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                  <text>Ohio Lottery ·
MUseeks

Pick 3:
885 j
Pick 4:
9873

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grid crown
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nd
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bUY· er\n9 y k w\ttt you. We
payment b~O these un\tS
must se 1 1993.
b81ore Jan. '
.

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1992 METRO
· 4 DR. SEDAN

1992CHEV.

•"' 1992 OLDS
ACHIEVA

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1992 OIEV. CAVAUER

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7992

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vo:. 43, No. 167

1 Secllon, 10 Pageo 25 con to
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. ff"..ail Dlii?il:aubw 18, 1992

Copyr!gh!od 1992

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' ·THIS SALE ONLY

WAS 17990

SALE

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1993 OLDS 98

1992 OLDS CIERA
4 DR.

REGENCY
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SPockmiHI
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1992 CHEV. LUMINA
EUR04 DR.

· 1993 CHEV, LUMINA
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Sat. Ra.d n-, R-Oncinnati. 1old tbe Senate
lhll wbill: BOOIIC litr:s totaise lUeS, "We have tried
to do as load a job as we can, under the circum" •• es We~ llicd to IJc as lair as possible.''
lad!cJJomr.Rep.. Tllomaslllhnson, R-New Conoonl, Slid lhll widlout IPbc biD, more cuts would have
1a:a N "!M ..,. ..,.... IJc devastating 1o education
:IIIII IIIIa wilahtawia:s.. ·
'

Sen. Robert Burch, D-Dover, and others opposed
the bill on grounds ~!tat it hurts ·middle-class taxpay·
ers and small businesses. He said the bill should have
been written to lake more money from wealthy
Ohioans.
Burch called !he bill "a $1 billion present under
Ohioans' Christmas trees" and said the governor and
Legislarure should have taken mo(e time to consider
other solutions.
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura, led the fight
against the proposal in the House, accusing the gov- ·
ernor and leaders of both parties of offering "snake
oil" solutions that won't solve Ohio's biggest problems.
·
·
Netzley and others argue41 that the taxes will hurt
the economy and do not a&lt;fdress problems .such as
welfare and crime.

·sheriff plans tofile charges·against
Wilkesville man in Tue~day shooting

WAS $11,995
SALE

Buy Now

••c

b ca11o
lbc sa~es 1111.
. 11 Discs IDCS Oil tobluo and alcohol products
aa4 aca:s a - bntdet under !he.slate income tax
-a wbidldtotl; wltoe2R $200,000 or more a year
- ' 1 pay 7.5 J*ALUl.
or lbc apilll ~owemeDl ~priations in the
biD.IIIonl sm million is a a.1ide for development
I*Qjtas in Ollio•s larF cities, such as Cleveland's
Ga:wai)
L+o pmin:l and an aviation museum in

. · Voinovich, who has implemented $627 million in
spending cuts since taking office in January 1991,
was ready to order more if the bil'l had •1101 been
passed.
Passage "was a team erfort of public oft"Jdals
who worked together to save education cuts of
$164.6 million," he said.
He added, howeva~ !hat the bill does not lcssca
his commitment to guard against waste and "do
more with less in our slate agencies.''
The Senate OK'd the bill 21-12 late ThllrSll&amp;y, a
few hours. after its approval by the House 68-30.
Voinovich is expected to sign it into law in ume 10
let the taxes lake effect Jan. 1,
The bill expands the base of ·!he 5 percent slam
sales tax to include certain Services ihal now lite
exempt. It also reduces a discount retailen ftllleive

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. George
Voinovich says he is pleased that the Legislature
granted his request for higher taxes to ease Ohio•s
budget problems, but he will continue his fight to
curb spending.
. He referred in a statement late Thursday to pas;.sage by the Legislature of a bill raising taxes by more
!han $1 billion 1o help eliminate a projected budget
deficit of $250 million in the fiscal year ending June
30.
The same increases will slay in effect over !he fol·
lowing two years and yield about $990 million 1o
help keep !he budge! slabilized.
The &gt;legislation had bipartisan support in both
chambers.
Tile proposal allocates an unrelated $1 billion in
bond-issue financing for capital improvement pro·
jeets, mostly at slate colleges and universities.

He is cum:ntly being held in the
who allegedly shot her in the heal!
Gallia
County Jail on a warrant
with a small caliber handgun Tuesfrom
!he
Wells1on Police Departday afternoon at her residence.
ment
on
a
charge of passing bad
The sheriff's department was
checks.
Salisbury
said he plans to
investigating Thursday to deter·
file
a
charge
of
felonious
assault
mine if !he shot· was self-inflicted
this
afternoon
with
the
county
prosCooory Sllaiff Dcmris Salisblll)' or fired by someone else.
ecutor's
office.
Mr. Snyder was ~rrested in
I
·Mrs. Snyder is.iq Cabell· HuntSalis1nuy said the vic.lim, Wellston Tuesday afternoon with a
ington
Hospital in Huntington,
o• s.,dl:l". 'MiiJIIicd informa' handgun in his possession that W.Va., where
she was reported in
ta "D•• +y afo•••• wllidJ liD- matched !he type used in the shootgood
condition
this morning.
IPS Ia' I I t, 0ayD A. Sny- ing.
der. S8. Wial:sYilk;. as die pmoo

Furdaer illwcsliption of the
Tlltsda) •"ioc d a 39-,ar-old
W"IDzswille- lias provided
wMjli+
• ••·
• • wbiicb may:
lm4 ID lllcdad ,t JJcq: dlalged
wilh felmlioas assaall. Gallia
'

100:.. 1992

FINANCE PEOPLE
WILL BE· HERE TO
FIGURE THE BEST
UTE AND TERMS:
AVAILABLE.

OUR COMPLETE INVENTORY - SPECIALLY PRICEP FOR

CHEVROLET LU.US
ll~tullr &amp; lurO'J),
CIVALIIIS, COISICAS;
IIREnM, GIO PIIDIS,
OLDSMIIU CIIUS TO
CHOOSE •aoa. WI WIU HOI
, II UIDIISOLD. PICK 011
lOW - THI PIICIIS IIIIITI

BOLl

I

E

Ill CDS MUST 10 IEFORE All. 1, l 993~ OUI LOSS IS YOUIIAII.
PRICES IIIHISAD IOOD IHRU DEC. 31, 1992
CALL US TOLL FREE 1·100.521.0014

I

"1'11:

.....

,~,,

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__,.... _.

1987 PLYMOUTH

1985 CHEV. IMPALA
4 DR. SEDAN.

1914 CHEV. 5-10

PKKUP

DUSTER

Goo&lt;ttrinopoMuon, low mlloo.

Air, 01110., QOOd ·-lomlly - " ·

WAS$2995
SALE

WAS $34115

· 1992 OtEV. LUMINA

1917 CHEV.
MOitTE WLO LS.

EURO COUPE
WAS $12,1100 $ ·

- - .7. Fully oqo~pp I d

Nr...o.............. , .....
WAS $31115

SALE

$

.1692

V.., 6-opoocl, dorll bluo. Prloodlo ga.

1l.n•2 .

SALE

$

SALE

1692

1987 DODGE DAKOTA

1989 CHEVROLET

lERmA
WAS $5985
$

WAS $2995

4192

, PICKUP 1

AMI, new s.-10 tr....

WAS$4~5

SALE

$

3592

FuiiJ-. """"""· 1011

,.

$68115

SALE · 3892
.

SALE

1987 PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE
Alr,tUio., AM=11.•

WAS$4{195
SALE

$5992

The Gallipolis Kiwanis Club WIC staff. The posters were proand the Gallipolis La Lee he League duced by Kiwanis International and
have joined to promote better La Leche International, a volunteer
health for babies by helping ' organization dedicated to helping
·women breastfeed.
women breastfeed. The program
The Kiwanians have a national also stresses tl\e unique bond
child health project which includes formed when a mother breastfeeds
distributing breastfeeding posters her inf~t.
10 health departments, hospitals,
The Breastfeeding Promotion
WIC clinicS and doctor's offices. A Project at WIC is sponsoring
poster has been donated to the breastfeeding classes several times
Meigs County WIC Breastfeeding a month, as well as individual conPromotion Project which is coordi- sultations with the breastfeeding
nated by Elaine Matheny, a certi· specialist. Anyone needing inforfied lactation consultant on the mation may contact Ms. Matheny

$4592

1986 CHEV. G-YU
. CONVERSION VU

4 Dl. SEDAN

$
3292

$6885
SALE

$4592

1987 CHEV. K·IWEI

SALE

414 PICKUP

SUPIEME

.....,,_a

LONI ea1, IIIIIJ - n , ctniJ D,CIOO
mlao, . .,.

WAS$8285

•

'

'

't

OUI.

oIOCIII,.r.
.. ~oea~-.... ""'"111"-··

---.-01o11-. .
IROUGIWA

MJ oqo PJI d

2 WAS$3':LE $3492 WASU~~LE $8292

year."

Teams B!ld their walkers participating in the event are as: Bank
One • Millie Midkiff, Marilyn
Wolfe, Joan Wolfe, Dianna Law·
son, Desmond Jeffers, Marilyn
Robinson and Doris Snowden:
Meigs High School faculty - Dana
Kessinger, Beck-y Baer, Cathy
Reed, Karen Walker, Jennifer
Walker, Ellie Blaeunar. Becky Cot·
frill and Fred Baley; Future Homemakers of America- Sherry Seddon, Tammy Queen, Ginger Holcomb, Shelly Sinclair and Lorena
Oiler; Veterans Memorial Hospital

at the ~C offi~, 992-6626.
Addttional mf~on ma~ be
oblamed by CODiaCtllll Ms. J~
Thompson of the Galhpolls La
Leche League. She has been
involved with the La l.eche ~
for 11 years; Ms. Thoen~ ~ •
anthropologiSt ~d ~ spccialOte:s
in mi~wifery, ch!ldbir111 and llaation (_breastfeedmg). S~ tew=~
pan-ume at the Uruvem.lY of_Rio
Grande. She conducts ~ccs
and worlcshops at tbe ~ ~
ty Health Department and ~e as
available for quesuons at all biDCS.

• Rhonda Dailey, Jackie Starcher,
Kim Shamblin and Charles Aikins;
Paul Gerard for Sheriff • Paul and
Niesel Gerard; Southern Local
Sc!Riols • Jan Hill, Mary Hill, :
Donna Norris and Jan Noms; Prosecutor's Office. Joyce McCarthy, .
Linda Warner, Nora Eason and
Steve, Nicholas, Allison, Anna and :
Ian Story; Middleport Amateur •.
Garden Club and Presbyterian ·
Group • Gladys Cumings; Middle· •
port Church of Christ - Dreama .
Pickens; walking as indi vidua1s
were Kimberly Fetty and Doris ,
We??.
•
The mission of the American ·
Heart Association is to reduce dis·
ability and death from cardiovascular disease and stroke. Heart disease is the number one cause of
death in Meigs County. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the local president,
Sandy Iannarelli at 992.7039 or the
Central Ohio Region Office at 1·
800·282..()291.

small business
gro.up disagree over health bill

58592

COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) 6ov. George Voinovich says a
health care insurance bill approved
by the General Assembly is an
important first step in giving all
Ohioans access 1o affordable, qual,

1992 CHEV. METIO

CONVEmiLE

.,..,1110, l o w - T Jl 110Ctl

SB~~LE $7992

But the National Federation of
The bill also au~horizes, ia
Independent Business-Ohio says it anticipation of future Stile IIIII fed..
is diSappointed by the measure era! fundi~g. a propn to l*owide
because of what it calls a costly, ·health care coverage to aboul
unnecessary mandate.
400,000 children of :low-inooine .
The House and Senate sent the families who .do not qualify for
bill to Voinovich along with more Medicaid.
than 30 others, as legislators Thurs- .
Jones said the bill, if fully fund.
day night wrapped up their voting ed, could take care of ·at least 60
sessions for the year.
percent of tbe estimated L3 million
Action on the measures was uninsured Ohioans.
overshadowed by approval of a w
Voinovich said the measure
increase bill that will generate an would provide atabilily in the
extra $1.1 billion in revenue over heal:h insurlocc
the next 30 .months, and authorize
"My lldminlstrlllion looks furborrowing anoth~r SI billion to ward to continuins our efforts in
finance state consuw:tion projects.
health care reform and in lhe
Sponsored by Rep. Wayne implementation of lhis ililpor111lt
Jones, D-Cuyahoga ,Falls, the pi~de of leaiflalion," Voinovicll
health c~ bill would limit insur· S81 •
,
ance company administrative costs,
But Roser Oeis«. 1111e dim:tor
prohibit balance. billing far Medi· of the SIDIII-hiSinen 015 iqrion,
care patients and allow employees objej:ted to lhe cbild prevcatiw
to change jobs without fear of los· cam reqilila••"•
ing their health ins~..
''Wellaea propama for dlillt also would reqwre msurance ~n are a wonby - · bat il is
contracts to provide benefits for amponant 10 1101e daalwpa,as
preventive ClfC for cbildlen up :o already aubaiclize local llleald!
age 9, and create 1 Joan rqJayment d~p~ents lhat pto"-le --·program for doctors who apee to nuauons to IDJOIIO n:pRDets d
serve in inner cily and rural - . · ability 10 pay," ~ llli4.

-•C\ILICC

OLDSMOBILE

•'

-·-..ny

ale I :al••••jes

such as that !Vhich developed tech,
niques used for open heart surgery
and advancements in medications
such. as those that ~ontrol high
blood pressure," commented Millie
Midkiff, American Heart Walk
Chairman. "We truly thank everyone involved in making this frrst
national American Heart Walk
such a success. We hope walkers
keep up the regular exercise routine
and invite everyone to join us next

Voi~ovich,

·~::..":' condlllon.
-·only 42,000-.
I•
IWJU; $9815

WJC clinics and doctor's offices. l•ditlle
Thompson, rlcht, or the Gallipolis Ll Ledte
League, doaates a breastfeeding illformaliaa
poster to the Meigs County WIC Braslfeeflw&amp;
Promotion Project, represented by N-a Torres, RN, Nursing Director and WIC Healtll Professional.

FW fig
in: iill u!br: lw.!
Mei&amp;s Cc-•y bericzn Hearl
Walk, sp
•ed locally by Bank
Oae of P- toy IDd Whaley's
Aim Pans.by Led-

Gallipolis Kiwanis Club~. along with .
La Leche League, promote project

ILoodocllwln oqo tp - ·

WAS $5985 .••

,.

Fofty-nine take part in
Meigs County heartrwalk

19U PONTIAC
GRAND Pill

'* 111m.

lluot-

'

......... ,.•..

$ALE

1985 OLDS TORONADO

-·

ntt. .,. R0tl11d. .tll11

v.._ · - - -lon, .otr, allo.

$.1892

' "'

M

Pledges tDIIIl $2,673.85

BREASTFEEDING PROMOTED - In an
effort to promote better health for babies by
helping women breastfeed the Gallipolis Kiwa·
nis Club and the Gallipolis La Leche League
have joined together in a national child health
project which includes distributing breastleed·
h\g posters to healtlj departments, hospitals,

WAS$3485

said---

..

. r,

.
IIEART ••• CIRS. ftllaied is tile win·
ailtc._. rwdle Mdp C Is Aaerican Heart
w.a fllltr •
ita lll8't Allodation. Pre.- alltr.,.. lite bau U &amp; plllque is Millie
KVIf,IIBftWIA" •
llen iwd ' , k, Jlarie lind:, Dave Harris,

,left.r-m--

Sniptfrsfire

on U.S. Marines; no one hurt

BAIOOA. S•lli• (AP)
Sllipi:D lid • U.S. J [ •
Oil
lli&amp;lllpaal iill B • •-: _.III!IJIII'
~.,.i:dd tllldiJ., liD- oectotS
0
capitai w11ae aid .-brs
had bl:alliij;lt* , ..., " ptl

:, i.e

I•""

Paulioe Mayer and Debbie 'naptonstall. Other
members aot pictured include Amy Perrin, •
Dixie Sayre and Barb Rigs. The team eolleded
$958.75. Tbe Meigs County Walk was sponsored
locaUy by Wbaley's Auto Parts and Bank One.

It was. the fiTSt time troopS had

been fired on in the city proper
since arriviog Wedqesday,
although tbe airsuip where the
M11i11es have set up camp has been
. tiled on.

.

.

!"feanwhile, the U.S.: led muluTIIe v-ecs ~ ..rcr fire IIIPlnal force was readying to venT
1 if· CXJIIIS..11J'l*
~- ture into northern ~ogadishu,
Malk BltiiiiCS said IDII&amp;J- TiteR where ch~os an~ vto!ence ~re
reportedly mcreasmg. Stnce amv110 ;,.:.a _. tile "Z
did. . .diiP&amp;e.
ing in Somalia 11 days ago, troq15

have been concentrated at the airport and pon. in south Mogadishu.
U.N. spokesman Ian MacLeod
said forces would move into north
Mogadishu in the nel\l few days
' 'because !he security situation is
. deteriorating."
Angela MacKay, a spokeswoman for. CARE International, said 1
nurniJcr of ti11ings wm ~ in
northern Mogadishu, but no details· ·
· were.available.
·
-

-

�...•

Friday, Del:embtr 11, 1182

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coat Sbeet
l'allaeiOJ, Oldo

.

