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~

Page-10-The Dally ~entlnel

Mrs. Moore went grocery shopping
and again spent the night in Diamond Hc\!d
·
The next night, lhey all decided
to stay in Honolulu with th e
Moores. On Wednesday, Dec. 10,
194·1, the family of Ben Eva~s. a
friend of ours, moved in with lhe
Moores, and on Thursday, the lllh
of December, Ben and I had a
chance to visit them briefly . I
hadn ' t seen Helen and Jane since
about 8: 15 a.m. on Sunday lhe 7th.
Anyhow.,.after a brief visit, we
went back to our command posts
and they stayed on in Honolulu
until Saturday the l3lh when they
returned to Schofield Barracks.
Jane was glad to get back to
Schofield barracks, because she
had had to leave her cat, Kitsy,
behind. Pets were supposed to be
fed by the guards, but that was
unlikely because Helen noted that
K1tsy had been eating raw potatoes.
At Schofield Barracks, Helen
was able to buy food and shop at '
the post exchange. A foxhole had
bee n dug in our front yard . At
ni~hl, neighb'ors of ours, Site
Mitchell and her children (a boy
and a girl), and Mrs. Johnson wilh
hei twm daughters, jomed Helen
and Jane at our quarters, and spent
the mght. I, of course, was down at
the command post. Our quarters at
Schofield barracks were blac ked
out. There was no enemy activity
th en, although down at my command post we were still gellmg

To be continued ...

'

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I

•

Coll)lllunity calendar

sabotage reports, but they. were
starting to taper off.
A short Christmas &lt;!inner
I was able to have Christmas
dinner with Helen and Jane on
Christmas, but had to return to my
batlillion within about lhree1hours.
Later on, as time went on, we were
able to have short visits every one
or two weeks. In February, my battalion was assigned a new sector
ex [ending from the entrance to
Honolulu Harbor on the west
almost to Diamond Head on the
cast. My command post was set up
in the Jo Do Mission, a Buddhist
mission in Honolulu. We started
gelling replacements, so we had a
training program for them, every
man in my battalion was required
to swim the length of the public·
pool located near Waikiki. Those
who couldn't qualify were given
le sso ns by our regim ental Red
Cross age nt umil he could. We
continued to improve our s'cacoast
defenses.
Meets a Gallia'Countian
Once, while Helen was shopping in the PX in early 1942, a soldier came and asked if she were
Mrs. George Bush. She said yes,
and then he inlroduced himself as
Lawrence Dickey from Gallipolis. I
didn't get to meet him while in
Hawai1, but since retiring, I have
seen and visited with him several
times here in Gallipolis. •

-

'

Monday, December
9, 19~1'
.-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

pearl Harbor...._co_n_tin_ue_d_fro--:m...:p...:ag=--e-------,.---~-­
booking for ships
Back at my Command Pos1.
things quieted down and I laid on
my bedding roll in the open, but
couldn't sleep. Aboul4 a.m., I lOOk
my telescope and drove to· the
shore positions and set up my telescope 10 see if I could detect any '
ships on the horizon. It was still too
dark.
·
After waiting what seemed like
ages, the dawning light appeared
which revealed no transport sh ip~
on the horizon. Prai ses be! l
breathed a sigh of relief.
Th e period after Dec. 7, we
were busy for several days improving beach positions and chasing
dow n sabotage reports. On Monday, 8 December, I received word
from Regimental Command Post
that my wife and Jane had been
bro ught to a school building in
Honolulu for the night of the 7th
and were offered the opporlunil y to
spend the next days and nights with
fri ends in Honolulu. Helen called
Mary Moore, a close friend, whose
husband was a colonel , and it was
arranged for Helen and Jane to sllly
wi th lhem in Honolulu. I knew then
th at Helen and Jane were bc.ng
taken care of.
I didn't know, though, that that
Monday even ing, Col. Moore
arranged for the dependents in his
area to be housed m the storage
rooms dug into the inside of Dmmond Head. That is where they
w'ere placed on co~ for the night of
Dec. 8. The next day, Helen and

...

•'

Commun'ity Cal.e ndar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or thbt event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
' MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The OH KAN
Coin Club members will meet
Monday at 6 p.m. at the Mason
Family Restaurant for their annual
Christmas party.
RUTLAND - Revival at the
Rulland Community Church, New
Lima Road, will be held Monday
through Dec. 14 at 7 p.m. nighlly.
Rev. Carl Eisenhart will be the
speaker and Rev . Dewey King
invites lhe public 10 anend.
CHESTER - Chester Township
Trustees will hold a regular meeting on Monday at 7:30p.m. at the
Chester !Own liall.
DARWIN -The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY- The D.A.V. and

Ohio Lottery

.-

Ben gals
drop Monday
night battle

Ladies Au~liary will meet Monday served following ll)e meetin~ ..A'\ ·
at the hall, 124 Butternut Avenue m as ~ er masons are invited tq·
in Pomeroy. A Christmas dinner auend.
.•
will be served. Men are to bring a
POMEROY- The Women 's,
$3 gift for a man. Women are to Missionary Group of the Laure,!:
bring a $3 gift for a woman.
Cliff Free Methodist Church m•
Pomeroy will meet Tuesday at 7:
LONG BOT!'OM • The Rock- p.m. atlhe church.
.
',
land Temple No. 618 Pythian SisWEDNESDAY
1
ters will meet at the hall in Long
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleBonom on Monday at' 6:30 p.m. port Literary Club will meet '
with a potluck dinner and $3 gift Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the,_
exchange. All members are urged home of Mrs. Richard Owen. Mrs&gt;
to auend.
Wenda! Hoover will present a pro·:
gram on "The Mu sic of Chri s t- ~
TUESDAY
mas." Roll call will be "What I·
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi Like Least About Christmas."
, :·
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
SYRACUSE - Revival at th\: ·.
will meet Tuesday-at 6:30 p.m. at
Syracuse
Nazarene Church will be.
the home of Charlene Hoeflich for
held Wednesday through Sunday:
the Christmas party.
with David Canfield the evl!llgehst~
Services
7 p.m. nightly and:
LONG BOITOM - The Flame on Sundayareat at
10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.'
Fellowship Chapter will meet
,
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bouom.
Mary Diamond, Cheshire, will be
the guest speaker. The public· is
invited to auend.

IN.SURANCE .

Columbus Southern Power says it can't waitfor PUCO decision

111 Second St., Pomeroy •.
YOUR INDEPEN~ENT .
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) is scheduled for Jan. 6, said PUCO
The Public Utilities Commission of spokeswoman Beth Vandawalker.
Ohio won' t speed up hearings oil a
Columbus Southern said the
Columbus Southern Power Co. rate increase for residential. business .
increase, even !hough lhe increase and industrial customers will slart
will go into effect sooner than Jan. 3. The rate for a residential
expected.
customer using 700 kilowau hours
The utility said Monday that it of electricity per month would
will impose the rate increase tern- increase $16.2 1. The current
porarily. Vice-President Harry Post monlhly rate is $52.98, the compasaid the utility needs to raise ny said.
money quickly 10 help cover the
The company would absorb
cost of converting the Zimmer nearly $17 million per month in
power plant from nuclear to coal- .. lost revenues by waiting for
fired operations.
PUCO's permission, he said. The
Dates for hearings will be set utility said the increase would
Dec. 12 •and an evidentiary hearing

14KT

bring In $202.5 million annually.
By law, utilities can use new
rates temporarily if lhe PUCO has
not finished a case within 275. days
of the application. Columbus
Soulhem said it applied April2 for
an overall rate increase of 28.4 percent. ·
The Zimmer statiOn, located
along the Ohio River at Moscow.
started commercial operations in
March.
·
If lhe PUCO doesn't approve an
increase or grants a smaller one,
the difference will be refund ed
wilh interest in lhe form of a tern-

porary rate Teduction. The PUCO
sets the deadline for the reduction.
The PUCO and Columbus
Soulhem said lhe case's complexity has lenglhened the review time
for the increase. The review
includes a st.aff investigation and
recommendation, as well as hearings, she said.
The staff probe must be compleied within five. months of an
application being fil ed. The
Columbus Southern investigation
report was issued Nov. 12, she
said.
Belh Gianforcaro, spokeswom-

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Ways of implementing a curbside recycling program with the
$ll,910 grant awarded the Village
of Middleport by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources , Division of Litter Prevention and -Recycling, were discussed at a meeting
of Middleport Village Council
Monday night.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that the village had applied for
$27,000 which included $18,000
for a recycle incentive of $3 per
month for each participating customer. The incentive phase, howe ver, was not funded, he reported,
which means lhat lhe village will
have lO come up wilh other options
to get the required 500 residents
involved in curbside recycling_
The program , the mayor
explained, must be in place by
April and completed by Dec. 31,
1992. Manley's Trash Service
which has lhe collection contract in
Middleport will be contacted for
suggestions and pi&gt;ssible participation in lhe new curbside recycling.
Manley's Trash Service had a
few residents in private curbside
recycling program for several
months but that program was.dis-

I

1/2 CARAT DIAMOND

STYLI
lOll

SPEIDEL
ID's
Ladies Rub~ Sapphire,
Emerald Rings

20% OFF

$129'5'

lf• Ct. T.W.

Ladies Opal, Pearl, Blue Topaz,
Amethyst, Garnett -,

sst•s

·- .

1395
VAlUE

L90

. Reg. $310 ..... $ .
.
NOW

$79
L430

95

SOLITAIRE

~:'uE

Rubyt Dia.
Sapph ./ Dia.

---.. .;. ;. . .,;-tocal briefs ;....____,
95

199··

$199

. Pulsar
Watches

WELCOMEI
All MaJor Credit cards wetcomel
. QlanllllllllmHid to In-~ IIIIICIIOrodllt aniJ
All total wy.lahls cu .aoaroxlmdle

EVElY

DIAMOND -

25°/o!

•RINGS
•EARRINGS
•NECKLACES
SAVE .

Jury trial to begin

Olomond . Eamngs
115 C1. Retail $299

112 Ct. Retail $889
Phologropl1s enlarged to snow delOit

•s99

Two GaUia County men have been sentenced on felony charges
of grand theft in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun.
.
Vinton residenl Terty 0 . Russell, 34, and Jeffrey A. Cochran, 26,
of Gallipolis were transported 10 lhe SEPTA Center m Nelsonville
after lhey were sentenced on fourlh-degree felony counts of grand
theft on Monday.
·
.
Both Cochran and Russell had earlier entered guilty pleas to
charges of stealing money from c9in-operated vending machines
belonging to Ohio Valley Publishing Company on October 18.
The defendants received identical suspended sentences of 18
months in prison and were placed on five years probation by Alhens
County Common Pleas Court Judge Roger Jones, who was assig~
to lhe case.
According to Assistant Meigs County Prosecuting Allorney
Linda. R. Warner, a condition of lhe .defendants' pJobation is lhe
successful completion of SEPTA Center's structured probationary
program, and Russell and Cochran were transported to the SEPTA
Center in Ne)sonville imme!liately following lheir sentencing hearing.
·
.
Cochran and Russell were also ordered 10 pay restitution in lhe
amount of $3,000 and court costs relating 10 their cl!Ses.
Col)tinued on page 3

.)

MIDDLEPORT 992-2635

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Cochran, Russell sentenced

'·

In Our Store On Sale!

INGELS FURNITURE and JEWELRY

-. .

Jury selection was underway on Tuesday mommg m ·the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court criminal case of Oladatun Fasheun,·
who is charged with nine counts of embezzlement-related char~es.
Fasheun was indicted by the Meigs County Grand Jury on lhe
charges, which range from charges of engagaging in a pauem of
corrupt activity to lhcfl, grand theft, aggravated iheft and passmg
bad checks.
Specifically, Fasheun is accused of stealing. nearly $334,000
from Lee 0 . Wood and/or Beatrice I. Wood while employed w1lh
Athena Trading Company.
.
Meigs County Public Defender Charles H. Kmght represents
Fasheun.

*149
114 Ct. Retail $399
199

.J

LAYAWAYS

that it's more cost effective 10 pre·
vent pollution lhan to deal wilh it
after the fact," said Donald R.
Schregardus, director of lhe Ohio
Environmental Profltl;tion Agency.
The pollution redu ction was
noted in lhe Toxic Release Inventory Report, an annual accounting of
about 300 toxic substances that

VISA
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approved by Council.
Council also gave a second
reading to an ordinance to change
the Betsy Ross building area from
industrial to residential zoning. The
area will be divided into eight
housmg lots after the demolition of
the building in early 1992.
A letter of appreciation will be
5enllo lhe Meigs County Commissioners for $4,500 which was put
into lhe taxi service in 1991.
Council voted to enter into
contract wilh Cheshire Township
for fire protection . The contract
calls for a payment of $4,650 plus
$75 a call. It was also decided 10
enter into a contract for Meigs
County Emergency Management
Service with Bob Byer , Meigs
EMS direclOr, for a cost of $300.

a

Also approved was a contract
with Floyd Browne ASsociltes for
$1,050 a month throuJb August,
1992, or until a licensed opera10r is
hired, for technical services on lhe
village's sewer and water system.
The mayor's report showed
receipts of $4,135.1l was noted lhat ·
delivery of lhe new ladder truck for
the Middleport Fire Department is
expected before lhe end of lhe YearCouncil approved several transfers
of monies to provide for the appro·
priate balances in th e various
funds.
Allending were Mayor Hoff.
man, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
and Council members, Dewey Horton , James Clatwonhy , Judy
Crooks, Paul Gerard, William Walters, and Jack Satterfield.

a

~~~i:su~~llw~e;~~f~~~~fi~~~

Report reveals toxic pollution·declines
· By The Associated Press
The top environmental official
in the st.ate said greater efforts to
reduce all forms of toxic waste
seem to be working, as evidenced
oy a report released today indicat. ing a 25 percent decrease in toxic
releases in 1990.
" Ohio companies are realizing

Ltll

tf• Ct.

certificate sold will be donated and all certificates will be redeemed at ruu value. Funds wiD
go toward the programs in Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and Mason counties. Pictured kicking off the
event are Judy S~franko, BBIBS executive director, and Mike Beckley, Rax manager. (0'\P
photo by Kris Cochran)

SPECIAL SALES • Teaming up for a happy
: holiday season are Rax Restaurants and Big
Brothers/Big Sisters Organization. Holiday gift
certificates from Rax Restaurants will be sold
throughout the area and at the Gallipolis Rax to
benefit the Big' Brothers/Big Sisters Organizalion. A portion of the proceeds from every Rax

Diamond/
Black Onyx

$157 million and $170 million dQI:
Iars a year, Ms. Vandawalker said. ·
A-utility has put an increase into .
effect this way once before, she,
said. An increase sought by
Columbia Gas of Ohio w.as in
effect for abo ut a monlh in 1990..
The PUCO granted a smaller
increase, and the utility was
ordered to refund the difference.
Two other increase requests are
pending l!efore the PUCO. They
are from Zimmer co-owners Dayton Power and Light and'Cincinnaii
Gas and Electric Company, Ms.
Vandawalkcr said.

.Incentive phase is not
funded for curbside recycling

33°/o OFf

ANTIQUE

an for Consumers,- Counsel
William Spratley, said lhe application review was delayed mainlv
because lhe PUCO staff report was
several months late.
"Columbus Southern Power •s
financially in a healthy situation
and doesn't need immediate rate
relief," she said.
Columbus Southern knows it
isn't entitled to th e full rate
increase it requested and is lakmg
advantage of lhe law, she said.
The PUCO staff recommended a
'rate mcrease of 20.2 percent, wh1ch
would give lhe company between

-.

Middleport must come up with new options for project

SALE

Choice
Dazzling ~ Ct. T.W.
Beauties
BLACK HILLS
GOLD
ONLY l,S.OO

..

Electric rates going up 28.4 perCent Jan. 1··

-.

S629' 5

1 StcUon, 10 Pogoo 25 ...,,, :
A Mutllmedla Inc. Newopaper.-

Pomeroy-Middleporl, Ohio, Tuesday, December 1.0, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

GOLD CHAIN

SAU PIICED

....·.•.
.•,.-::-.
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.

Vol. 42, No. 153

ALL BULOYA WUCHES

DINNER RING

...

•.

A'INIIELS

25°/o OFF

•

•

_MULLEN MUSSER .'

RACINE - The Racine Lodge
No. 461 F and AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Officers will be
installed and refreshments will be

.. Low tonight In 30s.
Wednesday, btgh mid 50s.

Page4

DOWNING CHILDS : .

PORTLAND • The Portland
Elementary PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the elementary
school in.Portland.

Pick 3: 303
Pick 4: 5280
Cards: 10-H, 5-C,
9-D, 3-S

an unprofiiable venture.
industries released into the air and
According to the mayor , the
water, injected into underground goal of lhe village in initiating a
wells, buried or hauled away for curbside recycling program is to
disposal.
reduce the amount of solid waste
Even with the apparent going into landfills and protect the
improvement, more lhan 277 mil- environment.
lion pounds of toxic chemica ls
An ordinance was adopted after
were reported by Ohio facilities as the third reading providing for
being released or transferred to the Christmas bonuses for regular full
air, land or water in !990 from and part-time employees. Each
·.nore.ihan t;MO'icpo'nlng sites ... · .. full-time employee will receive
.: . The chemical, rubber and plas· $300 while each part-time employtics and fabricated metals industries ce will receive $150. A list of
accounted for 68 percent of the employees to receive bonuses was
toxic releases/
~
presented by. the mayo r and

-~ri~~~?~~~ri~~£~~~~~ Alcohol-relate(rlraftic deaths
1987.
In a statement issued today,

~~;::~~;di~ ~t'l~ti~~i~re~=~i~~
program and suppons lhe Pollution
Prevention Develo~m ent Work
Group form ed_ by ov . George
Voinovich 10 draft a pollution prevention strategy for Ohio. Memhers of the group met for the first
time Monday.
·

15

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

J

dect•tntng
• ace or d.tng to orr·tc~a
.I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) r•lated trafTh e num ber Of alcohol -'
.
Oh1'o
has
dropped
but
fiIC dealhs tn
•
residents must still be remi_n~ed of
the dange_rs of drunken dnvmg, a
stale of1icl3l srud.
.
Ohto Department of Highway
Safety Director Charles Shipley
sa id Monday that one wa y to
remind drivers hot to drink is the
"Pany Animals."
The four dancers -dressed as a
cat, a rat, a ram and a-rabbit - perform in a video and in person.
singin~ songs that tell ~ple "to
party ts great, just don t forget 10
designate."
A designated driver is one who
promises 10 stay sober in order to
drive others who may drink home.
The "Party Animals" on Mon- ·
day helped safety and law enforcement officials and liquor industry
representatives introduce Designated Driver Days for the Christmas
holiday.
Highway Safety Director
Charles D. Shipley credited such

· h-h 1
programs Wil e ping reduce lllc land of the central Ohio chapter.
number of alcohol-related traff1'c He said the tavern owners long
deaths from 809 in 1986 to 623 in have encouraged responsible drinkContinued on page 3
1990.
.
Faialities were red,uced by 9 percent from 1989, when 684 deaths ·
were reponed, he said.
"Allhough deaths are down 9
percent, molOrists still need to be
reminded drunken driving is serious business," Shipley said.
The department said 38 percent
of the 1,639 traffic deaths in 1990
were related to alcohoL
In addition 10 lhe "Party Ani- .
mats" video and comlll!Ct discs, lhe
hi~hway safety department supphes liquor est.abhshments with
handouts, displays and training
about drunken driving.
" The success of the program is
largely determined by how many
people hear the message," Stale
Highway Patrol Lt. CoL Richard
Curtis said.
The Ohio Licensed Beverage · saun:o:"21Mlltjaoi-,"W.H.Imlll
Association supports the Designat- I'UOIIII&gt;trl lne.; - - ..... "'Wllllll
ed Driver effon, said Don Wood- Wt.r 11: Bloon Bcxllca Corp., till

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Seventh Amendment

The right to trilil by jury in criminal trials is guarameed by Article Ill,
Section 2 of the Constitution and the Sixth Amendment. The Sevem.h
Amendment was included in the Bill of Rights to meet the concern of the
people that civil claims should be decided, not by judges, but by feUow
citizens drawn from their own community.
The concepl of trial by jury originated in medieval England, and the
English system of a "jury of twelve men tried .and true" was practiced by
the colonists. The Constitution nowhere fixes the number of jurors. The
number twelve was once describi:d as an "historic accident," and some
states and inost·of the federal district courts use juries of less lltan twelve
J?CfSOns for civil cases,
. Although the guarantee of a jury trial in criminal cases was accepted as
necessary by most of the Framers, there was considerable debate over
extending the same guarantee to civil cases. James lredeU of North Carolina, who would be one of the first six Justices appointed to the Supreme
Court of the l!nited States, believed that jury trials in civil cases should
not be guaranteed because "it was a complicated business," best left to
"future legislatures." Iredell was concerned that juries in federal civil
cases might easily become confused by the different systems of legal rules
and procedures in the states.
·
Those who sup~ the Seventh Amendment wanted the duties of lite
judge and the duties of the jury clearly divided, because they knew that
some judges in England and in the courts of Europe had abused their powers in civil cases. George Mason of Virginia wrote : "In controversies
respecting private property, and in suits between man and man, the
ancient trial by jury is one of the greatest securities to the rights of lite
people, and ought to remain sacred and inviolable."
.
There is some merit in Iredell's position. Civil litigation sometimes
involves facts and issues s0 complex that they may overwhelm members
of a jury. More than a half century ago, England abolished jury trials in
most civil cases, making exception only for limited classes of cases. such
as claims for libel or slander and fraud.
The Seventh Amendment guarantee of the right to jury trial contem ·
plates a jury representing a cross-section of the community, and every
American may be called upon to serve on a jury at one time or another,
either in federal or state court, in a civil or criminal case. Allltough jury
duty may nccasionally be inconvenient or time consuming, it is a duty of
citizenship and an important way in whic~ ~very citizen can become an
active participant in the guarantees of the Bill of Rights.

...,

... DeC€M8el\' 7, 1991,
a r&gt;aV 'THaT WiLL
•iVe il&gt;llf?ot-~Y ...

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 10, the 344th day of 1991. There are 21 days
left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
'o n Dec. 10, 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt became the fmt
American to ·be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, for helping to mediate an
end w the Russo-Japanese War. .
·o thisda:te: - · - - ·· •
·
'
· ·
!520, Martin Luther publicly burned the papal edict demanding he
recant or face excommurtication.
·
In 1817 Mississi~pi was admitted 10 the Union as the 70th state.
In !830' poetEmtly Dickinson was born in Amherst, Mass.
In 1869', women were ifanted the right to vote in the Wyoming Terri·

1:

to~~ 1898, a treaty was signed in Paris'officially ending the Spanish·
,
"
Atnaican War.
In 1931, 60 years ag6, -Jane Addams became a co-recipient of the
Nobel Peace Prize, the rtrst American woman so honored.
In 1948, the United Nations General Assembly adopted its Universal
Declaration on Human Rights.
In 1950, Ralph J. Bunche was presented the Nobel Peace Prize, the .
rtrst black: American to receive the award.
In 1958, the frrst domestic passenger jet flight took place in the Urtited
States as a National Airlines Boeing·707 flew Ill passengers from New
"orI:: to Miami in about 2 1/2 hours.
In !964, civil rights activist Dr. Martin Luther .King Jr. received the
Nobel Peace~ during ceremonies in Oslo, Norway.
In 1967, singer Otis Redding died in the crash of his private plane in
Wisconsin. He was 26.
In 1980, U.S. Representative John W. Jenrette, D·S.C., resigned to
avoid being expelled fi'OIT! the J!ouse _foll?wing his conviction on charges
relating 10 the FBI's ABSCAM mvesugauon.
.'
In 1983, Raul Alfonsin was inaugurated as Argentina's first civiUan
president after nearly ei~ht years Qf miUtary rule.
In 1984, South Afncan Bishop Desmond Tulu received the Nobel
Peace Prize.
Ten years ago: President Reagan appealed to Americans in Libya to
leave foUowing reports that a Libyan-trained "hit squad" had entered the
United States on amission to kill the president and olltec offacials.
Five years agb: Human rights advoca~ and Holocaust survivor Elie
Wiesel accepted the Nobel Peac;e Prize, saying the honor belonged to all
Nazi death camp survivors and their children.
·
One year qo: A sta~~d-in for Mikhail Gorbachev accepted lite 1990
Nobel Peace Prize. Industrialist Armand Hammer died at age 92. The
space shuttle Columbia returned from its lOth mission. The Food and
Drug Administration approved a long-acting contraceptive implant called
NorplanLI
~

. '

By Jack Anderson
d.D · · l ." . AU •
an ·a e ran

.paign, Despitethe mea culpas after
the Willie Honon fiasco in 1988,
thecandidateswilldoitagain. You
can count on it
,
If this is campaign financing
reform, it's time to reform the
refonners.
California's Jerry Brown is the
one candidate who has stepped out
of the vicious circle. He dpesn't
stand _much of _a chan~ ofwmnmg,
bu! hts campl!'gn qamst ~e cam·
pa1gn financmg syste~ g1ves ~s
hope that some day poltttcal cand1dates w!ll trust the yot~rs with
tnfonnauon mstead of illustons.
Brown_ ';S notlll;ldng any '!'oney
from polm~l action commtt_tees,
and he won t let anyo~e contribute
more, than $100 to _hts ca'!'pa1gn.
But ev_en Gov. Punty can I run a
carnP;a1gn on petty _cash alone. He
has lisked and qual1fied for match·
mg funds from the federal govern·
ment. Any candidate who ~ants the
taxpjlye_rs to help finance hiS or her
campa1~n must raiSe at least

J:.

BILL OF RIGHTS

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we ffAVE TO

:

HAVi A T~~AL~ flf(~i.

=~~-=::::::::==========~~·:

Cracraft
oninunion
issues. Heston,
long active
right-to-work
causes,;·
joined the private National Right to '
Work Committee in protesting
Cracraft' s nomination, and it was;
his weight that helped to muscle
her out. The committee and
Cracraft crossed swords oh the··
issue of whether workers should be
forced to pay union dues that are
used for political purposes. The~
disagreement put Heston in the '
unfamiliar position of opposing a
conservative administratipn.
:;

@ 199 1 by NEA, Inc.

AMENDMENT VII. Right of trial by jury.

•

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'I

II

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In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exc~ twenty dollars, the right of trial by
jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of the
United States, than according to the rules of the common law.

Sununu's problems began ·withBy Martin
BQsh
·
Schram,
From the get-go, the president's
chief of staff seemed to go out of
his way to make himself the most
controversial - no, make that
despised - official in Official
Washington. ·
.
He snubbed con~ress10nal
potentates, treated Cabmet members like . cabin boys , became
embrotled 10 personal scandal, and,
10 short, .wound up the very symbol
of all that seemed wrong w1th the
pres1dent.
.
But when Ha_m11ton Jordan
moved out of Jtmmy Carter's
White House, _and .Jacl:: Wat~on
took over as ch1ef of staff, nothmg
changed for the man who was really in charge. Inflation remained in
double digils: ~ostages remained
~~Iran. Amen'!' s voters rem~10cd
dtsenchanted w1th the leadershop of
thetr leader. And that begat Reagan-Bush.
In time, another presidenthad a
ch1ef of staff who made htmself
conuovcrstal - no, desp,_sed --:and ·_snubhed potentates and treated
Cabm~t members hke cabm ~oys.
J!utaxmgDon~dRegan didn tend
Ronald Reagan s ~-contratemJ&gt;S.
Now, once agatn, the Whtte

House has come ali.ve with the to protect the environment- but
, sounds of "Impllle·the·Chief (of also pennitted Vice President Dan Congrc1s agreed, wail Street col&gt;.
Staff)." President Bush finally Quayle's competitiveness commis- lapsed in panic; then Bush did, loci.
reached the same decision Official sion to push for further dcregula· He rejected his own idea, as hi 1
Washington reached long ago: John tion at the expense of the environ- close pal, Treasury Secretary Nick .
Sununu had to go . So Bush will ment. (See also: Wetlands. Bpsh Brady, called it "wacky."
,
have a suong-but-sensible staff executes a uiple flip-flop - first
NATIONAL HEALTH: Bush' ·
chief. But a new chief of staff promising no loss of weiland s called for a comprehensive plan to·
won:t be a cure-all for what ails the through development, then redefin· cure our national health crisis _;,.•
pres1dent.
ing "wetlands" to. permit a net but then decided he didn't want to
It was Bush - no one else loss, finally reconsidering his propose one, after all, because all :
who made conflict and chaos the redefinition.)
solutions to curb costs and cover "
'comers~ne of this administration's
CIVIL RIGHTS: Bush OP.posed the uninsured proved controversial':
domesttc pohcy-mak10g. He gave a eompromise civil rights btU jJro· among the special interests. But •
the orders that made' it hap~e.n, posed by fellow Republicans wait! Pennsylvania voters rejected·,;.
across the board. Sununu adm10os- but then accepted an almost·identi· the stand-patism of Bush's unbeat- -·
tered and enforced these worst of cal bill. The reason he took that able buddy, Dick Thornburgh, for :
orders in the worst of ways.
first uncompromising stand was so Democratic Sen. Harris Wofford's ·
Just look at the littered land- he could bash Democrats as the · promise to fight for a comprchen• ;
scape of Bush's domestic policy- party of quotas (never mind that sive national health plan. Now .•;
making:
•
Democrats and Republicans led by Bush says he'll propose some plan·:
TAXES: Bush promised no new Sen. John Danforth of Missouri all after all.
. •.
taxes - .~~t then raised the old strongly rejected quotaS). The reaComes now the decline and fall :
ones.
son he caved.in was that he discov· of this latest White }jouse chief of
ANTI-RECESS JON PLAN: erect he was on, the same side as staff. It is a talc with not one moral,:1
Bush declared there was no need !'azi Klansman ~avid D.uke on litis but two. Sununu was UO,!ICCEJ!t;l_ble~.~~ __
f9r an ecq_nomic._growth package.. 1ssue-and the· pohucal hea~ beeame··-bur·Bosh-hllS oeen unpresideniial. •.
-but just a few hours later , he too hot.
If our president persists in giv- :
was enthusiasticaUy endorsing one. . . CREDIT CA~D INTER~ST ing us the same old dol)lestic flip- ...
ENVIRONMENT: Bush gave RATES: Bush proposed lowenng flop m the name of policy, our' J
lip-service to EPA Chief William the interest rates we must pay on problems will persist- and so will
Reilly's quest for .new regulations our•credit card debts -: but after his.
'•"

·Israeli maneuvering becomes intense ·;
· WASHINGTON (NEAl Through moves such as its demand
that the second round of Mideast
peace talks be delayed for five
days, Israel seems to be throwing
up sh.ort-sighted roadblocks . to
negouauons. However, U.S. offi·
cials say that such maneuvering is
at the heart of Israel's strategy to
minimize lite American role in the
tall::s and drag the peace process
outas long as possible.
·
. As _State Department analysts
v1ew ll, s10ce the first round of
talks in Madrid, Israel has been
desperately _tryin~ to ~complish a
senes of thongs tt beheves critical
to any successful outcome - successful from the point of view or
Prime Minister Yitzhak Sharnir's
conservative government
_,
The problem involves what the
two sides hope to end liP with at
the conclu~ion of the process.,Israel
wants to g1ve up as litde Syrian and
Lebanese territory that it now holds
as possible; it wants to retain absolute political control of the West
Bani:: and Gaza; it wanis internationally guaranteed secure borders,

complete recognition by all the
Arab states, and trade 8lld diplomatic nonnalization with its neighbors.
The Arab states, in turn, are
will~ng to recognize Israel and normaiiZe relalions, but m return they
w~t Israel· to be pushed back wi~in tts pre-1967 borders. If that ts
not attainable, at the very least the
Arab states want a guarantee of
political self-rule for Palestinians
living on the West Bank or in

Gaza.
Both sides seem to have come to
the same conclusion: The Arab
states will not get any kind of
agreement close to what they want
unless Israel is forced ~y the Umted States to make maJOr conces· .
sions. T_hus, the P?St-Madrid
maneuvenn~ by each s1de has been
about defimng the U.S. role in the
process and trying to force the process into a form most favorable to .
them.
· C
.
Sb

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY HRISTMA

Robert J, Wagman·.

Israel wants the talks to begm:
slowly and to proceed on a ver9
!ow-key has)s. Most of aU, for n?w••';
!1 wants to l~wer expecta.uo~s _w1th-.,,
1n the re~1on tha! stgmf!cant.
progress w11\ be achteved qutcklt •
As a result, Israel hopes, talks will,
drag on for months or eve~ Y~.•l
assum10g there would not be ~ ~to- ·;
lent explos!on b~ Arabs .ltvmg:under !sraeh rule m the capture~: "
terntof!CS and on the West Bank. " •

y Lane an

d Mill.er

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Continued from pqeT

The Dilly Sentinel-Page 3

---llospital news---

ing. ·
Other state programs t!ll'geting
· impaired drivers include:
·
,-The patrol ' s 24-hour tele·
phone hot line to notify authorities .

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ourt news

Stocks

Squads answer four calls

MEN'S NIGHT OUT

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--Area deaths--

MIDDLEPORT DEPT.
STORE

Shop For That Special
Someone '

--Meigs announcements-

FRIDAY, DEC. 13•8·10 pm

c~m~ 80 ~;~~~;!:M~~~

It

-'¥'

"* ..

. All I want for Ch-ristmas
•Is my two front teeth~ ..

··1'"

f

£

·J1.,J .

