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0 hio Lottery

First baby
of year
contest

Pick 3:
570
Pick 4:
7293
Super Lotto:
16-29-31-35-37-46
Kicker:
177178

Pages 6-i
rr:il

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON
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18 COUNT

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LARGE EGGS·

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1Y2

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DOZEN

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Coupon good lhru 112/93

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Limit 1 with
coupon M~d $10
or more
additional
purehaae.

MEDIUM

YELLOW
ONIONS

3

liS.

U.S. NO. ONE

15 LB.

RUSSET

lAG

low 30$.

·•

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FOODLAND
GRADE 'A'

Low t..,lpt In mid :2&amp;.
. Cloudy. Friday, cloudy, blgb In

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99c

Val. a, No. 175

Happy New Year To Your Family,
From OUr Family Of Foodlands

1 Section, 12 Pageo 25 oeni•
A Muldmedla InC: N-paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 31, 1992

Capyrlglued 1992

, Commission reveals first Issue Two project for '93
by a Community Development
By BRIAN J, REED
Block Grant in the amount of
Sentinel News Staff
The rirst of Meigs County's $57,300 'approved by lhe commisIssue Two projects for Round sioners.
According to Commissioner
Seven was. announced when lhe
Meigs County Commissioners met · Richard E. Jones, the village will
in regular session on Wednesday no1 be required to provide local
matching monies for lhe project
morning.
The board commenlled Rudand
A $515,000 waler line replaceVillage
Clerk Sandy Smilh for her
ment project has been approved by
work
and
"perseverance" in seeklhe Issue TWo committee, which
ing
lhe
grant
funds on behalf of lhe
wiD aUow lhe Village of Rudand 10
village.
·
replace an existing waler lines. The
Jones
said
that
he
anticipales
·
Issue Two funds will be augmenled

other local projects to be
announced shortly.
Roben Dyer, Administrator of
the Meigs County Emergency
Management Agency, reporled lhat
lhe county's Emergency Operations
Plan has been approved by the
Chicago office of lhe U.S. E.MA.
Mler being approved by all local
agencies involved, it will be published and distributed. All town·
ships in the counly, except for
Olive Township, have adopted lhe
same plan and will be included in

ii.
Jones lhanked Dyer for his work
on lhe project and for his Coopelll·
non with lhe board in lhe past
"You have developed an agency
lhat all of Meigs County can be
proud of," Jones said. "A lot of
people have been involved, but
you're the one who has been
pulling lhe wagon."
In his final act as a county commissioner, Jones appointed three
Meigs County residents to a commitlee which will be dexoted 10 lhe

. development and design of a Meigs
County flag . Dorothy }l:arr of
Pomeroy was.._named chairman of
the committe~and Maida Mora
and Joan Wolfe were also named as
committee members. Jones suggested lhat two olher members· be
named by lhe new board of commissioners early in 1he year, and
lhat a design be submilted by June
I. Several requests for a county
flag have been received by lhe
ccmmissioners (including a request
from lhe Ohio Slate Fair).

The comm1ss•oners also
approved a request from Recorder
Emmogene Holstein-Congo for a
carryover of pelly cash in the
amount of $50, and approved a
request from Byer to carry over
accrued vacation time for EMS
employees.
.
Present, in addition to Jones,
were Commissioners Manning K.
Roush and David KobleniZ; Con\·
missioners-elect Janet Howard and
Robert Hartenbach ; and Clerk
Mary Hobsletter.

'

ES . $199
DID OIIEG.

SEVEN
UP
2liTER

99 c

MAMIE BUCKLEY

Meigs Countians -make
resolutjons for new ye~r
....

E SELLS

POTATO

SAVE

CHIPS
16 oz.
Cll.

50'

ONION PITCH

ASST. YlRIEnES

CHIP ·DIP

COCA·COLA

c

c
LITE I

KAHN'S DELUXE CLUB

DELl BOLOGNA

$ 99

CONNIE DODSON
•

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By JJ(UAN J. REED
Sentlael News Starr
DO you make a new year's resolotion every year? More imponantly, do you l:eep lhe ones you lnake?
Several Meigs County residents
were asked aboutlheir plans for the
new year, and ahho!lgh none of
lhem mentioned their resolutions,
all of lhem had somelhing specific
to say about what they expected
1993 to bring to lhem and those
lhey care about.
MalJ:lie Buckley of Reedsville
makes a practice to never make

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New Year's resoluticiils: .
"I don't make resolutions
because most people don't keep
them. B~t I can say .lhat I would
like 10 live a betler hfe ~ch year
lhll!! I did ~e year bef~re.
MoSIIDlpottandy, Mrs. Buck·
ley S;llid. "I would like for lhe Lord
to g1ve m~ strength so lhal I can
lake care of myself before He lakes
me oul of lhis world."
.
Mrs. Buckley, w~o will be. 90
years old m March, ts. a long-~me
member of. Reedsv1lle Umted
Contmued on page 3

DONAT,ON TO REVITALIZATION- A
$750 donatiCJ!I to the Middleport downtown revitalization project, specificaUy for the cost of the
P.lan development .for streetscape work, was

FENTON TAYLOR

Powell still in critical condition;
appeal sought for.clothing items
Charles Powell of Long BotiOm
remains in critical condition in lhe
burn unit of University Hospitals,
Columbus. He was laken lhere by
LifeFlight for treatment of extensive bums and smoke inhalation
following an early SIJ!W'(Iay morning rue at his trailer home.
. .
His wife, Eslherla Powell, was
1realed at Veterans Memorial Hospital following the fire, but was not
admiued,
I
Meanwhile!, an appeal for clolh-

ing and hou!hold items for 1he
couple has
n made by family
and friends.
.
•
The Powe 's trailer and everylhing in it was destroyed in lhe fire
which reportedly started around a
woodburner localed in lhe living

room.

Donations of money may be
senl 10 Box 271, c/o Nora Martin,
Racine, Ohio. Those with household ilems tt clolhing to contribule
may call 949-2799, 843-5172, or

- Repabllean ofllelals wkoee
next week took their 01tltl of olllce
u.t:.... Coullty Common Pleu Court Jud1e
Fred W.
III 01 Wednesday afternoon.
They are, front, Clerk of Co arts Larry E •.
Spencer, and back 1-r, County Co.mmlssioner

949-2329 and pickup service will
be ·arranged.
Items can also be left at the
home of Maryln Powell, Brick
Slreet, Rutland, for. storage until
lhe Powells are ready 10 oblain new
housing.
As for clothing, Powell wears
size 38 waist, 30 lenglh pants, exira
large in shirts and coats, and a size
10 1{2 shoes. Mrs. Powell wears a
12-14 in pants, medium in shirts,
14-16 ih coats, and 8 in shoes.

Robert ·uartenbach,· Recorder Emmoaeae
HamlltoB, Treuui'er HOWllrd E. Frank, Coroner
·Doualu Hunter, M.D., aad County Engineer
Roltert Euoa. Democrats wiD be sworn iD at a
reception on nursday afternoon.

made Wednesday by the Holzer Clinic. Here
Sharon Harvey; R. N., represenliag Holzer, left,'
presents tile check to Mayor Fred Hofl'man and
Jean Trussell, pr9ject director.

Final public hearing on ·downtown
Middleport project to be held Tuesday .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
A fmal public hearin~ on Middleporl's downtown revitalization
progmm wiD be held Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the conference room of
Peoples Bank.
Members of both Middleport
Village Council and lhe Middlepon
Community Association will be
present at lhe hearing 10 which
merchants and olhers of lhe business community are especially
in vi led 10 auend.
Jean Trussell, project direclor,
will explain what is planned in lhe
way of upgrading and res10ration
of buildings. in lhe downtown central business area, and what loans
are available to business building
owners. Those owners will have to
come up with a "match" 10 the
revilalization funds put in by lhe
Ohio Deparunenl of Development.
At that meeting the overall project will be explained in detail.
Trussell is now seeking rinancial
commiunents from businesses and
building owners since 'all monies
which the Ohio Deparlment of
Development puts in10 lhe project
must be matched dollar for dollar.
Merchants will be asked to sign
agreelilents aboUt what lhey will do
to lheir buildings, TrusseD said.
In addition to the match from
lhe businesses, lhe village will be
required 10 put in 10 pen:ent of lhe
10tal amount.
In other wor\ls if lhe grant
request is for $400,000 lhen lhe village will have to come up with
$40,000. However, Trussell
emphasized, lhe actual grant figure
will depend on what lhe men:hanl
or building match is.
The village's 10 percent match,
according to Mayor Pred Hoffman,
can be spread over two years and

need not be in all cash, but can joint narrative will presenl a disinc! ude lhe local share of Issue 2 tinctive and unique situation since
funds as well as money which lhe it involves sister communities, it
village is spending on olher down- has been pointed out by Strolh.
IOwn projects.
The grants, however, will be
At lhe last village council meet- separate and there will no commin·
ing the first readin!l was given 10 gling of funds, Trussell stressed.
an ordinance providing for appointMeanwhile, lhe village is solic·
ment of a design review committee. iting corporate donations toward
That commitlee will be lhe group the cost of preparing the
charged wilh ccntrolling lhe down- streetscape design plan . This,
lqwn work, seeing lhat lhe pt!!ser- according to Trussell, will facilitate
vation adds flavor and lhat 11 IS all lhe gran1 application and contribute
appropriate insofar as revilalization by giying lhe village more of lhe
is concerned, Trussell explamed·.
necessary criteria needed toward
As earlier agreed, Middleport favorable consideration from the
and Pomeroy will file a joinlllllfl'l!- Ohio Deparnnent of Development.
tive 10 accompany lhe grant appliTrussell said Strolh, lhe vilcations as recommended by Mike lage's consultant on the overall
Strolh, SBA Consultants of Jack- project, has prepared a preliminary
son, who is working wilh bolh vil- design sketch which would be
lal!es on revitalization funding. The
Continued on page 3

Middleport receives
$35,010.34 grant
He said that the grants are
awarded to local transit systems
that allow persons aged 65 and
ovet: and people wilh disabilities to
ride lhe transil system for one·half
lhe regular fare.
·
The program is state general
revenue-funded and administered
by the Ohio Deparunent of Transportation.
The money will subsidize (he ·
Blue Streak Cab which has been in
operation since 1983.
'
The
village,
according
to
Mayor
Tbe Dally Sentinel will not .
publish aa edition Friday, Jan. 1, Fred Hoffman, has also applied for
so employees ean spead tbe boli· $44,000 in federal transportation
'day witb their families. Normal funds and $56,600 in funds from
publication wiB resume wit• the the Ohio Department of Transportation for operational assislallee
Suaday Times-Sentiael Jan.~.
to the local cab company.
•

The Village of Middlepon has
been awarded a grant of
$35,010.34 from lhe Ohio Elderly'
and Handic pped Transit Fare ·
Assistance
10ward continued operatic .of local affordable
public
· .
Announcement of the grant
came from Sen. Jan Michael Long
late We~~Desday .
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No paper Friday

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Thursday, December 31,1992

·Commentary

·

P8a• 2-ThaDelljSentlnel , .

.-----Local briefs.......___, ~-Area deaths-~
' Deer-vehicle wreck reported

Pomeroy llcldleport, Ohio :

r--------------------------------------,r:~----------~--------------------------~~----------------Th~.u~nM~~da~~~;~~~~m~bw~~3~1~,1~91~2~
.·

The Daily Sentinel

Clinton's que~tionable Cabinet
Bact wbell Gov. CJiDton began

~ tho members of bis

111 Coat ltnet

.......,,C*Io

.D&amp;VOUD 1'0 TD DnSU8TII or TD IDIGe MAllON AIIU.

cabi-

aamo apokeameti had much the

SIIDeiiiiWcr. Doa'l worry; from
!!OW 111 Ron Brown wUI be klbby-

net. bis apotamen would always
siieooe a$willuome -wtt mg exclulively for policies
of, "Don't ,
; C1inlal is goiDa
to lay down 1e policies for lhll
depanment hinself."
Thus, when he handed the
Department of Health and Human
., igned b Bill""'~.
Services over 10 Donna Shalala, a des
Y.
.............
liberal ao impassioned lhat even the
And SO II ~· deplnment by
University of Wiscqnsin's friends department, walh a (e!i notable
asked her 10 cool it when sbe rook exceptions (e.g. Educataon Secreover as its president, the Clinton tary-designate Richard Riley, who
damage-control squad wa m~Ssur­ is widely as-d to be .a rmt-rate ·
ing: Don't worry; Clinton will choice). By lhe .lime tho list was
determine HHS policies himself. complete, Gov. Clin10n had been
All Sbalala wUI do is enforce lhem. committed. by bis eager apologists,
Similarly, when he awarded lhe to running lhe executive branch
Department of Commerce to almost singte-handedly. All poll·
Democ.ratic Nation•! Chairman . cies would emerge, lovingly hand·
Rein Brown, a slick lawyet-polili- craflecl by the president, from lhe
cian who has made a fortune as a Oval Office. Everybody else would ·
lobbyist for big Anierican corpora- simply imple~t ~·
lions and foreign govemmems, lhe · . Of course, 11 can t be done that

Willillm A. Rusher

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.ROBERT L WINGE'IT
PAT WlllibmAD
Aalltlml Publlaber/Controller

C8A.RLENE HOEFLICH
GeneraiM....,er

Lll'ITI!RS OF OPINlOI'( ae welcome .. They abould bo loaa IliaD 300
ore
to eclltinc and muot be aiJoed :with name,
lddreaa and lelepboae n
. No Wlliped.Jenen will ~ publiabed. Lelia'&amp;
abould bo iD good IIIIo, lddluain&amp; U..., DOt pmonolitieo.
.

.' ....,.U. ~ !etten

:::!/:

The beauty of Iong~term
investing
is profit
.
•.

By JOUN CUNNIFF
APBo~m5sAnat~

·
. NEW YORK- Had you invested $1,000 early in 1983 in stOcks that
grew at abe rate of a popular rnadtet average you would have come close
tq tripling your money by the end of this year.
. That rigiii'C could have been achieved in teal dollars - that is, in dollars adj~ted for inflation.
At 12.5 percent a year, the llver&amp;~e compound annual ra~ of tbc Standard &amp;: Poor's 500-stock index during lhat lime, your $1,000 would have
~ to well ov~ $3,000 before deductions for dividend lilies and commiSSaon.
; The S&amp;P 500 is a ralher conservative measurement. A person wise or
IQCky or both might have done considerably bettel, butlhat of COurse is
•t;bnjecture. They could have done worse 100. At 12.5 percent, lhey did
)!i'euy well.
·
But more lhan wisdom or luck are involved in such results. IIDle is
100, and patience. Bolh are as imporiant as the rate of return, but neither is ·
' ~y 10 be sbesscd by a brol«:r eager for coml!lissions.
. · ~pies sucll as .this are~ by,brokm with long·tenn approsches
!(i investing, by dollar-cost avengers, by organizations such as lhe
National Assocaalion of lnvestment Clubs, and by wise investors bolh
small and large.
.
·' All decry lhe short-term mentality that is characterized by the casino
vi~w of the market; a tendency to in-out trading, a weakness for lips and
fl!ds, a quest for qui~k gains and propensity to panic over temporary losses.
Advocates of the tong-term approach to investing maintain thai wilh
C!lmmon sense and a growing America you are likely 10 do better by
s!lJ!Iding rarm rather lhan succumbing to fear, greed or tbc belief you can ·
o\.uguess abe marteL
.
· While the performance of a decade, such as in the example used,
seryes to illustrale the point, it is hardly lhe most impressive example. The
return on lime doesn't cease with a decade; it continues relentlessly.
A look baCk at 1992, with fond
Gerald Perritt, bead of Chicago-based Investment Informahon Ser- hopes Clinron will really cut taxes
vt!=CS, puts his mathematics background (Conner professor) 10 good use In for the middle chiss like be said he
studying m8rket behavior over many decades and reporting lhe results ln would:
b}s market 1eurn.
'Twas the night before·CiiniOn
· He calculates lhat over lhe past 50 years the S&amp;P 500 has provided a became our new president,/ In
t'2.9 ~ent COIII{JOU!Id annual return, which means that $1,000 invested inaugural festivities that will set a
in' lhas hypothetical portfolio at the beginning· of 1942 was worth .new precedent/ For parties .among
$431,220 a year ago.
· .
.
leaders championing the middle
This gain, min~ lilies and commissions, occurred despite bruising class:/ Say, Bill, we'd be happier if
short·term episodes. In 1973-19741he ponfolio's value tumbled 46.2 per- your 11ash cost less cash.
·.
cent, and in just three monlhs lhrough November 1987 it plunged 29.5
A gag~Ie of economists had ·
come 10 h1s Sill# To see what was
tter=ent.
.
. · Those were the ell.tremes. In all, there were 22 price declines of 8 per• happening in this Rhodes Scholar's
cent or more during lhat period. Six of lhe declines reached 20 percent or pale./ They all say he wowed 'em
more, and three exceeded 30 percent. .
with his knowledge or tbeoryJ
Such declin.es regularly ·shalce out shon-termers, cost lhem commis- Even if he snoozed some when he
Sions and often force lhem to accept losses. Had they chosen their srocks became weary.
1\'eU and retained failh in them rhey might have saved a fortune.
But what an election the guy'd
· : Market liming can enhance returns, but lhe odds aren't wilh you. just come lhrough./ Perot called
They're over there wilh lhe long-term invesrors who choose wisely, know him "chicken plucker," his ecolhe companies in which they invest, understand lhat markets are cyclical, nomics voo-doo./ George Bush
and wbo bold rarm.
called him ''bozo" and portrayed
his culture/ As'a horror film sound
stage overseen by a vulture.
ln '89 Bush said we needed to
forget VietnamJ yet Bill Clinton
made a vezy good targetJ For all of
Bush' barbs about Bill's not
going;/ At one point itlhrealened to
prove his undomg.
But even conservatives conced~Editor:
son, and io pass out lhe gifts; we
;. I'm proud to be an adopted got to see die flees of most of lhese ed Ibis race/. Did nolhing but Sturn·
Meigs Countian. A heany thank children as they lit up with delighl ble, stagnate and lose face./ Repuby'op goes 10 all of you in lhe com- at lheir gifts Ifrom Santa. Several licans were snuggled, all safe in
munity who either auended the thousand dqllars were spent to their bedsJ While visions of '96
Meigs County biters recent toy run make all lhese children happy. I danced in lheir heads.
The right wins was waiting to
donated money 10 lhem (includ- especially !hank Debtiie Meadows
see
if wife Hillary/ Will help wear
ing individuals, merchants and area ·and Sherry Swishtr for all the extra
banks).
effort lhey put forth. Alllhe staff of
,The Meigs County Bikers are a the Meigs County Heallh Departnlin profit association; volunteers ment is very grateful 10 know we
bQm lheir group nof only solicited bave such wonderful people in our
nimes of children (who needed a county.
toy/gift for Christmas), but also Sincerely yours,
The Dead Sea Scrolls continue
. bought presents for over 350 fwniNorma A. Torres, R.N.,
to
provoke mlich sound and fury.
lies, and permitted the Meigs
B.S.N., M.S. Ed. Nursing Director
The
latest etuption was occasioned
County Health Department staff to
by release.of a new volume by two
respected university professors,
rrt
Robert Eisenman and Michael
•
.
Wise, who dared publish without
Editor,
live in Gallipolis, but the coach of the blessings of abe tiny cabal of
• l have ·a major problem with lhe Middleport Midgets wants me scholars who control access 10 lhe
)lome of lhe people lhat are parents playing on bis te~m. I mean, I ancient ,manuscripts.
1~ Middleport kids playing the could see it if I was an all-star but
The controversial new book
softballandbaskctbaU.IIive
I'mnOLin·
lhelastpmel~l
"The
Dead Sea Scrolls Uncov~
•
·
f 8 Th' ·
allipolis but I'm ptay1·ng ball scored .our
0
pomts out
•
IS ered," includes a IOial of so·scrou
"'"th my old school ..... ~~use down argu1'ng has gOito stop It's la'Le
Half •L~
hi
~rules are differen~vecylime I having an all white teain with"'a !elliS. · uoo texts were lherro
10 play any of theSe two ~· black person trying out. l love preun~hye~~~~:.t~ ~fc:
oL ••• L:ds 1'n MjddJe.
pJa 1'ng ID' lh••• apo·rts but thiS
' 1's
parents of u.,..,""
Y
piled in .a sinf.le volume. The
pan also jumn my back because not worth lhe trouble. l'm not
...L _ al inc
-110 10 a ball
w
II hi• I the
L:.a. beca
auuJUaa so
ude English trans••
"-' w
game. e , ;em ng
parents ....,.
use lations of lhe texts from lhe origi111
1
: ~.:, i~: :'ha~ f!J':ci ~n~ ~~~=· :Ceaf~~ nal Hebrew and Aramaic, which,
these people 1r.y 10 stop me evezy- softball tbey hire these umpires :aa!'~f:e'!:ie
:!:.e,.~ll
. time.
wbo call a IJCliOI! out but lei them
To many minds, Eilenmlll and
; I jUSI wilbcd dllt once I would slay on base and score.' ·
Wise have rf ed
al bl
~ 10 play for tho whole reason its
They came up to my mom and public
Bo;nin
~arouse
illide, for fun. I wouldn't be writ· . said"You better ~e your asses mlnda of lhe three dozen or so
lng this Ieuer 'if il didn't matter back 10 TJWell Plains"· I WOIIIdn't scholarl wbo have jealoualy withwlilt I - cfaina. B.. at least play- go rhe the aouble if I didn't lhink held die scrolb froni ........,~domain
problem.
for. almost a
the
Ro•••.
luthora have commi"•d asacrlIMse D80IJie 1re eampllininl if l
.......Gallipo..
. .-lis 1ep.
""
llould pliy on lhillellll bee MIN I

.

Il
1

Will pick up discarded trees Monday .

