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                  <text>Sunday, December 3, 19$5

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pl~asant, WV

USDA forestry incentives program sign up now through Dec. 7
By PATrY DYER,
Dbtrkt Coosenatlonlst
GALLIPOLIS • The USDA
Natural Resources Conservation
. Service, formerly the SoU Conser·
vation Service is announcing the
USDA Forestry Incentives Program signup period commencing
now through Dec. 7, 1995. Interested landownef!i must signup at the
NRCS office located at CH
McKenzie · Agricultural Center.
Gallipolis. Application may also be
initiated at Ohio Deparlment of
Natural Resources Division of
Forestry offices. "Tbe shortened
FIP signup time frame is prompted
to obligate needed and available
FIP cost share funds on a first
come, first serve basis before pro·
gnun authority expires at the end of

this year", says Patty Dyer, district
conservationist. II is not known
whether the U.S. congress will coo·
tinue the FIP program authority
beyond 1995 at this time.
The NRCS is now administra·
lively res(lODsible for the FIP. For·
merly the USDA Farm Service
Agency bad administrative responsibility before the 1994 USDA
Reorganization Act. The OOF is
assigned technical responsibility
for the FIP in Ohio.
Eligible land users may make
application for cost sharing assis·
tance at a 65% rate for planting
trees, timber stand improvement,
and forest site preparation for natural regeneration during this signup
period. Eligible land is nonindustri·

----'Business briefs---HARRISBURG. Pa . (AP) The nation· s largest drugstore
chain, Rite Aid Corp., will nearly
double in size with the purchase of
No. 2 Revco D.S. Inc., in a $1.8
billion deal.
The cash and s1ock purchase
announced Thursday combines
companies with total annual rev·
enues of more than $11 biUion and
4,800 stores in 22 states in the East
and Midwest. About 1,100 jobs
wUI be lost as Revco's Twinburg,
Ohio headquarters is closed. The
company also plans to sbuller
about 300 stores.

more than 12 years. It dismissed
Foote, Cone &amp; Belding Advertis·
ing, which also bas been a Colgate's ad agency since 1983.
It was one of lhe biggest advertising consolidations ever, and
reflects the huge company's failh
in the viability of global marli:eting
as opposed to inventing sales
approaches country-by-country.
PRINCETON, Ind. (AP) Toyota Motor Corp. picked the
com fields of southwest Indiana as
lhe home for its fif!it U.S. pickup
truck plant.
The $700 million plan~ to open
in 1998, wUI employ at least 1,300
workers in an area bit bard by the
declining coal industry. The plant
will raise Toyota's U.S. work force ·
above 20,000, Toyota President
Hiroshi Okuda said Thur!iday.

NEW YORK (AP) - Colgate·
Palmolive Co. said it was pulling
one agency in charge of virtually
all of its $500 million-plus in annu·
al advertising spending around the
world for products ranging from its
flagship Colgate toothpaste to Ajax
WASHINGWN (AP) - Caller
cleanser and Mennen deodorant.
The consumer products compa· ID, the system that lets people
ny gave the job to Young &amp; Rubi· know who's phoning, is going long
cam, which bas been its agency for distance on Fridav.

Area farm, business•.. ----.
Continued from 0·1

Firm to sponsor annual event
GALLIPOLIS • Quality Farm and Fleet will sponsor its third
annual "Cherish the Children" !;8111paign, wbicb places names of
children in need on ornaments hanging on Chrislmas trees in the
store.
Shoppers are invited to pick an ornament, purchase a small gift
and return it to a Quality cashier. The SUver Bridge Plaza store is
collecting gifts on behalf of the Salvation Army.
"Last year, our store collected more than 100 gifts," said store
manager, Mark Jagello. 'This year we hope to collect even more."

Treasurer completes studies
POMEROY · Howard E. Frank, Meigs County Treasurer, bas
been awarded a certificate from Kent State University, College of
Continuing Studies, for successfully completing the County Treasurers Association of Ohio Professional Development Program.
Frank's studies dealt with investment of public Junds and the
security to cover those funds . In 1994, Frank was able to increase
the general fund by $130,000 from the inveslment of public funds.
He projects that this year the Investment earnings wlll exceed last
year's figure. All of the money earned through invesunent goes to
support the general fund of Meigs County. Frank explained.

Complete training
GALLIPOLIS • Claudeue Huggins and Debbie Watson of Dan
Tax, recently completed 16 hours of professional education credits
at a computer training seminar in Louisville, Ky .. sponsored by
Univer!ial Tax Systems. The instruction concentrated on changes in
electronic filing. IRS form changes, and a new. updated compoter
tax program.
Huggins and Watson have brought this information in addition to
another tax savings program, the Agriplan/Bisplan, to the 22 loca·
lions of Dan Tax in the region. The Agriplan/Bisplan is a prognun
designed to allow a 100% tax savings for the health care cost of
small business owners and farmers. The employees of all 22 offices
have received extensive training in both of these areas.

Variable annuities.~nunuedfromD-1
drawal from your variable annuity,
your investment wiU grow without
being exposed to current income tax.
Subsequently, you will notreceivean
annual 1099 form for tax reporting
purposes. What's more, in the absence of a withdrawal, your earnings
will not be included as part of the
Social Security tax calculation.
The bottom line is that you de·
cide when you want to pay the taxes
because you decide when to make the
withdrawal. That translates into more
tax conttol for you. For example. you
may choose to begin payout of your
annuity at a time when you are.in a
lower tax bracket, presumably at re~ement. And . with a variable annuity. in most states you can defer taxes
up to age 90. Please not that the IRS
does require a minimum payout for
participants of qualified plans begin·
ning at age 70 1/2.
With tax-deferral your money
works harder, helping your assets
grow. The end result could be a larger
future income.
How do you measure gain?
There's no mystery behind the
tax advantage that a variable annuity
offers. The~ of 72-a mathematical formula used to approximate the
growth of money over time.--&lt; an also
help you measure the advantages of
tax-deferred compounding.
Basically, the rule tells you how
long it will take for your mone:,: to
dOuble when it's invested at a spectfic
intereSt rate. to malce the calculation
under your annuity, divide 72 by the
torrent intereat rate your tnoney is
earning. Here's how it worlcs. A
S10,000 invesJment growing tax ·de-

fcnedata bypothetical6percentrate

12 years.
Different individuals have dif·
ferentinvestmentandretirementplanning needs. To make sure your tax
planning is on target, you'll want to
consult with a tax advisor,
(Jay Caldwell is an investment
broker for The Ohio Company in
its Gallipolis office.)

at private forestland capable of
producing 50 cubic feet of woo&lt;!
per acre per year as determined by
the DOF. This land is rural land~
with existing tree cover and othe1
lands including cropland; r :toleland, surfaced mined lar...s, and
non-stoCked forest land considered
for an FIP practice. An eligible person for the FIP is a private inuivid·
ual, group, association, corporation

(excluding corporations whose
stocks are publicly traded}, or other
legal entity which owns land. A
requirement of participation in the
FIP is a Forest Management Plan
prescribing measures to be used on
a particular ownership to implement cost shared FIP practices. The
minimum size eligible si1.e land for
FIP cost sharing is 10 acres and the
maximum si1.e is I,O(X) acres.

"In order to make FIP apphca·
lion during the signup period a person must sign an application containing the needed FIP practice you
plan to apply for wilhin a 12 month
period", says Dyer. Again, lhe FIP
application can be initiated at the
local NRCS office at Gallipolis or
by Jerry Grezlick, DOF Service
Forester. If applications are taken
at the NCRS office, we must coor·

dinate the person's request first
with the OOF before acting on the
application for funding approv~. If
funds become unavailable, NCRS
will notify person's that their application is pending subject to fund
availability . The DOF can be
reached at (614) 286-5900. If you
have additional questions. call the
NRCS office at (614) 446-86R7.

0 hio Lottery

Eastern wins,
Southern loses
first games

Super Lotto:
2-3-14-15-31-36
Kicker:
3·5·1·4-7-2
Pick 3:
3-5·5
Pick 4:
6-6-7-6

Sports. Page 4

•

ent1ne

Proper care of .live Christmas trees
ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY • Arc you planning
to buy a live Christmas tree this
year? Whether the tree is freshly
cut or balled (rooted system and
surrounding soil is wrapped in a
burlap bag) proper care will
increase your enjoyment of your
purchase.
For·your live cut tree. trim the
lower branches so the trunk fits lhe
rree stand you utilize. Reclll at least
one to two inches off the base of
the trunk so the tree can absorb
fresh water. Note that your cut tree
can absorb 1·3 quarts of water
daily as its needles transpire water
vapor into tbe home. Check tbe
water reservoir in the plant stand
daily, replace with luke warm
water as needed. Keep your decorated tree away •from warm drafts
and if possible, bright sunny windows. Use cool white tree lights
when uewrating. Remember. never
leave the Cbrislmas tree lights on
when you are not at home.
Tbe purchase of a live balled
Christmas tree for later planting in
tbe home landscape can be a
rewarding experience. Because of
the extreme environmental changes
imposed on the tree, however, no

nne can guamnlcc live trees taken
inside the home for U1e holid:~y season will survive. The follnwing
suggestions by Randy Heiligrnann.
Ohio St:lle University Extension
Natural Re.,ourccs Specialist may
help you reduce the stress placed
on the plalll and help insure success
when the tree is planted oul,ide.
When purcha.,ing a tree, remember that you are,uealing with a living plant. Be sure it is healthy. The
ball of soil around the roots should
be solid, and the needles should be
attached ftnnly, feel fresh and have
good colors.
At borne, store the tree in a cool,
protected place such as an unheated
garage or shed. Tbe plant is dor·
mant and should stay that way so
that when it is placed outdoors
again, it will survive the winter.
Keep the soil around the roots
moist to keep the tree from dryin!
out. If the tree is brought into a
warm borne, plan to leave it there
less than a week. The shorter the
time indoof!i, the better the chances
of survival.
After being indoors, the tree
should be moved back to a protect·
ed area so it can adjust to the cold.

Keep the soil ball moist and apply
:m :mti -ucsiccanl to the needle~ to
prevent drying out.
Select a site for your tree lhat is
well drained and sheltered from
winter winds-do this even before
purcha,ing the tree. Remember, the
tree will grow to considerable size
in a few years, so select an open
area. If you have poorly drained
so l, bring in soil and build up a
mound to plant the tree in. Dig the
hole twice as wide as the width of
the ball. Work organic matter such
as peal moss, leaf mold, compost or
well-rotted manure, and mix it into
the soil. Cover the area with 4-6
inches of straw, mulch or leaves to
prevent the grollnd from freezing.
When planting, place the ball in
the hole with tlte top of the ball
slightly higher than its original
level. This allows for settling,
which will occur the following
year.
Once the tree is planted, mulch
to prevent water loss and stake if it
is in a windy location.
To stake the tree . driv e 2x2
wooden stakes firmly into the
ground about a foot from the out·
side b_!anches. Three stakes places

around the tree will hold it in place.
If a single take is used, place it on
tbe prevailing wind side. If guy
wires arc used. surround the tree
trunk with a piece of garden bose
io prevent injW')'.
Pesticides
Pesticide applicawrs, are you
maintaining and retaining proper
chemical application records?
Record keeping is one aspect of
farming that c ivides a well man·
aged operation from a possible
mismanaged opcrauon. My offtce
has been informed that the Ohio
Dcparlment of Agriculture will be
inspecting randomly selected cerufied private applicator's records
within the next several months. The
inspection is being conducted for
assessing the current compliance
and community outreach. Confidentiality of these record s is
required by law and the ODA will
observe this rigidly. If you are m
need of assistance for possible
chemical application logs or what
the actual requirements are please
contact your local extension oflice.
Hal Kneen is the Ohio State
University Extension Agent for
Meigs
County.

New state program offers more choice
RIO GRANDE • A new state
program designed to pranote long·
term care planning, preserve con·
sumer choice and lessen state Med·
icaid costs is now available to
seniors, their families and other
consumers of long-term care.
The program, Care Choice
Ohio, was implemented by the
Ohio Department of Aging after
research was completed last fall,
and is offered as a service of the
Area Agency on Aging District 7,
Inc.
Care Choice Obio offers free,
in-borne evaluations and case-specifiC care plans for seniors and oth·
ers wbo wish to plan· for their longterm care needs. Long-term care
services are often needed by older
citizens, accident survivors or people who live with a condition that
requires rehabilitation. Care Choice
Ohio can help consumers and their
families make wise long·terin care
decisions by providing lhe latest
information on available services,
eligibility requirements, financial
resources required and personal
care needs.
According to agency Executive
Director Pamela K. Matura, "Care
Choice Obio is your short cut to
long-term care. We're helping peo·
pie prepare today for tomorrow's
choices."
Care Choice Ohio is available to
seniors who do not qualify for
existing prognuns such as PASS·
PORT, a state-funded service for
low-income seniof!i, and people of
all ages who may require long-term
·care. Care Choice Ohio was developed in 1993, after Governor
George Voinovich and the Ohio
Department of Aging began search·
ing for a system that could divert
families from costly forms of care.
cut the Medicaid burden. and preserve consumer choice.
The White House Commission
on Aging reports that nursing borne
care currently costs a yearly aver·
age of $30,000 per patient, a finan·
cia! cost that exhausts resources of
individuals who pay privately for
their care in just 13 weeks. With

the nation's annual nufliing borne
expenditures expected to reach
$168 billion in 2018, many more
families will find that their savings
fall short of their care needs.
Care·Cboice Ohio educates fam·
ilies about tbe services available in
their communities, so that a wider
choice of cost-effective, indepen·
dent care options can be consid·
ered. Care Choice Ohio consultants
from the Area Agency on Aging
District 7, Inc. wUI meet individu·
als in their home, to belp them plan
ahead for nursing home care, and to
outline in-home and community·
based care options. In 1993, more
than 180,000 Ohioans received
home health care services from cer·
tified agencies, including nearly
56,000 individuals under the age of
65.

Financial control can also be
maintained by planning care needs,
and using the best quality and least
e~pensive method of receiving serVIces. Care Choice Ohio wiU work
with physicians, attorneys, bank
trust officers, accountants and other
professionals who regularly
encounter their clients' long-term
care needs. By working together to
promote early planning, a family's
assets or insurance benefits are less
likely to be exhausted when more
acute care becomes necessary.
"When we surveyed the seniors
and families of Ohio about their
concerns about long-term care,
most reported they were concerned
about the cost and quality of the
care they'll need someday. They
also wanted to stay at home for as
long as possible. Care Choice Ohio

can address all of these needs while
educaling Ohio's citizens about
their choices as long-term con·
somers." said Judith Y. Bracbman.
director of the Ohio Department of
Aging.
.
"Everyone wins with this pro·
gram-taxpayers win because
fewer individuals will be forced to
rely on the overburdened Medicaid
system, individuals seeking longterm care win because information
can be easily accessed in one place,
and family members win, because
there is piece of mind knowing
their loved one's care needs will be
met," she said.
To receive a free in-home evaluation or for more information, con·
tact Jeffrey Hunter, Home Care
Director. Area Agency on Aging
District 7, Inc. at 1-800-582-7277.

Meigs County junior fair market
1
steer weigh-in for 96 set Dec. 16
POMEROY - All junior fair
exhibitof!i (4-H and fFA) wbo are
planning to take a market steer project to the 1996 Meigs County Fair
must register and weigh-in their
animals on Saturday, ·Dec. 16.
Weigh-in time is from 9 to !!a.m.
at the fairgrounds in the show

arena.

This year a member may again
register and weigh-in two steers,
but only one market steer may be
exhibited and sold at tbe 1996
Meigs County Fair. Tbe registration and weigh-in \\(iU be held on a
ftrst-come, ftrst-serve basis.
All steers should be halter broke
·and must be castrated and dehorned

prior to lhe registration and weigh·
in time. Each steer will be idenli·
fled with a tattoo and buuon tag in
the steer's ear.
Picture money in the amount of
$10 will also be collected at that
time and exhibitors must be prepared to pay for the pictures that
day.
.
Exhibitors should complete the
appropriate registration forms ami,
submit
them
at
thi:
registration/weigh-in time. They
also Iieellto know tlte birth date of
their steer. The steer's birth date.
weight and bip height will be uti·
lized in the "Design Your S tecr''

program again this year.
Anyone who knows of a mem·
ber who did not exhibit a steer pro·
ject in 1995, but is interested this
year. should share information with
them or have them contact, tile
Meigs County Extension Office··at
614-992-6696.
: '•:.
Failure to register and weigh-iii
steers on Dec . 16 will d\squalify
• the animals from being exhibited
and sold at the 1996 Meigs CQtipty
Fair.
In lhe event nf inclement weath·
er. junior fair exhibitors should;listen to WMPO radio, 1390 AM or
92.1 FM for ~ancellation notices.

DEADLINE FOR
LICENSE IS
20. Fees are Four Dollars ($4.00) for each dog, male or female. Kennel Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
license by mall, complete and return application to: Nancy Parker Campbell, Meigs County
Auditor, P.O. Box 551, Pomeroy, OH 45769. Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope with
a check for the price of the license.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

SANTA'S PICK
JEEP CHEROKEE SE

OWNEROFDOG .........................~-----------------------------------r
ADDRESS .....~----------------------------------------------~
TOWNSHIP

TELEPHONE

AGE

SEX

HAIR
Breed
if Known

Fees
Paid .

4 DOOR - 4X4, 4.0 six cyl., automatic, air,
AMIFM stereo, driver's side air bag. -

$1·9,943·

WHARTON
*

NOTICE: license must be obtained no later than January 20, 1996, to avoid paying penally. After t~la
date, pe118lty will be $4.00 for single tag and $20.00 for Kennel license.
.., ·

*

JEEP EAGLE
7th l Plum St. 424-5337

P.O. Box 551
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

of return would be worth $20,000 in

'

!

.

NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL .
Meigs County Auditor
··

Low tonight In 30s, cloudy.
Tuesday, showers likely. Highs
In the 50s.

Vol. 46, NO. 153
Copyright 1995

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 4, 1995

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Candidates tangle over peace mission
By SALLY BUZBEE
As.oociated Press Writer
WASHINGroN - Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole is challenging
fellow Republican presidential candidates to join him in supporting President Clinton's plan to send troops to Bosnia.
,"We have a responsibility to the American forces there. It shouldn't be
political," the Kansas Republican said Sunday on CBS' Face rhe Narion .
Dole made it clear he wants the president's plan altered, but he urged
his GOP rivals 10 follow his lead.
''I'm going to support the troops," Dole said, "I think Pat Buchanan
will. I hope Phil Granun will." Gramm, the Texas senator, bas been one
of the loudest opponents of the plan to send U.S. troops to Bosnia.
Buchanan, appearing on ABC's This Week with David Brinkley, said
Congress should lceep fighting the president 10 keep troops out and avoid
anolher Beirut or Somalia.

"Why, in a democratic republic, when the American peo ple are
opposed and the Congress of the United States is opposed, would you
launch an American army into an area where the prospects ... are very
high for a debacle?" Buchanan asked.
While Gramm said last week he would not support Clinton's Bosnia
action, his national campaign chairman, Sen. John McCain. R-Ariz .. bini ·
ed Sunday that Granun may eventually change that stance.
"Senator Gramm does not want to do what Pat Buchanan is seeking.
He does not want to cut off funding, •• McCain said on the Brinkley show.
"He wru1ts to express his disapproval, which many congressmen do.
But they also know they have an obligation as elected officials to go
ahead and see how they can best make the situation more viable. "
McCai n said.
Dole made it clear the tightrope Granun must walk.
"We have force s on lhe ground now, and the American people arc

going ro rally around the American forces." Dole said. " If Phil Gramm
wants 10 say be doesn' t support the American forces there. I'll be glad to
have 01at debate wi01 him ."
BoO• Dole and McCain exprcssc&lt;l strong reservations about the peace
agreement the Clinron administration negotiated in Dayton. Ohio, and lhe
existing plan to send troops .
Senators are drafting a plan that would require the United States to
train and arm Bosnian Muslims so they could defend themselves when
American troops leave, Dole said. The Clinton admmistralion has said it
would arrange for another country to do that.
" If Bill Cl inton is go ing to have lhe emry mategy. the rest of us
should have 111c cxil slrarcgy ," Dole s~uu .
McC:tin. a Navy pil ot who was held prisoner during 01c Viclllam War,
sai!l il w&lt;L' ineviwblc uoops would go. Si lting next to Buchanan be cau·
lioned: "II was very damaging to our morale to be played anti-war
speeches hy a.'pirin~ politicians."

Mining law reform _.Holida reflections----- Dole, GOP
pressing
branded a 'sham'
for budget
by its opponents
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - What a
deal! The righl to mine $2.9 billion
worth of copper and silver for a
scant $1,745- thanks to a 123·
year-old mining law everyone
agrees ought to be changed.
Now a proposal in the Republi·
can-crafted budget package would
end some of the abuses under the
law, say its supporters. But critics,
including Interior Secretary Bruce
Babbitt, maintain the GOP plan is
"a s!Jam' ' wrinen by the mining
industry and will do little to stop
the giveaways.
And it may make it more diffi·
cult to achieve broader mining
refonn in lhe future, the proposal's
opponents argue.
The mining provision is among
the handful of environmental poli·
cy issues that have become
embroiled in the budget brouhaha
pitting the White House against the
Republican-leu Congress.
Like a proposal to open an Arc·
tic refuge to oil drilling, Dpmocrats
say the mining "refo rms" are
another example of congressional
Republicans, primarily from West"
ern states, trying to help private
jndustry gel at resources on federal
lands.
In 1872, Congress decided to let
the public buy federal land for mining for as little as· $2.50 an acre as a
way help open up the West. The
law. including its now ridiculously
low selling price, hasn't been
changed since.
Amid strong lobbying by the
mining industry, numerous reform
efforts failed in recent years. But
with the continued clamor for
change,'lawmakers from Western
mining states - wilh a green light
from the mining industry - began
pushing a new reform proposal last
summer as part of 01e budget pro·

cess.
The elTon represents "responsi·
ble, meaningful reform," for the
first time providing a royalty and
requiring that the land be sold for
its surface value, instead of as little
as $2.50 rut acre, says Jack Gerard,
a mining industry lobbyist.
Gerard. a spokesman for the
Minerals Resources Alliance,
which represents the mining industry, accuses Babbitt of grandstand·
ing and suggests that his reform
proposals would drive mining companies overseas and put miners out
of work .
But Babbiu &lt;md other longtime
critics of lhe 1872 Mining Act .
characterize the GOP proposal a
"sham" meant to make it more
difficult to achieve significant mining' law reforms in the years to
come.
''The so -called reforms would
simply perpetuate the swindle, only
on slightly less outrageous terms,·'
argues Babbitt, who last week
announced the sale of 340 acres of
federal land in Arizona to a private ·
company, ASARCO Inc .. for a
scam $1,745. even though the land
contains an estimated $2.9 billion
in copper and silver.
.
Under the law, the company
paid $5 an acre and will have to
pay no royalties on the minerals
recovered . Company officials said
they've already invested $15 million in exploration and ·a fullfledged mining operation could
cost another $500 million.
Even so. says Babbilt, the tax·
payers are gelling fleeced. ·
Under a royalty scheme support·
eu by the Clinton administration
last year , ASARCO would have
had to pay 4 percent on minerals
before lhey are processed - a fee
he said would have netted 'the government $100 million over lhe life
of the Arizona mine.

proposal

Among the many displays at the Meigs Museum for the annual Christmas open bouse Sunday
was one featuring letters written home by servicemen in World War U. Most of the letters displayed were written to Edna Hite of Pomeroy, mother of serviceman Kimball Rite. One from
Kenneth Kelly Grueser is include\! on the "Letters Home" poster put out by the Society of Ohio
Archivists to mark the 50th anniversary or the ending of the war. The Rev. William Mid·
dleswarth, above, pointed out the "Letters Home" poster surrounded by Christmas cards and let·
ters from local servicemen Brooks Sayre, George Hicks, Ed Evans, Clarence Neutzling, Max
Folmer, Charlotte Bartels, Rollin E. Stiles and Kelly Grueser. (Sentinel photo by Charlene Hoe·

Die h)

1..--------------------....i-------------.....,.
Driver of submerged van found
following search in Mason area
MASON, W.Va.- Emergency been occupied when it went into
personnel from West Virginia and the river. Boats were launched to
Ohio were called to the Mason search for survivors. Wben the van
Levee early Sunday to search for was recovered from tbe water ,
what authorities thought was an emergency personnel found no one
occupied vehicle" that had gone into inside.
A ground and water search conthe Ohio River.
tinued,
Blake said. Around 8 a.m. ,
Mason County 911 Director
Chuck Blake said the Mason Fire Blake received a call that Will
Deparlment received a call at 4:10 Ohlinger had gone to someone' s
a.m. that a van had driven off the bouse around 6 a.m., saying be had
been in the river. After the call,
boat ramp at the levee.
Upon arrival, Blake said a van Blake said the search effort was
was submerged in the water, and an eased. At 8:45 a.m. , Oblinger
eyewitness said the vehicle had spoke with Blake and the search
was called off.

