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••

-

December 5, 1991,

eferans
lack orrespect fot flag -

Class to help
neellyfamilies

The explanation of recent
money grants from the Ohio
Department of Education to the
schools in Meigs C()unty was the
topic of the annual Chrisllll8S meet•
ing of the American Legion Drew
Webster.Post No. 39.
Grants coordinator for Rio
Grande University,John Redovian,
was the principal speaker. Fifty
three members attended the annual
event and were treated with a
turkey and ham dimier.
·
A concerned discussion was
held by members att~e lack of
proper etiquette the public shows 10
the nag of the•United Stares. ·Members of the honor guard complained
that men are not removing their
head cover and not saluting the Oag
as it is passed in review. Other
members tated at sporting events
and other events where the Star
Spangled Banner is sung and at
nag raisings many do not remove

The Golden Rule Sundgy
School Class mel for its November
meeting at .the .home of Dale and
Marjorie Walburn.

!herr heiJ\1 cover. The C?mman~
noted at a ~nl event m Georgia
one couple d1d not even sta.nd.
Respec_l for the Oag of the Untied
Swes 1s not .to be left up to verer:
ans of con.fbcts l)ut.l_he duly and
respons1bibty of all c111Zens:
Post 39 has .reached theu quota
for membersh.lp f?r. 1991. Every
veterans who IS ehg1ble for membership in the American Legion is
urged to conlaCI a Legionnaire to
disucss membership.
Plans for a new outside sign at
the post h?me ~ere disc~ and
are proceding With that proJCCL
Commander Weeks stated he
was looldng for sires in POmeroy
for a possible proposal for a new
post home. The accessibility of the
present home is a concern for some
members.
The next regular meeting will be
held Dec. 17.

Gallia Twirlers Western Square
Dance Club will hold a dance on
Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m. at the
Henderson Community Center in
Henderson, W.Va. Roger ·Steele
will be the caller. AI! western style
square dancers are invited.

Vol. 42, No. 151
Copyrighted 1991

The annual family Christmas
pany of the Modem Woodmen of
: America, Camp 10900, wiD be held
·Saturday from 4 to 6 p.m. at the
· Lion's Club Hall, Main and Third
Streets, CoolviUe.
.,
. The Camp wiU be serving oyster
·coup, cracker, relishes, hoJ dogs
. and beverages free of charge. Each
·family is asked 10 take a deuen to

share.
. The annual Community Service
Award will be presented along with
. awlld! to the 25 and SO year memben. New oflicen will be elected
and a general business meeting will
beheld.
.
A "shlrinJ colleetion" will be
taken to provide Cluisunas basketS
for the peedy.
.
The program will include acarol

SJOg, M WUill iu)tU $.:l."1t~ with tre8U
fo~ the child!en, and enrertainment

• by members.

•

Buy any Top

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens,
who chose not to seek another term
of office, was honored by Syracuse
Village Council Thursday night for
h1s 19 years of dedication and
devotion to the village. ,
In honor of the occasion, Pick- ennvas presented a plaque from
council. Refreshmevts were served
to those attending which included
his wife, Mary, son Eber. Jr .•
grandson, Jordan, his daughter and
son-in-law, Debbie and Tom

or Pants

•

Get
One.
.
I

1/2 Price
(eqHI or lesser value)

Buttons and Bows
100 E. Main St,
614·992·5177
Pomeroy, Ohio

CRAF7S GALORE. Trolley Station Crafts
has opened on Diamond Street in Middleport,
with open house hours sel for Sunday from 1
p.m. to 5 p.m. To date, 43 crafters have offered

CHRISTMAS AUaiOn

DECEMBER 6 - 7:00 P.M.
SYUClJSEAFiRE STATION

Stock 1111251,2 doors, 4
drive, 6 cyl .. air, &amp;land. Iran&amp; ..

Spon8ored by the Syracuse
Fire Deparbnent

.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..__.

WAS
'10,900
0

Lowry ~ Bill Roush, newly elected
During a brief business session
council member, Bob Wingett, for- Dennis Wolfe, co un cil'mem.ber,
mer council member, Mr. and Mrs. reported that caution signs are
Gene Imboden, members of the rue needed for highway work.
Since work along the highway is
and emergency squad , Council
~ members, Jack Williams. Kenny
usually difne by employees of the
Buckley, J1m Pape, Jamce Wolfe, Board of Public Affairs, it was
and Katie Crow, and Janice Law- determined that the sign should 00:
purchased by the water board ~
son, clerk-treasurer.
Williams asked Mayor Pickens Lawson, Who also serves as clerk·
what were the most memorable of the water board, is to notify the
events in his career as mayor: Pick- board that the signs are needed and
ensciledthebuildingofthemunic- should be purchased as soon as
ipal building and the widening of ·possible.
Conlinued on page 3
State Route 124 in

handmade items for sale in the shop. Pictured
with one or the seasonal displays in the shop is
Manager Patty Pickens.

has new

craft sJiop·

WAS
'7995

•

'

.Middleport

PB, AMIFM sterno tape, bucket!
seals

TOYS, TOOLS and fUN

2 Sections, 14 Po goa 25 cent•
A Mulllmodia Inc. No.,.paper

Pomeroy~MI(Idleport, Ohio; Friday, December 6, 1991

'

Tree packets available
applies in semi dwarf size.
Orders will be taken until March
10 or until quantities run out. All
packets have been .prcorden;d.and_
when quantities run out 'there will
be no more.
To. place an order, stop by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District Office, 33101 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy, or phone 9926647. All orders must be prepaid
before the order will be counted.
Trees will arrive in the spring.atthe
proper planting time. All packets
must be picked up at the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation Dis,lrict Office when you are notified
that they are ready.

·,

·.

Pickehs.honored·.
by Syracuse Council

TEACHER AWARDED GRANT • Patricia Shrlvers, titlh
grade teacher at the Chester ·Elementary School, was recently
awarded a Martha Holden Jennings lll'llnl In the amount of $3,000.
Science and math instructional materials have been purchased ·
with tbe money and will be URd Ill a dlslrlct-wide resource center
by the district's elementary teachers.

six, was presented a plaque on behalf by cound
by the Jim Pape, mayor-elect~ Joining Pickens
on lite special occasion w.as his wife, Mary.

..

s·Wisher·Lohse
Pharmacy

laj:oe, ·112 ton,

long

widobod,rearslapbumper, gauges,
. slidit&gt;g roar glass.

NOW

WAS
,,995

87' 919

Prices .~od through Monday, Dec. 9

..

(

"'--

.

.

• ""'

!'

. -y ,/

·\

'

-

I

0

DR•.GRABOW

NUTS

PIPES

FRESH FROM OUR
MACHINE

~10°/ooif--

Get 2 Ounces FREE

WHITMAN'S
SAMPlERS
I Lb. Rtg. $6.85

$484

- 2Lb:Reg. $13.85

$959

ONlY

ONLY

- ·-

-,

WIND SONG
SPRAY COLOGNE

-

COMPLETE STOCK

30°/o OFF ·

~

0

.---Local briefs----.

CHRISTMAS
M&amp;M's ·

ALARM CLOCKS

I.SOL .
Reg. $4.95
$3.69

ONLY

.

Income tax update meeting Dec. 16
991 FORDAER

PEANUT- 14 0~

•

REG. $3.23
$219
ONlY

Stoek116690, VAN, 6c:yl., ~r. au.,., PS,
PS, poweroir&lt;Jows,_.locl&lt;s, tiltwl1rJa,
cru~e. AMI!ill rill~. radiiJs, budwJ seas.
roar win. delog., rear wiper, king wide bed,

,gauges.

Holiday party set

Saturday, high In upper ~Os.

Savin·gs from Santa

TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup-

LONG BOTTOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Chu1th in Long Bot·
tom will bave a hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve l{eed
in vires the public.
'

Low tonight In mld-JOs.

Page4

ar

The Mei~s Soil and Water Conservation District Ladies Auxiliary
is Jaldng orders for tree packets and
ground cover plants for the 1992
planting season.
Packets available this year
include White Pine, 25 for $7;
Scotch pine, 25 for $7; Colorado
Blue Spruce, 25 for $7; Canadian
Hemlock, 10 for $6; Japanese
SUNDAY
Snowball,
10 for $6; Japanese
CHESTER -"A Great Joy," a Snowball, 5 for
white flowering
Chrislmas canuua under the direc- , dogwQod, .. lO $4;
for . $~; fruiuree
tion of Sue Matheny, will be prefour for $20; crown vetch,
sented at ML Hermon U.B . Church packet,
72 for $21; English ivy, 50 for$15;
on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Rev . . paC'hysandra,
50 for $15; purple
Robert Sanders invites the public.
winter creeper, 5() for $15; and
American wildflower packet, one
POMEROY • A 12-step AA ounce
for $2.50.
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
The fruit tree packet contains .
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
· two each of Smoothie and Cortland
Second Street in Pomeroy.

FRIDAY
POMEROY • The Enterprise
United Methodist Church wiU hold
its annual bazaar on Friday at the
former Main Street Pizza location
on Main Street in Pomeroy from 8
a.m. 10 1p.m. .

pers Plains V'f'W- Post-No.-9053ind Ladies A~Piliary will sponsll" a .
:dance on Friday at the post home
. f~ to 11:30 p.m. with music by
CJ. and the .Country Gentlemen.
The public is invited to auend.

Cards: 1-H, 1-C,
A-0, 5-S

•

POMEROY - The movies,
"Laughing Gas" and "Paddinglon
Goes to the Movies, " will be
shown·on Saturday and Sunday at2
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy and on Monday 81 4:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Library.

10 attend.

-l--· - ·~
· l'!f:i~~f~

Pick 3:351 ·
Pick 4: 5766

girls
triu_mph

A potluck meal was served by
John and Glenna Riebel, Jean
Thomas, Donna Grindstead, Dale
and Marjorie Walburn and guests,
Gene and Zelma Gray.

POMEROY • Meigs County
PERI group meets at I p.m. on
MIDDLEPORT • The PresbyteThursday at Senior Citizens Center. rian Church in Middleport will
All members are urged to auend have its annual "Craft and bake sale
this. the last meeting of the year.
on Friday and Saturday at the Sears
Store in Middlepon from 10 a.m. to
RUTLAND - The Rutland 5p.m.
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session on Thursday at6:30
MT. UNION • Rev. Calvin
p,m. at the Rutland fire station. Evans from Channel 13 will be
Public is invited.
holding services at ML Union Bap·
tist Church on Friday and Saturday
POMEROY - Girl Scout Lead· at 6:30p.m. Rev. Joe Sayre invites
ers meeting, investiture and Cluist- the public.
mas Party will be held on Thwsday
SATURDAY
at 7 p.m. at Trinity Church. Those
altending should bring a Chrislmas
POINT PLEASANT • The Libornament for exchange and a cov- erty Mountaineers will perform at
the Senior Citizens Center in Point
ered dish.
Pleasant on Saturday.
RACINE - American Legion
Post #602 will meet on Thursday at
SALEM CENTER - Star
7:30p.m. at the posL
Grange and Slar Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
PORTLAND • Evangelist Jerry grange hall on County Road I near
Cottrill of Palestine, W.Va. will Salem Center. Second degree will
speak at the Stiversville Word of be conferred in full form. PoUuck
Faith Church on Thursday at 7:30 refreshments. All members urged
p.m. Pastor David Dailey invites to auend.
the public.
POMEROY • The Belles and
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- Beaus Western Square Dance Club
ty Senior Center will have a holi- will hold a dance on Saturday from
day open house on Thursday from 8 10 11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
4 to 7 p.m. Entertainment of old Citizens Center with caller, John
time favorites and holiday music Waugh, from Gallipolis.
will be played by Junior and Rita
HENDERSON, W.VA.· Tile t
White, AI Windon and Bill Ward.
A S p.m. a brass ensemble featuring musicians from Meigs and
Eastern Instrumental Music
Departments will play Chrislmas
music with the Tree of Lights to be
lit at 5:30 p.m. Refreshments will
be served and the public is invited

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
: a clothing .giveaway at the Mt.
;.Moriah Baptist Church in Middle·

-'"'~ Meigs

John Riebel presided at the
meeting in which·members decided
to recommend to the church that a
Christmas card tree be constructed
to display Christmas cards from
each church family. The class also
decided to help needy families for
Christmas.

CHESHIRE -'Free clothing day
will be held at the old high school
building in Cheshire on Friday
from 9 a.m. to noon. The day is
sponsored b,y Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency.

POMEROY • The Eight and
Fony Meigs County Salon No.'710
will meet at Craw's Family Restaurant on Friday at 6:3(tp.m. for the
Christmas dinner. Guests will be
Dawn and Heather Friend. There
will be a gift exchange and bring a
gift for Heathe(.
·

Ohio Lottery .

..

·..

The Meigs County Health~
De~enl will, offer lrig~ycer,!de~
cheCks on Moildlly fJom 8:45 am.,
to 12 .noon. The; finger-suck rests:
will be given by appointment aJI\I,
anyone interested should con~·
the Departmen~ 992-6!126. C~t ~
$5. Results will be avliilable w1thm
minutes after the test.

D~votions were given by Mar-.
jorie Walburn with readings entitled, "What is a Gift?" and "God's
Footprints."

Community calendar
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees will meet on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the frrehouse in ReedsviUe.

............ _.department •
to -offer triglyceridet ~ _

~~~ SJ3,999

EARRINGS

AMITY BILLFOLDS

ClARA

COMPUTE STOCK

MH's &amp;Women's

E11u de parium spray

"h

1.12

/~ PRICE

.9SOL

.

s
1·
1
29
ONlY

.... $15.00

PRIU

f

lllsel, Garl11ll, 0111MIIIs, Llg.ts

~PRICE

IBOPAID lAVE!!

-

-··h Moe-.......
Cll.... - ....
...... ...........
'"'*'

I'll.,

Mon. ttwu a.t. 1:00 e.m. ID 1:00 p.m.
10:00 a.m. 10 4:00 J!om.
PREICIIJI'TJOIIII
iiH. 112-21111 ·1
E. Main
frii!Miy ._...
OH.

Pam-.

W.lll

..

ow.

·:~~

•8,41&amp;

By YURI KAGEY AMA
Associated Press Writer
TOKYO - Efforts collapsed
today to pass a parliamentary reso·
lution of regret for Japan's World
War II aggress1on i.1 time for this
weekend's 50th anniversary of the
Pearl Harbor anack, lawmakers
said.

1981 DATSUN
PICKUP • KltiG CAB
Stock t 20m, 4 cyl. diesel, stand.
trans., AMIFM I18JeO tape, bucket
seals, 1121Dn.

WAS
'1995

CHIISTMAS DECOUTIONS

NOW

Slock 1 16500, 4 doors, sedan,
front wheel driVe, 4 cyl. , air, auJO ..
PS, PB. power windOws, till wheel,
cruise,AM/FMradio, radials,bucket
sealS, rn• win. de~

· NOW

•1,491

WOALD-111 .

Stock I 115271 , 2 doors, 6 cyl., air,
auto., PS, PB, power windows,

power seat, power locks, till wheel,
cruise, AMIFM sterno tape, bucket
lUll

WAS
1
' 4995

NOW

84,498

i

Ill I Y l'l/111', A';() IOIJAY
'

"We won't do it. There were
just talks," said Takas hi
Hasegawa, a former justice minister and senior legislator in, the governing Libctal Democratic Party ·Of
Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa.
Ha segawa said he and other
conservative lawmakers stron gly
oppose such a resolution because
" there is no need now for the loser
to apologize to the victor."
In explaining why the resolution

fail ed to gain support, Hasegawa
said that Japan, like the United
States, should forego apologies for
the war. He praised President Bush
for saying Sunday that the United
Statl)s will not apologize for dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
Other party sources said they
were too preoccupied with dom estic affairs to reach a consensus on
the wording of the resolution by the

1•;,; 9····4 •1 .
0

I

•

'•"

,

'

'

•

There will be an income tax update meeting on Dec. 16 at 7 p.m.
in the VoAg classroom at Meigs High School.
· · ·The meeting will be conducted by Glenn Graham, Farm Business Planing Analysis consultant from the Adult Serv1ccs Department of Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD and Don Davi s, Farm Business Planning Analysis instructor from Tri-County JVSD. A ~y persons iiuerested arc urged to auend.

Lackey renamed to board
Glenn Lackey of Stewan.has been re-elected to his fourth threeyear term on the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation Board of Trustees.
The election was held Wednesday, the second day of the OFBF's
73rd annual meeting at the Ohio Center in Columbus.
As a rrustec Lackey will represent Farm Bureau members in
Athens, Gallia, Lawrence and Meigs Counties.
Lackey runs a 1,400 acre general livestock operation . He has
been an active member of the Athens County Farm Bureau, serving
as a member of the board and three years as county president.
Lackey is a member of the Athens County Cattlemen's Association. Mid-States Wool Growers and the Athens Sot! and Water Conservation District. He and his wife, Bonnie. arc the parents of one
son.

No one hurt in 3 accidents

· Three' accidents resulling .in ley, Pomeroy . .Pollee repOrted that.
damage 10 all of the vehicles but no 11awley backed the 1988 GMC van
• ':1:
·~· ~. ':·"·
• •.
.,.
_ .injuries por citations were jnvesli.- . into t~e Hawley car, _There was
gated by Pomeroy Police Thursday light damage to the right side rear
· Presldilnl ~t!lstvett . ~·
afternoon.
ofthe van.
.
.appeals to Japan's emperor
The fli'St occurred at 12:38 p.m.
While Pomeroy police were still
rorpeace; a Japanese l~vaslon
Thursday at 102 .East Main Street. on the Foodland ~arking lot, anethtore$ sails ioward the Plllllpplnes. . Thelma Miller. Syracuse, driving a . er s1mtlar acc1den1 occurred .
In ~urope, the Sovlels send lhe
1984 Oldsmobile, backed into a Roberta Cowan, Mason, W. Va .,
weakened Gennaris reeling wnh utility ·pole while attempting to driving a 1981 Ford backed into the
a pOW.I(UJ anack alon!l 500 miles park. There was moderate damage parked car of. John Proffitt,
to the rear of her car.
Pomeroy, a 1986 Dodge. There
ol .the oehtrawont.
At 3:14p.m. on the Foodland was l.ight damage to ~he right quae·.·.
parking , lot, the parked 1884 ter panel of the Proff1tt veh1cle and
'. ..
Oldsmobile of Shari Eblin, light rear end damage to the Cowan
• 'Souroo: 'World Almanac Book or WOrld War tr."
Pomeroy, was struck in the left side car.
811011 Bi&gt;al&lt;oCorp., 1981
rear by a van d!i~en by Lois Haw D!lc.6

Dec. 7 anniversary.
Failure to pass the resolution
would be particularly embarrassing
for Fore ign Minister Michie
Watanabe, who said this week it
was certain to be adopted and
called it "a milestone."

,.

·DAYS
19 UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

Miller rep to visit Pomeroy
A representative from Congressman Clarence Miller's offtce will
conduct an open door session from II to I p.m . Wednesday in the
Pomeroy court house. Anyone with questions concemirig the Federal Government is invited to stop by to d1scuss them wnh the represemative.
Continued on page 3

�,.

.

Friday, December &amp;, 1991

'-~.

·commentary

Saturday,~.7_
Aceu- Weathe~ forecast for · .

Page-..-2-The,oany ~ntlnel .
. Pomerc&gt;y~lddleport, Ohio.
. Friday, December 6, 1991 . .·

.'

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

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Conlroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

.

AMEMBER of The Associaled Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
lhc American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are_welcome. They should be less lhan 300
. worc4 _long. A[l !etters lij'c.Jiu_bjcello-ediling and must be signed.wilh name, .
address and telephone number. No unsigned tellers will be published. Leuers
should be in good lasle, addressing issues, not persona61ies.
.

~Fourth

'

Amendment

By prohibiting "unreasonable searches and seizures," the Fourth
Amendment deals with very-significant needs and rights~of-the people.
Here, too, there had been abuses of government power prior to the Revo·lutionary War when British soldiers and customs officers made general
'searches of homes and buildings looking for smuggled goods without
judicial aulhorization.
.
.
· The Fourth Amendment undertook to spell out the nght Englishmen
had long proclaimed that "a man's home is his castle where even the King
'may not enter."
.
-· The essence of the Fourth Amendment is that, before law enforcement
·'officers can make a search, they 'must have a neutral judicial officer
·decide whether there is some good reason for it. The Amendment is very
1)0inted in requiring that a warrant be secured from a judicial officer "paroticularly describing a place 10 be searched and the persons or things lD be
seized."
To satisfy this requirement, a law enforcement officer must convince a
• neutral judicial officer that is reasonably likely that evidence of a crime
-such as stolen property or illegal drugs - will be found in the place
·aescribed in the warrant. In modern times, the Fourth Amendment has
been applied to search techniques that the Framers could not have envisioned, including aerial and electronic surveillance, wiretapping, and drug
Jesting in the workplace.
·
•. By preventing the government from conducting a search and invading
·acitiZen's privacy when there is no reasonable basis to believe that the
•
·!lcarch is likely to produce evidence of criminal

Where were you
on Dec. 7, 1941?
,- By WALTER R. MEARS
"· AP Special Correspondent
", WASHINGTON - It seemed
t'edundant, typical Jerry Ford talk,
for the president to say twice in ·a
·sentencethathc'drcmcmberPcarl
Harbor. But a dwindling generation
~ Amcricims understands exactly
.~hal
he meant
by it.
,• . "We
who remember
Pearl Har'II a1
be " p ·
bar WI
ways remem r, res•·
dent Ford said on an earlier
anniversary of the surprise
d
Japanese attack, one hour an 50
minutes that changed the world 50
years ago Saturday.
So it is for the fifty-something
and older Americans to whom the
sneak.air raid against the U.S. Occt
was a shared, galvanizing event,
· - eiChed into memories, no maucr
~·~ow far they were from Hawaii and
~: the suddenness of war on Dec. 7.
~~ 1941 .
.
~~~ . AbQutth:cc-quarters of the cur: ~nt populauon was bom after th~~
i date _that Will hve 1? mfamy •
~1 Franklin D. Roosevelt s phrase to
"'' Congress when war was~cclarcd
;I the next day.
..
~~ Th~ word most people got first

Nu~n. D-Ga., the chairman of the
Senate Armed Services Commiucc.
"I regret the nccdJor this letter and
the breach of trust with the committees," wrote James F. Boatright, ,deputy assistant secretary of
the Air Force for installations. Boatright assured Nuqn. thatthe Ait
Force would lllke steps to "prevent
any future recurrence."
· ·
In this case, Congress should
·follow the Reagan axiom of "trust,
but verify." As we have reported
in the past, the Air Force has jug·
gled the books before, devising
ways lD build new golf courses and
bowling alleys and skeet-shooting
ranges with "maintenance" funds
after Congress ordered a cutoff in
construction funds for new ri:cre·
a tional facilities.
Our associate Jim Lynch has

BILL OF RIGHTS

As interpreted by jeff Mac~elly, SHOE cartoonist:

AMAN'£. V&amp;!?K

1~ J.ll~ CA~T~E.. !'

;

;

'

1.

..

-'i
- 0

•·
AMENDMENT IV. Right of search and seizure regulated:

Wh a t' s .the sp· Ifl
• •t 0f Ch. flS
• tm

and Dale Van Atta

IMansfield. I 54•1•

learned that when the auditors
landed at Hickam Air Force Bas~
in Hawaii, they discovered the
extent of the secret renovation .
.scheme at.the three'story headqlllU"·
ters building with 10 wings. A sim:
pic, 50-year-old building was being
-turned into digs the likes of which
IDe average soldier never sees: -carpets , wallpaper, wooden baseboards and oak chair railings
1
around the walls.
And, instead of pulling the work
out for a construcuon bid by civilian contractors, the Air Force
shipped 500 of its own handymen
- the· Red ·Horse Civil Engineer: - -·ing Squadron - . from-Osan 'Air
c Force Base in Korea to Hawaii .on
' 'temporary duty." Officially, the
mission was called a "lr.!ining pra:
jcct."
.
. .
Tbc Air Force claimed it was
just trying to save money, but irr
doing so it may have "unfairly
competed with private commercial
sources," the auditors said. And
then there-is the-little problem-of
justifying how the project contributed to the training of the unit
for its ''wanime mission.''
Since seeing the audit, the
House Armed Services Committe&amp;
has demanded a full accounting by:
the Air Force of its creative finano-.
ing.
.
Nobody in the Air Force is rush-:
ing forward to take responsibility.'
But top brass had to be aware of.
the paperwork twrations to make: ·
the project look like many small•
maintenance jobs. McPeak was not:
available for commenL
The official Air Force line is'
that the building needed to be:
remodeled. Now the Penlllgon must·
determine if the Air Force violated :
its own regulations in doing so. ·
CORRECTION - Our recent
column on how the "sovereign:
immunity" doctrine of the federal
government protects federal work- :
crs from having their wages gar- :
nishcd when they lose coun judg· ·
mcnts, co ntained an errot We '
reported lhat the doctrine ex nded
JO stu~dcnt loans and that f deral :
employees who default on hose :
loans could not have their wages -'
auached to force them to repay :
Unlike other court ,
against
federal workers, :
1
a small percentage of the employ- -'
cc's wages can be garnished for the •
rcp_aymcnt of federal student loans. '

1•Ig ht.s.?

