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'

-'

Pltge+-10-The Dally Sentinel

. Tbe year in review.:.
'

.

MAY
The contract for engineering
~ervices on the $127,000 Pearl
Street reconstruction project was
awarded by Mid&lt;llepon Village
Council to Triplett Engineering of
Pomeroy.
The Southern Local Board of
Education moved to discontinue
the noon kindergarten routes since
kindergarten pupils attend school
all day.
The State Controlling Board
released $50,000 for redevelopment of the existing boat ramp on
the Ohio River at Middleport
,_. Forty-three seniors at Eastern
High School received their diplomas. Andrea Cleland was class
valedictorian and Leigh Ann Redovian was tlass salutatorian. Charles ·Knight was reappointed
as Meigs County Public Defender
through mid-1992 by the Meigs
County Commissioners.
A loan of $175,000, used for
operational· expenses of the Eastern
Local School District. was secured
by the board from Farmers Bank.
Theodore T. Reed Jr., 66,
prominent Meigs County banker,
died unexpectedly on Sunday, May
26, !991 at Ripley•, N.Y. ·
Nearly 350 Pomeroy. High
School alumni and guests gathered
in the Meigs High School cafeteria
for the annual banquet and dance of
the Pomeroy Alumni Association.
The 1991 Middleport Alumni

alu1nni attending.
were awarded to
Maurisa Dawn Nelson, Darcie
Mafullla Wolfe, Joseph Paul Smith,
Philip Don Swisher, Mark Walter
Crooks and Heather Pullin.
Nearly 400 people attended the
1991 Racine Southern Alumni
Banquet at Southern High School.
Two stolen vehicles were recovered and three runaways were
taken into custody in Racine.
The senior class at Meigs High
School - 139 students - received
their diplomas. Tri-valedictorians
were Kristen Ayne Slawter, Aaron
Bradford Sheets and Jennifer Laurie Taylor.
Sixtx-seven Southern High
School seniors received their diplomas in combined baccalaureate and
commencement exercises in the
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium .
Jennifer Smith was valedictorian
and Jarrod Cin:le was salutatorian.
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Rerardation and Development Disabilities announced the
resignation of the program's superintendent, Lee Wedemeyer who
held the position since January
1958.
An allegation that a Meigs
Junior High School teacher physically abused a disabled student was
made by the student's parent at a
regular meeting ?f the Meigs Local ..
BOaid of Educatton.
·
'
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy was the scene of an
"explosion" on Tuesday afternoon
when the annual tri-county simulated disaster was held.
The Meigs County Board of
Education voted to continue the
safety belt edu~abon,center. .
William J. Joey Re1trmre, 23,
Old Chester Road, Pomeroy, died
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
fro,m an apparent self-111flicted gun
shot W?und to. the abdomen.
Me1gs Jumor High School students were recogmzed ~or academ1c excellence at the fust annual
awards banquet. .
.
Middleport VIllage Council
took the fust step toward mandatory trash p•ck:up.
More than 200 guests attended
open house at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Fifty-nine of Meigs County's
highest ranking students were hon-.
ored at the seventh annual Academic Excellence Banquet held at
Meigs High School.
Letart Falls native Ben Grimm
wa~ honored by the Ohio Valley
Baseball Association for his lifetime achievements in the game of
baseball.
Ground was broken for the $1.2
million expansion of the facilities
housing the Meigs County Depanment of Human Services in Middleport
.
After three tries at the ballot
box, the three-year four miD oper.ating levr of the Southern Local
School D1strict passed by a vote of
655 to 496. The Meigs Local
School District's five mill continuing levy for general operating
expenses went down to defeat by a
vote of more than two 10 one, 1,116
to472.
A rock slide lhat occurred just ..
below Hpbson on State Route 7
near the Meigs-Gallia County bor·
der caused the evaA:uation of 26
'people in 10 households. It is speculated that the slide occurred as a
' result of an ~quake in Illinois.
It\ additillll to the rock slides that
dum~'ltlnrof-bouldets from
nearby cliffs, coun_tless cracks in
~ and on the road devel·
· A celcliration of the first
annivetsary of the Options for
Elders J10111111 wu obla ~ at tbe
Meial CountY SenloJ Cilizenl Center. \lelp ~ty is 0110 of nine
SoadltatetD Ohio counties
in'IGI~ In tbe Opd0111 for Elden
pilot.,.aject.
(

r

•

'

Pomeroy--M-Iddleport,.Ohlo
County Museum during Heritage
Weekend. The theme 'was "Traveling Through Time in Meigs County."

Activities sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association in
conjunCtion with Heritage Weekend brought many people to town
to' watch the parade and see the
crafts,. Civil War camp and entertainment
JUNE
The first step of construction
Rutland's $2.2 million waste was taken on a river access prOJect
water collection and sewage treat- ncar Forked Run State Park.
ment system got un&lt;lerway. TAM
Holly Williams, daughter of
Construction of Westerville was Allen and Marilyn Williams, was
awarded the $1,605,761 contract crowned the first Heritage Queen
for installing all of the lines and of Pomeroy during Heritage WeekMack Industries, Valley City, was end.
given the $330,811.50 contract for
Paul Klocs was appointed interconstruction of the waste water im president and chairman of the
treaunent plant .
board of Farmers Bank and SavNineteen teenage boys and girls ings Company. ·
with their n counselors stayed
Tina Morgan, Chillicothe, was
overnight at the Pomeroy United named .ne~ branch mana ger of
Methodist Church. They were on a, BenefiCial Fmance m Pomeroy.
300 mile bike trip.
Documents pledging the local
Arraignment proceedings were ' share of funds for work at the Midheld before Meigs County Com- dleport sewage lagoons .were exemon Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III cuted by the U.S. Army Corps of
for !9 defendants, all arrested on Engineers and Middleport Mayor
drug charges.
Fred Hoffman during a meeting of
Southern High School sen10rs the Meigs County Commissioners.
outscored those in ~th Meigs and
Meigs County's three local
Eastern High Schools "m the Ohio school districts qualified for partieNinth Grade Proficiency Tests ipationin the Appalachian Aeeess
according to. the Ohio Department and Success Project, funded by the
of Education.
·
Ohio BOaid of Regents.
The Ohio University Communi Diplomas were awarded to 42
versity Band presented a concert in seniors during combined baccalauPomeroy. It was the sixth consecu- reate and commencement exercises
Live year the band performed. The at Eastern High School. Leigh Ann
concert was sponsored by Bank Redovian was Salutatorian and
Andrea Cleland was Valedictorian.
Ath ens, N..
A
to secure funding for
Bruce 'Fisher, Middleport, pur·sitt development from the chilsed the Middlepon Deparunent
of Development Store from its long-tim e owners,
were taken by Middlepon Village Lionel and Mary Lou Boggs.
Council.
Work began on a majo r conJULY
struction project that will completeJy renovate the Pomeroy offices of
About 40 Middleport merchants
Farmers Bank and Savings Compa- and professionals joined village
ny.
officials at Middleport village hall
A debate between the Meigs to hear about plans and funding
Local Teachers Association and the options for the revitalization of the
Meigs Local Board of Education downtown area.
on medical co-insurance payments
An application for 50 vouchers
resulted in an action being filed in fo r housing assistance to low Meigs County Com mon Pleas income Meigs County families was
Court.
filed with the Department of HousThe first steps were taken in an ing and Urban Development by the
attempt to get rural water service Meigs Metropolitan Housing
into the Pageville area of Scipio Authority.
Township.
Salary increases of up to 10 perEleanor Thomas, director of the cent have been given to teachers
Meigs County Senior Center, was and other certified personnel workhonored for 18 years of service and ing in the Southern Local School
presented a resolution of recogni- District by the Southern .Board of
tion from the Qhio Senate at a Education.
Regional Advisory Council on
Construction was started on the
Aging meeting.
new 1,300 square foot Racine
The Ohid Board of Regents Optometric Clinic under the pracawarded $50,000 to the University tice of Dr. Melanie Weese.
of Rio Grande to suppon a collabeA Burmese python, measuring
rarive effon between University of over 13 and one-half feet, was disRio Grande and Meigs County covered along Route 7 by Meigs
Schools based oit-~ e, Community County Department of Litter Con Education Model. ·
trol Workers Tim Davidson and
Tons of trash and debris as well Martin Woodard, both of Pomeroy.
as several hundred bags of garbage
Robert Byer, Director for the
were collected along 57 miles of Meigs Emergency Management
the Ohio River.
Agency, related to a group'.of Pity
Robert E. Byer, Syracuse , Me residents and state officials his
Administrator of the Meigs County efforts and his frustration with lack
Emergency Medical Services, was of help from the state during public
elected president of the Ohio Asso- meeting.
ciation of Emergency Medical Ser·
A budget of $291,908.17 for
vices when the statewide organiza- 1992 was approved by Racine Viltion met for its annual education lage Council following a public
conference in Columbus.
hearing.
Hallie D. Stollings, 76, Chester,
L.
Stewart,
Susan
died from injuries he suffered in a :Williamstown, W.Va., was hired as
two-car accident on Route 7 and 35 the new executive director for the
in Kanauga.
Meigs County Senior Citizens CenA $1,016,400 cost proposal for ter.
the Leading Creek Recreation Park
Pomeroy Village Council di sdevelopment in the area of the Page cussed possible funding of litter
Street marina was presented to control programs within the village
Middleport Village Council by as John Anderson, village adminisMayor Fred Hoffman. · ··
trator, presented information to
More than 300 visitors enjoyed council members regarding grants
a variety of exhibits and demon· available to Ohio municipalities
strations of yesteryear skills as well from the Ohio Department of Natuas entertainment at the Meigs ral Resources.
·
John M. Causey of Reedsville
was transported to Orient Correctional Institute .to begin serving a
!lenience on reduced charges of
voluntary manslaughter.

'

Charles .SnodgraSs, 65, retired
from lhe the Ohio Valley i'ublishing Company after 40 years of service in the printing industry.
Plans forgC{I ahead on the first
phase of a $1.2 million sewage system expansion project witbin the
Village of Pomeroy.
Only phase-out funding for the
Options for Elders program was
included in the two-year budget
passed by the Ohio General
Assembly.
• The Pomeroy Merchants-Association voted to proceed with a
-downtown revitalization project
with a possible total package ·worth
of $550,000.
Two utility poles were clipped
off, a fence surrounding the
Pomeroy Elementary School was ·
knocked down and a swing set
inside the fence damaged when
struck by a vehicle traveling south
on Mulberry Avenue.
Two months after the rock slide
at Pity Me, most residents were
. still living in rental propeny awaiting news from the state as to what
caused the slide and what would
happen to their properties.
Pri•cipals from the Eastern
Local High School and tHe Syracuse Elementary School in the
Southern Local School District participated in the Ohio OepaiUllent of
Education's Tenth Annual Ohio
Academy of School Improvement
Strategies held in Columbus.
A proposed budget of
$1,664,160 for village operations in
1992 was ad'opted by Middleport
Village Council.
Nearly $1 million in grant
money was received for four major
projects within the Village of Middleport
·
Repaving of several streets by
the Shelly Company was carried
out in the Village of Racine.
Glcnn Crisp, Langsville, and
Charles Gard, 61, Gallipolis were
injured when the plane they were
flying crashed in a wooded area on
Gard's farm near Leading Creek
Road, about one-half mile from
Middleport.
Patriotic salutes, a parade and a
gigantic fireworks display combined to make a memorable "For
God and Country" Fourth of July

Thursday, ~anuary 2, 199~ '

Livestock Sa;le. The bank pur;·
chased 35 animals.
· • .
Application for $1.9 million In
grants and low interest loans from
the FarmeR~ Home Administration
for construction or.a sewage treat"
ment system iri Tuppers Plains wa$
made by the Tuppers Plains Sewer
Steering Committee;
·
Law enf(X'CCIIlent officers seized
over 3,000 marijuana plants in a
continuinguadication effort. .
An open en.rollment policy
allowing students of contiguous .
school districts a choice of the
school they attend was adopted by
the Meigs Local Board of Educa-'
tion. A compatible policy was also ;
adopted by the Southern Local
School District.
· Southetn Ohio Coal Company's
AUGUST
Meigs Division announced lhe lay- ·
off of 197 employees from its
A gas rate increase was pro- underground mining complex in
posed by the National Gas and Oil Meigs and Vinton Counties.
·
Corvoration that services Rutland,
Finishing touches to the new :
Racme and Syracuse.
intersection of Route 33 at Nye : .
Millie Midkiff was named chair- Avenue and Route 124 were added. '
man of the !991 Meigs, County
Kimberly Johnson and Tim
Turkeywalk of the American Heart Cogar were selected the 1991
Association.
Meigs County Little Miss and Mis•. Several Rutland Township resi- ter at the Meigs County Fair.
dents aired their grievances before
A contract with the Depaitment
Meigs County Commissioners of Human Services to operate the
regarfling the new sewage system Adult Basic Education Jobs Proin Rt)Jand.
gram was approved and the staff of .
Details of Pomeroy 's zoning the ABE program re-employed at a :
ordinance were reviewed by the meeting of . the Meigs County ·
Zoning Planning Commissipn. ·
BOaid of Education.
•
Adept Construction Corponltion
Customers of the Pomeroy
Water Depanment in the Enterprise of Vienna was awarded the
area were encouraged to boil their $50,938 bid for renovation of
water for a period of 48 hours.
offices in the Meigs County CourtA contract for reconstruction hQu~ by lhe Meigs County Com - ,
work of Pearl Street.between Lau- missioners:
.
rei Street and General Hartinger
An increased price for school .
Parkway was awarded to CJ. Con- cafeteria meals was set, a work- ·
tracting and Trucking of GaUipolis book payment policy set and head :
by Middleport Village CounciL
teachers and athletic coaches hired ·,
The wife of Meigs County Sher- in preparation for the opening of :
iff James Souls by, Susie, and his schools in the Meigs Local District.
daughter, Cindy Fields, were erectMembers of the Meigs County
ited with assisting in the capture of · Chamber of Commerce were urged
two fugitives from Central Ohio.
to contaCt state and federal officials
Johnanna D. Shuler, 45, Racine , in an effort to maintain the lOth
died in an early morning traffic u.s. Congressional District.
accident on Route 338 in Letart
The Meigs County Commis Falls.
sioners reviewed a letter from the
Home National Bank was the Ohio Public Defender's Office
largest single buyer of livestock at regarding future funding.
the 1991 Meigs County Junior Fair

-ohio _State;
OU post
cage wins

,ce!ebration in Middlepon as former
Mtddlepon resident, Gen. James.
J:ll!llnger, Colorado Springs, parttc1pa.ted.
.
·
MicheUe.Fnen~ and Brent R~se
we.re.qowned Me~gs County J un1or
Fatt Queen and King a~ the Rutland
Fourth of July ce(ebrauon.
Hundreds. of people turned out
for .Fourth of July festivities in
Racme.
.
Plans for pavmg at Beech Grove
Cemete11: were fiuaiiZtld at a. reguJar m~eung of Pomeroy V11lage
Council.
. Th~ Eastern Local School-Distnct IS r_anked fust among. I I 5
schools m Appalach1an Oh10 m
studen!S who proceed on to higher
educabon.

Due To Tremendous esp

cent. High in mid-50s.

•

S'OREWID-E·SAVIIGS
LARGES,. DISCOUN'S
OF'IEYEAR!

Vol. 42, No. 169

Crow·to head
Syracuse Council

SWORN IN - New Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed was given his
oath or orrice by Meigs County Court Judge Patrick O'Brien
Thursday morning. Reed has served on Pomeroy ViUage touncil
for tbe past 10 years. New Council members, Scott DU!on and John
Blaettoar, will be given their oaths of office al Monday night's
m~eting of Council.
/
.

still flat on its back."
Most troubling to economists
was a report· from.lh.e -National
Association of Purchasing Managers showing that its monthly
index of industrial activity fell a
sharper-than-expected•3.6 percentage points last month to 46.5 percent.
It marked the third strai~ht
monthly decline and the first ume
the index has dipped below 50 percent since last June. Any reading
below 50 percent is considered a
sign of recession for the nation 's
manufacturers.
Meanwhile , a survey of top
bu sine ss executives sa id they
believed the economy would
remain stagnant through the first
three months of the new year with
only one in five companies expecting higher sales during the period
and 31 percent forecasting further
job cutbacks for their firms.
The American Business Conference , composed of 100 of the

. h

::

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman stated today ibat a public hear-

&gt; ing will be held at .11 A.M. on Tuesday, January 7, at the Law

:. 'Library on the top floor of the Meigs County Courthouse.
The hearing was requested by the village in objection to the
transfer of liquor permits from Jon Kloes, DBA Middleport Lunch
Room, to Harley E. McDonald and Randolph Fraley Jr., DBA BOais
Nest, in the former Friendly Tavern building.
.
The hearing is being conducted by' the Ohio Department of
. ' Liquor Control and testimony rcrovidCd atthis hearin~ will be used

'

::;: transfer
in~=~~~:=:1nnte~:'cist~~~~:n~::~ionsonthis
are urged to attend this hearing. ' ' .

v.:

1

·

'

, ~: Deer-vehicle WTI!Ckprobed
I'~·

, · .,
A Rutland man's:pickup received Ug~t dl\mage in a deer-vehicle
· , ' .accident early Thursday evening in Rutllind Township. ·
. , •• According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Slate
PatrO1• MichaeJ L· Lambert• 39 ~was 00rthbound on Co ~nway
"
. ;; •ty oad 3 (New Lima Road) when a deer ran onto the road and
· --··'- h' 1988 F""" F 150 ·,_,_ •
-: .:· ""'Th:d!er.w&amp;Stdtlect·and~~tothedriver. ' . .
,·
c In d
·
. ont ue on page 3
· \ i- , •

·RUTLAND
FURNITURE
STAll ROUTE 124 .
i '·

Hi~

RUTLAND, OH.
"

/

By I\. ATIE CROW
for the salltry increase. It will now .
Sentinel Cor~pondent
be up to the. Board of Public
Kathryn (Katie) Crow was Affaus to grant the increase.
named president of Syracuse Vii- ' Moore's present salary is 54,800 a
!age Council and I. Carson Crow year, with the increase bringing the
was hired as village solicitor when •. amount to $6,500 a year.
Council met in regular session
At this point, Jack Williams,
Thursday night.
councilman, stated that he did not
Council discussed the vacancy belie.ve in Council "!aking snap
on Council created by the election deciSions. W1Utams S31d he felt all
of Jim Papc as mayor. He had been matters bro~ght before Counc\1
serving as a member of Council should be g1v~n a great deal of
and there are two years left on his thou$ht. to wh1ch Council agreed.
tenn as a councilman. It was decid- ,Wili!Wils also reported that a new
ed that Council will meet on four drawer legal filing cabinet
Wednesday, Jan. !5,at8:30p.m. to withlockwouldcost$149.
appoint a new member to fill that
Councilman Bill Roush fElported
vacancy.
that he is the newly elected fire
Meeting with Council was Gor- chief..of the Syracuse Fire Departdon Winebrenner member of ihe ment. He informed Council that a
Syracuse BOaid of,Public Affairs in new lock has been placed on the
FILES PETITION - Ed f!urst, Middleport, filell his petition
regard to increasing the salary of storage room door. Council disfor the Republican candidate for Meigs County Treasurer on
Bob Moore an employee of the' cussed at lengtli the preparation
Thursday at the Meigs County Board of Elections. Pictured with
Board. Moore takes care of the needed to get the village dump
Durst as he files is Deputy Director for the Board of Elections, Rita
water system and has been doing truck in operation in the event of
Smith.
the work of two men since tbe res- snow. Roush was authorized to see
ignation of Bob Smith, Winebren- . that the vehicle is made operational
ner fe110rled. Winebrenner request- by placing the spreader on the truck..
•
ed an mcrease for Moore of $1,700 and securing a driver.
annually. Moore is a licensed mainBesides tllose named others at
tenance supervisor. Winebrenner the meeting were were Kenny
indicated
that if the raise is not Buckley and Dennis Wolfe, Mayor
fastest growing mid-size companies Department said that construction
granted,
the
village could lose the Jim Pape, Clerk-Treasurer Janice
in the country, said its latest survey spending, which had posted four
·services
of
Moore.
Lawson, aod Eber Pickens, former
found optimism among its mem- consecutive monthly gains for the
Council
approved
the
request
mayor.
bers down sharply from three first time in five years, suffered a
months ago.
setback in NoveUtber, dropping 0.8
"lf'l 99! was a year of declining percent to a seasonally adjusted
consumer confidence, 1992 is annual rate of $406.3 biUion.
beginning as a yc,ar of deteriorating
The weakness was blarhed on a
business confidence," said ABC sharp 3.6 percent fall in spending
for non-residential projects with
Pres) idcthnt Bllfi)'RO$~.~d. Th
n o er economiC news urs- work on office buildings and hotels
day, the Labor Department reported recording the biggest declines. ResEdward W. Durst, Noble Sum- States Army ; receiving an honorthat 438,000 Americans filed new idential spending was down 0.1
mit
Road, Middlepon, has filed a ab1e discharge in the spring of
claims for unemployment benefits percent as an increase in singlepetition
candidacy for the 1968.
for the week ending Dec. 21, a family building was not enough to Republicanofnomination.
for Meigs
He is currently serving as Salisdecline of 29,000 from the previous offset further weakness in the County Treasurer.
bury Township Trustce.to whiclj he
week.
apaitment sector.
Durst, a life-long resident of
elected in November 1989 for
While that represented the SI:CAnalysts blamed pan of the con- Meigs County, has served in the awas
four-year tenn.
.
ond straight weekly decline in the struction decline on unusually banlcing industry for the past 21
Durst has been a member of the
number of new jobless claims, ana- severe weather in the Midwest, but and one-half· years.
American Legion Feeney-Bennett
lysts said the weekly total still said they were still concerned
He began his banking careef Post No. 128 of Middleport for the
remains at recession levels and because the government sector with the Citizens National Bank of past 24 years. He is also a member
would likely go higher in coming showed no gains for the month , .Middleport, then later Central Trust .Jlf the Bradford Church of Otrist
weeks' given the number of large possibly indicating that constrained where he served as a loan. officer
He is a partner in the Mill Street
American companies who have state and local budgets will curtail and vice-president. In December Book Store, and also owns and
announced plans for new layoffs.
. spending in what had been one of 1986 he was employed by The operates Ed's Greenhouses with his
In another report, the Commerce · the few sources of strength.
Farmers Bank and Savings Compa- wife, Ruth.
ny in Pomeroy and is currently
Durst resides at 31340 Noble
· serving as a loan officer.
Summit Road in Middleport with
Durst is a 1965 graduate of his wife, Ruth, and their two sons,
Pomeroy High School and he Tim and Jim . •
served two years in the United
or will have, as much influence in cohesion and power." •
-Half of all people age 85 or
determining the course of hum an
older
need assistance with such
events." .
basic needs as eating,. bathing and
• The report said:
-Preserving the solvency or the dressing . Baby boomers will
Social Security system may be encounter this problem regarding
"one of the first major tests of the their own parents. Later, they will
The oatil of office was adminisIn a J gular meeting whi!;h f:J.
baby boom generation's political face the need for themselves.
tered to Jeffrey C. Harris, oewly lowed, the board heard financial
elected board member, and Oris reports and authorized payment of
Smith, re-elected· for another term, bills . The purchase of liability
at the organizational meeting of the insurance f~om J;larcuril Insurance
Meigs County Board of Elducauon Agency/Nauonwide Insurance was
held Thursday night in the board· approved, as was membership in
offices.
the Ohio Coalition for Equity and
Srli'ith was elected president of Adequacy of School Funding.
·· The Board agreed to write letElizabeth Schaad, regional rep- technology will be' beneficial in the Board, and· Bill Quicttil was
named
vice
president.
Regular
ters
of s.upport J~r the Me!gs
resentati ve, Governor: s Regional · total understanding of the needs of
monlhly
meetings
were
set
for
the
Metropolitan
Housmg Authority,
Economic Development Office, today 's industries. Her managerial
second
Tuesday
of
each
mo~th,
an~
the
Me~gs
C~unty Council ~f
today announced that Lynn M. skills, along with her motivation
starting
in
February.
~
meetmgs
Ag!ng,
Inp.
m
thell'
effort to obwn
Crow, Middleport, has been named and enthusiasm, wiU assure an effiAdministrative Assistant for ciently operated office," Schaad will be held at 7 p.m. at the board Children s Trust Fund money. A
office. The salary of Board mem- . resolution was , P~~sed in support
Region II, serving Meigs, Athens, said.
·
Hocking, ~. Morgan, !'foble,
The goal of the regional office is bers was set at $80 a month with ·for the CARE Pin,JCCt.
, Appropriations we~ · modified
Percy and Washmgton CounlleS.
to boost economic development travel at 15 cents per mile.
A
resolution
was
passed
in
to
allow .funds for reurement for
CrowisarecentgraduateofThe throughout thes.tate·whiie'strenglhaccordance
with
the
provisions
of
•
school
board members. .
University of Rio Grande, with an , ening public and private partnerSection
3313.18
of
the
Ohio
.
Supt.
John D. RI.ebel, Sr. ,
associate degree in upplied science ships witli the business community.
Revised
Code
that
the
board
disreported
on
progress m the new •
in industrial safety.
. . . . .. The-office provides outreac~ assisAmong ~~r res~nsiblllties m lance to la&lt;;al units of government, pense wilh the adoption of resolu- progmms to be carried out i~ Meigs
tions authorizin~ the payment of County ~ugh a coo~bve Jlf!'the. new PoSitton wtll be coordinat- business leaders elected officials
ing conferences and informatio!)al chambers of commerce and eco: warrlints, or debits, or claims, the gram with the Umvers1ty of Rto .
salary of the su?.lrintendent, teach- Gra~de. H4: al~o .announ~ed. a
semin.ars as well as serving· as nomic developmentorgMizations.
ers,
or the employees for which meeting of P~rs 1!1 Educauon to
execuuve secretary and office manThe Region 11 office is. located
provisions
are made in the annual ·be held at Metgs H1gh School on
a~~· ·
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at One Counhouse Lane, Marietta,
apj&gt;ropriations.
Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Lynn s knowledge m lrttlustrial and the telephone· number is 3735150.

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slowing further; new layoffs seen

:p ublzc earing set January 7

nrst.Came - nrst Serve

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1 Sec)lon, 14 PagH 25 con II
A Multimedia Inc. Newsp1per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 3, 1992

Copyrlghtecl1992

Durst files petition for
county treasurer's post

Smith to head Meigs board

Lynn Crow appointed to
regional development office

r!----- Ln&lt;:ca
u• · J bri·ef:s--...;..-...,
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•RECLINERS •DINING ROOM SUITES ··
•LIVING ROOM SUITES • BEDROOM SUITES

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The of retiring baby boomers "while
needs of the baby boom generation meeting the social, economic and
threaten to engulf the nation's political needs of today? " they
health care and retirement systems said.
Baby boomers are Americans
as the size of the elder population
soars over the next 40 years, a pri- born from 1946 to 1964, so by
vate study said today.
2030, the oldest surviving boomer
The nnmber of Americans 65 will be 84 and lhe youngest 65.
and older will hit 65 million by the
By 2030· there will be more
year 2030, compared with 30 mil- Americans over the age of 65 than
lion senior citizens today , the Pop- under"'th~ age of 18, according to
u)ation Reference Bureau said in a demograpbeis' estimates.
That reduces the number of
repon, "The Baby Boom -Entering Midlife."
younger working people available
Baby boomers in the next 20 . to support tbe growing number of
years "will set the agenda for the retirees.
Baby boomers are trying to
nation's publlc policy choices in
"provide
for their children , assist
education, work-family policies,
retirement programs and health their aging parents and plan for
care," said the report's authors, their own futures," the authors
said.
.
Leon Bouvier and Carol De Vita.
"Given their size, perhaps no
The key question wiD be "how
other generation in history has had,
· do we invest in America's future"

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Health care, retirement crun'ch seen looming

90'/a OF RUTLAND

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Low tonigh1around 40.
Saturday, chance or rain 60 per·

Pages 4-5

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
closely watched barometer of U.S.
industry plunged back into recession territory in December and onethird of top business executives
said in a separate survey that they
were .preparing for more layoffs in
tile new year.
While new claims for jobless
benefits eased a bit in mid-December, the government said that construction spending took a tum for
the worse after four months of
improvement.
And early returns indicated that
the nation's retailers had a disappointing Christmas.
Analysts said Thursday 's reports
were further evidence of a deeply
troubled economy that is unlikely
to show any life until spring.
. . "We ended 1991 on -a very
weak note with virtually everything
in a declining mode," said Bruce
Steinberg, an economist with Merrill Lynch in New York. "The new
year is beginning with the economy

Has Been Extended
TWO ~ MORE DAYS!
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3rd &amp;
SATURDAY,JANUARY 4th
Special Sale Hours: Open ·9 a.m.·7 p.m.

