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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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141 GOLD ·.

f.L...

EARRINGS

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(lUSTER liNG
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DIIOI11111111 ~
IM'!AlKTIOif
_

25" OFF
SOliD GOLD
DIAMOIID

WEDDING SIT

WASS2~ IJ64

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

�I

Wednesday, Decem~ 11, 19!1

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJI THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Assocoated Press, Inland Daily Press Assocoaloon and
the Amencan Newspaper Publisher Assocoalion.

[ETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long All letters are subject to edttmg and must be stgncd wtth name,
address and telephone number No unSigned !etten wtll be publtshed Letters
should be m good taste, addressmg issues, not personaliues

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, December 11, 1991 •

U.S. Customs looks to recruit from the NFL
WASIDNGTON - Drug dealers may need a new playbook for
thetr future run-ins with the U.S.
Customs Service. Customs ts
acuvely recruning professwnal
foothall players to fight the war on
drugs This ts the Washmgton Redsk ms vs. the Medelltn Cartel,
Lawrence Taylor vs. Pablo Escobar
It's funny, buttltsn'tajoke. It's
an offoctal recrUiltng plan tnlroduced Oct I by AsSIStant Commtsswner for Customs Enforcement
John Hensley. But "Operation
Ptgskin" has been greeted by other
Customs employees with a Bronx
cheer.,
On tts face, the tdea seems reasonable - offering a new hne of
work to retiring NFL players and
addmg some team spmtto lite Customs corps But the plan has

sparked heated debate m the agency on the merits of brains vs. brawn
when tt comes to fightmg lite drug
war.
In an internal memo obtained by
our associate Dean Boyd, Hensley
says the intent of ~ration Pigskin
ts to select "quahfiJ:d personnel
from a large group of aggresstve,
self-motivated, self-disciplined
men ... " He adds that NFL players
are typically in good physical
shape, have worked in adverse condmons, are used to long hours and
are tramed to "perform with a high
degree of perfecllon wtthin the
parameters of the team concept as
opposed to takmg lndtvtdual
aclton." In plam terms, Customs ts
lookmg for men who take orders
without asking questions and Ieick
m doors wtthout complaming about
stubbmg their toes.

\NNIVf.

' I
BILL OF RIGHTS

Eighth Amendment
Allhough ttts the shoncst amendment in the Bill of Rtghts, the Eighth
Amendmen t has engendered substantial controversy Th~ Amendment
s'tates that "excesstve batl shall not be required, nor excesstvc ftnes
omposed, nor cruel and unusual pumshments mlltcted"
By prohtbttmg "excesstve batl" the Etghth Amendment ...:.:hke the
SIXth Amendment - protects lhe nghts of lhe accused who, under our
system, •s presumed to be mnocent unul proven guolty. By proh obttmg
"exccmve ftnes" and "cruel and unusual pumshments," the Etghth
Amendment protects lhe nghts of the convtcted
Hostoncally, there has been debate about what the Framers mtended
when lhcy prohtbited "cruel and unusual puntshmcnts." The roots of lhos
clause can be found in the Enghsh Declarauon of Rtghts of 1689, whtch
was apparently intended to prevent Enghsh courts from tmposmg unauthonzcd and barbaric forms of punishment, such as beheadmg and dosembowehng, on convtcted criminals. Although there ts some dosagreemcnt
about what lite Framers believed consutulcd "cruel and unusual punishments" a century later in 1789, the more common vtcw ts that lite Framers
wanted to prohtbuthe kmd of torturous punoshments that were meted out
by the courts m 17th century England.
Although some dtssenung judges and JUStices d•sagrce, the
Consutution plainly authonzes the imposttton of capt tal punoshmcnt by
leg tslauvc act, smce that was a relauvely common form of punishment at
the umc that lite Bill ofRtghts was adopted.
The Supreme Court has ruled, however, that the "cruel and unusual
pY ntShments" clause prohtbtts sentcncmg a person to death wtlhout provtding procedures that prevent lhe death penalty from bcmg "arbttranly"
tmposed (Furman v. Georgta, 408 U.S 238 (1972)) and confming a person solely because of a mental or physocalollness (Robmson v Cahfomta,
370 u.s. 660 (1962)).
' The Coun has reJected claoms that the "cruel and unusual puntshmcnts" clause pre,vents school teac hers from "paddhng" unruly students
(lngmham v Wnght430 US. 651 (1977)), requores lhat state pnsons be
"comfonable" (Rhodes v. Chapman, 452 US. 337 (1981)) , and bars lcg•slaturcs from tmposing a life sentence wilhout posstbohty of parole on convtcled drug traffickers (Hanmelin v. Michogan, I II S. Ct. 2680 (199 1)).
Thus, although the Court has mvoked lite Etghth Amendment to strtkc
down punishments m exlraordmary cirC\Jmstances, it has not construed
the Amendment to authorize broad mterfercnce wtlh the Judgments of the
federal and state legislattve branches.

Farm Bureau delegates
back term limits
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Term hmits, heallh msurance and expansiOn of ctty
water supphes at the expense of farm land are among the tssues on whoch
delegates to the Ohto Farm Bureau Federatwn annual mceung took a
stAnd.
C. Ray Noecker, fust voce prestdent of lhe state's largest farm group,
satd delegates supponed ltmttmg members of Congress, the state Legislatnie and statewide o[ficcholders to 12 years m offtce. The proposed hmtl'
~Vould not apply to local elected offictals.
.
•• Two groups are trymg to place term hmtl constuuuonal amendments
iin the November 1992 ballot, and four resolutions proposmg related halttilttssues are pendmg m the House and Senate.
'
,• Noecker who farms 850 acres along the Ptckaway-Fntrfteld county
tine ts chai~an of the bureau 's pohcy development commtllcc.
·: Health insurance problems simtlar to those of thousands of people
$tewide also were on lite mmds of delegates at last week's mccung
:. They proposed that fanmers be allowed to deduct I 00 percent of the
~ost of such coverage from lhetr federal and state mcome taxes A 25 pere~nt deduction ts currently permllled on fedeml returns
:- "We're hoping that the state would lake the leadershtp and implement
(t irr_c:gardl~ ?f ~hcther the federal g~vemment does," Noecker satd m
'Ill intervtew.
- Proposals by the ctty of Columbus for developmg new so urces of
~Yater to meet future needs prompted a response from landowners m ccn·
¢II OhiO whose property would be _llooded or used as Sttes for new well
ftclds.
• Delegates stopped short of opposnoon. However, they called lor
increased water conservauon pracuces, water rceycltng, repatr of broken
lines, and chargmg hig~er rates for watering lawns, ftlltng swtmmmg
JX&gt;ols or other non-esscnual uses.
l
• Noecker said delegates also proposed a study of the tmpact litaL cunsiructton of a darn on the Scioto River and resultant floodmg m Delawure
aild Manon counues would have on surroundmg commumttcs.
c. William Swank, fann bureau cxecuuvc vtcc prestdcnt, smd the ctty
should pay attention to the concerns of farmers m Delaware, Manon,
l]mon, and Pickaway counues who would be affec!ed by the proposed
e)lpansoon.
• "Our concern tS that Columbus constder carefully the tmpact of what
they do on landowners and farm owners instead of actmg ltkc they don 't
1 ~ist, which is whatl(lj:y've done," Swank satd.
.: State-related pohc'y tssucs wtll be used by farm bureau lobbytsts .'n
t~eir legislative acuviues dunng lhe next year. Other p,oltctcs dcalmg wtth
Jtnt•onal issues n~x t ~o to lite Amencan Fann Bureau Fedcratoon for dosousston at a mccung m January.
•

The ·memo .htnts at another
mouvatmn, the publicity bonanza
for Cusloms: "The press wtll communicate to football fans everywhere that the NFL ts working m
conjunction with (Customs) ... '' '
Customs is a disorgamzed and
demoralized agency-that needs a
boost in the standings, and a few
big names on the roster mtght help
that. But many Customs employees
who miuaUy sntckered at the plan
and dtsliussed tl are now hopmg tl
will blow over. Huge men are wandering through Customs offtces
around the country, prompting varied responses. "Nothing su~rises
me now. I have seen it all,' satd
one employee.
Someone sktlled in shoving others around for a living is not what
Customs needs right now. One
agent told us, "I think tl will just

'~~~~~~~['
E
,

I

•
AMENDMENT VIII. Excessive bail or fines and cruel punishment prohibited.
Excess1ve ball shall not be requored, nor excessove fmes imposed, nor cruel and unusual
punoshments inflicted.

.

By Jack Anderson :and Dale Van Atta :·

promote a Robo Cop ima~e. And i
guys who pull that type of stuff
usually get shot or shoot somebody
when they don't need to. That's not
the message we noed to be sending ·
out."
.
Customs employees also say ·
thetr work is becommg increasmgly sophisttcated wtth the use of
computers and the onslaught of
major financial invesugaiions such
as the complex Bank of Credit and
Commerce International case. They ·
politely point out that the average
JOCk may not be suited for the job.
"It's not so much that we need to
work btgger. We need to work
smarter," one officJaltold us.
Spectal agents occasiOnally find
themselves m a scuflle with a crimmal, but most of thetr ume IS spent
domg nttty gntty invesllgative
work. And when it comes to kickmg m doors, they usually call the
local pollee.
Why Customs feels compelled
to comb lite ranks of lite NFL is a
puzzle . There are already '2,500 ~
applicants who have passed the
Treasury Enforcement Exam and
are waiting for intervtews. The
slate is so full that the Offtce of
Personnel Management isn't even
taking appltcations.
"I'm not sure why they are
looking at the NFL speciftcally,"
one former consultant to Customs
told us. "It may give Customs
some beuer athleuc abthty, but I
don't mink they will be any better
mentally prepared."
One Customs offictal had his
own speculation, in jest, about why
the agency was interested m football players. "I'm sure someone ·
got one hell of a pair of Superbowl
ltckets."
NUCLEAR SLOWDOWN - .
The collapse of commumsm has
slowed, but not stopped the production of nuclear warheads m the
Untted States. The full tmpact of
changmg world events won't be
felt until 1993 when nuclear '
weapons productiOn wtll begm to .
taper off. The Untted States has
produced about 60,000 nuclear
weapons, but on Iy 20,000 of those
arc still usa ble Out of those,
12,000 are stratcgoc and are still silting ready for a strtke agamstthe
Sovtet Union.

..

'

When perception becomes reality_~~=-=~~-~~
While the curtam has come
down on the 1991 seSSion of the
102nd Congress, work contmues m
the nation 's capital as legtslators
attempt to forge a biparttsan economtc recovery package that woll
pass muster wilh the Congress and
the Whote House. As thts column
goes to press the House Ways and
Means Committee ts m the midst of
a series of pubhc heanngs destgned
to gove hght to a senes of tdcas and
proposals that can be assembled
onto an acceptable and mcanmgful
pump-pnmmg measure that can get
the economy back m htgh gear.
One would thmk that wnh the
relattvely low mterest rates that
cxtst and lhe low and stable rate of
mflatoon, consumer conftdencc
would be htgher than 1tts Unfortunately however, the pubhc appears
to have grown mcreasmgly tmpatient wtlh lhe pace of the country's
economic recovery.
Perhaps we are a product of lite
" tnstant age" m whtch we ltve
Much ltke 'our appcttle for fast
foods and fast servtce, the Amencan publtc has come to expect fast
soluuons to our country's economIC tlls. When such solutoons arc not
readily forthconung, the Amencan
public appears increasmg ly
mclined to ampltfy the magnttude
of the problem.
No one would sugges t that the
economy is rebounding from tls
recent down-cycle as quockly as we
would hke, but at the same ttme,
few cconom tc analysts would con-

elude that the economy ts m free
fall. Few analysts would suggest
that radical surgery is requlfed to ·
re store our economy to good
health.
Many feel as I, however, that
the recovery can be hastened by
prescnbing a more rigorous and
hands-on form of treatment. Until
recently, most assumed the old
hands-off, "laissez-faire" approach,
(or to keep it m.. medical terms, a
bed rest approach) was the most
risk free path to full recovery . Normally I would agree wtth this time
proven and prudent approach to
recovery, but unfortunately, I'm
afraid that public percepuons have
dictated that we must do otherwise.
When the collecuvc mindset of the
American public ts filled with pesstmism, when the public percetves
that the economy is going to the
dogs, (whether u is or not) Iitts perce puon has a way of becommg
reality When we as a nation
become conditioned to qegative
thmktng, no good can come of it.
When one thmks bad things,
bad things normally happen. Poor
pcrceptton leads to poor perfor·
mance. Poor performance leads to
poor profots, and before you know
tt, we've collccttvcly wtlled ourselves mto an economic skod that
ncedn' l have happened.
It is m part because of such
thmkmg that we now find ourselves at a criltcal economic Juncture. -We can contmuc to let the

patient (the economy) tangutsh
(rest) or we can try to accelerate
the tmprovcmcnt of the patient' s
mental and physical health by tak·
mg a more direct role in the rceupcrauon process. By getung more
d~rcctly mvolved tn the recovery
process, we wtll hopefully bc,rcfocusmg the p~uent's outlook and
gmng the paucnt t~ c needed
encouragement to realtze a full and
more rapod recovery.
To.,ard tht s end, I recently
mtroduced a btll (H.R. 4005) that I
feel wtll accompltsh the kind of
economic sttmulauon that is necessary to get our economy back to
good health. G1ven that our country's two most troubled manufactunng sectors arc the housing and
automobtle mdustrtes, I mtroduced
a btll atmed at provtdmg Amenca's
middle-class with generous, onetime incenttvcs to purchase such
products.
Spectftcally, my two-part economtc recovery btU calls for the
granting of multo-year tax crcdtts to
be provided to eligible wage earners when purchastng a home or a
new, Amencan made, energy-efftctent ~utomobilc.J n.!~c .casc of a _
home purchase, a tax credit of 20%
of the purchase price (up to
$20,000) could be taken over ftve
years wilh not more lhan 4% (or a
$4,000 credit) bemg allowed m any
one year.
In the case of a new car purchase, a tax crcdtt of 30% of the
purchase pnce (up to $4,500) could

be taken over thr~ years wtlh not
more than 10% (or a $1,500 credtl)
being allowed in any one year. Eltgibihty would be open to any famt·
ly with a JOint adjusted gross
mcome of not greater than $60,000
and to any smgle wage earner woth
an adjusted gross mcome of not
greater than $40,000 Such purchases would have to be made
wtthm two years of lite enactment
of lhos lcgtslauon.
The thmkmg behind thts measure ts that it wtll prompt consumers to take quick advantage of
th ese credits and by so domg,
greatly increase the demand for
new homes and new cars, while m
th e process putting countless
tradesmen back to work m these
depressed tndustries. The increased
sales for new cars and homes that
such a bill would create would not
only genemte new JObs and new tax
revenues for the federal treasury,
but at the same time would ease lite
social service caseload that has
resulted from the large layoffs m
these manufactunng sectors.
In clostng, tt is IllY intenuon to
submit tesumon y to the Ways and
Mcans-Comm ottcc in support of
thos lcgoslation m that I feel measures such as H R. 4005 could play
a sigmftcant role m hastening the
pace of our nauon s economic
recovery. I don't profess that such
bolls arc a panacea, bull do suggest
that tl " ltmc to uttltzc more
aggressovc and unorthodox means
to get the recovery onto hogh gear.

Energy Credit Pr9gram---r-__se_n._1a_nM_._Lo~ng
Estabhshed m 1979 by the Ohto
General Assembly, lite Ohio Energy Credot Program was destgned to
help low-mcome elderly and dtsabled Ohtoans survive lite htgh cost
of heaung their home or aparunent
In order to qualify for the Ohw
Energy Credit Program , an appltcant and/or spouse must be Jhe
head of the household, be at least

'

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISTMAS by Lane and Miller

65 years of age, and have a com bined total annual income of no
more than $9,000.
Whereas the deadltne for applying for benefits for the l~!ll-1992
heating season was September 3,
1991 and therefore, passed, I fclttt
was 1mponant to dtscuss the current efforts to expand eligibility
reqUirements for succeeding ycais .
Currently, approved appltcants
who recetve energy from electric,
natural gas, or a retatl propane
dealer lhat distributes propane by
pipeline and whose lllCome ts less
than $5,000 qualify for a '30% cred. it for the five month heatmg season(November through March) ,
Appltcants wtth an income over
$5,000 but less than $9,000 qualtfy
for 25% credit.
In addition, approved applicants
who purchase energy or C(lmmodities from a retail dealer in file I oil,
propanc(01her than by pipeline),
coal, wood, or kerosene quaUfy for
a one-time payment of $125 provtded that at least that amount has

or wtll be spent for the heatong season (July through February). Proof
of payment m~st be provtdcd upon
request
·
Smce the eltgtbtltty requtrcmcnts have not been adjusted since
th e program was first begun 14
years ago, I am co-sponsoring legtslation lhat will revtse the eltgibth·
ty rcqutremcnts to adJust for innauonary changes. Because eligibility
has not been adjusted for rising
inflation over the years, significantly less elderly and d1sabled
Ohioans can qualify for the energy
credots This legislation, Senate Btll
261, was mtroduoed onto the Ohto
Senate on November 26.
Senate Btll 261 wtll expand ehgtbility for the 30% credotto those
quahfymg applicants with mcome
of less than $9,000 rather than the
current $5,000 limit.
The 25% credit will be extended
to those qualifying applicants wilh
income of less ihan $16,000 rather
than the current $9,000 lima. In
addition, the legislatton wtll
I

mclude an automatic adjustment
mechanism that will give the Tax
Commtssioner the responsibility to
revtew cligtbility levels every three
years and revise them according to
Consumer Price Index changes in
cost of livmg.
There were 128,437 total applicants for the Ohto Energy Credtl ·
Program who recetved about $I 5.9
million in cash payments or utiltty
bill credi~~ for the 1989-1990 heatmg season, the latest year whtch
staustics are available. Br expand- :
mg the eligibtlity requtrements,
more Ohioans and, m particulat, :
more elderly and dtsabled residents :
of Southern Oh10 wtll be able to ·
take advantage of this important ;
benefot.
'
As always, please fee\ Jree to
call or wnte me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, tf you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my ad~ is
the Statehouse, Colul!lbus Ohio,
.43215.
"

.

,.....___ Local-briefs...,·;.,; ,~...,;,._,r
Continued from page 1
Route 338 in Lebanon Township m his 1977 Volkswagen van when
he struck a deer that ran mto tlte path of his van. Moderate damage
was listed to the van; the deer was not !tilled.
On Sunday evening at6:30 p.m., Don Rose of Portland was east·
bound on State Route 124 in Lebanon Townshtp. He struck and
killed a deer that ran into the path of hts 1991 Ford'jiickup truck.
L1ght damage was reported to the truck.
At 6 a.m. on Monday mommg, John C. Hankinson, Jr., 46, of
Balttmore, Ohio, was eastbound on State Route 124 'in Lebanon
Townshtp in his 1988 Chevrolet truck and struck a deer than
jumped into hts vehicle's path. Moderate damage was sustained by
the truck.
Dale Proffitt of Racme was westbound on- state Route 124 m
Sutton Townshtp when he struck and ktlled a deer lhat ran into lite
path of hts 1983 Oldsmobtle. Moderate damage was hsted to lite
car.

EMS units answer eight calls
Eight calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday and early
Wednesday by units of Meigs County Emergency Med1cal Servtces

.

~~

At 10:08 a.m., Pomeroy units went to State Route 7 and Flatwoods Road at Five Points for a motor vehtcle accident. Ruth Smtth
was taken to Holzer Medical Center. Edna Harmon and Harry Harmon were taken to St. Joseph Hospital. Atll:I2 a.m, Rutland unit
went to Darwin for Gladys Blessing, who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
At 6:56 p.l)l., Rutlan~ squad went to Wright Roag, Beulah
Wright was taken to Holzer. At 8:33 p.m., Betty Vining was transported from Condor Street to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
Pomeroy squad. At 10:16 p.m., Pomeroy unit was sent to Spring
Avenue for Rhonda Stover, who was taken to Veterans.
On Wednesday at 2:36a.m., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine
31. Rtchard Hatfield was taken to Veterans. At 4:55 a.m., Tuppers
Plruns unit went to State RouJce §l!l~ John Brewer was transported 10
St. Joseph. At 10:20 a.m., Rutland untt went to State Route 124.
Beatrice Kennedy was taken to Holzer.

Middleport financial
statement released
A balance of $463,923.32 was
shown m all village funds at the
end of November, according to the
report of Jon Buck, clerk-treasurer
for the Village of Mtddlepon.
Total receipts for the month
were $110,449.09 while dtsbursements were$111,595.37.
The general fund showed a balance of $26,453.48 with recetpts of
$42,977.64 and dtsbursements of
$19,586.88. The fire truck fund
showed a balance of $380.701.71
wtth $5,996.93 tn recetpts and
$4,797.65 in dtsbursement s. A
major part of lhat money woll gp to
pay for the new ladder truck for the
Mtddlepon Fire Depanment whtch
ts expected to be deh vered later
thts month.
Other funds wtlh a postttve balance, the receipts and disbursements, on lite Nov. 30 repbrt, were
as follows·
Economtc
Development:
$3,840 86 balance; $791.95,
recetpts; $1,036.68, disbursements.
Public
Transportauon ,
$3,567.57, balance; $12,205.50
recetpts, $II ,051.17, dtsburse,
ments.
Water System Improvement:
$37 ,209.55, no receipts , no dtS·
bursements.
Water Fund: $36,657.24, balance; $14,144.39, recctpts ,
$16,669.90 disbursements.
San nary Sewer: $36,045.7 5,
balance; $11,550.23, receipts,
$I 0,608.47 disbursements.
Water Meter Trusts; $20,727.98,
balance; $780, rceetpts, $310, dts·
bursements.
Rcvolvmg Fund: $40,858 32,
balance: $917.45 recetpts, no dts-

. bursements.
Refuse Fund: $1,606.71 , balance, $9,022.98 recetpts, $8,667,
disbursements.
Funds showmg a deftctt bal ance, receipts and dtsbursements,
were as follows:
Street Maintenance: $35,365.17
def1ctt; $5,949.71, recetpts.:
$8,436 02, disbursements.
Mtm-golf: $10,217.30 dcftctt;
no rece1pts, and $}85.85 dtsbursemcnts.
Ftre Equipment: $2,857.62
dcfictl: $4,760.07 receopts, $967 15
dtsbursements.
ODNR Waterways Safety:
$1,000 deficit.
Swimming Pool: $34,942.33
defictl, with no receipts, and
$1,104.17 disbursements.
Cemetery: $14,827.77 defictt,
wtth $987.34 receipts, and
$2,818.19 disbursements.
Arts Council, $838.40 deficn;
$365.90 receipts, $392.39 dtsbursements.
ARC Housing, $17,373.71
dcficu; no receipts, $1,838.880 disbursements.
Issue 2: $6,324 .55 deftcit, no
recetpts, no disbursements.

