<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10316" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/10316?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T19:51:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20758">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/557483fcc33985eab28404cf7fa9b360.pdf</src>
      <authentication>847ae5b333829c2d04ae311b7f433cfb</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32929">
                  <text>.

_.,.••'",. .

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily SentineJ
-

Monday, Nove~ber 22, 1 ~ :

49ers

Page-:~-

Star Grange holds meeting
Christine Napier and Pa uline
Rife, delegates to the Ohio State
Grange Session, gave their repon
to Star· Grange #778 at a rece nt
meeting. They reported that delegates at the recent State Session in
Hudson voted to keep th e State
Grange offtce and home in Columbus at its present location.
Lecturer Vicki Smith had everyone tell things for which they are

thankful.
Jan Macomber, deaf chairman,
asked for ideas for money mak:ing
projects for the that comminee.
Legislative Cha irma n Eldon
Barrows reported on Petition 2493
B!ld the smoking ban.
County Grange Officers Conference was.annouilced for Dec. 5 at 2
p.m. at the ~ock Sprin!;S Grange

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

thump

·~

455
Pick 4:
4533

Saints

HalL All otllcers and tnterestetl
persons from all granges in t~
county are asked to attend.
,.
Members were reminded I:G
bring itemS for the food bank at tl!~
Christmas meeting in stead qf
exchanging gifts for adults.
•·
Twenty-eight members, guesli
and juniors enjoyed a potluck suP1
per follow ing the meeting.
&lt;~

Buckeye 5:

PageS

6-8-22-23-24

•

Harrisonville

FINAL-Accompanist Jennifer Sheets, seated; Paulette Harrisoa, choreographer, and Bob
Hoeflich, director, work out the rmal music reo-

dition on one or the numbers for the Meigs
County Showcase to be staged at 8:10p.m. Saturday in the Meigs Junior High School at Middleport.

Local dancing, singing to
culminate at talent showcase
With a cast of 80 and over 30
musical numbers, the Meigs County Talent Showcase will play a one
night stand at 8:10p.m. Saturday in
the' Meigs Junior High School at
Middleport.
Staged by the Big Bend Minsud Association, the show is being
sponsored by the Meigs Division of
the American Heart Association
and the Middleport Arts Council
which will share equally in the proceeds. Saturday night'S presentation, under the direction of Bob
Hoeflich, is the ftrSt musical staged
by the association, now 40 years
old, since 1989.
The Big Bend Dancers, under
the instruction of Paulette Harrison,
will open the show with Peggy
Bricldes, veteran association member, doing the vocal work on "Hey,
Look Us Over". Brickles will
make a second appearance later in
the show with her version of
"Embraceable You".
Making up the Big Bend
Dancers are Lauren Anderson,
Sarah Anderson , Abby Blake,
Danielle Crow, Tara Erwin, Kelly
Grueser, Heather Howard, Libby
King, Erin Krawsczyn, Amanda
Musser, Jeanie Newell, " Joy
O' Brien, Billee Pooler, Stacie
Reed, Jodie Sisson, and Crystal
Vaughan. For their second number
in the show the group will dance to
"Ragtime Cowboy Joe".
Veteran perfonner, AI Hanson,
will present his voc:al, "Getting to
Know You" and will appear as a
member of The Melody Men, a
quartet composed of Hartson, Mike
Wilfong, Denver Rice and Des JefferS. The quartet, accompanied by
Maryln Wilcox , durmg the
evening will do " Girl of My
Dreams" and "You Gatta Have
Heart". Another veteran of the
show, Laura Hawthorne Guthrie,
vocalist, will sing "Once in a
While" with a second number to be
"I'm in the Mood for Love".
Jnsnumentalist Bill Ward will
play an medley of Elvis favorites
on his tenor sax and a long time
veteran of the association, Jayne
Hoeflich Mann, will sing
"Cabaret". She will be joined later
in the show by her husband, Toby
Mann, for a duet on "People Will
Say We're in Love" from "Oklahoma".
· Returning to the show cast after
a few years of living in other local-

ities will be another veteran of the
show. Dick Nease, with "Birth of
the Blues". A dance trio, Paulene
Harri son, Kay Hem sley and
Danielle Crow, will be featured on
"Honey Bee", a selection from the
new album or Meigs native, Sheela
DeLayne, which is scheduled for
release in December.
Veteran performers of the association, Bob and Debi Buck, will
be featured on "Get Out Those Old
Records" with newcomer vocalists,
Sarah Anderson and Sam Cowan,
joining for a vocal duet, "Tonight
You Belong To Me". Cowan will
solo on "It Had to be You". Lauren Anderson. Sarah Anderson,
Abby Blake, Danielle Crow ,
Amanda Musser and Joy 0' Brien,
from the larger Big Bend Dancers
group, will step out to "When My
Sugar Walks Down the Street1' .
Jim Soulsby, a long-time participant in the Big Bend shows, will
present his vocal renditions of "I
Left My Heart in San Francisco"
and "He Stopped Loving Her
Today". Kathy Hood, another veteran, will sing "Everybody's Doin'
It" joined by dancers, Sarah Anderson and Abby Blake. ~dd i n~ to
the show's varieiy will be a p1ano
due~ Scott Joplan ' s, "Maple Leaf
Rag" by Jennifer Sheets, show
accompanist, and her son, Jared, a
medical srudent at Ohio State University. "Mobile" will be the number of Director Bob Hoeflich who
will be joined by Cindy Fields,
Paulette Harrison, and Dick Nease.
A newcomer to the nml&lt;s of the
association, Amy Rouse, a student
at Ohio University, will be doing
"Stormy Weather" and the Shady
River Shuffiers will do a production number, "Highway 40 Blues'!.
Making up the group are Joan
Anderson, Lauren Anderson, Jamie
Blaettnar, Jane B,nks, Daniellc
Crow, Cortney Cromlish, Ashley
Hannahs, Whitney Haptonstall ,
Paulette Harrison, Kay Hemsley,
Heather Howard, Kelly Kimmel,
Andrea
Krawsczyn,
Erin
Krawsczyn, Laura McCleary, Meggie McCleary, Stacie Reed, Peg~
Roush, Jodi Sisson, Paula Whitlatch, Linda Young and Julie
Zirkle.
For the fJTSt time in the long histo~ of the Big Bend Association,
an msnumental group represenung
the Meigs High School Band will
be lakin~ part in this year's show.

Band Director Toney Dingess has
organized the new jazz band wh ich
will do two presentations, "An Old
Fashioned Love Song" and "Put
Your Hand in the Hand". Members
of th e band are Chad DOtson ,
Susan Page, Mike Parker, · Kelly
Grueser, Jason Witherell, Dorothy
Leifheit, Tara Grueser, Joey
Ruchti, Phillip Edmonds, Susan
Cotterill, Daniel Russell, Jody Sisson, Adam White, Ryan Baker, and
Marlo White.
"The Committee" will again be
included in the show lineup and
will use a number from a show
some fiv e years ago, "Cigareets
and Whuskey and Wild, Wild
Women". Making up the group are
Carolyn Thomas, Dick Nease,
Kathy Hood, Jim and Susie Soulsby, Jayne and Toby Mann, B.ob and
Debi Buck, and Charlene and Bob
Hoeflich. Hal Kneen, Meigs _County Agricultural Agent, will h\' making his initial appearance in the
musical with his vocal, ''There Are
Such Things". Heidi Caruthers
Tucker, making her second appearance in an association show, will
do the vocal on "Love Letters in
the Sand". Appearing with his
"Appalachian guitar" will be Denver Rice on a medley, "Hello,
Dolly", "Baby Face", "Who" and
"Avalon". The entire cast will take
part in the finale. Special roles in
the finale will be taken by Orval
(Curly) Wiles, Joy O'Brien, Crystal
Vaughan , Amanda Mu sser and
Heather Howard.
Another innovation for this
year's musical will be the appearance of six women, all veterans of
the show in various capacities,
announcing the numbers. They
arc Susie Abbott, Becky Anderson,
Julie Buck, Annie Chapman, Kay
Hemsley and Maureen Hennessy. ,.
Making up the orchesua will be
Jennifer Sheets, show accompanist
and music director, on the keyboard: Tim Glaze, drummer: Jared
Sheets, bass guitar, and Denver
Rice, guitar. Roger Abbott, Pat
Thoma, and Scott and Jerri Walton
are the stage and lighting crew.
The cast will move into final
rehearsals this week with a full cast
run-through scheduled for 8 p.m .
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Village
Hall Auditorium and a dress
rehearsal at 7 p.m. Friday in the
Meigs Junior High Auditorium.

Social security statements used
to determine taxable benefits
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager in
Athens
Social Security beneficiaries
will receive statements in the mail
in January showing the benefits
they received in 1993.
The statement should be used to
determine if any benefits are subject to Federal income tax. To
ensure you receive the statement,
make sure Social Security has your
correct address. This is especially
important for individuals who
receive their benefits by direct
deposit.
Most of those who receive the
statement- Form SSA 1099- will
not have to pay taxes on their
Social Security benefits because
their total income is less than the
taxable ceiling. If you receive
Social Security benefits as your
onlY. source of income, you are
unlikely to owe Federal taxes on
the benefits.
·An Internal Revenue Services
(IRS) worksheet- IRS Notice
703- comes with the benefit state·
ment. The worksheet shows you
bow to determine if your Social
Security benefits ate subject 10 Wt.
If, after completing the worksheet,
you have questlMS about your Wt
liability, you should call the IRS
toll-free number, 1·800-829- I040

and ask for PubliCation 915, which
contain s tax information about
Social Security benefits.
Beneficiaries who file an individual tax return may owe taxes on
some of their benefits if their combined income exceeds $25 ,000.
Married couples who file joint tax
returns may have to pay taxes on
some of their benefits if their CQmbined income exceeds $32,000.

Married couples who live together
but file separate taX returns probably will pay taXes on part or their
benefits,
For income taX purposes, combined income is defined as the sum
of an individual ' s (or couple's)
adju$ted gross income plus onehalf of nontaxable interest plus
one-half of all Social Security ben- ·
efits received for the year.

The Willing Workers Club from
Zion Church held its November
meeting at the home of Hazel Stanley. The main business was plans
to make Thanksgiving trays for
elderly shut-ins and for residents of
County Home . Plans were also
made to clean the church on Dec.
John and Ann Williams made a
uip to Decatur, Ill. and Park Hill,

Mo. where they visited John's two
sisters and other relatives.
Nellie Lowe spent two weeks
visiting her sister Helen of Three
Mile, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Don Cotterill
spent several days in Wyoming
County, W.Va., where they attended the funeral of her brother, Walter Birchfield.
A potluck dinner was held on
Nov . 14 at the Zion Church to
honor Steven and Julie Stanley and
children who will soon be moving
to Zanesville where Steve will be
employed by Ohio Power.
Kenda Armstrong, Cincinnati,
spent a recent weekend at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue. .
Linda and Gerald Donohue
entertained at a party for their
daughter Rebecca on her second
birthday. Attending were grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Burbridge
and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Haynes
and children and Rhea Lantz and
children.

TUESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - The November
meeting of the Gallia-JacksonMei~s Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services will be held at 6 p.m. at the
Holiday Irm.
.

RACINE - Racine Area Community Organiiation will meet at
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
members are welcome.

MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
Coin Cllili will· meet at 7 p.m. at
Burkett Barller Shop. Social hour
and ll'ading ~ssion pi'eceed meeting. Refreshments will be served.
New members are weli:ome.
RACINE - Racine 'United
Methodist Women will m~et at
7:30 p.m;· at lhc church. The pro~ will be World Thank OfferIilg Service.

POMEROY- The 'Meigs Ministerial Association ~ts its annu. al Thanksgiving Service at 7:30
p.m. at St Paul Lutheran Church.
The,.theme for this year is, :'From
Whom All lJies_sings 'Flow. •
Preacher will tie Rev. Kenneth
Moller, pastor of RaCine Wesleyan
and Bast l:etar1 Uni!C!d ~thodist
Churches. The commtmily Is invited to attend For more inf011118tion
call Rev. Dawn Spalding at 9922010.

HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONnLI•:J•••·
LOOK TO US FOR THE LATEST APPAREL
Unifonns +(Crest and Angelica Brands)
Labcoats + Fashion-colored Scrubs
Standard Whites +Styles for Men and Women
60-Day Layaway Available
Special Orders Welcome
Now through Nov. 30, stop by and register to win
a uniform and other door prizes!
PLEASANT VALLEY

Home Medical Equipment
1011 Viand Street, Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Christmas
•• •
Greetane
---Edition
- ·---.
. I

Friday,

Deeeinller"J4

Seatlnel New~ Starr
the women's auxiliary through
·
food sales. He said that all of the
The proposed smoking ban in money goes back iniO the departvillage owned buildings which ment for building' upkeep, equipsparked a debate with the Middle- ment, and insurance. The jaws of
port Fire -Department bas been · life purchased by the department
l!lOved into committee until further cost $13,000, Byers said. ·Insurance
study of the issue can be made.
runs about $1,600 a year and
Meeting Monday night, Middle- portable radios and pagers about
port Village Council which gave a $500 each. He al~ mentioned that
fust reading to the ordinance at its traininJI sessions are paid for, that
last regular meeting tabled the mat- educauon programs are taken care
ter and referred it to a committee of of, that fireworks ate in part paid
Judy Crooks and .Mick Childs, for with funds raised in the bmgo
council members, and Mayor games at the department
Dewey Horton.
Byer, one of 10 firemen who
It was Crooks who called for a attended in uniform, asked where
"compromise" even before Fire the money for those lhings will
Chief Kenny Byer read a statement come from if a no smoking ordifrom the fii'C department about how nance is passed and the department
the no smoking ordinance would is put out of its Monday night
affect fund raising projects of the games.
depanment
Bob Fisher also talked on behalf
Crooks said that she had talked of lhe firemen suggesting that the
with Village Solicitor Linda Warn- flow of money would be stopped if
er who said that it is pOssible to the ban goes· into effect and that
have different smoking regulations would be disastrous to the depru-tfor the work environment and the ment.
entertainment environment. The
One of the two auxiliary mern.council member also talked about hers also spoke briefly about their
the rights of smokers and non- food service at the games and how
smokers and how everyone needs the money raised is spent to assist
to be considered in making rules the fuemen. .
. ,
and regulations by which everyAt that pmnt Counc1l gave a
body has 10 abide.
unanimous vote to tabling the ordiThe F'lre Department's concern nance until further study can be
is about the effects a no-smoking made.
ordinance will have on its primary Water Source
fund raising program - Monday
the meeting ~'~!fi
night bingo. He said that about 85
of ~he.
percent of those who play smoke
Distnct
cigarettes.
~~c9ording :to·By~~ last !JWJf
aboUI $17,000 was r a1sed by the

Clinton taps _·
Withrow for -·
treasurer
WASHIN!)TON (AP)

Ohio's state beiSurer, ~Ellen
Withrow, is President Clinton's
pick to become the next treasurer
of the United States.
The $115,700-a-year job wollld
put Withrow in charge or currency
for tlie govmunent, overseeing lhe
U..s. Mint and the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing and heading the U.S. Savings Bond Proghun.

W'db wreaths ol baBy aad llllsllidoe. -llocldngs bang 1ly
the lire aad scae. bla•llld wllb saow, thrlslma .
8DCOIDPII881 wllllllll
lood cbe• 81 we cb...b Ole

a•

" I'm pretty excited right now,"
Withrow said in a telephone interview from Columbus, Ohio. "It
will be exciting to be at another
level of govenunent"
Withrow said:she's been reading
about the job in anticijllltion of her
nomination. But she s only seen
money being made once - on a
visit to Washington when she was
S yean old.
''I wanted 10 go back but I never
quite made it," the nominee said.
Withrow described the position
as a public reladQos job, piOllloting
savings .bonds and "whatever takes
place with the'moncy."
·
The. treasurer's. ~ignature also
appears on all _the paper money,
aild Withrow said she's already had

MARY ELLEN wrrHROW
requests for some of the fJTSt bills
with the new treasurer's name on
the left and the new treasury secretary's name on the righL
Withrow said she eX~JCCts the
Senate to take up ber nomwtion in
late January or early Februaty.
In the meantime, she'll keep her
581,445 joh as swe ueasurer.
Clinton did not make an official
announcement. He sent the nomination to Congress Saturday along
with 29 others. The nominations
became public when the Congressional Record was distributed Mon-

. bl-..la!• we've sbarad lids past year. For uslt mn.nt ··.
saylag l~anb" to pa; .., muy lrleadl, Gld aad aew, ·

wbon ~lad sapportwe'D ~aystr~re. 1111111·
busblen db you · II olar greatest plea•el

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

I

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR I Dave or Bob
.. 992-2156
'.

1-,10PIIgM3$cen1a
A lluttlm.ct. Inc. "IWip pee

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 23, 1993

~2..!~k~~.P.2.!!~Y creates sparks at council meeting

2.

-Community calendar-MONDAY

VIII. 44, NO. 148
Mullllllldlo Inc.

THE . DAILY , S

A Ln'J'LE BQ9ST- Til belp read. lbe lll1h
spoCI, C"rtla ,J niell ·&amp;ell a Uttle
from hla'
motber, Mary JeweU, wllle decor 1 Christ·
mu treea Ia P-.eroy Mollllaj aftti'IIOOD, The
youaaer Jewell Is a eeeond-arader In Mrs. Cu

•::t;.

· ·..

SMOKING ORDINANCE TABLED - The ordinance to ban
smoking In vUlage bulldinga wu put Oil bold Moaday night in
r~p011se to.a p~ from the Mlddleporj ~e .DepU'tmenL Here
Coundlwomn :Judy ~roolii makes the·Jdolloil to refer tbe matter

·

to coiDbilttee for furtber considentloa before clviltelbe ordinance
a second readia&amp;. Tea flremeu In lllllfona ad two. aaxiliary members itteoded tbe meetin&amp; to qplain their concern about bow a
smoking1ln would a"ect fund raising projects carried out at the
lire department.

~EPA: Creeks recovering faster than expected
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
The creeks that flow from Meigs
Mine 31 should return to normal
much quicker than first expected,
according to preliminary reports
from top Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and other state officials who toured the region Oct 26.
Fish have already returned to the
streams but the recovery of the
streams' ecosystems - from fish
to microscopic plants - will not be
known for at least two years, said
Rob Berger, an Ohio Environmental Protection Agency spokesman.
"! think there was some ecological hardship on the life in the
streams but because it was so shortterm we expect it to be a quick
recovery," Berger said.
Today Southern Ohio Coal Co.
had to submit a comprehensive
stream restoration plan, which will
outline the company's plan for
keeping the area creeks clean ,
Smith said,
Nearly 800 million gallons of
water flooded into one of the county's two active mines July 11 from
an adjoining abandoned mine, said
SOCCO spokeswoman BJ. Smith,
"We are very pleased that the
streams with a little help ate naturally restoring themselves," she

said. "Water chemistry is back to
normal. The aquatic life is renun ing as well."
Mine workers have gradually reopened the mine while they set up
elecuical lines again, Smith said.
About half of the mine "that bad
been open before the disaster has
been reopened, she said.
Mter the incident, Mine 31 laid
off 300 underground workers out
of 460 total workers, while surface
workers continued, Smith said.
Only 100 of these workers still
have not renuned to their jobs, she
added.
Smith said she could not predict
when all the workers would return,
adding workers would continue to
renun as more areas are explored.
About half of the mine has been
explored since July.
Meigs Mine 2, also nearby, has
run at full capacity and all 360
workers have continued, Smilh
said. Laid-off mine workers have
been paid by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, she said.
In 1992, each Meigs mine produced 2.6 million tons of coal,
which then supplies Gavin Power

Plant. Total production of coal
should decline this year, but Smith
could not give specifics.
Smith was unable to say how
much profits will slip with the loss
of the mine, but Gavin has needed
less coal because one of the plant's
two generating units has been shut
down for maintenance.
SOCCO is uncertain what
caused the flood, partly because
water remains in some of the areas
and it can not be accessed Smith
said.
:
"We believe that the water
entered under the seal" at least 300400 feet underground, Smith said.
To avert this problem in th e
future, the coal company will not
hold water underground - it will
be pumped out and Ueated Smith
said.
'
Rescue workers removed the
iron sludge from the creeks Sugar Run, Strongs Run , Parker
Run and Leading Creek - which
have rejuvenated faster than
expected and should be back to
normal in less than two years,
Berger added.

The Ohio EPA will later stock
some fish and will ~ontinue to
mon itor the creek's clean-up to
ensure that after a fe w months
improvement the waters would not
worsen, ~er added.
Area res1dents should refrain
from catching the fish in the surrounding creeks for at least a year,
but not because or any health risks
from eating the fish, Berger said.
"If people want the fish to
recover quickly they should not be
disturbed," he said.
When the iron flooded the
streams from the mines the fish
we r~ not ~isoned , Berger said.
Tbe ITOn killed what the fish cat or
the fish suffocated because their
gills were covered, Berger said.
The iron was removed from the
stream fas t enough so the fi sh
could not build up toxic levels, he
added.
Keith Little, Environmental
Health director for the Meigs
County Health Department confirmed that the county h~d no
reports of contaminated water or
health problems since the accident

Handgun deadlock ·continues
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress gridlocked anew over
handgun control but sent President
Clinton a bill extending Jobless
benefits for 1 million Amencans ·as
lawmakCll neanxl the end of a year
they hope answered the voters'
calls for change.
Laboring into the wee hours .this
morning, the House approved, 238187, a compromise version of the
Brady bill, which would fon:e a
wait of five business days for hand·
gun purchases. But the compromise
ran aground in the Senate, blocked
by an$')' Republicans.
Chnton urged Congress to
resolve their differences on the
measure quickly , telling a news
conference Monday, "I would love
it if the Congress could give the
Brady bill 10 the American people
foi: Thanksgiving."
Amid chants, charts and a
clown's hat sported by Rep. Bob
Livingston, R-La., to mock one
Democratic measure, the House
nve fmall)lpiOVal to a bill providlii'g the final $18 billion installrnent
on the gigantic savings IUld loan
bailout
. Earlier it nanowly dealt conservatives a setback, voting 219-213
to till a $90 billion package of
spending cuts that relied heavily on

Medicare reductions.
"Yo• Can join the team that represents change," Rep. John Kasicb,
R-Ohio, wh9 helped write the cuts,
vainly beseeched his colleagues
before the fmal tally.
Instead of approving the conservative-backed spending cuts, representatives approved a measure containing $37 billion in reductions
written by Democratic leaders and
the White House.
As the end of a busy year
approached, most lawmakers were
ready to turn to other accomplishments to stake their claims as

agents of change.
For Democrats, it was the pattyline passage in Au~ of Clinton's
defiCit-reduction bill. For Republicans, it was the overwhelming support they gave just last week for thci'
North American Free Trade Agree.;
men~ which would pry open mar~
kets by gradually dropping tariffs
among the United States, Mexico
and Canada.
Unwilling the let go of Brady,
Senate Democrats were scheduledto return to the measure today. Sen~
ate Majority Leader Georg~
Continued on Pa2e 3
·

Stickland votes no on budget cuts
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressman Ted Suickland (D-6th
Disuict) joined 218 other members
of the U.S. House of representatives in rejecting I $90 billion
spendin~ cut proposal offered by
Reps. Tim Penny and John Kasich
turned up the pressure as the measure neared a vote.
Tbe measure was defeated Monday night219·213.
To help stop the measure:, President Ointon and Democratic leaders offered a smaller )JICkage of
their own worth $37 billion, which

was approved 272-163. Most of its
savings came from eliminating
252,000 government jobs.
"A vote for Penny-Kasich will
not only eliminate funding for your
project this year, but could~­
dize any future funding," said a
p8111graph in lhe letter received by
many House members.
Penny, 1&gt;-Minn., llld Kasicb ROhio, were the major architecli of
the alternate plan. Among the
recipicDIS of the ~ letter WM
a freshmen from a distnct adjacent
to Kasich' s.
:

�TUellday, November 23,1993

,Commentary
"The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L WINGEtT
Publllber
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS Of OPINION m welcome. They 1bould be lou !ban 300
wolds. All louen .,.. IUbject to editing ond mUll be li&amp;ftOd with name,
oddrels and telephone number. No Wlli&amp;ftOd totten will be publilbed. Lotten
abould be in good tute, oddnluin&amp; iu~. oot pononllitiea.

Letters to the editor
'God' still in Girl Scout Promise

Recent articles have stilled that
The motivating force in Girl
Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. removed Scouting is, and always has been, a
the word "God" from tbe Girl spiritual one. However, Girl Scouts
Scout Promise. Tbis is not true. At of the U.S.A makes no attempt to
the recent Girl Scout National interpret or define the word "God"
Council SesSion, the nearly 2,000 in the Girl Scout Promise. The
delegates lqll'eSellting the 330 Girl belief in a spiritual principle is funScout Councils in the Unital Stales damental to Girl Scouting, but relivoted overwhelminflly to broaden gious instruction is the responsibilithe spiritual base of the organiza- ty of parents and religious leadels.
We in the Seal of Ohio Girl
tion by allowing Girl Scouts to substitute for the word "God" in tbe ' Scout Council, which covers 16
Girl Scout Promise a word which counties in central and south-cenmore closely expresses their per- tral Ohio, 26,000 girls and over
7,000 adult volunteers, hope that
sonal spiritual belief.
THE GIRL SCO'lTI' PROMISE the community understands that
REMAINS EXACTI. Y AS IT this action is intended as an inclu· 1=-..
sionary measure. We want ALL
HAS BEEN:
GIRLS,
from every religious. culOn my honor, I will try: To
tural,
racial,
and ethnic population,
serve God and my COIDIIry, To help
people at all times. And to live by to feel welcome and comfortable in
Girl Scouting.
the Girl Scout Law.
Our program, lilte the pt;omise, ·
This action does not displace or
remove God from the Girl Scout continues to inspire all guts with
Promise. It ~ give members the the highest i!leals .of character, conchoice of using a more appropriate duct, patriotism and service so that
word for their own spiritUil beliefs, they will become responsible and
should they wish to do so, and rec:- resourceful citizens.
Janet L. Lawver
OP.~es the increasin.gly diverse
President
religtous, cultural, racW, and ethSealofOhio ,.......~
nic populations within Girl ScoutGirl Scout Council, Inc.
ing.

Not all abuse welfare system
of differeni ibings with no luck. I
would gladly become one of the tax
payers if I could, and yes, I know
dead beats. Ycs, there arc some my tax dollars would go to those
who abuse the system but don't who won't wott, but it would also
blame them all for the actions of a go those families with children
who do eat store brands the same
few.
1 don't eat T-bones or buy brand as I do.
You can't blame all the people.
name store irems or use my mediInstead
of running down all the
cal card very often even when 1·
people
on
assistance, people lilte
should. I have done without many
things for a long time hoping things · yourself should look at working at
would Bet better. I have had to get eliminating the causes if you want
someone else to take me places · to find a solution. This would do
more good than complaining about
because I didn't have a car.
people
on SS or SSI and on the
I have attended classed for sevwelfare
rolls.
eral different things in hopes of
B. Varney
fmdinB a job but I am stilllrying to
Langsville
get hired for work. I have filled out
numerous applications for all kinds

Dear Editor.
This is in response to the letter
on Friday, Nov. 5, about welfare

Page 2·-The Dally Sentinel.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~day, November 23, 1993

WASHINGTON (NEA) - , One
of the bO,ucst topics inside the beltway these days is the ~e, Jll'Qgressively straioed re1auonship
between Bill Clinton and his top
aides and the Clinton Cabinet's
most popular membel' - Attorney
Gellellll Janet Reno.
Insiders say the Clinton-Reno
relationship got off to a poor start
when she arrived at the Justice
Department to discover that her
deputy - Clinton intimate and former Hillary Clinton law. partner,
Webster Hubbell- was pretty
much running the show. She was
furthu dismayed to learn that, even
after her arrival, Hubbell remained
the point of contact for the White
House, and that she often learned
of key decisions after the fact.
Insiders say a prime examfle was
the final decision to fue FB Director William Sessions.
She also had amazingly little
input to other major dectsions.
When University of Pennsylvania
law professor Lani Guinier was
nommated to be assistant anorney
general for civil rights, Reno
became her No. 1 supporter. When

DBVOTZD 10 TIIB IN'I1t1Ut8TS OJ' Tlllt 10:108-IIASON AREA

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Weather
VVednesday,Nov;l4
Accu-~ forecast for

....,.._~,.~........:~~.-.,..,..

Today in history

Interior-secretary leads charge
Tbe West is no longer predomi· recognize itself and in the process
nantly rural It's urban.
stake out a land ethic that will sus·

Political and economic power tain public resources for future
~ities of the generations.
What's radical about his
apprOach is that he's tecommend·
ing we start dealing more conservatively )Vith the land.
Take a look at his grazing proWest. In the Rocky Mountain
states, the proportion of the popula- posals: He recommends policy
tion living in cities is higher than in changes to discourage overgrazing
the Northeast, the South or the and to reward ranchers who 'are
Midwest The 27,000 livestock goodsttiwardS of public lands. He's
ranchers who hold all the permits calling for an increase of grazing
to graze cattle and sheep on public fees to bring them closer to fees
lands in the West would hardly fill charged to run cattle and sheep on
out a good-sized suburb of pri~ate land. He thinks grazing
boards thai help administer the proPhoenix.
The tab has also come due on ~ram should reflect all regional
what we've allowed to be done to mrerests, including the urban and
the land. The zealotry of clear-cut- environmental communities,. not
ting naticmal forests far in excess of just ranchers. It won't be long
their ability to regenerate is a before people will look baclc at all
national scandal that has wreaked this and wonder what all the fuss
long-term damage to logging jobs was about and why the changes
weren't made sooner.
·
and timber resources.
The next fight will come over
Well over $1 billion is needed,
but the funds aren't available, to the 1872 Mining Law. .
clean up abandoned mine sites on
Right now you can bur an acre
publicland. Roughlr 60 percent of of public land using.a mirunlji claim
public range land ts overgrazed . for less than the cost of a Btg Mac
Water tranSfer schemes are subsi- with fries. An area the size of Condizing price-supported crops or, as necticut has been sold this way at
with Arizona's Central Arizona $5 or less per acre.
The gold or copl?!:r under the
Project, are delivering water too
land may be worth millions or even
expensive for farmers to buy.
, Babbitt has taken the lead in billions ot dollars, but as the law
asking simply that the New West now stands the public wo_n't get n
has shifted to the new

Jay D. Hair

penny in exchange for gtvmg a private mining firm the privilege of
extracting the wealth.
A reform measure is worlcing its
way through Congress, with Dabbill'~ support, to stop tbe :~le of
public mming lands and to charge a
fair royal!)' on recovered mincials,
as is already the case with oil, coal
and natural gas taken from public
land.
BabbiU has also announced that
the Bureau of Reclamation that has
built most of the westemwatcr projects will get out of the construction business to become "one of
the world's. great water resource
· management agencies."
Stopfing abusive logging in
nationa forests is a job for the
Agriculture Department, which has
taken ,the fiist stepS of many need· .
eel to c!lange the leadership of the
U.S. Forest Service. .
Grazinl!• mining, farming and
logging will all continue to play a ·
role in the West. But tbey will
never again wield ihe power they
once had to extract huge public
subsidies and to deflect reform of ,
abuSive practices. That is the reaJi.
ty Babbilt is asking the Old West to
face up to.
·
·
Jay D. Hair bas a Ph.D. In the ·
study or aalmal nte lllld bas b~n ·
prtsldent or the Nallooal Wildlil'e ·
Federation since 1981. .
:

The fracturing of America's The nation is in the wrenching,
~ political sysrem plhers momenrum overdue business of coming to
" every day;]t&amp; reordering does DOL
grips with vast political and eco·
·
The intraparl)' divisions on the nomic changes at home and abroad
NAFI'A vote reflected botb reali; tiel. So does the unbmten sul:cess
1
:. of .tmn llli!it
;. can and Will
die• Hiltcrianl
precipitat: ing faciora. What matten in the The old slogans are all but void of
~· hc:re llld aow illhll there arc vinuThe new 'fiuestions rumble
aUy no polltk:ll vetidea thal arc not cootent.
out with ~g frequency.
1lllller clW!eaae ad ao new 011e1
What II America '·s role in the
' t11at allow the atrentth to replace new world of multifaceted compe: the!n·
tition, uansnadonal entttprise and
~
COft'ider die llnDp bcdfeiiOwl borderlelll money?
' ·ori the NAFI'A vote. On tbe one
How can our self-Interest be
side wer¢ oraanizcd labor and best advanced - by full participatiabt·winJ Republican populists tion in the ever more alobal econosuc;h a . ~ Buc~. On the my, with' all its challenps, tbn:all
. other ftm Bill Clinton and the and opponunities, or by the conr ri&amp;lll·winl Republlcan wJUp, Rep.
of protective barriers
; NeWt Olriir!Ch or Oeorgia. These strUction
behind which we can repair our
: were iiOl iillural allies. Ten .years m011 daJna&amp;Od iMtitutionl anc1 rein·
; IJI\I• It woul4 have been unthink- vipate our indUIIrialllale? .
~ - .lhcy WOUld end pp in the
·How lhould we uae our mllltary
. . . CIIJIP. .
power now tliat ihere II nq other
-,: Bill NAFI'A was a symbol- great power 1hat can sertoualy
niher !ban i rnc cause- thmllen our physicaiiCCUrity?
' mICbllm_and temporary alWn:es.

