, lndudaa small
Iliad.
18,000. ow- may conakler onorl

DRIVEWAY wOU

and LIMEnONE

THE $BUCK $STOPS HERE I IF YOU WANT A
HOllE THATS "DEAR" TO YOUR HEART,
BEE US -AT CLELAND REALTY.
WE OFFER OUAUTY, AFFOAD:'BLE HOUSING!

DEliVERY SIRYICI
l•all lner Work

HENRY E. CLELAN0............~ .... .....................912-8181
TRACY BAINAGEA....................1
.....o.......... ......Nt-2438
JEAN TRUBBELL.............................................II4t-Hf0

992·7553

$25.00 Per Hour.
IWOIIIIU UIU

POIUROY, OIL

.

OFFICE ....................,••_ _ _,,,............................112·2251

11·13·'92·1 mo.

'•

SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

lerna ,,.. Pad Office
217 L Ieee.. St.
N.IOY,OIIO
3123/i2Ain

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.
992·2734
12-1-'92-

F&amp;l fRII SERYICE

Tol

l~oT....._I__.

Jroa rrrll.l1..

20%-M llumt
wl6tlrloa

742·2160

11-IS."tl-1 -

Po•roy

11121

POMEROY - Nice staner home or ranlal inveslmentl 1 y,
~~torr home with a bedrooms, and two lorso,ol 50X100
..ch. .
ASKING $18,1100.11ake M oHorl

'

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.

i •

992·7013 or
99.2·5553

or TOLL FREE

1·80G-141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

713t(B1Itln

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;

cuns

BRADFORD'S
Fresh CulT.....
or Cut Your Owa.
. CHERRY RIDGE
last of Dar,ta • Rt.
611 an lrawel Rolli
1Yo Mile .. ,,.,.,

WIICI fOI SillS
11124/" 1 -

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOrnE OF LOTION

'32.00
Ma1y more specials.

· BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTION
•New Ho•s
eGaraa••
.
•Complete .

Remodtliat
Stop &amp; Compare
FIIE.E ESTIMA'TES

~~~~E~~ ~~~:
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

FOREVER
BRONZE

Bashaa Rtl., Radne

939•2826

985•4473
AL.L SESSIONS 0000
667•6179
FOR a MONTHS
~------~·2-·7---'2-·1111~. ~-------~~~~~~·~~~--~

�Ohio
by Bruct Beattie

December
KIT" 'N' CARLYLE® by

Fumllhed

45

Larry

Wrlghl

IM4~SSU

•••plng·I'
OQIM .... .
-~-.AI-......

h r. .

Col . . . 11111, lloeon

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

wv.

•

- . 104-773-

(7 wanted to

Rent

allevedbylhelol

\Zit Squate One TV Star8!l.

.... Chnolll, . 23,000 ......
good aond,

;:.:,:.:ll ou4o,

5 Acrao ThamP.on Rood, AI•
110, Will CGnoldar Lind Contract. 15 MlnutM from Kyger,
114-388--.

Couch, chair, tnd rwcllner, i'nutt
ttkt all, 814-992-5706.

Cute mixed bre«&lt; pupplea to

giveaway. 304-675-1.124.

"I don 't keep

Ftmtll Dog
Shepherd Very
Chlldran, 1 112 Y011no
448-7137.
.

MerchJndrse

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Blonde Coc:ker Sp11nltl Ftmal..

a

light bulb

it .

The .added weight makes it tip over. "

·•i;j;
•• 1---------'T"'---~---'"""'i

11

a-

liD D Fulllou.!f 1;1
IIJ MocQrver .... .
1Z1 Sid Time
8 World Tod.ay

1111 Chryalor Now Yarbr,
Llothor ...... $2.411, 114-371-

Rln Tin Tin, K-8 Cop 1;1
1:06 (I) nw..•t Cotn£111tny
1:30(2)D 01 NIC Nn!o D
al Ed Mc,..._'s lta7

•"

DOTIDY

I

HILTY

I

F HE RS

I

l

Help Wanted

lqu8re

IG

Ccmplele the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
L-...1.-L--L-L-~-l you dovolop from Slop No. 3 below.

(IJD lllD AIC Nn!t.C
Ill Whete In the World ~
nMn S.nc!lego? Stereo.

oao,

I
I

As citizans and voters in any
election wa should all ra. . . . . . .. member that campaigns are
. . . - - - - - - - - - . like cleaning windows.The dirt
0 0 8 L EH
is always on the ----- ----.

1--,..;~7c-r,IS,.=.,..;I9;:-:;.I.:.:.,I~

Search

5 ecrM, waadtd, omoll, prlml·
live cobln,
ila uUIIti
.., - Al'ler,
eobardere
Shlao
hwrnlng,. $8500,
14olltl2-3478.

I

f---,1"'5-,1'"6'-,1-TI....j : :

0

1111 T-lllrd, Tu!bo Coupe, 81~
-IChoroaol, ChoOCMI lntorlat:l
kHMIIcl, IIC. concl. l•ldl I; out
$3,000.114 . . . . . ..

Household
Good a

the
be-dt.

I

(! Readlna Rot~ 1;1

•

2117,

Sl

•

low to form fO'!r ~mple

CD ONewe

="'..,:.-

$600 down, $1361 man., l14-il2·
2107,014-385-8227.

R~rronge letters of
0 four
ocrambled wordo

1:00(2)D \ilD lllD illlD

W.nlod To : -or Homo
Far W - Trip To South
1S.11. COli Pot .....

:lbdm1.,
15112.
Jurnlohod,
oentral tlr, 1klrtlng, will flr11nca.

Coli 614·256-1558.

WED., DEC. 2
t;VENING

$111 por IIIOIIIh Including e
lrHioC rontl Now ~170,
tMIIvorod • oot wp, oi&lt;Jrtlng.
• - · only $700 down, 1 13U821,

_'_::~!~_L.._'_;S:;:;.~..;;;~'!l~:it.~Se

Television
Viewing

AUIOI for Sale

71

-···--..·-

No hiOIIIng .. tr :
-~~ on
Rlymond Smltll'e llm1, · Oolllpollo Feny, WY.

'

•. BORN LOSER

Room•
_tor _
___ _

3 Announcemtnta

1912

.

_

_

.

_

_

One TV Stereo.

D CD CIS Newo Q
Roteanno Stereo. t;1

liD D

a

MoNEY ·MONEY -MONEY

I4GG Wk. Or 11..1 Moiling Pool

Corell. Stuffing Envolopoo AI
Home. Ruth $1 &amp; S.II-Addrll·
Hd Slompod Envotapo: ~A
Supplln, Bo1 81, Hllloboro, OH
45133.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
" ·•
Encore- Shaky- Haunt- Teacup - HAS an ECHO
The parents were trying to imprass upon their teenage son the value of money management. "Just remember son," the father lectured, "monay talks, but
credit HAS an ECHO."

1:35 (I) Andy Grliflth

Rentals

0 WhMI of Fortuno

7:00\JjD

(Z

ngWomen

Sto
(IJD

Wanted to Buy

9

Up Close

0 New Zorro 1;1

Ill

E-1;1

Cll ' Mac~/Leh,.,

NORTH

BRIDGE

Nawllfour Q
I)) D Morrleil ... With
Children C

+10 8 7

.Q 1U
.AJt087

01111 Jeotlat&lt;lvt D
liD D Star T.!!,li: ffia Next

+u

!01

Oenenttlon

PffiLLIP
ALDER

1121D lilly GiltiUtm: At1cltMr

Road, . . . _ CIUtnc:e

. FRANK AND ERNEST

Al-.1 Aoirlgorotor &amp; &amp;love COOl, ~
A
S300 For Sol Or $185 Eoch. 114- Tan O.ll-,81._..,..111141
,

. •.'

441-2M4.

a
Condition,

Bolly Bod llotlra•
txcollent

~~~~~~~~;;~·~

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home i u m =
Rd.
Frw Dollnty.

=r~

::::::;. rr•••

. PICKE.:'_'!'!!'!!ITURI
.,.._
Hot Mllold -ltlng. 112 mi.
Jontcho Ad. Pt. Pleieont, WV,
...1304-176-1410.
!lt£rigorol0.., F - , W.....,

~-.