Announcements
AA meeling
A 12-step AA meetmg wtll
begtn Sunday at 7 p.m at the JTP A
offtce tn Pomeroy, 117 West Second Street
Dance to be held
There wtll be a round and
square dance atthe.Rutland Amert-can Legton Hall on Saturday from
8 p.m. to midntght wtlh mustc to be
provided by Country Km Band.
Ray Fnch wtll be the caller and the
publtc ts mvited to attend.

Tite J?aily Sentinel
(USPS 218-960)
Pubhshed every 11.tlernoon, Monday
through Fnday, 1U Court SL , Pomeroy,
Oh1o by the Oh1o Valley Pubhahina:
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pottage ,.,d at Pomeroy, Oh1o.
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Daily Preu Alaoci1t10n and the Ohio
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Advert111ng Representative, Branham
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New YOrk, New YOrk 10017
· •

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The Dally 9entlnet-Pege 3

Pomeroy-Middleport10010

Dismal-weather forecast next few days
thts date at the Columbus weather Rockies.
By The Associated Press
Rain fell tn Las Vegas, and
Dismal weather was forecast for station was 66 degrees m 1931
, Ohio the next few days with cloudy The record low was 9 below zero locally heavy showers were foreskies .and frequent ram. On Satur· in 1917.
cast m central Anzona. It wa~
Sunrise' th1s morning was at cloudy over eastern New Mextct!'
day, the rain eould turn to snow,
the Nauonal Weather Servtce satd. 7:43 a.m. Sunset wtll be at 5:06 and western Texas, and rain was
forecast for the area.
Temperatures gradually will be p.m .
Around the nation
The East was wanm agam
turning a httle colder. The highs
Moist wr from the Pacific Ocean
Temperatures were predtcted in
Sunday may not be above freezmg
produced showers m the Southwest the 30s in the upper Mtdwest and
m some places, forecasters said
The record high· temperature for today. Snow fell in 1he southern • northern New England; m the 40s

Weather
South·Cenlral Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
low 35-40. Thursday ; mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers late m
the afternoon. Hig~ in the upper
50s. Chance of tam is 40 percent.
Extended forecasl:
Friday through Sunday:
A chance of showers Friday. A
chance of ram or snow Saturday. A
chance of llurries northeast Sunday, fatr elsewhere. Highs in the
mid-40s to mtd-50s Friday, mid30s to mid-40s Saturday and 30-35
Sunday. Lows in the mid-30s to
mtd-40s Fnday, 30-35 Saturday
and m the 20s Sunday.

Coll~ction

results

A total of $363 was collected
f - ae IJlll'*ll metal ill Novelli·

~-!\l"'llltMiddlt­
)!011 Police Ciief Stdney Little.

The merchant police collectio9
was $121 and during the montH
192 parkmg uckets were wnuen.
The depanment arrested 76 persons
and investigated I~ accidents .
,\II

through the lower Great Lakes:
regmn and in the Northwest; m flie:
50s through the Ohio Valley and •
Northern California; in the 60s in '
Southern California; in the 70s
along the Gulf Coast; and in the
80s m Miami.
'the htgh temperature for the
nauon Tuesday was 85 at Mel-;
bourne, Aa.

CIA paints bfeak picture of Soviet turmoil
WAS!llNGTON (AP) - Worrted CIA analysts foresee a Sovtet
Union shattered by shortages of
food and fuel, its military disheanened and Without disctpline and tts
once commandmg leader reduced
to a figurehead.
Those developments, CIA
Duector Robert Gates says, will
lnean a winter of soctal unrest
unmatched since the Bolshevtks
came to power m 1917. It's a
prospllct made all the more unsettling-by the continued presem:e of
nearly 30,000 Sovtet nuclear
weapons.
.
"The situation is dangerously
unstable," Gates told the House
Armed Services Commmee on
Tuesday. "The economy is m a
Cree fall with no prospects for
reversal in sight''
For the leaders of the increasmgly independent Sovtet republics,
at least m lite shon term, "we are
deeply concerned that the enormous economtc and social challenges .. may overwhelm them,"
Gates srud.
He added that dtsctpltne and
cohesion m the formerly powerful
Red Army were dtsappeann g.
Shonages of food, fuel and housmg
for troops were undermtnmg
morale and the rehabthty of the
forces was "dubious," he sat d.
At the same ltm e, Robert
Strauss, the U.S. ambassador to
Moscow, repeated warnin~s that
the volaule sttuation could g1ve nse
to a nauonalist, demagogic leader
who would fan ethnic tensions and
tgnite civtl war.

offictals.
Speaking to reporters in Chicago on Tuesday, Bush said the United States ts carefully following
developments in the Soviet Union.
The prestdent on Tuesday also
St~ned into law Jegtslalion normalizmg trade relauons with the Sovtets. Congress approved the "most
favored nation" trade status for lhe
Soviets JUSt lx;fore adJournmg last
month.
!n publtc tesllmony to the
boards.''
Aspm also cnttctzed Prestdent Armed Servtces Commtttce, Gates
Bush for his reluctance to endorse a
$1 boUton package of US. a1d to
the Sovtets JUSt before Cong,ess
adjourned for the year. Bush's
stlence forced Aspm and other law- Darrell Vining
Darrell (Leo) Vimng, 70, of 203
makers to push through on thetr
Condor
Street, Pomeroy, dted
own a shrunken version that proTuesday,
Dec. 10, 1991 at h1s restvtdes $400 milhon to help dismandence.
tle Moscpw's nuclear arsenal.
A former coal mmer, he was
The commtUee' s senior Republican, Rep. William Dickinson of born In Meigs County on Aug. 3,
Alabama, satd Gates told lite panel 1921, the son of lhe late Howard
m private that Soviet Prestdem and Mmnte Nelson Vinmg.
He ts survived by hts wtfe ,
Mtkhatl S. Gorbachev "is losing
Bealrtce
Bolm Vining, Pomeroy, a
out" as central control unravels.
daughter,
Donna Ruth Stobart,
"He will have to etlher restgn or
Racme,
two
sons and daughters-tobe a figurehead only, because he
law,
Roger
Howard
and Peggy Ann
doesn't have any force behmd
Vmmg,
Syracuse,
and
Gregory Lee
htm,'' Dtckmson said.
and Brenda Lee Vming, MtddleTwo other sources who auended port; 10 grandchildren, a brother,
the bnefmg, speakmg only on con- Eldon Vtntng, Rutland; and three
dttton of anonymity, satd Gates ststcrs, Phyllis Vtntng of Middleportrayed Gorbachev as m charge port, Frances Overholts of Eaton,
only of lite country's forctgn rela- and B ~mtce Jeffers of Bradbury
Bes'tdes his parents, he was preuons and satd even that power ts
eroding.
" He' s not gomg to nsc from the
ashes thts umc," satd one of th e

Strauss was due to testify today
before the Armed Services Com·
mittee, which Chainnan Les Aspin,
D·Wis ., said is beginning yet
another re-examination of U.S.
defense spending in hght of the
changmg Soviet threat.
'
"The whole Sovtet Umon IS
dtsappearm~." Aspm said after a
two-hour closed-door bnefmg by
Gates lhat followed a pubhc h~­
mg. "We're back to the drawmg

referred to the dismtegraung super·
power as the "arsenal that used to
be a country." He srud the system;
controlling Sovtet nuclear weapons
ts bemg severely tested.
,
'
A h1ghly disc1plined command
system has been mamtamed until .
oow, Gates satd, buttts destgners .
never an!Jctpated the )lind of tur-:
mool the country now faces.
.
Dtckinson saod Gates told the.
commtttee privately lhat the Untted:
States doesn't know how the Sovi- ·
ets controlthetr nuclear arms.

--Area deaths-......._:
ceded in death by a brother, Kenneth, two sisters, Betty Sarver an~ ~
Marie Jones, and an mfant brother
and stster.
,
Funeral servtces wtil be held
Thursday at I p.m. at the Ewmg
Funeral Home. The Rev Samuel
Basye woll officiate and burial wilL
be m the Rock Springs Cemetery.
Froends may call at the funeral
home after 10 a.m. Thursday.
.

Leona Karr .,_
Mrs. Charles R. (Leona) Karr,
Sr., 86, died Tuesday mght, Dec.
10, 1991, at the Extended Care
Facihty, Veterans Memonal Hospi- .
tal Funernl arrangements are pendong and wtll be announced by
Ew_mg Funeral Home

•

Eight tined in Middleport court ··

PUCO approves measur~ to
protect cash-strapp~d customers
COLUMBUS,Ohm(A~ ­

Customers who can't pay a Columbus Southern Power Company rate
mcrease won't have thetr service
disconnected, the Public Utilittes
Commission of Ohio ruled.
The PUCO ruled at an emergency meeting Tuesday that the uulity
cannot dtsconnect service to customers who can't pay a 28.4 percent increase lhat begms Jan. 3.
"Wtth wmter and the holtdays
upon us, the commissiOn feels tt ts
tmportantlo protect those who
can't afford to pay the mcrease,"
said Cha!l11lan Craig Glazer.
"This is not a free nde," he
added " We're not saymg that customers don't have to pay mcreased

Highway patrol
schedules so,Jlriety
Hospital news
checkpoints
COLUMBUS, Oh fo (AP) Sobnety checkpoints wtll be oper·
aung this weekend, lhe State Highway Patrol satd.
The checkpomts are set up as a
deterrent to drunken drtving and to
apprehend drunken dnvers, Col.
Thomas Rtce, patrol supenntendent, Sllld Monday
The checkpoint locatwns and
hours of operatiOn wtll be
announced later.
"Our ultimate goal 1s 10 conunue the decline 10 Ohto of htghway
deaths due 10 drunk or drugged
driving," said state Htg hway Safety Dtrector Charles D. Shtpley.
He satd alcohol-related Ohio
traffic deaihs-tiave declinecffrom
795 m 1987to 623 m 1990.
''The combmation of publi c
awareness campmgns and effective
drtnktng drtver enforcement ts
maklhg the difference," Shtpley
satd.
It will be th e 20th time the
patrol has operated checkpoints.

I rom northern New York state

Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Laura Cozart , Rae me, Donna
Smtih, Racme; and Curtts Rifne,
Racme.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES ·
Celia Htle, Flora Bailey and
Gaynelle Clark.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Dec. 10 - Geneva
Braley, Foster Bumgardner, Ruth
Ebersbach, Kaylene Errell, Bertha
Holling sworth, Rhonda Rogers,
Brandy Russell , Florence Well and
Carolyn Yates
Birlhs D c. 10 _ Mr and Mrs
e
John Coon, son, Wellston. Mr. and
- Mrs.- Ro ger Keefer, son, Potnt
Pleasant, WVa

Fire report
The Middleport Ftrc Department answered a total of 56 calls tn
November, accordmg to Jeff Darst,
ftre chief. He noted that the total
tncludcd II fire and rescue ca lls
and 45 EMS calls.
Of the fires, two were brush or
trash fires, three were for vehocles,
one was for a hazardous condotton,
one a rescue call, and four were for
mutual atd to another depanment.

Eight were fined and mne others Kenny R. Stewart, Mtddleport,
forfetted bonds m the coun of Mtd· $200 and costs, reckless operation;
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tues- Carol G. Mowery, Middleport, $15
day, night
fine only on speedmg; Richard G.
Fmed on four charges m the Friley, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
rates. We want to protect those
court as the result of his mvolve- dtsorderly manner; Ktmberly L.
who are truly in need."
Customers who can't pay the ment m two acc1dents on Sunday Evans, Chauncey, $10 and costs,
higher rates must prove their finan- was Ketth Pelrte, Alta Vtsta, Va., expired operator's hcensc, and $10
ctal hardship to the utihty and dts· $425 and costs and three days in and costs, fict1Uous tags; Johnny E.
putes will be referred 19 the com- Jatl for dnvmg a motor vehtcle Donohue, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
whole under the mnuence of alco- cxptred regtstrauon, and $100 and
mtssion, he swd.
hol
, $100 and costs for dnving costs, dnvmg under suspension:
The measure IS effecuve unul
under
suspensiOn; $50 and costs for and Donny Stone , Mtddleport, ·
Apnll5.
failure
conlrol to control his veht· $100 and costs, possess1on of mariThe rate for a restdential customer usmg 700 kilowatt hours of clc, and $100 and costs for leavmg Juana
Forfettmg bonds were James M
elc ctrtclly per month would the scene of an acetdent
Others fined were Harold Emerson, Akron, $60, no opera•
mcrease $16.21 underthe plan. The
current monthly rate tS $52.98, the Queen, Jr., Mtddleport, $25 and tor's hcense, and $60, expired tagsi
costs, disorderly manner, and $100 Rtchard E Carter, Gallipolis, $60,
utdtly satd.
The company has saod tl needs and costs, fleemg a pohcc officer, spcedmg;. Donald W. Price, Rut•
land, $57,'speeding; Aoyd W. Carto ratse money qutckly to help
son, Pomeroy, $50, speedmg; Don
cover th e cost of converting th e
Russell, Bidwell, $54, ~peeding;
Zt mmer power plant from nuclear
Mochellc R: Hall, Mtddlcpon, $53,
to coal-fored operatoons. The plant,
speedmg; Ernest R. Oldaker, Nellocated along the Oh•o Rtver at
so~vtlle, $60, no operator's ltcense;
Moscow, staned commcrctal operCharlene
K. Yonker, Letart, W,
auons m lylarch .
The second annual holtday Va., $60, exptred regtstratton; and
The uultly ts allowed to tem - church tour of the Middlepon Arts
porartly mcrease mtes tf lite PUCO Counctl wtll be held Sunday from Derek Mtller, Rutland, $60, runnong a stop stgn
has not dcctded a case withtn 275 I:30 to S p.m.
days of lite applicauon. But Glazer
Thts year nine churches arc
sa1d the provision was rarely mcluded on the tour whtch can stan
invoked in lite past.
at any of the churches anytime durSPRING VALLEY CINEMA
mg the destgnated time.
446 4524 " . ,' . :, .
All of the churches wtll be decP.A~(M "'T!II[[S SATUM!Al I SUIIM.Y
orated for the season. Some will '
Mfi~IN NIGIO n!fSDAY
IIOL.ICAY (i [Fl tERHF!t.lilES IIOW AVAILABLEI
have special mustc throughout the
afternoon, and others wtll be scrvAm Elc Power.... ..... .32 I /2
mg refreshments.
Ashland Otl
26 7/8
There is no charge for the tour
AT&amp;T.. ..... ....
37 1/2
and Bend area residents arc mvtted
Bank One .. .. .. .. ... .46
Ito share in the beauty and wannth
BobEvans .............. 211/4
of the churches.
Charmmg Shop... ....
...23 3/8
Parti Ctpaung are th e V
Ctty Holdmg_._.."......... ... 17
· Bapttsr-Church, North l(•e t, nni~ -­
Federal Mogul.. ....~ ........ 12 7/8
Strect; RCJOICtng L1fe Church,
Goodyear :r&amp;R ............. .47 1/4
North Second: Ftrsl Presbytcroan,
Key Centurion.. ..... ... 14 1/4
North
Fourth; F~rst Baplost Church,
Lands' End ....... ...... . ... 25 1/2
Corner
of Soxlh and Palmer, Mtd·
Limned Inc. .... .. . .. ... 27 5/8
Multimedta Inc .......... 21 1/2 dlcport Church of Chrost, South
Ftflh and Matn; Heath Unotcd
Rax Restaurant . ... . .. .. 9/16
Mclhodtst Church, Soulh Third and
Robbms&amp;Myers .... .. .... 31 1/2
Mam, Untted Pentecostal, South
1 00 PPI OA !Lt
Shoncy's lnc...
.. ... 207/8
Thtrd;
Mtddleport
Church
of
the
SAT / SUM 11ATIME£S
Star Bank . ... ...
.. 25 1/8
1 00 ,] 00
Nazarene , Beech Street, and Ash
Wendy lnt'l .... ... .... 8 5/8
l•l
Street Free Will Baptist Church,
Worlhmgton Ind.... ..... 20 1/4
Ash Street.
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

