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                  <text>Wednesday, December 27, 199~

Pom~roy • Middleport, .O hio

Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Ohio Lottery

Texas Tech
beats Air
Force 55-41

Super Lotto:
4-7-11-12-38-45
Kicker:
1-0-2-1-6-2
Pick 3:
6-5-8
Pick4:
4-7-3-2

Sports, Page 4

Clear to partly cloudy
tonight, lows in the teens.
Friday, sunny. Highs In the
30s .

•

ent1ne
Vol. 46, NO. 170
1 Section, 10 Pages

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

.,

FIRST - COME - FIRST -SERVED BASIS!
NO DEALERS PLEASE!

SAlE ENDS DEC. 30TH, 5P.M.

1995 FORD WINDSTAR LX
V-6, auto, front &amp; rear NC, PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr seat; tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass: lotttiH .

1992 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
V-6 , auto, air cond, PS, PB, PW, POL,
Pwr seat, leather, Clean- Low miles.

GXE

1995 NISSAN

ti~.

cruise, AM/FM cass,

1994 MERCURY VILLAGER
auto, air cond, PS, PB, PW,
Pwr seat: tilt, cruise, AM/FM

1
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P. seat, dual air bags.

LOADED

5

12,649

auto, air cond, AM/FM cass, 4 Dr, LE, V-6, auto, air cond,
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Loaded. NADARetail $20,750

ONLY

5

17,5

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1994 EAGLE TALON

Dr, V·6, auto, air cond, AM/FM 4 cyl, 5 spd, air cond, AM/FM
till, cruise, PS, PB, PW, cass, tilt. cruise, PS, .. PB, PW,
Much More ..
PDL.

Drive a Relatively New Vehicle for Less than you ever
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ible with the Ford Red Carpet Lease.
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5

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GUARANTEED

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FUTURE VALUE
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You

PAY ON

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5

5

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You

PAVON

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5

5,210**

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LOADED

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FUTURE VALUE

)3,9

5

1991 LINCOLN JOWN CAR

(Lease end residual value)

1991 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

Auto, climate control, PS, 4 dr, LX, V-8, auto, air cond,
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1991 FORD THUNDERBIRD
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1991 OLDS CUTLASS
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5

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cass

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5 spd, air cond,
cruise, PS. PB,
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wagon, V-8, auto, front &amp;
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1995 FORD E·350

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cruise, PS, PB, PW.
PDL, Pwr seat, AM/FM
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., Plus Taxes, Lease Charges, State Taxes &amp; License Due at Lease
Inception.

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ELIGIBLE IN STOCK TO CHOOSE FROM

1995 FORD F150 412
auto, !llr cond, PS, PB, tilt,
..,.,,~ ... AM/FM cass, long bed.

514,9

1995 FORD F150 414
cyl, auto, air cond, PS, PB,
cass.

IA~AIFM

5

16,7

1995 FORD F150 412
6 cyl, auto, air eond, AM/FM
tiH, cruise, PS, PB, PW,
, bedliner.
·

5

15,4

1992 FORD F150 412
auto, air cond, AM/FM cass,
cruise, PS, PB, PW, PDL, long
Low miles.

5 spd, air cond, AM/FM
PS, PB, tilt, cruise.

5

8,9 49

Emergency
unds shore
up Bailey Run
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Workers this month completed a
project to reinforce flood-damaged
Bailey Run Road in Salisbury Township.
Work on the $100,000 project
was funded through the Emergency
Watershed Protection Program
administered through the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District and
the Natural Resources Conservation
Service.
Many sections of Bai Icy Run
were undermined during the Mother's Day flood and seven sites along
the road were chosen for repair by
the NRCS .
• The objective of the program,
Meigs County SWCD Director Mike
Duhl explained, is to "assist in
relieving imminent hazards to life
and property from nood and products of erosion created by natural
disasters that cause sudden impairment of a watershed."
After the flood, Duhl said he contacted county Emergency Services
· Director Robert Byer to sec what
assistance could be offered.

Eventually, three projects were
identified for funding through the
EWP program.'
Approximately $200.000 was
committed for projects on Rutland ·
Township Road 175, a bridge project
on Baer Road in Chester Township
and Bailey Run Road .
The program has the .stipulation
that SWCD could repair or restore
the roads up to the condition they
were in prior to damage that
occurred, Duhl explained.
Upon completion of the Bailey
Run Road project, 516 feet ·of
Gabion basket was installed and over
100 feet of rock rip-rap places along
the seven-site area to prevent furtheF
damage to the road.
Gabion baskets contain rock are
made of fencing material. They offer
structural support while allowing
drainage. In this project the baskets,
usually made of galvanized chainlink fencing, were coated with
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) due to the
high acid content of the stream running alongside the road, Duhl said.
The project required the cooperation of manv people and several

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. · said Republicans propos~d a $240
George Voinovich has urged Ohio billion tax cut over seven years.
Of the total, $170 billion was for
Republicans in Congress to stand
a
$500
per child tax credit for famfinn behind a GOP plan to balance
ilies
with
incomes up to $110,000
the federal budget in seven years.
annually.
Also
included: a cut in the
But he remains opposed to most of
capital
gains
tax
worth $35 billion.
a planned tax cui.
The
balance
of
the cut representVoinovich joined six Republican
ed
a
host
of
other
tax changes
members of Ohio's congressional
delegation on Wednesday to deliver including an adoption credit and
an enthusiastic endorsement of a expansion of Individual Retirement
GOP budget that would give states Accounts.
Voinovich said the tax cut was no
more power over welfare programs.
longer an issue since Democrats
Voinovich and congressional
have proposed a reduction of their
Republicans divided over the merits
own.
of a $240 billion tax cut the GOP
"The president has said he is for
proposed.
a reduction in taxes. The RepubliVoinovich said he did not suppon
cahs say they are for .a reduction in
a general tax cut because it might
taxes. So this is something that's
send the wrong signal to the public
going to have to be on the table and
about the critical nature of balancing
negotialed," Voinovich said.
the federal budget.
Oh1o Democratic Pany Chairman
"The only tax cut that I am realDavid Leland said there was a sigly in favor of is the job creation capnificant difference in the concept of
ital gains cut," he said.
the tax cuts the two parties proposed.
U.S. Rep. John Bochner, R-Ohio,

Ry TOM HUNTER .
Sentinel News Stall
Filing deadlines for ~..:ounty o rli~..:c

candidates and iS&gt;ucs arc quickly
ncming. due to the adjustment in the

COMPLETED PROJECT - Workers this
month completed an Emergency Watershed Protection project on Bailey Run Road in Salisbury
Township administered through the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District and the Natural Resources Conservation Service. The project
governmental agencies indudin1'
Salisbuly Township Trustees
Durst, Butch Brinker and Bernard
Gilkey ; their clerk, Richard Bailey ;township employee Robert
Roberts; the D.V. Weber Construction Co.; the Meigs County H1ghway
Department, which provided the
township with a truck for hauling

Ed

repaired the road which was damaged in nooding
earlier this year. Mike Duhl, above, Meigs SWCD
director, c.amined the completed project, which
consisted here of PVC-coated Gabian ba.&lt;kets and
stone rip-rap. (Sentinel pholo)

spoil; the Meigs SWCD and the
NRCS.
"All these agencies and people
cooperated
together,"
Duhl
explained. "The result? Bailey Run
has become a showcase for cooperative efforts and erosion control

along roadways and streams."
"All should be proud of their
efforts," he said.

An area legtslator feels efforts to
increase Ohio's speed limit from the
current 55 mph should be approved
in a "fair and safe" manner now that
the stales have the power lo decide
traveling speed.
State Rep. John A. Carey Jr. said
federal legislation signed by Presi-

dent Clinton that became effective
Dec. 8 "will strengthen the nation 's
transportation systom and provide
jobs and economic opportunities for
many Ohioans.
"At the state level, the Ohio General Assembly should act responsibly
and pass laws that are fair and safe,"

sc heduled spring primary election
hy Ohio Secretary of State Bob Taft.
The primary election will be
held March 19 instead of the first
Tuesday after the first Monday iO
May.
The det:isior1

llJ

make the ~.:hang£

will allow Ohio to be included io
"S uper Tuesday," during primary
elecllons held 10 preSidential year..
In 1997. Ohio's primary will return
to
it's normal May date .
:
I':IVI ng of the rcp;u rcd road wi ll •
The
filing
deadline
for
candidate~
he done thi s sprmg throu gh a puhlic
seeking county offices is Jan . 19 a1
worb }! r &lt;ll11.
4 p.m., according to Rita Smith,
The Mc1gs SWC' D and the NRC'S
director
of the Me1gs County Board
also •uJministl'r the Rural Ahan of
Elections.
Lionct.i Min e Pro gram , Resource
Early filings have concentrated
Conservation and Development pro-

jects and \:Onscrvation operations
projects to assist local landowners in

planning farnlS .

on the offices of county commis-

siOner and sheriff. with competition
being staged against im:umhcnt s in

those offices.
Incumbent Democrat Sheriff
James M. Soulshy announced Nov.

H thai he will sec k a lhird term as

sheriff in 19%. So ul shy, who has
been shenff since 19HH. hcgan his
law enforcement career with the

Pomeroy Police Department m
1960.
Soulsby will face ono of two contenders, who wdl face each other for
the Rcruhlican nomma"tion in the

March pnmary.
On Nov. 16. Pomeroy Police
Chief Gerald E. Rought announced
he will seck the Republican nomi nation fur shenff. Rought has hcen
with the Pomeroy department since
I'IX1 and was appointed Pomeroy's
chief in 1985.
Last week, Michael R. Canan
announced that he is also seeking the
Republi can nomination for sheriff.
Ca nan, 43, served on the Columbus Police Department from 1973 to
I'N I, where he was ;an instructor for
the Co lumbus Police Academy and
worked c1ght years With the depart BUDGET CONSEQUENCES - Gov. George
Voinovich showed a pie chart to fellow Republicans Wednesday while discussing the federal budget. The governor gathered six Republican mem-

bers of Congress l'rom Ohio to talk about the
Buckeye State's role in the current budget stalemate and the consequences of an approved budget. (AP)

Carey calls for responsibility in setting speed limit
Carey, R-Wellston , added. "Until
then . be sure and obey the current
speed limits."
Carey said two bills have been
introduced in the Ohio House
addressing speed limits. The first ,
sponsored by Rep. Ron Hood. RCanfield, increases the maximum for

trucks to 65 mph for trucks on rural
intcrstales.
Another bill , sponsored by Rep .
Mike Fox, R-lndi an Springs, call s
for a uniform speed limit of 65 mph .
Both bill s arc pendmg m the
House Transportation and Public
Safety Committee, on which Carey

serves .

"I am intere sted in allowing the

ment 's narcotic\ hur(:au. He has Lllso
served as an in vestigator for former

prosecuting allorncy Steve Story,
:mtl as an investigator for the Meigs
County Department nf Human Services.
In the race for county commissioner, each rmt y is rc rrcsc ntcd hy
a contender

1n

the race for the seat

of current Democratic Commis-

Department of High tay Safety rai se

siu m;r Janct Howard .

the speed l1mit to the hi ghway design
standard ,'' Carey satd . "If a state
route has a 'design standard or 60
mph. the speed limit should be 60
(Continued on Page 3)

Ernest "Ike" Spencer, Racine,
announced Nov. 15 that he will seck
the Republican nomination to run

(Continued on Page 3)

Budget talks fail to hit substantive issues

,.,,

'

Deadline
for filing
primary
petitions
nearing

Voinovich endorses
balanced ·budget fight

~time ." said the official, speaking on
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
Staff members from Congress
WASHINGTON- White House and the Clinton administration's
and congressional negotiators arc Office of Management and Budget,
inching closer lo new talks on resolv- meanwhile, met to work out a scheding the federal budget impasse, but ule for budget talks for the rest of the
the prospect of serious progress week.
seems to be at least a day away.
"It's very much a process disMore than 280,000 federal work- cussion rather than a substantive disers remained off the job Wednesday. cussion," a White House official
So did most of the people charged , said. "The practical reality is that I
with getting the budget disagreemenl would not expect a real substantive
senled.
discussion to take place before the
Capitol Hill and White House staffs get together again sometime
staff were making arrangements for tomorrow."
talks, but President Clinton:• House
If all goes well at the staff level,
Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senate a meeting would be set up Friday
Majority Leader Bob Dole were not between Clinton and congressional
expected to get together until Friday. leaders, Sen. Robert C. Smith, RAn administration official was not N.H., said.
optimistic about the chance of
Clinton, Dole and Gingrith met
enough progress being made to get last Friday but without reaching an
all federal employees back on the job agreement to end the shutdown. The
by the opening of business next House and Setlate then passed, and
week.
Clinton signed, bills to keep benefit
"It's n9t impossible, but hard. checks flowing for veterans, welfare
There are a lot of issues to be recipients under the Aid to Families
addressed and there 's not much with Dependent Children. and foster

(

35 cents
AGannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 28, 1995

care and adoption services, plus
money to keep services in the District of Columbia functioning.
The panial govemmenl shutdown
stems from disagreement over how
to balance the federal budget by
2002. Republicans are seeking consid~rably larger savings from
Medicare, Medicaid and welfare and
larger tax cuts than Clinton wants.
Meanwhile, 760,000 federal
workers in unfunded agencies,
including the 280,000 on furlough,
will receive only partial paychecks.
Many national parks and museums
ar:e closed.
Rep. Constance Morella. R-Md.,
whose suburban Washington district
is home to thousands of government
employees, prepared legislation that
would declare all federal workers
condition of anonymity.
Dole, R-Kan ., gave this week's
efforts a mere "50-50 shot" at
resolving budget differences to
reopen the government, partially
shuttered since Dec. 16.
"Hopefully, by Saturday, we'll

have a framework - or we 'll know
we can't put it together." Dole told ·
a Cedar Rapids. Iowa, town mee ting
while campmgnmg fo r 1he GOP
nomination for president.
Clinton met bnell y w11h budget
director Alice Rivl ir. on Wednesday,
but his chief of staff, Leon Panetta,
remained on vacation. Neither house
of Congress conducted any business
Wednesday.
essential and reiUrn them to their
jobs.
A similar measure was approved
by the Senate last week. There was
no indication that the House would
consider it; GOP House freshman
have opposed ending the government partial shutdown until .a longtenn budget deal is negotiated.
Meanwhile a group of 46 House
Democrats challenged a group of
corporate executives who ran a
newspaper ad last week asking that
budget negotiators "have everything
on the table " 10 say how they would
balance the bud~et.

OPEN AGAIN- Visitors to the National Gallery of Art viewed
the painting " View of Delft" by Johannes Vermeer Wednesday in
Washington. The exhibit, which had been closed with the government
shutdowl), was reopened with the aid of private funds. Most other
government-funded museums remained closed. (AP)

••

�Thursday, December 28, 1995

Commentary

Pomeroy • Middler&gt;ort, Ohio

OHIO Weather

.P.age2

Friday,

Thursday, December 28, 1995

Dec. 29

AccuWeather• forecasl for daytime condtltons and htgh '"""'.. '"'"""'
MtCH

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TER S OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long All letters are subJect to edumg and must be s1gned w1th name.
address and telephone number No unSigned lellers will be published Leuers
should be 1n good taste, addressmg 1ssues, not personalities

Letter to the Editor

Prestdenl Clinton IS fintshmg
1995 as lhe "Comeback Kid" agam - butrhe very fact of hrs success m lhe polls may lead htm off the
centnst course lhat ts hts best bel for
re-electiOn m 1996
The more Chnton seems lo be
leadmg hiS likeliest Republican nval,
Sen Bob Dole , R-Kan , and the
more the public blames congresSIOnal Republicans for lhe budgetary
tmpasse tn Washmgton . lhe more
DemocratiC liberals are IIkel) to
push Clmton lo wave lhe bloody
shtrt ofMedtcare "cuts" to keep hts
advantage gomg
Some Whtle House atdes also
argue lhal Clinton should avOid
reachmg any balanced ·budget deal
wtth Republicans, !hereby protectmg
rradruonal Democraltc soe tal programs, secunng lhe Democrauc base
vole, and demonslratmg that he IS a
pnnctpled leader.

Chnton seems to have decidedfor the moment, at least - to stde
With pohltcal guru Dtck Moms and
seek a deal wtth Republicans How-

Morton Kondracke
ever, some atdes say !hal lhe last
word has nol been heard from the nodeal lobby mstde lhe Whtte House,
headed by George Slephanopoulos,
and pohltcal observer James Carvtlle
on the outsrde
"Healed argumenls lte ahead,"
satd one Whtte House atde, contendmg thai Clinton has not dectded
whether to accepl a compromtse
Other aides hope thai Republicans
wtll do !hem lhe favor of makmg a
compromiSe tmposstble
The Carvtlle confronta11 on Slralegy ts dangerous for Clmlon because
the lrulh may be calchmg up wrth the
Democrals on Medtcare and because

Clinton mtght lose 1he advanlage
he's gamed by seemmg reasonable
on the budge!
ClmiOn's Medtcare problem was
demonstrated recently on ABC's
" Ntghtiinc ," wh1ch amounted to an
endorsement of lhe Repubhcan clatm
Ihat the GOP does nol wan I to "cut"
or "destroy" Medrcare, as Democrats relenllessly assert, but stmply
slow tis growlh by JUSt aboul lhe
same amountlhallhe Chnlon admmtstratiOn proposed tn 1ts health care
plan m 1994
"Ntghiiine" mcluded a chp of
first lady Htllary Rodham Chnlon
lesttfymg last year that lhe admmiSIrauon wanted to "slow down the
growlh" of Medtcare to around 7
percent per year, whtch ts lhe exacl
amount the Republicans have proposed
A Republican "megapoll " of
7,200 regiStered voters mdtcates thai

Appreciates residents' kindness
Dear Eduor,
Never ha'e I apprecmtcd Metgs
County and the surroundmg area as
1 do lollowmg my recent hospltaltzauon and surgery While I have
always known area restdcnls to be a
&lt;;anng, lovmg and supporttve people,
I have never feillhe full forceoflhts
hlessmg unul now.
Heanng of my senous medtcal
problems, Metgs Counuans rail ted 10
g1ve me support lhrough many cards
&lt;ails and prayers Th1s outreach
I rom famrly, fnends, ne1ghbors and
even slrangers brought sunshme to a
dark lime, gave me the ab1hty to
keep a postttve atutude and to begtn
a long and dtfficult healmg process
Hospital employees were amazed by
rhe scope of the support gtven by
lamtly and fnends, provmg to them
rhal there ts a lot to be satd for hvmg m a small lawn .
Each day I lind myself a hule

slronger and contmue 10 be blessed
wnh thts outpounng of fnendshtp,
love and support thai one doesn'l
often see m today's busy world . I
believe !hal w11h God's help and
your conlmued support my recovery
wtll he accomplished much more
swtftly !han predtclcd by my doctors
Havmg learned firsr-hand how
very much the canng card or call
means, my New Year's resolulton IS
that I will also be beuer al lendmg
such support by laking the lime to
make thai call or matl that card. I
thank each and every one .of you
from lhe bouom of my heart, and
thank God rhatl have been fortunate
enough 10 ltve and raise my family
here among the besl of God's people
God bless each and every one of
you'
Loutse Radford
Pomeroy

UQ' MOl;;, POK!i

"IMtNT~~

AtJD MA~ UIM
BUNK AGAIN

J

JUSTSIW).UP

__, .)

012 I'LL ....
•

Candidates, beware:
discuss the abortion
issue at your own risk
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Aboruon 1s becommg the "thtrd rat I" tssue m the
campa1gn lor lhe Republican pres1denUal nom maltOn- the candtdale who
!ouches 11 docs so al hiS pen I, as Bob Dole JUSt demonslrated
The Sen ale Republican leader dtdn't say anythmg stnkmg or sharply dtfocrcnt from whal he 'd satd before Whal he dtd say sounded hke common
sense. mdudmg hts suggcsuon 1hat1h1s dtvtsrve rssue shouldn't be the domananl one
To lhe absolullsls, II was heresy enough. He qutckly recanted, saymg
there 'd been nothmg new m hts commenls The safer course would have
heen to utlcr lhe pat hne agamst abortiOn and talk around lhe toptc Instead
ol musmg aboul tl on natwnaltelcviSton.
Dole demonstrated lhe polency of the tssue long ago, ratsmg tl m narrowly delealmg a Democraltc doclor who challenged htm for lhe Senate m
Kansas m 1974, JUSt a year afler the Supreme Courl dec IS ton !hal legalized
abonron.
The thtrd ratl1mage -touch lbe extra rat I thai powers eleclnc !rams and
you dtc - was Ttp O' Netll's The late speaker of the House appl ied 1110
Soc1al Secunty, saymg thai to talk about louchmg thai benefit was lo nsk
pohucal death
For Republicans seekmg nommauon m the spnnt of preSidential pnmary electiOns and caucuses next wmler, abortton ts a parallel II IS an tssue
,of absolutes 10 the Chnsttan nght and other conservatives, powerful - pernaps prvotal - votmg blocs m states like Iowa, South Carolina, and pos
~bly New Hampshtre.
: In the drvrded fields of the pnmartes, and espectally lhc caucuses. a sm:gle tssue bloc can be a maJor force for, or agamst, a candidate
. So when Dole, who spends nearly half hts Sundays on TV lalk shows
even when be tsn'l runmrlg for preSidenl, venlured tnlO an abortiOn diSCUSSIOn
tm "Meet the Press. " he talked htmsell mto trouble
NBC's Tim Russert broughltl up, askmg whelher Dole supports the ceninst Republican vtew lhal Amcncans don 'l wanlllj ban abort1on bul do want
lo discourage II
" Well . ce rtamly I wan I lo discourage abort ton
II should be 1llegal "
• Russert .. A constumonal amendmcnl Jo ban all abontons &gt;"
:- Dole " I supported thai alone 11me I would not do 11 agam
lthmk
lkere have 10 be some excepltons '
He men11oned excepltons lo save lhe life of the molher, or m cases of
r~pe or mcesl pregnanctes
"My view as a Republican cand1da1e ts lhts shouldn' t be a dommant tssue
m the Republican nom malton or lhe carrpatgn for prestdent. . We have people on both stdes of the 1ssue, Republicans who feel strongly about tl
"I 'm nottrymg 10 dtvtde the parry I wanlto mulltply Republicans, nol
dtvtde Republicans "
Bur before he can try 10 multtply lhe Republican vole agamst Prestdenl
Clmlon's re-elcclton , lhe fronl -runntng Dole needs 10 diVIde 11 in hts favor
tn the nom malton campatgn As R1chard Ntxon once observed, the feat for
a GOP cand1da1e IS 10 move far enough 10 lhe nghllo wm the nommatton,
then far enough to rhe cenrer to wm lhe elect1on
The abortton ISsue ts a case sludy Pollsler Lmda DuVall, who conducts
surveys for Texas Sen Phil Gramm, a Dole nval, says up lo 38 percent of
likely pnmary voters are opposed lo abortton nghls But a naiiOnal poll cond!Jcled lor the Times Mtrror Cenrer lhts Iall showed thai 71 percent of AmerICans agreed complelely or'moslly wnh lhe statement thai a woman's nghl
1e dectdc about abortton should be preserved A stmrlar question got similar answers four years ago
: Other surveys show that many people who support the basic nght also
are m favor of hmtls or reslncttons - for example, lhe parenral nottficati'on Dole mentioned as one lhmg thai could be done
: One lhmg lhal can 't be done ts a conslllUitonal amendment to ban aborlron, a plank m Republican platforms smce 1980. Even ardent foes of aboruon nghls acknowledge !hat there aren'tthe votes to get thatlhrough Congress, where 11 would take 1wo-1hrrds majonttes. But the platform provtston
~~a symbol anti -abortiOn Republicans are deterrnmed to preserve.
: Whtle Dole wouldn ' t stgn a pledge against any change,' he satd at 1ha1
Itine, and says now, lhat ~is record ts clearly and "conststently pro-life."
: (Walter R. Mears, vke president and columnist for The Associated
Press, has reported on Washington and national politics for more than
3ll years.)

