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                  <text>. ..

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

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.Co~mentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE IIEIQS..MASOII AREA

'

.MUlTKDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man"'ler

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Pre" Association and ·
the ~rican Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban 300
words long. All letters a&lt;e subject Ill editing and must be'signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned lette11 will be published. Lette11
should be in good taste, addressing issiles, not pe11onalities.

·Tenth Amendment

•

Like the Ninth Amendment, the Tenth Amendment was included in the
Bill of Rights to address the concerns of those who were apprehensive
that the new national or federal government created by the Constitution
was too powerful. Thus, the Tenth Amendment makes clear that the feder·
al government is a government of limited, dele$ated powers: "The powers
not delegated to the United States by the Consutution, nor prohibited by it
to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
In drafting Ibis provision, Jhe Framers sought to preserve the idea that
the federal govern!llent was a government of limited powers without stating the limitation so strictly that the government would be paralyzed.
Under the Articles of Confederation,_the national government was severely weakened by a clause which provided that "[each state retains its
sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction,
and right, which is not ... expressly delegated to the United States." If
some opponents of a strong national government had had their way, the
Tenth Amendment. would also have limited the. federal government to
powers "expressly delegat~" to it by the Constitution. During debate on
the proposed amendments, however, Congressman James Madison of Vir·
ginia argued. that "it was impossible to confine .the government to the
exercise of express power; there must necessarily be admiued powers by
implication ...." Although Madison's view prevailed, not everyone was
convinced of the corre-ctness of his position. and some Members· of
Congress feared that the federal government would use its power to weaken or destroy the state governments.
In two dramatic incidents during the' early years of the Republic, states
attempted to assen their sovereignty by declaring acts of Congress unconstitutional. In 1798, the Con~ss enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts, ·
which operated to stifle the nsing political opposition of the Jeffersonian
Republicans. In response, with the assistance of James Madison and
Thomas Jefferson, Vtrginia and KentuCky passed resolutions declaring t~e
Alien and Sedition Acts unconstitutional and affiJ'Illing the authority of
the states to make independent judgments concerning the constitutionality
of federal legislation.
·
O.ther· states failed, however, to follow suit, and the challenge abated
when the Alien 1111d Sedition Acts expired in 1801. In 1832, led by Vice
President John C. Calhoun, South Carolina passed an ordinance that
decl811Cd the federal protective tariffs of 1828 and 1832 "unauthorized by
the Constitution" and
"null, void,
no law, nor binding
this Slate. its officers or
·
iii!
when Congress passed a
mi
high tariffs that South
fo:tmd.w !&gt;bjectionable._ .
While these and other ·
challenges to federal supremacy were
g raised, ·the Supreme Court established two crucial legal principles:
first, that federal law was supreme to state law and, second, that the federal government had certain implied powers that were not specifically enu·
merated
in the ConstitutiQn.
The first ofwhich
these declares
principlesthat
- the
expressly
set
forth
in Article
VI of lhe Constitution,
Constitulion, laws, and treaties of the United States "shall be the supreme Law of
the Land"- was given practical application in such cases as Ware v.
Hylton, 3 U.S. (3 Dall.) 199 (1796), in which lhe Supreme Court struck
down a Virginia statute that conflicted with the 1783 Treaty of Peace
between the United SLates and Great Britain, and Dartmouth College v.
Woodward, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 518 (1819), in which the Court ruled that
Dartmouth College's colonial charter was a contract, and that New Hamp·
shire's attempt to revise the original coUege charter violated Jbe comm1111d
in Article!, section 10 of lhe Constitution that "[n]o State shall ... pass
any . ... Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts."
The principle t,hat the federal govemment.was a government of implied
as well as express powers was set forth in cases such as M'Culloch v.
MaryJand, 17 U.S. (4 :\'{heaL) 316 (1819), in which the Supreme Court
ruled that Congress had the apJjlOrity to exercise a power not expressly set
forth in the Constitution - the power to create a national bank - under
its general authority in Article l, 'section 8, "[t]o make all Laws which
shall be necessary and proper ... ." In M'CuUoch, the Court specifically
rejected the argument that the Tenth Amendment limited the federal govemment's authority to powers that were "expressly" delegated in the Con. stitution, noting that "[t]he men who drew and adopted th[e] [Tenth
amendment had experienced .. . embarrassments resulting from ,the insertion of this wof&lt;\ in the articles of confederation, and probably omitted it
,
10 avoid those emban'assments."
Even after these decisions, advocates of "state sovereignty" continued
their assaults on federal authority well into the 19th century. The ideological dispute over the nature-or-the union and· the scope offederai·suplenliF ·
cy culminated in the Civil War, which finally resolved the question of the
federal government's authority over the states and the authority of states
to secede from the Union.. From the conclusion of the CiviLWar to the .
present day, the federal government's power and influence over state gov·
ClJiments has steadily expanded, as state gove.mments have surrend~red
significant authority in a variety of areas - interstate commerce, social
welfare, health care, and environmental protection - to federal control.
lnrecenttimes,thisshutinpowerrromstatetofecteratgovemmenthas
generated .debate about the concept of "federalism," .aqd some have
voiced concern that the statts should reclaim some of the powers and
responsibilities that have been 1111nsferred to the federal government.
As the Tenth Amendment makes clear, the federal government is a
government of delegated powers, and it is well within the power of the
states and their citizens to reclaim authority that they have surrendered if
. they so choose.

·~ ~

Today in histoty

Today's ~~ys: Fonner ~lary of $tate George P. Shultz is 71.
Ac10r-comedian Dtck Van Dyke ts 66. Actor Christopher Plummer is 64
· Singer John Davidson is 50. Singer Ted Nugent is 43.
·

Fflday, December 13, 1991

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the market for them is so limited a handful of people with a rare dis·
"ease. The 19831aw gave drug com·
pan'ies an incentive to spend the
millions of dollars in research
money it often takes to develop a
new drug. The law said those com·
panies would be allowed a
monopoly ·for seven years :=exclusive FOQII 110d Drug Adnnmstration approval of their drug and
no competition, so they could corner the whole market 1111d recoup
their expenses.'
The reality has been that some
.of the orphari drugs have become
big business. Without competition,
some .drug makers 'have pushed the
prices up and out of reach of
patients without deep pockets.
"It's uncivilized, that's what it
is," Herb Jacobson told our associate Dean Boyd. "What kind of
monster would make a drug for
people who suffer· from (rare diseases), then price it so high no one
can buy it?"
In recent years, some manufac·
turers have realized 1111nual sales of
more than $100 million, and,
a.cco(&lt;!ing to patients' advocacy

groups •. used the monopoly H!
shield themselves from compelltion. Last year, Congress looked at
the situation and tried to fine-tune
that law by introducing some
amendments that would have
allowed competition in certain
cases.- With huge sales at s!alce, several
bio-tech giants deployed their army
of lobbyists and succeeded in winning a compromise amendment
from Congress. But the White
House vetoed it at the request of
Vice President Dan Quayle's
Council on Competitiveness.
This year, because of the untir'
ing work of relatives like Herb
Jacobson and professional ad·VO·
cates for patieQts, new amendments
have been introduced in the House
and Senate to allow competitive
drugs into·the market if sales on the
original drug exceed $200 million a
year. Even at that, if the compMy
can prove that the cost of develop·
ing the drug was high - at least
$200 million in the Senate version
of the bill and $100 million in the
House version - then the
monopoly will remain.

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BILl Q f R1GHTS

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As interpreted by Mell Lazarus, MOMMA cartoonist:

A£
MY LOL
1, F~ANCI~/
7
7
N,
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'7
V/'lu M-AY OOA y~ G
1V
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N I HI N
. YOU PLEA5E,

/':r::.; 1.,-. MO''AMA •• V/'IU'~r=:
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HOWI:VE'R1 A~ YOU~
M01i; JER, l t::'O~BID v/'IU
1""1
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TV
.,-/'1 I'"'V7ANY~ .Jjll.&amp;.T..-: 'ATMAI(f".L
IV VV
I,.., ~.,..,
t::?
Mr=: L.O'LE LL.EEP.
='

,_

. - Meigs Coonty Em~ency Med·
teal Ser.vtces Mswered eight calls
for ass1stance on Thursday and ·
early Friday. ·
On Thursday at 11:36 a.m.,
Tuppers Plains squad went to State
Route 7 and took Wendy Rach to
Holzer Medical Center.
Atl2:13 p.m., Pomeroy fire
departrn~t and squad went to Lincoln Heights at tlie Powell residence for a smoke odor. Penny
Powell was ·lreal!:d m·lhe soene. At
1:18 p.m., MiddlePQrt unit went to
. Ash Street. Celia-Rite w11vrans·
poned 10 Veterans Memorial Hos·

Poineroy....:..Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Oecemlier 13, 19,91

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and Dale VanAtta : ~·
But the bio-tech industry is still ':
not ready to compromise. Th~ }
Pharma·ceotical Man~fact.l!ft!S~
Associallliii says that competition; ':
even after a company sold $200
million worth of its drug, wQul~ ·
remove monetary incentives to
develop new orphan drugs. The
association also argues thachun&lt;
dreds of millions of dollars in sales·~
don't necessarily add up to profits :
because of the costs of research and .
developerhent.
.-'.
But the top companies are not ~
exactly forthcoming with the fig: ..
ores on how much they spend oq
R&amp;D. To get to the bottom of that ~
mystery, Sen. Howard Metzen: .
baum, !;&gt;-Ohio, sent out pointed let· '·
ters to 14 companies last summer. ,,
He will hold hearings on the resulls' 1
of h1s survey next year.
.
When Congress cuts through the ·;
self-serving arguments, it will find '
that few orphan drugs will ever see,- ·
sales exceeding $200 million, So ::
changing the law would not crimp ':
the style of most companies - ''
only those who have let dollar ·
signs cloud their vision.
, 1
KEMP UNCHAINED - h's ·'
against Jack Kemp's nature to keep .
his opinions to himself. So the sec· •
retary of Housing and Urban .
Development is. spreadingsugges- '
tions around ·capitol Hill about '
what President Bush should be •
doing. And Kemp is rapidly win-·
ning converts, some of whom have
urged Bush to make Kemp his··
domestic-policy czar. This does not '
please Bush, who expects his ·
appointees to support his policies;. not promote rival policies. Bush :
has made it clear he has no intcn-'
tion of making Kern~ part of his '
inner circle of advisers.
•
MINI-EDITORIAL ~.• The ,
British press reports that U.S. war~ .'
planes in Britain arc practicing for ·
an attack on Libya. The justifica· .
tion would be the Bush adminislia· ;
tion' s contention that libya was
responsible for the downing of Pan :
Am flight 103 . There is still too :
much doubt about Libya's involve-',;
mcnt, and too many indicators
pointing at Syria and Iran. If Bush ~
thinks a quick and dirty hit is · the~·
way to handle this, then his victory '
in the Persian Gulf left ·
;
ment clouded with sand. If
·
'""'""'!;hi s sabre to

!!!!!!!!.=~l:l~t
AMENDMENT x, Rights of States under Constitution.

'ri

By Jack Anderson ·

,

h Se~r; paratus reads a stgn on
1. e w.,. .ere at the Spear Fo~da·
uon, and 11 descnbes us to a uule:
We are always ready.
Many of you have asked us, for
example, why the l!ledta concentrates al'!JOSt excl.ustvely on nega·
live stpnes. You get ured of bad
news, you say! a?d want to ~ear
more of Amenca s pos1t1ve stde.
We ~ectded not to resiJOnd to the
prectse request·because 11 would be

·

William Jones_

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too boring - do you really want to them." Now that's what we mean
read about 1,212,443,710 cats that by a good idea.
did not get caught in trees on ·a
Banish drug criminals to remote
given day?- but we could provide · islands. Actually, the exact phrase
a similar service. Instead of good used in a House Armed Services
news, we resolved to report to you Committee report last year was
periodically on good ideas.
''extremely remote Pacific
We speak of things as time-lest· islands. "-r would ilmend-this siig·
ed and utilitarian as lead pencils, gestion only to include all perpelia·
blue jeans and TupperwllfC; as rev· tors of serious crimes. Another
olutionary as tenn limits and bal· worthy idea is to wall off some
anced budget amendments; as Western state that is mostly federal
imperative as the re-regulalion of land anyw\iy, then toss hardened
cable television. These are stupen· criminals into the enclosure and let
dous notions that are worthy of the · them hunt jacl&gt;rabqits. for susterecognition they have gotten. We nance. (The Sf:' thought that one
have come up with a few more and uR.)
have enumerated them In the first
Stress detectors. One is the
Spear Foundation Repon on Good blinks-pe'r-minute (bpm) test
Ideas, herein highlighted:
. . devised by a ·Boston College neli·
Slash the federal bureaucracy. ropsychologist. During the Gulf
This is a fairly common ·idea, but war, he observed that Saddam Huswriter Irv Shapiro suggested in a sein did 113 bpl!l during a CNN
· 1988 Washington Post article interview and that George Bush did
s~ifically how it might be done: only ffJ bpm at a press cooference.
' Walk blindfQided through the During the Clarence Thomas/Anita
Pentagon, the CIA and the State Hill confrontation, at least two
Department, randomly lap four out tabloids usect devices called Psyof five people on the head and ftre chological Stress Evaluators to
·· · · ·
.... . - '

·--· ........ -~-- · ... - -

Joseph Sp-ear

determine who was lying. The·
National Enorrirer determined that
Thomas "told one bald-faced LIE : .
after anoth.er"; the Globe conclud- :
ed that HiJI was a "sex-starved ::
wallflower."
·
. •r
A nauonal bug. Dean King, edi·. ~ ~
tor of the Southe{n Farm er'~. ~
Almanac, thinks the i~sect most 'I
deservmg of the honor rs the light- ::
mng ·bug, whtch "symbolizes what i:
we stand fo;,." The. lightning bu~. ::
Kmg sa~s.. embod1es the curiost· ,,
!Y, creatiVIty, resourcefulness and ,
m~enmty . of ~his country.'' And it :1
enJoys a natwnal following: "I ,
thmk anywhere .you go in the U.S., "
people have a strong feeling for the :1
lightning bug."
; ,l
. The Butterball ~urkey Talk, ::
Lme. Tlus handy, holiday helper is', u
on standb~ to assist with_ free But-· !~
terball rectpe calenders and advice ,:~~~
on how to tell when the bird is. )I
done. ~00-323-4848. And when the 1
m~al ts over and you're feeling ·:,
guilty about the calories you've put ' ::
away, you can talk to a dictic~n ~n '~:
standby for the Amencan DteteUC"- '
Association. 80()..366· 1655.

-··~ .. · - - ' ' - ·· ··- · ·

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Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, more rain. Low in the
low 40s ..Ch811ce of rain 80 percent
Saturday, windy 1111d colder. Scat· ,
tered flurries or rain showers. Tern·
perature falling most of the day and
reaching the upper .20s by evening.
C h;u~cc_of precipitatioo 40 percent
Extended forecast:
Sunday through Tuesday:
A chance of snow northeast Sunday, dry elsewhere. A chance •
of snow statewide Monday and :
Tuesday. Lows 15·25 Sunday and
Tuesday and in the 20s Monday. ·
Highs mostly in the 20s Sunday ·
and Tuesday and upper 20s to mid· .
30s Monday.
·
COLONY THEA IRE

'-

. FRIDAY THRU THURS.

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~- CIJfEIIY
LRM~EH I MADSEN IRONSiot

HtGHLf\NDER 2
Tt1E

tf

OUIO ENIN[,

'

ADIIISSIOII Sl.lt
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NOW SHOWING!

"THE SATISFYING FAMILY
PICTURE THAT WE'VE
ALL BEEN WAITING FOR!"

~hatl ~ ~~F.Al PIID'I~'S.

o.\\ i WGnt {or

"...A funny and
moving family
film."
• - )C'« C.taill.
SIXTY SECOND PREVIEW

·CHRISTMAS
The Comedy ~t~ Both
Nzughty ~ Nice.

ft
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ft•tlllllll nnln.
NO PASSES·. NO BA!tGAIN NfGHT .

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7:15 &amp; 9:15

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SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES

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DAILY .
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1:15 3:15

THE P,Y,.MA .lAM!

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Stocks

'

Am Elc Power .................. 32 3/4
Ashland Oil ........m•m~ ... 26 7/8,
AT&amp;T................................38
Bank One ......................... .46 5/8
Bob Evans .......... :....... :..... 21 1,18
Charming Shop.......... :.......23 5/8
City Holding ..................... 16 5/8
Federal Mogul.. .. .. ............. 14 1/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .48
Key Centurion .:................. 14 1/4
Lands' End ........................ 25 3/4
Limited Inc....................... 27 3/4
Multimedia Inc . ................. 23 1/4
Rax Restaurain .... .. ............7/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 32
Shoney 's Inc...................... 20 7/8
Star B1111k ........................... 25 3/8
Wendy lnt'l.. ......................8 7/8
Worthington Ind ................ 20
Stock reports 1111 the 10:30 11.m.
quotes provi4ed b;y Blunt, Ellis
and wewl of GalllpoUs.

'HOUSE PARTY RJLLFORCE

TISHA CAMPBElliMAN llUHNLATifAH -

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IYiillble.

Man'sabacripllo,.
lnoldellalll• CooonQ'
IS Weoka.........................................l2t.84
26 Weeb ................................. ...... ... l43.l6
62 w..b ........................... .. :............ l84.76
O.lald!i Gallla c..nl7
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NO PASSES. NO IIAAGAIN NIGI!f :

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OlllVIIIMSIIOW7:JI - -

Metnber: The A.oeiated Prua, Inland .

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BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY 1 SUNDAY.
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAT.
HOLIDAY GIFT CERTIFICATES NOW AVAILABLE'!

contest winner

Lottery numbers

Plains and Michigan; in the 50S in
Northern California and the Slluth·· .
west; in the 60s and 70s in South· ·
ern California , Texas and the :
Southeast; and tile 80s in Miami.
,.
The high temperature for the ~
nation Thursday was 85 degrees at ~
Kingsville, Texas.
1

NG .TO

Funeral services will be held on
Sunday at-1 p.m, at Ewing Funeral
Home with Pastor James R. Acree,
Sr. officiating. BuriaJ ,will be in
Carleton Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Saturday from 2 p.m. to 4
p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Hospital news

William A. Rusher

.