Middleport
VFD assists
in quenching
area blaze

Blake said the investigation of
the incidelll was turned over to Sgt.
Mike Roach and Trooper Eddie
Starcher of the Point Pleasant
Detachment-West Virginia State
Police.
Assisting with the search were
Mason. Point Pleasant. and New
Haven fire departments. Mason
Police, West Virginia State Police.
Mason EMS. Pomeroy, Middle port, Syracuse, Racine and Chester
fire departm~nL~. the Meigs County
Sherin's Department and the
Meigs County Dive Team.

Lcing-distance switching
raises consumers' anger

GALLIPOLIS - A ftre causing
unofficial damages estimated at $200,000 was extinguished in the
building housing a former Gallipo·
lis business early Sunday.
The fire that struck the building
where Ball Furniture Co., 220
Third Ave ., was located, was
reported at I :09 a.m. The Gallipolis
Volunteer Fire Department
responded ·and received assistance
from the Guyan Township, Rio
Grande and Middleport volunteer
fire deparlments.
An estimated 3,000 gallons of
water was used to extinguish the
fire, a GVFD SJlQkesman said. Fire·
fighters bad th• fire under control ·
within a few hours, but most of the
vehicles responding to the fire did
not return to station until around
7:30a.m.
The furniture store closed in
November 1994, and little mer·
cbandise was dalnag~ by the fm:.
the ·spokesman said. It was unoffi·
MIDDLEPORT AT SCENE- The Middleport Volunteer Fire
cially reported that most of tbe
Department ladder truck assisted In fighting a blaze that damaged
damage bad been contained to the
the buDding housing the Ball Fumltnre Co~ 220 Third Ave., Gal·
first floor of the three-slory struc·
II polls, early Sunday. The Gallipolis fire fighting unit was also
tore.
assisted
by the Rio Grande and Guyan Township departments.
(Continued on Page 3)

•·

COLUMBUS (AP) - Mary Jo telephone solicitation as Taylor
Taylor thought her answer was found, or for no reason at all, as in
pretty clear when she slammed Huff's case. Some customers
down the phone on a company ask· receive something in the mail. like
ing her to switch her long distance a contest entry or vacation offer,
·and many do not realize ll1cy are
service.
Instead, tbe Worthington agreeing to switch long distance
woman found herself filing a carriers.
A customer who bas been
"slamming" complaint with the
Public Utilities Commission of slammed is entitled to ge t th e
Ohio because ber long distance ser- switch ing fee reimbursed, as well
vice was switched without her as"!be cost dillercnce of any calls
made with the new carrier comapproval.
Karl Huff of Westerville did not pared to their old service.
"Y!lu think it can' I happen 10
get a call. She found her long distance service had been switched to you, and you're an average ordi·
a ' Texas company when she nary citizen, but it !loes," Tay lor
received her telephone bill, which said. She was bit with a $10.45
was double what it had been the charge for a change she did not
want.
previous montll.
Although, the llUCO says Tay·
The two suburban Columbus
women are among more than 1,000 lor will get a $10.45 credit when
· Ohioans who flied slamming com- the matter is solved, she is sti11
plaints in the past year with the angry.
" II means you can' t trust anyPUCO. The number of complaints
bas doubled from the previous body," Taylor said. " I don't like
people screwing around with my
year.
Despite attempts to crack down money. I don't appreciate it."
by federal and state officials, slam· . When Huff fouwJthe name of a
Texas company on her phone bill.
min¥ is rising.
' My guess is we would get she called and Windstar Gatew~y
I 0,000 complaints a year instead of · officials told her sbe authorized the
1,000 if people knew wbo to call,'' switch when she entered a contest.
~d the PUCO telecommunications
Despite her complaints, Huffs
specialist Rick Reese.
service was not restored to MCI,
Slamming can happen through her old Jon~ distance carrier.

.•

WASHINGTON (AP)
Republicans set the mood for what
is expected to be a second raucous
week of budget 11cgotiation s by
warning that federal workers will
be sent home again if President
Clinton does not present a plan for
balancing the budget.
"They owe us a counter offer,"
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole,
R-Kan ., said Sunday. If Clinton
"doesn't ~;&gt;me forth with anything
and make any serious offers, then
we have to face up to a shutdown
again on the 15th."
Failure to make progress by
Dec. I 5 on how to balance lhe budget hy 2002 could force a preChristmas rcperirion of the six-day
shutdown in November thar laid off
hundred s of lhou samls of federal
workers.
The White House said Sunday
night the Republicans have to come
up with some offers, too.
Deputy economic adviser Gene
Sperling said the Republicans
"cannot wish away" lheir part of
the agreement that ended the shutdown Nov. 19.
"The unasked - and certainly
unanswered - question is why the
Republicans have refused to offer
any specifics or details as to bow
they would meet their part of the
agreement to find ways to protect
environmental, education and other
social programs," he said.
The first week of negotiations
between the White House and
Congres s last week made no real
headway. The talks are 10 resume
on Tuesday.
Dole on Saturday said that clos·
ing down government just before
Christmas was "not going to happen." But he was less certain on
CBS' Face 1he Narion Sunday, saying he thought a shutdown would
be a "mistake" that the president
was responsibiJ:, fnr averting. ''I'm
going to ask the president to be a,serious on th e budg et as we've
been on Bosnia," he said.

Grand jury
indicts five
Criminal indictments against
five indi viuuals, on charges rang.
ing from grand theft to arson, have
been retumed by a Meigs County
grand jury and were filed by Prose~
cuting Attom~y John Lentcs Mon'
day.
Indicted were:
o Dean Whittington, Middleport,
on an escape charge, for an elleged
aucmpt to escape from the Mid&lt;lle~
port Jail on Sept 9, 1995. Escape is
a felony of the fourlh degree.
o Ozzie Blair, 44. Long Bouom.
on a charge of cultivation of marijuana, a felony of the fourlh degrei.
• Mark K. Schall, Amesville. on
a charge of rrceiving stolen proper·
ty of more than $300 and less than
$5,000, a felony of the fourth
degree.
o Ban1ey C. Hiles, Middleport, il
charge of ar~on , for allegedly
attempting 10 set lire to a trailer in
Middleport on Oct. 13, 1995 .
Arson is a f~lony of the third
degree.
• Holly Franklin Mullin, 29, 271/2 Secon&lt;ISt.. Pomeroy. on a fail'
ure to appear charge. an unclassified felony.
J,

�Monday, December 4, 1995

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
I

1

LETrERS OF OPINION arc "clcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to ed1t1ng and must be s1gned wnh name,
address and telephone number No unSigned letters w11l be published. Letters
should be 1n good taste, addressing ISSues. not personahl!CS.

Developer sees chance
for casino .g ambling

PT

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Rick Lenzman thinks he has found an ace in the hole
in his bid to bring casino gambling to Ohio.
The furor over the Cleveland Browns' move to Baltimore.
Lenzman, president of Buckeye Extravaganza in the Cleveland suburb
of Moreland H1lls, was set to submit a proposed consututional amendment
that would allow riverboat gambling in Ohio and allow pan of the tax
money to be used for sports facilities.
Gov. George Voinovich has been adamant in his opposition to any
expanston ol gambling m the state, and a constitutional amendment allow.
mg casino gambling failed in 1990.
But, in the Drowns situation, Lertzman now sees an opportunity to
&lt;overcome Voinovich's opposition. Team owner An Modell said Cleve· ·
: . ;land's failure to upgrade crumbling Cleveland Stadium was key to his
· : ·decision to move.
: : . ''The governor has kind of boried his head in the sand with the sports
: . :issue - particularly in Cleveland," Lertzrnan said.
· . . "I think there's a lot of resenunent."
:: :. Not surprisingly,_ then, Buckeye Extravaganza's proposed ballot initia·
: . :uve calls tor Utree nverboats on the Cuyahoga - plus two on the Ohio in
·: .Cincinnati and three in Hamilton County outside Cincinnati, where simi·
:: Jar concerns over stadiums has the ~wners of the Reds and Dengals threat·
: . ~mng to leave town tf a sales tax mcrease fails in March and the teams
. : don't get new facilities .
: . : "1 think it goes to show you they're willing to do anything to get
·: rich," said Voinovich spokesman Mike Dawson.
: : : "The governor is opposed to casino gambling regardless of where they
: . J;ay the money is going."
:: : D~wson also crittcized Buckeye Ex travaganza's frequent changes of
• : posmon on where the casmos wtll be and bow the money will be used.
: • : Lertzman concedes he has been hedging his bets as to which petition
: : !anguage his group will use. But he said that's to keep opponents and
. • potenuat competitors guessmg.
· · The latest proposal is the fourth Buckeye Extravaganza has turned over
to the attorney general's office for certification.
The office must certify that the proposals contain 100 valid signatures
and must clear the legal language of the petitions that will be circulated to
get1ssue on the ballot.
The first three plans all said the state would get 15 percent of the gross
Robyn Dlurnner, executive
gaming revenues but put the riverboats in different locations. The most director of the American Civil Lib·
recent - the one Lertzrnan said is the most likely they will use - ups the crties Union of Horida, is so con·
state's take to 20 percent.
sistent a civil libertarian that she is
In addiuon to Cleveland and in and around Cincinnati, the riverboats occasionally at odds with the
would be on the Grand River in fairport . Harbor, on the Black River m national ACLU office. Dlurnner,
Lorain and in two spots to be identified later.
for instance, sees no logical con·
Lertzman estimated the state's cut at $400 million a year, to be split as flict between being a vigorous fern·
the Leg1slature sees lit among sports facilities, education, local govern· inist wbtle also supporting the First
ments and programs to study and treat compulsive gambling.
Amendment rights of Archie
He and his three partners plan to spend $500.000 getting the amend· Dunker·style males.
ment on the November ballot. lbcy have lined up professiOnal signature
In a case involving sexual
gatherers to the collect roughly 340,000 valid signatures before Aug. 7.
harassment by means of allegedly
Dawson would not say whether he thought the plan would succeed.
pornographic unages at a shipyard,
But he wondered wh etller Lertzman's plan was not just a solution in · a federal district judge ordered the
search of a problem.
removal of all "sexually sugges·
"The financing of the Drowns stadium IS already in place," he said.
tive'' posters from the walls and
" That's not the problem. Art Modell is the problem."
forbade any personal reading male·
rial that might offend any female
worker. Robyn Dlumner urged the
national ACLU office not to concur
in these overly broad prohibitions,
emphasizing that · 'sexists bave
By The Associated Press
First Amendment rights too."
Today is Monday, Dec 4. the 338th day of 1995 . There are 27 days
Recently, in her regular column
left m the year.
·
in the St. Petersburg Times, Blum·
Today's Highlight m History:
ner, who is strongly pro·choice,
On Dec. 4, 1783, Gen. George Washington bade farewell to his officers challenged Ute abortion rights com·
at Fraunces Tavern m New York.
munity to consider the harm it is
: On this date:
doing to free speech. Pro·cboicers,
· In 1816, James Monroe of Virginia was elected the fifth president of · she said, have caused "a cumula·
the Uttited States.
live roll-back of First Amendment
In 1875, Wtlliam Marcy Tweed, Ute "Boss" of New York City's Tamprotest rights to the point where the
many Hall pollucat organtzaUon, escaped from jail and fled the country.
1/Spro·life 3/8 picketer has been
. In 1918. Prestdent Wtlson set sail for France to attend the Versailles
effecuvely emasculated and can
Peace Conference.
exert no more pressure on his or
In 1942, President Roosevelt ordered the dismantling of the Works
her target than a roadside bill·
Progress Admmtstrauon. wh1ch had been created to provide jobs during
board."
the Depresston.
In 1945. 50 years ago. the Senate approved U.S participation m the
United Nations.

J

I DtFINI16LY COM6 O:f:

LOOKING TU~ B{;ST Ut;RbI•

Charles Stenholm, U-Texas. and
Dill Orton, D·Utah, the Coalition's
plan only found four Republican
supporters when it was soundly
defeated in an October vote. Yet
some Democratic officials hold out
hope that the plan- which scales
back some GOP spending cuts and
doesn't include a tax cut- could
form the blueprint for compromise.
Moderate Democrats believe the
final package would have to con·
tain th e following elements:
Approximately $104 billion in tax
cuts; a half-point cut in the con·
sumer pnce index, which might
reap more than $80 billion; refor·
mulating econo~ic. assumptions to
generate $100 b1lllon; and Medt·
care reductions in the range of
$180 billion.
But chances for an early agree·
ment don't look good. One member
of the House Republican leader·
sh 1'p , for example • has already
made h1s airline reservations to
.
. .
return home for Cbnstmas. Hts
n·tg ht ts· sc heduled for Dec. 23 eight days after the latest stopgap
spending measure expires.
FAIRCLOTH FOLLIES
Floyd Drown - whose conserva·
tive group Citizens United has
become a clearinghouse for White·
water rumors and innuendo - may
have grist for a new conspiracy theory : How the Senate Whitewater
Committee won' t inv1te him totes·
tify.
Committee Republiqtns find
Drown too much to stomach. Com·
mittee sources believe he would
make a circus of the panel's twoyear investigation and undermine
tts efforts to conduct a tough but
fair inquiry. Sen. Lauch Faircloth,
R-N.C., a member of the Banking
Committee. has been championing
Brown's cause behind the scenes.
In a fund·raismg letter last year
. to more than 100 ,000 people.
Drown accused Clinton of en gag·
ing in "a massive cover-up and
conspiracy to obstruct justice"
regarding the suicide of former
White House aide Vince Foster and
other Whitewater·related issues.
Brown denies seeking an invitation
to testify.
jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The pro-choice civil libertarian

~ ·roday
.

in history

..

--

&gt; •

Municipal ordinances and court
injunctions, Dlumner notes, have
led to the establishment in a number of ctues of buffer zones around

Nat Hentoff
abortion clinics. Pro·llfe demon·
stra tors are barred from those
zones.
Also, to prevent picketing in
front of an abortion doctor's horne,
courts have outlawed protests at
and near such residences . "The
United States Supreme Court,"
says Dlumner indignantly,
"refused to hear the appeal of 16
people who were arrested for
peaceably walking with anti·abortion signs through a neighborhood
which is home to an abortion doc·
tor."
Of course, Blumner writes, such
enforced limits ,pn • 'zealots and
their indefatigable protests" may
well be a relief to pro·choicers,
including herself: but "we are
mortgaging our liberty for a little
peace and quiet.''
Dlumner recalls that picketing,
"an American tradition," was
tumultuously evident during the
civil rights protests agamst Jim
Crow businesses in the South. But.
"had the civil rights protesters
been restricted to a spot down the
block from the businesses they targeted, would their distant chants

have effect ively made shoppers
guilty enough to avoid patronizing
those stores? ... It doesn't work if
you' re not close.''
There is also a question of class
advantages in the restrictions on
picketing. " If a major corporation
wishes to change public opinion
and bring pressure to bear cin an
individual or the government,"
Dlurnner writes, "it hires lobbyists,
files lawsuits and takes out ads.
Most of us don't have those kinds
of rj!sources. But we can protest. It
is one of the few tools of public
persuasion available to the average
ffiWl."

(Note that this independent feminist does not say "average per·
son.'')
Dlumner does not propose there
be no limitations on pro-life
protests at abortion clinics: "If
protesters are trespassing on private
property, interfering with the flow
of vehicular traffic, or molesting a
potential clinic client, they should
be arrested. But if all they arc
doing is m.'lking a royal nuisance of
themselves through an in·your.facc
message, the Constitution must
protect them from imprisonment."
The Constitution, however, has
at limes been set aside when it
comes to vociferous m· your.face
pro-lifers. There are buffer zones in
Buffalo, N.Y., and Pensacola, Fla.,
among other places; and the

Supreme Court has indicated that it
will look kindly on the principle of
exclusionary ordinances, if not
always on the particulars.
In October, the Rev. AI Sharp·
ton , a trombone of the First
Amendment, led 400 protesters in a
demonstration outside Justice
Clarence Thoma s' home. The
demonstrators were vehemently
objecting to the justice's decisions
on matters concerning race. It is
safe to say that Clarence Thomas
and his wife did not enjoy the
attention.
However. says the persistent
Robyn Dlumner, "if Sharpton had
been banished a football-fie(~
length away, would Thomas have
known or even cared about the
demonstration?"
In a different time, with differ·
ent judges, pro·choiccrs may find
their own free speech rights sadly
diminished by exclusmnary rulings
from which they used to derive
such satisfaction.
Some memories are short. There
is "a profound national commit·
rnent," said Justice William Bren·
nan in New York Times v. Sulli·
van, "that debate on public issues
be uninhibited, robust and wide·

open.''
And not a football field away.
Nat Hentort Is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill or Rights.

Helping the speaker save his breath

Berryls World

AUTOMOBILE AIR BAG THIEF
HAVING A BAD DAY.

•

A.ccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

·Moderate coalition coi_Jid solve budget mess·
vote no, but I need a moderate . ferences bas always required leg·
btll."
;siative leaders, of which there's a
. The ne~otiations now under way shortage right now. Gingrich is a
w1ll remam deadlocked as Ion~ as shepherd who ' s being led by his
flock of freshmen. Senate Majority
8
kA d
Leader Bob Dole, who knows the
y ac n erson art of compromise, IS under close
and
scrutiny by his Republican rivals in
the presidential race. And House
Michael Binstein Minority Leader Richard Gephardt.
by ruling out any cuts in Medicare,
moderates get muscled out o( the · finds htmself on the periphery of
proc~~s. Some $660 billion in the debate.
spending over the next seven years
' '(Gerhardt) may have dealt
is the fiscal chasm that has to be himself out of the debate on this,
bridged. For Republicans, particu- even though he' s the leader of our
larly the freshmen , who are agitat- party," satd one Democratic law·
ing for more spending cuts, the maker involved in the negotiations
$245 billion tax cut is considered Tbe same apparently holds true for
the ''crown jewel,'' as it was Minority Whip David Donior, D·
recently described by Gingrich.
Mich
Clinton. who bas found political
s~urces pin their hopes for a
rebirth in roiling the waters, is call- solution_ short of just waiting for
ing for a $105 billion tax cut, and the next election 10 break the logincreased funding for education, Jam
· - on reach'mg outst'de the nor·
the environment and other domes·
a1 1 d h' tru
d aft·
.
D
m ea ers ap s cture. an cr
uc programs. ut his holy grail is mg a centnst alternat 1 ve Some
protecting Medicare from the $270
·
·
·
offiaals are taking a second Ioo(( at
billion rollback proposed by the a plan forged by a group of conserGOP.
vative Democrats who call them·
Finding ways to bridge big dif- selves the Coalition. Led by Reps.
- -

Speaker Newt Gingrich's formal
announcement that be would not be
a candidate for president in 1996 a
decision be had informal'ly
announced a few weeks prior to the
formal announcement, reminded
me of a task th at I have been
neglecting.
Two years ago, I promised to
establish Tbe Curmudgeon's ProfessiOnal Announcement Service in
an attempt to relieve hard.working
public servants of the burden of
announcing .so many things . Hail I
been alert, I could have saved Newt
the chore of informally announcing
he would formally announce he
wasn't running, and I could have
made the formal announoement., as
well.
•
In any case, Newt said he is too
busy running Congress to run the
country, and I understand completely. I therefore volunteer, pro
bono, to relieve His Speakership
and other actual and potential candidates for high office of the strain
of announcing things by handling
some announcements for them.
The first announcement is on
behalf of Robert Dole:
"Senate Majority Leader Robert
Dole today announced that Holly·
wood is up to its old tricks. The

Senator said be has been alerted by
conservative Christian groups that
the Disney company has beeh
inserting subliminal sexual mes-

Joseph Spear
sages in its films. 'The scene in
"The Lion King" in which swirls
of dust spell out the word "sex" is
an abomination,· said Dole. 'The
scene in "Aladdin" where 'lbe title
character mutters "All good teenagers take off your clothes" is an
assault against America's youth."'
The second announcement is on
behalf of Dill Clinton:
"President Bill Clinton today
acknowledged that he had drifted
too far )eft, but said bad been
pushed in that direction by tbe
damn liberal media, which never
give him a break."
On behalf of the leader of the
Republican Revolution:
"House Speaker Newt Gingrich
announced today that in addition 1,0
murder, kidnapping, the drowning
of innocent children and general
moral decay, the liberal welfare
state is responsible for' purple hair,
tattoos and navel lings.'
On behalf of the Senate Major!·

films . 'I' II be whatever the Ameri.
can
people want me to be ' he
"Sen. Robert Dole today said
said.''
'
that due to a staff mixup, he had
On
behalf
of
an
Anonymous
issued the wrong announcement. 'I
am actually a fan of Disney films. ' A~nouncer with a deep, resonant
he said. 'Mickey Mouse is an vmce ~ho left these words on IJIY
answcnng machme:
American original.'' ·
"I have taken note of Phil
On behalf of the speaker of the
Gramm's remark that God doesn •t
House:
' 'Newt Gingrich wishes to like government, of Patrick
informally announce that he is very Ducbanan' s suggestion that God
busy running Congress and must disapproves of the Supreme Court,
dtscourage any suggestion that be of Parson Pat Robertson's claim
be nominated to the Supreme Court that God is a Republican, of the
or appointed to the office of pope, Rev. Jerry Falwell's assertion that
sbould such openings arise. He will G_od hates homosexuals, and of
formally announce this informal Ttme magazine's disclosure that
life exploded upop the earth in a
decision in a few days.''
btg
bang.
t1
On behalf of Jesse Jackson:
"I wish to infonn Phil, Pat, Pat
"Jesse
Jackson . today
announced that he is thinking about ~nd Jerry that I am a registered
running for the presidency in 1996, mdependent and a finicky voter
and tbat he will soon formally and when I am ready to discuss my
announce that be is seriously con- politics, they will be the last people
sidering it. He will later informally lcall.
"I also lllish to inform the ediannounce the exact day on which
tors
of Time that when I am ready
be will Connally announce whether
to
reveal
how I created life I do
be is still thinking about it.''
not
intend
to leak it to the~. I'm
On behalf of the Senate majority
going
for
high-impact
media, prob·
leader:
•
·
"Senator Robert Dole late today ably Larry King.''
Joseph
Spear
Is
a
syndicated
said be can be against Disney
films , or he can be for Disney .w riter ror Newspaper Enterprise .
Association.
ty Leader:

•

h··it~~~-u~ -~·- ·;~~-~·

Tuesday, Dec. 5

Monday, December 4, 1995

WASHINGTON:- Moderate
House D~mocrats, disgusted wtth
the polanza~o~ that has plagued
recent negouauons on the budget,
recently d1scussed a way for both
pames to ctlUDl VICtory. .
Under thiS scen~no, House
Speaker. N~wt Gmgmh wo~ld
agree to jettison the ali·Or·nothmg
Republican. freshman class. In
remrn, Prestdent Clinton. would
hand liberal Democrats theu walkmg papers m exchange for support
from moderate Republicans . The
effort to purge the fnng~s of both
parttes, ~ho now have vutual veto
power over any deal, rests on these
two htghly unprob~ble ass~mpuons. To be sure. Gmgnch •s not
about to stgn a death certificate
with ha s key conservative con·
sut?.~nti. k th
.d . ill'
1 .e_;t ts w mg
t t ~n I' be
o. e11 ts • e~a s, ou are ~ot
gmng to get relief out·fof thts btll,
an d you can vote _no 1 you want,
but we have to find a center of
't th t'
od t ..
grav1 Y a s m era e one vet·
eran House Democr~t told us
"(D t) N
.
. .
Ii
. u . ewt !s not WI 11 mg to te
hts far nght, Look, you guys can

·a~-t~ea..-w IJ:~ nO ICeS
,·· · ·; College
cut
spurs nat1onal 1nterest

OHIO Weather

Page2

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

t~ition ~os.t

Josephine H. Mallory

IND

NEW CONCORD (AP) - An
announcement -by Muskingum Col·
Josephine II. Mallory, 77, of the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, lege that it will cut tuition by 29
percent for incoming students has
Pomeroy, died Saturday, Dec. 2, 1995 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born Feb. 19, 1918 in Antiquity, daughter of the late Herbert Mallory drawn widespread·attfntion.
College President Samuel Speck
and Mary Boyd Mallory Smalley, she was a member of the Victory Dap·
said his pbonc has not stopped
list Church, Middleport.
ringing smce the an noun cement
She was also preceded in death by her stepfather, Emmett Smalley.
last week.
Surviving four aunts and several cousins.
"I knew parents were concerned
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Straight· Tucker &amp; Roush
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va .. with the Rev. Aaron Young and the (about college cost,), and I knew
Q.ev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will be in the Letart Falls Ceme· college presidents were talkmg
tery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7.9 p.m. today.
about it whenever they got togeth·
er." Speck told the Akron Beamn
Journn/ in a story published Satur·
day. "B ut I didn't know how big it
Neva Manm Van Sickle, 87, Addison, died Saturday, Dec. 2. 1995 111 was in terms of general interest.''
The tu1t10n cut at the I, IOO·StU·
Holzer Medical Center.
Born Nov. 13, 1908 in Addison, daughter of the late Curtis and Alice dent liberal arts college will
Carman Furst, she retired !rom the U.S. Postal Service in 1984 after 30 amount to a price break of $4,000
years of service as the assistant posunaster of the Addison Post Office . off the $11,850 annual tuition cost.
The cut IS a radtcal proposal
She attended the Addison Baptist Church.
She was also preceded in death by her fust husband, George Martin, 111 when tl1e average tullton for both
1960; her second husband. Delmar Van Sickle, in 1982: and a brother. public and private colleges has
John W. Furs~ in 1965 .
soared more than I00 percent since
Survivmg are a stepdaughter, Josie Shamblin of Mason, W Va.; and a 1985.
niece and a cousin.
"College administrators. par·
Graveside services will be II a.m . Tuesday in the Gravel Htll Ceme- ents, tlae media - people all over
tery, Cheshue, w1th the Rev. Miles Trout officiating. Friends may call at the country are contacting us ,"
the McCoy.Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gathpolis, from 5· 7
p.m today

Neva Martin Van Sickle

Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

&lt;0 1995 Accu Woalher In c

Today's livestock report

Thickening cloud cover
promises rain by Tuesday Death toll on Ohio roads
toward daybreak. Lows from the reaches 7 over weekend
By The Associated Press
More sunshine than cloudiness mid 20s nortlleast to the mid 30s
IS in store for Ohio today with southwest.
Tuesday ... Dreezy with showers
some cloud cover advancing in for
like Iy. Highs from the lower 40s
Tuesday.
Temperatures will be much northwest to the mid 50s southeast.
Tuesday night .. A chance of
more normal today than they were
snow
showers ... Maanly northeast.
on Sunday with highs reaching
Lows
in
the 20s.
only near 40 for the northeastern
Extended forecast:
third of Ohio. The very southern
Wednesday ... Snow showers
counties may see 50 degrees.
High douds will come from the likely extreme northeast. Flurries
west on Monday evening signalling likely elsewhere . Highs in the
that the next chance for precipita· upper 20s to lower 30s.
Thursday ... Dry. Lows 20 to 25
tion is getting closer. The clouds
and
highs in the 30s.
will thicken overnight Monday
Fnday
.. Cloudy with a chance
Weather rorecast:
Tonight...Increasing cloudiness . of rain or snow. Lows around 30
A chance of showers northwest and highs in the 40s.