·way. The laat Jnlidenl who tried sury Secretary and sending Les j
10 run tho whole .,_.._. him· Alpin 10 Defense Mr. Clinron has
self- Jimmy Clrter, who actual· at lean picked men of 1enuino
ly inr!aed Ill decidiua ~Y experience, who arc relatively ,
who could uae lhe Wbue House moderale as Democrats so and •
swimming pool. Ronald Reasan ·have tho added adVIIItsgO of know- :
shrewdly delegated Ill .,.. tho real- ins ~101 Hill indmalely.
:
ly key decisioas 10 careCuUy chosen
But Warren Christopher, who is
subordinates - a DOlley so auc- to be secretary of •.tate. is an unin- ~
c:essfullhat PJ. O'Romte rec:endy spiring
Carter retread. As deputy
spate IIOIIalgically of tho IOIJd old seaetay of ats1e in 11181 Iacldldl&lt;lr ,
days when •ying ~ had "slept · administration, Cbristopber 'was •
with die presideat' ~~~e~ely meant known u a man with a cast-iron ;
you'dlbendedaCabinetmeCdng.
bottom who never saw a pointleas, ;
So die people whom Mr. Clin- unproductive negotiation that he 1
ron has lapped 10.head rhe Cabinet didn't ·want 10 extend for allother 1,
departmems are indeed important, three months.
l
and a look at lhe list is not exactly
And what of Zoe Baird? Don't :
CIICOUraging. ·
feel ashamed if you've never beard "
At tho vay top - die ao-canect of ber. Neilher had Mr. Clinlqn, .
"inner Cabinet." composed of the until ,. few days before he named !
most impor1allt offacials - die four ber Atromey General 10 fnlf'lll bis l
choices are of distinctly mixed incautiotll pledge 10 give lhat crili- l
merits. ~t us be gralliful thai in cal job .lo a worn_... Where she j
desiplling Lloyd Bentsen as Trea- stands on anything is anybody' s •
. guess, including Clinton s. (But ;
don't worry ...)
;
Fortunately Gov. Cliaton's most :
appalling {«ointment to date
wasn't 10 a
inet post, but 10 tho .
leadership of his transition team ·
cluster in charge of lhe arts, educa•
tion, labor and rhe humanities. His '
· choice, incredibly, was Johneaa B: :
Cole, whom The New Republic
(hardly a conservative source) ·
describes as a "consistent ·
SJX*espcrson for scores of organizations affiliated with the Commu- ·
nist Party USA, inclnding rhe U.S.
Peace Council, lhe Venceremos ·
· Brigade, and lhe American lnslitute '
for Marxist Studies." ,
· ·
lt will give ~ some idea of tho
intensl of the media's love affair ·
wilh ·;.?;,. Clinton lhat, as of Ibis .
writing, no member•of it has yel
asked lhe dear man what (or who)
prompted him 10 name Ms. Colo 10
that influential position.
Wlllam .Rasher Is a .syndicated ,
writer for Newspaper El!terprise
Assoclatou.
.
. :

A .visit from St. Nickles-from-us

Letters to the editor
Proud of Meigs Countians

.or

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Bill's pants and do something sil- . PI\Wing and kissing women in his
lary ./ Like say, "Kids, sue your office/ His excuse? "I was drunk;"
parents!" Rush Limbaugh's so he doesn't think he should quiL
ln a huff PackwoOd snaoped,
flustered/ To see lhc suppon Ibis
"Why not pick on Inouye?/ to He's
a Senator too, and his hairdresser
sayi/ He "Fondles her regularly,
but it's justlhat she/ "Didn't want
to risk losing a rich client's
strong ·woman has mustered. ,
money."
Phil Gramm was safe in his
lt was a heck of a year for big
$63,000 house/In hopes the Ethics men $OinJ bad,/ New York's
Committee won't think he's a mightaest JUdge at his lover got
louse/ Because appraisers say lhe mad;/ Prosecutors say she broke up
home is worlh $117 grand/ And be wilh Judge Wacbller/ So he lhreatdid help bis conuacror from S&amp;L ened and sent. condoms to her
quicksand.
young daughter.
And I in my modc:rate Democrat
The Stale depanment's trying to
cap/ Had just .settled down for a put back the stuff/ In lhe presidentfour-year-long IVf)/ l hoped would elect's file,lalely treated so rough/
bring an era o( plain common By high-level folks out on a witch
senseJ Wilh extremist views on hunt/ For something, anything,
bolh sides dismissed as nonsense.
done while be was young.
Wben upon my fax machine
Streisand led the elite in boy·
lhere arose such a t:latlerl l spang COlling Aspen/ For a Colorado law
from my bed 10 see what w~ ~ against men loving men./ Will
matterJ Then what 10 my wonder· worse .come, to worse and the
ing eyes did appearJ Than some weallhy among US/ Have to vacaGOP centrists saying, "Be of good tion in Hawaii, New York or
cheer.
Columb~?
Corporate ·execs tried to avoid
"We have big tent and aiiii!IY
have shade/ lf lhey believe moral Ciinton lalles/ Proposed for the
decisiOns are really best made/ By richest; and so they sent faxes/
each citizen privately. Fiscal care is Buying stock, selling others; Disour mission/ You can call us lhe ney brass were most trickyJ "Sell
R blican Majority Coalition."
Donald, sell Goofy, buy Minnie
~hen nell.t 10 my wonl;lering and Mickey!"
eyes did appear/ A 20-year senator ' Baseball was punchy from. its
wilh repulalion so dear/ Accused of Big Red Headachej Marge Schott

Sarah Overstreet

a

.UnJ;toly war over Dead Sea scrolls

i

ur.ants to playj'ust fiorfiun

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servi&amp;.

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Middleport residents are as1c«1 10 place lheir Christmas trees at
the curb in front of their homes and IIley will be picked up by village workers on Monday, Jan. 4.
.

Amusement licenses expire today
Middleport officials roday reminded businesses that all am usemean machine licenses expire on Dec. 31, and must be renewed for
1993.
.
Fees for these ~censes are $50 for each' juke boll., $50 each for
lhe first three coin-o~rated wnusement machines and $25 each for
each machine in addition to the fitSt dtree.
Licenses may be obtained atlhe mayor's office Monday lhrough
Friday from,8 a.m. unti14 p.m.

..
!

a n

Beat of the Benq; ..
by Bob Hoeflich

Because rhe scroll ediiOrs have
been unconscioaably slow. 10 com- 'l
plete lhc work lhey began more .
lhlll four decades qo, and bec!hiiO :
lhey bl!ve been unwiliinB to offer :
aecess 10 scholan OUISide die offi. :
cia! editing team, a few apostates ·
have been so audacious as 10 chal- :
Ienge the editors' monopoly.
;
The most telling blOw for schol- ·
arly freedom was struCk last year I
by lhe H~ U'-~
in San t
,._r
Marino, Cali ., which liad in its '
·
ml fil
hi
f '
JIOIIOSSion a cro 1!1 arc ve 0 ;
~~!i.:' ::Y madequaru: :
•
scholar
'
The'scroll ediiOrs threa•··ed a 1
I
. . fi
B lh ...,ha,d
I.
awsuit ~t ar~t. ut ey
no '
ownership claam 10 the film. The
~~Yo~~~::= :
over except for the shouting.
;
It Is rather ironic lhat schotars ,
who have devoted much of lheir !
lives to studying primordial :
Judaism and Cbriatil!fiily w.ould •1
cury on like healhens about cus- 1

~~!.~ thah~E~!:.!'so~!!'!l,~ !

..,...,_. ·~ ,_.,.,., _...,..
with the !lllli:hmeots aad fnplents ;
exhumed from lhe Dead sea, that l
IIley have completely lostllabl of ,
the sp,irilual mes~a~e contained J

lhereili

i

.

JoRpb Perkins II a CGI-nllt
for Tbe San DlfiO Ualoa·Trl·
bune, alld as}'lldleated writer lot
Nllooewapaper £nterprlle Aasoela-

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James Manhew Garafola, 72, 9S
Kelly Drive , Gallipolis, died
Wednesday, Dec. 30, 1992, in
Pleasant Valley Hospilal in Point
Pleasant, W.Va
Born Dec. 2. 1920, in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, he was the son
of lhe late James V. and· Kalhryn
Zeuwatson Garrow. He was a
retired journeyman millright from·
the Federal Glass Company of
Columbus.
He was a U.S. Army veteran of
· · World War n and a member of lhe
Macedonia Community Chun:h. He
was a lifetime member of lhe Vet·
erans of Foreign Wars Post 4464
and the Disabled American Veter·
ans. He was a member of the
Nationai•Rifle Association.
A graduate of the Chicago An
Institute and formerly of Columbus, he has ffin a resident of G!ll·
lia County s·
1984. .
He marri Caroline 0 . Hershman on Nov. 6, 1963, in Oakland, .
Md., and ~h survives as does a
daughter, Vivian Kay (James W.)
McCarle~ of Gallipolis, and a son,
Roben (Debbie) Garrow of GallipOlis, and five grandchildren.
Also surviving is a sister-in-law,
Theo Newhouse of Windham, a
brolher-in-law, James Hershman of
Grafton, W.Va. and a niece, Elaine
Boylen of GarrettsviUe.
Services will be held I p.m. Saturday in lhe Macedonia Community Church with the Rev. Wayne
Queen ofHciating. Burial will fol ·
low in the Macedonia Cemetery in
Harrison Township.
Military graveside services will
. be conducted by VFW Post 4464.
T}le body will be .taken to the
church one hour before services.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel Friday from
6-9 p.m .

Some days you get lhe qear- cruise aboard the General Jackson
aild some days lhe besr gets you.
with entert~inment by Shotgun
Evelyn Gilmore, long-lime Lin- Red. And just to prove what a
coln Heights, Pomerby, resident small world it really is, the master
found that out before Chrisunas.
of ceremonies on lhe General Jack:Evelyn. was ready 10 take in a son is none other than Paul Galdance at lhe Royal Oak Reson and loway, a brolher of the late, talentwas headed for the car. SHe ed Ruth Gosney who resided in
stepped off the edge of the side- Meigs County for a number Of
walk at her home and down she years. There were 37 travelers on
went in a painful fall. Into the bar- lhe lrip wilh escorts Donna Nelson
gain she hit her head and face on and Maxine aboard the brightly
the concrete and was generally decorated motorcoach taking them
speaking pretty messed up. How- to Nashville.
ever-n.ot to panic. Evelyn
And, by ahe way, Robert and
returned to lhe Gilmore home and Genevieve Burdette of Meigs celewashed up to see how bad her brated !heir 50111 anniversary durfacial cuts were. Well, IIley were ing· the trip and Carole McLaugh- Betty Hammer
Belly Hoeflich Hammer, a forbad enough and she was taken to lin, also of Meigs, observed anoth·
·
Veterans Memorial Hospiaal. In er binhday.
mer Meigs ~ounty resident, died
addition to abrasions, cuts and
On Dec. 5, two motorcoaches Wednesday evening, Dec . 31 ,
general "hurts", E.velyn had suf- filled wilh lhe Bank One Classic 1992, at h r residence, 2087
fered a broken arm. J~t one of lhe members made a trip to lhe Palace Rochelle Place, Columbus, followmany things she didn't want for in Columbus to see the popular ing a lingering illness.
Born in Pomeroy; she was the
Christmas. However, she's home slage production, "The Will Rogers
and perking right along-she's a Follies" starring Keith Carridine. daughter of the late George and
spunky someone, you know.
Then on· Dec, II, it was back to Addie Hoeflich. Besides her parColumbus wilh awo more motor- entS she was preceded in death by
And heq: a bit more bad news coaches of Classic One members to her husband, Clarence E. Hammer,
for you.
.
take in tlie Lawrence Welk: Ali-Siar who died at University Hospital
lf you had ~e pleasure of dining Christmas show at Veterans nine days ago; a daughter, Lou Ann
Jones, and two sons, George and
at Branchwodd, operated by Sarah Memorial.
and John Fisher at their lovely
·Fifaecn of lhe Classic One mem- Dennis Keilh.
home behind the Rock Springs bers and their guests, escorted by
Both Mr. and Mrs . Hammer
Fairgrounds, lhen you know lhat it Classic One Director Griffith, flew
was a memorable experience.
from Columbus to San Juan on were employed by The Columbus
•: Near•lhc end of ·August, Sarah Dec.'6 for a seven day, Southern Dispatch for a number of years
and John closed lheir dining spot Caribbean cruise on lhe Starward. . before lheir respective retirements.
Surviving are a daughter and
but had planned to reopen in April. lslands visited included Barbados,
However, after long deliberation -Antigua; Martinique, St. Marlin son-in-law, Kimberly and Dennis
and consideration lhey've decided and St. Thomas. On returning to Stout, Columbus; a brolher and sis·
they won't be reopening come San Juan on Dec. 13, a to'ur of Old ter-in-law. Bob and Charlene Hoe·
spring. People came from miles San Juan and the El Yunque Rain flich of Pomeroy, five grandchilaround to dine at Branchwood-!!O Forest was featured before our dren, Steven, Nicole and Randy
Stout, and Chris and Amy Jones,
disappointing to know that it has group headed back home.
all of Columbus, and one niece,
permanently fade4 from our scene.
It's incredible that 1992 Jayne Hoeflich Mann, Lancaster.
You did a fantastic job, Sarah
whipped lhrough so fast and here
and John-lhank.you. ·
we are at a new year.-a chance to
Funeral arrangements are being '
Isn't it amazing how the song erase lhe slate- a chance maybe to made at ·the Egan· Ryan Funeral
"White Christmas" keeps coming make some improvements. I wish Home, 4019 Livingston Ave.,
back to us each year during the hoi· you a wonderful New Year..:...C.ne Columbus. Burial will be in Forest
iday season? lt's popularity lives just mied wilh happy smiles.
Lawn Cemetery.
on and on-Berlin really did a
good job on that one, didn't he? Meigs~. Continued from page 1
Bing Crosby introduced the everpopular number in the black and Melhodist Church, and hopes that School, remembered his young
white movie , Holiday Inn , which the new year is kind to its ministry charges when he outlined his hopes
was hauled out for television view- and its congregation.
for lhe new year.
ing again this season. I'll bet more
"I would like to sec my chun:h
"I would like to see the new
of us know the words to White become more spiritual, and for , year bring more jobs for our grnduChristmas lhan know the lyrics to more people to attend church Ibis atins seniors, more students furthe National Anthem . At least year," she said.
thenng their education and new
that's lhe way it is for me.
Fenton Taylor of Rutland Town· industry to Meigs County to bring
ship, principal at Meigs High our hometown people back home."
Did you know that the Senior
Patsy Ogdin of Pomeroy, office
Champs of Bank One have been Meigs EMS calls
manager at the License Bureau in
renamed. They are now officially
Pomeroy, remembered her family
Units of the Meigs County and
the Classic One Group and were
the bureau's patrons in her new
they ever on the move during lhe Emergency Medical Service year's wishes.
responded to 10 calls for assistance
holiday ·season.
"I would like to wish a special
In early December, it was a a on Wednesday.
happy
new year to my grandson,
At II :05 a.m . the Middleport
Country Christmas 10 Nashville lrip
J.D.,
and
a happy and healthy new
with the Opryland Hotel decked unit went 10 Overbrook Center for year to my dad, Charles Manley,
out in all of its holiday finery for Thelma Dill. She was transported and the rest of my' family, along
the season. One of the highlights to Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
12:32 p.ml the Middleport with my friends, co-workers and
of that excursion was a breakfast FireAtDepartment
was called to Sec- customers atlhe license bureau."
"I hope Meigs County will prosond Street in front of lhe Middleper
and provide jobs to help keep
port Sundry Store for an auto rue.
The Daily Sentinel
our
families togelher in our comThe auto waS owned by Dclberl
(UIIPS Jlll-1160)
munity,"
Mr.;. Ogdin said ..
Blake.
I
"Let's
aU remember our soldiers
Publithed every afternoon, Monday
The Middleport unit, at I :58
lh"'""h Friday, Ill Coart SL , Pamoroy,
abroad,
and
I hope we can bring
p.m. went to Turkey Run Road in
Ohio by U.. Ohio Valley PubliahiJW
lhenj
home
safely
to lheir families.
Cheshire Township for Todd Smith
Company/MWthnedia lru:.. Pomeroy,
I
also
Ohio -45769, Ph. 1192·21116. Second dOD
hope
America
will support
who was taken to Veterans Memopootap poid ol Pomeroy, Ohio.
Pl;esident-elect
Bill
Clinton
as he
rial Hospilal.
enters
office
next
month.
I'd
like
to
At4:12 p.m. lhe Tuppers Plains
Moml&gt;or. The Auoeialed t&gt;f.a, and die
Ohio Newapapr Aa.odaUon, National
unit responded to Route 124 for take this time to remember my
Mverliaina Hepn!aentative, Branham
Erica Boring who was transported molher, Merle Manley, who died
Ntwa_p~per S.._, 733 Thtrd AYenae,
Now York, Now Yod&lt; 10017.
to St. Joseph Hospilll in Parkers- on February 5, 1992, but who is
burg, W.Va.
still wilh us every day."
I'Olri'MASTER: Send &lt;hiiiWU to
The Middleport unit went to
Connie Dodson of Middleport
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 46769.
Soulh Fourth at9:26 p.m. for Glada will stan the new year out wilh a
Davis who
taken to Veterans.
IVBICIUPTION &amp;ATDf
new job - as secretary to Meigs
By Canter or MotDr ao..te
County's
At
9:36
p.m.
the
Rolland
unit
new Prosecuting Auor·
One Week ................. .......................... f1.60
went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for ney, John Lentes.
One Monlh ............... .......................... l6.95
One Yeu..........................:................ f83 .:10
Randy Jones. Jones was taken to
"I wish lhe best for John and the
I 81NGLJ: COPY
Holzer.
staff
at the prosecutor's office,"
PRICE
Daily...................... ......... ..............:u; Cento
The Middleport unit; at 10:45 Mrs. Dodson said, "and I hope that
p.m., was called to Race Street for through the work at lhe office we ·
Subo&lt;rihon not d•irinr to pay the c:arri·
Sherry Caudill who was taken 10 can make Meigs County a better
er ml)' remit in advance direct t.o The
O.lly ·Sentinel on a three, li:a ot 12
Veterans.
place for evezyone to live.."
month buia. Credit ..nn be pven can;ier
The
Pomeroy
unit,
at
10:52·
"I hope that in 1993, everyone,
-.chw-.
p.m.,
went
10
Village
Green
Apanincluding
myself, will take more
No IUbo&lt;riptiona by mail permitted in
ments for Terri Charmichsel who lime out of lheir bus~ schedule 10
.,.. where home canter 8et'Vlte il
a¥ail•lt.
was transported to Veterans.
spend quality lime with their fami...u lablcrlpdo•
Ar 10:54 p.m. the Racine 'unit ly and friends. I also h~ lhat our
IDol........ CeunfT
13 w..u ......................................... wl.tll went to Third Street for Stephanie county will prosper walh jobs so
Johnsron who was taken 10 Veter- · that my friends who have lost jobs
26Weeu.......................................... .18
fi2W..U.......................................... .78 ans.
.
can get back on track with their
O.t.lde M•lp Coanty ,
lives."
Finally,
at
11:04
p.m.
the
Rut13 Weeu.......................................... f23.40
26w..u.... ~ ..................................... s~uo
land unit responded to Pageville for : "May every dny bring a smile,
~2 w..u . ........................ ,............... t88.40
Louise Burbridge who was taken to and if there's a tear, let lhere be a
tear of joy."
Veterans.

'1

hail us all examining the ·fake/ .
"Equality" ruse. lhey've tried to .
portrayJ "She says it, olhers lhink
lf.'' blar:t ballplayers say.
:
The same \vee1t we heard 1'11. ·
partners got z~f'~r pouring life
savings iniO B
's ego tripJ We .
learned· Brolher Jim had his sen- ·
1ence redtaced./ Pretty good payoff
for old people seduced.
.
Alas, lhe folks packing to leave ·
the Beltway/ Had their shire of .
problems as lhey ended dleir su.yJ .
Treasurer Villalpando, wlio never ·
earned a degree,/ Was named U.S. ,
treasurer, and is now "away on
leave,''
While the FBl sees if she ped· died influence/ Throwing business
10 old boSses who sought congruence/ With Kuwaiti businesses '
after tho.Gulf War/ And made mil- ·
lions off conttacts that she arranged ,
for.
.
President Bush had his own
problems, 100/ While investigators
searched 10 see whal his crew/ Had
to do with lran-Contra and Iraq- .
gale, to boot/ And tried hard to
name them all in a IawsuiL ·
But be's a great optimist, as is . '
his wifeJ George and Barbara said, ,
"It's a wonderful life."/ And l ·
heard lhem exclaim as they flew
out of sightJ "Happy New Year 10
all,andiOallagoodnighL"
•
Sarah Overstreet Is a syn'di· ,
cated writer for Newspaper
FJaterprlse Association.

At a recent international seroUs
The seroUs generally are considconference, hosted by the New ered lhe manuscript discovery of
Yort Acidemy of Sciences, Eisen- lhe century. They were stumbled
man and Wise were s · t 10 lhe upon by a Bedouin shepherd boy in
1947 in caves northwest of the
D
,r.:
Dead Sea. They dale from roughly
~
~
200 B.C. 10 100 years after the
_ _ _..;;;,_ _ _ _ _...__, birth of ChriiL .
most uoseemly 111 homlnCm anacks
The scrolls comprise 800
by lhe Plhered scholan. When all manuscripts and 15.000 frqments.
was sald and done, lhe dispute · More lhlll 100 of the manuscripts
· · down to •aootaotea. Th e are b'blical
came
a
texiS, a'ncl udi ng all or
seroUs scbolars
the authors pan of e""rv boot of the Old Tes·-,
should have incl
more of thelil tame at- · ellcepl Estber. dther
oinf ~volume, crediting .die work manuscripts are dloUabt 10 provide
.........
.
inoNWIIialt lftnahts inti! the deve......_
ll is all a lelll""-"t in a teacup
..- f ~· •
c "''':'
r•
J'!'ef!l o bolll Judaism and bris- ,
says ~. a pofeasor or Mid·. 111111ty
die East religion at California State
For' rhe paslt4S years, the scrolb
University at' Long Beach. You have been under die ti~l control of
don't do this thing without taking a small team or ed1tors (which
~ is wi1Iin~ to lake lhe ~~se.,J!dY numbehrs 12~~~~olars
k
L
h
h
1i..e ..aseoman ~v~ as..........over
noc .. s, e says, . ecause e ~ years lhat thll cozy cotene of
believes 11181 It is wrons for a tiny editon bas trelled die acrulls like
group of scbolan ,to
their personal pro~y, denying
~.:,: ,P!!' Sea......, aD~ ~ ~eceaa 10 lhe ,matenal to anyone
cliairi
tho
students and
tbe ·~rolls-ere •ouod be com
..........·
~
"
•·
•
•
This did DOl orr~ad so much
plains.
early 011 "'- tho edMon reiu~Mty
publiabecl fruh lOW tranacdplions
I
or die scroll lex~. B~t. in recent
.
- - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - . . ; . . ._ _ _ _.,__~--- do~adcs, prec:lotis lillie or the
'
World War ll.
remaining
scroll ._...
;
By Tile "-111111 Pra
On lhildalie:
.
\
ria! has bOen
~forth from t1!e
~;. Todaf is ~undaf. Dec. 31-. d!e 366lh and final dsy of 1992.
ln 1775, the Brllilh repulaed an'auaclt by Continental Army Gens. ~10!'1, who exp am thai all th~s
()!~.
officially lm!ctaimed the end of Richard Monf&amp;lllllery and Benedict Arnold at Quebec. MonfiOmelY was ~:=~~: l:x"t:'e a derma,
tilled.
I
\&gt;
'&lt;11

James Garafola .

No injuries were reponed foUowing a deer-vehicle collision on
U.S. 35 ~Rio Grande Wednesday around 10 p.m.
.
. Aeeatding 10 a report from lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of. the Slate
Highway Patrol, Vicki J. Norlhup, 34, Racine, was weslbound on
U.S. 3~ when' a deer came from tho median and struck her 1984
Jeep Cherokee, causing moderale dainage,
The deer continued on after the accicfent '

MOM?!