Caurtnews

William C. "Bill" Jones, 72, of
41074 Baker Road: Pomeroy. died
on Friday; D~cember 13. 1991,
after a shon illness. He was 1111 auto
body repairman.
Born on January 19, 1919 in
Middleport, he was the son of the
late Harley H. and Downy Massie
Jones.
H1.1rry Harmon
Surviving are two daughters,
Harry R. Harmon, 76, '!'uppers
Donna E. Davis, Middleport and
Plains,
died Thursday, Dec. 12 at
M.rs. David (Barbara) Pratt,
St.
Joseph
Hospital in ParkerSburg,
Pomeroy; four sons, Rodney of
W.Va.
New Jersey, Larry W. (Dottie) of
Born in Wellston, he was a son
Darwin, Gary A. (Sandi) of
of
the
late John and Della Harmon.
Pomeroy, and Timothy 0 . (Felice)
of, Uniontown, Pa .; four sisters, He .was a retired employee of the
McBee Corporation as a mainte·
B~atrice Christy of Mogadore,
nance
supervisor.
Ohio, Clara M. DeWeese of Kent.
He
is survived by
G,iace E' Medley and Pauline KonHtumon,,one ~~~:r~~-~
kl.e, both ol Tucson, Ariz.; two .Harper
lii!et rii
brothers, Marvin H. Jones of Shade scill::Jft.Jaw,
Dixon,
Nokomis,
three gtand·
and Carl E. Jones of Waterford, dau~hters, VickiFla.;
Goode,
Tina
Mich .; 29 grandchildren and 25 Dixon and Sherry Uhlig, all
of
great-grandchildren. ,
two
great
grandsons,
Florida;
·Besides his parents, he was preceded in .death by his wife, Elsie Michael Goode and Charles Uhlig,
all of FIQrida; and a step-son and
Christy Jones.
He attended the Hillside Baptist daughter-in-law, Myron and Toni
Church and was a member of the West. Delaware.
Besides his 'parents he was pre·
Big Bend C.B. Club.
ceded in death by two brothers,
Albert and William Haqnon.
Services will be held Sunday at
1:30 p.m. at the White Funeral
Veterans Memorial
Home in Coolville with Rev .
, THURSDAY ADMI~SIONS · Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial
will ·be in the Silver Ridge CemeMarcia Capehart, Pomeroy. ·
THURSDAY DISCHARGES • tery.
Friends may call at the funeral
Zelia Riley, Hennan Moore, Laura
Cozart, Charles Werry and Curtis home on Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m. ·
Riffie.
Holzer Medical Center
, Discharges Dec. U - Mrs. Name mystery farm
jlrinton Brown and son, Mildred
Gregory, Jason-'Higginbotham.
Frank Jacobs, Samantha McKinney, Jua~ita Spence and George
Grace Holter, 32797 Pine Grove
Thompson.
. Road, Racine, was one of two to
Births Dec. 12 - Mr. 1111d Mrs.
,identify the mystery farm
Anthony Kopec, daughter, Middle- correctly
in
Sunday's
Times Sentinel as that
port. Mr. and Mrs. Shawn L1111han, of Edison Hollon.
Her name was
daughter,fhunden.
selected by ,lottery. The mystery
farm is a weekly feature of the
Meigs Soil and Water Cqnservation
District
1111d the Ohio Valley Pub·
Pick 3.Numbers
lis~irig eo: Mrs ..-Holter will· receive
9-9-9~
$5
from the Ohio Valley Publish(nine, nine, nine)
ing
Co.
Pick 4 ('lumbers
9-0·3-2
(nine, zero, three, two)
The Daily Sentinel
Cards
(USPS 211-MO)
4 (four) of Hearts
Publiehed every •Remoon, Monday
Q (queen) of Clubs
tlnoUj!h Friday, Ill Court Sl., Pome10y,
8 (ctght) ofDiarnonds
Ohio by tho Ohio Valley Publiohtng
Company/Multimedia Inc.. Pomeroy,
5 (five) of Spades
Ohio 45169, Ph. 992·2156. Second clue
The Super Lotto jackpot is $4 pootap
poid at Pomel'O)', Ohio.
million.

global air pollution through its
.
effect on the reflectivity of the
earth, is currently dominant and is
responsible for the temperature ... indicate the transition can be
decline of the past decade or two "
rather sudden - a matter of ccn: ·
. In February 1973, in an arti~le turies - with ice packs building up
in Science Digest entitled "Brace relatively quickly from local snow• ·
Yourself for Another Ice Age,•· fall that ceases to melt from wintci. ·
Douglas ·Colligan linked pollution to winter."
10 a far older and even greater danFinally, in Current for May-June
gcr·
1976 Anthony Wolff marshalled
;, At this point, the world's eli· the evidence that "global cooling" :
matologists are agreed Ol) only two had already begun:
'
things: That we do not have the
"The surface temperature of the '
-comfortable distance of tens of whole North Atlantic has cooled •.
thousands of years 10 confront the one'eighth of the way back to full '
next ice age, and that how carefully icc-age conditions and the Gulf
we monitor our atmospheric poilu· Stream has migrated to the south, ·
tion will have direct bearing on the forcing fishermen who had vcn- ,
arrival and nature of this weather tured northward back to traditional·',
crisis .... Once the rrecze starts, it grounds."
·
will be 100 late."
How did we get, in just a few i
On March 1 1975 Science mag- short years, from "global cooling"
azine spelled.o~t the_peril:_. _.. _ . to- " go
I ba I··warnung. "?. ·J'n th e-' • -••... (O)nly a small change of words o'f the Army doctdr who
global temperature _ two or three reversed himself in a single month·
degrees _ would be catastrophic. on the sleep-inducing effects of a· :
Sci~.n tiill.,once thoyght tl)e onset of ·snack before bedtime, "My boy,
an rce age would be very gradual, . !hat.was last month. Science has
with glaciers slowly pushing down made enormous ; strides since i
from the North, but recent studies then."

.

~tures in the 40s,

-----...Area deaths--

)I

G00d l•deaS fi~naJJy· get thei•r turn

By The Associated.Press
Things will get bl!Ck to normal
in Ohio, weatherwise, this week·
end, forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
says the temperature at daybreak
-c US!IBIIY the low -i11 likely to be
the htgh on Saturday as the mer·
cury takes .a nosedive during the
day.
· By evening; readings will be in
the 20s after early morning temper·

_Meigs announcements __

chi.ck·en LI. ttles .e-or~ saw· new •.ce' ag'e
As everyone knows, the great the human race ts sure to be d1sdlll1ger con~~ting the hu~an .~ace missed as a re~ct_ionary old curthese days IS global warmm~ mudgeon unwtlhng to face the
the slo~ but deadly mcrease m the unpala'!lble lruth.
.
world s average temperature
So, m the perhaps fuule hope of
caused by mankind'~ ~eedless dis- slo~ing our rush to war.~ stark
char~e o~ huge quanuues of carbon pam c. on, ~he subJect of global
dtox1de t~to· the atmospher~: pro- ~armmg, let me call you! attenducmg a greenhouse erfect.
uon to a remarkable art1cle by
Unle~s ~e mend our ways , Anna J.. Bray in the Fall 1991 issue
many sctentlsts warn, the nse m of Polley Rev1ew. M1ss Bray
tempe~atui~ will continue, and demonstrates conclusively that~~~
somell.me ~~ the next century than 20 ~ears ago the world s
(authonues. differ on exactly when) Ch1cken Lrttles were all a~~g over
the polance caps w1ll bcgm to the s upP.o se~ threat of global
melt •. ra1smg mean. sea level and coohng..
floodmg the world s ~eapons and
Scns1bly, she lets them speak for
coastal ~lams. Today s. temperate themselves. Thus, as eru:Iy as 1971
zones will beco.me habttable only Retd Bryson, m a p~per mcluded m
~~.th the expendit~ of hu$e q~an- Holden and Erhch ~ book Global
uues ~f energy on atr-condil!onm~. Ecology, shrewdly hoked the supWhat s more, the warmmg 1s posed danger of global cooling to
already under way: The decade of that trendy villain, pollution:
the 1980s witn~ssed ~everal . years ___ . __' 'The~-ntinu~ rapid cool.ing or
·that were;-over !RUCI! or the earth, t~e earth smce World War ll 1s also
among the hottest on record.
. m accord with the.incr~.ed ~lobal
. Anyone .who responds to th1s a~ IJPlluuon assocta!til :-v•th mdusdire scenario br argumg that the tr1ahzauon, mechant~!Jon, urbanwhole thmg IS Simply a scare-story 1zauon, and an expl6dmg popula·
m;mufactured by_the.mecjl3 to pan· · llo~. ~dded to a renewal o.f volca~1c
der to the free-floaung ~xtety of acuvny .... I belrev.e that 1ncreasmg

ForecasterS. say winter returning to Ohio ~:

S·ta·te ·

Americans have seen enough of the
macho Bush . With an election
coming up, they're looking for a '
wise Bush.
·
'
·

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are
reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
·

pital. At 2:59 p.m., Pomeroy squad
went ti&gt; Court Street Keith Nibert
was talcen to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital. At 3:15p.m., Rutland
unit went to Hampton Hollow
Road. Arbutis Fetty was taken to
Veterans. At 4:16 p.m., Rutland
unit wentto .l)nion Sll'eet: Katie
Fink was iakeg to ·Pleasant Valley
Hospital. At6:4I p.m., Rl!Cine unit
went tO Fifth Street and transported
Marie Roy to Veterans.
On Friday at 3;20 a.m., Tuppers
Plains squad went 10 State Route 7
.J.!LI.llppeJS Plains foLWilliam
Grue5¢r, who refused ~iinent.

The Qally Sentinel Page 3

cool and dry, with fair skies in the
Most' of the state will be dry on Oregon and Washington. Snow fell
Saturday, but snow is likely. to in Montana.
move into Ohio on Sunday.
A storm watch was posted
The record high temperature for through Saturday over northwest
this date at the Columbus weather Michig1111, along Lake Superior.
. station was 65 degrees in 1901.
Rain fell Thursday from the
The· record low was 7 below zero Rockies across the northern Pacific
in 1960.
.
· Coast, with snow in the mountains.
Sunrise this morning was at Rainshowers e~tended over pans of
7:44 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:07 the Gre;;~t Lakes, the Appalachians,
p.m.
the Ohio Valley, Arkan sas,
Around the nation
Louisiana 1111d Texas:
.
. Rain eootiliuedlOday_acros~_llle
Cold weather. ·was predicted· in
saturated Ohio and Mississippi val- the East today. Dry, cool air was
Civil cases processed
leys into southeastern Texas.
expected to bring relief to the rainA default judgment has been
Rain fell in northern New Eng- soaked Ohio and Mississippi valContiimed from page 1
awarded in Meigs County Common land and Buffalo, N.Y., as cold leys and the Great Lakes. The West
•• •
Pleas Court to General Motors weather returned to parts of the was e~pe£ted to IJI1 mild .and dry.
Gateway Ex.ecutive Director - -Meanwhile, Stale Sen-:-Roy Ray, Acceptance Corporation-against Northeast
Temperatures in the teens were
Thomas Chema acknowledged that R-Akron, called fm an end to fur· Fhonda Chadwell in the amount of
The southern Atlantic states predicted in Minnesota; in the 20s ·
6() perc.ent of Gateway's initial ther state rmancial support of tlie $4.234.28.
were cloudy, except for fair skies in North Dakota; in the 30s in Col·
costs will be funded by Ohio 'and Gateway sportS complex. ·
The ~ af Bank One,. Athens, in Florida. .
orado and Illinois; in ·the 40s in
Cuyahoga County taxpayers. But
Ray sllid ThurSday that the slate , N.A. agamst J.ack M,.· Spues, Jr,.
Much of the West Coast was New England, the Northwest, the
C~ema said Galeway had no inlen- Controlling BOard should reject the and others, has been dtsmtssed.
Mn of l;lpping the prqlOsed credit credit line request. .
hge. Chern a explained that the
Ray is a member of the Ohio Divorce granted
A divorce has been granted in
cr\)dit line would only be used to · Development Financing Advisory
Cou_nty T.I. meeting planned
dt:cn's program will be at 9:30a.m.
Meigs
County Common Pleas ·
cover unanticipated expenses on Board,
•
,
A county-wide Teen Institute
Scavenger hunt
the stadium pro.JCCt.
·'The state mready has forgiven Court in the case of Anna J. Laud- (T.I.) meeting will be held Satur·
The Rutland Nazarene- Youth
· ".It's nolgoing to go to the Con· the $6 million it was owed by the er'Jlilt against Greg A Laudermilt.
day at II a.m. in the cafeteria at Group will be conducting a scavtrolhng Board on Monday," said predecessors to Gateway, tax
Meigs High School. All T.l. mcm· enger hunt in the Rutland Village
Christy Bixler, a spokeswoman for abatement has been provided for
bcrs are invited to auend.
· on Dec. 21 from 2:30 to 5 p.m. The
Development Department chief the project, 1111d now lliey want the
Garden Club to meet
items collected. to b ~ all food
Donald Jakeway.
state to put its full faith and credit
The
Rutland
Garden
Club
will
items
, will be given to a needy
Tbe birth of tbe boycoll
:However, Budget Director R. on the line for a project that is sorehave its·Christmas dinner m~cting family. Participation rs rcqucsiCd.
T~he wor.d ,boycott, which means to
Gregory Browning said Voinovich Iy uri&lt;!~rfinanced," Ray said.
at the home or Mrs. Vernon Weber
Concert Sunday
has not decided whether to with" And to make matters worse. combine against in a policy of non-in- in Rutland on Monday at 6 p.m.
The South ern Hrgh School
Children's program
Chorr and Southern Junior High
draw the proposal from Monday's today it was revealed that Gateway tercourse for · ~onomic or political
The Rutland Church of the Choir will present an afternoon or
agenda.
·
will be asking for $25 million _in reasons, is an eponym. named after
'"We need to think about it· capital improv~ment dollars and an Charles C. Boycott, an English land Nazarene will present the Christ- Christmas music on Sunday at 3
in County Mayo. Ireland, who mas cantata "Call Him Jesus" on p.m. in the high school gymnasium.
briefly," Browning said.
additional $6 million in Issue 2 acent
was ostracized in 1880 for refusing to Dec. 22 at 10:30 a.m. The chi!- The public is invited to attend .
Ms. Bixler said the plan· will infrastructure funds. It's gcuing
Admission is free.
probably be on hold until next year. ridiculous. And all to simply move reduce rents.
Chema said after the vote that a facility from one part of the sLate
he had not yel decided on his next to another," he said.
step..

.,

Act hurts p~ople it's meant to help
WASHINGTON - Herb Jacobson of Denver is fighting in
Congress for his daughter's life.
She is one of fewet than 20,000
Americans who suffer from Gaucher's disease, a rare and potentiaUy
fatal enzyme deficiency.
After years of waiting, her fami·
Iy rejoiced at the ~lease of a new
drug last spriqg, Cqedase, which
reverses the worst symptoms of
Gaucher's disease. But thanks to
the consequences of the Orphan
Drug_Act of 1983, she can't afford
to buy Ceredase. It would cost her
$340,000 a year. Her health insurance policy has a $1 million spending cap that would be quickly
reached if she .used it to_pay for
Ceredase, and since the policy covers her husband 1111d children too,
she can't afford to use it up.
For many patients who suffer
from tare diseases, the introduction
of new drugs was one of the miracles they expected from the Orphan
Drug Act, but for some the promise
has tUrned to disappointment 1111d
desperation.
Orphan drugs are those that no
company wants to produce because

EMS units answer eight cal_ls. ·

•
-Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
~.-

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

-

· 7:10 PM DAILY.
. SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY MATINEES
j
' 3: '

.'

�'

,.•

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.

" We helped each other out,
talked to each other and came out
and played with the same intensity
and focus in the second half as we
did in the first,'' he said:
In other NBA games, Milwaukee beat Washington !09-97,
Cleveland clobbered Atlanta 134107, Sacramento beat Orlando I06100 and Hous100 defeated Golden
Slate 99-96.
Bucks 109, Bullets ?7
At Landover, Moses Malon~
had 24 points and a season-high 19
rebounds.
The Bucks got 21 points from
Larry Krystowiak and J5 from
Dale Ellis.
The Bullets started their lOth
different lineup in 21 games this
season. Pervis Ellison, the club's
second-leading scorer and top
rebounder, sat out the game with a
bruised leg.
Reserve A.J. English loo Washington with 22 poi'!ts and Torri
Hammonds added 2~.

Cavaliers 134, Hawks 107
At Richfield, Larry Nance
scored 26 points and Brad Daugherty had 20 points and 15 rebounds.
Atlanta stars Dominique
Wilkins and Kevin WiUis had subpar nights.
.
Wilkins, averaging 28 points per
game, ·was Mid 10 14. Willis,,.the
NBA' s leading rebounder at 17 per
game, got orily seven rebounds and
II pointS against the Cavaliers.
Kings 106, Magic 100
Lionel Simmons scored 28
points and Wayman Tisdale had 26
points and II rebounds as the
Kings handed the Magic their fifth
straight loss.
The Kings outscored the Ma~ic
16-6 in tne first 5:24 of the thud
quarter to take a 70-53 lead.
Terry Catledge paced Orlando
with 27. points, 21 in the first half.
Scou Skiles scored 21 points, all in ,
the second half, and Mark Acres

Scoreboard
Tonight's games

NFL schedule
Saturday

p.m.
·

p.m.

Wnhington at PitLSburgh, 7:35 p.m.

St. Louis at Quebec, 7:35 p.m.
~tro~t 11 C.!J~ry, 8:05p.m.

p.m.

Philadelphia at Oticago, 2:35 p.m.
Detroit at Edmonton, 8:05" p.m.·

1...01 Anade&amp; Raidcn at New Orlcar11,
9p.m.

East

Atl1nUc Dlvlllon

Mnn chuscus 15, Holy Cr06s 73
Pel.

N~w

Yod: ............. .l3

Milm1 ....................,.9
P!Wodclpu. .............9
O.lando ....................6
New Ieney ..............6
Wu!Unalon ............. .6

•

6
II

.684
.450

II

.4l0
.31 6

1l
14

IS

CB
4.5

4.l

.300

7
1.5

.216

8

South
Aa. lnLcmatia-.al 82, St. Thomas, Pla.

68

3

.842

7
AllmLI ................... II 10
M.ilwaukce ............. lO 12
Deuoll. ..................... 9 13
lndiono ..................... 9 13
ChariOU&amp; •......•...•...... 6 16

.631

4

.Sl4
.4$5

6
7.5

· Clet~tland .--- ..12

•

.409

8.5

.409

8.l

.773

1\.S

Midwest

Far West
Gcrtitlll79, Idaho SL 70
Peppcrdin~ 19, Cal St .·F~U enoo 69
Ullh &amp;4. Lewis-Clark St. 62

Ohio boys high school
basketball scores

•

·•

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•l 01~111011
W l. Pn
Ullh ....................... l4 I .636
"""'""' ............... .II I
.l79

Tum

-'
0

•'

GB
Ll

SanAn..Uo ......... .. ll I
Denver .....................9 11

.l79
.450

4

l)ollu ..................C.... 9 12
Minnelau ..... ........... 3 14

.42'1

4.l

.176

U

Brookville 75, New Leb1 non

LA. l.akcn ............ 14

Oc. H•wkcn 73, Newbury 69
FJyri.a FDCS 92, King's 56

Ll

Manillon ChrUt.lan 74, Akron Ouis·
liln36

Oringe Chri1tlan 61,

7

.661

8

.632
.619

I

Ponllnd ................ .13

l'tl001ia .................. l3
Suttl~ ................... .ll
L.A. Cippas ......... 12
S,mmento ............. .1

9

.S9!.

l.l

9

:SjO

10

.S4l

1l

13

.350

6.S

Ohio girls high school
basketball scores

2S

Akron Buchu:! 73, Akron Fircst011c
2i

NcwJency 12l,Dawcr8l
Milwa~ 109, Wuhina1on 97
Clt•elaftd 134, Alllnll1t7
Howtoo 99. Golden St•~ 96
S,cnmcn~a I 06, Orlando I 00

Tonight's games

Se.lulc 11 801ton, 1:30 p.m.
Miami 11 Outou~; 7: 31J p.m.
I)jllllltlndianl, 7:30p.m.
Philldel~ at MiMCIOU, 8 p.m.
PhOCI!.illl San An\Onio, 8 p.m.
New Yodt II ChiCI&amp;O. 8:30p.m.
· Ut.~h at L.A. Clippen, 10:30 p.m.
Dcuoit" PGUal\d, 10:30 p.m.

Saturday's games
. B0110n at Now York, 7:30p.m.
O..rlou at New J...yi1 :JO p.m.
Scaule at Philtdtl~ia, ~p.m.
Chica&amp;o at ~uhinaton, 7:30p.m.
Allanta al Miami, 7:30p.m.
D1IW 1&amp; Cle'ltl1ftd, 7131 p.m.

Akron E. 50, Ak.ron.Kenmore 38
Akron EUet 74, Akron Garfield 51
Akron N. 42, Akron Cent·HoWer 36
Aluoo SprinJ. 45, Nordon~ 37
Ak(on St. Vincent-St. Muy 61,
AluooE1ma24
Alliance 67, Uniontown LU.c 34
BUT\Civilfe 87, Dridgepon 67
Dallvia 36. Cin. Counuy Day 30
Deaver Creek 61. Day. Stcbbins'I9
Bca..,er Local 74, Portsmouth E. 28
Bellbrook 65, Ollcwood 53
Helpre 58, Hemlock Miller 46
Benjamin Logan 37, Triad ]2
Betlin Hiland 79, Jewcu-Scio 58
Dis Wail!ut60, Dcdey 45
Dlan ~ hcl: tcr 45, Goahcn 2.S
o~ ckcye Loca l 44, Union l..oc:al 38
Buckeye VaUc:y 5 I, R.iv~r Vdky 32
Canton Timkcn 54, ManiUon Pcny

l4

Celina S l, Defiance 29
Cin. Aiken 71, Cin. Colerain 49
Cin. Olcn Elite 64, Tift 19
Cin. ll arrison 78, Cin. Hughes 24
Cin. Loveland 71, Cin. Taylor 33
G.n. Madeira 47, Cin. lndian Hill19
Cin. McAuley 61 , Cin. McNicholas

OenYir al Indian.~, 7t30 p.m.
San Antonio at HOUlton, 8 : ~ p.m.
Minneloca It Mllwawi«. 9 p.m.
Dcttoit at Utah. 9:30p.m. ·
S.crarnerwo uP&lt;Wand,10 p.m.
· Orlando;uJ'Joldcn·SUitc,-10:30 p.m.