~~~m.

Leonard Bass
The date of death of Leonard L.
Bass, 72, was .incorrecdy reported
in Tilt. Daily Sentinel on Monday.
Mr. Bass died on Saturday, December 7, 1991 at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Bass attended the Racine
Church of the Naiarene.
.Funeral services wiD be held on
Wednesday at , . p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home With Rev. William
Thorpe and Rev, Thomas Gates II
officiating. Burial will be in
Carmel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 p.m . to 9 p.m. on
Tuesday.

Burkhard

·Funeral services for Emma
(Frick) Burlthard, 88, of 740 Zorn
Ave., New Albany, Ind., wece held
Monday a1 the Kraft Cbapef, New
Albany, Ind. Burial was in Hillcrest
Cemetery.
$he was a native of Pomeroy
an(l a member of St Mark's United
Church of Christ, New Albany,
Ind.
·
~Survivors include, two daugh·
, • .11\-• .... - -

L.

Weather

~Jllma

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Two InJUred in two-car wreck

I

·s,I,oo,ooo from cQntributors in at
1
least 20 .states to qoalify for .tlie
· federal match.
Q;
The money comes from volun- . .
t
tary donations by taxpayers. who mcumbents.. er of incumbenc is \
check a box on their .ta~. retu~ns ne:C~a~~~tpronounced than rna :·
earmarkmg $1 for pres1denual
.
.
.
1
campaig~s. That fund h~s b~en president~~~ c~~!~!:~c~de~!~; :
around ~m~e the 1976 pnmar!es. !~nh:as et h~ raised$! 5 million :
But t~xpayers are becomm_g at at s1~~le dinner in 'u,ouston :
t~mgly _wary of the way pres!· recently. it takes the challengers :
dential candtdates seU themsel~es. m0 nths on the road to coax that • .
In 1980, 29 percent of people filing . . ch money out of the waUets of l
therr tax fonns donated $1, but m mu_
rs
:
the last round of f!lings,. only 20 theo~'t~~s ·of incumbency are :
percent _were wllltng. _Smce th,e · also be ·nnin to show themselves. ~
amount 1s only $1, the ~ssue can t Bush
etginto the nation's liv- :
be money. It must be d1saffecuon ing room~ by staging a photo •
with the process. .
ortunit that the networks :
0
. G1~en the current leYel of ~on- w~~ld be rel~ctantto i ore even if : ·
tn,buuons, the fund wtll be JUSt it has no news value. rush doesn't :·
abou_t !h"y by the 1996 campa1gn. In have to pay for·the air time, nor ;
depnvmg the fund, even as a way will it be credited against his cam: "
of protest, voters sull hurt themai n s ndin ca
selves and the system because it is P 5urasso~iafe Jim L nch
the cha,le~gers who suffer when reviewed the slate of candiaates
money !S ught, not the entrenched who have filed to date and found ·
that the daunting odds ofbeating.an
~~~~~~~' incumbent president don't seem to
:!!!
' have discouraged challengers. At. ·
last count, 112 people had raised
the necessary $5,000 and rtled with ·
the Federal Election Commission ·
As interpreted by Bob Thaves, FRANK AND ERNEST cartoonist:
to be eligible as official candidates,
in the 1992 race.
,:
One West Virginia hopeful sent,
the FEC a leatherbound copy of his
platfonn -the Bible. He vowed to
keep it open on his desk in the Oval :
Office. And he has made a practice:
of stamping his campaign literature ~
with the wolds "Historical Documents. Do Not Destroy." It doesn't '
look like he will raise the $100,00Q'
necessary to qualify for matching ,
funds.
,
:'
. HESTON WINS =- Charlton
Heston, a conservative actor who ·
nonnally firids himself in the GOP
camp, has won his first hard-fought'
battle against the Bush administra·..
tion. Bush has decided not to
renominate Mary Miller Cracraft. Ul.
the National Labor Relations Board!
- an appointment that Hrsto~~
,
,'
..· ~~p.ru;ed be.cause .he differed with,

....WASliiNGTON -It doesn't
111 COUrt Street
· matter that vo~. are disillusioned
and disgusted with the electoral
POmeroy, Ohio
.
process. Tax dollars will still pay
DEVOTED TO THE ~RES~OP THE MEIGS.MASOY AREA
for the Democratic and Republican
co~~entions _in _1992- the Great
Amencan Shmdigs. •
Congress and the Whi!e House
make a show of wranglmg over
ROBERT L. WINGETT
shaving pennies from the deficit,
but nobody barked ~hen the Trea·.
Pu b.lisller
sury wrote $_10.6 m1llion m checks
to both parues to make sure they
PAT WtDTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
can
throw lavtsh conventions next
Assistant Publisber/ControUer
General Manager
summer- conventions that are all
show and ~o substance_.
_
AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
No_r
w11l
anrone
m power m
lhe American Newspaper Publisher Assoeiation.
Was~1~gton obJeCt ~hen th~ two
surv.tvlng pres1~~ntial cand_ldates
LETIERS Of OPINION ue welcome. They should he less lhan 300
rewve $11~ mtll1on for theu perwords long. Allleuers ue subject to editing and must be signed wilh name,
sona_lcampaignS so they can squanaddress and telephone number. No unsiJited leaers will be published. Letters
der 1t on. photo ops of the~ selves
should be in good taSte. addressing issues, not personalities.
s_wathed 111 flags and spouung onelmers.
.
.
Along ille way, taxpayers w1ll
also pay for the slash·and-bum ads
made famous by the last Bush cam-

_.,_,

are not drivin$.
.
-Veterans MtiiJI)J'lal
. Cr)'sial Reed, Emily Spim, Victo- ·
MOND.A
Y
.ADMISSIONS
_
.
ria Wilcox.
· -Curtis sa1d the hot. line has
th .Dec
received several hu~dred calls Cora Michael, Portlimd··, Theodore . B'us
. 9.......
• Mr
. an d Mr
•· ·
·
.,.__
since it opened a month ago about .Cremeans, Pomeroy; Robclt Calia· BnnUIII
, · Two people were treated at Veterans Meniorial Hospital afier a
...
u ... , a ...
, Jac'-...... "•mr;.
people driving erraticallyr Alcohol day. Pomeroy; Charles Werry, and Mrs. Jimmy Wilbur, a son;
::~-car accident on S.R. 124 in Salisbury Township' Monjlay mom·
·• '
:.
--of-suspected·dr\lnl::en·drivers;~---~- was·not--always involved; but the Pomeroy; :ZClla-Riley, Middleport; WeiiJton. ··~~g--~ ·-and
Charles
Moore,
Long
Bottom
.
-Immobilization of the vehicle notification still could have pre. According. to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
. MPNDA v DrscHA~GEs • .
•
used by a repeat offender;
vented an acciden~ he said.
His1ghway Patrol, Edith J. Williams, 59, of Rac_ine was westbound on
None.
Soutii-Cenlrll Otlio
.R. 124 and _stopped to make a right tum into a private drive. A
:._And a list of names the pa1rol
·
foUowmg vehiCle, a 1987 Niss811 J;&gt;i!lsar driven by Henry A. Salser,
uses to make sure repeat offenders C
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Tonight, mostly clear. ·Low in :
, ~~. of Syracuse was unable to stop and struck: Williams' 1984 Olds
with suspended driver's licenses
Discharges, Dec. 9 . Delma the mid-;lOs. Wednesd4y, mostly ;
C1erra ~~ the rear, the report said.
·
..
·•
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Arnold, Charles qark, . Mrs. sunny. High 55-60.
. y.'1Ihams and Salser were. transported to the hospital by the
Marrla~e license ilranted ·
Charles Dangerfield and son
Fair on Thursday. A chance at
·'i Me1~s County Emergency Medical Service where, according to a
A marnage license bas been . Louwanna Grubb, Opal Hupp, Ter~ rain Friday and .a chance Qf rain·a'.
hosp1tal spokeswoman, they were treated for injuries and released. - ·
granted in Meigs County Probate - ressa Jeffers, Velma: Luckeydoo, snow Satiliday.
~
Am Ele Power ................. .32 3/4.
Dama~e to buth vehicles was listed a8 heavy and disabling, the
Court to Larry Eugene Baker, 37,
·
~====~~
Ashland Oil ......................27 3/8
report sa1d.
.
Reedsville and Barbara Sue Hen·
jjii
AT&amp;T............ , ................37 1/4
Acoording to the report, Salser ·was cited for failure to maintain
derson, 32, Pon!and.
Bank One ..........................46 1/2
assured clear distance
Bob ~vans .......... :.............21 3\8
Foreclosure sought
Channing Shop..................23 5/8
A foreclosure action has been
Four cal)s for ~istance were answered by Meigs County EmerCity Holding ............... :..... l6
filed in Meigs County Common
gency Medical Servtces on Monday. . .
.·
.
Federal Mogul... ................ l3 1/4
Pleas Court by Bank One, Colum•
On Monday at 10:48 a.m., Syracuse unii went to Glenn Street.
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ..48 111!
bus, N.A. of Columbus, against
Anna Brown was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Key Centurion .................. .14 1/4 Larry Edward Klein, Pomeroy, and
At 2:32p.m., Racine squad was sent to Perry Run Road for Gary
Lands' End ........................25 1/4
others, in the amount of $5,023.58.
Moore, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.. At 4:27
Limited Inc ....................... 27 5/8
The suit aUeges that the defendants
: .p.m., Rutland unit went to State Route 684. Louis Christiim was
Multimedia Inc ..................20
defaulted on a property improv~­
. taken to Holzer.. At 6:13 p.m., Middleport squad was sent to South
Rax Restaurant .................9/16
ment loan. .
Second. Zelia Riley was taken to Veterans.
Robbins&amp;Myers ................34
.
Shoney's Inc........._. ........ ....20 7/8
'
.
AT
Star Bank ...........................26 3/4
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Wendy Int'l.. ...................... 8 3/4
446 4524 ' ', ~' "
Worthington Ind ................ 20 1/2
ters, Alice Livingston of New
Stock reports Dre the 10:30 a.m.
Thomas C. McKinney
Albany, Ind., and Margie L. Reas
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
of Louiseville, Ky.; lhree.grand·
and Loewl of Gallipolis.
Thomas Clinton McKinney, 82, children; and two great·grandchil·
of 199 Little Kyger Rd., Cheshire, dren.
·
died Monday, Dec. 9, 1991 at his
residence.
He was born Aug. 25, 1909 in
Beards Fork, W.Va., son of the late
Merchants to meet
Christmas dinner
William and Anna Crowe Baker
The Pomeroy Merchants Asso·
The Louridge Community Cen·
· McKinney.
ciation will meet Wednesday at ter will host a Christmas dinner on
'
Men Only - Refreshments Served
beginning at.noon. Those
~~=~liCe room at . Sunday
'
'
attending bring a covered dish.
Eveiyone welcome.
to be held
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
VFW Post to meet
Dance Club will hold a round and
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
Cou1ncil Royal and Select Malians square dance on Friday from 8 to No. 9053 will meet Thursdav at
Bosworth Council 46 of Pomeroy, II p.m. at the senior citizens cen- 7:30p.m. at the post home.
Ohio Valley Commandry No. 24 ter.
Dance to be held
Knights Templar of Middleport,
Christmas party _ .
The
Plains VFW Post
and he was a Master Mason for 37 ·· The Racine-Gun Club will hold No. 9053Tuppers
and Ladies Auxiliary will
"
years.
its Christmas party on Saturday' host a dance on Friday from 8 to·
. Survivors include his wife, Dar- from 7 p.m. to 12:30 a.m .. at the II :30 p:m. with music by "Second
lene Kingery McKinney, whom he Racine American Legion Hall.
Cuttin'."
married Nov. 23, 1932 in Catletts·
Guest speaker
burg, Ky.; two sons, Owen Mcl(inRev. Eddie Bufrtngton, Gallipo,ney of Addison, and William McK- lis, will be the guest speaker at the
_.,t...
..
inney of Gallipolis; two daughters, 10:45 a.m. service of the Naomi
1"!'"r
'll,.,y~.,;4v•
'HoiHIV,
S~lby Manley or Middleport, and
Baptist Church in Pomeroy. The
Juanita Sears of Cheshire; cousins, public is invited to attend.
1;,l
Ralph- an·d Carolyn Hygma; 15
Cantata-to' be presented
. h
· grandchildren; and 14 great-grandThe Racine Baptist Church adult . ·iil ~
children.
choir will present the cantata, .
Funeral services will be con- "Rejoice, 0 Earth," on Sunday at
ducted 1 p.m. Wednesday at the 7:30p.m. The public is invited to ~
Addison Freewill Baptist Chlirch, attend.
with Rev. RiChard Benson officiatProgram to be presented ·
ing. Burial will be 'in Reynolds
"Wonder of the Season• will be
•
Cemetery.
presented at Carleton Church,
~~
Friends may call at the residence Kingsbury,Road (County Road 18) .2:.~
arter 2 p.m. on Tuesday and one on Friday at 7 p.m. The pro~m is 1'
hour prior to servi~es at the church. a musical celebration of Christmas,
candles, choir and light. Pastor ~
Clyde Henderson invites the pubHerbert Noel
'
. lie.
·
·Hymn sing
Herbert Eugene Noel, 65, of
The Faith Full Gospel Church in
Pomeroy, died Tuesday morning, Lon8 Bottom will have a hymn
~l
Dec. IQ, 1991 at his residence.
sing on Friday at 7 p.m. featuring
• He wis born on March 22, 1926 the Mountain Top Singers and 1'
in Scioto County. He was the son Crystalaswellasotherlocaltalent. ,.
of Daisy McCain Noel and the late Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub·
Alton Noel.
lie. ~efreshments will be served.
He was a retired employee or
Muzzle loader shouts
GTE after 35 years of service. He
The lzaak Walton Club will
was a veteran of the U.S. Army begin annual muzzle loaders shoots
during World War II and was a at the club near Chester on Sunday
ml'ffiber of Ohio Independent Tele- at I p.rii. The shOOts will continue
phone Pioneer Association.
each Sunday until Jan . 5. Open
Besides his mother, he is sur- sights only and prizes include
v(ved by his wife, Patricia Roush turkey, bacon and cash.
Noel, Pomeroy; a son, Herbert
Cantata·pageant slated
Douglas (Kim) Noel of Middleport;
The choir of the Racine United
a daughter Mrs. Scott (Linda) Methodist Church will present an
McKinney, of Rutland; a brother, original and unique cantata·
Chester (Alberta) Noel of Waverly; pageant, "Let Us Go to Beth lea sister, Mrs. Bob (AvaneUe) Tom- hem," on Sunday, Dec. 22 at 7:30
· lisen of Lucasville; his mother and p.m . Soloists are Jennifer Walker,
father in law, Douglas and Nannie Chad Hubbard and Heather Dailey.
I'
Roush of Letart, W.Va.; and three Mary Louise Shuler is the director
grandchildren: Douglas Noel and and the narrative was written and
Angel Noel of Middleport and arranged by Ruth Steams.
,
Li)1dsay McKinney of Rutland,
Country music night
Besides his father, he was preCountry Music Night at the Lot·
ceded in death by two brothers, tridge Community Center will be ~
D~vi~ andloie_!:.:ill_·, 11 • ~
. _
held Sa!urt:l;ly_from 5 1!-lll~ to.mi&lt;!.: __ T.:... ...
..
··-Funeral serv1ces Wllloe hela on night. All bands are welcome and
Thursday at I p.m. at Fisher. Funer- the public is invited to .attend. j(s'fl
~%~~~~ ~~~f~ ::::nd~ill !r~i:~nding are to bring a cov- ~ .
You broke a tooth on Aunt Edna's fruitcake. Now you'D have to use )'OUT pvistmas money to
,Friends may call at the funeral ·..
~
pay your dental bills.
home on Wednesday from 2-4 p.m.
The Daily Sentinel
:- '

Ta,xpayers foot ,~be bill for pricey campaigns 1

The -Daily Sentinel

.

.

I ''""

r----Local briefs...._...__--; Alcohol... .Continued from page 1

Page-2-The Dally 9entlnel ;
. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
Tuesday, December 10, 1991 :
.

-

ru,aday, Dec;ember 1o, 1991

''

Commentary

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Don't let unexpected events take a bite out of your holiday plans! Help Is as close as Peoples
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T!Jeaday, December 10,1991

Daily Sentin.e l

;Michigan freshman score in double figures in rout over ·chicago State ··

Tuesday, Dece!Yiber 1O; 1991

..

PIG•

. '

4:

beats Cincinnati 37-~ 13
Miam
.

We're You're
COMFORT Professionals

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OPEN HOUSE 9:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 18 ·PUBLIC INVITED

ORMAN HALL, INC.
1317 OHIO STREET

675-2877

POINT PLEASANT

Miami ddeoder during Monday night's AFC
game at Miami's Joe Robbie Stadium, which the
Dolphlnswon·37·13. (AP)
' ·

HEADING UPFIELD - Cincinnati running
back Harold Green (28) heads upfield past a

II,Y HASRRY ATKINS .
AP ports W~iter . .
~ ANN. ARBOR,-M1ch. (AF)~ledv~ Ftshef knew h1s fres~me~
a one better. He JUSt d1dn I
know.how much better. . , .
ld~~~ all five of M.'chl~an s her. a. e reshmen sconng 10 double
.f lgur:, ~d ~~~-ranked Wolver•
~es dam . h lcago Slale 112-62
0
~ ythamg l
.
ut twas expecled. After all,
·

'

By WILL LESTER .
statistics, but the nice thing is run the ball with fliggy (Mark
Associated Press Writer
we're doing i1 in a way w win foot- Higgs) and lhey were playing a lot .
MIAMI (AP) - Dan Marino, ball games and have the chance 10 of man covera~e and we took
who opened a restaurant north of ~et into 1he playoffs," Marino said. advanmge of lhat. '
Joe Robbie Stadium a few years · 'It's more satisfying right now."
Matino not~ that the offensive
ago called Bambino d'Oro, is playThe Dolphins are seeing !heir line is healihy for the firsl" time this ,
ing like a golden boy again - and offense, always keyed by Marino, season an&lt;t lhe running attack wiih,
has the Miami Dol·phins within come together at just the right time, Higgs is' giving the Dolphins desreach of lhe playoffs.
with lwo games·until the playoffs.
perately needed balance. · . The $5 million man reminded
Marino signed a five-year con"It helps running .the ball
everyone why hfs a fran chise U'ac t cx1ension for some $25 mil- because then teams can't just tee ·
player and on trail to set almosl lion in 1he offseason and some off on 1he passer," he said
every NFI, quarlerbacking record, · teammates and fans were quietly
He had nothing but praise for
health willing, as he led [he Dol- gru mbling as he struggled in the his two wide receivers, Clayton and
phins 10 a 37·13 victory over the early pari of the season.
Duper. The trio are one of the moSt
Cincinnati Bengals on Monday
"I think we're coniing 10ge1her devaslaling combinations in .. footnight.
offensiv ely," Marino said. "We ball when they're all in synch.
•
Marino hit 1he Marks brolhers knew going in that we would 'have
"The amazing thing is t~at' ,
for three louchdowns - two to our opportunities. We wanted to
(See DOLPHINS oil Page 5)
Mark Clayton and one to Mark
Duper - and connected on ~4 of
33 pa&amp;ses for 281 yards wilh no
imerceptions.
·
It was a nighl for personal milestones as well. ·He passed Jim Han
for 'fifth on the all-time passing
yarda~e list wilh 34,818 yards in
jus1 h1s ninth season, behind Fran
Tarkenton (18 seasons,47,003
yards), Dan Fouts (15 seasons,
43,040 yards), Johnny Unitas (18
seasons, 40,239 yard s) and Joe
.
Montana (13 seasons, 34,998
We
proudly
sell
and
service
yards).
Marino also brought his season Comforlmakei heating and air
conditioning systems. We service
1ouchdown Iota! 10 20, giving him
his ninth season with 20 or more
other brands too. using only factory
touchdowns and breaking 1he authorized parts. Because we're a
record he shared with Unims.
local business, our reputation rests
"It' s nice to have individual
1 on your satisfaction, so we earn tt
with every job we do. Call us anylime ... your comfort professionals .

We worry about your
home heating and cooling
·so you don't have to!

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

PorneroY-Middleport 1Ohio·

Ohio $tale had burled the Cougars
by 72 points earlier in lhe ~son.
- "You'vegoi to l)e impressed
wiih only six turoovers in the sec·
and half," a reporter smd to F1sh.er.
· " Are you kidding?" .he asked.
"No. Look at the halfume sheet
and compare wilh the final."
. And there it was: halftime, 10
turnovers; finaltolal, 16.
This, 10 Fisher, was more; .significan~ ihan alllhe points. The talent·
··

Meigs de-feats
Miller .71-44. .
';/ •

1

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
After a slow siarl the Meigs
Marauders kicked it in high gear in
the final three quaneis and rolled to
a 71-44 win over the Miller Falcons in girls Tri-Valley Conf~;Cence
basketball action Monday night at
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
· The win give the Marauders a 3·
• 0 record with all three wins coming
• in conference action.
• Meigs held a 10-6 lead at the
·end of the rust period but outscored
: lhe Lad¥ Falcons 20-12 in 1he sec·
• ond penod and went in the locker
· room with a 30-18 lead. In the sec• ~d half it was more of the same as
• Meigs cominued to pull away for
· the win.

:Dqlphins win .. .
(Continued from Page 4)
: these guys are so consistent over
· long periods of time,'' Marino said.
: "Duper and Cia v10n wam the ba II
,. · thrown to lhem in critical silua/ tions."
Clayton, who snared a one-hand
. drcus catch in the end zone, agreed
· that the Dolphins' passing allack
was back in gear.
·
"Danny was on fire," Claylon
said. "He was hot, putting the balls
,righl where they needed to be. it's
·like a sixth sense. I know what he's
::thinking out there and he knows
~w hat I'm thinkin-g. We feel like
'we're peaking a1 the right time."
Marino said his mos1significant
accomplishmenlllas been avoiding
·injuri es and stay in g on lhc field
'year afler year.
. "lrgives the 1eam a chance to
·have that consistency ," he said,
'·"and alsci gives me an opportunity
to break all lhe individu al
records."
But Marino was careful not 10
dwell on his personal achievcmeniS
for too long.
"I think the biggest lhing is thai
foolball is a team game ... the satis·
faction of winning games and playing with your teammates. That's
the satisfaction of doing well.·'

.

Ve,rna Compston led the
Marauders with 16 points, she was
joined in double figures by Tricia
Baer with 12 as all 10 Marauders
hit the scoring.column. Meigs was
27 .of 54 from the field for 50%, the
Marauders hit 17 of 29 from the
line for 59% . .Meigs had the fast
break working as the gals had 22