,/

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

was

I

II

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Community calendar

Grace Welch
Grace H. Welch, 74, Pomeroy,
died Wednesday, Dec. 30, 1992, at
lhe Veterans Memorial Hospital
Extended Care Facility. _ •
Born on July 28, 1918 in Meigs
County, she was lhe daughter of
the late Pearl Manuel and Goldie
Buckner Rice. She was a former
machipist wilh.Precision Twist and
Drill Co.. and a member of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, the Rutland Church of lhe Nazarene, lhe
Meigs County Senior Citizens, and
the Big Bend Citizens Band Club.
She was a voluntee~ at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She is survived by six daughters, Mrs. William (Janet) Davidson, Middleport; Mrs. Gene
(S baron) Wise, Middleport; Mrs.
Bob (Donna) Jacks, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Danny (Patsy) Artrip, Stoutsville;
Mrs . Keith (Tammy) Clemente,
Point Pleasant, W. Va. and June
Ann Lowery, Amanda; lhree sons,
David (Terri) Welch, Crystal Lake,
Ill.; Gary (Arvetta) Welch, Colum·
bus, and Jerry Welch, Columbus; a
sister, Helen Hillen, Los Angeles,
Calif.; 22 grandchjldren:.and 13
great·grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Julian Lester Welch,
one brother, and one sister.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene with lhe
Rev. Samuel Basye, Jr. officiating.
Burial will be in the Vinton County
Memorial Park in Vinton. Friends
may call at 1the Fisher Funeral
Home in Middlepon Friday, 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m•

Loraine Wilcoxen
POINT PLEASANT • Amln·
gements have been announced for
Loraine Lee "Wilkie" Wilcoxen,
63, of Point Pleasant, who died
Tuesday, December 29, 1992, at his
home. He was lhe longtime owner
and operator of Wilcoxen Funeral
Home.
Graveside service wiU·be held on
Saturday, January 2, 1993, at
Kirkland Memorial Gardens at II
a.m. with Rev. Ralph Sagar, Rev.
Mike Evans and Rev. Herman Jordan officiating. Minturn Lodge No.
19, AF&amp;AM of Point Pleasant was
perform Masonic rites.
Cal~ng hours wiU be held on
Friday from 6-9 p.m. at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home.
In lieu of Oowers, the family re·
quests donations be made to
Heights-United Methodist Church's
Building Fund or St. Giles Presbyterian Church, Hudson Road,
Greenville, SC.
Born May 3, 1929, he was the
son of Maryland (PUllin) Wilcoxen
and lhe late Morgail Wilcoxen.
He was a 1948 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School and a 1951
graduate of the Piusburgh lnsliture
of Mortuary Science. In addition,
Wilcoxen · was a member of lhe
Minturn Lodge No.t9 AF &amp; AM,
Beni Kedem Shrine of Charleston,
Scottish · Rite, · Point Pleasant
Rotary, West V~ia Funeral
Directors Associauon, National
Funeral Directors Association and
.. the Heights United Methodist
Church.
He was preceded in death by one
grandson, Roger Reed McKinney,
II and one sister, Lula Daugheny.
Surviving in addition to his
molher, are his wife, Mary (Eads)
Wilcoxen; four daughters and sonsin-law, David and Anna Morris of
CanerviUe, Ill., Roger and Winona
McKinney of Point Pleasant, Paul
and Barbara Casto of Greet, S.C.,
and Barry and Tina Barnette of ·
Greenville,
S.C.;
and
five
grandchildren.

Final...
Conlinued from page 1
in.corporated into sidewalk replacement in the central downtown business di'Sitict. This includes slteet
furniture, period lighting of vintage
design, improvements at Diles
Park, street planlers and general
street design changes. The cost for
a completed plan is $11,750.
Feb. 5 is the deadline for applying for downtown revitalization
funds this year.

Weather
South-Central Obio
Toni$hl. cloudy wilh a chance
of flumes. Low m the mid-20s.
Chance of snow 40 Percent. Friday,
mostly cloudy. High in the low 30s.
Extended rorecast:
·
Saturday through Monday:
Saturday and Sunday, fair. Lows
in the upper teens to low 20s.
Highs in the ~. Mondsr, a chance
of rain or siiQw. Lows m the 20s.
Highs in lhe 30s.

Community Calendar items
appear two da;,s before an event
and lbe day of lbat eveDI. Items
mUll be recel•ed weD Ia advance
to aaaure publlcatloD In the pt.
endar.
THURSDA (New Year's Eve)
RUTLA
• Leading Creek
Conservancy Dislrict offices will
be closed to
public on Thursday
so that staff
conduct an end-ofyear inveniOry.
LETART • The Letan Township
Trustees will meet Thursday at
I 0:30 a.m. at lhe office building for
lhe,year-end meeting.
LOTTRIDGE • The Lotlridge
Community Center will have a
New Year's Eve party Thursday
from 8 p.m. 10 midnight. All bands
are welcome. Refreshments will be
served. Everyone welcome.
HOBSON • Hobson Church of
Christ in Chrilti.an Onion will bave
a watchnight service Thursday at 7
p.m. Pastor Theron Durhwn invites
lhe public. There will be different
speakers.
CHESHIRE · A New Year' s
Eve service w~l be held Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at lhe Silver Run Baptist Church in Cheshire.
LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bouom
will have a New Year's Eve service
Thursday at 9 p.m. There will be
special music and fellowship. Pastor Steve Reed invites the public.
There will be no services Fridal.
POMEROY · Hillside Baptist
Church will present the movie
"The Passion Play" on Thursday at
7 p.m. Following lhe movie will be
a service from lhe word of God and
special singing by lhe singers at lhe
church. The evening wiU close wilh
prayer. Refreshments will be
served at the midnight bour. Everyone is welcome.
·
·

come.

..•

RUTLAND · A New Year' s
Eve watch service will be held
Thursday Bl 7 p.m. at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church. Norman
Taylor, Riel: Weaver and John
Haley will preach. Pastor Paul Taylor invites the public.

•
:
•
:
:
:
•

POMEROY • A potluck dinner
will be held New Year's Eve
(Thursday) at lhe Meigs County
Senior CitiZens Center in Pomeroy
at 5 p.m. Bring a covered dish.
Meat and beverage will be provided. Public invited.

:
•
;
•
:
:

REEDSVILLE • The Fellowship Church of lhe Nazarene will
have a New Year's Eve service
Thursday at9 .p.m. Special singing
will be by Harvest Trio, Jett Family
and olher singers. Rev. John Douglas invites lhe public. ·

.'

'

;
•
;
•
:
:
•

FRIDAY (New Year's Day)
TUPPERS PLAlNS · The Tup-~
pers Plains VFW Post No. 905;J
Ladies Auxiliary will have a round
and square dance Friday from 8-'.
11:30 p.m . There will be a potluc~
dinner from 6-8 p.m. Music will be
provided by lhe Smokey Mountain
Drifters. Everyone welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS · " The
Orange Township Trustees wi~l :
meet Friday at 2 p.m. at the home
of the clerk , Patty Calaway, to .
finalize 1992.
'
SATURDAY
HOCKINGPORT · A round anit·
square dance wiU be held SaturdaY'
from 8·11:30 at the Reynolds
Building in Hockingport. Music
will be provided by Out of th ~·
Blue. Ronnie Wood will be the '
caller. Everyone welcome.

.

DARWIN· The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Thursday at
2 p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY - A watch service
will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
by the Middleport Wesleyan Bible
Holiness, Rutland Bible Methodist
and Harrisonville Holiness Church
at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
Route 143. Speakers will be Rev.
Amos Tillis and Rev. Victor
Roush, pastor. There will also be
special singing.
MIDD.l:.EPORT · New Year's
Eve Dance, Old American Legion
Hall, MiddlepoiL Music by CJ and
the Country Gentlemen. Admission
is free. Children are welcome if
accompanied by an adult No alcoholic beverages. Bring soft drinks
and snacks. Call 742 -2 179 for
infonnation.
RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Thurs·
day at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
RUTLAND · Rutland Community Church, New Lima Road, will
SUNDAY
'·
hold a New Year's Eve service
Thursday at 7 p.m . with Martha
LOTIRIDGE • There will be~
Nelson, Melody King and Plllricia . smorgasbord dinner at the Loloi
King. Rev. Dewey King invites lhe tridge Community Center on Sun'J
public.
day from noon to I :30 p.m. Cost is
$5 for adults and $2.50 for children
MT. UNION - A New Year's
under 12. Everyone welcome.
Eve service will be held Thursday
at 8 p.m. at the Mt. Union Baptist
CHESTER • The Ken Amsb3C):.
Church. The Messen~ers from
Chaprer, Izaak Walron League, willFairmont, W.Va., will smg. Public hold muzzle loader shoots Sunday
invited. Pastor Joe N. Sayre invites at I p.m. Prizes are the same as for•
the public . Refreshments will be the other shoots. In addition to the.
served.
re~ular open sight matches, th ere'
will also be shooting off-hanll;
MILLFIELD - A round and scoped matches.
•
square dance will be held New .
Year's Eve (Thursday) from 8:30
MONDAY
p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at the Russell
RACINE - Regular meeting
Building in Millfield. Cost is $4 Racine Chapter No. 134, Order of :
per person and $1 for children the Eastern Star, Monday, 7 : 3CY ~
under 12. Music will be provided p.m. Obligation Night will b~ '
by Out of lhe Blue. Everyone wei- observed.
.;

Thanks
Our thanks to
you for your
support and
best wishes
for the
new year.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSlONS
- Richard ThQrnton, Pomeroy;
Albert Martin, Pomeroy; Glada
Davis, Middlepon.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
• Icie Tucker, Louise Posey, Mary
Hendricks an.d Gertrude Stivers,
Gertrude Fin law.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Wednesday's
Super J;,otto drawing ,

'

'

., '

.
'

�·-

Sports

'

Iloi'IWIO, )-ville 11
B. MldUaon 77, Lab hporio&lt; SL 61
....,...., nt.IO.~ SL 70
Milmi. Ollio 7l, V,;p. SL 61
Sleno'I2,X...61
w. bllll&lt;l:y ll,DL.Qicoao 1!

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Q...,..,., clal

AU. j : - l'do. TD lnL
w-,Hou ......J46 2242:521 I I 12
Marino, Mia •.• $ S4 !30 4116 24 16
PloJW

Yoii SI, T.-.IoSO

!

llo.Jior 98, Mo••JC.nuo City 11

Soutllwost

Onl-

Rllllltn

NELauiliiMI1, , _ 71
ot1abocnl St. 14, SW Mlaoari. St. 59
92, s.. Dqo 81
SoulhcmMc:III. I1,·S ,_,11
TOIW Sou&amp;bem 51, S&amp;ephcll F. Austin

AU. Ydo.A'Io LG TD

69 II

161!0 4,3
T. 111omu, Buf.312 1417 4.1
Wlilo,Hoo. ....,.26S 1226 4.6
.265 1170 4.4
Wamn, Su.......m 1017 4.6

a.-. an. .....

9
7
2
3

44
44
53
S2

....._

l1

No. l'do. ..... LG TD

PloJW

cs Narlbri&lt;lp bl, - - SL 64
Colon4o SL 79, Rico 75
lbllton. a1 Nev.&amp;., pp4., wealher
~ 5L6Q. UC
$9
N. ....._,., w-.St. 11
Now Moaico 5!.13, E T.... SL 69
Poidond 61, J;lulmoMh l1 (Of)
UCLA 90, Col SL-F..-12
UNLV79,11o&amp;aa41

9

47
72
55

1

r1

2

67

7

I

Sula-.,

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Quanerloadu
.,_,...
A&amp;L Co&amp; Veil. TO lnL
Y-.. S.F.......-402 1613465 2:5 7
,MiJioi, 41). ........2:53 1$2 1739 IS 6
........ DIJ....413 3023445 23 14 '
C'hall, PIUL ..... 314 233
19 II
411 3023221
t3

r•..., a.s ........

ms

........

1461
1121
1201
1396
lrl

u

ll.l
12.1
14.3
17.9
10.7

lllaldancfinYitalklllll

c,..._ ,

63 14

Ball SL 81, San 'Pnricuw 72
Tlllrdpla..
lcilllo 76, Uberty 14 (Of)

76 13
1 1 II
80 10
81 1
38 S

' FlllbpiMiuawi 69, Maria S6
Snenllll place
Cllominode 93,llawoii-llilo ll
CabloCorCiull&lt;
CNmplooublp
bl, s.... Cui S8

Ala-

f

-otBulfolo.ll:JOp.m.
l'!li1o4elpllil .. Odeuu, • p.m.

C!Jam-p
Tn.-Cllo~~~67

GooJ&amp;ia SL 13, Souoban U. 79

In the NBA ••.

'ICAC llollday Ft~lh•l

AllanUc Dhillon
T- .
W L r.t.
Now Y..X ..............I8 9 .661
-Ionoy ............ 16 12 .m
~ ................. .13 II
.S42
..........................12 11 .414
Jlhil..Jolphlo ............8 11 .320
Milmi... ..................8 18 .308
Wullinp&gt;rt............. l 20 .286
Ceoln1DhCIIIoqo...............21
7 .750
ClEVI!UNIL •. .17 12 .ll6
J:lolnOL ........... . .... 14 12 .lll

Atizon11l, W... Vi1Jlnia14
Third plaCe
La S.Ue 83, DolaWIIO Sl 14
Freedom BoWl Clulk:
Clla-rJaiiiNp
Gomaaowa64, C Jnine60

1
9

9.l

IO.S

6
6$

IS

.423

9

"

I

---- .
Pd.
.692

GB

................ .14 11
Son An10No ........ .l4 12

.560

3$
4
II
12
1l

f6

s....tllplaco

Soortua-

.840

cu..-Ip
MichipnSt.17,'W......... SL 61

3.S

4
6.S

11olrd place
l'rim:&lt;ooa1l, Nowllamp.mn.60

7

7.S

Ohio high scbool
boys' basketball scores

Il.l

Ab&gt;n St.V.SLM 68, C.. ~y 61
A11ianoe 42, Co. St. looatiu131
Bclpo 61, MaD"" &amp;f
Bowlin&amp;Grooo62. Tol. Woodwool 5l

LA. Lok. . 96, Odoado 93
~ 10!, Miam;JOO
.,....Ill, W......... I 10
New v.a 94, Iadiloa 90

NowJ~lll,-.92

CudiallSaitdliS 1Ab76
Cdino40, Morian~37

SonAnooNoll4, Don-94 .
Ulah 119, Alillddphil 1.10

Cin Andeucml6. Now Ridmond 49
CUt. Olto Eoto 64, Lo¥ol.ottd S4
Cin. Madion71, an. SL llanud 61
Cin. Modi« 69, M=od, Coli. ll
Clay 61. S. Wobot«ll
Cle. Calholio 61. M,nuw Lake Cath.

l'ho&lt;ola133,-...uo

Ponlond Ill , 00. 92
LA. Clil'l""" 105, BGIIan 99

Nopmes

31

Tbursdafor..Frlday

Clc.Hoy 72, TilL Scco.70
Cle. illiabto 97. Elyri161

Major college
basketball scores
Etit
C.Jiose 94, Sl"'&lt;"'' 93 (Of)

Browa 11, Cola•tc 75

to,ola ~-76 , Bolrolo12

,.

31

CoL l ! u t M . - 6 1
Col SL o...t. Sl, Liokine Hla 41
Col"'el Crawfaod 60, Frldcrickto,..

E~o. 34,EU~31
Flirbom 70, MiamiiiMq 38

fo•&lt;"""' 73,-.. 5l

GufioW Hta. Tlinily 66, Clay C.., K7.

57
a.-47,-tSLJ-45
Gund.;... 74, Nootltridp ~3
a.....nJ~c 10. r ...wooc~- 51
llual11on Bodln11, On. 1Wri1at 29

Halhaway Brown 39, S. Euclid llcPn•

35
IMilnV.U.SI.~44

Iewca-Sc:iu "· New ea:aidowa. SO
Ka.ta1 43, Twinlboq 38
Llbolly Unian 10, Btadlc7o Voll. 54
llma Both 67, T~44

South
Cent Fknda 71. Maine 67
a..n-11.-69
Dukol06.8cola1U. 62
FIDoiclo SL 94, flarid• 13
GearJ• Wlllliq1cn 90, N.C. Ollrlouc
Gocqio 7l, Colondo 63
LSU 90. Ttmeucc St. 68
1Am1r 19, MeN- SL 13
Muahoi191,R-.Moorio6S
Mumy SL 68, A•. w.m.ti&lt;nol 64
New Odouu 90, Bodulelll1

W~-14, Wo,....47

Mldwtll

llrodlo7 6$, OoiaJ,IOII 41
Olicop SL 161_W. IIlia&lt;U 74

~.... 35.-l'allo 23
Loudanville40, ~-- 36
Mano6eld Saiio. " ·
lolcXin.
ley lO
•
Mulioaton 52. 0.... 46
Muon 4S, V.U.l'iow 41 (Of)
Muoillon 1'a'ry ~5. TollmoidF4S

c.-

Mo,mllo66,bne0Yille51

- - 4 1 , Contlnidao44
Medina16_ Noolania 31
Milmi 1!. 75, Trild 21
l\liddlelowtlfinwidtl2,Diltic41
Miltcrd " ~ HanilWJn 31
' Miner., 71, c.m.n 69 (Of)
r.tinao luctica 62. Stalbenville 26
N. CUtton 69, /Won Kcnm... 21
N. Rid,..;Ilo51, Etyrio W. 40
Noloon•ill•Yod&lt;46, Cat l!ut 39
Nowbltey 50, Middlc6eld Con!inol44
NOIWood 54, Cin. Til\ 33
Olx.tin 59, A•on S3
Olmltcd F.U. 72. Lonln Calh. 18
Pain01villc Rivcnido 31, At htabula
!Wbor24

s.

Picl:erinpoo S4, Funklin.Co., TOM.

44

Do,.

Doy. - 7 0 ,
Cmoll66
Day. Chlftl'lialldo-JuUea.ae 70, Cal.
illnloy6l

o.,.n..bu 19, s,ao.. Soulh 10

"·c.,-. 4S
H. c:.m.n 68, Do1uln 49

Sl

Et,U. C.lh. 13, Obodin 63
Fwtanka 6l, Maeynillcl4
Flilport 64, Cu70MP Hu. 62
Fairview S7, Pukw•)' •S
Fort l.alldvlli•l• w..\em 14, Olcn -

.
.
=

IIIIIY It
Footorio ll, Now Roipl l2

""* 64
64, Cal Bligo 33
66, a.u

2l

Howland lO,Iflloa 47

llubbu&lt;l69. - 6 l
lluom 75, Clyde S4
lndq&gt;atdt:nccl9, BIOC&gt;kl)'tl4l
J-1'l,Wallotaa64
Jeulu LU.cu ll, Van Bunm 61
Kalt Roo.evd.t 16, Wanw.ville Hu.

70

K&lt;nton RidF 69, Bcojanin Ina'" 67
(OT)

lAkewood St. Bdwar4 74, Col. De·
Soila 61
llbaty Ca&gt;loril, Tot Culoliut S6
Lonln Midviow 50, ~ Station
4l

.

Sidney l21, T10y 40
Solon 77, Wickliftc 37
Spdna. Nonheutem 49, Bellet'crua.ine

SpdnJ. Shown" 5S, Spoil~~ Nolllt SO
Sww 49, Kent R.oolewlt 21
Thoma Wotlbinatoo S6, Col DtSale&amp;
42
.
Tri·V.U.y 70, U&lt;JWta Voll. 46

Triway 63, Blaclt River 3:2
;
Unioo Local 53, B.U.U. 49 (OT)

ClO'Im 41, W.-n Bmwn 3S

(J;md l9, Mdlonald 40

.Pidlway 60, Onh&amp;m ~
-ond Hu. 40, C.. Collinwood 36
Rid&amp;cdolo: 63, Morim Cltlt. 22
Rid- ~.lutinpn JO
Riv« Vtow bl, Nowult S2 (at)
! . Chuleit.on SE 1l. Mochanicsbll.ra
S..dy V.U. 39,llibonlloa•cr21

DcMr

T - Todl 9S,I!ut Cualinl71
TW.. l07, Prairie View 74
Va. Commonwulth IS, Southern
Mia 74 .
Violioil Todl 11, M&lt;qiA SL 16

·L:~!:!sa.~~·

Contina!tal SO.A,...m. 34

N....,_76, Culiliut 66
!11. - · · 61, FoiM&amp;JI o;-..., 61
Vill~Acwo 7l, CobnbU 63
.
Walah 7.5, St.Bmavanwe 6&amp;

63

.
CGldwtte: 84, Sptnccvillo 34
Cohmbiono Cnootvicw SO, Laclalil30
Cooh....,. S4,JGI!n GloM 5 I
Clt""'op Folio 41,1Won Budtld 41

Cllamploolhlp

'-1111181,1- ... 66
11olrd place
Comell74, Calif..U. S4

WICirarl•y'siCOI'es

-

43

NebnW 79, For.lwo 5l
s.tan Jlaii-M..U.W..S. Toum~~ment

Paclllclll......

s.....- ............ Jo

an.p,;z-...ao. Foidield 41
an.Unullit 5S, On. Lokota43
c ... H.;,hta 61, lo1"'tor Like Clllt.

Thlrdplac:e

Nonh Cudina 101, llawlii 84
FlllhpiJacbon SL 17, SW Loulliana &amp;5

67, E. !Cao&gt; 36

Olopin F".U. S4, O...p 23
ClwdonS4, W. Gcaup 51
Cin. McAule742, On. CoJe:nm 3S

Tlllnl place

L
I

.691
.610
.511
.lS6
.l36
.lli

Cen-

c..field SS, Otunpion 44
Cattiolo S9. Doy. Stallbinl 31

N.C.-Orooooboro6~.Amly41

Rllnbowelullc
CilnlploMII!p
Michipn 16_ ICon... 74

WESTERN CONFERENCE

.................. 11 4
5. . .................... .18 I
Porllmd ........... ......11 I
LA. LaPn ............ IS II
LA. CUooon ......... 1l 11
Goldal ~ ..........IS 13

Cadiz 36_ c_,.. Voll. 21

Mount St. MarJ'• lloldly ToUritamenJ
CNm-1p
Debwue 13, MCNDt SL Mary 's, Md.

