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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich
The business sections of our
towns really look attractive for the
holiday season-nice atmosphere.
And I have never seen so many
lights glowing at homes so early. I
hope you or I don't wreck the vehicle as :~~e gawk at all of the sights.
Thanks to all of you who go all out
to make the county so anractive for
the rest of us at this time of the
year.'
And what did Mary Wise, dedicated Middleport Arts Council
worker get for Christmas? Unfortunately, a fr~ctured ankle. Mary ·
lost her footing in some wet shellac
while working at the council's
quarters with the broken ankle as a
result. A bone fracture probably
was one of the last things Mary
wanted for Christmas.
Mrs . Charles (Leona) Karr
markCII her 86th birthday last Friday. It-was observed low key since
Mrs. Karr is having health problems. She does make her home at
the Extended Care Facility at Veterans Memorial Hospital.

•

Public officials .are constantly
under criticism so it was refreshing
to hear Meigs Sheriff Jim Soulsby
receive high praise for his work
and cooperation at the annual
Meigs County Fair Board appreciation dinner. Board member Dan
Smith was enthusiastic in his praise
for the work of Sheriff Soulsby and
his department during the fair.
Smith commented that at convention he hears constantly complaints
on what a problem security is at the
fairs in other counties. Members of
other fair boards are amazed at the
cooperation and help provided by
Soulsby, Smith concluded.

' wanted to place a
If case you

heart on the memorial ttee of the
Meigs Division, Al!lerican Hean
Association, located at the front of
the courthouse you can call, Den·
ver and Nora Rice, at 991·3759:
Millie Midkiff at 992-5728 or 992·
2133; Donna Carr at 992-3222; or
Sandy Iannerelli at 992· 7039 or
992-7606. The cost is $5 per heart.
There seemed to be some confu·
sion on just how to go about get·
ting hearts placed on the tree.
Hence, the phone numbers and that
should get the process all cleared
away.
·
The Meigs Home Health Nursing Service will be holding an open
house from I to 3 p.m. at its quaeters in the Meij§ Medical Building
adjacent to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Everyone who has used llle ser·
vice-and there are many-are
welcome to turn out for the event
which marks the 20th anniversary
of. the service in Meigs Countythe IOOth anniversary of the service
on a national b~sis. Employees of
the service which is headed by
Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, RN, will be
serving refreshments.
On Saturday we will mark ' the
50th anniversary of Pearl Harbor
Day. Many of us easily recall the
shock that went across our nation
that day-by radi~as we learned
about the attack. How do we handle remembering-) mean since
everyone seems to have kissed and
made up after all of that tragedy?
Do we stop our Japanese cars along
the highway for a moment or
remembrance; not use our Japanese
cameras that day-or perhaps, even
shut down our computers? Don't
look at me. I don't know the
answer. I just know that whatever-you goua keep smiling.

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In. Washington, 150 peopl!l
turned out in the rain to light candles and 2,200 Christmas lights
dedicated to AIDS victims at the
Whitman Walker · Clinic. The
crowd included many AIDS
patients and friends and family of
AIDS victims.
In Seattle, 1,600 panels of the
14,000-panel International AIDS
Memortal Quilt were displayed.
Another section was.. displayed at
the High Museum of Art in
Atlanta.
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~~.s.......DOLL DISPLAY • A portion of Suzy Carthere. Tbe display wUI remain in place tbrough·
penter's doll collection is on displ~y at Bank
out tbe bolidily season. ' ·•
One in Rutland .ror the enjoyment or customers

•
Vol. 42, No. 148 .
Copyrighted 1181

1 Secllone, 10 P-un 25 0111111
Allulllmedlll Inc. rill•• prper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 3, 1991

Alternate bid accepted on·new sewage system
By BRIAN J. REED
' Sentinel News Starr
. Pomeroy Village Council·
approved a portion of .the village's
new sewage system when they met
in regular session Monday night.
Council voted last night to
approve a sludge de-watering sys. tern 10 use in conjunction with the
new system, with Council Presi dent Larry Wehrung casting a dis-

senting vote on the proposal.
· Tile system~apploved Monday
night was pre:rented tO· the village
by the project engineer as a
"dcducti ve alternate" to the base
bid.
The low base bid on the project
was received from Titus Construe·
tion, Inc., and was considerably
above the architect's estimate. The
purpose of last night's action was

to replace the expensive vacuum- from the base bid.
assisted system included' in the
·wehrung urged other council
-base bid with a similar system at a members and Village Administralower price.
tor John Anderson to continue conThe project engineering firm, sideration of a third alternative, that
Burgess and Niple of Parkersburg, of a "gravity-type" .system, stating
W.Va., had proposed 1wo alternate that it could be more cost effective
bids, but only the one approved than the alternates recommended
was a vacuum-assjsted system. The by Burgess and Nipl~.
··
alternate accepted last night will
"You owe it to the people of
allow for a $120,000 deduction Pomeroy not to spend more than

you have to spend," Wehrung said
last night. Wehrung also stated that
he felt the system 'ivas,''over engineered" for Pomeroy, requiring
more cost and more facility than
will "ever be needed".
Andersen said that the third system was given careful consideration by both him and Burgess and.
Niple. Anderson pointed.out that
the challenging location of the sys-

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·tern (in a "canyon" behind Bob
Roberts Field) prohibits the usc of
the grav.ity system, which by design requires a lal'ge space.
.
The award of the project bid has
not yet been made, although the 60
day period between the bid opening
date and the.award date will expire
on December 28.
Continued on page 3

:State board approves $10 million
for juvenile jails in .southern Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- built statewide.
. The Ohio Department of Youth
"In Butler County we have one,
. Services won release of $10 mil- in Belmont county we have one,
lion from the state Controlling and we have a number of others
. Board to build the first of two juve- that are going,to be built, so the
nile detention centers in southern youth will be held locally in dcten·
Ohio.
tion centers and be served more on
Controllers on Monday also a local level. We also are planning
. agreed to let Ohio University buy to build another southern Ohio coran abandoned railroad right-of-way rectional faci lity," Ms. Rankin
· through the Athens. campus despite said.
_
an opponent's objectiOn to the .
A site has not been chosen for.
$12,000-pcr acre cost.
'-'the second center, which will house
The board approved without dis- no more than 150 teen-agers.
cussion release of money for the · Spokeswoman Carol Rapp Zim150-bed juvenile detention center merman said the departments popncar Circleville.
ulation is about 2,220 and climbGroundbreaking is to be held .ing.
Dec ,' 1'0, and construction is
'.'We would ideally have about
~xpected to take 18 months. The
1,400 kids in all nine institutions,"
center will house teen-agers con-. she said.
victed of felony theft and other · "Our general philosophy right
non-violent offenses.
now is that we don't need larger
Teen-agers will be sent to the overall ~apac i ty for the state syscomplex from the Buckeye Youth tern, " she said. The agency faliOrs
Center in Columbus, a 300-bed diversion of offenders into elcc·
institution that is to be phased out.
tronic monitoring, drug rehabilita·
Caroline Rankin, the department lion and other local programs.
legislative liaison, said other
Controllers agreed to let Ohio
youths at the Columbus center University spend $470,000 to buy
would be transferred into regional 37 acres of hmd from CSX Transrehabilitation units that are being portation.

FAREWELL PERFORMANCE· Naomi
Judd, left, wipes lipstick off the face of ber
daughter, Wynonna, at tbe American Music '
Awards In Ibis 1987 file photo. The Judds' last
concert is scheduled for Wednesday In dareweU

concert by tbe motber-daugbter country !JIUSic
duo, airing live on a pay-per view televisioJI spe·
cial. Naomi Judd, wbo suffers from chronic bep·
atitis, plans to become a spokesman for tbe
· American Liver E'&lt;iundalion. (AP)

John Kotowski, the university's
director of facilities planning, said
the propcrt{.scpariucs the residential part o the campus from the
academic and administrative sections.
·
"The tracks ·arc still there, but
they have begun the process of
removing the tracks. As part of the
deal they continue to maintain llle
right to the mil, the ties and the
stone ballast and they're going to
remove that," Kotowski said.
·
Rep. Raben Netzley, R-Laura,
opposed the sale.
"It's ridiculous to pay $12,000
an acre for a narrow sblp of land
like that through Ohio University.
It doesn't have that kind of value in
any way, shape or form," Netzley
said.
In other action Monday, the
board:
-Approved 4-3 an Ohio
Department of ·Develo{lment
request to use $2.8 million frOm the
Ohio Enterpr~se Ji!ond fund to
expand operations of Cons~mer
Direetlnc. in Stark County. Con·
sumer Direct will usc the money to
build an addition and buy machin·
Continued on page 3

Steen freed, leaving only Anderson~
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) American educator Alann Steen
was freed today after nearly five
years as a hostage of Shiite Muslim
extremists, Iran's official news
·agency reported. His release would
be the second in two days.
It would leave just one American, journalist Terry Anderson. still
captive in Lebanon, and augur a
speedy end to the hostage drama.
The Beirut office of the Islamic
Republic News Agency said
Anderson, who was seized in
March 1985 and is the longest-held
U.S. hostage, could be free by the
end of the week.
..
· !RNA, which has been accurate
in reporting previous releases, said
Steen was freed at 10:15 a.m.
somewhere in Lebanon.
He would be the-eighth Western

MID.DLEPORT - The Middleport Masonic Lodge No. 363 will
observe Past Master's Night on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. with work in
the Master Mason degree. Refreshments will follow the meeting.

In Brilain, Princess Diana was
an honored guest at a benefit
dance, and a chapel was dedicated
as a sanctuary for prayers concerning AIDS.
The French put candles in their
windows. About 1,000 members of
the activist ~roup ACT UP
marched in Pans, where a Christ·
mas tree was hung with 800 ornaments signifying ROO children
afflicted willl AIDS.
The Colorado AIDS Project
held a.candlelight vigil at the state .
Capitol in Denver.

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POMEROY • Application for
Christmas food baskets and toys
will be taken at the Salvation Anny
in Pomeroy on Tuesday and
Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon
and Ito 4 p.m. C!ICh day.

By KILEY ARMSTRONG
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Skylines
' dimmed in the nation's largest
cities, museums hung blank can·
vases, and condoms were distributed in cities around the globe in
observance of World AIDS Day.
Some 90 New York structures
,_,_ including the Brooklyn Bridge,
the World Trade Center and Times
Square billboards - dimmed for
IS minutes at dusk Sunday.
Skylines also dimmed in. San
Francisco, Chicago, Miami, and
Austin, Texas, and U.S. museums
and galleries observed AIDS Day
WI'th "A Da~
. Without Art."
. Dr. Got ieb Lobe Monekosso,
Africa di'rector o.f the Geneva·
based U.N. World Health Organization, which started the annuaf
event four years ago, spoke at an
observance in Brazzaville, the
Congo. . the 'd . . d .
He SBld
ep• em1c 1s uc m
part to "illiteracy, malnutrition,
poor living conditions, unemploy ·
ment, as well as the lack of facili·
ties for testing blood."
·
South African Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, winner of the
Nobel Peace Prize, spoke at an
interfaith service about AIDS in
Atlanta, where the Martin ~uther
King Jr. Center for Nonviolent
Social Q~nge was offering anony·
mous AIDS ICIIS.
·
Tutu urged people of all fai~s
to abandon the notion that AIDS IS
divine punisbmcnt for homosexuals

Pick 3:434
Pick 4: 3J93
Cards: 2·H, 9·C,
. 8-0,6-S

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TUESDAY
POMEROY • The F.O.E. Auxil·
iary No:· 2171 Christmas dinner
will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m.

shopping centers 'in 'Portugal.
In Bangkok, young women
wearing scout uniforms and whis·
tles passed out condoms.
the American University in
Cairo's AIDS Awareness day featured a videotape of Magic Johnson, the basketball star wbo retired
when he learned he carried the
AIDS virus.

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TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of clerk, Susan Pullins.

and drug users. ·
' 'It was a neat theory - all too
neat to fit the complexity and mystery of life," he said. "The self·
righteous must find ano!her reason
for gay-bashing."
At the Art Institute of Chicago,
muscum-gocrs saw a blank spot on
the wall where Monet's "On the
Seine at Bcnnecourt" ordinarily
hangs.
New York's Museum of Modern Art put up 13 framed, blank
papers and canvases to "represent
all the works that will never get
shown" because of AIDS, said
Raben Storr of the museum Projects Committee.
The names of people who died
of AIDS were read aloud at the
museum for. five hours. A bell
toUed there and at the Studio Museum of Harlem every I0 minutes to
mark another death from AIDS.
In St. Petersburg, Fla., people
wore red ribbons at the Salvador
Dlili museum and other galleries in
a community program prom01ing
AIDS awareness.
In the Soviet Union, where
homosexuality is a crime, members
of the Russian Union of Gays and
Lesbians passed out free, U.S.·
made condoms and sa,fc-sex litera·
ture ourside Moscow City Hall.
At Tel Aviv University, condoms were handed out and a quilt
bearing names of Israeli AIDS victims was displayed
Lisbon Un1versity pharmacy
students distributed condoms at

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MIDDLEPORT • The First
Baptist Church of MiddlejXlrt will
have a craft bazaar on Monday
from 4 to 8 p.m. at the Western
Auto Store in Middleport. All proceeds go to the church building
fund.

Fourth Annual World AIDS
Day: condoms, art, solemnity

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· ;&gt;'r"'~......

Chanceor snOW' 60 portent

SYRACUSE • The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

CONGRATULATJONS • Courtney Baber, rlgbt, of Cincinnati,
receives a c:onRratulatory hand shake rrom Lisa MicbeUe Allison,
left, of Gahanna, Sunday following tbe Miss Obio USA Pageant.
Ms. Baber was crowned Miss Obio USA and Ms. Allison was
named rlfSI runner.-up. (AP).
·

0 hio Lottery

tonlgbL Wednesday, b]&amp;b In 1111d

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or tbat event Items
must be received weD in Jlllvan.ce
to assure publication in tbe calendar.
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
clerk, Sarah Gibbs.

POMEROY • Women Alive
will have its annual Christmas ban·
quet Monday at 6 p.m. at Dale's in
Gallipolis. Mrs. Millard Downing
will be the speaker.

·~

Eagles
jolt .
Oilers ·

Community
calendar

REEDSYll..LE • The ReedsviUe
United Methodist Women will hold
a soup supper and bake sale on
Monday in the church social room.·
Serving time will begin at 11 a.m.

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Monday, December 2,

Pomeroy-LQng
Bottom group
holds meeting
LONG BOITOM • The monlh· .•
ly meeting of Pomeroy-Long Bottom Flame Fellowship was held
recently at the Full Gospel Church,
Long Bottom.
President Mary Folmer opened
the meeting and Brother Glen Lawson led with prayer. Donna Bogart
led the singing, accompanied by
Kelly Eichinger at the piano. Vice •
Pres1dent Vivian Humprey blessed
the offering. There also was special
singing by Steve Cox and The Joy
Singers.
Guest speaker was Rev. Hazel
Life of Little Hocking. She spoke
from Matt 12:9-21 and Is. 42:1-6
Rev. Life taught on "How NQt To
Be Discouraged."
President Mary Folmer closed
the meeting with prayer and invited
everyone for fellowship and
refreshments following the meet·
ing.
.
The next meeting will be Dee.
10, 7 p.m. at the Full Gospel
Church: Speaker will be Mary Dia·
mood of Addison. For further
information calll-614-843-5416.

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Lasting Kitchens Start With
Quality Kitchenaitr Appliances

,----Local
brlefs-.....,
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Road construction underway

KltchenAid' KltchenAid' KltchenAicr
DISHWASHERS

REFRIGERATORS

Performanc~.

(onnnltnct, Durabllly,

Durability, Quality

Quality

Road construction is expected to begin this week on Letart
Township Road 97. The culvert installation work is being done by
Dravo Basic Materials Co. Inc. directly off State Route 338, and an
access road will be available to motorists.

WASHERS

Washallllt}; Durablll'f,
· Quahly

Patrol probes two-car wreck
Two Shade residents escaped irijUry in a two-car wreck on S.R.
681 in. Bedford Township Monday afternoon ..
According to a report fr:om the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Timothy A. Gilkey, 24, attempted to pull.from a
· private drive intending to go ':"est on S.R. 681 and pulled 1~to the
path of a westbound car, driven by Stella S. Blankenship, 37.
Blankenship's car then struck the left side of Gilkey's car.
·
Damage to the left-front of Gilkey's 1988 Oldsmobile Cutlass
was Usted as li~ht. Damage to the right side of Blankenship's 1988
Fofd Thundcrbrrd was listed as moderate.
According to the report, no citations. were issued. Hmvever, fail·
ure to yield on the part of G1lkey was listed as the c:ontnbullng fac,
tor.

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INSTANT
REBATE
IWillUOll2201
-sure CIMn Water Heating
•Automatic RlnH
Dl.pen•er
oExclu•lve Triple Filter
WeterSyetem

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for our new almond or
white KTRC18KX refrigerator.Gallon door storage,

adjustable glass shelving.

Model KAWE480

419

Hunters bag 512 deer in Mei~s

. •Direct Drive Syatemri
·•'/, HP Gold S..l Motor

· A total of 512 deer were killed jn Meigs County on the fli'St day
of the deer gun hunting season, according to a report from Keith
Wood, Meigs County game pro.tector. .
·
Wood said that the kill was down from 747 last year probably
because of the rain.
Cheeked. at the various locations were 87 at Baum'.s Lumber,
Chester, 90 at Eber's Gulf, Racine; 35 at Ellis and Sons Sohio; 18 at
McKinney's Taxidermist, Pomeroy Pike; 80 at Joe's Country Market; 53 at Forked Run State Park, Reedsville; 39 at O'Dell Lumber,
Pomeroy; 47 at Pick and Shovel Grocery, Langsville; 12 at Stew·
art's Gun Shop, Rutland;.and 17 at SunFun Pennzoil, Racine.
.
Continued on page 3

•Long Strong Warranty

KltchenAtd• FOR11IE WAY IT'S MADE'

INGELS F'URNITURE &amp;JEWELRY
106 North S•cond
992·2635
I

hostage released since August,
when the United Nations began
intensive negotiations to arr.mge a
swap Of Western hostages for Arab
prisoners held by Israel ahd its
proxy militia in Lebanon.
Quoting an informed source,
!RNA said Steen was on his way
overland to Damascus, Syria, a trip
which normally takes two and a
half to three hours.
Tbc report could not immediately be confirmed by Lebanese
authorities or the command of the
Syrian forces in Lebanon, which
normally takes delivery of freed
hostages and escorts them to Syria.
Steen's captors had announced
Monday that they would free him
within 48 hours and, if the release
time reponed by !RNA is accurate,
freed him nine hours later.
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The pro-Iranian or~anization of
Islamic Jihad · for Liberation of
Palestine said Steen, a native of
Boston who was grabbed on Jan.
24, 1987, was being released under
a U.N.-brokered agreement to
resolve the plight of the hostages in
Lebanon.
On Monday, American Joseph
Cicippio, 61, was freed in Beirut,
turned over to the American
ambassador in Damascus and
flown to a U.S. military hospital in
Germany for tests and debriefing.
Besides Anderson, two Ocrmans, Thomas Kemptner and Hein·
rich Streubig, arc still being held.
An Italian, Alberto Molinari, is
missing, but reports say he is dead.
Another underground group,
Islamic Jihad, holds Anderson, 44.
The Germans were captured by
Shiite_m,i!,itants s•~kin~ the release
of two brothers Jaded m Germany
on terrorist charges.
Steen, 52, is a native of Boston.
He was an editor at the Arcata
(Calif.) Union be(ore becoming a
journalism teacher, off and on,
between 1970 and 1981 at Humboldt State University and at California State University at Chico in
1981-83.
Continued on page 3

SE.iUOUS WITH SANTA ·Little Tommy
Lavender, three/ear old son or Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Lavender o Middleport, was serious with
Santa about what he wants for Christmas. The

OVER-ALL !lEST ENTRY • 'l'his ''Winter
Wonderland" float created by Central Trust
took lhe lrophy for the over-all best float in lhe
Middleporl Christmas parade Monday night. It
featured a lamp post surrounded by elves, a

Central Trust drive-tbru provided a dry place
ror Santa lo greel the children and distribute
candy treats following the Christmas parade in
Middleport Monday night.

sleigh with reindeer, ' and a large wreath. Riding
on the float were several bank employees and
lhtir children. The Middleport Merchants Association sponsored the parade. Bob Gilmore was
chairman.

FlQod waters recede in southern Ohio
By DEB MARTIN
many roads remained impassable,
Associated Press Writer
authorities said.
Flood waters were receding as
The flash flooding caused by
the rain tapered off in southern and heavy downpours of up to three
eastern Ohio this morning, but inches of rain Monday night
washed mobile homes from the
foundations, ovenurned cars and
forced some evacuations . No
deaths or injuries were reported.
By daybreak, flood warnings for
the areas had been lifted or downgraded to flood watches and the
National Weather Service said the
threat of additional flooding would
end during the morning.
In Scioto County, flood waters
that washed out one bridge and
co¥ered roads were receding .
Emergency personnel Monday
night rescued the occupants of a car
that went into a creek. Another
·vehicle was reported to have gone
into the water but a search turned
up nothing.
"It's a night for heroes," said
DAYS UNTIL
Phil Malone, county sherifrs dis·
CHRISTMAS
patcher.
,
Malone said residents of 1wo

J!l .

mobile homes were evacuated after Dispatcher Dean Kettelson said

flood waters pushed the trailers off evacuations had been ordered in

their foundations and down a creek.
Washington County Sheriff's

the county, apparently affecting
mosUy rural areas.