-••

Sunday's games
~

•
••

Orlando 1t LA. Ciippcn, 9 p.m.
Satramento 1t L.A. Laten. 10:30
p.m.

In theNHL ... .
WALES CONFERENCE

•

Pattkk Dl•lllon

T"ln
W•lhlnl""'·"""'
N.Y. Ranam .....
Pitubyta!&gt; ..........

New!...., ........

W L T PU. GFGA
21 9 0 42 137 9l
17 12 I

35 IOJ "94

lliO 4 34 12.! 106

Il l! J
N.Y. blandcn .... 10 14 4

Jllll 88

24 t0l11 2
Pltilodclpltl........ 9 IS 4 22 10 99

-,.

••

••

.•.
.•'

-

Adam• Dlrillon
MOOltUI ........... 20 12 2 42 108 74
Bootat ................ 12 13 l ~. 103107
HonlonL ........... II 12 4 26 17 96
B..tf•lo............... 9. IL 4- 22 15101
~ebo: ....

.......... 9 II 3 '21 99122

•
'·

'•.'·
·.::
•
.,
•.

••
•
·'
••
••
••••
. til

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

...

· -- Cin. Mt. Htill thyl4,0llt' Hinl49

'

Cin. Nort hw c1L 57, Cin. Winton
Woodt 43
Cin. Princeton 47, Middletown 34
Clll. St. Dcmard 60, Seven Hills 20
Cin. Turpin 4~, Aniclia-37Cin. Wc.altm Jlilll SO, Cin:- Wilhrow
48
Cin. Woodward 52. Cin. Ander101137
Cin. w~~ 49, Maric:mont36
Citc:lcvtlle 52; Amanda-Clcarcroc.k 33
Claymont a~\feadowbl'OOJt ppd.
Oc. Bcaumont48, Cle. St.fOscpn 43
Cl~ . Lutheran We~t 43 , Cu~ah o g a
HtJ. 33
C\c. Villi An&amp;cla·St Joseph 100, Cle.
Erievitw 44 ·
Qcar Fork 56, Mansfield Madiloo l6
Clermont NE 53, N. CoUc4c Hill 41
Clinton Muaic S4, Cedarville 30
Col. Bocc:hcroft ~9. Col Brooknaven
li
Col. Briw 59, Col. Maria\ Fran.k.lin
ll
Col. Ea.• 7l, Col. Mifflin 56
Col. E•stinoor79, Wen 30- ·
Col. lndepcndc.nco 62, Walnut Ridge
lO

t~nn'

-a... .
Team

W L T I'll. GFGA

Detroit ................ I8 9 4 40 124 100
St Louil ............ t3 10 1 31 106104

Cbl~;:~ao. .............

tl 13

r ....................

II IS
· 9 J8

s
3
s

3t 10s1oo

2l 9610l
23 !lt07

S•JtiM Dlvlaloo .

w.,... . . . . . .

V.-. . ......:.. II II 3
ll97
t.oa Anplol ....... 12 12 6
.......... 1214 5
~ ..............

.

l9 Ill 97

319419
'10 lOS ll6

:19 IOliiO

1214 4 21101105
s..1oio ........... !. 7 22 3 17 1214l

nuntday'lscores
iloaion S, M"'""'ll

...

Douoi14. Qt.- I
T_,.l, All1adolpltia I, U.
t.oa An~ 2. Wionipo&amp; I
s.. J... 6, -....,!

LOS ANGELES :DODGERS -

duU. In lh&lt; Dominican Rq&gt;UI&gt;W:.

Y~r~M~ww7,......_.5

••
••
.•

.,·.
•
0

·.
••

•

SLICK S1'ICKWORK - Detroit's Sergei
·Federov (left) lips tbe pitk between the legs of
Quebec's Mikhail Tatarinov (4) and in the
direction or Red Wing teammate Bob Probert .

*""

Basketball

"

N1llon11 Bulc.ttball Auodatlon

s;snu

SACRAMENTO KINGS -

Spud Wtbb, &amp;Uird , to I rOI,Ir•ycar oontnct
cxlelnlion lhroulh lhe 199S-96~C.Uon .
l
SA.N ANTbNJO SPURS - Signed
VlMic Johnlon, auanl. Waived Tom Gar·
riclt, 1uard.

J;LBOW TO CHEEKBONE- Atlanta's Gary Leonard is only
inches away from slicking his elbow in the cheek of Cleveland frontman .Danny Ferry (35) in the fourth quarter of Thursday night's
NBA game in Richfield, Ohio, which the Cavaliers won 134-107.
(AP) • ·- - .
.
·
~ ' ..

Athens to host Meigs Saturday
. By DAVE HARRIS
·
Sentil)el Correspondent
T)le Meigs Marauders, fresh off
of Tuesday evening's exciting 6561 victofJI over the Belpre Golden
Eagles, travel to The Plains on Saturday evening to play the Athens
Bulldogs.
Athens, under first-year head ,
coach Tim Smith, are 0-2 on the
year, losing to Nelsonville-York
86-83 and Waverly 79-45. Smith,
after 10 years as girls coach, took
over this season for Fred Gibson,
who stepped down after 15 years at
the helm.
The Bulldogs are a tall team
with all five starters over 6-1.
Athe'ns are led by 6-4 sophomore
Sunny Kalu who is is scoring 23.5
points a game in the young season.
Kalu in his fust varsity start against
Nelsonville scored-32 points and
pulled down 23 rebounds.
gained 1,642 yards this season and
has 4,001 career rushing yards.
Lester, a sel)ior fullback, has 1,116
rushing yards this season and 3,552
for his career.
•'They have two rea lly good
backs," Donnan said. "O ur
defense is set up. We've been very
good against the run and prelly
good against the pass. The big key
for us is how well we tackle.
" Titey don't march (down the ·
field), what they do is make big
plays," Donnan said. "We know
what they 're going to do. They line
up and come right at you. ••
Marshall is giving up only 3.3
yards. per rush and held Ea. stern
Kentucky 10 140 yards rushmg on
40 carries in last year's game.
"It'll be awful tough," Kidd
said. "Their front four and cs pecially their linebackers arc very
good. we didn't do a very good /'ob
running the ball against them ast
year.
"I think we're going to have
(throw.the ball more),'.: he.said . -~
we don't mix it up, 1 don't think
we're going to run the football on
them ...

.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS AM~ that Dexlet Manley, defensive
end, 101\.CCI polidve for drugs and retitr..d,
_dfoctivo immodiai.Cly.

·

COo~~•

~

ILY ··
Rl'. 33

NEXT TO FAST '4 U AND

·

The Dally Sentinel Page 6

~,

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· his -request this
Pastuch $Sid the girls still face
other problems.
" I think there might be kids
who might forfeit and refuse to
wreslle them,'' he said. "There's
differem feelings around the state
on that. A 'lot of people feel that
girls shouldn't be wrestling at.all.
Some o~ the_coaches feel thai way.
So they 11 stmply boycott and not
wrestle them."

Kentucky~hands Moreh~ad

State cagers 101-84 defeat ·
By MJKE EMBRY
AP Sports Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - It
was almost a moral victory for
Morehead Sta.te. .
.The lightly-regarded Eagles .
gave No. 9 Kentucky an unexpeet•
ed battle to the end before falling
101-84 Thursday night in Freedom
Hall.
" I have a good basketball learn
now , and I like that a lot," said
Morehead State headcoach Dick
Fick. " We didn't win, and we're
very disappointed , but we proved
to ourselves that we arc a good bas·
ketl)all team."
Kentucky also is convinced the .
Eagles are for real
"We'expected ·this team to play

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Ken
Keltner, the Cleveland Indians
third baseman who made two outstanding backhand plays to stop
Joe DiMaggio's record 56-game
hitting streak, has died of an appar- .
ent heart attack.
Keltner, who was 75, was found
dead Thursday at his suburban
New Berlin apanment after he did
nol arrive at St Luke's Hospital to
visit his wife, Evelyn, who had a
stroke several months ago.
DiMaggio went 0-for-3 on July
17. 1941, when Keltner made his
two stops at Cleveland's Municipal
Sladium, and then threw DiMaggio
out both limes. The golden ,anniversary of the streak was this summer
and Keltner was honored along
with the former New York Yankees star.
In 13 seasons in th e majors,
Keltner hit .276 with 163 home
runs and 852 RB!s. He was selected to seven _American League AllStar teams and played on the Indians' 1948 world championship
team.
"He was a dedicated, uue Milwaukeean," said former Milwaukee Braves shortstop Johnny
Logan . "He was a Milwaukeean .
He got his start here, and he was an
idol to the old-timers.
" He was an outstanding hiller.
He was not a classic third baseman ,
but he worked to become-a good ,
outslanding third baseman. When
he stopped DiMaggio, that was his
trademark.''
Keltner , a Milwaukee nati ve
who regularly attended Milwaukee
Brewers' games in retirement,

signed with- the minor-league Mil·
waukee Brewers in 1935. He was
sold to the Indians in 1937.
He' played for the Indians
through 1949, missing the 1945 ·
season when .he was in military service. Keltner finished hi s career
wi th the Boston Red ·So• in 1950.
" He was a great baseball man
and very loyal to Milwaukee,"
Milwaukee Brewers president Bud
Selig said. "We will really mi ss
him around the ballpark."
·

very tough, aild they did," said
Kentucky guard Richie-Parmer
"Titey didn'igive up until the very
last basket."
Farmer hit a three. pointer to .
ignite a 12-2 run in the .finiiJ 2:5.4
that lifted the Wildcats to ·their
fourth straight victory. .
In other Top 25 games Thursday
night, No. 10 Utah routed LewisClark 84-62 and No. 18 Michigan
beat Eastern Michigan 91-77.
Kentucky ,(5-1) scored seven
suai ght points to open up a seemingly safe 81-M Cushion on Jamal
Mashburn's three-pointer from the
right wing with 9:33to go.
But Morehead ~tate (3-3),
whose.only game agamst Kentuc~
'had been a 71 -64 loss in the 1961
NCAA tournament, fought back
against its heralded in-state foe to
uail 89-82 when Mitch Sowards hit
a f9ul shot with 3:16 left in 'the
game.
Farmer then hit a three•pointer
from the top of the key, and Gimel
Martinez and Sean Woods followed with two free throws eacti to
push Kentucky out to a 96C82
advantage at I:35.
'
P.J. Nichols slipped insideJor a
layup to pull Morehead_State to 9684 at 1:15, but Kentucky's Mash·
bum finished the scoring with five
points in the last minute foq~e ·-­
final margin.
Mashburn led Kentucky with 25
points, while John Pelphrey had 18,
Woods 13 and Farmer II.

The Meigs County Pioneer and Historical
Society Is offering a Christmas _sped••through the month of· December on:
reprints of the Hardesty History of Melg~
County (1883) .for $21.00, and Milgs
County History- Larkin (1908) for $19.00~
The society has copies of the Meigs Countj
History, Volume II available for $49.00 •
·and a vety limited number of 'tlte new pi~
torial history of Meigs County, Thru the
Years in ·Picture for $37.00·. These books
may be purchased at the Meigs County
Museum, 144 Butternut Avenue, Pol,fteroy,
during regular hours, Tuesday through
Saturday, 1:00·4:30. For mail orders add
$3.00 per book•

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a

depressed. They really help~d us
out."
·
Both girls lost elimination
matches on points and will not be
wrestling Wednesday when University High goes against Liberty.
Pastuch said he has asked for
waivers !hat would allow the girls
to tuck their long pair in10 swimming caps under their headgear.
He said he expects a ruling on

Heart attack claims Ken '((eltner,
DiMaggio's hitting-streak killer

....
By KEN RAPPOPORT
lead and their winning goal at 3:20 of the second
· AP Hockey -Writer
period.
The Red Wings are red-hot.
Maple Leafs 1, Flyers 1 - Philadelphia's Rod
"I was very impressed by Deuoit - everyone
Brind'Amour and Toronto's Mike Foligno each
agrees tha~ right now, they are the best team in the
scored first-period goals as the Flyers and Maple
NHL," Quebec head coach Pierre Page said followLeafs skated to a tie. .
ing a 4-lloss to the R~ Win~s Tuesd;lynight.
The Flyers, WhO had defeated Toronto in four
The game at the Joe Louts Arena was typical of
straight games prior to Thursday night, i/llproved
the way the Red Wings have been playing of late.
their season-best unbeaten sueak to three - (1-0-2).
After a 5·8-1 stan, they have been nearly unbeatable
The Leafs appeared to take a 2-1 lead at 6:52 of
with a 12-1-3 record.
the third period when a drive from the l~ft circle got
The Montreal Canadiens, who lost 5-2 at Boston
by Philadelphia goalie Ken Wregget. But Foligno
on Thursday nigh~ share the NHL's best record of 42
was ruled to he in the crease and the goal was disalpoints with the Washington Capitals.
lowed.
In other games, it was Toron10 I, Philadelphia I:
Sharks 6, Oilers 3 - Rookie David Bruce scored
San Jose 6, Edmonton 3; Vancouver 7, Minnesota 5:
two goals and Doug Wilson added a goal and two
and Los Angeles 2, Winnipeg I.
assists as the Sharks defeated Edmonton, snapping
Nicklas Lidstrom and Sergei Fedorov each had a
the Oilers' seven-game unbeaten streak.
goal and an assist as the Red Wings ended the
Bruce had his fii'St two-goal game in the NHL and
Nordiques' unbeaten streak at five games (4-0-1).
Wilson scored the first offour 'consccutive first-peri- ·
The Red Wings' home winning streak is their longest
od goals for San Jose, which has a 2-1-1 record in
since 1965.
four games against Edmonton.
.
Jayson More, David Bruce and Kelly Kisio also
Detroit goaltender Tim Cheveldae, wha faced
only 16 shots, had a shutout going until Dan Lambert
scoted for the Sharks, who are 3-3-2 in their last
scored for Quebec with 7:52 to play.
eight games.
.
The Nordiques had taken the game's first six
Canucks 7, North Stars 5 - Cliff Ronning
shots, but were outshot20-2 over the next27 minutes
scored with 2:0fieft to break a 5-5 tie and lead the
before managing two shots in the last seconds 'of the
Canucks over the Nortli Stars.
second period. Te Nordiques only had 16 shots to
The North Stars had trailed 5~3 at the end of the
Detroit's 47.
second period, but tied it at 5 with less than three
"We started strong, but then we got satisfied with
minutes left. Jyrki -Lumme had a goal and three
ourselves," Page said.
assists for Vancouver.
Detroit now heads west for a six-game road trip.
Kings 2, Jets 1 - Wayne Gretzky's goal with
"This was an important win , especially going on
8:38 left in the third period broke a tie as the Kings
the road," Murray said.
ended Winnipeg's 11-game un~&gt;eaten sueak. _
Bruins 5, Canadiens 2- Barry Pederson scored
Gretzky's 12th goal of the season came when he
his first goal as a reclaimed Bruin and Scon Amell
put the rebound of Tony Granato's shot past goalie
had the tie-breaking goal.
Stephane Beauregard from five feet away, enabling
Pederson, returning as a free agent to the team for
the Kings to end their five -game losi ng streak. -The
. which he played from 1981 10 1986, scored on the
goal gave Gretzky a 10-game point-scoring streak,
12th Boston shot on a power play at 3:33 of the first , the longest in the NHL .
period.
..
_ """ Winnipeg, which dropped two points behind firstArniel 's first goal of the season, a tip-in of Jim
"place Vancouver in the Smythe Division, was H-0· 3
Wiemer's drive from the point, gave the Bwins a 3-2
since its last loss to Sl. Louis on Nov. 14.

Sunday ihru Thursday, 10 am·9 pm ; Friday &amp; Saturday , 10 am-10 pm

•

40,

·. Scou Hillkirk, a 6-6 senior forward, and Jason Reed, a 6-1 senior
guard, are returning starters from
last season. Reid Schaller, a 5-11
senior who was counted on to start
is out with broken foot.
Meigs is led by forward Trevor
Harrison (6-1, jr.) who scored 36
points in the win over Belpre.
Junior guard John Bentley also had
a good game against the Golden
Eagles .with 17 points. Center L.J .
Mitch (6.3, sr.) was limited to six
points but had seven rebounds and
played an unselfish game on
offense with several assists. Shawn
Hawley also had his share of
rebounds and hit a key basket in
the co.meback win , while Frank
Blake added five assists and along
with Phil Hovauer played a good
defensive game. Jay Cremeans a 65 junior also had some quality
playing time off of the bench.
Meigs is scheduled to start
Bentley (6-1, jr.) and Blake (5-9,
sr.) at guards, Hawley (6-1, sr.) and
Harrison at forwards, and Mitch at
center. Athens should have Reed
and Justin School at guards, Dan
Kyger and Hilkirk at forwards, and
Kalu at center.
Tip-ofi for SaturdaY's reserve
game is 5:55 p.m.

tie ~ndwith eaCh oth~."
·Nicklow , a 119-pounder, said
having three sisters has been a factor in her success. "You've got to
be tough with all those girls
around," she said:
- The parents of both girls agreed
10 allow them 10 wrest!~ with the
same. stipu~tion: Another !lirl had
to~ on the team.
,
I JUSt laughed at her, but were
kind of used to it," said Sadie
Nicklow, Rachel's mother. "She
always liked to do things like \hat,
sports that boys normallydo."
Pretzel said her father was skeptical about the idea 10 begin with .
"I said, 'Guess what I'm going
to be ip?"' Pretzel said. "He was
guessing cheerleading, basketball,
everything he could guess.
"Now everybody knows around
Bruceton because dad's telling all
his friends,' ' sl]e said. "It's fun ."
"I didn'-t think much of it to
start with,,. said Dav e Pretzel,
Joni's father. " Wrestling all boys,
that's the pan I didn' t care for. But
it. was something she wanted to do
and if you want to be good at
something you do it"
Both girls said their male teammates have accepted them ..
"They respect us," Nicklow
said. " They ueat us really good. If
it wasn't for them helping us out,
then I doubt we would have (wrestled). We would have been too

..

RES,.IURAN'

Football

N•llonal FOOibtll Lt~aue

(24), who scored on the play during the first
period of Thursday night's game in Detroit's
Coho Arena, which the host Red Wings won 4-1

·. Detroit hands Quebec
4•1
defeat
--

, Featuring ,

Pinn""'wol.l, Cia. CAPI!40
· Fla!w Cllh. 41. U... Union 44
Oreen

•.

~f,
,_e..:.

Pm'SBURGH P!RATES ~ A.,-ood
10
wi~ Steve Buechele:, lhlrd base·
, man, on a fwr-ycu cootnc:t.

,_.,

Fcdml HO&lt;Iting 60, Ncl... vUo Yodt

a., Furnace
21

.·.••••·
·...·'..