_... VInyl llldlng. 304-176-

-.
Color Computer Pocklrd Boll
=~~.:x With Ll- Printer, &amp;

. 12111.
SW!UN
AUC'IION &amp; FURNITURE.

re $2.800, Allo Weight E·
qul-103.nt, 114-441-t771, 114-110
Frw•lool or Lomb, grain fod,
cUI
wro-,
ir..on
&amp;
doilvem, half or whole, 304o
TIHIII.
Fonback wlclcer choir, 0o1 at
Com~
~._ "

W::'::i.t:=.,:;:om

dallo,
• a£ ~':, &amp;
lhtrto. -"• '12·14.
·

Drv-

~ 1 B•ov•, · Color

T.\'.'o Etc.

Oltvea.,Oolll~'"
New&amp;
,...._.

"'• --. . nome, now

;TV;;:::::::::;::..;;2I~I::-:::;...
:::~bl=:nat:;- .I Fino! Bole Of Tho YNr: now lr-·
n., n
"'
• ,...tor jNno ond donlm Jock•
SII; llortol wringer - . at• oR _.._ _,., ~

-=~~bgge
.... Good -Alpllonno
·... · Wuhln a Qrytra $100 &amp; Up. All

Sold- W.ne~ ~

1

• ar,., s~~appe
WM4.
Auf-~wooltora ' ...
*''"'~%'

Wuher

't:o• ~·m~
~a=··;
- ..~ - IIJIIIIIo- - porto,
· -Delbert
SWiohor Applto.._, at
ilond l St. Konowgo, OH

a--

._117J.

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
6145 ,.••
Special Early llr•
$1000 Payoff
This .. good for I

fREE cor••

Lie. No. .0050·32

With- Benat ....; ft-12
Go Door SieYor S221; -

t• 10.01 8al Action $185;

Prcleo lora Firm. JIJ&gt;one: 114-44412718 Alit For Lorry.

Fmanc1al

:;,a!

21

38904 l.eatliag
Creek Road

Youth Cuotom Drivera.
leaaons included w~h
purchase.
Located on Scout' Camp
Rd., Cheater, OH.
11/27

Vondlng Aouto: Loeol. Wt Hovo
Tho N-ot Mochl-. lloklng A
Nice -dy Cull lncamo. 1·
100 Ill 0354.

Real Estate

00

..
5400 per inch
Fish ..•.,•.
.,'.
Call (304)
,... 895-3386
after 5 p.m.
.....:o

h ................

·"'.---------!.--..;..;._....,
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

••

..

1

ecre, 3 BR cloubtewldt .

New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE' ESTIMATES
(No' Su1H11y

Colis) ·

•• I

room, llvlna room, 3bdrm., w1lk:•
In c~e, luUy car,.tH, 2 pot·
choo( oloct!lc hHt, AC olovo,
retrlaeratori lterwo-wlred, Home

Not'fBonk, Aeclno; OH. 114-114112210. '

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlototlcll AIM Carnor Lot • ItO
lloln St. Pt. PloOAnt~ W. · Vo.
Cotnplltoly - . ,..., 2 Full
Botho, 3 Ll~ lodiGGIIIt, Now
HVAC, Now C.IPII. Avollable
lmmocJiotty. l--2205.

t

I

t t

t t t t

,

C.nten1ry Aru, Nice 2 Bed·
roome, Stovt, Rttnaerllor,

Fumlohod 1Br, Utllhlaa Pold,
O.pool Roqui!Od 2111 Stoto
Stroot, Golllpollo,
s&gt;.to. 814-

446-3167.

No

Fumlthod En, 1120 Fourth
Avonuo, Ooillpallo, $1-o:
l!tllllln Pold, 114 441 4411 Ailor
7 P.ll.
Furnished, 3 Aoom1 &amp; Broth,

Clun, No P1t1 Referenc:. 1
O.pool Roqul,.d. 114-415-tllt,
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
room lpartmentt .. VIU1g1
Minor
1nd
Rlverlll11

Ap1r1mente In Middleport, From

304-882-2581.

Complllly Fumlohod lmoll
Hou01"
+ Utlihloo. No
Poto, """ Bolora 7 P.M. tM-441Complotiy Fumlehod mallllo
homt, 1 mile below town onrtoaklng ~vor. No - . Cl. 114448-4:131.

I

t

•

I

•

I

•

t

Ono

t

Sett1cerltiM
fromSIUI
t,•

•

l85-4381or

_,.....,..,

_,.ky dapool, no polo; 114-

992-221e.

•

TIME ONLY

bodroam

1221/mo, lncludoo utDMioe, $100

LIMITED

.,...

,.

t t t

.i~····· $6995
I

&amp;County
· lo·c altervlco

IR1:

t t t

frl /Jifchose 0 Ceiltlll' {ilona?

Been woi#ng

petsftonth

I

'

FIIWOCid, Ook, HlcluMy,

A,.o!t,

llolll raallng end oldlng, 304o

312-20tt.

o.nvorOd, -

wtntor - . -m w1 loolhlr
trim, SIIMOIIInlng, IIIIa now, ..
ltlng Sll, £Mild fSliO; olea mloo.
lodfoo alathln1~":: 114-112·
21111, 1-apm or
II-221M o£._ lpm.

Ont loodroom lurnlohod oportmenl, refertncee and dlpoeh,
no polo; 114-HW83l

Six room1, 2 blthl, total eiiGtrM:

whh woocllurrwr, btm, 1nd
autbulldlnge, A11Dro1. locra~.' 3
mlln fforii Aoi:lno .., Boohen
Rd. "'-lnlmont only, 114-Mt2851.
.
','

R001n11 For Aonl: Wook. Month,
Stonooroot llatol, e1441\7104,
114-441-1142,
'

Two bedroom ljNirtmlnl on
llulblrrr Avonuo,

992-au.a.
I,

"--r; 114-

'
'

-

'

~ ~~-~;\\, F~~LING
~l\fl\9'

,-

!.'M

~f·f

A LITTLE

IN5~CLI,E.

?'.:k:::;~~;·

~

7:30 (2) D

J

I)) D You let Your Ule
1111• o£ Fortuno 1;1

~

Massachusetts at Florida
State (L)
acrouflre

t
'

•

:-ALLEYOOP

i

g

-~~ v:;,\2.MifJ,
114•

"' 2)

~304-17U::.;::.:,
·:;;2111:;;;;,·_ _ _ __

ie

-o. -....

Purebred INIIe lour, I mo old,
hod
$150.
Dr bl.t off•. Dlchuhund &amp;
Chlhvuohwo . mixed •puppoo,

r

raof Chrltl- - - · 30471-7722.

sr

.......,, low howe, llc.lltnt
candhlan, 12100 flrm, 1114-111:1-

150W P - Spoobro, $125;
·AUIIotlo lqiii!IIZI!i_ 12.~i ' oor
-~"~ oyotom, !!!; -hell

tM-812-1417 .. 304ot t&gt;-1143. '
-

uo..:·•

Tronomleotono,

Instruments

all AuciiOVlelon Chrio-

a

MORTYMEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Accesaorles

..
wn. "''"- oto~lna it see;
DWIIIr I'M-245-M77. lM-$

Musical

8PtlrnoNewtD

8:06 (I) MOYIE: You Only Uve
Twice JPG) (2:30)
,30
Ill D Dooglo How-.
8 (I)
M.D. Doogle's mother .
catches him sklnny-&lt;I•PP"'L
with Suzanne=reo. 1.;,1
1121D
Chrlo- Gar11eld
reluctantly allows himsaH to
be dragged out of bed and
travels to the !:Oilntry with
Jon and Odie tor a traditional
Christmas. (Animated) (0:30)
Stereo. I;!
9:00 Ill D 1121 S.lnfold Jerry and
his ex-girlfriend discover tho
meanin:?.f friendship. (R)
Stereo.
(IJD
BHome
~mpro..ment Jill's
reponslbilltles grow and Tim
tackles the mess at home.
Stereo. I;!
Ill AmeriCan Experience Q
(f) Arnorlcttn Pfayhouoe THe
adventures of Spanish
explorer Cabezo de Vaca .
(Spanish) Stereo.
OJ Dear John D
liD D llell'aoe PIKe Jake
asks Alison to help him study
tor his :tivalency exam. (R)
Stareo.
c•ln
Heatoflhe
Night Stereo. D
11J MOVIE: Wlilit Lie (PG13)
(2:00) Stereo. D

I·"1'0t.lli! 06-II..Y J-ICflOeCOPE :

WIL.L. fo\AVE. A fo\APPY,
UPI3EAT ~y ~Y. ..

