<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11198" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11198?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-17T05:34:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42165">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f70ff496e733ecf2537a410b113d71dd.pdf</src>
      <authentication>02ee00f42fc8817c2b2d5cc8932782f2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35312">
                  <text>..

.'

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 · .

.

.'

,.

· 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

•

· ' dM • ·

.,

••

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

•

·B

$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~•••.

•

~-- ·

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 %
. ··
'

,..

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 _

'

'

I.

'(

'-"
1

-.

'

. ••

�-·- ·

..,

• &lt;

..

Commentary
..

The ·Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Deeemb~r 12, 1991
P~g~~-Tl'lt Dally Stnll!ltl .

··-·

·There is only one politician left
· in America who has not yet pro:.
posed a tax-cut scheme to jump·
DEVO'n:D TO TD INTEREST8 OJ' TD MEIG8-JIIASON AREA
swt the U.S. economy. He is an
unemployed Lada salesman from
Grozny named Sergey who is here
to observe Congress because he
hopes to become a member of the
• Chechen-Ingush parliamencwhen
ROBERT L WJNGE'IT
that enclave becomes the 23d
Pubtkher
nation 10 arise from the ashes of lhe
Soviet eOJpire.
Trust me, I have sources on this.
PAT WliO'EHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
There
is also only one pundit
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
left in America who hasn't offered
a plan to getlhe economy rolling. I
AMEMBER of The Associated Pren, Inland Daily Press Association and
know this because he is me. But I
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
have been diligently researching
lhe matter and am now prepared to
LETil!RS Of OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
fill this void with a three-point
wonk long. AU letters are subject 1o editing and must be signed with name,
package that is obviously twice as
addreaa and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taSte, addressing issues, not personalities.
simple as George B
. ush 's six-pointer. We must balance the liooks, pay

off the debt and tate lhe politics
out of the lax system. It's fairly
fundamenlal. U we want a. healthy
economy, we must make our ledger
entries in black ink. Evety nebbish
in America knows this. Why
. doesn'tCongress?
Toe first_~ is ~Y to under·
s1and - ·except, perhaps, for thOse
who do !heir checking at lhe l{ouse
bank. Maybe they could manage it
better if we gave·!hem a formula: IE(EQ)O. Income ,minus expeqdi· ,
tures equllls zero. No red figures.
Just zero.
Can you imagine the s~bilizing
effect it would have on the economy if the )Yizards who lead us
accomplished lhe simple goal every
year of just balancing the confounded budget? Wall Street could
go its merry way wilhout fearing

Ohio. ',
Thul'lday, Dtclmbt.r 12, 161

As interpreted by john lane, cartoonist:

Congress will be doing something
desperate to ener¥ize the economy.
People· on fixed tncomes wouldn't
have to worry that huge deficits
will kindle runaway inflation.
Future &amp;.eneriltioJ,IS would be SJ1IIi"ed .
lhe burden of paying off our debts.
Tht sec~nd part can-best,be understood m terms of num~. In ,
1980, after 1?3 years of ex1stence,
the .U.s,. government was $907 ._7
bllbon tn debL At the .end of th1s
fiscal .y_ear, we will be sadd!C!I-~ith c
a nat!onal debt of $~ . 1. tnlhon,
That s $4,100 b!lhon, or
$4,100,000,000,000, !l"d thank ~ou
Mr. Re.a~an . We wdl be paymg
$319 b1lhon a year m mterest ~n
th1s debt - more than the enure
federal bu~get of 1974 ..Put another
way. we wtll make a daily payment
of $873,972,600, just to service the
debt.

THEY CLA.IM lT'S UNCONSTlTUTIONAl
TO DENY THEM THE. R\G~T TO ASSEMBLE!
HEY!! WHAT A BOUT MY . RIGHT
1
TH\5
LL
TO PRIVACY?

KOt5A6L'(

GO TO 'TRIAL

UNLESS YOU

CAN FLEA
BARGAIN.

AMENDMENT IX. Rule of construction of Constitution.
The enumeration in the Constitution, of cenain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage olhers
retained by the people.

Bush should be columnist ___B,....._en_m_att_en_be-"-rg
I

~

.i

.

history

IMansfield I W I•

Food aid for Soviets ·makes sense

Sarah Overstreet

&lt;

j

.

,.

'--·

'&gt;

~

--

..
The Dally Sentlnel-Page---'1

.

,

-,

Friday .
The record high temperllure for
Ibis date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 degrees in 1949.
The record low was 2 below zero
in 1962.
·
Sunrise this morning ·was at
7:44 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:06
p.m.
Around the nation
Rain fell ·across lhe central and
norlhem Plains today. The Atlantic

Coast reinained sunny and Wi!rffier
than normaL
·
It rained in De$ Moines, Iowa;
Nashville, Tenn.; Omaha, Neb.; St.
Louiun&lt;l Minneipolls. . ·
· The Mme system dumped rain
on lhe Southwest Md mow on the
southora Ro.ckies earlier in the

in northern ·New York s1aie, the ··
Great Lakes region and most of the
Northwest; in tjltf 50s in the Ohio
VaUey and Northern California; in
the 60s in Soulhem California; in
the 70s along ·lhe Gulf Coast; and
in the 80s around Miami and in .
southern Texas.
.
week.
The high temperature for th,e
Temperatures were predicted in nation Wednesday was 84 at Hai·
the 30s in the upper Midwest and lin.g.en, Texas, McAllen, Texas, and
·
·~northern New England; in !he 40s Mwru.

Holter, Shenefield take part in Ohio Farm B-ureau session~·.-. ~~..
•I Columbu.sl 52' I

'

George Holler, Racine, and Rex
'--------t . E. Shenefield, Langsville, of the
Meigs County Farm Bureau joined
nearly 300 official delegates at lhe
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation's
73rd annual meeting held last week
in Columbus.
The meeting !heme was "Farm
W. VA.
Bureau-The Tradition Con tin·
ues." Delegates attended the annual
meeting to determine state and
national policies that will gUide the
federation during lhe current pro·
gram year. OFBF is the largest

Showers T-storms Rain
. Via Associated Press GrltphcsNet

farm organization in the slate with
more than 126,000 members.
Delegates from Meigs County
Farm Bureau heard OFBEPresident Fred Finney, OFBF El!ecutive
Vice President C. William Swank,
Christopher Goldthwait, assistant
general sales manger and assistant
administrator with USDA, William
Dando professor, Department of
Geography and Geology at Indiana
State University, and Cotton Ivy,
Tennessee .Commissioner of Agriculture.
Goldthwait addressed how the

•

" I'

U.S. wiD be affected by changes in and Ivy presented a motivation~!
the Soviet Union, Dando focused · and inspirational speech titled "A
on weather's effect on agriculwre, Smile Fits Us AU."
·

01991 Accu-Weather, Inc•

-----Weath~r----South Central Obio
Tonight, showers likely and
·.thunderstorms possible. Breezy.
·Low in the mid-50s. Chance of ram
· 60 percent. Friday, showers likely.
· A morning high of 55-60 with the
temperature falling in the after·
noon. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Extended forecast

Saturday through Monday:
Chance of snow Saturday and
Monday . Fair most places but a
chance of flurries n.orlheast on Sunday. Highs from lhe mid-30s 10 the
low 40s Saturday and Monday and
25-35 Sunday. Lows mostly in the
30s Saturday, 15-25 Sunday and in
the 20s Monday.

DELEGATES • Meigs County delegates to the Ohio Farm
Bureaa Federation's 73rd unualmeeting in Columbus last week
were George Holter, Radne, lert , and Rex .E. Shenefield,
LanJISVIIIe.

__ Meigs· announcements_

--Local briefs----.
EMS units answer six calls ·
Six calls for assislance were answered on Wednesday and early
Thursday by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
At 11:10 am. on Wednesday, Pomeroy unit went to West Main
StreeL Donna Daniels was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
2:56 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to Mt Olive Road. Eugene
German was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 9:08 p.m .. Racine
unit went to Slate Route 124. Wesley Clarlc was transported to Veterans. At 10:01 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Welchtown Hill. Ray·
mond Landers was laken to Veterans.
On Thursday at 1 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to the sheriff's
office for Karen Peck, who refused treatment. At 5:27a.m., Middlepan and Pomeroy units went to Overbrook Center for Lester Bailey,
who was taken to Veterans.

SCHAAD HONORED • Ou.tgoing Meigs County Cbamber or
Commerce Director/Economic pevelopment Director Elizabeth
Schaad was honored with a luncheon reception on Wednesday, her
last day at tbe office. Schaad will begin her duties as Regional
Development Director for the Ohio Department of Development in
Marietta on Thursday. Meigs County is one of the counties that
Schaad will serve in her new position. Here, Chamber Secretary
Pamela NeweU, left, presents Schaad witb a plaque in appreciation
for her dedication to the Meigs County commumty.

Jury trial continues

Two fined in 'Pomeroy Mayor's Court

T~e prosecution rested its case and lhe defense began calling
witnesses on Wednesday in the ·case of Oladatun Fasheun, who is
charged with nine embezzlement·related countS in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
-·
The charges against Fasheun range from passing bad checks to
engaging in a panem of corrupt activity, and include several theft
counts, all felonies.
Fasheun is accused of stealing over $300,000 from Lee 0. Wood
and/or Beatrice I. Wood while he was affiliated with the Athena
Trading Company of Athens. '
He is represented by Meigs County Public Defender Charles H.
Knight. The slate's case is being tried by Meigs County Prosecutor
Steven L. Story and Assistant Prosecutor George McCarlhy. The
case is being heard before Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill.

Whole sale..._c_o_nt_in...,.ue_d_fr_om-'-pa.::..ge_1_ _ _ __
energy costs ret1ected a 0.7 percent . 'Excludi.n~ the volatile ener~v
drop- in electricity costs which off- and food categories, wholesale
set price increases for gasoline, nat- prices rose 0.3 percent last month,
pral gas and home heating oil.
compared to a 0.5 percent increase
in October.
Most of the November rise in
the so-calltd underlying rate of
inflation reflected higher prices for
Ill Y Yl tli\" M;() "Uil !IY
passenger cars and tobacco products.
·
Dtc.12
The various changes left the
Producer Price Index at 122.3 l&lt;ist
monlh before adjusting for seasonal
changes .
·

WORLD WAR II .

, .. 9~4·1

Hospital news
·'

~

- - _._ ___ · - JJ,

A.shift 10 strong soulhwesterly
winds \Viii bring mild and damp
weather into Ohio for the next day
or so, forecasters said.
Highs on Friday should be in the
50s, but the National Weather Ser·
vice says temperatures could drop
sharply late in the day as a cold
front swings across lhe state.
Showers and possibly thunder·
storms also are forecast for through

Joseph Spear

The newest presidential hopeful believe," and to appear credible issues of taxes and lrade. More dif· Cold War world. He says, "We
is a columnist. This-gives the cur- and passionate when saying it
ficult, and more important, he have obligations to go to war for 44
rent president an opportunity to do
Political scientists, and even should deal assertively with immi- separate nations," and that we
what he needs to do most, which is normal people, say they want a gration and isolationism . '
must do so. "automatically." (Fat
to think like a columnist
presidential campaign that deals · Immigration is tough; it may be chanco.) He is for "A merica
The columnist js Pat. Buchanan, with "the issues." George Bush, the sleeper issue of the·campaign.
(Who is for Am erica
who will probably do quite well who appears to be caught up in Ever since the time of the First."
fourlh?)
He
is against " foreign aid
against President Bush in lhe New White House hustle-bustle, now Mayflower, Americans have been .
to socialist governments." (So ·is
Hampshire primary.
has an early chance to give us that. looking at the next boat· (or plane) the U.S. government.) Along with
He ·has advantages . .Good It would be good for America, and and saying, " Uh oh, there goes lhe
columnists are forced to figure out · good for him . We know the neighborhood." Buchanan is play- exacOy 2 of the 44 Republican sen·
what they believe. That is a very columns ·of Buchanan; the presi· ing on that thought; and overplay· atars, Buchana~ opposed military
action against Iraq.
•
By The Associated Press
hard job. Buchanan has worked
Earlier isolationism had some
;:. Today is Thursday, Dec. 12, the 346th day of 1991. There are 19 days hard, and he has strong beliefs. dent would be doing better if he did ing it, qrawing nasty lines between
some mental heavy lifting and gave "Zulus and Englishmen," betweep intellectual validity. There wcte
; ; left in lhe year.
Some of them arc sound, some of us lhe columns of Bush.
Christians and non-Christians, huge downside risks: lhe possibility
; · Today's Highlight in History:
· them mean-spirited or wacky. But
Take
the
so-called
"quota"
beiween Euro-Americans and other of bi&amp;·time wars and huge defense
-: On Dec. 12th, 1787, Pennsylvania became the second slate to ratify the almost all of lhem touch lhe main
issue.
It
is
an
American
scandal.
Americans. ·
. .,
budgets. Not now. America is the
~: u.s. Co~stitution.
·
political nerves in America, and are The Constitution was not designed
We
ought
to
get
a
column-like
most influential nation in history,
' • On thiS date:
cen1ral to the course ·or America's to promote "set-asides."
view
on
that
from
the
presid;nt,
and
can remain so if we don't get
~ : - In 1792, in Vienna, 22-year-old Ludwig van Beethoven received his
future.
But what is .lhe the president's taking the high ground, the presi- spooked by isolationists of either
~ :first .lesson in music composition from Franz Jo.seph Haydn.
He deals in the red-meat of poli·
' . In 1870, Joseph H. Rainey of Soulh Carohna became the fust black tics: He is against 'luolas, for lower view? One senses that he 100 sees dential ground. It is not an easy party.
tile vast problems of proponional· position. Diversity can cause turbu~ ·sworn into lhe U.S. House of Representatives.
In America, lhe person who can
!aXes,
against
imm1grati&lt;ln,
against
ism.
But following tile complexi· lence; our immigration code needs best frame the issues is lhe presi •
• • In 190 I the fust radio signal to cross lhe Atlantic was picked up near
trade and for America "com- fied legislative battling over the work. But with strain and pain,
~ :st. John's.' Newfoundland, by inventor Guglielmo Marconi. (The signal free
dent In this case, if he does it well,
ing
home"
from around lhe world.
issue, no one now .qui it knows how immigration and diversity have like a good columnist, he has a bel·
: · was tranSmitted from a f!Oint some 2,000 miles away.)
Being president is also a very
' : In 1913, authorities 10 Florence,llaly, announced lhat lhe Mona Usa, hard job. There are lhe phone calls, he stands. The president ought to made America grea~ lhey are like· ter chance of remaining presidenL
handwrite a column on that. (He ly making America greater yet
stolen from lhe Louvre Museum in Paris in 1911, had been recovered.
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
lhe
lobbying,
lhe
tough
decisions,
will then be able to do something today.
.
In 1917, Falher Edward Flanagan founded Boys Town outside Omaha, ·
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
lhe compromising, the photo-cps, about it, by issuing the executive
The president's best target is
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
.
. S L . Ob"
• Neb.
In 1925, the first motel - lhe Motel Inn - opened m an u1s IS- lhe emergencies and the travel. But orders necessary to implement the Buchanan's nco-isolationist posi- at the American Enterprise In ~ti ~
that doesn't leave much time to do new civil rights bill.)
..
tion. It is a scam.
.
~~OC
.
·.
tute, is author of "The First Uni·
He should do the same ofl the
. In 1937, Japanese aircraft. sank the U.S. gunboat Panay on China:s the columnist-style brain·crunching
I debated Buchanan recently versal Nation\" published by The
.YangtZe River. (Japan apologized for the attack, and p:ud $2.2 milhon m that allows a person to say, "This I
about America's role in the post· Free Press.
reparations.)
·
.
.
- - ---------- ..,_,_ .
"- - In 1946 a United-Nations commiuee voted to accept-a-six-block tract
of ManhatW, real estate offerca as a gift by John D. Rockefeller Jr. to be
the site of die U.N. headquancrs.
In 1947, the United Mine Workers union withdrew from the American
Fedetation of Labor. ·
·
~
-· L
.
-·.
\ r
.
In 1963 Kenya gained its independence from Britain.
I
don't
do
a
lot
of
writing
on
on
a
45-year
Cold
War
aimed
at to the school bomb shelters you
In ·1975', sara·Jane Moore pleaded guilty to a charge of trying to kill
protecting
the
West
from
lhe
dan·
foreign
policy
because
it
simply
had told me that someday the SoviPresident Fonl in Sari Francisco the previous September.
gers
of
Soviet
Communism,
Soviet
.
isn't
my
area
of
expertise.
The·
et
Union would just figure oul that
In 1979 in response to the Iran hostage crisis, the Carter adminislrll· ·
issues
involved
in
international
Communism
has
collapsed
and
democraCY was better government,
; ·lion ordered the removal of most lran.ian diplomats in the United States.
' : In 1985 248 American soldiers and eight crew members were killed affairs are usually immensely com- they are finally, stunningly, reach· I'd have thought yqu'd had your they're sending is !ted grain, ani: ·when an Atrow Air charter crashed afler llkcoff froni the airport in Gan· plex, and someone who isn't ing toward democracy as a m~ns knees up under your head 100 long. mal food. How soon can lhat food
schooled in their intricacies can't to save themselves, Now instead of And if you told me that when lhe feed Soviet people?
: ;C!er, Newfoundland.
.
i
We don't hive jhe money to sin· •. Ten years ago: It was announced that lhe government of VIetnam· had form a clear picture. Most times threatening to use their power to Soviets did reach out toward
crush
us,
the
Soviets
are
in
danger
even
the
experts
can
't
come
to·
a
democracy;
lhat
we'd
lie
here-like
gle-handedly
solve the .Soviet
:: invited a llfOIIP of U.S. war veteraM to visit and discuss such issues as lhe
of
starving
.
.
And
instead
of
our
consensus.
stumps
and
through
our
inaction
Union's
problems,
but we don't
:· use of the herbicide Agent Orange and missing servicemen.
being
in
peril
of
lhem
crushing
us,
Yet
!here
are
a
few
situations
leave them · vulnerable to any have the leisure to do nothing.
.•: Five years ago: Addressing a biPartisan audience of newly elected stale
: "teglslatas, President Reagan v~wed not!? all?w the ~ntroversy over lhe. that come into clear focus easily. we arc in peril that they in their despot who could get hands on Some experts suggest a feverish
; Iran-Conlrll affair to prevent h1m from getung on w1th the busmess of even to lhe casual observer. One is desperation will turn to others of Soviet weapons for the price of forging of a cooperative aid plan by
the crisis in lhe Soviei Union now: our enemies for ~lp .
enough food to keep the s·ovtet the Western alliance. which is
• governing."
.
.
Now the logical mind would people alive, I'd have said you strong, in pan, because of the Mar:
'
One year ago: President Bush announced lhat he and Soviet President After spending· bazillions of dollars
assume lhat having wanted so long were crazy.
:Milch~ I S. Gorbachev would hold a summit the following February in
shall Plan . Rep. Lcs Aspin, D·Wis.:
for
them
to
embrace
our
philosoYet
that's
just
exactly
what
has suggested a program that
' Mosco~. Lauro Cavazos resigned as secrewy of education. .
.
phies of government, and hJ!ving we're doing. The Soviets are facing would send food we and lhe Euro: .
dumped so much money down the starvation, and starving people can ~~ have already bought, includ1
HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISTMAS by Lane and Miller
rathole that w_. $opposed to keep .get 'real fearf11l and hard to get ma leflovers fi'OIIl lhe Persian Gull '
them contained by spying and · along with. Fll!Cism.is already set· ' Wrt: ind $16S million already ·auo-: ·
building bigger arsenals, that when ting a toehold among some Soviet cated b.y President Bush . To dis,; .
they finally saw that Communism voters, and a few unfonunali turns tribute the food, he urges that U.S .
didn't work and asked us to help of events and their whole nuclear forces do what they did for th·i
them engage in free enterprise, iusenal is up for gntbs. Most of our Kurds and use existing Pentago·n:
we'd be overjoyed. Laale would legislators are afrlicl to act lest they fun&lt;ls to finanCe it. Those forcu
diclate lhat lhis was a l!lUCh beaer be accused of giving tieats to lhe ' could also help' Soviet lloldier~
deal than lhe one we bid before, . Procligal son instead of the fiitbful desuoy Soviet IIICiear weapons iO: ' :
and, lhat money to help them estab· American siblings. Our president lhe sweep, he says. .
.
lish a democracy was much better has proposed i plan that will give
Whatever we do, we must do it!
spent than the funds we had ear- .the Soviets loans they. probably and do it soon. Too much rests on:
marked for a continuina cold war.
can't pay off to buy food they il, including the personal safety w'e:
In fact, if during the time we won't be able get to people 's fotl~ht lhe Cold War to presef"'le. ,
were Ieatning how to duck and moulhs, judginc by lheir past food
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER:
cover and follow the yellow _sign~~ distribution fiascoes. And the food ENTERPRISE ASSN.
.:

~:Today in

.By The ~Ia ted Prt!Ss

'

Can you imagine what we could
do to stimulate lhe economy if we
had an extra $319 biUion a year 10
invest in America?. How. ml!n}'
briiiJes could we rebuird?- How ,
m311 y roads? How many wrpons;
high-speed rails; subways, side·
walks, homeless shelters? The con·
servative Heritage Foundation
recently called on Congress-to-pass
an ei:onomic &amp;rowth plan spon·
sored by Sen. Robert Kasten, R·
Wis ~. and Rep . Vin Weber, R·
Minn., that would allegedly "create more than 900,000 new jobs
over ten years."
·
Try the Spear-plan , folks . Pay
off the national debt, use the interest saved to launch a public invest·
ment program and create 900,000
new jobs overnight.
.. .
The third pan h3$IO do w1th lhe
income side of the ledger. The
problem is that politicians can't
resist tinkering with taxes. But
every time they pass a las cut for-a
tuxedo dealer, they distort the
economy. Where is. it written that
politicians know better than the
free market? As The Wall Street
Journal recently lamented, "Tlie
world's most important economy is
in the grip of economic incompe·
tents." '
What we need to do is force the
pols to leave us alone. What we
need is a system that is totally fair
to every taxpayer and generat~s
sufficient and predictable revenues.
What we need is a flat·rate las system - one that would las worlcirrg
stiffs, millionaires and .wealtby
presidents at exactly lhe same rate: ,
Can you imaaine what the eco~­
omy would be lilte if il were driven
by market forces instead of politi·
cal interests? If the debt were pai):l
off and the books were balanced?
We might he a reasonably secure,
fairly slablc, fully employed nation
ag:un.
Sergey says every muzhik in tlie
Russian Rep·ublic knows this. Why
doesn't Congress?
.
NEWSPAPER
(C)l991
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

·-- --

OHIO Weather

Pomtroy-Mtd~leport,

.

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Here's an economic-plan that will work

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

The Ninlh Amendmem states simply that "[t]hc enumeration in the
Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage
others retained by lhe j;Jeople."
.
One of the argufllents used during lhe debate over the need for a bill of
rights was that, if certain individual rights were expressly listed, rights
that were not listed might not be recognized later. Thus, Alexander
Hamilton wrote that lhe protection of individual rights depended nm on
their being listed in a biU of rights but "on the general spirit o( the people
and of the government"
Others were not convinced. They were apprehensive about a distant
national government and wanted to limit its powers over individuals as
much as possible. In drafting lhe Bill of Rights in 1789, James Madison
.drew on the Virginia Declaration ofRights and other state biDs of rights,
and included the pro\iisiol\ that became the Ninlh Amendment to address
these fears. Madison 's original draft of the Ninlh Amendment made it
quite clear lhat the protection of certain rights in the Bill of Rights did not
imply that other rights were not also worlhy of protection: The exceptions
here or elsewhere in the constitution, made in favor of particular rights,
shall not be construed as to diminish lhe just impOrtance of other rights
.re1ained by the people, or as to enlarge lhe powers delegated by the con·
:stitution; but either as actual limitations of such poiO(.Crs, or as inserted
merely for greater caution.
The Ninlh Amendment is the only provision in the Constitution that
instructs lhe people how the Constitution should be interpreted. In recent
years, this instruction has been the subject of considerable debate. The
prevailing view is that lhe Ninth Amendment itself is not a source of con·
,stitutional rights, but simply teUs .the people that the Framers' failure to
protect a particular right in the Constitution does not mean that the right is
without protection. For example, a right that is not protected by the federal Constitution may neverlheless be protected by a slate constitution.
Some Justices and Judges, however, have laken lhe position that the
Ninlh Amendment grants constitutionally protected slatus to a body of SO·
called natWBI. or fundamenlal rights lhat are not specifi~;ally listed in the
.constitution. Thus, in lhe case of Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479
(1%5), several Justices relied on lhe Ninth Amendment in striking down
a Connecticut slatute that forbid the use of conlraceptive devices by mar.·. ried couples on the ground that the slatute violated a constitutionally pro: tected right to marilal privacy, even !hough the right to marilal privacy is
• not Cllpressly set forlh anywhere in the Constitution.
.
• Wilh lhe possible Cllception of the Griswold case, the Ninth Amend·
: ment has been of relatively minor significance in lhe historical develop: ment of federal constitutional law. It. stands as. an important reminder.
.however, that our system of government is based on the will of" We the
: People," who have the power to retain rights not enumerated in the Con: stitution by making laws that protect those rights.

-·.-- ~-

I

.

Ninth ·Amendment

,.

" 'i,l•

SOUrce: '2194 Oays of War,• W. H. Smltl\ .
PublisherS Inc.; "World Almanac.Jlooi&lt; ol 1'/odd
. war II," Bloon BooksCorp., .1981 -

The Daily Seutinel
(UBP811S.I1801

Publiahed every anemoon, Monday
lhn&gt;lll!h Friday, I U Court Sl., Pome10y,
,Qhio by the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
1
·Ohio -45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second ~lau
paiop poid ot Pomeroy, Ohio.

Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
• Linda Brunty, Racine; Richard
Finlaw, Pomeroy; and Beatrice
Vining, Pomeroy.
. WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
· Chllfles Moore,_Luther .Bartow,
Brenda Wright, and Virgil Walker.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
·Discharges, Dec. 11 · Jodi Best,
Rebecca Bias, John Bloomfield,
Aaron Cundiff, WiUiarn Harmon,
William Lewis , Ronald Myers,
Sheila Nichols, Rocky Rese and
Mrs. Jimmy Wilbur and son.
Birlhs. Dec. II · Mr. and Mrs.
Sherm'iln Jordan, a son, Leon,
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Greg McKin·
niss, a daughter, Wellston.

Member: The Auoeiated Prul, Inland

Daily Prus Auoclation and the Ohio
Newtpaper Auoc:iation, National

AdvertiltnJ Repreaen.taUve, Branham
Newapaper Sal11, 733 Third Annue,
NeW' YOrk, New YOrk 10011.

POSTMASTER: S.ncloddreao chi,... 1o

The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
·l'l&gt;moley, OHio 45769.
IUBICIIIPIION KATES ·

BT C-or Moler Roode

"One Week ..•...................................•.•..• l .60
One M"'lh···· ·······················-············16.116
.One v..r. .............. ,....................-....183.20

BINGLE COPY • .
PRICE

Daily................................ ........... -..21i C"'t.o
Subomben not doolrilflllo poy lhe coni·
er may remit in advance direct to The

---·

Oallipolil Daily 'Inbune on • 3.6 or 12
month butt. Credit will be IJlven carrier
permit~
cal'l'ie~r lei'Yice

'No IYbacriptionl by mail

in

areu where home

Ia

owolloble .
• llbllhboorhotloao
IMido a.nto Co•nQ-

is w..kL ... .............,...... .................$2 uu

RB Weeu ......••...............................•.. l43.t6
112 Weeu ......•.•............................ ..... h-1.76
'
O.toldo Golllo Coant)'
IS Weeu........,......•••..............,....•,.,,$23,40
~6Weeluo ....•..•......•..........•....... ,...•.... l-!6.!i0
52 Weelll ..•••••••.....•••.••....••••••.•...•••.. ,. h8.40

Stocks
Am Ele Power .. ..... ;..........32 3/4
Ashland Oil ......................26 3/4
AT&amp;T................................37 l(l
Bank One .................... ......46
Bob Evans ................:.......20 3/8
Charming Shop...•..............23 1/8
City Holding .................... .l6 5/8
Federal Mogul................... 12 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 44 3/4
Key Centurion .................. &lt;14 1/4
Lands' End ........................25 1/4
Limited Inc. ...................... 27 1/2
Multimedia Inc .................. 22 1(2
Rax Restaurant ..................7/16
Robbins&amp;Myen ................ 34
Shoney's lnc.••••••••.•~..........ll Lll
Star Bank .................~ ......... 25 114
Wendy lnt'l........................8 3/4
Worthington Ind ....:........... 20 1/8
Stock nporiJ an the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis

and Imwl of Gallipolis.

Din• Tu~y
containers.
·The Harrisonville Senior CitiCantata to be presented
zens will have tbeir Christmas
The cantata, "The Wonder of
poOuck dillner on Tuesday at noon the Season," under the direction of
at the UJWll house. Tbere will be a Kim Herdman and Debbie Johri·
meetin1llld three month binlldays son, will be presented at Carle~
will be obser:ved. A gift e~change Church on Friday at 7 p.m. and on
will follow the meeting. AU mern~~ . Saturday at Falbee's House in Hlribers are uqed to attend.
ford, W.Va. at 7 p.m.
MSWCll to mHt
·.
The cantata has been performed
. The Melgs Soil and Water COl)- at several area churches and will lie
servation District llolrd of Super· , . presented at otjler churches in lhe
visors will meet Saturday at 7 p.m. community in lhe future.
The public is invited to auen(l
at Sebastian's in Pafkersburg,,
W.Va.
this event with features singing by
Plan Christmu program .
various gospel groups including the
The Long Bottom United . Gabriel Singers, Joy Singers an.d
Methodist Church will present its Shama.
progranl on Sunday at 7 p:m.
Every0111 welcome.
SoupllleslaMd
To meet Monday
Poliiii'O)' Troop l49 wiU haw: a
Regular meeting of the Soutllvegetabt. soup Mle on Dee. 22 ·at em Local Board of Education will
lhe Pomeroy Fire Depirllllent from be held at 8 p.m. Monday at m"e
11 a.m. to·4 p.m. Bring ·your own high school.
~

. Two were fmed and eight others Donna GO&lt;Jd. Pomeroy, $43, ~top
forfeited bonds in the court of s1gn vtolauon.
·
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday nighL
Fined were Roland Morris, Jr.,
Rutland, fined $163 and costs,
reckless operation; Lany Davidson;
Pomeroy, $88 and costs, consuming under age 21, and $63 and
costs, disorderly conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were Janet S.
Lambert, Point Pleasant, W. Va .•
$46, speeding; Nancy Neal,
Pomeroy, $20, no seat bel~ Donna
Phelps, Portland, $43, failure to
yield; Richard Thompson, OallilK.J·
~·aur
lis, $43, stop light violation; DebOrah Gilmore, Reedsville, S4S..
DIAMOND
speeding; Margaret Parker ,
WAHRFALL ·
Pomeroy, $46, speeding; Tina Hen·
dricks, Syracuse, $48, speeding ,
WAS $915 $
and $63, stop light violation;

,

Susan ...
Continued from page I
events to include the fashion
show which is tentatively set for ·
April 3;. the Heritage Queen
Pageant during Heri1age Weeken~ .(second weekend) in June;
and lhe herb fest in October. A
new project for the year will be
a tour of homes which has been
tenlatively set for Sept 13.