· 60od's Ab"a~

Named Ralph Avil• Moe pmidcnt wilh

Nadon1l Hoc:key Le1gue

ll
FrantUn
Ponamotllh

··:
••
:; ·
•.
••
;,
••
:~

with Oti1 Nixon, oulliclder, On 1

Hockey

;find!Citcr

2l

'

two-year conthct. ,

Col. Whcutone 41, Col. Contcnni•l
Coldwllcr96, New Knonil.lc 17- .
Colwnbia' 42, Richmond HtJ. 40
Crc~lllnc 48, Lucu 2S
Cuyahoa.• Filii 55, Bubcnon 44
Danville 69, Cmttrbu rg _ ~O
Day. Car141c 54, D•y. Nonhridgc 32
Day. CarroJJ 48, Lcmoo·Mc.lroc 46
Dcl1wan: 69, Fr~nklin Hei&amp;hts 30
E. Brown 76, W. Pike 50
Ed ... S. 70, BtllaU.lO
.
e~ 49. N. u~ .. 41
f11dl 64, St. Mary'• 63
Fairbani&lt;J 41, Mod11nicabou 40
Fairfield Union 63, C1n1l

Norrill Divlllaa

·:

'·
•••
•••
:·
••

51

l4

•

••

Chria-

South weiLt\m 60, Painsville Grand
River 57

I

Thu~ay's scores

•

Men~or

Lian 42

Golden Suoo .......... 12 7

.••

Di~le

' 56

Paclnc Dlwilion

•
••
•

Kentucky I01, Morehead St. &amp;4
R&gt;dlord 91. C.brini 71

Miami, Ohio S9, Daytm 47
• MichiJan 9l, E. Michigan 77
NE tllinoi.J 83, Wright St. 82
Ohkl U. 78, Robert MorriJ 67
Wis.-MilwaWtcc 77, Montlfla St. 75

Central Dhillon

Chir•ao.................. l6

year," he said, adding that he
planned to remind his defensive
!9
backs about Donnan's remarks.
Maplelon 42, Sooth Ccntral28
Maranalha Cbriltian 37, Col. Sc;hool.
'rhe ability of those defensive
rar OirlJ 29
backs
will be under scrutiny on
Marion Local !6, Minatcr 2'1
Mauillon Jac:k1011 48, New PhiladelSaturday.
Payton, a junior who was
phio4l
named Southern Conference player
Mo"'""' 48, Milbuty lAke 2l
MoDonnoa NW ll, Roolt Hill 5l
of the year, is better than ever.
Medina Hiahland 74, Riuman 4!5
He's thrown for 2,902 yards on
Mrzcy 46, tin. ROJcr Bac:an 42
' 182 of 279 passes. He set a regularMiddletown Founck 59, Odord Talawandl S6 ar
season mark for passing efficiency
Minlwd 73, Whooltnbwg 64
and
also completed-21 of 27 passes
Mingo 5J, Shadylide 36
N. Ridge 60; Worthington Chri•li•n
for 344 yards last week in a win
ll
over Northern Iowa. His compteNapoleon 37, To!. Whitmer 32
Noelh Adami 60, l'&lt;oblool9.
tion percentage of .778 set a 1-AA
N~and 60, Col. Li.nden-McXinlcy
playoff reconl.
4l
The secondary won't stand a
Nolil.nor6t,Canlin...,.46
Norwalk St.l'lul62. "Cre.:tvicw 26
chlmce
if Eastern Kentucky's
Norwood 43,Cin. Walnut Hill• 36
defensive
line doesn't pressure
Olentanay 40. LU.ewood 29
0..11"" Clay6S, Foaorit 60
Payton,
Kidd
said.
l'onJtbuo1ll, BowU.s C.... 53
"If
we
don't,
we're going to be
Pl.e~~anL 67, Hardin Ncirthem 61
Pn::ble Shawnee 38, Eaton 37
in uouble," Kidd said. "Because
Ra't'CMI 38, Kent ROOie"fflt 21 •
the young man can sit back and
R.iver 69, SlcUbenvillc42
pick us apan."
.
Rocky River Magnificat SO, Lor•in
Kin23
EKU
defenders
have
put
pre!\ourord .0, Anthmy Wayne 36
sure on Opposing quarterbacks all
Rt.lllcll, Ky., 66, Porumoulh 31
S. Wcbti.CI: Sl, Waverly 29
season long.
Sandy V.1Ucy 80, Canton Herit1ge
Four of the five players on the
Chriltian 17
Shenandoah 44, Bealbville 32
· line are aii-OhioValley Conference
Sa,..ol4, Watalord 42
selections, while the fifth was secSparta Hij.hltnd 47, Frf.dericlr.town
33
ond-team all-conference. Greg
Sprina. Northwealern 56, Belle·
McKee, a 6-foot-2, 279 senior
ranu.ine 3S
defensive tackle, has II sacks to
Sprin&amp;bcxo 61, Liulo Miuni 21
St UrRlll49, Mount Notn: Dame l j
lead the team in that category.
SteUbenville 31, E. LivCIPOOI37 Of
Apother key link in the line is
Suubura43, Malvcm 24
SylvaNa Southview 39, Tel . Sprins;·
David Wilkins, a 6-4, 242-pound
field 2j
senior end who has 10 sacks and is
Teays Valley 5S, Bloom-Carroll 28
TIDCUITIICh 4 J • Gtunon 32
· ' being scouted by the Dallas Cow TorontoS7,Cad.iz SO
boys, New York Giants and Atlanta
Trac dlife48, Col." Academy 18
Tricounly NIX\h 37, AK:anum 26
Falcons.
Trot'NOOCI Madilion 53, Piq111 SOOT
''Their big way to stop the pass
Troy 46, Norlhmorn 38 20T
is
to
rush the passer," Donnan said.
Twcar1wu Valley 46, Fairless 33
UniOto 61, Pike&amp;on 56
"Xou've got to protect the quarterUpper Scioto VaUey 60, Ad1 29
back." .
Urban• ao, Spfin&amp;. Northc11t.em 34
The teams have contrasting
UU.. 46, LioltlnLV.Uoy !0
offensive styles, with Marshall
~:~»7~un:.n~9c.nolhon 22
passing 42 percent of the time, or
W. J£49, \\'h;toOu39
Woo!Ungton Cll4l, &lt;ma.r..Jd 36
about
twice every five downs, and
WatkiN Mem. 46, New1rk 3S
Eastern
Kentucky throwing half .
Wilmlllgton48, Miami Tnce 42
W0011.c:r Triway 41 , Medina Buckeye
that much, or about 20 percent of
40
the time.
ZaneTrac:c47,Palm VaUey28
Eastern Kentuc ky counts on
runni,n.~ backs Marku,: Thomas and
_Tra.l!s,act.ic,&gt;n_L . . _.. ,
__ .. - Tim-.::..stennl:l iiSouensive'line to
BasebaU
do'the brunt of its work.
National Leaaue
Thomas, a junior tailback, has
ATLANTA BRAVES - Aarccd to

, MQRG~OWN,, W.Va. (AP) la_die8,but yet ~ey're tough girl~," that,:" tie 'said. "-And iliey seem to .
• •-Two g1rls des9nbed by their head coach M1ke Pastuch satd. be very serious about what they're
, coach as attractive but tough have "They're unusual girls."
doing so far." ·
·
.
_ become the first-ever female . "When they asked if they could
Pretzel, who wrestles at 112
, wrestlers at University High.
come out thts year, I told them, pounds, said growing up with two
Joni Pretzel and Rachel Nick- 'That's fine with me. But you have brothers and a sister has helped her
- low, both ~homores from Bruce- to be here for everything. I want prepare for matches.
.
, ton, SI!Y they re up to the challenge. you to be out the whole year,"'
"I'm always in lights with my
:: And they SI!Y the boys respect their Pa~t.uch. sai,d. ·
. .
brothers. ami sister and_ peoP.le. in
:;; spunk. , . .
.
l dtdn t want them dot~g 11 for my fam1ly;" Pretzel satd. ' I hve
·•
"They re very attracuve
pubhctty p~ses or anythmg Uke on a farm. On weekends, we wres'
·'
·
·
-:
•'

-~

Marshall to
hostEKUin
1-AAplayoffs
.,.

we:~~·~~ev~r~eg~~J·as~alnS:~

Londm 6l, W. 1clfcmm 14 ·
M•anclia Sandy VaUey 80, Canton
Heritage 17
Mandield Sc:nior n , Marion Hanting

EASTERN CONFERENCE
.684

....

23

Major college
basketball scores

In the NBA ...

'

Libert' c...... 41, Alchbold 38
Uberty Union 17, Millcnport 34
l..ocklr.nd 53, New Miami 33
Logan Elm 71, Col. HamiltOl). Twp.

Sunday's games

Monday

Kan111 Lalt011 47, Northwood 40
Kenton Ridac 53, Sprina. Sh• wnec

LoJtina""' 43, Aohland 24

Minnucu at San Jose, 10:35 p.m.

Pt:'ocnil.

W L

51

p.m.

Miami at San J&gt;icao, 4 p.m.
It ~vcr, 4 p.m.
· BUII'olo alnclilnlpolil, S p.m.

B..IM .................... I! 6

Johnltown49,Col. Aldcr47

Wtnrnpca atMn)onlon , 8:0S p.m.
Bulf'alo at Moo1.10111, 8:0S p.m.
Vancouver u Los Angeles , 10 :35

p.m.

Ttall

Oen0110, WoodmoR:l!i
Gnham 1!, W. Libcrt1·Salan 40
Oranview 66. Madilon-P1ainl35
Gnnvillo4!, Lickin.c llm&amp;hu 26
Greenup Oy, Ky., d, Ironlca l3
Hamillon Badin S6, Cin. Sc:tM 3S
Hathaway Brown 40, Andrew• 35
HCIIh 70. New Albany 24
HuntinJton S2. Adena 34
Independence 32, Aurora 29
Indian Laltoll, Ri...,;dol3

at Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, ' :05 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at HaNotd, 7:35p.m.
New Jersey at N.Y. hlandctl, 7:35

Ne• Yod: Giants 11 Wuhinston, 4

.••

II\ £ut 3j

Gatea Milia Hawken '!1, Clc. Lulhu·

Saturday's games

New Enalaad 11 New York Jeta:, l

•

Hoban 39

Chie~ao

.

'

lbutford at Buffalo, 7:3S p.m.
PiU&amp;buraft at New Jcncy, 7:3S p.m.
N.Y. Ranacn at Wuhinaton, 7:35

had season highs with \3 points
and 12 rebounds for the Magic.
Rockets 99, -Warriors 96
Rookie Matt Bullard hit a dunk
shot with 16 seconds remaining to
lift the Rockets over the Warriors. .
Bullard's shot ga~e the Rockets
a 97-96 lead. Golden State 's
Safunas Marciulionis missed a ·
jumper from the lane with two sec- .
onds left and Houston's Kenny
Smith then made two free throws
with a second remaining to account
for the finlil score.
The 6-10 Bullard scored 17
points for the Rockets, who were
led by Hakeem Olajuwon's 33
points and 20 rebounds. Marciulionis and Chris Mullin led the Warriors with 27 and 24 points, respectively.

ByMATIHARVEY
Assoeialed Press -Writer
HUNTINGTON, Y/.Va. (AP)
- Eastern Kentucky head coach
Roy Kidd isn't talking revenge, but
it's clear he hasn't forgotten a
remark by Marshall's Ji!ll Donnan
after last season's regular-season
game between the teams.
Eastern Kentucky won that contest 15-12, but Marshall quarterback -Michael Payion threw for 184
yards. Marshall (10-3) and Eastern
Kentucky (12-1) meet again Satlirday in an NCAA Division l-AA
semifmal.
' 'I know their coach said last
vear that. our__secondary was not ··
~ery good,''Rilld said.
.. .

Oarficld Hta1 Trinity 70, Akron

p.m.

Sunday
Clndnnau at Pltbburah, 1 p.m.
Daliu It PbiJadelphia, } p.m.
Scaulut Allanca,l p.m.
Dcuo.itat Orc:CI;I Bay, I p.m.
H&lt;*IIOII 11 Cll"eltnd, 1 p.m.
l..OI Anaclea Ram• at MiMcaola, 1

. .

'

Friday, December 13, 1991
.,
Page-4

Nets, Cavaliers among NBA victorS,

Tampt Bay atCIW:ago, 12:30 p.m.
Kan.au City at Sm Franciaco, 4 p.m.

· · Pomeroy--Middle,iOrt;Ohlo

•

·The Daily Sentinel :rretzeJ,Nucklow.firstfemale wrestlers at Morgantown~sch(Jol
:.Veet. . .

Sports
By The Associated Press
The New Jersey Nets held a
block pany at the Meadowlands.
The NelS rejected an NBAreeord 22 shots Thursday night .in a
121 -81 rout of the Denver Nuggets.
Eight New Jersey players had at
. least one bloet; with Derrick Coleman leading the way•with six. Sam
Bowie swatted away five shots and
Chris Dudley blocked four.
"Our defensive intensity was as
good as I've ever seen," said
Bowie, who also-had 12 points and
I0 rebounds in just 18 minutes.
The Nets; who led 57-26 at halfLime, broke the record with 8:.46
left-in the game when Tate George
blocked a layup by Chris Jackson.
The previous NBA record for
blocked shifts in a game was 21 by
the Detroit Pistons (1980), Los
· A!)ieles l..alcers (1982) and Clevelllii id eriiliRI (1989). ·•
·· ·
Coleman, who scored 16 points,
sai~ the Nets played excellent team
defense.

~. Friday, December 13, 1991

'"

""7

*IIIWalaiODt*
_,_ and filii Fill IDIIncladed
*Ill Patalllll IN sa•JeciiG Cndlllpii'DVII

Total Elodrio Kilcbett a I.auadly Avlillblt
FealuriO,I!oool)' EIBcleot lltall'lunpt

DnllllliBullder

VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPIED

VI

J,

I

9,9%APR
FINANCING

�By The Bend

..

•

The Daily Sentinel

• Friday, December 13, 1991

by Bob Hoeflich

CHURCH

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tht day or that event. Items
must be rtceived well in advance
to ass11re publication in the calendar.

Debbie Johnson, will be presented
at Carleton Church on Friday at 7
p.m. The cantata has been performed at several area churches
A nice honor won by Ay Mom, the two tv's so he no longer had the
and
will be presented at other
daughter of David Mora and gmnd- problem.
churches
in the community in the
daughter of Don and Maida Mom,
Meanwhile, out Rutland way,
future.
The
public is invited to
all of near Pomeroy;
·Joann May reports thar a deer
THURSDAY
aue.
n
d
this
event
with feature s
Ay was named Ohio University moved through the drive-in facility
RUTLAND
•
Revival
at
the
singing
by
various
gospel groups
Homecoming Queen and will be of Bank One while employees
Rutland
Community
Church,
New
including
ihe
Gabriel
Singers, Joy
riding on the queen' s float when watched. Jbann says, however, th? :
Lima
Road,
will
be
held
through
Singers
and
Shama.
1992 activities are held next fall. the deer did not make a deposit.
Saturday at 7 p.m . nightly. Rev.
This year a young lady named Now what did she mean by that?
Carl Eisenhan wilLbe.the speaker .
SATURDAY
homecoming queen in tile fall of
and
Rev.
Dewey
King
invites
the
FAIRPLAIN
· The Liberty
1990 occupied the queen's float
It was in 1974 that Mr. and Mrs. public to attend.
Mountaineers
will
perform Satursince the identity of the new qutlen Richard Rawlings and sons had an
day
at
the
Jackson
County Jam was not announced until the home- unusual experience-on Friday,
SYRACUSE
•
Revival
at
the
boree
in
Fairplain,
W.Va.
• "•·
coming dance · that Saturday Dec. 13th.
··
Syracuse
Nazarene
Church
will
be
evening. Ay is a 1989 graduate of
They had gone to the mall at
HARTFORD, W.Va.· A Christ·
Eastern High School. This may Vienna, W. Va., to view the deco- held Wednesday through Sunday
well be the f~rst time that a Meigs rations and take in the siRhts. with David Canfield the evangelist. mas dinner for American Alloy
Countian has captured the title. When th ey went outside to start Services are at 7 p.m. nightly and employees and Foote Mineral
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. retirees and their families , SaturCongratulations, Ay.
home, the family car was missing.
day, Dec. 14 at the USWA 5171
Security guards were no'tified
RUTI.AND • OAPSE Chrisunas Union Hall , Hartford, W.Va.
And how about that rustic vii - and the searc h went on for two Party will be held Thursday at Rutlage in one of the front windows at hours. Their then three-year-old land Elementary at 6:30 p.m. The
BURLINGHAM • The BurlingAnderson's Furniture on E. Main in son, Tommy , had a ball as the party will be a:potluck dinner, and
ham
Modem Woodmen of America
,Pomeroy? The effective village is . security officers took him under members are to bring a vegetable
Camp
7230 will have a potluck o.n
the creation of Jim Anderson , their wings letting him help turn and desert for their family. OAPSE
Saturday
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall m
·owner, who used the aged lumber out lights, inspect the workings of a will provide the meat. A gift
Burlingham.
Those attending bring
to really bring home the rustic puppet show, sit in Santa's seat and exchange is optional.
table
service.
Everyone welcome.
effect. The numerous buildings do everything that three-year-olds
making up the village are lighted at enjoy. ·
CHESTER • The Shade River
POMEROY - The Preceptor
night. The holiday scene would be
Mrs. Rawlings' parents , Mr. and Lodge' No. 453, F and AM, will
Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
effective in any community or Mrs. Roy Jones of New Haven meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Open
Sorority,
will have their annual
city-certainly a nice touch for were summoned and to pick up the installation of new officers will be
Pomeroy.
Rawlings fam ily at the mall. After held and refreshments will be Christmas party on Saturday at 6
p.m. at the home of Charlone
Mr. and Mrs. Jones arrived, a final served.
Elberfeld.
Bob Gilmore who head s the tout of the mall 's parking area was
Middleport Community Associa- made and the Rawlings' car was
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
. RA,CINE · The Racine Gun
tion is hoping those who made found in an out of the way location. Springs
Grange
will
hold
a
potluck
Club
will hold its Chrisunas party
pledges towards the construction of The car had been doctored to start
dinner
on
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
Memon
Saturday
from 7 p.m. to 12:30
shelt~r at the Dave Diles Park will
without keys but in the process the bers bring non -perishable food
remember now to send them in. If headlight wires were cut and the items. A meeting will follow din- a.m . at the Racine Americ&lt;tn
everyone who pledged sends i,n would-be thief as a result couldn 't ner.
Legion Hall. . ·
their $50 the total raised \\'.ill be - leave the mall parking lor.
$1200 for the project The roofed
LOTTRIDGE . Country Music- Repairs were made so-the family
LONG BOTTOM
The Night at the Lottridgc Community
stage area will e!lhance a variety of could return home in their own car. Coolville
Community Choir will be Center will be held Saturday from
summer entertainment planned for Frustrati ng. to say the least, but the
presented
at 7 p.m. at the 5 p.m. to midnight. All bands are
the park. If you pledged, please Rawlings did enjoy "excl usive" Faith Full Thursday
Gospel
Church
in L9ng welcome and the public is invited
send your contribution to the Trea- possession of the mall for a couple
Bottom. the public is inviteo and to attend. Those attending arc to
surer of the Middleport Community of hours.
refreshments
will be served.
bring a covered dish.
Assn., P.O. Box 9, Middleport,
The Rawlings sons arc now
45760.
grown but probably reflect. on lhat
TUPPERS PLAINS • The TupPOMEROY · "Paddle to the
experience 17 years ago. Tim lives pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Sea".
and "Paul Bunyon" will be
Som.etimes~ problem s ~work in Williamsburg, -va., where he is
will
meet
Thursday
at
7:30p.m.
at
shown
at the Meigs County Public
themselves out.
employed at a nuclear plant: Tedd the post home.
Library
in Pomeroy on Saturday
Kenneth Wiggins, head of the is a techn ica l sargeant at the Hill
and Sunday at 2 p.m . and at the
county's litter control 'program, Air Force Base in Utah and has
FRIDAY
Middleport Library on Monday at
wen1 to work the other morning traveled extensively over the world
RIPLEY • The Liberty Moun- 4:30p.m.
and found that someone had and has lived in several countries,
taineers will perform Friday at .
unloaded two televisions outside and Tom is attending Lee College Skateland
in Ripley, W.Va.
tl¥l program headquarters. What to in Tennessee training to become a
RUTLAND • There will be a
cfo witli -them was a problem which teacher in a Christian school.
round and square dance at the Rut·
RUTLAND · The Return
Ken decided to sleep on. When he
And how was your Friday, the Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R., land American Legion Hall on Sat·
went to work on Tuesday he found 13th?
urday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
will meet Friday atl:30 p.ni. at the music
that overnight somebody had stolen
by Country Kin Band . Ray
Do keep smiling.
home: of Mrs. Vernon Weber. Fitch will be the caller and the pubKrisana Treimong will present the
program, "Chrisunas in Thailand." lic is invited to aucnd.
Hostesses are Mrs. Weber, Mrs.
HARTFORD, W.VA . · The
Cecil Blackwood, Mrs. Stephen
cantata,
"The Wonder·of the SeaJenkins, Mrs. Robert Jewell and ·c son," under
the direction of Kim
Mrs. Dayton Parsons.
Herdman and Debbie Johnson, will
be presented at Father' s House in
POMEROY · The Pomeroy Hartford
, W.Va. m 7 p.m. The can·
By ELISABETH DUNHAM
dispute the DEA's claim that teen Senior Citizens Dance Club will
LSD usc is on the rise.
Associated Press Writer
hold a round and square dance on tata has been performed at several
" I think they are overblowing Friday from 8 to II p.m. at the area churches and will be presented
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) at other churches in the communit y
More than two decades after Ttmo- it." sc id Gann Galloway, a senior citizens center..
in the future. The public is invi ted
thy Leary urged flower chi ldrcn to researcher with the Haight-AshPOMEROY • "Wonder of the to aucnd this .\l'vent with feat ures
"turn on, tune in, drop out," bury Detoxification Clinic. "We're
Season" will be presented at Car· singing by various ~o's pc l groups
authorities say U.S. teens are not seeing a big increase."
increasingly following his a'dvice.
The DEA reported the number teton Church, Kingsbury Road including the Gabriel Singers. Joy
They're gobbling LSD, now a of LSD arres ts among teens has (County Road 18) on Friday at 7 Singers and Shmnit
cheap and easy-to-find drug.
more than doubled in recent years, p.m. The program is a musical celPARKERSBURG · The Meigs
"It never really died away, it froin 102 in 1989 to 205 so far in ebration of Christmas, candle's,
just seems like it's been rediscov- 1991. The number of LSD-related choir and light. Pastor Clyde Hen· Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold
ered," said Maurice Brown , a hospital emergency room visits derson invites the public.
its December meeting on Saturday
spokesman for the j.J.S. Drug amon¥ teens - including "bad
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Enforcement Administration in San trips' - rose 44 percent from
Full
Gospel Church in Long Bot·
Francisco. "It's fairly inexpensive 1986 to 1987, from 2.799 to 4,614,
tom
will
have a hymn sing on Fri··
and it's another high, something the agency said.
day
at
7
p.m.
featuring the Moundifferent, and they are trying it.''
tain
Top
Singers
and Crystal as
The agency sponsored a confer·
well
as
other
local
talent. Pastor
ence in San Francisco this week on
·
Steve
Reed
in
vites
the public.
Wbat do·you see?
the hallucinogenic drug , and
Refreshments
will
be
served.
released data showing a steady
Culturally, constellatiorutare imagS AINS Th T
1.n the number of "acid...
C"'tmb
11
ined patterns among the stars that, in
TUPPER PL
• c uprelated arrests and hospital visits some cases, have been recogltized pers Pl'ains VFW Post No. 9053
amopg teens. .. . , ·
throughout mi~lenia of tradition. In and Ladies Auxiliary will host a
The average h~t of LSD- the early days of astronomy. know!- dance on Friday from 8 to 11:30
~s'ho!l for.J~g!c ·ac!\!.dJethy_!;lmt~~ ~ edge of-the constella~ions·was neces-- · p.m.-with ·music by••-sccon-ct~cm- .~ ·
25- costs about $5 andean dt_p saryinorderto.luncttoouanutroo- tin'."
down to as liule as $1, hctghtenmg omer. For loday's astronomers,
its appeal to cash-short teens , constellations aresimply areas on the
KINGSBURY --The cantata.
according to the agency.
entire sky in which lnterestinl objects
"The
Wonder of the Season,"·undcr
However, some drug researchers await observation and intertm;tation.
· the direction of Kim Herdman and

Authorities: more
teenagers. taking acid

Video Touch
Poinsettias

2~~

at 7 p.m. at Sebastian's in Parkersburg, W.Va.
.
SUNDAY
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
United Methodist Church will pre·

sent its Christmas play, "Birthday
Party for Christ," on Sunday dunng
morning worship services at 19:30
a.m. Fellowship wi)l follow.

