<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10679" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10679?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T02:59:01+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="21123">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/faae2745f85b141563571f11625f281f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bcf5cff6b9c872ed6920322aac9e3623</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34020">
                  <text>•
Pomercy

Page 12-The Dally SenUnel

Community calendar ·
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that evenL Items
must be received weU in lldvance
to assure publication In the cal·
endar.
THURSDAY
POMEROY • Shade River
Lodge 453 will have open installation of officers Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Guests are welcome. Refresh·
ments wiU be served.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Sacred Hean Catholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for information.

Mountaineers will perform Friday
at Skaleland in Ripley, W.Va.
PO~OY

• Return Jonatl!an
Meigs Chapter, Daughter of the
American Revolution, will meet
Friday at I :30 p.m. at tl!e Grace
Church· Parish House. Mrs. Kay
Cecil, antique collector and
appraiser will present tl!e program
"Antiques· Bits of Our Heritage."
Bring a small antique to share.
Hostesses are Mrs. Dwight Mil·
· hoan, Mrs. Cecil Blackwood, Mrs.
Michael Elberfeld, Mrs. Gary
Moore Jr., Mrs. John Rice and Mrs.
Artl!ur Skinner.

department is invitecl. All attending
bring a covered dish.
.

.

POMEROY • Grace EpisCopal
Church will have ill 811Dual meet·
ing and potluck Sunday following
the worship service. Meat will be
furnished.

Country singer Garth Brooks ~
ropes in most Billboard awards ~·
•

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Country superstar Gartl! Brooks won
seven trophies Wednesday night at
the 1m Billboard·Music Awards,
including best pop artist and coun·
try singles artist.
The Irish rock band U2 captured

Boyz n Men performed.
•
Winners were based on. world·
wide mconl sales, radio airplay ani
marbtplace tallies as compiled by
Billboard magazine from Nov. 30,
1991,to Nov. 28 of this year.

Dallas drops
11th straight

Pick3:

NBA contest

Pick 4:

899
7089

Page4

c........

.,_llolntta

tonight Laor III'OIIIId 30.

SaturdaJ, cloudJ. Hlgb _,. 441.

•.·

..

TUPPERS PLAINS · Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. Members
are urged to attend.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will sponsor a round and
square dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. with music by Smokey Moun·
tain Drifters. Everyone welcome.

POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S•gma Phi
Sorority, will meet Thursday at 6
p.m. at tl!e home of Donna Jones
for a Christmas party. Bring $5 to
$10 Christmas items for the
exchange.

ENTERPRISE • Annual Christ·
mas party of the Willing Workers
class of the Enterv.rise United
Methodist Chutth wdl be held on
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Marge Bowen. There will be a $3
gift exchange.

HEMLOCK GROVE • The
Meigs County Women's Fellow_ship will hold its monthly meeting
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. a~ the Hemlock Grove Christian Church. Officers will be installed. Public invit·
ed.

. SATURDAY
POMEROY • Breakfast with
Santa wiD be featured at the Meigs
County Museum in Pomeroy on
Saturday from 8-11 a.m. The cost
is $2 for children under age 10 or
$3 for tl!ose age 10 and over. The
menu includes pancakes, scrambled
eggs, bacon, sausage, breakfast
breads and beverage. There will
also be crafts for the chih)ren.

Vol. 43, No.1&amp;2

Smart.'kry sinarr.
TV

w/Remote

$269

95

.

Come ·In and loot over these
unmistakable Holiday
B~gains. This sale lets you treat
·your budget kindly and enjoy
~~--value ... ! .
Reg. *259 RECLINERS .........1199
Reg. '359 RECLINERS ••••••••• 1289
Reg. *369 RECLINERS ••••••••• 1299
Reg. *379 RECLINERS ••••••••• 1309.
Reg. *499 RECLINERS •••••••••1399

MONEY FOR EDUCATION· Checks
totaling $3,372 were issued to Meigs and Mason
County schools in tbe McDonald's of Pomeroy
McBucks ror Education Thursday evening. Here
Teresa Davis, Meigs vocal music teacher,
accepts a check from Rnsclie Mills, owner/opera·
tor. Others attending to receive checks were

Meigs and Gallia Counties are
both in the 27-county area where
beginning Jan. 1 mine subsidence
insurance becoines mandatory.
According to the Ohio Insurance
Institute (Oil) and Ohio FAIR Plan
the new law affects all basic property, homeowners, farm owners,
and mobile homeowners insurance.
Insurance policies, whether new or
renewals, will provide coverage for
one to four family dwellings locat·
ed in the designated counties.
The initial premium by the Mine
. Subsidence Board of Governors for
coverage in the mandated areas is
$3. The legislative guidelines have
from the lert, Joy Sfewart, Carleton School;
set a cap of $5 per policy.
Suzaaae Bentz, Meigs Junior High School;
"The 27 counties identified for
Sheila Connolly, Tuppers Plains Elementary,
mine subsidence insurance cover·
John Riebel, Meigs Couaty superintendent· of . age contain the majority of Ohio's
schools, and Greg Mills, McDonald's supervisor.
abandoned and active mines," said
Daniel J. Kelso, Oil president.
"Homeowners in. these designated
counties should realize that this $3
investment protects their property
from damage caused by the collapse of mine shafts." .
In Meigs County there have