Area death
Leona Karr------·-· .
Leona S. Karr, 86, died Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1991 at the Extended
Care Facility of Veterans Memorial ·
Hospilal following an extended illness.
Born on Nov. 29. 1905 at
Portsmouth, Mrs. Karr was the
daughter of John and Theodoshia
Turner Ratliff. ·She was a house·
wife.
She was a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
and its Unit6d Church Women, a
charter member of lhe Laurel Oiff
Better Health Club, a 35-year
member of the Veterans Memorial
Hospital Auxiliary, and belonged
to the Rock Springs Grange and t!!e
Middleport Fuemeii's Auxiliary.
Mrs. Karr is survived by a son,
Charles R. (Rich) Karr, Jr.• Bonita
Springs, Fla.; and two daughters,
Mrs: Edward T. Bauer (Pat) of
Dover. Ohio, and Mrs. Theodore
_ Mauhews (Polly) of Birmingham, ·
· Ala.; three grandchildren, and four
great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Charle!J R. Kap', Sr. and two brolhers.
Funeral senices will ~ beld at
fl'l p.m. Friday II the E~flunGIII
, Home. Pastor Graco Kco and lhe
Rev. William Middleswarth will
officiate and burial will be in
·Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (I'hursday) aftei 4 p.m.
and Friday morning.

NOW

1

450•

/......

14KGOLD
. ~ DltMOND STUD
fL.
EARRINGS

....,@o

19,5

WAS Sl:C: s

7DIAIIOND
QUSTEI RING'
NOW ONLY
..... _

$4995

·~- ·

--:~~

BLACKHILLS GOlD
DIRECT FROM THULACI HIUS Of SOUTN
DAKOTA TO YOII · ~
·
LARGI SILECTIOK

25% OF··
SOUDGOLD
DIAMOND
WEDDING SET
'

·WAS $2= s

164

BUCK ONYX &amp;.~lAMONI

\ SOLID GOLD liNG'..
WAf$101.95$

NOW
AU 141 GOIJ
CHAIIS&amp;
IRAaLETS

30°,4•40% OfF

·; ,,
5· 9

M&amp;·Sat.

....s:Oo
lllc..t~ .
Palleroy Your Pro/euional}eueler

l.

�Sentin~l

The Daily

Sports

.

,

.

N.Y. Knicks boost. home mark to 8-0 /

Pag~ :

. By Tbe Associated Press
second-half run with eight of his 15
Ricky Pierce ~mained perfeet at poiqts. .
·
the line and the New Yorlc Knicks
Karl Malone h81\ 24 points and
rerpained perfect at nome.
Jeff Malone 19 roc the Jazz. James
Pierce made all seven of his free Wol(hy finished with 33 points 'for
throws Wednesday night to extend die Lakers.
·
hisstreakto75,threeshyofCalvin · Los Angeles led;76-71 with 59
Murphy'sNBArecordforconsecu- seConds to play in the third quarter
live foul shots withour a miss. But before Stockton's three-pointer
his Seattle SuperSonics .lost 96-87 with 3.3 seconds left gave the Jazz
to the Knicks, who improved their a 78-77 lead to stan the fmal peri·
record to 8-0 at Madiron Square od.
·.
Garden.
The Lakers. got as close as three
, Pierce moved 'into second place· points late in die game.
on the NBA's free throw list, passClippers 101, Pistons 96
ing Larry Bird, who made 71
Isiah Thomas, scoreless in the
straight foul shots in 1989-90. Mur- first half, scored 16 of his 26 points
phy set therecord widi HoiiSton in ill the thiidquarter and'1oe Dumars
1980.81.
helped rally the Pistons from a 12•
"! wasn't keeping track of how point third-quarter deficit with 27
many I had," said Pierce, who of his season-high 36 points in.the
scored 25 points. "I figured some- second half. ·
one would teU me if I reached the
The; Pistons took their only lead
record."
of the final period -w.ith 6:39
John Starks led the Knicks with remaining, 85-84, on a slam dunk
his long-range shooting. He was J. by Dennis Rodman- who had 15
for-9 on two-point attempts, but points and 18 rebounds. But Doc
made all five of his ~pointers Rivers hit a jumper and followed
and finished with 19 points.
with a three-point shot, and Danny
"If he can't hit the 15-footers Mannmg
· added two bas.....ets m
· the
and 17-footers, I might as well put final three minutes to help the Clip·
him out there for three," Knicks · pers beat Detroit.
head coach Pat Riley said.
Nuggets 98, 76ers 88
In other games, Denver beat
At Philadelphia, · Reggie
Philadelphia 98-88, Miami edged Williams scored 21 points as DenCleveland 105-103, Dallas downed . ver won at the Spectrum for the
Charloue· 106-103, San Antonio first time in four years.
·
topped Minnesota 98-85, the Los
Dikembe Mutombo and Walter
Angeles Clippers beat Detroit 101· Davis added 18 points apiece for
96 and Utah defeated the Los the Nuggets.
Angeles Lakers 101-95.
Hersey Hawkins led PhiladelJazz 101, Lakers 95
phia with 24 points.
·Utah won at the Forum in IngleSpurs 98, Timberwolves 85
wood for its fifth straight victory,
At Minneapolis, David Robinwith John Stockton keying a 1~-0 son had 35 points, 14 rebounds and

Southern, Hannan Trace to meet at Mercerville Friday
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVPStafi'Writer
.
Southern's and Hannan Trace's
boys teams will meet for the last
time on the Wildcats' Mercerville
court Friday night in the fllst week·
end of head-to-head matchups in
the SV AC after 'the-conference.
started the season with a 1·9 record
· · against the rest of the region.
Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes;
the victims in a
loss

to Alexander in their season opener, will need to use their height
advantage - 6-0 senior Roy Lee
B!liley and 6-3 junior Russell Singleton as forwards and 6-5 senior
Michael Russell at center - .to
maximum effectiveness. That
·means that Russell and Singleton
must produce more than the eight
combmed· points - seven fewer
than Bailey's total - .they scored
·

against Alexander. ·
.A little more than half of the
Wildcats' offense came froin their
guards - senior point man Brian
Unroe (team-high 16 points) and
sophomore shooter Shawn Cox
(10)- in last w~k's 35:pointloss
to Raceland. That means-that the
fronunen- senior forward Jimmy
Brace, junior forward Bryan Brum·
field and senior center.Chad Swain
·
·

L

I~

-will need to use their strength to idating presence in the paint that ward Jeff Durst - are theirs.
kee~theTomadoes' frontline from
Last year Biisell and Durst weri
the depaned Carl Robinson was,
getung the ball up and QUt of reach. but he might have a lillie more held to fewer than 10 points a·
Oak Hill vs. North Gallia
spring in his, jump. He must be grand total of six times in 41 starts
Even if it's not~ big surprise for taken as seriously as forward Andy (21 for Bissell, 20 for Dllrst). The'ir
a team experiencing a substantial Lester - a 6-1 senior who beefed scoring consistency should put the
change in chemistry, two losses is up by playing tight end on Merrjl!_ .Eagles in
·
no way 10 start the·-season.- And Tri~lett's fliolball squad ~ and
-EaStern haS the edse experience, · ·
North Gallia:s Pirates koow it.
sen10r guard/forward Eric Wall, especially with the addition of for-:
After losmg their opener - a who led the Norsemen with 13 and mer Meigs Marauder TerrY:
contestin.which they led by 14late 11 -points, respectively, in theic 54- · McGuire at forward or center." This
10 the th1rd quarter - by three 52 season-opening loss to
may be helpful against a High~,
points to Trimble in o\'ertime Fri- Portsmouth Notre Dame last Fri--. lander squad chat is similar in size
day night, the Pirates, once again day. Blake had 10 points and 17 -no one is taller than 6-foot-1on their home court, lost by 55 to rebounds in that game.
but short on experience.
defending state fmalist Unioto Sat·
Junior point guard Aaron:
The Vikings, who are 0-2 after
urday night
McCarty,
who racked up 31 in the:
Tuesday night's 88-34 shellacking
The Pirates know. that even by Raceland, wilt play host to a Highlanders' 44-point loss to
though they are at home against Bobcat squad that is a mix of a vet- Portsmouth Clay last Friday, will
Oak Hill - a 55-46 victor over eran~. young players and ftrSt-year probably see a great deal of double·:
McDermott Northwest Tuesday semors . .
and triple-teaming unless junior
center Chris Man~cville can get:
I:M:l!?!~,~·Q~jtp-~~.~.~::,:..'"' ~SO!ill~w~:sterP. vs; Ellster!l .'
There
three .. ar~smen · open and into poshion to turn:
offense · can muster (translated: at on the floor when Southwestern McCarty's passes into lay ups.
least 20 points per man) fnlm its heads to Tuppers Plains to face Senior guard Adam Simpson has a.
junior guns - center' Kevin Hum, Eastern . Fortunately, for the knack for shooting three-pointers•.
forward Rob Canady and guard Eagles , two of them - senior 50 the Eagles would be wise not to·
Charles Peck. That will guarantees guard Tiin Bissel!eand senior for- , pay all their attention to McCarty. ..
that they will at least stay competi.
tive against Oak Hill's Beef Broth·
ers - junior twins Brook and Ryan
Morgan, both 6-foot-1 and approxi·
mately 205 pounds - and 6-root· 7
sequoia Chris Simpson, who did
some beefing up of his own as the
tight end on Scott ,Bartholomew's
football team.
Oak Hill guards Benji Lewis
and Bill Potter will present their
share of problems to the Pirates'
floor schematic, namely Potter's
scoring consistency (he has scored
in double figures in 20 of his 21
games in an Oak Hill uniform, all
of which came consecutively). But
they will have to deal with Peck's
quickness and his ability to make
the fast break work for his team.
Kyger Creek vs. Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek is the last conference team to open its season, and.
,.EN
what better time for Tom Riccardi's Bobcats to get started than
WOMEN
against a Symmes Valley squad
.. CHILDREN
that promi ses a worthy challenge
with the serious matchup problems
it can present inside.
Chris Blake, the Vikings' 6-2
senior center, may not be the intim·

ALL TENNIS SHOES

'

•'

"'

20%J)FF

.

•'

',
:~.:,

, HULL ON ICE- St. Louis right winger
·Breit Hull (bottom) skids on the ice after being
:!ripped by Buffalo right winger Tony Tenti

(with stick) during the first period of Wednesday nightls NHL game In Buffalo, which the visiting Blues won 6-3. (AP)

'

~t.

Louis, N.Y. Islanders N·HL victors

: By RICHA~D A. D'ERRICO
: Associated Press Writer
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-lt was
a night of firsts for the St. Louis
Blues - and a last night for Rick
Dudley.
.
"We worked hard. That's the
main thing," said St. Louis' Breu
, Hull following Wednesday night's
6-3 vic tory over the Buff~lo
Sabres.
For die Blues, it was dleir ftrSt
win on the road since Nov. I and
only their third win this season as
visaors. In addition, goaltend~r
(luy Heben played in his first NHL
game, s~pmg 35 shots. And Hull
remained m fii'SI place among gO!IIsi:orers with 28 after scoring in die
S!\(:Ond period.
"!really can't think it could
come out any better," Heb!:rt said.
·'The team played great in front of
me.''
: In the process, the Sabres lost
their coach when Dudley was filed
right after the game. John Muclcler,
~ho had come over in die off-season from EdmoniOn as director of
hockey operations, was named the
interim coach.
'In the onl~ other NHL game
Wednesday mght, it was the New
York Islanders 5, Toronto 4.
Brendan Shanahan scored two
power-play goals· in a minute's
span to put the Blues in command.
The_.s~qnd period goals brok~ 1ltie"
Witfi bord Donnelly serving a
double minor pemihy, Shanahan
converted the rebound or ~ichel

Mongeau 's shot at9:22 to put the
Blues up 2-l.
A mmute later, Shanahan put a
45-foot wrist shot through a screen
past goalie Totn"Draper to give the
Blues a 3· 1 lead.
Dale Hawerchuk scored twice
for' Buffalo and rookie Donald
Audette added his 15th of the year.
Islanders S, Maple Leafs 4
Ray Ferraro scored his second
goal of the game with l: 50 remaining in the third period to lift the
Islanders over the Maple Leafs.
Goaltender Steve Weeks pla)!fd

SVAC cage standings

a strong role for the Islanders, who
were outshot47-19.
Dave McLlwain, Derek King
amj Tom Kurvers also scored for
the Islanders. Craig Berube, Daniel
Marois, Todd Gill and Mike
Bullard scored for the Maple Leafs.
On the winning goal, Pat Fladey
passed to Benoit H&lt;igue, who broke
in with Ferraro on goaltender Grant
Fuhr with only defenseman Bob·
Rouse back to help out. Hogue
waited, then slid a pass that F'erraro
couldn't help but steer into the
open side of the neL
_

Buffalo Sabres fire Dudley .
By JOHN F. BONFATTI
AP Sports Writer
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)- Rick
Dudley was in a novel - and
unpleasant - position Wednesday
night: "For the first time in my
life, I'm unemployed."
Dudley is looking for work
because the Buffalo Sabres, following through on rumors that had
been circulating for weeks, relieved
him of his coaching duties after the
team's dismal effort in a 6-3 loss to
the SL Louis Blues.
The Sabres, winless in their last
eight. games, named former
Edmonton Oilers coach John
Muckier, Buffalo's director of
hockey operations, interim ·coach.
_) n.m!l)clng the t hange~Sabres .
ge~era l manager Gerry Meehan
a~kno.wledged he was looking over
h1s sboulder.

of the regular season remains,
perennial Adams Division doonnat
Quebec las crept to within a point
of Buffafo for the fourth and final
division playoff spot.
" I don't know how long it's
been since Quebec ()as been within
a poiJll of anybody for a playoff
race after 25-30 games," Meehan
said. " It was a serious enough situ·
ation for us to have to make a
change."
A fanner. Sabres player, Dudley
returned to take his first NHL
coaching job in 1989-90 after win·
ning three championships in seven
seasons as a minor league coach.
He leaves with an 85-72· 31 record,
fourth best in team history.
.As the team went-deeper-into -awinless streak that rea.ched eight
games (0-6-2) with the loss to the
Blues, Dudley said he knew his
were numbered.

........

~

.. -

.
(Overall)
Team
W L PF PA
Oak Hill .............. 1 0 55 '46
Southwestern .......0 I 55 99
Southem ..............O 1 49 71
Hannan Trace ......O l 49 84
Eastern ........ ,.......0 2 143 184
North Gallia ........0 2 99 157
Symmes Valley ...0 2 86 142
Kyger Creek ........o o o 0
Tuesday's scores
Oak Hill 55, McDermott NW 46
Raceland (Ky.) 88, Symmes Valley
34
Upcoming action
Friday - Southern at Hannan
Trace; Oak Hill at North Gallia;
Southwestern at Eastern ; apd.
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
Saturday - North Gallia at
Rock Hill; and Manchester at
Symmes Valley

•When }OlJ want
:to give the
' beSt. ~ ·

GIFTSOFQ
JS• Dla....l ~/11/TH ~IGITAL
DIRECT VIIW ,_
UIJ '&gt;Y1:TF/II 'l

· Remo~t conlrol
•157 eNnnel caplllllll'f
• SIHO 111'1*

Santa Claus
Will
I
Be In Our Store
On Sunday,
December 15th
'
and December
22nd From 1:00
p.m. to 4:00 p:m.
Have Your
'
Child's Picture
Taken With
Santa - $3.50

. 1-o-

• P109'•1'M11bleiii'OIIIt
Cflanneltcln
1

. - ... '\9

,)

.'

,--.-~ 1

~-

-

-..

I...: $299

~

• II'IU :MtrtG Sor.IIMIJ~I(m . .'