: T&lt;lday' s Birthdays: Actor Lew Ayres is 87. Acror l.,j)u Jacobi is 82
Former United AuiO Workelll union presidenl Owen Bieber is 66. Aclress
Dame Maggie Smith is 61. Pianisl Richard Clayderman is 42. Actor Denzel Waslungton is 41

•

.

e

the pnce of hemg alive, and c\lnng
enough to slcp tnto the fray
Transformation does not come
eaSily for any of us Usually, we

Dinah Eng
dance around the posSibtltiy ol
change hke moths aui-acted 10 the
name, bul we fear gomg lhrough the
ftre . Whal, after all, wtll we become
when we emerge on the olher stde?
What tf we don 't even make tt
through the fire?
Ltke gently falling snow, a pan of
us wtll diSappear after we go through
the name
10 become somethmg
else. Just as snow melts to become
waler droplets that return to the
atmosphere. And we wtll make tl
though the name of transformatiOn,
JUSt as snow wtll return 10 lhe Earth.
I've never enjoyed snow like
those who can't wall 10 Jut the skt
slopes or sled down a wh11e-covered
h1ll Bul I've come to apprectale lis
power and beau1y
It's amazmg thai hule flakes of

frozen water can bnng cars and
planes to a hall. make people run to
the superrnarkel and Vtdeo srores and
change lhe course of everyday
evenls We can curse tls abthly to
delay our plans, or we can JUSt stop
and accepl the grft of lhe momenl
Transformation begms when we
stop and realize that change IS needed m our hves Somettmes that
awareness comes through feeling
anger or pam about somethmg m our
hves Somettmes our bodtes tssue lhe
wammg thai our mmds don'! wantlo
acknowledge.
A new study shows that men Wllh
htgh blood pressure m mtdhfe are
much more likely to have !rouble
thmkmg and remembenng rhmgs
when lhey are old We already know
that htgh blood pressure IS a nsk factor for stroke and heart diSease. Bur

Showers T·sto""s Ram

here 's a new warnmg to cons1dcr -

tf we don 'I create balance m our lives
now, we may well end up losmg
bram power later
Researchers say 1he study ftndmgs, done by experls at a Durch
tnSIHule, the UniverSity of Hawan

Dian Vujovich

good slack p1ckers wtll be rewarded
m 1996 - JUSt not as prosperously
as lhey were lhts year He also satd
thai wtth the U.S economy slowmg,
mvestors m1ght be wtse to look at the
European markets
If you've reaped the rewards ol
thiS year's markets and are wondermg whal 10 do wllh your fund
mveslmenls m lhe commg year,
don 't make any straregtc fund
changes unltl you know where you
stand today
To do thai, creale a snapshol of
your fund holdmgs Tally up the
number of funds you own, separatmg the funds by category - like
money market funds, slock funds,

(Continued rrom Page 1)
for Howard's commiSSion seat, commencmg Jan 4, 1997
James L. Davts, Mmersvtlle, also
tossed hts hal m the rmg for
Howard's seat, with h1s lale November announcement thai he wtll seek
the Democraltc nommauon for her
spot on the county commisSion
No cand1da1es have filed tn the

The Daily Sentinel
iUSJ'S Zl)-960)
Pubh~hed every ofterftoon, Mottdn~ through
Fnday ~I I Courl St Pomeroy, Ohw by the
Ohto Valley Pubh ~ htn g CompanyfGannen Co

Pomeroy Oh10 45769. Ph 992-2156 Second
cl:m po!'tnge prud ot Pomeroy. Oh1o
Membtr: l'he

(Dian Vujovich is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
Funds" and "Straight Talk About
Investing for Your Retirement,"
both of which are published by
McGraw Hill.)

A ~~OC I3ted

Press. and the Oht o

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Today in history

Sob:rienbeNJ nol d e~ 1nng 10 pay lhe c:nmer may
remit m advonce duul to The Dally Senunel
on a three, m or 12 monlh bnsu Cre&lt;ht will be
g.nen cnmer each week

By The Auoclated Press
Today_is Thursday, Dec. 28, lbe 362nd day of 1995 There are lhree
days left m lbe year,
·

28 • 1945 • Congress officially recognized the Pledge of AileOn Ibis dale:
In 1694, Queen Mary U of Eugland died at
·
·
wilb ber busband, King.William IU.
ler live years of jomt rule
In 1832• Jobn C. Calboun became lbe fll'St vice pesidenr of lbe Unilal
Slales 10 resign,llk:pping down over differences wilb Pres'dentJ~t..~
In 1846, Iowa became lbe 291b s1a1e 10 be admilled 10
U .__,.•.
In 1856, lbe 281b presidenr of lbe United Stales Th
";~
Wilson, was born in Slaunton, Va.
• omas
row

rk

to

The Datly Senunel, Ill Coun St. Pomeroy
Oluo45169

OneYenr

g~.Dec.

w1th snow-covered ground will
allow remperalures 10 drop 10 around
10 degrees 1n 1hc northwest and the
leens elsewhere
H1gh pressure wil l sellle m on
Fnday and lhe state should see some
sunslune. foreca slcrs satd H1ghs
wil l rebound mto the upper 20s and
low 30s
Generally dry and cold condl11on s
are expccled lor the New Year' s
weekend
The record-lugh temperature for
!hiS dale at lhe Columbus wcalhcr
slalton was 68 degrees tn 1984
wht le Ihe record low was I0 he low
zero m 1950.

Deadline for filing

New~pnper A~MC in flon

,

Cloudy

Emergency HEAP for lhc 1995- of a spouse or household member
The toll owmg mcome levels by
96 application penod ts tnto 1ts sechousehold
SIZe should be used lo
ond month and contmues unltl
March 15, 1996, Gaiiia-Metgs Com- delermme eltgrblllty. These mcomc
gutdcltnes represenllhc 150 percenl
munny Action Agency announced
The federally -funded HEAP calculallon and arc rcvtsed annually
Allowable mcome for a one peroffers healmg asstslance once per
healmg season on an emergency son household ts $11. 205 , 1\\0 rerbasts lor ehgtble households whose sons. $15 ,045 , three persons,
heat-relaled utthttcs are disconnecl- $18,885 , four persons, $2 2,725. IIvc
ed, threalened wtth dtsconneclton, or persons, $26 ,565 , Sl x persons.
the bulk fuel supply LS less than 10 $30,405 Households w11h more than
SIX members should add $3 .840 10
days
The Regular HEAP program al so the yearly tncome
App1Ic a11ons lor bolh programs
offers heatmg assistance once per
heattng season lo low-mcome can be made Mond.ty through Thurshouseholds to defray the h1gh cost of day from 9 am -noon and 1-3 p m
home healmg The application dead- al ellher the Gal11a Counry Oulreach
)me for Regular HEAP ts March 30. CAA office, 863 Porter Road, Poner,
1996, leavmg approximately rhree the Metgs Counly Oulreach CAA
ofhce, 39350 Umon Ave , Pomeroy,
months to apply
The mcome gutdelmes lor bolh or the central CAA ofltce, Cheshire
programs ts lhe same , However, No appl 1cattons arc laken on Fnd&lt;~y
Addillonal mformauon on rhcsc
Regular HEAP requtres lhe prevmus
12 months' mcome, wh1le lhe pas1 program s may be obtmned by call three monlhs' mcorne ts acccprablc ing lhe Cheshtre CAA olfice al 367 7341 or 992-6629 , the Galha Coun on Emergency HEAP
The 12-monlh penod or lhrce- ly Ourreach offtce at 388- R232: or
month penod for lhe mcome tesl ts · the Metgs County Outreach olftce al
dclerrnmed I rom lhe date of apph- 992-5605. The toll-rree number tor
catwn, makmg 11 posSible for some Regu lar HEAP mqutnes ts 1-800wtth decreased tncome dunng these 282-0880, or lor lhc heanng pcnods 10 qualify laler tn lhe pro- rmpatrcd with a tclecommuntca11 on
gram Examples ollhcse types ol stt- devrce or the deal, TDD 1-800-6861557
ualtons could occur f10m layoll,
slnkc, reltrcmenl, dtsabtiiiy or dealh

global funds and bond funds, calculate the value wnh each category;
then make a pte chart showmg where
- m percentages - your fund
assers are allocated Thts vtsual chan
w11l be a lernftc atd m helping you
lo see where your money is currently mvested, and m deciding what
changes you mtght want to make to
keep your long-term investmg plan
on !rack

Today's Higbligbt in His~ay:

Sunny PI Cloudy

Emergency HEAP application
period will extend to March

'

u

Ice

By The Associated Press
Nonheasl Ohto commute" !hiS
mormng had to deal wnh frccnng
dnzzlc whtle Ihe resI oil he slale JUSI
had cold wealher
Dnvmg condlltons 1n lhe northcas! were hazardous as lhe ratn
froze on contact wnh lhe cold surfaces
Tempcralures across the slate
were mostly m lhc lccns 1n lhe ear
ly mornmg hours hut had climbed
back mlo lhe 20s by daybreak as
clouds mo'vcd m, lhc Naltonal
Weather SerVlce satd.
Parlly clou dy sk1cs tomght along

For investing, 1995 was a very merry year
It's been a very merry year for
" Trams do nol go stratght up
many mulual fund shareholders But mountams -- rhey cut back and forth
tl ISn'l likely lhe markets w11l be as on the way," satd Jon S Fosse),
rosy nexl year
chatrrnan of Oppenhc1mer ManageThere's no denymg thai 1995 was
a hoi year The average stock fund
was up nearly 30 percent as of midDecember Wtlh many funds loppmg menl Corp " lnveslors who have
that m lola) returns The Perkms become ·used 10 lhc steady upward
Opponumty Fund , for one, enJoyed chmb of the (Dow Jones lnduslnal
a Iota) return of over 70 percem Average) must learn rhat ndtng out
through thai ltme penod, accordtng a correclton ts a normal pan of
1
lo Ltpper Analyltcal Servtces
tnve stmg "
H Bradlce Perry, of Davtd L
Accordmg to Fosse), ever smce
Babson &amp; Co , satd that 1995 will go 1926, I0 percenl correclwns have
down tn the record books as one of occurred every 18 months on averthe great performance years of all age The last one was more than five
ltme He pomted out th•t only twtce years ago Wtth the Dow over 5,000,
m the past 50 years have the leadmg a 500 poml move downward would
market averages nsen more than thiS not be exlraordmary A 20 percent
year's 30-plus percent advance
correcuon, lrke the one m the mtdWhal fueled !hiS year's markets 1970s, would bring the Dow down
was a combmauon of lower mteresl 1,000 pomls
rates and a srrong nse m corporare
In 1996, Fossel expecls a market
profits Thts year there has been a 20 correctiOn of 10 percent or greater m
percent mcrease m corporate profits the Dow, and he thinks that corporate
(!hat's almosl tnple the long-term profits wtll slow 10 5 percent. In
average earnmgs growth of 7 per- addttwn, he expects the yield on the
cent), and roughly a 20 percent drop 30-year Treasury bond will fall
in mteresl rales.
below 5.5 percent, and that there
Add 1o lhal a year of low mfla- may be inflatiOn fears as well
tton, and tt's easy to see why Wall
Even wtth those changes, pros
Street - and many fund investors- sull say that there's room for posttive
have been Ho Ho Ho-mg all lhe way growth m funds, provided you know
to the bank. However, predictions where to look.
about what 1996 wtll bnng aren '1
WalterS . Frank, chief investment
qutle as JOlly
(offtcer at JBC/Donoghue, said that

Flu.,;,es

Dry conditions expected
to prevai I over weekend

and the U S Nauonal Institute on
Agmg, are hkely 10 apply to women
as well
The mcenuve to creale change m
our It ves may come from anywhere
For most of us, the stan of a new
year IS a natural lranSilton pomt.
Ttme 10 make New Year's resolutions and all !hal.
The Simple act of turning the calendar page makes me feel as if I've
lurned another corner m my hfe. For
some reason, I've always thought of
January as the begmnmg of spnng,
even tf snow IS sttll falling funously oul the wmdow.
Transformaltons, after all, are
really a sea change of the mmd, and
as surely as snow comes m wmter,
spnng IS sure to follow.
(Dinah Eng is president of the
Asian American Journalists Asso·
dation and Special Se.:tions Editor
at Gannett News Service. Com·
ments about this column can he
sent to her at Gannett News Ser·
vice, 1000 Wilson Blvd., Arlington,
Va. 22229-0001.)

,

No s•b~cnpnon by ma1l pernuncd •n areas
where horne earner service 1~ avrulablc

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnskfe Meip County

13 Week•
26 Weeks. .
l2 Weeks...

S27 30
..
. .

•

.

m s2

.. . $105.66

IIIla OuJJlrk Mtlp Courrly

13 Weeks .
26 Week&gt;.
l2 Weeki

MarJOrie M Gnffllh. RO, S1ler Clly, N C , formerly of Mtddleport, dted
Sunday, Dec 24, 1995 at the Umverslly of Norlh Carohna Hosp11al , Chapel
Htl l, N C
She was born Dec 25, 1914 10 Loutsa, Ky , lhe daughter of the )ale Robert
and Maggte Lovens Meade She was a homemaker and atfiltaled w11h lhe
Church of Jesus Appsrohc Fanh. Rutland
She IS surv1ved by two suns, Homer Gnffilh Jr of Spnngfteld, and JmJmy Gnflilh of M1ddleporl , lhree daughlcrs. Mary M Swtsher of GalltpoIIS, Freda M Swan of Rutland , and Margaret Cleland of Stier Cny , and 23
grand chtldren and several grcal-grandchildren
She was al so preceded m death by her husband, Homer E Gnffuh Sr .
two sons, Bohby Gnllith and Bil ly Queen , and a brother, Harold Meade
GraveSide servtccs wtll he II am Fnday tn lhe Mtlcs Cemclcry. Rui J,tnd with local &lt;Irrangemenls under d~recl10n ol lhe B~rchllcld Funcr.il
Home Rutland No local 'ISII.tllon will he observed

Lucy McKee Reeves

,,,~,~~~

January offers 'springtime' of .renewed effort
The snow falls genlly, leavmg a
lhm layer of whtle on the streets of
Manhaltan Dciicale cryslals brush
my face and melt like magtc.
Anolhcr year has passed , and for
those of us who are Sagutanans. Plulo has moved mto our Sign, meamng
tl' s ltme for 1ransforrna110n mto
well, whale\er we wanllo be
Whtle lhe astrolog1cal stgns may
be pamcularly favorable m lhiS area
for wmtcr babtes, I lhmk 11 's safe 10
say lransforrnalton can take place for
anyone, al anyltme All we have 10
do IS dectde what we wan I, and move
forward Once we do so, the umverse
wtll move lo help us
Halfway around to world, US .
lroops are movmg mto Bosma 10
enforce a peace accord that's long
overdue. Snowfall !here hampered
tntltal efforts to transport mtiitary
personnel mto lhe country Was
nature scoldmg us for bemg so lardy
m responding to atroctlles that
dtmtntsh the meanmg of humamty?
ll's likely thai our miSSIOn tn
Bosma wtll nol end Wtlhoul accidents, mJurtes and penis But thts IS

PA

KY

(Morton Kondracke is exe&lt;u·
live editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

.

Marjorie M. Griffith

Clinton rebounds, but pitfalls are still there
when they are mforrned that the GOP
mlends 10 allow Medtcare to grow,
60 percent support lls budget.
Even so, some Whtte House atdes
contend Ihal Clinton can 'I suffer
politically from the fracas , no maller how much the medta support lhe
GOP charge that Clinton ts "demagogumg" the Medtcare tssue.
One atde satd !hat smce the GOP
takeover of Congress, semors have
moved deciSIVely back to the Democrallc Party and are likely to slay
there even 1fthe medta stde Wtlh the
GOP on the merns of the Medtcare
frghl
'Semors have a preconcet ved
no11on !hat RepubhcaM are a threal
10 Soctal Secunty and Medtcare,"
one Clinton aide sard. "They were
templed away from lhe Democrauc
Parry _II' 1994 Bul Gtngnch and lhe
orhetShave succeeded tn remforcmg
1he1r tradtttonal fears Among
semors , the game ts over"
The opposmg vtew ts that, tf
Republicans and the medta pound
home 1he pomt that Democrats are
actmg IrresponSibly on Medtcare, 11
could spread beyond the Beltway
cognoscenll and do senous damage
to Clmton 's credtbthly.
Medtcare tsn't the only danger to
Clinton's lead m lhe polls, now conSIStently runnmg 10 to 12 pomts over
Dole The perststent amnesra of
CIIniOn Witnesses before lhe Senale
Whtlewater mvesttgatmg commtllee
IS another And so is the blame thai
may be casl on Clinton for the latesl
government shutdown
It was Clinton, afler all, who
restsled for weeks acceptmg CongresSional Budge! Office economtc
esttmales as the basts of budget
negoliatlons, finally cavmg m only
lhiS week
But Whtte House atdes conlend
rhat Cltnton has not suffered rrom the
lalest shutdown and that mternal
Democratic polls mdtcate that the
public, havmg dectded m November
lhat the GOP was at fault, has c!Uried
thts notton mto lhe latest Impasse.
So, the prevatllng attttude m the
Whne House ts thai thmgs could
scarcely be belter

IDeath Notices [

$29 25 •
S$6 68
$10972

race lor lhe term of Republic an
Robert Hanenhot·h's Ierro as coun ty commrs"oner, commcnctng Jan
4, 1997
Several mcumbenl county oflictals have ftled, and are unopposed
lhus far Counly Engtneer Robert
Eason (R). Clerk of Courts Larry
Spencer (R) and Counly Recorder
Emmogene Hamthon (R) have all
ltled lhctr peltllons of candtdacy
wtlh the county board ol elecltons.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 40 1/4
Akzo .................................. 57 7/8
Ashland 011 ....................... 35 314
AT&amp;T ................................. 64 5/8
Bank One .......................... 37 314
Bob Evans .............................. 18
Borg-Warner ................. ...31 7/8
Champion Ind . .................. 22 314
Charming Shop .............. 2 15116
City Holding ...................... 22 314
Federal Mogul.. ................. 20 318
Gannett ............................. 59 -7/8
Goodyepr T&amp;R .................. 44 1/2
K-man ................................. &amp; 518
Lands End .................... ..... 13 518
Limited Inc ........................ 15 7/8
Peoples Bancorp................... 23
Ohio Valley Bl}nk .............. 35 1/2
One Valley ......................... 31 1/4
Rockwell .......................... 52 5/8
Robbins &amp; Myers ..............28 112
Royal Duleh/Shell .......... 139 7/8
Shoney's Inc ....................... 9 7/8
Star Bank .......................... 59 1/2
Wendy lnt'l. ....................... 20 7/8
Wonhlngton Ind ............... 191/2

Luc y Fran cts McKee Reeves o'J Pomeroy d1ed Wedncsd,ty, De c 27
I Y95 .tl Veterans Memon,rl Hosp1t.tl
Born Ma y 7, 1926 1n Glouslcr daughter olthc late Clarence ,ond A nn ie
McKee, she all ended the Rutl.lnd Frccwrll Baplrsl Chur&lt;h
She IS s urv1 vcJ hy a d.1u ght cr Jo .tn C.trol 0 1ler ol Middlepo rt .1

~0 11

James Rol,tnd Reeves ol Chcslmc. ll vc grandchildren and l1 ve greal -gl.tnd&lt;htldren, lhrcc SISiers , Edn.t Ste"arl, With whom she made her home , and
Helen Pari low bolh ol Pomeroy. and VIOle I Slover ol Galltpolt s, 1wo hroth
ers, Rtchard McKee ol Rae me and Jack1e McKee of Waynesvtlle , Mo and
several n1cces .md nephews
She was also ptccedcd 111 death by her hushand. John Henry Reeves. on
Feh 14, 1972,1wo sons Jerold Leroy Reeves and John We sley Reeves and
three stslers , Dor.1 Pence Ilie . Freda H.1rmon and Lucille Lcwt&gt;
Servtces will he I p m Fnday m Ihe Rulland Frcewtll Bapltsl Church
w11h the Rev Paul T.tylor olliuaung Bun al wtll follow m Gravel Htll Cemetery, Cheslme Fn ends m.1y c.tll .11 the FISher Funera l Humc, M1ddlepor1 .
from 7-9 1on1ghl and al lhe church Fnd ay Irom 10 am unlll the ltme ol
SCfVI CC

Vada Nease

White House denies larger
role for troops in Bosnia
WASHINGTON (AP) - Even
be lore US soldters lmtsh 1he1r f~rs l
bndge mlo Bosma, CIInron admtn tstrauon offtc 1als already are saymg
there wall be no " mt ss ton creep " m
lhe former Yugos la vta
A lop Pentagon general sa1d
Wednesday thai lhe placement ol
U S radar unHs 111 the Fn:n&lt;.: h·proll: t..:t cU SaraJ e vo a r l'.l 1~ tl: mpor.try

und re presen ts no cxpanl\ton ol th e

US rule

Lt Gen Huv. ell Estes also g.tvc
.tssur.mccs there will be no .u..: tn c
pursuit of .H.:t:uscd war crumnals,
,til hough Ihey w1ll he ,UTested II U S
or ' •ther lor&lt;cs h.tppen upon them
Scnslll\ c lu miiCI Sill lhatthc U S
deployment of 20,000 troop s to
northcastcm Bosma maml y to pro
let: I the I uzla .trc a ma ght become a
counu yw 1dc elfon domm ared hv
l l S I&lt;&gt;J ccs. Pcnlagrrn and St,llc
dqli.trtmcn t ol fic mls tssucd dcnt,tls ol
. 1 W,tshm gton Post report th:..~t the
r. ul.tr pl..~e c m c nt w.l s a stgmlu..:.mt
l'Xfl.ln st on

ol US rcspunsJhi! Jtt cs

I 'WouiJ .trguc wllh

th ust.: th.ll

'I'"'"

Rebecca L. Williams
Rebecca Lynn William s 36, New Haven, W Ya, dted Tuesday, Dec 26
1995 al lhe Char lesiOn Area Med1cal Cenler '
Botn Feb 14, 1959m Columbus , d.tughtcr ol Glenna Jean Wholey Dav1 '
of R1o Grande, and E ~ an R Reese ol Oak Htll , she was a licensed pracll cal nurse at Poml Ple.1san1 Nursmg and Rehabi111atton Center, a graduate
of lhc Buckeye Htll s School of Nursmg and Oak Htll Ht gh School
She was preceded m dealh by her maternal grandfalher. Etsle R WhoIcy and palernal grandparenls, Evan Reese and Jantc Sheperd Reese
Surv1vmg are hu sband, Dan tel Williams: a son, Scoll A Martm ol New
Haven, a daughler, Cnsttna N Manm of New Haven, a stepson, Geolf Marlin uf New Haven . a brother. Rtckey L Reese of Portsmouth . a half-Sislcr.
R11.t Jane Reese, a half-brallier, R11ch1e Reese of Oak Htll , and her maternal grandmolher, Mary M Wholey Hammond ol Patnot
Scrvtce wtll be I p m Salurday 1n lhe W1lcoxen Funeral Home. P01n1
Plc.tsanl W Ya wtth Rev Fred McCallister oflicmung Bunal will be m
the Concord Cemerery Fnends may call allhc luncral home from 7-9 p m
Fnd.ty
(Continued from Page))

mph
"I have been conlacled by anumber of consuruenls who want lhe
speed hmllto be re asonable and safe ,
bul allhe same lime, nol so slow Ihat
11 hampers effrc tency and economtc
devcluprncnt," he added

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admrsswns - none
Wednesday dtscharges - Ray mond Cunnmgham, Syracuse
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. 27 - Mrs
M1chael Brace and daughler, Kalllyn
Spees, Tracy Turner
Birth - Mr and Mrs Steven
Suver, daughler, Gallipol ts
(Published with permission )

The old nauonal lnntt of 55 moh
was sel m 1974 m response 10 fuel
shortages and nsmg gas pnces LeglSI alton approved by Congress recogmzed the developmenl of more
fuel -cflictenl vehtcles smce !hen and
was destgned to rclurn lhe power 10
sel lhe hmll to the states
Ellmmatton ol the speed lnml was
pan of a btl I thai gran led $6 5 mti IIon for 1he repa~r of 160,000 miles'
worlh of nalwnal htghways
The move 10 ratse lhe slalc limtl
has been mel wllh cauuon by sal ely
agcnctcs, rnclud1ng rhe Stale Hi ghway Palrol. wh1ch has Clled slall sllcs
10 prove Increased speed boosts 1hc
posSibtiiiy of falal .tnd IOJUry -rclal cd acctdenrs
In 1994, excessiVe speed was
respon stble for 8.323 olthc acc1dents
the patrol tnvcstt galcd satd Sgl
John Born. the palrol's public tnl ormallon offtccr

are saymg, ' Isn'l 1Im mtsSion
creep 1"' Es les satd al u Pentagon
bnefmg "I would say absolurely
not The mtsston has n' l changed "
Th e A1r Force ge neral sa1d 1wo
radar un11 s. de stg ned to prolecl
.tgwn st tm:ommg arttllery wou ld he
1n place al SaraJeVo for onl y 30 days,
.tiler wlmh Ihe y wo uld he moved 111
the Tu li a area. where the hulk of
20 ()(}() US forces will be hased
A.., nl Wednesday. cngmce nn g.
ur11t s were stru gg ling lo hutld two
pontoon hndgt:s ano ss the swollen
S . 1va R1 vc r o n the C ro,ttJ a n¥BosnJ,m
h( )Jder lor the m.1Jn J cp loynwnt ul'
US lon..: cs Un thc II VC r s Cru,Jtl .m

hank. the '" " ol l l pl anned lJ S
t ~.: nt u tu:s was bc JTJ g c.:rcctcd lor th l.!
yc.1 rlong opcr.JtJ un
Esh:s sa1d some U S lorccs h&lt;Jvc
hccn cxpct.: tcd &lt;t il .llo ng to ope rate
outside th e northc.t,tc rn sct:t or ol
Bosn ia
St.ttc Depart me nt spokesman
Glyn Davi es ab o s.uJ pl .lt.:cmc nt ol
the radar unJI\ w.1s t.:o nsJ, tr nt wit h
the U 5 IIJI S~ I O !l