Meigs schools share $3,372
in·McBucks edu,cation program

Thirty -one Meigs and Mason the money - Meigs Junior High it will be extended for the period
Co~nty schools_and school .organi· school for .computers, Meigs High Jan. 1 through March 31. He again
zatmns shared m $3,372_ g1ven by vocal _musiC department, fundmg invited the schools or their organiMcDonald's of Pomeroy m the first for tnps, and _Carleton ~chool, zations to participate and suggeSted
J!hase of the McBucks for Educa· -classroom supphes and eqwpme~t. that posters be made to display in
uon program.
.
The program was B;l_so carr1ed the restaurant to encourage comTI!e program which gtves t.us· out through t_he. _R•pley a~d munity suppon.
tomen ~ McBuc:ks for each)I_3. ~S~nccr..,WeatS~ wtth . ..Mills r.aid..thl\t the program
~~~Y ~nt m tl!e restaurant was mf:- R"oati(iiiliTae&amp;iii Courny schools gained ·mojllentum each month durttated tn September. For each rece1vmg another $3,000.
ing the fall promotion as more peoMcBuck turned in ~ve percent of
A~ut 123,000 McBucks were pie became aware of school efforts
the food sale went mto the educa- turned 10 for f!Je thff.C month penod to collect McBucks for special prolion fund.
of the promou_on.
..
.
jects.
School representatives gathered
Roscoe Mills, owner/operator,
Customers making pun:hases at
at McDonald's Thursday evening announ_ced that due to the o~er- McDonald's must ask for McBucks
to receive their education ~liars. whelmmg respons~ to the f~rst when they pay.
Several shared how they w1ll use McBucks for Educatton promotton,

RftLAID FURNITURE
BUY ANY 9n THRU 27" PORTABLE AND GET A 5 YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANn.FOR '9.99
(Offer
12/31192)
\,UI~UK TV
25" TV w/Rtmott
27" COLOR STEREO TV
w/Remote
Stereo or Picture·i•·Picture
.w/Rtmott
w/Rtmott
95 112566
$ .
$
RS1970C
RP2545A fow Choke
$469~ 5

9'5

$299

995"

1127401

RS27UC
I .

MEIGS CHOIR PERFORMS • Tbe Meigs
High School Choir, under the direction or Teresa Davis, perrormed Wednesday evening on the
newly constructed stage on the parking lot in
historic downtown Pomeroy along the Ohio

Zlnilh

zr ~ SENTRY

Control color

ot.ITS Stereo wldbx Noi1t Reduation olklifild TVNCR rtm·
ole control oOn-ICIIIn Menu

Mon. lhru Sal 8:30-5,
Clolt 11 Noctn .on Thur....y

Decoder •30 on-IICI'een
Display of'ldure-ii-Pidn Fllln • Triple

7SHOW
ROOMS

FREE
DELIVERY

742-2211

CREDIT TEAMS
10 Dayallama M Calh
LAYAWAYS WELCOME

1·100.137..217
MAIIITIIII • IUILIID, OHIO

WASHJNGTON (AP) - Con·
sumer prices edged up a tiny 0.2
pen:ent in November. the govern·
ment said .tOday, as the nation con·
tinued to enjoy low inflation.
The Labor Department said the
increase in iis Consumer Price
Index was the smallest since it rose
a similar 0.2 percent in September.
Many economists had forecast the
barely perceptible gain.
The November advance fol ·
lowed a 0.4 percent jump in October caused by one-time special fac·
tors, including a record 7 .'~ percent
jump in the cos! of airline tickets as
last summer's fare wars came 10 an
end.
For the ftrst 11 months of 1992,
inflation has been rising at an annu·
al ra1e of just3.1 percent, the Same
as last year. ·
The report on consumer inflation came just a day after the Labor
· Department reported tl!at prices at
the wholesale level fell 0.2 percent
in November after posting modest
gains each month since a similar
,I.

drop last January.
"Disinflation is still in place,
panly because the recovery is so
weak, partly because of excess
capacity,' • said Lawrence
Chimerine. senior economic coun·
selor for DRI-McGmw-HiU, a Lex·
.ington, Mass., economic forecast·
ing service.
"The weakness in Europe ere·
ates another dis inflationary force,"
he added. "It's a very competitive
environment. I think it will contin·
ue for a while longer."
The latest survey of 51 top
economists by the Blue Chip Eco·
nomic Indicators earlier this· month
found a consensus forecasting that
consumer inflation would rise 3
percent this year and 3.2 percent in
1993.
Consumer prices rose just 3.1
percent last year. down from 6.1
pertent in 1990.
Food prices fell 0.1 percent,
wiping out October's 0.1 percent

increase.

been identified 137 abandoned
mines and two active mines, while
in Gallia County there are 86 aban·
doned mines but no active mines.
Kelso added that mine shafts
have been lcnown to crack foundations and walls, causing thousands
of dollars in damage.
The new legislation, Sub. S.B.
224, was signed into law by Gov.
Geo~ge Vm!X'v1ch on May 5: ~ne
substd~ncc msurance v.:as ongmal·
ly available on an opttonal basts,
acco~ding to Ellen R: Leshe v1ce
pres1dent of Operauons ~o~ the
Oh1o FAIR Plan w~1ch adm1rusters
the.plan. She explamed that coveraile prov1des for !~sses caused by
mme subs1dence. The coverage 1S
equal to th~ amount of co.ve~age
bemg_ provtded for the _Pnnclp~l
dwelling ~r $5_D,OOO wh1ch~ver IS
less. Leshe sa1d. A deductible ~f
two perc~t of_ the coverage ~vat!·
able apphes, ~th a $250 mm•mum
and s.soo m~lmum. .
Mine subsidence m~urance covers the ~st of exca~atton or grad·
mg, bmlers or cngmes below the

under sUiface of the lowest basement floor or where there is no
basement below the surface of the
ground, and _underground pilings,
piers, pipes. llues, drains, and pil·
mgs below the watermark.
Coverage does not extend to
industrial or commercial buildings,
dwelling buildings which are commercially rated, outbuilding s,
barns, land. trees, crops, plants or
contents.
Included in the 27 county area
where mine subsidence insu!"8nce
become mandatory are counties m
the eastern section of the state,
Athens, Belmont, Carroll,
Columbia, Coshocton, Galli a,
Guernsey, Harrison, Hocking,
Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson,
Lawrence, Mahoning, Meigs, Mooroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble.•
Perry, Scioto, Stark, Trumbull,
Tuscarawas, Vinton, Washington,
and Wayne.
·
In the area are 4,138 abandoned
mines and 13 active mines. A total .
of 760,000 properties are eligible
for coverage.

MOGADISHU. Somalia (AP)
- The country's two mam war·
lords called for a cease:fue today
after a groundbreakmg U.S._-

arm!lic;li.!!!!:~!i!!ll·andorderel\!heU

fighters to .clear out of the cap1tal.
The announcement by Gen .
Mohamed Farrah Aidid and Ali

Mahdi Mohamed did not however,
call on clan gunmen to surrender
their we~ns. .
And 1t came JUSt ho'!rs aft~r
their fighters slugged 1t ou~ tn
Mogadishu and relief workers cow·
ered in fear in the lawless interior.
Aidid and Ali Mahdi shook

Meigs bikers to assist Santa
The Meigs County Bikers will
lend Santa Claus a hand this year
by donating toys to children in
some 300 needy Meigs County
families.
Almost 15 carts full of toys
were purchased at Big Wheel in
Pomeroy on Thursday morning,
using funds donated through col·
lection containers placed in area
businesses and fund raisers. Once
purchased and bagged, the toys
fiUed two cars and a pickup truck.
Toys collected during the bikers'
annual Toy Run will also be donat·
ed.
An application procedure was
used to determine eligibility, and
those doing the shopping yesterday
knew the age and gender of the
children who would receive the
toys . The Meigs County Health
Department and United Methodist
Cooperative Parish have agreed to
distribute tl!e toys to families.
Toys will also be donated to
Serenuy House. a facility in Gallipolis for abused women and chil·
dren, and Head Start. a pre-school

program operated through Wood·
land Centers.
The toys will be wrapped on
Monday night at the American
Legion in Racine, and a spokesper·
son for the group said that volunteers are encouraged to assist the
bikers with the wrapping. Distribution through the two a~encies will
begin on Tuesday mornmg.

hands warmly after the meeting,
which an Aidid aide called "very
cordial, very amiable ... Everybody
was hugging and enjoying the
camaraderie of one another."
It was not clear however
whether the warlords: call would
be heeded.
The warlords issued' a communique that said !hey had agreed on
an "immediate and total cessation
of hostilities" and restoration of
unity of the political party they
once shared, the United Somali
Congress.
The communique called for
breaking "the artificial lines in the
city," presumably meaning an end
to the division of the city between
the Ali Mahdi-conlrolled north and
the Aidid-run south.

Ellison clarifies statement
Joe Ellison, CEO of Peoples that we need occupants in those
Bank in Point Pleasant, W.Va. has buildings and that Main Street
clarified a statement he made at Point Pleasant and Main Street
Tuesday's meeting of tl!e Meigs West Virginia. as well as the
Mason County Chamber of ComCounty Chamber of Commerce.
Ellison, in discussing common ' merce and the Economic Develop·
goals with the Meigs Chamber and ment Authority are workin$ hard to
Mason County Chamber of Com· get occupants in those bu1ldings,"
merce, of which he serves as presi- Ellison' said Thursday.
"When you take on a project
dent, commented on the "Main
like
Main Street Point Pleasant, it
Street" downtown revitalization
causes
people to be attracted and
efforts of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
interested
in coming to Mason
"When commenting on the
County,
and
that's what we're try·
empty buildings in downtown Point
Pleasant, I should have clarified · ing _to do."

Tax office to be closed
The Middleport income tax
o{fice will be closed, Dec. 24
through Jan. 4 .. To receive credit
for December payment of taxes, the
amount must be paid at the office
before Dec. 24 or postmarked by
Dec. 31, Carol Cantrell, tax admin'
istrator, advises.

days unt1l
Christmas

.•

Warlords call for cease-fire

River. The choral concert was sponsored by
. Farmers Bank. The group will appear on
WOWK's Sounds or the Season on Christmas
Day around 11 a.m.

Consumer prices
post small advance

SJ27241'

We Ale Op111:

A Mulllmedla Inc. NewePflper

Mine subsidence
insurance
.
to be mandatory January 1

BURLINGHAM • Modern
Woodmen of American Camp
7230, Burlingham , will have a
Christmas potluck Saturday 816:30
p.m. at the Modem Woodmen Hall
'" Burlin):ham. Turkey, ham,
mashed potatoes, dressing, rolls
and drink will be provided. Bring a
STIVERSVll..LE • Brother Jerry • covered dish and table service. The
Cotterill will speak at the camp will deliver dinner to the
Stiversville Word of Faith Church elderly sick and shut-ins at 3 p.m.
on Thursday and Friday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor David Dailey invites
CHESTER • Evangelist Ron
·Marc, Winter Garden, Fla., will
the public.
speak at New Life Covenant
CHESTER· Shade River Lodge Church of God in Chester at 9:30
No. 453 F&amp;AM will meet Thurs- a.m. and 6 p.m. on Saturday and
day at 7:30p.m. Open installation Sunday. Pastor Gary Hines invites
will be observed. Refreshments the public.
will be served.
LOTIRIDGE • Country Music
PIUDAY
Night at tl!e Lottridge Community
LONG BOTIOM · Faith Full Center will be Saturday. There wiD
Gospel Church in Long Bottom be a potluck at 6 p.m. and bands
will have preaching and singing I will perform from 7 p.m. to mid·
Friday at 7 p.m. A special group night. Ev.eryone welcome. .
will be performing. There will also
be local Singers. Pastor Steve Reed
SUNDAY
invites tl!e public. Fellowship will
CHESTER • The Chester Fire ·
follow.
Department Christmas party will be
Sunday at 5 p.m. Everyone who
RIPLEY, W.VA.· Liberty participated in fundraising for the

MAGNAVOX

1 Section.. 12 Pages 25 _,..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 11, 1992

Copyrighted 18ft

LONG B01'TOM ··"The Glory
of The Lord," a Christmas cantata
under the direction of Sue Mathe·
ny, will be presented Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Long Bottom United
Methodist Church. Everyone wei·
come.
.

RRI940W

five awuds, inc1udinJ belt·album
rock net ror "Mytlaious Ways."
The aw.dlwere pm-t..t 81 a
two-hour ceremony. Pltil Collins
was host, and Goaesls, Arrested
Development, Richard Marx and

.

ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 6:30p.m. There will be a potluck
dinner. Meat and table serv1ce will
be furnished. There will be a white
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA. ·Liberty
elephant gift exchange. Brln~ non· · Mountaineers will perfQflll Sa!Ur·
perishable items for a Chnstmas day at the Jackson County Jam·
project.
'boree in Fairplain, WtVa.

•

Ohio Lottery

TOYS SELECTED • The Meigs County
Bikers will provide Cbrlstmas'toys to cbildrea In
300 lieecly Meigs County families. The toys,
bought witb dooatioas aad tbrouah fuad raisers,
were purclhtsed at Big Wheel fa Pomeroy on

ThurSday. Pictured as the sliopping was com·
pleted are, l·r, Jane Slater, Sherry Swisher,
Breada Davis, Patsy Price, Cathy Meadows, and
Becky Thompson. Also pictured, front, is Matt
Meadows.

:
:_.
'

�\

,.•

Frldlly, DeCember 11, 1892

.Commentary

Pomeroy Middleport, O~lo

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Dec. 12

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy llddleport, Ohio

By The Associated Press
A storm warning remains in
effect for extreme eastern Ohio
today, and some snowfall is expected to continue over the state today.
Snow accumulations of 3 to 5
inches aie possible over extreme
eastern Ohio. ·Accumulations of
about an inch are expected in
north-central and southeast Ohio.
Little or no accumulation is expect·
ed elsewhere.
.
High temperatures today should
be in the mid- to upper 30s. ·
The snow will taper off to flurries over eastern Olno tonight with
a chance of flurries over central
_regions.
Lows tonight will range from
the mid·20s in the northwest to
near 30 degrees in the southeast
There will be a chance or flurries over the northeast on Saturday.

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

Customs loses money in failed Texas bank:

WASHINGTON - Before beeause it was 1 federal agency.
depositing hundreds of thousands But they were rebuffed by their
Ill COIIIt Stnet
of dollars in confiscated drug bweaucratic brethren at the FDIC,
Pvlllei!VJ', Ohio
money in a recently failed Texas who are treating Customs- which
' Dft'0'11tD TO THE ll'ITZIUCil1'8 or TIIB JIEIQ8.IIASOJII .A111tA
bank, the u.s. Customs Service
should have heeded .the warnings
that are posted on the front door of
J Jj
every federally~nsured institution:
Insured only up w$100,000.
ROBERT L WINGEIT
Embarrassed 'Customs officials
II" h
[ B" t '
now find themselves exposed to
LrdC ae . IRS
Publllher
large losses because of uninsured
funds
they deposited in the First ironically falls under the Depart·
PAT Wllfi'EHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFJ,.ICH
City
Bank
of Houston, a chain of ment of Treasury - like they
Asslslult PubUsber/Controller
General Manager
20 banks owned by !he First City . would an elderly retiree or wage
Bankcorporation of Texas which earner. "They're (Customs) basi·
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
went belly-up in October. Customs cally saying, :Why don't you cut us
words. All !etten ore slibjoet to editing and must be·1igned with name,
concedes that it had upwards of some slack, and we're a governllddress and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be published. Lellen
$400,000
in uninsured deposits at ment agency like you,"' said one
should be in gqod wr.e, addressing isoues, not penonalities.
First City, while other officials put source familiar with the unusuaf
the figure closer to $1 million.
intra-governmental debate.
At first, Customs didn 't cotton
Alan J. Whitney, director of corto the idea of being treated like any porate communications for the
pther unfortunate customer. FDIC, although refusing to comAccording lo numerous govern- ment on this particular case,
By JOHN CUNNIFF
ment officials, Customs pleaded explains there is no legal basis for
AP Business Analyst
behind-the-scenes for special treat- treating the depositors of a federal
NEW YORK - If there is any one financial belief on which most ment with the Federal Deposit agency differently than any other
.elected officials now agree, it is that budget deficits are evil, which makes Insurance Corp., the agency that depositor. "There is a basic quesmore amazing their easy tolerance of red ink for two decades.
insures deposits in the nation's lion of fairness," says Whitney.
' Deficits have persisted so long, and so many promises of reduction · commercial banks.
"Granting preferential treatment to
_have led to increases instead, that President-elect Clinton may be viewed
Customs apparently argued ·that a government agency would cause
liS in a mere pro-fonna mode when he tells Congress he expects them to it should be allowed to cut in line greater losses to the other unin'be tough on spending.
.
.
ahead of other uninsured deposito(S sured depositors." ·
,• Congress tough on spending and deficits? Congress, which has shown
.rare abilities to spend, and rarer abilities to save? Congress, whose habits
have been developing over so long a time they are institutionalized? ·
· Joseph DioGuardi, a fonner congressman who is also an accountant,
says that if business JlOOP,le handled their finances the way Congress does,
Re&lt;:eS$iON
,they would go to jail. Sull, he concedes, members of ll)e public let it happen, especially if the spending is in their region.
·
aVeR._
: In his book, "Unaccountable Congress," DioGuardi, a Republican
from New York, observes that "no member of Congress has ever been
hounded into disgrace and retirement because his or her sneaky budget
gimmick was exposed.' •
· Maybe they've been humiliated for extracurricular activities, but not
for gimmickry. Yet, he says, "!he phony accounting principles and budget
practices Congress delights in are a far greater threat to Ow- country than
anyone's sexual escapades ... "
· Congress, however, may be only part o( the problem or merely the
proximate cause. The public too shares blame, because the public elects
members of Congress, and tben often does not monitor !heir behavior.
The public too puts great spending demands on their legislators. The
evidence of that can be found in an~ of numerous lists of large local
spending projects, but even more significantly in the structure of tbe budget.
In fiscal 1990, for example, 40 percent of federal outlays were in the
form of transfer payments, or entitlements, such as unemployment benefits, Social Security and Medicare. How do you cut these in the face of
rising demand?
What can be cut, bit by bit, are the lillie things, a lesson that most
households have discovered for themselves over the past few years. Pork
barrel items should be cut, of course, but well-meaning but sen~less
spending tOO.
· Scott Hodge and other scholars at the Heritage Foundation, a conserva. live think tank, defif!e ·areas and criteria for what they say are se'lsible
.
cuts.
~
\ . ..-.
·
s
,
.
1
~
:, 1. Federal programs that serve on! y localized or special interests rather
than the nation as a whole should be eliminated.
.· 2. Programs that have failed, fulfilled their mission, outlived their usefulness, or have simply become irrelevant should be eliminated.
"The time is out of joint; 0 thing, a number of bloody civil
, 3. Programs that duplicate or contradict the missions of other programs
cursed
spite{That ever I was born to wars are raging in various parts of
should be streamlined or merged.
set
it
right!"
the world: in what was formerly ·
.. 4, Programs or services that have identifiable users should be supportThus
did
Hamlet
rail
agajnst
the
Yugoslavia, 'in the Caucasian
ed by those users rather than taxpayers.
Fate that had saddled him· with an
unwanted responsibility, and the
United States today knows just
how he felt.
Having won the Cold War
against the Soviet Union, this country found its~lf, as "the only region of the former Soviet Union,
remaining superpower" on a in the Sudan, in Liberia, and in Sri
WHAT
shrinking globe, in the position of Lanka, to name only a few: Starvabeing able to decide what ought to tion of truly appalling proportions
'(OU
be done about almost any interna- has taken 300,000 lives in Somalia
tional problem that arose. By coin- already, and a thousand more vici'HINK A&amp;oUi
cidence, the first one - Saddam tims are dying every day.
In the latter case (and also, to
Hussein's invasion of KuwaitAL.L TI-\E
'
constituted a clear and present dan- some extent, in the case of Bosnia),
CI-\AN6~S~
ger lo the whole global economy. the need for food and medicine is
President Bush brilliantly mobi- paramount, and the obvious answer
lized domestic and world opinion - indeed, Ollf humane obligation
against
Saddam, and this country - is to provide it. But in both
•
Ct\AKGES2
spearheaded
a triumphant counter- cases local military forces arc
'
"
attack tbal briskly ousted him from thwarting the delivery of relief supKuwait. So far, so good:
plies, so the problem turns out lo
••
But since then Fate has been have imponant military aspects as
considerably less cooperative about well.
•
the sort of international problems it
What should our policy be?
•
has
put
before
the
United
States,
Should
we adopt a strictly hands•
clamoring lo be resolved. For one off posture, unless this country's

Bv "ack Anderson
and
eln

.
~(:ongr.ess

cut spending?

oo·vernment sources in Texas'
Half of the approximately i 11 ·
bank failures this year have result· and Wash inglon say that Customs
~in uninsured depositors suffer- found itself awash in millions ill
mg some level of loss. In the case cash after a rash of seizures from
of First Ci_ty, there were 5,000 banlc Colombian mo~ey launderers thiS
accounts m excess of the insured fall. In such cases, Customs turn~
limit for a total of $260 million. ·the money over 10 a local bank for
custodial purposes where it can be
CUSI011JS and Other uninsured
depos•tors are expected to recouP. ·stored ill a vault until a detennina•
80 percent of their . uninsured tion is reached about whether cash
money. But that would still leave samples are required as evidence. :
Had Customs kepl the cash in
the agency with wha~ is known in'
the
bank vault(ffor safekeeping:
!lan~ing oarlance as an $80,000
First
City' s co lapse would not
"hrur cut{,
have
left
the agency's mqney at
Asked by our associate Dean
risk.
But,
at
some point, Custom~
Bo~d why t.he deposit insurance
officials
opted
to transfer Sotne of
llmll was disregarded, Customs
the
cash
from
the
vault to an inter:
~pokesma.n Bill Anthony argued,
est-bearing
deposit
account - an&lt;!
It wasn t hke a Customs bank ·
in
chunks
larger
than.
the $100,000
account that the taxpayers had, it
insurance
threshold.
,
was money that they grabbed from
''We
didn't
shop
around
and
put
a ~g de!tler. They put i1 in there
w1th no 1dea that the bank was it in seven! different banks,"
Customs going to fail. ... (But) you're proba- Houston-based
spokeswoman
:Judy
Turner
bly right. They could have been
acknowledged.
''That
bank
appar.
more careful."
cnlly
had
an
agreement
with
us.
Drug money or not, it still repre- ·
W
c
JUSt
chose
tbat
bank."
se~ts cash for the government.
The inCident has left otber feller,_
Se1zed drug monies are typically
al
banking
officials baffled. A veri- .
shared with local law enforoement
table
death
watch had hovered over
agenc~s that assisted in the seizure
First
City
for
many months, with
ojleraliOn, or are routed back to a
rumors
of
its
impending
demise gen_eral forfeiture fund 10 buy
the
stuff
of
daily
front-page
head·
eq 01pmcnt
.
.......;,;_
lines and television reports. First
City is also the first institution ever
rescued.twice by federal regulators.
In 1988, the FDIC contributed an
· emergency infusion of more than'
$900 million for a bailout plan' fm:
the bank. In addition, Custom9
sources say that concerns over the
bank's health were aired at a Cus'
toms office meeting before thO:
bank failed, but were apparently.
dismissed.
.
."1 don't see how many employees would know that a bank was.
about lo go under. Holl( man y,;
banks have gone under in Texas?Il's a common story," argues Turn-,
er.
Though deposits in excess of
$100,000 have always been at risk,
until recently the FDIC frequently.
protected both the insured and
uninsured. Customs is among thou,
sands of individuals, corporations.
and even charities that have recent.
ly suffered for ignoring the gold-·
colored FDIC stickers that greet all
bank customers.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein ·are writers for United
F~ature Syndicate, Inc •

_____

GReaTNeWs. SiR!
rile

iS

.

~

'

f\1

.t&lt;:

Hi:f !-I

"'

~

'

j

Let the United Nations intervene ·
WiUiam A. Rusher

Berry's World
DO

.

;:

I

'

....
•...

WH#\T

,

.

'•

"vital interests" are clearly at is going to build up rapidly on Mf.
stake? Or should we send our Clinton in the case of Bosnia.
anned foroes off to every comer of
Why not tell the United Natior(S
t)le globe where civil war threatens that henceforth the military resolu. "stability," or local warlords inter- tion of international problems no.t
rUpt the delivery of food and clearly threatening the global ordc;r
medicine to the needy? Or should will be its responsibililj, and that it
. we- as Acting Secretary of Stale ·had better create a blue-helmeted
Eagleburger suggested on the mullinational expeditionary forc.c
Brinkley show recently- not have capable of resolving them? The
a uniform policy at all, but judge United States would 'contribute its
each case on its meritS, intervening fair share of the necessary funds
here and refraining there, as the and troops -and would, of course,
spirit (or the opinion polls, or the retain its usual veto over any
TV reports, or the relevant ethnic · deployment of the force that it
obJected to. If Jhere were logistical
pressure grqups) move us?
problems in transporting the U.N.
It is President-elect Clinton who forces to the region in question, we
will have to answer that question, . could contribute the transportation
and one sympathizes with him. For unilat~rally. But any dying would
one thing, he may not always have be done on a strictly international
much choice in the matter. A suffi. basis, by soldiers who volunteered
cicnlly painful situation, brought lo serve under the U.N commanhome to the American public by ders.
Failing some such solution, the
dramatic television .coverage, 'may
United
Statbs is well on its way tO
give rise to demands for interven·
becoming
the world's policeman\
tion that any president would find
fireman
and
nanny.
'
difficult to resist. That seems to be
William
Rusher
is
a
syndical•
what happened to President Bush
in the case of Somalia, and there ed writer for Newspaper Enter_~
arc plenty of signs that the pressure prise Association.

.

•
•
•
••

Why the joy of Christmas is lyrical

•
•

•

•

•••

.
..••

••
•

'

•

1:Today in history
:· ·
By The Associated Press
:: TOday is Friday, Dec. II, the 346th day of 1992. There are 20 days left
in the year.
•• Today's Highlight in History: ·
.
·
: · Two-hundred years ago, on Dec. II, 1792, France's King Louis XVI
;:Went before· the Convention, which had replaced the National Assembly,
• to face charges of treason. (ConVIcted and condemned, Louis was sent to
: ~e guiUotine the following Januliry.)
·: On this date:
.
:- In J816,lndibbecametbc 19thSUiteoftheUnion.
•( In 1872, America's fmt black governor took office as PinclmCy Ben: lon Stewart Pinchback became acting governor of Louisiana.
: In 1928, police in Buenos Aires thwarted an attempt on the life of
·President-elect Herbert HpOver.
;. In 1936•. Britain's ~ing Edward. VIII abdicated in order to marry
tAmerican d1vorcee W!llbs Warfield S1mpson.
t; In 1937, lilly withdreW from the League of Nations.
~: In 194l,Gennany and Italy declared war on the Uniled States; the U.S.
•
dod in kind. '
.
~946. the United NlWns lntemational Children's Emergency Fund
{.:.'UNICEF") was establillted.
·
.
: · In 1961,-a U.S. lirtraft carrier c.tJ:rying Army helicopters arrived in
~T
the tint dim:t American mibtary support for South Vietnam •s
against Communist auenillas.
', In 1980, President Jimmy Caner signed into~ law legislation creating
t$1.6 billion environmental "superfund" 10 pay for cleaning up c}lemical
~lis lind IOxiC wasle dumps.
.,
' Ten years ago: In his weekly radio address, !'J'e~t-~~ Reagan .

-

•

...

!i

These are meditations based on
"0 Linle Town of Bethlehem"
(1867), by Phillips Brooks - it's
one of our most beloved Christmas
carols:
·
"0 "
Unless we arc careful, we are
likely to skip over one of the most
important words in the carol - the
little word "0."
When it is used as a numeral, i1
stands for zero, nothing. Even
when 'we usc the word in speech, it
often has little importance: "Oh, is
that so?"
But "Oh" can denore wonder,
rapture and delight.
I so well remember the nesponse
one of our children made when he
first saw the toy s.eclion of a
department store at Christmastime.
He was 3.
When he saw all the toys every-

where, he gasped in sheer amaze- . go there for help. Instead, we follow the crowds to the "big city,"
ment. " Oh ... oh ... ohi"
.
This must be Ollf response to the looking for the world's answers.
Christmas miracle. We must be like
But if it is Christ (or the power
and presence of God in our lives)
that we arc looking for, we will
have to go to lillie, ou_l·Of·thc-way
Bethlehem -or consc1ousness.
As one writer has put it,
"Where consciousness (thought)
a child in a toy store.
" ... little town of Bethlehem is, there a physi.cal symbol will
appear."
He meant that the external conThe "linle town of Bethlehem"
ditions
of our life will be of the
was the birthplace of Christ iOOO
same
quality
as the ideas we keep
years ago. When Christ is born in
our lives ("Be born in us today" is in our thought.
" ... How still we sec thee lie!
a line that occurs in the final verse
of this carol), his birthplace is our
We find Christ in the stillness.
consciousness- the deep places in
This
doesn't mean thill by buying
our mind and henn.
.
ear
plugs
or getting off. into. a quiet
. Consciousness is truly a "little
place
we
will
have an cxpenence of
town." We assign it a very small
part in our lives. How seldom we
God.
II means shutting our minds, not
only our ears, to the din and clamor
urged the· Sena1e Ill Wile for procLnion funds tor lhe M-X missile, and of the world so that healing
worry 1111« about lhe ... . . , mode" for die YleiJIOI!. (Relpn bad sone thoushts of Christ will have a
on record favoriD&amp; lhe COIICIC•asilll ''dcnle pEt'' .,..._)
·
chance to come in and bless our
. ~ "NATO" all;:f:." the U.S. Sawc to ntify the lives.
m
.
ll'hfte ~
y, llld llllllencoed their IUJlPOI1
The trouble with our usual way
·by p~ to lellhe Soviet t1Dion illspect miaile bales in fi....: Europeail of meditating is !hal we let our
countnes.
minds dwell on the human problem
One year qo: A jary in West Palm Jleach, Fla., ecqu.iaed William
and not enough on the divine soluKennedy Smith of ~mUll