By The Associated Press
At least seven people were
killed in accidents on Ohio roads
this weekend, the State Highway
Patrol said today.
The patrol counts traffic fa tali·
tics from 6 p.m. Friday through
midnight Sunday.
Tbedead:
SUNDAY
MEDINA - Edward L. Matey·
ka, 79, of Patl\la, driver, and pas·
sengers Margaret H. Mateyka, 77,
of Parma. and Gene A. Koch, 73,
of Brooklyn Heights, in a two· vehicle accident on Ohio 3 in Medina

County .

SATURDAY
LEESBURG - Eugene Shin·
kle, 64, of Hillsboro, dnver 10 a
two·car accident on U.S . 62 in
Highland County.
CELINA - Michelle A. Keel·
ing, 21, ol Celina, passenger in a
one-car accident on a city street.
BATAVIA - Rebecca J. Otten,
32, of Batavia, driver in a one-car
accident on state Route 132 in
Clermont County.
CINCINNATI- Michael J.
Barber, 42, of Amelia, driver in a
one-vehicle accident on Interstate
75 in Butler County.

Five people slightly injured EMS units answer 17 calls
Units of the Meigs County
10:19 p.m. Saturday, Country
· in separate weekend wrecks Emergency
Medical Service Mobile Home Park, Byron Watson,
Five people were reported
injured in three separate accidents
· investigated over the weekend by
· Ute Gallia·Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
In the fust, David P. Smith, 25,
and Christopher K. Byers, 13, both
of Columbus, were transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Meigs EMS following a one·vehicle crash late Friday on County
Road 15 (Hysell Run) near Rutland, according to the patrol.
A hospital spokesperson said
Dyers was treated and released, butthere was no record of treatment
· for Smith.
Troopers said Smith was southbound, seventh-tenths of a mile
north of State Route 124, at IOp.m.
when his pickup truck developed
steering problems.
The pickup went off the left side
of the road and went into a tree, the
report said.

Announcements

The pickup was moderately
damaged, the patrol said. Smith
was cited for no operator's license
and n;:, safety belt.
In the second accident, two
Middleport men were taken to
VMH by the EMS following a one·
car crash late Saturday on County
Road 28 (Dashan) near Racine, the
patrol said.
Mark T. Reed, 29, 1101 Powell
St., and Gary G. Rose, 29, were
both treated and released, a VMH
spokesperson said.
. 'J:roopers said Reed was north· ·
bound, 1.5 miles north of SR 124,
at II :20 p.m. when his ear went off
the right side of the road. The car
then went back across the road, off
the left side, struck a fence and
overturned, according to the report.
The car was severely damaged,
and troopers cited Reed for driving
under the influence, no operator's
license and failure to control.
An Athens woman was slightly
injured in a one-car crash Sunday
at the intersection of Columbia
Township Road 10 (State Fann)
and SR 143.
TaraS. Zapata, 19, was not
treated at the scene, according to
the repon .
Troopers said Zapata was southbound on State Farm at 6:20 p.m.
when she failed to yield at the
mtersection, tra\ltled across 143.
and went off the right side of the
road. The car then struck a 'titch
and embankment.
The car wa• severely danaaged,
and Zapata was cited for no opera·
tor's license, failure to yield and
unsafe vehicle

recorded 17 calls for assistance,
including lour transfer calls Satur·
day and Sunday. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
I 0:18 a.m. Saturday, Logan
Street, Elma Goodnite, Holzer
Medical Center;
1:42 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department to Gallipolis to assist
Gallipolis Fue Department.
POMEROY
8:39 a.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Josephine
Mallory, Veterans Memorial Hos·
pi tal;

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions- none.
Saturday discharges - Gladys
Barrett, Pomeroy.
Sunday admissions - Ruby
Zeigler, Shade.
Sunday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. 1 - Mrs.
Stacy Edwards and son, Paul
Basim, Mrs. Roger Miller and son,
Mildred Lope, Diana Leith, Drebda .
Hatfield, Frank Brafford, Alexis
Washburn, CoUeen Thomas.
Discharges Dec. 2 - Joseph
Powell, Jan McFann, William
McKelvey, Haldon Thomas.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Bell, son, Leon, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Jason Dodson, son. Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Lucas, son,
Gallipolis.
Discharges Dec. 3 - Elizabeth
Caldwell, Betty Thomas. Evelyn
Gooch, Mrs. Mark Dell and son,
Mrs. Terry Lucas and son.
(Published with permission)

X-Mas in the Park
Racine Star Mill Park Board's
third annual Christmas in lbe Parle
will be held Dec. 14 at6:30 p.m. In
the park. Features include Christmas village, tree, bonfue, candle·
light walk, caroling, etc. All orga·
nizations wishing to participate
should call Dale Han at 949-2656.
Fellowship to meet
The Flame Fellowship meeting
for Metgs County Chapter Dec. II
at the the old legion hall in Middle·
port.
Saints scheduled meeting
The Senior saints of the Rutland
Church of God will meeting at I
p.m. Thursday. Rev . John Evans
D_&lt;:..:::C;:::on::::li::.::nu:::•d:..:f::..:ro:.::m:..:.P.::!ag~e:;,;.ll_ __
will be Ute speaker. Potluck lun- ·
cheon.
Ball Furniture, owned by Ernest fire marshal is expected to view the
Sale item&lt; in
E. Null, 50 Vine St., Gallipolis, had building this morning to help deterPortland Elementary School sale been located in the building since mine a cause for the fue .
items are in and will be delivered 1967.
A GVFD firefighter remained
this week. Any questions should be
the scene throughout Sunday
on
Gallipolis Code Enforcement
.
and
this morning as a legal procedirected to the school.
Officer Mike Null, wbo is also a
dure.
Leaving the scene would
Gallipolis firefighter, said the state
cause the fire department to have to
The Daily Sentinel
obtain a court order for pennission
to search, the GVFD spokesman
:i
(USPS m -9601
said.
-- - -

~

VMH;

Speck said.
:
•The tuition cut merited a ftrll
page in the Dec. 4 issue of U.S.
News &amp; World Report. USA Tod4y
called. Even the Wall Street Jour·
nat wrote about th e college in
Muskangum Co unty. abo ut S:O
miles east of Columbus.
Speck said the tuition cut will
help position Muskingum to co"'·
pete w1th good public colleges and
protect Muskingum 's base of mi4.'
dlc·class students.
Most current student' won' t lie
affected by the change, becauSe
about 70 percent already receive
nnanctal aid of more than $4,000.:
"We're not making tlle change
on U1e backs of current students/ '
he said.
'
Timothy 13ryma. d1rec10r of c~ ·
lege relations at Hiram Col lege .
saidl ltram conducted a IDaJOr maiketing research proJect I X monll)s
ago 111 which a tuition cut was ottc
of tlte plans discussed.
" We found studcnb wouldn't
really benefit because we would
have to drop linanc1al rud as well."
Dryrua said

4:29 a.m Sunday, volunteer fire
deparun ent to Mason, W.Va. , to
assist with river search, Middleport, Syracuse, Racine, Chester
VFDs assisted;
9:56 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Lee Williamson,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
12:02 p.m. Sunday, South Second Avenue, Gary Rose, VMH .
RACINE
11:25 p.m. Saturday, volunteer
fire departm en t and squad to
Dashan Road, motor-vehicle acci·
dent, Mark Reed and Gary Rose,
VMH;
10:21 a.m. Sunday, Perry Run
Road, Roy E. Moore, VMH.
SYRACUSE
1:06pm. Saturday, College
Road, Cortney Hunnell, VMH;
7:40a.m. Sunday, Vale Street,
Pomeroy, Thomas Ables, VMH;
9:19 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Pandora
Collins. HMC:
12:17 p.m . Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Lucy Reeves, HMC.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Oh1o direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday by the U.S:
Deparuncnt of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and g1lts. most ly 50
cents h1ghcr: demand moderat e to
good.

U.S. 1·3, 230·260 lbs. 40.00·
41.50, few 39.50 and 41.75-42.00;
plants 41.00-42.75.
U.S. 2·3, 230·260 lbs 34 50·
39.50.
Sows, under 500 lbs. 50 cent• to
2.00 lower: over 500 lbs. weak to
1 00 lower
U.S 1·3 , 300·450 lbs. 24.00·
26 50; 450·500 lbs . 26.00-29.00,
500-650 lbs . 28.00·31.50, few
3200.
Boars. 24.00-25 00
Esumated receipts 40,000.

Bulls: uneven. 2.00 lower to
1.00 higher : all bulls 42 50 and
down .
Veal calves : stc aJy to higher:
choice 125 00 anJ down.
Sheep and lambs: very uneven,
4.00 lower to 4 25 h1gher: choice
wools 65.00 -82.50: choice clips
65.00·81.75: Ie eder lambs 84.50
and down. aged sheep 43.50 attd
down.

Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle: slcady to 2.50 higher
Slaughter steers: choice 60.0069.25; select 40.00·63.00.
Slaughter he1fcrs: chotec 59.()().
69.50; select 32 00-63.00.
Cows: steady to 3.00 hagher; all
cows 45 50 and down

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Monday, December 4, 1995

The Daily Sent~«:l

;·Sports

Scoreboard

Monday, Oecember 4, 1995

Basketball

\:Eastern beats Beallsville 77-56 in hosts' season opener

NBA standings

"By SCOTT WOLFE
: ·Sentinel Correspondent
Led b' a 6-for-9 shooting blitz
· ·from the lloor in the second period
:- and a 17-8 scoring surge during
. :that spurt, the Eastern Eagles post. .ed a 77-56 non-league boys' bas. ketball triumph over Beallsville
: 'Saturday in the season opener at
' ·Eastern.
. Coach Tony Deem· s Eagles arc
.1-0, while veteran coach Scooter
~ _Tolzda' s Beallsville drops to 0-1.
Eastern was led in scoring by
· ·veteran swing guard Brian Bowen,
· ·who ripped the nets for 23 points
; .on a red-hot 9-15 (60%) night from
. ;the floor . Bowen hammered the
ouL,ide shot as well as post blitzing
. jnsidc drives . Junior point guard'
. "Eric Dillard, in his first varsity
, start, notched 18 points. Dillard hit

Ium

50 pcrcelll from three-point range
(3-6) ;md was 3-7 from the field.
Anoth er vet eran, se nior Eric
Hill, hit double figur es with 15
points and had six rebounds in a 613 night from the llnor.
Deem said, "It fe els good to be
1-0. This group has worked hard
for three years :md we twpe this is
the year they e&lt;m reap the harvest.
The kids really complemented each
other very well toni ght."
Eastem jumped nut to an 18-12
first perind lead. Utcn after working
the ball around the perimeter;
forced Beallsville to open up its
defense. Eastern then attacked the
inside. "fltc first 4uarter was a preview for what wa s to come .
Beallsville tried unsuccessfully to
top Eastern's hired guns - Hill.
Bowen and Dillard; linding ~tat it

~ . Redmen beat Tiffin 86-73
RIO GRANDE- Here is a
:· scoring summary from Saturday's
.Tiffin-Rio Grande men's basketball
• game, which the Redmen (6-3)
• · won 86-73 .

- •- *-

TIHIN {39-34=73) - Gaskin
• 6/12-0/0-0/0= 12f Wober 3/4-2/5-.0/0=12, Kin 5/9-0/0-0/1= 10, Stith
' 5/6-0/0-0/0=10, Wypasek 2/4-2/7: 0/0=10, Miller 1/7-2/6-0/0=8,
· 'Riegler 2/2-0/0-0/0=4, Sr~orr 0/1 ; 113·112=4, Stewart O/O-t13-112=3.
:;Totals: 24/46-8/25-1/3:73
TotaJFG: 32-71 (45.1%)
Rebounds: 4 I (Kin 12)
Blocked shots: none
Assist.: 10 (Miller &amp; Schorr 3
: :Cacb)
Steals: 5 (Miller 2)
Turnovers: 18
Foul.: 24
Fouled oul: Wypasek

RIO GRANDE (39-47=86) Schreck ri/1 2-2/4- 112= 19. Morgan
4/7-2/4-3/4=17. E. Burris 7/9-0/0112= 15, Snyder 5112-1/2-1/2= 14,
Kerns 2/4-0/1 -4/5=8, J. Burris 1/30/0-3/4=5. Caudill 2/3 -011-1/2=5,
Lavala 113-010-010= 2. Seitz 0/20/0-112= I. Totals : 28/55-5/12·
15123=86
Total FG: 33-67 (49.3%)
Rebounds: 40 (Schreck 9, E.
Burris 7)
Blocked shol.: 2 (by E. Burris
&amp; Kcms)
Assi.&lt;L.: 9 (Kerns 3)
Steals: 7 (Morgan 3)
Turnovers: 9
Fouls: 10
A Spanish expedition established the ftrst permanent European
settlement in North America in
1565 in what is now St. Augustine,
Fla.

Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past
Freeman's out in the woods.

Times-Sentinel

was impossible to stop all three.
Bowen appeared to be unswppable. and Dillard ripped apart the
nets with a 50 % effort from the
three-point line.
Eastern won the battle of the
bmtrds early, but BHS picked up
tlte pace in the second canto. Eastern , however, got red hot and
blitzed to a 35-20 lead at the half.
Dillard and Bowen continued their
pace, while Hill gained membership into the "H.H.C.- Hot Hand
Club." Eastern scored quickly and
often in the frame, but yet was
patient in its offense.

Senior Micah Otto. a former alldistrict player, got in early foul
trouble. limiting his usual doubledigit scoring attack.
Beallsville adjusted in the second half and played the Eagles
nearly even {37-36), but the lirst
half damage had already decided
the fate of the game. Eastern led
54-38 and 72-56 at the finale.
Eastern bit 5-10 three-pointers,
24-54 (44.4%) twos and was 9-15
at me line for 60%. Eastern collected 31 rebounds (Bowen 8, Barnett
8, Hill 6), six steals (Bowen, M.
Otto 2 each), 10 turnovers, eight

assists and 16 fouls.
Beallsville had 27 rebounds
{Bilyou 7, Tomolonis 6), had six
steals, 16 turnovers, 10 assists
(Caldwell and Colby Street 3) and
17 fouls .
Reserve noles: Eastern ' s
reserves wmt 37-24 as Josh Casto
notched 14 point~ and Rickie Hol lon added 12. Palmer had eight for
BHS and Burke had six.
The fulure: Eastern hosts Trim ble next Friday at Eastern in the
TVCopener.

- *- *-

poise and patience in breaking the
taller Green Devils' fast break. A
Spike Rizer jumper and baseline
drive by Jamie Evans tied the score
at 10-10 early, then Nathan Copas
drilled a three-pointer for a 13-10
North Adruns lead. John Harmon
canned a follow-up and Rizer hit a
IS-footer for Southern's only l!l3d.
SHS went cold and Copas and
Kenny Wilmoth lit up the nets for a
19-14 North Adams lead.
An even hotter North Adams
club smoked the nets more in ·me
second period. Soulhem' "J -gang"
- Jesse Maynard, Jamie Evans
an~ Jay McKelvey- allowed SHS
to keep pace, then after a Troy
S1orer bucket, Ryan Norris hit a
goal, leaving the score 29 -23.
North Adams. That was as close as
Soulhem carne the rest of the way.
North Adams went on a 10-0

Browns officials ask
players to accept pay cuts
ELYRIA, Obio (AP) - The
Cleveland {lrowns' payroll is so
close to lhe NFL' s salary cap lhat
team officials are asking players to
accept pay cuts, The Chronicle·
·Telegram reported on Saturday.
The newspaper, quoting a player
it did not identify, said player personn~ director Mike Lombardi has
called some players' agents and
told them the players migbt not
play the rest of lhe season unless
they accept a cut, so the team does
not have to pay incentive bonuses.
"All the guys are mad about

i~" lhe newspaper quoted lhe player as saying.
Tbe player also said that backup
quarterback Jim McMahon asked
for his release because be was
upset about not getting bonuses be
had coming for remaining on lhe
roster for a certain number of
weeks, the newspaper said. Tbe
team rele_ased McMahon on Monday.
"Jim went up lo ask Lombardi
for bis money and Lombardi said,
'Sorry, we don't bave it,"' The
Chronicle-Telegram quoted the
as saying.

scoring streak in which .SHS did
not score for over three minutes,
leaving the score at 39'23. Maynard hit a free throw at the 2:34
mark, a score that seemed light
years away from the last SHS goal.
The score at the half was 46-30.
Southern showed a great deal of
character in the second half. There
game was much more controlled
and they played at full throtUe. The
only thing that thwarted a great
effort was poor shooting gning
down . the stretch. SHS outscored
North Adams 12-4 at one point and
prompted a North Adams time out
as SHS pulled 10 within seven at
49-42:
Southern, three times, cut the
game to nine points in the last
quarter, but could not capitalize
any further. At one point, Southern
and North Adams exchanged the
ball five times without a score.
conceivably leaving the door open
for a possible Southern lead during
thai stretch. Southern free throw
shooting was especially bad at this
point.
Rizer, the Kroger's "Player of
lhe Game," had 13, while Maynard
had a great floor game and II
poin(s. Copas led the Green Devils
with 17.
Soulhern hit 19-47 overall, wa&gt;
a meager 8· 19 at the line, bad 19
rebounds {Harmon four, Maynard
5, Evans 5), seven steals and 12
turnovers. North Adams bit 22-48
and was a red-hot 10-13 in the second quarter for 76 percent. Nortb
Adams was 14-23 at lhe line, had
32 rebounds, (Basford 14, Storer

Third pl•ce

.R J. f&lt;l.

lill

Miami ................... !!
Orluntlo ........ .. ...... 13

3 .7116
4 .76S

Ntw York ........... 12
New Ju~y ............ ?
w.....hington ............. 6

4

.750

&amp;

.467

.5
S

9

.400

6

Bus lun ................ .5

9

.357

6. 5

Philadelphia .......... .2

12

.143

.5

Crnlnl DMNon
.... 13 2 .861
Alluntu .......... .. .9
7 563
CLEVELAND ..... 7 9 .4}8
Indiana . .................. 6 8 .4 29
CILarlort e ................ 7 10 .41 2
Dctruil. ........... ........ :1 9 .400
Toro ntu ............ ......6 II .353
Milwaukee .......... .5 10 .333

4S
,-;.5
tJ.5
1

Coors Ughl Cludl'·Championlhlp

7
8
8

Pri nc~to n

59, Fre.sno St. 54
Third place
Maine 62. Boise St. 45
Cydont Challtngr·champlon!ihlp
Iowa St. 82, Ridunund 64
Third plate
Te nnu~ S!. 74. Ten.'i-Pan American

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwf!t Dlvil.lon

W ............. L Pd
Utah ... ... ........ ..... 12 4
fiOlL'ilOll ........ ........ 12
4
San Antonio ...........9 4

GB
.750
.750
.692

Dallas ... .................6
lknver ...................5

9
9

.400
.357

S.5

.......... .... 3 II
Van couwr ....... ..... 2 IS

.214
118

K
IO.S

Minnt! ~ota

II), had 16 turnnvers and eighL
steals.
There was no reserye contest.
Southern will play Federal Hocking
Friday at Stewart.
SOUTHERN
{14-16-12-9=51)
Ryan Norris 1-0-2=4 , Greg
McKinney 1-0-0=2, Jamie Evans
3-1-1=10, Jesse Maynard 2-21=11 , Spike Rizer 5-1 -0=13, Jay
McKelvey 1-1 · 1=6, John Harmon
1-0-3=5. Tolllls: 14-5-8/19=51-

Saturda)"s

ll~~owkeye

lona-P:epsl Clusic-champlonKhip
Iono 71. American Uni v. 60
Thlrd plal't·
Cornell 74 , Wagner 69
MriLire Cla.~sic - l.'hlllrtplon:dlip
San Francisco 70, SW Te1as St . 42
Third plur
Hof5tra 18. E. Wa.~hingl o n 6K
Mi H~~ Oil( han

Sunday's scores

Mo nt~n a

92. Fairfieltl62
Third placr
W. Illinois 69. Cal Poly-SLO 154

109, Vancnuvcr 9S
Miami 112. Tnrnnlo 94
Ne~ Yurk 107, Washington ~ 3
CLEVELAND 108, Dalla." 107 (OT)
Portlantl 93, Orlaot.lo 112
LA. La~ers I 04. lnc.Jian a 96

l'epsl Marisl Cluslt-thamplonlhlp

Marist 59. Brown 56
Third place
Ni&lt;~~ard 64 , Hampton Univ . 62

Tonight's gameN

Piua Hut CIU!Iic·champlouhlp
SW MisRo uri St. 10 5 . Stephen
f. AU~ti n 8\
Third plan
ldalw St. K9, Teon.-Martin 72

Mi ami a1811slon. 7:30p.m.
Delmit at Denver, 9 p.m

Tuesday's ~ames
Dallas at New York, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Indiana, 7:30p.m.
Houston at Ut.ah. 8 p.m.
LA. Lakt rs a1 San Antonio , 8:3(t p.m.
Vom(;uuvt:r at Pttoenht , 9 p.m.
Toruntu at Seattle, to p.m.
OrlamJn a ~- A . Clipperl. 10:30 p.nt

or Champion"•
Champion•hlp
North Carolina 87, Stanford 63
Third pl•ce
SouUJ Carolina 80, Tulan e 75
Tournament

Sunday's action

NCAA Division I
men's scores

East
Connecticut63. Boston Collete 62
Syracuse 82, Providence 78
Yale 73, Swwtlunore 65

Saturday's adlon

Soulh

E"'l

Ala.·Birmingh am 66, Auburn 54

Bucblell 80. HMford 70
Canisius 71 , St. B oru:.venlut~ 64
Cent. Connecticut St. 98, Delaware St.

Soulhwul
Arkansas 116. Alcmn St.

17

Coppin St. 9M , W. Virginia St. 63
Fairleigh Dickinson 8.5, Fla. loternatiunal 60
Geurgetc•wn 116. WeJiit Virginia 83

Franklin Nallon.J Bank a

-$14,4!16
.... · $700
· $1,84!