Apostoltc

~~------::::::::::~:::::---~~;N:ew;·
u~~CC;hu;.~~h~~r::::-:-~--~f.:~~~~::~------;Po;,.;~~•;y~C~hu~~~ch~
-~. ~~~-~-N~a;~~--~•n=·-------~-S&lt;MIIh O.lh!l
,
... ,_ •
. Cheliei
Sil New
RJd T01tam0111
=
Poator: Rev. Thomu McClung
Church of Christ
Lm
Sundt
. y Sdtool
. -9:30 a,m.
.
ver ae
.

Churdo of J..., Chrllt Apostolic Faltb
New 1..\mil Rd., nOlt to FL M.... Paot
Pastor. Roben W. Ricllanla
Sunday S,chool· 10 a..m.___ ~
~
Bverun1 • 7 p.m:
W~eaday Ser&gt;iCIOa • 7 p.m.
Church or JeMII Clorlll Apotlollc
VanZandt and Want Rd.
Putor.lamea Miller
SUndoy Sthool · I0:_30 Lm.
.
Eveniil&amp; ·7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Semtea- 7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
LlbtrtJ Allembly or God
Dudding Lane, Maaon, W.Va.
Panor: Dan S. -Eaton
Sunday Wonhip -10:30 p.m.
.Thunday Seavioea • 7 p.m.

Baptist
Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport
PaStor: Mark Morrow
Saturday Se!vice ·7:30p.m.
Suncloy School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • tJ un.,
Wedneaday Service-7:30p.m.
Rulland First Baptl,. Church
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm.
Pomeroy Flnl Baptist

East MainS.. ·
Pas&amp;or: Steve Fuller
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
.
Wednesday Services ~ 7:30p.m.

APPRECIATION PLAQUE· "In recognition of exemplary
service to education" was the inscription on the plaque presented
.. to Harold G. Roush or Racine by the Meigs County Board of ~ucation this week. Roush -has been a member of the board smce
1956. He did not seek re-election. Employees in the board office
presented him with a clock. Here John Riebel, left, congratulates
Roush on his 36 consecutive years of serving oil the board.

CHRISTMAS 111801

SHOPPING HOURS
Dally
9:30·8:00 p.. m.
1 to 4

0\\;ff.
5tl'~f.l QJ . ,. ~s
93 Mill Street
Middleport

Poinsettias 4" to 10"
Poinsettia Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus Baskets
· Holly Trees
Cut Christmas Trees
Grave Blankets
Mo11ument Sprays and
Vases
Large House Plants
.Cactus
10" Foll11ga Baskets,
all varieties
Open Dolly i:OO o.m. to 5:00p.m.
Sundly 1:00 p.m. to 5:00p.m.

HUBBARDS GREEN HOUSE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
614-992-SnG

McClure's
Family Restaurant
2FOR

I

Hope Boptlll Chapel
570 Goot St., Middleport
PnLor: David Bryan, Sr.
Suncloy School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • tJ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Ser&gt;ia:1 • 7 p.m.
. VIctory Boptlsl
S2S N. 2nd St., Middleport
Pastor. James E. Kc:csce
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne1day Ser&gt;icea • 7 p.m.
FaMh Baptlll Church
Railroad St., Muoo
Suncloy Schoof· 10 a.m.
Wonhip . I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Ser&gt;icos • 7 p.m.
Foresl Ruo Bapll,.
P11tor. Rev. Nyle Bordm
Sunday School ·· 9:30 o.m.
Wcnhip - 2:30 p.in.
ML Morioh Bap'tlll
.. F!'"rth &amp; t¥n St._, Mid.dlepo~
Putor. Rev. Gilbert Crai1,lr.
Sunday School· 9:3Q o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 o.m.
AntlqullJ Baptlll
Putor: Xenneth Smilh
Sunday S&lt;h®l- 9;3Qhm, Wonhip • l0:4So.m.
Thunday Ser&gt;icea -7:30p.m.
Rutland Fret Will Bapelst
Salem St .
Paator: Rev. Pout Taylor
Soodoy School · 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 1 p.m.
Atilt SCmt FI'HWIII Boptl,.
Middlepon
•
Sooday School - 10 a.m.
- Worship • II o.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.
Soturday ScMCIO • 7:30 p.m.

SAJ.,E
BUT ONE MILKSHAKE
.
.
AND GET ONE FREE!!

SONNY

BURGER

ANDMEDRJM
FRENCH FRIES
MONDAY, DEC.

s• THRU SUNDAY, DEC. z:a

Alao •erving Hot Homemade Vegetllble Soup, Homemlkle Spicy

3S41111 M1i1 St.

P.OMIRO-Y~-~

614-992-6292

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

.I YOUR CHRISTMAS CHECKLIST
MIKE • REEBOK • K·SWISS • CONVERSE • KbS
DEDEI • HUSH PUPPIES • CONNIE • AUDITIONS • ClPEZIO
NUISEUTES • ISOTONER • ANGEL TREADS

-GIFT SUGGESTIONS FOI\ THAT SPECIAL ONE!
OSHOES
. 0 SWEATSHIRTS
D ·GYMIAGS
0NRSES
0 T·SHIRTS
0 NOYELn ITIMS
OSUWERS
0 BALL CAPS
0 ISOTONER GLOVES
-[SJ SOCKS
OJACKETS
0 GIFT CERnFICATES
IIOP LOCII.LY, UGiita TO wm 8ft CDIUICI ID .
,·
. rR£E PARKIII na ~ 1111PPIII ·

First Soul hem Bop list
•·
·41872 Pomeroy Piloe
Pastor; E. Lamar O'Bry~nt
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
· Wonhip • 10:45 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdoy Servicea ·7:30 p.m.
Middleport Flrsl BaptiSI
Comer Sixth &amp; Palmer
,Pastor: Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School • 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - 10:15 Lm.
w,meaday SeMCIOI. 7 p.m .
Roclne First Bapll,.
Putor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Silver Run Bapllst
Putor: Bill Lit~e
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
WonhiP • 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednead'ay Semc:ea· 7:30p.m.
ML Unl011 Jlapllst
Putor.loo N. S.yro
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Evenina· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday ServiCIOI • 6:30 p.m.
Bethlehem Baptlll
PallOr: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sundoy School • l 0:30 Lm.
Worship · 9:30 o.m.
Thursday Se!vite1 ·7:30p.m.
Old O.the Fr.. Will Baptlsl Church
28(,01 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening • 7:30p.m.
Thursday Se!vic:es ·7:30p.m.
Hillside Boptl,. Church .
St. Rt. 143 just off RL 7 ,
Pastor: Rev. lamet R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser&gt;icea • 7 p.m.
·

IDWDPEI FOR

Middleport •
Pomero , Ohio

786 North Second

218 N. SECOND

992-5627

.

, ''

.I

f

·

'

Episcopal

Pomeroy Wtllside ChurtJt or ChriSI
33226 Childm1'1 Home Rd.
992-3847
.
.
SWldoy School - tJ a.m.
,
Wonhap · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.

Groce EpiiiCO(Ial Church
326 E. Main St., Pomaoy
1
Pastor: Rev. Or. Roy C. Mycn
Sunday achool and wor1hip • 11:30 a.m.

Wedne!d4y Se~ceJ · 7 p.m.

Holmess

Mlddl•port Chufl'h of Christ
Sih and Main ·
Putor: Al Huuon
Slll1day School -9:30 a.l'\.
Wonhip. 8:15, t0:30 i.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Scrvi&lt;:e~ -7 p.m. ·
Keno Chowch ~Christ .
Wonhip-9:30 o.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Bearwollow Rld&amp;e C.hurch or Christ.
Pastor: Jack Colegrove .
Swday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - J0:30o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdncaday ScmCIOs • 6:30 p,m.
Zloo Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Hurisonvillc.Rd~ (Rt. 143)
P11tor: Rober E. Portell
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Bndbury Church of Christ
Putor: Tom Runyon
SWldoy SchOol· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Pastor: Robert Foster
·
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship . 9:45a.m,, 6:30p.m.
Dexter Church or Christ
Pas1or: Chris Stewart
SWlday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Putor; Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
MoiDii Church or Chrl ..
MiUcrSt., Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worsh1p - 11 a.m., 1 p.m.
WedneWay Services - 7 p.m.

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Brodford Church of Christ
St.·Rt. 124 &amp; Co. Rd. S
PaStor: I&gt;en:k Slwnp
Swday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship -I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneadayS.r&gt;iw ·7:30p.m.
Success R01d Cilurc' or Christ
Putor: Joseph B. llookins
Sundoy School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Llbmy Cilrlsllan Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody CaU
SWJday School - 10 a.m.
Even in&amp;· 7 p.m.

Wednesday Ser&gt;ia: - 7 p.m.
Langsville Chrl,.lao Church
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor. Olarles Domigan
Sonday achool • )0:30a.m.
Worahip • 9:30 o.m. 7 p.m.
Old Dexter Bible Chrlsllan Church
Pastor: Jack Cleland
Sunday Sthool • tO o.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hobton Church o( Chrlllln Christian
Unloa
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedne~day Services - 7 p.m.
Hartford Church or ChrlstlnChrislla~t­
Unlon
Hartford, W.Va.
PaslOr: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - t l a.m.
Worahip. 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedneaday Seryicos ·7:30p.m.----

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Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile.of! Rt 325
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sundoy School - 9:30 o.m.
Wnnhip ,- 10:30 !·m., 7:3,0p.m .
Wedncsdoy Servtce · 7:30p.m.
WeJteyan Bible Holiness Church
7S Pearl St., Middleport.
Pl5tor: Rev. Roy McCarty
SWlday achool ·9:30a.m.
• Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service: · 7:30p.m.
Hyscll Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Robcn Manley
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m., i p.m.
Thursday Service -7:30p.m.
Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday School 10 a.m .
W~h::r.' · If a.m., 7:30 p.m .
Wedne ay Service-7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Wonhip - l0:30 l.m. and 6 p.m.
•• Servaces
· · 7 p.m.
Wcdnesw.y

Chair Churdt or lite Nuar&lt;n&lt;
Paator: Rev, Herben G11te
Suny
da Sdtool ·:
9 30 o.m.
Worahip·llo.m.,6p.m.·
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pallor: Samuel Basye
Sunday Sdtool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p,m.

Mlnemllle "
_ll!!tor.W..ley Thau:ht&lt;~~- ~
' Su
· -··
-Y Sdtool -a.m.
9
Worahip · tO a.m.
Pearl Chopet
Pastor: Florence Smilh - Sunday School- 9a.m.
. Worship. 10 Lm.

Pomeroy
P11tor. Eunhae (Gracel Kee
Swtday School - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdneaday Ser&gt;icea · 7:30p.m.
.
Roc:k ~nas
Paaot:Keilh Rader
Sunday School- 9:15 a.m.
. Worship - 10 a.m.
Wedneadoy Scr&gt;ic:es • 6 p.m.
Rullond
PasiOr: Anhur Cr~blrcc
SWldoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Scrvic:cs • 7 p.m~
Salem Ccnle;r
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sundoy School · 9:15 o.m.
Wonhip • !0:15a. m.
Snowville
Pastor: f-1orence Smilh
Sunday School · 10 o,m. ·
.worsh!p -9a.m.

Bailey Run Roo.q
f
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
. Sunday &amp;hoot· 10,00 a.m.
Evcnina 7 p.m.
Thunday Service · 1 p.m.

Lutheran

Pastor: Kcooclh Baker

c......

Sunday School - 9:30 a:m.

Worship · 10:45 a.m . (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)
Mornlna Star
Pastor. Kenneth Baker- Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
Wor1hip - 10:30 a.m.
Thur~day Ser&gt;itci · 7:30p.m.
Sulton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sundoy School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 o.m. (tat &amp; 3rd Sun)

United Methodist

Sundoy School · 10 o.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Groham United Melhodill
Worship . 9:30 o.m. (l st &amp; Znd Swt}.-7:30
p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th.Sun) ·
Wcdn01day Service· .PQ p.m.
Mt. Oll•e Unlt&lt;d Methodist
orr I 24 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Chailes Joocs
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Meigs COopenthe Parish
- ·
Northeast Cluster
Allred
Pastor: Sharon llausman
Swtdoy School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - If a.m., 6:30p.m .
Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - tO o.m.
Thumfay SeNicc:s -.7 p.m.
Joppa
PastOI': Brenda Weber
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm .
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services. ,. 7:30p.m.
LongBolttHD
Pastor: Charles Eaton
SWlday School , 9:30a.m.
" Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Laurel curr Free Methodl .. Church
Pastor. William Willianu
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hip • 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m. .
l1astor: RcY. Ivan Myers

ll&lt;lh.,. Cburch
Town1hip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 o.m.
Wonhip • tO a.m.
Wcdnesdly Services- 10 a.m.

Rutland Church of Gud
Pas1or: John F. Con::oran
Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Worsh.ip · I I a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeN ices · 7 p.m.

Siracute Church of the Naur.ene
Putor: Rev. Glenn McMillan
Sunday Sdtool • 9:30 o.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 6p.m. ·
Wedneaday Sctvicea • 7 p.m.

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S(lver.nlllc Word ofF• I*
Pastor: David Dailey
Sundoy School 9:30a.m.
Evenin1 · 7 p,m. - l~ursda~ Service · 7:30p.m.

Hazel Communi!)· Churrh
OrfRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel llart
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.

Rc]oklng Lire Cilurch
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor. Rev. Michael l'm&amp;io
SIBtday School • t 0 o.m.
Wednesday SeNiees - 7 p.m.

Dyavllle Community Church
·Suncloy S'cltool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

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St. Rt. 124, Racine
,"i;
Pastor: Willi101 iloback
Sundoy School • I 0 o.m.
EvC!ting • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m. ~

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Middleport PMie&lt;oslal
lllird Ave.
J•u 1or: Rev. Clartc Baker
Sund1y School • 10 a.m.
Evening -6 p.m.
Wcdncs.(,lly ~rviccs ·7:30p.m.

Presbytenan
q

HmliOIIYltie Presbyterian Cilurdl IJ
Worship · 9 a.m.
''
Sunday School · 9,45 o.m.

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Middleport Presbylerlan
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship . t'o a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd 8i 4th s..,.)'

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Syr11&lt;ust Flrsl Unlled Prelbyterlan
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
1
Wonhip . II o.m., 4 p.m. (Itt &amp; ~ rd Sun.) .l

Seventh-Day Adventtst

United FaUll Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy lly -Pass
PaslOr: Rev. Robert E."Smilh, Sr.
Sunday Scllool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · I 0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sundoy School · 9:30a.m.
Woohip • 10:30 a.m.

. ,.

Syracuse Mlulon
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse
Pl!tOr: Roy (Mtkc) Thompson
Suncloy School · 10 a.m.
Evening ·. 6 p.m. Wednesday Service -7 p.m..

Mt. Olive Communlly Chur(b
Panor: Lawrcntt: Rush
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wcdncday Service · 7 p.m.

Hoc:klngport Churcl\
Grand Street
Swtday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Rtednllle Fellowship
Church or tht Nuarene
P11tor: lnhn W. llooglu
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Woidtip - t0:4li.!R., 7 p.m.

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C•lnry l'ltgrlm Chapel
llarrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sundoy Schooi9:30 o.m.
Worship -.11 a.m., 7:30 J:l.m.
Wcdncsda)l ~rvicc · 7 ~30p:m.

Faith Gospel Church
l.oog llottom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . )0:45a.m., 7:30p.m.
Woonesday 7:30'p.m.

Racine Fll'll Church or lise NIWI'Ine
P-stor: Thomu l. Gates, D
S•tnd!l_ ~chooi:.~:30 a.m. --~ ·+ .. -~ ..
Wonhip - 10:30o.m.,op.m.
Wedneadoy ScrviC&lt;S • 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Church or Cod
Racine
-·p. 1 tor:R.Cv~ James Sancrfield
Sunday School · 9:45a .m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - l t a.m.'
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scl"ice -7:30p.m.

Spiritual Faith Chorch
s..te 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Stewart
Sund•y School·· 10 a.m..
EYcning ·7:30p.m.
Thursday Xtvicc · 7:30p.m.

Morse ChoJl"l Church
Paslor: David Curfman
Sundoy school · lO a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Cwhllle tJnltt:d M•lhudlsl Parish
Pastor: ~laruld E. AUoway-Priddy
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Tueaday Ser&gt;icos · 7 p.m.

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Paslor: Robert E. Mu~scr
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
Wonhip · Jl :J5a.m., 7p.m.
Thursday Service - 1 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a,m.
Evening · 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

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Pastor: limes Lewi1

Christian f(.ollowship Cc~lcr
S..lcm St., Rutlan d

Rutland Bible Methodist

Mlddlepot1 Church or lht Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm,Jr.
Sunday SchOol· 9:30 o.m.
Worahip • 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.·
Wcdneaday Services • 7 p.m.

.n ;

Burllneton Commu.ilty Churrh
Burlingham
Pastor: Ray Laudcnnih
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Wonhip · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

RadM
Pastor: Roger Gr1~

Nazarene

Church of God

White's Chapel Wesltyan
CoolviJ le Road
Pas10r: Re.... Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service ·1 p.m.

Calvary Bible&lt;;:hurch
11omcroy Pike, Co. Rd.
l)a5lot: Rev. Dlackwood
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Worsh&lt;p 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Middleport Community C~urch
575 )•carl Sl., Middlcpon
Pa~ tor ; S1m Andcrs11n
Sunday Schooi !O 1.m.
Eveni ng - 7:30 p.rn.
Wednesday ScNiet · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Kcnnclh Baker
Sundoy School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip · 9a.m.
Wednesday SCIViccs • 10 a.m.