·'I'QJ

..
.

' .. . E.XCEPr F'OR 'THAT. '1

Oo

2213, , _ , . , 114--8100. .

..... au tanka,

Ofll

ton truck

whelli. Nd&amp;aion. tkaor· mate,
ole. D·i AAuto, Rfploy, WV. 3043724t:Q

_,_273-132t. '
Serv1ces

181-------e.o.,
Home

~-=~oh':ll~oo~

Poovor .10 bo
...,..
$175; Yomohl ox-100 arboont
ond oahoholl "71;
Yomoho RX-11 drvm . .ahlno,
t1DO. Cllll11 ttl 1~

I

Tum your·clutter iR.to cash,
~it the eaa way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your clguifjed gd today! ·
15 word. or less, 3 dgy,
3 pGJ!er,, $5.40 paid in advance.

It'll

Supplrc·,

Improvements •
IIASEIIINT

WATERPROOFING
,
Uncondtuar.t Ulotlmo guorontoo. Loeet ........... Jurillohod.
c.n ...oo-217-01i711 Or 1114-2117-

0411

-\ [IVI'S'ClCk

CUrtl8
Oohl II ~-mi-. Now Hallind 1ft hoy bind. AC no 1111 oom f!lontor, AC 10ft
tro..:or dloa wlhomiW. 304-2734211. '
W.ntod To Howl Tobo...., 1142511003.
•

Homo

CALM
DOWN,
: SIS tf

1111 ment

W.t.rprooflnil,

61 Fann Equipment

63

Rogera

HARNEY

·-.........

IF SNUFFY MAKES ONE MORE
REMARK ABOUT MY HAIR-DO
. I'M GOIN' TO PACK UP AN'
SPLIT!f
-·- -

'

lm-orh:

SNe~NOw

1. --,~-o------:-----

10 alao.l20 Mah, - · · · 10.11111

................... I'IJIOI!Wd, • ..-In 11101... In otook, RON

3-·--~,------------­

14 YoM Old Antblon lloro, Wonl:
flOG. I'M Ill .....

. 'B

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1 . Cnioli Rood all At. 12. - · 1137-1121.
1113.

~·------------5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:--_

bullo. 11 montho ald. :104 1112242e.

7. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
6~--------------~

I WIH Old Plgia, 125 Eech, 4
Yoor Old Alpine lily Goot, 1114317-11114.

8 . _ _ _..;._______----;'___
9,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

64

2 rogl- SIGIIod Honionl

Condlllonod

lioY, •

_ , . olltlllonae 18£1ttlro. WY
304-171,2Stl Ohio 114-441-2454.

Sos11!o Tonk P..........

Oollie
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPhl• •

stzo

A

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

10·~-------.~
. ----11.__ _- - - - - - - - - 12---'-----""--__;1S~----------

*'· •

Hoy, oquoro bollo

12. &amp;

82.10.

Awnd - · 120. ooaSt. lotu..
doy plok up ...,.. I04-IlNIIO.

14--~
-_
~·~---------15.__
_ _ _ _ _ __

rranspo11at•on

446-2342
992-2156
675-ISSS

1'! AutOI for S81e
1m Cltr!y 112 Tan Pick~:110,
AUiamotlc, Rune G~
Or
loot Ofior, 114-441

,·

'

64

Electrical &amp;

Refrtgeretlon

-r

RMidlndal

or

t~at you 'll want fa partlclpale ln.
AQUARIUS (~en. 20-FMI. 18) This Is a

ratller unusual day, IInce your hunchlltl
and Intuitive perceptions could be ~en
more accurate than your logic: Try to
..
use all your attrlbulea when making
avaluationa.
PISCES (Fell, 20-IIM:h 20) Friends Sor
whom you do lavora loday will be very
Dec. 2, 11111:1
oppreclative of your goeturll8. They
aren't likely to forget your klndnaH too
.Your ability to make and win new · lOOn . This Is a delightful way to ahore
friends will be SJhanced In the year up your popularity.
1
ahead . There are Indications you mey AJIIEI (-.:h 21·Aprll1t) Today you
l!'.ove to an entirely new social group. may be exposed to two SMnl-related
' However, thla does not mean you 'll de- opportunities. Eat~ will be of a fleeting
·s8rt old pals.
'
·
nature.and, If~ ' re going to do 10me· at.GITTAIIIU8 (Nov, 23-0ec. 21) Both thing about
you 'll have to act
today and iomorrow, yoo could be vary quickly. · r
"SOf!unatelnyourftnanctalandcommer. TAURUS (Afrll 20-ltley 20) You could
;Cial dealings. Even If you're not malerl- be rather fortu~ate al this time through
.lllstlc by natu~e. think money anyway. parsons Sr""J foreign Ianda, especially
SIQittanus, treat youraeli to a birthday th0141 with whom you have some 1ype of

'Your
~'Birthday

Rood,

Hoy, ballo
suo.
Round boloe 120. ...... loturdoy pick up only, I04-IlNIIO.

gift. Send tor Sagittarius's Astra-Graph
prediCIIOns for the y•ar ah·a ad by mailIng $1.25 plus a long , nil-addressed,
stamped envelope to Astra-Graph, t/o
1
this n~r. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state
yoor zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 2:11-Jan. It) Keep
your SChedule as flexible as poulble to• day, because t~e Is a possibility

~-lliil•••••• something unannoonced may pop up

•

Jec-,OHI~-11211.

Round - . . lllintS OUioldo
$10, In ..... 112. Wll

Lood. Don Coot, tM-S?Nin.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Ran'o TV ........, opooloililna

In olea ... i'loSna moil
..... bntndo. ..... olea

82

Hay &amp; Gral{l

NihJMialil

.llo....
. .r - -rlciOn.
.. rosoelro.
UcoMe!l
EIOctrlcal, WV00030e,
304-175-1711.

J'lf"l·

Upholstery

trl_, ....

-.oy•o Upltatoiorlnt lng
21 ,..,.. Tho
11001 In funilluro upllalotorlng.
COli -5-41114 £or ... timoiN.
\

u..•

a Lany King
Fa- Dciwllng

O.vlo Sowing Moahlno Apd
Vecuum Cfllntr Aep~lr, Fr'M
Plait-Up And Ooii...Y, Ooorgeo
CrMk Aoed,IU ~.
JET

,.

+J

L----~------...J

From u..;·

piay at trick one, with
East droppinc his lowest club, you
know that you can't wia a club trlclc.
The diamond play att'Oilgly IUQests
that declarer started with K-Q-4 of·diamonds. Partner's diamond nine looks
like the top card from a doubleton.
This is empbasiJed when East plays
the beart two on the lint round of
trumps. With a singleton diamond,
East would play blgh-low in trumps,
the accepted way to ask for a ruff.
To defeat the contract, yot: have t o
cash three spade tricks oow. You must
switch to the spade nine, bopillg par t
ner baa aCe-third or -fourth.
As sonte&lt;l£te once wrote, every card
tells a story.
~-.wua.uaa;

.. ...

a ·•au-.

,..._ ,

38

14Lea. . - -

a•••.,.

15 Future bkt.
18- St.
Laurtnt
17 Whale
1B OCcttlonaliy
(2 wdl.)
20 Conlutlon
21 Doloro1Rio
22 ActreHCaldwell
23 Oelrich
28 AVIIilble to
buytl'l
(2 wde.J
3D· Dry, I t wlnt
31 Ranmbllng

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liCit

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aloorly
311 RO.ter

40le(IIIIUHtr

.1 2,001 ,
Roman
43 Wlltlnt-

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tlaled)
48 Hebrow
n.UOO.Htnt
50 IWnoH part
51 Borden
52 llotlter ol
IIHt.
53 Went to lht

boHom
54 Ctlttard

apple

I Papa'o wile
2 Vtrll-w-

55 EncOUitlered

58 llualcal work
57 Ntll

tng"thou"
3 Nellinl

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Y•ro lxporlonce On Oldor, •
-•Homeo.-Addhlaolo,
Foundotlon WO&lt;t, Aoolll\g,
KltchontiAnt£ ,-.Frao . ...
tlfNII•I Refw• 1111, No Job
Tao llg Or SmeNIIM-31JOSil.