Church tour
slated Sunday

Stocks

~~~
Speci~l 'o f the Week!

HAMBURGER

74C

WITH .FRIES............... $1.44

ING·ELS ELECTRONICS

ftad1e /hae"
DEALER

t06 N. 2ND

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�.

'

Wednesday, December 11, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

-The .Daily.Sentinel

Sports

Kentucky, I~diana~among -Tnesd~y's college cag~ victors .·.. · ·
B;rThe AS8Qciated 'Pres$
Utah State's bigg~st. win in .
r17ent years was Utah s ftrst loss
th1s season and first at home m 20
games.
. The Ag~ies trailed by seven
'Yith f1ve mmute.s to play and~hed for a 62-62 be after regulation..
Utah State then we~t 8-for:lO from
the free throw line m overume for a
74-72 v1ctory over the lOth-ranked
Utes, a wm wh1ch made up for a
71-62 home loss to the in-state
nvallas\ wee!&lt;:. ·
. .

· . Wednesday, December 11, 1991
'

Pag~

Meigs defeats Belpre 65-61 on Harrison's 36-point clinic
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Joh n Bentley's IS-footer along
the right baseline with :07 seconds
left gave the Meigs a two point
lead and after a Belpre turnover
Trevor Harrison hit two free throws
to ice the victory as the Marauders
defeated Belpre 65-61 Tuesday
evening at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasi um . It was the season opener
for both teams.
·The victory capped off a furious
comeback for the Marauders, coming back from a 15 point deficit
early in the third period before
tying the game heading into the
final period.
.Trevor Harrison picked up this
year where he left off last season
pouring in a career high 36 points,
hitting 12 of 15 shots from the
floor and cashing in on 12 of 14
from the free throw line.
Belpre came out of the blocks
fast opening up a 11-4 lead on a
bucket by Matt Wilcoxen with 3:00
minutes left in the period. But
t.acigs came soaring back scoring
nine of the next II points including
a•Lhree pointer by John
and
. Ben~ey
.

.

tied the game at 13 on a tip in by one coming off a steal and lay:up beautiful moves through the paint. turnovers and eight steals.
Bentley a 6•1 junior also had an
Harrison with three seconds left in with 1:48left in the period.
In the res~rve game Belpre
outstanding
game for the Maraud- gamed the spin by defeating the
the period.
Buckets by L. J. Mitch (1:05)
Belpre came out playing excel- and Harrison (:39) cut the Belpre ers with 17 points, nine coming Little Marauders 39-36. Chuck
. ·
lent defense in the second period lead to 43-42. After a missed Bel- • from three pomt range.
Ga·rvey led the winners with I 0.
Belpre put three players in dou- . Ja~k Stanley led Meigs wiJl112 . ..
opening up an 12 point lead on a pre shot, Bentley was fouled and
bucket by Chad King with 2:13 left the junior hit both free throws with . ble figures with Erin Hall leading Eni:: Wagner added II for Meigs.
in the half. Meigs cut it back to six seconds left and the Marauders the way with 16, Wilcoxen added
The Marauders will travel to
·
nine on two Harrison free throws held a 44-43 lead heading into the · 14 and Bradley added 11.
Athens on Saturday evening to play
with 2:05 left in the half. But a final period.
Both teams hit 23 qf 43 from .the Tim Smith's Bulldogs.
bucket in the paint by King .gave ... ·· Meigs quickly opened up a eight floor for 53 percent. Meigs was Quarter totals . - Belpre a 33-221eading at the half.
pomt lead (53-45) on a bucket-by three of II from three point range. Belpre ~............... l3 20 10 18 = 61
The Golden Eagles looked like Harrison with 6:05 left in the game, The' Marauders cashed in on 16 of Meigs .................13 9 22 21 = 65
they were going to put the game but Belpre came back to tie ·the 20 from the line for 80%. Meigs
BELPRE (61)- Tony Bradley
away when Russ Jacob hit a three score at 56 with 3:01 left in the had 19 rebounds with Mitch grab- . 4-0-3-11, Erin Hall 7-0-2-16, Chad
pointer to give the visitOrs a 39-24 · game on a three pointer by Wilcox- bing seven, the Marauders commit· Williams 0-0-4-4, Mall Wilcoxen .
ted 21 turnovers. Meigs had 12 2-3-1-14, Russ Jacob 1-2-0-8, Chad
lead with 6:48 left in the third peri- en.
od.
·
steals
with Mitch getting a team King 2-0-0-4, Mark Ohl 1-0-0-2.
L. J. Mitch picked up his fifth
But Bentley started the Meigs foul for the maroon and gold with high five and 15 assists with Bent- Travis Wells 1·0·0·2. TOTALS comeback when he hit a long three 2:56 left in the game, but Meigs ley chalking up six and Frank 15·5-10-61
pointer with 6:23 left to cut the received a big break when Chad · Blake five.
MEIGS (65)- Shawn Hawley
lead to 12 with 6:23 left. That Williams picked up a technical foul
Belpre wa§ I 0 of 19 from the 2-0-0-4, L.J. Mitch 2-0-2-4, Trevor
started a string of 14 straight on the play. Harrison hit one of two line for 53%, the Golden E&lt;!gles Harrison 12-0·12-36, John Bentley
Marauder points that was capped technical foul shots and the grabbed 20 rebounds with Travis 3-3-2-17, Phil Hovatter 1-0-0-2.
off when Shawn Hawley hit a 10 Marauders went back on top 57-56. Wells getting four. Belpr~ had 14 TOTALS- 20-3-16-65
footer to cut the lead to 39-38 with
Neither team scored until the
3:24 left in the period.
1: Ii mark when Harrison was
Tony Bradley gave Belpre a 43- called for a questionable goal tend38 lead on two straight baskets in a · ing call giving Travis Wells a
span of 13 seconds. The second bucket and Belpre a 58-57 .leap
with I: 12 left in the game.
But Harrison gave Meigs th e
lead at 59-58 when he hit two free
throws with I :03 left. Trevor came
up with a steal at half court and
increased the Meigs lead to 61 -58
.
lmntoo 66, Ruuell, Ky. 58
Jackson Cc:.nter 93, W. Libeny-Salem 71
with a lay-up at the :45 second
Jeweu-SI:io 79, l!di!oo N. 42
mark.
Kansas Lako11 ?8, OibsCilbur&amp; iJ
But Wilcoxen tied the game
Kcnston 68, Willoughby S. 61
Kemon Ridge 74, Spring. Ct\holic jl
when
he hit a long three pointer
Kidron Chr. 56, ~uillon Chr. 52
with
26
seconds left knotting the
Un cuter 47, Oilllico!he 43
lima 87, Cin. Princeton 69
game at61.
Liu.lc Miami 72, Dethd-Tato 4S
Meigs ran the clock down and
Lo11ln Southview 62, Lakewood 61
Lcudmvillc 110, S. Ccnuall6
Bentley . despite outstanding
Luc:.u 52, Worthinston Chr. JS
defense by Belpre hit a 15 footer
Lu~an W. 75, Avon 72, 0T
along the right baseline giving
Mtlvcm 70, E. Canton 6&amp;
Mapleton 44, Plymoulh 25
Meigs the lead for good (63-61)
Maplewood 63, LaBrae 48
with seven seconds left.
Marien" 65, Zanc5ville Roae~;:rans 63
MatheWll 66, Badger 39
Belpre turned the ball over on
Maumee Vall , 61, Emanuel Baptist 58
the
inbound pass and with two secMaya'o'ille 51, River View 42
Mc~nal~ 46, Ol~mpion 45
onds left the Marauders got the ball
M~~a Flrat Ba~~ SS, ~entorChr. 54, OT
into Harrison and the junior iced
M.iam1 Valley SS, Cin. Hillcrcsi4S
.
the game by canning the two free
~ddletown Frnwict. S4, Cin. Lockland 50, or
Mtdpark 62, Olmlle4 Falls 4.5
throws and giving the Marauders a
Minrord 6i,JaWM 59
65-61 win.
Mingo 66, Columbiana .56, OT
Mt Vernon 67, Wt.tlemUe N. 44
Harrison put on a clinic scoring
N. Can~ 69, Canton GlenOak 51
from
both outside and inside on
New Win~ 66, Crooklville S4

'

Akron Buchtel 13, E. Cleveland Shaw 76
Ai.roo FitellOrlc 71, Cuyahoga FailJ 43
AJcundct 74, WaUROn 54
Alnhcnt 62, N. Ridgeville S6
A,hland, Ky. 77, Portlnlo.Jih 74
AlwatcrCI'll'. n, Wam:n. Chr. 41
A~stintawn Fitch !i2_
, Young. Swth 41

A\lon Laic S8, Lora111Brooklidc 50
Uarbe.rtoo 76, Akron Garfaeld 63
Bilmuvillc 62. Shadylidc 47
70, Berea 54
8Civct Local48, Columbill\1 Cn:atvicw 41
B~ven:rcek 67, Trotwood· M.ad.Uca 52

Bh•

Btdlord 54, Nordoni&amp; 47
Utllefbnllinc 70, Sidney 66
H!oom -CuroU .58, Col. Academy SO
Bf dgeport 81, Bellaire St. John 73
B\ldeye Ct.t11. 48, OnUirio 35
Bl.ldeye Local61, Bellaire 57
Campbell Memorial 73, Young. Uberty 72
Canlield 73, Young. Eut 48
CantonS . 78, LouiavilleAqulnas 62
C~erville 70, Vandalia Butler 65. _
C agrin Falll 41. Aurora 37
'
C · apeakc 60, Gailipofu 55
Cit Aiken 90, Cin. l..:Salle 59
Cin. Colerain 75, Cin. Bacon 47
Clh. Country Day 74, Amelia 35
Cin. Mt. llealthy 70, Cin. Walnut Hills 47
CUt SL Bernard 74, Cin. Ouislian 58
Cin. St Xavier 54, Cin. Oak Hilla 50
Cin. Sycamore 70, Millard 40
Cin: Winton Wooda 51, Cin. Wcs~em Hills 57
Claymont49, W. Holmc.34
·
Cle. Collinwood .59, Oe. Manltall 47
Cle. Glenville 83, Cle. Eut Tcdi 53
C!e. Hay 77, Oe. South 74, OT
Clc. Kennedy 58, Oc. Linccln·Wcst.52
C\e. Rhodes60, Oe. East S9
Cle. We.tTecb 76, Clc. Adun' 69
Co.al Grove 61, Alhland (Ky.) Fairview 58
Col. Ballmoor 18, Col. Bcccbcwf\ 64
Col. Linden-McKinley 80, Col Soulh 76
Col. Milnin 92, Col. We~t65
Columbia 41, Key1l0rte 40
Conland Lakc-.icw 47, Omcrlvillc, Pa. 42
Cuyahogalhs. 61, ~yria ()r,en Door 54
Dan'o'ille 63, Liberty Olr. 6d
D1y. Chaminade-Julicnne 80, Day. Belmont 79,

New Miami 74, Mlddlewwn Cht. 71
New Aliladelphia 71, Coshocton 70
New Ric:hmmd 61,N. College Hill66
Newark Ca!h. 4.5, Northmor 32
Ncw(:omr:nLOwn S4, T~emwu Vall. 40
Nile~7S, Youns- Ch1ney J7
Northwood 82, Oenoa S6
OU: Hill SS, Mcl:knnott NW 46
Oberlin 72, FWview Puk 61
OhioDeaf71, Tree of Life 40
OrcgOO Clay90, Tol. Bowahtr 73
'Orrville 73, Akron E. 67
Ot11wa Hilb 61, Pcttilville 48
Pain01Yille Rlvt.n~ ide 60, Chardon 45
Pann1 64, Btlllllwid S9
Panna Hol)l Name 53, V.Uey Forge 52
Pec:bla 90,Pm.moulh W, 71
Philo 79, Moraan 12
Piqua 60, Urbina 59
RaceJand , Ky. 88, S)'mma VaU. 34
Ravenna SE 53, Woodridl' 48
Rock Hill 77, Ironton St. oseph 52
RoolSt~JWJ~74 , Garmuville 56
S. W~I.Cr S7, Franklin Funuct Green 52,
Shaker Uts. 59, Clc. Catholic 57
Sharon, Pl . 68, Brookfield 66
Shelby 68, Bucyl'\11 30
Sheridan 60,/ohn Glenn 58
Skyvue 53, Shm~ndoah 52, OT
Solon 64, M1ple Hta. 53
SJilrt.lllighllnd 44, Oear Fork 41
.. SpringN. 82, Greenan 6J
Spring Valley Academy 84, Cin. L.andmadc 70
Springboro 69, Carlisle 49
Steubenville 67, E. Li.vcrpoo162
Steuberwillc C1th. 70, Wheeling (W.Va.) Li ndy
61, 20T
Suulhen 77, S. R•nse 45
Tala wanda 72,Cin. Northwest 59
Thomu Worthington 76, Watkins Memoria l 54
To!. R~en 61, Maumee 57
Tol. Wane 68, Fremont Rm1 60

Uzelac may miss
OSU's bowl date

TREVOR HARRISON

EAS:rERN CONFERENCE

•

Cal~w~:11.811aP.11vj§ (~~~&gt; .

.684

.M1
.474
.421
.333
.300

14

.263

Oak Classics II
.Collection™

5
6.5

Richmond Hll. 49, Cuyahoga Htll. 44
Shelby 611, Bucyrus 30
Spring Valley Atldemy J4. Cin.
Lindmark 33 Spring. Northwcslern 51, Sprin&amp;.
c.. lholic 40
Springboro 52, Kings 39
St. Muys 54, Min&amp;t~:r J2
Sylvania N&lt;111hview 42, Findlay 38
Teays V~tll. 53, CoL Dc:Salcs 50, OT
Th omas Worth ington 46, Walnul
Kid go 28
Tree or Life 4&amp;. New Albany 42
Tri·County N. 59, Xenia Wikoo 12
Uppe r Scioto VaU. 59, Kenton 43
Victory Ou. 39, Eric Bethel 38
W. Carrollton 60, Valley View 57
Wadswonh 80, Talim1dgc 39
Warren Cht. 24, Atw'au:r Chi 16
Warrau11ill c 40, Elyria 35
Waynes'o'iUC 44, Mi ddletown Madison 25
Wor.hington Kilbourne 33. Westerville S. 28 '
,
Xenia 30, Middletown 29

Xanur.k.y 82,SWTexuSL 36
Low.ville 96, Moeyllnd 79 ·
MiuisJippi St. 19, DrU:c 50
Oklahc.n• St. 77. Louisian• Tech 71
Richmond 59, Army J6
Samford 67, Belhaven 66
Tulane 97, Southern U. 94
Virginia Te(:h 73. George Wuhinglon 71. OT
W. Carolina 73, Erskine68

7.5

Midwest

8

Ark ansas 70, Ka nus St. 59
Indiana 89, Vanderbill 51
Jow•1 08,N. Iowall5
low• St. 96, Teus-Arlingl.Pn 82

4

5.5

SouthwesJ

8
3
11.5
' 11

Pet.
_.619

CD

.556

1.5
1.5
3.5

.556

.444
.400

45

.118

7.5

Lamar 71, Dudley 41 ·
New Mexico 94. Texas A&amp;M 72
Oldahcwna 106, Teus91
Ooi5c: St. 71, San Ftancisco 65
Idaho 91, Sacramento St. 88, OT
Utah St. 74, U1.1oh 72, OT
W~lbington 89, AIL'ik.a-Fairb•nks 5fl
Wishing1on St. 80, E. Wuhin,gton 59

I

1.5
2
25

3.5
7.5

Seiule atNe~ York, _7 :30p.m.
Denver at Phila.delphia, 7:30 p.m.
Cltvtland at Mlllni, 7:30
O.Uu atCtwloue, 7:30p.m.
San Antonio at MinnCIOUI, 8 p.m.
Detroit 1t L.A. Clippcn,l0:30 p.m.
Utah at L.A. Wen,10:30 p.m.

p.m.

.

i

I

Thursday's games
Denver at New Jcrscy,7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee 11 Wuhington, 7:30p.m.
Allanll at Clt:¥tland, 7:30 p.m.
Houaton at Golden S1.1tc, 10:30 p.m.
Orlando at SacnmcnlO, !0:30p.m.

'

In the NHL ...

.•
''•
•
'
'

WALES CONFERENCE
Palrick Divlllon
Tum
W L T rtJ. GFGA.
'· Wullinl""' ... 21 9 0 42 137 95
' N.Y. Rangm
17 12 I 35 101 94

Pitllburah ..... 1510 4
NewJmey ... 15 II 3
, N.Y. tolanden . 9 14 4
Philadelphia .... 9 15 3

'
I

.
I'

8,.1011
Hanfard

Bufl'alo
Quebec

J..

34 125 1116
J3 113 88
22 100 108
21 79 98

Ad1m1 Dl,-lalon
..... 20 II 2 42 1116 ffl
,. ..... II 13 5 'II 98105
...... II 12 4 21i 87 96
....... 9144228295
...... 917 3 21 98118

MontiW

I

CAMPBELL
CONFERENCE
"
"NQr"ili DirlikHt -~ - . .
M

•

-

Team

Detroit

........

Chicaao
SL l..oui&lt;

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

Minnacta

Toroow

....

......

W L
17 9
13 1J
1210
II 14
9 17

T Pta. GFCA
4 38 120 99
5 31 109100
7 31 100101
3 25 91 91
4 22 76101

Winnipca

.., IS 8 7

SanJ01e

...... 6 22 3

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores

37 93 17
29 102104
28 108105
28103115

IS 76138

Tuesday's scores

Akron Springfield 56, Abort Cent.·
Howc.r4 l
Alliance 62, Akron E. 35
Amelia 56, Cin. Ursuline 48
Bellbi'OOik: 63, Milton-Union 27
Big W1lnut 48, Granville 3.5
Brooklyn 49, Aurora Tl
Bnllh 56, Shaku Hts, 40
Clnlort Cath. 49, Kent Roosc:vclt 38
Card inal 38, Berkshire 37
Cclin1 6.5, Sa. Henry '1:1
Centerburg 86, E. Knol36
Cin. Bacon 46, Cin. Oak Hills 41
Cin. G\m Este 65, Cin. Wood ward 44
Cin. Indian Hill45, CAPE 28
Cin. Maricmoot 63, Cin. Madeira 54
Cin . Mo1hcr of Mercy 72, Cin .
Syc1more J9
"
Cin. Tlylor46, Cin. Fin ncytown 44
Cin. Turpin 58, Cln. Taft 23
Cin. W)·oming 68, Cin. Dc.cr Pnk 46
Oe. Andrews 57, O c. Llwcl 4':#
Cle. Collinwood 64, Ck Mm haU 62
Clc. East6l.Cle. Rhodes 31
Clc. Ericview 79. tle. St . Augustine

u
u

Cle. Glenville 68, Clc. Eut Tech 29
Oe. Hay 53, Cie. Soulh 37
Clc. Lincoln· West 31, Cle. Kennedy
Clc. Ludu:~n E. 52, We Ridge 33
Clc. Lutheran W. 42, Independence

39 '

Clc. Wc.,t Tech 50, Cle. Adam .~ 45
Col. Dcechcroft 76, CoL Mifflin 41
Col. East 68, Col. Whetstone 18
Col. Eutmuor 65, Col. Muion Frank. lin J7
Col. Linden·McKinlc:y 58, Col.
BrooKhaven 50
CoL s~h uol for Gills J8, Wellington
37
CoL South 76, Col. Independence ~9
Col. Wat 55, Col. Briggs 44
Coldwater 18, Lima Cath. 31
Copley 60, Gr~burg Grcc.n \9
Cuy1hoga Vdley Chr. 61, Ak ron
Elma 58
Danville :S i , Johnstown Northridge
36
E. Camon 46, S111dy v.. U. 41
Fairlcu 40, Tllslaw 36
Ft. Recovery 56, Linculnview 44
Gahanrta 62, 7..~oncaville 60
.Gufidd llu . 47, Cle. Catholic 40
Gilmour 42, Bedford 38
Gro'o'e Chy 55, Galloway Westland
43
1-bmilton Ros1 32, Goshen 22
' - Hathaw•y BfuWri37, Onnge Chr. 25
Huber IIts. Wayne 61, G~nvill c 56
Jlunlington 75, Zane Trace 32
Loveland 46, Cin. Rea ding 38
Margar~:ua 73, Sandusky 45
Maron 60,

. Tonight's games
St. I...oWa 1t8uffalo, 7:3S p.m..
N.Y. Ialandcnal TorontO, 7:3~ p.m .

Thursday's aames
MootJealat.Boccon,1:35 p.m.

18
.

Pyma ~uning Vall. 47._.fiairpo.n llard lllg25
''
Reynoldsburg .56, Upper Arlingtoo 50

East

'

·'

!
•

South
Charlelton Soulhem 64, S. Cuolin1
~ St. 60

oa Rt. 35)

Gulf' Cout Leagu~

.,

.•

The Eastern junior high girls will open their basketball season
with the Eastel'lf varsity on Thursday, Dec. 12 at SouthMstern.
There ar:e 13 players currently vying for a startin&amp; spOt on the
team. Team members are eighth-graders Nicole Nel10n, Jessica
:
Karr, Beth Bay, Rebecca Evans, Lauren Young, Kristi Warner and • ,
Crystal Morris, and managers Debra Dillon and Crystal Smith.
'
'._
The seventh-grade players are laura Eastman, Patsy Aeik.er,
Crystal Holsinger, Amanda Milhoan, Martie Holter and Christie
Grossnickel.
Scou Wolfe is the j4nior high coach.

Rutland·Holiday Tournament
set for December 22
The second annual Rutland Holiday Tournament will be held
from Sunday, ·nee. 22 to Sunday, Dec. 29 for boys in grades 4-6
and combined grades for girls. No all-star teams will be allowed.
For more information call Danny TiUis, tournament director, at
742-2572, or Joe Hawkins at 992-2400.

.

1

Bobby Moore, outftclder, to the Atlanta
Bnve~ for Ric:o R011y, infielder.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS ~
N1med L-Ou Snipp director of national
1cnutina. O.n Mon10n director of intern a·
lionlliCOilt.ing and Ed Ford, Rod Fridley
and Jeu flom; acowing supcrviaor1.
TEXAS RANGERS - Named TommyThm~P'on m~nager of Oklahoma Cit)I
of the A.~crican A11oci1tion, Bobby
Jones manager or Tutu of the Texu
lcaJU~ Wlit WUliam• m~nagc:r oC Gutonia of the SOllth Atbnlic League, Victor
RarnirR m1n1ger of Bulle: of the Rook..ie
League, Bump Wills m1naaer of Port
Chulotte or the Florid• S11te League and '
Chino Cadahia of Gulf Coast ollhe Flori·
da SUite League. Purchued the conuactl
of Benigno Cutillo, outfielder: D1vid
, Rolla, catcher, and Da,-id Aman:on, pitch·
er, from S•lt Lakc,.City of the Pioneer
lugue.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES - Agreed to
tenna with Jerry Wii!ud, catcher, on •
oae·re.ar rontnlct.
COLORADO ROCKIES - Nomod
Michael Gui1tti area ICOUting wpesvilor
for New Jeney, New York •nd New England. Signed Ryan Turner, outfielder, an'd
Marc Morria, Mm Connolly and Milte Erie~on ,

Cht/1111111

11111/ng Eill/1n
-.. Tu11iay,
l11tm611 If

pitchm.

LOS ANGELES DODGERS ~
Traded Dennis Cook and Mike OnUtopher, phchen, 10 th e Cleveland Indians
for Rudy Seane1, pitcher. Signed Don
Wakam•llu, c1tcher. Acquired Ben Van ryn, pitcher, from the- Mootteaj Expoa for
Mark Orilfm, outfielder.
MONTREAL EXPOS -Signed
Dean Wilkin•, Tim Burcham and Sergio
Valdez, pitcher1, • nd Shon Ashley and
Jerome Nclaon, outfielden, to min or

---· le~aue conlncta:-Natred~Roberu -M •zur -­
, buebaU opentions admirtistl'ltor.
NEW YORK METS - Traded llubie
Br00l1, outfielder, to lhe California An·
&amp;clJ for Dave Gallagher, outficldcr.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES ~
Aar~ to tenni with Mariano l).]:ncan,
1ccond buc:man, on a two-yea.r conU'att.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES - An nwnccd Mike LIVtlliere, ca~eber, hu ac·
cepLod a ulary arbitntion offer.

·Basketball
Nadonal8uktlball Auodallon
CHARLOTIE HORNETS - Placed

Mike Ominlki, centor, on the: injured llst
Si8J1ed Tony Mmenburg, forward-guard .

. FRIDAY,DEC. 1.3-9:00·12:00
11 Dr. A. Jack101 lallts' Office
11 0 M•c•••lc StrHt, Pomeror ·

IELTONE HEARING AID CENTER

•r

!It 11111 writ .,_ 1 lhtuN Hts tit Alii Sptdl/ifl
has lrouble hearing 01 Understand~!II IOIIYtnlllon.is lnviltdlo have •
FR[E hearilg ltsllo uell INs pro~emllll b. ht!Did.lflnt this IOUpotl wllh you lor
·.
your FREE HEARING lEST. 1 $75.00 rilue.
UIIWA -UAW •WOllfiS tllllllliiiiiOI RJIII
lllKOI AltO Ill OIHIIIIIIIIIAJI(( 1'10¥10EH

Wli...SWQ(OIII

.,

•

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

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th . ..
ADVERTiSING.
ASK FOR BRENDA
OR DAVE
.
I

1312 ra1tera ,,.,.,. (Route 7), Galllpoli1
.
614-446·1744
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 11-9:00.a.m.•4:00 p.m.
Col Toll Free 1-800-634-5265 for an Immediate Appointment

'

L.---------------------------··'"'
\1

Junior high Eagles to begin
season Thursday

: CLEVELAND INDIANS ~ Tndod
Willie Blair, pitcher, and Ed Taubcnsu,
catcher. to the Houlton AIUOS ror Kcntly
Lofton. outfielder, and Dave Rohde, in·
fi~der. Deaignlted Doua JonCI, pitcher.
for aui,srunent
KANSAS CIT'I' ROYALS- Tndod

BEllONE HEAR NG AID CENTER

•

lj

i

CALIFORNIA ANGELS ~ Ai'...t
with Chur.k. Finley, pitcher, on a
four-year contract. Tn.dod Mike Feucn
1nd Glenn C..rt.er, pitcbm, to the Milwaukee Brcwcn for Ot!JCi C~. pitcher.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX - Named
Mi.ke Roju m•n•ger or StrUOII of the

Will be jven in MeiJs/Gallia Cotaties ~

Campbell S3, N.C.·O=olboro 51

Wilberforce (1-6) travels to
Denison on Thursday, and the Red- ·
women (8-1) are at Notre Dame
(Ohio) on Saturday ..
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (108) - Kim
Sowers, 4'-1-1-12; Gena Norris, 01-1-4; Michelle Crouse, 3-1-2-11;
Elizabeth Gannelli, 11-2-24; Jackie
Hannon, 2-0-4; Tricia Collins, 3-0,
6; Mindy Montgomery, 2-2-1-11;
Ann Bamitz , 3-2-8; Stephanie
Gudorf, 5· 2-2· 18; Melanie Miller,
3-2-8; Kathy Snyder, 1-0-2.
TOTALS 37-7-13-108.
WILBERFORCE ,(30) Mico Scott, 3-2-8; Brenda Greer,
2-2-6; Shanta Wynn, 0-1 -1; Mia
MatJock, 4-1-9; Michelle Starling,
2-0-4; Kathy Spears, 1-0-2.
TOTALS 12-6-30.
Halftime score: Rio Grande'
56, Willrerforce 14.

.Me1·g·s·sp·or·ts brt·e~s
· · .,
I

10 1CnTIS

FREE- IHEARING. TESTS

Anyont wlto

turnovers.

I

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - As=d

-----------COUPON
~·

Toronto.tt.Jlhibdelphia, 7:35p.m.
Winnipea "lA Anpla, 10:35 p.m.
Edmonton at San /OK, 10:15 p_.m.
MiMOIOla 11 V•ncouvcr, 10:35 p.m.

Delaw1R1 ?3, MONnouth, N.J. 63
Duq ...... 93, Robert Monio 82
FWI"llld 93, Foirlei&amp;h Dickin100 79
LonallllndU. 79,Sc !'mt'o71
~ 84, New Hamp~hlrc63
Ptovidenc;:e Tr, Rhode Jaland/4
St. Bont'o'G'lturc 76, CtrtiaiUI70
Temple 92, lllinoil56
W. MiehiJin 63, Sie1.1 S9

Miuni 23

Rio Grande, Kim Sowers-netted 12
markers and six rebounds. and
Michelle Crouse and Mindy Montgomery had 11 points each.
The Redwomen were 49.4 percent on shooting (44-89), including
7-20 from the three for 35 percent.
They connected ori 13 of 24
attempts at the free throw line for
54.2 ·percent. Foote's club neued
65 rebounds, 13 by Crouse, and
limited their turnovers to seven.
Fof Wilberforce, Scott had eight
points and brought down nine of
the lady Bulldogs' 34 ~s. The
team was 19 percent overall on
. shooting (12-63. 0-6 from the
three) and netted six of eight
attempts at the foul line for 75 per-'
cent. The visitors totaled 28

88
N~;;1e~t~~~1
~~~~~:~h~~~~:b~.:-:;
.
Bob Knight benched three Bryan Sal)je.r. Oklahoma_openod :

lO lem'l.s with Tim Huleu, irtfielder, oo a
one-year contnct.