. DI:VOTED TO TID: IN'I'BRII81'II OP 'I'D Ma!Qa.:MAIIOJ.II .All&amp;\

•

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publilher

PAT WIIITEIIEAD
A.Jslstant PubUsher/CGnb'oller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GenentM....,.r

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be leu than 300
words. All letters are subject

to editing and must be sigiiOd with 111m0,
lddJeas and 'relepbolle number. No unsigned lettm ,uJ be publisbed. Leaen
sl&gt;ould be in good1alle, iddR&amp;Sing issues, not personalities.

ln _defeat, GOP tries to pull
party toward mainstream
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- It's almost a reflex. In defeat, middle-road Republicans are organizing to try to pull the party toward the mainstream, an
elusive and unchaned course !hat's been debated for decades.
Another generation of GOP moderates is taking its tum now, founding
the Republican Majority Coalition in an attempt to shelve divisive issues
like abortion rights as conservative-pressed tests of party loyalty.
. The new outfit is laying claim to the mainstream just as 'its forebears
did, and just as conservatives insisted then. and now that their ~ reflect
the real majority in a basically conser\lative party.
The conservatives argue that President Bush lost the election not
because of conservatism, but because he veered from J)Je low tax, limited
government course set bf Ronald Reagan and never got back to it.
.
While specific issues have differed, the slnlggle over party philosophy
hjiS changed !iule in the 30 years since conservative Barry Goldwater tried
to wrest party leadership from the liberal eastern Republicans personified
by ~elson A. Rockefeller.
Aftec Goldwater's ticket was trounced in 1964, GOP moderates organized as Republicans for Progress for the drive to reclaim party leadership. Denied a lease on GOP headquarters, the Goldwater wing set up the
rival Free Society Association to press lhe cause of the Republican right
Neither outfit lasted long. One moderate GOP organization that has is
the Ripon Society, fortned in 1962 as a forum for progressive Republican
ideas.and still at it, although never a powerhouse.
.
· : When Gerald R. Ford lost the presidency in 1976, he tried to pull factions together ~ a symbolic White House meeting that included Reagan
on lhe right and Rockefeller on the left.
Ford said the party had enough ideological leeway to encompass them,
and that !hey planned a national coordinating committee to rebuild lhe
GOP. Nothing carne of that, and Reagan later set up his own outfit, Citizens for the Republic, as he begwi building lhe conservative coalition lhat
won !he While House in 1980 and kept it Republican for 12 years.
Now the model1lles are back, arguing iliat conservaii ve ideologues hun
·and perhaps crippled Bush's bid for a second term. Outgoing Rep. Tom
Campbell of Califorrtia, director of the Republican Majority Coalition,
said the aim ill to broaden thll party and make it more inclusive.
That's been in the vocabulary of the debate all lhese years. So have
such phrases as "progressive conservatism," Sen. Nancy Kassebaum's
.description of the or,anization's tenets. New York GOP Chairman
Richard Rosenbaum Sllid·Republicans "must ·become lhe party of the big
tent" The· new c;oalition will work to "move our party back to its main·
stteam," consultant Roger J. Stone said, a term tl)at echoes lhe long-ago
Rockefeller presidential campaigns.
'
: "We believe issues such as abortion, mandatory school prayer, homose.xuality ... and similar questions ... should be left to the conscience of
ilidividuals," the moderale c;oalition's founding statement said.
.: That collides with the agenda of !he religious right, a growing force in
JlllrtY councils. The Christian Coalition, led by evangelist Pa( Robertson,
his mobilized to win party offices beginning at precinct and county lev,
eli, and is said to be active in all 50 states.
; The new organization of GOP modcmtes is pauerned on a Democratic
nkldel that worked. Tho Democratic Leadership Council was founded in
11l8S as a counterforce to liberal dominance. President-elect Clinton was
Jlilrt of that movement, and stepped aside as DLC chairman to launch his
winning campaign.
.
At the Heritage Foundation, President Edwin J, Feulner Jr. said in his
annual appraisal of the state of co_nservatism !hat Clinton won by conv incing vo~rs "he had moved the Democratic Pariy into the moderate-center .
mainstmun,' ~ while Bush was forsaking the course set by Reagan.
"Thete are no permanent victories in Washington," Feulner said.
"Much of what Reagan accomplished in his eight years, Bush undid in
four ....
"There are no permanent defeats in Washington either," he added. "If
we are wise enough, well orgahizcd enough and persistent enough ...:.. as
the big government liberals were during the Reagan and Bush years- we
can advance the conservauve agenda even during the Clintpn presidency."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washiagton and
natioaal politics for more than 30 years.

Berry's World
•
•
•

P~clepol1, Ohio
Frt~, December 18, 1912

SatunlaJ, Dee.19
Aocu-~ fom:ut

Iran continues to bu"ild its arms supply
WASHINGTON - While
America•s attention is elsewhere,
Iran COIIIinuea an arms buildup that
includes the early ~ges of a nuclear weapons•making complex and
the actual production of chemical
and biological weapons.
We have been 'detailing the
nuclear push of Iranian President
Hasl!emi Rafsanjani for more than
two years. Surprisingly, much of
the world seems to take Iran at its
word wben it publicly denies such
pursuits. They take their evidence
from statements like the one by
Deputy Foreign Minister Ali
Mohammad Besharati on Iranian
radio last November: " We have no
need for nuclear weapons.''
Careful review of selected stalements suggests that Rafsanjani' s
regime has a far different goal in
sight - to buy or make whatever
weapons they feel they need to
"defend" themselves, whether
conventional,
nuclear
or
chemical/biological.
As far back as 1989, Rafsanjani
said: "Iran cannot overlook the
reality of nuclear strength in the
modem world."

MICH.

More recendy, in between secret wilh fmeip lllilla!Ce.
Engineerinl! Research Center of the
The fanatical Revolutionary Construcuon Crusade - work
visits to counaies such as China in
· pursuit of more ~ns of mass Guard Coips hu already produced together here. Large numbers of
destruction, RafsanJani referred large quantities of chemical Cltinese engineers and military
weapons, IS well as the cajlability experts c~erate with lhe Guard , '
to mount them on long-range Scud Corps on thiS site. The best Iranian
missiles. They've also produced an expe•ts .are also being transferred ,
unknown quantity o( biological there.
weapons.
. The Guard Corps alsQ operat.e ·
Though the Revolutionary . research (acilities. laboratories and
Guard· Corps is in chlir~e of the mustard gas production in Marvmission, most of the credit belongs dasht, a city in southern Iran. A
somewhat more obliquely to the to experts imported from China, large fire broke out at this cu:nter in
purpose of these missions on Aug. North Korea and Germany, who 1987, where at least 400 people
II, 1992: "No doubt defense is provided valuable help along the. died from flames and toxic fumes.
Another key chemical weapons
impossible without the suitable way.
weapons of the time.''
Under the strictest seaecy, Iran producer is the ~azi Chemical
Tliis would only be bluster if we has been expanding its chemical Corp. whose work is secretly
didn't also find, from our U.S., weapons sites this year. Only a supervised by the Chemical War. European and Iranian in~lligence small number of Iranian military fare Unit of the Gulll'd Corps .
sources (including the Iranian resis- and civilian officials are aware of Though their main productiOn
tance group, the People's Moja· them. Rafsanjani PersonallY select· facility is in southwest Iran, the.
hedin) that Rafsanjani is ~ding ed several of his closest confidants cenfral office in Teheran Hes in the _
biUions of dollars to arm Iran, and . to supervise these plans, and repon building of the Oil Ministry's:
his regime is actively pursuing to him direcdy.
Petrochemical Indilstries Establishadvanced weapons systems.
·
The main chemical .weapons ment. The corporation ·works inde·
Our associl!te Dale VIII! Aua has complex is at Karaj, about 14 kilo- pendently of the Oil Ministry.
learned that in addition 10 its nucle- meters west of Teheran. Three difAnother company, the Polyar buildup, Iran has also made dan- ferent government entities - the Aery! Corp., operates ostensibly as ·
gerous advances in the chemical Guard Corps, the regular military . an ordinary commercial venture, '
and biological weapons fields or Ministry of Defense, and the but is acrually one.of !he key chemical gas production-facilities for the ·
Guard Corps.
'
Rafsanjani is speeding up his
weapons production this year,
because his government is in crisis. ,
There have been numerous anti-'
government demonstrations in
recent years, and the economy is in
a shambles. Desertions within the
regular military are on the rise. In '
addition, a potent military force of
the People •s Mojahedin sits in Iraqi
bases, poised to topple the regime
when the time is right
Rafsanjani clearly intends to use ,
.whatever means necessary to stay
in power, including anncid conflicL '
The- doctrine might have been best '
spelled out by one of his key
deputies, Aua'oUah Mohajerani, on
Oct. 23, 1991: "Regardless of the
United Nation's (~(fort to prevent '
nuclear proliferation,
Muslims ·
.
must connnue to cooperat.e among
themselves and procluce their own
nuclear bomb; because the enemy ·
has nuclear facilities. Since the :
enemy has nuclear facilities, Islamic countries must be armed wilh the
same capacity."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United ·
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

By Jack Anderson
.and .
·
Michael Binstein

~

Spirit of a Chri_stmas·carol is ours
Here are meditations based on
lyrics from the Christmas carol "0
Little Town of Bethlehem" (1867),
~ by Phillips Brooks.
.
This seasonal favorite begins:
"0 little town df Bethlehem, I
How still we see thee lie!..."
It goeS oli:
" ... Above thy deep and dreamtess sleep ... " ·
Let's consider two words in Ibis
line of the carol:
DREAMLESS - Where would
most of us be without our dreams?
Dreams are our vision of a better
life, and "wherc' lhere is
vision
the people perish."
We don't like to be told, however. that we are living in a dream
world. 1bat s~ests we arc out of.
touch with reality.
·
We want to live in the real
world.
But reality has come 10 stand for
a world of VIOlence, coarseness and
cruelty, where happy ~ndings and
Cinderella stories don't exist
Jesus was no dreamer. He lived
in the real world, but he found it a
world where God's power, intelligence and ~oodness were everywhere in evulence and available to

not

all. No need for unreal dreams in a
real world dlc:e lhat.
.
SLEEP - It is only when our ·
minds are quiet - not agitated or

This is·always lhe fli'St step toward
success and 11reatness. It is only
when we realize that our resources
are inadequate !hat we
look outside
ourselves for help. 1 . · _ 2. "Hilch your wagon.to a star"
-to a heavenly power.
"Now this is the wisdom of
disturbed - that the good thoughts man," said Emerson, "in every
we plant there have a chance to instance of his labor to hiteh his
wagon to a star and see his chore
grow iniO visibility in our lives.
The thoughts we place in our done by. the gods themselves ....
minds just before we fall asleep lire Everything good in man leans on
usually the most powerful and pro- what is higher."
" , .. Yet in thy dark streets
ductive . During sleep, our minds
shineth
I The everlasting Light; ... " ·
- the creative force within us The
human mind, wonderful as
are free from !he distractions that
it
is,
can
become truly a "dark
inhibit concentration during our
street"
if
it is not lighted from
waking hours.
Whoever suggested we say our. above - the only way really !hat a
prayers before we go to sleep at street can be lighted.
It is the Star of Bethlehem that
night was oa to a lnlly fruitful idea.
" ... The S1'lent stars go by....
. ..
stillli~hts the street where we live.
ThiS is the Christmas message:
Jesus knew that his power came
"The people who sat in dark·
from a source higher than l!imself.
"The Son can do nothingof him- ness have seen a great lighL ••
Or, in the won)s of the hymn,
self," he acknowledged. The
source he turned to was as l!igh as "The dadcness shall turn to dawning and the dawning to noonday
the stars.
·
· Here is the two-part secret to bright. •' That is the Christmas
pCQmise.
life:
"... The hopes and fears of all
__ L ~ecognize your limitations.

George R•. Plagenz

the years I Are met in thee
tonighl''
All of us are made up of hopes
and fears. Not on Iy !he hopes and
fears we can put.our fmger on th~ .
moment, but "lhe hopes and fears :
of all the years" - of a lifetime.
So now we are . to bring our .
hopes and fears to Bethlehem - to ·
the place where Christ is born in .
us. And what will we fmd?
,
Well , won' tlwe see that the.
things we have been hoping for and
wishing for all our lives - love, ,
abundance, health and happiness ·
- wjl already have because Christ
·. ("God with us") means all these
things?
,
And when our fears "meet" ,
Christ, what then? They will disappear. For as we realize the trUth :
that Christ carne to reveal - that .
the good life is ours for lhe asking :
- why, then, there is no longer
anything to fear.
It is in the spirit of the words of ·
this treasured carol, "0 Little
Town of Bethlehem," that I wish
you aU a very ~erry Christmas.
:.
George Plagenz is a syndicat·
' ed writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.
t

.
•

•
••

.·•
....••••
•
..•
':•

••
•

.
...••.•
••.
•

,.••'
.;

..
'

••

.

~

~by ~EA. Int
THE WORLD'S FIRST
TALK SHOW

It was inevitable thai the election returns would impel a.good
many wishfullhinkers to blow laps
over conservatism: Never mind that
57 percent of the electorate clearly
share some of its basic tenets, or
that Bill Clinton amassed his 43
percent plurality by pulling back
from his party's long commitment
to liberalism. (To quote George
Stephanopoulos, ''He ill not a liberal.") Conservatism's opponents
have had a rough 12 years, and
now, as one of 1he Los Angeles
rioten said, it's payback lime. So I
wasn't terribly surprised when
Andrew Sullivan, The New Republic's thoughtful new editor, took
over the back page of its Dec. 141h
issue. to dO a few chest-expansion
exerc1ses.
Significantly, he wastes little
time arguing that liberalism offers
~ny solutions: The New Republic
m recent- years has gotten over that
idea, replacing its ancient aile·
giance to liberal doctrines with a
zesty eclecticism that offell unp~e­
dictabiliiY in lieu of a llifllnJ con·
sisletiCy.
Sullivan starts wilh a few IIIII·
dard riffs on his political piano,
accusing conservatives or a "cast
of mind" that re~isll "recalcirrant
reality." and ~ointing out the
alleged "instability or • politics
that bolh wants to ua'fflh lndivid·
uals to pursue their ec:oriOIDic destiny and simultan~sly 'reimpose

moral norms upon them. " (If that
sounds suspiciously like free will
in a morally ordered universe, fear
not- SuUivan is coming to that)

William A. Rusher
Toward the end of h_is essay,
Sullivan declares that conservatism
"has lost ... an empirical ·relationship to itS own culture." He is
refening to "the int.ellectual right's
inability to see that in the most
important cultural area - the creation of a profound moral consensus -· the game is fmally up. The
fracturing of our culture is too deep
and too advanced to be resolved
simply by anything but coercion;
and coereioa, Pat Buchanan wi11 be
disappointed 10 hear, ill not a democrauc op!ion."
Whereupon Sullivan briskly
concludes that "providing a princ•·
pled poUtlcal path benyeen ideoloSY and a rootless pllgmatlsm"
("the most uniUJe of modernity's
political journeys") "is conserYIIIism's primary responsibility.'~
In lhOrt. Sullivan believes that
modenl American society is too
deeply fractwed· to achieve and
mainlain a moral consensus, and
thai in this dDemma it's up 10 conIICI'VIIilm 10 pro~ "a principled
political path" between its D~rn ·
outmoded ideolo'y and what he
apparently recogruzes as the dan1/

rules it"
"
But is there, in fact, any middle ·
way for a society between some - ·,
sor,t o~ rrioral ~ORSCJISUS and the ;
chaotic hedomsm that Sullivan '
rightly describes as "roolless" and :
understandably fears? Speaking as · :
a conservative; I don't know of •
any'. Moral standards are not mere- ' '
ly esseniial: lhey are inevitable. It; :
isn't a . quesiion of trying to :
"impose" some particular set of I
them. As C.S. Lewis wrote, '.'If we ' '
will not learn 10 eat the only food : :
that the universe grows -the.only :
food that any pqSS1ble universe :
ever can grow - th~:n we must \ 1
Starve eternally."
i
That is why the looming "cui· '
tural ~ar" is inevitable. We con- : J
servanves, ht least, know where we '
stand.
·
i
WIUianl .Rusher 15 a syndical; ·:
ed writer ror Newspaper Enter· · :
prise Association.
•1

gers of "a rootless pragmatism ..-.
On what basis does Sullivan
conclude that !he possibility of a
moral consensus has gone down
the tube? He points to women's lib,
and the changing, perhaps diminishing, role of the family. In addition, he argues, during the 1980s
and '90s, "the mass media popularized ways of living that had once
beeQ shrouded in shame or irony;
(and) a fast-growing popular culture found new languages of self·
exposure to demystify what was
left of conservative moral t.eaching.''
Now, there is no doubt that what
Sullivan describes has in fact
occurred. Nor is The New Republic
the only magazine to notice- it:
Writing from a highly conservative
perspective in the December issue
· of Chronicles, Samuel Francis
desc:ribes the same phenomena as
part of ''the systemllic destruCtion
of a civilizauoo hy the elite that

•

------Weather---,.--showers. High in the lower 50s.
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low Cl)ance of rain is 30 percent.
Extended forecast: .
around 35 early wilh the temperaSunday through Tuesday:
ture rising by daybreak . South
Sunday and Monday, fair. Lows
winds increasing to 10 to 15 mph.
Saturday, mostlr cloudy and in the 20s and highs in the 30s.
warmer wit~ a slight chance of Tuesday, fair. Lows in the 20s with
highs in lhe lower to mid_40s.

