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                  <text>: Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy •_Mid,dleport, Ohio

Wednesday,· November 29, 1995

PEPSI COLA
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Copyright 1995

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79

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Pomeroy7Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 30, 1995

Giving a gift of life

Ohio may not change speed limit
Trucking companies take neutral position on issue

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Blood is a gift of life for the critically ill or injured and at
Wednesday's visit of the American Red Cross Bloodmobile, Meigs
Countians were given an opportunity to give for one of their own.
Jim Adams of Syracuse awaits a liver transplant at a Columbus
hospital. He will need about 20 units of blood and many donors
designated their blood for replacement of that which will be used
during Adams' transplant. Regular donor, Patricia Barton of
Pomeroy, pictured here with Red Cross nurse, Connie Young, gave
her 67th unit. (Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

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State plans appeal
\in ·Snouffer case

79(

By: TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
. The special prosecutor in the
criminal case against two peoplec.
accused of attempted murder and
felonious assault in the poisoning
of a Pomeroy man said yeslerday
thai he plans 10 appeal, afler a Yin-

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Bul Rep. Mike Fox. R-HamiiIOn, would like Ohio 10 speed
lhings up.
"Nobody drives 55," said Fox,
who introduced a bill last week Ibm
wou ld eliminale lhe 55-mph limil
in cilics.
King, whose associalion represcms 1,200 lrucking companies,
said members are split along lwo
schools of though!.
One side argues thai 55 mph is
the safest and mosl fuel-efficienl.
The olher lhinks \hat. whalever !he

speed limil is. il should be unifonn.
Fox agree s wilh !he Iauer.
"Having dual speed lim11s ereales more of a traffic hazard." he
said.
Plus, it allows some municipalilies lo cash in on speeders by stationing police JUS! over the line
where lhc speed limils switch
" Thai crcales far more rearenders and ncar-rear-enders." f'ox
said. " As soon as they sec the
police. !hey slam on !heir brakes.''
Rep. Ron Hood , R-Canfield,
inlroduced a bill thai would take
Fox's mea sure a step further by
eliminating !he 55 -mph limit for
trucks on rural interslalcs.
Fox said !hal would be fine with
him, noting that I he state's roads
were designed 10 be safe a1 much
higher speeds.
Warren Davies, superintendent
of !he Highway Patrol. docs nol
buy !hal argument.
.
" People say highways are bud!

for a certain speed. !hat cars are
buill for certain speed." Davies
said. "A lot of our cilizens aren't
buill for driving al certain speeds."
He cited a sludy done by the
sla!C Dcparunen1 of Public Safely
!hal show ed ihal accidents
increa sed 22 percent in the first
year afler the speed limit on rural
interstates was raised in 1993.
That. coupled wilb llle fact !hal
surveys showed !hat many
motorists already were speeding, is
a strong argumenl again st raising
the speed limils further . Davies
said.
Thai argument - along with lllc
governor' s opposit ion - could
sway some voles in !he Legislature,
said Sen. Scott Oelslager. R-Canlon , chainnan of !he Senate Highways &amp; Transportation Cornmillee.
"We do want 10 ensure that
public safety is no! jeopardized,"
Oelslager said.

Orders for durable goods down in October
WASHINGTON (AP)- Led
by plunging demand for aircraft,
orders to U.S. fac1ories for expensive, long-lasting goods fell I percent in October - the first drop in
three months.
The Commerce Deparunent said
today that the decline pushed
durable-goods orders down to a
seasonally adjusled $167.3 billion
from $168.9 billion in Seplember.
Orders had risen 2.9 percent in
September and 5. 1 percent in
August. The last time they fell was
in July, when they sank 1.8 percent.
Half !he Oclober decline was in
transportation goods. as falling
orders for aircraft and paris led a
10.5 percent plummet in this
volalile category. The decrease all

bul wiped out a I 0.6 percent
advance for transportalion equip·
ment in Seplember.
Analysts had predicted the
October drop in durable goods,
although many expected it to be
even steeper. 1be economy overall
has been expanding al a modest
pace in recent monlhs, they said.
Analysts are awaiting a Dec. 19
meeting of Federal Reserve policymakers, !he last of ihe year, 10 see
if they will lower short-lenn inlerest rates again. The Fed shaved a
quarter percentage point off a key
rate in July, the lirst cut in nearly
three years, but ha s left rale s
unchanged since.
The October decline in durablegoods demand incl-uded fewer

orders for industrial machinery .
Electronic equipment and primary
melals rose las! monlh.
New orders were 8.2 percent
higher in October than for the same
period a year ago. In an up-and New orders
down year, orders fell in six of lhe
Bill1ons of dollars. seasonally adjusfed
first I 0 monllls.
Durable goods include such 1180
items as cars, computers and appli175
ances !bat react 10 changing inlcresl
rates because they oflen arc pur170
chased on credit. Analysis track lhe
dala carefully for indicalions of 165
where consumer spending is headed.
Consumer spending, which
fueled lllc economy's recovery lb31
began more !han four years ago,
has slowed dramatically

Durable
goods

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Stall
A proposed 25-mile electric
transmission line projec1 for the
new Belleville Hydroeleclric plant
has been recommended for
approval by the staff of the Ohio
Power Siting Board, according to
officials willl the Ohio Public Utilities Commission.
The county-wide project would
allow transmission of generated
power from !be Belleville hydro
plant to the existing Ohio Power
Company Rutland subslation of llle
American Electric Power sys1em
over a 138 kilovolt electric line.
The pennits for construction of the
line were filed by llle Ohio Municipal Electric Generation Agency.
The Agency is a group of 42
municipal electric companies that
own and operate individual municipal electric systems, and jointly
bold a license from the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission for
the Belleville Hydroelectric Project.
Federal officials cbose the
Reedsville to Rutland line route
from five potential routes, including three in West Virginia and 1wo
in Ohio, Celeste Miller, a
spokeswoman for ihe Federal Energy Regulatory Commission sUited
previously.
· According to Leon Daggett,
executive vice president of AMP-

Ohio, the licensed route for the
power lines for the 25 mile stretch
of lines was the first route recommended by American Municipal
Power officials last year.
The 42 megawatt hydro plant al
the Belleville Locks and Dam is
scheduled to be complele for generation of electric power by Nov. I,
1997 . The project's developer,
PASCAGOULA, Miss. (AP)- :
American Municipal Power of
S!ale and federal lawyers who are :
Ohio,. is a non-profit wholesale
questioning a former researcher at ·
power supplier and trade associallle third largest U.S. tobacco com- :
tion for 77 of Ohio's 84 municipalpany won'! say what information :
he is proviuing.
ly owned electric utilities.
A public hearing on the pro"The judge has the deposition :
posed line construction is sched.under seal. I don't want to say any- ·
thing thai could be interpreted as :
uled for 7:15p.m. , Wednesday,
Dec. 13 at the Meigs County
talking about lhe deposition," Mis- :
sissippi Auorncy General Mike ·
Senior/Mullipurpose Cenler in
Moore said Wednesday.
:
Pomeroy. An adjudicatory hearing
State Chancery Judge William :
is scheduled on the proposal for
Myers oruered thai Jeffrey ·
I :30 p.m., Dec. 14 at the Public
Wigand's testimony be seaied until :
Utilities Commission offices in
CONSTRUCTION RECOMMENDED· The
the Belleville Locks and Dams (above) in
further
notice in a lawsuit the Mis- ·
Columbus.
Ohio Power Sitting Board, a division of the PubReedsville, and send it to a Rutland Substation
sissippi attorney general's office :
At llle conclusion of these hearlie Utilities Commission of Ohio, has recom·
operated by Ohio Power. A public hearing has
brought 1o Ioree I3 tobacco compa- .:
ings, !he Power Sitting Board will
mended approval for construction of a 25 mOe,
been scheduled for Dec. 13 on the proposed pro·
nie.~
10 pay for smoking-related ill- •
meet 10 consider tbc staff recom138 kDovolt electric line that would send power
ject.
nesses.
mendation, public testimony and
. generated from the new Hydroelectric plant at
.
other evidence in !he proposal.
Final approval of llle Board is necessary prior to construction of the
project.
The $73 .8 million hydroelectric
BELFAST, Northern Ireland ship of peace to sink on the rocks Here, the will for peace is now
party lalks, we canno1 have a peace
plan~ which will provide power for
(AP) - Hailing Northern Ireland's of old babits and hard grudges."
stronger than the weapons of war.'' settlement.' '
42 Ohio communities, is being con- 15-montb cease-fire, President
Clinton hopes his presence in
'Britain and Ireland have agreed
Adams greeted Clinton w;umly
structed by Guy F. Atkinson Con- Clinton today challenged ProtesNoribern
Ireland
alone
generates
to
:isk an international commission when they met today outside a
struction Co. of San Bruno, Calif.
tants and Roman Catholics to stand confidence in the peace process and to tackle llle sensitive issue of dis- Belfasl bakery afler the president's
f1rn1 against !bose who would allow
builds on a breakthroug~ agree- arming guerrillas. The two govern"old habits and hard grudges" to ment that opened his five-day ments pledged to continue talks speech. The two shook hands and
spoke briefly. Laler. Adams told a
destroy their cbance for peace.
.European trip. He flew to Belfast with individual parlies in hopes of reporter he had extended "a thou Hundreds of well-wiskers on
from London and carefully split his eventually moving into all-party sand welcomes" to Clinlon in
both sides of Northern Ireland's
time in Northern Ireland between negotiations.
Gaelic.
sectarian divide turned out to grc;et
Prolestant and Catholic factions.
While the president praised llle
Clinton visited tough neighbor. initially estimated.
Clinton as he became the first
In his speech at tbe Mackie agreement, 'friends and foes of the hoods on both sides of Noribern
Many analysts had expected a American president to visit the
Plant, whicb assembles textile outlawed Irish Republican Anny Ireland's conflicl. In the Catholic
slight decline last week, which war-scarred Brilish province.
machinery, Clinton said !he truce called it "a fudge." .
Falls Road, Clinton piudged inlo an
included the Thanksgiving Day
"Clinton Fever Grips Belfast,"
transformed a land once gripped by
Trimble
of
the
Ulster
David
enthusiastic
crowd, shaking hands
holiday and thus fewer days in trumpeted a headline in !he Belfast
terrorism into a place where gunfire Unionist Party, a pro-British with dozens of people. On a stroll
which 10 file claims.
Telegraph.
is a rarity and children play without Protestant group, said, "The essen- along the Shankhill Road, in the
The {our-week moving average
In a speech to Belfast factory
fear. The region will continue to tial issue is that there must be heart of the hard-line Protestant
of new weekly jobless claims also workers, Clinton said that attempts
prosper ''as the shroud of terror decommissioning (of weapons), area, he and his wife, Hillary
fell during !he period ended Nov. to end a quarter-century of sectarimelts away," Clinton said, because and there will be no talks with Sinn stopped to buy oranges and apples.'
25, down 1,000 to 373,250. It was an conflict were certain to be
so many people are focused on rec- Fein unlil that happens."
Even with the cease-fire , Clinthe lowest level since claims aver- assailed by "people who, deep
onciliation.
He suggesled that the lith-hour ton can't claim that the violence
aged 369,000 (luring the period down inside, will never be able lo
"Now is the time to sustain that accord was staged to protect Clin- has ended. The IRA and pro-British
ended Nov. 11.
give up the past"
momentwn and lock in tbe gains of ton and British Prime Minisler Jobn "IQ¥lliists" have intensified attacks
Many analysts consider the
"Just as peace bas its pioneers,
peace," Clinton said. "Long,suf- Maior from embarrassment.
against tbeir own people in
average more 'eliable because it peace will always have its rivals,"
fering people are moving closer to
Sinn Fein plp'ty leader Gerry •attempts to maintain power bases
smooths out the spikes in the often- Clinton said. "Protestant and
normal lives. All have labored to Adams, a lon'gtime voice of the . and keep the policy from undervolatile weelcly reports.
Catholic alike must not allow the
realize !he promise of peace . ... IRA. said. :'If we cannot have all- . mining their authority.

State deposition
under seal in
tobacco suit

Clinton calls for peace in Northern Ireland

JobleSS claims are
down from last week

MORTON

SCHICKEN LUCt(S PINTO BEANS
)
lSOZ
NOODLE SOUP

Continued on page 3

repealed on Dec. 8, several states
will automalically increase limils
on inlerslales.
B01h Gov. George Voinovich
and !be head of !be Stale Highway
Pa!rol, however, oppose raising !be
limi1s in Ohio.
"He lhinks !he speed limils we
have are adequale," Voinovich
spokesman Mike Dawson said
Wednesday.

PUCO OKS transmission
line project for electric plant

ROLL

59

ton County judge dismissed tbe
case Wednesday morning.
Danny Zirkle of Pomeroy and
.Sarah Snouffer of Pomeroy were
accused of po1sonmg Mrs. Snouffer's ex-husband, Gary,..dunng the
autumn of 1989 w1th arsen1c, a

COLUMBUS ( AP) - The association !hal represents Ohio's
trucking companies is laking a neutral position on whelbcr !be state
should raise its speed limits in light
of the federal decision to lift llle 55
mph limil.
"Trucks in Ohio have never bad
more than 55 mph - even when it
was 70," Tom King, executive vice
president of the Ohio Trucking
Association, said Wednesday.
"We need to be careful that we
don't change for the sake of
change."
President Clinton on Tuesday
signed legislation to end the 21year-old national 55-mph speed
limit.
The limit was imposed in 1974
to save energy. Highway deaths
declined by nearly 9,000 the following year. Siatcs later were permitted to set a 65-mph limit on
rural inters1a1es.
When llle federal s~ed limit is

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
nwnber Of American workers filing
first-time claims for jobless benefits fell by 16,000 last week, the
largest drop in nine weeks.
.
The Labor Depanmeqt sa1d
today that new applications for
unemployment insurance tolaled a
seasonally adjusted 363,000, lowest since 358,000 during the week
ended Oct. 21.
The drop was llle largest since
claims fell by 31,000 during the
week ended Sept. 23. Claims had
jumped by a revised 9,000 during
the week ended Nov . 18, to
379,000, rather than by 1,000 as

10 LB.

90

/$1 0 ADD. PURCHASE

I

.... _.

b

•

,,

..

�'

Commentary

Thursday, November 30, 1995
Page~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Photographer linked to another model slaying

OHIO Weather

Thursday, November 30, 1995:

..,

)&lt;'riday, Dec. 1

LOS ANGELES (AP) - lnves·
tigators were retracing the travels
of a photographer charged in the
slaying of one model and Unked to
the death of anotber, trying to

AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

The Daily ·S entinel
I

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

fiMU.TNEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
·

·Letters to the editor
Is this necessary?
This delinquent tax notice thai is
published in the paper, I find to be
offensive.
I think it is intimidating and is
embarrassing to the land owner.
I do not think lllis is a public
matter but should be solved
between the tax collector and the
property owner.
I think they could be sent a
notice notifying lllem of what the

penalties tlley face.
I do not believe dJe cost would
be any higher than advertising
costs and would provide a bener
working situation between them selves and not embarrass tlle property owner.

With President Clinton signifi- shouldn't be sent to patrol a precarcantly ahead in the still-to-be-con- ious r.,eace - Clinton isn'tlikely to
cluded I 995 political sweepstakes, he seen as a warner as he asserts to
the White House is planning to usc Congress that U.S. leadership of
an unlikely theme - leadership to belp him win re-election in Morton Kondracke
1996. A tough issue, Bo~nia, may
help.
NATO ami the world community
Top White House aides say that requires a military role .
while Clinton is frequently accused
Right nnw, every major poll
of "waffling and having no back- indicates that Clinton is clobbering
bone," he actually has a record of the Repuhlie:uts for political advan"taking on tough issues," and his tage going intn 1991\. although as
1996 campaign will consist partly one aide says, "what happens in
of reminding people of the fact.
the next couple of weeks is going
Aides list the 1993 deficit- to stick in people' ., minds about
reduction fight, the North Ameri- who did what"
can Free Trade Agreement. sending
Tbe polls sho;v mixed results on
U.S. troops to Haiti, intervention in whether approval of Clinton's per·
the Mexican peso crisis. defense of formance is improving, but they arc
affirmative action, and baltles unanimous in showing a precipiagainst the National Rifle Associa- tous fall in esteem for the Republi·
tion and tlle tobacco lobby as evi- cans against whom he'll be camdence of Clinton's standing up for paigning. ·
principle.
Last week's ABC/Washington
They say that the 1995 budget Post poll showed Clinton's
controversy is giving him another approval rating up seven points
opportunity to demonstrate convic- since June, to 54 percent, while the
tion in defense of the social safety NBC/Wall Street Journal Poll had
net and the environment that are him at 49 · percent, and the
under attack from Republicans.
CBS/New York Times poll put him
While the public tends to sup- at 48.
port the current GOP position on
At the same time, House SpeakBosnia - that U.S. troops er Newt Gingrich's approval rat -

ings have dropped to 27 percent in
all three polls (down 18 points
since May) and Senate Majority
Leader Bob Dole's are down from
60 percent in March to 45 percent
now in tlle ABC/Washington Post
poU.
Congress ' approval rating,
according tu CBS/New York
Times, is down Io 22 percent, its
low before tlle 1994 GOP victory.
The same poll showed that voters
trust Clinton more than Congress to
deal both with Medicare and the
deficit, and by 53·34 they believe
that he's "concerned more about
doing what's best for you."
The NBC/Wall Street Journal
poll shows tllat only 49 percent of
Americans think that Clinton's
budget actions show him as ''a
strong leader standing up for what
he believes in" while 43 percent
see him as "pu,tting his own political agenda ahead of what's good
for the country." However, only 33
percent consider Gingrich a leader.
and only 30 percent sec Dole as
one.
One top White House aide com·
mented that "Bob Dole makes Bill
Clinton look line a ramrod." Clinton is now consistently running I 0
points ahead of Dole in head-to·

Virgil Wallcer
Racine.

A wonderful event
Dear Editor
Returning to Meigs County to
visit my family in Chester for
Thanksgiving is always a wonderful family event, but this year it
was even more exciting for me.
I remember when I was a kid,
we would travel to Parkersburg the
day after Thanksgiving to begin
our Christmas shopping, see the
parade. and all of llle sights. In
later years we usually went to the
Parkersburg mall. It just wasn't the
same as I remembered from my
youth ... not the hustle-bustle of
friendly people or stores I could
meander thru "just looking." In the
last decade or so, we'd go to purchase poinsettias and maybe to a
discount store, all a far cry from
my memories as a youngster.
But this year we took a trip to
Pomeroy because Mom said there
were a couple of new stores that
liad opened. I was reluctant but
agreed to drive Mom and my aunt
to our first stop, the new "dollar"
slore. What a nice clean store with
friendly workers and filled wit'!_
bargains unavailable to me in
Colum~u s.
..
On downtown we went to the
Victorian Parlor. The aroraa of
roses filled tlle air, and while talking witl1 the shop owner, she told
me her tlloughts of possibly including a Tea Room on tlle premises.
Now wouldn't that be something
for Pomeroy? A place where folks
could chat and have .a cup of lea

MICH.

Clinton will assert 'leadership_'---__;

together on a wintery afternoon or
morning ... all right there overlooking the great Ohio River! (Do I
remember this building as being
my doctor's oflice?)
We visited the store housed in
the old dime store where I found
Christmas lights for .99 cents~
string that I have been searching
for in Columbus for craft projects.
(I bought4 strings!)
l the office supply store, I
couldn't pass up a tape dispenser
with Cbrisunas tags printed on tllc
tape, Christmas computer stationary with matching envelopes and a
couple of Christmas cards that ·
made me laugh so hard I began
coughing so loud the clerks came
running to see if I needed a drink of
water.
The trees decorated by children
on llle sidewalks are unique and :
ImpressiVe. At fll'St my "Big City" :
mentality assured me that the orna- 1
ments would be destroyed and ,
never last until Christmas, but I
realized how young children can
point out their ornaments with
- pride to their families and friends.
As a retired teacher,_I know the
amount of work and cooperation
this must have taken. Bet they'll
last past Christmas!
¥ was a wonderful afternoon.
If you've got some long-term
Pomeroy, be proud. I know I'm
vision,
enjoy taking risks and don't
even more proud than ever to say
mind the price volatility of emergthat I'm from Meigs County.
Janet Knight Pennell ing markets funds, meet two fund
Columbus. managers so gung-ho on China
they could make anyone want to be
an investor in that part of the
world.
Lynda Johnstone is the portfolio
manager of the Guinness Flight
China and Hong Kong Fund. She
asked investors at a Fidelity Fund
By WALTER R. MEARS
Network Seminar in Atlanta earlier
AP Special Correspondent
this month this question: If it were
WASHINGTON -With American troops cast as irreplaceable I00 years ago, you lived in Lonenforcers of the Bosnia peace accord, President CUnton is on a course he don, would you have looked to the
foresaw long ago and now will pursue in tandem with his quest for re- United States for investment opporelection.
·
· tunities?
The frrst rigors were diplomatic, the next will be military- and those
Good question. Particularly
of the political campaign will come close behind. Clinton said the military . because it makes you tllink aliout
time frame is one year. The year is 1996.
things from a different perspective
The president promised Americans a mission clear, limited and well and then wonder if you, in fact,
prepared.
would have bad tbe foresight to
''But no deployment of American troops is risk-(ree, and this one may imagine the United States growing
well involve casualties," he said Monday night in seeking support for his into the most powerful nation in the
dectston to send 20,000 Amencans to help secure the shaky Bosnian set- world.
"There are very few invesunent
tlement. "I assume full responsibility for any hann that may come to
them."
opportunities that occur throughout
history that have significant impact
Republican rivals would haye made sure of that anyhow.
In his televised address, Clinton suggested that the administration's on the way we view investmenL~ in
role in negotiating tlle accord carried its own commihnent: "America's the future," says tlle London-based
commihnent to leadership will be questioned if we refuse to participate in Johnstone, who was in the United
implementing a peace agreement we brokered right here in the United
States," he said.
So each step led. to the next. Clinton said he will seek the support of
Congress. But his fi~ commibnent to the mission does not binge on what
happens on Capttol Htll. Indeed, he said UJe advance force of Americans
will be sent to Bosnia next week, to prepare for the main deployment later
Consider two new books about
in December.
Republicans: " Bob Dole" and
With the ghosts of past peacekeeping missions to dispel, Congress at
"Lincoln." Taken together, with
best skeptical and Americans clearly unconvineed, Clinton's bid for backpresidential primaries coming up,
ing was only beginning.
they can add perspective to what
One speech isn't going to suffice. His address was a keynote, not a we know about presidents.
conclusion. More than 30 months after be fll'St spoke of sending American
After all , the Dole presidential
soldiers to help uphold a peace accord in Bosnia when there was one, the
campaign could be called "Wbat
administration still is trying to prove that vilfll U.S. n,ational interests are
About Bob?" It's said that he
at stake.
doesn't stand for anything, that be
Now there's a deadUne, and the campaign that bas been a sometime bas pandered, that he's not really a
thing is becoming full•time work. Bosnia will be a central concern during conservative, that he's too conserthe five-day European journey Clinton was beginning today after briefmg vative, that be can be a sarcastic
congressional leaders on the troop deployment.
meanie, that be has a dark side that
. Coesional hearings are next. Bob Dole, leader of the senate major- be doesn't get anyone excited: that
ity an of e RepubUcan field of would-be challengers to the president in he's a professioqal politician that
1996, s 'd anticipated a 10-day debate before Congress votes.
bis image is manufactured and that
It isn't clear yet what it will vote on. Clinton wants support, but witll be's lost each of the lllree times
the caveat that he claims constitutional power to order the mission any· ' he's been involved in a hational
election.
bow.
For the RepubUcan-led Congress, the ideal pplitical position would be
Pulitzer Prize-winning Richard
to voice reservations, then say OK and let it be Clinton's operation. That Ben Cramer's short (163 pp.) book
was the Republicans' tone as Clinton broadcast his bid for support in his on Dole •s an excerpt from his
Saturday radio address and Monday night speech.
landmark earlier volume "What It
But Clinton's national security adviser, Anthony Lake, recalled the TV Takes," about the 1988 presidenimages of carnage in Sarajevo and elsewhere in Bosnia and said he didn't tial candidates. It otTers a different
think Congress would want ' 'responsibility for leuing that happen again.''
view. Born in 1923 of a middleEDITOR'S NOTE- Walt..r R. Mears, vice president and colum· class family in Russell, Kan ..
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and enduring an oil crash and a dustnational politics for more than 30 years.
bowl Depression, Bob Dole was

TU!; ~OOS~ APPQ?'l'~ BAN ON GIFTS A&lt;OMiOOQ'l~TS
'

'

.