=

:• ecrec:c-:

Hodding Carter 111

• IColumbus Iss• I

W.VA.

.

Thanksgiving Day
to be m1ld, but yvet
By The Associated Press
It wiD continue to be mild, but 30s to mi!I-40s. Fair Friday. Lows in
rainy, through the Thanksgiving the 20s. Highs in the 40s.
holiday in Ohio, forecasters said. Around the nation
Clouds will build up tonight
Astorm bearing heavy snow, high
ahead of an approaching frontal wind and cold whistled from the
sys!M\, the National Weather Serv- Northwest through the northern Rock·
icc said, and showers are lilcely on ies onto the Plains on Monday, piling
Wednesday. Lows tonight wi~ be up drifts as high as 5 feet in some
35-45.
mountain areas.
High temperatures Wednesday
The noon wind chill at Belling·
will be mostly in the 50s. It will be ham, Wash. wasabout25belowzero,
a little cooler on Thursday but read· the weather service said. Bellingham
ings still will be in the 50s in the had wind up to .50 mph during the
north. Rain is lilcely both days.
morning.
The record-high temperature
Power outages believed caused
forthis·dsleattheColwnbusweather by the storm blacked nearly 4,000
stationwas72degn:esinl931 while customers in the Seattle suburbsdurlhe record low was I below zero in ingthemomingandscaneredoutages
1880. Sunsettonightwillbeat5:10 were reported in the Puget Sound
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:27 regicm.
a.m.
Atmidday,rainoverthenortbem
Southern Ohio
half of the PacifiC Coast changed to
Tomght, mostly cloudy. Low snow a1 higher elevations with snow
around 40. Wednesday, mostly extending across the northern Rock·
cloudy w1th a shghtchanceof show- ies onto the northern Plains and reachers. High 55-60. Chance of rain 30 ing as far as northern Minnesota and
pen;ent.
Upper Michigan.
Extended forecast
.
In Montana, the storm l~ft 12
A chance of showers Tuesday incbesofsnowatGiacierPark Whitenight,mainlynorthhalf.Lowsmid- fiSh and Libby, with 24 h~hes at
30s to lower 40s. Wednesday, a_Polbridgeand28atEssex,theweather
chance of ram or snow _showers and Service said. Flathead Valley had 12
turm!lg cooler. Early h!ghs mtd-40s inches of snow with drifts 5 feet deep
to m1d-SOs falling dunng the day. and some roads in northwestern
Thanksgiving Day, fair and Montana were reported closed by
colder. Lows 25 to 30. Highs mid· drifts, the
·

Gun control...

Continued from Page 1
MitChel( D-Maine, even threatened
to call senators back to the Capitol
after Thanksgiving if need-be to
break the Brady deadlock.
.But angry Republicans, favoring
a Senate-passed version that could
phase out the five-day waiting period in four years instead of five as
in the House version, seemed determined to hold out.
"Are we going through a politi·
cal charade or dO you want a bill?"
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, a
National Rifle Association member, told Democratic bargainers.
"If you want a bill, accept the Sen-

Craft show to be held
There will be a craft show sponsored . by Prece)?tor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Stgma Phi on Sat·
urday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. on the upper block of Main
Street in Pomeroy.

Three issued
marriage licenses

Prldly, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo by die

...-a=

·,

I

"As-these ·children grow up,
they must deal with the reality or
violence, AIDS, drugs , the sheer
drag or poverty," Education Secretary Richard Riley said in
pared
remarks to students, teacl:s and
administrators at a Washington
junior high school
The report said high school
sophomores overwhelmingly

lac., Pom«&lt;&gt;y, Ohlo •l76P, 1'11. P9l·lll6.
Secolld ci J U - pold 11
Oblo.

-f.

Member: The Auocllted Prell, ud lbe Ohio
Newlpllpll' A.odltioa, NatJoaal AdwrtkiDa
RepreualatJve, Brll&amp;bam New.piper Salol,
133 Tbird Aveaue, New York. New York
10017.
POSTMASTER: Sn4 ..sdrtll cbu,_ to The
DIU)' St atiael, Ill Co\Wt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
&lt;.!769.

.,.c.m...-•SUIISCIUI'I10N IIA1U

Three marriage licenses were
recently issued in the Meigs Coun·
ty Probate Court of Judge Robert
Buck.
Receiving licenses were: Keith
Lynn Rockhold Jr., 25, and Jamie
Laurayne Buies, 22, botb of Tuppers Plains; Bobby Wayne Vance,
41, and Yvonee Elaine Vance, 37,
both of PomeroY: Keith Lee Stout,
26, and Melissa Elaine Foster, 24,
both of Long Bottom.
·

0.. w..t,,.,.,,.,, '" '"""'"""""""'"'" "'"" ,JI.60

0.0 Mootb. ...........,_.., ,................. ......_s.s.9l

o.. Y,...........................-.............SINGLE COPY

..113.20

I'RJCE
Dolly........................................ - : ! 5 Cala

No injuries were reported following a deer-related accident on
Stale Route 7 near Chester Friday around 6 p.m.
According to a tepon from the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart. ment, Dorothy Ellis of Middleport was dorthbound and slowed to
allow a deer to cross the roadway when she was struck from the rear
by a following northbound vehicle driven by Iva M. Sisson of Rut·
land.
Ellis' 1989 Ford sustained light damage wh i1e .s·tsson 's 1991
Buick sustained moderate damage.

Deer-vehicle wrecks probed
Three deer-vehicle accidents were investigated Friday by
deputies of the Meigs County Sbcrifrs Department
Norman E. Hysell, Pomeroy, was norlh~J?uru! em_U.S. 33 around
6 p.m. when his car was struck on the !'river s s1de by a button
buck. Damage to- his 1988 Chrysler was listed as hght to moderate.
The deer had to be destroyed.
Michael Edwards, Racine, was southbound on Sa~ser Road
around 6:25 p.m. and struck and killed a doe deer that Jumped m
front of his 1982 Dalsun piclrup truck.
Melissa J. Marcinlro, Reedsville, was eastbound pn State Ro~te
248 and suuck a deer that jwn~ into the path of her 1986 Ponnac
causing the car to go into a ditch. Moderate damage was listed to
the car's grille, right-front fender and front passenger door.

RAF jet crashes
- LONDON (AP) - A ROyal Air
Force Harrier jump-jet craslled
early today while patrolling the
U.N. -imposed no-fly zone over
northern Iraq, the Ministry of
Defense said.
A spokesman said the crash was
caused by mechanical problems

Band Director Tony Dingus a1 992·
7141 or949-2105.

Subla'ibt.n 101 dcstri111 to ~J ~ cwrkl' 1D1J
remit Ia od....., dltoc:t to 1be Dlllr Soolilel
oa a tbrN.Iix or 12 moe.dl bllil. Ctedk wlU be

·----·-tlod "...
No
-p
t l...
mill li lmiloble.
_b
_
_b7_
......lwYfx

-~c-.,.

13 -

--·--·-----·"""'"""'"'"'""""Jli.M
215WIIIo ............. ............................... .S.!.I6
52'Moob...._,,, .....,,,,,,,. __,,_,__ , , JIU6
O.UW.IIWp
13 w,.lo........ ----··'·---···........ ,_... JUAO

:ze -

.52·-

c.o.., '
.........................................s.ua
........................................ .taaACI

Band to perrorm
CJ and the Counlry Gentlemen
will play at the Russell Building in
Millfield on
from 8 to 11
p.m. John Russel and Melvin
Cross will be calling. Everyone is
welcome.

Saturdar

Country music aig•t
Lottridge Community Center
will host counlry music night on
Saturday from 7 ".m. to midnight
Refreshments wtll be available.
Everyone is welcome.

Divorces and dissolutions
The following actions to end
marrisg"e were ftled rec:ently in the
~eigs County Common Pleas
CourtofJudgcFredW. Crowm.
Filing were: Nov. IS, Bonnie
Sue Brewer, Portland, and Terry
Lee Brewer, Rutland, dissolution;
Nov. 16, Lila Marie Barber from
James .Edw!l'd Barber, both of
Reedsville, divorce; Nov. 16, Dana ~ayon,Racine,CromCmieEnyon,

Hoplr.insville, divorce.

In addition, the following diaso-

"·

STAFF DINNER - Hillside Baptist Church
recently bad its fourth annual staff dinner with
the theme, "Loves! Thou Me?" Pictured are
starr members. Front row rrom lert, Kristin
Acree, Jamie Humphrey, Debbie Clcmch, Betty
Acree, Sandi Jones, Belinda Oellll, Rachel Hood

Two-car wreck investigated

Clarification

Ohio Valley PubUth!tl Coq,uy~Multlmedil

1m:=:

eompetitive, the deuartn~t said in
the study " YOUlh ~- 1993:
Ttends in the Well-Being of Atnttican Youth."
The analysis painted a portra!t
of American youth holding ~etr
own in class worlr. while copmg
with violent crime and the fmancial
and psychological effects of being
raised by only one parent

believe in the importance ol wor!c.
family and friends, but only a thUd
say they really feel good about
themselves.
:
On the positive side, the study
found that a much higher PfOPOI"
lion of students are completing
high school than in the 1950s an4
college auendance is at an all·time
high.
•

and Kaye Willett. Second row, Linda Jones,
James Acree, Jr., Joe Humphrey, Ron Clonch,
James R. Acree, Sr., Gary Jones, John Dean,
Dan Hood, Teresa Reynolds and Charles Willett.

,--------Local briefs-------.

----Announcements---

P\lblilhed every lfteraoon, Monday thtouab

Within otir borden, what is the ment policies, if any, should be cans say they are political indepen- as NAFTA, ·wbil~' indispensable, :
proper role of govemmeni as .its implemented to deal with them? r. dents than say they are Republicans isn't enough. A~ of cliflbang..
pre-eminent role as fonder of the ~overnment really an .answer, or is or Democrats. Even allowin~ for ers makes for great',heater but:
military industrial complex dimin- tt the problem? ·
lite f~t that many so-called mde- chaptlc iovernance. ,Wh11t the ·
ishes markedly with each fiscal
These are nol Democratic or pendents in fact lean toward one rtallOO peCda is I compreliensive .
year? What is owed to working Republican queslions. Many of the party or the other, pollstm say the vision of' a new ~~)'stem, domestic .
Americans ·whose real hourly propOsed a:nsweD - whetbct'·from number or real independents has and international, Whoie. w~s :
wages have deteriorated over the Ross Perot. the Democratic Leader-'' now n:ached nearly 25 pcircent,. an will be beneficW 1.0 most.Amen· ·
past two decades and whose ship Council or Jaclc Kemp - are all·time high. Neither of the orga- cani.
.1:
!
prospec:ta - even lllllling the weD- not old-line party fll8POIIses. Mean- nized parties claims' the allegiance
Ai t'he mOIIICIII, neilhlir tile IRSeducated - are bli:aker than theit whilC, the voterS I!I'C saying, lOudlY. of as muc~ as 40 percent of the . idalt nor 111yone ebe Is presenting :
predecessors a .gcrieration aso? illldcleady, that when tesu!.ta ~ t ad~lt popul.ation, ~ven am.ong such a ~'lion. Bat polldcs~. l~c 1·
And if something should be done, forthcomi~g. t~ey will change those 'whd identify diemselves as natme, illhCn a,vacuum. It will bC
by whom and how?
horses 111.the fnt OJIP9f1Wiity and (lltliiana. there are vast.tl!ff~. lille,d and w~ diere are no aw- :
Is our g~ment still of, for withoUt ieprd to party label81 .
Democratic Sens. Sam Nuiln of antees about the ~results,. there, is ,
and by the people? How can politi"I:Jie faCt il that 111911 illeol:;cal Georpa and Bill Bradley of New one ~ty. Only tlicilc who J1111'· '
ciana be made more accountable? gl!ide~~:;.e ~anlsbed. he J~le arc~ the aame. Neither are ticiparo In the~~ debate and :
Have ·the elitca - Whethcir fman- Olea!
' and die I hl!t"
Ucaila.lib catifomia's Gov. .CJtolce'will be alito tq influence the t
clal, technolosical, iniellectual or ile !IPhJM Sovlet-!llylo
Pe1e WlilqD and Sen, J - Helms ~rcome .- ~4 the outcome will j
political - e~clt....,. the common no ~!laP let the.limlll or~ the ofNoilb Cli'Oiina.
let the course of lllis nation well ,
·1
man froiD meaningful plirticipalidn · staitla1 poinl for Jbe pplllical , . W~al we have is vacuum, ' in~Q 111e 21• century.
Hoddllll Carte.r III, former :.
In his own democr&amp;lly? How do dobale:Neither is relevaril 1.0 the ll'OWid which unmOored factions
you make the government more people's concerns todaY· though and interests are revolving furious- State Department 1pokeaman :
b\llh were the intlilpenaablo foun- ly. Becanae he,II preaident, 91ll • aj!IWIII'd.'l(lmllq re~ edl· 1
to IDi' ud publlaller,la pr1 Plti;t ot t
~~:'~ lo much l8lk about dation of tbe nation's political ; Clinlon baa the belt•
y lnc!!czstu
social ililintegratioQ, crime and supelllniCIUtO for a1111011 SO yei!J. Jill it, a fact. he
a'Wialililltoa.&gt;D.c.- 1
Parly Identity is a ~estcrday · that he
• ·
ball1l i*411Da prodlieijoa (0111.,.
poor ~bile edt"atiiJII, and ao liulc
1 But taking 01) ·bald Issues such
paay..
.
~ '
meanmgful action? What sovern· thing. As o~ aa not, ~ Ameli-

Am Ele Power.........................J6
Ashland OiL ..................... 33 3/4
AT&amp;T ..................................... ,56
Bank One ........................... 36 3/4
Bob Evans ..........................19 112
Channing Shop .................. 12 112
Champion lnd.................... IS 1/4
9ty Holding ........................... .32
Federal Mo_g_ul ...................23 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................44 112
Lands,End ..........................42 1/8
Limited Inc........................22 3/4
Multimedia Inc . .................36 3/4
Point Bancorp ..........................15
Rcliahce Elecnic ................ 16 7/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16 112
Shooey's Inc ......................21 3/4
Star Bank ................................. 34
Wendy lnt'L ..................... l5 3/4
Worthington Ind ................ 17 112
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Revival
Liberty Assembly of God ,
Mason, W.Va. will have a revival
Sunday through Wednesday with
Evangelist James L. Dennis and
special singing. The Sunday ser·
Preaching and slnginf
Faith Full Gaspe Church in vtce begins at6 p.m. and the MonLong Bottom wiD have preaching day through Wednesday services
and singing Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor starting at 7 p.m. Pastor Gregory A.
Steve Reed invites the public. Fel- Johnson welcomes all.
lowship will follow.
Open h.ouse
Tbe United Methodist Coopera·
Christmas bazaar and luncheon
There will be a Christmas tive Parish Clothing Department,
bazaar and lunchecm on Tuesday, 311 Condor St., will have an open
ate bill."
Dec. 7 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the house on Dec. I from 9 a.m. to I
Heath United Methodist Church p.m.
sponsored by the Eleanor Circle.
Rutland EMS Christmas bazaar
The James Priddy of Middleport Annual Christmas parade
Rutland EMS will sponsor a
who was reported as having ftned
Christmas
bazaar at the Rutland
The annual Pomeroy Christmas
$50 plus costs in the Meigs Connty parade will be on Suoday at 2 p.m. Civic Center on Dec. 4 from 9 a.m.
Court for possession of marijuana Anyone interested in participating to 5 p.m. For table rentals contact
is James D. Priddy and not James should contact Meigs High School Marcia Elllot at 742-2233.
Robert Priddy, who also lives in
Middleport.
Lebanon Trustees to meet
Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet Satunlay at 7 a.m. at the
Township Building in Portland.
The Dally Sentinel
(USPS 113-Nf)

..

W_ASHINOTON (AP) Despjte a surge in violence and singlc-parent families, American teenagers are cloinjl slightly better in
~hool ~ thetr older~ and
ststen ~d, the ~uc:atll1" ;Department Slid tod_ay m a '~all'~tcal, profile of the Dallon 'a youth.
But progress since the late
1970s has been slow, and many
educators are concerned that current' levels of achievemenl are not
good enough to lr.eep America

Stocks

1

. Political vacuum raises questions
:.

IMansfield Isao I•

Robert]. Wagman

Dool? To
Ne.;GH13oRMooD

Bruce Babbitt's home state of
Arizona used to be ruled by the
three Cs of copper, cattle and cotton that govemed everything from
the state's politics to its lifestyle.
Now as secretary of the Interior,
Babbitt is in an all-out ftghtto get
not only ArizQna and the rest of the
West, but the nation as a whole to
accept a change that has already
taken place.
The ·concentrations of wealth
and power that relied on public
lands and resources are from the ·
era of the Old West that has in fact
given way to the emergence of the
.
·
'
By The Associated Press
New West.
. , Today is Tuesday. Nov. 23, the 327th day of 1993. There are 38 days
To gain acknowledgement of
left in the year.
thai change, Babbitt was confrontToday's Highlight in HiStory:
.
ed with die-hard filibusters in the
Ftfty years ago, on Nov. 23, 1943, U.S. forces seized co!ltrol ofTI!fll~a U.S. Senate against land reform
and Makin atolls from the Japanese during the Central Pacific offenstve m and hiner anaclcs from some interthe Gilbert Islands.
ests that continue to view national
resources as private property.
On this date:
·
repudiated ·~- British
.' S
L
In 1765, Fn:dcrick County. Md.,
'
'""
':ID'P. A
ACl
Arizona's copper and cattle
In 1804, the 14th president of the Umted Stales, Flanklin Pierce, was stand for Western mining and liveborn in HillsborO, N.H.
. • Pal ·
stock. Cotton and other farm crops
In 1119 the ftrSt jukebox made its debut at San Franct~o s ~!is became abundant in the arid West
Royale SalOOn: It COI!'isted of an Edison tinfoil phonograph With four hs- thanks to massive federal investtcniD&amp;tubes and a com slot for each tube. .
ments in river diversion and water
In 1903, singer Enricl_l CarusQ made his, An:'e~\can debu!. at the canal projects. Add to these a logMetropOlltan Opera House m New York, appeanng m Ri~oleno.
ging industry inc1C8Singly depenIn 1936 the firSt edition of Life, the picture magazme created by dent on nauonal forest land and
Henry R. L~. was published.
you've got the economic base from
In 1945, most wartime rationing of foods in ~e United Stales ended ..
which the West grew.
In 1959, the musical "Fiorello!," with mUSic by Jeny Bock ~d Iynes
But the growth with all its size
by Sheldon Hainick. and starring Tom Bosley as New York Cny Mayor and success has bro1JIIhl change. Fiorello_4 Guardia, opened on Broadway.

conditions and blgh temper8lurel

MICH.

Guinier came under ftre for her ing about three weeks before the ·long .ago sent to Reno l!s.ts of I?P
candidates for each postuon, wtth
controversW writings, Reno fought NPR was to be released.
Several ·frantic sessions are said the White House's rop choice indihard to Sjlve the nomination. However, she was ignoreci by the politi- to have ensued. On a number of cated. Reno has personally interoccasions Reno made public state· viewed many on the lists. But, ~Y
ments to tbe effect that she was the White House sources. she will
dubious about the idea. Finally, not indicate her choices, nor will
however, the NPR staff thought she acc:ept the White House's lOP
choices. A staten/ate has devefcal typeS at the White House who they had a deal with l)er.
In answers to reporters' ques- oped, one that many in both the
decided the Guinier fight was one
tions at the release brieftng for the White House and at Justice can't
they could do without.
:
Given the situation she found at NPR, high-level pfficials gave understand.
The latest flap is over a brief
Justice, Reno has moved from the assurances that Reno had now fallvery beginning to claim her inde· en in line with the proposal , ftled by Justice in ~ child pornograpendence. Her ftrSt major chance although, they said, the merger phy case before the Supreme Coun.
came when the vice president's would be implemented slowly and Justice holds the position.that, to be
National Performance Review staff on a timetable to be established by pornographic, a picture had to
show a child either nude or with
·
came up with the idea of saving Reno.
monel' and avoiding duplication by
However, the next day Reno body parts "visible" throuJ.h
mergmg the Drug Enforcement held her own press briefing and clothin~, and had to "depict a child
Administration and the Bureau of told reporters she was still against lascivtously engaging in sexual
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms the&amp;':· .The idea now appears to conducL"
Many courts have established a
into the FBI.
be
, but the Whire House con-lower
standard for child pornograReportedly, Reno fii'SI heard of tinues to SJ:Ilthe over the way Reno
phy
as
any picture or vidc::o displaythe plan from frantic DEA execu- handled th£ matter.
ing
a
i:hild
"as a sexual object" ,
tives who were trying to kill the
Then there is the issue of perThe
Justice
Department posiidea even before it could get into sonnel. There are still 10 major
tion,
which
was
accepted by the
the early draft of the NPR. Accord- appointments to be made at Justice,
ing to Justice sources, Reno was the. most remaining at any agency Supreme Court, was immediately
, not fully aware of the still-develop- other than Defense.
. . blasted by children's welflllC orgaing plan until she requested a briefWhite House sources insist they nizations and by conserv~ves. A
Senate resolution condemrung the
Justiee Department position passed
by a vote of !()().(), and 154 mem·
I'M .GoiNG Ne)(T
bers of the House cosponsored a
·resolution demanding that Jus lice
T}f~
reverse its position.
-In a move that raised eyebrows
Ware~
all
over town, President Clinton
M~T;Nc;.
wrote a terse three-paragraph letter
to Reno. chastising her posilion,
CoVeR Me..
and then immediately released the
letter to the press. "I fully agree
with the Senate about what the
scope of child pornography laws
should be," Clinton wrote, and
ordered that Justice immediately
prepare and submit legislation to
toughen existing law. .
Most observers here are aghast,
given the explosive nature of the
subject, that the Reno brief was not
cleared at the highest levels in the
White House before it was submit·
ted to the court; The White House
apparetltly sees Reno's decision as .
another attempt to claim her independence - thus the swift, and
very public, rebuke by the presidenL
Robert Wagman is a syDdicat1,..._o...a ed writer for Newspaper Enterprise Assodaticm.

The Dally Seritlnel=:f!G• 3

Study: School acheivement up since late 70s

OHIO Weather

Are Reno and Clinton at loggerheads?

111 Co1lrt 8tn:et
POmeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lutions wero &amp;ranted: Daniel A.
Warth and Brenda G. Warth, Nov.
IS; Almena R. Bentz and James M.
Bentz Jr., Nov. 15; Angelique
Dorst aild Mike Dorst, Nov. 16;
Rosalee Jones and Paul J. Jones,
Nov. 17,
Also, the following divorces
were panted: DavicfWa)'D!' Grindstaff from Sandra l(ay Grindstaff,
Nov. 17;' Kclly J. Turner frolri
Toby D. Turner, Nov. 19; John P.
Pictcna ill from Kathy L. Pictens,
Nov. 19.

Vegetable school slated
Commercial vegetable growers will have an opponunity to
update their cultural practices before spring planting at the Washington-Meigs Winter Vegetable School to be held Wednesday. Dec.
I, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Ag Center (Oil! Tech College) on
State Route 676 west of Marietta.
Those attending will receive Ohio State University's recommendations concerning irrigation of vegetable crOPS; new vegetable
field trials; pest and disease control on peppers, pumpkins and
sweet com; weed control and worlr.er protection updates.
The $5 registration fee includes lunch of either chicken, meatloaf
or baked steak. Call the Meigs County Extension Office at 9926696 by Wednesday at 3 p.m. for reservations.
.

Recycling center closed
Manley's Recycling will be closed from Nov . 25 to Dec. 5.
Meanwhile, Manley's Trash Service will operate in Middleport on
Nov. 25 as usual.

Village offices closed for holiday
All village offices in Middlepon and Pomeroy will be closed
Thursday and Friday for observance of Thanksgiving with the
exception of the potice departments which will remain open.

council... __c_on_li_nued_rrom
__
Pa..;:c•_•_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
mg Creek Conservancy, District,
and Bob Snowden, a board member.
The two were there with cost
estimates at the request of Council
which is in the process of forming
the Big Bend Water Disnicl in conjunction with Pomeroy Village
Council.
The village is now in the pro·
cess of comparing the cost of creat·
ing a district, drilling wells, and
setting up treatment facilities in a
new system to purchasing water
from another system such as Leading Creek.
Bolin presented preliminary cost
estimates of $5 million to extend
the waler system and provide the
necessary tanks to service Middlepon.
He said that based on a 38-year
100 percent loan the cost would run
$1.93 a thousand gallons. The average bill now of Leading Creek customers, he said, is about $25 a
month but he said the board anticipates lowing the rates once addi·
tional customers are added.
Bolin talked about the new well
field and treatment plant which is
being developed a1' Cheshire which
should also held in reducing the
cost of water. He said the well field
will be in full production by the
end of 1994.
Christmas Bonuses
Council approved Christmas
bonuses for employees of $100 for
the 18 full-tirrie worlr.ers, snd $50
fortwopan-time worlr.ers.
Councilman Bob Gilmore pro·
posed the bonuses as "something
we ought to do' even though we are

shon on money. He propOsed that
the $1,500 which Feeney-Benneu
Post 128, American Legion, recently donated to the village be used
for that purpose which would leave
only $400 to come from the general
fund.
All three readings were given at
the meetin2 to an ordinance providing for the bonuses.
The mayor was complimentary
of the village workers and their
efforts at keeping costs down .
Another way of cutting costs pro·
posed by Mayor Horton was using
those who cannot pay fines when
they appear in coun to do some
work for the village.
The di sc ussion on village
finances went into·the 1994 budget
which shows a deficit of $27,000.
Honon said that the budget initially
rejected by the Meigs County Budget Commission because of the
deficit has been resubmitted. Councilman Paul Gerard said thai the
revised budget had been considered
by the Commission Monday.
Other Business
Arrangements were made for
several Council membel'!&gt; to be present at a hearing on the Christina
and Raymond Kirk liquor permit
transfer. The hearing will be held at
II a.m. on Wednesday at the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Mayor Horton commended the
Middleport Arts Council for their
role in th e community and
announced thai the group expects
to get a grant sometime in the
spring. He also said that plans are
being made to have an anist in residencc.

It was noted that there will be
two vacancies on Council in January and several names were proposed.
Proclamations from the Ohio
House of Representatives were pre.
senled by
Mayor Horton to Gilmore and
Child s on their appointment to
Council last month.
Tom Dooley, president of lhe.
M•ddleP?rt Community Associabon, outlined holtday plans noting
that the parade will be held Dec. 2
at 6 p.m. He also commented on
promotions planned for Christmas
Attending were Mayor Hono~
Council members, Crooks, Childs:
James Clatworthy. Jack Satterfield,
and Gerard, and Clerk-Treasurer
Terri. Hockman. Prayer to open the
mccung was by AI Hanson , Middleport Church of Christ.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446·4524

11111rr1

~-

.,.__

: '"'-

7

2m

.._ .. . . . . . . . . . . . r '

.

~JPT

caaTIPICATIS AVAILAIL&amp;I

~·-~;qp;.~~~.,~~~·~~~~~~-~~~ lf4·~~~~~~~~c~
ptuu,. f'IA fo.. ~
:· ,

r .:·
~·

~

U&amp;

~ &amp;pen gr(.I(LM?

.

.Swul~ dVovuo.bn 25, 1993
/ ."00 /'·"'· -

''""

...
.

.

p.m.

,q~ !TI.Wiilare~
Corner 2nd and Grape, GaUipolis

~!Tme.ff~
Corner 2nd and Grape , GaUipolis
and
91 MiU Street, Middleport
i-~

-..,for..,_ u..w......, ,...,_ *

TM fiiWI Allit H~r ,.,Ill•
.. -

"

, olio.

'

�'

4 The Dally Sentinel

Page

Clark
leaves
Giants for

Eastern's Newland named
Division V 'Player-of- Year';
three other Eagles honored
Eastern's Pat Newland S-8
senior halfback and defensive oornerbac k, today was named the
Division V District Player of the
Year by The Associated Press.
Newland had 65 tackles and
eight pass interceptions (212 yards
and one tou chdown) . He also
c:ught II passes for 358 yards and
rushed for 355 yards in 39 carries

for a 9.1 average. He scored 15
touchdowns for 90 points. Newland
is a repeater, having made all-district as an end when he was a
junior.
Three other Eagles were honored by the AP. Jared Ridenour,
senior tackle and defensive end,
was a ftrst team offensive honoree.
First team defensive honorees were

McArthur Vinton County, who
starred as both a quarterback and
defensive back.
The teams were chosen in balloting by a media panel from the
district.
Lucasville Valley's Brian Bear,
who completed 62 of 119 passes
for 815 yards and 12 touchdowns
was picked as the top offensive
player in Division IV, while
Crooksville nose guard Jeremy
White and Chillicolhe Huntington
linebacker Jason McCloskey
shared the defensive player of the
year award. The eoach of the year
was Crooksville's Craig Spring

NEW YORK (AP) - John
Starks helped the New York
Knicks break an NBA record. Then
he broke his nose.
Starks' seven 3-pointers were
the -major share of the Knicks'
record-setting 10 in the ftrSt half or
a 119-87 rout of Miami that pulled
the Knicks out of a scoring slump.
But Starks fmished the half in the
locker room, nursin~ a broken nose
courtesy of a collision with the
Heat's Brian Shaw, wbo holds the
NBA single-game record with 10
3-pointers.
The Knicks were coming off an
86-72 loss to Utah on Saturday
night and a four-game stretch in
which !hey averaged 91 points. The
slump had New York coach Pat
Riley on the warpath.
Stacks scored IS points in the
fust quaner, 16 in the second and
then finished with 37. Wearing a
facemask, he did not play in the
fourth quarter and missed both of
his 3-point attempts in the third
period.
.
"I srarted orr shooting !he ball
well, and the rest of the team
picked up on that and we all shot
well," Starks said of his 31-point
fU"St half against the Heat
In the only other NBA games,
Indiana routed Boston 102-71 and
San Antonio tripped the Los Angeles Clippers 110-98.
The Knicks led 64-39 at halftime, nearly matching their tolal for
the entire game against Utah.
New York made 10 of 12 3pointers in the half, including 7 or
8 by Starks, who broke his nose
with 18 seconds left in !he second
•quarter.
The Heat, led by Rony Seikaly
with 16 points, got no closet than
17 in the second half and are now
0-12 at Madison Square Garden
since joining'the NBA in 1988.
Pacers 102, Celtks 71
Indiana spoiled number-retirement ceremonies for six Boston

____,

BLOC'KS P.o.Tw • Tbe Boston Celtles DiDo Radja is blocked
from laking a shot by IDdlaDa's LaSalle Thompson, left, and Dale
Davis, center, in lint hall action at Hartford Mpnday night. Tbe
Pacers won, 1102-71. (AP)
Spurs no; clippers 98
David Robinson scored 28
Celtics standouts at Hartford Civic
Center as Rik Smits scored 27 points and Dennis Rodman grabbed
points, including the Pacers' first 22 rebounds as San Antonio won at
home against Los Angeles for the
I 0 of the third quarter.
Dale Davis added 13 points and ninlh straight time.
Dale Ellis had 25 points for the
had 14 rebounds for Indiana, which
Spurs,
who led by 23 points in the
never trailed and outrebounded the
Celtics 49-34.
fust half before !he Clippers closed
~ Bird, Dennis Johnson, Jo to 93-84 in !he fourth quarter.
Los Angeles, which played
Jo While, John Havlicek, Dave
without
the injured Danny ManCowens and Don Nelson were honored in the halftime ceremonies. ning for the fourth straight game,
Space was left on the banner for was led by Mark Jackson and Gary
the numbers of Kevin McHale and Grant with 22 points each. Grant
also had eight steals.
the late Reggie Lewis.

LA. LU.ea et Cbuloue., 7:30p.m.

.,n.

W '- L

New Ycd.
Batton
()declo

W.........

I
6
........

l

2
•

..

4

4

Now Jeney ....... 4
Miomi
.......... 3
PhilodolplUa ....... 3

4

6

l)eaoil

Ctewland

tndWoo

GB

.100
.600

2

.lOO

6

.400
.375

'

.300

3

.6111

s

ScaaleatSacramcmo, 10:30 p.m.

s

NaUonal Hoc:lte.f Lcque

1

l
3

l
3

.444

6
6

.3:13
.3:13

Milwaukee

...... l I
.111
WESTERN CONnRBNCE

1
2

s

lllldw.. lli.... W

L

""""""
uw.
....... ..... '7 ·ol

SanAn\Onio ...... 6 S
.......... 4 4
_...
....... 2 •
O.UU
...... ..... I I
PodlkDIS..alo
I 0
Pt....U
6 2
l ~
4
5
LA ~:~ ........ - ..... 4
s.cr.mon~t~
......
Goldlll
3 5
LAIA:., ....... l 1

s.... . . . .

s

I'd. GB
1.000 -

.?0021/2
.545
4
..50041/l
.150 61/l
.111 8

1.000 .7SO
2
..556 31/l
A44 41/2
.#141/2
.375
s

.300

Adantlet Milwaukoe., 1:30 p.m.
New lerley at Mi!w.ata, 8 p.m.
Chicaao 11 Sm Antcnio, 1:30 p.m.
HOUitan at thah. 9 p.m.
0cnw:r It PhoaU, 9 p.m.