Perry 37, KirLJand 36
Preble Shawnee 34, Twin ValleyS.

Qucl&gt;ec 'I DeW, 7&lt;3S p.m.

· Major college
·· basketball scores

Li~e

Medina Highland 53, Hudson 33
Newuk Calh.-45, Northmor 32
Newbury 51, Gnnd Vall . 39
' f'iprdonia 52, Maple llu. 36
NDnon 63. Revcrc43

Queba:1, B"""" 2
Walihington 4, Ca.lgal')' I
MinnOICll'-4, New Jeney 3
Winnipeg 3, San l01e 3,lie
Edmonton 7, Vanecuver 4

'

Amcrlca n Uaaue
AL - NamOO Phil Jafl.'lsen coordinator of umpire operations, and Carl Pohlad
to the E•ecuti'o'e Council.

4!

Sc Louio 1, N.Y. blandm 7
Piwl..u&amp;h 5, N.Y. lW!p 3

•

Elected Mike Moore p1csident.

Adena SS, RichmondUode Southcut·

Detroit S, ChicagO 3

•

llaseball

NATION AL ASSOCIATION -

Sm)the DIYIJion
Vancoover
... 17 II 3 37 108 92

EdiOOJ!tm
... 12. 13 5
Colpry
...... 12 14 4
J.MAnJdCI ... 11\2 6

Transactions

em 36
Akron Chr. Sl. East Liverpool Chr.

Tonight's games

.

(1/4 •II•• W. of Holzer

4

Tuesday's scores

Presidential
Collection'•

ty

.l

AllanUilll, Milwaukee 104
Indiana 109, S1n Antonio 102
New York ll4, New Jmcy f!l
Chicaao 10&amp;, Scallie 103
Dallu 114, MUmi 11 o, or
UWI 122. Odando I03
PhOQ'lU 102, Detroit 93
Houncn 10&amp;, Ponllnd 106
L.A. Laken 92, Sacramento 90
LA. Oippon I'll, Golden Stue 117

VHS Hi·Fi Video Casette

MASON, WV.

~~mm'

6

6
10
II
12
14

GB

PaciRc 01,-bloo
L.A. l.U.ct1
...... \4 6 .700
Goldens .... ....... 12 6 .667
PorL1and
.......... 13 8 .619
Ph...UX
.......... 13 9 .591
S..ttle
............ 11 8 .579
L.A. Cippe~~ r .... .1 1 to .524
S~oenmcnto
......... 6 13 .316

I

PICKENS
. :HIIDWIIE .

Maocbute.wu

........... 13

NowYor:k
....... 12
Philtddphy .............9
Miami
............ !
Orlando
............6
Wuhing100 .........6
New Jmcy ......... 5

W L
Ullh
............ 13 8
HDUIIOII
........ 10 8
San Antonio ....... 10 8
Denver
............ f! 10
o.u.. ..............8 12
MUmaw ......... .3 13

Makers
•Small
'
• • Appliances

~

the second half with 1 19-4 run.
B.J. Tyler led Texas with 24
points.
No. 19 A.rkeii88S 70
'·
Killisas St. 59
The Razorbacks (5-2) rebounded from a home toss to Missouri :
with the road win apinst the Wild:·'
cats (3-1), who missed their flrlt
nine shots of the game. Arlcaasas ',
departed from its usual racehri'~
style to control the tempo behind' •:
Oliver Miller, who had 18 poiriU."
Kansas State was led by Askia •'
Jones' 12 points.
•

Mldwefl Division

~·Coffee

.,

Botton

Team

J.'~di~i~~
·•Electric
Roaster
•Toasters

starters - Calben Cheaney, Enc
Anderson and Damon Bailey- to
show his unhappiness with recent
offensive production, and it paid
off in the easy win at home. The
Hoosiers (3-2) used some trademark defense to break the game ·
open, holding the Commodores (32) to 12 points in the first 7:44 of
the second half as lhey took a 7038 lead. The three sudden reserves
did start the second half and they
scored Indiana's ftrst nine points of
the fmal 20 minutes. Kevin Anglin
led Vanderbilt with nine points.
I
·
·

WESTERN CONFERENCE

•90 Days Same As Cash - No
Payment Due Until March '92.
•Exte.~de.~ Y/F~rr~n_ty and Qn _$pot
1nancmg

FOR HER

.
The .Rio ladies~had-defeated
Wilberforce's program, currently in
tts second year, 110-31 defeat in
their season opener on Nov. 12.
"The · best thing you can say
about something like this is that
some of our kids need a lot of minutes and they got tq play them,"
Redwomen Coach Doug Foote
remarked. "I was very pleased with
the work of our freshmen, because
they neened the experience, and we
put five of our players in double
figures." . .
In ~dd1110n to Gannelli,
Step~ame Gudorf had IS points for

Far West

•

~

AtlanUc Dhtslon
W L
Pd.

Central Division
......... .16 3 i···:142
Clevelan~
..- .. fl 6 .647
Allan11
............ 11 9 .550
Deuoit
.............. 9 12 .429
Milwaukee ......... 9 12 .429
Indiana
.............9 13 .409
Chlrloue ............ ! 15 .286

Syracuse Grade
School cage
••
preview wmners announced

GIFTS

No t6Iowal01, !if Iowa
I~ (6-0) sileaeatl.dte secoNI
largest buketball crowd in Stilt! *
history with 1 no !1111 to stan ilte _
~ . t ihe laid.,.. as much IIi':
2(J points in the font 8 1(2 minutes •
The victory was tile l;lawke es;'·
18th iri 20 meetiop wilh the~­
thers (2·2). James Moles led Iowa
wilh 211l0ints and Cedrick McCul- ·
Iough and Troy Vaughn eaeh had
18 forNonhemlowa
. •
No. l7 Okw.-t 106, Tau lll..!-"
The Sooners (5·0) beat !lie.
Longho{ns (4·3) for the e'iJhth

Chiugo

:r•to/W.)
••We

..

Team

Is :

hom a State with 15 points. Ron
Ellis led louisiana Tech with 16
points.
No.9. Keotucky 81
SWTexas State31i
All 13 Wildcats got to play at
home and 10 reached the scoring
column, led by Jamal Mashburn's ..
17 points. Most of lhe starters saw
limited playing time in the seeond
h'alf after Kentucky (4-1) went on a
24-2 run on the ·way to a 49-18
halftime .lead. Southwest~Texas
State (2-3) was led by George Conncr's 22 points. ·
·

Scot·eboar(l
In the NBA ..•

·~

"We beat a really gOod basket. Utah's only field goal in over- · No. 19. Arkansas 70, Kansas State
ball team. Utah plays extremely time was~ thre~-pointer at the 59.
··
har~ defensive!y., This win gives us buzze~ by Jimmy Soto, a shot made
Soto led Utah with 25 points.
a b1g hft," said head coach Kahn meanmgless after Todd Gentry
No.6 Oklahoma St. 77
'Smith, who called the win the · made two free throws with seven
Louisiana Tech 71'
biggest in his four years at Utah , seconds left for a five-point lead.
The Cowboys (8-0) came up
State.
.
·' In other games involving ranked with an impressive road win. OklaMalloy Nesmtth and Kendall teams Tuesday mght, 1t was No, 6 homa State took a 42-28 halftime
Youngblood scored 13 ~ints ~h Oklahom.a State 77, Louisiana l~d •. but l!!e .Bulldogs (3·3) stayed
to lead Utah State, while ~arb to Tech 71: No. 9 Kentucky 82, w1thm stnkmg distance as their
DaSilva added 12 points and 1I Southwest Texas State 36; No. 13 45.3 shooting percenll!~e _was the
rebounds and Jay Goodman scored lnd1ana 88, Vanderbilt 51; No. 16 h1ghest.agamst the Cowboys this
11 points.
·
Iowa 108, Northern Iowa 85; No. season. Byron Houston lCI! Ok!a·
l7 Oklahoma 106, Texas 91:- and
·

Reeling off seven unanswered minutes of the wi,od. ~~
points to start, tlieUniversity of
The hosts led by 42 points going
Rto Grande women ~s basketball into the second period and only
team took off for a 108-30 victory three players for Wilberforce over-Wiberforce U.niversity Tues- Mia Matlock, Kathy Spears and
day at Lyne Center.
Mica Scott - got points on the
In a game where many of the board during the opening 20 min· younger members of this season's utes.
Redwomen edition got into the
The Redwomen, drawing a 24game, Rio Grande employed the point, 13-rebound petformance
defense that guaranteed its win from freshman post player Elizaover Concor~ f.Y{.Va.) during the beth Oarinelli, outscored the lady
weekend to hold Wilberforce to a Bulldogs 22-4 midway through tile
l6.7 percent shooting,performan.ce second half. Matlock ended with
m the first half. The closest the_ VIS· · nine points for the game to be
1tors came was 17-11 in th~ first 10 Wilberforce's top scorer.

23-W Slno/11-fi Calar 1V/War
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) CU27SIFSTGD SUPIRTUIETM C..solo
Ohio State's offensive coordinator
46·inch Protectloa TV/Moallor Color TV w/CARVIR®
Sollie Hol!tfiiDhy®
probably will miss the team's post·
TP46W - Pro(octltl TV wllfl CARVlR .s.lo·Wtof•, Pktwrlo·Picturt
,·l·P) and
season because of hean problems. •
S011lc Hol..llplly SystiiW, St•to MlS
R•ott C.trelltd Po- Swlvtl.
Broadmst Roc•fl011 aod M.nitw T""""'als
Elliot Uzelac, who also is the
Buckeyes' assistant head coach,
likely will not go to the Hall of
OT
Fame Bowl.
Doylcttown 61 , Medina Buckeye 58
Uzelac said through his office
Dublin 61, Delaware 59, ar
E. Uverpoal Or. 72, Akron Ou . .57
Monday that no decision had been
Eutwooci6S, Woodmore (jl
reached because doctors were still
Elmwood II , CMcgo .56
EJ.Iclid 83, Cleveland Hta. 65
discussing his heart problems. His
FalrblrJu 63, JMalhln Alder 42
office called reports about a deciFairborn 81, OU.wood 12
sion speculative.
Federal Hockin a&amp;6, Nellonville- York 79
TRX·1800
FICid 97, CJCJtwood 44
Uzelac did not return a teleFrontier61, River 59
phone message.
Oahama70, :Z.netville 63
Galion 6.5, Upper Sand~lky4l
Head coach John Cooper was
GaUoway Wenland 67, Grove Ci1y 64
out of town Monday and not avail. Goshctl 87, Wilminston 81
M-HF84S. VHS II·R VCR wllfl Gr"hk (tlalror/SpoctrUII
Grcencview 63, Wnhinaton CH 62, OT
able to comment. Uzelac's doctor ·•
Gm.nfield 30, Paint V1U. 29 ·
Atalyt• aod Flyllg Erase. foaturn Htod doublt atlrnth
Satellite
Receiver
/Decoder
UHF
Remote
did not·retum a telephone message.
Groveport 55, Pickering1on S4
4tst,.,
with Ax Rolst rodooctito, Sytdoro
Ohio State, 8-3 on the year,
HamillOn 71, Fairfield .54
Controlled.
..
,,
4
..,allzor,
O.·satt11 protr-111 wit•
Hawken 63-, Richmond Hb. 54
plays Syracuse in the Hall of Fame
Howland 69, A1h1abula Harbor 64
'"'
rtMIIII!tltdkalor,
2·spttll
slow ••lfoo, .,,, ~ay.
Bowl1an. 1 in Tampa, Fla.
1-io.,]and Chr. 67, Girard Alliance 57
Hudaon Wc:~tem RtiCIVo 73, Akron Hoban 53
Uzelac, in his first year with
Ohio State, had heart surgery in
August, just days after tailback
Raben Smith said Uzelac had told
•
him to cut classes and to cut back
on his study time.
Uzelac, who also was hospitalIn the Syracuse Grade School
In the sixth-grade opener Racine ized with heart problems earlier in
basketball preview, which was defeated letart 54-33. Sayre led the summer, denied Smith' s
completed Sunday, Racine, Racine with 37, Writescl had (six), charges. Smith quit the team.
Riverview, Salisbury and Syracuse Grace (five), Dill (two), lane (two)
A year agQ, .Ohio State was
were.tlie winners in the sixth-grade and Matson (two). Letart was led without its offensive coordinator as
games. Rutland and Syracuse won by Smith with 12, followed by it prepared 'for a trip to the liberty
fifth-grade bo,uts, ~nd Belpre~ n~ .. !Qhn~.n (eight),_Tackett (six), Bill " Bowl. ·-' """~- .. · ,_.. _ --·
Tuppers Platns won the girls (five) and Miller (two).
Jim Colletta left the Buckeyes
games.
Riverview defeated Pomeroy to take over as the head coach at
Rutland defeated Riverview 's McCullough 39-27 . Barber led Purdue. Ohio State, a 17-point
fifth grade 40-19 as Willi~ms led Riverview with 19,-Tolliver had favorite, was upset by Air Force
with 14, Col~man had eight, McK- 12, Harris and Hawley '(four each). 23-11 in the bowl game.
inney (seven), VanMeter (six), R1f- Pomeroy was led by Harris with
n e (three) and Mills (two). For eight, followed by Crow (seven)
Riverview, Rockhold had 11, McCullough (six), Roush (four)
Myers and Adams (four).
and Whittington (two).
Syracuse, which downed Racine
Salisbury rolled to a 47-32 win
38-22, was led by Allen with 16, over Coolville as Frecker had 18,
AVI810
followed by Rupe (six), Williams followed by Billingsley (eight),
A2442
(six), Nease and Ahjridge (four) Hysell (eight), Dave'nport and
and Mills (two). Racine was len by Folmer (four each), Barr (three)
Rizer with 12, followed by Manue.l and Dickens (two). Cooolville's
(four), Boso (two), LiUie (two) and Curtis had 10, followed by
48" Hb
Terwpplous (two).
Ed~ards (eight), Montie {six),
49W'W
.
Kn1sely (four), and McCune and
45" ·Hby 21V."
Sv'Ac cage st andmgs
Null (two each).
.
.
·19Yr"D
..
Wby 16%" D
Syracuse edged Bradbury 40-24.
Rts _. 27" lV's
(Overall)
Sisson led with 24 points, Ash had
Team
W L PF PA (eight), Williams (four), Day and
Oak Hill .............. ! 0 55 46 Struble (two each). Bradbury was
Southwestem .......O 1 55 99 led by fisher with eight, SC&lt;llberry
Symmes Valley ...O 1 52 54 (six), Hanson (six) and .Whitt
Southern .. :...........0 1 49 71 (four).
Hannan Tmee ......0 1 49 84
In girls play, Belpre defeated
EaStern ................0 2 143 184 · Pomeroy 43-32 as Stewart, who
"
. ''
Nonh Gallia ........0 2 99 157 had 32 points, was followed by
Kyger Creek ... :....o 0
0
0 Eaton (six) and Mays (four) .
Pomeroy was led by Miller with
Tuesday's score
14, followed by Roach (nine),
Oak Hill 55, McDermott NW 46
Shamplin with seven and Wright
with two.
UpeomiDIIaction
Tuppers Plains was. led by CaldFriday - Southern at l{annan well's 17 oa 101118 IU 21·23 will
Trace: Oak Hill at North Gallia; . over Syracuse. Teammates Brant
Southwestern at Eastern; arfd non had (six), followed by Gumph
Kyger Creek at Symmeli Valley
and Rojas (two each). Ash, who led
SalurdiJ' - North Oallia a1 Syracuse with 11, was followed by
446·2411 or 100·365·1229

TRX - 1800 RDO

I

Wilberforce falls 108-30; Redwomen post 8th win

I Tuesday's prep scores I
j

The Dally Sentl111l · Pill• ~

\.

992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL

�..'

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December 11, 1991

•

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.BASEBALL B!::)'IEFIT • Far.e Wiggins was
!he winner of $SCJO in a fund raiser staged by
Drew Webster Post 39 for Meigs County's
American Legion summer baseball program.
Jler name was drawn from a box containing the
names or all who contributed Tuesday ·,by

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BOTIO~ The,'Faith:~:

News brze
' if:

'

Pomeroy Attorney J~nnlfer~Sbeets. She~joined
legionnaires John Weeks, commander, holding
the liox·, and from tbe left, Paul Casci, Wayne
Milhosn, George Horak, Dick Vaughan,
Leonard Jewell, and Frank Vaughan.

122 E. Main St.
Pomeroy,·0~
(614) 992·6632

BAG

$ 99

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LIBBY'S DINNER

RUTL'X~~-~~ti~al

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APPLIAN(. IS

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FOLGER'S SPECIAL ROAST COFFEE .......:.~9 oz. can $3.99

MIKE SELLS

week, portraying Smith as a cruel
Community ·Calendar ilelils
rapist who assaulted her withput ap~r .two days before u event leton Church, Kingsbury Road •
warning, wilhout sexual foreplay cr ud tile day or lhat event. Items (County Road 18) on Friday at 7 ,
even suggestive Iangua,e. She said must be received weD in advuce p.m. The program is a JllU~ eel- •
he lliekled her as she me~t U!J~ve - to ~ure publication in tltual, ebration~Qf.:.J::hristmiu, ~and!es_. !
the beach and raped her on the endar.
choir and light. Pastor Clyde Hen- ;
· estate lawn. · .
· .· .
,
derson invites the PJlblic.
. :,
He said the woman's bruises did
not come from him.
,'
at the
LONG
:
La1e in ·the day, Smith's attorney Rutland Community Church, New Full Gospel Cliurch in Long Bot- ·•
reneweda~requeat tO ~eO jurors that Lima Road, will~be held through - tom. will have-it hy"!n smg on Fn- ..
the woman had an abortion in the Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev. day at 7 P·f!l· featunng the Moun; ~
pasL The jud~ ~fused.
·
Carl Eisenhan will be the ~ tam Top Smgers and Crystal as •
Smith testified afler the prosecu- and Rev. Dewey King inviles the well as other local talent. P~IOT. ~ }l,
tor and Circuit Couri Judge· Mary public to attend.
Steve Reed invites the public .
Lupo clashed over limitations
·
Refreshments will be served.
placed on cross-examination. The
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleJUdge ruled out any questions even port Literary Club will meet
• TUPPERS' PLAINS : The Tup-:
hinting three women's allegations Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 ·
that Smith had· tried to sexually home of Mrs. Richard Owen. MrS. and Ladies Auxiliary will host 8: .
assault them in the 1980s
.Wenda! Hoove.r.will present a pro- dance on Friday from 8 to 11:3o'
The defense twiCe demanded a gram on "The Musac of Christ· · p.m. with m11sic by "Second Clit.·'Jj ,'
mistrial claiming Mrs. Lasch'$ hos· mas." Roll call will be "What I tin'."
tile questioning had moved outside
legal limits. The judge scolded lite . Like Least About Christmas."
SATURDAY
prosecutor and told her if she asked
FAIRPI:.AIN • Thel.it•er.t)i&gt;ji
SYRACUSE - Revival at the
another impermissible question, Syra_cuse Nazitrerie Church will be · Mountaineers will perform
"You will n,ot get away wtlit iL"
held Wednesday litrough Sunday day at the Jackson .County Jaffi •.'!' ~·.~'i'
Smith 'is charged with sexual wilit David Canfield the evangelist. boree in Fairplain, W.Va.
·
bauery and battery. If convicled, he Services are an 8.m. nigh!ly and
co.uld be sentenced to 4 1/2 years in on Sunday at 10:3 a.m. and 6 p.m.
BURLINGHAM· The Burling~
pnson.
ham Modem Woodmen of America •.
POMEROY • The Wildwood Cainp 7230 will have a potluck on •
S
Garden Club will have its Cliiisl' Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the hall in ::~
mas dinner on Wednesday at 6 p.m. Burlingham. Those anending bring '
Lake Superior is 350 miles in at the Branch wood.
lable service. Everyope welcome. ,;
length. ·
·
The Gobi Desert is 500,000
. THURSDAY.
POMEROy · The Preceptor
square.miles.
Beta
Beta ChapW, Beta Sigma Phi •
RUILAND • OAPSE C_hri~unas
In 1990, there were 57,020,000 Party
Sorority,
will have their annual ~
will be held Thursday at Rut·
Roman Catholics in the United
Christmas
party on Saturday at 6 •·
land Elementary at 6:30 p.m. The
Sia~~ United Nations headquar· pany will be a potluck dinner, and p.m . at the home of Charlotte
'
members are•to.bring a. vegetable Elberfeld.
ters in New Yorjc City is, open to and desen for liteir family. OAPSE
,.
the public every day of the year will provide the meat. A gift
RACINE ~ The Racine Gun t·,
except Christmas and Jllew Xear's. exchange is optional.
Club will hold its Chrisunas party ~
Waller Tewlcsbury of the United
on Saturday from 7 p.m. tO 12:30 '
States won the gold medal in lhi!
CHESTER • The Shade River a.m. at the Racine American ,
200-meter run at the 1900 Olympic Lodge No. 453, F and AM, will Legion Hall.
~·
Games in Paris, France.
meet
Thursday
at
7:30
p.m.
Open
.
LOTI'RIDGE • Coun1ry Music ~
instaUation of new officers will be
held and refreshments wili be Nighl at the Louridge Community "'
Center will .be held Saturday' frqn :
served.
· 5 p.m. to midnight. 'Ali bands are ~
-ROCK SPRINGS - -The Rock welcome and the. public is i~vited ~
· Springs
Gll!llge will hold a potluck 10 attend.· Those altending are to ..
.
dinner
on
Thursday at 7 p.m. Mem- bring a covered dish. · ·
Scripps Gerentology Center, Miami
~
bers
pring
non-perishable
food
University, Oxford, in addressing'
'
POMEROY
- "Paddle to 1hc ''•
the Regional Advisory Council on items. A meeting will follow din·
Sea" and "Paul Bunyon" will be :·
Aging at its annual· meeting held in ner.
Athens.
shown at the Meigs County Public ~
RACINE - The Racine Legion Library in Pomeroy on Saturday ;
Dr. Applebaum was invited to
comment on the evaluation of lhe ~uxiliary Chrisunas party will be and Sunday at 2 p.m . and at the :
Scripps ~tology &lt;::enter Qll·lhe ll~ld Thur&amp;d.ay. Me.mbeta ate Ul. MiJlillcpor!-hibrary .po -~onday at 1'
·
. Areli Agency's Options for Elders meet at the hall at I p.m. before 4:30p.m.
traveling to MOlD's Smorgasbord in
Program.
..
'
' .
t,.
HARTFORD, W.Va.· A Christ~ '·
In his talk, the speaker focused Ravenswood. There will be a $3
mas dinner for American Alloy ~;
on lite program's abilily to deter· gift exchange.
employees
and Foote Mineral ,
mine the appropriate le&gt;el of care
LONG BOTTOM • The retirees and their families, Satur- • J
for clients through a telephone
screening process indicaling lhat Coolville Community Choir will be day, Dec. 14 at the USWA 5171 :,·
;.
case managers were used appropri· presemed Thursday at 7 p.m ..at the Union Hall, Hartford. W.Va.
ately and clients who did not have Faith Full Gospel Church in Long
· case managers but had telephone Bouom. the public is invited and
..
monitoring were satisfied with the refreshments will be served.
arrangemenL
TUPPERS PLAINS • The TupEmphasizing the need for Ohio
to develop home care syslems, Dr. pers Plairis VFW Post No. 9053
Applebaum said it was unfonuna1e will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
" · that the decision to phase out the ' the post home.
111 Second St., Pomeroy . ~
Options program was made before
FRIDAY
the evaluation was completed.
YOUR INDEPENDENT ·~
RIPLEY - The Liberty MounThe Council's recommendation taineers will perform Friday at
AGENTS SERVING
'
for distribution of state block grant Skaleiand in R!pley. W.Va.
funds was discussed. Ohio's new
MEIGS COUNTY
budget combined six individually
RUTLAND . The Return
SINCE ' 1868
funded programs into one fund Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R .•
which was reduced by about II will meet Friday atl:30 p.m. at the
••
percent, it was noted. .
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber.
GO US
Council recommended a dislrict Krisana Treintong will present the
OD ED
formula that would find similar ser· program, "Chrisunas in Thailand."
· WA$HERS, DRYERS,
•
vices in each county. Home meals, Hostesses are Mrs. Weber, Mrs.
REFRIGEUTORS,
TYs,
transportation and homemaker ser· Cecil Blackwood, Mrs. S1ephcn
vices would each receive 30 per· Jenkins, Mrs. Roben Jewell and
GAS &amp; ELEC. UNGES
·cent and caregiver services such as Mrs. Day~n Parsons.
1
day care, respite, or escon, would.
'teceive 10 percent of the available
POMEROY . The Pomctoy
monies in each county.
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
Charles Blak~slee and Florenc_e hold a muntl and square dance on
ar4
;;-t.tn-n
-Smah-~flite·Metgs-Gounty·Councti·-rrlday-frcrni"8'1o1'11f.m.atlhc~~ t 21-ln., ~·pv , -on Agang, and Susan Stewarl, senior citizens center.
.
·PH. 446·1699
Senior Center Director, represenled
·
HOURS: I l.M.•6 P.M.
Meigs County at the meeting. The
POMEROY - "Wonder of the
Re~ionai AdvisorfCfliiiCilon
Agmg is acitizens' advtsory group
froni lite Area on Aging and composed of 36 represemalives from
tne eight counties that make up lhe
district.

mFREE

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810 BEND FOODLAND
700 w. Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2891
Open 7 IM·11 PM Mon•.thru Sat.