ass ists with Reva Mullen and
Compston chalking up seven each.
Meigs committed25 turnovers.
Jamie Hannin~ led the Lady
Falcons with 12 pomts, Jenny Plant
added II. Miller hit only 16 of 53
for .30 percent and 10 of 19 from
1he line 'for 53 %. The Marauders
forced 33 turnovers from the Fal.
cons.
Meigs out rebounded· lhe Falcons 35 -33, Lori Kelly led Meigs
wilh 10 rebounds. Hanning led
Mille&lt; with 12.
In the reserve game Miller
jumped out 10 a 11-0 lead and held
off a furious Marauder coll)eback
10 post a 40-35 over Meigs. Meigs
was able to cut the Falcon lead 10
1wo midway imo the final period
but the Falcons held on for 1he win.
Sandy Hem led lhe Falcons with IS
pdiniS, Joy O'Brien led Meigs wilh
II.
Meigs will play Southern on
Wednesday evening. There will be
no reserve comest, so the varsily
will get underway at 5:55.
Quarter totals
Meigs ................. 10 20 22 19 = 71
Miller ....................6 12 14 12 = 44
Meigs (71) - Reva Mullen 1-0·
3-5; Verna Compston 7-0-2-16;
' Mary Cremeans 3·0-3·9; Tricia
Buer 5-0-2-12; Kim Hanning 4-00-8; Lori Kelly 1·0·2-4; Lee Hen·
derson 2-0·2·6; Ginger Findley 10-0-2; Katrina Turner 1-0-1 -3 ;
Missy Sisson 2-0-2-6. Totals 27·0·17-71 '
Miller (44)- Jeannie Wycinski 1-0·0·2; Jamie Hanning 5-0-2·
12; Tina Colvin 2-0'0-4; Michelle
Nelson 3-0-5-11 ; Jenny Plant 0-02-2; Erica Toki 1-0-0-2; Lisa Wesl
1-0·0· 2; Mandy Cook 3,0-3-9.
Totals -16·0·12·44

ed W1&gt;1 verines had played like
.what they are- freshm~~ - in
,their firsnwo games, tummg lhe
bal!,over 3f! times in each con!-Cst. .:
. Boy, I .11 take lhat every ume,
F1sher sa1d. '_'If we 11ave !6
turnovers agamst Duke, we II
win."
Only one other .ranked team
played Monday mght. No. 23
. George10wn cruised past Delaware
· Slate 93-76.
Michigan (3-0) will be at home
for neighboring Eastern Michigan
Thursday night, lhen !likes o_o N.o. I
DUke in Crisler Arena on Saturday .
Freshman Jalen Rose led the
way for Michigan wilh 19 points.
Reggie BUfl&lt;Y scored 16 points
for Ch~c ago State..(2·5), which

managed only seven baskets in lhe51\CP,nJLhalf.. .-._. l .
The Wolvennes led all the way,
breaking the ~arne• open With a 195 b~t e;arly m the rust half.
M1ch1gan led b:t as many as 22
pomts and was ahead 51 -32 at
mtermission. The Wolverines
wound up shootmg 64 percenl for
the game. The Cougars shot 29 percent.
·

. NO.' 23 Georgetown ~j Delaware St.'76- .·
At Landover, Md .• Alonzo ·
Mourning score.d 21 points,
grabi)ed a cru:eer-h1gh 22 rebounds
&lt;111d added mne blocked shots to
lead the Hoy as over Delaware
SUIIe.
.
Georgetown (4·1) wasted a
chance 10 blow the game open m
the first half. But the Hoy as used a
· ·

9·0 run 81 the
.. beginning of the
ond-half -!1&gt; tak~ a 49·34 lead wilh
just over 17 minutes remaining.
Delaware State, which nearly
erased .a 14-jloint GeorgeiOWn lead
iillhe firs! half, never got closer
than seven points the rest of the
way.
. ..
Roy Williams had 15 points to
pace the Hornets (3·3).
sec
.·
•

Joyner sigfts one-year, $4.2 .million pact with K.C.
~-- ·

MIAMI .BEACH, Fla. (AP) Wally Joyner, whose once-sweet
career in California soured through
the years, joined lhe Kansas City
R,oyals today when he signed a

one-year, $4.2 million free agent
contract
Joyner, 29, hit .301 with 21
home runs and 96 RBis in 1991.
But his relationship wilh Angels
owner Gene Autry was said' not to
be great. and when California trad·
ed for Philadelphia's Von Hayes on
Sunday, it hastened Joyner's departure.
The Royals wanted a full-lime
first baseman, and Joyner's acqui·
sition will make George Breit, 38.
the permanent designated hiller, .
. Joyner can also become a free
agent again after next season
because the Royals agreed to waive
the restriction on repeal free agen-

cy wiihin five years.
"II was probably the toughest
decision I've made," Joyner said,
pausing for long periods and hold·
ing back tears. ''I've enjoyed my
time with l,he Angels . ... But in my
opinion, I didn't see any future
wiih myself and the Angels."

HOLIDAY
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107 Mill Street
Middleport,
Ohio

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992·6687
MILLEN SCORES - Georgetown's Kevin Millen (32) gets
around the defense.oll'ered by Delaware Stale's· Roy Williams dur·
ing the first half of Monday llight's game at Landover, Md., which
Ihe Hoy as won 93·76. (AP)
·

f&lt;J

Stale Auto
Insurance Companies

Scor·eboard
In,the NFL. ..

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Eutem 01¥ilion
Team
W L T PeL PF PA
r:~:I!WWt•·
... I&lt; &lt; o.IS7 409 2114
......,. •• .... B 6 0 .l71 293 218

'

I :'.

.... 7 7 0.500281 267
"'""'BnaiJnd l 9 0 .3!7 191 273

1 N.Y.Jeu

'JndianopoliJ

.. I 13 0 .071 133329

Central Dlvkion
JO 4 0.7t4 349 213
• ' a t .429 119164
PitgbwJh
... 5 9 0 .3l7 '2.51 324
Clndanall
1 11 t .JC 12A Cll

•·Howlon
cle..Jud

M

Norril Dlvlllon
W L T P... GFCA
Dclroit
........ 16 9 4 36 Ill 96
Chicago
...... 1!12 5 31 106 9!
-51. LoUis
...... 12 10 6 30 93 94
Minne&amp;OI.a .... 10 14 3 23 17 95
Toroolo
...... . 9 17 4 22 76 101
Team

'

Sm)1.he Dlvlllon
v~~~=:
10 J J7 104
W --~ .... 11
IS 8 6 36 90 84
Cal&amp;ary
...... 12 13 4 21 1071 01

..

Lo&amp; Angelt~~

WtlltrD DlvU:Ion ~

y-Dmver

... 10 4 0 .7 14 263 202

r·KanJU City
r ·LA. Raidm

9
9
6
.. 3

S..Wc

San Dics.o

s
S
8
II

0 .643 211 l03
0 .643 m 243
0 .429 lAO 226
0 .214 22229~

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Ttam

Eutem Dlvklon
W L T PeL PF PA

a.-WuhinfOn
13 I
PhUoddpllio .. 9 5
JnUu
...... 9 S
N.Y. GianY .. 7 7
PhOOli.... 4 10

.0 .929
0 .643
0 .64)
0 .500
0 .216

429 I8l
248 197
286 270
240243
174 293

Central Dlvblon
.... 10 4 0 .714 258 217
C'hiCIJO
Detroit
...... \0 4 0 .714 301 264
.. 7 7 0 .500 274 265
Minna au
Qn.en Bay
.. ) II 0 .21422921l
Tampa B1y
2 12 0 .1 4l182lll

WtJitrn Dlvlllon
At.lan1.1
...... 9 S ; .0 .6_:43 308 294
New Orlearu
9 S 0 .643 217 208
S1n Fnncilco
I 6 0 Slt 313 211
LA. Ro1111
J 11 0 .214 211 347
a.-clinched divilion
7-&lt;lin&lt;:.... ployolfb&lt;dh

Mollday's score
Mllmll7, Clndnn•ll13

Saturday's games
Tamp~ B•r• Chklao. IUO p.m.
Kanau Cilyat Sat. Fr~neilco, 4 p.m.

... 11 12 6

Edmon"" · ...
Sa nJa~e

ss

......

11 13

Mon~ay,

Ou. l6
l.ol Anacla Raidcn 1 1 New Orlun•.
9p.m.

In theNHL ...

622 2

95100

14 73135

Monday's score
Mon1ral 4, Tormlo I

Pllrkll: Dl'rillon
TW L T I'll. GFGA
W.......... ... lO 9 0 &lt;Ill Ill 114
N.Y. R.....,
17 II I ll 91 19
Now 1cnoy "' I~ 10 3 33 110 14
Plttlboqh "'" 14 10 • 32 llO 100

N.Y. Iollndon . 91• 3 21 93101
PltliHelpltlo .... 9 ll 3 21 79 98
,Ad1111 IMvWon

..... lO II 2 42 106 Ill
....... 11 12 ·S 27 96 100
'"'" 11 12 • 26 17 96
914422129~

1 17 3

19

93116

Dlllu at Ourlotte. 7:30p.m.

San Antonio 1\Minncsou, S p.m.
Detroit at L.A. Clip~X=rs, 10:30 p.m.
Utah at LA W ets, 10:30 p.m.

New Jeney 11 Minnaotl, 8t05 p.m.
Winnipeg 11San JCWI, '10:3S p.m.
EdmonlOn n Vancouver, 10:35 p.m.

Boslon CoUcge 65, I lof11ra 52
Brown 79, Holy Cron 76
·
Goorge~.Own 93, Dcla ware St. 76
1..1 Sa Uc 79, Villanova75
Urayeuc 119, Swanhmon: 47
St bcf*l's 82, Penn 81

Division

W L

PtL

GU

OOIIOn .................... \3 ' 6
Nc~Vork .............. ll 6

.684
.647

1

Philadelphi• ............. 9
Miam i.. ............. ,...... !
Orlando .................... 6
Wuhington .............. 6
Newlcrv.y ..... ......... S

4
4.5
6
7.5
.271 ' 1.5
.474
.444
.n3
.300

Central Dlv!J:Ion
Chic:a,o.................. IS 3 .833
C l e ~ e •nd .... - -11
Allanli ................... IO
Ocuoit .....................9
Milwaubo ...............9
lndiana .....................8
Cblrlouc ..................6

6
9
11

1I
I3
15

.647
.J26
.450
.450
.38\
.286

j,S
5.5
7

7
8.5
10.5

W L
Utah ....................... 12 8

S1n An~onlo ........... \0 7
Hou~oo ..... ,............. 9 8
Dcnva .....................1 10
7 12

o.u.........................

Mittnuota ................ 3 13

PeL
.600
.S88

GU

. 52~

1.S
3

.444
.36&amp;
.188

Paelne Division
!i .706
L.A. Llkcr~ ............ l3 6 .684
PonJ.nd ................. 13 1 .650

.'i

4.5
7

GoldcnS"te .......... l2
Sunle .................... ll

1

Pltocnio. ................. 12 ~
L.A. Clippcn ......... IO 10
S aenm~LD ..............6 12

.611

.l71

Turkeys

.5
I.S

2

.!iOO .. 3.5
.l33
6.5

Boucn 132, Denver 94

Tonight's games
Milwaukee 11 Allanca ,7:30p.m.

San Antonio at lndiam, 7:30p.m.
New Y&lt;ft ai,New Jcraey, 8 p.m.
Sea1llea\ Chi~ao, 8:30p.m.
Miami 11 Dallu , S:lO p.m.
Orlando 11 Uuh, 9:30 p·.m.
Oct.roitat PhoeniJ:, 9:30p.m.

HoultOn 11 Portland, 10 p.m.
L.A. Oipptn at Golden Sute, 10: ~0
p.m.
L.A . Lakcn II Stcn mento, 10:30
p.m.

o

AP Top 25 college
basketball (poll
The Tnp Twenty F1vc l~ms in 1hc
Auuci1tc:d Prcu 1991 ·92 collc~c. ba!kcl·
bill poll, with fmt·pla ce voles in Jllrl!l1 ·
thcsc1. records lhroush Dec. 8, Lotal
poims based on 25 potnl\ fo r a fint place
vote through one poi nt for a 251h pllee
vote and lu i week 's rankings:

.....

Pis. Wtek
1,625
1
1,482
3
1,47?
2
4

5. NmthCuolinil , ........ 6·0 1,394
~- Ok l•honu S1. ..........1·0 1,315

5
8
. K1nsu ........ ~ ............ 4-0 l,lR2
10
8. Cmn&amp;XticuL ............... 4·0 1,072
12
9. Kc:nt ucky ................... 3·l 989
14
10. Utlh ..................... .....6·0 970 13
l l.S t. Jc.tm·, .................. J·I 888 ~ 7
12. Sctooii11IL ............. J . J 836
6
13. Georgi• Tcch ............ S-1 691
11
l.ic.lndiana .................... 2·2 691
9
lie. Michi,g•n S1. ........... ..S.O . 691
22
16. 1owa ............... ........... 5·0 688 21
17. Oklahoma ................4·0 639
19
18. Michig1n ................. 2·0 446 • 25
19. Arkansu ............ c......4-2 444
II
20. Alabama ................... 5· l 407 IS
21. Miuouri .................. .4-0 404
22. Wake Fore£1...........4· 1 244
23
2J. Oco rgetown ................ · t 206 11
24. N.C. Charlotte .......... •\.! t 27
2l.LSU ........................ 2·2 12.5
16
Oth er r ccchl n1 vuLu : LouiRvi ll c
lOS, Virginia 67, Syncus~o~ 62, f'ilt.~!Airch
59, 11oulton48, UNLV 44 , E. Tconcucc
St . 34, Ru1gcrs 31, Muuc hu Jcttl 29;'
W11.·Grun Bay 21. N. Cuo1in• S1. 17
Penn S1. 17, ArizOna St. 16, DePaul 16'
Temple 13, TCJ.u Chri uian 11 , UC San~
Ua1ban 11, Maryland 10, Nc:w Ort~:o~ns
10, Teu. 10, Cincinnati 9, Wuhington
S1. 9, 1Joc1on College 8, Drigham Yollltg
S, Monuna !I, Ncbrnka S, MiMcsota 4.
Tuh ne 4, Florid I St. J, Ric hmond 3'
Horid• 2, Soulhem Miss . 2.
'

,_

I

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung
.by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow,
Christmas enc~mpasses warmth and ·go9d cheer as we
cherislt the blessings w.e've shared this past year.
For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always
treasure. Doing business with you is our
greatest pleasure!

•

---·---

¥- - - - - - - --

'·•

Route 82, Eleanor, WV
497 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy., Middleport, OH
28th St. &amp; J•ckson Ave., Point Pleasant, WV
Route 7 &amp; 38, Kanauga, OH
278 Main St., Pomeroy, OH
809 Jackson Pk., Route 35, _Gallipolis, OH
801 2nd Ave.,
OH

w.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

-----..._...,:-------\~--,.------------f,------.,----

SAVE40¢

· 2 Liter

'•

--:i.l

•~•.5*- ·December ff -•$lft$

Gallon

Wish all your cus.tomers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
. December 24th.
ADVERTISING
ASK.FOR BRENUA OR DAVE ·
992-2156

.

.

Register to win One of Seven Turkeys al the
ca stores lisled
below. Registration is December 2 through noon ·December 20, 1991. Np
purchase necessary. You need not be present to win. A drawing will be held
at noon December 20, 1991.There will be one Turkey per -store given away.
drawing
Inside .
store for complete details. Approximate retail
--~·· --·· ·- -- -----·. ----

l'ar Wesl

Gon4aga 61, Sa11 Jose St. 56

APPRECIATION DAY!!

From 9:00A.M. - 5:00P.M.
Come I~ And Let Us Pump Your Gas
___ -~··-·~·'----~.And:Check .Yo.u r__Qil___ _:___:. ~. - . -----·
SUPERAMERICA 8 OZ. ~COFFEE
·ANTI·FREEZE-

112, Ch it~go St . 62

4. OhmSL ..................... 4·0 1,402

MldWdil Dlvblon

Team

one ot Seven

NE Ulinois 96, Cardinal Strileh (it
N01.re D am~ 71, VJI[llf&lt;II SO 66
Ohio 79, Chultslu n, W.Va. hl
S. lllinois93 , Suuth 1\lahllma M4
S. lJ1a h 9~. Ev~n~v tll c 93
Wis.· Mi.lwaukcc 87. ~h im: 73

Team
Rtcor d
I, Duke (65) ......... , ...4·0
2. Ariz!JI'll .................. .3-0
J. uc.t.A ................. J.o

WESTERN CONFERilNCE

N*

*REGI

Suuth
Alcorn St 86, Ark .- Litllc Rock 75
Cilldcl 12, Wimhrop57
D1vidson 137, Wancn Wihoo 51
Georgia Soulhcm 102, Troy St. 94
NE l.oui1 i1na 109, Uap1.is1 Christian
80
/
ihdford 72, Va. C&lt;Jmmonwc.lt h 71

Mu~hi$an

EASTERN CON.'ERENCE

10
10
11
14
13

Speciali Good December 11
9:00 A.M. - 5:00 All.

Tu11d1y,
l1eem6et 14·

East

HuLler 96, Mercer 73
~)'lon 92, Fordh11m 82, 20T

In the NBA ...
Atl1 n1l~

SuperAmerica Group, Inc.

Mldwesl

Wednesday's games
S1. Louisa\ DWTalo. 7:35p.m.
N.Y. blandcn1a1 to~nlo, 7:35p.m.

Te1m

SUPERAMERICA®

Chtlllmll
IJriellng Edition

Major college
basketball scores

· Tonight's games
Chie.go 11 Detroil, 7:35p.m.
SL Louis 11 N.Y. Ialandcra, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Ranam 11 PiuabuiJh, 7:3S p.m.
8011on 11 Quebec, 7:3S p.m.
Calpry at Wu hi.nglon, 7:3S p.m.

Monday's srore

WALES CONFERENCE

Denvc- 11 Philadelphia, 7:30 P.m.
Cleveland al Ml• mi, 7:30p.m.

28 103! 15

S 27

Next week's slate
SUWr, DH. lS
ClnclnnaU II tllbburah, 1 p.m.
OaUu at Philad.elp,ia , I p.m.
S..ule 11 Ad1nta, I p.m.
OeuoiutOrcen Bay, I p.m.
llll'l&amp;lOft 11 Clevdud, I p.m.
Loa Anaclu R1m1 11 Minnu01a. 1
p.m.
Now Enaland 11 New York let• , 1
p.m.
New Yori Oianlt at Wu hington, 4
p.m.
Miami It San Diego, 4 p.m.
Phocni' at Omvet, 4 p.m.
Buffalo" Indianapolis. 8 p.m.

Wednesday's games
Seaule at New York, 7:30p.m.

....

...:;.;--~-----......-

"""'!"

M ACI;EPf A

,~ .. ··~· ,...

amr~ ~.3: .~~: ago 10~~

Credit Cards May Be Used For All Purchases
Excluding Lottery And Money Orders
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities

.......

SUBSIDIARY OF ASHLAND OIL, INC.

----------.-~~----'"

---------------ltr-----------------,-----

____ .. _

--~-.---

,'

.~

~

�/

'fhe. Da~y Sent~!le~
o,

By The Bend

·

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,'

.----""

,

'

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'',

.

.

. .

'

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Chester gardeners win--10 ribbons

TUESDAY
PORTCAND • The Portland
RUTLAND ·_Revival at the ElemenUlry P'tO will meet TuesR~tland Comm.unny Church, New c day at 7 p.m. at the eleme·ntary
L1ma Rpad, Will be held through school in Ponland
Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev.
·
Carl Eisenhart will be the speaker
RACINE . The Racine Lodge
and Rev. Dewey King invites the . No. 461 F and AM will meet Toespublic to attend.
day at 7:30p.m. Officers will be
insU!IIed and refreshments will be
POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi served (ollowing the meeting. All
Chapter, BeUl Sigma Phi Sorority, master masons are invited to
will meet Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at attend.
the home of Charlene Hoentch for
the Chrisunas pany.

POMEROY · The Wildwood
. Garden Club will have its Christ·
mas dinner on Wednesday at 6 p.m.
at the Branch wood.
THURSDAY
RUILAND. OAPSE Chri sunas
Patty will be held Thursday at Rut·
land Elementary a1 6:30p.m. The
pany will be a potluck dinner, and
members are 10 bring a vegetable
and desert for their family. OAPSE
will provide the meat. A gift
exchange is optional.
CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge No. 453, F and AM, will

7

The Meigs Soil ailll Water Con·
servation District is accepting .
applications for Multiflora Rose
SYRACUSE · Revival at the
Cosi-share monies r/ow through Syracuse Nazarene Church will be
. Feb. 28.
held Wednesday through Sunday
Rules will be the same as last with David Canfield the evangelist.
yeir and are as follows: to earn Services are at? p.m. nightly and
cost-share monies, successful on Sunday all0.30 a1m. and 6 p.m.
applicants must be cooperators of
the · Mei~s Soil and Water Conser·
vatiOn D1strict, be willing to follow
2 conservation plan developed for
A Thanksgiving potluck dinner
at least those fields in which the, was hosted recently by Paul, Pat,
b~s will be treated, be willing to
TerryandPaul~Lifeforthefarnily
auend one workshop conducted by of Mrs. Edna Life at the VFW Hall
Coqperative Extension Service and in Tuppers Plains. The blessing for
the :District, apply herbicides or the dmner was given by Russell
· OlhCr treaunent per Exwnsion rec- Spencer.
ommc:ndations, be willing to mainAfter din~er a door prize was
tain control of muhiflora rose on won by Mrs. Edna Life and games
the lmlllld area for a minimum of
were Mrs. Edna Life,
two years following the initial
treatment, be williu to bring in Paul, Pat, Terry and Paula Life,
bills, to show proof of purchase of Edna, Jake and Sarah Householder,
herbicides, when cenifying com- all local . Russell ·and Juanita
Spencer, Larry, Janet and Ashley '
pletion of the practice.
_Applicants·must apply ln person Life, Pomeroy; Ida and Linda
at the Meigs Soil and Water Con- Bog~s, Jack, Dottie, Jamie and
servation District Office, 33101 Jack1e Mays, Scott and Heather
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. No phone Justice, Bernice, Jessie and Seth
Calaway, Coolville;· Lyle and
applications will be accepted.
Eddie Life, Vincen~ Ev11 Zumbach,

RACINE. The Racine Legion
Auxiliary-Christmas party will be
held Thursday. Members are to
meet at the hall at 1 p.m. before
traveling to Mom's Smorgasbord in
Ravenswood. There will be a $3
gift exchan~e.

Thanksgiving dinner heldat VFW

we~,~~:ti

UPHOLSTERY

614·949·2202
_RACINE, 0"'10
11/20/1-

•
j

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAm

. I'

~

BRAD FORDS
Fresh Cut Trees or

••

Cut Your Own.

CHERRY RIDGE,
or Darwin on Rt.
681 on Gravll Road
1Y. Miles to Grove.
...

FIVE GENERATIONS • A family gathering
was beld recently at the borne or Ruth Canter,
·syracuse, to celebrate the birth or Brittany
Marie Griffith. Her birth makes five genera·
lions. Family members are Pamela Canter Crif·

fith, Springfield, bold Brittany, great-great·
grandmother Lillian Pierce, Pomeroy, great·
grandmother Ruth Pierce Canter, and grandrather Danny Canter, New &lt;;:arlisle.

HARBOR RESCUE • While smoke rolls out
· or the stricken USS West Virginia on Dec. 7,
1941 after Japan's attack oli Pearl Harbor, a
small boat rescues a batth~ship seaman in fore·

The Modern Woodmen of was matched by Modern Woodmen
America Camp I0900 held a victo- of America for a total of $2,325. A
ry party recently to celebrate the check for this amount was.present·
successful completion of a match- ed to Edna Forrider, Torch, repreing fund drive to raise money for sentative of Torch F,ood Pantry, by
. supplies and building needs of the Ralph C. Henderson, Coolville,
Torch Food Pantry.
secretary for Camp 10900, MWA.
The drive, which included a
The victory party opened with a
smorgasbord dinner at the Torch prayer by Thelma Clegg, Torch,
Community... Cenler, and individual and . the Woodmen's CreeqJed by
donations, netled $] ,162.50 wliich John Breedlove, Coolville, and

included games, prizes, and group
singing led by Frances Henderson
Coolville. Dalton Forrider, Torch:
returned from West Virginia for the
occasion and thereby won the ttavel prize. The smorgasbord door
prize winner )Yas Amber Gillespie.
·Model airplane kits were given as
pany favors for the children.
Refreshments were served and
cheer plales viete sent to shut-ins.

•
.
we did, how long it would be. As it Kanauga w
her mother was
~t least _SJ~ Galha -~ounty turned oul, we did not see each recovering from a stroke.

Brownies hold
costume party
. Mrs. Shirin Nuggud, of Gingerbread Pro-school, painted the faces
of members of the Pomeroy
Brownie Troop 1271 at the group's _
Halloween costume party.
Girls also painled themselves as
part of their "Art to Wear" try-it
badge.
Bobbing for apples, bat toss and
fish pond were also enjoyed.
Brownie Fly-ups (third graders)
attended a sleep over with Pomeioy
Junior Troop 1309 at ihe Rock
Springs Grange Hall. "I:o prepare
them for bridging into the junior
troop in the spring. They completed
four requirements: learning abQut
junior scouts with a 'big sister,' did
a junior scout activity. transfer
prints, did something with a junior
scout, learned a new song and
game, campout or sleepover, have
FACE PAINTING • Mrs. Shirin Nuggud of
rbread
campfue or cookout and do a gel
Preschool, painted the faces of members of the Pomeroy Brownie
acquainted activity with junior girl
Troop 1271 at lheir Halloween costume party; Girls also painted
scout friends.
themselves as part of their "Art to Wear" try-it badge.

wolf· pen·h

·

I

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aQp_e~Ing~ -~--~-- ~~

Robbie, Eagle,Ridge Road, Mrs.
were Sunday visitor .of Mr. and Barbara Davls1 Ashli, Joshua and
Mrs. Howard Thoma:
Mirinda, Minersville, Mr. and Mrs.
. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summer- Joseph Evans, Tyson and Jonathan ,
.. f1eld, C_r~stal, ~edma, were . Mr. and Mrs, John E. Murphy and
Thanksg1v10g guests of Mr. and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole were