Ill and beaay, n:jec:tina the allegations of
tion.
Patricia lklwnwn. wbo lliid Sllllth bid llped ber. Ewopeilil QlmliiUllity
In spiritual meditation, we
leaden rneeling iQ the DUd! city of Maulrichl hammered Dltt a c:Omj!roimagine 10 ourselves what the situmise for a loose fedcntion of their countries. · ·
'ation confronting us would be like

...

George R. Plagenz

..

.

..

in heaven - the world of perfec~-\
tion. We lose ourselves in the glory
of that world and see ourselves ,
enjoying the harmony, joy and :
peace !hat exist there.
:(
We do this until all thought o,f 1
the material world leaves us and a ;
wonderful stillness comes over uS: :
This is the stillness in which Chris~ :
is born.
·l
" ... Above thy deep and dream· 1
less sleep ... "
I
We think good thoughts mpch :
of the time. We read the Bible, -lis; 1
ten lO the Word of God in church I
and say our prayers. Yet our lives :
often don •t show any change for ;
the beuer.
·•
It isn't that we disbelieve these
things we say, hear and,think. It.is 1
that our belief in th(\m doesn •t gq I
deep enough.
I
Thoughts, like seeds, grow only :
if they get down deep below the :
surface where nothing can dislodse :
them.
.
.,
Give yourself a test. Get your
Bible now and read the great
promises in Psalm 91.
I
Do you believe them as deeply 1
(that word again!) as you !leliev~ :
that two and two is four? Until you ,
do , you cannot count on these (
promises coming true in your life. '.I
George Plagenz Is a syndical~ ,
ed writer for Newspaper Enter· •.
prise Association.
'

i

l

'

IND.

•lcolumbuslago

I

W.VA..

Sllnny Pl. Cloudy ce:c~y

- - - - - W e a t h e r - - - -....
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
chance of flurries. Low near 30.
North winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance
of snow 40 percent. Saturday,
mostly cloudy. High around 40.

.

Extended forecast:
Sunday through Tuesday:
Sunday and Monday, fair. Lows
in the 30s and highs in the 40s .
Tuesday; a chance of rain. Lows in
the 30s with highs in the 40s.

--Area deaths-Harold McClaskey

Katie VanMeter ...

Harold L. McClaskey, 50, of
Katie VanMeter, 93. of Mason,
· 152 Jrvingwick Drive in Heath, died Wednesday, December 9,
died on Thursday, November 10, 1992, at her home.
· !992 at his residence. He was a forShe was a member of the V.F.W.
mer Meigs County resident.
Post #9926 Ladies' Auxiliary in
He was born in Racine on Mason.
March 2, 1942, son of the late
VanMeter was bom on February
Cecil and Rosa Lyons McClaskey. 18 •. 1899 in Plymouth, West VtrHe was a machine operator, ginia. She was tbe daughter of the
employed by Owens Corning late Pete and Flora Stevens NoUge.
Fiberglass, and was a veteran of !he
She was preceded in death by her
U.S. Army.
husband, Okey VanMeter, Sr.; four
Survivi~g are a daughter, Tiel
sons, Bobby R. VanMeter, Winfield
Dobbe, Kissimmee, Fla.; three VanMeter, Jr., William F. Vansons: Jerry Hayman, Lancaster, Meter, Okey VanMeter. Jr. and one
Harold L. McClaskey, Jr., Heath, daughter, Michelle VanMeter.
and Scon McClaskey, Lancaster;
Surviving are five sons, Winfield
l&gt;vo sisters, Ada. Gallgher, Newark, R. VanMeter. John L. VanMeter,
and Emileen Sayre, Racine;. and .George H. VanMeter, .Jackie L.
four grandchildren.
VanMeter, all of Mason, and James
Besides hi~ parents, he was pre· E. VanMeter of Boston, Mas·
ceded in death by his brother, Otis sachusens; three daughters, Eva G.
''Mac" McCloud.
Funeral service$ wiD be held on Gibbs, Rosalie Roush, both of
Mason. and Flora M. Brewster of
Sunday at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Cyclone,
West Virginia; two
Home jn Ponietoy, with burial to
daughters-in-law,
Mrs. Luella F.
follow in Greenwood Cemetery.
VanMeter
and
Mrs.
Dottie Ann
Friends may call at the funeral
VanMeter,
both
of
Mason; 34
hom~ on Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m.
grandchildren,
71
great·
~nd 7 to 9 p.m .
·
grandchildren and 7 great-great
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held on
Winners announced
Sanmlay,
December 12 at I p.m. at
· ' Winners in the Chrisbnas Givethe
Foglesong
Funeral Home. The
~way _ were drawn on Thursday
Rev.
George
Hoschar
will officiate
mornmg by members of Drew
and
burial
will
lake
place at the
.Webs_ter Post 39, American Legion.
Kirkland
Memorial
Gardens.
,1. Wmners were: Anthony Corsi ,
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
~300; Manning Roush, Pomeroy,
home
on
Friday
from
2
to
4 p.m.
$200; and John Hile, Middleport,
and
7
to
9
p.m.
$100.
(.'

~
:. -Meigs

announcements--

... Christmas meeting
. The Rulland .- Garden Club's
annual Chrisbnas meeting will be
beld at 6 p.m. Monday at the home
of Mrs. Vernon Weber. Members
are to take favors for Overbrook
and a corsage.

building in Cheshire.

Christmas party planned
Women Alive will have a
Christmas banquet Monday al. 7
p.m. at the fellowship hall of the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene. ·
Further information may be
obtained by contacting Ruth
Service time corrected
,· Evangelist Ron Marr. Winter ' DeLong at 992-2469:
Garden, Fla. , will speak at New
Homemakers to meet
),.ife Covenant Church of God in
The Syracuse Homemakers
Chester Saturday 7 p.m. and Sun. day at 9:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Pastor Club will have a Christmas party
Wednesday at I p.m. at the SyraGary Hines invites the public.
cuse Presbyterian Church. There
will be a potluck and $3 gift certifiFree clothing day
.
The Gallia-Mei~s Community cate. Bring table service.
Action Agency w11l hold a free
clothing day Tuesday from 9 a.m. Middleport CCL party
to noon at the old high school
The Middleport Child Conservation League will have its annual
I
Christmas dinner Thursday at 6:30
The Daily Sentinel
p.m . Secret sisters will be revealed
and
there will be an exchange of
(U8P8 J1S-Il80J
ornaments.
Pu61ilhed eveey al\emoon, Monday
lh""'ih Friday, til Courl St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Pabli•hiltl

Compony/1dwlimodio

Inc.,

Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2166. Second cWo

poot.qe pojd at PornBroy, Ohio.
,..ember: The A.uoeiated ~. and the
Ohio Newapaper Aai!OCialion, · National

Mverdai"' ~~o_.,ntative, llrolihom
Newa,-ecn: S.., 733 Thmt Awn1111,
NewYon,N... Yon 10017.

. POSTMASTER, Send addrua cha"'.. io
' The Daily Sentlnil, lll Court St.,
l'&lt;nnoray, 0Hio45769.
8UB8CRIPTION RATB8

.
BT Carrier or Motor Ro•te
·
OM Week...................................... ..... $t.60
OM Monlh ................... ....... .......... ..... l6.96
OM Yoar.... ........... ......... ................... ap.ao
,
SINGLE COPY
..
PRICE
DoRy....... ....... ............,..................:ul Cenla'

S!lbocriben nat ....mn, fD poy tho conl;r may nmit in lldo..:e direcl to TM
DaUy Sen~nel on a three, 8ix or 12
moat.h biN. Credit win be (lven curitr
1Dachwnk.

No au...,.ptiona by mail pormitlecl in
where home cw.nier Jet'Yice il
iYoiloble.
llaU SaMrtptloM

-~

-·Co-b'

...

_13 WeeuJaalcle
....... .... ,...........................,.$21.84
26 Weeu.............................. ............ $43.16
~2W..U ............. ............................. $84.76

~f

O.Uide • l p C..aty

aaWew.............. ............................$23.40
.112 w..u............. :..............,............. t88.40
i:l6 w..u........................,................. Uli.IIO
•

••

The Dally SenUnel Page ,. 3

Parts of. Ohio remain under storm warning

'

Accu-Wealber• fmc:ut for

Frlct.y, December 11, 1112

I

Dance planned
The Royal Oak Dance Club will
hold its annual Christmas dance
Dec. 19 from 8-11 p.m. al the
Royal Oak Resort. Music will be
provided by the Doug Hess Quartet A snack buffet will be served.
Live nativity
A live nativity will be featured
lit Father's House Church in Hart·
ford, W.Va. on Dec. 19 beginning
~~ 6 p.m. Pa~tor Clyde Fields
mVJtes the public to view the nativity.
Coin Club
Members of the OH KAN Coin
Club will meet Monday at Dale's
in .Gallipolis for a Chrisunas party • .
Plans will be made for the March
21 coin show.

Hospital_news
Veterans Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Levy Foster, Reedsville.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
Sharon Ward.

Highs statewide will range from 35
lo 40 degrees.
Arouad lbe nation
A powerful low pressure system
dumped rain along the Atlantic
Coast and blanketed much· of the Northeast and Midwest with snow
early today. ·
Forecasters predicted snow
would cover most of West Virginia, Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio,
New York state and parts of New
England today. Rain was expected
along the coast from Baston to Virginia.
A Pacific Northwest stonn was
forecast to d\lmp rain along the
coasts of Washington, Oregon and
Northern California and cover the
northern Rockies with snow.
, Winter slorm warnings were
posted for today in Ohio, Peni\Sylvania, West Virginia, New Jersey,

New York, Connecticut~_Mas·
·sachuselts, Rhode Island, Nevada
and Northern California.
Forecasters warned wind gusting to 60 mph could cause heavy
snQwdrifts, beach erosion and
coastal flooding from Virginia to
Massachusetts.
Thursday ni¥bt. the system hovered over Virgmia and North Car·
olina, blanketing much of the midAtlantic region and Appalachians
with snow and drenching coastal
regions with rain. The 1.79 inches
of rain in Wilmington, N.C .• broke
its 1888 record of 1.44 inches in
one day.
Up to 20 inches of snow accumulated in parts of western Mary·
land during the day, with drifts of
snow up lo 5 feet deep in the
region.

The low pressure system pushing eastward in the Pacific North.
west dumped snow and rain Thursday in Washington, Oregon, Idaho;
Northern California and Nevada. ,
H1ghs today were expected to
reach the 20s in Maine and north:
ern Minnesota; 30s in the rest of
the Northeast, the Midwest, the
northern Plains and the northern
Rockies; 40s in the southern
Appalac~ians, the cenual Plains;
the southern Rockies and tbe Pacific Nort!lwest; SOs in much of !he
Southeast, the southern Plains and
Northern California; 60s along the
Gulf Coast region, Tex.as and
Southern California and 70s in
southern Arizona and southern
Texas.
The high temperature for the
nation Thursday was 85 degrees at
Brownsville and McAllen, Texas. .

Meigs County Court petit jury list drawn for January term :
The following names have been Margaret L. Henderson, Pomeroy; Slone, Albany; Vickie L. Rowland,
selected as potential Meigs County Patrick Michael Sheridan, Tuppers Dexter; Judith Diane Adams,
Court wtit jurors for the January , Plains; Ruth E. Carr, Pomeroy; Reedsville; Carolyn Sue Smith,
1993 term: Raymond D. Priddy, Sheryl A. Patterson , Pomeroy~; Pomeroy; Paul F. Dill; Pomeroy;
Middleport; Dean V. Hill, Racine; Clara L. Robie, Pomcro.y; Mary Joan Marie May, Rutland; James
Mary · B. DuVall, Reedsville; Teresa Byer, Syracuse; Terri Lynn Keith Abels, Racine; George H.
William Thurl Kimes, Racine; Hayman, Portland ; David Alan Schneider, Syracuse; Jason Alan
Cannel L. Evans, Racine; Kristina Lewis, Pomeroy; Kathleen G. Rupe, Rutland; Sherron Sue SimpLynn Ctmnolly, Reedsville; Bar- Clonch , Middleport; Tina Louise son, Pomeroy; Larry Gene Sayre,
bara Jean Connolly, Racine; ·vir- Beckett, Albany; Carrie F. Rutland; Randall L. Tackett Sr.,
ginia M. Hanson, Vinton; Larry Kennedy, Middleport.
Vinton; Hallie Robertson, SyraRebecca K. Phillips, Rutland; cuse; James Matthew Werry Jr.,
Horace Farley, Long Bottom; Jerry
J. Grueser, Minersville; Bertram B. Leo Story, Pomeroy; Margarel L. Racine; Carolyn Ohlinger, Racine;
Grueser. Minersville; Rhonda Sue Story, Middleport; Helen Louise Mary L. Butcher, Pomeroy; KathDavis, Pomeroy; Dorothy M. Ebersbach, Middleport; Keith B. - leen M. Ward, Portland; Janet K.
Reeves, Pomeroy; Bessie A. Darst, Harris, Reedsville; Teresa K . McDaniel , Albany; Reba Jean
Middleport: Anna Marie Wolfe, Blackwood, Rutland; Marilyn L. Stout, Syracuse; Pamela S. Yost,
Racine; Lula Mae Quivey, Middle- Hyalt, Albany; Phillip Roger Harri- Coolville.
port; Gay F. Johnson, Albany; son, Pomeroy; Jason Andrew
Charles L. Neutzling Jr ..
Lynne M. Crow, Middleport; Amott, Syracuse; George Benjamin Pomeroy; Arzilla Fields, MiddleJames L. McHaffie, Racine; Joni Skinner, Pomeroy; Sandra Rcnea port; Paula J. Butcher, Pomeroy;
Lee Carrington, Albany: Cheryl Hart, Pomeroy; Raena L. Eblin, Kendi Rae Utt, Racine: Bo Frazier.
Lynn Carpenter, Racine; Beuie I. Pomeroy; Raym on d Franklin Racine; Mary Magdalene J&gt;arker,
McGuire, Pomeroy; Elizabeth Rose Adams, Racine; Rebecca M.' Pomeroy; Dennis Eugene McKin·
Amoriya, Pomeroy ; Alpha · G. Amberger, Racine; John E. Neville,
Butcher, Pomeroy; Margaret Mary Pomeroy; Dixie Ruth Sayre, MidMcCar!ney, Coolville.
dleport; Timothy W. Thoren,
Gwinnie Lucille White, Middle- Racine; Tamara Lynne Theiss, Divorce granted
A divorce action has been grant·
port; Connie L. Rankin, Tuppers Syracuse; Roy R. Humcr, Middleed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Plains; David E. Napper, Rutland; port; Ruletta Agnes Roberts,
Court
10 Jo Leigh Goode from
Mabel Marguerita Michael, Mid- Pomeroy; Woodrow Wilson Hall,
Todd
NorviUe
Goode.
dleport; Johnie 0 . Smith, Middle· Racine; Teresa J. Doughty, Albany;
port; Rocky R. Hupp, Long Bot- Ira Kathryn Quesinberry, Albany;
tom; Cecil E. Johnston, Langsville; Gwendolyn K. Martin, Middleport; · Marriage licens'e issued
A marriage license has been
Richard A. Peyton, Dexter; Bill L. Frances L. Carleton, Pomeroy.
issued
in Meigs County Probate
Henderson, Dexter; Jerry Lee CleMartha D. Hag gy , Pomeroy;
Court
lo
Shawn Eric Goble, 23,
land, 'Pomeroy; J uni_qs E. Marks, Virgil Clinton King, Pomeroy ;
Ewington,
and Audrey May Lam·
Albany; Jack Francis. King Jr., Michael J. Roush, Shade: Emogene
bert,
22,
Ewinglon.
Pomeroy; Rhonda Y. Gomez, Rut- J. Simms, Albany; Helen Kathryn
land; Charles E. Casto, Albany; Windon, Pomeroy; Wanda L.
Rutland Court news

Court news

r---------------~----

Beat ofthe Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Middleport's Mrs. Jean Fisher
who has been undergoing outpatient treatment at the Mayo Clinic
in Minnesota since early November
asks that I extend her deepest
thanks to you at this time for all of
your cards, letters of encouragement and prayers.
You •ve really done it great deal
for her morale - and that's impor·~ant when you're facing problems
such as Jean's. It appears that Jean
will be spending the Christmas holiday season in Minnesota - the fmt
time to be away from the home in
Middleport. You might want to
.soften the experience for ber just a
bit with a holiday card. Here again
is the address: Mrs. Jean Fisher,
Best Western Soldier's Field, 401
Southwest 6th St., Suite 61 ,
Rochester, Minn., 55902. By the
way, Jean's writes that she's getting along pretty well.
Beverly Wilcox Miller, formerly
of Meigs who has been serving as
the voice of the Marshall University Band in Huntington, W. Va.,
during the past football season
band shows, is also keeping busy
with her vocal work. Beverly is
nol only singing with the Huntington area Sweet Adelines but also is
singing with a barbershqp quartet
called "Reprise». Incidentally, it's
interesting that Beverly is bass with
the group:

in the 28 or so member group
meeting occasionally at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. If
you are interested in such a meeting in Pomeroy please notify Rhonda Dailey, RN, BSN, director of
nursing, or Linda Jones, administration employee, at 992·2104. If
the interest is there for tbe Pomeroy
meeting, then the group would
meet for the first time here on Feb.
21.
Purpose of the organization is to
aid in the rehabilitation of ostomales through visits, educational
material, moral suppon and mutual
understanding.
The Meigs County Health
Department has wrapped up its nu
shot program for the year. There
were a few special days set aside
for the shots and the numbers ran
high-since then it's been a slowed
down process.
At any rate, the department
administered 1,690 shots this year,
according to Jackie Hildebrand.
The thrust of the program was 10
give the shots to as many senior
citizens as possible and that turned
out 10 be the bulk of the 1,690.
In the under silo ;rears old group,
seven children rece1ved shots; 42 m
the seven to 17 years old group; 17
in the 18 to 24 division; 161 in tbe
25 to 44 years old group and 234 in
the 45 to 59 group. The remainder
went to senior citizens.
And here's how many people in
your iownship received the immunization from the department:
Bedford, 79; Chester, 174;
Columbia, 10; Lebanon, 35; Lelart,
27; Olive, 68; Orange, 82; Rutland,
118; Salem, 63; Salisbury, 631 ;
Scipio, 51, and Sutton, 299.

Meigs County has eight men
and two women who are patients at
the Athens Mental Health Center.
The Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post39, American Legion,
is taking care of seeing that these
patients are remembered during the
holiday season . You can leave
.your contribution of a safe giftunwrapped-at the Quickel InsurNow did I read that correctly?
ance Agency in Pomeroy.
Yes, I did. An advertisement dated
Dec. 9 advising that it's time for
There is a 'group known as the "last minute» Christmas shopping.
Gallipolis Area Ostomy Associa- Unless Christmas has been back·
·tion and this group has been meet- dated and we haven't heard about
ing on the third Sunday of each it, we can hardly be in the "last
month al the Holzer Medical Cen· minute» mode - can we? Do keep
. ter and Pleasant Valley Hospital. smiling.
Some interest has been expressed

FRUft PHARMACY
.
.

II IIIDDLIPOIIt

WILL II DPIII FROM
·DEC. 14-11 DllftL ID P.M.
FOB YOUR IIDPPIIIG
. , CDIIIIIIIIICE.

•

Rutland Mayor Edward Martin
fined the following this week :
Dwight Bolton, McArthur, speeding, $54; Misty Crews, Gallipolis,
speed, $52;. Dennis Boyd,
Pomeroy, speeding, $49; Michael
Clark, Rutland, speeding, $48;
Mark Davis, Gallipolis, left of center, $50; Guy Troyer, Pt Pleasan~
W.Va., speeding, $50; Becky
Tillis, Gallipolis, speeding, $48;
Jasop Wallace, Jackson, speeding,
$52; Keith Hicks, Ewington, speeding, $49; Ronald F. Reynolds, Middleport, expired tags, $75; Robert
Kennedy, Rutland, DUI, FRA suspension, expired tags, $723; Andy
Vance, Rutland, illegal plates,
squealing tires, $90; James Council, Langsville, speeding, $52.

EMS units answer calls
Meigs Emergency Services
units answered the following calls
for assistance: THURSDAY, 7:23
p.m., Rutland unit wenl to Nichols
Road, Sharon Ward to Veterans
Memorial Hospital ; II :57 p.m.,
Middleport unit to the police
department, Chris Rayburn to Vel·
erans: FRIDAY, 8:12a.m., Middleport unit to Railroad Street, Hazel
McHaffie to Veterans.

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dec. 10 discharges - Lisa
Masters, Ramona Smith, Roscoe
Gabbert,'Bryson Adkins, Mrs. Glen
Hosellon and daughter, Patricia
Thompson, Charles Casto, James
Underwood, Sharon Clarke, Anna
Shoemaker, Eva Peterson, Freda
Miller, Mrs. William Woods and
daughter, Eula Stafford, Joseph
Miller, Taylor Butler and Angela
Canode.
Dec. 10 births - Mr. and Mrs.
John Holsinger son, Bidwell.

Lottery numbers
Pick 3 Numbers
8-9-9
.
Pick 4 Numbers
7-0-8-9

ney, Rutland; Deborah M. Harris,
Portland; Matthew Dillard, Rutland; Jack L. Frederick, Middleport; James R. Frecker, Middleport;
Anthony Ryan Miller, Rutland;
Richard L. Wamsley, Racine ;
Jessie A. Curtis, Pomeroy: Mary E.
Wells, Middleport; Dorothy G.
Roush, Langsville; Richard D.
Sauer, Middleport; Sharon Lquisc
Vance, Pomeroy; Michael B. Staggs, Middleport; 1ames Richard Carpenler, Middleport; Dottie Lou
Pierce, Shade; Williain A. Taylor,
Long Bottom; William Manson
Hannum, Long Bottom; Charlotte
A. Hanning, Pomeroy; Bert F.
Christian, Albany.
Bulah G. Casto, Pomeroy; Raymond Clair Cassady. Tuppers
Plains; Carolyn S. Elam, Pomeroy;
Lois Ann Deem, Tuppers Plains;
Harold Dana Brown, Pomeroy;
Floyd Ernest Brown, Middleport;
James F. Weber, Middleport; Darla
N. Thomas, Syracuse; William T.
Fink, Middleport; Penni Elaine
Carr, Reedsville; Debra Jean
Lyons, Reedsville; Jack E. Rankin,
Coolville; Richard A. Mees,
Pomeroy; Jeffrey K. Snowden,
Rutland; Philip Donn Ohlinger,
Pomeroy; Pamela Marie Jude
Pomeroy; Henrietta O'Brien:
Shade: Cora M. Marr, Pomeroy;
Belly A. Carpenter, Racine; Roger
H. Roush, Racine; Sharon R.
Edmonds, Rutland: Elizabeth Tulloh, _Middleport; Harry G. Brown.
Racme; James F. Carter,
Reeds-:rille; Alyssa M. Eddy,
Reedsville.

Frazier named
substitute teacher
Michelle Frazier was employed
as a substitute teacher on an asneeded basis when the Meigs
County Board of Education met
Tuesday evening in the board
office.
Discussed at the meeting was a
request from Mark Boyd for additional hours in his position as attendance officer. Boyd is hired on a
half-time basis with other hours as
needed.
Membership in the Ohio School
Boards Association for 1993 was
approved. The board made budget
adjustments to correct for sick
leave, personal leave, and vacation.
The organizational meeting was
set for Jan. 12 at 7 p.m. 10 be followed by the regular January meeting. The treasurer's report wa s
approved and payment of bill s
approved.

Stocks
Am Ele Power..... ~ ..............31518
Ashland.Dil....................... .25 118
AT&amp;T................................. 48 SIB
Bank One...........................48 3/4
Bob Evans ......................... 19 5/8
Charming Shop.................. I?
City Holding ......................l8 1/4
Federal Mogul...................J 7 318
Goodyear TilR ..................68 1(1.
Key Centurion ...................20 318
Lands End.......................... 27 1/4
Limited Inc....................... 27 1(1.
Multimedia Inc..................27 1(1.
Rax RestaiUJIIIL .................. l/16
Reliance Electric................ l8 114
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 15 3/4
Shoney's Ine ......................24
SWBank .......................... .33114
Wendy lnt'l........................ l2 1(1.
Worthington Ind................ 22 518
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis ~IDd Loewi ol Gallipolis.

�•
Fr1ay, December11,1112

'

·s ports

The Dally

The Daily Sentinel

In continuing l!aseball business,

P.irates acqtJire Pepa; Yankees
sign Key;. Mets snag Tanana

Friday, December 11, 1882
PIQI 4.

In NBA action,

.

.

, ~Minnesota beats Dallas 111-88 to hand-~avs 11th straight loss
By The Aaoeiated Press
• No mauer how bad their opponents may be, the Dallas Mavericks
are worse. Nearly every night
. . ~~ which has won only
ftve times m 16 games; was too
'

'

Xantu City at N.Y. Gianta, 12:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at San Fnnciacp, 4 p.m.

Sunday, Dec:. :ZO
p.m.
Mimc.ou al Piuabur&amp;h. 1 p.m.
~. lllmlatGreeaBay, l

Wi.ll~Hill

New Enpnd at CINCINN'"ATI, I p.m.
Phoeniaat~i,,l p.m.
Wuhin~ tt
· tdclph.ia,l p.m.
CliclfO atllcoil, 4 p.m.
San Ditao 1t LA.IWdcn, 4 p.m.
Seattle It Danvr:r, 4 p.m.
N.Y; lef:~ at Miami, 8 p.m.

55

In the NBA ...

.S

New Jrney ............ 11

I

.579

I
10

.SOO

2

.474
.389
.2'14
.2&gt;67

2.S
4
5..l
5..l

Central DIYllton
OUcaao......... - ....... 12 S .706
Jndiana ................... lO 8 .556
Mll........... ........ .IO 8 .l56

~5

Aolam.a ·-···········-·····9

.526

9

.400

Blanchellc:r 58, WillWn&amp;blltJ 31
Bloom·CarroU 38, Tea)'l Vall. 31
Blulf""' 63, Spenoavill&lt; 5'!
Brooklyn 71, B"ehwood 22
Canal Wincheaed1, Flirlicld Union

Cin. Andenon 44, Cin. Woodward41
Cin. BaCGn 39, Cin. S1- Ursula 31
Cio. Colorain 54, Cin. Ahn lS
an.Cawolly Day 63. N.,..lo!Wni 31
Cln. finnoJIOWn 52, Cin. CAPE 49

5

C'an, Glen f!sa.e 85, Cin. Taf't 2l
Cln. Locilond 43, Cin. Sounmi1 40
an. Lo..W.d 63, N. Bomol Taytm- 3!
an. Madc:in 51, an. lndiln llill4!
Cin. McNicholu 42,. Cia. P\arceD-

MW..t IM't'blon

Pd.

W
Ulah ...................... ll

L
6

.647

-

6

.600

...................9

San Antllrtio .............l

.9

GB

.471
.431
.313

3
3.5
5.5

Dallu .......................l

.067

9

14

Paclnc DIW:IGn
4 .750
5 .706

PlooaW\ •••••.••. :•••••. .12
Podllnd.-......•...... 12
Seattlo................ -.. 11
L.A. Laken ............ 10

6

.647

6

.62S

L.A. Cil'P"' ········.Jo 1.
Ooldon Sule ..•..•......7 II

Marian 3S
Ci.n. Scloo 33, Cin. Umulino49
Cin. S......llilb s2, an. Lan~m

I

Denver .....................7 9
Mi..nna:oca ................ 5 . ll

!S

1.5

2
2.5
6
6.l

' my

Thursday's scores

53

Mi!IOOIOUtll,D&amp;IIu 88
S110Anlonio 101, Miami 91
Ullh 112, Wllhin .... 96

49

23
Ccnnmt Nonhoutem !51, Hillabom
ClniOol·MuaiO 62, Codarvillo 39
Col. Boochenoll 63. CaL Ccn"""'\&amp;1
Col Brookhaven 56, cO!. Eut 48
Cot Easunoor 63, Col.
33
Col. lnJ.J: ~-ocku~o Sl, Col. 8Dgp49
Col. Lin...,· MeKinley 36. Col.

w,.,

Ooidal State 114, ldii.WIIukCC 102

.
TonJcht's pmes

Jru:IWsa 106, Sacn~D~;~ft\.0 99

Wh-30
Col. NOilbllswl SO. Col. Milllio 3f

Ridac

Satde It Bolton, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Clipptn II PhU•delphll, 7:30
p.m.
Phoenil. at ()Qando, 7:30p.m.
Denver u Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Q.EVE1AND at Detroit, I p.m.
Hou~ at ~IJO. 1:30 p.m.
Wuhioo.... 11 L.A. I.Wn, 10:30 p.m.
Indiana at Porthnd, 10:30 p.m.

Cal. Walnut
56, Col. Marian·
Fnnklin 2IJ
ColdwMer 80, New Brancn 32 .

Colmnbia 45. Riohmond Hu. 26
Cohmbus Cln&gt;vc 46, Crida.,ill• P.,.

ry 20
Covcntty48, S~d,Y Vall. 37
Dofian&lt;e 52, Cdi'\138
Delphoa Je!Trnm SO, Kalida 4S
~ph'" Sl. John's 6l,Pari&lt;way 45
DCiu 53. Pauick Havy 43
E. Cinlon ~2, Yellow SpDnp 46
Fairbanb !56, Medianicsbwa 40
Felicity61, New Riclunond ~
f"W... C.lh. 41, Boooo Union 36
F011CI'ia 54, Qn.aon. Clay 44
Frtnklift hmace Groen 67,
Parumauth Notre Dame 37
funklin·Mooroe 63, Tri· Village 4l
SL ~-52, S...OOI E. 31
Ft. Loramie S9,:A.usaia 48

Saturday's &amp;ames

l'&gt;llllvil; n New York, '7:30p.m.

"loiWni. 7:30p.m.

-

Cin. W,.,...,. 63, Cin. M.m.m,.. 43
Cle. Erievi~w 70, Oe. Collinwood 66
Ce. Hoiahu Bol\l!IOOfto 78. S. l!uelid

Reain143
·
Qe. VASJ 70, Cie. SLJDICph Aead~

O..utouc II 0, New Yark I 03 (OT)
No,.Jeney Ill, LA. Clippen 105

;

Cin. St. Bemud 32. Batavia 29
Cin. Sycamon S2, MJI!ord 41
Cin. Wllnoallilll 33.Norwooc128
Cin. WC~~~an Hil.IJ 57, Cin. Wilhmw

41

.s

:sss
.!89
Sacnm..,., .............. 6 11 .353

O.W.atChulcue, 7:30p.m.
Philadolphia at Alllnta, 7:30p.m.
S.O.uleat Q.EVEI..AND, 7:30p.m.
New Janey at CUcaao. 7:30p.m.
Hauaan at MW-au, ap._m.
San An&amp;Onio at Dallu.l :30 p.m.
Mii.WIIulr.ct It lJiah, 9 p.m.
.
Oold..-. State at Sacramento, 10:30

fL Rooovcty 46. Min-43

p.m.

Goaben 34, Wilmin m 32
G!tndview 70, M•Z: Plainl 32
Onnrille 70, Liciina Hu. 42
Oreeneview 46, WayltiiVWe 36
Hamil""' 67, Flitfiold 111
Hamili.CI'I Bldin 47, Cin. MI.. Notre

Sunday's games
Wuhin~

aL Portland, I p.m.
lrtdilfta It LA. Oippen, 9 p.m.
Milwaukee at u:Laken. 10:30 p.m.

Oamo32

In the NHL •••

Hmilon 62, Cin. Hugha 36
Hawm46,LudocvoE. IO
HOilh 35, New Albany 29

WALES CONfERENCE
Pa&amp;rlck DI.YIIIon
Ttam
W L T I'll. GFGA

Holland Sclrin&amp;, 39. Maumee 30
HOUIIOn ~. Botkin1l0
Huntinaton 60, Ptint v.u. 41
Huron 62, Yennillm. 42
lndepaldeooc::e 43, Aurori 25
IncUan Lake48, DeGrilf Rivmide 38
Jackson 31, Wanen Loeai 1a
ldlnlt.own 73, Jonathan AldC:r72

PiaaliosJI&gt; .......... 20
Wuhin&amp;""'····-·' 15
H.Y. Rana"' ·····

New Ieney ...... ..

7 3 43 138108
13 2 32 111103
1411 3 31 115108
1412 I 2'1 93 93
10 12 4 24 104110

P!Udolphia .......
N.Y. Itlandm .... 1014 4

1A 109114

Adam• DIYblon
•.••. 18 • 4
B..................... l8 8 2
Quebec ............... 1s 10 s
Butralo ............... 1113 5
lllrllord ...•..•...... 8 18 I
OUawa ............... 3 26 2

40 125 90
381179l
35 130113
'I112&amp;109 ·

(OI)Ubaly CM. 39, X..U. Willon 2'1
Uberty Union 8!5, MiDcriPOn 20
Liberty-Benton 70, Rivcrclale 50
Uma Bath 74, WapU:ondl41
Li.nu Calh. 71, Miller Citt 57
Lopn Elm 65, Hamill&lt;n Twp. 37
London 59, W. Je.ffcnon 47
Luca~ville Valley 85, PoJUmouth W.
28
Lutheran w. 51, Cuyahos• Hu. 33
Lync.hbl.lr&amp; Clay 9!5, Cleoraetown 31
Manchccter 47, La~am Wmem 40
Ma&amp;Orl 47. Kin&amp;l 1!5
Mellemooa NW 72, Oak Hill44
Miami Vooll 62, an. SL RiLo 31
Middletown Fenwick 44, MiamisOOIJ

17 12123
I 68145

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Ncrrls INvilkMt
·
W L T Pta. GFGA
Chicaao.............. 16 1l 4 36 lOS 91

Tt1m

- . ........• 16 10 3 35 104 91
()euoil.......••• ••.•• ll l l I
31 133121
TorooiO ........ ....• 12 12 4 21 15 90
SL l.ouil ............ 11 14 4

26 106118

Tampa Bay ........ 10 18 2

22 106118

SmytlM Dlokloo
I 3
Van&lt;:Oilvcr ......... 17 9 2
Calpsy ... ,.......... 1610 3
Edmonton .......... 11 1~ 4
Winnipq; ........... 115 3
Sanl01e ........ "... ~ 23 I "

LooAnJd-....... 19

•

•

17

N. Baltimore 53, Old Fort 37
New Pnlladelphia 39, Can&amp;on Timlr.cn

41 139107
36 121 19
lS 116 91

211

216 15121

19 IB IOS

Z1
32

W. O.C.tc~Lakou 64, Middletown

WaLCdorcl64, RcodiVillc Ea1tcm !51
Waverly fif, S. Webs~&amp;r45
Wsem Btown 6S, Bethel·Tate 62
WOOitCr 89, Uniomown.l.ake 32

'

Olcn&gt;an&amp;Y l6, llobronl.lke......t 42
Opo:n Door 62. Llkollidae 211
OU..w• Hilla S4, Tol. Otnl\i.an 44

Transactions
Baseball
Atatrtcaa Lea•e
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - R•·
•iped Brian Dubois, piu:her, to 1 minorleap concnct. and •J81'1ed Edgu Alfan·
zo, infielder, .nd R.af'ad C1uvet, pit.cher,
to minor·leape c:onuacu.

DETROIT TIGERS - Aareed to
t.erms with Tcm Bol.ton, pitcher, on a ·~e­
yeu oontnct.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Ae ·
q\W'ed Mike Oucauo, llhorutop, from the

Milwal.lteo Brewen: for CuiO&amp; Maldona·
do, pitcher, and usiSf!Od Guerrero to Om·
aha d tlM American Association. AlfCOd
tcuns with Ne.IJon Santovenill and Paul
Williama, catchers; Keith Brown and E~­
·riquo Buraot, pikbcn; Russ McOinni&amp;,
f111t bascmm·lhird. baseman·cau;her; and
SiJ Campusapo and Mike White, outfield·
crs, on minOr-Icas~ae conttactt and II·
sianed Santovenia, Brown, McGinftil,
Campunno ~nd Buraos to .Qmaha and
William~ and White to Memphi1 of lhd
Southam Leai\IO. Promoted AUcn Baird,'
acout, to national CfOII checll..er. Named
letT)' Tcrrdl. Herb Rayboum and Frank
to

Baezacow.
NEW YORK YANKEES - Aped 10
1am1

with Jimmy Key, piceher, on a four-

year contncL

""'-'Lioso•

- CINCINNATI REDS- Aarecd to
with T:oy Menir and Brian Dtnett.
catchea: Gary Gr..a, iaficklcr; and Jeff
Kader, pltdlct, on minor-lolpe contneta
and aui&amp;ned them to lndianapolil G( the
AmericaJ;I. Association.
'
NEW YORK METS - A1reed to
tmnl widt Prank Tanana, pitcher, on •

terms

St. l..oWI3, San Jose 2

Tonlaht'a eames

Hattfonl It BuffalD, 1:40 p.m.
N.Y. ItlsopnllT- Bay, 7:~p.m.
P!UoWrJI:"IlNowl~, 7:~

p.m.

Saturdoy'•comet

8odfllo .. lllrllaod, 7:40p.m.
W1NUp1t: at N.Y. I•...... 7(40p.m.

Now,....,
.. Pllu-.7:-10p.m.
Wlllllnpls PllilodJphU, 7:40pm.
It

- I t T . . . , . Bay, 7:40p.m.
CaJpqM.OUwa,lllOp.na.
-~~--I : IOp.m.

Oololp 11 - - . I:IO p.m:
~otSIIll-10:40p.m.

St. .........La&amp; Aaploa.l0:40p.m.

Sund•Y'I pmea

·.

7:40p.m.
IWII!tr'" w. N.Y. 1'illadM II Okll·
11 N.'l'. -

City,l:40p.m.