Dian Vuiovich

·Clinton's military course
will parallel campaign

U.S. market. And you can take
another look back in the 1970s,
when the Japanese market was the
place to be at tlle time. The majority of tbe people missed out on
those opportunities.
"All I'm saying is that people
need to look forward and say ,to
themselves, 'Where-are the investing opr,ortunities in the world

today1' '
.
There's no doubt tllat China is a
growing economy. According to
Johnstone, it has been growing at a
rate of about 9 percent per year.
and if economic growth continues
at tllat pace China could become
the world's largest economy in the
21st century.
·
Sbe also said the "prudent"
way to get the best exposure to
China at the moment is by buying
Hong Kong stocks, altllough these
are high-risk markets.

According to Lipper Analytical
Services, there are about 60 stocks
in Guinness Flight's China and
Hong Kong Fund that through Nov.
16 had a year-to-date total return of
over 11.5 percent. The, majority of
the stocks in the ftind (75 percent)
are blue chip stocks foilnd on Hong
Kong's Hang Seng Index. John·
stone's l)lanagement style looks at
risk first and reward second, with
, tlle goal of trying to. beat a bench
mark. At this ·mome.nt that bench
mark is tlle Hang Seng Index.
Barbara Trebhi is portfolio manager of the Ivy China Region Fund.
A fund that bas about 14 percent of
its assets invested in mainland
China, 55 percent in Hong Kong,
12 percent in Korea and the
remainder invested throughout
other parts of Asia.
She too thinks that' China offers
tremendous long-term inveshnent
opportunity. "It's really the engine
of growth for the whole world."
But Trehbi, whose fund is down
roughly 2.6 percent this year, is
aware that investors..are no longer
enchanted with many of tlleir Far
East and Asian fiBld.invesbnent.i.
"I think that China is a perfect

• IColumbus l49o I

Showers 1'-storms Rain

•

Ben Wattenberg
Kansas University, he was drafted
into the Anny. He went to officer
Uaining and into combat as a lieutenant in Italy, ~~ere be was
gunned down.
The strapping young man
weighed 192 pounds when be went
into service and 122 pounds when
he came borne. Only rare willpower and an excruciating four years of
treatment resurrected most of his
torn body. The frrst thing his wifeto-be, a nurse, heard about bim
was, "Ob that poor Bob Dole, he
doesn't have long to live ." He
thought he might end up crippled,
selling pencils on a street corner.
He survived, harshly handicapped
and fiercely ambitious. He went to
law school, ran for local, state and
federal office, running, running,
running, wheeling and dealing,
serving constituents, colleagues,

a

-

Ice

Via Associated Press GraphicsNet

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
(0·1995 AccuWeather , Inc.

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Ohio
Today .. .lncreasing cloudiness.
High in tlle lower 40s. Southwest
wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight...Cioudy with a chance
of rain . Windy. Low near 40.
Southwest wind I 0 to 20 mph.
Chance ol rain 30 percent.
Friday ... Becoming opartly
cloudy. High in the lower 50s.
Extended forecast

r

'

:."

·~

I

~. "'

Hallie Ann (Young) PI.. nts, 91. of Apple Grove died Wcdncstlay .
November 29, 1995, at her home.
·
Born October 8. 1904 in Pliny, she was a daughter of the late llarvcy
and Nancy E. (Steele) Young . She was a member of Barton Chapel
Church, Apple Grove and a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Robert Plants Jr.; and
two sons, George F. Plants and Charles R. Plants.
Survivors include six daughters, Emma Long and Violet Chapman .
both of Apple Grove, Doris Lanzotti, Dorothy Coleman and Alma
McConnell, all of Troy, Ohio, and Mahle Amerson of South Carolina ;
five sons, James Plants and Noah Plants of Apple Grove, Walter Plants of
Kentucky, Forrest Plants of New Jersey and Larry Plants of Troy, Ohio;
42 grandchildren; numerous great-grandchildren: and numerous greatgreat-grandchildren.
Service will be Saturday, December 2, at I p.m. at Barton Chapel
Church, Apple Grove, with Rev. Jerry Ranson, Rev. Marlin Campbell and
Rev. Bert Flora officiating. Burial will follow in Barton Charel Church
Cemetery, API,lle Grove.
Friends may call at tlle Wilcoxen Funeral Home Friday from 7-9 p.m.
an~ at tlle church one hour prior to Saturday's service.

State plans appeal...

Sarurday ... Dry. Lows in the 30s
Continued from page 1
and highs in the UpJ!Cr 40s to mid
heavy metal that accumulates in tlle
50s.
Sunday ... A chance of showers . body until a lethal dose is reached.
Lows 40 to 45 and highs in the · In the dismissal opinion, presiding Judge Warren J. Lotz of Vinton
upper 50s to lower 60s . .
Monday ... A chance of showers. County stale&lt;l that the court agreed
Lows in tl1e upper 30s to lower 40s. the destruction of recorded tapes of
Highs from the upper 40s north· telephone conversations between
west to the upper 50s southeast.
Sarah Snouffer and others deprived
the defense of their role in cross
examinating witnesses or impeaching witnesses.
"You should not be able to dismiss a case whose actions occurred
iq 1989, for conduct tllat happened
~tween July, 1990 and November,
1991. Two wrongs definitely do
not
make a right in this case," Toy
Heavy rains and melting snows
have flooded every major river in said Wednesday afternoon.
Court documents state tllat in
western Washington, and hundreds
of people have left their homes to July, 1990, shortly after his wife
escape rising waters. A state of filed for divorce, Gary Snouffer
emergency has been declared in 14 began recording phone conversacounties, and up to 2 more inches tions between his Sharon Snouffer
and others, without her knowledge,
of rain was possible today.
on
an extension of his home phone
Gusting winds and patches of
heavy to moderate rain should continue across the Northwest, with
lighter rain possible in Montana
and Idaho.
Applications being taken
Balmier air should take the chill
,The Meigs United Methodist
off across the southern and central Cooperative Parish will be taking
Plains, including Texas. Ample applications for Christmas baskets
sunshine also should prevail from
Southern California to llle desert~
Southwest.
Tbe snow level may drop to
Am Ele Power ....................... .37 Ill
4,000 feet in the Cascades. and
Akzo ............... -........................ 56 Ill
_some mountain passes could sec
Ashland 011 ........................... .34 S/8
rain changing to snow throughout
AT&amp;T .................................... .116 Jill
the day.
.
Bank One ............................... .J8 Jill
Winds could gust to 65 mph
Bob Evans ............................... I? Ill
from. eastern Montana to eastern
Borg-Warner..........................l9 7ill
Colorado. Snow accumulations of
Champion Ind ............... :........l l S/8
up to 8 inches were possible in the
Charming Shop .....................l 5/t6
City Holding .................................23
northern Rockies, and light snow
Federal Mogui ........................ J8 Ill
showers were forecast across the
Gaonel1 .........................................60
northern Plains.
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................4l5/8

Warm temperatures
will return to Ohio
By The Associated Press
Strong southerly winds will continue to keep Ohio's temperatures
unseasonably warm into tbe weekend. Showers may linger through
Monday morning.
Highs on Friday will range from
the upper 40s to tbe mid-~. forecasters said. Lows tonight will be
around 40.
Temperatures are expected. to
climb into the 60s in some parts of
the state by Sunday, the National
Weather Service said in its extend·
ed forecast. Saturday is the only
day with lio rain in the forecast
The record-high temperature for
tllis· date at the Columbus weather
station was 71 degrees in 1934
while the record low was 4 below
zero in 1958. Sunset tonight will be
at 5:07 p.m. and sunrise Friday aL
.7:34a.m.
Across the nation
Rain-swollen rivers forced evac·
uations in western Washington
early today and a cold drizzle fell
over the Cascade Range before
daybreak. Mucb of tlle eastern third
of the nation felt a blast of chilly
Canadian air.

· example of people overreacting on ~
the negative side,'' Trebbi said . .
''Stocks have really been beaten
down. There are stocks in China
that are down 50-60 percent off
tlleir highs trading at 40 percent of :·
their value. With all the positive .macroeconomic changes that have
taken place (in China), there is still
a lot of value there that has been
created."
··.
The China and Hong Kong markets are not for everyone. Price
volatility on the handful of funds ·
investing there is likely to repeatedly spark, pop then fizzle like
Chinese firecrackers, so interested
fund investors have to be both bigtime risk takers and very long-tenn ..
thinkers. And long term doesn't ·
mean investing for a couple of .,
years - it could mean decades . ,
Which, for visionaries, is no time at
all.
Dian Vujovich is tbe author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
Funds" and "Straight Talk : '
About Investing for Your Retire- '
ment," both or which are published by McGraw Hill. Send
questions to her in care qf this
newspaper.

Stocks

Units of tbe Meigs County owned by Bill Haptonstall.
Emergency Medical Services
recorded ten calls for service
RACINEVFD
Wednesday, including one transfer
8:55 p.m., Basban Road, possicall. Units responding were:
· ble structure fue, no injuries, assisted by Racine EMS Squad 24.
POMEROY
6:47 a.m., Overbrook Center,
TUPPERS PLAINS VFD
Leuvnia Hayman, Pleasant Valley
10:16 a.m., state Route 7 at
Hospital.
Masser Hill, auto fue, assisted by
10:32 a.m., Rocksprings Reha- Chester Vfll
bilitation, Elnora Adams, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
3:22a.m., Meigs Mine #31,
MIDDLEPORT
Herbert Roush, O'Biennis Memori12:55 p.m., Bailey Run Road, al Hospital.
Joseph Fcblagbeck, Ireated at
10:54 a.m., Meigs Mine #2,
scene.
Gerald Gibbs, Westmoreland Care
Center.
MIDDLEPORT VFD
12:55' p.m., Bailey Run Road,
8:42 p.m., North Second Jeff Shimel, Holzer Medical CenAvenue, electrical odor at building
ter.

Dance to he held
C. J and the Country Gentlemen ·
will be playing for round and
square dancing Friday from 8 to II
p.m. at the old American Legion
hall in Middleport.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY
Admissions: Mildred Fultz,
Pomeroy, Elnora Adams, Pomeroy.
Discharges: None.

Register weekly for a share of $2500 Given
Away by Middleport Merchants.
Drawing every Thursday til Christmas.
Register every week at the following
Middleport Businesses.
Peoples Bank
Acquisitions
Mill Street Books
Furniture on the "T"
Gingerbread House
Millies
Ohio River Bear Co.
Valley Lumber
Locker 219
Ingels Furniture
EllisBP
Trolley Station
Johnson's Variety
Western Auto
Middleport Flower Shop General Tire
Bahr Clothiers
Radio Shack
Ingels Carpet
Vaughan's Cardinal
Dairy Queen
Dottie TUrner Realty
Country Naturals
Lionhead Electronics
McClure's
Fruth Pharmacy
Foreman &amp; Abbott
Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees
Big Bend Health &amp; Fitness Center
Middleport Department Store

THE PERFECT

CHRISTMAS GIFT: NO
AsSEMBLY REQUIRED,
BATTERIES INCWDED.

-·-·-

..

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

GETSHORTY R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
MICHELLE PFEIFFER
IN

DANGEROUS MINDS

R

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
44
3

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Gift Ideas For The
Man In Your Life!

Ohio Valley Publishinz Compaay/Muldmedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!i6.
Stc&lt;lnd etas.~ po&amp;tage pnid nt Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mflnben The Associated Press. and the Obia

Newspaper Associlltion.
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The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4.5769.

!

Salv11tion Army projects
Applications for Cbrisbnas food
baskets and toys will be taken at
tbe Salvation Army, Bullernut
Avenue , Pomeroy. Tuesday and
Wednesday, from 10 a .m. until
noon, and I p.m. until 4.

Holiday Give Away

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Adve&lt;l o
Gallipolis.

:

Published tvuy nftemoon. Mcodoy thro.~sb
Friday, Ill Coun St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C.rrier or Motor Roat~
One Weck ....... ............... ............................ $2.00
One Monlh ............. .................................. $8.70
One Year .............................................. 1104.00

K·mart ...................................... 7 314
Lands End .............................. 14 S/8
Lbnlled loc.................... .. ....... J7 718
Mulllmedla Inc . .....................44 718
People's ........................................23
Ohio Valley Bank ................. .36 Ill
One Valley ............................. .31 3/4
Rockwell .............................. ..48 314
Robbins &amp; Myers ........................ .JI
Royal Dutch/Shell ................ llll Ill
Shoney's Inc........................... 10 718
Star Bank ............................... 57 112
Wendy lnt'l. ................................ .21
Worlhlnglon Ind .................... IS Sill

for low income families on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. only.

National Forest last week . He Rathbun was a suspect. She said:
claimed he accidentally ran ber her daughter had told her she was :
over and buried her in a panic, an working with "someone thallrnew :
account investigators now doubt.
a lot about motoring."
. ·
Rathbun had recently made b1s :
The remains of another blond
model, 20-ycar·old Kimberly Pan- living as a freelance pb~grapber, :
delios. were found in the same for- specializing in automouve photos..
est in 199l a year after she disap- His attorney, Mark Werlcsman. :
J!Carcd .
wouldn't comment on the Pande- .
Rathbun, formerly of Worthing- lios case.
ton . Ohio. a Columbus suburb, "is · Block said the investigation of:
;••'"·'fXXl in that case," Los Ange· Rathbun is widening to other states. ·
b County Sheriff Sherman Block
"We're ~ending some people
,;ooil Wcilnc.\tlay .
out of state this week to look at
" l'c11plc have placed them some unresolved cases in areas
IIIJ..'Cihcr on :11 lca'l two occasions. · where we know Rathbun has
Whether .,he ever went witll him been," the sheriff said.
f11r a photogmphic session or whatHe said one murder case being ·
ever. we have not established that investigated is in Columbus, near
ycl," he said.
where Rathbun's father lives.
Pandclios' mother, Magaly
Authorities have yet to continn
Spector, told KCAL -TV in Los any significant part of Sobek's
Angeles that she wasn' 1 surprised story, the investigator said.

.---------====
===:...======::;
Great Christmas

Th~ 0-aily._ S~~;inel :
(USPSlU·MO)

state and nation, rising to Senate be could .. .. Rather than a simple
majority leader. ,
backwoodsman, be was a promiDavid Herbert Donald's "Lin- nent
and successful auorney reprecoln" also tells tlle story of a trou- senting tlle most powerful interests
bled young Midwesterner. Lincoln m emerging corporate America''
was born in a log cabin. His mother
When Lincoln ran for presiden~
died when he was '10. He received
Donald
writes: "To all outward .
almost no formal education, went
.
appearances
be was less prepared . •,.
west to Illinois in his teens and
to
be
president
of the United States t
worked at odd jobs. He. too,
than
any
other
man wbo had run :
became a lawyer.
For
that
high
office."
.:
Had Lincoln's biography been
.
·
N~w,
tlle
point
is
not
that
Dole
:
'
wntten befqre he became a great
ts
Lmcoln,
nor
·
that
Lincoln
I
president, these are some of the
things that could have been said deserves a trashing. Dole isn't and
Lincoln. ~oesn' t. What we see is ~
aboutbim:
that pohucs ts rough work, in the .
He was a professional politician last century or Ibis one. Harsh criti- •
possessed of an ambition tllat was
comes with the territory. (I · :
"a little engine that knew no rest," cism
ratller
liked the sardonic Dole more · •
according to his law partner than the
goody-two shoes remake.) · :
WilUam Herndon. He was a politiAt_
its
levels, politics · I
cal loser - a one-term Congress- requtres highest
ferocity,
tenacity and
man, who lost twice for the Senate hypoc!lsy.
and never quite made it to big-time
Ben Wattenberg, a"senior fel· . I
politics:
low
at the American Enterpdse ;
He ra~ as ·"Honest Abe, Tbe
Institute,
Is the author of a. new : .
Rail Splitter,'' but as Donald
"Values
Matter Most," :I'
hook,
recounts, Lincoln "bad little love
and
is
the
hnst
of
tbe weekly pub· ; !
for his pioneer origins; he disliked
lie
television
program,
"'tblak ...
physical labor and left it as soon as Tank."
·

that was installed in his Middiepon
office. The recording device continued to record the conversations
of Mrs. Snouffer until she vacated
the marital home just prior 10 tlleir
divorce becoming final in November, 1991.
"I was appointed to the case iu
199;3. I've never listened to the
tapes that Mr. Snouffer recorded.
because I felt it was inappropriate
for me to hear them . What this all
boils down, to is the fact that whatever happened in 1990 did not
affect 19XlJ's evcnL~ . " Toy added.
Pomeroy atlorney I. Carson
Crow, who represents Zirkle in the
cao;e, agreed with the judge's decision that a fair trial would not be
possible . "We feel that tlle judge
made the proper decision in the
case," Crow stated.
"The state or people need to
conduct themselves within the
laws. The laws are designed to protect everyone," Crow added ..

Meigs announcements

Squads log 10 calls

Lincoln wasn't Lincoln either-----the busy kid who was into everything. He emerged as the handsome
hometown high school basketball
hero. In 1943, while a student at

\

Hallie Ann Plants

IND.

China offers long-term,opportunity
States to talk about her fund.
"Back in the late 19th century,
there was a point in time when people were beginning to look at the

(,.

12'~·,

determine if he could be tied to
other unsolved kiiUngs.
Charles Rathbun, 38, led
searchers to the body of model
Linda Sobek in the Angeles

·:·l ea.Jh Notices

head presidential polls. Democrats:
have a four·poim advantage in the;
CBS/New York Ttmes congres··
sional test vote, reversing a slight:
GOP advantage last month.
.
Besides "leadership," White·
House aides indicate tlley plan to .
campaign in 1996 on the theme that:
Clinton represents "the main· ·
stream" while the Republicans are:
"radicals," and that Clinton is try.;
ing to secure a belter future for ·
most Americans.
The polls indicate that these :
themes will find some resonance ·
among the electorate. In the ·
NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, 62
percent of voters worry tllal Repub . .
licans will "go too far" in maldng :
changes, while only 29 percent ·
t!Jink they will n01 go far enough. .'
Clinton's own internal polls ,·
aides say. show that "people want
smaller government, but they do
not want it eviscerated. They sec
education as the key to their kids'
future. They want reduced government regulation, but a clean envi-•
ronmem. They want some reductions fn Medicare, but tlley want to
be sure that its future is secured."
,. Clinton aides say that if Dole
wins the GOP nomination, they
will exploit his age by saying that
Clinton represents the "future"
while Dole is "tlle past." "From
the point of view of physiognomy,
he represents tlle past," one aide ·
said.
According to one of Clinton' s
top political advisers, "the general
election campaign begins April I," •
when it's likely that the GOP nomi- ·
nee will be known and Clinton will
begin spending between $8 million
and $12 million on pre-convention •
TV ads.
•
This aide estimates that the
Clinton campaign will raise a total
of $36 million by the end of the ·
year, get about $14 million in fed- .
eral matching funds and spend a
total of $43 million prior to the ·
Democratic convention in Cbicago,
$31.5 million of it on political
activities including media and trav- .
el.
Despite Clinton's lead over
Dole and congresGional Republicans in the opinion polls, Clinton's
advisers say they expect tbe win· '
ning margin in tbe electoral college .
in 1996to be "thin as a razor.''
Still, "if I bad to choose :
betweep our political position and
theirs,' one aide says. "there's no ·
question that I'd rather be in our .
shoes than theirs."
(Morton Kondracke Is execu· ·
tive editor of Roll Call, the news- .
.paper of Capitol Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

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BAHR CLOTHIERS
145 NORTH SECOND

[iii

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,.

\

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Saturd11y 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

---........
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�· . Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

lfi ·

INVITE YOU TO SHOP FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1ST &amp; 2ND

~
5~

The Perfeet .
Stoeking Staffer
1 Meigs Count~'s

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1..· 100 E.Savi.ngs·
Throughout The Store!!!
MAIN ST..
POMEROY

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Y~ti'c, ftnzua&amp;' o~ ~a'Jt ~Vl;p.1.
~tlmt' .Jec Me.1c t/t d!otilfl mW.
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Many More Styles In Stock
.
MASTER

Christmas Reeliner Sale

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All At Special Christmas Sale

JEWELERS '" .

~ ~e-t.relers
r Main

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Skirt Size • Pkg. of .3

14
$1
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FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Coty Wild Musk ·
Cologne Spray

Box of 15

~ Reg. $3.49

WRAP-UP ·~.
CHRISTMAS ~
AT CHAPMAN'S ~

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$1 49

Christmas
Gift Boxes

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We've just receive a truck load of quality
Berkline Recliners! Huge Assortment of .
Fabrics &amp; Colors.

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ANDERSON'S

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Christmas
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THE FABRIC SHOP .

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Our store made quantity purchase
of HEAVY DUTY SINGER sewing.
machines which are of rugged
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sewer. These SINGER models are
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Suggested list $349.99. Your price
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All Sweaters ~
In Stock

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Walk through our door
and step back in time.
Shop in a relaxed
atmosphere, enjoy
our music and reflect ·
on the true

SIOO
The Daily Sentinel

Santa Sa,s:

It
STOP
I

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to

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50%
OFF ~
$4.so $7.oo
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aoo

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$219

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FOR WOMEN
Reg. $9.95

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Earrings
COMPLETE

STOCK

~ Price ·

1/5 CAJIAT.JEG. $350 SALB·$270
1/4 CABAT·REG.·$595 SALB·$350
113 CABAT·REG.·$625 .~ALB·$425

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Russell Stover
Assorted
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Reg.

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Christmas

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t CASSETTE TAPES - Christmas Oldies
t Reg. $3.98~.....................................0NLY 2.69 .. . .
t Reg. $4.99 ......................................0NLY 3.39 ·
t Christmas CD's Reg. $4.99 ••••••••••••••• 0NLY 3.29 .•
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5
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"To Qualified Applicants

5

Prices Good thru Monday, Dec. 4th .

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n erson's
Open Monday. Til 8
Tues.-Sat. T1l 5

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

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�Thursday, November 30, 1995

·Sports

The Daily Sentinel
,

Three
Eastern ·warriors
.
.receive hono·rable mention

Page6

.

Meigs boys to host River Valley
in season's first contest Friday

Eastern girls record
70-38 win over Trimble
, Eastern· s Lady Eagles rolled to
ll 70-38 Tri Valley Conference vrciory over U!C Trimble Lady Tom~ats in Glou"cr Monday mght to
pick up Llicir first win of the sealiOn.
·
• The win was significa nt for
Easteru as Trimble swe pt the
llagles during conference play last
"&lt;t.~'&gt;lm and only lost one senior 10
was a great team effort for
fa~ern . as Uuec Eagles hit double
""'"'•·,· and a lola! of seven hit the
$coring column.
• Junior post Patsy Aeiker led
taslern with 20 points, eight
tebounds ami four steals. Aeiker sat
out most of the firs! half with three
rouls, making the effort that much
!nore impressive.
.
• Ea.~1en1 racked up an 18-10 fust
period lead behind Ae,iker' s seven
!KJints and Jesstca Karr s SIX pomts.
• In the second quarter, the Lady
Eagles outscored Trimble 21-10
J&lt;:arr, Rebecca Evans and Jessica
Brannon led Eastern· s offensive
'barges. The Eagles led at the half
'9-20.
. .
.
, Aeiker tos sed tn erght pomts
and dominated the boards during
lhe third quarter, as Eastern extended their lead. Nicole Nelson added
great effort, and Evans hit for
four point' to give Eastem a commanding lead heading into the final
quarter.
In Ule fourth quarter. a decent
bench effon from the Lady Eagles
gave them a 15-10 advantage over
Trimble en route to the v1ctory.
- For Eastern. Evans talhed 16
points, with seven rebounds. whileJessica Karr scored 17 pomts and
added three assists.
Freshman Jess ica Brannon. in
h.er first varsity game had nine
points, a ream-high nine rebounds
and team-high seven steals. Nicole
Nelson, Tracy White and Martie
Holter also played well in leading

Enstcm to t11e win.
Eastern shol 24 of 68 (35.2%)
from the floor and went 20 of 30
(66.6%) at t11e free throw line. The
Eagles had 3'1 rebounds. led by
Brannon's nine; 24 slca ls . 15
tumovers :md four assists.
Trimble was I 3 of 46 (28.2%)
from the floor and was 12 of 19
(61 . I %) ;II U1e free throw line. The
Lady Tomcats had 24 rebounds, six
steal s, :12 turnovers and four
assists .