State, county roads
flooded; schools closed
Numerous county roads and state highways wete closed by
flood waters Tuesday morning, according to reports from the
State Highway and County garages.
A spokesman at the county garage saicUate Tuesday morning
I hat many roads were closed .and reports of more were coming
in all the lime.
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As for state highway closings, the garage reported closing on
Roule 33 at Burlingham, Route 124 at Rutland to Route 325;
Route 143 at the old landfill entrance, Route 681 from Darwin
toward Snowville and between Tuppers -i'lains and Route 33,
and Route 248 between Route 7 and 124 at Keno.
Schools In the Meigs Local Districl were closed due to tbe
. high water road closings, but all schools in botb Euter11 and
Southern School Districts were reported open wltb few
absences.
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COmmentary

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~MUJIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

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AMEMBER of The Assoc~aled Press, Inland Owly Press Association and
the Amencan Newspaper PubliSher Assoc~aqon
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less !han 300
words long. Allletten are subject to edlling and must be Signed wtth name,
address and telephone num6er. No wtStgned letters will be published Letters
should be m good taste, addressing issues, not personalities

First Amendment:
Freedom of Religio~
Although lhe First Amendment
ts perhaps best known for granting
the people freedom of speeeh, freedom of the press, and freedom of
pelttton and assembly, the Ftrst
Amendment begms wtlh the command that "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establiShment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof.... " Why did lhe
First Amendmem~'irst guarantee
lhe people freedom from a government-sponsored church and freedom to worship as they pleased?
Two hundred years ago, people
vivtdly recalled how government
and religton had been combmed m
the countnes of Europe, and how
government-sponsored rehg10ns
had made tt tmposstble to enjoy
true relig1ous liberty. When the Btl!
of R1ghts was adopted in 1791,
some states - such as Connecticut
-had estabhshed state churches, but
a growmg number of Amencans
wanted no part of that. Thus, by
1791 Vuginia had adopted laws
prohibiting state ~overnment from
sponsoring a parucular religtOn or
denymg ciuzens the right to practice any religion that lhey wished
- or none.
The FtrSt Amendment guarantee
that "Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of rehgton" 1s commonly known as the
"Estabhshment Clause." In general,
the Establtshment Clause proh1bits
the government from supporting,
by fmanoial assistance or other- w•se any particular religiOus fruth.
For ~xample, the Supreme Court
has held that the Establishment
Clause prohtbtts states from usmg
public school factltties to promote
rchgtous mstrucuon dunng regular
school hours (McCollum v. Board
of
Educauon, 333 U.S. 203 (1948)),
or requtring students to recite "officull prayers" in public school classrooms (Engel v, Vitale, 370 U.S.
421 (1962)). On the olhcr hand, if
the state activity tn question does
not amount to preferential treatment or endorsement of rehgton, 11
may not violate the Establishment
Clause. For example, lhe Supreme
Coun has held lhat a state may provtde free bus transportauon to all
schoolchildren, mcluding children
attendmg parochtal schools, if lhe
purpose of lhe program ts stmply to
provide safe transportauon to all
chtldren travehng ~tween home
and school (Everson v: Board of
Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947)), and
that states may lend non-religious
textbooks free of charge to
parochial school puptls (Board of
Education v. Allen, 392 U.S. 236
(1968)).
The second clause in the First
Amendment that guarantees religious freedom - "Congress shall
make no law , , , prohibiting the
free exerCISe I of reliJtion l" - is
commonly known as the "Free
Exerctse Clause." Within certain
limits, the Free Exercise Clau se
prohibits the government
interfering with an
.

bas ruled
followers of
the Amish faith cannot be compelled against !heir religious beliefs
to send their children to public
school beyond the eighth grade
(Wisconsin v. Yoder. 406 U.S. 205
(1972)), and has struck down a
state law that prohibllecf mimsters
from servtng in the state legislature
(McDantel v. Paty, 435 U.S. 618
(1978)) .. The Supreme Court has
upheld regulations that infringe on
the free exercise of reli,~ion, however, when it has constdered the
government interest at stake sufficiently important. For example, the
Supreme Coun bas ruled that lhe
federal government may require an
Amish carpenter to collect socl31
security raxes from his' employees
and pay bis. share of such taxes
even thouJh his reliJious beliefs
forbade h•m to do e11her (United
States v. Lee, 455 U.S. 252
(1982)), and that the federal government may deny taX benefits to
educational illllitudons thai engage
in racially discrimillltory practices

based on their rehg10us behefs
(Bob Jones Untvemty v. Untted
States, 461 U.S. 574 (1983))
Like the guarantees ~of freedom
of speech and freedom of the press,
the Fust Amendment guarantees of
religious freedom often requtre
governmemal tnterests to be balanced against lhe interests of mdividual caizens and rehgtOus
groups. Typically, the balancmg
process requues public offtcials
and courts to make difficult choices. By forcing careful consideration
of the competing mterests at stake,
however, we have successfully
maintained a SOCtety m whtch relig•ous libeny has flounshed.
Fust Amendment: Freedom of
Speech, Press. Assembly, and Peution In addttion to guaranteemg
people religious freedom, lhe Fust
Amendment provides m part that
"Congress shall make no law ..
abridging the freedom of speeeh, or
of the press, or lhe nght of the peopic peaceably to assemble, and to
pcuuon the Government for a
redress of grievances." In lhese few
words, the Ftrst Amendment lays
down the essential principles neeessary to ensure the protectton of
other important nghts. This is so
because w1th the freedom to speak
freely, wnte freely, hold meetings,
and present demands to the,govemment, people could ultimately have
used lhe political process to secure
all of lhe_olher fr:eectoms ~tected
by the B•!l of Rtghts. Obviously,
however, u would have 18ken some
ume an~ much pol_itical debate ~
aecompltsb all of this.
The First Amendment guarantees of free speeeh and a free press
are two of the most familiar guarantees m the Bill of Rtghts. Perhaps the reason that the Framers
listed freedom of speech before
freedom of the press was that. m
their ume, the print medta was not
as pervastve as 1t ts today. In the
late 18th century, people were
commonly kept informed both in
town meetings and in informal
neighborhood gathenngs, where
they discussed the problems that
were foremost in the1r minds. They
believed that free st'CCCh and a free
press were imperauve to a government of "We lhe People."
The guarantees of freedom of
assembly and lhe nght to peution
the government are also tmportant.
The guarantee of freedom of
assembly allows c•uzens to meet to
dtscuss tssues of concern to them
wtthout government mterference.
The Framers included thts guaran·
tee because, under coloma! rule,
public meetings had often been
subJect to poUce control; mdeed,
even today, in some countr1es no
meei.ing can be held by more than
three people wilhout fust obtamtng
a permit -like a parade penmt from local authorities The right to
ptjtition the government guarantees
cttizens the right to complam to
public officials about soctal and
economic ~roblems, and to express
their opimon as to what government should do 10 solve them. The
Framers included th1s guarantee
because ciUzcns had formerly been
punished for petitioning the govemmen~ regardless of how respectfully thetr peutions may have been

WASHING10N- Some of the
_people the Epvironmental Protection Agency bas hirec;l to check the
safety of pesttcides are not qual•fied, accordmg to one EPA sctenust who is in a position to know.
He'sone oflhem.
Dwi~ht Welch boldly proclaims,
"I don 1 know what lhe hell I'm
dotng." But no one seems 10 be listemng.
Welch didn't come by lhe job in
the usual way. He took the whistleblower's route. For years he was
the EPA's top expert on bug
bombs, the mdoor aerosol foggers
that kill fleas and other pests. In
1989 we reported on Welch's
struggle to get the EPA to label bug
bombs as flammable. He mvestigated cases m whtch the foggers
caught ftre when they were
exposed to a flame - somethmg as
simple as a pilotlighL Welch f•gured a wanung label would solve
the problem. But he made a pest of
htmself trying to get lhat accomplished and he was transferred to a
new JOb.
_
Now Welch works m the EPA's
Office of Pesticide Programs. He is
supposed to decide if pesticide
labels have enough precauuons on
them. And to do tha~ Welch must
check the work of the chemists

ulate speech that ts dtrected to
tncite, and ts likely to inctte, tmmtnent lawless acuon (Brandenbura
v. Oh10, 395 U.S. 444 (1969)),
speeeh that ts likely to cause senous damage to national security (
v Aqee, 453 U.S. 280 (1981)), and
matenals that are obscene (Miller
v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973)).
In mterpretmg the free speech
guarantee, questions have also been
raised as to what qualifies as protected speech and what does not. In
this regard, certain kinds of conduct have been deemed sufficiently
"expresstve" to ment FirSt Amendment prolecuon. Thus, the Supreme
Court recently overturned a state
convtction for burnmg the Amencan flag, rulinl!. that, although the
burning of lhe !lag is deeply offenSive to many Americans, 11 is also
expressive conduct entitled to First
Amendment protection in certain
ctrcumstances (United States v.
Etchman,.\10 S. CL 2404 (1990)).
The FirSt Amendment guarantee
of freedom of the press has
required lhe courts 10 balance the
media's right to gather and disseminate tnformatton agamst other
important public interests. The
Supreme Court has struck down
court orders that prohibited the
press from publishmg ~~~counts of
confessions or admissions that
tmplicated a criminal defendant
(Nebraska Press Association v.
Stuart, 427 U.S. 539 (1976)) or
barred the press from the t'Ourt·
room (Rtchmond Newspapers. Inc.
v. Vrrgmta, 448 U.S. 555 (1980)),
but has reJected arguments that the
Ftrst Amendment ~nmts newspa·
per reporters to wtlhhold mfonnauon about conftdenual news
sources m grand JurY' proceedmgs
(Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665
(1972)), or grants lhem tmmumty
from lawfully tssued search warrants (Zurcher v. Stanford Da1ly,
436 U.S. 547 (1978)). The Court
has also provtded members of the
media industry wtth some protcctton from potentially devastating
lawsuits by hmitmg the cucum•
stances under which the press may
be sued for hbel. For example, tf
someone who IS a "public ftgure"
sues the press for libel, it ts not
enough to prove that the reporter
was negligent; the public figure
must prove lhat lhe reporter made
the ltbelous statement with actual
malice or a reckless disregard for
lhe truth (New York Tunes "Co. v.
Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964). The
Coun has rejected arguments, however, that the media industry is
entuled to absolute immunity in
such eases
Like the Fust Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech, the
guarantees of freedom of assembly
and the nght to petiuon the government are also subJeCt to narrow
ltmttattons . For example, the
Supreme Court has ruled that a
state may constllutionally place
reasonable time, place, and manner
restrictions on meetmgs and
demonstrations on public property,
provided that !hose restricuons arc
not imposed m a discnmmatory
casL
Although freedom of speech, manner. (Cox v. New Harnpsbue
press, assembly. and petition are of 312 U.S. 569 (1941)). In addiuon,
cntical unponance in a democratic !he Couit has held that- provided
society, the First Amendment lhat the rcstricuons are not overly
describes these rights only m gen- burdensome - the government
eral tenns. Aecordmgly, lhe prectse may constllutionally ban sound
meaning of these guarantees has trucks that make "loud and raugenerated controversy over the cous" notscs (Kovacs v. Cooper,
years. The guarantee of freedom of 336 U.S . 77 (1949)) or nmsy
speech has ra1sed d1Cflcult qucs- demonstrations that disrupt school
ltons about the extent to wh•ch sessions (GraY,IIed v. Rockford, 408
government can regulate speech to u.s. 104 (1972)).
Throughout our histocy, efforts
Jl1lmtlle public safety, welfare and
morals. The right to free speech is have been made to accommodate
not absolute; as Justice Holmes lhc Frrst Amendment's guarantees
once observed, even "[t]he most of free spccc:h, press, assembl~ and
Slringent prorection of free speech petition with the competing mterwould not proteCt a man in falsely ests of an ordered SOCICly. By and
shouting rue in a thealre and caus- large, the balance .._, been struck
ing a panic" (Schenck v. Unued strongly in favor of pr:sen:ing the
States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919)). Thus, nghts ,that are essential10 the confor example, the Supreme Court tinued success and vlrality of our
has ruled thatsovemment
. .. can reg· democracy.

who made the pestictde and deterhow toxic the mgredients are
to humans and anunals.
Appropriately, this fu:ld of work
ts caUed toxicology and the people
who do it are caUed toxicolo~sts.
But Welch is an entomologiSI, a
bug btologtst. He can teU you 1f a
pesticide will kill bugs, but he can't
tell you if it will ktU humans or animals.
The federal personnel system
sets out mmimurn requirements for
EPA toxicologists, including 30
hours of college chemiStry and 12
hours of college toxicology. The
requirements specifically state that
on-the-job training ts no $ubstirute
for the college courses. But Welch
hasn't had those courses, and neilher have most of the people who
work wilh him and are called toxicologists.
Ironically, the chemical industry
scienusts who submit the toxicology data to the EPA are requ~red to
meet the same education standards,
and they do. So they are better
qualifted than most of Jhe people
checking !herr work.
The EPA bas avOided the 1ssue
by caUmg Welch and his coworkers "btologists." But the toxteologists we spoke to were in agreementlhat the office 1s domg toxicology.
What's the harm if a label on a
pesticide isn't up to snuff, espceial1y tf the pesticide has already been
determmed by the EPA safe for
use? The Hartz Blockade case of
1986 answers that question. The
flea spray was approved for use,
but the label wasn't spec1fic
enough to teU the users how much
was too much. Hundreds of j!ets

~ mine

were killed or injured by excesSive
amounts o( Hartz Blockade sprayed ·
on them by unwitting owners. The
EPA solved the problem by requifing that Hartz beef up tiS Ia~! to
warn about overuse.
Now Welch is one of the people
who is supposed to rruiJI.e sure the
labels are adequate to begin with,
and he says he ISn't trained to do iL
"It was pets then. Next time it.
could be humans," he told our
reporter Nick Budnicl\.
Welch doesn't expect hiS bosses
10 take hiS word for tL He obtained
affidavtts from two EPA toxicologists in other departments. They
looked at h1s qualifications, and at
the requtrements of the JOb. One
said it was " ludicrous" to have
Welch doing what he was doing.
The other said "his lack of qualifications makes it probable lhat the
U.S. public might suffer grievous
harm from an improperly tnough
honestly performed evaluation by
Mr. Welch."
The EPA's posiuon Is that
Welch can~get all lhe teaming he
needs by learnmg on the JOb.
Welch has asked for approval for
the necessary collc,ge course work,
and has been turned down. Rather
than do a half-baked job, he is now
refusing to do any toxicology ,
reviews for the EPA. His bosses
have put h1m in a ''performance
tmprovement program" - the
EPA's version of probauon. Welch
has two months to shape up and do
his JOb, no matter how badly, or he
IS OUI.
STOOD UP AND STEAMED
- Pres1dent Bush's planned tnp to
Aslll in January w11l be devoted m
part to patchmg thmgs up with

MAKE NO LAW
RESPECTING AN

1

E5TA6LI5~MENT

OF RELIGION''

MEANS ..
E){ACTLY ..

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

IMansfield I 21 • I•

America's Pactftc tradtng partners.
Hts sudden deciSion to cancel the •
1r1p for December uked the
Japanese and Koreans, who didn't
understand the poliucal bind Bush
was in at home. Democrats revoked
Bush's passport with a flurry of
cnucism that the traveling president has no time or interest in the
folks back home. Administration
officiills fear lhat wben Busb final·
ly gets 10 Japan, he will be greeted
icily by lhe Japanese. They were
snubbed not only by the poSipollement of the trip but by the implication that Busb didn't want to begin
his commemoration of the 50th '
anmversaey of the J~se attack
on Pearl Harbot with a tnp to
Japan.
MINI-EDITORIAL- It's get- •
ung harder to read George Bush's
lips, htps and everything else. Hts
pohttcal s1gn language ts ;
mscrutable. He says banks should :
lower credit card rates and then
blasts Congress for trying to do JUSt
that He implores Congress 10 cut
the capital gains tax, but he won't ,
take lhe fight to Capitol Htll htm- ,
self. He now agrees the economy ts
sputtering, but he blames the co~ ­
sumers by saymg they aren t .
spending enough. One thmg •s ;
clear. Were it not for the fact lhat 1
an election ts less than one year off, 1
none of these problems would be ,
getting Bush's attenuon.
;
Copynght, 1991, Umted Feature . •
Syndicate, Inc .
.•

r-----

•I Columbus I 23~ I

says the credu card comments were
written m Bush'sprepared text.
(N~te : Blame for bad ideas gets
aSSigned vta the anonymity of
intransttive verbs.) Finally, Bush
palpitaung after hts close brush ·
with lcadersh•p. says lhat when he ··
urged lower rates, it "never
occurred to me that somebod~ was
going to mtroduce legislauon. '
~
LAST RITES FOR CIVIL
RIGHTS · At 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue, Wh1te House counsel C.
Boyden Gray puts forth a draft
statement declaring the new civil
nghts btll means the government
can scrap all affirmauve action m
Its own hiring. On Capitol Hill, the
Repubhcan who spearheaded the
compromise b1ll, Sen. JCllln Danforth of Missouri, goes ballistic,
mststmg t1 says no such thing.
Bush repudiates the policy that was
stated m his name, claiming he had
no ulea what his own counsel was
counseltn~

Ftve calls for ass1stance were answered by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Serv•ces on Monday.
At 10.33 a.m. on Monday, Chester and Bashan Umts went to
Bentz Road for a frre at the John Bentz res•denee. At 11:06 a.m.,
Syracuse squad responded to Vme Street. Donald Spaun went to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12·51 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mam Street. James Walker was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospttal. At 1·20 p.m., M•ddlepon
umt took Mtlton Hood from Mill Street to Veterans. At 7:04 p m,
Rutland sq uad went to Side Hill Road for an auto acc•dent. Sherry
Lentz was treated atlhe scene.
.

President says he cares
about America's economy
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush , on the defenstve
because of hts handhng of the
~onomy, says he wants to show
oash-strapped Amencans that he
qares.
Bush, whose JOb approval ratings have tumbled to their lowest
!~vel smce he took office nearly
three years ago, wils heading South
tbday on a trip he said gives him a
dhance to "listen to and learn from
r~e Amencan people."
It also gives him an opponumty
to point to some bnght spots in the
riuddle o{ an economtc downwrn.
.Qush scheduled stops at a Braden·
ten, Fla., orange ju1ce plant !hat has
lisuceessful workplace drug testing
wogram, and an electronics plant
m Mendtan, M1ss., that has thrived
4esp1te the recession.
• The prestdent's excurston followed by a day his order for
a:dministration agencies to try to
il!lprovc unemployment, job-training and other ass1stance programs.
But lhe president unve1lcil no new
program s to spur an economtc
r~vival, saymg he was "not going
,

to do anylhmg dumb."
- Bush has been under mcreasmg
pressure to offer a plan for sumulatmg the economy. And he has
been chasttscd by a growmg chorus
of criucs - some of lhem Republicans - for not acting more dectsively to end the recesston.
Bush pointed to the trtp as an
md1cation of his concern for v•cums of the faltenng economy.
"When people are hurling out
there ... we've got to let them know
we care,'' he told representatives of
the real estate and home building
industries.
Bush said he realizes that Americans "want to know what their
government is doing nght now to
get the economy moving agam.''
He said he "wtll be pointing out
difficult thmgs" and "certam
sound thmgs that I think offer hope
to the Amencan people." He gave
no indication what they might be.

Murl L. Shain, 82, Fredencktown, Pa. dted Monday, Dec. 2,
1991 at the Washington Hospital in
Washmgton, Pa. following a bnef
1llness.
Born tn Anuqutty on June 7,
1909, he was the son of the late
Samuel B. Sham and Susan Watson
Sham. He IS survtved by a stster,
Mrs Laura Rtffle, Racme, several
meces and nephews
Bestdes hts parents, he was preceded m death by two SISters and
f1 ve brothers
6ravestde services ·wtll be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Plants
Cemetery. There ar~ no calhng
hours. Arrangements arc be1ng
handled by the Ewmg Funeral
Home.

Tite Daily Sentinel
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Pubh1hed every aRernoon, Monday
through Friday Ill Court St. Pomeroy,

Ohio by the Ohto Valley Publiahlng
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SubiCrlbtn not desinngta pA)' the e.am.
er m~y nm1L In advance darect t.o The
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Meigs County Court Judge
Palrlck H. O'Bnen fined 36 defendants m l)lat coun last week.
Fmed were: Edward Bell, Pomt
Pleasant, W.Va., exprred tags, S10
and costs; Amy E Campbell
Racine ; speed, $20 and costs;
James H. Runyon, Nelsonv•llc,
overload, $I 75 and costs, unsafe
vehtcle, $10 and costs; Davtd B.
Baker, Middleport, speed, $20 and
costs; Thomas Hines, Tuppers
Plains, domesuc violence, 30 days
in JWl, suspended, costs, probatiOn
of one year, alcohol counseling,
Thomas W. Hansune, Pomeroy,
speed, $19 and costs; Gregory T
Satterfield, Racine, fatlure to control, $20 and costs; John Hetzer,
Reedsville, unable to stop in
assured clear dtstance, $10 and
costs; Jenme S. Dalley, Reedsville,
seat belt violation, costs only;
Vicki Payne, Langsville, menacmg,
costs, one year probaoon; John G
Hayes, Middleport, passmg bad
checks, stx months in jatl, costs,
f1ve years probatton, alcohol
assessment; Robert C. Saltsman,
Racmc, no muffler, $10 and costs
Lawrence R. Wozmak, Vermtl·
ton, overload, $317 and cosls,
Rudy Stewart, Middleport, speed,
S20 and costs; Mary E. Roush,
Pomeroy, stop sign violauon, $10
and costs; Donald B. Kennedy,
Pomeroy, failure to control, $100
and costs; Gerold Moore, Pomeroy,
speed, $23 and costs; Douglas W.
Hanson, Martetlll, seat belt violation, costs only; Larry A. Hmes,
Guysv1lle, speed, $20 and costs;
Ron Capehart , Pomeroy, DW!,

Court news
Dijsolutions, divorce sought
Acuons for dissolution of marriage have been filed in Metgs
County Common Pleas Court by
Dale Edward Sisson, Middleport,
and Ann M. Sisson of Pomeroy;
and by Lawrence R. Lee, Pomeroy,
and Kimberly Rene Lee, also of
Pomeroy.
A divorce acuon has been filed
by Robert B. Stx, Albany, agrunst
Kathleen J. Stx, Gladstone, Mo

Marriage licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
• t Courtto Earid Elias Mast, 25,
Albany, and Judith Lyne Mees, 22,
Pomeroy, and to Jason Michael
Yeauger, 17, Cheshire, and Tma
Marie Conkey, 18, Columbus.

Contiaued from page 1
lnsurancediscussed
Two bids were recet ved for the
general insurance package for the
vtllage. That packa~e includes
police fleet and hab1lity, pubhc
officll!ls hability and general ltabtluy on propen~ and contents.
The low btd accepted was from
Downmg- Ch1lds-Mullcn-Musscr
Insuran ce in the amount of
$20,620. The btd from Brogan
Warner Insurance, also of
Pomeroy, was rec et ved 1n the
amount of $32,328.
Council also agreed to enter mto
a policy agreement with Central
BenefitS/Blue Cross and Blue
Sh!eld through th ~t_V{t~man Agency of Gallipolis for employee medtcal msurancc.
The policy accepted last night
offers major medical and hospitaltzatiOn coverage as well as dental
and opucal insurance for employees covered under the plan. Currently, the VIllage pays!()() percent
of the smgle policy cost, and
employees who WI Sh coverage
under the famtly plan are requ~red
to pay the difference in the pohcy
costs.
The smgle plan will cost the v•llage $112.87 for 1992, and the
family plan is pnced at $299.98.
• Other business
Council discussed the poss•bihty of moving the mailboxes across
the street from the Pomeroy Post
Office to the space m front of the
Carne~•e Bllllding due to a problem wtth postal paiCOns parkmg m
the no-parkmg zone m front of
those boxes.
Counctl tabled action on the
ch'ange pendmg further dtscuss1on
with Pomeroy Postmaster Tom
Reuter.
Wchrung suggested that the
boxes be left where they are and
that the parking regulations pertain·
ing to that location be enforced.
Unttl actton IS taken on the new
box locauon, v1llage officials will
be insa-ucted to ticket any parking
vtOiators at the post office.
Auendmg in addition 10 Anderson and Wehrung, were council
members Betty Barontck, Bryan
Shank, Bruce Reed, Bill Young,
and Thomas Werry; Mayor Richard
Seyler, Clerk Brenda Morris and
Counctlman-elect Jolin Blaettnar.

Area deaths

By CUTler or Molor Roate

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISTMAS by Lane and Miller

Cloudy

EMS units answer five calls

Murl Shain

By Martin Schram

Pt. Cloudy

Local briefs...

T

How revolting are the Republicans?

The Dally Sentlnel~age-3.,

Sunnse this mornmg was at
7:36a.m. Sunset will be at 5:07
p.m.
~
Arouad tbe aation
A treacherous mix of freezmg
rain and 1ee fell over tlie Nol'lheast
today. while unusually warm ternperatures graced the Southeast.
Ram continued across parts of
the Mtdwest and East, where torrenhal downpours Monday and
during the weekend caused at least
two dealhs from noodmg Three
other people are m1ssmg and
believed to be drowned.
•
The north-cena-al stales shivered

before dawn, wuh readtngs ncar
zero m Nonh Dakota. The West
was fa1r wtth clouds along the
coast.
,
Ram, we. and snow were blamed
for four traff•c deaths around the
natiOn Monday and dunng the
weekend.
Bitter cold was predicted m the
northern Plams ioday, wuh heavy
snow to continue around the Great
Lakes. Heavy rain was expected tn
parts of New England and also over
most of the mtddle Atlantic stales.
Sleet and freezing ram were
expected m Pennsylvania and New

York.
"(
Subzero temperatures were \
expected m the north-central states.
H1gh readmgs in the 20s were
expected in northern New England
and the northern Plruns. Temperatures in the 30s were ex pee ted in :
New York and Colorado, with the
Nort hwest and New Mexico
expected to be tn the 40s Texas
was predicted to be m the 50s and ;
60s, wuh readmgs m the 80s m '
Flortda,
The h1gh temperature for the ·,
nauon Monday was 88 degrees at l,
Fort Myers, Fla.

Thirty-six fined in' Meigs County Court

Continued from page 1

LAMB'' BUT
WEAR' A
COAT!

Congress shall make no law respect1ng an establishment of rel•gion, or prohibiting the free exerCISe
thereof; or abndging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or ~he r~ght of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of gr~evances.

!'

"

C1991 Accu-Wooltlo!,lnc

WIND
TO ntE SI-IORN

..)

I

.. . ..

Sunny

T~E

AMENDMENT I. Religious establishment prohibited. Freedom of speech, of the press,
and right ~o petition.

prestdential imtiatives to jump-start
the economy. At 1600 Pcnnsylva·
ma Avenue, President Bush says
there's no need to lead. HUD Secretary Jack Kemp publicly warns
that the economy IS on "automatic
ptlot.'' Meanwhtle, Ch1ef of Staff
John Sununu lectures the Cabinet
on the vtrtue of loyalty and team
play.
.
CREDIT CARD DIS-INTEREST: The prestdent calls for lower
mJcrest rates for credtt card purchases The next day on Capttol
Htll, Sen. AI D' Amato, R-N. Y.,
puts Bush's idea mto a bill, lhe
Senate applauds, but tbe stock market plunges 120 pomts. So Treasury Secretary Nick Brady calls the
idea "wacky" and "senseless."
Officials blame Sununu for havmg
inserted the two sentences mto
Bush's speech wtthout proper staff
analysis -but Sununu den•llS guilt
and blames his boss, saying Bush
"ad-ltbbed" the idea. But wrutthat allegation b~ the White House
ch1ef of staff ts denied by the
White House press secretary, who

•

W VA

600
TEMPERS

~

"

•

.. ... ..