• (h~IW C_.il'i4 , ,d.,. Tu"'-' fur
~~~tPI!efla l torrtr~ !tt 11'111 l'tl lor f~o.lo: ht ~ .
• lltlhrllt Ch~uil with IOO'f. Mtl.tnl.or

d(Ji"' .
• Eit~trftll lc 1\rftinJ.
• Compt~t1•r Sp~ce C"nun., nrl ~NO R~·
mot ~ C'onlt•ll.
· • l'ro,r.-..oMt F:~&gt;&lt;&gt;r irl' Ch:rnlll:'l !1.·~ 11·
nin1.
• 11R Cllanr\('1 Cnr~ Niit ~ ihl' ll ul i n ~

t:!

,

,

.;!

•C'Ioo$o:II)M""""""

'""'"'""o,,..,,,

' · ~~ [l,Mflfll

''"
'" '"' ''""'''
·~J . .. ..... ~

•lll)ublrr~l+.lll

'"'"I"
l ''f"'"""r•&lt;o•
~""* """'""'
j•·

I""

ch nftl'l' .

and hit the go-ahead free throw
with 12.7 seconds left as Miami ·
broke a five-game lOsing streak. .
Seikaly scored eight of his 20
points in the final2:35, including a
free throw that gave the Heat a
103-102 lead with 12.7 seconds
remaining, ,
Mark Price led the Cavaliers
with 21 points.
· Mavericks 106, l:fornets103
.

Meigs beats Southern, 70-24 . "
JennifeJ Cross led S.outhem.with~ ,_
13 points. Southern lost the ser'·
vices of 5-4 sophomore guard
Aimee. Mills with I:20 left in me
game with an ankle injury, MillS
finished the game with seven
points. There were no other statiS..
tics available for Southern.
There was no reserve game:,
Southern will host Hannan Trace
tonight, while Meigs will travel to
Eastern on Saturday.
Quarter totals
Meigs ................. 21 12 24 13 70
Southem............... 4 3 ll 5 = 23
Meigs (70) - Reva Mullen 7•0·
0-14, Verna Comp,ston 5-0·0·10,
" The victory gives Meigs a 4-0 Mary Cremeans 2-0-0-4, Tricia
record, while the young Tornadoes Baer 5-0-7-17, Kim Hanning 2..().
who have one junior, four sophomores and three freshmen on the 0-4, Lori KeUy 4-()..0.8, Lee Henderson ()..Q.J-1 , Missy Sisson 3..().
team, fall to 0-2.
Tricia Baer led three Marauders 0-6, Katrina Turner 2-0-0=4, Ginin double figures with 17, R_eva ger Findley l-0-0=2. Totals- 31Mullen added 14 and Vema Comp- 0-8=70
Southern (23)- Jennifer Cross
ston .tO. Meigs was 3l of 76 for
3-2·1=13,
Aimee Mills 2-1·0=7, ·
41% and hit 8 of 13 from the line
Andrea
Moore
1·0·0=2, Christie
for · 62% . Meigs grabbed 46
Cooper
0·0·1=1.
Totals- 6-3rebounds,.Lori Kelly. had seven.
2=23
.

The Meigs Marauders jumped
out to a 21-4 lead am! rolled to a
· 70-24 win over a very young
Southern Tornado girls basketball
team Wednesday-evening at Southem.
Meigs jumped out to a 14-0 lead
before the Tornadoes got the score
board. Marauder head coach Ron
Logan substituted freely in the first
period as th.e Marauders placed
nine of the 10 players on the roster
in the scoring column in die period
Meigs
increased
thealead.18
to 33-7
at the
half,
and held
57 lead
heading into the final period and
coasted to the win.

=

BRA

: BRICK WALL -Cleveland postman Brad Daugherty (with
' ball) finds himself smacking his bead into a brick waU - in Ibis
case, Miami Heat center Rony Seikaly - ·while trying to score in the
first .balf or Wednesday night's NBA game in Miami, which the
Heat won 105-103. (AP)

Indoor track season for RG
begins at WVU invitational .
Indoor track season for the Uni• versity of Rio Grande began Dec. 7
when the men's and women's
teams coached by Bob Willey par-.
ticipated in West Virginia Univer·
·Sity's Holiday Invitational in Morgantown. · ·
In men's events, Brant
,McLaughli.n (sophomore, Little
'flocking) placed sixth in _the 3qo&lt;l
·meter run at 9:29. I, whtle Bnan
·Brel sford (sophomore, West
'Lafayette) finislied fifth ·in the 55
·meter dash at 7.53 seconds. Breis.ford alro finished third in the 400
·meter dash in 53.57 seconds. Zold·
en Eastwood (freshman, Kingston.
·Jamaica) was third in the 55 meter
'dash in 6.82 seconds.
·· Tim
Murphy
(senior,
'Zanesville) placed first in the high
'jump at 6 feet, 7-l/2 inches. Marc
·Michigan {sophomore, Kettering)
:was also firsl'in the 500 meter dash
~t 1:09 .72, and Bryan Specht

(freshman, Belpre) was second in
the same event at 1:10.95 , Jason
Weeks (sophomore, Port Clinton)
compl~ted the 55 meter hurdles at
sixth place with a time of 8.22 seconds. Chad Benson Ounior, Glen ford) was third in the 800 meter at
1:59.95.
For the women's team, Renee
P.eck QuniQr, Baltimore, Ohio) was.
· second in the 3000 meter at9:28.4·, ·
. while Vonda Stiles (senior,
Shawnee) placed sixth in the long
jump with a diS!lUICC of I5 fee~ 93/4 inclies. Lisa Hinton (freshman,
Beverly) was fifth in the 55 meter
dash in 8.21 seconds, with Ginger
Smith (sophomore, Botkins) placing second in the 500 meter in
1:28.4. Nancy Arnol&lt;l (freshman,
Waterford) placed second in the
200 meter in 35.62 seconds:
The team's next indoor meet
will be at Cedarville on Jan. 18.

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY.
BARGAIN NlGHT TUESDAy.
HOLIDAY GIFT CERTIFICATES NOW AVAILABLE!

"THE SATISfl'ING FAMILY
PICTURE THAT WE'VE

ALL BEEN WAITING FOR!"

1

~

'I r

• 1

-....----

I ' I·

l

SNE.IIl'ilriiEws'

"...A funny and

moving family
film'!' .
. J&lt;ff CftiC,
SIXTY SECOND PREVIEW

1l 1MlJt'," ,\

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Uni- day.
.
Mackovic met with Texas presiversity of Illinois coach John
Mackovic has been hired as head dent William Cunningham, Texas·
:football· coach at the University of athletiqlirector DeLoss Dodds and
:Texas, according to published former Texas coach Darrell Royal
•reports.
near Chicago on Wednesday.
: The Austin American-Statesman Dodds and Cunningham could not
;reponed that the university will be reached for comment late
·announce the hmng at a news con- Wednesday.
'fetence today. The same report
The coach then revealed his
:appeared today in the Chicago Tri· decision to Illinois president Stan·
bune and the Chicago Sun-Times.
ley Ikenberry and chancellor Mor·
. Final details of the contract have ton Weir Wednesday night, the
,yet to be ironed ou~ but a source in Chicago Tri~une.reported. ·
.
·l!!irwis_sai!!. '(eJ\~ 9ff.~r¢J. fiv~- _
Mackov•c. w.1ll repJace _pav~d
·.year package worth $3-milbon - . McW1Ihams, Wfi'o was forced to
$600,000 .annually plus additional r~s1gn afte~ the Longhorns posted a
unspecified perks.
.
dtsap~mong 5-6 record one year
Sources in the Texas athletic after wmmng the Southwest Con·
.department said Mackovic agreed ference championship a"nd· an •
'Ln prin ciple during negotiations appearance 10 the Cot~on Bowl
)Vednesday night. He could not be where they lost tO Miam1 m a 44-6
reached for comment late Wednes· rout

I
")

, ...... llllllf!ln.

IJ!l~

7:15 &amp;9:15 DAILY.
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
1:15 3:15
'

•

' r

''.

T • '
I I I j.

~

•

The Comedy That~ Both
.Naughty and Nice.

~

1UMlJr·, t1 IN

A

1

'\

~m- . !~!.~~=

7:20 &amp;9:20 DAILY.
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY MATINEES

~IHl
· ~urn Mmn • •
· -=IJJDlll!

/ rm•

7:10,9:10 .DAILY.
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
1:10
TIE PAJAMA JAM!

• '

'HOUSE PAR1Y 2' RJllFORCE
.TlSHA CAMPBBJ: !MAN QUEEN lATIFAH .

1, ~rv·u~·~hti·N

IJ!l,ll\

. NO MATINEES .

[iOi'd:j......'iiiiCkLiiij
1 For fta Wo~an In 1

$298·

7.F.Nml ir Qtlllfl~
('alflrT1'•..,.

(

2149

1

Compm " Mud hubft Allm&amp;nh VHI HQ W(R

''

nine blocks as San Antonio
snapped a five-game losing streak.
Robinson, who scored 15 points
during a 21 -5 run at ihe end of the
third quarter, finished one block
shy of his seventh career. ~ripledouble. ·
Gerald Glass scored 21 points
for Minnesota
·.
_ Heat.10S! Cavaliers 103.
At M1am1, Rony Setkaly
grabbed a team-record~· rebounds -

:university pf Texas hires
Mackovic as football coach

INGELS FURl

'.

716 Nor.. hc011d.

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY

:)

With 96-87 win over Seattle,

. r

Thursday, Dec:emb!!r 12, 1991 :

· · ·

..

OhiO

• I V II'

•

I

"""'

Ingels ·Furniture.-.
MIDDLIPORI, OliO
1·100-426·1111 . t92·262S
c:AIDIT TEAIII
VISA • MASTJ:A CARD

•L
-Your L1fe -1
1: •ALL STYLES
•SWEATERS REDUCEDI
1: LADIES COATS
30%to 50%
ft

!·

REDUCED 20%
•DRESSEs-Many
I
Styles foi' the
Holidays
.
REDUCED 20%
•COSTUME
JEWELRY
.

· 1(

I

*LEVI BENDOVER ·
1
SLACKS
1
•BLOUSES
I:
•COTTON KNIT PANT . 1
SUITS and SPLIT
I
SKIRTS
I
•GIFT CERTIFI~A!ES

I

BAHR CLOT IERS 1.
z •

MIDDLEPORT
!
Optn Monday•Saturday 9:30 a.m.•S:Ot p.m. I
0

I •

.

.

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

.

7:00 &amp;9:30 DAILY
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
1:00

110 PASSES. NO BARGAIN N1GitT.

7:20 &amp;9:20 DAILY .
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES

, ~m-.

-

7:00PM DAILY :
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES

�.

·,

--.

Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, December 12, ,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mets, Angels, Royals, .Reds busiest clubs at ~winter bqs.eball meetings
f~t

pd~ie

By JIM DONAG_HV
Cincinnati Reds. were the busiest Saberhagen to New: York for ' homers and 69 RBis. .
baseman since
Murray
clubs at the m~Ungs, and the Seat- t~faelder Gr~gg Jeffenes and left
It will be interesting to see the · stgned as a free agent wtth the New
. AP Baseball Wrater
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) tie Manners. fmally made a baJ: fielder Kr.vm McReynolds in a numbers Mitchell might produce · York Mets.
.
Four teams ~eaded .home from the move. No, it's not to St. Peters- five-player deal.~ Mets also got teamed with Ken Griffey Jr. in the . T~e final official .day of the
. wtnter meeungs wa~ a new look burg, Fla. .
. ~econd bas~man ~all Peco~ and Kingdome. Of course, there is no meetmgs also was a ttme .for the
after makin~ some bag deals, and . In the fmal hours of the meet- mfielder Keath Miller went to the guarantee the Mariners will be jn owners to hear from commassioner .·
the rest wtll JUS! have to keep look- mgs, the .Mets ana Royals pulled Royals.
Seatlle.
.
.
ingThe New York Mets, Kansas
Cuy Royals, CalafomiB Angels and

~:e~hi!::~ec\t~e:!~~~s~~ . l~g~~tsac:~:. :~ ~~~~~ hoJ~er~~:i:i~~o~o~~!e~
Cy Young Award wanner Bret one of the best. Saberhagen, 13-8
last season, won the American
League Cy Young Award in 1989
when IJe was 23-6 and in 1985 wilh
a 20-6 mar_k. He is 110-78lifetime.
"I know the New York Mets
Obalin IO't.Ai!qn.ny..
.
have made some-big deals in their
&amp;"~"t~~~~J2
history, but none involving so
a!'
Ia
" M
ncr.. Tl, Ohio IlonUnican 75
many qu uy p yers,
ets genWallh 116, Lake Eric 84
Wiucnbura 81. Ohio Wcsleym 63
era I manager AI Harazin said.
XIVier, 01\io 73, Kent 6S
"Saberhagen is one of the .three or
four
best pitch~ in bitseball."
Ohio women's college
In
the.ftrSt btg deal of the day,
basketball scores
the ann. ers ·acquared slugger
K
h
f
. Grove Ci1y 75, Hiram 46
~vm Mile ell and le t-hand.er
MoWn gum 73, Otterbein 42
Mike Remlmger from S~ FranctsOhio Wulyn 68, Wiu.enburg 58
co for pttchers Btll Swtft, Mtke
Jackson and Dave Burba.
Ohio boys high school
It was a deal the two clubs have
basketball scores
been talking about fo~ a' while, but
•t. was thought the Gtan.ts wanted
Cin. CAPE 89, Cin. Madcin 67
Cin. Indian Hill61 , Cin. Rr..~ding60
Pitcher Enk Hanson as pan of the
Cin. Moclla67, Cin. Hu~hes~1
package.
.
Cin. Tayiot S4, Cin. Manmonl30
Copley 69, cn-w.g G=n 64
Muchell,
29,
was
the
Nattonal
Ri\ler !59, Lake Ridge 56
League MVP m 1989 .when he hu
Hudson 81, Medina Highland 45
Jdfenon 72, ~rf)' 66
47 homers and drov~ ~n 125 runs.
Loveland 59, Cin. Wyoming 57
He wenf through an ~nJury-pl~gued
Revere 69, Nortlln 66 ~
season m"1991 and hat .256 wtth 27
SLOw 67, Gadicld Hts. 57

Scoreboard
In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AllanUc Dhialon
W L PeL
.......... 13 6 .6S4

T...,
B~kln

GB

:!ro

~ort

... , I~ I~
Philaclclpltia ....... 9 tt .450
Orlando
......... 6 12 .333
Wllhinpn ...... 6 14 .300
New Jcney

4.5
4.5
~s

7.5

S 14 .263

.......

I

Ctnlral Dlvlalon
......... 16 3 .842

Chicago
Cle¥tland

.nl

4.5
5.5
8

9 13 .409
6 16 .273

8.5

.. -" 11

7

........... tt 9 .SSO
9 12 .429
9 13 .409

Allul1.1
Milw1ukce

o...u

Indian•
Chu10110

a.s

II.S

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwetl Dlvillon
Tum
W L Pet.
Utah
............ 14 · 8 .636
San Anlonio · ...... 11 I .579
Houatm
......... 10 8 .556

GO

IS
2

Denver
.......... 9 10 .474
Dlllu
........... 9 12 .429
Mlnnoo,..
....... 3 I~ .176

3.5
4.5
1.5

Paclflr: Dlwlllon
L.A. Lakcn
..... 14 7 .667
Golden SLate ....... 12 6 ,61j7
I\HIIIftd
.......... 1l B .6 19

Ph..U.

......... ll

9 .S91

Se1ulc

.. .... ..... 1l

9 .5 50

L.A. CUppon

.... 12 10 .545

SacramatiO

...... 6 13 .3 16

I

M.

Amhers16l,Ba~43

Ashllbula 62. Conneaut 56
Ashtabuh Harbor 45, Paincavillc

Hatvey 29

Wednesday's scores

Avon Lake SS, Fairview Park 36
Drunswick 65, Dreck•villc 27

Tonight's games

Friday's games
SC:'nl~ at Botton, 7:30 p.m.

Mianu at 0\adoac. 7:30p.m.
Dallu at Indiana, 7:30p.m .
Philadelphia at .Minnaota, Bp.m.
Phocnilat San Antonio, I p.m.
New Yart at~ca1o, 8:30p.m.
lJI&amp;h at L.A. Clippe.n, lO:JO p.m.
Dcl.roitll Penland, 10:30 p.m.

In theNHL...
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrlek Dl\olllon
W L T PII.GFGA
... 21 9 0 42 137 95
N.Y, Rongcn
17 12 _ I 3S 101 94
Plt"""'Jh ..... 15 10 4 l412S 106
NeW' Jcney ... 15 II 3 33 113 8&amp;
N.Y. Wtndcn . 10 14 4 24 lOS 112
Philodolphio .... 9 IS 3 21 79 91

Tum
W.ahiftaton

..... 2D II 2
....... II 13 S
...... II 12 4
9 15 4

42
T1
26
22

106 69
98105
87 96
15101

9 17 3

21

91 118

Qu-

NorrloDI•Ioloo
~

Tum

W
17
13
13
Jl

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

Oeuolt
St. LouiJ
Chki&amp;o
M.illntlotl

L
9
10
13
14

T
4
7
5
3

I'll. GFGA
38 121) 99
33 106104
31 IOIJ 100
25 91 91

.....
C~pey
......
LooAngel&lt;o ....
SanJ010
......

12
12
11
6

Bosebnll

l3 S 29 102104
14 4 21 101105
12 6 21 !Ol ll l
22 3 l5 76138

Bob Melvin, catcher, to the Kanm City
Royals for Stonn Davis', pitcher.
·
KANSA S CITY ROYALS - AI·
siWJcd Domingo Mota, aecond baseman,
to Bueb1 ll City of the Florida Stale

wsu•

Vancouvc:,l0:35 p.m.

Hartford llBuffalo, 7:35p.m.

Pituburah uNew Jcney, 7:35p.m.

N.Y. R•ngcn II Wuhin.&amp;ton, 7:3S

p.m.

Major college
basketball scores
~-­

Jona 57, Hor~ ~3

s""' Htu n. Ruta.n 12
Slono 76, Htnloofll
·
WaJflcr90,BrooklynCol.. 71

WMt Vlralnll 9l,lunato 44

South

Auburn 14i, Troy St. 116
~ 16, Columbol70
Salil&amp;uy Still, Md.-E. Sh~Xe 74

Va. Commonwoabb 90, Ocorsc Ma·
aan 82

Midwest

Bowlin&amp; a.- II, W. Ka&gt;&lt;ucky74
Butler 13, V&amp;lparaiaa 10
DoPoul t06.
U. 10
~

Am....,.

Neb(l&amp;• 16, w~

SW Miuowi. St...
6&gt;i

01

. tto.· K~

City

Xavier, Ohio 73, Ken16S

Southwest

Tc).u Chriatiln 66. Plc:ilic tJ. 61
Toua Tech 76, Ml. dwcatcrn St.,
Tcua 64

Far West

Fretno $1. 94, Nenda 71
l.cN1&amp;Beaeh St. 71 , Tuu.Pt.n Amcri·
con60
New Muk:o St. JOS, W. New MW· ·
eo63
son 01..., 90. Col s,.u.ron~ 63
60, Colando S

W,.....

·Ohio men's college
basketball scores
Nhloadli7,Riollnnde II

Bowllna OrNn ll. Wut.m Ken·
. ... 74

lb..ls,a....c;. s9

-•o.

l""' C....U 64, BoiJ'win.Wolloco 55
ICtJI)'OIIIIS •

·MiM~ ,16 Alu'!" S9 ••

II
111ft
torelgn or domes He

-

Fill

2~~

$1 Off

69'·9

1
:=:r=1'11111111111

79~·

9

PIIIIIW
M'flllil
or Clomeltie
tor.~gn

.

NEWYORX·Mirl'S- TndcdKrnn
~ l!!!!fitld«: a.... lclforico, .
thi.td ~ and Kt11h Miller, aecond
buem.an; &amp;o tDt K-.. City Royals ror
B"" Saboma""' plldMr; ond Bill ~'®!a,
1-.1 boo.iion. A"""* StoYo ROial·
boot, ...._, fn111 lho Son JMao l'ldn&gt;o
far Jell Gonl.w, infioldor.
PHILADELPHIA PHILUES Tndcd 8""" llul!'m, pli&lt;Mr, 141hc Mil·
Wl\lloe a,..... for DIJe Svcurn, infield-

'"';W.
'"
....::. : •• •••
~':!':..":":'

Tuded Kevin Mi&amp;c;hcU, out!'Wdcr and

Miie Remliaaer. fMldler, to the S~nl•
fM Bill Swift. Miko Joc:Uoo ond
n...,. Bum., pi&amp;chen. O.ipatod IWael
N...... pildl«, far oqm,,..,

tf
~- _.," ot lm"""l·
lfd!Jdllti'IUII,.f 1 ,

~'"'"" p~p~and t~MI P'PI ·

'Iiutetblll
NaUoull•ketW Aaladalioft .
NBA - Fin"' Ridtio Adubooo, Dol·
~ w.-. ..,.., Sl.OOO, far mlkina
diooonafna ....., """'' tho oltlciotina

• • , ,..

.....................•t7

....-iii"

rdlowiiia••- o...7.

Nt&amp;looal Footb•ULuauo
DBTilOIT UONS - Siped David
Ulllo,-.

0RBBN BAY PACJCIRS - Waived

J•rry Enna, tiaht end, Siano4 R•ndy

~ ..tin, liaht enl, 111d Dout Uoyd, nm·
tWIIINci; "' 1M !'f"o'd.
NEW YOIUC OIANTS - Plocod!ofl'

.............. lnjwod~
s.l&amp;nM
Ptna, ~==ack. A•·

Mi.ka

lipod-7"'-,
pooc~~.........

......
...c-;.._,........
c lh,.,..

-

FootbaU

,••
.......

:·:"·''4

Llll11M! W~RRAH11

~ .

Ill' rllll
IIIJI-15

.~

•

•.totbo

I

~oclaey .

.

--

BUFFALO

;.:.w..~

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

Rick

Du4fo7, OOtCh. Homod loU Mu&lt;ilor in-

hauro: 1:311 l.m. ID I p.m . .._., IIIIOUgll Frldly
1:*1 e.m. JD 1 p.m. lalurdly, IIIC1 t e.m. JD. 1 p.m. Bundly

NEW YOU: IW«JEU - Slpod
Milt M.Mi, ~. 10 I muJiiyeu CCII•

....

GALUPOUS

·~1:::~~

'"'
J\

'

'

'

•

'

over Rutgers. ·
them."
.l
But when· the game was over,
In the only other game involv:-)
Carlesimo didri't tall: aliout Walker ing a ranked team Wednesday, No.t
and Winchester ri'ght away. He 21 Missouri hammered Nebraska-talked about the career-high 13 Kearny H3-67.
points from freJhman Danny HurSteve Worthy 1~ R'utgers with
ley, and the career-high 13 from 13 points and Phillips added 12. '·
sophomore John Leahy. He menNo.ll Missouri 113
tioned a big defensive play from
· NebriiSka-KeJIJ'Ile)'" • • .
Bryan Caver in the final minutes- - AnthQDy Peeler BCQJ'ed 25 Jl9jniS'c'
and some play liy soph!imote cen: in 24 minutes as Missouri crushed!"
ter I,.uther Wright and backup Dar- Nebraska-Kearney.
t
reU Mims.
The Tigers (~-0) opened a 50-I~
Finally, someone asked him lead wilh 5:47 le(t before halftime.'
about Walker and Winchester, his The Tigers' largest lead was 49
junior-senior forwards, respective- points with about one minute lefL~
ly.
Nebraska-Kearney {3-6) missejl
"I thought Goldie and Jerry are all 12 of its 3-~int attempts in the
two guys who give u's upper-class ftrSt half and dadn't mali:e Its fam3leadership," Carlesimo said after poiiuer until 12:56 of the .second.
his team won !?r '¥fourth tim~ in.- The Antelopes ended up 2-of-1?
ftve games. Were not talkmg from 3-point range.
.
about them , but they &amp;ot 11
Steve Scheidegger seared 15 10
rebounds and 33 points between lead the Antelopes.

D~Berg,

Krieg ·among incumbent QBs,
to f{lll from grace in future NFL games

By Tbe Associated Press .
Starting quanerbacks are being
sacked all over the NfL these days.
The latest to fall are St~ve
DeBerg of tlie Kansas City Chiefs
and Dave Krieg of the Seattle Seahawks.
·
_DeBerg, a 15-year veteran, will
be replaced by Mark Vlasic, who
has started only ~ games in his
four,year career, when the Chiefs
meet San francisco on Saturday.
Krieg, a 12-year_yeteran, will step
aside for little-used Kelly Stouffer
when the Seahawks play Atlanta on
Sunday.
"Given lhe opponunity to perfonn, Mark has met_~ chal!e_nge.
. Steve's been, struggling," Kansas
City coach Marty Schotte.nbeimer
said Wednesday in explaining why
he was making the quarterback
I\
change, one of many around the
league this y;eekend. .
.
•••~ ' lli!iil:'":...·· ....• • '
The
Chtefs
(9-5)
chnched
an
:t:.. b.. ·~ ..f .,. ..' '
AFC wild-card berth last Sunday
when Vlasic replaced DeBerg in
.._
STIUPPED! - Seton Hall's Gordon Winchfirst half of Wednesday nigbt's game in Piscatthe
$C(:Ond hl!lf and engineered a
~ ·· ester (rlgbt) reaches for tbe ball after stripping
away, NJ., wbicb tbe visiting Pirates won 77-72.
come-from-behind
20-17 overtime
~ It away from Rutgers' Steve Worthy during· tbe
(AP)
victory over San Die~o. DeBerg,
who threw only four anterceptions
all last season, has thrown eight in
his last four outings.
Ashland (3-1) hosts West VirVlasic was 12-for-18 for 150
~ Billanced scorin&amp; that put seven Mark Erslan and Troy Donaldson,
~ players for Ashland University in with Donalcbon responsible for six ginia Tech on Saturday. Rio yardS and a touchdown against the
: .double fiJIRS Jed the Eagles to a of the team :s 34 rebounds, but - Grande heads for the Cleveland
.. :I 17-118 vactory OVIll' the University were unable 10 overcome the fmal area this weekend, where it meets
~ 'Of Rio Orande ·men's basketball run that saw ail of Ashland's play- Dyke on Sa!urday and Lake Erie on
Sunday.
·
·
,.Aeam • Albllnd Wednesday.
ers get into the action.
Box
score:
; • The -loss, RIO Gmlde's-'lecond · Sean Cl!iiilton led the 'Eagles'
ASHLAND (117) - Gary
" :to Ashland since the series began scoring wilh 21 points, followed by
~ ·last year, fook the Redmen to 6-3 Michael Young, Chris Royer'; Jef- Watkins, 1-1-0-5; Michac:l Young,
;, ,on the season.
.
frey Littl_e, Bernard McG'uire, 7-l-I5; Jeffrey Little, 7-0-14;
" . Freshman guard Matt Powell, Ricardo Hill and Norvain Morgan, Ricardo Hill, 2-2-0-10; Bernard
:. who has been accounting for much · ·who ended tlie game with IO .or McGuire, 4-1-2-13; Jerry Coleman,
3-2-8; Chris Royer, 2-2-1-11; Tom
~ of Rio Grande's sc·oring to date,
more points.
.: poured in 29 points for the game
The Redmen were 52 percent Scholl, 3-1-0-9; Norvain Morgan,
: and contributed to the team's ·55 oveiall on their shooting (34-66, 5-0-10; Sean Charlton, 8-5-21.
: percent finish on shooting during . 13-37 from the three for 46 per- TOTALS 42-7-12-117.
RIO GRANDE (88) - Matt
~ the first half. But Ashland con- cent) and connected on three of six
I trolled the rebounding and Capital- attempts from the line for 50 per- Powell, 4-7-0-29; Jeff Brown, 1-1i ized on some of the visitors' 36 ' cent.
I-6; Troy Donaldson, 5-0-10; Mark
~ turnovers for the game to post a 13Ashland was 55 percent .from Erslan, 0-4·0-12; Brad Schuben, 4:!.pointhalftimeadvan.tage.
the floor (49-89, 7-14 from 'the 3-2-19; ·Brett Coreno, 2-2-0-10;
. The Redmen chapped away at three for 50 percent) 'and was 12 or Jason Curtis, 1-0-2. TOTALS 21: ·the hostS' lead on double-digit per- 18 from the line for 50 petcent. The 13-3-88.
Halrtime score: Ashland 59,
: formances ftom Brad Schubert, team hild 42 rebounds and held its
Rio Grande 4Ci.
"'
turnovers to IS.

iAshland
hands Redmen 117-881oss
,,

Chargers. For the year, he has hit
26 of 38 for 292 yards ~nd two
touchdowns.
_
"I came in and said, 'OK,
what's the secret?"' Vlasic said.
"He said, 'You're the staner.' I
was excited to hear that. I didn't
know what it was going to be. I felt
good that if I got the chance I could
milke the best of it."
Meanwhile, Seattle coach
Chuck Knox is also making a quarterback ~hange, in hopes of tuining
around hts team.
"We've been struggling a little,
bit and we just made the decision
that Kelly 's worked hard and is
throwing the ball better j n praclice," Knox said. "So we're going
to stan him."
.
Knox denied the switch was
made to appease owner Ken
Behring and general manaaer ToiJI
Flores. Flores has told the media he
hoped Knox would.play some of
the younger p?ayefs now that the
Seahawil:s (().8) are virtually eliminated from the playoffs for the
lhird year in a row.
In a 24-22 loss to San Francisco
last .week, Krieg commiited hi s
107th career fumble, an NFL
record.
.
In Krieg's place. Knox went
with Jeff Kemp u Seattle's Slarling
· quarterback for I ' while. Knox

released Kemp when Krieg was
heallhy enough to return and Kemp
was signed by the Philil~elphia
Eagles.
It was a fonunate move for the
Eagles, who have lost more lhan.
their share of quarterbacks to:
injury. First Randall Cunningham
went down, then Jim McMaholf.'
Rookie Brad Goebel was given a
shot, as was Pat Ryan.
r
On Sunday, Kemp will be the
fifth starter for Philadelphia thiS
season when the Eagles play the
Dallas CowbOys. Kemp will .be filf..:
ing in for McMahon - who went
down wilh four fracwred ribs in the
Eagles' 19-14 victory Qver the New ~
York Giants.
_
_ Kemp came into last week's'
game after McMahon was hun an~
led the Eagles to their victory. H~
is now at the controls of the hottest
team in football. The. Eagles (9-5}
have a six-game wmnmg streak. :
Meanwhile, the Phoenix Cardi'
nals are playing musical chairs
with their qu_ar_terba_c!__positiott,
again naming Chris Chandler as a
starter for Sunday's game agains).
the Denver Broncos.
Tom Tupa, the starter for moil
of the season before being demo~
ed, moved up to No. 2 and three~
game starter Stan Gelbaugh fell tO
No. 3.

FORD

MERCURY

.

.

- some high-powered schools.
Other opponents. haven't had much
drawing power.
The school expects that to
change nm year, when it joins the
Mid-American Conference.
" The wins will come again ," he
said. " Coaching's a cycle. I feel
very good a.bout the future. It's .
starting· to come to~ether now.''

• CINCINNATI (AP) :.... Nothing son said. "Our fans didn't really
.
l lhat happened during his five diffi- buy into that.
."We got nation'al visibility from
} cult ~ears coaching Notre Dame
can stack up to the ·troubles that Gerry ~nd his name. He's done a
; Akron football coach Gerry Faust good job recruiting and has excel. lent people on his staff. But the
• had lhis year.
; His father,'"Fuzzy" Faust, died bouom line is, we haven't won.' '
~·Nov. 3. His team had' a losing
. The schedule has been a prob~ record. And attendance took a tum- lem. As an independent, Akron has
ble.
wound up playing - and losing to
"This has been the toughest
year of my life," Faust said. "First
i:of all, my dad's been sick, and my
~ ·dad was my best friend. We knew .
;~ we were-very young this season
: and the NCAA .said we had the .
~ ,39111 toughest schedule in the coun:·try.
.
· · •; " I knew it would be very hard.
:;.This job has tume4 out to be a lot
, jlarder than I ever thought it would

~·"

...SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS -

!BATTLE SUPERSONICS P1aoed ()lialin O.U.,, plrd, an waiven.

.~ ,

h

! Last 12 months miserable for Akron's Faust

$3.99 sate price
·$1 .00 mil's rebale

-~

r... ~.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

~

LOS ANdELES DODGERS -~­
Tnd~d Chril Owyan-, OUtfi~dCr, and
Dom.iaao Mot~, aeconcl t.Kmtn, to dtc
Kwu City Royall for Todd Benzinaer

16. Alum 59

Miuotlrlli3.NclnU ' ·Kwncy67
•.

CINCINNATI RI!DS - Tndcd John
Wcacland and Bill Risley, pitdlcn, to lhc:
Moatrlal lb.pot for Dave Manina out·
lie1der; SCQII RuKin, p'lchor, and Willie
a-. infielder.
. FLORIDA, MAALINS - Rc.ollod I
onc·year player development apecmcnt
wilh Brie: ol &amp;he New Yadl-Pam. Leaaue ·
fw 1992. Namod FMi GDnuC m•u•er
olEo..

Bat::.cniOO, Harvard 80
B~l(l'l Collep 71, Nolte Dame S4
Coppin SL 14, Md.·BilWnon: Count,

74

midw-.aooudftai~OI'.

NelkN.I Waue

Friday's games

- East "'

.

MlNNESOTA TWINS - E1Lcnded
lhc comt11ct
Tom KeUy. m1nagcr. ror
two yettl. Named Joel l.epcl, lJnd WieL·
W and Seott Groot &amp;eouu.
TORONTO BLUE JAY S - Si gnw
Kent Andctton. infielder: Julian Yan, f1t1t
~ and Bllld! Davil, outfielder, w
m:ncr loapc CCil\riCU. Named Joe Siers

or

Moottctl at B011on, 7:3.5 p.m.
Queboc 11 llolntic 7:35p.m.
Toroo\.o II Philadclphia,7:35 p.m.
Winnipca atlM: Anple&amp;,l0:35 p.m.
&amp;imonlon at San Joao. 10:3.5 p_.m.

·- -

pa11

Amf.rk•n Luaue
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - T"dcd

Tonight's games

-

or

Transactions

St. l..ouil 6, Buffalo 3
N. Y. l&amp;landcn.5, Tcronto4

'

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

51

VVednesday•sscores

Minnc:&amp;o~.lll

The second annual Rutland Holiday Tournament will be held
from Sun~y. Dec. 22 to .Sunday, Dec. 29 for boys in grades 4-6
and combaned grades for guls. No all-slar teams will be allowed.
For more information call Danny Tillis, tournament director, at
742-2572, or Ice Hawkins at 992-2400.

Valley Forac 53, Parma 44
W. Branch 47, CtMon S. 44
W. Oelu$• 72, Wickliffe 'II
W. MusiUngum 67, Philo 37
Wca:llake 68, N. Olmsted 51
Windh1m 46. Woodridac 43
Zanesville R01e.craN 74, Col. Re~dy

.... IS I 7 37 93 17

Edmoni.On

RUtland H0 /'.I
t
Juay 'T'
~ OUrnamen
setfior December
' 22
_

Twin~t.ag .58, Orange 46

.... 17 11 3 37 108 92

.Winrupea

The Eastern junior high girls will open their basketball season
with the Eastern varsity tonight at Southwestern.
There are 13 players currently vying for a staning spot on the
team. Team members life eighth-graders )'licole Nelson, Jessica
Karr, Beth B.ay, Rebecca Evans, Lauren Young, Kristi Warner and
Crys't&lt;il Moms, and managers Debra Dillon and Crystal Smith .
'Phe seve~th-grade play~rs are Laura Eastman, Patsy Aeiker,
Crystal Holsmger, Amanda Milhoall', Martie Holter and Christie
'Grossnickel.
Scott Wolfe is the junior high coach.

Sherid an 541Crooksville 32
Sol~ 70, Kquton 48
, S.oulhingt.on SO •.P~matuning Va U.lJ
St. Ur11ula 49, Nolte Dtmc 39
SLICCuboro 41, Moaadon: 46
To!. Oowshc.t SO. To!. Sc:ou 45
To\. Centnl 78, Tol. Woodwud II
Tol. Sl..lrt 64, Tal. Roaers 55
Tri·VaUcy 54, River View 43

Smy&amp;MDI...Ioot
Vancouver

Junior high Eagles to begin
• h
Season t(}nJg
t

36

...... 9 II 4 22 10106

To100to

l

:

i

Ravervu SE 60, Rooutown 43

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

'

.. · By'TOM:CANAVf,N
1 , . AP Spol'tl Writer
',PISCATAWAY, N.J . (AP).Gordon Winchester and Jerry
,Walker are getting to the point in
·their careers at Seton Hall where
they 'really have to do something
spec·'-cul.ar to get a rave from
coach PJ . Carlesimo.
Solid pertonnances:are now the
norm for Winehester ind W~r.
a!ld any=less is unacceptable..
. Wed
y msJit,lhey turned m
workmanlike performances as No.
12 Seton Hall held off a second~ cluirge by Rutgers and defeated the Scarlet Knights 77-72 befof!l
the second-largest crowd at the
Rutgers Athletic Center.:
Winchester had a team-high 18
points and four rebounds and
Walker chipped in with 15 and a
team-high seven rebounds as Seton
Hall posted its sixth straight win

Meigs placed three player.s in double figures and went on to .
!lefeat Athens 61-55 in eighthgmde basketball action recently. . -= _
Meigs ju!IIIJed out to a 7-2 lead, but Athens came back to lake
the lead at 10-9. Buckets by Travis Abbott and Gary SI3Dley gave
lhe Marauders the lead for good at 13-10.
'
.
Allhough Meigs led the game the rest of the way, Athens kept ,
the game close cutting the Marauder lead to one on six different ,
occasions. .·
- - -- ·
·
-- .
1
Bush led the Marauders with 18 ·points and nine rebounds, l
Abbott added 16 points and five rebounds and Hansen added 13 l
· h' · three f r, three ·
· Ma h d s
'
pomts, . lltmg
o our
pomters. Pullins, s an tan- '
ley had four each for Meigs and Yost added two. Meigs was called
for 14 fouls and l)ad 23 turnovers.
•

Sandusky St. Muy 59, Lorain Cath:

Adarru [)lwlalon

Hartford
Bullolo

Meigs eighth-graders top Athens

I

No.l.2 Seton Hallbeat~Rutgers;- ·
No. 21 Missourl tops UN.Kearney

Meigs sports briefs ;_

Day. Patt.enon 12, Oaj . Jefferson 34
Day. Wayne 47, Ccntcrville44
Dover .55, Mintn'&amp; 3S
E. Ocyeland Shiw 50, Labwood 39
Firelands 74, Obul.in 47
Oc:ncva 62, Aduabula St. JOOn 43
Hamilton Rou 56, New Miami 24
Lenin Oearvicw 53, Wellingtct1 49
Lorain Keys lOll~ 47, Elyria W. 30
Louisville 7S, Carrollton 31
' Madison 40, Athabula Edaewood 38
Mulingtoo .55, Cind Fulton NW 4S
Medina 6&amp;, Bert~ 35
Moaado"' 59, Waterloo 40
Moraan 55, Ma)'lville 44
N. Royalton 41 1 Midpuk 34
NDCL 66, Clc. Calholic 3~
New Lcxinglon 44, John Glenn 41
Olmll.cd Falla 63, ROii:y River 37
Pa inesville Riven:idc 54, Jeffen:on 37
Panna Holy Name '71, Mcntor4S
Panna Padua 42, Bedford J6

Milwaukee al W•hinatcn, 7:30p.m.
Atlon~ II Covclond, 7:30p.m.
Houatm at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
Orlando ll Sacramcnw, 10:30 p.m.

:;rhursday, December 12, 1991

Fay Vincent about the gam d
future. .
.
.
.,
Vincent told the owners he will
meet with lhe commissioners of the
NBA and NFL to dtscuss the
tmpact of AIDS on their sports. I
~

15

Dt:nvar 11 New Jeney, 7:30p.m.

1
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. .

Chudon 49, Chlarin Falls 22
Oc. Ma.11haU 62, Cle. Collinwood 54
Ccvcland Hu:. 73, Normandy 34
Cloverleaf 59, Strongsville 55
Col. Watl.Cnon 39, Cal. H&amp;nlcy 35
Crea1wood 41, Ga'rrcttsvillc 26
Day. Co~oncl White 59, Belmont 47
Day. Dunbar 113, Day. Mcadowdalc

San Antc:Wo 98, MinDaou 85
t..A. OippctttlOI, Douoi196
Ul.1h tot;LA.I..oken 95

M""""'
u
..~a~

·

Moo 58, LouinBrookl idc ll

New York 96, Seaulo 87
llenv.. 98, Philaddpbio 88
Mlamlli5,Ciewllnd 113
DIIW I 116. Clwloao 103

'

SEATTLE (AP) - The Seat~e
SuperSonics waived guard Quintin
Dailey, who appeared in only II of
the team's 19 games this season
and averaged nine minutes and 2.8
points per game. Dailey, 30, was in
his third year with the Sonics after
three years with !he Los Angeles
CliD,oirs and four with the Chicago

Ohio girls high school
basketball scores

I.S
25
25
7

Sports briefs

Wadswonli 72, Tallmadge 56

trying to look Uke an attractive
buy. Owner Jeff Smulyan put the
team UP. for sale last Friday for
$100 mtllion.
. Any new owner will have-to pay
Mitchell $3.5 million for each of
the next three years.
The Giants came to the meet•
ings looking for pitchers and added
three young arms. General manager
AI Rosen is still looking, 100•
The Reds, who had acquired
pitchers Greg Swindell and Tim
. Belcher before the meetings even
started, acquired infielder-outfielder Bip Roberts on Sunday from San
Diego fa( reliever Randy Myers
and \&gt;P Wednesday traded pitchers
John Wetteland and Bill Risley to
Montreal for outfielder Dave Martinez, reliever Scott Ruskin and
infielder Willie Green.
~Whitey Herzog also improved
the Angels during the meetings by
acquiring outfielders Von Hayes
and Hubie Brooks and pitcher
Chuck Crim . The Angels also
signed left-bander Chuck Finley to
a four-year deal worth $18.5 million .
In another deal Wednesday,
Kansas Cuy traded frrsl baseman
Todd Benztnge~ to Los Angeles for
outfielder Chns Gwynn and
mftelder Dotn~ngo Mota. The Royals aiso sent pitcher Stonn Davts to
Balttmore for ca)cher Bob Melvm.
The Dodgers were looking for a

-

- '

.

Faust was hired before the 1986
l -5eason
to help Aleron make the
H ump from Division .I-AA to Divi•.) ion 1-A. His ~s are 29-34-2 at
·• ·:_~kron, includmg a 4-6 mark last
season. He has two years left on a
·• !'r~ontract that includes an $89,000
:1Jase salary.
.
~ There's grumbling on campus
-:,:about the football team's strugg!e~,
~ut FIUSI'I job appears safe.
..- ' 'I wouldn't say that Gerry's in ,
rwuble," said university president
" William Muse. who htred Faust.
~ 'He has two years to go on his
l":contract, and we expect to honor
t:ihat eontriiCL
·
.
~ "Then's certainly a level of
•ldis$atisfaction with the perforimance of the ieam and disappoint·
'lllenl with not having more wins,
~ utI haven't ~n any 'Oust Faust'
. '~"'tigns."
·
~ Atllletic director Jim Dennison,
• !'WhO was football coach before
: ~. biaust, empethizea with him.
· "I think the problem was when
·{Jerry came here, there was a per*&amp;eption that when Gerry came here
•:We were acing 10 jump 'from 1-AA
fto tho Obi() States and the•Michi: .
:4ans of the world. And that is a
''.\oery'unreaiistic situation,' ~ Denni'

.

'

.------- ..--.-'-----·-·---~-------+-----------I-~....!-----

�..
'

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

l

: Thursday, Decem.ber 12, 1991

Thursday, December 12, 1991;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

North, South KoFea agree on -~ ­
historic no~~aggression pact ··:·

Yeltsin says Soviet Unio.n dead
By BRYAN BRUMLEY
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW (AP) - Boris N.
Yellsin today sought the awroval
of Russia's legislature for hiS new.
commonwealth, which he said was
gaining sup~rt because of the
Soviet Union s "uncontrolled anarchic disintegration."
The Russian president said he
and Mikhail S. Gorbachev agreed
at a meeting Wednesday 10 keep
the "currently working-slructures"
of the central ~ovemment functioning until a maJOrity of the republics
join the commonwealth.
In a speech 10 Russian lawmakers, Yeltsin said Armenia, Kirgizia
and Moldavia have expressed interest in joining the new political entity forged by Russia, Byelorussia
and Ukraine on Sunday.
He also said he believed Kaza.
khs1811- the second-largest Soviet
republic after Russia - would
become a full member.
Yeltsin said the creation of the

Russian winter
forecast
By ALAN COOPERMAN
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW (AP} - A divided
miliwy and downtrodden citizenry
could explode during the long Russian winter, leading Soviet thinkers
said Wednesday, predicting bandit- ry in the countryside and angry
mobs in the cities.
For now, the streets are oulm.
Under a perpetual gray sky Russians silently slog through a brown
mush of snow and mud, ignoring
what seem to be a thousand daily
incitements to riot shovin¥ in line
to buy shoes, paying a day s wages
for a few tomatoes, watching
limousines race down special lanes
reserved for the Kremlin elite.
"Riots, disorder , chaos are
always possible here, especially "·
this winter," said·Len Karpinsky,
editor-in-chief of the influential
Moscow News.
"They are a spontaneous thing
that can't be preciSely forecast and
can't be ruled out ... Everyone is
worried. We live under a constant
threat of some kind of local uprising,'' he wid The Associated Press.
Since tens of thousands of Soviets took to the streets against the
hard-line coup in August, no lar$e
demonstrations have taken place m
Moscow or SL Petersburg.
What Soviets call the political
'.'left" has stayed indoors.
Only the so-called rightists have.
held street protests, seldom involving ~ore than a few dozen ~JMple.
As the counll'y unravels, the fringe
is·showing.
On Wednesday, about 50 rightwing demonstrators stood in a circle outside the Russian Parliament
·building, carrying signs denouncing the oew "Commonwealth of
Independent States" as a joint
American-Israeli plot 10 destroy the
Soviet Union.
The protesters later marched to
the Defense Minisll'y 10 appeal to
the army to resist the commonwealth pact signed Sunda~ by Russian President Boris Yeltsm and his
counterparts from Byelorussia and
Ukraine ..
Waving Soviet flags, they
stepped in time 10 m&amp;r!ial music
from a ~rtable loudspeaker and
cried: ' Yeltsin is Judas! Down
with Yeltsinl"
No one from the Defense Ministry appeared to RaY attention, but
political analysts !interviewed by
The AP said the danger of a split in
the military was real.
"I think that on the whole, the
officers and the field commanders
will support the commonwealth
agreement. But I'm not sure about
the tOp ranks of the Ministry of
Defense," said Alexei Arbatov, a
defense specialist at Moscow's
Institute of the World Economy
an!l InteJll!l!i&lt;!nal Relation~ - -·-·-

commonwealth was made necessary because President Gorbachev 's Union Treaty, which
would have maintained stronger
Kremlin control, was rejected by
most of the 12 Soviet republics.
• "Maybe time has come to say
that personally, ~ am not going to
asprre to a role m the new structures," Gorbachev told the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta.
Support for the commonweath
agreement is growing, Yeltsin said,
with Armenia, Kirgizia and Moldavia expressing interest in joining.
He also said he believed Kazakhstan would become a full member.
Yeltsin said he and Gorbachev
agreed at a meeting Wednesday to
keep the "currently working structures" of the central government
functioning until a majority of the
republics join the commonwealth.
He said the creation of the
''Commonwealth of Independent
States" on Sunday was made necessary because Gorbachev's plan to
hold the nation together with a central government was rejected by
eight of the 15 former Soviet
republics - principally Ukraine.
Ukrnine's refusal to join the Union
Treaty was a "serious violation of
the geopolitical balance," said
Yeltsin, because it has nuclear
weapons.
The commonwealth was created
not to eliminate the Soviet Union
"arbitrarily" but to halt the " process of uncontrolled anarchic disintegration of that common space in

commonwealth declaration has
"no legal force."
The commonwealth described
by Sunday's founding document is
a looser grouping than the Union
Treaty envisioned, allowing each
republic to establish its own curtures.··
Gorbachev said in an interview rency and army but coordinating
published today that he was not military and foreign policy and
seeking a role in the new Slavic maintaining eentral control over the
commonwealth and has not been Soviet nuclear arsenal.
Yeltsin and Gorbachev are
offered its· presidency. But he convying for t~e right to decide the tinued to defend the n-eea ron central ~overnment to coordinate eco- future of the former Soviet Union
and tile loya)tr, of the Soviet milinomic and other policies.
· "! am a convinced advocate of wy, which w1U play a key role in
the opinion that a Union Treaty is determining whose political con_ _ __
simply necessary as a basis-for-the cept will win out.
Yeltsin
told
Russian
lawmakers
reformation of our huge, multinational state," the Independent Wednesday that Gorbachev would
remain commander-in-chief of the
newspaper quoted him as saying.
The Soviet legislf\!Ure was to miliwy- for now.
In today's interview, Gorliachev
convene tOday for a crucial session
reiterated
thai he would not use his
on the commonwealth. The legislarole
as
military
commander-intures of Byelorussia and Ukraine
chief
10
prevent
the
break-up of the
have already approved the treaty.
country.
Representatives of Kazakhslan,
"! do not think that a politician
Turkmenistan, Tadzhikistan and
who
embarks on the route of using
Uzbekistan also were meeting
armed
force for attaining his polititoday to decide whether to join lhe
cal goals deserves success. He must
commonwealth.
There was no immediate word be cut .off and damned," he was
on the three other Soviet republics quoted as saying.
The United States signaled on
-Georgia, Moldavia and AzerbaiWednesday
that it was focusing
jan.
more
on
Yeltsin
as the country's
The Soviet legislature's authoripower
broker.
ty was greatly weakened in the
wake of the failed August coup and
U.S. Ambassador Robert
has already approved Gorbachev' s Strauss said in WashingtOn that he
Union Treaty. Its Constitutional believes Yeltsin will succeed in
Oversight Committee, a pro-Gor- winning ratification of the combachev body, has said Sunday's monwealth agreement.

The Dally Sentinel Plgt 8

which our nations live," he said.
"The world community has
started to consider it bankrupt,"
Yeltsin continued. "The central
bank has announced that it doesn't
have linything to cover its expendi-

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ~
North ·and South Korea, biu.er cnemies since the K01ean peninsula's
1?45 ~vision, agtccd today 10 a
hiStOric accord on non-aggression
and reconciliation, a South Korean
spokesman said.
, The accord, reached at prime
ministers' talks, is the nrst major
agreemcnt betJI~n the Communist
north ~d CBjlltaliSt SOU~. The t~O
countnes opened a d•alogue m
1972:
.
SWI technically at war from the
. ~~~~~thKorean conflict, th,e north
.
~ the world s.most
heavily-guarded borda'.
The agreement would p~ovide
for measures 10 prevent acc•dental

hosuhues through prior notificalion, observation of military exercise and on-the-spQt verification Of
troops movemenis and military
bases.
"We heve reached full agreement on the accord," the South
Korean spokesman, Lee Dong-bok
~ld reporters. "~ only remain:
ID$ proceedure is sign.ing by. t!'e
Chlef,\delegates (the pnme MIDIS·
ters). ,
Lee s comments c~e as he left
the conference room m a luxury
rote! outside Seoul where .lowerC\'el delegates from each-Side-had ~pleted talks. He said it had not
been decided wheth_!r ,the signing

Middle-income families
need tax cuts: Bentsen

· WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
Lloyd Bentsen, chairman of the
Senate Flpance Committee, says he
is aiming his tax-cut legislation at
middle-income people because
only
minutes
after
It
began
and
spokesmen
for
, BRIEF MEETING •. Nortb Korean dele·
they are worse off nnancially now
both
sides
announced
the
delegations
would
: gates reach acr.oss the table to shake hands with
than they were in 1980.
work separately on language for an agreement
: their South Korean counterparts in Seoul
Bentsen, 0-Texas, planned a
on reconcUiation. (AP)
·' rhursday morning. The meeting was adjourned
hearing
by his panel today to study
-·~....
his
anti-recession
bill and other
.
proposals for injecting life in10 the
stalled economy. Treasury Secrewy NichQlas Brady, White House
budget director R•chard _Darman
and Michael Boskin, chairman of
the president's Council of Economic Advisers, were called to testify.
Bentsen on Wednesday released
,.' .
,..
figures from the ·Congressional
'.
soybeans and other U.S. farm prod- while the California au-orange Budget Office showing that mid•·
By JENNIFER DIXON
ucts.
forecast calls for 60 million boxes, die-class Americans had lost ceo· .
AP Farm Writer
USDA's also forecast an 13 percent more than October:s nomic ground during the last
': WASHINGTON - U.S. wheat
:.stocks could soon reach their low- increase in U.S. meat production of forecast and up 124 percent from decade, and that the rich had seen
. · ·
! est level since 19.74, driving up more than 3.5 percent next yc:ar, last year.
their tax burdens eased.
Other forecasts call for 2.1 mil,
:~rices, according 10 the Agriculture led by nearly 8 percent more l:&lt;!rk.
· •Cl!O, which peiforms analyses
~ Dcpanment's latest·forecasL'- ·
It predicted slightly higher' u:s. · lion boxes of' oranges in Arizona', for Congress, said it believes the
.• USDA Sl!id Wednesday that milk production in 1991-92, with up 20 percent from last ·year, and median income for families with ·
:ending wheat stocks on June I, consumption prospects a littl ~ 80,000 boxes in Texas, which had children will be $37,300 next year,
·· 1992, are estimated at 414 million weaker.
no commercial production last year about $1,600 less than it was in
"bushels, less than half of what the
The all-milk price forecast for due to a severe freeze in 1989.
1980 when measured in 1992 dolBased on Dec. 1 surveys, USDA Iars.
:nation had on hand as the crop year the 1991-92 marketing year, which
-began last June and the lowest began Ocl. I, was lowered by 10 estimated grapefruit production at 2
The figures also showed that as
&lt;since 1973-74 's 340 million cents per hundred pounds, from a million tOns, unchanged from the a result of tax law changes in the
j)ushels.
,
range of $12.05-$13.05 to $11.95- Nov. I forecastbut down 5 percent ·last 12 years, middle-income fami· "With stocks tighter, the fore- $12.95.
from last season. Reduced produc- lies will owe $100 more in 1992
:Cast price range is up 10 cents on
Cotton farmers, meanwhile, are tion in Florida was cited for the than they did in 1980. But because
.each end to $2.85-$3.05 per expected to harvest 18 million decline.
of the changes, the .richest 1 per:bushel," the deparunent said in its bales this year, a 16 percent
.monthly world agricultural supply increase from 1990 but down 1 per·
cent from last month's forecast,
.)nd demand estimates.
· It said prospective wheat stocks USDA said.
Orange production was forecast
were down sharply due to forecast
· ;.. targer exports to the Soviet Union. at 8.4 5 million tons, up 3 percent
Tbe Soviets_., usinJ $!.25 billion from the Oc&amp;ober forecast an.d 1
irr receflll)''lui!IOOzea credit guar- .percent above"'lst·season,•M!l\en a
antees to purchase $495 million winter freeze damaged California
I
worth of U.S. wheat and $338 mil- output
The
forecast
for
all
Florida
lion.for feed grains such as com.
The package also includes oranges is 136 million ·boxes, 10
smaller amounts of protein meals, percent below last seas~n 's crop,

•

says cotto·n crop r,lp 16·
percent; wheat stocks tighten-

:~ VSDA

YELTSIN SPEAKS • Russian President Boris Yeltsin answers
reporters' questions ln Moscow Wednesday. He said that Armenia
and Kirgizia have agreed to join the commonwealth of Slavic
republics that formed over the weekend to replace the disintegrat- ·
ing Soviet Union. (AP)

• •

0

cent of families, earning more than
$320,000 annually, have·seen their
tax liability drop during the same
period by $16,400.
.
"The study confums my betief
that middle America was victimized by the economic policies of
the '80s and reafftrms my con viction that these families are entitled
to tal\ relief· denied them in the
decade just past," Bentsen said.
His bill would provide taxpayers
with tax credits of $300 for each
child below age I 9 liv_ing_with
them . It also would make it easier
for more people 10 use Individual
Retirement Accounts, and allow
penalty-free IRA 1\'ithdrawals for
first-time home purchases and
medical and colle~e expen5es: .,
Bentsen said hiS measure would
spark the economy by giving
Americans more money to spend. It
would be paid for by cutting the
defense budget during the next five
years.
The administration has said it
opposes coning defense 10 pay for
tax cuts. Last week, Deskin told the
House Ways and Means Commit·
tee that rather than fueling a recov- .
ery, such a plan would have "offsetting contractionary effects"
because defense contraciOrs would
fire workers and reduce their
investments.

ld be igh ..,.. ~. .
wou
ton tor ru....y.
As reporters gathered ncar the
conference room, thc:Y coul~ .sec_
deleB!Iles from both Stdes. smiling, .
shakmg hands an~ patuna each:
0 ~.~ '::e back. .
. .
. ,e ave ach•eved a h1s10nc
~d~le :~one of the NOflh Kore' Relfxed relations could 8
the withdrawal of some 0~
40 000 u.s. troops stationed in
So~th Korea
Th talk ·
·.

accor~ had !:~n:::·:t:e~:

Korea in a suJprise- mer-e-on~
'
v '

~o~~~~~:~an~cf~~p:;:ul~~

inspection of suspected nuclear

w~s!:ved a major obstacle
on the sensitive issue of North
Ko~&lt;:~~~~~='=~r

reported today that South Korea
and the United ~tates have agreed
to suspend the cont(oversial
"Team Spirit" joint miliJarY exeicise in 1992 if North Korea agreei
to a proposal for a nuclear-free
Korea.
A halt to the exercise has long
been one of North Korea's major
demands. U.S. officials declined
comment on the report but sources
indicated that the United States
fuUy backed South Korea's proposals.
·

IOWWBIPII

callirllll
•n•
Polnuttlu ••to 10"

Polnnttlll Hinging B•lwl5
Chrllttn• c.ctus Bu'il'tt
·HollyT,_
Cut Chrlatmu T,_

G111ve Blan.Ub .

. ~ulllllll Spl'llys aiNI _
Vuu
large' HouM Plants
Cactus
,

10" Folla9e Bullets,
aU varieties
Open o.lly 1:00 o.m. to 1:00 p.m.
8u...,.1:00 p.m. to 5:00p.M.

HUBBARDS GREEN HOUSE·SYRACUSE, OHIO

114-tiMn&amp;

lite pe~d gtft for the
.

perso~ ·who has .eve

•

g.

Dayton man sentenced

SOLID OAK
HACKBERRY

Christmas Savings

TABLES

BOOKCASES

SID~BOARDS

ON

PIE SAFES
CURIOS
.HUTOIES
-=-nd MORE ,
- L

KLINlRECLINERS

.

WAilAWAY RECLINERS, ROCK-G-LOUNGERS and
~ SWIVEL ROCKERS _.,
.
Beattiful Fabrics •• Birkr~ne's Umitecl Ufetime
WIITanty

Justice separates.tie
AK~ON, , phio (AP) Su~reme Court Justice

0hio
Craig
Wnght will no longer sit on cases
involving his campaign treasurer,
N. Victor Goodman.
The Akron Beacon Journal
reponed ~ that Wright also will
replace 0 man with a ucasurer
' ''who would not ,ha'le 8J!Y real likelihood of appearing in this Court.' '
Wright began honoring his
pledge Wednesday, disqualifying
·himself from a case in which
Goodman was representing the
Ohio Srate Building and Construe.
tion Trades Council.
•
The case cen!efl on enforcement
of.a.state law assuring union-scale
.or prcvaiting wages on pubtic pro·jects. It could affect tens of thousands of union jobs, Goodman
:wrote in his briefs.
• In a previous prcvailin.s·wage
·matter, the Episcopal Reurcment
Homes CMC was decided, reconsidered and decided apin in 4-3 votes
to the detriment ,of unions .and
clients ot Goodman. Wright voled
aplnst Oooclman Ill three times,
which Wri&amp;ht uid reflected his
ability to sit fairly on Goo4man's

-

·-

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man by the company, knowingly
has been sentenced to five years of allowed the company's books to be
'probation and 750 hours of com- mainlained "in such a way as to
munity service for his role in a conceal the nature of numerous
scheme to defraud the NASA unallowable items of costs and
Lewis Research Center and the Air expense," according 10 the charge
Force.
filed against him.
Edward F. Dierker, 50, of DayDavid J. Wall, 61, of Fort
ton, also was fined $10,000 by U.S. Myers, Fla., former executive vice
District Judge Alvin I. Krenzler on president of Analex, has pleaded
Wednesday. Dierker hld pleaded guilty to two counts of making
guilty to conspiring to defraud false statements to a government
NASA and conspiring io make agency and is waiting sentencing
false statements to a government by U.S. District Judge Sam H. Bell
•agency.
in Akron.
Dierker was one of three current
Joseph M. Carsley, 56, of Orlanand former officials of Analex do, Fla., faces a Jan. 15 trial on a
Corp., of Fairview Par~. who were four-i:ount indictment returned by a
:~~ccused of concealing m the com- federal grand jury in Cleveland on
•pany's records more than $1 mil- SepL 4.
.
:lion in expenses that were not relat- . Authorities said the costs also
'ed to the company's engineering included pleasure trips for Carsley
support contracts wah NASA or and. Wall, including $79,953 for
•the Air Force.
.
one European trip.
.
. The company was pa•d by the
Tbe charges stem from an inves.government based in part on its tigation by the FBI, NASA's
~ e!lpe~ .. __
. ._·. -.. inspector general's office and-the
D1erker, who •s sun employed Defense Contract Audit Administration.

VCR • Camcorder
Microwave • TV
Repairs
·. FAOORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

'\:d
-----.
'~

Goltlstar

"·=
,,., -

We OHer
·Delivery

Z.sttlt

~lV'hDik
Phlko
Elllll'soii
s•l•tom

~~

•

,,

•
• •

'

.

-.,

Want a great gift Idea for a very spedal person7 You don't have to led&lt; any t:urther than Peoples
Bank In Mason, New Haven or Point Pleasant! Our Peoples Choice Gift Ceadr.-'".ates can be
purchased ln.a.rfy amount
Choose and applied to the CDSt ci any Peoples OlOice trlp or tour.

yoo

•

The 19921tineraly Includes something for~ Upcoming adventwes will take ouunembers
to a winter luau In Ondnnatl (yes, Onclnnatl ...ancl Mary wiD do the hula), Broadway shows In New
Yolk, the fabulous Amerlftora Exposition In Columbus, the OpiYland Hotd in NashviDe, and (drum
. roll, please) a aulse to Nassau at an ynbelleyable prlc:el That's lw&amp;i11se our trips and tours are
priced at cost • meaning a first&lt;.lass trip at a fraction c:J the price. Plus, Peoples OlOice patrons
travel with folks they know- and In most cases, depart right from the bank! (What's the catch?
them to~ our custcime~l But non-members can go oo our trips for-Just $25 more.)

we.

want

Yoo won't 6nd a more thoughtful gift. Stop by your nearest Peoples Bank locatlal.

Or c.all MaJy
Fowler at (304) 675-1 t2t. ave them a "gocxl time"ln '92 with aPeoples Choke Gift Cedlflcatel

~-sody

JCP11uy

391 WIST MAIN STREET
H2·3524
Jl

-

HotDelst

:HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

The Beacon Joumal reported
last week, that Wright voted in
favor of Ooodman in another palitiCally divisive case involving future
control of the Ohio House.

.

Cra"'

·WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

cases.

.·

.

Peoplea CJ~o~g. Cllolce ln1W' II ftt ... cllolce-.! oppo-W fllr
peoPle 50 llld - · Maubw nut mUIIIIn a SIO,OOO mnmrn deposit
biJance In a Peoplu llllki&amp;VIIWIIICXIDUN, ~ af clepall~ lltA, 01' rry
Clll'llblnaaon o..at. NaH•••ibws 1111\Y10 an~ b 111 adelia Ill SUper
persan file. Pilaplll
II a cl\•lla11 aftli Peaplll illrlk cfi'Wit ~
s...ostanllll penallytbrelltyv.tlhdlaJJII. ,.•• ,. . fDIC.

aac.

POMIROY, OHIO

.

J' !.

I
\

.

.

. ··-- &lt; .. .

•

'

�..

..
_._

, , P!2=10~The Dally Sentinel

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .•·.

&lt;Jhristmastree sales
.
'-

By Tile Assotlitted Press ·
It's turning into a green Christmas for tree growers.
The sluggish economy isn't
hurting Christmas tree sales around
Ohio, said growers who are more
concerned about a tree glut than
· consumer spending.
"The economy is not hurting
the Christmas tree business, as I
see i~" said Roger Dush, owner of
Pine Tree Barn and Farms in
Wooster.
. . __
Growers report brisk sales and
.. low prices in some areas of the
,.state. the result of an oversupply .of
trees.
"Despite the poor economy, we
feel that families' want tO bave a
traditional Christmas and \Ire buying trees," said Donn Appleman,
owner of Appleman Tree Farms in
Wooster and director of the Ohio
Christmas Th:e Association.
Some of the association's 300
members sar their sales figures are
ahead of thelf usual pace.
"We have done much beuer
than past years,'' Appleman said.
"It's hard to determine whether
that's just us or in general, but
we've been hearin~ good reports
from other growers. '
Although the economy isn't
hurting growers so far, an influx of
-- trees from other states is cutting
into their income.
Tree shipments from Michigan
and Pennsylvania have affecied t]Je,
Ohio market, as are trees being
grown in large numbers on small
farms, Dush said, That has pushed

~8 ~emng in some areas forslsto