Mrs. Roben .R~ssell and fliJ1!ilies.Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Thanksg!vmg Day VISitors of Mrs. J.R. Murphr . Also visiting
Charley Sm1th were Mr. and Mrs. were Debbie Mullm and son RobDaniel Worley, S1acy, Daniel and bie, Clinton.
'
·
Stephen, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole wereFri·
Knapp, Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. day visitors of his mother and
Kevm Knapp, Michelle, Amy and brother of Stockport.
.
Ashley, Ka1l Knapp and friend,
Mrs. Charley Smith was a ManTonaa, Dexter, and Mr. and Mrs. day dinner guest of Mrs . j(evin
&lt;;:harles Knapp.
Knapp and family , and Mrs.
Mrs . Elaine Downs, Eric and Charles Knapp.
Dickie,.,otouster,RobertMurphy,

••

Metgs
.
c
ompetes
B b
cat Buzz-In

Lancasler; Diana, Justin and Chris
Beaty, Austintown; David, Kim •
andJill Zumbach, Stow; Mike, lll
0
Regma, Greg, Bmn and Michelle
O~ill; Alexander and Logan
Cooper, Morgantown, W.Va.; and
Mendy Hill, Racine.
Elm captured first places in their
respective divisions at the lith
Annual Bobcat Buzz-In held
IS
recently at Ohio University.
Teams from 24 Soulheaslern
Ohio High Schools, including
The printin~ of a ~ew history of Mei~s. competed in the double·
!~Je Sa~re family of Meigs County elimmation tournament sponsored
1s nearmg completion. The original .by the Office of Continuing Educa·
history was prinled in 1901. Every tion and Workshops and funded
Sayre in Meigs, Mason, Jackson through the Office of the ProVI&gt;SL
and Gallia Counties is a pan of the
Each quiz match consisted of
family. The deadline is Dec. 31 for eight minute halves in which par·
all material for the book. Send all ticipanu had tbree seconds to
information to Ralph Sayre, Route answer questions on subjeciS rangI, Buckhannon, W.Va. 26201.
ing from math to literature.

Sayre h. tory
near ~ompletion

IOWOPEirOR
ClllftMIS 811101
PolnHttlu 4" to 10"
Poinsettia Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus Baskets
Holly Traes
Cut Christmas Traes
Grava Blanketa
Monument Sprays and
Vasea
Large House Plants
CIICI:UI
10" Folia~ Baskets,
all varieties
Open D•lly 1:00 •.m. to 5:00p.m.
Sunct.y 1:00 p.m. to 5:00p.m.

HUBBARDS GREEN HOUSE
.

SYRACUSE OHIO

•••

WINTER
COATS

FOR THE ENTIRE
FAMILY

SAVE

20%

•I

•

...~.,,.
.
=
......
.

ALL WEEK AT

YOUR HOLIDAY
SIIOPPING

~

'·'

PLACE

· FLYING HEROES· Second Lieutenants Kenneth Taylor, left
and George Welch, were among the first pilots in ihe air after
Japan's attack on Dec. 7, 1941. The two pilots took orr from the U•
s. Army base at Honolulu and shot down seven Jap planes
between them. Both were later awarded Dislinguished Service
medals for, heir quick response. (AP)
·

(. . .=. .,

mo. pd.

•VINYL SIDING.
o~LUMINUM StptNG
•BLOWN 1N
INSULATION

.•

BISSELL
SIDING 'CO.
!ltiw lttniKiullt
"Free E•tmetes"
PH. 949·2101
· or Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CAW

DK's FARM TOYS

by ERn

'

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'

SHRUB &amp; TREE

'

.

...lllltl

C.tlll~

&lt;.nn,ttc.

Prtfts...,

I Opiratar

. - -u,. ....

Bill SLACK _

RIGGS
TREE FARM •·.
Choo•e and Cut

.... .•.

'' j

'

Your Tree or We'D 'I
.'
'
Cut It For You.
''
39507 Rocllruings Rd.
(At

late lrnr ••...::~~~

992-2269

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

1:00 P.M.

"~Rilllsona_
W. PricK"

SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22

PH. 949·210 I
or Res. 949·2160 .
Day or Night · ·
NO SUNDAY

12 Gaugt Factory
Choke Only

c... • u.s. UJ

Pomtroy, Oltla

lll'GO lA 124
Lang ~. Ohio

e.

Little thirtgs
Rre Worth Alot

IAONE ._
FIRE DEPT.

rn

the CIRssified Stet ion I

Bashan Building

EVElY
SAT. NIGHr

6:30P.M.
Stpt. 28
Cllilko

12 Gaup

12·2·91·1 mo.

USED APPUAICES .
90 DAY WAIUm

WAIIIm-s 110

HOURS:
8:30 am-4:00 pm

- Interior a Elltlfior

··•

:':

i \

IANGU-GoHI«.-$125., I

fiiEZEH-$125 ., '
.CIO 0YIIt5-$1t .,.

, , .,
;

liEN'S APPLIANCE ' SEIVICE

992-5335 or 915-3561 ,
Across from 1'011 Offico · ' 1
POIIEIOY, OHO
1
10,10/19 "" ' '

WEIER'S1
.CHRISTMAS TREES .,,
Homegrown,
"
beautifully ahlafld. · ·
White 1nd Scotch Pine ''
5 Ft. and up
·'
Good uiiiCtlon of . .
large treas.
614-742·2143 or

Only

..

742·2979
1112L

DEER CUniNG

YOUNG'S

Displayed at The
Quality Prial Sltop

.,

DIYIS-$69 .,
IUIIGRAIOIS-$ 100 .,

Strictly

- Room 'Addhion•
- Gutter wort.
-Eloctrlcol ond
-Con...Wwork

'•

614·992-5702

9-6-tfn

GUN

".

1111111 ....

We Sell &amp;Service
Weather King, MIller,
Luxalrl, lnllldar,
Heat Pompa, Fumacea,
Air Conditioners

•FIREWOOD ·
••

.I

614·915·.3961

C. L Heating &amp;
Refrigeration

TIIM ,and
REMOVAL .
•LIGHT HAULING

··~
WRAPPING

CHRISTMAS TRUS
FOR SALE AT 101
·SNOWDEN'S LOT

~5 (II &amp;Wr;rr

MaiiStt:~Ol

!FREE ESTIMATES!

MAPLEWOOD

FrKIJ C.t ~ Gnwt

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

LAKE

RAONI,OH.

SIO.J.,
6:r;·7~
·742· 51

TRE IUD

'5 EXIra to

~ Roolll'lg

PelntlnQ

.

NOV. 2rc.!:l

IJy...

949·2734

12·2·Dt-1mo. pd.

•

.,
.,

11·111 •• pt

11-21-1 mo.

'
;:
'•

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BUUDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
. WATER&amp;
SEWER UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;·
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucen11d •d Bonded

PH. 614-992·5591

12·5·tfn

BISSEU &amp;BURKE
CONSIIUCIION

J&amp;L

INSULATION

•New Ho1111s

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
·Roounrc
•Insula! ori

•Gart~~~s

•c-plete

•-titling

JAMES KEESEE
992•2772 or
7·2·2097
53D Bryen Piece

667-6179

Middleport, Ohio
11114111n

FOR SALE

CHRISTMAS
TREES .
RWONAILE
HAILEY HAlliNG'S
RESIDENCE
35975 Flatweetls Rtl.
Pomerof, Ollto
11· a, 1 mo. pd

INDEPINHIIT ·

OVEN ·IEPAIR
ILl lUllS .

Iring It .. Or We
Pick Up.

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE ·
-- 99J-5U5--or
985-3561
Acri111 Pre• -p..t Offlro

CA.ET CIIA'-EIS
and nLE flOOI CAll
•Reaoonable flateo
•Quality Work · '
•Free Eitimerea
•Cerpet Hao Foot Dry
Time •
•H_Igh__ g!!I_U_..1111 . Tl~
Floor Finish
MilE lEWIS. Ownor

Speclalizl"' in
~sta111 Fr•• l:rs-r
NEW &amp; USED PAl S
FOR All MAlES &amp;
MOD£lS
- ~,!9.2.,7013 - -·or 992-5553

BLANKETS
Homallllldo with
Long Lasting Green
Scotch -Pint.

$20.00NovifO'r Your
Lost Loved Onts.

01 TDU fiR ·
1-100·841.0070

7U-2451

614·949·2051

DAIWII, OliO

11-251 mo. pd .

7 / 31 / '91 tfn

I&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULLETIN BO:\RD

BULLDOliiG

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ·
LAND. CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :
Umeatone, Dirt,
Grovel and Cool

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

·• Shipped to Guadalcanal
We shipped out from Honolulu
on Dec. 7, 1942; exactly one year
after the "day of infamy ." The
rumor was that we were headed for
Australia (and that is where an
advance party had been sent we
learned later). But changes came
about and we were shunted into
Guadalcanal, arriving there on New
Year's Eve 1942. By Jan. 10, 1943,
we were in heavy combat with the
Japanese on Guadalcanal and we
ultimately won the victory there by
. driving all the Japanese off of the
island and securing Henderson
Field on Guadalcanal as a major air
base to secure further allied victo·
rics in winning the Solomon
Islands .
· Much more remains to be told
of my combat experiences in the
South Pacific, but that will have to
be 1old later.

PUBLICATION

HILL'S DEER
coniNG

Licen•d end Bonded

PH. 61
JO'S' CRAFT SHOP
Give a Homemade Craft.
Hats, Beads, Lace, Paint, and
Many Other Supplies.
DAILY SPECIALS
St. Rt. 7 • 992-6109

.,
'

GRAVE"

AUTO PAllS

Rl. I, Rutlotld, OH •

~

~

Stop &amp; Cosnpare
Fr" Esti111at11
'915-4473

CUntNG,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

..
...

.

'

BASHAN RD;,
RACINE

J

949·2206
111141111 ma.

.,.I '
'
·: '

·IJI'II:IIDII:III,.
. - ....

~
·, . .
AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUiii'S and
FURNACES FOW MOillE &amp;DOUILEMOE HOMES
~...,..,CipiM

HOURS: 10:00·5:00 Tuts. thl\l Sat.

••••••••

0

0

••••••••••••••

0

••••••

MO.LE

BENNETT'S
~twtl

0

HOME

~:::G'

011 Saffertl Scheel .... tff lt. 1-41
(6141 ..6-9116 er I·ICIO·II71-:196l

••

.\

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d

,.,
,J
'l

.,

••J

Groo111ini
for All lreeds .

CLARENCE ATHERTON

&amp;14-H2·Sn&amp;

.

&amp;n,Wt•&amp;
. llittiO.

Pollllt'Of,

'

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k. hlfStt•

6l4~9f2-6820

11/&amp;/lma. pd.

'

eo!.t"!;'&amp;.

GROOM
: ROOM ·

Ownet

CARPENTEI SERVICE ·

61H92·3394
Or Call
742·.3020 Evenings

'

E-LEE MERINAR

1111 d"J
can Ed Battin
collect at
1-$14-667-6474

'BISSELL .
BUILDERS

1111511

'

lf:"

THE lASKO WEAVE

992-6855

pr;v

Plans were made for the annual
Valentine Dinner with further
arrangements to be announced at a
later date.
The next meeting was set for
Jan . 27 at the home of Mrs. Alisa ·'
Findley in Syracuse at.? p.m.
Several were in atlendance and '
the meeting was dismissed with
prayer wishes for a Happy Thanksgiving.

'

n_allves were m Haw au at the other for three ears four months
Training
lime of the Dec. 7, 1941, sneak and eight days Y '
.
Back in Hawaii, we were active
attack o~ Pearl Har~or. They _ Afwr we toid our families good- in training exercises. We had
were: Major (later MaJor Gener- bye at the dock Herb Mitchell extensive drills and con1inued
al) George Bush, his wife Helen, wbo commanded 'the 2nd Battalion: . improving our defensive positions.
and daughter Jan.e; C~rporal 27 th Infantry, and 1 went to a beach The new defensive sector, assigned
Fred Lawrence D1ckey, nurse area near Honolulu Harbor and saw to my battalion at that lime mcludDorothy Crockett and the Rev· our dependents' ship leave the area. ed the waterfront of Honolulu from
erend (then sergeant) W. E. We felt so good because she was Honolulu Harbor almost to DiaCurfman .. Two other Pearl Har· esconed b a destto er and a cruis- mond Head. Among other things ,
bor surVIvors, Ray Boone an_d er After ihe war ~elen told me we installed barbed wire along
Oren Kyger, moved to Galha th~l the destrover iurned back after every beach or other poten.tial invaCounty after t~e w~r. . .
. about 100 miles and the cruiser it sion area m our sector. Th1s mcludThe followmg, detallmg the i 1 d 1 had be · d
ed ' d ed Wailciki Bea'ch Years later they
exploits or three or them; is from ~:ego?~g' back toen am~g :n must have had an.awful job g~tting
material· submitted by retired the U.Smfc re · a nava yar 10 that barbed wire out. Later on, we
Major General George E. Bush
Th.
':ctus. ·
h
put tons of barbed wire all around
of Gallipolis and was printed in · 1 ~ d ag th crm~.er may ~ve the slopes of the Punchbowl It
three installments. This, the third s ~we how~ .1elr tr~ome, -~ 1 must have been an even tougher
1 a c~n~ · job getting it out
segment, begins with the evacua· no b~uc d' an 181
8
lion or Bush's wife and daughter. era le vanh. ghe . ecausled 111 a ha
1 received my. prom'otion to Lt
seap ane w 1c 1t cou
aunc
.
·
· from the deck and rctover from the Colonel on my .birthday, 3 June,
Family evacuated
. ocean. So, each evening, while it 1942. I was 37 then . I wanted to
Helen and Jane's evacuation was still daylight, the se~plane call Helen and tell her the. good
orders finally came directing them would be launched and patrol an news, so 1 put m my apphcat10nto sail on a presidential liner March area perh~ I()() 10 200 miles out as we had 19, do m those ')ays :- to
5, 1942. Just prior to that date, to search for enemy submarines
call the mamland. It was dlsap·
boxes and barrels were delivered to
·
proved. I tried the next day with the
our quaners at Schofield Barracks
Arrives in San Francisco
same results. Then, 1 tried each day
and Helen packed our dishes, .
I1
f· h ·
·· , h for the next several days with the
kitchenware, silverware and sm~l
was a ng temng tr1p aor l e
mothers
On the Shl·p• and for the same results. Finally, about a week
items. After Helen and Jane le t,
the Army packers came and packed fathers back in Hawaii waiting for later, I was able to get through and
the rest of our household goods and word of their safe arrival. Helen tell Helen the good news. Later, I
.
d said she remembers on \he morning found out that the reason I hadn't
•rrtbe'Ll!'CJ~ ~lac.ed 1~ storage pen - of the 6th da fro H 1 1 th l been able to get through was
Y m ono u u, a
: t' ng~'delivery to Gallipolis, where
' we had decided that Helen and Janc · She Was at breakfast w hen th e because the B~iltle of Midway had
been in progress and all personal
would live for the duration. As it announcement Came that they had
happened, it was September 1942 just cleared the ·submarine net at phone calls to the mainland had
. to San F anc'sco
Hac been canceled during the progress
the enuance
before the household goods arrived
r 1
· of the battle.
in Gallipolis.
bor and were now safe from enemy
Everybody cheered.
We decl.dcd to sell our 1940 submarines.
u. I ' f' t t 10
··
...and more trainin"•
Chevrolet in Hawaii. After Helen
,,e en s ITS ac · San FranciS
and Jane left, 1 sold it to a civilian co ·was to send a cable to me in
During the summer, we Cantin·
'or $675 in May 1942 and sent ·the Hawal·,· tell1·ng of theu· sa'e
" am·val· ued training ,thc increasing now of
,,money 10 Helen. She bought a used Then she sent a telegram to her newly assigned soldiers to fill us up
Chevrolet in Gallipolis for about Parents 1·n Oh1·o and then th~" Red to full authorized strength and we
Cross took them to a hotel where also received our full complement
lhesamep rice.
nd
Jane
de"arted
Honthey could turn in those gas masks of authorized equipment. Some of
Helen a
"'
they
had been req Ul'red to carr Y this was new to us and required
oiulu March 5, 1942, along with a
,
ever
since
Pearl Harbor. 1'hey had special training until we knew 1\ow
f
shipload o other dependents. It a chance to rest and refresh them- , to function with it. We conducted
was a very emotional farewell. We selves and, when they were ready, small unit training exercises while
knew that their trip to the mainland Red Cross Volunteers were avail- we were still deployed in our Hunwould be dangerous if Japanese able 10 take them shopping. After olulu sector positions.
submarines were lurking in those about ~wo days in San Francisco,
In late summ er, we were
waters. We also knew that s ooner Helen and Jane departed by train relieved from the Honolulu sector
or later, I y.-ould be sh1ppmg out for Ohio and were met in Colum- and assigned to training areas at
y;1th my umt and would be engaged bus by Helen's ·father and my Schofield Barracks.· With our full
m co~bat som~where m the South brother, Gilbert. Initially, Helen complement of men and equip·
Pac1f1c. We d1d not kno~ 1f. we and Jane lived with her parents in mem. we conducted intensive train·
would see each other agam or, 1f . :
,
___ _:_,____ _____ ing. cxercises-so-tha l.-our-leaders
and men got to know each other
- ------ -----.- · - - · - - - - - - - - and their jobs, and functioned as a
unit. I could see the progress being
· made every day in these matters! In
the fall, we held regimental exercises and division maneu vers.
Morale was high and we knew we
were being readied to be sent to a
combat zone. We knew we were
combat-ready. We felt equal to any
Ulsk in combat which we would be
asked to perform.

Interior Pelndng,
Fr..EIUIIIIIM
30
nperlonce. ,
· our lttttra of ,
ricommendadon. Hon111 ·
and dopliidable.

USED RAILROAD TIES

grounds.

Se~vices

PlllfliG

WATCH FOR SIGNS

Now ODta oa s.-~~ay,
for lilt a.Jstmu Sailoa.
Give a IMIIdwoYin basl!ll
lothalll'!dals•- 01
your GristMsllst.
WeGvtns .,U.s also 11
stodt.
Located on Rocksprings
Rd. in Pomeroy, 3 miles
from the Meigs Ca. Fair·

'ct!

Mt. Moriah ladies group elects officers .
Officers were elected when the cers will begin their terms in Jan·
Ladies Group of the Mt. Moriah nary.
.
Church of God met recently at the
The meeting opened with prayer
home of Mrs . Shirley Simpson, followed by the officers reports.
Racine.
The craft and bake sale held recent·
... Officers are Anna Wol_fe, pres~- ly at Krogers was staled a success.
· dent; Shirley Si'mpson, v1ce-pres1· .
Secret pal names were selected
dent; Mrs. Mary Bush, secretary and· the group's annual Christmas
and treasurer; Mrs. Hedy Lauder- dinner was announced for Tuesday
m!lt, reporter; Mrs. Pats~- Lauder- at 6:30p.m. at Mom 's Smorgasm1lt, Oowers; and Mrs. W1lhe Scar- bord in Ravenswood, W.Va. A gift
berry ; cards. Mrs. Scarberry was exchange ·will follow. All ladies of
com~ended on the jOb she does m the church are invited to at lend and
keepmg m touch w1th the shut-ms are asked to bring a gift for the gift
thru her card ministry'. New offi· exchange.

ground. Two men may be seen on tbe superstructure, upper center. The mast of the USS
Tennessee may ,be seen beyond the burning
West Virginia. (AP)

Bush's family evacuated
from Hawaii on March 5~ere1942

Modem Woodmen hold vict9ryparty

wilrbc - . ' Mrs-: DlrfyBarrail(n •;lichelle

Applications being
ac,cepted: S&amp; WCD

SNO,GUSS

lnooatmtJnt" · ·

~:~~~:~~yn:~ ~~g~;~;.~~ ·.

helct&lt;rn'll-iefteslim ents
served.

....
••

-"Helping You To
,Recover Yo~

Moore ·gives report on holly tree

Community calendar

.

~

•

Christmas With a Song" was by the
Chester Club. A basket of pine
cone~. gum balls and assorted nuts,
lightl.y sprayed with gold was
exhibited by Edna Wood. Also on
display were the grapevine
wreaths, newly decorated with
hand-crafled tiny Chrisuna5 angels.
Later they were taken to Overbrook
Center and Americare for the
enjoyment of the patients. The club
also furnished sandwiches and
cookies for the flower show lunch
hour.
In lieu of a decorated tree to be
exhibited at the Meigs County
Museum and then' sold, The
Chester Club decided to send a gift
of money.
The sick were noted and George
Genheimer at Americare was
reported to be enjoying the "sun·
shine" nower delivered by Kathryn
Mora.
The January meeting will be at
the home of Maida Mora on Jan. 8
due to the New Year holiday.

:rhe Wildwood Garden Club the hostess served refreshments to Scott. Juanita Will \von tile door
held its monthly meeting recently the members and ~uest, Cindy prize.
at the Bethany Methodist Church
with Janet Theiss as hosless.
The meeting opened with devotions by Dorothy Smith reading, "A
Psalm of Gratitude," "A Call to
Thflnksgiving" and "Everyday
Thanksgiving Day."
Kathryn Miller presided and led ·
the group in the club creed. Roll
call was answered with .members
naming their favorite evergreen.
Mis. Miller also read a letter from
the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society and for their Christ·
mas Open House w.ould like the
cl \lb to donate a three foot or less
anificial tree for a silent auction to
raise funds for the museum.
:For the program, Janet Theiss
had material needed for each to
make a berry basket. She assisted
everyone in starting with the base .
of the basket and continued weaving. Mrs. Theiss had several dyed
sections from which members
selected their center strips for the
baskets.
Dorothy Smith had a Thanksgiying arrangement using dried
"live for ever," bronze mums,
ENTERTAINMENT· Jan and Kathy-Kathy McDaniel, lert,
cliestnuts, pumpkin and a turkey
and Jan Lavendar, right-popular local vocal duet-entertajned
cahdle with a dried wood base.
with Christmas songs and led group singing of carols Friday ilight
Peggy Moore gave the monthly
when the annual party of the Women's AuKiliary, the volunteer
report on the holly tree. It can be
organization of Veterans Memorial Hospital, was held in the hosrecognized by its heavy, spiny, . pital cafeteria. Mrs. Jessie White, president, was presented a girt
evergreen leaves and its smooth · from the group by Vice President Libby Fisher, and Helen Hill on
gray bark. It grows best in moist
behatr of the organization presented Christmas gifts to Adminis·
soU or near river boUoms. The red -trator Scott Lucas; Director of Nursing Rhonda Dailey, and Public
berries are only on the female tree
Relations Director Bob Hoenich. A large poinsettia was given the
and in the winter are a favorite
Nutrition Starr and a gift exchange was also featured. Several
food for son~birds .
guests received poinsettias-used as table decorations-at the close
:The meenng was adjourned and
of the evening;

BuslDess

· Tuesday, December 1 1991 ;

.

The December m ~eting of plants as pineapple-\ cranberry and
Chester Garden Club began with a chili peppers.
holiday dinner party at Gilmore's
Maida Mora, president, wei-:
in. Pomeroy with grace given by corned the guests and exlended seaMacel Barton.
sonal greeiings. In her message,
Roll call, "A Plant With Winter she spoke of Ohio Village, Columlnterest," ' was answered by 14 bus, featured it the current edition
members and guests, Jane Ann of "Mid-West Living," a bre&lt;~th of
AanesUld, Jan Davis and Charlotte the past, the Civil War era. Mrs.
Elberfeld.
·
Mora's gift to each was a heritage
Maye Mora gave devotions on candle decorated with ribbon and
the angels song to the shepherds tiny flowers.
from Luke 2: 8·20.
The gifts for exchange were
Edna Wood' s lesson from the judged by the guests who awarded
theme of the year, "Save the Earth" first in religious to Bette Lou Dean:
was "Attention Shoppers." She . secular, Twila Buclde):; and recy·
noted that one 15-20 year old tree cled, Maida Mora. In charge of