•

An eene sound echoes throu~h
the corridors of Pennsylvama
Avenue. It is the sound of elephants braying.
We are wiblessing lhe Democral!Zation of the Republican Party and with 11, the Cartenzanon of the
Busb prestdency. It ts not a pretty
sound, nor a preuy stghL But 11 IS
painfully familiar.
The Republicans in the 1990s
are behaving like lhe Democrats of
the late '60s, '70s and '80s. Those
were the years when the word
" disarray" carne to be a mere suffix that seemed permanently tacked
onto the phrase "Democrats-in-"
- years when you could leave two
Democrats alone in a room and
rewrn to discover lhree factions.
Now lhe Democrats have put on
the11 best party manners. But the
Republicans are revolting. You can
hear the telltale sounds echo at
every menuon of our domestic
woes.
RECESSION Rx: On Cap•tol
Hill, Repubhcan senators and ropresentatt ves are calhng for new

By Tbe Associated Ptess
A blast of Arctic air will send
Ohio temperatures plunliliginto
lhe low 20s and teens tomght, forecasters said. And lhe frigid condilions wtll last for I)Ie next several
days.
'
The National Weather Semce
said snow flurries also were likely
statewide tonight and Wednesday,
when the mercury isn'tlikely to get
out of the 20s.
The record htgh temperature for
th1s dale at the Columbus weather
station was 76 degrees m 1982.
Tbe record low was 0 m 1966.

MICH

11

W~ATTI-IAT

-.

~

Temp-eratures-will dip into 20s tonight-

}Vednesday,Dec."4 ~~-~ -~
for

As interpreted by Charles M. Schulz, PEANUTS cartoonist:

I WONDER

--~--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

' Accu-Weather•

BILL OF RIGHTS

''CONGRESS SI-IALL

- ..

~~------~~--~----~--~--------~~~~~~------~------------~~~~~~~
.•.
OHIO Wt~athm
;:

Page-2-The Dally sentinel j
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
~Juesday, December 3, 19!11_ ~;

Some EPA 'experts' are not really_qualifietl

.

Tuesday, December 3, 1991

r

~--------------~--~~--------------- ~----~~~-~--~~~~~~----~---

The Daily Sentinel

~- -~---- -~ --

$500 and costs, six months m J&amp;tl,
mdefmuc license suspension and
counsehng through Health Recovery Servtces, five years probal.lon;
Gordon L. Stmpson, Proctorville,
speed, $20 and costs; Gerhnda
Luckeydoo , Henderson. W.Va .,
passing bad checks, $25 and costs,
resutuuon and one year probauon;
Robert T. Boyd, Galhpohs, safety
belt violation, costs only.
Mansa Gray, Rutland , DWI ,
$350 and costs, three days m J&amp;Il ,
90 days license suspcnston. If
defendant attends ResidenLial
Treatment Program, $150 of fme
and three days m Jatl wtll be suspended, Cmdy Hayes, Dexter, dr•v•ng under sus pensiOn, $75 and
costs, 30 days tn Jail , suspended 25
days and one year probatton;

Steen .. ,

Lottery numbers

Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Mtlton Hood, Mtddlcport ; and
Wa1d Spencer, Long Bouom
MONDAY DISCHARGES Russell Eshelman and Aossie Badgley
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Dec. 2 - Vmcent
Bee, Brian Ktmberling , Wtlliam
Mayes, Lac1e Musick, James
Rainey and Cheryl Robie.
Buths, Dec. 2 - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mapes of Jackson, a son;
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ohlinger of
New Haven, W.Va., a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Zmn of
McArthur, a son.

j

!

ofrcnse to he lorl'etted to the State ,
of Oh10, three years suspens1on of 1
hunung pnv•lcgcs, two years pro- i
bauon; Michelle Wmebrenner, i
Ractne, left of center, $25 and 1
costs; Davtd Wells, Tuppers Plains,
rcce1vtng stolen property , s1x
months m Jail, suspended to 10 •
days with cred1t of one day bemg
served, reslttullon and costs, one '
year probat1on , Jeff Cundiff, Middlcport assault, SIOO 00 81111 costs, :
30 days m Jail suspended to three :
days and one year probauon; Donn1c A. Freeman, Shade , fwlure to :
yteld, $25 and costs; Dav1d W. :
Jones, New Marshfield, overload,
$212.50 and costs.

i

1

ment department loan to G BS
Computer Systems, Youngstown,
to expand operations and create 25
JObs over three years.
-Approved a $420,000 development loan to the Putnam County
Community Improvement Corp. ro
build a factory that wtll be leased
by ACME Precision Automatics,
Inc. The proJect is expected to aeatc 60 Jobs over three years.
-Approved a $1 million development loan to Cascade Wood
Products, Ashtabula County, to buy
Webb Manufactunng, Conneaut,
and retain 213 jobs. Total cost of
the pro]ectts $3.1 million.
-Released $282 m1llton m state
substdtes to local schools for
November
- Approved use of $1.2 mtllion
for the spillway replacement proJCCI at Buckeye Lake State Park in
Licking County, and waived competiuvc b1dding to hue Koltosmg
Construction Co. of Fredericktown
for the proJCCL
-Wruved compeuuve b1ddmg
for a $75,000 pnson system contract wtth OhiO State Umversity
Hospttals to perform mammogram
cbmcs aJthe Oluo Refonnatory for
Women.

CLEAR
CONNECTIONS

r

Hospital news

I

Continued from page 1

Columbia Gas to
sell Canadian Oil
and Gas Subsidiary

Library movies announced
Bradbury School reunion set
The movies "Laughing Gas"
The 1958 class of Bradbury
and "Paddington Goes to the School will hold a reumon on SatMovies" will be shown on Satur- urday from 6 p m. to 10 p.m For
day and Sunday at 2 p.m. at the more mformatiOn, call992-7303.
Pomeroy Libnuy and at 4·30 p m.
on Monday at the Mtddleport
Libnuy All chtldrcn are invtted to
~arly slated
attend.
There wtll be a Girl Scout LeadEvaagelistic service scheduled ers' me et•ng , tnvc suture and
Evangelist Jerry Counll of Chnstmas 1Parry on Thursday at 7
Palestme, W.Va. will speak at the
m arTnntty Church Those parStiversville Word of Fa1th Church puctpattng
arc to bnng a Chmtmas
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor ornament and
a covered dtsh.
David Druley mvites lhc public.

South -Central Ohio
Tomght, flumes hkely Low 2025 The chance of snow IS 60 percent Wednesday, mostly cloud y
w•th a chance of flumes. H1gh 2025 The chance of snow IS 40 pcrcenJ
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Slowly moderaung temperatures
and frur through the pcnod except
for a chance of snow north Fnday
H1ghs tn the 20s Thursday,thc 30s
Fnday and 35-45 Saturday. Lows
I0-20 Thursday , 15-25 Fnday and
in the 20s Saturday

State...

ery for a project expected 10 create
70 jobs over the next three years.
The company now has almost 200
employees. The 10-year loan carnes an 8.7 percent mterest rate.
- Released $350,000 from the
development department to the
Allen Sugar Co. m Cuyahoga
'
County
to build a rail s•ding.
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) -OK'd
a $250,000 developColumbia Gas System Inc.
announced Monday it plans to sell
tiS Canadian oil and gas subsidiary
to Anderson Explorauon Ltd. of
Continued from page 1
Calgary for about $96.7 m1Uton.
Steen's kidnappers sa1 d Lhe
The transacuon is expected to be dccts1on to free htm was tn !me
completed by the end of the year.
wtth announcements made earlier
The substdtary, Columbia Gas by the Revolutionary Jusllce OrgaDevelopment of Canada Ltd ., 1s nization, which freed C1c1ppio,
based m Calgary, Alberia. It owns about agreements and guarantees
more lhan 319,000 acres of oil and reached throu~h negouauons wilh
gas
lea ses
in
Alberta, lhe United Nauons.
Saskatchewan, Bnttsh Columb1a
"In solidarity With the brethren
and the Yukon It has 5.5 m1llion m Jthad (holy war) and struggle ..
barrels of otl and natural gas hq- essenltal agreements have been
utds reserves and 149 billion cubtc reached on the whole tssue of the
feet of natural gas reserves.
hostages and tiS offshoots," the
Anderson IS a pubhc oil and gas statement swd.
company.
"We hope the agreements wtll
be honored and commttments wtll
be fulf1lled by the parttes concerned," the statement saJd " The
atmosphere ts very pos111ve and
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are everything is reassunng about the
Monday ntght's Ohio Lottery future."
selectiOns
Pick 3 Numbers
4-3-4
(four, three, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-3-9-3
(three, three, mne, three)
Cards
2 (two) of Hearts
9 (mne) of Clubs
8 (eight) of D1arnonds
6 (stx) of Spades

Meigs announcem.ents

Weather

Palrtck Kaune, Columbus, seat belt
vtolauon, $20 and costs; Matthew
Smtih, Cheshtre, DWI, $350 and
costs, three days tn Ja•l, 90 day
license suspensiOn, defendant
ordered to Health Recovery Serv1ces for counsehng and g•ven RTP
opt1on, tf RTP auended, $150 of
fine and three days Jatl sentence
w11l be suspended, fatlure to control, costs only; Joanna C Salem,
Galhpohs, speed, $22 and costs
'
Imogene M. Knapp, Syracuse,
fa1lurc to control, $20 and costs;
Paul Stemmetz, Sr., Pomeroy, taktng deer w11h gun out of season,
S 1,000 and costs, suspended $750
of fmc, all weapons used m the

I

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...
32 3/8
Ashland Otl.. ...... ... 28 -1~4
AT&amp;T ..... .... .........36 3/8
Bank One ... .. ... ... 45
Bob Evans .. . ..... . 23 1/8
Chanmng Shop ..... . . . 21 5/8
City Holding .... .... 16
Federal Mogul... ........." .14 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R............. 48 3/8
Key Centurion ................... 14 1/4
Lands' End ...... .................. 26 5/8
Ltmtted Inc... .... . .. ... 26 1/8
Multunedia Inc . ............... 20 1/4
Rax Restaurant ................. 9/16
Robbms&amp;Myers . ......... 35 1/4
Shoney's Inc .. .. ......... 21
Star Bank.... ..... .. ............24 3/4
Wendy lnt'l ... . .. . ..... 9
Worthmgton Ind ..............20 3/8
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro~ided by Blunt, Ellis
~nd toewl o/Ga//ipo/ls.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 45?4

. : .

Preventative
maintenance
provides
peace of mind

PHIL BIEDERMAN

L-::-..!D~I~•t~rl~c!._t~~~--J

, " _.

What comes to mmd when you thmk of your local telephone
serv1ce? I'm workmg hard to make sure words l1ke 'reliable'
and 'hig n-qualfty' descnbe us these days And l1ke all GTE
employees I m committed to prov1dmg you w1th the best
possible serv1ce
As my cnticalllnk to the outs1de world, the telephone
provides me w1th a very Important Intangible-- peace of
mmd. One of the ways we ensure your peace of mmd IS
through our sop hiSticated computenzed Ime testmg system .
It looks for potential or ex1stmg problems on your Ime With
one goal preventative mamtenance . finding and f1xmg a
problem before you ever notlce In fact, we check your
phone Ime every n1ght dunng tradllionallow usage penods
And we always check 11 when your lme 1sn't 1n use.

..

Here's an example of how our system works Let's say a
small portion of our buned cable became exposed to
mo1sture after a heavy ram You m1ght not recogn1ze a
problem nght away , but stat1c, n01se, or even a serv1ce
outage are the polenl1al concerns In a matter of moments,
our computenzed system recogmzes the problem and even
dispatches the nearest group of repair techmc1ans to ltx il.
The result? You don'l have to worry about the problem
because your GTE serv1ce Isn 't affected.

.

Our compulenzed line lestmg system IS one of the ways we
work lo assure your telephone service conlinues to provide
that peace of mind. But lt 1sn 'l perfect-- at leasl not yet. So
1f you have a telephone repair problem that you haven't
reported, and our system hasn't found , call us at 1 + (800)
336-3144 (toll free) .

"'.
'&lt;

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THE POWER IS ON
~)

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�TUeiday, Declmber a, 1991

The Daily Sentine!

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rio ladies slip-past Tech-for 75--'J-3 -win

TUesday, December 3, 199' ~
Page .4

There wiD be a number of mile- with a dogged defense and accurate
· ston~s in the C@J'eer Qf Mil!dy shooting from Toni Green, Ida
Montgomery, -'5-6 guard for the · Buill:e, Dec Marcum and Yolanda
University of Rio Grande women's Lee. Although all four barely made
basketball teani, and among them it out of the single-figure column in
will be tlie fu:ld goil she ll8lik witll the first half, ·edch ended as the
two seconds left Monday to hand team.leaders on the scoreboard.
West Virginia Tech a 75-73-loss at
Green also brought down .1.1
LyneCenter. ,, ~, .,.,, •. , , .. rQboun.ds 19 help the Lady Bears.'
Montgomery, a junior from offens.e keep the Red wpm en on
Chillicothe and one of. the team's their toes throughout. Neither team
most accomplished three-point led by more than a handful or
· shooters, snatched a rebound as the points and the Rio hldies were
clock ran down to stem a potential forced to take a number of outside
overtime session with tbe Lady shots to catch up with or surpass
Bears. The physically intense con- th~ visitors.
test marked the Rio ladies' sixth
.The score tied four times in the
win of the season.
first half until Montgomery's three
"It wasn't pretty, but it was a at 1:28- one of four out ofl3 to
. win, and r:n take a win any dl!y," connect for the game ,.-- put the
Redwo111en ,Coach Doug Foote hosts ahead 35·32. Tech narrowed
remarked. "The thing that Surprised the gap to one, but Crouse's free
me was how many threes we got, throws at :55 and Damitz's basket
beeause Tech had scouted us and I 37 seconds later gave the Redwomthought that )VOU!d be the first en a cushion and th~ir biggest lead
thing they'd take away from us.
of the half (39-34). A Burke goal
"But Ann Barnitz played a great forTeeh at the buzzer saw the Redgame, Michelle Crouse came in women's~dvantage~wnJothr~.
and played well, and Mindy came
Tech ued three umes agam .(at
· through with clutclt rebounding," 42, 54 and 56) 10 the secoAd penod
he added.
and went on a run at )l: 16 that put
Tech, coru;hcd by Tom Watkins them ahead by seven (~-57) by ~e
to lhe championship of the WVIAC Slx-mmute mark. R1o Grande s
last season showed the Redwomcn 'offense, sparked by consecutive
why it was' on top of its conference three-pointers from Crouse and

Philadelphia . hands Houston
13-6 defeat Monday night
By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
AP.Sports Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - Jim
McMahon's tendinitis-wracked
right elbow gave Jeff Kemp's
career a shot in the arm.
And Philadelphia's Seth Joynerled defense did its pan, too.
Ke.mp, claimed off .wai vcrs Oct.
16, came off the bench in the third
quarter to throw a 21-yard touchdown pass to Keith Jackson and
direct a 10-minule drive that lifted
Philadelphia to a 13-6 victory over
Houston Monday night.
"You are constantly preparing
for the next opportunity," Kemp
said. " My career has been so slow
in developing and it's been so
bizarre. I've had a lot of oppo.nunities and I just tried to stay prepared,
· to be ready for the next chance."
The Eagles defense, ranked No.
I in tile NFL, brutalized Houston's
offense in the Astrodome.
Ernest Givins left the game witll
a broken nose and Drew Hill suffered a concussion.
The Oilers, averaging 392.9
yards per game before Monday
night, wrested only 24 7 yards from
the Eagles defense that grabbed
five fumbles from the Oilers and
finally emerged from a 3-0 halftime deficit in the third quaner.
"We fell they would complete

balls, and when ·IIley 'did complete
them we wanted to hit tllem hard .
and make them pay," PhiladeiP,hia
coach Rich Ko111e said. • We
played hard NFL football tonight."
The Eagles (8-5) kept alive tllcir
hopes of gaining the playoffs and
the Oilers (9-4) missed a chance for
the second week in a row to clinch
their first AFC Central Division
title.
Houston took a 3-0 lead on the
final play of the first half on a 42yard field goal by AI Del Greco.
Roger Ruzek's 23-yard field
goal with 7:47 gone in the third
quarter tied the game and, with
6:18 to go, Kemp threw a 21-yard
pass to Jackson at the goal .line and .
the Eagle tight end rolled into the
end zone with safety Do Orlando
hanging onto his waist
"It was a choice, either short to
Byafs or a long pass to me," Jackson said. "I went a liule deeper
than normal. He had to stay in and
take a shot, but he delivered the
ball."
While Kemp filled in for
McMahon, Joyner was leading the
league's No. !-ranked defense in
terrorizing the Oiler offense. Joyner recovered two fumbles, forced
two more, defended two passes and
had two sacks for 17 yards in losses.
And before the game, he was

vomiting because of a flu bug.
"I just thank God for helping
me get through the game," Joyner
said.
Oilers quarterback Warren
Moori, who threw five interceptions in last week's 26-14 loss to
Pittsburgh, had trouble in getting
the snap from center Bruce
Mallhews. Moon had two of the
Oilers' five fumbles.
"It was a combination of
things," Moon said. "Bruce was
trying to really get out of there
quickly and help out He was shan
snapping a little and l was pulling
out to pass. I just had to stay in
there longer."
. Moon completed 24_of 46 passes for 262 yards and was pressured
throughout the game by the Eagle
defense.
'
.
The Oilers, bauling for a division title and home field positioning for the playoffs, failed for the
second straight week to clinch the
title.
" I guess you could say we
haven't played as well as we did
the first eight or nine weeks,"
Moon said. "We have to find that
same enthusiasm and that same
feeling.
"I think there's been a little lull
in our team. We just relaxed a little
and everybody else is playing harder."

'

SULTAN OF SWAT- New York Knicks center Patrk:k Ewing
: (right) earns the sobriquel with this rejection of the shot or the
·: Charlotte Hornets' Eric Lackner (45) in the first half of Monday
·: night's NBA game in Charlotte, N.C., which the Knicks won 99-97.
. • (AP)
OOPS! - Houston quarterback Warren
Moon is on his knees in pursuit of the loose ball
aner fumbling it during Monday nigjlt's inter-

Scoreboard
In the NFL ...

~lmi ................. "...1 7
P!ill.ddpbio ............7 9
Od&amp;ndo ..... .......... .....6 8
WaWnston........."...6 10
New Jeney ..............3 12

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eulem Dl~illon

Team

W L T Pet. PF PA

J.•llufhiD
N.Y. Jct.a
Miami

... 11 2 0
.... 7 6 0
.... 7 6 0
New En~""'
4 9 0
lnd ianapolll .. I 12 0

.SJ8 2S6 27.5
.308 17lll6
116 306

... 9 4 0 .692318207

- ' 7 • •• 622,1:U7
... l 8 0 .385 251293
.. 211 0 .15421137.

Clc~tland

Pinsbut&amp;h

Clndnnali
L.A. Raiders

9 4 0 .692 250213

Kansas City
Sc.attlc:
San Diego

9 4
8 S
6 7
3 10

0
0
0
0

PhLladclphi• ..
OaUas
.... ..
N.Y. Giuna ..
Phoa'liJ.
....

5

.643

AllanU .. ................... 8
Dt.ttoi1 ...................... 8

8

.lOO

9
Milwaukec ....... ........ 7 9
lndiana ..................... 6 11
ChadOW&gt; ................ ..4 14

.471
.438
.353
.222

SanAntonio ...........!O

.613

l.l

.l63
.467
.467
.231

2l
4
4
7

4

Golden S1.11e ............9

!5

.733
.&amp;43

6

.62l

1.!5
l.l

7

.l33
.471
.412

3
4
l

.313

6.5

~tio&amp;oll, Brid,..,.rtll

N. UniLIO 49, CsnlinaLGl 44
1'\"d sonville-Yotk 46, Miller 39
1'\".:wcomcntawn. 51, Conouon VaU

ll.OT
Konhmor 50, Cratline 31
OrcgonC!ty66. Toi.Scou S3
l'ymauanin&amp; Vall. 46. Cortland Lako.vicw :3S
Ravenna !IS, W. Branch S4

boro 59

lona 86, Old Dominion 71
N. Carotin• SL 78, Pihlburah n
Pam St. 77, Amari~:an U. 6S
Robtrl Morrill!, Manhall61
Siena 80, MarUI. 63
Wal Vlralnla 13, Rad(ord 49

Patrick Dl•lllon
W L T PtJ. GF GA
Wuhin&amp;ton ... 18 &amp; 0 36 120 SS
N.Y. Rangcrt
16 10 I 33 89 83
Ntu hurgh ..... 13 8 4 lO I OS 92
Nc.wJ..:nc~
.. 14 10 I 29 100 T1
• N.Y. Islandcrs
912 3 21 87 91
l"hUado;lpbia .... 8 14 2 Ul f:IJ 17

54

Sotnhington 58, Lcd&amp;cmonl43

Alcorn SL 102, North Tcua 98

Srring. Swlh 78, Day. Belmont SO
S)· l~ani• Nonhvic:w !53, Tot. St. Um~ ·
Ia 51
Wellsville. 64, E. Liv~ 44

C..mpbeU 64, Ccter 49
Cent. Fl~da 113, Lon_&amp;hllnd U. 84
Ccnw:n.ary 100, Ouac:hi~ 88
O!.a.rte.ton Southern 88, Benedict fJJ
Clcnaon 96, Ortl Roberta 76
EuL Carolina 100, Lon&amp; wood 61
R1. lntt.mfltional98, B~rry 9S
Florida &amp;0, lack1011ville 71
Jacbcn Sl. 82. Arkan1u Baptis\ 67
Jamet Madison 84, Md.·l!. Shore 57
lmisiana Coli. &amp;6, McNee:te SL !2
Louiliana Tech 99, SE Louisi•n• 75
N. Carolina A&amp;:T 71, Coli. of

92 60
91 89
81 81
70 80
81109

Qtti~IM

S5

Willo·llll141. Kina '• Ae~domy 47
Wilmington4H,E. Cinton47 '
Yourtg. Uberty 73, Connca.ut SO

Transactions
Baseball
American Leaaut
llALT IMOR E ORIOLES - As ·
1ign co.l Sta cy Jooe~, pitcher, to Rochcater
or \h e lntcmat.lonal Leaaue.

•

N.C. Olarloue 13, Awalachian St. 61
-N.C. Wctley•n71 , Wtnlhrop64
NE Lou.Wana 97, Belhaven 63
NW Lou.i1iana Ill, Gnmblina SL 73
Nicholll SL 7S, Air Force 74, 20T
SoutH:&amp;rolina 69, Funnan 49
W. Kcnwdly 80, lll.-Chicaa:o 78

Norrlt Dhillclft
Tum
W L T Pll. GFGA
Ik.lroit
........ 14 9 3 ]1 102 17
SU.oula ...... ll 9 l 1:7 121l
Cllicoao
...... 10 12 l 25 II 89
.... 9122 2D 7l79
7 16 4 II . 66 94

y...,,. . . .

f

Midwest
Baylw T7, VllpanU:o 68
Crci&amp;)1l00 62, Colorado St. 56
Kansu St. 90, Mlaouri·Rolla 78
Kno1tvillc: 1011, 0\icaao St. I01
Loyola . ru. 71 , Illinoil sL. 5&amp;
Micllipn IOO,Ileuoit 74
Minneaotl98, Younptown St. 59

98 76
77 73
94 99
97 13
13 92
69122

Monday'ollnal

N.Y. Ilona., 4, Philodelp/lil2
l6

Toal&amp;bt's gam'"

Nebruka Sot, Ci~tde161
NanhW&lt;Nm 13, V&amp;ndCibill 81
fw'due ll,lndiana SL 6S
SE Mil.awi HS, Teut·Pan American

I

Rncnna SE 58, Waterloo 39
Regina 80, GibnCI.Ir71
River 60, Marieaa &gt;44
Roo\ltown 63, Moi,adore44
.Shcrid•n S6, Fairfield. Union .5(
Simon Kca~m, Ky. 66, Cin. McAule)

Skywe61 , Shenandoah4S

South ·

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

Nallonal Ltaaue
CIIICAGO CUBS - Named Sycl
Thrift usis llntgc:ner•l manaacr. C1imcd
G cor~;e 1\:.dn:, c•tchcr, off w•i~e.n from
Lho K~nm City Royall. DcliJNiod Suwc
C• no.: r, outlieldcr, for ruuianmenL
Cli\CINNA TI REDS - Cl•imetl
Rob Geren, catcher, ofr waivers from Lhc
l\ow York Y•nkee~~, and Ccur llcman ~
d¢1, nutficlder, off waivttl from tho Man·
ttc1l EA!'O'· Namod Oo111 Spra:n, \rllner,
for Cedar lhpids of lht Midwcat Waue:
and Mu k M•nn, trainer, for Billlna• of
Lhc l' innccr League.
1'\J:W "YORK METS - AaRC41 to
tcnn~ wilh Bobby Bonilla, tiutflddet, oo a
~Y C· }'Ulf COI'Ill'ICI..