3

4
•

54..556
l 4 ..5l6

4S

Cbia10

Philadelphia at Indiana, 7:30p.m.

..556 21/2

Ctn1ral DlvWon

Cllodoao
Albnta

Wuhinp:ln II Cevelaad, 7:30p.m.

Bo.tu~at Dettoil. 7:30p.m.

Pet.

AlA Glance

By The Alaodaboa p,_
All 11m• EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
A.tltntk Dl.tlloa
W L T PUGFGA
NYRonam
New1eney

Plill•ddp!Uo ....

_ , .. ,LA~J6

-··:z;--t'l

sao-IOI~ MII'"'*-t?

l'lloB&amp;It2.Cimled"

s.Mot·- .

Now,loa!T 10!, LA Lok• t02
J)oaol&amp; .... ~119
s.w r un,
tOI

Mr::.,·.r._,.
........ IOI.O.U.

- y -·( lf, lllaotiJ7

... ,._.tiD; LA Clippen 9J
Td ¢,..0..
' c , • w-&amp;w= 7 :30p.m
LA~•-· ?:lOp.m.

Cl!ldiD ....... ~.p.m.

LA Cllfp.o•lldoo, l:30p.m.

OoloiiP•-·;30 ......
-·-·0:30p.m.
Wt ' &amp; a '

&amp;....r-•~!:30 .....

tl

9
Flori&lt;la ....... I 10
Wultinpln ... 9 11
NY lllmd• ... 7 12
Tun.- Boy • S 14

30 71 5S
28 73 41

I 7:1 99 96
3 19 60 65
D II S7 65
1 IS 70 72

2 12 49

~

Nurtheul Dlwlllon
Pil"bu!Jh
..... 11 7 4
211 11 71
Bot\Oft
....... 10 4 6
26 68 St

M-

s 11

Bu!Tolo

......

..... ' 11 2
.... .. S J2 2
.... .. 4 14 2

Oaawa

23SI49

..... 10? 3

Qucbco

11

1

n n

16 14 13

12 69 92

Hartfwd
10 S4 82
~RNCONFERENCE

Ceatnl DIYIIIon

6

So-J'•O...
Orlando 17,- s..., ll
Wuhin&amp;foli 104, MUmil02
,..._ J6, a..-91
bldlana 100,-94
o...-~1'
m·l9
llloh 16, lltw Yool('l2

.. 14 S 2
... 14 S 0

c.t...,.
Vancouv.

.... W L T
...... 16 l 4
...... 12 4 •

PUGFGA
36 91 S9
21 66 sa

........ 1114

2118314

...... 1012 226859
.... I 11 3 19 73 B3
........ I 9 2 · 11 7l 70
PocllkDitltloo
...... 14 6 l 3t as 70
.. .. 12 I 0

too Anf'l" .. ' 10 2

San l0111

Anoboint

~

...... 1 13 4

.... 713 2
... 317 3

MondaJ'• a••
Bulrolo ! , Ooowo 2
Anoboim 2. CoJ,Juy I
Tomrao S, VlftOOUVI!Ir 2

246162
201014

11 S6 .,..
16 61 17
9 61 90 .

T-,··o-

New 1.-yat Quebec, 7:35 p.m.
, Montftld.atN.~. RanJI!Ift. 7:3S p.m.

IWiford ot FICllidl. 7:35p.m.

n.tzuit.at Sa.nJaso, 10:35 p.m.
WedftfllldiJ'J Gatnea
B..tan otPillll&gt;wlb. 7:35p.m.
Ne.- Jcne.y atBu!aio.7:3.5 p.m.

N.Y. Jtana- ~Ouawa,1:35p.m.

MOICrcal atfbiladolDbia. 7:35p.m.
IWifordot Tomz.oo
Jfoyy,, HS p.m.
St. Lauil "W
1:05 p.m.
N.Y. lalandert at
,1:35 p.m.
Anahoim ot W"liOilpcc. S:3S p.m.

PAT NEWLAND

CHARLIE BISSELL

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State coach John Cooper
guaranteed a victory for the Buckeyes in their bowl game. He made
the pledge two days after a 28-0
loss to Michigan on the last game
or the regular season.
Cooper gave the guarantee
Monday night during the team's
annual appreciation banquet.
"I'm ·~oing to stand right here
and ... bnng on ua.A ... bring on
Tennessee, or Florida, or Alabama
... or any of those West Coast
teams .... Bring !hem on," he said.
"I'm going to guarantee you a victory in !he bowl game."
Turning to the players and assistant coaches on the dais, he told
them to stand and back him. They
did as the crowd of about 1,600
cheered.
"We made that commitment,
and we're going to back: it up,"
Cooper said. "You people deserve
to go out a winner."
Senior co-captain Chico Nelson
said Cooper was "talcing !he bull
by the horns and making a state-

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -'- Never srart), olher !han a very, very isolatmind the losing streak. Pay no ed group of plays, there really
attention to the quil:k fall from ftrst wasn't much positive in that game,
to third place. Coach BiU Belichiclc either. There were some games in
insists he sees real progress in the there where I really didn't lhink we
Cleveland Browns since he cut played very well."
Bernie Kosar.
Since Todd Philcox replaced
"We've definitely improved Kosar, the Browns have lost 22-5
offensively in !he last two weeks,'·' at Seattle and 27-20 at home
Belichick said Monday. "I mean, against Houston. Philcox has
we ran the ball against Seattle as thrown six interceptions and lost
weU as we've run it. We lhrew the two fumbles, and his quarterback
ball yesterday (against Houston).
rating is a minuscule 38.2.
"There were some bad pia ys
Belichick, howev.e r, said he
and a couple of turnovers in there, likes what he's seen of Philcox .so
but as far as being able to get the far. Despite four interceptions Sunball down the field ... I think we've day, Philcox passed for 316 yards.
shown the last two weeks that we
"I thought Todd hung in there,
have the ability to run the ball and threw the ball well. A couple of
to lhrow it"
times he took hits right as he was
The Browns have lost three releasing it, and stepped up and
straight games and five of the last delivered it," Belichick said. "He
seven, dropfing them from sole threw the ball about as well as
possession o fust place to a game we've lhrown it in a couple years.
behind co-leaders Houston and He missed some timing on a couple
Pi~burgh in !he AFC Central.
plays. A couple balls got deOected.
The standings, however, aren't We probably could have had 400
the only gauge of a football team's yards lhrowing if we had done a litprogress, Belichick said
tie bettei on five or six plays."
"Sure, if you just look at the
scores of the games - obviously
Still, some of the Browns are
!he team is here, and it was there, anxious for the return of Vinny
!hat type of thing - I don't know Testaverde, who had his arm out of
if that's a totally accurate presenta- a sling Monday for the first time
tion," Belichick said.
since he separated his right shoulThough he didn't mention Kosar der Oct. 24. Testaverde said he
by ;.arne, Belichick was not very would start a throwing-program
subtle in reiterating that the this week, and he expects to be
Browns are better off without the back in action sometime in Decempopular quarterback who was cut ber.
two weeks ago. Fans angered by
the move chanted "Bill must go"
during Sunday's loss to Houston.
"In the Denver game (Kosar's
last with !he Browns), I'd be hard
pressed to find anything that was
~ood in that 11ame," Belichick said.
'The Miam• game (also a Kosar

.

Clark and Sid Fernandez are on ·
new teams today, agreeing to new ··
contrncts for big bucks.
Clark, who had been with the
Giants since he was drafted from
Mississippi State in 1985, left San
Francisco Monday to sign $30
million, five-year contact with the
Texas Rangers.
Fernandez, who had been with
the Mets since Los Angeles traded
him to New York after. the 1983
season, left New York for a $9 million, three-year deal wilh !he Baltimore Orioles.
" Baltimore was the first ream to
call and Baltimore showed the
most interest," Fernandez said.
" It's a great organization, a great
team and they really wanted me.". .
Clark, who finished a $15 million, four-year deal this season, had
visited the Orioles last weekend, •
but his lawyer and agent, J_eff
Moorad, couldn't work out a deal
despite extensive talks. Clark also •
had an offer from the Colorado ·
Rockies, but his first preference •
was to stay with San Francisco.
When Giants owner Peter
Magowan and general manager
Bob Quinn wouldn't offer a guaranteed deal for more three years
and $15 million, the fust baseman ·
went for the Rangers' offer.
·
. Clark gets a $2 million signing · ·
bonus, $4 million in 1994, $5.75 ·
million in 1995, $6 millicm in each ·
of the 1996 and 1997 seasons, and ·
$6.25 million in 1998.
Clark, who will be 30 next sea•
son, hit .301 with 29 homers and
116 RB!s in 1991, but slumped to
.300 with 16 homers and 73 RB!s
in 1992 and .283 with 14 homers
and 73 RB!s Ibis season.
His signing means fust baseman
Rafael Palmeiro, the olher top free
agent hitter available, probably will '
leave Texas to sign elsewhere.
Fernandez, a 31 -year-old leftbander from .Hawaii, .is known for
his appetite as much as his pitch- .
ing. He has been injured in two of
the past lhree seasons, but is 98-79 · .
wilh a 3.15 ERA over 11 seasons.
He has allowed only 6.64 hits per · ·.:
nine innings, the second-best ratio ·
in major league history among
pitchers who have thrown at least
1,500 innings.
.
·
Fernandez also got offers from
Texas and Cleveland. He said the
Mets never offered a deal that
would have kept him in New York:.
"They kept on jerkin$ us
around,' he said. "They dtdn 't
want to talk."
Fernandez, who made $2.1 million this season, gets a $1 million •
signing bonus, $3 million in 1994,
$2 million in 1995 and $3 million
in 1996, with $250,000 bonuses
each year for pitching 200 and 220
innings. Any bonuses earned are
added to the base salaries for succeeding seasons.
Baltimore has an option for
1997 at $3.5 million, but it goes up
to $4 million if Fernandez pitches
200 innings !he previous year and
$4.5 million if he pitches 220
innings the previous season.

DAIRY QUEEN
MIDDUPORT, OH.

WILL BE CLOSED
THANKSGIVING DAY

NOV. 25 &amp; FRI., NOV. 26.
Our lobbies will be closed
Thursday, November 25
in obsetvance ofThanksgiving Day.

.,

But if you~ an A1M card

with one of these symbols. ..

State·Auto's already
klli premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
·and home with the St;.tle
Auto Companies.
Let us tell you just
· how much your savings
can be.

.

2~4 ..EAST MAIN.
POMEROY
992·6687
'.
.

you have 24-hour aa:ess to your
accounts ev~ ~of the year
at our SuperTeUer madtii!es.
Marleua Dowrllown Offire, Sealnd 8t Puln2m Street;
Fronller Olllre, Fronder SOOpplng Cenler
Kroger Of!lre, WasljngiOn Cenler
Seoond &amp; Scammel Sis. Dr!Ye-up
Athens I No11h Court Street
801 ~Stale Street
Belpre 190Z Washlng10n Boulevard
The Plains 70 N. Plains Rd., Counuy Comers Shopping Pia1ll
Other ob In Lowell, Middleport, Nebomllle, l1ld Reno

..'.
•'

. .. .
~ ~

.
- ..

..

~

-

,_. ...,

...'-.
' j •

by San Francisco (7-3), knocked
the Saints (6-4) out of a ftrSt-place ·
tie in the NFC West and denied
their bid to sweep the two-game
season series for the ftrSt time since
1979. New Orleans won the season's first meeting 16-13 on
Andersen's 49-yard field goah'in
the final seconds.
San Francisco didn't get a
chance to answer_ until Monday

•

night

"II felt good to win," said the
49ers' Jerry Rice, who caught two
of Steve Young's lhree lOIIChdown
passes.
The 49ers obliterated a recent
trend of close finishes with their
biggest win over the Saints since
beating them'40-0 in 1973.
"They manhandled us in ever
phase of the game," said New
Orleans quarterback: Wade Wilson.

Jackson, Lutz•.•--=-eo-nt,--lnu_ecs.,.,,rom-pa---a--e4~~~===-=....:..:.==

YOUNG

Q B Steve Young falls down after a short gam in
Moaday aight's 42-7 romp over the New

Bowden, Osborne still
seeking first national title
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Among active Division 1-A
coaches, only Joe Paterno has won
more games than Bobby Bowden
and Tom Osborne. Unlike Paterno,
though, Bowden and Osborne are
still seeking their first national
championship.
One of !hem oould fmall y finish
No. 1 on New Year's Day.
If top-ranked Florida State and
No. 2 Nebraska win their final re¥ular-season !!ames, Bowden s
Seminoles wtll play Osborne's
Comhuskers for 'the national championship in the Orange Bowl.
But that's a big if. Florida State
(10-1) must beat No. 7 Florida (91) Saturday at Gainesville, where
the Gators have a 23-game winning
streak. And Nebraska (10-0) must
beat its archrival. No. I6 Oklahoma
(8-2), on Friday.
"If we didn't have that one
more ballgame, I guess I'd be
jumping up lind down and holler:
ing," Bowden said
"We've had some stuff bounce
oilr way this season, and we hope ii
keeps bouncing our way," Osborne
said.
'
Bowden has won 237 games
and Osborne has 205 victories, but
neither has a national championship trophy. Osborne just missed

Portsmouth linebacker Brandon
Jackson was tabbed as the top
defender. Sharing the coaching
honors were Brent Saunders of 9-1
Gallipolis Gallia Academy and Jeff
Conroy of 9-1 Washington Court
House Miami Trace.
The hoiiOI\! in Division I went to
Brooks Bonis of Logan on offense,
Bill Burke of Lancas1er on defense
and to Lancaster coach Tom
McCurdy.
EdJtGr'a nota • No lttlllld tam In Dlvldon
I beeiUM only "" ~eboob Ia dldrkt
COUJMBUS, Obio (AP) - The 19!13 Auo·
ci.llcld Pra• Soutbeuccm All-DWbics. high ld!.ool
foo&amp;hell team. u adect.cd by a media panel from
the diruict:

DIVISION I
lilrat Teem
Offenae: Endi----Shlnnon Bmwn , OUJ.liCGthe,

In the only other NHL game
Monday night, it was Buffalo 5,
Ottawa 2.
Ducks 2, Flames 1
The expansion Ducks had
launched the franchise by winning
only two of !heir ftrSt 12 games. In
the last I 0 games, though, Anahei!Jl
is 5-5.
The Flames' winles s streak
increased to three (0-2- 1).
Anatoli Semenov and Alexei
Kasatonov scored for Anaheim :.
German Titov scored for t~ e
Flam
A~heim goaltender Guy Hebert
made 33 saves and the Ducks killed
all four power-play chances by the

~J~bert) played all right, but

he wasn' t sensational," said Calgary coach Dave King . "We just
didn't generate any real offense.
We scored only one goal, meaning
we'd have had to have a shutout to
· "
wm.

Maple Leafs 5, Canucks 2
Felix Potvin made 37 saves as
the Maple Leafs won their fourth
straight road game.
Potvin blanked Vancouver on
15 chances in the second period
when the Canucks kept the Maple
Leafs pinned in their own zone for
long periods.
Glenn Anderson led Toronto
with two goals as the Leafs
improved their record to 16-3-4,
' best overall in the NHL. The Leafs
~omplete their five-game swing
·Wednesday in Calgary.
"I'm just trying to keep the
team in the game,'' said the 22year-old Potvin, a second-round
draft in 1990. "We tried to hold
them at two goals and take care of
things in our end."
Sabres 5, Senators 2
Dale Hawerchuk and Derek
Plante each scored two goals to
lead the Sabres over the Senators. It
was the third straight victory for
Buffalo and fourth straight loss for

Ot~~:·senators

lost for the sixth
ference
champion
in
the
Holiday
straight
time
at
the
Civic Centre,
HOCKEY
Bowl
in
San
Diego
on
Dec.
30
if
scoring
just
once
on
nine powerBUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)- The
strike by NHL referees and lines- Wisconsin beats Michigan State play chances. The Sab1es, mean while, connected on two of three
men went into its ninth day today, and gains a Rose Bowl berlh.
SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) chances with a man advantage.
apparently no closer to being setHawerchuk's goals gave him II
tled following a 2 1{2-hour meeting No. 21 Indiana accepted an invitation to play No. 22 Virginia Tech for the season , while Plante, a
at a Buffalo hotel.
NHL spokesman Arthur Pincus in the Independence Bowl on New rookie, raised his total to nine.
said no new lalks were scheduled. Year's Eve. Both teams are 8-3.
Don Meehan, the negotiator for the
State of Ohio Department of Insurance
offi~:ials, said he will holll a news
conference today at his Toronto
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
office.
The undersigned, SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE OF
On Sunday, the two sides met
THE STATE OF OHIO, hereby certlfln that COASTAL
for more than five hours in HartSTATE LIFE INSURANCE CO. of ATLANTA, State of
ford, Conn., after Meehan. called
the league Friday to return to barGEORGIA, haa compllad with the laws of thla State and
gaining.
applicable to It·and Ia authorized during the current year to
CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago
transact In thla atatelta appropriate bualnna of Insurance.
Blaclchawks defenseman Chris
THIS CERTIFICATE MUST BE PUBLISHED IN A NEWSChelios signed a contract extension
PAPER OF GENERAL CIRCULATION IN MEIGS COUNTY.
that will pay him an additional
$11.2 millton through the 1997-98
Ita Financial condition Ia shown by Ita annual •taternent to
season . Chelios will finish the
have been as follows on December 31,1992:
1993-1994 season under his existing oontract terms.
ADMITTED ASSETS .....................................,.$116,255,563.00
N'EW YORK (AP) - The NHL
LIABILI'TrES
................ .'................................... $100,4118,5118.00
suspended Chicago defenseman
Steve Smidt and Tampa Bay center
SURPLUS ........................................................... $4,828,730.00
Denis Savard indefinitely pending
INCOME oouoououoo·o ooooooooonoooooonooooooooooooooooooooooooooo$88,()()3,200,00
a review of a stick-swinging inci- . EXPENDITURES ............................................. $101,625,280.00
dent Saturday night.
NET ASSETs ........
$8,758,965.00
· TORONTO (AP) - New York
CAPITAL ............................................................. $1,928,235.00
Islanders center Pierre Turgeon,
who had seven goals and three
IN WITtESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto oubassists·in three games last week, is
ocrlbod my n11111 Md couood my H11 to bo
the NHL player of the week:.
anlxod at.Columbuo, Ohio, !hill dlly and dille
FOOTBALL
·
.HAROLD T. DURYEE
·coLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)' DIRECTOR
Big Ten co~champlon Ohio State
Buperlntondont ollnouranca of Ohio
will play the Western Athletic Con-

·'

n.

k
Oft'IMIYt play1r of tiM yar: CUd Dcnrnlna, HUIIboro.
Defeaal ... plaJer or lha Jttrl lnndo11
Jll£boll, PGIUMOUlh.

C01cb111 t# Utt year: Bratt Saunden, Calllpol .. G•llla~ Jttr CGIIrDJ, Wuhlnaton C.H.
MlamfTrsce.

Special MnU.
Nate Morrit and Darrell Lindt, Pon.smcx.nh;
Keith Ford and T. 1. Tumc:r, Hillabam; Jame~ Jacolu and Tcwn Heath, WaahinJUm C.R Miami

Trace; Justitl Y011, Ryan Sceven and Ryan Alloway, Vincent Warren; Mike Daanally and Juaie
Caldwell. ~Iii Gallia Aeadany: Jay WackIer", Jacbon; S~ Campbell. Chelhire Rive.- Valley.
DlVISIONm
F1nt Team
Orrenn: End1- T.J. Hen1on, Proctorvill e
Fairland, 5-10, 147, Sr.; Erie JacUon, Minlcnd, 60, 112, Soph.; Ouny Ward , McArthu r Vinton
County, 5-1 0, ISO, Jr.; Juon Bolin, W1verly, 5-9,

torville Fairland; Ruay Devil, 'Illomvillc Sheridan; NoUn Yatcl, McArthur ViruM County. Tad

Ducks make it three wins straight on road
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
It 's net surprise the Toronto
Maple Leafs have the best road
record in the NHL. But suddenly
the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim have
become road warriors, too.
With a 2-1 victory over Calgary
Monday night, !he surprising
Ducks won their third straight
game, all on the road
"We seem now to have more
composure in our own zone (in
tight situations)," said goaltender
Guy Hebert, who made 33 saves.
"Earlier in the season, we didn't
have that same confidence ... to win
these close games."
The Maple Leafs, on the other
hand, have had that confidence
since the opening of the season when !hey won an NHL record I 0
straight. Their 5-2 victory over
Vanoouver Monday night improved
the Maple Leafs' league-beSt road
record to 9-2-3.

17S, 5&lt;.; Owd B..,.., Oallipolio G1Wa " ' " -Y·
! -10, US , Sr.; Bra4 Buey, Hilltbcwo, S..t, ISO,
Sr.; GcoJf Manhewt, Jtcban, 6-0, 1
Jr.; Auon
Trainw, Wuhinp:ln C.H. Miami T~ 6-1, 165.

in 1983, when Nebraska was No. I West Virginia (10-0) beats Boston s-f-·9,t5s, SaU&lt;r.Tn.UToley,Lan&lt;u..,, S-9.
!SO, s,. Lin&lt;mon-Wollpns Kta~Zeobeo!, Jmn.
tss. s,., 101 h su.uBurril,
.... w•uu:r.
11-6, 200, ''all season until a 31-30 loss to College. Result: Florida State vs. Linemm-Broolu
LoRan. 6-8 , TIS, Sr.;
ton. 6-2, 215, Sr.; Woon t..eq,, ~ ~-­
Miami in !he Orange Bowl. Bow- West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl.
Niok Mill... Muiau, 11-0. t8S: s,., Joo Whi~oy.
land, 6-1 . 220, Sr.; Ben Hi.Ll.. Thomrille Sheridan,
Chillicothe, 6·2, 2.40, Sr. Quuterback- Todd
5·8, 24S, Sr.; John Wcllt , McArthur Vinton Coun·
den's Florida State teams have fin2) Nebraska beats Oklahoma, Votmtino, Oilllicx&gt;lho.ll-1. t80, l•. B•&lt;b-{)J l)', S-10, 150, Jr.; Jevin Richard•. Grcc:rWdd Mcished in the top four the past six Florida State loses to Florida, and Nma, Chillioolhe, S-9, 110. So.; John Coo&amp;ro'e. Cla in, 6· 1, 200 , Sr.; Scou Dillinaer, Alba ny
years, but losses to Miami.probably West Virginia beats Boston Col- Lopn. 5·11 • 170·1&lt;. Ki&lt;lun--Dmdl Shou. M.- Aleundcr, .S-11, 27.S, Sr.; Res. Pylcl, Wboclenricna , 5-10, 170, Sr.; Jordan J•cbon, Logan, 5· 11,
burg. 6-5, 290, Jr. Qu.artabad:-Micbad. Jacboo,
cost !he Seminoles several titles.
lege. Result: Nebraska vs. West t60,s,.
~ Fairb.nd, 6-0, J7S, Sr. Bacb-Jc:rmon
Jackton, lrmtcn , 6-0, 17S, Sr.; Mau Smith, PikoNow both coaches are one victo- Virfinia in the Orange Bowl.
Dtfenu: Linemen--Chria Knight, Muictta,
S-10, Jr.; Andy Deem, Lancallcr, 6 -2, 21 0, Sr.
ton. 5-10, 200. Sr.: Scou Cawu.er. Gra:nfidd. Mcry away from a shot at their first
) Wesl Virginia wins, Florida Linebackers- Billy Burll:e, Lanc.u:ter, 6-0, 210. Oain, S- 11, 17~. Jr.; Monte. Shriner, Thornville
championship,
State and Nebraska lose. Result: s,., M.u F....u,I..nou..,., 6-3, 188, s,., Nw• Sheridm. S-10, 170. Sr.: Justin GaiJ. NcUonvilleMickey, Otillicotbc., 6-1, 212., Sr.; Eric Saull, Ma·
190, Jr.; .Troy Smith, Wclltton, 6-0 ,
"You don't have to say any- West Virginia vs. Notre Dame (I Q- n.u..
s.a. 210. s,., s•.u-a... :zm.m....n. t.o- YoU.,Jr.6-l,
Kic:ker-Chrit Acbunan, l..rml.on. S-10,
thing to the kids,'' Bowden said. 1) in the Fiesta, Florida in th e B"'·'·7,t69,h,;W;na.w... Mm&lt;ua.S-i.I3!; 17S,
195, Jr .
. the
Jamea Lee, ChilliccMe, 6-&lt;l,l4S. Sr. Puzna-~John
Defense: Linc:mcn-T.wn Sam, Sowh Point,
"They know what's at stake."
Sugar Or Texas A&amp;M (9 • I) Ul
Snow,Chillic«he,S·ll ,llS,k
6-~ . 248 , Jr.: JJ. King,~ · 6-0, 175, Jr.: B~d
Nebraska hasn't won a national Couon.
Otren.~l,.. player ~lbe 1ur: BrooU Burri&amp;,
Drown, Grecnfi.dd McO&amp;lll, 6-0, 190, Sr.; Jusun
title since 1971, when the Huskers
Haw~. \;Vheeletsburg, S-1, 140, Sr.; Rich Hale,
4) Florida State, Nebraska and t..oe:~relllhe pbyer or the yur: Bill Burke, Thornville Sheridan, 6-3 , 230, Sr., Scott Braden,
won their second in a row under West Virginia lose. Result: Notre Lu&lt;ut.,.
McA rthur Vin ton CoWil)l , 6-4, 2\S, Sr.; Mitt
Bob Devaney. So Osborne is cau- Dame vs. Florida in the Sugar or
COKhof ..eyur:TomMoCurdy,uncasl·
RodCt, Albany Aleunder, 6-0, 225, Sr.; Scott
Cheatham, WellAan, 6-7, 225, Sr. Ur.eblcken-tious when discussing a possible Texas A&amp;M in the Cotton.
"·
Speolal Menlloo
Paul Culver , Thornville Sheridan, 5·9, taO. Sr.;
championship.
The last two scenarios aren'l
J. R. Tanner and Kevin Mathia , Chillicothe:
Brian Ki.dd, lrornoo Rock Hill, S-9. ZlS. Sr.: Neil
Euna, Ironton, 6-0, 200, Sr.; Juon Sn ider,
" I think our players are mature completely clear because the y ErioO..o,Mm"'ii~~gt;:o'•··~
McA nhu.r Vint on County, 6-4, 223. Sr.: Ben
cqough to understand that right depend on the outcome of the
Fln&lt;Toam
Bllllkcnthip, Whcclcnburg, 6-0, 19S, Sr.; Ch1d
now it's a ranking and it doesn't Southeastern Conference champiorr..,., Ends-CJ. C.ptotn, HiJWoom. 5-1. Inman. Nckonvillc-YOik, 5-10, 160, Sr. Bar.bSophanoro; R;,IUc O.pm.,, """'-oh. 11Anlly Booth, McArthllf Vinton County, 6-0, 170.
mean much until the final one," he onship game (Florida vs. Alabama) 3,140,
230, s,., Tyl" "-· Wuhingtoo c.H. Mi.o.
Sr.; Ryan CNthric, Ironton, 6-0, 110, Sr.; Nonnlll
said.
on Dec. 4 and Thursday's Texas- mi Tra~c. S-10. 165. Sr. Linemen- A. J. Pn tt. Evans, W.1.1hinpon Coun. H ouse, ~ - 10, 165, Sr.;
Portsml'dl, 5-10, 226, Sr.; Jllltin Mesrin, Wul'ling·
Eric Wagn.Cl", Alblny Alexa nder, 5·8, 143, Sr.;
So what happens if Nebraska or Texas A&amp;M game.
10ft C.lt Mi.omi Tnoe,l·ll, 110. s..; Mike Bnd·
Jonathan Eaton, Whee.lerlburt, 6-2, \80, Jr.; Dave
Florida State lose? Here are some
The wild card in the cham pi- """'· Ch"JWO IUva v.uey, 11-2. 2A3, k ; ""' Gant, lronton Rock. Hill, 6-0, I 85, Jr . Puntcrpossible championship games, Onship picture is Auburn (11-0), Toylor, l"koon, S-10. 190, S..; Do"" lohn~on . Jolh Li.a.hllc. Waverly , S-8, l&amp;S. Jr.
6-2, 230, Sr. Qua.rtcrbaclr.-Chi d
Orfe.llve player ol the JUr: Jmnon Jadtbased on rankings in the bowl which completed its season Satur- Port1mouth,
Downing. Hillaboro,ll-0, tas. s,. B•w-BNoe
10111 Ironton.
coalition poll . The bowl poll, d
er Ward, Portsmouth, &amp;-0, 182., Sr.; Heath Hulcllin.th 22 14 ' tO
Def'enalw plaJCr ol the year : AndJ Booth,
ay WI 3
VIC ry OV
son, OdlipoJia Gallia ACidemy, 5-9, 1S0.1t..
Vln'- County.
.
which combines The Assoctated Alabama.
Kahicem Maxwell, The Plauu Athens, S-9, 166,
Coach o( lhe year: Bob Lut1, Ironloa.
Press media rankings and USA
Sptdll Mattlon
The Tigers are barred from post- '~•t•n.., linomm-Oyion Evom, G.ollipoli•
Shane Holton, BobbJ Huahn and Jame1
Today-CNN coaches' survey , season
play because of NCAA pro- G•W. Ac:adany, 6-2. 210, 1•., en;1 s ..... Wuh - Ramey, Waverly. Eric Conwell, Sculh Point; Clilf
determines the major bowl bation, but they could win Lhe AP i.n&amp;ton C.H. Miami Trace , 6-S , 185,
Sr.; Mike
Conley and Brad Monroe, Pik.~:U~ ; Dale Bo-,
1•W&lt;&gt;n. S-1o. m, ''· Linobooi........Sh...
Ed Croaa and Jim Oyer. Greenfield McClain ;
matchups.
.
Champl.onsht'p t'f they' re the only "'"·
Perdue Vincent Wanat, 6-1, 18S, Sr.; Bnndon
Shane ltakccp, Wuhinaton Court House; Mile
1) Florida State beats Florida, undefeated team after the bow Is. hoko..;. Pon.m... th , 6-3, ns. ''·' Mil&lt;• coot.. Ilr.Priat.,
Ty Ma.ri.d. and Joe Cain, ltomon; Mike
Nebraska loses to Oklaboma, and Auburn isn~t eligible in the coach· Cheahire Riv er Valley , 6 -0, 115, Sr. ; Trav is Martin and Mutt Oulleae, lron10n Rock Hill; Eric
Mill.e:z-, Wuhinpon Cll Miami Trace., 6-1, 185,
Conwell and Tun Daaiela, SouU\ ~ md Willie
es' polL
Jr. Bac.ks- Nic..k Toth, The Plllin1 Athens , 6-0.
Mill.l, Bill Cwnint;a and J. D. Dinwiddie, Proc-

u ............................................

'

New Orleans 42-7

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) This lime, the San Francisco 49ers
never gave Morten Andersen a
chance.
They raced 10 a 28-0 lead, ignited by Menon Hanks' 67-yard inlerception return for a touchdown, and
emerged with a 42-7 victory Monday night over the New Orleans
Saints.
The victory, the fourth straight

------Sports briefs

wouid go to the Rose Bowl on New
Year's Day.

menL• •

"I think we needed some of that
tonight because, everybody was
feeling like the sky is falling, and it
really isn't,'' he said.
Which bowl 12th-ranked Ohio
State (9-1-1) wiU go to hasn't been
decided yet.
They are assured at least a share
of the Big Ten Conference title and
can win it outright if Michiga!J
State defeats Wisconsin Dec. 4. in
Tokyo. hi that case, Ohio
- State

JASON SHEETS

Belichick says Browns
are improved team

Cooper promises
bowl victory

Sc&lt;n. e hoard
Nad_.P ., 1 ·-.ul IIIII
AlACJiulo6
"'reid=',_
EASTIRN CONJ'DI:NCE
Alladc- '

JARED RIDENOUR

after an 8-2 season.
In Division V, quarterback
Rusty Richards of Glouster Trimble was picked as the offensive
honoree, while Reedsville Eastem's Pat Newland, who had eight
interceptions as a defensive back,
was the defensive standout Randy
Churilla of Portsmouth Notre
Dame was the coach of the year
after improving three games to 6-4
this season. .
· Hillsboro's Chad Downing was
the offensive player of the year in
Division II after passing for 1,604
yards and 13 touchdowns, while
Continued on page 5

Starks hits seven 3-pointers
as NY Knicks humble Miami

'

a

Jackson, Lutz top Division Ill honorees
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Running back Jerrnon Jackson and
coach Bob Lutz of state poll champion Ironton headline the special
award winners in Division III of
the 1993 Associated Press Southeastern
All-District
team
announced Monday.
Jackson was the offensive player of the year in Division III after
rushing for 1,221 yards and 22
touchdowns on only 126 carries.
Lutz was tabbed as lhc coach of the
year for taking his team to a 10-0
record and the playoffs.
The defensive player of !he year
in !he division was Andy Booth of

. San Francisco mauls

$gfJYJ!!{!f!Oil~ :

Charlie Bissell, junior flanker and
defensive end, and Newland.
Jason Sheets, sophomore halfback/linebacker was named special
mention all-district
Southern did not have a representative on !he Division V squad.
Mei11s was not represented on
the Div1sion II team.