Sa ..ah·Qve ..'Street

!

w·II
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
R
.
.
?
I red~st·ric·t••ng' _
m
· ak·e·. " osut·.. retire .•-· ~

~:~logan

Robert]. Wagman -.

:!:

I
•'I

l

!!: _

I

.:,....,oday 1•0 hi•story

!

I

-· t_' ________.. -- - ...... _( - .

.. .,t._

MIC!:I._~

By Jack Andersoil

as we go 10 meet the foe.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
"Let's remember Pearl Harbor, searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause,
as we did the Alamo ... "
supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or
Ford's repetitive 6pcning line on things 10 be seized.
Dec. 7, 1975, a1 ceremonies on the
monumentabov'ethcsunken bauleship uss Arizona, reflected the
.
~~
times of which he spoke, not the
~
stumbling
Some very bright people have and I'm prou_d of their resourceful- 'signs on businesses. These new
dogged
him.syntax th at sometimes
r,
r,
H'
turned
my
neck
of
the
woods
into
ness.
Thousands
of
shoppers
miJ)&lt;e
lights
arc
just
business,
too.
-Thcir
e was c1oquent that morning. an enchanted 'orCS!. H•'lls and val- the P•'lgrimage to our lights and . b 15
.
beef
.
Christmas. lights need the indi;
"Whoever watched the Pacific
''
JO to
up our economy.
viduality
of every person who buys
churned by' winds of war comes 10 lcys twinkle like a miniature Lionel spend their money with us, and
Christmas lights were the lights
and
strings
them, not city work
train village throughout mjlcs of people have jobs who would not my parents and my friends and 1
this hallowed place with feelings southwest Missouri.
otherwise. Next year there will be drove to sec in residential neigh- crews to put up identical lights over
overcoming words," Ford said.
They call it the "Festival of more of both, and the next year borhoods where each f~mily said identical po_les, or businesses who
Bush goes there on Saturday, to Lights" and for the second year it even more.
something about itself by its deco- hire lighting d&lt;:signers to enhance
the USS Arizona Memorial, the began in early November, first th&amp;And it truly is beautiful. As I rating. They arc the lights I sec at their images. Those displays can be.
ship where 1,177 American seamen giant sno,wOakes ap~ng on uti I- drive home, a corridor of the·giant my friends' houses during the holi- · aesthetically beautiful and worth
were killed and all but 75 arc ity_poles, then strings of sparkling snowflakes lights my way along days - not because they are part seeing ... just not cnou~h for some:
entombed. A tollll of 2,403 Ameri- white lights spreading along out- miles of a major thoroughfare. of my childhood or because the one used to seeing Chnstmas lights
cans were killed in th e bombing lines of commercial buildings, then Lights line all the -shopping malls, lights belong to people I love, but that bring a personal message from
:
and strafing by carrier-borne 10 the huge coll!red rooftop cxtrav- the gothic bed-and-breakfast on the because they arc put up with pur- tile people who put themup.
If the prospect of an electrified;
Japanese auaekers that Sunday ·aganzas on the giddiest businesses.
old convent grounds and the woods pose and the best emotion s we
winter wonderland and lots of
morning. Nineteen U.S. ships were
It was the brainchild of local behind it. Even our zoo is done up share in this life.
shops
gussied up in expectation of
sunk or dama ged, 188 warplanes business people who were search· in lights, and as I pass it on my way
They can symbolize religious
destroyed.
ing for a way to rev up declining out to my country borne, cars in sentiment or just the simple recog- your arrival appeals to you, then by,
Forty-four months later, Japan holiday-shopping revenues, as well front of me turn in to tour the nition that once a year w~ _cclebrate all means come on down . We 're
surrendered on. the deck of the bat- as create year-round employment "Christmas Extravagimzoo."
the joy of caring about and being prcuy. But if you want to see:
tlcsHrp USS M1ssoun , now m Pearl for seasonal employees left out in
I'm glad for all the folks who've wilh each other. They can be strung Chri stmas, do yourself a favor.
Harbor for the ceremomes.
the cold in our heavily tourism - come here to ooh and aah, all the on trees in small cafes or beauty After you 've gone to the biggest
YJ Dny, for v•ctory over Japan, dependent economy. They fash· employees with much-ncedpd jobs salons or at office parties - last . mall and taken the majestic drive.
I b~rad~o, ofa sn(Cak_atlllck.thcysa_w wa~ Aug. 15, 1945 . But. the ionedit fromthcexample·ofanoth· and all the busincsscnharwill yearlcutoncofmytrccsandtotcd down snowflake lane, head into
1 later 1R bl~ck and whue _p ho·
anmversary that lives •s the stnke er community that d•d the same prosper because of this. But as I it and my lights to town for our some nearby residential area. We ·
1 to~raphs and n~wsreels .. h1t the
that began the war, not the v1ctory thing when their normal industry puss the snowflake chain, I am office party - just as long as still hang our lights for the pleasure:
and those of you·
mam.
l
and
and
mrun
streets
.m
.
a
way
that e~dcd •t.
. failed.
cold. They arc just ·
to me, the they' rc put there so .others can of our
1
.J.__ ~,_the _Instan Lc_
o l.o uclc.n s ton_oL .--M1sstate -the -YJ- da te-and- •t - -(rwas-sound·economic·thinkmg;-samo-.as the -traffic -li ~hts·-ancl·nclon--en ii)V·thenn""·--.:...·----~---&gt;~mu: ~""~-JJJ~,___..u,u_,~e.JJ.uu.uwYjl___ _
•'' today's crises docs not match.
might draw a lcuer or two. When,
'
~I It was a defeat that became a as a candidate, Bush crr~d on Pearl
in Pearl
the war
it ignited
Harbor,
!herenncj_gasps
was an instant
wave
..
Y':lrememll!;r
Harbo_r:,_
_ . _of
)llurmurs
in an JlUdi·
_
_ !.W...AA. _
__
.
_ ._
"'-.;~ Presid'cnt l)ush was 17 at iliC cnce.ofvetemns.
~:·time. "Prior to the atlllek on Pearl
It was Sept. 7, 1988, and Vice
CillCAGO (NEA)- In a stun- nario.
.
One thing is certain: More lhan_
'
~·'Harbor, I remcmber·a general con- President Bush was addressing a ning reversal of fortunes, Illinois . · Currc~lly 16 of .Illinois', 22 ·a few'ihcumbent Democrats will be
1•: cern ·over world events," he veterans' convention in Louisville. Republicans - with the help of House members are Democr&lt;tts. calling the moving van as they represented by fellow Dep,oerat ·'
•'i recalled. "Parents would talk about "I wonder how many Americans three Reagan/Bush-appointed The plan Republicans were pushing change their place of residence, George Sangmeister. Even though :
the troubles in Europe and we remember today is Pearl Harbor judges - have handed Democrats in the legislature would have split looking for a clearer path back to
Sangmeister is only in his second :
~~! would discuss world events in Day," he said. "Forty-seven years their worst redistricting defeat in the new 20 districts 10-10. W~at Capitol Hill.
term, he is poP.ular, and the new i
~~~ school,
ago to this very day we were hit any state in recent memory. ,The the panel has given the GOP is a
For instance, Southern Illinois district is heavdy suburban o;- not 1
•! "But somehow, being so far and hit hard at Pearl Harbor and we . big question is whether the results map that very well could result in ··· Rbp. Glenn Poshard has seen his to Chicagoan Russo's liking. So 1
~ away, we never thought war would were nor ready."
.
will cause powerlul House Ways Illinois having 12 GOP congress- 22nd District disappear, divided up
:: come directly •to the United
Alerted by the incredulous reac- and Means Chairman Rep. Dan men in 1992 compared to only 8 · among the 19th, 20th and 21st Dis- Russo is moving into a district now ,
represented by fifth-termer Willlam 1'
•' StateS." .
tion, he corrected him self: "Did 1 Rostenkowsld to retire after 17 Democrats.
..
tricts -,- all. represented by ihcum- Lipinski, setting up ~Yhat will likely ,
j~ -Jt was an awakening, too, for say Sept. 71 Sorry about that." terms.
'!Jie .~w map th"?ws SIX Demo- bent' Democrats. Poshard's only
a very ugl'{primary bailie. .
boys who would be too young to Bush said later he'd been trying to
This year !Uinois must draw its crati_c 10cumbents 1010 th~ sam.e choice is to retire or to take on become
But
the
most interesting situa· :
::1 fight in World War II as Bush did, ad lib the Pearl Harbor reference new House district boundaries ll•s~cts and sets up pot~nual pn- either Rep. Jerry Costello or Rep. ' tion has developed
Chicago. 1
;~, but old e11ough to talk of war in the into his speech, and misspoke.
based on losing two of its current manes between ~l?se fnends and Terry Bruce in next year's primary. There the new map hasinsplitl4-ter·
•!corridors outside their school·
For that Dec . 7 is not a date to 22 House seats. It is also under a colleagues. In ad~IU~, at.least four That prospect . has downstate mer Frank Annunzio's district 11
~. rooms, and pretend at' recess that be forgotten. Bush says it was the federal court mandate to create a other Democrauc d•str•C!S have Democrats wincing.
. between districts now represented :
::(hey were soldiers or airmen.
day he decided to enlist. Within new Hispanic majority district in been weakene~ to the pOint th~t
In the Chicago area. nine-term by two longtime Democratic pow- ;
the Chicago
area. and
When
Demo- 10cumbents m1ght be defeated 10 incumbent Democrat Marty Russo crhouses- Sidney Yates and Ros- •
' •', Band 1eader sammy Kaye wro tc ·two years hc was a Navy p•·1ot, shot cratic
Assembly
thethe
Republi:
has been put into a' district now tcnkowski.
~i: a mania! song about it, and every- do~n, rescued by submarine, and cal\ Senate and governor reached 1992.'
:
. ~·· body knew the words:
dehv.ered safqly to U.S, soil.
an im~. the decision was turned
'
"Let's remember Pearl Harbor,
At Pearl Harbor.
over 10 a ducc-judgcfedetal panel.
,.l
- ~-- -r
Both Republicans and the
r-----~~~~~
HEY\
!GoST IT! '
YEAH, .
•
Democrats submitted suggested
WHAT
Tl-lEN '!'AXE'
eur WORJ&lt;ON
;:' : , .1.1
. .
'
maps. The panel - all Republicans
ISlH
A61G
NAIL
'·
·
appointed
by
either
Presidents
ReaNEW~F£RS.
1
ANDA
gan or Bush -!hen heard tcstimoITPR/f.'5.
HAMMER
1'
By The Associated Press
ny and presentations. In the end
~j Today is friday, Dec. 6, the 340th day of 1991. There are 25 days left
they swept aside any Dcniocra~cANOPUNCH
tfOJ.£5/N
"1 ·m lhee rc-"· ,
.
suggested plan and adopted the
THE CAN
: • Today's Hlgblight in History:
most Republican plan berore them.
• i ' On Dec. 6, 181l9, Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of lhe Democrats cried foul, calling the
I Confederate Swes of America, died in New Orleans.
decision "completely political."
j • On dill dale:
.. ,
GOP strategists rejoiced while
,:: In 1790, Congress moved hom New York to Plriladeloltia.
adm iUing the approved plan was
'1:~ 1884, Anny engineers.completed conS!n!Ciion ot the Washington
even more favorable than they had
1/! ., IIIICIII, 36 yean aller lhe COI'IICISiolle was 181d.
·
hoped for in their best-case see-

I

cciodltions and

Did-the Air Force bend its own spending rules?
WASHINGTON_
· Tlie Pen- Force, and p;;rsonally modcied the
lagon is conducting an internal Sl.S million prototype thatlook.ed
probe to determine whether the Air like a knockoff of an airline pilot's
Force ducked the spending rules suit. .
with a $5 million, first-class reno"I think our people ought to like
vation of its Pacific headquarters in the way they look in a uniform,"
Hawaii. Part of the ruse i'nvolved McPeak said to justify the expense.
an attempt to number the wings of Perhaps _he' feels the. same way
the huge headquarters as 14 sepa- about offices.
rate buildings on the local realAn Air Force audit completed
estate records so the massive earlier this year concluded_that the
remodeling project looked like a service should have asked
series of smaller maintenance jobs. Congress for new construction
The fancy footwork took place funds to finance the project. But
when Gen. Merrill McPeak was Congress might have sai.d no.
commander of the Pacific Air Instead, the Air Force robbed liS
Forces from July 1988 to October own operation and maintenance
1990. McPeak is·now the top dog kitty and passed the work off as a
-chief of staff of the Air Force- series of smaller ''maintenance''
a job where he has Cl)ntinued to projects.
show-his preference ·rorform-o-vcr ·- The "Air-Fotcnec'ently senr-a substance. He rccen~y ordered the leuer of apology to Sen. Sam
design of new uniforms for me Air

·---:&amp;.I.. •. - --..'t-----.I '
· __'-- · - · ,·----~
___ ·-. _

. ~

t

-------:;;~_;.
..
_ ,_:,_~ ...._.::__,,_~··-· -· u

IND.

•t Columbusls4•1

. By The ASsoCiated J'rtss .
The National Weather Service
said things will tum a litde Wfltlller ·
for the weekend in OhiO. Tht mild
temperatures will be brought on
southwesterly winds created by a
high pressure system developing
over the Great Lakes.
.
Highs both Saturday and Sunday should be in the upper 40s or
· 50s. Lows will be in the 30s and
low 40s.
Some parts of northern Ohio
received a .trace qf snow. overnight ·
as a cold·front moved across the
state. Westerly winds accompanying the front gusted to up t_o 50

mph.
.
'
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weaiher
~tation was 70 degrees in 1956.
The record low was 3 in 1977.
Sunrise this m·orning _was at
7:39 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:06
p.m.
Around the natiqns
· Snow fell early ioday in the
Northeast as a storm. system that
brought freezing temperatures and
heavy snow to· the Great Lakes
region traveled eastward. Clouds
covered much Of the rest of the
nation.

· Temperatures began warming Michigllll.
_ ·. t - ·
..
today in Michigan, a day after a
Clouds covered the Pl~s;- dr~
foot or snow fell on the state: In Southeast, the Midwa&amp;. lhe South,
Marquette.c)n the Upper Peninsula, west and lhe West COUL .
;
the mercury dipped to 11 below : The high temperature for lh1
zero early Thursday; 13 degfl:(:s _ nation Thursday waa 78 .depees id
lo'pl'er than the old record set in San Gabriel, Calif.
:
1984.
r
High temperatures !Qday were
In Wisconsin, where high tern- expecte4 in the teens and 20s in die
peratures Thuisday reached only northern part or the Oreat .I,akes
mto the 20s, an ice jam caused the · region and New England; the 30S
Wisconsin River to overflow near and 40s in the Plains, ihe MidwesJ
Port,age, strandin~ about five fami- and the Northeast; the_50s in thf
lies in their rivers1de homes.
Northwest, the mid-A~Iic SIB~
it snowed this morning in parts the Rockies and .the sOuthei'Jl p,arJ
of New York, Massachuseus and or the Midwest; and the 60s
70s iii the nation's soulhern half; ... _.

and

Racine Council seeks new fire equipment ·

Stocks

Racine ViUage Council voted to
Council authorized its clerk 10 Holman, Beegle and Wolfe, were
seek new flre equipment when they bill Letart Township for its fire Councilmen Bob Beegle, Henry
Ashland Oi1 ......................271!4
met in reg~lar sessi~n on Monda~.
contract payment. It was noted that Bentz, Ron Clark, and Jeff ThornAT&amp;T .. ,.....................,.......371!8
Counc1l authonzed F1re Ch1ef Suuon and Lebanon Townships toiL
BlU)k One ...................., .....461!8
John Holman to order flve sets of made their payments in .October
Bob.E~lii1S ...... .,.,,.,, ., .. ,..... 3!8 _ _ _l!lrQ·aut g~!ffor the__cj~JIJII'J.!11!l!l!,__ s)Jo__r_t!y ..a!JeLr!ll:•iviug .Jhe_t~.~~armmg_ Shop.......... ........23 5/8 and askc;ct Holman to apply for _a money from the co~nty audiiOr.-- .
. fC kens~-:.
Clly Holding ............... ...... \6
brush fne truck from the Oh10
Street Commissioner Olen Rizer
.
Federal
Mogul...
................
l3
3/4
D~~ent
of
Nat~l
Resources,
reported
t~at
~ver_the
.
weekend
.
C~nllnued
from page l .
Ice
Sunny Pl Clpudy · Clc&lt;Jdy
Goodyear~&amp;R
.........
,
....
,
...
48
Dms10n
ofForesti')i.lt
was
report·
someone
rui&lt;l
me((
m
secr-w-to'lhe-Wtlharnsagreed
to secure ·pnces
Via Assodaled Pttts Gtapl'ic&amp;Net
Key Cenwnon ;... ;.............. 14 1/4 ed at this week's meeting that vehi· · wooden snowman on S!lite Route for the purchase of.filing cabinets .
4nds' End ...:,.................... 26l\'! cles are available for the fire 338.
and a typewriter. Buckley reponed
L•m•!ed~c ....................... 261/8 departments since cutbacks in the
Inotherbusiness,council:
that Bob Mathews, Syracuse, has
Multimedia Inc.................. 20 3/4 state budget have closed various
- Authorized the clerk to transfer offered to reset the tombstones at
·South Central Ohio
Sunday through Tuesday:
Rax
~estaurant
.................
5/8
forestry
~tions.
money
in the general fund and the snowball ~etery . C~ncil
Fair
on
Sunday
and
Tuesday.
Tonigh~ clear. Low in the midRobbm~&amp;Myers
................
34
Counc1l
elected
Ron
Clark
and
water
fund
to balance the appropri- the work w1~l be don~ mn !th~e~:~e---!
.
Chance
of
rain
Monday.
Highs
irt
30s. Saturday ,_par.tly_cJoud.y_and
-Shqney
s
lnc.~
................
~O
3/4
Henry
Bentz
to
represent
counc•l
ation
·irems·
- - - - -Mayor PICkens-WJII s·
upper 40s or 50s Sunilliy and Monwarmer. High in the upper 50s.
Slllr
Bank
·;
.......................
..
26
1/4
on
the
1992
Firemen's
bependency
Hono;ed
Councilman
Larry new mayor, J.im Pape, and
day and mostly in the 40s Tuesday.
Extended forecasl:
Wend~
lntl...
.....................
9
1/8
Board.
Rank
Johnson
and
Doug
Wolfe
with
oyster
stew
served
by elected counc•l members on
Lows in the 30s or the low 40s.
Worthmgton Ind. ............... 20 1{1 Recs were elected by the fHc Clerk Jane Beegle. Wolfe did not 30.
Stotk reports are the 10:30a.~.
department. Those four members seek re-election 10 the council, and
The mayor announced that
quotes provided bY_ B/~nt, Ellrs
will elect the fifth member.
his term ends December 31.
Santa Claus will be at the municiand Lqewl ofGalllpolls~--- · - H~lman reported-that'he· had: ~Kdjourne&lt;lwlth the ul\du-- · pal building ~n Dec~ 22 t~ ·give
Continued from page 1
rece1ved w.o rd from the Darley · standing that any necessary·busi- -treats to thech1ldren of the vdlage.
Com~any that it will ~umish a 1992 ness will be conducted on Monday,
Santa's visit is being span~
chass1s at the 1991 pnce for the v1l· December 16 prior to the annual by the fire department. Donanons
!age's tanker truck, since it was - Christmas party for village offi- for the purchase of candy are being
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that deputies
that company's fault that the truck cials.
.
accepted and may be sent to th.e
Hallie Cross
from his department probed three deer/car accidents on Thursday.
order was not filled.
Auending, in addition to Rizer, fire department.
At 5:20p.m. on State Route 681, Joe Loftis of Pomeroy was
Survivors of Hallie Cross, 91, of
westbound when he struck and killed a deer that ran from the left
Sixth Street in Syracuse, who died
~eigs-anliouncements.
side of the road. Heavy damage was sustained by his 1990 Oldsmoon Thursday, December 5, 1991 at
bile.
Holzer Medical Center following a
and a $3 gift exchange. All mel'!!Chester Trustees to meet
Veterans Memorial
At 7:10 p.m., Kenneth D. Kirk of Langsville was traveling west · brief illness should have included
bcrs
are urged to attend.
.
Chester
Township
Trustees
will
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS ·
on State Route 681 in Salem Township when he struck a deer than
24 grandchildren, 41 great grandhold a regular meeting on Monday
carne from the right side of the roadway. Moderate damage was list·
children and four great-great grand- Tracie Westjohn, Long Bouom; at 7:30p.m. at the Chester town
Racint Lodge to meet
.
Net!ie
Barnhart,
Pomeroy:
Luther
ed to his 1985 Chevrolet.
children.
The
Racine
Lodge
No.
461
F
Bartow, Long Bonom; Beny hall.
The third accident occured on State Route 681 at II p.m., when
and
AM
will
meet
Tuesday
at
7:30
Young, Long Bo\tom.
Leslie Stomns of Albany struck and killed a deer that ran into d1e
Lighting contl'st
Marvey Carsey
p.m. Officen will be installed and
THURSDAY DISCHARGES ·
path of his 1975 Chrysler. Moderate damage was reported.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners refreshments will be served followEdwin Bumem and Belly Temple· encourage all citizens of Rutland to
ing the meeting. All master ffiSSCJI!S
Marvey Carsey, 87, Columbus, ton.
decorate with outside lighting for are invited lD attend.
·
died Thursday at his residence.
the holidays. To spur participation,
Holzer Medical Center
A
retired
employee
of
the
B
&amp;
Yule party Monday
At 10:59 a.m. on Thursday, Racine unit went to Valley Bell
Discharges Dec. S - Melanie winners will be chosen in both reli0 Raiiioad, he auended the Colum·
Annual Christmas party of the
Road. Lillian Proffiu was taken to Veterans M~morial Hospital and.
Arnold, Mrs. Charles Bump and gious and non-religious categories OH KAN Coin Club will be hell!
bus
South
Church
of.God
and
was
later transferred to Holzer Medical Center.
Dec. 17. All homes wW1in vilpreceded in death by his wife, son, Minctlll Davis, Michael Laud· on
At 2:08 p.m .. Syracuse unit went to Seventh Street. Christopher
lage
limits will be considered by Monday at 6 p.m. at the Masoll
ermilt, Mrs. Michael Ohlinger and
Hazel.
Family Restauranl in Mason, w·.
Meldau was taken to Veterans. At \0:50p.m., Racine 'unit went to
daughter, Harley Payne, Pamela .the judges.
Surviving
are
a
son,
Charles
Va.
Front Street and took Michael Ward to Veterans. At II :42 p.m.,
Rhodes, De,lores Suravce and Ray
Carsey
of
Columbus;
four
daugh·
The club members met recelllly
Pomeroy unit went to Mulberry Avenue. Helen Reynolds was transPythians to meet
ters, Mrs. Marvin (Mary) Hayes of Unklesbay.
for their 350th monthly mee1ing
ported to Holzer.
·
Births Dec. S - Mr. and Mrs. -The Rockland Temple No. 618. and auction at the Burlccu Barber
Orient, Mrs. Joseph (Marie) Arick
On Friday at 3:07 a.m., Pomeroy unit went to Spring Avenue for
Robcri Chapman, _son, Oak Hill. Pythian Sisters, will meet at the
a report of- smoke at the Roy Stobart residence. No damage was . of Columbus, Mrs. William (Myr- Mr. and Mrs. Wilford G•llel)l, hall in Long Bonom on Monday Shop in Middlcpon. Plans were initle) Carson of North Canton; and
tiated for the organization's 30th
reported.
· with a po~uck dinner at 6:30 p.m. annual spring coin show, Marc)I
Mrs. Lloyd (Ruth)... Brooks of , daughter, Wellston.
Coolville; II grandchildren and 12
22, at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.. :
great-grandchildren; niece s,
nephews and many friends, includ·
B.UC.A[N MT INE£ 5 SAT\IIIIIU lo SUNIMY .
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
COLONY THI::ATHE
BOGAUI HIGHT nJ(SOAY .
ing John Gillispie.
{~J OA Y GIFT CEifJFICATES ll)j AYAIWL[)
446
4524
"
:.::
:.
:"
Services will be 10 a.m. Man·
FIL THIU THUIS.
day in the O.R. Woodyard Co.
Chapel, 255 E. State St., ColumBy The Associated Press
so-called "gab" or dating lines. It bus, with Pastor Aibert Newsome
AT&amp;T said it is refunding about docs not cover sexually explicit ofliciating. Burial will be in Forest
$2.8 million to customers nation- "900" services, which the New Lawn Cemetery. Friends may call
ivide who were billed twice for York-based AT&amp;T banned three at the chapel from 7-9 p,m. SaturOil~ SIIOW 1:3t
day, and from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
calls 10 cerlllin 9QO numbers, pub-. years ago.
n s!Oisu•
lished reports said today.
Ms. Dube told The Plain Dealer, Sunday.
44Ht23
The Columbus Dispatch and however;-thal. she believed the douThe Cleveland Plain Dealer rcpon- ble-billing occurred on nO!l·interac".. .A funny Qnd
Mary Holsinger
ed in today's editions that 150,000 live 900 lines. ·
mot•ingfamtl)'
to 216,000 residential and business
The double-billing occurred on
Word has been received of the
..film.'
. ....
customers would receive refunds or calls made betiveen April 25 and death of Mary Jean Holsinger, 65,
credits on their bills.
June I, when AT&amp;T inadverten~y of Rich Hill, Mo ., formerly of
AT&amp;T spokesman Stu Vosler sent local telephone companies Long Bouom. Mrs. Holsinger died
said the average refund would be electronic billing records for pay- on Sunday, November 24, 1991 at
about $10, but some would range per-call services, the Ohio Office St. Joseph Health Care Center.
as high as $600.
·of Consumers' Counsel said ThursSurviving arc her husband, ClifPhyllis Dube, an AT&amp;T day.
ford Holsinger, also of Rich Hill; a
1111111.1 l i IIIIIIU Ill
spokeswoman in Columbus, said
The OCC ; the state's utility brother, Harley Smith of Raymore~
Thursday that "we will either.have watchdog, learned of the problem Mo.; and four sisters: Gertrude
credited or sent refund checks to all when a customer of General Tete- Gillespie, Foniana, Kans., -Maxine
of the customers affected" by the phone Co. complained about $80 in Westfall, Rich Hill, Mo., Vivian ,
end of the week.
charges on his November bill. He Laughlin of Garden City, Mo., and
The double-billing was for 900 said he already had paid for the Ernestine Hayden, Peculiar, Mo.
--·services-ealted·Multiquest;the·Dis,- calts:--- ··
-----·-·-1-- .,
patch said.
.Consumers' Counset·William A.
Multiquest includes calls to a Spratley sent a letter to AT~'I'offi- ._
wide variety of intemctive or tWO· ·ctals Wednesday asking that an
The United S~tes won the most
r
~ · '
·
.
·
·
medaiJ
overalliiiatHavana,
the 1991 cu6i;-W'
Pan Amer·
-way •nes or-m.ormatJon on spans,- - 10sert. ~added to customer bdls~ lean Games
i!bstocks and entertamment as well as explammg .the ~roblem and how 35z. Cuba, despite winning the most
the money IS be10g refunded. The gold medals only had a to~\ of 265·
consumers' counsel also wants to third-place Canada-had 127.
'
TI~e Daily Sentinel
~ YOII' New Home NOW.
be informed of the progress of
(U8P8 IIS.1180)
Tlke Delivery IX Your New Home
refunds and correction of the
Pub1i1hed enry al'teftloon , Monday
billing error.
·
B«we~~~.Jaft. lstand Mlrtb31..
lhrv111h Friday, IU Court St.. l'ommJY,
Vicki Leach-Payne, OCC's conOhlq by lhe Ohlq Volley Pubtlohlng
1992 ADd ~ve Y011' Special
•'" Company/MqlUmedia Inc., Pomeroy,
sumer services director, said the
WinlerCciisuuction Dim a
Ohio·~?~, Pb. m-21&amp;6. Second cle•
problem appears to affect cus:
paa&amp;lp paid at Parneroy, Ohio.
For More Information .
tamers who use AT&amp;T for long
Member: Tile Aloodaled Ptou, lnta\HI
On
How You Can Save :
dislllnce
service.
Dolly ProM Aooo&lt;lelion·•nd lhe Ohio
Although refunds are on the
.Blg...C~U or Stop In At ·
NewapaJ»~r Ataac:iatioh, NaUoaal
Adverti11n1 RepreHnlaUve, Branham
way to 900 service users, Vosler
'
Newapaper Satea, 733 Third Avenue,
said
the
problem
may
not
have
New YOrll, NewYOri!IOOl?.
been resolved.
POSTMASTER: Send adtlnu cho- "' .
AT&amp;T suspects there could be a
The Dolly S.nlinel, Ill Courl Sl.,
recurrence
of the double-billing
Pomeroy, OHio 451611.
J Carol La, Athena, OH
error.
8UB8CIIPTION IIATEI
By Curler w Motor Ro.te
'
"We're starting an investigaOne Weok ...........................................l1.60
tion," he said.
One Moolh ......................................... l6.91i
Am ElePower .. ........., ......321\2

p•

n

t;Saci!l\

-----Weather------

..------~ocal brief~ ..._
-. - - .
. Deputies probe 3 accidents

Area de.aths

__

Hospital news

EMS units answer calls

AT&amp;T to refund $2.8 million
for double-billing customers

..

~U"I'Io,o~o"""R~

~