~~~·or

the six large Ohio cities
included in data published by the
A!llerican Hospttal. Associat!o'n
·dropped in an Amencan Hosp1tal
Association ranking of adjusted
expenses of hospital admissions . .
Only Colu)llbus rose on the
AHA list, from 59th in 1989 to the
49th most expensive city in 1990,
Blue Cross and Blue ·Shield of
Ohio said in a release Wednesday.
The list. compiled by the AHA,
ranked cities based on the average
adjusted cost of hospital care per
admission per year from 1986 to
1990.
· In Ohio, hospital costs in 1990
were: Cleveland, $6,703; Toledo,
$6,090; Cincinnati $5,638; Akron,
$5,362; Dayton, $5,455 and
-Columbus, $5,561.
The ten most expensive cities in
the country in 1990 were:· Boston,
~9,031; New York, $8,339;
. Anchorage $7,963; Washington,
. :s7 ,876; San Francisco, S?,860;
:" Philadelphia, $7,300; Ch1cago,
: $7,012; Pittsburgh, $6,925; Omaha,
: $6,731 and Honolulu, $6,714.
,
Cleveland, the most expensive
city in Ohio for hospiral costs, had
· the lowest increase over the period,
. from $5,393 to $6,703, or 24.3 percent.
Cleveland dropped from fourth
to lith nationally between 1986
and 1990.
· "This is one area where a drop
'in national s~ding_ is ~ ~~I, a
move in the nght direcuon, S3ld
John Burry Jr., chairman and chief
· executive officer of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield. "The cost of health
care is a national dilemma, and the
ro;t of a stay in a hospiral is a big
pan of the overall picture.' •·

WINTER .
COATS
..

FOR THE ENTIRE
FAMILY

SAVE
'

20%ALL WEEK AI

YOUR HOliDAY
SHOPPING
PLACE

''

•'

priceS down in some areas.
California and North Carolina are
· Firs that were sold in past years . the nation •s _top five. &lt;;llrist~s ·
at $25 wholeSale are now costing tree-producing states. Olno r_anks m
about $14, Dlish $aid. Sc()ICh pines
.
,

-;+-

.

economy
·.

growing the ~s. The industry
illys it employ1111ote thaJi 100,000
JleOII!e fuU- or part;time nationally.
:~
. )

I~ in New York for lW() (jec~s. WedJtesc!ay al'temollll~ Ulirllll'O had · cou,nted. That .would be more like
had an insurllloun!able lead for the 23,112 VOleS, or 36 pen:enL ~g- 25.percent of.tlle vOte. . .
.
presidency.
·
·
shot.caJididate Walrtr Shea trailed
The ·elecll~ IS the.f1rst r~nk·
Durham, a vice president of the with 6,575 votes, or lOJICI'CnL . and-file vote 111.tbe Teamsters 89international union. s!nee 1989, had~ ... ~-The 64,D(l0 fOUDied ~loiS rep-~ -~ear'. h1story and -~ b1_ggest elec. tJi~Jbl!i!i:irU&gt;f rel!!il!l Tl)IU!l.s.tcrs - resent about-16 pef~ent-of \he -.t1onm U.~ ..Iatiii-llllltory~ -eli.'-~-President Wil!iam .McCarthy and expecied· total. _Of the 1.6 mllhoo
.The umon ~ to ll1e elecuon
~ad been cons1d~ the frot!t;run· Teamsters ehg1bk: to vote, about to sett_Ie a mam:ve rac!ce~ermg
ner because he won the most voteS 4;00;000 were estimated to bave l~WSII~t Jhe)usuce _D~pan111ent
at the union's nominaling·conven- . cas~ ballots. Fiilal results were not ·f1led m 1,9~1 alleJmJ .t~at the .
uon over the summer: . ·
, expected unlil th_~_weekend. _ ... ---~~s!C" ~1p ha4 made,!
s ovet, .,_sa1d a Durh~m
Lite¥. unoff'ICiilres~lts prov1r ilevil ~ pact . Willi 11!e moll: , ,
source who requesied anonymity. · ~by_ the Caref campaign owed . . Prev.10us ~ll!ftSta:s presidents,
"I don't ·thin~. anybody knows hts trend h(lldtng up. Carey h~d md~c!mg J1m•~ Hoff~. Roy
w~at happened.
. about 50,000 V()tes-compared WI~ Willwns and ~~~ ~. were
Carey had' 34,632 votes, .or 54 Dufhllm 's . 34,000 and · Shea s elevated .to .the.top JOb by a small .
pe~cent of th~ ballots }O'!nted_~Y 16,000, Wtth about 135 locals group of umon msiders. . ·

':It•

sh
.

Thurtd•y; Dec;ember 12, ~991
..
Page-11

District 13 D of A holds
·christmasprogram ·

Beat oftheBend; ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Quite a s~ccer player is Tom tal.
-Rawlings; son. of Mr. and Mrs ; - - - - --- -~- ·----~· -··'~
· Richard Rawlings of Mason, W.
And more abOut thdse friends
. · Va .• and former residents 'of Meigs and neighbors of yours who have
undergone various heart proce~ .
·County.
Tom is currently in Longview,
· Texas, where he is playing.il!. th\1.
Nationiil-Christlan CoUege Athletic
· Association's tournament for the she was almost • in
·1957,
Lee College Flames soccer team. she had her first opell · heart
·.Last year, Lee placed fouith in the surgery. Again in. June, 1959. _she
· tournament.
had a second open heart (lperaUon.
· Tom is a graduate of the Ohio . It was experimental at that time,
Valley Christian School and is cur- but she survived.. She's had some
rently atteltdingJ,ee. a Chr\l;tian ups and downs but she~s slill with
College in Qeveland, Tenn. Torn us today-taking gOOd care of bet
played two years in the West Vir- mother, Elizabeth Ohlinger, and
ginia Christian Ed~ation Associa- now her sister, Kathryn Smith.
lion's state high school tournament
Elsie Circle of Racine, had open . ·
for the Ohio Valley Christian heart surgery on Jan. 13, 1966, to
School and was team captain .dur- remove calcium deposits. On May
ing his senior year.
3, 1975, she underwent prosthetic
Tire Li~ihg Word Ministries is ~replacement of the metra! valve
sponsoring Rawlings on the Fll!ffies with a poreine menograph; Oct. I,
team where he has not only assiSted 1981, a faulty metral valve procine
in organizing clinics but has also was replaced; June 19,1986 the
~passed out jerseys and, soccer porcine valve was replaced with a
·equipment to children in underpriv- mechanical vahe and she was hos:ileged communities, attending local pitalized for 45 days. Unfortunate~unday services, and ~as assisted ly. Mrs. Circle passed away April
on the painting of the New Testa- 12, 1987. All of her operations
ment Church of God as a part of were at University' Hospital in
the team's refurbishing project.
Columbus.
The Flames advanced to the
· Chelsea Ann Pape, dau$hter of
.final four of the national tourna- . Allen and Carol Pape, Racme, had
ment last year after defeating her first open heart surgery on
Geneva College, Pa., 2-0 jn the Sept 30, 1991 at Children's Hospi·
first round. The Flames then tal in Columbus when she was only
dropped a close contest 10 George one day old. Her pulmonary valve
WIJIINE;R • Sara Craig, Pomeroy, was th~ ~inner or tbis lll_M.Or:
Fox of Oregon, 2-1, the team that was completely shut-off and the · .ized ~ar at tbe Pomeroy Suadry Store. Cra1g ~o~ rirst_place m a
wound .up winning the national surgeon~had to go in an mal(e an
local coloring contest In her age category and rewved the car as a
championship. In 1990, the opening in it. She also had two
prize.
Flames chalked up a 16-7-1 record, holes in her heart. He second operthe most wins ever in a season for a ation was on April 24, 1991. The
Lee College intercollegiate soccer surgeon went pack in and removed
team. ·
her pulmonary valve completely
Tom is studying to be a teacher because it was not allowing the
After 20 training sessions, parOLYMPIA, Wash . (AP) - At
and an associate pastor.
blood 10 flow through properly so
ticipants
were given the option of
they put in a transanular parch in its the end or a 16-month motivational
· Hold the ted_dy bears.
place. A hole in her heart was course. supervisors at the state breaking a board 12 inches Ion~. 10
: A request was issued recently closed . The second hole in her Department or Ecology got the sat- inches wide and 7/8 of an· mch
·asking residents 10 provide stuffed heart closed on its own. She is is£action of smashing a nearly l- thick - to symbolize breaking
through an obstacle course, said
teddy bears for the 35 patients or doing well so far but may have to inch-thick board with their hands.
trainer Terry Schmidt.
Some wished they hadn't.
the Extended Care Facility at Vet· have further surgery at a later time.
The exercise was for those who
Curt Eschels broke his right arm
erans Memorial Hospital for
Alex E. Birchfield had angioauended
all the sessions, which
ChrisiJllas. The request was well plasty at Univer~ity Hospital in in two places. Gary Hanson broke
Eschels
had
not, or for- those who
his wrist.
received and contributions_went May. 1985. '
.
· "It sounded like a neat exercise, had not previously broken an ann
over'the lOp. Thank you for your
Robert F. Chapman, Syracuse,
·
but
two guys gelling hurt is too or wrist, Schmidt said. Hanson pargenerosity. · There are a few over had quadruple open heart surgery
the 35 req_uesied and those will be at University Hospital in Cll:tober, high a price to paY..'' said Eschets, ticipated even !hough he previously
. special assislluit to' Ecology Direc- broken an arm . .
held to g1ve as gifts to children 1983.
"I certainly regret the injuries,
_who might be patients at the hospiCara Lyn, daugh!Cr of Rochelle tor Christine Gregoire.
and
it hurts me almost as much as 11
and Bill Lawless of Middleport
hurts them," said Schmidt,, presiunderwent open heart surgery at .
dent of Management Concepts
Children's l:lospital, Columbus, on
Aug. I, this year. She was born on
Jllly 22, 1991. She's the granddaughter of Bill and Carolyn
ASPEN, Colo. (AP)- John
McDaniel.
has filed for divorce and
Denver
Mildred Harris of Reedsville
had open heart surgery at Universi- asked for a temporary restraining
ty HospiU\1 in Columbus on April ·order to bar his wife of three years
3, 1987 when she was 75. This from entering his home. ·
Not granting the order would
was a double bypass. The surgery
result
in "irreparable injury or
left one passage closed as the surdamage,"
the 47-year-old singer
geon did not deem it advisable to
said
in
court
documents filed Tuesdo the third one. Ms. Harris'
.
reports her health is better than it day .
Denver's
filing
said
the marhas been for over 20 years.
riage
is
"irretrievably
broken."
He
I promised that we would finish
asked
for
joint
custody
of
the
cou1
up the listing of these heart patients
before the end of the year. Hang in ple's 2 1/2-year old daughter, Jesse
there-! think we're going to make Belle.
Cassandra Delaney Denver, 30,
it. Aren't you amazed at how
currently
has custody of the child
many of our residents have underCHERYL BUSH
gone the procedures being used . although her whereabouts are
unknown, according. to documents.
today? Do keep smiling.
0

' '

BEAUTIFUL
GLIDER
.ROCKERS · ·

ALL ·
.WOOD
ROCKERS
·

- STUIIIIII
Ar

nAmNGAI · .