Pick 3: 010
Pick 4: 79ss
Cards:
2-H; 7-C; 7-D;

5-S -

Fa~tories

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RU,LAND FURNI7URE
COMPA 'S
END OF THE YEAR
CLEARANCE

Ohio Lottery

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The first baby to be bor.n in office before noon Jan. 11. In the . $10 gift cenific'ate from Buttons 'from Mill Street Boots.
1992 .to Mei~s County parents will . event of a tie, t!Je lifts wiD be dis- and Bows, three ~xes of Newborn
A 52~ gift c.ertificate from .
be the recip1ent of gifts from 17 ttibuted ~~ the'disctedon ofthe con- Pampers from Swisher-Lohse Phar- • Vaughan s, Card1.nal, a · ~b~ eup .
Bend area merchants.
test'COiilmiuee; All prizes. must be macy.
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from Clark s Jewelry Store, a free .
According 10 the rules, the win- claimed by Jan. 31 , ·
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A $10 savings acco~nt from , meal to the ~arenti of the baby
nlng baby must be llotn tO ~ts
The 'prizcs indild'e a $15 gift P~oples. Bank, Middlepon, a SIO from Craw's FI!Dily Reslluran~ a ·
who are legal residimts of Me~
· s ctztificate from The Shoe Place, a g1ft certificate from the Food 'Shop, lhree ptece feeder set from K .t C
· of b'
$5 .,.
.nrt,certifilcate and 10 pe.rcent a free ice.c-·m
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Je ...,.,_.,
-•... a.$c~ gift~,.,
ounty and the exact ume
·- _cake from Datry
..... _ __ from
must be specified ·in a written state- off on all fftfru'inti0111 until age six Queen, a box of Newborn Pamper the. Fabric Shop, 11111 i $10 savirra
mentfrom.theattendi!tgphysician. by the~ Shop, a diaper Diapers from FOOdlaQd, a $10 gift · account from the Home Na~
That information !DUSt be bag with $10 of 1'(0-selected mer- certificate from tht MiddiCJ,IQrt Bank.
brought to The•Daily S,entinel cbandise· from Fnnh,Pharm~cy, _a Department Store, a first Btble

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·Commentary

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The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-,-The Dally Sentinel ::
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio •
Friday, January 3, 1992

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DEVOTED TO THE IN'I'IRISTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

eMULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
I'Uililsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated ·Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisber~~ssociation .
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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, a&lt;jdressing issues, not personalities.

Health care issue invites
political cures, not answers

WASHINGTON - America's Agency. The inspectors said t!Je:
~ublic lands are being turned into mess amounted to unhealthy and
trash heaps by people who bounce degraded environmental condioff the road through an isolated tions, and that the BLM wasn 't
spot of desert or forest and .dis- doing its job to monitor the· land
gorge their garbage. The "land- under its stewardship, tei\ller at· the
lord,'' the Bureau of Land Manage- legal dumps or the illegal ones.
ment in the Interior Department; · No one expects the BLM to
seems powerless to do· anything keep enough people on its staff 10
about it.
eyeball every square mch of t~e
This isn't simply a matter of old 688 million acres of federal land in
pizza boxes and milk cartons piling . the United States just to make sure
up on federal property. In some that no one throws an empty beer
cases, ·the dumps arc home to rot- can on the ground. The taxpayers
ting animal carcasses and barrels of couldn 'I afford that kind of vigimysterious chemicals.
lance. The taxpayers ask for much
BLM has two lands of dumps to less - BLM supervision of the
worry about, the ones it rents out dumps that it authorizes and the .
to authorized trash haulers and the illegal ones that it knows about
ones that spring up on their own in
The inspector general found that
places that the BLM never intended BLM has aUowed more than 1,000
to use for dumping. In both cases, unauthorized dump sites to exist in
the BI,..M does a lousy job of polic- II states with virtually no control.
ing them.
The agency was aware of those
The BLM's own inspector gen - illegal dumps and even kept an
era! visited just 18{of the 359 inventory of them , but did nothing
authorized landfills on federal land to close them , or to clean them up
and found 85 violations of anti-pol - and lease' them to authorized dump
lution rules sci by the BLM itself operators.
···
and. the Environmental Protection
At one of the illegal dumps on

the BLM list, the inspectors found
commercial wastes that may be
toxic and had been lying around the
dump for nearly I 0 years. Al\ll
there were 55-gallon drums co~·
taining unidentified liquids buried
ati)Je same dump.
· At one of the legal dumps in
Utah, the inspectors found about
100 dead animals in various slllges
of decomposition littering the landscape. Most of therri had died from
diseases and were thrown there by
ranchers in violation of the BLM
rules for legal dumps.
The inspector ge neral has a simple suggestion. The BLM should
immediately require the operators
of the legal dumps who lease th e
federal land and make money off
the trash business to immediately .
comply with the rules of the EPA
and the BLM.
The current rcpon on the condition of the dumps is the second
verse of an old song. In 1987, the
House Committee on Governm ent
Operations iss ued a repon that said
the majority of the landfills on
BLM land did not meet basic EPA

I'M SMACK!

Jack Anderson, :
Michael Binstein :

standards. Although the Interior i
Department said then that correc- :
tive action would be taken, only a :
few . landfills in New Mexico ·
sho)'led improvement, according to :
the latest inspector general survey. ·
The BLM threw b1g money mto '· .
New Mexi ~Q. spending $4.6 mil - ~
'lion to clean up hazardous. waste ;
sites. Another $3 million was spent .
to study more than 300 other sites :
for possible contamination of the :
land and water by ha za rdou s .
wastes. But study alone doesn't :
remove the hazard. The actual cost ·
of cleaning up the mess may not be
known for years.
,
In the meantime,. the BLM has ·
proposed a plan 10 make the cities_:
and counties that lease the landfills
responsible for following the rules.
Lawmakers are also scrambling
for better long-term solutions to: .
case the amoum of trash Americans
generate because the country is
running out of places to put that
trash.
·
Sources on Capitol Hill told our
reporter Ed Henry that two bills
being considered by the House· ·
Energy and Commerce Committee
would promote the usc of materials .
recovered from the trash and de vel-.'
op recycling markets.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Rcpubli·
can president candidate Patri ck· :
Buchanan 's notion of "America
fir~t " has a dec idedly "wealthy •
first" tone about it. In a rece nt •
speech in New Hampshi re, :
Buchanan said he didn' t think .the :
homeless had a constitutional -right •
to stand on the streets and ask for :
money. The terms he used were '
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Sarah Overstreet·

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Today in history

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IND.

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Robert J Wagman

Our imperfect legal -system works

IMansfield I 42• Ie

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Rain, clou·ds cover most of Ohio today .. ·~ -