· ·
ts---- Mel. .gS an nouncemen
Christmas dinner
There will be a free Christmas
dinner Dec. 24 beginning at noon
at the Long Bottom Community
Building. -There will be candy for
the children. For a ride or for delivery to shut-ins, call667-3799, 8435321 or 985-4482 before Dec. 23.

Area death

i

Q

Game time announced
Saturday's reserve game
between Southern and Unioto will
beginat6p.m. arldnot6:30p.m.
Board or Edue~~tlon to meet
The Southern Local Board of
Education will ineet Monday at 7
~m. at Southern Higil S&lt;;hool.

Luther Jenkins
Lutner .Jenkins, 62, 18568
County Road 6, Coshocton, died
Wednesday, Dec. 16, .1992 at
Bethesda Hospital in Zanesville
following a short illness.
Born March 12, 1930 in Middlepon, he was a son of the late Uoyd
and Elizabeth (Lynch) Jenkins. He
served as a corporal in the U.S.
Army from August 23, 1948 to
June 20, 1952. He ~ad been
employed _as a !ft:IC_k driver m the
tra'!sportaUpn diVISIOn of the Ford&lt;
Motor Company Rouge Plant at
Dearborn, Mich., for over 20 years.
He w.as co-owner and OJICI'B~r of
Luke s Marlcet m Detrmt, M1ch.,
for y~kins 'was a member of
the F~aternal Order of Eagles
.
Lodge No. _761, Coshocton, Veteran.s of Fore1gn W&amp;;rs Post ~o. 1330,
Coshocton; Amencan Leg.on Post
No 65 Coshocton· AmVets Post
No·. 36 Coshocton: and the
Coshocton County Sportsmen's
Association.
On March 6 1954 he was married to Helen Clark ~ho preceded
him in death on June 22 1991.
Mr. Jenkins is survi;ed by a sister Mrs. Maxine Butcher
Po;.eroy: three nephews, Mark
Jenkins and Kevin Jenkins, both of
lndianapolis, Ind., and Roger
Moore, Richmond, Va.; and one
niece. Crystal Ranis, Indianapolis,
Ind.
Besides his parents and wife,
Mr. Jenkins was preceded in death
by one brother.
Services will be Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Free Funeral Home, 788
Soulh Second Street in Coshoc~n
:w•lh Pas~r S~ve Ste~ens of!ic~t·
tog. Bunal will be 10 Chnsuan
Chapel Cemet~~Y, Coshoct~n
County, where military honors will
be conducted by the Coshocton
County Veterans Council.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. at the Free Funeral Home.

fir

The Daily Sentinel
'

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Lh""''h Friday, 111 Court St.. p,....roy,
Ohio by the Ohio. Valley Publilbi..
Company/Multimedia Inc., P~.
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~2 WooU..,, .... ,...............,................ NI.40

By The Alloclatecl Press
Another cold front will move
across Ohio Saturday, causing
clouds, breezy conditions, mild
temperatures and a chance of
showcn. Highs will flllge from 45
to 50 and any showers should be
light and brief.
High pressure will move in Sunda with dry conditions and cooler
teri;perawres, Highs will only be in
the 30s. Normal highs are 35 to 4S.
Clouds are on tap tonight and
temperatureS may begin to rise by
daybreak Saturday as south winds
increase.
·
HighS today were expected to be
40 to45.

veteranstoberemembered
A party for the veterans at the
Athens Menial Health Ce!lter will
beheldbytheAuxillaryUnitofthe
American Legion Drew Webster
Post, Pomeroy. Gifts are needed for
eight men and two women by Dec.
22 and those•gifts may be dropped
off at Davis-Quickel Insurance in
Pomeroy.
Plan sale
Eastern athletic director Pam
Douthitt has announced that the
school will be selling all typeS of
old uniforms in the hi$h scbooL
.. c&amp;feteria -during the bOys' vanity'
· and reserve basketball games Ibis
Friday at Eastern High-School.
Boys' and girls' uniforms flllging
from volleyball, basketball, football, ~· and oth~ activ!lies ,will
be on display. !"nces ~·II vary.
however, most 1tems w11l be no
more than five dollars. Proceeds
·ugo back into the alhletic fund
w•
·
Weigh-Inset
The, 1993 Junior Fair Market
Steer weigh-in, for all ~ti~e
4-H ~ FFA steer exh1bttors, will
be held Jan. 3 from 9-11 a.m. at the
Meigs Count)i Fair Grounds in the
· show arena. All steers !DUSt be
~eighed-in ~d identi~ied at this
orne. Further tn.formauon may be
obtained by c~tacting_ the Meigs
County_ExtensiOn Off1ce at 9926696. .
Program to he presented
The Middleport First Baptist
A.B.Y. will present their version of
"A Christmas Carol" by Charles
Dickens on Sunday at 7 p.m. The
church is on the corner of Sixth and
Pabner in Middleport. The public is
invited.
CbildreDI' program plann~d
Racine First Baptist Church
children will be presenting "The
Gifts of Christmas" on Wednesday
at 7 p.m. under the direction of
Debi Bradford. The public is invited.

W ASI1INGTON · (AP) Bankers are hoping President-elect
Clinton's push for economic rejuvenation wiD result in a regulatory
relief package for their industry.
And so far, ClintOn shows sign~
of being receptive to such relief
despite warnings from consumer
groups and others that he should
not forget the lessons of the savings
and loan crisis, which may cost
taxpayers $200 billion.
On Thursday, lhe industry won
import;u~t backing from lhe heads
of all five federal a11encies regulating banks, savings mstitutions and
credit unions. ·
·
The agencies issued a joint
report to Congress saying banks
spend as much as $17 billion to,
. comRIY with government rules.
' The regulatory burden on lhe
financial system is very large and
growing as we speak,'' Federal
Reserve Board member John
LaWare told a news conference.
"Some of lhe burden ma_y be necessary to achieve pubhc policy
goals, but the unnecessary burden
represents a dead-weight loss to

he said fewer and simpler rules
would reduce the cost of bank services, which in tum could make
borrowing more attractive to some
customers.
The report to Congress was
required by banking legislation
signed into law by President Bush a
year ago.
·
The regulators, three of whom
are only filling in temporarily until
Clinton makes new appointments,
said lhe cumulative weight of regulation, no mauer how well intended, was becoming a heavy burden,
particularly for small banks wilhout
large legal and accounting staffs. ·
"i\lmost all of the regulations
that have been put in place have
praiseworthy gQals .... The problem
•s the regulatory burden you get
when you add them all up," said
Stephen Steinbrink, acting
comptroller of the currency.
Earlier this week at Clinton's
economic summit in Little Rock,
William H. Brandon Jr.. president
of lhe American Bankers Association, said relaxing J!Overnment
rules would spur $86 billion in new
society."
·
lending, dwarfing lhe $30 billion
Between 6 cents and 14 cents of economic stimulus under consider·
every dollar of ~he industry's ation by Clinton.
Clinton, who made easing the
expenseS go toward satisfying state
and federal requirements, said so-called credit crunch one of his
LaWare, who spoke as chairman of campaign issues, said later: "You
the Federal Financial Institutions heard the $86 billion figure. I've
Examination Council, a steering just been sittin~ here all day lhinking about this. '
committee for the five agencies.
That amounts to between $7.5
billion and $17 billion, he said.
LaWare, a former banker,
stopped well short of saying that
reducing regulations would stimulate lhe economy by spurring lendinjl • .a~ tr~ !lrf!IIPS ~onte!ld. B~t
COLUMBUS, Ohio ,(AP)Richard E. Disbrow, chairman of
American Electric Power C6., will
'
. retire n,ext year, the company said.
Disbrow, 62, said Wednesday
Cases processed
he would retire after the sharehold·. An action for dissolution of ers meer'ing in April. He has
.marriage has been filed in Meigs worked at AEP for 38 years.
County Common Pleas Court by
" The company faces a number
Carol Ann Ault, Pomeroy, and of new challenges and opponuniDennis Jay Ault, Pomeroy. ·
ties and, in my view, it would be
An ·action for dissolution has preferable to step aside now and let
been granted in the court to Calhy lhose who will manage the compaJane Hart and Monty Rae Hart.
ny through the 1990s and beyond
Divorces have been granted to have free rein in establishing the
April Y. Haggerty from John Mark needed policies and programs,''
Haggerty and to Wetzel T. Bailey Disbrow said.
from Unda G. Bailey.
E. Linn Draper, 50, will be his
successor,' the company said. DrapMarriage llcellllfS
er, who joined AEP as president on
Marriage licenses have been March 1. was formerly chairman,
issued in Meigs County Probate president and chief executive offiCourt to Mark David Porter, 22, cer of Gulf States Utilities Co.
Racine, and Misty Kay Swisher,
AEP is the parent company of
Syracuse; to Michl Arland King, seven electric utilities providing
23 , Pomeroy, and Teresa Marie service to residents in Ohio, IndiLieving, 23, Pomeroy; James ana, Michigan, Kenwcky, Virginia,
Edward Keesee II, 25, Middlepon, West Virginia and Tennessee.
and D'Lynn Renee Salls, 18, Vinton; and to Dennis James Edmiston, 19, Dexter and Jamie Lynn
COLONY THEATRE
Schuler, 18, Langsville.

Plains today. Scaltered flurries also
were expected in tbe southern
Rockies, the northern California
mountains and northern Maine.
A winter slortn watch was
issued for today fOr high elevations
of southern Nevada. A winter
storm waming"was in effect today
for the mountains of Utah •. while
snow advisories were issued for lhe
mountains of northwesrArizona.
On Thursday, lhe front .dumped
heavy snow over much of the
Northwest. Up to two feet of snow
fell during the day in mountains of
northern Nevada.
In nonhern California, a tornado
touched down at Oroville. No one

But lhe new . administration will
be subject to counter-pressure from

consumer groups that have fought
for many of the regulations, and
from senior Democratic lawmakers, who took credit for toughening
rules lhat had been relaxed during
lhe Reagan administration.
· Three consumer groups - Consumers Union, Public Citizen and
th e Associati.on of Community
Organizations for Reform Now ·accused lhe banking industry of· 'a
blatant campaign to undercut key
consumer protections.''
LaWare and Steinbrink were
joined at the news conference by
Andrew C. Hove Jr., acting chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.; Jonalhan L. Fiechter,
acting director of the Office of
Thrift Supervision; and Roger
Jepsen; chairman of lhe National
Credit Union Administration.

AEP chairman to
retire next year _

Court news

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions: Milton·
Hood , Middleport; Lola Bohlen,
Syracuse; Robert Bailey, Long'
Bottom; and Wayne Gilliand;
Coolville.
Thursday Discharges: none.

HOLZER MEI&gt;ICAL CENTER
Discharges, Dec. 17 - Tinn
Johnson, Kim Hutchins, Dakota
Billings, Joshua Crabtree;-Mrs.
Matthew RhoMs and son, Roy
· Shaw, Olga Stilmer, Lorna Howell,
Gary Ward, Walter Perry, Kevin
Gillman and Richard Campell.
Discharges, Dec. 16 - Thelmil
Naugle,
Aubrey Williamson;'
Pick 3 Numbers
Rebecca
Twyman, Nathaniel ··
. 8-8-5
Boggs,
U\tisha
Parriet, Heather
(eight, eight, five)
Cumbo,
K~thleen McDermitt,':
Pick 4 Numbers
Frances Lee, Kayla Barnett, Sally·
9-8-7-3
l'&gt;arst, Audra Hafflet, Donna
(nine, eight, seven, three)
Vaughn, Letha Leedy, Wand&amp;:
Blake, Myrl Samons, Lilly Oxye(
Natalie Bobo, Blumey Swaney, and
Susan Snider.
• Births, Dec. 16 • Mr. and Mrs.
Am Ele Power....................32 1/8 Richard Parson, a son, Wellston. ·
Ashland Oil ........................26 •n.
AT&amp;T.................................491/4
Bank One...........................49
Bob Evans .........................19 1/8
Charming Shop.................. 17
City Holding .......................21
Federal Moi!UI....................21
Goodyear TilR ..................63 7/8
Key Cenlllrion ................ ,.. 21
I..ands End •. ~ ....................... 27 7/8
Limited Inc. ...................... 27 5/8
Multimed.ia Inc ••.•••••....•••... 28 3/4
RaX R.estauranL .................. I/16
Reliance Eleclrif................ l8 S/8
Robbins&amp;Myers -:: .............. 16 1n.

Lottery numbers

Stocks

Shoney's lnc......................23 Ill

Star Bank ...........................33 ln.
Wendy Int'L .................... .l3
Worthington Ind. ...............22 7/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
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Ellis and Loewi ol GaUipoUs.

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U .IO AU ~nNIIS I JUiiDAY IMQAIN NIGNT

Units receive five ·
"
•
calls 10r aSSIStance

p . .
rJnClpal shot

••

was injured, Fire Department Capt.
Michael Damon said.
:
A powerful winter storm pound- :
ed western Nevada, and rain •
soaked the Pacific Coast on Thurs- :
day evening.
·
Rain from a cold front that :
drenched the East lingered along :
parts of !he Adantic Coast in the ·
evening. Light~ and snow fell in '·
the Midwest and ihe Great Lakes. ·
Highs today were expected to be -:
in the single digits in nor.thl!fn :
Montana; the teens throughout the ·
rest of the northern Rockies and :
norlhern Plains; 20s in lhe central :
Rockies, the in~rior Northwest and ·.
lhe Great Lakes region; 30s in the '
interior Northeast, the Midwest, :
· central Plains and soulhern Rock- :
ies, 40s along ihe Northeast coast, :;
lhe Appalachians, southern Plains '
and Pacific Northwest; 50s in much :
of the Southeast, the southern :
Plains and California; 60s along lhe .
Gulf Coast, southern Texas and the·
Southwest; and 70s in soulh Flori;
da.
The high temperature for the
nation Thursday was 82 degrees at.
Fort Myers, Fla., Lakeland, Fla.~
and Naples, Fla.
·

I'IATINE ~ SAT I ~ IJN . 1 : 20 J: JO

Five calls for assistance were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Thursday.
NEW YORK (AP) - Patrick
At 9:59a.m. the Syracuse squad
Daly, beloved principal at P.S. 15 went to Peach Street Alley and
in the rough Red Hook section of transpuned 1;-ola Boh~en to VeterBrooklyn, was checking on the ·· ans _Memonal Hospital. Wayne
safety of a fourlh.grader who left G•lhan_d was taken to Vete~ans
hool abruptly when he was Memonal by the Pomeroy unu at
· ~~ghl in a fatal crossf'trC.
I :2_8 p.m., and at 2:21 lhe Racme
A 17-year-old boy was ~Sled umt went to Fourth Street for
in the shooting Thursday, Police Dorothy Johnson who w!'-s transsearched for two others today. poned to the Holzer Medical CeoThey do not believe that Daly • a te\t 6 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
~8-year-old father of three, was the · uad went to the Rou~ 248 home
10
a
said
Kibble and
li Capt. John Sullivan.
her to SL Joseph Hospital m Parkpo pee 18 students and teachers ers~urg, _and at 9:34 -p.m. the
aren •
desc .bed
Rac1ne umt took Sarah McDowell
were devOiecl to D!tiY_.
"! . as from her home State Route 338 to
an unusually de~•cate~ prmctpal Veterans Memorial. At 11:12 p.m.
known for ~~g children home lhe Middleport unit was called to
•f parenis badn t pu:ked them up by Custer Street (or David S~inmetz
3:30p.m.
·
.
'·
who was taken to Veterans.

~~s~;,.as prin~,''

The record high temperature
was 63 in 1967, wilh a record low
of minus 7 in 1989.
.
Sunrise _SaWrday is at 7:49 am.
and sunset at 5:09 p.m.
Around the nation
Snow blanketed much of the
Northwest early today as an arctic
front moved through the region.
Snow also covered parts of the
Great Lakes region and !he MidweSt.
Showers soaked San Diego and
Las'Vegas.
Forecasters predicted lhe arctic
front would dump snow in the
northern Rockies and northern

Bankers hopeful of bank
deregulation under Clinton

W. VA.

No oubocriptioM by moil permitted in
__. when h~ carrier
il

IJT'IIe-'-iatedl'rell
•
. Today is friday, Dec. 18, tbe3S3nl day of 1992. 11lere are 13 days left .
mtbe~.
·,
1
Today's HIJhlilht in Hiitory:
On Dec. 18, f865, die 13th Amendment to the u.s. Constiwtion,lbofishlng slavery, W118 clecllred in effecL
On this dale:
.
'
Ill 1737, die most renowned violin-ntaker in hisiOly, Antonio Stradi- , l
vari, tUed in Cremona. Italy.
.
.

• IColumbusl47" I

·: j
I

'

., ' ' 'w-;.'----.---

;i

.

~

IND.

Sublcribm'l n!Jt, d•itin1 to ·pay the _c url·
"' may remit in advance ~direc:t 10 Tt.e
Dally s,.itlnel on • Lhne, tis ..- 12
rnaaLh buia. Credit. will be pvn carrier

J

Today in history

1¥..

47"

The Dally SanUnel- Page 3

Dry weathe~ forecast for Ohio over weekend

OHIO WcJthct

Page 2 The Dally Sentinel

Does U.S. have (or need) a culture?·
0

.

,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

. '· ....

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.......