~~$,,95

$188°

0
ByLA·Z·BOY

FL.EXSTEEL .
CATNAPPER

•249~0

DAY BEDS

BIG IILICTIOI

AVAILAILE IN RED, PINK,
.WHm, ALMOND, IRASS
IIIIWOOD
STARDNGAT

by GIIi

··yta

$119°0.

CURIOS

. . fri~,. . &amp; g,

AVAIIAil£ WITH MAmE$5
AND POP·UP UNIT '

GOOD SEI.KTION
IN STOCK

$449°

K~nator

' ' ./•. .1.~ ·_;:.:..!

L ' '· '

'

'

0

-~ Rra~qgUIIGI GASANDELKTRK

·-

5l88wtl

.

IAIIGES

Sell al alzg

Slarlllg AI t

- -· . -

'

·
.

599"

'

. Slwflatlt l;s..,y-'

'"

...

· -·

'

.

8Sbenwod. .STEREOS

NOW OPEN ·

Monday•Fri.tay
Until 8:00 P.M.
· For Your
Convenience.

,................................
,
BEAN BAGS
--

.

'

DESKS

Great
. Ill COLORS
Selection
j
•WVU •Ott~
Of
•;
-ou.
Gun .
' Cabinets t.~'!'!..~!.............J

s399s

TOPS

MIRRORS

~--

FROM $299.00
TOS$99.00

FLAT fOPl
. · FIOM $111.00
10 $~tt.OO

Rutland. Furniture Company
742-2211

11 . . "' n. 71

IIIWII,

···-

-·-

Shi~ley Wolfe was the best held· anh·e Carpenter's Hall in
weekly 16ser at the recent meeung Pomeroy. ·
of the-Ohio TOPS Club No. 570
The best weekly KOPS loser
was Linnie Aleshire who also won
the fruit basket
, The· Christmas party will be"
held Dec. 17 and weigh-in will still
International ·Inc. of Tukwila. be held. All ~emllers are urged to
"Unfortunately, this will probably attend.
._
_
be the Jut time 1-do·iL"
· ·- Hundreds of people who took
part in the company's programs
had daM the boud·breaking exercise wilhout injury during the past
lhree y•s, he said.

Dinner planned
Christmas dinner for American
Alloy employees and Foote
Mineral retirees alld their families
will be beld Saturday: Dec .. 14,
1991 at the USWA 5171 Union
Hall in Hartford, W. Va.

SWISHERLOHSE

P

CY

CHRISTMAS
SAVINGS%%

,•

o.o

...

--'

Dr. J. Singh and others from
Birmipgham and Midland Bye
Hospital in England told of two
young women who suffered e~e
burns .from eggs that blew up m
their faces after being microwaved
for one minute at full power.
A patient of Dr. Geoffrey .E. .
Bradford and Robert A. Bumsune
of Children's Hospital Medical
Center in ~n. Ohio, su~fered an
even m~re spectacular acCident

CHRISTMAS CARDS

COMPLm STOCK

IN .IOXES .

-

~
.

ONLY

9:00 AM~ 10:00 PM

ONE·DAY ONLY!
Holiday Dresses........~••••••~••20°/o Off
and PJ's..............~............40°/o off
3mos. &amp;'up.Outfit~ .................30°/o Off
. 12 mos. &amp; up Casual Dresses....30°/o Off .

· ·BIIftONS
liD
80\VS.Poilltroy,
100 E. Main St. ·
Ohio.
•

•

-~----

·-,---

----

.

'~.

.

r

1o.... _·

1.1 OL - Reg. $6.50
ONLY

$449

. .

69· .

i

(

·

LADY IN RED
Eau DeParfum

MARSHMALLOW SANTA$

L

.

for Mtt-5 Oz.-l~g.-99C

. RUSSEU STOVII
OIOCOlAn CO¥aED

RUSSELL STOVER .
ASSORTED CHOCOLAnS
2 OZ. ~eg. 95C

PRICE ----

DESIGNER.BODY
SPRAYS

. COLONGtSPRAY

43(

--ONLY-

CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING PAPER

_,. . v, PRICt... .'... 'f2

Bag of 25-Reg. 69C

FRIDAY, DEC. 13

SAt-ES THROUGHOUT THE .
STORE TOO NUMEBOUS TO
MENTION

-

BOWS--

Lucky tJ -~our _sa-le

I •

read manuals, the result can ·
nasty. Sometimes, the eggs blow
· up after they are removed from the
oven,.splattering the cook with
boiling-hot bits.
.
Two groups of doctors reported
cases or this surprise in letters published in Thursday's New England
Journal of Medicine.
·

OU.'I!AWA\'1 AYAIIJ\IU oiO. DA\'IIAMIAI CAIN olfttliANCIIilct AYAILAIUI •PIIII DILMIIY

n. n. uc

wffr£~~~

BOSTON (AP)- Be careful .
cooking eggs in their shells in
microwave ovens. They may
explode, doctors warn.
Oven manuals typi,cally caution
users to prick the yolks of opened
eggs before zapping them. They
also warn that eggs in the shell
should never be cooked in a

STAlliNG AT

S29

. . '•

TIMEX WATCHES

40°/ooFF

Be careful
.
zappzng eggs

- -·-

J

·'

Cheryl Renee Bush, daughter of
James and Ruth Fry Bush,
observed her first birthday on Nov.
18. A clown theme was carried OUL
Traveling to Virginia Beach, Va. to
join in the celebration were her
._. -Fry

.Up Far Dar.Big laUday

TOPS announces winners

First birthday

IWITH COLUMN SPUIERS
·
WITII RECEIVER, IMPI.If.l, CASSEm,
GRAPHIC .QUAliZEI, IEMOIE
IlL SEPIUIE COMPOIIINTS

,. ,

-.we

John Denver
seeks divorce

Refrigerators

STARDNGAT

. · Tho District Deputies and Past Esther Smith read a clipping froni
Co11ncil(lrs Chill of Distric!l3, The .Daily Sentin~l • .Dec~mber.
·. Daughters of America, had their . 1963, 28 years ago,.:_when ~ DIS•
C!irilbllas-pro~ at~thc-QUa!ity - triet~DeJ!Ull
. 'e_s
e s_--,Ciub-of Distflll
. .-H3~­
Inn in ·Nelsonville recently with 34 had its Christmas dinner and meet- .
ing and gift exchange .at the Lions
aSked the bless· Club Building in Belpre. There
· and Erma were two present at this Chrisim~
the meeting mee~ng_at the_Q~i!Y lop, ZeldiL
Opil"liol=
er andEstfie.r Smith, who
··. .
Rid 111e Chriltmu ·story from attended that meeting. ·
··
· ·· ·
secoad chap~er of Lpke. The . Door prizes weie won by Faye
· Lord's Prayer and l"ledgc of Aile- Hoselton, Thelma Whiie, Esther
giance Were given in unison. ·
Smith, Charlotte Blake and MilThe minutes of the previous dred Lowery. Jean Welsh and
meetilfJ were ~d by secretary Esther Smith conducted the gift
Betty ~t and &amp;W_EOved. Be_ne exchange. . ·--- _ _·_ _
Biggsj!Vi tlie-treourei"s repNt. - . ·Attendmg were Mary Moose,
Repined sich..ere Bea Mayers, Alberta Hartshorn, Betty Wolfe,
Betty Young, Mary Reed, Eliza- Perry Council, New Lexington;
beth~ 8Jid Helen Wolf. ·
Vemie Coogrove, Charlotte Blalre,
The dub voied to have the pic- Faye Trowbridge, Mary Nell Gano,
nic at Logan on June 27 at noon · Mildred Lowery, Sylvia Bownes,
and for the 1992 Christmas pany to Logan Council, Logan; Faye
'
l!C hel!lat the Quality Inn in Nel- Hoselton, Iva Shuus, Belle 'Prairie
sonville."
Council, Belpre; Betty Spencer,
The Christmas program was Betty Biggs, Bob Harden, Es_ther
conduc~d by Mrs. Cleland with Harden, Nathan Biggs; Janice tawreadings "Poor San~:&amp; Cl~us"by . ~n.E!I~n Clark, Mar~aretCotter­
Sylvia Bownes; "Potnsetuu" by 1U, ~u1dmg SIM Council, Syracuse;
Mildred Lowery; "One Perfect Dons Grueser, Dorothy R11ch1e,
StM" by Mary Moose; "I Remem- Jean Welsh, Esther Smith, Marcia
ber Santa" by Betty Wolfe; "What Keller, Zelda Weber, Erma Cleis -Christmas" by Esther Harden; land, Opal Hollon, Lora Dame·
"God Loved the World" by Eileen wood, Ethel Orr, Pauline Ridenour,
·. Clark; "The_Way .To See C_hrist- Faye Kirkhart, .Bulah Maxey, Thelmas" by Bulah Maxey; ''Beautudes .ma White, Mary K. Holter, Chester
of Christmas" by Mrs. Cleland. Council, Chester.

Motivat.ional exercise results in broken arms

RECLINERS
Of

.

The Daily sentinel.

,,

. '

"

Teamsters reform ..candidate has ·e_agt;·: 'i~ pr~swent s .r~ce .·

"The overabundance of !teeS is
WASHINGTON (AP) .,... Ron
hurting the business ... it's creating Carey, the Teamsters presidential
pressure on prices,'' Dush said.
candidate who ran on a clean-up•
Dush said his sales are steady the-union slate, appears headed to
because his business tries to enter· victory in the goyemment-ordered
tain customers.
election . aimed at-purging '!!!~
-- ''We take-people·out-in ·horse&gt;- · nafion•s· 6lggest union of orga.drawn wagons, we shake the trees, nized-crilne influence.
we let them cut their own," ht
Carey was far ahead of his chief
said.
opponent, R:v . Durham, in the
Doug Kiley has been selling early voting, according to results
Cllristmas_ttees for ll years at tl;.' . released-Wednesday-by the counsame corner in Cincinnati's Clifton appointed officer overseeing the
neighborhood. Scotch pines and election.
.
.
Douglas firs have been selling weU.
Sources close to the process,
He said his sales are.about one- including a Durham supporter, said
·thil"d ahead·of last year.
·
it appeared that Carey, who has
Oregon, Michigan, Wisconsin, headed a United Parcel Service

•. ll~ The·Bend

.I

the top half but imports more !teeS
Th' nation his ab&lt;&gt;iHIS ,000
tliail are grown in the S!l~. Apple- · Christmas 1m groweis and ~ut I
man said.
.. .
milli\)il acres in production for
·
· ·
· • .. . .

.

·,.

-. .::___,. .:.. ·. '

Thursday, Dtctmber 12, 1~1

unafTed~dbj

.

'

'

·Hospital care cost
is rising in Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
average cost of. hospital care is rising in Ohio's major cities, but not
as quickly as·ilnither parts of the
nation, according to a new hospiral

'

JJ.oc

hj: 4sc- ON1Y- ~ -

Nat~ral Spray

1.7 OL - REG. $9.95

_,--s-ca9 ONLY ·

.U

OFFERS GOOifftiROUGH.
DECEMBER 16

JEWELRY
'

' '

COMPLETE STOCK

~2PRIQ·..

'

•

�'

~

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursd!y. December 12, 1991

Pomeroy-Middlep~rt, qhlo

Thursday, December 12, 1991

The Dally Sentlllf[l-Pape-13

General Motors~ Corp.,·planning plant closings, job layoffs -

Community calendar

&lt;

Community Calendar items refreshments will be served.
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
TUPPSRS PLAINS - The Tupmust be received well in advance pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
to assure publication in the cal-· will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
endar.
the post home.
THURSDAY
RUTLAND • Revival at the
Rut!~nd Community Church, New
Lima Road, will be held through
Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev.
Carl Eisenhan will be the speaker
and Rev .~Dewey King -invites -the
gubtic to attend.
SYRACUSE • Revival at the
Syracuse Nazarene Church will be
held Wednesday through Sunday
with David Canfield the evangelist.
Services are at 7 p.m. nightly and
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

FRIDAY
RIPLEY - The Liberty Mountaineers will perform Friday at
Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
RUTLAND • The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
will meet. Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
- home of Mrs. Vernon Weber.
· Krisana Treintong will present the
program, "Christmas in Thailand''
Hostesses are Mrs. Weber, Mrs.
Cecil Blackwood, Mrs. Stephen
Jenkins, Mrs. Robert Jewell and
Mrs. Dayton Parsons.

tin'."

HARTFORD, w .va .. A Christmas dinne{ for American Alloy
employees and Foote Mi.neral
retirees and their families. Saturday, Dec. 14 at the USWA 5171
Union Hall, Hartford, W.Va.

SATURDAY
FAJRPLAIN - The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at the Jackson County Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
BURLINGHAM - The Burlingham Modem Woodmen of America · United Methodist Church will preCamp 7230 will have a potluck on sent its Christmas play, "Birthday
Satlirday at 6:30 p.m. at the hall in Pany for Christ," on Sunday during
Burlingham .. Those attending bring _morning worship services at IU::JO
table service. Everyone· welcome.
a.m. Fellowship will follow.
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buffington , Gallipolis, will be the guest

POMEROY • The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will have their annual
Christmas party on Saturlliy at 6
p.m . at the home of Charlotte
Elberfeld.

.

'

.

_·

.·•

.

. .
.

.

.

DETROIT (AP) - General' · active assembly plants, and it 's
Motors Corp., in the latest example likely that some of GM's hundreds
of the depth of the recession, plans of component factaie.s alJo will be
to make .Paid moves in its ailing shuttered or consolidated, - .
"!orth Arrletjcan automotive operaEmployment levels vary, but an
-ttons which could include plant assembly plant has around 2,500
closings and layoffs.
·
hourly employees. But when an
GM issued a terse statement assembly plantshuts down, it could
Wednesday saying that next affect several component plants
Wednesday it planned to detall the and layoffs could grow dramaticalmoves designed to hasten a return ly.
~ profitability of its core automo- _ . l( s alsQ._ lik~!y ~M will_
tlve bu-siness.
announce cuts m ~~white-collar
"In connection with the actions work foiCe beyond ihe_ 9,000 jobs
related to improving GM's_North Stempel already has said would be
Amencan capac'ity utilization , elimmale(J liy the end of 1993.
management is continuing to develThe automalt:er currently has
op the elements -of~~rpossible about 94,000
_ salaried
. workers..
. charge to earnings,'' GM Chairman
!here have l)een "!mars ClfcuRobert Stempel said in a statement latmg around Detrott and Wall .
He said the board hasn't decided Street th.at there could be some
: on the size of the charge or when it changes m top-level GM manage· would betaken:
ment. But company spokesman

Open sights only.

speaker at the Naom i Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
10:45 a.m. The public is invited to
auend.

LOTTRIDGE • The Lottridge
Community Center will host a
ChriStmas dmner on Sunday begin_RACINE • The Racine B,ajltist ning at noon. Bring acovered dish.
·church adult choir will present the Everyone is welcome.
cantata "Rejoice, 0 Eart.h" on Sun'
RUTLAND
- The Rutl and
day at 7:30 p,m.
Youth Group will present "Seeing
CHES1ER • The lzai!k Walton the Star" on Sunday at 6:30p.m. Club will begin its annual muzzle Rev. Sam Bayse invites the public.
loader .shoots at the club -near
Chester on Sunday beginning I
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
p.m. The shoots will continue each meeting will begin Sunday at 7
Sunday throu&amp;h Jan . 5. Prizes p.m. at the JTPA office in
include turkey, bacon and cash. Pomeroy, I 17 West Second Street. ·
.

'

'

.
zarra • GOLD.StiR ' '
..

'

.

..

'

.. ..

.

.

PU'r I MIIIIUX,
UNDER YOUR fill 'Ill YIIR nDM
-RUtLAND FURirrDRE CO~

· RACINE · The Racine Gun
.POMEROY - The Pomeioy Club will hold its Christmas party
Senior Citizens Dance Club will on Saturday from 7 p.m. to 12:30
hold a round and square dance on a.m. at the Racine American
Friday from 8 to 11 p.m. at the Legion Hall.
senior citizens center.
LOTTRIDGE · Counuy Music
POMEROY - "Wonder of the
Night
at the Lottridge Community
Season" will be presented at CarCentet
will be held Saturday from
leton Church, King sbury Road
(County Road 18) on Friday at 7 5 p.m. to midnight. All bands are
. CHESTER • The Shade River p.m. The program is a musical cel- welcome and the public is invited
Lodge No. 453, F and AM, will ebration of Chris tmas, candles. to attend. -Those attending are to
nieet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Open choir and light. Pastor Clyde Hen- bring _a covered dish.
installation of new officers will be derson invites the public.
POMEROY - "Paddle to the
held and refreshments will be
Sea"
and "Paul Bunyan" will be
served.
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
shown
at the Meigs County Public
Full Gospel Church in Long BotLibrary
in Pomeroy on Saturday
: ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock tom will have a hymn sing on FriS}lrings Grange will hold a potluck day at 7 p.m. featuring the Moun- and Sunday· at 2 p.m . and at th e
dinner on Thursday at 7 p.m. Mem- tain Top Singers and Crystal as Middleport Library on Monday at
~ ers bring non-perishable food
well as other local talent. Pastor 4:30p.m.
items. A meeting will follow din- Steve Reed invites the public.
RUTLAND · There will be a
ner.
Refreshments will be served.
round and square dance at the Rut: LONG BOTTOM - ..The
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- land An\erican Legion Hall on SatCoolville Community Choir will be pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 urday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
presented Thursday at 7 p.m. ~t the and Ladies Au xil iary will host a music by Country Kin Band. Ray
Faith Full Gospel Church in Long dance on Friday from 8 to I I :30 Fitch will be the caller and the pubBottom. the public is invited and p.m. with music by "Second Cut- lic is invited to attend.

RUTLAND • OAPSE Christmas
Party will be held Thursday at Rut. land Elementary at 6:30 p.m. The
party will be a potluck dinner, and
members are to ·bring a vegetable
and desert for their family. OAPSE
will provide the meat. A. gift
exchange is optional.

---------------

It's expected
that GM
announce
th_e closing
of .,.,;ill

LOWEST PRICES IN THE ARU

-

• Uolmsol fer TV ... ~rtuaiiJ Ill V&lt;lt
• AerAOte lour-way ttlrtdioft&amp;l CMirof of pidure

•14 hature - .

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

· • CMM!el Relllinder option
• Ole-button picture reset
• r...r.t 52 100"' pidure tube
• Two s• oval speakers

• RaMoao dlaiiiOII-

de&lt;'oder

'

' RcceN1: $50 dtscoum lor adl' paid m adva n cu
Gtveaway and Found ads undl!f 1S words w1ll bt'!
run 3 davs 31 no ch &lt;~ ge.
"Pr 1~;~ ot ad fell all c;tpltallt!tle •s •s doublu- pn ce of ad cost
'7pnml hne type onlY used ,
·
"StmtmLot IS not tt'!§pOilsrble for e1rurs aher first •Iii¥ jChedl
lor e u urs lu s t day ad "run s .n pap ml. Call before 2 00 p 111
dlfV altt!t J)ubhcaliont O ma k ~ cu n u&amp;IIUi l
"Ads th at 1l1USI be pa1d 111 adva ncu at•:
Cmd o l Th auk s
Happy Ad s
In Mc mQrlam
Yard Satlls

Aulio/Videc~

patch panel with AJV inputs and
Varllble Audio outP•Is ·

• Univerpl Rt'mote fur TV, VCRand (Able
• RfMie four-way W«tinnal ~trnl of picture
adjuSiments IUid ffttvrr lt'lfctioo

• mtotal dl~nne l rap~hili ty

• Total rtmllU~ "fi!!OI·• torllat tunin~ !ystem

• rr~r ftm!RIIIIif ~R il l lin in ~

• llrmntr foor ·WI)' direclinnal cnlltrnl ol plr.turr
Nius1mf'nl' 1ncilf'11h!tt' !ll'lrctinn
• Comb filler ddi1of'rill- ~ linM Mri7Jlfllal
rr~ u t io n

CP4761P 27"

• On·51'tHn " mfnu '" ~· nnh11l
• Aulu Rrput
• Contrast 5Z ~hur h1bc
• Vn lable Stow Motion ( 115th·IIJOih·lt'l11nrl)