5

21,950

Ohio men's
college scores
Saturday's action
_

350 V-8 PoWer
•350 V-8Power
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ISave '1905 I

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fll' Wcat
Air Force 71 . Doane .SR
CS Northridge 11, CaJ St.· Fullerton 76
Colora do 132. Geor; e Mason J17

tonGont.Qga n. S. Utlil 60
-

Lema Beach St. 101, Cai ·S t-Hayward

·'

Sl
Loyola Marymount70, UNLV 61
New MCiico' St. 80. W. New Mexico

56

West Virginia:S #I Chew, 0/ds,
Ponliac, Buick, Geo
Cuslom \trn Dealer.

ana·

• Taxes. Tags, Title Fees exn Rebale irdOOed n sale

.

TOLL FR.EE 1.-8()()-822:·0417 • 372-2844

344-5947 • 422.0756
Jce or new vehicle ~S1ed where ~Alb~- On~ mtdit. Not respon~ lortypooraphical errors.

MDIIIIII -S..dly: 91111 - 9 111ft
Sl.llllfly: rtoon . 6 111ft

S9.

Oreaon 10.5, Alaska· Fairbanlo 63
Oreaaa St. 64, uc lrYine n
Portland 84, Pac. l..uth0'1UI 64
Sacramento St. 69, Notre Dame, Calif.
1

SllD Oieao 69, San Die11o Sl. 6S
St. Mary's, Cal. S3 , Pacinc 46
Utah.St. 61 , Lcwill..Clark St. S7

2

1,413

3

1,325
1}15
1.203
1.1 40
1,128
1,105
Qll3
833
K09
801
758
733
637
.536
420

5
4
6
7
8

9
10
II
12
13
14
15
17
18
19

406

It!

365
319
): 89
225
Ill
86

20
ll
22
24
23
2.5

Olhtu rudving vol.-1: Syra c ~s..- 57,
l:CLA 4H, Tcllas Ted1 25, Stanford 19,
Ea.'il Ci!wlina 14. Colorado St . ll . M1d1i ·
~:..n St. 6. Nev-.ula 2.

Ohio H.S. state finals
COLliMBLJS . Ohi [} (AP) - Here are
the rc.o;ul!s rrum the 24tll state high school
fuott&gt;all dlillllpinnship!ii Ill Ma.~sillon Paul
Drt~wn Til,lt'l" Stadium.

~
~

Saturday's scores
Divl11ioo I
Cltovd antl St. lgnatiu!ii 41 . Elrumwicl

Venm ille.~

HURRY!·DEADLINE
FRIDAY, DEC. 15, AT} p.M~

t

21

Plvision IV
50. Bellaire 44 (2 OT)

~

i

n 1.

.... H
... ..7
Mtarru ................ 7
New England ...... .S

Buffalo.

ID~Ii an.apoli s .

I

no. u 260
u

5 0 .61 5 26.5
6 0 .538 256
6 0 .538 324
8 0 .38 5 229

25!
281
298

. ... .310 0 .231 199 318
Cencral m,·J.ion

t ·Piltsburldl ........9 4 0 .692 318 266

Mounl enion 82. Capil&lt;.l78

CINCINNATI .... .5 8 0 .385 296 3t4

Ohio Nathern 66, Marietta 47
Olterbeii 72, Hiram 51

Housto n .....•...... .5 8 0 .385 280 277
CLEVELAND ... .4 9 0 .308 231 29 S
Jack:mnvi\le .. ..3 10 0 .23 1 220 298

Western Divi sion
·JI·Kunsa:&gt; City ....·ll 2 0 .846
Oaldand ... ...........8 .S 0 .6l j
Denv~r .. .......... ...1 6 0 .538
San Diego ............6 "1 0 .462
:'ie.&lt;~ltle ..
. ...6 7 0 .462

306
300
313
239
285

208
228

266
251
303

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Ea.~lern

Ium

Da!lw; ....

Di•lslon

.RJ.I&amp;l!E fA

. .... 10 3 0 .769 360 238

Poinsettias (5 Colors)
Poinsettia Baskets
Live Spruce Trees
Cut Christmas Trees
Monument Sprays, Vases
&amp; Grave Blankets
Cut Christmas Trees
$11 to $16

Entry
Form

~
~

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

s::

0

~

=

0

.c

Cavaliers a .. lc
Cllampion•hlp
Ohio IX•!ninican 93 . Clinch Valley 75
Champlon~hlp

Mcrcyhurst 14, Wobh 65
WolfBw Une1 Tourname•l

11Urcl place
Wilmington 80. La Roche 75

;&gt;.,
C&lt;!

""'
._,
"'

0

~

-·- ."'
;::1 •

0
0
0

-u -""0

.c
0

0..~
""0 00

'[~

0..

.c

"'0s::

---

C::c::

"'C&lt;!
o..E

~'

~

C&lt;!

u --

-

J5o

ro

~

'E"' -~...
o.c
-uU
= '2

~
~

Knobloch Roundball 01WIC

·--

C&lt;!

E

I
i

lli~land

u

~

~

n,

.c

Q.

992-sns

Food For the ll~anary
llolld11y lnYit•lionlll•ch.mploolhlp
Mount Vernon NIWIIene 87, Ohio Vallt'y 82
Third place
Windsor , Canada
Nyack 76

~

i

Open Daily 9-5, Sun.12·5

Syracuse

~
~

~

Official

Now Open For
Christmas Season

Alma Collese Tournament
Cbmplonshlp
Colorado Coll.76, Defiance 71

c::

;&gt;.,

u-

;&gt;.,

~

0

~

E
C&lt;!

Sunday's action

z

Mid-Ohio Cortfurnrc
Shawnee St. 82. Tiffin 80
Non-conference play
Rochcsler 87, Case Westcro 82
Thie179, Lake Erie

n

STOP

Soulhwut
Alabama 74, North Teu.1 72

Arizona 73, Hc&gt;t.nton 69
Lam.1r 106, SamHouslon St. 7':1
Nt!vada 88. Baylor 80
Oklahoma St. 90, Arizona St. 85
Oral Roberti 81 , Tennesxe Tech (, 2
Southern Meth. ~ . Wi chita St. 4t&gt;
Tt:xuOuislian 103, Hnward74
TeJW Tech. 71, Ark..l.ittle Rock 6'1
T~:xas· Arlinatoo 81, N. Arizonu 77
Texas-EI Paso KK, NW Louilllann67
Texas-San Antonio 93, AnveJo Sl. 91
Tul sa IOO , N. Carolina A&amp;T Sl

~

1,500

Saturday's tournaments

" Youngstown S1 . 84, Wash. &amp;Jeff. 44

' - - - - - - - - -;._-LJ SJie Pr~co

• Dnvers s~ Arr Bag
• Rear Anii-Lock Brakes
• Power Steerir&lt;J

No Doc Fees_DeLYeted'

. . . . . . . S11 ,555

Eutern Dlvisloo

Mid-Ohio Conreren&lt;"e

Toledo 67, San Francisco St. 5 I
Valparaiso 75, Grace 51
Wisconsin 57, Tert1tle 54 (01)
Wright St. 76 , E. Kentucky 64
Xavier. Ohio 109. Lons Is land Univ .

. factO&lt;)' Rebate ........- ~

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

N.Y. Je~ - --

Noa-confennce play
Ashland 76 , Edinboro 74
Bluffton 97 , Concordia, Mich. 72
Bowlioa Green 63, N. lllioois 59
Darton 80, Coastal Carol ina 62
HuotingtoD 82. Cedarville 73
Kent 86, Rice 76
Lake Erie 67, Thonw More 66
Mnlone 9.5, Wilberforce 68
Ohio St.75, Cleveland St. 52
Toledo 67, San Francisco St. 51
Wright St. 76, E. Kentucky 64
Xavier 109, Long Island 711
YnuniJI'Iown St. 84, Wash. &amp; Jeff. 44

2. Fiorida(l 2) .. . . 12-0-0
3. NortllWt'I!1Ctn .... . 10-1-0
. 11-1-0
4 . OHIO ST ..
ti e. Tennes.'iee .. .. 10-1 ·0
6. No tte 0 3rue ...
..9-2-0
? . Colorado ............... 9-2-0
II . Fiorida St. ... ........ 9-2 -0
Y. Tella.L ..
. . ...... 10·1· 1
9-2- 0
JO. Kans:u S!.
1\. Kansus . .......... 9-2-0
12. Ore~on .. . .......... 9-2· 0
11 V irb'ini~Tec h ... .9·2-0
14. Mic:hig:tn ..
.....9-3-0
I S. Penn St. ...............8-3-0
!6. Auburn ..
.... 8· 3·0
17. Soutltern Cal ... .....8·2· 1
I ll . Virgini a ............ .. 8-4-0
19. Tua.~ A&amp;M . . ... 8-3-0
20. W;~.~hin.:ton ......... 7-3-1
:! !.Alabama ..
.... 8· 3-0
12. Miami (Fla .) ........ 8-3-0
:!3. CleiJLo;on ............. 8- 3-0
24. Ar!Oinsa:; ........... S-4-0
:! 5. TOLEDO ....... .10...0- l

NFL standings

Ohio Athletic Conrehn&lt;"e
Heid elberg 71, Baldwin- Wallaee 66

RIO GRANDE 86, Tiffin 73

:wm
l:UJ fll.llilll
I Net"lra.'ikn (5l&gt;) .... ll -0-0 1.538
I

Pivbiun VI
St . Henry 10. New Washington Bud:·
t&gt;Yt! Centml7

Football

Ium

J...hn Cnrroll78, Must..ingum 66

Tew 88, DePaul 84

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· · • Power Brakes
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.
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•Drive!s Side Ai• Bag • Co~tlm Cllth Stit
•4 Wheel .
Beoch Seats
AntH.o:l&lt; Brai&lt;es • Deep Tinted Gklss
• Power Steer1rg

Cui. Hnrlley 6 1. Reynoldsburg .54
Col. St . CharltJi. 62 . lick.ins Hts . 49
Col. WaUersoD66, Col. Whetstone 6 1

N(Wih Cout Athletic Cord.
DeniAon 83 , Allegheny 76
Wittenbug 71, Ober lin 44
Wooster 73; Earlh1UJ164

(&lt;rrt

ut Detroit, IJ p.m.

(OT)

Maryland 98, George Wuhinllon 81

Midwul
Bowling Green 53. N. lllinoi~ 49
Bradley 87, New Orleans 72
Butler 67, Ball St. .51
Dayton 80, Coastal Carolina 62
Drab! 70, Lo)·ola.lll. 62
Duquesne n, lllioois St. 6S
E. Illinois 72, Millikin 66
E. Michigan 95 , Montana St. 71
Evansville 81 , W. Michigan lil.
K.:msu 85, UCL\ 70
Kansas St. 106, Manhla.ll 88
Kent 86, Rice 76
Kentucky 89, Indiana 82
Michigan 68, Detroit 48
Misswri 117, Chicago St. 4.5
Northwutem 66, Robert Morrii 46
Ohio St. 75. Cleveland St. 52
St. Louis 58 , Penn .SI

BRAN&gt; toft '95 OfVY K-1500 EmltlED CAB 4x4

...J&lt;"

295

TI1e Top 25 tca fll.'&gt; in l11e A.slwCilt eU
Press final re.:ular-scason college foo:ball
pull . WJUJ fi.n:t ·place votes in parenU1eses.
r ct:ott l~ through D••c. 2, total points b!fit d
on 25 points fur u !irst ·place vote U~ro us h
unc puint fur a 25tll· place vole. and previ·
o iL( ranking·
La.t

.

Third pl•ce

62

mM PIDIN. SMARRIASIIS THI WAY TO GO!

Cent~rvill e 57. Day. Meadowdale 54
O mnel 67, Mlru;f1eld St. Pe ter· ~ 44
O l ~:.~upt:C!.k e 73, Gu:;hen 68
Cin . Antlenon 88, Bethel-Tate 3\1
Cin. Bncon 74. N. Cullege Hill68
Cin . Central Daptisl 57, Cin . Calvary
Chri:;tian 5.5
Cin . Elder 66, Oat Hill IVa.) Academy
41
Ci n. LaSalle 6 1. Philade lphi a Roman
Catholic SK
Cin. rrincelon 77, Cin. Glen Esle 6 1
Cin. Sycmnore 52, New l.uingtnn 50
Cin . Turpin 54, Cin. l'.'ortl1west 45
Cin . WitJ1r&lt;1W92, Cin . Hughe11 67
Cin . Wuodword 61, St. Louis Ritter ~ K
Cin; h:ville 38. WestFall 37
Cle. Bt!n et.lictine SS , Twinsburg 56
Ch:ar r·ork 74, Sparta Highland 44
Clermont Ncnheastern 70. Norwood

Massachusetts 80, florida .58

St. Joseph's 64, Delaware 56
Vermont 12, Yale 64
Villanova H3, St. John's 611

Me.nlflhif' KO, Anrida A&amp;M 50
Mercet 76, Wofford .SS
Miun~ SO, Selon Hall 70
Mif.!.;issippi St. 79, Brigllam Young 74
Moreh~acl St. 11.5 , Centre 6M
N. Jnwu ~.Cent. Florit.la 18
N.C. Otarlc11te 110, East Can:•linil 6 ~
N.C.-Asheville 10.5, Montreat-Amler :.
~(11\ 71
N.C. -Grec:nsbow (&gt;9 , Campi-ell btl
Penn St. 6Y , Tennessee 57
S. lllinois 73. Old Dominion 65
SE Louisiana 86, Baptist Christi an 73
SW Louisiana 67. N.C.-Wllmington 51
Southern Miss. 68, Jackson St . 61
Southern 93, Ark..· Pine Bluff 85
VMIIIO, Radford 103
Vam1erbilt 87, Furman 63
Virginia Tech 71. William &amp; Mary Mi
W:t.ke Forest 68 , lehi~l SJ

62

Ct1l. Acudemy 66. Madi son Plains 62

Champioruhlp

{Yf)

South
Alal&gt;ama St. 69, Tn .-&lt;..1uillaooos:a 66
Centenary 65, LouisianuTech 58
Citadel65, Randolph-Macon 58
Clemson 19, Wiotlvop 63
Colc.er 60, W. Carolina .511
David50n 101. Caiholic U. 59
Florida St. 87, JacUonville KO
Georgia Tech 89, Appalachian St 65
Illinois 7.5, Duke 6.5
Uberty 86. Va. Commonweulth 71
l..ouisvillt! 79, Michigan St. 59
Mll.-E . Sh ore 109. Wilmington . De l.

Saturday's action
Amheril 68, N, Rid&amp;eville 54
Anna 71 . New Knoxville 64
Arcanum 72 , Brookville 67
Archbnld 61, Continental 36
Ar!ing10n .54, Ada .52
A.'ihland 7.5. Ga.Jion .55
Ashtabula Edgewood 86. Cle. Mar ·
shall 73
AU.ens 112, Berne Union 45
Ayen ville 57, f&lt;l . Jennings .51
8arbtor1nn 109, Cle. Eas1 Tech SJ
Beawrcreck 67, Tipp City 56
Bellevue n , Huron .52
Belley 71, Grandview 63
Big Walnul 53, Ulica. 44
Bloom·Carroll 64, Beaver Eastern 52
Blufftun 53, Jl-dnt.lora-Oilboo SO
Bryan 72, Van Wert60 (20n
Canal Winchester 58 , W. Jeffmon 51
Ca nhm Cath. 52, New Philadel phia 51
Cuntun lleri t a~;e 63. Newwmeflitnwn

45

7~

Sunday's tournaments

tOT)

G&amp;ll"gia !i5, PitUbuq;h 66
Hurvord 64, Lafmye.tte 4-4
Holy Cm!!." 7.5. La Salle 72
Md .-B al1imore County 5ll . Luyola. .
Md . 53
Mun100ulh , NJ . 78, Army 57
Navy 66, New Hampshire 6J
Rhode hlutl 98. Sien111 .58
Rider 89, St. Peter' s 81
Rutgers 86, Notte Dame 80 lOT)
St. Fro.nci:~. NY 98, Fordham !115 (2

C.xa- Cola Oa.4!1lc

Ch111npiun~hlp

Milwaulc.~

'

Michiglln 91, omo 79
Ohio St. 99, Providence 77
Rochesll'r 67. Case We&amp;tern 6.S

Missisrippi 65, E Te nnessee St . 5(1

scon~

190
287
297
257

AP Top 25 college poll

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Third phu: t

6

162
298
237
241
270

Non·confrrrnre play

lnYk.tlonal-c:hampl()nllhip

Iowa 79 , Co l ga~e 59

.692
.538
.538
.462
.462

Tonight's game
Chic&lt;~ go

Sunday's action

Franklin NaUonal Buk Cllllhlir
Flr1l rouad
Aorida 75, George Washington 6li
Massachusetts 50 , Maryland 47

New Jerlicy 79, CU:VELAND 78
New YurA 94. Phi:;,Celphla ISS
Washin~:1un BS. Bcr;ton 107
D..:~ roil l04, Atlanta!){.
H.•uston 113, Charlotte 98
S: m Antt1niu 10 1, Plloenix9 I
Dt!nver I (.I ~. Minne.M a 105
O lit:ago 104. l.A . Clippen 1.HC
G. •lth:n Stak !OO . Indiana 97
Sacr.unt.ntn 109, Orlando 106

NORTH ADAMS
(19-27· 7-9=62)
Nathan Copas 2- 3-4= 17, Dusty
Campbell 1-1-0=5, Troy Storer-50-4=14, Kenny Wilmoth 4.-0' 3=11,
Jeremy Basford 5-0-3=13. Totals:
17-4-14/25:62
;.

Defiuncc 95, Heidelberg 62
Third place
Wilt-erfmce 82, Olivet 69

Marquet te 64, Wi, .-Grecn Bay 44
Third plact
Texas A&amp;M 65 , Columbi a J9

6

0
0
0
0
0

Sunday's scores

Ch11mplunship

Flnt B11nk £..1tailt·champion51lip

Dlvilion

Carolina 13, 1ndi anapolis l0
Green Day 2( ClNCINNATII O
PitUburg.h 2 1. Ho u.~ to n 7
Miami 21, Atlanta 20
New Orleans J l . New England I"1
· St. U1uis 2J, New York Jet:; 20
Minnesota 31, Tampa Bay 17
Denver ~I . Jacks&lt;Jnv tll e 23
Kans a.~ City 29. O ~ kland 23
San Diego 31, CLEVELAND I 3
Washington 24, Dalla." 11
Sealtle 26. Phil:ldelphia 14
San Francisco 27. Buffalo 17

ll~idtlbns TipoiTTournam~nl

1.5

3
4
4.S
5

w~,lern

San FrancilOO ...... 9 4
Atlanta ............... 7 6
St. LoU iS . . . .... 7 6
Carolina ... . ......6 7
New Orleans .......6 7
~- clinc he d diviston Iitle

Saturday's tournaments

6S

Pudli.: DiviHiun
/ Sacramemo ..... 12 4 .750
( Seattle ..... ...... ..... \0 6 .62S
L.A . Lakm .... ........ 9 7 .563
Portland .... ...... ....... 8 8 .500
Plw enix ............ ..... 7 S .467
L.A . Clippers ......... 7 9 4)8
Gnldt!n State .......... 6 · 10 J1S

Detroit.. ............6 6 0 . 500 304 302

Tampa Bay .........6 7 0 .462 20S 257

Non-conlntn&lt;"e play
Ashlaot.l 91, West Liberty 57
Bow linK Green 88, Duquune 76
Dayton 17. Miami , Ohio ti9
Kent 82, St. Peter's 49
Louisville 74, Cleveland St. 48
Null e Dame, Ollio 64, Ober lin 49
Oklahoma St. 78 , Cincinn ali 57
Tirlin66, Malone 47
Toledo 86, Deuuit Mercy 70
Urbana 114, Ohio Valley 45
Walsh 100. Point Park RO
Willen berg 82. Hope 15
Yu~r~ug~tuwn St. 118, Wright St. 80

C11pllal Bank OuAc-thamplomhlp
MiSlli . Valley St. 84. SE Mis!iOuri IW
Third pl•n
ltlah11 9.5. Truy St. 86

0 . 61~ 263 211
0 .308 217 336
0 .308 233 279
0 .308 25 8 299

Central Dl\'lllon
Green Bay ........... 9 4 0 .692 336 259
OticilgO....... .....7 5 0 .583 324 293
Minnesota ...... .... 7 6 0 ..538 331 310

Ohio Athldl&lt;" Conference
Baldw in-Wallace 74 . Hiram 47
(';onita1 81, Mount Union 71
Mariel1a 50, Ohio Northern 59

Thlrd pla&lt;"e
Drexel 83, 111.-Chicago 72

Chicago. .

EASTERN .
(18-17-19-18=72)
Brian Bowen 9-1 -2/4=23, Eric
Dillard 3-3-:'l/6=18, Daniel Ouo 10-0/0=2, Eric Hill 6-0-3/4=15 ,
Micah Ottn 3-1-0/0=9. Michael
Barnett 0-2-1/1 =5. Totals 24·5 ·
9115=72

Saturday's action

Boilermakrr lnYitMional-champi«u;hip
Purdue 88, Mumty St. 76

,o_s

Phi ladelphia
.. S .S
Arizona ..
_ .4 9
N.Y. Giants .. ...... 4 9
Washington... ... 4 9

North CoaJI Alhlellc Conr.
Allegheny n , Denison 52
Kenyo n 61 , Ohio Wesleyan .54
Wooster 67, Earlham46

B•nk One-Foothill• Dodae Ram Claulc
· O.amplon•hlp
Weber St. 66, Colorado St .SR
Third place
Tew Southern 76. NE Louisi ana 73

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

.

Ohio women's
college scores

Peppcrdioe 69. Georgia Southern .59

Alhulfil" Dhillon

BEALLSVILLE
(12·8·18-18=56)
Rick Meade 1-0-0=2, Ryan
Caldwell 6-3-2/6=23, Mark Bilyou
2-0-012=4. Jason Abrigg 7-011:'!= 15 , Ryan Tomolonis 5-02/3=12. Tolllls 22·3-5/14&lt;=56

North Adams defeats Southern 62-51
By SCOTT WOLFE
Senlinel Correspondenl
Although it was not the blowout
that some expected, the Southern
Tornadoes boys' varsity dropped
the season opener Saturday to powerful !'Jorth Adams 62-51 in the
Kroger's Hoops Classic, sponsored
by Alexander High School's Alb·
letic Department at Ohio University's Convocalion Center.
At the half, Southern trailed 46·
30 as turnovers and poor shooting,
especially poor foul shooting led to
their demise. The second half,
however, Southern was a much different team, making fewer
turnovers ami switching to a zone
defense that brought some
respectability to the game.
Southern hustled throughout the
game and showed a great deal ·of

SaturdaY's tournaments
Amdll• Clulit-ehamploruhip
Nebraska 96, Gta.fl'tJiing St. 80 .

EASTERN CONFERENCE

,.•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ol:lio

Earn

PAYING TAXES
ON YOUR
ACCUMULATING
INTEREST!

high interest &amp; defer lllxes
oo interest earnings· wilh SAFE
high-yielding
lllx-dererml
ANNUITIFS.
• Accumulate or Monlhly Income
• High Safely!
• No Loads·or Fees
Call for Information:

SCOTT INSURANCE
614-698:4011 (collect)
3222 Swart Rd.
Albany, Oh 45710
• Annuities are issued by Insurance
Companies and have substantial
enallles for.ea~ w~hdrawals.

I
•..

I)

E
C&lt;!

that fits your minivan.

-=

z

The Ohio Casualty Group of Insurance Companies, one of the top 50
insurance groups in the United States, is working with us to offer
minivan drivers 15% off their premium rate . Now, minivan drivers
like you can get top-notch insurance coverage at family car prices.

"'

;::r

--0
~

0

~

To find out more about this mnney - ~aving deal in minivan insurance,
just call us today! We think you '11 find our offer very fitling!

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 15 at 3P.M•

Your Independent Agents
Serving Meigs County Since 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE.
'

111 Second St.

Repres.entins:

Pomeroy
C'hlo Casualty Group
Companies

992-3381

Mall or bring the entry form :

[·

.