.......

-· ~ .,,. U .

l.IN. l : OO l :

.

··:

·-

-I

�•

•

Sports

.

'

Sent~~~

By MATT HARVEY
AP Sports Writer .
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Marshall seemingly has a big
advantage over Youngstown Stale
in Saturday's NCAA 1-AA championship game, since tii contest will
be played in Huntington before a
largely p!O"Herd crowd.
But Nick Cochran, 4uartemack
of 1991 champion Youngstown
State, isn't cOmplaining.
''I think it's going to be exciting
to play in front of a b'- crowd lilce
that," Cochran said. 'We're just
lucky to have a: chance 10 play for a
national championship. I know a
lot of divisions don't even get a
chance to play for a title."
Marshall. defensive coordinator
Mickey Matthews sees two ways
the Penguins could look at it.
:There's the negative side of
playing in front of an expected
. crowd of about 32,000, of which
probably about 20,000 to 25,000
will be Marshall fans.
There's a plus side, too.
"I would say this," Matthews
said. "If you really ask the
Youngstown coaehing staff, I think
they'd say they'd rather play at
Marshall in front of 32,000, have a
great atmosphere, something their
kids can always remember .. . than
to go to Wichita Falls and play
Delaware in front of 1,500."
Marshall
(11-3)
and
Youngstown State (11-2-1) played
last season on a neutral field in
Statesboro, Ga., in front of i2,667
spectators.
Yoqngstown State scored 19
unanswered points in the fourth
quarter of that game to overcome
an 11-point defiCit and win 25-17.
"We learned a Jesson last year
that you've got to fmish them off,"
said Marshall coach Jim Donnan.
"We're just going to have to work
hard with our preparation."
Youngstown State defensive
tackle Chris Vecchione said last
season's comeback against Mar·

:River Valley hands Southern
:67-21loss to gain fourth win
River Valley's Raiders blitzed had six, and Bea Lisle four.
(o a 20-9 first quarter lea4, then Rachael Polcyn ahd six to lead the
never looked bal;k as they coasted winners and Cincy Armstead had
to a 67-21 non-league triumph over five.
. Southern Thursday night at
River Valley will host Gallia
· Cheshire.
Academy Monday. Southern will
: River Valley had dual I 0-point tntvel to Fon Frye Monday and to
efforts from Dama Twyman and Trimble Wednesday.
_Beth Salisbury.
. :· Southern was led by Sherri
Southern
• Stover with nine. Andrea Moore
. (9-10.0-1=21)
had six, Jonna Manuel had four and
Moore 3-0-0=6, Stover 4-0-1=9,
Bea Lisle had two.
Bea Lisle 1-0-0=2, Jonna Manuel
. -. Southern·hit 10-SI two pointers, 2-0-0-4. Totals- 10-0-1=21
'W8S 0-7 from three-point range and ,
:was 1 of 5 at the line. River Valley •·
River Valley
:was 27-73 from the field and was
(:Z0-14-15-18=67) .
·10-15 at the line.
Ward 1-1-2=7. Metzger 3-0'• Southern had 32 rebounds led 2=8, Staton 1-0-0=2, Salisbury 3-1Iiy Stover with 11 and Moon: with 1=I 0, Erica Mollihan 0-0-1 = 1,
Qine. SHS collected five sleals, five Gilbert 0-1-0=3, Clagg 1-0-0=2,
assists, 19 turnovers and 13 fouls. Twyman 5-0-0=10, Meade 3-0:Amber Ohlinger had assists for 1=7,
Armstead
3-0-2=8,
·Southern.
. McCormick 2-0-1=5 and Meadows
. River.Valley pulled down 35 2-0-4. Totals- :u.:,-10=67
~bounds (Armstead led with nine),
cj;sh~d out 13 assists (Staton led
with seven), had 19 steals (Staton
led with five) and committed five
turnovers and I0 fouls.
&gt;. After trailing. 18-9 at the half,
Southern held Rtver Valley to just
six second half points. Southern
P\llled baclc to within one.and had a .
c;hance to win, but slipped to the
:14-23 defeat. . ·
~ Christi Cooper led Southern
with seven points, Sammi Sisson

'
By DAVE
HARRIS
with two. JoyO'Brien, Amber
Sentlael Correspondent
Blackwell played but did not score.
Beth Reck drilled a three-pointMeigs hit 15 of 47 from the
32% and cashed 'in on 15
er from the right '\Ving at the buzzer floor
· to give Belp~ a 4746 wiil over the . of 26 &amp;om the line for S8%.Meigs
host Meigs Marauders in girls' Tri- pulled in 30 rebounds with 26 of
Valley Conference basketball those coming in the second half.
aetion on Thursday evening;·
Sisson had nine to lead Meigs. The
The win gives the Golden Marauden had 14 turnovers.
Eagles a 6-0 mark on the season
Tabby Mayne led Meiss with 15
and a 4-0 mark in the TVC. Meigs, points, Reck and ChriSty Bartlett
which lost its flfSt game of the year added 11.
in five tries, owns a 4-1 madt in the.
In the reserve game Meigs came
TVC.
back from a 13-4 deficit at the end
Meigs came out of the blocks of the rust period to post a 29-24
fast and opened up a 6-0 lead with win. Melissa Clifford .led Meigs
the help of a technical on the Bel- with nine, Erica Robie added six,
pre bench. Belpre be~ind the scor- Jaclyn Swartz five, Bobbie Butcher
mg of Tabby Mayne with five f1tst four, and Cynthia Couerill and Bilperiod points cut the .Meigs lead lie Butcher added two each.
· 10-9 afler the first period. Missy
Meigs will host W-ellston on
Sisson who had an outstanding Monday evening.
~e for Meiss led tht Marauders
-m the f1tst penod with four points.
Meip
Christy Bartlett scored eight
(10·10-14-12=46)
second-period points to spark the
Vema Compston 2-1-2=9, HenLady Eagles to a 12-10 scOring derson 0-0-2=2, Kelly 3-0-3=9,
advantage and give Belpre a 21-20 Turner 2-0-0=4, Sisson 3-0-4=10,
lead at the half. Chrissy Taylor and Taylor 2-0-4=8, Vanessa CompVanessa Compston both came off ston 2-0·0=4. Totals - 14-1the bench to lead the Marauders ·in 15=46
the second period with four points
each.
'
.
Belpre
Sisson once again sparked the
(9-12-8-18::47)
Marauders iii the third period, scorMayne 5-l-2=1S, Bartlett 5-0ing six third periOd points to $ive l-•11, Reck 1-3-0=10, Kruger 5-0Meigs a 34-29 lead heading mto 0=10. Totals -16-4-3:47
the final eight minutes .
. The Marauders held a 46-44
lead late in tlie game but Reck
came up with the big shot despite
good defensive pressure to give the
Marauders their first loss of the
season. Reclc sparked the Belpre
comeback with three trifecta's in
the final period.
·
Sisson led 'the Marauders with
10 ·points. Verna Compston an·d
Lori Kelly added nine and .Chrissy
Taylor eighL Other Marauders in
the scoring column were Katarina ·
Turner and Vanessa Compston
with four eac(l and Lee Henderson

ror

HANDS TO HEAVEN - MeiJFl Marauder Chrissy Taylor (44)
reaches ror the airborne ball durmg Thursday night's TVC game
agaiast visiting Belpre, which I he Golden Eagles won 47-46 to stay
unbeaten and give the Marauders their first loss or the season.
Trimble hit 13-65 from the floor
and was 5-16 at the line. Trimble
had 40 rebounds, 29 turnovers and
had 25 fouls.
Eastern won its first reserve
game of ·the year, a 27-15 !Pumph
over the reserve Tomcats. "Nicole
Nelson led the winners with eight
points, Jessica Radford had seven
points, Kart four, and two each by
Melissa Guess, Congo, Rebecca
Evans and Redovian.
For Trimble, Abby Curry had
five, Hope Mingus four, and two
each by Sarah McDonald; AOly
Eltringham and Leta Doster.

Eastern is idle until its January 4
game against Warren. Trimble will
go to Vinton County Monday and
will host Southern Wednesday.
Trimble
(5-8-11-7=31)
Pallo 1-0-0=2, T. Trace 2-00=4, Koons 3-0-3=9. Antle 6-02=14, M. Trace 1-0-0=2. Totals13-0-5=31
Eastern
(12-8-8-17=-45)
Wilson 4-0-2=10; Aeiker 2-·
8=12, Congo 4-1-9, Karr f4-14.
Totals- 15-0-15=45

PUMPS·JN 32-- Jeff Caldwell, son ot Jim and Sally Caldwell "'
Racine, recently ripped the nets for 32 points when the Marietta
College Pioneers fell to defeat 92-80 to John Carroll University in
Ban Johnson Field House in Marietta. Caldwell Is averaging 19.2
: points per game and leads the team in steals.

REliT
Steam clean your own
carpels the w

By SCO'IT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Although his team hasn't
enjoyed much success, former
Southern standout Jeff Caldwell,
son of Jim and Sally Caldwell,
Racine, has been doing an out~tanding job for the Marietta College Pioneers.
'
· Caldwell recently scored a college career-high 32 points for the
Pioneers in a 92-80 Ohio Athletic
Conference loss to John Carroll
University.
· Caldwell hit seven lhree·point.ers in the stint, leading the Pioneers
with a· 7-14 night of a team 12 of
20 .from three-point ~ange . Caldwell 'also had three rebounds and
stole the ball six times. •
Caldwell not oniy is a scoring
threat outside, but is a great passer
~nd ballhandler while running the
. point for the Marietta squad.
In an 82-64 loss to Kenyon College, Caldwell had '13 points,
including three tliree-pointers.

proressionals
do: .. but at

a rraclion or
the cost.
ReD( for onlv

Christmas

'h DAY

Greetine
Edition

Thursda,, ·
Deeem•erz4
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POMEROY
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Wish all your customers and
friends a very .Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition,
on D_e cember 24th.

1993 And Receive Your Sp..'Ciul
Winter Cotastmction Discount.

'

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Purchase Your New I lome Nuw .
Tnko Do livery Of Your New !·lome
Between Jun I st t~nd March 31st.

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With wreallls olboUy aad adlllll•, •~ldnp bug 11J ·
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· ·'

Paul Brannon's Eastern junior
high girls' basketball team recently
remained undefeated at 4-0 with a
31-25 win over Meigs,
The Eagles were led by Patsy
Aeiker with 18 points and Laura
Eastman with nine points. Eastman
also led the Eagles with nine
In the second game of the ·sea- rebounds and eight steals. Aeiker
son, CaldweU led the Pioneers·with had eight rebo)lnds and Martie
17 points, bitting three three-point- · Holter had five rebounds and two
ers and also was cited as the telim' s points. Crystal Holsinger chipped
leading rebounder with five per m with four points. She also had .
game. At this point, Caldwell also three steals and three rebounds.
According to Brannon, the
averaged seven steals per game.
In an 87-68 loss to Washington Eagle girls played excellent
and Jefferson College, Caldwell led defense. The defense was led by
the traveling Pioneers · with 17 Amanda Milhoan, Tracy White,
points, including three more three- Erin Sexton, Christie Grossnickle
pointers. The senior had six steals, and Amanda Maynard.
and five rebounds in that game,
sparking a 45 percent team shootGRAVELY TRACTOR
ing effort from · the floor. Marietta
hit 27 of 60, while Caldwell led
· SALES &amp; SERVICE
with a 9-18 from the floor overall.
204 Condor SL
Pomeroy, OH.
Caldwell currendy holds a 19.2
IIW ...... I WIIID IIIII
CLOSED MONDAY
scoring average and has earned
OPEN
TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
much praise from fust-year coach
UII-SPM
Doug Foote.
SAT. I AM-12 Noon
Foote said Caldwell's recent ·
effort's have just been "(lutstand~THE
ing," but cited his tean\' s inside
game as an area that oeeded work.
In its last outing, Marietta was out- '
rebounded 50-29.

shall was indicative of his team's whatever opportunities we had.
character.
•
That game, we had to go all out, do
··we never give up," Vec chione said. " We're going to be
fighting down to the last play,
whether we're down 30 points or
we're abead 30 points.
"I think Marshall will definitely
respect that about us," Vecchione
said. !'A lot of teams overlook that ·
aspect about us, and Marshall expe·
rienced that last year." .
The Herd also found out that the
Penguins, a team with a bruising
running attack, can throw the ball if
need be. Former Penguin quarterback Ray Isaac threw for 198 yards
against the Herd, with 145 yar$ or
that coming in the fourth qilarter on
four passes.
'!This vear we're a little more
balanced," said receiver Herb
Williams, who caught a key 33 yard touchdown pass in the 1991
title game. "Last year we were a
team that
took

Jewe{ry

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DIAMOND
TENNIS

•.,

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ON THE "T' IN MIDDLEPORT

Junior high Eagles
still undefeated
after win over Meigs

Former Southern standout
-floor general for Pioneers ·

5.-98

.

Marshall possesses home-field advantage

Friday, Dectmber 18, 1892

Belpre. drops Meigs
from u·n beaten tanks

2 advantage on buckets by Karr
and Congo.
Eastern motored on to a 12-5
flfSt period lead.
.
Both teams became sluggish in
the second period, scoiing just
· eight points each, which resulted in
a 20-13 Eastern lead.
Eastern was caught flat-fooled
to start the third frame as Trimble
cut the score to 20-17 on goals by
Chasity Antle.
Penny Aeiker hit Easlern 's fiTS!
~oal of the half, some two minuiCS
mto the frame. Antle hit for two
more points as Trimble rallied to a
28-24 score.
E1!5tern 1,1ressed and picked up
the tempo tn the fQurtll quarter,
outscoring Trimble 17-7 down the
Stretch.
.
"
Karr tallied nine key points in
the stretch, while Jaime Wilson hit
a couple of gutsy jumpers. Aeiker
added a free throw and Congo
mopped up with three late game
taliJCS.
Aeiker hit 8 of 11 at the line.
She and Congo dominated the
offensive boards; while Morris
came off tiie bench and did a good
job.
"Tonight we had two juniors
and the rest sophomores and freshmen on the coun. We did 'a lot of
~wing up tonight and did a great
JOb, whep we had tO. Tara Congo
and Penny Aeiker stePJM:~! up and
picked up the slack mside. Both
played a good post. Our other
starters Jaime Wilson, Jessica Karr
and Amy Redovian played very
well. In addition, the bench really
did a good job," said Eastern
Coach Scou Wolfe.
Eastern hit 15-70 from the floor
and was 15-28 from the line. Eastem had 49 rebounds, 20 turnovers,
12 steals and 22 fouls. Kart had six
steals. · ·

The Dally SenUnei-Page 5

In NCAA 1-AA title game Saturday vs. YSU,

Pag~

Eastern girls hand
Trimble 45-3lloss
By SCOTI WOLFE
Eastern Head Coach
With their backs against the
wall, a very young Eastern Eagles
girl s' basketball team buckled
down to defeat Trimble 45-31
Thursday evening at Eastern.
· · Eastern moves to 3-4 overall,
while Trimble is winless at 0-6.
• Eastern was playing without
- their double digit scorer-rebounder
~ Stephanie Quo, who was absent
.because of a death in her family.
Eastern was led by freshman
Jessica Ka!r, who netted 14 points,
had six steals and had 11 rebounds,
while junior post Penny Aeiker had
a career-high 12 points and 12
rebounds. Jaime Wilson had 10
points and six rebounds, while
sophomore Tara Congo had a
career-high nine points and nine
rebounds in her first-ever varsity
stan.
Not scoring, but equally effective in boosting Eastern to the win
were starting swing guard Amy
Redovian, Jessica Radford, Melissa
. Guess, Crystal Morris, Nicole Nelson and Beth Bay. Redovian and
Radford were crucial defensive
strongholds, while freshman Morris
. filled in the post with five
· rebounds.
ChaStity Antle led Trimble, who
is also in a rebuilding year, with 14
points, Beth Koons nine points and
• 13 rebounds, Tonya Trace four,
· Kim Pallo and Misti Trace two
· each.
: Eastern took a 2-0 lead at the
:stan of the game when Congo post:ed up and hit the turn-around
. jumper off the glass. Congo was
fouled, but missed the toss.
· Trimble failed ht its first
attempt, but Aeiker drew a foul
· Inside, where she hit both ends of a
: two shot foul. ·
·
.
: · Kim Pallo made it 4-2. before
·Eastern ran off four more for an 8-

The Daily

Pomeroy ..ddleport, Ohio

.,.. ,.r

Hei!He~:lraw

their world.
Call and get free information
on how to protect your children
from drugs and violence'
in your neighborhood.
Cali 1•800•WE PREVENT

'I

'

•

1988DODGE
DAYTONA .

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. t:00-8:00; Sat. 11:00-4:00;

•
A Public Service of
This PUbliCation

17999

Sun. 1:00-5:00
TAX I TITLE
INCLUDED
ALL PAYMENTS
ALL

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio.
-?.

CHURCH
DI
.

'
Catholic

212 W. Main SL
Putor: Andn:w Milea
Sunday School • 9::10 a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W...,elday Semca • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service·~ p.m.

Free Will Bapdst Church
Ash Slle(t, Middleport
Putor: Mark Morrow
Saturday Service • 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.,
· Wcdne~day Service-7:30p.m.

.

.-

Tuppen·l'laln Church of1 Chrl•
Pastor: Bill Winca
Sunda~ School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:4S a.m., 6:30p.m.