The

Ohio

Tuesday, Novembtr 23,1993

Pomeroy-Middlep-ort, Ohio

It was Buffalo's third straight
win without center Pat LaFomaine,
who is sidelined for the season as
he prepares for reconstructive knee
surgery.
"We need a lot of leaders now
!hat Patty's out," said Hawerchuk,
who was set up on bolh of his goals
by interim Sabres captain Alexander Mogilny. "As a linemate (of
Mogilny), you just have to go to
the holes and he 'II get you the
puck."

144, ~ ; Juon T«*ic, CroobYJ.Ue. S.'i, lla, ~r.

K.aa-Bn.ncioa MM., o..''i=bo z.. Trace,
6-0, 175, Sr.
DdtMr. Li.uen
Ryaa o..b..m, Fnakfon
Adena , 6-7,121, Sr.; Rylll Smilh, Bainbrid.ae
Paint Valley, 6·4, 200, Jr.; C.J. E•cnole, ~
cuville Valley, 5-9, 170, Sr.; Adam Tokie;

CrookiYi ll e, 6-l, 270, Sr.; JeNml White ,
Crvobville. S-1 0. 195, Sr.; Kb tHI , .4 Slewart Frdenl Hock.in&amp;. 6-0, 203, Sr. I . ' etc"
Juan McCloU.ey, Chil1icothc Hlllllia~, S-10,
205, Sr.; Jerry Qaffin, Chillioo&amp;be ~Trace,~
0, 160, S¢; Todd Wa!ker, JW-hridVJ'aitu Vat.
ley , ~ - 10, 175 , Soph.; Orq Gibtoe, l.41ca1¥illc
Valle,, S- 11 , !6S, Sr.: Mike WilliamlcUl ,
Croobvi.lle, S-10, 193, Sr.; Gref, L)IOIIJ. Bdpc.. 510,1 95,Sr. Bu:b-StcVeAlley, O..•po b S-9,
180. Jr.; Chril Brsmmcr, Ce»l GroW o. .. onBf)'&amp;nl, 6-{), 16S , Sr.; Sb&amp;nnon Muon, Q,;m ,e,

s,_,

Finl Team
OfTen.1e: End&amp;--Chtia Craig, G1otuter Trimble:, 6-0, 185, Sr .; J.T. B!Wcwiu, PoiUIIIouth
Notre Dame, 6- 1, 171, Soph . Linemeo-Jolhn
Dupuy , PortJmouth Nolte Dame, 6-1, 20!5 , Jr .;
Jared Ridenour, Reedsville f.ulem. 6-2, 190, Sr.;
Jodlllivis, Porumoulh East. 6-l. 220, Jr. Ql&amp;anabacil - Rulty Richud1, Glow!tu Trimble, 5-1,
1'36. Sr. BacU-Bany McOr.w, Porwm&lt;Uh F.aA,
6-1 , 180, Jr.; Nick Bukicwicz, Pottarnauth Nou-e
Dame, 5- 9 , 176, Sr. Kicker-Andy Sllt1m1n,
Ponsmouth Notre Dame. 6-0, 185, Sr.
Ddenae : Li nemcn- Travia C ampbell ,
GloultCI' Trimble, S-9, 180, Sr.: John Paul Pauer.
!Wfl, Willow Wood Symmca Valley, 6-2, 190, Jr.;
B .J. Can u-ell , Porum outh Etst , 6-3, 275, St .
lincbackcn-Oarlic Bisaell., RICIOdM.lle .Eaacm,
6-3, 170, h .; ChrU Coaan , Fnnk.Jitl Fumace
Green, 6-3, 185, Jr.; Auon Schmidt, Potl.lmou&amp;h
Notre Dame, 5- 10, 187, Sr.; Josh MeQe.lland,
Glollller Trimble, 6-0 , 165, h .; Brian Monroe.
Porumouth Eul, 6--1, 185, Jr. Bacb---Pa.t New land, Rudsville Eutcm, 5·8, 160, Sr.; Nathan
Blizzard, Frmk.lin Furnace Gn~en, 6-1, 170, Jr.;
Chrit Boggs, PortsmoUlh Eul, 6-J, 110, Sopb.
Punter- Adam Collins, Willow Wood Symmca
Valley, S-10, l-40, Sr.
Offerui"e playu or the yur: RusiJ

Rkhard&amp;. Clowter Trimble.
Dtfm.~IYC player ol lht yur: Pat NewlaDd,
Retdlvllle Eulerft.
Coulil of the , .. r: IUdJ Cllarllla,
PorUmcM.IIh Nolrt D011oe.
Special MenUon
Mm Xcl1ey , Portlmouth NOlte Dame; A~n~n
~arrett and Jeremy Caf\'er, Franklin Fu.maee
Green: Muk. Patt on and Jona thon Hooper,
Glouster Tnmblc; Jaaon Sheell, Reoclsvilk Eutem.

Sleinbrink, Ja1cn Gail, Randy Cline and Tony
Bataon, Neltonvillc-Yodl: ; Mall Rou , Alb.lny
Aleundcr; Kevin Coff man, Wc ihton; Mack
Wollenbi.Lker, Whcelenbun.

Sllop
Mi""'e....

DIVISI0!\1 CV
FlntTum
Ortenae : Enda- Man Park, Chillicothe
Unioto, S-9, 150, Jr. ; Tony AdJdns , Lu cnviUe
Valley, 6-2, 200, Sr.; Hcuh DenniJ, Bel pre, 6-1.
205, Sr. Linc:men-Shane McCullouah, Chilli cothe Zane Trace., ~-9, 175, Sr.; JCI'Iathan David,
LucuviUc Valley, 6-1, 185, Sr.; Steve Lc.thcn ,
Oak Hill, 6-3, 22.5, Sr.; Tony Taylor, Cmolr:aville,
6-3, 260 , Jr .; Bob Co1., Belpre, 6-1, 200, Sr.;
Wayne NUll, Coal Gron Dawlon -Bryanl 6-0,
283, Jr.; Matt Jonea, Cheupea.ke, S·8, 190. Sr.
Qu.anaback- Brian Be.ar, Lucuville Valley, 6-&lt;l.
1115, Sr. Bacb- Aaron Hough, Fnnkfort Adem .
6-0, 180, Sr.; Jeremy Tuule.. OtilliCOU.c Un.iota S9, 162, Jr.; Mike Harden, Oak Hill , S-1!, \60 , Sr.;
Dusty Smith, Coal Grove Dswson-Bryant. 5-9,

._.._lldf.o-.

Huntin....,_ l-9, 163,
Tod&lt;l
6-.1, 1/6, Sr. Puntcr- J81GD Sl.laffet, B&amp;Uibridp
PaintVaUey , 5-1 0,160,Jr.
'lJI
Oft'enthe plaJ« ol liM Jar: Brlall lear,
Luunille Valley,
Defual•e plaJen of lllle 1••1': Jere•[
Whitt., Crook..IHt ; J111011 McCI•UJ, CIIUI
cotht HIHIII~
Coac• of lhe JUr: Crala Sprh•a.
CrooUvlk
SpedoiMoolloo
Trenl Thomu, OU. Hill; C1ut Swnd, Lucan illc Valley; Rob Davis, Oilllicadle UaicKo;
Ph illip Bobb, Eric Danicllon add Onlc.i M«&lt;l·
somery , Bainbridae Paiat Vllley; Tany Ml:Dce.td, Oti1W:oohc llwoinplo; En. W"dbum, fnok.
fort AdeM; and Kevin Bute;r, Riehmoad O.le
Soul.he&amp;llem; Jucmy Perry and Eric JobnaM,
CheupeU.e; Juon Fiellk 'llnd Don Honaker, Coal
Grove Da..,....Bryara; NUID Gildas and C1ui1
Lewia. Stcwaa Federal Hoc:kina.
DMSION(i

DapllllmMIII•a
ftanlrsglwiag
Day4-7 P.M.

Located • lba !

THE POMEROY
ISSOCIA,.ION WOULD Llll tO
IDITE IVERYOIE ,.:
"Christmas Along The River"
1993

CBRIS,.MAS OPEN
S

DAY,N

28th

12:011-5:00 P.M.
Mlft WI I&amp; 111,.1 Arrll I BE PARDI II

!BIMIII PARI II COli! I 181ft

LOOK NR II·SftRE SPECIALS II
WEDNESDAY'S EDiftll
Christmas Parade 2:00p.m.
· Free Parking
Refreshments

�·,

.

By The Bend

Jingle Bells garden show held

•

t
I
'
:
:
:

•'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Berried branches and colorful
baubles, glittered pinecones and
pretty ribbons, silver bells and
beautiful flowers in containers and
on wreaths, decorating Chrisunas
packages and adorning tree ornaments turned the auditorium of
Carleoon School at Syracuse into a
holiday showplace over the weekend.
Ch .
It was the annual
nstmas
flower show of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association.
Betty ~ was chainnan of the
outstanding display .which ~led
more than 63 Metgs Counllans
making more than 150 exhibits in
the show.
"Jingle Bells" was the !heme of
the show which featured not only
artistic design in arrangemen~. but
wreaths and swags, spectmen
plants and e.vergreens, as w~ll as
dried matenals, and educauonal
displays.
"
.
. . .
The best of show m arus11c
arrangements went to Beny Dean, a
member of Chester Garden Club
and Shade River Council. Her
modem design featured contrived
flowers of dried magnolia leaves.
They were fashi~ed into poi~ettia
design and combmed wtth twtsted
cane, all enhanced wilh gliDer and
artificial snow.
The top award for artistic design
in the junior division went to Lisa
Stethem . She won best of show
with an attractive red and white
carnation arrangement including
pine and holly and accessorized
with a gold musical staff. She Competed for that award with 16 other
juniors who had entered the s~ow,
including Ben Crane wbo recetved
the reserve best of show ribbon.
Lisa also took the junior horticulture award.
Reserve best of show in the
senior division went to Brenda
Bolin of lhe Friends and Flowers
Garden Club of Rutland. Her
arrangement of protea, eucalyptus,
and holly was in a wood container
with the silhouette of a modern
madonna.
The creativity award went to
Shirley Miller, Allegra Will won
the best of show in horticulture
with a house plant. and Jean Moore
took the horticulture sweepstakes
award.
Ribbons were awarded in four
places, listed fust through fourth
re~tively, as follows:
'Dashing Through the Snow",
modem design featuring white:
Betty Dean, Betty Milhoan,
Dorothy Karr and Shella Taylor.
"In a One Horse Sleiglt", sled as
an accessory or conrainer: Melanie
Stethem, Mildred Jeffers, Ben
Crane, and Iva Powell
"Over the Fields We Go",
including wood: Marjorie Davis,
Alice Thompson, Peggy Crane, and
Addalou Lewis.
"Laughing All. the Wa_y ",
designer's humorous mterpretabon:
Shirley Miller, Betty Dean,

The Daily S~ntin
Tueaday, November 23, 1993 '
, .
Page-4

-Community calep.darCommunity Calendar Items
appear two days before 1111 event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advaoce to
assure publlc•don Ia tbe eaten·
dar.
TUESDAY

light communion service at 7 p.m.
The public is invited.

' 74e4~
.

•
'

''.

.•

• Ad. eutlide tbt couatr your ad I'UIUI aUld h prepUd
• .R.o.IM~ dilao-t for_. pUd la ad.YaDU.
• F.... Adl1 CiYMwa)' ud Fow.lad.llallw 15 warda will he

•

...

...

...

...

...

n..

Rutland Furniture

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

~

RACINE - Racine Area Com.
Grate
munity Organization will meet at
of
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
In 185 1, Hennon Melville's "Moby
btlalll
members are welcome.
Dick" and Nathaniel Hawthorne's
POMEROY _ The Meigs Minis~ / '.The Ho~se of the Seven Gables"
F1nltere
terial Association presents its annu~ w.ere published.
. a! Thanksgiving Service at 7:39r
..---Pu--bl-lc_N_ot
__
Jce
____
aomtont wh worki
p.m. at SL Paul Lutheran Church.
government,
•ut dona'l
The lheme for this year is, •"From
PUBUCNOllCE
to
take
a
clvllllnlct
tum . .
Whom All B lcssings Flow."
LEGAL
,.&lt;&gt;nFlCATION
Preacher will be Rev. Kenneth
Nome ond oddreoo of
Molter, pastor of Racine Wesleyan
appllconl, Konnoth F. Molz,
and East Letart United Methodist
214 Weot Main Stroot,
llooroatown, NJ 08057
Churches. The community is invitLocotlon of propoold oalt
ed to auend. For more information .
Wiler
Injection well-Bedford
lal genius: somtona who
call Rev. Dawn Spalding at 992Townohlp,
Section 23.
money Iuter thin tht
2010.
Geologlo name ond depth of
lla1nllv can apand II.
lnfecllon zono·Socond
a...... op_prox 1150 .....
WEDNESDAY
HORTICULTURE
• Jean Moore, right, took
Moxlmum lnjeellon pre..ure
un tha alrllnn bt losing
tbe sweepstakes award for her borticulture exhibits. Here sbe Is
• 400 lbo. Propooocl IVeflgl
tmonay7
Do lhty put It In wllh tht
MIDDLEPORT
The
Freedom
presented 8 ribbon by Dottie Bates, past president or tbe Obio
d11ly lnfecllon volume •
Road
Resource
Center
will
hold
a
Association or Garden Clubs ud an accredited judge, wbo judged
under 200 bbl. Further
ThankSgiving Dinner from S to 7
lnlormotlon moy be
tbe holiday show beld at Carleton School, Syracuse, over tbe weekwho art walling lor
p.m. at lhe Old Legion Building.
end.
·
obt•Inod by contoctlng the
l•oi~tllllng
turn up ought to
following: oppllconl
Seating is limited to 100 and reser·
(608)235-3387, or Ohio
lhlrtslHYII
..
vations
can
be
made
by
calling
Addalou Lewis, and Maida Mom.
Dop)rtment of Naturol
packages displaye&lt;l in a sleigh were Kerry Wright at 992-6822. Dona"Bells on Bobtails Ring", a Clarice Krautter, Lilly Kennedy,
Reaourcea,
Fountain
Square, Columbuo Ohio
vibratile using bells: Betty Dean, Addalou Lewis and AlleJFB Will, tions for the dinner are accepted
Don't wofl .. como Itt ond '" uatoday
but not required. The public is
43224, (814) 285-6925.
Kimberly Willford, Alice Thomp- in ·one category, and Carrie Elber- invited.
ol Aulland Furnhurt Co., Rulland, ·
Any peraon deolrlng to
son, and Addalou Lewis.
feld, Melanie Stethem, -Edna
Ohio 742·2211 or t-IOO·U1·1217.
comment or to make an
"Making Spirits Bright", two Wood, and Jackie Frost in apecond
Shop
h111for .., bttt otltcllon and
obJection
.
w
ith
roloronco
to
POMEROY - Free Clothing
categories, first, using a traditional division.
.,
an
lppllcallon
to
convert
or
beat
plica
on quollly, brand n- fut·
Day will be held at The Salvation
Madonna or Holy F8111ily, with the
to operate a aalt water
nlluro
ond oppllancea.
Army from 10 a.m. to noon. All
InJection
well
proJect
ohall
winners being Gladys Cumings,
•••
One of the requirements tO enter area residents in need of clothing
file auch commenla or
Pauline Atkins, Ben Crane, and the ornament and the package are
welcome.
obJocllono with tHo
Sll., n. led
Evelyn Hollon; and the second cat· classes was that each exhibit had to
UNDERGROUND
c
.....
..,,.., • .,df
egory, using a modern Madonna or contain some pllmt material . .·
INJECTION CONTROL
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Holy Family, with the ribbons winIn the horticulture division blue
SECTION, DIVISION OF OIL
ners being Melanie Stethem, Alice ribbons went to Betty Dean, for Plains VFW Post 9053 wiU have a
AND GAS, FOUNTAIN
7 SHOWROOMS II WAREHOUSES
,. SQUARE, COLUMBUS, Ohio
Thompson, Peggy Cntne, and !Car- magnolia exhibit; Juanita Will for meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
All
members
are
urged
to
43224.
Such
commonlo
or
lita Stump and Betty Milhoan, pine, and Addalou for taxus in the
anend.
obfectlono ohatl bo llled
tying for fourth.
evergreen category; to Dorothy
with
the dlvlolon no later
In the jurtior artistic division, the Woodard for holly, and Alle~ra
Rt. 124, l•ll.ti, Olt. · 742-2211
lhan 15 calendor doyo from
LONG
BOTTOM
Faith
Full
winners were:
Will for pyracanthy in berned Gospel Church will have a candlethe dale of thlo publication.
"Oh What Fun it is to Ride", branches; and to Thelma Dalton for
(11) 23; 1TC
showing motion: Ben Crane, Lisa African violets; Jean Moore for
Stethem, and Susie Francis with a blooming foliage plants and also
tie for fourth between Derek Bolin for .cactus or succulents.
'
and Becky Taylor.
"And Sing a Sleighing Song
In the junior horticulture diviTonight", an interpretive design, sion, Lisa Stethem captured blue
Lisa Stethem,Joshua Bolin, Adrian ribbons in both the berried branch
Bolin, and Brook Bolin.
class and the dried and treated
In the wreaths and swags classes material class.
.
the winners in the class "Jin!lle
A feature of the show was a speBells, Jingle Bells" for an outstde cial educational exhibit by the
design were Peggy Cmne, Shelia Shade Valley Council of.Floral
Taylor, Heidi Elberfeld, and Edith Arts on luminaria. Members of that
Hubbard; and inside, Bobbie Karr, club had on display numerous
Juanita Will, Jean Moore, and handmade luminaries lighted with
Gladys Cumings and Jean Moore, Cbrisunas tree lights.
,.
tying for fourth.
For Christmas ornaments created by the exhibitors and displayed
A bear cub at birth is smaller in
on a tree,the ribbon winners were proportion to the size of its mother
Shane Milhoan , Peggy Moore, than the young of any other nonmarGladys Cunnings, and Juanita Will, supial mammaL When born, a cub is
'
first through fourth. Junior 8 or 9 inches long lind weighs only
exhibitors winning ribbons for about 12-15 ounces; its mother can .
ornaments they created were Josh weigh 500 pounds or more, so the cub
Bolin, Derek Bolin, Adrianne is less than !/SOOth as heayy. In con·
...---::::
-Bolin, and Brook Bolin.
trast, a human baby is usually about
Winning ribbons for wrapped l/20th the mother's weight.
.·~Friday,

Slluotod In the T-ltlp
of Sallobury, County ol
Malga, Slota of Ohio and
deacrlbod •• lolowo, 10 wh:
Boglnnlng South 27" Weo.l
8 Rode and 21 llnko lrom
Ill• Northeut corner ollhe
Lowronca Reuter 154 acre
lot In the North port of
-'ion 2t lawn 2, In Rlnfll
13, In Sadebury Townehlp,
and at o otoke In he cenllr
of tho Boll Run Road;
Then01 North 74• Wool 12
rodo; th.,ce South 11• E11t
7 rodo to the ploce or
beginning, oontolnlng 84
oquarerodo.
Aloo known 11: Route 2,

MoN. thru Far. 8.ur.-SP.M. • SAT.8-12

\

By
Dave

Public Notice

Call992-2156

'

•
'•

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of AA and AI-Anon will
meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Hearl
Catholic Church. For more information eaii992-S763.

To place an ad

•
'•

! :..__"'-::;n~3-:do:.:.Y'~•~tno~..;;.;•.;:'P:.;;•_
•

Public Notice

: --------~~~--

Public Notice

: ROGER W. GORANSON,
; ATIORNEY
•·, TO THE DEFENDANT1l,
; ;DAVID A. .FERRY, JANE DQE
' (ACTUAL
N A·M E
' UNKNOWN), PRESENT
•. SPOUSE OF DAVID A.
~ FERRY,
AND
THE
' UNKNOWN CREDITORS,
~ SPOUSES, EXECUTORS,
' EXECUTRICES, ·
,
: ~DIIINISTRATORS, HEIRS
• AT LAW, NEXT OF KIN,
: DEVISEES, LEGATEE~, OR
' ASSIGNS AND THEIR
: CREDITORS, EXECUTORS,
- EXECUTRICES,
l ADMINISTRATORS, HEIRS
$AT LAW., NEXT OF KIN,
, j.EGATE~S, DEVISEES
• AND/OR ASSIGNS, IF ANY,
: OF DAVID A. FERRY,
• WHOSE' LAST KNOWN
: PLACE OF RESIDENCE
~ AND
POST OFFICE
\ ADDRESS WAS 32878
i ROSE HILL ROAD,
1 POMEROY, OHIO, 45711!!
! BUT WHOSE PRESENT
., RESIDENCES
ARE
; UNKNOWN AND CANNOT
, WITH
REASONABLE
; DILIGENCE
BE
, ASCERTAINED:
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
COMMON PLEAS COURT
COURT HoUSE
POMEROY, OHIO
THE CENTRAL TRUST
•
COMPANY, N.A.,
PLAINTIFF,
:
• DAVID A. FERRY, ET AL, .
i Cauoe No. t3-CV·224
• NOTICE BY PUBUCATION
:
DEFENDANTS.
• Plaintiff h11 broughl thle
' octlon naming you aa
I delendanto In lh• abov.·
! nomad Court by filing lie
l Complaint on lhe 3rd doy of
;.:!eptember, 111t3. The objeCt
ol the Complolnl Ia to

Run Road, Pomeroy,

Ohio
Prior
45769. lnllrument

::s::r~~ca:

under

282

Current Own.tr'• N1mea:

Gory L. Soholdorer and
Connie K. ScholdProperty Addr•••: Route

2, Ball Run Roed, Pomeroy,
Ohio 4575i
Approlaod at: $8,000.00
Torma oloale: 100% down.
on doy of oole, caoh 01
cerUftod chock.
Jomee M. Souloby
ShtliH oiMelgo County
Cohen, Grogg I LouriiO
Jaffrey V. LouriiO
Allornay lor PlolntiH
P.O. Box 1288 Mid Chy
Slltlon
Dayton, Ohio 45402
513-223-4332

Supreme Cl. 1100141152
(11) 16, 23, 30; 3TC

'

011367.0117

GENERA.L'
HAULING
Ll mestone
Dirt
Gravel
992• 7878

PUBLIC NOTICE
The VIllage of Pomeroy
deolrea to receive oeoled
bldo 11 the Clerk'e office,
32D

Ea•l

Main

Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio lor the
following vehlciH:
1982 GMC panel true~

-. 1 ,1 ~===:::::;~~

31904 i.e•tli•t
C--k
,.._.
,..,.. 1.,...
llltltlleport,
• • 0•1o

614 992 7144

4/29/93 tfa

MODIS
CO-UIICATtOIS
S1Mt2-e168
A•l:l ttlal I
Comm...,..
ktotoll8tloneoiUnM
J-.:b • Phon• it FAX

a

Olf·PremleM Ext. • Dill

FREE EITIMATEI

Jell Morrie - 15 Yr. Exp.
Trf.County Aru

, morlgage ogolnot the
~!:~~:lng deecrlbed re11
~ ; Tho following deocrlbod
.; ·teel 111111 •ltuate In th•

'£.Eount~ of Melga, State of
r Dhlo and Townehl~ of

Scotch, White &amp;
Auolrlan Pineo, 5' to 8'.
Hll'ley Haning realdance, 351175 Flotwooclo
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio

OH .

742·2979

liNGO

•DOZERS

EvERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45 p.m.
Special Elllly Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good lo1 1
FREEcan:l.
Lie. No. 0051-342

•BACKHOE

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.l. IOSTOII
EICIYAniiG ·
(614)
667·6621
4-19-83-lln

Parts • Service • Bags • Belts
Rainbows, Kirby, Eleclrolux,
Hoover, Eureka, Tri-Stat,
Regina, &amp; most other brands!

ROOFING

Parte Shipped UPS
Fut • Dependable S.rvlcel

NEW-REPAIR

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs
273-4098

FREE ESTIMATES

'949-2168 .
3-16-13-Hn

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ICCIDENI INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

and bounded and
eo lollowo:
•· PARCEL 1: Dna hall octa
~I Iond In the Vll'-!e
Entarprloe, H
a lot
'
tho land·
lha

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Wholesale
&amp; Retail
·
up Relollat
Bob Snowdon'a Jolin
Rudond, Oh.

lox 119
Middleport, o•IO 45760
(614) 143·5264 5114183111n

Whol..... 110 .. fllrm.
$12 dellvarod. RIOIIIIlol

wiH be open II Lm. to I
p.m. etorllng Nov. 24th.
T.... aro5'101'.
Calli14-7U-3061

IRI·STAIE 1·9
. ACADEMY

Plumbing

hlnlng
(FREE ESTIMATEJ)

V.C. YOUNG Ill .

992-6.215
Pomeroy, Ohio

ltllnlap we'n 1b1r111 lllfa"p... year. For •II ••••• ·
aylag ..lbaalcs" to,_, • .m ay frlllulli, Old Ud •ew, ·
wboseldad app• we'D .awaystr....,.. Domg
~n~~~a..· w~~•,.. 1s ............ , •

..1H2~1n

•

....,.r

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

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

EVERY
In loving

L&amp;LniE lAIN
33151PIItlmtl. .

memory

of
ARTHUR I.
JOHNSON
who p•Med IIW8Y

'

Nov.

...... 45771

614...2·5344

23, 1991.
8l8y off~ road In

trw ...,,..

; Th.. f1C) one OM ....,
DNIIIIila heartaohe
I ·T~..t nolhlng Clll heal.
o.p In our
You wlllolwap 8lly
Loved and

,.rte .

-m-

bered_,~

'

SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
FIICiory Choke
12GaugeShol
S1rlctly Enforced

EICIVITIIIG
BULlDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING! l-lmee1one,
Dh1, Gravel and Cool
Ucenold and S o -

8he'a 811ltMn now
lnd lltlt(CIII't lib
hiM' out to ...

Happy ·
,Birllul4y!
Lo"e you Chanda.
Mom

Rllolne', Mother
blondlhM driver'• '•
tlcen... Hope ....
, drivel ben'!' than
(Cr•h Mulford).

Happy Birthday
Coril~e~ &amp;
Clumdtlt
Mom&amp;Did

e

•Dozer •Backhoe
-o~cher oOump Truck

304-415·7256

CALL AFTER 6:00
11112113 1 110.

Land Cleorlng, Pondo,

W111er Llneo, Septlee
Lleenoe &amp; Bonded
Charlie Hlllfleld,
Operll1or
742-2903

McLendon
MORTGAGE COMPANY

1111tv1 mo.

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED
Shoulder Mount... ... '155
Hom Mount............... '22
Sqtinel ...................... '55

Financing Available

1-800..553-3586

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS

446·9515

675-6755

CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CUIIIIIII
~--:---1:...;·1::-:0:.=:o-....,300.9515
We give 011rpeland
upholetery the
"SPECIAL CARE"

IT THE
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP.
lllddbpart. Ohio
GREAT IELECTION AND
VAIETY OF QIMUTY
IETAL TOft.

I8NH4 1:»411on..:frl.
7G4020 Aller 1:00
PMol Traclola Anla•I•

.

. ..,

'
•

NOVEMBER SPECIAl,

J.I.R.
COIISTRUCTIOII

rufanw

'~

Phone 992·5114

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n •••••••••••• s110
NORINCO UN I. SKS ........................ SC) S
1200 ROUNDS NON·CORROSIVE..s130

tim. DK's

,. . . .
·-··100

Is now accepting all ferroua matal•
Including: tin, cast Iron , long and ahort Iron.
Must be small •nough to be tllOv.d by hllnd.
Short Iron (lass than 3ft.) 1.75 per hundNd
Motor Cast ..... 2.00 per hundNd
Cl•an, dry alum. cans .23 pound
Pric•a subjec:t to chllnge without notice
Located at the corner of S.R. 143 and 7

(BEAT THE BAN)

12-5-tln

1111011 mo. pd.

·Come by 111d rtglater
for frH lldery to be
~n away o-nber
2&lt;4, 1m. No purdlue
requnct to regleter ·1nd
don' h - be preeill'lt
IO win.

TRI·COUftTY RECYQING

PH. 614·992·5591

,..,..714-niE

M-rt..are

'

'

I U'II'IU '

Homegrown-carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Wh~e Pine 4' &amp; Up wilh
a great telection of
lar90r trees.
Call 7 42-2143 or

992·3470

~lfeocrlbod

DC-.....11 wamlb Ud lelNI clae•al WI ........ .

SENTINEL:

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
,'; ~92·7878

WEIER'S
. CHRISTMAS
TREES

FILL DIRT

~ Sallel)ury,

Wllb wrealb Of boDy ud milllllae, llocldad:::::'·
1M lire ad sc•• M•••lllll wllllliaaw,

~ DAILY

&amp;

1111111 MO. pd.

-Roofing

·THE

12-3042-lln

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

3 dllltrllll klnda:

,tn\orioi&amp;Extarlor

'

P01111roy, Oltlo

Clerk/Trea•urer

.£lectrlcol.ond

' . 992-2156

36970 Ball RUII Road

Gutt•rs
Down.poub
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

.floorn Addlilona
.OutWWork

ASK FOR ~Dave or Bob

HAULING
SERVIa

Open 9to6

TUPPERS PLAINS
Bulc obedience,
l8w enlorcemen1,
per.on•I prollc11on,
kennel Mrvlce, pupa &amp;
young clogo for ule.
Byappl only
614-667-PETS

ADVERTISING
.
'

114-tiS·Itll

Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
(11) 18, 23; 2TC

USED RAILAOAO TlES

7f71

JOHN TEAFORD

· HawriL Wrltesel

Kathy Hyoell,

ofiREWOOD
BILL SuCK
992·22"'

PllqllH

Kaylyollm

YOUNG'S

on

au11o,

RISIDEiiTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

'll'opltlao

1.\VZ.MONU

CARPENTER SERVICE

2.3 Lhre OHC engine, 18" aluminum wlteels, auto tran, epollef. tm, cruise, air cond,
rear defroster, stereo caNetle, ant~lock brakes
·
•t\IJ Rebalee To Dealers

Ropolr,
uoocl Golf

~

1C12111 mo.

I

THE COUNTY QUI

CHRISTMAS
TREES
$10.00 each

Bldo may be eubmltted
until 12:00 p.m. Eot on
December 8, 1993. Tho
Yllloge rooerveo 1h1 right to
reJect any or oil·bide.

1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 4 Dr. SE

1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM 2 Dr. SE

1-100-141o0070
tliWII, 01110

~

•-. •.

,UGHT HAUUNG

I W2111 mo. pd.

er TOll Fill

s·
r

.,o...,

LoC81ed on VIne SL In

aft•r 6 p.m.

1952. American La France
ladder fire truck
·

a•een.aer-u

3.1 SFI V6 engine, cruise, 4 speed automalic lrans, spoil mirrors, 16" aluminum wheels.
AmoFm Cassette, dual air bags, deck lid release.
• All Rebates To Dealer

SpaclaHzlnglneu.tom
Fraa-air
,_ ,..,..

·H2-SS5J

DAVIDSON'S
P. L.u hiQ'
• ..~::.~ ;

11111UMYII.

tt2;7011w

Christmas
Creetine
- Edition

''
•'

WIWIY'IIU10
1'1111

t:~;;;:;:;:;::;:~
7nt1 ..

&amp;

lOME
FOI SALE
R•clne. Ample tot,
fenced y•rd, walking
dl&amp;tance 1o aehool or
church _ Ideal for
young f•mlly.
Call 84~2244

-II&amp;UIU&amp;
&amp; . . . Nlllfll '
. . .LI

SYRACUSE, 0H.

';~Jorecloee the equity of
:..~edempllon

Volume

Now hu beaulHut Cocker 5panlel Pupplee. Also
llllurtng a 2 II. common Black Tequ. Loyaway1 are
now avallable lor
Sale on our entire etock
ollarge equarlun..
now Itema.

WV013372
We opecletlJIO In:
ARE &amp; WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORAliONINSURANCE CI..WS
2&lt;4Hour
Emergency Service

Gal)l Bany, Ownor!Tlm Fauik, Mlnlglr

Certified tachnlctant on
Satlalacllon

-'

job.

�'
Pllgl 8 The

Sentinel

\

Ohio

TUnday, November 23, 1993 ·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrtpt'

44

'

The Dally Sentinel--Page a

ALLEYOOP

' 71 Auloa for Sale

NEA Croaawol'd .-P ·u zzle

B.IDGE

forR•nt

ACROSS

EAST
.Q87

1 Unit of Nght
• Sand hill
I Palra
12 ObMrve .
13 Southweal·
11'11.1ft41ane
1. " " - rapt,
15 RR dopol
16 Motlon
picture
17 German river
18 Small baked
dllh
20 Very old
21 Summer (Fr.)
22 Young dog
23 Oacelve
28 lftdlan rainy

t A KJ 10

30 Uncle

• K872

31
33
34
35

PHILLIP
ALDER

NORTH

U-U·II

•u•

.K 10 7&amp;
tQU

EEKANDMEEK

.QJIO

lAW.. HE'S

R~IGUill .:.