I
~~~~~~sa'i~~ure~ich~sasra~: I -B- AHR

stood next to the star imbedded in a
Hollywood Boulevard sidewalk.
; Th.ose flanking the singer
iocluded Phil Everly, Johnny
R(vers, Wolfman Jack, and -Harvey
F~gua of.l/le "Moonglows."

446
367
388
245
256
603
379

l~mbtrls p!'Ak

brillltltM

1
1
1

- ,

!.

•

•
•

M

1:
I:

WW.,"I'IetorHt·l'ldlrt oi41Jobeml
I - t lor 1Y, VCR llld Clble

•

WIIEilB YOU CAN BUY

• ('l)fllb

•

Pomefoy

986
843
247
949
742
667

Ch•1et
Po11tand
let.an Falls
Rutrie
Rulland
Coolville .

675
458
576
773
882
895
937

Pt.

46

75

Spa c~ to• R~ent · •

76

77
78
'19

Servrces
81 Home ln•pro'olemenl lio
82 Pfumb.n g I He•mu
83 hc111ating •
· .
B!l Ehrctr1 cal &amp; Relrtg l:ffilll ton
85 G•:n«al Ha uhny
86 Mobll t! H ume RIIPillll
87 Upholster"

·
5 4 M itr.:. M erchand•st

ljhtihlitill

55 Bu .. ding Suppltet
56 Pels tor Sille
57 Mu 11cal lnstrument s
5 8 fru1ts &amp; Veglltiibhs
i9 for Sale or Tnrte

21 Bus in en Qpportulllly
22 M on ll\' to loin
23 Protes .. onal Sefv•ces

a. 4 wo ·s

MotOI'cychs
Bo1111 &amp; Motor s fo r Siile
Auto P01rh S. A cc•Wfltlll
Auto Rep1111
C•mptng Eqmpmtlf11 .
Ca mpers &amp; Mot or H om~

H

53 Antiques

Apple Gr ove
Mills on

A11101 tor Sal e
TIUclll tor S11le

73 Vans

Merchandise

Pl t~•ant

New Ha'ol e n
letart
Buffalo

71
72

51 Hou sehold G oo~
52 - Sporting ,Goods

Mtscellanwu l

leo n

...--......--...--..--·-·
B- 8---1·ness

=:::'
:r-::"towl'lih:
mlnlm•l elfecttr on the

Give a Homemade Craft.
Hats, Beads, Lac.e, Paint, and
Many Other Supplies.
DAILY SPECIALS ·
St. Rt.7 • 992-6109
HOURS: t0:00-5:00 Tues. thru Sat.

or celle; (21) H..dwetare
•nd looloted Watera Dl•·
chlrgoe (provided thoro Ia a
!oM oll11alhan 10 .._ ol

REWARD: $300

onent AcUono: Any atructure, work or cllochllrge ol
dredged or 1111 material
undertllkon In ICcord.,co
or remaining In placl
-pllan• wtll, - o f
a IIRal court doclolon,
deorw or NIIMmeot agr...
mont; (33) T-porory
Cont1rucilon -•nd Ac0111;
(34) Cranbarry ProdUcdon
Actlvltloo; (35) lblnllnanco
Dredging ol Exlallng
liMine; (3&amp;) Boat Rampr,
(37) Emargoncy Wolorohed
ProteCtion; (38) Cleanup ol
Hulrdoua and Toxic W111t;
(3t) R-rved; (40) Form

614-992-7694.

w!~ a~.:::.~~~;~~

111..; (21) R•trved; (30)
R•erved; \31) Jl. .orvod;
(32) Comp tied Enloroe-

Bultdngo.

u·

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR
POMEROY

Last markdown
on shots
btfort closing
store.

CARPENTER SERVICE ·

DITIS- $" " -- - ,
llfiiGOATOIS-SlOO .,

· -Qutllr WDrll
- Eioctrlul onrl Plurnblng ·
-conCNta wort:

IAIIGIS- C..-Bac.--$t2l

- Room Addftlon1
Uf1

FIEIZIIS-S IU Ufl : '

IICIO OWIIS-$79 .,.

I

:

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Across From Post Offko '
POMdOY, OHO
10!'30119 lfn 1

OPEl FRI. &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.
1211211 mo.

......

-

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gouge FtKtory
Choke

NO SUNDAY CA'US

&amp;cum

IUDFORDS

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMJS &amp;GARAGES·

~.Raolrlfi

· ~1-nablo

-Interior • Eater..,

Fresh Cut liees or
Cut Your Own. ;

Prien"

PH. 949·2101
or In: 949·2160
Day or Night ·· · NO SUNOA Y CAllS

CHERRY RIDGE,
East of Darwin on Rt.

GRAVE
BLANKETS

HILL'S DEER

Pllnllntl
(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621$

Pomwoy, Ohio

6Uon G111wl ROICI
1Y.'Milasto Grove.
WATCH fOR SIGNS

11-1 4-'90

·- -

RACIN£GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

•VINYL S
•ALUMINUM StpiNQ
•BLOWN IN
JNSUtATION

PH. 949-2101
· or Its. 949-2160

Public Notice

· 'ODAY WliiAim

WASHRS-$t00.,

CHRISTMAS TREES

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

YOUNG.'S

USED APPUAJICES .

,.••." . . . luilt
/ 'Free Ettlmetoo"

(t2) 12,1tc

~

-:=······-

• full JMtnilt\f [ll' llnrm~nrt with S·\·id"'' inpul ,
"-IV inpul~ .~nd VAriable ~udin nutpul~
· • TotAl remote " J~~~;n u " fnrm1111uninR \y~ r rm
· wit~ m~tll l·flllflf 'rl,HrT'rn d ~~~~l·~ ~
• Stlrrlllhlf ~:nRII$h/Sjl~lll~h di~tJilly5

·-

• RMII!Ilft'l th:mnl'l o\!11'."
• llil·minulr ~1#-~· p thurr
• 17R IOIAI fk:lnnt•l rlpJbilil)

......... --.......
• On&lt;!l('t!'fn

'

"Smtrt Window"- Color Pidur~·ln·Pklutt
wMn 11~ -ilh 1 VCI
UnhmaiRemDte for-TV, V('t aM Clblf'
16()- wide ·•n~ ~n with 41(1• 11101
lamlterll puk briflhli!M~
1• liquld·cooft!d tubtl
Stere~~/Vidfo ir1puts and' Oulp!~t. wHh s.vwen
Input, Varllhlt AIKiitl outputs, uptionJI RF
Swikfler idAptflf Md S..n••IMI ~nd jKi1

Public Notice

fill,,·

rlork

IlL~

• • -- .

• Rt. _ _tnnlrol i'nnvtiJ{'IICe adju!lmf'nl '
• Surrowltd Sotmd tt~rttt syslrm 'lo'ith hui11·in
M111SAr drtoder and dhK '"' llfM$(' rPduftlmr
• Chlllftfi Guidr w~ h lull •lphR/ numrrif t:hnnrl
ea..-h·~
• Partntal crmtr1 ~

• 11810111channrl r~p8b llit~ _
• 600 .. II~ hnrilnnlal rf:Stllulinn

• Cnmb fillff

........ -:; *111111•

co.

PUBUC NOTICE
ANNOUNCING RECEIPT OF
, , . . -:,__ AI!I'UCATION FOIL _
SECTION.Ot
CERTIACATIOij
Tht U.S. Afi!IY Corpa ol
Engln1111 (Corp•) publltht.d Nationwide Parmll
Projjriam Rogulellona · Final
· Rulo November 22, 1tt1.
The Corpa h• propooed to
reiMUe 26 exlatlng nationwide permlto (NWPa)
with IOIIHI madl11caUono;
IIIUI 13 now NWPa; and
edd n- condlllona to 111
tilt NWPo. An NWP' It o
!arm ol Clean W1111 Act
(CWA) SocUon 404 genaral
permit which aut_horlzet
ocUvlllto 1hroughaut the
nation. Tho Corpa hu
de!Mmlned thoao acllvltl•
rtairR In mlnlmol lndlvldu•l
or cumulative envlronniental lm,pocll and art In
the public lnl11etl. For
tho•• NWPa llot 11UIIorlze
~etlvlllea that r.. ult In a
dlach•ge of drodgtd or fill
onaterlol to any aurlace
wlllr In lht .Stolt!, CWA
Soctlon 401 wot11 quality
-anc.tlon (WOCI mutt be
gronled valldlle tht NWP.
ASocllon &lt;101 woe "'"be
gronltd, granted with
oondlllona or denied. A
Soctlon 401 woe te denied
oihon actlvltiea d•crlbed
J.y an NWP m•y vloloto
Slate Woter Ouollty
Standorclt. 11 -uncllion Ia
denied, potentlol water
cjuollty lmpacto will bo
tvalu•ted on 1 •••by·
belle. Ohio EPA onuat
gran~ gr1111t Will condltlona·
or deny Soctlon 40t woe
!Or each N~P Involving a

*

to

ruaJn'rORB IP YOU DON'T MIND ·

ftl!l-11114
I IILIIIPF IOU II 7 ·IIILAID, BID

''

:l

-'--- ---~--- -

992 . Mtddlepon

Tran s ortat1on

Mobi le Homes fu• Reo11 t
F•rms to• Rent
Apart ment tor R~nt
45 Futnished Rooms ·

u.. for which d0cum•n•I---------......1.------'------~-----..__--~--

For information or retum of
our 7 mos. old Rottweiler
that was stolen
Wednesday morning, Dec.
4 on Skinner Rd. Answers
to name Cody. Anyone with
information please contact
1US at

fnnntrr

• 550 t linr5 h 11rir.oot~lr!!~llh lt~ 'n

IPIEHDINQ A 1.1'1'1'1.1 ' ' •

__,

14 Business Tram1ng
15 Schools &amp; lmtruc1111n
16, ,Radio. TV &amp; CB R t.-pit•r

·

Serv 1·~es
'-"'
huon•n tnvlraniHnl; (25)
r---;:::=====:;:=::===:;--11
Structui•l Dloch•rge ol ~-----------T-..:....;.,._____T________'1========;r;::::::::===~
JO'S CRAFT
mallrlll Into , ..led lonna 1

Smart.'krysmart~

I

lnsur~~~tce '

17

1;11111
.. H ouses
lor Rent

47 Want ed to Rent
48 Equ ipment for Rvnt
49 For Le-.e

11 Helo W1ntud
12 Situation Wanted

l•'olesl oc*

64 Hay S. Grain
'6.5 Seed 6 ferhhur

I&amp;C EXCAVATING
IULLDOIIfG

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :
Umeatone. Dirt.
Gravel and Coel
Ucen•d end Bonded

CUTilNG,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

Long Lasting Green

Scotch Pine.

$20.00eadl

BASHANRD.,
RACINE ,.- ,,

Order NoW for Your
Lost LolHKI Ones.

949·2206

614·949·2051

PH , 614-992•5591
9· 1 1· 1

CUniNG

Homemade with

11-251- pd.

mo. pd.

111141111

mo.

• 11~ IniAl r.hAnurl upa t1 il i t ~

• Slrreo lli·fi srmfld rystrm wit~ Mih-in ltn'SIS~r
clecoder 1mt db1"' IIOist rNudiofl
.
• "Smut Willdnw'"- Pldurr:·t.l'irture with
" A11on Frtttt·· wlH-n oft With 11 V('R ~
• Unitmal Rrmotr h1t TV, Vtl .. rld Cahk
• R~mnte fom -way Ltirh:liiJMI rontrPI nl picttll'
ad~Jthnenls 1nd ft~IU tf !ll'lmifln
• Cnmh liltfr deli\-rr"'- IJIKlli~ ll•wiwnt-1

CP4760A 17'

.

6J

41
4Z
41
44 ·

Employrrent
Services

Mason Co . WV
Arttil Code 304

ArU Code 614

3 1 Rusin on Buildings
35 Loh &amp; Atteage
36 Real ht11e Wanted

5 Happy Ads

6 l o11 &lt;~nd Found.
7 Y•d S .. etpa•d •n adva nc e!
8 Publi~: Sitle &amp; Aucl fon
9 W.nled to Buy

13

&amp;1 ·· f arm Equipmool
62 w.,t ed t o Buy

Public Notice

• ParPnl.\1 mntrnl •

. . . .10

rMf!lt1111M1

G.lllipolis
Ch•hile
Vinton
Rio Gt~nde
Gu~n Din
Arabi•Oisl
Walnut

FRIDAY~-

c~ptionlntj

• 7" 1iquid-cootrd hrbrs
• Sterto!Vidro inpltl\ Ntd rmtpnh. witk S·VidC(I
inplll, VArilh le Audln 'rmlputs. uplin!W RF
Switr~t·t ldaptnr ll!d ~rrum..t Snwnd )Kks

Metgs County

Gjn awrw~

&amp; Ltv esluc k

HontM. tor Sale
Mobillt Home~ tor Salt:
FB'rms lor S~e

31
32
33

1.8 Wanied To Do

THURSDAY

" BULLETIN BOARD JEADUNE
4:30P.M.DAYBEFORE
PUBLICI:rloN

IALI

·

-

P.~.

• Remote C'I'Hitrol roM· tr~nct adju~tment
• Surrlll n4 S11und !lmu systrr:n with bni\1·10
MTSISA P dr.toder And dbK"' nMsr rrduclinu
• Chlwnel Guide with full Alphal n11mfr ir Ch1nnr!

··smart Wir1tlow"- Color Pidurt·IJ·Picturt
wbtn uled,with 1 VCR
• Uninrllllemolt for TV, VCR UMI C•bl!
• 160' w•· in~le term~ wilh SOO t loot

~

CLOTHIER-S-

.....

HlO

Smart.'krysmart~

I

lllliti. •
·
MJDDUPORT
_..
.I
9:30
Optll Monday•SaltrwaJ
_ a.&amp;• J..AA
ovv p.-.
•

Galli a County
Are• Code 614

BULLETIN BOARD

r.rh

-MAGNAVOX • 3n. 60, ~·""""f' ~~ 1i111rr

Prince Rainier, and her siblings,
~;:~ss stephanie and Prince

!:.;

2 00 P_M.

• ~ l'fnrd ~•d Search
• Timt Surt'hiCMnnrl Snrrl1
• 1'\1 Mm 1 ~ ur lu nrtiun
• 27)( lalchin~ lurwull/rrvmr S.·Arrh
• ll nt·Tnnrh Rrn1rd with St~nllh)'
• A~dil'l!Vidl'fl input
• Antn Trdin- ~)·Jtrm
• Quirk mr-rh~ni~m

b~r k - up

CRM202

2 .00 PM . WEC&gt;NE~DAV

Smart.~ry smart~

• 4 rvtnll f mmith pr~r•mmin~ with I minutr

II" dla. TV /VCR Coroblnatlon wHh lnlr""d
TVI VCI Uoln&lt;d RemOie

THURSDAY PAPER

IILI

• SS.fundioll h!lrarN TV /VCR l.l~tifltd rtmote
• I SS.channtl Frrqwenry S~nthtsiltd rU. tuni~

(rademark Chane! cham-ltnk belt,

ct;isc jockeys of the 1950s and
2!\~!~~ man who helped
: Disc jockey Alan Freed, who
coined the phrase "rock 'n' roll"
but was implicated in the 1960s
payola scandal, was posthumously
awarded a star Tuesday on the Hoi-!~wood Walk of Fame:
·
: • 'Th.is man was great. If the
record was good, he played it,"

.....

rr~l · li n1 e

.05/ dav

'followi Ill{ I l'll'l'h 1i111' f ' x;·lwll~l'.l...

OAV Bt:FORE PUBLI C ~ liON
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM . MONDAY
2 00 PM . TUESdAY

t HtUAY PAPER
SUNOAY PAP E-R

........ -• On·KJtN1

1 Cafd ot Thanks
2 In Memo'y
3 Annouc:emen1 1

4

Farm Supplies

Real Eslale

-~~--..---

• Full mnnitnr pr!rlnrmant'f' with s.Video input.
MV inpub ~ nd V~riable Aud i~ nulpul'
• Tnt:tl r~nwtt• "l!lf'nu" f01 m~llun ing ~~~ lrm
with mul!i·r.nlnr llll·'rrr t•u d i !p i~Y'
• Stltct11ble F.n Ri i sh / Sfl ~ nis h di ~ pl~y~
• R1ndom rhannr.l .unn
, • 120-minutt slr.rp timrr
, • 1111 1 ()1 ~1 rhAnnPinpahility
• On ·!IHrt'O rlrd

MAGNAVOX

1·

i LOS ANG.~ES (AP) - Liule
~ichard was JOrned by smgers and

- ~

dtroder and dbr- noise r~ucli&lt;m
• ''Smart Window'' - rN:tllrf'.Jn.Pirturt with
"flctinn Freeu" whtn n.'led with a VCR
• Univm~l Rf'mOt~ for TV. VI'R1nd Cab!~

E~§g_~?,~ [iO_,.ii.i:-,·•liii•••c·-ha·c-itL••is.-..'1
;:~~~~~~r.:~!~'~yl~~rL~ili:r~ I .,-.-~, The- .
.··Jn~ ~,••.r .
!
I
Lit£.&amp;
.
I
II
•NE
•MANY STYLES
JACKETS REDUCED
, -•DRESS &amp;CASUAL
_20%
I . HATS
:RKOEYBECSASES
· •GLOVES
II •ALL STYLES
•ARROW.SHIR.TS
1 SWEATERS
(Dress, Sport &amp; Knit)
1 •LEVI DENIM JEANS •DRESS PANTS
I &amp;J'ACKETS
·
· •BELTS
'
;
... ·
I •PJ'I
oJIFFY SLIPPERS
I •WALLETS
oJEWELRY
•GIFT CERTIFICATES

• AUern..tr rh ~ nn&lt;'l

• Sttrto hl·fi sound ~y5ttm wilh buill·in MTS/SAP

..

clock

• On·KTr!n

CP4571 P 25"

People in the news

CKTIES

• Se~ctRblf' F.nRiis~/Sp~nish displl)' ~
• Raridom channelll'f:f'ts
• ltO·minutt slrrp timer

with multi -color OM·~~rer n d~pl~~~

by Clarice Allen
· Keller and Elsie Folmer.
Chevalier and girls.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
The firemen held their annual
Mr. and Mrs . Hobart Newell
Chester Volunteer Fire Department Christmas dinn er on Sunday and Mr. and Mrs . John Newell
held its annual Christmas party at evening.at the fire house. A baked spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and
~he home of Ethel Orr recendy . The ham dinner was served to the fire- Mrs. Jeff Newell and son, Syra)msiness meeting was conducted by . men and their families. Santa Claus cuse.
'Vice-president, Inzy New_ell. !'lans gave treats to the ch ildr.en and _ Dr. and Mrs. Bill Allen, Katie
tor the firemen's Christmas dqmer approximately 50 people attended. and Bobby, Greenwood, Ind., spent
were discussed. Money for cards
Thanksgiving dinner guest of Thanksgiving week with Mr. and
was collected and cards were Mr. and Mrs. Larry Cleland were Mrs. Clayton Allen.
signed for the sick and bills were Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Young and
Janet Ridenour spent Monday
paid, A gift exchange was held an.d Mindy, Rutland; Mary and Chris with Opal Wickham.
Mrs. Orr served refreshments to Myers and Erma Cleland,local.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hall were
Erma Cleland, Opal Hollon, Inzy
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bea l, Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr. .
Newell, Lora Damewood, Clara Pomeroy, and Betty Chevalier, and Mrs. Richard Gaul and David.
Conroy, Betty Newell, Dorothy Tuppers Plains, were Thanksgiving
Todd Clay and friend, Lea Ann,
Haw k, Jeanie Newell , Marcia dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Clevel~nd, spen!_ Thanksgiving
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Clay. Other guests were Suzanne
Clay .-Athens, Brian Durst and Opal
Wickham.
- Jean Frederick spent ThanksgivPARIS (AP)- Princess CaroFreed's 1950s program in ing with Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Balline of Monaco returned to the sto- Cleveland, called the "Moon Dog lard, Long Bottom.
rybook world of socialites, royalty Show," pioneered rock ' n' roll. - Pauline Ridenour spent Thanksand tycoons for the frrst time since His broadcast career ended in the giving with Mr. and Mrs. James
the death of her husband in a boat- 19t\()s when hearings by the U.S. Ridenour.
ing accident last year.
House of Representatives implicatMr. and Mrs. Tim SmitiJ spent
•• The event Tuesday, set among ed him in the scandal of accepting Thanksgiving with his sister, Bon~enturies-old Greek statues of the
payment from record companies nie Smith.
louvre Museum, was a joint chari- for playing their records on the air.
Mr. and Mrs. ·Ronald Cia~ visitly benefit for foundations honoring
Freed, who died in 1965 at age ed in Cleveland wi\h t~ e 1r son,
Caroline's mother, the late Pt!Jjcess 42, ha1 the walk's 1,945th star.
Todd Clay.

TUESDAY PAP ER
WEONFSDAY PAPER

• Audin!Vidl'n patdl p~ntl ~to·ith AIV inpul~ t~nd
Varim~ll' Audio out p u t ~

hi-fi sound systm w~h built-in MTii
· deood&lt;r
• "Smut Window'' - Picture-tn -l'icture with
" A ~tion Frtete" when ustd with a VCR

$6.00
$9.00
$13 .00
$1 .30/ day

C/a.~.~ifif•fl 1'11~1·~ f'fll 'f'r lltf'

'A cl...ss tlu~l ;u.lve •t• semL~I I pluccd ttl Th e Datly S1:11tu1tll t e~ .
CttVI
claSsl fi L'(ltlisplav . Busml!!!&gt;s Card aud lt.KJ tli not ic~tS I
wtU ,tl su &lt;~ppear '" tht! Pt PltJ&lt;tSall1 Re!JISit!f and th e GaM1 ·
~uhs Dally Tflb\11\t:. ruachmg o~~C r 18.000 horu~s

COPY OE ADLiNE
MONOAY PAPER
Ster~

.20
.30
.42
.60

Rates ;uu tor consecutrve runs. blokenupd~ s w iU bec:hil ged
tor each d~ as sep••te ads.

.-

get acquainted party ai the Thomas Institute) in Columbus. 'There they
Werry campsite. Refreshments learned responsibilities of an offiwere serv ed durin g several gam es cer, candidate and voting delegate.
The club officers were also
. and activities.
In October, VICA had a Hal- infonned on the proper parliamenloween party at The Locomotion in tary procedures.
The club is currently having an
Pomeroy. Several games and contests were held with bags of candy aluminum can drive. The competifor prizes.
tion is between the individual vocaIn early November the club offi. tional classes.
cers and representatives attended
The Meigs VICA organizatiim
L.O.T.L (Local Officer Training is planning on several community
service projects in the near future.

1
I
I •SUITS
I •SPORT COATS
1I •BLAZERS

Monlhlv

Ann Junce menls

0\IQr 15 Words

"F rt!t! ads

• ~ Encli!h/SpAnish displllys
• "Smart Win6ow" - Pldwt·I•·Pictute 'with
• RIHtm cbanntl ac:~s
"Action F~ " whea_. with 1 YCI
• UO-IIinute sletp timer
• Uaimal Rt.Rtlle ror TV, vet and Cat»e ·
• Remote four-w•y diftctlorlal eo~~irol ol pidiln: • 118 lOIII dlanllft Uplbilit~
• O•·scrttn dock
·
ldjlsimefttlllnd luture seledion
• Propammahlt san tuni"f!
• Toll! remote ".nenu" lw!Mttltftint snltm
• Allu.111tt (hannel
wil~ molll-'""' .,;."""' d~~J'

.Chester community news; dinners held

:· The 500 guests, who each paid
$'925, had eyes only for Caroline,
fho has been in virtual ·seclusion
$ince the death of her husband, Stefilno Casiraghi, in a boating accident in October 1990.
: The gala raised $37o,ooo for
l(andrcapped chrldren, the elderly
apdaspiring3!1ists.
·

6
10.

paod

• Stereo hl·fi souad system witb buiH·i• MTS

15
15
15
15
15

3

' Ads oulsl·' ·• :-" tugs . Galha or M i15 un cuunlius musl bl!' pre

•

Rate
$4.00

Words

Davs
1

POLICIE:S

Meigs High School VICA .elects officers
Officers were recently elec ted ,
for the Vocationallndusaial Clubs
of America at Meigs High School.
Elected were Love Batey, presid(!llt; Melanie Qualls, vice-president; Robin Imboden, secretary;
Brian McOlintock, treasurer;
Miranda Nicholson, reporter; Mary
Stein, parliamentarian; Valeri e
Wilson, historian; Jason Dowell ,
sargean t--at-arms: and Evelyn
Neice, chaplain.
In September the group had a

RATES

TO PLACE AN A.D ICALL ' 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until ~OON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

IILI*48110

CS45 15A 25"

Unt....,..le;,.le

.

.

Volume mute

!

wllb multi~ G~-~m~t~~4ilplays
• Aud~ll'ldeo plldl panel willl All' ..,..,

Mtnlt•IReftlver

plan~~~~c;a~rs~a~n=d•t~h;e~S:ep~t:
. ~14~,~1~9~9~3-~e~x!pl~
~it:s~b~a~I:an~c:e~shCet
for the
far the national
UAW-GM -ra:t~io~n~o~f-~c:er:n:s:a~b:o:u~t
contract. strengtiJ."
·

cover
the the
endclosing
of 1993.of other factories

• AllerMie channel

.

• Total remote "111111" lonut tuliftllyllem

IS"~ Color

However, he said the indusuy had
been through a mi~ble year with
unexpecle!l drains on the fund, 3lld .
$2.8 billion remained in it
.
The looming moves have been:
the source of speculation fo'
weeks. Wall Street credit-rating
agencies have warned tiJat without
large-scale cost ~eduction moves,
GM securities could be dolmgraded,making it more expensive for
the automalcer to·borrow money;"---""·
On Wednesday, Standard .&amp;·
Poors Corp. said ·plant closings
could help the automalcer's overall
efficiency, but a big charge could
hun in the long_11!n. _ _ _ _
" Substantial write-offs would
conf1T111 the deterioration of GM's·
asset protection,'' an S&amp;P statement said. " The company's higher ·
debt levels and diminished cash
position had already raised con-

Stempel said the coming charge more than Ford Motor Co.'s 20
would be smaller than that
factories and Chrysler Corp.'s 14.
''This time, they are going to
The UAW negotiated a contract
take open plants and move the·pro- with the huge automaker just over a
duction other places:' Casesa·said. · year ago which contains provisions
That can be significantly more for furloughed workers to get 95
expensive than simply shuuing pereent of their take-hoine pay for
down a mothballed plant Industrial tbe first three months after being
tools and· othei equipment needed latd off.
·
_
_
to produce a certam vehicle would
After that, the company must
have to be moved to a new assem- either rehire the workers or !lay
bly planL. -~ _ -~ · .
them full wages while they are in
•Casesa and others_were unwill- so-called JOBS banks doing non'
ing to I!Uess which plants could be ~utomotive work, such as helping
on'GMYs hit list.
m community service projects. '
UAW members at seve.ral
The company has promised it
assembly plantS ontside Michigan, would set ~ide slightly more~than
who declineil to be identified, said $4bl'Ilion to pay for the benefits.
they had heard nothing, but that Through Dec. I, GM has spent
union members were waiting anx- about $1.2 billion of that fund.
1ously. for the pending announceCompany spokesman John
ment.
Maciarz declined to forecast if the
GM has 33 North American fund would be tapped out before

• I!Minute sleep llmer
• 171 total chanarl apabiliiJ
• Pncnmmable an tunin(

• Sl- hi-R t4Ufldi)IIOftl wlllo bull·ln MTS

llljuolmel~

Terry
Sullivan said was
Wednesday
such ·announcement
planned.no

Other speculation about what
may be in the offmg continued.
•'I think they will announce a
charge closing two or three (asSentbly) plants in the 'first quarter of
1992," said auto analyst John Casesa of Wertheim Schroder &amp; Co. in
New Yorlc. "If you close assembly
capacity; you probably trim down
component plants."
United
Auto
Workers
3p0kesman Reg McGee.declined to
comment, saying the union, which
~epresents about 300,000 active
GM hourly worlt:~s would wait for ,.
next week's annou~ement.
On Oct. 31 , 1990, GM
announc¢lntTthird-quaner earn-ings, which included a _one-time
$2J billion -after-tax charge to
cover expenses of closing four
.'" idled" assembly plants and an
unspecified amount of money to

Publlc Notice

NOTICE ON RUNG OF
INVENTORY NfD
APPRAIIEIEHT
The·- ol Ohlo,lhlgt
County, Court ol Coonmon
PINt, l'lobl.l8 Dlvlalon

commenttr on uti INI ·oubonllted
by January I, 1..2 to lit
Socllon 4Gt Coorclnllor ot
Ohio EPA, 1100 WraltrMMi
Drlva, Columbut, Ohio
43215. C:oonplete dofcrlpllona ol lie NWPa moy
be reviewed II lie Ohio EPA
Columbua oHico. Tho following NWPt will oullorlze
acllvltieo whloh IIIIJ lnvolvo
a dlechlfllllo watn ollie
State: (21 Structure• In
Arllllclol C:..nalo; (3) Main·
ttrnanco, Ropllr, . Replacemont al Prevloualy Author·
lzed, Currontly llorYicublo
All or Structuro;~(~)_Fio_h
•nd Wildlife Horv•tlng,
Enhancement, and Attraction Dovlctt ond
Acllvlllta; (Si Sclentlllc
Meaouromont Devjcoo; (8)
Survoy Acllvltloo; (7) OutloU
Slnrolu-; (t) Struli- In
Fleotlng and ,,Anohorlge
Aroaoil· (12) Utility Lint
Back I 1111d Bodcllng; (1'!
B•nk
(14)
Roed Croaalng;
U. B.
Guerd

-- To --tho Executor -or
Aclmlr)latrotor ollhe Millo,
ouch 9flhe following 11
. . -ldonlrt ollho Slolrt ol
Ohio, ~z:-11• ourvlvlng
apo~..; 1M n.t ol kln, the
"-I 111 riM llfiCIIr h wiD;
11141 1rt the 81tomoy or oltorneya ropr•enllng ony ol
tho
aloroon enllonod

to

Homegrown,
beautifully shtsfld.

danMed,

Mel• County

~5 (If &amp;

White end Scotch Pine

742·2979

Appnl1tmenl ol the .....

ol· tho lllortllentlonod,
lleo.....rt, lito ol uld
CDUnly, WIN flied In lhla
c-1. a.ld ln'tflfttory Md
Appr•l-•nt will be lor
hearing bllore 1111 Court on
the lOth lilly 'ol 'Jonu•y,
1112, a1 1:311 o'olook P.M.
Are.. ;
Any peraon cloelrlng to
Projacll; ,,, _......,. uuptlonolherelo _ ,
Dlaoh•- ol
.,_ al IIMI live dayo
than 25 cubl~ r•il•
tho dell eat for
drodgod a&lt; 1H111atltlll; (11)
GJv.. 1111. , mr hlll\d and
25 Dubie Yard Dredging; ..., ol alld Court, lila tlh
(20) 011 Spill CINnup; t~ cloy ol Dmnllnr, 1•1.
$urloo• ·illnlng Aollvl •
......,. E.lluclk, Judge
(22) ~~~ ol v.a•;
ay a.- K. Noatlllraod,
(23) Approved Cltegorloll Doputy Cllrll
i;Kclualono: Federally oup. 112) 12 , 11e
ported or rogulated actlv~

c:.:

HAILEY HINIIG'S
RESIDENCE

I~ OIL

35975 flltwaads Rd.

AUTO PIITS
Speclallling In
(jrstom Fr- btlair
NEW &amp; USED PAR'rS
FOR AI.l.-MAI!ES &amp;
MODElS

992-7013
or 992·5553

Located on Rocksprings
Rd. In Pomeroy, 3 mites
from 'the Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.
•

01 TOU FIR ·

1-100·141-1070
DAIWIII OliO
ilt311'81 tfn

992-6855

1111511 mo. pd.

GUN SHOO.l.

OYEN-AII

lAONE
FilE DEPY: · '

Bat'*' luHIIng

MliAIIS .
lrl"' H t. Or We
Pldllp.

'SAl. NIGHr

UN'S APPUAJIG
SIIYta

EYDY

6:30P.M.

992-5335 .,

Starting ~t. 21
12 .......tpaDnly
St rlctly hfercad

--"---- - -

61H92=3394
Or Call
742·3020 Evenings
12·2·91 ·1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L

EXCIYITIIG

BUU.OOZING

INSULATION .

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER UNES , ·

•Rioao~able

ftote,•
•Quality Work
•Fr.. Eatlmotoa
•Cirpet Hoa Foat
Time '
•High . Gloea on Tit.
Floor Flnloh
!
_Mill lEWIS. Ow'*

•VInyl Siding'
·Rtpl-mtnt
Windows
·Roofing
•lnsulltlon

&amp;

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097 .

lt. 1, lullallll, OH.

539 Bryan Ploco

MICidltpol't, Ohio

1155111 &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUmOIIl

........... ·

........

11114/lln

: -.. - ·-·

I

·:
~·
;·.,.,...,
. . ~ ..~~.. :

" ,

All COND1110NERS • HEAT PUMPS and
fUIINACES FOI MOillE. &amp;DOUKEWIDE HOMES

•Ga......

•Cotr,llto

0

f

I

I

0

t

t

t

0

0

0

t

0 ,t

O

0

O

f

O

O

O O

0

0

0

f

0

0

f

0

0

f

0

I

MOIIU lOME

Step &amp; CoMpara
free ilstl•lltlt

BENNE.TT'S

~::.'

LocatM On s.tfonl Sdltol ... Iff ... 141
(614) 4U·9416" J ••,. ... n..!ltf~J

5-31-'10 lfn
1

8:30 11!11"4:00 pm

11-fs, 1 mo.

ca•n CUANIIS
and nu noaa CAll

667-6179 •

9-13-'91

HOURS:

Po1111roy, Olllo

11-lll ... pt

91S-C473

,_,..., Olillt

Displayed at 1M
·. Qua&amp;IJ Priil Sltip

· TREES ·--

INDEPIIIDIIIT

- ----"--"------'--"-'-----..l..~---:-~_;;;;_..:..:.._~----l~--,a_-...,
, ~~~- - - - - - ---:--_
_ __....__ _ _ _ __ .....;._ _ ~-~ - -

•

CHRIST

MAPLEWOOD
ll·lt-1 mo.

THE BASKET WEAVE

DK's FARM·TOYS
by ERR

--- FOR SALE
, REASONABLE

949· 734

111:1&amp;

PioiNI18 Court, C•n No.
27,220.
Diane Conde,
Laet Known Addrt1o:

unknown.
You ere horeby noUIIed
that the lnvontory and

FOR SALE AT BOB
SNOWDEN'S LOT

UIE

Now Opfa oa Satwdays
for the Grlshnas S..St111.
Gl¥1 a hantlwovlft balk11
Ihi
ol to lhallp!dal som- 01
- your Orl!lntas list.
Wltl¥111 st~ppl!ls also in
on
21, tt70.
N.,. and Heir•"• art
slo!lt.

to

wr;r

CHRISTMAS TREES

5 Extra ••

'1

5 Ft. and up
Good stlectlon of
lsrgttrees.
614-742-2143 or

peroone:

(Name ol Decedent,
Rllldonoo):
1
Eattrlo ol Kalla Gulh,

DEER CUniNG
and
WUPPING

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TRElS

•

--

'''---"

' I

'I

'

�. .

''
,'

Senllnel

Pomeroy"'-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

44

.32 Mobile Homes

Apanment
. for Rent

lor Sal&amp; .·c

Roduco Sato And Faal With
GoB- Capilli And E·Vap
Olurwllc At Fruth Pharmacy.

ThNI 1·bdrm apt, In Racine, WI
r,~~~ $1111!10 ftOO dop,

OHler repo, dNlwr cannot PlY
for thtl beautiful, n•w Palm

Unturnlahod 2br ~ Apart·
mtnt, 322 Third Avtnue, Qal..
llpolla, 614-+18-3)11, &amp;14-2561903 Beforwllp.m.

chance

~olor

home,

your

to IIVI, call 1-aD0-837·

6825 Uk tor Mall

4 mont" old flmate groy kltton,
304-875-:!7711.
5 Malt Puppi0o: 3 Montlla Old,
112 Wire Haired l•riw, 112
Bugle. Will Bo Small Doao. 814258-8735 Allor 4p.m. W.olidaya.
Four ado11bl1 khl~ to
giVHI'Oy. 814-255-1821. Fr11 German Shepherd PLIJ)plu, Good Ch~llmae GIHI 614-

Gmt Solocllon Of RopooHIsod Double Wldot • $1,000 !)own
And Single Wldn· • $500 Down
With Approvod Crwdll. Call Mid
Olllo Flnanco At 614-m-1220.
NO PAYIIE.NTS UNTIL APRIL At
EiHa Ham1 ClnterLW.hln Pw·
chaelng A Now Or USid Mobile
Home With Approved Credit
Call 1-800-5811·5710.
Sho~ Tlmo On Job? Paat CrodH
History A Prabl1m? Many
Etpoe...Hd Mobile Hom11 To
Ctloou _From. Small Down
Payment. Caii1400-S&amp;9-5711.

388-11844.

Mol her BMgle, 4 Puppln, Shor1
HairR, Chow, Malt, 1 Yur Old.
614-367·7158.

6

1m Holly Pork, 14•70. 2 bad·
rooms,
1
bath
etov•,
tttrl;orator, outbuilding In•
ctudid1 ~1 ooo. 304-875-5169 attori:OuPM.

Harbor

Giveaway .

4

Lost&amp; Found

33 Fanns for Sale

" It never falls.

year one of the
lights on .this string is out!"

Roword to paroon or pa,....

gun on Whh1 Aoed.

127 Acrws,

8

Help Wanted

11

18 wanted to oo

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

homa,
rtflflllCI avellabll 614-667-6855
Babyalnlng

Rick P11rson AucUon Company,

my

Furniture Stripping Raflnlst1ad
And Repair, Quality Work, FrH
Eltlmatoal 304-675-5529.
GoorgH Po~abto S.wmltl don't
houl yow loa• to tho mftt just
can 304-875·1l5l
r.Yts Paula'• Day Cart Center. •
Sail, 1tfordabl1, chlldcert . M·F
8 o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 211-10.
Befar11, afltr IChool. Drop-Ins
welcome. 614-446-8224. New In·

lull tim_• auctlanHr, coml)llle

auction HrYica. UcenMd Ohio,

Wnt Virginia, 304-J"'3.67S5.

9

In

Wanted to Buy

Wantld lolluy, Standing tlmbar,
· Bob Wllllamo ... Bona 114-11112·
:5441.

f1nt Toddler C1r1, 614-446-6227.

1954,614-255-11751.

·11

40 Acrn With 2 BR MobUt
Home plul 12x14 edckm.
125,000. 614·367·7054.

· AT, PW;' 22,500 mlln.

.

.

.

46 Space for Rant

,. ,..

===::;=====:::::::..J

:
CIHn Raoponolblt Adult Woitt· -=~=:'"::::·"':·
~
tng Couple, Sook Ltrgo Untur- .

54 Miscellaneous
g~ttd~J'or ~r!..~ ~=
Merchandise

56

4-18.. rima, grill I rtar bumbtr,

uge At: 814-446-:1&amp;311

6-hp outbolrd motor, 811. top-

nice clun 2 t.Cfroom home or
lpt, to moniiJ flr.t of y,.r, 30441 Houses for Rent
6'15-4981 ot 675-7780 and Jtave
m...aga.
2 bedroom home, ntwl~
dttoraltd 1 c~rpet, 11c, reftrente Wanted to rent, for &amp;-7 monthe,
&amp; deposit, no pats. 304-871·!182. 3 bedroom home wibaument,
~rage, Pl . .Pit. ar11, 304-6752br t-lom1, Near Gallipolis And
14.
'

Would llka Ia rant large hom•,
Galllpolla Am. 3 BR. 814-441·
3211.

C:'•

ell for Ford truck. 2·2t"

lc]cto, 814·11112·2805
Dill No Mort! Lau Unwanltd
Pounda And Eat Your Regular
M~ll. Takl Nltural Herb "CaptuiN. Rtlliltl Ouerantttd. 614·
448-8188. ·
FlrtWood tor Nit. Will deliver.

130 lruckloed. ISO 110rd. Stan
Miller, Jerry Lu~u. 614-256-1ggo,
Gallla Tlmbor Product• Spill
FlfiWood Dtllv1rad, WI Acc1pt
Hup And .Emergency At·
lllance, 814-t48-8851.

Had fed paach far:• lava birds:
IWHI, IOVNblt1 lktrtmely If•
facllonalo ISO; aaby paroknts,
rocantty wunod $10; Lullno
Purt, Cinnamon Ptsrl Pled
Cocklllol br...atng potrs, 6t4·

~-11t51.

51

&amp;Livestock
61 Fann Equipment

lor Rent

AC 185 Tractor, Sharp, $5,950;

2 bdrm mobl!l noma ior rent,
appro11. 3 mll11 frQm P~:~mtroy &amp;
Mlddlepor1, total alactrle, 614·
985-4233
2 bldroom turnlsh•d--moblle
home, At. 2 Apple Grove, $250.
mo. 1100. damaga deposit. 304·
675·20211.
2 btdrooni mobile home, Hen·
derson, Hud, ret and deposit ,..
qulrtd, call altar 5:00 PM, 304·
675-11172.

raulfc Loader, $5,995 ; IN Ford

2 Btdroom Trailer On Rl. 588,
Golllpollo. $100 Deposit. 304·
675·5709.
'

w

.

1:00
. (I) •
. 12le
@Newl

1e:a·~~

fi.AMPA ALWAVS
1tli.D ME '(OU CAN
I.IAVE JUST AS MUCH
~UII 5LIDIN6

•

Lett Model '5040 AC With Hyd·

l'!ith Buoh Hog, $1,995; Ownar
Will Flnanc-1 , 614·286·6522.
Dlnlltl Ml wllh 4 Chllrt, lOYI

drnur with metchlng mlrrow,
COff.. table; 2 lnd ta6l ... Inti•
que drtaHr, ~-67S.1460.

Last call for 19911 lrr•gular Ieana
$5.00, denim jiCICIIS 120.00, blb
OVIrhiUII $5.00, &amp;M Peggy, 132

Bu!temut 1 Pomeroy
Ulnohl 9000 Protnslonal 35
GOOD USED APPLIANCES mm camera; .totally auto.,
Washers, dryers, refrlgwatorw, uvnl large lentil, $600. &amp;14rangaa. Skoggo Apptlancoa, 448-2713.
Uppar Rlvor Rd. Boalda Stono Moving oala, IVIrythlng m~at
Croat Motot. Call 614-446-7398.
go. TV, etereo, new lurnltLn,
wolhar-dryor, ~ldgo, houoahotd
ttema, cratls, molorcyclll, 304·
875-3512 .

For Solo: Good Uold Whirlpool
Drytr1 6\4-446-4410.

Nhl diamond eolltart ring, call
for dolalltl 614·1112·2153
.Ntw Oak CurYad Gl11s China
Clblnlll, Dift.rent Slylll,
Etched Glass. L..aded Glass
Mlrrowed Back, Rope Twist,

Lion

HHd, Gtaoa ShaiVII,

Spoon Clrvod, Etc. $3:1&amp; Each.

814-445-431&amp;.

Aat1 Or Mice? In Your HouH?

Buv ENFORCER, Kitto rats &amp;
mtco In onlj 1 fHding,
GUARANTEED! Available at:
Blum True Value Store, 11 Wnt
Main SlrMI, Chllltr, OH

Rats Or Mlct? In Your HouH?

Buv ENFORCER, Kllta rato &amp;
mic. 111 only 1 fHdlng,
QUARANTEEDI Avallobto at:
·O'Dtll True Value Lumbtr, 634
East Main Str~~l, Pomeroy, OH

Sign•: Port
.
able UarquH Chin·
goabla Letter Sign $261. FrH
ltlt~llvtry. "Plastic IIUIFI
147.!50 box. AM Slgno 1-800.
533-3453. Anytlmo.

QJ11toro"'hllrld Dlgftt
atWOIId . odey .
1.':.~ Tin, K-1 Cop

.

1:01(]) IIMrly 1• =

DOWN

.111!111 Dodgo Ram 150 4 WD,
Supar
C.b,
tuttv oqutppad, tow:
miiHgo.
&amp;14-388-tmll.
9~
1 •·d 11 kl
t
1

:

~IJI--.IWR

•

; llqun Onei{"'stareo: .

Jim'• Farm •Equlpm1nl, SR. 35,
Wnt aaltt&gt;Otta,- 614-445-11777;
W* •.a.ctk3n ,... &amp; uud farm
tractora &amp; tmpl.,...lo. Buy,
1111, trad1, 8:00..5:00 w..kdays,
Sol lilt Noon.
Wantld: Used farm equipment,
anvthlng you want to 1111. &amp;1.-.
251-«1040.

1D IIIW Zorro Stereo. Q

1:35 (]) Attltt Cklllltll .
. 7:00 IJl• Ill WI1Ht ol FOftllne .

OK ... RIGHf Ni/AY...
11/AI.ll&lt; YOU!

a·/l.lfillr
="""

(!) (J)

c- .

1111 Cunni Aflllr C
~!~TJf: TiMt Next

----

TOIYI6HT1'

TOPIC.:

---..... .

you~

1987 Dodgo 0-50 Raal Gooci
Condition I $3,200. 814-251-82!1.

..

A

:t'M

pftJ~Lf

P'-f"AJff?, fpNif•. .

.
i

rf61NNING

Ill .. I Stltr Sllreo.
GIColllae......,..

o----- ---

7:35 (]) ilnlord a aon

:rtPoetor --

1:00 (2).
~tereo.
(J) MOYI • Six Wlll11 (PGI

'

ALLEYOOP

(2:00)
1IJ (I). PloU Coni
O'Hannon and Bird take over
a 20-year-old homicide caae.
swr&amp;O. D
(!) My11llf Florin ,.....,..
SIMI of L8W- Willi
si.. Band members from
the talevlslon show join for a
performance of polkas,
COtJntry rnadleys, hymns arid
patriotic and show songs.
(2:00)
(J) Clwfltmlut Pope
Conduelor John WIKilms and
the Bolton Popt Orchestra
lOIII the holiday 1811011 wl1h
a lineup of specill guells,
Including sopreno Barbara
HendrfciCs. (t :101 Stenlo.
Ill 111•-Top Copt A man
alms hie gun at an officer
after shooting his own
daughter. Stereo. 1;1
all• ThiSimp- Usa
reads an asaey at the
Kennedy Center In
';Xf&amp;hlngton , D.C. (R) Stereo.

1 Pllllnger, higH
mllaage, asking $4,9Go. 3o.J.675!
5306.
:

Motorcycles

Qoldlng Son
01 BUly amy Bayoui 4 ~o,... 1988 Honda 70, 4 wheeler, look~
Traitor, 15 Big Show Soddoo. like now, $850. 304-875-245l ,
114-2811522.
1987 FZ 700 Yamaha Gtnals;
3/4 TIIIV1. Walklr w/coll, Hddto, very lost, very elton, 12,200,
304-875-3512.
304-773-548p,
•

Transmlulon~,

Pa~a.

614-245-5877, 814.379-

814-446-2412.

Auto .Parts &amp;
ACCE!SSOrleS
UHd &amp;

flbuitl, starting 11 SH; Auto

Spacial Feodor Cllf Salol
Alhano Ll-ock Ballo. Soturdav Ooternbtr 14, AI 1:00 P.M.
Ll.vntock Accaptld Sto~tng At
4 P.M. Evory F~dov. Soturdovo
Solo At 1:00 P.M. Hltlllng Avail·
able. 614-8118-3531, Or 414-8112·
2322.
.
.

:EEK AND MEEK

~=:3·--------------~
=

0

N1w g11 tanks, body parts, one
tan lruck wh11ls, radlalors,
floor mats lie. 0 &amp; A Auto,.
Rtptoy, wV. 304-372·3933 or 1.'
B00-273-11585.

A.EAS£ 5TAOD ~.. .

~ 24-~ f...ELOS
QWA(L.AAS~IlY
LQS1 rt'S ~ l VAW AC1Ui.l.

5-10 paris, front bumptr black'

$25 . back gtaso $20. 304-875-'
64 Hay &amp; Grain
7942.
'
Ground ahatt com, $12011on1 12 Sioux Valve Grinder, 3 Years
parcenl Food, $130/lon nov Old, Uk1 Ntw; Slou• St1t Outrotta1 $25. llorgon Farm, AI. 35. Ill, Guido Tooto• Almoll 5K tn.'
304-o37~ota.
'
v11t1d. Offers ur Trades Conoldorld, 614-446-2306.
Transportation
UHd tlros four 225-70R14·RWL
and tour 235-70R15. White wall ~
304-875-1608.
'

~

~HA5

ee&amp;l FOI.JN[l . ,

Business Servic.e s

.
Toy• Ill agtt, remote conlrol
ant1q1.1i1,
furnlturt,
gra~rely lraclor, canning , jars,

plant,

THI6\\0JLON'r

CQ:lKINYUBA

FIRST; 'M::IUl..D

CmtoR~.

Christmas party becomes a
battle ground for Owat
and Whitley. S!trll!l· I ·
all• Drw111't~Ctna ·s Is
left holding the bag when he
opena a Slnta rtnlll
company. Stereo. Q
Ill Ameflcan MuiiC Shop .
Swreo.
1D You Allcld lor It, Apln
Stereo.
t:OO (2) • Ill Cheen Sem and
RebeCca spend the weekend
~the Idea of heving
a bllby. tereo. Q
Cl! (I). 1'111: TIM! Untold
Stolle• A mysterious wrrorist
pollOI!&amp; over-lhe-oounter
madlcatiOns. Stereo. C
Ill 111• Trlall ol ROill
O'Neill Rosie changes her
mind about the gui~ of a

e.E APRIL.
IT~

,)

)

..

lo'.ORKINEi .4e A
SHORT-ORDER

Serv1ces

304-675-811'18.

Tr11dmlll • Saars Llflllylar whh
t&gt;UIM monllor. UMd very Utile.
Excel..nt condition. $250. 614-

Home

4464183.

VCR'•, good condition,
otorao. Colt 614-446-2713.

RIGGS
TREE FARM

Newly Re-done

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

lias nice horilesites
available for up to
·-so• honrea.- -

Choo•e and Cut
11 •uuo

for All lrlllls

39507 Rodtsprlng1 Rd.
(At en. ~(U.s.J31

-~ Cal

I

P01111r0y, Ohio

61-t.992-5528 or
385-8227
12·11·1 mo.

;, SNODGUSS
UPHOLSTERY

614·992·5702

We Sell l Service

UCINE,OHIO

11700Sfi1M

7 t 'rir ,

ContryCWI

&amp;tal

\;1

11/20/1•

30 yM,. uptrllnce.

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

Fourl-.ol
recommtndellon. HonMI
end dopentllble.

(

Call Ed Battin
collect st
1-614-667-6474

,........,

Cern,""

•FIREWOOD ·
BILl SUCK.,

E¥•Atttl '

992-2269 .

~

' '_

_ _ _ ,' ___ __..

Cornptotty Fumlahotl Small 52 Sporting Goods
HOUH, ~. Ptuo Utllhllll
And tlaMoh. f14-441-G338. Cal Remington model 1100 12 ~
Befort1p.m.
tll'~; 22~~1':/t~n B.:'r't!'~el &amp;
EHencltncy ept In Pt. Pl1111nt, WHVIr V12 ....... $450; Smith
nlet neiGhborhood, Hud accep&amp; W-n modol 21-44 mag. 4"
ted, 1·~a.to42
bantl, nickel plated whh wood
Fumlthod 3 AOCOII &amp; Bath, Clll cltanlng ll:h and thoulcllr
CINn, No Plio, Aaloranca I helotor, $350; eon ' gomnmom
model IIKIV, 380 "'th 3 ctlpo,
_Dopoolt Roqutrod. 614-4411-1618.
$44S; Nlnttndo game with Nil
Gracious living. 1 ond z bod· Advantogoloy atick $!50. All tiki
1
room IPI,.mtntl It VU1191 new. Call 304.f75-a15e
lftar 5
Minor

and

Rl'4trll •

Apartmonta In Mlrldtepon ,~ From
$1lltl. eatt ll+llz-7711. EOH.
In Mtddtoporl, Ohio. 1· and 2
bodraom tumlahod apt, oomo
wHh tltttHioa paid,,.,....., and
" - " roqUirod - · - • ..,....,
•
·--·
Modem 2 BA 1pt. l1t 141 Olto.

p.m.

Merchandise

Ij~~~;·~~~~~

::i::l:a

·~·-·-

114-

Pats for Sale

56

1 Rogltlorod B~llany Bird Dog,
13 Mont Ita Old. Will Boll ChHpl
814·448-348&amp;.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pat
Grooming. All breeds1 atyl11.
lama Pel Food Dtaltr. Jullt
Webb. CaH 114-445-0231.
AKC Bt8HI pu~piH, rtady to
go, will hold for Chrlttmu, F.A.
Btnedum, 114-667-3856

nltds
2'116

1

epec111 home, 814..Q8·

e"'rld

AKC
loxor pupptoo,
Cham
bloodiiM vety nic•
Born
. 2a, 1111. ib4-8112·3m.
8ug1a1, dlfterent 1ges and
pricea, 304-875-11110.
Drogonwyml Cattory Poraton,
SlomtH ond Hlmallyan kht ....
114-4q.3144 after 7 p.m.
Ftlh Tank, 2413 Jackson Avo.·
Point ,........ 304-175-2063,
IIIII lint Troptcot floh 1 blnfl,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

ii'

11113 Otda
4 cyl., 4 dr.,
$1100; 1113
Dllllomot, 4
dr., a cyl. $400. t 21Ua&amp;4 call
71HV1mtg.1114 Camaro l-28, l·tOPt, 350
ang, IUID1 loaded, $3200, 3()4..
&amp;75-331i

'

Will build patlo. covere 1 decks,
.crNnld roome, put up vinyl
tiding or traitor o kl~lng. 814245-9152. \.
'

82

1114 Chavy Camaro 12100, 114841-l!IIH

11114 Dodgo A~H, 4 - · black,
AMIFM oa.,..no, 4 cyl, F10W axhauat,S14-1112-7238, ovonlngo
1115 Chavy eavattar, at, pl. pb,
ac, AIIIAI rlldlo, new paint. IX·
,,. ctoan,IIN - · 114-112-3703
1111 ea.-., wry goad concf,
$11,8001~-~-

.KQS
.QJU7U
.Q2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

· When you wish to fJIIslea4 an oppo,
nent, it isimportaat to make your pta,
in tempo. A hesitlttion, sug utlag tbat
you lutd an optioa, will usU&amp;U, pve tM
Opening lead: 3
game away.
Eric Rodwell, a member of tht
USA-I team, fOtllld a good play in ~ L - - - - - - -- -...:;1
nail-biting quarterfinal NECBermudlt weif .;ru;oii.Iy dropped the queen. Not
Bowl match against Brazil, which knowing who held the club two and not
Brazil won by 188 to 180.
wanting to give South a q!!ick. disr.nd
North's openU!g ·one-spac~e- bid was if his queen were a singleiOII, East
wafer-thin, but it had a safety valve in switched to his trump, covered by ~
that it was limited to a mazimum of qttee11 and king. West returoed the
15 hiP-card pointa. South's two-jlia- heart jack, but East no longer bad a
monel response was natural but 11011- • trump left.
forcing: the so-called neaative f~"te
At this point, Rodwell saw how to
bid. His three-diamond rebid oa a po- get home. He w011 with the heart kina;
tentUII ' misfit wu ~. and, caalted the heart queen, led a bUrt 10
West was happy to double.
t11e
and continued with dummy·~
It seemed as. tbougb the 4efeme feurth heart, discardin&amp; bia spade:
would follow Ibis path; a club to the Now East couldn't ·gain tl1e lead Ill
ace, club ruff, 11aert ruff, d.,. .....,.. · 1!1.,. Ills pertner 1 club ...tf. IIDdwell
ruff, spade trick and trump tridt - a lost just one heart, tiro diamonds atilt
500-polnt pe111lty. But when East won · a club: plus 670.
,
:
the first trick with the club ace, Rod-.......

+

ace

·-

e-.--··="!!!-.--.
-

-

The World Almanac®Crossword PUzzle:
ACROSS
1 Secret agent
4 Hl"lllln
lnllrumenll
8 Mormon
Stilt
12- r...tung
13 ShMt of

111111

•

111 r~t~~t"
49 Er1
11

14 Entice
t 5 Pllonetlc
·
aymbol
i 16 Of liquid
p

AnowertoP~Puulo

fHII
ouperlor
41 Stringed
lnot-1
42 FIUy drlnkl
ol4 PICII
481n1Muma '
place (-r.)
48AII.-!e'
51 Ao.,.,

bron•

53 Full of
currtfll
lnfannlllon
57 Conlllnlng
lir

, ....

18 ltoraho111e
' 20 Mile tiUa
2 I Sort
2224 Tide type
26 Flourlahad

I

o-un

eo Chamlc.t
luffll

30w:r·-

61Formerty

33 -

83 Snllcellke
ftah

62 WH!ern
wled

...

ctlftlar'
34-ltCIH
36 Nolluftctlonlng properly
. (tl.l '
37 buretloh
31 Ont who

I Duck
2 Geap
3 EJtrclu
IJitllft
4 Uft
5 Actreu
Francis
8 Compenlon
of odda

64 Stfltlllle
65 $peNI
66 DotorwRio
~·
DOWN

27

Piuinblrig &amp;
Heating
Carter's Plumbing.
Fourt~ and Plno
Galllpollo, Ohio
814-448-3888

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

1Condhlon,

~

'**· .

I

MOI'ray'o Upholoto~ng oorvlctng t~ county aru 26 ~aaro. Tho
~ In tu It
0 t1 t . t
· m urw up
ng.
C1U· 304.&amp;75-4154
for frHar II·'

'

Msiil

.l

~ . -

•

.

\

\

.... .
:

i

29 AI.. tor

•
P8Y1111nl
•
31 lhlerlal fever :
32 Llvtro
•
35 Smelt
- ··
q-tity
'
38 Snetch
40 DtMerteem
43 Anne end 1M
King at45 lllkt47BUIInHo

1

QEMIII (Mer 21-.rune 2111
t:10(J) M•IIMrt A man's aliter
for your Altro-Groph predictions today your tuck too far today In _II~~~:~:
may aufftr when ha gambles
by mailing $1.25 plua a tong. self-ad- where you have to put your it
on a I!OrM. (Pi 5 of 5) Q
dNtlecl, stamped 8IMIOpe to Astro- on the line. The limb you're
Graph, c/o 11111 .-paper, P.O. Box a rather weak one.
1:30 (2). 11J Wlngl Roy Is
91428, Ctevellnd, OH « 101·3428. Be . CANCEl! (JUIII 21-July 22) Be extra
unable to date because he 18
n01 over the death of his
sure lo elate your zodiac llgn.
mindful today of thoaee ,:~~~~~=~I
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. zt..lln. 11) A plan that are so routine you "'
them
wife. Stereo. C
. (I) • Arntrle4lil DetiCIIve
111M 11 periCIRiily lmportllll to you Is by rote. These are the ones
could
sound end work out u you an- end_ up - diving 7 you - the blggMt - - Patloe·UH tVIfY'trtc:lc-ln-1111·book to bull 1CCUiad drug
~IICipeti. H -. ·yOiimtgijl 6e unduly headache.

· - · - - - - - ll)lluenced ~ by 01herl and . un"'HIY LEO (July 2S-Aug. 22) Be wary In comQJ Top l!ll*llulng USBA
chenge it.
.
merclef developments today ...,. .MPe'
BsntamWelaltt
.
AQUARIUS (.1111. »M. 11) Even . clally If you're _,ally offared someChlmplona~lp: Jur\ior Jones
thOUgh you ma~ be expecting addlliOnll ;thing on the tilde tor going along "'th
· (20-0, 13 ~01) VI. Olo,
fundi at thll time, try to operate from . partlcullt deal. Compliance could
AndUjlr (38-1().3, 13 KOs),
- y o u hatre In hand. Hyou don't i cauae you compllcatiOna.
12 rounds, from Atllntk: City,
mlllltiJIIhtngl prudently, later reQretl . . VIIQO (Alii- 2J.IIpl. 22) Thlr""l-.utlllllonaf
.
N.J. (L)
era Akll)'.
•
nanc111 opportunity today In ""
I'IICIS (Jiela.. " Mh ttl) If you leave . in 'Mhlch you'll be involved. H - . 10:00 (2) • Ill L.A. L8W A man
bllmll • vendor tor hll
up to olhera today the ~~ you · · yoo m1g111 not comprellend 111 prthOuld be mtklng, you could bt Uklng ence, bleii1M your focus may
weight and the bfllk'5!,of
for trouble. Thly won't be kloklng out · ...........
1111 I!IIJTiega. Sino. 1iJ1
(J)Newl
for your Int.-. 11 eH.cllvely u you ' 1J1RA (llpt. 2J.Oet. 21) Oe not
Your ptlllliCII for 1M year llllldtook · COIIICI.
. qu11111ity mora lmportent to you
f~~TimeU.. .
IN"'dtling, 1Novld1d you don't' AIIIU (llleNIII1·Aprll11) In ordar to 1then quality. Whel-ld eppeer to be
(!)Willie,....,., lpt!llll Ray
· lll\letoe11'11rtY.Ir0111in 1M nra. Oe ltll. operat•lllwOII..ty tlldey, you must be · biO bltgltln may 1n actuality, aonlist
Charlll and Jacllll King join
llut de ttMm
IMII10cllcaf end purpoMiut. Don't • lot Of "Mirll1111illlmlrtll.
Wille end the Femlly Bind
IAQITTAIIIIII (lift. 21 o.cr 21) Your , t.11 ,_,Min lituaUOftl that require ICOIII'IO (Oat.,._...., 22) Thera's
tor IORIJ6 incllidlng
I10uNhold budget cen bt tlretchld tullllrolell. •
·.
poostblllty
might place mora
Eyea, Georgia, s.1
tlrnt todlv I
enly 10 f1lr II thll llrlll belora R 1'111 . TAUIIUS (April ....., :110) Thll COUld phUII on
Splnttlh
Angell. Whllkey
111111· Will unlll you .,. IIIII to buy . bt 1111 wrong liml to ,modify arrange- lhlrt you tlhould. ii r~.:~·~:~~=~
..
RNII'
and
olhen. (2:00)
whit , .u WW1I end not bt ptRIIIMd . 11111111 you eln1ldy llllbllehad ""h an- diet In mind and the
Stereo.
""heiK ml'lt PI'Jflllrtll. ~ • !Liftp,OII otMr In order to cat• to o:urrent nleda. handy.
lit ·~~y undlrllanlllng IM lnftulnoM Stick to your ~ game plen.
Ill 1D. Knoll ~

:

(II.)

28 Praperad- •

I

11TiftQe-

1111ftle•

49 Gulli fortll
50 Crau · ·

lii\Ciliii!On • :
52 Pcwch '
•
54 Unwmtec:J ,:. :

SINitlt. Stereo. C

1111 Dodga Chalgor Shatby RHidlntlal or commercial
Turbo, I opaad, lllttrp, factory wiring, new urvlae or l'lpalrt.·
aklftm whlill, 70.000 mllel, Molltr UcanHd etoct~clan.
Ridenour Etactrical, 304-&amp;75·
12,710. 304-87W308.
17M.
•
1111 Ctttwne, auto, $1,500. 304·
's'II-Jt111.
87 Upholstery

1,. Dodga Dart.... Good
LoadoiU I Spud,
Fut~Bioodld Chow Chow Pup- 112,100: 1M2 - a c T·1000
A,..•=.
lod•, Rou...,
137'.
plat, ftOO Each. S14-44&amp;-8124.
V''
v

lntlll anlm~lt and aupph•.

•w

goy.m~ng you In the year ahead. Send

:-:;:;:-;:---.--~-"--;--:­

mod,
53
Antiques
$50.
:::::-::-::::-:~.::.:.~~­ anytime ,
Buy or aatt. Rivorlno Anttqu11, Stapl1ton.
1124 E. Main Strwat, Po..roy.
Hou..: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m, to 1:00 AKC Cocker Spaniol pupl)loi,
p.m., Sundoy 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. black&amp;whlte and Tri·colar, rMI•
114-812·2525.
&amp; flmate. Nal Rog. Buff color
&amp;14·J112·3111
·
Now Havon, one bodroom apt, 54 Miscellaneous
AKC Dolmallon, 2yr old mate,
" - " ona ,.,...... raqullld,

Roqutrod.l14Fumuuill molllto
Cornptotty
horM, 1 mila bolow10W.!'1 ovor·
·-ng ~ver. No Polo, ""· &amp;14- 11,000 Bru Worm Morning
44t.o331.
stavo1 For Solo. $200. &amp;14-44J.
Alo Orondo, Nlco Zbr, stove 7737, •14-441-&amp;2111.
Ho Pota. $235/mo, Clelo Ktvboord, $100" Mor·
cartlta Nacklaca, &amp;5 Voaro Old,
Sma
$10· Homotha Chelnoaw ·11"
It 1 lA. apl. 7 Court 81. Cu1!orba&lt;, ftOO·, 2 So~ln Ev~.
Kltahail · wllh
1 Ing Oowna; ro..,.r
~-·· V A. Alwin·
-·
rwfrraor,
SIU. 110ft
mo. ptuo
._. 1
dor,
HoadaiNnor,
ft50·
u111•
" • Qt.
rollroncao. Moaaburg 10 Ga. AutomottC
114-441-4 ·
Shalgun, ft35. l14-388-i1a&amp;.

.

-----" - -~-

245-5121

NICI 1br, Pa= Fumlahod, 1181 Fonf pickup, tow mllol, 22
W.ter And
P -. ft campar traitor, roal ntoa cond,
Convontont !Aadon Dlpollt 304-8'75-1514

USID IAUOAD T1E5
_ __......

dow., lintel., etc. Claude Win·

111'1, Rio Granda, OH Call

* ..-.

SHIUI &amp;' TIEE.

..... a...

\1I

Interior PelnUng,
FtwEIUm1111

111111- pd.

TIIM ,and
liMO VAl
•LIGHT HAULING

61,4-915·3961

ED'S
Plllflll

C. L. Heatln1 &amp;
Rtfrlltratlon

614·949·2202

=.-~

P-oy,

mo.

12·2·111·1

Bklcll, brick, IIWtr Dlpll, win·

614-9f2-6120

Wtllhtr King, Miller,
Luulrt, lnekler,
Pumpa, Fllt'lllctl,
Air Condlllontra

8t"lt&amp;

_Owner. &amp;Operator

CLARENCE ATHERTON

"Helping You To
,Recover Your
' ln»e•tment"

k.WfSets

EMILEE .111ERINAR . ·

.

.AJ 10U7 S ..

..~t;.nd~~.~10 - .
Steve eccepta n11 adOption
·and receive&amp; suJlPOI:! from
his .friends . Stereo. C
11J MOYIE: Ywtlgo {f:30)
Ill NltiMII Now Stereo.
• LalrJ King U..l
1D Fllhlt 0ow1tng MyiA parishioner Is arrested by
1111 FBI tor lleaiiRIJ
, - d a t a . (R) Stereo.

lrf,lfl j&gt;t.We'Jl

Cut It For You.

JUST OFF RT. 33
On!Y $75fjr mo.

Teaford

In

'

..s

Ptlllllp Alder

Ill Hippy Hofldlyl With

'1:30 (2). Q DIH~rent World A

...

• JI09654
.AK52
• 3

The false card
was well-timed

tiJ Murder, She Wrote Q

8ollby Oofclaboro Seasonal
favorite&amp; are performed by
Bobby Goldsboro. (0:30)
Swreo. ,
8P1LwNan
1111 T1111'1 My Dog Stereo.
1:05 CIJ MOYIE: The ~
COli Mint MiriiCie (2:00)
THISI~A~AL.
Rf;R?Ilf! AN.E!.IA

.AQOU

SOUfH

(L)

tlons,

Budget

ALPER

&amp;stem F.!lchlgln st Michigan

Gil Clollllta

..

.

EAST

us

Mlirllci••.Witlt Chllcnn

WI1Ht ol FCirtunl Q

,,

1975 Ford 4 WD, 3/4 ton, 460, 4
tpd. 6M-141.0401 call attar 6
::P·:::
m:._.
1186 Dodge C1ravan LE, au op:.

WF8I"

c.n ..

e Femlly Feud

If--

73 . Vans &amp; 4 WD's

buU1, O.ma to 31.000 j ll'lllk.

PHll.LIP

fti.o,.,inflllnl ToniQht

•

"irTH ME-·

Pffl)ONAJ..tTY

11187 Ford Ranger Big Fool pk8'
tototty toodld. 4 Wh. Dr. $8,00 . .
814-446-2713.
'

76

t6

1D Thl Wlllon1

-....

IZ-11-11

.K84

7:01(]) Addlmi' FIIIIIIy
7:30(2). IIJ JIOPI~ C
(J) Now n
oil

N

NORTH
•K1074~

..... 72

~~
ta Monlyllna

Callaftorlipm. 814·367-02011 .
1118e Toyota Pickup, 5 Spud&gt;
Qood CondiUonl 13,400. 614t
446-4712.
,

Hortord calvoa, 450.100 tbo,
114-m-7803
.
Rag. Holltaln brwodlng ago

BRIDGE

r~z-T~

truck. Loadtd. Good condition.

~nul

Hominy - Crest - Laugh - Shrill - HIT HIM
Two boys in museum noticed a mumniy case was
marked, '1286 B.C.' "I wonder what that means?' one
boy asked. The.Oiher laughed, "It's the license number
of the Clr that HIT HIM.'

~ lllrMm ol ""nnle
D