Sunday I am·1 0 pm
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Community calendar

.

BULK

SHELLED
·WALNUTS

innocent'

Applebaum
_ empha,sizes
· systems
nee·d 10T h.orne· care

:

REG. • BUTTER

Crisco
s·hortening

7

P~ge

By LINDA DEUTSCH .
Associated Press Writer
WES:r PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP)- A tense William.Kennedy
Smith took tile stand Tucsday an!t
~
painted his accuser as a sexually
voracious woman who seduced him
john C. Wolf,'
into sex twice in a halt hour, then
' cried rape for reasons he can't
Associate Professor
explain. ·
of Family
Medicine
-.
.
-"What are .you, some kind of
· ~x machine here?" the prosecutor
..
.
· · . · l . asked Smith sarcastically. An
:0 Question: I haven't been feel- depressaon m~y b.e a h.eadache, ,objection blocked !he answer.
·j)lg vea;r'welllately,Md I have "the backache or. mdtgesuon. · Th.e· '
•'.The issue here· is I'm in no.b~ues.' My doctor says that I.'m depressed JlC!SOO tends to focus ~IS' centl" Smith exclaimed as he fend·
~epressed, but I don't think so. or her atlen~on on those bUle sag-! ed off repeated suggestions by
'What does she r~lly mean when nals our bodies constantly send and Assistant State Attorney Moira
~he says I'm depressed?
. blow them out of proport,~on. '
Lasch that his story was unbeliev·
·
J?epressed people ofte~ com• able. . ·
·
:; Answer: This is a very good plam of const.tpauon or dt~hea
'Repealedly she challenged his
question to answer as we get into and. ~.tomach ·pams. T~ey, ~~g~t 1 _ asse,.Pon·.that the woman was the
!lle holiday season. Many people say. My stomach growled an~ I . sexual aggressor in~ Easter week·
~eel sad this time·(1f year. For hav~ som.e gas1·Oh no_! Am •I §OIRg end encounter that began at a night·
some, this sadness is just a minor to die from stomach trouble? ·;The club.
annoyance, but for others it is a real.~essage - tha~ a tr~med
"What are you saying, that she
more serious matter. There is an physacaap or psychologJst c;an often raped you Mr Smith?" the proseimportailt difference between just ·pick up '-- is: "I feel reall_y ·bad cuwr snap),oo.'
. .
liaving "the blues" and the disease about myself. I want attenuon to
·.:Absolutely not!" said Smith.
we call depression. They're not help me ~eelless.wo!thless,"
The 31-year-old defendant was
really the-siune liting.
QuestiOn: Willi be able ,to ~et pale and. nervous as he took the
. , "Having the blues" is a tempo· bet!Cr? What treaunents are avaal- stand but gained confidence during
tlUY feeling of sadness that usually able?
questioning by his auomey, Roy
lasts only.a few dar,s. All of us
Answer: Some mental health, BlacK.
-, · .
experience "lite blues' from time to
practitioners favo~ cpunseling.
In 4 1/2 hours' on the stand,
\ilne. Depression .is more than just whde others pref~r t_he use of Smith gave a calm, step by step
feelin~ sad. A cheeldist of what to an_.ud.epressant medtcauons. .Most, accou.n. t that contradicted many
l·ook or when a person IS
· depres sed uu 1aze. bot h types o.f treatmen~.. points in the woman's testimony
might help you get a clearer under- ~epending o,n the fauent's. co,ndi- last week.
.
.
S!anding of this common disdrder. uon. Mild forms 0 depresSIOn freMoments after he concluded his
'
&lt;:~ depre ssed
person will have.some quenuy respond well to psycholog- testimony the defense rested its
"~r ~I of lite following characteris- icai counseling w!thOut. the ne.ed, . case. The Prosecutor began calling
~J:S.
. ·.
_for medtcauon. W11it a little g01d- rebuttal witnesses.
.. , ~ a sad or amtable mood most of . ance,. the person can 1~ to•ta)ce a , . Smith said that afler his sexual
t!le day, nearl~v~ry day,that lasts "!ore ~ealisUc look at h!5 or her life . encounter with lite woman, he tOld
~\I'O weeks or mo~; . .
.
slluallo~ and then arrave at more his cousin Patrick Kennedy: "This
.: • a markedly dtmaniSh~. l!'terest approp~)ale act~ons. More severe woman's a real UL..
'!~pleas~ from most acuvtues;
depress 1~n requll'es psyc~oth~rapy
The 3 0-year~ld Florida woman
.• ~ a st~mfacant weaght loss or and anudepressant medacataons. testified tearfully for two days last
wetght gam;
There are several types of antide·
· ·
·: • difficulty sleeping or sleeping pressant·medications, each with its
•.
lllUCh more than usual;
unique benefits and side effects.
• • general fatigue and a loss of Your doctor will start' you on a
el)ergy;
treaunent that is apP.ropriate for
~
: • feelings of worthlessness you.
·
and/or feelings of guilt;
Your depression is tre.atable.
.
: • diminished ability to thinlc or You will get beuer. Life won't
By the year 2030, Ohio's Meditq concemra1e; and/or
always be tl1is discouragirlg.
caid
nursmg home expenditures
"Family Medicine" is ,a weekly
• • recurrent thoughts of dealit or
will
total
Ohio's currentlolal bud·
suicide.
.
column. To submit questions, write
get
unless
alternate care systems
, Many medtcal problems, to John C. Wolf, D.O.. Ohio Uni·
are
developed.
although seemmgly unrelated, can versity College of Osteopathic
That was the prediction of Dr.
oo associated with depression. At Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens! Robert
Applebaum,
of
liflles, the only outward sign of Ohio. 45701.
. Ph.D.
.

BONELESS

'

, Wednesday, D~tCember 11, 1991 •

'

Ohio University
·,
College of Osteopathic Medicil)e :.1 . ·

GOLD N' FRESH
SKINLESS

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s·entine~"'

Nol Roop onllblolor lWIOaflphlcal or Plolarlal Ernn.

........... -.,...

Oullr Yaar CluiltM.. c.lde
. .......Its!
Oosed Wed. &amp;1Ms. Eve1ilgs II
Deceaer die to prlvtt• ,.ties.

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F.RI.: Hoaey Glazed Ham.,,.
SAt: MushrHm Stiak '611
OIVE AOILIORE'S liFT CERTIFICATE!
Aile ..,.......... JIQ .... . , •
1r11W A1n1= PeW, D••• IIW •llllflt 511t1t
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Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy~lddleport,

- ~· r•• ••••"" '''~';"'" "

, Wednesday,

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MANUFACTURER'S

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D~ember 11; 1991

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Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

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The Dilly.Sentinel-Page

:·Cake sale under,way: ~hester D of A -- ~Women'sfef!otYship installs offi~~fS· ,

.-- '~

Ohio

___.._ -. _. ···-·- ..·
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The Ches r Council No 323 · mittee is selling cakes and further Roush, Betty Denny, Mrs.
' Daughters of erica, met r~ent: information or orders m~y be Demosky, Paulme Ridenour, Thel·
ly at the ball 'th JoAnn Baum obtained by contacting Esther ma White, Ethel Orr, Mary Jo Bar·
councilor, presidi
' Smith.
,
ringer, Mary Holter, Bulah Maxey,
Pledges to the 'christian and
The Past Councilor's Club will . Jean Wel~h • .Kathryn J;la~m.
A"!erican flags w_ e given and meet Wedn~sday at 6:30p.m. at · Doroth~ Rllch•~· Esther Smll~.
scnpture was read
Luke The Mason FBimly Restaurant. There Laura N1ce, Dons Grueser, Goldie
first stanza of "The Star Spa~gled will be a $3j!ift exchange.
Fredrick, Doris Koenig and Marcia
Banner" was sung.
.
The Chnstmas dmner will be Keller.
A thank you was read from Ada held Tuesday at. 6:30 p.m. at the · Those having birthdays were
and Kenny Bissell. ..
, · hall with a $3 gift exchange. Enna seated at the table with a cake.dee•
Sic,k noted incluqed Cora Bee· · Clel~d read "This is the Way l orated by JoAnn Baum~They "'.ere
&amp;!e. who is in Western Hills Reba• ' Feel.
. •
..
. Charlotte Grant, Sandy Whtte ,
bditation Center- in Parkersburg, . .The meeung closed m regular . Kathryn Baum, Ella0sbQ1ne·, Thel· ·
W.Va.; Elizabeth Hayes and Bren· form . . . .
. .
.
rna Wh1te, Esther Smcth and Betty
· · da Holter, who are out of the hospi·
Auendmg were Erma Cleland, · Denny.
tal; and the death of Ethel Hart's JoAnn Baum, Faye Kirkhart, Char· · · A potluck was enjoyed by all
son.
·
lotte Grant, Lora Damewood , and !he' door prizes were won by
The state ways ~Jl_d means com· Sandy White, Op!l~cln, Beuy Sandy White:and Betty Roushc ·

Officers elected

.,ilh

pfOgfaffi·
· ,• 8lated

Dinner planned

14i&amp;iilu ITIIII'CIUC'I· Eooh oitt\oo ""'~lOCI- ia - to.lloltldilr • • - i1lf- in .... " - Slolo,
tacep~ u "*~ nolld 1ft tbilld. lr we dQ nan oue of 1n lltl:a '
-.n, we Mil otfef you yow cttaiOI of a • ......,..
lltm . wntn twlllllillll. I A ' ........... UVingl 011 raN!Cfttck wNci'IMIIfttiltl yOu IO ~ tni:IIJU
J ••
tile UV41n•MG pnce llllrin_30 da¥1- 0n1r one vtndOf coupon wil bl
~· ''"" QWd\IMCI ,

c;oio I :US'IT 11111 · TH1E KfiOGSI CO. r!EAIS AHD l'l'lfCES 0000 SI.WIMY, OS:. I, 7lfltO!MI!I ~11lAQC r;DEC.
If, 1•1 IN

Po~OY

I

· Officers for 1992 at the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department have
been· elected and are as follows: ·
Ray Willfor4, _president; Ralph
Searls and ~euh Molden, vice
presidents; Fred Williamson, secretary; BilJ Williamson, treasurer;
Charles Barrett III and Mike Will·
ford, reporters; Bill Williamson,
chief; Dan Davis and David Davis,
assistant chiefs; Marie Richmond
and David Willianison, captains;
Charles Barrett III, first lieutenant;
Ray Willford, second lieutenant;
. and Charles Barre~ III, Mike Willford and Charles Rife, training officers.

-

Officers were inall\lediat the Lyon Runyon sang li solo, "Down
KalhrynJ4d)eclosing
recent meetillg of tbC MeipiCoun· : From His Glory."
prayer and 1 Vi
on.lbe Cbrillty Women's Pellowshipheld at the
l(atlu'yn.Johnson conducted the mas Lightsat .
-~Bradbury Church of Christ
29 buStness meeting in which offiCerS ed.
• t. ,·
present .
. .
1.
reJX)nswerej!iven.
Thenexlmq, willbe~
. Charldille ~ pve ~- ope.n,
A hymn smg was announced for by the Bllldford;Cjl.la:c
. h ol Clirist,_,
mg prayer and mstalled the new Dec. 29 at the Pomeroy C.hurch of on Jan. 23.
.,
officers: ~th~n Johnso!'• pres!· Christ. The public is invited. .
dent; Debbie Milea, first VIce preS!·
The closmg song was."God Be
dent; Linda Bates, secor(d vic~ . · With You.".
. .
•
,:
:
president; Jane Hazelroo, sec:re~Mf; .•·
Hillside Baptist C)lurch will pre&gt;Tina Lambe'r!, 11ews rei)orter;· :· , , .
..
.
sent_its C~ristma(program, "A
Marge ~U, ueasu,rer~ IJI,i!J~.ut!t _.__, Chnstm.u d,inner.. for Amencan • Family Chrisunas EY!;~ on·Dec~21 Underwobd, caill Clla:iftnan. / . . •Alloy . employees .and foote and n at .7 p.m. n•$htly. Rev.
, The SOD$ of the mon~ was Mirleral retlr~ and their families James~ Acree Sr: !'IYltes the P,Ub,
"God Be W1th You" and the open·
.
·
.. ·
he. ,
·•.
· ·.
ing song was "Hark! The Herald WID be Peld Saturday, Dec .. 14,
The church will also have a
Angels SinJ." Devotions were b'~ 1991 at the USWA 517L l.Jmon NewYear'sEvesemceonDec.31
Zion on a Lump In My-TIIi'oat, Hall in Hartford, W. Va.
from 8 p.m. 10 midnight.

Wf ~ TH1E 111GHr TO L/!IIT OVNmTifS, NONE SOLD TO DeALEIIS.

Faith Full Gospel
program planned
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't'

The Faith Fuli Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have its Christ·
mas program on Dec. 20 at 7 p.m.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub·
lie. Refreshments and fellowship
will follow.

.

REGUlAR OR
DIET wrTH
NtmfA$WfET

we Glat#Y Redeim .
YourHderal

Big K .

flOod stamps

son Drinks

•s••

24-PIIc 12-0Z. Qlns

People in
the news
[.food ClubJ

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Prices GoQd 4 Days · ·
December 1991
Wednesday, December 11 thru
; Saturday, December 14, 1991

7 a.m. thru
· · SatuJli&amp;Y Mldnlte
Sunday 7 a.m•
'til 10 P,m.
~nday

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Bear ~· Minimum Prices

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Items and Prices Effective,only at:

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' lb.
Fresh "Silver Platter" f10..10.5·1b. AVg.J

Assorted Pork Chops

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Vice
President Dan Quayle said problems in lhe nation's logjammed
le~al system are typified by a $20
m1llion class-action lawsuit filed
against lip-synching duo Milli
Vanilli.
.
Quayle, who has taken Up the
cause of legal reform, indicated
Monday · he· was ·not ·~::~~i~·
learn his chil(lren, who own
of a Milli Vanilli album, could
efit from the lawsuiL
"They ~~te die victiiils, my kids
- it hurts me,"lie saKI sarcastical·
ly. "Speaking
. of v1cUms,
. .
Man'1yn
and I thought, all these years, that
wt were the victims of Milli Vanilli,••' he said of his wife.
The lawsuit against the musical
group was filed in San Diego on
behalf of Americans who purchased Milli Vanilli albums "
because the duo did not sing the ,
songs. The revelation forced the ·
pair to give up their Grammy
Award.
Quayle was in Pittsburgh to ·
campaign for Sell .. Arlen Specter,
R-Pa., and spoke 10 city business
leaders about legal reform.
NEW YORK (AP) - And now,
for something completely different
in television: A talk show star
interviewing his wife, a, network .
news star. about her ~pcommg
interview of a major ~ns star.
All this wiD happen Wednesday
on the syndicated "The Maury
Pavich Show."
Povich will interview his wife,
Connie Chung,' about her taped
ituerview with former Los Angeles r
Lakers star Magic Johnson for a
"Face to Face · With Connie
Chung" . CBS speeial airing
Wednesday night. Johnson quit
basketball after disclosing he tested
positive for the AID,S virus .
1

GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR SIDRE
..

·~-' PHILADELPHIA (AP) ·'"'.::_""' '·'
Actor; singer, disc Jockey, comedian ... and now a w111ter?
Former "Partrid~e Family'' star
Danny Bonaduce s resume can·
include all of the above with his
latest endeavor. lie's a minority
partner in a diner scheduled 10 open ·
in Man:h.
It's located across from the club
where the 32-year-old Bonaduce
does stand-up on Fridays. But on
Sunday and Monday nights, diners
may give their orders to Bonaduce.
If that isn't enough, he already
works five mornings a week for
radio station WEGX·FM.
' 'ld le hands are the devil' s • ·
work," ·Bonaduce told The
Philadelphia Inquirer in explaining
his schedule. "I like to be as busy
as possible because it keeps me out
of trouble."
Bonaduce was a disc jockey on
KKFR -FM in Phoenix but lost that
job after being charged with attack·
iog a uansvestite prostitute. He was
placed on three years' probation
and ordered 10 perform community
service.
Previously , he lost a job at
WEGX after his arrest in DayiO'"'
Beach, Fla., on a charge of atiempt·
ing to buy cocaine. He pleaded no
contest and was placed on 15
months' probation and ordered 10
perform community service.

"

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Pouna

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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Wednesday, December 11, 199C .

Rotarians endorse efforts to bring ---Names in the news
medium security prisons to Meigs