Bond set for Pomeroy mart

Bond was set early Friday in the Rollins allegedly ftred a high-pow·
case of I;loug Rollins, a Pomeroy ered rifle at his father, Bernard
man charged with attempled aggra- Rollins. He is a"Iso accused of
45°
vated murder and other related pointing a rifle at his mother's head
charges.
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and a 380 handgun at his wife,
Rollins appeared before Meigs Sally, and threatening to lcill both
County Court Judge Plurick H. women. Rollins alsq allegedly
W. VA.
O'Brien today, and O'Brien set a doused the family's trailer with
concUrrent' bond in the amount of kerosene and threatened to set it
$100,000 on the two felony counts afire.
against Rollins : attempted aggraRoUins entered a not guilty plea
var,ed murder, a ftrSt-degree felony to the misdemeanor char~es against
and attempted arson, a felony of him IOday, and a prelimmary hearthe fourth degree. A bond of ing was set for Wednesday afterIce
Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
$5,000 was set on the five misde- nou n,
O'Brien, by law, is unable to
C1992 Aceu-Weather, Inc. meanor counts against. Rollins,
those charges being three counts or accept a plea on die felony counts.
aggravated .menacing,. a count of.
Rolli~ was referred to the
domestic violence and one count of · office of 'Public Defender Charles
60 percent. ·Soutb-Central Ohio
carrying a concealed weapon.
H. Knight for evaluation of indiExtended forecast:
.Tonight, _mostly cloudy with
The Meigs County Sheriff's gency.
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Sunday through Tuesday: . . . .. Department reponed.abursday that
ram contmum$. Low ·around 40.
Fair through the period. Highs
Chance of rain IS 80 percent. Satur~y. mostly cloudy with rain likely. in mid-30s to low 40s. Lows mainHigh 45-50. The chance of rain is ly in the 20s.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio ing January as the key month," he
collected $28.5 million more in said.
sales ani! personal income taxes in
Because of collection cycles,
December than expected, Budget
Director R. Gregory Browning some taxes collected on holiday
sales might not get to Columbus
said.
The December collections 4.6 untillate January, he said.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Smices units answered 10
percent over estimates probably
calls for assistance on Thursday and early on Friday.
Voinovich and Browning
will encourage a "wait-and-see"
On Thursday at 9:31 a.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to State
stance from General Assembly aMounced Monday that the state
Route 7 and took Virginia Burke to Holzer Medical Center. At
members considering Gov. George was facing a $457 million budget
10:19 a.m., Racine unit went 10 Fourth Street Mabel Shields was
Voinovich's budget cutting pack- gap. To help balance the budget,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:35 a.m., Pomeroy and
Voinovich is cutting spending by
age, Browning said.
Middleport squads went to State Route 124. Leroy Watson and
$196
million.
"My feeling is we'll be watchEUadena Watson were taken 10 Veterans. At 10:49 a.m., Middleport
unit went to East Main Street for Anita Folmer, who was taken 10
Veterans. At 11:05 a:m., Racine unit went to Ebenezer Street in
Pomeroy. Charles Strauss was taken 10 Veterans.
At 12:25 p.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 Mulberry Avenue. Sally
Juanita "1\n~ie" (AngUn) Kay; a
Charles Chaffee
Sparks was taken to VC\Clllfls. At 3:31 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to
daughter, Vlfginia labawslci of
Charles A. Chaffee, 89, of Twinsburg, OH; a son, Thomas
Pomeroy Pike. Virginia Phalin was taken to Veterans. At 10:42
· Silver Ridge Road, Dewey Kay of Nonh Highlands,
31959
p.m., Ru~and squad went 10 Main Street for Jack Harrison, who
Reedsville, died Thursday, Jan. 2, CA; a step-daughter, Charlotte
was taken to Holzer.
1992, at his residence.
On Friday at 12:05 am., Racine units w~ntto Tanners Run Road
Susan Rainey of New Haven; two
Born on Ian. 15, 1902 at sisters, Nellie Stotts of Ooltwah,
and State Route 124 for an auro ftre. Bob Campbell was the owner.
Ohioville, Pa., he was the son of TN and Ilene Coin of Chattanooga,
At 2:18a.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 Tuppers Plains. Georgia Harnic
the late George H. Chaffee and TN; se~ral grandchildren, great·
was taken to Camden-Clark.
Lucy E. Starling Chaffee. He was a grandchildren and nieces and
construction worker.
He is survived by hi s wife, nephews.
Service will be held at 2 p.m.
Gladys L. Chaffee, three sons, Sawrday, January 4, at the CrowMeigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W,. Crow III has
appointed two new members 10 the Leading Creek Conservancy
James H. Chaffee, Davis, Calif.; HusseU Funeral Home, Point
District's Board of Direcrors.
Keith D. Chaffee, Reedsville; and Pleasant, with Rev. Dave Fields
FenlOn Taylor was appointed 10 fill a full five-year term beginCharles H. Chaffee, Laguna officiating. Burial will follow in
ning January 29, 1991. Taylor will replace Paul Patterson on the
Beach, Calif.; three daughters, Mrs. Kirklarid Memorial Gardens, near
board. Patterson was appointed by Crow after the resignation of
Paul (Naomi) TorrenCU:ndianapo- Point Pleasant
Dan Arnold.
.
...lis, Ind.; Mrs. Don (Jane) Miller,
Visiting hours will be held at the
Charles Barrett, Jr. was appoinled by Crow to fiU the unexpired
Colull)bus; and Mrs. Dwight {Judy) funeral
home today (Friday) from
term of Olen T. Crisp, who resigned in late 1991 as a condition of
Luther, Pittsburgh, Pa.; two broth.
the plea bargain agreement in the criminal ease of his father, Jack
ers, ·James E. Chaffee, East Liver- 7-9 p.m..
In
lieu
of
flowers
hnauons
may
Crisp. Barrett's term will en4 on December 16, 1993.
pool; George Chaffee, St. Peters·
be
made
to
the
U
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W.A.
Strike
burg; Fla.; a sister, Mrs. Richard
Fund, Local #5668 Ravenswood,
)"
(Ellen) LettereUo, Salem; I 3 grand1 '
1
WV26164.
~~~ren. and 9 great-grandchil·
·
Besides his parents, he was pre- Florence Well
Funeral services for Florence
ceded in death by a son, Gene
Well,
60, of Pomeroy, who died
Allen Chaffee, a granddaughter,
Jan.
I,
1992 at the Hickory Creek
Nancy Walker-Chaffee; three
Nursing
Center at The Plains, will
A cancer screening clinic will be direcror, announced IOday.
brothers, Chauncey E. Chaffee,
be
held
Saturday
at I p.m. at the
held at the Meigs County Healtil
With crotcer u the second high- Robert Chaffee, and Leland E
DeP.arlment in the multi-purpose est cause of death in Meigs County, Chaffee, and four sisters, Oeorgian- Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
The Rev. C. Russell Archer will
bu•lding on Mulberry Heights, Torres emphasized the importance na Ady, Mary Hendry, Olive Jamiofficiate
and burial will he in HemPomeroy, on Jan. 22 from -2 10 4 or cancer screening which can son, and Pauline Jackman.
lock
Grove
Cemetery, Friends may
p.m., Norma Torres, R. N. nursing resull in early cancer detection.
Funeral services will be held at
call
at
the
funeral home Friday
Cancer is one of the most curable IIi~ Ewing Funeral Home Sunday at
(ronight)
from
7 10 9 p.m. Eastern
of all major diseases if it is diag- 2 p.m. The Rev. Sharon Hausman
Star
services
will
be held at 6:30
will offic@te and burial will be· in
nosed in ~me, emphasized Torres.
p.m.
.
' Sbe again J,isted tile seven _warn- the Silver Ridge ~metery. Friends
Divorces, dissolutio~ sougbt
Memorial contributions may be
ing signals of cancer • change in may call at the funeral home Satur·
A divorce action has been filed 'bowel
mad~
to the Meigs County Heart
day
from
2
10
4
and
7
10
9
p.m.
and
or bladder habits, a·sore that
in Meigs County Common Pleas does not
Association
in Pomeroy.
unusual 6Ieeding or ·on Sunday morning.
Court by Sharon A. Davis, Middle- discharge,heal,
thickening or lump in
port. against Jason I. DaviS, also of
Marcella Coleman
the
breast
or
elsewhere, indi$esMiddlepolt.
James
Kay
Marcella Coleman, Mic!dleport,
tion, or difficulty in swallowmg,
Actions for dissolution of mar- obvious
died unexpectedly this morning
change
in
wart
or
mole,
riage have been filed in the l:owt
James F. "Robbie'' Kay, 69, of (Friday), Jan. 3, 1992, at her resia nagging cough or hoarseness.
·by Damon Stapleton, Pomeroy and and
Letart, died Wednesday, January I, dence.
Anyone
with
any
of
these
warning
.
Cheryl Stapleton, Bidwell; by signs should see a doctor immedi- 1992, ~~his home.
Aroing the survivors is her husKevin C. Knapp and Rose A. ately. Torres.said.
He was a retired emp((lyee of band, Jack.
Knapp, both.of Syracuse; by Vikld
Arrangements
will · be
The Ian. 22 screening clinic is Kaiser Aluminum Corp. at
Lynn Freeman and Jon Michael limited
announced
by
Fisher
Funeral
orne
10 12 patients with each one Ravenswood, and a member or
Freeman, both of P0meroy; and by to pay $5
in
Middleport
10 help offset lhe lab fees. Uni~ SE~:Iworkers of America
~bra Kay Meadows and Mitchell
Qther
e~nses ol the examination Union Lol;al 115668.
H. Meadows, both of Middleport.
Born February 10, 1922 in Point
which includes a pap smear for
Tite Daily Sentinel
Pleasant,
he wu a son of the late
women and .a testicular exam for
' J'udament actions filed
(USPS JJI·tMIO)
along with hemoccults, uri- Dewey and Hattie (VanMeter) Kay.
Judgment actions have been men,
Published every a~rnoon, Monday
He wu also preceded in death by
filed in Meigs County Common nalysis, blood presSures, and gener- two
th,."'h Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
brothers, Joseph and Dewey
alized
be8lth
examinations
are
paid
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Pabliahing
Pleas Court by Star Bank, Ironton, for with funds generated lbrough Kay and a sister, Jerry K. Smith.
COinpany/Multimedia Inc:, Pomeroy,
against
Michael
Litman ,
Ohio 46769, Pb. Wl'2166. Ser:ond clau
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
tile
Health
Department
tax
levy.
Langsville, in the amount of
pooll«e pold at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Dr. James Witherell will be
$~,o70 . 59; by Doctor's Hospital,
his services 10 the January
Member: The Auoeiated Pteu, Inland
Columbus, against Harold H. donating
Daily Preu 'AuociaLiDn and &amp;he Ohio
cUnic and·PilyUis Bearhs, women's
Newapar,er A11octa~ton , National
Willis, Pomeroy., and-®lers, in the... health care ~hnician, will be coer·
Advertia na RepreaentaUve, DranKaan
lt)IOunt of $11,458.57; and py .Citi· dinating services at the clinic.
Newopaper Sole•~ J33 Third Aven.,,
zens National Bank, Point Pleasant,
l'lew York, NowYura 10017.
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.
Mei~ Countians who are in~er-•
W.Va., against Delmer Grady of
Am Ele Power ......,., ....... .33 1/4
POSTMASTE~ Send ld4reoo chlnl"l ,;,
es1ed tn matina app!)intments
· ~ine in theamountof$4,904.29.
The
Daily Sentinel, Ill Court Sl.,
Ashland
Oil
...........
,
....
,
...
.30
·1/4
should call lhe Health Department
PomeiOy, OHio 46769.
l'tt
&amp;
T
...............................
.39
1/2
.' at. 992-6626 as soon as possible.
. : Marrlaae llcensa IJ',IDied
8U88CIUPI'ION RATES '
~ank One .......................... 52 1/8
Appoiritmenu will be rnade on a
• By Clll'rier or Molar Jlooote
Marriage licenses have been ftrst
Bob Evans ...................:.... 24 3/4
call;-ftrSt' serve basis, Torres
.One Week............:........ ,..............,...... $1.60
gianted in Meigs County Probate
One Monlb ....................... ... .............. -'6.96
Charming
Shop................. 23 318
said.
Court to Douglas Way,ne Beaver,
One Year............ ,....,,.,,,, .. , -&gt;..:.183.20
City Holding ..................... 17 1/4
conjunction with the clinic
BJNGLBCOPY
22, Pomeroy, and Tracy Dawn theInAmerican
Federil Mogul.. .. :............ .'.l5
PRICE
.
Cancer
Society·
win
Bbiin, 18, Pomeroy; to Ronald Leo
Dei1y......................., ................. ~... 25 Centa
Goodyear
T&amp;R
..................
53
1/8
DJiley, 38, Portland, and Kathy be providing ~~ materials
Key Cenbtrion ................... 15
Subtcribors not deolrillf lo poy lilt carri·
LCe MiiChell, 37, Pomeroy; Allen and suppot1 ~
Lands' End .................... ."... 29
er Jna)' nmil In -.l•nce dincl to The
Brent Miller, 24, Palllkala, and
Gall\JIOlilll&gt;lily Tribune on a 8.8 or 12
Limiled Inc. ...................... 28 1/2
moolh bulo. Cloclll will bo p.n eurier
B~tb Elaln~ Bailey. Albany: to
Multimedia•Inc ................,,23
Pick
3
Numben
' Alvin Lee Johlison, Jr., 21, Bid·
Rax Restaurant . ................. 5/16 · No oabocripl\ona by moll pmntllod in '
().f.()
well, and Ansell, Dawn QUI, 17,
Robblns&amp;Myers ....... ;, .... .'.36
enu w.Mn hont earrier itrrict i1
·
{zero,
one,
zero)
available.
~y; Randy Dale Taylor, 33,
Shoney's
Inc
.....
,
................
22
3/4
Pic~ 4 ~amben ·
Cowen, W.Va., and ICalby Lynn
Malllalloorl,tlo,.
Star Bank ............. ~............25
7-9-S-8
lllllda
Oalllo C...n!J
"
Lewis, 27, Portland; Steve Ray
Wendy Ini'1.. ......... ,,,,;, .. :.9 314
(seven, nine, five, eight)
13 Wook&amp; ........................................Qt.lt
Qqillen, 22, Rutland, and Michelle
26 w. ..........................................ka.ts
Worthington Ind .. :......... , .. 22 318
Cards
IJeo McKinney, 23, Pomeroy; and
15:1 W..............................................M4.76
·Swck reports'an tht 10:30 a.rn.
Oallldo Oollla ~
to' Xerule!it Ray Shuster, 23, and
2~two)ofHearts
q110111 pro ~illtd b1 B/11irt, Ellis
.
7
NVen)ofOubs
·,
13 Woou ........................................r. =
,40
Deolae Wynne Ruuell, 18,
ud l.Diwl of Gol/lpolil:
, ~ :16 Wllll:l.................................-..... JIO
7
NVtn) of Diamonds
u
:·····~,.
~.
S five) of Spidel

-----Weather·-----

State tax collections are up 4.6 percent

,.-----Local briefs--..
EMS.units answer 10 calls

--Area deaths--

LCCD board members appointed

CaDCer screentng c IDIC ,
scheduled January 22.

Court news

•t.
milch ofthe East and West Sides floOding.
were fair over much of 'the Mid,
ft., ~term system off.the South {" ·
west
·
'
Carolirl!l coast was expecte9·to pro- ;
Freezing r8ln made driving dan· · d~ce gale-force Oc:eaii winds th11t ~
genous in north-central Pennsylva- will push water ashore and raise the '
nia on Thursday evening and was riSk of coastal flooding. !WUill '
blamed for many fender benders. be heavy over. the mid-Atlantic •
t
And freezing rain and up 10 2 inch- states.
es of sno!'! caused hazardous drivTemperatures were ~xpected t6 '
ing conditions over' part of northern reach the 30s in Maine, the North- • ·
Upper Michigan. .
.. em Plains arid the Great Basin; the :
A wind ·advisory was posted 40s in New England, the Nort)lwest ·
and Nevada; .the 50s in .the Midwest, the Southeast and Northern :
Rain wu expecled til hit the South- California; the 60s in Louisiana, · &gt;
em Califorma coastline IOday. , north Texas and south Arizona; and · 1
Heavy rain also was fOrecast for the 70s in south Aorida and south :
. •
Arizona through S81urday, with the Texas.
runoff expected. to cause local
The high temperature fouhe :
~
nation Thursday was 80 degrees at ~
Cof9DadO'and National City, Calif. . :

~r::~ro:H~~~~=

Wreck injuries
prove fatal to man

Hospital news

A Thursday morning wreck
Veterans Memorial
,
which claimed the life of a GasTHURSDAY ADMISSIONS • •
saway man clllimed 'a second life Wayne Gilliand, Reedsville; Mabel:,
. Friday morning, according to a Shields, Racine; Charles Strauss1.' ,
spokesman for the Mason County Pomeroy; Leroy Watson, Pomeroy;
Elladene Watson, Pomeroy; Vir•
Sheriff's Department
ginia
Phalen, Pomeroy; and Her:
Danny L. Kimble, 21, of Point
.
Pleasant, died Friday_at St Mary's bert Hoover, Middleport.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES ~:
H&lt;ispital in· Huntingron from injuries reCeived in..the two vehicle Brenda Darst, Norma Curtis:·
accident. Kimble was cri~callr in- Emma Chapman, Elma Epple, Ruth
jured in the 7:25 a.m. acctdent Gneen, and George Baer.
Thursday. He was transported 10 HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Pleasant Valley Hospital and later
Discharges Jan .~ 1- Mice •
. .flown to St. Mary's.
Cook, Daphne Gilkey, Megan Hat•.
'!1le accident 'also- claimed the ·field, Doris Kelly, Delhen McCoy.life of Joel R. Jarvis n. 30, of Gas- Jar.ne Pedigo, Anita Riffle ."
saway.
Varney and George White ..
According 10 a sheriff's spokes· William
Births Jan. 2 - Mr. and Mrs. '
man, Kifnble's 1991 Ford was left Sam
Corfias, daughter, Gallipolis.' •
of center, for some unknown Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Richmond, •
reason, , and ·struck Jarvis' 19&amp;4 daughter, Point Pleasant: W.Va .•
Pontiac bead-on. The accident oc- Mr. and Mrs. David Tulloh, son ,
curred off the pavement on SR 2, New Haven, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. ·
near Greer Road.
John Wallace, son, Oak Hill.
·

__ Meigs announc~ments_,
Singers scheduled
Featured singers at the Ash
Street Fnee Will Baptist Church in
Middleport are Roadmasters and
New Way Singers from Columbus
and the Oabrie1 Quartet, local. The
groups will perform Saturday at
7:30p.m.
Garden Club to meet
•
The postponed meeting of
Chester Garden Club will be held
Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Donald Mora. "Turning
Winter lnro Spring is ~e theme of
the pTQgram by Mrs. Rtchard Bar·
ton.
Game scheduled
A three-way event will be held
Saturday when the Southern Tornadoes take on .OaUia Academy Blue
Devils in OaUipolis. The freshman
game win begin at 5 p.m. followed
by the reserve game ~nd varsity
game.
Assoclalloa to meet
The Middlerort Community
Association wil meet Tuesday at
5:30 p.m. at Middleport Council
Chambers. All members are urged

to attend.
Racine Counc;,il to meet . .
Racine Vtllage Counctl wtll ·
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the coun- ·
cil chambers at Star MiD Park.
Legion to meet
.
·'
The regu)ar meeting of the ' ·
American Legion Drew Webster
Post No. 39 wiD be held Tuesday atthe post home. Dinner will begin ar
7 p.m. followed by meeting at 8
p.m.
.
Au,xiliary to meet
The Ladies Auxiliary of the'
Eagles Club will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m . A pizza party will b~
held and all·members are urged II)
attend.
'
· ·, ·
"

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Lottery results

'

The Daily Sentlnei-;-Pag·e -3 1

By The Associated Press
station was 64 degrees in 1897. The
The rain is ending but pockets record low was 20 below zero in
of dense fog could develop tonight 1879.
and·early Saturday, the National
Weather Service said.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:18
There will be a chance of more p.m . ..Sunrise on Saturday Will be at
rain in eastern Ohio on Saturday · 7:54am.
while variable cloudiness will be
Aroun !be nation
the rule elsewhere. .
Rain fell over the mid-Atlantic
Tbe record high temperature for states and. the Southeast coast early
this date at the Columbus weather IOday, and fog and clouds covered

'

caI'1 orDI-•3 sees n_eW popuIat100
• Sh1,f t

"! .. - . . . .

conditions and high temper.iturCs

MICtt.

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspo~dent
WASHINGTON - While the issue won ' I wait in 1992, the answer to
the problem probably wiD, because there's little chance the government
will be abletQ.write a new national health insurance policy in an election
year.
But with costs and concern rising, the health care crisis and rival ideas
to deal with it are going to be fixtures in every campaign, White House to
Congress 10 state house.
By President Bush's count, there already are 31 varying proposals
before Congress. He'll be adding his own in the State of the Union message on Jan. 28.
" I do think the time has come for the administration to come forward "
with a comprehensive program," he said. " We will capitalize on and
learn from some of those programs that are floating around up there. ''
Until Bush made that commitment, almost offhandedly, answering
~&lt;panhandlin g " and "vagrancy ," i
questions at the Kiwanis and Rotary Clubs in Ontario, Calif., on Dec. 6,
but
it amounts to old-fa shioned '
the White House had seemed willing to let the issue ride with a limited,
begging
by the have-nots. Sure, it :
holding-action proposal.
threatens
and offends some people . .
But the numbers are getting worse, the soaring cost of medical care is a
Sure,
it
makes
a stroll down the ·
drag on the faltering economy, and the question has climbed the roster of
city
streets
an
obstacle course :
voter concerns.
sometimes. But " Buddy, can you
National health insurance was one of the issues Sen. Harris Wofford
spare me a dime" is a sign of hard :
pushed in Pennsylvania in winning his Democratic upset on Nov. 5.
times. The key is cleaning up the ·
The Commerce Deparunent reports an 11 percent increase in U. S.
economy, not jailing people who, :
spending on health care during 1991, to a rota! of $738 billion in 1991,
becau se of that econo my , arc
and forecasts annual increases of 12 percent to 13 percent for the next five
reduced
to begging.
years.
That report says health spending will reach 14 percent of the gross
national product next year.
'
An analysis by three or~anizations backing national health insurance
~
•
•\
saysabout40millionAmeneanswereuninsuredduring 1991.
A poll conducted in.November by the Times Mirror Center showed 82
_
percent of Americans agree that the government should guarantee health
.
•
insurance to everyone.
SAN FRANCISCO (NEA) - A the same time, the repon noted that transportation systems designed to
·,
A Washingron Post-ABC News poll conducted Dec. 11-15 reported 83
new fmding has emerged from the " .. . cities like Beverly Hills ... move what was assumed 10 be an
' .
iI
percent consider health care an impontant issue in deciding which presifine pri~t of the 1990 Census that showed no gain or even r,opulation ever-growing suburban population
dential candidate t,o support
has. maJOr nahonal ~ubhc-pollcy losses during the decade. '
into the cities to their jobs.
SUltham 's map draws the line north :
That survey also found 44 percent support for a tax-financed national • ramtficatwns. Re,vemng a 3,0-year
The. reasons, according to
According to Rod Harrison of and west of San Francisco. This ~
health care plan; 32 percent for a system in which employers wou ld protrend, Caltfomt~ s mner ctues are demogfaphers, are a massive immi- the Census Bureau in Washington, puts it, Oakland, Sacramento and :
-~ ide coverage or pay into a federal fund 10 cover it; and 20 percent for the[- :~ammg populauon whtle the afflu- grant influx and a much higher
this reverse migration back into the most of the Bay area's suburbs in •
current system of private insurance with government coverage only for ent suburbs have etthcr held steady birth rate in the iMcr city than the inner cities - while most pro- the south.
:
the poor and the elderly.
or lost population .
suburbs. At the same time the sub- nounced in California - was also
Statham argues that far nonhcm :
lt'sclearthevoterswantsomething done. Thequestionis what.
Smce the 1950s, every census urbs were being hit by " empty see n to a lesser extent in New California's hard-hit economy can- l
An administration advisory panel that studied the problem for two
has attested_to the out-migration nesting ": suburban children who York, Boston, Miami and other not keep contributing to the high ~
years couldn't agree on an overall plan, and instead proposed a limi~ed set from the ctUes to the suburbs; As grow up and leave their parents' major cities. It is a demog raphic tax demands of the state's major __;
of child health, prevenuve care and cost control steps, along w1th state th1s trend accelerated 10 the 60s homes, but cannot afford 10 live in trend that will be watched closely cities and that "lifestyles in LA
tests of varying proposals for comprehensive reform.
~
and '70s, political power gradually the expensive suburbs themselves.
in the coming years - one which and San Francisco are not in keep~ :
A majority of that panel agreed that "at this time, there is n&amp; one right shtfted from Amenca 's central
The report focused on parts of could cause fundamental changes ing with the lifestyles up here.' '
choice.
Cities 1010 the surrounding suburbs Los Angeles to show how this in the way urban society is ordered.
In order for any of this to take
"The national consensus so essential to the successful systemic reform -suburbs that continually pushc~ demographic change is being
Speaking of California cities, a place, the California legislature
the council believes necessary has clearly not developed," the advisory out farther and farther from the played out: "A single-family house radical new plan 10 split the state would have to pass a bill, or stale ·
council reported.
.
core Cities._
in Watts that housed a single black into two states is engendering con- voters would have to approve an
Even its piecemeal proposals would cost more than S6 billion a year.
In Cahforn ia, however, this family in the 1970s, for example, siderably more serious talk than initiative, asking Congress to allow
The solution that eluded experts with time and tranquillity to stud y the seems to be changing. According to now may house two families similar plans have in the past.
the split. Congress would then have -~
problem is not like!)! 10 be attained by candidates competing for votes in a new report from the Governor's recently arrived from Mexico.
The plan ....: the brainchild of to give its approval. The last time· ·
the clamor of a presidential campaign.
Interagency Council on Growth Much of the growth in this area State Assemblyman Stan Statham that happened was when West VirSen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska said it's up to the voters to say what they Management, the 1990 Census comes from immigrants doubling of Redding in the far northern part ginia was allowed to split from Vir- ~
want done; his proposal is universal health insurance financed by a pay- sho:vs _tilatm the 1980s: "Califor- up or more in existing dwellings."
of the state - calls for the 27 ginia during the Civil War.
roll tax.
n1a s mner-CIIy ne1ghborhoods
This new trend has significant noRthernmost counties to split away
Statham admits he docs not real" That's one of the questions that has to be answered by the American began growing again . Areas public-policy implications. These from tile rest of the state and form a ly believe it will happen, but he ·
people," Kerrey ~aid as Democratic presidential candidates debated thought full_y built up 40 years a11o new inner city.lfJOpulations, mosUy new state. This plan differs greatly will try to force deba~e on his bill
health care plans in Nashua, N.H., two weeks ago. "Do we want national have expenenced Sizable leaps tn poor, are putting an ever-increasing from the 27 other attempts to in the legislature next year: "At
health insurance or do we want managed competition or do we want some population."
sua in on social-service delivery divide California inuoduced into least it will show Sacramento aRd
Washington we are fed up with
refonm at the edge?"
Oakland, for example, grew by systems that were believed ade- the legislature during this century.
. Bush hasn't said what's'to be in his plan, but he has said that new taxes 10 percent. Close-in, lower-class quate to serve what was assumed 10
All the past separatist blueprints expensive programs that send our-·.
are out, and so is the governmem health care program favored by some Los Angeles suburbs, and,some be a declining pop,ulation. Mean- divided the state so that Los Ange- mon ey elsewhere, and maybe it
1\beral Democrats who want to model the U.S. sys~em on Canadal s, ·
sectwns of the clly, experienced while, significant assets have been lcs was in one half and San Fran- will stimulate some thoughts about ;
" WhenlhearpeoplesaywhatweoughttodoisputtheCanadi;msys- growth as high as 30 percent. At poured into highway and surface ci sco in the other. However, greater local control. "
tern inro effect. I thinlc they're wrong, " Bush said. "I think we've got the
best quality health care in the world and I don't want to see that diluted by
going to socializing our medical treatment."
.
- There's more likely to be common political ground in a plan that
would keep private health insurance, while providing government coverage for the uninsured and requiring employers who don't cover their
,
A few years ago, while I was a wasn't the.nephew· but the uncle, cuit coun judge violated slllte law
workers to belp pay for it
whose
last
murderous
act
was
to
during
jury
selection
for
the
uncle's
bachcv's
"
law
and
order''
regime;
,
reporter
for
a
Missouri
TV
station,
'· There's a lot more to i~ of course, including cost contr~ minimum
the state's worst mass murder to slay the boy and wound himself to 1988 trial, so 'they're starting the where if the president wan~ed 10 do .
benefits, affordable covera~e.
.
·
something contrary 10 the constitu- '
• Complexities like_those defy the shorthand of a political campaign and date was committed. Seven family add credence 10 his story:Wben the process all over again.
truth
came
out,
people
around
here
It
is
hard
to
swallow.
to
have
lion, he simply asked lawmakers to
members were found shot to death
lnvi~ one-liners,' like Sen. Tom Harkin's in the Democratic debate: '
"George BI!Sh was born with a silver stethoscope around his neck," on two farms and the lone survivor were as angry and disgusted by this seen something so evil - to have ahct-or amend it, and they did.
said Harkin. The Io~a sena~r !'-'so said 'it wasn'"t wonth talldng about blamed the spree on a teen-age crime as any I can relllem~er . watched the judicial process unfold Then he· either followed the new
member of the family. The sur- 'wben the uncle was convicted ana and belfeve, asjurors'did, tharthis laws or didn't, according to whim.
health care refonm while Bush ts 10 office.
But Congress and the candidates are going 10 be talking about it all vivor, the boy's uncle, claimed he . ~tenced 10 death for three of the man cOmmitted cold-blooded, pre· With the promise of democracy .'
had 10 kill the boy in sel{-defcnse murders, sentiment was highly sup- meditated murder and then tried to and fnee enterprise held out like a·:
year.
portive of the judicial system.
blame it on an innocent boy - and carrot and then snapped back whc!l .
after the boy murdered the rest,
Then,
this
past
November,
the
then,
to wa!ch the Judgment affairs didn't suit hit)!, we watcheq ',
Reporters
were
skeptical
of
the
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice presidennnd columnist
Missouri
S![prcme
Court
over···rescinded
because such a small part his nation uruavel beneath his rule. : 1
for The Associllted Press, has reported on Washingron and national poli- uhcle's srory from !be outse~ espeWe often grumble about tHe
cially after those who kilew the boy' turned the convictions on what of the overall process was fiawed.
tics for more than-25 years.
talked of his ~entle nature and angry citiulls are calling a "legal .._ Yet if we have'? S!Br! ~e leg~ costs of our system or justice, the '
kindness. As pteces of the puzzle 'loophole " and ' !just another proceas all over asam m tillS man s "to;any-lcngths" defense we give '
·citrne together over the following eX8{1lple of what's ivrong with our case, it ~uldn't have happ_eped at ,a even the most heinous criminals::
weeks, evidence indicated the killer system." Justices ruled that a cir- better ume m h1story to tHustrate But inevitably, when we ~egin to "
• just why it DID have to happelt. talk about what part of the process
----'----------:~---,------- With increased media a~tion on we could suspend. we can conic up
·what-we BOCe knew as the Soviet with no answers that wouldn't
, .
By The Associated Press
In 1938, the Marc_h of Di~es campaign 10 fight polio was organized.
Union, we have a powerful and · threaten one. of us if we welt ever :.
;: ·Todiy is Friday; Jan. 3, the 3rd day of 1992. There.are 363 ~ys left in
In 1947: the operung sesston or the U.S. House of Representatives was compelling.Jesson in'what can hap- accuSed of a crime.
·
die year
.
.
.
televised for the ftrSt time. ~
.
•
,
.
..pen whell the concept of law has no . The truly. amazing thing we do ·.
·, Today's HisJIIight in Hisuxy: · •
·
.
.
· In 1959, President Eisenllower signed a proclamation admiuin&amp; Alaska mlllllin&amp;.
,. ,
.
in this country - to keep in place.':
. : One hlllldred yean aso. on Jan. 3, 1892, author I.R.R..Tolkein, the cre- to the Union u the 49th SIIIC.
, ' ·
Thll country's-74-year htsrory IS -laws that largely protect us froll!." ,
aiOC of the "Lord of lheRinp" trilogy, WllS born in Bloemfontiin, South
In 1961, the United Stales severed diplomatic relations with Cuba.
a study in~ enactingiaw and crime, gov,ernmentaltyranny and·~
Africa.
'
'
. In 1967,25 yean 1130, Jaek.Ruby,l/le man who shot presidential assas- tilen either using pr ignoring it to unjust prosecution - rcmllins fairJ 1 ~
On this dale• ' . .
'
.'
sm Lee Harvey OsWald on tive Jeleyision, died in a Dillas hospital. ·
· g&amp;!n personal polilic.al pis. f1:~en ly unappreciated until we have th~ ·:
' ': ' lalS2l,- Luther,wu CJCOOlmunicaled from the ROman Catholic .. In 1980, ~~nservationist Joy Adarnson, author of the best-selUn&amp; ·book Mikball Qorbacbev, who prmmsed chance 10 compare our system witJI •&lt;
Cltun:b.
.
.
·'
. • Born Free, wu kiUed m nonbem Kenya by a servant in a
dis-. 10 build a state bfsed: on law when · one sueh as t1!at of the Conner Sovi: ·;,
· lnl777, Ge~. George Washington'S lll'lllY rouled the British in the Bat- pute.
· ·
·
,.. .., . ~. ..
~ . hecame,,to power m-1985,· ro(..... et Union. When one sees the colosJ ·
tle of Princeton, NJ.
·
·Ten years ago:. President Reagan and his wife, Nancy, retumcd to lowed this pn~etice.
. '
sal repercussions that happen when ·;
· In 1833, Britain seized conuol of the Falkland Islands in the South Washmgton after ,tpending the New Year holiday' ln California with pubA recent ·remembrance m t~e a country ignorc:s even a few laws, • .
Allanlic. (Almost ISO yean lalu, Argentina seized the islands from the IJshe.r Walter Anneilberg and his wife, Leonore.
· ·
Kansas City Star by fonmer (Sovtet l t brin's home the importance of.O
Qritish, bUI Brillin took diem back afrer a 74-day war.)
• ' . Ftve Y~ aso: About 200 people gathered in San Juan, Puerto Rico, news agency) Tus foretgn, corre· mainliuling them all until c~ged .)
; In-1868, th&amp;Meiji RCIIIIrllion re-eallblilbed lbe authoriiy of Japan's for a memorial service honoring the victims or lhe Dupont Plaza HoJel spondent Maxim A. Zmazkov leplly within the democnitic pro- ~!
~and put an end 10 die militacy rulers known as "shoguns ....
fi~ lhat killed 97. .
.
l •
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recapped tl}e hlghJigbu of Go~- cess.
.
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Saturdpy, Jan. 4

BLM buried ·in case_s of illegal -dumping
0

111 Court Street
Pome107, Ohio .

OHIO Weatt1er
Aeeu-Weather" forecast

'

Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

Friday, J11nuarv 3, 1s's2
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�•
i

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'·

'SPorts

, Friday, January 3, 1992

.

The Daily Sentinel

'-"' ' ~ • .-•·· • ~ · '

: St. Louis beats Minnesota 6-1
· ror\~eventh
-

Friday, January 3, 1992
Page-4

-

Nuggets into 16 turnovers in the
second half and 26 overall.
"We had to put pressure on
them in the s'e~:dnd half," Hardaway said. "We were sluggish the
first half and they slatted to pull
away. We knew if we put pressure
on them, they'd make mistakes."
Chris Mullin had 26 points for
the .WarriQrs, who lead )he league
in forcing 'turnovers. Golden Stare,
which won its fourth in a row and
improved to 20-8 overall, increased
its lead in the Pacific Division to
two games over Portland and
Phoenix.
The Nuggets were led by
{)ikembe Mutombo with 29 points
and 15 rebounds. The rookie center

was 11"for·l4 from the field, bui
turned the ball over seven times.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Cleveland 110, New York 103; the
Los Angeles Clippers 109, Charlotte I02 in overtime; Atlanta 123,
Phoenix 105; Milwaukee 92, Minnesota 91; Detroit 106, Houston 83;
Utah 107, Portland 103; Seattle
113, Miami I09 in overtime; and
Sacramento 114, Philadelphia 110.
Jazz 107, Trail Blazers 103
Utah improved its r.ecord to II ·
I at home as Karl Malone had 30
points and Tyrone Corbin scored
10 of his 15 in the fourth quarter
against Portland, including six in
the fmal minute.
(See NBA on Page 5)
'

Redwomen defeat Ohio Dominican
87-67 for first conference victory

Last season, the University of 13-8 in the halfs flfSt five minules. cent. At the foul line, they were
Rio Grande women 's basketball but a run of foul trouble and a stiff- 57.9 percent (11-19) and commil·
team finished as co-champion of ened OD defense allowed the visi- ted 14 rumovers.
the Mid-Ohio Conference. Howev- 1ors ut chip away at the Red women
The Lady Panthers were 34.8
er, its 87-67 victory over Ohio lead, which hit 25 twice.
percent overall from the field (23Dominican Thursday at Lync CenIn spite of OD's numerous trips 66, three of 10 from the three for
ter served notice that the Redwom- to the line (18 of 29 auernpt for the 30 percent) and held their turnovers
en are out for sole ownership of the · game for !)2.1 percent), the Red- to four.
conference crown.
women stayed out in front on the
Now 12-2, the Redwomen proAnn Barnitz and Stephanie work of Barnitz, Gudorf and ceed to their second conference
Gudorf, with 17 points apiece, led a Crouse, who all "played well," in game Saturday at Mount Vernon
combined effort that shook off Foote's estimation.
Nazarene . OD (7-4) also travels
OE&gt;'s early attempts 10 take Rio
"I thil)k that in the fu;t half we .Saturday, to Washington &amp; JefferGrande out of its offense and played very well offensively, and son (Pa.).
resulted in the first MOC win of did well in the first 10 minules of
the season for Doug Footc'sclub.
the second half," he commented.
The firs t half saw the Redwom- "In the las! 10 minules we got into
en also working to close down the SO!Ile foul trouble and had a let- 14; Michelle Crouse, 4-2-2-16;
visitors' offense, which resulted in down, which caused us to lose
Gannelli,
0-2-2;
Jackie
a 20-121ead for Rio Grande at the some things. We just kept putting Elizabelh
Hannon, O-l.Q-3;
Tricia
Collins,
110-minute mark. But three-point people on the line. But on the • 0-2; Mindy Montgomery, 0-1-1;
shoo ting by Gudorf, Michelle · whole I'm very happy with the Ann Barnitz, 8-1-17; Stephanie
Crouse (who scored six of her 16 results."
Gudorf, 2-4-1-17; Melanie Miller,
points on lrifecta attempts) and
Both teams ended equally_on 1-1-3; Kathy Snyder, 4- 1-9.
Gena Norris (nine of 14 markers rebounding at 47 each, w•t Tnc•a TOTALS 23-10-11-87.
from the three) boosted the hosts to Collins recording seven to lead the
OHIO DOMINICAN (67) a healthy halftime lead.
Redwomen and Hovest snatching Kari Ri ebesell , 3-6-12; Katie
Tresa Davis' OD crew, with mne for OD. Hovest and Moeller Moeller, 5-1-1-14; Jennifer EwansKelly Hovest and Katie Moeller each had 14 points and Kari Riebe- ki, 0-1 -1; Nikki Bolte, 1-2·0-8;
captaining the offense, managed to sell had 12.
Lisa Janusz, 1-4-6; Sherron Bates,
narrow the deficit to nine twice
The Redwomen saw a healthy l-2-4; Kelly Hovest, 6-2-14; Mary
later in the half. but were unable 10 part of their shooting (33 of 73 Tressler, 3-2-8. TOTALS 20-3·18·
slow down the Redwomen.
attempts for 45 .2 percent) come 67.
The second period saw Rio from the three, where they connect·
Halftime score: Rio Grande
Grande outscore the Lady Panthers ed on 20 of 28 tries for 35.7 per- 47, Ohio Dominican 30.

points in overtime for Kan sas ,
which trailed Pepperdine (7-5) 5853 with just over six minutes to go.
Jamison scored 13 points and
defensively shut out Doug Christie,
Pepperdine's scoring leader, in
overtime. Christie fmished with 22
points and 10 rebounds.
In other games amopg ranked
teams, it was No. I Duke 68. Virginia 62; No. 3 Oklahoma Stale 85,
Midwestern State 45; No . 5 Connecticut 85, Miami 62; No. 6 Arizona 82, New Orleans 64; No. 7
Ohio Stare 73, Penn Slate 63; and
No. 8 North Carolina 78, Purdue
50.
Also, it was PittsbUrgh over No.
12 Seton Hall 77-68; No. 15 Georgia Tech 82, Richmond 75; No. 16
Arkansas 123, Quincy 60; No; 17
Kenblclcy 91, Notre Dame 7~ No.
18 SL John's 79, Villanova 69; No.
23 Syracuse 100, Blis!:;n College
90; and No. 24 Louisville 60,
Houston 56.
No. I Duke 68, Virginia 62
At Charlottesville, Va., Bobby
Hurley scored seven of his II
points in the final 27 seconds .
Duke (7-0) had won its previous
six.games by an average margin of
27.6 points. But the Blue Devils
had trouble getting quality shots
against the changing defenses of
Virginia (4-5).
Christian Laettner led the Blue
Devils with i 7 points and nine
rebounds . Grant Hill added 16
points.
.
No.3 Oklaboma State 85
Midwestern State 45
AI Stillwater, Okla., Byron
· Ho~ston had 27 points and II
rebounds and Oklahoma State
overwhelmed undermanned Mid·
western, which had 25 turnovers.
Midwestern State, an NAIA
school, used balanced scoring to
take a 17-13 lead six minutes into
the game. Then Houston scored
four points and Bryant Reeves
added six for a 10-0 run.
No.5 Connecticut 85, Miami 62
At Storrs, Conn., Copneclicut
·welcomed Mia!l\i to the Big East
with an overpowering defense.

Thursday night's NBA game in Minneapolis,
which the Bucks won 92·91. (AP)

so!J~~~~t:NG~~a~:~;:-2~~~ Kansas, Duk-e, Ohio State. post

Scoreboard
In the NBA ...

'

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvilkln
Team
W L • PtL
NewYork ............. ll 9 .667

8 01tm .................... l9 10
Mia'mi .................... l4 17
Phil&gt;dolpbio ........ 13 17
NcwJcney ........... .ll 18
Wuhingwn ............ ll li
Orlando ....................6 23

.6:55
.45 2

6

.379
.379
.1fJ7

8

.433 6.5

Central DI•LIIon
ChiC110.................. 24 4 .857
Clcvclond ............... 20 9 .69{)
Mi.lwaukcc ............. IS
..... 16
Atlanl.l ... ................ l4
lndiana ................... l2

\4
IS
15
18
Clw'lou.c ..................1 1A
Detroit... . ..

GB

.517
.Si6
.48 3
.400

.250

i

13

4.5
9..S
9.5
10.5
13
I&amp;

WES'FERN CONFERENCE

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NortlJ Division
Team
W L T Pb.
Detroit ...... ...... 23 11 4 50
SLLouis ............ U 14 7 43
Chicago .............. 15 17 9 39
Minne&amp;(l(a .......... 16 17 3 35
Toronto ......... \015 S lS
Smythe Dlvlllon
Vancouver ......... 2:t II 6
Winnipe1 .......... 11 16 s
Colp:y .............. 1617 l
LoaAnacle~ ....... 15 16 7
Edmonton .........)...j 5 19 6
SanJ01e ............. 8•28 3

Midwest
OeYeland St. 52, Ken.L49

GFGA
152 121
138128

Creighton 61. E. Illinoi161J

138 134
116 123
103 149

Marquette 92, Oticago St. 55
N. lllinois 77, Valparaiso 66
Nebraska 57, Toledo 52

50 139 115
42 125 129

37 142 135

31 137148
36 140 154
19 9817 1

Thursday's scores
WinniPeg 3, Boston I
Hudord 4, Quebec 1

New Jersey 4. Phubur&amp;h 0
N.Y. Jhngcn 4, Chicago 3
St. LouiJ 6, Minneacta I
1M Angeles 5, Edmonton 3

Tonight's games

DrUc 58, ColoBdo St. 40
Kansu 79, Pcpperdine 73, OT

Ohio SL 73, Ptnn St. '3
Ohio U. l7, Wright St. 71

SE Missouri 84, Oakland City 69
Wii.·Omc:n Bay 69, Colondo 60

Southwest
Arhnm 123, Quincy 60
NoM Tc.ul71, S\1{ Te ua SL 64
Oklahonu St. &amp;S, Midweuem St.,
Tcus4S
Teu ~ · Arllngton 83, TeR.u-San Ant~
nio 18
Tulu 97, SE Lou.iliana 70

Far West

WI·ns ··n Th·ursday college games

By The Associated Press
Instead of riding over the wave,
the Kansas Jayhawks nearly got
swept under by it
Fourth-ranked Kansas was taken
· into overtime Thursday night
before it subdued pesky-Pepperdine
79-73.TheJayhawks' 24th straight
home win was a struggle from the
outset after they had been routin~

opponents by an average of 29
points in theii first eight games.
" We definitely showed something as a learn," Kansas forward
Richard Scott said after the Waves
outplayed their hosts for much of
the night
"That kind of game i~ going to
help our team," said Jayhawlcs
head coach Roy Williams, who was

called fbr-a rare technical foul after
slamming the scorers' table with
his hand in the second half. "I told
the team during the timeoul with
eight minutes left, 'It's going to be
a lot of fun coming back and winning this thing. We needed thi s
kind of game."
Alonzo Jami son score d six
(See HOOPS on Page 5)

Meigs hands Alexander 50-38 defeat
Meigs outscored Alexander 3218 in the second half to post a 5038 come from behind win over the
Spartans in girls TVC basketball
action Thursday evening.i .
The win gives Meigs an 8-0
mark and a 6-0 record in the TVC,
and Alexander drops to 3· 2 in the
TVC and 3-5 overall.
Meigs who had not played since
December 19th had trouble getting
started after the long lay -off,
Alexander held a I 0-7 lead at tfie
end of !he first quarler. The
Marauders hit a shot at the end of
the first half to cut the Alexander
lead 10 20- 18 going into the locker
room.
Meigs went to a 2-3 zone in the

second half and shut down the
Spartan offense, while the Marauder defense was doing the job,
Verna Compston and Reva Mullen
led a charged-up Marauder offenre.
Compslon scored 12 of her game
high 18 points in the second half,
while Mullen scored eight of her 14
points in the fourth period. Meigs
outscored the home team ' 16-1 0 to
hold a 34-30 lead heading into the
final period. The Marauders pulled
away in the final poriod with good
free throwing shooting in the final
period.
Tricia Baer joined Compston
and Mullen in double figures with
12. Meigs hit 18 of 41 from th e
floor for 43% and cashed in on 14
of 27 from the line for 51%. Baer

Eastern downs Trimble 54-30

Ariton• 82, New Orleans 64

' Califomi• 92. Col01mbi• 64
Ka11111 SL. 71, W}'oming 6S
Long Beach SL 68, San Jo.e St. 65

(9) and Lori Kelly (6) controlled
the boards grabbing 15 of the
Marauders 21 rebounds. The
Marauders committed 12 turnovers,
had four assists with Mullen and
Compslon getting two each. Meigs
had II steals, Mullen had five,
Compston and Kelly added three
each . Marauder Head Coach-Ron
Logarti!lso received good play
from everyone off of his bench.
Alexander was led by Jamie
Rolston with II points. The Spartans hit 17 of 56 from the floor for
30% and three of six from the line
[or 50%. Alexander pulled down
29 rebounds with Rolston grabbing
13.
In the reserve contest the Little
Marauders scored 22 fourth period
points and went on to defeat the
Spartans 38-15. Melissia Clifford
led Meigs with 12 points.
Meigs will host Wellston this
Monday with the varsity game getting under way at 6 p.m. There will
'be no reserve game.
Quarter totals
Meigs ................... ? II 16 16 = 50
Alexander .......... 10 10 10 8 = 38
Meigs (50) - Reva Mullen·6-02=14, Vema Compston .7-0-4=18,
Lori Kelly 0-0-1=1, Tricia Baer 40-4=12, Kim Hanning 1-0·3=5.
Totals -18-0·14=50
Alexander ( 38) - Teathcr
South 1-1-2=7, Jamie Wortman 10-0=2, Kris Gilkey 2-0-0=4, Jamie
Rolston 5-0-1=11, Amber Davis 40-0=8, Audra Andrews 3' 0·0=6.
Totals -16·1·3=38

By SCOTT WOLFE
oulrebounded Trimble 42-30.
Quarter
totals
Sentinel
Correspondent
Tum
GB
MenLina 62. Webet St 60
Ullh ..... ............. 20 12 .62.1
Outdistancing Trimble 26-12 at Easlem ............... IO 1610 18 = 54
Mcm.LIIUI St. 90, ldaho St 17
15
San AnlOruo ........... l~ 13 .S52
N. AI'Uona 64, Boise: SL 59
the half, the Eastern Eagle's girls Trimble ................ 2 10 12 6 = 30
3
Houatm ................. 16 14 .SJJ
Novada 88, Idaho 70
6.l
Omvt::~ ................. .. l2 11
.414
Easttrn (54) - Shelly Metzger
baskethall team soared to a 54·30
Saturday's games
New Melioo St. 75, UC Irvine 71
6.l
DallaJ., .................. .I2 17 .-414
Ore.Jon
SL
104,
Sacmnen10
SL.
89
.
6-0·8=20,
Tiffany Gardner 5-0·
Winnipeg
at
Piwbllrah-,
I
:35
p.m.
non-league
win
over
the
Tomcats
14
Minnel:c:U .............. .4 1A .143
Buffa.lo at Booon, 7:b5 p.m.
San Dieao 93~ Nny 76
•
2=12,Tabby
Phillifls 2-0-1=5, Jcn·
here
Thursday
in
non-league
bas·
San Francisco 71, DePa\11 56
Wadlington at Hanford, 7:35p.m.
Padfk Dl¥ilklll
nifer
Roush
1-0-0=2, Jaime WilSanta
C.ra65,
Geofle
M11on
58
ketball action. The game was the
N.Y. Ranaen at New Jeney, 7: 35
Golden Stalt- .......... 20 8 .714
•
Swlfcml 89, S.CIIh 71
p.m.
son
1·0·0=2,
Ruby
Burke 0-0-2=2,
ftrSt for both clubs since Christmas
. Portlond ................ l9 11 .633
2
UC San\1 Bliblra 60, Pacific U. 53
Quebb: II N.Y. hlandcn, 7:35p.m .
Phocnil ................. .19 II .633
2
break.
.
Penny
Aeiker
1-0-0=2,
Lee Gillilan
UNL V ~.Cal SL·FullertCI\ 74
Edmon100at Calaary. 1:05 p.m.
L.A. Lokon ........... .l7 12 .ll6
3.5
Yale69, San Dieao St 62·
Vancouver
at~. 8:05p.m.
Coach Dawn Heideman's crew 3.Q-2=8, Amy Redovian. 0-0-1=1.
Seal1lc: .................... l6 13 .5S2
4.5
Chica,oatToron!o, B:M p.m.
L.A. Clippat ......... [7 1l .531
5
Totals 19.0·16=54 •
is
now
4-2 overall.
Oa:ronat SL LouiJ, I:JS p.m.
SICRmaao ..............9 20 .310 I J..S
Transactions
.Philadelphia at Loa Angclu, 10;35
Trimble (30) - Tammy LeniThe Eagles were led by the
pm.
gar
0-0· 1=1, Chastity Antle 4-0'
effor!S
of
5-9
junior
guard•Michelle
Tbursday's scores
BasebaU .
Montreal at San Ja..c, 10:35 p.m.
Cltnlartd ltt, New Yorilll3
5=13,
Angie King 1-0-4=6, Anna
"Shelly"
MciZger
who
tossed
in
six
Amerk•n Le•aue
L.A. Cippca 109,0wlollo 102, OT
DETROIT TIGERS - AMounced
Sunday's
comes
field goals and an 8-12 night from Downs 3·0·0=6, Leta Doster 0-0Allantal23. Pbot:nil lM
the raiplion of Ju Roberuon, scoutina
C~ at Edmon tell, I :OS p.m.
MiiWiukeo 92, MiM- 91 '
the·foul line for 20 points, while 6- 1=1. Totals 10.0-10=30
Minno.otaat Chleaao,. 1:35 p.m.
Dsro!ll06, - 1 3
0
junior sidekick Tiffany Gardner
~llh 1117. Pmlond 103
NtllontllAa&amp;u•
netted 12 points and led the team in
s..111e 111. Mllntll09, ar
CliiCAOO CUBS - Nomad lim Eoo.w...s.... l:zs,o.... ut
lian major lelpiCC»l.
rebounds with 10.
Soc•
uu·.~uo
Tabby Phillips netted a couple
.Buketball
Tonlcbt's pme1
jumpers
early (S points) 10 get the.
Nlllaoll lluulboll Allo&lt;lollon
NBA
F~ad
lhe
Charl..,.llomCII,
Eagles
rolling
en route to a 10-2
Cln- ·11Newlcaoy,
· -7:lt pa.
w"""7:30p.m.
HOUIIOII. R.octdlut.d New Yotk Xniekl
first quarter lead, while Lee
Detroi.l &amp;I Dlllu, 8 p.m.
$10,000 oach f'or vialltinf a loaaue Nle
ChiU&amp;O al MiJ.w111be, 9 p.m.
thal pmhibkl homD~ rem practicina
Gillilan had a good game from the
Indiana at L.A. L&amp;ke:n, 10:30 p.m.
on Jm. 1.
elbow with eight points, including
A1UNTA HAWKS - Si&amp;n«&lt; MooS.tunt.ly's 1ames
lon WIJotl, pud. WoivM Oliy Loononl,
a 2-2 night at !he line.
New Yam 11 w...._,7:30p.m
Chastity Antle, a 5· 7 sophoJlhoGA ., Chadoae.""1:30 p.m.
"""'·
MlNNl!SOTA 11MBEttWOLYES more,
led the Tomcats with 13
Claimed
Mark
R.an.dlll,
forwud.,
off
L.A. OiPI"" "~.7:30p.m.
wu~
.
801t.01ttt MDM~cM, I Jl'.lft·
·
points,
including a :S-9 night from
NeW 1-ot Otlolp, 1:30pm.
• OltLANJlO MAGIC - Ploce4 Scou
the
line,
wbile 5-6 Angie King and
lbPm l l San~ 1:30 p.rn. •
Sku., ........ on tho inj....t lla. Sipoad
0&lt;.-elllaw«, 9 ......
s..p.on"tloam-pud.
5-9 junior center Tammy Shank·
DtUu
ll uw.. l:t~
each had six wints. Shank led in
•
~~~ '
IOpm.
• 1\octc:tJ
rebounding with nine.
1Ddiool .. OoWeo s-111:30 P"'·
Nallollll Hod&lt;aJIAape
RT.
.
MASON. WV
MiimJ at
10:!41 pm.
BOSTON BlutNS - Trdo4 Ouy
Eastern
methodically
built
UP9D
.,)
.
NEXT TO FAST 4 U AND MAsON MOI:EL
Oallcy. delen-..an. and w. w.a. oenits 10·2 outburst from the ftrst
Sullday'opmu
tcr, to the PtillaGelphia FI)'CI'I foe Oor4
.. Su,(ldly llvu Tlwrlday, 10 am-9 pm; Friday &amp; Saturday •.to am-10 pm
Mwphy, ~~a~..,....,Brian Dobbin, ripl
frame, despite the efforts of the
- . ..1-v..... ~P"'·
win...rid I 199l ii1!N·......t dPII pj&lt;k.
Ph il·bl~ • .. ~ 10 p.m."
young
Trimble
club
to
control
!he
CALOAJlY FLAMIIS - fnded
11 U Loio1t. IO:lGp.m.
lfake ~ To HaTe Sunday Dinn'r With 111
' baskelball. Behind Metzger, Gard·
·f&gt;QI.Ia Oilmow, cenw,lamil W.ooun and
lit No- ...._ l l o k w.......,.
.
.
•'
ner,
and
Gillilan,
EHS
put
together
JDahendv, .,.. X•&amp; Mand.,-We,ltf\
In the NHJ, •••
114ood inside-olltsido combination
Feizturtng
wiaa, \0 lb• Ti:
' \0!rio~;
~· lAif• for
o.,y
~
Calc
-bo;
and
led
2li-12
ai
the
half.'
.
WALES CONfiUNCI
loll will: .,., ....
a.
'l'rimble aho!ved meager signs of
t~pJUII, . . , _ , •• Jlffa...,
TWLTPII.GrGA
· a comeback in the third frame,,IIi
P"
1
.
•
:1H3 1· " l'lf ,,. ,
NIW II!IIBY DBVILS - Sent
man·
y
Eagles
saw
action
in
tHe
N.Y. . . . ...... :16 t4 I " 1161!1 ·
Atea.M ....... - · IOIJ&lt;ioo of the.
-.Ji .......... ll14 4 41 IMI49
...--.,Loop.
frame. Overall nine players broke
Now~ ........ It 14 6 44 14411!
into the scoring column.
"'" 1 \ 1......... tl17 7 3!011! ll~l
FOOibaU
EHS led· 36·24 after t~ree
••
N.Y.... lllt 6
1~ ,
N-J.."'!t'ol
'
frames, then added 18 in the final
HOUSTON
- PlioM Ooq
Smith, .,._,.,. ~ • iAjlullll reround 10 bury the hatchet and cllim
» 14 2 ,. liS 9l
,..., Aotl••"' Onl, .........
the 54-30 win.
· -..........:.... (111 ' " tJ$141
lllfllool ............. ll II 4 M lltlll
!CANW
crrY
CHIEFS
Slpd
Jaime WUson, a S-6 scphomonl
.1111hlo.............. 12'1t 6 JtllU3t
1oM lfou, ubr(. ,__ Tnq . _ .
Qljboo ............... 11 2S ' 'D 1211,
. guard, bad Just two :
· :
bul Ill·
"t t . - . . - - '
lied ieveo rebounds.
had
'--:----~-----------------._...;...--.....1' tiRe of!Mteam'sfive
• EHS
I
Mkhrl!lll ()!•ilion
W L Pel.