--and Travis Abbott. Cleland averaged 13 points a game and eight
rebounds. Abbott scored an average or 14 points a contest and
pulled in four rebounds.
Six-fool senior guard Paul
Pullins also returns. Pullins averaged eight points, six rebounds.
three assists and two steals a game.
Pullins is coming off an ankle
injury that caused him to miss most
of the second half of foolball season. This is the first full week of
practice lor Pullin~. so he should he
ready 10 go against the Raiders.
A part-time starrer from last
year. Nick Haning, a 6-foot-2
junior, has played well in the preseason and is quickly becoming a
force for the Marauders.
. On of the strong points for the .
Marauders will he their deptll, witll
several players battling for playing
time.

The Marauders and the Raiders
split two games during the regular
season. with the Marauders winning U1e season opener at Cheshire
74-71. River Valley carne back to
post a 72-53 win at Rock Springs
heforfe winning 79-61 in the Division U sectional tournament win at
the University of Rio Grande.

By RUSTY MILLER
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - St.
Henry quarterback Ryan Uhlenhake
and New Washington Buckeye
(:entral linebacker Brian Heydinger
grabbed the top honors on the 1995
Associated Press Division VI allOhio high school football team
announced Wednesday.
Uhlenhake, a 6-foot, 185-pound
junior, led his team to the state
championship a year ago, the AP
poll title this season and to this
weekend 's state title game against
Heydinger and Buckeye Central.
Heydinger; a S-9, 185-,pound
senior, was selected as the defensive
player of the year based on lhe recommendations of a state media
panel.
Four coaches shared the state's
top award in the division:
Bridgeport's Rick Goodrich, AI
Kennedy of Bowerston Conotton
Valley, Covington's Bob Riley and
DeGraff Riverside's John Graber.
St. Henry (13-0) and Buckeye
Central (13-0) decide the smallschool state chamP.ionship at II a.m.
Saturday at Masstllon's Paul Brown
Tiger Stadium. !it. Henry has won
three titles in the last live years .
Uhlenhake completed 78-of-135
passes (58 percent) for 1,093 yards
and 12 touchdowns with only two
illterceptions during the regular sea$on.
: Heydinger was busy on both
sides of the ball, running his career
iota! to 436 tackles while rushing for
t30 yards and 16 louchdowns on
offense.
~ The ends on offense are
f:incinnati Country Day's Brandon
lJuttman (48 catches, I ,047 .yards,
16 TDs), St. Henry's Randy
Hemmelgarn (34 for 517) and Justin
tJolmcs of Shadyside (56 catches for
?62 yards).
.
: The front wall is comprised of
tlewark Catholic's Nick Kagey (6-1,
\95), Brian Wise of Norwalk St.
Paul (6-6, 315), Buckeye Central's
Steve Shell (6-5, 320), St. Henry's
foe Hartings (6-4, 235), Jason
topolski of Independence (6-0, 210)
and Columbus Grove's Ben Maag
(6-4, 245).
' Joining Uhlenhake in the backIield are , Bryan Widnor of
Bridgeport (1,805 yards, 23 ,TDs);
Lo•werlville 's Mike Cruz (1,519
rds; 18
Matt Otero of

OPEN HOUSE:
SATURDAY • SUNDAY
SAT. 8·5 PM
SUN. 12·5 PM
U'Ll'tUU

ALL NATIVITIES 30% OFF

1995 SPECIAL EVENT FIGURE

DOMINICA
WfiTED QliANTJTr -IIVIUlY!

Stahl's

,.

Paul Brannon's Eagle reserves
blasted Trimble 43 -23 . Julie Hayman, Srephanie Evans and Angie
Wolfe eac h had nine points.
Valerie Karr added seven, while
Kim May le added seven and
Amanda Milhoan had two. Trimble
was led by Bobbi Lent's seven.

Heavy Duty
CAR RAIMPS

Eas tern plays host to Meigs
today at Eastern High School. The
reserve tip-off time is 5:55p.m.
Eastern
(18-21-16-15=70)
Evans 6-0-4=16; J. Karr 6-12=17; Nelson 1-0-3=5; Aeiker6-l5=20; Holter 0-0-2=2; White 0-01=1; Brannon 3-0-3=9. Totals: 222•20=70
Fouls: 22
Trimble
(10-10-8-10=38)
Sheryl Davis 1-0-2=4; Trace l0-2=4; Campbell 0-0-1=1; Sherry
Davis 0-0-1=1; Lent 3-0-0=6;
Lawrence 0-0-1=1; Canter 2-00=4; Koons 6-0-5=17. Totals: 13-

a

~=~~~

As Uhlenhake gets top Division VI all-Ohio honors,

Thursday, November 30, 1995

James -led ihe team in scoring last
.By DAVE HARRIS
season averaging 15 points a game.
Sentinel Correspondent
Among the veterans underneath
· Tbc Meigs Marauders and the
River Valley Raiders launch the the Raiders will have 6-foot-3
1995-96 basketball season Friday senior Bruce Ward (10 piS a game),
night when th e Raiders invade and 6-foot-2 senior Jam es
Cochrane (3.4 pis a game).
Larry R. Monison Gymnasium.
The Raiders have one key player
Former Meigs and Southern
coach Carl Wolfe is in his f~rst year on tbe sidelines with a injury in 6at the helm of tht· Raiders. Wolfe is foot-5 senior center Larry Hunt.
in his 32nd year of coaching and The Raiders will be looking for
iuso has had stops at Middleport. help from several underclassmen
until Hunt is ready to play after the
Waverly. and Portsmouth Clay.
first
of the year.
Wolfe takes over a team that
Third-year
Marauder coach Jeff
finished with a 10-13 record last
season. The Raiders have a lot of Skinner welcomes back three
veterans on this seasons club. Both starters from last years team tl.Jat
guards are back in Jamie Grabau) finished with a 10-11 record. The
( 10 9 pts./garne) and Greg James. three returning staiters are a pair
of 6-foot-2 seniors in Cass Cleland

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Independence (1,857 yards, 28
TDs), Buckeye Central's Robby
Manley (1,059 yards, 18 TDs) and
Kerry Wright of Dola Hardin
Northern (1,127 yards, 20 IDs).
The kicker is Norwalk St. Paul's
Ryan Baltes, who converted 32
point-after kicks and three field
I · I d'
42
de
goa S IOC U mg a -yar r.
The defensive front includes
Beallsville 's Rick Meade, David
Catanese of Richmond Heights,
Nathan Painter of Sandusky St.
Mary's, St. Henry 's Abe Boggs and
Ernest Walker of Cincinnati Country
D

a y'

·

The linebackers are Centerburg's
Ryan Altizer, Chad Sollman of
Sidney Lehman, Portsmouth Notre
Darne •s Mar k .K e11 y, Mar k Busc hur
of St. Henry and Heydinger.
Backing them up are Portsmouth
Notre Dame's Ryan Rutman, Chip
Phillips of Southington Chalker, Ian
Barford of Cenlerburg, North
Baltimore 's Keily Woodruff and
· Bo
fp
hE t
Ch ns
ggs 0 ortsmout as ·
The punter is Lucas' Jim
Tomlinson, who also was a standout
on placements.

Goodrich guided Bridgeport from
1-9 a year ago to 8-2 in his first season as bead coach. Kennedy took
over a 4-6 team and went 9-1 at
Conotton Valley in his rookie year.
Covington's Bob Ri ley transformed
a 4-6 team to 9-1. And Graber led

6,-2,255,Sr.;AbeBoggs,St.~enry, 6-2,2liO,

Sr.; Ernest Walker, Cin. Country Day, 6-2.
227, Sr. Linebackers: Ryan Altizer ,
CenJerburg, 6-3. 215, Sr.: Chad Sollman,
Sidney Lehman, 5-8. 175, St. ; BrJan
Heydinger, New Wash. Buckeye Cent., 5-9,
185, Sr.; Mark Kelly, Portsmoulh Nolte Dame,
6.j), 175, Sr.; Mark Buschur. St. Henry. 5-10,
202, Sr. Backs: Ryan Rulman , PortSTMulh
Nolte Dame. 6-1. 175, Sr.; Chtp Ph•lhps,
· Southington Clulker, 6-3, 185, Sr.; lan
Batford, Centerburg, 5-10, 160, Jr .; Kelly
Woodruff, Nonh Baltimore, 5-t O, t75, Sr.;
Chris Boggs, Porrsmoulh Easl. 6-l. 190, Sr.
Puntedim Tomlinson, Lucas, 6-1, t70, Sr.
orronslve player or the yur: Ryan
Uhlenhakc, St. Henry.
Defensive player of tbt year: Brian
Heydinger, New Wash. Buckeye Cent.

BRIAN BOWEN

Bodor, Bridgeport; C.J . Hupp, Bridgeport;
Jerry Burnett, Zanesville Rosecrans; Mike
Osler, Strasburg; Trent Edic, Bowerston
Co notton Valley; Ben Dupke, Bellaire St.
John; Darrick DOty, Bridgeport;
Kyle Reichenbad, Pandora-Gi lboa; Mike
O'Neal, Edon; Man Dysert, Dola Hardin
Coacbes of tbe year: Rick Goodrich , Nortllern; Ryan Schwartz, Minster; Nalhan
Bridgeport; AI Kennedy, Bowerston Conotton Painter, Sandusky St. Mary's; Josh Yost,
Valley; Bob Riley, Covington; John Graber. Fostoria St. Wende lin ; Terry Jolliff, Dola
DeGraffRiver.;ide.
Hardin Northe rn; Travis Sanders, McGuffey
Upper Scioto Valley;
Second-leam onenst
Jake Church, Cedarville; Lee Schmidt,
Ends, Ryan Caldwell, Beallsville, 6.j),J75.
Sr.; Mike Gn:govich, Williamsburg, 5-10, 140, Cov ington ; Brian Pulfer, DeGraff Riverside;
Sr.; Dave Bajnok, McDonald, 6-1, 170, Sr.: Damon Anderson, Cin. Ca untry Day ; Steve
John Daviso, Richmond His .. 5-10, ISO, Sr. Manahan, DeGraff Riverside; Ktrk Holloway,
Linemen: Brad Raterman, Sidney lehman, fl . Cedarvill e; Jay Boyd, Ci n. Summil Country
3, 200, Sr.; Adam Gerring, Mogadore, 6- 1. Day; Darick Rose, Ansonia; John Underhill,
Zll, Sr.; Vince Maroua. Independence, l-10, Cin. Summil Counuy Day; Brock Swonger,
175, Sr.; Joe Iarocci, Ashiabula StJohn, 6-1, DeGraff Rive rside; Jason McNabb, Hamilton

185, Sr.; Ryan Jochum, Richmond HIS., 6-5.

MICAH-OTIO
New Miami; Jami e Jamison. Cin . Coun try
Day; Mike Long, Middletown Fenwick; Gabe
Schlappi, Cedarville; Kyle Sheer, 'Bradford;
Jeremi ah Keller, Hemlock Miller; Joe
Blockner, Portsmouth Notre Dilme: Russell
Salmons, Willow Wood Symmes Va ll ey; Mark
Eicllenlaub, Portsmouth Notre: Dame; BRIAN

Bob Coppola, Lowellville; Ty Tyso~, Jadtsoft-

Mi lton; Tod&lt;l Johnson, Sebnng McKinley;
Juan Cespedes, Lorain Cath.; PJ. Robison,
Barrett, Franklin Furnace Green ; JAS ON Thompson Ledgemonl; Steve Robinsol'\, ,
SHEETS, REEDSVILLE EASTERN; s; mon Richmond Hts.; Ben Scolaro, Richr:nond Hli.;
Coriell, Portsmouth Notre Dame : Floyd Frye, Brian Smith, Thompson Ledgemont; Ron
Hemlock Miller; Aaron Davis. Portsmouth Munn . Ne:wbury; Mike Kinder, Thompson
Nocre Dame; Brian Ca rter, Portsmouth East; Ledgcmont; D.J . Ketterma~, Thompsct:n
MICAH OTTO, REEDSVILLE EASTERN; Lcdgt:mont; Rob Turner, Karl land; Steve
Bobby Bol&lt;lman, Portsmouth Notre Dame;
Nelisse, Thompson Ledgemont; Chris Kusc,
Kyle Skidmore. Southington Olalker; Tom lndependtnce:; Malt Pastron, Lorain Cath.;
Cormell , McDo nald; Ry an Helfr ich, Mickey Fagan. Ashtabula St. John; Dan
Mogadore; Marion Hot;;hstetler, Dallon: Tim Sc hm id!, Newbury; Joe Panzarella, f1irport
Barnhan, Leetonia ; Ryan Pearce, South ington; Harbor Harding; Eric Greenberg. Richmond
Carmen Carrabhia, Lowellville; Mike Lowery, H Lc;.

BOWEN, REEDSVILLE EASTERN; Aaron

215, Sr.; Ron Kollmorgen, Thompson
Lcdgemonl, 6-U, 260, Sr. Quanerbadts; Tony

Clum, Lancaster Fisher Cath., 6-0, 179, Sr.:
Reed Warner, Cin. C&lt;&gt;unlry Day, 6-3, 185, Jr.;

WEEK-END SPECIALS

Dennis Robbins, Mogadore , 6-0, 170 , Jr.

BacKs: Mike Miley, Bowerston Conotto n

Valley, 6-0, 185, Sr.; Denver Williams, Cadiz.
5-9, 165, Sr.; Mitch Giesige, Columbus Grove,
6-2, 215, Sr.; Shane Hall, Ansonia, 5-l, 150,
Sr.: Chuck Moore, Mogadore, 6-1. 195 , Jr.
Kicker: Charlie McNier, S. Charleston
Southmtcm, 6-t, t65, Sr.
Second-team defense
Linemen' Brian Payne, Danville, 6-1, 175,

FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY

Sr.; Joe Busch, N. Baltimore, 5-10, 170, Sr.;

Riverside to its first 10~ 0 recOrd, Kraig Dippold, Maria Stein Marion Local, 5-S.

first league title and first playoff
berth ever.
Here 's the 1995 Associated Press
Division VI all-Ohio team, seIecle d
on the recommendations of a state
panel of sports writers and broadcasters:
First-team offense
Ends : Brandon Guttman, Cin . Country
Day, 5-fout-8, 150 pounds, Senior; Randy
Hemmelgarn, St. Henry, 6-3, 182. Jr.; Justin
Holmes, Shadyside, 6-0, 170, Sr. Linemen:
Nick Kagey, Newark Cath ., 6-1, 195, Sr.;
Brian Wise, Norwalk Sl. Paul, 6·6, 315, Jr.;
Sieve Shell, New Wash. Buckeye Cent., 6-5,
320, Sr.; Joe Har1ings, St. Henry, 6-4, 23S, Jr.;
Jason Topolski, Independence, 6-0, 210, Sr.;
Ben Maag. Columbus Grove, 6-4. 24S, Sr.
Quarterback: Ryan Uhlenhake, St. Henry, 6-0,
185, Jr. Backs: Bryan Widnor, Bridge(Klrt, S·
11 , 17,,Jr.; Mike Cruz, Lowellville, 5-11, 17S,
Sr.; Man O'tero, Independence, 6-0, IS.S, Jr.;
Robby Manley, New Wasil. BLickeye Cent., 510, 16S, Sr. ; Kerry Wright, Dola Hardin
Nonhero, 5-11, 168, Sr. Kicker: Ryan Baltes,

Norwalk Sl. Paul, 6-t, 165, Sr.

ZOO.

Sr. Linebackers: Gteg Branon, Danville.

6-2, 160, Sr.; Lew Montgomery, Newark

SPAGHETTI DINNER

Cath., 6-1, 185, Sr.; Nick McMillen, New Phil.
Shaffer. Covinglon, 6-I, 207, Sr.; Victor
Kapostasy, Fairpon Harbor Harding, 6-t, 178,
Sr. Back" P.J. Seiler, Minslcr, 6-2. 195, Sr.;
Matt Weikert, Covington, 6-2, 173, Sr.; Rick
Chambers, Ashtabula St. John, 5-10, 170, Sr.;

Tuscarawas Cent Cath., 6·1, 206, Sr.; Andy

$495

OR

FETTUCINI ALFREDO

Sean Manfredonia, Independence, 6-1, 190, Jr.

Includes: Salad &amp;
Garlic Bread

Special mention

• Nathan O'Rei lly, Heath; Kristian Richert,
Danville; Mike McKinney , Hath ; Da vid
Reinhardt, Milford Ctr. Fairbanks; Russell
Rogers, La ncaster FisherCath.; PcterSJabicky.
. Centerburg; Joe Wiley, Heath; Todd Wiley,
Nwark Cath.; David Richert, Danville; Brian
Gillman, Centerburg; Joe Grein, Lancaster
Fisher Cath.; Jared McGill, l.anca.'liite r Fisher
Cath.; Bryan Swaney, Millerspor1; Geoff Betts,
Heath; Bill Johnson , Danville; Josh Martin, .
Danville; Jeremy Corcoran, Marion Cath.;
Jaso n Sandy, Tuscarawas Cent. Ca th .;
· Bowerston Conotton Valley; Mike
Hudson, Beallsville;
Rmecrans; Brad
; Joe Mattingly, Zanesville

$6

13" 2 TOPPING PIZZA

95

Cenl.

Ftnt ..telm ddensc
Linemen: Rick Meade, Beallsville, 5-10,
115, Sr.; David Catanese, Richmond Hts., 6-4,
190, Jr.; Nathan Painter, Sandusky St. Mary's,

0-12::38

-

Fouls: 22

~AUTOMOTIVE
~REPAIR
Auto &amp; Truck.MANUALS

Sen. Huey P. Long, the " Kingfish " of Louisiana politics, was
shot and mortally wounded inside
Ule state capitol in Baton Rouge,
Sept 8, 1935. He died two days
later.

We Will Be Open Until 8 P.M.
Thursday, November 30th
For Your Shopping ·
Convenience and
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�•
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Thursday, November 30, 199$

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Eastern's 1995 championship football season recalled
By SCOIT WOLFE
Slntinel Correspondent
Football season bas come to a
cbe, and baslc:etball season is just
around lhe comer. However, final
statistics and honors for tbe Easrem
football team were just recently
released by Tri -Valley Conference
Coach of the Year Casey Coffey.
Eastern won lhc TVC Hocking
Division title for the first time three
weeks ago, finishing the season
wilb a 7-3 overall record. Of tbe 19
teams in th~ Southeast Region,
Eastern ranked fifth in overall scoring behind Jackson, Warren, Gallipolis and Meig s; and was tied
wilh Meigs for fourlb in winning
percentage at .700. Eastern scored
233 poinL~. while giving up 135. In
the margin of difference category,
Eastern was fifth wilh a 9.8 average margin of victory.
Coffey stated, "The boys came
along way. It seems like yesterday
when we bad our camp and were
just getting acquainted. These are a
very unique group of young men.
They are always striving to
improve and be tbe be_st lhey can
be in every tbing they do; whether
it is executing a trap play, performing on a test in school or setting an
example for the community. Whatever challenge in life these young
men take on, they will achieve.
They are true winners."
Senior halfback Jason Sheets
posted his second consecutive
1,000-yard season to complete an
illustrious career. Sheets ended the
~eason with 1,003 yards on 174
carries, 110 points and 17 touch downs. Sheets was second in the
region wilh an 11.4 point average.
trailing only Erick Reusser of War(en with 19 touchdowns and four
two-point conversions for an 11 .8
average.
In TVC games only, Sheets wa~
lbe league leader wilh a 14.8 scoring mark with 74 points. Nathan _
Gilders of Federal was second with
an 11.0 average, and Matt WiUiams
of Meigs was third with a 10.5
mark. Sheets also bad four catches
for 178 yards "and led Eastern wilb
·10 kickoff returns for a 26.4 yard
average.
Coffey praises Sheets for a speclacular effort and a great career, but
also heralds lhe Eastern line for
making lbose yards possible. The
·Eastern offensive line, consisting
of Daniel Otto (center), Mike
Smith (guard), Adam McDaniel
(guard), Billy Francis (tackle),
Wally Rockhold (tackle), Eric Hill
(split end) and Steve Durst (tight
end) were much smaller tban most
of their opponents, yet were very
spirited and got tbe job done.
Coffev said. 'The line was our battering ram. They were small, but
lbey were tough."
Recapping the season, tbe Eastem Eagles trailed 14-0 to Alexan- der after three quarters, but scored
18 second-half points capped by a
final touchdown coming on Sheets'
one-yard touchdown run with 25
seconds left. That resulted in an
undefeated Tri-Valley Conference
record and the school's fust undisputed Hocking Division championship with a thrilling 18-14 win.
Eastern finished the season winning of six of its la1t seven games,
was 7-3 overall and had an 5-0
mark in the Hocking Division.
At the recent Eastern banquet,
senior honors went to Sheets,
Travis Curtis, Smith, Micah Otto,
Hill, Rockhold and Bowen.
Special football honors went to
Billy Francis, Outstanding Interior
Lineman; Sheets, Outstanding
Offensive Back; Curtis, Coaches'
Award; Micah Otto, Outstanding
Defensive Player; Eric Hill, Outs"tanding Receiver; and Brian
Bowen. Outstanding Offensive
Player.
Other members of tbe football
team were Chris Bailey, Adam
McDaniel, Abe Rach, Steve Ours~
Nathan Radford, Cory Yonker. Joe

Dillon, J.T. White, Dan Otto, Eric
Dillard, Chris Buchanon, Sbaun
Long, Wes Sanders. Beau Bailey.
Josh Hager and Adam Sanders.
Coffey's assistant coaches were
Ron Hill, Bryan Durst, David
Hawthorne, Dan Thomas and
Shawn Bush.
Another offensive force who
hopes to carry his offensive
weapons to the basketball court
soon is senior fullback Micah Otto.
He had 366 yards on 61 carries and
had 218 yards on 17 catches with
two touchdown s to his credit. Hi &gt;
bloclcing was a main force in Eastem's success. Otto was also used
sparingly on kickoff returns and led

tbe team with 108 tackles.
McDaniel had six sacks to lead
tbe team, while Brian Bowen bad
four interceptions, and Francis had
56 tackles and two sacks. Smith
was cited as tbe team's defensive
"spark plug."
Hill led all Eastem receivers wilb 566 yards on 25
catches. Big catches in Eastern's
comeback against Federal Hocking
and in the Alexander game highlighted his season. Hill had four
touchdowns and 26 points.
Curtis was another key offensive cog, gaining 204 yards on 18
catches and 89 yards on 14 carries
in the ru shing game . Curtis bad

four touchdowns and was also a
key defensive force in the backfield, where he broke up numerous
plays by the opposition. Curtis also
had a 10.8 yard kickoff return average(7-79) and 8.5 punt return average (5-36). Other return men were
Otto and Adam Sanders.
Brian Bowen was an anchor at
quarterback, where he bad seen
action since his freshman year.
Bowen rushed for 193 yards on 52
carries. He also passed for 1,231
yards (perhaps a new school
record) on 76 completions for 12
touchdowns and only four interceptions. Bowen also punted 35

Slam~­

Oucntity Rights
Rase Ned

Sparkle
Towels
37 oz. Box

t.Top
Pumpkin Pie

Limit 1 Free Per Customer

4 Quarters -lb. Box

Imperial
Spread
·lib. Bag

California
Carrots
1 oz. Can
1111 IIIII AIIIIFicl
I \II 1 . - I PI

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western

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•We Redeem
Federal Food

1 Roll Pkg.

Tbe

Secondary - Aaron Beasley,
West Virginia; Lawyer M11loy,
Washington; Alex Molden, Oreg_on· Adrian Robinson, Baylor
Punter - Brad Maynard, Ball

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

•

times for 1,387 yards for a 40.5 doing that, lbe kids have to believ¢
yard average.
. in what they are doing and improv~
Steve Durst was the backup every day at practice as well at
quarterback and the team's second every Friday night. That's _exactly.
leading tackler. A sophomore, what this group of k1ds dtd. Th¢
Durst was praised for his excellent difference between us having l!;
technique and will be "an excellent good season and a great season this
foundation for our defense next year was that little extra effort of
,
year." Sanders started as a fresh- improvement."
Coffey is already excited aboUCI.
man at cornerback and bad an
interception and several big plays, preparing for next year. De~pite hiS:
heavy loss of talented sen10rs, he&gt;
vital in Eastern wins this year.
Coffey concluded, "I learned has a good nucleus coming back.;
really quick when I took over lhe Altbough many teams would deem;
job here at Eastern lhat putting in a next year a rebuilding year, Coffey
whole new system would be a chal- sees it as a year to defend the·
·
lenge_. I think any time you are championship.