~~~~

Discount

~eHURCH
525 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

~nvites

Ev,ryone To Come
and Help Us Celebrate ou·r
,. .· . 14th Anniversary ·
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8th

At 2:30P.M.
.
.

One Year...................................~........ l83.20
81NOLECOPY

PRICE
Daily. ......................... ,..,.............. 21i C.n,.
~ubecriben not dolliritW "' (IIY lhe eani.

REV. DON McQUEEN of the·
.Faith Gospel Church of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Will
be speaking.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELANP (AP) - Here are

Thursday night's Ohio Lollery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
3-5-1
(three. five, one)
...n.ble.
·
Pk:k 4 Numbers
Moll S.bllerlpllonl
5-7-6-6
l ... d. a ..... co..nty
,~five,
seven, six, six)
l3 Weeks .........................................$21.84
Cards
26 Weoiu ..................................... ..... l43.16
G2
$84.?6
7 (seven) of Heans
o.111t1o a.m. Cooontr
7 (seven) of Oubs
IS Weeb ..........................................$23.40
2e
uuo .
A (ace) of Diamonds
~2 w~.,.....................,.................. $88.40 •
5 (five) or Spades
er maY remit tn. advance direct to The
Qalllpollo Doily Tribune on • 3.6 or 12
monlh bulo. Cndil will be liven conier
each week .
·
No aubtcriptiont by m11il permitted in
treaa where home carrier tervlce i1

AwWII1112, 16&amp; 20 1L

-

Chuck Wingett ·

Builden

592-4119 .
592-3749

r--;H;-ours:-·-;M-:011-.-~F:::-n-:•• -=9-.i--:---.
, ;~
Sit I-4, CloleclSuoday

ALSO SPECIAL MUSIC BY FAITH
GOSPEL QUARTER

w-.. . . . . . ........................ . . . .
w-...................................... .

~. ,--,.;-.:_',,-.-,•., -·'= -··c~=C"~"-""-·"'••-------'L----------··'-c'-------·--·;____---~•---'fl--~.- ~~~ ·- .-

-

a&amp;
•

The Dally Senttnei-Pagl 3

Mild weather forecast fo:c_weeken

01110 Weather

'

..

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.•-.
~·

.

Please Come and Bring A Friend.
.

'

.,.

,

..

�'

Sports
-- -

.~

-

The ~ally .Senti~el

.,

_

.

_

~~

-~-~-

·

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·-·--- -

_.__. .

• -11.

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"-

Friday,

o~mber 6,

, --

.

. _.,.,.

_.,

~

1991

I
I
···- Paa
-~-

.

'

;l=rlday, December 6, 1991 .
1

Utah beat Bradley 65-41 and No.
24 UNLV defeated James Madison
80-73.
It was Alexander 's personal
eight-point run that helped Virginia
(3·1) rally from a 50-45 deficit to a
53-50 lead with 10 mil]utes left.
Stith had a chance 10 win it in
regulation, but missed the back end
of a two-shot foul with 11.6 seconds left. Joey Brown's only basket
in the second half, a one-bander on
!he left baseline, tied the score at
63 with one second left and sent
lhegameifiiOovertime.
From there it was all Virginia as
the Cavaliers ran off six straight
points before the Hoyas answered
back, And, after Georgetown got
its three points on a.free throw .by
Charles Harrison arid a jump hook ·
by Alonzo Mourning, Virginia ran
off seven more points 10 seal it.·
Brown and Mourning had 16
points apiece for the Hoy a~ (2-1).
Duke (3-0) didn'Lhave 'much of
a struggle with the Redmen (3-1).
Within three minutes, the Blue
Devils had a 10-point lead. At the
half, Duke was in command 48-30
as ChrisJian Laettner scored 19
·
·
with 26

po~~-John's lopped all but ei~ht · 12 points for Utah. Bradley (3· I)

got 14 points from Charles White.
-No. 24 UNLV 80
_James Madison 73
,
UNL V celebrated its return to
the Top 25 by winning on the road._
The Run~in' Rebels, ranked No. I
in every poll il!st sea5on.except the
final one, broke into the ratings this
week for !he first time t!lis season.
Dexter Boney scored 22 points
to lead UNLV (3-0). James Madison (1-2) led 66-65 with 7:30 left,
but J.R. Rider 's three-point shot
starte~ a 12-4 bUrst !hat put UNLV
ahead for good.
Bryan Edwards scored 15 points
for the Dukes.

points off the deficit, getting to 981 on Malik Sealy's basket with
1:06 left. Sealy scored 37 points,
21 in
the second
No.
Utlh half.
, Bradley 41
13
65
.
Utah held Bradley wuhout a
basket fot nearly 14 minutes in the
first half.
Byron Wilson scored 10 of 12
points in the fust half, helping Utah
(5·0) take a 30-8 lead at halftime.
Bradley went.l3:54 without ~ field
goal as the Utes went on a 21-4
run.
Paul Afeaki and Jimmy Soto
each played 21 minutes and scored
·

~

In the NBA .••

. CATCHES PASS- Meigs Marauder Verna Compston (33)
tatcbeslhls pass near the paint in front or Vinton County's Michelle
Speakman during Thursday night's TVC match up on the Maraud·
ers' home court, which the hosts won 56-40.

· Meigs hands Vinton County
-56-40 defeat Thursday night

Atlandc Dlvlalon
'!J _.L _Pet.
NewYarlt ..............IO l ..667
BOIIOn .................... l l 6 .647
MYmi .... .............. :... s 9 .471

Tttm

::
. By DAVE HARRIS
... Semtinel Correspondent
: . The Meigs
Maraud~rs
&gt;Outscored Vinton Count[ 13-1 in
:me final five minutes o the first
;i}uarter and went on to defeat the
-~isiting Vikings 56-40 in girls Tri:Valley Conference action Thursday
)vening.
. ; The Vikings jumped out to a 8-2
lead midway through the first periJ)d, but the Marauders press started
•(o ra1tle the Vikings and the
)farau·ders went on a 13 · I run to
'lake a 15-9 lead at the end of the
:rlfSt period.
~ Meigs continued the pace into
·the second period and went into the
locker room at the half with a 2818 advantage . The- Marauder
defense forced the Lady Vikes into
l5 first half turnovers.
• With Marauder coach Ron
· · Logan using his bench and keeping
~p the good P.ressure defense the
}faraudcrs budtlhe lead to as mu~h
ras 22 in the second half. The wm
Iovas 'the second in as many tries for
Jhe maroon and gold, with both
~ins
· in the conference. The

goal against Western Illinois.
Northern Iowa placekicker
Brian Mitchell started his career at
Marshall but transferred. He was a
consensus 1-AA AU-American last
year and holds 17 national records.
Marshall is in the playoffs fo r ·the first time since 1988. NOrthern 'Iowa lost to Boise State in the first
round of last year's playoffs.
.
"I think we're a much better
football team this year," Allen
said. "And I think playoff ex perience is a great help to anybody."
Donnan said playing Nonhero
Iowa won't be anything like late·
season blowouts against VMI and
East Tennessee Slate, in which the
Herd won by a combined margin of
124-9,
"Hopefully everybody wo~ld
know that the teams we're playing
aren'tthose kind of teams," Donnan said.

who's scoring 21.3 pomts per contest.
·
Oral Roberts is led b.y Ray
Thompson, who's averaging 24.5
points per game.
Freeman w·'d Oral Roberts runs
the ball well, while Wyoming has a
powerful inside game·and South
Florida has a combination of both
power and speed, Freeman said.
'Freeman said this weekend's
tournament is about more than just
basketball. Marshall's tournament
is named in honor of the 75 foot· ·
ball players, coaches and s,latl who
died in a plane crash in 1970.
" I think the tournament helps us
reflect and keep the memory of
those who we lost in the plane
crash,'' Freeman said. "Everything
that the university went through,
the community went through, the
' losses people went through, the
way they handled a~~ersity, it in _a
~ay reflects the spmt of compell·
ho~;
.
.,
I rcme.l!lber 11 and h?,w the
crash cm,ne ~~ross the news, F~ee­
man satd. It was ~ btg thmg
across the whole Umted Stat.cs .
You'~e. not l?llrl of the commumty,
but u s sull a sense of lqss.
Because once
m athlettcs,
on m~ ""''"&lt;
Fn:eman was a schoolboy in
Washington, D.C., at the time of
the crash.

tecord to I· I overall and in the man 5-0·3=13,
conference.
1-0=11, Missy
2-0-0=4,
; Senior Tricia Baer had, an out- Wendy McComas 1·0-0=2. Totals
)tanding-game for- Meigs with 25 - 16-1 -5=40

!Tickets for McDonald's-Days
•.

.

3

New Jeqey ..............S 12

.294

'
l
7

7.S

s.s
IO.l

1

.

•' Tickets for Saturday morning's
:Samc.cbetv.«n the Southern Torna;does and the Alexander Spartans in
~hio University's Convocation
i¢enter are now~on sale iu Southern
~igh School for $6.
.: The game will put Howie Cald:Well's Tornadoes against former
~outhern- star Jay Rces alid his
~partans .. Recs was also Caldw~ll's
assistant coach for a number of seasons. The game is one of eight
being played in the McDonald's.
Days Inn Prep Classic, with ~he
~outhern-Alexander game bemg
tJ!e second contest, gelling urydcr)ltay around 11:00 a.m.
, Every year since 1988, thegnme
lias brought together some of the
19P teams ln the state of Ohio with
d'rcp basketball powers from
lttroushout the -eas tern United
States. This year's event has
attracted teams from Kentucky,
Maryland, So.u1h Carolina and ·
tiouisiana as well as Dayton and

cnt showcase. "Street and Smith
has rated the McDonald's-Days Inn
Prep Classic one of the top 10 ·
events of its kind in the eastern
lij_.," he said. "This year we'll be
showcasing as many as a dozen
potential All-American players in
one of our strongest fields ever."
Among the blue-chip prospects
slated to appear on Saturday arc
five players who earned high bon-orable mention in S trect and
Smith's annual listing of !he top 25
prep players in the country. Terry
Moore, a 6-8 senior from Newpon
in Kensington, Md, has already
sig ned to play for the national
_champion Duke Blue Devils. Gary
Trent, a 6· 7 senior from Hamilton
Township High School in Columbus has signed with Ohio University. Other top prospects include 6-3
Richard (TuTu) Brown of Dunbar
High School in Day(on, and 6-5
Dean Jackson and 6-8 Terrel
Bridges of Patterson Co-op High
~Iumbus.
School in Dayton.
,. Jim Derrow, head coach of the
Tickets at the door will cost
f;ellston Golden Rockets and the S7.00. Each ticket admits one to all
p t organizer, expecta this reaf'S eight of the Classic contests.
dfauie to be anolher basketball tal· ·

...,..._,...,.,....,._

'

cur rout SEWING

Ohio eirls hil!h
basketball scores

Featuring

-~~

MEATLOAF DINNER
Mashed Potatoes with Gravy,
Choice of Vegetable,. Soup and Salad Bar
Or Tr'JI One qj Our Other Great Menu Items!
SUNDAY

n

.526

.l
2

-u 4

S.l

Tonight's games

\

99

31

t··

machines with

from
one machine to
the other.
move~nt

REGULAR $449.99 SALI

$399

Sunday's gnmes
San Antonio at MilwaWlot, 8:30p.m.
Dallu at LA. taken, 10:30 p.m.

In the NHL. •.
WALES CONFERENCE

99

Patrick Dlvl1loa

Team
Washington

FABRIC SHOP

W L T Pts. CFCA
311 126 88
..16 10 1 JJ 89 83

... .19 8 0

N.Y. Ranaen
Pitt~burJh

....... 14 9 4
NewJcrsey ..... 1510 I

Fnnklin 49

32 119 97
31 H)6 80

Col. Hanley S6, Cal. Driggs 41
Col. ' School ror Girll "39, Marion
Calli. 38
Col. SOulh 69, Col. Drookhtv!:fl 34

N.Y. h l1nders ..... 9 13 3 21 91 96
P'liil•dclpbi• ........8 15 2

110 West Mala St.
Pomeroy
992·2284

IH 12 93

Cni . Whctltone47, Coi .' Weat41

CoMCIUI 46, Fairvicw45 , or
Conotton VaU. 4( Ctdiz45
Covin,ton 65, Mississinawa Vall. 27
Crca t~tcw 43, S. Ccmral 40
Danville 6&amp;, Lucu 25
D1y. Mcadawdalc 49, Day. Christian

Adam• Dl•blon
....... 18 11 2 311 97 61

Monueol
B&lt;XIOn
Hartford
Buffalo
Qucbcc

......... II 10

l

..........717

l

., ...... II 12 J
...........9 13 3

Z7 93 91

II
21 74

90
85

2S

Cin . Lo~dand 46, Cin. Deer Park 35
Cin. Mt. Healthy 55, Cm. Weatcm

Cin. Northwest 45-, I lam1oo 35
Cin . Rcaditls 71. Cin . FiMc)'LOwn 32
C"m. Sycamore 55, Lakota 43
Clrt. Tt)'lor 41, Cin. Indian Hill 39
Cin. Winton Woods SO, Cin. Walnut
1Wis 32
·
Cin . Wi\hrow 60, Cin. Co!cratn 4&amp;
Cin. Wyoming 66, Madcin 35
Circleville 46, Loa•n Em 42
Ck ~~- Jon:ph Ae~dcmy 57, St. Au·
gustine 31
Cle. VASJ 83, Be~umont 31
Ointon·M•ssic SO, Gn:encvicw 31
Col. Be'cchctoft 47 , Col. lndepcn ·
dcnce44
CoL Ccntennid 52, Col. Muion ·

p.m.

•

11 86 Ill

41

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Tum
Del.rtlil
St. Lcuis
Chicago
Minnes.ota
Toronto

Heavy
·Value

Norrl1 Dl•blon
W L T Pts. CFGA
......... ll 9 3 33 107 89
....... 11 10 6 21! 81 93
........ 11 12 s
94 91

...... 10 12 l

v

23

13

......... 8 16 .4 ,20 69 94

Thursday's scores
2. a...., 2, tie

Qo....,

Now J....y 6, Col gory 3

Monual 5, N.Y_.&amp;Jandecd, ot_
WuhinJton 6.-Piilltdelphia3 -

Chie~ao

6, LAII Angelca2
Pillsbllfah &amp;, San J01e 0

'--

...,

. Saturday'~ games
Philadclphi• 11 Bo.:ton, 7:05p.m.
Durr.!o" llant&lt;Wd, 7:35p.m.
Dctnnt at New Jcm:y, 7:3S p.m.
Chica&amp;o at N. Y. lliandcn, 7:35 P·ll"'·
to.: Anael e~•t Quebec, 7:35 p.m.
Wuhinston 11 Mini'ICijlll, 8:0S p.m.
Cal&amp;ary 11 Monti"CC I, i ;OS p.m.
v.n~OilVa' II Totomo, 1:05 p.m.
Pitwburgh II St l.cuil, 8:35p.m.

Sundoy's games
C•l&amp;uy at Bufftlo, 7:0S p.m.
New Jmcy 11 Phil1delphi1, 7:0S p.m.
Bo.~ct~al N.Y. Rlnaen. 7:35p.m.
San Ja~e at EdrqC'Inton, B:OS p.m.
Wuhingi.On 11 Wimlpcg, I :OS p.m.
Minncaota 11 Chlc•ao, 8:35 p.m .

Major college
basketball scores

Ot••• Hilh
46, Moumoo V•U.-38
4
29
Pml"
8, S7.
l..cabwg
Foirfiotd
Pc:rrysburs
Millbul)'
Lake 26
~&lt;koring""' 99, Mory..illo 26
Pon Clltllo,a 70, Sandusky 47

.l'orlsmouoil&amp;,Onoonup,Ky.ll
R...,,.61,T•Um•daol0
Rid&amp;owood l6. Nowctm0r110wn 41
... Ri~er 5~. Bellaile; S2

Ri~cnidc 4R, Triad 41 .
Rocky River Mlpilicat62, Byria 23
S. Wcbalcr 62, PGrUmoulh 27
Sudinia E11tern 63, W. Union 46
Sebring 48, ~nton Heril.lae 2&amp;
Shctwood Fairview 61, Wauae.on 4S
Sidney SS, W. Ctrrollton 34
Span.a HighJand 41, Buckeye VaU. 45
Sprina. Sllawnoe 61, Sprina. Nonh -

weslem

4S

Springboro 42, Lcbtnon 3~
St. Cl•iriville 67, Dune~ ville .56
St. Joteph 57, St. Augustine 31
St. Mary'' 63, Kcn10r1 4S
Sl!Uburg43, S•ndy Vall. 41
sW.nton 61 ' EVCIJI'CCI1 29
Sy!VInia Southview 43, R~1ford 41
Tta)'l Vall 63, Canal Winchutet 22
Tccumsc:h 71, Xen10n Rid&amp;c4S
Tri·ViUar. IO,Fnnklin·Mcmor: 64
Troy 59, Plqlll•l
TI.IKtnwu CILh. 67, JcWCI.l·Scio 46
Tu•l•w 39, Mauillon Washington 37
Union Lact\72., SICUbenville 31 ·
llnioto 67, Wutf"all21
· Upper Scicto Vall. 90, Bluffton 40

Urbont 76, Pdlel.nt~ne 22 · ·.
Utica 49, Olcntan&amp;Y46, OT
VaUcy View 66, Northridge 41
Vandali•·Bullcr· 68, Trotwood-Madison 33
Vcn~Wea65, St. Henry 31
W. Holmu48, Oaymoot34

Next week's NFL slate
Sunday's action
Dcmer •I C&amp;tvtland, 1 p.m.
Green Bay a\ Chicago, I p.m.
lnd iantpolia aL New England, 1 p.m.
New Orleans 11 Dalln, I p.m.
Phi.! adelphi• at New York Oi•nts, I
p.m.
PitL&amp;bW'gh at Houaton, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Kansas Cit)', 1 p.m.
A.llant..a 11 lol Angel~ R1ms, 4 p.m.
Bu£Calo •t Lo• Anaclcs Rtir;lcn , 4
p.m.
New Yori. Jeua1 OctrOiI, 4 p.m.
San FranciJca 11 Se~u.le:. 4 p.m.
WuhinglOO 11 PhocnU, 4 p.m.
MinnC:.()I;I at TamptBty, &amp;p.m.

Gr.nvilie
Gmenfield , Hillsboro
- Hamiltoo.Dadin..S!I...Cin..McNicholu
29 ..
•
. ..
.
Hamilton Rw 56, Litl.le Miami 2&amp;
H11hawa)' Brown 24, Hawken 22
Heath 57, Liberty Union46
Huntin&amp;LOn 63, Paint Vall. T1
Johrwtown 4&amp;, Madi&amp;CI'I Pl•iru 32
lohn1town Northridgo 70, E. Kno&gt; 26
Keuerins Ahc:r47, Xenia 20
Kirtl1nd, P. Harvcx, Ppd

Monday's game
Cincinnati at Miami, 9 p.m.

Transacti!)ns
.OaSllbnll
American Uaaue
NEW YORK YANKEES - An·
noun ccd \he ~ign11ion of Robert Ncdcr·
lander, m1 n1ging geneul partne r, effcc:·
ti~e Dee 3t.
TEXAS RANQERS - Ex tended the
c:anttttt or Bobby Vtlcnlinc,

,,

VilJirli• 76, Georaotown 66, or

'

--~L -

,

.

ocal, but he couched his replies in
wavering phtases such as "hope
to," "want to" and .. plan to."
"I love Notre Dame," he said
last month. "I want to finish out
my coaching career here, whether
that's a year, or two years or five
years. I don't plan on coachi_ng any
place else."

but he proved unable-to sq1~el•c~
rumors that he might take the NFL
job,
·
"We determined that the best
way to do that was with this con•
wrct," said the Rev: ·E. W'illiam··
.

his name was mentioned, Lou was
leaving," s~rts information direc·tor John Hetsler said. "This will go
a long way toward eliminating all
L~ose calls."
~the ·Irish .•• r.•hr- &lt;flv•· -.,-,,.,M,n..-.:-- +

app•roa1:h Holtz about the job.
indicated at every opportunity my intention to remain at
Notre Dame as long as the univer'
sity wishes me to serve as football
coach," Holtz said when the contract was announced. "I have no
intention of coaching anywhere
else.'' .
Terms of the contract were not
disclosed,
He will lead the No. 18 Irish (9·
3) against No.3 Florida (10-1) in
the Sugar Bowl.
The 54-year-old Holtz has a 55·
11 record in six seasons at Notre
Dame, and an overall record of
171 - 82-~ in 22 year~ as a college
coach. Notte Dame won the national championship 'in 1988.
When asked about his future.
Holtz's tone of voice was unequiv-

formal contract may av~ had
something to do with the speculation," Heisler said.
"This was going to happen
today regardless,." he said. ''But
realistically the suggestign that
continued to be made regarding
Lou's future was frustrating."
" This is a big recruiting week·
end for us," Heisler said.
This year, Holtz hopes to sign a
top-rated quarterback to _take over
when junior Rick Mircr graduates.
Holtz coached one year in the
NFL, producing a 3-10 record with
the New York Jets in 1976 and
resigning the week before the final
regular season gaJne. In !985 ac h1s
first Noire Dame press conference,
he said; "I just think God never
intended Lou Holtz to coach 1n !he
NFL."

resiSIM!;e.