45

l.l

.S38
.269
.201
.083

ans - Co., Ky. Sl, Um.n. lS

CW.~Ip

3.l

.444

-IDI-

Bullolloo51,Ab&gt;nlfoboo41
s-wie6l, BNJppart49
u..... 69, Lopn Elm 66 (2

· - 10, - · - 76 (Of)

:z.s

ll

22

AkJOn N. 61,/Won F.....,... 60 (0'11
AkJOn SLV·SLM 61, SlrCttlp\'illo 3l
Alt«42, l'diddlloown 26
Nitta bull 73, """"39
Awn l...akc s-4,'£. t1e. Sh.w 35

.,. . _c_

GB

.519
.464

llolloo ...................l

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

I

13
ll

,..,_... .............. .s 19

•wne68
.
Youna. S.Ulh 11. TilL Bowohcr44
Youna. Unu!inoS3, Nowton F.U.40

1p
Clllllpl
Kant!x:ky 86, St. Jdm.'a 77
Tlllnl placo·

EASTERN CONFERENCE

19

Woodm&lt;n72,014Fottll
WoMinaton Kilboumo 80, Cat Whot-

Chlill........ p
Looa. Booch'l1llrd
St. f2, - · SL 61
place
Novyl1,E. Wllbill.... 56
Dr. ......... Ciuok

Sunday

Whitd&gt;.U 72. Roynoldobura 41
Wilminalon (N.C.) LaMey 6l, K""'·

u.1 Ahet6J

C...uptC-c

WuhinJlOnat MNel.cu, 12:30 p.m.
JW.u Ci&amp;y al San Dicao. -4 p.m.

u.n-....................1

55

Rhode bland 80, !Wvoro ({I

Saturday

TW
Ullll ................... :.11

· Third placo

.
Shokor H~. 61, C.. Uncoln-Woot 31
SJ"VI~ Nonh 92, Sprin&amp;. Shawnoe 38
SL Motyl 60, Min-41
Tooulnocb 63 , um... 51
Tol. C.t.bolic 61. Tol. SLJOI)n'a 60

Wuhini'Oft Oi 14, Waverly 66
Wayrri Trace SS, UncoJnview ~7
Wootloke60, Olmllcd F.U. l 1
Whocling Central, W.Va. 71, Toronto

Third place

Alub·Ancbonao 80, Weber SL 71

Mi~mi

Tol Wahc49, 0JqmClayod
1\llcan.wu C.lh. 46. Unitocl Local31
WollltJGOUit 87, Suonpvil1e 16

All Colleat TOilJ'I\IIIIent
Champlonahlp
CJklahoml·as. Teu•76

Uppw Scio&amp;o Vall. 74, Wayne~r10ld·

Ooohm32
Vc:nnili"' 67, El,U. Coth. 42
W. 8.-nch 41 , LouiiYillc 35

44

W. Ho!mea ,., W. MtlakiAJWn 55
Wt~tanllilb 33, PwcoiJ Morion 31
WeAeMUc N. 10, Punui Holy Name

W-.60, Boon!man50
Wmltin~ta~ Kilbourne II , Col Whot·
.... 1l

'

Z...Trace49, AmiN!oCoan:nelt35
U..Wie lt...,... 61 , lnam49

SLIPS THROUGH - Southern's Mark
Allen (center) slips through the defense set up by
Oak Hill's Brook Morgan (24) and Mike Turner
.

'

(right) during Weclaesday night's Rio Grande ' '
Holiday Tournament title game, which the Oaks •'
won 64·53.

Oak Hill ,hands Southern 64-53 ·~
loss in Rio cagefest title game .'.
.

,/

'I

'

Outscored 33·20 in the second
and third quaners, the Southern
Tornadoes dropped a 64·53 deci·
sion to the Oak Hill Oaks in the
finals of the ·university of Rio
Grande Holiday basketball tournament at Lyne Center,
Oak Hill (6·2) was named tour·
nament champion, while Southern
(4-2) settled for runner·UJ? honors.
Jackson won the consolanon game
over Wellston in the preliminary:
Oak Hill's twin towers provided
the needed punch to propel the
Oaks to the win. Brian Blackmon, a
6-foot-5 senior forward, grabbed
10 rebounds and 24 points to lead
the towering Oaks while 6-foot-8
senior center Chris Simpson
110tched 10 rebounds and 20 points.
Together their 44 points and 20
rebounds nearly equaled Southem's tota! offensive output
Southern's Russell Singleton
paved the way with a good secondhalf performance, g11rnering 14
points.and nine rebounds, while
sophomore guard Ryan. Williams
netred II,
The pregame marquees highlighted Southern's run-and·gun
offense against the ·height of the
Oaks. That billing equalled the
pregame hype as a great ftrSt quar·
ter developed from the two suc·
cessful, but different game plans.
After Southern struggled in its
opening possession against Oak
Hill's zone,. Blackmon found the
back door open for the game's ftrst
score at the 7:01 mark and ·the
Oaks led 2-0. After a miSSed SHS
shot, Oak Hill put the fast break in
motion and Simpson scored on
another inside feed.
After watching Southern the
night before, OH coach Doug Hale
knew Michael Evans and Mark
Allen carried the hot hand and had
to be stopped. The Oaks ran a
match-up zone around the perime·
ter to seal off Evans and. Allen,
while also'collapsing well inside on

Southern's inside game.
Southern did get its offense in
gear, however, and hit Evans on the
wing for a three pointer, then
Mason Fisher hit a free throw to tie
· the score at the 5:34 mark. · ·
The e11.citing ftrSt frame was tied
at 8·8 before SHS took a lead on
an Allen three. pointer, then off the
press, Allen grabbed a steal and hit
Fisher with a feed underneath for a
13-10 SHS lead.
Southern's momentum was
short·Iived as Simpso11 brought the
Oak Hill crowd bacJc into the game
with a break·away slam dunk. A
pivotal bloclcing call on Southern
with 41 seconds left drew some
scorn from Southern coach Howie
Caldwell and, the large following of
Southern fans!
' ·
Instead of getting the charge and
SHS holding a 13-12lead, Lewis's
driving tay·ur was good for a 1413 Oak Hit advantage. Lewis .
missed !he foul shot, but Tumver
hit the boards and laid in the Coltow-up jumper for a Il)-13 lead.
Southern tied the .score on a
Williams three-pointer with 20 secohds left The score stood 16-16 at
the quarter's end.
.
Oak Hill started the second
frame with a six point run that gave
them a 22·18 advantage. Southern
took numerous ill-advised three·
point shots, fon:ed shots inside and
had several tip-ins that ti~ out.
As iiS offense was gnnding to a
sicldy sputter,the Tornadoes finalIy pQtinabucketatthe5:12marlc·,
its ftrSt of the frame. Oak Hill gave
several of iiS staners some rest in
the frame, but still managed to pull
to a 30-23 lead at the half, compliments of late quarter goals by
Lewis and Blackmon.
Southern shot 9-30 from the
field in the ftrSt half and Oak Hill
was 14·29, hitting mostly lay·ups
and shon inside jumpers.
Beginning the third frame, Oak
Hill rattled off a 15-6 run that

pushed the score to 45-29. Prior to
that, however, SHS had a basket.
nullified on an offensive goal tend· '
ing call- That woald have made th&lt;;
score 32-27. ·
· ·
Southern's game plan to wear•
down the opponent fell short to
Oak Hill's physical beating on the
boards and the Oaks ' body· ult
defense. Aftet a late period technical on a SHS plsyer, .Soutllem rari '
ofh 11.4 string that cut the l~d 10 '
49-40.
'
• .
Cleland, Grueser, Reiber and
Williams did a good job on the
press and kept· SHS in the hunt.'
Reiber and Singleton hit inside''
buckets to pull SHS to 51.44 in the
fourth quarter, but then Oak Hill
had a string of 8-0 to ~ the game;'
alid coast to the 64-53 rmate.'
'
Southern hit 21-64 overall for
33 percent and 7-15 at the line;
while Oak Hill hit 27 of 57 for 48
percent and 10· 14 at the line.
:
Southern was outreboundCd 39-;'
25. Singleton led Southern with
nine and Evans had five. SHS had
15 fouls and OH 18.
.'
Southern hosts Eastern on Tues- '
day, Jan. 5 ·in Racine.

SOUTHERN
(16-7·13-17=53)
.,
Mark Allen 0·1·0=3, Ryan
Williams 4-1-0=11, Michael Evans':'
0·2-0=6, Andy Grueser 1·0-2=4,
Trenton Cleland 2-0-1•5, Reben '
Reiber 1-0-0=2, Mason Fisher 1-0-·,
1.,3, Jamey Smith 0-0-3.,3, Russell
Singleton 7·0·0= 14, Tucker '
Williams 1·0·0=2. TOTALS17·4·7=53
OAKHR.L
(16-14-19·15=64)
Mike Turner 3-0·0=6, Josh
. Donley 2-0-().&gt;4, Wes McCorlde 00-1=1, Benji Lewis 3-0-3=9, Brian
Blackmon 9·0·6=24, Chris Simpson 10-0·0=20. TOTALS- 27·0·
10=64

''

New York Giants tire Handley .as head coach
By TOM CANAVAN
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(AP) - The man who succeeds
Ray Handley as coach of the New
York GianiS is going to have something that his predecessor never
had: a honeymoon .
Handley never had a grace period after taking over when Bill Par·
cells resigned following the Super
Bowl vict&lt;Xy over the Buffalo Bills
in 1991. He inherited an .aging

team and everyone e11.pected him to
continue to get the Giants to the
playoffs.
It never happened. The team
went 8-8 in his first year and

,,

slipped to 6-10 this past season, a
tumultuous year marked by incon- •
sisteney, fan dissatisfaction and •
bickering between players and .
coaches.
1i

head coach
involved in training racehorses

. · GROVE CITY, Ohio (AP) life in the big city."
Ryan has exchanged life in the
Fonner ·
Ipbia Eagles coach
Buddy RYIJI, wbo's been involved spotlight for life in Lawrenceburg,
in hone 11e • 1 for 2$ years, says Ky., where he has a 176-acre farm
and about 42 hooes.
ttaininl
11 just what
He said he has owned lhoroughhe WilliS 10 be
at dliJ Slage of
breds for 25 years and took out his
1\is life.
..
"I was pt.naing on retumg at trainer's license three months,ago.
'Tve had a lot of trainers in the
!1!1 IIIII bliDing bones," Ryan said
ea11er this month ll Beulah Park in past, some good, some bad," he
suburt.l' Columbus, where he had said. "I feel I'm as qualified as
they are."
IWO hones J'llllllins.
Ryan wa1 fired in February
Ryan said racing gave him
1991 by die l!8llet .rw coaching anOlher area in which to compete
them to the NFL playoffs for a after his days with die E~~~es.
third coaliOCutive season end to a
, "I'm not a guy to si~ around and
43· 3!1-1 record· in his five years play golf," he said."lf 11 wasn't for
horse racing, I would probably
with the ICIID.
"I was disappoiilred," he said miss football. But I haven't
of die flrin&amp;. "You draft 'em, you because I've had this."
, ~ach 'em how ·to play and don '1
Both sports offer similar
get to reap the benefits. But lhal's rewards.
"(!

1991.
" Tbis year, I ntally didR't tbint
lbout it; all die J11Y1 wmtlll 1t111ke
it, bat u well•I p1aJed lilt yeao,
it
disappoindJis. 10 I tbougbc,
why pu1 youne1f in tbll pooitioa 10
10 tlirough it qain?" Marshall
aid. "I've proved tbll "wei, oo 11111111r wbll 1 ~~';;:

w•

"""""ft•

who Rlplaced pea:nnial AU-Pro Joe
Montana u qliiWitlblck for die San
Francisco 49as, received 78 votes.
Sbatpe, the ace receiver of the
G111CD Bay Pldrn who set an NFL
mat with 108 receptions this year.
Joining Shalpe at receiver was
Jerry Rice, Young' s pass-catch
(lii1Der in San Fl'liiiCisco who made
the team for the sillth time.
One other 49er; tactle Harris
Barton, made the AU-Pro squad.
Also 011 offense were Cowboys
running back Emmitt Smilh; Steelen running back Barry Foster;
Cowboys tight end Jay Novacek;
Oilers center Bruce Matthews;
Vitings guard Randall McDaniel;
Dolphins tackle Richmond Webb;
Raiders guard Steve Wisniewslci;
Dolphins placelcicker Pete Stoy·

anovK:h; md Fall:oiQI kil:t Rl1lml7
Deion Sanckn.
Founcca playeq from the NR:
•nd 12
tfle AFC m.se the
squad. Only Witniewlki repellled

froaa

from the 1991 offensive team .
Defensive ..,...,., wac Swillq,
Sim-llld Atwller.
Joiniaa the 49ers witb three
players 011 the All·Pro team We!C
Hoo!ston and MinnesoiL
The second team offense featured a tie • quarterback between
Iluffalo's Jim Kelly and Philadelphia ~ s Randall .Cunningham, each
with one vote. Joining them were
running backs Thurman Thomas,
Buffalo, and B':f!r Sanders ,
Detroit; receivers Michael Irvin ,
Dallas, and AQdre Rison, Atlanta;
tight end Keith Jackson, Miami;

By RICK WARNER
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Knowing he wasn't going to play
in the 1990 Sugar Bowl, Miaini
redshirt Kevin Patrick panied on
Bouibon Street the nigll bef~n the
game. The next night, he paid the
price in the Supenkime.
"It was so loud, it was unRal,''
said Pcick, oow a junior defensive
end for die Hurricanes. "I was sitting on .the sideline and I ldnd of ·
had a headache. 'The ooise kept getting louder and my head was
pounding. I just wanted to get up
and leave."
Miami beat Alabama 33·25 that
nighr to win the national champioftship. On Friday, the top-ranked
HIIITicanes will try 10 duplicate me
feat against die No. 2 Crimson Tide
before another eat"-splitting capaci·
ty crowd of rn ,OOO:plus in the
t'

'

By RUSTY MILLER·
; ·ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Tim
Walton says he has something to
(irove to his native state when the
Ohio State defensive back takes the
field Friday in the Florida Citrus
Bowl,
Walton will start at cornedlact
agaimt Georgia, the only native of
that state OD ibe Buckeye JOSI«,
"It's a lot more 5pecilll to play
GeorJia because I'm from there
and they didJI't recruit me. I guess
they feh.l !lOIJldn't play there, bul
now I get a clumce to show them I
can,·· ·he said.
A stlllldonl quarterback-defensive bilck in high school in Columbus, Ga., he was ignored undl the '
rUlal ~ys of die recruiting season.
Dogged by Ohio State for more
than a year, he returned die loyally
by signing with the Btdtcyes.
"Once the schools in die SOUib
didn't recruit me 11 the beginning, I
.stuck with the schools that had
recruited me all die way dnough,"
said the 6-foot, 170-pound senior
swter at cornaback. ·'Most of the
Southe&amp;$tem Conference schools
came in in the last two or three
days of recruiting. I felt then that if
I attended the school, I would have
been a .second-hand player and a
second'hancl choiee.''

By RUSTY MILLER
ORLANOO, Fla. (AP) - That
.6·foot·6, 275-pi&gt;und hulk startin,r
at defensive tackle for Georgia·Fri"
day in the Florida Citrus Bowl
hem liaie leaielnblanCe physically
or emOtionally 10 the g11y no one
wanted fdia' years.ago.
Now he will get a shot 81 Ohio
State, which twice spumed him. He
Will be tile olily ~yer on the Gcor·
gia roster who 11 from Ohio when
the Bulldogs IIIII Buckeyes clash in
the Cittus Bowl.
"I never thought we'd f.lay
them," said Tom Wallace. • And
here we ar~Iaying them at a
m · bowl
."
.
.~allace ad a lot of things

TAJU ( order ot fillldl) Bac;teu's R fing (6), Spores !:
~idf (6), '11 Ord Golf !: Trophies
. (6), Rutland American Legion (2),
Banks Construction (2), Tony's
Carry Out (2).
Hl&amp;ll aeries - Bub Stivers
(SS4) and Belly Smith (503)
Semnd-lllgbetlt !lel'la - Larry
Dupn (501) and Shirley Simmons
(462)

.

Hl&amp;ll &amp;ame -

Bub Stivers
.
Sec:ond-111&amp;11 1aae - Jimmy
Hawley (187) and Betty Smith
(176)
.
Team !lel'la - Teaford Golf cl
Tltlllllial (1797)
,
• tea•
Tony's Carry 1
(199)and~Canon(201)

Out((ol\7)

(

''