LANCASTER, Cali£. (AP) building are under way.
This city had an original idea for
, '.
ridding itsel£ of an abandoned
. DE KALB, Ill. (AP) - There
Mojave Desert housing tract: get- probably aren't many mothers.who
The Recognition of Excellence a state participant in the American ly for supplies as well as by the ling
Mel Gibson and Danny Glover can boast that actor Richard Gere
Program of the Middleport Rotary History contest. He plans to con tin· prison staff.
to
torch
it in the climactic scene or wore their swealpants. The mother
·Club completed its first round on ue work in arts and sciences with a
The Rotary Club endorsed the "Lethal Weapon III."
of supermodel Cindy Crawford
Monday evening the club met at major in chemistry.
support of those attempting to . "We think it's a serious blight can.
the Heath United Methodist
The mothers of both honorees secure lbe prison for Meigs County on our community and we want to
Cindy Crawford, 26, recently
Church.
were guests as well as the brother with letters to be sent to the proper ,level it," Assistant City Manager brought Gere - her boyfriend Seniors from Southern High of Miss Canter.
officials.
Dennis Davenport said Tuesday or to this town west of Chicago to
School were recog ni zed and
Gene Riggs presented the possiRotarians were reminded of the the unfinished, rotting 54-home visit her family. The "Pretty
includcd Dee Canter, daughter of · bility of the location of one of the Christmas family meefihg sl:hed- eyesore nonlrofi.;os Angeles.
Wom-an" slai' forgot his pajama:s,
Raymond and Leigh Canter; and medium security prisons in Meigs uled for Monday with Santa
But officials worry the tract, soJennifer Cmwford carne to the
David lhl e, son or Charles and County, according to Governor • appearing for the benefit of the seized from a failed savings and rescue. ·
Donna lhle.
•
George Voinovich's program. Con· children and gmndchildren attend- loan two years ago, won 'I be gone
"Ever since Richard wore those
Miss Ca nter was the county structlon of such a prison locally ing.
after the proposed January shoot. old sweat pants, the young girls at
winner for three years in the. Voice would result in several hundred
Gordon Amsbary, Gallipolis •. Moviemakers want to uSe propane work have been after me to cut the
of Democracy Program and hopes permanent jobs as well as miltions was aguesL
gas flames to create lbe effect of a legs up into headbands and sell
10 pursue work in communications of dollars in construction costs and
Richard W. Vaughan presided at conflagration, saying destruction lbem,' said Mrs . Crawford, who at
and eventually be an airline piloL
many additional dollars spentlocal- lbe business meeting.
would thwart any chance of 45, is only lbree years older than
lhle was the county winner and
reshooting the scene.
.
her daughter's beau.
"I don'tknow much aboui what
. the Warner Bros. folks have in
BOSTON (A,P) - Former Presmind," Davenport said. "I under- ident Carter helped give awards to
stand the flames would flash but young Haitian, Guatemalan,
"Even Jesus Was a Child" was are multiplied.
arouril) the world.
The scripture read was Luke
Mrs. Ruth Karr and Mrs. Helen really wouldn't burn the wood," Mozambican and Salvadoran
the title of the PJl?&amp;mm presented
human :ri~hts activists, and blasted
Wolf sang "Hope For the Chi!, Davenport said.
by Mrs. Betty Roush and Mrs . 2:41-52andMatthew 18:1-5.
Movte
spokeswoman
Anne
U.S. foretgn policy as the culprit in
Mary Jo Barringer at the November .
The group sang the hymn dren."
Reilly
said
negotiations
to
use
the
many
rights abuses.
Mrs. Mae Young presided at lbe
meeting of the Chester United "Thank You Jesus" with Betty
meeting with 15 members present
Methodist Women.
Dean as pianist.
,
The purpose of the progmm was
It was stated in the United and one gues~ Mrs. Twila Buckley.
to affirm children by celebrating · States, one of four children lives in There were 21 sick and shut-in
their contributions and paying poverty and every 53 minutes a calls reported.
A thank you was read for the .
attention to their needs, to provide child dies from its effects. Fourteen
"He figured that if Santa Claus
SAN DIEGO (AP) - With
·
breakfast
sent
to
the
sisters
in
song
opportunity for United Methodist million children die each y ~ar
visions of Santa Claus dancing can get in through the chimney. he
Jo
the
parsonage.
A
card
and
donabefore
reaching
the
age
of
five.
·
through his head, a 12-year-old boy could too,'' his mother said. "He .
Women 10 present their gifts for the
tion
was
sent
from'
Bernice
Bailey.
The
World
Thank
Offering
is
who locked himself out of his was so embarrassed..~ . He said he
World Thank Offering and to .
Jackie
Frost
will
check
on
a
given
to
fund
hundreds
of
mission
house tried 10 slide down the chim- might not go back to school for a
remind UMW lbat as joys ~ celenativity
set
for
the
group.
projects
in
the
United
States
and
ney and beCame stuck.
week." She spoke to the San Di.ego
brated in giving to thts offering
The
boy,
who
wished
to
remain
Union on condition of anonymity.
throughout the year, so these gifts
The crisis started when the boy
anonymous for fear of teasing from
came
home at 3 p.m. and realized
.classmates, was stuck for abourtwo
sooty hours Monday until rescue the front door was. locked, with his
workers plucked him to safety, He key was inside. He clambered up to
the roof and slid feet ftrst into the
·'
In another study. Dr. Joseph R. was uninJured.
By PAUL RAEBURN
"The data on advenising effecAP Science Editor
tiveness shows an overwhelming DiFranza and colleagues, also of
NEW YORK (AP) - A cartoon success in penetrating the illegal the Medical College of Georgia,
character used to promote Camel children's tobacco market;" Lund- found Ill at Camel's cartoon character wasn't as well recognized by
cigarettes is as familiar to 6·yew:- _ berg said in an interview.
.
adults
as by teen-agers. Ninety·
olds as Mickey Mouse and has lei!
"I believe the Congress of the
to a sharp rise in smoking the brand United States will now have to act, eight percent of hi gh school stuamong teefl·agers, studies show.
to protect the public heal Ill, by ban· dents recognized it, compared with
DETROIT (AP) - Robert used during mis~ fog, light rain or
The studies found that the car- ning lbe advertising and promotion 67 percent of adults.
Kearns, inventor of the intermittent other times when full-speed wipers
And Pierce and his colleagues windshield wiper used on nearly all are not needed.
toon camel, called Old Joe and of tobacco products in all forms.
referred to in ads as a " smooth We didn't have the data before , fo~nd that Camels were smoked by cars and trucks in the world, won a
Chrysler Corp. spokesman Tom
character," was recognized much nearly as much . Now we have 25 percent of 12-year·old to 17- patent infringement lawsuit against Houston said the automaker had no
year-old smokers, but only 13 per- Chrysler Corp. today.
more often by children than by them.''
comment on the verdict because
adults.
"Cigarette advertising is the cent of smokers ages 18 10 24. The
Kearns, who·earlier won a simi- another trial will begin Jan. 21 to
"The studies strongly suggest moral equivalent of a national cam· findi ngs were based on a survey of Jar claim against Ford Motor Co., determine how much Chrysler must
that advertising causes children to paign to 'Drive Drunk - Just for 24,296 adults and 5,040 teen-agers.
still has suits pending against 18 pay in dnmages to Keams.
Comparison with 1986 survey other automakers.
become addicted to cigarettes," the Fun of It,"' said Rep. Henry
The verdict came after the jury
said John P. Pierce of the Universi· Waxman, chairman of the House data showed that Camel smoking
The 64-year-old retired inven- deliberated for nine days in U.S.
ty of California, San Diego, an Subcommittee on Health and the among younger smokers had tor, who now lives in Houston, District Judge Avern Cohn's court.
increased sharply since the Camel claims that automakers, beginning Testimony lasted five weeks.
author of one of the studies.
Environment.
Cigareue makers deny,lhey are
"Enticing children, Third World cartoon character was introduced in with Ford , stole his invention
Kearns accep~ a $10.2 million
targeting children and say that populations and disadvantaged 1988, Pierce said.
despite his patents.
settlement from Ford after the fedbrand recognition does not mean members of our own society to
The devtces, standard or option- · eral trial in that case determined the
children are buying the cigarettes. smoke is the only way for tobacco
al equipment on nearly aU vehicles, 'validity of Keams' patents on the
But the studies.show Camels are companies to make up for the numautomatically start and stop wind- device.
smoked by a higher percentage or ber of smokers who quit or die,''
shield wipers at intervals. They're
The Rutland Youth Group will
children who smoke than of adults, the California Democrat said in an
present "Seeing the Star" on Sun·
matching closely the, brand recog- editorial published in the journal.
nition, researchers sail! Tuesday.
In a statement issued in day at 6:30 p.m. Rev. Sam Bayse
The studies are being publisHed response to the journal, the Tobac- invites the public to attend.
Wednesday iii a special issue of the . co Institute, the industry's Wash·
· Journal of the American Medical ington advocacy organization, said:
Association devoted exclusively to . . ~ecognition of advenising logos
the health dangers of smoking. The or characters does not automatical·
journal's editor, Dr. George D. ly translate into pure base of the
Lundberg, said the studies provide product. Simply because one sees
important ammunition for health and recognizes a cigarette ad does
advocates' ·
not mean that the person will
smoke because of the ad.''
SHOPPING HOURS
Dr. Paul Fischer of the Medical
College of Georgia in Augusta
Dally _
asked 229 children ages 3 to 6 to
9:30-8:00 p..
match pictures of 22 logos to the
nday 1 to 4
products they represented. Ninetyone percent of 6-year-olds correctly
By DEBORAH HASTINGS
identified th e character, almost
AP Television Writer
exactly as many as wer-e able td
LOS ANGELES (AP) - NBC identify llle Mickey Mouse logo of
won the latest ratings race with lbe Disney Channel.
5trr.tt
strong finishes by vetel1ll\.comedy
" And think of this - Joe
raceharses "Cheers" and "A Dif· Smoolb has never been on televi93 Mill Street
ferent World."
sion," said Pierce.
Middleport
Figures released Tuesday by lbe
'Even among 3-year-olds, 30
A.C. Nielsen Co. showed that NBC percent identified the Camel
was No. I for last week wilb a 13.1 cigarette character.
average rating. ABC, which has
finished lbird for most of the fall
season, followed wilb a 12.8. CBS
was No. 3 with an ll.5.
Each
point represents

Chester ,UMW make contributions

Kearns wins again; Chrysler
liable in pdtent infringement

Sunday program

NBC wins
Nielsens race

~~
tl

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

··

:t:

25% OFF Ladies Dress Shoes
Nat..Zers, H11~ hpples, .......
OFF Nurse Mates
20% OFF Ladies Casuals and
25% OFF Men's Dress Shoes
....., H.R hpples, Clttroktts
20% OFF Men's Casuals

'Ads ou111:· ·· :.. et gs. Galtia or M.u un countiB" must be pr e

MONDAY PAP ER
TU~SOAY

W£0N fS DAY PAP ER

THURSDAY PAPER

.

tHIUAY PAP ER
SUNDAY PAPER

'·

Ovtr 16 VJorda
.
.20

~-

-~

$9.00
$13.00
-·s1 30/ day

.42
.60
:05/ day

Af; io, cOr!t•cultv• run1. bfokenup deys wtll bech•ged

A ~~ ou 11 cem n1s
1 CHd of Ttlanks
2

Jl

In Memof y

Galli• Coun1y

11 :00A .M. SATURDAY
2 00 PM. MONDAY

2.00 PM . TUESDAY
2.00 PM . WEDNESDAY

Area Co de 614

Meigt Counly
Ar.. Code 614

Mason Co, WV

446 Gallipolis
367 Ch•hire
388 Vinlon
246 Ria Gutnde

992 M1ddi1PCM1
Pomeroy
986 Ch•llr
843 Portl.-.d

256 Gu.,.n Oist

24 7

Le1an hils

675 Pt Ple•11nt
468 leon
616 Apple Gtove
173 M•son

949

R•cin•

643 Arabi• Oisl
379 W.tnut

2:-0 0P.M. THURSDA Y
2 00 PM. FRIDAY

Area Co de 304

882

New H•11 en

89&amp; Letatt

Rull811d
667 Coolv•le .
742

937

Bulfilo

' chimney.
brick
About 90 minutes later, his
mother and his sister came home
and heard his voice calling out _ J ~.~
but from where?
! ·:'::
••At ftrs~ I lbought he was play• 2:
ing some kind of scary boy 's trick," the mother said. "But then ;
my daughter said, 'He's in the ~
chimney!'"
~
Mom was unable to pull her son • ~
out from the roof. Finally, about 5 '
p.m., firefighters were able 10 extri- '
cate the boy.

-: • :I- ...

''

IOWOPEIFOR
CHRiftiiAS SUSOI

PoinHttlaa 4" to 1o·
Polnatttla Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus Baskets
·Holly TrH8
Cut Christmas Trees
Grave Blankets
Monument Sprays and
Vases
Large House Plants
Cactus
10" Foliage Baskets,
all varieties

".

'·

s

BllLLETI'\J BO:\RD

e;mma
tor

IULLml IOIRD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
JO'S CRAFT SHOP
Give a Homemade Craft.
Ha1s; Beads, Lace, Paint, and

.
.

Many Other Supplies. ·
DAILY SPEClALS
St. Rt. 7 • 992-6109
HOURS: 10:00·5:00 Tuos. thru Sal.
•

·~

•'
•'·

..'
'

REWARD: $300
For informallon or retum of
our 7 mos. old Rottweiler
thai was slolen ·
Wednesday momlng, Dec.
4 on Skinner Rd. Answers
to name Cody. Anyone with
infonnation please contact
·us at

.••'
•

.
·'

''•
·''

·'.

.
Open Dilly 1:00 1.m. to 5:00p.m.
Sunday 1:00 p.m. to 5:00p.m.
·.'
HUBBARDS GREEN HOUSE

71 Auto s f~Jhh1
72 Tructu lot Selle
13 VMnsii4WO ' s
1A M oloreyclts
75 Bu111S S. Motors lor S..,tt
76 Aulo P•ls &amp; Act:85SOI"IOI
17 Auto Aepa11

47 Wanted lo Renl
48 Equtpmem lor Run t
49

lnsurilnce
14 Butineu Tram11t11
1!) Schools &amp; ln llrt iCirnn
16 R•dto. TV&amp;. CB Rl!p;ur
17 M+scetlanvou s
1~ WanledloOo

for l eiillle

Mercha ndrse

22
21 ProfesSIOROIII

81
82

•

Hom• lnlprowml!nl •
Piumb1ng HeM my
83 EKilllat mg
84 El•cu ical &amp; Refr '9tt~Mt1on
85 Gun"'al Hauling
86 Mob!lo Hume Rep1111
87 Upholslerv

Mltc . Mer chand111t
Butlding SupphrA
66 Pels tor Sale
57 M uaicilllnsh 1nnen1a
5 B Fru it s &amp; Vegttt1bles
5!1 f or Sa le or Tr;Hfe

~l!fV ICt!:!

•

Services

5 1 H ou~e h old Goods
62 - $porting $Joodl
5] Anhquet
.

Businws..Cfppor1 umty
Money 10 Lo1n ·

..

7 B C• m p1n9 Eqtt~pm111nt
79 Carnpors &amp; Molor HoRies

64
55

21

or1a11un

a.

-·•'
·.

..

.. .
.

.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Business Services

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
.\ CONSIGNMENT AUOION
THUR., DEC. 12, 1991 at 6:00 P.M.
T•ke 50 &amp; 32 W. of Albany lnd exit onto 50
W. toward• N.,cArthur. Auction Ia • qu1rter. of
• mile Oll'the.lett. Signa posted.
Woodbumer, filing cabinet, etoraqe cabineta, wooa deaka,
2-1985 Cabbage P1tch dollo on original boxoo, 1984
Pl'lllmie, 1983-&amp;4 Black cabbage PatCh, now plant stands,
Chriatmas paper, Chriatma1 crafts, balls, 15-boer aigns,
ba8r cans , Hoover swoeper, boxoa of good usable ilams,
gugritl.
Term• ol Auction

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RE-NTALS
Available In .
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME-PARK
Sbortlngat $235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2
bath hou1e

wlbuement and

Newly Re-done
COUNTRY MOBILE

HOME PARK
has nice homesites.
available for up.to
80' homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only·$75 per mo.

Call
614-992-5528 or
. 385-8227

carport, free g...

Call614-992-6528 or
385-8227
-11·

Caah or check with poeltlve ID. No out olallte
checka. Not reiiPOnalblelor to.. or accldente.

12·11-1 mo.

o.

. Food availlibl1.

.

Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson 614-8$8-8706
Assoc. Frank Hutchinson 614-592-4349

PAINTING

GROOM
ROOM

Interior P1lntlng,
FreoEatlmotn
30 yNra experience.
Fo~r lllltre of
recommend1don. Honeol
ond dependable.

Complete Grooming
for All Breeds .
EMILEE MERINAR

••.
I..,,.
can Ed Battin
COlle~;\ a'
1-614-667-6474

(Roan,...,.. .. My

.i 614·992-7694.

SYRACUSE, OHIO
614·112-5776

OUR LOWEST PRICES
OF THE YEAR!

Owner &amp; Optrittor

614-9f2-6820
Pomeroy,

IN POMEROY
Don't Miss.Our
11th Annual

•,•

'

Call Sentinel

113 Court St: • Pomeroy

•

·,'•

-,.

•:"""

•

•

••.

•
.,
•

Real Estate General

CLASSDIEDS!

BOOK YOUR
CHRISTMAS DINNER
PARTIES WITH
· OSCAR'S
RESTAll RANT
Some dates still
. available.
No group too small or up

992-2156

to 901
446-9545

Real Estate General

'

l

j

Make reservations by
calling 446-9545

.

J'

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Justin Time
For Christmas
Giving
AMISH CHEESE .
AMISH HAM
AMISH PEPPER BACON
AMISH TRAIL BOLOGNA
AMISH SUMMER SAUSAGE
· and
HOMEMADE CANDIES

I s.Domino'
.. :11M atflhe ..,...,._ o1""'
I lb. Dirk lrown,
Ullttlkown,Co&lt;tf I "".,.. .
I 14... - - - Sup-.
.- .'-.....,.
. ~--·
e - ..
a--·
f •.,.....,,...,.......___
l_""_
... ._. ......
.......
._...,
..
"""""'
......
...........
,.....,.,
......-=::.-:-.....
:,::-~. -· ..............:.......
I._...

.=_______
... - _
•=--..
""
I II lion._, l.pl hM
11 II w
............ a.. ... - - .......... ....

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

-:r"~ ~.-::"""

r.::-.:w.• ~- ,

514 Eut Mllln • 882-6f10
Pomeroy
WI Accept
Food St1mp1

V"U.SSSS COUPON VAI.llS

Dominae sugar.

205 North Second Ave.

-

Middleport, OH

-... ---·.- -:-:--7':7.;J : ----'-:c-

Teaford
CoantryO..
Jr. GtiiStls

Gr""'
t• &amp;
Mttala.M

;::==:-:··~-~~2~:10-:-:-~-:~ ;:
SNODGWS
UPHOLSTERY
'

'Cut• Rt!ilt
Bap,HNII
Covtn, tic.
Proftsllaell

m,....

614-985-3961
mo.

"Helping You To
,Recover Your
I ntJe&amp;lmenl"

··4·949·2202 '
UCIIE,OHIO '
~

11/20/l

'

:=:::::;:::;==~ ' '7

RIGGS
TREE FARM .
.,

Cl1oooe and Cut

Fresh Cut Trees or
Cut Your Own.

Your Tree or We' ll
Cut It For You.

CHERRY RIDGE,
of Darwin on Rl
681 on Grav•l Flolci
1% Miles to GroVI.