Meigs announcements
Office to remain open
The Mc1gs Count y Treasurer 's

Oll1ce wil l he ope n .ill day Fnday
.tCCO H.h ng 10 r rl' ~ s urc r Howard
Frank Other t: ourthousc offiL:cs will
~.: l ose

at n()( )n

New Yr~r's Eve scrv1ce

I he Mount Ol1 vc Cumm un11 y
Church will hold a New Yeat 's l:ve
worstup sc-r vJcc, bcg1nrun g at 7 pIll
and lasnng unt1 i lll1dm ghl The puhlll IS ln VI ICJ to ,Jitc nU

l,lanning sessmn set

Vada Nease, Kl , Kenuv.1, W Ya d1cd Monday Dec 25 , 199S due IO an
aulo accident .tl Apple Grove, W Va
Born Nov 5. 1914 m Hanlord, WVa, daughter olthe late Lawrence and
Kathryn Moore Weaver, she
reltred medtcal secrelary for the feder al governmcnl
She was a member ol Ihe Ftrsl Church ol God. Kenova, Ihe Amcncan
Rose Soc1el) and the Honor.1blc Order of Ihe Kenlucky Colonel
She was al so preceded m de.llh by her husband , Pearl G Nease
.Surv JvJng arc ~~o cve ral cousml\ , mcces and nephews
Servtces will be I p m Fnday tn lhe Foglesong Funeral Hotnc. Mason.
W Va , wuh the Rev Harley Johnson olftctalmg Bunal will be m the Bro.td
Run Cemelcry Fnends may call atlhe funeral hom e from 6-8 lomght .tnd
one hour pnor 10 lhe servtccs Fnday

Carey calls for

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

Da v1d M.lll' ol the Educ.III Onal
Oppor1un1l y Ccn lcr wtll he ,11 the
Mctgs County Puhl1 c Library 1n
Pumero y on J,m I() I rom 7 -~ p m
He wrll prov1de personal c.trccr and
cJuc~ltJon counscl1ng lorrcsH
.knts ul
Mctgs County No L h.~rgc f or rnorc
mlormat1on or a spcL: J,tl appomtmcnt
c,tll 1-614-75 1-1511 e&lt; l 107
Services slated
F.uth Full Gospe l Church. Lon g
Bonom, will hold a New Ye.tr 's Eve
SCrV ICC ,It Y pIll With speu dl speak er KCilh Rshon Relrcshmcnt s will
he served Pastor Sieve Reed tnVIlC s
1he public
Service slated
Belie vers l'cllowshlp MtniStry
New Lun.r Ro.1d , will hold 1ls Ne"
Yc.tr's Eve scrvtcc startmg ,\t 7 p m
puhlic welc ome
Service planned
Mount Umon Bapltsl Chur&lt;h . on
Co unry Road IO oll Swr e Roul e 141,
Carpenter wil l hold .1 New Yc.tr s
Eve set vice starling ,11 ~ p 111 wllh
spcL htl spc.tkcr:-i, spcu~d ,1/lJ lm:,tl
s1n g1ng PL~ s tor Joe N S.tyrc Jn vllcs
lhe publ1c
Organizational meeting
The Orange Township Bo.ud ul
Truslecs wtl l hold tls organiZallono~ l
mcctmg Monday, S p m at the lwme
ol Ihe clerk Po~lly Ca l.tway
Grange team to meet
Star Grange 77~ second degree
ream will pracltcc Fr~day. 6 30 p m
all he grange hall on Counly Road I
near Salem Cen ter All tc.un mem bers requcslcd lo aucnd

Reedsville man
cited in accident
A Rccdsvtlle man Wds u tcd lor
assured clear d1stancc hy thl: G.tlll ttMctgs Posl of lhc St.11e H1 gh""Y
P.1trol tolhlwmg a two -v d11d e ,1\.LJ
dent Wednesday on OII Vl' ro\1 nshl p
Ro,td 264 (Oshorn)
Troopets satd Olt vcr f. So~\fc Ill
19. 'i0240Townsh1p R o&lt;~u ~~;2 w o~ s
wcsthnund I 1 nu !e..; Wl'"- 1 " ' Coun
ty Road 46 (Success ) ,11 II IS am
whe n he was unable to :-.tnp 1n lime
and slruc k the rear ol a car dn vcn hy
Connte K Sc•mel sbergcr. 41 , al so of
50240 Town shtp Ro.td 262
Semelsbct gcr h.td slowed her c.tr
at the t1mc ol the i.u.:udcnt , a\.: t.:un.J :
mg to the report
Damage W,ls moderate to s.,yrc's
p~ekup and Seme lsbcrgcr's c,tr
·

Meigs EMS runs
Unlls ol lhe Met gs County Emcr:
gcn cy Mcdtc.tl Scrv1cc ans we red
nmc t lllls for d.SsJs tomu.· Wednesday
1n c l udm ~ lour tran sfer calls Unus
respnnd1ng mcluded
OLIVE TWP.
3 52 p m , Moun! Ol1ve Ro.td
Cody Banoc, O ' Blcncss Mcmon,ti
Hospllal
POMEROY
~ 44 .t rn
Mulhcny Avenue .
Lucy Reeves Vetcr.ms Mcmonal
Hospll.tl .
2 04 p m , West Mam Slrecl
Florence Rohtson, VMH,
',
II 59 p m . volunleer ltre departmen! .md squad lo SlaiC Roure 143
clcllncal f1re al Ladonna Mtntl res:
1tlcnu:, no lnJuncs

RACINE
7 05 p m , Dcw111 s Run Road,
Jul1c rhompson. VMH

APPLIANCE RECYCLE DAY
FRIDAY- DECEMBER 29
Location Office Parking Lot
Union Ave. Pomeroy
• Unload appliances at end of parking lot
• Must be before 4 pm Friday

Meigs Co. Recycling &amp; LP for information - Ph. 992-6360

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
!' COLONY THEATRE :

••

TONIGHT
JIM CARREV IN

••
'•

;;;;

VENTURA, WHEN

•• NATURE CALLS .. ,
• ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
•
• STARTING FRIDAY

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy· Mason Bridge
992-2588
VINTON
Gallia Counly Display Yard
155 Main St.
388·8603

•••'
•••
•

PIERCE BROSNAN IN

JAMES BOND,
GOLDENEYE ~ ..
441Hl923

••
•~

•$30couple
• $20 single

••
•••

"'''"

TDY

-·-·-

..

••

•

lltltl4

-

non

IIOWII'Gl
too.\1' thru JUUUI 1ST
1 1If JsOO 7: 10 I100

Stock repons are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

•••
•

(G)

Dec. 29 and 30 • 9 p.m. 'til 2 a.m.

•••

�Thursday, December 28, 1995

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Page4
Thursday, December 28, 1995

doesn ' t work when a learn has to
catch up - went out of style years
ago.
The Red Raiders bolted to an 18-

potnt halftime lead against Air Force
in the Copper Bowl. then put the
game out of reach with another
surge tn the second half.

"It fe lt like for the first time th1 s
year we looked good for all 60 min utes." Zebbic Lcthridgc said
Wednesday ni ght after directing a

Southern girls tally 41-36 win over Wellston
The Southern Lady Tornadoes
placed lis,. players m the scoring column , and were led by another good
performance hy junior center Renee
Turin . as thcv defeated Well ston 41 _1(1

Both tcatm played a ltght game
earl s. '" the Golden Rocket s held a
..,J im K-7 lead after one quart~r
Sn uthcrn hrokc ou t on a I 0-5 run
dunng the final X:OO of the quarter
to lead .11 the half by a 17- 13 score.
Turl ey led the way for Southern
Ill the fJp.,t half. IJ y \C Oflll);! S\VCn of
her 1-1 points tn the first 16:00. The
TnrnaJocs rece ived balanced sconng
dunng the first half. with Briannc

Proffit! adding four and l onna cd Southern in a close bailie by a 22Manuel adding three. Bea Lisle and 2 1 margin. K1m Sayre led Southern·'
Cy nthi a Caldwe ll also scored during with n1ne pnmts Jenny Roush added
the first hall fur Southern .
se ven . while Darlena Flowers each
In the second half. Southern co n- had fi ve. Wellston was Jed hy Cara
tinued 11s control of the Golder Walters ' 10 points:
Rockets wnh great delensive play.
-*-*The Tornadoes posted 12 steal s on
Southern
the night. many of which came dur (7-10-10-14=41)
ing the fmal 1wo quarters.
Becky Moore 2-0-1/2=6, Bea
WclbHm ou tscored s{lUthcrn II - ' Lisle 2-0-01 1=4. lonna Manuel 4-010 in the thi rd quarter, hu t Southern 113=9, Renee Turley 4-0-517= 14.
had the I m.1l wnrd hy outscoring Brianne Proffit! 4-IJ-012=8. Totals:
Wellston 14-12 during the fmal quar- 16-0-7/15=41
ter to seal the f1 \ '1.' point v1ctory
Total FG: 16-61 (26.2 %)
Reserve notes: Well ston JcfeatRebounds: 29 (Proffill I0)

Assists: 9 (Caldwell 3)
.Steals: 12 (Caldwell 3J
Thrnovcrs: 18
Wellston
(8·5·11 ·I 2=36)
Andrea Wyall 1-0-0/0=2. Mandee
Argahnght 4-0- 114=9. Sandy Sickles
1-0-2/3=4, Nikkt Downey 1-0010=2. Dana Stevison 4-0-214= I 0,
Mandy Leach 4-0- 112=9. Totals:
15·0·6/15=36
Total FG: 15-48 (31.2o/rJ
Rebounds: 40 (Leec h II)
Assist.: 7 (Stevi son 3)
Steals: 9 (Argabright 4)
Thrnovers: 22

Newark Catholic boys get by Southern 55-53
The Newark Cathnl1 c Green
Wave. led hy the 20 pntnl pcrforlllclllLc o f 6-foot - 1 sc mor Mall
Wal :-. 11. n uh corcd Snuthcrn 12 -6 in
th,· f1na l quarter to hold off Howie
Caldwell\ Ttlfnadocs 55 -53.
Sou thern contm lled the early
.-.tagc" of the gJrnc.jumping up to :l
,·nllllll.llldlnc 12-6 lead after one
~uartcr nf l1lay Newark Catholic
cuuntcn:J hy mJk1ng a 25 -16 run in
the final X·()() of the first half. to lake
a narrow 31 -2X lead atlhc half.
The Tornadoe s t l -5) controlled
r lay throughout much of the second
hall·. kcymg a 19- 12 run to give
Suuthern back the lead heading into
1hc li11a l quarter. Sp ike Rizer and
I1 dlll Harmon we re each big contnhu t o r~ to the Turnadocs' scoring
dunng th1 s run. as hoth finished with
J o uhlc- d1 gi t ..;corin g mghts.
The Green Wave wok control of
f11 ul ~ 1tuations late in the contest to
rul l ahead of Southern late, outscor"' ~ the Tornadoes by six pomts in the
f1nal L1Uartcr to come away with the
\ ' ICt o r v .

Th ~ v..: in was the lin.;t of the sea""' tor Newark Catholic ( 1-6). ·

Reserve notes: Newark Catholic
stupped Southern 72-38. Ryan Jones
: led NewarJ.; Catholic Wtlh 16 points.
:No -..cor1 ng for Southern was avail • ahlc .

• The future: The Tornadoes will
: f1,1SIIheir firSI home game of the sea: ..,u11 FnJ.1! n1 ght when Nom1 Pcrsin's
• C h ~·..,arL· akc P:ullhcrs invade thr
: Chc~rk..,

Ha)n13n Gymnasium.
· R L· ~cnL' tip timl' 1s 6 p.m., immedi -

: ale is- full u\\cd hy the varSity game .

( 12·16·19-6=53)
Nurns 1- 1-010=5. Evan s 1- 1.11-hX. Maynard 2-1- 112=8. Rizer 50-616= 16. Harmon h-0- I 12= 13.
Buck ley 2-0-010=4. Totals: 17·3·
10114=53
Total FG: 20-55 (36J SI )
Rebounds: 20 (Harm o n ~ ~
Assists: 16 (Norris 4)

Turnovers: II
Total fouls: 20

I
NEWARK CATHOLIC
(6-25-12-12=55)
Labuda 2-0-012=4. Walsh 5-010114=20, Kloekner 4-3-0/0=17 ,
Stevens 1-0-213=4, Gress 1-0-010=2,

Men's
levi Denim Jeans
I

Negalc 2-0-4/4=8. Totals: 15-.l16/23=55
Total FG: 18-48 (37.5 %)
Rebounds: 32 (Walsh II )
Assists: 7 (Walsh &amp; Richardson
2 eac h)
Turnovers: 16
Total fouls: 13

Men's WinJer

OSU &amp; Nike

5

34.00

5

23.99

Men's Long &amp; Short
Sleeve Dress Shirts

0% Off

Men's Suits

Oo/o Off

1-Lot of school

Ja(kets
1/2 Price

, "'"I

THE SALE OF ALL SALES
s
8
tit SAVE tf
THOUSANDS
~F DOLLAR'

''

That's right! Save thousands of dollars on our Sale Prices.
Our loss won 't be your gain if you don't stop anU compare
prices. This is the best time of the year to buy that vehicle
you've been wanting!

N.A.D.A. Book Retail and Our ~~;: ::: g~: SALE PRICES

By FRED GOODALL
TAMPA . Fla. (AP) - A new
co ach 1s just pari of the grand plan
Ill make the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
more competitive .
The perennial ce ll ar-dwellers
fired Sam Wyche after fo ur losing
seasons Wednesday, but finding the
ri ght replacement isn ' t the leam"s
JJnly priority thi s winter.
Owner Malcolm Glazer purchased the Bucs for a record $ 192
million last January and insists the
franchise has to have a new stad1um
to have a better chance to he suL: ccssful.
"We're trytng to do the he91 we
can 10 win foothall games. That's
what we ' re in the business to do,''
ge neral manager Rich McKay said
afte r announcing that Wyche will not
return for the final seaso n of a five year contract.
"We're m the husmcss to win
football game s. The coaehmg situa tion clearly tics mto winning .. and
understand that the stadium issue tics
directly into winntng Don'tth1nk il
doesn't. With free agency, if yo u' re
nul financially competitive , yo u' re
go ing to wake up and you're gomg
tn he wiped out ..
Plans to build a new $168 million
stadium 10 Tampa have stalled , and
Glazer is exploring option :-. lor relocation while maintainm g that his
preference still is to get a deal here .
Among the cities that could land
the Bucs as early as nex t sc~J so n arc
Cleveland. Los Ange les and Orlando. The Glazers reportedly have also
contacted Hartford, Conn., to find
out what that city might have to
oiler.
McKay declined to answer specilic questions about effort s to find
a Sladiurn deal. but stressed that
Wyche' s job won't be filled on the
has is of fan opinion or a candidate's
pqlcnlialto sell tickets.
"Yo u don't make thi s on emotional factors . You make it based on
what's best for the li&gt;otba llteam. You
make it on what gets thi s team to the
ne' l level ," he said.
Wyche. who led the Cincinnati
Bcngals to the 19H9 Super Bow l,
compiled a 23-4.1 record with Tam pa Bay, including this year's 7-91in ish that normally would have been
good enough to ensure h1s return.
But the Bucs lost seven of their last
nine games after a 5-2 start.
The dismiSsal came one day after
the Ariwna Cardina ls fired Buddy

Ryan, who the Bucs passed over in
1992 to hire Wyche because of his
reputation as a motivator and offensive innovator.
tl&gt;
The Bucs haven't finished with a

winning record or made the playoffs
since going 5-4 during the strikeshortened 1982 season. The 1995
team remained in contention for a
postseason berth until the 15th game,

despite the second-half nosedive.
Wyche's firing was all but guaranteed when the Bucs closed out the
season with lopsided losses to NFC

Central rivals Chicago and Detroit.
The coach didn't help himself when
he benched second-year quarterback
Trent Diller '" favor of the even-less-

experienced Casey Weldon against
the Lions.
Wyche declined to answer ques~
lions at a press confe"rence .

Scoreboard
Basketball

NCAA Division I
men's scores

NBA standings

East
Boston Co llege 116. Long Island Unt\

EASTERN CONFERENCE

81

Atlanti( Divisiun

l!: L f&lt;L

Iwn

Or!ar1do
New York
Mtamr
W~shrngwn

Roston .
New Jent:y

Pluladclplua

22
19
14
l.l
12

6 786
1 71 1
12 ..'i JR
Jl
'100
14 46 2

10

1.~

~

20

!il!

Connecncu1 77, Coil. ol" Charleston bll

Fla lntemauonal82, Columbta 67
Southl!m 96. N C. - Greer~sboro 7R
Tennesc;ee 'iii . Mmm1 (Ra) ~4

R
&lt;J

10 :'i

15

!I .'i
9.'i
10
10 5

Southwest
Texas QIJ . Lamar 82

II

Far West

ll
'\

Fresno St 75. St Mary' s. Cal 74
Utah IO!t C:~l Sr -Fullerton 58
Washrngton St 90, San Jmc St. 74

1~

Midwrst

I&lt;am

San Amomo .
Utah .
Denver
D;11la\
Mmnewta

. .20
17
IK

v~ n.,o u ver

.

R

Kenlw: ky 90. Rrder 6~

! ~

R 680
lJ

667

15

12 15

444

7

IK

280

7

IM
24

2~0

15
II 5
II 5

14l

!(J

~

lona 70. St. John 's 57

(ill

714

Pacifit Oivision

Seatllc .
18 8 .692
Sacramento
I0
CJ
040
LA. Lakers.
I&amp; I I .'\52
Phocnu .
12 J.l .480
Portland .. .
.. 12 l.'i 444
L. A Clippers ..... II 17 393
Golden State ... ... 10 17

Rainbow Classic-first round
Khodc Island ~N. HaWJH 74
Sy ra~: u sr 7~. llhnots 64

Sacrum("nlo Holiday Clu~ic•firsl round
Gcor!!e W,tshmg ton 98. S:tL' r.tnlcnr u
St Kl
Idaho 6.'1. Old Dumrruon .'\~

I '\

:no

Clas~ic

5
5..'1

Sierru Mediral Center Sun
Fint round

65
8
8 .'i

Texas·El Paso 69. L1 Salle62

~

Wednesday•s scores
LA. Clippers 116, Charlotte 101
Was hingtor~ 115, Golden State 94
Milwaukt--e 99. Minne£Oiil 9J (QT)
Phoenix IO.'i, Philadelphm 90
Ponlomd J 15, Bostor~ 109
Seatrle 99. Denver R~

E Midugan 9J, Te~as Ted177

UNO Christmas Cla~~ir.first round
New Orl etlns 94, San Frart l." ISCO 84
lOT)
V;r Commonwealth 66, Ja~kson St 48

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Ada .'\2, Ridgemom 41
Akron St V-St M MI. Maplt· Ht s. M
Amherst !!!4. Vermilion ~4
Barberton 79. Eli da .~5
lJCiL ~ h wunt.l 68. Middldidd Cardinal

Tonight's games
Mramt at lndrana, 6 p r11
CLEV LEAND ~~New York. 7 lOp m
Toronto nt Detroit , 7:10pm
Vancou\et at Dallas. R JO p m
Nrw Jersey at Houston. 11.10 p m
Mmncs01a at Utah. 9 p m.
San Antnnto J l LA Lakers. 10 10
p nr

61
Relllft' 1!0. Parkersburg (W Va) C:t th
46

Dcnjamtn Log.m 66, Sprtng North ·
ea~ t crn .~K

,

Bethel hte 6LJ. Wahon (Ky) Vrnm a

Friday's games

Fu ll ~

49. Co l. Brookhaven

l.11ram Cath 49. ElynaCath 44
~hnetm 69 Wdh amsto~, W Va. 2.'i
r&gt;.tU"ron Pleasunt99. (ol cademy 77
1\bs~ rllon 52. Umumown ~ake .'iO
Middletown 78, Mt lford ~ I
Mrd view 6l Col umbra 49
Ntw Phrladdphr:r M , P~ekerrng tnn '\~
New Rr chmond 78. Ludlow . Ky , 54
Ncw.:.rk Cath . ~5 . Ractnc Southern 53
Olmsted Falls H4. Sandusky 70
P~nn~ Val Forge 8\ Parma 11
S Central 79. Mansfield St Peter 's 66
Shaker Hl s 52. Euchd .~0
Suuthtn!Eton Ctnlker 65 . Mtneral
Ridge .'i~
Sprrng Shawnee 85 , Sprmg North 82
(OTJ
St Henry 107, Ansorua 40
St Mary ~ 61. Sidney 59
Stcutwmville tiK. Rrver Vi~w 59( .~ OT)
Str1w 74. Newark, NY 56
Sylv ania Nurth\lcw 5:'i. Sylvant.r
Southvrew .'\4
Tiffin Cat vert 78. Cardrnnl Strr h.:h 52
Trotwood Mo.d1son 69. Day . Chamr ·
naJc-Juhenne .l2
Unnersity 64, Clc Catholrc 61 (0T)
W Gcauga .' ll Kent Romevch 46
W Urtron 5H. Malll:hc srcr 45
Warren Kennedy 71, Lordstown 6 1
Wi\lnughb~ S H6. K1rt !and 77
Worthington Kilhntrrru· 71 Dublin
S.:mtu 7.1
Yt1u Bu;rrdm;w M. Strother ~ 42
Yuu Ea~t4 .l. You Mooney 41
l.Jncs\'tllc llJ . Crrnhmlgc .l S

nal

~6

Crn AnJcrwn 61 , Lmeland ~)
On Oak Hills .\0. Crn St. Xavter 47
On ·1urptn 6.'\. Clennont Northca~lcrn

12
Cle Lrn\:o ln W 76. Warrensvrl !c Ht ~

74
Col DeSales KH. Prir r ~:c tun , N J 70
Col Rcm1y 7(). Manon Ci1th . .'i7

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Akron Ftre s tone .tO Pcn1n sula
W oodndge .16
Akrurr Ga1 frcld 66. Akrl&gt;u Elm~ U.'i
Akron Spnr1g ~0. CantonS .11
Arnhcrst 44 , Mtdv1ew .1 I
Avon Lake 51, Lnrarn South view .17
Bedf11rJ 49, M cr~ tor 4/i
B~rk s h1rc 4.\. Auror;r J I
BruuklieiU 76, Fane II. I' a 4K
Uudcye V~l 'ili. Brg Walmrt ~9
C:uro lllorl 58. E L•vcrpoo14)

Oi~&lt;ision

n t. r

Fl unlJ.r
NY R.ru ~c r s
J'hii .LlJdphL J

Z.'i t!
2l II)
:! I II
lfl l'i
I ~ 17

Wa ~ tung trm

Nev. Jersn

2

fu. UI lid

6

5
\
-'

Tarnp.r B11).
!.1 l 'i 6
N Y hi:LllJl' rS H 22 0

Hu!l~1o

ltmron
H:nt!or,l
Utl a&gt;I .L

I-I l-1
I\ !X
~

ltJ I

r~~r.nuo
Clu ~ J g o
S1 l.nms

1111 ~ h
It• I~
! ~ \(,
I~ 17

Wrnnrpe!!
l&gt;.dl.t ~

IU \ ~
fllttifir

EJnh&gt;lll urr
1\nahetm

I~

I'J r1

~~ ~~'

CalgJry
San Jn~e

I 0 ~0 7
II ~ 4 .t

Men's Sweater Vest

75k, auto., air, cass, tw, cc, pdf, V-6.

I

Us( Prce

.
.
.
FaoOTJ F&gt;ooate .
Oploo Pkg OtSCOtlll
GMAC ! S1 T1m&amp; Bvyer
Alowai!Ce To
auatlte!! BuyJJTS .

1991 FORD AEROSTAR XL EXTEND ..•• $7495 $163

77k, auto., air, am/fm, tw, cc, pdf, 4.0 L engine.

Men's Work Pants
Uniforms Shirt

1991 FORD AEROSTAR XL. ...........•.•... $7275 $157

Tom Peden Di!roUrl .

L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ J S&gt;'e Pr!c'

75k, auto., dual air, cass, tw, cc.

0

$99

1990 FORD J;&amp;l.;tx 2 DR ..................... $2995

$9,450

$50

BRAND NEW '96 CHEVY S.SERIES PICKUP

1990 CHEV. CAVALIER SW CL... ........... $4100

$77

83k, 5 spd., alr,.r.'

60k, auto., air, am/lm, tw, cc.