•••e-

~~~"*~=.::·:
center Mart SJepaoski, Dallu ~ ·

~erdk ' " MDI1IIII ANieiiiCII, New ~
deans; and kick returner Mel ,
Gray, Dc:troiL
'
On defenoe, it - ends Regie :
Whi~. Plliladelpbia, and Bruce :
Smith, Ba6!n; tackle Pien:e Holt, •
San Franciaco; tackle Greg :
,...__ l&gt;eiM:r: ootside lineb.:k· •
ers Rickey Jiebon, New Orleans, .•
and Seth 1oyner, Philadelphia; :

--·---·

.

inside linebtlckel3 Sam Mills, New •
Orleans, and Chris Spielman, !
Detroit; comc:rbacb Gill Byrd. San :
Diego, and DeioD Sandt'ls, Atlanta; •
safeties Tim McDonald. Phoenix, :
and Louis Oliver, Miami; and •
punter - Rohn Slld:, Indianapolis. :
•

So Walton found himself in
Columbus. Ohio. instead of Colum·
bus,Ga

The irony is that the .Georgia
•ssismiJl coach who passed him by
is now the Buckeyes' offensive
eootdina~, Joe HoUjs.
"We've kidded each other
about it." said Hollis, who came 10
Ohio State two years ago. "Hey,
this recruiting is not a fine science.
I'm sun: glad we've got Tim Wal·
tort''

Hollis said that Walto!J WliS
overlooked because he was men·
tioncd 100 far down on the Geolgia
recruiting list.
"At that time, we just needed a
couple of defensive backs," he
said, "And the defensive-backs
coach had him rated lower than the
fli'St oouple of guys who had commiueclto us. It WISII'I anything. He
was a .good athlete. He was talented."
Georgia head coach Ray Goff
said die mistake wu made during
the transition period when he took
over for Vince Dooley four years
ago.
"BasiCiilly, he kind of got lost
in the shuffle," said Goff. "When I
got !he job, coach Dooley had just
left. Recruiting kind of went by the
wayside there for three or four

going ag~ him after his senior
y- ·at Madison
School, 40
e Erie coast
miles alons the
from ,Cleveland. He was "only" 6e
foot•2 and 250 pounds, hardly
imposin~ in die world of ro¥x"
· college, ~1 .
He didn't play for a glamorous
prep program, and he also had ·
grade problems. He received a letter from Ohio State, nothing more.
"No big deal,'' he 111)'1 DOW.
That had 10 hun, since he had
grown up loving the Scarlet and

r!e'

Gray.
"That was my team, my
favorite team through childhood, •'
hesays.
·
Urged on by the will of his
father. Jim, a welder in a factory,
Wallace entolled at Alan' Hancock
Junior~ in California. After
two successful/ears there, his
thoughts turne to Ohio State
again.
.
"I called them becanoe I reallv
wanted to go there,'' he says. .,..1
talked 10 coach (Jim) ColleiiD, who
was thele at the time. He kind or
tried to ptDIIlde me 10 play oft'en·
sive line. IIDid him I didn't want to
play there. He lalkeciiO my coach·
es, they llllll him ~~MDC film. Then ·
he told me they didn't tieed any
defensive linemen, I told him I
· didn't Wllllt to play offensive line.
1bat-that." . . .
.Colletta is now head coach at .
Purdue.
Apin a die~ of his father,
he IIJPioecbetl GeOrgia. He verbally COtllllliaed 10 the University of
Cincinnati, dlen made his vis1t to
Athens, (la. It - a beam fit.
.
He played in all II giiiiiOll lut
SCIIIOII, but slill didn't seem 10 have
die fire.
"'The fli'St year, he had I lOUgh

"'

behind a guard on the Hurricanes'
rust play. Unable 10 hear their signals above the roar of the crowd,
the Hurricanes often had to call
timeout or go bacll; to the huddle
during a 35-7 loss that spoiled their
bid for a national championship.
The Sugar Bowl crowd was
nearly as wild in 1990, but Miami

wasn't ratded.
•
"It was pretty crazy,'' said cor- :·
nerl!ack Ryan McNeil, who made
his first college Slarl in that game.
"When you looted into the stlmils, ·
all you saw was crimson and white. :
But we didn't lq it affect us. We :
had a goal to reach and nothing ·
was going to stop us."
:

Four rematches of regular-season
bouts turn up in first-round play

Georgia's Wallace wants to make
Ohio·State pay for not picking him

Dec.23
~aiue~Early Wednesday

Securilies ofterad lhlough H. 0. Veal Investment Securi1ies, Inc. ·
433 East Las Colina&amp; 81\td., Thild Floor •Irving, Texas 75039 • (214) 556-1651

"We lite it when the fans are
against us, .. he said, "and we love
it~ when they call us llames. The
louder they boo, the better we
play."
Copeland and Miami's other
senion have played in a lot of loud,

hostile environments during their "We try to prepare for every situation.t'
c.een.
This yeat, they 'beat Penn State
Miami wasn't prepared for the
before 96,704 at State College and Superdome sound in the 1986
defeated syracuse in front of Sugar Bowl, when Tennessee 'fans
49,857 in the deafening Carrier sang their "Rocky Top" theme
Dome. Last season, they won at song all night
Florida SIBle and Arizona, two
Quanerback Vinny Testaverde
other tough sites for visiting teams. got so disoriented that he lined up
" We've been in crowds every
place we've played," coach Dennis In NFL playoffs,
Erickson said. "We know it' s
going to noisy. We just have to
deal with iL"
If the Hurricanes can't hear at
the line of scrimmage, quarterback
Gino Torretta will liSe hand signals
to communicate with his wide
By BARRY WILNER
receivers. He'll walk directly
AP Sports Writer
behind the linemen to relay inforThe
new
year brings the new
mation to them.
season
in
the
NFL - and some
"It's something we do every
familiar
malchups.
day in practice," Erickson said.
The playoffs begin this weekend
with four rematches, starting' in
Minnesota, where the strul!gling
defending champion Washmgton
Redslcins play the Vilcings. Wash·
ington won 15-13 at the
Metrodome on Oct. 25, but the
weeks. Some of the coaches kept Skins lost three of their last four
recruiting and others looked for and backed in to the postseason
when Minnesota beat Green Bay.
other jobs."
' !People will rate us the big
Walton said there were two or
three defensive backs prefern:d by underdog, I think. We've just lost
our last two 1111d we've got a lot of
Georgia.
"Then they decided not to go to guys hun," coach Joe Gibbs said.
" I' m fired up about getting in.
Georgia, so that left me and they
We've
a shot, and that's what
offered me a scbolanhip two days you plsygot
for."
bef!xe the · · date,' he said.
Georgi:~~t even want him
immediately. He was told he could . The other NFC game has
spend two years at a junior college Philadelphia at New Orleans. The
Eagles, undefeated at home this
011 the promiJe that he would get a .
season,
·won the opener at the Vet
scholanhip at Georgia to play his
against
the Saints, also 15· 13.
fUlaltwo seMORS.
"It
does~'t matter where we
He dido 't ~any attention at all
play or who re play,'' coach Dick
because of his size - until SEC Kothe
said. ' The best thing to do
and Georgia recruiters saw who is realize
atmosphere and do
else was pursuing him. Walton's somethingth about
it. .You can
list of possible schools included
change
the
abliOSphere
of loy sta·
Michigan: Syracuse, Ohio State dium by having some success."
and Indiana.
AFC, Houston visits BufHe chose Ohio State and was faloIn011theSunday
after Oilers poundredshirted his ~ year. He's been ed the Bills 27-3 Sunday nighL The
a key performer ever since.
He started eight games this sea- two-time defending conference
son for the Buckeyes, intercepting champion Bills have been ravaged
by inJury, with Jim Kelly suffering
two passes with 51 tacldes and four
a
knee ligament at Hous·
passes brolcen ~· He missed three ton~prained
and
Cornelius
Bennett missing
games because of a concussion and the game altogether.
Bruce Smith,
separated shoulder;
Thurman
Thomas,
Darryl
Talley
Bill. now he's back and he wants
and
Don
Beebe
also
are
not
to show the Bulldogs he belongs.
healthy.

l;JSU's Walton-looking to showcase
his talent v~. Georgia in Citrus Bowl

~.

KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
Registered Representative
(614) 992-7270 or (614)667·6011

canes.

•

These are the resulcs of recent
action at the Pomeroy Bowliqg

H. D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES

S)jpanlonie.
Once again, about 75 pen:ent of
the fans will be screaming for
Alabama. Jt's only a five-hour
drive from Tuscaloosl to New
Orleans, and Tide rooters are
among the most faithful in college
football.
' 'It will be lib a home game for
us," Alabama nose tackle James
Gregory said. "Hopefully, our fans
will give us a bii lift."
Miami receiver Horace
Copeland says the pro-Alabam a
crowd will actually help the Hurri-

.

~BLresults

We can help find
the investment that's
. right for you
INCOME FREE
from Federal Tax, and
in some cases INCOME
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tackles Steve Wallace, S. francis..
and Plul Gruber, Tam.. Bay;.

QO,

looking to duplicate 1990 win in Friday's edition

~
~

I

E~-Philadelphia

The Dally Sentinel Page 5

In thre Sugar Bowl vs. No.2 Alabanuz,

Quin e)' (Ill.) Noue Dame 6S , Col.
·~44
Richlond l7, Cuylboll F.U. 41
lliclunond Dole SB Sl, lAoin Elm lO
Ripley 59, Eutcm s.. wn 31
Roc:l:y Ri... 1l. Amhont 41
Sondulky l'&lt;4inl 84, Milan Edi&lt;"' 61
SIIICI.Uy St. Moorys 80, Ook Ham"'

Geara• M»on 63,\.oyok, Md. 55

NFL first-round
playoiT schedule

~ .............. .14
Jadiona ....... ..........l3
...... ..................12
Mll-.............11

-...-J,E. 62,Minfool57
Pt-.ie Shawnee 64, Twin V.U.y S. 59

c-"""'~~~~'
Bolio SL 1l,
s. tlwi 69
Third placa

RICO!'""
Yolo. A'l· LG TD

'Pio;,or
No.
Shupo.G.B ...... IOI
l\iooo,AIL .......... 93
Rico, S.F............. 84
Imn, D11............18
,.......,AIL .....11

N......n11, CUt. Woodwon!6!1
au llill64, Rl&lt;:inc S011tltont S3
Omne• 01r. 6!1, C!~ lito, Luthenn.H.
61
.
l'odlla74, Watcm Lltltlm 67
PikCICia 51, &amp;avwEataa 41
-Ciiol-73,~40

Tournaments

PloJW
AIL Ydo. A'I· LG TD
H. Smith, lloL.373 1113 4.6 68 II
B. Sudcn. Dc&lt;. l12 13l2 4.3 lS 9
Alloo,Joift. ..... .266 1201 4.5 Sl 13
Cobb, T.B ........ .310 1171 3.8 2:5 9

llunpton, NYG2:57 1141

VIII. 31

A - ' • Hollda7.Ciullc

u

49

M.ulllloal3,-JodtJooSI
,.._75, Lol7. Fla. 73
Midoult76, Puma NctiiDIII4yA9
N. dimotod 60, Flitviow Pult l2
N.lll4poillo-!6. Blyril W. 44
N. Royolloo II , Modina lli&amp;hland 6l
New Philadelphia ·77, ~ ICiriWII

68

C\leD the Pro Bowl in

Tile inside linebackers are
I unior Seau of San Diego and AI
Smith of Houston.
I..eadiq all defensive vote·gettera wu Seattle tackle Cortez
Kennedy with 71 votes. That far
ouldiatanced Seau. die 11111RCl-up in
total ¥Ole$ with S8.
Abo l!llking the All·Pro .team
thefield,iaJ*lofthepme."
011 defense Eagles end Oyde
Swilling and Marshall each Simmons; Vitinp end OlriJ Dole........
drew 34 OUl d. 80 VOiel. They beat . man; Oilr:n tactic Ray Cbilchu;
"It's something you look for- lltll such Slln as Sed! Joyner, Rick· Sleeiers COIIICitack Rod Woodlon;
ward to .ot1 a ...--_.........., level," ..,...
-•• ey I ackson , Deni-o.
- T'1m . Vikings cornerback· Audray
"" onumas,
Swilling, the NFL Defensive Play· Harris, Bry•n Cox and Simon McMillian; Bills safety Henry
er of lhe Y- last swon who had · Flc:tcher.
·
Jones; Broncos safety Steve Atwa·
anotber.ICI!ific year in '92. "It' s
"There we !10 many great play· ter;. and Cardinals punter Rich
very satisfying."
ers in dlilleague 8nd a lot of them Camarillo.
MarabaJI wasn't getting bis are at linebaCker,'' Swilling said.
Steve Young and Sterling
hopes up for postseason honors "So being selected is something to Sharpe got the most votes for the
after failing to make All-Pro or be proud of."
team, lllliiOUIICed Monday. Young,

-y

M• I
92,llortoo ll
Motion Calb. 59, CoL

Far West

Jolllnoi, Hcu.......90 913 10.1
Doncon, Hcu...... 8l 9S4 11.6
!WmaJ, sn....... 79 914 11.6
Willioml. Soo.....74 S56 1.5
lolillot, SD ..........n 1060 l&lt;l 7

:
ly BAIUtY WILNER
~ NEW YORK (AP) - What's
the deepe• positioo in the NFL?
Try onllide lineblc:lror. where the
best ad I le 1 play - and where j •
about eo;ay team 1111 one.
'The two'- ia 1992, u oelected by I natimnridc .-cl of media
members, ~ SYiillinl of lite
New Orleans Saioll and Wilber
~of the Wllhington Red-

Laoilvilla Tliaily 73, M..,lleld St.

Xavier, QUo II, Wicbila St. S4

115 2213 13 9
Kall,, &amp;f. ....... A62 269 lol'l7 23 19
H... :..227 1~91710 ' 9 II

O' llomoii. Pi1L 31l

-.o., PilL .......390

-66

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Swilling, Marshall considered World Almanac's best

Page 4

a.Y.taad SLn, Sl.l'nol:il. Po. 6l

,

At o•tJ/fk lbtebtlchr,

The .Daily Sentinel
Thuradey, December31, 1992

NFL final leaders

1lu'adaJr, December 31, 1982

adjustment,'' said Georgia head
coach Ray Goff. "He came in
straight out of junior coUege and
had no spring practice, nothing
with us. Then he came in in the fall
and he had 10 play for us and really
wasn't ready 10 play."
·
He finished with 39 tackles and
one sack. But then his play off the
field was chanl!ed bv a couole of
major events off iL
"He got married over the sum·
mer and that's probably the best
thing that's happened to Tom,''
Goff said. "He lcind of got his priorities focused about what he wanted out of college, He's done
elttremely well academically since
he got married and 11M really been
a good player for us."
His tackle stats doubled to 78
and he had four sacks and two fum.
ble recoveries. Now 6-6 and 280
pounds, the senior is one of the
more imposing players on a
defense

AFC East champion Miami and
AFC Central winner Pittsburgh
have byes, with the Sleelers holding the overall conference homefield edge. San Francisco has that
in the NFC and, like Dallas, is idle
this week.
"It feels pretty good," Dolphins
tackle Jeff Dellenbach said. "Hav·
ing a week off is going to do the
team a lot of good. At this point
everybody has a lot of bumps and
bruises. This will give everybody a
chance to heal up."
Redskins at Vikings
In their first meeting, Chip
Lohmiller, who went to the Univer-

sity of Minnesota, lcicked a 49·yard
field goal with 1:09 remaining to
beat die Vilcings. Washington held
MinneiJOIIID 218 yards on offense,
with l,(XXJ-yanl rusher Terry Allen
getting only 51.
But the Skins flgiii'C 10 be undermanned. Receiver Desmond
Howard ~ his Jell shoulder
and is out for the seaut. Comei'back Danell Green has a bruised
heel, running bact Earnest Byner a
sprained back, tight end Teny Orr
a knee problem, receiver Art Monk
a strained back, and Ricky SIJI(Iers,
who sprained an .ute fast week,
did not play in the finale.
Ea&amp;Jes It Salats
Herschef Walker ran for 114
yards and scored once. while Ran·
daD Cunningham hit 18 d. 25 passes in the season-opener. New
Orleans, which did manage six
sacks, had only eight r~n~ downs.
"They did a good job with us
the fii'SI. time, bllt we'll be at home

and we've been playing pretty :.
well,'' Saints linebacker Rickey I•
Jackson said, "We're goiag into :
the playoffs with a positive atti- :
tude.· ·
Oilen Ill Billl
Houston made the postseuon .
for the sixth straight year with ics :
overwhelming victory on Sunday •.
night. Conditions will be VIStly dif- ',
ferent in Buffalo, of course, but .
these Oilers have slxJwn mD1iclu ;
and played well on the road.
·
Bestdes, the Bills could be i
severely handicapped by injuries. :'
And the Oilm' defense is danger- .

ous.

'

:

Chiefs at Charlft'S
Kansas City ll'oke out of a minislump by rouung Denver to get into
the playoffs. Now, the Chiefs face
the league's hottest team. But San
Diego might not have qllllrtelback
Stan Humphries, who separated his
left shoulder in a closing win over
Seanle.

'
:
·

·

:

Children draw

what they see,

and what they see

is a crime.

GRAVeLY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor st.

Pa!Mroy, OH.

. . . . . . . . . . . . .-!!! .
CLOSED IIONOAY
OPEN T\EIIDAY 11tAU·FRIDAY
IAII-6PII
SAT. 1AIIe12 Noon
I

.' ·

.•

'•,

,,, TOGITHII AEROBICS
AGIEAT WAY 10 STAIIIHE lEW YEll!
lEW SESSIONS IEGIIIIIG JAil. 4•••
-MON. &amp; WED. 10..11 AM

•TUE. &amp; THUR. 5:30-6:30
at Big Bend Health • Fitness

•TUE. &amp; THl:JR. 7-8 PM
at Middleport Ch11rch of Christ

CALL 992·6193
FOR REGISTRAllON OR INFO
JEANNIE OWEN·
Certified lnatructor

Help redraw their wOOd.
Call and get free intormatioo
on how to protect yry: children
from drugs and lliolence
in 'PI neiglilorhood.
Calloo!IOIHIE JIRE'aT

.,

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Paaa &amp; The Dally sentinel

'

•

Thu~.~ber31,1992

Thursday, December 31, 1892

The Dally Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Listed on· These Pages Are·Gifts Offered By Lotal Mertltants Fltat

. . Go To Tlte first Baby of 1~93 Born of Meigs County Parents.
Born
After
Midnight,
Detember
31,
J992,
Are
Parents of Children
Asked To Send Their Name, Address and Dottor's Report To The .
Daily Sentinel By No later Titan 12:00 Noon on January J5, 1-993.
.

FIRST BABY OF 1993 RULES
1. Winning baby must be born to parents who are legal residents of
Meigs County.
2. All such babies are eligible.
3. Exact time of birth must be specified in written statement by
· attending physician.
4. Application must be filed in the office by noon, January 15, 1993.
5. In case of tie, award will be distributed at the discretion of the
contest committee.
.
6. Prizes must be claimed by January 31, 1993.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
·STORE

The Shoe Place To The First
Arrival
of
.
In Middle.port 1993 $5.00
Will Give The
Gift
First Baby of Certific.ate
1993 A
and
$15 GIFT
· CERTIFICATE

•

~

,.

I"

10% Off 0~ All

Prescriptions Until The
Age of 6 Years. .

.WE WILL HELP THE BABY lOOK
· TOWARD THE FUTURE WITH A
$1 0.00 SAVINGS ACCOUNT. .

;j

•
•

fTft.t•

.

.'

SHOE I,LAtE

Prescription Shop
992·6669
253 Mort. Stcod

::

t@t

:
992"6661· . .

97 NORTH .

MIDDLEPO,RT,

~:

1

~·. 9=92=·5=627====M=I==OH=IO==M=illd=l•=por=t,O=hi=o====:!::=SEC:ON=D====F=DIC===~;; .
•

~.•• OUR

GIFT
~ TO THE
fiRST BABY
.,~ OF 1993
•

•

$10.00 GIFT

,
~

~

'

CERTIFICATE

. ~ SWISHER·LOHSE
..
PHARMACY
!
992·2955
•

•

.'

· To The Parents
Of The 1st
.

.

A

''
'

•'

...'
.•

'•
•
•

•
•

\

. I

We Will Chte To
The First Bahy
of The ·Year•••

-..
..

. . BABY OF
1993

'

OWE LL'S

A s10
SAVINGS
AC(OUNT

POMEROY, OHIO

THE FIRST

s20 Gift
Certificate
.

.....

-

'

Baby
Of
1993
,
.
.
.

' '.
•

~:=11=2=EIS=TU=I=N====P=OM=ER=ft=,O=HIO========~~======~l=OO=EU=T=U=IN=·=====H=M=ERO=t=O~ ~

.

GlOW'S
FAMILY BES...AURANf .

POMEROY, OHIO

.'

992·5177

,

.

FABRIC SHOP

992·2054
.
.
Joe aid Susa• Clark.

...

\·

.

TO THE PARENTS OF
·.THE FIRST BABY OF 1'993 .'. .

FROM THE

POMEROY, OHIO

•'

OUR GIFT TO FIRST ·
· BORN OF 1993 A
·"Baby Arrang·ement"
$1 0.00 GIFT . . ..
Compliments of
CERTIF.ICATE
:
POMEROY .
·BUTTONS and BOWS .~

FLOWER SHOP

A $5.00 .
GIFT CERTIFICATE

113 COURT ST.

'.'

RECEIVE A .
FRESH CUT

.

FREE MEAL

;:

1993 WILL

:·

,

'*

~

~

WILL GIVE A :.·. :. . · . . .

..

THE FIRST
BABY OF

•

FAMILY
RESTAURANT ·..fll.~'"·

STOP IN FOR YOUR NEW
BABY CUP

•

'•

CROW'S

Congratulations
To The First
Bahy ·.
of t99JI

:1

..
..

298 SECOND
STREET
POMEROY

.
•.'

WILL
RECEIVE
. A $20 GIFT.
CERTIFICATE
FROM

..
..

...
..
..

•••

.

FRUTH PHARMACY
992·6491
.
786 North Second
Middleport, OhiO'"' .:
•
•

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

~

Gl;: :~~HE

OUR GIFT TO
THE FIRST
NEWBORN .
OF 1993

.
Vlv70\

A BOX OF

NEWBORN ULTU ..
PAMPER DIAPERS

FIRST
~~=~~:~ · BABY OF
THE YEAR

A $10.00 GIFT
. CERTIFICATE
ON THE "Tn IN MIDDLEPORT

FOR THE
FIRST
ARRIVAL
OF 1993

:
..

.

WE WILL

...

GIVE .

ITS FIRST BIBLE.

•

MILL STREET BOOKS
Middleport

93 Mill Strut

OHIO
I

'
•

•·

'

·

992·6657

~
•

~

�p I

:0. o.uy Sentinel

I

CHURCH
Dl
.-..:.,..•.
.;;:
c.... Orolllr

~tlli

,_,., c..rdr fiCiiilll
2tiw.·MUoa.
1'1-.:AIIdoeWMiloo
s-toy SchaaJ - 9:30 .....

Hocking College De'an's list released

a&lt;CIIIIip - 10::10--.~p.m.

U ua.

"·- ~7:30p.a.

Wi I

S,t nc..rdrfi... N " - : ..... &lt;a..McMill.

Clio-

- . , Sdooal - 9:301&amp;
' . Wonbip ICI-.lOLm., 6p.m.
W 1 1 j Senk&amp; .. 7p.m.
I

Sllldoy Schaal . 9:30 .....
Wonhip-l:IS,ICI-JOUL, 7p.m.
WodoeldlyScni&lt;a - 7p.m.

Ep1scopal

lea• CIIMuduriCiorlll
Woriblp - 9:30.LnL
Suadoy Schooi - ICI-JOo.m.

..........

Sundly Schaal ·9-.Jo a.m.

Wedneldoy Srnica - 6:30p.m.

l'lllar: O..lfcwma
_ , Scboal· 9 .....
Woftllip - !Oua.

Zloe Clollrdo ofCiortll
J'omr:rot'. H~Rd. (RL14l)

f&gt;uu: lniOIUD-

~Sdraol-9 ......

....""'Clio,.._.-Clio-

ofCIII'III
: TCliDR.,yoa

Sooldor Scboal - "JJ LID.
.,......., - 10::!11 LllL, 6,....
SoniOoa - 7:30p.m.

w-,.

ofCirrltl
-.BiD.W -

Pl.....~
·~ SchaaJ- P:JS LllL

~7 Schaal - 9 lUlL
Wunbip - 9~ o.m., 6;30 p.m.

fiCirrill

I

Puiar. Quia Sicwan

Wonhip - ICI-.30 LID.
W + cloy Scnicoo - 7 p.m.

-·

Latter-Day

.._Clio-

•

ofCiortll
. Pamr. Euame E. Underwood

b

t

Sa·r·.ts

Wonilip - ICI-.lOo.m.. 7pA

-~
ofCiorllt
Miller St., MoJoa, W.VL

s.m.r School - 10 a.m.

t w

:•,

I

IMoiot - 6:30 p.m.
!cniozs 6:30p.m.

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

_,

o

1'11-. : ..... liod .....
s..laJSdoaoi-111-JOL&amp;
Wonllip - 9:30 ua.
,..,..,. --7:30p.m.

.•

i

s.-~ ofCIIrllt
r.-:J~B. Hookins

. - 7 Schaal - 10 LUI.
l!wloioi&amp; - 1:311 p.m.
• . ,..,.1omoei -7;30

LIIMi1J Cloo lorllw Clourdi

'l ..._.,..Clio_
SLIL14ljaoa . . IL 7
' , _ , .... R. Aaoo, Sr.
I
~Sdooai- IOLIIL
Wanlip-l1~6p.m.

'I

'

Wllnllip- 10:30 o.m.. ':30 p.m.
Wodoesdoy Senice 7;30 p.m.

..

..:-::

IOua.
. Waallip- II LllL, 6 p.m.
W-..toy Scni&lt;a -7 p.m.

1

'

;•
I
''

t.liddtq&gt;Oil

w..-,-

p.""~~

.-

.......

MLMorlloloCio-fiGM

-..
J_s.

6old
S...tar SdoooJ - 9:45 .....
7 ,....

Putor. .....

. .r. . -

w.. ~ - 7p.no.

I)

Rolla..

A-.• .P

0). 992-SI91

' r-:a...W-B.IIcin&amp;

S&amp; 0.. 4:45-S:JSp.a; MMo- S;30 p..m.

: s.. 0.. A:45-9:t5a...,,
S.. MiM ·,..:!II LDI.

!

Clio-

rl OM

p_, lat. F. eo.-...
~ Scboal - 10 LID.
Wonloip -11 a.m., 7 p.oo.
WednetdOy Sonia. - 7 p.m.

I Clioodo

s,_ a...a fiGM

lloiloJ .... - 1:30 .....

Apple . . SocloM Sil.

• era-a

.... Tn.l!lay

Cllrltllw F-lli!p C..ler
Solem S.., Rudiond

PUtor.RcbeiiE.Mower
'S ...,Scboai - IOLnL
Wonliip ·li :IS Lm, 7 p.m.
Wvlr day Seniae • 7 p.-.

1

C

•

Ceoltlla~

W~ - 9LIL
r-ctoy Sot- -1 p..m.

llollloiCioorn:lo

.........

~JW.,4611C

s..doy So:loaol- 9 .....

Wortllip- 10 L1L
W I I V Siroloa - I~ L1L
B1 5I L lc..rdr

Suaday Sc:haol - 9:30 lUlL
Wantip- IO::!IILOL
Wodladay Seiviaoo • 7;30 p.m.
I

a

Moia a:iHNo SL
s-twSchaaJ - 10&amp;&amp;

.

.a -. . .

·s.dorldrrtol-lD .....

, •

WI

r.-:a..s.w..JcJ..._
........ . 9::JCJ .....
I• a: 3nl S.O.S. • 7;30 p.m.
s...dar Sc:haol - 10:30 ......
Wednolday Sw wiaoo - 7:30 p.liL .

s...r.,

Jo. l/dot MoiJr
Plrllll
. ,._, -ltliao
.

Wanbip- 9;30 Lr1L
_ , Scllaol - 10:30 .....
Wedneaclay Sw•i&lt;&gt;eo - 7:30p.m.

.

M-a..Cio.r..
Suot.: Mikeodooai-IOLIL
Wonhip • II o..._, 1 p.oo.
Worfneodar Senice -7 p.m.

soma.

&lt;&gt;a

......... JILIL
•dTSom-·lp.liL

I

S..RL 12A, Raciw

"""""' Williario Hcilad:
SUIIdaf
Scloaal - I 0 LllL

Jmmq - 7p.m.
Wedoolday Semi:a - 7 p.m.

',,.,
~

,

Fllllli~Ciollrdo

Sunday~JJoacwn
- 9;30 LID.
Wonhip - 10:45 o..m.,7:30 p.m.
Walnaday 7;30 pA

•
I
•,,
,I

J'

Presbytel&lt;an
....._.......p:kaOI.-dl

Mlddlot*t

RLi.•l"
Oj~':
,._,...,_.....,&amp;,
·
s.k)'

School- 9:31! .....
Wonllip - 10:30....., 1 p.m.
w' , ., s.m.o ·'1 p.m.

'

K&amp;C JEWELERS

!

Mill Work
l '.'t.• '~ t;;, .-.
~ '·· .\ I
I Cabinet Makin~
'
Syracuse
992-3978

.

212 E. lila in Street
992-3785. Pomeroy

H--

,....,_tu

I

_ , Sc:haol - 10 LID.
.
Wonhip - 'II ...... 4 p.m. (I• a: 3nl Sun.)

•',,
'
""

Seve nth-Day Ad ventis t
'
I

.,'

'

lo -

l i I ..

. ''' ... ' .
'

"

Un1tCd BretrtC&lt;l
. . . .. . . .

'I

i

T
:"

Ia Clorlril Clo.do
T-c
., . .

caa

, _ , - - Satllloll
- s...,
Sdooal - 9::JCJ ......
Wanllip - I0;30a.m., 7;30p.m.
WedaoldayS..--7;30p.&lt;A.

1
'.••
~

IIEHiS. TUIE 8ropn-Wamer
. \ ' CENTER, INC. INSURANCE --=--i ( .1.¥ Wfullz ·, : SERVICES
~

l
S,rw !Booli,

11

l

MIJ1181111'

Ph. IIN'I01

204 .Condor St.

· . . Memorial Ho.-ital
115 1. .,_.iorl !If.

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ot Columbul, 0 .

Midciii'Oft. Ohio 46 710
ltZ-1117 -

992-2975

...W. M11n
HUJII Pomero•

I

·\.._=:;/ Veterans

912·5130 Po_.,

P-ey, 011.

992-5432

_(M;\

·Zl4 E. ltli~

IJM•ser...

•'

I
I

Crow's Family Restaurant

Mi ••,,..,

0

.,,_,,0.

'

Pomirtr

t ·tn .....

.,.•.....,.,.,
S.C...

:
•
••
••
••

.SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARIUCY
•f;i
_
W~r F1U Oocton' ru

Ii

"f'fl•\cr,phon\

nl ltSS

Pomrrov

EWING FUNEIAL HOME

. "Dilfnit~· ond S..nir~• Alu·•.v• ·

Established 1913

H2·2121

-

1-5 p.m .
Handmade Gil\o For

446-GallipoUo
367- Cheahtre
388-Viaton
245-Rio Grande
256--Guyaa Dlol.

645-Arahla Dlol.
379aWal...&lt;

992-Mi~dlepor&lt;l

675-Pl. 1'1......

PomeroJ
9115-Che.ier

4SIJ.Looa

843-Portlood
247-l..:&lt;art Fallo
949-Raclne
742-Roidaad
667-CoolviUe

AucUoa

•"•

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
s~s &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

11ZNarlh S.Canoi Au.

,.~
..

J

!:::::::_j__~~~~-~._~ny~A~t!L----~P:om:•:~~JL--~~~~O~N:•----~!!~ r

Bl 'LLETI\ B&lt;&gt;.\RD

992-6215

· Everyone, and Great
Gift ldeao.

Pomeroy, Ohio

BINGO

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

1

Open New Year's Eve at 6 P.M.
Open New Year's Day at 3 P.M.
Call for Reservation

992-3432

MASON BOWLING $)ENTER
Mason, West Virginia
304-773-5300 •
Open

New Year's Day 3 p.m.

0pan $411. &amp; SUn. 5 P.M. for Opon
Bowling. Open Every Evening ai Sp.m.

PRICE R DUC Dl
ond
n.pJcohuboon-IOie8,800
'
financing "' '4' ro "' .......
- - - ~ ....- '"'on....-,.na
.....In .
311..,.

•·-· . _ n1oa-

YWt
1
-oon 10 .lMiy
4BR,3-,2-.
. BR opt. P'"P""J --4,1011 ~· ft. ,.,..
bldg.

Cd 81 ...Ji92-71041or

I.

·'--......;-----:-""

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing . .

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$4 0.00 a Load
Delivered.

COMMERCIAL and JlESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949-2801 • 949-2860
or 915·3839
(No

Sullllay Crllal

(614) 992·544 9

2/12192/tfn

~~::::::::::;:::~
1~1~~"
L
~R:&amp;:C:E:I:C:I::V:AT:::I~NG:;:
.~

li2 ""

BULLDOZING

··

SIZED liMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992~
6637

s

R 7
C.e!hir~, OH. .

SMAll DOZER
WORK
DRIVEWAY WORI
and UMESTONE

stoPTl'c?:~;TEMS
LAND cLEARING .
WATER &amp; SEWER i·
LINES .

00

1

BASEMENTS

&amp;

DELIVERY SERVICE
S•all Dozer Work
$25.00 Per Hoar

l'

HAur~~~ ~~one:

IWONAILE UTES

992·7553

Olrt, Gravel and Coal •·

2

PH, 614•992·~ ~:-Jn
LICENSED .... BONDED

POMEROY; OH.

11-13-'92·1 mo.

J&amp;L INSULATION

DEER CUT

576-Apple Grove .
773-Muoa
882-New Hnea

•Vinyl Siding
•Repllircement

AND

Window

WRAPPED

•Roofing
-inauialion

MAPLEWOOD

LAKE

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or

RACINE, OH.

539 Bryaa Place

895-Letort

937- BufFalo

I

CHARLIE'S

Middleport, Ohio

949a2734

12/1/92/ifn

GARRY'S
GENERAL

742·3305
AFTER
7:00P.M.
12-17-'92·1

12·1-'92·1 mo.

Public Notice

I \li\1 '-I l'l't I I "

NOnCE OF APPOINlMENT eeaood, lata of Main SJreet,
Rulland, Ohio 45775.
OF FIDUCIARY
Robert E. Buek,
On Doc ember 11, 11192, in
Probate Judge
the Meigo County Probate
Lena K. -oelroad, Clerk
Court, C01e No. 27711,_
Connie B. Blac:k, 34711 New (12) 24, 3t; (117, 3tc

,\ 11\ 1.-.."l()(."
32-

Mo~ile

H-lor Sale

33- Farm• for Sale
34- Buai.... Boildiap

35-l.o.. II: " " 36- Real Eataio Waated

Lima Road, RL 1, Rutland,
AuiGI for Sale
Ti-uck1 for Sale

41- ~ ..... for R•t

va;..&amp;4 wn·•
Mo&amp;orcycle.
Boat~

&amp; Moton for Sale

Auto Pull

.

46-- Spaee for Heat

Auto Repair

47- Waated to Real
.48-- Equipaeat for Rat
49-For._..

Ca•pl.q Equipment

81
'

51- Ho...Ioold Good.
s2- Sr-r.ias Good.
53-- Anliq'l"'
54- Mite. MercbandUe

s:;- BulldiDJI SuppHoo

·

.•

Ohio 45775 woa appointed
Adminiotratrix ollhe •tate
of Robart B . Blaek,
decrta1ad; late ol34711 New
Lima Road, Rt 1, Rutland,
Ohio45775.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Neuelroad, Clark
112117.24,31 , 31c .

Public Notice

:-I II\ 11.1 ~

\II 1:1 II 1\111'-l

.....

82- Pluml&gt;iaJ A Hear.ias
ExcuaLias
Elociricalll: Reloriser~lioi~ ,
C...wal HauU.s
Mobile Home Repair
Upbolotery

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
on Decembar 2t, 11192, in
the Moiga County Probata
court, Caoe No. 27743,
Charlotla A. Harper, 358011
Tltua Road, Middiaport,
Ohio 45760 wao appointad
Execulor of the aotate or

Zimmerman,

de·

MICROWAVE OVEN
.and !f~~~fiiR

232 2nd St.,
Pomeroy

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992·2036

992·5335 or

Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program.
12_1 _2 mo. pd.

Public Notice
I'UBUC NOTICE
Public notice is hereby

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.

op11ate on call oftha pubtic
over Irregular routes to
from all poinla in Ohio.
inlareoted partie• may
obtain further information
by addreaoing
the Public
Ulilitiaa
Commiaaion
of
Ohio, Columbua, Ohio.
Rae•' Excavating

Raci~~~o~:5~~

.
(12) 17, 24, 31, 3tc

•LIGHT HAULING

1:00 P.M.

•FIREWOOD

OPEN TO PUBLIC

12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
121911 mo. pd.

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

th8 home is well cared lor.

$32,

·

LANGSVILLE - You'll love 10 come. homo .10 relax. in tho
counlry In thi s 2 bedroom ranch W1th equ &lt;pi'Qd k&lt;tchan,
sitting ~n 13 acres. If you enjoy hunting, this IS the place
$42,500 .
lor you.
POMEROY - Mulberry Ave. - A 1:.\ siory .hom~ w!th
new roof arid gutters, new pon:h, freshly painted 1n ~de
and ou~ ruii buement. Owner W111 take LAND
CONTRACT with $5,000 down for 7 years at 10'Yo
interosl with a monthly payment or $182 .63.
$16,000.
RACINE - A commor&lt;:iai 2 story briclc building with 4
apartmants upstairs. Has graat rental po!antial, or put
your own bcsinoss downstairs and rant the apartments
upetairs. ,Sils on throe lois.
$4Z,ooo.oomE TURNER, Brok.........................HZ.I882
BRIONI)~JEFFER8 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~•.112..JOSI
BTEWART
, ...........................- ...812-

:,'!"a

POMIIOY, OliO
. 3fl3192A1n

SUNDAYS

BULLDOZE~ 1 ~ACKHOE
and TRACIU1UE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES illld
TRAILER SITES,
· LANDCLEARING
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
UMESTONE-TRUCKifll .

. MIDDLEPORT- Homllton SL - Looking for a nice ho"':"
in town on a qukat street? This 3 bedroom home , 1'/~
sto home is just the one. It has a lol of hardwood floors,
fir;;ace , 2 full baths , 4 porches. Sits on a comer lo~

985~3561
1'T!~':.";:!-.!:

'=======~ !======~~~
SHRUB &amp; TREE
RACINE GUN
CLUB
TRIM and
GUN SHOOTS
REMOVAL

EXCAVATING

OFFICE 992·2886

BUNKER HILL - II yo~ want a large iarm with privacy. •
't . Approx 159 acres with abcul hail bilable , ills
here 11s.
·
h ·
1 nM Has a
all fenced with approx. 40 acres av1ng. new o - ·
d
pond 2·3 streams, big rad bam. eqUipment shed, an
other" outbuildings. The home has 3 bedrooms, and lroe
gasiO lioat with. May trade lor smaller home. $69,900.

irln1 It In Or We
Pick ul!-

cavatlng
hoo lilod
wilh Ex
!he- r
given that
Rooaa'
Public Utilitiea Commioolon
of Ohio an application lor •
Cartlllcala of Public Convanionce and Neceooity to

Real Estale General

Real Estate General

BULUTIN BOARD DEADLINE.
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
POMEROY BOWLING LANES
382 E. Second

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 14;1··~;

.c.

Sun.

Ca•h

UWIIIIS~OAts

992-5141

County. Meigo Counly M1110n Co., WV
Area C~e 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
Gallla

~

.,......., lniaoo -7;30~,

221 w. Mlln St., Pcllneroy

11- Help Wanted
12- Situaliou W aat.ecl
13- IDIIII'IDCe
14- Buai_. TraiaiDJI
15- Schoolo &amp; t ......clion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miocellaoeoua
18- Waated To Do

9- Waated "'Boy

Scboal- 10 IUD.
Wortllip - 7;30 p.m.

"FHHurlng K111ruclty FriedCirk:ltM"

3-- AnDGuDeemeatl
4-Ci..away
5- Happy Ada
6- Loo&lt; aad Fouad
7- Loot aad Fooind
3-- Poololi&lt;: Sale a:
·

.

- . . .. ...... Madtley

Wonlip - 10 LlL
TIIOiday s.m.. - 7:30p.m.

GET RESUI.TS • J'ASr!

I

-y

l'utor: . . _
~Scboai-9LOL

s.tlt 2M

e:~rchanges. ,

following telephone

lil.\'1 \1:-

)
,,

21/Zllliloolllllrlid.-.
oo-a-t2A

RSHEI
FUNERAl HOME

cover the

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

Mon.-Sat. 10-8 p . m .

Stone .

,,oo

42- MHlle Hom• for Rent
43-- Farm1for Real
44-- Apartment for Rent
45-- Fumilhed Roo••

ldoeUalted._.. .. ~

~ ...... St. .....

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
cbaJged for each day as separate ads.
_ _ _.__--!

Ptolli,.....

s,,_. Fl,. u.a...

. . . .. . .

Sr.

""
.''

_ , Sc:haol -9 LID.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd a: 41h Sua.)

PUtor.LawratceB....
s-ky Scboal - 9;30 ......

IWIIIIPtollli Clo.do

Monthly

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

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15
15
15
15
15

W&lt;nillp-'ua.
Stmday SchOol - 9:45 i.m.

·ML on•• c--•IIJ Clooudo

w...!..,Z,,J:"7p.a .

1
3
6
10

••

i
!lACINE PlANING MILL
,..

HOLIDAY HOURS ·

RATES
Over 15 Words ·
Words Rate

Days

"-111r

S...,~-9:3Do.m.

Wonhip -10:30LJD.,700p.IIL
'
DJ-C-•IIJCioSunday Schaal - 9;30 LiL
Wonbip • 1~.30 Llll., 7 p.m.

,..., ..... lno .Moero
. . . .s...l - 9:311".....
lf--.-7.p.m.
w , ...,
-7 p.m.

1'1-. .......... Jolouc.

Church of God

LID.

I

1

-c-•wiiJCio...,.
08"RL 12A
.
l'otlAr. 'l!dool llati

W•• d·~-7p.liL
a-.. 11111t M r dlil

,._,c ......

.......-

'l,;..m,.~7 p..m.

.,... :::: ¥

Woalip • 10::!11 LllL, 1 p.m.

Hlrlfonl Cloiordo ofCiuiot Ia
ClrrloCI.. \JoiOll
llonfonl, W.VL

w_.,
••

lfl " ,

-

Puaar. ._He m11
Wonloip - 9 o.m.
s.-, Sc:liaoJ - 10 .....
Ilwndly s....... - 1 p..m.

Sunday Scboal - II Lm.
Wonbip - 9:30~ 7:30p.m.
s.- -7:30p.m.

Sr-Miotloa
1411 Bri._SL.SyJmooe
, Putar: IIOj (Mlkc) 'l1o I e
Suaday Schaal - 10 ......

s..dir SchaaJ - 9:30 .....

i'ua:Thcn!aDwbam
S111day School - 9:30 a.m.
E...una - 1 p.m.
Wedncacloy Sen;.,.. • 7 p.m.

Puror: R.,.. Domd McManil

- . , Sdooal - 9:30 .....
· Wonbip - 10:4S o.m.
1\andoy sem- -7:30 p..m.

- a - t Col'

t..n~aur,.._v

ClrrloCi• \Jo!Oll

l'lllar: ..... Oilbon Cflia. Jr.
s..daJ School· 9:30 LDI.
10:4S Lm.

. -.
1 -

Wanhip - U

u.- Clll&lt;rdo fiCiorlll ..

I! M:~l:.
s...
Poanha: Miill

Somdot Scboal- 10 Ull.

Christian U111on

Arial un.

Sundoy Schaal - ID Lm.

:

.....

_,._a,_

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage . '

Qua

1:00 p.m. Tuesday
p.m. wednesday
lOOp.m. Thwoday
1:00p.m. Friday

C~ified page•

abe Daily.S.atia..l, re.daiDf o-.er 18,000 home~

Pe ntecostal

- . , . SdioOI- 10 Ull.
Wanloip-9UL

7:ltlp.m. Otd:4rU•)
W.,. I tSomo:e-7:JOpA

..-. w;u;.. v• .....,.

p

. ,._,._a,_

II
Wonlill- 9::!11 uri. O• a: :W S.),

614·992-2549

Prity-7~