395.07 RocksJWilgs U
!AI c... .ru.s. u1

P01111r0y, 0Wo
614·992·$702

12-2-11-1 mo.

~~~·
·
YOUNG'S
I

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
- Room AcNttlon•
- Gutter work

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

- ElKtrical onll l'lullll&gt;lfta .
- Concnwwort

"AlltaMnoblt PricH"

- Interior

~ Raatlng

a ErllteriOr

Pointing

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

,_.,, Ollie

CHESTER-No need to slart your own bus iness-just lake
lhis one over. This Reslauranl saa!s 38 and alreday sell s
tots ol great tood. tnclucled Is 3 refngaralors, 4 freezers. 2
deep tryers 2 small steamers, a large grill, and lots more.
You can even purchase supplies lhat are in slOck, also has
soorago buildings and a.vailer hookup so you can love nght
behind your business. Plenly o_froom lor li'Ucke r~ lo park.
to stM making money. Sits on 3 acres.

WASNIIS-$11M! .,
DIYIS- $.. .,
.
lffiiGDATOIS- $1oe .,
IAIIGIS-.......-$12\
FlllliiS-$tU.,
•no IIYEIIS- SJt .,

--

$92,000

POMEROY-Union Ave.-What a groat buy lor a greal
tamily. 11has 3 good sized bedrooms, nice bjlth, and a.full
basement. This has boon completety redone new w1nng,
furnace , windows. plu~ng, breaker box, and roof . to has.a
built-in hulch, ceiling lana, and is in a great noigh(lorhodd.
Has low utilities and a one car garage.
.
$25,900
HARRISONVILLE-A 3 bedroom ranch s~·le home that is
silling on approx. 1 a'?'e beautifUl _lay ing land. Clo~ to
school and ahs immedoate possossoon.
ONLY $24,900
MlDDLEPORT·This two story house is loaded with character from its beautiful open slatrway to lhe vo_do oak baseboards. aown molding , arch doorway.s, cornoce boards ,
lireplace, and hand made kitchen cabinets . It also has 3
bedrooms' 1 112 balha and a full basement.
'
'
ALL FOR $48,000

'-

country

i
wilh fnsoned

modern conwniences .

home features 10 rooms, 5

bedrooms. 2 1/2 baths, 1 car garage, shed, patio wilh
. cement pat~ furniture &amp; ga s grill. Plush carpeoing &amp; lovely
drapes Included. Certainly one of tho most soately &amp; lo ne
homes in Middleport! You must see! ASKING $79,900
RACINE· VERY NICE 2 &amp;lory homo with 4 bed rooms, 2
baths enclosed porch, insulatton, original woodwork ol red
cedar: walnut and oak. New paint outside with many newer
. repairs around lhe hqmo. Wtth this home you also haw an

option to purchase 2 additional lots bestde the hom e at
$5,000 each. ASKING $44 ,900

RUTLAND- Approx. 7 acres with 3 mobile homes. Ill 10 •
60,1f ~ 12 x 70, (1 ~ 12 x 50. Grea l rental potential! ASKING
$20 ,500
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT • Hamilton St Nicely
remodled 11/2 story home art a quiet stree t in town . Fenced

in yard , niee lront porch and storage building Many added
features includ ln~3 bedrooms and an abunrlance ol closet
space . AFFORDABLY PRICED AT $19,500

KEN'S APPliANCE

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Fac:lory
Choke Only

THE BASKET WEAVE
Now llpe1 oa Sotwday~
lor tht Grislltas S..S01.
Gin o !.dwonn basket
to Jbat Sfl!daiSomtolt on
yaur Clwislmas list, ·
Weavitt supplies also ia
stock.
Located on Rocksprings

Rd . in Pomeroy, 3 miles
lrom the Meigs Co. Fairgrounds. ·
992-6855

SERVICE

..
'
·-

992-5335 • 915-3561
AcroSJ Froot Pest Offlct
POMEIIOY 0110

·.
..

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

.,

.,
Homegrown,
beautifully lheaNCI. .•

White111d Scotch P11111

5 A.•nd up
Good aelectlon ot
largetNea.
6t4-742-2143 or
742-2979

11 /1511 mo. pd.

11/H
- ·~

POMEROY-Bell Run Rd .·lf you need ronl!ll propeny·L!l"k
no further. Sining on a lillie tess lhan an acr~ of land os a
t 973 Greenbr~r 1otel eleclric 2 bedroom ~ob1le home that
has room builton lhe bacl&lt;. Included IS • 1 bedroom
camper uailer also rentable .
ALL FOR $10,500

a

OWN ER WANTS AN OFFER-Pomeroy·S lots wilh • 2
story home. Home nas 4 bodrooms , dining room, and a lull
· basement. Newer gas furnace and a big one car garage.
WAS$17,100
NOW $15,000

NEW LISTING· RACINE· Ranch Siyle Home wilh 3 bedrooms 1 1/2 bath, with 2 car garage on 3.2+ acres . Wood
burner &amp; bonle gas heat T.C.P. water ana an exira spring
available. ASKING $25,500

GUN SHOO.l

WE NEED LISTINGS! WE HAVE CONTACT WITH IN·
TERES TED BUYERS EVERYDA Y...COULD BE YOU
HAVE WHAT THEY WOULD BE INTERESTED INI IF
YOU'VE EVER THOUGHT OF SELLING GIVE US A
CALLI
'

Bashan lullding

. l

DOmE TURNER~_aroklr...............................H2-51182
BRENDA JEFFEtftt•••.••••••.•...•....,..........:•.•.•.....te24018
DA..,LitiE ITEWART

SANDY IUTatER- ..................................--112-1371

,

USED RAILROAD TIS

CLUB
GUN
SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

'

HOOOOIOUUOUOMOOIOIOOIIUOOUOOOOOOtta-131&amp;

:. £

Long

' -1+ 1 J?.~~,~~

Also a neat 1inle picnic area. G1va us a call1f you re ready

but when I take out
the Domino•..

....

..

'

t t-14·'90 l1n

Seatings.At •
1' 3 &amp; 5 P.f.'l.

~
I

992-2269

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949·2160
Ooy or Night -· ·
NO SUNDAY CAllS

ANOTHER BUFFET
AT OSCAR'S
NEW YEAR'S DAY!

J

~

~1700::::--w

WATCH FOR SIGNS

OFFICI; 88~-2886

r------..
SHRUB &amp; TIEE '

Luxelrl, lnllder,
Hell Pump8, Fumac:ee,
Air Conditioners

·a1
BUILDERS

•

.

TRIM ,and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD ·
• B.lll SLACK

BUDFORDS

CHRIS1MAS SALE

.''

C. l. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration
w. s.n &amp; s.rva
-Wulhlr King, Miller,

OfRISTMAS TREES
· &amp;CRAm

JEWELRY
·,'•

CLARENCEATHERT~lll

11M :Itt

CLARK'S

-- - ----:·--

Tr~ns

R ent

4:l M otill e Hom ts for Rt.•m
4"3 · Farms l or R•inl
44 Ap;~r,m ent f or Rent
45 Fwnts h ed Rooms
46 S~ tv . tor Rent

H.tu W ~n1 od
Situ•tion W anted

I .

•.

There's IJlOR: to baking ·
than what you're making!"

63 Liwes1oc:Jl .
1)4 H•y &amp; Grlin
'&amp;J Sued &amp; f~ llllil'er

35 Lots • Acru.y e
36 Real Ettate W~nt ed

Ernploy;nenl
Servtces

• •
followittl{ I t•ft'llhtmt• t•xdllmgt•s...

62 Wanted to Buw-

I 8u1inou Bul,lngs

HOU16S

ID;J P;s

61 ·- Farm Equtpmont

33 FMms tor Sale

~

5 Happy Ads
6 Lo't a net Found
1 Y•d Salelpa•d '" a!Jwan cel
8 Publtc Slle • AuctiOII
· 9 W~ntldlo Buy

r_;

6 li~l!~'lJLI(

Honws fo1 S;tle

32 Molltlv Homes tot So.l 11

3 Annouumen1 1
4 Giwuway

11
12
1l

Farm

Real Eslale

'•

'

210 ••••• ,_,,.,
HJ-6254

PAPER

Rate
. $4.00

41

OAV BEFORE PUBLI CATION

D~ADllN~

-

16
16
1s
15
15

•

for e.:h d"- u separate ads.

• A c:I OJ&amp;!ir fwd advtl'rlise.nur\1 pl01cml•n Thu Omlv Swll•nllllll•
Ct'PI
cli1U1t"1Ulf 1.hsJ,Iuy, 811 sim .oss Card ;nuiiU11al t~ Ot iCd)
w11l ;tbo d p!J tl lll' 111 the Pt Pl v&lt;Gant Rllll•slur .ilnd thtt Gall!
polls O;uly l••bum:, ruactunu over 1B. OOO ·hunHrt

;.,

H1m P1pplts .d Portsltltis
.
20% OFF Mll'r,llllles,OIIn's Tennis Shoes
K·$wlss,,LA. .Gtt!r, Co1vtnt, K-a-oo ~

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

Ratet

patd
'Rccllftlltl t .&amp;O discount lor adf paid rn advance .
'Free &lt;Ids
GNe;tway and found ads undl!f 15 words w•ll be
run l dav s at no chage.
'Price of ad for all upilal lutht.rs tS doublv· ~n c" o f iMI cost
~1 poMrl ltn11 type ut!ly_u!f!d
.·
'S ~tnlijtulr s not ruspon s ibltt for errors ilhtrr lrrsl dtrt . !Chuck
' for ti rrors 1 ~111 d-v ad'runs 111 pap~rl . Call h ufot e 2 00 p "m
diV ahm publn::itliO..rtu rnilk tlcOrrttcliun
' Ads tha t must btr-porud m t~dVil!tlCu ar•!
Car d ol Thanks
H11ppy Ad$
111 Mumori am ·
V;~td S~l us

COPY

Words

1
3
6
10
Monthly

POLI CIES

-

'
HOLIDAY HOURS: Monday
thN FrldiY N
s.turday N; Sunday Noon-S

Days

ClOSED SUNDAy .

$7.50 each
$4.50 children under 12

"They don't
jum.p up and down
when I clip .coupons,

RATES .

. TO PLACE AN AP CALL 992-2156 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

(}\\iff
03ooks

--Holiday·iavlngs · .
. Thursilay ·thru .
F\..~ ~
Sunday ·

Ohio

L

" The worst human rights abuse·
in the world is the iniliation of ~i
war," Caner said j)efore speaking
Tuesday at the Reebok Human ~~~
Rights Awards ceremony. "If you 1
look at the last decade, where have.~!
the wars origini!led? They've origi- ~:
nated in the United States," he •'
said.
· ·
" We gave tacit approval to •: .
Israel's invasion of Lebanon," : ·
Carter said. "We bombed villages - :
arouna Beirut We.launched a war;: :
against Grenada. We invaded Pana- ·~·
rna. We financed and orchestrated;: :
the Contra war, where 35,000 peo- • :
ple were killed in Nicaragua. We·:
were the leading f~rce in launching::
.a warm Iraq, wllhout any real:&gt;
effort to resolve the issue peace-·~
ably."
::
Recipients included Guatemalan··
Carlos Toledo, Haitian Sauveul":
Pierre; Salvadoran Mirtala Lope~::
and Mozambican Abuliacar Sultan.;•
Three young Soviets killed while-:
helping to protectlbe Russian par.,:&gt;
liament during the August coup; '
attempt also were honored.
•
•:

m.

Boston bar
comedy
' finished fifth .
"The Cosby Show" spinoff " A
Diff~t World" wa£ ninth.
ABC's blue-collar family head&amp;! by •"Roseanne" was lbe mostwatched ·program on television.
CBS' "60 Minutes" news·
ma,azine was second.
'Coach," which follows
"Roseanne" in ABC's hit Tuesday
night lineup, was No. 3. The formulaic ABC sitcoin "Full House"
was fourlb.
. NBC's reality series, "Unsolved
Mysteries," was No. .6, followed
by ABC's " Home lmprovemen~ "
still the only new fall series to
break the top 10 lisL
The Philadelphia Eagles show- ~r
down with the Houston Oilers
made " NFL Monday Night Pout·
ball " the No. 8 broadcast of last

11 '1991

f

· r;

12-year-old gets caught in chimney

Cartoon.Camel as familiar as Mickey Mouse

I.

IHERYL WAL'ItRS.......--··· ............ ..........M7-cMtt

HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................It2..111 ',
TRACY aRtNAGER...........................................IU-243$
JEAN TRUISELL .............................................Nt-2110

JO tiLL.............................................................tll 4411

-.a.

OPfJCI......,,•..;._, __,__........................".......

---··..,:--:--:--::-:c---:-~-::-----~·~..!.--;-------,,7"--........-~-~. ~~-;-::;:-·---~:?T::l~~~

RACINE._
-· FIRE DEPT. '
EVERY
S~T.

~t.

.

BISSEU
·SIDING CO.

....... ...,

· "

NIGHT

6:30P.M.

Starting

i

•VINYL SIDING
ei(LUM lNUM SlJ)ING , ;,
•BLOWN IN
INIULATION ' . •

28

Fodory Olioko

12 . . . . . . . . . Only
Strictly ........

I · U ·'IHift

•

"FrH ElllmetM' "

PIL 949·1101

.., .... ····1160
NO SUIIIAY CIUS

~---""'..--~3-:;,~1~. ~.

'.•

�•

.

. . . . . . ., , _

· ·-

'"~M&gt;O ,, . . . . ~ .oo&lt;•

•

•

••. . , , ,

'OhiO

\

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio
Announcement s

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

21

Business.
Opportunity

, Apartment
~ tor Rent

December
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Llrry Wript

INuly .Sa.lon for •••· or rant In
an lx!lO ft. trollor on Routh
LIM..114-317-1101.
Four •Pl. rtmtnt•. .cornDitlttv
romodolo!l, good lnvooimonf,
Mil own · l1nd contrtet to

quolllfod poroon,I14-Hlh117t
'

4

gra~

1104..75-277e.

--"''

·'-- ---.- .

Television
Viewing.

F"'-~ ~TttK TillS IN.TII'-T
I()(.E F'OillfE, PN. ~

torSIJe

71

~

'18M Chevy C:.YIIIIr, at, pt, pb, ·
oc, AMIFM rodlo, - ptlnt, IX• ;
lro oloon~lft - · 114-112-•'IUS ,
1811 Corvotto, voiy good oona, .

lmoll
Pluo Utllllloo

Fu-

.•

'WI!D.. DEC. 11

t1f,IOO 11+247-4111.
· .:
1181 ~ao, a.ao. t1,100. 304- :

An!! ot!IDIII. lt4 44tl:IM. eotl
Betoro1p.m. .

I

,.,
•

. . .fa... ' """' of the

lour acramblod _ . below 10 form lour ~mple - •·

EV!NINO

.,a=:,_

IJI.71)11.

..'00(2)

Real Estate

Giveaway

4 month old fomalo

'"llllno;

ColnpiiiiY
HouM

~c·

e

!II !II e Ill D •

~

kltton,

0... lV Sllfeo.

·==

• lint of NI'L Glmt of !he

·h--· .._ ~'foilci Toclaj :~

C .lTin, K·t

Cop

I .. (I) llollft HIIMttt
1:20 ~ lqillrt One lV Stereo.

·~~u~..."=~
111 Ua-~ca...,..

.

lt~aJ:'-Q
DUpCioM

0 Ntw Zoml Stereo. Q

9

e

wanted to EJUY

!:i:'Jt:'J:
r§'C~ ;..

Wontod to ~. Stondlng tlmbot,
lob Wllllamo I Sono 614-1192·

1441.

Top

P~c11

COine, Oold

Pold: All Old U.S.

Ring~

(J)

Sliver Colna,

~-

Gold Colno. M.b. Coin Shop,
151 Avenuo, Golllpollo.

1:0

Employment Services
11

Proc111ing Phone
Ordorol Pooplo Coli You. No b ·
pt~onco Nocooury. 1-800.25!11r111,

-

(0:30)

....'

C.ll Mlrllyn

I

-vor3Q4.882·2645.

\1.!

:&gt;.

~ .

,1

~o~?Y· you'flf
THE W~ONC? ('ffl.fON.

I

;

s

!

•

lly:

R01d Laldn lftlt' .3:3oPM.

1181Honda'IU,4-.- .
...~~-~-~·.;;'';;;10;;;·.;,304;.;.:
..;;.71o2;.::;411l:;:._
;

76 . Auto Parta &amp;
Accaaaortea

- - - - - - - JIWiiness Services.-------

DEER CUTTING

J&amp;L -

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

•RIPI-ment
Wllldowa
•Roofing
•lntulatlon

WRAPPING

Long Lasting GrHn
Scotch Pine.

LAKE

Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Onea.

949·2734

614·949·2058

MAPLEWOOD

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

RAONl,OH•.

PI Bry~~~ Place
lllildleport, Ohio
11/14/ltn

rwbull, 1t.rtlng II

tlii

Auto '

Pano. 114-24U4177, 114-ft. '

2213.

HomerMde with

,5 C1t &amp; Wrapped
1
5 Extra to Ski•

Rlplq, Wv. 304-372-3133

$IO..r.,

'

m.

1M2.

bock 1 1ooo

I

614-742·3051

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

.

Campera&amp;
Motor Homea

PlclrU,.

·

ON'S APPUOICI
SIIYICI
"I-SUS or

7:30~L~'l::~i
ft:.01t~l

i

.. .

Tonftht
...Willi

Cltltchn

WhMI of Fanune Q
Family FIUd
11J A Chlpmunlt Chrlllmal
When Alvin gives away hiS
.harmonica, he muat coma up
with another one ~lore the
next concert. (Anltnltad)
(0:30)
Qll Ill • Star Stereo.
D Calli I lloatcllllltU Notra
Dame II Bolton Colitge (L)
Cnllaftre · .
7:35 (J) Sanlont a Son
1:00 (]). 0 UniOivld
..,..,._, A con geme uses
IOtllry tickets to reap llrge
returns. Stereo. C
(I) MOVIE: Scrooge (2:00)
(I) (J). Dlnolltn The
Slnclalra can't ~lebrata the
lnventlon.,sllhe refrigerator.
Stereo. 101.
(!) Ctmllitll Hal Cttltllml1
c - Aleadve holidiY
~ or Chriltmaa Classlca
Ia performed by Kalhlten
Battle, Frederica von Stade,
Wynton Marulls and otllers.
(I :30) Stereo.
(I) Cl!rfllml• Willi Llleilno
PevarDitl Lea Disciples de
Maseonet, the Canadian
Boys ChOir and LUCiano
Pavarotll perform holiday
f!)uslc: altha Notra Dame
Basilica In Montreal. (1 :10)
iiDl D e llrooldyn llrldge
Thl Berger end Sliver
lamiNas learn of Jackie
Robinson's trade. Stereo. r,.
liD MOVIE: Amazon ·
Womtn on the Moon (A)
(2:00)'
. .
,. 11J Murder, She Wrote !;J
1111 Funny Bullnilll Willi
Chtrtlt ChiH VIII Country
music: stars beCOmt object~
. of practicallokas perpetrated
by Charlie Chase. (1:00)
Stereo.
PrttntNewa
1tft1 Brother·Jeke Stereo.

e

1:01 (J) MOVIE: Thundtrblll
Serv1ces

CH

oQuellty Work •
•F- Eellmetee
.•Cti'Ptl H11 F111 Dry

Time '

•High 01011 on Til.
Floor Flnlth •

. •r 1nns, o...,

·'

-·

TREEt

SUrlliuo Aomy Ctmtlallfll, ea~
hOr( Clothlnt. Now 111 loatflirl
oombat - · · lnoulotod dacron
...,llallfiiCOVIIIIII 130, Junior
11111 camftougo. Som So,....., lelidlo Bond,.lllo Poll
otflol Eall of Rov...woocl
lt~l unlll Chrtotmao 3:00.
•=oo
,rt, s.t; Sun noon IlK
I:OO P cthor houro call 304:nwus.

REASONABLE
HARLEY HilliNG'S
RESIDENCE .
35975 Flatwottlls Rd.
44

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERn ·

AUTO PAm
Spedlllling In

(pstOM

NEW I USED PARts
FOR AU MAKES &amp;
MODElS ·
992.7013

HOURS:
B:30 am-4:00pm

614·992·3394

Ia

• '•••

'

9154471
D7~617t

L.OWEEZ.Y WILL FAINT

A·PLUSH

.

~12,=000.~.;-'3"C~:-:..::,JI.=:"""':::-:,::.'' 7 ' - -

lm
Ford FtOO truc!o, Nno
"""" ond 1 1814 Iuick A-•'
.-.
~ '

coil 114-1411-2881 oftir 11pn ond
wlllllendo
1m Chryolor Coldobl now
Pllnt~ new llr•, $1000, 3ik.e75seas oftor Spm

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
•

311..3111.

·

Plumbing &amp;
Heitlng

J,.,..

Aalltno.,_1121 dotJ, Doio 114441-1117, ~vo. IM.f~

FIIINACES FOR MOlLE.' DOUilEWIDE H~

•••••• t • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••

· ·

MO.LEH-

BENNE.TT'S

·

aH_..Iul_,

O:J~~~:.Io

bat~ 1
ltltahln. .. Now~
'NMDdlllll NIOI .,... big )'lrcf.

Oj)ur

oo • • · - . _

affluent, Influential lrlends .. lf ~ou ' ra In and hoping lor ch.,_ to take place In
need of a special favor. chances are It an endeavor you're Involved In, do
~
will be granted - If you alk.
something lboulll youreetl.
·
PI8CE8 (F.tl. 20-lllrah 20) The good VIIGO (A,.. ZS.Bepl. 22) You might
- ~ u~
. ,
news from a distant place you've been have to make a rlther dllflcun dloclllon
Dec. 1z, 1811
anKioully anticipating could be on' Ita . today, but If you Itt your hllrl. lnllead
.
way today. Chec:k yoor mailbox and, If of your logic, rule your h&amp;Jd, you'l autolmp~ove~tl
your financial In- ~ou have to go out, leave a number malk:llly do what's beet lor ell
ler81tl .are concerned 18 Indicated for where you can be reached.
conc«ned.
the. I'll' ettead. Additionally, It lOOks ARIEl (lllrch 21·AprH II) Someone ' LIIRA (lepl. ZI-Ocl. 211 COnditione
like your .OCialllle will be perking up. who Ia deeply concerned abOut you but should be lmpoovlng today where your
11 not particularly. demonatratlve, may flniiiCial lntareetl are concerned. Be
~':Jn.iARtul (-. ZWIIC. 21) There again do something niCe lor yoo toda~ alert lor developmenll that could en·
areatHI opportunltlla avallabll to you at In thla lndlvldual'a own, qultl way.
h111C8 your mlterlal..tl-belng.
thl811me through avenues yoo'd leaat ;. TAURUS (April~ 20) You'll make ICO!II'IO (Oat• ...-.a) You might
expect. Don't .... one aource u being
very tavo~le lmpreulon today on ' have to take • clrcultout route 10 Qtl
~lOr 10 another Gil a jump on life someone you ve recently met. It will be what you Wll'll today. Hyow dealroo ano
by ·ilncleratandlng i11e lnlluencet gov· llgnl~nt enough to l;&gt;egln a bonding " of • tnlterlal neturt, locue flm on the
ernlt\o you 1n the year ahead. Send tor proceaa lor • good ,retat!C?nlhlp.
humlll rtllatloniltlpllnvOIYICI,

canw•o Plurllblno
Fourtlt ond Plno
21A,

Sagittarius' Aslro-Graph predictions GEMINI (Mer 21..tuM '20) An enaeavor'
today by malting $1.26 plus a long, sell· you may gtlllnvotved In today can give
addressed, stamped envelope to Astro- you a real sense of achle&gt;oetMnt. You'll
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box like the way you'D handle lhlngs, and
91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be your methods will be admired by others
sure1o stale your zodiac sign.
as well.
CAPIItc;ORN (Dec. 22.....,. 11) This CAN~R (JuM 21..tu1J 22) You're
could be an extremely pleasant day lor much more popular with your peera at
you socially. Your chtu;t shows you thla.tlme than you may realize. Howev·
might be more admired. than usual by er, you may begin lo II art appreciating
members of the opposite gender.
. thlslact today.
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-F.tl. 11) You're LEO (Jutr 2$-Atlg. 22) Take control of

.{)I . ..,_. ,. ,.. . . .-- ,. . . .

· - · Cll1114-C4Wl't3.

44t-4:131.

a:::~:a'

e Wonder Year.

SOUTH

"TU2
tK .8
+QISU

ra

Dealer: East

wHI Nor~ Eut
Bluffing is an integral p.1rt of poker. Soti~
It
You bid a lot with a bad hand, hoping · P..
I t(!) Pus
z+
the opponen~ will fold and leave you
I·
u
Ill&gt;I.
Pus
with the pot. There is ocwional bluff.
p..
Pus
ing in bridge too. A psychic bid m~ 4 '
. p... Pass
P..
I~
represen~ the · length of one's suit
and/or the strength of one's band. At
Opening'lead: 8
the right moment, a psychic bid can be
an effective weaPQil •. ~ut it Ia a two- L------'-----;.,."""'~-"
edged sword. Partner, taking the bid
alface value, might carry biuide too
, . , . _-"" .• , , •
high, per.baps eliciting a juicy penally majors. South ml&amp;ltt bave j 2 ,1 ~
double from lhe opponen~.
three hearts, but IIIey got •
In tMs year's World Bridge Cbampi· anyway.
&lt;
onships in Yokobama, Japan, Piotr
The del- blpa with
tti.llle
Gawrys and Krzyszto( Lasockl of Po- king, the club. aad a clull...rt. . _ · ..
land sid~~pped a psychic bid durin&amp; returned a spade. .
·
·
the semtfmal match against the deDeclarer, Laeockl, clecWed tltat·lf .
lending champions from Brazil. (Po- West bad the K.J-10·1 of tara. Milia
land won by 261 to 209.)
. bid indicated, be wwld bave ' 1 w
West's tactical one-heart response the final contract. Also, lf Ellt dlda't
was Jtliibtly .safer than it seems be... bave the bean king, wbln - 1111,
caule. !Wt's openltig bid wu limited opeDi.tll bid? So r"'t'kl -tile ......
to IS high~ard points. EaSt wu un- iii baathrith the ace aad led • r..t to
likely to jump to four hearts. North's dummy's ttee. wa- Eut'l ldltil apr
double, following his initial pw, peared, declarer clalmeitl.
~wed. length and st~glh in both
o-.wuuas WI
-

i;'

3"

+

I
I

·, · "' ·

..-e

a.

ace

The World Almanac®Crossword P11'"'•
ACROSS

AMwerto,. ...... .......

tnfiiOIIId

37 1,051,
Romen
38 Trip

1 Stlfllh
peraon
7 Gothic arch
12 Covtr, 11
with netting
13 Extended

40Cu~y

exchenge

PrtltliUm

4 1 F111 aircraft
(abllr.)

14= ·
genUy
15 Slghltlt
16 Unit
17 Chemical

42 Sacrad book
« Wtatem
hemltpht;e
111ft.

.....,

45 llmaltln. lor
ahOrt
46 Popawa'a
lrltndOUvt

"'"''.a

48 Again
51 Shld
55 WOII awey
56 ot building