Jantzen
Sports Wear

· Driver's SKJe Air Bag
• Rear Ani1-Loci&lt; Brakes
• Power Sleenng

1990 CHRYSLER LEBARON 2 DR ........ $5800 $120

72k, auto., air, cass., tw, cc, pdl, pw, V·6.

Alfred Dunner
Selections

0°/o Off

1990 NISSAN PU ....•..•........•.............•..... $5000 $99
57k, 5 spd., cass., sunroof.
1989 OLDS CUT. SUPREME 2 DR.' ....... $4295 $139
90k, auto., air, am/fm, tw, cc.
1989 JEEP COMANCHE PU ..............•... $4375 $109
73k, 4

spd .. radio.

1988 FORD MUSTANG GT CONVT...•... $8750 $251

58k, auto., air, cass., tw, cc, pdf.

...

No Doc Fees Delrvered'

___js21,950

L _ __

BRAND NEW '96 CHEVY K-1500
EXTENDED CAB 4x4

· V~ Powet
· AutomatiC

· Po.,r Steenng
• Po.,r Bral&lt;es
• 414
•AM/FM Cassette
• M Cond!Uon
• T1R Sleem'lj
• Drivers Side Air Bag •Cruise Control
• 4Wlieet
·Custom Ckllh Split
Anlt-locl&lt;
Brakes
Bench SealS
~__:.:.;_::_;;_::_;~

· Deep Ttnled Glass
· Chrome AppeaTance
Pad&lt;age
· Chrome Rear
Slep Bumper
• Alummum Wheels

· Well Equ!Jped'

1Save '2947l

1986 PONTIAC FIERO GT ..........•.•........• $4995
1986 PONTIAC FIERO SE ...................... $2995

69k, auto., cass., tw, pw, pdl, V-6

.. $2Q,200
Tom Peden OISCOllll . · $1 ,830

$64

List Pnce .
$22 .480
&lt;Ji;!oo Pkg. DtSGOUrt . . · $800

Tom Ped&lt;n ~scoonl. · $1 640

Sale Price

BRAND NEW 95 CHM G-20 3/4 TON
CONVERSION VAN
1

• Driver S.de Air Bag
• Anti-Loci&lt; Brakes
• Ail Condil!on
• Automa11c Overdnve

69k, auto., air, cass., pw, sunroof, V-6.

Ladies Blouses
Long &amp; Short Sleeves

• Vista Bay Windows
• Power Sle&lt;Jing
• Power Brakes

• lndli€CI L1ghl1ng
• PTemium Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion

· Power Windows
• Power Loci&lt;s
• Tilt Steering
• Cru1se Conl!ol
· AMIFM Cassette
• 4 Captam Cha~rs
• Sola/Bed

• AltJmrnum

Running Boards

• Loaded'

1981 CHEV. EL CAMINO PU .................. $2495

s19,950
BRAND NEW '96 BUICK REGAL SEDAN
• Air COJJdijlOJI
· A~omai!C
· Dual A1rbag
• 4 Wheel AnteLock
Brakes
• Power Steering

· Powa Brakes
· Power Dolll Loci&lt;s
• Power Windows
• AWFM Cassette
•!itt Sleenng

• Pear Defogger
· Cuslom Cto~ nletior
• Styled Wheels
, LoadeJ'

BRAND NEW '96 CHEVY BLAZER 2DOOR 4x4
• 414
• Air Condilton
• 4300 Vortec V-6
Power
• Driver •de A1rbag
· 4 Wheel Anti-Loci&lt;

• Power Steering
• Power Brakes

· AM/FM Stereo
· Delay Wipers
• Console

·Custom Cloth InteriOr
· Rear Loci&lt;mg
Dtfferenttal

• Well EQUipped!

Brakes

113k, auto., air, am/fm, cass., V·8.

Ladies Dresses

1980 CADIL~-"SSLLE •.................... $2495

8ave'1830

92k, auto., air, am!fr1it1P,t'r, pw, pdl.

1 Rack Ladies Suits

DESCRIPTION

CODE:

Ladies Jackets

BAHR CLOTHIERS
I I
145 NORTH SECOND AVE.

-$24.897
- S700
-$2.247

58k, auto .• air, am/fm, tw, cc, pdl, psts.

All our
Koret of California

illl

• Power Brales
· Custom Cloth tnleriOJ
· Well Eqlipped1

I Save '2106 1

1990 FORD LTD CROWN VIC ..•...........•. $6650 $141

All Ladies Coats

.·1500
·S524

VISA

992·2351

MIDDLEPORT

•

•uto. · automatic

air · alr condition
tw _tilt wheel

d1
p ·power door locka
pw • power wlndawa

clc • trulll control
Clll • arnftm caaaette

V-6- V-6 engine

No Doc Fees. OeWM&lt;I'

1Save'2530I

No Doc

Fees Mwre'r

~~t~Oob:'t~~eltl

*Payments are based on $1,000 cash or trade-in plus tax, title tees.

KENNY Auto CENTER &amp; RENTAL
264 UPPER RIVER

West Virginia's #I Chew, 0/ds,
Ponliac, Buiclc, Geo ani'
CusiDm \bn Dealer.

446·9971

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372-2844

344·5947 • 422.0756

• Tua. T&amp;liS, Ttle Fees eKtra. Rebate ifl:kded In sale price ol new vehiCle listed Mleft applicable. On ~ creat. Net rtSfl(lfiSible 101 typographical errors.

'.

ll ~

27 I U! !.\0
20 10:-i 16~

at liutblu . 7 "10 !l rn
Detmit :~ t Dallas. H.lO p m
New Jt'rsey Jt Wtnmrcg. K .\ 0 p 111
TownltJ at Color .1J o, \) p nl
Phll:u..ldpht3 .rl C tlg.rr y. IJ ..lO p rn
Lo ~ 1\ngcb at Edmumon, lJ·JO p tn
S:m lose at Anaherttl 10 I() r m

Srt l ~ &gt;~n.:t&gt;

1990 PONT. SI.UII.IRJ SE 2 DR ...........•• $4975

70k, auto., air, cas;!!V.~

Save Big In Our Ladies Shop

.. -$781

911 14 I

~lj ll ~

Frida) 's ~amf!s
Cht~:ago

LLSI Pnce
Oplron Pkg. Orscoum
Tom Peden DISCOunt

• S300

1"14

pm

ON SELECTED MODELS

$11,555

lO

107

Tonighl"s gam.s

•

1991 FORD TAURUS L SW ...•.....•.......•. $5565 $114

l lU
kX IUS

Hart fnrJ at P t nsbur~h . 7 ~0 p m
Montreal at Tampa Hay. 7.10 p 111
Washrngtorr at FloriJit. 7 \(J p m
Wrnnipq: at Ou.:ilgo. X lOp m
D~ ll as !II St LOUI S, X:JO p 111
N Y Kangcrs &lt;ll Vanu1uvcr . I 0 HJ

1991 CHEV. CORSICA LT....................... $5725 $118

:

"II 1~1

27

Duffal 11 1
New J er~y 5. N Y lsl.uHkr s I
Calgary .t, Toromo 0
EUn10ntor1 ~. PhrladclphtJ 1
J.,,s 1\ngclt·~ 7. Anal11.•rm I

Co l urnb ran ~ ~ . \

APR UP TO 48 MONTHS

~~ I 1\
~~
~ ~ 11 6 10 1
~0 Ill! 107
H 1)\ 117

Wednesday 's scores

1992 CHEV. S10 PU TAHOE .................. $6250 $119

$339

121
107
140

Ottaw;r 4,

1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUP. S ............... $8995 $181

Men's Dress Pants

\ 1 I I \I
H.'i
17 K7

~7

n 122 ~~~

68k, auto., air, cass., tw, cc. pw, pdl, psts.

1991 FORD T·BIRD ...........•.....................$6850 $147

119
I JIJ

I ~ 14 ''

' Per Mo.

83k, auto., air. amfm, tw. cc, V-6, pw, pdf.
1991 CADILLAC ~DO 2 DR .•.. $14,500
64k, auto., air, cass, tw,-a~;-pdl, psts., sunroof, touring
"

\0.1
HXJ

V:llllllUV\'T

1992 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE .......... $11,300 $233

Men's Felt Dress Hats

~9

-t7 ! .'i ~
\fl II')

49k, auto., air, cass., tw, cc. pw, pdl, custom wheel, psts.

74k, auto., air, am/fm, tw, cc, V-6, pdl.

') I

1)11 i~run

66k, auto., air, cass., tw, cc, pw, leather seats, pdf.

86k, 5 spd, cass, air, V·6.

q
2~

Q~
Q\

~ I \I "
!_. 1·1 ,.;

auto., air, cass., tw, pdl, cc, pw..

Men's Flannel Shirts

1-l

Cul11r:tdu
l tl ~ Artgl'le•

1992 LINCOLN TOWN CAR ......••........ $13,650 $286

0°/o Off .

~~

ll' L I !"" G£ LA

l'i "! ~

l k trntt

1992 DODGE DYNASTY LE ................... $7825 $154

Men's PuUover
Sweaters Crew &amp; VNee~

Ill! 10·1
47 I 1 \ 4 \

Cellini Uhi1ion

Iwn

61 K, auto., air, cass., tw. cc, V-6, pdl, sunroof.
68K,

Il l

~~

WESTERN CONFERENCE

1993 DODGE DAYTONA ES ................... $8975 $180

Men's - Rugb_y
Long Sleeve Shirts

S2 1 2~

Nonhrasl llivisum
n lJ l ~ ~ 11,.16 104
Ill 1.~
"IIi IO'i l(r7
!b 17
\~ liN 11 '1

J'111 st&gt;urgh
Montreal

Ottuvillt" 70. Ona~~o• a-Gl;r n Jo rf J2
Pamewrlle R1 vers rdr.&gt; 64 . Ashtabul a .J ~
Pt"ny .19, Wrcklrfl"e 24
Rilmll.' Southern 41 Wellston .16
Rt d rnr o r~d Hts 7.'. Regrna .~7
Shendan 75. Mrller 1.1
Sprrng Shawnt"e 67. SpnnJ! ~onh 5 I
Struthers 7l. Mt!rt"er. Pa n
Sylvnnr;r SoulhYil"w '16. Sy lv .rnr,r
Nonhvrew .13
Tol Nutrl" DJnk" ~ 7. Akrun St V-St.M
46
Urhana XO. nay Cnlnnl"l Wh1te .\0
Vermtlr on lilt El1r.Ja C uh 1~
W Hotml!s 62. Tn -Valky 40
Walsh Jnull ~4. Mog;1Jure F1t"!U 44
We&gt;~crv1lk N 7.'1. Bruuswtd 64
Wtllnn)!hby S '11. Ml·ntm Ltlt= C t1h
41
WuuUmnrt' 7"1. D.mhur y Lake,rde l~
You
W1hn.lr o w Wr! sl&gt;n
47,

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Atlantic

:wm

lOTi

6.1
Brecksv tlle 4'1 , N Olms1ed 18
O..:nnherlarn. P.t 62. Campbell M.:mo·

Nl"w York Jt Wushtnglon, 7 )0 r m
LA Cltppen a\ Orlando 7·10 p m
Pt&gt;rtland al Ch~rlo!ll!, 7 ~ p m
Golden State at Athrnta. 710 p.n1.
lnUrau,r ill Cl n.:agu, 8 ..10 p m
IJL"ILVCr ill Phocni~, 9 p.m
BrlstonatSeattlt=.IOpm
Phibdelphia at Sa ~ rarncntu IOJ O p.m

lr~d

{l~

Hockey

Col BrooiJrJ vc n 77. Oak H!ll n
Col OeSab .'ill. Huber Hh W;r yne :q
Cui. lnde pende rr ~e 50. Frank!Hl Ht ~
46
.
Col Wattcnw r~ .'l .\ Ml'llma 51
Connc:.~ut 4-4. Ucne\'J 42 .
C o~ h o.:tmr 61. John fiielm ~ 1
Day Ch.Hnrn:.de-Ju ltcnne -II (h~,·" ·
Mum , ~~
Ddtv. •trc 6 1, Wurtlu rrgtntt Ktlhuutne
.18
lJtxtl" .'ib . Preble Shawnee 12
EudtJ 71. W Gcau)!afll
Fatrfteld Unron 69. T nmhk ~6
hrl'l.liH[ , ~~ \A.·dlrn gtll n ~~
l·orr Jtnrurrg) 62. W,tyrrr J"r.L&lt;l." 'i(J .
Fr~:rnom Ru):; 6.1. Tol St Ur\uLt ~)
G:1l1anna Ltnwln DR. St Marys fd
Gr;md Val 76. Ashtabula St ·l nhn .tlJ
Grt"!"Jlt"Vtew &amp;0. Spn nto! Northwes tern
40
Ht"ath 64 , Olcntaugy 19
Holgate Vi, Lt~rty Ct" nter J I
Jcffrrson Arl'a )6. Ash tallul,t H:.~rb 11r
2K
John 1W Va) Marsha! )(!! llu d.:~"Yl"
l.ill';ll 6!
Jonathan Alder .19 l";urh,m b 4 ~
Kl."nston tl~. l'armJ 44
Kenton RtJgc ~. Sprmg Stlullr .'\4
l....tk ~ 111nod 47. Bred sv tlle 46
Lrberty lknton 49. New R1t"gd 46
Llfllol .ShawnCI:" 4Q PH..JUJ 2!!
Lmarn Adm K1ng 47. Bud,l"Yl' .lX
Mar.Jr ~ ur1 4.1. Ashmbula l::.dgcwoot.l 2'-J
Magnrth"&lt;tl "17. Ctn U rs ulrne~~
Mansllcld MJdlson M . Clear Fork 4 .~
Masor1 ~ 0 Cireenup C1 .. Ky 4..J
M.:Cbu1 '10. Cle VA -SJ ·0
Mwrni Tra~:e 41. Bdlbroo~ .~0
Mrmnr slrurg 100. D,\y Hdmont 2'
Mttlpark 40. Fmrv1cw .1 1
Mtlan Edtson 46. S:mdu5ky Perk 111 s 4.'\
Minford 67. Logan 6 I
Morgan 4.'1, r:urt Frye .W
N. Olmsletl47. Elyna ~7
Napolt"on \lJ, Pa1m·k Hl·nry .l ii
Nt!wark CaTh (m. Ncbor~vr!lc - l mk 4ii
1\cwton hils &amp;4, J:.ll.k~on-M iltun 61

47

ECAC Holiday Frstival-fin;t round

Di~&lt;ision

.II' L l':l:l.

llou ~lon ..

LnOJ:OO\ce,

Zanc:SI'rlic ~ IJ . 1-r s tr~· r C uh .W
1-&lt;tlleSvtlle Ru~ccr;ur.1 Hl 2. M1lhJH.I

Cur Mercy 57, Wooster 'iO
Cl c Col lln.,., oo d 74. Luu rsv lllr

~· r·.e ~~

Tournaments

WESTERN CONFERENCF:

Dublin Coffman _li9, Lancaster 42
Elyna W 67. N Rrdgevtlle 40
Fairborn b4. Vandaha Sutler 58
Frnrfreld 70. Ademr 6.'i
Gilrawuy 67, Sandy Val. ~J
Gate&gt; Mtlls Gilmour 66. Chagnn

Cdma 42. Col We stl ~ nd lS
Chaulon ND/CL 78, Beau-~ont ! 9
C'm Cnlcraw 67. Thuma~ Wonlun gtnn

Aqumas 61

Gcorgeto.,.,n 76, Western Brown 6J
rirhsilnhurg T1. N Balmnore 69
Hrlltard 69, Grovo:: City 50
kfferson 6~. Pymrrtur~ing Vo.l 55
knlu, Ok!u . 57. W Che~ter Lakota 51
Kcncrmg Farrrnon! 92. Lebtmon Monwc 60
L;rkcwood St Edward 71. Gler~v1 lk 52
L11m Cath 5S A ll~n E 'I I
l.rrr1;1 Shawnee 80, Day Stebhm1 70
Lr 1bon .'i\ Berlm Center We ~ tern Rc-

Ball St. 7M. Coppm St 55
Mwnu (0hro) 10~ . Wnghr St !16
St l..oUL&gt; 96. Chicago St .'\6

Central ()ivi'iion

ChtL&lt;Igo
2~
J 1Ul5
lndrorna .
14 II .560
CLEVLEAND .. I~ 12 .'\20
1\tl;mta ..
.. .... D 13 500
DetrOit..
.. .. I\ 14 .481
Charlolle .
.1.1 J .~ 464
Mrlwaukee .
10 16 .JR5
Toronto ...
9 20 JIO

o.s

Mid,•sl

~

61

;o

South

2
7

400
2{X}

Co l Wauet-son 61.Col Cc:O(enmal29
Co l W es tlar~d 74, Fran kim HIS . 57
Dny Be lmont 81. Tipp City 6 ~
tJuy Colonel Whue 98. Col South 85
De troit (Mrch ) Coo ley 72. Day Dur~ bar .'il
Deno tt c,rumry Day 71, Cin Withrow

Bare Bones

Sale

• B l \! Ten Con ference .

• ·Gci"cr said OSU cho&lt;e Nike
: after s'o l!citing bid s. Recbok and
: Starter abo made offers.
He s.1iU the dC(Ision to sign with
: N i kc iTwul ved more than the total
: s:duc ol the contract.
" II 's not just a houom-line deal."
: Gcn!cr s&lt;ud . "Yo u have to look at
: m ol~~ than dollars. You ha ve to look
:at fL'l' I"Ultlng and 1magc and product
·and 1hc posiuon of the company in
:the marketplace. All of that enters
: int o 1t.
" Nike has cstahlished itself with
: the teen-agers of 10day. In terms of
: the mark etability of our logo and
: hemg in the strongest possible posi• uon in terms of the anractiveness of
: uur program , I fell that Nike was the
: :-.ound and nght lie&lt;.:ision ,,. Ge iger
:said .
The agrccmclll reportedly also
:gives Nikc marketing right s for
: OSU -licenscd athletic apparel.
Ntke spukesrh 1n Eri n Patton
: poimed out the relationship allows
:the l:Ompany to do some creative
; things m supporting non-revenue
• sports.
'
" II covers all 34 sports. •• she said.
· " II communi cates the fact that
: women's sports and non-revenue
· sports arc importanl. We want to tum
the tide ."

Tampa Bay Buccanners ship Wyche to unemployment line

\ Are placed in each windshield - No Gimmick or Inflated
Prices...Just Plain Ole Facts!!

Mens Sport
Coats &amp; Blazers

sign contract Men's Cardigan Sweaters
COLLMBUS , Oh10 (AP) Ohio State Universny has signed a
li ve-year contrad givmg Nikc excluSiv e rights to provide apparel,
fomwear and cqutpment for the athlctil p10gram 's 34 snort s.
Athletic director Andy Geiger
detmls of the pact would be
• announced wday.
• ' Gc1ger dedi ned on Wednesday 10
reveal the value of the package, but
The Columlms Dispatch said it had
learned 11 was worth between $9
million and $10 milli on The news: paper desmhed the contract as the
• most luc rauvc ever between a col: lq: 1atc athletic program and an
: apparel supplier.
•
1\ine other maJor athletic pro• grams have similar deal s with N1ke,
: the Dopatch said, mc ludin g Miehi : gan. Penn Stale and Il-linoi s m the

TO THE BARE BONES!!
TH~Y HAVE TO GO
BY JAN. 1st

40o/o off

Valuato $44

down with 5:06 left in the periliCI.
then ran 63 yards to set up another
Tech score and a 45-28 lead.
Air Force, No. 3 in the NCAA in
rusl11ng offense and No. 105 in pass ing offense. couldn "t rally again
" We had several point s where we
were about to turn the game aro und.
but it seemed like we were playJnll
catch-up the entire game," quuncr~
hack Beau Morgan saio.
The team s. shaucred most of the
offen sive records in the sevcn -vcar·
old howl. which is sponsored hy
Wctser Lock.
Han spard. who carried 24 tunes.
scored on run s of two. II , two &lt;.~nJ
2Y yards.
Lethridge tluew a 38-yard sconng
pass lo Stacy Mitchell and scored un
one- and three-yard run s. To nv
Rogers kicked field goals of 24 and
31 yards for Tech .
A11 Force cornerback Mickey
Dalton fi gured in Air Foree's rally by
picking off a pass by Lcthridgc. 11 h;,
had sc i a SWC record with 2 11 cu 11 .
secut tve Lhrows without an intcrce rllon . and returning it 32 yards. He
sa1d the quick pace of the no-hudd k
got too much credit.

MOVE 'EM OUT•••WIPE 'EM OU-J•••

Ja(kets

Unwashed StraiFt
leg &amp; Boot

* *

SOUTHERN

no-huddle offense thai caught the
Falcons off-balance and powered
Tech to a 55-41 win .
!I takes players to ge t ahead ol a
team w11h Atr Foree s crunchin g
ground game - 67 1ushcs for 431
yards. And the Red Raiders (9-3! had
them
Byron Han spard set Copper Bowl
rushing and scoring records with 260
vards and four touchdowns Wednesday n1 ght. and Lethndge had 330
vards in total offen se after pass me
for 245 and one IOuc hdown. wh ile
runnin g for I\\'O
"" I knew H wa~ gomg to h~.: an
offen sive game," Lethbridge said .
""We were going to have to put pomts
on the hoard to keep up w11h them."
The Ra1dcrs never showed the nohuddl e during the season.
'"We came out with the intenti on
of showmg them something Olffercn l We knew they would he key1 ng
on me." ~a id Han spard. a sophomore
who led the Southwe st Conference in
rushin g in it s last year of existence.
i\11 Force (S-5) took advantage of
a senes of mistakes by the Ra 1dcrs lo
close to 31-2H in the f11st seven mtn ut cs of the third quarter.
But Hanspard got ill s tlmd touch-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

/;

Texas Tech gets 55-41 win over Air Force in Copper Bowl
ll) 'IEL REISNER
TUCSO N. Ari1 (A PI - Texas
Tc·ch ' hewe d why the Wi shbone
ul ten".:- - a run-hascd attack that

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday · Saturday: 9 am · 9 pm
Sunday: N-n · 6
·
CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY

�6 • The

· · . Page

Daily Sentinel

..