.

.i1uN CARRnr t
AARON SHEETS

Sheets gets pin for
first collegiate win
John Carroll freshman Aaron
Sheets, a recent graduate of Meigs
High School and one of four
youngbloods on the Blue Streaks
wrestling team, claimed a second·
period pin against Case Western
Reserve junior Damon Kimes in
the heavyweight match for his first
collegiate win.
Kerry Volkmann's Blue Streaks,
last season's defending champions
in the Ohio Athletic Conference
tournament, are 14-1 in conference
com petition in the last two seasons.
This year's squad has six national
qualifiers and two All-Americans
among them.

record set by outfielder Jose
Canseco in hi s five-year, $23.5
million contract with the Oakland
Athletics,
· "I'm going to probably take a
lot of flack for this one," Harazin
said. "I'm sure some people are
goi ng to see this as irresponsible.
But it was obvious we had to do it
to get Bobby here."
Bonilla turned down California's offer of $27 .5 million for five
years and Philadelphia's proposal
of $26 million for five years. In the
end, he wanted to play in the city
of his birth.
Bonilla, a .283 lifetime hiller,
wanted to sign a four-year C&lt;lcnsion with Pittsburgh last winter. but
rejected the Pirates' $16 million
offer as too low. He then lost his
$3,475,000 request for salary arbitration and was awarded $2.4 million.
Pittsburgh increased its offer to
$16.8 million during the season and
after the World Series upped it to
$18.5 million with a club option for
a fifth year at $4 million . Gilbert
said the Pirates then offered to
guarantee the fifth year.
·But by then it was too late.
"They kept putting it off and
putting it off. The Pirates really put
me in a nice position," Bonilla
said. "It was a frustrating process
with the Pirates. I leave with no
hard feelings."
•
The Mets will give Bonilla a
$1.5 million signing bonus, $5.5
million in 1992, $5.6 million in
1993, $5.7 million in 1994, $4 ,7
million in 1995 and $4 .5 million in
1996. In addition, the Mets agreed
to guarantee Bonilla at leas t $1.5
million in promotional income during Jhe con tract.
Bonilla also gets $200,000 if he
is traded, a $100,000 bonus if he
wins a Most Valuable Player
Award or finishes second or third,
$250,000 for finishing among the
top three in two MYP ballots, $1
million for fini shing among the lop
three in three MVP balloLs and $2
million for fini shing among the lop
three in four MYP ballots .
"I'm still not thrilled about five
years," Harazin said, "but to get a

O'DELLS' SPECIAL

v.-.v••~. 7:35p.m.

Xavier, Ohio 75, Samford 59

St. Louit 11 Minnelcu,: 1:0!5 p.m.

l'iNboqh" E4m-. 9,» p.m.
Lot Anpioo.
1-.10,35 p.m.

Southwest

s.n

....... 96, ~buna s. 110

'

1

Rige ~· Plllrit Viow 60
SW Tuu St.. 16, HU~~Gn-TillO&amp;IOO S4
Tuu Soulbem 102. Howton BaptiJt

Wednelday'a aames .

TOIGIIWIII Haftford, '~p.m.

VIMGIYW 11 Moaueal. 7:"3S p.m.
S• Louitot-.,!,OS p.m.
BufTolo ot Wl~Wpcc, 1:3l p.m.

VIA UPS
SEARS

Far Weot
Colorado 73, UC bvine 70, 20T
R. New MCJ.ico &amp;I, New Meli.co 76
E Wullina1a179, Whit....,..l1
Southern Cal 76, SLI...oui160
UC SanLI Barbin 101, Saenmonto

In the NBA...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
o\111...W
- L ~ Gl
,..

S1. 61

-

S1.67

-

WaahlnJl«&lt; Sl. 109, San Franci1ca

.l

l

-·

-· ---

I

~

......

~.

---

711 IORTH SECOND

2

;._

_____

Spl

Anllnle In 12, 16&amp; 20 "'

.

Baseball
CHJCAGO (AP) - Syd Thrift,
the former general manager of the
Piltsburgh Pirates and the New
York Yankees. was named assistant general manager by the Chicago Cubs.
Basketball
NEW YORK (AP) - San
Antonio's David Robinson, who
averaged 24.6 points and 14 .6
rebound s in three victories last
week, was named NBA player of
the week . He also averaged 5.6
blocks and 4.3 assists during the
week.
1
Denver center Dikcmbe
Mutombo, who averaged 10.9
points and 14 .6 rebounds in
November, was namect rookie of
the month.

-"

By PAUL NOWELL
Associated Press Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Maybe it's just coincidence that
Patrick Ewing errupted on offense
just as th e New York Knicks '
defense was getting stingy.
· AS' the NBA's top defen sive
club was holding the struggling
Charlotte Hornets to 20 fourthquarter points, Ewing scored 13 of
his 23 points to lead the Knick.~ to a
99-97 victory Monday night
Ewing's heroics -with a big
assist from the Knicks' bench helped New York erase a Charlotte
lead that reached 17 points in the
\bird qua11er.
·
' "He's the type of guy who can
iake over a game," New York
guard Gerald Wilkins said when
asked to assess Ewing's performance.
The win was the six1h straight
for New York. For the Hornets, it
was their fifth straight loss in the
only NBA game played Monday.
" We were coming in having to
catch a team desperate for a win,"
said New York head coach PatRiley.
While Ewing provided the bulk
of the scoring, it was the New York
subs who put the Knicks in position
to catch the Hornets.
With his team down late in the
third quaner, Riley inserted a lineup thai included Brian Quirtnett,
Kennard Wincftcstcr, Greg Anthony and Anthony Mason.
Before the y sat down, the subs
had cut the Hornets lead to 77-71.
When the fourth quarter began,
Ewing went to work.
He hit three straight baskets and
Anthony followed with a basket
and two free throws to give New
York its first lead since early in the
game, 81-80, with 8:48leftto play.
"We kept, him (Ewing) out of
the picture until the last quarter," a
dejected Charlone head coach

Allan Bristow said. "II' we•could
have done our pa11 at the end of the
third , he would have never been a
factor."
Ewing was battered all game by
Horne ts centers Kenny Gattison
and Eric Leckner, and forward
Larry Johnson .
"I was able to absorb a lot of
con tact throu ghout the game,"
Ewing said. " I was still able to
make some shots in the fourth
quarter. The problem was that !let
so me of the cont ac t bother me
early."

After the Hornets fought back to
take a 95-91 lead on a 15-foot
jumper by Gani son with 2:05
remaining , Ewing turn~d his
offense up another notch. He
scored three straight baskets again
to give the Knicks a 97-95 ldd in
the final minute.
.
After Hornets guard Kendall
Gill was called for an offensive
foul, Anthony and Wilkins each hit
one of two free throws for the
Knicks.
" Thi s game sho uld no1 have
gotten away," said Hornets guard
Muggsy Bogucs, who fini shed with
10 assists.
The Hornets. who gol 20 points
and I5 rebounds from Johnson, fell
to 4-14, the wors1 start in the ir history.
The Hornets went on a 14-4 tear
early in th e thi rd quarter to take
their 17-point lead. Johnson scored
si• points during the surge, with his
layup making it 70-55.

Washingloo

11-0-0

lpociol Modolill Auto Policy, your
ratas won' t go. up with your flrat

Florida

Hl-1 -0

5 5-1 -0 73-37-1

Michigan

10-1 -0

4 4-1-0 64-47-1

AoridaSl.

10-2·0 1,180

3 3-2·0 68·41 ·3

Penn St.

10-2·0

6 2·1-0 68-56·1

Iowa

10-1 -0

Alabama

10-1 -0

-0 56-44-0

Clenison

9·1-1

763 13 2-0-0 52-46-3

California

9-2-0

712 14 1·2·0 57·53·1

Colorado

8-2-1

802 15 1-1 ·1 65-49-4

. 9-2·0

591 16 2-1-0 60-51 -0

accident.
Unlike similtr poUcies that require
thrM veers of policy ownerlhlp,
the Medelilt allows the exemption
immedllttly.
The MtdtliJt recognlz11 the older,
.. llftr driver wi1h aub1t1ntill r1t1
reductions 1nd broader coverage.
R1t1 reduction• begin 11 early 11

ROGAN ~
~....... ER

lD.suJuce Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
r992·6687

.

----~..

--- ______ L

1,461

2 2·0-0

TexasA&amp;M

Tenn8SSit9
Nebraska

8-3·0

575 17 3-2-0

9-3-0

517 18 1·3·0 69-51 ·2

8' 2-1

-460 20 1-1 ·1 50-49·1

8-3·0

268 19 0-2-0

9-2·0

217 21 2-2-0 47-49-5

!1-3-0

195 23 1·2·0 60-50-2

9-2-0

172 22 1-1-0

8-3·0

161 25 2- t -0 00.50-1

8-3·0

. 128 24 0-3·0 52-57·1

40-46-~

NEW YORK (AP)- It took left wing Rod Brind'Amour, " but
the slumping Philadelphia Flyers to no one cares if you don't win."
tum Mark Hardy into a goal scorer.
Blame Hardy for this one. The
Hardy's g?·ahea_d goal with Ranger dcfcnseman last scored a
5:22t_o play, h1! first mover a year goal Oct. 6, 1990, against 11anford
and h1s second m three seasons, led _ and last recorded a game-winn.er
the New York Rangers to a 4-2 vtc- Dec. I, 1988, against Boston.
tory over the Flyers in the only
Normally a conservative backNHL game on Monday night., .
liner, flardy made a rare dash down
That extended the Flyers wm- the left side to take a pass at the
li;ss streak to seven - 0:6-1- and goalmouth from Paul Broten and
dropped thcor record agamst Patr1ck jammed the puck behind Flyer
Divi sion opponents to 1-9-2 this goaltender Ken Wrcgget.
season.
Broten mistook Hardy for
"Everybody is frustrated," said another teammate.
Flyers head coach Paul Holmgren.
• "I saw a white jersey out of the
In defense of the Flyers, they corner of my eye," he said. "I
h~vc been hampered by IDJunes. thought it was Turk (Darren TurR•ck Tocc het, Mark Howe, Ron corte). If 1had known it was Harpo
He&lt;tall, Keith Acton, Jiri Lata! and (Hardy), I'd have shot for sure.
Steve Kasper were among the What was he doing there, anyclub's hobbled pl~ye~s scratched way?"
from Monday n1ght s lmcup.
Hardy, lost for a logical cxplaSull, Holmgren has been under nation gave a deadpan response.
fi re for the club's recent poor play, "I forgot to sharpen the edges on
leading "!any to speculate about his my skates, so I couldn't slow down
JOb secunty.
in time" he said.
"This can't go on much longer
The'goal spoiled a comeback for
before changes are maae," said Philadelphia, which had rallied
Holmgren, who has a career 107- from a 2-0 deficit on a second-pcri126-31 mark bchmd the Ph1ladcl- od ~oal by Kerry Huffman and
phl3 bench. .
. .
another from Andrei Lomakin at
Holmgren tned to mslltute some 9:44 of the third.
In building New York' s lead,
of those changes h1mself dunng the
off-season, choosmg Tocchet,a Ranger defenseman Brian Leetch
respected team leader, as captam helped set up goals by Turcoue and
after Ron Sutler was traded to St. Mikc ·Gartner to raise hi s career
LOUIS.
.
assiSttOta)lo 200.
. W1th thctr two goals Monday
Sergei Nemchinov beat Wrcgget
mght, the Flye~s only ued S~ Jose on a breakaway with 1:51 to play,
for 20th place. m the _league~ goal- a1suring the Ranger victory. John
sconng stat1sUcs. Phtladclphm out- Ogrodnick reached the 800-point
shot New York 15-9 m the th1rd plateau with an assist on the goal.
per!?d and 37-26 forthe game.
John Yanbi csbrouck made 35
You can get a h~~dr~d shots saves to preserve Jhe victory for
and play a great game, sa1d Flyers N&amp;,W. York.

Robert Morris posts,85-61
win over Marshall Monday

CORAOPOLIS, Pa. (AP) Coach Jarrell Durham made his
team an offer and they ran with it
- literally.
Robert Morris controlled the
boards and converted wmovers and
rebounds into fast -break layups
Monday in an 85-61 win over visiting Marshall. Raben Morris forced
16 Marshall ffimovers and finished
with a 20-rebound edge.
"I've preached 10 them that if
they play good hard-nosed defense;
the 'reward will be fast break's, "
Durham said. "It's a good marriage for us."
The Colonials' frontcourt trio of
Myron Walker, Joe Fallcua and
Ricky Cannon combined for 64
points.
5-5-1 in Rose Bowl
Cannon had 24 points and a
1s1
· wilh irish
career-hig h 14 rebounds for the
Colonials (1-0). Walker and Fallet1-1 vs. Husl&lt;ies in Rose
ta each aaded 20.
19811asltime3strl's
"(Marshall) got something like
Paterno 13·7-1 in bowls
30 offensive rebounds against us
last year, but when I saw at halfBowl
time we were lcadipg 27-14 in
Lost3 of lhe iast4 bowls
rebounds, l knew we were in good
shape," Durham said.
The Robert Morris frontcourt
held Marsffilll' s big men -Tyrone
Phillips, Eric Clay and Wesley
Cornish- to 19 points. Harold
Simmons led the Thundering Herd
Hatfield 100 career wins
with 14 points and Malik Hightower added 12.
1st
wilh Clemson
Marshall dropped to 1-1.
1·4 in bowls
Raben Morris trailed 12-11 with
Fifth
15:54 left in the first half, but went
on a 21-4 run and led 32·16 at the
1986 last bowl
11:20 mark.
Allowed
lasl3
Walker had 18 points in the first
half and Falletta and Cannon each
First
wilh Okla.
had 14 poiniS .
18-10-1 in bowlo
Durham was coaching his 200th
12-6 vs. Easl Carolina
game at Robert Morris.
"I'm real hapP,Y with this ,"
Donahue 7 str. bowl wins
Durham said. Never in my
Can
Faulk
wildest dreams did I see us wianing
13-13-3 in bowls
this game by 20-some poiniS."
· Roben Morris plays Thursday at
3·1 VI .
West Virginia, which it upset in
AP
Morgantown in 1988 and 1989
&amp;

-··--·

.

Montgomery, allowed the hosts to 51-40, with Barnitz accounting for
knot the score al Q4 (5: 10) and hold - 13 boards, and both teams were
a tenuous lead on .free throw shoot- equal on turnovers with 19 each.
ing.
·
.
The Lady Bears netted 3~ of 77
Tech 's Green broke through to tries from the floor for 4~.9 percent
tic at 71 (1 :04) and Rio ·Orandc's and were 22:2 percent on trifecta
·Kathy Snyder slipped in a basket to shooting (2-9). At the foul line,
lead 73-71. That promptly evapo- they were 45.5 percent (5-11).
rated when Green, who ended the
Tech, now 3-2, hosts West Virgame with 20 points, connected to ginia State Wednesday, while the
tie at 73.
Redwomcn (6-1) meet Concord
Following a set of timeouts, the (W.Va.) Saturday, 6 p.m. in Lyne
stage was set for Montgomery to. Center.
attempt a three-pointer and take · Box score:
advantage of the resulting qual1erRIO GRANDE (75) - Gena
court action to rebound and sink Norris, 2-0-4; Michelle Crouse, 2the winning shot.
2-4-14; Tricia Collins, 1-0-2:;
"Give them a lot of credit," Mindy Montgom ery, 1-4-4-18;
Foote said of Tech. "They were Ann Barnitz, 10-0-20; Stephanie
very aggressive in the two-three Gudorf, 0-3-0-9; Kathy Snyder, 3zone and they. took away our 2-8. TOTALS 19-9-10-75. ·
perimeter shots, which could have
WEST VIRGINIA TECH (73)
cost us the game."
- Ida Burke.• 7-3-17 ; Dee Mar·
The Redwomen were·38.4 per- cum, 5-1-0-13; Toni Green, 9'2-20;
cent frail) the field (28- 73), includ- Erica Dcgannes, 2-0-4 ; Yolanda
ing nine of 35 three-point auempts Lee, 5-1-0-13; Elsie Washington,
for 25.7 percent. In addition, the 1-0-2; Anastasia Woodruff, 2-0-4.
team connected on I 0 of 20 tries TOTALS 31·2-S-73.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
from the free throw line for 50 percent. Tech outrebounded the hosts 39, West Virginia Tech 36.

New York Rangers top
Philadelphia Flyers 4-2

hcfoie losi ng to the Mountaineers
last year.

John Starks lmished with 18
points for the Knicks.
Mason grabbed a career-best 15
rebounds to go with nine points and
Mark Jackson added l ~ pqints. for.
New York. ·
·
Three Horne ts - Gauison. Gill
and Dell Curry -scored 17 poinll
and Jo hnn y Newman added 16.

When you qualify •• 1 praferred
risk for State Auto Cornpenl11'

'

------.,...- - ----- -~-·

New York Knicks hand
Charlotte 99-97 loss

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

.1!1
........
.
........ c ........

MIDDLEPORT

~---------·-·-2·p21·7-·--------~
__

Sports briefs

49 '

- WE ·sHIP PACKAGES

60

player we coveted we had to bite
the bullet on the fiflh year."
New Yor.k began by offering
$24.5 million and increased its proposal to $27.5 million on Saturday.
The final jump came during Monday's negotiations.
"We've been going at this since
10 a.m.," Dennis Gilben, Bonilla's
agent, said just before midnight.
In six major league seasons;
Bonilla hqs 116 home runs (19.~
per season) and 526 RBis (87 .6),
He hit .302 last season with 18
homers and 100 RB!s as the Pirates
won their second straight division
title, only to lose their second
s1raight NL playoffs.
Last Wednesday, New York
signed first baseman Eddie Murray
to a $7.5 million, two-year contract. Bonilla joins Murray,
Howard Johnson and Gre~g Jefferies ·to give the Mets four Impressive switch-hillers in the middle of
their lineup.

191 25 and ere particullrly 1ttrac~
tlvo tor tho 45 to 114 year old .
If you hive 1 ufe driving record
1M just how tow your car lnlur:
anee premium c•n be with the
Mldollll Auto Policv from Slota
Auto lnaur1nee Campanili.
C1ll us about this ear inaur1nce
broekthoough tor ute drivoro.

Toledo 62, Miu, Valley SL44
W'li.·MUwau.lcec 91, W. hliruU 84

Colp&lt;y ollouois, 7,35 p.m.

.11&gt;7
.625

ll ~ rrison 60, Rc.a .t9
lloUand Sprina. 44. Tol. Roacn 38
lluust.oo 61, CoviA&amp;.tcn49
llunlinalcr\ It, Latham Weatem 43
Kenton Rid):e 63, SprlnJ. Nonh 53
I.Ucllll4 5:!", C..diz 46
Lclunon 49, Wayn01Ville4S
l..odland 67, Cin. Seven llll.la 24
Lucuville Vall 40, Piketon 3~

East

Team

.... _ .............10 6

201'

Boston College 123, New Hamp5hirc
11
•
ConnecticUl84, Wake Foreat75
l&gt;.iqueanc: 92,lndiana, Pa. 63
Fwieigh o;w...,. 73, N.C.·&lt;l=&gt;•·

WALES CONFERENCE

~

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - On Nov.
18: a day after meeting with Bobby
Bonilla, New York general manager AI Harazin sent the outfielder a
Mets jersey with the free agent's
name stitched across the back.
It took tWO weeks and $29 million before Bonilla agreed to wear
the uniform . But finally , after a
frenzied si•-team negotiation, the
Mets won the biggest bidding war
in the history of U.S. team sports. ·
Bonilla, a 28-year-old outfielder
who left the Piusburgh Pirates to
become a free agent, agreed late
Monday to a five-year contract.
"New York City was in my
heart," Bonilla said from his home
in Bradcmon, Fla. " It'll be hard to
knock the smile off my face."
· The $5.8 million annual average
value tops the previous record of
$5,380,250, set by pitcher Roger
Clcmens 'iri the four-year e&lt;tCJ\sion
he begins with the Boston Red So•
nc•t season. The total amount of
Bonilla's·deal breaks the previous

Gam!Rn'illc 34, Windham 31
Greenfield 64, LynchbwJ C.y 45
Gro~e City 49, Col. Eaamoor 47
Hamilton Twp. ~0. W. ldf'c:non 47.

Major college
basketball scores

In the NHL ...

f'low Yodi .. I.......... IO l

p&lt;Uc26

.Wednesday's games

Monday, Oft. t
Clndnnat.lat Mlam~ f p.m.

,•

Cin. Sytlti')QR. S4, Cin. Withrow 43
Cin. Whito Oak 57, B«hcl·T•w 4~
Cin. Winton Woodl51, Cln. SL UtW
lol6
· Crestwood 68, Woodridac46
D1y. Chamin.ade-Julienn.e -45.
Grccnc:vic:w 30
o.y. Jeffenon41, Tri-County N. 34
Da y. Pancnan.46, Faizbom 41
D1y. W1yne 65, Da~ . Mcadowdalc4S
Eutlaie N. 92, Cle.. Collinwood S2
n&lt;~ioon S .6l. r ...... 49
E~C!Jrecn 33, OUawa Hilla 29
f• yc:tteVillc 11, New Richmond 33
Meld 67, Sueeubom 13
Franklin Furnace Oret.n 'n, Chcaa·

Mianu at Dactoo,'7:30 p.m.
PMland 11 Orlflndo, 7:30 p.m.
L.A. LU.r:n at Chlrlouc,1:30 p.m.
PhoaWt atlndilnlo 7:30p.m.
Cltvt:land It Chi(IP, 1:30 p.m.
Wuhinaton 11 Utah, 9:30p.m.
San Anmo at L.A.. C!ippen, 10:30
p.m.

Minneai'U a\ Tampa 817, I p.m.

Ftulk1iit 33

Cin. SL Bernard 69, Now Miami 39

Par\lan II Miami, 7:30p.m.
Indiana 11 Dcttoil, I p.m. .
Pbocnia •~ MiMctO~. 8 p.m.
Aillnu ll Dallu, 8:30p.m.
L.A . Lakcn al Milwau.koc, 8:30p.m.
Dc:rlvcratHouon,l :30p.m.
Wuhinat.onatSoatl.lc:,10p.m.
U~lh at 'Ooldt11 Sta~ 10:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Sac:ramcn\o, 10:30
p.m.

PhocniJ., 4 p.m.

c....,. . . .

Carlilt~ 42.

Chudon lO,llablWe 36

Tonight's games

Uuf(alo ll Loa -Anaclc:a Raiden, 4
p.m.
~cw Yodl. Jc:u al Dctroi.t, 4 p.m.
San Fnncilco ll SoaaJ.c.-4 p.m.

SOiflllt lll&gt;lrlloo
Vanccuv« ... 16 I l 3S
W....... .... 13 I l 31
t... Anaelco ... ll 9 6 28
ll 10 4 26
l!dmonLGl
... ' 13 4 zz
SanJoae
...... 511) 2 12

0-ville 63, N&lt;oional Tnill4
Duck eye 1.ocaJ. M, Sta.~benville 21

Philod"hia 11_New krley, 7:30p.m.

Svndly, I&gt;«. I
Denver ll C~w:lallCl, 1 p.m.
Green Day at Chicaao. I p.m.
lndianapolilal New EnaiiJ'Id, I p.m.
r\cw OdcanJ" Dt1111, 1 p.m. ·
l'hilldc:lphia 11 New York Oianta, I
p.m.
l'lttablltJh it Hounon, I p.m.
San Dic:JO 11 Kanus Cil.y, I p.m.
Atlanli 11 U.. An&amp;del Ram.1, 4 p.m.