The Daily Sentinel

~,- ··._
·. , ..·

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.•· ~
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6 • The Dally Sentinel

.: ;:.Americans
ByMAGGIEJACKSON
: •: AP Business Writer
:
NEW YORK (AP) - Quills.
:: : Aannels. Jeeps. If it smacks of U!e
: •: country, it's chic.
- • : Hungering for com(on and simplicity, Americans are' reveling in
things rural.
They' re trekking up mountains
- or down Madison Avenue - in
fancy hiking boocs. They're splashing houses and apartments with
gingham, baskets and, as Chrisanas
nears , garlands and gingerbread
houses.
Ask Kun Abrams, wbo oobs
and ahs about his new Ford Explorer, lhe best seller among U!c "sport
utility vehicles" that constilute U!e
fastest -growing segment of the
domestic auto market for several
years.
No matter that he's a New
~ Yorker, bom and bred. WiU! such a
:· car, lhe country beckons.
: · ·'I'm starting to contemplale
-: taking my kids camping," says
::Abrams, a father of two who works

for a pharmaceutical company. "I
didn't U!ink about it before. I'm
uying to figure out things 10 do
wilh lhe vehicle." ·
Of course, not everyone gets the
gear firsl and t11en wonders what to
use it for. Many people are rock
climbing, biking, hunting or quilling. But lhe numbers of Americans
buying imo the country look ' with_out the life shows U!e strenglh of
U!e pastoral allure.
"You talk about wanting to live
this country life," says Peter L.
Horn II, manager of Beretta Galleries, a New York boutique
opened by the lmlian gun company
in June to sell tweedy hunting and
"apres bunting" clothes, along
with $100,000 handmade guns.
"People come in here just to buy
clothes for the weekend. It has
nolhing to do with hunting."
Whatever happened to the gliiZ,
the glamour, lhc sparkle of city
things 10 covel and emulate?
After the ostentatious '80s,
Americans seem to be clamoring

for a warm, homey, outdoorsy
look. No matter that it ean cos1 as
much as sleek did in lhe last decade
- it evokes down-borne goodness.
"There's a longing for a return
at least symbolically 10 quality, 10
people who can be uusted, concepts U!at ~:an be believed, producL~
that will prove to be of value, ' '
says John Mack Carter, president
of Hearst Magazine Enterprises and
creator of Country Living, the most
popular of the dozen or so magazines of the genre published today.
For lhe more urban or lhe young
and hip, a streamlined country look
,offers less traditional furnishings.
"Sun-faded, soft colors, weathered furniture and fabric Provencal would come to mind,"
Barbara Turf, chief buyer for Crate
and Barrel, says of the style that the
Northbrook, lll., chain will push for
a second year.
In the J. Crew world, pale
women stand sternly beside stubbly
bearded men in old pick-ups or

Thanks."
Frances Reed conducted the
meeting with members responding
to roll call by naming a colonial
flower or fruit. Grace Weber was
appointed chairman of decorating
the community Christmas tree .
Mary Alice Bise, Mrs. Whitehead,
Marlene Puanan, and Mrs. BaldersOli were named to a committee to
purchase new lighls for the Christmas lree.
Gifts were brought for patients
at the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Mrs. Reed will

deliver the gifts to the Center. It
was noted lhat Randy Wachter and
Brian Reed helped wilh the litter
pickup in November. Theda Haskins was welcomed as a new member.
Finger foods was enjoyed by
those named and Janet Connolly,
Janice Young, Delores Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Ella Osborne,
Gladys Thomas, and Betty Boggs.
The Cbrisanas dinner, program
and gift exchange will be Dec. 14
at 7 p.m. al the home of Mrs .
Boggs.

Reedsville UMW plan visit to county home
Plans for a Chrisanas visit to the
county home were made when the
: Reedsville ' United Methodist
Women met in the church base·
:ment recently.
During the meeting conducted
by Grace Weber, the group voted
. to buy a new door for the church,
·to give $200 to the furnace fund,
and $50 for Chrisanas baskets.
Seventy-six sbutin calls were

made and Cants were sent to several friends . Reports for the group
were completed and the bill for
pecan sales paid. Games were
played and prizes given. Diane
Jones won the door prize . and
Susie Mash gave the closing
prayer.
Mrs. Weber read tbe purpose of
lhe organization 10 open lhe meet-

ing with Gladys Thomas giving
Thanksgiving readings, "A Slice of
Life" and "A Thanksgiving
Prayer."
Refreshments were served to
those named and Frances Reed,
Diane Jones, Nancy Buckley, Ann
LaComb, and Lillian Pickens, and
Delores Frank and Debbie Weber
who are new mem~. Nexl meeting will be held with Mrs. Pickens.

· ~woman's $22 million bequest borne of bitterness
NEW YORK (AP) - Anne
· Sch::bcr retired as a government
'auditor at lhe height of World War
II, bitter about never having been
· promoted and never earning more
than $4,000 a year.
·
Living frugally and investing
· . -wisely, she built her $5,000 savings
into a stock portfolio valued al her
death this year at $22 million. Her
:last act was to bequeath the fortune
' to Yeshiva University to help

women overcome discrimination.
"Elation would be an understatement," Yeshiva 's president,
Dr. Norman Larnm, said Sunday.
"At first I didn't believe it."
In facl, administrators at the
Manhattan college had never even
heard of U!e mysterious benefactor,
who lived as a recluse until her
death in January at age 10! .
Scheiber's gift wa' borne of bitterness, her attorney said, because

she felt that despite havmg a law
degree she was held back for 23
years at the Internal Revenue Service simply because she was a
woman. She retired in 1944.
"This grew on h~r yearal'ler
year," attorney Benjamin ~.':lark
said. "She was very much embittered while employed at the IRS."
Clark, who met Scheiber in the
mid-1950s, said she led a solitary,
reclusive existence after retiring,

Open House
Come and see why we're

a ~ospita/ we can all be proud of

Sunday, December 10, 1995
1:OOpm - 6:00pm
Guided tours of the outpatient center, our
new addition and our new medical office building.
Free refreshments.

the signs and enter at the Visitor Entrance.

Memorial
·Hospital
55 Ho•pital Drive, Athens, (614) 593-5551

••
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'..

Got A Cold Room

:1

~~

~i

:1
:I

~i

'I ' I

I)

.
I
If'
ai ' .~t'lllitlf'
.
111 Court St.
Pomeroy. OH.
992-2156

I!
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1:

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.:..,- · -· -· ---. -· -· -· -· ... -· ................":.
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Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed bide lor the laue
or purchaae of an extended·
length mini-van will be
received by the Malga
County Commlaalonora at
their oHice, Melga County
Courthouae, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until
tO a.m., December 8, 1995.
At 1:00 p.m. on aold ·dote
and at oald oHico, blda will
be opened and read aloud
for the following:
One (1) white, 1996
extended-length mini-van,
with the following
apeclllcatlona for leaturea
end equipment: capacity lor
seven (7) puaengere; V-fJ
engine; power atoerlng:
power brakea; healor and
air conditioning; crulao
apood control; tilt ateerlng;
2 front bucket ooota; bench
rear aeata; rear

wiper~;

all-

uooon redial tlreo; AM-FM
radio; and driver's aide
alrblgo.

~

•

CALL YOUR

DATE NOW!!!
1900·484·2600
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 years.
Touch-tone phone
required.
SERV·U (619) 645-8434
11/1411

mo.

REPANE
992·2549

Auto

(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

...

:_

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~

A Dollar A Day.

TROLLY
STATION
HANDMADE
CRAFTS

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

·: • Room Additions
• • New Garages
·.. • Electrical &amp; Plu mbing
~· • Roofing
.
~ • Interior &amp; Exterior
•
Painling
~·
Also Concrele Work
::
(FREE ESTIMATES)
"
. V.C. YOUNG Ill
·'•
992-6215
~
Pomeroy, Ohio

CUT YOUR ElECTRIC BILL
Sun-Twin® costs no more Jo operate than your
coHee-maker! And if's easy to install - no spe-

cial wiring needed.

--;;:;::-;;;;~~~

Come In far a demonstration!

'1

:

Local (rafters
· American Made

992·2549

949·2882

Wreaths • Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

CONSTRUCTION
Cuotom Building &amp; Remodeling

• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(6141992-5535
614 992·2753

106 North Setond An .

0 Credit Terms

Middleport, 011111.5760

0 Lay-A-Ways

(6141 992-2635
1-800-426-5581

1',. !

.. . l~b@

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.

Thur1 . 9-12; S1l. 9-2

Public Notice
Oueatlons concerning
this vehicle may be directed
to Max Cale at the Malga
County Veteran• Services
Olfln, 1t4 Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
All blddero must use their
own bid form. Bldo ohall bo
aealod and marked oa "Bid
for Mini-van" and mailed or
delivered to the office or tho
Meigs
County
Commlaalonera before the
aloreaald dale and time.
The Meigs County
Commlsaloners reoorve the
right to accept or reject any
or all blda and/or any part
thereof or to accept tho best
bid lor tho Intended
purpo11.
Gloria Kloea, Clerk
Melga County
Commloalonors
(11) 20, 27; (12) 4; 3TC

.:•
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Mon .. Tutl., Wed., Fri. 9·5

110 IDEA II
WAS IHIS MUCH

"I HAD

:.

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Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Purchase of School Buses
lot
EASTERN LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local School District of
Reedsville, Ohio, by 2:45
p.m. on January 2, and at
that time opened by the
Treasurer of said Board aa
provided by law for as many
as (3) 71-72 passenger
school buses according to
specificelions of ssld board
of education.
Specill cations and
Instructions to bidders may
be obtained at the oHice of
the Treasurer, Eastern High
School building.
A certified check payable
to the Treasurer of the

above Board of Education
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed by the bidder and
the surety company In an
amount equal to submitted
with each bid.
Said Board of Education
reserves the right to waive
informallttes to accept or
. rejecl any and all or parts of
·any and all bids.
No bids may be
withdrown lor at least thirty
(30) days alter the
scheduled closing time lor
receipt of bida.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
OF EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL. DISTRICT
Eloise Boston Treasurer of
Eastern Local Schools
38900-SR7
Reedsville, Ohio 45n2
(12) 4, 11, 18,26 ·

FUHn
Meet'flew people the
fun way today.
Call 1-900-255-5454,
ext. 6694
,2.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs.,
Touch-Tone phone
required.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

For Love And
Affection Dial
1-900-255-5454
Ext8417
Must be 18 yrs
$2.99 per min
Touch Tone
Phone Required

).: ...______,
Serv -U (619)
645-8434

STAR GUITAR
GUITARS
$300&amp; up

l-900-255-1515
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

DOZER
DUMP TRUCK
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Licensed
•Bonded
•Insured
Jim Hawthorne

985-4386 111311 mo.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
g85-4473
7/22!94

H&amp;H

4405

For Free Estimates
4/13J95

&amp; DOLLS

SAWMILL

FIND YOUR

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

1-900·484-2600
Ext. 9765
$2.99 per min.

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742-2193
11{13/95 mo .

Licensed

&amp;

l~sured

Free Estimates
Stump grinding
Gallipolis, OH
614-441·1191

•

=
:

~

.":

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

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.
. GUN SNOOTS
· SAT., 6:30 P.M.
"

'
'

'

12 Guat•

Factory Choke Only
Bashan Bulldint

____....

''•..._

.-

TREE TRIMMING
J AND REMOVAL
•;

''

..•
.

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

;
;

Misc. Jobs.

I

Bill Slack
992·2269

'I
I

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j

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

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

Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
including weddings,
receptions,
· annlverliarles,
reunions. Special rates
for individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
can 992-n47.
1111411

mo.

MEn NEW PEOPLE
THE FUN WAY
TODAY!
1-901). 388..0500
- EXT. 3754
$2.99 Per min.

Mustle 18 yrs.
TOld ·l011t . . .
Reqlllrecl
Serv-11 (6 I9)-645--8434
11~tmo.

Aft£1!101

BOW BUIITERS
ALL. YOUR BOW
HUNTING NEEDS.

•Bows •Arrows

•Deer scents
•Deer calls

&gt;Clothing and much more
JOE'S .
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
Antiquity, Oh.
614-94&amp;-2906101511

WATKINS
PRODUCTS
(Stock up on your
holiday baking

One-Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

LIVE GIRLS

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

NOW
1-900-484-2500
Ext. 1565

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
'
Insurance Work Welcome
iiO;iilii!i,

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

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

LOOKING
FOR LOVE?
1-900-255-4242
Ext. 9106
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone phone

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

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
· Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512
JliASONABU: RATES
813Mn

PE.NING NOVEMBER 25tli
Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

HA ~ TWELL HOIJ$E

required.

102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614-992-7696

Serve-U
(619) 645-8434

Holiday Hours: M-S 9:30- 4:30p.m.
Sun. 12:00 - 5:00p.m.

-

10/26195

OILER'S
DEER SHOP
Langsville, Ohio

SR325
Skin- Cut - Wrap
&amp; Freeze
Y1111 Kfl't111 &amp; we dJII'em

742-2076
Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk To 'em Live
1-900-526~2500

Ext.6113
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434
...
... '
-

614·949·3027

1112W1511 mo. pd.

••••••
DATES
ROMANCE

,1-900-2 SS-1S1S
Ext. 8S83
U .et ,.. 10in. M.,.. lto18
ynt. Touch-tone phono -..rs.....u f&amp;tJ) 64S-S,J4

Get Your Message Acrou
Willi ADally Sentinel

BULLETIN lOA-D
7" colu~nn Inch weekdays
19" column inch Sunday

1

CALl OUR OFFICE AT

155

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

992-9923
10% Discount w/Ad

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Live

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

localed on Cherry Ridge: From Rt. 33, turn East at
D..:wln onto Rt. 68t. Go 4 miles 10 Cherry Ridge Rd., 1
1/2 miles to tree farm. Watch lor Signs. t 0:00 a.m. til dark
Nov. 24 lhru Dec. 24
Wagon RideS/Craft Shop -Weekends

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (6141645-8434

plies To : CLA 309, C/o Gallipolis
Dai ly Tribune, 825 Third Avenu e,
Gallipoli~

Umeston,e &amp; Grave~ ·
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp;Ho1se Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

30 Announcements
No Hunting or Trespassing of any
type , no veh1cles or 4-wheeler s.

Viola10rs will be prosecu ted. Raymond Smith.

No huntmg or trespassing day or
n1ght, Ch arles Yost Farms . All
previou s hunting permission canceled

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

No Trespassing On The Property
Of 784 Wh1te Oak Ro ad, Gallipolis..
Richard Fehrmann

949-2512

40

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

5069 .

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

2 Outside Kinens. From A Farm,
Mother Good Rauor &amp; Mou se r,

$20, 00/HR

6t4-446·3326 Evonings.

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 4Sn1

3 Puppies, 12 Weeks Old ..Fa males Rodecian Ridgeback M1 x,

(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-20t8 FAX

S

Giveaway

1male, neutered, declawed killen.
has shots . 11emale, all shots. Includes all the e)ltras . 304 ·67 5-

Cheaper Rates

HYDUULIC REPAIR

OH 45631 .

12 Weeks. Wormed , Sho1S , 614 ·

'

4 % - 1603·

L-~~3::2::•;:0;:0;::/;:H:R:_•____~(6~1.:J4)~5~94-:!:2008~~N:I~GH:!,T~ !3

space hea1ers and bathroom

· heater. Can be seen at 811 Ma •n
St., Pt Pleasant, WV.

FOR SALE
Cut &amp; split
Firewood
All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball Logging &amp;
Sawmill
992·6142
Call Even in s ,,, ~

DAILY

Blonde Cocker Spaniel. 614-446-

9934.

HOROSCOPE

Free Skids To Giveaway, Pick-Up
At : Gallipolis Daily Tribune , 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis. In ,Ba ck
Of Building.

Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CALL NOW!If

Sunday School Material Mus1 c
Cassette Tapes &amp; Books, To Any
Church Or Family, 614-446-4333.

•1-900-378-1800
Ext. 6HS

Unliveable old house trailer, you
haul away. 304 -675-6 , 49 , Donna

or Dean.

$2.99 per Min. Mu•t b. t8

60 Lost and Found

yn. Touc:ft..ton. phone req.

s.....u (&amp;19) 645-8414

Losl In Rio Grande : Black Cat
With White Che s t &amp; Paws, Re ·
ward For Return, 614 -245-9186.

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal - Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilels renled.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
NO\\/ OFFERING GENERAL. HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954

or

985-3418

110\\ \IW
E\C \\\'II:\(;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Sep1ic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

&lt;)&lt;)•)
•_) () ') ()
--.)(),)()

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
. AND MORE!!!
1-900-884-9204
Ext, 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

([he Y.zame
Coznez
Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 No~h Second Ave., Middlepo~ 992-5020

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

MOBILE
HOME PARK

...

Home or
Trailer

Mobile home
sites for rent
614-667-3630
1{){1 1195 lmo. 00.

Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions
1-900.255.0200
Ext. 6993
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Lo st : In Campaign Church Area .
Black /White Male Engli sh Setter
With Orange Collar 614 -36 7-

7947.
I

REWARD for into leadi ng to return of copper- nose Beagle wt
purple collar, rrissing in Gill Ridge
a rea since Nov. 22 . 304 -675 -

5990.

70

Yard 5ale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Advance . DEADLINE : 2:00p.m
the day be lo re th e ad is to run
Sunday edition - 2: 00 p.m. Frioay.
Monday edition - 10:00 a.m. S;u.
urday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
( No Sunday Calls)
2/12192/tln

HOCKINGPORT

LOS"! · Hunter's blonde German
Shepherd; between William Gill' s
&amp; Roth lee' s, dead or alive, pel.
304 -675-1 235.

&amp;'14195 2 mo. Pd.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New At King Hardware

· Companionship

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BODFORD'S

CALL

Ship From Nice Female For Talks.
Wa lkg &amp; Friendship. Send Re-

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

'-

supplies)

..

...,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

992-5756

10121194/tfn

614-949-2512

9127/95 ttn

-

OPEN NOV. 23 -10 to 9:00

Gentleman Seeking Companion-

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up wilh
a great selection ol
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or
742-2979

Call

~ :::=:==:::

Are you looking for
love?
Longterm
relationship?
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min.
Mu&amp;t be 18 Yrs.
Touchtone Phone
Requited Sar-U
(619) 645-8434
J~

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

1112418511 mo.

,,.

·,

LOVE!!!

. . ...... .

Riggs Christmas Trees
Choose and cut your tree. We will
mechanically clean your tree for you so
I · no more needles in the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like.
RIGGS TREE FARM
39507 Rocksprings Road (at corner of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702
Carol and David Riggs

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

GUYS

FREE
Pick-Up discarded
washers, dryers, hot
water tanks, stoves,
furnaces, and any
· metal material.
Call 992-4025
between 8 am - 8 pm
Mon thru Sat.

NEFF REMODEUNG
SERVICE

:

lessons on
Piano,
Guitar &amp; Drums
69 N. Locust St.
Cheahlre,Oh.
614-367-0302
Roger Walker

At. 124 Rutland; Ohio 742·3051

11NI mo.

11211fn

:

Please Shop Local

$10 &amp; Up

3rd St. Racine, OH

:.•• ,..._____________.....,

Call your date now

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

&amp; WINDOW

CHRISTMAS TREES

WICKS
.HAULING

SMITH'S

Business Services
BINDO

GLASS

'

i

I

,_
•

(Lime Stone Low Reteal

~

Meigs County's i
1: Holiday Coole :;
~I
I:
;: Boolc "95" i
~I~~

K.&amp;W.

..'

Heat Where You Wont It For Just

1:

s1.00

'

•

• Heat up lo 500 sq. ft .
• Uses 50% less electricity than convenlional
heating systems
• No flames, no fumes
• Plugs into 110 outlet
• Purifies the air all
year round
• Furniture cabinet
serves as functional
end-table

':

;:

..'

.

In Your Home?

STUFFER :i

Country Naturals
Glfta &amp; Accessories
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
992-4015
Mon -Sat 9-5;
Evenings Mon, Thurs.
Fri. til8:00 p.m.
Come in and see
what we have for
Christmas.

O'BLENESS

~

......

'ij"' "' "'"' "':.: :.: :.:"':.:"'"'"' fi'
t: STOCKING 1j

1l

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

- ~

Charles Durant new a balloon
from New York City across lhe
Hudson River to Perth Amboy ,
N.J., in 1830.

Ext. 6927

follow

,: MC)OC~a,,,

field s. All sport flannel, corduroy
and plaids.
Valerie Sleele, an author and
professor of fashion hislory at the
Fashion Institute of Technology in
New York, says this style, which is
defying the sales doldruo)s suffered
elsewhere in lhe relail world. tap
into an American prejudice against
fashion . "People perceive these
clolhes as being not fashion but
real clothes," she said.
Sales of Timberland boots and
clothes more than doubled to $637
million last year. Yet many wearers
arcn'l tackling mountains in them .
"We're seeing a lot of people
buying our very technical hiking
boots and using d1em to hike Madison Avenue ," says spokesman
Roger Rydell . referring to a line of
footwear that costs $150-$200.

11126511 mo

Just

1995

seek rural look:· even in New York

··club conducts Christmas workshop
:
Members of lhe Riverview Gar. · den Club met recently at the
· Reedsville Church of Christ for
. their annual Chrisanas workshop
conducted by Ruth Anne Balderson
and Maxine Whitehead.
Marilyn Hannum. who was
unable to attend, helped prepare the
-craft project. Each member made a
door decoration using slraw bats,
. flowers, ribbons and other Christmas trim.
Devotions were given by Nola
Young wbo read "What It Is to Be
-a Friend" and "Let Us Give

Monday, December 4,

Pomefoy • Middleport, Ohio

(,J!~r. ~)r Tr!~=~nt

~'LZ..!J~
"

Equipment

Distributed by

TRI·STATE WATER SYSIEMSr INC.
The water treatment" company cordially invites you to

participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

analysis. WE WILL. TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Pleeae call R"inSoft at 992-4472 or 1~13
to set u our free water anal sis. tOISittn

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa 1d In
Advance . Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day before the ad is Ia run, Sunday edition - 1:OOpm Friday, Mon.
day edi!ion !O:OOa.m. Saturday
Hundreds ol yard sal e and flea
market Items lor sale· lots of good
stull! Due to movmg. any reason.
al}e offer, 6 14-992-5322

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lu ll time auctionee r, complete
auc tion
service .
Licensed
#66 ,0hio &amp; West Virg inia. 304 ·

773-5785 Or ~~ - 773-5441 .

90

Wanted to Bu~

Antiques , collectables, estates,
Riverine Amtques, Ru ss Moore.

owner, 614-992-2526.

Clean late Model Cars Or
, . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer,

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Solid Vinyl
Replacement
•
Windows

Good piano, not to old . 3041-695-

(614) 992-5041

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal-

Residential • Commercial • Industrial
ONB c:.u.t DOES IT AU.
•Pressure
.Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
.Carpentry
.Carpel
•Roofing
•Palntln{l
-Drywall
-Gutters
.Cabinets
-Maaonry
•Electrical
•Siding
oOecks
We Have Emergency Servlcaa
7 DaY&amp; A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all work guaranteed.
"Fall Specials" Leaves cleaned up and hauled
away. Most yards $49.00
Gutters cleaned and ec:reened,
moat 1 story homes, $49.00.
OHIO- WEST VIRGINIA - KENTUCKY 11Wt mo.

We have the
best window
and the best
price

Repairs/Additions
Craig 614-367-0567

,,
\.

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East-

BIB ROOnNO and
CONS,.RDC'riON

ern Av&amp;11Je, Gallipolis.
3353.
vage ve~icles . Selling parts. 304 ·

773-5033.
Rear End

For

A 1987 Ford 1 Ton

Dually 614-4~· 1756 .

Top

Prices Paid: Old U.S. Coins
Silver, Gold , Diamonds, All Old
Cpllectible.s, Paperweights, Etc.
U. T.S. Com Shop, 151 Seco nd

Avenue, Galtipoli~ 614-446-2842.

Used furniture · antiques, one
piece or complete eabuea, O!'by

Martin, 614-992·7441 .
WantB&lt;I To Buy: Little likes Toy,
614-245-5887.
WANTED: Book, "Waterloo Woo
ders: Conlact S.A. lee , 682 Me
hawk Street, Columbua , 0 1
43206, 614-444-3861 .

�Monday, December 4, 1995
Monday, December 4, 1995

·Page 8 • The Daily Se~t!nel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

: ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ALDER

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

;1 1o

BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

440

540 Miscellaneous

Apartments
for Rent

Furntshed Etllc1ency $225/Mo
Ullllbes Pakt, 920 Fourth Avenue,
Galhpoha, 614·446· 4416 After 7

Help Wanted

RM

.t1 DOD We ekly Stulltng Envel

~es Free Info Send Self Ad-

Gractous hvrng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtflage Manor and
Rtvers1de Apartments rn Mtddle-

'tlj esseo Stamped Envelope To
fxplorer Dept 91 6069 Old CanJ~ n Road .Sox 510 Jackson MS

por1 From $232$355

.1~211

Call 614

992· 5064 Equal Housrng Oppor
run tiles.