~~~~~~

Pastor. PbiJip Slurm
Stmday SchoOC 9:30 ......
Wonbip Servia:: 10;30 Lm.
Biblo ScadJ, w~. 6;30 p.m.

~ Sdooal-

,_
Paaor :

......

&lt;t

ad--..,

......

Pootar: r
1 llabr
Suaday Sdooal- 9:45 Llll.
W..mip-10:30 ......
'Jbundoy sem... - 7:30p.m.

. _.. Clollrdo ofCiorbl

~SL.liiUoa

•

,

I

Clorlil,

~Faltlo
mile pill foft Meip oa New U.. Rd.

' Vel~~-=;..,

Sua)

......,,
hJiabr
Silldoy Scliool- 9:30 LIL
Wl11Dp-10:45LOL (1•.1: :!nl Sun)

w~ - 9:JOo.m., 1 p.m.

NlllluiiiiCioordo

'..
•

en.. Clordo

·~-- ..
~·

LIL "'-4 A 4di
-

....

Cbodca-111-.30
Domi&amp;•
Sunday.....

Wanllip - 10La., 7 p.m.
W ' 'hr Sonia:s - 7 p.m. .

l
lr

•

Btnlocl&lt;

V-~
1
w~-

GIMwt....._. .. ,

Sutdoy SchaaJ - 9:30 Lm.

~. ru~:rA::t••
-1-&amp;.'•
'

~..:tit':.lUlL

1/4

"J-

••t

....,n

=:LyScni&lt;a-7pm.
SdtooJ- 10 ...... .
W

"-:~llabr

•Cio--

r "f.
L'r· ··cJ
'l

Ji.

,_, ..... t.ld.!PlD&amp;iD

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION •
1:oo p.m. Saturday
1:OO.p.m. Monday

, · Monday Paper
Tuesday ~per
Wednesday Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Sentiaelil DOt . .,..a... for eri'Orl after tll'lt da:r (cbeelr.
, for
fint clay ad,... iD poper). Call belon 2:00p.m.
da:r after puhlicalioD. 10 ..Ue correclioa
• A.d. t._t ll'llllt be paid ia adYUce are:
Card 01 Ttoa..b
Happy Ado
Ia M...na.
Yard Sal•
.
• A cluaitoed
placad ia 1he c.tlipolio iWiy
Trillooow (acep&lt; Cluoifoed Dioplay, B•ia- Card or Lepl
Noliceo) willaloo appear In 1he P01at Plouui Repter ..d

hill IIACio500 2ooJ Avo., 'IJiddlepM

Cloorn:lo

COPY DEADLINE

• Acll outlicle the eounty your ... 1"1111
be prepaid
• Receh'o dYcout for .U paid ia adnu1ce.
• Free Ado: Ci--r a~ F.....! ado ........ IS word. will to.
run 3 dar• at • claarp.
• Price of ad for .U eapitalleru,n i1 douh)e price of ad cOil
• 7 point liDe type Oaly uod

Thundat Scnioo - 7:30 p.nl.

~Scliool-9-.:lllua.

0

s...doy~-IOo.m.

,,.., ••CWIIda•C~Mwcta

.,......,~-7p.m.

=• ...

~'~Mr. 0ocno Woidr:t

'If........,

!

.

Comer·s - a: SoooMSt.,Pr......,..,
..

E - , - 7p.m.
Servi&amp;ie - 7 p.IIL

POLICIES
Sll•a»41it Wtri fiFIIMII
. . - . Dmd 1loiley
Sunday School9;30 a.m.
B...... -7p.m.

w· •

Dar.r

'"-:Woody Coil

CLOSED SUNDAY

,_,~llabr
s-ta,Sdoooi.-!Oa.m.
Wanlip- 9 L11L
7 s.m... - 1oa.m.
,
. c:...1

Wanhip - II ua.

St.Pun •

I'Utor.RcbeiiVSuaday wonbip- 10 ......
Wednadly oem.e -6;30p.m.

....,

LIL

.

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M,a5P. M. a SAT.B-12

s••••

l'llli:ill-.cna .
So-., Sdooal- 9:30

Wonhip - IOa.m., 7p..m.
w........,
s.m- - 7 p.m.

' l h .... fiPta,..

, _ , ........ Smidi
S'"'!oJ Scliool - JO LIL
Wonllip-9LnL

GrrwCio do
Wolaoa _. Hlluy Sia., Ita
W.VL
,
C..pii~&lt;B: ......clidwiJ.I:

SoDdoy Scl.ool- 9 .....

P., leCIN Fho Wllllpdot Cllnrdo
. ~ 211i01 SL 1L 7, MioldJoport

.

Call992-2156

Waillrip - IO:JS LIIL

Wanhip-J-JOo.m.
S...,Sdooai-IO::tOIUIL

o.rs.....,.•

····-·7pa.

'-:lloaPion:e

Pi«oan...
l'oaGr: 0..0... Weilidi

,

w,

To place an ad

Sandor Scboal - 9:JS ......

St.Joliiti.C -~

llndfn Cllilldo ofCiuiot
S.. RL 12A a: Co. Rd. S
l'lllar: Denik Sanp
Suadoy SchaaJ- 9:30 .....
Wonbip - 10;30 IUD., 7:00p.m.
.,........, - - 7:30p.m.

IIJIL

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE anti.
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

. Uc. No. 0050·32

m •

..... c...

la._Div .....

TROLLEY
STATION CRAFTS

fRE tard.

New l b - Cloorn:lo ., ... Jlle Putar:
lllnal
_ , Scboai·9:3Da.m.
Wanblp- )0::10 ...._, 7 p.m.

Wunllip-10:30LllL .

Wonllip -II.LJII·•
7_7
p.m._
.,.....,.,
_

s-,. Sc:haol-9:4

w-,S..--7,....

n.n..ta, s.m... . 7,p.m.

Cloorn:lo "Je=Ciiotlt

1211411 mo. pel.

Special Errly llrd
$1000 Payoff
This rdlood for 1

&lt;• Burl..,_ . . . . . . ._33)

s...loto SchaaJ- 9-.:!11 .....

Jtort!mdP . Jtd.
Putor. Willia . _ .
SaDy ScllliCII· 9:30 lUlL
. .,....... . J~JO .....
We' dor'Sor.iaoo -7:30 p.aL

Sunday~ . 9-JO .......

J

f

,

"-:~Cnlltoo

Sandor School - 9:30a.m.

STARTS

6145 , ••• ·

l'lliJI1niQ_fi ... N - Poaor: WllliaaJilllil
Suoiiay Scloaal- 9:30 ......
Wonbip -10:40 LIIL, 7 p.m.

:::t;.::!":'6 p..m.

Vel t

12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only

FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985•4107

EAGLES CLUB
IN POMEROY

I

Wonhip - 111-.lOIIJIL

SUNDAYS

-.,Schaal - 9;30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6;30 p.m.
WI 'tS..--7p.m.

,_, .! 1.-) Ita

Sutdoy SchaaJ- 9-.30 ......

CLUB

EVERY THURSDAY

-

Wonloip - 10 Lr1L

SPORTSMAN

r..IGr. , _ a.,e

,_,,......Soiiik

Wonhip - 10;30 o.m.,7:JO p.m.
W-yScni&lt;a - 7p.oo.

rML\JiiGII~
. - : JaeN.

Navy O!ief Petty Officer Roben Steffy ' s celebrated the SOOth
W. Steffy , a 1965 graduate .of anniversary of Christopher ColUDIPomeroy High School of Pomeroy, bus' discovert of Jhe Amencas.
recently returned aboard the guided Steffy also visited Manta, Ecuador
missile frigate ·USS Elrod, home- where crew m ember~ were
ported in Charleston, SC after a involved in the delivery and distritwo-month deplor.ment to the bution of over eij!ht roos of Project
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea and Handclasp materials. Project HandEastern Pacific Ocean.
clasp is a navy-wide program to
USS Elrod participated in distribule donated goods tO lesser
counter-nan:otics operations while developed countries.
deployed, interdictmg drug traffic
Also a graduate of Trident Tec;h·
on the high seas.
·
. nical College, Charleston, SC, wtth
Steffy visited SantO Domingo, an Associate of Arts degree, he
Dominican Republic where joined the Navy in July 1965.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN

HOMEMADE
PIES
ORDER
. NOW
.

h_Cio_fi ... N - -

.... Cio.-I

Sutdoy SchaaJ - !J:30LnL .

f

News of our servicemen

'

wonhip • 10;30 IIJIL, 6:30 p.m.

Clio-

Richards, Shade; Matthew Riffle,
Cheshire; Angela Spangler, Jon
VanMeler, Syracuse; Dana Fick,
Joann Gard, Sheila Lattimer, Long
Bottom; Tammy Grimes, Letart,
W.Va.; Rebecca Ockennan, Dexter.: and Charles Smith II, ProctoJVille.

Hol•ness

JUdp Cloorn:lo fiCiorlll
Pamr.Jad: Cokarow

Datr

.

c..rdr.lf ... N
'-:W.W. Daopo
s..t.r SchaaJ - 9-.:!11 .....
Wanlip • 10;45 a.m., 7 p.m.
W t doy :!loniaoo - 7 p.m.

rleto.bt
Slh_.Maia
l'u-.AIHoruoo

-

.

•aile ... up

'

!1:-Cioiordo

Mlddloport

I 1 Soniaoo -7,p.m.

Winebrenner, Robert Barnhart,
Vicki Dent, Stephen Donohue,
John Haggy, Timothy Mayes, all of
Pomeroy; Mary Hawk, Crystal
Kaylor, Diana Kimes, Jeffrey
Kimes, all of Reedsville; Denise
Hendricks, Logan; Denise Megahey, Terri Roush, Alhens; Galha

Marlene Chaffee, Christina
Cooper, Velessa Hunnell, Lula
Hupp, Chester Rose, Fre'derick
Thompson, Sheila Warner, all of
Racine; Jackie Cremeans, Dena
Gerlaugh, Rachel Robinson, Philip
Blackwood, Dawn Howard, all of
Rutland; Jennifer Deem, Michael
·Smilh, Dhronda Rile hie, all of Tuppers Plains; Todd Doczi, Angela
Duckwonh, Paula Haynes, Shl!llnon Hinely, Patricia Weaver, Mary
Woods, Kimberly. Hanning, Mary
Mills, Miranda Nicholson, al\ of
Middleport; Jonalhan Dunn, Janice
,Fetty, Gary Freeman, Denni~
GilmOre, T818 Humphreys, Penm
Jeffers, G11ry Snouffer, Richard
Vance, Trudy Will iam s, Lucy

SlodortiaOI- 9-JOoa.

fiCiorill
33
Childn.'l H - Rd.
Sundoy School • II LllL .
Wonhip - I~ 6p.m.
W-yScni&lt;a -'lp.m.

p

L-

...