N.Y. bl ua ders at Buffalo. 7:35p.m.
Toronto at Oclroit , 7:15p.m.
Vancouver at Wuhinaton-. 7:35p.m
Philadelphia at San J01e, 10:35 p.m.

.........

· GOO"'s Alwra,_

,e._;

~

goal and two assists as Hartford scored three power·
play goals. Terry Yake scored an empty-net goal.
Sidorkiewicz stopl,led the first 22 shots he faced
until Greg Paslawski s deflection early in the third
period produced Quebec's only goal.
Devils 4, Peugulns 0 - Craig Billington notched ··
his secD!ld shutout in less than a week.
·
Billington stopped just 16 shots in posting his
eighth win in 10 decisions (8·1·1). He won i!l fitts·
burgh 7-4 on Tuesday night, and by far bas outplayed
No. I goalie Chris Terreri in recent weekS.
Billington had plenty of help against Pittsburgh,
getting goals from Claude Lemieux, Claude Vilgrain,
.Scott Stevens and Eric Weinrich.
Jets 3, Bruins 1- Fredrick Olausson scored five
.seconds after Boston had changed goalies at 13:19 of
the third period.
Olausson drove a 40-footer post goalie Matt DelGuidice, the replacement for Reggie Lemelin, who
was tarried from the ice on a stretcher after injuring
his leg while making a save. Just 64 seconds after
Olausson's score, Paul MacDerrnid ruso beat DelGuidice to clinch the victory,,
C81D Neely had scored the tying goal for Boston at
10:30 of tile third period.
Rangers 4, Blackhawks 3_- Mark Messier
scored a pair of goals and Mike Richter made 44
saves.
Messier scored on a 20-foot wrist shot from the ·
right circle at 8:40 of .the fi~. period and then with a
shorthander with 12:40 lef '\lie second.
Richter, who $topped at :1o shots he faced in the
fmt two periods, gave up all three Chicago goals in
the third, two to Jeremy Roenick.
Kings 5, Oilers 3 - Corey Millen and Luc
Robitaille each had a goal and an assist. ..
Kings goalie Kelly Hrudey rumed back 24 shots,
giving up two of Edmonton's goals to Joe Murphy.

.rf ~Oo,

¥

The Huskies (9-0) carne up with
27 turnovers, including 12 steals.
Chris Smith scored 21 points as
UConn continued its best start
since going 11-0 II seasons ago.
Miami (5·6) has lost five of its last
six.
Jerome Scou scored 19 points to
lead the Hurricanes.
Nil. 6 Arizona 82
New Orleans 64
At Tucson, the Wildcats broke
New Orleans' six-game wining
streak with its massive front line
controlling matters. Six -foot-10
Sean Rooks scored 24 points, while
7-footcr Ed Stokes had 14 and 6-6
Chris Mills added II. Arizona's
frontcourt also held the Pri vatccrs'
6-11 center, Ervin Johnson, to two
points on 1-for-7 shooting.
Arizona (8-1) has won 69
straight home games, the nation's
longesl streak.
. No. 7 Ohio State 73
Penn State 63
At Columbus, Ohio, Jim Jack·
son hit for 23 points in the Buckeyes' 25th straight home victory.
Ohio State (8-1) dropped Penn
State, which will join the Big Ten
next season, to 8-3.
Alex Davis , Chris Jent and
Jamaal Brown also scored II
points apiece for the Buckeyes.
No.8 N. CaroliDa 78, Purdue 50
At Chapel Hill, Huber! Davis
scored 20 points, hitting 7-for-9
from the field, including four of
five three.-pointers. North Carolina
hit 62.5 percent of its field goals in
the first half and finished at 54.2 •
percent for the game to Purdue's
35.1 pereenL
George Lynch added 15 points
and 10 rebounds for North Carolina
(8-1). Matt Waddell led the Boilermakers (7-4) with II points.
Pittsburgh 77
No. 12 Seton Hall 68
At Pittsburgh , Jerry McCul lough has a nice Big East debut
with 21 points as Pittsburgh (8-4)
surged to a 14-point halftime lead,
then held off Seton Hall.
•
McCullough, a freshman guard
from New York City, scored 15

,

.~

ES,.A

points in the second half.
Pitt, the Big East's worst foulshooting team, made 28 of 38 free
throws to withstand six lhree-point
field goals by the Pirates (7-2) in
tbe second half.
Jerry Waiker had 16 points and
II rebounds for the Pirates.
No. 15 Georgia Tecb 82
Richmond 75
At Atlanta, Georgia Tech held
Richmond scoreless in two stetches
tolaling more than II minutes and
overcame 35 points by Curtis Blair.
Travis Best scored five of his 20
points during one of Tech's runs.'
Malcolm Mackey added 19 points
for the Yellow Jackets (10-2), who
had to withstand six three-point
baskets by Blair.
No. 16 Arkansas 123
Quincy 60
At Pine Bluff, Art., Todd Day
returned from a one-semester suspension and scored 26 points in .22
minutes.
Day made five of nine threepointers . He also had six assiSIS,
fiv e rebounds , three blocks and
three steals.
Quincy, a Division II team , led
for th~st time at 54 .
No. 17 Kentucky 91
Notre Dame 70
At Lexington, Ky ., Richie
Farmer scored a career-high 28
points, 22 in the first half against
rusty Notre Dame (1-5), which
hadn't played in 21 days.
Jamal Mashburn finished with
25 points and Sean Woods added
' 13 as Kemuc[(y hit 30 of 53 shots
for 57 percent.
'
No. 18 St. John's 79
Villanova 69
At Villanova, Pa., Malik Scaly
scored 26 points and Ja son
Buchanan got 15'tJf his 16 in the
second half.
Leading 37·34, St. John's
scored 18 straight points , six by
reserve forward Lamont Middleton.
and took a 55-34 lead with 7:50 to
play. Villanova went 7:10 without
scoring.
Villanova gm within· eight with
2:05 left, but that was all. Lance
Miller finished with 31 points,
going 6-for-8 from the floor, 3-for·
3 from three-point range.
..,
· Ne. p Syracuse 100
Boston College 90
At Newton, Mass., freshman
Lawrence Moten hit 10 of 12 shots
and scored ·a career-high 26 points
for the unbeaten Orangemen.
Bostoll' College (8-2) is- 1-2 since
winning its first seven games and
has lost !}..straight Big East games.
Dave Johnson added 26 points
for Syracuse (9.Q). Boston College
was led by sophomore Bill Curley
with a career-high 31 points.
No. 24 LouisvUle 60
Houston 56
At Louisville, James Brewer
made six free throws in the final
1:22 after getting his f~rst star! of
the season becauS(l of a fOPt injury
to leading scorer Everiek Sullivan.
Brewer scored all ll of his points
in the second half for the Cardinals
(7-1).

BAKED CmCKEN DINNER

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Sam Mack paced the Cougars,
, who had wqn eighl in a row, with
18 points.

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college h00ps •••-('-'-=Co~nti~nued-'-f~rom_P-'-'=ag'-e4~)- - - - - IT'S MINE - Minnesota's Felton Spencer
(50) holds on to the ball despite the aggressive
efforts or Milwaukee's Alvin Robertson during

Sports briefs
•

w·

WHO'S OPEN? - Tile tCII'DII baWtba11 qaestlotl Is liked by

Hoalllll'l
Ew. (12), no loob tor .. ·opeD teammate
t' no. LouiPt- '• Kill! LeGree deleDdtl froiD btlllnd dunaa Thune - aiPt't -··· ...... ~..o~~~•. Ky~ which~ h~ CardiDall
1
••
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. ..--.c.ut

The Dally Sentlnei...,...Page-:5

straight home win

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer ·
.
The Quebec !l{ord.iques can't win on the toad. The
: St. Louis Blues are finding it virtually impossible 10
· lose at horne.
: "If we could start winning a few games on the
; road, it'd be great;" said St. Louis center Adam
· Oates after a 6-1 victory over the Minnesota North
· Slars on Thursday nighL
·
· The victocy was the seventh straight and lOth in
. tbtllast II for the Blues at home, where they are 14. 3-2 overall. If they were half as good on the road,
they'd'be running away with the Norris Division race
instead of sitting seven points behind Detroit in sec. ond place. Away from home, the Blues have been an
unspectacular 4-11-5. ,
•
Meanwhile, the Nordiques are the only Nffi. team
still looking for their fmt road win this season following a 4-1 loss in Hartford. Away from home, the
Nordiques are 0-14-4.
Elsewhere in the NHL on Thursday night, it was
New Jersey 4, Pittsburgh 0; Winnipeg 3, Boston !;
New York Rangers 4, Chicago 3, and Los Angeles 5,
Edrnonron 3.
1,
· Blues 6, North Stars 1- Brett Hull extended his
goal-scoring streak to seven games with his leagueleading 38th and Nelson Emerson scored twice for
the Blues. Curtis Joseph made 38 saves for St. Louis,
which was outshot 39·25.
·.
Hull added an assist and has scored points in 16
consecutive games. with 20 goals and nine assists
during the streak. Hull's point-scoring streak became
the longest in the league after Brian Leetch of the
New York Rangers went scoreless, ending a 17-garnc
streak.
Whalers 4, Nordiques I -Peter Sidorkiewicz
stopPed 27 shots as the Whalers extended Quebec's
club-record road winless streak.
Pat Verbeek scored twice and John Cullen added a

Golden ·State downs Denver
125-lll;.Cieveland also wins
By The Associated Press
Tim Hardaway was more con·
cerned with putting pressure on the
Denver Nuggets than on himself.
After all, what's a 1-for'8 shoot·
ing performance after going 0-for17?
Two games after settin~ an
NBA record for shooting fuulity,
Hardaway scored 19 of his 27
points in the second half as the
Goldcn.Siate Warriors defeated the
Nuggets 125-111 Thursday night.
He missell seven of his first eight
ficl d-~oal attempts before going 7for-9 mthe second half.
Hardaway said he was more
intent on the Warriors' pressure
defense, which harrassed the

. .

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohl9

:

STOPS PUCK- New York Ranger goalie
Mike Richter (35) stops the puck in front or
Chicago's Brent Sutter (12) during ·Thursday

night's NHL contest in Chicago, which the .
Rangers woo 4·3. (AP)

Revenge main spur for ;Falcons
in Saturday playoff vs. Redskins
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AtlaDta (10·6) at Washington
AP Footl!all Writer
(14-2) '
Jerry Glanville always can.find
(12:30 p.m. EST Saturday)
a hook to get his Atlanta Falcons
Perhaps the biggest danger for
up for a game. If he 'can't find one, the Red skins is that first game,
he invents one.
when Atlanla played withoUI three
· This week's is "running up the of its best players- quarterback
score," as he claims Washington Chris Miller, cornerback Deion
did when it beat his team 56-17 at Sanders and tackle Mike Kenn.
RFK Siadium on Nov. 10.
"We grew up after that game,"
" Let's set the record straighl on says Kenn.
that," says Joe Gibbs, whose RedOne problem for t~te Falcons the
skins scored 11 points in the fourth first time was blitzing against an
quarter of t~at game. "We were offensive line that allowed just
·trying to run out the fourth quaner.' eight sacks all season, leaving the
I think anyone who saw the game secondary to single-cover Ricky
wouldn't think we were trying to Sanders, Gary Clark and Art Monk.
run up the score."
The result: six touchdown passes
But Glanville spent only three by Mark Rypien.
minutes this week on a call with Houston (11·5) at Denver (12-4)
Washington reporters, then said
(4 p.m. Saturday)
"kiss my grits" before signing off.
The Oilers, who beat the New
'I think ~ey defini1ely have the York Jets 17-10 last week, had
revenge factor on their side," says gone downhill since their 42-14
safety Danny Copeland of the Red- win over the Broncos in the
skins . "Last time doesn't mean Astrodome on Oct. 6., when Den·
much."
ver's turnovers led to four Houston
All four games this weekend touchdowns. The Oilers finished
Atlanla at WashingtOn, Houston at the regular season 4-4 and needed
Denver, Kansas City at Buffalo and ' mistakes by the Jets to make it
Dallas at Detroit - are repeats of even this far.
games played during the regular
Houston's hesl bet is for one of
season. Remarkably, that's .the fmt those occasional spring-like mid· .
ume all four games ~t th1s stage winter days in Denver - Warren
have 'been rematches s1nce the NFL •· Moon and the run-and-shoot don't
went to this format when it fully fit well with snow.
merged with the AFL in 1970.
The last time the Oilers were in
Nor l!tere these normal games Denver was for a 1988 playoff
-the wmners won by an aggre- game, when Jerry Glanville (sec
gale of 165-47, 0~41 - 12 per game.
above) called a lateral to Mike
But of the b•g wmners, only Rozier from his one-yard-line on
Washington is a clear-cut favorite their first offensive play . Rozier
this weekend.
.
fumbled, Denver scored, won 34Two of the losers, Buffalo and 10 and went on to one of its three
Denver, are favorites and Dallas is dismal Super Bowls, a 42-10 loss
rated even with Detroit, to whom to Washington.
the Cowboys lost 34-10 in the first
Kansas City (10-6) at Buffalo
meeting.
(13·3)
Here's a loo~ at the weekend in
. (12:30 p.m. Sunday)
order of appearance:
The Bills well remember that

Monday ni.ght 33-6 thrashing '"
Kansas City in which the Chiefs
ran up 247 yards on the grQ,und and
contrOlled the ball for moft'than 44
minutes. Buffalo now has back
Bruce Smith and Jeff Wrighl to
help control that ground game. .
Still, this is the matchup the rest
·Of lhc AFC was hoping for - the
ball-control Chiefs to exploit Buffalo' s weakness against the run,
just as the Giants did in the Super
Bowl a year ago.
Dallas (11·5) at Detroit (12-4)
(4 p.m. Sunday)
What were the odds on these
two getting this far at the start of
the season, particularly the Lions,
who have won six straight with
Erik Kramer at quar!crback for
Rodney Peete, and have done it
with a raft of other injuries?
·
Peete actually was hurl in the
fmt meeting, won by the Lions 34·
10. Detroit was outgaincd 415
yards to 208, but scored on a
blocked field goal and an intcrcep·
uon l)ltum.
The Cowboys also have won six
straight, including last week's 1713 win in Chicago, and have
earned this year's designation as
the team no one wants to pla.y.
Their winning streak slartcd '"
Washington - the Redskins' first
loss - after Steve Beucrlein
replaced the injured Troy Aile man.
Aikman is ready now - or
almost ready - but Jimmy Johnson is going with his hot quarterback.

Sports briefs
Hockey
NEW YO RK (AP)- Mario
Lemieux of tbe Piusburgh Penguins, who ha'd II ~oals and 26
assists in 14 games m December,
was nam ed NHL pl aye r of the
month.

NBA games ···- -(ContinuedfromPage4)
--:-------Jeff Malone added 23 points for
the Jazz.
The Trail Blazers g01 23 points
from Clyde Drexler.
Corbin made four foul shoiS and
an 18-footer in the final minute,
with the 18-footer giving the Jazz
the lead for good, 105-103.
SuperSonics 113, Heat 109, OT
Ricky Pierce scored seven of his
34 poinis in overtime.
Benoit Benjamin's basket with
2: 10 left in the extra period put the
Sanies ahead to stay, 106-104.
Kevin Edwards led the Heat with
26 points.
Kings 114, 76ers 110
Mitch Richmond had 2~ points,
10 rebounds and 10 asststs for
Sacramento, which blew a 22-point
lead at home before holding on to
defeat Philadelphia.
Philadelphia was led by Charles
Barkley with 31 points and 13
rebounds.
Cavalters 110, Knicks 103
Brad Daugherty had 23 points,
Mark Price 22 and reserve guard , .
John Battle added II of his seasonhigh 19 in the .foll!th quarter for the
Cavaliers.
Daugherty scored 13 points in
the third quarier, helping the Cavaliers open their largest lead, 83-68 .
Xavier McDaniel scored 27
· points and Patrick Ewing 22 for the
Knicks.
Clippers 10~, Hornets 102, OT
Ron Harper made four of five.3·
point shots, including two in overtime.
Harper scored eight of his 19
points Ill overtime, which the Clippers started with 115·0 run.
Kendall Gill had 23 points and
Dell Curry 22 Cot the Hornets, who
shot 40 percent for the game and
never shot better !/tan 45·perecnl in
any q1181ttt.
.

B•all /
·
BOSTON · (AP) - . Frank
·Viola's signing with the Boston
Red Sox is finally official. The Red
Sox made the announcement after
' rcvl~wing medical ~. on the
31 -year-old left·hander's condition.
Viola, who fiad el~\11 and fin·
ger problems last season with the
New :York Mets, bec11111e a free
. Hawb W, Suu 1116
·qent after the season and agreed in
DoV~inique Wilkins had 39
principii: 10 a lhree-yeir, $13.9 mil- points, 10 rebounds and eight
lion conll'act on Dec:20.
assists.