~ cbt.:c

Be.vtt Loc•l 52., WinlUIVilla 45
Be!lain&gt; 60, Manina F.m 49
Dcllbro&lt;* 65, Codurilla 31
Boudm011 l2, Bmoldi~d 39

Mond•y's score

Next week's games

D"ffalo

Bunaville 61, Shadyside: 43
Blllvia42. William~bura 32
Bt:avtr Eulern 75, llannan Trace

New YcD 99, O!.uiow: 97

Monday's final

111n rord

9

L.A. Clippcn ..........1 10
Sammezrto ..............5 I I

Philadclpbll13,11ouaton 6

l6
26
2l
21
14

40

Dn&gt;clr.Mlloll,lndopald010040

LA. Lokcn ............ n

l'ho&lt;M ....................8

x-clinthcd diviJion:

Monu.:al
D01ton

Amelia 66, Oolhcn 34
Amhcnt 56, Oberlin 31
AlhLibula Harbor lS. Cardinal 32
Athen•16, New l..e.tington 35
AUitinlown Fitch 56, Y.ouna. Wils on

GB

7
8
Dcnva-.....................7 8
Minnaou .........t ..... l 10

~COLLie ......................!

.692 m ISS
.6JS m 280
.S38 2.&amp;9189
.231 197316

Adami Dlwlllon
..... 17 tO 2
...... ll 10 4
...... ll 11 3
'"" " 9 12 3
...... 6 17 2

lO.l

.769

J

Partlond ................. 10

Wtlltrn Dlvlllon

Wuhinator~al

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores

6
6.S
8

racine: ~vt.lon

Ct1lrll Dlvblon
9 4 0 .692 231 204
...... 9 . 0 .692267244
lldrott
.. 6 7 0 .462 2482Al
MinncsOLa
.. 310 0 .231 2162ll
· Groen Day
211 O .ll41l83111
Tampa Bay

0
0
0
0

l .l

~

IIOUMn ...................9 l

Chic a~o

9 4
A\Janta
..... 8 S
San Francil.co
7 6
L.A. Rama
310

3.5

Pd.

Utoh :.......................9
o.n......................... 7

W L T PeL PF PA
12 l 0 .923 409169
I S 0 .61S 229183
H S 0 .61!5 263 1!56
1 6 0 J31 226224
4 9 0 .301 160273

New Orl.wu

W L

Bank C..ulc

Flnt Round
Vennoot 93, Norwich S7

Mldwell Dlvlaion

Ellt.ef'IIIIMvillon
~ -Wuhillg'lon

Cleveland.----..9

Team

.692 24619l
.61S 261186
.462 218 202
.231 20S 27!5

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
TCam

1

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Wattnl DI¥IIIOA

Den"'

.200

conference bame against the ho~t Philadelphia
Eagles, who won 13-6. Tbe Eagles' Jer11me
Brown recovered the fumble. (AP)

N.Y. M.ets sign Bonilla to five-year,
$29 million contract Monday .

Grtll Aluka ShooiGUI
.
Chlm)tlonlhlp
Mai&amp;IChtu:cw:61, New Odcans 56

Crntul Dhidon
Chie~ao....,............. IJ 2
.867

Central Dlvblon
Hous\m

4.5

Tournaments

2
3.l
3.l

llmt~rd

.846 379 267
..SJB 268 233

.un

.SJJ
.438
.429
.37S

The Dal)y sentlnei-Page,-...6

Pomeroy Bowling

Lanes results
These are the results of recent
action at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes.
Nov. 27
League -Early Wednesday
Mixed
.
Teams- Mike Sells 67-45,
Tony's Carryout 62-50, Banks
Construction 59-53, Hackell's
Roofing 50-62, Boaters Bowlers
50-62 and Shammy's Carryout4864 . .
High series- Terry Seidenabcl
(506), Marlene Wilson (514)
Second-highest series Jimmy Joe Hensley and Dennis
Musse·r (both 503), Pat Carson
(484)

High game -Dennis Musser
(186), Marlene Wilson (199)
Second·high game - Jack
. Fallrod (no score given), Pat Carson (187)
Team series - Mike Sells
(1922)
Team game - Mike Sells
(673)
Nov. 20
League -Early Wednesday
Mixed
Teams- Mike Sells 61-43,
Banks Construction S9-4S.._Tony's
Carryout 5~8, Hackett's Koofing
48-56, Shammy's Carryout46-58
and Boaters Bowlcn42-62.
Hll(b aeries - Dottie Will
(622), Larry Dugan (5-\S)
Second-bl&amp;best series - Debi
Hensley (535), Jack Bachner (472)
Hiah aame - Dottie Will
(246), Larry Dugan (196)
Second-hilb aame - Debl
Hensley (213), Larry Dugan (181)
Team series- Hackett's Roofing (1880)
·
Team pme - Hackell's Roofing (657)
A

---·----

..,_..

- ---

'

·'

SHOOTING IT - Rio Grande's Mindy Montgomery (25)
shoots for two points during Monday's matchup between the Re!lwomen and West Virginia Tecb af Lyne Center. Rio Grande woo,
75· 73, on Montgomery's last-second sliot.

�I

1991

,.

..'•.•

Salman farm.ing in abandoned mine
pits dr_a.ws complaints of pollution ·

The-Daily S~ntinel -

By The Bend

1\Jeaday, December 3, 1991
Page;.-6

By TONY kENNEDY
· than · a decade . But Minnesota water flow, but he said the process
Associated Press Writer
Aquafarms, Inc: is the first to oper- would be costly and might
CHISHOLM,-Minn; (AP) ate in a mine pit. · .
·
- inconclusive.
Fledgling king salmon surge to the
One of the pits owned by AquaEnvironmental regulators
surface of a flooded iron-ore min· farms is the Fraser Mine Pit, which haven 'I given the fish farm an
ing pit, hunting for food pellets suppties Chisholm with water. The entirely clean bill of health. 'I'I!c
scaltered on the water by a handler. companr. no longer .has fJSh _there, . state fmed Aquaf~rms $3,000 m
As they mature, the silver- · built sull opera~s m the adjacent May 1989 fo! stoppmg water quatibacked fish raised in a matrix of Sherman Mme Pit, about 300 feet ty tes~ on ptts they OWJ! but were
submerged pens will be shipped off away.. .
.
not '!smg for .fish farmm~ . Cady
to restaurants and grocers lhroit~hCrt11CS of the operauon say .srud 11 WIIS ~misunderstanding.
. out the Midwest. It's an innovauve water passes between. the two ptts
Cady S31d .phQSPhorus levels .in
· effon to make use of the remnants through a water-bearmg rock for- some of the .ptts exceeded the state
of an industry that gave northern mati~~· or aquifer .. Graton said . limits naturally, even before t!Je
Minnesota's Iron Range its name mumctpal water took on a foul ftsh farm opene~. But he. admits
but lost 10,000 jobs to the reces- taste and smell when the fish fanp there have been I~ .m e~os­
sion of 1981-82.
opened, and the problem hasn t phorous content m the ptts smce
Along with inno.rmion though, gone away.
.Aquafarms opened. ·
may have come a new ~·of probHowever, regular testing of
Hall said .his biggest con~ is
lems Some residents in this town ChiSholm tap water by a state agen- fish feees. Like any other busll\eSS,
of s:200 rear that their drinking cy has sh~w"! no significant level ~quafarms should be re~uired to
water is being contaminated by fJSh of contammauon.
dispose of the waste, he S3ld,
feces .foodand medicine.
"We're certainly concerned
"We're working on that with
"People were so eager to get about where water is going in the them," HaU said.
new busmess up here they didn '.t aquifer," said Doug Hall of the
But Cady said 'the fish waste is
look into it," said Pet&amp; Graton 64 Minnesota Pollution Control Agen- minimal, and is biodegradable and
a Chisholm resident and the lcacte; cy. "There is potential for water non-toxic. Eventually, he said, fish
.of opposition against the fish farm. movemenL" . .
. farf!!ing in the pits will ~rove so
"This is a feedlot for fish. They've
Graton and others fear contamt· bemgn that the company w.ill ret'!'"
got their. feedlQJ.s right in- our nation of four kinds: fish feces ; opera~ions tJ:l the Fraser. p11, .wh~ch
aquifer."
antibiotics, phosphorus and alu· supphes ChiSholm w•th tiS drinking
The fish farm employs only , minum compounds.
.
water.
abj,lut 40 people, but an expen on
''The nutrieots go!~g into the
But he admits it's not .easy to
the local economy says that's more pits (are) a pollutant, .srud Jo~n overcome .the 1mpress1?n that
than a drop in the buckeL
Daily, aquaculture spec1al1st w•th Aquafarms IS a.pollute!· w~ch may
: "To the people of Chisholm, the the state Department of Natural hurt busmess m the mtenm. 'T.I!e
· 40 employees is significant" said Resources ... Their concern 1s company has not made a profit m
Phil Bakken of the Iron Range what's going into their drinking its f~t th~ years, but it i~ on pace
Resources and Rehabilitation water."
with Its busmess plan and mvestors
Board, a state agency that works on
Bruce .Cady, president of Aqua· ar~ satis~ed, Cady said.
.
economic development in the farms, S31d the fears ~f con~ma - . He sa1d the ~uccess of a ~5 mtlregion. "Those 40 JobS and pthers lion are unfounded. It s .mor.e tikely hon stock offermg earher thts year
have enabled the ecopomy to that water from the aqwfer IS flow· proves that the company •s sound
strengthen since the early '80s ing into the mine pits r~ther th~ and envuonmentally s.afe.
when major problems with the steel vice versa because the p1ts are sull
''We would not have been able
industry oecurred."
slowly filling with water.
, to raise that i.f aU those people, w!th
Fish farming is 100 years old in
The Pollution Control Agenc~ s all the du~, dihge~ce, !odW any cnoNorway and domestic salmon Hall said the state has toyed wtth cal flaws, he sa1d.
farming has been around for more the idea of st!Jdying underground

~Emory: 'Japanese more successful
~buying

!I Zero-zen fighter off its.assembly

lines.
"When you think about it,"
says Ray Emory of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Assocation, "the
Japanese have been a lot more successful buying Hawaii than bomb·
ing iL If they had let history take its
economic course a lot of ordinary
guys would NOT be buried up
there in the Punch Bowl or down
under the Arizona."
Japanese in large numbers came
to work the sugar plantations at the
invitation of King Kalakaua,
Hawaii's "merry monarch," who
made a world tour in 1881. After
visiting Queen Victoria and Pope
Leo XU!, he dropped in on Emperor Matsuhito and of(ered the hand
of his 6-year-old niece, Princess
Kaiulani, to Prince Hatsu . The
royal match was declined, but
Japan's ties with Hawaii s![engthcned over the years. When Pearl
Harbor was attacked, 157,905
Hawaiians of Japanese blood were
caught up in a hysteria of suspicion
and racial taunts.
Lawrence Nakatsuka , former
press secretary to Gov. John King
and Sen. Hiram Fang, was a cub
reporter on the Honolulu Sr.ar-Bulletin when rumors began pouring
into the newsrOQ(Il telephones
shortly after the attaCk.
"Those of Japanese blood were
accused of poisoning the city's
water supply, plowing arrows in
the cane fields to direct the
bombers, paddling out in sampans
to lead submarines through Pearl
Harbor's steel defense net ," he
recalls. "Japanese ma1ds were

reportedly murdering their employers in the beach-front mansions."
One rumor told of a milk truck
driven by a Japanese sympathizer
racing down the flight line 81 Hick·
am Field, lopping off the tails of
fighter planes. There were persis·
tent rumors that enemy parairoop·
ers-had landed and were being hid·
den out by Japanese families.
Seven separate investigations
failed to turn up a single instance
of sabotage in Hawaii's Japanese
community, which responded sto·
ically to the wartime hysteria of
verbal and .sometimes physical
abuse. On the afternoon of the
Pearl Harbor attack three fiShermen
who didn't know there was a war
on were killed when their sampans
were attacked by Navy seaplan.!)s.
Their families were told they died
from "enemy bullets."
The Monday after Pearl Harbor,
Japanese Americans lined up by
the hundreds at Queens Hospital to
donate blood, but they no longer
went out in kimonos and obis. To
be as American as possible, they
avoided speaking Japanese in the
streets, stayed away from their
Shima shrines and temples, toned
down wedding and funeral ceremonies and buried Japanese pass·
ports, flags and samurai swords in
the back yard . Many adopted
Hawaiian or Portuguese names.
Historian John Toland remembers
one who "changed his name from
Aldrsa Aolti to Angus McDonald."
For many Japanese Americans
01e war hit home on both sides of
the Pacific.
Nakaasuka's father was "put in

··us 0deserves the support
of eve~ indivi~ual citizen

Jt

•

r

Hawaii than bombing it'

. There is growing fear th at
· Japanese visitors will stay away in
: droves in December, just as the
• state is.beginning to recover from
· the nearly 25 percent drop in
:1ourism caused by the Gulf War.
:: The first view the approaching
/.Japanese submariners had of
: Hawaii through their periscopes
· before dawn broke on that never: to·be-forgouen Sunday was of the
: iUuminated twin pink towers of the
· Royal Hawaiian Hotel. Task force
~commander Adm. Isoruku Yamo::mota had promised himself a
· ·~umptuousdinnerthere someday to
·:celebrate the final victory.
~ The admiral was born 50 years
·•10o ·soon. The hotel is now
.: Japanese-owned. It retains.some of
~its prewar charm but is dwarfed on
:)lonolulu,'s crowded skytine by the
~heraton Waikilti, the Hailekulani,
;'ji.he Ilikai, the Hyatt, Hilton's
·,if!awaiian Village, the Ramada
·~enaissance, and a pair of Outrig·
~ger Hotel skyscrapers, all also
"::under Japanese ownership.
-; In the past decade , Japanese
· •investors have acquired a number
:or aparunent towers, banks, shop.· ping centers, a couple of dozen golf
·.:resorts like Hilton's Turtle Bay, all
:the 7-Eleven convenience stores
•and several office buildings in the
:downtown business s~ction that
;keeps encroaching on the old red
'light district at the end of Hotel
;Street known to thousands of
' World War II servicemen.
:: Among the key players in
•:Hawaiian real estate is Mitsubishi,
' which rolled the speedy World War
"'

Classifie

160i:t~­

Gen. Hidekl Tojo, a hawk,
succeeds the moderate
'
.
Prln~ Flimlmaro Konoye as

7 January
Adm. lsor&lt;?kU Yamamoto, commander of Jap11n's Combined
1
for a
auack on Pearl

.

23 January
Ambassador Klch isaburo Nomura leaves Japan tor the
U.S. He Is not
of his
tor

.II;

26

1 February
Adm. Husband E. Kimmel
becomes commander of Pacific
Fleet forces at Pearl Harbor.

Japan's First Air Fleet
leaves for Hawaii.
1 Dacamblr
JapaneH task
fort:ipasses
international dateline~
unnoticed and Is
· to Hawaii.

7 February .
: ·. Lt. Gen. Wa~er C. Short
becomes commander of

6 Dacambar

10 April .
Adm, Osami Nagano
becomes chief of ~
Japan's Naval
General staN.

President
ROCISeVeh sends a
personal
I for
peace to Japa11's
Emperor Hlroh~

Source: LIFE magazine's special Pearl HarbOr issue

an internment camp on the West had lost power and got hung up on
Coast and didn't get out until a coral reef after being depth·
1946." His uncle died in the atom- bombed by destroyers at the
ic auack on Hiroshima. His wife entrance to Pearl Harbor.
Minnie's brother served in Europe
A few weeks after Akui led
with the all-Nisei 442nd Regimen- POW No. I off to the stockade at
tal Combat team , "while her Fon S~after, a strange thing hapfather, an air raid warden in Hon- pened to the Territorial Guard. The
olulu when the war began, sudden- Selective Service System reclassily became the enemy." Immigra- fied all Japanese Americans 4C:
tion laws excluding Asians denied enemy aliens.
him citizenship.
"That decimated th e Guarct :
The loyalty of the Japanese nearly 80 percent were of Japnncse .
community was underScored the ancestry"like me,'' recalls Honolumorning after the Dec. 7 attack lu labor arbitrator Ted Tsuki ynma,
when Master Sgt. David Akui, on who was then a 20-year-old top
beach patrol with the Terrhorial sergeant. "The released Guards·
Guard, bagged Uncle Sam's first men swallowed their pride and
prisoner of war: Ensign Kazuo formed the Varsity Victory Volun .
Sakamaki of the Imperial Navy. teers, swinging 16-pound sledgeHalf drowned, Salcamalti staggered hammers in the rock quarry to
ashore from a mini-submarine that build harbor defenses and gun

emplacements.
Their dedication to Ame.rica's
war effon impressed a couple 'of
congressmen and led to the creation of the 442nd Regimental
Combat Team . Fighting through
Italy and France, the "Go For .
Broke" Nisei regiment won seven :
presidential unit citations and more ·
than 6,000 individual awards. Their :
casualty rate of 650 killed and :
4,500 wounded was triple the combat average in World War n.
.
U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye, who '
lost his right arm in the fighting in . ·
Italy, is willing to let the past bury ,
the past.
"Fifty years of pain and hatred
is long enough," he told a Japan·
America Society banquet a few
weeks ago. "The time has come .
for reconciliation.' '

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

90 DA T WAIIANn

WASIIPS-$1 00 up
DIYII-$" u~
IEFIIGIRATORS-$100 up
lANG IS- GoJ.o... -$12 ~ up :
FIIIIIRS-$ 125-up ..
MICIO OVINS-$79 up

NOTICE!!
I need a place to set a 14x70
mobile home. See George
Cummins Sr. at 48041 Plants
Rd.

oultide Meig1 , Gtllit Or Mtton

•Pri~

of ld tor 111 ctpittlletten 11 double price of td COli

"7 point lil'lt 1VPt only used .

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Csrpels, Headliner &amp;
Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST. MASON, W.VA.

Specialiling In
C..stem Frame lt~air
NEW &amp; USED PAR S
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS .
992·7013
or 992-5553

1-1304)
773-9560

1-800-848-0070
DIIWIN, OliO

01 TOll FlEE

9111191 1mo. pd.

·

•Sentinel is not responsible for errors afteJ- first d~ . IChedt
for errors firt1 drt ad runs in PIPifl Ctll before 2 ·OO P m
d~

ttter public-'ion to m•ec:orre ct •on

•Ads thlt mull be peid in 1dv1nce are
C1rd of Thankl
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Yard Sales
•A c:lusitied adve"itlment plaeed rn The Daily Senun~ le• ·
c::epl- c;l•tified displ-v , Busineu Card and legal notices)
will also appear In th e Pt. Pleaant Register and the Galh
polil 01ilv Tribune, ruching over 18 .000 home$
OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
..:.. 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M MONDAY
- 2:00P.M . TUESDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.EA
WEDNESDAY PAPER

- 2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 P.M . THURSDAY

THUASbAV PAPER
FRIDA'{ PAPER
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-

2·00 P.M FRIDAY

words
15
15

1
3
6

Rete
.

' 15

10

$4.00 ·
$6.00 .
$9.00

1~

Jollou~in~

telephonP l;xchanf{es ...

Gallia.County
Art I Code 614

Me 19s Count~

446 - GIIIipolis
387 - Ch•hire
388 - Vinton
245 - Rio Gr1nde

992 - M iddleport

256 - Guyan Oist.
643 - Arabia Oi1 t

379 - Walnat

Mas on Co .. WV
Area Code 304

Atee Code El14

675 - Pt Pleasant
458 - Leon
676 - Apple Grove
773 - Muon
882 - New Have n
895- Letart
937 - Buftalo

Pomero~

985 - Cheater
843- Portlan d
247-Letan Falls
949 - Racine
742 - Ru tllnd
66? - Coolville

•

Get Recufts Fad
you

want it. ~.

you ·ve got 1t ...

.

.20
.30

.42 .

.eo
.05/ doy

Rat• are tor consecutive runs, broken upday l wlll bechlfg.cl
f"nr"eat:h day 11 11011a1e ads

Announceme nts

Mer ChJ IIIII ~; 1:

1- Cird of Tt\ankl .
2 - In

S 1- HouHhold ·Goodll

Nlemor~

3 - Annoucemenu

4 - Givuwey

5 - Happ·y Ad s
6 -L0$1 1nd Found
7 - V~rd Sale !p1id •n advance)
8 - l'ublic Sal• &amp; Auction
9 - Wanted to Buy

52 53 54 55 -

Sporting Goode
"ntique.
Misc. Merchlf'ldise
Building Suppl ••

66- Pttl for Sallt ·
57 - Musiclllnllrurritntl
58 - fruits I Yegttabl .. ·

59- For Sale 01' Tride

Emplnymr.nl

Fa rlli Supplres

Serv1ces

/&lt;, LiV!!SIIIt.k

1 1--HeiP Wan•td
.
12 - SituatiOn W1nted
1 l - ln1urance
14 - Sus iness Tra ining
15 - Schools &amp; Instru ction
16- Radio. TV &amp; CS Aapa ir

61 - hrm Equlpmem
62- Wanted to Bu y'
63 - l•vettodt
64 - HaY lr Gra in
66- Sud &amp; Fert~•ltr

17- Mist:ellaneou s

18 - Wanted To Oo

lihtUIQtJI .
Classified paf{es,co rer the

Over 15.Wordl

.,3,oo
&amp;1 .30 / diy

15

Monthly

mu st be pre·

run 3 d-slt no ch•ge.

CHERRY RIDGE,
East of Darwin on Rt.
681 on Gravel Road
1'It Milas to Grow.
WATCH FOR SIGNS

IMOfl9 tin

c:ounue~

R
Days

p1id.
"Receive 1.60 ditc:ount for ads pa id in tdYance.
.
•free Ids - Gi11eaw•v snd Found ada undtM' 15 words w11t be

Fresh Cut Trees or
·Cut Your Own.

POMEIOY, OHO

'..--------,

•

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56 1
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
BA.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUNDAY

BUDFORDS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 985-3561
luou Fr., Post Offkt

•

• The Area's Number l Marketplace
.'

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAm

USED APPUANCES .

&lt;

Tr ans po rlallon

21 _ Bu1in•s Opportunit~
22 - "'0"ft' to Loan
23 - Proi•Sioaat Strvrcn

71 - Autos tor Sale
72 - Trucks,lqr Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WO "s
74 - Motorcycl•
75-Boats &amp; Motor1 tor Sale
76 - Auto Perl s &amp; Ace•sori•
77 -- A~o~to Aep1ir
78 -- Camping E~urpment ·
79 - Cempers • Motor Homes

RHa l Eslale
31 32 333435 36 -

Homes for Sa!e
Mobile Homes lot Sate
Farm$ for S1le

Business Buitd1ngs
lou &amp; Acreage
Real Ettate Want ed

'

IU§dlll
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 -

Ser v1cP.s

Ho uses torRent
Mobile HomM tor Rent
Farms for Rent
Apartment lor Rent
Fufnishitd Rooms
Space for Rent
Wanted to Rent
Equipmenl for R61'11
Forle•e ...

81 - · Home lm prowmlf11S

·

82 - Piumbing • Helling
83-Eac~WIIIng

84 - Etec:uic:al &amp; fleffiO••tian
85 - Genlfll H1u11ng
· Homt Rtplit
I

IN

Business Services
. WEBER'S
CHRIStMAS TREES
Homegrown,
beautlfully·shlared.
While and Scotch Pine
5 Ft. and up
. Good selaction of
large trees.
614-742-2143 or
742·2979

THE BASKET WEAVE
Now ~ •• Saturtlays
lor the slllas Sta1011.
Give a liandwovH llasket
to that ~som-e on
yiiUr Cltrillma11i11.
Weaving supplies also in
stodl•
Localed on Rocksprings
Rd. in Pqmeroy, 3 miles
trom the Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.
992-685S

1112~

7 / 31 / '91 tfn

,,,511 mo. pd.

DK's FARM TOYS

ATTENTION
FIREWOOD

by ERn

Displayed at ne
Gaolty Prilt Sllop .

SELLERS
Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Price!

, HOURS:
.
8:30 am-4:00 pm

61.4-992-3394
Or Call
742-3020 EvniitgS

CALL

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
9-1-91 - 1mo.'

12·2·11·11110. pd.

PRICE REDUCED!

P,rtiJI ownor fi101King ovoillblo. Tho priu •., be"
redutod lo ~. ~ 113,900 ond owner
liiGIKilg ol "!' ~ 80% &lt;I l"!lmo 01111Unt II'Gy ~ pos~
blo I~ qooi~og pet!OI ~ bw "~ nu hotro 01 3~ «'
M

nRociiM. 4BR, 3bclhs, i gaa:•nl1d I BR opl.