~~~~~~~~~~

"-11

SCIAM t.m ANIWIIS

(]) llllldt EtiiiOn

1981 Chovrolol El Comtno. Excelllnt condhkxl.&amp;. Vtry Sharpl
514-446-2445.\ok •or Paul.

campers &amp;
Motor HOmes

1·bdrm

• Mdy Qrtllllh

QJUpCIOM

11·'11

1948 WJJ1y'1 .J11p, 9~ cond,
ftB00~32 Bunarnut.

.:.63.:....,.....u::.;.v.:.e.:.st:.:o:.:c.:.k___ 74
1888 Big

IDe CSI Newe Q

.

ova
motor·

cyctoo. 304-675-351 2.

nc.,.... -

(2) e Ill NIC Newl ~
- 1:30
- Cl!
IMil

A IIII.L..IN-A _

'

... •OplZ ~IIIII! •
piymenle. 3 Honda

o•

•

Cl! VIdeo """''

•25 Qlllon Milk Tank, Compros· . 1987' Dodgo 150 PU, PSIPB, otr,
lor ··vacuum Pump, Delaul 48,000 mi., 4tpd., overdrive. As•.
t.tukn, Pulsators, Tlmtr BoJ. sun. 101n $5678. 614-446--75271
614-245-0525.
after 5. .

...t, ltrg• and •maD wood

tHu., OIC. 12 . · W

Chavr.
Pomwanii=H, pure brad
' 8 cy .~
no papera,
5-3125.
cond,
Poodta Pilpplas, AKC Tiny Toy
And T.Cup; Alao Mlnloturo 11182 Ford F-100, 8 cyl, 304·575·
Schnauzere Salt And .,.ppar, 2903 ahtr 7:00PM.
1
cootvlllo, 514-aer-3~4 .
1DB4 Chevy 112 ton PU. Call ahe ~
5 114-388-5112.
•:
Farm Supplies
11185 GMC High Slorra 4 wh. dr.'

Merchandise

42 Mobile Homes

Real Estate

'

72 Trucks for Sale

Rtferencn. PINH . IMVI M..