Llvellock

2 •. _ _ _ _ _ _~------

WAS YOU
5PEAKIN'
OF ME,
FRIZZLE
TOP ?,..._.o&lt;f'N

Opening lead:

thHp

,31:tlblt tube

o•

SPLAT/

Pass

Pass

33 Larar of 1011
34 Experienced
pereon
35 QuiCk lunch

1 ElectriCII
unn
4 BabaauB RebtlliOUI
demonltraUon
12 llotorllll'

a Crook and CIUtH

3200 lla Rod,
olorto, ohoft irlnn,
rovoroo, hlflhlknl-.11- &amp; malor, s-. 080. 176-413!1,
'

Auto Parts &amp;

ACROIS

11J Murder, She Wrote .,.

.

-

· The World AJmanac: 11 Cro•sword Puzzle

aev.tr

Motorcycles

76

(2:00)

tD D Chertie Brown
Chrft-• Chartle Brown
and Linus wade through
garish aluminum trees, tinsel
and commercialism to find
the true meaning of the
Yuletide season . (Animated)
(0:30) St.eo. D
liD D
Hille, 90210
Bran&lt;lon Is chosen to be the
school p_!Per editor. (R)
Stereo. l;ll .
..,

·iiii:o
aut Rt. ,.,S:::tpatlo. 114- I ::'"~~;;.:;:~~=-:::::­
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Woyne
moltor.
1t11 tcowooold * Boyau, Sour;

Puppy Potoco Pol Shop.
Locotod In G.C, Murphy Ca. Gotllpallo. --. 1~1-.

.

(IJD lllDWonclerYeoro
Kevin calmly prepares for his
S.A.T. eams at school.
Stereo.
Ill (f) entitle Amerlcttn
Frontiero The Channel Island
fox once ilounshed off the
coost of California. Stereo.

ct.vrolll, Fwd, Dodge- pickup
Shari or lang. No Nol.

1103.

pick up the cards, sbuffle them, and
try to put them back in the same order. Shuffle up the cards again. Do
something else for 20 minutes; then
take the cards and try to put tbem
back in the same order.
Increase the number of cards until
you have 13. Then repeat the procedure but with the cards sorted mto
suits. You should find this last task
much easier.
Howe\'l!r, it isn't enough just to
watch all the cards. You must draw inferences too. (Isn't this game
aggravating!)
As West in today's deal, delending
against lour hearts, you lead the club
jacll; three, two, queen. Declarer plays
the diamond four: two, 10, nine. Next
comes the heart queen: two, three,
king. What sbould you lead at trick
lour - and whv?

1:00 Ill
01 Untolved
My•-• A report on Eva
Schoen's murder, the wife of
U-Haul heir Sam Schoen.
Stereo.
I]) The Sitndo ol Time (Pt 1

Tan, 1811
-1103, 114-441-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

A good way to improve your memory for bridge is to take, say, eight
cards, shuflle them and lay them out
in a line. Look at them for 20 seconds,

7:35 (I) S.niord &amp; Son

4

tKQ4
+!,Q

By Pbllllp l,lder

1221 College BotketlleH

I llonlh Old
Ccocllor Saonlol, llolo, luff
~. Ha1 . Shot1 . lovH
ChlkiNn, 150, 114o24WIIOII.

olono &amp; Slo,.... Ktaono. 114448-3144 Met 7:00p.m.

1121 J8CI£Nitrdfw.

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and analyze

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St~fe!&gt;1 • C.l. Etc. 85,1H, 114211-1oooEvtnlnge.

RCA COlor CONolo TV. I76 ftrm.
Aouon for Nlllng. bougltl now ll&lt;aganwynd Cotlory: CFA Plfo

coblll'Hdy TV. 446-0391.

ALwAY! COMf

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SOUTH

7:05 (I) BeMI'Iy 111-o

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Flmraad: All Nordw- lplft Wolob.'Ciii1Mo411o0231.
Delfvorod S3l Pick-Up IMd:

BEAUTIFUL APAATIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 1131 Jecklon Pike
frotn $1t21mo. Walk to •hoD &amp;
mavloo. Collll..__-2581. EOH.

Now Hoven 1 lA fumlthod
oportmont. Dopaeh &amp; roloranco.

2112192/tfn

••• t

~-·

-

$400·
Fonder-BOAmon
10
400 · omplliior
t425;- -voy"""'""'·
mannar

Wotor . S24Mia. Na Palo. 114441-8038.

TOTALLY AUTOIIOnvE £IEAFOIIIIAHCE
t

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---.

2bdrm. 1pt.., total tl.ctrk:, appllancll ~ tumlahecl, laundry
room faciUIIH cioN to achool
In 1own. Appl(catlone available
at : VIllage Creen Apia. 149 or
calll14-·3111. EOH.

1588 Sq. Ft., .11 ocro tal, 211
wall•, 2 oompt.t• blithe, dlnlrtg

CELLU!8{i.
t

tconowgo, •

Btac• brlc" · _ . , ....... win,
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OH
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73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
56
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1388.

B-h Stroot Middleport, Ohio,
iumlohod 1 roam 11£11. Ulllhl•
lncl~o~dld, dtp &amp; ,., -required,

-4'8.Md

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~

72 TruckS fpr Sale
" " GIIC, C111 Onr, CUmmine
~lno; 11711 Rlveno 4211.
Aluminum Troll'!.. Homo Nol'l
Bonk, Roclno, unla. • - •
2210
•
Ford F-110, Auto, Air
14,1118; 1111 N-n
13,111; 1117Tara40 I 8poo((, Atr,
$2.111; 1tll l-10 ~ UtUhy

YOU A~E ttfF~
~(
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EAST

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Truok,~~
~~-:.=·oAwa
Sotoe, 1- Hoi
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Building
Supplies

Yomollo DX-7 Koy Boord ond
110ttahlll Clll tiSOi PeaYiy C.S.

0338.

I

55

very clnn, No pets. 304-675-

130-.

t

eammu:."l

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.

Fl-ood F.. - · AH Ook. In- ' " " ' ' eM-:117-71111.

cloy, 0.0.

One bedroom apt, fumlshlld,

$1116. Colllt4-IKI2-77B1. EOH.

or '15·3839

Sovwol polro "' C'!!:!.'.., _ . . g - . 114-el2-oruo.
WaNed:
Uuc1 S.rvt=tlblt
Plono For - y
Bulldl~. £11- Coil: 114liN or "4 2411.140.
,
WHITE'S METAL OETECTOAG
Ron Allloon
1:110 Socand
Avonwo, a.nlpo~~e. Ohla, 114448-4331.

'

'

'

~=~·100.

Apartment .
for Rent

304-882-2581.

614-949·!101 • 949•2160
'

44

$31,1100. 2 bathe 1 whh gordon
tub. Oolllpalla ~orry. 304-8757217.

4 Hdroom, fully lnaul.-td, new
wiring, now point, now co!PII,
1 - N. lloln St. 304-875-:1130.

New Homes • VInyl Siding

Sot

·•

..
Enoyclapodlo
Brlttonlcao,
Mil tor

-t

CA~H?H

INOTlCEI

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
Deer Heads •• :.................'190

Business
Opponunlty

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
,..eommendt tMt you do bull• - with poople yw know, ond
NOT ta oond """'"Y threuan tho
moll untl you hove lnvootTgotod
tho oilorlng.

o•io

laaert.

113~
o£

ond cltlldllnO. Only 15. Peaay, 1:12 Buttomuf, POOMroy,
w.~· doliJit'-doy lhru Botur-

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

. ri'J~~ng

Beginner Sets,

Evontt, .loekMn, Ohio. , . -

Floh Tonk. 24t3 JoeUon Avo.
Point P-nt. 30W7J.2013,
SUit llno T"""""' Sloh, blrdo,
amaU anlmela •nd 1uppllle.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

10%·20%011

..

-burg '12 Oo. -...rer

614·742·2138

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
-

- t 11 Bhat Gun,
114 411-881.

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

EAGLES CLUB
IN POMEROY

..,

52 Sponlng GoOds

HAULING

.