• lk1lned and washable.
• Tliclt abrasion resis!Mlt tr.l.
• Replaa!monl
gu~~~Mtee

on

materials.

terrnc~~~~~~~~;:~~~:~~~--c~--------~~
dent for athletics.
wotk
on a year-to-year
Holtz said repeatedly he intend- Although former coach Gerry Faust
ed to stay at Notre Dame, but talk was given a five-year con-tract,
fl are d anew when Ihe V1'k'tn gS Holtz was hired after two seasons
announced Wednesday thatlerry at the University of Minnesota on
Bums would retire and team presi- the more informal terms.
Beauchamp ;-university~vice-lJreSI·

.,.............
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Only"' ,., - ~

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MULIEIIY AYE.
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South

Vond&lt;tbllt90, N.C.-.Wilmin""' 71

By THOMAS P. WYMAN
Associated Press Writer
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)LOu Holtz signed a fi,ve-year contract extension Thursday, abruptly
ending speculation that the Notre
Dame coach might leave for the
Minnesota Vikings.
Holtz fe~red the

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National Bukttball A.uodaUnn
CllARLOITE HORNETS - Si&amp;oO&lt;i
Kcwin LYnch, guard-Corwud.
LOS ANGilLES !.AKERS - SignO&lt;i
Chucky Drown, forwud .
MINNESOTA TIMD ERWOLVES Pl1ced Felton Spencer, ccni.Cr, on lhc in·
jured liat.

W•l Vlr&amp;lnl• 79, Roberl M"orrlt ' '

UNLv 8(), loma Modioon 13

LONGWEAII.

~-

s....

Rider II, Woanerll, 20T

The Daily Sentinel

Holtz s!g!l~ ~9ntract
extension with Notre Dame

w..tluo 63, .,.ru. 49
Whitehtll 70, Col.. Wcat 41
Wilmington S4, Day, Stebbins 45
WOOilet 57, Mauillon Jackloo 34
W)'Tifard 52, Uppu Stndulk~ 39
Youlla. Boardman 90. Youn,.. Ean29
Zane Trace 5&amp;, Richmond Dale
Soulhcutem 4S
Z.ncnille 56, Col. Easlmoot 3~

.EllS!

Alcom St.IU, Tenneucc Si. 74
App~lachim St, 112.Pikeville 71
Coil of Olarleaon 63, CilldeJ 60
Coppin St. 92, American U.17, 01'
Dub 91, St. John'1ll
Miuiuippi 92, Mc:Ne.cao St., 70
Soulh Cuolina 68, Winthrop 56
Soolhcm Misa. 98, Hawaii Loa 80
Tenneuoe 86, Middle Tenn. 83

COIIFOII'I'

WellJvi.l.lc 59 Ediaon S. Sl

Delaware St. 99, Delaware9~

_,

"Yo11r Hometown NewapJtper"

Day. OakwOod 56, EatM 29
Di,Uc 54, Middlct.own 53, OT
E. Can ton 68, L.:.ctoni• 25
E. Li•CfPOOI S4, Wintenvillc 47
Erie•icw 80, Resin• 53
.
Faitban.ka 51 , Indian Lake 24
Fairfield 41, Middletown 30
Fairfield Union !iS, H1mil ton Twp. 54
FiJ.hcr CalhoJic 4~ . Millen: port 31
Fort Thamu. Ky.. }{;ghland.s 56, Cin .
. McAuley 52
.,.... •nnilin Furna-ce Orcen 67,
Porumo~o~lh E. 13
Fremont Rau 51, Tol. -Whilmci- 47
Fremont St. Jmeph 68, Scncc.~ E. 62
Ft. Lor•mic S7, Anna 50
, Ucrlin Hiland 47

.

Tonight's ~ames
N.Y. Ranac11at Detroit, 7:35p.m.
EdmonlOn 11 Wilmlpcg. 8;35 p.m.

A good thin~ that
Santa doean t nave .;::::
to deliver all of them
at once. Your gift
keepa on gl~lng all
year long. The Dally
Sentinel means
-. ·· news and photos
• .from all over Meigs
' Coun•y six times a
, week.
:
.
The best news, sports and current events all year - long. Make someone on your gift list a new
_subs~rlber·Just c:all 992·2156.

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- -Oinulc&lt;!E~a66.N.-Royo~ton-54--· Open Door41, Elyria Fmt
14
OriVillc57; CioveriW so ~ ·---·-··-11 -

Bradford 52. Tti..County N. 24
37
Brookville 62, Bcllbtt:d 37
Buckeye 45, Keystone 35
Buckeye Tn il42, lnd i1n Villi. 40
C1n1an G1010ak. 41, Uniontown Like

Hilh44

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.,.....:

freedomof

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.. Dallas at Se~tlle, l 0 p.m.
MiMcso~l. ll L.A. Clippen, 10:30

p.m.

A.ltilnoc 51, New Philadelphia 39
Amelia S6, Cin. Woodward SO
Andrews 44, Oc. LU!hctan East 30
Aruoni• 72, Bethel 35
Awtintown Fitch S4, Young. Mooney

C1nton McKinley 38, Ak1on Cent·
Hawer35 _
_
__
Card.ing\00 53, ML Gilead 44
Culi lic 51, Preble Shawnee 31
Ccllnt 66, Olllwt-Olandarl" 46
0\ippc.w• 58, Smilhvillc 46
Ci.n . Ai..kcn 53, Cin. Oak Hills 39
Cin, Afldcnm 52, Cin . Taft 35
Cin. Counlt)' Day 52, Cin. Lockl~nd

Saturday's games

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NorNoo•l67, Cin. Hugh" 32

'o~"KUville43, Nordonia

Chicago It Philldtl~, 7:30p.m.
Charloae at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Ph001i.x at Miam i, 7:30p.m.
!
New York at Allanu, 7:30p.m.
Wuhlnaton at Cle•ebnd, 7:30 p.m.
Portlind at Indiana, 7:30p.m. ".~
U\.lh at Houston, 8:30p.m.

The Sew·
Corner-

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

Clv. 31

40

New Ymt.n 801ton, 7:30p.m.
LA. Lakers 11 New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Portland at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
De!roi~ at WubinJI.On. 7;30 p.m.
Phom11. tt OrlandO, 7:30p.m.
Mif'wau.koc a1lndiana, 7:30p.m.
Ut.h at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
Charlotte at Chicaao. 8:30p.m .
LA. Ci.ppcn u Denver, 9 p.m.
Minneaota It Sc.t~. lO p.m.

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Bay42, N. Rid~c~ille 31
___ DcaU.villeJi6, ald~ ell~ . _ ·Beaver EaNm 7&amp;, Ponsm~nh Nou-e
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Bdlairc St. John 71, Shad)'lule 33
o.n.hioe 44, t.w.t29
Bcmc U,nion 57, Licking HLI. 36
Btxley 6.5, Hebron Lakewood 40
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WESTERN CONFERENCE

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Atlontt .................10 i
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52 Weeks
312 issues
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----

TINGUY

__

E: Dllho~ ll, Ctl St.:Fullerton"57
LoWville &amp;4, Nooe Dame 81
·_

GB

- " '40

Marshall Cl~ssic set for tonight

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
' - Marshall head basketball coach
Dwight Freeman isn't putting
points and nine rebounds. Reva money on his school's tournament
.
... d b I h k
h
Mullen joined Baer in .double fig- th IS
wee..en ' u e nows w o
the favorites would be if he were.
ures with 10 points and six assists.
"I think if you·were-a betting
The Marauders pulled "in 30
rebounds led by Baer with her nine. man, you'd bet between Sauth
Meigs commiued 20 turnovers and Florida and Wyominf," Freeman
had 14 steals led by Mullen with said. "I think both 0 those teams
return a lot of veterans and are
seven .
doing
well right now."
In the reserve· ·game, Joy
In
addition
to Marshall (1-1),
O'Brien poured in 15 points, and
Vanessa Compston and Melissa the other teams competing in the
Clifford added eight points each to Marshall Memprial Classic will be
help Meigs roll- over the Little Wyoming (3-0), South Florida (3·
Vikes 44-10. The win gave 0) and Orai'Roberts {1-4).
Marshall plays Oral Roberts in
Marauder coach Beth Schneider a
the
first round Friday, while
win in her coaching debut.
Wyoming
takes on South Florida.
Meigs will host the Miller FalMarshall
is led by Harold Simcons Monday evening.
mons, who's averaging 20.5 points
Quarter totals
_
Vinton County .....9 9 5 17 = 40 per game.
The Herd, however, misses twoMeigs .......... ,,.,, l5 13 15 13= 56
time
Southern Conference player of
Meigs (56) - Reva Mullen 5-0the
year
John Taft and two other
0= I 0, Verna Compston 1-0·0=2,
departed
starters.
Marshall commit·
Tr'icia Baer 9-0· 7=25, Kim Hanning 3-0-0=6, Lori Kellt 2-0-0=4, ted 31 turnovers in an opening win
Missy Sisson 0-0· 1=1, Lee Hender- over District of Columbia and had
son 1·0·0=2, Katrina Turner 1·0· 16 more in it loss to Roben Morris.
Wyoming is led by Reggie
2=4, Ginger Findley 1-0-0=2.
Slater,
who's scoring 25 points a
Totals - 23-0-8=56
game,
and
Tim Breaux, who's
Vinton
- Sandy

OF·THI'-LIN• .-

Lakelond 53, Mo'- )4

Butler 93, Illinoi1 S1. BS
Dwait81, Fla. lntcmatiooal69

EASTERN CONFERENCE

. . ·. ·

mark that was later broken by led the NCAA m au-purpose top lineman.
also placed two players on the
Kansas' Tony Sands. ·
yardage with 2,996: is the squad's · He is joined by linemen Santana squad.
·
Detm~ was the nation'~ No. 2 aU-purpo~ back. ~s.total_yar~gc Do!S!ln ?f Baylor, Brad CulP,Cpper
The All-A medea
passer thts season, compleung 249 for rushmg, receiVIng an~ klc,k of Flonda and Leroy Smllh of selected by
of-403-lhrows for-4.03;1-yards-a~...Je.tumin~was the.secon&lt;l\ti&amp;heJLJowa;
. ·
Rick arner and relioaal
35 touchdowns. He fmtshed hts ever behmd Barry Sanders 3,250 East
Marvm Jones of
career with mQre passing yards in 1988. Benjamin is the fus~ Pacif- Florida State anq Joe Boy;deri _of _· sports writers. )'he .team will ·
(15,03l),and TD. ~s (121) than tc player to make the AP s first Oklahoma; and backs Kevm Smtih ~e:u~.;~~ rso~':.l~:
a~yon_e m ~CAA htstory, two of team. , ,
.
, of Texas A&amp;M, Terrell Buckley of
. hts 68 passmg and total offense
Mario B~ley of :Washmgton ts Fl~n~ State, Darryl Williams of EST on NBC.
records.
.
.
, the other wtde recetver_ a~d . Kelly Mtamt and Dale Carter of Ten- ·~------'-.,_-:--,
Completing the backfteld ts Blackwell .of l'exas Chrisuan •s the nessee.
.
Indiana's Vaughn Dunbar, the ughtend.
. . .
The punter is Mark Bounds of
OUIITOI'~ ­
· nation's No. 2 rusher with a 154Rounding out the offense are Texas Tech.
yard average; AlthOugh he only center Jay Leeuwen burg of &lt;;ol·
The team includes eight under·
played two years for the Hoosiers, oradp; guards Jerry Ostroskt of classmen- Faulk, sophomore
VAWI':'
Dunbar finished his career as the Tulsa and Jeb Flesch of Clem.so~; Marvin Jones and six juniors· school's third-leading rusher and tackles Greg S~penak of M1ch1· Howard, Whitfield, Benjamin,
TO scorer.
gao and Bob Whitfield of Stanford; · Emtrnan, Buckley and Williams.
Ryan Bel!,iamin of f'!cific, who and placekickeJ Carlos Huena of · Top-ranked Miami and No·. 2
· · ' · · ·• ·
Miami.
Washmgton, the only undefeated
The defense is led by Washing- teams in Division 1-A, each have
ton's Steve Emtrnan, who won the two players on the first team. No. 4
FOil
Lombardi Award as the nation's Michigan and No.5 Florida -State

· Midwest

-----~IHhlinl&lt; ~it!s -JJrol~at,ly-a-p•retty - Southern~Conferen· ce--scor-ing
go~d barometer, - sai'&lt;t'N1Drt~if1rn record and kicked the winning field

Iowa head coach Terry Allen. '
both played them very close, and I
think it just leads you to believe
this should be a very exciting foot·
ball game."
Western !Uinois convinced Marshall head coach Jim Donnan that
Gateway ConfereMe football is
akin to that played in the Southern
Conference.
"After watching films of their.
league, it's easily as good as ours
was this year," Donnan said. "To
win the league speaks very highly
of their team."
Both teams feature balanced
offenses and tough defenses .
Northern Iowa finished the regular
season with the fourth-rated
defense in I-AA; Marshall quarter·
back Michael Payton set a I·AA
record for single-season passing
efficiency.
While
... Northern Iowa quarter-

The Dally Sentlnei-P'e 5

Sct•t. cboard

~
'
·
back Jay Johnson may not have the
natural ability, of Payton, he has ·
done well nonetheless . Johnson's
savvy earned him a spot on the
Gateway's first-team all-conference squad.
Another key player for Northem
Iowa is T~nk Corner, a_runni_n,g__ __EIRST.BUCK Rick..Lunsford or-I!omeroy is migbty-proud-ot--~ ~
- baclc-wh_o s ga!ned 100 yards m the 14-point buck that he bagged at Laurel Cliff on Wednesday;
four ofh1s teams past five game_s.
Lunsford reports that this is his first buck, and that it weighed in at
Both teams feature explostve 170 pounds. (Sentinel photo)
·
spec1alteams, and both have excel·
lent kicking games. Mars.hall's
'
Dewey Klein holds the all-time

By MATT HARVEY
Associated Press Writer
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- I f Western Illinois serves as the
bellwether for Marshall's NCAA
Division I-AA semifinal game
against Northern Iowa, the contest
should be a classic.
Marshall (9-3)-beat-Westem~llli•
nois 20-17last week in ovenime to
stay alive. Northern Iowa (ll-1)
beat Western lllinois 24-17 during
the regular season en route to winthe Gateway Conference title.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I· _,....,By RICK
-- passing !Cader-ts llie oolyre)lC&lt;!ter
• -- · ~Football Writer ·. . . from the 1990' team. He is the fust
' · 'Fy ·Det~ and Marshall _Faulk · quarterback to make tile fust ~nit in
'lire a rare pllll'On the 1991 Associ• consecutive .years since Notre
. ated -Press All:Am_e.rica_c_ollege-Dame1sJohnny-bujaek-in-l946.!41-.
football team.
·
Joining Faulk and Detmer on
: Faulk _led tbe country in rushing offense is Reisman trophy favorite
'an~ sconng, _the-_fmt freshman to Desmond Howard ofMichi~an.
,finish on top m_CJther category. On The triple-threat wide rece 1ver
:'r~ursday, tl)e San Diego Slate run- averaged !59·yards per game and
nmg back also become the third was the natio_n's second-leading
f!eshman to make the AP fust team scorer with 23 touchdowns; many
:smce they became eligible for var- coming on his trademark diving
fity competitio~ in 1972. The oth· . catch, Two of his TDs came onea
•ers were Georgta's Hersche!Walk· 93-yard kickoff return and a 93'er in- 1~80 and Pittsburgh's Tony yard punt return. .
·
·
.porseu-m 1973.
. Despite missing ihtee games
' Detmer, last year's Heisman with an injury, Faulk rushed for
Jrophy winner. from Brigham 1,429 yards_and scored 140 points.
•Young and the NCAA's alf-iime He gained 386 yards against Paeif,,
ic, setiins an NCAA single-game

I
M
h
II
-Northern- .owa- .ars a
ba'ttl e--' ta-bJ...U ed-as·a- e-l·assJ•
.·. -e'. .,
~

'

·Detmer,
Faulk
among
AP
All-America
loQ!_balL
honorees
WARNER~

·Virgin·ia, Duke win Thursday night
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)Just when Cory Alexander was
beginning to enjoy himself, the Big
East took its basketballs ,and went
home.
:
Virginia's freshman guard
·~ joined the Atlantic Coast Conferenee in time to lead the league to a
victory in the final showdown with
its counle!parts from the Northeast.
The Cavaliers clinched this year's.
series with a 76-66 victory over
No. IS Georgetown.
Top-ranked Duke took a 31point lead and beat No. -7 SL John 's
91-81 in the final game of the
series between the conferences following_ a threeear'·year ~n: Th62e ACC
won thts y s meebngs · , leaving the overall series tied.
"I love~ it.~! wish~ I'd gotten to
play in the other ones," said
Alexander, who had 17 points in
support of Bryant Stith' s 24.
"Hopefully, we'll schedule some ~
Big East teams for the next few
years while I'm here. The Big East
was the first conference I really
wanted to go 10.''
In other ranked games, No. 13

'

2541111 . . St.
POMEIOY

614-tft-tm

EXTENDED HOLIDAY HOURS
MONDAY.- FRIDAY, 9:30 A.M.• - 8:00 P.M._,
SATUDAY, 9:30 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. ·
. SUNDAY~ 11:00 A.M.,J .; 6:00P.M.

PHONE 675-2188
COUNTY

'...

�'

.. -

.

I

By The Bend
·-·

~

~

-

·-

The ·D ajly Sentinel

Students visit fire
---

.

..

FIRE SAFETY LEARNED - The Pomeroy Elemenlary·second
grade class of Suzy Carpenter had a walking field· trip recently to
,. the Pomeroy .Fire..Station where Todd Smith was assisted by
Orville Hi~l. i!l. showing the fire trucks, •emergency squad, safety
equipment and the statimi-house.
•

G
b
Ashley family visitS ettys urg

..... ·.·

1••.•

H ['day dznner
•

:l__:t[h~,e~jir~lp~a~r~e~nt~su~br~in~~~~h~e~m~b~ac~k--~cja~ a~l~ry~ parlt~·~c•parled~•5n ~the~parad~·~e·~1~__.CHRISTMf1S·fiOaiO~·--•--another time. Spectal children's
at the library were

_ _ Faniily gathers _ __
Myca Jeanne and Terry Harrison
and their two sons, Curtis and
Jeremiah, all of Orangeburg, S.C.
With the Harrisons was their
foreign exchan~e student, 'Jo-Idar
Bulbrandson, Gjovik, Norway.

dumbwaiter
lifts
to and from the boolcmobile.
visit helped 10 inspire a desire

Post to meet
The regular meeting of the
American Legion Drew Webster
Post No. 39 will be held at die post
home on Dec. 17 with dinner at 7
p.m. followed by meeling at 8 p.m .
This will be the final meeting of
1991. All members are urged to
aacnd.

This Ye:u s parade was the ial'gest
ever With 8,000
sol·

was the lead
r ~~;;&amp;~~:.~?::
He assisted the cc
chief of the Sons of Union Veterans, Lowell Hammer, in the ceremonies at the Gmnd Army of the
Republic monument by placing the
society's memorial wrea.th. ···
The parade was followed by a
re-enactors' Civil War ball with

AI THE

SYUCUSE FIRE STATION
rors, roou and FUN
Spo1180red by the Syracme
Fire Deparbnent

Buy any item at $250 or more from our
sales floor and choose ·any WISH BOOK®
item of $25 or less· as
Pelonis

.

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(DM721) Wh~e.Gas $40 mote

AArq'd $10 rl'09

Has double

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•

4.89
Electric Engraver

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'

SALE

$10 MONTHLY'
(011214311)

.....
,......
,......
IIGIIS~

loll.

614-ttl-6611

•••••n.01.
-LIPOIT.

"''"

....,.s...-, 9:30-5:00

'

Sea••

l'cmerl&gt;y: HanUilnville·Rd. (RL 143)
J'utor: Rober E. 1'\irtell

S10ulay Scb&lt;iol • 9:30 a.m.• .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wedai:lday SeiVic:a • 7 p.m .

'

. Faith Taltfriac:le Cltordl
. Bailey !tun RDid
Paotor: Rev. F.mmdt RawiCO
Sundar Scbool· 11):00 a.m.
• Eveninl 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

.Paiulr; Kennelh Biker

SioldaY School. 9:30 Lm.
Worship - 10:45 o.m. (2nd &amp; 4th SW&gt;)

MonltlaStar

.,

Lutheran

.

SL John Luthoru Churdl
PlneGiove
·
P•stor: Llura A. Leach Sll ..mer
Wonhip • 9:30Lm.
Sunday Sehool· 10:30 .....

· Putor: Kenoeth Baker
S101day Scl)ool--9:45-a,m.
. Wonbip • 10:30 a.in•
Thursday Service~ · 7:30p.m.

Srram• Ml- ·
1411 Bridpnan St., Syraatoe _
Putor: Roy (Mike) ThontpiCII
Sunday Sdtool - 10 Lm.
Evenins • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