Kevin Willis had 15 points and
16 rebounds for the Hawks, who
limited the Suns ' high-scoring
guard duo, Jeff Hornacek and
Kevin Johnson, 10 24 poiniS: Tom
Chambers led Phoenix with 28
points and I0 rebounds.
Pistons 106, Rockets 83
Orlando Woolridge scored 12 of
his 26 points during a third-quarter
surge.
Dennis Rodman had 14 points
on 7-for-7 shooting and 14
rebounds for the Pistons.
Hakeem Olajuwon had 16

points and 12 rebounds for the
Rockets.
Leadin g 50-36 at the half
Detroit took charge with a 30-14
surge in the third quarter.
Bucks 92, Timberwolves 91
Jay Humphries, who missed
four of his first five free throws, hit
two foul shots with 6.7 seconds to
play.
Mpses Malone had 18 points
and Ill rebounds for the Bucks.
Tony Campbell scored 24 points
for the Timberwolves.

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By
The
Bend
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Friday, January ~. 1992

·T he Daily Sentinel

Associated Press Writer
LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) Mother Teresa suffered a new
episode of chest pain apparently
caused by a spasm in a small blood
vessel, her docm said Thursday.
The 8.1-year-old Roman
Calholic nun, who won lhe 1979
Nobel Peace Prize for her work
wilh homeless beggars, orphans,
lepers and olher forgotten people,
remained in. serious condition at
· Scripps. Clinic and Research Foundation.
Sbe has been at the hospital
· since lhe day after Chrisunas for
tteatment of pneumonia that led to
congestive hean failure.
The new chest pain occurred
Wednesday night and was trea~
wilh medicine, lhe hospital said m
a sratemeni. It said .an angiogram
indicated that all of her major
blood vessels looked fme.
On Sunday, cardiologists Patti-

cia Aubanel and Paul Teirstein performed an artery-opening procedure called angioplasty, thleading a
balloon on lhe end of a tube ·into
lhe clogged artery and inflating lhe
. balloon briefly.
Teirstein has said it may be necessary to repeat the angioplasty
wilhin six months in Molher Tere. sa•s_case. A coronary bypass would
be necessary only if her condition
worsened dramatically, he said.
Dr. Anira Figueredo, a longtime
friend of Mother Teresa, said
Wednesday that Molher Teresa has
by no means resigned herself to
dying, but believes lhat God will
decide whether she will continue
her mission to serve the world's
downtrodden.
'
"Whether she dies is no big
deal to Molher," said Ms. Figueredo. "She believes th3,!,.if this.is his
time to take her, then she wtll go.
This is · a whole . different
approach."

Community Calendar items
appear two da,s·before u event
and tbe day of tbat event. Items
must be received weD In advance
to assure publlcadoo iD the cal-

County Public Library on Saturday
and Sunday at 2 p.m. and at the
Middlepon Library on Monday at
4:30p.m.

eodar.

MIDDLEPORT - The Ash
Street Free Will Baptist Church in
Middleport will have guest singers
on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. fl:!lluring
a gospel group from Columbus.
Tbe public is invited to attend.

FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at lhe Rock Springs Grange
Hall at 7:30 p.m. Srar Grange will
serve refreshments.

Church or Jesus Christ Apostolic Faith
New Uma Rd., next toFt Meigs Park
Pastor: Robcn. W. Richards
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Servio:s- 7·p.m.

'Uberty Assembly or God
· · Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Dan S. Eaton
Sunday Worship - 10:30 p.m,
Thursday .Service5 • 7 p.m.

Baptist
Fre&lt; Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pas tor: Mark Morrow
SaiUrday Sc r.- icc · 7:30p.m.
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a. m.
Worship· II a.m.,
Wednesday &amp;! rv icc-7:30 p.m.

I

" j';;.
.

Rutland First Rapllst Church
Sunday School -9: 30 a.m.
Wo Nt i~ · !0:45a.m.

..

Investiture and rededication held

Brannon personals

Birth is announced

AA to meet

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ill Pllbnbura, W.Va.
Hlhed eight pounds and

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S·UGAR RUN MILLS

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~dparents 'are Qliv-

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PII md IJ1!ldperents are James
lild Cannie ~.Reedsville.
~relt lfllldmotlter 11 Louise

' Reedsville:'

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•

••
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992·2115
110 MULBERRY AYE. POMEROY
.iERRY RU~KER

.

' (

Christi un Church.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
w o, hip . 10:30 a. m... 7:3 0p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Grove Church
Pastor: Charl es Domigan
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30 a. m. 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hobson Chun:h of Christ itJ Chrisllan
Union
Paswr: Theron Durhum
Sund11y School · 9:30 11.m.
E'tlcning • 7 p:m.
Wcdnes~ay Services - 7 p.m.
Hartford Church of Christ in Christian
,,
Uni on
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. Da\lid McManis
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship· 9:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·1:30 p.m.

•

Sa&lt;red Heart Caihollc Clturcll
' 161 Mulbe,..Y M e., Pomeroy, 992-5898
;
Pastor: .Rov. Waller E. Hcin~
Sat. Con, 4:45-5: 15 . Mm - 5:30p.m.
'
' Sun. Con. · 8:4:1-9:15
Sun. Mau- , ._, •.,, ..

Man

Pum"""f Church of Christ
212 W. Moin S..
l,llstor: Andrew MiiCJ
Sund•y School · 9:30 1.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.,7 p.m.
Wedncsdoy Si:111icos - 7 p.m.

I l'.;.,~oy W..utde Cborch ol' Chrlot
33226 Children'• Home Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School- It o.m.
Wonh1p - tO o.m., 6 p.m.
· Wednesclay Se111lcds - 7 p.m.,

,'j- , l

Chester
Pastor: Gary Hines
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wors hip - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Episcopal
· CrAt'C•:PI!«.'O p~l Church .
326 1!. 'Mai n S. ., Pomeroy
Pasto r: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myen
Sundoy school and worship · t I:30 1.m.

Holiness

.Pine
,.
'
Grovt Bible Hoi ln.., Church
If.! mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednciday Service - 7:·30 P·"!·
'

'

WCIIC!In,Bible Holln ... Church .
7l Pearl St., MHidlepon.
Plino r: Rev . RvY McCarty
Sun.tay schwl · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.
Wcidncsday Sc111ice · 7:30p.m.
'
Hyltll Run HoillnCJI Church
Pu10r: Roben Manley •
Siti!day School -9:30a.m.'
)Vonhip • tO:~' a.m.,7 p.m.
•Thttndoy s.Mcc -7:301&gt;.m.

Seventh-Day AdvcnUst .
Mulberry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Bob Snyder
Saturday St!Mees;
Sabbath School - 2 p.m .
Worship- 3 p.m.

Mt. Hermon United Rrelhrcn in Christ. • ,
': •
Church
' ... '
Te-.as Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - t0:30o.m.• 7:30p.m. ~
Wednesday Services . 7:30p.m.
Eden United Drtthrcn In ChriS!
Sunday School · I0 a.m.
Worsh.ip · 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Gh urch

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172 North S.Contl A¥1•
MiddlltiOrt, Ohio .

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992-7075

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992·6U9

SnowYIIIe
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

.·

'

Syrucusc Flrsl Unlll'CI Prcsbyt~rla11
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Wors hip · II a.m., 4 p.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sull·,,J;!i;l

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

Rock Springs
Pastor:Kenh Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worsh ip · 10 a.m.
Wcdnes4ay Scrvicc:;s · 6 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron' f-ierce
Sunday School- 9:t5a.m.
Worihip - 10:15 a.m.

·~

Caln ry Rlbfc Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Bltckwood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wcdnt~day Sc111ice - 1:30 p.m.•

'
Trinity Congrcg:ulonal Church
Panor: Rc.\1. Roland Wildman
Church · 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

214 E . Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

I

Fairview Dible Church
Le1an, W.Vo. R1. I
PaSior: JamtJ Lewis
Sunday School . I I a.m.
Worshi p · 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Other Churches

Rutland
Pastor: Anhur Crablree
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:3 0 a.m. ·
Thunday Services · 7 P:m.

·-

While's Chapel Wesleyan
Cooi.Uie Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

New Have n Church of the Naurcnc
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sun day School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.• 1 p.m.
Wcdne1day Services · 7 p.m.

Pom eroy
Pastor: Eunhae (Grace} Kcc
Sunday SchOol - 9:15a.m.
Worshi p · t0:30 M.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

New Life Church or God

'
1

·t..
0

Fre&lt;dom Gospel Mlssloo
3ald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pa stor : Re~ . Roger Willford
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- I 0:45a.m.•7 p.m.
Wednesda y Service· 7 p.m:

Portland F irst Church of the Naza rene
Pastor: William Justus
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worihip - 10:40 o.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Pastor: florence Smith
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

.•

I

Middleport P-yltrlan.
Sunds y School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m ,, 4 p.m. (2nd &amp;. 4th

Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde W. Henderson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Rutland Churc:h of 'thc Nal.arc nc
Pastor: Samuel Uasye
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonh ip - !0:30 a. m. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

Minersville

lnlerd~nomlnatlonal

·-~

Harrisonville Presbyterian Church ·.1 ~'
, Wor1hip • 9 a.m. ·Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:45 a.m.

South Bethel New Tt slamt!nt
Sil ~er Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydcnstrlt!tcr
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Chester Church of the Na1.arcn c
Pastor: RcY. ll crhc n Crate
Su nday School · 9:30a .m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Serv1ccs · 7 p.m.

Pas tor: Wesley Thatd!cr
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m.

Presbyterian

Nease SeUiemmt Church
Sund.oy Worihip - 2:30 p.m.;
Th ursday services - 7:30 p.m.

Carlcloo

",J.f

Mlddleporc Pcnloolst.ol
I •.
Third Ave,
-~
Pastor: Rev. Oart. Baker
·~ :
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:10p.m. to

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter .
Sunday School - to a,m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; ThuNday - 7:30 p.m.

SUnday School ·9:30a.m.
Worshi p · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Hcoth (Middleport)
Pastor: Frank Sm ith
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 6 p.m.

Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt 124, Racine
,
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlces · 7 p.m.

Ecc)esl• Fellowship
128 Mill St., Middlcpon
Pastor: Chuck McPhenon
Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 ·p.m.
Wednesda y Service· 7 p.m.

-

'I

Pentecostal

United F'alth Church .
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By -Pass
PasLor: Rev. Robert E. Smith , Sr
Sunds y School · 9:30a.m.
Woflhip · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p,m
Wedn csd11y Service · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church Hf the Naza rene
Pas'-"r: Rev . Thomas McClung

Worship · 9 a.m.
Thunday Services · 6;30 p.m.

Chun:h ufG 1Kiuf l'ruphc9
OJ . While Ku. off S1. K1. INI
l,astor: l)a1 ll cnsoo
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
W&lt;lrship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

~
l~

01

En terprise ·
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - J 0 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m ., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services · 1 p.m.

Forest Run
Pas tor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.

Syracuse Church uf God
Apple and Second Su.
Pu tor: Rev. D.llvid Russell
Sunday !ft:hooland Worship· 9:30a.m.
['tlening Scrvices-7 p.m.
Wed ne~d~ty Scrv~~.:c~ · 7 p.m.

Mt. Oli'IIC Community Church
PaSLor: l.aw rt:ncc llush
Sundlt y School · 9:30 a.m.
Evcn.ing · 7 p.m.
Wcd ncday Service · 1 p.m.

Syracus"c Church nf"lhc Nazarene
!)astor: Rev. Glenn McMillan
Sunday School ·9:30a.m .
Won hip · 10:30 a.m. , 6 p.m.
Wcdncsdlly Services · 7 p.m.

1
fl atwoOds
Pastor: Keit.h Rader
SWlday School • I0 a.m.
Wors hip : II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services -7 p.m.

Rutland Church of Cod
Pasto r: John F. Corcoran
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p · I I a.m., 7 p.m. · •
Wed nesday ScNices · 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a. m.
Wednesday Servi ces · 8 p.m

Rccdsviltl' f ellowship
Church of th e N:~:tartne
Pastor: Jo hn W. Douglas
Sunday School - 9:30 a.in .
Worship · I 0:45am. , 7 p.m.

Cenlral Cluster
Asbury (Syrac:u~)
Pastor: Wesley ThatChe r
Sunday School·· 9:45a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

MI. Moriah Church uf God
Racine
Pastor: R\!v. J~tmcs Slltlcrfic lJ
Sund11y School · 9:45 1.m.
EYening · 7 p.fn.
Wed nesday Services · 7 p.m.

Fallh Gospel Churt h
long Rottom
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wcdncsd~ty 7:30 p.m.

Middleport Church ur the Nazot rcnc
Pas tor: Rev. Lloyd D. Grim m. Jr.
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Wors hip · 10:30 H.m ., 6:3 0 p.m
W.:dncsduy Serv ices · 1 p.m.

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
~as tor : Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 ~t.m .
Worship · IOa.m.
Tuesday Sem ces · 7:30 p.m.

Church of God

Bethel Chu rch
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a. m.
Wol'lihip -"10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · IO a.m.

Racine Flrst Church or the Nazarene
Pastor; Thc:Jnas L Gates, D
Sund ay School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m
WcdnesdHy Services · 1 p.m.

Reedsvill e
.Pastor: Re.v, Ol.arlcs Eaton
Worship - 9.30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 1:30 p.m

Rc]olclng Ure Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Michael P•naio
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Supt. : Mike Matson
Sunday school · 10 a. m.
Worship· II a.m ., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

Nazarene

Long Bottom
PaSior: Oiarles Eaton
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m.
Wednesday Services ·. 7:30 p.m .

!.t! ~

Sllvcmllle Word of Faith
Pas LOr: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 a.Jll.
· Evening · 1 p.m.
Thursday Se111ice - 7:30p.m.

Chrlsllan Fellowship Center
Salem St., ltuLland
Pastor: Roben E. Musser
Sunda y School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II: 15 a. m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sund ay S~ hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonh ip - 10:30 a.m.

H~mlock

'

!1 m t. ~~~~Will
Jr.
tft;Jit4

Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Wetxr
Worship · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:3 0 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Lan g~vl ll e

•

,,
•

De~ tcr

Pauor: Woody CaU
Sunday School • to a.m.
. ·Evenmg - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Catholic

•IRON.OUT SALT. PELLETS
50 LBS. &amp; 80 LBS.

Liberty Christian Church

MI. Union Baptist
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Eveni ng -6: 30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
Bethl ehem Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School - 10:30 a. m.
wo,hip . 9:30a.m.
Thursda y Services-7:30p.m.
Old Bcthc Free Will Baptist Churth
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlcpon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.
Hillsid e Baptist Churt"h'
St. Rl.-[4j JuSl off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Schooi - IOa. m.
Worsh.ip • II a.m.. 6 p·.m. '
Wednesday Se rvices · 7 p.m.
Hope n~ptlst Chapel
570 Gran• St. , Middlcpon
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Services - 7 p.m.
Vldory Raptlst
525 N. 2nd St., Middlcpon
Putor: James E. Keesee
Woflhip • 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Faith ll apllst Church
Railroad St., Mason
· Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m
Forest Run Dapllst
Pastor: Arius Hun
Sundsy School · tOa.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Foonh &amp; Main SL, Middlepon
Pa stor: Rev. Gil ben Craig, Jr.
Sund11y School · 9:30 11 .m.
Wo11hip • 10:45 11.m.
Anllqulty Dapllsl
Pastor: Kcnnelh Smith
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Thuflday ScJViccs - 7:30p.m.
Rolland Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
. Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 P·"l1
Ash Street Freewill Raptlst
Middl cpon
Sunday School - 10 11.m.
Worship · II a.m.
• Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
S11turd~Sy Servi ce· 7:30 p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sun day S&lt;hool · 10 a.m.
Thursday ~rvi ccs · 7 p.m.

....,.,

Calvar1l'llgrlm Chapel
Harrisonville ROad. ·· ..... ~- II i ~
Pas tor: Rev. Victor Roush
S'\'!day School 9;30 a.m.
Worship · I 1 a.m., ?:30 p.m.
Wedne5day Service · 7:30p.m.

Burlington Communlly Church
Burlingham
Pastor: Ray Laudennih
Sund.oy School . 10 a.m.
Worship · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m .

&lt;.:oolvlllc Unllcd Methodist l ~:~ri sh
Pastor: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Cool ville Chun:h
Main &amp; FifLh St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhi p · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Scrvicts -7 p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Nonhtasl Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Ha usman
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worshi p - II a.m.. 6:30p.m .

Success Road Church of Chrlsl
llastor: Jmcph R lloskins
Sunday School - 9 H.m.
Worshi p · I 0 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvic'c:s · 7 p.m.

Pastor: ~biul e

Brownie troop takes trips

'Today' show host
to celebrate 10
years

Bradford Church of Christ
S1. Rt.' l24 &amp; Co. Rd.5
" Pastor: Derek SlUmp
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wcdne!day Servi ces ·7:30 p.m.

· ··~t
~J\

,,..

Rutland Dlbl~ MethOdisl
Pastor: Rc\1 . Ivan Mye rs
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
EVening - 7 p.m
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m .

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behi nd Wilkesville
' Pastor: Charl es Jones
Sund ay School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.,7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

. j~1
. · ·~

Spiritual Faith CHurdl
Slate 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Stewan
SWlday School · I0 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30 p.m.

Oyes'llllle Community Church
Su nday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

LaUrel ClifT Free Methodist Church
PaSior: William Williams
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wors hip · 10:30 a m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices· 7 p.m.

Grah11m United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (lSI &amp; 2nd Sun), 7:30
p.m. (3 rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service . 7:30 p.m.

..::&gt;

Hul.cl Community Church
Off Rt. 124
i'ustor: Edsel Han
. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
WoNh ip · 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.

Racine
·Pas Lor: Roger Grace
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

United Methodist

·"

' )

Syracuse Mission
141 f Bridgeman S1., Syracuse
Pastor: Roy (~ike) Thompson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Eveni ng · 6 p.m.
Wedne sday Service · 7 p.m,

East LLiart
l)asl&lt;lr: Roger Grace
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m

St. Paul Luthcrun Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Shreffler
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Mason Chun:h of Christ
MiUcr St., Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Wonh1p • 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -~ 7 p.m.

Sunday·Sdiool ~ lOa.m.
Wol'li hip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Salon 710 gathers

Sunday School · 9i30 a.m.
Worship - lla.m.

Rutland Church nf Christ

F1rst Southern Baptist
41 872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Middleport First Baptist
Comer Sixlh &amp;. Palmer
Pastor: Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School· 9:1S a.m.
Worship· JO:IS a.m.
Wedncsd~:~ y Se rvices · 7 p.m.
Racine First Haptlst
Pastor: Steve Deaver
. Sund.o y School -9: 30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services :7:30 p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist

Grange meets

Tuppers Plains Church or Christ
Pastor. Robert Fosler
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worshi p· 9:45a. m., 6:30p.m.

·. 5

Faith Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
.
PaSior: Rev. Emmett Rawsoo
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 1 p.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a. m. (1st&amp; 3rd Sun)

W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. George C. Weiri ck

l1as1or: Eu~cnc E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· !0:30 a.m ., 1 p.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main St.
Pastor: Steve Fuller
Sunday School ·9: 30a.m.
Worship · I 0:30 a.m.
Wedne~day Services ·7:30p.m.

Pine Grove
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Shreffler
Worship · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

. •.1 '"j '
..

Middleport Communlly Church
· 575 Pea rt St., Middlcpon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening- 7JQp.m.
,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Morning Star
!'astor: Kenneth Baker
Sunda )' School-9:45 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services -7:30 p.m.

St. John Lutheran Church

. . !1
11...

The Sahatlon Arm)I

Buuemm Ave.., Pomeroy.
Sonday Schoof· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:00 a.m.• 7:30 p.m.

C:&amp; rmcl
Pastor; Kcn neLh Baker
Sun day School· 9JOa.m.
Wo~hip · !0:45a.m. (2nd &amp; 41h Sun )

Lutheran

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnu l and Henl)' Sts., Ravenswood,

11~

Bethany
Pastor: Kcn nel.h Baker
Sunday School · 10 ~t.m.
Worship · 9a .m.
Wednesday Services · \0 a.m.

Reorganized Church of j esuSChrist In
LaUer !JaySa ints
·Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor; William Rqush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serviccs·- 7:30 p.m.

Bradbury Church ul' Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
S und~ y School · 9:30 li.m ,
Worshi p - 10:30 ll.f!l .'

Dtx1cr Church or Christ
Pistor: Chris Stewart
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wol'!hip • 10:30 a.m.
. Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

.

Joint :holiday party held

Tree disposal offered

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisooville Rd. (R1. t 43)
PasLor: Rober E. Punell
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
w o,hip . 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednc~day Services· 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

\

.

Dearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
wo,hip - 10:30 a.m.• 6:30p.m.
Wednesd.oy Services - 6:30 p.m.

Pastor: Il\fT!eS Miller
Sunday School ' 10:30 a.m.
Evening -7:30p.m..
·"Wednesday Se.rvices - 7:30p.m.

New Year's baby
birth 29
years later to New Year's baby

cker birth

The Dally Sentlnei-Pegt-'7 ·

Southern Cluster
Apple Grove
Pasto r: Carl Hicks ~
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Kenn Church uf Christ
Worshi p-9:30 ~t .m.
Sunday School · t0:30 a.m.

Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.

SUNDAY
CHESTER - The lzaak Walton
MIDDLEPORT - The Pomeroy Club will hold a muzzle lo~Mr
Lodge F and AM No. 164 will hold shoot atlhe clubhouse near Chester
its regular meeting on Friday at on Sunday at I p.m. Open sights
7:30p.m. at lhe MiddlepOrt Lodge only and prizes include turkey,
Hall.
bacon and cash.

Harrisonville Holiness Ch ap ter .
Pas1or: Rev. John Neville
Sunday Schooi iO ·a.m.
Worship. II a.m., 1)0 p.m.
Wedne~cby Service· 7:30p.m.

Mlddlcporl Chur&lt;h orCbrlst
5th and Main
Past&lt;lr: Al Hanson
SundaySchool · 9:30a.m.
Worslup · 8:15, 10:30 1.m.. 7p.m."
._ Wednesday Serv1ccs · 7.p.in.