~~ :': Ptlollc And - • Culvolt linch
1
Thru 10 lnah In Stadt, Ran

••71 •• 1 f t . .
~ol makJing. Ook &amp; Poplor.
--&amp;·-baarcl.
·
12 ft. -~~

Nowsong, former
quanerbeck Nell Lomax,
Redsklns' coach Joe Gibbs.
(1 :00) Stereo. I;!
tiJ
Leep Stereo. 1;1 ·
1221 SporlaCerttar
all MOMyllno
all The WaHont

WEST
+1( J 9

e

1:30 (2)
1121 Mild About You
Whan Paul and Jamte go
pick out a sola, he ~ to
her choice.
:reo. Q
(I)D 0 h
Hayden's Screaming Eagles ·
play at the first Patriot Bowl
game. Stereo. ·1;1

co~merclal arrangement .
GEMINI (Moy 21· Juno 20) Your Instincts and hunches on ways to get
ahead In competitive developments today could provide you with the edge
you 'll need to enter the victor's circle.
CANCER (Juno 21.Julr 221 Being able
to grasp the essence of Ideas should
come quickly tor you today. Additional -·
ly , you'll be able to show others how to
" Improve upon their
Ideas and
conceptions.
LEO (July :D-Aug. 22) Contentmenl
with the status quo Isn't Uktlly to be your
long suit today. When dealing with conditions that aren't to your liking, you'll·

know1 how

to

make

it!Miea

I

(':!