Thursday, December

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

28, 1995

.3-

Thursday, December

28, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:·\ \How do parents keep anonymous son a top family secret
Ann
Landers
1~ . Los AngJtles

Times Syndicate and
Creators Syndicate•

Dear A Landers : Our 44-year old
son went through a divorce five
)Car-. ago . Si nce then. h1 s life has
d~ t L' ri\Ha t cd . He has made a number
nf h&lt;1d

d~.:c lsJn n s

and ex perienced

&gt;Ollie sclf-innJ cted setbacks. We
have lived in different areas of the
L'ount r) lm severa l ye ar~ but ex. peri - cnced a normal relationship thruugll
p LT Hldh.: v tsl lS and phone call s.
Twt ' teen&lt;l t! C chil dren we re
lll \"tll \'c d m the Ji vDrcc They li ve

with their mother and are doing well.
We maintain close ties with the chi I·
dren through vis its.
Our son phoned recently and
infonned us that he has relocated to
an undisclosed state, taken on a new
identity, has a job and is starting a
new life. He would not tell us his
location but promised to keep in
touch by phone. We agreed 10 respect
his deci sion and hope for the hest.
Periodically. rel ati ves and friends
inquire ahqut our son: "How is he?
Where JShe" What is he doing " Will
he attend the ne xt family reuni on?"
How do we re spond" UNNAMED IN SANTA BAR BARA
DEAR SANTA BARBARA: Tell

well meaning family members and
friends who inquire about your son
that you do heat from him, that he is
well and happy, and that he has a job
he enJoys but hasn't decided yet
where he wants to settl e.
People who push for more information than that are prying. Change
the subject.
Dear Ann Landers: Justice takes
another hit in the judicial wars. The
hot-coffee epi sode is one more
example in the long line of bewildering verdicts.
Here's my personal forehead slapperto add to your gro wing li st of litigious odditie s: I swear that! am not
makin g this up .
My neighbor ca lled to complain

that el m bugs were fl ying from my
elm trees into his home and defecati~g on his curtains and upholstered
furniture , !laughed out-loud and didn't take him seriously.
Then he threatened to sue if! didn't cut down the trees at once. I
decided he was crazy and told him
so. A few weeks later, I was hit with
a lawsuit.
In court. I argued that I couldn' t
control roaming insects and asked,
"Why couldn't he just screen hi s
windows"" You'd think this suit
would have been laug hed out of
court. Think again . I lost and had to
buy that loon a new couch and new
window coverings. P.S. I cut dow n

the trees 10 ensure no further buggy
episodes. - PARK CITY, UTAH
DEAR PARK CITY: The biblical
admonition to love thy neighbor can
be diffic ult to honor with neighbors
lilie that. When are you m.oving'
Dear Ann Landers: I read the let·
ter from the teen-ager who receives
tons of gifts from parents , grandparents and great-grandparents but has
never wri llen a th ank-you note and
does n't pl an to. Tell that brat I have
a grandso n with the same ani tude .
I have long since written him out
of my will . wh 1ch means that a great
deal of prope rty and other assets will
go to th e Sa lvation Anny. They
always say thank you . - PORT·

Dairy
Barn
posts '96
events

Middleport Elementary
students present
Christmas musical

·

··J [., nc C hn strnas" was the title
Pl ~~ Clm ., tmas mu ~ J Lal performed
IJc-, 1'1 hv Midd leport Ele mentary
tlmd .1nd i( JUrth grade students
\t udcnt&gt; of Mrs. Sebert , Mrs.
7. url'lll'f. Mrs . Whitt, and Mrs.
llne n. al ong with the help of Mrs .
Rou &gt;e . Mr. Hannin g. and the
. schonl 's P&lt;u-c n t ~ Teache r Organiza·
· · I Hill JU!llp:-. t:lrtl.'d the Christmas spirIt Jun ru.! thc1r show.
iv1 u s~l' or the season was prov id ·
. n l In ml' mhcrs of the Snowflake
. ( ' I H n~u .. : : Kl' vin Adkms. Brandon
Bel l. Brandon Carpenter, Kenny
l'.li &gt;L'V . Candace Casey, Clifton
l 'h ,iilll k r. Mi.:lwc l Clay, Drew
C'&lt; ll~&lt;k. Nid Da iley. Charlie Davis ,
· 1\tdl.trd De Weese. Jeremy Dingey ,
· lh dlt L' llu\.! an . Je nnifer Dunn , Lisa
. ( ; II L'l' TL
He ul t Gil more. Justin
l l,l( H.k . Ka!t: lyn Huud. Jessica How·
ell. A, l\ icv John son, Becky King,
ll eth L111~k rs. Heather Lavender.
Kannd tc&gt; Lee. Ashley Litchfield,
·. Steve n Map if. Chery l Partfow, Ash-

Icy Payne, Erica Poole, Ryan Qualls,
Jordan Rawson, John Roush, Amber
Sha ne, Angela Smith , Ash lee Smith.
Sicl'an Stamper. Ryan Stone, John
Taylor, Manhew Thomas, Daniel
Thorton , Rhonda Wagner, Chet
W1gal. Adam Wise , and Natasha
Wise .
TI1e Yuletide Voices were: Ashley
Hol ley. Ryan Stobart. Ryan Frazier,
Cassie Windsor, Matt Hawley, Page
Bmdhury. Cass ie Lee, Katie Reed,
David Boyd, Mike Stewart, Anna
Sa}re. Kim Johnson, Donnie Whan ,
Luke Roush, Clay Stone, Carrie
Michael, Brook Venoy, Ty ler French,
Jarruc Chapman, Kindra Snouffer.
Megan Mayes, Johnathan Larkins,
Amber Alderson, Tonda Elliott,
Miche lle Neece and Katie Childs.
The youngsters were joined on
stage during thelf performances by
Frosty the Snowman and Rudolph
the Red-nosed Reindeer. A real
snowstorm also contributed to the
performance.

"I LOVE CHRISTMAS" was the musical pro·
gram presented by Middleport Elementary Schoo!
third and fourth graders. Here, Ashley Hawley,

Ryan Frazier and Ryan Stobart act out their roles
before the audience during the De.:. 19 production.

AAA offers motorists safety tips for winter time driving
Mm t dri vers assume they know
al l they need 10 about handling a car.
.hut 0.1 utomotivc advan&lt;.:cments in
steering and stopp ing mean the skill s
.. r many{,'drivcrs arc out of dat e.
·r~ o rdlll ,:! tD AAA South Central
·~ i D.

•'The dc&gt; ign of cars has changed.
··" your dri vin g habits need to
clmn ~c." &gt;aid John D. Morton, dircc·
. · .tor ,; rcty and cducauon .
:
The dri ver 's scat used to be con: : :s idcrahl y hi gher I han it is in today\
:- : passenger vch1des. The proper posi, ti on (d the dnvcr 's hands on the
· ·wheel w.J&gt; 10 and 2 o'clock.

With today's lower seat position
and the advent of air bags, drivers
need to move their hands lower on
the wheel and sit farther back for
proper control and safety.
Before starting the engine, AAA
recommends that drivers adjust head
restraints so they arc high and close
to the back of the head , then fasten
safety belts and adjust mirrors.
Drivers should hold the steering
wheel at its eq uator (3 and 9 o'clock
posi ti on) or sl ightly lower. In a
crash , thi s minimi zes the possibility
of injury to lin gers, hands and forearms from deployment of the air bag.

LAND, ORE.
DEAR PORTLAND: Way to go,
Granny' I like your s1yle. I hope your
lener will encourage other unthanked
relatives to do the same .
Gem of the Day : A conservative
is a liberal who has been arrested.
PlanninR a weddi11g ' WhaT 's
rigl!l ' Whar's wrong? "The A11n
Landen Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxieTY. Send a self
addressed. long, business-size envelope und a check or money order for
$3.75 (This includes posTage and
handling) To: Brides. c/o Ann Landers, PO. Box 11562. Chicago, Ill.
606 11-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.55.)

Positioning the hands on the outside of the stee ring wheel rim also
reduces the likelihood that in a
frontal crash the driver's hands will
be forced off the wheel into his or
her face.
Keeping the hands on the wheel
means the driver is better able to
steer the vehicle after the air bag
deflates, potentially avoiding a second or third crash.
Drivers who sit too close to the
steering wheel need to move back to
avoid possi ble upper body injuri es
from the considerable force air bags
exert as they deploy.

"Correct drivmg pos ition is
essential, "said Morton . " It gtves the
driver bener control with less likelihood of injury, stress or fatigue. This
is especially important 10 older drivers and motorists taking long trips."
Drivers can detenninc their proper position behind the steering wheel
by sitting with shoulders comfortably back in the seat, arm s slightly
bent and hands mrdpoint or lower
along the rim of the wheel. Drivers
should be able · to pivot their foot
from accelerator to brake pedal without lifting their foot from the floor.
Vehicle braking systems also are

changing in ways that will force drivers to modify some long-established habits.
Gene rations of drivers earned
their lice nses when cars had drum
and shoe brakes, and the procedure
in an emergency was to pump the
brakes and steer in the direction they
wanted the front of the vehicle 10
go," Morton said .
Because many car. today have
disc brakes with the anti lock feature.
in an emergency drivers need to push
down hard on the brake pedal and
keep it depressed -- not pump.
Since the car doesn't skid, the driver
retains full steering control."

The Dairy Barn Cultural Arts
Center in Athens is saying goodbye
to a successful 1995 and is looking
forward to 1996. The 1996 Calendar
of Events has some of the commu nity favorite s as well as several new
exhibitions.
The Third Annual Dairy Barn
Community Gallery opens the 1996
exhibition schedule by ICaturing the
late Anne Clark Culbert and the late
Murray Stern January 19 · March 3.
Several of Stern's best known portraits, paintings, and sketches will be
displayed along with Culbert's twodimensional work as well as her popular porcelain tableaux . The Cu lbert
family will donate all of the proceeds
from the sale of Anne's two dimensional work to the Dalfy Barn to
establish a scholarship fund .
The Dairy Barn's biennial Art
Auction is scheduled for March 30.
In 1994, the silent and live auction
raised the most money any event
ever had at the Dairy Barn, and the
planning committee has even higher hopes fur 1996.
The annual regional art exhibi tion, Area Art on View, will be held
April 12 to May 17 . The regional
winners from the Governor's Youth
Art Competition will join the regional artists in ex hibiting their work.
Patterns Worth Repeating which
features traditional , Appalachian
quilts wil l be held June I through
Sept. 2 .
The Dai ry Bam wi II feature a new
exhibition in the fall. A display of
African-American photographers
will be in the gallery Sept. 27 t&lt;i Nov.
3.
To begin the holiday celebration.
the Annual SEPAN Holiday Tree
Festival and the Gallery Holiday
Shop is schedu led fur Nov. 15-23,
and the Fourth Annual Children's
Holiday Festival will close the year
on Dec. 7.

Study: Common female infection increases risk of premature births
:: :Bv DANIEL Q. HANEY
·: A,P Science Writer
· BOSTON iAP) - Curing an ex tremely common fema le mfcction may
" I\C duc tor-; a new way to reduce the chances of premature births. the chief
t'
'
.
.
,: ;.t ll ~l'

of nt:w horn fatallt1 cs.

f\, man \' as one -quarter of all women may have the infection, called bact l' r i ~tl \' a\! u~ o . . is. alt hough most don't kn ow it.

• T" o : tud Jc&gt; puhli shcd today in the New England Journal of Medicine
deTnon&gt;tratc the potential bcnclit s of routinely screening and treating preg·
nant women fur the vagi nal in fcl' ti on, which can be eliminated with standard ant 1hwtic..;.
One of the &gt;tud1es concludes that the infection increases the risk of delivC flll ~ p!Clll .JIUJ C undcrsJzcd bab1es by 40 percent.
~P.t~ b o l u gan:: ttes ha ve warn1n gs say mg pregnant women should not
~ trll)\.. l' Th e ~"~ " "- a ~s oc 1atcd with bacterial vaginosis is aboul the same as the
nsk ""·'cJated 11 nh smok ing." said Dr. Sharon L. Hillier of the University
of PJl t -, h ur~ h . lc ~ td author of one of the studies .

Premature birth is the biggest problem of maternity care. Yet up to now.
there has been little doctors could do to stop it other than to warn pregnant
women against bad habits such as smoking and drinking.
Dr. Ri chard B. Johnston Jr., medical director of the March of Dimes. said
the new work " will be remarkably important to our efforts to prevent prctenn
birth."
The infection is distinct from yeast mfections. It results when a vanety
of unwanted bacteria invade the vagina, displacing the microbes that ordinarily live there .
The most common sign of infection is a fishy odor. But "a lot of people
assume that a fi shy odor is nonnal for women," Hillier said. Other symptoms can include vaginal irritation and excessive moisture or discharge .
Douching increases the risk of the infection. So does having multiple sexual partners. although it is also common among monogamous women .
While doctors have long suspected that the infecti on is linked with prematurity, the two new studies provide the clearest ev idence yet of its importance, as we ll as the benefits of eliminating it.

Each year. ahout 440,000 bab1es are born prematurely in the United States.
They account for about three-quarters of all deaths in the first month of life .
Prematurity is the most common cause of low birth weight. Babies born
too small arc 40 times more likely than nonnal-size infants to die in their
first month , and they are also at greater risk of mental retardation, blindness
and learning problems .
Htllier's st udy foll owed 10,397 pregnant women, 16 perce nt of whom
had vaginal bacterial infections.
Six percent of the infec ted women had undersize premature babies. On
average. they gave birth two months early, and their children weighed 4
pounds . By comparison. 4 percent of the uninfected women had such small
preemies.
Overall , the infecti on accounted for about 6 percent of all the premature
births m the women studtcd. Most of the other tmportant risk factors, such
. as giving birth for the first time, cannot be prevented.
. In Hillier's study, 23 perce nt of black mothers were infected, compared
wtth 15 percent of H1spamcs ahd 8 percent of whites. She said this could
help explain the relatively high risk of infant mortality among blacks.

Where to redeem your old supply of stamps; which ones are worthless
IIJ ,\NNE B. ADAMS and

NANCY NASH-CUMM INGS
DEi\ R i\ NN E AND NAN : A
whil e ago you publi shed the address
of 1he S&amp; H Gree n Stamp Redemplton Ce nte r. I ha\'c collected and se nt
in orer $200 worth of stamps from
fncnds anJ mcmhcrs of our church
'to help pay oflth c repairs on our bell
.t nwcr. In the meantime , I have been
g11 cn Pltnd stomp&gt; . Eag le stamps.
• Top Volu c sto mp s. Tripl e Blue
stamps and Gold Bond. Are there
any rcdc.: mpti on ce nters for these as

well '' - MRS . JOHN CAMPBELL,
DuboisJ'a.
DEAR MRS . CAMPBELL: Plaid
stamps and Gold Bond stamps can
be redeemed by wnting to: Gold
Bond Stamp Co .. Mail Order Department , 12755 Hwy 55 , Minneapolis,
·MN 5544 1. The S&amp; H Green Stamp
Redemption Ce nter. National Mail
Order, Sperry Hutchinson Co ., Inc .,
P.O. Box 5775. Norcross, GA 300915775 will also rede'&lt; m Top Value
stamps.
To the best of our knowledge, nei-

ther Eagle nor Triple Blue stamps are
redeemable .1y longer. Now, dear
readers, will you PLEASE clip thi s
answer for future reference? The
above ts one of our most frequently
asked~ and answered- questions.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I have
a goosedown puff that has passed the
useful stage and would like to make
a large pillow for my dog, using the
down from the puff. My question is:
How can !transfer the down into the
pillow without it getting everywhere
but where I want it'l The puff has

baffle s which keep the down in sep~
arate compartments lengthwi se . VIRGINIA BALDWIN , Ocala, Fla.
DEAR VIRGINIA: Are you sure
you want to do this? It isn' t that we
don 't love dogs and care . for their
comfort, but we think it's a waste of
a down puff that can probabl y be salvaged, refurbished and recovered for
YOUR use. The Down Under Co.,
Rte. I00, P.O. Box 82, Weston, VT
05161 (802-297-1066)candothejob
for you.
If you insist that the dog needs the

comforter more than you do. why not
JUSt fold up the comforter and use it
as the stuffing for a dog bed cover?
The Drs. Foster &amp; Smith Inc. pet
supply catalog. 2253 Air Park Rd.,
P.O. Box I 00 , Rhinelander, WI
54501-0 I00 ( 1-800-826-7206) offers
a wide variety of covers in all di fferent sizes and colors, both round
and rectangular. The covers are made
of 100 percent water-repellent cotton
and the prices start at $ 12.99, plus
shipping and handling .
Frankly, it's going to be just an

ASK ANNE • NAN

awful job to remove the feathers
from your puff without gettin~ them
all over everywhere.

RACO recalls.accomplishments of past year at December meeting
The Rac me Area Community
· Orga ni za ti on recalled its 1995
: acco mplishment s at the club 's
: Decemher meeting.
The accompli shments noted
: inc luded.
· Prcsenling two $200 scholarships
to Southern Loca l High School
se ni ors;
Sponsoring the RACO Second
Annual Flower Festi val, queen and

•

parade. and donating $175 for one
musical entertainment group;
Sponsoring Racine's' Fourth of
Jul y Second Annual Frog Jump
se nior di vision pnzes of $100, $75
and $50 and jurlior division pri zes of
$40, $25 and $1 0, and sponsori ng
children's games .
Sponsored RACO's Third Annu·
al Holiday Home Decorating Contest
with prizes of $50, $30 and $20 and

purchased poinsettias for the judges.
In addition , the group donated
$1 00 to the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department Fireworks Fund; $400
for the mowing and trimming of the
Greenwood Cemetery; $150 to the
Racine Fall Festival Committee;
$100 for candy and fruit treats for the
children distributed by Santa Claus
at Christmas in the Park.
The group also pledged $500 to

help upgrade the electrical system at
Star Mill Park and honored Mrs.
Mona Farra, Rac ine's oldest citizen,
on her hundredth birthday in September with a dinner, plaque and
flowers.
The organization also designed
and placed three Southern Tornadoes
signs at each town entrance.
Purchases by the group included
siK patriotic bannm, II fall banners

with one fall banner donated, nine
seaso ns greeting banners. All ban·
ners were placed throughout the
town during the appropriate season.
Other purchases included two tables,
two large coolers and kitchen utensils for use at the food booth and a
dozen "Racine" caps for village personnel .
Funds are raised from dues, yearly yard sales, food booths at special

events including the flower festival
July 4 celebration, fall festival Buff:
ington Island Days and the seliing of
refreshments at local auctions and
catering picnics.
A civic -minded group, RACO
originated in January, 1993. Meetings are held on the fourth Tuesday
of each month, 6:30p.m. at Stat Mill
Park. New members arc welcome to
attend.

(Lime Stone Low Ratn)

H&amp;H "
SAWMILL
Portable
Handsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 4!j760
Da nny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742-2193

WICKS
HAULING

PUBLIC NOTICE
The VIllage ot Pomeroy
Water Department public
water supply hao completed
the monitoring cycle tor
volatlllt organic chemicals
(VOCe) aa required by
chapter 3745·81 ot the Ohio
Admlnlatratlve Coda (OAC).
Upon completion of each
VOC monitoring cycle, s\llta
regulations also require the
owner or operator ot a
publlc water supply to
notify lis consumers ot the
availability of the VOC
analytical rooulto tor the
period tested. Persona
wanting to ravlow the VOC
results should contact:
John A. Anderson,
Superintendent,

Pomeroy Water Dept.
320 E. Main Street
P.O. Box866
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-0866
(614) 992-3121
it2) 28; 1TC

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

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

Fill

Dirt

614-992-34 70
'

11 11:W5mo.

Public Notice

SMITH'S
CONSTRUaiON

YOUIG'S
CIRPIITER SERVICE

UP·JO·DAfE

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

FIIANCE
STOCKS
AND MORElli

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

1-900·378-1 800
lit. 3140
$2.99 per mtn.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch lone phone
required.
Serv-U (614) 645-ll-434
1211ti1

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

Call
614-949-2512

( No Sunday Calls)
2/ 12/92/ttn

mQ .

60

ro==;;o;;;;~~~;;;ii

STAR GUITAR
GUITARS
$300&amp; up
Lessons on
Plano,
Guitar &amp; Drums
69 N: Locust St.
Cheshfre,Oh.
614-367·0302
Roger Walker
1112419511 mo.

LOST 12-24-95
1 Yr. Old Black~ Tan
Female Doberman.
Showcul Ears
(wearing a black collar)
Rutland Area. Friendly
Offering Reward
Please Phone 742-3041

Court Street Grill's
Pre-New Year's Eve Party,
Saturday 3oth
Karoake with Jeff North
9til1:00
Food, Hats, Party Favors

your Specifl/ Occasion?
• Weddings/Receptions
• Couples
(Engageme nl Piclures)

BINGO
Racine American

985-9996

SAL Gun Shoot

on!!~~·~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

others.

SUBJECT to easements
South 85 degree• 55
· minutes 31 seconds East of record.
Salrl nuhllc auction wilt
30n toet to a point In thA

. CHECK THE CLASSIFIEDS FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS!

Names in
the news
· WASHINGTON (AP) - Mari 1yn Monroe was queen of the stamps
in 1995 , but Elvis is still kmg .
The Monroe stamps were the
best-selling si ngle stamp thi s year
with 46.3 million sold.
But Monroe 's transformation
• from celluloid t~dhcs 1ve couldn' t
, quite match E l_~· success as a
postal phenomenon . The post office
· has sold 124 million Elvis stamps
since it came out in 1993.
·•· Other hig-se lling co mmcmora' tive stamps for 1995 include the
.- World War II stamp . 32.5 million of
which were sold : the Jazz musicians
. stamp, 30 million ; and Great Lakes
Lighthouses set, 26.2 million.
NEW YORK (AI') - It pays to
be wealthy when ..wking a royal
body buff.
Princess Diana spends $ 1,2 15 a
month on a thorough fitne ss regimen
1hat include s a personal traincr.U\'Upuncturc and massages, Fitness
- reported in Jl s January-February
() issue.
At least three times a week, the
princess swims. plays tennis, works
out with her personal trainer, and
takes a one-on-one step class, the
magazine reported .
She also adheres to a special diet
that .discourages eating protein and
starch in the same meal.
: \Yith a lonely Christmas behind
her and the prospect of tough
di vorce negot iati ons with Prince
Charles ahead, the princess took her
newly toned body out of Britain on
Wednesday for a Caribbean vaca·
tion.
CORPUS CHRISTl, Texas (AP)
- The woman convicted of killing
Selena has been denied a new trial,
fo r now.
State District Judge Mike Westergren, who presided over the October murder trial, said he found
"somewhat problematic" the
defense argument that important
infonnauon was withheld. But he
said Wednesday that the matter
should be considered by an appeals
court .

Public Notice

1_ _.;.P..:u::b:..:h::'c:.:N:.:.:O:;ti::Ce:...__

t·

take place on Friday,
January 19, 1996, at 9:00
a.m., on the front steps ot
the
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
TERMS OF SALE: A
deposit ol10 percent of the
total purchase price w111 be
due on the day ot sale ln.
cash or certified check only.
Balance w111 be due In 10
daya pending the Issuance
of a quit-claim deed aa title
to said real estate.
Inspection ot the property
may be arranged by
contacting Melg~ County

Sheriff James M. Soulaby
during regular bualnou
houre.
The Board ot County
Commtaslonero ot Melge
County, Ohio reserves the
right to refuee or reject any
bid lor any roaaon, and may
re-advertloe said property
until the property Ia aold.
No

warrantlea

are

expreued or Implied ae to
title ot property.
Board ot County
Commlaalonere of Melge
County, Ohio
Gloria Kloea, Clerk
(t2) 14, 2t, 28; 3TC

Legion #602
Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Doors Open
4:30P.M.
Bring ad for Free Card
Phone 949-2044
949-2685
nn919511 mo

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 Sa~.

HARTWELL .

HOUSE

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob

Hoeflich

I don't reall y know what happened to 1995, hut 11 reall y rolled
along there .
With only a few days rcmaimng
in the year, it 's time to make tho se
New Year's Reso lu tions if you are,
indeed. into that . They tell me writing t-hem down makes them effective
a few more days . I don ' t know.
See ms th at we're supposed to concentrate on the areas of smokin g,
drinking. eat ing and exercise and 1f
we hand le !hat okay we could live to
he 100 or so. On the other hand. who
wan ts to'' Maybe a happy medium·&gt;
Of course, Charlene does have a
I0 I year old aunt, Lui a Rainer,
whom she vis ited Wednesday in the
McConnellsville area. Mrs. Rainer is
good mentally and physically and
best of all maintains a tremendous
se nse of humor so maybe there are
some good points to all of thai
longev ity. Meigs res ident s, Harold
and Blondena Rainer, are a son and
daughter-in-law of Mrs. Rainer.
I always enjoy Dr. James Witherell's comeback when I ask him the
question :
"Who wants to li ve to be '10'"1
Hi s stock answer is"
"Ask any 89 year old ."

REG. HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 1().4:30
Fri.·Sat. 1 ().4:30
Closed
Thurs. &amp; Sun.
102 East Main
Pomeroy
992-7696
12123/1 mo

always features the unusual things
which Art created over the years .
Like a lot of us, Art isn't getting any
Public Notice
younger but every year those decorations are always there to delight the
I'UBLIC NOTICE
Saturday, December 30,
public. Jy the way, you have to dri ve the side street by the Strauss home 11115, at 10:00 a.m. the
Home Netlonal Bank will
to really appreciate the scene.
offer for aala at public
euctlon on the Bank
The new year will bring us some Parking totthetollowlng:
1967 Konworth Model 204
new res idents in the Racine area.
Serlall204082
Gene Roy Lawrence, his wife,
1984 Plymouth Reliant
Beverly, and their daughter, Dara, Serial
will be moving into their new home 11 P3BP21 C8EG175264
1985 Mercury Lynx Serial
on McKenzie Ridge in the Rac ine
11
MEBP5424FW631478
area in June following Dara's grad1988
uation from high school in Serial Hyundla Excel GL
Clarksville, Tenn. Gene Roy, son of IKMHLF22J1JU436648
Jeanette Lawrence of Racine, has
t990 Dodge Daytona
retired from a career in the anned Serial
11B3XG24K3LG419118
forces.
1884 Pontiac Sunbtrd
Jeanette who was such an active Serial
member of the Women's Auxiliary of 11 G2JB148XR7578734
1987 Ford Bronco II Serial
Veterans Memorial Hospital is on
leave from the organization at the 11 FMCU14T5HUA36729
460D
Farmell
present time . She has had hip revi- tntematlonal
Ferrn Tractor
sion surgery at Grant Hospital in
The terma of the aolo are
Co lumbus and is getting along quite caoh. Home National Bank
we ll with that . However, In January reaervaa the right to bid at
Jeanette will be undergoing addi - .lhe sale or to remove any or
mil Item• from the oale at
tional revision surgery on the other anyUme.
hip .
(12) 12, t4, 18, 21, 2.6, 28; 6TC

Speaking of the new year, anoth·
So you can look towards another
er American Legion Post is staging new year-a chance to do things beta free family oriented New Year's
ter, at least-and to the Christmas
bill s arriving in the mail. You're
Eve party and that is'the Racine Post.
Hours of the party are from 8 p.m. · probably going to be amazed at how
they add .up. Didn't realize you
Sund ay to I a.m. Monday with C. J.
spent that much huh'? Oh we ll , you
and the Country Gentlemen providcan't take it with you so just pay up
in g music for dancing. Food will be
and keep smi ling.
provided by the Star Mill Park
Board. Alcoholic beverages will not
be pennitted. TI1e party is open to the
publi c and will be held at the American Legion Hall. You're cordially
in vited .
In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the GalHow does he do that'? I noted that
lipolis Daily Tribune and Th" Daily
the Arthur Strauss hom e on S. Third
Senrinel will not accept weddings
in Middleport is again decorated
after 60 days from the date of the
extensively for the holiday season. It event.