WHY?

•sz

AVON I All Arooa I Shirley
Speal'l, 304-G75-1429.

HOLIDAY • c - Your
Houra, Income And
R-ardo. Av~ngo ii- 814
Nauriy Sa&amp; at Worll Or
Homo. No
A /DOOR. t-80().

AVON

Own

llnowlnglr """""'
advl--.rotoroul-~~ln-alh

.:::=~.:!"::!,
.,. l'fd

And Reference•

A~qulred,

hie on II'IIQUII

BARNEY .·

oppori1lnlly-

llollyolttor Noodod In My Homo
M-F Na~hup Aru, E1partonce

Mimeograph machine to give

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

llw. 0... . . - , . . . hlooby

1'12-4738.

IWay, 614-94i-2241. Can be SHn
If Meigs Co. Museum.

tao
.At

LUKEY I! l HEAR
YORE CARD GAME

614-

Don~ Junk HI Sol! Uo Your Nan- 441-8924 4-7 P.M.
Work!ng
Major ,Appllancea, Babramer Neldld Ml1ure, Non.
Color
TV'I
Rofrlg~r~toro, Smoktr In My Home For 1 Child,
FrNar., vcR·a, Microwave•. Call After 6 P.M. 614-446-4818.
Air Conditioner.. Washtln,
Very h•tthy 3 112mo. old klnen
Exp. Cholr1ldo Dontol .....~.
Drt~n. Copy Mo&lt;hlnn, Etc.
needs to lind good home, litter 114-25&amp;-1231.
nHCIId for growing, quell1ytr1lnod. 304-a82·2008.
conack&gt;us dlnlll priiCiicti. Serid
J a D'1 Auto Partl and S.lvage, raau1111: 2924 Jackson Av•, Pt.

6

alao -buwtna Junk car1 &amp; truch.

Lost &amp; Found

Pleaunt, WV 25550, Alln:

304-773'5343.
Lost: 2 Coon Oogo, t Block I
Tan ; 1 Rtdbont, VIcinity: Junk Autoo, App I Junk Motol
Of Any Kind, 814-446-1'182.
Friendly Rldgo, 614·256-8129.

Ckv-

2 Family Moving Solo: 28th,
271h, tBf Hlldo Drivo, Galllpotla,

Tr~lnlng

INm.

24th. Mall application• or coma In person to
Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport, ·
Ohio.
Satn raprauntatlvoo naadod,
lulllpo~·tlmo,
no uporlanco
,_..ry, will tr1ln, oamlng
potontlal 12-t!5/hr. ptua now tupperwart. 304-4575-6415.
Stralghl truck dr1¥1.w wantod.
claa "'D" lleenat, claan phyal·
cal, Clean driving record. 31)4...

Fettlva, 41p., 1.3 lhtr, nMded
ASAP, caii814-!1112.:Zt55, 8:30am-

ALL Yard Slloo MU01 Ba Paid In
Adva .... DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly beforw the ad Is to run.
Sunday edillon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondoy odhlan - 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

1:00pm. or 114-182-2428 after
8:00pm.

Employment Services

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

11

Help Wanted

AVON! All IfNI. NHd extra
monl)' or want 1 career, efthlr
way-ca 11 Ma n. 304-882 -2645
or 1-800.892-63 .
·

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Package

Good

Available..

14x70, 2bdrm., ~ tub. _,..
arate Iorge kitchen, an
applllncee. a~r candllontr, urto
d~nnlng,

110,000, 114-812-

cZD=:-;:8:.,.,.-,::--:,.----:=----;:-,,::--:-

:fbne c-

1111 11o1111o Harne Dual!
!.at 3, '12X80tf
Dlrwcl
Or Cclloct I
4 ~I8erlcnno

lnqulrlaa only.
t98l PineR...._, 3 bod- 2
....,...
. ·-···-.
bath1 utl!fly room,
ooo, 614QQ2..041.or 814-IMI2 49.

w

S1artlng

Ability; Commentur1t1
Aloo Holplul Wltfl
And
Sllary
Prot.alonal Aatr.Mr Training
In A Pluoant WorklllO Envlrm•n.t. Appl~t~mont
The Of
Humoil
R....,.ao
Ohio
Valley Bank. 20 Third A¥1nua
Gallipolis,. Ohio 4883t Equal
Oppo~unny Employer.
Wa~ld- •om•an.
A to brush•
a amal lot 1n 00 1no, 6t~~
2940 aft• 8:30pm.
WANTED: Ful~Time Ll¥t·ln lnotructor Naadod To Toach
Community And P-nat Skllio
To One AduH With Dovetapmontal Oloabllltloo In Molgo CGunty.
HOURS: Monday Evonlng Thru
Saturday Morning; S!Nj&gt;-Ovor
Roqut..~; . Dlytlma Hou,. 011.
lntormal Sottlng. Yariouo Skills
And Talonto Noodod. Hl[!h
Sc- OlgrM, Valid Orlvor o·
Llconoo, Goad Driving Rocord,
Thnoa YNro Llconooa Orttlng
Eopa-. And ~uata
Automobll• Nurance COvwag~~
Roqul.wd. Salary: $5.00 IHr, To
Start; E1collont Banet• Packago. H lntaroWd Canlact
C.CIIIo At t-IOCI-G31·2302 No
Lalor Than t1/3._,, Equal Opportunity Employer.
.
WANTED: Full-lima llvo~n In•
ltruetor nMdad to tMch community ond ......,.., okllo to,
ono aduH wnh -pmonlal
d!Nbllltloo In lhlgo Caunjy,
HOURI: Monday onnlng thru
Saturday morning• aloop ovor
,.qulrod; daytime f.iU,. ott. Informal oatUng. Yorlauo oklllo
and talonta .-d. High ochool
dagnoa, valid dmor"o u..-.
aoOd driving nrcanl, thnoa'Y11f8
nconncl driving ••poria....
and ·odoquato outomobllo lnaurarc~
coverag~
,... ......
Salary: $5.00/hr. to ollrij ~­
lont benotR packogo. It .,._
tod, contiiCI C.Ciilli. t.-&amp;312302 no taler than 11130113. E·
quol Opportunhy Ema&gt;lo¥••·

::Z

COMMEitCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)
21121921tfn

JAMES AI·'IM SEBVICE
Our Business is Security
Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV

Security Cameras

New Haven W. V. 25265
Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

(304) 882-3336

~

18

FURNACES
lnetallecl complete wl1h
fln.onclng ..lllobla.

11- lJ

Aoomt for rent • wak or month.
Stoning at $120/ma. Gallla Hatol.
8t4-446'9880.
Stooping roomo wnh cooking.
Aloa tr1llor opaco. All haak-upa.
Call aftar 2:00 p.m., 304·Tn-

' l-OtS &amp;

46 Space for Rent

~----== ~

-=

- - -_- --

FRANK AND ERNEST
EICNif 1$ A

(p~:b

"''
N

T~E IIVf:j')PMAT'Ul"'

Merchandtse

~rGttr.vAY.

'

51

"It's a poor sort of memory that
only works backwards," the Queen
remarked.
U backward memory. came from
44- Sl.
knowing the future, it.would be a help.ll...-i~+-4Llurent
Pickiog lottery numbers and horse45 Blackbird
46 Ruulan rt•er
race winners would prove lucrative.
47 Knob In
,\1 the bridge table, usually one needs 11..-1-+-4colton fiber
to think forward, but occasionally
48 Cut
backward is the order of the deal - as
4V Non-profll
in today's.
org.
After South's one-heart overcall,
51 Dontlat'o
dog.
North might have bid three no-trump
CELEBRITY CIPHER
- an easy contract here - or taken
Celeorlry Clclt* cryp10gr.-n1 .,. crwtlld from QUOiatlonl by t.rnou. people, Pill .nO ~things more slowly by starting with a
e.cn liner 1n rt1t CIPJ*' ltlndl toJ enmner. TodaY'• CAM.· S «!WWI x. ·
two-diamond cue-bid.
West led his lowest diamond. East
'PYX D
Gt
DIZ:XC
I I
HJIIGOE
won the first three tricks before
switching to a low club. Declarer fiKVMEX
COVKX,
XIHKICGRX
nessed, drew trumps and cashed the
club ace, but the king didn't drop. Now
UGKZ:,
VDIGIO
B 0
FIVO
PBB
South had to avoid losing a spade trick.
How would you normally play that
G C
I Y X
OXP
EBKL
CIVOLVML
spade combination lor no loser? You
would cash the king, in case East bad a
WXOOXIY
IJMVO.
singleloll queen, and then finesse dumPREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I wu a Yankee tan and Mlc~ey Mantle was my
my's jack. However, here that won"t
Idol. 1 loved to ptay Duobllt." - (Jocl&lt;ey) L.amt Plncay.
. work - and you should know it won't.
· - ~-- --You are. missing only 13 high-card
WDII
points, yet East opened the bidding. He
IAMI
must have the spade queen. So should
14hod toy CLAY L IIOWIN
you cash the ace and king, hoping to
Reorrange Jenera of the
drop the queen? That is better, but not
four sc:rombled words bebest. As East is known to bave started
low to form four simple words.
with two hearts.~ four diamonds, he
probably bas three or four spades.
You should enter dummy with a
TRETON
trump and lead the spade jack, forcing
East to cover with the queen. Then finesse dun1my's nine on the way back.
A backwatd finesse requires two
cards well placed, so it is usually
IIIURES
'III'OI'!e than a simple finesse - but not
alwayt.

-'~~:~:~' . S@\\Q{\lJ.-"r..trs·

0

Acreiga

OUTSIDE
FURNISHIIGS:
Wrought Iran Tabla W/4 Chal.w;
sEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS: Fan Book Rocking Choir $58;
lhlao County, · Silom 1\op,l Girdon Arch Way'• $12!1.00
te8G/ ecro. Ramc4e, IINutltu
land; "':,';/arilurtJ and hllla. Boddlng -Twtn llott Set l89, Full
Calli for
map. t-114-5113- ltQ, Soi~ Queen 8148 Sat; 4
1848,'At,..,OII;
O..wor Chool S44.118; car Bod'o
Bunk Bod'o, Pootor Bodo. Fut\
Llna 01 South-om Vao01
Rent a ls
Storti!'/! At$20.00; ln&lt;lane Mony
Shapo o l Slln Sta~lna At·
$5.110. 2 l.oclitlono ·B•Ida 'lute&gt;
Auctloil Or 4 lllloo 0.. 141.
41 Houses for Rant
Opon VA.Il Toe P.M . IIon-5at.

Now Fl......luo .... StOO
Eoch -l'lbergtaao - · l
,.... $i8o Each, &amp;14-24HI52 A~
tore P.M.
Oold .ofa hi• • bed, $2llj
pono!ll• dtohw.-, l200; both
In IICOitent condition, 814-!1112·
80112'aftor 8pm.
·
0000, USED APPLIANCES

~~:...iPJ($"':.
Vlno su.- pa11 81
•
, t·
1

IIOO-IIMI-34n.

•

MHI "Catllah, ,J!o!n of lha
Waodo: In tho 80 mlnuto video
In whlah ha 11plolno hlo
.. lor .. .arythlng ..1.· - r and lmpotoncy !o ....
-lllliiA!IlS. To ot'llor "Cattloli,
Motorcycles
~r Socnlo olthl Maunlaln
• aond $21.98 • l4.00 Saxaptiano, oxc. cand,, $400. 1880 Honda CR 250 R, 6t4-992·
PI -to Ta-1!0, Olllr 1:!!1
:~==2~·"=·~·~5pm~----------P.O. Bol 233, Pl. PlooNnt, w • 304~~~~
28880. ' .
Olk ·CUrved Glaoo China
Cablnettl Oak Tabloo, .l -ChaiN,
Etc. Rlvw 'Iaiiey Olk Furniture,
3813 :Cin:pw er..k Road, 01J.
!lpolo, 011, ·~311,
Applea- Juat off At. 143, one ·mila
eauth of Carpantor. Rod llllil
GqldOn Oltlclaw
la-yoonly.
_ __opplao.
, . Open :::.::...._ _ _ _ __

ANilide Clr 8tll'80

pci!Wer

a;r:

~~r"' l!!&lt;e ~·. $45; ,14-'

.

Romlngtan ttOO.. a· vent rlb,
llko.--, f380.. 304-&amp;71-7942.

FJrm Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock

76 Ailto Pans &amp;
Accessor~s

BORN LOSER

r

. ,

r

()IL'( OOMI~ lEFf()HlfJR

~~T'i~l(:o
11-EMr Gl~ 100\6 ~TilE

I

DEN. R'lt lME 1'11/HW (AI)~ .
~I
~(!£~\

~

VE61AA11C.!

''

Sam Soinor¥11"'• Ar!nY Surptu.
. """" ,tN4 br SandyV!IIo Paat
otllco hao lui line comolla-.
Junior kldo 4 to _,lor
XXXL CornpatRhlo prtcoo, FriSat,S~~n.
·1,...,.lblo
- dayo
and
hau,.,'
(FIIarht
.to
arongo jaoUIL 304-273-Be65.
Sa0r1 Prima Fit Sklar llo&lt;hlne,
$375 Llka - - 114-2411-8043 .
, . , _ nrMOII!I tor -· uo
por lao!~, 814-41611-4228.

Services

:II II'

Nov. 23, 1993
~11!111~1JU~t

Today is the 327th
day of 1993 and the
63rd day of jilU.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINmROP
NO f'i'I,IR
erANDIN6rON
TIPPY-10Ee&gt;.

Mobile Homes

I
I I' I I I I~

K

wanted to Do

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Taoolng,
Trimming, Tr• RIIIIDV&amp;t, f.tedge
TrimminG. Froo Eotlmotoal ~~
:1117·7981'Aft« 4p.m,
Gona,.t Malntorllnce, Painting,
Yard Work WI-. WaahiCI
outt... Cleaned Light Hauling,
Cam~ll, Raol-lal, Stl¥0:
114-446-t888.

.,_~·-· THAT TROUE\LE ..

Spac:ao lor nn1 ata~lng ·at
N5fmo., • • 2 IMKiroom rMblle
homnlor ,.,., 114-1112-2187.

!'~~~~~~~;~~

35

IT 15 TOO EARL'( IN Tf!E
MORNING TO GO TO

Wl-11( DON'T 'f'OU OPEN
'(OUR E'f'ES AND SEE
'(OURSELF?

156S'I, Ma.on wv.

Wanting lo rwnt· 2 or 3·bldroo.n
ho1»1, ln ctean and good condl·
tlon. prwfer prlvat•·~lng, 614~..2428~ 1r no enawer j)IIIH
leave mnaage on mechlne.

tl93 22 Hu- Scaia.w Fool
Amloh Bu.llt, can ' P.M. Or
Loavo -Ngo, 614-2&amp;1-8224.
tiM Rod. .n 14x70, 3bdrrn., lnctudn lkl~tng, otopo, blacko,
5yr.
warranty,
. IMIW,...
OUFJIOCII,
ond t nom
yoar
at lrM Jn..
lol
,.nt, all for only ,StT!Ima., call t800_,37-3231, alk 1or Mtka.

r

l-IAS TI-1E SCHOOL
BUS COME i'ET?

lf1. Wanted to Rent

BeMfhl

1

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;;;:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.
1
1

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

A technique
that is backward

PEANUTS

Rooms

Bank Telltra • Minimum 1 YNr
Experience.

Rlploy araa, now tbr. ape.
wlcomplete k.!'!'!'!!!.. Including
washer/dryer. ~r~~~~:-5480.

Furnished

WANTED

rtt

BISSELL · BUILDERS, INC.

Eut
It
All P""

TWO!!

· FREE·FER·
ALL!!

442.0393.

Rick P.arson Auction Company,
full lime auctlonHr, comptete
auction I nrvlce.
UcenHd
-•,Ohio
Wnt Virginia, 304-773-5785.

getUng
aound
2 Abominable
enowm1n

LOST

WOUND .UP IN A

provided.

November

WANTED: onglno lor t1188 Ford

FtiNiew Sub, 9-5.

8

time agent. Eam whllt you

With Or Without Motoro. Call Benefhe. MUll bli a ull 11arter.
Experianee p!'lferred. Send
Lon-y Uvoly. 814-388-9303.
resume Ia: Agent, 114 Court
TOf&gt; PrieM Paid: All Old U.S. Stroot, Pamoroy, Ohio 45789.
Coins. Gold Rings, 9Uver Colna,
Gold CalnL M.T.S. Coin Shop, Now taking appllcatlona • for
pharrnocy tachnlclan through
t51 SIICand Avanua, Gaiilpoi!L

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

4.

1 Attenllon-

By Pbilllp Alder

Property I Clauatty lnturance
Agoncy lo looking for full I part

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autot1

Yard Sale

Pass

DOWN

Opening lead: t 2

'

YEP!! BUT l ONLY

a..

Hunh lnaurancM
Sal... Oo you have conlrol of
your own Uta? Exp~.ndlng

pork! SA 33 oroo, cnlld'o pot,
torable ea... 814-388..0554.
114-992-5058. Reword.

7

Nortb

•e

llfl and

Wanled To Buy: Junk Clrw &amp;
Truckl At Top Prtct &amp;: A. .

l.ol'l: Mlnlalul'l Collle1 roadlldl

W..t

--•

• .,,
'

""'

•

~'·&gt;

-

"'*""C®

~
"

"'

·if. ~~

"' ,,.

"~~

BERNICE
BEDE.OSOL

F llldilCiiil

I I I I

r-....:..;,.16..:...,;1;.....;;,17:-=;.,1.;.....,1,....--l

1.

.

•

. ..,...

·---

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1899, ·the first jukebox was installed,
in San Francisco's Palais Royal Hotel.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Franklin
Pierce (1804-1869), U.S. president;
Billy the Kid &lt;William H. Bonney, 18591881), outlaw; Boris Karlofl 08871969), actor; Harpo Marx 0888-1964),
comedian; Jerry Bock {1928-), composer, is 65.

•• • .•

•

t&gt;;

,.

I

"

'"

•

_

.

A PR INT NUMBERED l ETTERS
'1:11 IN THE SE SQUARES

~;mplete

rhe chuckle quoted

t

-

·-

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Herm1t - Basm - Eight - Siding - BIGGER
"Did anyone see you catch such a big fish? ' the
woman asked her bragging husband. "\Nhy sure," he
. answered, "otherwtse that fish would be even BIGGER!"

helpyoumayopanlhelaucet
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Today if sue·
cess eludes the methods and lactics you
employ ,; continue to make changes and
adjustments until you lind someth&gt;ng lhal
worfts.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Developments
lhat pertain to your material well being are
tranding·in your favor in this cycle. Don't let
time pass without making an effort to
improvo your lotln lite.
LEO (JUly 23-Aug. 221 You might be able
to ad'iance your seHolnteraats today in a sH· ,
uation lhal haa elements ol cllanco. OM! H
a lry It you teal bold, secure and self_.
guy.
,
auurad. .
· tdt d
2• •1113
PISCES (Feb. 20-Malch 20) Do not visual- ~ Y1AOO (Aug. 2:1 lapt 2:1) Changes could
• W nn ey,
· '
ize yourselt u lha undo~ today, ..P.· wOrlt out to your l!lllmMe advantage tOday,
.
·
ctatty 11 you're draw~ Into somet(llng com ~ 1v1n 1hci.e brougfil Into pf~y by outside
improve- ~ career.vise and socially 1 J!8111hlo w(l8ra ~~
Of car:-- !I·CO!I· m... Don, _be lnttmldallcl by U(ltltpeCied
are strong prcbebilltlei tor the yoar ~ad. ' Dlmli1.
lhil1l.
f
hnet"' tn an.. ~ a - miQflt cor:ne Alii. . (MeNit 11-Aptlt ttl YOII fi\Ould LIMA 111ft; a-o.t.ll) v~ Uouli~ ~ .
alloUIIn uttiOr\tOAIY WIYI!·,
.
. h~•• n:10ra dlrHJ control tOday ove( IIIII· In 111!'111 .....,. from ,our pennt,..ljl i
SAQITTAIIIUI(No\1'. 21-Dec. 21) Your , arrangem,nta Which recently helle. been l lilli!~U~mtuts 1 1nd today~, 11p1 to be an .
beat aiM)I· Iodaytill)l your organl~atlonal , w,.~tod from You&lt; grasp. Thla lime wile'\ lloepJion. h a IMm ~v-r !nllasd of a
llklllo arid your ~~~ u a saleltJIIIIOil Of you laka hold, hand Qll·"
,
. rU(I(IICI!t)dMdudat.
,
protf)Qfer' find wayo 10 uae your ~ · ccn: TAiJ!II,II (Aprlt 2D-May .201 Somtthing BCOIIPIO (Ooti 24-}'111¥• ZZ) Beginning ,
tlruotlvety and etltctl,vely. Scorpio, lreat benatlc!~l might de vel~ for you . l~ilay today •• .. uv-~ .,.ltttll( In OOIIC!Jiioill
yourwtf to a birthday gift. Send lor your . through eour&lt;:ea upon which you astdoln tllat pertain to your llnlncial W8ll being, u
Astio-Orapll ~.• tor tho ytar ahead prevail. A paroon who hfs been .wailtlng 1o well u yOtlf status with your """·
·

,...

_

&lt;t %'i

'""!'&lt;

•••·

.

e-

by filhng in the missing words
1..-...L.--L-...L--.l-...L--1 you develop from lfep No. 3 below.

Nov

11114 •Camero Fof SOla Or Trade
For 4 WD Truck Or n,IOo, 114-

. .lll~m,njac_!IHI9C~or: :LwiJ~

I could think as clearly Clunrig
s
the day when I'm supposed to
be awake as I d9 in the early
. - - - - - - - - - , hoursofmoming . l'dmakea-RESJET
I
.

torRent

by mailing ·st .25 and a tong , self·
addressed. stamped envelope to Astro·
Graph, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O. Box 4465,
New York, N.Y. 10t63. Be sure to stale
your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Ole. 2Nan . .111 It lhere is
something you've been' anxious to finalize,
don~ let others set your agenda: or rig your
timetable. Your tate is In your own hands
and you do nol have to be dopendenl upon
other&amp;.
·
AQUARIUS(~. 20-Feb. 18) Y_9ur rappo~
wilh per&amp;Of\l of aulhorily in large organizalions can be wor1&lt;8d out to produce aa.an-laiJIIS fOf' you today as ·well as tor lha other

I

-· ·r.....:F,...H~I_l-1,--F~~. ::~

·-RIFJo'
........

ASTRO-GRAPR

CALL
..•
304-nU633
Open~o.y'aAWMIC

Ban(lllo~ -

nollve
40 - • • leiter
41 F00111111 p8(1
43 Rlligloul
.aonga
Noodfor
' tetlon
50
Layer ot ' ' '
51 Medicine
52 Shade tree
53 Microbe
54 Florida
eounly
55 Snaplhol
5e City In
Norway
57 Wlnler
vehicle
56 Mlnerll
apring

Uft
Grook Iotter
Non-prolll TV
Aaatata
In crime
36 Beaat of
burd1n
37 Curly·helrad

• A.QJV 3

dOll

3g

HIIOn

SOUTH
.K 4 2
Thla "''MIP 1¥* wll nol

.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'·!t' ...

•

�1\lelday, November 23,

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

'

'IEifPO

•Air Conditioning
•Power Mirrors •Overdrive

•Ciearcoat Paint
•AM/FM Stereo

•Driver Side Air Bag
•McPherson
Suspension
• Power Brakes
•Halogen Headlamps
•Reclining Front Seats

ROLIDAY GIFT GUIDE

Page 11 - The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, November 23, 1993

Sharing the joys of many. tables at Tha_nksgiving
By KENNETH J, AYV AZIAN
HYDE PARK, N.Y. (AP)Traded back and forth in both edible and recipe form, food builds
bridges between cultures and Iranscends societal banic:n.
Think of Thanksgiving, which
established the rust sense of community between the Puritans and
th~ natives of what would become
Ne\v England. I imagine that before
either group had a firm lock on the
other's vocabulary, each developed
an appreciation of _ and an
appetite for_ the other's foods.
Today, immigrants continue to
come to this coumry with their own
lan~uages, customs and cuisines.
While there may be misunderslanding and friction where languages
and customs are concerned, there is
little when it comes to good cook·

ro~

94

TERCEL

~~atcbworlt Quilt

5*--- - ---

&lt;

-

-

·~--Jolt_ _

attbe Family Table
In my own family, it was my
uncle who ventured beyond the
cultural customs outlined for him
by his Armenian immigrant parents. He bought a 17th century
Duu:h stone house in upstate New
Yor1t and coveted his holiday table
with a patchwori quilt of friends,
associates and family. members for
Thanksgiving celebrations that
bel:ame legendary.
What follows is a sampling of
some of plates that fillc!l my
uhclc's table: .V,q~onian stuffed
m..scls, braised celery root; sarory
4l!e1tnut so'!ffle -and· flourless
chocolate cam
'
My family'• Armcililall 'illlli of
stuffed mnsrls ia not a ttadidonal
AmeriCan 'l1illlks · · dish but it
iS reminiscent
turkex - :
and quite relevant to the New England and American Indian tradition
serving shellfish such as clams
and oysten at this lime of year.
Chocolate Cake aDd
Cileslnut Soullle
Also included is a flourless
chocolate cake, a legendary dessert
- by now interpreted countless
times by countless cooks - that
was first brought to my uncle's
table in the early 1960s by a friend
and business associate, Dick Kimball.
·One year Kimball and his sister,
Dorothy, came witli the fixings for
a Canadi8n cheslnut souffle !bat
left a lasting lmprusion on me. It
has a subtle llawr and unusual texture. And it seemed appropriate
that it was prepared and eaten in a
house that was built of huge carved
beams and planks of long-gone
native c)lestnuL
Lastly, I have included a recipe
for I braise of celery root. Pew
guests at my uncle's table knew
there was a vegetable right underneath the celery. All enjoyed the
distillalion of my uncle's tastes and
experiences of trips 10 Italy found
in a single dish that represented
simplicity itself.
Armeniall Shdfed Mussels
4 !lozeit lar11e black or New
Zealand mussels; in their shells
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 red onions, diced
1/4 cup dried currants or raisins
.l/4 cup pine nuts
1/2 cup uncooked extra-long
white rice
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground
black=
1 tab
tomato paste
1 bunc fresh parsley, leaves
only, chopped
4 cups cold water
. 2 to 31emons .
I bunch watercress, rinsed and

of

94 Ford F-150 4x2
Yll C111

Lilli •

Ftr Only

94 Toyota 4x2 Pickup

94 Toyota T·1DO Pickup

•Air Conditioning •Cloth Seat
•Full Carpet •Chrome Package
•Rear Step Bumper

•AM/FM Cassette

•Automattc •Air Cond illoning
•Bed Liner

$14,999

9999

Automatic. air.
3 to choose lrom .

99

t3 POIInAC GRAND PIIIX
AM /FM casselte.
anti-lock brakes

$1

13 CAIILLAC SEDAN DIVI.LE

Automatic. air. AM/FM
stereo. loaded .

. $9999

93 FORD MUSTANG CONYERnBLE
AM/FM cassene.
· automalic. air

. $12,999

93 FOIID TAURUS BL

Leather . al~y wheels.
~ed . . .... .

14 999

International Series.
leather. loaded ..... . .

$1 •
999

Air. V6 .
loaded

$7999

6 cylinder overdrive.
AM/ FM cassene. a~r

$13,999

88 OLDS CUlLASS CIERA

92 OLOS 88

84 CHEVY 4x2 PICKUP

6_cylinder. automatic. air.
1111. crUi se. loaded . . . .

One owner.
low miles. loaded

Aulomalic . low
miles. sharp

$
5999

$14,999

88 BUICK RIVIERA

89 FORD f ·150

LS model. all power
options. low mileage ...

loaded.
one owner

XLT Lariat.
2 lone paint. loaded .

'· ~

' ' J'!i

.

·.,•

9
. ' \

•

~.

v'

. 'i

88 DODGE CARAVAN

$5999

81•MERCURY BRAND MARQUIS

Air . low miles.
one owner . ....

7 9 99

V6. 7 passenger.
$ · -~power windows &amp; locks . : .

86 FORD E·150 CONVER$10N •.

of=

dried
Scrub the mussels in cold runDing water with a stili brush. Hold
them "hinge'~ side up until all
traces of sand and grit are Rmoved.
Pull .away the beard. Discard any
mussels with crushed or cracked
shens or that are not firmly closed.
Reserve the mussels in a bowl in
the refrigerator loosely covered
with a damp cloth or pape, towel
until needed.
Heat the oHve oil in a saute pan
over medium high heat Add the
onions, currants or raisins, and pine
nuts. Saute, stirring frequently,
until the onion, are a golden
brown, about6 to 8 minutes.
Add the rice to the onion mixlliR and stir to coat each graip thorou11hly with the oil. Add the allspiCe, l!laclt pepper, tomato paste
and parsley. Stir to combine these
ingRdients evenly.
Gently pry OP.en the mussels
with an oyster knife or a small paring knife. Do not break the shells
or their hinge. Gently stuff about a
tablesp9on of rice mixture into
each mussel and gently R-close the
sheU. Anange mussels carefully in
the bottom of a heavy flameproof
casserole or Dutch oven.
Pour in the water and the juice
of two lemons. Set an ovenproof
plate over the mussels. Cover the
casserole or Dutch oven pot and
brinL~ liquid to a simmer over

appetiw servings.

Braised Celery Root
2 large fresh celery root knobs
1 ruby grapefruit, broken down
to zest and strained juice
112 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 cup sliced red onions
2 ounces diced raw beef marrow
(optional)
2 cups beef brOih (preferably
homemade)
Cinnamon to taste
3 tablespoons shredded fresh
celery leaves
1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill
fronds
Peel the celery root. Cut it into
large sticks; they should look like
large french fries.
Remove the zest from the grapefruit. Cut the grapefruit in half,
squeeze the juice through a fine
strainer. Reserve the juice and zest.
Heat a large, heavy saute pan
over high heat for about 40 seconds, until quite hot; add olive oil.
Heat the oil until the surface just
begins to shimmer.
Add the celery root immediately. Stir constantly until the edges of
the celery root just begin to brown.
Add the onions (and marrow if
desired); continue to saute over
high heat, stirring frequently, until
the onions are a very light gold,
about S minutes.
Acld the grapefruit zest and
low
I'&gt; '
juice, broth and cinnamon. Bring
Cook the mussels fO!' ~' min- the liquid to a simmer. Cook
ute~ or untii ih'c rice is tOIUicr." .uncovered unlilliquids, reduce_.and
Realove the•ll!,apeli to I! plltllir;Iet .• ·celery toot ls just ~. , . '
them cool 10 room temjler~~t""e,
Transfer the dish to a heated '
then refrigerate them for- several ,serving dish and platter. Garnish
hours or ov~ ' - · , '"
with th.e celery leaves and dill.
- Serve 'the muasels, as col~ appe- Serve hot, or allow the celery root
lizer with lemon Milgcs ind water- to cool to room temperature, chiD
cress on the side. ~~ 8 to 10 for several hours or overnight in

.

;

:k:fis Choeolate
Cake
J:'jualily semisweet
1 pound

peaks. They should appear glossy,
not stili or dry.

Fold halt of the beaten egg
whites into the chocol&amp; mixture
gently but quickly.· Fold in the
remaining whila 1m1i1 jua N"''led
and immediately pour the batter
into the pepaed cab pan.
Place the cab oo the center t8Ck
of tbe oven 1nd bake in a 450degree F oven for 15 minteee Thea
carefWiy prop open ovea door and
leave cllkc in the oven until both
the calce and the oven .-e cooled.
Serve the cab 11 room tempera.
ture, plain or pmilhed with a dollop of unsweetened, unOavored
whipped acam, if desired. M.ta
10 to t21e1Vin&amp;L
.

chocolate,
10 tablespoons lightly salted
butter
I tablespoon water
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon flour
4 eggs; separared
.
Place oven rack in the center of
the oven. Preheat oven 10 450
degrees F. Li_ghtly pease and flour
Kenneth 1. Ayvaziln is a cbelan 8-inch spnngform pan.
insuucror 11 tbe Culinlry lnllilllfe
Melt the chocolate and buuer of America in Hyde Plrt, N.Y.
over low heat, or in the microwave
oven . Remove it from the beat.
Pour the chocolate mixture into a
large mixing bowl. Stir until evenly
blended and cooled.
MULUI
Stir in the water, sugar and
fl&lt;iur.
Beat the egg yollcs in a separate
111
St..
bowl with a whisk or a band-held
mixer until they are thickened and
a light lemon color. Fold them into
ARm SIIVIII
the chocol&amp; mixture.
Beat the esg whites in a very
bowl, with whisk or band111(11161

DOWIIIG CHILDS
.ISSEI
IISUUICE

Sec••• r....y

YOUIII..,_IT

••scoum

All varieties retain needles well throughout the holiday!
1993

••

Christmas Savings

2DAYSONLY!
Friday, Nov. 26 &amp; Saturday, Nov. 27
NICE SELECTION OF

4KGOLD

Area's Best Selection Of
... Red
... Ank

Poinsettias

1/2PRICE

Grown Fresh In Bob'• GreeDhoaae•
Range In Sbe• To ftt The BudCet

... White
...Marble
...Jingle BeU

EFFECtlVE NOVEMBER 26

PULSAR
WATCHES
30% to40%
OFF
Check Our Svpply Of Bulk Chrishnas Candy (0. 20 Varieties)

...