Apostolic

LONG BOTTOM, - The Faith
POMEROY - There will be a
Full Gospel CIIJlrch in Long B.ot- 12-step AA meeting on Sunday at 7
tom will have a hymn sing on Fri- p.m. at lhe JTPA office, 117 West
day at 7 p.m. featuring local talent. ' Second Street in Pomeroy.
Pastor Steve Reed inviteS lhe public. Fellowship wiU follow.
LOTTRIDGE - There will be a
•
dinner at lhe Lottridge Community
' \
SATURDAY
Center on Sunday from noon to 2
_....
t
HENDERSON - The Gallia p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50
"'''!t
~ -~ ' ~-' {.
Twirlers ·Western Square Dance for children under 12. Public invitClub
will
hold
a
dance
Saturday
HAPPY
Zelia
Taylor is happy with her teddy bear family
ed.
give~
from 8 to II p.m. at lhe Hender.;cin
which was completed Christmas morning at Veterans Memorial
Community Center in Henderson,
Hospital. Taylor is one or 35 residents of the hospital's Extended
MONDAY
W.Va. Ketth Rippeto will be the
Care
FaciUty receiving teddy bears contributed by the public for
LETART - The Letart Township
caller. The dance is open to all Trustees will meet Monday at 6
Christmas. Taylor bad Papa Bear and Baby Bear but received
SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - When ond time was a suiJ1rise to the cou- western style square dancer.;.
Mama Bear, on the len, as a part of the Christmas activity at the
p.m. at the.township building for an
Lora Smart Swink was born 29 ple, because the baby wasn't due
facility.
~
organizational meeting. ·
years a,o. she made news as her for another 10 days.
RUTLAND - There will be a
" This little one, he'll be spoiled round and square dance at lhe Rutcounty s first baby of 1963.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive
Wednesday, history repeated itself rotten - born on Mama's birth- land American Legion Hall on Sat- will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
day," said Mrs. Swink, an X-ray urday from 8 p.m." to midnight. Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Then: will
wilh lhe birth of her son.
At 12:23 a.m., Jerem y Tyler technician. The couple also has two Music wiU be provided by Country be a devotional speaker and a craft.
Swink, weighing in at 7 1/2 daughters, 10-year-old Brandi Kin Band. Ray Fitch will be the Those attending bring a salad bar
A joint Chri stmas party with
Members Glady s Cummings ,
pounds, became lhe first baby of Nicole and 2-year-old Katherine caller. The public is invited.
residents
of
th.
e
Athens
Mental
Juli a Hysell and Mary Ma rtin
item.
•
1992 in Cleveland County, which Dawn.
Health Center was held recently by recently attended a birthday par ty
Her husband, Perry, is a truck
borders South Carolina in lhe west
POINT PLEASANT - The LibMIDDLEPORT - The Middl e- members of the Ameri can Leg ion for lhe veterans at the Ch illicothe
painter at Freightliner Truck Manu- erty Mountaineers will perform port Garden Club'will meet Mon- Drew Webster Post No. 39 Auxil- VA Hospital.
of lhe Slate.
.
. "I lhink lhey said that I won the factur ing Plant in Mount Holly, Saturday at the Senior Citizens day at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport iary and the Wilkesville Unit AuxThe unit provided $425 worth of
derby ," she told The· Charlotte where workers returned to work 'eenter in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
food and money including a large
Presbyterian Church Social Room. iliary No. 476.
Observer in a report published Thursday after a 17 -Pay strike.
Games were played and prizes Christmas cake, 100 candy bars,
Judy Amold will have a program
Thursday. Winning lhe derby a sec" Everything is just coming up
SALEM CENTER - The Star on "House Plants ~ Our Living awarded to those attending and din- I 00 potato chips, I 00 bananas,
roses." Mrs. Swink said.
Grange and Star Junjor Grange will Room Landscape," from Pla~ts Arc ncr was held and enjoyed by all .
brownies, homemade fud ge and
meet in regular session on Saturday Like People by Jerry Baker. All
Each resident was presented a canteen donation.
at 7:30 p.m. at lhe grange hall near members are asked to brin g a wrapped bo ~ containing gloves,
The unit welcomed one ne w
Salem Center. The baking contest houseplant to show and exchange. socks, handkerchief, soap, deodor- senior, Wanda Sweari ngen, and her
wiD be held and Third Degree will Roll call is "What do gardeners do ant, comb, shampoo, shav ing two granddaughters, Tabitha and
be exemplified in ~ ull form . All in winter?"
cream, toolh brush and paste and a Megan. The group also met at The Cormembers and candidates are urged
deck of cards. Each also. received
to attend. A potluck supper will
ncr
Restaurant in Middleport for a
homemade
candy,
a
candy
cane.
RACIN E - Sou the rn Loca l
Christmas
dinner and gift
follow .lhe meeting.
-\)range,
apple
and
banana.
a
gift
School Board will hold an organ iexchange.
Attending
were Eunice
zational and budget meetin g on card wit.h money and a container of
Meeks,
Marjorie
Fetty
, Mildred
POMEROY - "Cougar" and Monday at 7:30p.m.
coffee.
Hudson,
Iva
Powell,
Mary
Martin,
"Countrr. Coyote Goes Holly Pomeroy Auxiliary 39 visited
wood" will be shown at lhe Meigs
veterans at Pomeroy Nursing and Pearl Knapp, Julia Hyse ll and
Rehabilitation Centef) ' at the Catherine Welsh .
Attending the Athens party were
Th e Hemlock Grange met E~ tended Care Uni t at Veterans
Veda
Davis, Pearl Knapp, ~ J adys
Memorial
Hospital
and
at
Overrecently at the hall with worthy
Cummings,
Calherine WelsH, Julia
brook
Center.
All
were
presented
A Christmas party was held master, Rosalie Story, conducting
Hysell
and
Mary
Martin.
gift bo~es and fruit and candy.
recent! y at Crow' s Steak House by business.
After the ritual, business and
lhe Eight and Fony Meigs County
installation
of offi cers were held
Sa!on No. 710.
Following the dinner a party the lecturer. Muriel Bradford, pre- .
1
was held for Mrs. Don Friend and sented a program demonstration on
Members of Pomeroy Brownie
A cheese tasting event .was held
her daughter, Heather, at t)je making ribbon .bows for swags, Troop No. 1271 recently enjoyed to learn about part of the milk faro INVEStiTURE AND REDEDICATION -Investiture and
wrealhs and packages. She read the making bread with Meigs County ily toward the members' "Good
Legion Home in Pomeroy.
Rededi~ation or Pomeroy Brownie Troop No. 1271 was held
Christmas
story after which mem - Extension Agent Cindy Oliveri.
Gifts were presented to Heather
rec:eatly. Pictured, 1-r, rront are Carolyn Bentz, Kim McDaniels,
Food" badge.
bers
participated
in
reading
articles
and
an
exchange
was
held
includMaking the bread fulfilled one
The troop visited the Salvation
Asbley Hamilton, JenniFer Fire and Jessica Hooten. Back row,
ing Mrs. Friend. Heather enter- of Christmas from Ideals. Carols requirement for the "Science for Army when members donated new
Asbley Haonabs; Sarah Houser, Emily Stivers, Nicole Davis, Brentained with singing and dancing were sung and the program con - Action" badge.
and used toys to be distributed to
Da Sissoa, Stephanie Burdette and Sara Moon. Nol pictured are
and she thanked the partners for cluded with a game about The
Mrs. Oliveri provided supplies lhe needy for Christmas.
Heatber Baxter and Andrea Burdette.
Night Before Christmas. The game · and insuuction for lhe 18 members.
dinner, gifts and being her friend.
The troop also visited th e
was
won by Leota Smith. She was The members learned to measure, extended care unit at Veterans
Tickets were purchased by salon
parmers in an effon to raise $1,000 presented a gift and Mrs. Bradf~rd mix and knead the. dough . The Memorial Hospital where carols
Investiture and ltededieation of Burdette, Nicole Davis, Sarah towards payment on a bed for one pre sented each member with ll bread was baked at lhe members' were sung and room sachets made
Pomeroy Brownie Troop No. 1271 . Houser, Sara Moon and Emil y child wilh respiratory problems at a candy cane.
homes.
by the members were given to resiMrs. Story gave each member
children's hospital in Denver, Colo.
Was held recently.
Stivets.
·
dents.
Oth.ers auending were Marjorie the Christmas mouse which she
· Pomeroy Jumor Troop No. 1309
Some members participated in
This was followed by "Brownie
presented lhe flag followed by lhe Smile Song. "
Fetty , Iva Powell, Lula Hampton , had made.
the "Adopt-A-Grandparent" proRefreshments.were served at the
Chri stm as guests of 'Lav ina gram and met and visited their
Pledge of Allegiance and welcome
Adults pJiflicipating in invest- Jul ia Hysell, Pearl Knapp, Veda close of lhe meeting.
Brannon from the area included selected grandparent. These girl s
by leader, Terri Houser. Junior ment and rededication were Rhon - Davis, Loretta Tiemyer, Florence
Alice Mays, James and Virginia will visit on their own time and
trOOp members are Andrea Neut- da Moon, Betsy Jone s, Susan Richards, Mill)' Martin, Catherine
Brannon, Decdrab, Thomas, Tyler hope to become good friends.
zling and Melissa Houser and lhird Mossman, Anna Ba~ter and Ann Welsh and Ruby Marshall.
'
and
Trista Simmons, Ron, Robert,
·arade brownies, Ashley Hannabs, Sisson.
Th e group also sponsored a
The troop also participated in
Nina
,
Jonathan
and
DeLeah
Sarah Houser, Bren·na Sisson ,
Christmas
basket
and
gifts
for
a
the
Pomeroy Christmas parade with
Following the Lighting of the
Sanders, Paul and Joy Brannon and a float.
Emily Stivers and Stephanie Bur- Colors of Worlds, awards were pre- local famil y totaling $136.
dette.
Daniel and Kcll ec Nease, children, Jessie~. Bradley and Julsented and refreshm ents were
Tbe Lighting of lhe Three can: served.
Pomeroy, arc announcing the birth lian, Mike and Debbie Holbrooks,
~ was presented followed by the
of their son, Benjamin Isaiah Agus- Logan; Lorena ~ill, LitUe HockRandy Wachter, Manager at tus Nease, on Dec. 13 at O'Bieness ing; Tom and Lmda Glonosa and
G'itl Scout Promise.
The AA and Al -Anon Group
Forked Run State Park, has Memorial Hospiral in Alhens.
children , Jonathan and Stacy ,
- Participating in lhe investment
announced lhat anyone needing to
Mansfield; William and Eileen will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
were Carolyn Bentz, Nicole Davis,
dispose
of
their
cut
Christmas
trees
Kirkbride, Lexington; and Robert Sacred Heari Catholic Church for
Jessica Hooten, Katie Jeffers.
The
infant
weighed
six
pounds
are
encouraged
to
do
$o
at
Forkcid
. discussion.
and Kathryn Hill, Mansfield .
. A:ndrea Burdette, Jennifer Fife ,
and 13 ounces and was 20 inches
Run.
·
Rebecca Houser, Kimberly
NEW YORK (AP) - NBC will
Trees may be dunlped in the long.
Daniels and Euva Stumbo.
bring back Jane Pauley on Monday
f'I'his was followed by a song, to celebrate Bryant Gumbel's lOth Jake from lhe Curtis Hollow Boat
Maternal grandparents arc E.N. ·
Make New Friends."
anniversary as anchor of "Today" Ramp off Route 681. The trees will
and
Chcrole Burdelle, Upland ,
~ The Lighting of Ten Candles - which went.into a slide when benefit lhe fish in lhe lake.
Calif.
.
Further information on the
w;is presented followed by Girl she left lhe show.
grandparents are Fred
Seoul Laws.
Pauley, who co-anchored with dumping may be obtained by call- · andPaternal
Mary
Nease,
Racine.
ing
Wachter
at
378-6206.
·
. , Participating in .the rededication Gumbel from 1982 through 1989,
were Healher Baxter, Stephanie wiD join "Today" co-anchor Kalie
BUrdette, Ashley Hannahs, Rebec- Coulic in recountin~ highlights of
C4 Houser, Brenna Sisson, Andrea Gumbel's globeU'Utung can:er.
" Today" lost its lead to ABC's
J " Good Mo~ning· America" in
morning-show ratings when
; OffiCe!S for 1992 at the Chester Pauley. who had been with the
Volunteer Fire Department have · show for 13 years, w~ replaced by
rleintly been elected and are as Deborah Norville m Pecember
f~Uows:
.1989.
•
• Junior Koenig, pres~de nt; B.D.
Myers, vice-president; Leonard
ICI)Cnig, secretary; Charles Radf9RI, lri:8Surer; and J.L. Ridenour,
cJKf.~)
·

/yew VFD officers

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, January 3, 1992 .
. Page-!e

Mother Teresa suffer~ new Community calendar
chest pain, hospital says
By BRIGITIE GREENBERG

.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT-,
Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol ~olumllus, 0.
104 W. M&lt;tin
"Hill PomtrOV

11141Hl-1111 - 1111-00K81
'CHURCH IU!'J!LIEI • IIILEI

. r•

'

1).
\ '• •

.

\

,

�- ------·----

-

--- ·----

--.- - ~

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

- ·--·

- ..

'."-~

''

~

-

'·

•
The

(

01110

•

SNAFU® by Bruc~ Beattie _

3,

January

3 Announcements
I, Norm In Martnar, ·am

Classi

• The Area's ·Number 1 Marketplace.

' my _9wn. ·•

AN AD

_

_

10
Monthly

_

Bu s m ~s

THURSDAY PAPER
H-tiUAY PAP ER
SUNDAY PAP ER

.30
.4 2
.60

.05 / dav

1 C•rd of Thanks

31
32
33
31
35
36

3 Annoucement s

4 G1veaway
!J H•PPV' Ad s
6 Lost a nd Found
7 Y&lt;~~d S.lejpa1d •n adv an ce!
8 Publi c Sa te &amp; ~u c ho n
9 Want ad to 8U'f
•

I'OI 't •r

11

Help Wantud

fulluwirr~ ll'lf'JIIlt;,,. r •xcluur~t' .l ...
Galh a County
Ar ea Co d c 61 4

Me•ys C uuntv-

M ason Co , WV

Area Code 6 14

Artla Cod e 304

44 6 Gathpoh s
367 Ch tllli hli C

99 1

6 75 Pt

388 Vwt on
245 R1o Gran de
256 Guyan D• st

98 5
84 3
247

643 Arab1 a 01s1
379 W&lt;dnut

Moddleport
Po ml:lfovC heste1

Pl t!~ ant

13 ln h .ua nce
14• Busmess T! a ~rurt(t
1S Schools &amp; lnsttu.ct.un
16 JhdiO. TV &amp; CB RIIP&lt;I II
17 M15c cllanoou s
1~ Wanted To Do

P o nland

77 3

l e t•rt f•lls
949 Rac.n e
74 2 Rutland
667 Co ol~ttU e

Mason

88 2 New t1 aven
895 l elafl
9 37 B~flilllo

21 Busmess Oppqrtutu ty
22 Money to loan
2 3 !"rolesStOnal Set 'oii Ct!S

M1s c Merch an d1s e
8u1lding Supph•
Peu lor Sale

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;

GRAVE

PUBLICATION

REMOVAL

BLANKETS

Pruning and Lands1aping
Frot Esllmatos- 25 Yn. hp.
Call altar 6 p.m. -992·2n8
(1)3,1 ...

2

ustom Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

$20.00 each

MODElS

614-949·2058
11·251 mo. pd.

I would like to thank a ll my
custom e rs who have given
me cards and gifts during this
holiday season . They were all
appreciated by my family and
I.
Thanks,
Kevin Hoffman
Sentinel Carrier

\.

.....

Read
the
ClassiOedsf

1

1

Card of Thanks

Leonard,

THE WEAVER
Tho pattern of my lifo hlo
·changed,
For 1imo hao brought 1
torrOW i

Tho pattern muol bo
rNrronged
To fit • new tomorrow.
Although my oyeo oro
blind with INro,
Although my heart lo
WNry.
Tomorrow'• du1ioa otlll
. •PIM•;

Although todoy oeomo
I

; -~ •.-r.r•
If'

'

"r'':e

,.:

Tho JNitllni or my fifo 11
mine,

Athing thot I muot finioh;
Although lima hu altered
ltodoooign,
.
And Ita brlghtnooo hoo
· tlmlnlahld.

•

A little kneeling by, my
bod,

Some hour• ol qulo1
weeping;

•

And now I muot "Take up
mythrudl
or lilt ond go on
weaving."
Until we m•t again,

Your wile, Oro

r

Card of Thanks

There is no way we
could ever thank
everyone for -the great
outpouring ol love
exprened to Leonard
Baas and hia family
during his yeara ol
sickness and death. We
knew he was loved but
did not know the depth
ol that love. The great
abundance of those
who came to pay their
respects, the flowers,
lood, -ai!O&gt;J ova gifts
were unbelieva~le . We
a,incerely aay, "Thank
You."
We also thank Dr.
Shah, the lab stall,
third lloor nurses and
Same Day Surgery
nuraea ol Camden
Clark Hoapital for their
yeara ol dedicated love
to Leonard.
To everyone, we will
be forever grateful.
'
Leonard Ban
f amily

everyone who helped
and cared during the
Ill nee a and death ol
husband and lather,
Wallar E. Baker; the
men he worked with on
his last job s1 Gavin,
Dr. Hunter who lo
problem, his atall
and Veterans Ho,spilai,l
nurae with Home
Health who came to the
house, Holzer Hospital,
Drs. Sholtis, Mize, Yoklowski and Berkich,
nurse in intensive
Mra. Newberry, who
cried with us when
inga took a turn
worse, Rev. Art
Lund and Nancy Smith,
went out of their
to help ut, his
Pipefltters 577
who are helping me
now l n many waya ,
especially the Finan cial Secretary Steve
Collins, Rev. Duane
Sydenstricker, ladies
South Bethel Church
who prepared a meal
White·Biower fu·
neral Home, Cool·ville,
took care Qf
larr·anr•em,enta_ We ap·
preciate and thank you
all.
Mrs. Waher E. Baker,

HILL'S DEER
coniNG
CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

;

Wanted

Over6roof(

Certified .o r Trained Nursln~ Assistants
Our rapid growth 11 the area a _ntweat and
flntat,'Skllled Long Term Cart Facility haa
creatid lmlllldlate opportunities for Ce(lifild
or Tntlned Hunting Asailtants.
Come for 1 visit, talk to vs about ·your
elq*llf!CI, and we will talk to yoil about our
wage p~giam which begin• at $4.80 per'
hour, PLUS · expfrlenc• oomptnsation,
offiNd lrt wb8t II truly a. "Ststa Or The Art"
~~ Facility. . . by for an
or

..

Glalllrner at

992-7013
or 992-5553
OR TOU Fill
1·800·848.0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7 131 / '91 tfn

104 Mike pocy Matats· PBL

II
Ant. 4 sections. Tower, Co·ax
extras. E•c. cond. $600 . Call
betw11n 9a.m. &amp; 10 p.m. 614-

614-992·33 94

GUN SHOO.l

Or Call

742·3020 Evenings
12·2·91-1 mo. pd.

RACINE

FIRE DEPT• .,
Bashan Building
EVERT
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Starting Sept. 28

Factory Choko
12 Gauge Shotvun Only
Strictly Enfan:ed
9-13-'91 -dn

THE BASKET WEAVE

WASHEII-$100 "''
Dlnl-$69 up
.
llfltGIIATOII-$100 up
UNGIS-Got.Dtt.-$125 up
FIIIZIII- $ US up
'
MICIO OYINS.,-$19 up

· KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or 915·3561
Across Fram Post Olfke
POMEROY, OHO
10/30!89 tfn

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL

8:30 am-4:00 pm
mo.

90 OU WIIUNTY

Complete Grooming
for All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

6!1

73 Votm &amp; 4 W0 ' §

King size wa ter bed. 6 drawer
ptcfestal . Headboard &amp; mirror.

$150. Good sho~ . 304-675'39111.

7 8 Campm u Eq •npm c1tt
79 ~.J mpent &amp; Mot or H o m t:s

Home Improve m ent s
8 2 Plum bm y &amp; Heallll!l

6

Lost &amp; Found

7

Yard Sale

your ChristiiCislist.

Weaving supplies also in
stodt.

on Rock~
prin
. in Pomeroy, 3 m·
lho Meigs Co. ·
I OI'DUrldS
992-6855
11f1511 mo. pd.

87 Uphu lslt: rv

IR&amp;t EXCAVATING

BUUDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Uconood .,d Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

Cal1614-992-6528 or
385-8227

Call
614-992-5528 or
385-8227
12·11·1 mo.

and

WUPPING
1
25 C1t &amp; Wrapped
1
5Extra to Ski•
MAPLEWOOD

LAKE

brand new roof and gutters , central air, and soma new

carpaling, and a storage building.

$30,500

JOHNSON ROAD - Approx. 1 mile out of Pomeroy.
Apprnx. 5 acros with a building silo. Has an old wall and
public water is available. Electric is on the silo. Comes
with your own cave . Some wooded land.LEADING CREEK - Higley Rd. - This is a Mautllul
building spot with plenly ol room to expend or hulitefo
dream. 38 atres with lrea gas and water and electric .
available.
$23,800.
IlDDLE PORT - Ruoaoll SL - Grwat Nei~borhood. In
town iving with country saning. A3 bedroom, 1W baJh
l)oine with a lui basement, 1 ear garage, ond a Iaiii'! lot.
Wu$59,800. .
NOW $56,0oo.
·POMEROY - s-h Sl You need to sea this beautiful
btlck hollll. Has 3 bedrooms, large living room, full bast·
mont, llld ~ one-cargarage - 534,100.
LANQIVILLE - How would you IIQ al!ict 52 - 111!11?
Wei "-llo 1pprox. 45·50
With aboUt 10
ICIH lllfllllt. Alto llttit1g on It II 1 two bldRIOin holno
wlfl 1 ~. and hlo car gaqgo. Hill w.l ,WIIIor that.
.... ""'" lfOIIII dry. Evtn hal lillie timber ICI...

.

JUST .-,oao.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

· West Virginia, 304 -n3-5785.

9

14

Business
Training

Wanted to Buy

Wanlad to

bu~,

45

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 acre
lot on
Creek
Good I
$5,900. 61...,446·1615 or 446-1243.

St anding limber,

51

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON • All areas, Call Maril yn
Wea ver 304· 882·2645.

l ov ing mother will baby s it In

my home day /night, hourly/ 3 bedroom untui-nlshod Mous e,
w"kly, any age, rtlerencas, 507 Second St, New Haven, 304·

614-992-nag

AVON ! All Areas ! Sh irle y

POMEROY

Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

Ar.ply In P1rson To Tha Medical
p au, 203 Jackson Pike, Btl· 2
1
WHn 9 A.lol. And 4:30P.M.
MEOlA SALES

Possesses

Willingness

•H igh Glosa on Ti~
Floor Finish
MIME LEWIS, Ownlf
Rl. I, Rutland, OH.

Salas

Skills,

'E nthusiasm

To

Experience,

And
Work Hard.
Cold Calling

!NOTICE !

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

re commends that you do bustnets wlih people you know, .1nd
NOT to send money Uuo~l'ltht
mall until you have lnvesttgattd
the offering .

Real Estate

Regional Manager.

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
- Room Addition•

- Gutt•r worit
- Eltetrictl and Plumbing
- ConCNtt woi1c
- Roofing
- lf'lttrfof &amp; Exterior

Pointing
!FREE ESTIMATES!

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
"Helping You To
,Recover Your
lnvcslmenl"

614·949·2202
RACINE, OHIO

12 Gauge Factory
Choke

'ntorior Polnllbg,
Free Eatlmotn
. 30 y.... llperlonce.
Four leUtrl ol
recommendadon. Honnt
and dopendlibte.
(&amp;.nP 1.... . ,
IJI"C'dy)
cau Ed Battin
caliBCiat
I

1·614-667-6474

1t1~ mo. pd.

I&amp;C E.XCAVATING
IULLDOZIIG

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
· HOME SITES
HAULING:
Umfttone, Dirt,
. Grtvel and Coal
Ucen•d ond Bondood
PH . 8-14-992-6691
8·11 -1 mo.

Bo~

Owner
CLARENCE ATHERTON

C._,L-Keating &amp;
Refrigeration

T~

mo.

i

·J
r

I

r
1

.O.tam fit-no installatioa me1.1
•Newt require&amp; painllna
•SMhellilt·ln for wy cleanina
•U f~me

The Classfie~,
Ml The ioun~ Is Yours!

a '"'free
.,,.
:,,,.,..

C U,

•Uiibeatable tnergy savingt

frame warranty

JAMIS IIISII
992·2772
MIDDUPOIT

~Mastic

r.1
•

•

SHRUB TREE
· TRIM ,and

MICIOWA i.
OVIN --AII

IEI10VAL

MUlliS .
lrl.. ft Ill Or We

•LIGHT HAULING

lEN'S AMIANCE

•FIREWOOD'

• illl SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD nES

BISSELL BUIL.DERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
~w Garages • Replacement Windows
, -Room Additions • Roofing

Plclt ~ '

I

snv1a

Conuneralaland Re•ldentlal
· ·FREE ESTIMATES

HJ·SJIS.,.
tiS-1561

614·949·2101

.... .......... Offke
tiJL ..... -11.

NttiiOY,3/

or 94'9·2860

(No Su...ay Call)·

IV3t.tt1 mo.

I

N•• /4.

;
'
"
'
"
Ulll~·· =~~~
..............................
....

=·:·
•

""

.

COOIIII .

........ 0. lift.• .............. 141,
161•1 ......... er 1·1tiO.aPt.!l9"

Unfurnished House , 3
Room1, Bath, Air Conditioning 1
Car.-tad, Draperln, Scraeneo
Porch, Prlvltt Perking, 614-446-

:til02.

,.

ror,

Headboard. Cost : $850;

1987 Horizon Automatic With
Air, $1,700; 1959 Ed11l 81,000
Mil ts, $1,200. 614·256-1270.

Sell: 1250. 114-446-3040.

56

Household
Goods

County Applianc., ln.c. Good
ustd appliances, T.V. ·s ets. Open
8 a.m. lo 8 p.m . Mon.·Sal. 614·
448-1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Galllpolla, OH

GOOD

USED

AMIFM /sltrto casst!lt, rear
defroster,
powtr windows,
moon root, rear window louvers
and front end cover inc luded.

245·5121.

One DWOer. bc1lltnl condition.
52,000 - mllto*rag• kopt.
$12,000. Tl'ld
rable. C.1ll

Pets for Sale

614-441-1108 or 5;00 p.m.
1987 Nloaan S.nlra, Aoklng
$1,800. 614-441.0731.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pel
Grooming. All breeds, sty-les.
l.1m1 Pet Food Dealer. Julie
Webb. Call614-446-0231 .

1989 Toyota Tercel, 5 Speed, Air

AKC Chocoltle 1 Labrador Puppies, Beautiful, 6 Wilk s Old,
Shot s And Wormed. Rtady To

Cond itioning, Sharp! Someone
To Takl Over Payman1s. 614·

256·1)93.

APPLIANCES Be Placed! 614·446-811 1.

42 Mobile Homes
"- for Rent
1 bedroom trailer, pay own
utilities plus deposit, 304·675·

2535.

Now that the weather bat ceolcd
clown, why not hcatthlnp up a bit
by dearlnA your doscls, aule or
bumint or these unwaat9 items
and .lbertialaA them r... llle In
the Cllaslllcdsr
Aad, you can put that eltnt
cash t~ Keod use by ehccklDA .

the C,._.llleds rer leal prap
lila, flea marllc:ts and ..rplns
In your ~k er the woeda.

Wtrk fer yeu,
call till'....wiJtrt, Mon6y-Fri41f
. . II

To put the ·c:lutlfledt II

~ ,.

446-2342
·. . .
-·
675-_13_~3

992~2156

2 • BR mobUa home, $200/mo.

614-367-7802.

2br Mobile Home On Large
Private Lot, $215/Mo. Secur~ty

Ot:poall , Refutnces . 614-4116·

22118, 114-441·2581.

3br Trailer, $200/Mo. Water Paid.
Deposit Required. 614-256·6717.
Mobile

Horne t

Rent:

For

Retererict

I

And Deposit Re·
Call Ahtr 2p.m. 614-446-

for rtnt.

&amp;

44

dryer. 304·773-

Apartment
for Rent

monthly, el4-t49-252t afltr 6pm

unluml ~hld,

bedroom

New/Used

Houl4bold lumlshlng. 112 mi.

.

ROom additions, skiing, roofln~.

Stallonwagon 1m, Cheverolal
Malibu, aulo, PB, PS, ntw tlrt&amp;,
$800, 814-9112-2717

upllalro ope, Flrol Avo, ulllllln
qulrld, 814-448-43tt or 304-11152330, ,
•
1 tiR . rumlohoti opartmonl.
Upllaln ext 131h Sl. $1110 mo.
pr.. g11 &amp; aile. 30W71-HS1. •
16~-llclrm oplo, In lloolno OH,
unrurnilltod, 814ollz.t5111
lnclud..:i, 1350. rtf &amp; dtp ,..

nol reglslorod,
~·~~~~~~~~~

Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WV,

, 614-ltl2~025

Oragonwynd CaUery Persian,
Slam••• and ltllmalayan klllt ns.

Pil"ll

814·446-3844 '"" 7 p.m.

Jtnicho

dinette

wuhtr/~ryer

stt

$225;

$150 ; cotftt table,

2 ends , 2 lampe $125. 614-446·

t062.

Dalfls

Saw·Vac

Sarvlct , •

Geor911 Crttk Rd. Parts, sup-"

Wa buy 1111 or trade. Jim
Cochran Aulo Center, 5th and

Vltnd St, Pt. Pit. 304.075-1985.

72 Trucks for Sale
1974 ·Ford 3/4 ton 4X4 1 360 an-

plies, pickup, and deli very. 614-:

446-0294.

- '

Will build pallo covers, decks, ...
ICrMned room1, put up vinyl •
tiding or trailer skirting. 614- •

245-9t!2.

gino, 4 speed Ira,.., $150. 614· 82
256-1156.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

1978 Chevy pick up, 350 au1o,

1800. 304-675-2457.

•

Carter'• Plu"'blng

Fourth and Pine
'Golllpolto, Ohio
614-441-3881

1985 Oodg11 half ton pickup,
auto. AMIFM l ltflo, 13500. 614-

84

1986 Dodge Carann LE, loaded,
clean, 97,000 rrlllts, NADA
"Book" value• $5900. Ask ing

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Rn ldlnllil

$4900. 304-675·5306.

wiring ,

76

1788.

commercial '

Of'

naw ..rvlca or repairs. ;

Mester Oc•n"HC:i --.ltctrlelan.
Ridenour Elec:lrical, 304-675-

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

'

Budget Transmissions, Used &amp;
reb\.1111, star1ing at $99; Auto

Ports. 614-245-5677, 614·3792283.

Mowrty'a Upholttarlng wvic- :
lng trl county aru 2t yeant. Tht "
bul In tumhu,. upholstering. If
Clll 304.075-4154 lor ... ... ~
t lmatH.
I

'

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Polnl Pleasa nt, 304-675·2063,

lull line Tropical llshl blrd1,
small animals and t uppl 11.

•

Rat Terrier puppill, lntldt or
81HU-471i7.
-•
outside doQ , partnts an
RENT 20WN
premlsn, 61.f-e96-1079 or 814814-446-3158
593-6429 leave musage
Vl 'l'l Fumltura
Solo 6 Chair, $11.10 Week;
Musical
Recliner, $5.47 WHk, Swivel
Rocker, $3.63 Wnk.Bunk Bad
Instruments
Complete $8.41 WHk, 4 Drawer

Chnl, $3.26 WHk; Pos1er B•d·
room Suitt, 7 pc., $16.67 W11k,
lncludn Beddlng.Country Pint

Want to buy ulld trumpet , good
cond , 304·675·3748 afler 6:00

Dlnotlo With Bonch 6 4 Chairs, PM.
$10.18 WHk.OPEN : r.tondoy
Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to· &amp;p.m.,
S.ndoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
Farm Supplies
MIIH on Route 7 On Rou1t 141,
&amp;Livestock
In Conl1nory.
Saki On All CArpal In Stock!
Vinyl, 14.H yd. Corpat 14.00 Up.
Mollohan Clrpett . 814-446-i'l44. 61 Farm Equipment
SWAIN
tiS Alii• Cholmoro Dloaol Troc·
AUCTION 6 FURN!lURE. 12 lor,
$5,950; 0.14 AC Wllh l.old•,
Olive St., GaUl poUt. Ntw &amp; Ut ed 12,150, 0.17 AIJ Whh Plow, Col·
fum11Uf!, huters, We stern &amp; llvllor, Groin Drill, $2,950; &amp;14·
Worf1 baolt. 114-446-3159.
286-6522.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Ford 600 Fann Tl'lclar Just
814-446-3158
Equipped To Uu
LIVING ROOM: Sola 6 Choir, Overhauled,
$1H.OO;, Rtc:llltlf, $149.00; Unleaded G11. 114'488·9116.
Swivel HockllrSH.OO; ColiN 6 Jim's Farm Equipmtnl, SR. 35,
End Ttblol, $89.00 Sot.OIN ING Wnt Galllpolla, &amp;14-44J.Bm;
ROOM: Tobit Wllh 4 Paddld Wide stllct lon new &amp; ulld farm
Ch1lr1, $141.00; Couni'I Pint tr1ctors • &amp; 1mpltmtnls. Buy,
Dlnono With Bench nd 3 Hll, trade ; 8:00.5:00 wMkdays,
Cholr1, $291.00; Mllchlng 2 Set. 1111 Noon.
lloof Hitch $349; Or $589.00
lol; Ottk-Toblo, 42xl2 Wllh .1 Want.ct: Ustd farm equipment,
Bow
Bock
Choirs, anythlnl you want to 1111. 614·
$82i:OO.BEDROOM:·Poolor Bid· 256·130 , 114·258o6040 After
100m Sullo (5 pc.), S34t.OO; 4. lp.m.
Dritwar Choat, $«.15; Bunk
Bid, $221; Comploll Full M1H 63
LIVestOCk ·
Sal, $105.00 Sil; 1 pe. Coder .:.:;_,....;.;:..;..:.;.;..:_;__ _
eldroom Sullo, $8H.OO.OPEN: 2 HoJH Trailer Now Palnl, New
!p.m., 4 Milos OH Roult
Route 141 In C.nttn~try.