' SulliHt
PutDr:'Kestnelh Boker
BradiMiry Cburdl ~Chrllll
S111day School · 9:30a.m.
Putor: Tom Rmyon
Worship · !0:45a.m. (111&amp; 3111 Sun)
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Hazel Community Cburch
. " EuiL«art --- - - . -- - Off Rl. 124 ---.-----Wonhip • t0:30Lm.
Baptist
Wolnut
111d
·Herily
Sta.,
Ravauwood,
'
'
PI•tor.-Roser
Grace
.
.
W.Va.
PallOr: Edte1 Hart
;&lt;I
Sundly School • IJ)a.m.____
Tuppm Plaint Chur\'11 ol Chrllt
·.. ~-Sunday-5c:hool • 9:30 a:m: ~­
r~t~cP.ev.Jl&lt;orJ•.C.~Weirict __
1.
- J?ret.Will Baplllll-ehurdl
.
- P111ii: Riibert Fos10r - Worship :.9 a.m. · Sunday School·-9:30 ~om. ·
Worship - 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
I
Aah
Street.
Middlepon
Sunday
scliool
·
9
a.m.
Woi1hip
~
11
Lm.
_
I
Racine
PallOr: Melt Morrow
. ' .
Wonhip • 9:45 Lm., 6:3() p.m.
Dft1YIIIe Community Churcto
Pa1tor. Roger Grace
Saturdey Semce. 7:30p.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Sunday S&lt;:hool· 9:30 e.m.
SWldafSdtool
10
a.m.
·
Sunday Schco1_·10 a.m.
Deller Cliurcll ol CllriOI
Comer SycunO.e &amp; Second SL, Pomeroy
''
Woohip
. JQ:30 a.m., 7j&gt;.m.
Won!tip · H a.m.
Wollhip • II a.m., ·
Putor. Chri• S!ew.art
Peotor: Lau10 A. t..ach Slu&gt;lfler
Wednesday SeiVite-7:30 p:m.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
S111day School • 9:45 Lm.
Ll•el Cllll F,... illelhodllll Church
Bartloaton c ....munlly Church
1
Wonhip - !0:30a.m.
Wonhip ·11 Lm.
Pa11Dr. WiiiWn Williams
Badin ham
I
Rutland Flnt Bapllll Church
Wednelday SeiYic:a . 7 p.m.
Smday School· 9:30a.m.
Putor:
Ray Cudennilt
1
SundafSchool· 9:30 1.m.
Wollhip . 10:30 e.m., 7 p.m.
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 Lm.
RuUand Chorch o1 Christ
Wc:dnclday SeiVic:et · 7 p.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wc:dnelday Semce • 7 p.m.
Pornoro•
Ftnt
Boplllll
Pa11«:
E~t~ene
E.
Underwood
Graham
Uolled
Mothodtit
R ••·-• Bible Ill
I
Main St.
Sundav School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhi · 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun1.1:30'- - -...;;;u elhodl&amp;t
-l-- - -Palli&gt;r.SiCVCFW!er ·
--w"cii'iliip=llf.30 a.m'"'.,!.:
7""
p.m
" c. - -...2."'-"'"' p.m-:(3iif&amp; 4th Sun)
lilli:~eorChrlllllaEetlowlhlp Center
'
Wednea&lt;joy SeiVice. 7:30p.m.
Swtday Scboot · 9:30a.m.
SalelifsL, Rulland
',
Sunday Sebool · 9:30 1.m.
~ h ol Chrllll
Evenin&amp; · 7 p.m.
Putor: Robeot E. MU.oer Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Muooh..norc
Wednelday Semces. 7 pm.
Wednelday Service• · 7:30p.m.
MillcrSL, Muon, W.Va.
ML Olive Unlled Methodist
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II :lh.m., 7 p.m.
Sundey School- 10 a.m.
· Off I24 behind Wilkeoville ·
Coohtlle United Melllocllll Parioh
-" Flnt Soulhem Baptlsi
Wonhip. 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Pu~r. Chad~ Jooes
Poawr: Harold E. AUoway·Priddy
Thursday Semce • 7 p.m.
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Wc:dnc•day SeiVice~ - 7 p.m.
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Coolville Clton:h
Pa1tor: E. Lamar 0'81)'1111
Wonhip . 10:30 1.m., 7 p.m.
M . &amp;. Fifth St.
Sunday Schcol· 9:30 1.m.
Bradford Cburdl or ChrJ!i! _
.Thursdoy SeiVices -7 p.m.
1!11
--~
Worshq..-t0:45 -a,iji~7:30-p.m.
Si. ·RL tl4&amp;CO:R,S:S.
,
-~
-~-.-----__ S~ylcbool --t0-•,m. - - 0
Wednet4ay.Service• ·1:30 p.m.
Pl1101: Derdt Stump
Mel,; CooperaUve Parish
P • a.m.
Thelday
Sem"'' • 7 p.m.
Middleport Flnl Bapdlll
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
ortheut Chioter
Comer Sillh &amp; Pilmer
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Atrred
Bethel Church
Putor. Rev.lamel A. Seddon
Wednelday Sei'Yi&lt;ZI · 7:30p.m.
Pam.: Sharon HIUIIIIIII
Townohip Rd., 468C
Faith Coopt! c•urch '
Sunday School- 9:15 a.m.
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
,
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Lata Boaom
·:
Worship .JQ:J5 Lm.
Su.- R111d Churdl ofChrllt
Worship - lla.m.,6:30p.m.
Wonhi_p· 10 1.m.
Sunday Sdtool·9:30 a.m.
,
Wednelday SeiVicoa. 7 p.m. _______•_ ___P!II~~Iyceepb
,
B:_
_~"'
.•.~
•. •_ - - · - - . ··-~ "~-•. _
Wednelday Senoicea . 10 1.m.
Wonhip · 10:4hln., 7:30 p.rii
__
_____ _,.. •,Sclu!o! .... "" ........ __
.
~~-~---------- ~-··---Hockl-...~-h
~--..&lt;. ·..
Wednelday7:~ 0p.m. ;
----· ' - - -Ra&lt;IM-Flnt·Baplllll
Worship . IO.a.m., 7 p.m.
Putor: Sharon Hau1man
"ar-•'-•-·
.
PU1or: Steve Deaver
Wodnelday SeiVices . 7 p.m.
Wonhip • 9 1.m.
Gruel St...,
!IlL Olive Communlly Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
.
s...day Scheel · 10 Lm.
Sunday Schcol - 10 a.m.
Pastor: Llwomce Bush
Wot1fiip -10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Liberty Cltrlsllu Church
Thunday Seovices. 7 p.m.
Wonhip. 11 t.m.
Sunday School · 9:30 e.m.
Wednelday Sei'Yicel· 7:30p.m.
Deller
Wednelday SeiVices • 8 p.m.
Eveiiini · 7 p.m.
Joppa
Sliver Run BapUII ·
Pa11!&gt;r. Woody C.U
Wednedly
Sei'Yice • 7 p.m.
Ton:hChurdl
Pastor: B,.nda Weber
Putor: Bill Uole
•
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m.
Co. Rei. 63 •
Wonhij&gt; • 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Unlled Faith Churc~
:wii,sfu;;-.-io. 9::1Q.a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
·Rt. 7·on ·Pcmeroy By-Pau· Worship· 11 Lrn., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday SeiVice • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servict~· 7:30p.m.
Putor: Rc~. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
W&lt;idneoday·Semce•· 7:30p.m.
SUndav School · 9:30 a.m.
Lan&amp;IYIIIe
Chrbtlan
Churdl
MI. UniM Baplllll
LongBotlllm
Worship
- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Sonday School· 9:30a.m.
PaoU&gt;r: loe N. Say,.
•
Panor: Owiea Eaton
Wt:Giesday Service · 7 p.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Racine Flnt Churdl or the N,_me
Sunday Schco1- 9:45 e.m.
SWlday S&lt;hccl· 9:30 Lm.
w.-..d•y SeiVice 7:30 p.m.
Paotor: Thana• L. Gates, ll
l!venina • 6:30p.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. ·
E&lt;dala Fellowllirp
S~mday School· 9:30a.m.
Wednelday SeiVic:et ·6:30p.m.
Wednelday
Service•
·7:30p.m.
128
Mill SL, Middlepon
Hemlock Grove Cburch
Worship ·10:30•.m.,6p.m.
llethltltem Bapdlll ·
Put"" O.uclt Mcl'hersoo
Wednelday
SeiVices.
7
p.m.
Pa1tor. O.ules Domi&amp;an
•
Reedsville
PallOr: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday Scbool · 10 Lm.
Sunday 1chool • 10:30 a.m.
Pastot:
Rev.
O.arl01 Eaton
Sunday Sebool--t0:30Lm.
Evming · 7 p.m.
Mldtlfl&gt;ort Church ollhe N,_ene
Wonhip • 9:30 un. 7 p.m.•
WoBhip • 9:30 Lm.
Wcnhip - 9:30a.m.
Wt:Gielday Service· 7 p.m.
Pastor. Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday S&lt;hool • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Some.. -7:30p.m.
Old Delttr Bible Chrlllllan Church
SW&gt;day Scltool · 9:30a.m.
Wednesday Semceo · 7:30p.m.
FuttG.... Li&amp;hthPaacr:
ltck
Cleland
Worship
· !0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Old .Bethe Free Will Baplllll Chorch
'
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy .
SUJI!Ia.JI Scheel· !Oa.m.
Wedneodey
Service~· 7 p.m.
·
. 28601 St. Rt. 7,Miildleport
-- l)lppers Plains St. Paul
Pa110r.RoyHun10r
Wednioday SeiVice• - 7 p.m.
' · ·• Sunday School· 10 a.m. :
Putor: Shlron Hausman
Sunday School · 10 Lm.
Reedsville FelloWIIlip
Hob,...
Cburch
~ Chrlllln Christian
Eveni"'- 7:30p.m.
Sundoy School· 9 Lm.
Cburcb ~the NIZirene
.Evenina7:30p.m·. •
Unloo
·
Thursday Service• ·7:30p.m.
Worship · 10 Lm.
Tueoday &amp; Thursdey · 7:30p.m.
Pastor: John W. Dooglas
Pallor: Therm Durham
Tuesday Semces ·7:30p.m,
Hillside Bapllsl Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. .
Sunday Schco1 • 9:30a.m.
N,.. Setllemenl Cttuids
Wonhip - 10:45 1.m., 7 p.m.
SL RL 143juatdfRL 7
Central Clulllor
Sundly Worship · 2:30p.m~
PaStor. Rev. James R. A....,, Sr.
Christian Union
Asbui'J' (SJfiCUSO)
Thunday 1&lt;Mce1· 7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Syracuoe Churdl ~the N121!'ene
PuiOf. Wesley Thllcher
Wollhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Pastor. Rev. Glem McMillan
EvcninB·7p.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:45 Lm.
Sooth lleiiHl New T5!im•t
Wc:dnelday Service~ - 7 p.m.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wednesday SeiVicea · 7 p.m.
Worship · II Lm.
SilverRid&amp;e
Wo11hip
•
10:30
a.m.,
6
p.m.
Hop&lt; Bapdsl Cltapel
Wednelday
Seovice1
7:30p.m.
Pt~Ulr.
Duane
Sydenlhid&lt;er
Wednesday Service• • 1 p.m.
Hartford &lt;;burch~ Christ In Cbrlstlan
570 G1111t S.., Middlepon
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Unloo
Putor. David Rl)'an, Sr.
Worship • I 0 a.m., 7 p.m.
Eat~rlse
Pom.,.oy Churcho(lhe Nazaren e
.
Hanfonl, W.Va.
Sunday Schco1- 10 a.m.
Pastor: Keah Rader
Wedneoday SeMce • 7 p.m.
Pastor.
Rev.
Thomas
McClung
Pasror.
Rev.
David
M&lt;Mani•
Wollhip- p a.m.., 7 p.m.
Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
Sunday Sdtool · 9:30 1.m.
Sund1y School - 11. a.m.
Wedne~day SeiVices- 7 p.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Carleton lnuntenomlnadooll Church
Wo11hip . 10:30 1.m. and 6_p.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Tuesday
Services
·
1
p.m.
·
King1bwy Road
Vld&lt;N'J Baplllll
Wednesday Seovice1 • 1 p.m.
Wednelday Service• - 7:30p.m.
Putor. Qyde W. Henderson
525 N. 2nd S1., Middlepon
!IlL Moriah Church of God
Flo!Woods
Sunday School -9:30 Lm.
Pastor. James E. Keesee
Chellor Church otthe Nazarene
Racine
Pastor. Keith Rader
SJoeni!!a · 7 p.m.
Wollhip • tO a.m., 7 p.m.
l'luwr: Rev:'HeJbert GoaiC
Pastor: R~. James SauerfiCld
SWlday
Scheel
·
I
0
a.m.
Wednesday
SetviCe • 7 p.m.
Wedne~day SeiVices- 7 p.m.
Sunday
School·
9:30
•.
m.
Sunday School · 9:45 e.m.
Wonhip • l1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Worship
·
11
Lm.,
6
p.m.
·
Faith Baptlll Churclt
Flftdorn Gospel 1111111.,.
. Thund1y Servicet • 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Service• • 7 p.m.
Church of God
Rlilroad St., Muon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
.
'
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Putor:
Rev. R&lt;&gt;&amp;er Willfonl
Forest
Run
RuUond
Churc~
or
Use
Nazarene
Evenillfl · 7 p.m. ·
Worship'· II a,m., 6 p.m.
S101day School · 9:30 Lm.
Pas&amp;or: Wesley Thucher
Paltor:
SamueiBuye
Wcdna:day
Services
•
7
p.m.
Wedneoday Servi"'s • 7 p.m.
•"'
Worship, 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
SW&gt;day School • I 0 Lm.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wednelday Sei'Yice -7 p.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wo11hip . JQ-JO Lm., 6:30p.m.
Forest Run Bapllll
Rutland Church ol God
Thunday
Semces
·
6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services·? p.m.
Pastor. Rev. Nyle Bonten
P•siOr: John F. Corcoran
Whlle'o Chapel W....yan
Sunday School • 9:30a.m. •
Suod•r Sehool · 10 a.m.
Coolville Road
Heath
(Middleport)
Portland Flrlll Church or the Nwrene
Wonhip • 2:30 p:m.
Wonhtp • II a.m., 7 p.m.
PallO" Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Pastor. Frtnk Smith
Pa1tor: William Justus
Wcdnu~ ay Services • 7 p.m.
ML Moriah Baplllll
Sund1y Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 9:30 t.m.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Foorth &amp; Main SL, Middleport
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wonh1p • 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Syrat11se Church or God
Wednelday
Sei'Yice · 7 p.m.
Wednesday
Scrvtces
•
6p.m.
PuU&gt;r: Rev. Gilbert Craig,lr.
Wedne1
day
Seme&lt;s
·
7:30p.m.
Apple and Second Sta.
Sunday School · 9:30 a,m.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Fairview Bible Churclt
Mlnenvllle
New Hne1 Church of the Nazarene
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Smoot and Wonhip- 9:30 a.m.
. l.etan, W.Va. Rt I
Pastor: Wesley Thatdter
Pastor:
Glendon
Strood
Evening
Services·
7
p.m.
Anllqulty &amp;ipus1
,.
Putor: Jmncs Lcwi1
Sunday
School
·
9
a.m.
Sunday
Schco1
·
9:30a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Putor: Kenneth Smith
Sunday S&lt;hool · II Lm.
Worihip · 10 a.m.
Worohip , J0:3Qa.m.,J p.m.
Worship : '9;30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Sunday Sc!tooLJ:30.a.m.
Church or God ofProphecy
Wedne•day Service• • 7 p.m.
Wedneodey Seovice ·7:30p.m.
Wonhip • !0:45a.m.
OJ. While Rei. off St. Rt. 160
Pearl Chapel
Thunday Services · 7:30p.m.
Pastor: Pat Herlsoo
Pastor: Florence Smilh
Other Churches
RuUand Free Will Baptllll
Sund1y School· 10 1.m.
Sund1y School .'9 1.m.
- - - - ---'-""'s.,.·p
hi · iOLm,
--.,---~~":-.:=-------:-::--7"' hi " ·
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Wcd~:~~y t-;;'i~~--·
\•'
Pomeroy
Sund•y Schco1 · 10 a.ni.\1
Pastor: Eunhac CGrtce) Kee
E"""'a· 7 p.m.
New Life Church of God
_ SW1day.Schoolo1Xi:WL. _
Wednelday Sei'Yic:et • 7 P·'!':_
-~ChesiC L-- - Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Ba
tlsl
PaSlor:
Gary
Hines
---'11
F
Wednelday Service• · 7:30 p.m.
Aoh St ~~~·.
P
Sundoy S&lt;hool· 9:30a.m.
••
. Sunday = O·Lm. "-,
WoiiHip • 6 p.m.
· - Rock Sf&gt;o'l"'• Worship . !!a.m.
Weditcsday ScOVIcel • 1 p.m.
P•ltor:Ketth Rader
!!
9"·'"'
Wedneoday Service - 7:30 p.ln.
Sunday Sebool - 9:15 o.m.
Grace Eplocopal Cburch
Satunlay Service -7:30p.m. ,...
271 North
Worship · 10 a.m.
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
_
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.
Soc IIIII
P11tor: Rev. Or. Roy C. Myen
~
Sa&lt;red Heart .Catholic Churdl
Middleport,
Sunday
ldlool
irid
wonhip
·
l1
:30
a.m.
RuU111d
214 E. Main
~ !61 Mulberl)' Ave., Paneroy, 992-5898
Pallor: Arthur Crabtree
Ohio
992-SJJO
Pomeroy
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
~
1Catholic
Ep1scopal
Wonhip • tlk30 a.m.
' '
Pine Grove Bible Hollnea Church
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.
Pastor: Rev. .Walter E. Heinz
!(.!mile off Rt. 325
~ SaL ecn. 4:45·5:15 pm.: Man · 5:30p.m.
Salem Center
Pa1t&lt;&gt;r. Rev. O'Dell M.,ley
•1
Sun. Con.- 8 :45 ·9:1~-a.m.,
SNOUFFER
PallOr.
Ron Fierce
• ~SCho01 · 9:30a;on: •
•,. •·· ·
Sun. Min · 9 ~30 a.m.
S111dey S&lt;bool- 9:15 a.m.
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
·'
Dlily Mall· 8:;Kla.m.
Wonhip . JQ:Jla.m.
Holiness
;
l'oln""'f Cborch ol Chrllll
I
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Snowville
:.
2-12 w. Main St.
Worship. J0:30·a.m., 7:30p.m.
992-7075
1)
John F . FUitl, Mgr .
P1110r: Florence Smith
Wedneodty SeiVice · 7:30p.m.
,
Ph . IIHlOl
SIDlday
School
•
10
a.m.
172
North
S..ond
Au.
'••
Church ol Cllrist
Pom('roy
Wonhip • 9am.
Micldl-t; Ohio
Weoleyon Bible Holiness Church
PuiDr: And.... Mila
7l Pearl SL, Middleport.
S101day School · 9:30a.m. ,
''
P11tor:
Rev. Roy MeCatty
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Sunday
ochool - 9:30a.m.
Wednelday SeiVica • 7 p.m.
.Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
EWING FUNERAL HOt(£
Wodnelday Service· 7:30p.m.
"'"'
~
Pomii'07 Wealalde Chun:b or Cltrlol
"niJ(uir _,. and .~j'rl'kf' .4/u· n~·.(.
!:
33226 Otildnm'1 !lome Rd.
Hroolt Run Hollnea Church
"'"'"'"' Kewlll&amp;g Fllrl Clrldrw"
!:
992-3847
E;sta bllshed 1913 ·
Putor: Rllben Manley
228 W. Main St_., Pomeror
w - -Sun=
·Sdtool~lh;m. - .~
- - Sunday School~ 9:30 1.m. "
W
• tO a.m., 6 p.m•
992-2121
Worship · 10:45 1.m., 1 p.m.
~
Wed
SeiYic:a • 7 p.m.
601 EAST MAIN
I'OIIIIOY, OHIO
Pomtroy
Thunday Service· 7:30p.m.
106 Mulloerry An.
' PaiiDr: Dan s.lluon
Sunday Worship • 10:30 p.m.
Thunday Servicea. 7 p.m.

.

Spiritual PaW. c-.
S!l1o 338, Aa!iquily
- P.-: A. ~wart
SundaySdtooi - IOim.
Evenin1 · 7:30p.m.
Thunday Setvice . 7:30p"'!&gt; ~~

.

l
'

"''

, ..
Catnry Pllpi• Qipol ! ')''
Harrisunville ROid J
Putor: Rev. Vic:1trllouah•, . . Swtday School 9:30 ""'· •
_,_W.OIJitip.· ll a.m.,.7:30p.li!J~-.
Wednaday Servke; 7~~ p.mf .r~
•·

I

1_6.99

&amp; SUPPLY CO.

ReJoi&lt;lel Lire Clt-

500 N. 2nd Ave., Mi*U t "'
Pastor: Rev. Midlael ......
Sundaf Sdtooi·IOLm;
Wednelday Se1&gt;icoa • 7 p.m.

East

Pentecos!Ji

''

9

Mldd~~­
Pulor: Rev. Clod&lt; lltker
Suoday School · JOLm. '
Evonin1 · 6p.111.
·
Wedotetday SeM&lt;a ' 7:30 .....

Presbytenan
Harrllollvllte PreoiJyteri• Clt.-dl ...
Wonhip • 9 Lm.
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.

- Miild!OpOri'Prtllll

'· '--·
iirf'u
=--

Sunday School·~ a.m.
Wonhip - !Oa.m., 4p.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sill.)

Syracu• Flnt UIIIIM .....jlaiu Swtday School · 10 ~m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 4 p.m. (htl3nl S...)

Seventh-Day Advent1 s•
;..._

J[

Sevalls'·Day Advtallot

. ,,

Mulbeny Hu. Rei., Pomeroy
P1110r. Dei&gt; Snyder
· Sawnlay Serviou:
Sabbath School • 2 pm.
Wonhip ·~g._~

'•

!IlL Hmnoa Uolted 111-.o • ~-r

Cltsorclt
Teus Communiry off Cit 82
P11tor: Roben Sanden
.
Smday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Services · 7:30pm.

Ed.. United Brettt... lo Cltrlll
S111day Scb9ol • 10 t.m. _
Worship- 7:30 pm.
Wedneiday Setvic:et -7:30p.m.

-..

IPTION

fJ

l.

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

992-5432

-F"

204 Condor St•
Pom~ror. OH.

'

I ·'

•

,.

SWISttER &amp; LOHSE·
PHARMACY
we
Doc ton' ·El
-..
Fill
Preurtption!i.

'

•·

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Pomfl'oy,

911-l95S

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
~URNtTURE I HARDWARE

Hom elite S~ws

'1'12-2219

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES .

716 NOiTH SUOND AVE •
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO .

..

Mitldltpor1

.

(row's Family Restawant

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
115 I. Momorlel Dr:
Poma,.y
,u.uo•

,I'

.

·" . MEIGS TIRE
~ \ CENTER INC.
'I

00
~

83' ~ffi

. Rllify-UII,.
.
~ flllhllghl
WIDfracl Plug In

•

SUv....Uie Wonl ol Fallis
Paotor: David Dailey
Sunday Scbool9:30 a.m.
Evenina--7 pm. •
Thunday Setvice • 7:30pm.

'''

•
''

RollryPTool Kit

$199.99

71811ort1J
An.
....,..;. 992·2178

· z.... Churcll ~Cbrllll

,...

-

64.99

Jt~!»

'

b8ater bar

C) PEN

Ll1Mr17 Ammblr ~God

Duddina I.ute, Muon, W.Va.

P01tor: Jodt CO!e&amp;rove .
Sunday School· 9::10 a.'l'.
Wonhip • 10:30 i.m., 6:30 P·"i·
Wednesday Semces -'6:30p.m.

~

1.441111

PowerMate"
4.3-HPvac

,,
.',

.

of..._

Putor: Kmutellt Boker
SundoyScbool - IOa.m.
W'onhip · 9 a.m.
Wednay ~ . IIi a.m.
' ' ' Connll

..

7x35mm Center·
Focus Binoculars

• ~to 147 channels,
Incl. Cllble

2·speed, 9-cycle washer 4-temp electric dryer with
with our best agitator
Automatic Fabric Master"

Assembly of God

.,

Bwwdow Rllfae Cburdl ~ C~rlll

Latter -Day Saints
R00111nlzed Church
Chris! In
,
Liller Day Salnll
Portland-Racine Rd.
Paotor: William Roush
Sunda.yyScl)ool-9:30a.m.
WQnhip'· !0:30a.m.
Wodnelday Sei'Yice•· 7:30p.m.

Middleport Com11unky Curcto
S1$ Peul St., Middleport .
Putor: Sam Aadmon
Sanday SdtooliO a.m.
Evenin1 • 7:30 p,.m.
Wednesday Savice · 7:30p.m.

II&lt;IUoy

~

w/CIIIrglng Bile~

KIIII'IIOI'e" 5-cyde dliihwalher
3 wash levels for
Complete ooverage

w.-.~~~ay s..,.;... ~ 7:3op.m .

.Ktao Ch~rcli ~ Cllrlll
Wonhip,9:30 '"'·
SjiodaY School· t0:30 a.m.

'nle Salwailoo Ar..y ·
liS Buucmut A~ .• l'ot!len&gt;y.
Sunday School - 10:30 .....
Worship · 10:00 Lm., 7:30p.m.

fl

Cordlen 'Screwdriver

oper8ling displays
• AN In/out jacks

,. Churdl ot ...... Cllriot'A ....... Ic l'allll
'· New Umt Rd., neJlto F.: MoW Padt
t1
PallOr: Robert w. Ric:lwol.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
•
E"""'a • 7 p.m.
L
Wednelday ScM'* - 7 p.m.
u
C...rdl or_JtiUI Chrllt AIIOIIOIIc
.VanZandt and Wad !teL
Pa119r. fames Miller
Sunday $chool· 10:30 Lm.
Evenina - 7:30p.m. .. .

- Mkliltijl..fCbl&lt;l of'Cifrill
511undMaia
. • Putoi: AJ-!Wuon
· S101day School · 9:30a.m.
· Wonhip - 1:15, J0:30un., 7p.m.
Wcdnolday Service~ - 7 p.m.

'

•

-1-5.99~

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!

-c -

.,

tas.C O'

11

"''

to ....~.H

The Pomeroy Elemen••~ sec- to read and gave them information observe community workers such
_,
-'-·-'-' """
"--reading m_,_,_,
the
The Chester• Volunteer
ond grade class o.f S.uzvI - Carpenter
_ on
""""'"ng
"""""·
ashthose'.rom the
gas-· company,
_. Department
. Fire
.
• '
ation' .. c.
.
.
stall
'
will
be
holdmg
u.s
anu un.
p one company, a serv1ce
on,
had a --•L=-g field tnp' recently to m.orm
,..,...,
B
'
·
the
trip'
tit
t
d
h
ff'
'I
.
·
annual
Christmas,dinner
on
on
. the Pomeroy Fire Station and the
e.ore gomg on
e s u- an t e post o tee rna• earner.
Meigs County Pilblic Llbrllry in dents prepared pict!D'es_wjth cap· _ Students had the opportunity_lo~ Sunday at 5:30p.m. at the fire
Pomeroy. They were accompanied lions which they .gave 10 Smidt and practice traffic· safety rilles: ~ed .. house. All yo)untcers who hcljled
by their teacher, one college stu• Mrs. Hawthorne. Upon returning tn the classroom. These skills relh· the depanment throughout the year
dent-aide, one father and four- the weeks since have included a for.ced information from science, · are invited tq attend 1 • .. .. others
unit on leiter writing, in which the . social studies, health, English-Ian· · The depanmept will' furnish the
m At the
· Pomeroy Fire Station students have learned
· r•"te-· guage and reading. · • .
m
_ eat. All oihe
. rs are
. ~ - to w
. 10.-bOng a covTodd Smith was assisted by Orville thank-you leiters to those who
At the r.re station students were ered d~h. ·
Hill in show,:~~. the fire trucks. helped them on the trip including given take-home pamphletS for
emergency sq . , safe!.)' ~uimrn:nt the adults who walked with them themselves aJilttheir families 10
and the station house. Smith insuring their safety. Students also study. In the future students will
Revival .at the RutJa.Jciimmuexplained all of the equipment, collected fallen leaves of many write a letter of invitalion 10 Mrs. nity Church, New Lima Road, will
answering many quesl!ons, and types for identification in ~lass- Hawthorne asking her to Visit the be held Monday through Dec.l4 at
giving s_afety pointers to the stu- room science. In addition 'to ·cmn- classroom with more stories. They 7
· litJ
't
k
1 th lib
and
p.m.
mg1111
·
8
dents. Children were permilled to mum Y wor ers
e rary
will also write stories and illustmte •
Rev. CarlYEisenhart
will be the
wear the uniform items and Smith fi!C station, they were also able 10 them to be given to the library.
speaker and Rev. Dewey King
showed !hem how he would look
•
invites the public 10 atten~:'
~·
· sndsoundifhecameintothe.home
during a fire. This on-site v!sit
.
~ .
. IIW-DPII"~
' ·helped the-children-to understand- Keith and Emma Ashley and period music . Over 700' people
..
__· ·
··. ••
Dl
the importanCe of safety pre-~lan- daughters, Rachel, Whitney and auended the event Also a meeting
--.-- ning and involving the11 famtlies. Emily, of Rock Springs, recently of the S.V.R. was held with Ashley
Poli1Hltl11 4" to 10"
The irip featured their kilowledge auended Remembrance Day 81 Get· representing his uniL He'ttceived a
Potnuttla Hanging !!lukets
· -or ~ll1l and hmne safety, as well as tysburg, Pa.
baUie streamer for his participation.
Chrlltmla Clctua-BIIskets ··
gtv1ng them reassurance that capa- . This day iS held in honor of Lin· This wiU be presented to hisS. V.R.
Holly TINS
•
ble help could be had in case of coin· s Gcuysburg, Address. The unit captain.
Cut Chrlltmls Trw1
.emergency. .
. festivities are sponsored by the
Grave Blankets ·
. At the Metgs County Pubhc Sons of Veterans Reserve(S.V.R.),
0 l
MonuiMntSprayund
L1brary Mrs. Norma Hawthorn~ led the Ci vii War reenactment group
v....
the ~~p on a tour of the facihty, arm of the Sons of Union V~s
lJLTyJee...and her daug11ler,
Large House Plants
~xplammrwhat--was--tn-eaclt-sec~of the Civil War.
·
- Melissa Tyree, are hosting a ChristCactus
uon. ~he et them explore the Ch!lThe Ashleys touredmany of the mas Day dinner for anyone who
10• Follana Aaskets
dren s Corner, wh~re books, Civil War sites including the loca- would like 10 attend.
, all v:ri.'it.s
'
games, toys ~d l.eam~g tools are tions where the First Ohio Light
'the buffet style dinner will be
Ope 0.11y too
kept. After enJOymg thts .area stu- Art•'llery ·fought. Tht's un,·t,·s the
22
n
. : a.m. to.s:oo p.m.
dents moved to the soctal room
.
held at the Tyree ·residence, I
Sundlyt.OOp.m.loS.OOp.m.
here Mrs Hawthorne told three onc:porm~yed~ytheS.V.R.umtof Mulbef!YAvenue,from l.IOSp.~. HUBBARD$ GREEN ·H
· OUSE- -.w ·. ·1 · . d · f1 n 1 whtchAshley!Sa~mberi -·
onChnstmasDay~nd-will- con~sr- __._ __ __ - __ ~-- __
sto~tes • .~u.strate ~llh . .~ ne -·- A parade composed ·enurcly·of---or lram- an·d turkey marshmallow
SYRACUSE, OHIO
boafd. This was so engrossmgtha1
U .
•
U4-et2.ans
the students asked for more stories both .mon .and Conf~erate re- YaJ1!S and dessert.
L..--..;·....;.....;.;..,;,;.;.;._ ___.
so they were encouraged to have enactors of .•~fantry •. Brl.tllery and

Rev_ival slated

$299.99
111 MONTHLY'

The Dally Sentinel-Page _7.