will provide only 700 grocery bags. gifts for the winners was Eleanor
The use of cloth or string bags for Knight.
.
small purchases would do much
It was noled that Chester Garden
toward saving trees. ·
Club won ten ribbons in the artistic
"C_hrisu:nas Plant Le$ends" _by design classes and eight in horticul·
MaunU! Miller1ncluded mwresung lure at the recent Christmas Flower
comments on the Christmas tree, Show . Bette Dean was Best of
holly, mistletoe, the kissing ball, Show and Charlotte Elberfeld, a
yule log, Chrisunas· Rose, lavendar guest, won a blue ribbon her decoand other herbs, and on regional rated Christmas tree. The entry
theme decorations, "We Welcome

~:=~~~~~O~h~lo~--.-------------------~~-~~~~~~~~~!!:!3\ ·

,.

•
t .

I

�'

.... .

- ~~·

t'&lt;19~1n~

uauy

~enune1

Announcements
3

..
127 Acrn, 8 Room Houu 2

Furnished
Rooms

llpolll. Tobacco But, 614-256·

Norih 4th Avt; Middiopor1 1Ohio,

Largt Barna, On Rt.218, Gal·

Annou'ncemenrs

1954, 614-266-6755.

Molgs Co. Golf COurn Mtmblr-

ship, Wlll make nlet gifts for
Christmas, 614 · ~92 ·2511 or H2•
6312
.

35 Lots

&amp; Acreage

Home

plus

3 Puppi ea, Black And Whlllil,
Par1 Collta, 8 W11k1 Old. 614446·1092.

Rentals

314 't&lt;uthond, 1 Year Old MaLt,
Good Walch Dog. To Good
Home. 614--446-81327.
Fo ur
ad_oh. bie
kittens
to
gi~Jea way . 614·25(H629.
Oak doubla dosk, naads glue &amp;

-·

JlOiiSh 614-992·5811

2

bedroom

home,

newly

&amp; dopooil, no pots. 304-675-5162.

6

2 .or 3 f. lidrm houn in Mid·

Lost

&amp; Found

dltport,

~?d';:ko~~~14~~&amp;-;~~ootring
LOST lomaio Sibonon Huokty

around

Potter cr..k Road,

onswort lo Aioko, 304·67!&gt;6162.

r'---------'"T----------1

all

gun on OJ Whlio Road.

afore 10 am

614·446·6653.

7

Of

H I W
8 p anted

11

after 5pm.

11

Accountant I potiUon at lht
Mtlgt County 801rd of Mtnttl
Retardation/
Otvllopmantal

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,

Now Taking Applications
Domino's Pizza, Gallipolis.

C n ty

·

All Yard Sales Must Ba Paid In

Ad vance. oeadllnt : 1;00pm · the

at

day belorG the ad Ia to run,
Sunday edition- 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
ediUon
10;00a.m.

6at~.;~rday.
lnsida Salt-Syracusa before
You gat lo pool V-4pn\, sign In
yard, coata10-12, IIHie girl coal,
tols ol lg. size clothes, Dingo
Boots, Ioiii of everything.

prlnclpala &amp; proc•

someont

N11d

with

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

2602.
42

l;;:-c---7.--:-':-:::'-..,.---,
Your Current Income Or U11 At
Your Only Income. lnctntlvt
Bonuaea With Unllmlttd Growth
Potential. Send Brllf Work HI•
tory To: CLA 102, clo Gallipolis
Dally lrlbu~ 1 825 Third Avtnue,
Gallipolis, Vt145631.

Netwotk m1rkttlng opportunHyl

1::;--;-.,...:;:..:..:..:..:.:.:..__-:-:

Entry level and m1nagemen1

position• available. Mfnlmum Wanted person or married
invntmtnt. Serious lnqulrlu • . couple to aullt with milking

614-448-8813.

125 cowt, 6

hout~lng,

Now accel)ting applications for
Umf caa~l•r mull bt 18 ~ra
old, no phon. calls pl1111,
pirt

Cl'lwfordt Sul)lrmarket, Htn·

Wanted to Buy
Want lo buy· Wal1 Ol tnty'a Lady
a.. 1he Tramp '(ldto tape. Nam•
your price. 61~1..0313.
lllontod to buy. SIIndlng limber,
Sob Williams &amp; Sono 614·992·
.5.149.
Top Prlc• Paid: All Old u.s.
Coins, Gold Rlnga, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.~. Coin Shop,
151 Secoi\d Avtnue, Glllipollt.

dar

work wHk,

pay by the hour, other
blnalllt depending on experience. Rupond 1o Box C-1
cart Point Pl1aunt Rtgllltr,
200 Main St, Point PleaSant, WV

dorson, WV.
25=550.:..;....- - - - - - LABORERS
Situation
Now hiring to $16t'tr, paid Wllltly 12
1-800-521-6313
Wanted
_Fc.E:..
DE_A_A_L_ G_OV
_ ER_N_M_E_NT- -IS
Nttd 10m10n. to do al·
HIRING. SJ~1ooo • sn OOti!Yr. 1· lorotlono,
coil 614-i92·3663
805-564-6,.. Ext. GB968 For
lmmodioto Rllponoo.
14
Buslnes·s
-FT Coun11lor Vacancy Avtltal:lle

With A Progroooivo Addicliono
Tr1atment A~onc~ In 111 Out·
patient 0/vla n. ht Ideal Candldttt It Experlenc:ed In TM 12
Employment Services Slop
Rooovory Modoi, .A Cor·
tilled
AncUOr
ucenltd
Coun111or Or Social Wotktr,
And · Hoo A Documontod Work
11
Help Wanted
Hlolllf}' Of Two Yooro.ln Tho Ad·
S3SO.OO/Oay Procttalng Phont dlclio · c ounu 11 ng Fi1 ld• APOrdtrt I Peoplt Call You. No El· pllcanta Must Be Expertenctd In
parience Nec11ury. 1-800.255- Completing AINMmtnta Aa
Wtll Aa Providing lnclvldual,
~42 .
Group And FamHr . Coun11llng.
AVON • All lrlll, Clll Marilyn Tho Work Silo io Tho Pomoroy
0111co in Motp County And
Waavar 304·882-2645. , .
Ouotillod R"ldonlo Of Molgo
Accepting Applicatlont For County Will eo Priority AI&gt;
Motivated, Caring ~pit For pllcnlt. Rttpond With A Litter
Cen llitd NurN Aktl Tl'llnlng Of ktttnt And Thrw Atftrtnctt
Ciau And Employmant Al To AUII Flthlr, Silt Manager,
Plntc::rllt Cart Ctnttr, Must Be Moip Coi'"IY 0111co, HoOtlh
Able To Work All Shlftt'And Bt Recovery S.rvlctt, Inc. 101 112
On Call. Pan~Time With Po•- A
Second Str11t, Pom~ro~,
slble FuU-Timt Employrrrent Ohio457U.

Training
I:::~:---:~==-.:--:-AIIraln
Now!USoutheasttm
lutlniD Colllg~, Spring Vallty
Piau. Call Today, 6M•446-4367fl
Aoglol0ralionfi0.05·1274B.

n•

W••

S

1

Wanted to Do

::;:::--;;:;::::;:--;::--:~~'::'::

Will Babyoll In My Homo
AnVCimt.
Rodnty
Area.
Reftrencn A~tallabl._ Call 614·_
245-6887.
Btbplttlng In my home
· ~uoo&gt;
,. lorenC'I lVI11 1 bl• voT"V''I''"VV"'
Furniture Stripping Rtllnlahld
And Atpilr, Quality Work, FrH
Eolimot11i 304-675-552!1.

o.orgM Porlablt Sawmill, don't

haul your logt to the mill just

Clii 304-676·1957.
Mill Paula's DaY Care Center.
~vailible BaNd Upon Motive·
Uon And Oependlbllily, P11111 Fuii·Timo Cortlllod MT Or MLT. Sat., aHordablt, chlldcare. M-F
tomael Pinc~cretl Cart Ctnltr1 Excellent Btntfltt, Wttkdayt, 5 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agto 21\-10.
170 Plnac:rnt Drive, Gllllpolia, No Slllh Work. Apply in PlfiOn Beto,., afttr tchool. Dropolnt
To Thl Medical Plaza, 203 Jack· wtlcome. 814-441-8224. New In·
~~ i o 46631 614-446-7112.
aon Pike Betwttn t A.M. And tant Toddler Care, 614o446-6m.
l ' AU~TAALIA WANTS YOU
4:30P.M.
Gctllant
Pa~.
B1nellts,
LABORERS
Fmancial
rlntpor1allon,
407-292-41117,
gt. stt 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll Now Hiring To 116-HR, Paid
WHkiy. 1-600-521-1313.
lllunded.

i

l YON I Ail Arooo I Shi~oy
lpllt1, 304-675-1429.

Lobororo1 , _ hi1lna to Jti-HR,
poid WHOiy, 1·800-521-1313.

~· ·s·u·BTR
. · ACT. THOSE
. TIINCS

..
·-"

DUSl
. "~DD,. DOllARS ·

."

11

21

Business
Opportunity

VALL~~~u~~ISHINQ

OHIO
co.·
recommends that you do busl·

nna with people you know, and

NOT to 11nd monty through the
mall until you hiYI lnvntlga11d
tht otftrlng.

~

Four apal1ments, compitllly
romodoiod, good lnvostmont ,
ul• own land contract to
quallltld person, 814·D92·257t
Privati Pay Phon11 For Salt.
_ ...::;..:::;:;__ _ _ _ _:..__ _ _ _:..__ _ _-, Loco! ANI, Big $. 1-800.226·
r
3305.

TO YOUR POCKET

Want tc:
PIN down EXTRA
~cA~H?!!

Locot Vending Roulo High Cuh
Flow, 1.S00.2'l4-2651.

Real Estate
Homes lor Sale

3 Room F.,mlahtd Apartment
Hilt Mila Eut ot Poitar, ori
At.l54, S276/mo.l14-311-t963.

Call our office for paid in """"""" Mletl

•

~o4752.

Lilt call for 1vtl, lrr~gul1r june

$5.00, donlm lackoto uo.oO, bib
ovorhoulo $5.11!1, - Poggy, 132
Butttmut, Pomeroy

Merchandise
191'1 Aogera, 35. ton, trl·ax~.

Blowboy, . $1500. - 1i81 480-C,.
caoo b1ckhoo, $5600, 11M41122U
· 30 Inch Sunray Gas Range tor
1200, u.-d tor onty 5 montht,
614-992·34'N aftor 5pm
4-16" rlmo, pill l mr bumbor,
1-hp outbolird mo1or, 1ft. top~'· 11 lor Ford truck. 2·28"
OicyOII, 114-1112·2101
66,000 BTU Worm Morning
91ovo, For 8olo. $:ZOO. 114-441'
7737, '114-446-6251.

4548.

.

MlnoH1 1000 Protnalonal 35
mm camera: totally 1uto.,
lfVII'III lara• ltnsel, $600. 614·

4~·2713.

Toyo oil ogH, romoll control
plane,
antlqun,
fumlturt,
grovoiy tractor, conning foro,
304-675.fl/l!.
='
vc::R-::••.:.:. .:.:ood
"-:--c-o-::l
nd "llo'_n_,...,,..n
otoreo. c.; 1614-446~713.

=
9

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Alllaon 1210 S.Cond
Avenue, Qafl{polll, Ohio, 614·
4~o4336.

"'
w"'ood
...;..
.bu-m~
. ,...n-•--::-,.-pl"'oco~--

11

1•
11of.441·2111.
55

1Mort.

Building

Block, brick, tewtr . Dlpea, win·
dows, llntalt, etc. Claud• Win·
ttrw, Ala Granda, OH Call 114·
24H121.

56

Pets lor Sale

Qroom 1nd

Su-"'

Shop.PM

Qroomlng, All biNds, 1iylaa.
l1m1 Pet Food Dt.. tr. Julia
_Wobb ..Coii §1H411,023L . -·
AKC BIIIOI •p .u p .ody to
go, will hold lor
moa, F.A.
Benldum, 114-t8f.. II
AKC boogio pupo: 7 Wko, wor·
mtd, thOit .ttart~, tri-color.
150. Call Doyo 114-446-4172,
anvtlmt
251·1611,
SttVI
Slaplelon.

Fumiohod 3 Rooms a 8oth

Mobil~ Homes

t.o r Sale
14x7'0 1U73 Rockwood Mobile
- . 3bro, 2 Botho, Almoot All
New
Carpal,
Unfumlahld.
13,800, Ed Brown. 614 ·388-D~.

1m Holly P1rk, 14x70. 2 M&lt;f·
roomt, 1 bath, stove,
rtfflgeralor, outbuilding In·

~iudod, ~,ooo.

lor 5:00PM.

304-67S.516i , ,.

Deller repo, dultr cannOt pay
for thla beautiful, new Ptlm
H•rbot molor home
your
chanc1 to aave, call 1-~137·

ChFroin. Smoii Down
Poymont. Collt.-661-11711.

Claan, No PMs1 Atttrince ,:
Dopoo~

Aoquiroa.l14-4411-1118.
Oroclouo living. 1 and 2 bod·
room lpirtm.nta II Village
Manor
. and
Rlvtrsla1

Aportmonto In Micfrflo/,;;rt, F10m
1'196. CoN •-a.mfioH.
In Mlddioporl, Ohio. 1 ond 2
bedroom fumlahlld 1pt, somt
with utllldM peld, rerer.nc1 end
dopool1 roqulrod, -·211M.
Modorn 2 BR opt. 614-445-03iO.
Complotiy Fumlshod moblio
homO, 1 milo botaw tow.!', ovor·
looltlnt rim. No Polo, ""· 1144414331.
Sm111 1 eA. apt. 7 Court 91.
Kilahon
wfth
otovo
l
ro~lgorotOf, t165. mo. plus
uUtltlel, dtiiHit &amp; rtflrtnc11
814-441o4124.
0

Throo 1.bcfrm opt, In Aoclno, wo
r,r..:z~, t1Umo. t1oo dop,
Trlllor And Gorovo Apor1mon1
For Rent, 1111tl 1111.

Unlumloho!t 211r ~ Aporlo

monl, 322 llllrd A~o .... , Qal·

IIPGIIoil l'l4-4oiii-3M, 114·2111-

1103 lfonoip.m.

·

·

Shalgun, $135. 614·311-1111.
Dlol No Moret lolo Unwonted
Pound1 And Eat Vour Regular
Moaio. Tallo Noturol Horl&gt; Copo
tuiH. Rttultl Oulranttld. 814446-81ii. .r
Eloclrlc boooboonl hollorw wl.
lhlrmotlltt, Zft, 3ft, 4h, Sfl, &amp;

AKC
Chocoiolo
Llbrodor
Aotrivor pur.piH. I WHkO.
Hullh c11'1lf td. 3 mlal11 ....
$250. 114-662·'i't77.
Block Lob puppln lull btdldod

$'100. ooch, 304-675-uot.

0

'

Dr~gonwynd

C.l1ry Ptraian,

1112 Okla FrienD, 4-cyl •ut:o,
runo aood, boon W11Ckod, 1250.
1i83 bido CUIIoo, body good,
bH motor, nny new pirtl,
SiOO 114-N5-3314 oftwlpm
1i82 Ponlilc llomlvllll, V-6,
Pli- pb, two.~ body, rune ··"'f
good, lfr, 111, cruln, t1250 obcl,
614-112-6'111
1i14 eo..... Mit, T-topo, 360
ong, 1u1o1S::.1do d, ,_ - a
. . . . . . . ., •
1 104411-3SIJ

"'·

Slo.- and Himalo,.n klllono.
614-441-3144 oftor 7 p.m. .
Floh Tonk, 2413 Joctcoon Avo.
Point PI-IW, 304-675-2063,
lh IIC concl. $15-$40N, lito 1· lull linO Troplcot ~'",:'· btnlo,
10·.
co[l type blower htlttr, 114-882· 1m111 anlmalaand 1
1187 ~ Sholbv csx, 2.2
51U
T\fto
ln1.._, klllod, 1 ot
Oroot F0t CMotmoo Giho 6Eltelrlo hot water' tank, lltctrle cocktoll birds, S31oa, 114·'142· 1000 botH (11121, AMIT'II COOL,
AC, PI, Pl. Sort- lnqulrlot
range, ~wood I coal atovt. 2322
Oltlyl EnnllllfO 114-"2-6125.
114-'31J
Had t.cl peach fl.ce lov1 blrdt:
lirgometar Exctrclll 81~ For owoot, -blf~romoly ·~ ,..,- IublN QL wogon, 4wd,
1140 And eompoc1 ,,.,.. ayo- toctlorllto $50;
porolillto, 110..,... condtllon, ooef new
lom Wilh llpookoro. 114-441- ..-ly 0; Luttno
~
fat 1441111, 61400711 Aftor lp.m.
Poarl, Clnn1mon Poo~ Plod
C:OCIUIIIII brooding polro. 614o
Flrowood klr oolo. Will dollvor. 311o1111.
130 lruckloocl. 160 cord. Slln
Millor, Jorry L~. l14~66-1tl0. Pomoronlon ....,.., puro bred
no piiMrt, ~4Ht.
1111 C.rnero AI, mint condJ..
Ooiill Tlrnfllr ProcfUCIO Splh
t•·- · ~
ol&lt;
Ftrowood Dollvored, Wo Aecapt
-·
- '
.......
111, · A M' ·
caoiOIII.
Hllfl And !mora~ , .
Rotlr wt- dotrootor. 35,231 1
lhanct, 814-44f.lllf.
ownor miioo. $1118 or t1111.36
Qolf clulre,
oot,
por _,h. Exto.- worronty
3,5,7U, 2 . -1 11110. wllh bog Aoglllltod pootllo, 125. :lp4- ovo- Cal 114-441.t711 or
or comptoto 101 t200. wHh bog, t71-t030.
•--·
_
304-t!'U713.
lhar·Pol Pupo! Juotln Tlmo For ~- QTA Tron•Am, 350 onglno,
Hand modo quiH, 304-171-3282 CMti!NII. 1400 Eoch. 304.f25. ~~-. oU oKira!f 0,800. 114·
44H2fl,441-7/17.
or 176·7411.
1764, 304oi2:Jo260i.
0

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= ..

T= --

,_ ·boa-

F.

In a lllilboat
underwater.

'
MORTY
MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

• ,

a kidnapper.

Stereo.

Cll C l l e R -

compound
. I Glouy fabriC
, 10 Rowolullon
j 13 lnkNng
1·14 M1ng1t
15 Food filh
18 Held
cqvorlnt
17 loward
tlttlttr
18 Hlfl (FI.I
20 Aatonllll
23 Unbroken
26 Cortalnly
30 Ploca of

b

ask5 RoHtnne for help
birth !:Of!trol. (R) 518180.

.f!lUT e.He 5AI16 IF eJ.N.O

Q

81 a e MOII'Il!: 'Nigltln.ln ·Columblll County' CIS
T~IM (2:00)

EiAFFNEY E'v'liiR

m'&gt;NSI USCUT...

Stereo.

0 MO

money

: Rur Window

3 t Arliwadorcl

(2:30) •

• Nlttltvtle Now Stereo.

•• LMrr King Llvel

33 llln'a Hila

A blii!CI man b'lel to blaokmatll
a woalthJ.,Pari5hloner. (R)

P1t1Np1 .
35 Ortltl of
Whliel
3S Frull center
37 Spatttlll Mrl.

34 Comedlen -

0 Fttther Dooling Myatao11a

to

Stereo. ~;~

1:30 Cll (I) • Co.cllltayden's
tum Ia given ttoe dtanoo
~a~ boWt gtlllt. (Pt 1 Of

'' ·

BARNEY

~

or night . ..

...calm

5I Surglctl(
thrald
51 Curly leHtr

DOWN
1 City In Hawltl
2 SchOlarly
knawltdge
3 Dal&lt;oll
Indian
4 Table ocrap
5 12, Ratun
1 Dot of land

1 Phone IIIII
8 Grafttd, in
helllfdry

i

IZI Callge lllltttbttll Texas
at Otollhoma (L)

Curtis Home Improvements: '
Yoora Exporionco On 01c1or a ,

10:00~..:,.'!!"". Cnler
(!)"""

Ill (I). 11-INnt Ginger
lnd Jtff prep11re fer • tell In Hollywood. Stereo.

.

1;1

(!) ..... Biltlnd·the-~

look at hOw the 4"alorl. .. ·
World~~ Plaza Wll buiH.

year ahoocl by mailing $1.25 plus along,
Hlf·addi'OIHd, atampad envtlope to
Aetro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
BERNICE
Box 91428, Clevlland, OH 44101-3428.
· BEDEOSOL Be
lUre to alate your .odlac llgn.
CAPIIICOIIII (Ilea. 2Netl. 111 If you
plll'tldplta In aome sort Of aoclal Involvement tOday - a betung Ia a raetor, keep the 1takeaas small and friend·
ly u pooalbte.
•.
ADUAIIIUI (olan. »feb. 11) Two Important obf«::'- can be achieved today, but you might operate In a manner
that will deny you tholr attainment. Be
aure your mtthocla match your
expectatlono.
PIICU (Feb. :II lllrdt 2111 You might ·
Dea.11, 1111
have an opportunity to dlotort IOfil8o
Don'tgivauponanondelvOrln the
thing Uld by an lndhtdual you dltllka.lf
llhllld the! you've boon wortdng on for : you do, you can _ , the ocore, but •
tlmt. Con!!ltlona are chang- : you're ~ol apt to like yourMH mUCh for .

r..'ro

Plumbing &amp;
Haatlng

-:--;:::::::::::-;;::::~:--Clrt~t'o

Plumbing
Fourth lnd Pino
Goliipot~:.io
614-44

yew:

:-84:---:::-----....
".. .
Electrical &amp;
..

67
Upholstery
•
I:::=::::-~~~~-­
-..y•o
Upholatortng
......
lng
lrlcountr
,,.. 28 yooio.
Tho':
bUt In turriHuro upholl!ortng. 1
Coil 304-6711-4164 tor fnio ...
Umat•.

Slllthway
feature
57 Period of

s..reo..

·:·

or ODMnte~clal ~ :
wlrlna, new MrVkti or ,_..,,. ~
Mootor U - -~olin''
Rldonour IJN1rlc1t ' . --·~r
••.,
17a6.

52 Wlllltcl
55 Cltl'lll fruit

- - ·--..levltlon.prw--a-apeclal flliu\eoto the 6lnger. (2:30)

Rogera_ Bsument - Wattrproo- ....

'RHidtnllaf

44 Will .

47- .to Joy
41 Drlvora' org.

Tttltult Hlny Chepln
Ten ynra after the b'agtc
deatll of activlst-trouba&amp;r
Harry Chapin, public -

IALIIEADY
SDT DNEII

t11. t.oca1 retnncH fumtlhtd. .
FrM nllmat•. Call cola.ct 1- :.

Refrigeration

1 Thll girl

Night GiltHple lnd Tlbba
oonduct thelr own search fer

~.

31 Dined
41 Poetle flcllon
43 ChMr

4 Oxygen

~ StNet 8lltlon

•

Serv1ces

62

ACROSS

.D w-. to Siltvlv8IQ
8:00 ()) • llllln . . 111111 of 11M

5--10 partl:, fronl bum.-r black ,.
$25. bock glooo $20. 304-675- ,.

ling.

· The World AJmanac:"'CrosiWord PuZzle

lttgedl (2;40)
1:30(1)- (1). Home
lmproo-.rt JHI needs time
alone. oo.Tim and the boye
~-Cjltn tile houlll.

..

114-217-0411, dey

two=

1:05 (I) MOYIE: The Devll'a

I

....

= -·

Stweo. C

Pt.:.~ nn•.K·t eop

fZaiEf, lt\JSfAIJT ~ ..

•u

USA·2 team·WOII tbe Women's loa..
Team CbaniplODiblp for tile
+ Pa. !NT
NEC Venice Cup. Tbe learn membei'l · ~ •
P•
were NeD Calut; Stuba Cobelt, L)'tlll
Deu, Sltart111 Osber&amp;, Nalley PaueU
Openillc lead: ' 3
alld Sue Plcus. It wu tile third cotlllic:utive Venice Cup victory for L)'tlll
Deu. In tile flDal, USA·2 beat Allllrla ,
by SSI to 258 IDteraatioaal m1tdt- dummy'a ~· No doubt i111e tript
polnll (IMPI).
.
site wu ualtdy tbat Eut lteld tile 11&amp;1:.
· Tbe swinp plnecl on part«ore ·lielllll ace, lltlt now· site bad IMee
batlcla caa add up ltfllllantiaUy over.a spade tc.en: - don.
. '
long m1tcb. USA·Z, for eumple, . Stu11a C.. reallJetl from tile flld.
galnecl flvelliPI on toda:r'• deal from : tllltc lltat IIIII wu am.t eeriiiD to
the fiDal. H you wlab to teat yomelf, . have
Allo Eut 1114
cover the Eut-Welt caniiiD tile dla· lboWII
111 two llllt,IO tat wu
lfllll· Welt Ielldt a low beart. Eaa1: · a daqer -'d be illlort ID 'fldu
wiDt wltb tile kiDI. cubel the ICe and .Cobelt - lite fowtlt trlt:ll d :dtaata third rouad to Welt's q-. ·my's cllll t1ttc ..S led the itpl1dl 1-.
-ottlt~comesDue?
tile club lour. Row do you When tlte .... ' a feU 011 lltll&amp;l1
1
groand, c.tiiD ltad oaly two trump lof.
·
1•
The AU5trillnl use a canape IJ*m, en: -lnd macle.
In wltlcb they bid a four-card major
Tbll'tleal wu pla,ed ID bollt fiDalt&amp;.
belore • Ionaer au-.
CoMa wu tile rmlJ decllrer of IUee
Tbe Austrlu declarer, alter I simi· to make
Jar alar~ _to tile J!I'Y~_Iecl 1.11111.. to .
o-.uu
MISS
-

llll'rlniiHewa

~CE. MTMJT~IAI5TAtJT

BASEMENT
_,
WATERPROOFINQ
,
Uncondillonll lr.tlm• gulran· •,

+A

•u:et

1~....

Stereo.

Ntw a•• ttnkl, body partt, one ',·
ton lNCk whMta, radlltort, •
floor mats, etc. D A A A~o. ;.
Ripley, WV. 304-372-3133 or 1- 1•
800·273-1585.
,.

Home
Improvements

....

£ABf

,.

. , . holiday muotc. (0;30)

"

.......

VuiDenble: llotl1
Dealer:Eut

Ctil1llmU RICky Van Shetton

MRe. ~BERRY Mia
I'M· !loOT THE OUMel::eT
IQD IN HeR Cl .AeS...

NOiml

72.
tltl

~~=--==s..

EEKANDMEEK

3 Yura

.Q,
•Ju
•IttA5U••r

.10

Texas Still (L)

Budgot Tronomlulono, UHd I ·
.robuTH, ollrllnt ot tn; AL&lt;o ·
Parlo. 114-245'5677, 614·3J'U. :

'

1100'1'11

·
1111111111111
Kentucky at South West

II.AAT A t.l..ai?LD., .
IUSTAtJT &lt;D'Ff£, 1k151AllT

ANOTHER."

.It 108112

Maly'o (2:00)
(I) (1). FullllottM JHH
. and Reblcca r801ivo a
preview
(R)
Stereo.
• &lt;D Nova lnd· thHcenea
look at hOw the 49-atory
Plaza Wll butlt.

Sterto.

,.
.•
"

' •

.QJIIS

iJ5 MOVIE: The llttlt of St.

~

No. 3 below.

11111111 ' 1

PHILLIP
'ALDER

liD.

. '.

1ho douddo quotwd
by flllina .In ......- " " _ .

BRIDOII:

Natttanpaltlelpatnln_1
chicken matcfl with a
~h·IChool friend. Stereo.

man
racelatr

~

•

young tot. "WWde grlna or amlles are ron.!)' things unless

1:00()). IIJI'I Fly Away

Wa

Homoo. Room Adclftiono, •
FOWiditiOn Work, iloollng, •
Khchono And Balho. FrM Eo- '
Atftrenctl, No Job To 1
1114 !!oCfp ArfH, 4 - · bltck, tlmatMI
,.
AIIIIPM. Mlllttt, 4 orf, new u- Big Dr Smollil14o441-0221.
~--,-,.-~~,.--~~-- ·
hollll, tM-na-'12:11, ovonlngo
FtNmon't Plumbing And HNt• '
1188 Chovj Covollor, ... po, pb, lng, &amp;1-.256-1811.
:
IC1 AUM r8dlo, ntW ptlnl, II•
Aon'o TV Servtco, opoclllizlng· !'
tro ctoon,lll - · IIWI2·3703 In Zlnlth 1110 Hrvlclng moit
1188 Cortot1o. nry good cond, othtr brtnd1. Houle calla, aleo
f11,100 t14.z4'1&lt;4ei1.
oomo
IPPI- -~·· WV
304-676~3111 t;lhlo 114ol411-2464.
11181 Dodge Doytono, Clood
Condition, Loodocll 5 ·Splod, Rootn oddiliono, oldtng, rooting,
.. vinyl roploc..- Wlndowi,
1-2 Pon1110 .._......
1
-.-i.
~
Ill' AI Tromm, 114-'1112·
RuM - ,·llccly
Rough' ·"""'
$376. carfiO!llry
2321. CALL COLLECT •
ll114o~2~51~6~2111.~=-=c=~
::IM N~- p
u ooo
Dlvlt
Sew-Vee
SIIVIct,
1
- n ui"!'!t, ' .. mi, oura.. Crllk Ad. Pll'le, luproorgror11160 obo""''-~'
5o
pickup, ond dollvory. 614·
'opoOd,
1...•49·2100
214.
Wpm, 1411-344 .i. lpm
1187 Chovy _ , high mlioogo, WIU build polio covoro, docb,
i11M1 , .... Goad lr~naport1~ acr11ned room•, put .. vlnvl
lion oor. t1.1100. For m- fnlar· olding or trlillr atdrtlng. 114·
mation Col11 - 2 , Ask 245.fl52.

Int-.

;

H-

81

· UNSCRAMBLE. FOR
ANSWER

shared with

rtrt1111t00d.

11186 Honda 360.. 3 - ·

0

SCI~ &amp;ITI .ANIWIIS
11.·'
Behind -Quest - Aorta - Throng - ANOTHER
'Don't be discouraged,' the teachlr comlorled the

7:31 Cll Ianford a 1on

ALLEYOOP

$100. Fint t.au. on ltlte Fa~
:.:R,;;ood;;;.;Lo;;ldn;;:,:.;o;;W;;or~3::;:30::..;,P;:M;.._ _ ·:

0

IIICmtllle

r

•i

1m Chrvilor Cor-. 380 eng, 79
Campers&amp;
304-17UMI.
Motor Homes
1880 Buick Rogel, 2 Door, Good
Condition. Coil Aftor ~p.m. 614- 12 n. Elclorodo oildooln campor.
368-63'111.
.
St- I . Sllol!!~ tub, lumaco,
ico-bol, llc. fj200. Qood condl·
tHO Iuick Skyiork. 4 Cyllndor, lion. 814-38?-7017 or 614·317·
NMdo Aopolr, $200 O.B.O. 614· 0113.
251•1434.

1\182 Lincoln Town car, txctlllnt
cond, MW Michelin tl,.. new
vlnyt root • hoodllnor, 1\ooo
mliH, 15,000, 614olll2·:1410

0

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.

•

l'tud
•lealllfStwriO.
ill Coltat llukatball
Vandarbtllat Indiana (L)