News policy

~VV

Water

Frf't, Estimate~
QrwliTy Work

~,;,.,r; ~../~ Tre~tment
~'LZ!

B. D. CfiNHRIJCTION

Equ1pment

Sitli11p:. l' (lrdr P.sDed,·.'i , Ho11..e
I ltl/)rt~ Vl'llll'llls ,
R emotleling ,

DL,tributt!d by

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.
The wate.r treatment compan y cordially invite s you to
participate in a free, no obligati on, comprehensive water

.4rld-011 's, Rooji11g.
Su t ~"i{udion

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mfnerat Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call Rair~Soft at992-4472 or 1·800-606·3313
to set up your free 'water analysis. 1015/lfo
J .E. DIDDLE OWNER

G!tarnnleefl

Bill

949·2512

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

RACINE HYDRAULI C REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays ,
Sale &amp; Reliable Night Out on the Town
Service with
OH Livery
License

Owned &amp;
Oporatod by

(614) 992 4279 John(Emle)&amp;
•

Lori Miller

33058 SR 33 • Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
\211'-'l mo.

Onir Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
614-992-6223

Chuck Stotts

Free Estimates

•

Insurance Work Welcome
State

Rt. 33

1

(Stock up on your
holiday baking
supplies)

614·949·3027

11n919511 mo. pd .

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

Darwin, Ohio

614-742-2138

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

Racine, Oh . 45771
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

REASONABLE RATES

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal - Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; " ' 1able toilets renled .
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954

or

HOWAIW
EXCA\ATIM;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Ser vices.
Home Sites, Land
Clea ring, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

813mo

MODERN SANITATION

985-3418

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling ·
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call W:1yne Nell 992·
4405
For Free Estimates
41 13195

,~~~~~It

BRAMHIINC.
STATE RT. 124
WELLSTON, OHIO

Wrecker Service

(614) 384-6212

Car/Heavy Treck
Repair

Lump &amp; Stoker

(614) 992~643
23 Cottage Drive
Middleport, Oh. 45760
12/W8S 1 mo

Hours:
7-4 Mon . lhru Sat.
Heat Vouchers Accepted
We Will Deliver
2 Ton Minimum
Call for Quote

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Gun Shoots
Sun 1 pm
12 gauge
Factory Choke Only

END YOUR

$2.99 per min. Must be 18 yrs.

Touch·tone Phone Required

Your

WATKINS
PRODUCTS

"Ride in a Chariot of Luxury"

There is someone lor
everyone. Whatever
your preference
Nationwide or Right Next
Door. Don't Waste
Another Minute
CaiiNowlll
1-90(1.255-5454
Ext. 4375

Shop !he classified section.

9i27/9S t in

Laurel Limousine Service

LONELINESS NOW!!!

Doo'r ger stung by high pnces 1

12 Guage
factory Choke Only
Bashan Building

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 4577t
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949·2018 FAX
(614) 594-2008 NIGHT

HYDUUUC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

Doerfr~r

(61-1-) 992-2979

Cheaper Rates

• Anni versaries
• Groups
• Family
Reasonable prices
Call992-7747
after 4 pm during weekdays
(Anytime on weekends)

Skate -A-Way
New Years Eve Party
Sun. Dec. 31 ·7:30- 12:30
Adm . $5.00 Skate rental $2.00
Roller Blades $5.00
985-3929

.,

• Reunions

The Draft House
New Year's Eve Party
Food Buffet
Must Have Ticket To Attend
675-9915

Public Notice
center of Township Road T17 NE (McGrath Road), said
center of road being the
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Board of County West line ot Herb (or Fred)
Commlaalonera, Malgs Riggs; thence South 14
County, Ohio, hereby give degrees 22 minutes 01 "
notice that the following West 62.39 teet and South 0
. real estate, which Includes degrees 12' 29" West 85.37
, a rostdentlal dwelling, shall feet along the canter ot said
· be sold to the highest Township Road end the
bidder at public auction . Herb (or Fred) Riggs West
Tho subject real estate le line to the South line of said
Fraction 36; thence Weal
. described below:
Situate In Bedford 270 teet along a lance on
Township, Melge County, the South line ot said
State of Ohio and being In Fraction 36 to the point of
Fraction 36, Town 3 North , beginning, containing 1.01
. Range 13 west ol the Ohio acres, more or less .
The bearings In the above
Company's Purchaae and
being described eo follows:
Ohio areCompany's
Beginning at a point East the
description
basad
about 150 teat from the Purchase survey. Above
Southwest corner of said description prepared by
Fraction 36, said point of Robert H. Eason, Reg.
beginning being on the Surveyor No. S-06546, In
South line of said Fracllon August, 1980.
EXCEPTING all coat, oil,
36 and being marked by an
Iron rod along a lance line; gas and all other minerals
· thence North 4 degrees 36 end right appurtenant
minutes 18- West' 167.66 thereto outstanding In

Nftd a Photographer for

,.;!: ~

Public Notice

feet to an Iron rod; thence

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

SPORTS

Se!V·U(619) 645·6434

...........

1211/Mi 1 mo.

. . . Coadllllllllag
Bob Davia
•Soltenoro oflhera
oRaveraa O.moala
~721

9804 St. Rt. 7So., Gllllpolla

I

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

Bill Slack
992·2269

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
7122194

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

!!- Thursday, December 28, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
...! T~ I NI&lt;. THOSE VARMINTS
J&gt;JIE MeRE INTERESTED
IN US THAN IN THAT

40

Giveaway

'

41

• ol•

1979 Ct1evy 4x4 short bed, 305
auto, new parts , shar p, $3,809

Ntce two bedroom apanmem m

AI&lt;H"&lt;l'l S'1eon.tro r"&lt;L ~ or
wr 1.' 1\r••or 0 rl QOOO w
''• Cl l l

Wl'

t !1

lid

(j00\1 'L

1'.\ v ~ ·

•

2 Bedroom Level Lot, Heat Pump,
5 M1les From Town. Depos !! &amp;
References 614-446 -1079

r'l' Gtc•r· .1~ S·•&lt;!P'lurc..
M r• u .Vet•ro. t. l ) - llcorl W /l
Cn •0'-11 Part1,1 y Hov l ll o• ur
~ l&gt; ' I t\&lt;16 '!923

!)ANGtR:E.

,e.,v~U.U-~CH

'Z.ONE.

Lost and Found

2 r ) r •or)''lS o•f'
lh,r M'll nel'ld'll
Hill Sk:wa ri 51&lt;: 7&lt;12 /08L

J !luagltc'

:~o...ps

flo

[ .t:-.1 (

dll'd

305 22nd St , 3bedroom. fur
n1s hed kitchen d1nmg room 11v1ng
ro om, lull basement, garage No
pe ts lease $300/mo p lus de
fX)Sll 304 675-3812

Twm R1vers lower. now accepting
applications for 1br HUD subs1d
1zed apt lor elderly and hand1

: ' IOn!ll ord f,, 11,1le H L• 1
pup u 1 33 9'-13 Co 'I " I llo
Jrr 1 Po r·1l' oy Or1 o w l t • u 1 ·
' ,1

.,

.-.

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'-l',

'4

w

ll ,r

DorH'•~','

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1

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N t:"IL'•'C

I)Oir

Have Open1 ng Fo1 1 Ftderly Or
Hanorcapped Person In L1ccnsed
l'nvale l lorne 614 441 0000

or&gt; (,•,, jllti !l':{Jh

70

o

11

Yard Sa le

Help Wanted·
f\GLN I AVO !~ Sf\1 FS

Gallipol is
&amp; VICi nit y
l~ t P

J\ll Y&lt;110 Sc1h.::. 1.1 .. •

cr m ADI INI

r\ cvar

t'•e

dtl)' :)(

fo ,. '"·

5unoJy tdr t O'
Mom1,ty rod rf1'

'UOO Ill('

J'

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0

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fl. r 1\

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Sl'11rley

1429

( / 0)

j)

)1!,,

- -- I 1\I! N $$$ at rorne il l

,I(
1\IJ\JN

jl(lol y

•'•'l' • ,\ ill!', 304 8112 2645 1
J rei, r,Jj(j IN I); ~{!:: I'

HJ

Pomero y.
Middlepo rt
&amp; V iCinity

v, ·r'

\I

~

\('' '
('"
hi&gt;

iloif

,.

,o, ' li..'!OI O&lt;JI~,t Needed Gaur
,J• 1e1:ct W.l ql'', l" ul And Pa r t
I ' e lh· p W &lt;11 ~a b 14 445~?G/

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r1

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t

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V '-'"I

I .tsy Wc1 ~ I q;pllt ·n Pay I As
sernblt• l'•oauLIS dl Home Cdll
OCO 161 SS66 I::X l
f ol I r~·('
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1)14 992 ·p 1

l.Ld
I 0
fld"V 1 (Cri.Jitii\ Q OJ.td
1 · , , v '.:J~&lt; ••n ~ accurac y
r•l,J ,., : -~:. ·1· ~.&lt;Firng Seno
·• , ,n ,.., :u Box r, /ll Q·~ P t PleaS&lt;ln!
I., q s, r 1 JO ~,Li trr Sl p r Pleo~ s

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PubliC Sa le
and Auc t10n
Alto

1\ LC' 'I",.,

d IJt'I Y M l'')' '-

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Hr ck
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.. 1· •'

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tl(' t,l•f1Jf.!J PMb l4

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C:l ,J' r
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servtt l
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#bb 0 11•0 &amp; WI· S! Vuq I ,I lv

90

~· 1 4/

Wanted to Buy

M o&lt;Jc• C "'· 0
1987 M o c1.:1 ~ I) ~J · &lt;~'~ (
:::, 1 I!" 8 u1 t:ro. P o•l:t,il
J.... I 1
L'' ·~ Avcr1;€ Gal pol.s

(.lean

c'ie

l ruc ~s

I IS D ~ AuTo Pa rts Hu v c, .'-&gt;~!,
v,\gC VC' flll:l t' S $1
r, ~ ' ~ l ~

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---

Use(l l u •" l u•c oil'' U\o• ... ..)r t
ooec..e o' compleiC· ··&lt;:. 1h. '• 0~"1,
r.1 drtrn t'. t 992 ; :'1
War 'C O lo l.h.f ! •' · ! "'
ti 1 : 2'.5 9.38

lo1

[i1 1 31.!8 0-1 29

Unlu tn1shed rwo bedroom house.
n ce and clean depo s1t requ1red.
no rns1de pets 614 gg2 3090
Wctzgal Street Pomeroy, WID,
$350/Mo Deposn, 513-922 0294

420

I.,
·.: · fl

J'

II'.. 1 ,

P

.,

.

Llfl

reiL'pnone

Geo 1go s Port&lt;J bl e Sa wmill , don' t
h&lt;JlJ I your logs 10 tile mill )US! call
10-l 675 :957
lh.t&gt; &amp; Scruo Clcan rng Serv1ce
OUSTing r&gt;10pp1n g WindO WS an d
mere Complc-w sorv1ce or touch
~..ps F~ele1ences on request call
l etr r al614 992 4232 or 6 !4
-~-----

S1.. 11 Va lley Nu rse ry Sc hool
Chrldcare M F 6am 5 30 pm Ages
? K Yo ung Sch oo l Ag e Du r1ng
Surnrne r 3 Da ys per We eK M1n1
munl 6141146 36 57
Wrll do Sl lh':19 w/el ocrl y, evenmgs
or ntgtm at your house or has p
1&lt;1.1 3fl &lt;1 675 7'14 1
Wcu ld L1he To Clea n Hon1 es An·
y!Jn!P 61 4 446 tl1 ;:4

Cl e&lt;~ r

Oi.:•t.:f.J

I f 1'0 l lUII IJ ~N GS
I to.. cr 1 11.1~ .' /1 Sloel Ouanset
S y t R1 rJr Y" I 01 l n1medtate
c,, 'i ' lUll 'J r~ t'V I r L rectcd
'IJ l 1" l11 ,J• 1..t• OwPd Can IM
1\0U ')t)' t/8 113
1l Jll !l:,li\1!( 11illl$ neecl.!c 1n
t
• ll '• 1'' t Worh. av .1 ':-~bl c
U.'! 'Y :ldy Wh11 r \' Jl'l '1 tl •rl Q
Vlt e H nd" UPi tO 11 M us · I'," Vt
Cll.il iP • r o~' l~t;Or 'oll o• frd&gt;l' &lt;:~nc
W\ll "' T&gt;drllrr·r .1 f, v~ I 0 1 rlOf\' 1rr
'o•mr11 :Jn C.J.I !,.,1 5'• J30J b~;t
W t:('ll{;U"' 101JI'

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1

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I l•'o!Oil\•' l 'i
App 1y
'1QR P 111(1 St
PI

Business
Opportunity
lf\I IJ Til.F I

tnveo:; tmcnt Pro[.Jerty ~n GafllpOits,
Owner May Be Able To Help Wllh
Somo Ftnanc 1ng C all 6 14 79 7
4345 Alter 6 PM
Upsca le be-auty salon 4statlon w/
1ann1n g bed Reta il &amp; work tn g
supplres are well st ocked Great
clt entele &amp; locat1on 1n Pt Pleasant
Tu rn key op cr atron, owner relo
L&lt;~~ng Ca!l614 742 2072

"

, ,.

All real estate adverttstng 1n
th1 s newspaper IS subJeCt to
111e Federal Fa1r Housmg Act
ol 1968 wh1 ct1 makes 11 tll eg al
10 a d~ Pf&lt;•&lt;;e 'any prefe rence
l1 rn 1t&lt;lhO n or diSC nmtnatlon
based on race calor rellg1an .
sex la mrhal status or naltonal
o ng1n or an y antent1on to
make uny such preference .
limita tiOn or dJscnmmaiiOn "
TtliS newspaper w1ll not
knowllngly accept
adve r11se men1s for real estate
wll1ch IS m vrolatton ol the law
Our rea ders are hereby
rnf01111ed 111a 1all dwelhng!S
adver11sed 1n lh1 s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportu nity bas1s

31

2 Mob 1l ~ Homes On
Road 2 Bedrooms

M~.:Cormtck

614 446-

9669
2bt:!droom mob1le home Deposit
requ~red No pets
$250/ mo Wa ter &amp; sewe r pa1d

&amp; references

304 675-6984
N1ce 2 bedroom mobile home
Mrddleport, Oh , 614-g92 5858

1n

N1ce 2 Bedroom Mob1le Home For
R e nt, 8 M il es Out State Rout e
2 18, Gall1pol1s, $210/Mo .. De
poSI\, Aelerences, We Allow Pets I
614 446~8172, 614-256-625 1
Tw o and tllree bedroom mobile
homes sta rt1ng at S240 - $300,
sewer, water and trash mclu ded,
6 14 992 -2167
Two bedroom tratler fo r rent , call
6 14 992 29 79 alter 6pm

440

Apartments
lor Rent

Furn1shed £fhc1ency, 607 Second,
Gall1pohs Share Bath, $t851U!ih tle s Pa1d 614 -446 -4416 Alte1

7pm
1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
ms hed and unfurn1shed. secur1ty
depo srl req urred no pet s 614
992 2218
1 bedroom apartment 1n M1ddle
pori , avat!able December 1 all
utiliti eS pa1d . $250 pe r mo nth
$1 00 depos1! , Sam to Spm 614
992 7806
2bdr m apls . Icta l elec tt 1c a p
pl&lt;ance" lurn1shcd, laundry room
lacllmes, close 10 school 1n town
Appl1cat10ns available at Village
Green Apts 1#49 or ca ll 614 992
371t EOH
2bedroom , all electnc, carpeted ,
a ppl 1ances. lurn l shed , water &amp;
trash pa td, on -s1 te managemenr.
close to stores and schools l au
reland Apartments 6th &amp; George
St New Haven 304 -88 2 37 t6 or
TTD TTY 1 800 982 6771 Equal
Op~X)Itunny Hou s1ng

35 WEST

2 BR BRICK TOWN ·

HOUSES
1261 Jackson P1ke
A cro ss From C1nema $295/ Mo ,
Dep For Renta l Appl1cat10ns Call
G1 4 44G 095 7 614 -446 0006
6 14 441 t616 Or Wrl\e PO Bo~
994 Gallipolis, OH 4563 1
456 112 Second Ave 2 BR, AC
appliances $400 month U!ihlles
pa1d $200 depos tt References
614 446 -2 129

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR ICES AT JACKSON
E STATES , 52 Westwood Onve
Irom $226 to $29, Waf~ to shop .
&amp; mov1es Call 614 - 446 2568
Equaf Hous1ng Opponunny
Beech St Middlepo rt, 2br lur
n1shed apt, utlliltes pa1d, dep &amp;
ret 304-882-2566

o Homes for Sale

Country S1de Apartment, la rge 1
Bedroom, $290/Mo Deposll 513-

3-4bedroo rT1 story &amp; 112, wlba se
men ! B ga rage, lo1ced a1r furnace
cent1al a11 n1ce neig hborhood
wa krng d1s1ance 1:1;o9 rocer y store
$29 500 304 882-3652
Nu10 room house four bedtooms,
now ly remo del ed, kl!c h en an d
bath new carpetmg, large corn er
IOI $28 000 614 992 -6173 or
614 992 20 15 after Spm
lt1ree bedroom home 1n coun try
W!" 1tCS H1ll R.d Rutland one bath,
1n ground pool, 614 99 2- 50 67

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1986 Grandvil le 14x 70 2 Bed
rooms F~r e place Total Ga s Un derp mmng
16•t 2
De ck
$11,500, 614 3670429
Lm111 ed Ofler l 1996 doublewtde ,
3br 2bat h, $1 799 down $2751
month Fr ee de li Ye ry &amp; setup
Only at Oak wood Home s, Nitro

922 0294
E xtra N1ce 2 BR. All Elec , Furn,
K1t, Close To Spnng Valley Area.
No Pets. $340/Mo ... D 0 -t Ref
614 446-6t57, Alter 5 PM
Furn 1shed 2 Bedroom AparlmenT,
Ac ross From Park, AC, No Pets
Re ferences, Depos11, $350/Mo ,
614 446 -8235,614 -446 0577
Fum rshed 2 Rooms B Bath
DownstairS, U111111es Furnished
C l ea~ No Pets . Reference. De
pos1t Hequ1red, 614 446 - 1519
Furn1shed Apartment. 3 Rooms &amp;
Bath, All U t1ilt1es Pa1d, Downsta1rs
$250/ Mon th, 919 Second Ave

614 446-3945
Furmshed Apartment, 920 Founh
Avenue . 1 Bed room , $285/Mo
920 Fourth Av enue. GallipO liS ,
Oh1o 614-446 4416 Alter 7 PM
Furnished Elllctency All U ttl lttes
Pa1d, Share Bath, $145/Mo, 919
Second Avenue, GallipoliS, 614 -

446-3945

Appl1 ances
Recond iti oned
Wa shers, Dryers, Ranges. Refr1
graters 90 Day Gua r anteet
French Crty Maytag, 614 446

7795
Country Fum1ture 304-675-6820
At 2 N, Smiles Pt Pleasant, WV
lues-Sat 9-6 Sun t 1 5

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete llome f urn1sh1ngs
Hour s Mon Sat 9 5 614 446 ·
0322 3 mrles out Bulavllle P1ke
Free Dei very

PICKENS FURN llURE
New /Used
304 675 1450
Grey Used Sola With A Wall RE
c!rner Roc ker Recl 1ner &amp; Love
Seat6!4 446-117t

VI RA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Oual 11y Hou sehold Furntture And
Appliances Great Deals On
Casll And Carry I RENT-2-0WN
And layaway Also Available
F1ee Dehvery W1thtn 25 M1les
Washer B Dryer Matching Set,
Kenmore $95 Each, Whnlpool
Washer $125 Cut To $95, G E
Wa sher $ 150 Cut To $125.
Wh11lpool Washer $95 Kenmore
Dryer Heavy Duty $95 Maytag
Washer l1ke New $250 , K~nmore
Washer like New Heav y Duty
Pnce Reduced To $205 , Electnc
Range 30 Inch Whtte $95, Relngerator Adm~ral Almond llke New
$350, S1de By S1d e Refng erator
WhHe, N1ce, $350; G E Aefngerato • 19 Cu Ft Green $150, All Of
These Are Ful ly Guaranteed!
Skaggs Appliances, 76 V1ne
Street, Gall1polls, 614-446~7398,

1-800-499 3499

.:...:::_.:.:.:~:=:--::-----1
520

Spor11ng

Goods

Full se t women's golf clubs. tour
model , $125 304 -675-6986

530

Antiques

304-675-5162

Scentc Va lley, Apple G rove .
beaull ful 2-ac lots , put&gt;J 1c water, , N1ce one bedroom apar tment fo r
rent in Pt Pleasanl, 614 -992Clyde Bowen Jr , 304-576-2336

5856

Relr1gerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Reco nd1t1one d
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1ll Deliver 614 -669-644 1
Sal e l ady Kenmore heavy duty
washer / dryer so li d oak d1net1e
set Sll cha1rs . qu een s rz e blue
sofa sleeper, must sell, 614 992
3796. leave message

5595
Schw1nn S1er ra 18 Speed All Ter
ram Bicycl e, Excellent Co ndition,
614-446-0070

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

15 Fl Stock Tra11er Hillsboro Alter
5 PM 614 446 -2 t63
!986 Ford Taurus tu l ly loaded,
V6, $1,200 1984 Pon11ac F1ero.
pw , 4cyl, 4spd, runs great. $t,OOO
GE almond stove &amp; relr~gerator

304-6 75 4496
Baby bed sltoller , dress1ng table,
sw1ng , car seat 304 675-4546
Brand New Ammana Hu m1d1f1er
$65 614446 -t712Aiter5PM

614 698·6228

730

Vans

Wllh Bush Hog &amp; Blade, $2,650

614 -742-2050

N ear ly new (169 hours) Rayco
AG 1635At SA 41 hp a1r cooled
D eutz dtesel stump cutrer. twc
se ts ol teelh, used one year to
clear !arm f1elds, cos t effecttve
over hmng a dozer for suc h work
MSRP $ 14,600, yours lor $11,500,

1977 Jeep CJ7 , V-8. dual ex.
hausl alloy wheels, $2300 . 1979
CJS Jeep frame , body and dn~
tra1n kepi 1n dry, pans a'w'atlable !Q
make 11 complete. 614 742 1903 •

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

300 round &amp; 3300 square bales

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

G round ear co r n, your sacks

1990 Chevy Van G-20 , loade d ,
crest hner. 88,000mt , $7,600 30~-

304 675-2443

675-2835

Hay lor sale, 1st &amp; 2nd cuttmgs,
s~ua re bal es, $t 25 -$1 50, call

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 25(),

72.000 M1les $6 000. Can

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

TRANSPORTATIQN

Toppe r For Mazda B2200 Truck
Wedge Topper , Chaco Grey 3
Years Old, $750 New. $450 Now

614 446·9465
550

560

Pets lor Sale

Groom Sho p -Pet GroommQ Fea
tunng Hydro Bath Ju l 1e Webb
Ca ll6, 4 446-0231
AKC German Shephard pupp1es.
$150ea 304-675 7771

l•l•e V-6, ellle model lurbo, PS, 750 Boats
AC, 5 speed, power seats

92 Z24 21,000 miiCs, PW power
locks , sun roo! a1r, crUise, amllm
c&lt;Jsselle , ltke new cond1110n 6t4 992 3798, leave message
95 Bu1ck Regal Custom, V 6 au romatlc
all power, smoky
amethyst. 10.500 mles wtll sell or
can take over payments, make
oller on pnce, 614-985 -3362
1983 Cutlass Brougham. all electriC, VB. good shape, $1500 304 675 t446

AKC Registere d Ch1nese SharpeJ

pupp•es, wo•med and ''"' shots,
eKce l lent bloodline. 614 -949

2126

AKC Regtstered Dalma11an pu pPI SS, 5 left, shots &amp; wormed

$125ea 304-773 9122

ooo:

fOr

S

ale

t 993 20 1 Pro XL, 20' St ruto s
bas s boat. 200 XPHP, 6t4 -667·

734 7or 614-949 2879
M ust S ell 1989 24 Ft. Arnva
Speecl &amp; Sk1 Boat, 454 Bravo MO·
lor W11h Bravo 1 Outdr1V9, Power:
Rack &amp; Penton S teermg , Thru.
Transom Exhaust, Tandem Tratl ...
er W1th Br akes Too Many ExtraS
To L1 s[l $15,000 OBO, 614 -441 1975,614-256-6369

760

•

$1 75. I Sel 01 Small Block Ch""Y

Car, $3,000 OBO 614-256- 6867.