199S all-America football team as
selected by the American Football
. Coaches Association:
Offense
. Quarterback - Tommie Frazier, Nebraska
.
Runnin'g backs Edd1e
George, OHIO STATE; Troy
Davis, Iowa State
Wide receivers - Keysbawn
Johnson, Southern Cal; Marcus
Harris, Wyoming
·
.
Tisht end - Marco Bauagha.
Rutgers
Center - Clay Shiver, Aorida
State
: Linemen - Jeff Hartings, Penn
S,tate; Jason Odom, Florida;
Jonathan Ogden, UCLA; Orlando
Pace. OHIO STATE
Plilcdticker - Michael ~·
Texas Christian
"
Defense
_ Linemen - Tedy Bruschi, Ari. zona; Tim Colston, Kansas S~te;
Marcus Jones, North Carolina;
Jason Horn, Michigan; Tony
Brackens, Texas
·
: Linebackers - Zacb Thomas,
Texas Tech; Pat Fitzgerald, North-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•.

AFCA names
all-Americans
WACO, Texas (AP) -

Thursday, November 30, 1995

.HIE
EIVBIYI
On Major Purchases

FURNITURE

408 MAIN STREET
POINt PlEASANT, WVA

Tl Plr.

• MasterCard • Visa • Discover
• Heilig-Meyers Card • In-Store CredH

~McCormick

Blaek Pepper

Limit 1 Free Per Customer

We reserve the rVIitto limit quanlilloo. C Holllg-Meyere Co. 1995

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

•

.· •

�I

~age 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, NQvember 30, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

because Trump wanted to.
commission allowed the casinos to
Trump sought to have his three carry the pay-per-view telecast of
ca,inos and th~ two Bally's proper- Tyson's fight with Peter McNeeties sponsor Tyson-Mathis . . His · ley, which King probably derived
lawyers structured a tical under. proceeds from.
which King would assign the pro. That was different, Smith said.
motional rights to an unidentified
"It didn't involve sponsorship
promoter.
by Atlantic City casinos and didn't
Tyson would have been paid up involve the payment of the guaran·
10$10 million by King and gotten a tee," he said.
King
called
the
ruling
unconstishare of the ga te. Th e casi no s,
meanwhile, would have guaranteed tutional.
" II was a blow against America
up to $5 million towa rd ticket
·
not
a blow against Don King," he
sales.
said.
But regulators said no dice .
Tyson has fought once since
They voted 4-0 to reject Trump's
being
released March 25 from an
request, saying it was n attempt to
Indiana prison, where he served
subvert the ban on King.
Joseph Fusco, who represented three years for rape. He beat
Trump, cleclined comment after ibe McNeeley in 89 seconds on Aug.
hearing. Trump, who was traveling 19 at the MGM Grand in Las
Wednesday, could not be reached Vegas.
The Conner undisputed champifor comment.
on
is scheduled to challenge WBC
In the - hearing Wednesday ,
Fusco told commissioners King champion Frank Bruno on March
would not benefit directly from ibe 16 at the MGM Grand.
Junior middleweight s Terry
casinos' money. But he siiuggled
Norris
, the WBC champion, and
to answer when chainnan Bradford
Paul
Vaden,
the WBA champion,
S. Smith asked him if the fight
light
on
the
Dec. 16 undercard.
.will
could be held wilbout them.
Carl
Daniels
and Julio Cesar
Fusco said there was precedent
for granting Trump's request: The Vazquez will fight for the vacant '
WBA junior middleweight title.

NBA standings

Ohio women's
college scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE
!t.tlanUc: Dirillon

Ium

llw&lt;

!ill

North Coast Athletic Conr.

4
3

.714
.727

2
2.5

Case Western Reserve 79, Wooster 64
Kenyon 66, Denison SO

Boston .................... 5 7
Washington ... ....... J
7
New Jersey ··:· ..... .5 g
Philaclelphm ..
.. 2 10

.417
.417
.38.5

6
6

Miami

.... .8

2 .8l7

65

9

.166

Crutral DiviJion
Oticago ... .. .. .. . II
2 1146

..... 9

Atlanla .. . .

Indiana ..

..li

..... 7
CLEVELAND ..... ..5
Churlotle ...

2.l

5 .643
I .141
8 .467
8 .381
ll

l)e(IOII.

_j

Toronto ....
Milwaukee .

10
.3 9
.5

4

.m

250

6

6
7

75

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mid•nl Dlvbion

fum

.!!: I. fa.

!ill

.m

.l
2

1-louston .... . ..... II
........... II
Utah ..
.. 8
S;m Antonio ....

Dall"-L ---.
Denver ....
Minn~suta

.....

...... s
.... 4
. . ,]

3 .7K6

4
4
7
9

.667

.417

.301
.250
.2 12 .1 43

'

Vancutl\'l!r ..
P~telfi(

l
fi.l
7
9

Dh'i8ion

Sacrnmento .... .. . 10
.... ~
Sc:altlt' ,,
7
L.A. taken ....

7
J

Pcrtland .. ..

'

6

714
6011

J

soo

'J

"'

500

4fi 7
L.A. Clippen; ...
7 462
£'1l0enlx .....
'" .6
Gulden Stule ....
s 10 .H3

'

N~n-conrerence action
Defiance 119, Rose Hulman 26
Mounr Union 61, Wheeling J~uir 45
Muskingum 8-4, WIU\h. &amp;. Jeff. 52
Ohi o St. 17, Kentucky 67
Ohio We.c;leyan 54 , Earlham 49
Otterbein 79, Thoma~ More 68
Virg_iniu 120. Cl£'vdantl St. 53

5

.J8j

3

J5

15

5l

2JJ7

4
9
l
6

I)

3077 26
1469 i
1880 15
3180 28

II

Ohio H.S- girls' scores
Akron Sprmg. 50, AKron Garfield 39
Harbor 27, Cardinal 20
Avon Lake 66. Vermilion 36
Barberton 52, N. C;mton 48
Derea 47, N. Oln5led 37
Brecksvi lle 70, Bay 32
Brookside 61, Rocky River 33
Brunswick .5&amp;, Par rna 43
0\an.lon ND·CL 48, Newbury 10
Cin . Purce ll-Mar ia n 48 , New Richmond 22
Cle. Catholic 44, Lorain Southview 29
Columbia 63 , Avon 31
CrestWood 63, Ravcn~m 54
Day. Dunbar 69, Day. Pauersun 49
Day. Jefferson 59, Day. BeJil\l()nt 38
Gilmour 44, Grand Vall. 36
Harvey 6.5, Kirtland 45
Kenston 72, Shiiker Hts. 41
A~htabu l a

~fun

Kec:eiver'

&amp;

Ca.rtt'r, Minn ........ 89
lrvin,Dal ............ 88
Moore, Det ......... 87
Perriman. Det ...... 87

:xu.

5.0 601. 21
5.3751 H
4.1 57 !I
4.0 22 4
3.4 20 11

944 10.6 37 12
1290 . 14.7 50 I)
1234 14.2 691 II

1142 13. 1 5lt 8
Rice.S.F .............. 85 12Sl 14.7 Bi t 12

NFL's Week 14 slate
Tonight's game
N.Y. Giants al Arizona, 8 p.m.

Sunday, Dec. 3 games
Indianapolis at Caro lina, I p.m
ClNClNNATI at Green Bay, I p.m. ·
Houston at Pittsburgh, I p.m.
AUanta at Miami, I p.rn
New Orleans at New EngiW!d, I p.m
St Louiul: N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m
Tampa Bay at MioDeSota. l p.m.
Jacbonville at Denver, 4 p.m.
Kansas City at OaklaDd, 4 p.rn
CLEVELAND Dl Sao Diego, 4 p.m.
Washington at Dallas, -4 p.m.

Boston I00, Detroit 96
Atlanta 106, Philadelphia 81
Ol:arlotle li S, New York lOS
San Anronio lOS, L.A. Clippcn; 86
L.A. 1..3e:s 107, Phoenix %
1\wtl:md 11 2. Golden State Y8
~0

PhiladeJphi&lt;l JJt Toronto, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at Boston, 7:30 p.rn
Otarlolle at Miami , 7:30p.m.
Dallas at Atlanta, 8 p.m.
Minnesoi&lt;J. ut Phoenit. 9 p.m.
Milwaukel.! at Seal1lt! , 10 p.m.
'v'allWU\'er ill L.A. Laken, 1~: 30 p.m

THANKSGIVING DINNER
Eileen Snyder. Katheryn Metzger.
A Thanksgiving dinner was held . Betty Way, Carol Wines, Loue.lla
· for residents of Stonewood Apart- Driggs, anti Betty and Bob Pooler.
ments.
Brenda Merrill was a guest.
Attending were Dorothy Russell, Eileen Bowers, Louisa Johnson, Jean Sexson, Mary Roush,
ENTERTAINING VETERANS
A Thanksgiving dinner was
Martha Childs, Mary Durst, Mildred Meadows , Goldie Shaffer, served to seven veterans at the

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Chicago at Detroit, 9 p.m.

the Chester Garden Club held at the
:Chester United Methodist Church.
During the meeting the group
made I 00 yam angels to decorate
four grapevine wreaths for Over.brook Nursing Home and Veterans
Memorial Hospital Extended Care.
The workshop was conducted by
Edna Wood.
For roll call members displayed
favors from nature which they had
made for nursing home patients.
These included bars of soap

Transactions
1\ulo racing
N~tmed

Johnny Rutherford special projects coordinator.

BasebaU
Amuli::an lAague

NEW YORK YANKEES : Named
John Thursby iWiistant director of media
relations.

SEATI'lE MARINERS ' Named Larry
Beinfest director of j)la}'et development.
Trnded Mike Blowers, third baseman, to
the Los Ange le!i Dodg ers for Migu el
Cai ro , second baseman , and Will ie
Otanez, third baseman. Destgnated Bob
Well~ . pilcher, for w ignment
TEXAS RANGERS : Agreed to rerrns
with Mat! Whiteside , pitcher, on a oneYea! contract and Eric Pappas , catcher, on
a minor- league contract Invited Pappas to
spring training as a non·roster player.

DESKS AT SALE PRICES!

NFL leaders

Georgeluwn 96, Southern. NO r.s
Pitllibuq~h 84 , Du4uesne 7)
Princeton 62 , L::lfayene 47
Towrwn Sl. 7-4 , Navy 60
Villanova 70, Br:ullt'y 63
Yul~ 89, Lehigh 72

South

n.

Cent. Florrda
Winthrop 65
Centenary 108, Wiley 71
Clemson 91, Appalad uan St. S5
Duke 71, N.C.·Greensboro 57
Gellfgia91. W. Carohna 11
J aJIIC.~ MatliMl n 118, Delaware St . 64
LSU JO'J . Southern 100
l.outsrana Tecll 70, Henderson SL 62
Mt'fcer 97. NortJt Geora•a 78
N.C. Owlotte 79, Tennessee 76
N.C.·A.shtville 73. Furman 71
Old Dominion 75, 1-hmpton 67
William &amp; Mary lOt, Marymount, Va .

4llJ:lim. l:Jb. Il!lo1.

Ha~baugh,

lnd 229 l j3 1963 14 3
Manno. M•a ....... 336 216 2635 U 9

4.4 52 10
3.8 4lJ 10
4.7 601 7

921

4.6 M

9

-4.0 40

9

9&amp;1 1.5.3 43
907 14.4 SOt
744 12.2 49
830 13.850!

ll-1~

South.,est

Califom 1a 112 , TexaaSou~ern 73
Grambling St S6, Teua·A.rlineton 82

- (01')

.•

Houston 9". T• a.-San Antonio 90

Te1a1 tech 81, Oklahoma M
UUIIJ 70, TemA 69

Far West
Colorado 116, Teoneuce St. 72

l6

N. Arizona 83, Cal Poly-SLO 71
New Mexico 80. Te.w-Pan Amencan

.

Sacramento St. 51, UC Davis ~0

Saa DieKQ 82, Pomona-Pitzet 63

:Ohio men's

•college scores

•

North Coasl A thletle Conr.
Alleghen y 102, Oberlin 61
Kenyon SJ. Den iion -48
Wooct« 66, Case Reserve 54

Mid-Ohio Conference
Ohio Dominican KS , Tiffin 82

Non-conrerence action
Lab Erie 76, Moual Vernon Nazarene
66

•

N
~·

.c:

Super

-c.::-

Saving&amp;!

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Priced

'

• Sleep Timer
• CaptionVision (CC)
• AudioNideo Input Jacks
• Matte. Black Color Finish

~::r

REGULAR 1229.95

-o

....

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u

=
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Employee Activity Association

~

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will sponsor its annual

~

UnM&gt;rsal

~~:

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Save Up To

'

Ewly IUitt In IIDCit Ndui:td lnim 11110.00 10 fiQlCIO Dllatr._ r.
picefarfii ... Fricllwl-btlMr.......,...,_. . . .

Deadline: Friday, De(. 1Sat3 P.M.

· -M.a-.... an...

.,

· .

ON SELECTED
5011'1.
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.

..

SALE

a IIIIIMrsSIIIIIIIIII

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·
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~

Holiday Craft Show
Saturday, Dec. 2 • 10 a.m. to 4· p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 3 • noon to 4 p.m.
~
at Davis Hall, First Avenue
in downtown Gallipolis
•

UMITED SUPPLY

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~edic~./

Selections
At

.Q

Qulll"ltrhark.•

Akron 72. Canis ius 68
Cincinnati 101. Wyoming 51
DePuul 90, Stet:;o n 57
Ocrruit 67 , B uwl m~ Greeo 64 (2 OJ)
E. Mich l~ ISJ. St. Bonaventwe63
Karums 72, V ir grni:~ 66
KaMas St . 63. Emporia St 57
Kent 108, Morehead St. 84
Mitlllll (OiuoJ 74 . La Salle S3
Midugan KO. Bt~ll St. 52
PurdUt 711 . \enl. Michipn 76
S. lllinois 65. N. lllioois 61
Wn.ke r'O rCIII (,9 , Oklahoma St. 5:\

3
6
J
3

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

llw&lt;

0

-

M&lt;t. :xu. .W.l&amp; m

Pickcns. CIN ....... 70 882 12.6 68t 15
Thiwen . Pill ........ 64
Brown . Oak ........63
Sharpe, Den ........61
Martin .S D ......60

Sturdy construction for
ye2rs of comfon.

I;'N

Great

Htulven

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Comfon you can sink into.

-0c1 Youn Toclayl

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Midwest

~

Como in
newly U)llllded
jak-lille. JOlllllp IIIII
;llldcnJ clelb in stock.
They Ale Ooin&amp; Fill

RWihtn

• 67

.'

llld-- ..."- - .-: : :"

Quarlerb•1da

90-4

SIMPLICI1Y

NEED A
DESK?

A.MERICA.N CONFERENCE

1040
1004
993

A drug awareness program was presented to the congregation
of the Victory Baptist Church by the D.A.R.E. (Drug Awareness
Resistance Education) recently. Presenting the program from the
lert were Sheriff James Soulsby, Steve Heater, C¥1ine officer,
Danny Leonard, and Mony Wood, D.A.R.E. officer. They are pictured with Dill Cornell, right, youth leader.

OPEN 9 A.M. tO 7 P.M. - FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1ST
JISt A SAMPLE LIStiNG ••• EVERY I,.EM IN TIE StORE ON SALE!

Football

Warren, Sea ... . 237
M:ll'tin, N.E ...... 262
Davis. Den . ..... .. 211
WilliarTL&lt;;, Oak.. 202
Faulk , lnd ... .... ... 227

were given out.
Maurita Miller, president,
reminded members that the club
will host the convention in July and
will be required to furnish door
prizes.
Macel and Richard Barton will
be remembers b· y the sunshine
committee this month. A pizza
party was hot cider was enjoyed.
Next meeting will be the annual
Chrisnnas party, Dec. 6, at the Oak
Room in Athens. Members are to
lake packages decordted with birds.

STOP IN' AND REGISTER TO WIN OUR ONE OF TEN GIFT ITEMS TO BE GIVEN AWAY! DRAWING
DEC. 22, 1995-.NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN!

169 2018 10 J
158 1960 13 6
Chamller, Hou ... 324 202 2206 15 8

]I)

balls in each hole will keep the
moles from eating the bulbs.
Betty Dean noted that she had
done inspirational programs for
both the Region 10 and II fall
meetings and that she had auended
the state board and judges school.
Reports were given by the oflicers auending the regional board
meeting and the county board
meetings. The 'Meigs County
Christmas flower show was noted
along with the role of members. It
was reoortetl that state funds h•ve
been paid and membership cards

PEN 10 HOURS- FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1ST- FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

• Tc1l. Catholic93. Tol. Woodward 19
Tol. Notre Da~ 62 . Tol. Waite 24
Tol. Scull 60, Tol. Libbey 19
Tol. St. Un ula 61, To I. Rogers 14
Tri -Vallcy 55, Philo42
W. Branch 66. Ravenna Southea:&gt;t 32
w ~uhwurth 62, Medina 41
Warsaw Rh•er View 47, Sheridan 42

l'l.wl:

American Legion Auxiliary Unit
39, Pomeroy, and Brcman Unit 20.
Those participating were Ruby
Marshall, Joan Vaughan, Loretta
Tiemeyer, Jane Snouffcr, Mary
Martin, and Gladys Cumings. A
Chrisnnas party will be held there
in December.

''.GRA,E" CIRIS,MAS KICK·OFF SALE
A' MASON FUR I'URE

National IAIJue
Pfr fSBURGH PIRATES : Agreed to
terms with Nelson Liriano . infielder, on a
two· yew oontrnct
SAN DrEGO PADRES: Signed Mike
Sharpmon, infielder, loa minor-league
contract

O' Donoell . Pitt. .266

East

wrapped in ribbon with nosegays
of dried flowers for the bow,
nosegays of herbs to be used as
closet hangers, and small vine
wreaths with dried flowers to hang
on bulletin boards.
Other items included a "feeling
bag" filled with herbs, a pinecone
tree with a winter scene, a small
birdhouse with raffia bow, and
dried bouquets in cloth covered
container tied with bow.
The hint of the month dealt
wiib planting tulip bulbs and it was
suggested that putting three moth-

A therapy workshop was feawred at the November meeting of

Tesravlyde,CLE.268

Arrerican Univ. 65, Lo yola, Md. 53

Southeast Ohio Psychiatric Hospital in Athens last week by six Auxiliary members Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion.
The women served a complete
turkey dinner and presented each
veterans with $5, cigareues, candy
bars, gum anti pop.
The party was sponsored by

Therapy workshop held at Chester Garden Club

Ledgernont 40, Laurel2 2
Lima Cath, 86, Fort Jennings 56
Maple l-ltJ. -45, Cle. South 42

llw&lt;

be

the price, we only sell it). Also, the long. I hope you will print it for the 1 My Laugh for the Day: A woman
price of merchandise. We don't thousands who are in my shoes.- ' wasdoingherhouscworkinthenucfe
detennine that, eithet If the car wash P.F.• SAVAGE. MINN.
when the doorbell rang. "Wbo'J
is br)&gt;ken on thai particulll' da~ we
DEAR P.F. : When John F. ibere?" she asked. "Blind man" Will
are sorry, but we didn't break iJ.
Kennedy delivered his inaugural the reply. As the woman opened the
In an average eight-hour shift, I address, he referred to our door. the man said, "Where do
give directions to people who are lost. "dangerous and untidy world." That you want me to hang these blinds,
I help people who don't know how to was almost 35.years ago. The world lady?'
pwnp their own gas and I keep an eye is infinilely more dangerous and
Is lifo passing you by? K&amp;lll IIJ 1111on the liUle ones who rille through . untidy today, and a lot more rude, as prove your social skills? Kt'iU for
the candy shelves while Mom fills the your leaer indicated.
AM LandLrs' lltW boolclet. "How IIJ
tank. I apologize to Mt Smith, whose
But don't give up, and don't give Mau Friends and StoP Btittg
car broke down and who is mad in. Keep doing those small acts of Lo~te/y." Sendaself~ued,IIHig,
bctause we don't have a towing kindness, and keep saying 'Have a busi~tess-size envelope tllld a clltc'k:
service.
nice day' even if nobody responds. or money order for $4.25 (this ill"
I rarely hear a 'thank you" or even Your cheerfulness and civility are eludes postage and handli11g) 'to:·
"have a nice day," although I say it to appreciated, despile the fact that Friends, clo AM I.Andtrs, P.O. Box :
each and every customet All !his in nobody acknowledges them. Trust l/562, Chicago,///. 606JUJ562. (Iii
"Friendly Minnesota. • I could go on me.
Canada, send $5.15.)
and on, but my letter is already too

Society scrapbook-----

Friday's games

..

hardly

Sebri ng j 4, Mogadore 34

Tonight's games

Connecticut 86, NortJtea.~tern
Delaw:ue 7J, Buckndl li4

should

. Canadian Prime Minister Jean
: Chretien. Afler all, fewer than I
: pertenl of U.S. citizens c:an lake a
· map of the United StaleS and wrile
: in the name of each slllle.
Less lhan 1 pcn;ent c:an name their
: senaaor or ~epreSe~~tative in Congreas
: or the vice president of our COWlII')'.
. Onlyoaeper!lOII in IOOc:an name the

Monday, Dec. 4 game

.W.l&amp;TI!

At leul 75 penlCIIt of Canadians
that Jhere ~ SO StaleS in
the USA,IIId moa of them c:an name
at least 30 of than. Hardly any U.S.
cilizala know how many provinces
there ~ in Canida, let alone c:an
namelhem_
What are they teaching in our
schools these days? -- OBNB,
AUSTIN, TEXAS
DEAR OBNE: They are teaching
driven ed., computer science,
personal hygiene and Japanese
wood·blodt ~:arVing. Not as much
~·. ~·.llld 'rilhmelic as when
I was in schOol.

; cmlMasacd lhat lhey C8llJKX identify

Buffalo at San Francisco, 8 p.m

INDY RA C ING LEAGUE :

who have had it with insensitive and
rude people.
I work for a 11111e corporalely
owned gas atalion IIIII convenience
aore chain that also olfcn a car wasb
ICfVice.
Like many people in this f~eld, I
work for minimwn wageatajob Jhat
is quile dangerous_ We never know
if the next customer is going to pull a
gun or knife llld rob, slab or shoot
us. If this sounds dramalic, believe
me it is very much a reality.
We are well aware that we are
dealing with an increasingly hostile
public. Ofaen, we are insulted for
things that are beyond our control,
such as the price of gas (we don't set

Mount Rushmore is.