ASSOC IATES NEEDED
In The Gall1polls Pomeroy, Pomt
Pleasant And Surroundmg Areas

One bedroom furn1shed apartment 1n Mtddleport, 614-992·
5304 or 614. g92 2178, or 61 4

I na t Wou ld Senously Entoy Help
ng People WJth Vartous Otseas
es Health We1ght O r Medtcal

446-3091

1-'ro blems To Physt ca lly Get Bet
1er Phys tcal l y look Better And
Phystcally Feel Better Contact

Dennts M lucy

HEALTH BENEFrTS UNLIMITED
2960 Ollvene Road
Columbus, Ohto 43232
614 861 6321

ATTN PT PLEASANT Po s tal
PosrtrOns ava1tubte Permanent full
tr rne for clerks/sorters Full Bene
Its salary
For exam
applrcatr
on
and
rnlo date
708 264
1839 ext

3670 Bam-Bom
AVO N ' All Areas ' Sh~r l ey

"The ftrst step tn decorattng for Chnstmas IS
throwtng

210

Business
Opportunlly

Spears 304 675·1 429

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn $8 $15 /Hr At Work Home
Dtscountst No tnvenJo1y Or Door
Door lnd /Rep 1 000 742 4738

Stonewood Apartment s now acceptmg appltcat rons for apart·
ments, all electrrc lor elderly and
dtsabtlrty FMHA substdrzed basrc rent $260 par month, EOH,

3 Bedroom Furmshed Tratler
$285/Mo 614-446 7641

Investment Property In Gallrpolrs
Owne1 May Be A~e To Help Wrth
Some Frnancrng Call 014 797
4345 Alter 6 P.M

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Old

Fr om 4 11 PM

14)( 70 1993 3 Bedroom, Ntce
Coun ty Vrew Near Cora &amp; Rae
coon Creek $315/Mo 614 878

3 To 4

N1ghts A Week 614 446- 7376

5532 (Columbus)

Com pany tn Racme OH loo Krng
lor pnone salesma n M•JSt be
l'. r'Owledgeable rn the automotrve
rndustry Please call Uon Fn lrom
9 00 5 00 For more rnlorma tron ,
614 949 2311
Cos metolog i st Needed Gaur
a nteed Wag es Full And Part
Trme Help Wa nteo 614 446 7267
Danc ers 18 and older earn extra
Chrrstmas $ No experrence
needed The South lo rk Inn. 304
6 75 5955
D1 rver Small Dependable Ca r
Pard Twrce Week ly 614 4 46

9905
Ea rn up 10 $ 1 000 weeK ly stullrng
envelopes at home Stan now no
expenence , lree supplres rntor
marron no oblrgat ro n Send self
add1 essed stamped enve lope to
1:: xpress Dept 36 100 E Wh rte
stone Blvd, Surte 148 345 Cedar
Park TX 78613
F-a sy Work! Excellenl Payt As
semble Products &lt;ll Home Call

f oi l Free 1 600 467 5566 EXT
313

2 Bedrooms, Wrth Relrrgerator,
Stove, Fuel Otl Heat, Rt 7 Crown
Crty Alea 614-256·1533, After6
2De droom, furntshed $225/ mo
$100 deposll, Includes water,
sewage, &amp; garbage 304 · 675

6512
4bedroom trailer for rent St Rt
143 304-882 2904

31 0

Homes for Sale

lmmedta te Opemng Avarlabte For
Par t Ttme R N Supervrsor Com
petrtrOJe Wages Dtfferemal Wrth
Experrence Conwct The Otrector
Of Nursrng Prnecrest Care Cen
1e1 170 Prnecrest Drrve, Gallrpo
us On to 45631 614·4 46 7112
Equal Op!X)rtunrry Employer

Hours, Call (909) 715·2300, EXI
782 (24 Hours)
Now hrrrng al l posrtrons for Juke
box Przza Apply m person Man
day, December 4th at the old 7-33
bu!ld1ng on SR 33 between 2pm

320 Mobile Homes

P;; rt trme tem porarv typrst need
00 Send resume Box R-2 cJo Pt
P.eas ant Regrs ter, 200 Marn St
Pt Pt easan~ WV 25550
Recept ton1st tor medrc al ofl rce
[ xpenence p1elerred Send wr rt
ten resumes onl y to Olfrce Man
at;; er PO Box ng New Haven
'NV 25265
Sa le s Rep Fo r Snap On Tools
Equal Opportun rty Em p lo~er 606
9286128
VAC AN CY Ma tntena nce /Bud d
rng &amp; Grounds Su perv rsor Qual
rht a110ns H S Dtploma IGED Ae
Ia ted Tra mrng tExpertence Con
tact Su pt Otfrce By Dec 11, 1995
Gatlra Jackson Vt nton JV SD
P O Box 15 7 Rro Grande OH
156' 4 614 245 5334 EEO

Babysrt11n g 1n My Home
Cheshrre Area 614 367 7849
Gene ral Ma rntenance Patnt lll g
Yard Wo rk Wrndows Wa she d
Gut!ers Cleaned Lrght Ha ulrn g
Comme nca l Resrdentra l Steve
614 446 686 1
Georges Portable Sawmrll, don t
1au l your log&amp; to the mrll JUSt call
304 675-1957
Profcssronal Tree Ser~ r ce Com
ptere Tree Ca re Bucket Truck
Ser.rce 50 Ft Reac~ Stump Ae
mova • Free Estrma tes l In
~urcmce 24 Hr Emergency Serv
rc c Cal l And Save t No Tree Too
Rrg Or Too Small! Brdwell Ohro
614 386-9543, 614·367 7010
nub &amp; Scrub Cleanr ng Servtce·
aus trn g, mopprng wtndows and
more Complete servrce or touch·
~;ps References on request call
Teny at s · 4 992 4232 or 614

992-4451

FINANCIAL
Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommen ds that you do bus r
ness wtth people you )(now, and
NOT to send money through the
ma1J untlf ryou have mvesllgated
the offenng

•

992 7806
1 Bedroom Unfurnrshed Apan

ment No Pets S1951Mo lnclud tng
Wat er, Deposrt, $100, 614 · 446

3617

Two bedroom apartment m Mtd·
dleport, two baths equtpped
krtchen, HUD approved re!erenc
es and depostt requtred, 614·965·

4448aner 500pm

2 Bedroom Apartment For Rent,

61 4·446·9580
Sleep tng rooms W1lh cooktng
Also IJatler space on rrver All
hook-ups Cal l af ter 2 00 p m.
304-773-5651, Mason WV

460 Space for Rent
large Pr1vate Mobtle Home
Space Centenary Area Refer
ences Aequtred. 614 446·4053
Tratler Lot For Rent, Kerr Ohto,
Must Have Good References,

614·446 0175

2bdrm apts , total electriC ap
pltan ces furntshed. laundry room
tacrht1es close 10 school rn town
Apphcauons avar lable at Vtllage
Green Apts #49 or call 614· 99.2·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Frve acres ,
ae rator, near
Rac rne,$16 000 can hnance wtth

hal1down 614·949 2025

3711 EOH

Scenrc Vall ey, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots, publ ic wa ter,
Clyde Bowen Jr :'214-576-2336

2bedroom ground floor, wid hook
up, cen tral heat, kitchen w/stove
&amp; refrtgerator Prtvate storage
Oepostt &amp; reterences $325/mo
304-675-6902

Real Estate
Wanted

35 WE ST 2 BR BRICK TOWN
HOUSES 1261 Jackson Ptke
Across From Ctnema $295/Mo,
Oep For Remal Apphca trons Call

Ho me Wanted 3 Bedrooms Crty
Schools Some Acreage Excellent
CondrtiOn Only FP Basement A
Plust No Mobt les 614 441 1618
Days Only

614 -446-0957

614 446-0006

614 441 1616 Or Wnte P 0 Box
994 Galltpohs, OH 45631

:..:.:.:.c.._:__:c.:..._ _ ___ I

RENTALS

Furnrshed Apartment, 1 Bedroom
$275/Mo Ullhttes Pard 607 Sec

ond Avenue, Galhpol/5 614 446

410 Houses for Rent

4416 After 7 PM

2 Bed room s With Garage In
Country L tncot n P tke , DepOSit
$200 , $325/Mo WtO Stove. Refrrgerator, Freezer 614 441 0590

Beach St, Mrddleport, 2bedroom
furntshed apartment Also 1bed·
room efl1ency Oepostt &amp; referenc
es, utrl1bes patd 304·882·2566

3 Bedroom House, 1 112 Mtles
Out 141 Gree11 School Otstnct,
614 446·6541 After 5 PM

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

3 Bedroom House Country Ltv
rng, $350 / ~o Plus Deposrt, 1
Year lease 4352 Cora Mrll Road
Galll~IIS, 614·878-6589 AM
3bGdroom, Apple Grewe, close to
locks 304 576 ·2642 or 304· 762·

2330
4bedroom house, 2 bath $4001
mo plus depo stl &amp; references

'

Small 2 Bedroom, Rear 238 Ftrst
Ave • Kttchen with Stove IRefrtg·
erator $325/lAonth DepoSit! Ref.
erences, No Pets 614·446--4926
Small Unfurntshed 1 Bedroom
Hou se Near K· Mart, Atr Condt
uoned, Ga s Heat, Microwave,
New Parnt , &amp; Carpet, Upstatrs
Storage Avatlab le, $325/Mo +
Gas EleCUIC, Call Between 8 &amp; 10
PM Or Before 9 A M 61.4-446-

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dnve
!ram $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; movJes Call 614 446 2568
Equal Housmg OpporVJntry
Beech St , ~lddlepor l 1 room lur
nrshed etltc1ency u111111es pard De·
pos1t &amp; references 304 882

2566

Country Srde Apartment, Large 1
Bedroom S290/Mo Deposit 513-

922 0294
Extra Ntce 2 BR, All Elec , Furn ,
Kit , Close To Sprmg Valley Atea,
No Pe1s, $355/Mo + 0 0 + Ref

614-446-0157, Af111' 5 P.M
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downsta1rs, Uttl1t1es Furntshed,
Clean No Pets, Reference , De
pos1t Requ1red, 614-446-1519

Spc Daystrom dmette set Oak/
cane/chrome charrs &amp; 115~
square/rounded glass top table,
very good cond . $200 304-675
3678 atr.91' 5 30pm
Appliances
Recondlltoned
Washers Dryers. Ranges Rein
graters 90 Day Guaranteet
French Crty Maytag , 614 · 446

7795
Berge, Wtlhamsburg
mauve stnpped couch

4210

Bl ue

&amp;

304-675-

Country Furmture 304-675-6820
At 2 N. 6mlles, Pt Pleasant, WV
Tues Sat Q.-6, Sun 11 5
Electrtc catJtnet sewing machtne,
good condttron, booKcase bed,

baby bed 614·992·7770
more Dryer $95 Cut To $75, May
tag Drye1 $150 Cut To $125. Hot
porn! Electnc Range 30 Inch
Whrte Was $1 75 Now S125, Ken
mo re Washe r Was $150 Now
$125, Whtrlpool Washer $125
Now $95, Whtrlpool Washer
Hea~y Duty Whtte 1 Yea r War-

614-446 7398, H!00-499-3499

Good Condl!ton 2 Pc Sectional,
Tan Coucl1es Plus Recltner, 614-

446,(1767 After 6 RM

clapedras, ltke new condttJor1, call
614-985-4282

1·800 537-9528
Otsney Area 5 Days 14 Hotel
Ntghts, Use Anyttme, Pa1d $310

AKC

Reg

USED

APPLIANCES

Complete home furmshmga
Hours . Mon ·$at , 9 ~ 5 . 614-4460322, 3 m1les out Bulavtlle Pike

Free DefiV&lt;Wy

-

Mollohan Carpets, At 7 N. 614·
446·7444 For Carpe1 &amp; Vmyl

1984 Peuro1 505 GL $950, 1974

5951

lTD Braun, 1987 Butck $2,300,
Ha"rley Gall Car (Utility) $450, 614

AKC Yellow Lab Pups, Ready For

Btg beautiful AKC Chow pupptes
only one blue and one black fe

614·446·7283

CFA H tmalayan kttte ns 2 fe
males, vet checked, 1st shot &amp;
wormed, ready to go $175 304

you

Fodder Shocks $2 Each And fn.
dian Corn Frve For $1 00, 614

245-5887

Grave B lankets For Sa le, 614

992-6166
Great Chnstmas Gtlts Boots By
Redw1ng, Chtppewa, Tony lama
Guaranteed lowest Pnces AI

304-67~1450

Sectional w/recl lners, seats 6,
rantsh gray, great shape $BOO
Couch &amp; love seat, multt-colored,
good shape, $300 Co lor console
25" TV, works, beauttful wood,
$200 3l4..fl75- I 236 aher 7pm

Sofa Sleeper $200, Sofa loveseat
Set S200, Gas Dryer S75 Console TV $50, Rocker Seat $35,

W1ng Chair $35, Baby S"'ng Wl1h
Basket $20, Will Except Best Off.
er On Al l 614 · 245·0909 Leave

Message

Sporting
• Goods

Ruger Super Blackhawk 44 Mag ,
7 112·, blue wtnew boJt of shells
$250 Taurus Mad 94, 4• blue, 9
shot revolver, ad) Sights, $200
Must s1gn transfer papers 304
67~1236 ahet' 7pm

530

Antiques ·

Buy or aell Riverine Anttques.
1124 E Matn Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

am 10600pm , Sunday 1001o
800 pm 61~·Q92-2 526

1822
Two bedroom small house,pnvate
senmg , rn Pomeroy $250/mo ,

Ntce one bedroom apartment for
rent 1n Pt Pleasant, 614 · 992·

$130 B arb1e Doll House wlfurnt
ture, eKe. cond, w1ll sell for $50

Merchandise

5858

~4-578-2494

Ntce two bedroom apartment rn

28 lighted Christmas candles,

Pormlll)', 614-992-5858

36"

~each,

614-4&gt;16-8599

750 Boats &amp; Motors

CFA Regrstered Persian /Htma·
tyan to:mens Wtll Be Ready For
Chn stmas Taktng Deposits Now!
614· 446 1 104

198 7 Cavalier CS, automatiC,
runs great $700 614-992-5322

Champtonshtp AKC Reg Dalma·
tran puppies, shots &amp; wormed

1967 Olds 98 Regency Braum
$2500 614 .245 9248

675-7767

$150ea. 304-773·9122

1967 Ponttac Grand Am SE 4
Door Wrecked Front Passenger
Stde 109 000 Mtles (4 Cylinder)
.;:"'.::".::"·..:6~14;_·~446.::..:·9::7_:42::._____ 5 Speed Power Locks, AMIFM
1 Cassette. Not Drrveable 4 New
Poodle pupputs· teacup toys
black or whrte also mmlature Tires 614-446 4223

Ch thuahua Pup Female AKC
Regtstered Cocker Spanrel Fe

Schnauzers. AKC. sho ts and

1989 Chovy Corstca , 614 985

HOW CAN 61RDS FL'(

1978 Lowe lme 16 Fl Alum1num
Boat Wtlh Tratler And Accesso

bass boat, 200 XPHP 614·667
7347 or 614-949-2679
Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1Q88 2 8 V-6 Engrne &amp; Auto
Transmrss10n, Complete Untt, LoW
M1las, Also Have Radiator. Fan
Clutch, Fan Shroud, Exhaust
Parts W1 ll F1t Chevrolet S-10 Or