~~~V-.IO:IOp.m.

'

· • Ohio men's college

basketball scores

~"_

L-_..._-_"_·W_ilmillf-_
.

_. ·

l

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

I

,_.oy~.

204.Condor Bt

IIW .... I WillA lllnll
CLOSED MONDAY
OPEN TUE.IDAY THRIJ FRIDAY

on a one&gt;-year oontrlct.

-IAIUPM

SAT. I All-t2 Noon

~THE

Ma•hed Potllloee &amp; Gravy ·
Graen Bean• and Muehroom•
Hot Buttered RoH
Coffee or Small Drink

,,

Natlon11 luketball Allodatlon
HOUSTON ROCKET~ - ActivalOd
Tree Rallina, &lt;*llcl', from the.injured lilt.
Placed Kcruwd Winclat.cr, JU•rd, on the
injuted lilt.

$429

We Will le Closi•1 llo•rl•y, Der. J4
for rite Holirl•p
ltlfllr ·CHIISTIU$
IIA,r NEW rEAl!

••rl

'\['t'/Jtlllijlt ·' (1/ ( '/t(.'/L'i
RESTtHJRANT
~

ROUTE 7

CHESTER

&lt;~IVL

I'lL

SUJIUI, l.lll.'LIIC, IU

LJI:Ol.Ulll&lt;l

'

=

CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
POMEROY, OHIO

301 E. Mllll ST.

r

FOOihaU

~-McEnroe

declines tQ announce his
,retirement
after
tournament
loss
·
•

NEW ENGLAND PATAIOTS -

~

I

1992 CHEVY lUMINA

Auto., air, stereo, loaded. $199 Down
6 To Choose From.
$199 Jill mo.

Porter, aafety.

Hockey
National Hock., Leaaue
NHL - Awudecl conditional u.panlion rrancnila, lO bcain play either nell
a cason or in 1994-95", to South Florida
and Oranae Coun1y, Calif.
SAN JOSE SHARKS - Recalled
Claudio Scremin, dcfenaeman, from
Kan$11 Chy of the lntemali011al Hockey
WJUC.

1992 CHEVY CORSICA LT
Auto., air, stereo. air bag.
$

$9 999

SI64Doww$164p• ... ASLOWAS

·

NCAA - Named Lt. Oeneral
Claudius Waua u \he NCAA Cou.nci1'1
rcpracntati.ve on the Ae.demic ReqWrementl Commiuoc; Lindl Moult.oft u tho
Cauncil'1 repreeanati.ve. m the EliJ;ibility
Commiure; and Ni.lton Sc:htooder u 1
m""ba- oflhe Eli&amp;ibilily C.....UU...
BAYLOR - Jilamod lwly McColl""'

744·4

anti-lock brakes. SIS4 per mo.

79 9 9

loaded.

.!::t::::.:::
•

ONLJ12,999

$149 DoWI
$149 per 11'1.

$6999

windowa &amp; locke. AS LOW AS

1oI 999

1987 OLDS CIERA
Auto., air, nice et~r.

~4995
ca
CD 1985 MERCURY COUGAR·
N

.Do

1933 FORD E\(01{1
'

Rune •nd looks' good! .

$2495

5

:

'·

I·· I

I

I

'I

:! •

2695

1983 OlDS. DElTA 88

Only 55,000 mila., 1 owner,
.
Ilk• n•w.

$3999

1985 FORD RANGER 414
5 epeed, etereo, clean.

$4495

$148Down
$148 permo.

1988 DODGE

DAYTONA
Bright rad, auto., air.

$3995

$108Down
$108
mo~-~j!IJI!!i9i

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
HOURS: Mon.·Frl. 9:00-8:00; Sat. 8:00-4:00;
Sun. 1:oo-5:00
TAX l TITLE FEES NOT INCLUDED
ALL PAYMENTS 8U8JECT TO BANK APPROVAL

•

Saying it was best to go when
he was still playing good tennis,
McEnroe satd Thursday that he
won't be playing any more,tournaments.
McEnroe's swan song was cut
'

-•

CD
CD

NI

en
en

-

short by big-hitting Goran lvanisevic, who beat him 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 in
lhe quarterfinals of the Grand Slam
Cup.
Was that it?
"I suspect, yes," McEnroe said.
" I am not going to announce my
retiremenL I feellilce that's it, but I
can't say for 100 percent what is
going to happen.
"I don't personally think you
will see me playing !Dumaments. I
lhinlc you will see me playing S&lt;Jr!le
exhibitions here and lhere, llopefully against the best guys because
that would be a lot more interesting," McEnroe said.
Allhough he said he was goin~
to "step back and re-evaluate,'
McEnroe's lhoughts were clearly
turned to a future without tourna·
ments.
"I feel like I could do a good
job as Davis Cup captain," he said.
But it would on his terms,
McEnroe said, not on lhe terms of
tbe U.S. tennis establishment. He
agreed, however, that it may not be
wise to change die winning formula. Tom Go~man has led the team
to three straight finals and two

~~
By JIM O'CONNELL
the nrstsix games or the season.
• WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)Corey Taylor led Iona with 19
,.Terry "Dehere wasn't scoring and pointsandHarryHartadded 15.
i Se1011 Hall was in a zone defense.
Arturas Karnishovas had 15
: · If you walked in during the rust points and nine rebounds for the
: fialf of the Pirates' game against Pirates and 7-foot-2 center Luther
"{ona on Thursday night, you would Wright had 13 points, 10 in the
•.have had to do a double talce.
opening 6:11 when he dominated
~ Dehere, who came in averaging down low.
::Z4.5 points per game, had two at
No. 25 Nebraska 100
:J!alftime before ~iraightening lhings
_Creighton 83
.
!'OUt with 16 in the second half. The
At Lmcoln, · Neb., Enc
!:seventh-ranked Pirates went back Piatlcowski scored 21 points and
b o the man-to-man defense they're · Ne~ used scoring surges at \he
·~own for and too1c a 75-61 victory .start of each half to down lis
:over the Gaels at the Westcltestcr intrastate rival .
~County Center.
Platlcowski scored nine or his
~ · In olher Top 2S games. it was points in the fmt five min.ftes of
:_No. 11 Oldahoma 92, South Caroli- the game as Nebraslca (4-0) jumped ti~es .
lila 761 and No. 2S Nebraska 100. out to a 12-6lead.
"I thinlc the decision should be
~rdghton 83.
Center Bruce Chubick, who made in the next few days. As far
~ "I was not mentally J'!'Cpared at started in place of the injured Deras I am concerned, the decision
~ sran and I have no idea why,"
rick Chandler, triggered the sec- should have already been made,"
!l}ehere said. "It was one of those ond-half surge, scoring six of McEnroe said.
wghts where you do everything to · Nebraslca's first 11 points as the
Andre Agassi has been camepare iiS you always do but yoil Hus~e_rs led 53-38 with 17: 12 paigning for McEnroe· to become
captain. McEnroe also J?lans to
• eel overconfident; you 'rc to6 rel1181nmg.
.
•
!axed."
,
- After ttading a pair of baskets, worlc with Ag&amp;Ssi to help him ~h
~ The guard he's h8d next to him Nebraska ran off, eight straight his goal of becoming the world's
lrcpr the past two seasons at the · points to trigger a 20-8 spun that No.I.
~int, Bryan Caver, sprained his gave them a 76-.50 lca4. Creighton
McEiiroe's career included 170
~eft anlde in JrliCtice Tuesday night feU to 0-3.
weelcs at lhe No. I spt on the com!!UJd could ritiss as much as three
No. 11 Oklahoma !12
puter ranlcings, seven singfes Grand
il.weelcs. Up siepPed Danny Hurley
Solltll CaroBna 76
· Slam titles, nine doubles Grand
~handle those responsiblities.
At Norman, Okla., the Okla- Slam 'championships and one
The younger brolher of Dulce's 1 homa Sooners (4-0) used li full- mixed doubles title,
Hurley scored a career-high court press to cause 35 turnovers,
He 1won 77 tournaments in 15
ints in playing 35 minutes, which negated S2 percent shooting years on the tour, but his last big
e the time he had averaged in by the G!lfliCCOCks.
,
vear was in 1984.

·c·

e

.

~

/
I ,'

.

f.Seton Hall defeats Iona;
!Oklahoma, Nebraska win

1992 CHEVY LUMINA EURO
Auto., air, eta reo, power . $

.1992 GEO METRO CONVERnBLE

en'
en

•

~

.

""'

ddendve IICOrldaiy coach.
FRANKLIN ot MARSHALL Named Malk. Ashley head JOC:Cet eo~cb.
TEMPLE -Named Nick Oupan.to
oJJOfllive line eo~ch and football ftCNit·
ina coordinator.
·
VlRG!NlA 1l!CH - N...-..&lt;1 !'loll EJ.
mauian defllllivecoordinator.

t;.uuua:ticuu~uwd

.

~·~ By NESHA STARCEVIC
: • MUNICH, Germany' (AP) • John McEnroe didn't want to malce
~"it official, but he left little doubt
~ -that one of the great tennis careers
,-.was all but over.

1992 OLDS 88 ROYALE

1992 CHM CAVAUER R/S
Auto., air, stereo, $154 Down $

Colle&amp;•

. .·:·: •

.

:s: .

Nadonal Football Leaaue
Placed Huah Millen, quarterbac:k, on injured I'OICI'Ve. AC\iva~ Scca. Lockwood,
runnina back, frcm the practice aquad.
Re· liped Scou Bowlta, otrauive lineman.
NEW YORK JIITS - Siped Kevin

Famer WI111e Mays said he could wear, decided
to Jake tbe No. 25 jersey Wllrn by his rather, All·
Star oulf'Jelder Bobby Bonds. (AP)

By KEN RAPPOPORT
· 16. It was the sixth home loss in a row, a first for the
, AP Hockey Writer
two-year-old frBIIChise.
:
The new-look Quebec Nordiques are looking even
Emerson's shot went between Brian Hayward's
•• beuerthesedays.
le~s at 15:08 of the second period to brealc a 1-1 tie.
}
"We have a lot of speed and talent offensively, VItali Prolchorov added lhe clinching goal against
::; and we work hard for 60 minutes," said Steve Duch- goalie Brian Hayward with 2:43 remaining.
,.. esne after Th~day night's S-4 victoty over the Los
BrulruJ 4, Senators 2 -Joe Juneau, lhe leading
Angeles Kings.
scorer among rookies in the NHL, scored his lith
.: Duchesne, one of many new acquisitions made by goal and 42nd point as the Bruins oven:ame a gener:
~: the Nordiques Ibis season, burned his former team
aUy poor performance to beat the Senators.
;· with three assists as Quebec broke lhe Kings' 12Juneau's goal extended to eight the number of
• game unbeaten sb"eak at the Great Western Forum cons~utive games in which he has scored at least
:- (11-0-1).
one po.i nt
.
The Kings • only other loss was in their home
Adam Oates, Ted Donato and Dave Reid also
;
~ opener on Oct 8 against Chicago. But the Nordiques,
scored for lhe Bruins.
~,; bolstered by the acquisitions of Duchesne, Mike
Norm Maciver and Sylvain Turgeon scored for lhe
" Ricci and Ron Hextall in lhe trade last June with Senators, who have won only three of 31 games so
~ Philadelphia for prized rookie Eric Lindros, wouldn't
far in their inaugural season.
;• be intirnidBted by lhe Kings' home success.
Oilers 3, North Stars 2 - Shayne Corson
• With 15 victories, the third-place Nordiques are . deflected a power-plaj goal past goalie Jon Casey
,' only five short of last season's entire ICtal of 20 and with 2:10 to play as the Oilers rallied from a third; remained lhree points behind Boston in the Adams period defiCit to beat Minnesoi.a, snapping the Norlh
~ Division.
Stars' five-game winning streak.
·
. ~IS ~undilj, w)lo, l}»,~~i!IJIUO pf, dll: ,.. Mi•'l"'""8r .which bad beeJI , l~.;Q.I , w~-leading
Nordiques' gameslhis season, assisted on a third- · alter two penods, eniered the third w1th a 2-1 lead.
l; period goal/The Sb"ealc is the longest in the NID.. this But Esa Ti1clcanen scored shorlhanded at 2:35 and
r season and the fourth longest in history.
Corson tipped Dave Manson's shot from lhe point
' ·Wayne Gretzlcy has the all-time best streak at 51 past CII$Cy, who aUowed goals on two of the five
games and al.so had streaks of 39 and 30. Mario third-petiod shots he faced.
.
.
:;::Lemieux had a 46-game streak.
Blackhawks 5, Islandei'S, 3 -Jeremy Roenick
In other NHL games, it was SL Louis 3, San Jose had two goals and two assists as lhe Blackhawks ral: :2; Boston 4, 01tawa 2; Edmonton 3, Minnesota 2, lied past the Islanders to take over lhe Norris Diviand Chicago S, the New Yodc Islanders 3.
sion lead.
,.; . Blurs 3, ~'!Jirks 2- Ne~ Emerson scored the
Power-play goals by Steve Larmer and Steve
: uebreaker, lifung the Blues VJCtory over the troubled Smith, both set up by Roenick in the final period,
" · Sharks.
·
erased a 3-2 deficit as lhe Blackhawks exiended their
::· St. Louis, which is fifth in the Norris J?ivision, home unbeaien string to 10 games (8-0-2).
.. ,~head of only the expans1on Tampa Bay L•ghbnng,
Defenseman Steve Smilh also had four points for
~ •mproved to 11, 14-4.
"
.
the Blackhawks on a goal and three as~ts- includ~ . The Sharks fall to 5-23-1 and last place 1n lhe
mg one on an empty-netter by Greg Gilbert wilh 23
,.. .Smythe. and extended their losing streak to seven seconds left.
games. San Jose has only won two games in its last

Beat the Rush! You don't have to wait 'til after
Chri~mas to get a great deal. Check us out!

Basketh•U

ered takinR tbe retired No. 24 jersey Hall of

.:

TRY QUA HOMEMADE PIES
. OPEN 10 A.M.-6:00P.M • .

NTATE

SAN DIEGO PADRES -Traded
PauJ Faria, infielder, to lbe San FnhcUco
Giants far fun Paw, pitcher.

•

iDuchesne'~ assists h~lps Quebec ·

.SYSTEM

HOMEMADE NOODLES &amp; CHICKEN

Football
NEW YORK (AP) - The NFL
and its players were "closer lhan
ever" to a contract agreemen! that
.would bring a form Of unrestricted
free agency to football and end a
five-year labor lllalemate.
· '
A source close to the negotialions insisted lhe deal was all but .
done after an eight-hourmeeting
Wedne$day.

a ono-year contract.

I

I

: In NHL action,

GRAVELY

SUNDAY, DEC. 13, 1992

Sports briefs

PfiTSBURGH PIRATES .- ApWd
lO terma wiUt Alejandro Pcna. phch•. m

L1

I

•'

UKES DAD'S NUMBER BE'ITER- Barry
Bonds, the San Fraacisto Giants' newest acqui·
sition, holds up bis new jersey at a news confer' ence Thursday. Bonds, who originally consid·

SW{'JJJJ.Y SPECJ;{L

The baslcetball game scheduled
between Southern and Miller for
Saturday evening has been canceled and rescheduled for Jan. 30.

w.._

I
f

I

k:post 5-4 wjn over Los Angeles

Southern-Miller game
rescheduled for Jan. 30

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Aped .. ,.,. wilh David
pilch«,

IiOO·S;OO PM
;: Video Touch
.' Dan's
:.. Jahnson's Variety
.:.' I:00·4;00
.·. Ingels Furniture
' liag Swvistar
:: M!Meport Departtnent
Stare ,
·. Mill Street Baoks
. :,;, 10;00•9:00 Dairy Queen .

PttP....... atDeuoit, 7AOp.m.
CaJpq at T...-o, 7:40p.m.
.
Wim/pll 1t Wuloin-I:IOp.m.

to play. After Danny Manning 's
driving shot rolled off the rim ,
Anderson was fouled and sank two
free throws to wrap it up.
~
Drazen Peb"ovic finished with
27 points, while Chris Morris
added 19 points and 16 rebo.unds
for the Nets. Danny Manning led
lhe Clippers with 25 points, while ·
Ron Harper added 23.
·
Spurs 101, }!.eat 91
At Slln An10nio, the Spurs won
!heir fifth in a row at home and are
7-0 against Miami in the HemisFair
Arena. David Robinson scored 26
points and Lloyd Daniels added 17.
The game marked the Spurs
debu ~ of forward J .R. Reid,
acquired Wednesday in a deal wilh
Charlotte. Reid scored four points
in seven minu~.
Miami was led by Rony Seilcaly,
who scored 16 points.

ono-yeat ccrunct,

· ,: M'iddleport Sunday. Dec. 1J : ·
. .·. Holiday Shopping Hours ·..·

Clicl.. S. N.Y. b ........ 3
Qulboe 5, Lot Ansoot.. 4

a.-13.BI-ll

Tinon 66, Continenta148 .
Ttotwood·Madisca 44, Vandalia-But·
ler 34
·
TI"'J S3, Piqua 43 •
TU1Canw11.Cat.h. SO, Malvcm l9
Twin ValleyS. 40, Areanum 22
Upper Sc:i010 Vall. 81, Allen E. 41 .
tfrl&gt;tna 62..Sprina. Nonheu...., 24
Utica62, Uckin&amp;V.U. 40
•
Valley View 66,Dilic 42
VIUI Wert 64,Kenton 37
Vinron County 31, Fcdcnl Hockin&amp;

lir'~.!f¥.~~.~ .~.~~~~~~.!(4\·~ .

--l.Mino-2

-

T....,...)o 46, a.-on 36
Tiffin C&amp;l,... 75, BeuMII• :14

Warriors 114, Bucks 182
At Oalcland, Tun Hardaway had
14 of his 29 points in the fourth
quarter as lhe Warrior~ won for
only the third time in nine home
games. He also had 12 assists
while Chris Mullin added 28 poin~
as lhe Warriors sent the Bucks to
their fifth straight lciss ,after a 10-3
start. The Bucks fell for the first
time this se1150n after leading going
into the fmal quarter,
Blue Edwards scored 28 points
· and Todd Day 21 for Milwaulcee.
Jazz 112, Bullets 96
At Salt Lalce City, Karl Malone
scored 33 points on 14 of 24 shooting, and John Stockton added 17
points and 19 assists.
Rex Chapman led Washington
with 32 points and Harvey Grant
aJded 17. Utah's David Benoit
scored- I 8- points and Tyrone
Corbin added 14 points and 13
rebounds.
.
.
Neta 111, Clippers 105
At .East Rutherford, NJ., Kenny ·
Anderson made the big plays as the
Nets won for the seventh time in
eight games. .
Anderson had his first NBA
triple-double with 26 points, 10
rebounds and 12 assists as New
, Jersey snapped the Clippers' fourgame winning streak. With the
score tied at lOS; Anderson drove
the lane and passed to Ch ucky
Brown for a dunk .•with 24 seconds

ll 11 143

Bolton 4, Oaawa l

·-

Millao63, Wellllon 2'1
Minford 91 , Whoelcnbura 67
Moh1wk 41, Carey 28

Thursday's scores

·

Sprina. Shawnee 61_.X:enton Ridae
.
Sprinaboro 75,liltlc MWDi 22
S.L Heruy 37, New Kno1villc 2l
SL tdaeyo SS,Illida 54
.

57 (01)

CuliJle 41, Oakwood 37

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tarn

IUPoJ 65, Whiloool&lt; 38

Shab&lt;Hu. Aa&lt;bowo 37
SLdaoy49, W. Cmoltoo41
Spano llighllnd lO, N. Union 44

42
c.n... GJaoou 5S, N.Can...,
Hoov«50

4.5

10 .....

·.

Bwoy 61. Bi&amp; Walnut 56

3
3

Jlid&amp;tzllCI1t 61, Waynetfi.cld-~ ·
~Hu. JUthawiyBmwn49,

Berlin !!iliAd 48, Stllsbu!J 33

~5

8 .S29

9

31

Ashland , Ky . 70, P«Umouth 26
Alhmt 73, GlllipoiU 53
Barberton 42. Cutaho&amp;• Falls 35
Beaver Eutem 82. New Bo.tcm 67
Belp,. 44, Trimble II

TWLI'I:LGB
Mow Yca ......- ......11 1 .611

l'leuUil 56, Hudia Nto1he111 51
- l h Coy 5l, Pommrutl, 1!.

Ricllnanll Dale Sou.lhea•tcm 63,
Zine Traco 51

Alaon Sprin&amp; 52, N~50
Anwodo·Cleama S9, Ci&lt;daWio 40
Amelia 50, Cin. Twpin 28

CONFERENCE
1EASTERN
AllonUe Dhbloo

Oaawa-Oluldocf S6, Lima Shawneo

ll

Ado 38!Paulain8 37
Adonl 3, Pik&lt;~m 37
Alaon Buclud 73. Akron Oufiold 54
Akron Ccnt·Howcr69, Akron E. 50
A1aon llllot 51, Aha&gt; N. 47
Aboo Fila tone 66, Akron Kenmore

DaJ.1U "..want., 9 p.m.

Or!.ando .................... l

51, Orand R.ive:r 33

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores

Monday, Dec. 21

Chuloao ............... IO
CU!VI!LAND •. -..... 8
Docroil. ....................6

41

Cin. Hil1crelt &amp;5, Cin. St. Rita 39
C.. Arto 61, Cle. Hayoo 64
Co. Avitti.tz~61 , Cle. Adatp~59
Elyria F'u tt Ba}"iit 75, Soulhweuem
Cod]

Bulfalo at New Orlean~, 1 p.m.
-atC!BVELAND, I p.m.

'

I

Ohio high sehool
boys basketball scores

SIIIUrday's games

Wuloinpn .............7 II
lo!Wni ..................... ..l 12
fltiladclJOIUI ..•....•.....4 II

-

UrboM Ill, 0raco II

NFL'S Week 15 slate

801\m ......................9

ericks have lost r.O Minnesota and
Miami (S-12) by a total of 37
points. Their only win was in their
fourth game, on Dec. 14 against
Atlanta.
Chuc'lc Person sc_ored eight of

suong for the abysmal Mavericks
on -Thursday night. The Timberwolves handed the Mavs their 11th
sirai~ht loss, 111-88. Dallas' 1-14
start IS the ,.orst in team history.
In the last two games, the. Mav-

his 26 points during Minnesota' s
33-17 stan as the Timberwolves
snapped a four-game losing Sb"CBlc.
Doug w~ added 16 points and
Micheal Williams and Lance
Blunks scored 15 each for lhe Timberwolves.
Dallas was paced by Terry
Davis with 21 points and 12
rebounds.
.
In other games, it was Clulrlo~~C
I 10, New York 103 in overtime;
Indiana 106, Sacramento 99; Gold·
en SUIIe 114, Milwaulcee 102; Utah
112, Washington 96; New Jersey
Ill , the Los Angeles Clippers 105;
and San Antonio 101, Miami 91.
Hornet&amp; 110, Knic:ks 103 (OT)
At New Yodc, somebody found
lhe answer to lhe Knicks' Garden
magic. They had been 9-0 at Ma4i·
son Square Garden , the only
unbeaien team on its home court
Larry Johnson scored 22 of his
28 ·points after halftime, inclu~ng
iwo baskets to start an 11 ~0 overtime run. Dell Curry added 23
points, while Alonzo Mourning who was tutored by Patrick Ewing
even before Mourning followed
Ewing at George10wn - contributed 22 points and 17 rebounds.
Ewing had 28 points and nine
rebounds, while John Starks scored
all of New York's nine points in
ovenime and finished wilh 21. '
. Pacers 106, Kings 99
At Sacramen!O, Detlef Schrempf
had 25 points; 12 rebounds and a
career-high 14 assists for Indiana,
which never trailed in the second
half. Rile Smits scored 20 points for
the Pacers, who won lheir fourth
slfl!ight game and third in a row on
the road.
Wayman Tisdale had a seasonhigh 32 points and grabbed 14
rebounds for lhe Kings, who ~ave
l()St six of seven games.

.

•

· By RONALD BLUM
LOUISVILLE, Ky .. (AP) Four teams came up with some
pitching help before leaving baseball's busy winter meetings.
The meetings were over Thursday, but the dealing was not done.
Pittsburgh agreed to a one-year
deal with reliever Alejandro Pena
for $1 .35 million, Detroit got
,eliever Tom Bol!Dn for one season
at $400,000, the New Yodc Mets
signed veteran left-hander Frank
Tanana for aile season for SI.S million and the New York Yankees
got Jimmy Key for four years at
S 17 million.
Key , 31, was 13 -13 for the
World Series champion Toronto
Dine Jays last season. In nine years
with the Blue Jays, Key was 11681.
The Yankees came to the winter
meetings hoping to sign Barry
Bonds, Greg Maddux and David
Cone. But general manager Gene
Michael was frustrated each time.
The Blue Jays originally wanted
to keep Key, but withdrew their
offer at the meetings. Texas was
also interested in Key, but the Yankees were considered lhe fronuunners since last weelc.
Tanana, 39; was 13-11 with a
4.39 ERA for the Detroit Tigers
last season. He sraned his career
with the California Angels in 1973

.