Ea,.Lellrl
Pastor. Roger Gral:e
Sunday School· .10 o.m.
Worship- 9 Lm.

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The Salutloft Army
liS Ouucmut Ave., Jlomcroy .
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wo~hip · I 0:00a.m., 7:30p.m.

fallh Tabernacle Churth

St. Piut Lulhenn Church
Coma Sycamore&amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Llun. A. Leach Shreffler
SWlday ,Sc~oot ·9:45a.m.
Wonltip • ll a.m.

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Fain lew Dible Cllurch
i.&lt;tan , W.Va. Rt. l

Trlnlly Ccotlrtglllonol ChtM'th
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Chun:h · 9: LS..m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m

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Fr•edtHD Gospel MluiiMI
Bold Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. ROI,'cr Willford
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Soulllern Cluster .
AppleGro\'e
Pastor: Carl Hicks
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
WcBhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

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Carldoa lnt.ntenomlna~tllal Clsordt, .,· ·
Putor~~~~~-~~ ";
SWlday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
·~!
Evcnin&amp; - 7 p.m.
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Wcdnesdl~ Service -7 p.m.
"-J

New Hawfn Chul'th of Uw Nnarcne
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:301 m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

B~lhanJ

Our Sal'lour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Su., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. George C. Weirick
SWlday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · ll Lm .

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Portland Ftr,. Church orthe Nuar•n•
Pastor: William Justus
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsday,SeNitel · 7:30p.m.

Reorganized Chut£h of Jesus Christ In
,
'Laller Dliy-Salnls ·
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pistor. William ROush
Sunday School • 9:30 o,m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wcdne1day Services-7:30p.m.

St. Joho Lullteron Clturdt
P:inc Grove '
Pastor : Laun. A. Leach Shn:fflcr
Wor1hip • 9:30 Lm. •
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Panor: Duane Sydcmtritker
' Sunday Sch.ool - 9a.m.- ·
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sctvice -7'p.m.

Seventh-Day Mvenllsl
Mulberry llts . Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Bob Snyder
Saturday Services:
S.bl&gt;oth School · 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p,m.

F.ccle&lt;la Fellowship
128 Mill St., Middlcpon
Pu tor: Oaudt MePhcnon
Sundoy Sthool · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser&gt;ia: · 7 p.m.

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United Brethren
Mt: Htrmon Un lltd Brethren In Chrid ··

Churth .
: ·Full G~l Ll&amp;htlr®se --- ---'··- ---- Tuu Cm!munityorf-CR 8-2 -=--.,,-~ P•Uor: Robert Sanders
.~
33045 llilond Rood, Pomeroy
Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
.: •
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;.. Thursday • 7Jp p.m.
.
J
Ed&lt;:n United Rreth,.n In Chri•
Sunday School : 10 a.m.
Nease SetU(!mC!t'lt Chunh
Worship · 7:30 p.m.
Sunday Won~ip · 2:30p.m.;
W~n
c,day
Scrvicc1 - 7:30p.m.
Thursday serv1ce1 · 7:30p.m.

QirHf Q)~,,f;s
93 Mill Strool
Mlddtepon. Ohio 46760
(8141992 -6857 ~ 1998 -0.0K!i)

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VIS·QUICKEL

AGENCY INC.

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POMEROY, OHI0 - 992 -6617
BILL QUICKEL

SUPPLIES &amp; 81 BLEB

Mt'\ Veterans
...::;;_;

-,

'

Memorial

'

"2·""
llerth
271

Soc~

(row's family Restour111t

"Fut111l•• K1111eA~ Frlu Cil,.,. "

992-5432
l

\\'cd~::::So~~;~a.m.
- 6 p~m.

·~

2-U W. Moin St., Pomeroy

•

'Panor: Gary Hines
Sundoy·School·
· W
6 9:30a.m.'
Orsjtip • o P.JTL
7
Wedneaday Seivicea· p.m.

''

· ··~~-..... ..

Ollie

PLACE

Pomeroy Church or Cbrlll
. 212 W. Main St.- ·
Pallor: Andrew Miles
SW&gt;doy School· 9:30a.m.
•
-Wonhip · 10::!0 o.m,7-pm•~
. -~~
Wedneaday Ser&gt;icea • 7 p.m.

C&lt;.~thoi i C

1111141t,.rl,

'

~-SHOE

7

,_ Frl.day, Decembl!r 1~, '!_991

·PagH

eat of the Bend....

Pef•

The Dally Sentinel

PHARMACY

788 NORTH SECOND AVE.MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RAWUNGS·COATS

FISHER
FUNERAl HOME
992·5141

264 South 2nd .
I•

Middleport

~01 UIT MAIN

RACINE PlANING MILL
Mill Wook

t: ~htnel Maktn~
Syracuse

992 ·3978

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAUS
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OM.

EWING FUNEIAL HOMf
"'l&gt;i~uil ,\ '

orul S.•rri••t• ·llu·n~·s ··

Established 1913

I'OMIIOY, OHIO

SWISHER • LOHSE
. PHARMACY., _\ ;1
_ .

rn

Wr ,.,II DoCI I)t'\'
992-2121
Prf\(r!phon\
~~-9_9_2_·_2_9_7_5__~~·_t~__M_~
__"-;,
YA•_•_· ____P_MM
__ro~y~~·~tl~l~tl~l--------''_•_m_•·-~-·~

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45

Rentals

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Furnished

Rooms
41 "Houses for Rent.
'

2br Home In Thurman, S200fmo

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 Pe Me DAY .BEFORE
PUBLICATION
.

JO'S CRAFT SHOP
Give a Homemade Craft.
Hats, Beads, Lace, Paint, and
Many Other Supplies.

St. At. 7 • 992-6109

HOURS: 10:Q0-5:00 Tues. thru Sot.

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

NEW YEAR'S EVE
AT OSCAR'S
RESTAURANT
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL 446-9545

Seatings At

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY. 8 A.M•. Jo S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
UOSED SU.NDA Y .
POLICIES

DEER CURING
·

$7.50each
$4.50 children under 12
Make reservations by
calling 446:9545

OUR LOWEST PRICES
OF THE YEARI

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 us at

CLARK'S
JEWELRY

~ and~·-·

CHRISTMAS SALE
113 Court St.

614-992· 7694

Pomeroy

Words

15
15
15
15

.3

6

10
Monthly ·

J

In

Public Notice

Card ollhMiti

nlihed House In Prlv111 ~tttlng,

Accomodate
Horaa.
ChlldNn, For Long Term
Or "-land . Conlrld.

conaecutiva quart.rly aarn-

Public .nollce I• hereby PuQUc Convenience and
te on call
given that R &amp; C Excavating, Necessity to aperaM
34055 Pine Grove Road, of the public over Irregular
Racine, Ohio 45771, haallled routea to and from 34055 Pine

with the Public Utilities

Commission of Ohio an ap-

t

Card of Thanks

pln lor detlfmlnotlon of
compliance with the
rldlologlcol mulmurn oonlamlnont ltvela. The Vlllogt
of Srr-e hu completocl
.,e quortortr monitoring u
of November I, 1890. Tho
- • o1 tho four cono•
outiv. quart.rfy rodlologlool
Nmploo Is feoo tlton 3
pCU1. Thlo level 11 within
tho etato'1 ulo drinking

949·2734

H•PPr Ad ~

•

Hand·Carved
Solid .Wood

G...raiWard
PrO&lt;tsSII8

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME ·SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES

Ducks

' Cl.ET CLIANEIS
and nll FLOOI CAll

Merchandise

•Reuonoble Roteo
'
•FrH E1tima1es

•Quollty Wortt

Tempo~

Household
Goods

Time '
•High Glou on Tit&amp;
Floor Finish
Mill LEWIS; Ownor
Rl. 1, ltvrla.-; OM.

R&amp;C

lllf!lflllil."

WIUUS . ·
1rint It 111 Or W1
· Pick Up.

BULLDOZING

lEN'S APPLI,ANCI
SEIVICE
.
992~5335

ar

915-3561

Acro11 r,_ Pod Offlctl
217

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.;S11em

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BENNETT'S a:::~:G'
•lOCIINd. an Safford Schill ld.
(614) 446·9U6 -or -l•IIM~·Il'l-59~~

RAONE
FIRE DEPT. '

CARPENnR SERVICE ·

Bashan lulldlng

Racine, Ohio

Grove Roadi

45771. Number and capacity
of vehlcloo to be uaod: 11,
Capacity 20,500
#2, Capacity 24,000.Intor·
ealed parties may obtain fur·

CommaealonofOhlo,Colum-

the. concern •nd aym·

Roy Laudlfmllt, R&amp; CEx·

pothy given during her
lllneoo ond dooth . .To
Overbrook Center for
1M wonderful Clll'l you
gevo her. We will forev·
er be grotoful. To Dr.
Wlthoroll; Ewing Fun.
eral Home, and to Rev.
Thatcher lor hlo con•
1ollng wardi. To the
pollbeorert, -Richard
Houduhelt, JtH Reu·
ter,' Don ond Philip

cavatlng Name of Applicant

Swatzel, J•ck Welker,

,.

ther Information by 1ddreu·

Tho lomlly o1 Elele
Forboo would llko to
••tend thtlr thonko fO!'

Roglf Sayre, end Ben
Ewing. And lor the
flower•.

food

•nd

card1. Thonk you to

lng lho Public Utllltloo
bus, Ohio

w1tar mu:lmum contaml·
nant lovot standard of 15
pCL/1. lor grou olpho porU.

.

ell activity,
34055 Pine Grove Rood (12) 13, 11, 17 3tc
Racine, Ohio 45771
(12) 6, 13, 20, 3TC

POMEROY
Last markdown

DRAFT PUBLIC NOnCE
Tho Village ol 8yracuoe
hao laltocl to monitor lor
rlcllologlcal activity In tho
drinking woter 1up~ly u
.-qui rod by ..e IIIIo I sole
drinking wot.r low1. Rule
3745·11·21 of the Ohio
Adntlnl1trodvo Code r•·
qulr" 1 community wolor
ouppiJ to oollect four lnlllll

everyone.

on shoes
before closing
store.

OPEII FRI. &amp; Sit
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.
1211211 mo.

Real Estate General

· Juno &amp; Brooko Sayre
Martarle Reutar &amp;
Fomlly
Paul &amp; Dorothy Farboo
Holen Jonoa &amp; Fomlly

- concna wort.

~Aoollltt

V. C• .YOUNG Ill

.

and dependable.
(laud I u,.la IIJ
r,uldy)
Call Ed Battin
collect at

-

m-2886

Starting Stpt. 28

Stop &amp; Co11pare
Fr11 Estimates

Factory Choko
12 Gautt She""" OniJ
StrlctiJ•lnfonod

Tolol Eloctrlc, On 3Actll Lond,

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
'

USID APPUANaS . .

tODAY WAIIAIIn
WAlllliS-$100 011
Dlm-S6f ., ... ,.. .
-fOIS-StDO ''
FIIIDIS-$115 011 ·

•oo DVIIIS-sn .,

THE BASKET WEAVE
Otott 01 Stllirtlays
1Clrls ..11 SoaN..
6111 a ••olwow•ltatloet
to tlrat lf!dals- 01
yiw Gris'- 1st,
Wtavmg suppllos •o lrt
stocl , .. ,.

on Rockaprlngs
Pomeroy, 3 miles
Meigs Co. Falr-

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Acrm Fnrm Post Olfk1
POMIEIOY, OHO
tVINYL
•A'LUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
JNSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.-'
"FrM E~lmo1as"

IIH. f4f.210 I

992-61155
1111511

Sp1dallzlllt In

Homegrown,

IHiautlfully .sh8a!lld.
Whitt •nd Scotch Pin•
5 Ft. and up
Good selection of
largat-•.
614-742-2143 or.

742-2979
11&gt;25

WINTER IS APPROACHING•.• •
WARM UP YOUR HOME WITH

IIIDOLEPORT -lloplo IL - A nice homo wilh 2 bed·
room a upotoiro, 1 cult kitchtn down with 1 dining II!Om, ·

-

121,100

~ IIIDOLEPORT ..;-iJncolti .,..,_c"~ ltwilt-:-ilfllwo,Dlli..--n.&gt; -1

Happy
Birtl,day Mom!
TJ,ey don't make
irioru like you
aFtymore!
Kid!

this 3-4 bedroom 2 etory
on
molnlortonco ,.. slclng ond • o1orag1 buicing. 11a.ooo
PORTLAND -Big Lot- Ont llory homl. Acule 5 IIIDm,
2 bodtuom home with attic ~pac~lar ,..,. roome. On1
car gorogo, lov1l ~t, wtt1 lnoullted lor oconornlc lYing.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER. WAS $22,600.
NOW 120,0110
POMEROY -No Dowi1 P8Yftll'lt- Owner will cany 2nd
mortgage on thle 2 atoir ·homo on • good llnoel Hoo 1
largo family room, ·101111 hlnljlood loon, 3 badi!IDmo,
ond a dnlng rtiom. Hal Ylnyllklng tor low main-.

.

.

.

N4.000

~ in lit Plrle1io thla

LANQ8V1LLI-·D•i.riW. •

(.rntOM Fr- llltiGir
NEW &amp; USED PAI\'5
• fOI All M¥£5 &amp;

..

MODEl~

992-7013
or 992-5553
OITOU n11 ·
I ·100·141·0070
tfn

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSiOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
·~1-nablo Prkts"
.H. 949·2801
or 1". 94f·2169 .
Day or Ni;lt · ··NO SUNDAY

LAND CLEARING

WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS I
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umellona,
Dirt, Gravel•nd Co•l
LJconood Md Bondtcl

~

.·

ronmnY- 0ao1t llfMt·- NIM c0zy 3 Net-., 111
otory homl will a pretty Of*l olllrwoy, go.-go, attel·•
C111101t-Nlol t11r11r homo or IIIUipropotty. •
• '

"?0" .·
'Birthday!.

ONLY ltO,(ICIII

BLANitETS
Homemacle with
Long Lalllng Gr11n
Scotc:h Pins. ·

·Fusion.Welded-Sashes. •Tllt·ln Sashes.•7Al" Insulated Glass •Lifetime Warranty
·Low.£ Glass FilM wllh Argol Gu at Fod•y Cost.- .
Add • extra 4" ollllowt-ln ..soolatlol

- 614-949•2051 -

Financ1al

Ctvws, ole.

Business
Opportunity

614-985·3961

•

!tat.,_.,
...., r-s. Coolll•llllilat1s.

W1 do r..adelini - kltcMtu,

DK's FARM TOYS

by ERTL
Displayed af Tlte
Gtalty Prill s..,
HOURS:
8:30am-4:00pm

614-992-3!94
Or Call

742·3d20 Evelli19s

FOR

CHRISTMAS
TREES

CHRISTIAN CONSTRUCTION
446·4514
AUTO AND PICKUP GIFT SPECIAL!

cuniNG,

CUTTING,
SKINNINGJ
WRAPPING
BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

949•2206 , 11114.t1 1 mo.

lllcl
.
$125.00
Moldld Clrpete...- ...............carryout from $99.00
PERSONALIZED Bug Shields ••.lnetallld $55.00
TFXIBurg Grtphlo KTts .. .lnatalled from
$30.00
Mirror Flnllhlloldlng K~e..lnllllltd trom $75.00 .
PlnllriJMI.-----.................Inllallld from $15.00
CUitonl leila..;:................ ·········-······.......... 1K orr
Trualc lilt Cov.,.,...........:.. .tnllltllld from . teo.oo
llunvl--, pttlntld............. lnsttllld from S140.00

Help Wanted

S:IIO.OO/Ooy p,_q Phono
ardors! Peop1o Coli You. NO Eo·

peritnce NeceiAry. 1-800-2550242.

"Helping You To
,Rec01)er Your
Investment"

2·bdrm, all llleclrlct...lppllancu S11t On All Carpet In Slockl

tum, $175, e1+912-6n.2 -

2br Apartment, Lbclttd, 468·112

Fourth

~

BILl SLACK

AUCTION

31 Homes ror Sale

Newly Re-done
COUNTRY MOBILE

'·
HOME PARK
has nice hDmesites ·•
available lor up to
80' homes.

JUST OFF RT. 33

Only $75 per mo.

Call.
614-992·5528 or ·
385-8227

Iff Allin llJe WMfA0J

12-11-1 mo.

RIGGS

TREE FARM

...,.

r

'

~

,,

tl

v: ",,
"'I'I

•
Choooc and Cui
·-. l j
Your Tree or We'll · :•
,I
__ CuL ILEor...You.-~ --.. •' -·
•'

GROOM
·ROOM

;i
::

1Hif!HIHIIIIIIII/1IIflllllfii/NIII/JIIIfi!HIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHINI/IIIImiiiHIIHIIIIIIHIIIJIIIIHIIHII!IUIUI!I

.

'

Wanttc:
'
·RIN doWn EXTRA

Fuli·Bioodld Cllow Chow Pup- 1111'1 Chhrolet El Camino. Ex·
pin, St,DO Eooh. 614-4-24.
oollenl Condition• Very Shorp!
&amp;14-446-2445 Ask t-or Paul.
Hod lid - h loco lovl birds:

·

ew..-.
kwMbte elltmnety af·
ftcllanltt SSG: baby p.~raketlt,

~~·~-·~·~"'~~~· ~~:~~~ ~ 6,:,3" ',. :;L:-Iv;,;e;.:s:. :t~o,;:c~k: ·:1988 Big ChHtnut

Rocllnor,

01 Billy Billy a.,ou;-4
rronor. 15 Big show · Soddl11.

614·286-6522.
304-675-3512.

Surplus Aimy Camtlauge, Car·

hart Clothing, New all leather
combat boals, Insulated dacron
c1mllauge coveralls $30, Junior
sizes camll1uge. Sam Somt·
r.tille's, Besldt Sandyville Post
Ollice East ol Ravtntwood
(avtry day until Ch~islmjls 3:00·
6:00 PM) Fri, Sat, Sun noon till
~: 00 PM, other houro call 304·

273-5655.

Tandy RGB, CM5 color monllor,

exc t:Dild, $175 t ontacl, 614·992·
2882 arler 4pm
VCR's, good condit ion,
s tereo. Call 614·446-2713.

In

WHilE'S METAL DETECTORS

Ron

Allison, 1210 Sacond
A~enue, Galllpoli3, Ohio, 614·
446-4336.

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sow•r Dlpet, win·
dows, llnltlt, •tc. Claude Win·
ttrs, Rio Grands, OH C1ll 614'

house lrall1r,
14x&amp;s ali total electric, $4,800.

:1

~

304&lt;175-2457.

..

1970 Clairmont 14x70, 3 bed·
rooms, 1 !;lath, w/underpenning
and front porch, gas heat,
ctnlrll 11r, mvsl move, $1,500.

l·',,

304-182·23411

I•

••

2·bdrm 1ralltr, furnished 6 new
ctrptt.$3000, 814·941·2526

, -...

-

Tum your clutter into cash,
&amp;Jl it the easy way... by pho'.'e,
no need to-leave~your;home•-----:
Place your cl(udtied ad todqy!
15 words or le .., 3'(lqys,

Bank repo1, 2·3 bdrrns, mull
Hll lmmldiatety, lillie 01 monev
down, c•ll 1·800-466·7671, 11k
tor Branda

apt. 814..,.46-03110.

Water And Treslt Provided. 1124 E. Main Slrtll, Pomeroy.
Convenient L.oclllon, O.posll Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
Requlrtd. 614-44W561. .
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614·992·2526.
.
ComplaUy Furnished mobllt
homt, 1 mile below town over· 54 Miscellaneous
J~lng river. No Ptt1, Cl. 614·
446.03)8.
Merchandise
Ont Bedroom Apattlftlnl In 1;81 ford pickup. low mllu, 22
Point PIIIHnl, WY. Fumlti'Md, tt cain per trailer, rttl nlct cond,
Very Cl11n And Nlct. No Petl. 304-875-1564 ..
304-4175-1386.

Call our offiee for paid iA odtHJn&lt;e roleol

Choou From. Small

·-:-----•

11 . - - - - - - .

12 . _ _ __
13 . _ _ __

14 . _ ___;,_

15 •._ _ __

addG'I.

Water tronl lot at Racine D1m,
reduced prke, Wll 17000 now

15000, 614·M1·2521

.--·----··--·-. -· ·•

71

Autos for Sale

..