alii

~~~~·
24 Houno
D College
hKetball

constructive .

chang1111.
VIRGO (Awg. 23-llepl. 2:11) Being able to
think on your feet and moe snop Judg·
ments are your strong aulta today. Your
first thoughts are likely to be your belt
ones, 10 have tile courage to lot low your ·
convictions.
LIIIIIA (Sept. 23-0ct. U) Difficult tasks
can be simplified today If you take time
to think them through before starting
them . Be patient and examine them
from 111 angles.
ICORPIO (OCL J!I.Nov, 22) Even
though It may not appear to be 10 at the
time It OCCUI'I, an unexpected change
may prove to be a very lucky braal&lt; .

. Don't make huty aeteetments.

'.

.,

Memphis State at Arkansas
(L)
10:00 (2) D 0 Spy Magulne H~
Uot The 100 Mott AnnOying
... Highlights of 1992's most
annoying, alarming lnd
apalllng people, places and
things In the worlds of
entertainment, polltlctl and

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Civil WIQ Ell
meets a wotmtn on the but;
Sydneyi.oesenll a letblan .
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pending execution of a death
row Inmate. Sterao. 1;1
llll iD Hunter 1;1
. all Worlci Newt

till 7011 Club Wllh ht

R*-

Exca,Votion o£ II!- DanMr
Potty

. 10:30 Ill

CELEBRITY
lirWII. . CIPHER
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CllllbfttrQIIW CIJPIDII••• ........

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I rocomrnond hiving o child to everyone because
It to,. you off yourself a little bit." - Wlltom o.soe.

f'

2 ·

•

�~

Ptlge 14-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, December 2, 1992

Middleport, Ohio

Meigs senior bakes her way
to cookie competition finals

Racine UMW announce dates
for upcoming holiday activities
'

Refreshments ·were served by
"Advent, Prcplring Our u-ts CJ1Ifts are to be at the church by 6
for Jesus" wu presented by Sue p.m. on Friday. Alice Wolfe is the Frances Roberts and Ruth Wolfe.
The next meeting will be Jan. 25
Grace when the Racine United chaifman and Etta Mac Hill is
2eggs
Methodist Women met in Novem· chairman of the bake sale. Baked at the church.
Amy Reynolds, Paulins Hill
items should be at the church by 9
Attending were Margie West,
1 lablespoon milk
ber.
Road, Middleport, has been select·
Clara
a.m.
on
Saturday.
Mae Sargent, Alice Wolfe,
''The
Fullncss
of
God's
Earth"
ed as a finalist in.the King Arthur
2 te~ vanilla
•
1 ,lcups King Arthur was discussed by Mrs. Grace. She
Names were 'iven for the Ruth Stearns, Eua Mae Hill, Lois
Flour's WinterBake competition in
Unbleached AU-Purpose Flour
stressed trying to enjoy Christmas Christmas fruit basket to be di~­ Bel\, Karen Walker, Robyn Reiber,
the Junior Cookies and Bars cate1 1/2 cups graham cracker while remembmng the true mean- .tributed to the ill and shut-ins. ·
Sharon Hubbard, Sue. Grace,
gory for her recipe "Fit For A King
A banner contest was discussed. Tammy Hill, Carla Wallace, Vicki
Cookies." ·
·
erurnbs
ing. Scriptures were read from
1 cup oats
fsalms and Proverbs and "Joy to It is sponsored by the General Hill, Ruth Wolfe, Gladys Shields,
Miss Reynolds, a senior at
1 t~spoon baking powder
Meigs High School, is the daughter
the World" wi!S suna- Readels Who Board of Global Ministries. FIU'lher Dorothy McKcnzie, Margery
1
teaspOOII
baiting
soda
p~!;ipated
iq the program were information may be obtained by Roush, Frances Robens. Chris Hill
of .Kathy Gardner, who, as you
1
teasp0011
cinnamon
•
~e
West
acting out the "Has· checking the bulletin board at the and Lee Leemight recall, was a winner in the
sled member, Robyn Reiber, Lois . church.
1~salt
. .PiUsbury Bake-off held in Orlando,
1/2 teagpoon allspice
Bell and Eua Mae Hill. All memFla
10-ounce
package
butterscotch
bers
shared stories of favorite
Miss Reynolds created the
chips
·
Chrisunas gifiS or memories. The
recipe by experimenting with vari1 1/2 cliP! pecan pieces
program closed with a prayer by
ous ideas and she says she likes
1
cup
laiSUIS
·
Mrs. Grace.
competing with her mother to see
&lt;
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In
Lee Lee opened the business
who can win in the various conlarge mixer bowl with electric meeting w.ith' the group repeating
tests.
mixer, beat together until creamy the UMW purpose. All members
King Arthur Flour reports over
AMY RJi;YNOLDS
butter, confectioners' sugar and and one guest, Carla Wallace, were
1,000 entries were received from
brown sugar. Add eggs, milk and welcomed. Thank: you notes and
across the United States. Entries
vanilla. Beat one minute more. In cards were read.
were then sent to New England
The secretarY: .and treasurer
Culinary Institote in Montpelier, ham ; bread baking expert and medium size bowl add flour, graVt., for preliminary judging where author Bernard Clayton; Woman 's ham cn~~;ker cl'Qmbs, oats, baking reports were given. It was
the field was narrowed to 70 final- Day magazine food editor and soda and powder, cinnamon, salt announced pledge money must be
ists, five in each of WinterBake's cookbook author Elizabeth Alston; and allspice. Stir to m~. Add II~ tomed in by Dec. 10.
former White House pastry chef mixture to creamed miXture, w1th
Mrs. Grace gave the mission
14 categories.
,
According ·to King Arthur Flour, Albert Kumin; and San Francisco · wooden spoon mix together thor- report. With the ''Gift to Mission"
.,
there is no magic list of what the pastry chef and author Jim Dodge. oughly. Fold in buumcotth chips, donation in remembering Mr. and
company is looking for. Prelimi- . They will come to Vermont's Inn pecan pieces and raisins. Drop by Mrs. Robert Bell for doll8ting the
nary judging guidelines simply at Essex to judge the final recipes rounded tablespoons on ungreased handbells 10 the churtb and a spestated that the company preferred which will be prepared by the New cookie sheeL Bake for 11-12 min- cial mission recognition rememberutes. Wait two minutes . then ing Bernice Carpenter (district
scratch recipes that contained England Culinary Inslitote.
WinterBake
winners
will
be
remove cookies and place on wire vice-president and shepherdess) the
ingredients that were not highly
processed and ingredienis that were announced at the first of the year. rack. Let cool slighdy then top with group has met its goal in becoming
readily available in any supermar- Two grand prizes of trips foc IWO 10 maple glaze. Makes approximately a "Five Star in Undesignated GivY$.,..";!$".,.."~·~·1$·n
ket. Thus, recipes balling for ingre- England, one each in the adult 3 1/2 to 4 dozen cookies.
ing."
junior
divisions
and
trips
to
Win.
Maple glaze:
dients such as pudding mix, instant
The group is again having a
I 1/2 cups confectioners' sugar
potatO flakes or processed canned terBake, Feb. 10, ll and 12 inVerAngel Tree this year which will be
mont are among the prizes that will
2 tablespoons plus two tea- placed in the church vestibule.
pie fillings were eliminated.
A team of five nationally be awarded in 14 baking cate- spoons mille
A donation was given to the
I ~maple flavoring
renowned chefs and cookbook gories. Medals wiU be awarded 10
Fhurch general fund and $100 was
dash Salt
given 10 the Red Bird Mission. ·
authors will conduct the final Judg- the fll'St, second and third place finIn small bowl mix together
ing of King Arthur Flour's';Wmter- ishers.
Due to an unforeseen circumHere
is
Miss
Reynolds'
recipe
sugar,
milk, maple flavoring and stance, the UMW morning worship
Bake competition. They ;nclude
salt until smooth and free of lumps. service was canceled but will be
chef, author and television person- for Fit For a King Cookies.
Fit
For
a
Killg
Cookies
Enough
to generously glaze four held in late January.
ality, Julia Child; the modem day
'
..
I
cup
butter
or
margarine,
softdozen
cookies.
Fannie Farmer, Marion CunningThe UMW membership song
was sung, penny fund collection
taken, sick eaUs reported and many
get-well cards signed.
The annual Christmas party and
dinner wiU be Dec. 14 at 6:30 p.m.
at Sonya's Country Kilchen. Reser· .
vations must be m 10 Lee Lee or
Margie West by Dec. 10. A $S gift
wiU be held. ·
lesions. It is interesting that exchange
Alice Wolfe is in charge of
Dear Aan Landers:' In 1969, I
the .writer's lesions lljJjJCililld .llftt:r games, etc., and Robyn Reiber is in
started my ftrst year as a university
periods of 8Ras. Stress can make charge of gifts anti music.
.
~
studenL Soon after, I developed a
acne
worse
and
can
also
wonen
The
Election
Day
dinner
was
aev~ case of acne, and ·I am sure
other conditions such as ulceis and reported 10 be a success.
SllesS had a lot to do with iL I went
psoriasis.
ANN LANDERS
The Christmas bazaar will be
to three doctors and spent hundreds
In
any
case,
sometimes
there
is
a
"IJ9i,
LooADael•
Satorday
from 9 am. 10 5 p.m. All
of dollars on medicine that did not
11m• Syadlcale ODd
simple
acientif'JC
basis
for
success
in
worlc.
Crellon S)'DIIi=•-"
home .ranedies.
The, summer of 1970, I went to
Wlwu CQII )'OM give lite perso11 wllo
lunch with a friend at the Wocld acne was tenible lind nothing else luu ~~~erytlti11g? A1111 LG11ders'
Bank in Washington, D.C., and had ~otked.. Well, Ann, that woman booklet, "Gems." is ideal for a
while in the ladies' room, a beauti- blew what she was talking abouL llighlStalld or et!{fet Ulbk. "Gcrril"
ful East Indian woman wearing a Since then, I've told several is a colkclio11'ofAM La~ drrs' most
sari gave me a · smile. When I friends about the egg-yolk cure and req1111s1ed poems 111111 esstl]l. SeN~ a
responded, she touched my face aDd the SllCcess rate has been phcnome- self-addressed, lo11r, bllliltu.s-size
said, "Oh, no. Red ugly SJlOIS on nal. Please tell your readers. They,'U
t11velope 111111 a i:lteck or 1111111ey
pretty face. You fix with egg yolk." be forever grateful. .. SILKY SKIN order for $4.85 (litis l11clttdes
I said, "Are you serious? Do you IN WASHINGTON
postage 111111 lttutdlillg) to: Gtms, H ___;_~~~,...,.,
think it would really help?"
DEAR SILKY I f
She replied, "Yes, you put raw
:
axed your c/o AM Ltutders, P.O. Boz 11562,
letter to Dr. Mary Ellen Bndcmu, Chicago, Ill. 606ll-0562. (/11
.e g yolk on face and let dry for 10 1 superb ~logist in New Yodt, CIINMia, send $J.Ifl.)
minull:l, then wash off. Do every and Ibis is her response:
day fa,: one man~ and SJ;IOIS ~o