Mears
announces
retirement

and has a lifetime record of 233219.
"We set out to try and find a
fifth starting pitcher for several
months, someone who could give
us 175 innings and (some) wins,"
Mets general manager Al Harazin
said. "He has averaged more than
200 innings over the last 11
years.' '
Tanana was signed as a free
agent by Texas before lhe sran of
the 1982 season and traded to
Deb"Oit in 1985. The Tigers, however; chose not to offer Tanana a
contract
"I was exb"emely surprised."
Tanana said of lhe Tigers • decision.
" I won 13 games for the team and
I felt really ignored. They've been
burying me for 15 years. There's a
lot of guys who staned after me
who are long gone. It was just an
age lhing wilh !hem (Detroit)." ·
Tanana joins Dwig!n Gooden ,
Bret Saberhagen, Sid Fernandez
and Pe.te Schourek in the Mets'
starting rotation.
·
"I am delighted to be part of the
New York family ," Tanana said.
"I'm excited to be part or a new
league and a new park. Generally
spealcing, a pitcher has an advaiiI.age with a new league."
Mets manager Jeff Torborg
caught Tanana"s first major league
game on Sept. 9.1973.
Pena. a 33-year-old right-hander, was burt toward the end of the
1992 season. He was 1-6 for the

Atlanta Braves wilh I 5 saves and a
4.07ERA.

In 1991, he had a 6-1 rccool and
four saves with the New Yorlc Mets
when he was traded to the Braves
in laiC August He then went 11 for
II in save chances for the Braves
down the Sb"etch; helping them win
the National League WesL
Pena pitched for the Los Angeles Dodgers for nine seasons before
going to the ~ts after the 1989
season. Pena has a career record of
50-48 with 67 saves and a 2.95
ERA. He hasn't made a sran since
1987.
Bolton was 1-2 with a 3.41 ERA
in 21 games for the Boston Red
Sox in 1992 and 3-3 with 5.24
ERA in 16 games for the Cincin:
nati Reds, who released him after
the season. He is 24-26 in sill: seasons with a 4.54 ERA and one
save, which came for the Red Sox
in 1989. ~ - ·

~~~.i~~.W~9.«4f~~~"~~

· ·.····WASHER ANTI·FREEZE •••••••••••99' .• ·

By MIKE HARRIS
READING, Pa. (AP)- Rick
Mears is so low-key outside of a
race car that even his surprise
retirement speech was delivered
without fanfare .
Standing in front of the members of Marlboro Team Penslce and
their families, galhered Thursday
night for their annual Christmas
dinner at the team's race shop in
Reading, Mears grinned and began,
· 'WeU, it was an up and down year,
even upside-down at Indy."
The 41-year-old racer, a fourtime winner of the Indianapolis 500
and considered perhaps the greatest
oval driver in Indy-car his!Ory., survived a frightening CraSh in May
during practice for the Indianapolis
500, his helmet scraping along lhe
track .after sniashed into the concrete wall. ~ut Mears wallced .away
from lhat one with only a broken
right wrist
He aggravated lhat injury two
weeks later in the race, getting
caught up in a crash that began on
the track in front of him. The injury
didn't heal properly and Mears
underwent surgery on Aug. 19, premaiurely ending what turned out 1D
be his last season.
Expected to get back in!D one .of
Roger Penske's cars' later this
monih to begin testing for 1993,
Mears instead opted to end his
compeiitive career. Penske, along
wit~ Mears' wife Chris, were the
only people who lcnew of the driver's retirement plans before the
announcement,
"It was a tough decision,"
Mears said. "I started thinking
about it some time ago, probably
even before Indy. Obviously, Indy
was something that made me lhink
a lillie more about it After that, it
was a little here and a little lhere."
Mears . who has 29 wins, 40
poles and is second 10 1992 IndyCar PPG Cup champion Bobby
Rahal in all-time earnings with
$11,050,807, will work with
remaining team drivers Fittipaldi
and Tracy in testing, development
and race strategy.
Mears, who began his Indy-car
career wilh three stans in 1976 and
eight more in 1977, ·signed with
Penske as a virtual unknown the
next season, mainly as a substitute
for Mario AndreUi when the latter
was running on the Formula One
circuit. Mears quicldy established
himself as a star by winning three
races and earning co-Rookie of the
Year honors that year, then taking
his first Indy in 1979.
Mears was voted the Driver of
the Decade at the end of the 80s
after winning 20 races, including
the I 984 and 1988 Indy 500s. He
joined A.J, Foyt and AI Unser as
the only four-time winners of .Indy
in 1991. Mears also holds the
record for poles at Indy wilh six.
He drove in eight of 16 events
in 1992 ....: only four after Indy.
Mears finished an undistinguished
161h in what turned out to be hiS
final start on Au~. 2 in the Marlboro 500 at Michigan International
Speedway. He failed to win a race
for only the second time in 15 fuU

2% MILK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••s2.19
PEPSI, 12 Pak••••••••••••••••••• 12.99
PEPSI, 2 liter.~••••••••••••••••••.•• 99' .-u
PRICES GOOD THRU DEC. 15, 1992

J!j

Holiday Glass 49¢ With Purchase of Gas •·~-

it. . r--V-id_eo_R_e_n..ta_I_-_L_e.,..g_a_lB_e_v_e_ra_g_e_s____, ;~:
i.l:
Register to :~YAri!i:.y~l; to be given

J

t

t

~

.

.

••

it•.
ill

lie

I lASCAR MINI CAR • I INDY MINI CAR,
2 Bl(YCLES
DRAWING DEC. 19th
AT GRAND CENTRAL MALL

.·_11

a

N
I

S;;;.T;.O;;;.P;...;;I;;.;N~A~N.;;:D;..S:;;;,I:.;G;;.:;N.;.,.,;;U:.::.P.:.!-----1 ·~ •

L-.-..;;·

CHESTER QUICK -STOP

.=

·~

Rt.c~:~!~

J~

t£ti·a~at&gt;i·a~.iidiia~~~~~it

Victory Baptist
Church
525 N. SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Celebrate Our
15th Anniversary
With Us
Sunday, Dec. 13!

'

'

Featuring:
•Special Music by the
"Higher Phrase Quartet

''
'

·From Massillon, Ohio

•Special Speaker, the
Rev. Bob Hutton
Join Ui Sunday, Dec. 13 for
10:00 AM Sunday School
11 :00 M~rning Worship
7:00 Evening ·Worship .

seasons.

I

c

PASTOR JAMES E. KEESEE
INVITES THE PUBLIC

"•

•

.
•

'

I•
•

-•

.••

'••

.

•

•

�•

Friday, December11,1982 ·

Fr1CI8y, Dt!Cember 11, 1882

PonleroJ-IIddleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel Pagl :"t"'"'

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

'
•

- .
'•

.

'

•

Old fa£hioned

:
j

•I

..•
.•

.

'

'

..•
•

•
•

.•

.
..
.'

.

i'
'•

..
.

'

..•'
•

Enjoy fl rtight Of Old Fashioned ttoliday Shopping I
,~

D~c. 12

Sat.,

•,

. ..

Participating .Stores Will Be Open Until 9:00 P.M.

''

'

.

I
;

.

.'

9

'~m;a~ :Aw;:.-~

•
•
•
•
t
•

:·

I'

. EIIU SPECIAL: first 12SoW
wll .... 50" OH

AT .

I

•

.~

.

·Savings ·Of

.

* All Desks

.

* Floor.Lamps
* Day Beds·

·,'

20%. 50% ·
OPEN SATURDAY .NIGHT
UNTIL 9:00 P.M.

:1:

•·.

I
.·,.
.

.•
.•
.
'

STOVER ASSORTED CHOCOLATES ··
2 OZ.95C ONLY
I ROCK CHOCOUIE COVERED CHERRIES •·
I OZ. ONLY

•

:

.·•18-,TOHS and

iii;_---.--~

I ..DR. &amp;UIOW PIPES

BOWS ·~·

I

'•
'

'

REDUCED ::"" •.

•
•
•

.

oct~-;~..,.., DOWITOWI

Reg. $299.99

-7C

. l: ·1;\=~!j:::r~
:: · Cltristmas frees •'ii· •

! · .· Along tlte Business ·J.
i ..·.·Jistrid Donated sy'J.
: . · David liggs free J. .
~
farm and
';I
Decorated by tile &lt;
Students of
Pomeroy .
.•
flementary
•·
~:
Sdtool. " ·~

992·2284

Multf.DI-.mond
Threeaome

Diamond Heart
Bridal Pair

1 CaratTW
Diamond Saltaire

Brldi!NOIWSala

%Carat

Greallluy
NOW

•••••••••••••••••••

.

'•

FrM Sizing • ·'

PAY MORE

.·'

· ••
i

Diamond
Wadding Ring•

Se

'h Carat 0

'

I

95

'•

.•
.'
'
•

'

I

•

•

'•

ILACIHILLS GOLD

..
•
I

•

•

•
'
'I
'
'

•

.•

DIAMOND SOliD GOLD
WEDDINGsn

. .

Open Till 8 PM

CheckOur
-ey-==- Nightly
· Specials ~~

F-GIIIWrap

20%

' .

LAY-A·W.AYS
WELCO.ME .

. ;rrm:n~ ~--- OFF-

''The Past Is OUr·
Present To ·You.''

-~

I'

212 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY
.

.

.

.

r··.·.:·~tlni:··,~-·~M~l~.,
· -· ;;m!·~-~:~~~

-

·.··~ Meet Wltii:~IGnta Claus at ;J. ·
· :• · tile ,.,.,,,., Methodist .;
· : Cllutfh, loca.ted Be$ide the :" ·
.:\.. · Be•elillill Building. .··.:..

~\li·-~-~---1d
~

,I

1

..

'

'

•

•

•

t

'

.&lt;

•

I

. .. ..
· · Enjoy tlte Sounds of · ·

\I

.. '

:'.

il-

. · ·•
•

Carolers As
·• .
ltle111llers of
Pomeroy United
Jletltodlst Clturtlt1 ..
St. Paul lutheran · . ·
Clturclt ~nd Trinity .:
· Congregational · .: ·
..
Clturclt Join . ·· ·
. ; Together Uniler tlte ·. .
· , Direction of . :•.
~·:
Lois 8urt.
.: ~

l

~\li•tiW*~iHia•ua

...
.

'

!

ll

~~7.
. ··"o
·.,·.o
· .. ~,
·.·. ·~· · o
· · o.. '41&gt;P.,·~.~.iff~
•, .
',

I

..

~

SUndloya 12-5

')'our persona£st:rr!iu store for al!your Cnristttuu giving.
5tttractive (jiftwrrJppine witn ail pu.rcfuLses.
SPECIAL PRICES THROUGHOUT THE SiORE
.. OPEN UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SAT., DEC. 12

•I
•

·..-... SJ899S

)

·. :

!

.

I

.

aa•a...llfiidruat
..
..

•

POMEROY

riia\•

m

'

.
..'

••.. .

14K G.OLD 30%

..._lwtaDJLUGIRIII'I'MQIQUfl ~

t

, SAVE 150.00

GREAT GIFTS

I

•

I

s499s • ·•
SAVE

NURSE
MATES

.•

·. WAS $99.95
.

NO.W

$14999

. POMEROY, ON.

I

•
•

S.J99S •.

FABRIC SHOP

·,.

••

14K GOLD •
.1
'.
DIAMOND •
.' . DIAMOND :
EARRINGS .• · . CLUSTER •.•.

1114034

FLAT BED *1021

~sa~,

·T;:w~7~l0ifi~
s ·e
FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; MONI»AY .•
Il CONNIE.. STOR WIDE

.•'•

SEMINAR
PRICE
•

·· Anderson'.s .:~

DON'T-MISS·THE FESTIVAL
OF LIGHTS ILLUMINATING
THE
.
.
BUSINESS DISTRICT THIS HOLIDAY SEASC)N!
.

.

$459 99

~w§!!~:~=~~~~

'•

'

sl99~q·

. ·. 100 E. Main St.'
Pomeroy, OH. · .
. ,.
992·5177
..·

I
~
I

I

'

•••• $699.99

These specials plus ·many::nmre
outstanding values
throughout
our- store! : -::
-

will ship your packages by :
·. U.P.S.
·
. ·•Shop now while selections·are still .
i good. Shop Locally!!
. ..
•Dry Cleaning Pick Up Service&gt;
· ;. Available
·

COLOGIE &amp; PERFUME

I\ '

s4:9on

.

*Curios
.

~ •We

99 c

25o/o

REDUcED

'·

.• OVER 250 DJlESSES IN STOCK · ·•· ·

69C ·

{

(Includes Bed, Mattress, 2 Pillows and.C09erlet)

:. Largest Selection of Dresses In .•.· ·
..·•·• · · The ·rri-County Areal
•·
.

._or.
...

.

400/
/0

''•

SATURDAY NIGHT .
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS

Blh-J'ONS . fl · BOWS

. TI.EI WITCH Complete Stock

'•

.

•

•

..

I

· Sav~

I
"I

t

ChrU1tma,e

•

•

.

I

.

'

�,.,.. 8 Tht Deily sentinel

-•'
•

•

r·
••'

..

I

Apostolrc

a ......,
• a.a.r.,.Nm.... IWIIItO.. .

-s-.1~
_
, ..... . ,:30 .....

. G.-~
0

3:~&amp;B.
Hdy"

Mlddlepol't Cburdl "'Cllitlt
51h IIIII MaiD
Pu10r. AI 1Wuat

..,

•• ,i-t , .•

...,
• ••

'••

Racine 11lnt Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednuday Saviooa - 7:00p.m .

•

'•

Silver Rua Baptbl
Puur. Bill Linle
Sunday School · IOa.m. ·
Worship· I lam., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncaday Servicea· 7:30p.m.

•

Mt. u- Baptist
Putor : Joe N. S1yn:
. Sunday School·9:45a.m.

• ·'

w..s!'.s.~~6:'3op.m.

.,: :

•

.'• ..'

Bellllehem Baptist •
P1110r : Rev. Ead Shuler
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wanhip • 9:30a.m.
.Thunday Semc:e~· 7:30p.m. ·

-

''

•'
f

Old Betbe Free Will Baptbl Cburcb
28601 S.. RL 7, Middleport

'

~
•

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; · 7:30p.m.
Thunday S.rvicea . 7:30

i
j

'

,
'
~,\,
•~

HUIIIde Baptbl Churcla
S.. R\. 143 j11t off RL 7 1
PuiOr. Rov.lamea IL Acree, Sr.
Sunday School·IO a.m.
Worship • 11 Lm., 6 p.m.

r

W..metday Semw -7 p.m.

S2S J.~t.Cepoll
Putor: J.,.. E. Keeaee
Wonhip • !Oa.m., 7 p.m .
Wedneaday Savicea · 1 p.m.

••
•
•
•
•'
I

Fallll Baptbl Church
Railroad S.., Ma""'
Sunday Scllool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednetday Savicoo • 7 P:m.

t

I

•

''
•

.•

ML Moriah Baptbl
Founh &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pul&lt;lf! Rev. Gilben Craig. Jr.
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship ·10:4S Lm .

~

\

~

•

••
• "·~

•~

Anllquttr Baptbl
Putor: lCeiinelh Smilh
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
, Worship ·10:45 Lm.
Thunday Setvi'l'. 7:30p.m.

•

!• 11
••'

•
•

•••.

·-• .

..

L
'
•
'

'

Rolliad Free WW Bapt1ot
SalemSL
Putor. Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Ewnina · 7 p.m .
W..metday Semcea . 7 p.m.
Alii Screet .,._. Bapllat
Middleport

s-tay School - 10 a.m.
. Worship· 11a.m.
Wedneaclay Service · 7:30p.m.
Salurday Service • 7:30p.m.

Catholic
Sacred·Heut Calllollc C..rdo
161 Mulberry A.... Pomeroy, 992-S898
l'um: R... Woller E. Heinz
1
, S... Con. 4:45·5:15p.m.; Mua- 5:30p.m.
I
Sun. Con. -1:45-9: IS a.m.,
: ,..
Sun. Ml11 • 9:30a.m.
' ••
Dailey
8:30 Lm.
I

l

,

&amp;4•• ·

I

I

Pu10r. • Bla&lt;:kwood
Sun,lay.School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship 111'.30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeMce • 7:30p.m.

&lt;·~

........... 33)

Tlle-AniJ

Dexter Churc:b ot Cbrtol
PallOr: Ouil Slcwart
S101day Scllool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ' 10:30 Lm.
Wednetday SeMcos · 7 p.m:

•

R.....aolaed Clsoirdo of 1-.CIIrtol

l

RuUand Churc:b rl Cbrtol·
Putor: Euscoe E. Underwood
Somday School · 9:30 UD.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bvmiai · 7:30p.m.
WadneadayService· 7:30p.m.

._,

.,

Follll.J=--~e,...
Paaur. Rev. -.RawJOO

Wonioip-9a.a. .
W' .1 ySaoia:I-IOa.m.
.

Lutheran

Miller SL, Maion, W.Vo. .
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • lla.m., 7 p.m.
Wednetday Semc:ea. 7 p.m.

Suaday Sc:bool - 9:45 ....
w....., . lo-.30 ....
Thursday SC:10ia:l· 7:30JUD.

w• .!":1.;..!~7 p.m.

s.-

oo RL J24

.

--

1J1o1rtr a..- CII-

Wonbip. 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Oeatcr
Puror: Woody Call
'
~ Scloooi·IO a.m.
..
11"-iaa ·7 p.m,
•."'
Wotlncsd·y !erviCo .. 7 p.~

ML Ollvt Ualtod Mel-·
Off 124 behind WilkeMlle

Putor: CwletSunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30o.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services • 1 p.m.

•

Alrncl
Putor: ShiUQI HautmaD
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.

R-.ule Cllurdo rl Cllrlot
Puror: Philip Stwm
Sunday School: 9:30 a.JD.

'

~Uoltoi!M

.

dl
Moio A filila ll.
Suaday Sc:bool· 10 ....

Christian Un1on

Suaday Sc:bool . 9 .....
Wonlaip - IOLIL
.
7 S&lt;.,;ca ·IO&amp;m.

w-....
li1

I

G.!i.ssSuaday Sc:bool - 10 .....

Worship· 9:30a.m.
S~day School • 10:30 a.m.
Wedl1elda)l Service~ · 7:30p.m.

PuiOr. Tberoa Durbtm

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Bw:nina • 1 p.m.
Wednesday SaYic:a • 1 p.m.

.-

Loaa-

Wonlaip • II L11L

w

I

\

Scnias - I p.m.

T.an '*

Pastor. Rev. Seldon JamiOft
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip · to-.30 a.m.
Wcd!leaday Servica · 7:30p.m.

a-on~ cunto of Cllrtolla
~Vololl

.,,

Co.Rd.61
Sc:bool . 9-.lO ......

wO.*P-IO::JOa.a

~II Gaopol

Church of God
MLIIWiall a...do ~a.!

na_.
PlaiDI St. Paul
PasLor: Sharas Hauan.m

RaQne

Putor. Rev. James Sauerfield
S\llday School- 9:45 a.m.
B_., · 7p.m.
Wedaelday Semcos ·7 p.m.

It''# I I ta.rc. ..... N
iM
Puror: Rev. u.,.t D. Gn-.lr.

s.-,. Sc:bool · 9-.lO .....

Sunday School· 9 Lm.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
1Ueaday s.,.;.. -7:30p.m.
&lt;

..

w....., · I0:30&amp;JL,6-.30JUD.
W'•t
';Sa ;~u - 7pa. •
l.l-'lfi•••F
. I

1 III
Q.afl~~teN·nrna

CentraiClAibury (Syracuoe)
Pulor. o.,... Newman
sUnday Sc:boal - 9:4' Llli.
Wonhip • lla.m.
Wednetday Servioea • 7:30p.m...

p.,..,.,

• • - Cllurc:b at Gqd
Jam F. Con:onn
s~ School· 10 O.m.
Worship .. JJ o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday SeMcea • 7 p.m.

!!:!:;M.W. D aha

w..-,.1o,u--. 7p.a.

w:

EftterpriM

SJ;

Puur. Kaidl Rader
Sunday School · IO•o.m.
Wonbip • 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tueaday Service~· T p.m.

PuiOr. Rev. llovid RsuaeU
Sunday School IIIII Wcnhip- 9:30 IJDi
Bvauna Savica· 7 p.m.
W~Etdl)' Semca .. 7 p.m.

I

I

,

. . .

~

0

- 7p.a.

Clllildlrla.w

1. Pollee Uobilily

Mldlleporl, Ohio 45710

11141192·11117-IIII·OOKSI

·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIILES

\

" . MEIGS TIRE
~·
CENTJR, INC.

I

'\ .}·
I

601 EAST

..J.Jtst

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
• 271 Nert~

Slconol
MHWJtport,

Dlole.

'

Mlneger

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD- Approx. 40 acres of land, which
about 20 acres are tillable . Has a bam w!lh hayloft and
an equipment shod. Public water and electric available .
Many great building sites and water for animal s.

POSSIBILITY OF SOME OWNER FlNANCINGI!I .
$30,000
oomE TURNER, Broker........................." .....812-S6112
BRENDA ·JEFFERS.:.......................................,812-3056
DI!RLINE STEWART..............""···-···-"··········812-6365
SANOY BUTa-IER.............................................I82..S371
JERRY SPRADLING""'"-""'"""·-······(304) 182-3418
OFACE ,. ............................................................. 982·288'S

Ph.M2·2101

Prncr.ptions

992-2975

Pomeroy

·r'k,u·
.

r

REDUCED: LOVETT RD. • 2 story 1119 home wilh 2208
sq. ft . living space, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large
deck/porch, ,bulll'ln accessories , 3 t/2 ac:rvs. Beauliful
home &amp; locadOt) . REDUCED TO $79,900

MIDOLEPORT · Charming home on a dOUble 10! lhalll.loncecHn ao
1he kids can play or Y04JI" pets can run. This home has 3 bedrooms,
extra large living room, dining room, 1 112 b•th, klcr;hen wilh bar,
large closets, full baaament, and gatage. This home ala&lt;&gt;~ "''7 low
on utilities . On North Second. $37, 50P ·
·
~

....

· ont acre lot In a lovetr country aettlng. 11 alao feaiUrtl a dintng
room, dod&lt; llld porch.A new 100! hat juat _ , lnalallacl.$34,1100

Homelile Solw,

Ci'ow's Famill Restaurant

992:5432

I 72 North S.Cond Ato.
Middl-rt, Ohio

IAWUNGS.COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

' EWING FUNERAl HOME

· ·

-n;JCnit~·

nn1l SnTin• Alt.~ ·a.\·.~··
Established 1913

992·5141
264 Sauth 21111

786 NOiTH S((OND AVI~

MWh....

. . .lfPOIT. CillO

- --·-·

-•

992·2121

106 ...,.ny AYI• . '

'

MIDDLEPoRT • Thla 2 boclniom home II locaiCICI on Grant St,...t on
a ~rvolot. ~ haa ""'"""'building. 3 porchoo, llld lots of
Thotola oiMng nx&gt;m.larill~ 1oom,llllchen, ond bllh.IZ!,IIOO

clo-.

SYRACUSE • Locatacl/uat oullldt lht city llmlta, yoo muat iHihla
houae ta!IPI&gt;rec:latll fl. 111 p&lt;osendy aet up • a - lamily ~lne

· 214 E. Main

SHADE • Helwig Ridge Ro8G • Tlil 1001117 IMIIty

.£Mil
\S)

115 E. Mom.lal Dr.

·

homo will 01"'

I

"'"' lamily broathlng apiCCI. You will find 5 bedrooma, IMrt room,
dlnng room, family room;·den, utility room, 2 bllhallld klldlln wiltl
loll ol cobir&gt;Ma. Alllhla on 3 ,..., ml1. 1n tho 50'1.

Veterans
Memorial Hospitql

DON'T JUST DRIVE BY OUR OFFICEI STOP IN AND
SEE THE GREAT SECLECTION OF HOUSING We
HAVE AVAILABLE!· ONE MAY BE JUST RI(IHT FOR
YOU! OUR DOOR IS ALWAYS OPEN ... TO YOUI

MIDDLEPORT • Tho prlt:&lt;~ hu boon raducecl on IIlia brow..,...
houoe. II hu a living ""'"'· dining room, if bedroom, 1 1/2 bath,
kltchln, full buCimenl, :and garage and utllty bulldlrt. Very nlcl
- · In tho loW 20'1 .•

r-y

HENRY E. CLELAND..............................H2..111
TRACY BRINAGER................................. I4flo2438
JEAN TRUSSELL .................................. II4flo2MO
OFFICE ..........,........,. ............, .................H2·2251

992·2104

7

,,

'

1V88 SKYLINE Manufaclurod Homo· 3 bedrooms, 2
bath, CIA, fireplace, skylight, appliances, skirting, steps,
In 'Like New' condition. Leave on reotad lot or move 10
location ' of your clloicel $29,900 !OWNER WANT9 AN
OFFER!)

but GOUld ealfly be converted 10 a one family I\Orrle. The hOUM hai
10 many tatru they are too numerous 10 mention! This 11 8110 I

992 · 5130 Pomeroy

f

SR 388·1 floor frame homo wilh 3 bedrooms, view of
river, needs repair. ASKING $5,900 make a .aoacl
fishing/hunting cabin I

.

p&lt;opar8G Uol~r lot and 4.5 IICICII ttVI , Great prlooll

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
' 992-7075

· DEXTER· 1 112 story home with 4 bedrooms, cellar,
garden area, added Insulation, large 1ront porch , newly
painted. $t6,000

POMEROY • Thlo one floor/1111 home Ia located on Mulberry
Htlghta. Proatnd!'lhtla a11 btd1oom1 and a large udllty""""
(which oould be can- hade ID alhlrd bodraom). Thli 1-oint h•
a large - I n yard and an attachoct garage. This placey. •moor

moln-..oo lrcle. G1011 l-omolll52.500

· Pomerey

NEAR A( BANY • Lovely split· foyer home wilh 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, decking, garage, appliances,
basement wilh workshop, 8.35 acres with tru•tlroes &amp;
shed. $54,900

•

BILL QUICKEL

"lullri•J K~tlre g ftlli Cbld~t"
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

I

HEMLOCK GROVE · Thla 3 bedroom, 2 balh home Is locaiCICI an··

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

POMEROY, OHIO

NEW LISTING· TUPPERS PLAINS. 2 story, 3-4 be«oom
home on paved Rl. 1+ J-ere, fenced back yard, 2
fireplaces, unique original styling.
$49,900

Ql!lage. Price lo variable depandlrt upon garage. let ua "*you

you can't.

(614) 3711-6153
9 am • 12 pm and
6
·10

FretE.. ImaiH

. RREWODD FOR SALE
' 6-26-'82~1n

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES CLUB

Rugs, Placemats,
Quilts, 5 Types
Pillows, Animals.

IN POMEROY
6:45 ,....
Spacial Early llrd
$1 ooo
Thlscil1
for I
FREE' car•.
.Uc. Jlo. 0050•32

::r·"

of small articles.
60¢ and up

OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
985-4356

111241'92/lln

11-30-1 mo.

Trr..ln~rTiliPioi.R_Y..

Fi• £titoHtu

20~H DIICHII

wlllr tlrls a

742·JS60
11-1:1-'112·1 mo.

Pomeroy
992·2036

Sholllodala • Colldllloo
'Ridars In Stack'
Spada! Ecltloo ·Show PloSoaAI

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE

FOR SALE
Call 614·992·
6637

OUAUTY PRINT SHOP

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE

MICROWAVE OVEN
ancl VCR REPIIR
ALl MilES

lrl111 It I• Or We

u~
KEN'S"'"
APPLIANCE
SERVICE .
992·5335 o·r
985·3561
a. .... Fro• ,.d Office
217.LS..e.. St.
POMIIOY, OliO

10%·20% Off
Puttera, Beginner Seta,
Youth Cualom Drive111.
Leaoone Included with
· purchase.
l.o!:ated on Scout Camp
Rd., Cheafer, DH.
.
11121

:::====::
CHRISTMAS
TREES

Fresh Cut Daily
5' • 8' Tall
OPEN 9-7

WHALEY'S
,
PARTS
Speciallllng In Custom
Frame Ripalr
. NEW &amp; USED PARTS

255 Mill St.,llldctlaporl, Oh.
112-3314 Daya, 742-3020 ~"'·
I w-4 pm WHkdayo
t ....12 pmSalslnl.ayo untl
Clviat. .
Aakfor Dal•

BULLDOZING

SR124

Ready Nov. 26
.11·17·92·t mo pd.

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; CUFTS

BRADFORD'S
Fr••• Cut Trees
or Cut Your Owd.

I

-

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
·CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

eGartia••
•Complete

FIIEE ESTIMATES

. 985·4473
667·6179

2-7·92·1fn .

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE
36970 W l11 Road
,_,,, Oltle

HOLIDAY SPECIAL!
SCJ.SO ATo•

SIZED LIMESTONE
992·3470
12·flol2·1 mo

-Electrical .,d Plumbing

::l!':::1:.
&amp;Wlor.
Pointing

(FREE ESniiATES)

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
P-.:py, Ohio

12-5-tfn

, 1·2-92-tfn

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOll FREE
1·800.848·0070

RUTLAND, OH.
HomegrownCarefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up .~VIlh a great
. selection of larger
trees •
Call 742·2143 or
742· 2979
11127

RAVENSWOOD
NYA HALL
New ~··•e•
POMPOM,

HAULING

CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUliDAYS

1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12·GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

614-742-2138

12/911 mo. pd.

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
Deer Heads....................'19000 ·
Turkeys •.••...•..•....•••...••••.•*17500
Fish .........................1400 per inch
Call (304) 895-3386

after 5 p.m.

TUMBLING,
BATON JYIIRLING

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

All Ag. . Wlllcoma
Special Clau 3-1 .
For More Information
can 304-273-3721

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ~

1

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.
949-2734

RACINE GUN

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; 'COAL
Reasonable rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

.

12-1-'92·1 mo.

Remolltling
Sto' &amp; Compare

..floam Addlllone
-Gullilr Worlt

PH, 614·992·5591

YtrarOids

Spcciallloli•luy lfotll'"
Open Unlil 8 Mon.·Sat.
After Dec. 1 0
~
Grc:u flomcmndc 'N

CARPENTER SERYKE

PONDS
SI:PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER i
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp; ·,
HOME SITES
.
HAULING: Urneslone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

742·3051

YOUNG'S

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

0110

Residence
Rutland, Oh.

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

121tfn

BQb Snowden's

Gil\ Idea

~JAYMAR ·
. Quality

FU TIEl SEUKE

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.
232 2nd St.,

MERRY CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE
SAT.,D£C. 12-10 loB
SUN. D£C. 13-1 to 6

992·2259

SYAACI!SE • Thla one IIDI)' 3 bodmom home Ia Iuii waltirt fol you
to ma-e ln. It has 2 beljla, 1 large Living Room, 'Dining RdOm,llld
Kitchen. It can alao be purchaaed with or without a tarae 2-car

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
' and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; · Removal
Rooklanllat I eon-crat

CRAFTS

. CHERRY RIDGE

RUTLAND • Locatacl on New Lima Road, lhlo mmlarlablo homo
haJ 3 bodrmma (one down, IWO upf, one bllh LMrt Room, Eat·ln

608 EAST b\AIN

949·2391or
1·100·837·1460

BINGO

992·2549

MIDDLEPORT · Lll you1 l-ome pey 'lor ltJell I Th~ hauoe hu 2
epartmonta. Oow'natawa ~ a comlortablo 2 room apartment Thtl&lt; Ia
8110 a one car garage and a laundry room, Upltairt Jt a nice 2
bedroom''""'"'""''""' one balh, ~tdlon and 1Mrt room . Clooe.,
lloAII , In rho mid-20 'a , GOOD INVESTI:ENT .

.Easy work from
home. No cash llblrt
up. Start at onca and
you'll nav• haVlJ to
worry $GUt
Chrlatmaa money
again! lncoma that
keaps going whan

GRANNY'S

cum

w.

KEVIN'S LAWN;
MIINTENANCf .

Chrlllmlla Jncomal .

~EASONAILE
11126/t mo. pd

East of Darwin 011 Rt.
611 011 Gravel load
I Y. Mile to Grove.
WATCH FOR SJGIJS

Kirchen. Sun Room, Fun Baalf!lent, One C. G*iQO. Aleo with lhlo
propatly Ia a 38x40 LIIJI CAbin lhll Ia unfinlah&lt;id but could be
completacland lived In . Only fSS,OOO
.

MOTHERS AT HOME

cc-"

TROLLEY STATION

Na;:~~:~J;::Y ~
We- Fill Doctors•

$16,000

CHESTER .:. Toxao Road .- Thet8's mot8 to it than a
drive by will tell . Inside tho house thal8 is 3 bed moms, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, sauna, family room, fit8place, sky·
light, and Mexican clay tile in the kitchen. Outside is a
gazebo bar, inground pool and privacy fence , which a ll
would be greal for entertaining guests.
579,000

..

POMfROY, OHI0-992-6677

HARLEY HAIIIH
IESJDEJJCE
2597SJirtwoods ld.
Jlorleroy, Ohio
load 261

1

SUPPLY ,.

PHARIUCY

a F.A.N.G. fumaco, city water and sewage, 1 car garaga.

_,

RIDENOUR

204 Condor St.
P-roy, 011.

J. MarcUa Funz

POMEROY - W. Main Street - A view of tho beautiful
Ohio River comes with this 4 bedroom homa which has

Real Estate General ·

Wodneaday Semce - 7 p.m.

SWISHER &amp; UIISE

.hutch, 4 bedrooms, 1'/, baths, W18p·around poroh , 3 fire·
places, and a nice big lot.
$29,000

up-

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

205 Norlh Second Ave.
Mlddleporl, OH

LANGSVILLE -You'll love lo como home to relax in lho
country. In this 2 bedroom ranch with aquippad kilchen
silting on 13 acres. II you enjoy hunting this is the place
for you.
$42,500

AI: Blosser's Auction House on Old St.
Mary's Pike, Parkersburg, WV.
_
WILL HAVE LOTS OF: oak, walnut , poplar, mahoga·
ny, primrtives &amp; other furnrture.
AND Lot• &amp; Lola of collectibles, glassware, stone
jars, toys, pictures. Consignments welcome.
·

Sunday School . tO a.m.
Wonhip . 7:30p.m.
Wedaeoday SCrvi&lt;:ea ·7:30p.m.

S..lll Belllel New Teotamtlll
SI... Ridp
Pa-. Duaao Sydenlllri&lt;:ker
Sanday Sc:boal· 9 a.m.
Worahip · 10~,7 p.m.
Wadnelday Service · 7 p.m.

-

Co.

992-3838

and-new tih out windows throUghout.

lhll one today.

S••W (B.,.,r.s
93 Mill Street

•nd TRACMUE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
L.ANDCLEARING,
DRivEWAYS INSTALLED
·UMESTONE-TRUCKlNG
FREE l';STIMATES

home ' With a big living room, dining room with built-in

• License M599
Terms: Cash or
Check with Positive ID
Phone: (304) 863-8895, (304) 428·7245,
(304) 428·2514

....,Sc:bool-9:30-.
. . . . . . .~ ..... 6p.a.
W:' ';Sa;· - 7p.a.

0\\ifl

BULLDO~ 1.,!1ACKHOE

N - s.tlletDIIIl Cbordl .
Sunday Wunbip ·2:30p.m.;
Thunday-. 7:30p.m.

r...: .... GI.aMdf!=

n~

EXCAVATING

' .
.
MIDDLEPORT- Soulh Second St.- Alarge older brick

PATRICK BLOSSER, AUCTIONEER

'
Cartetc. InterdeaamlnatiODal Ourdll
KinasburY Road
Pulor: Clyde Hendell&lt;lfl
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm:
. Evenina - 7 P.DJ.

-7~·9:300&amp;

.

s,Apple
.....IIIIICllurc:b
"'God
Second Su.

Edon United - n o lao Cllrlot.
l Ill milOo nollh o( R ' o111e
· on Suae Roa1e 124
Putor. Rev. -Maddey

3304S Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
Puior: Roy Hunler
Suoday School· 10 .....
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tueaday A Thunday - 7:30.p..m.

R-Ule
PaaiOr. Rev. Seldon Johruoa
Wonbip · 9:30 ua.
ht&amp;3oiSWiday. 7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wadneaday Servioea · 7:30p.m.

•

.

SUNDAY, DEC. 13-12:30 P.M.

ML Hermoo Untied BIAs

Sw&gt;day School • 9:30a.m.
Wonllip . 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wodaeiday Service· 7 p.m.
'
lc.clllll FeUOWihlp
121 Mill SL, MicLI!q&gt;ort
O.udt Md'henon
Sunday Sc:boal· 10 Lm•
Bvcains • 7 p.m.
Wecbaday Service · 7 p.m.

ID ell

U

United Bretilren
In C~rllt Clourdo
Teuo Cooununisy off Cll. 82
Putor: Robon Sanden
Suaday School • 9:30 LID.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wod!W'tday Services· 7:30p.m.

aurancea:

EXTRA LARGE ANTIQUE &amp;
.COLLEOIBLE AUOION

'• •

Wonbip · 3 p.m.

Ualtod Follll Clo- '
RL 7 on Pomeroy By-Put
Puur. Rev. Roben 1!, Smilh, Sr.

.f6IC

Joppa
p.,..,., Brenda
Wcbe&lt;

H - C..rc:b ol Cllrtolt.
Cllrllll• Vololl

llanfonl, W.Va.
Putor: Rov. David McMania
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonbip • 9:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wodneoiloy SOnioa ·7:30p.m.

~

W&lt;&gt;f!hil&gt; • 9Lm.
Sunday Sdiool • 10 a.m.
Thunday Servicea • 1 p.m.

~Servia:a:

Suaday Sc:boal • 9:30a.m.
llnains • 7 p.m. ·
Wedaeday SeMce · 1 P.'l"

JUll.

reoorveo tho rightlo roject

8

Sahbaob Sc:boal • 2 p.m.

'"'n

5' • 7' TALL

Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program. ,
12· 1·2 mo. pd.

.,-~

POMiiiO!t_OH.

Need a Gilt?

OFFICE 992·2886

. ony or Ill bldo "':..•.:..:•..;.,...;.;R;;.:o;.;ve:..,.:_ _ __

Sevetiiii·Dar A.msidol
Mulberry Hu. Rd., p 'M)'
Putor. Roy Lawillal:y

ML Olfl CO!IImlially Cllurdl
Pum:LawmoceBuah

W~·9LtL

• oma •uon

Seventh-Day Adventrst

Wanhip • 10:45 o.m., 7:30 p.m.
W...,.Uy 7:30p.m.

c ..... a.

=·7
-....o
Tow '·aRd..

Srra.,.. F1nl Uolled .....,,_
Sunday School· 10...... .
Wlll!llip·l4......_4y, ll!l~ "!Sao.)

Suada~30o.m.

e r -

1'uesdaJ Sao

MldCI._. Pr•Jia'l•
Sunday School· 9 Lm.
Worship· 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd A 4111 Sao.)

Foi.. GoopeiCII.-c:b

r..r.Jw.Kiioe

CIMoler
Putor: ShanJn Hauaman
.

Worship· 11 o.m., 7 p.m.
W..m.aday Service - 7 p.m.

I

Wonhip · II un., 6:30p.m.

Wonhip Service: ICI-.30 o.m.
Biblo Smdy, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

::r.~J::."'
~ tcbool· 10 a.m.

-Rov.I..M,as
SUnday Sc:bool- 9:30a.m.
E""""" • 1 p.m.
w t ,s.n· •1 JUD.

Melp Coopondve Parloll

Norlhoast Clu-

,,