~~~ II"L, ~ .....r-.

acarea the .

~~Tonlgltl

0

.(/., fN/)IN(J/

1i65 Honda XA-10 dirt blko, ix..
calion! condillon, 1850, 614-14g..•
2241
.

~~~~

........_,__,__...,........., you dtnlop lroll .....
0

rilL, t.r~S

/

tr •

howa\'8(
couldn1 get along wilhout one.
He . . thai an alarm clock is

··- . ·--·---

s aeA••-:l11 A

.:

I

7:01 (I) • dUma l'lf1tllr ·
7
'•

WHO .flf.J'

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I've

1·7· My~:WIIa

GY H T E C

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Stetto.

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T'f'lf ONI.y Ofo/f
. Tt1f {tfcff'JION

L

T R I MH
•
•
•s •

·

~-~·
·
I!:£A=i

1ih
Otvldoon, wido
gllclo 11.0011 mliM 14•- ....
14H293'
' - · ·~·

'

lt~:ln

1:31 (I) AttcJr Cl.tlt1tll
7:00 ~. ,0 WIIMI of FOt1Unt

WfotO $1f(J Tttf f'E$1l&gt;FI'IT t'IAS' NO VIJIONJ tlfj

j I IJ .

1--rilf1"'111"ri'TI-.
. lr--r-1-t 8 ~-

•

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ill Up CioN

(!)

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

40
I1

.................or-'-_.

DNewz.NStwriO.I;J

614-317·7614.

Grlnd~r,

Cop

I::IOIUt.."=§

• ;

l

-~

1:01 (I) fiM!IJ "" ...
1:211 (!) ...... oM TV 1;1

1m Fonl F100 truck, runo Old, Lib Now· Sioul SUI Out•
good, and a 1114 Buick Rtgali' lit, Guido T;.;;!.~ A/moll !K-in·
can 1-11-2188 after Spm ona Vlllld. ott.rs or Tradn Con ...
oldor"', 614-446-2301. •
wHbndo

614-287·'1054.

Supplies

Chow Chow Pupe For Solo,
Rogllllorod,
t100 Eoeh. ltof.441.
32:
• 3.
Chriotmoo
puptl.
AKC
Chihuahua ~po. Coli ltof.441.
-•5
·~ after 4

32

r.:.'J.nn. K·•

Charger Lock In/Out Hula:
Ooocl Shape, No R,.t, 12,600.

Sioux Valve

Is

111-Wotld Tolley

Sale

7142.

•

ill MIA Tolley

1V71 FGrtl E160 von, Vol, PS PB1
dual ~a."!J ~2J._CruiooJ~• II
1 ·~· 304-an-2571.;
Nna
11113 Dodgo 4 _ , Drivo Ram'

2283,

0 • .

;;:;o;~·

425 Galion Milll Tank, Compreo.
aor, 'V1cuum Pump, Dtlazal
Mllb.., Pulsators, Timor Box. 1i65 GMC High Slorro 4 wh. dr,
614-246-11528.
truck. Loodod. Good condlllon.
Col itltor 6pm.114-307.02fla.
AC 165 Troctor, Sharp, $5 1~;
Lolo Modoi 5040 1C With "ydo 1ill Toyoto Plcllup, 5 Spoodl
roullc Loodor, U,tltl6i -IIN Font Good Concltiont 53,400. 814'
With Buoh Hog, t1,ih; OWnor 446-4782.
J
Will Flnonco.I14-28M522.
1867 Dodgo D-60 Rool &lt;looci ·
Jtm'a Form £qutpoitonll :~ ~:· Condllionl S3,200. 114-2U-62St.,
WMI
Oaiilpotlo, l14 4 1 ; 1i67 Ford llo['f; 8"'
Wldo •-ion ,_I uood form
., Foot pies·
troctort 1 lmplotMIItL Buy, totally ioodod. Wh. Dr. $1100 ,
1011, lrodo, 8:00o4:00 wooldoyo, 614-441-2713.
,
8ot till Noon.
Docombor 91111 1i81 Ford 4x4;
P.U., $3,HS; 1081 NIHin P.U.1
John Ow 4020, ron10111, $3,i15;
1N6 Dodgo P.U. Nico
hyd~:~lico, dl-lllllock, John
1867 Font f'.1!1!,_t2.~11
Door Wldo Irani ond good I3,8Hj,
1187 11uda P.U. 12,5w~; 1Ma
conct.II!OO, IM-185-3iD
Chev. S·1D P.U., S2,4M; 1113
Rldl"tt. Lawn llowor, Uko Now, FOfd Club Cob 12,015; 11~
Paid 11,200; Will Socrolico AI Chlv. ~10, P.U., tl,805; 11&amp;4
Chov. S-10 P.U., t1718; 1114
$400. 114-25H182.
Chov. S-10 P.U., 81,98; 1144
Wantodi U.od firm •qulpmont, Ford Bronco II, 12,765; 1N4
;:l~. you wont to Hll. 614- , Bronea a, $2,500; 1110 Ford 414
Pc'!.·! $1,11i5; 1171 Fanf 4o4 P.U.,
Sno; 1i7,8 Ford Bronco t1,0H.i
1Na lou•u P.U. $1,5115; e&amp;"'
63
Livestock
Auto Solos, Hwy. 160 N. 114-4411,
1UO 81g Chli1nu1 Golding Son Hti5.
Of ellly Billy B = 4 HorN
Trattor, 15 Big
Soddtoo.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
814211 1522.

76

(J). ill

CllYitiN"-

1V71 Chevy 112 1on, 414, tf50C!.
1m Ford 112 1on, 4x4, $tSOCI.
1171 Oocla- 314 ton, 4x4, $800.
1m FonJ 314 tQn, 414, hDO.
1m
OMC rotd 1 - , 311
~~~~~
dom du"'!'o S11001 114-Mto22i3
1181 Chovrotot Et c.m1no. Erl·
cotllnl eondnton. Vorr· Shorpl
-2445Aok...., Paul,
1181 Cuatom doluxo CIJOvy
truck, hall ton with IDflpor, 1 e~
elanard thlfi,J.ood c:on'f'
$2,toq. 304-675-1 .
1
111i2 Ford F•IOO, 6 cyl, 304-57$
2103 oftor 7:00 PM.
~