'• '
t

Pallor: Chris Stewart
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm.
Wednelday Servi""'- 7 p.m.

ML Union Baptist
PaJior : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
liv..U., • 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Servic:a-'6:30pm.

I.
/ .,

••
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Old Belhe Free Will )laptlst Church
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thunday Se.Vicea • 7:30

SLRL 124ACo.Rd.S
Pasurr: Derel&lt; Slump
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
W.,..tUp • 10:30 am., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- ~:30 p.m.

HUislde Baptlll Church
SL RL 143 just off RL 7
Pastor: Rev. Jamea R. A....,, Sr.
Sundal' School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip·lla.m.,6p.m.
Wodneaday Servica ·1 p.m.

s..... Road Cllurdl fiChrill

'
•
••
I

.
.
:

Paa10r.Jooeph B. Hookina
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedoesilay Services · 7 p.m.

Liberty Chrlstlan Church
Dcuer
Pas10r. Woody Call
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
livening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

VIctory Baptist
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip - !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnelday Services· 7 p.m.

t

''•

·-'' '

•..
..

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad ~,Mason
Sundar School · I0 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 Lm., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•'' .
r'
•

Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 am .• 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service 7:30p.m.
Hl!RIOCk GroYe Church
Pastor. Charles Domigan
Sunday •.chool· 10:30 a.m.
· Worship - 9:30a.m.• 7 p.m.

Foresl Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m.
Ml Moriah Bapllst
Fourth &amp; Main SL, Middlcpon
Pallor. Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
SIDiday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 Lm.

.••

1

r.
I

.,'

.•

'.

•'
•

l

Andqully Bapdsl
Pastor: Kennelh SmRh
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Salem St
Pastor. Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 a.m .
· Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednelday Servioeo - 7 p.m.
Ash Street Freewill Baptlll
Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship- II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Saturday Service · 7:30p.m.

.••

St. .r-ul Lutheran Chureh

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

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: George Weirick
Sunday Sehool • 9:45 a.m.
.
Wonhip- II a.m.

Ml Moriah Church of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

Sunday School10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
WednC!iday Semce- 7:30p.m.

Faith Tabernacle Chrch
.,
Bailey Run Road
Paslor. Rev. limme11 Rawson
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evenin&amp; 7 p.m.
Thursday Semce - 7 p.m.

Hazel Community Church
OrrRL 124
Pastor: lidsel Hart
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30pm.

Pas1or: Roger Grace
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m.

Laurel ClltrFree Methodist Church
Pallor: Pc~rticmblay
Sunda)i School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 7 p.m.

MclRS Coopcrotl•e Parish
• Northeast Cluster
Allred
Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Rudand Bible Methodist
Pastor. Rev. Ivan Myers
Sunday Scl!ool - 9:30 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedocsday Services - 7 p.m.
Coolville Unllod Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helm Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; .Fifrh Sl.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhi~- 9'a.m.
·
Tuesday SeMoes • 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Weber
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C .
Sunday SChool- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - ,to a.m.

Long Bottom
Pastor. Rev. Sddoil Johnson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service~- 7:30p.m.

Hockingport Church
GrandS!reet
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Seldon John1011
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
I" &amp; 3rd Sunday· 7:30p.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.
Wcdneaday Services · 7:3~ p.m.

Torch Chureb
Co.Rd. 63 .
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

I

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'

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992·2036
Check with us for

Hot Water-Tank
Rental·Program.

Public
ADVERTISEMENT .
FOR BIDS

Hours: DIIC. t9'23, 11 am-5 pm
992·5082

.A HANDFUl

OF CASH

IS.BEITER

THANA

OF STUFF

... K&amp;C JEWELERS

MILL

I

Christl Ill FelloWship Center
Salem SL, Ruthnd
Pastor: Robert E. MuSser
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip. ll :ISa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe -7 p.m.
Marse Cblpel Chun:h
Sup.: Mike Mataon
Suncfay achool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m .
Fallh Gj,pel Church ·
-LoogBottorn
Sunday School· 9:30 ~.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m.

'

Mt. Olive Community Church
PastOr: Lawrence Bush
Sunday SchoOl · 9:30a.m.
Evening .. 7 p.m.
Weclneday Se01ice • 7 p.m.
United Fallh Church
RL 7-on Pomeroy By-Pua
Pasror. R.v. Robert 1i. Smirh, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

~ ~.,.••:, l~ ~'· l

Mill Work

C ~h111el Mak rn ~

212

Syra cus e

264 South 2nd

~~UICKfl

.;r' ..""~.......~~.
)'

"

,.,,a.. .,.., '\l.C.
.... . . .
YINC.

~,.,, . • .., .,...

ohUI4&lt;~'• "

~··

POMEROY. OHI0-992-6617
BILL

QUIC~El

0\\iff Sml

a3aor.;

9 3 Mill S IIHI
Middleport, Ohio 46710
882-1157 -

r

I

~

1

~",

'

J\

1

MEIGS TIRE .
CENTER, INC.
J.

:;!uftz

Ph.~2101

Pomeroy

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2975
D.

"Fururtng Kentucky Fr/«1 Chicleen"

228 w.

992-5141

991-3785. Pomeroy

992 -3978

E

E. Ma in Streel

Middleport

Middleport PresbyterlaQ
Sunday School • 9a.m.
,
Worship- 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd .1: 4lh Sun.)
Syracuoe Flrst Unlicd Presbyterian
Sunday Schooi·IOa.m.
Worship. II a.m., 4 p.m. (htA 3rd Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventist

.fM;\ .

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy
214

liS l. Memoriol Dr,

..
P. J.

'

Cotumbu~. 0 .

104 Vj . Ma•n
992 Jlll Pomtrov

EWING FUNERAL

r.10

Nationwide Ins . Co .

.

Pomoroy

''2-2104

..OiJ(nir .' · nnd S•·rl'ir·r· ..11wny.~ ··
Establishe d

1913

992·2121
'106 Mullllrry An.

,

·.

~

./

'Speolllo•tlona may be
plclr:ecj up •I lie Clerlt'a
Oflhie. II* may be aubmltlad uniii10:0D A.M.. J;iiT on

P1ljeclany or all blda. .