~~~7~
WM ,.~sa - 7p.m.
a.- ......... 'In

-

U..-GriwoCIIPuror: Cbarlol Dmrizan
Sunday • 10:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:10 o.m, 1 p.m.

Suaday Sc:boal• 10 UD.
Wonhip -ll:U o.m.,7p.m.
~ + day Senica -7 p.m.

r rto.m.

'-:Pt.Ti

·

~P&lt;I-IpC.W

WCl111Up - tlaa.
~CBJifto"

Wdnhip o.m.
Sunday School • 9:45 .....

CHRISTMAS·
TREES

In Ire?

Real Estate General

Public N011ce

992·7553

I

yra and up. Earn ae
much u you want, full
or part time from your
Public' N01lce
. ho.i ne. No cuh
lnvHiment, be your
tad undl 10:00 A.M. EST on
ownbo. .,even H
December 21, tll2. Tha
you'ra
etllla etudent.
Vlllall" reo•rv• the right to
Thlalllncome
that
reject any or all bldo. u.,,nr
1
kMpe going even
Bruc.J.Reed,
when you clon'l
·Kathy ~Ill, CtWIIJ.I
(814) 318-6153
(11) 27; (tZ) 4, ,,, 1e, 4tc
8-12 and 6-10

USED RAILROAD TIES

ony unit from tho Hie al MY
PU8Ut. NOTICE
Saturdoy, December 12th dmo.
In order lo inopect lillY of
ot 10:00 All, The Home
lho above n11111od properly
Natlo~al Bank, Racine,
to
the aole
Ohio, will oHer lor ule at prior
.Public Auction, on the S.nk 11rangementa may be modo
by calling 1141-2210.
Parlclng Lot, the loUowlng:
(11)29; (12) 8,11, 3lc
1989 Ford Hatchback
1988 Pondec Rroblrd
1987 Ford Thunderbird ·
Public N011ce
Serial No.
·
IFABP6031HHt98783.
1987 Niuan S.ntro .
ADVER;rtSEMENT
FOR BIDS
11182 Choitrolet C10 Pup
The Vlllall" of Pomeroy
1971 GIIC Tr..,tor Trallw
will oacept oealod bldo 1 t
1178 Chevrolet PT CKt
. tho c .. rk'o OHice, 320 Eut
Tho torme of lhe ••.. aro Main Streel Pom11oy Ohio
-t:eah,
,
I
I
. ~ 11 ~- k lor tho following InTh H
N

, .

Salem S.., Rutland
Puror:Rol&gt;ortE.!douau

BILL SLACK
992·2269
•

$25.00 , ... "•"

IWOIIAILI UIU

Miclclleport, Ohio

Do ·YOU liNd 8ltart

742 ·2076

Public Notice

Suaday Sc:boal • 9:30 Lm.

s-s.,. Sc:bool · 10 .....

United Methodist

OPEN HOUSE
FEATUR ING HOM E INTERIOR
by Gloria Oiler
Fri. &amp; Sal., Dec. 11 &amp; 12
10 A.M.-9 P.M. Each Day
31645 SR 325, Langsville, Ohio

DELIVIIY SEIVKE
1••0 D01ar Work

KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
539 Bryoa Place

11127

•

Dr..ile C0111m""IIJ Cllwdl

.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

•

Wonbip. 10:30 a.in., 7:10 p:m.

Wonlip·9L&amp;

&amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•

Pentecostal

Pallor: l!dael Hart

-~GSuaday
Sc:bool - 10 ....
-~c...

'

Cburc:b or Jaua Chrtst,
ApolldlcFalth
1/4 mile pan Fon Meia• '"'New lima Rd.
Pu10r. W.illiam Van Meier
•
Sunday-7:00p.m.
:
Weclaetday·7:00p.m.
o
Friday-7~.m.
:

s..iday Sc:boal ·9:30a.m.

Eaoll-..

PallOr. 1oaepb B. Hoakina
Sunday School • 9 UD.
Wonhip -10o.m.,7 p.m.
w-.y Services • 7 p.m.

f

~ c-•lll!llr Clo-

Jl.slar: K 7 • Babr
Sunday Sc:bool - 9:30 .....
Wonioip · 10:45 L11L (I• A :W Sun)

Sucaa Road Cllurdo oi'Cior1ot

PaaiOr. Rov. Michael Panai&lt;&gt;
Sunday Sehix&gt;l - 10 a.m.
Wedaetday S.rvi&lt;:ea · 7 p.m.

1411 BridtiiiiiUI SL, Syn&lt;US~~
PuiOr. Roy (Mike) ThOmpoon
Sanday Sc:boal· 10 UD.

M=n. . Sbr
Pallor K
n Jlabr

Bradford Churdo of.Chrtot
S.. RL 124 A Co. Rd. 5
Pallor: Oerdt SWmp
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30un., 7:00p.m.
Wednetday Sa.o- ·7:30p.m.

••

s,;-..-

Suaday Sc:bool- 9-.lO ....
W&lt;l111Up · ICM5 ..._ (21111 A 411! S...)

Muon Churc:b rl Cllrtol

•I

Rejoicing Lite Churc:b

s-Jay School · 10:00 a.m.
B....... 7p.m.
Tbwldays.Mce. 7p.m.

c...t llabr
Pallor r

OSTOMY ASSOC. CHRISTMAS
POTLUCK DINNER
SUNDAY, DEC. 13, 1:30 P.M.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
COMMUNITY ROOM .
BRING .WHITE ELEPHANT GIFT
F'9BLIC INVITED

·a11tl LIMESIOIE

(614) 949-2058

l

''
••

soo rt lnd A.... Middkpon

JrtC..--.ya.ntl

Sanday Sc:boallO~.

Pallor K..-h Babr
Suaday Sc:bool-10&amp;111.

•'

I

S7S Pad ll., MiddlopOn
PuiOr. Sam ADdenOD

Wonloip·9L&amp;

•• LaUor DarSaJoU
Polllaad.Jia&lt;iae Rd.
Pu10r: William Roush
.Sunday Sc:boal- 9:30 .....
Worahip · 10:30 a.m.
Wadneaday Sorvila • 7:30JUD.

••

Puaor: David Dailey
S...S.y School9:30 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 7:30p.m.

liS Buumut A.._, Pomeioy.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m. ..
Wonbip ·10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Sarnts

•

Silvernllle Word otFalllo

Onudl· 9: IS LID.
Wonbip • ICI-.30 o.m.

2. Public Official'•
Uablllly
3. Fleet Cavor.,g.
4. GIIIWII Uoblllly
5. HNIIh/Lllelnourance
lpeclHcoUono may bo
plckod up al the Clerk'a
Olllce, Bleil may be. ~!!!Jill-

NE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

&lt;

Calvar7 Pl(&amp;rlm CUpel
HarriJonYille Road
_ Puaor: Rev. Violor Routb
Sunday School9:30 a.m .
Worship· 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7:30p.m.

·

Po-..-.vw-.yaem.e -6:30p.m.
T_,
c a tw;~S:.,dl
PuiOr. Rev. .

~-"';

'•

Pu10r. Rov. Franklin Dicl:eo•
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.

SoedaJ worship· 10 a.m.

s .... .
'"""" Flunaoe s..u.
Suaday Sc:bool· IOa.a

Public N011ce

FaiiiiF&lt;IIowahlpCruaadetor~

,

oim':'a~1irou

$20.00

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

~e,Co.Rd.

I aa-tiPn,_

I

Wlllof""

CGo&amp;YiOe R.oiMI

c.t..., Bible Cllurdl

-

SIWL DOZEJI

For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine,

'

Other Clnrrclws

, Tuppen Plahl Chw:dl of Cllrlot
Pallor: Robal FOII&lt;Ir
SwlCiay Sclluol • 9 a.m.
Worship · 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday School · JO a.m.
Y(onhip ·lla.m.

• .•

~

.

Wonbip ·10:30 o.m . .

. P1110t : Arilll HuR

··~
f

..
•

w

Bradburr Ch'urn·of Cllrlot
Pulor : TOIII R...yoo
, Sunday Sdaool· 9:30a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30 ...... .
Wonhip • 10:30o.m., 7:30JUD.
WeoNaclay Service 7:30p.m.

~.,
WilliD 1aotla
Wonl!ip • lo.40 ..... 7 p.m.
W-ySaoiooi • 7JUD.

a

Putor. Interim putor

• a ... Cllrtltlu a.-

...
"_ ..
.....,....,..,9:30 .....
,....

s-tay Sc:boal· 9:30 .....
Wanbip · IQo.JO a.m., 7 p.m.
Satices •1 p.m.

FonltRunBaptlsa

',

,.;

~

Hol111c::.s

BtonoaU.... Rlctae Cllurdl of Cllrlot
Putor. Ja&lt;:k ColeJII"Y•
s...day s~ :9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 aJD., 6:30p.m.
. Wednesday Service• · 6:30p.m.