Plqlltj iKiidos 4,800 ~ n. ~nn

: USO GETS ROLLING • A billboard bearing
:the portrait or President Roosevelt is unveiled in

Open house scheduled
: 'The Meigs Museum Trustees
will again host the annual Christ·
inas open house to be held at the
Museum, Butternut Avenue,
·pameroy,on Sunday.
: The museum will be decorated
for the season and will feature
completely decorated iilble iop
.
· :wtuM.IDCIY. .be bida
''' pn n 1 silent auction, and pur1haJed at that time. Funds from the
bJe or the trees will be UselllO fur!he~ the progrrun of the museum.
Also featllfcd will be displays of
figcls, sanr.as; and snow or water
' liOmes. Anyone wllh items to lend
fo, the display are asked to take
them to the museum from I to4:30
p.m. on Wednesday or Thursday.

All items should be labeled with
the owner's name, and will remain
on display through December.
Handcrafted Christmas stockings will be the contest feature of
the museum.
Stockings of all kinds, crocheted, patchwork, crewel, embroi·
dery, needlepoint, knitted or other "
type of handwork will be displayed
grnlpJi.zes.al'll!rdcd.to-the winners.
The stockings should be taken
to the museum on Buuemut Ave.,
Pomeroy, between I and 4:30p.m.
on Wednesday or Thursday.
Attached to each stocking
should be a lag giving the name of
the exhibitor, 1hc address; phone,
and type of cmft.

.M
•
. eigs S&amp;WCD acceptzng
' Itzif/ orO; rose app z·zca tzons
.
'mu

.

Coi!IH92-11041ar

June, 1941 in New York ' s Times Square to
advertise the United Service Organization
(USO).
.

'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

-52 WEEKS-·FOR

SAVE STEPS!
the
Ads
first!

ONLY
5
67.60

INTERIOR • EXTEIIOI
. ~-EEIEE EJ?TIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting.
.a.t 111 tlo It for you.
VERY RWOIUILE
HAVE REFERENCES .

(6141 985 .. 180

10.23-91 1 mo. pd.

GRAVE '
BLANKETS
Homemade ytlth
Long Lasting Green
Scotch Pine.

992-2156

PH. 949-2101

o

0

0

1

0

0

0

o

o

o

0

o

0

o

o

0

0

BENNETT'S

0

0

0

0

0

0

o

0

0

0

I

0

I

DEER CUniNG

and

WUPPING

~sc.t&amp;wrrd
5

949·~734

RAOII,OH.

HAU~ING :

limestone. Dirt.
Gravel and Coat

Ucen~ed

and Bonded

PH . 614-992•5591

eUGFir-HAULING
0

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;

COOLING .

BISSELL
BUILDERS....
CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
""\leaJOnable Prices"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-%860
Day or Night · ·
. NO SUNDAY CAllS

11-2e-1 mo.

•Complete

•FIREWOOD ·
, BILL SLACK
. 992-2269

Rtmotleling
Stop &amp; Compare
Fr., Estimates

. 985-4473
667-6179

USED RAilROAD TIES

5-31 -'90 tfn

1-1

INDEPENDENT
CAIPEr ClfANEIS
and nlf FlOOI CAIE
•Reuonable flates
•Ouality Work '

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN .
SPORTSMAN
' .
.CLUB ,.
Begins Sept. 15
hery Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
9/9/91/2 mo.

fALL fESTIVAL
SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

•Free Estimates

•Carpel Hu Fast Dry
Time

~

'

"

•High Gloss on Til&amp;
Floor FinishMIKE LEWIS. Owntr

Rt. I,

Rut~nd.

OH.

742·2451
3·14-'91-tfn

GUN
RACINE
FilE DEPT. ,;

Offer Ends Oct. 31

Bashan luHclng
EYDY
SAT. NIGHT

949·2826

Starting Sept. 21
factory Cltoko
12 Ga... Sho~too Ooly
51 rictly r.t. ..lll

.FOREVER
BRONZE
10-l'

9·11 -1 mo. pd.

BISSELL &amp;. BURKE
SHRUB &amp; TREE
CONSTRUCTION
TRIM and
Hollttl
REMOVAL .' . •New
•Garages

/If·
;$tDd/J

located On Safford School ld. off Rt. 141
(6141446-9416 or

614·949·2058

11-251 mo. pd.

0

BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lAND ClEARING
WATER 8o
SEWER liNES
BASEMENTS 8o
HOME SITES

"llclping You To
,Rccuvcr Your
lnvcslmcnl"

11/20/11111.

NO SUNDAY

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
. FURNACES ~FOR MOBILf&amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
0

I&amp;C EXCAVATING

RACINE, OHIO

· or Its. 9U-2160

lllfBlfllll'

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

614·949.·2202

"Free Ejtimatal"

6/lTTflf ., OIIIQIIj

Orilar Now for Your
Lost Lovad Ones.

ln .MimOry

2

&lt;

5 Extra to
MAPLEWOOD
lAKE

$20.00 eadi

°

v.... .

Now Himts lullt

12·2·91·1 mo. d.

~

f·~ ~ost ·3~ Auxiliary to collect gifts .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

614·992-S702

cor

; Applications for multiflora rose per Extension recommendations, be . SIO.hots
kids
cost· share monies are being accept- ~1lhng to mruntam control of mul·
l'
~d now by the Meigs Soil and oqora rose on the treated area f~r a
Childhood i munizations are
Wa~ Conservation District.
mtmm~m of two years followmg free at the Mei County Health
; To earn cost-share monies. sue- the IDIUal treatment, and be wlllm.g Department. Ne date for giving
l:essful ~pUcants must be coopera- 1~ show proof ofpurchase of herb•- shOts is Tuesday Dec. 17 from 9
Of e Mel·gs s01·1 and Water c1des when. cert1fymg completiOn a.m to 11 a.m. an 1 to 3 p.m.
ors
enservation District, be willing to of Ihe Pf!~CUc.e.
.
14 ~ w a conservation plan de vel·
Appltcauons are bemg· taken
PIIFOR
0 ~ for at least those fields in now through Feb. 28 at the Hiland
~ch the bushes will be treated, be Road off~ce of the Dtstr•ct.
C
IIIIIUIOI
iujlling to attend one workshop, to
Add•oonal ~~formauon may be
Poinsettias 4" to 10"
fpPly herbicides or other treatment obtamed by calling 992-664 7.
Poinsettia Hanging Bukets
Chrlltmaa Cactus Basktta
' HollyTrHI
~
Cut Chrletmaa TI'HI
Gran Bllnketa
I Christmas gifts 'for the Meigs . fined to the Center. Gifts which are
Monument Sp,.Ya and
CountJ residents at the Athens appropriate include stationary,
tofet1111 Healdt Center are again this stamps, Chrisunas cards, pens, pen·
Large l'louse Plants
ye~r beina collcCtcd by the AUJtil· cils, notepads, hose, stockings,
Cactus
lary of Orew Webster Post 39, handkereh1efs, hand cream in plas10" Foliage Baskets,
.)\nioricaa Legion.
.
tic tubes, bath powder, jewelry,
. all varieties
1·~ Mildred Hudson, comm11n11y gum, candy bars, head scarves, Open Dilly
.1:00 1.m. to 5:00 p.m.
seivice chairman, has placed a box sUp-on house slippers, and gloves.
Iunday
t:OO
p.m. to 5:00p.m.
for alfls at Davls:quickel lnsurThe box will be picked up on
ance, comu of Second llld Coun Saturday and the items wrapped
HUBBARDS GREEN HOUSE
in l'llmeroy.
and dcUvered to the center on Dec.
8YAACUSEJ OHIO
Curreatly Mel11 County has 10.
et4·m-one .
tJuee women and seven men con·

•VINYL SIDING
o.(LUMtNUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
JNSULATION

Ch~o&amp;c and Cut
Your Tree or We'll
Cut It For You.
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
!At cor.. ol u.s. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Post 39 auxiliary
to collect gifts
Christmas gifts for the Meigs
County residents at the Athens
Mental Health Center are again this
year being collected by the Auxiliary of Drew ·Webster Post 39,
American Legion.
Mildred ·Hudson-, community
service chairman, has placed a box
for gifts at Davis-Quickel Insurance, comer of Second and Coun
in Pomeroy.
Currentl y Meigs County has
three womc.n and seven men confined to the Center. Gifts which are
appropriate include stationary,
S\3fllps, thrislmas cards, pens, pencils, notepads, hose, stockings,
handkereh•efs, hand cream in plastic tubes, bath powder, jewelry,
gum, candy bars, head scarves,
slip-onhouscslippers,andgloves.
The box will be pickod up on
Saturday and the items wrapped
and delivered 10 the center on Dec.

RIGGS
TREE FARM

6:30P.M.

mo.

1 -13·

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

FOR SALE

CHRISTMAS
·TREES
REASONABLE
HARLEY HANING'S
RESIDENCE

12 Gauge Factory
Cl!oke Only

35 97 S Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
11-lB, 1 mo. pd

Teaford ·
C011try Cl.ll

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SALE AT BOB
SNOWDEN'S LOT

Jr. Golf Sols
Grl(llilt &amp;
'
MttaiOHs
C.sl• Fillilt .

Maii St: Rutkltd. 011.
TREtS READY
NOV. 28 1991
frt1IJ C.t Dli1Yl ~ GrtWII
by ... Swowdti.

lap,HHII •
CO¥•s, etc.
Prolestlllal

$10.1"

E.., ...

0,.. tll7:00 !•·

614-742·3051

614·915·3961

11-11 ho.pl

1111:111 ....

'

In Loving Memory ol
WaMer (Bill) While.who
paaeedaway
Dec. 3, 1989.
Wherever we go;
Whatever we do;
Locked In our heart•
Are memoriaa ol you.
Memorllle 111 treaeure•
No-one cen ateal.
Dulh It 1 heartache
Nothing can heal.
·
Love,

"Your Hometown N~wspaper"
PLEASE SEND A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL FOR 1. YEAR FOR
ONLY $67.60 (Payment lncludld).
NAME: _____________________________________

'

'

~ndFamlly

~
ADDRESS: _ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__

ED'S

PAIItiiQ

lnlorlor Pointing,
FrM E1tlmiiM
30 yttraexperlenco.
Four ltlltrl ot
recommend1don. Honttt
1nd dopendlblt,
(lloua Ptslrl. . lilly
•• ahMy)
can Ed Battin
collact at
1·614-667-6474
11N1 mo. pd.

CLARENCE

C. L. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration
We Sell llo Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalre, Insider,
Pumps,
Air Condltlonere
...111•11

-Ill

117GO SR 124

=-

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

949·2206

. 111141111 ....

· GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
for All lrftds .

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6120
Pomeroy,

J&amp;L

INSULATION

•VInyl Siding
•Rtplacament
Windows
•Roollng
•Insulation
JAMES KEESEE
992·2772.,
742·2097
531 Bryon Pllce
Ulddltport, Ohio
11114/lfn

MICIOWA E
OVEN IEPAII

YOUNG'S
CAIPENTEI SEI''KE1

AU IIAUS .

- Room AddltkNit
- Gun.r wortc
-EI-Icol ood Plun....
-:-Con-. wort
.,.IIIIo...

Iring tt Itt Or We
Plcll Up.

lf·

.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

- 1 - . htt&lt;lor
Polnt"'(FREE EITIMATE81 ~

SEIVICE

991·5335 ar
915-3561

...... ,,_ Pest Office
2 U I. ltcoool St.
POIIIIOT, OttiO
.
3/5/to/tftl '

V. C. YOUNG 11·
992-621
·-·....,,..,.~,....;;.,:.;:;.;;;.;::!1

Get Quick Results! Place A$5 Per Day 'Bulletin Board' Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Se(tion
.•

••'.

.

'

'

'

�Page

~The Dally Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

18

42

Wanted to Do

:letS.

I will not bt rMponliW. for any
debla OCher t~an my own 11 ol

thlo dtlt. Nyroo D. 1 1 -.
Molgt Co. Golf Cou,.. llombor·

ship, Will m•kl· nice gifts for

c nnatmH, &amp;W.D92·2571 or 892·
6312
No hunting or trupualng

.p~o,.rty.

Oller'l Otar Shopt ctf. wrap &amp;
froozo, 31145 SA 325, Llngovlllo
OH, 614-742-2076

Giveaway

3· Block Pupllioo, mlxOjl brood,

6 mo. old black, part Chow &amp;
Lab. ShOll &amp; wormed, 814-446-

Yard Sale

ALL Yard Saltl Mutt Bt Ptld In

Adnnco. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
tht dty btfor1 tht ad It to run .
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy. Monday aditlon • 2:00
p.m. Stturdly.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Aue11on

Rick Paaroon Auction Company,
tun time auctlonMr, complete
auction Mrvict. LlctnHd Ohio,

Watt Vlrglnlo, 304-773·5784.

9

Wanted to Buy •

Uud Mobile Homta, Call 614446~175.

Want to buy 11anding tlmblr &amp;
plno, Tim Soorho 614-tlt2·7810
after epm.
Wontad to buy, Slondlng llmbor,
Bob Wllllomo l Sono 1,._112·
5448.
W•ntad To Buy: Junk Autoo
Whh Or Wltho.- Motoro. C.ll
Llny Llvoly. IM-311-11303.
Top PriCM Ptld: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo, Slivor Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Socond Avonuo. Golllpoilo. ·I

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

'AroN • All or•, Coil llorHyn
Wtovor :J04.812.21145.

AMIFII, Cluttll, 4 c~, new IX•

Will .do prouwt ctHnlng: fo~ a BA~ twnlthed or untumi-'*1.
bun1, hOuut, tral~':ei,.arid anJ C-blo ovtlltbtl •.looutltul ~vor
typo r.nn ..,._114
m' . · vltw In Kanauga. folltra Mobile
'
.
Homo Pork. 114-446-1602.

1G84 Tompo FL $2,4t0. · 11115
Oldo 58,000 mlln $2,695. ttal
Buk;k Llmitod $5,195. 11182 Con-

1884 Dodgo Aftao, 4 -

Stlllng

. n

· btlok,

haullt, l14-112-7231, evening~

tinental MMI VI, 43,000 mil•

53,1100. 11188 Ford F2!0 M,300.
1m Ford Truck 4x4 $1,1100. 1G85 ·
S.tO Chovy 8ft bod f2.8N. 1"111
Ford Eo- S1,7N. 1G87 ..loop
truck $2,600. 1186 Ford 314 ton
2!0, $2,695. · 11111 Coochmon
moto,. homo f3,38S. Scotly"o
U..cl Carw., New Hlvtn, wv.
304&lt;182.J75Z.
18U Mtzdo RX'I, oome domogo,
low mileage plua extra1, 11kfrig
$2500, phon• 114-112-6012 oftor
5pm
1886 FloroGT, 114-H2·7153
, . Otdomobtla Dolll 18,
Loodad, 62,000 llllta, .$5,500.
614-4411-92116.

. mtehinM,

IOcatlone, and Inventory. But 1·bdrm opt In Mlddl_.t,
over $8,000. C111 3CJ4.875· ullll11n pdi: $2!0mo pluo dop,
1788.
614·849-:121 .
Four 1 pa~monto, comlllotoly
remodaltd, good lnvlllmtnt,

'.
15 IT PROPER
TO SENP '!'OUR

·TEACHERS HAVE HOMES?

TEAC~eR · A

· CI-IR15TMA5 f'AP1n1

"These·
come with a coupon for 50%
off .on any pair of c rutches. "

t::=;:;:;=~~=T========::j

•. . &amp;

.,,.,;

..... ....