In!trior

aumx

18 Cooking
21 Shttr lebrlc
23 Srnal
cuShion
26 Smen 11mp1t
ot cloth
28
Golda

2larllt
entotope

57 HeYing lllpl
for llaartng

28 Troolcal
cuckoo
30 Poker ataka
31 Drunkerd
33CIH

FIUI'ftt'1

a llttrt Pitt

4 Shlk-ar·
oan ¥lltlln
5Arama

58 Deny

DOWN

31 WlloHy

7 lollltap

3 Ancient

6

I Even (poet.)

g Wintry • •

10~

~~

·11r
Actor-

·-~----;--'-,- 13

_ ..................-...~- 18

lli ~torte• of c...._

Lavt wtlh L.to BuiCiglia
The lnternaUortllly known
author and speaker on lilt
dynl!lllca ot loving .
relatiOnahlpelhlm.warm.
and wondlrtut rnemorltl ol
peat Chrlstmaa hOIIdlys.

&amp;.catlll 0. .SaHenl Scheel Ill. off II. 1•1
1·100·171~596J

;

••

'

j

,,

::.r=-·' -··f·

......

211 Silly ,....,.
22 PieCe " metl .
:n AllloN

......

14 llltectln
wlolon
25 Dupllcalea
27 Foolllh part
32 Mre.ln
llladrld

.-.---4---4--1
....-1-+--1

34 Soolol
35FIIIttMtl
3g Poltiii'J cllty
43 Wolllke

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

47 Wile ., • ·ltl;d

....

48 Milt . . .

41 Flruntt
owntfl' Dfl·
50 Heart

52 NetiiMI
53--(0VIIII llij
54

Jul.,.,
Kid -

ClLEBAITY CIPHER

r..,..•

~ C6ptMr. CfW1~ n or.lell firWI • flllO 4 by fiMOut ~
•
EICh ~ttt• tn 1t11 CllpNr...,. tor tnotn..
aM: z

'J
JV

URC
R

HTI

ZRKHXYO .
TXPS

KTJIZ

IJVIRIIFI
J

KXPBXHI.'

...-F.

·

·

1*f tnd l)fWiftt,

KTIVWIY

HX

l

''
•

~

FJWI

OSHHS

KXPI
R
PJOFIY.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The penalty of ouccm Is to ~ 11J 1111
anentlona or people who formerly anu- you: · ~ Miry Lmlt.

(2:30)

i

KRV V JVA

ICIO

CPaFFJYA

• Colli' ....,..,.. Seton
Hel II Flutgarl (L)
If

EUIIK

1..........

uvet

e

,.

Vulnerable: Neither
By ~lip Ald•r ·

e

M.D. Doogle realizes the
truth about beauty wllen he
meetJ a librarilon. ~tereo. Q
a ce Jekutitllhe
Fatnllrt Starao. 1:1
11J MOVI!: The ilin Wllo
K- Too Much (2:30)
1111 Nllhvlllt Now Starao.
Lin')' King
0 Ftllher Dowling llyaterln ·
II young man Is plagued by
his late lather's underworld
ties. (R) Stereo. Q
·
8:10 (I) Cemeglt HIM Chrilfttl
Conctfl A 18atlve holiday
collCirl of CMstmaa Claaalc:s
Is performed by Klthlee~
Battle, Frederica von Slide,
Wynton Marsalis and otllers.
(2:1OJ Stereo. .
t:iO (2)
0 Night Court Din is
/ - held II gunpoint by a bitter
deplm slortl Santa.
Stereo.
.
'
(I) (J)
~lui Love
Marty end Hannah a
rtlattonshlp 18 hlldld lor
~altr. (PI 2 of 2) Stereo.

r•

'

••

(I) (J). Dootfe ~•

1110 lulak R::p•1, 2 Doar, Qood

WHITE'IIIElAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon 1210 Socond
• - Golt(pollo, Ohio, 114·

+iloeu

tAKIOI

0 Seliileld Elainebreaks up with her boyfriend
when he starts to.drink
again. Stereo. C

Condition. ca Aftor 5p.m. 114-

¥, 31 1'81tfn

CONDinOHERS • IIAT PU"'S and

t.OO (2)

daar ..Un, 11,000.1tii.Honda .
l00cc,..?1400 mlllo,

VCR'I, aood oondHion, In

1·100·141-0070
DAIW1N OliO

"·.
·'ltHk/1
161.1 " .........

BUT THIS TIME
I GOT ONE

:·flfPDRT CARD

1.

OlfOUfiD ·

12·2-tt-1 mo.

.........
ec. ,,....
•..,. c.,.....
.............

SHE'S SEEN YORE
OADBURN REPORT
CARD~ BEFORE!!

.• I'M SCAIRT AUNT

1 I 2 bdrm
In lllddlopon,
.Utltltll Fum, op roq. no plio,
114-102-2211.
1 And 2 Bldroom Apartm•nt1,
Filii Avonue, Gllllpollo, 514·
441-1221 .

(J)

a•

BARNEY

Apartment
for Rant

or 992-5553

742·3020 Evelllngs

. . . 1111111

Fr- htlalr

tiJ

Kavin notlcas hOW the annual
Christmas party has
Changed. Stereo. ~
!Ill
'Tw•• ~~~e Night
Balorl Cltrl1tml1 A mualcal
adaptation from Clement
Moora's poem reveals the
story ol a village whose
townspeople fear San,~a . _ .
· Claus will not coma.
~!mated) t0:30) Stereo. Q
l:)lllnlle Menllon Stereo.

•'

1BIIIIuotana, I cyl., auto., oxc.
lntortor, f3,100. 1138 Chivy 2

o..c•

II. I, ...... ON.

I~

"

Autoa for Slit

·Displayed at JH_
Q~agty Prlat Shop

(2:451

...,.._tf~(to

"K

.Q7653

7:01 (J) Addlma Farnttr

B

"&lt;

+JH

+AS

ra

WHEN SHE SEES MY

1 mo.

•R-t;t~• flet-,a

"DIJM80~'

t8U2
"JI08

·~

~ ,l

Pont'8v.OW.

IIEU&amp;.Mln .
CAIPI'f CUA.IS
••IUPLOOICAB

HER FRIENDS
CAl-L HER

•
'·

Trnnsportat1on

·-··

.

.

MY FRIENDAMYTI-IINKS
'ia.I'RE CLm: AND VEIZ"'"
INTISL.L.IeiENT'.

11·11 lttto.

....... It .. Or ••

• •

IWT

WIST

PHILLIP
ALDER

O_Ttte Wattona

e

no. 304-e?l- •

U

Opd 7:CM!!-!·

:~SH·fli&lt;CA'{li ,41\ltJ~ .. .

S.10 porW, tront bumper block. •

PONDS
SEPnt SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
S.EWER LINES
BASEMENTS '&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Umeatone, Dirt.
~:~~~~ end-Coal
Bonded

Fr... C.l Nwl ~ GrtWtt I
byiHS..W11oi.

tiAIR Ga . .c.n.mwASI(
'lEErn W!-lt'TEUR AW

t•

Of

I00-2lW581.

BUUDOZIIG

~~r2lEffJ1

ro:.a::a,

•

11·251- pd.

FOR SALE AT BOI
SNOWDEN'S LOT
Mall S!-:..Rtti-. Oh.

. lAA'~­
SI{At\IIRX),

Nn 11• tankl, body peril, one :
ton lruck whttll, r•cllltOf'l, ,
11- mot~1 lie. D I A Auto, .

$20.00eadl

CHRISTMAS TREES

O~EN.JEPAII

'

Budgll Tronomllllono Uood.l ;

GRAVE
BLANKETS

and

'

•,

i{EK AND MEEK

• :

+J 7 2

.

ra

tell Honda 3!lOX. 3 wltlolir- '
1100. Filii houu on Btato F'f"'

.,.

.ta~JIInt .

II\

ff#f I•6HTI
TIMf

.

Cltdltntat Trw Tllltt Abear
cub and a lox are
aCCidentally IOCkad Into il
train car carrying Christmas.
trees to the city. (Anlmiled)

$350.DO/IIoy

NORTH
11-IJ.tl
+IQJGI
"AQHS

BRIDGE

Tonight

II!

Help Wantad

0242.
AVON • All

.SCIIM Lm lNSW81
· ,.....
Lethal - Drill - Mirth - Cygnet - DAYLIGHT
I've always haled·alarm clocks and never ue8d them
My roommate however couldn't get along without one·
He says that an alarm clock is somethlrig that seare8
the DAYLIGHT into you.

·1:31 (J) .Mdtt Grltllth
7:00 ~ Q WhHI of F -

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Ohio

~

-

.

:'·'

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

~

~ Winter

I
I

meetings
concluded

I

•
&gt;

5 LB. BAG

STORE HOURS

Chance 'If rain 1oftiPt 60
percent Friday, btp hl'mlcl.a..
Cbanee or.rain 70 percent.

·79c

Monday tlru Sunday

8AM·10 PM · .

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· 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

-· .,...

KE&amp;BLER
GRAHAM CRACKER_

PRICES EFFECTIVE DEC. 8·THRU DEC. 14, 1991

aI

•

•

I '~­

..
o

PIE CRUST
6 oz..

COfFEE
390Z.

LB.

.(
W1eners••••••••••• 59
59
Bologna•••••••••••• $1.
WIL~ON'S CO~N KING

·

ECKRICH

$269

.EEF BUCKET . , .

Cubed .Steak••••••
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
Chuck Roast••••••

LB.

I

11.

·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BOnOM

Round Steak••••••u.
'

-.

ZESTA
SALTINE

. .

'

$ 99

TYSON CHICKEN PArnES or

WHITNEY
PINK
SALMON
..

$249

east Fillets•••.,.to oL 1

° ·an

ty.
te da
· ha bee ffi
"We're not here to propose a
r y, no Sites ve n ICI Y for t)le medium-security prison.
potential site," Reed told the com- presented to the state officials
Other business
missioners." but we want you to =~~~lefor choosing me prison
The chamber officials briefly
know that the chamber wants to do
county personnel are currently chamber's
updated the commissioners on the
h
.
k
(
•
I
h
progress in fillt'ng the
w
atever
11
ta es to ocate t e gathering data ·0 1 di
·
·
1
' 'li ty here)...
• I c u ng potenba
E.xecutive .DD'
irector{Eco.act
sites, for presentation
to the vaca.nt
no
DC lo
"You've.· got the business com - Department of Corrections. Once
mtc ve pment trector ._ .
munity behind you," Kitchen told that information is received and tion. Tbh•tE 11°s~!~n.. wiJt. made
the board, "and we are willing to reviewed by the state, site reviews vacant Y· tza-n »Chaad·, who
do the leg work or anything else
ill be · b
has ~etwned 10 *!etta to assume
3
thatwiUhelg."
w
gm ystateofficials.
r~$ioaal&lt; development director
Governor George Voinovich polltiOII:on the state level.
. 1 .
AI thaug potentia sites_were announced last. week ,that_Meigs,
Accordin to Bak
h
discussed between the commission- Noble and Belmont Counliea were ..
g
er, w o SCJVes
ers and the chamber leadership yes- be'
'dered
on the steering committee to hire
mg const
· as.- potential sites the new director, applications con-

1

W; 'l

: Phillip Bruce Wilsdn, Gallipo. lis, _was ~ired as principal of ~eigs
. Jumor :J:ligh School at a meeung of
: the Metgs Local Board of Educa·
tion Wednesday night..
.
. . Two candt~at~s were. mter: vtewed:for the JOb t.n .execullve ses·
: SJon pnor to the hmng of W1lson
whose startmg date wanet as Jan.
· 2,· 1992. His contract. is for the
. remamder of the. ~991-92 school
. years .and two addiU?nal years.
: Wilson taught ftve years fr«?m
-1976 to 1981 at the Metgs Jumor
: High School and since then has
· been teachmg in Gallia County.
:The. ~rinc!pal's .j?b is his first
admmtstrallve pos1uon.
. He is. a,gt.aduate Qf Mo.rehe~d
State Umverstty and-the Umversity
of Dayton. He holds a master's
degree in education and a princi-

_,(,

$149,

LB.

2 Soctlono, 14 P1ge1 2 5 -

A MultlrMclil inc. New:p=e:t

•

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tinue to be reviewed, and several
applicants have been int.erviewed.
Baker told the commissioners that
the new director should be in place
no Ia•than IDI·d-Jan•"'"'·
....
-~ .
. n.. .._.
, ..........
._..
....... -. eel oLC
u~c; ,,'allowmg mterdeplniriental funds transfers: Meigs Board of Mental Retardatton and Develo.JIIIlental Disability, for salaries, m the amount of
$16,000; Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, ·ss,976.43 ', . for
.
sa 1anes; Meigs County Home ,
$2,719.09, for supplies; and Meigs
County Clerk of Courts, $700, for
Part·time employees.

The commtss1oners revtewea a
petition and letter received in opposition to a new carry-out beer p¢rmit application filed by Ruth C.
Rose , doing business as Ro•e 's
Grocery in the Bashan area• of
Chester Township.
Those items will be forwarded
to the Ohio Department of Uquor
Contra~. which in tum will set
hearing on the application to be
he ·
ld m Meigs Cowty.
Present wm CO!Nitission President Mannmg
· )(. Roush, Commissioner I&gt;Uid Koblentz and Clerk
Mary Hobsletttr. ·
·

a

:· ruce . z son name~· · . _ezgs
Christmas·Js ...--~--~
:/unior High S·chool principal .

14.75 oz.

$159

•

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$449

12 oL

Pomeroy·Middlel)l)rt, Ohio, Thursday, December 12, 1991

•
By BRIAN J. REED
' ·
Sentinel News Staff
;. Members of the Board of Direc: tors Of the Meigs County Chamber
, of Commerce met with the Meigs
. .
Wed nes• County Commtsstoners
. ; day regardi ng the new prison that IS.
: being proposed for three Ohio
· · counties· including Meigs County.
· Charles Kitchen, Torn Reed, and
; Dave Baker pledged the chamber's
·,,s,upportforthh:Jl~saland volu.n1'\eered , on be f o the chamber, to
: help in any war that would assist in
, gelling the factlity in Meigs Coun·
:
.

MAXWELL1
HOUSE

LB.

.

• Vol. 42, No. 155
!,Qopyrlghted 1991

Chamber, commission discuss prison proposal

SPLIT CH . N

a·reasts•••••••••••••
CHICKEN
Leg Quarters~•••.

•

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pai's certificate.'Meigs Junior High
has been without principal since
early November when Debbie
Brennan, who served in that capac·
ity ~~two years, transferred to the
posmon of Pomeroy Elementary

a

Schoo~ pnnCIJ?3~·

Invited to JOID Board members,
Robert Snowdep, Jeff Werry. Larry
Rupe. Richard Vaughan and Robert
Barton. Supt. James Carpenter, and
Treasurer Jane Fry for the executlve session were the newly elected
board members. Roger Abbott,
Randy Humphreys and John Hood.
. The Board re-issued a contract
~or Josie ~orton. so that it will
mcluqe bemg an mde r~r an add1tiona!, handic~ Student. 1t was
agreed to enter mto a purchased
services agreement wuh Curtis

Holliday to transport a handicapped studeni to the Athens Coun.ty Out of School Unit at 25 cents a
mile.
.
!amie B.Iaeunar was employed
as Junior h1gh cheerleader advisor
for the 1991-92 school year. On
recommendation of the treasurer,
the Board voted to borrow
$310;189.H against the personal
property tax receipts of 1992 in
order to handle expenditures for the
remainder of the year.
·
. Fry also reported that an audit
by the State Auditor's Office is
being completed and that ai 10 a.m.
Monday a representative will be: in .
Meigs County to give a report. The
audit was requested by me Board
as a preliminary tO 'going-into the
state loan program.

I

GlVING TO MAKE OTifERS HAPPY • A
request for staffed teddy bears as Cbristaias
remembrances for tbe 35 residents of tbe
Extended Care Facility It Veterans Memorial
Hospital bas gOne over tbe top. Sharon Vickers,
lett, activities director, and Beck1 Jl!.novec,

. 1 LB. PICG. ·

director rl tilt loai llleiHied Care t'IICIIlty, pictured with. tbe ••n1 teddy bears aive!ll ill
response lo tbe request. The excess bears will lie
used over the •ext few months for children who
are confined to tbe Pomeroy hospital.

·Abel disappointed by.utility's .
decision to hike rates 28.4 %
. ··
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U. S. NO. 1RUSSEn

179
Potatoes••••••••••• me. s
1

PHILADELHIA

C

TIDE
DETERG.ENT
(Unscented Only)
136 oz~

$599

Cream Cheese••~.. oz:89-FLORIDA GQLD
• . .
$ . 19 .GROUND
Orange Ju1ce....,4oz. 1
.

.C
Cool Whip•••••••~. oz. 89 sl 9o
_
( 3
Dumpllngs•••••• 12 oz. 89
.
BEEF

BIRDS·EYE

\Tomato
•SWEO SUE
Broth•••

REAMES FR~ZEN NOODLES Or

l •.soz.

·BATHROOM TISSUE ·

$ .

. 6oz.w4/l

4~0LL
PKG.

6ft(
7_

v•

o.H o.1y At , .....,-s;p;..
Olt.r 111M Dec.. tin Dec. 14, 1"1

CAKE MIXES

5
/ 2

.. CHUCK

JO·_LB. PACKAGE.

$1590
.

:
NEW PIANO • Abbie Stratton, ldt, bds
used for re&amp;ular bymn sings and musical pro:given thf. Extended Care Facility of Veterans
grams wblch are presented from lime to time in
-Memorial Hospital a new Baldwin acronsonic
the facility. The iutrumeat was given the fadli.console piano for Christmas. Receiving the new
ty by Mrs. Stratton in memory of her parents,
·musical instrument from Mrs. Stratton Wednesthe late Robert and Ada warner of Pomeroy.
-day were Scott Lucas, Veterans Memorial
Mrs. Str;atton, a Pomeroy resident, is an active
:AdmiJJislrat'lr, and Becky Janovec, Director or
member or tbe Women's Auxiliary, the hospi:_: ;!he_Ext!_!!~ ~are Fa~ility. The pla_n_o will b_e . tal's vo!l!nJeer or~niZ!I.tiOII,
_ .. . _

~iS~u~s~an~C~la~rk~
~ -to~h~e~ad~.~ASCS

~ Pomeroy Merchants
- Officers for 1992 were elected during Wednesday's regular
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
: Susan Clark will serve as
president of the Of$anization for
another year, as wtll Vicki Ferrell as vice-president and trea• surer. Julie Diilon will serve us
· ·secretar'y and Brenda Veney
· :will occupy the office of public• ity' chairman. Meetings for 1992
• -will be held the second Wednes• .day of each month at 8:30 a.m.
: ·in the conference room of Bank

·one.

GROUND

lETTY ClOCKER

. 9~UVES CAT FOOD
!

I0 LB. P~CKAGE

)

Stale Repr II . ""'D~C Mary Abel
said Wednesday that
she was "dis11ppoioted" by the
decision of Columbus Southern
Power Company to increase electric rateS 28.4 percent withou\ the
appro~al of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
"One of the most important
things about the rate increase·process is the fact that the public is
able to offer input and objections,"
(D 0Athens)

Nancy Thoene was employed
·by the Association to serve as a
corresponding secretary. Mrs.
- Thoene wilt attend each meet' ing, beginning in JanllllY, after
• which she will prepare a
• newsleuer for all members. She
: will .also be responsible for con·
; tacting all members pnor to
·meetings or about any other
·matters pertaining to the Associ:· ation.
· Mrs. Clark spoke on the suc: ·cess of the Christmas Open
House and thanked Vicki Fer·
. · rell, parade chairman, for her

efforts in coordinating that
event. Mrs. Clark also expressed
appreciation to Pleasure's
Restaurant for serving hot
chocolate to the children in the
mini-park following the parade,
as well as Curly Wiles (Santa
Claus) who was assisted by the
1991 Heritage Queen Holly
Williams.
Mrs. Clark stated the Christmas tree program coordinated
by Pomeroy Elementary with
tile cooperation of the Association has been well received in
the community, despite the theft
of several of the trees. She went
on to..say ihe ·program was a
learning experience not only for
the students but for the businesses as well.
Appreciation was expressed
to Brenda Morris, Pomeroy Village Council Clerk, for her
efforts in workina closely with
the Association to establish ·a
stronger working relationship
between village government and
the J',ssociation.
Projects for 1992 were
briefly discussed with major
Continued on page 3

"This is just another burden thai
Abel said. "
will
make iL difficult for"worlcing
By putting this increase into
people
to make ends meet in tllese
effect before hearings are held,
tough
ecoooinic
times," J\bel said,
Columbus Southern is disregarding
cenai~ly
will
OOl help the econ,
"It
the concerns of the public that they
serve. The utility is attempting to amy of thts area."
Able added that'a decision by
circumvent due process for rate
the PUCO on the case is expected
payers and set its own rate."
Abel pointed out that the deci- late this winter. and that Coiunlbus
· sion compounds problems in an Southern may be forced to pve
area already showing the signs of refunds 10 its customers if llle
increase in rates it puts into et'kct
economic difficulties.
is not approved.

':YJ1.9Je~al~ p~~c.e~ -~P ~o~~stly_·~----. .lf/ .\~lJINQTON

Wholesale prices ~ged up a modest 0.2 percent last month as a stagnant economykept a lid on innationary pressures, the ·government
said today.
The Labor Department said the
small November.risc in its Producer Price Index, which measures
inflationary pressures before they
get to consumers, reOected falling
food prices and the best per(ormance for energy costs since July.
Election results of the Meigs
For the first 11 JIIOnths or the
County Agricultural Stabilization year, wholesale prices have risen at
and Conservation County Commit- a barely pen:epable annual rate of
tee have lleen announced.
0.2 percent. Retreating world oil
Results of' the community com- prices and a sluggish U.S. economy
mittee election ht LOcal Administrative Area No. 3 are as follows .
Columbia-Scipio - Donnie
Sentinel to publish
Cheadle; chairman; Rex Cheadle
Jr., 11ice-chairman; Leroy Welsh,
•
member; Ppt Manzey, first alter·
letters
to
Santa
nate; Cecil Gillogly, second alt.ernate.
· '
Boys and girls, bave you
Rutland.'Salem1 • Joe Bolin, written your letter to Santa?
chairman; Jack Ervm, vice-chair·
It's jllst 12 days 'til Christ·
man; Rex Shenefield, member; mas, you know!
Larry Montgomery, fmt alternate;
Here at the Tbe Daily Sen· Shirley Coleman, second alternate.
tinel for the next week we'll
The chairman, vice-chairman be lJrlntinR letters to SaaiL So
and member from each area 'will be Ret Daddy or Momm;yto belp
delegates at the LAA Convention you write a letter ud brlnf it
on Tuesday at 10 a.m. to elect a to llle aewspaper olllce at 11
County Committee Member to rep- Court St. in Pomeroy.
resent their area and join the dele·
Santa Is a rqular reader of
gates from the other LAA's at The Sentinel, you know.
10:30 a.m. to elect positions on the
··County Committee.

election
results

announced

(AP)

have combined to give Americans cuts.
the best inOation performance since
For November, food prices actu1986.
.
ally edged down a slight 0.1 perln aho'iher report today, the· cent, renecung a b1~ 12.4 perc~nt
Labor Dep@rtment said that the . drop m. fresh frmt pn~s and smallnumber of new claims for unem- er dechnes for such Items as meat,
ployment benefits fell by a sharp poultry, fish, and eggi.
61,000 in the week ending Nov. 30.
These declines were enough, to
While the weekly total of offset a gtant 23.6 percent ,jump in·
414,000 was far below the 475,000 ve'getable costs, a price spike
new claims regist.ered the previous blamed m.Iar$e par~ on .the white
week, analysts discounted much of Oy mfestabon mCaltfoml8 . .
the .drop because the Thanksgiving . Energy prices were unchan'ed
hohday gave laid orr workers one m November, the best showmg
less day to file claims.
since they actually fell by 1.3 per·
The small rise in wholesale cent in July.
prices in November followed a
The November moderation in
much larger 0.7 percent October
Continued on page 3 .
increase which had been discount·
ed ~~ the ·time as a fluke that did not
correctly reflect the current low
inDationary environment
The government will report on
consumer prices· Friday. Analysts
believe that report will also show
only a small price. Increase, of
around 0.3 pen:ent
Many economists believe the
Federal Reserve will soon move to
cut interest rates further, given the
good news on inOation and a num- .
ber of economic reports warning ·
that the countty is in danger of top- ·
piing bact into teeesaion.
!he s~gnant economy ha~ led
to tncreastna pressure on PreSident
Bush and Congress to stop relying
DAYS UNTIL
solely on the Fed to holster eco·
.CHRISTMAS
nomic growth and come forward
with a )lackage of mi~dle class tax.

13 _

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