1

lhleo Moclol 27 12 G.tugo Slu~
Gun. Shoo!• 2 3/4 And 3 Inc
lllgnum Shone, $250. 614·251·
1~. ·
Antiques
53

1;,,.,,_yoru· dullm· into f~ tlsh,
I

it tire easy

Sell

Vtarllng Ang1.11 And Cht rotals
Bulls For S.fe. 6143-446-4447.

1-

64 Hay &amp; Grain
:.:_..:,;..:!.,;_;,:;.::,;;.;,......,..,.,.,

Fat flonC.-

c;;;,;;

City,

.
j
I

'1

•

Wtly ... by pltone, '

no rr.eetl f.o letwe yoltl4 1wme.

l'lace you1· cltzssilied ad today!
15 wm·tls m: less, 3 days ,
3 palre,.s,$6.00.
f :nll oru·. 11j]kt&gt; .(m-11nitl in

\

.•
'

·I

(lfl11nn~ll nllt· ~!

'

nrH, $1,19S ; 1ggo AOHA Glldlng, $800i 8 V~r Old Paint Mafe,

On $650. 614o28f.6122.
Will houiiiYIIIock. &amp;14-446·1514.

52 Sporting' Goods

'

..

•

9·----:----I '--------·- 2· --------~------ 10·--~---

11 . - - - . - .,r. 4. _ _..:;.;,..,..'---_ _ 12 ....:_·~~------- -.
.'J •.-_--------------- --r:

1.'1. _ _ _ __

7._ _ _ _ __

14._ _ --,.. _ __
15..________

·'·-----------------------6, _ _ _ _ _ __
II, _ _ ___.__..,.......,.

•1
I

•

In

'

::-87~~Up~hi-OI~st;..:.:ery~--,.... :'

lurnlahld, $300 per monlh, 614·

141~528

1

..

Ci\c£,H?H

.

Mlxod Hay~' R0&lt;1nd Balu; $15
~ 1
--•
Ha
~r alo. ..,.
aoo
sq. Ba111. Puto Rid !!.:
.......,.•
:..;.---::.;.;.:~F~:--- $2.00 Pir .....111-24!-14t0.
Buy or 1111. fllvirl111 Anllq.,.o,
1124 E. Moln Slrotl, Pomoroy,
1br Apartment, Carpeting, Fum, Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. lo 6:00
T; or~sportation
KKchen, Wtltr And Trull Ptld. P-'!'1 ,!unclly 1:00 to 6100 p.m.
Locotld In -Buloulllo Plko, 814· 11.....-•·2521.
446.a!l88.
Middleport, 1 ape. In 54 Miscella1110us
, coli 814·89N403
Merchandise
2 bdrrn In Pomeroy, all utiU11as

:23=2:8-~C~A:
LL~C:O:L=~:CT
~~----~

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

non shadding, ve~ry tmart,
htalth guaranlH, now taking
deposits, 614-594-46n Athens

call 304-675·1450.

Monday Thru Sllturday, 9a.m. to
tur- lp.m., Sul'\day 12 ~oon Till

•:r.··1200

1 bdrm. b11em1nt
nlshtd, utiiiUtt pal ,

1

71i4i,

some appliance repall'$. WV

304-$71i-'239.! Ohio 814-446~2454 . •

t

puppies,

FrH PICKENS
DMIIfery. FURNITURE

Rtfrigtrator: good cond., $100.

1 BR apar1men1 &amp; 2 BR !railer.
'
Double Wide With 1 Acre Land, 614·441-1115.
Gallipoli s Ferry, 3 Bedrooms1 2 12x65 In country. VInton araa .
Baths, Electnc, Central Air,
Water, trash, stove, retrig. fur·
$37,000. 304·675.7111.
nishtd. $185/mo. Ret &amp; dep.

c, marvestA Bargain..
Reap The Rewar~...
len You-Tum To

11700 SR 124
Long BOIICMn, Ohio
......
.41

\

Small

Conlor, $200. mo, rot 6 dip roqulrld, 114-446-4369 or 304-675·
2330.

JIL BLOWN
I

992·2403

2 bedroom, unfurnlshad 1_12x60,
112 mile pla.-1 Holzer Medical

.........c.••on:lltl

MASTIC®-o
TfiE NATION'S FINEST
.,. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

wages paid. 304-776-8421.

Houses for rent- one in Mid ·
dlapan, 2 In Pomeroy, call 614·

614·388-1686.

We Sell &amp; Service
Weather King, Millar, .
Luxalre, Insider,
Heat Pumps, Furnaces,
Air Conditioners

11/20/hlo.

607 Pl. Pl11sant, WV 25550. 31 Homes for Sale

Nul'llhg
AssistantS/Home
Haalth Aid s, Homa Makers wan·
ttd. Yarlous hours available.

malion Call 614-446 -2342, Ask
for Paul.

Block, brlck 1 HWtr llipta, win·

tompllte horne furni shings.
Hours: Mo~Sat, .9-5. 614·4460322, 3 mllet ou1 Bulalfllle Rd.

Business
Opponunity

Strong Closing Skills
Preltrrad. Draw /Commission All Ty-pe LoansLandtrs sr.cllal·
ICar /Allowance /Banetits. Send lze In Credit Problems. ell Us
Resume In Conlldanca To: 2120 You r Needs. 803-293·1641.
Hamilton/Middlet own
Road,··
Hamilton, OH 45011, A'n'N:

742-2451

1987 Chevy Nova: high miltagl,
naeds repair. Good t111n sporla·
lion car. $1 1500. For more l ntor~

dows , Unt111, ate. Claude. Winters, Rio Grande, OH Call 614-

=

Financial

MT Or MLT. E1cellant Banaflts.
Weekday• · .. No Shift WOfk,

•

6:30p.m.

3404.
n stu water blcl, 8 dr1W1r AK.c R~lalertd Cocker Spaniel
lltll, miiTow hNdboard, Pups For Salt. All Shots, Wor·
25. 304o615o5301.
mid. $150. 614-3118-9162.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
AKC Scottish Terrior pupplu,

313.

Television Advonislng Sa las
Rep Needed For The Gal·
llpoti SIPoint • Pteasant Area.
We're Seeking A Candidate Who

good, looks good. Loaded.
$3,000. 614-:JBB.:a'l 10, call efler

Ctollllolol. Coli 614-446-7398.

Toll Free, 1·800-467-5566, Exl.

•Reasonable Rato1
•Quality Work '
•Free Eatimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry

1986 Pontltc Grand Am , runs

Washers, dryera, rtlrl~ralort, AKC Poodle puppies, toys &amp;
rangn~ Skagga Appll1nc81, tiny tOys, miniature Schnauzer,
Upper Rlvtr Ra. B•ldt Slone mala, sllvar, Coolvllla 814-667-

Easy .Work! Exc auanl Pay! As·
5tmbla Products AI Home. Call

INDEPENDENT
CUPIT ClEANEIS
and nlE FLOOI (AlE

Time

675-3469.

Spears, 304-675-1429.

5-31 -'90 tfn

g..spm, 949-2644 alter 6pm

King, Complete Bookcase Mir-

5651, Mnon WV.

CONSTRUCTION
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FrH Estimates

speed, $1250 obo, 6t4·949-2600

Wat erbed Solid Oak California

Mtrchandise

985-4473
667-6179

PICK·A·PAIR

Furnished
\ Rooms

Cadge Van , short whHI base'.
New &amp; clean Inside. ~4-615-

446-7604.
614-446·9580.
1987
Mazda
RX-7
{while
with
Sleepln~ rooms with cooking] 55
Building
blue Interior) Turbo cttargtd
Also'"""
space.
All
hook-ups.
Supplies
Call aher 2:00 p.m.. 304-773· ___.;..:~;..,;.;;__ _ rotary ' engine. Air, 5 tptttd, .73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

Renlals

Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992·

•New Hames
•Garages

1986 Nlssan Pulsar, 86,000 ml ,
radlgray Interior, AJC, ps, pb, ! -

4634.

Rooms for re'nt • Wltk or month.
Stanlng at $120/mo. Gailia Hotel.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE ·

949·2734

-lenaad.

. '.

8

Stair Sla(lpar $80. Eurclsa bike
$35. Both e•c cond, 304-675-

Please se nd ru ume to: R1. 2

·ID'I\
PAII,ING -

SALEM STREET - Rudand - A2 sto'Y home with 4·5
bedrooms, nice front silting pornh, carport, cute liltla playhouse si«ing inside a fenced back .yard. Home has ~

$30.00.

Fflck PearsOn Aucti on Company,

Call 614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.1n""

W14tt

Middleport, OH

Wanted

p.m. Salurday.

lull ti me auctioneer, complete
auction service. Licensed Ohio,

Curtis Home lmProvem.nl:l::
Years Experltnet On Old.,. &amp;

Salt: 1984 Ford Tempo GL, vinyl replacement window~..
Ctean. 12,200. 304-676-3708, Or For
l1,1i5. 814-367.0274.
•.
ca•pantry by AI Tromm, 614-7420•
614-446·1044.

percent discount, junior cam·
Uauges- regular prlcas. New
hours aher Christma s. Fri ., Sat.,
Sun. Noon ~ 6pm. other days
hours call 304·273·5655 (until
Christmas~ (Other days 3-6pm)
All Christmu ••changas In by
January ! , 1992. Insulated
Dacron camoflouge covera lls.

~ ituation

the day before the ad is to run.
Sunday tdition - 2:00 p.nt!
F'r iday. Monday edition - 2:00

SIZED.LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

RAONI, OH.

OFFICE 992·2886

. 205 North Second Ave.

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa id In

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. 12

3-14_.' 91 -tfn

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22

1986 Ford Bronco II 4 WO,
Automatic , Air, A-1 COndition,
S5,800 : 1986 Olds Cutlass Ci1n ,
4 Door Sedan, Automati c, Air,

614·4116·4316.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Quality
Stone Co.

Claims Acetplld. &amp;14-2~·1611.

Newer Homes. Room Addillona,
Foundation Worll, Roofi~.
Kitchens And , Baths.- Free El-

Solid Oak Curved Glass China
Cablhi'ts, ·Round Oak T~ b1 9S .

NHdad: Salesperson for are a.

YOUNG'S

1----------.-----....,----1
:iJ 199 I lly NEA. Inc

Sam Somerville's Army Surplus.
Camtlauge c:lolhlng, Car harts 10

has nice homesites
available for up to
80' homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $75 per mo.

Repairs; Commtrk:eiJ Anidln·

tlal tmprovtmtnts. InclUding:
Plumbing, Electrlcal. lns~ranct

Seasoned Ash, Oak And Hick· 71 Autos for Sale
ory Firewood, &gt;55 Pick·Up Load ·_ _ _,..,.:,....;,....;,:_.,...,..., 71 Autos for Sale
tima1ts! Rtlerenc", No Job To
OeUvarttd And Stackad, Don 1985 Nova s SpHd, Real Good
1990 GMC Shon Bad 12,900 Big Or Small! 614... 41.0225.
Waugh, 614-446·9646.
Work Cor, $1,850. 614-446-4782.
Mi los, 44.3-V-6, 5Spd., Loodod FrHmtn's Plumbing And Heal·
SeU Or Tradt: 3 Tobteco Bo•es,
$10,900; Rtminglon 11·48 16 GA. lng, 614·256·1611.
1986
E.1900;
1986
Horizon
4 Choice Grave Sp~cas In
Full Choka, Automatic, 5 Shot,
M•morlal Gardens. Cheap! 614 - $1050; 1986 Turllmo, low miles, $225. 614-446·7357.
Ron's TV Service, specializing
$1050; 1987 Horizon, $1650. 304·
446-1004.
in :Z.nhh also Mrvlclng mosl
675-2440.
For salt or trade lor Truck, 78 othtr brand s. HouW calls, also

8 5 Gomll'lal Haulo n!J .
86 Mobil t! _H u r11 c R t~ p our

;a-JAYMAR

Complllo Moblta H- iltt.Upa,

sage.

Help Wanted: Full Time Cenil lad

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 s

Real Estate General

$1200. 614-446·3608, leave mas-

8 3 E liC &lt;~Va tm n
,.
84 Et ee~ u ca l &amp; Rc lr u tt:f&lt;IIWn

Now Ope1 on Saturdays

for tht Otrislmas Season.
Giveaarlwoven Hsket
to that spedal someone on

New walnut wate'rbad $900; 4
poster, 6 drawers, originally

Part Border Collie, 5 mos. old ,
shots, very sweat, 614 ·992·5486

Services

11·28-1 mo.

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Sllrting at $235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2
bath houae
wlbaeemenl and
carport, free gat.

.'

Boats &amp; Mot or s to r Sdl c

77 Alit o Repa •r

614-44~316 .

Unconditional litltl ~ guarln•
tea. l.oc:al referenc• turnlshed.
Free estimates. Call collect .. , .
614· 237•0488, day or night.
Rogers Basement· Waterproofing.
..,JI •

7 4 M ot or cy cll!!ii
7S

'.

··-'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG

/ 1 AlJt os lo r Salc
72 Truck s fm S01l c

76 Aut o Par ts &amp; Ac cussori!!S

'•

Home·"
Improvements

Milos, ~ Cjllndor, 5 Soood, Bid

For s alt - womtns j11n1, dress
pants &amp;
size 5 &amp; up. Also
a
l
condition,

Trans ortation

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

.Pomeroy,

Se rvtces

lold. 814-448-8199.

Seed &amp; hn rlu vr

Newly Re-done

. 6 t4-9f2-6820

~

liner, AMIFM

DEER CUTTING
GROOM
ROOM

~

Heib Capsulu . Resuns Guaran-

57 Mu51calln s trwn en t ~
58 FrUits &amp; Veg tl'ta bl es
~9 For Sal e or Tr ade

USED APPUANCES .

'·

Rlploj, wi/. 304•2n.3133 or .

800 ·273~585 .

Regular Meals. Taka Ntfural

5449.

HOURS:

949·2206
111141911

FOR ALL MAKES &amp;

Displayed at The
Ouahty Print Shop

$11 ,000.

11

Specializing In

Homemade with
Long Lasting Green
Scotch Pine.
Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Ones.

In Memory

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

. "

w.·

C.B. base radio , Cobra 2000. D·

256·1443;

Business Services
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

. .

NJW gas t1nks, body P•r1s, Qnt
ton l ruck . hHta,· radlitor~t.
floor matS etc. D I R Aut

304-675-6495:

81

54

335*:

446-6833 Ahll 5p.m.

1989 F9rd ·F·150 Custom 23,000

Household G o ods
52 - S porting .Goods
5 3 Anhque$

55
56

redu ced fo'r qulcll Nit. 614:-44$.-

63 l 1veH ock
6 4 Hav &amp; Graut

51

5 76 Appl e Gtovt!

Dl'l~lcall~

22 tt . long truck bell.

Bridal Gown. Stml.fO~m a llvory,
.Size 6, Nev•r Worn, 1200. 614·

No Morel · Lose
Pounds And Inches. Eat Your

Merchandise

458 l i!On

.

6 1 Fa rtn .Eci u•tlm enl
62 Want t:-d t o Bu y

Hou se l tor Rent
Mobile Homes lor Ren t
F.1rm s tor Rent
Apartment lo r Runt
Fu1nislled Rooms
S pace tor Renf
4 7 Wanted t o R en t
48 Equ•pmeol fo1 Rulli
49 For leas e

12 S•tuauon Wanted

-•

81

41
42
4 3•
44
45
46

Servi ces

I J. I'

Hom es lor S ale
Mobile tiomes fo1 S~ l c
hrms lot Sale
Bu sin85 s BU1Id1n gs
Lots &amp; Acre1ge
R.e al Est111 WJnt ed

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories .

Commercial vidt_o game, space
lnlfadtr, $150. Ros.- Tree prom
dr.,.BtS, 13·14 -$100.16 -$200 .

I;Rjltnl

Ert1ployment

(.'/(l , _
,j_fir•t/1WJ{I'.'

l h t! Da1ly S t:lil tll i:l lt:•
C ud o iiUII t.~ tdln O\ I Ct! ~l

SHOOTING MATCH
AT POINT PLEASANT
MOOSE LODG E
SUNDAY 12:00 Noon-Dark
At Picnic Sheher
Merrbers Only

•

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

Real Estate

2 In Mem orv

'

DAY BEFORE PUBl! CATtON
II 0 0 AM SATURDA Y
2 00 P M MON DAY
lOOPM TUESDAY
2 00 PM WEON E'S DAY
2 .00 PM THUR SDAY
l 'lOPM FRIDA Y

.TUE SOAY PAPER
W[ ONF SOAY PAPEfl

$6.00
$9.00
$13 .00
$1.30/ d ay

lor each dil'/ as separat e a d s

Will oii 51J ;tpp tt itl lit the PI P l co\SCI III R e !jiS ie r .t rullh e Gall i
pulos O;:u ly Tubt •n c _ w aclun u ovc1 18.000 hom es

COPY DE ADliN E
MONDA\' PAP ER

. 20

~ 4. 00

R• tesolw tor con.ecu t•ve ru ns. bJokenupdiiV SWIII be ch•ged

'R ectHVt! $50 d•scount lor &lt;tdf pa •d 1n a•lv an cc
' fl i!f! ad s
Give otwav and Fo und ads undtll' 15 w o rds w oll be
n• n 3 difl/' 5 at n u chaqe.
' Po w ot old tot all &lt;; ap•talleu er s 1s do ubl e·t.m ce o t ild co !&gt; t
• 7 ~J O int lmv lypu only uwd
' St!nlln d 1s nol re spo ns lblt! 10 1 enor s .t h lll f1 rs t dil'f ICh cd•
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15
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Announc ements

Ov• r 15 Wo rds

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Merchandise

M111t Araa S-Ingle• By .Cholet
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Box 1043, GaiHpalis, Ol'llo 45631.

'

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54 Miscellaneous

Apartment
for Rent

RATES .

- TO PLACE
CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until ~OON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
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4·46-2342
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Pag._10-The Dally Sentinel

Seven Community Development Water Conservation District held
Block Grant Fund applications its annual meeting. The Goodyear
were approved by the Meigs Coon· Fatm Family Award went to
'
ty
Commissioners, ranging from a Richard and Patty Manzey.
Will Southern Ohio Coal ComJudge Roger Jones of Athens
$25,000
grant to Tuppers Plains·
pany sell its Meigs ~ines? Will
'
County
ruled that a ·plea bargain
Chester
Water
District
for
expan·
· Meigs County be the s&gt;te of a new
agreement
in the criminal ca8e of
sion
10
an"$18,000
grant
for
street
stale prison? What toll will the
Jack
W.
Crisp,
fonner Board Presi·
improvements
in
Middleport.
A
downturn in the national economy
dent
of
Leading
Creek Conservan· .
· take on Meigs County's already- 10tal of over $90.000 was awarded
cy
Distric~
was
unacceptable.
(The
to local governmeins through the
fUtgile economy?
same
agreement
was
approved
in
These are some of the questions CDBG program.
.
Racine held its annual Fall Fes· late November.).
being asked by Meigs Countians as
The
Eastern
High
School
tival,
with
a
parade,
entertainment
we enter into 1992.
•
Marching
Band,
under
the
direction
and
othe.
r
activities.
Marcy
Hill
was
As 1991 ended, Meigs County
of William Hall, received a "supe·
began to make serious preparations crow.ned Harvest Queen.
rior" rating at state marching comThe
M'eigs
County
School
for the ne.w year · and beyond.
Despite the uncertai.nties facing our Board received a $250,000 rural ~titian at Ohio State University; a
community at year's end, one thing educational demonstration project, week later, the Marcliing Maraud·
is for cenain: 1991 was an evenlful targeting "at-risk" freshmen as the ers received ari "excellent" rating at
the same contest.
year in Meigs Gounty, and this benefactors of the grant
The Robin's Crest subdivision
Over I ,500 people attended an
review of the years' final four
issue
was once again the topic at
open
house
at
the
Belleville
Locks
months shows that they were no
the
quarterly
meeting of the Meigs
and
Dam
facility
at
Re.
e
dsville.
It
exception.
County
Regional
Planning Com·
was the first time since 1979 th at
September
mission.
Action
on
the approval of
Meigs County officials - Devel· the inner workings of the project
the
controversial
subdivision
was
opment Director Elizabeth Schaad, were open to the public.
Pomeroy Village Council voted tabled pending fmalization of utili·
Emergency Management Agency
to
discontinue
its leases on the two ty arr\ingements and,other details.
Director Bob Byer and the county
James L. Hartzler of Canal
commissioners · were scrambling Court Street mini-parks, and the
Winchester,
an urban planner,
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association
to complete an imminent threat
expressed
his
opinion that the
application 10 assist the victims of used a donation from Pomeroy
Pomeroy
revitilzation
project had
councilman Bruce Reed to renew
the Pity Me slip.
potential
for
success,
calling
,
Members of Pomeroy Village the lease.
Pomeroy
"one
of
the
last
remaining
Peoples Banking and Tru st
• Council approved pay raises for
Company
announced th~t it had 19th century river towns in existhemselves, the village's new
made
an
offer
to purchase the Mid· tence."
mayor and for Clerk Brenda Mor·
November
dlepon
branch
of Central Trust.
ris. Under the new resOlution, the
Meigs
County
was included in a
Ti!T!mhy
Hively,
I~.
cf
mayor will collect $6,000 per year
stale-wide
ban
on
outdoor burning
Pomeroy,
died
in
a
twocar
auto
(as opposed to the current $3,600);
imposed
by
Ohio
Governor
George
council members $30 per meeting accident near Syracuse.
Voinovich.
The
county
was
The MeigsLocal School Board
(instead of $25) and the council
shrouded
in
thick
smoke
due
to
accepted the resignation of Har·
president $40.
The Meigs County Commis· · risonville Elementary School Prin- brush and forest fli'Cs in West Virsioners, followed closely by Syra· cipal Chuck Holliday and trans- ginia and Ohio.
Mary K. Rose, Jennings Beegle,
. cuse, Middlepon and Pomeroy vil- ferred principals John Lisle and
Ed
Holler, Addalou Lewis and Dan
Debbie
Brennan
to
Salem
Center
lage councils, became the first
Smith
were elected to lhe Meigs
and
Pomeroy
ElemenElementary
elected body in Meigs County to
County
Agricultural Society Board
ratify the AGHJMV Solid Waste tary School, respectively.
After experiencing delays and ofDireciOrs.
Plan. Ultimately, the plan did not
Among those elected in the·
what Commissioner Richard Jones
pass district-wide. ·
Meigs County Board of Educa- described as an "unwillingness 10 November General Election were:
tion Auendance Officer Otis man the job" at the site of the new Bruce J. Reed (Pomeroy Mayor);
Knopp retired from that "position Department of Human Servi ces Ed Martin (Rutland Mayor); Jim
building, the plumbing contract of Pape (Syracuse Mayor); and fred
after 33 years of service.
Parkersburg
Plumbing and Heating Hoffman (Middleport Mayor). A
900 Meigs County recipients of
General Assistance were told they was canceled and another firm, half-mill renewal levy for county
would see a decrease in their assis· Specialty Piping Corporation of tuberculosis office operation was
tance amount beginning in Octo· Davisville, W.Va. was put in place. approved, while a one-mill addi"Take Charge", an economic tiona! levy for the Meigs Board of
ber, following reform legislation
and
community development pro- Mental Retardation and Develop·
passed in the Ohio Legislature.
gram
under the co-sponsorship of mentalDisabilities was rejected.
The Meigs Emerg~ Managethe
Ohio
State University CooperaTed Reed, Jr. was honored
ment Agency waYjlraised for its
tive
Extension
Service
and
the
posthumously as Meigs County's
performance during the SARA
Meigs County Chamber of Com· Man of the Year for 1991 at the
Title III Ohio River Exercise.
The American Red Cross began merce got underway at Overbrook Southeastern Ohio Regional Coun·
purchasing homes for dislocated Center. Through the next-ro ur cil's annual Man of the Year ban·
weeks, parlicipants de-veloped an quet.
residents of Pity Me.
.
overall
community development
The Mei~s County Chamber of
Ground breaking ceremonies
plan
for
Meigs
COunty
and
targeted
Commerce
and Meigs County's
were held for the new Gingerbread
specific
development
projec;ts.
·
sc hool distri cts
three
local
House Pre-School building in MidIn
keeping
with
Governor
announced the implementation of
dleporL
: Secretary of State Bob Taft vis· George Voinovich's promise to do "Partners in Education", a coopera· ited Meigs County to attend the "more with less", Shade River tive program which teams each
district meeting of the Ohio Asso· State Forest was de-staffed . school building with a local busi·
ciation of Election Officials, held at Administration of the forest was ness.
turned over 10 the staff at Gifford
Repair work on Letar! and Sut·
Royal Oak Reson.
Slate
Forest
in
WashingiOn
County,
ton
Township Roads damaged due
Meigs County Common Pleas
while
personnel
who
staffed
the
to detoured Yellowbush Bridge
Court Jud11e Fred W. Crow III
Meigs
County
facility
were
relocat·
traffic began, thanks to donated
ordered the Meigs Board of Mental
ed.
materials from the Ohio Depart·
Retardation and Developmen tal
Preliminary construction of ment of Transper(ailon and assis·
· ~~iWili~'!:.~ro..;!le.-ne~r:&gt;$atY scrubficirs'gol underway at the Genlance from the Meigs County High·
services to c Jents rn hght of the
eral
James
M.
Gavin
Plant
Though
way Department.
board's financial hardship. That
the
decision
was
not
made
to
scrub,
The Meigs Local School Board
decision was later praised by the
the
construction
"kept
AEP's
requested a financial analysis for
Ohio Education Association, while
the purpose of applying to lhe staoo.
an appeal by the Ohio MR/DD options open."
Mark
Malone
announced
his
loan
fund. The request followed the
Board seemed almost certain.
candidacy
for
the
94lh
House
Dis·
declaration
of an impasse in negotiAmerican Electric Power Vice
•
trict
at
the
Meigs
County
Demo·
ations
between
the board and the
President Marshall Julien and Con·
cratic
Party's
Columbus
Day
Din·
Meigs
Local
Teachers
Association.
soiidated Coal Company officials
ner.
Malone's
announcement
was
Following
11
years
of service
confirmed that discussions conmade
in
light
of
lhe
news
lhat
curwith
the
Meigs
MR/DD
progmm,
cerning the possible sale of th e
rent 94th District Representative including the last six months as
Meigs Mines had begun.
Mary
Abel would be moved into interim perintendent, Meigs
Sandy lannarelli was named
another
district by the state '.s reap- County n ·ve Bette Hoffman
President of the Meigs County
portionment
_
resi~ from e program 10 take a
Divisio n of the American Heart
50
business
owners
and
citizens
posrti with the Southeastern
Association.
met
with
Middleport
Village
offiOhio
ial Education Resource
Residents in the Portland area
cials
as
the
village's
downtown
Center.
were cleaning up debris following
the
The Village of Pomeroy voted
revitalization
project
got
off
a storm which ripped roofs from
gR)Und.
.
to
seek a grant from lhc state for
buildings and interrupted electricity
The
Charles
and
Donna
lhle
the
purpose of instituting a Iiiler
for several hours.
Family
was
named
Meigs
COunty's
control
program within the village.
The renovation of the Athens
Outstanding
Fann
Family
for
1991
The
Eastern High School
Cou nty Courthouse forced the ,
Marching
Band took the runner-up
Athens County Common Pleas when the Meigs County Soil and
Court 10 hear the murder trial of
David Losey in the Meigs County
Courthouse. Losey was convicted
of th e beating death of Donald
McNaughton of Glouster.
·
Bob Gilmore, Presid ~nt of the
Middleport Community Associ~­
tion, described the community's
first Catfish Festival as "a huge
success in every way."
Final anangements were completed between the Meigs and
Southern Local School Districts to
enact an open enrollment policy
between the two districts, allowing
students from those districts to
attend schools in either system,
Eastern Local Schools have not
ad()lllt.d such a policy.
the resc;ue .leam at Meigs Mine
31 wasp~ lith in the nation in
: a Sqiiember frrst aid competilion.
By !iRIAN J. REEl)
Sentinel News Stall'

.