400 C I Cylinder Head s $100 ,

Alter SPM

614-441 -1053

1987 Pont1ac SunbHd, 5spd, 2dr,
ps po ac good cond1110n, de
pendable car , $2,500 304 882

New gas tanks, one ton true~
wheels, radiators, floor mats, etc i
D &amp; R Au to, R1pley, WV 304 372i
3933 or 1-800-273-9329

1988 Cougar Blue Ma. Edn•on. 790

new \lf OS, loaded, good COnditiOn,

$3200. 614·949 2203

1990 Oldsmobile Royale 88 Ga rage Kept, Excellent Condll!on,

614 446·1211

Campers

:..:.:_~:.:.:.:-::-::--:--:-:-1 570
F ~rewood S25 rruck Load. You

Haul, 614-388-9643 After 5 PM

Fende r Squue Stra l &amp; Fe nder
S1 dellick Amp Good C ond1110n
6t4-446-0070

t991 Rocket ChaSSIS race car, all
new 1n 91 Wtlwood , best ol ewrylhlng . weld. three wheels, t1res,
Neal pedals, fu el cell, on board
li re system, rolling chass1s $5800
neg Call Scon Wolfe, 614 - 9492879, 614 -949 -2045 or 614 992

6193

1994 Olds Cu tl ass Su preme SL,

13.000ml, 3 1 V6 304-576·2986
·as Mercury Topaz. 4 Door Auto
Good Runn 1ng Condt!lon 6 14
245-00 1901614-245-5845

872·5967
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red, New &amp; Rebu1l1 In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528

610

Farm Equipment

12)155 lratler frame, tongue, axles

and ll res, $275 OBO. 614 ·9923016

lEf&gt;.ST I
COULD D0 1

LV D PI

SJHSF.D,

PO

GTMYVWTYVG

s

CVG

D Y V Z N

SZN

y K

ZSGVMX.
WVDGSR
LSTJXM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'I've diSCOvered the gene lor regret, I'm sorry to say."

- Mantsto Navarro.

"Adults are obsolete children." - Dr Seuss

....

r::~~:~' S©\\~~-~~~s· WOlD
E411ot1 ~y CLAY I 'OLLAN - - - - - 0 four
Rearrange letters al the
scromblad wods be·
low to form four words.

ANDIPK

IIII
My husbands co-worker told
h1m that computers Will never
replace man His reason was
r--:::--;;-;:-~~-;--, because computers can't laugh
VU0 0 J
at the boss's - - - - f--=5·,--,r-T,- ,,-,,r--1 G) Complete the chuckle quoted

I

S

•

•

•

•

_

.

by fr lltng 1n the m1U1ng words
you develop from srep No 3 below

TO GET ANSWR
I

IIIIII

SCRAM-I.ETJ ANSWERS
Nephew- Gnmy- Waltz- Loathe- HOW to LIE

STRICE. ABLOW IN 1l£ WIR ON
lofGH PRICES. SHOr floE CL.ASSFIED,S,

ITHURSDAY

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Ap~llance Parts And Ser'w'Jce AU~
Na me B rands Over 25 Years Ex 1
per 1ence All Work Guaranteed, '
Fr ent; h Cny Mi:lytag, 614 -446 - '
7795
~

Bill Orrrck s Horne Improvements,:
add111ons . remodelmg, roofing,
sad1ng, plumbmg, etc Insured, cal~
B1fl Omck , 6t4 992-4240
C&amp;C Gene ra l Home M ain tenance- Pa1nttng, vtnyl S1 d1ng ,.
carpentry, doors, Windows, baths
mobtle home repa1r and more For
tree est1mate cat! Chet 614 992 -

' LF

•

)
'h

ASTRO-GRAPH

Earl's Home Mamtenance, vtn~l
s1drng, rooling, extenor and Interior P&lt;Hntmg, power washmg, room
addt!ions Free Esttmates, 614 992 4451

Friday,Dec . 29, 1995
'

F~ T£1-1

ground
21- Lingua
(airline)
23 Periwinkle
24 Coarse hair
25 Conotructlon
beam
27 Other
28 Require
29 Cricket
potlllona
30 Chlld'a card
geme
34 More crimson
35 Singer
Fitzgerald
36 Vehicle lor
Santa
38 Oornestlc
animal
41 Loathe
42 Storehouse
43 Weekendwelcoming
abbr.
44 Housetop
46 Ruselan veto
word
47 Welter's
burden
48 Long ago
49 Yorkshfre
river
51 GoHer'a
gadget

by Luis Campos

UNSCRAMBLE AIIOVE LETIUS

Upnghl P1ano Whttney Made By
K1mball Ame ncan Waln ut looks
And Works Greatl 614-446-9635

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

8 Marathon unit
9 Turn the page
(abbr.)
11 braws out
13 Fender
damage
19 Small piece of

8 PRINT
NUMBERED tmERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Peavey 6 channel PA system wt

.

document
4 Act as
chairperson
5 Comparative
suffix
6 Metaphysical
beings
7 --arms

~ C~ cryptograms are created from quotatiOns by famous people past and presen1
Eact'lletler 1n tne aptter standS lor anolh&amp;r Todays clue W eQUals G

"

800-287 ·6308, 614-4:06-6308, lp·2 speakelS $795 oo 61 4-446·
Duct Systems And A., Condition- 6591

'

Southwestern

Indians
2 Pronoun
3 Legal

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

New Eptphone electronic gurtar,
275 wan amp W/4 12 1nch speak
ers $65000614-4466591

Ht-Effec1ency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100, 000 BTU 1-

IT 1-J~ TK(

SERVICES

34,000 M1les, $11,500, 304-6752524
6323

Alvarez acouStiC gu1ta r DoYe
Eddll , l1ke new $35000 6t4-446
6591

F~rewood $40 Prck Up Load 614 -

388·9265

t991 Pont1ac Sunb1rd 4 Cylinder,
4 Door. Auto, PS, PB, Air. Burgundy, tgag Pon!lac Grand Am 4 Cylinder, 2 Doors Auto, Fully Loaded, Burgundy Needs Some Work.
Amencan General F1nance, 614
4464!13

1994 Chevy lumtna Eurosport

Musical
Instruments

A. Cf\E.CK.

27 16

Uncond1tronal lilet1me guarantee
Local refer ences lurn• shed Call
(6t4) 446 -0870 O r (614) 237
0489 Rogers Waterproolmg Es tab'ished 1975

SFA Reg1stered H1malayan Kittens, $200 OBO 614 -441 0782

YOJR (.fTORJ) Tf\IS
YEI'.R. W I TH ~ YW-·
0\Doo-10) 1

~

Yellowstone 23' sell-contained
cam per , askmg $2500 614-949:

t99t Grand Am. LE Fully Loaded,
$6,500,614 256- 1206

992-7929

I&lt;.LWI"'-V

~

&amp;

810

Registered Bo~er pups, 1 male 1
female , wormed w1th shots, 6 14

Tf.UN~L I'VE DXIOCD m

Motor Homes

CFA Reg1stered Htm alyan Kittens
W ill Be Ready For Chnstmas
Ready Nowl6 14-446-1t04

Poodle pupp1es uny toy males,
AK C, champ 1on bloodlr ne. sho ts
and wormed, 614 667-3404

~

1-----------..,.- =-:....:....::.c.::...:..:.:::;__ _,.'

1991 Ford Escort GT, bl ack, 5
speed , cru rse , PM, amt/m cas sene al e htgh m1 1eage and ltght
lront and (lgh t damage, $4700,
6t4 992 5524

Insure yow pel' s wmter coa l Ask
R&amp;G Fee d &amp; Supp ly, 614 992
2164 about HAPPY JA C K T O
NEKOTE Oelt c10US nu 1r1t10nal
food supplement

BORN LOSER

2 Chevrolet 5 Inch Railey Wheel!~

1987 Chry sl er 5th Avenue, V-6,
Automatrc , Full Power Very N1ce

3652

...

Every year. the Bois liqueur compa ny run s a bridge tips competition Cor
journalists. In one or these t1ps, the
mercurial Pak1stani Zia Mahmood
pointed out that usually 1C an opponent
doesn 'I cover an honor With an honor,
he hasn't got the missmg honor
Lew Mathe, a fiery competitor who
d1ed m 1986. was already aware or th1s
in 1962, when he played today's deal
dunng the Bermuda Bowl, which was
held in New York The decisive match
against the Italian Blue Team wouldn't
have been so close but Cor his making
this six diamond slam
Mathe's two-dtamond overcall was
thin in tenns or points but reasonable
in tenns or playing-tricks. North, Bobby
Nail, bid the slam because he assumed
Mathe had all his points outstde
spades.
Mathe ruffed lhe spade lead m lhe
dummy and tmmed1ately called Cor the
club king When East, Walter Avarelli.
played the three, Mathe assumed he
didn't have the ace So. Mathe ruffed
the club, ruffed a spade in the dummy,
ruffed a club in hand, ruffed another
spade in the dummy, ruffed a th1rd club
in hand and ruffed h1s last spade With
dummy's diamond king.
Now came the heart king, a heart to
declarer's Jack, the heart ace ~nd a
trump. The deCenden; could take only
the diamond ace.
That looks simple enough, but at the
other table the Italian declarer,
Eugenio Ch1aradia, went down in the
same contract. Deciding Cor some reason that West held the heart queen,
Chiaradia played Cor a heart-club
squeeze in the endgame

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1990 PonTtac Grand Am $2.500
304 675-5091

For sa le. one female m1n1ature
Collie, ready to go, $150 6 14
74 2-2050

••
•
,_.
.., •'

&amp; Motors

tOgal tank set up spec 1a ls F1sh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Pomt Pleasant . 304 -6 75-

2063

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

8 7 Astra Van. 85 Chevrolet luH
stze. 4x4 truck. 614949-2665

and locks, Greal Cal," $6500

5121

TI-lE'{ KEEP SA'(ING TJ.IE
SAME THIN-6 OVER AND
I-IONK, 1-lONK, HONK, 1-lONK ..''

Autos for Sale

neg 614 992 7478 or 614 949
2879

Block. brtck. sewer ptpes. wmd
ows, l1 ntel s, etc Claude W1n1ers,
Am Grande, OH Ca ll 6!4 - 245

LISTEN TO THOSE 6EE5E
FL'I'IN6 OVER .. '' 1-!0NK,
HONK, HONK, HONK ''

88 Plymouth Grand Voyaget
Auto, A., V6, Excel Cond $4 , 500~
614 441 -0777
89 Thunderbird SC , IWO door, 3 8 1---:---::-:--~-.;.

71 0

PB

Building
Supplies

PEANUTS

B~

Seen At Ga ll1p011 s Da•ly Tnbun8,
825 Ttmd Avenue GallipOhG
Oh10

4 Wh eele r 250 4 lr ax $1
614-367·9388

Upr1gh t, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Oh10, 1 800 537-9528

DOWN

There's
a good reason

!!

1976 Jeep CJ 7, V 8, $1200 614446-6958

Square bales ol grass hay,
Wayne Roush 614 -949-2287

S1g ler Fuel Orl Stove. Forced Air

CLOSET II

1984 Ford F 150, 4x4 300, 6 Cr.finder. Low M1les $3.200. OBQ
614 -388- 98 1,

ol90'k allallahay, 6t4-338·9199

614 992-5533

contraction

58 Nautical rope

By Phillip Alder

6 14 286--6522

614 698-6228

Betti

50 Film director
Jacquea52 Pita bread
sandwich
53 -Grande
54 Fencing sword
55 Receive
Information
56 II precedes gee
57 PoetiC

Opening lead: • 3

&amp; 4-WDs

' 78 F-250 Ranger 4x4, 4 speed
transmiSS IOn, 33~ BF Goodr1ch
Mud Terrain 11res, Della tOOl ba):
lor the bed, '79 Ford Super Cab
for parts, $3000 OBO or trade for
sma ll car or truck of equal value

M assey Ferguson 180 Tractor,
$5,950, Mas sey Ferguson t7 5
$5,800 Massey Ferguson 135
D 1esel $5,495, Fergu son T020

OAOBURN

JUGHAID

89 Chevy S- 10, 4 cyl, 5 sp, e~
cell ent co ndtt1o n 85 Chevy Ce lebrity, good condition 614 949
2 14'9
r

Fan, $75, 614·379-2720 AFTER
6RM

Efectnc WheelchairS / Scoo ters ,
New /Used Scooter / Wheelchair
Ld!s . Sta1rway EleYators lift
Chairs Bowman's Hom ecare,
614 -446 7283

G1eat Christmas Grits Boots By
Redwtng, Ch1ppewa, Tony lama
Guaranteed Lowe st Prtces At
Shoe Cale

Alli S Chalmers 190XT 2 WD 95HP
turbo dt esel Wllh AC519 end
loader, eo~ bucket, separate bale
spear 4665 hours, 90% rubber
on t 8 4x34 11res, excellent condition, $8900 , tractor only, $6500,

IN MY

'POSSUM,

66 Mercury lynx, 614 949 2665

1993 Chevy Srlverado 112 To~
4X4 Lo ng Bed , 350 . Automa1 1c;
44 000 Mrfes, Ekcellenl Condl!rOf\
$17,500 , 614-379 938 1

Co ncre te &amp; Plastic Sep11c Tanks,
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Entorpnses, Jackson, OH
[ -800-53 7 9528

Fuel 011 furnace . home made tandem trailer, 614 -992-5880

610 Farm Equipment

I FOUND
YORE PET

1 Underground
laborera' org.
4 -ala mode
7 Rel'a kin
10 Exhaust
12 Tear
14 Cherry pan
15 City in
Oklahoma
16 An deco
illustrator
17 Workers· assn.
18 Plans
20 Idiotic
22 Atmosphere
24 Constant
26 City in Nevada
30 Dictionary
compiler
31 Bernstein's
nickname
32-- loss
33 Hair
37 Scarce
39 Soothed
40 Cajole
43 Goodie for
Fido

45 Mincing
49 Playwright -

Dealer: West
South
West North Easl
Pass Pass
I.
2•
Pass
4•
1G •
Pass
Dbl
· All pass

BARNEY

1994 F 150 4x4 XL 300 6 Cylln der, 38 ,000 Mtles. lots Of Extm ~.
Wel l M a1ntatned $12.500 6t4
446 6769

ACROSS

Vulner;~ble. Both

12. 2.8

52 500 Miles $10,000. 614 -441
1417

N ew Farmers Unto n Tobacco
Warehouse, Ripley, Oh10 IS re cetvlng toba cco eve ry day F 1rs1
sale Jan 8th Call collec t OrY1 1le
Whalen 513-377-3364 or Et11son
Mayes 304 6 75-1858

Sega, Sega CD, ACIIVBIOr, Game
Geme, 6 Sega tape s, 4 Sega CO
games, 5 controllers $300 304
773-9166 or 304-773 5164

AKC Yellow lab Pups Wormed
Sho ts $300, (N eg ) 614 256 6336, AIIer6 PM

lntertherm &amp; Miller Mobtle Home
Furnaces Gas, 011 &amp; Electnc In
Stock l arge 01str1bu1er Buy Out
of New Mobil e Home Furnaces
Bank Ft nanctng Avatlable , Ca ll
Bennetts Mobtle H o me HTG &amp;
CLG .At 614 -446-94t6 or 1-800-

Newly redecorated, mce clean
2bedroom ground noor. wt d hookup Relereneea. Depo sit No pets

Matchtng Country Couch &amp; Chaar.
Glasstop Coflee Table , lamp,
6!4-44 t -0777

Buy or sell Rrver1ne Antiques,
1124 E Ma1n Street, on At t 24,
Pom eroy Hou rs M T W 10 00
a m to 6 00 p m , Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 pm 614 992 -2526

Grac1ous hvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartmenta 1n Mtddle-

&amp; Acreage

1 10 Ri0 1ng Lawn
Mower puarter Horse Mo ssburg
12 Ga Shot Gun. 614 -367-{)219

AntiQue V1ctonan vanny wtth cheval m1rror . excellen t c ond 1t10n,
must see. $275 , call evenmgs,
6t4 949 2957

ers Free Esbmates

350 Lots

J o ~111 Deere

AKC Reg1stered Pug Female 2
Years Old. Very Gentle Hou se
Tralned. Very Heal thy, $300 6 14441 -1687

PM

F1ve acre s,
ae rator, near
Racrne,$t6,000 can finance w11h
hall down, 614-949 -2025

Merchandise

Sam Somervi lle' s regular Army
For Your Carpet &amp; Vrnyl Need s
camouflage by Sandyville Po st
Mollohan Ca rpets Rt #7 N 614
Offtce Fn -Sun 12noon-6pm 304
446 7444
2 73 -5655 Jun1or SIZes Ex
GOOD USED APPLIANCE~ change 11ems to be 1n by Decem
Washer s, dryers , relr1gerators , ber 31, 1995
ran{les Skaggs Appliances . 76
Vme St ree t, Call 614 446 7398 , Santas Chuslmas Trees, Sta te
Rout e 850 Between Rt 35 and
1-800·499 3499
Rodney, We W 1fl Cut 6 14 245

wv 304-755-5885

tunbes

Z.,"tf~

Household

Pnce Bu st erl New 14x 70 2 or
3br Only $99 5 down. $19~month
Free del1ve ry &amp; satup Only a!
Oakwood Homes Nl\ro WV 304-

porl From $232·$355 Call 814·
992-5064 Equal Housmg Oppor.

ILl.'(

411' E,en,n9, 614-446·7157

Furn1shed Efflcaency $225/Mo
Ut1ht1es Paid, 920 Fourth Avenue,
Galhpohs, 614·446 -4416 After l

755 5885

You'il build a big nest egg when
you save with the classifieds

Natural Gas Furnace Very Ntce
61 4 446- 2003, 614 446 1409

REAL ESTATE

2 Oed room B1 1ck Ho me In Gal li
oo i!S Inc lu des Ga rage , C entra l
Atr Ln Krtchcn And Bath , 6 14
446 8578

Be ACool Car And Check Out the
Savmgs in the Classified Section.

2 Bedroo ms Wall To Wall Carpet,

01110 VALLEY PUBLIS HING CO
1ecommend s that you do bu s1
ness Wt th peopl e you know and
NO ! to send mon ey th.ug h the
mall un t•l you ha ve rnvesligated
Ulfl oftorrng

10 !

r, HqJ rS t' ed rong te rr•
N J.c,,rlg i\ &lt;,s !..l.:u~ s tor long
t,
,_,~,, t.IL
tv ior p3!t 11me
11., .1n . .:.11 It", Porn! Pleas ant
N_,•o; '19 e. Hcnabrll!di'On Center
S.Jt'll~L'('r3? llO u•t~ 1 Hox32fi,
P:~ · JliP:-1' ...!.'11 WV 25550 EOE
A c •'r ··~ /l •,•oc il ' e~ f ;:wrl y
t

210

u{l · ", ! W oP k

2 Bedrooms Porch. N1ce. Clean 5
Miles Soutll 2t8, $2 75/ Mo In
eludes Wate• $125 Depostt 614

•QJ9853

1992 Ford F- 150 XC 6 Cylinder.

1·- --M-I_s_c_e_lla-ne_o_u_s__
Days 614-446 - 54 0

3pc hvtngroom su1te $500 Con
sol e floo r model TV l1ke new
$200 304-675 1446

...

AIC Bedl 1er, Goo d Cond1tron

Tra•ler Space For Ren1. OJ W1111e

Goods

• J 8 76
• AJ 2

5840

460 Space for Rent

MERCHANDISE

tK1042
•K Q 8 54
EAST
•A Q 9 4 2
•Q 9 7
tA 6
10762
•J93
SOUTH

1966 S- tO 4X4 , 28 V6 5spd, ps
pb, short bed $4 600 304 -773

C 1995 by NEA h:

'

• K 8 6 5

1987 Ma zd a p1ckup, 4cyl. Sspp,
srlver exter1or, maroon 1n1enor,
n1ce clean work !ruck Sell or
trade 304 675 3324

Sleepmg rooms With cookmg
Al so tn11ler space on r1ver All
hook ups Call after 2 00 p 111 ,
304 · 773-5651, Ma son WV

12 28·95

--

CALL BRIAN AT 614-256-6391
IF NO ANSWER, LEAVE A
MESSAGE

Rooms for rent - weell or month
S!arlmg at $t201mo Gallta Hotel
614 446-9580

Rd. $100/Mcnth

.

BEK&amp; MEEK

351m . AUTOMATIC, BEDLINER.
TOOL
BOX ,
ALUMINUM
WHEELS GOOD CONDITION

Furnished
Rooms

510

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

256~ 1337

FINANCIAL

,

,

loo flriC O~ P&lt;1 1C. Did US Cot·
Sil ver Go ld Dt ilmO 'l&lt;l ', lil t 0 r:
Co l l~ct t tl l es Pape1W t'1g rq ~ I L
M f S Co rr Shofl 1r&gt;1 St•co• ,
Avenue Ga,ltpol s 6 ' t. t. 46 ?Aq

Gcnern l Ma rn tenancc Paon trng,
Yar e Work Wmd ow s Wash ed
Gu t!EHS Cleaned L 1g ht Haul1ng
Co mrn errcil l R est dent1al, Steve

' I

P e;Jot;Qn

1/3 S185 Or 304 713

Ct11 •~1 &lt;l :l C N A Wtll Care For [I
dvrly In l tHJir No n Srno k tng
Hnmu Days Call 61 4-446 4525

992 .l&lt;15 '
111 'll' lyp rs.s 11 ..: usus ne eded
1 -, 000 ncorm• poiPr•Ji,ll C::1ll I
•, 'J 1 ~1~3
'JJt&gt;IJ

r..1 ovr1 G , • I, "'
~Qf&lt;.J t, •:l' L &gt;I •
w oo~ J'~LP , t1.'
lamps il u •·n· c '1
IJc.r ~ 'H;(}S .V ,..,, '~
,11 fl VC'I y QOOC ~

IJio.,.,n lnsulat10n In su rance E)
pe tn(. t: 11e le rc nces lleasona blc
fl &lt;Jic~ C&lt;J II f or Fre e E st ma tes
ti 14 ? liS r17sr,

Sm all unlurn1s l1ed rwo bedroom
hous e Wi th base men t near
llacme, no pets, $::100 plus utili
Ires. 614 949 258 /

.,

,
J

r·1 '!I\ ~ r: ' lr r\t Work Home
, f r•
D l~cour'rsl !=le ) 1ble
lie 11\/Cntor y Requ 1red

f1,

try1~g

------180 Wanted To Do

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

' '

Lo~
Itt.: •g W,u.,
Hc;Jm•a X Bd .. ~ Mi1'
Jc 1 ·,~r

Hey' Sp1t that oul 1 Are you
to gel us all kill ed? I'

I' ;r. tJ
" , :· •\ ' &lt;1 1\
o· " 1, c '.t

11( '

450

)

Sm all Unlur nrs hed 1 Bedroo m
House Near K Mart, AH Cond iti oned, Gas Heat, M1crowave,
New Pa 1nt &amp; Carpet Upstalfs
Storage AYailable $325/Mo .,.
Gas Elecmc Call &amp;tween 8 &amp; 10
PM Or B~fore9 AM 614 -4461822

6 11'T7

Un turmshed, G raham Schoo l
Road, 2 Bedrooms. Stove, Relng ,
Washe r &amp; Dryer Hook Up Car ·
port, All Electnc, AIC, $275/Mo
$275 Deposit, 614 446 -3688
614 446 -4491

Houses lor rent 1n Reedsville,
Syracuse Middleport and Rutland
area s Contact Do\!l e Turn er Re
alty 6 14 992 2886

r o .::

IJ,,
• • ''

... ,981 FORDF-150...

capped EOH 304 675·6679

3bedroom. mce locatron low utlh\leS Oeposl! &amp; rele rence s requ1•ed $400/mo 304 675-1090

f ouno

t980 Ford XLT 4x4, auto 30~
new M1cheltn rad 1a ls, runs gootl
no r ust, $3,000 304 -576 2919 ~r
1-800-392-3844

l-£iT M&lt;O ovT
I flAil"' To 4o
!U&gt;1vl'"' M~ My
&lt;::rl p.l'-TN1 A'7

One bedroom lurn1shed apart
ment 1n Mtddlepon 614 -446-3091
or 614 -992 - 5304 or 614 - 992
2178

,, I'

1 "'_,

304 -773-5840

Pomeroy, 614 -992-5858

(! )

60

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

o Houses for Rent

~ 1,1 r

:;:r 1y lO&lt;i l r, 165..0

PHILLIP
ALDER

440
:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDdE

'10U Eli10UGHT!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Jo1nt endeavors could prove both produc·
t1ve and profitable m the year aheU.
However, you must know how to align
yourself with people who understand the
rudiments of success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 19) Others
mi!Jht make heavy demands on your t1me
and talents today. In fact, you may have
to alter or adjust your plans to suit their
needs. Get 8 JUmp on 1ne by undersland·