Dear Alia Luders: Uniled SlaleS
· residents

Ptliladelphia at Seanle. 4 p.m.

A1lllla.. .W.IJ&lt;TI!

E. Smith, Dal ..... 28 1 1403
Sanders . Det ...... 232 1232
Watters. Phil ..... 24M 1005
Alhm, Wash ....... 23 1 923
Rhett . T.B......... 266 1195

Dear ADD l..aD4en: I 8111 hoping
you will give a voice 10 those of us

~ IWII'C

Maysville 72, Crookuil le Sl
McDennott Northwe&amp;t 72, Peebles 54
Midpark 58, Normandy 14
Mtller City -48 , Cory- Rawson JS
Morgan .50, John Glenn 29
New Lelington 52,-W. Muskingu m 49
Rivcr11ide 82, Chardon S I

Wednesday's scores

CLEVELAND at Washington, 7
p.rn.
Dalla.~ at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Miami at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Utah at Houston, 8:30p.m
Milwaukee al Portland, 10 p.m
Oticogo JJt Vancouver. 10 p.m.
Indiana nt Sal'l'aJnenlo, I 0:30 p. rn.

203
241
127
179
2.57

Ru!lht&gt;n:

.!!: I. fa.

Orlando .. ..
.. .. 12
New Y«k.. .. _ .... 10

•

Aikman, Dal ...... 29 1
Kramtr. Chi ...... 395
Grbac. S.F....... 181
S. Ynung . S.F. ... 265
Favre. G.B ........419

Musklngum .58, Wa&amp;h. &amp;. Jeff. .5.5
Ohio Northern 73, Bluffton 60
Ohio Wesleyan 69, Earlham 66

four

preaidents who~ faces are
carved iniO Mount Rushmore_ An
equal number does not know where

Ann
Landers

Scoreboard
Basketball

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Reader wonders just what are they teaching in school?

Tyson-Mathis fight rescheduled for December 16
the Constitution. The constitutional
By JOHN CURRAN
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . (AP) congress met there," he said
..:_ Mike Ty~on·~ on-again, off- Wednesday .
"I tltink tltis is what democracy
again fight with Buster Mathis Jr.
is on the road again, with ibe next is all about."
Tyson, recovered from the brostop in Philadelphia.
ken
thumb that caused the fight's
· The Dec. 16 bout at the Specpostponement
earlier this month in
11Um will be televised live on free
television by the Fox Network. pro- La' Vegas, has been sparring for I
moter Don King said Wednesday 112 weeks and wa&lt; unfazed by the
after King and Donald Trump lost change of venue, co-manager John
tbeir bid to stag e the bout at Home said.
"Mike doesn't care if it' s in
Atlantic Ci tv's Convention Hall.
. New Jersey gaming regulators Philadelphia or Minnesota, be
sluck hy a ban imposed 15 months doesn ' 1 care where it is." Horne
ajlo llmt says ibe city' s 12 casinos said.
cannot do business - directly or
King, whose trial on wire fraud
indirect ly - with the spike-haired charges ended in a mistrial, was
promoter because of a pending still under intlicunent in August
wire fraud indictment against him.
1994 when the New Jer~ey Casino
· They rejected Trump's request Control Commission banned him.
ro let King sign over his promoter The ban remains in place. despite
ririe for the Dec. 16 event to an the mistrial.
unnamed promoter so that no link
"I'm chau~iug to Philadelphia
~llisled between the live sponsoring
because Philadelphia has tbe pret:asinos and King.
sumption of innocent until proven
: To King , being punished while guilty, rather than New Jersey,
· ~e's still only accused is a travesty \\ hich bas th e presumption of
of justice. And what beuer place to guilty until proven innocent," King
iight it than the city of liberty and said.
!he Constitution?
King said he·tlitln' I believe New
· •'Philadelphia is the home of . Jersey auiborilies would let Tyson
Rocky . Philadelphia is ibe home of light here. hut thai he agreed to IIy

Thursday, November 30, 1995

$499°0

L--------------------------~

PRICE

$13900

Visit Our
Curio

Accent
Gallery
15 Beautiful Styles
to Choose
Priced From:

OPEN 9 A. M. TO 7 P.M.

FRIDAY~

DECEMBER

JST

Mall or bring the entry form :

~ Th~ Daily Sentinel
t

,. .

111 Cou~ St.

. ;

~&amp;#~::;~~&lt;;:~::~~~!
I

.·
•! I

I'

�Thursday,Novernber30,1995

:Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 30, 1995
;......,.......-~---;========::::::jjjjii~iiiiiiiiii~-~---=-~--~~-=--~

.·:-:.

. ~~~Southern

- - - Home Health Care Week---

~~~Local

Beat of the Bend ... .:

} Schools post
honor rolls
Honor rolls from schools in the
Southern Local School .Dislrict for
the fust nine-week grading period
have been announced . Making
grades of B or above in all their
subjects to be ·listed on the honor
rolls were tbe following students;
Lelart Falls Elemenlary
Fifth Grade: Robert Craig John,&lt;On

Fourth Grade: David Gloeckner,
Jessica Hill, Amy Norman, andMike Roush._
Third Grade : Brooke Kiser.
Autumn Reed, all AUs; Terry BeD.
Christy Hanley, Craig Randolph,
Nicki Tucker, and Aaron Sellers.
- Due to the Venture Capitol
Program at Letart Falls Elementaiy, there is no honor roD selected
for the first and second grades.
Portland Elementary
Sixth Grade: Amanda Huddleston, Lori Sayre, all AUs; Nick
McLaughlin, and T J. Moore.
· Fifth Grade: Alan Moore. all
AUs; Megan Combs, Lisa Deem,
Amanda Miller. Tara Pickens, Zach
Pickett, Brandon Smith, and Tom
Theiss.
·Fourth Grade; Stephanie Bradford, all AUs ;. Michael DePue.
.Adam Johnson, Paige Musser.
Andrea Tedford and Liz Wamsley.
Third Grade: Sara Cammarata,
Ryan Smith, all AUs; Andy Hen'derson, Kyle Kees, Joanne Pickens,
Nikki Riffle, Bryan Smith, and
.Brandi Vance.

.

Syracuse Elemenlary
Sixth Grade: Amber Duffy,
:'fyler Little, all AUs; Matthew
. Ash, Joe Cornell, Sheri Cummins.
· Joey Manuel, Rachel Marshall, and
AarOjl Ohlinger.
· Fifth Grade: Min(Jy Chancey,
: Crystal CotlriJI, Marium EIDabaja.
: lennifer Walker, all AUs; Adam
· Ball, Rachel Chapman, Justin Con. IIOlly, Curt Crouch, Jeri Hill, Jor:. don HiD, Amy Lee.
Fourth Grade: Bethany Amberg: ~r. Codi Davis, Sarah Hawley,
-Katie Sayre. all AUs; Shawn Barnbart, Jordan Bass, Amber Mills,
Andrew Philson, Joey Rime, and
. J.O. Smith.
Third Grade: Ashton Brown,
: Racbael Cottrill, Jordan Lidel.
· Stacy Snyder, all AUs; J{eather
~ Duffy, Holly Duffy, Joshua Harris,·
: Wallace Hill. Ashlee Hill, Tyler
· Roberts, and Christopher Warden.
: Second Grade : John Bentz.
: Myca Michael, Chelsea Smith,
·Jenny Warner, Jennifer Wolfe, all
: AUs; Nicole ,McDaniel, Caillin: Nease, Derek Rousli and Selena
:Spencer.

by Bob

Hoeflich

Perhaps, you haven't yet heard
of the Coolville Conununity Choir,
but now you will.
The group will be making three
appearances in Meigs Count y this
holiday season presenting a Christmas program. "Make His presence
Glorious".
Six Meigs Countians arc a part
of the Coolville group and they are
Judy Adams, Paula Welker, Janice
and Tom Reuter, Brian Reed. Barbara Barber and Sue Maison.
Many of you will rem ember
Tom R~uter from the Pomeroy Post
Office wh ere he worked many
years before retirement. Torn has
dabbled in music as a hobb y for
years and comm ent s that the
Coolville group is ille hcst orgamza(ion he ha' ever been with.
The choir will present its pro. gram at the St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy at 7: 30 p.m. on
Wednesday. Dec. 6. On Dec. 3. the
choir will he at the Mount Hermon
Church in the Texas Community
and at the Riverview Elementary
School on Dec . 7. The starting time
is 7 on the two latter appearances.
Of course, all performances arc
open to the public and the choir
would just love to see your smiling
face in the audience, I'm sure.
I have a feeling illat there are
some folks who ow~ illcir lives to
young Shannon Spaun. son of Ruill
and Bill Spaun of Pomeroy.
Shannon was corning down
Union Ave ., about 7 a.m . on
Thanksgiving morning When he
thought he detected a fire at the
Pomeroy Cliff Aparunents. Shannon turned his vehicle around and

went back to the complex, and sure
enough the structure \va~ ablaze.
Quickl y Shann on went to the
Becky Ward res idence on nearby
Osborne S tr-cl' t and asked her to
call illc Pomeroy Fire Dcparunent.
Shannon thm rcturnctl to U1e complex where he lll cr.d ly broke down
the entrance door to U1e building.
Shannon began a&lt;Jv ising occu pant s- apparentl y everyone wks
still aslec p- ol th e lire In one
aparuncnt he t.: llCl HIIltt:rc&lt;..l a woman
who had to he removed from the
buildin g via a wheel chair. The
woman' &gt;hushaml ami Slmnnon got
her safely out of U1e st ructure. In
anotl1er apartme nt. Shannon found
a youn g hoy as le ep in bed . li e
aroused the parents and the boy and
carried the youngs ter to safety. He
awakened another woman and her
parent s in anoth er apartment and
advised th em to get out of the

GLASS
&amp; WINDOW

REPANE
992·2549
11/W1

Home Health Care Week was observed with
an open house Wednesday arternoon by the
Home Health Service or Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Enjoying a moment at the rerreshment
table here rrom the !ell are Paula Eichinger, R.
N., coordinator, Loraine Venoy or the hospital

huilding.
All in all it wa s a traumatic

cxpcncnce for young Shannon who
is :UJ employee of tlw Pomeroy Vil lage Wat er Department. There
were a couple nr other person s
around durin g th e turmoiL I' m
sure, they, too helped people, but
Shannon I happen to know about.
Meantime, Shannon 's parents
were waiting at U1eir home for him
to arrive as he was joining illem for
a trip to Columbus that morning .
They, of course. were concerned
that Shannon had not appeared on
schedule. But that little problem
was quickly drowned in the pride
illat illey felt and feel for their son
who would risk his own life to go
into a burning building tp help others.

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C . YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

staff, and Leanne Cunningham, R.N., a home
health care nurse. This week the agency's nurses
have held blood pressure clinics al Krogers in
Pomeroy and Vaughans in Middleport, and
have spoken about the service at several community organizations.

"I HAD NO IDEA IT
WAS THIS MUCH
FUN"
Meet new people the
fun way today.
Call1-900-255-5454,
ext. 6694
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.,
Touch-Tone phone
required.
Serv-U (619) 645-,~!~

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Choose From •••
•New Fall &amp;Winter Coats
•Dresses •Sweaters
•Blazers
•Ladies Flannel Nightgowns
and Paiamas

For Love And
Affection Dial

PLUS MUCH MORE

Mrs. Johnson received an outstan!ling award from the department of
Ohio for her senior prayer book
and her contribution to ille chaplain .
program. The unit received second
place award from the Deparunent
of Ohio for t11c program of public
relation s with Lula Hampton ,
chainnan.
The :umual Chrisunas party was
planned for Ocr. 12 at Mt. Moriah
Baptist Church. Middleport with
Public Notice
Public Notice·
veterans to be invited. There was
group singing of America, a prayer
Meigs County Courthouse.
PUBLIC NOTICE
fur peace ;md remarks by ille presiMeigs County Budget
Pursuant to Section
dent to close t11e meeting.
Commission
121.22 of the Ohio Revised
Code, notice lo hereby (11) 30; 1TC
given thai the Melgo County
Budget Commtoolon will ba
Public Notice
meeting on December 4,
NOTICE OF DRAWING
1995, at 2:00 O'Clock p.m.
JURORS
The meeting will be
conducted In tho Melga Rovlood Code, Sec. 2313.20
(;o_u11_ty_ AudHo(~ _ Office, Office of Commissioners of

1-900-255-5454
Ext 8417
Must be 18 yrs
$2.99 per min
Touch Tone

BAHR CLOTHIERS

145 NORTH SECOND

Phone Required
Serv -U (619)

MIDDLEPORT

645-8434
Public Notice
Public Notice
Jurors Meigs County, Ohio Term of tho Common Pleas
November 27, 1995
Court of said County.
To All Whom II May
Wallace Bradford
Concern:
I.O ~McCoy
On Thursday, the 7th day
Commissioners of Jurors
of December 1995, at 8:30
Drawing wilt be held at
o'clock, a.m., at the office of the Meigs County Board of
tho Commissioners of Elections, 112 Mulberry
Jurors of of Meigs County, Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ohto, Jurors will be publicly (11) 30; 1TC
drawn for tho January 1996

.

WATKINS
PRODUCTS
(Stock up on your
holiday baking
supplies)

614·949·3027

1112t/9511 mo. pd.

BLACKHAWK
Strong Enough

1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.

Arista Nashville

Touch-tone
phone required
Serv -U

JEFF FOXWORTHY
REBA McENTIRE
Games Rednecks Play Starting Over
Wamer Bros.
MCNNashvitle

11112-2588
'

'

1NTON

Clllllll County Dllplay Yard .
·

155 lllln St

aiJa 8603

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Pol"table
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614·742-2193

CLIP

I... _____________
SJ.OO OFF YOUR NEXT I
...
!MUSIC PURCHASE WITH AD.!

DANGEROUS MINDS
Original Motion Pict11re Soundtrack
MCA

Middleport,

•Licensed
•Bonded
•Insured
Jim Hawthorne
985-4386 H/'JI1 mo.

4405

For Free Estimates'
"'~5
.

Mon.-Fri.
9-7
Sat 9-5

.

I'

·,•

' ·. · ·.,.

:r.v

·

992·2549

A

•

CHRISTMAS TRE6S

•

-BRADFORD'S . •

Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt 33, tum Eost at
Darwin onto R,l. 681. Go 4 mies to Cherry Ridge Rd., 1
1/2 miles to tree farm. Watch for Signs. 10:00 a.m. dl dark
Nov. 241hru Dec. 24
Wagon Rides/Craft Shop- Weekends

Oh. 4576o

(614) 992·2825

..

~------------------------~.~~~
•,

IlNDO
Racine American
Legion #602
Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Doors Open
4:30P.M.
Bring ad for Free Card
Phone 949-2044
949-2685
1112M511 mo

Are you looking for
love?
Longterm
relationship?
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Touchtone Phone
,Required Ser-U
(619) 645-8~34
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

~~--~~~

Call
614-949-2512
Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
including weddings,
receplions,
anniversaries,
reunions. Special rates
for individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
Call992-7747.

Licensed &amp;

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen
at 614-843-5327
or 614-949-2632
after 10-1 0-95

Free Estimat~s
Stump grinding
Gallipolis, OH
614-441-1191

CALL YOUR

DATE NOW!!!
1900·484·2600

LOOKING
FOR LOVE?
1-900-255-4242
Ext. 9106
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
Touch·tone phone
required.
Serve-U
(619) 645-8434
10/26195

OILER'S
DEER -SHOP
Langsville, Ohio
SR325
Skin- Cut - Wrap
&amp; Freeze
Yor Kl/'em &amp; we drilYem

HEAD START
BAKE SALE

742-2076

DEC. 1ST, 9 A.M.-3 P.~.
PAM IDA &amp;KROGER'S

Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk To 'em ·Uve
1-900-526:2500
Ext. 6113
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

••••••
DATES
ROMANCE

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 years.
Touch-lone phone
required.
SERV-U (619) 645-8434
11114/t mo.

Riggs Christmas Trees
Choose and cut your tree. We will
mechanically clean your tree for you so
no more needles in the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like.

1-900-2SS-1S1S
Ext. 8583
-2.9§ per min. Mullt be 18
yrs. Tauo~:h-tane phone req.
Sorv-U (&amp;19) 645-a.n

I

34480 A Rocksprings Rd.
Co. Rd. 20 North of Meigs Fairgrounds first
drive past horse barns

IS your summer tan fading?
New beds with dual face tanners
Also new High Turbo Bed in mid December.

992·5756

~~~~~~~~~ TREE TRIMMIIIG ·

r

Hand Crocheted

tl

A6:;ha.11gsho~poE~arSiyFoar lBeest

~

J
J

Selection Of Patterns,
Sizes &amp; Country Colors

i

.

~e~6ect

C. h7ist»tilS

~
~

Sharon Louks

1}

tj

CJi6ts

~·

(614) 985-4114

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

LIVE GIRLS

HAULING &amp;