Putor.: E.l.amarO'Bryant

~~

..

. Ntw S . . Cllludl of till N
Pallor.
1 Sllaad

Sunday School · 9:30a.m. .
Worship·l0:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednetday Semooa. 7 p.m.

,'

••••• ,

I'll 'I l _ _ _,lciDa!JI&amp;a.

Ktno Churdo of Cbrtol
WO!Ship • 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 o.m.

r-eror Flnl Baptbl

Sunday School · 9:]0 a.m.
· 10:45 o.m., 7:30p.m.
• Wonbip
Wcdneiday Service• -7:30p.m.
.'
,
Mlddlepc!ltflnt Bapdll
·, ,,. ·
Corner Sillob A Palmer
• J'Utor: Rev. lamea A. Bill, Robon Fotrer
·~
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship • 9:45 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

~

Sunday Sclaool· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15,10:30a.m., 7p.m .
Wednesday Semc:ea . 7 p.m. .

Zloo Churc:b rl Cbrtol
P0111e10y, Haniaalville Rd. (RLI43r

Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m.
111r11 South. . Baellll
41872 Pomeroy Pilce

•
l'

t

RuUand•F int BapUII Church
Sundiy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:45 0.m.

East MainS..
Putor: Dr. Lee Morria

lr ''I,..
Me· ,,._wA•s ',,

c-...

.

Folrvlew llli&gt;IICIIunll
Lturt, W.Va. RL I
Pallor !ames Lewis
S-ySchool-11 o.m.
Wonhip · 9:30LIIL, 7:30p.m.
WE "' h)' $eolice • 7:30p.m.

Ti4lnlllip· l0:30UL,6:30JUL
WI t,S..looi · 7JUD.

ta-ll

a..-.~

PuiOr. Rev. Philli~ R s-Jay School • 9:30 UD.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m,
WedneadayS.mce ·7p.m.

ta..t~~a.Jb=SW9

1

I

. Wonbip - 10o.m., 6p.m.
Wednetdiy Saviou • 7 p.m.

Free Will Baptbl Churdl
Ash SUeel. Middlepon
Pastor: Mark MotTOw
Saturday Semce • 7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.,
Wcd!leaday Semco-7:30 p.m .