Also Our Abunde~~ce Of Bulk Nuts

~

HARRY SIDERS
&amp; SONS JEWELERS_

. CELLULAR
., · 'Free Use Of

· c•lir Pllorre

yw~

: aallng ai you liu thitr
llt'$J. ' Phlnl~l

.

'1&amp;.~

•·
(

•

'

«46-328l_• !lllYer lrldae Piau, Gllllpolil

--------

675-3857 ,• R.l2, South. Gallipolis Fe.ay

Hael Nuts. he-. Mixed Nuts. More)

PECANS, FILBERTS, ALMONDS,
BRAZIL NUTS • s1.69 LB.

l.oc8d 114 .,.. Nollh 01 Pornetoy Bridge, " M'l,
Phone (304) 773-5721 or (304) 773-5900

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

At 7, Upper River Road, C'.alllpolls, OH
Phone (814) 448-1711

a.ASSFIED
ADS .

ptepetty or Cllulll' Ole!

·'

whiteS. Pour the balltz quickly inlil
the prepared souffle dish. Place
dish in a larJer dish-containillg 1
inch hot wlla'. Bate on the bottOm
rack in a 400-degree F pven for
about 55 minutes or until 1 buller
knife inaerted comes out clean.
Serve immedillely. Makes 10 to 12

THE MOST BEA.1JTili'UL SELECTION OF TREES
IN 1BE TRI-C01JNTY AREA!
Select From Either BeauttfidiJI Sheared P'rufer Fir,
"The Elite In Chrfst.mas Trees" 01'
Traditional White Pine and Scotch Pine
All trees are perfectly shaped and reasonably priced.
Sizes range from 6' to 10'
Suppllds of tall trees are limited ... So, Shop Eartyl

' l:ast&lt;ry lNst- 36_ii-onlh TMC91tast Dase&lt;l on MSRP ~ $19.61&amp;. Qplonlo purcllase _al •lease
end S10.&amp;66;.62. Total of payinents ·$9684 : lax . lfcenS!. ~ s ecunty dePQ,Sll &amp; dOCUment lees t~t.tra ,
~

the refrigerator and serve cold.
Makes 10 to 12 servings.
Savory CheatDut Soume
1 pound chestnuts, peeled and
coarsely chopped
1 medium-size shallot, minced
2 cups light cream
9 eggs, separated
1/2 teaSpoon salt (or to taste)
1/2 teaspoon fresh I y ground
black pepper (or to taste)
Combine the chestnuts, shallot
and cream in a heavy saucepan;
simmer until nuts are very tender
and cream is reduced by half, about
30 minutes.
Remove the chestnuts and
cream mixture from the heat. Let
cool briefly, then puree in a
blender, food processor or with a
hand-held (immersion) blendez.
Beat the egg yolks in a mixing
bowl with a whisk or hand-held
electric mixer Wltil thickened and a
light lemon color. Gradually stir in
the chestnut puree. Add salt and
pepper to taste.
Position an oven rack in the bottom third of the oven. Preheat the
oven to 400 degrees F. Grease and
flour a 3-quart ceramic souffle
dish.
In a large bowl, beat the egg
whites to medium peaks. T!~
should loolc glossy, not dull or · .
haff of the beaten egg
the chestnut mixture

..

r/ ,

~-

I

•

'

wv

. ..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
    <file fileId="20759">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/e20713ef9660cfa8954a333873a96fce.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5eb446d77abb738f121487c8b886bc07</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32932">
                  <text>1\lelday, November 23,

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

'

'IEifPO

•Air Conditioning
•Power Mirrors •Overdrive

•Ciearcoat Paint
•AM/FM Stereo

•Driver Side Air Bag
•McPherson
Suspension
• Power Brakes
•Halogen Headlamps
•Reclining Front Seats

ROLIDAY GIFT GUIDE

Page 11 - The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, November 23, 1993

Sharing the joys of many. tables at Tha_nksgiving
By KENNETH J, AYV AZIAN
HYDE PARK, N.Y. (AP)Traded back and forth in both edible and recipe form, food builds
bridges between cultures and Iranscends societal banic:n.
Think of Thanksgiving, which
established the rust sense of community between the Puritans and
th~ natives of what would become
Ne\v England. I imagine that before
either group had a firm lock on the
other's vocabulary, each developed
an appreciation of _ and an
appetite for_ the other's foods.
Today, immigrants continue to
come to this coumry with their own
lan~uages, customs and cuisines.
While there may be misunderslanding and friction where languages
and customs are concerned, there is
little when it comes to good cook·

ro~

94

TERCEL

~~atcbworlt Quilt

5*--- - ---

&lt;

-

-

·~--Jolt_ _

attbe Family Table
In my own family, it was my
uncle who ventured beyond the
cultural customs outlined for him
by his Armenian immigrant parents. He bought a 17th century
Duu:h stone house in upstate New
Yor1t and coveted his holiday table
with a patchwori quilt of friends,
associates and family. members for
Thanksgiving celebrations that
bel:ame legendary.
What follows is a sampling of
some of plates that fillc!l my
uhclc's table: .V,q~onian stuffed
m..scls, braised celery root; sarory
4l!e1tnut so'!ffle -and· flourless
chocolate cam
'
My family'• Armcililall 'illlli of
stuffed mnsrls ia not a ttadidonal
AmeriCan 'l1illlks · · dish but it
iS reminiscent
turkex - :
and quite relevant to the New England and American Indian tradition
serving shellfish such as clams
and oysten at this lime of year.
Chocolate Cake aDd
Cileslnut Soullle
Also included is a flourless
chocolate cake, a legendary dessert
- by now interpreted countless
times by countless cooks - that
was first brought to my uncle's
table in the early 1960s by a friend
and business associate, Dick Kimball.
·One year Kimball and his sister,
Dorothy, came witli the fixings for
a Canadi8n cheslnut souffle !bat
left a lasting lmprusion on me. It
has a subtle llawr and unusual texture. And it seemed appropriate
that it was prepared and eaten in a
house that was built of huge carved
beams and planks of long-gone
native c)lestnuL
Lastly, I have included a recipe
for I braise of celery root. Pew
guests at my uncle's table knew
there was a vegetable right underneath the celery. All enjoyed the
distillalion of my uncle's tastes and
experiences of trips 10 Italy found
in a single dish that represented
simplicity itself.
Armeniall Shdfed Mussels
4 !lozeit lar11e black or New
Zealand mussels; in their shells
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 red onions, diced
1/4 cup dried currants or raisins
.l/4 cup pine nuts
1/2 cup uncooked extra-long
white rice
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground
black=
1 tab
tomato paste
1 bunc fresh parsley, leaves
only, chopped
4 cups cold water
. 2 to 31emons .
I bunch watercress, rinsed and

of

94 Ford F-150 4x2
Yll C111

Lilli •

Ftr Only

94 Toyota 4x2 Pickup

94 Toyota T·1DO Pickup

•Air Conditioning •Cloth Seat
•Full Carpet •Chrome Package
•Rear Step Bumper

•AM/FM Cassette

•Automattc •Air Cond illoning
•Bed Liner

$14,999

9999

Automatic. air.
3 to choose lrom .

99

t3 POIInAC GRAND PIIIX
AM /FM casselte.
anti-lock brakes

$1

13 CAIILLAC SEDAN DIVI.LE

Automatic. air. AM/FM
stereo. loaded .

. $9999

93 FORD MUSTANG CONYERnBLE
AM/FM cassene.
· automalic. air

. $12,999

93 FOIID TAURUS BL

Leather . al~y wheels.
~ed . . .... .

14 999

International Series.
leather. loaded ..... . .

$1 •
999

Air. V6 .
loaded

$7999

6 cylinder overdrive.
AM/ FM cassene. a~r

$13,999

88 OLDS CUlLASS CIERA

92 OLOS 88

84 CHEVY 4x2 PICKUP

6_cylinder. automatic. air.
1111. crUi se. loaded . . . .

One owner.
low miles. loaded

Aulomalic . low
miles. sharp

$
5999

$14,999

88 BUICK RIVIERA

89 FORD f ·150

LS model. all power
options. low mileage ...

loaded.
one owner

XLT Lariat.
2 lone paint. loaded .

'· ~

' ' J'!i

.

·.,•

9
. ' \

•

~.

v'

. 'i

88 DODGE CARAVAN

$5999

81•MERCURY BRAND MARQUIS

Air . low miles.
one owner . ....

7 9 99

V6. 7 passenger.
$ · -~power windows &amp; locks . : .

86 FORD E·150 CONVER$10N •.

of=

dried
Scrub the mussels in cold runDing water with a stili brush. Hold
them "hinge'~ side up until all
traces of sand and grit are Rmoved.
Pull .away the beard. Discard any
mussels with crushed or cracked
shens or that are not firmly closed.
Reserve the mussels in a bowl in
the refrigerator loosely covered
with a damp cloth or pape, towel
until needed.
Heat the oHve oil in a saute pan
over medium high heat Add the
onions, currants or raisins, and pine
nuts. Saute, stirring frequently,
until the onion, are a golden
brown, about6 to 8 minutes.
Add the rice to the onion mixlliR and stir to coat each graip thorou11hly with the oil. Add the allspiCe, l!laclt pepper, tomato paste
and parsley. Stir to combine these
ingRdients evenly.
Gently pry OP.en the mussels
with an oyster knife or a small paring knife. Do not break the shells
or their hinge. Gently stuff about a
tablesp9on of rice mixture into
each mussel and gently R-close the
sheU. Anange mussels carefully in
the bottom of a heavy flameproof
casserole or Dutch oven.
Pour in the water and the juice
of two lemons. Set an ovenproof
plate over the mussels. Cover the
casserole or Dutch oven pot and
brinL~ liquid to a simmer over

appetiw servings.

Braised Celery Root
2 large fresh celery root knobs
1 ruby grapefruit, broken down
to zest and strained juice
112 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 cup sliced red onions
2 ounces diced raw beef marrow
(optional)
2 cups beef brOih (preferably
homemade)
Cinnamon to taste
3 tablespoons shredded fresh
celery leaves
1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill
fronds
Peel the celery root. Cut it into
large sticks; they should look like
large french fries.
Remove the zest from the grapefruit. Cut the grapefruit in half,
squeeze the juice through a fine
strainer. Reserve the juice and zest.
Heat a large, heavy saute pan
over high heat for about 40 seconds, until quite hot; add olive oil.
Heat the oil until the surface just
begins to shimmer.
Add the celery root immediately. Stir constantly until the edges of
the celery root just begin to brown.
Add the onions (and marrow if
desired); continue to saute over
high heat, stirring frequently, until
the onions are a very light gold,
about S minutes.
Acld the grapefruit zest and
low
I'&gt; '
juice, broth and cinnamon. Bring
Cook the mussels fO!' ~' min- the liquid to a simmer. Cook
ute~ or untii ih'c rice is tOIUicr." .uncovered unlilliquids, reduce_.and
Realove the•ll!,apeli to I! plltllir;Iet .• ·celery toot ls just ~. , . '
them cool 10 room temjler~~t""e,
Transfer the dish to a heated '
then refrigerate them for- several ,serving dish and platter. Garnish
hours or ov~ ' - · , '"
with th.e celery leaves and dill.
- Serve 'the muasels, as col~ appe- Serve hot, or allow the celery root
lizer with lemon Milgcs ind water- to cool to room temperature, chiD
cress on the side. ~~ 8 to 10 for several hours or overnight in

.

;

:k:fis Choeolate
Cake
J:'jualily semisweet
1 pound

peaks. They should appear glossy,
not stili or dry.

Fold halt of the beaten egg
whites into the chocol&amp; mixture
gently but quickly.· Fold in the
remaining whila 1m1i1 jua N"''led
and immediately pour the batter
into the pepaed cab pan.
Place the cab oo the center t8Ck
of tbe oven 1nd bake in a 450degree F oven for 15 minteee Thea
carefWiy prop open ovea door and
leave cllkc in the oven until both
the calce and the oven .-e cooled.
Serve the cab 11 room tempera.
ture, plain or pmilhed with a dollop of unsweetened, unOavored
whipped acam, if desired. M.ta
10 to t21e1Vin&amp;L
.

chocolate,
10 tablespoons lightly salted
butter
I tablespoon water
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon flour
4 eggs; separared
.
Place oven rack in the center of
the oven. Preheat oven 10 450
degrees F. Li_ghtly pease and flour
Kenneth 1. Ayvaziln is a cbelan 8-inch spnngform pan.
insuucror 11 tbe Culinlry lnllilllfe
Melt the chocolate and buuer of America in Hyde Plrt, N.Y.
over low heat, or in the microwave
oven . Remove it from the beat.
Pour the chocolate mixture into a
large mixing bowl. Stir until evenly
blended and cooled.
MULUI
Stir in the water, sugar and
fl&lt;iur.
Beat the egg yollcs in a separate
111
St..
bowl with a whisk or a band-held
mixer until they are thickened and
a light lemon color. Fold them into
ARm SIIVIII
the chocol&amp; mixture.
Beat the esg whites in a very
bowl, with whisk or band111(11161

DOWIIIG CHILDS
.ISSEI
IISUUICE

Sec••• r....y

YOUIII..,_IT

••scoum

All varieties retain needles well throughout the holiday!
1993

••

Christmas Savings

2DAYSONLY!
Friday, Nov. 26 &amp; Saturday, Nov. 27
NICE SELECTION OF

4KGOLD

Area's Best Selection Of
... Red
... Ank

Poinsettias

1/2PRICE

Grown Fresh In Bob'• GreeDhoaae•
Range In Sbe• To ftt The BudCet

... White
...Marble
...Jingle BeU

EFFECtlVE NOVEMBER 26

PULSAR
WATCHES
30% to40%
OFF
Check Our Svpply Of Bulk Chrishnas Candy (0. 20 Varieties)

...

Also Our Abunde~~ce Of Bulk Nuts

~

HARRY SIDERS
&amp; SONS JEWELERS_

. CELLULAR
., · 'Free Use Of

· c•lir Pllorre

yw~

: aallng ai you liu thitr
llt'$J. ' Phlnl~l

.

'1&amp;.~

•·
(

•

'

«46-328l_• !lllYer lrldae Piau, Gllllpolil

--------

675-3857 ,• R.l2, South. Gallipolis Fe.ay

Hael Nuts. he-. Mixed Nuts. More)

PECANS, FILBERTS, ALMONDS,
BRAZIL NUTS • s1.69 LB.

l.oc8d 114 .,.. Nollh 01 Pornetoy Bridge, " M'l,
Phone (304) 773-5721 or (304) 773-5900

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

At 7, Upper River Road, C'.alllpolls, OH
Phone (814) 448-1711

a.ASSFIED
ADS .

ptepetty or Cllulll' Ole!

·'

whiteS. Pour the balltz quickly inlil
the prepared souffle dish. Place
dish in a larJer dish-containillg 1
inch hot wlla'. Bate on the bottOm
rack in a 400-degree F pven for
about 55 minutes or until 1 buller
knife inaerted comes out clean.
Serve immedillely. Makes 10 to 12

THE MOST BEA.1JTili'UL SELECTION OF TREES
IN 1BE TRI-C01JNTY AREA!
Select From Either BeauttfidiJI Sheared P'rufer Fir,
"The Elite In Chrfst.mas Trees" 01'
Traditional White Pine and Scotch Pine
All trees are perfectly shaped and reasonably priced.
Sizes range from 6' to 10'
Suppllds of tall trees are limited ... So, Shop Eartyl

' l:ast&lt;ry lNst- 36_ii-onlh TMC91tast Dase&lt;l on MSRP ~ $19.61&amp;. Qplonlo purcllase _al •lease
end S10.&amp;66;.62. Total of payinents ·$9684 : lax . lfcenS!. ~ s ecunty dePQ,Sll &amp; dOCUment lees t~t.tra ,
~

the refrigerator and serve cold.
Makes 10 to 12 servings.
Savory CheatDut Soume
1 pound chestnuts, peeled and
coarsely chopped
1 medium-size shallot, minced
2 cups light cream
9 eggs, separated
1/2 teaSpoon salt (or to taste)
1/2 teaspoon fresh I y ground
black pepper (or to taste)
Combine the chestnuts, shallot
and cream in a heavy saucepan;
simmer until nuts are very tender
and cream is reduced by half, about
30 minutes.
Remove the chestnuts and
cream mixture from the heat. Let
cool briefly, then puree in a
blender, food processor or with a
hand-held (immersion) blendez.
Beat the egg yolks in a mixing
bowl with a whisk or hand-held
electric mixer Wltil thickened and a
light lemon color. Gradually stir in
the chestnut puree. Add salt and
pepper to taste.
Position an oven rack in the bottom third of the oven. Preheat the
oven to 400 degrees F. Grease and
flour a 3-quart ceramic souffle
dish.
In a large bowl, beat the egg
whites to medium peaks. T!~
should loolc glossy, not dull or · .
haff of the beaten egg
the chestnut mixture

..

r/ ,

~-

I

•

'

wv

. ..

�;PIII:g:e~1~2;;-~Th:e~·~Dal=ly~Se:n:tln~e~I-------------..:;P:o:m:e~ro~y;:l:~d:d:le:po=rt~,O~h~l:o------•'-----,.,___;Wtdneaday, November 24; 1'993

RC COLA
PRODUOS

Alter Thanksgiving Sale
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

:••

24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0...

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD NOV. 24 THRU NOV. 27, ·1993

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

49

FARM FRESH

$1' 49

FISCHER BRAND

Bologna •••••••••••••••~~•••

HILSHIRE FARMS

R·•beve
,. Steak.............

USDA . C~OICE B~NELESS BEEF

La.

By JENNIFER MER1N
Foe AP Special Edition
This year was Cherry Kellogg's
first time 'to organize the annual
Strong-Kynerd family reunion, and
as 62 relatives-~ four months
to 82 years - amved in Atlanta
from ten states and embraced each
other, she beamed.
'(Our 'family lives for
reunions," said Kellogg, S2, a legal
technician fro111 Dunwoody, Ga.
"We keep track of each others'
progress, motivate each other and
teach our children family values.
Most of us are professionals, working in stressful situations. Being
with each other renews our vitality
and refreshes us with a lot of love
and fun."
· Kellogg, who had only recently
moved to the Atlanta area, began
planning the reunion last year.
Most family reunions require at
least that much lead time:
"Our family has golfers, spa~ '
goers and shoppers, so I had IQ fmd
a place with access to all activities
they lilce. It also had to be someplace that has staff to handle
reunions. I interviewed several
hotels and· finally seuled on Holiday Inn, because they worll: a lot
with reunions. After that, everything fell into place. I just let the
family !mow where, when and bow
much, and it worlred out fme. Next
year, another relative has the
reunion near her home in Cincinnati, and five years froril now we'll
have our reunion on a cruise."
It's probably too laic to eaJI for
a major clan ga!hering for this holiday .season, but if you'te yearning
for renewed family ties. you might
start-planning for nexl year, ·~ ·,
You 'U have to use your organi-

640Z.

C cken Leg Quarters... · c

FLAVORITE
TOASTER
PASTRIES

.

mo e ausage •••••••

llOZ.

$189

c

Ru·mp Roast··········~···
4
l/ ' '
•
s
149
Perk Lo1n •••••••••••••••••~
FLAVORin
9
(
·
.
n.......,.~················ 9
I

-· ··-·.

L8

l~OZ.

CHEESE

~

I

r•

'&lt;
,
!r

~~

fir•

.,,"•
t.
'

n
·~
i!

"
••
I

,

ners), budget and linance (opening
a reunion bank account,. handling
income and payments), family
archives . (collecting memorabilia
for family histories), ~graphy,
entertainment and acuvities, decorations, and other essentials-. ·
If you have a large family tree
with many branches, a sub-committee made up .of one member
from each branch can track down
missing relatives · and distribute
information about the reunion.
The more kinfolk come, the
more fun and memories - and the
more leverage to negotiate dis. counted group rates for accommodations and activities.
.
Finding family members ean be
a challenge. Ask those you're in
touch with to Compile lists. Contact
others on their lists for their lists
and so forth. Consult civic, church
anll schoo,l records. Place ads in
local newspapers and in "Reunions
Magazine" announcing your
reunion and asking family members to contact you.
,
You also can register your event
with Reunion Research, a network:· ·
ing organization that connects fam·
ily groups with possible members
and provides information about
prOducts and services that ~an help
in planning.
Cost and fmancing ~ big factors, influencing everything from
location to souvenirs, family directories, photo albums, and recipe
boolcs.
Sites might be on a cruise ship,
at rustic campsj!es, ~uxury resorts, ..
destinations of,histoncal or cullilra) ·
significance :- or in Gran4!J13's
back yard

'

•t...·:

!

''';' ..

and dates. Choices are limited only

br per-person budget, distances

..'.' ·

ldnfollo: must ttavel, how much lime
they can be away and availability
of accommodations.
Several international hotel
chains, local resorts and cruise
lines cater to family reunions,
offering special packages that may
include the services of a reunion
planner.
Most reunions are set fer threeor four-day holiday weekends
(hotel booldngs are liSWilly heavy,
so these requii'C lengthy lead lime)
or summer months, when kids are
out of school ani! parentS can take

'."' .
r.

I

.L
''' .
);

......"
'.
r";

JLLUMINATED STAR- A 110-point illuminated star bangs from tbe cancel of the Moravian Church in Lititz, Pa., eacb year. The only

time off.

But Christmas and New Year
also ate popular for reunions.

one of its kind in tbe United States, it's patterned after !bose in two German churches.
(AP)

'

99C

..:•••"

h

'•••
••
.,.
:

•',.

•••
1
••••
;,

'·'.''•!' ..
••
••

'•'•,.
•••••.•'
'I

.

~

',:.

,,,;
••
,.••
••

:•

••
~

lfSTW800

~":

·-'."
••

,.....
,,
·~

:~
••

~ :

.:'.'

II
fll&amp;.•s
loreign or domes.lic

'

~:

·'.,.,
.,

.,
't

••

....·-''
·~

Sllff
IVOIIIDP

$1 ° ·
49(
Large Eggs······~·····~!.. . ·
$·159
-a.

GRADEA

SHOPPERS VALUE •

Mac &amp;·Cheese.........

3.
•OWe S~......... .

Paper

•••••

.'

1 ~-----11I

::I

..

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

'

CHARMIN

TOILET nssuE
.

69 .

•

•

'I I I
:1 I I

:: ::

-·

•

•

KEMPS

Ice Cream ••••••••••• ~:;••••

$299

.Buy

7soz

Fpo! DELux

Qne

. . Get Olne FREE

· IZZa

a•o

•

10

"t.';
I

· - ...
..~:. 0

....
'= ··"
a.- ..
!Ill'

·~

0 ••

.. •
0 0 .v.ll
.

'~~~D

•
' 0 '-'· ~&gt;:: . . . :
0 .. 0 .

I

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

11!,..
.

GOLD.MEDAL

II 1 1'
:• 1:

FLOUR

:I 1:

'

.

.

I r.o
I In ..
'
1
1I : Good Only AI Powell'o SUI* V.lu
1 OllwGoociNov.21111ruNov.27,11113 .
I 1
Umlt 1 Per CueiOIIIII'

TO
STOVE . p

DRESSING

11 11

II
I
11
II
11
1
1

:
II

11
1 11
II

I1 I
II I:

:: I :
.1 11

KRAFT

MIRA~LE WHIP

6 01

11 I I 32 .
II I
IL.
GoociOnlyAt'Pow.II'ISII!*VIIu
' I11: oiiar
Off8r
Good Nov. 21.111ru Nov. 27, 11183 :I
Umlt1PerC-..,
11 11
P17·11-430-12,18AK3
1.
1 1

~~~~~!~.

·- -·---- ....... -..

..

I1
II

.:
;
1

1
11

t.

~fllli'l

'

foreign or dome&amp;lic

•

••

...
'•

'
••

••
,•
•••

....
.••,

..,.'''
••~

.••' .

2~7

•

•

•••

''' •

CII'IIC
AliCIIIOI'Iel

....,.
,.

IIIUIIVIIIJI

•••
Wlllll

'.
,,
'•
••
•••
!,J

covers

.•,
'.

,:
,,••••

:.,·•
~

Executive V.P./President
Athens and Meigs Division

.'
''

e .o .. .
.
.! ....

'...

:

~rrfk,~

'
'''
'

.. -· ·69( : : 8·9'c : :: '99(' : ,.. -IIIIi •

.

:~ I :
1ll1

II
I
11
1
I :
Goocl Qn1y AI Powell'l Super Vllu
1
1 ., oiferGoOdNov.21111ruNov. 27,11183 :1
1 o·
Llmll4 Pll' c 1

-- --- ----

•

99(

•

·,

.• •
• • ~-I! ...• ... I! -•. •-I! ,!1_111! !1... 11! !1...1! !1... 11! !1...11!. !1...1! !II
i ~------·coUPON------ ~ 1 11 ~ -•-~ -•-~COUPON
: I:
~OIWBnN
:

•11 •

"coUPON"-- ••• "

: $2
1 12
Pl.
''
II1

•

.

1

1·00

I

sHOPPERs v~LUE

liOZ.

Coupon Expires 11/27/93

Orange Ju1ce ••••••.•2!21••

100

4

.SHOPPERS

We reflect on the many blessings' that come to'
us through other people. We give thanks for
those people.
We're thankful for the people who founded
our nation in the spirit of cooperation and
freedom.
We're thankful for the people who endured
personal hardships and built our community.
We're thankful for a professional staff
committed to sound community investment.
We're thankful for customers' trust and
confidence.
We're thankful that we can all work
together to build friendly neighborhoods,
prosperous communities and a better world.
As you give thanks, we hope you will
recognize the people in your life who are filled
with the spirit of Thanksgiving.
Sincerely,

P-17-11-160 IIC3AAG

·

'•

't

''•
•' t
It·
•
••

..

•

l

r•

'~
,1,
'•
~.

Limil2

Celery•••••••••••••••• 2·

..;'.:
,,'.l

99
0

'.

.••

WE' WILL NOT BE
ON ANY ITEM AT

Estimate how' mal\)'l'tfam1ly , .
members may 'attend and how find
zati9ala! ~ and .reso~fulness. out bow deep they're willi!;!g todig
just ·as Cherry Kellogg did.
into their pockets. Ybtl can charge
Her family shifts responsibility mininial registration fees covering
for reunion planning from one . administrative costs, or larger
member to another each year, but amounts including lodging, meals
some families find it easier to form and activities. Travel ammgements
a steering committee with each may be put in the hands of one
member responsible for one part or capable agent. but charges should
the project -locating and contact- go directly to individual particiing family members, travel coordi- pants.
nation (working with travel agents
Open a reunion checking
on reservations), site coordination account to keep finances straight
(working with hotel reunion plan~ soon as possible,' select a site

FLAVORITE
•

;;

Family reunions require lots of planning

INDIAN
Valley Apple
Juice

$169
Chuck Roast ..........J~•••

.~

' ~.:

:. .;

20 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

§

CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) -Is it guilty about celebrating such a take part in a program like the
environmentally naughty to cut wonderful season." .
"Grinding the Greeas"· project,
down an evergreen bee to decorate
Yes, there will be an incresse in which will eitlw grind up trees for
for ChriSbnas? Or use shiny, wrap- solid waste right after Chrisbnas, "-m ulch or use them in lakes and
ping papa'! Or send piles of Christ- agrees Dic,t; White, a SQ!id.waste strearils to create fiSh habitat. ·
mas cards?
expert at the university. That means
If you want to stay as "peen"
"It might be kinder to the envi- extra worll: fer trash collectors and as possible, Testin and White say,
ronmeBt not to have live ChriSbnas landfill operatOrs.
look for gifts that have simplified ·
trees, wrapping paper, excessive
. South Carolina is one .state that or reduced packaging, wrappings
packa~es and decorative burning has banned yard waste from state and cards made from recycled
lights, ' ssys Bob Testin, a Clem- landfills, which could pose a prob- materials, and those printed with
son University pac. .g scientist. !em for disposing of the bees after soy ink.
"But you have to we1gh those conWill it make a Clifference?
cerns with. the psychological bene- Christmas.
But Diane Waddle, dirqctor of "ProbablY. not," Testin concedes.
fits they .provide, which are impor- the S. C. Clean and Beautiful pro- "But if it keeps a person from feeltant, too. People shouldn 'I feel gram, says pe~le can copy what ing guilty about celebrating Christher state's res1dents often do mas, it's wonh it."

. ..

579

0
0

WE ACCEPT
aso Ill

Alti•!UVI

...

li:CII......
IU l'llll

• .I

'

)

.

.,\

'

'•
'•

:J

yandon

c7J=··

OPEN
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
StoiW Houra: a e.m.to 8 p.m. Monday through Fridey,

~-•.

8 8.m. to 1 p.m. SAturday, end l l.m. ta 5 p.m. Sunday

IAlLIPDLIS

209 Up=' Road

2

,,

•

'

�Paaa

.

'
wednetday, November 24,1993

•

'

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

-

The Pom.eroy ·Merchants Invite You To Shop
'

•

.

."CHRISTMJS ALONG THE RIVER 1993 ''
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

OPEN .B OUSE

ANNU

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 28th .... 12:00 - 5:00 P.M.

CHRISTMAS
PARADE 2:00P.M .
.
Santa.Claus·Will Be In The La~ger Court St. Mini• Park .Immediately Following The Parade
.

I

PRESERVE YOUR HER.ITAGE, SH~P .LOC A·L~Y TH.IS HOLIDAY-$EASON
.

.

'

.

.

..

OPEN HOUSE
STOREWIDE CHRISTMAS SALE

THANKSGMNG DAY10A.M.-1 P.M• ._·.

I

1LB. RUSSELL STOVER REG. $5.75
AS:t
· 0 DCHOCOLATES._..................................................ONLY $4.39
IN • -otJTIIOOR REG. $1.99
.
35 CH ISTMAS LIGHT SET.;........_ ...................................... ONLY $1.29
(OLD POP...........................- .................................- ............. 27 c.CAN
REG. $3.98
. THE SOUND OF CHRISTMAS CASSmES...............................ONLY $2.69
1.4 OZ. SPRAY REG. $4.95
. AVIANCE NIGHT MUSK•••- ................;,..... _ ....._,_...........;ONLY $3.49
MEN'S COLOGNES &amp; AnER SHAVES ..- .........".--...........".25'11 .QFF
'CHRISTMAS'BOWS, Various Siz..- -••- ........................." .. Yz ·PRKE
CHRISTMAS Gin BOJ~S 2; 3, or 4 to pkg. Reg. $1.49..~··"·;•0NLY .a9t ~

NOVEMBER
26th &amp; 27th

BIG
DAYS

Check Our Ad In ioday's Paper for Details

CHOOSE OUR DISCOUNT

·SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl .SAVEl

25o/o - 30°/o - 40°/o - 50o/o

Whaf

1 Yea~ $10 Down and $10 Per Month Interest FREE
or, No Payment nil March 1994

FAB'RIC
SH·
O
P.
..

{Jk;ou naurfixvultile rt,jNt_PeMon'
let tt&amp;he/j;Jj~td the rf:!lht rV/9·

GOLD AND D

I

ND SALE

2 BIG DAYS
14K GOLD .... 60 ''{ OFF
DIAMONDS ..... SO'X, OFF

POMEROY

992-3785

CHRISTMAS BEGINS AT

You Are
Invited To
Our Annual
Chrlttmat
Open Houte

POMEROY

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
28, 12·5
-

2T·7 BOYS SEPARATES.__.- GIRLS DRESSES
BUY ONE, GO ONE

. 12 11101. to Size 14

'V2 PRICE

25% OFF

(Equal or Lessor Value)

-we

•DISCOVER
•LAYAWAY
113 Court St., Pomeroy • 992·2054

'

"to Quollflod Appllconto

CIIJU52'MA5 OPEN ROUSE ·
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 12 til 5

20°/o·25°/o-30°/o-35°/o-40°A. OFF SUNDAY ONLY

swe•t Greetings
Sh~p

POMEROY, OHIO

122 E. MAIN ST.

WE.CAN·FILL YOUR HOLIDAY lEEDS•••
.Donuts, Pec~n Rolls, Strudels,
fi;~ldis, Custom Designed Cakes,
C~okie. Bouquets for all occasions.

OPEN HOUSE HOURS: Salll:30-6:00; SUn.1-6
Come Early for Fun and .Pi-lz..!
. LAYAWAYS ARE WELCOME

•VISA

STARTING THE
HOLIDAY SEASON
OUTRIGHT WITH A VISIT TO

ANDERSON'S

~

This Is The Sa~· vou Have Waited For...
TWO BIG DAY
Our Gold &amp; Diamond Representatives Will Be In Our Store
With Their Complete Line of Diamonds at
50% Off &amp; t4K Gold at 60% Off.

'

Register to win: RUSSELL STOVER CANDY
2 lb. 4 oz. Gift Box
2 lb. Assorted Chocolates • 1 lb. Creams

.K&amp;C JEWELERS

29.

$

FREE DELIVERY

. EXTRA SPECIAL- THE FIRST 12 SOLD SUNDAY WILL BE
AT 50% OFF (Umlt 2 per cullomer}

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY; ONLY,

212 EAST MAIN

SALE PRICES
START AT

.

25% OFF SELEC'F qROUP OF.DIAMONDS

110 W, MAIN POMEROY
992·2284

SALE

-Wallawqys .
-Rocker/Rtdiners
-Vibra Ma$sage
-Thermo Massage

Jewelry, complete stock .....................~ ........... Y. Price
:christmas Cards In Boxes ........ :..~ ............... y, Price
,•Christmas Wrapping Paper .......................... Y. Price
Amlty Billfolds,
men's &amp; women's ................. Y. Price
\
TI11Jex Watches .............................................. 40% Off

f&amp; the, Ufttnlllr.fe-, n1llfY

'

REC~INER
.

lUI-'OILY- OPEN 10 I.M.-1 P.M•

•fea.w" efjwv~_g,

YOUR CHOICE - SPECIAL TERMS

THE

L~~~GOO~D~TH;Ro~·uo~HES~UN~DI'~~'~NO~V.~.2~8 J

.,

.

'

Other savings throughout the
, too
numerous to 111entlon. Stop In and check us
o~t you'll be
you did.
100 E. Main St. , Pomeroy ''

IZIIill

992-5177

.. .

.
,..,
~

ltOP IN AND LOOK AIOUND.
SEE WHAT WE HAVI fOI JOU
. ..

~

.

..•

.

'

. -992·6632

· OHII 6 A.M.·6 P.M. MON~·FRI; 8 A.M.·3 P.M. SAT.
'Ill•

'

'

Choose the savings on your purchase from
Christmas Tree!

CHAP

N SH.OES

POMEROY'S QUAutv SHOE STORE
Saturday 9:00 A.M.-6:00P.M.
Sunday 12 Noon-5:00 P.M.
MONDAY-THURSDAY 9:D0-5:00; FRIDAY 9:oo-&amp;:OO

�·Turkey with all the trimmings ·
~

.

BJ Tile A_.lated l'l1u
Whim seJectina your bird fQr lhe

rholiday tabla, allow at least a
• pound of unoooktd lultcy per per; son when purchasing a whole
•turkey. Turkeys weigh anywhere
l from 6 to 24 pounds.
· To accompany the roasted
lwkey, Ka!Ja Goldman, chef for the
·Empire Kosher Co., has created a
cornbread stuffing flavored with
· fennel; a sweet and savory stuffing
: made with celQry, peppers, apples,
; nuts and curranu;, a wild rice,
· mushroom and cherry stuffmg; and
an orang~ranbcrry relish.
Q,oast Turkey with Fennel·
Cornbread Stumng
{closed foil method)
For the stuffing:
2 tablespoons olive oil
4 onions, sliced very thin
6 cloves garlic, minced
2 fennel bulbs, chopped (about4
cups), reserving fronds
1 pound fresh mushrOOIJ,IS ,
sliced
. 1 pound fresh mushrooms,
chopped
4 cups dry French bread cubes
5 cups cornbread cubes, dry
2 to 3 teaspoons thyme leaves
I tellSJJ?On ~
I cup CllOIIPC'IItalian parsley
1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes,
chopped and soaked in 1/2 cup
sherry
I teaspootl crushed fennel seeds
Fresh ground pepper
2 cups cbiqen broth
Heat the oil in a lar'ge skillet.
Saute the onions, J.arlic and fennel
over low heat until soft, about 10
minutes.
. · Add the sliced and chopped
· mushrooms; saute 2 minutes more.
: Transfer ihe vegetables .to a large
bowl; set aside.
Combine dry cubes qf bread,
herbs, sun-dried tomatoeS llld their
soaking liquid, fennel seeds and
fresh ground pepper.
. .
Lightly toss to'ether the veg- ·
• etable and bread miXtureS. Add ,the
: chicken broth; lightly toss again.
· Set stuffing aside while preparing
the turkey. (SlUffing lhe turkey and
letting it stand before ~g ~Y
cause increased bacterial growth m
the turlrey and stuffing.)
,. For the Turkey
: 18 to 20-po\lfld turkey, fresh or
· frozen, completely thawed, neck
· and giblet reserved - .
1 fennel bulb, sliced into 6
pieces, reserving fronds ·
2 carrots, peeled and quartered
· I onion, quartered
;' . I tablC$JlOOII ~oil
: 2 cups chicllen•brocb. 'additional
: may be needed for exba stuffing or
gravy
'
8 cloves ~c. crushed
1 cup apncot preserves
I to 2 tableSpoons soy sauce
I teaSJlOOII Ulyrne l~ves, dried
Fresh ground JlCPI!CI'
1/2 cup orange JWCC·
112 cup sherry wine
112 ~cornstarch
Preheiu oven to 400 degrees F.
Remove plastic wrapping' from
. the nutey.
; ; . Remove .giblets an.d. neck from
body aild neck cay•tJ~.
~ • Rinse the turkey mstde and out
: with cool water. trim all visible
: fat, pat dry with paper towels.
Stuff the .cavity looself with
stuffini. alloWing for expa!L'lJOn.
: Stuif the neck area and secure
: with ne&amp;. Sldn. Put any remaining
stuffing i'! an ovenproof baking
I. dish·
set astde.
·

:tbe

1
I

.'
j

Ill the bottom or a large roasting
pan, arrange a bed of fennel slices,
reserved fronds, carrot and onion
pieces. Gently place the turkey on
top, breast side up. Rub the I tablespoon oil all over the bird.
Pour I cup of the broth in the
pan, place pan in hot oven and
roast turkey m a 400-degree F oven
for 30 minules to seal in the juices.
Meanwhile, for lhe glaze, combine the garlic , preserves, soy
sauce, thyme. pepper, remaining
broth and the 1/2 cup orange juice
in a bowl; set aside.
After 30 minutes, remove ,or
pull turkey out on rack, brush on
glaze, covering the entire surface.
Create a tent with two ~e pieces
of foil that allow 3 Jo 4 mches of
air space so that you can open ,to
baste and then re-closc. Return
covered turkey to oven; reduce
temperature to 350 degrees F.
Roast the turkey for 4 hours,
basting every hour with basting
mi xture and pan juices. After 4
hours, uncover the turkey to allow
it to further brown.
Bake I more hour, basting two
or three times (about 5 hours cooking timc).lf you have extra stuffing
to bake, stir in a bit of broth or pan
juices, loosely cover; bake for the
last 40 to so minules.
Transfer the turkey to a heated
platter, cover loosely and allow it
to rest 15 to 20 mmutes before
carving. While the turkey rests,
sbain and defat the pan juices. You
should have 4 cups. Add more
broth if necessary. Place in a
saucepan. Heat to simmer.
In a small bowl, combine the
sherry and cornstarch. Then whisk
into saucepan, simmer 5 to 7 minutes, add salt and pepper to taste
and serve with turkey. Makes 18
servings.
Nutrition information per serving: 926 cal, 41 g fat

bake in a 325-degree F oven for I
hour, uncovered, in two 9- by 13by 2-inch pans. Makes 12 cups.
Nuaition infonnalion per !-cup
serving: 270 cal .. 10 g fat.

IINiml-9
ICIIIIIY

•

Wild Rice, Mushroom and
Cherry Stutring
I cup brown rice, uncooked
3/4 cup wild rice, uncooked
4 cups chicken broth
1 bay leaf
112 cup marsala wine (Malaga)
.8 leeks, white part only, sliced
thinly
4 cloves garlic, minced
ltablespoon olive oil
I cup chopped celery, usc stalk
and leaves
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1/4 teaspoon allspice
2 cups sliced mushrooms
1 cup chopped fresh mint
I cup dry, crumbled wholegrain bread
112 cup chopped almonds
112 cup dried cherries, plumped
in 112 cup marsala or sherry
In a large Dutch oven or covered skillet, combine the brown and
wild rices, chicken broth, bay leaf
and wine . Bring to a boil. Stir,
lower heal and simmer, covered,
until nearly tender, 40 minutes.
In a large skillet. saute the leeks
and garlic in the I tablespoon oil.
Cook over low heat for 5 minutes,
then add chopped celery. Saute 4
more minutes until wilted ; add
tomato paste, stir, then add allspice
and mushrooms. Cook 2 minutes
more, set aside.
When rice i s tender, add to
sauteed vegetables. Gently toss in
mint, bread crumbs, almonds and
cherries. Moisten with more broth,
if needed. Stuff in bird (neck and
cavity) or bake in two 9- by 13-by

TUPPEAI .PI.MIS
lllillc a billa nee,
In lnlat-.t,
pe-t prollellon,
kennel 111Yice, pupe •
young dDgl tor 1111.
By itppt. only
114-117-PETS

To place an ad

Call 992-2156

'I.

l

.-It\

.'

MoN. lhru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.B-12

..

POLICIES

,.,.,•

,

.

-.'".' ...

.
c

.

.

,,

Hoppy Ado

Ia Me~aortu.

Yerd Sal•

Open.9to6

• A dueilied ad.,.rtiHmu.l placed ill lb. The D•ily Seatlnel
(mopl Ctu.iElocl Dioploy, Buaia- Card or~
Nolie•) will abo appear la 1be Point Reuu1 Repter ud
the CallipoU. Daily Trili.UD~, reaclaiDI oYer 18.000 bo-

TURKEY SHEPHERD • Bill Harrington
herdS a field full or turkeys into a corner so be

Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

can coot tbem at tbe Wyi:bwood Farm in Stonington, Conn. (AP Pbota/Norwk:b)

2-inch baking dishes in a 325- .quarters
degree F oven for 45 minutes.
1/2 to I cup sugar
Makes 11 cups.
3 tablespoons lemon juice
Nutrition infonnation per !-cup
1/4 tablespoon allspice
·
serving: 230 cal, 7 g fat.
In the bowl of a large food processor fitted with a metal blade,
Orange-Cranberry Relish
pulse-chop half the cranberries ,
12-ounce bag fresh cranberries, half the orange pieces and half the
picked over and rinsed
orange peel. Repeat.
I seedless orange, peeled
Combine
batches in a large
(reserve 1/4 of peel) and cut in bowl.
· ·· lemon juice and .

allspice; mix together. This recipe
can be made two to thtee days in
advance and refrigerated. Check
sweetness, as cranberries can vary
in tartneSS; adjust lemon juice andor-sugar. Makes 3 1/2 cups. .
Nutrition infonnation per !-cup
serving: 200 cal., 0 g fat.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thur.iday
1:00 p.m. Frlday

AUTO

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

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone

Dill
992-7878 .
7{7/1....,.

"'-'

• MS-DOS 6, Windows 3 .1 and
America Online software
• 3'12'' 1.44MB floppy.drive
• 4 open slots and 3 open
device bays for quick and
easy upgrading
• With .39mm Super-VGA
color monitor
Reg. separate Items 1498.99

~r25 - 1624/4Q!It

HOUSE OIIERROWINC?
ClEAII if WITH n...
ClASSfiEDAD$ &lt; I

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

Ally • · • Pa Cllan

Vate at Radii W;.otHclal

Vofe.IIIHo Sweepstakes

&amp;Baloting~

For the fi~t ti.,., tans wil help select the
NFL Pro B&lt;1M teams. EI~Wo ballots wiN be .
entered into a ~~ to win a trip lor
2 to the Pro Bowl in Hon~~u and other
valuablo prlles. Balloting onds Dec. t3. See
participating stores fur of1kial rules.

PRICES, TOOl

2

TIM •ngele •re eoftly
gu•rclng you, Ann.,
In • quiet •rid ellent
orFor In It llee •
precloue daughter,

,...,. ............ _1
Coupon good lh!'OUQII November
30, 1993 at partjdpaling Radio

Shack-• tor" and dialers. One

coupon per 'Jllll. Not redeemable
lor caah. No enotocoplta . Void
where prohib1 tl&lt;l by law. Ma~ not be

Ann.,

combined with any other coupon or
di800Unt cHer.
&amp;TORE: to enter POS, reduce by $5
the pur(;hiiH of any single ittm
priced $15 or more. When prompted

I loved you then, and I
IIIII do.
1
you Anna, God
only know• how
.lonely I'm without
you.
But Anne, you had to
lelve ue end go loin
the lord.
He bed elreedy
ptep~red 1 pi- for
you.
.
Anne, I'm 10 thenldul
you left me • p11rt of
you, e · wonderful
grendeon,
Thttleo much like you
tn every -y, every

.ml••

lot reaaon, ~elect "Other" and in
tPtce PI'OYided, typt : GIVSAO

Y.¥:1(.,0•

,, j -· -·

r:r.mll

~

day.

A.-.-..:. .

W?! IIIII

Rtg.'H ,t9143-757 .

ml

IAVE'40

•

Though God c8!1ed
you •wey, Anne, I
elwttyl elt •nd think
of you. .
To think you could
not eay goodbye to
your lolom, Ded,
Son, Broth•r, Aunt
Nennle, .Jem .. ~
femlly.
Before you clo18d
your' IY.H lor good
end God celled you
home to . be with
Hlfrl.
AnnJ/ your weery
houre, dey• of p~~ln,
troubled ntghte ere
over.
But, eome IWHI dey,
deughMr, I hojll to
meet uou. •e•ln In
with God.
An111le, I'm IUJ'e you
melie 1 be•utllul
ugel with your
bHutlful emile on
your IIJCt.
Annl, you eure ·ere
mteud every dlry.
And the h~lldeye
won't be .the ••1111
with Y9U 110'*
We ton yo I! very
much end ml" you
•lot.
wteh. you could be
holM with Ul.
LDvll ~·Mom..

H-le.i

Pill UP II t11•
fliltl Ylll.' 1• . . ,
.tlevels.

Rio. 11.M 160·2466

BODFORD'S

112-5702
Clrot lo DtiVid Rlggo

FUSH CUI TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUI YOUR OWN

tl/24/tS

UCAYITING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BrENTS &amp;
SITES
HAU G: ,l.lmeetone,
lllrt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenaad ond Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5-lfn
·---=----·
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
Addition•
Work

UMITED BALLED TREES
LOCATED ON CHERRY RIDGE: Turn Eaet Ill
Jl'lllarwlnonto Rt. 681, go 4 mi. to Mllepoot 13. Turn
South on gravel road, 1'h mllea to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK

NOVEMBER SPECIAL
(BEAT THE BAN)

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK47) ............ s180
NORINCO UN I. SKS ........................ SCJ S
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE.. s130
CALL AFTER 6:00
304·485-7256
11112193 1 MO.

lo Exterior

·

/I

Dll4, IIOII,IIrclther,
Au!ll
.._
fllmly.

In Memory

Let not your hMrt be

trouble,
Ye believe In God,
believe 1!10 In !M·
In my Flllher'e hou~
ate INJR!f IMnllone:
If It w•re not eo, I·
would heve told you.
I go to prep•te e pt.ce
for you.
And II I go end pill·
p11r1 1 piiiCe for you,
I will come again •nd
ntceW. you unto me,
Thill whe111 I em, there
·ye 11111y be eleo.
John 14: 1, 2, 3

tn Loving Memory
of our mother,

BERTHA
RIFE
Nov. 26.
1896-1990
We mlae you, Mom
Eva, Ben, Bonnt. 1:
femlllee, grlndchiJ.
drenl;g...t·
grandchildren.

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

·tt2•SSSI
or TOll FlEE
1400..141•0070
IAIWII, OHIO

DAVID ARNOLD
(&amp;14) 8112-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

Mft .... ~

., o,••,

COMUIIC,ATIOfiS

locflld on VIne St. In
R•crn•. Ample · lot,
lei)Oed rard, w•l!llng
dletance to-echocll or
churcH. tdeel for
roung family.
Call 949-2244
after&amp; p.m;
1Cl'2111

-

...

lOME
FOR .•IL.

IYAA=Oit.a

-l'RACMUC: WOfiK
AVAILABLE.

=

ME SITES-

Raaldan

Calnll*:l..
lnoolallalloM at UnM
J ..u·-·FAX
Koy&amp;y.-

E~CAVATING
BULI..OOZE!! t~CKHOE
C SYITEIIS,

61H82 fH

'

Olf.Premlooe EIIL • o.ta
:FREE Em!IIATEI
Jeff Morrie.• 11 Yr. Exp.
Tri-County Ani

1110.

McLendon
MORTGAGE COMPANY

,~~~

DRIVEWAYi'
iNs'Tili.Eo
UME&amp;TONE-lRUCKING
. FREE ES'DMATES

·-· ,992·3831 .

..10-t2·ttn

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED
Shoulder Mooot. ..... '155
Hom Mount.. .............. '22
Squirrel ...................... '55

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS

•

Financing Available
1-800.553-3586

,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

675-6755

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Window~
Room Additions .• Roofing

GUN SHOOT

COMMER.ClAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTlMATES

RACINE
FIRE lilEPT.

614·9U·7643
(No Sunllay C.llsl

EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
FJJCtory Choke
12 GauJIII Shot
Strictly Enforced

11/IQ/1 mo. pd.

1ot21/1 mo.

2112192Jtfn

liliES ALARM SERVICE
Our Business is Security
Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras

New Haven W. V. 25265

992-2156

GOOD ON SALE

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

CHRISTMAS TREES

Pomoroy, Ohio

Plumbing

ARNOLD'S
PLUMIING,
HEiniG &amp;
COOliNG

PAllS

Gra~tl

NEWI Alfordlbla 488SX
PC with Mlc.,.son -·
.WOrks for Windows
. 'Cast Yu 19M Pra Bawl

H507 A aal111prlng. Ad.
(at comor o1 Ul At 33)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

. Recipes from: Empire Kosher
Chicken.
·,
• , ·

Died: llilroh 21, 1113
fir,! Th•nktJilvlng
gone In ;zs ~-

999

Rigs- Tree Farm

•

ANNAJO
SHOEMAKER

SAVE
· 8489

.,

17

cor-'lullor,...l

Pomeroy, Ohio

In Memory:

.

IIOUN
2'N•UUJ~•"

cut your t-.

Now has beaUIKul C'ocller Spaniel Pupplel. AIIOl
featuring a 2 .ft. common Black Tequ. Layaway• atlj
now available for Chrietmu. Sale on ouf entire ltoct.
of large
MW heme.

Pllnting
(FREE ESTIMATE!II

,2

..

mo. pd.

is now offering
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Frea Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink w~h each purchese of

IU.IUID&amp; ...IU
H2~7011or

8

ScotCh, White &amp;

Aullrl111 Plnaa, &amp;'to 8'.
Hert.y H.nlng rellldll1ce, 3517&amp; Fl•twoode
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio
11/IWI

COPY DEADLINE

WITH MONITOR

CHRISTMAS
TREES
$10.00MCh
3 dlfflt 1111 lclnda:

Specializing In CUllom
FraqAipalr

Sweet mel Savory Stulf'mg
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
I pound lean gro~md turkey
2 cups chopped onion
6 cloves garlic, minced
112 teaspoon crushed red pepper Oakes
6 celery stalks (including
leaves), chopped
2 red peppers, sliced very thinly
into strips
5 cups one-day-old dry French
bread cubes
2 cups coarsely chopped parsley
I teaspoon dried rosemary or I
tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary
112 cup fresh chopped basil or 2
teaspoons dried basil
1 teaspoon poultry seasoning
4 Granny Smith apples, peeled
and cut into small chunks
1/2 cup currants, plumped in
1/2 cup apple juice
1/2 cup pignoli nuts, toasted
2 1/2 cups chicken broth
Fresh ground pepper
In a large skillet, place the oil,
ground turkey, onion, garlic, pepper flakes and celery; brown over
medium heat. Add pepper strips;
cook 5 more minules. Drain off the
fat.
ln. a very large b6wl, combine
turkey mixture, bread cubes, parsley, rosemary, fresh basil, poultry
seasoning, apple chunks, currants
and any reljlaining apple juice, and
pignoli nuts. Gently toss.
Add chicken broth to moisten.
Add pepper to tasie.
Spoon in to prepared bird or

• .,

C...d' of Tlwob

:,'.

Holiday toys
.

day •fter publieaUoato aake correc&amp;n
• Ad. that •ut be paid Ia ad•uaae ue:

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Ada outdde the eouty yeur acii'WUI •u.t. be pr~pa.MI
• Reeeiw-e dieeout for aU p~ ia adnDCe.

't

• F.... Acloo Cl-••r •ad F"'""' ado uod•l5 wordo wllll&gt;o
run 3 d&amp;)'l! •t DO a.u,..
·
• Prke of ad lor .U capilal Jeu.n .. double price o( ul COil
• 7 poial U... type'..ty .....l
• Seatiaelll not ....,........ for erron afaer rant day (~heck
for errora lint Uy ad ru.u ill paper). C.UWon 2:00p.m.

11112111-.

IIHS
CHRISTMAS TREES

Cheryl A. James
William C. James

WICK'S
OH.
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp; ··
WMe Pine 4' &amp; Up w~h
a great eelectlon of
larger treee.
Call742-2143 or
r 11

SERVICE

••Nil

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
I. FILl DIRT

992·3470

OWNEI: Jolt~

CONCRETE
WORK

. How..!, LWrltesel

ROOFING

Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks
.-. ~92·7878

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters •
Downipoufe
Gutt., CINnlng
Painting

mt mo.

Rudond, 911.

Wholuale $10 Ill !Inn,
$12 dellvwad. R...Uiot
Wil ~· OJ1111 I LJII. to I

949·2168
S-16-83-lln ;

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB

THE COUNTY CLUB

...,..r,

Golf

uM&lt;!Ooll
Ciullo,

Trophtol
PlaqUII

JOHN RAFORD
614-tiS·It6

D.A. IOSION

EXCAVATING ·
(61.)

667-6621

&amp; LDRE

lAIN
13151 PIM Gme IIIII
. ...... 45771

'14,2-5344

4-111-113-lfn

Mobile and Doublewlde owners•..

Cd

IISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
oNewHomes
oGarages
oComplete
Remodeling
Stop • Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473

AT THE
QUALITY PRINT SHOP
Middleport, Ohio
GREAT SELECTION AND
VARIETY OF OUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
VH-3:1114 8:30-4 Mon.-Fri.

71'l2193

Pedal Tr~~etoro Availabl e

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL

J.A.R.
CONSTRUCTION

&amp;. ~OAL
Rtatonable.Ratea

Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
. 614-742-2138
mo.

•Dozer •Backhoe
t[)~cher •Dump Truck
Land Cl1141ring, Panda,
Water Linea, Sepllca
Llcenae &amp; Bonded
Charlie Hatfield,
Ofterator
74~-2903

sweeper

TRIII••4
BMOYIL
~HTHAULING

.,IRIWOOD
BILL SLACK
--~268 .

· U8EO IIAILROAD 11&amp;1
1NOillln ·

••r

Come by and
lor !tee B11t1ry to be
~n away o-mber
24, 11193. Nloo ~:~::
r.quired to 1'1
.don, have
to win.

•

.. _.!-.......
,.,.L

..... .

lnollllled complete with

e
~~· ftntrnelng IVIilable.

'Y il l

.=
I

Electric Furnacea
$21.00 rna.

·-

G11

Fumacoo

$25.00 mo.

Oil Fun'ac'"

$36.00 mo.

can BENNER'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING AND COOLING

Gallipolio, Oh.

4-4&amp;-11411 or Toll Free t-S00-8n·S967

446-9515
CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
We give carpet and
upholstery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they deaervell
'drllpery (on ahe)
'fine fabric•
'generel cleaning
'odor trelllment

Partl • Service • Bags • Belts

Ca~lllfl,O(j

Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
HooV«, Eureka, Tri-81111',
Regina, tl moat Olber brands I

\'/V013372

We specialize in:
FIRE&amp;WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATION·
INSURANCE CLAIMS
24 Hour

Emergency Service
Ownermm Faulk, Manager
technicians on every job.

SatlsfaCIIori

Pan. lblpf"d UPS
Faat • DlpendJJbll Service!

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs

~vn••
SHRUI I Till

FURNACES ·

,,.

Farm Toys

742-3020 Allor 5:00

t

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

ATTENTION

p.m. atllrllng Nov. :14111.
. TIH11reS'tot'.

FREE ESTIMATES

IIIIGO
IN POMEROY
8:-45p.m.
Special
Early Blrcl
.$100 Pll)'oft,
Thlo ad good for I
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Co-Owners

36970 Ball Rua Road

Potltloy,Ohla

(304) 882-3336

Daytona Radial 60 and 70 Series
• Low, wide 60 and 70 • Series

GENEUL LIFE and

ACCIDIIT INSUIIIICE COMPANY

parlonnance profllea.
• Two strong flberglan beltf'
• Aggre..lve true! dea9l
• Smooth riding poly8ater oord

Special RIWIL ~"~-•­
TNcldoad SALE Pricaa:l

body.

Life •!Yedlc.we • Cancer .. Fire • Health •
~dent •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

Rocky I. H.,., D.C.U. • Agent
.
"-•119
...........; Olalo 45760
1614) 10.5264

CALL
304-773-5533
Open 6 Day'aA Week ·

'

.

�Sentinel

Ohio
32 Mobile Homes

44

tor sate

November

AllartiiiM
fOr Flint

1993

Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYU:® by lArry Wripl

..

BRIDGE

~~.:f~!

-h ·- ..=::::,Ohio.

NIEA Crouword ••••••

.t

PHILLlP

ALDER

tAit

One bod,_
apottmon11
1221/mo. lncludoo UIIIM!eo, toiiO
-urlly dlpoolt, no polo; 114-

J a' D't Auto Partl and Salvage,
aa. buylna junk Cl,. &amp; INCi.t.
:104-773'13(:1.

....

54 Miscellaneous

AVON HOLIDAY • ChooM Your Molao Counly, '".lam lWD.I
Houra, lncom~1 And 115111 oc... Romolo, buullfu
Rewtrdl. Avtra~t ....
$14 land; woodt. pulu,. and hllll.
Hourtr Soiling 11 WOf!c Or CIH lor JIOOC!. !'liP· 1-61WI3o
Homt. Na DOOR !DOOR. 1-800o l541, Alhino,OH.

Smol puppy,block wlbfown a

whitt, ternafe, Bwk1. old. 30t-

Employment Services

882·20fe.

Tr- To CUI

fo( W~

Clll, Vou HIIW, 114..388-14n.

You

::rw~:': '1ut="t.!
1

6 Lost &amp; Found
11 Help Wanted
Arlnca covenge requlntd.
.:...._..,.~:..;.,.-,-:--:-=':':' I llallyolnor NHdod In lly Homo S.lery: 11.00/lv. lo 1111111· .....
M·F Northup Aroo, Exporlonoo

And Ro,__o Roqulrod, 114Lost : Miniature Colllt, roadtldt 448~124 4-7 P.M.

r~:o:. ~=lrci.chlld'o pol, Bobyohtor Noodod MIMo, NonSmoklr In My Hama For 1 Chlkf,
Coli Aftor I P.M. 114 448 4111.
Bobyohtor needed, 3 lchool 1110
chlld,.n, momlngt 8:00.12:00

Yard Sale

7

11n1 bono!• g:tuogo. ~ n10-

~~tr ~~~ ~~:

quol OpponunHy Employor.

18

Wanted to Do

• :~nt, WV 2.5550, Attn:

'

IVIO, "'·

=;::=i~~::s;~;;;,;;-;;;;;;;
2br., t21V1mo.. Bml ltom kllm
on

'!!..8&gt;

dopao• &amp; , . , _

3041JHI3B.
3 Bod,_ HoUle In Galllpatlo
nt I DepaiR ReqUirM,

........
814 441 100Z.

3-4bdrm. houoo wh~ oxlro lol,

Roclno 1,.._ &amp; roforon.
en, 8'f4.1M8-221t evenings, 114D4W57I doyo.
3br. homo 2101 lit Vornon
A_!!.J4Wmo. wldopoah. 3041,....,.1.
Nice, ot-n 2 or 3 biM:Iroom

contllc1 whh ..,..., lo buy, no

=~With ••h. 114-

Exp. Cholrolclo Don!•! ""'·
Jar grawlng, quolllr2 FomM Moving Sole: 21th; · coniCiouo donlal prod leo. Sind
21th 11~ Hlldo Drlvo Gllllpollo rooumo: 2124 Jocbon Avo, ·Pl.
Falriltw Sub, 9-5.

304oll2-3712.
2br. ·- · -

~

-"',._Jar- ...

blglnnlng JoniMry 2nd, mull
hive,.,.,....., &amp;!4-W.Z-3271.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

...,~ H

42 Mobile Homes
·tor Rent

a.

ALL Yard Sal11 Mutt Bt Paid In

Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Now t.lllng appllcatlone for
lhe day befln th• •d .. to Nn. l)h.rmacy l•chnfclan through
Sunday tdltlon • 2 :00 p.m. November 24th. Moll apF~doy. Mondor odhlon • 2:00 pllciUone or come In perton to
Fruth
Ohio.

p .m. S.lurdly.

Pharmacy.

·· BARNEY

By "'W!p Alder

1077.

Bedding ·Twin Ml11 S.l 181, Full
In 8o1.._ ~Mn 1141 Sot; 4
Drl•r "'-.- S44.11i c.r led'•
Bunk lod'o, Pollor Bodo. Fud
Line 01 hul-lllm V1111
Slarll!'l! AI 120.00; lncla,. Monr
Shopo I A 8Jzoo Slal11na Al
11.00. I ~ ·8ooldo 710110
Auction Or ~ MIIH 0... 141.
Opon t A.M, To BP.M. Mon -Sol.

Which Ia tbe wont cootract In
. bridge? Moot people will probably answer five nc.-trump. This CCIIItract
mamnllel the rilk for tbe minimum
of profit. You could bave stopped Ia
three or four no-trump to collect the
ume game bon111. However, my least
favorite Ia any 1111111 slam !bat de-

Doyo /4

Nlghl!z. UnderbDDktd, Mull S.d.

12711 l'lr Couple• .Umlod TJcll.

.... 407·717-8100 Exl. 111, llon-dly Thou SO!urclor, I A.M. To 10
P.ll.

r -;....--------.t

't'ES, MA'AM,I WALKED
SCHOOL IN THE RAIN ..

Buck Woodbumer Stove Witt\

Supply 01 Wood, FuR Sill Pool
T1bl1 Whh EcauiDn!MC Table
Tonnlo,l14 4ti-OU1.
Cornplilo
ldlchon
oator.
Counlry .._..., 41'• &amp; 33 112'0
RPM. Roolfnor lift chllr, nry
good conil. OlyiiOft 1an1t, • pl.t•, on wlllel8. ~7&amp;-4023.
Now Flborgleoo
Eooh
_ _ ~-.
_ _1100 CONCRETE sPETIC TANKS,
1,~ o.tton, m1: Now JET 111
Tub ~50 Eoch, 114-245-11152 A~ (Mo
Sand FIHor "-!ulrod)
tore P.M.
11,418; Ron E - Ento.........
Gold oolo hldo a bod, 1275; Jocklon, Ohlo1~.
pont.,., dlahwuh•r, 1200: bath
In UCIIIInt Concltlon, 614-112· Eloc!rlc SNro Troodmln, S210,

pellds on a f~.
Slama are wortb vast numben of

poiDII. And to bave your wbole empire
rating on the poeitlon of one card al·

·n Cho~tolllll/4 ton !ruck, 2100

MI'IH, 4WD, txcellenl ....,.,
17,000 mll11, I,..SNt-2072.

614 388 1000.

0000 USED APPUANCES
WolhoroL dryoro, ·l'lf!iglrOIOf.!t
rongta. okogflll Appllanceo 111
Vlno St-1 ,Coll 814-441-'iiii, 1·

'II Ford XLT Lorio! PlckUD
Truck. s &amp;pood, 300, v.a B14-381- ·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complilo homo lumlohlngo.
Houro: llon-811, 1-5. 114-4410322. 3 mlleo ou1 Bulavllle Rd.
F-lllllvory. •

1534.

TN3.

.FRANK AND ERNEST

I

'

n

. . '

Moylag AUIOtnolla Uko
w.- Lloa Now, I Yoor W1to
'"'"Y $2011; Hotpolnl Dryor, LID
~1 1 Y11r Watronty, 1208; CU.
Romgtrotor, Alm~1 ..Liu Now,
1 Year Warranty, AUDi Skaaa•
VIne Blroll, 01~

17,~;

IT'~ ACREAl DEAl

INO'TICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO.
rocom- thll you do _ . . h~youk.-,ond
NaTiollild - = t h o
moll u!WII you
od
tho ollorlng. .

hlwO-

1 Bod._ Elllcloncy Wllor
Paid, Cluiol lonlng. 10 MlnU111

·-07.

PICKENS FURNITURE
.......J..d
H o - lumfo!1lntl. 112 mi.
Rd. P1. PINNIII, WY,
CIU 304.a'll-1450.
Rillriaorllar &amp; Slove, Good
Cond1tlon I Runs Won 1120
Rolrigor01or; 110 Stove, 114-388-

Fn&gt;m
Golllpollti,
$175.11o.
-~ R • - - Roqllirod.

114-446-2320.

.

1bdrm. . .rti"'IMMIn Mlddlapart,

1111 utlltt!M lltrnlohod 1 $250/mo.
pluol200 dopaoh, 114·949-2217.
Tonnl"'l ...lily Solon E..,. 2 Lorge Bodrwmo, 2 Flo«o,
mont Far SOlo, E-rtl!lng ~~-!,112 8111J, 2 Pools, Plllo,
NNdod To Sla~ Your Own n;rutMO, Na t"'lll Lease Plua
B - 114-24U121.
Stcuilly DopooK Aoqulrod, 11438'1-7850.

Real Estate

PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?II

wll not

Tlllo .._

...."*9'fiCCOJ)1

ldlft.rlltrnlrU for,...Nt...
-llln&gt;1ollllano1h
llw. Our - • .,.,......,
lntonntcllhiiiM dl b• • ¥
DertllldlntiiJUW

-

2bdrm. aptt,, lotal electric, apo

pllinooo

lltmlohod, , laundry

FI'MI,;r.,•
Mk:rowt.,., ......-..

52 Sporting Goods
- And
......lllug
100,Borrol
12 Ga.Wllh
..
Vont· Rib

o-·. -

· SjJj it the

•ci•x.~AUJy... by ghone,

! · pq ,..,d·to ~GI!f your hor:w·

~.Piq,fl 1oyr clg.Ui6ed ad today!
1
•

,\

I

'.,·

.:

11117 Bronco II, Excollanl Cond~

King WoOd • Cool . IIIIMf
Slovo, Wl1h Equljlmlnt, 114-216o
121:1.
'·
Khchon u..o Cool,
Woocl or O..."Goocl Cohllllon.

11t

ue 0212

$

•

lluny Rldlna Lowil 11- 10
~!'r.JO Inch Cut 2 V2 Yooro bid,
oouu,lf4.4411.23N.

1;.,...-.,,......._ __

'
·~ '

f.lfln Suppltes
,~ Livestock

4
7

"-::::-::-Moto~=rc~yc~les::--:==::ltiO Hondo CR 250 R, 114-1192·

)

.

MORTY
MEEKLE
.
·-·

76

-

Nt-f ~ W.Ae Ctl.P!;II.,iN CF
~16TlDDL.YWINK6
"'Tl5AAJ. l N CQ L E.EiE ...

WHEN HE- PULu:D A
HAM6TRING IN HIS
TIDDLY-'Tl-!L.W.e.

/

3202 1fter spm.

/

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

B - Tronomlnl..., Ullld a
·robull; lllfYpoo, llonlna •1181;
ollnor 11(.241-IBTT, '814-371ZISS.
lankl, one ton !ruck
llo. D RA~{~-~· 304·

wheetl. rldlltol'll lloor m1t1,

a

372·3133 "' 1

2n'lroi&lt;l.

Serv1ces

Home
Improvements

=":·

AITRO·ORAPH

I,.,

Nor, oquoro - , $1.10 a up.
Solurdly on!y pluup. 304.a'll-

-.

31 Homes fc!r Sale

..

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

T1 ,msportdtlon

Nolll PumR,

Blorogolulld"'l, i/4 AOnl UnCI,

••••li
- Route
790, hi.OOO,..,._
114-211-ati.

... stamped envelope to
P.O.
Box «86, New Vorl&lt;, N.Y. t0183.
, CAPRICORN (C.C. ~- 11) You have
1 the ll&gt;llly to do eornethlng IOOay thai many
othero can\ and that Is 10 make miiVINll
comman:lal or llnanelal sKuatlons yield a
profltabla. UH .h.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Ftb. It) Sometima
when dealing with , _ n·s wile to 1e1 our
heart rule our head. Today, however,
things will be bener tor everyone con ·
earned nlOgic 1al&lt;el pi8Cfldancl &lt;Mtr ernotionl.

' * - , 1 AOnl,

, ......... -!na And Cooljl)g.

....,101.

-Avo.•P.!·

P l -... -~. , , _ To - •
11 · -..,..--- - - j 1-nu.
12 •._ _ ___,
11AJ011 PlaCE REoucmoN • 4
13. _ _ _ _--1 la.d
2 V2 ..... - .. On 4
ftiD.IOO,. ....
1'4. _ _ _ _--l ,.....
unc11e....
Awol-. no AoiM ,..

lntllllallon And
RilES
COrllftod. Aolldontlol, Cornnoll&lt;ole~ 114-2BB-111t
•'·

15·-------1

!!flint, -

=···

·6·.,_
' -----

8,

Dollc!Oqo ....,.... Opon
So-yo only.

IBIB.

i.u.~..oi/!.eeftw poid ill .....,.,,.,. rote.I

'

••s,~.:..:...,:::.-..;~--.

o\jlplooo lull oft RI.MJ, ono milo
oouth 01 Corponlor. Rod end

pqper~,$6.00

9.___ ___,
10. _ _ _ _--1

'

~~::-::Vtg~e~ta::-b-::18~1~=

Running lloordil, ·AIIIFM Sla~1
Air Candltlonlng, ·St•ncf•ra
Tronomlulon, 11,200. 114-388-

15' ll'OrcU or k11, 3 days,
I

,.,~ . . ~'71 11111-1

lion, Now Engine, Now n,.;;,

~-

2 lod""!'M, -

- ··--

tNnamlatton, JOoll8 '
,.,..
good, $1.200. Urm. :104-571-2704;

..... .......... Read the Best

:,., _nw,. your clr.ittf!r into ctuh,

Nov. 24, 1993

11'12 Chow 4 whMI drlvo, hoojil
hell, 301' onlngo, . 4 ,.....,

Rilling, 1241; Wlnchollor 1300,
,
In_
town.
-·
AIII&gt;Jioii- · - toavailable
IChool 12 Oo. Pump, Slug Bunol, 1230,
380, lmni And 41 AUio
11: ·a.- Aolo. 141 or S.v1n11
PlltOII, S.vet~l Uud $150 ·1&amp;0.,
0111114-0'12-3711. EOH.
Ammo For AU. Aloo I On!y
Aecenlly BerNd From Futun
Solo SOml AKS, RH!eo, - ·
Soverol Mll-8~ SKS Rlftoa;
Huntl!'ll And Procllco Ammo.
Ono • - Flro 11-18, .223 CoL
1 1'0011111 upoW,.. portlallr lur- 11,'100
1200 Fed Tu. P.
nllhod, rocontiY romodlod, Hock, BPluo
Bln:h uno (Bohlncl Hut·
utll~leo I coble JV pold, cloon.
lone Cor Wah) 114-446-1123 Or
304471-1111.
• '
l.orlllo B14-44NH1, . 0pon
BEAUTIFUL APAIITME~S AT Whono- I Am Noro 7 Doyo.
BUDGET PRICIII AT JACKSON Chrll1mn Loy-Awoyoff?71?
ESTATES, 138 "ollckoon Plkl
lnlm l20t/lllo, Walk 10 shop a 53
Antiques
movleo. Colll14-44t~~68 . EOH.
Buy or 1111. Rlvorlno Anllq-,
Fll"'l
HotMr
ApartmlnW, 1124 E. Moln 811011, on Rl. 12,4,
A - . Olol"j&gt;ollo. 814- Po!Mroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:w
441-1800 lonlol',. DII!Bbled, A a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sun4ar 1:00
lo 1:00 p.m. B14-lt2.z&amp;2B.
1 - . FMHA Sullllcllzad, HUD Will Bur One nom Or 11111n.
CenlflcltH Acoeptld. 61......1·
331
te, 1'141ioo 1 Equol HoUolng Oppor· Second Annue,
448-em, Mon .a.t., 1:30-1,
tunlu•.
•
F~dor e:ao.a.

="=·d~ &amp;~::=

Eaoh .._..,.

'H

p I ,

lhl.,. ..... .., ..... r....,... a..,..,.,...

PZ

KLTZLUPT
IPMHIIX

.V L U

I' • by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.
K.

3

IVP .UZ,

p

IHNZVUHPII .

zv

IYDHVN

IHNZVUF . '

H ' I

UVKTPKI
'ZGHNZ '

AHUVKZYU)
UVII
IPIIII.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: .._
h comeo to puttiog lai!ll ella, Mploal"'
OCIIon on lttm. Jonn woo to 1ho new gold otanclonl." - K - Tunon.

·I

I

CAN0 0 E

I I I I
LOHYL

Eltctrical &amp;:
Refi'lgel'llllon

On A Jolnlna 1'11111 'IIIII 1111 An
- . . l'liHo 01 . . .,100.
.._... Colt
. . ConMI AI lllo
Dlnnllillw••

ii11l.nllll

··
..

or OOift"*''III
llrYicoo or ioMire.

Mo.., Uoonood ltocl~.
. flldiiNur IIHirloll, ~.

llaoioltr AI (1141 - · ·

·t~

....,..1711,

PISCES (Feb. ZO.IIarah 20) Thera Is a
poaalbllhy you might come acrooa 101118·
lhlng IOOay while rum~ lhrougll your
attic or clceet.thai may bo tJ! more value to
you now that) when you flrot got K.
r you have taken time to prepatV youruN ARID ( - 21·Aprtt 11) Make Ka point
fOP"rly In your praeantlleld ol endeavor today to try to opend IOII1e time with ., Old
/'18 ~ llhNd could tum out to be a ban- lriencl you've been neglecting lately. Thlt
:oer lor ,.,... Good lucl!.
relatlonlhlp Is 100 Important to ti'Nt lndlfler·
~am""":!' fNri. ~- 21) Today n anhy.
~ apply,yoltrMH, you lhould be an IKctl·
TAURUS (April ZO.IIay 20) Today H you
jtnl oomm\1i11Cetof. Whit you aay velllally help othsra to fulfill thtlr ambltlona and
er put In writing will be algnlflcant and I achieve !heir 001tct1va nwiH oontldlrably
!"~"- othl!l. Ttylng to patoh lip a bro- onhance your reputation, IAIW H you , _
~·n
romanoa? The Aatro· Graph :S bOOel, theM wiU be tha pereona to tum
fo!IIChmaktr 'can help' you to.unde01tand to.
GEMINI (May 21.Juna 20) An old lriend
~~.to do. 10 m~e tho rolalioroshlp WOil&lt;

on.

-·'

..~.

'·

.,

I

,,

.

of )'Mil ago il aboullo lal&lt;e 011 new &amp;lgnlll·
canoe . lllooko like the two of you mlghl
become Involved In on Interesting endeav·
or.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) S~eas It
indlcatocl IOOay, but nia likely to come !tom
a joint venturia. Neither you nor I'()Ur coun·
terpart can do this wllhoul the help ol tha
other.
LEO (July ~ug. 22) An unlucky lrlencJ
might come to you lor and coontat
IOOay. H)'01.1 I'Nily wont to help 11111 ~ .
tell nlike n1o and not what 1011 lllink hellht

wantatohear.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·8tpt. 22) Asaoclatal
might not perform up to their u•ual higH
IWidatOa todly, but lhlo ltn't aplto anocl
you, When you do I job you'll !aka pride I~
doing It right, oven II It Is a mundane
asalgnmont.
UIRA (lap!. 23-0ct. 23) Don't lal&lt;e your·
ul or INe too Hl1oully today. In !act, Hyou
con, troet nlike a Q1RM1 and I think you'll
lind you'll produce mol'!! winning acoret
than loolng ontt.
ICORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) You hava
whit n talcM to bo a.-..~uJ today. You
c:M dnlw upon your !enacily, C0Uf101 and
wHI to win. Thaae tleinetots repttHnltha
tr1plo lhi'Nt you have going lor you.

I

I
I I" I I I
CRE p H

Recliner

Excollenl Condhlon, $400, B1429ol331.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., Oollpollo. Now &amp; Ulod
lumhuro, hoiloro, Wltlorn a
WOf!c boolo. 114-448-3111.
Wolhor, ·!ltYor, Rlfrill!notar,
Color T.V.
S t -.

_...,."1&gt; "'

GIVE. 'ltXJ 'Ill£ Tille

1501.

Slteper SofiAocker

1110 Food

441-4711.
.·
3B ft. loti lrolllr; 1188 Cho'IY, I&amp;
2 opHdtronomlalon loti liuck,

Jor·Opportunity

'I

Cv!IIIOII', I Spood, $4,200; 114-

Mollohln Fwnhure C.rptt,
11.50 Yd &amp; VInyl $4.41, e14-44511144.

BUIIIIHI

AR:I,
Rongor

1111 GMC St.1'T81, 2100,

AppUinCH 114-44&amp;--7311, 1..fCR).

21

ounces.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c:.e.&amp;wttr ClpMr ~ . . en.~~~~,....

!

- , fY•r-.n.v, 1201; a.E.

Apartment
torRent

few

To some, today's grand slam would
t40w'S YOUJ GAiltfll AS A
;t, depend on a finesse; but not to othen.
North's mponse of two no-trump
6~0LOGIST GOIIIG 1
"'
was the Jacoby Forcing Ralae. Soutb's
•
~
jump to five spadea announced two
.I IT "" • " vv'T
&lt; heart losen and asked bis partner to
., .,..,;•• I
ACti. wAS
act, given that lnfonnation. Nortb'a
Tl,fiH
TO L.ITTI.."
~ silr-4iamond cue-bid showed both red·
"
suit aces.
PlfOMOTION
What lltould you discard at trick
ANf&gt;-.tiOw .I'M ~ one? The .immediate ruction Ia your
••o.,.""·T
beart.looer. tM \lilt resqltsln defeat
Up A . "'"
1 .: wbea
tl!li"
there IS an unavoidable Clab 101/tT MOUNT All~ t40Mf / • • · er. You lhould dilcard a low club.
I Draw trumJII, caab the A·K of clube
and, wben the queen doesn't drop, play
a heart to dummy's ace. Dilcaril your
BEGIQE., YOO
laat club on tbe -.x~d top diamond,
ruff
a club, play a trump to dummy
AANDfiNI:t PIP·
and discard your heart loser on the es~li'U.II~I
tablllbed club jack.

SMPLOYMSNT
RSSUMSS
PRSPARSO·
. , ..

1881 314 Ton OMC Plck.IJt&gt; Wll~
Compor, &amp;14 au 1547, 114-441-

I00-4fll.34w.

44

waya Beellll undesirable to me. Any
looing llam II bad bn•'naa. U you 10
one down, you bave loot not only the 50
or 100 penalty points but alao the
avallab~eme bon111. It isn't ill tbe
lAIIIe I
e, of course, but one Ia reminded at the Cballenaer abuttle dl·
lUter was caused by the dillnlelra·
tion of a rubber ring welghinc only a

r.

li

PUI

The contract
of cost

70,000 BTU LP 011 Hlelllng
Stovo Good Shipe, $150, 1114'
VI'RA FURNITURE
256-t323 Aftorl P.M.
114-448-3188 Or 114-441-4421
'tO DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT~.OWN (NO DEPOSIT) 8 Ft. Poet Tobie, 1300, 114-388-

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wn&gt;ughllnon Table W/4 Choln;
Fan Bock Rocking Choir 158;
Qardon Arch Wor'al121.00

Puo

ALL GONE II

Goods

Bohlmo Crullo I

••

OpeDillg lead: t 10

YOU MADE IT

olngle,
US:
Romll1alon
S.On111111n, 121111., 1200; lllrx
efectrlc tr~lnt, aild. 1 ,.aa.nger,
lrllghll,
1350 lot"'""'
111; hNr,
oyn1hllll4ii'
koybolrcl,

ll:t;;;;.;;)id---1'$100; M1rtfn uxlllthone, 110;
S
51
liH ol.-ohor; B14-tl2·2060.

40!1-34H,
Upollo.

ICIUIId
37loclltr

l!oo1

Puo
Puo

GOOD BOY ,TATER!!

30 Clrlilnl $1'10; 410 ....... pi•
tal grip, S15cii lmm rtn., lUi 410

8012 1ft1r Spm.

Mlddlepon,

31Utt:MI.plola

p. .

llh3.

Merchand 1se

41 Housel for Rent

.AitiS

Wool

Merchandise

1 Couch 6 Chllr, 121, B14-3Bl'

1112-4738,

ono
OduH wllh
dt-Pilllldol
dlubllllloo
In Mllgo
Cou!IIY.
HOURS: Monday tvenlng lhru
Soturdlr morning· lleop roqulrod; doytlmo l.ciuro olf. Jn.
lormol aonfng. Varlouo lllolllo
end Ia- nHdod. High lchool
· dogroo, vollcl d~vtr'o 1101-,
aood dllvlng Noon!, lllr• _ .

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

R ent~ Is

......

lleaier: Soutb

Own

WANTED: Full·llmo llvo-ln ln-

u.._,. .,
..,
·--flllt

Vulnerable: Eut-West

C.l lfter 2:00 p.m.,
Ml1, . " " wv.

SEVERAL 'lo ACRE PARCELS:

.rructor needed to tNeh eommunfty tnd penontl tkllt. to

I

10-lela
•14=1~11
1J
I'IDIMNillk
11"1
,,,,. S1=-

,14

...

12

,..;:,:1:"'1 -

IIOVTB

8loopl:3Aliol l w -.
35 Lo1a &amp; Acreage

•u

.Aitl41U2

Alii·-

AVON I All Aruo I Shktoy
Spoaro, :JOol.fl'S-1421.
AVON! All arau. NMd txtr.
money ot want a carwr lhhlr
way-call MarilYn. ~-21411
or 1-800-H2-83As.

Furnished
Rooms

II r

IF

Ill diU

.lQJI411U
tQJS

Roomo lor
or month.
Slaitl!lll 01 $120/mo, Oalllo H
. olll.
814 441'1BIO.

Help Wanted

loll II
IOP,..a;:,,•
111 I
" n

. ..

lWT

W.Z~2f8.

11

... N.ii.. -

11

.J14H

Wanted to Buy

.,."
.....
... r,::,;.u
.,r.=
.,,,!IF•
·=II
-..

17-...t ....

• .u s

till

.. r!!'!.

i:=:"
SF

.QJtl

9

41 C1

I ''IIIILS-

. ·fl II
NOIITII

45

40 .....

14"CM

. .:,..

-.· ......

'Whew, that was close! I tOld him we're
the world's smallest ostriches."

,....,

. 11

-·._.....:-

....
........
. ....
AC111111

?
•

•

~

I've done a lol of traveling
mostly by air and I've always
wondered why the first suit·
. . . .
case to come 'down the chute
r --:-A-G_E_E_N_T_--. doesn'tseemtobelongto- ....
. ~

, lfos...:.Y...I;=I,,6.,:,1.:....,1,...--j1•
L -J.L-..J.L-.-l.-..1.-..1.---l.

8

. Complete the

chuckle quoted

by f,JJ,ng 1n the wuutng wordt

you de.,.lop from step No. 3

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQU,O.RES

1

below.

�I.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
543
Pick 4:
2076
BuckeyeS:
12-21-29-30-34

Low lollfPt In 4Gs, eloud,.
TbundaJ, dOudy, bJ&amp;)I Ill mid

50..

Your Professional Full Service Jewelers

113 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 • 992-2054

~~

You're Invited to Our