=::::7'---:-:---o---:1i80 Otdoonobllo Omoga, 1100.

but not reglttiftd, rtldy now,

l

Fann Equtpment

St-.v-

And Dopooh. 614-441.Q331. Coil

COlo K.ybaan.l, $100; Mercarlile Necklace, 15 Ynrt Old,
Btfore 7p.m.
.180; Homtlltl Chllnllw 18"
;:'Eff;;:o:n--c:;io:-'nc_L:
_ 'III.,.,-In"'Pt:-.-:P,io-o-oo-nl- , Cutterbar, $100; 2 Bll•ln Evennice ntlah lt\OOd, Hud ICetp- Ing Gowno: Flshor VCA, RoWintid, 1·30'l.f75.1042
dti',
Headclllner,
$'150;
Mo11burg 10 Gil. Automatic

51

Now Oak Curvod Gtooo China
Cabinet•, DIHerant Slyl11,
Etched GIU1 1 LMdsd Cllau
.Mir-od Back, Ropo 1\vlot,
Lion Hatd, 01111 . Shiflvtl,
Spoon Clrvtd, Etc. -Each. ·
614-441-4318.
.
O.k hobby horstt, Grut
Chito1rn00 glfto. $45. 4 ft. onow
blodo klr walking Cltlvlly, $90.
114-31'1·7812.
1
PANASONIC tOO Won ollroo
aystam wllh O.Olby NR, Duel
Co-11 wilh high apood dubbi"f, Dlailtl tunor with 11 proo
sots, 5' bond · oquiiiNr •
aulomotlc tumtoblo, lull lunc- Cuatom Uv_.ock Hauling. C.n
lion ron10\o control, Otk rock Haul To Hilitlboro Solos 01 Loo
with gltll door front, 38• lh,.. cal~.
Chuck
\ Wllliomo
woy opooklro whh romovobll Trl
3 i . - Trucldng. 114grilll:, like naw... musl lltl $400." 24 096.
304-117~.
.
Aile Or lllct? In Vour Hou•? lila.· HoiOtoln brooding aa•
buff1, Demt to 31,000 t milk.
Buy ENFORCER, Kfllo r111o I 6-2412.
miCo In ....,
..,., 1 -~·
Coil sa1ot
OUAAANTEEDI Avoiloblo 1 : _,., Boum Truo
~~~).11 WHt Alhono U-ook S-. Salur·
doy Docomblr 14, AI l :00 P.M.
Motn
Cholllor, utt
Aoc:optod stortint AI
Rill 0r Mlco? tn Your - ? 4Llvoolocll
P.M. Evory Frklor. Salurclo,.
Buy ENFORCER, Kills reto - , SOlo
At 1:00 P.M. Haullna Avolt·
mtoo In only 1 tlodlna, oblo. 114-IU-3131, Or (14-5112·
GUARANTEED! Avoillblo ol: 2322.
O'Ooll Truo Valuo Lumbor. 634
Eoot MoliislrMI; POmeroy, OH
64. Hay &amp; Grain
Signs: Portoblo Moret- Chin• Qrouriihhol com, f12QIIon, 12
QUb.. Lifter Sian S21t. FrM t1301ton. hay
lotloNIDollvory. 'Pioollc lolloro ratto, 121.Fotcl,
M-n Form, lit. 35.
$47.50 box. AAA Signs I - 304 37 011
"' .z •
533-3453. Anytimo. .
Hoy tor - . flflll round boioo
Surpl,. Army Comilougo, CoJo a12' • flO, oirootiOnl quoiily, Of·
hart Clothing, oil illlhor
co'mbet boot•, IMullttd d1cron chord .... · - · t14-:s7H4111
camtleugt covnl8 130, Junior
tiln camflauge. S1m SomeTransportat ion
rvliio'o, Booldt Sondyvilll Poll
0111co Eut of AOvonowood
(ovory doy until CMolmao 3:00.
8:00 PMI F~. Sal, Sun noon 1111 •71 AuiOI for Sale
6:00 Pll, ot11or houro coil 3Q4. ::::-::~~-:--.--.-- ••••
1i81 M-ng, 11 cyl o·•o ooc
.. ~..
lniorlor, 13,sOo. 1u3'8 chO'vy ;i
Tondy AGe, CM5 color monitor, d- -~~0011. 111!'Hondo
•K cond, $175 contact, 814-012· Shadow
• 2,400 mll11,
2112 onor 4pm
$2,000.. JOW76.3!160.

Avtnuo, Oaiiipotlo, 2 Btlhl Now

6._______
8

Large kiiDIInt huter, Never
boon uood. 112 p~co. Call B14-

CompltUy Fuinllhld Smlll
Hou11, $250/mo. Plut Utllltlta,

11·-------U

1~·========:.--------...:.._jl

go. 614-44&amp;-3941.
HAPPY JACK MAHQE 1.0110N;
Counly Appillnco, inc. Oood promot11 hsollng ond hofr
ulld eppllancu, T.V. 1111. O~n growtH to any r'nlnfl, hot tpol
8 o.m. to 6 f:.m. Mon ..Sot 14- :\,.:!::li'~:.O:::rs&amp;~~
~j:~ I 7 3rd. Avo. Got· . STATES 304-676~.

lmmldlllte Aaalltanct.
Nice 2 Story Houtt Slcond

6625 Hk tor Men
1,,_______ 9.,______, 11Qrio1 Sol~~ion Of Ropoono·
lod Doubi• Widoo • t1.ooo Down
2,, - - - - - - - - 1 0
And Slntl• Wldoo • S!OO Down
With APf'I'IVod Credit. Coil Mid
Ohio Fino nco Atl14·m ·1220.
4. ______......;.;. 12.
NO PAYMENTS UNTIL APRIL AI
· - - - - - -- ·11 Elno Homo Conlorl Whon Pur·
5
13
ehoolng A Now Or USod Mobilo
· · · - -- - - - •
Homo Wilh Approved Credit.
14.
eo111.-uJ.mo.
Shor1 Tlmo On Jol&gt;? PMI Credil
7•·- - - - - - - - 15 •
HIIIIOfY A P,_m? MI!IJ
Eopoo-d Mol&gt;llo HomH To

3--------

5 room• of tumlturt. Priced to

OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
FOR $1,100 Full Prlct. Go'oltm•
mont Aalncill Now Llquidoling.
1-105-514-6500 Ell. H0968 For

1~4&amp;-00ll.

3pagm,I6.QQ

~
~~~~~=:=::::::r:=~=::::::::~=,
llllrlaorolorL AvocadoL 30 Inch
~r~o. eJ~C. 336 ~1 •1n 1••· 54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
g
••• ·
•
:n~R-~~

eEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
eUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
£STATE~1 . 631 Jocbon Plko
from t11Wmo. Wolk 1o ohop l
movill. Coll614-441-l511. EOII.

Link Fonco. ClotoTo Everything
In Town! Ready To Movt lntol

home.

15 cu f1 chllt~y hll1t, runt
ood ~35 3
• ••13

304-175-1632,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complt11 home fumlahlngs.
Houro: Mon-Sot, J.l. 51of.441Dopooil. 614·368·9686.
0322, 3 mlln out BUIIYIIIe Rd.
2 bdrm ·mobilt hom• tor rent, Froo Otllvory.
approx. 3 mli11 trom Pomeroy •
PICKENS FURNITURE
Mlddltpo/1, total tltctrlc, 614· i
.
Now!Uood
949-4233
Houathokl tumllhlng. 1f2 mi.
2 bedroom furnlthed mobile Jerricho Ad. Pt. PIIIIIRI, WV,
home, ·At. 2 Apple Grove, $250. Cali 304-671·1450.
mo. $100. damage deposit. 304- Refrigerator, 2 dr., $75·k30 Inch
675·2029.
tMictrlc r1ng1 $75; .nmcn
2 Bldroom, RtftrlllCII And wnhtr, $75; Por1ablt wether,
Otposil Roquirod. Coil 614-446· $75; 40 Inch lloctrlc rongo, $15;
Sldo-by·oldo Horvnt gofdr nlco,
0527 Ah•r 2p.m.
wu ·$215 now t1i5; 'Wh rlpool
2 BA mobile home It Evergreen. dryer, wa... $125, now SVS.
614·379-2678.
Skoggo Applioncn. 614-4467318.
2 mobile hom11, Hertford Lane,
Appla Grovt, Hud acctptld,
RENT 2 OWN
304-578·2103.
.
61of.445-3156
Vl'ra Furniture
2·bdrm trellar In Raelnt ar11, Solo &amp; Choir, t11~0 . WHk;
coil 614-985-4233
· Reclln•, $5.47 WHk, Swivel
2-BR tralltr In Racine, 614·949· Rockor, 13.83 WHk.eunk Bod
Complete $8.41 Wttk. 4 Drawtr
2026
ChHI, 13.26 WHk; Poolor Bod·
2 Bedroom Mobilo Homo With room Sullo, 7 pc., $'16.67 Wook,
Gas Hut On Prlv111 lot, No lncluctoo Bodcllnt.Country Pino
Poto. OopooH Roqutrod. 1 112 Dinotlo With Bench &amp; 4 Chalro,
Milt From Holler Hospital. 814· t10.tltl WHk.OPEN: Mondoy
Th ru •-•
446·3968, SI0-446·2300.
- un1 ay, •·
-.m. 10 •vp.m.,
Sundey 12 Noon Till 5P·"l· •
2br Unlumlohod Ail Eloclric Miln 011 Roulo 7 On Rou11 \141,
Mobile Home On Private' lot, By In CoiWonory,
Centenary Jumbo, Gllllpollt.
SOlo On Ail Corpot in Stock!
614-446-0130.
VInyl, SUi yd. Carpot $4.00 Up.
70 h. tr~llar, 2 BR, Mw ctrpel, Moilohon Corpoto. 61of.446.Jit44.
on
Neighborhood Rd.· I~ •
1755 an"'lmo.
Hont Rock Moplo Bod·
,•
, Solid
room Suitt, Drentr, Mirror,
Taking AppllcaUona For A 14x70, ChHI And Full Slzo Bod, Boaull·
3br, Totti EIIC1ric Trailer. Avail· full 1400, O.B.O. 614·256-1182.
able Dtctmbtr 15th. Largt Yard
SWAIN
And Garden. 8 Mli11 From GelAUCTION
l
FU ANITUAE. 62
ilpoilo. 614·386-9~6.
Olivo St., Galllpollo. Now l Ulod
Trajltr In Henderson ror rent. fumhurt, hNIIl'l, WMIIm •
wilh wa- I clryor• .304·773- Work boots. 114-446-3158.
5248 ony~lmo .
VI'RA FURNITURE
Nice 2 btclroom trlllltr, lerge
614-446-3158
yard.' Ctty School Dtttrlct, ln LIVINQ ROOM: Solo I Choir,
Kona"tti.I14-441·'N73.
$'199.00~ Rocilnor,
h4i.OO;
Swlvoi Hockor, 199.00; CoffH &amp;
End Tobloo, Sli.OO Sot.DININO
44
Apartment
ROOM&lt; Tobio Wilh 4 Poddod
lor Rent
Chotro, $148.00; Country Pino
Dinette With Bench And 3
1 l 2 bdrm opt I~.Middlopon, Chotro~, 1299.00; Motchlng 2
Utllltn Fum, dtp req, no peta, Door · "itch S34i; Or S66i.OO
614-lli2·2218.
Sot; Otk Tobit, 42x62 With 6
Bow .. Beck
Chalrt, .
1 And 2 Blc:froom Apartment•, S62i.OO.BEDROOM: Pooler eodFlllt Avonuo, Gaiilpotlo, 114· room Suito (! pc.), $348.00; 4
446-6221.
Drowor ChMI, S4U!; Bunk
1·bdrm tpC . SyrKuM, 1125 mo Bod, $229; Comptoll Full Moft
r~ lliiltllo, dopooit, 614·992· Sol, $'105 .00 Sot; 7 pc. Collar
Boaroom SuHo, Plli.OO.OPEN:
Monday Thru SaturcM~, la.m. to
1·bdrm
"""''-' lfll, 3rd lioor, lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
no peta, depod, Pomeroy
!p.m., 4 Miln Off Route 7 On
2 Blclroorn Apartment In Cit~ Roullt41 In eontonary.
Llmila. l14-441-11111, J.S.
2 Boctroom Co~Wrol Air, Goo
Hut, DlthWIIshlr, Washer!Qryer
Hookup, 060/mo. Rontor Payi 53
Antiques
UliiHioo. 1-5-4411.
::---::-:::-:--:--:--:-Buy or 1111. Alv.-lne Antkluet,
2-bdrm part baument, no pet1, 1124 E. Main Slrell, Ponwroy.
"-ll, :Jomlnu1H oouth Mid· Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 6:00
dloporl At7
p.m., Sundoy 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614-lli2-2526.
2·bdrtnL Ill oioclrlc, tfppiloncoo
tum, t1 11' 114-11112" 762
54 Miscellaneous

3 rMIIOdllld one bedraom.. un-.
tumlahtd apta, good cond
grNt locatlon,corntr 8th .nd
Main 91, Pl. Pn. 304-676olli31.

30x30 Block Cartgl, With Chain

Sell it. the f!!U way... by gho"ne,
no .n eed lo leav~ your
Placll your classified ad today!
15 words or lesa, 3 ·d ay,

Goods

GrHn Yelvetttn toft 1nd chair,

Clinic of WHI Virginll, 304-6754481.

By lulldl; Ntw 3 Bedroom•Full
Bastmtnt With 2 Car Garao•
And
Family Room, Larg•
KJtchen And Dining, Utltlly
Aoom, 2 Fun Btths Walk In
ao..ta, _ Large Lot, _ Cit~
Schools, 4 MQu FronJ Town
$51,500 Conoidor Trod4-ln Of
Mobile Hom1, &amp;14446-8a38.

T1trn your·clutter into ctUh,

Mobile .Homes
lor Rent

Trucks for

$180G,132 . _unernut.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Waahtra, dryers, refrt~rators,
rwngM. Skoggo Applloncoo, Mohogany twin bodo comploto
Upper Rlnr Aa. B11ldt Ston1
$800. · Some ~by furniture,
Croot.Moltl. Coil 114-448-7318.
81/2lc12 ABC'o carpot, 304-675-

3 bedroom apl abovt Holzer

31

72

Household

12x65 In Country Vinton Ar11,
Wattr,
Trash,
Stovt,
R1frlgsra1or,
Furnithtd,
$185/mo .
Rtferanet
And

Sllttman Wanted: Supplement

parson, tor room and board,
304o466·1065.
·

·

ONtn

1148 WliiL'• .totp, good cond,

Dlntttt nt with 4 chair., lovt
Small Unfurnlshad Hws• 3 1111, lergt and tmall wood
Roomo, Bllh, Air Condilionlng1 drnur wllh matching mlrrow,
Carpattd, Or1perlts, Scrttnea coffee tablt, 2 end tablu, anti·
Porch, Privett Parking, 614-446· que drttllr, 304-G75-1410.

lnl· Gallipolis. Full·tlme with
apartment • ufllltl11 lncludad.
Sind rttume to: Box 1320
Waynuvllla, NC 28786.

vaUd

3 BR home, ntwly remodeled

Small Hou11 In The Clly, Par·
tlally Furl'llshld, 3 ,Rooms And
Bath, Largt Lot. $175/mo. 614~
446o4109, 614·37H740.

1·216-967-15377am-10pm 7aaua.
6
Realdent mantger, mainltnancl
couple for apartment complex

drlvtrt llctntl to help blind

Nolghborhood. 114-446-9205.

Mtrcervllla. 614-446-1158.

IXtrh and application lnto.1 call

(or 18 months ••·
perltnca): or equivalent. INa
phont Callet Stnd RHUI'I'Ie lo:
Meigs County B01rd of MRIDD
PO Box 307, SyracuH, oH
45779. Meigs MR/00 dote noc
dlacrimlnate In provlalon of Mrviet or employment bttcluu of
handicap, r'ICe, color, national
origin, stx or aga.
du,.a)

wather; Gtrbtgt Dlpotal, Nlct

3br Home, 2 Baths, Located In

coureoa in occounling !e.g.,
-336-8005.
managtmant accounting, f nan- :CPo""m_•_o_y-:P:::
OS
:::T
::-:Ac-L-cJ:::
O::BS::-:c
$'1--1.=7a.
clalacountlng,·cott accounting, 114.90/hr. No up. nHdtd. For
auditing

-·
2br Hou" In Middloport, Dloh·

Wilh partial baoomonl. Excolltnl
location In Pi Pi1110n1 oroo.
$400 mo. pius dope·•. Rtlo-n·
~·
.•
cas r.qulred. 814-441.0228.

plue: &amp; ~· trimming photographt. 1·

common vocabulary

Middleport

6

H I W led
e p an

Oiaabllilioo. AbNIIy to caicullto PHOTO TRIMMERS: Wlshln; to
tractions,
percentagn
&amp; t tart lmmedlattly. No txp.
decimals &amp; to reid &amp; wrltt ntcuury. Earn up to $110 per

&amp; Vi I I

rtftrtn~es.

_oo:-c.-:-1:-1 ':..6_14-:-.9"4'7.9.,::29~34:..__=:-cc-

decorate so early, the only way to
tell Christmas Is close is how
desperate the husbands look ."

Reward to parson or persons

clinding
b

tin1

dopooit, ond utl111111. Avoliablo

51

1:00 (I) • .Cll

Sh- El $2,111; 1UI Nl101r1
Sonlro, $3,011; 1187 Sulek
Sk~k 12,3M· 1185 Olclo ~·
ilia Collis t1,UI; 11113 Nl-•
.BaiWro, 1796j_~4 Olclo- Dot1o
II $1,5H· lOA Dolllin, 21.008
Mil.;, iHii 1181 Chov. S.W.
tell; e&amp;D IWlO 8olo, Hwy, 11f
N.114-441 .....:

Merchandi se

decorated, carpet, tte, reference

Sovon waek Old puppies, 304575· 2335.

•

I!V!NING

~:a~~-:~
~hr~e
Ford EocOrl, t1, ;.1187

~

~·

. TUE., DEC. 10

$3,1111; 1181 IIOJOWY l
llorot1o, 1181 Ford Ftl
S2,ttl;

loti, Nnllll, partl, ul... C.ill
~

!•

*'·'"L,

•tl•

614-lli2·ll11'8.

'TH6 ~HELLS TO
/to.V·f,AA ..,

, ourKool,
Aoklng 13100. 114 4o-S347. '
Docombor Solol 1181 1 Chtv.

Country Mobile Homo Pork,
Routo 33, Nonh of Pomeroy.

2 bdrm ·houH In-Rutland, $225
month p_lua utilities, deposit and
fl!flrtncta required, 614-992·
7503

.

mllol. 1\lrtio, 5

46 Space for Rent

41 Houses for Rent

Television
Viewing

. 1l4E Bfl(.ll AND H6Lil ~

67 Shoiby Cllo~r, 44,DOb·

with cooking.
SIHplng Also trollor -·All hookoUpo.
Ctll
2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, M11on WV.

12x14. add-on.

· The Dally sentinel Page e ·

OhiO

. ~f"lliEOI!tCRMY ·l~,_T~-~

1110 ~ Aim 160 4 WQ,
!Iuper Coli; fully oqulppod, ...,
mlillvo.I14.SU.11711.
,

2 room tpl, utllltl• pala, 304·

$25,000. 614-367·7054.

2-pups &amp; mother, part chc;lw/
hus ky, 614-992.fi605

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Uriy Wright

o,

1

; 'BORN LOSER

10, 1991

Autos for Salt

71

68H!Iel.
ADOITI• for rent · wok or month.
Sllrtlng ot NOimo. Qofllo Hotol.
614-448'UOO.

40 Acroo With 2 BR Mobile

Giveaway

4

45

33 Fanns for Sale

Tuesday, December

Tuesday, December

Pomeroy-MIOOieport, Unio

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

-- --

.

=•

Ullil• youow belli etcptc:tlttg
bewltliln ..-11.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Nor. za..aeo. 111 UIU·
a1ty you're an optlmlltle lndMdual but
t~ your _.ptlona might ba
tlva lnllleed of hopeful. If your thinking
11 murt&lt;y your effec:t....,_ w11 be...

(llnll 11•..,. 1,1 Be carefUl ·
oc1

h

il..,i.:r:-~

u

run coutd .Uddenly - o p Into
something quite serious.
GEMINI (MIJ 21..June 211) Someone
whOM philosophy cluhel With yours
could be dlfftcultto ~t II""" with -a1n
... -..
..,.

' ~"::i=-=~::-hnteetlngs

ID 700 Ctilll Wilt Pit
Ra~a~

10:30•·Cioolland ChiN
...... 1: ~ .... ~ , _
10:••,..,
·-.., ..... 1 ' •... ...., ........ ~
(PG) (2:15)
U:OOaJe (I)
111 o •

til•a

CANCIR (olune 11..,., 2111 Don't al·
peel too much rrono a friend whOM put
hlltory lhowa the lack .of a gtvtng Ill·
tura. Thta lndlvldu .. will run true to form

9 Ntn
~ ~ CGult

~:Yi.lulr D-Aug. 2111 voJ: obf«:tl\'81

.,, likely to be cltltrty defined tOday,
but you mtgltt not go after them with the
dettrmtnltlon and perolotence - -

uryfor•K:III.

VIIIGO (Atft.'D-...... 221Jhllil not II
dly to - ' ! on llllgn"*ltt .
you don'l enjoy. The end ,_Ha •a

r-'*

~to=

trnla .,. mixed tOday,

~n~~~
plnl ,l nd

s-.