.. .

;.::.=::-::;:.:.7:.:..::===:::0::'
campers&amp;
Motor Homes

===:::-;=-:::::-:::-

1W10 ..Scony Camping · Triiler,
SiMpl 4, $500. Call After 5p.m.
304·773-!il154.

11177 Vollawagon B11111, conlflr·
llbtt, wrecked, runt good, f600,
614-647·2961

Services

1978 Ford F·100 !ruck, runs
11ood, &amp;14-949·2886 attar 5pm
and WM""nds
1179 Chrytllr Cordoba , ntw
paint, ntw tlrtt, $1000, 304-875-

81

1155 '"" 5pm
1m Ford Thurnderbird, 302
automatic, 1ir, good work car,
SSDO tlrm. 614-446-4472.

Unconditional lillllime guarln·
IH. Local references furnished.
FrM nllmetn. Call collld 1·
114·237-D488, d1y or night
Rogers Beum~~nl Waterptoo-

1979 Monta

lin!i!· __::::__, ..___.. ____ .

Home
·Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

~

Ron 's TV Service, tpeclalizlng

Grooming. AU. br11ds, 11y111.
lams Ptt Food Dealer. Ju lie
Wtbb. Call6t4-446·0231.

•f'l

In Z•nilh also sorviclng most
other brands. Houu calls, elso
somt 1ppliance rtpairs. WV

1982 Oldt Frlenze, 4-c.yl auto, 3()4':576·23S8 Ohio 614-446·2454.
runs good,
wredl.td, $250 .
1983 t&gt;Jda Cutllu, body good , Room •ddiltons, siding, rooting,
bad molor, m1ny new · pens, vinyl raplacemenl windows
$000 614-NS-3394 1fttr 5pm
earptontry by AI Tromm, 614·742~
AKC Built puppl11, read·y to
2328. CALL COLLECT
1083
Buick
LtS1bre,
2dr,
coupt,
go, will hold lor Chritlmu, F.A.
just like ntW, low mUtt, evtry Davis
S.w-V1c
StNke
Btn.cium, 614-667-3856
opUon, Y-8;·12100, 614·192·6719
Georg11 Cr11k Rd. Parts, e~
pllu, pickup, 1nd delivery. 614·
AKC beagle pups : 7 wks, wor·
mtd, shots started, lrl·colot, ~183 Olds Om-a•. 4 cyl., 4 dr., -446.0284.
$50. Call Days 614·446-4172, $900; 1IB3 Dodge Oiplom•t, 4
1nytimo_____.., 256·1618,SleVI dr., 6 cyt $400•.814.256.6554 call Will -build ·patio covm-;-di¢k.,--;-:.
71taVImag.
lcretnld rooms, put up vinyl t
Stapleton .
e~lng or trailer tklrti ng. 614- :.
1184 C1m1ro Z·28, T·lopl, 350
AKC Cock• Spanl•l pupP11, eng, auto, loadtd, $3200, 304·_ 245 -9152.
btack&amp;Whlta and Tri-color, m.ale
82 Plumbing &amp;
• ttmale. Not Reg. Butt color 675-3318
614-1112-31116
1184 Chevy Cam•ro S2500, 614·
2-Female At(C Rtg Lab pups,
8wks old, tilonda &amp; chocolate,
614·992·2732 or 992·2475 betors
Ctc. 1'7.

Healing

M8~950

10&amp;4 Dodge Arln, • door, bl•ck,
AMIFM, cl...ttl, 4 cyl, ntw IX•
hau .. , IM·H:z-7236, lvtnlngt

Carter'•

Plt.~mb ing

Fourth 1nd Pine
Gallipoll11, Ohio
614·446--3888

!

•'

Rtsldlnllil
or
comm11cl1l t
wiring, new Mrvlce or flf)llrs . ~

Maat•r Uctnsld lltelrtclan. ~
Ridenour Eltttr~oal, 304-171· ~
1786.
..
, . . Chtvtftt, lutO, $1,500. 304·

_.., ___ ,. ........

llorti:J otltaOimo. 011111 Hotll.
114 4

Uud Urts lour 225·70R14·RWL: -•~
and lour 235-70R15. Wh ite wall. w
304-475-1609.
"'

1960 Mustang, 6 cyl., auto., IXC. Ont 24ft. R.V. Hollidl)' Traval
Interior, $3,500. 1939 Chevy 2 Tuller, For Sale, E11cellent
doot stdan, $1,000. 1985 Honda Sh1ptl Good Condition. Make
Sh1dow 70Dcc, 2,400 mlie1, ott•r. 614~46 ·3496.
$2,000 .. 304-675-3960.

:M?-7700.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
40 Acm With 2 BR Mobi!O 45

r•ue

~

Ill, Guk:lt Tools, Almost 5K In· .;
VHied. Offers Or Tradn C01V .,
lldtr.ci, &amp;14-446·2306.
t,

0&amp;13.

18114, 614·2111-6755.

Homo
12l14
125,000. t4·367-7054.

::SI:.:ou..:x~v;.:,,,.::,::...,G.,.nn"'d:-•,-.-::3--:-:Y.,
- r, :

Old, Uk1 New; Sioux S..t Dul·

petctnl FMd, S13011:ont.. hay
rolls, S25. YotQan Farm, Kl. 35. 12 tt. Eldorado slldt-in camper.
304-i37·2011.
SI•PI 6. Show•r, tub, tumact,
let-ben:, etc. $1200, Good condi·
lion. 614-367•7017 of 614-367·
Transportation

Groom and Supply Shop.Pel

AKC reglltnd Boor pupptn,

121 Acrn, 8 Room Houu 2
LarQI Berns, On Rt.218, Gal·
llpolll! Toblcco BIH. 6t4-251·

~w gas tank.t, body part1, one
ton truck whHis, r~~diatOfs,
floor malt, tfc. 0 &amp; A AUio, ..
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1· "'
800·273-8585.
"

Ground shell com, S1201ton, t2

ChomoiOn -lne YOtY nlco,
Bom How. 21, tilt. 304112 33f7.
AKC lllalltwtd Colrn T""'r
Plor:.
Cull Cllriotmao PilL Will
Ho d Till CMotmoo, $150. 114-

Down

9•._ _ _--'- 33 Farms for Sale

10·~:-----

Herford CIIYII, 450-500 lbl,
614·992·7603

. .,

Frttmon's Plumbing And Htat·

2116

P1yment . CIII1·80Q.5811-6TI1.

1.'

Each. 614·245-iliiS.

2263.

lng, 614·256-1611.

n - a -111 home, 614&lt;1118-

Short Time On Job? P111 Crtdh
History A Problem? M•ny
ElposiHMd Mobllt Homn To

lings, $600 E.Ch, 2 Cllvll, SSOO

Budqtt Transmls1lona, liMd &amp;.:...
rt~ult, starting It $98; Auto .._
Parts. 614·245"·5677, 614·379· ,

;:::;:.:c:;--,-;c-::--:-:::--::=

dopoolt
,;;J """"'" roqulrod, 53
'Antiques·
304-6~256!.
Nke 1br, Plf'tlaiiY Fumlthtd, ,:8-uy-..-,-,"II."R"'I::'vo:-::rl=no:-A~n=tlq;:uo=o,

AKC Oalmetlon, 2yr old malt,

3 ewer,,$6t00

strn.n.nt•l Bulls,

~

Curtis Home Improvements: '
Ye•rs Erperleflet On Oldef &amp; . :
1980 Ford F1innont llltion Newar Homu. Room Additions ' •
wagort, good cond, nttd tome Foundalion Work, Roofing' ,
work, mull Hll $400. linn, 304· Kitchltrll And Baths. Fre• Es! ~
675-3734.
II malts! Reft'r1nc11, No Job To- ~
I 8ig Or Small! 614-441.0225. " :

New Haven one bedroom 1p1,
1876 GoYtner

P...-~nlage

an. J Y•rOtd F« 1700; :Z v..r.

Special Nldw Call 5•111
Athens llvtstock Salla. S.tur·
Seope; Ruger Rednawk 44 Mag. day O.C.mber '14, AI 1:00 P.M.
With Scopa1 Fodlr• Crossbow, Llvntock Atctpted Bt1rtlng At
J11p H1rdtop Fill 70·76, 614· 4 P.M. Every Frldlly. Saturdeyt
441-1721.
Salt At 1:00 P.M. Hauling Avlllabll. 614-698-3531, Or 6"14·592·
Seasoned Ash, Oak And Hick· 2322.
ory Firewood, $55 Pick-Up Load

245-5t2t

1

5

Auto Parts &amp;-c--.
Accesso
· rles

.

· 314 ·Ttnn. Walker wlcolt, nddlt,
Rats Or Mlct? In Your Houst?
Buy ENFORCER, Klllt rats &amp;
mice In only 1 " tetding,
GUARANTEED! A'lalllble II :
0'0.11 True Vslut Lumbtr, 634
Eut Main Slreat, Pomeroy, OH

;:~~'J;.~~'Y co.. n, 12,2011,.•',

$149.00; Oollvorod And Stackod, Don 64 Hay &amp; Gral n
Wough, 614·446·9646.
,:...:-~7,=:;..;.;::::;:-;::::-::; 79

32

Modern 2

:-::-:-:

210 ffidel 700 6
FURNITURE. &amp;2 Remington
Power Rediteld;
,.,:lin 22 Wllh

3 ttedroom, btlh, utllhy room, Swivel Rocker, $99.00; Coff•• &amp;
Jerry Run Ad 1 304·571-%103.
End T1blt1, $89.00 Set.OINING
ROOM: Ttblt With 4 P1dded
3 rtmodlted one bedroom un- Chalr1, $149.00; Country Pine
tumllhtd lpll, good cond DintUt With Bene!\ And 3
great locallon,corner llh tnd Chllra, $2111.00; Mfk:hlng 2
M1in St,,., Pn. 304-675-6131.
Door Hhch, S34~ ; Or $58"9.00
3 Room Fumllhld Apertmtnl, Sot: Ook Toblo, 42&gt;62 With 6
B•cll
Chlirs,
Half Milt Eut Of Porttr, On Bow
$629.0D.BECROOM: Poster Bed·
AU54, $275/mo. 8~163.
room Suit• (S pc.), $341.00; 4
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Drawer Chtst, $44.95; Bunk
Dol.lblt Wldl1 Ont ICrt proptrty, BUOOET P.RICES AT JACKSON 'Btd, $220; Compl•te Full Mill!
G•lllpolis Ferry, lor lntorm1tlon ESTATES, 536 Jac:klon Plko S.t $10!.00 Stl ; 7 pc. Cedar
304-475-7217. H•y for salt.
, from $1921mo. Wall! to thop &amp; e;droom Suite, $898.00.0PEN:
movln. Ctii814-44B.Z518. EOH. Mondav Thru Saturday, h .m. to
OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME Compl"ly Furnished Sm11l 6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
FOR $1,600 Full Price . Govern·
Sp.m., 4 Mll11 011 Routt 7 On
mtnl Agtncles Now llQuldallng. HouH, 125010'1~ Plue ~IIHitt, Roule 141 In Cenltnlry, .
And
Dtpoalt
.
'
8M-446o0338.
C1t1
1·805·564-6500 Ex!. H0968 For
Btfore7p.m. .
·
Whirlpool Refrigerator, $60. 614·
lmmtdlate Aaslttanc•.
245-5393.
lplin
Pl.
Pltl•senl,
EHtnciancy
Nice 2 Slorv Houst, Stcond
nlc1
ntiahborttood,
Hud
1CctpAvenue, Galllpolit,·2 BalM, New
52 Sporting Goods
301130 Block Ciarege, With Chain ted11·30~5-6042
Link Fence. Close"To Everything
H•ndmadt Solid Cherry Gun
In Town/ Rt~dy To Move lnlol
C1blntt, Holdt11, $350. 614-446·
614-446-0036.
.
7720.

.!i

.

Poiltlroy,

1087 Ford Ranger Big Foot pkg.
lotllly loaded. 4 Wh, Or. S6,DOD.
425 Gallon Wille T1nk, Compr... 614-446-2113.
aor, Vacuum Pump, Dlli1Zal
Milk.,.., Pulutar., Tlrritr Box. 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
614·24S·N25.
1::;~;-;:=::-;;;::::-~;;;;: I 1i75 F:otd 4 WO, 3/4 ton, 460, 4
AC 185 Trtctor, S.hlrp, $5 1~; · spd, 614-441.0401 call after ·6
La11 Madill 5040 At! wtu. "yd· p.m.
I'IUIIc l.older, $5,115· tN ·,Ford ':=;-;:;:::;:::-:::::--:;::;:-::::--::With Buah H"", 11,1195; Owner 1977 Dodge van, 360 auto, lor
-·
1111 or tro•· lor car - .truck ol
Will fin1nc1. 8M·281-1522.
""'614·1112-2502
equal Wllut,
Jim's F•rm Eaulprnent, SR. 35,
West Gllllclll, 114~46-W77 ; 1986 ~ Car~van LE, all opWide 1eiiCI n new &amp; UNCI farm lio11ns,
kl~~a.,:.......
hlah
lrlelors &amp;. implements. Buy, ~~~ge , II ng ..,..,110(11. . - ~
sell, trade, I:OG-5:00 WNkdeyt,
New Oak cu~td Glass China Sat. liU Noon.
74 M
I
~t1c~~~ 11 G1as~:"el!~~ed s~~·:~ Wtntld : UncLIArm equipment,
Ot&lt;?r~yC___!S =-:rr--Mirrowtd Back, Rope Twist, anythln!{ you_wanl to Mll.,.614· 1~86 Honda 70, 4 wheller, looU 1
Lkm Head, Glaa 1 Shelvet, 256·13oi, 614·256-6040 Afttr like new, $&amp;50. 304-675-2457.
Spoon Cai'Ved, Etc. S325 Elch. &amp;p.m.
1~87 FZ 700 Yamana Gtnsis,
61
6 3 16

Last call tor 1991, """"'"loons 61 Farm Equipment

$5.00, d1nim Jackett 120.00, bib
overhauls $5.00, IH Peggy, 132
But11rnul, Pomeroy
Mlnolta 9000 Profnslonal 35
'I
mm camera; ' o' a.IY
auI o.,
llveral · i~rge ilnses,
$600 .. 614·
446·2713.
.
must
MovIng Iii II, every'h .ng
go. TV, stereo, n1w furniture,
•
tid
r ge, ho u11 ho ld
was her-uryer,
Items, crahs, molorcycles, 304·
675·3512.
New diamond solitare ring, call
tor delllll 614·742·2153

-~ - err~H?!!

Complete Grooming
.for All Breeds .
EMilEE MERINAR
Ow111r &amp;Optrator

. 614 .,_.,1.: -o_.,

'

.

SWAIN

&amp;

Work boots. 614·446·3159.
2BA 1 bat~t
kltchln...Ntwly
VI'RA FURNITURE
rtmodeled. Nlc:e art•, big yard.
614·446·3158 .
$325.fmo., 1325. dep. D•y• 814LIVING ROOM : Sot• &amp; Chair,
448·1157, Eve. 114-894-4501.

S188.DO·

12'-2·81 +mo.

TIIM .and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
·
.

Galllpolll .

Vinyl, $4.98 yd. Ctrpol 14.00 Up.

Moflohan Carpels. 614-446-7444.

nlohod. $240/mo. $100 DopooH. Olive St., Gallipolis. Ntw &amp; Ustd
fumtture, hn11111, Wntern &amp;
614-446-31711.

Real Eslale

RACINE, OHIO

614·99H702

SHRUB &amp; TREE

Avtnue,

Stove, Aefrig•llor, W.l« Fur·

614·949•2202

39507 Rocksprings Rd.
.• IAt c....ru.s. 33l
. P~oy, Ohio

11·2S 1 mo.

HILL'S DEER

11

SNODGUSS
UPHOLSTERY

,, , .. attic.

S8,100

POMEROY - -Mulberry 11/e. - Look It thlo Hlslorical
home. Thlt hattie hat chlny cabinets in tht kitch1n, a
btautilul woodon on:hway, ond llfVI woodtn pockot
doors -noting tht living room lrorn the dlnlr,tg .....
Aloa hal ., 01*1 1111,_,, 3 bodroomo, ll1d 1 giNgio.
.
132,1011

C.st~ttitg

PH. 614·992-5591
12+1fn

GRAVE

Replacement Windows

raoma, 2 cor go.-go, ond o trulld clack. AI oiling on
'

-

12·2-Vt-1 mo. pd.

Order Now for Your
Loved Ones.

"'*'" Ioiii electric homl that h11 a '-1111tlly roorn
lor .....,lrv otter a hard day'a walk. liocludld 111 3 bod·
approx. 25 ICIM.. \

Jr. Gelf Sets

Prtfossiatd
E.adag

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

NO SUNDAY

lovoly llvong·roam:-H'llto- olli on a·g,...t C.mor
50X100 lot. e..., hu olittlo gordan opot. .

Teaford
Cou1try Club

Bap,Hiatl

R&amp;C EICIYITING
BULLDoZING

AUTO PARTS

mo. pd.

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

or lis. 94tt-21160

· 205 North S.C011d.Ave.
~dltDOr:t. OH . .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Metol Otolts

11/1-4ttln

PICKENS FURNITURE

Ntw!'Uitd
HouHhold . tumlahlng. 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Plaa11nl, WV,
Teklna Applle~ttlons For A 14x70, call 30+67!1·1450,
3br, Total Eleclrtc Trailer. Avail· Ralrir,rator, :z dr.. SJS·, 30 inCh
oblo
Oocombor 15th. lorgo Yonl
'nd ~--d
a Ml'- F G 1 tltclr c range $75; Kenmore
"' .._1 en.
rom... a· washtr, $75; Portable washer,
tlpolla. 8 4·388-11141.
$75; 40 Inch tltctrle range, S95;
Sldl&lt;by-sidt
H1n&gt;11t g~d. nice,
44
Apartment
w11 ·$265 now $195; 'Whirlpool
dryer, was- $'125, now $95.
for Rent
Sk1ggs Appll1nc11 . 614-4461 &amp; 2 bdrm 1pt In U~dltport , 7398.
01illt11 Fum, dep req, no pttl,
RENT20WN
814·912·2218.
614·446·:tl58
Vl'ra Furniture
1 And 2 Bedroom Apar:tmenlt,
First Av•nu•, Gallipolis, 814- Sola &amp; Chair, $11.10 WHk;
R.cllner, $5.47 W11k, SWivtl
446&lt;1221.
Rocker, J$3,63 WHk.Bunll Bed
1· bdrm downstairs, ullllli11 Compltlt $8.41 W11k, 4 Drawer
furn, buuutul view ol river, Chttl, $3.26 WHk; Potttr Bid·
1250mo, 614-8411-2526
room Suitt, 7 pc., $18.67 WHk,
,.bcfrm eHiclency apt, -3rd floor, lnclud11 Btddlng.Country Pine
01111111 With Bench l 4 Chairs,
no pets, dtpotlt, Pomeroy
t10.98 W11k.OPEN : Mond1y
2 B1droorn Ctncr~~l. Air, G11 Thru S.lurdly, h .m. to 6p.m.,
Hut, Dlshwe•hlr, w..tteriDry•r Sund•y 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
Hookup, l~mo. AtnJer Pays Mllll On Route 7 On Routt 141,
In Clnlenaw.
Ut/tltiH. '814-441-441t

8 Mllll From Oenlpolll On At.
218. 614!38~o~M~ .

Gr..,Wra &amp;

JAMES KEESEE
992•2772 or
742·2097

985-4473
667-6179

As·

lull

1981 Cul1om daluu Chevr
lruck1 half ton with topper, 6 ey,
rtctntly WNMCI $10; lullno stanaard t hl rt, good c:ond,
Paart, Clnntmon Purl Plld $2,100. 304~75-150(.
Driven Cockllltl brMdlng pr~,lrs. 114·
Grandfllhtr Clock MOvtmtnl 1 383-8151.
1984 Chevy 112 ton PU. Call arttr
.
Triple Chima, B111ss Dial Ana
51514·388-8612.
Wilght Shtltl, $75. Htrmla Pan· Poodlt Pupplu, AKC Tiny Toy
dulum And Balance WA11I And T.Cup; Alto Miniature 1985 GMC Hk3h Sltrra 4 wh. dr.
Triple Chima Movamtnts, $35 Schnauurs S.h And Papper, truck. Loadtd. Good conditiOn.
Callaftw &amp;pm. 6J4..367-D208.
Each. Call 614-441-0914 Afttr 5 Coolvlna, &amp;M-&amp;67-a404.
p.m.
Rattwel•r Puppl", AKC ANdy 1&amp;16 To'yot1 Ph:kup, 5 Spwd,
Hummingbird Agurines, Plates, For Chrlltmu! cau 114-446- Good CondiOon! $3,400. 614·
446-4782.
4701 __._,___
Aft• Sp.m.
Etc. 614·•41.0002.
,187
Dodge 150 PU, PSIPB, 1ir,
JVC stereo 1ystem, exc. concl.,
48,000 mi. , 4spd., onrdrive. As.
turnt1ble,
cass1t1e
deck,
tum• lean $5678. 614-446-7527
Farm Suppl1es
receiver, tuner, wllh 5-band
lhtr 5.
graphic euqallzer. Pair ot JBL
&amp; L1vestock
tpel'ker1 wf c•bl• $200 or btsl
1187 Dodge 0.59 Real . Good .·
ottu. 614·446-9363 or 388·8049.
Condition! $3,200. 614·256-6251,

Compllltly lurnlthed mobile·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
home, washer &amp; dryer, air cond, Compltle home fumiShingt.
3D4·nl·5958.
Houl'l: Mon-Sat, 9-5. 614-4460322, 3 mlltl out Bulavltle Rd.
For Atnl Or SaJa ·On Land Con- FrM OtUvtry.
lract: 3br Mobila Home, 14x70,

111611 mo.