~~~eht~ tJjun ~~
I

Not Only Do You Get the Finest
Jewelry at the Best Prices, You Get It
from Your Local Jeweler.
I

HOMETOWN SERVICE IS WHAT
WE STRIVE FOR.
NOT LIKE THE MALL JEWELER, IF YOU HAVE
A PROBLEM THE CLARKS WILL PERSONALLY
TAKE CARE OF YOU!!

14K Gold &amp; ·Diamond Sale

·.

TO BEITER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS~ THIS SALE
HAS BEEN EXPANDED FOR TWO BIG DAYS.
Saturday, November 27th and Sunday, Npve.mber 28th
Saturday 9:30A.M. TO 7:-otrP.M. Sunday 11 :00 TO 6:00 P.M.

OVER $1,000,000.00 IN GOLD &amp; DIAMONDS
MANUfACTURER'S COMPLETE LINE

COMPLETE

DIAMOND LINE
ONE

ONE

DAY

DAY

Chains, Charms, Bracelets
· Earrings and More!

~

_

0 . OFF
0

1OO's of Clusters, Fancy Rings
Earrings, Necklaces, Bracelets and More!

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR OUR .FREE GIVE

AWAYS. DRAWINGS WILL BE HELD EVERY
HOUR DURING THE BIG 2 DAY EXTRAVAGANZA!
LAYAWAYS

STOP BY AND SAy

~dW
Joe and Susan Clark
•

COUIT n.
POMDOY
992·205.

Vol. 44, NO. ue
Multlmecl8lnc.

2 IICIIOftll1 20 p..,_ 35 0111111
A llulllnu dlalnc. New p•P•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 24, 1993

Coal

Eastern board OKs
bus garage projects

strike
nearslend
HUNTINGTON W.Va (AP)The United Mine Workers has settled lhe fmal issue holding up the
end 10 a six-month slrikc and has
told miners ui abandon their picket
lines later today, union offtcials
sad.
"The pickets are being pulled
off,lhe (company)~ are being
pulled off, and !here's amnesty for
everybody," said Mike Burdlss,
director of lhe UMW's political
ann in West Virginia.
-Jim Grossfeld, spokesman for
lhe UMW' s international headquarters in Washington, D.C., said the
final 'issue, amnesty for those
accused of picket line violence, bad
been reached "but il would be premature 10 comment beyond that at
this int ''
·~e·re slill meeting," he said.
Thomas Hoffman, spokesman for
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association. He cited a news blackout imposed by federal mediator
Bill Usery.
Pickel lines are 10 be withdrawn
a1 4 p.m. EST, said Larry Ward,
president of the union dislricl cov-·
ering parts of West Virginia and
Ohio.
The UMW has been on slrike
since May 10, when il began a
walkout against selected members
d'. ~ ~qal opera1m 81'0111! in what
It said was ll dispute•over Job

BRADY BILL - Sea. Howard Metzeabaum, D-Obio, and Rep. Charles Schumer,
D-N.Y ~ talk to reporters oa Capitol Hill Ia
Washington Tuesday on the ' Brady Bill,
wbldl bas stalled Ia the Senate. Metzenbaum

Patrol urges
safe driving
Lt. R. J. Woodford of lhe GalliaMeigs Post of the Highway Patrol
reminds area motorists 10 be especially careful during the Thanksgiving holidays.
"There are some things you can do
10 protect yourself while driving, "
Woodford said. "Drive defensively-and be alert to
some ofthe signs of drunk driving. Be
especially watchful for cars that are
weaving, constantly changing speeds
or narrowly escaping crashes with
vehicles and roadside objects.
"Drive at safe speeds and conslantly
check the roadside for an escape path
in case a drunk driver threalens 10
involve you in a collision.
"Defensive driving can help protect you in the event a crash should
occur, wearing your safety belt can
funher protect you and your family
from injury-or death. •
"All the troopers at the Gallipolis
Post will be working during the holi·
day 10 assist motorist and remove
unsafe drivers from the road.
"If you see an unsafe driver or need
assistance call the Gallipolis Post at
614-446-2433. We also monitor CB
channel 9 24-bours a day. Also you
can use a state wide phone number 1800-GRAB-OUI."

business
·
~4ill.i;.~~as~h~igh~C.school
end ot !he.
da~aof

w ASHING'I:o~: if.Pl With D~moctalloo-adii-conuol
advlJcaleillllri\ing up the politi-

cal be8! on cotiservative Republicans, negoliations .are stalled
over legislation establishing a
five-day waiting period for
handgun purchases.
In an unusual move, Senate
Majority Leader George
Mitchell summoned ilena10rsmany of whom have already left
for the holidays - ·IO return
Tuesday for a last-ditch attempt
to pass the Brady gun-control
bill:
Senate negotiators may 1ry
again IOday to reach agreement,

llius avoiding

the need for next
week's session. Bul lhC'otalks
· ~ew 'so acrimonious TUesday
night that it was wx:lear whether
they would resume. Each side
accused the other of intransigence.
"We've gone the 1as1 mile,"
said Nancy Coffey, spoteswoman for Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, the Senate's
chief sponsor of the bill. "If
they want to change their mind
overnight, we're still open to
it"
The bill, which takes its
name from fanner White HOUSII
press secretary James Brady,

WO''!f!"'i.in ihC 1981 .assassina-

lion att'etnpl on Ptl:sldent Reagan, would impose a five-day
waiting period and background
checks on handgun buyers.
Republicans, tired of raking
the blame for killing the bill
after blocking it three limes in
the past week, said they plan 10
keep negotiating.
"We're still aying to work it
oul," said Senate Minority
Leader Bob Dole's spolcesman,
Clarkson Hine. "We were within an eyelash·of an agreement"
Both sides agree that the
Democrats walked oul of the
Continued on Page 3

L------------;______________________,

Federal EPA to
cap Ironton landfill
ffiONTON, Ohio (AP) - The
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency said il would cap a smoldering landfill within 10 days bul
would ask owners and users 10 pay
for it
An EPA emergency response
team found contaminants in air
samples _that were dangerous
enough 10 wammt spending an estimated 5250,000 to cap lhe burning
section.
ResideDIS will nol be evacuated,
said Lawrence Leveque, community relations coordinator for the u:.~ .
EPA.
The GB Aulllpans and Landfill
bas been burning for two months in
this Ohio River city about 100
miles south of Columbus.

Contractors will tear down
buildings on the seven-acre dump
and push hardened clay from lhe
center 10 cover the smoldering rim.
The Ohio Department of Transportation will_close. Ohio 141 near
lronllln al vanous tunes 10 accommodate the conlnlCtors.
The cap will be paid for from
the Superfund, a federal program
for protecting lhe public and the
environment from uncontrolled
releases of hazardous substances.
the EPA will auempl lo recover
some of the cost from any fonner
owners or operators of the site.
Once the landfill is capped, the
Ohio EPA will be responsible for
any other environmenlal controls.

Agency cites
Ravenswood
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The U.S. Labor Department
cited Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. for alleged violations of safe·
ty and health standards.
The agency's Occupational
Safety and Health Administration
on Tuesday proposed $62,000 in
fines for the Ravenswood-based
company.
The company received six
repeat citations with a proposed
penally of $53,500 and four serious
citations with a penalty or $8,500,
said Stanley H. Ellioll, direciOr of
the agency's Charleston office.
An inspection was conducted
from June 29 through Aug. 3 as a
follow -up to one conducted in·
Continued on Page 3

cum:nt ". ;nooJO year.
In
personnel matters, the
board:
- Employed Jill Holter as
freshman class advisor on a supplemental contract for the 1993-94

school year.
- Employed Gary Holter on
lhe maintenance substitute list for
lhe 1993-94 school year 10 be used
on an as-needed basis only and
employed him for extra hours 10
asSJSI the maintenance department
of the district
- Approved Annie King for
home instruction and Mary Leach
as her tutor for approximately tbree
months with lhe starting date effec.
live Nov. 16.
- Accepted the resignation of
Cindy Oladwell as TuAleJS Plains
building consultant for tlic effective
schools grant due 10 her lransfer 10
Riverview Elementary.
In other businesa, lhe board:
- Approved the minutes f11he
Oct 6 special meeting llld lhe Oct.
18 regular meeting.
- Heard reports from board
members thai auended the Ohio
School Board Association Conference in Columbus.
- Heard a rqlOI't frpm Superintendent Ronald D. Minard that
Landis and Gyr were BJIIXOximalely 95 percent completed on their ·
work in lhe dislricL
- Dia:ussed higb IIChoo1 discipline and COtporal punishment
- Approved lhe treasurer to
transfer funds from lhe general
fund to food service fund for
$20,000 and 10 uniform supply
fund in lhe BDIOUDI of $10,000 for
cash flow JlUIPOSCS at Ibis time.
- Set Wednesday, .Pee. 15, al
6:30 p.m. u the ~- w ·IUM' or
the next regular meeting of the
board of education 10 be held at
Riverview Elementary.
Atlendi.ng were Minard; Ray
Karr, pres•dent; Jim Smith vice
presiden~ and board mem~ Ron
Eastman, Bill Hannum and Mike
Martin.

County commission
approves truck bids
During its weekly meeting
Tuesday afternoon, the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
met wilh County Engineer Robert
Eason and Dave Spencer. highway
garage office manager, who
requested permission 10 advertise
bids 10 purchase a new 3/4-ton,
four-wheel-drive pickup lnlck to
aid in snow removal.
The commission agreed to
advertise the bids Friday.
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency informed lhe commission it is in the process of
developing the 1994 Community
Services Block Grant for submission to the Ohio Department of

Development's Office of Community Services.
The public is invited to review
and orfer comments on the grant
between Nov. 22 and Dec. 3 a1 the
GMCAA offices in Cheshire.
In other mailers, the commission:
• approved transfers in the
amount of $25,352.81 .
• discussed changing its regular
meeung ume.
• paid weekly bills in the
amount of $131,692.7 L
Present were Commission President Robert Hartenbach, Vice President Janet Howard Tackettt Commissioner Fred Hoffman ana Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

---Local briefs-Two die in trailer fire
ATHENS (AP)- Two people have died in a trailer fire in
southeast Ohio.
Ruth Nelson Boggs, 41, and-John Browning, 32, were killed
when ru-e swept through the home lhey shared near Stewart in
Athens&lt;:ounty, about 75 miles southeast of Columbus.
Athens County Sheriff's Lieutenant Pat Kelly said the fire was
reported around II :30 p.m. Monday as a brush fire.
Rome Township Fire Chief Larry Me Vey said he suspec~ the
rue was sel.
Kelly said the sheriff, the state fue marshal and the state Bureau
of Criminal Identification and Investigation were investigating.

No paper Thursday
The Daily Sentinel will 001 publish Thursday so that its employees may enJOY the Thanksgiving holiday. Publication will resume
on Friday.

I

KSU student
shot in dorm
KENT, Ohio (AP)- Kent State
University police were searching
for two men seen running from a
donniiOI')' where a student was shot
and seriously WOWided.
David, Kremling, 24. of Copley
Township in suburban Akron, was
a,dmitted to Robinson Memorial
' Hospilal in serious condition.

said "dlscualoas are going on" with Brady
opponea_!l and Schumer Urged people to "call
their senators, keep calliag, and tell them to
stop tlie games, piL'IS the Brady Bill." (AP)

n control bill s

~~~~ae~t~-

1•
rity
future
unlonand
members.
'
sents some of ·the '
.coel'OOin~.
The' union· ~aid il had, ~bopJ ,
17;500.members on slrilce in aeven '
states in Appalachia and the Midwest
Usery said last week a settlemenl was expected "any hour."
Also last w~k. Labor Secretary
Robert Reich lllld several coal state
congressmen, including Sen. Jay
Rockefeller, D-W.Va.,that the two
sides bad reached an agreement
Amon' those affected by the
amnesty 1ssue were 22 members
ftred from Eastern Associated Coal
COI'Jl •• a subsidiary of Peabody
Holding Co., for alleged picket line
violence. Other companies indica!ed they were considering similar
moves.

The Eastern Local Board of
Education accepted proposals from
two different companies 10 make
improvemen!S 10 the dislricl's bus
garage in Tuppers Plains.
Shuler Cons1n1ction Company
of Middleport was approved to
install new fuel links and pumps
and 10 do lhe necessary wiring and
plumbing a1 the bus garage for
53,427. Also, lhe Hockin~ Fence
Company was approved 10 mSiall a
fence around lhe fuel l8llks 11 lhe
garage and 10 install a new fence
on lhe north side of the Chester
Elementary School building.
In addition, lhe board approved
Sunday, May 29, 1994, as graduation for the Eastern High School
Class of 1994. Graduation will be
held at 6:30p.m. in lhe high school
gymnasium.
The board approved lhe employment of Cynthia Smith as high ·
school Chapter I teacher for the
remainder of the school year
replacing Sandy Needs who has
assumed the vacant Chapter I
teacher position a1 T!~f!PCrs Plains
Elementary School. This position is
to be paid for by Chapr.er I and will
have lo be non-renewed in the
spring.
Doris Wells was employed as
the building consullanl for the
Effective Schools grant for the
Tuppers Plains Elementary School
for the 1993-94 school year.
Also. Sheryl Roush was

caaaed aoocl•
other
were coatrlbated
Middleport
Sunday al1bt at tile
Chrllt. u,rejbe Rev. James

McBucks program underway
The second annual McBucks for Education program sponsored
by McDonald's in Pomeroy and Ripley, Spencer and Ravenswood,
W. Va .• will get underway Wednesday.
Last year's program pul $10,650 iniO 73 area school groups.
In announcing lhe program, Sandra J. Mills, coordinator,
explained that the McBucks for Education is a fund raiser designed
10 share the McDonald's commitment to education with local
school groups and organizations.
The business will donate five cents of each dollar spenl in the
restllll'lllt ($3 minimwn purchase) Ill any Sllldent group or organization within school systems in the ateaS where the n:staurants are
located. Customen will be n:quired 10 ask for McBucks when they
place lheir onlet.
The promotion will nm through March 31 with redemption in
early April and check p!esetllation the week of Apri\26.

Recount reveals no changes
The recount of votes for alUIICil seats in Rutland and Racine and
Coatlaued on Pqe 3

,I

J

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="354">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9678">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32931">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32930">
              <text>November 23, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