• AtM11i0 .
Ricky Van lhlllton 11nga

Clttllltnu RICky Van Shetton
alngl holiday muaiC. (D:30)
: . Tonlgllt
0 IIOtdeiiUwn Stereo.

t):301!!!:. c"S""tereo. 1;1
·

1;1

.
Hill
• •~~~~tett· Ante!' CriMe

~~~i~......,

oz.

' - could ebb and flow. Fortunately,
In your COIMotl clal detlll~ t 1Y wH
lndMclullll wHh whon1 )'IU ve , _ preo howl.., , you may ltHI end up on lhe .
•
viOully detllt. Dan't IllUme Ihey do plullkla.
iiCOIICIIO (Oot. 14-f!o¥. 211 CooperaD MOYI • The l.ellttM
bu.._ In the, manner as lion among llmlfy membora II Nkely
lteed (1 :30)
w1t1i whon1 yo~ne .llmlllar.
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Ptg&amp;--1 0-Thl! Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OVS brings holiday spirit to Ariel
By Edna Whiteley
"T~e~~k" from thee "N utcracker
"Sleigh Ride," yesterday's,
Every Christmas it's the same , Su1te, ~as best. The.Trepak 1s a today 's and probably tomorrow's
dilemma. We start out searching fast-tempoed Cossack dance that favorite, was enhanced by the
for the trUe spirit of the season and speeds up so much al the conclu- multi-talented percussion section of
get so sidetracked with activitieS~ sion that the dancers cannot keep Tom Shriver, Guy Remonko and
that are just yuletide trappings that pace and fall down. There was no Scott Milam and Ernie Bastin's
we risk missing it.
·such lapse for the OVS. At the cut- whinnying trumpet.
Most folks probably dido 't off, everyone was still standing.
The OVS conc luded with a
expect to find it at the Ariel '(heatre
The ensemble e~r~ptured the light-hearted rendition of "W~
Saturday night. But it was there,, audience With Brahm s 'There Is A Wish You A Merry Chnstmas.
embodied in the holiday music pre- Rose In Flower." The composer Obviously ttie audience would have·
sented by the Ohio Valley Sympho- used the rose to symbolize Christ at stayed for more.
.
ny and Maestro Ray Fowler.
blflh. Sweet blends of strings,
The Christmas Spint may elude
The OVS has never sounded so oboes and horns, especially John us again but Saturday night. it was
gobd. Dynamic, sensitive, respon" Gerber!s, brought great warmth and clearly within our grasp. (Edna
,sive and perfectly balanced, the resonance to the delicately-flavored Whiteley is an Ariel board memensemble brought a freshness to work.
ber)
carols and other seasonal pieces
that when played elsewhere often
sound cut from a very old and predictable mold.
Achieving the special
.shadings required concentration.
Considering -the pieces were familiar, it would seem they could be
played almost effortless ly . After
all, Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker
Suite" must be in every musician's
' yearly repertoire and most played
Leroy Anderson's "Sleigh Ride" in
Mr. Musicdirector's 7th grade
band. But overfamiliarity can be a
liability.
When music is overly familiar,
it's easy for the musician to
become detached, somewhat like a
pilot nying on instrUments or worker driving the same route home at
day's end. If it happens, the music
takes on a rote-like aspect and bad
habits acquired as far back as
junior high may creep in.
The musicians had to continuously remind themsel ves to stay
alen. Mr. Fowler, whose direction
· is always exacting and animated,
seemed to step it up even more in
an effon to sharpen and resharpen
the ensemble's focus. It worked.
Concertgoers regardless of
A VETERAN REMEMBERS - '"·•··
degree ·of tunefulness were invited
intermediate
students at Riverview Elementary School on
ocas·
to sing along on several of the carsion of the 40th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor Mon.
ols. Mr. Fowler pointed out the
day. Bahr served during the World War II, joining the armed
hazards and cheered the assembly
forces a year after the attack. Bahr is a member of the Tuppers
on. That it was not altogether SUC'
P-lains VFW Post.
cessful seemed of little moment.
Considering we live in a world
where cooperalion often does not
come easily, it was nice that so
many tried.
The November mceti,ng of the at 6:30 p.m. There will be a gift
From a technical point of view,
Shade Valley Council of Floral exchange.
Arts was held at the home of Mrs.
The Chri stmas Flower Show
Alice Thompson.
was also noted.
.
Thoughts and devotions were
JoAnn Francis had the program
read by Mrs. Kathryn Mora . Roll on "Living Holiday Arrange WASHINGTON (AP) - Don- call
was answered by telling a ments." She stated grapevine can
ald Trump and on-again, off-again favorite
fruit or vegetable to usc in be used with ligh ts and a bow covfiancee Marla Maples, have been at Thanksgiving
dinner.
ered by a fern. Figurines in hanging
it again, this time right in front of
A thank-you was read for the baske ts and ornaments on tall ·
guests at one of Washington's group's donation of a book at the
plants can also be used as well as
poshest hotels.
Meigs County Library.
poinsettias as center pieces.
Witnesses said the couple began
The Christmas dinner will be
Refreshments were served by
shouting at eac~ other near the gift Tuesday at Gilmore's in Pomeroy
the
hostess.
shop in the lobby of the FoUl Sea-

Council to hold dinner

Trump, Maples
have another spat

sons Hotel, and_that Maples threw
her high heels and her $250,000 .
diamond engagement ring at the
real-estate developer.
The Washington Post on Monday quoted Maples as shouting,
''I'll never marry you. I don't care
how much money you make." She
stormed out of the hotel in the
trendy Georgetown section with •
Trump "in hot pursuit," the Post
said.
Before leaving the hotel, Trump
stopped at the reception desk and
asked the night manager, "Whatever happened to the ring anywiiyT' witnesses told the newspaper. The manager and a security
guard had retrieved the ring, the
Post said, and handed it over to
Trump.
Trump and Maples were in
Washington this weekend for the
wedding of Republican political
consultant Roger J. Stone and
Nydia Bertram, the Post said ..

Asbury UMW h0 /ds dznner
'
A Christmas dinner was he Jd
recently at th e home of Buelah
Ward for members of the Asbury
United Methodist Women.
Mary Lisle opened the business
mceling with a reading about
"Ordinary Persons." "Away in a
Manger" wus sung and prayer was
given by I-Jopc Moore. Scripture
was read from Luke. The officers
reports were given.
The program included a~ pffering after which "Silent Night" was
sung by the members .
A letter was read from Sine
Cera and a gift was prepared for
residents there.
There were 15 shut-in ca ll s

Baptism held
lohnathan David Lehew, son of
John and AJice Lehew of Jackson,
was baptized on Nov. 24 at St. Paul
Lutheran Church, P01111!1'6y.
·
The"Rev: WilliaiiiMiddleswarlh
~{Pf!JlAA ~ bAAii~IIJaJ, r(\es for
~ l!"lll'biiiii on rune 11, 1991.
S_po_nSO!S · were : He,len . and
l:lwlenee Canter of Gallipolis. .
Mary Acker, maternal grandmother, and a cousin, Taken Learer were among those attending the
b~ptismal after which Bill and
Margaret Lehew, paternal giandparents, served a brunch at the
home of Mrs. Harry Davis, great
grandmother.
.
Others attending besides those
named were Sarah Jo Uhe~, sister
·to Johnathan David, Sadie Thuener,
his great-grandmother, Bill Lehew,
an uncle, and the Rev. Ron Shref·
fler and the Rev. Laura Shreffler.

Chester UMW meet
· The December meeting or the
Chester United Methodist Women
was led by Mrs. Kathryn Baum and
Mrs. Betty Newell.
The Christmas story was read
from Luke and the group sang the
hymns, "There 's a Song in the
Air," "It Came Upon a Midnight
Clear," "Silent Night," and "loy to
the World," with Kathryn Baum as
pianist
A poem, "Best Wishes," was
read by Kathryn Baum.
A potluck dinner and gift ,
exchange was held and games were
played with prizes . going to
Kathryn Mora, Sharon Hausman
and Jackie Frost.

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reponed for the month of Novembcr.
Volunteers and cookies arc
needed for the Blood Bank panicipat ion and Mary Lisle, Helen
Teaford, Hope Moore, Kristen
Pape, Irene Parker and Martha
Moore will assist.
The group will meet at the
church on Tuesday to prepare sandwiches and juice will be at the
sen ior citizens center on Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. ·
Secre t pal names were
exchanged and the date book for
1992 was distributed.
The· meeting Closed with the
singing of "Blest Be the Tie That
Binds."

Tuesday, December 10, 1991

_Arlington-based _social group .
helps tall singles see eye to eye
By ANNE GEARAN
Associated PRess Writer
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) Giles Light has no problem meeting women, but says it can be difficult to strike up a 1tonversation
when he's hunched over.
"I'm always bending down or
craning my neck when it's crowded
or noisy.'' said Light, who stands
6-foot-3. "! can't hear the person
l'm talking to." So Light chucked
the bar scene and joined the Tall
Club.
The Arlington-based social
group is made up mostly of young,
single professionals. The minimum
height for membership is 5 feet 101

inches for woinen and-6-2 for men.
"The attraction is that it's nice
to be able to look somebody in tlie
eye when you're talking to them,"
Light said.
..
·" You'd be surprised how many
people say they're tall enough to
JOin but they really aren't," said
club vice president Byron Wolfe.
Height is usually considened an
advant.age but it can have drawbaeks. . .
.
"TaU people are different," said
Wolfe, also 6-foot-3. "For a long
time we've had trouble buying
clothes, fitting into airplane seats,
buying a car. The world is designed

A Christmas workshop was con·
ducted by Nola Young and Ruth
Anne Balderson at the November
meeting of the Riverview Garden
Club held at the Reedsville Church
of Christ.
Marilyn Hannum assisted in
.preparing for the workshop and
each member made a mimature
angel Christmas tree omarrtent.
Thanksgiving devotions were
prepared by Pauline Myers and
read by Grace Weber. Readings
were "When the Frost is on the ·
Pumpkin" and "Let Us Give
Thanks."

Dues and money for program
books were collected and gifts
were brought for Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center patients.
The gifts are to be delivered by
Frances Reed.
Roll call was answered by each
member telling what they were
thankful for.
Finger food was served to the
above named and to Mary Alice
Bise, Betty Boggs, Janet Connolly,
Delores Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Opal Harris, Phyllis
Larkins, Ella Osborne, Marlene
Putman, Gladys Thomas, Nancy

!MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
. STORE
.Is Open For
Your Holiday
Shopping
Needs Daily
From 9:30 a.m.
to 8:00p.m.
and
Sunday
1 to 4 p.m.

men~

They may earn a high school
equivalency degree as well as train
in optional areas like computer
operation, office skills and technical training.
Ohio Civilian Conservation
Corps serves the state by maintaining ·its parks and recreation areas.
The Corps also involves youth in
liner prevention campaigns and
highway beautification projects.
The Civilian Conservation Corps in

the past 12 months have res)ponded
with relief effons at seven natural
disaster sites, including the Shady·
side floodin~.
Anyone mterested in learning
more about the CCC and is invited
to contact the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of .
Civilian Conservation, 1855 Fountain Square. Building H, Columbus, Ohio 43224.

Group to meet
The Women 's Missionary
Group of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church in Pomeroy will
mee t Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
church.
The Missionary Group will be
in charge of caroling and visiting
sh ut-ins and delivering fruit baskets
on Dec. 18 at 6 p.m.
The church will· have a buffet
dinner on Dec. 14 at 6:30p.m. in
the church fellowship hall.
The Chnstmas treat will be
given during morning services on
Dec. 22. The public is invited to
attend.

107 MILL STREET
.MIDDLEPORT, OH.

0'

Westinghouse Electric Corporation and
West Penn Power Company are offering
a $20,000.00 reward for information
leading to the arrest and conviction
of individual(s) responsible for
intentionally damaging a turbine unit
while working at the
.Hjitfield'~ FercyJ~ower .Station
located 'along Route 21 near
Masontown, Pennsylvania,
sometime between
Wednesday, October 23, 1991
and
Monday, October 28, 1991.

0

OR
. call West Penn Power Security
at (412)838-6565.
All information will be treated confidentially.

West Penn
Power

•

Westinghouse

·~Power System

Pick 3: 140
Pick 4: 8242

Cards: 7-H, 4-C, ·

8-D, S·S
U!w tonight In mld·llls.
Tbursday, blgh In upper 50s.

.
a1
-

Vol. 42, No. 154
Copyrighted 1991

Christmas Is ... ------_,

., .......

.

;

•

TRIMMING THE TREE • Residents in the
Meigs County Home are gearing up for the boli·
days. Here, residents Arthur Reeves, Josephine
Mallory, Charles Bush and Jerry Carpenter put
the finishing touches on tbe home's Christmas
tree. Carolers and other yuletide visitors .are

al~ays a welcome site for the 5even men and five
women housed in the infirmary, and those
groups who would lille to visit are asked·to call
prior to coming. Matron Sharon Bailey can be
reached at 992·5469 or 992-2437.

r

Chamber will support
action to locate·new
prison in Meigs County
By BRIAN J. REED
Baker seconded. The resolution
Sentinel News Staff
will be presented to the chamber's
In light of the announcement by Board of Directors at their next
Governor George V. Voinovich regular meeting.
that Meigs County is one of three
Voinovich announced last
counties in Ohio being considered month that Belmont, Noble and
as lhe site for a new prison, the Meigs Counties are being considMeigs County Chamber of Com- ered as potential sites for the new
merce voted Tuesday to approve a medium-security prison. No partieresolution supporting any action of ular site in Metgs County is being
the Meigs County Commissioners considered at.this juncture, and no
in attrlicting the new facility to the official action has been taken by
county.
the commissioners. ·
Chamber President Nick RobinIt was speculated at yesterday's
son suggested the resolution yester· meeting that as many as 300 jobs
day when the general membership could be created by the new facili..
of the chamber met at Overbrook ty.
Center in.Middlepon. Vice PresiBaker reported to the memberdent Charles Kitchen made a ship that three applicants have been
motion that such a resoiution be . interviewed and eight to 10 applidrawn ·up and
David cations are
considered for the
r---

vacant position of Chamber Executive Direclor/Economic Development Director.
Baker said that
three other applicants will be interviewed later this week, but did not
offer a projected time as to when
the position would be filled.
Current Chamber of Commerce
Director/Economic Development
Director Elizabeth Schaad was
scheduled to leave her post at the
chamber at the end of business on
W~nesday. She will .assume her
new duties as Regional Director of
Development for the State of Ohio
on Thursday.
The Meigs High School Choir,
under the direction of Teresa
Davis, peformed a Christmas musical
at the close of the.

-Electric company wants to build
~public aceptanc~ for n~clear po_
wer
becomes the safest, surest, .most
economic and most environmentally beni~n option we have,'' company Chrurman W.S. White said.
White said nuclear waste isn't a
problem if it is buried 2 miles
underground in dry, so tid rock.
White told a uranium-handling .
conference in Oak Ridge, Tenn.,
recently that American Electric
Power wants to begin switching to
nuclear energy at its aging coalfired facilities in seven states.
" We must find a way to make
the nuclear option available for
future capacity additions," White
said.
"The environmental requirements and concerns with global
warming paint a bleak picture for
coal as a low-cost alternative compared to i1s· present position,"
White said. "Within the scientific
community, the jury is slill out as
to whether so-cal led global warm- ·
ing is real.
·
"This is painful for me because

MOSCOW (AP) - Russian
President Boris N. Yeltsin met
to®y with milicacy:commanders to-.
try to win their suppon for the new
Sl~vic commonwealth and indicated that the officers were reassured
by the tallcs.
The meeting came only a cjay

'

,/

.•

after Mikhail Gorbachev tried to
gauge the military's loyalty to his
dissolving Soviet Union. -·
Yeltsin's office refused comment on his meeting with military
brass, held behind closed doors at
the Soviet Defense Ministry.
But a ministry spokesman was

r---Local briefs-__,
G-J-M board to m~et Dec.16
The regular monthly meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board
of Alcohol, Drug Addi.c tion and Mental Health Services will be
held Dec. 16 at the board offices. Meeting time has been changed to
noon.

Pair arrested, returned here
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby rcpons that two men
have been arrested and returned to other counties to face criminal
charges.
.
·
James E. Adams of Toronto, Ohio was arrested Friday night by
local authorities on a sexual battery charge from Jefferson County
and was released to Jefferson County authorities on Tuesday. · ·
• It was reported that Adams bad walked away from the Jefferson
' County Mental Health Center in mid-November, where he·was to
have undergone evaluation.
·
.· Terry Reyoolds, 26, of Long Bottom w~ released to Washington
'County authorities to be returned to Manetta to answer a bench
warrant.
·
:: .Reynolds was arrested late on Saturday in R,acine.
•

.. :Deer accidents probed

.

'

The Meigs County Sheriff's ~epartment investigated ~our
deer/car accidents earlier this week mLetan and Sutton :rownsh1ps.
On Sunday, Keith C. Frank of Wes~rville was traveling on State
Continued on page 3
.
.

•

2 Seellons, 14 Pageo 25 illftlo
A Muldmedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 11,1991

a large part ·or our service territory
is in the coal region," White said.
•'Coal is important to our economy
and we are heavily involved in several clean coal technology programs. But I believe it is a realistic
assessment of the outlook for
coal.' '
The company's consideration or
nuclear power marks a major
change for it, said Norman Kilpatrick, a Charleston consultant
who often testifies against the company in consumer rate case.
"They originally tried tp build
one (nuclear plant) several years
ago in Virginia and they got such a
terrible reaction that they dropped
the idea," he said.
Gregg said n,uclear plants have
been risky propositions to date.
"From the consume~ standpoint,
with nuclear plant track records,
we'll have to look at this with a
very skeptical eye, There have been
huge cost overruns in other systems," said Grep,g.

ENTERTAIN CHAMBER- The Meigs
High School Choir, unde~ the direction of Teresa Davis, enterlained tbe Meigs County Chamber of Commerce with Christmas music at the

.,,

chambe.r.'s full membership meeting,on Tuesday. The meeting was hosted by -Overbrook
Center in.Middleport.

0

BH/HVRDD awar~ed cooperative
agreement by defense agency
(I

.. , By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District Procurement Outreach Center
has been awarded a cooperative
agreement with the defense logistics agency.
The center, located in Marietta,
assists
businesses in procuring ~ov­
quoted as 1elling the Tass news .
emment
contracts - and has a1ded
agency that Yeltsin reass~ them
at
least
one
Meigs County business·
-~ and tlie~worl&lt;l commiJintY in
doing
so.
that he favors unified control over
The cooperative agreement was
the superpower's 2.7 million soldiers and 27,000 nuclear warheads.
It was not clear whether 't'eltsin
meant control would remain in the
hands of Gorbachev's government,
or the new Commonwealth of lode- ,
pendent States of Russia, Ukraine
and Byelorussia that has claimed
control over military policy. The
Retiring board member Harold
three republics, plus Kazakhstan, G. Roush was honored when the
have all the Soviet Union's nuclear Meigs County School Board met in
weapons.
regular session on Tuesday
"Th,ere can be no question evening.
about any division of the armed
Roush was presented a plaque
forces. The world public need have for his years of service. Roush
no worry about it," the ministry served on the board for 36 years,
spokesman, Lt. Gen. Valery and it was noted that he had only
Mamlov, quoted Yeltsm as tcllmg missed one meeting in 36 years.
the meeting, according to.;~·a~s .
In other action, the board voted
10 re-employ Mark Boyd as lite.
board's attendance officer for the
remainder of the 1991-1992 school
year.
Bill Quickel .was appointe4 as
the board's Legislative Liason --for
1992, and Diane Ash was
employed by the board as a substitute teachct:'s aide on an as-needed
basis.
.
The 'board approved the modification of the Teacher Development
Appropriations and approved modific~tion of budget accounts to correct for sick leave, personal leave
and vacation time.
Membership in the Ohio School
Boards Association was also
approved by the boa!d. .
The '1992 orgll!nzauonal meeting was set for January 2, 1992 at 7

Yeltsin meets with military

If you have any information concerning
this incident, please call
the Federal Bureau of Investigation
at (412)471-2000,

ft Part of the Allegheny

'

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (A~)
- American Electric Power Co.
officials hope to convince customers that nuclear power is more
viable than coal as a fuel.
But a.consumer advocate said it
will be difficult selling the idea in
West Virginia and other states
where the coal industry is a major ·
employer.
" ·I can't.believe it would be
received with anything but great
shock in most of AEP's service territory," said Billy Jack Gregg,
head of the state Public Service
Commission's consumer advocate
office.
American Electric, the parent
company of Appalachian Power
Co., is based in Columbus, Ohio. It
serves West Virginia, Virginia,
Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Ten nessee and Michigan.
"Our goal needs to include educating and cultivating lhe public, so
' that gradually and inevitably,
nuclear generation of electricity

•

'

•

PageS

Wachter and Maxine Whitehead.
The Christmas ~Y will be on
Dec. 19 at the home of Ma;tine
Whitehead. Members are to bnng a
present for the gift exchange. ·
The community tree lighting
will be Monday.

Black completes training
Shelley K. Black of Middlepon
has been selected for an 18-month
enrollment in the Civilian Conservation Corps, according to the Ohio ·
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Civilian Conservation.
Black has successfully completed the Corps Training Academy
and staned her work at that Zaleski
facility in McArthur on Nov. 25.
The Civilian Conservation
Corps offers an opponunity for 18
to 24 year old men and women to
receive on-the-job training in areas
like carpentry and landscaping.
Corps members receive compensation at the fedenilly mandated minimum wage during their enroll-

0

fot people of medium height.''
The club offers directories of
specialty clothing stores and other
retailers who cater to the h1gh end
of the populace. ·
The Club also raises money to
fund research and treatment for
Marfan syndrome, a genetic disorder whose effects include unusual
height and lankiness. Some geneticists belleve Abraham Lincoln suffered from the diSe.ase ..
The club's main purpose isn't
much different from most singles'
organizations. Most events are
evening cocktail parties where. singles can meet with less pressure
than in nightclubs; Wolfe said.

Riverview gardeners conduct workshop

Ohio~bottery

-Oklahoma
State trips
foe 77-71

•
contracts is Singer Construction
Company of Pomeroy. That local
operation was recently awarded a
$183,000 contract from WrightPatterson Air Force Base in Dayton.
Funding for services offered at
the POC come from the Defense
Logistics Agency Cooperative
Agreement, the Ohio Department
of Development and the AppalachianRegionaLCommissionr With·lhe·
Cooperative Agreement and other
sources of funding the Center has
expanded its coverage area to
include Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
Monroe, Noble, Perry, Relmont
Morgan and Washington Counties.'
The services offered by the staff
at the BH/HVRDD Procurement
Outreach Center include, but are
not limited to, Bidder Mailing Ust
''
p.m., to be followed by the regular Applications for the various government illlencies, commodity lists,
January meeting.
Ice cream cake was served to counseling on Solicitations, Solicithose present: Roush, Robert Bur· tations from the Commerce Busidette .. Harold Lohse, Bill Quickel ness Daily (a government publicaand Oris Smith. Also attending was tion which advertises all procureJeff Harris, who was el!l(:ted to·the ments greater than $25,000), Smllll
purchases, pre-award and pollboard in November.
award surveys, ~ontrac t administration, quality assurance, military
specifications and standards and a
full library of resources. All services are free of charge except the
1
!If y Y! M\:-, /1.11 1 I\' l.\\
Bidmatch, which is optional.
The official signing of the
.Dec. 11
Cooperative Agreement between
the Defense Logistics Agency and
1'•9~4·1
The BH/HVR DD Procuretnen1
Geimahy and naly
Outreach Center took place at the
declare war on the
.
Travel Host Inn in Marietta at 9
.unald Sl~tea.Uapan~sa ~~ ·· a.m. on Thursday. Representing the
DLA was Thomas Corey, Auoclbegin« majo( attack on .Britain's
ate
Director of Small Business
liang Kong colOny. The 450 U.S. ·
Defense
Contract Management
Manna defenders ot Wllka lilland
Distric~ Mid-Atlantic who an't'at
.•~ a Japanese Invasion tOJ!)e.
the official signing and rqx tJi
SJn~lng two &lt;ltstroye~
·
ing the BHJHVRDD was ))opna
Russell, Director of Procurement
Services.
Local bu~inesses interested in
Scturctt "21114 llt)t 01 Wtt," W. H. Smllt
government
contracting can conltlct
PubUahorslnc.: 'World- t1oo1&lt; or WOnd
Donna Russell at 374·9436.
Wlrii,"BioonBookiCCrp., IIIII

'established to share in,the cost of
establishing or maintaining procurement technical assistance programs. The effective period or the
agreement is October I, 1991
th(Eugh September 30, 1992.
The Procurement Outreach Center (POC) has been in existence
since 1987 and has assisted more
than 220 clients with government
contracts.
·
.. Among . the firms - -.in ~
BH/HVRDD's service area who
have been awarded government

Roush honored by
Meigs County Board

'

WORlD •Alii

-\.

' ',.

I

�</text>
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