October
The current master contract
between the Eastern Local School
Board and the leacher's union was
extended for 8llOther year.
The Meigs County Health
oeperunent conducted a four-dny
' multiphalic health screening; offer·
, inJ. f500 in medical servicea on a
ahling fee IICiie, at a 'maximum
' COlt ol'$25.

·

. . . JeiiOVIIion

Gene R. Lawrence, son of
Jeanette Lawrence of Racine, has
been promoted to Command
Sergeant Major. He is currently
stationed at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
By the way his wife is the fanner
Beverly Rowland of Gallipolis.
Sgt. Lawrence has 22 years of service if! lhe U: S. Army.
·~··

Chrissy Weaver, daughter of
Betsy and Bill Weaver of Middle·
port, a senior at Meigs High
School, has been accepted to the
College of Business at Ohio Uni-.
versity. Chrissy who will be grad·
uating from Meigs High School
this spring is one of 350 accepted
by the business college out of
2,000 applicants.
.
And out Eastern High School
way. Nichola Plckens, daughter of
Ray and Patty Pickens, and a senior
at Eastern, has been accepted at
Ohio State University for the fall
term. Nichola has no indecision
about her major-she's definitely
going for journalism-writes well
and has had some good encourage·
ment along the way.
Ray Stone, son of Dorothy
Stone of Pomeroy was September's
Police Officer of the Month in
Columbus. .
A 23 year division veteran of
the force, R,ay was selected for the

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ID (MD) NaUOnal High
School Dance Team

IIJ Tha Jlllla•

18Daylr~~k

Slater's latest movie, "Kuffs," has
run afoul of Dallas officials, who
believe it's too violent for children
under 16 to see without their parents.
The movie, scheduled to open
Jan. 10 , is rated PG-13, which
means parental guidance is sug·
gested for children under 13.
But {he Dallas Motion Picture
Classification Board has sued to
change the rating, saying children
under 16 shouldn't be allowed to
see the movie without their parents.
That would have virtually the
same effeel in local theaters as an
R rating, which requires an accom·
panying parent for children under

"'

FAM

IIJ Hollywood Squarea

18 Cookln' USA
II.Bodlea In h1ot!On
Qll NIWIHour
0 Paid Program
12:05 (I) PIIIJ Maaon' .
12:30 ()). 0 A CloHr Look
(J) 1JJ e Loving
(l) lTV Progremmlng
1111 Gle Young and lhl
RIIUIU
.

a aa~~~na Ftt

Slater movie gets
thumbs
down
DALLAS (AP) - Christian

.'

ESPII

CNN

Ra~re

12:00 (V. (II (J). IJI) 112l.
ONtwt
(J)Cltraldo
IIJ lTV Pnlgremmtng
ill). Matlock

II! (WE,TH,FR) Palel
Progrem

Prelrte

Pomer;\.

\

AFTERNOON

=•Y

Then there arc those Christmas
bills that come pouring in. But
we're smiling, aren't we?

...

NASH

IJ) (MO,TU) QID
IIJ (WI) Whlt'i HappenlnQ
In Kanawha County Schoola
IJ) (Til) Your C.holce: Our
Chai!CI
IJ) (FII) Advanture1 In Scala
lt!oclellng
llll liZ e Quldlftl Light
1111e Chip 'n' ~la'a 'Reacua

.·Ill DayWIIc~
11:30(l)SaHma s-t
IIJ Cla1llc c:Gnc;entreflon
. · t1J Dlvonia Court
ll"lloiiJ 11J Jaka
18 Crill I Co

1:30 (J) Blwltched
Ill Candid c -

Route 1 ly·p•••

WON

TIS
WIYX
woue
WCHI
WPIY •
WINS

Gtlllng FM

5:00(J) (MOl Lovelloat
Cll Morning Agrlcultln
Roport
IIJ (TU,WE,TH,FR) NBC
~lgii~Palel Program
t1J (WE,TH) My 81- lam
0 (MOl Road R- ollie
Month
Ill (MO) Sporta Llllllgld
18 (TU,WE,TH,FR) 8llowllz
TOIIIJ
5:05 (V e (TU,WE,TH,FR) Home
Sllopping
Ill (MO) Hogan'• Naroaa
(I) (TU,WE,TH,FR) a-r
Pyla . .
5:30 (J) (TU)IIob Ntwhart
(II Thla Morning'• ..._..
(J) e ABC World Nlw1 Thla

{

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.

- .--.:- - - , - - -... -~-....-~- r-oo-- _ __ _ _......,... .........

-~ ~_ ,_,

_ _. - · -

.

···-~

on both occasions, a sense that'
each loan had tried in his own way
to leave the world a better place butlhat each had been swept aside
by forces each had unleashed." •
As he had in September after the ,
fai!ed coup against Gorbachev by
Soviet hard-liners, Johnson flew to
M_~~w to hel~ arrange interviews
With bOth Yeltsrn and Gorbachev. ·
"Doors are opened for Tom
Johnson that simply don't open for
anyone else at CNN," said the net· ·
work's international ediiOr, ·Eason
Jordan, who had asked hini to
· make eilch Moscow expedition.
(ABC News P-resident RoQne
Arledge also was in the thici!Wf
things in Moscow in September,
heipiRJ swing an unc~edented
lin jomt Yeltsin-Oor
ev IClc·
cast where the two leaders fielded
queations from viewei's'in the United S18tel.)
Contlnlled on aex! ~ie ·
'

•

I

SAT.. JAN. 4

·~

.

iiJI
Wtwire'a Wa!Jip? Q
tiJ J Slater lam 1;;1

MOANING
·

ID Mldwelll Angler Fishing
lor large I1)0uth ball on ·
Lake Okeechobee, Fta.
1:35 III e NBC Nlghlllela
7:00 III e SatilrdiJ RljiOII/TIIIa
Week In Plrtlamant
(J) Larry JonH
•
&lt;ll e tiJ Paid Program
1111 u.s. Farm Rlporl
ill). 8ueky D'Ha,. and till
TOld Wan
1!2le tMfiiCIOr Gadget 1;1
01 K-TV
II SportiCtntar
Ill ~Jireak
8 G 1!!111 Iunny a ,._.,
ShowQ
1111 Qartiert
7:011JJ Ounomoke
7:30 ()) e Mr. Cartoon
I)).World Tom01r0w
we Conctm
1111 Agrt Country .
ill) ID Toxic Cn!Hdllra
1!2le Rkllrlln lhl Skr C
01 Capteln Planet and !Iii
Planet..,.
1D ESPN Outdooll
Ill Newatlporta C-·Up
1D Till L1tt111
I:OO(VG OSpociCitaQ
(J) U.S. Farm Report
&lt;llG a•Naw
Advanturel ol Wlnnla lhl

.

F,.ah Fleld1
llll ALF Q
®ID A~olthe Klllll
Toma-E;J
112le Jim Hanaon'a Muppat
llllifea C
II Sporliman'1 Challenge
DDIJIII'elk
ID Augla Doggie and
Frtanda
I:O&amp;IJ) Bonanza
1:30 ())a 0 Yo, Yogll Q

•.tt•

® People to PIOpla
(J)
Land ol lie

IE~:..act. uic~ Horne

ill)llportl Clul1t

IIIIID.IIobby'a World C
1!2le Mother Qooaa ani!
Qrimm C
1D QreaTOUidoorl
Ill Nawii/Tht lllg Storr
1:00 tV e 01 Capteln Nand the
Maw Supar Mario World Q
(J) Charlando
·
(l) llodJ Elec1rtc
Ill• 8 a Dartcwing Ducic
~SMiley
IJI) 112l1!/:rtllld lnd
Frttndl
,
IIIIID T I ...., Klda Q
II!IIIICkJird AmariCil
ID Jimmy Houobln Outdooro
18 Newa/Health-k
1D Fllnla- KICI1
11051J) WCW Po- Hour
v:30me o ProStere Q
(J) Heart ol Clltcago
(l) llocW..l!lec1rtc
(J) • • • lltltlljulee Q
(J) Elltiutlvl ltrtll
ii])~TAZ·MANIA

1:;1

II! ROIIy wood lnaldet
Ill Joy ol GanllrllnQ
II Flallln' Holl •
D Nawo/MOnaJWMk
ID Maw Archlel
10:00 (V. 0 WlaiiKid Starring
MHI~Clilldii!Q
(J) Ml
111.-.1- Reporl
(l) llodJ ·l!larilrlc
(J) e Ill • 8llnillland the
Real Olloatlluaterll Q
IJ) No Job IGr I LlciY
1111 0 e T~ Mutant
Nl,_ Tunlll Q
ill). 111111~ ••

Advanlura

Excellent
.

tiJPIUSA
18AAilni'1Cnlta
a Marte Solln'l Saltwater

SaturiiiJ/NaWI
UPoP•re
10:051JJ MOVII!:. DHp Dark
lee 11112:00)
10:30(V. ill Clllp. r : l
CarillOn Ill~.....
Ulallll'l' w

Worlclollporta

1D llodJ 1taotrto

(J). ~. PtrltM ol Dirk

ww
AN

(J) e HammemlanB
IIJ VlctorJ oa•n
1111 !lie NFL Today (Time
mar_VlrY) C
ill) e Movtt
·
0 MIA ln... Stull C
11J MOVIE: Nltl!!_ltlle (PG13)
(2:00) Stereo. lijl
Ia Remodeling-and
Decorating
II Adventure
18NiwaDay
8 • Famnr Tle1 Q
• ' ID Tha Viiglnlan
12:05 (I) MOVIE, Blood Vowa: The
SIOI'J&gt;OI I MaRa Wile 12:00)
12-.30 (V a 01 To Ill Announcacl
(l) Vlctoi'V Garden C
~~~· ABC WeekerllSpacial
~ Thll OICI HiJuH 1:;1
1111 Ol.e ~FL Footbill Q
18 Grtat American OutdOora
Bass llshlng on Lakes of the
Otatks Stereo. · ·
Ill Evana and MDVIII
••FactaoiLIIa
1:00 (V e Spoi11Cent11
IIl MOVIE: OICI Molhlr
. RIIIJ'I Cln:ual2:00)
(l) areal American OuiH
Stereo.
(J).e Dwight FrMman
.,
IJ) HomeUm• Q
Qt To 1141 Announced
ID Snow Skiing From
Brackenridge, Colo. IT)
DNawiDay
Blnaon
1:30 III a College·Baakltball
Vanderbilt at Tennessee IL)
lD Strip Quilting
(J) e Mountal-r Mqulne
IIJ Amntu,.l 1n Scala
Modlllng
a Cattbrt!J Outdoorl
Stareo,
II Wa""' Mlllar'a Iavan
~JI In Paraclll Heii·Skiing.
ill NIWI/IhoWIIZ Thll ....
Willi

8 e National Qaogrep/llc
1D Wagon Train
2:00 (l) Sawlng With Nancy
(J) e MOVIE: Cleopatra IPt
1 of 2) 1Gll2:00)
IIJ Wonclerwortca Family '
Movla Q
® .• Mil'lle.
II! MOVIE: Waxwork !AI
12:00) Stereo.
18 Champlonlhlp Rodeo
Stereo.
D Lldlal Figure Sklllng
a Nlwaton lie Menu
2:051J) MOVIE: Swill, S Rachell1 :30)
2:30 (l) 11111 ol Joy ot~ainllng
D NIWI/Styla With ElM
Kllnach
8 . MOVIE: CIOII
Encountara ollhl Third Kind
lPG) 12:30)
3:00 (J) MOVIE: Till Wlkl Woman
ol Challity Qulcii(G) (2:00)
(l) Stelnld Qlaaa With VIcki

,.,...

ill
W:!:rworh FemUr
Movla

·· taR

w-··

DICDIIIII~

ngand

T•r
a.tarda

11
IB NaWI/HNIIIIWIIk
1D IIIII Valley
3:30 (V e 01 NFL Uvt (Time
may vary)
(l) Woodworking lor
Evary- Stareo.
18 ln·Fithllman AngUng
Aelvanturet Stereo.
ill NIWI/YOUI MoniJ
3:35 Ill MOVIE: A Teate ol EvU
. 11:30)
3:46
Ole Collagl lluatball

e

4:00We 0 NFL FOOibltl
(l) Marcla Adame: Hearttarljl
Cootllng Stereo.
(J) e MOVIE: Claoprrtra IPt
2 ol·2)1Gl (2:00) .IIJ
Movie
' Family
ill). ACF C
·
t1J Wllcomi"llack, Koller Q
18 Truekl and Trector.
Po- Tractor puling
competition lrom
Owenabolo, Ky. Stereo.
D I!CIA v- In Review
18 Nawa/llportl Clo... Up
iDOunamokl
4:30 IZj Frugal Qounnal S~ereo .

wrc·

Wllllllng

011 Iaing lanlld'l

w.........

Martin

1;30 IZj MaW Yanlcll Worklllop

~ wcw Pro Wrealllr•
. (l) . . , lliGirlo

(!Wind In the Wlttowt

'q;:~' ·.

0

C ......

TWMIJ

· 8 Tole ArlrlOIII Did

.

. ..,...

Ooft&amp;o Gamel

........"""'.OlllniO

18 Nawamallar
1:31 (J) l'llllln' With
WllaDft .

Naxt~C

liZ e WKRP In Clili:innati
tiJ MacGyvar ""

a~

Ill Capital Gang/Niwa
8aNewa
.
~ Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop
7:30(V e Roaatn'e H-1
(J) .1DO,Ifdil F-na Hunt
· 1111 C11ll Exploalon .
aJ e Ohio Caall Exploolon
18 Ofturch • - • Station
0 ~FL Prtr111Time
ill NeWI/Iporta lltunlay
8 . WKRP.In Cincinnati
ID SlaCk StalliGfl Steieo. Q
7:35 (I) NIIA lllk.U.U los
Angalls Clippers It Aflanta
He,wkaiL)
e:oowe o Oolftn 01111 A
genfllman and his slater
reej)ond.to Sophia's
paraonalt ad. Stereo. Q
(J) llutta EJI
·
(l) Ac~Venturea ol Robin
Hood

IJJe ae'Who'alle
lou? ,Angala meets
oppoiiiiOn lrom Tony when
she wants to go shopping.
Stereo..C
..
(J) TrpVJa In Eurape. With
Rick llllvea Stereo.
1111 ID. MOVIE:·'Whltll .
Fang' Cl8-.ll~~vle
iPGil2:00) Sltrao.·
ill) • COP8 A SU
ld
copokllle~r
· i lost aldllty man.
Stereo,
.
t1J MOVI : ,_,, lack !lll
(2:00)

e OprJ llekatege Stereo.
II College..........,
Okllholna at Maanehuaatta
IL) -·.
IIIPII.....awaC
IP MOlliE; The lletlllghtere
!G) 12:30) .
1:30 III e 0 Walter and EmiiJ
Emily's slater comes to town
and middles In ~ne's
business. Stereo. !!I!.
(J) MIA llallc.U.N New
Jersey Nets at Chicago Bulls
IL)
· ·
·
&lt;ll e 18 e Glowing Paln1
Mlk~ trtea to arrange a skiing
trip IYtth Kate. C · ·
(!) tpiCIIhlp lirth: A
Qlobii(Mm
"
1111•
co;:;:=.r.,.,ld
• .·

diatrauiht inan who wants to ·
dle ..IR) Stereo.
• Graold·I*·Oprr IJ¥e

Stereo.
1:00 tV e IIJIImpty Nae1. D•.
Weston gains a 13-~r-old
apprentice. Stereo. _1;;1_
(l) Auaun CIIJ Lnlta Stereo:
(J). 18. l'oung Rlclan A .
good·tlme saloOn girt ·
shattet'a lhl ~of Lou's _
(list. Stereo. C
·
!D War Fila: Tfie Occult
·
HltiOrJ Ollha Thlnl 11*11
1111• WOIId'a o-arat
Stunttll Acar travels a ski
j~mp; two men ahere one
parachute; a man rtdea a
•
parachutHqulppld blka oft ···
a wata~all. Hosts: Ken Ober, ·
Catherine Bach. (R) (1 :00)
Stereo.
18 1111111 lraa. Stereo.
e llolh Sidle Willi Je11t
Jackaon
1:30 tV e 01 Nureaa A pafllnt
holds a nurse hostage and
• damando junk food. Stereo.

i
NIWI/I'UIIn W81ch
10:00 tV e 01 Slltlit Alex llama

r.::r"'

about Wadl~t aa they

-=:IIIMn·Q

D Wlllllr C1r Cilia Ill u

1.

11110(11 • . DIMd 11r ... Ill

IVININO

,_
.......... Allllll Stareo.

1:00 (II LIIIIJIM ollll llldl I
.

~

Q
~"····-­

(!)Will Iiiii I'!!

pcftalt. (R)

,

Ill u.s. (l,mpic Qald Flgurt "
Skating: NHK TT•o
'
(l) Nlw eo. •b r
·
(J). • • Till Commlah
CommlaaiOner Scali' a trtand •
hla a bloQdy encounter with ;
hllacl&lt;e11. Stereo. C
(J) Aualln City Lilliill Stereo.
1111 liZ e P.S.I. LUV UCody
Is the target of a killer at a .
berilll't pageant. Stlf'IO, "
ill) • llllllgiiiCJ Cell ... .
0 The I tlcfllhlll:•
~
18 Arr•ic:lt• lllualc lllop
Stereo. •
..
II NFL'a o-IMtllo-111 :·
Warriors, Wlzardl and

~

Wondl~.

Ill \VOIId .....
10::10 ID ...-n PlayhOYII Tha
rill end dldine ol a group
ol you~P~venue
soCiallttl'
.
. ®e ,Lighl
,_,Q
tiJ ..,_ llliiiiJ .
.18 Tax11 Cor-'ion Stereo.
ID llordar!own Q
11:00(V. (J) (J). Ill ill.

0 .......
~ IIOVIE: Molal HlllliPGI
12:00)
'

§•MOVII: H.O.T.l.Stereo.
tR) (2:00)
(J) ~ l'lna 8paciall
'

AIMnlo Hal
\

18 0prJ lacktllp Stereo.
ONFLPIIIMTima
18~Tonl(lht

ID llordtrto.n Q
11:30 III e Ill 11111 l'lllr Night
·

LiYI ~ Morltegila. (R)
Sllreo,

® MOVII: Onr; L1111r Down ''

6-:J'
I
ti
(PG) (2:00)

(1).,11'11

Ill
JlmSW..

®iiNWA Pro WI IIIIi I .

/

1111 NIW .ZDml Stereo. Q
7:00 \1! e 1111 Whttl ol F~
~ AuniWIJ With the Rlcli I
Famoua
(l) Wonderworkl FamiiJ
Movlt Stereo. Q
IJJeNaa New
IIJ!-1-Walk .
ill) e iii!Ster Trek: Till

ID IIOIIIm.•
&amp;:01 (J) ~ With Roland

ID llliClll~ II the Zoo •
11:0011!• 0 liVId"' the'ltl

·.

al
ceci8Nawa Q
Ill Nlwa/PIMide · .

w...~~~o.

Klanach

.

1:30!ilil,";&amp;=·.P ;::
~
I All!* Ster:t. , ·:

a PIIA Golf

D l'ly f=taNni lhl World
18 Nawi/SlJII With 1111

' 11::!: ....

lllllloldlitowrr Q . .
I:OIIJJ WOIId .CflliiiPIOiilhlp .

18 EartyPrlmli
·a e wcw Main Evant

. • Country IUichan

18111111/1111not.
T1. till' Willi

•• ,.,..Look

11J My Two Gada
18 c-try IIIII Stereo.

. ~l''ou"::::'Q

I

tiJ
D WOIId TodaJ

a•

®eALFC
t1J Ju'l lhl ten ol ua Q
18 Exciting World ol SpMd .
and laauty The N~SCAR
race achOOI; the H.D.A.A.
off-road championship.
Stereo.
D NIWifi'Uiure Watch
S:OO.Iil 8tlwt Julllca
(l) ·'lbla Old llolrll c
IJ) ~ I Fl! l'WIJ
Starao.
llli e
FSupe11tare of

Jollrnal
. .........kif'

(J) 11011

Doctor:

T_,

eo.....apondentetNe••

Q

·
18 ~· llllcltblll
Prt'llew
.
8 . Not Juat the NIWI
•
AFTERNOON
'(!) Till Oarrtta

e L111la Marmald

POOh

aNFLGame~y

. Vtttrlnlrj Macllclne

01 Abbott and Coatetlo
tiJ Dog llolrM
1D Snowmoblll Ski·Doo
Formula Ona Racing From
Beauselour, .CanedaiR)
llllntarnatlonll

(J)

·

..

DeN.
II Snow Sltllng Mogul TOUI'
from TeHuride, Colo. IR)
Ill Daylruk
8:30 IJJ le-tha unaa
1111 Ule c....C.a ,
aJ

18 QOina OUr WIJ

12:00 tV e BlturdaJ Vldaoa
.ro Soul Train

ill).!). Jlmaa KIMICIJ

Count.._.

ill). Gludge-

'11 Frupl Goutinet Stereo.

••
&amp;:OO())eHoma··~
II! 1\l()VIE: Charlli Cfian'1
Slcret 11 :30) ·
llllhoWIIz Today
5:20 0 NBC Nlglltalcll
5:30 Ill Flahing With Roland
Marlin
·
IJI) Ag WeeklftCI.Report
II IMSA Vaar In Ra'llew
Ill SporU LlteNiglll
1:00 (J) Lou Qrant
(I) Flahln' With Orlando
Wllaon
llll ID Palel Prottrem

•

~·Living With Alllinlla

J

. . ..

........·,.. . _

.. , ...... .

S.ATURDAY

~!~======~~~~====~
Pllntlng ·
. MOANING
II

1111 Thl Waltona
I:OIIJJ UIUe llouH on the

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~·

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'

•'

WEEKDAYS

e-.gNawa

I

.

0

This Is AHappy ~etirement

.

...

ID

1111 ~ Uttlea

'

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COOOOOOOOOOEE

ILY HOMES

'(

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UIA

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WIS

''· 11_

--

1991 turned into a dud for Paul
Hudson near the end of the year,
Paul, of Pomeroy, went to Grant
Hospital where dunng an examma,
tion he was found to have heart
problems. On Nov. 18 he was
scheduled for a triple bypass.
However, when the surgery took
place the surgeon was only able 10
do a double bypass. Paul was
scheduled 10 come home about six
days laier when he had a setback.
He had 10 return to surgery and a
pacemaker was placed in him.
He!£. getting along o.k. but has
other problems and is returning to
Grant Hospital for more medical
attention. Ho(\efully, 1992 will be
better for ·Paul.

··~

Sp•fGl D•al Now AuaiiG•r. for Otir

underway
~ 11 1111 Meip County Courthouse.
: Tlte olllcel of !Ito counly audi&amp;or
: ::r.1t1~~ !"""'"•re cour~ were 'om' pletely reniOdeled, corrirluio 3nd
. · sllirwclls, were painted, and new
iltlerD' sigugc wu inslliled.
't

honor by the Insurance Wcirrfen of
Columbus. He .was presented a.
certificate recognizing "outstanding
contributions to the J;!Ublk safety of
our community". Ray was also ·
featured on a billboard for the
· entire month at an intersection near
Fiflli Ave. in Columbus.
Chosen out of approximately
1400 oft'icers for the honor, Ray is
currently assiRned to the Patrol
Bureau on the Short North side
where he has worked for most of
hi s career. His co-workers and
supervisors praise his..e~ ten sive
knowledge of North Side residents
and activities which serves as an
invaluable resource in solving
North Side crimes.
Officer Stone's supervi sor in
recommending him for the honor
had this to say: "Officer Stone is
one of the most effective, depend·
able offic~rs I have ever observed.
He sets a slandard of performance
that serves as an example for all to
follow".
.
' Ray wus honored in 1973 as the
Exchange Club Police Officer of
the Year and received the Medal of
Merit in 1981 for his outstanding
record of felony apprehensions.
A graduate of Rutland High
School, Ray and his wife annually
make up Christmas. packages for
the homeless in his district and he
frequently buys lunches for some
of the down and out people in his
area.
Congratulations, Ray.

Not to worry. You're really not
going to turn into a cookie or a
piece of candy-it just seems like
it. Enjoy. When the goodies are
all gone you can get iniO an exer·
cise program--&lt;Jf course, to do that
you'll have to have a right. shoes,
sweats, equipment-but that's
another s10ry.

........ _...

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WTAP

Visit our model~.todi\Y for fuR' details..

'

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W'I'AH
WOWK

Purchw rour net~· All i\mericaf! llomt h)' March 31 , 1992 ~ nd rrrrivc aSI.OOO
manuf~eturer·~ rtbate. Whafs tnorr, you1 hr livimt in )OUJ owri .-ffordablt.
qualit)··hullt homr thl' llt'flnll."

'M.aiRoaa•

'.

by Bob
. Hoeflich

'

Clienll of the OptiOOs for Elders
~ wen: expressing concern
lbotl die piiDned phuc-out or the

. : .-.funded pmaillll.

Beat of the Bend ....

trophy in the Battle of the Bands in
Detroi~ Mich. The. band competed
in the contest by invitation pnor .to
marching in the Detroit Thanksgiving Day Pamde.
December
The Ohio Pallet Company faciti-·
ty on Rock Sp~ings Road near
Pomeroy was destroyed by a three·
aJarm blaze , In addrt&gt;on to the
building, equipment and inveniOry
were also destroyed.
The Village of Middleport
received a $150,000 grant from the
Ohio Department of Development ·
to consuuct a housing project at the
site of the old Betsy Ross bakery
building.
Meigs County Chamber Direc·
tor/Economic Development Direc:
tor Elizabeth Schaad announced
that she would leave her post at the
chamber to assume duties as a
Regional Direct~(Jof Economic
Development unaer G.overnor
George Voinovich. Schaad's new
office is locall:d in Marietta.
Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens
was honored by the village council
for 19 y~:ars of service as an elected
village officiaL Pickens did not
seek re-election 10 the post and will
be succeeded by Councilman Jim
Pape.
2,412 deer were killed by
hunters in Meigs Coun!y_~uring tbe
county's gun season.
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and various county officiajs jumped-· into action in mid·
Dehmber to entice the state to
locate a new priSOn in Meigs County. Governor Voinovich announced
that Meigs County was one of three
counties in the running for th e
prison. ·
Bruce )Vilson of Gallipolis was
hired as princi pal at Meigs Junior
High School, following the rcassignments of Debbie Brennan to
PomerQ;y Elementary School and
John Lisle to Salem Center.
Pomeroy Village Council, faced
with bids considerably over th e
engineer's estimate, began to dis·
cuss alternative bids for the de·
watering portion of the village's
new sewage treatment system .
Meigs County Engineer Philip
M. Roberts announced that Meigs
County 'governments would
received $371,790 in Issue Two
funds for village street and other
capital improvement projects.
The Ohio Department of Tmnsportation announced a 1wo-and
one-quarter mile segment ·of US
Route 33 would be funded for
1994. The first segment of the
"Ravenswood-Pomeroy Connec10r" was described as ·"a campaign
promise fulfilled." ·

'

WEEKLY

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:·The year in review:-. _ ____,.______

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