•VInyl Siding ·
•Rtpl-mtnt
Windows
•Roofing
•lnsul11fOn

oCotWpleto
~mo_dollng

Emargancy

Deliver, 81111·256-e202.
Hermia
Cabtt

1-614·66i-6474 ·~

INSULATION

•Garag~s

And

Good Firewood For Salt, Will

Employment Services

flow llltlnllrllt

OFFICI;

6:30P.M.

oNew Homes

hlatar, eall

tllanca, 614-446-8851.

recommendadon. Honest

J&amp;L

9· 13· '91-lfn

UIIID-.....-$12\ .,

SIMON'S
PICK•AePIIR

Public Notlca

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

- EIIIOtriclll tnd

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON

Point Plllllnt, 304-175-2013,
Uno Troplcol fllh birds, 111" Willy's Jnp, good cond,
am1111nlmlll 1nd ·~l.i.
S1800,132 Butternut .

lpiCt

~

o o

MOBILE HOME

For S.le· Gu
614-992-2111
H11p

lnttrlor Palndng,
FrH Eodmotoo
30 r .. ,. experience.
Four letters of

AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUWS and
FURNACES FOR MOilLE&amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
0

Fish Tank; 2413 Jtckton Avt.

RrawDOd Dtlivtrtd, Wa .lcct~pl

992·3838
OVEN REPAIR

Pets lcir

54 . Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Gallla nmber Products Splil

•Carpet H.. Foil """'·

Secretarial lolls
tndlvldualtnd
Tutorials

TRUCKING AVAIIAIII
FilE ESTIMATES

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

,.......
(FREE ESTIMATES)

. ..,, 614-44e-2S38

GIFTS lor HOME o;

PERFEC1
RESUMES

HOWARD '
EXCAVATING

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

- lntlt'lor • ERttrior

No

erv1ce

. U~I,OH.

- Outler worlt

pllcallon lor a Cerlillcato of

AT, PW, 22,500 mll11. S851io.

614--379-2M8.

'Ads that must be piid '" adun~ ••:

1

•

- Room Additions

NOTICE OF APPLICATION

1188 ChtvroiM Bettht OT, tlr, .

Return Your C. II.

.·UKE

YOUNG'S
Public Notice

'

Sill Bock Ott Rood Whh Botn To

PH. 61

Public Notice

· only! Ev'"lng1 ~~• ..,25.

Rel«encu. Pl.... LNv•

• St~ntlftt.oi .,-

tor errors

call.,

loiquWtoo

CINn Allpontlblt Adult Working Couple, ·S.tk Large . Untur.

-

' Pr •et! ol at't tor all C~Pt'lllllt.,, 11 dollbiD'pllce ot ad cos t
'7 ~o ml t1111t
anf; med

'25 C1t &amp;Wrapped
15 Extra tl Slll

'·

1000 bWit (1152), ....
N;, PS, Pt. lollouo

47 Wanted to Rant

$4.00
S6.00
19.00
113.00

run 3 d.WI II no Ch ..ge.

WUPPING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:

R1te

$1 .30i day

15

Country Mobile Home Park,
ROut. 33, -North of P01n1ray'.
Lott, rantalt, parts, Altl. Clll
~"'"*·"'71.

., .

A•tnate ~~ conMcuiNt "''"· broken up d..,:. IMII be dl•g«&lt; ;
ICM' each~ •• ~_tr-.lelcb __ .;
.
,.·

' RccllftW $.50 chaeount tor adl' p.id .n actv1ncu:
'free ;Jds Giv.t~.,. ..,dfot~nd.ads under 15 wordt w1ll bt.o

9-6-tln

IN POMEROY ,
Don't Miss Our
11th 'Annual

,

Day1

'Atts-~IYMe•gt. GMiia or "Maton eout'li• m1111 bt~ pre ·
patd
·

1, 3&amp; 5 P.M.

REWARD: $300

And

1117.

. RATES

!tll7 Dodgo
ShoU?..=:•, 1Uof
Turbo
lntercoo&amp;H,

46 Space for Rent

Gallipolis City Sc:hoals. 614·44&amp;-

COUNTRY CRAFTS ·
&amp; HERBS
FRI.·SUN. 12·5
HANING'S CHRISTMAS TREES
Flatwoods Rd., Pomeroy, OH.

DAILY~SI1ECIALS

I'

Plut Deposit And RtJerenc ...

614-388-lloat.
2br Home, NtJif Oalllpollt

IIMflllll _,.. wHh cookl"''.
AO... trollol - · A l l hook-upo.
Can 1fter 2:00 p.m., 304·773Nit,MIIonwv.

1880.

111-11111.

11116 Dodgo Doy1ono, Good
11112 Pontioc T-1000
·o....,
..ynd
Cotllr)' · · 12,6110·
R""' Oociii, lody Rough S375.
11and lllm*ylft
ltlnone.
114-211W251.
114-441-1144 Ollar 11!.111.
Cond(llon, Loodocll S SOlid,

87
Upholstery
:-:Mo=w::,.::,:::.,:-'::U~pt::ool-:-11-:-lri:::-=ng-111'"",...""
lng trl county .,.. 26 years. TN

bell ln tumlture upflotllwtng_
Call 304.e71-4114 lor rr.. ...

UmltH.

•

•

�beCember

Ohio
·

·

.

•

•

•

Star Grange plans Christmas acttvttles
•

•

•

Pians for the aiinual ChrisiJIIas
Thirty-eight members, visitors
dinner, to serve an auction, and to and juniors enjoy_ed potluck
go Christmas caroling, were made
" when Star Grange met recently at
· the hall.
The Christmas dinner was
scheduled for Dec. 21 at 6:30 p.m.
at tl)e Salem Center Fire Station. A
$3 gift exchange will be held and a
visit from Santa Claus in planned.
. Chrisunas caroling was set for ·
Dec. 23 with members to meet at
the Mjdlciff residence at I p.ln. to
assemble the baskets and to go car- .
oling.
Plans to serve an auction on Saturday at the Green safe were made.
Memebers were asked to bake pies
and also to assis~ with serving the

.

r.

.f·-:·
f.

I

refreshments following the mee[~ing.
"'

.Marshal}.gains I~AA finals • C-1

Christmas
·tradition,
folklore

•

1992 Meigs County fair memberships
are being sold • Bob Hoeflich •·B·7·

· B-1
_Top~ranked Duke~cagers

defeat- . ~
No.19 Michigan·88·85 in overtime -C-1

ny at its Christmas party on Thursday evening
held at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen·
ter, Presenting the awards is Robert L. Wingett,
publisher.
' .
'

Davis, Hoffman receive service
awards during annual OVP dinner
Employees of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company gathered
Thursday evening for their annual
family Christmas party and dinner.
The Daily Sentinel hosted the party
at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
A catered dinner was served to
63 · gu~sts with entertainment
through the dinner hour provided
by Jennifer Sheets. Entertainment
following dinner included a performance by a clogging team from the
Shady River Shufflers, under the
direction of Paulette Harrison, and
voc alists Sharon Hawley and
Donna Sanders entertained with
several Christmas selections.

Service awards were presented
to Emma Lou Davis for 40 years of
service to the company, and to Fred
Hoffman for 35 years of service.
Attending were Brian Billings,
Shirley Billings, Betty Tope, Paula
Tope, Brian Reed, Brenda Venoy,
Kevin Venoy, Julie Dillon, Scott
Dillon, Laura Brewer, Joanie Simpson, Dave Harris, Tammie Zehm,
Donald Wright, Evelyn Wright,
Kim Moore, John Wright, G.
Spencer Osborne , Emma Lou
Davis, Helen M. Davis, Margaret
Finnicum , Jack Finnicum , Gary
Cochran, Sh'ari Cochran, Janice
Veazey, Johanna Errett, Fred Hoff-

man , Pauline Hoffman, Helen
Bush, Gay land Bush, Pam Dotson,
Norm Lieving, Phyllis Roach, Cleo
Lieving, Tom Roach , Charlene
Ho efli ch, Bob Hoeflich, Kati e
Crow, Debbie Jenkins, Mike Jenkins , Terra Barker, Paul Barker
Matt Rodgers, Bob Wingr,tt, Chip
Young, Carolyn Young, Larry_
Boyer, Pat Boyer, Margaret Lehew,
Bill Lehew, Michell e Carter
Mindy Kearns, Chris KeartJs, D~
Adkins, Kris Cochran, Jean Davison, Amy Wedemeyer, Pat Whitehead, Kitty Whitehead, Judy Ray- .
bum, Henry Rayburn, Hobart Wilson, Beverly Wilson:

l-allnerme Colwell'; Women's
Activities Chairman, reported that
the baking contest .will be held at
the Jan. 4 meeting. Her safety tip
discussed chemical spills.
·Eldon Barrows, legislat ive
chairman, discussed several important iss~es including returning
prayer to pub~c schools, term legISlation, etc.
State Deput)l Pally Dyer presented Traveling Granger Awards
SUPERSTARS • S~perstars for the week at Pomeroy Elemen- '
to Pauline Rife, Christine Napier,
tary are, 1-r, Michael Hoover, Tommy Queen ~nd Shannon Part- ·
Waid Nicholson , Maxine Dyer,
low.
Opal Dyer and herself on behalf of
the Ohio State Grange Lecturer
Francis White. These people ,have
visited ten or more granges over
the past year.
Dyer also announced that BridLOS ANGELES (AP) ge t Vaughan, a member of Star Madonna was honored for her
Junior Grange, received first place work against AIDS during an allon her National Junior Art entry. star benefit auction, but her
Bunny Kubl, a member of the Rock remarks were tempered by another
Springs Grange, received honor- public denial. that she has tested
able mention on her Class A quilt positive for the AIDS virus.
SAVE ON ALL FALL &amp;
at national.
Eldon Barrows, lecturer, pre"Instead of pointing the finger
HOUDAY MERCHANDISE
sented the program and discussed at people and having witch bunts
Pearl Harbor Day and .Christmas and ostracizing each other fo r
TODAY ONLY!
Tree Safety.
lifestyles and sexual preferences, ·
we all should be uniting to fight
this disease," the pop star' said at
·
Tuesday night's gala.
AND

Madonna denies
rumors of AIDS

BURONS &amp; BOWS
WILL BE.OPEN '
TONIGHT TILL
10:00 PM

BU¥rONS

BOWS

·'Now I'm not HIV positive, but
what if I were? I would be more
afraid of how society would treat
me for having the disease than the
actual disease itself."

110 EAST MAIN ST.

Vol. 26, No. 45

Along the river .............. Bl-8
Business/Parrn ......::.....D-1-8
Classified ...,................... D3-7
Deaths............................~•••A4

Editoral ;;... ~ ~-:
A2
Sports .............................Cl-7
oa. . . .

•• •

. . .: . . . . .

Weather...........................A-3

.

Partly cloud'y. Hlgb today In mid ·
30s.

1a s ..11on., 111 Pogoo
A Uultimoclio Inc. Nwop. .

·24TH ANNIVERSARY -The Silver
Bridge, shown here
at its dedication in ·
1928, co.Jlapsed into
the Ohio River between Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant 24
years ago today.
Shortly before 5 p.m.,
near the height of
. rush hour, Dec. 15, .
1967, the Silver
Bridge collapsed
_
carrying 46 people to ~
their deaths. Two ·
years later, the Silver
Memorial Bridge was
completed.

-schaad reviews past year asMeigs Development Director
By BRIA)II J, REED
Tlmes•Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Prior to leaving
her post wi\h the 'Me.igs County
Chamber of Commerce last
Wednesday , Governor -George
Voinovicb's new Regiooal Development Director for Southeastern
Ohio, Elizabeth Schaad, took time
to review her year as Meigs Coun·ty's Development Di,rector.
.
From the local controversy surrounding the Clean Air Act and the
possible closing of the Meigs
Mines, to the success of chamber
programming throughout the year,
Schaad had an interesting year on
the job.
(The following remarks are
printed in a verbalim question and
answer format in·order to maintain
the integrity of the interview.) ·
SATURDAY ACCIDENT- A Vinton man · Vinton Fire Department_responded to ·tbe acciTIMES-SENTINEL: What is
dent scene. Smith. was admitted to Holzer M~i­
was hospitalized after a bead-on collision on
the most important accomplishcal Center for obServation. EMS and patrol·perS.R. 160 Saturday morning. According to the
ment achieved by the Meigs Counsonnel credited Smith's use.or a seat belt for savState Highway Patrol, Shane R. Smith, 18, tried
ty Chamber of Commerce in terms
ing his life. "I have no doubt he'd have been
to avoid vehicles stopped in the rol!d and struck
of economic development during
killed if he wasn't wearing a seat belt," the
a pickup driven by Launchey McCoy, 42, of
199 1?
respond ing trooper remarked later. Here, work·
Ewington. According to a Gallia County EmerELIZABETH SCHAAD: The
ers free Smith from the wreckage. Smith was
gency Medical Servic:e spokesman, it took about
chamber bas made treme ndous
cited by the patrol for failure to control. (Timesprogress. We are now established
20 minutes to cut the roof of·the caf and free
Sentinel
photo
by
Kris
Cochran)
Smith. Two ambulances," a rescue team and the
in a nice facility , and thanks to the
hard work and volunteer efforts of
chamber members, we have purchased and paid for furniture and
equipment
for the office without
si.on, of the Meigs County Court of by Article.!, Section 5 of the ConBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Common Pleas, and Judge Pav-ick stitution of the State of Ohio.
Times-Sentinel Starr
O'Br ien of the Meigs C()unty
The right to a ~ivil jury trial in
POMEROY - The Ohio Acade- Court, a framed copy of the Juror America, ·according to the proclamy of Trial Lawyers have pro- Appreciation Weelc jl!OCiamation. . _mruion, dates back at l~st ~ far as _ "l&gt;if'\IP'li
~'laimed this week, -Dec.-·15-22, as
ilie proclamation notes iliiii for ·164 1 when the Massachusetts
"J uror Appreciation Week, 200 200 years Americans'have bencfit- " Body of Liberties" was enacted
Years of the American Jury: Justice ea from the protection offered by and thus predates any other ri ght
by the People."
the right to tria! by jury guaranteed guaranteed.by the Bill of Rights.
· As a part ()[ the local obser- through the Bilt.of Rights. It points
·The British denial ofJhe righl to
vance, pomeroy Auorn_ey John out that the right to a-trail by ju,Y trail by jury was on~ of the princi· Lentcs presented to Judge Fred W. in both criminal and civil cases is · pal transgressions that sparked the
Crow, Ill. general and domestic guaranteed by the Sixth and Sev- American Revolution and was one
divi sion , and Judge Robert E. enth Amendments of the United of only two specific violations of
Buck, probate and juvenile divi - States Constitution, and separately,
Continued on A-3 1

SUPERSTAR
Michele
Watkins was recently selected as
In 1981, the best·selling car in t~e
a superstar of the week at. United States was the Chevrolet
Pomeroy Elementary.
Cbevette.

\

I

1\

•
LOW, LOW, LOWEST
PRICES
OF THE YEAR!
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
.

rv•s .....................SAVE $30-$3()0
VACS .....................SAVE $35·~ .

0

Juror Appreciation Week to be observed

LOW AS

$ij499
LOW AS

STEREOS .~........;..SAVE $45-$135 29995
5

.MICROWAV-ES .~:.~ SAVE

Inside .

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, December 15, 1991

. Copyrighted 1191

The event, sponsored by the
American Foundation for AIDS
Research, honored Madonna's contributions to fund-raising and public education about AIDS.

YEAR-END

0

•
tnttli•

--

SERVICE AWARDS PRESENTED · Emma
Lou Davis, lert, was recognized for ·40 years or
service and Fred Hoffman, right, for 35 years or
service with the Ohio Valley Publishing Campa-

'

ELIZABETH SCHAAD
"going in the red."
Chamber membership is up 30
percent from 1990, and more
importantly, community involvement and participation in the cham~
ber has increased dramatically. I
have met new people on a (pgular
basis. With every project that the
chamber has undertaken, more new
people have become involved and
stayed involved.
All of the chamber's programs
were successful this year. In the

spring, the "Leadership 2;000" program was a success. Althoi!Jh the
full benefits of ''Take Charge"-and
the new "Partners in E4uc4.tion" - .
program have not been fully realized, the programs themselves were
successfully organized with the
help of significant community
in volvement
Meigs County has made significan t progress in its economic
development efforts. We have
made progress in identifying a marketable industrial site. But, a1 this
point, that development is still in
the planning stages.
,
We've talked to individuals who
are interested in industrial sites in
Meigs County, and I have been
able to provide the data that they
needed. W facilitated meetings
with state age ncies and business
people needin~ state funding, and
directed indivtduals interested in
starting new businesses to the
Smal l Business Development Center in Athens, when appropriate.
The chamber co-s pon sored a
"Start Up Business Basics" program ut the chamber office which
was well attend ed and we ll
received.
T-S: Are there any goals that
you had for your first year here that
you didn't accomplish?
Continued on page A-5

0

-$5-$36
LOW AS

RANGES ...............SAVE .$65-$95 22499
5

.

LOWAS

DISHWASHERS ....SAVE . $20-$90 27995
WA.SHER&amp;
. DRYER PAIRS ......SAVE $20·$120
5

25 in. Sears
Ul ~onsole T•Ievision ••••••••;.••• ;$399.99

Panasonlc
8 cu. lt. 600 Watt Microwaye ••• $150~96
loovtr Upright
Convtl!'lible Vacuum.................... $99.99
ltnmort 24 ln.
lullt•ln Dishwasher.................. $299.99
ltemlllllld lii:IDWI may be one-of·a ·ldnd, IOid 1111, with prie'lng and availability 11m1180 10 store stock
Oulnlillllllmltld. Prien lncludllhlpping to atore. ~lnctl wtila: colorl e111ra.

Hours: Mon.-Fri. e:»S:OO
Saturday 9:30-4:00

., -

. 7.88 North Second Avt~.
Middleport, Oh.
992·2178
•

\

,,
'I

JUROR. APPRECIATION WEEK ·. A
framed proclamation for Juror Appreciation
Week, Dee. 15-22, was presented by local attorney John Lutes, repusentatlve or the Ohio
··~

Academy or 'trial Lawytrs, rlabl, to J1d1es
Robert .Buclt, Patrick H. O'Brltl,, and Fred W.
Crow Ill, pictured len to rigbt, Friday ahernoon.

SHOPPING FOR TOY TOWN:... Members
of the Gallla Audemy HIJb School Key Club
shop at HOI's Dep1rtment Store Saturday morn. lng for Toy TOWII. This Is the fourth year that
tbe Key Club hu been sponsoring Toy Town.
Here, Angle KlnR and Jared Ford load toys onto
•

•

a cart. Behind tiem, Jolla lAatllr, tar rear, and
Jason Koplclt are cheekln1 1 lilt to make sure
they aet alltbe toys needed to help make Cbrlst·
mu more enjoyable for about .l tbouSind area
children. (Times-Sentinel photo by Jim Frtt·
man)
l

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