.... '

1~--'"-

: Thanksgiving weekend was
.;njoyed by 1ohn aqd Marjorie
.Brewer, Reedsville, when they
were visited by their granddaughter, Pvt. Drcma Gale S1orms, who
is stationed at Ft.1ackson, S.C. and
their daughter and son-in-law,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,

~"---'--'

TOURING THE LIBRARY • The Pomeroy Elementary seto1nd
grade class or Suzy Carpenter had a walking fteld trip recently to
the Meigs County Pubhc Library where Mrs. Norma Hawthorne
led th.e group on a tour of the facility, explaining what was in each
section.

( rlday1 December 6, 1991

992-2975

• •

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Sfruf a3o;.r.1
131 MHIIIIMI
Midcll!lort, O~lo 41710
(1141 812·1117 - IIII·OOKII
CHURCH IU~PLIEI • IIIL£8

(\\\i(l

,

Nationwide

Ins. Co . .

of Columbus, 0 .

104W. Main
991-1311 Pomeroy

'

.

_

......' "'. h
.~~

r.J...

.

•

.

I

(1

POAIROY, OHI0-992-66J~
IILL QUICKEL

.'

,.

�.. ··'

.... .•
,

·~

- ..... '

Ohio

.'"'Bustness
.

·I need a place to set a 14x70

Saturday, December 7

I m.nh;' la home . See George

Rd.

C~ooae and (:ut

For information or return ol
our 7 mos. old Rottweiler
. th~t wa.s. stolen ·
Wednesday morning, Elec.
4 on Skinner Rd. Answers
to name Cody. Anyone with
inlomnation please contact
us at

BOOK YOUR
CHRISTMAS DINNER
PARTIES WITH
OSCAR'S
RESTAURANT .
Some dates still
available.
No group too small or up
to90!

614·992-7694.

446-9545

DEC. 6, 1991-

0EC. 7, 1991
10:30 A.M.-5:30P.M.
CAROL SISSON
201 LASLEY ST.
POMEROY, OH.

35975 Flatwoods Rd.

Po~~~Ta~hta

614·992·5702 .
12-2-91·1-n!O.

DEER

C. l. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration

'25 C11 &amp; Wnpped
s5 Eitra to ~.
•

949·2734

o.r.,

614-742·3051

11-111 ...

AIR
- IIAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBilE.&amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

.... . ... ....... ... ........ ... . ...
~BILE

RACINE
FIRE DEPT: '
Bashan luilclng
EVERY'

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Startina Sept. 28
Fa~lo';v

8

~

&amp;Auction

HARRISONVILLE PTO

CHRISTMAS AUOION
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7 --,
7:00P.M~

At Harrisonvlle Elementary
DAN SMITH.

Offer Ends Oct. 31

742·2979

949·282'6

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

•VINYL
•"LUMINUM
•BLOWN IN
JNSULATION

Public Notice

Public Notice

Nalk:e al Qrawlng Jurora
Revised Code, S.C. 2313.20
OHice al Commlulanero
of Jurora, Melgl Coun!y, Ohio
November 27, 1991.
To AU Whom II May Concern:
On Tuesday, the 12th day
ol December 1991, 11 8:30
o'clock, A.M. altho alflce of

ol llelga Counly, Ohio; Ju.
rart will be publldy drawn
lor lhe January 1991 Term al
lhe Coun ol Common Pleu
al uld Counly.
Wallace Bradford
I. 0 . McCoy
Commloaldhora of Jurora
{12) e, lTC

1ht Commlaalanera af Jurora

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

FOREVER
BRONZE

.................

entire

~AOaoned cablnol alld
; hlrdWoro. Ukt - ·
051
" 7.
9
nted t B
11 Help Wanted
'LovNblo c.1tco KHion, F...ia, _ _ _
a-..._o
__
u.:.y_ --.....::;.....;...;.;..;._ _ ,!~l~~~~~~
rl W- Otd To GIVIIwoy, 614'
AVON I All Arooa I Shlrloy
::•;ll;4~1170i;,;Aft;;;";;;4;:p;;;.m.;=.:;:-.;-.;;;.l~~.'!
Spura, ~OI.a75-1121.
__
:11a1o JlpontaO- SpOnlol;- 2
~'11.."':! 0i}~:."".:'J~
In mf homo: ;:::,=:-:.,-.:'c:--:-:-:-::--=
..ld, 301.a754136.
·
65'N.
.:2'ni houro. Mulll Unll Ronlsl; 1 Y•r Old.
IPii~ CIDw
to gtv11w1y, Wont lo bur· Wal Dlonoy'o Lady
no
14-245- Vinyl ·Siding, !-oW Molnto111nco,
'1114-2M-101 , ·
. &amp; lho Tramp yldoo 1lpe. Nlmo I :.J;::.......,...,=::c"":-=',---·j Conlraly Locotod, $58,900. 114·
Part Gorman Shophlld d~ your prlco. 114-411.Q313.
, CONSTRUCTION
.;.14;::1.;::BI!ea:::::.·--~--~
f
Cllrpenttre' To S22, laborers To
'"'"""· spoyod. .30W75-55113 • W.ntod Ia buy, Slond ng llmtoot, $18, DtyWoll To $14.75, M111ot1o 32 Mobile
. Homes·
lor 8:00 Pll.
'
Bob Wlllloms &amp; Sono "111-11112· ~nd T_,ors To $22.50 Coil 1·
BOO.a82·2971.
• for Sale
;P.u.pploa:' H111ky And Shophord 1149•

w

-

HAVE REFERENCES

f."pploa

(614) '915•4180
10.23-91 1 mo.

&lt;.Mix. 111-317-7M7,
Wlntod To Buy: Junk Au!OI
.Uiocf ~~~- wtth llorrn win- Wllh Or Wllho.- llolora. Call
•..a
-.... •
Llny Uvely. 614-3U.t303.
~-. -7W753.
Top Prien Paid: All Oid u.s.
,;
Lost &amp; Found
Colno, Gold Ring~ SIIVor Co1na,

Homemacle with
Long Lasting Green:·
Scotch Pine.

CONSTRUCTION- Cll~llll to
122, Laboraro 10 f11._DtyWIII to
$1~.75, M1tone 1nd Tendera to
•-·50•P"II1.a~·-_
•••, · , · ·

CONSTRUCTION
Gold Colna. II.T.~. Coin Shop, Corporolon 1o $zz. laborlra lo
1111 Second A - GolllpoUa. · $11. lltywoll lo $14.75. Mason
olld Tonctora lo 122.50. 1·8IJO.
Color Brldlomoldo 0..00 1162-21171. .
Found: Black I ton . , _ dot, Wlnlor
Wllh Sl-• Sizto 511, 0. 'Ill.
unpvlllo ..... 114'1112~8
111 Ill !1821.
DRIVERS NEEDED
1400-1150 wkly, will lraln, drlvo
olOST omoll brown 11111111 dog
co car; 1.81J0.289-3857.
with blue coll1r answ... Cindy,
Employment Services Full·limo Cortllltd MT 0. MLT.
-t=~ SOulholdo, WY~·

f;;li:
a-1o In- Rio Gro..._,
j()hlo, 11144411-SM1.

·'

$20.00 eadl
Order Now for Your ,
Lost Loved Ones. ·

614·949·205a--:-: 11·25 1 mo. pdo,

'l.OIIT· Att1 1 whno eoppor 11010 11 Help Wanted
Harrloonvlllo aroa, 814' _ _ _:,_...;.;..;.;.:.;;___

~lo,

.7

Yard Sale 1
~LL Vanl IIIII Must Be Paid In
~anco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lho day bolono tho ad Ia lo .Un.
8undoy odlllon • 2:00 · p.m.
Friday. Mondoy odMion • 2:00

USED APPUANCES

90 DAY WAH&amp;IIn
up
up
.
IIEfiiGUATOIS-$100 up
IANGIS-Got·Boc.-$125
flfiZIIS-$115 up
'
IICIO OYfNS-$79 op

' HOLIDAY INCOME ''91" '

8

publiC Sale

_Exc.illni-BI~t•a,

eN,w HOIWII

•Complete
RemotWing

i. Optrator

W.y....,llto, NC 287811.
Wanted mollv1tld NlftptrtOn,
$21,00-$52,000 111 year, ti'llnlng
provkl.d,. 11perlenc• prtf•red,
aend rtaume to Dilly S.ntlntl

992-6855
•1111 511 mo. pd.

PO 801 1291 Pomeroy, OH

DARLI'E ITEWART...- ......................- •••.. .~~2-a~~

SANDY 1UTCttiR-•• - ...................................J12.1171
IHERYL WALTIRS........,•. _ ...................:.Mt-41421

GUN SHOOT

in the (;Jassifieds!

F.ORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

t!=~~
'·-~~~~e::=====:!.ll12

Situation
Wanled

.ClUB

Ftmllt roomale nNdtd to
ah1re lp.trtmtnl wl1hrH Olhtr

Begins Sept. 15

call 6'11·592-a256 or 611·992-

glrll, 5 min, from O.U. campus,

11027
Student

614-985·3961

Factory Guns Only
9/9/9112

expensn. 814·192·2463, uk -for

nttdlng a ride to
Unlvorally ol Rio Grand lrom
Pom•oy, willing to help wlgaa

Brtndl

614·949·2202

US-4473

RACINE, OHIO.

DK's FARM TOYS

by ERR

- Et-lcol olld Plumbing ·

Displayed at The
Qualry Prlat Shop

~

- Concrete wol'tll

-tor.::,

"Helping You To
,Recover Your
Investment"

Stop &amp; CoJI!IICirt
Fr• Estimates

CARPENRI SERVICE ·

.,.Aao...

UPHOlSTERY

ED'S

.

HOURS:

8:30 am-4:00 pm

Exterior

614·992·3394

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C• .YOUNG Ill

,!!!:~.2JJo

_ . - --·- 1_1:14.'90 ~fn

Or Call

;

742·3020 Emlngs

..__ _1;.;2;.;
·2;.;·1;,;,1·.;,1.;;mo~.~

- Interior Painting,
Free Eetlmatoa
30 yeara experience.
Four ltllereol
rocommendellon. Honnt
and dependable.

18

.......,,

CUSTOM IIILT
HOME~ &amp; GARAGES
·~ lea10nalllt

Prien"
PH. 949·101 ·
or 111. 949·1160 . ·
Day or Nltlht--·-

NO".SUNDAY

. , J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

·Rept-ment
Window•
•Roofing
·lnaulatlon

IAIIIIIEUEE
ft2·2772ar
742·2097

liM Bryon,.._

MICklllport, Ohio

11/1.mn

Wantad to Do

Speclallllng

In

c..ntom Frame II!Hiir
NEW I USlD PARlS
FOR All MAllS I
;. MODllS

992-7013
or 992·5553

at 10UfiD ·
1-100-141-0070
DAIWII OliO

71311'&amp;1 tin

CA.IT CUANEis"
aild nu flOOR CAll
oR••~ontlble Rllte~

•QuetJty Work
•FI'III Eatlm1t11
•Carpej H.. Faat Dry
Tlmt •
•High Gloaa on Tl~
Floor Flnlth

Blbytittlng

. .-·
Now tllat the weath~ bas ceo.led
dOWD, why DOt heatthlop up a bit '
by dcsriDB ytt~r cltllds, attic er
basemen! of those unwanted .items
and advcrtlallll lhem l'or iale In
the,CIUIIIIediP
Aid, you WI puttbat eltra
cash ts pod usc by checkln&amp;
. the Claulfteds r.r local garage
11les, II~ Jiiarkellllld bargains
In your neck of the woods.

IULlDOZIIG
, PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
· SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Umestont, Dirt.
Grtvtl and Coal
Ucen.ud and Bonded

PH. 614-992-!'i691
9-11:-:j mo. pd.

•

. MtllllWIS. ow ..
Rt. I, hliln4. OH.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULlDOZING -

PONDS
•
SEPTIC SYSTEMS •.
LAND CLEARING :

In

my

Ttli! lbc

Cfullftals II werk for yeu,

"446-2342
675-1333

Fumllwo Slrlpplng Alllnlshtd
Alld Aopelr, Clulllty Wo&lt;k, FrH
Eallmolooi30U756.S529.
Goorgu Pottoblo Sawmill, don'l
hlul your logs to the mill Just
caii30U7M957.
Hoer.t Cle1nlng S.rvlct, Itt ua ·
clean pur carpet1, 614-4462200.

Mita P.aula'a D1y Cart Ctnler.

S.tl, aHordlblt, chUdc1re. M·F

6 o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Avo•

wllcomo. 114-111-8224. Now In·
tant lf'oddltr C1re, 614o448-8227.
Will Do Com~ttl Houtt Clean~~. lnoldo Pslnllng. 614·
Will do .hou11

babphllng, ·

rtltonll~· riiH,

cletnlng 1nd
havo
rol,
614•949-2005

1nytlme.

· Will iii lronlilg TnPOiilr. 614·
381-a713.

11x70 1f73 Rockwood Mobllo Small 1 BR. opl. 7 Court Sl. And Mitt,.., Microwave St1nd,
Kllchon
whh
Olovo
&amp; 10' Gallon Fllh Aquartum, Ac·
ro~laorator, $185. mo. pluo ·-.114-411.0317.
$3,8110. Ed rown. 614-388-9973. UlllttT11, depoelt &amp; reftrencn.
6M~II2S.
10" Solo ltd, I . R. Sliding
1Vl'2 12llll0 . 2 BR 911
G'-' Door. llopte Couch And
Trollar And Gorago Aporlmonl Choir, Coptoln Choirs, Fllo
hoal&amp;llovo,
For
Aonl,
,,....,.,115,
.
ro~laoralor,dlthwoahor,
Cll•
Coblnol I
Alld Olhor
potoil lhrouahQut. Vory good
lllocl301.a75-1010.
condlllon. 114'258-t237 onor 45
Furnished
lp
Chlld'o tiding boll8rY car. 7 ft.
m
coyeh IfNI coffM tl~t, lltctric
typewrltw, tonu11 lize 12·15.
Cill 611-411-2103.

Dt-.

Rooms

Font Eacot1 GT, IUOO.
Otsgonwyhcl Coftory Potalan. 11M Bulcli Algol, ·
Sl..,_ ond Ht.. loyan klttonL UIOCJ, 114-111-0731.
61......_3844 aft., 7 p.m.

Fish Tank, 2413 Jacklon Ave.
Polnl Ploosanl, 30W7S-2013,

17 Shelby Chi~, 11,000
miiN. Turbo, IS ,,
tun-rOOf,
- .. 131110. 111
5347.

lull llno
T.roplcal
sm1ll
anlrn.t.
and a

72

·=l

11blrdl,
.

Trucks for

Sale

Poodlo Pupploo AKC Tiny TO)'
·And T.Cup; Also Mlnlalwo
s.m. ..... Soil And ""-·

COoMIII, 1114117o3101.

'

1979 ~ 112 ., .... II~, f1500.
1979 Ford 112 lon, lx4, $1500.
1979 Dodao 311 ton, lol, 'S7 . MOslcal
1877 Ford 3/1 lon, Ill, 1979 GltC rood troctar, :111
Dlo1 No Morol t.oso unwanted
Instruments
Po&lt;tndo And Eol Your Rogulor _ _::.;.:.:;
· ..::.:;..:.:.:::.:__ _ Dooroll. IZIIOG. 11711 Cllovy T...
llaolo. Toko Nllural Horll C.po Stldwin 2-lloybolnl O&lt;gtn, oc- .... dump, 11100, .-e.221S

.wulll. R•.uhs Gulranlted. 614-

1111-81111.
Electric hot wit• t1nk, Metric
i&amp;~:-- &amp; eoal atovt.
Ergometer Excercl1t Blk• For
$10 And Compocl s1- Sp.

1om ·WIIh Spookoro. 114-44800JV Aftot 5p.m.

Merchandise
Rentals

LUCII. 814-256-1990.

51

Household
· Goods

~ big load
Alao, Wdi"t:ilul gnvtl

Floowood for ..It:

d.tl~•red .

alld grado drl-•r•. 11'1-448-

1321.

Gttllla Tlmbot Products Split
Firewood Dollnrad, Wo Accopl
HMp And Emorgoncy Aslllnco, 111-415,NSI,
Konmoro Rolrtgoralor; Old
Bllnkol Chill; Dolle: Doll
~~lgh Chair And Bod. 614·

tnt bna ,....., rythm I other

,.., GMC ~"7Jt Tl.-ilsllody
-nd . - . IIC cond, 611· Good.
Runs
Air, ., H.
111-118-4352.
1. . Chovy S.1G Plck.!Jp, Will
cam- Top I CYI!ndor, Good
F&lt;Jrm Suppltcs
eon.tltlon, Law IIIIMge, 1'14111-11117.
&amp; L1vestock
11181 Tavolo Pickup, I Spood,
Good Condlllonl U,IOO. 114'
111-4712.
61 Farm Equipment
1117 F.rd Ranger Big Fool oko.
AC 185 TrociDt, Slwp, $8 1150: IOially - · I Wh. 0.. II.OCIO.
l.llo Morlll 5010 /lC Wl1h nyd- 611-1141-2713.
toullc IJoodot, $8,195: fiN Ford
With SU.h Hog, $1.185: Ownot 1117 GIIC Slom, 3/llon, hoovy
Wll Flnonco. 611·21H1122.
duly, - · Air, PSoiiO, ........
114-116-2351.
Jim's Form E~utpmon11 .SR. 35,
Wool Gttlllooho, 611,..S.f777; 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Wlda toloctlon- • . - , ....
lrociOfS I lmplomonls. Buy, 1979 Ford E150 ven, V.a,
PB,
Ull, trade, 1:00-5:00 WMkUyl, dUll link, ~!'!_CIUllo,
I •
Sal. tKI Noon.
...... good, o,.w. 3Q1.171.25'1S.
John Door 4020, duol romo!H,
hydrollco, dllferonllallock, John ,wllh... Dodgoplow,
- :-~~~·~·
7 ..
115-3354.
Door fronl
ond,
"""'
cond .. $8!100,1114'8t&amp;o3825

192·1318

:r.