I

Wonloip-ICI-.30 LllL, 7 p.m.
W-ySrnica - 7p.oo.

•

,,,
......,.. ni~,D.~!!..
._.. .._...

~ Sdooal - ~ ..... .

.

The Dean 's List for the fall
quarter at Hocking College has .
been announced. These students
llave achie¥ed at least a 3.3 quarterly gqdc point average and com ~~ -12 hours or more credit .

992-2259

-

.r-'

"e!..,ellgas

MIDDLEPORT- A Goregeous home iocatod near the.'l""
which makes Jhia home very convenianl lor shopping,
banking etc. 10 roomo, 5 bedrooms,
1/2 baths,
, ftreplace, woodbumer, garage, shed, patio, very mee
home lnlide &amp; out!
IU,OOO

New Dealer
JandT Gas Service
:~~.~:· eyundar•

POMEROY- Large 3 story building with a 50 x 100
parking lot has alol of poten~al , could be us!!d for an
eparlment building with 3 unlll .
$28,500
MIDDLEPORT· Lagoon Rd. juol out of lawn, 2 story
frame l-ome wilh 3 badraomo, beth , enclosad fronl porch ,
2-' x 24 garage, added insulation.
$27,000
NEAR ALBANY, Split foyer home with 4 bedrooms •. 2
baths, decking, garagjl, appliances, basement wrth
workshop, 8 .35 itenl&amp; wilh shed, lruk 1T9es. Close lo beth
Alhena end Pomeroy!
$54,800
WE WISH YOU A SAFE &amp; HAPPY NEW YEAR I

Nfl.=
-······::::2251

·····-··-··•z.en1

HENRY E. CLELAND---'- -..
' TRACY BRINAGER•••••••••_ ..,.................
JEAN TRUSSEU. .......................

()ffiCE. .••.••••••••••••••••••••• _,,,,_,____ _ _

·'

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-311-92-lht

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
· CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
-Garages
•Complete
Reinocleling
Stop &amp; Compare
f ltEE ESTIM4tES

. 985·4473
667·6179

WICK'S

PouEROY· Vacant lot o~. Spring Ave, would be a good
mobile home she as all util1ties am avwlable. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION I
ASKING $5,000

?

BILL SLACK

., "·

HAULIN8~ RSE~~CE
36970 llr lin
Pom«oy, Ohio

-,.

•

HOLIDA~ SPECIAl! • :
~.50 A Ton
:

I:
i
~==··;;·~~~,·~~~~ ~::::::'2:-~:~:-1:m:o~· i
•Gu Grill Tonka

•Vantleaa HNiera

Rt. 124, Racine

lEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mow~,

Fertilizing, W

lng,

· end Seeding.
· Shrub end Tree
Trimming I

Removal

R-Ial I commorc1a1
FrHEIIIm.t•

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

SIZED LIMESTONE
3470
992·

Dellvtr.4 16 Ton Mlnlmllll

· DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

t

•

nv!l/~ng

:;,jjl
- 31904 Le•••••

c....kao..

MltNieport, Olllo
614-992·7144
10/1'" llf.i--J

•

�Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

SNAFU® by Bru~ Beaule

for Sale

71

51

.
'

A(!ROQ
LAYNE'S NRNITU.
C

I ']fa

fumm!_lil!
. 9

-

PHILLIP
ALDER

ttoun.: ........... ......

-- ....
__
.....
-.·-·
~ ... ~IIIRd.

~

Z
.8R •
-ir-.:
·lurVIntGn,
ONo
3dM7WTJI.

-=

-· - .
IIOOcl .....
· hi. .......

lion, good -

........ ~aa1ee
IIUt.... -

wlh

--.-

, NORTH

pollllbiWII 11t441-1111. ..,

..\t4

18 C..-cllan -

.AJOIU

20.P.....IM1

l'hlllpa

+Ju

21 Eac1M8Uon
22Haw....
food .....

+7z

lt+MHI17,

WEST

EAST

+an

+s2

... .

.QH76SZ

fiB '

f2

+AKQJ864

+JOS3

+KQJaoe

•K

f AK .Q 10 P6

-.p,
'

114-'1112·

just put it where the

Lolt &amp; Found
Foundi ~ -'&lt; .Lob dog,
SumnOr Raid.- ChrloldaJ, I14 ,.. .tm. ·
9
.

Lolt: . e.l:ued
Chlh... ~-

pet,
t0

Q=
part

. ·· •
Wollo
hn
a-,114-912

'

lf14-IIUWI.

rtt-.

used to be."

18 Wantacl to Do

-·oo

'Tiolt coon -""""·'"7
· ---J~k-'-:-•.- .
lloond, 1. _ . _ old, 1 on11o Wll,.od To Sur: ..,
Wllh Or Wll-

M«on.

l.af'! UWIIy. 114 3~&amp; · 1303.

Coli

ROLLERIN'
AN' LAFFIN'
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE.
Trl~ ..

LOST: blook a tan coon
doa
.,
Nor1h•P
-· l~t~e.
·
·
·· ·
lool: 8hodo
15-IOibll.,
doa. laQb nu oholt
~
Col:oure
wino 11111. 114-filo
·-10118, 114-7U 1000
MIOalilg! Ylll• C• With Rod
Exr
ttl; 11- Coli Aid Exr
Tag
FflondiY RldaO, laona

a-,

l:r

·Ra!l!cl .._ 114--1141.

.

31J.

Fr• Ednwi._l I

•

PIPM "And ... -

Pola•oJ• ......_: II.T.W.

Anor 4p.m.

.L IL

tl&amp;hl,.. ·

Fumlhn: .er..
and
,...... - ,. ,, rl llu .., Dhurah
~-will buJ; 0111--

1~

t;llld.

,..,._...,~,

L.ta.~=r!i
n

-~~~~-

- t ·lCooa
-llooi 11311. 11100.
..o.lntop......,.2417.

55
~

mr hoolo:
MYI -

_.... _

Building
$uppllel

.......

oil lonk ..... CloUdOa '-'"' o11. Coil• -t-, RiOllntolo,
- ....
. OH
Call 114-

2?1 Gal .....
80 011. No.
814-l4W54a.

- . rollablo lronajlar]flan. 114-

:1§41351.

Bla -

LY. 41", 11,1011. - .

calor camplllor wit~ la•r pOint.
er, tuoo. en 441 ell&amp; or,...,

:MH121.

56 · Pets fOr Sale .

o.- 111r lor
114-317-'IDO.

9

10 ........ Ta LooO
· No .....
win "-r
Eltltn. hDI.-I.hiDicll, oomplllt Walaht
NMIH. -Brand
~
w.,.od old lube

1JPa

rolloo a

TVa.
Old .......
l'ldiO patti
·-·
Old }uloa
11111!!1 •bo·oldor

wv.....
.
W.-

tLII bolo.

-

=ra.- 11.80
!llr. "'~...,.

:-:::~~::"::"'~...,.---.~,-:-:

-::
. =.-==

=--

1m'Ford ·~ - · 4 WD
.··, mini
· I
- - ..
Colllft!W I p.l'll., 114-44e;

11011!1 - I l 'l.

:..~ . "" \,
74

Motorcycles

liJI-lAT DO 1{00

MEAN , WE'RE

·:·

ALL OUT OF
71
l-lOR5 D'OEVVRES ..J '·'' ' '"''·.I

boltj
- - - . 2,401111111UII ,•
'1181 ICa

•1 CIR-110,

par bolo. 304-773- : : :1:;,;,-. rune IIU -~~~

boln $2. •

•uo. -78--Aut-o-P~a-n-s.....- . -&lt;1:

RoUnd baloo 120. oachl -

diJplckuponl)o.:lll+ll'WNO. '

Hat ·!Of -

...
.

11111 Ford ~

niUid ond oquoro

.

'

AcceMorlel

14 .

s.

'

.

2221!,.P.D, ........ ~Haven,

Business

THE BEST

Real Estate

31 Homes for Sale

· new
ChaYJbiRIIJ,
Cnollor,
t1roe,
11. •2 bolt,

contptoiJy Fumlohod -~~
homo, 1 milo -.town =..~.,.r. No Poll,
114-

1611 Fl., .18 - - lat. 2lll
walla, t oomplolo blllto, tlnl'!l
room, Uvlng , _ , 3bdrm., - ·
In .._., NIIJ oarpotad, 2 por-

--

.....,. - . hltJh mM • $200

CA.

tlntt. -

onO

bldooom apo~monto
1225/ma. ·utllltloo, 1100

ollla. -ric - · AC 1 otova,
,.lrltiorotor,
• -OH.
-••
Homo """"'"' .._n, no pat8; 114Not"rlonk, Racine,
IIW8MZ-utL

lilly .. · -

zno.

ISA

voo f€a ~.,.......-?--"-¥
eET'I'Eil.,
l'U..
N.RE£
WlTll

WANT AD

ONe FOR "TTLlR DAD, ·
ONE R:)R YOWR MOioA,

ant to:

'YOU R:JR60T 1'\-IE ONE

. IN 'THE (X)GJ-ICUeE.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

-""'lot-·

1152.17 por . - h lncludlna all

-

.Mx70,

dollvol'ld ond 011 up, lldrtlng
ornd ....... 1-1100·137-tea5•..

~

-="ta

.Wanted to Rent

W.-

a

8A, 2 botho, 121111, 1111 For W.-od
To
11Jl14
~k:. $5,500.II14-4a-151·1·
Bond, Coli Pot I

• !

-1180

14x70 3

Bodroomo, 1

112

Batho On LI(V! Aonlod Lal, Will
Soli On Land Conttoet. 114-3111-

11

!!«or
Homo
~0 ....
h
701•

1188 Skyllno HollY Rldgo14x70, - --H-OU_H_h_O_Id
_ __
alec, 2 bedraom•, AJC,
covorod porch, k~chon lotlnd,
atcnp -blda. - underpennlng,

all

Tum your clutrer into cash,
SeU it t~ easy way••• by ghone,
'no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
I 5 words or less, 3 days,
3 gagers,$6.00

51

GoodS

lllco now, 30W'75-24114.

Rentals

you

CaU our office for paid in. od""""e role• I

ASTRO,QRAPH

1~...,.......----

9 •._ _ _ _ _ 1
10. _ _ _ __

(
3
4. _ _ _ __

11 .: - - - - - - 1

2~_..,.......
/ ---

·-----s_____

6 . _ _ _ __
1. _ _ _,___
8 . _ _ _ __

gERNICE
BEDEOSOL

12•.·_ -----1

13 •._ _ __
14..___ _ __

15.__ _ __
LorQo

~123 Fou~h Avo., COUNTRY FURNITURE
rna!,. utlilll11 ,
CRAm

Ga!Dpollo.

a dojloalt. Ill 441 llt24.

GallipOlis Dally 'Irlbune ·.
448·2342
Po•eroy Dally Sendnel·
992·2156
Pt. Pleasant Register
875-1333

,

Wo Hue Clitia -

AND

_lD\q'our

Craft . . .

N. Main S~ Pl. Pll. 2 bldnoam, - . AltO Wll CUIIMI ~n
pootllll boaa-, $200. - h v-· lhlllo. wo 11uJ lill
,..._~ .. , dop. 304-t711-1127. . Good~,_ _ ...
UoAI2218--o141,114-

42 Mobile Hom11

for Flint

-'Birthday

--·

,_ ,
- · 1 1811
. In t~ _., --·~ t~ more knOwled.
·~,- ...... ·~
..l,ble yo~~ b80ome In JOUr Chooenlleld of
~. lila li'B'Iet )lOUr probabiii1J
lor MICCIII. Prep8nl JOUI'IIIII property
lor the opportunl- that could be
111!:'~1ng.
Thl
.CrornovO!Itl • - - · 181' 1 11
, 0!11 ol thole daro whiN JOU might unlnWitJona!ly tat&lt;a ·out your lnielrlllone
on people lor whom you GIN the moat.

-

Ple. .e ull "'" -~ Iii · ••r eeaolty
'I

regulatoro

":!

21 F'"
!rom -baclerll
....,.,

(

jl

- ,_

are fr:~~

a:,~:'J':
know on a social
In
which are govwnlng you In demarcation nne Is ac~t~~!lll!d .
the year lheed. Send lor Ceprleom'e CANCIII (June 21-.IIIIJ 22)
JOU
Altro-Grl!Ph prldlctlona today by mall- MIOhl find companions ore only
lng St.25 plua a 101111, 11811-add-. · In accord with your purpoaea end ol&gt;- ·
stamped enVIIOpe tQ Allro-Orl!Ph. c/o jectlwa. They will be event-encllantthla neNpapar, P.O. Box &amp;1,28, Cleve- ad 11 you enemptlo manipulate them.
land, OH 44101-3428 . Be oure to alate LEO (~uiJ 23-Aug. 22) People who are
your zodiac Ill•·
aubject to ~""" authorlly today will reAGUAIIIUS (Jon. ~· ill People quite llkllllul manageti)Brlt II you ~on'l
whom yoy'll have dlallnQI with todar lnaplro 1hlm . properly, lhey won I rewltl be able to perctlve rour mollvll spc&gt;nd to your dlrecu-. · ·
eallly. Don't UH ftanery , aubterluge or VIIIGO (Alii. 23-lept. 22) Forego maklnslncerltr to meke your point
lng demands today of the one you love
P18CD (l'eb. 8J 'I alt 211) Today you that, If the rolll _ , revened, you
miGht have trouble dlstlngullhlng be- would ,_,t end Ignore. Try to COI)IId·
people JOU lltould troet (jenar- er thlll(ll from hll or her perapectl.,..
ouiiJ end thole you lltOuld not Unfor- UBIIA (llep4. ~ 2JI Strtveto' be a
tunetely, JOUr jud(lll*ll may be IIUIIJ. bit mora affactlonotathln uoual todey
(MMGII 21~Aprll11l There Ia a t-d• ~r mate. If he or she II In a
poellblllty today that rou may cater to grumPJ mood, 11111 Is the elixir that
en lndlvldull you'll think can dO rou COUld aoothe !rayed ·
1101118 good. -barely acknpwledglng 8CCIIIPIO (001. 14nf1M, Dl lnduatrl• IOJIIIIIy who hll IMIIp8d you Previ· ...-a, not opathy, lorequlted today II
oullyandcan":l:'"ow.
· youhopelohlve-hlngwortltwhlle
TAUIIUI (April
r 201 Be Clllltloue • to lltow how rou opent rour ttma. Don't
today of beCOming romanllelly fuel-' UM exCUMitO neglect JOUr dutlll.
·neted by a poriOn w110 1181 alreldy 8ACIITTAI'IIil8 (Now. 2J Dec 2118ellmillie -~t. You CCUkl be Ilk· dllclpilne 11 required at lhle ttma whiN
lng lor trouble II you lniPUaln forbid- tile lhllll9"ftt"t ol rour reoouroea Ia
den.,..
conoei'ned. An lddHionll dOIIIIIB might
Glllll 1M.r 21-J- 201 Treat bull· be nee mary for handling other' reo• ftlll endeevoro aerlouiiJ todar even pla'e milliey.
'

.-s

'

"•

·c.:
eomruc=". ;:.

27 •••,

~::

omoroullr • '
"
'

33 Trtckfd
34 Merited
35 MOll

M!llillll

••

36Expunoee
37 AclrtM
Wtnon140 lnlltt 199
43 ActorWilder

;::·;

44 Llctrlll

--

.-+--+-t-----t
·
"'

•
-

~

··

47 Nelglltlor ot::
Fr.
· "· .
48 52, Roman ....
51 EliJPUin IIMI:
. god .
53 Mull&lt; buH'~ ...

pure haM

.

'

,
'J X 0

RVNGJ

D V K I

Z R

J X 0

GJOY

VK

NOFZEONM

BTSO

TOVKL

J

XZNNZN

z

aKM

SBALX
VJ

Z R

""

VG
BJ

B IS. '

.,

...

...

J z c
BIIKZSI •
· PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Wrllers IJI!naraity in film, and maybe In televlalon, ,:
get shor1-shrlhed

111.1

the time." -

Nell Simon .

'~~:~~,
S©~.tllA-l&amp;"EtfS•
.
br CLAY I. POlLAN

WOlD
lAM I

ldiiO~

letters · of the
0·~ Rearrange
faur scrambled _.: wOrds be· f."'o\ \&lt;;••
I~ ta fOrm fou'r

I

••

..
..

·simple .words. ,...,_un•

c A1L u AT

I 1I I I

Asahobbylgotocraft
shows and antique shops to
~ 15 I I I 7 find old samplers. One of my
. . . · · · • favor~e . sayings said,"You can
, . . . - - - - - - - - , let bad times make you biller

I

LEBVE

I

1--,,.:T....:;R:,....:.Y~L_O;-:P:.,-11
Q-~:~;tete
6

1

I I 1I I .

the . chuckle quoted

by filling 'in· the missi ng words
L...I.L ...I.I.-...L.....J.-.1.-...1 you develop from step No. 3 below.

Q, On a TV commercial, a waiter
hands out a new menu ; a voice says,
"' It's the• new menu,' the waiter
quipped." isn't QUIPPEQ the wrong
word'
A. You're ri~ht. The verb QUIP
means "to say something witty or humorous "; Groucho Marx was expert
in using quips. The word should not
be used to report a flat statement. II
you hear people misuse this verb,
though. skip the quip, and suggest
that they replace QUIPPED with lhe
simpler SAID.

FRIDAY

Merchandise

.

•::ct.litllcurrent

ter which
9 Dod
1D Engra-..r
11 Do bettlf

a Bodr

.....

13 GIIIWIJ " •
lrCHII
.
18
19 R
I --

a One, no mat·

set

5

th1n

meatur"

21

•

ONE: FOR 'tOO ... "1

CA~H?II

.,..
7 Radiation

23 In front

Aoything LACUSTRINE grows or
is round in lakes, as in "lacustrine
fish ." Those who don 't know that the
adjective LACUSTRINE is pronounced "luh· KUS-Irin" may lind
themselves in deep water. ·

Furnished
Rooms

I

PIN down EXTRA

1 DtiiCitdiY
· 2 8etwe.n IAA
andCT
3ActrGirdner
4 Mound

· 25 Pllall pert

By J elfrey McQuain

'1'00!
,45

DOWN

+4!

OUR LANGUAGE

.

Col-

54 Challenged
55 Journaro

Pass
Pus
Pus

AA£ ~~oor lrfOIG.. .

Hom,
lmp!QVements
_.....;

Opportunity

AOiroln
-llllolltJIMatom
BualS~ V.Uor
-lng U~r, Plaa. Clll Todly, 11
43170
oo1&lt; and olno.
.
111 llot-12MI.
_ , o.t::to IIU 5:00 Pll.

powered

YIIMI

Eall

If~~ oW, ~BO'r,IFifWIU..~

i

Training

thon 1150. Col Cllllck 304 112·

Pass

50Colm
52 Wind-

blackbird ,

Jais' decided there was only one way
to defeat six diamonds. He led the club
four. East. the perlect pa.rtner, produced the. 10. Jais sat back contented•
ly, sure that East would return a. heart
for him to ruff. But nothing was bappenlng. Eventually, Jais told East it
was his lead. He asked to see the previ·
ous trick. Then he led back - the club
five. South ruffed and claimed.
Jais knew there was no point in be·
rating his partner. lnatead, he has al•
lowed East to retain anonymity ..
A young expert once tried this lead·
ing coup in England. Suddenly there
was a gust of wind, blowiDI dummy's
cards ooto the floor. After they had
been picked up, the y.e.'s pa.rtner, a
Wiirld-class player, led bact the rlgbt
suit at trick two and the y.e. ruffed.
The y.e. was surprised his partner
didn't say anything, Afterward, he
asked his partner why be hadn't com· I
plimented him on the lead.
"You didn't liee which card I played
to 'win' trick one."

\

in

~uslness ·

21

Ntdu~~ ~OO'Wt GuarantlliCI. Call
~

SNT

47 WoiHired
49 Por-

The old year is drawing to a cloae.
We are all wondering .bow the new
president will mold the.country durinl
the neat four years. At .the bridle table, thougb, I suggest we concentrate
on counting and on trea.Ung our partners kindly.
·
On today's deal, West was ·Pi,rre
Jais, a winner of all three world Utles:
the Bermuda Bowl irl 1956, the Team
Olympiad in 1960 and the Open Pairs
in 1962.
Deciding to bid tactically, Jais
passed as dealer. Then, qver South's
strong and artificial opening that
asked for aces, he leapt to .flve clubs.
North's five oo-trump showed two

aces.

'&lt;

blloo, tat • 2nd cunlilg; ,.,..
""
HZ•~trualdng · - ; 114.

Ftnanctal

wanted to Buy

'"'

-=

73 Vilntl4WD's

Transportatton

u..-

01 ....L 114 Ul 4530.

. .

~
COII-4pll,
-

1803.

Rick
Company,
tuU 111M liuet..,_r, oampllte
.....ian
........
toH,Ohla I VIrginia, :10477W'/a
.
'
.
'

calli ""'i', 111"

tt•llll. ·

Hay&amp;Graln

84

11 .

1n

"t.

•

.

'

l;r.::'.:......:".:. ~

JOUI'
tho

.a.o DUll lu.cf bMf C0W1i

loothwllo' .... (N!II·Ioll),

1 mink (rool mllikl;

.

Pol--

Conlw, 111 Moeor- - . ~~~~ aion, · RaiJI!i.l'ld
Gllllpollo
. , ·.
lll'ld, Raglltofld lou!lo, 112Jr8,

Public Sale
&amp;Auction ·

8

PliSS

per-

4&amp;-P-

By PbliUp Alder

DRA!fl CARE At: '~'~&gt;or.- Do
a
llur

Merchandise

AYON I All - · I lhlrt.y
Spooro, towlii-Ma.

llobJolllor 2 ehlldiOft. II,..

s+

45=

To UN.

54 Miscellaneous

- y blwn 10

'AVON" AI.L AREAs! -

ALL Yonl_ll .... II Paid In
AdYincl~ DEAIIUNE: 2:00 p.m.
... day bo- tho od lo to 11111.
S..nday . odltlan • 2:00 p.m.
Frlcloy. llandoy odftlan • 2:00

luftdaJ

Ia 1:00 p.on.

to 1:00 p.m. 114-iill a111 ·

Expanding I 22 PEOPLE
Ta Sta~ WorUmmod!at""' "'"at
Do
............
8 ' Honul, . . - -.-~,;·-·
• -··
bHicHAo. No EXoort- Na....
llilry. Wo Will Ttlln. 11,200 Por
llo. Ta Sla~ W y.., Qualll)o.
P"- Fot lnlarvlow Sat..day
Of

- ---1

DIIAIN CARE Enola-....... , ... ot ...... ln

Local Branch ot·15 Storl Chain

limo with ... You'U Dompany. 1100 ta ase.