•

'1

s

uit own land contract to
quollllad pelion, 614·912-2!571
11 Help Wanted
Prlvato Poy Phono Routo Coah
Income WMkly 1-800-i'11·55i'l.
, HOLIDAY INCOME "t1",
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich
Quick? No Wayl But Wo Ho" A
Chow-chow puppl.. for Alt. 1tl88 Hondo Accord LXI 5
Earn . Eotlro lnccmo llolllng Good, Sttody. AHordoblo, Susl·
Roglottrad. 1100 aach. 114-446- opoad. 1 owner, 42,000 ml101,
Chrilllftlt CordtAnd Gift hmt. nno. Won1 Loll. 1&lt;100.284·
RENT20WN
8323.
'
IXC con!l,_tJ0,9QO. 304-475-4308~
· 2·1dm1 turnlohod opt, all
For II.,. lnlormotlon s..t· A VEND.
114-4411-3151
utllhln
paid,
1300
month,
Cllp.botrd Pot Grooming And 111111 Comt.O AS, mint .cgndl·
Slompad . En•olopo _Jo: Clatoy
Yl'ra Fumhur.
Pomeroy, 614-992·553&amp; or 114- Solo ~ I Choir, ttuo WMk; · Boarding Ktnnet Former Vttl-- .tlon. · l...oact.d. T.Copa, autO. ~air,
Cards, P.O. Bol 2530, Miami, FL
Real Estate
14i·2526 after 6pm
Rocllnor. M.47 Wook, Swlvol nary A11latant, OWner Ttmmy crulll, tilt, AMI'FM caiuttt.
33111.
Aur window dtfroeter. 35.231 1
Rocltoor, $3.63 Wook:Bunk Bad Pennell, 814-371-2731.
3 Room Fuml1h~ Apal1mtnt, Complalo $8.41 Wook, 4 Dro-r
ownor
mun. $8H5 or ttH.35
AUSTRALIA WANTS VOU
Half Milt Etlt Of Porter, On
Oragonwynd Cattery Ptrsill1, per montlt.
Extended warrlnty
ExceUtnl
Pa~.
111'11111•, 31 Homes lor Sale
Rt.654, f27!1/mo. 1,._381.fltltl3. , ChiM, 13·28 Weeki Potter B!NI· SIIIIIHI and Hlmtlaytn kltttnt. ovolltblo.
Coli 614-441&lt;17111 or
Tronoportollon,
41J7.2t2-4llt!
4
4
4
room
SUHt,
7
pc.,
$16.67
Wook,
lll~·~
~
~,
~~~
~
n~
7~~-,-,
• " p.m.
614-4411-7804.
Ext 571. llo.m.·10p.m. Toll 3 Bedroom HoUM, 116 Kinton BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT lncludn Baddlng.Country Plno I ; ' "
Rtfundod.
Drive, Gallipolis. Living Room, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Dlnotto With llorii:h &amp; 4 Cholro, Floh Toni&lt;, 2413 Jockoon Avo:
Ford Eocort GT, $5800.
Dining Room, Kitchen,. Bath, ESTATES, 536 · Jocltoon Ptkt 510.111 Wook.OPEN: Mondoy Point Ploooonc, 304-675-2013, . 1990
11115 Buick Rogtl, .toodid.
AVON I All Arata I Slll~oy Control Air,_ Vinyl Siding, Cor· hom
ttg21mo.
Wolk
to
thop
&amp; Thru St1urdoy, llo.m. to &amp;p.m., lull llno Tropical Uohl btrdt, $5800. 114-441-11731.
Spooro, ~7!1-142G.
12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4 amoll onlmtl1 1nd
1
Gtro~. Wllhln mo•ln. Coii614-446-2S61. EOH. Sunday
pttad. 2
Mli11 OH Routt 7 Qn Routt M1,
eupp 11• .
Walking Distance Of Tht Poal,
ft. campor lop $50; 1879 Ford
BarttndtrtiCaelno
CAST
· Shor·Ptl Pupa : Juot In Tlmo For 8LTD,-·
Golf Coom And Clinic. Gol· EHencitncy tpt In Pl. P••.. nt, In Centonory.
614-44M211.
WorkerefDack
nice
ntiahborhood,
Hud
•cctpo
Ch~otmu.
$400
Etch.
304·525Hondo/Hoot- tiC. PotHiont llpollo City School Dlst~ct. 614· lad, 1·30H75-8042
Tho Btot Soot In Trucking.
5784,
304-423-26011.
tbotrd Cruloo Sh1po. 13004900. 245-5152.
72 Trucks for Sale
I
wkly.
frM World Trtvel. Call 1· 4 rooma and bllh, good condl- Extra nice 1 lA apt. Carpeting,
PIC1urt Yourself Bthlnd Tht
52
Sporting
Goods
57
Musical
1887 Ford Ranger Big Foot. pkg.
tlon, on Old Rivtr Rold, Glen· Wlltr, ll'lah fumlthld. Stcurlf~
Whool Of A Sttto Of Tho Art 201·736-7000 1111. 18111N3.
tottlly loadad. 4 Wh. Dr. 51,000.
wood,
WV.
$14,000.304·576-2141.
dopo-it
r.qul,.d.
614~46-8588.
CAST Tractor TraNtr Whllt Yau
lnstru~enls
28"
Rtmlngton
1100
ohotgun,
12
CONSTRUCTION
614-44fl.2713. .
AtctiYt:
Corponttro To $22, Llboro11 To By Bulldtr New 3 Bedroom Full Fumlahtd 1 BR, LR, ut·in gauge, mOdiiiiCI bl.rrtl, utra
Boa
~.f
200,
Coli
lllltoo
Kin·
SIS, Drywtll To $14.7!1"_11otono Baumtnt With 2 Car Gtragt k~c hon, lg. porch, $215 mo. S.c. 211" iiMr barrel, otlng, f325, 614· cado
7!1-24!0.
1g87 GIIC Slorro, 3/4 ton, hltvy
• Top Pay •• ·
And
Tondoro
To·
S22.au Coli 1· And Family Room, Llrgt dap: reftreneu. 614-44&amp;.2236 01 112-3401
duty
1 dluot. Air, PSIPB, crulot.
'HighMIIoo
800-882·287'1.
614 •41 235G.
KHchon And Dining, UtiiRy 614-446-2581.
Tharnpoon Hawklno CO.goro. 58
• Ponolon And Profk Shoring.
Fruits
&amp;
Room, 2 Fun Botho Walk In Fumlohod 3 Roomo &amp; Both, Motch MI. 45 I 50 caliber. Gar·
Pttno
. Dontol Rocoptlonlot Ltrgt Lot, City Cioon, No Pttt Roltronco l mon ollvor Inlay. Coli 614·24573 vans &amp;
•1naurance
Fuii·Timt. Send Reiurne And CloHia,
Vegetables
.
•
Guaranteed
Quar1trly Rtltrenc. To: CLA. BoX 018 $chool1, 4 MD•• From Town Deposit Roqulroa.1 614~46-1519. 1448.
Ap~• Rouanroblo Prlcod. Fat· 1980 Dodv- Ram Charger, 4x4m
Bonuc/o GtlllpoMo Daly T~bunto, aiil &amp;59,500 Conaldlr Trad•ln ot
tor • Fruit Form, SR 143 1 milo with plow, 3CJ4.175.4437 or
• Flrot In, Flrol Out Dlopolch
Third Avonuo, O.lllpollt, OH Mobllt Home, I14~4H036 .
Fumlo~ad EHicloncy. $150/mo. 53
Antiques
.
South ol Corpontor, · tottow 67!1-»54.
Utllltln
Paid.
7
112
Ntll
Avonue,
.:..;;~....;~;.::::.:::_,_.,...
• 10% No Touch Frolgh1
.:.451=31::_.
Sale or trade, 50x100 iDt, 2 btd- Glillpollt. 614-441-4418 AHor Antiquo Rooowood Stodo~ llgno. Ooon Solurdoy lllm·lpm
• Job Socu~ty
DRIVERS NEEDED
rooma, nice ahapa, locattd New 7p.m.
1ttl Chovy 3/4 Ton. 4 Whool
Plano With L~ro Shtpad Foot
Drlvo, 4 Spa"!,_350, Air eon.
$4004650 wkly, will. train, drive Haven within walking distance
Minimum Ag~21 Yttr.
ditlonlna, Till wnoot, Sunrool.
of' achool and atorn. 614-667- Groclouo llvl-. 1 tnd Z bod; Podolo, Modo otwoon 1850 An~
co car, 1-800-281-3857.
1860
814-24 5-51 52•
Farm
Supplies
llSG.
614-371-1731.
".
room
IPIIIt.;,-:nll
al
VIllage
·
C.ll
lmmadloto Oponlngt For Ex· Entry Lo"l Rtloll Monogomont
Manor
and
. Rlversldt Buy. or 1111. Aivtrlne AnUq11111,
&amp;
Live
stock
porlancod Drlvoro, Studonto, Potldon
Llrga
comtr
lat,
Ohio
rtv1r
1182
Dodgo
llult
van,
oqulpStnd
And Driver Tr1in111. On S»t AMUml To:Avollboio
rrontage, surveyed , fruit trwa, Apo~mon1o In Middleport. From 1124 E. Moln Sl11ot, PO'"""Y·
pad
for
camping
ond
trovtllng.
Box
CLA
100
Nouro: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
Hlrlng If You Qualify. Apply In oloGolllpollo Dolly Trlbuno,
ltrga garden, cltr wattr; ctblt $196. Coli 614·tm·m7. EOH. .
Ertra dNn~ gooa paint, Ultl no
Po110n At Elthor Locttlon:
ol. Coli A. E. Knotto, Sr. 114o
Third Avtn~, Galllpallll, OH TV, 114,500 corner of 3n:l and In Mlddllport, Ohio. t ond 2 r;~~~y 1:00 to 8:00 p.-m,
~61 Fann Equipment
Fronl 911'111, Hartford, WV.
446·2ttl
45131.
btdroom ~mlehtd apt, aome
Holldoy Inn Cl•lc Contor
with
utllltin.
peld,
reltr.nc•
and
Alllo Cholmor 0.17, Dlnoi
Acrou From Tht Civic C.nltr
Full tlmt Oftlca Man~ger : Multi Unit Rental, 1 YNr Old. doposlt r.qulrod, 304.atl2&gt;2566. 54 Miscellaneous
Chlrletton, WY
Ptowo, Cunlvoto~ G11ln Drill:
typing, computlf', accounHng, Vln~l Siding, Low Malntenanet,
12,750; 50 IIF •lnloh _ . ,
Merchandise
Wodnoodoy, ~mbor 4, 1881
communication, org~nlzation, Cont111iy li&gt;catad, $59,900. 6t4· llodom 2 SA opt. 614-4411-0300.
Plow• Cuiitvotor, U~,
~P. M.
ond oHico monogomont oxpor· 441~568.
Complllly Fumilhld mobil• All~nUon Bullnaa OWM111 And Willl"inanci. 814-288 ·1522.
11oo roqulrod. Ex~ profo~
horne,
1
mile
below
town
ovtr•
.
Emplo,...:
.
Aflordabtt
HHith
OR
rod, oppllcollono avolltblt In 32 Mobile Homes
looking rlvtr. No Poto, CA. 114· ,._,.. For Till Soli· Atttntlon Dairymen And Ftr·
.,.._, only t1 the Mtlgt
446~338.
Employod, WV l OH. 114-446- mo11: Aff•dlblo Hatnh lnlor
Sale
' ·
~olldoy Inn
County Extenelon Office, Mul·
.
NASE Anjtlmo. ___ _
Motorcycles
tullnco FO&lt; Till Sotf-Ernployad. 74
Galli polio, OH
barry lttt., P-oy. AP11ilcttlon
Ont
bedroom
1pt
for
rwnt,
:;:;,:=.:::.:!.:::::::....
11
12x60 2 BR
W'l I ·OH. 614-446-NA$:, :::-::~~~_,.,;.:.,__
Thutodoy, Docombor 5, 1991
cloodiinoll Docombor •h. Eouol 11172
V Spring An, no P".!U.)IO mo, BlD bond tow with tabla, ootlro Anwtlmo.
hNt&amp;.tovt,
tm 550 4 c,tlndor Hondo, &amp;1410 A.ll.
· ~un"y/ AHirmoUM Acilon
car· $100 cftpooll, 614-81N003
bladao (mob nlco Chnotmu
441..355.
,.frlgerator,dlthwathtr,
Employo'
ood
gift).
114-258·1014.
Jlm'o
Form
Equlpmont
.SR.
35,
pttoCI throughout. Vtry
1
1 BR. opt. 7 Cou~ St.
GtiUpollt, 614 ... 6-11777·
condltlon. 614-251-6237 gafter Smtll
Fui~Timt Corllllod liT Or MLT.
Kitchen
Whh
atove
I Boxed grutlng Clrdl for Nil, Wide ••ltctlon new &amp; uMd t..m 76
Auto. Parts &amp;
Tho Dlfforonce BotwHn Driving Excttlortl Btntfll, WHkdayo, 6pm
ti'ICION
6
lmpltmtnta.
lur,
ro~lgoratO&lt;,
$185.
mo.
piuo
_
6
:;-14":'
M
.:.
9
:.:
'
20
=..:,
7171:·
-A Truck And A Cor- In Truck· No Shift Wort. Apply In Poroon 1814 Ooilwood MK7U, Somo- utllitin, dtpoatt I reftrwnctl. :;;
Accessories
Hll, lrrodo, 8:-:00 wookdoyo
il)g.
• To Tho - t l Plou, 203 Jock· rvlllt Aul Ellltl, 304-675-3030 614-446-4926.
Chrlatmaa TrNI, cut rour own Sti.
UII-.
•
11 112 ft. 1ruck bod. 514-446$10. One milt from Union
11011 Plkt - - g A.M. And or 67!1-3431.
Church on Vlckera Farm, 3()4.. John DMr 4020, duel remot11, 3358.
CAST
.::
4:=30P:::
.II::_
· - - -- - 45
Furnished
182-2563.
1118 Skyline 14x70, tomton• to
hydrollco, dlfforontlot lock, John 2·1tltll75/14 otuddad ,,_ tn.,
Equol Oppo~unlly Employor M· lmrnedltl• _opMing tor ex- IIIUIM lo4"n, Somt~llle Alii
Rooms
CHRISTMAS
TREES,
grawn
on
~ ~!. lnont and. good olrnoot - · 1·31" whito atorm
poriancod
cltolr
oldt
dontol
••"
F,
tllt.lnt, und reeume to~F•mlly Eoloto, 304-17!1-3030 or 675-3431. North 4th Avo lliddlo- Ohio Stnto'l Forott, Cut ilmool dolly. con ·• ....... ~~1115-3825
-.I,..H2-8103
Dental Clrw, 2124 Jacbon Ave, G- Sttoe11on Of Ropoo'
~...
• Llrgoot oolodlon In .... Prlcod IIF 265 T -~ Sht I $8
utiiMin pold, 304- ·to Mil. Stnlt"o Foraoi Form 85 IIF w\,",;''':ruth H~. R::: 14 Pontiac Grand P~x V-6
Pt. PH. 255SO.
aod Doublo Wldoo • $1,000 Down k~~tpt,
.
MIN loti open It farm on At. 87 Baler, And Mowing llechln•' motor, 57,000 ICtual mUte. $350.
Looking for poop1t .,. Hil And Slnfllo Wldn • S500 Down Roomo for rant. wook or month. ond P,.ocriptlon ShOppa, 28th s~,9SO; Ownor Will Flntnco,l14! ~IM=25-::-51;-:8-:tt_a":'.-;-- , . -.,..,-W11h
Approvad
C11dlt.
Coli
Mid
mollwltMI, neat In lpp.arnact,
Ohio
Flnanco
All14-772·1220.
Sta~lng
ot
$120/mo.
Oolllt
Hotot.
St.
ond
Jockaon
Avo,
DoC.
4th.
.
:2:ao_.a_m"""":
.
-:------~
!
Now
tonkt, body ··~i. ono
havt a Clr to till ham. ...._
1on rue k whoo1t, ,..
pooltlon. $200. oolory pfuo NO PAYMENTS UNTIL APRIL At 614-446'g58o.
F l - for oolt. Will dlll•lr.
rodtttora,
J ilol&gt;lng , _ , with cooking. no truckload. f!O cord. Stan 63
Livestock
, _ mota, ate. D I R A.-o,
comm~on , *"75-1725 lnttr•
El- Homo cantor! Whon Pur· '!llso
opoce. All
Millar, Jetry LUCIO. 1114-l!fii.IHO.
Rit&gt;lov, W'l. 304-372·3833 or 1·
t :OO lut 12:00 .-,, chlolng A Now Or USod Mobllt ~-11 trolltr
ft
2 oo
304
. to - k otd botoy 111-. &amp;14-149- IIOO.ztl.a566
Homo
With
Approvod
Credit.
~
a
or
:
p.m.,
•
F
•·
420
•·•
~
Do
-7
...
=;.:.=:,.:.:=
·-=-:--:-- - $400 WEEK, Or Mora SluHina
5651 ' llooon WV·
or oo~:
- n - • lOr •••
.
Envoiopoo At Homo. Ruth $1.00 Coli 1.S00.519-t5710.
' I 1811 Dod~• 1-ton truck, 814·=SIDUI V• Ivt G"~ .ndtr, 3 Years
112-3"~
• 8
1886 AQHA Big Sarrett lloro· otd, Uke Now; SIO&lt;IX Soot Out·
Sti~Add,..Md StomDOd En·
46 Space for Rent
-··co '"" pm
Big 1990 AOHA Chestnut Qotd! 111, Guido Tooto,_ Almoot 5K '""
val., No. 1G to O&amp;A Suppt111, 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
For Hie: Lacll• aiH 11, 'Camel lng; 2 Hcnt T.. u.r, N.w Paint, viUNI. Ofttrl ur Tradn ConP.O. Box 1443, Folrbom, Ohio
lkiw'td, 114-446-2308.
·
45324.
.
10 or 12 acr. t.rm land, excel· Country Mobile Homt Park, color wrap coat, never worn. $1,~15. 814411-1522.
Route 33, North ot Pomeroy. Atto, miUis alz• 14-18 d,..ay.
lont
toll
con
bt
lrrlgotod.
304VETERINARIAN.
79 campers&amp;
llodlcot rocoptlonltt tor prl&gt;ttt 576-2884.
loti, rontolo, porto, ooln. Coli ctothlo, very roooonoble. 114Dr. lUI C11nk, DVII. Llrgo
pr~clict In GaHipallt aru., und
614·112·111711.
112-Btlo
onlmol opoclaHy. 304-87J.m8.
Motor Homes ·.
,...,_ to Box P·21 ce~ Point Bulking lott,1 «rt and up, T-P &amp;
Ptaaoont Rogistor, 200 Main St, C wotor, Eoottfn Moll' Co., 48 · Equipment
Galllt nmbor Produe1t SpiM 304-875-1U8.
Polnl Plottoilt, W'12IUO.
Fl-ood Dollvorod, Wo Accept Cullom Ll-ock Hauling. Con Hunlorw Spoclt~ 9 112ft, tilde-In
mila olt SR7,. ,._A5HHp And Emorgoncy A• Hood To Hliloboro S.iot Dr f.o. t~k t~~mplf', refrlg•rator,
lor Rent
PHOTO TRIMMERS: Withlng to
st~v!._lcoUot, AC. turnoco, , &amp;14o
~·~tl14~~2~====~·-ct~l.
Chuck
Wllllamo i4NtM1
otort lmmadlotaly. Ho up. 3 lallflllolo (At. 35 W ~ontogo), Loa Splitter For Rant. Evtno :d~·~...
Mcuury. Earn up 10 $110 per
HAPPY JACK MANGE LO'IlON; Trl oc31.- k Trucking. 614rlvtlt, urweetrfcttd, ltnd con- llolo11, 614-441 ..tt2.
promo101 hitting and hllr 24 -5011.
dor, trimming phatogropho. 1· ract, 114-246-8448.
g-h to any mongo, hot opot Grain ted, young lrMZtr beef
800-3.-.
Services
or lunguo iln doai &amp; h011u holf or whola, S1.201b on tht ron"
Merchandise
RMidtnl: mtnagar, malnttnanct
withouf Conltonef SOUTHERN 614-8111-2785
Rentals
•
eo&lt;~lllo for oportrnont contllitK
STATES 304-87!1-Z780.
'
In Golllpollo. Full·tlmo witH
Home
Llmouoln Stit • t 11gltlorad 81
Mlnolto IlOilO Proloulonal :15 cowo
tportmont I .. IIHIH lnctudod.
51
Household
12
Stnto
croa
cowo
brod
lmproveme·n.s
Send ,..umt lo: lox 1320 41 Houses for Rent
mm camera: totally auto.,
Wtynaovlllt, NC 2878e. ,
IIVII'II ltrgl ........ MOO. l'f4,; ·to Limouoln bull, 15 112
GoOds
Llmouoln loodtro lnd nlco
BASEMENT
446-2713.
2 bdim houoo In Rutlond. $225
yaarllng . Umouoi..S.nto bulla,
TV REPAIR SUO por hr to ota~ month pfuo .. IIHin, dopaolt·tnd 5 pleco ot1 whhe BR oulto with
WATERPROOFING
11poriooeod only, HEC 311 W. ,...,_ r.qulrad, 114-992· maltr.u &amp; baz ipl'lngt. ldtal Roto Or lllee? In Your Houoo? ':!,1'!"' ~~ bocrouao ollnJury,. Uncorod"lonol ilfttlmo guoronlloln Sl, Pomeror, IM-112·3524 7503
tH. Local roloroncn tumlolood.
.
gilt for young lady. 814o441·7231. Buy ENFORCER, Klllo roto I 1
mlct In ontw- 1 fHding,
Frat Htlmotoo. Call colloc1 1·
Wanttd motivated uleepti'IOn 2 bedroom homo, nowlr Baautllul Solid/ Clak Dining GUARANTEED! Avolloblo ol: Pony I horoo lor ulo. CoM 114-237o0488, day "' night.
$26,00452,000 lot yaar,•tlllnlng dtcoraltd, carpet. ttc, rtftrenca Room Suitt, /Aim011 2 YN,.. Boum Trut Vtluo SIOf!r.11 Wnt onwtlmo, 114-441·11711.
llogoro loHmonl Wotorprawkled, tlperil('let pl'tt.rr.cf. &amp; d-'t, no poco. 304-87s.trt6Z. Old, Llko N•iiil St,loo. C.l Aftor
tlng.
lloln
Stioot,
Chottor,...,
Hay
&amp;
Grain
64
Hnd rotumo to Dolly Stnlinol.
4p.m. 614-441-Mit.
PO BOlt J211B Pomoroy, OH 3 bodroom unlurnlohod howo,
A1t1 Of' Mlct1 In Your HouH? ;;:::--::~=:-==-~ Compttto Mobtio Homo Stt.Vpo,
457U
507 2nd StrMI:, New Hlven, :J04. County Appllonco Inc. Good Buy ENFORCER, Klllo roto l Good oor com, 1000 ptuo Rtp.~lrti Comrntrlcal, Rlaidtn·
67!1-34U.
uHd oppllancao, T.V. ooto. 0oon mica In only 1 fOlding, buotooto, Col oftor "'"' or lotvo tltl lmprovnon1o. Including:
Wantod: Night tuditor, .moth·
I o.m. to' I p.m. llon ..Stl. $t4- GUARANTEED! Avtlloblo tl: t numbor. 614o245-M21. '
. PtYmblng, EJ.ctrietl. lnauranct
mttlcol okiUo hllptul~to 3 ·bidroom, 5 mllot out Stnd 446·11H, 627 3rd. A,.: Go(· O'Doll Trut Ytlut Lumbar, 134
Ctolmo Acctplad. 614·251·1611.
Hill
Rd,
304-87!1-88111
or
304•773Box CLA 101 o/o Goll
t 117,
Eoot Main StrHI. Pomoroy, OH
Gf11Und ohlll com, $110/ton 12
llpollo, OH
Tribune.~.,~~ Third ve., Go • 5874.
"""'nt FMd, $120/lon hay Curtla Home lmprovtmtnta:
llpollo, ..., 45131.
• 3 BR untum'ad houH: Chlthom Gino top kitchon 1oblo ond Sootonad Aolo, Ook, Hickory rollsl $25. Morgan Form, Rt. 35. Yuro Exporlonct On Oldor l
Flrwwood: Dollvorod I stockod. 304 .. 37-2011.
Homot. Room Additlono
Wort 1rom , _ ~eo · por 100 AM., no l*t, S210/mo, $100 chllro, SSG. 304.. 75-61111.
$55 pickup. Don Wauuh. ·614o
Foundollon Work, Roollng:
prwporlng moll. lnlormttlon dop. l14-44$-3117.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 446.f1141.
Hoy lot" oolo: $1.25 por lolio,IMo KHchont And Batho. Frot "E•
Hnd otomp to K.S. Entorprion
lll2·24tG or 1,._317·l'l18
WatMn, dryer8, re~ators,
tlmatnl Atfer-.cn, No Jab To
3 Room ~au• In town: waltr, I'O/IIIH. Sktggo ADolloncao Slgno: Portabto MorquH Chin·
P.O. Box llt57..JM'1osH~ide, NJ 1rooh
pild.' Soc. dop. roq'ad. U- Rlvor Rd. Bnldo StoM GHblo Lattor Sign Utt. Frao Hoy: Small bolot. Stturdoy only Big Or Smotll614-44to0221.
07205, Phono :101·
.
5175/mo. 114-441-lf72 or 441 · C1101 Motol. Collet4-441-T3!11.
lattertm.llvery. "PI18tk: letttra pickup. 304-87&amp;-1132.
F,..mon·o Plumbing And Hatt·
1034.
141.!0 bn lAA Slgno 1.50Q.
lng, 614-25&amp;-1611.
.
12
Situation
Now
.Fo""""
TobocOO
Hoapftal
rttriaerltora,
533-3453. Anwtlmo.
~BR
on
Lin&lt;Otn
Hgto.,
Worohouoo,
Ripley,
Ohio.
Silo
atOVt IOYeMaU nv1,. room
Ron'o TV Sorvlce, opocltlllfna
Wanted
- o y. 614oH2-718G a her oun 1-utllul chondolloro now Surptue Arrrrt Clmoullaugt Floor AYOiroga 111.14.06 No¥, 25. In Zlnllll 1110 wvtelng moal:
.f....,. _,. nttdad to 5:00pm
1
clothing, lnaulatld dacron Stlt Floor Avoo!i 51.84.14 Nov other brandt. MD'- caJJa, alao
call ng ton~. tl14.fi85-42Z7 '
c•rnoufl•uge coverah "'• ·130, 26. Will toll 4
auntli·
Mare aJMirlrnenl wllhl"'l other 3br HoUH 112 Milt From Clly
WV
LAYNE'S FURNITYRE
ltothor US Combat B -. Cor· Doo. 11. Coli
lo!:t 111:1-312· 304.S'PI43M Oh~ 114-441-2454.
glrlo, 5 min. 1rom O.U. compuo, Llmht, G~ School Dlllriet,
htrt
clothing,
otd
,,_
knllo
43115
ook
tor
Onrillt
Wlooion
or
coli 114ott2-8ZII or ,,._112•
~·lion-Sot,
horne 9-5.
tumlt~l~i:·
11
Room addH-, tiding, roofing,
Ro1tttnet~~"':
~5p.m.
A• Houro:
dtoitr. Stm 1kornorvtiio'o ~ idl.... lltyoo, 304-17!1-1861.
IOl7
qulrod.
I
5411fttr
vlrlyt roplocomont windowt,
0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllt Rd. dyotlllo WV loooldo FraoDollnl)'.
carponll)' bJ AI Tromm, I,._JII2.
Someone lo move In and ~p
Rt 21 N. Frl, lt1, Sun. noon-8:00
2328, CALL COLLECT
·
Tran
sportal
ton
PM
(ootltndad
houro
du~ng
wi1Mng
- ·lllddltport,
- · Inquire
PICKENS FURNITUR!
241 N. Third,
OH ot
hunting --~ 304:273-IIUI.
Dovlo
Sow-Voc
Sorvlce,
New/Uoad
Gtargee Cf'llk Rd. Parte, sup.
-hold
tumlohing.
112
mi.
14
Business
plloo, pickup. ond dollvory. 11471 Autoa for Sale ·
Goiilpotlo Forry, 2 otory,' 5 bod· Jo&lt;rlcho Rd. Pt Pltooont WV ~,:;lng
446~214 .
call
~7!1·14SO.
'
•
-!!..
dlth
•
:;::-::::::::--:::-:~~"::"""":
docodon,
Training
room, dining room, 1 bOth homo
docoder, 1,._112-em
1841 w11,. Jaop, .....,.,
with
tmoll
01or1go
bldg.
Near
Will
build patio covo11, docko,
'""Rtt_ro_,.ln-.;,l,;_lo.;,w.;,~I..ISout,:.._hlt_ot_tm ochoot f30G. month pluo
ftpe, 132 Buntm"' Ave.,
SWAIN
,
eeraened
rooma, put up vinll
WHITE'S
METAL
DmCTORS
Pomeroy,
1~25211
AUCTION
&amp;
FURNITURE.
12
........ Coiltgo, SjNing VoAoy utNitiH, rtforoncu tnd dotioeit
okllng • trollor okl~lng. 11 •
Ron AMioon 1210 Socond
Pt.... Coli Today, 814-441-435711 roqulrad, autoldo poco only, OIIYI Sl., Golllpollo. Now l UMd Avonuo,
.
1171 01do CuUuo, ptttlng out. 245.fll52.
Aogiotorotlon -12l!IB.
Hrlou lnqulrao only, 304-17!1- tumtturo, hltt-. Wtttorn I 446~331. Gollipollo,. Ohio, 614- 114-441-4862.
.
Work
boott.
614-4411-31!11.
7151.
Plumbing &amp;
18 wanted to Do
Uaod rofrlgonotor for Nil. CoR 55
Building
Lion, WV cal - - 1:00 All an•r
5, 114-318-1771
Heating
Will Bobyoh In lly Homo ond z:oo PM. 304 458 11011.
Supplies
Anr:me.
Rodney
A11o. Toklng appllcotlont for rontlna t
Cortor't Plumbing
YI'RA FURNITURE
Ao . , _ A•ollabtO. Coli 114- s.bclrm hOUM In Racine. $210
Fourth and Pint
Block, btlck, -or llipoa, win1
.
14H811.
r.~...,. and _ , I goo, &amp;14- LIVINQ ROOM: Solo I Chllr - · tlnlalo. ate. ClaW. Wln0:,~~:.:
$1H.OO· Rocllno• f148 oo: toro, Rio Grtncle, OH Coli 114~lttlno
,
my homo
Swint
hockor,
S99.6o;
CotrM
i
245-112~
llonifrt, tliytltlft only, ogtt 2
End T - . $88.00 Soi.DINtNG
l1ftd up. 11....._ t..Uiblo, 42 Mobile Homea
ROOM: Tobie WHh 4 Poddad 56 Peta for Sale
Etactrlcal &amp;
....71o4111.
lor Rant
Chllro, t148.00; Country Ptne '7.;;;;7-;fif.;~ih;;:p;
Ralrlgeratlon
Dlnotto With Bonch And 3 o,_ ond SUpply lhop Pot
Gn1 ... Portololoo s.-u'i
z bdrm mobllo homo lor - . Chtiro1• $288.00; llotciolng 2 Grooming. AD loieidt, otwtoo.
Raoldontlal . or comnwalol
=~~ tho Olll)uot
Door ~Hell $348: Or 1111.00 ltmo Pot Pood - r . Julio
Pomtror. lt1; Dok Tololo. 4zdz Wl1t1 • wiring,
.. "' .........
· can 114 m 0231, • ~ ~ric, ~.... Malter... UCIMMI ellctrlclan.
Bock
Cholra, 312~231.
Hotflt Clcan6ng lervlte. Itt ua
Aldonoitr Eloctrtcai, :104-671S82UO.BEDRODII: Pottor lad·
1711.
tlldiOCNii
room SUHt (I pa.), $341.00; 4 AKC Cllow puppln:
hold
~ Ihomo,
1175. ontl up por month Dnl•r Chlit, S44.ts· lunk lor Cli~otmio. $200. LAona ....
•lloRw 1:00PM llod. 11221LClorollioto ;'o~ IIIII tinct collo will bt dooiUctad
- ,· fable.
· DtrotRd~ I Corti•.
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Itt; 7 po, Cador with Ollo. l,....,.2352.
I o.oo. • 1:10 p.m. AMI ~-. Zbod _ _ _ l.,.,,
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pilpploo: lomtlo Ult
WIIDUil1.114 4411224. N1w In-- ~~ ~· , .. dlmogo ........
ko.m., 4 lllin 011 A- 7 On I - · $150. Collmomlngo I
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BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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A
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' . ~'Birthday
Dec. 4, 1111

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Do noi be iatlsfled with 1he alajua quo
In the year ahead: You're In a cycle
where It's
to elevate your llghll soct~~~y, financially end on the Job.
IAQITTA111118 ( - . zs.Dec, 21) If
tfttlre 11 IOmtlhing you need to get your
, head together lor, don'1 request advice
from ot,.,.,. Go off In solitude unlit you ·
get It oorted out yourself. Sagltllltlua,
treat yourself to a birthday gilt. Send fO.
S4lglttarlu1' Astro-Graph prodiCtlons
tO&lt; the year ahead by milling $1.25 plus

time

.

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.

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a long: self-addressed. stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o this nawapaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state your zodlac algn .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 11) Because you'll treat others In a warm,
friendly fashion today. you 'll be repaid
In the same way, A emile and a kind
word general• a tlmilar response.
ADUARIUI (Jan. »Ftb.11) Don't sell
yourself short In competitive developmentl today; the odda will be tilted
slightly In your favor . Capitalize on yOUr .
edge.
·
PIICII {Feb. »March 211) Believe In
yourMif today ond lhooe you'H be ,InVOI'Mdwllll. ijWr&amp;w lUll. YOUrfamJU!a
for IlK r ala focused on, "Yn, I can."
ARIEl lllatrcll 21·Aprll18) Abulineas
maner you're ln•otvtd In could take an
unexpected tum tor the bet1er today.
However, 10 get thlfl(ll mo'llng, 11'11 re- .
quire tiOm8 nudging on your behaH.
TAURUB (April ._..., 211) In sllua·
tlono of mutull d - I e ln1trft1, dlacull thlngoln defoll with your mate 11&amp;lore tilting action today. This will allUre
smooth reauila.
·oEMINI (MIJ 21-.lune 211) You're not

,.
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· ·~ - - -

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apt 10 have too much time to · play
ar!)und tQday; your aer)O\fS lnvol..,.
menta could be rather demanding.
lng productive will give you the graat•t
gra1111Catlon.
CANCIII {June 21 ....uty 22) Try not to
take yourself or things you' re Involved