llwn twHper. good u new,
114-1112·2132
.
1. . FOld Ringo&lt; STX, $3o400.
l.lwn Llko - At
· ·-1-0731.·
M1hog1ny ,lwln beds complet• Rkllna
Plld 'l1,200;
Will ·
Slcratice
Somo baby 1umHu11, 1400.~11-256-6112.
74 .Mo torcycles
ABC'o carpel, 304-675·
6:~~~~~;_-.-:63 · Livestock
l tlli Harlro' DOvldoon, ...
~~m.ll•, $4500, .,..
2br CoU1ge In Town, Reftren· Gl111 top kitchen t1ble 1nd Mlnons 1000 Proloulonol 35
en Roquliocl. $250/mo. 614-245- ~hllra, $50. 301-875-69118.· .
mm cam1r1: totally 1Uio.,
8375 .
MYirtl llrgt 111\MS, $600. 6141185 Honda XR.aD ell~ blkt, 01•
GOOO USED APPLIANCES 1111·1713.
clliarll condftlon, 1150, 114'Mio
3 bedroom unturniahed house, Wnt.t., dryers, rttrlger1tort,
1507 2nd SlriOI, Now H•••n. 304· nngu. Sk1gg1 · AppU1n~1, Moving Nil, mise ttem1, 1917 Cullom l.hoolock Hauling. Con ~~
675-3481.
Upper River Rc1. Bnldt Stone Ford Ranger XLT, 1!f78 annlvlf'· H1ul To Hln.boro SaiM Or Lo- 11811 250x I W.._r,- Tlroa,
ury Eclitfon Corvette, 304-6753 BR holM, n•wly remodeled CrHI MottL Clll 014-440.7318.
Wllllon. Runo Good! $1,700. 114'379-22!12
2280.
. ~1!:._.. Chuck
with pa~rtltlbnemenl. Exeelllnt
Ttueklng. 614- After &amp;p.m.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
locallon In Pt Pltlllnt 1r11. Complete home tumlahings: New 40 a•llon g11 w1t11 hllt•r.
19811 Honda 350X, ~ · - r
S400 mo. plut depoeU. Reteren- Houno: Mo1&gt;S1I, 9-5, 114-446- $100. 614'38a.S542.
Groln foci, young bool, 31110. Firat houoo on Slllo Fonn
cu !.qulrod. 81lol41o0228,
0322, 3 mlln ouc Bullville Rd.
N•w C1Nt1te Tapes, Nev•r holl ot whole, $1.20111 on 1ho to I~ Rood Lakin lftor 3:30 plot.
3-BR on Lincoln· Hgt1., F110 !)ollvory.
Plopcf, Sluffod Tor Ant""'•· 114-111-2!16
Pomeroy. 614-992-7689 •h•r
Eloc1rlc Slovo, An llalchlng l.lmouoln Solo • t raglolorod 76 Auto Parts &amp;
PICKENS FURNITURE
5:00pm
Sol ... _ . 611-416-'i'l69.
Nsw/Usod
cowa, t2Sanla CroMCOWI brtd
Accessories
Houuhold fumlthlng . 112 mi.
to L~n bull, 15 112
Gll!lpolls Forry, 2 slory, 5 bod· Jtrricho
Gtik
hobby
horNI,
GIOII
Rd.
Pf.
PlnMnl,
WV,
roo"', dining room, 1 blth hotM call304.e75 ~1450.
Chrislmat a•H•. $45. 4. h. snow Llmoulln . -~~ and nlco gas lonko, body potts, wHh omoll lloroge bldg. N01r
blldo lor Wilking Grsvoly, $90. yoo~lng u-ualn/SarOa bul~. 1on trud whoola, radlllots.
Nlling
COWl
bociUM
Of
lnfury,
ochool. 1300. monlh plua Rolrlgorolor, 2 dr., $7S·k30 Inch 814'367·7512.
Hoor ruta, etc. D &amp;. R Auto,
11WJ18.21U
ulllltlta, r•terencn 1nd depaalt •lectrlc rtnge S75; tnmorl
Ripley, WV. 301-3n·3133 or ,.
Nqulrtd, outside ptt1 only, wash•r, _$75; Ponablt w1Wr, Rats Or Mlc.? In Your HoUH?
1100-273,.595.
Hrlou lnqulr~a only, 304.fi7S- 175; 40 inc:h oloctrlc rango, $95; Buy ENFORCER, Kllla rtla 6 64
ttay &amp; Grain
7559.
'
Sldtoby-aldt HII'YIII gold, nice, mlco In only 1 llldlng,
GUARANTEED! Avollablo o1: Good 11r com, 1000· ~ua
HouH for 11tt or rent. 3 miiH wu ·$265 now $195: Whl~pool Baum True Y1lut Slore, 11 Wilt buthela, can efter lpm or lelve
dry•r.
$'125,
now
$95.
10uth of Rio Grandt, on Rl . 325. Skaggo Appll~cH . 814-446· Mllln StrMI, Chl1ter, OH
1 numblr.'I14-24J.5127.
3 btdroomt, 2 bllhl, 1lr con· 7399.
Rift Or Mk:l? In .Your Hou•? Hsr. Small bole&amp;. Solurday only
dltlonlng 1nd ca~ttd . 614·245-Suy ENFORCER, Klllo lila &amp; pickup. 301-175-1832.
5558.
RENTZ OWN
mlco In only 1 flodlng,
614
...
46-3158
Services
Smoll Unlurnlohtd Houoo 3
GUARANTEED! Anllablo ol :
Fumlturt ..
Rooms, 'Bolh, Air Condllionlng1 Soft &amp; Yl'ra
Transportat ion
0'0.11 True VIIUI Lumber, 634
1 $11.10 ·Wook ·
Carpettd, Df1perles, ScrNnea Recliner, Cholr
Eaol Main SlrHI, Pomoroy, OH
$5.47·
WHk,
Swivel
Porch, Prlv111 Parking, 614..f46.
81
Rocker, $3.63 Wook.Bunk Bod School HOUH Boll II lnlornlod
..
2602.
Complet• $8.41 WHk, 4 Drawer call 30WIW835.
71
Autos for. Sale
lmprovem_e.nt~ . , Choll, $3.28 WMI&lt;: Postor Bod·
' JHp, excallonl
42 Mobile Homes
room Sullo, 7 pc., $11.17 W•k, Souonod Ash, Oak, Hickory 1111 Wllln
BASEMENT
ln&lt;ludoa
ltddi~Counlry Pine Firewood: Dtllver1d &amp; 1tackld.
shape,
1:12
BuntrnUI Ave.,
WATERPROCI'ING
,
for Rent .
DlnOIII Wllh Oonch &amp; I Cholra, $55 pickup. Don Wough. .,.. Pomoroy, 111-11!12-21121
Unconclltlonal llfolln gusIn Countrt Vinton Ar.., $10.18 W..k.OPEN: Monday 118-96111.
Ill. Local
turiHhtd,
T,..
Sl -o Thru Sllurdly, 91.m. 10 &amp;p.m., Signs: Por11bl1 ... rqua Chin· 1965 GTO, $1,!100. 304-171-1331. FIIO HIIIIIIIN. Clll colloct f•
111·237.olll, day .. night.
Fumls~~d MIIH OK12Routo
7 On
Noon
TillRoulo
5p.m.111,I Qtlbio l.al1or Sian $269. FrH 197&amp; Okte Clrfllall, ptrtlng out Rogora
Wil-611
......
882.
[otloro/Oollvory. '1111111&lt; 1-•
I~Csnl101ry.
$17.50 box. AAA SlgM 1.8IJO. 1i78 Chovy P.U, Good Condl· ling.
mobile home' tor rtnl, S.le On All Carpet In Stock! 533-3453. Anyllmo.
tlon, 11118 Olds $200 0. BHI 01. Curlle HolM lmprowemtnla:
Vlnyl,$4.99 yd. C11po1 $4.00 Up.
:!:pro'· 3 mll •• lrom PQ...ro~ &amp; Mollohan Car-ts. 614-446-,..44. Surplus Army Comli.lueo, Cor· lot, 11 Fl. C.mpor, Good Colldl· YNII Exporlenco On Oldar l
lddllport, Ioiii tllc:trlc, 14·
,..
Hom11. Room AddHiona,
flirt Clothing. New 111 tnthtr lion, FUlly Soli Conttlnod. 6~, -Foundollon
Wo&lt;k, Aooll"!!,
1192-6858
Solid Hard Rock Moplo Bod· combat booe1, lntul1tld decron 116-6632, 301-175-23'N.
Kltchtne And Baths. FtM £i.
2 bedroom · tu~nlahed mobile room Suitt, Drtlltr, Mirror, ctmllauge covlfllll $30, Jun~r 18'78 Ford F100 tNCk, run• llmoloof
Ror.ro,.., No Job To
homo, AI. 2 Applo Grovo, u 5o. Chill And FuiiS!zo Bod, Boo uti- alzn e~mlleugt. S.m Somt-- lfOOd, ond 'it 1981 Sultll Rogal Big 0. Smalll111-111-0221i.
1
mo. $100. do1111 g1 dopolll. 301. luiiiiOG, O.B.O. 6to.2S8-a1112'.
tvlllo'S. Bosldo SandyviiiO ~ coli 614-111-2881 aftor lptJo ana
Ofllce E11t of Rlv•IWood wtlktnda
1
Froomon's Plumbing Arid Hoi~ ··
875-2029.
SWAIN
(ovory dor u~lll Chrialmoo 3:0Go
lng, 114'258-1611. •
•
2 bedroom wllh wnhtr &amp;ctryor, AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 6:00 Pll) Frl, Sol, Sun noon lUI· 1m T·blrd, 2dr, S700. 1m
avalll~lt Dtc. 15, Jerrys Run Olive St., Galllpoll1. New &amp; UMd 1:00 PM, olhor houra call 301· Dodge, 4*, Monaca, tow Ron's TV Sonllca, spoclollzlnQ
Ad, $250. plue d1m191 depoait, furniture, hllttl'l, W•stem 1 273-5155.
mJ~ $1!100 obo. 11185 Chovy In ZonHh olio Hf'flclng moil
,614-1111-4353 or 300.~5-5033.
Work booiL 611.016·31!9.
112 ton truck, 614-985-3831.
olhor
HOUN
- · -WV
Ulod satoiiHo oqulpllllnl, In·
aomo btanda.
IPr&gt;lltnco
..,.n.
VI'RA FURNITURE
eluding whole syllem wllh 1979 ChtYIIIr Cordoba, 3110 ong, 301-II'IW:III Ohio.,......_
2 bedroom lumlahod wllh
1111-441·3158
washar &amp;. dryer, Jerry~ Run Ad, LIVING ROOM : Sots &amp; Chair, docodtrai rocolvor, dlth &amp; 301..71-41158.
Room addhlons, oldlng, rooling,
$275. mo~!h1 .~po~y damsgo $199.0G; RociiMr, $111.0G; docodat, M·lll:l-6173
1980 Buick Rogol, 2 Door, Good vinyl replacement . windowi;
.pall, IJ4.1JV4.4353.
. SwtYII Rocker, $99.00; CotfH &amp; VCR's, good condnlon, In Colldlllon. CoK AHor 5p.m. 114- carpentry
br AI Tromm, 111·111112 Bod""'"" RolorancH And End Tabloo, 11!1.00 SOI.DINING ...,..o.Clll 114-44e-z.n! '
:JBa-83111 . .
2328. CALL COLLECT
:
Do11o11t A-·•~ ~-11 611 e. ROOM : Tablo Wilh I Podded
0527 A! -.-•-·
-4l
C~1i11, 1119.00; Country Plno Warm Morning olovo, gaa opoco 1980.Sulcll Sllylltk. 4 Cyllndor, Dovlo · Sow·VoC
Sorvlc~
ftot 2P.m.
·
Olnollt Wilh Bonch And 3 hOIIIOr, WHh bJOWtr, '!J.OOO BTU, HoodJ Aopolr, $ZOO O.B.O. 81~· G - Cowk Ad. Pma, IUJ&gt;
2BA mobllo hom111 EvorgoHn. Chtlrt, $299.00; Mllchlng 2 uc cond, $300, 811.fllil·50111
piiH, plckUA 1nd delivery. 8142511·1134.
1
GM-37f.H71.
Door t1itc:h, 13*19 ; Or S!&amp;t.OO
116-4291.
WHITE'S
METAL
DETECTORS
1181
C1G
350
dlo-.
Cho¥.
lruc:k.
Sal; Olk Toblo1 12162 With 6
Totaltt.ctrlc 2 IR, no pet•. 614· Bow '
B1ca
Ch1lr1, Ron Allison, 1210 Socond $2500. 1177 ChovtoiOI Caorlco Ml bufld ptflo caYWW, decll;s
3111'11138.
~29.00. BEDROOM : Po11or Bod· Avenua, Q.alllpolia, Ohio, 1.14· Clonic. HltJh mlloat•· $500. .crllf'lld rooms, put up Yl~
aiding Dr trailer aklrtlng. ~~
610.317·7017. ..
room Sullo (5 pc.), '1349.00: I 146-4336.
245-!1152.
Drlwer Chell, $44.15; Bunk
Apartment
44
1982 Uncoln Town Clr, IXCelltn1
Bed, $229; Complete FuM M1n.
cond, new Michelin Urn new 82
tor Rent
Plumbing &amp;
~~ $105.00 ~: 7 pc:; Cedar
vinyl rool a holdll-. 'n,ooo
ttearoom Suitt, SIH.OO.OPEN:
mJioo,
11,000,
111·11112·3410
1 &amp; 2 bdrm IPI In Mlddlsport, Monday Thru Salurday, lo.m. Jo 55
Heating
Building
Utllltn-Fum, dtp req, no pela, 6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
1912
Olda
Frlenzo,
1-cyl
o.-o,
110.11112·2218.
. '
Supplies
eo~.. ·• Plumbing
5p.m., I Mlln Dn Aouto 7 On
Nna aood, bMn wrecked, $250.
Fout1h alld Plno
Routo
111
In
Camonary.
19113
Oldo
CUIIIa,
body
lfOOd,
1 BA unfum'td apt wllh 1tove I
Block, brick, alpeS. ....,.
refrlg, No ptfL l1111mo., w•t•r
doWI, llnttlt, etc. Clludl Win- bid ...., ~~~~ ..
lncl.l10G dop. 614-418-3817.
52 Sporting Goods
loll, Rio Gronda, OH Coli 614' 1900 114Ni Dll oftorlpm
1M2 'Pontiac llonnovlllo, v.a, 84
~ Btdtoom Aptltmenl In CHy Thompson H11111kin1 CouQII'I . 215·5121.
Electrical &amp;
u.nn•. ·~11181, 11-1.
~~ eac. body, NM very
llalch MI. II I 150 callbor.11or·
mill
ollvor
Inlay.
Col
614'215~~~· cruloo, $1250 obo,
RefrigeratiOn
2 bod.,..m lurnllhod tpl, Hud 1141.
........... 111-411-2200.
56 Pets for Sale
11m Codllllc Soden Dovtllo, •·1
2-Btlrm lllrnlohod opl, 111 53
Antiques
Clllltl, lko - .,.. . ond out.
utiJIIIoo pold, $300 month,
G,_, ond sucr,:da~:l: Pot Ont ot lho bollor ..-, fUn
Pomeroy, 111.a92-113&amp; ot 614- Buy ot 1111. Rlvorlno Antiquo&amp;, G..,...lng. All
rieL
Sl,tQO. calla
Mi-21126 oftor &amp;pm
1121 E. U..ln Slroll, Pomioroy. lamo Pol Food Ooalot. Julio -!L
only-~
~~ -~o Ho'-r
10:0G '·"'· lo I :OG W...... Coli 114-III-02!J, 1.8IJO.
z.a, T4 - s150 87 Upholat3 bodI0 • 00
312.0231
CIInlc of WHI rglnla, 30W75- ~-~~~~~·:~:·::p~.m~.
~.::. J J, .,.. - 1 ,;,..-..,,;..;;,...,....,..,..•.,..:.•' - liN.
I
.AKC PalilngoN = - = I l l - .
• 30W7S..mt
_,.,... Uphol·~
J""""' ~- Apertmonl, &amp;"ak,_C•~·~.=r.~ Cllrlllmnprloo,
.
-DeMAMI.C-.-11, =.~r~:=.,:•
Tilt .
Half Milo Elll 01 Por!ot, On w-n~~
Orftlnil AKC ~It
A -1 - - o , I eyl, - .,. Call 30+f71.41M li1r he
RUlli, S27111no. l14'319!tll3.
H~rdworo. lll-4ll&lt;ll~.
Rlody ltnNdlallly.
·1 . hlllll, o,.._7231, .,........
,....,..

J4'r:::::-

w••·

Home

••c:nc•
_,.nl

.

o:r::t1:0

i

' '

. HOME BITES ~
HAUUNQ: Llmeetone,
Dirt, Gnwelend Coli ·

U011 nd~Jonded .

BusinesS

PH. 614·992-5591 ·
-

2~10.

Before, after tt:hoof. Dtopolna

WATER.&amp; -· ~

BASEr.ENTS &amp;