For many years, topical appUCa- ·
away. You do agam two limes m lions of Vitamin A have been
Alice Wamsley wa, the winner
e~ montb fa- ~ months and prescribed by physicians 11 a
of
the
.video tape, "Meigs County:
agam if trouble ~• ll'eabllent for acne. Because egg .
Heart
of the Valley," given away .
uncon~ but ~ed yolks are an excellent source ·of
I during
the open l!ouse of the Meigs
her anyway: That nigllt I ~ided I Vitamin A, it is not surprising
County
Park District and Visitors
had very ·liule 10 lose smce the that raw egg yolks improve acne
Center on Sunday.
' y .. !LIE E. DILLON
g, _,inel News Slaf't

ened
1 cup conrectioners' sugar
1 cup brown sugar, packed·

•

Mt{{Street 'Boo/(§

·

Welcomes
Santa to Town with

20o/o off

ALL .GIFT ITEMS ·

6:!:»:~!-;.~!~=~·
W'V'l..ll\'.....

·~:

· Middl~port ·
:\'
Merehants' Bolide~
GiVBIJWIJ~

SHARE

ATHENS • Ironton High school
took top honors in the Class AA
division of the "Bobcat Buzz-In"
Quiz Tournament held Friday,
Nov. 20 at Ohio University.
William V. Fisher Catholic and
Warren high schools won tht! Class
A and AAA div,isions, respectively.
Twenty -four schools from
throughout southeastern Ohio competed in the double-elimination
tournament, which tested student's
ability to quickly recall answers to
questions on a variety of subjects
including current events, science
and literature.
Other schools participating in
'the tournament were: in the Class
AAA division Athens, Logan, Mor-

gan, Lancaster, Newark, Chilli ·
cothe, and River View; in the Class
AA division-Waverly, South
Point, Jackson. Meigs, and Philo;
in the Class A· Alexander, Nelsonville-York, Crooksville, Trimble, Zane Trace, Frontier, and Valley LOcal.
The contests consisted of two
eight • minute halves in which participaniS.received 10 poiniS for correedy answering toss-up questions
and from five to 20 points for
bonus questions.
Ironton captured first-placed by
defeating Vinton County High
School in the championships.
Logan Elm High School lost to
Vinton County to finish in third

place.
Members of Ironton's winning
team are Charles Lawless, Tomi
Casde, Matt Bryant Jason Canow,
David Brown, and Aaron Houston.
Their adviwr is Doris Hannon.
Those participaling on the Yin·
ton County squad are Jay Wise,
Angela Brandau, $tacic Hale,
Andrea Faught, Melissa Zimmerman, and Jason Mango. Their advisors are Pete Semple and Jane
Eddy.
.
The tournament, which was
started in 1981, has hosted more
then 2,790 students and advisors.
Ohio University's Office of Continuing Education, Conf~nces and
Workshops sponsors the'evenL

Harrisonville OES holds installation
'

The Hartiwnville OES held its Clayton and I,.ena Smith; district
annual installation recently with president, Wilma Mautz; vice disWorthy Matron Pat Arnold and trict president, Betty SChenkel; disWorthy Patron Larry Well in trict secretary, Shyr~ Olinger; discharge.
trict treasurer, Pam Diddle.
Honored guests were introduced
Worthy matrons and worthy
and welcome: Past grand patron, patrons of other chapters were
Dr. Howard Schull; deputy grand mtroduced and welcomed. Wonhy
matron, Ann Price; grand represen- matrons and worthy patrons of
tatives, Lena McCutcheon, North . Harrisonville Chapter were intro·
Dakota, Margaret McNabb, Maine; duced.
grand chapter committee members,
Instal_ling · officers were:

installing officer, Gracie Wilson;
installing chaplain, Sharon Jewell;
installing marshall, Bernice Hoffman; organist, Catherine Shenerield; installing warden, Stella
Atkins; installing sentinel, Norman
Will; and soloist, Jane Wise.
Officers are: Worthy Matron,
Pauline Atkins; Worthy Patron,
Larry WeU; associate IIIIITOII, Betty
Bishop; assoCiate patron, Robert
RCed; treasurer, Janet Bolin; coriductress, Jill LipiiCOIDb; asaociate
conductress, Pat· Arnold; chaplain,
Goldie Reed; orpiUst. 1BDC Wile;
Ada, Pearl Canaday; Ruth, Lois
The-1993 Annual Work Plan changed to Dec. 12 at the Stow- . Wyant; Esther, Lois Thompson;
was approved when the Meigs Soil away in Gallipolis at 8 p.m.
Martha, Neva Nicholson: Electa,
and Water Conservation District
Attending were Tom Theiss
Avane! George; Warden, Rosalie
Board of Supervisors met recently.
Charles Yost, Joe Bolin, Marc~ Star)'; and sentinel, Charles King.
Plans 10 attend the Area 5 winter Jeffers. and David
. Gloeckner The secrellli'y tllld mmhal1 will be
meeting on Frida~ere made as supervisors; Mike Duhl, district inst•lled at a lala' date.
well as the Ohio F ration of Soil , conservationist; Blair Windon, disWorthy P11101J Larry Well gave
and Water Conservation ·District trict technician; Opal Dyer,' district the table b~ befcR the group
prog~m , administrator, and Hal
'annual meeting Jan. 11-13.
enter11d the di.lling area where
The December meeting was · Knccil, extension agenL
potluck refmhmeniS wen: enjoyed.
.

Meigs S&amp;WCD approve plan

•

.

.

4273
Super Lotto:
3-19-21-25-40-42
Kicker: 079503 ·

.e
Vol. 43, No. 1se

Copyrighted 1992

mkl-40s.

J3il proposalagain discussed by Lentes, commission
· Discussion .of the possibility .of
building a minimum-security misdemeanant jail facility in Meigs
County continued when the Meigs
County Commissioners met in reg·
. ular session on Wednesday.
Meigs County Prosecutor-elect
John R. Lentes, who, along with
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, had recommended that the board file an
application for state grant fund$ for
such a project, aaended yesterday's
meeting with f\ll'ther lnforniation
about the.grant program.
At last week's meeting, Lentes
and Souls by outlined the state's
program, which was discussed at a
meeting last week conducted by
Ohio Lt. Governor Michael
DeWine's office.

Lentes had indicated that a
search would begin for potential
sites, as would development of a
plan to su)lmit with the application
for 50 percent matching monies.
The filing deadline for the application is December 15.
Lentes and Soulsby urged the
board to me the application, based
upon ever-tightening jail regulations. Lentes said yesterday that
state officials had indicated that the
existing county jail could have
been closed three years ago, but
has been left open because of die
county's financial conditiop. He
suggested to the board that two
applications be flied, one for a new
facility and one to upgrade die
existing jail.

· required for the construction,"
Lentes said yesterday. "As it
stands, the county would be fon:ed
to buy land for the facility, and I
expect that the operating costs
would be very extensive."
The expense of operating such a
facility once it is constructed was
another matter of concern for .
Jones when the application was
proposed last week.
"In the long run." Lentes said,
"this just won't be economically
feasible."
However, Lentes cited impend·
ing jail reforms as a reason for ming the application anyway, statil1&amp;,
lhat if jail improvements are mane
dated by the state in the meantime,
fon:ing action on tbe part of the
·county, an application for renova-

lion of the existing jail would
already be flied, releasing the county from at least a part of the consttuction burden.
Commissioner-elect Janet
Howard, who attended yesterday's
meeting, expressed concern that filing a grant application could obligate the county 10 take action if a
grant is awarded. However, Lentes
said that the actual plans for any
facility would not be required for at
least six months after the apPlication is filed, and the application
could be withdrawn if the county
does not see consuuction as being
possible. In addition, Lentes said
that before a grant is awarded, the
county would have to provide
proof of matching fund sources,
and that a lack of those sources

would make the county ineligible,
anyway.
Meanwhile, Lentes said that the
state expressed an awareness that a
50 percent match, in many cases;
made the grant applications impossible for poorer counties, and said
that Governor Voinovich may seek
additional funding for counties like
Meigs. In that case, funds could be
so~ht for renovation of the existing Jail facility at a later time.
No action was tj!ken by the
board, although Lentes agreed to
come back to the meeting next
week with further information.
Present at the meeting, in addition to Jones and Howard, were
Commissioners Manning K. Roush
and David Koblentz; and Clerk
Mary Hobstettcr.

Ohio man suspect in serial killings

0

Shop Middleport and
\
Reetster to Win
"'ta ~~a ~;a '~~a·~· iiua·Na v~a uif·

Low tonight near JO. Friday
cloudy. High ln

..
2 Sectlono, 16 PogH 25 oonto
A llultlm..... Inc, N.wo...,..

Pomeaor •ct' port, Ohio, Thursday, December 3, 1992

•

ADON. Ohio (AP)- A man
suspected in die s1ayinp of live
. . . . . . \IIDCii-

bein&amp; lldd with-

. out bond today on ann:l•e4
we.-cbaF
Dave Ha• IJCilior supt:l"li5D
in charge of die FBrs Cal-bus
office. said We4nesday that
'[bcmas Lee Iiillllll, 42. is comjd.
-1 12 •• .
.... • ••• ~
CICd c.: Ul.
...
pects in die tiDings
Tile Akron Beacon Jounal
reported Wednesday tUt Dillon
was c:haged in Mm:ll willl p• ._

DRAWINGS:
December 3, 7, 14, 21, and 24

ti·•

Meigs competes in ·quiz tournam.ent

Pick 4t

GIFT CERTIFICATES

.-.

Winner announced

646

. $1500° IN

Egg yolk was the miracle
cure for a former acne suffer
Ann
Landers

Pick 3:

Page 4 .

p:~•-.,Jt~,.ft~,..,..fA.,..,M,.~''·,Ilt·~

~:.

Ohio Lottery

Marauders·
open court
season Friday :'+t'•.,:a

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•

m

aJrarcr·

sion
aa .arqiSICRd..
equipped pisull. ;md fOr llavioc a
silencer tbal dida't llave a saia1

munlJcr.
He repodaly ph wkd pihy 10
lbosedlagcs- r.:ed ••• ,•••
IOday bcfon: U.S. Distric:t lnd&amp;e
lobo Manos in Clc~ DilloD.
OOIJid be 9 IIIUM(d to up 10 JCII$
iD prisoa and f"mcd $10,000 liD
cachcwnL
But The Columbus Dispau:h
tqutallllday lhii.Dib ~in
July 10 plead pilty to Jl'
• I I o(
a silcnm- willl110 v:Da1 mmbcr if
the adler atu11t wae
d Oilloll also tcpiXIIedly Jl&amp;ia:IIIO pvc
up all 1lis fit-ms -.1 - live in

*uw

FINISHING TOUCHES • Tbe traditiooal Cbristlll11 decoratloos which adorn the Meigs County Courthouse are ncnvln place.
Here, custOdian Homer Smith puts the rmishing touches Wednes·
day on one of the lighted angels placed on the facade of the historic
building.
·

Wednesday. Whitlatch said that his