1ng the Influences
govem you 1n the
year ahead Send for your Astro-Graph
pred1ct1ons today by matltng $2 and
SASE to Astro-Graph, c/o th1s newspa·
per, P 0 . Box 1758, Murray Htll StatiOn.
New Yotk, NY 10156 Make sure to state
your zod1ac s1gn
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. 19) Today you
m1ght be a tad too sens~1ve lor your own
good Th1s could cause you to act delen·
s1vely and erect walls when you should
be building bndges.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) II you do
not live w1th1n your means today, you
m1ghl regret your spending later Do not
let inends Involve you 1n any financially
unsound arrangements .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Keep your
assertiVeness 1n check today W you want
assoc1ates to cooperate w1th you to
ach1eve a personal object1ve. Aggressive·
ness could chill their support.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Nothing
worthwhile will be achieved tOday ~ your
plans are too convoluted or complex.
Remember the phrase Keep 11 simple.
stupkl.
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) Do not poke
your nose into slluatlons where 1t doesn't
belong today. If you dO. you could be
drawn Into something you've been trytng

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Important
~ dec1s1ons shouldn't be rushed mto tOday,

especially 11 what you dec1de will affect
someone you're representmg who 1sn't
present.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In order to make
a favorable 1mpress1on on others today,
stnve to be sell-reliant Do nol ask com·
pamons to do things that you can man·
age fo• yoursell
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) M1nd your "'
budget today and don't let your extrava·
gant 1nchnat1ons entiCe you to buy unnec·
essary merchandise. Buy only what you
need.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) AvOid dtS·
cuss 1ng volattle 1ssues w1th your mate
today . 11 dtstastelul subjects are 1ntroduced, especially in public, ~ could spoil
the daY for everyone.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~Nov. 22) Imposing
your ideas on others could prove unwise
today 11 they don't buy what you put
down. ad&lt;itional pressure will not ch8ngetheir m1nds.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Usually
you can competently manage your
resources, but loday you mi!Jht be waste·
lui, especially regarding things that bring
you instant Qratlf~tion

My friend came home from the gym and got on her
balhroom scale "Alii want 1n life," she Sighed, "is a scale
that knows HOW to LIE I"

DECEMBER 28 I

'

�. L~

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Deaf school gets $3 million donation from stranger
By TODD SPANGLER
Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP) - Olive
Swmdcll s lived modestly with her
husband in a cluttered, run-down
Victorian house in the suburbs, and
nei~hbo rs knew little about her until now.
Mrs. Swindells. who died of a
stroke at age 94 while preparing her
tax return in March, lefl at least $3
million to a university for the deaf
that didn't know her or her husband,
who was deaf. She had quietly
amassed $4.8 million with help from
decades of stock purcha,es in stron g
con1pames .
"We don 't know why." Gallaudet
Umversity spokeswo man Mercy
Coogan said . " II was just this unbelievable gift."
The donation was the largest
from an individual in the 131 -year
history of the Washington, D.C.,
school. the only four-year liberal arts
college for the deaf in the United
States.
Gallaudet, which learned of the
gift earlier this month, will gel 80
percent of the estate after taxes and

fees are subtracted, Mrs. Swindells'
lawyer. Bruce E. Goodman. said
Wednesday. The final figure could
hit $3.6 million .
Mrs. Swindells' husband, Bert, a
draftsman , died in 1994 at 86.
Nobody seems to know for sure
where Mrs. Swindell s got the money to buy stocks or the real estate she
also owned .
"She was a very private person.
very mdependenl ," Goodman said.
" She didn 't strike me as eccentric.
She was very serious-mi nded ."
In a si milar case this year, a
woman who had turned a $5.000
investment mto a stock portfolio

worth about $22 million left her there were stacks of newspapers and
entire estate to Yeshiva Uni~ersity in magazine s dat mg to the 1920s.
New York. Anne Scheiber, a recluse dozen s of empty cans, bottles and
who died at 101 last January, never boxes.
attended the school.
The co uple had one luxury, a
The Swindells had no children summer cottage in Naples. Fla.. but
and no known living relati ves, and had not gone there for most of the
had li ved since at least the 1940s in last decade.
a middle -class neighborhood in tl&gt;c
Hilda " Pat" Brewer. a neighbor
Baltimore suburb of Pikesville m a and friend of Mrs . Sw indells. said
modest, eight -room house valu ed at the woman ~t ancd ··saving every
$35 ,000
penny" once she married . ApparentNeighbors were astonished to ly. it was these savings that she spent
learn about the fortune amassed by on the stock marke t.
a couple whose house was in disre"They were very unu sual peopair, the grass uncut and trash seldom ple ," neighbor Dra nnin Rose said.
taken lo the curb . In side the house.

"They lived like they had nothing.
They never put their trash out, never cut down a bush or a weed. "
Mrs. Swindells ' stock portfolio
was estimated at $4.4 million when
she died. It included thousands of
shares of companies such as H&amp;R
Block, DuPont. Archer Daniels Midland and Royal Dutch Petroleum.
The remainder o~ her fortune was left
in real es tate holdings and bank
accounts . Goodman said .
The Gallaudel gift will ~o toward
construcuon of a conference center
at the school, which has about 2,200
students.

White most
popular car color
in North America
By BRIAN S: AKRE
AP Business Writer
DETROIT (APJ - Forget
fuchsia. Puce is practically passe.
The hottest color on wheels is
white .
White was the color of choice
on most cars and trucks in 1995,
accordi ng to an annual survey
released Tuesday hy paint supplier DuPont Automotive.
··r think il's just a nonoflcn sive kind of color." said Bob Daily, DuPont Automotive's color
marketing manager. " ll 's kind of
bright and clean, and it looks
good on all sizes of cars."

u
ONLY AT, RUTLAND FURNITURE, RUTLAND, OHIO

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.

2
DAYS
ONLY
% FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
OFF*

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Girl
Scout Service Unit Leaders meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. in the Trinity
Church basement. All troop cookie
chairmen should anend for training .
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars will
meet Thursday, 7:30p_m at the post
home.

DEC. 29th &amp; Dec. 30th
SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE

LIVING
ROOM
DINING
SAVE!
ROOM
SAVE! BEDROOM
SAVE! RECLINERS
CURIOS

FRIDAY
CARPENTER Columbia
Township trustees end-of-year meeting Friday, 7 p.m. at the fire station:
Organizational meeting to follow.
POMEROY - Board of county
commissioners regular meeting Friday. I0 to noon in the Meigs County Courthouse.
LETART FALLS Letart
Township trustees end-of-year meeting Frid&lt;Jy, 4 p.m. at the township
office huilding.
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township trustees end-of-year meeltng
Friday. 6JO p.m. to be followed by
the 19'16 organ izational meeting.

Partly cloudy tonight, lows
in the teens. Saturday,
increasing cloudiness. High
near 40.

•

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 171
2 Sections, 14 Pages

: By TOM HUNTER
· Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County residents have
more than tripled their efforts to
recycle. according to year-end statistics released by the Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention
office Thursday.
During the first II months of
1995, 249 ,536 pounds of house hold
materials had been recyc led in
Meigs County. up more than 360
percent from the 1994 tota l of
67,772 pounds recycled in 1994.
The number of household app liances recycled in Mei gs County also
saw an increase. 58.500 pounds or
appliances were recycled in the
county in 1995, up from 34.000
pounds in 1994.
"I attribute the increases to more
public participation :· Liller Control
Director Kenny Wiggin s sa1 d.
"During 1995 , we've estab lished
more dropoll sites, particul arly 111
the Bedford and Salem Center areas.
If you make situations easy and
accessible for people, they arc more
likely to participate," he added.
The county program al so placed
13 park t&gt;cnches, manufactured from
recycled plastic, throughout the live
villages and three hi gh sc hools in
Meigs County. The hcnchcs were
paid for through a Ohio Department
of Natural Resources gra nt.
The county program. now in lis
13th year, has been responsible ror

0

m

AND
MORE!

SATURDAY
DARWIN - Bedford Township
trustees end-of-year meeting Saturday, I p.m. at the Bedford town hall .
PORTLAND - Lebanon Township trustees meeting Saturday. 7
p.m. at the township hall.
SYRACUSE - Sunon Township trustees end-of-year meeting
followed hy organizational meeting
Saturday, I p.m·. in the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

35 cento
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 29, 1995

al :IIL'~l:-. Wl'll lh:y arc cuttin g th r..: am ount s nl 111nnc~ Tl11.:y :-,cml 11 h:1ck lP
Cu lumhu s !1 J he di strihuteJ, " Burch ~ai d .
.. TI1L' ~r~m:c dollars go to Cleve land . t'll lurnhu s anJ C in cinn:11 1 :md \\,:
Lhlll .l ge t uu1 1.111 -. han.:.·· o.; alll Bu rch. wlli J~e ca:-, tcrn l) i ll o_dl -.. t l"ll"l l.tlVL"I.., l1 \ ::
lll OS tl y rural \.."I) LIIlll ~S.

''There arc go ing to be few er doll ars s rr~aJ around , competiti on wil l bL'
more rierce. ;md rural Ohio is going to lose.··
Mic hncl Dawson . press sccre!ary for Gov. George Voin cvich, saiL! rur:1l
i.lrca .. would nrH wi nd up shonchan ged.
.. The people who need the help will ge t the heir no maner whcr,· thq
li ve ." DJwso n said .
" Roh Burch hns proved ove r and over agatn that he does n't know what
he's 1:1 lking ahoul. \ Vhat he 's saying 1oday ts JU St plain nonse nse." saiLJ Dawson. w!HJ~t: ho~~ lh:fl'atcd Burch mthc 1994 guhcrnat orial election.

U.S. Rcr John Kllslch, R-Wcslerv illc. has S&lt;llli proposed hudget redu c-

!Ill' LIIC p( '&gt; Jll' lld ing grow th
TilL· Oh11l D L·pann~t·nt ,I( Human Serv ices did not &lt;t)~rc:c with Burch'.-

!h ill"' \\"L'f"l' l.." lll " 1!1
,l..,..,l•...,:-. mt'll!

·· 1 d1111·1 th 1n k t il~:: .., Lll l ' \\iiU id de si!! ll a pr•ll! l":llll . .,.,iJl"lil\. 1 n 's Medicaid
h:tsrd on rq !l(lll:ll.tppi ('dL" hcs,'· said Ronald

wc: ll ;u~..· l·hn·k,, thai \\ "tluld hl·
RIHlliL: :-.. dcpul~ Jircc tur.

lll"

·· J t h m~ wil&lt;t l we' ll~ l ut1k111 ~ ;It is des ignin g a program that 's diflercnl

· from t 11d~t) ·:-. fl:tkra l rrqu u·t:nH.: nt s. hut sti ll hJ~ a Sl' t ! l()t~f fur inl:ome lev·
ci s or l(lr rninunu m hcn~...· l"l l'\, ·· ht· :.aid .
··.so \llllll'hndy in Athe ns at ~t rl! rtai n le ve l of mcoml! or certai n number
o f ki d.... hmH\'L' r the final pmgram turns DUI. the person in Athens would
he trc;lln lthc s;um; a.. thl' rcr~ () ll Ill Cuyahoga Coun ty... Rh odes said .
LeaJn:-. 111 .1r~•~ ~ oubidc Oh1u \ bi )!gcs t Ci ti es have i11crcasing ly complained in rcLcn t years ah tnll a ru nccntrat1 on ld. government juhs. money,
anJ h1 ghwa y c on~truc t 1 on sp~..:ntling in the state\ b iggest cities.

Local businessman
enters the running
for treasurer's post
Middlepo11 area businessman and
· resident Ed Durst has filed his peti tion of candidacy to seek the Rcpuhlil:an nomination for the offi ce (d
Mei gs County Treasurer.
Durst filed his petiti on Wedne' day at the Mei gs County Board of
Elections. and is see king the poSI
curre ntly held by Repuh lic m
Howard Frank , who has hce n coun ty treasurer since 199 1
-- Durst has work ed loc ally in th e
banking industry over 1he last 25
years. He began his fin&lt;.~nci a l career
with Citi zens National Bank of Middlcport. workmg with the instituti on
lor more than 16 years. and has hccn
with Farmer:-. Bank fur the past n!,J1f
ycurs .
/
Durst and hi s wiiC, Ruth , fr~,.• al ..,o

. ·&lt;~'
..-~
....... ~

@
RECYCLE
aluminum cans

th e owna s &lt;mJ upcrat or.'i of Ed's
Grcc nh (tu scs for the past IX years.
·· 1fcc l th :ll \V i!ll my experience in
til L· rln :IIKial !"i,·td. I ( ~ Ill he a hig
a ~:-.l.' t tu the cou 11ty 111 thc....t.rea!-iurcr's
ulliL·l.'," Durst s&lt;.1Him announc in g his
c: tn dH.bL·y

Durst I S cu~n·ntly .\Crvmg ht s sec~
onJ tcrm a ~ a S;Jti . . hu ry Township
tru stl.!t'.

He

1~

a U.S. J\rlll y vctL' ran . and

ha;.. hrcn

ol M1ddkport
Lq.! l()ll Pns l J 2X lor the
p .l .\ 1 27 )'C&lt;I I /'1 Jl c 1'1 ;JI \o &lt;I IIIL'IIIhl' r
of 1hc DAv
Du rsl and ht' wi l"~o: nf .·w y~;1rs,
tile... runth'J Ruth Reed . re ~ 1d ~ :ll
·' ll..fll :\tl hk Sur nr11 1t Rn :1LL Middll'Jltlrl . d lhl h(lt h :IIIL'mlll ll' Bradford
C'llllldl 11 ! Cl m ~ L Thq h&lt;~VL' a sm1,
:1 lllL' IIl h l·l

1\m c ri ~..·;m

lly TOM II liNTER
Sentinel News Stall

EFFORTS TAKE OFF- Meigs County Litter Control Director
Kenny Wiggins displayed one of the recycling boxes plated around
the county. Recycling efforts continued to be succe.o;sful in 1995, Wi~­
gins sa id. (Sentinel photo)
cleaning moer than 400 illegal dump
sites, 8.000 miles of highways. and
ricking up over 45.000 hags of trash
throu ghout Meigs Co unt y sinL.:c II
hcgan. ac cord1n~ tu \Viggms.
The program was funded in 1995

Qy LARRY MARGASAK
" has noth ing w do l'{ llh our pay "
Associated Press Writer
Democrats we re "Jcmagnguin g''
: WASHINGTON
House the issue by try ing to change the sub Republicans have offered an abun- jcct from" hal anced budge t; and, as
dance of proposals in their drive for a mcmhcr of Congress, he was a
a balanced budget agreement, hut "constitutional offi cer. ·· not a feel ergiving up their paychecks apparent- • al employee.
ly isn 't one of them.
Rank and fil e House la wmake rs
While the partial government do- - Repuhlican and Dernocral alike
sure will leave some 760.000 fcder- - arc pai d $ 133,600; Speaker Newt
al workers with pruned paychecks Gingnch gets $ 171.500: Majority
starting today, House GOP leaders Leader Dick Anney. R-Texas. gels
reneaiedly have rebuffed anempts to $148,400, as does Minority Leader
h&lt;.. t congressional pay dunng a shut- Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.
down.
'
While some federal empl oyees
House Majority Whip Tom make more than $100,000 a year. the
DeLay, the third-ranking House norm is the same as "most working
Republican, offered these reasons for Americans, the majority of whom
the opposition in a recent CNN li v&lt;l paycheck to paycheck," said
appearance: Balancing the budget John Koskinen . deputy director of
the Office of Management and Bud get.
Health and Human Services Sec retary Donna E. Shalala recently
wrote to her employees that fur loughed workers may apply for
unemployment , but woul d have to
give
back all benefits if they arc paid
The Daily Sentinel will not be
later.
"You may wish to contact your
published Monday so that its
·-· to apprise them of the
creditors
employees may obs_erve the New
current
situation."
she said .
Year's holiday.
·the
Senate unaniThree
times,
Regular publication and busi that
mously
approved
language
~ess hours resume Tuesday.
would decree - during a full or par-

STOREWIDE SAVINGS!!
DAYS SAME AS CASH

SUNDAY
POMEROY- Hillside Baptist
Church New Year's Eve service
starting at 8 p.m . Special smging and
speaking . Refres hm ent s will be
served. All welcome .

•

FINANCING WITH 0% INTEREST (with Approved C~edit)

* TV's and Appliances Excluded

PDRIITDRB CO.

MAIN STREEt
742-2211

RUTLAND, OHIO
•1-800-837•8217

No Sentinel
on Monday

Service Hotline 742-2212
MasterCard

.,\

daughte r- in -law, and gmndso n: Tim,
Krisli . ;md Jarrcl Durst of Middleport : and one so n al llnmc. Jim
Durst.

1\flajor bond issues for Eastern,
Southern schools set for ballot

through a $45.549 Recycle Ohio'
gram hy the Ohio Deparlln cnl ol
Natural Rcst Hlrl·~-" Division of Rccy din g anJ Lit k r P1\"\C ntinn. ·$ 15.000
fr om the G-J-M- V So lid Wa ste
(Continued on l'a~:e 3)

The fi l1 n~ (k:1dl uJc lor pl&lt; H.: m ~·
issues on I IlL' halh1t is onl y o 11 c \\Cl'l

away. w1 th l\\oo fthc m o~ l impill"l ant
tax i ssues to b ee (ount y vo tL.: r~ 111 the
last 20 year&gt; · already fil ed lor the
March I&lt;J pri m:u·y hall ot.
The E;1..; 1l'm and S(HIIh an l.tll ·:d
~c h ool tl i., tril"l .. 11 ,1\T fiiL:d V.llll ll ll·
Mc ig-; (\1u n1 y Ou:u·d tl f LIL'll l iill " Il l
place separJii: hond i:-.sur:-. 111 tilL' primary to fund II C\\: constructinn anJ
major building improvements in

eac h ll 1stn ct.
The f"i lin _;! Lk.1d i111L fnr prilll&lt;.lr~
1:--;. , uc s IS Jan . -l .1! -1 p.ltl
W1th stalL' hu!ldm!! a'sist;lllcc
l und ~ d w in dlm ~. rc..; 1dr nt s in tilt:
E:1:-.tl'l n and S o uth ~.· rn d ! 'i ll"i L· t ~ ;1n:

L11nl "ront111g wh at L"utdd he thc u· l;, st
sh(lt at new huildin ~ pm_l cc ts .
L .l ... tt: nt Ln c:JJ ,dli l· i: tl .., l ~.n·t: fikJ
!'til .t -l.~ · ll lil l hnnd ~ ~.., IJ.' 1\1 lh.· nd l\
L.l Ill \I I ti L" [ II H1. I L\ '· 111 ._,11 U11 I' IJ I , trl d 1 1t iJ ·
L' r IIII J1 111h.' lllt: ll h lor hu ild111,!;, 111 thr

district to pay c o ~ t s for r un:ha:-.c or
cl ass room f(}ci litJ cs from the st ate.

Shutdown-hit federal workers
receive paired-down paychecks

TUPPERS PLAINS - Square
dance at the Tuppers Plains Post
9053 of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars Saturday, 8- 11 p.m. featuring
Alvin Chutes and the Country
Drifters.

MIDDLEPORT - New Year's
Eve party 8 p.m. lo I a.m. at the
American Legion Annex. Free and
open to the public. Music by "The
Classic" Snack table, soft dnnks
and party gloves.

Sports, Page 4

Recycle:
a concept
pays off
in Meigs

ON ALL

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees end-of-year meeting
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at the Pageville
Township Building. Organizational
meeting 10 follow.

TUPPERS PLAINS - A New
Year 's Eve party will be held at the
Tuppers Plains Post9053 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars starting with
a covered dish dinner at 6 p.m. with
a dance following . Free admission.

Pick 3:
8-3-3
Pick 4:
2-7-3-8
Buckeye 5:
5-11·26·28-30

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
· COLUMBUS - A Republican congressional plan 10 turn control ol wel fare and other programs ovc rto states likely will spell tro uble lor rural " ""' ties, said stale Sen. Robert Burch, D-Dovcr.
Republicans disagreed.
.
Burch objec ted Thursday to a GOP plan that would send federal muncy
for Med1caod, welfare and other programs direc tly to stales '" the form of
block grants with freedom to spend accordin g to thcif indivi dual needs.
Medicaid is the federal-state welfare prog ram for the poor.
. "I have no problem with mov ing decision -making back as close as posSible to the people," Burch said .
But he said there was a history of Ohi o rural areas lming to hi~ citie, in
a competition for government money.
~
"The R&lt;;Jlublican approach in the stale of Ohi o is not goi ng to sene rur-

OFTHE YEAR

calendar

LONG BOTTOM - Mt. Olive
Community Church New Years Eve
worship service. 7 p.m. to midnight.
The public is invited to attend.

·Texas A &amp; M
wins Alamo
Bowl

Block grant concept draws fire in Ohio

Community

RACIN E - Free New Year's
Eve pa11y featuring CJ. and the
Country Gentlemen. 8 p.m. to I a.m.
at the American Legion HaiL Family -oriented , no alcohol allowed.
Refreshments. All welcome .

Ohio Lottery

Thursday, December 28, 1995

ti&lt;JI sh utdown - that no payc hec ks
~o out to th~ •l.' ) House nH.: I"Jlhcrs ,
Ihe I00 sc nal ol s , 1r the rrcsid cn1.
' Five limes, Rep. Richard Durbin.
D-111.. said he I ned to get the Hou se
to consider the proposal and was
rehulled hy Re puhl ie:ms - especially in 1hc lcadershi p-w ntrollcJ
Rules C{ l l!ll nitl ~ c .
" I thin k the Re puhlican leadership is very two -laced, " said Sen.
Barbara Boxa. D-Cal1f., the chief
Senate sponsor of the legis lation.
"They want fcdcml employees and
cu ntr&lt;;ctor~ (serving the govc mmcnt)
to sacrifice themselves on the altar of
their balanced hudget plan. but arc
nut willing to saL:rificc themselves on
that altar."
In addition to Durb in's rejec ti on
in the Rules Committee- the gatekee per thnt decid es wtiich bill s and
amendments get to the floor - the
Boxer proposal was deleted by a
House- Senate conference
When DeLay, of Texas. was
asked on CNN 's "Talk Back Live "
on Dec. 19 whether he would support congressional pay cuts d~ring a
shutdown, he told the audience participation show: "No, I would not. I
am not a federal employee. I am a
constitutional officer. My job is in
the Constitution of the United States.

TilL

~~~u e

wou ld approve 2_,_

)'L'ar hnnd s to finam.:c the co nstrul: IJon

nl a new

huild111 ~

to lwusc the

dl\ lfll "l ·, K-Xstudents, in addition to

l!l:qor rc no v~ms and additions to
the cx 1s!Jng higtlS'thou l huildmg.

Ea,iLTn wi ll rece ive $7.2 million
111 ass istance from the State Bui lding
/\ ..;st-- I :I JlL"~' lund rm IlK· SX .7) million
p nl.j L'~· I. l c;n · in~ ~1.~ mil liun to he
r:u..,c:d I'\ th~...' h1 IIHI l \', lJ(' .
Ll &gt;tnn L ,._: ,d Board members

ex amin ed the pO&gt;Slbility of purchas(Continued on Page 3)

·t996's first
baby contest .
scheduled
The first hahy h&lt;lfn io a Me1gs
Count y coup le 111 llNh will rece ive

a vnricty or ll t: 111 :-. and ... c rv i cc~ from
numcrou:- hus1nc"'" cs lahlishlllcnts 1n
an ;.~nn ual ...:o nt est ~PI HhDTL'd by The
Dali y Sen t me l and lo cal hus mcssqs .
Pare nt\ o f rln ldrc n ho rn after
m id night , D LT .. \! . I'IIJ')_ arc asked
tu se nd thc1r nant~...· . .tdd iL"'I:- and doctor's report to ·The lla dy Sentinel by
no later than noon on Jan . I0, 1'196.
The contest rules arc:
• The wi nn1ng hahy must he horn
to pare nts who tu\· legal n.:s idcms of
Mei gs County.
• The exact time of hirth must be
spec1ficd in a writt en swtement by
the attending physiCi an.
• The application must be fi led in
the office by noon. Jan . I0.
• In case nf t1c. award will be di stributed at th e J i ~c rc t 1un ll f the conte st co mmittee.

NO DEAL- Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, right, and House
Speaker Newt Gingrich spoke at a news conference Thursday on
Capitol Hill. On the day before resuming top-level budget negotiations, Gingrich ruled out reopening the entire government until a sev·
en-year balanced budget deal is forgcd with the president. (AP)

Ann oun t:c mcn t of the winner
will he made th e rnllowin g day.
Gifts include a bear from the
Ohio River Bear Co .. Middleport ; a
case of Gerber hahy food from Big
Bend Foodland , Pomeroy; a stainless steel sipper cup from Acquisitions Fine Jewelry, Middleport; a $5
gift ·.certitieate from the Fabric Shop;

(Continue~ on Page 3)

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