"hem•,

Nftl'lnct IVIIIIblli 614-667-6855

I&amp;( EXCAVATING ,

SEWER UNES

Bod

~

Call Ed Banln
collect at

1 -614-667·6474

WHALEY'S ·
AUTO PAITS

Bolly

~~~~·~=~~=~·~Sunday

, . _ , . t......,

ca I our ad-vlson, Monday-friday at

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

Business
Training

ROiraln
NowiiiSoullltlllom
Buol.... Collogo, Sptlng Valloy
PIIZI . Coli Torlly, 614'116-436711
AoglaloraUon Ho.QS.12MB.

PAINTING

1116/1 m~&gt;. pd.

· =~:o,:,:'!..,, ·
1..

DOmE TURNER.z._Brobr................u.,.,_,,;,,,ft2.1112
IRENOA JIFFEna ..........................................24011

SAVINGS•••

W.nlod: Night oudllot, mollt
llllllcol okllll hollllul Apply lo
Box CLA 101, c/o O.lllpoUo Dolly
Trlbuno, 825 Third Avo,. Go~
llpollo, OH 45131.

UgrMtg

SNODGRASS '

5 Placo Dlnollo Sol,

DINO-MITE

· IPirtment &amp; Ulllltln Included.
Send rnum• to: Box 1920

3 rnloiH

pupo. Coli
lflll4:30.

.

~324.

Enry S'!nday 12 Noon

667-6179

YOUNG'S
JOHNSON ROAD-Pomoroy··Approx. 1 mile oul ol Pom·
eroy. Approx. 5 acres with a butlding sill!. Has an old W&lt;lll
and public water Is available. Electric is on Ihe site. Comes
with your.own cave. Some wooded land. $11,000

.

•Garilll'• .:.. .

Pomeroy,

a

Covtrs, etc.
Proftssltttlll

~3'.11.

41 Houses for Rent

Localed on Rocksprings
Ad. in Pomeroy , 3 miles
from lhe Meigs Co. Fair·
grounds.

CO~Iflo'd.

home, 1 milt bllow town, ovw-

Homl, 3bro, 2 Sllhl, AIOIOII'Itl
· New
C•Q'.:•
Untuml•hecl.

AVON • All oroos, Coli MorUyn Nllwork morklllng opportunhyl
WIIVIr 3()4.882-2645.
Entry llvel and man1gement
poaltlon. •valllblt. Mfnlmvm
lnvutment. Serious lnqulrita.
114-446-8813.

Gin a haadwma basket
to that ~rlals011110111 on
your Owlst!ftllsllsl• ...,..1WtoYing svpplit1 also in
stodt.

HN!Ih

RIG. 611...2·llln

looklng river. No Pots, CA. 610.

No ShiH Work. Ar,plr In Porson
To Tho Modlcil P oza, 203 Jock·
1011 Pike Bttw•n 9 A.M. And
1:30 P.M.
labor.rs, now hiring to $15-HR,
p1rct wHkly, 1-800~21-6313.
SlOG WEEK, Or Moto SluHing

1!9moroy P~TAL JOSS $11.78$11.1GIIor. No up. noodod. Fot
n~m •net-1ppUcatlon lnfo.1 call
1-2111-1117-1537 7om-10pm 7Giys.
Rttldtnt mtnager, maintenance
couple tor ape,mtnl complex
In GoUipoiiL Full·tlmo wllh

Pats for Sale

AI&lt;C _ .Chocoiolf_
Allrlvor puDDin. I

- 2 1 R•opt.
Ntw one Hciroom ape, ground
ftoor1 "'vate entrance-, ex_;
nslahbcit""'"', dap 301.6'/5.
45811 ovenlngol715-11182.
Complttly FIOIIIIhod · mobllo

WHkdlya,

992-5335 .... ·91),-J~~j hl ·
Acron. From Pett
POMEROY, OHO
10/30/'19

S6

Mlscallaneous

Eam Extro Inc- Moiling
Chrlolmoo Cords And Gin Horns. Envelopea At Home. Ruah $1.0D
For Moro lnlorrnsllon Ssnd A So!~Addroalod Slompod En·
Slomi'O!I Envelope To: Cluor volopo,
10 to DIA Supplloa,
Cordi, P.O. Box 2!30, Miami, FL P.O. BoxNo.1443,
F1lrbom, Ohio ·

~~·.:;:
m;.:.S~ol~w~da~~~---- ~~~~,~~-~~~-

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Bags, Head. _

IISSEU. &amp; JUliE
CONSTIUCnON

614-9f2-6820

JUST ONE IIILE GUT OF TUPPERS PLAINS.A beautllul
2 year old doublewlde thai ~alike new. Has 3,bedrooms
2 baths, limplace in.the family room, dinlnq room and
cathedral ceiing In the living room. Aniot laytn~ 1.sS5 acre
lol, public water, and a heal pump.
a dtal •t JUST . $45,500

Cust1111 Filling

biro nice 1 BA opi, Cllrpotlng,
...... lroah -llo;l. _ ,
~ NqU!Nd... -411151'.
Fumlahtd ~ Roome a Belh,
Cloon, No Pola,· lloh!iaNM ~~
. Dopolll Aequlrod.ll14ol4..1!119.

Cilr wl~ertzellon p(ICkage. 'I·'

14

MldiUeport, OH

Pomeroy·Hyaell Run Rd.·Hunlllr's Oream-7 112 acres of
woodOO land on a nice black top road.
$S,500
.

Mtlal Cubs

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

NO SUNDAY

205 North Sfc:ond Ave.

ADDISON·Honoyouckle Drive-Could be used lor a renlal
or a nice starter home. Two bedrooms, I balh now septic
and new wiring. .
.
S24,500 '

Gr•1ile&amp;

Starting Sept. 22

GROOM
. ROOM

EAGLE RIDGE· Want Seclusion? This Is the one lor you
and a beautiful home. II is a white biick wllh 3 bedrooms 2
baths, family room, and large kilchen Oil approx. 1 acre.
$55,000

Jr. Golf Sell

SUNDAYS

PH. 949·210 1
· or Res. 949-2160

OFFIC~ ~~·2~

Mlddlepori·Rulland St.-You need 10 seolhis .one 1111's a
nice 3 bedroom ranch style home with a full b'asement 2
fireplace . carefree vinyl Siding, 'fully carpeled, and a one ear
garage all on a 2 acre lot
PRICED AT JUST
· $38,500

Teaford
Country (lull

1:00 P.M.

"Free E~lmataa"

reason why;
Out
dear Lord
But we will strive to
mHt again
Over thent whera all
Is PMC• and rest.
Gr11tly missed by
wife, chlld,.n and
grandchlld,.n.

"I- they·aoid you

•"' 'm all pu-, I wka old,
, rnl•od, :104-4~2075. .

' 151&amp;8

Owner

knows the b..t.

2-. portDolilnnon, 1 molo,

BASKET WEAVE
·IALL
fESTIVAl · THE
'
Now 0.... 01 SaiUrdays
SPECIAl
for tlit Owistmas S..s1111.

HOmegrown,
beautifully sheared.
While end Scotch Pine
5 Ft. and up
Good ulectlon of
• large trees.
614-742-2143 or

·.

Fumlahtd E-.oy. f11101mo.
Ulllhlao Paid. 7 112 Noll Annuo,
OtlllpoUa. 111 411 U11 After
7p.m..

t .:,1·.:;:-='"';:.';.:*.:.;lU-m4=:::,:-,-· ......,.

1041 mo.

Complete Grooming
For All Brlllls .
EMILEE MERINAR

PubllcSalt

~UOIONEER:

Oroko

12 Gaut•
Slrktly$11~:~;~Dtlly
I

l2, Capacity ~4,000.Inler·
ealtd
parlles may oblaln fur·
1
lher Information by oddrou·
· -tng lh'e' Public UTIIHies
Commsulon oiOhlo, Colum·
.Joilo,Ohlo
Ray uudermlll, R &amp; C Er·

Glorgal
Gl'llndcl!lldren

Fresh Cut Trees or
Cut Your Own.

&amp;af orH&gt;ravilt Road
1 '1. Miles to Grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS

WEBER'S " ~·
CHRISTMAS TREES

SHOO.t.

Open House Sun., Dec. 8, 1·5

~-C.paclly.20,500.--­

•nd ldndnne ahown
during the ion of our
loved one. W• would
like to lhllnk Rev.
Rolllncl Wltdmlll!r lhe
pellbeerertl•ncl twlng
Fune11 Home.
. Wife Mary; Daughter
Opal; Son• Qph• •nd

IUDFORDS

CHERR'(IIDGE,
East of Darwin on At.

loc01ttd On Safford School ld. off lt. 141
{614) 446·9416 or 1·100·172-5967

Make reservations by
calling 446-9545

CARL J. OFFUTT
wlahea to lh811k
frltnde .nd nelghbort
for the flowert, lood

HOME

BENNE.TTtS .."::~~~:o'-··

Lg. Bsk. $6.99; Sm. Bsk. $4.99
Wreaths $5.99·$24.99

yeara old todiy.
We don't ask the

992··6461
·
9.1.91- 1

lil2~1137.

.CHRISTMAS TREES
~ &amp;-CRAm

·;$to~kl/

$7.50 each ·
$4.50 children under 12

The F•mllv Of

OHIO PALLET CO.

- - WQ/91 1 mo.

Arrangements-silk

you would
have · beeh . 81

Real Estate

CALL

GRAVE
BLANKETS ·:-

1·(304)
773·9560

0,.. .. 7:00~...

317 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, Oh.
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS HOURS:
Tues.·Wed. 10:30-4:30
Thurs.-Fri. 12:00·7:00
Sat.·Sun. 1' 00·5:00; Cloilad Mon.
Christmas Floral

NOTICE OF APPLICATION cavallng Name al Appllcan1
Public . notice lo hereby 34055 ..Pine Grove Road
given thai A &amp; C Excavatln~ , Racine, Ohio 45771
34055 Pine Grave Road, {12) 6, 13, 20, 3TC
Racine. Ohio 45771, has Iliad
with lhe Public Ulllltleo
Commlulon of Ohio an apA LOVING TRIBUTE IN
plication for a Cerllllcato of
OF
Public Convenience and
Noceoolly to operale on call
ol tht public over lrrogula1
rouleo to.inclirom 3if055 Pint
Grove Road, ' Racine, Ohio
"" 45771. Number and capaclly
ol vehlcleo to be uood: 11 ,

loci,!~

,.·

Convertible Tops,
Cai'Pet:s, Headliner &amp;
Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST.,MASON, W.VA.

'

torAJnl

ROUTE: Got Rlah
W.yl But Wi Hive A
Sloldr, AlloniOb~luol·
,_, Won' l.ool. 1
28lo Effancloncy alii In Pl. -nl,
'IENO.
ntco. no!Gh"""-, Hud -

Slabs ·
For Salt
Great Prica!

111141011 mo.

A&amp;B

IUT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri&amp;'t

.

••

ARTFUL HANDS
·GALLERY OF GIFTS .

Public Notice

I

CUTIING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

949·2206

44 . Apat bllilll

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALL&amp;¥ PU.UIIIING.CO.
NOOrntM,. thit you do buelnlll )lllh poop11 you k-, lind
NOT 1o 111nd rnonoythrougn lho
111111 until you hovo 1..-1g11od
thoollwl~
.

·•(

HILL'S-DUR
·coniNG
BASHAN RD.,
- ---·RACINE -

RACINE, OIL

Seatings At
1, ~ &amp; 5 P.M.

1 card of Thiriks

We Sell &amp; Servlctl
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalre, Insider,

··- -UKE ---

ANOTHER BUFFET
ATOS€AR'S
NEW YEAR'S DAY!

Public Notice

..

I

1-!-i-....:G:;.Iv:;;ea;.:wa:.::!..y_ _

that is nice but not expensive, try

FRI. &amp; SAT., DEC. 6 &amp; 7
10 A.M.·9 P.M. Each Day
GLORIA OILER
31645 SR 325
LANGSV.ILLE, OHIO
742·2076

Business

Opportunity

. . SELLERS .

HillEY !liNING'S
RESIDENCE

39507 Rocksprings Rd.
Ill c.. .r u.s. »I
Pomeroy, Ohio

Looking for a gilt or decoration

HOME
DECORATING
OPEN HOUSE

,

REASONABlE

Big Kids &amp; Baby Classes ~- ·
for Children Becoming
Big Brothers &amp; Sisters
Tuesday, Dec. 10,
6:30P.M.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Downstairs Conference
Room
Call 675-4340 Ext. 230
to Register

HOME.
DECORATING
OPEN HOUSE

'

2~

Hardwood .

"Your Tree or We'll ·
Cut It F.o r You. ·

WUPPING

REWARD: $300

SNAnJ® liy Brute BeaUle

•
~.;::,ervtces

CH

TREE FARM

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
~
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL 446·9545

9:00A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
2232 6th St., Syracuse, Oh.

Cummins Sr. at 48041 Plants

•

NEW YEAR'S EVE
AT OSCAR'S
RESTAURANT

CRAFT SALE

6, 1

FOR

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. -DAY·BEFORE
PUBLICATION
NOTICE! I

.Q

c.1;.1,.., December

.

Opportunity

12-&amp;-llri

,_, - -

1-

:::.=:::.·---..,.--..,,..., .,.,

u::.=

"'""-=:::==.......... ··--- -·

v

.

"----··-··---···-··· ..
~

•••

�-·-

--r-

.~~

·;.

...

•

December

Harrisonville
~Gommunity news:
I

.

.

.J

Mr. and Mrs. Jon Scott, Mansl
field, Mr. ,and Mrs. John Win.s~~
Montery: Va., visited Mr. illld Mf!4
Virgil King Thanksgiving week•
end..
·
~
Mr. and ~ · Ed Dill and farni).
ly, Syracuse, were Thursday dinne~
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stien
mcntz.
Mrs . Minnie McGrath,
Plains, visited Tue~day evenipg
with Mr. and Mrs.. Bob Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Gibson ana
sons, Columbus, visited over thd
weeke.nd with Mrs. Vitginja Glb j
son.
•
Recent dinner guests of Mrs(
Pauline Atkins were Mr. and Mrs;
Tom Hill of Cleveland, Mr, and .
Mrs. Frank Casto, Philip Smith :
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Scott Kaise(
and daughter of Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Jewell and daughter;
Mrs. Norma Lee, local.
Mrs. Stella Atkins and Miss'
Ruby Diehl were Thursday dinnet.
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloos:
·'lllld family, Syracuse. - " - "-"~·-- · ··
Mark Riggs and friend-ofAla.,:
were Tuesday dinner guests Of his'
grandmother, Stella Atkins.
:

Sund:n.

Pear(
.Harbor
attack .
recalled

Tha

• PERFECT ATTENDANCE • Four members
. Qf th.e T~.irltrs 9_n Parilde Baton Corps received
perfect attendance awards af a ba-nquet held
, recently. Left to right are, Shauna Manuel, Jes·

sica Smith, Jennifer Wolfe, and Rachel Mar·.
shall. Pictured with them is instructor Kenda
··Rizer. The5e girls did mit miss a lessonorTpet' - ·
·
•forrilance since February.

. , ..

B.-1
'

- Cl
Experts failed to make allowances .for
time diffe~en~e~· Bob Hoeflich -· ·B-7 -

HH ·DOH

Buckeye Fm·nace originally built
in 1851- James Sands· Page A-5

Vol. 28, No. 44

Copyrighted 1991

Mlddlepo~~omeroy-Galllpolls-Polnt

Manuel, Alison Woods, Jessica Smith, Lena
Yoacham, Carly Crow, Kelli Bailey, Joey Sands,
banner boy·;·back row, Rachel Marshall, Tasha
Johnson, Lindsey Smith, Jody Hupp, banner
boy, Cassandra Smith and Toriia Nazare'Y)'cz.
~bsent were banner boys, Adam Williams and
Corey Williams.

Community calendar
FRIDAY
HENDERSON, W.VA.· The To register, participants may call
·'
. POMEROY • The Enterprise Gallla Twirlers Western Square 992-5696 or 992-7733.
.
Unill!d'Methodist Church will hold Dance Club will hold a dance on
TUPPERS PLAfNS · The Tupits annual bazaar on Friday at the Saturday from 8 to 11-p.m•.at the
pers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053
former Mjlin Street Pgza location Henderson Community Center in
and
Ladies
Auxiliary will have
pn Main S'treet in Pomeroy from 8 Henderson, W.Va. Roger Steele
their
Christmas
diner and party on
will be the caller. All western style
a.m. to 7 p.m.
·
Saturday at 6:30p.m. at the post
;
___ __squarc_daneers are invited.
home. The auxiliary will furnish
; POMEROY • The Eight and
POMEROY
•
The
movies,
turkey,
chicken, dressing, noodles
Forty Meigs County Salon No. 710
"Laughing
Gas"
and
"Puddington
and
baked
beans. Each family is to
will meet at Crciw's Family Res tau·
Goes
to
the
Movies
,"
will
be
bring
a
salad
or a dessert. Ice tea
rant on Friday at 6:30 p.m. for the
'shown
on
Saturday
and
Sunday
at
2
and
coffee
will
be furnished. Chil·
Christmas dinner. Guests will be
p.m.
at
the
Meigs
County
Public
dren
bring
a
$3
gift to exchange.
Pawn anq Heather Friend. There
'j\'ill be a gift exchange and bring a Library in Pomeroy and on Mon· Joe Struble will be the guest speakday at 4:30 p.m. at the Middleport er and Santa Claus will be there to
~ift for Heather.
Library.
give out treats.
'
MIDDLEPORT · There will be
1
MIDDLEPORT • The 1958
RUTLAND • There will be a
ciQthing giveaway at the Mt.
Class
reunion
at
Bradbury
School
round
and square dance at the Rut·
Moriah Baptist Church in Middle·
will
be
held
Saturday
from
6
to
10
land
American
Legion Hall on Satport, Fourth and Main Street, on
p.m.
For
further
information
call
,urday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
Friday beginning at 10 a.m.
I
992-7303.
music by Country Kin Band. Ray
Fitch
will be the caUer. The public
TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tup·
MIDDLEPORT
·
A
Creative
is
invited
to attend.
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Fun
Art
class,
under
the
direction
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
LONG BOTTOM • There will
dance on Friday at the post home of Shirin Nuggud, will be held at
th
e
Middleport
Arts
Council
on
be a hymn sing at Mt. Olive Com·
from 8 to 11:30 p.m. with music by
C.J. and the &lt;;ountry Gentlemen. Saturday from 9:30 a.m . until II munity Church in Long Bottom on
a.m. Children ages three and a half Saturday at 7 p.m. featuring local
The public is invited tp atLfnd.. ·
to seven will be making Chrisunas talent. Pastor Lawrence Bush
crafts.
The cost is $4 per session. invites the public.
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot·
tom will have a hymn sing on Fri·
day at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
iilVites the public.

AND THE WHEEL
- -- SATURDAY,~DEC~- 7 -

By SID M_OODY
eret P~le diplomatic code for a
AP Newsfeatures Writer
: 'year. The niihtary in Washington
A flJ!Uve moon played tag with had warned President Franklin D.
uade wmd clouds as Mrs. William . Roosevelt and his Pacific commanBlackm~re dropped her husband ders that war was only days if not
off for pre-dawn duty on the Navy hours away.
.
tug Keosauqua.
.
But in their overconfidence and
"This is the quietest place I've amid a blizzard of conflicting sigever seen," she said to the shad· nals and cOde intercepts, few if any
ows.
Americans thought anything m~de
Thus Pearl Harbor in the early in Japan - whose products were
hours of Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941.
disdained as synonymous with tin
America's "Gibraltar of the -would be audacious enough to
Pacific" was sleeping.
strike at Pearl Harbor.
Washington was sleeping.
But 220 miles•du-e north of Hon· . · Actually, the first shots that
olulu, the fliers of kido butai- the Sunday in Hawaii were from the
six-carrier Japanese "Striking U.S. destroyer Ward. Her skipper
Force"- were wide awake, fin· ofbuttwodays,LL 'William Outer·
ishing a ceremonial breakfast of bridge, radioed at 0~51 that his
red rice and red snapper before ship had fired on a submarine in
they reached for infamy.
forbidden waters off the mouth of
Arter 50 years of hindsight, the the huge naval base.
most surprising thing about the sur·
At 0700, a ,plane on patrol
prise attack on Pearl Harbor is that around Pearl reported - in code,
1t was a surprise, ·at all. Americans despite orders to signal·in plain text
had been· reading Japan's ultrase- in an emergency.- that it had·sunk

9:30 AM 1111 :30 PM
$2.00 COVER CHARGE
MUST BE 21 YEARS OLD
CORNER OF STATE RT.7&amp; 143
POMEROY, OHIO

a

· CHESHIRE · Free clothing ·day
will be held at the old high school
· building in Cheshire on Friday
I)-om 9 a.m. to noon. The day is
sponsored by .Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency.
1

'A'E
.,

NEW AND

5 1peed, AMIFM c811ette.

•3995 or
OIILY *1 09 Pw Mo.

,: MIDj)I,.EPoRT • The Presbyte·
~an Church in Middleport will
~ve its annual cral't and bake sale
"9ll Friday and Saturday at the Sears
'Store in Middleport .from 10 a.m. to
5p.m.
'
~ MT. U.NION • Rev. Calvin
~=-:/
: Evans from Channel 13 will be"
'' ~oldihg services at Mt. l.Jnion Bap·
tist Church onh:illay_;md Saturday
1\l 6:30p.m. Rev. Joe Sayre invites,
the public.
.
SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT · The Lib· i
erty Mountaineers will perform at
the Senior Citizens Center in Point
Pleasant on Saturday.
~

't

t '

ALL PRICED AT 4995 or
ONLY 5135 P••

'A date which will live in
infamy': Pres. Roosevelt

till YOIIIIIICI...

1917 lUlCK CEIIJURY
Su... lharpt 1lu1t IIIII
5

ALL PRICED AT 499 5or
ONLY 5135r...

- RED WING WORK SHOES; .PlAIN TOE,
_SlEElTD.E,JNSULAlED, PUll ON BOOT
Florslteil, Cherokee, Portsicler, LaCrosse,

till ........
NCEt

All PRICED AT 54995 or
ONLY 5135 Par . .

.................
•

. . , _ .............. llllnc..dllll
*lll"t•... 118la~Ject IDCreditlp..oftl

1984 CHEVY 4WHEEL
'
DRIVE ·
STEPSIDE PICKUP
-·~495 -

Lockard kept tracking for practice.
...0715, 88 miles and coming ...
The blip was so large Lockard
figured the set was broken . They
turned it off at 0745. The blip had
disappeared behind Oahu's mountains. The soldiers closed up to get
some breakfast
In Washington military leaders
and code breakers waited for the
last part of a 14-part message
Tokyo began sending to its two
negotiators the day before. The last
section came in early that Sunday
morning. It broke off peace ne~oti­
ations but did not declare war tn so
many words.
The intent, however, was clear.

a sub with depth charges. Arter
some delays, Adin .-Husband E.
Kimmel, commander of the Pacific
Fleet, was notified. "I'll be right
down," he $~id, forguing a golf
date with his Army counterpart. Lt.
Gen. Walter C. Short.
There had been . another
cp1phany ..At Kahuku Pomt on the
· northern up of Oahu, Pvts. Jo~ph
L. Lockard and George E. Elhott
had been on duty since 4 a.m.,
familiarizing themselves with a
new marvel that could "see" 130
miles to sea- radar. (The Nation·
ai Park Service and Hawaii's gov·
emor had vetoed placing the new
sets on high ground lest they mar
the landscape). At 0702 Elliott saw
"something completely out of the
ordinary'' on the screen, a huge
blip, due north, 137 miles out
Control at Fort Shafter told
them it was a flight of B-17 Flying
Fortresses due in from California.

War. lmminen~y .

The message was to be delivered to Secretary of State Cordell
Hull by 1300 Washington time,
0730 in Hawaii. But it was delayed
over an hour due to an inefficient
typist at the Japanese ,Embassy .
(Thus war came from Japan, as it

At least six Gallia County
natives were in Hawaii at the
time or the Dec. 7, 1941, sneak
"I saw the plane
attack on Pearl Harbor. They
were: Major (later Major Gener· that buzzed us ...had a
al) George Bush, his wife Helen, red dot on each
and daughter Jane; Corporal
Fred Lawrence Dickey; nurse wing... My immediate
Dorothy Crockett and the Rev· reaction was one of
erend (then sergeant) W. E. complete disbelief. I
Curfman. Two other Pearl Har·
,bor survivors, Ray Boone and refused to realize that
Oren Kyger, moved to Gallia we were at war and
County after tbe war1
The rollowiog, detailing the that the plane was
exploits of three of lhem, is from Japanese."
material submitted by retired
Major General George E. Bush
of Gallipolis and will be printed
Schofield Barracks (a large Army
in three installments.
Post near the center of Oahu, about
20 miles inland from Pearl Harbor).
I am retired U.S. Army Major 11ived in a set or quarters with my
General George E. Bush. I was a wife, Helen, and nine-year-old
36-year-old major D..ec .. 7, 1941, daughter, Jane, just a block away
commanding the 3d Battalion, 27th from the soldiers' barracks. There
' Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry was an ,Afmy Air Corps fighter
Division, in Hawaii, when the base, Wheeler Field, about a thou·
sand yards from where we lived.
Japanese attack ~me.
For about a year after we arrived
The following account tells of
my recollections of the Pearl Har· in Hawaii, I was acompany com·
bor experience and for a year or so mander, commanding about 150
men. Several monihs before the
afterward.
This is in response to my daugh· Japanese attacked 'Pearl Harbor,
ters' and granddaughters' requests. Gen. Shbn, commanding general of
the Hawaiian Depanment, held fre·
quem
alerts at all hours, day and
Some background,
.
In July, 1940,1 was a captain in night. ·
,
the Army assigned to the 27th · Every unit in the Hawaiian
Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Department had precise instruc·
Division, stationed on the island of tions as to its combat missio.n and
Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, at knew exactly where its battle Sta·

·'.

..
1

MANY OTHER PU.

OWNED CARS AND
.. • TRUCKSTOm
ANT BUDGET

21.0 East Mil• Pomeroy, Oh.
992·6254 ..

Major General (ret) George Bush, 1991
J.

•

ship fees are_ used to provide support for vtcums and for planning
arid implementing educatioilai programs.
She pointed out that anyone can
belong to MADD - that you don't
have to be a mother just a supporter
of the objectives of the organiza.
tion.
·Meetings will be beld the fourth
Tuesday of each month 31 6 p.m. at
101 1(1. West Second St., Pomeroy,
in the Health Recovery Services
offices.
ProjCct Red Ribbon is un&amp;rway
and the chapter has been joined by
era! b ·
10 eli stn'b lite n'b·
sev
bO
. usmesses
n~he project was created by
MADD in 1986 to change the
meaning of "tie on·e on" Roush
said'. MAJ)D asks drivers to tie a
red ribbon in a visible location on
their vehicles between Thanksgiv·
ing and New Year's Day to show
their commitment to drive safe and
sober throughQUt the year.
Members of the local chapter
.are encouraging residents to take
part in the simple but effective pro.
gram during this holiday season.

,,

"

..

1988 OLDS CIERA

Hush Puppies, D. Myer.Jillrse Mates,
Nattl'.zers, Snow Boots, Leather Ptl'ses,
K·Swiss, LA. Gear, Converse, Kangaroo.

HOOD FAMILY
.
SHOES

December 7, 194i

V-4, 5 ..,..cl, AC
5

STOREWIDE
·SATURDAY, DEC. _7

.

had to Russia in 1904, before the
Sharp-eyed bandsmen noticed
declaration of it. That was why -pianes converging on Pearl from aU
Roosevelt was to call it infamy).
points of the compass. On the bat·
Washin~on ~lready knew two tleship California, a crewman
Japan~se tnvaston convoys . ~ad . noticed red balls oo the wings of
been sighted headmg for Brmsh low-flying planes - torpedo
Malaya. Roosevelt feared there bombers. " The Russians must ha~
would be other stnkes agamst the a carrier visiting us '' he said.
Philippines, Guam, even Wake and
Cmdr. Logan Ramsey saw a
Midway islands. But certainly not plane diving at Ford Island in the
Po;arl Harbor. Unthinkable.
middle of the harbor. He thought it
Nonetheless Short was sent a was some hotshot " fiathatting ..
warning - by commercial tele· until he saw a bomb explode. He
graph so the Japanese wouldn't grabbed a mike:"Air raid Pearl ·
suspect their code had been broken. Harbor! This is no drill!"
It wasn't even marked "urgent"
Many thought at first some pilot
Meanwhile, on Battleship Ro~ would catch hell for dropping live
at Pearl, Seaman Leslie Sh~ clam· ammo ali ove~ the place. The lrllth
bered up to a foretop machme·gun was not long ln dawning. Fireman
stauon on the Maryland to address Charles Leahey was easing himself
Chrisunas cards. At 0755. the bat· in the head of the destroyer tender
tleship Neva~'s band ~atched the Dobbin when Waterman Samuel
. "P" for "prep" f111!Tise over the Cucuk hollered at him: "You betsub base water tank -aM got ready ter ~ ut that short, Charley. The Japs
for the '0800 ·rendition or "The arc Iiere!"
Star-Spangled Banner."
C t" d
on mue on B·1

Gallia native recalls sneak attack ..:

1987 CHM 5·10

.I

, SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall on County Road 1 near
Salem Center. $econd degree will
lie conferred in full form. Potluck
rFfreshments. All membe{s urged
to attend.
'
j POMEROY • The Belies and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
"ill hold a dance on Saturday from
S to II p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center with caller, John
Waugh, frOm Gallipolis.

,,

25%·oFF

.

·peari -Harbtir: 'Gitir~it;;'"hfth"el»aciiiC'

DAVE BARROWS

••

1991

County investig~ted by ;the Gallia·
Meigs and that· I'll ol;·i)re injuries
weie alcohol related •.two of Meigs
POMEROY • A chapter of the County fatalities were also alcohol
Mothers Against Drunk Driving related, it was replllled.
has been organized in Meigs CounFigures for Ohio, as provided by
ty.
the Stille Highway' Patrol, show
Officers elected this week were · 1,336 crashes investigated with 467
Sue Roush, president; Russell Fish· being alcohol related so far .this
er, first vice president; Laraine year.
.
Newsome, secon~ viCe president;
The figures emphasize the need
Sharon Birch, treasurer, and Cathy for action against drunk .driving,
Stacy, secretary.
..
said Roush. She pointed out th.e
Roush, whose son Bob Seelig primary reasoo for the existence of
, was killed in an automobile crash a chapter of MADD in Meigs
where the other driver was drunk, County is to eliminate the crime of
is the victim advocate for the newly drunk driving here, and to serve the
· d M. eigs
· County Ch apter needs of the vt'c•'-s
orgamze
wn of drunk driv·
ofMADD Ohio.
.
ing, with emphasis on assurirrg
Work on or~anizing the local proper rerogmtion of the rights of
chapter began m July. All of the the victims.
·
preliminary work including court
She explained that 'MADD has a
monitoring and compiling local balanced program of public aware·
statistics has now been completed ness and education, with efforts to
and the local chapter is scheduled secure legislative support and
their vehicles this holiday season to show their
to receive its charter later this aggressive enforcement by police
commitment to drive safe and sober. Pictured
month.
to curb drunk driving.
with the tree, decorated by Pat Thoma and Ellen
The statistics for 1991 up to Fri·
Currently the local chapter has
· Rought, are Meigs Chapter officers, Sue Roush,
day • Dec. 6, as released by the 32 members. Members are actively
president, left, Cathy Stacy, secret11ry, and RusSt~te Highway Patrol to chapter being solicited and dues are $20 for
sell ,Fisher' rtrst vice president.
officers, show that there were 71 individuals, $40 for families, and

THE MADD TREE. This little Christmas
tree at the corner of Court and Second in
Pomeroy has been decorated with red ribbons as
: a part of the Mothers Against Drunk Driving's
· Project Red Ribbon. MADD is asking that
drivers tie a red ribbon in a visible lneation on

TAVERN

POMEROY · The Meigs Coun·
ty Museum will observe its Christ·
mas Open House on Sunday from I
to 5 p.m. The public is invited to
attend.

December

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff

MIZWAY

Increasing doudh~U~;. HIP
today In mid tiOs. .
'

4

News briefs

POMEROY • A 12-step Ali.
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.

Along the riv~r .-......... ;~.Bl-8
Business/Farm .............. D·I-8 ·
Classified .......................03-7
Deaths.................................AJ
EditQ~ai ..............~····· ...,.....A2
Sporis.......,.....................C1·7
Weather . ..........................A-3

·New MADD cchapter is
formed in Meigs Coonty

Twirlers receive awards

· RECEIVE A WARDS • Members of the
:Twirlers on Parade Baton Corps received par·
. ticipation awards at their annual banquet held
: recently in Parkersburg. R~eiving awards were,
, l·r, front row, Cassie Cleland, Brillany Morari·
' ty, Jennifer Wolfe, Casey Roush, Shane Butler,
:Josh Sm.ith, banner boy, Juli Bailey, Tiffany
Williams; second row, Ashton Bro)l'n, Shuuna

Inside·

1m:es-

Morrison family
holds dinner
A family dinner was hei~
Thanksgiving Day at the home of•
· Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Morrison.
:
Later in the evening snacks and·
dessert were served.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .:
Nelson Morrison, Brad. Danny ;
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Schaefer, Jen·:
· RiCEIVES TROPHY • Brittany Morarity, age two, daughter
nifcr, Mandy, Josh and Maria, Feli·'
of Marty and Debbie Morarity, Racine, is the youngest.member of
ca See, Debi Brockert, Jonathan
the Twirlers on 'Parade Baton Corps grou·p. She began ·twirling
and Ja son , Brian Nitz, Tammy'
when she was 18 months old. Here she receives her group award
from Kelly Rizer, instructor.
·
Klein, Donnie Nitz, Jan and Court-:
ney Rife and Nora Nitz. •
Mrs. Brockert and sons returned·
to their home in Springfield on
Sunday after visiting her mother
Members of the Twirlers on lessons and events. Additional cri· and other relatives.
P!l!'ad~ Baton Corps received par· tcria had to have been met.
The group participated in the
tiCipauon awards at a banquet held
at Show Biz Pizza in Parkersburg, Racine Fourth of July Parad ~
Cape Town, South Africa is 35
W.Va.
receiving first place, the Ohio Stat&lt;!
nautical
miles northwest ~f the
Additiona.l awards were given to Fair Competition receiving fifth
Cape
of
Good
Hope.
individual girls who participated in place in Dance Twirl and third
In
1936,
the
Hindenburg Zcp·
area events. To be eligible for place in Show Teams, the Ohio
awards, girls must have been pre· River Festival Parade receiving · pclin Oew from Lakehurst, N.J., to'
sent at 92 _percent of the group's second place, the Racine Fail Fcsti· Frankfurt, Germany. in 42 hours
'
val Parade receiving first place and 53 minutes.
the Southern Homecoming PafJdc.
Four girls received perfect allen·
dance medallions. They were Shau·
SUNDAY
.
na Manuel, Jessica Smith, Jennifer
CHESTER· "A Great Joy," a Wolfe and Rachel Marshall.
Christmas cantata under the cfU'eC·
tion of Sue Mathe'ny, will be pre·
Presents·
sented at Mt. Hermon U.B. Churth
on Sunday at 7:30 p.m . Rev . .
Roben Sanders invites the public. ·

l'llf\

&gt;J

1

.(

tions were. They also knew what
suppties and rombat gear would be
needed. This alert gear was stored
in one place in each unit's store
rooms.
Trucks were assigned to each
unii, and.a loading plan was pre·
pared so the supply personnel
would know exactly what went on
each truck, and where-it-was loaded. We had alerts a hundred tim\!5
or more and were very efficient 'iii
getting to our -battle stations and
organizing our defensive positions.
My battalion was assigned to
defend a stretch of seacoast-about
four miles along the Ft. Kame·
hameha peninsula shoreline
betwee.n the entrance of Pearl Har.
bor on the west, and the Honolulu
Harbor entrance on the easL

if the authorities don't stop the.);·

from buzzmg us, they are going to
kil l themselves and a lot of innocent others." I said that because
young pilots from Wheeler Field /
had bu1.zed us before.
•
I then looked out the window
and saw the plane that buzzed u$
was turning around and I could se(
that it had a red dot on each wing:
jl)e mark of a Japanese plane.
:
. My immediate reaction was one
of complete disbelief. I refused to
realize that we were at war and that
the plane was Japanese. I even iried
to explain to my wife that Gen.
Short, our comman'ding general,
was very clever to make things
seem more realistic - that he had
even hild our planes put red dots on
their wings to make them appear to
be Japanese. That explanation did
The raid comes
not last very long, however
The Japanese air raid attacking because almost immediately w~
Pearl Harbor came at 7:55 a.m . on heard the loud thud of exploding ·
Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941. At the same bombs at Wheeler Field and 1could
t1me the Japanese attacked Pearl look tow.ard Wheeler Field from
Harbor, tllcy also attacked Hickam our back door and see the dark dust
Field (a large Army Air Corps · '·' clouds rising over Wheeler Field.
bomb.er base), nght next to Pearl
I came to the certain realization
Harbor, Wheeler Field (mentioned that we were at war. ·
earlier) and Bellows Field, a
Marine Corps Air Base a short dis- .
Strafing bullets
tance west of Pearl Harbor.
Ali my combat gear was stored
At 7:'55 a.m. on Dec. 7, 1941, I in one spot at our quaners so 1
was just waking up and wandering quickly started getting dressed and
what I would have for breakfast, ready to rush to the barracks II'CI
when an airplane, flying at tree-top whe~e my b.attalion was already
level, came zooming over out quar- loa~mg trucks to go to our bau~
ters ,
stauons.
I jumped out of bed yelling
•
Continued on B-1
something like, "Those darn Bilots.
'

I

"

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