GMC S 15, 4 Used P205 60Hr

6429, 61~·258 1950

1990 Ford Escort , Actual 6.000

Mjles, 2 Door. 614-379-2720 AFTER6RM

New gas tanks, one ton truck
wheels, radtato(S. floor mats, ere ~
D &amp; R Auto, R1pley, WV 304 372'
3933 Of 1·800-273-9329
I

~~~~~~~~ Grand Am S3,soo

790

Repatred, New &amp; Aebutl t In Stock

Call Ron Evans, 1-000-537-9528
KILL RATS AND MICE I

ENFORCE~ rat and mouse kill·

ers are GUARANTEED ! Avat l ·
a~eat

CENTRAL SUPPLY
O'DELL ffiUE VALUE LUMBER

570

Musical
Instruments

::-------,-..,---1
Baby grand prano for sale $2300,
614·367.0302

:..:.:_.:.:.:_:::::_______ I
Black J B P layer Guitar Wt!h
Case $300, 614-256· 1553 After 6
P.M Ask For Shawn
lAarnn&amp;Gtbson
Gu11ars &amp; More

HOLIDAY SALE
HUMMINGBIRD MUSIC
Jackson, OhiO
614-286-5689

Ktng Stze. Waterbed $100 614 ·
large dresses and shoes, 614 -

742-2823

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

lAaynards Ou1lt &amp; Fabrtc Sale 1st
Thru 8th, Chnstmas Fabr1c 50%

Extra Nrce Sola &amp; Charr, Good
Kuchen Glass Top Table Wtth 4
Chatrs, Offtce Chatrs, SrTTa.ll Drop
leal Table, Lux Atr Gas Furnace,

614·37!1-2720 AFTER 6 RM
Pmg Eye II golf clubs red do1

610

Farm Equipment

12x55 tratler frame, tongue
wheels and axles, excellent for
butldtng lowboy, $300 080, 614·

992·3016
Alhs Chalmers 190XT 2WD 95HP
tu rbo dtese l wtth AC519 end
loader,
bucket separate bale
spear 4665 hours, 90% rubber
on 18 4K34 ttres, excellent condt·
uon $8900 , tractor only, $6500,

so·

2n2
Refngerators , Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Recondlltoned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Wtll Dell\ler 614-669-6441

Massa~

$~,695

Ferguson 35 Sharp.
~assey Ferguson 65

30')(40'X9' Patnted Steel Stdes
Gr 1valume Steel Root, 15'x8' Steel
S .. der, 3' Man Door $6 ,444
ERECTED Iron Horse Builders 1·

800 352 1045

Rodney, We Will Cui, 614-245
5595

630

Jackson. Ohio, 1-800-537-9528
Very clean 8' sofa w11h matchmg
chair. two matchtng table tamps,
four matchtng glass-top wooden
lll~es,

614·992-6512.

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
4336
Wood, appro• -400 board ft, wal

nu1. s~ 70/bd It 200 board h chllf

ry, $1 50/bd ft A~r dried 414 to 814

304 67~6682.

550

Block, bnck, sewer ptpes, wtnd·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters,
614 · 2~5

Metal Rooftng &amp; Stdmg Geo Tex·
tile Fabnc For Driveways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Cover Or Tem
porary Storage Co~er, Alttzer

Farm &amp;Jpply, 61(-245-5193

560

Pets lor Sale

Groom Shop -Pat Groommg Fea
1unng Hydro Bath Julte Webb

can &amp;14-4-4&amp;-0231

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Special Fall Feeder Calf Sale Sat·
urday, December 9th, A1 1 RM

Spooal Cons~gnment Of 13 Cross
Bred Spungeralfrom 1 Farm,
Cattle Accepted Startmg At 4
P U Fnday, Also Hau l1ng Avatl-

If you want o sell wtth us, call collect 1·513-392-4365 ask for Qr.
VIlle Wha len or Edtson Mayes
Premtum oat/alfalfa ro ll s $25.
Morgan's Farm Ar 35, PUny 304·

937-2018 )

suaw 304-87~5086.
TRANSPORTATION

cond111on. askmg $10 000 614
949-2529
Auto loans Dealer Will arrange ~­
nanctng even tf you have been
turned down elsewhere Upton
Equ1pment Used Cars 304-458·

Autos for Sale

-. ,_..
=&gt;f\[ KNO\o.l::, HOW

B·Y·Y·Y·Y·Y·Y·E. 1 'I

6-0·0 ·0-0·0-Q·D

'I

l HATE t.ON&amp;
GOOC&gt;-B'(~I

Smarter at Bridge," ts avallable,
autographed upon request, for
$14 95 from P 0 Box 169, Roslyn

1984 Itasca 27 112ft class A mo ~
tor home, 454 chevy, 31 OOOmt ~
ac, mrcrowave , rear bed, new
tues, new refnge[ator, exc cond '
304 675·1429
:
1990 Travelmastor Motor Home:
27 Ft Excellent Condition, 6 New
T1res, 614·446-1211

810

UlllliShed 1975

720

Appliance Parts And Serv1ce All•
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex ·
penance All Work Guaranteed •
Frencl1 Cnv Maytag 6 14· 446

STRICE ABLOWN Tt£ Wilt ON
HIGH PRICf.S SHOP Tt£ CLASSflfDS.

IMONDAY

'

Call Rum, 614-416-21117

1976 Chevy P1ck-Up Truck Good
Cond1non, $1,300, 080 614-441 1199
1977 Toyo ta pick up. 5 speed,
body rough, runs good, $700,

1987 Mazda ptck-up, mce htUe
truck 4cy l , 5spd. needs some
body work, prtced on tnspectron
304-67~3324

1990 Ford F- 150 XLT La rrat
Loaded, Excellent Condition, Very

Clean 614-245.0717$9,400
1991 S 10 P tck Up . Excellent
Condttton, 1988 Vo lkswagen Fox
Trade-Ins Welcome, Ass1stance
Wtth Bank, Flnancrng It Request

1902 Ford F-150 XLT, 61,000mt ,
Sliver &amp; forest green, $12,000

30(.773-5004.

With Rad Interior, Excellent Con-

dil10n, N:'., S1andard, .$9,750, 614·
2~5-9554.

titre, V-6, eltte model turbo, PS,
PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats

72 Ford Explorer p!Ck up body rn

and locks, $6800 neg 614-992- good condition, $700 obo, 614
992·2308
7~78"' 614-949 2879
'94 Cadillac DeVIlle, mocha color, 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
11,000 mles, call614-ll67-3228.
1989 Plymouth C1rand Voyager
1980 Plyri'louth Volare Four Door, SE, 130,000ml., OulO, 4cyf 1Urtlo,
Blr, cruise, black cherry, $2,800
304-87~2949,

4l3~q: W\.\1~~ Ohl

B1ll Orrrck's Home lmprovem emsS
additions. remodeling roofrng,'
srdtng, plumbing, etc Insured, cal~
BtU Omck 614 992·4240
r

JIDJXS

GMVNJB

S K

AMGGVJP

F J G

F J

T J B XF

XKKC

S K

6323

AJGJPVSF.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "He who grows up among folk songs. grows 1n1o a
complete man · - (Composer) Leos Janacek

WOlD
'::!:t:~' S©~oUlA-lGt.trs·
lAM I
Uito4
CLAY I, P O L l A N - - - - - - ~r

letters
0 Rearrange
scrambled

of rite

four
words
low to form four words

I

r

be-

IXLYAT

I I _:,C~~-~,'
••
1

-.-K_Hr-E-r-0
15
1;

Last summer we had a pool
bu1lt Now I know thai a poolts
. - - - - - - - - - - , a body of water surrounded by
L UKC0 N
other people's .. . - - -- -1
.

1

I

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Complele lhe chuck le quoted
by ldlmg rn the m•nmg words

you deve lop from step No

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Oemtse -Youth- Logtc- Vermrn ·SOMETHING
The guest speaker al my local woman's club was very
humble and unassum1ng A co lleague commented
Fame usually comes to those who are concentraltng
01 1SOMETHING elsel '

DECEMBER41

l
f

Try1ng to
patch up a broken romance? The Aslro·
Graph Matchmaker can help you under·
sland how to make your retahonsh1ps
work Ma11 $2 75 10 Malchmaker, c/o thts
newspaper, P 0 Box 1758, Murray H1tl
Stat10n, New York, NY 10156
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Your
chart 1nd1C8Ies that the problems you Will
conlend w11h loday may be your faull Try
not to be your own worsl enemy.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20.Feb. 10) Make a
po1nt of hangmg out W1th pals you really

ASTRO·GRAPH

992·4451

Ron s TV Servtce, spectallztng rn
Zenith also servrcmg most other
brands Hause calls , 1 800· 797

oo1s. m 304 578-2398

Roofmg and gutters- commercial
and restdenttal . m1nor repatrs 35
years expenence, B&amp;B ROOF

lNG, 614·992 5041

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

'II
~

Freeman's Heatrng And Caohng
lns!allatton And Servtce EPA
CetUfied Rasidenbal, Commerctal

· ': ;:::;:Jvl...,.
,.

61~-256 - 1611

840

~ ••

'"IJU U~~U&amp;Y

Tuesday, Dec . 5• 1995

Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, Arr Condttton!ng 11
You Don't Call Us We Both LoSer
Free Estimates, 1-800-287-elo8 ,
61H46-6308,
0029 ~ 5 . , •

m

Reatdenttal or commercial wiring ,..
new servtce or repairs. Master n
censed electnctan Ridenour

u:

In lhe year ahead, a more advenlurous
s1de of your personal~y mtghl emerge.
Your boldness could compel you 1o
explore areas you preVKlu~ly avoided
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) OPI»
sotlon 10 your personal alms and Interests
might be 8lronger I han usual today·
However, you must lry not to vent your

~~1r1cal, WVOOQ306, 30 4.675 _

••

GEMINI (Moy

3 be low

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
.

ARWTINf:.

~====~~~~::~=~=-anger on 1nnocent bys1anders

FJ'P

P KE

1

DRYWALL

M

TMU

C&amp; C Ge neral Home Matn •
tene nce· Patnttng, v rnyl std tng,:
carpentry, doors. wmdows bath! •
mobile home repatr and more For'
free estrmate call Chet, 614 992 1

ed, Cook Mo10rs, 614-446-0103
300 6cyf, 5apd. topper wibed Wror,

VR

VU

ROBOTMAN

;

614·742·3513
1976 Chevy 4WD PICkup, good

BMEPGH

OJGRJXSVKEVUS.

e

BIG NATE

(614) 446-0870 Dr (614) 237-

Help, Easy Bank F1nanctng For
Used Vehicles, No Turn Downs

SKA

I.._J.__.J.'-..J..._J.____L,__.J

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

0488 Rogers Waterproofing Es·

With new dial exhaust, runs good,
needs tuneup, askmg $500 080,
614:'742 3011

(XKMXF)

l---r.~7::-.,,,.......,.,-.,,6::--,r--l G)

Home
Improvements

7795 '

r

by Luis Campos

Celebnty Crpher cryptograms are created trom quotahons bv faiTIOUJ p&amp;op~e past and pres«tt
Eactllehar the cipher ltanda lor anolher Tl1drlyg W. N «1~/f U

f)

CRED IT PROBLEMS? We Can

ll'ucks for Sale

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

SERVICES

Uncondttlonaf ltfetrme guarantee ',
local references furnished CalL

'89 Thunderbird SC 1WO door, 3 8

3 A,KC reg11tered German
Shepherd puppies, had shots &amp; Auto Transmlsston, 8 Cyltnder,
wormed, $250, 614-992-3832.
$1,200,614-388-8389

i~~

PO

Hts, NY 11577-0169

1069

1994 Ford Ranger Splash, Black

710

~

North wanled to rebtd hts club su1t,
but West's three-diamond bid made 11
awkward Knowmg lhey had at least
eight hearts, North supported his part
ner Note that ftve clubs will almost
certainly fall.
It ts posstble to make four hearts by
winning the first tnck, unblocking the
club ace and leading a low trump to ward the dummy Whether West plays
low or wins with the ace, cashes a
spade trick and extts with hts last
trump, declarer can hold h1s losers to
three His spade losers disappear on
dummy's club Winners
Declarer, though, ducked the open
ing lead, hopong to take spade ruffs m
the dummy But West, believmg hts
partner's discouragmg spade three,
sWitched to the ace and another heart
Mter drawing the last trump and unblocking the club ace, the declarer had
to broach diamonds Note that if Soulh
leads the king, West must duck his ace
to stop dummy's queen from becoming
an entcy. Whereas tf South leads the diamond seven, West must nse With the
ace to block the sutt. It is just the re verse of the normal procedure
Ph1ll!p Alder's book, "Get

1994 Eagle Talon ES, very good

dtsposHton and bloodli ne, very

wo W111 sell Dec 5, 8, 7, 11, 12, 14

~UII&gt;e,

OBD. 614-992-3016

Earl's Home Matntenance, vtnyl
stdtng, roofing, e•tenor and ~ntert
or painting, power washtng, room
addrtrons Free Esttmates, 614 ·

New Farmers Warehouse, Rrpley,
OhiO Before the Chnstmas break,

MY

BUT

15' Bonanza camper, excellent foF
permanent deercamp stte no
axles or tongue, fully equrppect1
furnace, porta JOhn, etc , $35Q

1979 Ford 250 4X4, Dual Wheels
Super Cab, 400 Engme, Fla1bed
With TOWing Huch, 614-388Seven month old co lt excell ent 8756
Hay &amp; Grain

C.ONS,IeNC~ ~~

BORN LOSER

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

rwo ,_lenders, $1550 neg , 614992-7478 or 614-949-2879

640

MY

t:&gt;lliVING/

ttres and dnve line, runs great,

able, 614· 592-2322, 614·698·
3531

/

Plates 614-379-2935

Hang, ftntsh, repatr
Cetltngs textured plaster repatr
Call Tom 304·675· 4186 20 year
experrence
t

304-675·1858

Building
Supplies

R1o Grande, OH Call
5121

Livestock

genua, ~.14-985-9613

Ron Alltson, 1210 Second Ave
nue, Gallipolis, Ohw, 614 · 446

1993 Cors1ca 23,000 Mtles, PD.
Automatic, Atr, AMIFM Stereo

$3,695, T020 Ferguson, Blade &amp; 1972 Datsun , rebut It engrne &amp;
Bush Hog $2.650, 614-286- front end, 2 new bres, $600 3046522
773-5256 otter 6pm,
POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
1Q74 Chwy truck, 307 automatic,

Santas Chnstmas Trees, State
Route 850 Between At 35 and

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

614·379-2553

TONI6tiT'5
TOPIG

Budget Transmtsstons, Used &amp;
Rebutlt All Types Accesstble To
Ovor 10,000 Transmrssron, Also
Parts, Clutches &amp; Pressure

Very Clean TOR 614-379 2360

614-698-6228

Sam Somerville's regu lar Army
camoullage by Sandyvr ll e Post
Otftce, noon ·6pm Fn -Sun 304
273 5655 Junror StZes Free De·
hvery Pt Pleasant

1992 Ford Tempo GL, V-6, Au·
1omat1c, 27,000 Mi l91;, Askmg
$4,500, 614-256-1252,614-256
1738
1992 Geo Pnst'n Good Condition.
32,000 M1les, $6 ,300 Prtce Neg

l tke New, Bush lrne Sofa And
Chatr, 614-446·2871

24~5582

1991 Rocket Chassts race car, all
new 1n '91 Wtlwood best ol everythrng, weld , three wheels, trres,
Neal pedals, fuel cell. on board
ftre system, rolltr1g chassts $5800
neg Call Scott Wolfe, 614-949·
2679, 614· 949· 2045 or 614 ·992
6193

Pe~SONAl-LY, ~ L.~i

1309

Pr/CO $175 -$200, 614·388-8962

JET
AERATION MOTORS

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

15· Tires, New Pertormance Com
puler, Wtll Ftt Dodge V-8 Engme,
Genu me Mopar Parts 614 · 446

We1maraner pups, 8wks old , 2
males left, $250 ~4-a95-35 1 5

Duct Systems And A1r Condtlton·
ers Free Esnma.tes.

WOULD FREEZE ..

1993 201 Pro XL, 20' Strutos

75·R14, off of 91 Dlds, $65, 614'
992 5956

800-287-6308, 614 446-6308 ,

I TI-IINK Ml/ EARS

VJI-IEN IT'S SO COLD?

De-

52 Cozy home
53 Actor
Montand
56 Actraaa
Charlotte-

ceed'

Four tubeless tires, black P1 85-

H1-Etfectency l P. Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU 1·

If you watch a begmner playmg '
bndge, he wdl cash aces and kings as ;
qwckly as possible Then he wdl be told 1.-.-1--l-that he might do better to delay won
nmg w1th h1s aces unlit they can capture opposing kmgs or queens rather
than twos and threes All well and good
- but on bridge there is always the ex
ceplion to the rule
Against four hearts, West leads the
spade king How should, the play pro-

nes. $600,6 14-388-8369

lent Condtlron, Runs Greatl Auto,
AC. $4 ,7 00 After 6 614 -2 56 -

367-7512.

stones

Should honors
kill honors?

PEANUTS

for Sale

760

11 Precious

By Phillip Alder ,

Reglstered Wolf Hybrid Pups 60%
S1benan Husky, 20% Arct1c Wolf

Akle Car Tratler Waodsphtter &amp;
Snow Blade For A Gravely, 614·

Upright Ron Evans Enterpnses,

520

GLOPTER

TH' DADBURN AtR IN
TH' FLATLANDS!!

1995 Wolvenne 350 $4 000 614

1964 Ftero, black Wtth !an rntenor
1983 lrncoln Towne Car, whrte
wtth burgundy , $500/each. 614
198 7 944 Turbo, red wrth black
rnterror 52k mtles rrght s1de
lender/quarter damage dual atr
bags Blaupunkt stereo 150 mph
{plus) sports car, very clean con
dttlon. $5000 614 ~49·231 1 days
or 614.g49 2644 averungs

WHAT MADE
ME SICK
WAS--

cycles, $1,700 614 949·2722

742·2866

male let~ $200, 614-992·7574

LANDS NO I

1989 Harl ey Custom Salt Tat I
Spnnger low mtles lots of e)(tras
$1 5,000 ser rous tnqu•rtes only
1994 Pace t:argo tratler carpet ,
rnsrde lights set up !or two motor

256 ~ 1288 or 256 6467

9 Recurrent

10 Angers

Opening lead: e K

YOU TOOK ONE
OF THEM HOPPY~
RIDES!!

Aegtstered Black Perstan Cat, 2 1989 E.agle Prem•er LX , 6 cyt
.;_Year:::..:s..:Oid:_:_'_:6_14_-4_46-..::._:99;_34
____ auto , 81,000+ m1les, pay off
1 $2439 52. 614·949 2982
Regtstered we 1mBraner puppres
.::304::_:·6:.:.7:5-;_77::40::.__ _ _--'---11969 Dlds Cutlass Calais, EKcei-

furniture, heaters, Western &amp;
Work bOots 614·446·3159

And layaway AJso Avrulable
Free Deltvery W1th1n 25 Mtles.

UP IN TH' FLATLANDS,
SNUFFY!!

1987 Yamaha 100 Moto 4 Four
Wheele r Ext:ellent Condr tton
$1 300 080 614 ·446 6651 614

Hand Made Oak JWalnut Hobby

Horses $45, K1ds Sleds 16' 2

det"ream. $250, 614·245-9554

Cash And Carry I RENT-2-DWN

l GOT PLUMB AIRSICK

388 9906

1

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Ohve St Gallipolts New &amp; Used

614-446-3158
Qualtty Household Furniture And
Appliances. Great Deals On

BARNEY

614 446-6958

19 Courteous
21 Nota aoul
(2 wds.)
23 Peeled
25 Chooaa
26--lhe
Mood for
Love
27 Showered
29 Inebriated
31-Wonderful
Life
32 Golf pegs,
34 Muscle
protein
36 Collect
gradlllllly
41 Decorative
44 Baseball's
Wade46 Nude
47 --delay
48 Western
defense O/'tl.
49 Withdraw
gradually
51 Actor Robert

7 Kind of lesl
8 Author H.G -

Vulnerable North-South
D ealer. South
South
Wesl North East
1 ..
Dbl
2e
Pass
2.
3t
3•
Pass
4.
Pass Pass
Pass

1985 Suzukr Quad Sport $1,600

.;_
wo.;_r_m.;.ed::.:·..:6.;.14_-6.;.6::.:7..:340:_:_•____ 9620 or 61 4·985·3639

--=-------SWAIN

VI'RA FURNITURE

Motorcycles

Sl'&lt;lO Cote

Star Trek Satelltte System,
$1,000, Super S1ng le Waterbed
Excellent Condtttonl Drawers Un

Twtn bed wlmattress and box
spnngs, exc cond 304·882-2640
alter 4 :JJpm

198~ Cutlass Supreme $1 000

pupptes,

Electnc Wheelchaus /Scooters ,
New /Used, Scooter /Wheelchatr
Lrfts , Statrway E levators, Lift
Chatrs, Bowman's Homecare,

bag, pull cart, $650, 614 949

PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used

Brittany

10wks old , $200ea 304 -364-

Chnstmas, $300 814 256-6338,
Anet 6 RM

F~rewood for sale, $25/load,
ptck up, 614-949·3027

1981 Gray Camero 305, v 8, lots
Of E)(tra s, $2,000 OBO 614 256
6718 See To Apprecratel

AKC black male Cocker, excellent temperament champ1on
bloodline, $150 304 937·2733

Sell $100, 614-470-2766

Washers, dr ye r s, refngerators, Off. 20% Off 45 Inches Fabnc,
10% OH go Inches Fabnc, 10% Of
ranges Skaggs App l tances, 761
Vrne Street, Call 614·446 7398, On All Crafts &amp; Supplies, May ·
narCs Outlts, Open 9· 5 Monday ·
1·800·499.3499
Satruday, West Of Rodney 614

540 Miscellaneous

Unlurnrshed two bedroom house,
nrce and clean, depostt requtred,
no tnstde pets, 614-g92·3090

ll ,

ranly Was $225 Now $205, 3 To 258-6m
Choose From, Skaggs Appltances, 76 Vtne Streel Gallipolis OH.

•A

84 Chevy 112 ton truck, 4x4 step
srde 250 51)( cyhnder, runs great
soltd body, needs parnt Albany,
$2400 B14 698-6050

MillO~
Wl«ln\1

l

t K 7

1994 Ast ra Conversion Van Ex
ce11en1 Condllron, W•th T1ara
Package, 614 446 0350

All Dark Wood, E1t· t.:=======:=:=:::"f":::=:=:=:=:=:=;=:=:=j :"":::6:_:0::8::2:::1- - - - - - cellentCondl110n,614·388-11870
1560 Pets for Sale
710 Autos for Sale
1988 Honda so Like New, 614·
Complete set of Bntann1ca Ency·
~36
.:.7_0_5_
94_ __ _ _ _ __

G E Dryer $125 Cui To $95 Ken

Nrce 2 upstaus bedroom carpeted, appltances Included, uttltttes
patd, ac, $375m'l0 Depostt &amp; ref·
erences requtred 3l4-87S.61Q6

614·985·4256

2153

740

12 04 95

•Q 2
•KQJt063 2
WEST
EAST
eKQJ &gt;
• Uti3
•As
•973
tAJ106 5 4
t983
1/ol
e9B54
SOUTH
eA 10 7 2
•KJI0642

~
~

Drum Table,

992-11026

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

2 Bedroom Unl urntshed Apart
ment, CA, Hardwood Floor, Butld
In Knchen, No Pets, In Galltpolts,
614 446·2300

755 5885

Household
Goods

.. 8 4
•Q 8

1993 S-10 Blazer 4x4 52,000

Cl 1995 bot NEA tnc

Car audto- Rockford Fosgate
punch 150, punch 75 amps ,
Rockford Foagate R124 12•
speaker box, Alpt ne p re amp,
equalizer wllh sub output, 6 14

MERCHANDISE

614·446·6221

Pnce 8ustert New 14x70, 2 or
3br Only $995 down $195/month
Free delrvery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes Ntlro WV 304

360

Rooms lor rent · week or month
Starttng at $120/mo Gallra Hotel

NORTH

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250 ,
72 000 Mtles $6 ,0 00 Can Be
Seen At Gallrpolrs Dar1y Tnbune
825 T h~rd Avenue Ga lltpolr s
Ohra

m1les· whJte/gray rntenor, automa t
tc, Reese httch, $16,500, 614·742

Cat Napper Recltner, Mauve Calor, 1 Year Old, Ltke New, Cost
$400 Askmg $200, Atr Stzer Ex·
erctse Brke $50, Halo Track
Ltghttng Heads L 2717 Uses 12
Volt Halogen MR 16 Volt Black
$80 Each New, Asktng $30 Each,
614 446-9649

Concrete &amp; PlastiC Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
E\'ans' Enlerprl ses Jackson, OH

Furnished
Rooms

Parts I $3,000 614 446-2019

1991 Nrssan 4)(4 XE Loaded Ex
tra Low Mrtes, Warranty Transfer
able l rke New $10 000 614 ·446
3100

.,~ ~-r·""·

Bakers Rack Hunter Green &amp;
Brass Like New, $75. Carpet 6 11
2 x8 1/2 Mysttc Jade Brand New

Cacktatl Table, 2 End Tables,

510

rf'&gt; ~tfl&lt;-"7uypo~,­

Babybed dressmg table. carseat.
stroller, sw1ng 304-675· 4548

1zed apt lor elderly and hand'
capped EDH 304-675-6679

GOOD

1bedroom, upsta trs, no pets
$175 + uttlltles, and deposrt 304·
675 4975 after 5pm

304-75~5885

304-675-6676

Sun Va ll ey Nursery School
Chtldcare M F Bam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Durmg
Summ er 3 Days per Week Mrnt
mum 614-446·3657

1 bedroom apartment tn Mtddle·
port , avatlable December 1, all
utrlrtres patd, $250 per month,
$100 deposit. 8am to 5pm 614·

Ltmrted Offer! 1996 doublewrde
3br 2ba th, $1799 down, $2751
month Free deltvery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes. N rtro

Do

Have Opemng For 1 Elder l)'l-Or
Hand1capped Person In L1censed
Pnvate Home 614 441 0000

992·2218

for Sale

wv

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur
nrshed and unfurmshed, securuy
deposit requt red, no pets, 614

lo1, $26,000 614·992·6173 or
614·992 2015 alter 5pm

rst Expenence Requ1nKl, Mall Re
sume 41 Co un Street Galltpolrs
0t"HO 45631

Two and three bedroom mob•le
homes, starting at $240·$300,
sewer, water and trash mcluded

7pm

Nme room house four bedrooms,
newly remodeled , ~l!chen and
bath . new carpeting, large corner

1n-ground pool, 614-992-5067

Oh, 614-992·5858

Furnished Elftctency 607 Second,
Gallrpolis, Share Batn, $150/Uhh
tres Patd 614 446 · 4416 After

304·562 5840

Part Trme !Permanent ReceptJon

Middlepor~

440

Glenwo® 10mn from Rt 2 1990
3bedroom~ 2batA mobtle home,
1acre land city water. for sale
$25, 000 Owner frnanc.ng wrth
$3,000 down and rent lor $335 1·

Three bedroom home rn country,
Whiles Htll Rd , Rutland, one bath,

Nrce 2 bedroom mobtle home tn

Two bedroom tratler for rem on
Beech Street tn Middleport, $1751
mo plus $100 depostt, 614 ·992
2395 or 614-992·5961

675·6557

5om

Mrt chell Road Area Gall rpolts
$310 / Mo Water, Septrc, Trash
Patd , Depostt /References, 614
643-2916Aher4 P.~

614-992-2167

5 Room House 26 Chilltcotl'1e

No Experrence Necessary! $500
I a $900 Weekly /Potential Pro
cessrng Mortgage Refunds, Own

•

Mill Road Off 325, No Pe1s. Oeposl! ReqUired 61 4-24~5622.

REAL ESTATE

Counlry hom e
4bedrooms ,
2baths 2 car garage, 1acre
mmures from Pt Pleasant, pnced
to sell For appotnlment call 30~

210

2 Bedrooms Unfurnrshed On Cora

------1
Road, Galftpohs, $6,800, 614-446
1615, 614-446·1243

Wan tee! To

992 6777

Thrs newspaper wr11 not
knowtmgly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh1ch ts mv1olat10n of the law
Our readers are hereby
mfarmed that all dwelltngs
advertised m !his newspaper
are avatlable on an eQUal
opportunrty basts

Home Typtsts, PC users
$45 000 mcome pO!entra r
600 513-4343 Ext B-9368

180

2 bedroom mobtle home, refer
ences &amp; depostt requrred , Mr
nersvllle area, call after 5pm 614

All real estate advertrsrng tn
thrs newspaper tS subject 10
the Federal Fatr Houstng Act
of 1966 whtch makes 11 rllegal
to adver1tse "any prefefence
hmrtauon or dtscnmtnatron
based on race color rehg10n.
sex famtllal status or national
ortgm or any mtentton to
make any suoh preference,
llmrtatron or dascnmrnatlon •

\ t&gt;I~CDNN!iC.T!&lt;t&gt;

$5,soo Bom. 614-446-9649

Twm RNers Tower.
accepbng
appltcattons
for 1brnow
HUD
substd·

614·992·3055

450

Babysl!ter For Ages 7 t 2 Years

2 Silk Screens By Photographer
Wtlham Wegman, Wtemenener
Photographer,
Both
Are
Numbered Edlltons, 32196 Tttles
Are "Elephant Dog" And "Bad
Dog~ They Are Stgned And
Framed 38 112 Inches x32 112
Inches • Asktng $3,000 Each,

Chrrstmas Trees R:t 33 between
New Haven &amp; Letart, across trom
Graham B lock Church J ot) r
Bradfield 304-882-2334

out the Halloween pumpktn."

i::======:;::===i::~::::::=~=~=;==i
410 Houses for Rent

\985 Ford Ranger lots Of New

$25,614 441-Q615 Mer 5 RM

Remodeled two bedroom apart
ment, $200 plus depos it. water/
trash pa rd rnqurre at 21 S Sprrng
Avenue Pomeroy

(Prestdent &amp; C E 0) Of

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

MerchandiSe

portion
42- Vegas
1 Happy
43 Pen polnl
5 Circulate
45 Baoebafler
9 Sty resident
Nolan12 Bronte heroine 47 Not discovered
Jane50 Engflah nurse·
13 Ireland
maid
14 Rather than
54 Chum
!poet.)
55 Kit
15 Relating to
57 Chickena lime
58 Sault - Marte
16 Israeli airline
59 Shook
(2 wds.)
60 lnsh
17 Sleep stage
61 Hebrew letter
18 Glacial Ice
62 Large knife
20 Malady
63 Small spols
22 Cry of pain
24 Male child
DOWN
25 Greek fetters
Horse
28 Enormous
directives
30 Slep--t
2 Musical
33 Mar
Instrument
35 Sat on fire
3 Resin·
37 - of Friends
producing tree
38 Polite word
4 Leg
39 Maka (a
5 Service charge
swealer)
6 Showv flowers
40 Medicine
ACROSS

PHILLIP

20) lmporlanl

one-to-one relahonshrps must be man-

aged wilh all the tact you can muster
Ieday Even small mfract1ons can pro·
duce 111 will
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Today you
Will have enough problems handlmg yvur
own responstbthtres without assumtng the

burdens of others Av01d gen1ng 1n over
your head
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Res1s1 lhe lemp·
tation lo partiCipale in speculahve
endeavors today Your chances for suc·
cess w111 be exceedingly slim
1ngs 1f yoo don't feel too friendly loward
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The pressure
QOOker could be bo1llng 1n your household
lhe partic1pants
PISCES (Feb. 211-March 20) You m1ghl
today, so don't contnbute to a potenllal
feel strongly 1ncl1ned to asse~t your
spillover by stirring up volatile 1ssues
authority over others today This behavior
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If you have
may nol s1t well w111l your colleagues.
strong opinions partain1ng 10 a speCific
ARIES (March 21-April19) 'k&gt;u possess
Issue today, you shOuld lry 10 keep your
a keen' 1mag1nabon, but Ieday, take care
lhoughls lo yourself. Whal you say could
nol louse rt aga1nst yourse~ Avood self·
anlagon1ze others.
defeating laCheS.
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Guard your
I TAURUS (April 2CHhly 20) Yoo may be
finances and material poasess1ona w1th
pressured today by an old obligallon
exira care loday. Furthermore, avoid
you've seen frt to ognore Try to resolve
shady ondlvoduals
Ihe s1tua110n 1n less hosltle terms.

.._.................-

I

•

�.'

..

'

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

Monday, December 4, 1995 :

'

'

Ohio Lottery

Chicago Bears
fall to Detroit
A11n

Landers

M 1995, LoiJ~
Tlmu Syodicatu and
Creatora SynciJcattf

Dear ADD LaDders: Several
monlhs ago, a reader said he had a
roueo, miserable life, he was a
bwdcll to family and friends, and the
world would be a bcncr place
without him.
He had already started to save up
pills and was just about to do the deed
when he picked up an old copy of
Reader's Digest His eyes feU on an
article that changed his mind.

Lalcly,l have been having suicidal
thoughiS and lhink maybe that article
might be helpful. Will you please
print it?DEAR ZVOO: I've had more than
500 requests for lhat article, which
originally appeared in June 1985. I
am certain it saved lives. Here it is:

zvoo

Before You Kill Yourself
by Renee T. Lucero
You've decided to do iL Life is
impossible. Suicide is your way ouL
Fme- but before you lciU yourself,
there are some things you should
know. I am a psychiatric nurse, and I
see lhe results of suicide •• when it
worb and, more often, when it
doesn't Consider, before you act,

these facts:

Silicide is usually not successful.
You think you know a way to
guarantee it? Ask the 25-year-old
who tried to electrocute himself. He
lived. But bolh his arms are gone.
Wha't about jumping? Ask John.
He used to be intelligent, wilh an
engaging sense of humOt That was
before he leaped from a building.
Now, he's brain-damaged and wiU
always need care. He stagg~ and has
seizures. He lives in a fog. But, worst
of all, he knows he used to be
normal.
What about piUs? Ask the 12-yearold with extensive liver damage from
an overdose. Have you ever seen

$20 will be awarded. Judging will are asked 10 furni sh their own canbe done in the village of Racine pies. There will be no fonnal proand within a two mile radius of the gram but story telling and caroling
village cor(lOration s1gns. roin sel- will he done around a bonfire.
Th e Racine Am en can Legion
tias will he r resented to the JUdges
and winners will be announced in Post 602 Auxiliary and RACO will
The Dm ly Sentinel. Jbe homes of r ro vide fruit and candy treats for
rrevwus first rtace winners will be Sant a to uistribut e, and a liv e
manger scene with a lighted tree
marked
Chrisunas in ~1e Pm·k has been and display of the miniature Racine
schedulcu for Dec. 14 beginning Village will be included in the feswi~1 a canulelight walk and carol- tivities. Refreshm ents will be proIng at 6: 30 r .m. Those wishing to vided.
Donations of homemade cookrarticiratc in the candlelight walk

suicide note is no help. Those who
loved you will never completely
recover. They'll feel regret and an
unending pain.
Silicide is conlaRioUS. Loot around
at your family. Loolc closely at the 4·
yesro()ld playing with his cars on lhe
rug. Kill yourself tonight, and he may
100.
do it 10 years from now.
Who will clean your blood olf lhe
You do have other choices. There
carpet or scrape your brains from lhe are people who can help )IOU through
ceiling? Commcrclal cleaning crews this crisis. Call a hot line. Call a
may refuse that job - butsomeone friend. Call your minisiCI' or priest
has to do il Who will have to cut you Call a doctor or hospital. Call the
down from where you hanged police.
yourself or identify your bloated body
They will tell you that !here's hope.
after you've drowned? Your molher? Maybe you'll rind it in the mail
Your wife? Your son?
tomorrow. Or in a phone call this
The carer ully worded "loving• weekend. But what you're seeking

Social Security checks to be adjusted for cost of livingv(
lax on a rortion of your benefits
based on your Ulxable mcome.
If you are a married couple witb
earnin gs hetwcen $32.000 and
$44,000. or a sin gle r erson (or
Cost or Living Increases
married person separated from your
You ' ve probably heard by now.
srouse)
earning between $25.000
Social Security benefit checks
for Jam1ary are being increa~ed 2.6 and $34.000, you include 50 perpercent to kcer ur with increases in cent of your benefits when figuring
your taxahl e income . For married
the cost of living.
Even though inOation was rela- courles earning over $44,000 a
tively low this year. Social Security year or sin gles earning $34,000,
beneficiancs haven' t lost any of you inc lude 85 rcr cent of your
their buying (lOWer. Unlike many Soc1 af Secunty benefit s in your
private penSion plans, Social Secu- taxable income.
ri{)' payments are adjusted automatTh e SSA·l099 statement you
ically each year to make sure that receive 111cludes an IRS Notice
beneficiaries can still buy the same 703 . You ' ll kn ow whether you
amoum of goods and services now need 10 pay ta x on your Social
tbey could 10, 15, eve11 20 years Securit y benefit s after you com·
rletC ~lC five steps On the nOIJCe.
ago.
Look fur benefit statements
For I JCJ). Socml Security estimates
In January, Social Security will that about 18 rercent of beneficiasend you a sL1tement showing tbe ries will need to r ay tax on tbeir
tOL11 benefits you received in 1995. benefits
The statement is design~d to help
For more infonnation about tax·
you determine if you need to pay able benefits , call the Internal RevBy ED PETERSON
Sodal Security manager
in Athens

enue Serv1ce LOll-free at 1-800-829- ment period from January I to
3676. Ask for Publication 915, Tax March 31. This peri od is to give
Information on Social Security you a second chance if you didn 'I
Benelits (and Ti er I Railroad enroll when you were first eligible
Retirement Benefits); and IRS Pub- or you drorped your coverage iu
lication 554, Tax lnfonnation for the interim. If you enroll during tbc
current sign-.up reriod, your coverOlder Americans.
age will begin July I, 1996 For
Another Chance to Sign Up for
1996, the cost for Part B covemge
Medicare
is 42.50 per month. Most delayed
If you're 65 or over and don't
have Part B Medicare coverage, enrollees pay a I 0 percent suryou 'II have a chance to sign up for charge for each year they could
t11e Part B medical insurance cover- -have been enrolled but weren' t.
age during the 1996 annual enroJ; .
Part B coverage, also called
"medical insurance," helps pay for
ment rcriod.
Every year . th e government doctors' care. outpatient hospital
offers a three-month open enroll- visits, and other medical services.

People are offered the option of
signing up for Part B at the same
time they are automati cally
enrolled in Medicare's Part A pro·
gram. Part A helps pay for inpatient hospital care and certain oilier
services.
People who want to sign up for
Part B Medicare coverage should
call the Athens Social Security
-oflice or call Social Security's toll·
fre e number, 1-800-772 - 1213,
hetw een 7 a.m and 7 p.m. any
business day. The lines are busiest
early in the week and early in the
month, so it' s best to call at other
times.

-

and Louise Bearhs gav~: devotions
entitled "Lovely Things," "Bounty
of the Lord". and "Forget Not His
Benefits."
Mrs. Bearhs thanked the clot
for llpwers during her hospitalization.
Mrs. Blackston presented the
program which included "A Cold
Allergy, Maybe Not" by Dorotby
Jeffers; Screening for Heart Disease:" by Agne s Dixon; "Phones
and Pacemakers" by Frances Goeglein; and Did You Know?" by
Mrs . Blackston . Dorotby Jeffers
had lhe contest won by Mrs. Blackston and Mrs. Bearhs.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Blackston to those named and
Dorothy Jeffers and Nancy Morris.

Community calendar·-

The Community Calendar is
publi shed as a free service to
non -profit groups wi shing to
ann ou nee meeting and special
event s. The calend ar is not
desi gned lo promote sales or
fund ra i.« rs of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
MONDAY
CARP ENT ER - Co lumbia
TownShip trustees. 7 r .m Monday,
fire stati on.
CHESTER - Ches ter Elementary PTO. Monday. 7 r m.
LETART - Letart Town ship
Tru stees . Mo nday . ti p m at the
offi ce buildi ng.
RAC INF: - Raci ne Chapter
134. OES . 7 10 r .m. Monday ,
installation ot officers
LETAR;f - The Letart Falls
Elementary School PTO will meet
Monday, 7 p.m. at the school.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship trustees, 7:30p.m. Monday at
.the Syracuse Municipal Building.
POINT PLEASANT. Life. Lib·
erty and Freedom meeting, Mon·
day, 7 p.m. at th e vocational
school.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township tru stees, 7:30 p.m. Monday at the home of Clerk Pauy
Callaway.
RACIN E - Racme Village
Council meeting Monday, Star Mill
Park, 7 p.m.

POM EROY - Meigs Band ·
Booster.&lt;. Monday. 7 r .m. in t11e
band mom. ·

MINIATURE LIGHT SET

:z :r

BOXED

:Z-.99

CHRISTMAS

Mui1•-Colored or Clear - SO'S

•

ent1ne
Vol. 46, NO. t 54

The rrcsitlenl ~Jankcd members ·.
for their contributions to the organization during ~1c past year. Spe- .
cial tbanks were extended to Dale ·
Hart anu David Zirkle for their.:
work on projects. Tom Diddle and :
John Holman will be given RACO :
t-shHi s in aprrcciation of their ·
heir. Ofliccrs' reports were given. ;
Frank Cleland had tbe invoca- '
tion before the covered dish dinner. :
Zirkl e led in the rtedge of aile- :
gim1ce to dose ~Je mee ting. There :
will be no December meeting .
A 1934 fire claimed 134 lives ·
aboard the liner Morro Castle off ·
lhe New Jersey coast.