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

p,m.Sotllnlay.

l!r:i,

IELP WANTED

bl:oin 10 I I

38 Well-behave. ~
39 Southern

vontllalld

42S.M
43 Grain lor

Out
with a bang

AN'--

ILDW DIIAIIIS?

II, 114 4414153

Yard Sale

2+

&amp;t

. 1J2

North

Opening lead:

Trimming, TrM Removal,

11 . Help wantacl

Wftl

Pass! · Pass

us

Employment Services

Plu. e~.

7

83
Livestock
.
.
·w ·. r.n. " ·wt~~~~er,

Top Prlcll Paid: All Old . .
Colnl, Qalcl AI·~ II'- Col~
Qalcl Colna. II.T.S. Coin Shop.
111 SOcoftd Avenue, ClalllpoliL

LOST: LI!V!,
11\11 ..-,. "Toby".
In ¥1ciniiY- of 11111-"'Addl_,

26 LAlli" onoko
' 28 Harsh
30 Pot-111-31 e,t
32 hcentlr
(2 Wdl.)
35 Wild diSOrder

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Soatb

wantec:t to Buy

LOST mo1o -

or-,:JOWJao1:m.

frid~e

24 Olclop
25 EmploJed

+v

"It's for our New Year!s resolUtions . Please

6

1710&amp;,Rotun

Jl.ll-ll

. SOUTH

Tlltoo 2441. • f .

Jol!ol
12 WDOIIJ
,
14Greekleltor
1511yi*-

........ rtno. ....

OIII"r111t114.M .........
.t ynp' -old, 1111:
new
wll
...
A71.
........

41Woll-

1 CMrt
&amp; Fruit
11 - Newton-

•

......, .. lrca:l·n l , . . .

A
9

PRINT NUMBEREi) LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

f) u~~R~~~~E LETTERS 1 I. 1 1 1 1 J
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
•• - 1o
Torrid · PiOus · Quirk • Foment · .SPITE of IT
My neighbor mustered up enough nerve to take
skydiving lessons. Her instructor told har lhat courage
is not the absence of fear but the ability to carry on
wilh dignity in SPITE of IT.

eo

JANUARY 1

.

�Page 12-The o.lly Sentinel

Meigs County's year in revie'Y
Six members of the award win· facility.
By JULIE E. DILLON
ning
Eastern High School band
Steven Beha,.Scipio,Township,
Seatiael News Staff
were named to the 1992 All-Ohio was named executive director of
(Contiaued from Tuesday)
The middle months of 1992 held State Fair Band. They were Char· . the Meigs County Bolrd of Mental
a mixture of news in Meigs Coun· lene Dailey, Kyle Fausnaugh, Retardation and Developmental
ty. Looking back, remember what Dawn Foley and Letitia Holsinger, Disabilitie,s.
Following ~y 18 months of
you would, the positive as well as all of Reedsville, and Andrew Wolf
of
construction
work, an $800,000
and
Vicki
Warner,
both
lhe negative. Whatever the news, it
Pomeroy.
.
river
access
facility
at Forked Run
certainly made May, June, J~y and
Roger
Grimm,
age
two,
and
his
State
Parle
near
Reedsville
was
August, months to remember.
nine-month-old
sister,
Christian,
dedicated.
May
Meigs Counlians participated in
Meigs County lost its bid for a children of Alona and Homer
Grimm,
apparently
died
of
smoke
the
fourth annual Ohio Rive~
medium security state prison and
inhalation
in
a
fire
at
their
home
on
Sweep.
The litter control project
representatives of Ohio goverll·
May
12.
The
home
was
located
on
was
carried
out in Middleport,
ment discovered that "Hell hath no
Bradbury
Road,
near
Middleport.
Pomeroy,
Racine
· and Forked
fury like Meigs County scorned."
of
more
than
Run/Reedsville.
Borrowing
County development leaders and
Things of yesteo'ear displayed
concerned r'~~idents filled the $500,000 to handle bills of the cur·
school
year
was
approved
by
and
demonstrated highlighted the
tent
offices of the .Meigs County Cham·
the
Meigs
Local
Board
of
Educa·
annual
Heritage Day observance at
ber of Commerce to q11estion the
.
the Meigs County Museum. The
reasoning behind Gov . George lion at a May meeting.
The Pomeroy Merchants Asso· Pomeroy Merchants Association
Voinovich's rejection of Meigs
ciation,
under the presidency of also sponsored a variety of activi·
County's proposed prison site at
Susan Clark, purchased and hung ties in the business district over the
Salem Center.
The Village of Middleport was new "Welcome to Pomeroy" ban· weekend
April Hudson, daughter of Mary
awarded a $26,100 grant in Issue 2 ners in the business district of the
village. The purchase of the ban· Hudson, Pomeroy, was crowned
funds for street improvements.
The 35th annual baccalaureate ners was possible with a $500 con· the 1992 Heritage Queen for the
and commencement exercises of tribution from the sale of Christmas Pomeroy Merchants Association
during Heritage Weekend activi· ,
Eastern High School were held. ornaments from Bank One,
Harold
"Hal"
Kneen
was
ties . .
Amy Lea Ann Well was valedicto·
employed
as
associate
agent,
agri·
Meigs County's new promotion·
rian and Sherri Dawn Wolf was
culture/horticulture
for
the
al
video,
"The Heart of the Valley,"
salutatorian . Sixty·four seniors
Meigs/Gallia
County
Cooperative
produced
by Roger Gilmore of
received diplomas in the M~y 31
Extension
Service.
Aardvark
Sound,
was presentt.d at
ceremonies.
than
200
residents
were
June's
meeting
of
the Meigs Coun·
More
A summer school program at
guests
when
Veterans
Memorial
ty
Chamber
of
Commerce.
Meigs High School was approved
A five person committee to
by the Meigs Local Board of Edu· Hospital held its annual open house
to
mark
the
beginning
of
National
review
and prioritize all Issue 2
cation.
.
Hospital
Week.
projects
in Meigs Coun~y was
Robby W. Wyatt, valedictorian,
Students
at
Southern
High
appointed.
The committe.e inclllde4
and Barbara Joan Anderson, sal uta·
School
participated
in
a
Teens
Commissioner
Richard E. Jones,
torian, led the procession of gradu·
Against
Drunk
Driving
program
County
E11gineer
Phil Roberts,
ates into Lljrry R. Morrison Gym·
. nasium for the 24th annual bac· coordinated· by Wayne Lyons of Economic Development Director
Paula Thaclter, Frank Cleland, rep· ·
cal aureate and .commencement the Racine Emergency Squad,
Sixty·one
top
academic
achiev·
resenting village government, and
exercises at Meigs High School on
ers
in
Meigs
County
schools
were
Gary
Dill, president of the town·
May 24. Jo Ellen Diehl Yeary, a
honored
at
the
Eighth
Annual
Aca·
ship
trustee
association.
·
1972 graduate, was baccalaureate
demic
Excellence
Banquet
at
Approval
for
wor'k
on
the
Cen·
speaker.
Meigs
High
School.
tral
Building
of
Meigs
Junior
High
Music of early America, a gun
salute to the war dead and the . Work was started on stabilizing School, costing $7,000, was given
recognition of several who have the river bank and improving the by th.e Mei~s Local School Board.
The Metgs County Parle DiStrict
contribute.d to the preservation of boat launching ramp at the Middle·
the Burlingham Church and Ceme· port levee. The levee project is was awarded a $5,740 grant to
tery highlighted the 10 Ist annual being paid for with a grant of develop a 23-acre site at Skinner
Memorial Day service in the $75,000 from the Department of Park, loeated off Route 124.
Natural Resources, Division of .
About 20 Meig~ County senior
Burlingham community.
More than 350 alumni and Waterways, and $37,500 from vii· citizens and s~ff of, the Senior •
guests attended the 77th annual lage funds and business and per· Center joined thousands of support·
ers from across the state m the
reunion of the }?omeroy Alumni sonal donations. ·
Union members representing Statehouse Rotunda in support of
Association held at Meigs High
several different unions showed up Eldercare.
·
.
School.
Meigs l{igh School was one of
Sixty-nine Southern Hi~h at a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
School seniors received their diplo· publil= hearing at Meigs High 106 high schools in the United
mas May 22 in combined baccalau· School in Pomeroy to show their States and Canada to receive a
reate and commencement exercises support for Southern Ohio Coal classroom calcularor program grant
in the Charles W. Hayman gymna· Company miners and for American.. from Hewlett Packard Company.
. ,curriculum
sium. Kellie Ervin was salutatorian Electric Power's quest to install The school received
. scrubbers at the Gavin power plant materials, along with graphing cal!
and David Ihle was valedictorian.
Ohio's economic development in Cheshire. More than 1,200 peo· culators and related equipment Yal·
czar, Donald Jakeway, gave Meigs pie packed the high school audita· ued at $8,$00.
Meigs Countians defeated levy
Cpunty business leaders and county rium in what appeared to be unani·
mous
support
for
AEP
scrubber
appeals
from the Meigs Board of
officials a pep talk at a luncheon
proposal.
Mental
Retardation
and the Meigs
meeting. During his first official
An
estimated
350
people
attend·
County
Parks
District
while a
visit to the county, Jakeway
ed
the
open
house
at
the
new
Meigs
cemetery
levy
issue
in
Olive
Townencouraged community leaders to
work more clo!!&lt;:ly with state agen- County Department of Human Ser· ship was successful. .
Meigs voters elected the field
cies to accomohsh development vices headquarters in Middleport.
Construction on the $1.3 million for the fall election in the June pri~
goals. .
Grace Episcopal Church in building took appro~imately one mary. Winning the races were Bob
Pomeroy celebrated its 150th year. It involved adding a three· Hartenbach (R), Richard Jones (R),
story addition to the existing Race and Janet Howard (D) for commis·
anniversary.
·
Ed McComas, St. Charles, Mo., Street building. It·was designed by sioner; Howard Frank (R) for trea·
in memory of his faiher, the late tlte arthitectural firm of Burgess surer; Robezt. Eason (R) for county
Lee McComas, donated to the Mid· and Niple, Ltd. of Parkersburg, engineer; and Paul Gerard (R) for
·
dleport Library several bound W.Va. The new building consoli· sheriff.
Kathy Hysell was sworn in as
books containing all the Middleport dated all DHS operations under one
the new village cler'k for Pomeroy .
High School newsletters from the roof.
June
and Brenda Monis, outgoing clerk,
years 1935:66. ·
A commendation from the Ohio
Middleport village ·Council, by was honored for her service to the
House of Representatives ·on the a vote of 4-1, approved the plan of village.
occasion of the lOOth anniversary the Athens, Gallta, Hocking, Jack· .
July
of Carpenters Local 60S, Pomeroy, son, Meigs and Vinton Solid Waste
Two MiddlepOrt village
was· presented by Rep. Mark Mal· Management District at a June employees,.Bill Durst and David L.
one.
meeting. Councilman Paul Ge~d Ross, retired. Durst after 26 years
Peoples Banking and Trust voted against the plan.
of service and Ross after 24 years
Com{&gt;aRY in Middleport held a celPomeroy village Council . of service.
ebrauon in observance of 90 years accepted an offer from the Meigs
Royalty for the 1992 Meigs
of serving Southeastern Ohio.
Local School Board 10 purchase the County Fair was announced.
The larger mini·park in former Pomeroy Junior High Bobby Johnson was Icing; Bol&gt;bie
Pomeroy was newly planted with School building.
White, queen; Susan Grueser, horse .
additional herbs by Donna Nease,
Dr. Hugh H. Davis, Pomeroy, princess; Lori · Hayes, horse
1
Bobbie Karr and Dianna Lawson was designa¥
as Ohio Universi· . princess runner·up; Nora Eastman,
for the Pomeroy Merchants Associ· ty's most acc?mplished alumnus of dairy princess; Lisa Hoffman, liveation which maintains the park.
the past half century in the field of stock princess; Mike Hoffman,
Dave Bowen, an instrumental Classical Languages. In recognition livestock prince; and Ginger Hoi·
music teacher in the Meigs Local of his accomplishments, Davis was comb, livestock princess runner·up.
School District, was elected to the presented a Significant Achieve·
An arraignment proceeding m
board of directors of the National ment Award from the Ohio Univer· Meigs County Common Pleas
Education Association by a repre- sity College of Arts and Sciences at Court afforded Donald Lindeman,
sentative assembly· of Ohio teach· . the Third Annual Departmental Racine, the opportunity to deny a
. ers.
Award program held at the univer· murder charge and a related coimt
Eastern Local District Superin· sity.
filed against him. Lindeman was
· tendent Richard Smith announced
Three Meigs County business· charged with the armed robbery
that the "tremendous progress" men were the first members to be and shooting death of Howard
made by the district in the year appointed to a new advisory board Lawrence, Long Bottom. Lawrence
made it possible for the dislrict to formed at Farmers Bank and Sav- was shot in the head on June 25
withdraw its application to the state ings Company. Bruce Fisher, John and died from those wounds July 1
loan fund. ·
Musser and Phil Harrison joined at Grant Medical Center.
Four members of the Tuppers the bank's compliance officer,
An ordinatlce providing for pay
Plains community were horlored by Donna Schmoll; executive vice increases for village employees
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. president in charge of lending, was adopted by Middleport Village
9053 for their contributions to the Bruce J. Reed; and bank director Council.
community. Honored at the Loyal· Ferman Moore on the Farmers
An estimated 350 misc,ellanctDS
ty Day program were Victor Bahr, Bank Advisory Board.
4-H projects w,ere judged at the
Red Carr, Iva Upton and Rev.
Howard Lawrence, owner and Rutland Civic Center in preparation
operator of Lawrence Grocery on for ·the 1992 Meigs County Fair.
Sharon Hausman.
A contingency of Meigs County Dewitt's Run Road in Lon~ Bot·
union members attended a rally in tom, was found June 25 lymg on
Ravenswood, W.Va. in support of the floor of the establishment
United Steelworkers of America bleeding from the head from a gun:
local5668.
shot wound, after an apparent
A grass-roots movement sup· , armed robbery.
porting equity in education funding
The Easter Seals Society. of the
was encouraged by William Phillis, River Cities, which serves Meigs
executive director of the Ohio County, obtajned a $20,000 grant
Coalition for E9uity and Adequacy to provide parent education at the
of School Funding, when he spoke Meigs County Speech and Hearing
to a group of leaders anjl educators Clinic at !he Meigs County Health .
at a meeting hosted by the Meigs Department.
County Chamber of Commerce.
·
A storm in June produced larger
The 20th annual Tri-County than pea-sized hail and large
Simulated Disaster Exercise, held amounts of rain. The stOrm comannually during National Hospital pletely destroyed the tomato and
Week, was held by Ul!its of the pepper crops at Harris Farm and
Meigs County Emergency Medical Greenhouse in Poo,Iand.
Service and Veterans Memorial
ExtensiYe remo,deling of the
Hospital. The practice. drill disaster Farmers Bank was completed and
' was a bus wreck near a chemical area residents were treated to an
spill of ammonia hydroxide.
open house of the newly remodeled
f

~

CARNIVAL HELD • Tile RutiUd Elmeatary PTO held Its rail restivalreceatly wtt•
games, rood and doorp~ r. ever)oeM. Wianers were Perr7 KeDDedy, $100 cu•; Elaiae
Burton, two Melp Jackets; Sudy llaUIIIII, $50
savings bond. Jamftba WIUford woa ·a selliJl&amp;
prize. Btlttuy WDII•ms wal croWDed prillass
or the tiird &amp;rade aad Gabriel Jenkins, prbtce.
Allison Patterson was queen for tbe sixtll gl'lllle

Uld J.R. IUie . _ lilt- Pldw eel are die icltool
royally, ......... .n-ay QRfcn; Ryu K81dr,

.

.

Aalter S•owde• ud Melissa Rlc.aOild, aU •
t•ird &amp;nde; secoad row, Brlttuy Wlllla•s, •
Gabriel J ' 1-, J.R. JUre nd Alliloa Patter· •
soa; aad tltlrd row, Mattltew Jutice, Toaya :
Miller, Clart VMMatre aacl Kelly Gilkey, aU •
sDtla &amp;nde•

,

Joyce Bulich, a 19-year employ·
A ~~1993 geoenl fuod
ment teams met with school JeP.C·
ee at the Meigs Senior Ciuzens . deficit
• a half-mmim dol- sentatives to outline the plan
Center, was the fltSt to be named Iars was •
by the Meigs desipcd to funnel monies into die
Employee of the Month in a recog- CountyA 1c.!':'!!!~toas;...
. ~
. .... food scbonls .
nition program initiated by the
A $9 ouu . - - ........,....
Pomeroy Attorney John R.
Meigs County Council on Aging.
and nutrition programming in I mtcs was named pesiclent ~ !be
A Sharon Wright Alzheimer's Meigs County was ftlCCived by the Mcip. County Regional Plannin
..
g
Disease Memorial Fund was esta)). M~gs County CooiJea&amp;b~ Extea- commliS"'"
lished by the Meigs County Coun· sion Service.
Middlcpon Village Council
cil on Aging, Inc. Wright was
Allplt
apecd 10 inaeae sewer and watr.r
employed several years as the coorA grant of $13,400 for tree taleS in !be villqc.
dinator of the Alzheimer's Disease plantings a1oag Hobsoll Drive ...S
A lOIII m231 •imals 36 raband Related Disorders Program · near Diles Park and the boat bits, 88 lambs, 74 bop, :h steers
before her death in November, launching facility on Front Street alid a pen of chickens, brought
l99i.
·
was awarded to M'oddlqnt by !be $97,30S at the lllllual Meip CounWhat was described as the Division of Fuestty, Ohio Depart· ty 4-H and FFA Junior Fair Live;.
largest seizure of cas1i from a dru&amp;. mentofNaturaiResoun:es.
·
stock Sale at the 129th annual
transaction in Meigs County histo- · . Matthew L. Snyder, age nine, Meigs County~· The largest sinry took place in a search and Rock Springs Road, died from gle.buyer was the Farmers Banlt
seizure operatiop. Eight to nine injuries he received in a car-pedes- and Savings Company. Home
,pounds of processed marijuana was trian wreck on Roct Springs Road National Bank was the second
confiSC8ted at the Keebaugh Road in CheSter Township. .
llqest buyer.
•
residence of John Dillard, alQng
A contract with David V. Weber
A five-mill levy for five y-.
w.ith $65,000 in cash. Another Consuuction of Reedsville for !be ,· clesipatcd for pcnnanelll implo•
$37,000 was seized lrom an undis· Bfid&amp;emall Sueet SIOriD sewer and lllCIIlS was approved to lie placcid
closed location.
street ~ was sipecl at a Syra- on the ballou of Meiss LOC:Cl
The Meigs County Commis- cuse ViUqe Coomal meebllg.
School District voters iii · the
.
:
sioners authorized the placement of
The Southern Local School November elcctioo.
a 1.8 mill levy fer the Meigs Coun· Board was onlcred 10 . .y for ml·
The ~llem Local Sc:ltool Dilty Board of Mental Retardation and lege expenses for a former
lrict YOied 10 pllce a levy on the
Development Disabilities on the of the district after
...S November Wlot for fudiDJ 10
November ballot
his pam~IS claimed he RICCived an CODS1111Cl a DCW school far kinder·
The Village of Pomeroy took inadcqUIIIC Cllalion.from the dis- gancn ......... c:i&amp;fldl pades.
'
the first step toward downtown trict. Jerry and Donna Aleshire,
The Mcip County Council on
revitalization when the village Syracuse, claimed their handi· Aging ra:eived a $500 Jlllll from
.council agreed to apply for grant capped son, Jerry Alesbin: Jr. has the Women's Health Program,
monies on behalf of the Pomeroy not been granted a "free appopri· Burean of Maternal and Child
Merchants Association,
ate education" as reqund by the Health, Ohio Department of
A $1.7 million operating budget laws of the United Stares and the Health, to develop a program for
for 1993 with projected receipts State of Ohio.
. the ser.tember observance of
falling $198,397 short of being
Paul M. Reed was appointed 10 Women s Heabh Month.
•
enough to cover anticipated expen· serve as president of the Farmers
Meigs County Emergency Serditures was adopted by Middleport BanksdSa~~Y·
vices Director Robert Dyer
Village Council.
Southern Ohio
Company, received permission from the
. The Oldies But Goodies Car Meigs Division, a~~mnnd !be lay- M~gs County CoaunQsioners to
Club sponsored its fourth annual off of 212 employees from its advatisc for bids for a c:ommunic:ashow on the parkhtg lot in underground mining operations tioll systaD 10 augment !be existing
Pomeroy.
near Willcesvillc.
system at the Pomeroy headquarLinda Briggle was named
The Rock Springs United ras of the EMS depa&amp;ment.
administrator at Overbrook Center Methodist Church cefebrated its
To be cuatined
in Middleport.
lOOth anniversary with an all-day
Approval to again place a two- service.
1be English idiom MGo jump in the
mill levy on the ballot' for fire
McBucts for Education, a fund late!~ is translated into Ylddiah as MGo
department operation in the Village . raiser designed to share the whistle in the ocean!~ (MGai feifen ah·
of Middleport was' granted by the McDcinald's commilmCDt 10 educa- fenyam!'')
village council.
lion with local sc:bool gt014JS and
Dem~l!tion of. the old Betsy organizations, was kicked off at a
Ro~ bwlding oo Ftfth Avenue ~as meeting held at McDonald's of
earned out by Pulhns Excavaung. Pomeroy. Owners Roscoe and
The lot was cleared for construe· Sandee Mills and their manage·
lion of eight houses for low income
families.
,
COLONY THEATRE
Jim Hill of Pleasers ReStaurant
10IIQtl1'
was selected as J991-92 Employer
THE
MIGHTY
DUCKS PG
of the Year by ihe Meigs ~ounty
ONE E~ IHOW7:30
Schools Wor'k·Study Program.
ADMISSIOII$1.50
AND
Prominent Middlepat business·
PURE COUNTRY PG
man Rodney Downmg, 94, died
ONE E~ IHOWI:30
July 5 at his residence on North
ADMIIIIC1UUO
Second Avenue in Middleport.
STMTIIIG FlmAY
FAL,SAT,SUN.
Independence Day was the day
Danielle Peckham and Chris
THE~~s
Snouffer won the Second Annual
ONE EYEitltG IHOW 7:30
AD Ill IliON $1.10
Meigs County Soapbox Der'by held
AND lttiJWING AT 1:30
in Middleport.
FAL,SAT,-.
Denise Cotterill, age 10, daugh·
SlEYEN SEAGM. WI
ter of Barbara and Steven Cotterill,
UNDER SIEGER
ONE E~ IHOWI:30
Pageville, was crowned Little Miss
ADIIII-$1.10
Firecracker 1992 in ceremonies
··~21
held at the Rutland July 4th cele·
,.
bratioo. The contest was sponsored
by Holly Williams of Holly's
Dollys.
A cQfltract with the Meigs Local
Teachers Association (MLTA) was
ratified by the Meigs Local Board
ofEducatloo. 1

•*••

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JUST

AlllVIII

CALL .US

TODAYI
992·2124

'

IUISIILL UIIYEISITY
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DIYISIOI 1·11
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....

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ft2·H27

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