1

5' • 7 TALL
HAILEY UIIIG
IESitiiCE

J5t7s FlatWODIIs

~·or,olllo

(CM._., 1011126)
IIIIOUIU

Middleport,

~~~~~! 1~1

F're\cnphan'\
_, ., 7911

F.IRE &amp; SAFETY
11\LEI &amp; IERVICI

992-7075-

Kally Hyaell, Clork
(11) 27; (12) 4, 11, 11. 4tc
.

Our God Ia

mhome
Real Estate General

Sedly miaaed by
husband, 10ne &amp;
wlvea,
. granddaughters &amp;

grendeona.

172 Norlh 511and Ave.
Middloport, Ohio

KEVIN'S LAWN
MIINTENAitCE
949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mowing.

Fertilizing, Weeding,
· and Seeding.
· Shrub and Tree
Trlnwnlng I Removal
R-Illa
Fret~

eom......111

Elllmi'IN

FIREWOOD FOR SALE
'

up or more Information
call
Tho•asWhlta

Special Early llrd

If you need tra•h pick·

915-4352
or Staai..MH

PLUMBING

nunthlnn

;a· .
...• • "11

. 38904LHdial

c.......... .

Middle110rt,O•io

614·992·7144
'

HOMEMADE
PIES
ORDER NOW
FOR THE

•RepiiiCement
Window
•Roofing

olnsulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
539 lryan Place
Mid.leport, Ollio

1211/92/1111

HAULING

RACINE _ IIAIHAH ROAD - This 3 bedroom, 2 llath
....,.. needs wort&lt; but could be made ntce with tho nght
hw&gt;dy,.,..,.,•• !ouch. R sUa on. ti little over an acra. Has a
ran•tlc view of tho countrylide. ,
S17 ,000.

3-4 bedroom•

la~pecl yard wth lenclng .,d oaoraga building .
ASKING l21,to0

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

SUCCESS ROAD _ Hardly looks lived in. This 1989 2 .
bedroom 14x70 2 bath DIIIIYIMe home has • garden tub,
central air, gu lumaca, and cathedral ceiling. $15,000.

POMEROY • SR II Ramodeled 2 arory home with 3
bedrooma, moot appllancea, central air, decking,

614-742-2138

ONLY_512,000.

POMEROY_ Euta-d llr•l- You need lo- thia
2 atory 2 •3 bedroom home with 1Y. batha. Walking

dii..,.e to """" but not right In ml&lt;kle of town.

,.,

t:zt,OOO.

IYRACUIE _Fourth llreet - Need an axtra incoma?
You Could h - ~ Hyou buy this 2 f"'!'ily duple~. It has 2
bedroomaln Ndt eputment haa a big lot and 11 cloM to
tlta pert&lt; and pool.
$28,000.

HAARIIOHVILLE· v-n1 ground! 28.288 acreo located
along peved raad ...~ 8CC811l
118.000

MIDDLEPORT ·VINE ST.- Remodelad lrllf!MI home wilh

.lacltad page,

carport, pallo, fireplace &amp; cellar. Nice

lalge flvnt porch.

.

U7.000,

DANVILLE· IIIN FAIIII- SR 12111/2 a!Ciy home with 2
IMtdrVoma, 2-3 IJI:N8, pond, bat'n, alted, cellar, garage,

-llncad land. W!l!l ....

.122,100

WE STILL NEED LISTINOS...WINTER TIME DOES NOT
SLOW OUR BUYERS!
IF YOU HAVE PROPERTY AND YOU WANT IT TO
MOVE ... GIVE US A CALL TODAYI

•.-:A ..IEFFERI..................... - .•·----..111-1011
DA11P.,M 111WAAT-·--··-····-·····:.. ••••••••- - · · 1111

lANDY IUTCHER.. ................................,..---.al71
oiiAAY
.(304) 11144.

IPAADLINCL.---·-·-.....,._.

OFFICE·........~··········~·············-ro·········-·..--····· ;tll1

HENRY 1!. CLELAND...........~.................I82-1111

TRACY IRINAOEII..... - .................~-.ID-14311
oi!AH TRUSSELL-----·---..-·.14·1810

a:FIC:E.:-----····-····---"'!"--2-21·

47- Wanted to Real
48- EquipMeal for Rent
411- For Laue

\II HI II\ \Ill:- I

4 Acceaoorieal

.'I 1\\ II I·'

•

8

po

PI...Mns &amp; H•lial
Excavatms
Ele.tri&lt;al &amp; ~etlrico,ralio1

· 51- Houaeloold Cooda
52- Sportla1 Cooda
53-Antiq54- Mi.e. MlrHiaa.adiae

185-- ~:....raJ

Hauliq

Mohlle Home Repair

5&amp;-- Buildina Suppti..

Uphoblery

~JAYMAR · CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; CUFTS

Quality ·
Stone Ca.

BRADFORD'S
Fres• CutTreea
or Cut Your OWII.
. CHERRY RIDGE

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992~

East of hrwla on 11.
611 01 Grawel 101111
1Y. Milt to lrowa.

. 6637

St. Rt. 7
c•es.ire, OH.

WATCH FOR SIGNS
11/241'92/1 -

&amp; BURKE

.CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Reinocleling
Stop &amp; Compere
flltiE ESTIIU'IES

. 985·4473
667·6179

2-7·92-lflt :

. UCIIIf GUll
CLUB
GUll SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
t:INI mo. pd.

GARRY'S
GENERAL
MAINTENANCE
742·3305
AFTER
7:00P.M.
12-17-'92-1

5'- 8' Tall

SHRUB &amp; TREE
. TRIM and
REMOVAL

OPEN 9-7

•LIGHT HAULING

CHRISTMAS
TFlEES
Fresh Cut Daily
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.

742-3051 .
SR124
Ready Nov. 26

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES
RUTLAND, OH.
HomegrownCarefully Sheered
Scotch &amp; White Pine

4' &amp; \lp with a great
selection of larger

trees.

Ca11742-2143 or
742·2979

mo.
'

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

131,100

P~ru

111241'11211fn

J&amp;L INSULATION

... rlvlrboatal

Aul&lt;&gt;

tiE c•d.
Uc. k 0050..32

Who?!

MIDDLEPORT· i.ocatad on Front St • 1 112 atory home

.

Aoloo for Sale
Trucb r.r S.lo
va.. &amp;4 WD'a
Motorcycle. .
Boala A Moton for Sale

41- Ho\IHI lor Rent
U- Mobllo 'H.... for Roal
43- Far. . rOr R·e at
;M - ~pal"t.Meal for R-.t
4$- Fumilhed Rooma

$1000htaH
Tltls ad loollfor 1

11-17-92·1 mo pd.

wllh 4b!Miooma. natural gaa '-~ larga lot tocalld along
Ohio n•. Home features a large trent porch lor viewing

~

k45p.&amp;

1211411 mo. pd.

PoMEROY· COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING- offic:elo'-nlom
II!*», 1WO Ieveii, ~~~ olsiOrage lpiC81 llellutlfLA view ol
r1wr locllllld on Main St. ASKING $15.000
.

IU \I II

EAGLES CLUB

985·4107 .

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

3&amp;-- Lota" Ac .....
36- R~l Ea~ato11'aar.d

BISS~ll

IN POMEROY

IJOLIDAYS

992·2886

LiYeatock
Hay &amp; Crain
Seod" ron~~~aor

M- BWiiPMI B\Uiclinp •

1121tfn

Look Who~
40!
Guess

Real Estate General

•••

15- Scboola It lutra&lt;tloa
16- Radio, TV II: CB Repair
17-Miic:ellanoouo
18- w.:nr.d To Do

Sllnlor cnlztn $6.oo

o.Cembar:.J:Jal
$8.

•Vinyl Siding .

I

l~ Buai- Tralniflti

EVERY THURSDAY

Milly lliore sped..s.

ALL IEISIONI GOOD
FOR &amp;MONTHS

whh the rolling
aphern and m home
with brokan hearta.

13-- IM\II'I.DCII

SANITATION

32.00

. . 939·2826

Wanted to Buy

BINGO

5

· · DO liE TURNER. Brobr.:::...........................,llll-ial

.

LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOnLE OF ,LOTION

FOREVER
BRONZE

Eden Unlled Bnlltren In Cllrl!l
2 112 milca north of Reedaville
on State Route 124
Pastor. Rev. Robert M1rkley '
Sunday School ! 10 a.m.
Worship · 7;30 p.m.
Wodneaday Services ·7:30p.m.

271 llorth
Second

Dirt, Gravel and Coal ·

w••ted

DAVIDSON'S

Bruce J. Reed, Mayor

.

In ._moryof
SYLVIA ZWILUNG
who peaaed away
o.c. 18, 1936.

MI. H-on United Brethren
In Chrlll Cburch
Tcm Communily off CR 82
Plstor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
}Vedncoday Servic:a • 7:30 jim.

f

PONDS
SloPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER i
UNES
'
BASEMENTS &amp; ~~
HOME SITES
'
HAUUNG: Umestone,.

111H11mco.

United Brethren

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

'

-~77·~

INSURANCE
· SERVICES

c.r::s:,

4.o.n..J
I. HeotltltiLJfa lnau,_

. CHRISTMAS·
tREES

In Memory

SeY•Ib-Day Adveatlst
Mulbeny Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Satunlay Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Won hip • 3 p.m.

992-61169

R&amp;C EICAVATI,.
BULLDOZING

12-5-tfn

lashan ld., laclnt

Ohle

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Brogan-Warner

ol

St. Pomeroy

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only
STARTS

II- Help Waor.d
12- SitUIItioDI

5-BappyAda
6- Loot and Fouad
1- Loot and Fouad
6- l'lablic Sale 4
Aactloa
II- Waar.d 1o Buy

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT· GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CEiniFICA'I'ESI

2

Crow's Family Restaurant

FISHER .
FUNERAL HOME '

1. Polloa UabiiiY
Z. Public Olflclal'a
Uabllly
~- Fleet

Middleport Penteeoslal
Third Ave.
Paa10r: Rev. Oark Balter
• 10 a.m.

205 North Second Av• . .
· . Middleport, OH
HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD - Looking for a pia~ to build
thai cham home or a place to pari&lt; that mobile _h~me?

RAWUNGS-COATS

•ur•oee:

'

Well ...,. k is approK. 2 acr11 with a 121&lt;16 budding-

PU\~ING

The VIllage of Pomerov
will .cO.pt ....eel bills ..
lie Clark'a Olfloe, 320 EMI
Main Blr..a. Pomoroy, Ohio
lor the lollowlng ln-

D•cember 21, 1812. The
VIllage r•erv• !Ita right to

ei!Mdy Mt up 111d ready lor you .

RACINE

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING; IIIC.

2301 Silf1h StrMt
Syracuse, Oh.

~­

PertloCDIIal A-hl7
Sl Rt. 124, Racine I !,.
PallOr: WilliunHoback .
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
.
Wodneadly Services- 7 p.m.

Uyesvllle Communlt) Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

•

247-Lotart FaUa
949-Raelae
742-R.Itland
667-Cool..We

379-Wol,..t

CLEARANCE SALE!
20%-40"/o OFF
THE BEARY BASKET

Pentecostal

Syracuse Mi~lon
1411 Bridgeman 51., Syracuse
Pasror. Roy (Mike) Thompaon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - ~p.m.
Wednesday Servioe -7 p.m.

~CI-way

12·1·2 mo.

. lieJolclna Lire Cburth500 l'l. 2atd ........Mid'dlef&gt;On '
PallOr: Rev. Michaell'qio
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednelda)' Servicea • 7r.m.

~

I

Racine

MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor. Charles Jone·s
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services .. 7 p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehool - I0 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

.,,J.., "'-Putor. Sun AndenOII'''

·~

East Lelart

Graham United Methodist
Worship - 9:30a.m. (Ill &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd .1: 4rh Sun)
Wedneaday Service ·7:30p.m.

. ,.,

. 458-Looo
576-Apple Grove
773-M- ·
882-NewH...-ea
89&amp;-Lotart
937-Boll'alo

PoiMi'OJ

~i.

2-la Me•ory .

843-Portlaad

32- Mobile Horoea (or Sale
33- Fa..... for Solo

46- Spaee Cor R01u

Pome'ro1
985-Ciaoater '

92, 1990-91 and 1989-90 Special.
Also get your child'.s 1992-93
Y,earbook gift cert~lcate for
Christmas. Contacl Rena
at992-:3269.

Sd•ersvllle Word of Faith
Puror: David Dailey
- Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Thunday Service-7:30p.m.

Middleport Community Chureh
575 Purl 51., Middleport

567-a...t.Jre
"388-Vlotoo
24s..lllo Gnnole
256-CII)'ID Dial.
64s.:.Aralola Dial.

232 2nd St.,

=

I I I: I I "I 1'1 'I II "
,\ I I I I ." I I 11 1,

GET BESULU . : I'AST!

3- AuoaDCementa

Southern Jr. High YearbOok 1991·

· W

$.30

$ .42
$ ,6() I
$.05/day

=:------1

675-Pt. PI-ani

j
&gt;

$ .20

Rates are for coltSeC!itive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

992-Middleport/

~

~

Cal..ry Pilgrim Cliapel
Harri1011.ule Road
P•ston Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 o.m,
Wonhlp • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Trinity Cooaregatlooal Church
Postor. Rev. Roland Wildman
Chureh · 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

446-Callipolia

~

~.

Faith FelloWihlp Cruaade ror Christ
Paouir: Rev. Fnnklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7.p.m.

Tbe Salntlon Anny
115 Butternut Ave., ~eroy.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor. Roger Grace
Sunday Scl!ool- 10 a.m.
Worship .. 9 a.m. .

United Methodist

Hobaon Church or Chrjslln

Church of God

.-

Morning Star
PaSior: KeMerh Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. ·.
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.

Christian Union

Harlford Church or Christ in
Chrlsllan Union
Hartford, W.Va.
PaslOr: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship · 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7:30p.m.

School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip . 9a.m.

Walnuland Henry S11., Ravenswood, W.Va.
· · Co-r&gt;uton: Revt. Richard A
Patricia Bon~·Krila .
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wof'!hip - 11 a.m.

Chesler
Pastor. Sharon Jlausman

Christian Union
Pastor: Theron Durham
SWJday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wedne•day Semces · 7 p.m.

Sun~ay

Our Saviour Lulheran .Church

Wonhip·- ll a.m. , 6:30p.m.

'

Snowville

•

ReedsYIIIe Church of Christ
Pastor. Philip Srurm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: !0:30a.m.
Bible Sludy, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Enddmo House of Prayer
(II Burlingham ehurch off Rou1e 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance ·
Sunday wonhip -. 10 a.m.
Wednesday service .. 6:30 P·n:'·

Pastor: Florence Smith

Sl John Lulher111 Church
Pine G1011e
Pastor. GeooRe Weirid&lt; .
Wonhip , 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

'

Other Churches

Salem Center
Pastpr: Ron Fierte
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m.

Belhany
Pastor. KeMeth Balter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship .. 9 a.m.
Wedneada.y Services- 10 a.m.
' ~ c.-·rme(
Pastor: KeMeth Baker
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m. (2nd It 4th Sun)

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pao10r: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m. .
Wednead&gt;y Service· 7:30p.m.

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

15
15
15
15
15

Melp Coun17 M1110n Co., WV

GaWa C0t1n1y

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

~

1
3
6
10
Monthly

Over 15 Words

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Bl'LLETI\ BO.\RD

~

Rate

. fo"-inw tekphone B#claange• ...

~

~

Fal"lew BliJieChurch
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Pallor: James Lewia
Sultday Sehool - II a.m. .
Wonhip- 9:30 ~.rn., 7:30p.m.
WedneSday Service· 7:30p.m.

N.,. Haven Cbureh or the Nazarene
Pastor:&lt;ilendon Sl!OUCI
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedqeaday Service•- 7 p.m.

Rudand
Pastor. ArtOOr Crabtn::e
Sunday School-9:30a.m,
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Thursday Servi~ - 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Bra,.ordChur&lt;•otChrlot

· Port1111d F1rst Church of lite Nazarene
Pastoi': Willi1rn Justis
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m. ,

Rock Springs
PaSlor.Kenh Rader
·Sunday School- 9: 15 a.m.
·
Wonhip -IOa.m.
Wcdneaday Service• - 6 p.m.

Reoraa•laed Chun:ll of J-• Christ
I• Lalltr Day Saints
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Putor. William Roush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worahip- 10:30 a.m. .
Wedneadav Services-7:30p.m.

M.- Church of Chrlot
MillerSL,Ma1011, W.Va.
Sunday School-IOa.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
_Wednead&amp;y Semoeo - 7 p.m.

.

Pas10r: Eunhae (Grace) Kee ·
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
W...,elday Services-7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

RuUand Chorth of Cbrlot
Pulor&lt; Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-lll-.30a.m., 7p.rn.

Bethlehem Baptist
Putor : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 9:30a.m.
.
Thunday Services· 7:.30 p.m.

. Pomeroy

•

1:00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. M011day
1:00 p.m. Tuelciay
.t :OOp.m, Wodneaclay
IOOp.m. Thw'oday
I :00 p.tit. Fri.s.y

Days . Words

.Clau(fied page• cover ehe

Trll&gt;uoe (..cepl Cla..iflad Dloplay, Buola- Cud or Lepl
Notieoa) wlllalao appear In the Point Pleoaat Bepter ...I
.... DOily S..liDel, . . .hi.. o...r 18,000 .....

Whlla'o Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Putor. Rev. Phillip Ridenour·
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m. .
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Paator: SwnuelBuye
Sunday School • 9:30 a.rq.
·Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedn.. day Semces . 7 p.m.

••t

'·~-Y~S~M
• A eluaiflocl advertlooMal plaead lo ... Callipolia Daily

Freedom Goopol Million
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
· PallOr: Rev. RO]]er Willford
Sunda_y School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wodnelday Service· 7 p.m._

Chester Church flUte Nozarene
Pastor. Rev. Herbert Gn11e
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednetday Semcc;• • 7 p.m.

SAT.8-1·2

• Ada outaidelhe eoaaty your ad I1IDI
b. prepaid
•. Recehe dileoUIIIt for 11;4L palcl ia aclftBCO,
• Free Ado: Ci-wa:r ""d Fo.....t ado uad•IS worda will be
...... 3 da;r..t.. ........
.
• Prlo, of ad for aDeapltalletlen It douhlo prieeof ad &lt;oot
• 1 pojotliDe type ooly ...d
• Sentiael ilaot hlpoa.lbl. for erTOI'I after lint day (check
for erron Aral day ad nuu io paper). C.U hefoN 2:00 P·"'·
day •fter publication to ~aake C:OI'I"ee.ltioa ·
• Ad. tlaat111wl be paW in ad.aace an:
. , Card of nub
Happy Ado

'

Pomeroy Chureh of Ute Nazarene
· Pastor: Rev. ~· McClung
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServiceJ • 7 p.m.

8A.M.-5P.M • .:

DAY,BEFORE PUBUCATION

Monday ...per
' Tueoday Paper
Wednelday Paper
Thtlllday ...per
Friday ...per
Swtday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

· CarleiOn Inltrdenomlnadooal Church
Kin ~ROlli
' Putor: Clyde . Henderscn
.
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Evenin&amp; • 7 p.m.
Wech!elday Service· 7 p.m.

.

Putor: Aormce Smith

MoN. thru FRI.

Sfl4ilh Belhd NewT-ment
Silver·Ridge
Pastor. Duane Sydmotricker
Sunday Scbool· 9a.m.
WonhiP • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Syraeu. ChMreh orlbe Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Glem McMillan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship • I 0:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 7 P.trl·

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip , 10 a.m.

Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pastor. Rev. John Neville
Sunday School 10 Lm.
Wonhip • II Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service .. 7:30 n.m .

Dexler Church or Christ

• Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • I0:45 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servic:a - 7 p.m.

Purl Chapel

Hysell Run Holiness Church
. Pastor: R,obert Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Semce - 7:30p.m.

Paaror : Torn Runyoo
Sundar School·-9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.

Putor: Jolm w. Doualu

COPY DliAOLINE

Call992-2156 :

N- Settlement Church
Sunday Wonhip ·2:30p.m.; .
Thonda~ services· 7:30p.m..·.

F.tln,....ln

' RUtland Church of the NWrcne

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church .
15 Pearl SL, ~leport. ·
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday school · 9:30a.m. '
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

BradbUI'J C•IU'Cb of Cbrbt

Slher Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Uttle
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worship· II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7:30p.m.

'

c...... Bible Hollneoi Cburcb
. 112 mile of( RL 325
l PallOr: Rev. O'DeU Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Plao

. To place an ad · .

Full coopei IJahth33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy
· PallOr: Roy Hun~r
·
Sunday Scbool-10 a.m• .
Evenina7:30 p.m. ,
Tuelday A Thunday -7:30p.m.

Clturdl o( lite Nazar••

Healh (Middleport)
Putor: Fnnlc Smith
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service• .. 6 p.m.
MlnersviDe
Pastor: Deroo Newman
Sunday Schocl • 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.

Holiness

Zloo Churc• of Chrlll
Porn&lt;!OY, Harri,oatville j{d. (RL143)
.
Pasl.Or: ln&amp;erim ,.stor
·'
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wednelday Services- 7 p.m.

Racine Flrsl Bapdsl
Pastor: Sleve Deaver
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship · J0:40Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

...

Gr- Epbcopal·Churth
3261i. Main SL, Pcrnoroy
Holy Euehuial !It &amp; 3rd Sundays,
Morninf l'nlycr 2nd A 4rh Sundays
Principal Service and Sunday School II a.m.

Bea""'llow Ridge Cbon:h or Chrlot
Pastor: Jock Colegrove
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednelda~ Services - 6:30p.m.

ReM~t~IU•

Forest Run
Putor: Deroo Newman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9a.m.
Thursday Services-6:30pm.

Ep1scopal

Keno Chureh otCbrlst
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool · 10:30 Lm.

Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip' • I0:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
East.Main St.
Pastor: Dr. ~ Morris
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
F1rst Southern Baptist
'
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor. E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip .. J0:45 Lm.~ 7:30p.m. ·
WCdncsday Services· 7:30p.m.
Middleport Flrst Baptist
Comer Sixth &amp; Palmer
Pastor. Rev. James A. Bill. Robert Fos~er
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Worship-9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

rI

, Pas1or. Gary Hines .
Sunday SciiOol • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -6 p.m ..
Wednesday Semcea - 7 p.m.

Middleport Cburdl ot Cbrlsl
5rh and Main
Pastor: Al Hart.aan
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

Rutland Flrst Baptist Church

l

Qesler

Pa-: Chudt Mcl'lle11011
Sunday Scbool - I0 a.m. • ,
·
EveninJ l 7 p.m.
We&lt;kleaday ~moe -7 p.m.

Middleport Church of lbe Nazarene
Pastor. Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,6:30p.m.
· Wedneaday Semces - 7 p.m.

Flatwoods
Pastor. Keirh Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Won hip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

New Life Cburch ot God

Pomeroy. Wellllcle Cburdl fiCbrlal
33226 Childrm's Home Rd. ·
Sunday Scl!ool· 11 a.m.
Wonhip • IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday school-9:45a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm. and 7 p.m.

Radltl , , . Cl!urdl of lito N,_o
Putor: 11tanaa L Ga.,, II
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Semoea • 7 p.m.

. Entt.,ri!IO
Putor. Keith Roder
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 i.m., 6 p.m.
Tueaday Services- T p.m.

Chureh or God of Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. RL 160
Putor: Pat Henson ·1
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WonhiD • II a.m.
Wedneaday Semce~ • 7 p.m.

.....,., Cloordl fl Cbrlll

Ecclala FtllOWIIolp
121 Mill 51., Middlepolt

Nazar enc

Central Cluller
· Asbury (Syracuse)
Panor: Deron Newman
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wedn.. day Service• -7:30p.m.

S)raCU!IO Church orGnd
Apple and Seoond Su.
Pao10r. Rev. David RuaaeU
Sunday Sell~ and ~onhip- 9:30a.m.
EvCIUIII SeMcet· 1"p.m.
·
Wednelday Semces - 7 p.m.

Church of Christ

RATES

Toppers Plallls Sl. Paul
PaliQr. Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9 i.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Tuelday Servicea • 7:30p.m.

Rudand Church of God
Paoror: Jolin F. Corooran ·
Sundll)' School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., ?p.m.
Wedneaday Semces. 7 p.m.

Sacred Heart Calhollc Church
161 Mulbony Ave., Pcmeroy, 992-5898
Pasror. Rev. Wal~r.E. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:45-S:l5p.m.: Man- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
,. SWl. M111 .. 9:3Q a.m.
Dailey Mua • 8:30 ub.

•The Area's Number 1 ·
Marketplace

'

Wedneaday Semces • 7 p.m.

Apostolic

Ohio

11127

. · MICROWAVE OVEN
, , and VCR REPIIR
AUIIAIU
lrle1 II I• Or We ·

'

KEN'S APPUIIICE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561 .

•FIREWOOD
'

Pick U

BILL SLACK
992·2269

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

USED RAILROAD TIES

217L ..... It.
POIIIIOY, OliO

4+92·tfn .

3123182Mn

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Po-oy,Ohio

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

HOLIDAY SPECIAL!

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

36970 Ball A11 Aoacl

.sq_so ar••

·

SIZED LIMESTONE

Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760

992·3470

(614) 843·526412·11·92-1

12-fl-92-1 mo

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
10%·20"·0H
Putten, Beginner Seta,

Youth Cuatom Drivers.
Leeaona Included with
purcha••·
Located on Scow Camp
Rd., CMIIIr, OH.
.
11127

·GRAVE
BLANKETS
For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with ·
white pine.

. $20.00
-i614) 849-2058

11m

CELLULAR

Authoriucl AQtftl

TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE
•• "

•••••••••••••••••• t

•

"

,

• • • • • • • .• • • •

The twfect Clwistmos Gifr for tOOt INJrd to buy for person on your list.

Count,

I
local
Nf'VIcli .....

-

'

LIMinD
TIME ONLY

s.nt-RIIel
fiOrtt 11 &amp;.86 per
moMh. Dnl,..r

$6995

ag,.qulrod.

......., SR

OH.

•-4311tor511

�•

I

1992

__
_
=:=-··..- ,.. ...

••11

au•·• ...

Or

PHILLIP
ALDER

-~~-­
!IW; . , . . . _ . , . . , . .

=.-=.: ·-

.........

,..

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pi..~

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Pass
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Opening lead: •

ALL YDR'N fl

18
Yard Sale

~-!ERE' S AN

SOMEONE SNEAKED
I
I ITEM INTO T~E C~AMBER
COMMERCE 6UtLDIN6
·FilUM NEEDLES,
N16~T, AND PL066EO
CALIFORNIA .. •
IN AH EXTENSION CORD
-W-OIHMCan b I :1

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fl'odrdllr8 114 ... " Pt..
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II an lllnd. 1400
M.
. 114-

Fumbliod Alii: 2 lA, 1260.
Wllloo• br....., In . , - . 1111111._ H. 101 41h, Clollpolla.
11•- 'Ill
............... lfler1 pJIL

• Public sale

8

lnltrunu~nts

Building
SupplieS

55

&amp;Auctlori

AldcPoo. --~
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tulllmoiUCI-.-......
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Servtces

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6 UNSCRAMBLE
A'80VE LEITERS
10 GET

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
" -n
Mohair • Vital • Orbit • Gently · ALL this TIME ·
A geme popped out of the old tamp the bum found.
·~rant me a wish, • the bum demanded. "If 1 could grant
wtshes," the genie replied, "do you think I'd be in that
lousy lamp ALL this TIME?"
.

8

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'~a Gift?

32 Mobile Homes

Rl!gs, Placemats,
QuiltS, 5 Typas
Pillows, Animals,
lots of small articles.
5o. and up

45

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Rooms

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40 F'l. Loa~.~:AiumiRYIII Trucll; -..ell, I

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YOUNG'S

992·2549
MERRY CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE
SAT., DEC. 12-10 to 8
SUN. DEC. 13-1 to 6
Spcciallloliday llouro
Open Until 8 Mon.·Silt.

After Dec. 10
Grenl Horucmn&lt;lc
Giflldcao

EXCAVAnNG

. . . . . . 4:30pm.

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Merchandtse

Household
Goode

10•. _ _ _ __
11._ _ _ _ _1

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

13 . _ _ _ __
14•._ _ _ __
15-.___ _ __

41" "-"" 0111 T - Willi 2
L8rl• And 4 Anowl 1 ck Challw
mo. Conoll . . . Clllno
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tor romance and you'll find it.
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker lnstanlly

10 lOOK

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OAIVEWAYIIHITALU:D

GaUipoll1 Dally 'Irlbune
448·2342
•
· Po•eroy Dally Sentinel
992·2158

FREE ES'IDIATES

Pt. Ple•unt Be111ter

BUL.I.DCiz.!l.! 1....8;:4CICHOE
•ncllRA!iMUI: WORK
AVAIL.AIII.E.
S'EPTIC IYITEIII,
HOIEIITEI8ncl
TRAILER '"!!!r

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'Your
'Birthday

o.c. 11, 1112

.

.

•l Some alterations In your lifestyle you've
bean hoping to make but have bean unable to do so In the past could be poesl·
ble in th~ year ahead. Happy translor·
mallons are possible .
I~Gin ARIUI (Nov. 23-0ec. 211
Something Is going on behind the
aclanes thai will be of benalll to you
whan It is dlsclosetllully . You mlghl get
your 11rst Inkling of It today. Know - •

875·1333

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are romantically

18 Anllqlit Clr
2D Kitchin
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22 Unit of Mtx~.:

can currencr

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23 Sign ollhll

fulura.

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42
44
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46

47
48

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ComfOrt
Aid In

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49 Author-

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56 Period Of .:
tlmt
58 Tr8niPOrl• :: ·
lion abbr. •

· CELEBRITY CIPHER

C.brity Cipher Cf')1)IOOrtrnl . . Cfel1«i from quot•ttona by ra.nout ~ . pall and JnMfll.
Eactt lett« In tM ctPMf llands for ano1'-. ToftT'• ct.: A~ C.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Golf and sex are about lne only things you can:::
enjoy without being vary good at lt." - (Golfer) Jimmy Demaret. •
:;

e 199:2

TV Listins Inc.

an intimate exchange .
GEMINI (MIJ 21·Juna 10) Time is not
likely to be wasted on inconsequential
projects today. YoU're an industrious
producer and you'll know how to keep
your priorities in order .
CANCER (Juno 21-.lulr 22) Take a
break today to smell the roses and do
things you et1joy doing. Hours spenl in
this manner are not a waste of time because lhey havo both mental and physical beneflls.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Victory will not
be denied you today If you are tonaclous and persistent. Focus on finishing
what you slart, because you grow slron·

I

groomed

'"'-*•, In

52 Colltcllon of ,

perfect lor you . Mall $2 plus a long , selladdressed, stamped onvelope to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428. Cleveland, OH.44101-3428.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22........ 11) Try to
devote as much lime as possible loday
to a new eo\deavor lhat has captured
your laney . You're ap1 to be luckier with
your currenl interesls than you will be
with your older ones.
.
AQUARIUS (.lon. 20-Feb. 11) Major accompllsl1ments are possible In this cy·
cle II ybu choose to locus your eHorts
on lhem . Don't waste lime on goals of gar as the end draws nearer.
smallstgnlllcance. Elevale your lights . VIRGO (Aug. 23-llapl. 22) You are a
PISCES (Feb. 20 llltr~ll 20) Have Iota! lai~y good negollator loday. II you are
lal1h in your abllilles loday and you displeased with an arrangement, if
might even surprise yourllll with wha1 you can make a posill.. adlualmBt1t
you'll be able lo do. Mounlilns can be now. Remember, the terms were not
moved if you beliovo that ll'a PQISible.
Carved In alone .
ARIEl (llltrch 21·,..1 11) Your moS1 LIIIRA (llapl. 23-0cl. 23) Thoro are cer· aubalantial opportunltteSioday are like- 'llln lhlngs 1hat can be done loday
ly to come lrom· orrangemenls where whiCh could help enhance your material
someone else has laid a lounda11on al· woll·belng. You know wh&amp;l thl!Y are, so
ready. Your pertlclpatlon can supply don't postpone them once again to a
something gravely needed.
taler dale.
TAURUI (April 20-*J 20) Dealing ICORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. 22) 'iou'll perwith people on " one-lo-one basis Is torm well today In slluatlons - e you
somelhlng you should do woll today. It h•ve 111e freedom to act In en Indepenan importaot matter is to be di'O'f ed, dent manner. Do your thing - be a
avoid group involvement. Instead, - k IMder, nola lotio-. .
1f

'

10 Snoozeo
11 Arrow pollOI);,
16 Clour
-

24 16 oz.
--~- 25 II plus oiltl
20 Wool
•
31 Want
32 BlbHcal wHd
35 Numbelt
•
(abbr.)
•
36 Lend dlplly ,
lo
.

-

Call.our oj]ke for paW lA tuft&gt;oMe ra'eii