~~~!~s~~!'P~,S~~~S

.

, ., ..
"\O!

-

CHRISTMAS GIFTWRAP

~- -

Eltra Va lue Pack, 3 Rolls, 30' W•de,
125 Sq Ft -Pre-priced S4 99

' "''

WHITE CHANTILLY

EOP Spray - 0.5 oz ., EDT Spray{- 1 7 oz.,
EDT Spray - 1 oz. or Gift Set II 8528

MS.M's
CANDIES
Plain or Peanyt
16 o:z Bag

199

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
64oz Tubeor

199

PRECISION

TOOTHIIRUSH

scon CLEAN
PAPER
TOWELS
SingleRoll

EACH

~

Assorted Types ·

C

79

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township trust ees, 6:30 a.m. Tuesday,
Pageville Township building.
POM EROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Charter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will have its atmual Christmas part
at the Meigs County infirmary 6
p.m. Tuesday . Members are
reminded to take gifts for the angel
tree
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge, F&amp;AM, open installation,
7:30 r .m. Tuesday.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township trustees, Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at
the townshir hall.

ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Republicans laboring to strike a seven-year
budgel-lfalancing deal with President Clinton are courting conservative Democrats, hoping to pressure
tbe White House to reach a compromise.
With bipartisan negotiations
entering their second week today
and no signs of progress, GOP
leaders hore tbat if they can woo
enough conservative Democrats to
tbeir side, administration resolve to
hew to a hard-line position at the
talks will fad e. Those talks are
moving slowly, witb officials saying it will take days for the Congressional Budget Ollice to update
its estimate of hnw big deficits will
be over the next seven years.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
warned today that if a deal to balance the budget isn · t struck tllis
month, "you will see interest rates
skyrocket and the stock market
crash. "
He told leaders of the American
Medical Association that ' 'if we
cave, if we walk off," the best
chance in a generauon to balance
the federal budget will be lost.
The immediate Republican tar·
gets are the Blue Dogs, 21 conservative Democrats who have
unveiled a seven-year budget-balancing plan of their own . The
group has strengtb beyond its own
numbers - it often attracts suppon

from two dozen or more other fis- oppose the Republican $24 5 billion
cally conservative Democrats.
tax CUI.
Republicans concede that they
The GOP's divide-and-conquer
probably can't win enough con- strategy could unsettle administra·
verts to put togetber a veto-proof lion officials and Democratic law.
budget-balancing bill that would makers. Many rank~and - rile con·
deal a devastating political blow to gressional Democrats are eager to
Clinton. They would need support vote for a budget-balancing plan
from 55 Democrats to get the 290 before next year's elections, and if
votes needed in the House to over- tbe party's unity behind Clinton
ride a presidential veto, and from shows signs of crumbling, so m1gbt
13 Democrats to line up the tbe administration' s tough bargain·
ing (lOsition.
required 67 votes in the Senate.
"We'll meet with anyone, any
"It will be very difficult to get a
veto-proof number," admits House time, anywhere who bas a con·
Budget Committee Chairman John structive plan to balance lhe budget
in seven years ," said Rep . John
Kasich , R-Ohio.
.
Kasich says Republicans can Tanner, D- Tenn., one of the Blue
gain by talking to conservative Dogs.
When Republicans pushed a
Democrats because "it obviously
creates pressure on tbe president to measure through Congress last
rut something on lhe table" in the month pledging Clinton to seek a
seven-year plan for eliminating
negotiating room.
Kas ich and House Majority deficits, the administration lobbie&lt;l
Whip Tom DeLay, R-Texas. ,met bard against it. But 48 House
with th e Blue Dogs last week. Democr~ts and seven Senate
Kasich said Rep. David Hobson, R- Democrats voted for it anyway. In
Ohi o, and Rep . .Mike Parker, R- addition, 68 House Democrats
Miss., a former Democrat, would voted this fall for an alternative
talk regularly with them and budget-balancing plan the Blue
explore wh ether some middle Dogs produced1 despite Op(lOsition
by Minority Leader Dick Gephardt,
ground can be reached .
Though the Blue Dogs share the D-Mo.
Those numbers might not apply
GOP's goal of eliminating deficits
by 2002, there are important policy as the budget endgame approaches.
differences. The conservative Some Democrats who might otherwise vote for a GOP budget might
Demo~rats would ease tbe GOP' s
not
do so if a major defeat for Clinproposed savings from Medicare,
ton
were at stake. Top Democratic
Medicaid aqd scores of other
aides
say they are not worried.
domestic programs. and they

Emmogene Hamilton of Syracuse is seeking re-election for a
fourth full term as Meigs County
recorder. She filed her petition
Monday with the Meigs County
Board of Elections.
Hamilton wa~ ap(lOinted to the
office of recorder on .Jan. 28, 1982
to serve out tbe term of the late
Eleanor Robson, and has since
been elected to lbree fulltenns.
EMMOGENE HAMILTON
Her emphasis in tbe office has
been on updating records and :nak· tial for preserving tbe film. Records
ing them more accessible and can easily be retrieved within 24 to
serure.
48 hours.
Since taking over the office she
The office, under Hamilton. has
has put all deed records on micro- also re-created 80 volumes of tbe
film from 1820 to 1962, and has old pennanent bound records and
microfilmed all 37 volumes of deed put tbem into looseleaf binders,
indexes and all 17 volumes of making it easier to copy documortgage indexes. This brings up ments.
to date all records of deeds and
Many of tbe improvements in
mortgages , according to the the office. according to the
recorder.
'
recorder. have been made from
Th e microfilm records have encumbered balances from tbe sup,
been placed wilb National Under- ply budget or previous years. The
ground Storage, which bas con - office computerized its operation in
trolled climate atmosphere essen- January 1994.

RITE AID
VITAMIN C
OR CALCIUM
PRODUCTS

Diet Coke
2 Liter

La~s Potato

ChipS
Wh~ poy "'0',. tho" you ho"~ lo l ao Oualoty rd.., Do~· l&lt;&gt;p•.,ql

For the Rite Aid Pharmacy near
you, calll-800-4-DRUGSTORES.

oz. baa Prepriced $1.59

•

89

[JI.iv81age lteli1s plus applicable taxes

¢

·

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIJ.AJT OUANnTIES
BEVERAGE PRICES ARE fOR NON-REfRIGERATED PRODUcTS ONLY
SOME ITEMS MAY NOT BE AI/AII.ABLE IN All STORES'
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR lVPOGAAPHICAL ERRORS.
UMIT 1 REBATE PER CUSTOMER.
'REBATE UMIT $2.00 •• REBATE UMIT $3.00

NEW YORK (AP) - Unconvinced by tbe president's rallying
cry, Americans opp_ose sending
troops to Bosnia nearly 2-1,
according to an Associated Press
poii.
Fifty-seven percent are against
the deployment, 30 percent in favor
and tbe rest are unsure in the survey of 1,016 adults.
The poll was taken Wednesday
through Sunday, even as President
Clinton was giving the troops in
Europe marching orders. But that
spectacle did not seetn to lift a
steptic1sm that has endured
lhrougb numerous surveys in recent
years, including those taken Nov.
27, tbe night of Clinton's televised
speech.
Only 38 percent in lbe poll consider the situation in the former
Yugoslavia very important to the
interests of the United Statei. And
a 51 percent to 37 percent majority
do not think saving the lives of
civilians in Bosnia is worlh putting ,
U.S. soldiers at risk.

While debate rages in Washington about the largest U.S. military
operation in Europe since World
War II, 42 percent of adults in lhe
poll - and 55 percent or those
under age 35 - say they are not
following the situation closely.
Twenty-one petcent profess to
be foUowing it very closely, and 37
percent somewhat closely. These
people are somewhat more support·
ive of lhe deployment than tbe least
attentive respondents, who oppose
it by 3-1.
Even Democrats in tbe poll narrowly oppose the military ·mission
by 46 percent to 42 percen~ while
two.-tbirds of Republicans are
against it.
The 52 percent who think
Bosnia is not very important to
U.S. interests are somewhat more
likely to be young and male. In the
55-64 age bracket, a generation
whose childhood was dominated by
World War II, a plurali{)' sees vital
interests in Bosnia.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

The true meaning--.

THE NATIVITY DEPICTED- Primitive life-si1.ed figures
created by artist Jason Witherell to lelllhe story of lhe birth of
Christ are adorning lbe front windows of Anderson Furniture
on Main Street, Pomeroy. Witherell's colorful creation.• include
tbe wise men and shepherds who came when they heard of the
birlb or Christ, and the many animals who were al the stable.
To enhance the wise men ligures, Becky Anderson, seen above
completing the nativity arrangement, made jewel-toned velvet
robes for them. (Sentinel photo by Charlene Hoenich)

Pomeroy councilmen
considering options
for water treatment

Recorder
in running
for fourth
full term

PoU: deployment in Bosnia
opposed by most citizens

WEDNESDAY
POM EROY - Community
choir presenting "Make His Praise
Glorious" directed l'Y Sue Matheny, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at St.
Paul Lutheran Church. Refreshments.
POMEROY Narcotics
Anonymous, Wednesday, ' p.m.,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
THURSDAY •
POMEROY - PERl group
meeting, I p.m., Meigs County
Senior/Multipurpose Center.
S..,eakers and lunch will be at 12
noon . All members are urged to
aucnd.

'Blue Dog' support
sought for budget

'

, , . ~,.,~~.

lotion - 6.7 oz.. Talc - 4 oz.,

TU ESilAY
REEDSVILLE - Eastern High
A~1lctic Boosters, 7:30 p.m., high
school cal ctcria.

;::E ft99

35 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 5, 1995

1 Section, I 0 Pages

~~~~u::;r~':

,_

Low tonight In the 20s , clear .
Wednesday , sunny. Highs In the
30s.

Better health club plans
remembrances of others
The annual Christmas party and
project to remember the sick and
shul.n of th e community was
rtanned for Dec. 21 when the Rock
Sprin gs Better Health Club met
rece ntl y al th e born e of Helen
Blackston .
The dinner will be held at noon
at the Rock Srrings Church after
which member will prerare trays of
goodies to be taken to confined
members and others. There will be
a gift exchange by the members.
Agnes D1 xon gave a donation to
the club for purchasing fruit for the
fruit baskets.
Ph yllis Skmner presided at the
meetin g whi ch opened with the
Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the
nag. Officers' re(lOrts were given

Pick 4:
1-9-6-6
Buckeye 5:
1-5-8-9-17

Sports, Page 4

J

ies are needed and anyone wanting nominating committee's report, and
to donate is asked to contact Marl- 11 was voted to reL1in the same offi·
lyn Powell at 949-2676 or Ann cers for the anotbcr year.
Zirlde, 949-2031
Project coordmator. Dale Hart,
In olher business it was noted ga ve an urdate on the Racine
that 12 '"Season's Greetings" ban- Museum/Cross Mill rroject. The
ner have been rurchased and hung building IS now under roof and
around town , tbat Southern Torna- rtans call for t11e water wheel to be
does signs will be rtaced at each in rlace and running by tbe April
town entnmce, and "Racine" caps 27 flower festival. The Cross Mill
will be purchased for village per- was bmlt Ill 1836 on tbe ouL~kirts
sonnel.
of Rac111e . Contributions for the
Proje cts for 1996 were dis - project can be made at the Racine
cussed . Delores Cleland gave the Home National Bank.

7-3-8

Lions 27-7

anyone die oCiivcr damagc?You tum
yellow. It's a hard way to go.
What about a gun? Ask the 24year-old who shot himself in tho
head. Now he drags one leg, has a
useless arm and has no vision or
hearil18 on one side. He lived lhrough
his "foolproor suicide. You might,

Community organization makes plans for holiday activities
Holiday projects and programs
were planned following a Thanks·
giving observance when the Racine
Area Communoty Organi zation
(RACO) met recently at Star Mill
Park
Kathryn Han , pres ident, conducted the mee ting during which
time the holiday home decorating
contest was set for Dec. 12 with
JUdging from 6:30 to 9:30p.m.
It was noted that out of 10wn
judges will be used to select three
winners and prizes of $50, $30 and

Pick 3:

newly-drilled well will vastly
By JIM FREEMAN
improve the village's water supply .
Sentinel News Staff
The future of Pomeroy's water Preliminary testing on the new
system was the main topic of dis- well, which is deerer than the
cussion at Monday night's meeting existing wells, shows minimal levels of both iron and manganese.
of tbe Pomeroy Village Council.
In addition , council gave the
Council met with Kim Cutlip of
tbe Institute for Local Government fust reading to a motion to revise
Administration and Rural Develop- the village's water billin g otdiment (ll.GARD), and Jeff Chrisler nance.
The revis1on will raise the miniof tbe state Envjronmental Protecmum
water bill from $9 to $11 a
tion Agency to discuss water treat·
month
and increase the rate to 46
ment options in the village.
Chrisler said t)Je village is not cents per hundred gallons after the
required to remove manganese and fmt 2,000 gallons used.
The rate increase is needed to
iron from its water because tbe
materials pose no tbreat to humans. pay for the new water well and
Pomeroy water has high levels other improvements to ·me village
of the elements which can cause water system.
In personnel matters, council
staining and make tbe water taste
members
recognized water depart·
bad.
ment
employee
Shannon Spaun.
"There's no health problems,
On Thank sgivin g morning ,
but there are a lot of consumer
Spaun was driving by the Pomeroy
complaints," Chrisler explained.
The best way to treat manganese Chff Apartments when he noticed a
is to remove it from tbe water, he building wa' on fire. He woke reo·
said. A system using a srecial type pie up and led them sal'ety and may
of sand can remove the manganese have saved at least seven lives,
from the water, hut will not address according to Mayor John W. Blaet·
tnar.
the issue of water hardness.
In other business, council:
Manganese is present in many
•
Appointed Ell en Rought as
water systems in southeastern
Ohio, he said.
cemetery clerk for $50 a month.
Village ofricials are hopeful a
• Approved the minutes of the
Nov. 20 meeting and the mayor' s
report of $5,402

Associated Press Poll

..

Portions
of state
offices
to move
COL UMBUS (AP) - Parts of
some state offices will begin moving out of Columbus under a bill
the governor has Signed. the S(lOnsor said.
Gov. George Voinovich signed
the b11l on Monday. It takes effect
in 90days.
" I lhink th e fact that they are
really going to fmally look at this
whole issue and put some autbori lative stuff t(Jgether is very, very
healthy and the way they've laid it
out protects everyone· s interest,"
he said.
"From a cost-benefit point of
view and value point of view, if we
can save money and provide better
services, that is some thing we
should all be intere sted in,"
Voinovich said.
Supporters say it will end the
city' s lock on good -raying government jobs and allow state agencies
to move closer to tbeir customers.
"This bill says instead of letting
the Ohio Revi sed Code dec ide
where UJe johs are located, lei's let
good common business practices
dictate where those jobs are located, " said Rep . Lynn Ohnan, RMaumee.
" Ultimately what we will find
... is not that entlfe departments
w11l move, but d1fferent sections
(Continued nn Pa~e 3)

LIFESAVER RECOGNIZED- Shannon Spaun, !ell, was recognized Monday by Pomeroy VIllage Council after acting to rescue
people from a burning apartment building Thanksgiving morning.
Spaun, an employee with the vUiage's water department, noticed
smoke coming rrom the building and woke up residents and helped
them gel out of the burning structure. Mayor John W. Blaeltnar,
above, presented Spaun with a certificate recognizing the act.
• Ratilicd the appointment of
Donnie Fry, 16, a.' a cadet fueflght·
er in the Pomeroy Volunteer f'ire
Depanmenl
• Arproved Chri stmas bonuses
for village employees.
• Gave second reading to an
ordinance which will require building owners to remove burned
buildings before they can receive
all of their insurance settlement.

• Gave fust reading to an ord1·
nance raising the clerk's ray from
$15,000 to $17,000.
Present were Blaeunar, Clerk.
Kathy Hysell, council members
John Musser, Bill Hapton stall,
Scott Dillon, William Young, Larry
Wehr~ng and George Wright.
Counc1lwoman·clect Geri Walton.
Mayor-elect Frank Vaughan an.d
V1llage Administrator John Anderson.

PLA may open stockyard by February
GALLIPOLIS - Produ cers
Livestock Association is looking
toward a tentative February opening of it! Gallia County stockyard,
PLA 's director of branch operations said.
Construction began earlier this
fall and wl ile comp~!iQn or !be
full-se~vice ~ilck c"ll1!ter is
dependeti't-onweather. Jeff Harding
said the stockyard will be "up and
running, as soon as possible."
The facility is mostly under roar
and interior work will continue
through lhe early winter montbs, be
explained. The general contract on
the job went to Double M Construction of Jackson.
In the interim, PLA has assigned
a manager to tbe area, Brifin
Hamilton, who is currently working out of an office in tbe c.'H.
McKenzie Agricultural Center.
Hamilton bas been employed
full-time witb PLA for the past 1-

1/2 years, Harding said. He began
with PLA as a trainee at its Hillsboro stockyard, and has worked for
the association at iL~ Bucyrus and
Springfield locations.
Hamilton has been familiari zing
himself with the agricultural community, buying cattle and making
arrangements witb local livestock
producers, Harding exrlained.
Once open , the stockyanl is
exrected to offer such services as a
credit association to assist livestock
producers , writing contracts,
arranging for livestock purchases,
and offer advi ce and suggestions
on marketing, he added.
But the stocky ard remains a
point of contention with nearby
Jackson Pike residents who have
filed a series of legal action s
against PLA 'and tbe Gallia County
Agricultural Society, which leased
five acres to PLA earlier this year
for tbe stockyard. .

Th e res ident s, who want the
stockyard moved to another loca·
tion, have ctted healtb and safety
reasons for their orposilion to its
current location .
They won a judgi!lent in Gallia
County Common J&gt;teas Court in
July invalidating tile lease between
PLA and the society, but the soci· .
ety ' s board of directors later
approved a revised lease agree ment.
In spite of the opposition, Harding said the response from the community to the stockyard "has been
very PQ,silive and encouraging.
"I wish we could have had tllat .
at all of our oth er loca ti ons," he
added. "Our other locatiom have
been dependent on th e situ ation.
such as what kind of competition
we faced."
The Gallipolis stockyard will he
PLA' s 20th facility in Ohio and .
Indiana, Harding said.
•

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