mother wllo is usually at the house,
left for a short time, and when she
returned, the. dogs and the equipmcnt were missing.
A minor accident on Craw's
Restaurant parking lot Wednesda5'
morning was investigated by
Pomeroy police.
Larry Grueser, 51, Minersville,
backed .his bUck into the passeng""
side of a car driven by Vera Crow.
There was light damage to
Orueser's bUck and moderate dam·
age.to the passenger side front of
the. Crow vehicle. Grueser was
cited for impoper backing.
Pomeroy police are still invcstigating a car fll'C on the Flood Road
early this morning. It was reported
to ,Pomeroy police at 12:40 a.m .
that a car was on fire. Capt. Joe
Kirby went to the site and found
smoke inside but no one around.
The interior of th!: 1976 Buick was
heavily damaged. Pomeroy futmen
were caUed to the scene. Owner of
the car which was towed is ADen
Easter, 146 Mulberry Ave ..
~aoy.
'

---Local briefs--vegetable growers to meet·

The vegetable grower's wii1ter ~fleeting sponsored by the Ohio
State University and Meigs/Washington County Extension Saviccs
will be held on Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the
Racine American Legion HaU. Several O.S.U. staff members will
present topics such as the current O.S.U. VC~etablc production recommendations; the products/grades that farm markets are looking
for; diseases of peppers; and current and futiR research being conducted at the Pilreton Research Extension Center.
·
There will be a SS fee to help defray coats of handou!J and 10
provide a soup and 11811dwich lunch. Please tuke reservations by
Monday at the Meigs County Extension Office, 992-6696.
Cm¢inued on p 3

'

)'

'·

jail.

At the hearing, Assistant U.S.
Auomey Marilyn Babula named
Dillon, as the "prime suspect" in
" anywhere from six to 11" homi-

cides.

Dillon, an employee of the Canton Water Department, lives in
Magnolia, about 10 miles south of
Clinton in liortheast Ohio.
Dillon, who has a bachelor's
degree !'rom Ohio State University,
has worked for the Canton Water
Department since 1972 . He has
IJcen married Ior about 14 years
and has an 11-year-old child.

He has not been charged in connection with the serial killings, and
Hanna would not say if authorities
are close to filing charges against
any of the suspects.
Dillon's lawyer, Roger Synenberg of Cleveland, described his
clieiu as happily married, a lifelong
resident of Stark County and a
" valued employee of the city."
Synenberg said Dillon would
deny any involvement in the
kiUings.
Law enforcement authorilies Say
they believe the killings of outdoorsmen in Tuscarawas, Coshocton, Belmont, Noble and Muskinguen counties between Aprill989
and April 1992 are related as the
work of one person.
Killed were Donald Welling, 35,
Strasbui-g; Jamie Paxton, 21, Bannock; Kevin Loring, 30, Duxbury,
Mass.; Claude Hawkins, 49, Mansfield, and Gary Bradley, 44,
Williamstown. W.Va.
All were fishing, hunting or
exercising outdoors when they
wereshoL
The Dispatch, in a copyright
story published today, reported that
members of a task force ·investigat-

$300,000 settlement_reached
after Pomeroy man loses fingers

Yule decorations
reported stolen
Christmas decorations from
three· locations in Pomeroy were
stolen overnight Wednesday.
Pomeroy Police reported that a
decorated tree in front of K &amp; C
Jewelers, seven big ,red bows used
with greenery on the stone wall
planting area at the intersection of
Sycamore and Main, and th~ee
large holiday wreaths on the doocs
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church were taken. The bows were
valued at $3 each, and the wreaths
at $25 each.
The tree at K &amp; C was one
many placed along Main, Second
and Court Streets by the merchants
as a .cooperative effort of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association to
make the town more festive for the
liolidays. The trees were trimmed
with decorations made by Pomeroy
Elementary School children.
Harvey Whitlatch of Laurel
Street reported to Pomeroy police
Wednesday that two Walli;cr coonhounds, their collars, and restrain,
ing equipment including two ten
foot log chams and steel ~itching
posts were lliken from hts home

any residence where fJCearms were
maintained.
Since then, he has been charged
with receiving a weapon while
under indictment. He allegedly
bougbt a .25-caliber pistol at a
Cleveland gun show. Hanna said
Dillon had a loaded gun in his
pocket when he was arrested Friday outside a Tuscarawas County
convenience stoce.
At a preliminary hearing on that
t harge, held Wednesday before
U.S. Magistrate James Gallas in
Akron, Dillon was ordered held
without bail in the Stark County

An out-of-(;()Ud sculcmcnt in
the amOUlll of over S300,000 has
been , ... h d ~a 1'\Jwaoy man
IJJst two liogas w1lilc ..urtiug as a

deckhand for a Piu.sbugll-bascd
towingc•••IJA'f.

William O.lbmscy, Jr~ fOIIIICI'·
ly of Mason Connty and now of
Pomeroy. wasit!iutedFcb.S. 1991,
while employed hy Mon River
Towiag, Inc. as a deckhand.
according ID Ramsey's allomey
Randy MugatolftliatP'
•
Motgan said Ramsey was
injured wbeo bis ript &amp;Jove got
caugbl on a laF able.. His iiJda
and middle linaas were an•.,d
!Medical eme111eucy pcrso•nel
.

aucmpta110 save die fingas. but
brnmsc of aJilllll* MM+K, die rm,gCili wen: SD"gically tcmovc:d 81 the

University of Pittsburgh.
Ramsey and wife , Virginia,
em ployed Morgan to bring suiL
agamst Man River Towing for acts
or alleged negligence and/or failure
to provide a reasonably safe place
to work.
Morgan said after putting the
towin~ company on notice that a
lawswt was anticipated and would
be fired, he and a representative
from Mon River Towing .JlCl?CCCtled
with a series of negouations to
resolve the legall!ispute:
Man River Towing on Tuesday
agreed to be responsible for all
medical bills incurred by Ramsey
directly associated with his injury.
The cocnpany also paid a portion of
his IOSl wages and, in return for an
absolute agreement against Man

River Towing, paid Ramsey an
additional $300,000.
"Some people might think this
sum of money is a lot to pay to settle a claim for the loss of two fingers es~ially when fault was dispute'd.' Morgan said. "However.
Mr. Ramsey suffered permanent
disfigurement. T~~ . company
denied any respons1bihty for Mr..
Ramsey's injury and maiJ!tained, to
the end, that his injury was ca~scd
by carelessness or lack of attenuve. ness."·
"The company's willingness to
pay a substantial settlement showelj
there was some doubt in their
minds as to how a jury might interpret the evidence, however," MOr·
gan conclude&lt;!·

THOMAS DI~LON
ing the deaths of the outdoorsmen
tracked Dillon by car and lilrPiane
over hundreds of miles of winding .
back roads of eastern Ohio, but still
lacked a clear link to the shootings.:

Middleport Council accepts
Walburn bid on project
The bid of Elden Walburn for
construction of a sidewalk on
South Sixth Avenue between
Williams and Palmer Streets in the
Betsy Ross Subdivi sion was
accepted at a special meeting of
Middleport Village Council
Wednesday 11ight.
Walburn 's bid was for $3,416
for the consuuction of a four foot
sidewalk and curbing. It was
accepted on the condition that it
· includes all required excavation
·and removal of debris.
·The only other bid on the pro:
ject was $3,936 which came from
Home Creek Enterprises, Inc.
.
Funding for the project comes
·from grant funds awarded to the
BeiSy Ross housing development,
Mayor Fred Hoffman pointed oUt.
Attending the meeting beside~
Hoffman were Council members.
James Clatworthy, ·Paul Gerard,
Dewey Horton , and Jack Satter."
field.

Ohio Power joins EPA Green Lights- program
demand-side-management strategy
to improve our customers' • and
our own • energy efficiency in an
environmentally responsible manner," said Richard Disbrow, AEP's
chairman and chief executive offl·
cer. "It underscores our commitment 10 encourage the wise use of
electricity, as oudined in Environmental Principles and as promoted
by our SMART program."
SMART (Saving Money and
Resources Together) is Ohio
Power's and AEP's customef\service and information program
aimed at S~~ving customen money,
while conserving 118tural resources
and using the utility's existing
resources even more efflciendy.
Green Lights is in line with
other energy-efficiency initiatives
thai AEP has embraced throughout
its system over the years. Those
programs include, among others:
refrigerator
recycling, new tech·
decllicity.
"'l11c Green Lights program is a nologies in thermostats, heat-pump
perfect complement to AEP's and water-heater design, and most

this significant program,"' said
Ohio Power. President Charles A.
HeUer:
·
At a ceremony this morning in
.the U.S. ~A's Washington, D.C.
office,.offiCials !'rom AEP and U.S.
EPA siRRed a voluntary Memorandum of Understanding outlining
each party's obligations..
Under the Green Ltghts progJBm. facilities are upgraded with
energy-efficient lighllllg technologies whctever they are cost-effective and maintain ~ improve light·
ing quality. &lt;Apontions and othu
Olglllizalfuns that make a commitment 10 Green Ligllts benefit from
improved lighting qu~l!tY,
increued worker producll vlly,
increased enc~g)' efficiency ~nd
lowered electnctty consumpuon.
They also mlucc air emissionS .and
othu effects on the environment
ISSOCieled with the generition of

.,.

,,

recently, investment in developing:
the E-larnp, a long-burning, elec-:
tronic appliance designed to combine the compactness and light
intensity of incandescent bulbs
with the energy efficiency of tlua:
rescent lamps.
"Green Lights is our flagship in
a whole fleet of voluntary energyeffiCiency programs aimed at satis-·
fying the United States' obli$ations·
under the new global-chmatechange treaty. We are confident
that by' the year 2000, those ini~·
tives and
. other existing regulatory.
requirements will result in a signjf.
icant reduction of .U.S. greenhouse~
gas emissions," EPA spokeswoman
Eileen Claussen said. ·
Ohio Power Company is based
in Canton and serves more than
646,000 customers in S3 Ohib'
counties.
·
AEP is a public utility holding
companr with seyen eleclric lllilitY·
compames, scrvmg aevcn mUllan
people in seven states.

,,
1

.'

'-.

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