~~~IICIO,,...

I NEVER KNOW WHEI-J
HE~ PUTnN&amp; MEQ.I .

M,4DECIF NOODL..ES.

'rOUR PARENTe":!

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78 . Auto Pans

rris A SQI.t..E NDCEl..

15 il-16-TAl'oOll-IER NOTE
,FROM 'THE TIS"CHER TO

5 Aavlto
6 Th,....totd
alolh
1 Female
sandpiper
8 Compacl
9 Ono-colled
organism

1 Wldt shoo
tiZe
2 Unit of
Slamue
currency
3 Cheer
4 Garmenlslll

Tum your clutter ·i nto ca&amp;h,
SeU it the ea«x 1DAy.. •by :vhone,
no need to leave yo~r home•
Place your chilsjfied pd today! ,
15 word. or leu, 3 dqya,
3 :vruzera.$6.00

1117 Cllr!M F-~ .14z72. 1

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DOWN

54 Pltct

OUR LANGUAGE AO.VICE: . A
household cleaner takes an Ad-Vice
Award for advertising that "You can't
'clean' genns, you have to kill them."
The quotation marks around CLEAN
are appropriate if you want to erflpha·
size that verb. Less appropriate,
though, is the comma that lries to separate two complete sentences. Either
end the sentence after GERMS or in·
sert a semicolon to separate lhe two
independent clauses. You can't "ig·
nore• run-on sentences; you have to
fix them.·

/'~·lei.,',
I

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Com.- Trollor Lol Fcir 11ou1t 1
Mil•
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HOLLAN

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for S81e

CHESTER
985-4356

74

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43 Vloltnl
whirlwind
45 Aomanuc
mulllt:
47 Banish lrom
one's counlry ·
50 Puerto51 Type olstork
53 Small alone
57- Ouenun
58 Regarding
(2 wda.)
60 Falslflor
61 Organ of
tlghl
62 Merll
63- Ktll

1 Wyatl-

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121 ._. W canf1IO, loin W' l'orlablo
Wi_tl&amp;_b_
Condition. ht all me.
' .

Anawer to PrewkHie Puzzte

40 Decay

Don't,let the spelling ol CATER·
PILLAR bug you. ,Pronounce this
term "KAT-i!r-pil-er,• but cater to
those who spell the start of this noun
like CATER.

Color T.V.'e

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ACROSS

By Je(lrey McQuaiD

Trove1CII2t,~.

Comploltj
horno,1mllo-lown-

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GRANNY'S
"CRAFTS

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The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle-

OUR LANGUAGE

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.BORN LOSER

NOT ID- -1..-..ual.iho

1'r1· ·r1·1

PRINt NUMeERED LE11ERS IN
THESE SQUARES

The Irish are supposed to be lucky
organa
people, but that's always seemed like
8 Cuckoo
blarney to me. However, an Irishman, 12 And olhora
Hugh MllcGanl\, ~rtainly made the
(2 wda.)
most of his luck on today's deal. It was 13 Manner
played in the Junior European Cham· 14 Malt
pi01111hip held earlier this year in a sub- 15 Atlrigaranl
17 Conllnenl
urb of Paris.
19 Penny
North oJiened with a strong and arti· 21 Gaggle
ficial one club. South responded with a
members
weak and artificial one diamond. Al· 22 Type of spot
ter that, a natural auction finishe\1 in 26 Type of Dr.
27 Atd-llot
five diamonds.
..ce of coal
West led his trump, the best start as 28 pCanine
cry
it stopped declarer from ruffing dum· 30
ln11ct
my's three club losers in his hand . 33 Compass pt.
MacGann won in hand and made the 34 Cap1ble of
wrong guess, playing a spade to dumbelllll
llrtiChed
my's king: East won with the ace and
returned bis second trump. Now de· 37 Apleca
(abbr.)
l.~r~~i,·:w,ith the unfavorable spade dis· 38 Crj,cket
Jl
seemed doomed to defeat.
poilllona
Bul when he won the diamond return
in the dummy and led the spade jack,
East discarded the heart thrJ!e.
;,
The revoke wasn't established, but
- the heart three became a penalty
card, to be played at the first legal
opportunity.
Alter winnin~ with the spade' qu'"""'•.i
West could exit safely only
the ho.-1--1--+-club king. Dec¥rer won with dummy's
ace, ruffed a club in band and led the
heart king, discarding a club from the
dummy. East was forced to follow im·
potently with his penalty cant, the
three. Dummy's last club went on the
spade 10. Declarer lost jWit two spade
tricks.
As MacGaDD said, "I got the spades
wrong but the hearts right. •

PEANUTS

...

f)

I I I I 1

5 Hearing

wanted to Do

--'eU..Cinl-l

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By 'PbUUp Alder

Bullnea
Training

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.Comp lete the chuckle quoted
.
.
.
.
.
.
by fill ing •n the m1s.smg words
L--..J...---l'--...1...-L--'--' you develop from step No. 3 below .

The luck
of the Goidels
14

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Vulnerable: North.SOuth
Dealer: East
·

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Help Wanted

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SOUTH

EAST .
.A7
.AHU

QU4
Q7U
8
KQ75

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TU F I N

Saleswoman: "How did you
getthose wrinkles around your '
~~ 1
~ eyes at such a young age?"
L-...L..-L-J.......L
. ....1 ~ Young customer: ·t raugh a
r - ' - - - - - - - - , lot.· Saleswoman :"Honey, noH I S F L Y I thing is that ·····!"

'WI!8T

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Worth. TX

DECEMBER 181

�• I

By The"Bend
Commun~ty

a-.,.

t-aaity Caludar itt•s

e.lar.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTI'OM - Faith Full
Gospel Chun:b in Long Bottom
will bave pttaehillg and singing
Friday • 1 p.m. with David Dailey
lllld the Dailey Family. Pastor
s- RciCd . ~ lbC ~lie. Fetlowsbip will fallow.

HENDERSON, W.VA. - Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club, Saturday, 8-11 p.m., Henderson Community Center, Henderson, W.Va. John Waugh wiJI be the
caller.
CHESTER - There will be. a
special meeting of Shade River
Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM, Chester, on
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with work in
the E.A. degree. Refreslunents will
be served.

1UPPERS PLAINS - A round
~ diP:e will be held Fri·
day liDm 8-11:30 p.m. the TuPJ!CfS
Plains VFW Fml No. 9053 Ladies
AuDiiaty. Music will be by 0 and
the Country Gentlemen. Public

aad

Education first

a• -•.

Typical America now has more
hiah-scbool graduates than at any
otlier time in U.S. history: over .78
percent About 23 percent of lbcse
graduates have gone on to earn a
bachelor's degree or highet. Educa·
tiona! attainment directly impacts
income.' The avemge monthly eaql·
·ings without a high school diploma
are $452; with a diploma, $921;
and with a bilehelor's degree,
$1.829.
.
. .·

POMEROY • Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Route 143, will have its
Chrisunas program Sunday at 7:30
p.m. Rev. Victor Roush invites the
public.
CHESHIRE • The annual
Chrisunas program at Silver Run·
Baptist Church, Cheshire, will be
Sunday at 7:30 p.f11. The public is
invited.

Names in
the news

W011der, who vowed in 1986
he'd neoa-perronn in Arizona until
it bad a KiDg Day. bas agreed to
late Jl-'ha. IS in a Xing-inspiled
musical spectacular, the city
MID*' e.t n.sday.

s

I

JACKSONVnl.E, Fla. (AP)Thieves smashed a window and
carted o{f $5,000 worth of toys collected for needy children, but the
Salvation Anny said Thursday it
should be able to salvage its holiday toy giveaway.
As news of the.tor grab spread,
businesses and individuals pitched
in to make up for the loss, said
Fred Musgrave, Salvation Anny
area commander.
Donations were up slightly this
year, but the number o~ families
registered for the toy giveaway
jumped to 2,247, up 110 percent
over last year, said Musgrave's
wife, Miriam, who coordinates
women's services for the Salvation

be..........,

.
stot
en ear1y
Wednesday after someone threw a
~~!~ of c~crete through a win-

NEW YORK (AP) - Kirstie
Alley's new adopted son has !O
com)lflC ror space in the actress'
32-IUOIIIIIIIJ!Sim wilb a menagerie
of some 40 pas. including dogs,
raccooos, geese, chickens, cats,

•-n.e .Uma)s be him.'• Alley

. says in the Jlllloary issue of the
I adies' HaDe JournaL "We have
five dojs. And one or the dogs.
I inie, lies an die bed and prot«ts
him from die oilier dogs.

The Grand
. Old Party
fte

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BUIIDess/Farm-----.D l-8
Classified - -....- ..- ....D:Z..7
Deetb• ·--~.:.------A-3
Ed.itoral ..-~----..--A-4

Features ------..:..-Et-8
Sports, --------Cl-8 .

W-.tber.-..-------A·2

'

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A JIIUiicGl &amp; tlnuntJtic pi-e•entotion. of the
bin/a ofour S.nor.
Praented by th(t combined
Children. &amp; Adult ChoU. of the

.

Middleport Church of Christ,
~

Stla &amp; Main St.

REMOVING THE BODY • Jay Cremeens,
lert, ol Cremeens Funeral Cbape~ helps GaLlipolis Pollee OIYicer Charles Reynolds remo•e the

Sunday,
December 20 at 7:00p.m
•.
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'
GALLIPOLIS
- A Gallipolis
·man was found dead Satur~ay
mor~ing at his residence of an
apparent gunshot wound to the,
head. A handgun was found near
the body, but police offiCials said it
would be up to Gallia County coroner Edward J. Beikich to determine
if the wound was self-inflicted.
Berkich was out of town Satur-

'

By DAVID A. REED

·ft1iddleport Sunda_y, Dec. 20 ·.
Holiday Shopping Hours
.

·· WrCiot~iers

•..··Jo~•so•'s Variety
ILI!IItls fll'liture
Servis tar
LICker 219 /1\e Sne
. Miclcleport 'Dep•tlllelt
Store
.Mil Street Books
DciryQa•

'

During January 1986, God gave unto· me a vision, at ~he age
of 38, where I saw a massive amount of air crafts, destroyed, in
an isolated, snowy mountainous area.
Let us turn to God's Word, for support of this vision.
Acts 2:17, In the last days, saith God, your young men shall
s"visions.
St. Matthew 24:20 &amp; 21, Jesus speaking, but pray ye that
your,fllght be not in the winter, neither on the sabbath day,
"which is Sunday."
For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the
beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
Habakkuk 2:2 &amp; 3, ~rite the vision and make It plain upon
tables, that he may run that readeth It
··
·
For the vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it
shall speak, and not lie: Though it tarry, walt for it, because it
will surely come, it will not tarry. .
.
Habakkuk 3:2, Revive thy work in the midst of the years, in
the midst of the years make known; in wrath remember mercy.
Isaiah 55:11, So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my
mouth, it shall not return unto me void, but It shall accomplish
that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I
sent it.
·
1 believe as a result of this vision bejng fulfilled, the followIng scriptures shall be ful~illed.
Romans 14: 11, Fo'r It is written, as I live saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to
God.
Genesis 6:3, And the Lord said, my spirit shall' not always
·
strive with man.
II Corinthians 6:2, (For he saith, I have heard thee· in a time
accepted, and In the day of salvation have I succoured thee:
behold, now. is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of
salvation.
A person can obtain salvation, by praying to God, confess·
ing our sins, asking for forgiveness of those sins, and accept·
ing God's Son, Jesus Christ as personal saviour.
Then we must obey God's word, only by His help, inclUding
being baptized by a minister, by submersion, In the name of
the F.ather, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Romans: 2:13 (For not the hearers of the word are just before
God, but the doers of the Jaw shall be justified.
·
Let us meet In Heaven, Is my earnest desire. AMEN I
""\

body or Gary Lee Carter rrom his .f~ourtll
Avenue residence Saturday morning:'~f· e~·
Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)
.

in Meigs County to the
Ravenswood.- Bridge .has been
included irr'ihe state's "Access
Ohio" plan announced several
weeks ago. The connector road will
offer a long-sought link with I-77
at Ravenswood.
Tbe committee's major focus is
on the development of U.S. routes
23, 33, 35 and 50 and State Route
32 , the Appalachian Highway.
Bush said detailed recommendations on these roads are ready for
submission to the Ohio Department
of Transponation.
In a letter to ODOT, the committee has reaffirmed its push for
the extension of 32 and 50 easiw.ard as a link to 1-77 at Parkersburg, and of 1-74 at Cincinnati to
the west. Additionally, the commit·
tee is urging the state to plan

beyond its boundaries in developing U.S. 35.
·
In other matters, the committee:
• Heard from SEORC Chairma'n
Carl Dahlberg about the ~teed lor
the state to complete a highway jbb
once it's planned and started.
Dahlberg suggested passage of·a
law mandating such action.
·
• Voted 10 send a letter to Stale
Sen. Scott Oelslager supporting
Oelslager's stance on changing·
Ohio's highway construction procedures. .
• Were u~ by Bush on die
committee s highway progress
brochure, which he described ns a
means of gettinl! "our ideas to
Columbus." A h1ghway agenda
brochure developed by the committee is being readied for publication
after New Year's, Bush.~;

5

Ma.n fo~:~nd dead in fesidence

in thU c!lebrcadon. of_ our ~rd~ birlh.