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

~~~00
1 .~:0~~
8
Ext. 1565

uE!~!!!~r?v~,

Ch uc k Stotts

614·992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512
REASONABLE RATES
813Mn

PENING NOVEMBER 25th
Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

HAi.TWELL HOII$E
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 4576g
614-992-7696
Holiday Hours: M-S 9:30- 4:30 p.m.
Sun. 12:00- 5:00 p.m.

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal- Commercial or residenlial.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (614) 645-8434

Bill Slack
• 992-2269
RACINE

;J~ame
eo~ne~

Clhe

Picture Frame, Mats

614-742-2138

AftENtiON
BOW BUNTERS

949-2512

ALL YOUR BOW
HUNTING NEEDS.

•Bows •Arrows

Cheaper Rates

•Deer scents
•Deer calls

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR
HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

FOR SALE
Cut &amp; split
Firewood
All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball Logging &amp;
Sawmill

992-6142
Call Evenin s , ,

110\\ \IW
E\1. \\ \TI:\(;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

DAILY

HOROSCOPE
Up-To-Date
Soap Results

CALL NOWlff
1-900-HS-1800
Ext. 6HS
per min. Must he 18
yrs. Touch·tone phone req.
Serv-U (Gt9) 645-84H

PARK

Mobile home
sites for rent

614-667-3630
t01ttl95 1mo.

Solid Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
We have the
best window
and the best
price

On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available
Premier Cleaners·
and Coin Laundry
397 West Main St., :
Pomeroy
Under new management
New equipment

992-9923
10% Discount w/Ad

SPORTS
MEET NEW PEOPLE
POINT
THE FUN WAY
SPREADS
TODAY!
AND MORE!!!
1-900-388-0500
1-900-884-g204
EXT. 3754
Ext. 2g12
$2.99 Per min.
'
$2.99 per min.
Musl Be 18 yrs.
Must be 18 yrs.
;
Tou&lt;h -Ton:Shone
Touch-tone Phone
I
Requir
Required
Serv-U
(619)-645-8434
:
Serv-U (619) 645-8434 I
11 120195 1 mO.
9/ 14/95 2 mo. PCI I

( No Sunday Calls)
21 12192/lln

HOME

-

$ 2.9~

614-992-7643

~

oCiolhing and much mo..,
JOE'S .
.
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
Antiquity, Oh.
614-949-2906 t0151t mo-

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

405 Nonh Second Ave .. Middlepon 992-5020

MOBILE

Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building .
912719Sttn

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

&amp; Framing Accessories.

HOCKINGPORT

12 Guage

Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New At King

FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reasonable Rates

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

992-3954 or 985-3418

~~'

Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Vfater
~~Mt-;
Tre~tment
Questions
~'U:,_~
Equ1pment
1-900-255-Q200
., Di.&lt;tributed by
Ext. 6993
TRI
STATE WATER SYSTEMS1 INC •
. •
$3.99 per min.
The water treatment company cordially invites you to
Must be 18 yrs.
participate in a free, no obligation, compreh ensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
Touch-Tone Phone
TOS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Required
Please call RainSoft at 992-4472 or 1-800-606-3313
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
..__ _ _ _ _ __. L_ _....:;to;..;s;;:e;:..tu._t.:o;;:U;:..rf;.:,ree;;::..;w:,:a::;te;;.:r.:a:.:na;;.:lz.:s:::ls::,·....:'.::.,""::::Jn

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

•·.

AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling, ·
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

~==============~~~~~~~~~~~~----~

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

Middleport, Oh. Presents
"CHARLIE LILLY" Fri., Dec. 1
"BLITZKRIEG" Sat., Dec. 2
9:30pm-1:30am. $2 cover.

RIGGS TREE FARM

COUNTRY TANN .

· Companionship

Sons of the American
Legion of Middleport will be
having a Youth Gun Shoot
Sunday, Dec;. 3 at the
Legion Farm on Baily Run
Road starting at 1:00. Boys
16 years and under. 41 0 and
20 gauge. $1.50 per shot.
Any questions call
992-3934 or 949-2726.

Ext. 6927

OPEN NOV. 23- 10 to 9:00

-

1111411 mo.

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
MIDDLEPORT
AMERICAN LEGION ANNEX
TIME: 12:00-6:00
DEC. 3, SUNDAY
To rent tables call:
Kim Fife 992-5026
Jane Hawley 992-3934
$5.00 per table.
BAKE SALE
SOUP &amp; SANDWICHES
WILL BE SOLD.

Insured

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051

10121194/ttn

ENTERPRISE UMC ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
FRIDAY, DEC. 1, 1995
8A.M. · 5 P.M.
AT CARPENTER'S HALL

Service

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
While Pin~ 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger 1rees.
Call 742-2143 or
742-2979

CALL OUR OFFICE A1992-2155

Tree

39507 Rocksprin·g s Road (at corner of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702
Carol and David Riggs

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

17°0 column inch weekdays
1900 column inch Sunday

Country Naturals
qlfts &amp; Accessories
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
992-4015
Mon -Sat 9-5;
Evenings Man, Thurs,
Fri. Iii 8:00p.m.
Come in and see
what we have for
Christmas.

Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.

111911 mo.

BULLETIN BOARD

,.~

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Liv~

ELECTRONICS

1-22 North Second Ave.

DOZER
DUMP T~UCK
BACKHOE
SERVICE

SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992-

SAVE

Ow~~00

11/13195 mo.

NEFF REMODELING

r-------------,
&amp;
1

1

llad1e l'llaeli

POMEROY

1-900-484-2600
Ext. 9765
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (614) 645-8434

(619) 645-8434

•CREDIT TERMS • LAY-A-WAYS

IIIII I'UiiMCIY"Maon Bridge

GUYS &amp; DOLLS
FIND YOUR
LOVE!!!

Call your date now

.

·• Eleventh Grade: Nadlan Haines,
Mark Lewis. Greg McKinney, Jessica Sayre. Amber Thomas. -all
AUs; James Blackwell, Emify
puhl. Matthew Evans, Nick Fitch,
Hillery Harris, Tonia Nazarewycz,
Amy Rizer, Greyson Taylor, Sarah
Wallbrown , Craig Wolfe, and
Bobby Writesel.
· Twelfill Grade: Jason Barnett,
~J. H8rris, Rochelle Jenkins, Jenaifer Lawrence, Jonna Manuel, Jay
McKelvey, Sammi Sisson. Rayan
Young, all AUs; Kim Cornell, Eli
Craig, Robin Gillispie, Becky
Moore. Denise Roush, Jason S(Juler
and Nick Smith.

American Made

Wreaths - Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling
•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
614 992-2753

Gel Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel

'

Jan up your music collection with some of our great
CDs. We have hundreds of titles at incredibly low prices.
Be it rock, rap, country or jazz,our selection is grand.

JOHN HIAT
Walk On
Capitol

Local (rafters

949·2882

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Repairs/Additions
Craig 614-367-0567

Business Services

: berry.

Southern High School
. Ninth Grade: Jennifer Carleton,
· Nildci Circle, Suzanne Evans, Kara
: King, Jesse Little, Kimberly Sayre,
:all AUs; Teresa Bush, Donald Car. nahan. Bridget Cross, Jessica Han: ley, Jody Hupp. Josie Jarrell, Patty
:Lawrence, Jerrod Mills, Sarah
· Roels. Crystal Rose, Jason Roush,
·Billie Jo Sellers, Jessica Smith, Jessica Thei ss, Trisha Warner and
Rebecca Wolfe.
Tenth Grade: Cynthia Caldwell,
Crystal Coleman all AUs; Matthew
Dill, Jennifer Friend, Ashley McKinney, Tara Michael, Jackie Proffitt , Nikki Robinson, Jennifer
Roush, Lindsay Smith, Evan Stru]lle, Re_netta Wheeler, and Billy

TROLLY
STATION
HANDMADE
CRAFTS

$10 &amp; Up

3rd St. Racine, OH

Home or
Trailer

'

Your favorite artist

Auto

(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

112/tfn

FILL YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST
FOR HER WITH GIFTS FROM

CHRISTMAS TREES

WICKS
HAULING

mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Auxiliary makes donation
Donations to illc Veterans Hos- .
pilal birthday party , Covenant
House. and Food for the Poor were
made when the Lew is Manley
Auxiliary Unit 263 met recently at
Dale's Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Dorothy CdScy was hostess for
the meeting which opened in ritualistic form with Lorrene Goggins
presiding. Annette Johnson, chaplain assisted with the opening.
It was noted that the next party
at the Chillicothe hospital will be
held on Dec. 21 . Mrs . Goggins
gave a report on ille fall conference
held with Unit 27 of Gallipolis.

(Lime Slone Low Rales)

K.&amp;w.

·,

Southern Junior High
Seventh Grade: Macyn Ervin ,
: Shauna Manuel, Jonathan Evans,
· all AUs; Sarah B'all, Clay Enslen,
: Brandon Hill. Chad Hubbard,
: Emily Stivers, and Brenna Sisson.
: Eighth Grade: Jamie Baker,
. AJilber Maynard. Kyle Norris ,
: Brandon Wolfe, all AUs; Jessica
· Alley, Erin Bolin, Heidi Bumpass.
:Adam Cumings, Heather Dailey,
: Josh Davis, Stacey Ervin, Kim lhle,
· Chris Randolph and Bobby' Scar-

roo~

The Daily Sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

B&amp;B ROinNG and
CINS,RUCTION

STAR GUITAR.•
GUITARS
$300&amp; up
•
'
Lessons on
•
Piano,
Guitar &amp; Drums '
69 N. Locust St.
'
Cheshlre,Oh.
•
614-367-0302
Roger Walker
1112419511 mo.;

.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

Are 1you ready for love ?? Call
now
1-900-484-2600 oxr ons.oil

9473. $2.99 per minute must be
18 years, to1.1ch -tone phone re-

quire&lt;!, Serv-Ue19-645-8434.

lonely ? ? Need to hear a so li

smil!r.g
voice? t-900 -484 -2500
ex,tension 1429, $3.99 per minute,
muSI
18 years,
- ron~
phone be
r"''ulred,
Serv·Urouch
619-645-

~- Announcements '
30

(614) 992·5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial
ONE CAlL DO&amp;S JT AU
•Pressure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Claanlng
-carpentry
-carpet
No Trespassi ng On The Proper!i
•Roofing
•Painting
•Drywall
,?; 784 While Oak Roao, Galllpo:
•Gutters
•Cabinets
-Maaonry
Richard Fehrmarvt
•Electrical
•Siding
•Decks
o
Giveaway
4
We Have Emergency Services
7 Days AWeek, 24 Hours A Day.
' pan LabtCoon hound, 1yr old,
35 Years experience, all WOrk guaranteed.
male. 3 pari Collie/Chow puppiea•
6wks old. 304-895-3815.
'•
"Fall Specials" Leavea cleaned up and hauled
•
4 Puppies, 2 Mates. 2 Femaloa •
away. Most yards $49.00
He1nz 57.614-379-2834.
·:
Gutters cleaned and screened,
4 Puppies, 3 Months Old A.I!J
most 1 story homes, $49.00 81ac&gt; Morher Beagle 3 Mateo 1•
.__ _o;;.H;,;;t;;.O_-..;;W.;;E;;.ST;..V;.;;IR;,;;G;;;IN;,;;I;,;A_-..;;K::E;;NTU;,;;C;:;KY.;. .10151-'rno......l. Female, 614-256-1i554.
·•

�Thursday, November 30, 1995
·• Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel• Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pome!OY • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
: Ador able ha ll Da lma 1an pups
304 675 1726

2 bedroom mob1lo home, refer ences &amp; deposu required , MInersVIlle area. call after 5pm 614-

E1ght week old yellow s1npcd male

i.1tte n htter tratn ed na d sn ots
,6111 992 1077

992-6777

2 Bedroom Mobile Home MercerVIlle Area, Reference &amp; Deposn,
614·446· 1158

.Female olac!l. and wh 1te cat 61 4

•9925122
• Full s•Z:C bed Irame With s p r~ n9s
:ana manress 6t 4 992 6558

2 Bedroom s, Wnh Relngarator
Stove, Fuel Oil Heat, At 7 Crow~

lr S rOOI S 304 6 75-7785
Pupp•e s 614•446-7556
Sma ll Mal e Puppy t l2 lha sa
/Ipso 112 Ter r•er 6t4 446 9310

Lost and Found

FOUND La rge cream colored le
mate lr1endly Golden Relnevet
near Leo n 30 4 458 16t5 11 Lfl
claomed w•l g•vc away

''I'm nol goong to wear that earrong agaon after
you caught a fosh woth ott'

Fou nd Span tel Whtte &amp; Brown
On McC ully t:l.oad 6 t4 446 786 7
Aher 2 PM

LO ST Hunters blonde German
Help Wanted
Sheph erd between Wilham G1ll s 110
&amp; Rotn Lees dead or al•ve pet
AVON I:ARN $$$ at home at
304 675 1235
wo rk All area s 304 862 2645 1
Lo st In Campu g n C 11.. rLh Are a BOO 992 6356 INOIREP
Black 1Wh te Male En glish Set er
W1th Orange Collar 6 14 36 7 Babys liar ne eded 11 my home
•7947
relerences requ11ed M•ddlepo n
area call 614 99? 250 8 al ter
REWARD lor nlo lc ad 1n.g ro 1e 6pm
turn at co pper nose Be ag le WI - - - - - - - -- -~urple co!lar m•!&gt;s.ng 1n Gill ~•dge Dancers 18 and Older earn extra
area s•nce Nov 22 304 6/ 5 Chro stmas $ No exper •ence
5990
~ ~;:~",~~&lt;;The Southfotk Inn 304

70

Yard Sale
Callipolis

V' · t

REAL ESTATE

All real estate adverttsrng 1n
tilts newspaper rs subject 10
lhe Federal Fatr Housmg Ad
at 1968 whiCh makes tltllegal
lo advertiSe "any preference
hm1tatton or dlscrmtnatton
based on race, color, reltgiOn,
sex lamlltal status or natiOnal
ongtn, or any tntenlton to
make any such preference
limllahon or diSO'lmtnatton ~

supp11es. 1nlo•

oblt9atton Send sell

Thts newspaper wtll not
knowhrgly accept
adventsemems for real estate
wh1ch 1s m \IIOiatton ol the law
Our readers are hereby
1nlormod that all dwellings
ad11ert1sed 1n thts newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunrty baSIS

Chflslmas Sale And Yard Sa let Home Typ1 sts PC users needed
Decora tions 1 Mile We st Rod $45 000 mcome potential Call 1
ney Fr1 Sa t Sun 10 AM
BOO 513 4343 Ext B-9368

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Auct 1ons every Frtd ay Sa turday
7pm Mt Ailo Au c110n Rt 2 33
·crossroads" New rnerchandtse
groccn~s &amp; lots more Ed Frazter
930

II You Need EJ:tra Cash For
Chmtmas Th1s Is Just For Yo u I
The Nat1 onal Rem inder Serv•ce
Now Has Opemngs For Full T1me
And Part T1mc Pos111ons We
Need 20 Depefldable Respons1
ble And Amb1t1ous Workers Who
Wan t An Exc1t1ng Ca reer In A
Job Where Pertormance Pays Ott
No Expenence Needed
A Great Tramtng Program
No Relocation
Flextble Hours
Awards For Top Sales
Mu st Possess Excellent Com
mun•caboniPooplc Sk1lls
For Personal ln! erv •ews Call
Monday Fnday 9 A M 9 PM
614 446 6941 Ask For L•sa
Must Br1ng Three References Or
Resume

Chrt stmas Sale Nov 30 th Hart
lord WV Communtty Ouddtn9
LOIS Ol toys &amp; gtftS EleWOniCS Needed 1mmed•atcl y 4 people to
Snack Bar Come &amp; ro• n the make phone contacts from home
crowd Howard Beasley Auc11on 304 675- 1725

eer
::---:------,----1
No
R1ck Pearson AuctiOn Company
full Hme aucuoneer complete
auct1on
ser\IICe
L1cense d
#66 Oh10 &amp; West V•r 91 n1 a 304

773·5785 Or 304 773 5447
90

Wanted to Buy

An t1ques collectables estates
R1vorme An1 1ques Ru ss Moore
ownB!' 614 992 2526
Clean l ate Mod el Cars Or
Truck s t98 7 Model s Or Newer
Sm1 th Butck Pon11ac 1900 Ea st
ern Avenue Gallipolis
J 8 D s Auto Part s Buy1ng sal

vage veh1 cles Sellmg parts 304

773 5033
Hear EnJ For A tga 7 l-ord 1 Ton
Dually 614 446 1756
Top P111.:es Pa1d Old U 5 C01ns
Sttver Gold Dtamonds All Old
Coller:t1blc s Paperw c•g h!s Etc
M 1 S Co1n Shop 15' Seco nd
Avenue GallipoliS 614 4t.6 2842
Use d I urn !u re dnt q;cs one
p1ece or com plet e csra 1es Osby
Mart1n 61499 2 7411
Wameq ro Buy Junk Autos Wtth
Or W1tho ut Moto rs Ca ll Larr y
Ltvely 6 14 3ll6 9303
Wamed To Buy L1111e T ke~ Toys
614 245--588 7

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

$t 000 w ee!l.ly Stu lhng Envel
opes Free Info Send Sell Ad
dressed S1amped [n velo pe To
Explorer Dept 91 606 9 Old Can
ton Roac Box 5t0 JacK son MS
39211
$200 S900 wee kly Yea' ro und
pO SIIIOn s Hor ng men wo men
Free roo m board Will tram Call
24hrs
40 7 875 2022
1H1

0505C43
ATTN PT PLEASA NT PoS!a l
Posruon s a'la•lable Permanent lull
time lor clerks1sor1ers Full Ben e
hts For exam date appll cat .on
and salary rnto 708 264 1839 ext

3670 flam-6pm
AVON

I All Are as I Sh1 rley

Spears, 304-675 1A29

AVON CHRISTMAS SAlES
Earn $8 $15 /Hr At WorK Home
Dtscounts I No Inventory Or Door

Door lnd iRep 1 600 742 4738
Avon Chrtstmas $8 $1 5t Hr No
M1n1mums No Door To Door
Benefits 1-800·736·0168 lnd tSi p

IRep
BaDySiner needed 1n my home af
ter sct'lo ol, 2·3 day s per week
614-985 9813.
Clerk wanted lor retail store 1n Po·
mer o~ area 30/nrs per week ,
some Sunday and even •ng hours
Must be able to work w1th the
publ1c Knowledge of cash reg
1sters and any oU1ce ma chmes
helpfu l Send resume wah previ ous work eKpertence and three

references cto The Darly Senlrnel,
PO Bo&gt; 729·16. Pomeroy Oh1o
45769 Respond by 12/11'95
Cosmeto logist Needed Gaur
anteed Wages Fu ll And Pa rt·
Ttme Help Wanled 614 446 7267

310 Homes for Sale
10% Down 3 Bedroom 1 Bath
Gas Heat Aural Water Bula111lle
P1ke 614 446 8832

5 Room House 26 Chllltcothe
Road Galltpolts, $6 800 614 446
16 15 614 446 1243
8 11C ~

Home 3 Bedrooms Cedar
Closet Ftreplace D•ntng Room Off
Ltv ng Room K1tchen Range Re
lr1gerator Laundry Room Central
A1r Gas Heat Garage In C1~ K1
neon Street 133, Galltpohs. Sale
By Owner 614 446 2573

Expertenc e Neces sary! $500
To $goo Wee kly /Potenltal Pro
cess1 n9 Mortgage Refun ds Own
Hours Ca ll\909) ] 15 2300 Ext
782 (24 Hours l

Country home
4bedrooms
2baths 2 car garage, \acre
m1nutes from Pt Pleasant onced
10 sell For appo1n1ment call 304

Now h•nng all pos111on s for Juke
b&lt;» Pllza Apply '" pe&gt;Son Mon
day December 4th a 1the old 7 33
bu1 ld1 ng on SA 33 between 2pm
5pm

Three bedroom home tn country
Wh11es H1ll Rd Rutland one balh
tn ground pool 614-992 5067

Pan lime openmg for ln struc1o r
AsSIStant at Ca rleton Scllool to
work With the pre school program
three (3) days a week Must nave
or be wtlhng and able to ob1a1n an
EducatiOnal A1de pe rm 1t from the
Oh10 Departmen! o f Edu ca tion
App hcat1on deadlmo Tuesday
December 5th at 3 OOpm

320

Posta l Jobs $tS 90/hr BenefitS
On jOb 1ratn1ng Fo r appl•ca t•ont
1nlo can 818 764 901 6 ext 4101
Sales Rep For Snap On Tool s
Equal Opportunl!y Employer 606

928 61 26
180

675 6557

wv 304 755-5885

Pnce Busted New 14 ll70 2 or
3Dr Only $995 down S195fmonth
Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nttro WV 304

755-5885

Wanted To Do

Opemng For 1 Elderly Or
Hand1capped Pe rson In L•censed
Pnvate Home 614 441 0000
General Mamtenance Pat ntmg,
Yatd Work Windo ws Washed
Gutt ers Ck!aned l ight Hauling
Commencal Rcs•dcnllal, Stelle
614 446 6861

Mobile Homes
for Sale

l.nll!e d Offer' 1996 doublewlde
3br 2bath $1799 down , $2751
month Free del1\lery &amp; set up
Only at Oakwood Home s Nttro

340

H r~1e

Business and
Buildings

For Sale Or lease 5 000 Sq Ft
Oommerc1al Burldtng On State Ro
ute 93 In Oak Hill Formerly
Known As H•ghway Res taurant
Large Customer Parkmg Lot Cal l
614 682 3199 Alt9f 6 PM

350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

FIVe acres
aera tor, near
Georges Portable Sawmill don t Rac1ne,$16 000 can l1nance wtlh
haul your logs to !he m11l JUSt call hall down 614 949 2025
:k14 675-1957
Scen•c Valley App le Grove
local Man Scekmg Job On Farm beaulllu t 2ac lots pu blt c water
Ltlet 1me Expertence Wit h Da1ry Clyde Bowen Jr , 304 576 2336
And Macllmery AI Cert1f1ed Sal
ary Schedule Negottable Sertous
RENTALS
lnqw••e s Only 614 24 5 50 20 II
No An:;Wef Leave Message

_ _ _ _ __.::.._ _ 141
Prote ss ronal Tree Se rv1 ce Com
pl ete Tre e Care Bucke t Truck
St:Jrv1ce 50 Ft Reach Stump Ae
moval Free Est tmate sl In
surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
1ce Call And Save• No Tree Too
B•g Or Too Small' Bidwel l. Oll•o
614 3689643 614 367 7010

o Houses for Rent

3 Bedroom Hou se Co untry L1v
mg $350/ Mo Plus Deposrt 1
Year Lease 4352 Cora Mill Road
GallljX)IIS 614 878-6589 AM
House tor rent 304 675-6720

Newer lour bedroom house for
Rub a Scrub Cleantng Serv1ce ren 1 on Holley Rd $325 depoSit
dustmg mopp1ng, w1 ndows and plus hrst and last months rent at
more Complete serv1ce 01 touch $3 25 per month Relerences re
ups Relerences on request ca ll qurred call 614 gg2 5861·
Terry at 6 14 992 4232 or 614
Small 2 Bedroom, Rear 238 F1rst
992-4451
Av e, Kttchen With Slave tRefng·
Sun Valley Nursery Sch ool erator $325/Month Oepos1t1 Ref
Childcare M-F 6am-5 30pm Age s erences No Pets614·446 4926

2 K Young School Age Du nng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mtnl

mum 614-ll46-3657
W1ll Blow lnstall auon Have Equ1p
ment Insured Ex perienced Rea
sonable Rates Free Est•m ates

614 24!&gt;-5755
W1ll do genealogy PO Box 403
Syracuse, Otno 45 779

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
OpportunHy

INOTK: Et
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommen ds that you do bus•·
nes s wllh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma 1t until you have 1nvest•gated
theoflenng
Investment Property In Galltpolls,
'Owner May Be Able To Help W1th
Some F1nanc1ng, Call 614 797

4345 Aloer 6R M

Apartments
' for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartnlents lur
ntshed and unlurmshed secunrv
depos11 re qu11ed no pets 6 14

$1 000 weekly stufhng
/lome Stan now no

I ••P""""''•· hee

Two and three bedroom mob•le
homes, start1ng at $240 $300,
sewer water ana trash mcluded
614 992 2167

Furn1 shed Efhctency 607 Second,
Gall1pOI1s Sha re Bath, $1501\Jtllt
t1 es Pa1d 6t4 446 4416 After
7pm

ALL Yard Sates Must Be Pa1d In
36 100 E Wh1te
Adv ance DE AOLINE 2 DO p m
148·345 Cedar
the dav oelore tlie ad •s to run
Sun d a ~ ed1t10n 2 00 p m f nday
Help needed lor deer proce ssmg
Mo nday ed1t1on tO 00 am Sat Crawford s Grocery 304 675
Ulday
5404

All Ya rd Sales Must Be Pa td In
Advance Deadlme 1 OO pm the
day Oelore the ad IS to run Sun
day edtt1on 1 OOpm Frtday Mon
day edl!lon 10 OOa m Saturday

Clean 614 245.07 17 $9 400

1992 Fo rd F 150 XlT 61 OOOm1 ,
300 6cyl, 5spd, topper wlbed liner,
Sillier &amp; fo rest green $10,200
30&lt;~ 773 5004

7795

Country Furntlure 304 675 6820
Rt 2 N 6m1les Pt Pleasant WV
Tues Sat 9-6, Sun 11 5

730

G E Dryer $125 Cut To $95 Ken
more Dryer $95 Cut To $75 May
tag Dryer $150 Cut To $125 Hot
2bedroom mobile home, Broad potnt Electnc Range 30 Inch
Run Rd near New Haven $2401 Whtte .Was $175 Now $125 Ken
mo plus deposit 304-773·5881
more Washer Was $150 Now
2bedroom $2001mo Deposit &amp; S 125 Wh 1rlpool Washer 9i 125
Now $95 Wh1rlpool Wa sher
references 304-675 4526
Heavy Duty White 1 Year War
N• ce 2 bedroom mobile home 1n ranty Wa s $2 25 Now $205 3 To
Choose From Skaggs App1 1anc
M1ddleport Oh, 614·992 5858
es 76 Vme Street Galltpoll s OH
Ntce three bedroom mobHe home 614 446 7398 I 800 499 3499
m Mtddleport 614 992 5858
Good Condtl1on 2 Pc Sect1ona1
Small 2bedroom Middleport OH Tan Couches Plus Re ch ner 614
References &amp; secur11y deposit re- 446 0767 After 6 PM
quued Xl4 8B2 3267

440

&amp;
---,.--I,_,C_In--,1
Y;.....,,.--1 addre!;sed soamped envelope 10

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Loaded Excellent Cond1t10n, Very

Smatl Unlurn•shed I Bedroom
House Near K Mart, Air Condl
110 ned Gas Heat, M1crowave,
New Pamt &amp; Carpet, Upstairs
Storage Available, $325/Mo +

Gas Elecoroc. Cell Be1Weel1 8 &amp; 1o
PM Or Before 9 AM 61 4 4461822
Two bedroom small house,prtvate
setting, m Pomeroy, $250/mo,

614·985--1256
Unlurntshed two bedroom house
rl1ce and clean, deposit reqUired:

no 1~de pelS, 614 992-3090
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1&amp;2 Bedroom, Stave, Rafngerator

Trash /Water Pa1d, New Carpet,
$200/Mo, $250/Mo, Plus Oeposn
614·388-9686
14ll70 1Q93 3 Bedroom, N1ce
County V1ew Near Cora &amp; Rae
coon Creek $315/Mo 614 -878

5532 (Columbtis)

992 221 8
1 bedro om apa flment 1n Ytddle
port available Decembe r 1 al l
utt l1t1es patd S250 per month
$100 depos11 Bam to Spm 614

992 7806
1bedroom upsta~rs no pets