.

Pets for Sale

448-1251, 4..S..7137.

¢

Q

MNING

1181 GTA Tr11n1-Am, 350 •nglne.
t-tope;, all •xtrae, $8,800. &amp;14~

Will

.

CVcv
0

.

'NV. 304-8824752.

Country _ Mobile Homt Pari!,
Rou1e 33, .North ol P-~·
Loti, rentalS, parta, 81111. can
814-1112-111711.

Coupto ""h blllw. "'nt ·to Nnl

Galtlpotlo City Schools. 614-446·

~ IN~ CJ:IIINfl•• r
~THINK !i I c.~

814-3711-21148.
1i811 Buick LlmHod 14,800. i988
Ford F-2!50 Cullom 14,8i5. .111711
Foril 150 oxc cond, $2,300. 1985
Oldo 12 350. 11187 Jotp Corn;
onchO-plckup P-1885. 1983 Unf
coln Mark IV 4,JUU miiH, S3,215; .
11186 Ford . F-2SO IZ.ai5. 1174
Coachman motor ho"".$2 9951.
1184 Brooco 11 $2,5i5. ThtM
prlcae · thlo - k only.l!ll
9cotty'e UMd C.re, New HavM,

Rooms for rent .. WHk or month.
Starting at ft:!Otmo. Qallla Hotll.
&amp;14-445-9510.
SIHplng -~whh cooking.
Alto trallor opaco. All hook-upa.
Call afttr 2:00 p.m., 304·7735851, Maoon WV,

Television
Viewing·

11 ~ 01 nw: ~ E£.~JHDM~C ·~ r NUD~ ·

1988 Chevrotat Barllta ~~·

Furnished
Rooms

45

Return Your Call.

Rentals

S.Wlng Uachlna Rapalr And.
Se.... Over 28 Year~ Ex· 2br House In Middleport, Dlshl*ience. All Work Guar~ntltd,
·Garbage Olposal, Nlca
liouH Calls, Scissor• Sharpen· washer,
Neighborhood, ot4-446-9205.
lng. Patriot, OH 614-311-2921.
3br Hom1, 2 Batkt, Locattd In
Mtrcorvlllt. 814·44&amp;·1158.
Financial
Small Haus• In The City, Par11ally Fumlthld, 3 Rooms And
Balh, Large Lot. $175/mo. 614446-4109, 614·3111·2J110.

Help Wanted

For R•nt, 814 411 8558. . .

nlahtcl Hou• In Private Sitting,
Site Back Off Aoed Whh Blrn To
Accomodt~•
Horu.
No

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

1617.

Employmenl Servtces

Traitor Antf Garogo Apa~monl

Ohl~

-'

71 Autos lor Sale
1117 ChOvy Nova: hlah milalgo,
OMdo ropalr. GOod lranopo~a­
Uon Hr. 11,500: For mor1 lnfor·
malton Call 61.-·2342, Aak
lor Paul.
11117 Ocdgo Shatby CSX, 2.2
Turbo lntttcccled, J.sPitd,1 of
1000 buill (1152), AMIFII can.,
AC, PS, PB. Sorlouo lnqul~ll
only! Ev~nlnga 614-1112-5125.

a Room Hou 11, 2 47 Wanted to Rent

1 ToblccoOne....
tlndl~
OJor after Spm. I~:==:::::::=:::::=====1r:========:1l•rg
Rt.21B,
Gal·
Call
before 10 lm
'
lipolls, Barna,
614·256·

814446-865 3.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

.~

1991

December 1

-

55 =knllt :
'58 llhMt
'

a Sholhotiean :

11

. ..:..,_...

. ...

(1) 1M 1 l1y NEA, Inc.

CILIBRITY CIPHER

CIIMrMy~ ........
p..........;. . . . . . .

hm.

1 - · ............. . , . ., . . Wid

e.tl .... ln . . . . . . . . . lof..._. TOdly'#~: \1'..- c.

'C G

CY

ZftiFLXI

SXIHYPJI

Gill

-·

lndlttn

59 Frigid

prwet~l.

.,'
';

G WI

ZIYICMI

~I

OWl

I

Zt ·YtCMtJ . '

lftiAGHCAt.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I flclory. I Ulld to oornt -

II H A

Z I

,;'

XH

''

'• •
lha chill chunker In I plnoapplo cenntng , :
srntltlnflllltt 1 ·compote." ~ Beth; Mldlar. ~ •
12

'!
'

�. ..

At the movies: 'Hook'
By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
Just when the nation needed it,
Steven Spielberg and company
have prepared a grand holiday gift
for one and all. He calls it
" Hook," in honor of Captain
James Hook, pirate exttaordinare.
• Audiences will call it pure joy : the essence of feel-good filmmak: ing.
• Spielberg has long been
. obsessed with "Peter Pan" (self·
identification perhaps?), witness
the bedtime readings in "E.T. the
E&lt;tra-TerrestriaL" Now he and the
writers - Jim V. Han and Malia
: Scotch Marmo, script; Hart and
: Nick Castlem story- have carried
: the James M. Barrie classic a step
· further.
Peler Pan is now Peler Banning
(Robin Williams), a New York
finance lawyer with liule time for
his wife and two young children.
The family goes to London for a
, holiday reunion with the wife's
. grandmother (Maggie Smith), who

~Smith

---.--

'

~Ohio

had flown to Neverland as Wendy deviltry of Hook, if not his humor.
l ulia Roberts, seven inches tall
(Peter's age was retarded because
of the years he refuSed to grow up) . . in most. stenes, is a gorgeous TinThe two children
stolen from · kerbell, though not very fterj, and
their beds by Caplain Hook and his Bob Hoskins is i~y cast as the
men, and flown 10 the pirates' lair sniveling Smee. Honors also go to
in Neverland. Peter, who has no Miss Smith, Caroline Goodall as ·
memory of his ftrst 12 years, is vis- Banning's wife, and Charlie
ited by Tinker Bell (Julia Roberts), . Korsmo and Amber Scott as the
who sprinkles him with fairy dust children.
"Hook" is not .flawless. Hoff.
and flies him away for combat with
Hook.
man's scenes appear padded, and
At ftrst Peter is a pitiful oppo- Spielberg overdoes Roberts'
nent, iii!__QVerweight ShacJQW Of the '~cute" reactions. But the film lllds
cunning boy he once was. But then ·· another-to-his ·list-of triumphs, both
he is taken in by the Lost Boys, logistically· and artistically; giving
who train him into a fighting new luster 10·his record as the most
machine.
successful ftlmmaker of all tiine.
The TriStar Pictures release was
The climactic battle is chor'.pgraphed chaos, llJ1d Hook and his pro!!.u.J:ce_d by Kathleen Kennedy,scurvy bunch are vanquished Frank Marshall and Gerald R.
(though Spielberg seems to leave Molen. Raled PG, it may be fright·
the door open for a sequel).
ening to the very young. Running
·Robin Williams, eschewing his time: 135 minutes.
"
quicksilver mannerisms,' does his
PG - Parental guidance sugbest work ever, both as the gested. Some material may not be
thoughtless Banning' and the dare- suitable for children.
devil Pan. Hoffman captures the

Cavs

acquitted of all charges

Pick 3: 999
Pick 4: 9032

defeat

=

Cards:· 4-H, Q-C,
8-D, 5-S

''

Hawks
Page4

Vol. 42, No. 156
Copyrighted 1991

CORONA, Calif. (AP) - A
denounced Smith as a rapist who
judge
has rule,d that actress Elizainflicted "violence, humiliation
beth
Taylor's
husband must stand
and degradation,:' on the Florida
trial
in
a
1987
drunken driving
woman. Black said the sexual
encounter was ''right out of a case.
Riverside' County Municipal
romance novel."
Court
Judge Michael F. Flynn on
The sensational case was sub·
Wednesday
ordered Larry Fonenmined to.jurors at midaftemoon by
sky
back
to
court Jan. 29 for the
the the judge, who told them "all
start
of
his
trial
on misdemeanor
of us are depending upon you to
drunken
driving
charges.
make a wise and legal decision in
this matter."
"This isn't a date mpe," Lasch
told the panel in closing arguments.
"This is a stranger rape. She didn't
know thiS man."
.
"This is the act of a mpist," she
The churches lrom the Syracuse
said. "This is not the act of love."
United Methodist Charge met for a
In his summation, Black Thanksgiving dinner recently at the
stressed that the prosecution had to Asbury Church in Syracuse. ·
prove Smith guilty beyond a rea- .
Following the dinner Rev. Wessonable doubt ~
ley Thatcher administered the
He said the woman was not · sacrament of Holy Communion
bruised enough and her clothes with all churches represented.
were not damaged enough to cor- Charge churches are Minersville,
roborate her account of a violent Forest Run and Asbury.
rape.
. . .
f
Allending were Mr. and Mrs.
"There are no obJecl!ve signs o Kenny Wiggins, Sarah Hawley,
trauma on this body," tle said, Jean Stout, Hallie Robertson, Mary
holding up pictures of the woman.
K. Roush, Kathleen Scoll, Mary
The jury had to consider testi- Bell Warner, Irene Parker, Linda
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Police Five more- seeking a total of $7 mony from 45 witnesses during 10 Ferrell, Martha Moore, Mr. and
car chases have been banned in million - were ftled last month all days. They also have access to Mrs. Carl Weaver, Trina Davis,
Omaha because the city faces more in connection with the same acci· . physical evidence, including the Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins, Mary
M~e Rea, Carolyn Roush,
than $10 million in lawsuits ftled dent.
woman's dress and underwear · Lisle,
Mary
Chancey,
Nancy Van Meter,
State Sen. Ernie Chambers worn on the night of the alleged
by people _who clai.m they were'
Rev.
and
Mrs.
Wesley Thatcher .
injuned durmg pursuits, the poltce sponsored the amendment -that assault
Helen
Maag,
Mr.
and Mrs. Ron
··
chief said.
· changed the law in 1981.
The key evidence was is the tes· Reynolds, Mary Cundiff, Helen
. "Excellent," Chambers said timony from the accused .and the
A 10-year-old law makes local
governments liable for injuries and when he heard Skinner had banned accuser. She said he raped her. He Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Ri'zer, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Moore,
deaths connected with pursuits, police chases. "At last rationality said she enticed him into sex.
Mr. and ,Mrs. Larry Wiles, Sarah,
·even if officers were not ne~ligent. has been injecled into law enforce"There will be no pohce pur- ment in Omaha." ·
Smith, nephew of Sen. Edward Lisa and Rebecca. Tim Fink, DenKennedy,
was charged with sexual nis Moore, Craig Knight, Jacki.e
Another legislator said he felt
suits in the city of Omaha for any .
reason • .Period," Skinner said Skinner's ban--was· an attempt to banery and banecy on the woman ·Hildebrand, Kathleen Fryer,
pressure the legislature to change shortly after they~ met at the Au Tammy Fryer and Scooter Fryer,
Tuesday.
• Five of the lawsuits that prom ph the law, but Skinner said he acted Bar. He could have 'been sentenced Mr. and Mrs. Michael Winebrenner
·co Tuesday's ban were filed from because he only recently learned of to 4 1(2 years in prison if convict- and Shelly, Hank Cleland and Beulah Ward.
.
ed.
October 1986 to October 1990. several of the lawsuits.

0.4 percenf in November

A defense niotion to dismiss the beer. If convicted. he faces up to a
year in jail.
·
.
case was rejected.
Taylor, 59, and Fortenskr. h~r:
Fonensky, 39, was charged with
one count of drunken driving and _eighth husband, were !!lllrned m
one count of having an open con- October.
. '
,.,,
tainer' of alcohol - two cans of

DAN!S

RISTMAS HOU

An~a churches

hold dinner

'

Open each' Suhday 12 to 5 p.m.
Starting Dec. 16th
.Monday thru Friday until 8 p.1n.
Open Friday 13th Until 8 p.m.
'

LEE

CARHARTT
SUNSET B.LUE

:Police car chases banned in Omaha

JORDACH~

REDWING
BUCK
GEORGIA

JERZEE
LAREDP

LEVI
CHIC

ZENA
CHIPPEWA
CASE
LaCROSS
NORTHLAKE
TEXAS
JA'l:lY

•.

•
1 Section, 10 Pages 25 con to
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwoptper .

Electric rates going up 28.4 per~ent Jan. 3
oiumbus s~outherrt PiJliier sciyfit can -~r·waitjor PUCO ~ -decision

Maxwell's death due to
combination 0 f causes

Why Buy A Hlat Pump Wheil Electric Rates Are "GOing

. .
...
· Out Of Sight?
.
GAS COSTS LESS THAN ANY '·OTHER FUEL USED FOR HEAT
- ·· Effective Mond-ay,~ December 16, We Are Lowering The
··
-,. Cost of _Propane 1oc Per Gallon. · ·.

--Local briefs---___,
Soulsby issues remz"nder

1

IIIIILD UJAIII

•

.Ch
, nstmas frees Said Stolen

CALL 742·2511 or 1•800·837·8211
TOLL
FREE' FOR' PRICES
'
.. .
' c '' '
'
' . !- t ' .

'

'

'

'

'

fior Gateway olnpose· d

fiace' m_assz've
Keati.ng, 4
fiedeli•hlJi'flCketeerzng

a1

'/

Q

Bush -ad~inistration mulling
ways to help middle .class

•

'

st te-loan. guaran t'ee

1

290

1991

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
sion because of weak consumer in October, their biggest advance
AP Economics Writer
demand, there is liule chance that since August. Gasoline pump
WASHINGTON - Consumer price pressures will get ou~ of hand priCes were up 1.3 percent but w~re
prices rose .0.4 percent last month anyume soon.
still 16.6 percent lower than their
as food and energy costs turned
November's increase reflected peale level reached a year ago in the
sharply higher, the government an acceleration in food costs, which aftermath of Iraq's invasion of
said today.
rose 0.4 percent last month after Kuwait.
The advance in the Labor having fallen in three of the previOther bi~ price advances d)Iring
Depanment's widely watched Con· ous four months.
the month mcluded a 0.5 percent
sumer Price .Index was blamed on a ' Leading the advance in food rise in pr~scription drug prices,
big jump ill food costs that reflect- costs was a huge 44.5 percent jump which have risen 10. I percent over
ed in pan the whitefly infestation in in lelluce prices and a 12.7 percent the last year.
California
and higher gasoline increase for ·tomatoes. Both
Apparel prices were up I per,.
costs.
increases were blamed on shortages cent in November while airlineDespile the higher-than-expect· caused by whitefly infestations in ticket prices climbed 2.2 percent.
ed
spun in consumer prices, ana- California.
Even with the increase, airline fares
one or the dolls to Rhonda Dailey, director of
GIVING TO· OTHERS • For nearly ·20
lysts said they still believe the .Fed·
Beef and veal prices, which had were still 5.2 percent lo.wer thaii a
nursing. Other Grange members there for the
years Mei1s County ' Granges have provided
era!
Reserve
has
room
to cut inter- been falling for five months, rose year ago.
·· ...-.
· presentat!ol! were from the ,left, seated, Jessie
homell!ade stul'f'ed toys for children confined to
,est
rates
further
to
spur
the
weak
0.9
percent
in
November.
Partially
The
various
changes
left
the ·
White, Hemlock; Barbara Fry, Rock Springs;
Veterans Memorial Hospital. They traditionally
economy.
..
offsetting
the
price
gains
was
a
.
Consumer
Price
Index
at
137.8
Dorothy Bnlen, Star; (Dyer and Dailey), Mary
make the presentation at Christmas time. Here
The only debale is over the tim· 17.1 percent drop in the price of compared to 133.8 in November
faster'day,
Racine;_Emma Adams, Racine, and
Opal Dyer or Star Grange, center back, presents
ing.
Many analysts argue th.at the oianges. This followed a '14:1 per- 1990. That meant that a marketbas·
bernice Midkil'f', Star, seated.
Fed will probably wait until after a cent decrease in orange prices in ket of goods and services costing
key policymaking meeting next October.
·
$133.80 a year ago would have
Tuesday, but others contend that
Energy costs jumped 0.8 percent cost $137.80 last month.
the reduction could come sooner
given the need to bolsler deman.d .
duri_ng the all-important Christmas
buymg season.
Analysts said they are not concemedaboutthe0.4percentrisein
.
J'.
WASHINGTON (AP)- With Bush said. The five were loudly remains of two beloved Americans consumer prices, which was
cheered
as
the
president
introduced
who
have
not
been
accounted
for.''
sharply
higher
than
October's
0.1
.
.
•
five recently released U.S. hostages
sharing the moment, President them on stage, one by one, before a
As he welcomed the former percent increase. They said most of . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ A
"Every time we look at this, the
Bush lighted the national Christmas crowd of 12,000.
hostages to the White House, the the price ·pressures were located in . proposed state-b'lCked $12 million · number.&gt; are a moving iarget," said
tree and said it was a reminder of
Anderson, the longest held and presid'dent said f"all ~X~ub have sur- · the volatile food and energy cate- credit line for the Gateway Eco- member Marlene Flagel, executive
what the captives had done " to the last freed, threw the switch to v1ve an acto uns!"&lt;""' e, unciv- gories. .
nomic Development Corp. is in director of the Montgomery County
light our nation's soul."
l!g~t thue hu~;,. tree ~ut it ~ained ~Ized cru~lty .... Hos tage-takin~/s
The so-callecj core rate of infla- doubt..
. .
_
Development Center in Dayton .
11
1
1
"It-i!NIIG~e: tlltur.just· llppr6j!ri
q·m· m.... asaen, upplAS iR . Hi _uR a n-tlll. Iiiii ~il JUSt .or ''[j1JO,li6seril'Tooa and energy, was
The seven-member Develop- "We're starting to have a considerate, it is almost miraculous that we elecuic switch on the podium a few the mli~e.nts held captive but f~~ better behaved, rising 0.3 percent mcnt Financing Advisory Board able amount of money at risk."
·
can celebrate with these five the times, then threw up his hands.
the fa~ahes they left behmd,
last month.
voted 4-2 against. Gateway's
Ohio has already given Gateway
lighting of our nation's Christmas
The president took over, shak - Bush sa•d.
Even with November's increase
request Thursday, citing uncertain . about $2 million and forgiven a
tree,'· Bush said in the festive cere- ing the switch box. But the tree was
''Th.~ truth is dear,'' Bush consumer prices were still rising at financial projections and several $5.3 million loan, and last week,
mony on the Ellipse in back of the still dark. Moments later, with no added. Hostage·taJ:ing has faded. an annual rate oJ just 2.9 percent million dollars in other state money Gov. George Voinovich signed a
White House.
·
one in view pressing or banging ... Your captors believed hostage- for the first!! months of this year. that Gateway wants to help fund bill that would cap Gateway's
"The idea is so moving because anything, it blazed into light to a taking woul~.ue our ·hand, and they sharply below last year's 6.1 per- the $360 million sports complex in · propeny taX obligation at about Sl
these men have come out•of dark - roar from the audience.
were wrong.
.
cent increase.
Cleveland . Board chairman J. million a year.
,
ness into the bnght light of liberThe ceremony. a Washington . U.N. Secretary Geneml Jav~er
Analysts said with the economy Kearney Shanahan of Cleveland
In testimony before the board,
tradition, was all the more poignant Perez de Cuellar and his spec_Ial threatening to drop back into reccs- abstained from the vote.
Continued on page 3
ty ."
Three of the hostages - Terry because it marked the first time in envoy on hostages, Giandomemco
Anderson, Alann Steen and Joseph eight Christmases that no American Picco, were honored at a ceremony
in the brightly decorated East
Cicippio - were released only last remained prisoner in Lebanon.
Earlier,
Bush
was
asked
by
Room.
week after years of captivity.
Bush said th ey "represent the
Thomas Sutherland was freed in reporters wllether it was time to
November' and Jes'se Turner in take down the yellow ribbon that highest in humanitarian ideals."
has decorated the White House vis- He presented Perez de CueUar with
October.
itor's
lobby for years.
,
the Medal of Freedom, the nation's
"Welcome home, to this , the
wASHINGTON (AP) :... The .cre_dit, a Kennedy-era ,:on.~cpt in
. Sti_ll ~ing considered, Darman
"Not
for
me
,"
he
repli
ed.
highest civilian honor, and gave
most generous and proud and free
Bush
administration
is
looking
at
wh1ch
the
government,
unul
1986.
said,
~s some form of tax rchcf for
nation on the face of the Earth ," "T here's two Germans held Picco a special award for cxccp- alternatiVes to a cut in income tax prov1ded a dollar-for-dollar. match the .~uddle class . .
against their will. There _arc tiona! service.
rates_ such as new incentives for to busmesses for 10 percent of the11 .
I d1d not think that was the
o·the~'S
people Ur buy homes - to stimu- in'vcstmcnt in new plantS and- most efr.c1ent Or effccti~C W~7 lei
late middle-class spending and end machmery.
.
get ~~~ economy growmg, he
the recession.
Seve_rallawmakers arc p~shmg swd. However, the president has
·
.
'
•
·
Administration officials said the . ~ev1val of the tax crcdn as _a . m s.tru~~ed us to look at tha~
char~oes
Bush is considering rushing a pack- measure that would spur cconomi,C opuon.
.
U
U
l:)
age of economic stimulants to cxpans•on faster than a cutm cap•· • Senate Republican leader Bob ·
.
.
.
Congress in January and saving tal gams tuxes.
Dole of Kansas said he suggested
" We're \~king a good , hard thc _idea of two packages to Bush
LOS ANGELES (AP) interest while on the board of Den- nal case charg~n~ him ~Ith racke- more controversial measures, such
Charles Keating Jr., indicted on 77 ver's Silverado Savings, Its failure t~nng and a ClVlllawsUit accusmg as a cut in capital gains ta&lt; rates, look at that, Treasury Secretary dunng a mecung Thursday mornuntil later in the year
Nicholas Brady told the Senate in g. He said the first one should be
federal fraud charges on top of his cost taxpayers $1 billion, but Neil him of ms1der tradmg and fraud.
The
_
scope
far
exceeds
the
state
"We
really
want
to
get
somecommittee.
des igned solely to speed help to the
conviction in California, com - . Bush was not charged with crimisecunues
fraud
case
m
which
the
thing
done,"
White
House
budget
Darman
said
nothing
has
been
m1ddle class, somethmg both politplained as he was led away in nal wrongdoing.
chains that bll's a scapegoat for the
By contrast', Keating and four ~nzona land developer was con- director Richard Darman told finalized and ·no decisions have •cal panics are eager to do as the
nation's savings and loan crisis.
co-defendants in the federal crimi- · victed last week. !'le faces a maxi· r!l ncrs after_te.sl!fyiJl.&amp;..Ihur£&lt;1ilY.. bife n made on which clcll)cnt~ 1992 clectton.SC!ISon opens, --- .
would bi included in the first pack·
''The Amen can people would
. 'There but -for -the--grace-ok -nal·case face-aboutcS(l(}-years each mum -I 0-yea~-pmon-sentence--m-- - 10~e Senate Finance Committee:
The administration package age and which would be deferred to be astonished" at how quickly the·
political power goes Neil Bush," in prison if convicted in Lincoln ,that case, _which mvolved charges
Keating said as he· was taken into Saving's $2.6 billion collapse, the of dccelVI_ng mvestors who lost could include an. investment tax the second.
first pack_age could. be approyed,
..
Dole prcllicted later tn the day.
federal custody Thursday; shackled costliest in_ U.S. history. Keatiqg m_oney on JUnk bonds purchased at
~ to his ~on and co-defendant, also fliCes $17 million in fines.
Lmcolnbranches.
The second measure could
Ke~ti~g, 68, rem_ai_ned j~iled
become home for more controver. Charles Keating Ill.·
All five surrendered Thursday
today m h~u of $2 million bail, an
•
•
sial proposals, such as a capital
He referred to President Bush's and are to be arraigned Monday.
son, who federal thrift regulators
The elder Keating was attacked amount_ hiS lawyer, Stephen C.
gains tax cut~ to encourage long.
term economtc growth that otherdecided had engaged in conflicts of on two fronts Thursday: the crimi- N~al, S81~ would be appeal~ . Neal
said Keaung would plead tnnocent
SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE. microscopic and summary findings wise might endanger immediate
to all chargt;S·
.
makes us believe the probable middle-class relief, Dole said.
Keaung.s son-m-law, Bradle,y Spain (AP)- An autopsy report cause of death was a double mech·
Bush had said previously that
B~land. said the family couldn t ~~~~~el~o~i:~~~~u:l~~~~ anism" triggered by a hean attack. the plan he wil! unveil in his Jan,
~ai~e baiL .~e called .the f.~deral
followed by immersion in the 28 State of the Union address 'tor
mdtctmcnt purely pol!ltcal.
bination of natural and accidental
reviving the sluggish economy
Relauves sauggled to find prop- causes. The finding_said there ~as water.
•
would include cuttin~ the ca ita!
The lac_k of flvc-di,git address numbers on local mailboxes is
makmg'll umc-consummg JOb of servmg JUry summons for shcnff's
erty to pledge to cover the no evidence qf po1son_mg or vao- th;e~~~~~; ~;~: ~}~~~ gains tax rate and feature othc~ tax
depuues. .
.
$300,000 bail for th~ younger lcncc, and d~dnot mcnuon the pasp 1 cuts for business,
Accordmg to .Meigs .County Sheriff James-M1 Soulsby, dcputies-- - Keating.- ~- - - - Sibiiity of swcide. .
the autopsy on MaxwcllJn.Las. a- -~~~~-~-~·~llll!"llllllllliiliiiilllo•
are serving two sets of summons for next week, an4that the lack of
.
The repo~ said the 68-yea_r-old m~h~n ~~do?'~:::I~~\fhd~s trig·
house numbers 9n mailboxes is making the joli difficult.
Maxwell died on Nov. 5 etther
b
.
Soulsby urges re_sidcnts to place their five-digit number on the
from a ·sudde
__n, on-deck w~rsenmg gered .the collapse of his debt· urempire,
mru'lboxes. Accord'mg to soulsby, this will ajso aid emergency med·
of ~~ e&lt;Istmg hean con dllton! an dened
'Includes media
the privately
ownedwh1ch
New
ical crews if the need for medical assistance arises.
accidental fall from his yacht mto
O.c. 13
the All ti
t
ff th c
York Daily News n~wspaper ~nd
Islands af~l~.:~e~ ~w~ng~~~ cootrolling'1nteresl$ m the publicly
1
Barr's Christmas Tree Farm at Danville reported to' the Meigs
combination of both factors.
held Mirror Group Newspapers ·
County Sheriff's Department on Wednesday that five pine tree~
' The six-point conclusion said PLC and Maxwell Communication
The Br~ish defenders of Hong
have been stolen from the property since Thanksgiving weekend.
the au\opsy failed to positively Corp.
Kong reject a Japanes;
,
No other information is available about the thefts at this time.
deteJrjlinc the cause of death, only
One Maxwell company is near
surrender demand. On Borr.eo,
that-'il was able 10 eliminate several closure . The Europeaq; a weeklb
British Indian troop!\ destroy lil·
possibilities, including a lack of newspaper. has laid off ~ts IS,
facll~les at Saraw11k and Bru 1ei. ·
[;!" · The Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment reports that on Thursevidence that M-axwell was poi· employ~. and editor.&gt; say It wont
In North Africa. the retreating
day evening, a· 1972 GMC station wagon owned by Michael K.
sonedorpushedaboard.
publish again unless a buyer IS
.
Germans
halt around Gazala
Snipes of Portsmouth caught fire and burned.
·
·. "In that sense, it is an open ver- quickly found.
·
and damage the pursuing British
The vehicle was parlced at the Petry residence on State Roule
diet,'' pathologiat Carlos Lopez de.
Revelations of hundreds of mil8th Army.
124. The Rutland fue depanment responded to the call; the owner
,
Lamela told The Associated Press lions of dollars of missing funds
was not at the scene.at the time.
·
once the report's conclusions comes amid allegations Maxwell
The cause of the fue is undetermined, and the ownefis expected
DAYS IJNTJL
became public. The report said, resoned to massive fraud to prop soun:o: "21 !M Days ol ww; w. H. Smith
to contact the sheriff's depanment when he I;elums.
CHRISTMAS
·'The global interpretallon of the . some companies, then killed him· Pl!bl~heroinc.: "WUrlo Almonoc lloOII of Wor1cl
dirfercnt clinical, chemical, macro=' self.
warn: Bison Books Corp .• 1111

President applauds freed U. S.
hostages at festive tree-lighting

'

153
1gg1

A Multimedia _lni:. Nowopaper

...--Christmas Is ... --------.,~---. Consumer prices up

in Achtovan, Netherlands: This was one of the :
flrsi days or the season for the Dutch to take
part iii their favorite pastime. (AP)

DUTCH. TREAT • ')'wo girls skate on a
frozen canal as their father prepares to join
them Thursday under the gaze of the local cows

ChaDte ol rain tonlght80
-percenL Saturday, chance of
raiD 40 percen~ Low Ia upper
20s.

2 Sectlono, 14Pag• 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday; December 13, 1991

Elizabeth Taylor's husband to stand trial

the courtroom because the judge
By LINDA DEUTSCH
warned the spectators they would
AsSQCiated Press Writer
. WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. face punishment if they made any
;(AP) - William Kennedy Smith · noises to show approval or disap·
' .
. was acquitted Wednesday of sexual provaJ.
After
the
verdict,
Circuit
Judge
:assault and battery in a case that
·:focused national attention on date Mary Lupo thanked the jurors, say~Tape and tarnished the Kennedy ing "You have done justice regard·
less of your verdict~'
·
.
;legend.
has
not
been
a
movie
"This
~ The jury of four women and two
made for TV,'' she told them .
~men took little more than an hour
: ro reject the allegations of a 30- "The TV has come into the court·year-old woman who said Smith room. The only difference between
this case and any other is that more
;~based here, toppled her on the
,lawn of the Kennedy estate and people want to see this case."
She told jurors ii was up to them
·raped her under a fuU moon.
: Smith, 31, had taken the stand whether they wanted to talk pub:on his own defense, adamantly licly about their decision, but "I
·denying her charges and painting need to tell you that you are the
:her as a sexually ~~·vessive woman story now.' '
As he left the courtroomi Black
:who initil!led seX;_~t~r they met at a
was
asRed how he felt. "Terrific,
·trendy night cl~ during Easter
just terrific."
'weekend.
"I feel great, just great!'' said
: Smith grinned as the verdict was
·read and embraced his lawyer, Roy Smith's mother, Jean Kennedy
.
:alack, who had argued passionate· Smith.
Before
the
jilry
began
deliberat:Iy in his defense earlier in the day.
ing,
prosecutor
Moira
Lasch
· There was ·no other reaction in

Lottery

'·'

L

1• 9 •4 •1

Carjirt reported ·

.

12

. I

,,

.,

.. ~ I
'

\

~

•

•

,\

'

I

Yl

II

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="317">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9608">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35314">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35313">
              <text>December 12, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="558">
      <name>karr</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