Prepare For Jesus

Middleport

JACKSON - Environmental
opposition 10 the construction of a
four-lane stretch to U.S. 35 south
of Chillicothe was outlined to the
Highway Users Committee of the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council when it met Thursday.
Committee chairman G. Kenner
Bush said the need for environmental impact studies is delaying the
project
Wetlands and the possibiHty of
archaeological sites at several locations in the path of the road-widening are prompting the opposition,
Bush swd. He added that environmental and lUI:haeological protests
to other projects promoted by the
committee are "our biggest hangup
now."
,
Bush told the SEORC members
that a connector road from U.S. 33

~

~

Vol. 27, Nq. 44 ,

Copyrighted 11182

Highway Users Committee
eyes opposition to 35 project:

~

.

•

·.:.

Mlddleport:-:f'omeroy Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, December 20, 19112

•· ,

I

paiiUIS, llllb:ys and possums. .

1bc ''Chcm'' sw and her husband. actor Parter S!evenson ,
""t.,.a. w-.m- True in October.
He -llaru PeL s.

Celebrating Christmas during
World War ll • James A. Sands • A-6

111 tlt::.131..... .
Allu._ . Lno. Hiouuapepor

'k~~--~=t'J!::V'~~~--i!::¥~

Police had no leads.

992·2178

&lt;I;OQ-$;00 PM
•YideoToa
O.'s

Wahama group lauded for outstanding
holiday shows in area • Hoeflich • B-6

fit

~h~':::cy~· were

s

788 N. Second

'

Marshall cops national 1-AA title 31- 28

Consolidation
of schools is
top·story in
Gallia in '92

Thieves steal toys ~~~~~~~~~-~~~:ifn:~
for the needy
~

.

1111SBURGH {AP) -The last
time Bruce Sprillgstecn p~ed in
Pilbtugll,
$10;
to a
suup titcM! in a depessed former
st=IIOMI.
This week, Springsteen was
bact oo another concert tour and save the Rainbow Kitchen
:uuJM:r $10,000.
... 1 was floored:• said Kevin
Amos. opellllioDs roanagu or the
tiu:ben, who met die star during
~ • Wc81esday's show.
.. He' s real nice, a real dOWD·II&gt;canbpenoa..''
Sprihg
abo asked concengoers 10 matt clonalions. Volunu:ers 001sjclc the Civic Arena colla:li:d iDUIICy; food and toys.
Sprihg ca dnnara! SIO,OOO to
dleti~in 1985.AIDO&amp;said.

GrlstiiiSSeaSOI.
9 to SMH.·Sat.
I to 551111ay
Feahrllg PollseH~s II 7
. Mn. P"ollseHia Halill
laskets, Ho'r Tree~ ~ ·
laskets, UYi .d (It TretL
For deparhd loved MS: gme
blo•ki,ts, wreat•s, sprays •d
raseL
HUBBDD'S s
Oh.
·
' ~CIIU,
992•5776 · ·

PROGRAM PRESENTED • A dress rebearsal Was beld Tues·
day ror the Christmas prorram at Pomeroy Elementary. During
. this dme the t~rogram wu pretented to die senior citizens ol Meigs
County.
·

WE SHIP PARCEL POST
DAILY

mqltin&amp;-

II b

ls•w•~ftr•

LONG BOTI'OM - A Chrisunas
program will be presented at the
Long Bottom United. Methodist
Church on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.

I

1 i

HtaiARD'S GREENHOUSE

I

HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance SaturRACINE- Racine First Baptist day from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Own:h will pn:sa11 iiS live nativity Reynolds building in Hockingpon.
sa:oe Riday and Salwday from 6- · Music will be by "Out of the Blue"
POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buff.
7:30p.m.eacbcvening.
and Ronnie Wood will be the
caller. Santa Claus will be there. ingiOn, Gallipolis, wiU be the guest
preacher at the Naomi Baptist
SATURDAY
Everyone welcome.
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
Chureb Cbrisamas progr.un, SaturLOTIRIDGE · There will be a 10:45 a.m. The public is invited.
day 8ld Sunday, 1 p.m.• MA Family Chrisunas dinner at the Lottridge
O.ia ws • ~ pesnjration by Community Center on Satilrday at
CHESTER • Ken Amsbary
tbec:bikRL
6 p.m. Bring a covered dish. Every- Chapter, I~aalc Walton League, .
one welcome. The center is located muzzle loader shoots, each Sunday
KANAUGA • Square dancing on Athens County Road 53, five at 1 p.m. through Jan. 3. Prizes are
... dgilg a die DAY Building miles west of Coolville.
the same as fqr the other shoots the
from 8-11 p.m. Music by Liberty
league has had.
Mc••aineas..
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Santa Claus will
RACINE - Racine First Baptist
J'OMEROY • Royal Oak Dance visit the Syracuse Fire Department Church will hold a Christmas canOlris1mas c~ance, sat- on Sunday at 2 p.m. to give treats tata Sunday at 7 p.m.
urday, 8-II p.m., RoyaJ Oak to'the children. The event is ilJXln·
Reson. Masic by Doug Hess Quar- sored by the fire department and
MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
tet. A macl:.llulfet will be scrvtd.
ladies auxiliary.
Church children and youth Christmas program, Sunday, 1 p.m. The
HARTFORD, W.VA. - Live
CHESTER - A Chrisunas pro· ·morning service will feature a
Jalivity, Saunlay, 6 p.m., Falher's gram will b.e presented at the Happy Birthday cake for Jesus and
louse Chan:b, Hartford, W.Va. Chesfer United Methodist Church everyone will light a candle.
.. _ . Oyde Fields invites die pubon Sunday at 9 a.m. Frolil 6-8 p.m.
ic.
there will be a live nativity 31 the
MONDAY
~·
church.
RACINE - The Southern Local
MIDDLEPORT • Hope Baptist
Board of Education will meet Mon.
;:bun:b will bave iJs pre-school
TUPPERS PLAINS· A Christ· day at 7 p.m. at ,Southern High
d e p - . OiljsJmas pc!fty Satur- mas program will be presented at School.
_
day a7 p.m. a die chwdt.
the Tuppers Plains United
Methodist Church on Sunday at 6
RACINE - Racine Village
p.m. and in the Alfred United Council will meet Monday at 1
Methodist Church the program will p.m. at Star MiU Park.
beat7p.m.
·
MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
MORNING STAR ·The Christ· Church will have Chrisunas carolmas program at the Morning Star ing Monday at 7 p.m. Christmas
United Methodist Churcl\ will be baskets will also ~be deli~ered.
PHOENIX (AP)- Slevie Won"
der, who ' )jed lead a boycott of
AriZIIIIIl wiiC!l die state refused to
COKl a c:ivil fi8lt!s holiday, is coming to help c;elebrate the first
•S1lil&amp;:widc Mlrlin Ludler King Day.
Afta' yellS
SCOOIIJid
die loss of the
Bowl,
Arizooa voters in No•wemt ber
wud apmd
. · stae holiday boninviral.

'

Page 10

Sunday at 10 a.m. Pastor Kenny '
Baker invites the public.
•

REEDS VILLE • Eastern' High
School Music Department, annual
Chrisunas concert, Sunday, 3 p.m.
at the high school gymnasium .
Public invited.

-; :_

Friday, December 18, 1182

calendar

MIDDLEPORT - Hemh United
Methodist Church will hold a sweet
shop Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. at the Middlepon Arts Council building. Cakes and candy will
be available.

kllft • evnt
1111111 1M t1a7 fll *M e-. lkms
k •ilfti•e4 wdl i1t advaDCe
to
,., , . .liratioa ia tbe cal-

. , , t11

·~ Ill It I, I\

ctay and could not be reached for
comment
_.
Gary Lee Caner,41, 422Fourth
Avenue, Oallipolis, was found by
his wife, Ann Carter, Saturday
morning, GallipoliS Police Deport·
· ment Detective Michael Tucker
said.
Mrs. Carter told police she and
her husband had a dispute Friday

night and she left with their three
childrll. . . tpotMhho· night else· where. She ·returned to the residence e.I!I'IY Saturday morning after
·calling and not receiving an

answer. ..

The police were called to the
scene ·at 6:27 a.m. The incident is
stiU under investigation.

Revolutionary procedure allows
high quality cattle production
I

Bb BRIAN J. REED
R~~~8~~::~raham

.is taking al"quantum leap" at his.
1,

Roct Springs beef fann, using an
innovanve iechnique to.increase his
productivity.
The process of embryo transfer
allows the G and H Limousins fann
(co-owned by Graham and C.C.
Heilman) to produce high-qqality
beef cattle using cross-bred cattle
as embryo recipienJs .
The Limousin breed is the
fastest-growing .breed ol cattle in
American ·agricultute, sccoidirig to
Graham. That's because in light of
increasing concern about choles- ·
terol in red mCllt, the Limousin
breed's lean meat product is more
popular. Presently, it is the third
most popular breed of beef cattle,
behind the Angus and Hereford.
The Limousin breed is expected 10
come ahead of the Hereford breed
very soon.
The artificially-inseminated
eggs from Graham's prize
Liniousin cow are "flushed" out
and implanted in less valued cows,
allowing the farm to produce a
higher number of top-quality catde .
using less expensive recipients. In
fact, in only the third "flushing",
Graham's prize Lirnousin has pro- .
duced almost as many calves ns she
could be expected to produce in a
lifetime if she. were bred in the

"traditional" manner.
,
cess is significant, Graham said. He ·
Graham is assisltid in lhi proce- estimated that he spends about
dure by Brad Wiseman, a profes- $300 per calf, cOnsidering the cost
sional embryo technician from Lib- · of semen and implanting, feeding
erty, W.Va., who flushes the fertil- the calf and other expenses. The
two groups Friday arternoonl. Among those
READY FOR DELIVERY • Tbese 350
ized eggs from-the Limoi!Sin cow average price paid for a yearling is
dtlivering nowers were Melvin Cross, Frank
beautiful poinsettias were delivered by Feeney•
and implanJs an embryo into the $1,800 for a bull and $1,500 for a
Epple, Thomas Brewer, Fred Hanel, Lloyd
recipient. At a implanting session heifer. ·
Bennett Post 128 legionnaires and auxiliary
Johnson, Reuben Collins, and Virgil Parsons.
members to arta nursing homes, elderly houson Friday, an embryo was implantSo far, the farm bas enjoyed a
ing, the lnfirma~y, and shutin membtrs or the
ed intd a Holstein cow, although 100 percent successful calving ntte
Graham also uses one of several with the implanting process, almost
crossbred llereford/Holstein cows unheard of in conventional cattle
as recipients.
·
farming.
Wiseman and his wife, Char"The only time 1 really enjoy
lene, who also operate a cattle , this work is tile calving and weanfarm, provide the embryo service to ing," Graham said. "Then, 1 can see
20 fanns in the area, and are among
hat
f£ rJs h ••tped
Chrisunas project of remembering sons was project chairman again
ByCHARLENEHOEFUCH
several technicians who do the duce.~Y e 0
ave'"'
to pro·
this year.
others.
Timts-Sentlnel Sta(r
breeding service. The process is
At last year's Ohio Beef Expu in
The project cost was about
This
is
the
lOth
year
for
Feeney·
lVIIDDLEPORT • "It tales hunused mostly with dairy cattle, Ora- Columbus, a buD produced in this drel!s of dollars and lots of hard Bennen Post 128 and its Auxiliary $2,000. The cookies, candies and
ham said, but is gaining popularity manner at G and H Limousins work, but when you see their to remember hospilalized veterans. breads for goody bags were made
among beef catde farmers.
brought the highest price for a red smiles, you lcnow it's all worth it."
residents of the infirmary, disad- by the Auxiliary members. For
The profit realized when selling bull.
That was the comment of one vantaged families, nursing home each child in the 19 needy families
the top cattle produced by the proAmerican Legion Auxiliary mem - residents, and shutin members of and to the residents of the Meigs
Continued on A·2
ber as she talked about the annual their own groups. Geraldine Par·
'&lt;

Legion Post128·and auxiliary remembers
others at Christmas for 1Oth year in row
I

Firefighter, deputy contain blaze

VINTON- An off-duty Viriton
Volunteer Fire DeparunC\IIt firefighter and a Gallia County Deputy
Sheriff demonstrated quick thank·
ing and action in containing what
could have been a major blaze at a
Vinton business Friday evening.
According to fire department
spokesman Mark Werts, a truck
caught fire in a work bay at ·

Ratliff's Filling Station on State
Route 160. 1
·
Firefighter Mark Imboden
noticed the lire around 8:05' p.m.
and ~ported it, Wetts said. Deputy
Joe Browning used a fire extin·
guishef from his vehicle to comain
the fire before arrival of the fire
deparunent.
The fire department then
responded with one truck and 13
fll'Cflghters, WellS added.
Damage to the truck was listed
at $2,000. An electrical problem
\Y&amp;S listed as the probable cause,
erts said.
'
'

Klan to erect cross

I,

POMEROY • Donald i:. Lindeman of Racine is scheduled 10 go to
trial on Monday morning, but the
weekend has brought speculation
that he may instead enter a plea to
charges relating to the May 25 robbery and murder of Howard
Lawrence of.Long Bouom.
Last month, Lindeman waived
his right to a jury triai and opted
instead to have his case heard
before a three-judge panel. That
panel is made up Qf Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fr~

W. Crow III, Dan W. Favreau of
Morgan County Comf!!on Pleas
Court, and Robert G. Tague, a
retired judge ~m Pe~ County.
Lindeman, 28, was mdicted last
summer on a count of aggravated
robbery and a count of aggravated
murder which carries a death
penalty ~iflcation. If convicted
by the panel, Lindeman could face
the electric chair.
Lindeman, throufi his attorney,
Public Defender Mike Westfall of
Athens, rejected a plea bargain

offered last month, and reportS of a
planned plea by Lindeman Qn
Monday have not been confirmed. ,
Lawrence was found shot in the
grocery store he operated on
DeWiu's Run near Long Bottom in
late May. He was taken by Life
Flight to Grant Medical Center in
Columbus, where he died several
days later Auth!)ritles believe that
Lawrence was also robbed prior to
being shot, due to the fact that his
wallet was found missing upon his
arrival at the hospilal.
'

on Cincinnati Square

w

?!~~~~~$·::;~~:~~~~~

Victim of shooting dies early Saturday

Klux Klan
erccung a cross on
a downtoWD blic !!jU&amp;re Sunday.
GALLIPoLIS -A Patriot man
Mayor Dwight Tillery said he active in Gallia County legal cir- ·
deplores ·plans for the Ku f'1ux cles who was shot at his residence
Kl'!ft disPlay, aild flnds the orpni- more than two montlis ago died
zauon otfenstve.
,
early Saturday at Pinecrest Care
But a recent court ruling has Center.
cleared the .way for the U.S.
Samuel 0. Hoffman, 49, 4350
Knights of the .Ku. J9ux klan, a State Route 32S, had been hospital·
facliot't based .in nearby Hamilton, ized since the OcL 13 incident, in
. Ohio, to set up the 10-foot, white ·which he wu repol1edly shot sevwooden cross on Fo1111tain Square.
eral times with a small-caliber,
"We're pulling the cross up for .semi-au10!1181ic; handgun.
Jesus Christ on his binhday," said
Diana Whaley, 26, Columbus,
Ron Lee, who said he is the was arrested by sherlfrs deputies
group's imperialldaliff.
in connection with ~shooiinJt llfld
I

•days until
Cliristmas

Lin.deman trial to begin Monday

.
&lt;

(

has been-charged with attempted
murder. Whaley's case was bound
over to the next tenn of the Gallia
Countr grand jury by Gallipolis
Munictpal Judge Joseph L. Cain on
Oct 21.
The grand jury i~ expected to
meet in January. Whaley has been
held in the Gallia County Jail on
$50,000 bond since her arrest. .
Prosecutin~ Attorney Brent A.
Saunders sa1d Saturday he has
requested Coroner Dr. Edward J.
Berkich conduct an autopsy on

.

'.

Hoffman. Saunders added thai he found Whaley ui be sane. Common
will review the autopsy's findings Pleas Judge Donald Andrew Cox
b.efore considering a switch in has since allowed Whaley to obtain
charges against Whaley.
her~ own psychiatric evaluation, an4
Whaley, represented' at her pte- Saunders said he. will also have an
liminary hearing by Gallipolis evalution done on Whaley .
at~a!:[ Richard C. Roderick Jr.,
Hoffman served as the local
pi
DOl guilty to the attempted common pleas bailiff during Roe!murder cbaJie. She has also plead· erick's term as judge, and !lad been
ed'not guilty by reason of insanity, a parHirne insauctor in the E_mer~
prompting an evaluation of the son E. Evans College of Bus10ess
defendant by the Shawnee Forensic · Management at tbe University of
Center.
Rio Grande. Whaley bad also been
Saunders said the center a Rio G~ student
::
info1111ed .him by telephone that it
•

'

'·

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