$175 + ut1ht1es, and depos1t 304
675 4975after 5pm

GOOD

1982 lull me Bronco 4X4 302 '
automatiC sohd body runs excel

Kenmore electric range $200 Ra
dial arm saw$150 304-675 1272

Mollohan Carpets Rt 7 N 614
446 7444 For Ca rpet &amp; V1nyl
Needs

AUCTION

SWAIN
FURNITURE 62

&amp;

Olive St GallipoliS New &amp; Used
lurn nure, heate rs Weste rn &amp;
Work boots 614-446·3159
Twtn bed wtmaltress and box
spnngs, exc cond 304 882 2640
after 4 30pm

VI RA FURNITURE
614-446 3158
Quality Household Furntture And
Appliances. Grea\ Deals On
Cash And Carry' RENT·2 OWN
And layaway Also Available
Free Delivery Within 25 Mtles

2 Bedroom Unlu rn.shed Apan
ment, CA, Hardwood Floor, BUild
In Kitchen, No Pets In Gallipolis
614 446-2300 .

2bedroom ground lloor1 wtd hOok
up. central heat, krtchen wls tove
&amp; ref r• gerator Pnvate storage
Depost t &amp; relerences $325/mo

530

Antiques

Buy or sell At\le rme Ant1ques,
1124 E Mam Street on At 124
Pomeroy Ho urs M T W 10 00
a m to 6 00 p m, SunQay 1 00 10

8 DO pm 614 992 252tl
540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
46~

304 675 6902

Blade Ne\ler Been Used
$260 Fns 1995 Yamah Kod1ak

35 WEST

(YFM400FWE) Or Btg Bear 1994
(YFM350FWT) 614 446-4436

2 BR BRICK TOWN

HOU SES 126 1 Jackson P1ke
Acro ss From Cmema $295/Mo
Dep For Rental Appltcatlons Call

614 446-0957

614 446-0006

614 44t 1616 Or Wme PO Box
994 Gallipolis OH 45631

5 p1ece secuonal couch $400
collee &amp; end table $50 for both
desk &amp; chair $30 call 614 742

2076

Furno shed Apar1men 1, 1 Bedroom
$275/Mo Uttltltes Pa1d 607 Sec
ond Avenue Galltpolts 614 446
44t6 Alter 7 PM

Amana Stde By S1de Refngerator
Washer, Dry er, Chest Freezer
Microwave, 11 OV Dryer Color
TV 614 256 1238

Beach S1 Mrddleport 2bedroom
furn1 shed apartment Also 1bed
room elltency DepOSit &amp; referenc
es. ut1l111es pa1d 304-882 2566

Babybed dressmg table, carseat
stroller. swtng 304 675·4548

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dnve
!rom $226 to S29t Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 446 2568

Equal Houstng Opponunlly
Beech St Middleport 1 room fur
mshed eff•c•ency ut1h11es patd De
POSit a relerences 304 88 2

2566

lr }t

Bakers Rack Hunter Groen &amp;
Brass Ltke New, $75, Carpet 6 l f
2 x8 112 Mysttc Jade Brand New
$25, 614·44H&gt;615 Alter 5 PM
Break last sel table w/6 chatrs
$35 Vtnyl cover chatr, green $25

Molasses $6/qo 304 875 1515
Concrete &amp; PlastiC SeptiC Tanks
300 Thru 2,000 Gal lon s Ron
Evans Enlerprtses Jackson OH

1 BOO 537 9528

Sam Somerville s regular Army
camouflage Dy Sandyvtlle Post
Olfrce noon 6pm Fn -Sun 304
273 5655 Jun1or s1zes Free De
livery PI Pleasant
Santas Chnstmas Trees , Stille
Rou Ie 850 Between At 35 and
Rodney We Wil l Cut 614 245

559&gt;
STORAGE TANK S 3 000 Gallon

Upr 1ght. ~on hans Enterpr~scs
Jackson, Oh1o, 1-800-537·9528

Three p1ecf' Southwestern destgn
liv •ng rooiT' sutte, brand new nw
er used $800 6t4 992·7024 after
4 30pm
Upnght Freezers Sears Au
tomatlc Wa sner Sola Bed. Gas
Cook Stove 614 379 -2 720 AF

TER6PM

Wood approx 400 board tl, walnut $1 70/bd ft 200 board It cher·
ry, $1 50/bd h A1r dned 4/4 to 814

304 675 6682
Zenith 25~ console TV $75 304

675 1732
550

Building
Supplies

Block br1ck sewer p1pes wtnd
ows, lmtel s, etc Claude Wtnters
Ato Grande, Ot1 Call 614 245

5121

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groommg Fea
tunng Hydro Bath Ju he Webb

Call614 446-0231
AKC Reg
1Owks old

5951

AKC

Br111any pupptes
$200ea 304 364

Registered

sho~

Pomer1ans

&amp;wormed 304-675-2193

AKC Rottweller Puppy 1 Male

Lefo, 9 Weeks Old, Shoos Up To
Date, Pnce Reduced! 614 379-

Sell $100,614 470-2766

9116

Extra N1ce 2 BR All Elec, Furn,
Kll, Close To Sprtng Valley Area
No Pets $355/ Mo + 0 D + Ref
614-446-6157, ~fler 5 P.M

Elect11c Whee lchatrs /Scooters
New /Used SGooter /WheelGhaH
Lt fts , Stauway Elevato rs, Lilt
Cha1rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7263

AKC Stbeflan Husky Pupp1e s
Blu e Eyes, $200, Each $175
Brown $150 , Calm Selec tive
Breed 614 4468627

For Rent t Bedroom Apartment
Furmshed In Mtddleport 814
446 3091 614 992 2178, 614

Firewood lor sale $25/load you
ptck up 614 949-3027

992·5304

FHewood P1ck Up Load $25 Un

922.0294

Furntshed 2 Bedroom Apartment
AGross From Park, AC, No Pets
Relerences, Oepos1t, $350/Mo

614-446-8235, 614-446.()577

FurniShed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Oownstatrs. Ut1ht1es Furnished,
Ctean, No Pets, Reference , De
posit Requtred, 614 446-1519
Furnrshed Eff1ctency $225/Mo
Utlhbes Paid, 920 Fourth Avenue

Gallipolis 614 446-4416 Aller 7
PM
GraCIOUS hvmg 1 ana 2 bedroom
apartmenll at V1llage Manor and
Rtverstde Apartments m Middle-

pori From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Housmg Opper
IUnllleS.

3 Badrnom Apartment For Rent In
Potnt Pleasant Fully Carpeted
References &amp; Depostt Requtred.
Ca ll After 6 00 PM 614-446

0041
Ntce 2 upstairs bedroom carpet
ed apphances tncluded, ut1ht1es
patd, ac, $375/mo Depostt &amp; rel
erences requrred 3:&gt;4-675-6196
Ntce one bedroom apartment lor
rent tn Pt Pleasant 614 992·

5858
N1ce two bedroom apartment m

Pomeroy, 61 ~992-5858
Stonewood Apartments now ac·
ceptmg appltcauons lor apartments all electrtc for elderly and
d1sab1hty FMHA subs1d1zed, baSIC rent $260 per month, EOH,

614-992-:j)S5

Twtn R1vera Tower now accepttng
appllcattons lor 1br HUO subsld·
•ze d apt lor elderly and handt ·

capped EOH 304-675-6679
450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms lor rent week or month
Start•ng at $120/mo Gallta Ho tel

814 446 9580
Sleepmg rooms with cooktng
Also trailer space on nver All
hook ups Call after 2 oo p m •
304 773-565t, MasonWV

460 Space for Rent

spill, $40 Sp11 614-388-9265

Fodder Shocks $2 Each And In
dtan Corn F1ve For $1 oo 614

245-5887

For Rent 2~x26 Pole Barn For
Storag~ Only Good Locauon On
Route 7 614 446 4782
Car audto Rockford Fosgare
pun ch 150 punctl 75 amps
Rockford Fosgate R124 12·
speaker box Alp1ne pre a mp
equal1zer Wllh sub output, 614

992-6026
Grave Blanke ts Fo r Sale, 614

992-6166
Hand Made Oak ! Walnut Hobby
Horses $45 K1ds Sleds 16' 2
Axle Car Tra iler Woodsplttter &amp;
Snow Blade For A Gravely, 614

367 7512
Ht Effectency l P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU 1

800 287-8308, 614-446 ·6308
Duct Systems And A1r Cond1110n
ers Free Estimates

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~ted New &amp; RebUilt Jn Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1 BOO 537 9528

KILL RATS AND MICE I
ENFORCER&lt;!&gt; ral and mouse ktll
ers are GUARANTEED! Avaol-

AK C Yellow laO Pups Ready For
Chnstmas, $300 614·256- 6336

Aller6 rM
81chon Fnse For Sate To A
Good lov•ng Home, $100 614

379-9061

Electric cabrnet sewmg machme,
good condrt1on bookcase bed,
baby bed 614-992-7770
Regtstered Wetmar~ner pupptes

304 675 7740
We1maraner pups, 8wks old 2

malealef\ $250 304-895-3615
Wh1te female Poodle while male
Poodle, 4 month old Poodle, not
regtstered,614-992 7841

570

Musical
Instruments

Gemernhardt !lute, very good
cond111on, askmg $250, 614 992

7894

Mart1n &amp; G1bson
GUitars &amp; More

HOliDAY SAt£
HUMMINGBIRD MUSIC
Jackson, Ohto

614-288-5689

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK
610 Farm Equipment
379 2370

RUBBER

11 o Autos for Sale
80 Toyota SW, 5 speed AC, ami
lm good condinon 614 992 7891

1309

1972 Ford LTD 2 Door, Hardtop,
83,000 Actual Miles, Anzona Car,
No Rust No Wre cks I 614 379

PEANUTS
TI-IERE ~ I'VE
MAILED ALL Ml(
CI-IRISTMA5 CARDS!

1985 Chevette Au1omat1c $700
6t4 446 1954

I-lAVE AN'1' STAMPS ..

I

I DREW M'&lt; OWN ..

DREW DICK TRAC'(,
AND POPE'(!:, AND
TI-lE '1'ELLOW KID ..

1987 Pont1ac Grand Am SE 4
Door, Wrecked Front Passenger
Side 109,000 M1les (4 Cylinder),
5 Speed Power locks AMIFM
Casseue Not Dnveable 4 New
Ttres, 614 446 4223
19 89 cnev~ Cors 1ca $2 650.
1985 Dodge 650 4 Cylinder, 1ges
Escort AutomatiC , $1,000, N1ce
Carsl614 441-0584

-rHt
urmJ ~/ZS e

.,
•
:
•

~1

BORN LOSER
v

'(00(,

614·24~1004

1994 Eagle Talon SE, very good
cond111on askmg $13 000, 614

949·2529

7

p--.;:-:;:=-~::::::::1

IF YOO W/-.1-\TE.D

TO 60 5lEOOI~
AfffiZ YJ.IroL 7

Sale

1972 Datsun rebuilt en9me &amp;
lront end 2 new 11res $600 304
773·5256 alter 6pm
1978 Chevy 4W l) p1ckup, good
ttres and dove hne, runs great,

8756

1g86 Ford custom 4x4 300 6cyl,
ps pb, 4spd, ntce truck, $5 200

4660 4WD 52hp lully loaded w/6 9 304-675 3824

RIX

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1 TNF

GWHG'V

J I HYW

D WI A

G WI

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Y XC R L

LIKCAV
RCYWHIX
YH C AI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Men should th tnk tw1ce before makong wodowhood

women s only palh lo power " -

Glona Stemem

'::~:~:~' S©\\~lAdt £~s~~
GAM I
ldltod br CLAY l .
----'--'--WOlD

~OILAN

0 Rearrange

letters of the
four acrambled words be
low to form four words

I
I

SHEOCO

UTAND

I

1--r:,J~,-,-1...--If ~

I_R HLkE I_V 0I_

I:::;,'

Upon conege graduauon
granny
gave me a plaque that
5
read "Happiness Comes Not
I
From Havmg What You Want.
,...,-W-H_O_L-A-L--.~ But Want1ng - - - - you - - - - "

.

7

,~

WELL,

SO YOU
DEN'( TH"T
YOU TOOt&lt;.

Home

I I I

r e

Complele lhe chuckle quolod

r AL..WA'(S

UNFOII.TUNI\TEL'I' FOR
'(OU, WE HAVE E'IE \.JITNB!.ES I I'EOPLE
WHO &amp;1&gt;.W 'I'OU LEAV·
1-NG THE CAFETERIA 1

PAR.T IIJ

'reStER !lAY'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

FOOD

LOOK THAT
WA'( AFTE~
LUNCH 1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
V1rtue - Mumps· gourd· Upturn- NERVOUS

FIGHT?

Uncondltlonalllleltme guarantee
local relerences lurntshed Call

~TR/Kf. ABIJJN IN

THf WIR ON

HIGH PRW. WJP TI-E CU.SSF.IED$.

(614) 446·0870 Or (614) 237·

I overheard one dummy ask another, "What do butterflies have 1n lhe1r stomachs when they get NER·
VOUS?"

0488 Rogers Waterproohng Established 1975

ITHURSDAY

1:-::-:-::--::---:......-:-......- Appl•ance Parts And Servtce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
penence All Work Guaranteed,
French Ctly Maytag, 614 446

I

l

•''

C&amp;C General Home Ma1n
tenence Pamttng v•nyl s1dmg,
carpentry, doors wmdows, baths,
rrobtle home repa1r and more For
free estimate call Chct, 614·992

6323

DRYWALL

Hang, ftn1sh, repa~r
Cetltngs textured plaster repa11
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 yeara
eJo:penence

•
"

'

Earl's Home Mamtena nce, vtnyl
s1dmg, roofing, extenor and tnten·
or pa1ntmg power wash1ng, room
add111ons Free Estimates 614

yourself to a borthday goft Send for your
Astro-Graph rredoctoons lor the year ahead
by matllng $. and SASE 10 Aslro-Graph,
c/o lhos newspaper, P 0 Box 1758,
Murray Holl Statoon, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156
Make sure to state your Zodiac sogn
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Today
the candod comments of an acquaontance
may surprose you This person may not
have trustell you previously.
AQUARIUS (Jen. :zo.Feb. 19) An onv,olve·
ment with a smal group will be more comfortable than a crowded party loday Seek
quality,.not quantity on relatiOnships
PISCES (Feb. 20·M•rch 20) You may
denve a modest return today from somethong you woll do on your own onoloatove
Pride In your achtevement woll mean
more than profit
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 10) Your worde
and concepls woll have considerable Influence over others today. In fact, two of
your tans might carry out your sugges·
tiona exactly.
TAURUS (April ~•Y 20) Do more hs~
ten1ng than talking today when conversIng with a friend who really knows how to
make or save money. His or her Ideas

ASTRO·ORAPH

'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Roofing and guners- commercia l
and res1den11al, m1nor repa1ra 35
years Bllpertence, B&amp;B ROOF-

ING, 614-992-5041

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

" &lt;~

Cernfied ReSidenM.I Commatcial

614-256-1611

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, Air Condlttomng If

Days 614 446 6848 Or Evenmgs

'VFYYIVV

BIG NATE

SERVICES

1987 Dodge P1ck ·Up V 8, Auto
$20,500 00 Keeler ServiCe Con: Trans
You Don't Call Us We Both Lola! , ,
Ton Camper Spec1al
oer, Sl Rl 67 Leon, WV llH95- 80 000 3/4
Free Esolmaoes, 1-800·287·6308
M1les
$6,000
080,
1986
3874
'
Toyota Cehca $3,200, Call Tom 614-446-6308, WV002945

Gary, 614 446 3680

/&gt;HER :X:.KCX:X.

by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipher cryptograms are created lrom QUOtations b~ lamous people pas1 and pre5ef11
Each leher 1n the ctpher stands lor anothe• Today s c/11~ I( equals G

1

owo new landers, $1550 neg 614992-7478 or 614 949 2879
Freeman's Heattng And Cooling
lnstallatton And Service EPA
1979 Ford 250 4ll4, Dual Wheels
Super Cab 400 Engtne, Flatbed
Wtth Towtng H1tch, 614 368-

5l£DOIN6

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.
.
.
.
.
_
.
by f,ll,ng 111 the m1ss1ng words
._....._ _.__..__._......__, you de11elop !rom step No 3 below

0015, wv :J)4-576·2398

Tl'ucks for

\.11&gt;-NTED TO (:IJ

Phllltp Alder's book, "Get
Smarter at Bndge," IS available,
autographed upon request, .for
$14 95 from P 0 Box 169, Ros1yn
Hts, NY 11577-0169

55 Printer's
measures
57 Poetic
contraction

3:14 675-1429

992 44f'l

720

w:J.J.x:£ r

...

Marvm Kilman saod, "II God wanted
us to be brave , why dod He gtve us
legs' " Well, you don't need legs to play
bndge, but ot helps to be brave
Thos deal was played on Biarrotz, 1
France, earlier thos year West, Jean
1'1erre Carde, mossed a chance lor a
truly courageous play
The auctoon by Laurent Bouscarel,
South, and Jean -C hrostophe Quantm
was lengthy but reasonable Followmg
South's reverse, three doamonds was
game lorcmg, North would have rebod a
convenbonal two no-trump woth a weak
hand
Declarer won the first tnck wtth the
club ace, drew trumps and played a
heart to dummy's none Alter ot held the
tnck, Bouscarel continued w11h the
spade ace, discardmg a club, and the
spade queen, preparing to throw a second club When East covered wtth the
kmg, South ruffed, played a heart to
dummy's ace, threw hos second club
loser on the spade Jack and conceded
one heart llick
N ocely done by declarer, but Carde
realized he had mossed a great chance
Suppose, on the first heart lead, he had
played the kmg Wouldn't South, placmg East wtth the heart J8Ck, wtn wtth
dummy's ace, throw one club on the
spade ace and run the heart 10 through
East• If so, the contract would lao!,
South havong to lose a club trock as
weU

1984 Itasca 27 112ft class A mo·
tor home, 454 chevy 31 ,000mt.
ac, mtcrowave, rear bod, new
II res, new refngeralor, e~c cond

Auto loans Dealer w•ll arrange It
nanc1ng even 1f you have been Ron's TV Servtce, spectahz1ng m
tu rned down elsewhe re Uptof'l Zennh also serv1c1ng most ether .,
Equ tpment Used Cars 304 456· brands House calls, 1·800 797

1069

Pass

•Q

1-:-:--------- -

1738

1993 Old,s Achteva S 4 Door
Quad Four PW PO Autoamt1c:
Arr, Tilt Cr u• se 55 000 Mtles,

Pass
Pass

1978 Starcralt 25ft travel trmler c
delulle model ac sleeps 7 exc' ' :
cord 304-675-1429

Brit Omck s Home Improvements·
addrt1ons, remodeling, roollng,
srdtng, plumbtng etc Insured call
ant Ornck, 614 992 5183

1993 Cors1ca 23 000 M1les PD.
Autom atic Atr AMIFM Stereo
Very Clean TOP 614 379 2360

m

992 3016

7795

614-985 4492

"l

Wf\Y DIQt-1\ YOO
~ MY IU,I\ISSI()I

10' shde-m truck camper, excel
len\ conditio n, $600 080. 6 t 4

6193

1991 Olds ClJtlass C1erra Uetall1c
Blue, 4 Door, Auto, PS, PB Auto
Lock, Good Con drtton $5,.600,

q

f'ND Jf.JT WI\ERE. f\/\VE:. YOO effN,

door, automatiC, PS, PB atr,
1
crurse brand new paint, new trres, , ____
m-:p:-:r.,o,v,_,e,m.,..e_n_ts
__

ssaoo

vJANH li gy

Olds, $65 614 ,

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1990 Chevy co,Sica LT v 6, 4 810

well kepi, $4500 OBO call 614
992 3354

... AND H~ SAY$ Hf

$VNDAY.

3933 o• 1 1!00-273-9329

0706

1986 Olds F1renza, ltxer upper,
ask1ng $500. tnqu1re at basement
apartment at 47537·8 Yellowb~:.~sh
Rd . Racme OhiO

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

New gas ta nks one ton truck
wheels, radtators, floor mats, e~c
D &amp; R Auoo, Rtpley WV 304 372

1985 Honda Prelude Sunroof S 790
Speed 6t 4 446 4051 614· 446

hnanctng dtscoun t for cash

Husqvarna cham saws, now on
sa le thru November Srder's

I TIIOUGI-IT '1'0U DIDN1T

Four tubeless ttres black P185

75-R14, oil ol
992 5956

4•

5•
Pass

10 Lion's hlllr
11 Unit of maae
19 c ED scar,
maybe
21 E1preuad
anger
24- -daisy
25 Simulate
26 Numbers
28 Canlna'a
wagger
30 Get bigger
31 Emerald tale
32 Actor - Cain
34 Lived
38 Dutclau
39 Seaweed
product
41 Deep bow
45 Neighbor of
lurker,
47 Trave a on
foot
48 Wing-shaped
49 Church Hots
51 Author Grey
52 Diminutive
suffix
53 Yorkshire
river

Budget Transmtss1ons Used &amp; • ;
Rebuilt, All Types, .A.ccess1blo To · ~
011er 10,000 Transmtsston, Also
Pans Clutches &amp; Pressure -..
Plates, 61:4 379-2935

2566

Pass
Pass
Pass

By Phillip Alder

1988 2 8 V 6 Engm e &amp; Auto
Transmt ss10n, Complete Untl, Low ,
Miles, Also Have Radrator Fan •
Clutch, Fan Shroud, Exhaust •
Parts Wttl Ftt Che\lrolet S 10 Or :

89 Thunderbird SC, two door 3 8
lttfe V 6 ehte model turbo PS GMC S 15 4 Used P205 60Hr
PB AC 5 speed power sea ts 15" Ttres, New Performance Com
and locks $6800 neg 614 992 puter, WtU Fn Dodge V 8 Eng1ne,
7478 or 614 949·2879
Genurne Mopar Parts 614-446-

6 Calif summer
hra.
7 Not suitable
8 Character
91mpel

Courageous
or foolhardy?

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

Pass
l•
3•

Opemng lead.

7347or614-949 2879
TRANSPORTATION

CFA H1malayan ktttens, 2 Je
males vel checked 1st shot &amp; 1gg2 Ford Tempo GL, V 6, Au
wormed, ready to go $175 304 tomattc, 27 000 Mt les, Askmg
875 n67
$4 500, 614 256 1252, 614 256·

Agco All i s tractors wlworld
famous atr cooled Cfi&amp;Sel engmes
4y r dnve lratn warranty Example,

'

1g93 201 Pro XL, 20' S1ru1os
bas s boat, 200 XPHP, (114 667·

1991 Rocket Chass1s race car aU
new m '9t W11wood , best ol eve
ryth1ng, weld, three wheels, 11res,
Neal pedals, fuel ce ll on board
fire system, rolling chaSSIS
neg Call Scott Wolle 614 949
2879, 614 949·2045 or 6t4 992~

Smnh Corona Word Process1ng
Typewriter With 6,000 Memory,
S70 4 Poster Queen Stze Wa
terbed, Wtth Drawers &amp; Semt
Waveless Mattres s. Honey Pine

Must Have Good Relerences, And Gauranleedl $100 And Up,
ril DeliVer 814-669-6441
614-446-0175

Straw 304o.675·5066

Chr1stmas lay a-way Spectall
55ga l tank &amp; hood, $99 Ftsh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop 2413 Jackson
Av e Pomt Pl easant, 304 675
2063

440 Kuhn Hay Tedder, 1 D~rt
Scoop, Farrowtng Cra tes, 614 ·

Large Private Mobi le Horpe Rambow sweeper wtanachments
304-875-1726
Space Cemanarr Area , References Requtr&amp;d, 614-446-.4053.
RefrigeratOr&amp;, Stove&amp;, Washen
Tretter lol For Rent, Kerr Ohto, And Dryers. All Reconditioned

Prem1um oat/allalfa rol ls $25
Morg ans Farm Rt 35, Pliny 304

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

6+

DUCKY
!I

1989 Harley Custom Soh Ta1l
Spnnger, low m1les, lots of extras,
$15,000 sertous mqU1r1es only,
1994 Pace cargo trailer, carpet,
tnstde hghls set up for two motor
cycles, $1,700 614-Q49-2722

Ground ear corn, your sa cks
304 675 2443 alter 4pm

29
4 NT

I FOUND YORE

36Hl594

&amp; Grain

TER 6PM

Ptng Ere II gall clubs red dot,
bag, pull cart, $650 614·949
2722

$125, 814-245-9405

Hay

male lett $200 614-992-7574

256-6723

2720 AFTER 6 P.M

640

Pass

4.

$1 300, OBO, 614-446-6651, 614 •
446·0821

Seven monrh old colt, excellent
dtsposttron and bloodline very
gentle 614 965 9613

+

I

STOP
SQUAW LIN' II

1988 Honda 50 Like New 614·

1Qgo Ford Escort Actual 6,000
Mdes, 2 Door 6t4 379- 2720 AF

King S1ze, Waterbed $tOO, 614-

NICe Computer Desk, Extra Ntce
Sofa &amp; Chair, Good Kitchen Glasa
Top Table Wtth 4 Chair&amp;. Ofllce
Chaus, Small Drop Leaf Table,
lux Atr Gas Furnace, 614-379-

BARNEY

1987 Yamaha tOO Mota 4 Four
Whee ler Excellenl Cond1110n,

Livestock

B1g beau(1lul AKC Chow pupp1es
only one blue and one black fe

aije at

CENTRAL SUPPLY
O'DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER

1985 Suzukt Qu ad Sport $1 600,
61 4 446-6958

Metal Roofmg 8 Stdtng Gee Tex 1978 Grand Pm Runs Good
nle Fabnc For Drrveways &amp; Etc Look s Good $500 Ca ll Aller 8
Typar For Hou se Cover Or Tern PM 614-446-7998
pora ry Storage Cover Alt1zer 1981 Gray Camero 305 V 8 lots
Farm Supply 614 245-5193
Of Extras, $2,000 080, 614 256
6 718 see To Appreoatel

Dtsney Area 5 Days t4 Ho te l
N1ghts, Use Anytrme, Patd $310

Country Stde Apartment. Large 1
Bedroom , $325/Mo Oeposrt, 513

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30 X40 XQ Pa•nted Steel S1des
Galvalume Steel Roof, 15.x8 Steel
Sltder, 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Burlders 1
800 352 1045

Anawar to Prevloua PoUll1e

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer North
Soulh
We'll North East

Motorcycles

1983 Yamaha 80 Enduro Mtnt
CondH1on Looks &amp; Runs ltke
Newl $700 OBO, 614 446 0821,
614 446·6651

937 2016

Very clean B sofa wtth matchrng
cha1r, two matching table tamps
fout match•ng glass top wooden
tables 614 992 6512

560

7 40

Mas se y Ferguson 35 Sharp
$3 695 Ma ssey Ferguson 65
$3 695 T020 Fer guson Blade &amp;
Bu sh Hog $2 650 6t4 286
6522

630

OR LATE«.. '-ta.J'I&lt;£ (:;(11-.1; 'ID
iV'I£10 MIU ~II..XS ..

+AKQ96
•A K 6 5

$2400 614 698-6050
610 Farm Equipment

EAST

•9 Q 8 6 5

84 Cheo.&lt;y lf2 Jon truck 4ll4 slep
s1de 250 m cylinder runs great
solid body, needs pamt, Albany,

INYl.iU\\1'
C 1995 by NEA Inc

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home lurntshtngs
Hours Mon -Sat 9 5 614 -446
0322, 3 m1les out Bulav•lle P1ke
Free Delivery

CUMBIU3 STAIRS Wl't'K
1:3!1&lt;£ IZICIOO,. f,(JIRMJT®
TO 51-(pg 'dXJ &lt;P..

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250 •
72 000 M1tes $6 000 Can Be r.
Seen At Galltpohs Da• ly Tnbune, :
825 lhHd Avenue Gall•pohs
Oh10

,AflJZ-"'.

30 95

•43
•KI087652
9KJ2
9 743
+J83
+74
•QJI082
•1
SOUTH

tI

'

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'ta.i CPIJ'T UE: ~00
f¥..t l.ra..R LIFE, sa::¥..:£1&lt;.

1989 Plymouth Grand Voyager
SE 130 OOOm1 auto 4cylturbo, 1
a1r crutse, black cherry $2,800 .,
304 675 2949

0

540

WEST

lent $2200 OBO 614 992 3016

•

APPLIAN CES

~ ~TAIIC.-E!IK£ (QVB!!XS

0
0
0

11

• 9 7 3

&amp; 4-WDs

0

0

Washers dryers re tngerators
ranges Skaggs Appl •ances 76
Vine S1reet Call 614 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

2 Bedroom Apartment For Rent,
614 446-8221

2bdrm apts, total electrtc ap
Dl 1ances lurmshed laundry room
fac•hhes close 10 school •n town
Appl•catwns a11a1table at V1llage
Green Apts #49 or call 614·992
3711 EOH

USED

Vans

NORTH
• A Q J 9
9 A 10 9
• 10 5 2

EEK&amp;MEEK

1979 Bronco XLT 4x4 automaltc
slro ng 351 elcellent runnmg
gear solid body $1800 080
6t4 992 3016

City Area 614·256 1533 After&amp;

H1ma laya n1 Per s•a n male cal
·Bmos old neutere d dec law ed
:304 6/5 7169

60

1990 Ford F t50 XLT Lanai

Appl1anc es
Recond itioned
Washers Dryers, Ranges Rein
graters, 90 Day G1.1arantee •