Wblla~
I

~~~=
W~S.olool · 7p.m.

Sundaf Sd!ool · II a.m.

Wonbip • II Lm. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service ·1'p.m.

1'1--

BoW ICaob, .. Co. u 31
Puror: Rev. J!Gpr WilU'...a
Suliday School • 9:30 .....
Wonbip-10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
W-ySeMce·7p.m.

a-

1, ....... 7 ......

I

Pomeror w - Cllunto "'Cllrtol
33216 Chilcl,...'a Home Rd. ·
·

Pum:Rov.
Sunday tdlool · 9:45

., a.nlllf... "

,__, ... 1'IIIIMI u=

-~ ·10:30&amp;&amp; . . 6p.aa.

.._.., CUrdo ofCIIrlot
212 w. Mail! s..
Pu10r: Anohow Milu
Sunday Sclaool • 9:30 ......
Wanhip- 10:30 UD, 7 p.m.
W.........y Sa.o- . 7 p.m.

·,•

.....,
......
""'...
w

•

Church of Chnst

CHARLIE'S

GRAVE
BLANKETS

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent "'
Box 189
,,.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
_
(614) 843·526412•11 •92_1 mo.

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Wfnde&gt;Wa
Room Additions • Roofing
··
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOnLE OF LOTION

614·949·210 I • 949·2860
or 985·3139
(Jio

Suntl•y CDils)

32.00
Many J!IOrt specials,
1

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

FOREVER
BRONZE
lasha.- ld;, lacina

939·2126
ALL SESSIONB GOOD
FOR I IIONTliS
11-2:1-'112·1mo.

CELLULAR
.............
~

TOTALLY AUTOIIOnVE PEAFOAIIANCE

t

t

I

I

t

I

I

t

t

I

I' I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I I

/

'

I

•

t

I

I

I

I

1 t

Been Wliling foro good rfiiS()II fO oorchose ocllhJ11 ti1onff

=lc•

UMITED

8 eou~~~y .

TIME ONlY

lacol

=~~:'
pormanlh

6995

5

31452SR

.

•

I

�•

Friday, DeCember 11, 1882

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
SNAFU® by Bruc:e Beattie

51

42 Mablla llomll
torAint

Friday, December 11,1992

The Dally Sentinel Pag1

ftLLEY

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household
Goods .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TilT DAILY
PUUUI

__ --,
.....
........
'
·
-···
I~~-

.........

q..-·-·..-,,·-1151.
0..0 lA
--

.................
__ -. .....
,.
.. Ow-.....,._

2d
..... 2 C?FF'rt· .............

Un-

10110:

... -.11111w .......ad, J - rolrtpnlor -

Good lor
gllto •
BHullful llock Puppioi, tl4- • Alllrtn
441h31'M.
.

I AlqtJIIwd. ........

1721,

---Como
_........, _..., ........
Couch. 114-416-2871.

Sootb
3+

Qoa~. I

st

ttOO

BARNEY

......... CDctol • \l(ll!ng
44
Apanment
Ducu •• gtv-y. 1114-"IU- ,..; , _ Cluoot• •ldn
2 .
2 ........ 17110
luii
O.NJ.
tor Rent
3028.
... Chat Anclroo, no phclrio :::..~~~-oollo
.......
One
bOdrwm.
opt, ·rumllhed,
port
Doo-M,;
No polL, :IIM-t75IIR_on_IILIIO
lo- lddo, •• jjoocl ......... ·~
NclotiL ....
1182-tl?l.
fumlohod Alii:· 2 IR, S2eO.
utiHioo !Jd, 10t 4th, O.Uipollo.
Puppy IIIII " - - I holt
114 111 ,.,, ..... 7 p.m.
Chlllliohw,
304~7171,
. , . . . . . . . . 112a.l.

••*DIIIIII!.

Dill.-.., .....

·---·-""""'

holr ..... - · •

llln\mocl. Dog ttw45-1137.

IEAIITFUL FOR SALE
Hlotootc.l Arlo Lol ·111
lloln II. Pt. - . W, V..
OoepltfoiJ -tool: I Ful

• -

Tooioo,.blolla.11W78,2114.
To 1 good llomo, a "*llh Old.

lalllo,l~ld-.How

•ea•

HYAC, How C:.IIIOL Avollobla

~· Colllll T.mor, 114--

...........,.11t

SCRAPPIN'
AS'IN It

Fol&gt;d 'Ad. How Rio GronciL 11424UIIL

ao- on 111. Cannot Aoed,-

llftonll Weortng

~
~. 114-245 51112, 114-

!-vt!l:

ml1od
-~.with ...... In COllar,
no lD. I , ..,. old, Chnhlno
wlc:lni1J, _
_.,
lmoll,

..._,

•••llpooo.

IIIIo llooalo.- School.,..

on Orohoioo School Ad. . _
t25f.

1"'

~E'( LOOK , MA ~ SANTA

54 Miscellaneous
Mllrchandlll ·
A bat ol - ' * .,,_,

llblod Pltoacad ,_ ..... 11430-1831.

dr? ' , ~

top. IM-44f.4la4.

CLAll5 15 EATING OUT
OF A DOG 1/1514 !

- I t ............ ...,.; PooltabiL ooaUtottan .......
a oNf, MO;

1111tl &amp;41i

.

Apoll....,.,
1 . ·Stove
Rolilgomor,

~ Dryor Hooll-Up, 114-

TEXAS REFINERY CORP. N lloturo In IIALUPOUS Ana. Aollllnllooo
01
Trolnlntl. Wr"o V, N. Hopldno,
801 71\ !'L Worth, TX 'IIIDI,
Wanltd: ...w

....

~

....,._ ......... 711- ol
11Q1 or_,_ ,_ "*" rntli&gt;n pllano liiWIWT.IZ.

Yard Sale

......

THIS TIME!!

'-li:RE, I T140ll61-lT YOU .
MIG'-IT LIKE' A LITTLE SNACK
ILE YOU'RE WOI&lt;.KI

u.,t: F.wn Catarld ,......

__

...- .......... •rn.

-with

a rw,

•

Coonl.....,

Aroa, Nl.. 2 hdltovo, Aofrla.,.tor,
• f244IAolo. No PM 114-

-

-

44~

1031,

FRANK AND ERNEST

'

Ttl~
-TOPAY'S
LeSSON•

Mil

- l l d l .,.., ADMo.L I ..... I
inlloo
- llmenl
lloOinaRd. . ,
- .. l14-llr2-

.

I

. P~~- SC~OOL,.

::

NO.NV~~gAt..
!ICU-LS wiT~

COMMVNIC.ATION
~MPt-IAfiS ON FO,MAt..

a-.

11114 Chevy
414L 13,200.
304-171-2711 or ••• o:DO Pll
l'lllolllll.

SYMBOL-IC. Tt,MINATION Of
ON~OING Pf:PSONAt. P~LATIO.f\1·
SHIPS IY MeAN! OF

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclrilty

G~.s"TUfl AL' Sf: MANTIC
J

...

.,. . . . . . . . . . .

..

~.,.

NOgMS..
'":'~

.

'

--.

;&gt;

•I

Fumllhod, I R - I Bllh,
Cloon, No Pole, Rolo!ronco •
11oPoo1t Aoqulml, 814-+11-1511.

.,.rt_

Orool... living, I -

room

Apoot..-.

2 bed.
All Ylllago
Rlvorolclo

,,_

llodom I IR opt, 114 t41 0380.
HI- I I

a bed.- lllr-

OE 112 Ill
_..

.Ill"--.
wll
lonll;
1IU ....

55

Aomoclollna? ConolcMr ltll..,_
ooblnolo w1th topo,' •• - . onn,-llnl,
dlllliwoll)or, P - to oo11 cam-

Building

______

AlciiPoo- ....,_ CalnponJ.

~

_,._

.,ONolWool~­
~

ttco....,
Ohio a Wool V1rglnlo, - 1 '

21

OpportunHy

Agonto • • -· R-edl Don
Blick. 11.. 31112'10.

Wanted to Buy

INOT1CII
OliO VAI.LE'f PUI~ .... CO.

Rentals

- . Call 114-

,...- ...

thlt,., ...

.

~~oo-....,

lbdnn,

~,_ ~

~..::....~

...

I lr, 2 both, llllllly wtth
-pump, t40Giftoo. Rot, • . , .
nq'ocl, 114-+11-1124.

3bdrnL, I oiGry - . pa6'
mon., plue utlutl~ _dtpOell,
,.... en ~ P. .ror
114-112-MII, '

Employment Serv1ces
11

llulbofry Ave,.., "-or;1141112-181L

45

eau..
........
41 HOUIII tor Rem
IICJI' .. ....
... ,...-ltiniiiiilt
.... 'rJ+nl5.t..tho
•d
fl ~ 111116.. . .

Two bOd.- • ...,_. on

Yendlfta -

Aout1:

P

I I II= I

Prooi._WithAII~
CMit I,._, 1-100 tl1 W'.

lllr 1'1111 I mila
hm Pt. PI on At. 2 N, itil: par

I ,_ -

- . 1100. .....~~.

Rei ...

~,nlol
- 'gH:Iol1lnd,
1.

2h*

;;,

f

'

'

.,

'

'i

61 F1m1 Equipment

I

·I--

--·

I

. I
'•

)mart

·---

......
In
louy on

tan
·-~·--

''•,

Serv1ccs

IMd. CIIIPII 11t11 1101.

S1

Household
Goods

41" Rcund OM Tobie WRh 2
Luv• And 4 Anowbac- Chol,.
f7!10, CUrved' Oloa Chine
Coblnelo, s.. otlng AI: 1171:
Alvor VoUoy OM f"IUIIMuro, 514-

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sell it the ean way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words_or less, 3 days,
'3 paper&amp;.$6. 00

ASTRO·GRAPH
..
.
'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

84

a-In IIOCII.

I

~•J

an U.lllr, ,.,.,.,CII I

lloll- Coorpolt,

Gallipolis Dally 'Irlbune
446-2342 '
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
882·2156
Pt. Pleasant Register
. 675·1333

Hay &amp; Grsln

...............
_.ri
.......
-.,...
..
=r--.....·

'-Your ·

'Birthday

Plumbing &amp;

H1atlng

"II 'MIInAM
... -..Anol-...
....... RID
011....._ R11P

TrJnsportat1on
71

Pleaq eall
' -1

•

Astro-Graph Match·
maker Instantly reveals which signs are
romantically Rl!rfl!!li.Jm._ygy..J].1.all ..$2
plus a long, self-addressed, stamped ·
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428 , Cleveland,
OH 4410 1'3428.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22•Jan. 18) II some·
one tells you some sacral business In·
!ormation today, don't betray the conll·
dance, because the purveyor might be
testing you lor something else he or she
has in mind.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 11) Your cons1ructive suggestions to others loday
could Inspire them to lake action on
matters that I bey would othefwlseleave
dormant or Ignore.
PISCES (fob. :Z0.114•rch 20) Your will· lngneas to lnccnvenlence yOuroell on •
behalf or othel'l tOday Increases your
sratureln lheir eyes. Thlals a great day
for image-building.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll11) Your artistic
and creative Inclinations are pro:
nounced tOday. Try to operata along
Imaginative lines or get Involved In
so"""hlng that has elements of
glamour.
TAURUI (Aprii:ZO.May 20) Others will
hava diHiculty hiding facts from you today. They'll find out quickly, and to their
dismay, that when II comes· to 'super
1

,

•vtnp tlot All VInyl a c..

.

poem
•,
1 - Llnou•
(~lrtlnol
.. ,
8 tennll,p11yer.
Jclhn -'9 River nymph :
10 llldw1y
•
lttr.Ctlon :~·~· :
t 1 Tropiell frull,.
10 HouH .,-t ,
21 carMI gr. .
23 ScriP
·• •
24 Hog laacl ~::
25 Contfrlent ·
20 &amp;e111tor sam.:

1 Average
2 Grand
3 Organizing
4 CluaUc
aubellnct
5 - voce
6 Long heroic
'

27 Sto- ' '"
28 Front Ol 1100£ ·
[2 wda.)
'
20 Dutch clltlil
30 .F ill•
bOttOtllld - but
32 11118 chlklrlft
35 01 • pttchlna.

ltyt.
I '"
30 Cunning • •
~1---1--1---1 38 Young ~Y ....
31 One D•r ~:~
- Tlllll
•

41 Pllnwright _ _:
Nall42 Aclrttl
118gnenl
43 llleltlng
44- La Douce
45 Bera
•.. ;
47 Olve~ut •.
48 Jacoba- "
51 Flower
" •'

OUR LANGUAGE A[).VJCE: A
magazine takes the newest Ad· Vice
Award for describing an American
woman who has moved to Europe as
an "expatriot." Tl!e proper word.for a
person who moves away from her or
his native country is the noun EXPA·
TRIATE. In use for more than two
centuries, this word comes from a
Latin verb for "to leave one's own
country" and may not refer at all to a
person:s patriotism. (All "ex-patriot,"·
in fact, may decide to remain in the
native land.)

necklace ...,.

52 Olalrna call:

Autol tor Sale

.W.t1tiM11n.

84

, \ Can r 1

! •

Dec. 12, 1112 .'
In the year ahead, II behooves you lo
"tabllsh good relationships with people In banking or financial fields. Theae
contacts could be ol real value to you In
an endeavor that you might pursue.
a~otn u,us (How. 2J.IIec. 211 Chal
rllma Is a aeverely overworl&lt;ed word,
..Ut It best delll'rlbea you tOday. II you
doubt this, study the raactlon ol others
when ,you make your pretenCe lett

,,

,

....

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cettbrity Clpltlf ctyptOQteml ue CAIII.:I from quotttiOnt by t.mou. JMIOP'a, I)Mt lind pr.Ml.
UCft ltlt•ln tM cipher standiiOf 8r!Other . TOIUy'•cNa· B~ k

J

'z s

YS X0 RCK0 T

0

KO

TCU

OZT

H P Y T

OS

0 S Xl

ZKG

GTT
CSO

s v

S C T

P G

S C T' G

OZKO
KJTU

MIRX
OPOZ

VPCCTBKCC.

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

.. . .
o 'I I

VXTU
PF.IEVIOUS SOLUTION: " Life is like a sewer . What you get out ol It oi&gt;
depends on what you put 1nto it. " - Tom Lehrer.

M SR. '

«'J

1992 TV Listing II"'C .

Ul::L--...L.-...L.-~ U:!.!...L..&gt;rrfow..t.iwrii~ol~;ri~;;;c;;-;;~-.l;.~le;;;uiht.thing,

Call our office for poid in odvon&lt;:e rote•!

a

tor Rent

..,.

41 Eye Infection
42 Tolerate
45 TV'IPttpltl
48 Kentucky
b(ue gren
411 Neither'•
tollowar
50 Former
student
52 Mineo and
llaglt
53- de plume
54 llakt over .
55 Curved
molding ·
58 CoiiOCtlon of ·
tecta
57 Manner
58 Scorch

with -ng.
Ideo IraTI• - · Al-k-upo,
C:.U oftw 1:110 p.on., 304-Jn.
IIUI,II-WV.

Wonlocl To Ron!: llol• Homo
,_ W..._. T~ To ....h

'

35 Gumbo, e.g.
38 Be chief
feature
37 Flahlng
39-Children
[SOIP opera)
40 lllllboarda,

ACROSS

liMPing -

Q Wanted to Rent ·

.••

f'

1 Flah1atlng
My favorite author of bridg~ fiction
mammal
is Englishman David Bird. He writes 5 Tailor's
about a group of monks .who fit their
handiwork
b
'd
9Firtarm
·
I
d
normal duties aroun p aytng rt ge.
ownero' org .
Bird's fourth collection of stories,
Grand Ole Dll·exportlng
"Doubled and Venerable," has been
published in paperback by Gollancz. It
ann.
is available for $15.95 from '
14 River ialand
Bridge World, 39 West 94th Street, 115 Coll'alather
New York, NY 10025-7124. It is as
16 Ripped
joyable and entertaining as the nrli•vi-1 17
18 Flah
oxalla' plant
ous books.
111 That thlng'a
The Abbot is a cantankerous soul 20 Orpna of
oman
who greatly overrates his own abilit~He particularly likes to show off on 22 De-: again
front of players from the novitiate. 24 :'~~~
Brother James was forced to watch 25 FuriD~I
today's deal.
27 Colleplred
' West began With two top
31 Outfit
Abbot ruffing the second .with
32 Blackthorn
my's spade six. Next came the
trult
33 BIIChelor'a
queen, covered with the king by
laet worda
34 Tavern
a weak player.
"A -little lucky, perhaps," said
Abbot to Brother James. "But
players ~reate their own luck."
The Abbot played a club to the'd!llll·
my and ran the spade nine. Now he had
to return to hand to draw the last
trump. The Abbot tried to cash a second top club, but East ruffed to defeat
the slam .
"What a ludicrous distribution,"
cried the Abbot. "Makes tbe game
more like spinning a 11/Uiette .wheel
•
than a test ofskill:
J!ut Brother James wondered why
the Abbot hadn't -unbleltked the spade
suit by ruffing with the spade nine at
trick two. II would be instructive to
know why, ·he thougbt to himself. But
I'd better ask him later, I don't want to
make a fool of myself now,

IFRIDAY

'

P118 Ill holM. HUD IU lp,ell,

42 Mobile Homes

\

_____..__\

top lor Chovr •
.... ft bOd JIOO. 1110 hloh ·:

·'
11 T...,. Aooort Trlvol "
IOOPonlt--bolw,nllo, -.--l,llollyoct~ltc I, ·
·
111511;
t-or , II:,!~....... ....... hca. . 12 • l'lnlloolnf
.
Am'h"'e.l,._._ 1121.

IJ))

'

Motor Homes

·::::c
«
.......... 1300 ...... ""
-lor - -

ADH~IVE".

FAL-L-INe OIJT.

........ :'4

I

0

· CA6H?!!

campers&amp;
-

DENTURE

~ HI6TEO.-n-l KEEP

114 . . . . . ..

llouao: II IIIII CIMir, Oolllpotll,
·~ IIOII1aorlter F u -.
fl . o. fiDII .,._~ • 11711,114-+11-1:140.
441-4315.
NNW' home, I Ndrooma a I YI'AA FUAIITUAE AND APPUANCES
.:~r.,WV·
month,
oftw $100.
4:00
11t 441 U21 OR f14.441..31M
Pll,

I ()n

0

PIN down EXTRA

Rooms

Merchandise
quiNd, *"1711-1221,

~

FJrm Suppl1rs
&amp; L1vestock

AOO&lt;DO lllr rant • - or month,
llortlng o1 suom., Ha4ol.

Help Wanted

'AVON' ALLAAEASI 8IWo yUmo wfth ... You'l loYo tho
company. I-1112-13N.

Fumlshed

CHeAP

.MY 6AAND~~ UF'ei:T

bOdrocm
-monlo,
122S/mo. lnclud• ullihl.., 1100
-Hr dlpaoll, no polo; tt411124211.

~ ~­

oluolo, hlmllnfoabiR. l r - -

Bual. . .

--

2211 or 131'2121.

-

MORTY
MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
'

eno

houM MWty rc•adtltd Z llrv-

Cat• 11M
Ilona a bondool
...._ .
or

Ueed -

U•

l'llarmofY·

M ocra ocuntry-...,

lull
ouo11cn
limo --.· U.Ucoaitn,.ued•

9

~

c-pltfly Fuml- mobilo
ltomo, 1 mit below town •-· -lonnui"IL
........., .. Aid
No "-11,
114- Tho•r.-todlol,

Public Sale
:&amp;AuctiOn

8

11 -1 0

Anything that calms or soothes is
ASSUASIVE ("uh·SWAY -siv"), as in
"the assuasive effect of a hot bath."
For a persuasive hint about spelling,
end the adjective ASSUASIVE like
PERSUASIVE.

SupplieS

c-jllolly FumloMd lmlll
.. ._-..... . Ulllhloo. No pltfounlt, lfW45IIM,
"-'"·""" lloloro7 P.ll. 1 0331.

•

By Jeffrey McQuaiD

=:.!1. =:=.:~~- _....._ __
·
=
=
.::,;r Air-....Bof.l
::::&amp;tvor.
a
Nooio

Pass
All pass

I 1111111

OUR LANGU,AGE

and
In ~~~.r.rfilii, Coolll14-112
, EOH,

Ill-

4 NT

4"Pass 6.

GET ANSWER

Venerable monks:
double the fun

-.PEANUTS

En~oh SliMp ~. bluo ~
=~lckooy ChOpol Ad,

East

W

'•

THEY'RE

THROWIN'
THINSS

oollll4-iD-II'IL E~

BMgl• on Oamor'o

ton Ololo,

THAT'S NO
BIZ NESS OF
MINE!!

:lbdrm. ....... Ioiii _ , . . , ....
pU1nmn tumllhed, l&amp;undiy
lllcll~loo; O!OM to ochool
In tOWII. ADDIIctttlono ...lllblo
at: VII- ·0rwn At&gt;IL 141 or

LOST: , lll!oignoy· a will'" Olcl

. . UNSCRAMIL! LETTERS TO

Nortb

"'·

r rl'rl'tl'l .•

PRINT NUMIU!D LUI!RS
IN THESE SQIJAifS
_

•

By Pblllip Alder

6 · Lost &amp; Found
a -

West

quoted

m1ssing word~
L...l.-J...-l.-1-..L.....J you develop from step No. 3 bt~~low .
fill ing

Opening lead: • K

TH' BARLOWS '
ARE

.,, - ""J11o1711.

..... lo!lll

~

_,;IS:...;.II..:.N=-ri:.:.H-iAii&lt;-6,;_Vlr-;7-11. !e
~::~;~!• inthethechJI(kle
V by

SOUTH

......

._,_ taoo.
-. -.; II: .........
~iiO.iiii
dopaolt, 114-44M'II1.

I

+AJ8HIZ
"9 2
t73
+a 4
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

"" Nlll, c.nop Conloy
u-, *"1711-llll all• t :DO
Pll.
.
.

I

0 0 0 RE

Political debates remind me
.•
of the stock car races. No one ,
. . . . . . .. watching them really cares
..------:--:-"':"":----, who wins , they just wanllo see

+3

to
orwl

-

OoldiiGilo

-.-.
. . ,.-. ...... 01(.,...
=. -.
3t Hamel for Sell
- Ill- 1'1., ,II _ . lot,

Cllrlotm..

lnllor

.~

1--..:1;_:;I....::.'TI~,.-T"I_, .:_·

tt098S2

Nlce2br-.~ • .AI.JI!,_I
1111-, Depaoli I A-nee ,...

~·

SCOPH

"7613

........_, Cennl Air a
.......14 4412111.
.

...

YAPERR

3

EAST
+K 103
hd-

141'111, I

••..

I
I I I . I 1·

NORTH
l%·11-n
.Q96
"10
tAKQJt
.AK,QIO

I lnd t:nt ...-.. home. J

-lo -

I

..,_

.._

nlolood, I U Mllli!o~
..,.._, WV. IOW15-1221.

the

IJ..

low to form four sJmplt words.

PHILLIP
ALDER

1R. fleL I dop. nq'od. -

•

0 four
~earrangt letters of
ocromblod wordo

·----:111
-

t1

you're In a class with :;herlock Holmes
'
GE-l (M~J 21·June 20) Your greet·
es~asspUoday , Jl. you choose· to apply
yourself, is your ability to take the parlial ideas or suggestions or others and
complete them in an errective manner.
CANCER [June 21·JUty '22) No one Is
likely to hand you something special on
a silver platter loday, but you could be
quite fortunate when It comes to earn·
lng your rewards. Work for what you
want
LEO [July 23·Aug. 22) Good things
could happen for you today il you place
yourself where you can see and be
seen. Same type of pleasant adventure
is Indicated In your chart
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sapt. 22) II there Is
nothing special on your agenda today,
ring up eameone you like to come over
to your place and share candlelight ,
caSMtte tapeo_and conversation .
UIRA (SapL 23-0ct. 23) Compliments
that you grace others with today will
have a favorable, lasting aHect . Their
self-estaem Is enhanced knowing that
your remarks are sincere.
aCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) Profit appe,ars,to be til the plctu're lor you today.
You 're not only an lmaglnatlva seller,
you'll olea be a canny buyer who will
know how to spot real bargains.

,,

r

Ft Wonh n;

DECEMBER 11

I ··....
.. '

�I

~

•

..• •
•

.•.•

.

.By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
·

Friday, DeCember 11, 1 •
Page 12

'

Ravenswood ·
connector·
Phase I

/

Wife wonders whether or not to ---People in the news--.. . . . .
tell .her husband about the past

LAS VEGAS (AP) - . LaToya
Jackson was ftred from her starring
role in a show at the Sands Hotel
six nights after she joined the glittery production.
Dear Au I...Mden: I am a 29- r------~~~~~: can't be bothered wilh anything so
Her husband-manager said he
mundane as careful penmanship?
Yc:¥-old Jlfll(essioaal who
WQ.uld sue for $2.3 million.
Invariably, the first two or tluec
was ~~t~xually moleslcd by my older
Jackson debuted in the show,
lette:rs are rme, but the ~ of 1he
brother wheill was a child. 'l,'llcR ia
" Bare Essence," the day after
signature is a hen-scrau:h scribble Thanksgiving. She was to be paid
a six·~ age difference between
or a wavy line.
"Pele" and me.
$26,000 a week, but the arrange.We hear a lot about adults
When I was in my early 20s, my
ment didn't work out, said Lynn
who can't read. How about the
Garlock, spokeswoman for the
boyfriend and I were overnight
show's'production company.
ones who can't write? Can we
guests a1 Petc's summer cottage.
blame thia on poor educalion or
" We did give her a dismissal
After everyone: had gone to bed, Pele
notice 'and we're looking at other
Should ItcU Jim whal Pele did to plain old-fuhionea laziness? -made a move on me. I slapped him
so luiid his ears must have rung for me? I believe then: should be no AN IRRITATED TEACI$R IN options," said Garlock, declining
· further comment.
sccteiS ~ a husl:Bnd and his OREGON
·
a.week.
Jackson's husband, Jack·GorDEAR IRRITATED: Illegible
The following day. I told my wife, but I'm afraid if he knew aboui
don,
said he would file lhe lawsuit
sislCr about 1he childOOod molcsla- 1he past, he would be so 111gry he signatures are not necessarily a
against
the show's producer, David
tion and Pete's recent attcmpt. would want to kill my brother.
matter of poor education or laziness.
WriA!Jt,
for breach of contract and
Slie was SIUJIIICd and insisttJd that I
rm exaemely ambivalent about ~re are several ~le explamental stress suffered by his wife.
see a therapist, which I did. The this and would welcome your inpuL nauons. SOII1C of diose 111scrutable
therapist said I must lake conuol Sign this letter-- SILENT SO FAR signatures are carcfuUy ·crafted so
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) they wiD be difficult to forge. Then
of my life and confront my brolher IN MASSACHUSE'ITS
DEAR SILENT: I c8n see no 1here are those folks who are simply
in a forthright and self-assured
manner. I did. Pece said t11c usual useful purpose served by tclling tired of writing lheir ~ 1he same
sick lhinp. •y011 never said no; your husband SOmelhing that would old way, so they do the scrawl
Uc1 •you enjoyed it as moch as I guaranrec a lifelong rift between him number to break the monotony.
Homeowner Patriek Kelly and
· ~ illegible wavy lines are just an official of the mongage compadid.' This made me furious. I kept and your brolher.
ny threatening foreclosure were
calm, rebuttcd intcUigcndy and left
Apparently you are over the plain laziness.
invited to Phoenix, where Cooper
feeling in eonuol. I never brought anger and there. is no longer a
Gem~ ';he D~y: f&gt;:. ~husband
need ·to lllk about il, so I suggest never atbc•zes his wife sold clothes. was scheduled to hand over a check
1he s!lbject up again.
Is tltol AM Ltwlers column you for $13,044.52 Thursday to cover
My poblem is !his: I was caught that you leave weD enough alone.
Dear Ann Landers: Will you cUpped years ago yellow with ate? part of Kelly's debt, said Toby
up in a self-assertive. lake-ronuol
Mamis of Alive Enterprises, Coopmode at that lime in my life and please tell me why intelligent, For a copy of Mr most frequently er's
agency.
told .my boyfriend and several educated people sign their names in requested pomu alld ess~s, se~ a
Mtcr
seeing news report$ about
ocheR about the molestation. (My a way that render's their signatures selfaddreued, long, biUlness-siZe the house's
artwork,
envelope aNl a cMck or mo~~ey which Kelly psychedelic
doctor said it was healthy to lllk IO!illy illegible?
painted to show his
Do 1hese people want to appear order for $4.85 (this includes frustration over not being able to
: about it.) I no longer see that
· boyfriend and rccendy married so busy thai they don't have time postag~ tJNl Nwlling) to: Gems, find a buyer, Cooper held a rock
: "Jim." He knows nothing of IJ!is to write properly? Or do they c/o AM Lmrders, P.O. Bo:r..l/562, 'n' roll garage sale there Nov. 22,
put history and adores my cntue believe a hastily scribbled signalure Chic11go, Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
drawing about 1,200 people.
fanilly. He is especially fond ofl'ele. announces to ' the world -that they CtuttUJa, send $5.87.)
The event raised $11,300 and
more money was donated.
The payment will bring the
Kelly account up to dnte, but does
not pay off the loan on the home,
which has been valued at $258,000,
said
Pam Beck, vice president at
Community Calendar items invites the public.
cal Society will meet Monday at
Standard
Mortgage Co. of San
appear two days before an event
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Bernardino.
and tbe day or that event. Items
LOTTRIDGE - Counlj'y Music . Museum in Pomeroy, weather permust be received weD in advance Night at the Lottridge Communi!)' mitting.
to assure publication in the cal· Center will be Saturday. There will
'
be a potluck at 6 p.m. and bands
endar.
RACINE - Racine Board of
will perform from 7 p.m. to mid- Public Affairs will meet Monday at
FRIDAY
night. Everyone welcome.
I 0 a.m. at the fire annex.
RIPLEY, W.VA. • Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Friday
SUNDAY
CHESTER· The Chester Fire
at Skatelan~ in Ripl~y, V!. Va.
Department Christmas party will be
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Sunday at 5 p.m. Everyone who
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies participaled in fundraising for ·the
-Auxiliary will sponsor a round and · department is invited. All attending
square dance Fri.day from 8-11:30 bring a covered dish.
p.m. with music by Smokey Mountain Drifters. Everyone welcome.
POMEROY - Gr,~ce Episcopal
Southem Ohio Coal Company's
Church will have its annual meet- Meigs Division will hold its annual
ENTERPRISE - Annual Christ- ing and poduck Sunday following Christmas parties for underprivimas party of the Willing Workers the worship service. Meat win be leged children in southeastern Ohio
class ;&gt;f the EnterJ?.rise United furnished.
on Friday, Dec. II at the division's
Methodist Church will be held on
general office in Wilkesville.
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
RACINE - The Teen Choir of
The first party will be held at
Marge Bowen. There will be a ~3 the First Baptist Church in Racine 10:00 a.m. for the Children's Sergift exchange.
will perform at the church on Sun- vices of Gallia and Meigs counties.
day at 7 p.m.
Children from Jackson and Vinton
SATURDAY
counties will attend a party at 1
POMEROY - Breakfast with
POMEROY - Guest minister, p.m .
Santa will be featured at the Meigs St. Paul and St. John Lutheran
Athens County Children's SerCounty Museum in Pomeroy on Churches, Sunday. A reception will vices and Sine Cera, a bon' home
Saturday from 8-11 a.m. The cost follow the service at St. Paul. Items in Athens) will not be in attenis $2 for children under age I0 or for the reception wiD be provided. dance, but will receive gifts from
$3 for those age 10 and over. The There will not be a potluck.
the company.
.
menu includes pancakes, scrambled
Santa Claus will make a special
egg~. bacon, sausage, breakfast
MONDAY
visit at each party to hand out gifts.
breads and beverage. There will
SYRACUSE • "Holy Night" This year Southern Ohio Coal
also be crafts for the children.
will be presented Monday at 7 p.m. employees raised over $14,000 for
at Carleton School in Syracuse by the event.
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA.· Libeny the pre-school class, primary class,
Mountaineers will perform Satur- and senior high class, under the
day at the Jackson County Jam- direction of Kay Tackett. Public
boree in Fairplain, W.Va.
inv~ted. ~efreshments w'll be
served.
BURLINGHAM • Modern
Woodmen of American Camp
POMEROY - Pomeroy Village
7230, Burlingham, will have a Council, special meeting, 7 p.m, to
Christmas poduck Satordny at 6:30 discuss demolition of buildings.
p.m. at the Modem Woodmen Hall
on Burlingha~m. Turkey, ham,
POMEROY - DAV and Ladies
mashed potatoes, dressing, rolls Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
and drink will be provided. Bring a p.m. A Christmas dinner will be
covered dish and table service. The served. Men brin~ a. man's ornacamp will deliver dinner to the ment. Women bnng a woman's
elderly sick and shut-ins at 3 p.m.
ornament. Cost of present should
be$3to $5.
CHESTER • Evangelist Ron
Marr, Winter Garden, Fla., will
RACINE • Big Bend Farm
speak at New Life Covenant Antique Club will ineet Monday at
Church of God in Chester on Satur- 7:30 p.m. at Southern High School.
day at 7 p:m. and Sundny at 9:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. Pastor Gary Hines
POMEROY - Meigs Geneologi-

Ann
Landers

DULUTH, Minn. (AP) - Ted
Nugent, the rock star twned hunting advocate, said his prowess wilh
a bow and arrow will help him feed
venison to the poor.
Speaking to about a dozen
hunters Wednesday night, Nugent
promoted his World Bowhunters
group and criticized those who
oppose hunting.
"The media and the general
public have accepted the fantasy
that their McChicken dinner got
there in a less painful fashion dian
my p~t dinner," said Nugent,
43, a resident of Jackson, Mich. ·
The rocker dubbed himself the
' 'Whaclanastcr'' in boasting of his
recent hunting accomplishments,
which included three buck deer in
one day and I6total deer amon_g 52
game animals·this fall.
He said he will cook venison
from six ofhis deer for "hunl)reds
.
.
.

75

S ui HI:t.\

Marshall gains I· AA finals 28-7 - C-1
Severe winter storm misses area
once again • Bob Hoeflich • A-8

of hungry people" at the Salvation'
Army in Detroit on New Year's
Eve. He also operates a hunting
ciunp for children each summer.

Writer describes popular Christmas
toys of 1911· James A. Sands· A-7

HUlBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Is lOW optl for tile

. .. Qrlsftnll !easaL

.

9 to 5 Molo·Sat.
ltoSs.dn

For departed loved OilS: tp'IIYI
blcl•kits, wreatu, sprays •d :

.

..

·

Community calendar

..

Middleport-Pomeroy-

'Copyrighted 1H2

.

'

··

·

s1soooo

PART!'(ERS IN EDUCATION· Middleport Elementary and
Peoples Bank are Partners In Education. This program promotes
the involvement or both parents and teachers tOWIIrd lhe! ej(ucalion
· of y0un1 people. Here, Emma Plu&amp;b or Peoples Bank, ("ft), pre·
· sents Mrs. Zurcher with a check ror the fourth grade field triP.
Fourth graders will be goln11 to the Ohio HistoricaL Center and tbe
Ohio Vllla1e in Columbus during December.

In Gift Certificates

:. DRAWINGS:
m Dec. 14, 21 and 24, 1992 . ·
Shop Middleport and Register
~·
Prior to Each Drawing
.-. ~

I

MAKING A LIST • Scott Workman, 3, or
Jackson County, paid Santa Claus a visit at lbe
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division
." on Friday afternoon, as "elves" Gary Evans and

(

Homos Sold Under

stable condition Sawrday morning
at PVH, a hospital spokesman said.
Apparently the vehicle was west
on Sand Hill Road when it went off
the right side of . the road. The
spokesman said it appeared lhe
driver attempted to steer back onto
the roadway when the .vehicle
struelc a tree on the passenger's
side. The vehicle continued on
spinning into a power pole, again
hitting the
side.

.

-.~

accident is still under investigation.•,
Assisting at lhe scene were IIi
Poi~t Pleasant Volunteer Ftre: ·
Department, Point Pleasant EMS,
and the Portsmouth Ambulance· ·
Service.
The Wilcoxen Funeral Home is ·
in charge of arrangements fori
Jones, with the service to be an-.'
nounced. Arrangements for Davis;
are under the direction of 1he Me- '
Coy-Moore Funeral Home in Gal"
lipolis.
·
''

The

.

:t65·underprivileged·children···
assured ·or a . -~righf_ Christmas POINT ROCK . Santa Claus
paid an early visit to Meigs Ccitinty
on Friday afternoon, delivering
gifts to underprivileged children at
the Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs hcadquartcrs
A total of 165 'children from
Southeastern Ohio will benefit
from more than $14,000 that was
raised lhis year by Mei~s Division
employees. The money was raised
by events such as a golf outing, the

ChriS I IIIIlS
·creetillfl

Edition
TJaursda,,
Decena•er24

annual Coal Miner's Jamboree, and
a ·payroll deduction plan, ~hich,
a!lows employees to contnbute
direCtly to.lhe pro~.
A sJ)ecial donabon was made by
the (Jnite4 Steelworkers at
Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora·
lion in Ravenswood, W. Va. In the
past seven ~ years, SOCCO has ·
~aiSCdov~r$HO,OOOforunderpnv-

1leged childft:n.
·
Two pattJes were held at the

company's offices at Point Rock in
ruJ!II Meigs County .on Friday . .24 .
children from Galha and ¥e•gs
Cou~ues were welcomed 10 the
mommg, and 14 from Jackson and
Vinton in the afternoon. Each child
got to' visit with Santa Oaus (Max
Whitlatch), received. a can.dY treat,
and ~as presented w11h a gUt.
B•cyele.s and other nding toys,
pretend kllch.ens and workshops
Conbnued on A-4

..
25 YEARS AGO TUESDAY- Emeraency

Ohio side. A memorial marker erected by the .
Gallla County Historical Suciety and the GaUia 1
County Genealogical Soi:iety will be dedicated.:.
Tuesday at the Stale Route 7 roadside rest above
Kanauga. (AP)

vehicles and rescue workers are seen on .the
bank of the Ohio River after the Silver Bridge,
which linked Kanaug11 with Point Pleasant, collapsed on Friday, Dec. 15, 1967, claiming the
lives or 46 people. Tbis photo.was taken from the

Issue 5
opponents
spend $4.5
million
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Opponents
of a product la~liing
register With Harold Benson. The duo are the
REGISTERING STEER - Althou1h the
proposal
defeated
by voters m the
children or Jim and Debbie Walker or Vinton
Gallla County Junior Fair Is eight months away,
Nov. 3 election spent more on their
and are members of the Centerville Farm Hens
Gallia County youtbs were registering their
campaign dian any other candidate
4-H· club. (Times-Sentinel photo by Jim Freesteers Saturday at the fairgrounds. Here, Beth
or organization, campaign finance
man)
Walke~, center, and her brother Clark, right,
reports show.
· Ohioans for Responsible Health
Information, bankrolled mosdy by
big corporations, listed $1.8 million
in a repon filed Friday with Secretary of State Bob TafL
The group, which listed expenditures of $2.7 million in a similar
J:ell!ll'! filed 12 days~ before the ,el~­
levy replaced a one niilrlevy-t)Y·SI08 a y~-:-···--.- tion, wound up with a $4.5 million
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
already being collected, it effecThe audi!or emphastzed t,llat total which was the largest of any
Times-Sentinel Staff
tively
increased
the
money
to
be
Conbnued on A-41
candidate or group.
·
POMEROY - With county real
collected
by
about
.20
mill.
That
is
Th~
total
compared
to
$34,337
estate values up about eight percentreported Friday by Ohio Citizen
in this year's reappraisal, and the because property values have
increased
since
1987
when
the
last
Action, which circulated petitions
voted levies totaling a two percent
levy
was
passed.
for what became Issue 5.
' increase on each $1,000 of assessed
This means that the next tax
Spending 10 defeat the ballot
valuation, Meigs County Pl'llperty
statements
will
reflect
a
two
mill
issue,
which would have required
owners can expect hefty· increases
levy
in!;rcase
county-wide,
(1.8
for
labels on products suspected of
on !heir next tax statements.
causing cancer or binh defects, also
Those statements will be going Carleton School/Meigs Industries,
dwarfed the amounts spent on three
jnto the mail in late December or and .20 for 1he Health ~t),
plus
whatever
other
~~::
:
~
'II
subdisuccessful issues that limited the
early lanuary, according to Bill
vision levies were pa&amp;::(t.
terms of smte officials, smte legisWickline, auditor.
Eadl mill means a one percent
·lators and members of Congress.
While the 1.8 mill Carleton
Repons were also filed Friday
· School/Meigs Industries continuing increase on each $1,000 of assessed
by candidates for the Ohio
levy and 1he five-year I mill Meigs property value.
Jn other words if the property
Supremo Court and Clllipaign com- .
County Health Departl)lent levy
,
valuation
prjor to the reappraisal
mittees or 'both parues which
were not passed until November,
helped finance campaigns for the
the tax collections on both, by was $50,000 and the reappraisal
Legislature.
·
virtue of the way they were filed showed the average eight percent
Candidates for Cbngress had ,
with the Meigs County· Board of · .increase, the valuation would move
· filed their reports earlier with the
Elections, are rettoactive to 1he first up to $54,000.
The two additional mills voted
FedeQI Elections Commission.
half of 1992. Thai is the lime periIn the reports Sen. John Glenn
od for which proJlerty owners pay in the November election based on
the new $54,000 propeny assesssaid he raised and spent $4 million
taxes in January, 1993.
to tom back Rr;fublican cballengcr
. WhileJ.the Health pepartment ment wo_u!d increase the tax _!Jill_

Meigs property owners
can expe&lt;;t hefty tax hikes

lnllinas willa yaa .II oar grat.a pi1811Be!
-

~-

"""'-T-

.

12

days
Cliristmas

.

' DoNor
;

in

•

Rodney Butcher look ' on. SOCCO employees
held two parties for underprivileged children in
four counties on Friday, and distributed gifts to
them. (Times-Sentinel Photo
. by Brian. J, Reed)
"

'THE DAILY SENTINEL

Onlbiii:"Bulldl!r

..•

~12-~&amp;4iitd~ia~iiidafiri*$iri*l2e~
•

I'

lleelltC Httii...Ctotl,, llecltlc
• l':lleM/'11 tiM! UII"*Y "tCIIIIIH

were killed and another man . injured in a single vehicle accident
early ·Saturday morning on Sand
Hill Road, according to a spokesman for the Mason County Sheriff's Department.
Michael Davis, 27, of Gallipolis,
and Daniel Jones, Jr., 30. of Point
Pleasant were pronounced dead at
Pleasant Valley Hospital following
1he 3 a.m. accident. '
The driver of ' lhe
rolet, Edwin L.' nmc:s,

-

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR P.• J. OR DAVE
992-2156

Hours: Man· Fri 9-4 Sall-4. Closed Sunday

14 Sectlona, ,,..~
. :
Allutllmodlllno: NiM,...
•

POINT PLEASANT - Two men New Albany, IN, was listed

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

Chuck Wingett Builders
I Cn rol Ln . Athens
(614) 592-4119

•

Two killed, one injured
·in Saturday accident

••Jbal
"lba•ks" to ,., oar many lrllalk, IIIII a•ll aew,'
noseldad appartwe'D ·alw1J8Ir181are. JIDIDI

Order Now At This
. YC;Irs PriCe
Putln Your Owi1 Foundation
And Su\'c E\·cn More

•

••

Willi wr•lhl of boDy ad Bllsllaloe, lloclda&amp;.::::r
lhe fire ad scena Ma•lllled wllh •aw,
enc•p..... •••wdh ad load ell- •• we clllllsb tile
lll..mp we've 1hared lbll pal ye••. F• •••••••

Purchase Your N!!w I lome Now.
Tal« Doli very or Your Now Home
Between Jon 1st and Murch 3t st.
1993 And Rcccivo Your Spc'ciul
Winter Constmction Discount.

'

•

SOCC to post
parties for
needy children

·~

.
•

lllpolls-Polnt Pleasant, December 13, .1992

Holiday 8h1eaway

·;.SHARE
·,.

f

AloDI tbe river
Bl-1
Bill( ea!F---.Dl-1
Cllllilled
D:l.-7
Deatba. ••---....A-3
Edltonl.
,
, A-4
Sporti.------Cl-8
Weather. - - - -......A-2

•

Vat. 'D, Na. •3

~~JF~~~iSt~s~~h~~ . P;,~r;,di::;;,~;:;:h;:~~~
.

Inside

•
mttS,..

='?. ru.,ttfu • 1
. ·=-~=r:.=
Basbts; Uve ..I C1t Tms. ;

vases.
·
HUIIUD'S, Syrac.N, OIL
992-5776
'

Cl'llh

'I

I

Mike DeWine. De Wine, who is
Ohioans for Responsible Health
Ohio's lieutenant governor, listed Information reported spending $1.8
expenditures of $3.4 million.
million during lhat time, but. it had
. Ohioans for Responsible Health listed $2.7 million a pre-election
Information filed a long list of con- report.
·
tributors that included Monsanto
Other reports included:
Chemicals and the Mead Corp.,
- Ohioans for Term Limitseach of which donated $100,000 to . tions, $296,000, bringing its total
help defeat Issue 5.
·
for the year to $658,709. Citizens
Others included Anheuser- Against Term Limitations spent
Busch, SL Louis, Mo., and Ashland $104,7.27, bringing its total to
Oil Co., Ashland, Ky,, each $112,000.
$50,000; B .~. Goodrich, Akro~ ,
-The Ohio Democratic P.arty,
$30,000; Whirlpool Corp:• £?eao·~· $2.9 million.
$50,000; 'Krage~ Co., Cmcmn~tJ,
-The Ohio Republican Party,
$50,QC10; Worth111gton Industrtes, $1.7 million.
Worthmgton, and L'IV Srecl Ccirp.
- Ohio Senate Republican
Cleveland, each $25,000, and many Campaign Committee, $942,497~ ·
ochers from both inside and outside and the Ohio Senate Democrati~ ·
the state.
Victory Fund, $182,107.
,
. Friday's reports covered . the
-The Ohio House Democratic
fmal 12 days of the c~mpatgn, Committee, $1.7 million, and Ohio
wben many of the candidates and House Republican Campaign Comorg~nizations spent heavily for mittee, $942,497.
media advernsmg.
¥

I

~

~

'

t

'

'.

\.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="330">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9624">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34022">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34021">
              <text>December 11, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3074">
      <name>mcclaskey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6379">
      <name>nollge</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="451">
      <name>vanmeter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