In too seriously today. Becoming tense
will lillie your effactlvtneBa.
LEO (.IUIJ 21-Aug. 22) You may be able
to profit from oomethlng today that 11
ob'lloua to you but overlooked by oth·
en. Don't let their Indifference Influence
your relf)OIIM.
VIIQO {Alia. 21-flepl.
of a co--'Ctlr

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don't k.- If Leo Du.- knew llOw to 1P1i1
computer, but he hid 1 mind thet .nttd llk1 one." - Gent MIUCh.

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446-2342
675-1333
992-2156

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The other night, .in a quiz show on
television, a question was asked about
Well
Not'11t Eut
tbe nickname of an old-time baseball
player. I had no idea of the ans•er.
Pass 2NT
Pass
Dbt. Allpasa
But the nut day lsaw a tray featuring
Hall of Famers. There was my man, .
Opening lead: • K
nickname and all. sitting in the mid'
•
dle. Once you have learned something,
it often crops up~ again almost irnme- 1----~------..J
diately. The same is true with bridge
bands. You 'spot a card-play theme in
one hand, and anoth~r hand requiring trick ooe with dummy's heart ace and--~
led a spade to the ace, ~ling tbe ez•.·i:
the·same teChnique soon turns up:·
East's weak two-bid is hardly classi· peeled news. HiS only dl&amp;nce was to . cal. In fact, the hand bas such good discard a red-suit loser on the fourth : ··
playing strength in two suils that I round of clubs. Also West would have· ·'
to hold lour clubs; otherwise he would .~•
think the bid is inadvisable.
After South overcalled, North invlt· obtain a fatal ruff with tbe spade sev- :
ed a 1arne, while promising a heart en. Rubens cashed tbe A-Q of clubs '. ··
stopper, and South was happy to jump led a club and finessed dummy's 10~; ~
to four spades. West's double was in· When that won, Rubens discanJed his- ~ ­
advisable too. He bad no reason to ex· heart loser on the club king. The ~~e-· · ·~
pect to beat tbe contract, and his dou· fense Cllllld win only one diamond and ~~·
• ,,,
ble could only belp declafl!r with the two spade tricks.
Do you remember when last you
play of tbe band. .
South W85 Jeff Rubens, l:o-editor ol saw this tecbniq~? It was in this col ~ · ~
·
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The Bridge World magaziDe. He won umn 15 days ago.

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"SUBTRACt THosE THINGS

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GATHERING DUST,
"ADD,. DOLLARS

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offer

Puppln: Huoi&lt;Y And Shophord 11
Mix. 614-367-79ol7.
Help Wanled
Pure brld long COlt Chlhuahun
to good hom11, 304-e7Uit3.
f35MIAY PROCESSING
Rod
HMior,
roglllorod, PHOHE . ORDERS! PEDPLE
noutorad, good wHh pooplo ond
CALL YOU.
chlldrtn, 304.ati2.:!BII.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1.S00.255-024Z.
6 . Lost &amp; Found
CONSTRUCTION- Co~nto11 to
6Sll14 Bank rtpo, bly window, S22, Llliomo to tts._orywoll to
•• IIIII• 11 1307 down, " " $14.75, M._,. tnd Tondoro to
$22.50, CIII1-80Q.I82-2171
dollvory, 1&lt;10Q.837-6625
Found: IPPJOX. 8 moe. old
CONSTRUCTION
blo~iliwhlto
famolo dog In Corpontoro to $22. L l - to
Porotroy, 614-112·5118
$16. Drywall to f14.7!1. Mooon
and Tenders to $22.50. 1..aoo.
Fo.,d : Booglo In Rio Gnnde. 882·2171.
614.245-sgst ·

7

Autos lor Sale~

Will do Ironing In Porlor. 114- S275. month, proptrtJ dam1gi
388-ll't3.
.
dopoolt,l14-814-4353.

pllced.

2687.

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18114 Comoro, 1111. 114-311'040~.

2 bodr!&gt;Qrn tumlahod. with ·
waohtr l dryor, ,lorryo Run Rd

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Bwkl, 614·992-7609

LOST omoll brown fomolo dog
whh blut collar tntw.,. Cindy,
Reward, Southside, WV, 304615-4087.

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2br llobllo Hamo, With Got Hot1
Do Rt.5118, $2!10/mo. Pluo
~'posit,
114~1118 A11or
&amp;p.m. .
Bu!llness
'3 BR In country, no ptll. $200
Opportunity
mo. pluo dopoolt. 614-441-311117.
INOTICE!
Totaltltelrlc 2 lA, no ,.ta. 114OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 34;7·lll36.
rocommondt thtt you do butl·
nea with peopl1 you know and 44
Apartment
NOT to otnd monoy through thl
ll'llll until you have lnvtltfgated
lor Renl
tho offo~ng.
&amp; 2 bdrm
In Mlddl-~,
Condy and Snocko Vondlng Mo· 1Ullllttt
Fum, •p rtq, no ptlt,
chlnH. ,Eftven u·nlta, nine 614·1192·2218.

No Hunting or Trat palllng
anytime on R1ymond Smith

441-0417.

.

KIT ' N' CARl. YLEC•J by Larry Wright

Mobile Homes

Financial

anytime on Chai1M Yost farms.
Vlolatol'l will Dl proucuted.

Four klttono to glvoawoy. 614251·162G.
FrH pUpplea, Rac:caon Ad. 614-

.

'

TUesday; December 3,

lor Rent

Door oidnnod, cut, w11-;::
ovor 15 yro oxparlonca, I

4

.

Poineroy-:Middleport, Ohio

�Community calendar
- Col!!munity Calendar items
appear two dayS before au event
and tbe day or tbat event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

at-Sp.m.

TUESDAY
POMEROY • The F.O.E. Auxiliary No. 2171 Christmas dinner
will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT · Past matrons
of Evangeline Chapter #172, OES,
will meet at the home of Emma
Ciatworthy on Tuesday at 6 p.m.
for a Christm as dinner meeting.
Price of the dinner is $7.50. Dinner
wiU be catered by Gilmore's.

POMEROY · Application for
Chrisunas food baskets and toys
wiD be lakcn at the Salvation Army
in Pomeroy on Tue sday and
Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon
and I to 4 p.m. each day.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middlepen Masonic Lodge No. 363 will
observe Past Master's Night on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. wi\h work in
the Master Mason degree. Refresh ~
ments will follow the meeting.
POMEROY • The Am erican
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
will hold its annual Christmas dinncr on Tuesday at the post home.
Ail members are urged to attend
and bring a veteran as guest. Dinner is a 7 p.m. foiiowed by meeting

POMEROY • The Meigs Local
Band Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. in the high school·band

room.

at .7: 30 p.m . New officers will b_e
inslalied and a video of ~c Fesuval of Lights" will be tbe program.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees wjll meet on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at .the ruehouse in Reedsville.

,
~N~' Il ' The "Home for the

Holidays" noat of Farmers Bank which featured
the gathering of family and friends around a
Christmas tree won the trophy for the most reli-

LcM tonight near 10.
nul'llllay, Cloudy, CbaDCe ol.
SDOW 40 percent.

Vol. 42, Na. 149

Meigs County Chamber or Commerce, talked
about her job and tbe qualirlcatlons necessary to ,
work in that capacity. Emphasis or the career
program is to give students an insight'into possi. ble career choices for their ruture.

r

.:. •n

2

tives of major denominations and
indeperiden t ministries there. Also
during his visit, the Rev. Mr. Pangia preached in many of the local
churches each evening in the cities
of Managua, Estiie, Matalcapa, and
Leone. He plans to return to
Nicaragua twice in 1992. .

'til .'til 'til
2

2

r

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•

Chrlllm11
lr11flng Ellllon
I

Tu11l1y,

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With wreaths of holly and ·mistletoe, stockings hung
by the fire and scenes. blanketed with snow,
Christmas encompasses warmth and good cheer as we
cherish the blessings we've shared this past year.
For us it means saying ••thanks" to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always
treasure. Doing business with you is our
greatest pleasure!

Wish all your customers and
friends a very· Merry Ghristmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.
ADVERTISING
'
ASK FOR BRENDA OR DAVE
992-2156
.

,·

the enemy and· we're going to tree
our last captive, Terry Anderson,
thus closing this page in the
hostage file before glorious Christ-

mas.' '

The kidnappers said they made
these decisions despite what they
tenned effons by Israel to " put all
obstacles in the way of a comprehensive seUiement" of the hostage
issue. The slaiCment made no mentioo of two Germans stiU in captivity.
.
It was not clear why the staiCment was issued in Damascus .
• Born: Oct. 27, 1947,
Usually the kidnappers iss:-u~ie~~~::
muniques in Beirut h&lt;
In Lorain, Ohio
release.
• Abducted: March 16, 1985,
Anderson , wearing a dark
on a Beiru1 street after a
sweater and white shin, said before
tennis game
he read the slatem ent that he did
not agree with everything in it.
• Family: Slste_r Peggy
AfiCr he had read it, speaking in
has become the principal
a clear voice, he took his speclaCies
spokesperson for the families
off and put his head in his hands,
of U.S. hostages. Father
revealing a bald spot at the back of
Glenn and brother Gleim Jr.
hi s head . He appeared in good
both died of canqer in 1986.
physical condition. .
The 6-year-old daughiCr Ander• Oceu~lon: Chief
son has never seen, Suiom e, was
' OPEN HOUSE - In observance of National
gram is this year "marking its 20th year or operaMiddle East correspondent,
among loved ones waiting to greet
Home
Care
Week,
the
Home
Health
Nursing
tion. Growth over those 20 years has been pheAssociated Press
him in Damascus.
nomenal with over 20,000 visits being made last
Service of Veterans Memorial Haspita I hosted
Feiiow hostages ha.vc said -·an open bouse Tu~ aft~rnoon in their oflices
year to the .elderly and infirm . Here Elizabeth
• Ciuwi: Gra,du~ from .Iowa
Andetson; a tenacious rcponer, had - in·tl\e Meigs Medical Complex. The local proSmith, R: N., direl:tor or tbe department, setves
State Unlvetslty;·Marine
shown the same determination in
some puncb to Howard Erwin, Racine.
combat correspqnden! in
mainlaining their spirits amid the ·
Vietnam. Covered F.a~ East
despair of captivity.
and South Africa for AP ,
The uncertainty about And erbelore llrst Bairutasslgnment,
son's whereabouts was a shock
reporting on 1982 Israeli
after the initial rejoicing.
invasion of Lebanon.
"The first thing that came to my
mind is arc we back en another
Returned to Beirut in early
" .She had her knees up to her
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. had go ne out on th e town with
railer coaster ride? " said Jack
t 983 as news editor and later
Smith's
accuser
the
night
of
March
chest
and when we tried to talk to
LaVriha, head of the. Free Terry (AP) - Th e woman who says
chief conesJ&gt;ondent. Among ·
29,
testified
she
saw
the
woman
her,
she
would jump like she didn't
Anderson Committee in Lora in, William Kennedy Smith raped her
th&amp;first repqrters to reach
leave
a
disco
with
Smith
about
3
want
someone
to touch her " Ms
was hysterical and disheveled when
Ohio, where Anderson was born .
scene of Oct. 23, 1983 twin
a.m.
She
said
she
received
a
call
Mercer
testified.
' · '
"I am a liU!e surprised, l)ut not she left the Kennedy estate, a wittruck bombings of U.S.
The 30-year-old woman says
actually too surprised considering ness 'Said. Smith's lawyer attacked from the woman about 4: 15 a.m.
"
What
did
she
say
to
you?:'
Smith
, a 31 -ycar-old nephew of
Ma~ne and French peace·
the
witness
for
seUing
her
story
to
what's been happening for the last
asked
prosecutor
Moira
Lasch.
Sen.
Edward
Kennedy , D-Mass.,
TV
for
S40,000.
keeJ&gt;lng force hea~uaners. AP
6 1/2 years," he said.
"
That
she
had
been
~aped.
She
laCkled
and
raped
her on the lawn
"You realized you could cash in
Continued on page 3
on the Kennedy name," defense asked me to come and ptck her up. of the Kenn edy family' s Palm
attorney Roy Black challenged the She said she was at the Kennedy Beach estate March 30. The
eslate," Ms. Mercer said.
charges could bring 4 1/2 years in
witness, Anne Mercer.
Ms.
Mercer
said
she
arrived
prison.
"No, I did not," she said
CINCINNATI (AP) - The recently adopted city rules th at an annual nativity scene sponsored adaman~y.
with h ~ r boyfrie nd , whom..th e
On cross-examination, Black
city's downtown houday decor will require displays in a public forum by a life insurance company. The
woman
had
asked
her
to
bnng
for
asked
Ms. Mercer why , if she
Courtroom speclators gasped at
not include a Christmas cross from to be removed by I 0 p.m . and KKK did no1 pian to burn either the S40,000 fi gure, the amount she safety."
.
.
believed Smith was a rapist, she
the Ku Klux Klan..
replaced no sooner than 6 a.m. the cross because city law outlaws received for her appearance on the
When they arnved, she satd, the walked through the mansion alone
The city has rejected the Klan's next day, Rowe said. The KKK open burning.
·
tabloid TV show " A Curren t woman was slanding at the top of with him , then down a dark stairrequest to place a cross on Fountain was allowed to display a 10-foot
an outdoor stait:t:ase.
well onto a deserted beach in
The Park Board of Commission- Affair."
Square for the holidays. But Public cross on Fountain Square last ers is reviewing that application
"She was literally shaking and sea rch &lt;If the alleged victim 's
Ms . Mercer, a 33-ycar, ol d
Works Director George, Rowe said Christmas.
,
,
and should decide in it within a few friend of Smith 's accuser, was to she looked messed up," said Ms. shoes.
.. T_ucsday that officials are· consi~er- '
The Klan did not want to ·have days, board spokeswoman Jan·Sei- continue·tcstifying today.
Mercer. " Her mak.eu p was r.~n "You asked the rapist to help
·' ' ing ibe KKK 's requ-est to display a to remove the cross every night, del said.
you find her shoes? Is th at corOn Tuesday, Ms. Mercer, who ning. She was hystencal crymg.
Rowe said. Ron Lee, a local Klan
cross at another park.
.
rcct?"
Black asked.
A court order has allowed a
1
1
The request was the latest in an spokesman, did not return a tete- Jewish congregation to set up a
On cross-examination. Ms. Merannual Christmas holiday tussle phone message left with , his menorah on the square for
ccr ack nowledged she was paid .
over displays on Fountain Square.
answering service Tuesday.
S40,000 fo r two "Current Affair"
Hanukkah, which began Sunday.
, ,A Jewish congregation was
The Hamilton-based U.S. The eight-day holiday celebrates
interviews but said... , was fair to
allowed to display a 10-foot meno; Knights of the Ku Klux Klan also the Jews' recapture of the Temple
both panics involved." Black sugrah there dunng Hanukkah.·after have applied · for permiss ion to of.Jerusalem from the Syrians in
ges ted she tailored her story to
. WASHINGTON (AP) - The about the sour economy, but lhe intrigue TV producers.
winning a long federal court fighL
erect a cross at Eden Park, site of 156 B.C.
,
The K.I.an ' s
conflicted with
·
sudden exit of White House chief options at his - and Congress' of staff John Sununu from the disposal arc fe w.
political slage opens the. way for
The last th ing Bush needed in
President Bush to move ahead on a such an environment was backbitvariety of fronts without sniping ing from his own advisers - and
from fellow Republicans.
evert from some Cabinet members
And even th ough Sununu 's - over Sununu. 'who managed to
departure won'rmake much of a aliena te even many members of the
difference to most Americans, spur Republican right wing, from whose
the economy or affec t Bush's ranks he emerged.
slanding in public opinion polls,
~'I t 's defini. ly a .catharsis,"
said
William Schneider, a political
analysts suggested it lifts a huge
'weight from the president's shoul- analyst at the American Enterprise
ders.
Institute. " Bush was quickly getFor one thing, it frees Bush to ting the message that there were
name hi s re-election campaign tremendous numbers of Republiteam. Bickering between some of cans who did not want to work
the top contcslants in that race and with, around or for John Sununu."
the abrasive Sununu had held up
The former New Hampshire
DAYS UNTIL
such an announcement. Sununu governor, a Washington outsider
even
to
the
end,
chose
to
deliver
his
had been expected to play a major
CHRISTMAS
role in the re-election campaign.
resignation to Bush while they
Aides said they expected Bush were both out of town, handing u
'
to nam e both a replacement for to the president aboard Air Force
"
p~isoners
f:;}t .• : r'·
Sununu - widely expected to be On e durin g a vi sit Tuesday to
'
Transportation Secretary Sam Florida and Mississippi.
Skinner - and then his re-election
Sununu told Bush in the fivecampaign hierarchy within days.
page handwritten letter that he
With Sununu gone, Bush also didn 't want to be " a drag on your · Meigs Cou~ty Sfieriff James M.
was getting something of a fresh success.''
Soulsby reports that his deputies
sian to deal with domestic issues
Bush accepted the resignation, transponed three prisoners to the .
- or at least to make his OWl! mis- praj.§iog Sununu for having "laken Orient Correctional Institution on
• lakes.
a lot of hard shots that would have Tuesday.
Rightly or wrongl y, Sununu landed on my chin."
Roger Dent and Milce Sltoemat.
COOKIE TIME • The Big Bend Service session on Tuesday at the Pomeroy village haD, 7
increasingly had been blamed by
A sigh of relief went up back at er had been sentenced by Common
p.m. All cookie chairmen are asked to attend. In
· Unit of the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council is
many Republicans for what they the White House, where Sununu Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow
addition to the seven kinds or cookies sold by the
preparing for the annual Girl Scout Cookie Sale
saw as a series of White House had few fans among the presidcnt;s Ill on drug trafficking charges
scouts in years past, there will be a new cookie,
· .. to be held Jan. 17-Feb. 3. As county co-chairmissteps on the economy.
.
s1aff; and among Republicans on wh.ilc Mike Shoemaker was found
golden nut cluster, avaUable this year.':rhe price
. man or the sale, Patty White, left, and Pat
The president has been under C ap i to ~ Hill, where Sununu also gu11ty on a charge of felonious
will remain at $2 a box.
·
Thoma, will be conducting a cookie sale training
assault.
enonnous pressure to do something had few boosters.

say

Prosecution witness at Kennedy
trial got $40,000 for TV i~terviews

Wh
- It·e. HOUSe c hIe f 0 t•
S.taff Sununu steps down

•

THE DAILY SENTINEL
,., 7'lltl t

By EILEEN AL T POWELL
Associated Press Writer
DAMASCUS , Syria • The
whereabouts of Terry Anderson,
the last American hostage held in
Lebanon, were clouded in confusion today despite earlier reports
from Arab ,and U.S. officials that
he was safely in Syri an army
hands.
Anderson, The Associat~ Press
chief Middle East correspondent
who has been held 6 1/2 years by
pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim extremists in Lebanon, said in a videotaped slatement that he was to be
freed. The tape, released by his
captors to The AP, gave no indication of when he was to go free.
American, Syrian and Lebanese
officials initiaUy said Anderson had
been freed and turned over to Syrian troops in Lebanon. Later, however, Syrian Foreign Minister
Farouk ai-Sharaa said, "We hope
he will be released this evening the sooner the better."
A five-p~ge Arabic language
slatement from the Islamic Jihad
group which has held Anderson for
2,455 days announced that the AP
correspondent would be set free,
but its wording was unclear as to
whether he had already be·en
released. In the accompanying
videotape Anderson spoke in the
future tense, saying he would be
freed.
The situation was further confused by repons of bad weather and
snow along the highway from
Beirut to the Syrian capilal, the
route to freedom for previous
hos1ages.
The Arabic-language slatement
from Islamic Jihad said: "We have
seriously made efforts to close this
lile in the past year ... After finishing several stages we decided to
separate the issue of our captives
from the hostages in t.be prisons. of

KKK won't have Christmas cross in square

•

Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion. The
noat won the tr~phy for the ''Most Christmas
Spirit."
.

Journalist said safe
in Syrian Army hands

.

l1~em61t 14

..

2 Soctlono, 14 Pageo 25 -Ia

A MuiUmedJ. Inc. New ....per

Anderson released; Whereabouts uncertain

Stepb1en }Jysell and Jared Wamer, tie for ~ird.
The winners, all students or Ed Bartels s•xtb
grade class, display their posters.

. ter to lake medicines, Bibles, and
rcligicJIIs materials into the countty
without having to go through the
delays of customs.
Highlights of the trip included
pastor conferences with more thll!l
live hundred senior pastors, a leadership breakfast with representa-

,.:.. IJ!'itr •ilr 'til .~($

.

•

as a part of the open house and here Bobbie
Karr, left, Helen Blacks! n and Edison Baker
look over the wide variety or items on display.
Refreshments were served during tbe.evening.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 4, 1991

Terry Andmson

Michael Pangia, pastor of the
Rejoicing Life Church, has
returned from his third trip to
Nicaragua in the past year.
While there he visited with the
president of Nicaragua, Mrs.
Chamarro, who shared infonnation
on the needs of the people there .
and gave pennission for the minis-

HERE COMES SANTA! • The crowd was
llgbt and tile rain !Ieavy at times, but notblag
stopped tile arrival or Santa In Middleport Mooday nl1~t. He came In a slel1h crea.ted by

2-D, 2-S

Copyrighted 1991

para~e
entry
Mo,nd11y night. Several bank employees, the•r
children and ·grandchildren rode on the attractive float.
·

Pastor Pangia returns from Nicaragua trip

Arts Council staged an open house Monday
night as a part of the village's activities to usher
In the holiday season. A craft fair was included

Cards: Q-H, Q-C,

. POMEROY • Meigs County .
PERI group meets at I p.m. on
Thursday at Senior Citizens Cemer.
All members are urged to attend
this, the last meeting of theyear.

winners in the recent
contest
by
Meigs County Litter Control were
tbe left,
Cbad Folmer, .first; Vincent Broderick, second;

6E~~ ~n1&amp;~~-1r~h:e~Mfddleport

_ Pick 3: 327
Pick 4: 11508

PageS

RACIN E · Southern Junior
High Boosters wiii meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Junior High
RUTLAND • The Rutland
School. Proposed bylaws will be Township Trustees will meet in
voted on and iniCrested persons are regular session on Thursday at 6:30
urged to attend.
p.m. at the Rutland fire slation.
Public is inviiCd.
POMEROY - Applications for
Christmas food baskets \"ill be
RACINE - American Legion
taken at th e. Meigs United Post #602 will meet on Thursday at
Methodi st Cooperative Parish at 7:30p.m. at the post.
311 Condor Street in Pomeroy on
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
PORTLAND • Evangelist Jerry
from 9 a.m. until noon each day.
Cottrill of Palestine, W.Va. will
speak at the Stiversville Word of
WEDNESDAY
Faith Church on Thursday at 7:30'
BRADBURY · The Women's p.m. Pastor David Dailey invites
Fellowship will meet at the Brad- the public.

CAREER DEVELOPMENT PROJECT •
As a part of the ongoing career development
· project at Salisbury Elementary School, Elizabeth Schaad, Meigs Co~nty Economic De.velopment Director and the Executive Director of th~

Ohio Lottery,

MU's
_Bartrum
honored

l)ury Chweh of Christ ·on Thursday ,

•n

2

tar til 7'tU , 't;W' 'lfiiiD 'ft1r 'ft'l t
•

•

..

•

tit'

11

Three
taken to Orient

J

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