French C ity Maytag 614 -446

42 Carry
43 Skin problem
1 Potato
44- Vogaa
5 Made thread
46 Stadium cheer
9 Actress48 Appropriately
Thurman
50 Award
12 Bristle
53 Rubber tree
13 Author Ferber 54 District
14 L.A. tootballer 56 KouMe15 Sesame
58 Cold and
16 Rat·--damp
17 Large antelope 59 Goals
18 Reilgoous
60 Grafted, tn
poem
heraldry
20 Thock soup
61 Hesitation
22 Roman 3
sounds
23- ·la·la
62 Bulk
24 Flytng saucer 63 Looked at
(abbr)
27 Ran tnto
DOWN
29 lncoted ,
1 Fast aircraft
33 -·s box
(abbr)
35 American
2 Slight sound
Indian
3 Southwestern
36 Swerve
Indians
37 Dancer4 - Lama
Duncan
40 Posillve words 5 Less pleasant
ACROSS

Res1dent1al or commercial wtnnq.
new serv1ce or repa~rs Master lt·
cen~ed electrrclan Ridenour

Equlpmeno304-675-7421 or 1- 1988 5 · 10, runs &amp; looks good,
800·277 3917
Eleclrtcal, WV000306, 304-675·
$1,800 304-675 6868
1788

Fnday,Dee. 1,1995
Matenal 'condltoons look more favorable
for you this year than they dod la&amp;t year
You may be able to buy thongs you've
·alwaye wanted biJt co1Adn1 qfforll
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee. 21) You won
be ~t today 'when doing lhings with
frlaoda who know how to enjoy them·
selvea. The ectlvltles don't have to be
••pensive or spacial. Sagittarius, treal

'

,,

should cltck for you
,
GEMINI (May 21--.lune 20) Your 1udgment
regardong the outcome of new endeavors
could be prolound loday Have laoth on
your assessments, even ol lhey appear
exaggerated to your assocoates.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) An omportant ob)ecttve os reachable, but Hcan only
be anaoned one step al a time Remaon
content with consistent progress, even If
It os slow at ttmes
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you may
receove happy todlngs trom a close fnend
who moved away recently The news woll
bnghten your whole day
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Today 's
events could be qUite unpredictable In
ithe final analysis, !hongs woll be resolved
In your favor.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) In order to HI·
tie your restless splnt today, schedule a
number of new actlvotoes on your agenda.
Variety will have soolhi(19 effects.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A new concept lor augmenting your financial assets
might be presented to you today . You
may not get rich, but 1hos scheme will add
to what you already have.

NOVEMBER 30 I

�. ., .. ...

•••

~

~·

,

..

-~

.

.-~

...

'

•
•

Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 30, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Eichinger speaks to Rotarians
:on Home Health Care Week
Paula Eic hinger of Veterans
Memorial Hospital's Home Health
Service was guest speaker at Monday night's meeting of the Middle·
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club held at
· Heath United Methodist Church.
She noted that this week is
Home Health Care Week and told
of severa l things th e agency is
doing in observance of the occa·sion . Blood pressure screenings
took place Tuesday and will also
take place on Thursday from 10
a.m. to 6 p .m at Krogers in
·Pomeroy, and Vaughan's in Mid·
dleport. An open house will be held
from 2 to 4 p.m . Wednesday (this
aflernoon) in the office located in
·t,he medical complex across from
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Eichinger asked the question.
"What is home care?'' and then
responded with the answer. She
said lhal home care is a service to

recovering, tlisabletl. or chronically
ill persons who need medical 5
treaunent :mdlor assistance with the
activities of daily living.
To qualify for home health care
one must homcboupd, require
skilled care. need intemliltent care,
and be physician approved. among
so me of tile services listed by
Eichin£Cr where Home Health Care
assists arc in such areas of difficult
wound care. specia l diets, se lf·
medication. skin care, and diabetic
instructions.
She s:ritl that there are len regular nurses crnpln ycd by Home
Health Scrvrccs with eight home
health aitlcs also available.
Approximately 3,000 visits arc
made each month to about 235
patient s. Horne Health Services
was established in 1971 making Lhc
organization Lhe oldest and largest
agency in Meigs County.

Education with the patient and
the family Is crucial for the pro·
gram's suc.cess, she said, noting
also !.hat it is less expensive to take
care of patients in their own home.
and more patients prefer to be
there, which contributes to recovering faster.
Eichinger bas been a nurse for
16 years and has recenUy moved
into the management position wilh
Home Health Services. Sbe said
that it is rewarding work for every·
one involved.
The nurse said that a recent survey showed !.hat most patients are
pleased with Ule agency's work. In
Lhe survey. 95% of the respondelll'
were satislied with Home Health
Service's assistance . The agency.
said Eichinger, is "proud to provide
a special service to individuals of
all ages in their own homes to pro·
mote, maintain or restore health ."

"A memorial contribution is an
appropriate tribute to the deceased,
she said. arul tluough such contributions, U1e life U1a1 ha' just passed
will continue to Jive on.
For every memorial contribution
to the AHA, a memorial sympathy
card is sent to the bereaved by the
association on behalf of the contributor. TI&gt;e amount of the contribution is not disclosed to the card
recipient. The contribution can be
from an individual or from several
people. such &lt;L' a family . or a group

of employees.
For Meigs County residents to
make a memorial contribution to
the American Heart Association.
U1cy cru1 pick up a donation envelope from local funeral homes· or
write directly to Campbell, PO
Box 177 , Racine, Ohio 45771.
When sending a check residents are
asked to be sure to include the
name and address of the family
member to whom the donor wants
the sympathy card sent, and the
donor's own name and address so

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878, 8 p.m. Saturday, with poUuck
at 6:30 ,p.m. Subordinate youth and
young adult and marri~ds' baking
contests to ,l,le held. Practice for
second degree.

. Local ministers and the planbt were recognized ror years or service ,a t a recent potluck dinner held at the Freedom Gospel Mls·
sion. Recognized were from the left, Rev. Roger Willford for 16
years; Violet WOlford, pianist for 34 years, and the Rev . Lawrence
Gluesencamp for 39 years of service.

.... . .,.

;

,,

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star. 2:30
p.m. Sunday.lnstallation practice.
POMEROY - Cantata, "Make
His Praise Glorious", will be pre·
rented Sunday, 7:30p.m. at the Mt.
Hermon United Brethren Church
by the community choir directed by
Sue Malheny.
MONDAY
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township trustees. 7 p.m. Monday.
fire station.
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday , 6 p.m. at the
office building.
RACINE - Raci ne Chapter
134, OES, 7 :30 p .m . Monday,
installation of omcers.
TUESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township trustees, 6:30 a.m. Tuesday,
Pageville Township building.

You'll build a bf n&lt;st egg when
you sa110 with the dassifieds

Now Open For
Christmas Season
Poinsettias (5 Colors)
Poinsettia Baskets
Live Spruce Trees
Cut Christmas Trees
Monument Sprays, Vases
&amp; Grave Blankets
Cut Christmas Trees
$11 to $16
Open Dally 9-5, Sun.12·5

1995 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE

1995 FORD
T·BIRD LX

4 Jr, 4 cyl, auto, A/C, PS,

V-6. auto, AIC, tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr seat,
AM/FM cass, keyless

PB, PW, POL, cruise,
AM!FM cass, rear delogg,
etc.

PAULA EICHINGER

ONLY S,OOO miles

ONLY 3,500 miles

The annual Chrisunas party will
be held on Dec. 18 at the church
for members and guests.

that a receipt can be mailed.
In addition the AHA has general
purpose cards for people who want
to make donations in honor of
someone's anniversary, birthday or
other special occasion. This is a
thougbtful way to honor someone
who may not want to receive a gift.
The American Heart Associa·
lion is the nation's largest voluntary health organization dedicated
to the reduction of disability and
death from heart di sease and
stroke, it was pointed out.

.

The Dairy Bam Cultural Arts
Center in Athens is looking for
regional artists to submit work for
its annual Area Art on View exhi·
bition.
The exhibition will be featured
at the Dairy Bam April 12 · May
19, 1996 along with the regional
winners of tbe Governor' , Youth
Art Competition. The entry dead·
line for Area Art on View is Jan .
Media may include, but is not
limited to painting, sculpture,
ceramics, fiber, jewelry, glass, pbo·
tograpby and paper. All entries
must be original art work and have
been completed after January.
1995. The entry fcc is $20 with a
maximum of three entries.
To receive an entry form, please
send a self-addressed, stamped
business size envelope to Area Art
on View, P.O. Box 747, Athens,
Obio 45701. For more information
residents may contact the Dairy
Barn at 614-592-4981..

1995 NISSAN
ALTIMA GIE

1995 OLDS 88
ROYALE

4 dr, 4 cyl, 5 spd, air cond,
PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass, etc.

V·6, auto, air ·cond., PS,
PB, PW, POL, Pwr seat, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass, etc.

ONLY 13,000 miles

ONLY 9,000 miles

1994 CHEVY
LUMINA
4 dr, V-6, auto, air cond,
PS, PB, PW, POL, lilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass, more.

1994 BUICK
PARK AVE
4 dr, V-6, auto, air cond,

PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr seat,
tilt, cruise, cass, dual air
bags, more.

DEC. 1I 6:00·9:00 P.M.

: Bradbury Elementary School Will!1iave Their
Snowflake Festival For All Elementary Aged
Students on Friday, December 1 from
6:00.9:00 P.M. Events include:
GAMES-GAMES-GAMES
PRIZES - PRIZES - PRIZES
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FOOD - BAKE SALE - CRAFT SALE
50/50 SPLIT THE POT RAFFLE
Auction With Dan Smith, Auctioneer
And Much More for Children As Well As
Adults!

60s.

1992 MERCURY
GRAND
MARQUIS
4 dr, ~ V-8, auto, air cond,

1992 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE SE
V-6, auto, air cond, PS, PB,
PW, POL, lilt, cruise,
AM/FM CD, keyless entry.

PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass, More.

All American Model
Home For Sale
Cedar 1 1/2 story
Cape Cod Style Home
SAVE THOUSANDS!!

FAMILY HOMES, INC.
Located at Rt. 7 By-Pass in
Pomeroy, Just off of Rt. 33 See
Home Bewteen .1 p.m. &amp; 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Saturdays

•
Vot. 46, NO. 152
Copyright1995

By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON- Worried
and bitter Republicans are register·
ing concern tor the safety of 20,000
American troops headed for Bosnia
by February. Majority Leader Bob
Do~ said he will ask the Senate to
endorse the plan .
Many of the Republicans who
have questioned President Clintqn' s policy said they were
resigned to it, but Sen. Jesse Helms
of North Carolina, chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Commit·
tee, declared today his opposition
remains as strong a' ever.
Opening a hearing on the troop
deployment plan, Helm• said, ''I
cannot, I do not and I will not sup·
pon sending American soldiers to
fight and to die for the sake of an
agreement that may offer no more
than the promise of a brief pause
while all sides prepare for the next
round of Balkan wars.''
Dole, who is Clinton's leading
rival for next year's presidential
race, and Sen. John McCain of Ari·

en tine
2 Sectrons. 12 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 1, 1995

zona, who had been a persistent
critic of U.S. intervention , said they
would back the president's decision
to send troops.
"If we would try to cut off
funds, we would harm the men and
women in the military who have
alfeady begun to arrive in Bosnia,"
Dole said. He added lhat he will
ask the Senate next week to adopt a
resolution of support for the Bosnia
policy "that helps reduce the
risks" and "ensures American
forces come home as soon as possible with a successful mission·
accomplished.·'
In Dublin, Ireland, Clinton said
today he was pleased with the sup·
port of Dole anti McCain, saying it
helps "to build the kid of bipartisan support we need."
" Right now we ' re moving
toward implementation of a peace
agreement and I feel good about
i~ " Clinton said.
Clinton's ambassador to the
United Nations, Madelerne
Albright, today allempted to
answer lawmakers who fear the

United States will get bogged down
in a years-long involvement in the
fom1er Yugoslavia.
Within about a year, she said on
NBC, "The troops from the con·
tending parties will have been separated. Tile weapons wiU have been
withdrawn from the batUefield, and
there will be the beginnings of a
civil society. Elections will hayc
been held. This is the end state
which will enable the forces to
leave ."
Defense Secretary William
Perry and Gen. John Shalikasbvili,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, offered assurances at a House
hearing Thursday that the American troops would be prepared for a·
tougb mission. The training incl.ud·
ed clearing mine lields under live
frre and securing a model Bosnian
village set up in Germany, Sha·
lilcashvili said.
He acknowledged there was no
technology to detect plastic mines
and said "it's clear we don't know
how many lhere are."

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Christmas in IV/.iddleport

HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS- The
Onale of Middleport's Christmas parade Thursday night was the arrival of Santa. From the

I

float he moved to the warm lobby of Peoples
Bank to meet and greet the children.

Hunting accidents leave 3 dead.

1995 FORD
F150 XLT 414

1995 CHEV S·10
412

Supercab, V-8, auto, air
cond, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
PS, PB, PW, POL,

Extended cab, 4 cyl, 5 spd,
air cond, PS, PB, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass.

ONLY 14,000 miles

992-sns

BUDBURY ELEMENTARY
SNOWFLAKE FESTIVAL

2-3-10-14·29

Deployment splits I
legislative majority

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse

Low tonight in 30s, clear.

Saturday, sun ny , high In rhe

\

' CLEAN CAR"

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Rev . Floyd
Ross to speak Sunday, 7:30p.m. at
the Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church.

Buckeye 5:

\

·exhibition

THURSDAY
POMEROY- Pomeroy Alco·
holies Anonymous group will meet
: at 7 p.m . in the basement of Sacred
· Heart Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053, meeting,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at post home.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group,
Alcoholics Anonymous, Thursday,
7 p.m . basement of Catholic
Church, Mulberry Avenue.

876
Pick 4:

Sports • Page 5

Community r---Service recognition_____, Local artists
calendar
sou'ght for
The Community Calendar is
: published as a rree service to
: non•prorit groups wishing to
. announce meeting and special
: events. The calendar is not
· designed to promote· sales or
: fund raisers of any type. Items
: are printed as space permits and
· cannot be guaranteed to run a
: specific number of days.

Pick 3:

9681

Memorials keep more than memories alive
Meigs County residents can
honor the memory of family members, friends, neighbors or business
associates through the life-givin~
memorial program of the American
Heart Association, advised Nancy
Campbell, AHA memorial chair·
man.
"When you think of bypass
. surgery, pacemakers, CPR courses
· and blood pres sure medication,
: remember that the American Heart
: Association has helped make Lhese
: things possible," said Campbell.

Ohio Lottery

Giants
slip past
Cards 10-6

1995 FORD
F150 XLT 412
6 cyl, auto, air cond, PS,
PB, PW, POL, tilt, cruise,
AMIFM caaa. Short Bed.

3,000 miles

SEE YOU rJI.EU:
'

1994 FORD
F150 XLT 412
6 cyl, 5 spd, air cond, PS,
PB, PW, POL, tilt, crulae,
AM/FM cass. Long Bed.

ONLY 13,000 miles

By The Associated Press
tal gunshot injuries since the 12·
The deaths of three bunters in day season opened Monday.
shooting accidents this deer gun
TwO' hunters were shot and
season is the worst in a decade, the killed on Thursday in separate acci·
Obio Division of Wildlife said. The dents in Adams and Ross counties.
season was to colllinue today and
Michael Fillmore, 13, of DaySaturday and all next week in 61.. _ton, died or a gunshot to the head
cOunties.
- -aftei.be apparenUy fell on the bar·
The last time there were three rei of a shotgun that discharged as
fatalities was the 1985 season, said he hunted near Blue 'Creek in
Jim Wentz, Wildlife Division Adams· county, Wemz said.
spokesman.
The Ross County Sheriff's
There also have been six nonfa- Department said Andrew Haines,

34. of Fort Myers, Fla., was shot in

Spencer
to seek
new term

Cremeans
to attend
cross rally

Larry E. Spencer will seek re·
election as Meigs County clerk of
courts and Thursday filed his petition for candidacy with the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
A resident of Racine, Spencer
has been ·clerk of courts since Jan·
uary 1973 . .
Spencer said that he has seen a
lot of changes in the clerk's oflice
during the past 23 years. He said
that be is proud of the fact that both
the title office and legal department
at the courUmuse are now compul·
erized.
"'The cornputer.izatioo of the
offices is one of the goals I have
worked toward while serving tbe
county," Spencer said.
The title office was computerized about live years ago, with the
computerization of the legal depart·
ment taking place just over a year
ago.
"I want to continue to see them
work eflicienlly, ru1d work for the
het1em1ent of the citizens of Meigs

LARRY E. SPENCER
County," Spencer stated.
Spencer has been an ac;tive
member or the Masonic organiza·
tion Order of the Eastern Star, and
the York-Rite bodies. He is a past
chaim1an or the Second District of
the Ohio State Clerk of Courts
Association, and a fom1er member
of the association's state executive
comminee.
He antl his wife, Kay, havt: one
son, Mike, a daughter-in-law, and a
granddaughter.

the head and killed Thursday.
Haines, who formerly lived in the
Chillicothe area, was hunting with
friends about 10 miles southwest of
Chillicothe.
Deputies in Monroe County said
Benjamin Gramlich. 68, of Mil·
tonsburg, was shot Wednesday
while bunting with friends on his
property in Malaga Township,
northwest of Woodsfield.

TALKING TO SANTA- t'ive-year-old
Larry Lee or Cheshire sat on Santa's knee and
told the jolly old man what he wanted for
Christmas. Santa greeted hundreds of children
in the lobby of Peoples Bank after last night's

McARTHUR- A Saturday
morning rally supporting a Chris·
tian cross atop the Vinton ,County
Courthouse will be auended by
U.S . Rep. Frank Cremeans, R·Gal·
lipolis, who is championing the
cause of those wanting the religious symbol to stay in P.lace.
The American Civil Liberties
has challenged the placement of the
cross. arguing it defies a constitu·
tionally mandated separation of
church and state. Tbe ACLU has
threatened to sue the county if the
cross remains.
In November, the Vinton County Board of Commissioners
announced it would have the cross
·taken down in January , 1996.
Saturday's 10 a.m. rallywhich marks the 41 -year anniver·
sary of the cross being atop the
courthouse - is being held by the
Christian Crossroads Association.
Cremeans is sc heduled to
address the group.
The cross was erected in 1954 in
(Continued on Page 3)

·e~ .... ,

Middle110rt parade. Each child was ~iv&lt;n a
candy treat and photographed with Santa. The
bank served cookies and punch durin~: the
evening.

* DAZZLING

DOLLS
BATON CORPS

MIDDLEPORT . OH i:

TWIRLING THROUGH TOWN - Tenyear-old Hannah Woolard was featured doing
Ore baton with the Dazzling Doll~ Baton Corps,
which performed in Thursday
Middle·

port Chri&lt;tmas parade. Hannah i&lt; the daughter
of director Nancy Swartz. (Sentinel photos hy
Charlene HoeOichl

Brick sale to lay amphitheater's foundation
amphitheater, are now being
By TOM HUNTER
offered by the Meigs County
Sentinel News Staff
Have you even dre3111ed of the Chamber of Commerce. Eacb brick
time that you could sit on the banks is a limited-edition brick, and wiH
of the tranquil Ohio River on a he individually numbered.
long sunimer' s evening, and listen
According to Karin Johnson.
to a band playing from a waterfront director of the Meigs County
amphitheater, while sternwheelers Tourism Board, the idea for the
and towboats roll by in the back· project stemmed from similar
· effons for the soon-to·be·completground?
Those days aren't so far away ed Olympic Bicentennial Park in
for Meigs County residents, wi~ downtown Atlanta, :tl!d a project
the anticipated completion of the that recenUy took place locally in
riverfront amphitheater project in
Athens.
"We hope to inake everyone
the county's sea~ Pomeroy.
Now, residents from Meigs and throughout the county a part of thl~
points far and near bave the oppor· revitalization project. We want to
tunity to help complete the project get every area of the county
and leave a lasting impression for involved•ili the completion of the
pro)ect," Johnson said.
.
all to see.
The riverside amphitheater will
Commemorative personalized
bricks to adorn the floor of tbe provide a place for outdoor con-

certs, dramas and other activities, new amphitheater.
"We would really like to get a'
and will consist of. a stag~ and
many
local people as involved as
walkway. The structure will extend
we
can,"
said Johnson.
21 feet from the normal pool shoreThe four-by-eight bricks will
lint with lUI material placed below
the ordinary high water elevation. allow three lines of 13 characters
Work is expected to begin after the per line for a personalized message.
Eigbt-by-eightcornerstone bricks
first of the year.
The bricks can bave "basically will allow four lines of 13 cbarac·
anything you want on them," Jobn· ters per line for a personalized mes100n said. Bricks could be personal- sage. Spaces and punctuation arr.
ized for families, businesses, alum- counted as a character space.
The white limestone 12-by-12
ni groups, church -groups, schools.
togo
markers are an excellent
and youth groups. Bricks also
choice
for businesses, Johnson
could he personalized with mes·
sages, such as "In Memory of' and said. •
"Tbe logo markers will allow
friendship quotes, Johnson added.
Tbe chamber is hopeful that one to three lines of text to be dis·
local unions and workers would played, along with a company
.
also play an important part in the logo," she explained.
Prices for tbe four-by-etgbt
brick projec~ by donating labor for
(Continued on Page 3)
the placement of the bricks in the · ·

,I

•

COMMEMORATIVE BRICKS- Meigs Chamber of Commerce secretary Patty Calaway, left, and Karin Johnson, Meigs
County tourism director, are pictured with commemorative per·
sonallzed bricks that are currently being offered by tlte Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce. .

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