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OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Times-Sentinel

December 15,

Caribbean:seen as-promising_·fi
market for U.S. 'food ~~ports -·~
"Unless U.S. food companies have further impeded progress in ~:
become more aggressive•in the this region,"
, ·~
Caribbean market, tlie United
While the Caribbean generally '·
Slates may find itself edged. out of is spoken of as a single market, tt ~
t~is neighboring markel," said a actually is comjlOsed of many dis·
recent report in Agn'cultural' Trade tinctly different cultures, the repOI'I tHighlights put out by USDA's For- said.
'
·
~
eign Agricultural Service.
. " With an average per capita ~
Much of the market is dominat- mcome rangmg between .S360 and ~
ed by Euro~~~supJIIiers, th~__ j.! 8,~QO "and ·.,~i_opulatio~s , o(~
rejlon said. Tt'noted that "signifi- between 10,000 and 7 mtll.IO~, ~
cant trade barriers, ranging from these islands rep~nt smalltnd•- r
GALLI?OLIS • The Board of lack of interest 10 high tariff rates, vidual markets," it $11ld.
~
.
Directors at Ohio Valley Bank in
Gallipolis recently voted. to
mcrease the founh quarter dividend
by 4.65% from $.43 to $.45,per
share according to President and
.' ;·"
Chief Executive Officer James L.
......- '
Dailey.
,.
The recOiil date for the increase
tt-: .
•
was December 1, 1991 while clivi·
;
Security, Safety,
dend checkS were mailed Decem·
;
and a Guaranteed
ber 14, 1991. With the payment of
..; .
this quarter's dividend checks,
Incoine for as loag
OVB has jiaid a cash dividend of
as you live.
$1.74 per shftre in 1991.
The book value of OVB srock as
of September 30, 1991 was $34.12,
which is an increase of $1.98 per
Call me.
share from the December 31, 1990
CAROIL SNOWDEN •
book value of $32.14. The bank's
• · Comtt of lhittl ·
tolal assets were $259,990,000 at
bt.. &amp; State St.
the end of the third quaner, which
Golipolls, Oh.
represents a gain of $40,831,000
Phone 446-4290
over year end 1 990 ligures.
~ 446-4511
· Dailey said: "The board is
pleased to make this increase in our
ITIIU fA.M
fourth quarter' dividend to our
Like • good neighbor, State Farm IJ the,..
shareholders'. This again illusuates
the vitality of the communities we
INIUUNCI
State Farm Llle Insurance Company
• Home Olftce: Bloomington, Illinois
serve and what can be accomplished when we all work together."
WASHINGTON . (AP) Although the Caribbean'has been a
growing market for the United
Slates, its potential has been underestimated by many U.S. fo9d
exporters,.the Agriculture Department says. , .

Ohio Lottery

Meigs
defeats
Athens

Pick 3: 582
Pick 4: 4764

Cards: 4-H, 4-C, ·
7-D, A·S
Super Lotio: ·
10·28-29-34-38-47
Kicker: 682636

PageS

t

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a1

increases-di-vidend .

~

G,rnnti'ng
"'"'
....

and yoo rna; win a $5 prize from the Ohio Val·
ley Publishing Co. f.eave your name, address
and telephone number with your card or letter.
No telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wellnesday. ln case of a tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Meigs County farm will be featured by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.

Continued from D-1 .

_.:._::::::::::::.::.~:..:.....__

than 100.
The company has kept in mind
the marlcet it will be facing in coming years: " By the year 2000 one
out of five people in America will
be over 55 with a life expec1ancy
of another 20 years," Hallmark
spokeswoman Renee Hershey said. ·
American Greetings' cards
include a humoroils look at having
the retired husband around the
·house and tbe importance of longheld friends.
"Now that our hubbies are
retired, let's get together for
lunch!" says one card showing a
woman lalking on the phone. The
kicker: " ... And leave them at
home!"
The crea10r of American Greetings' line, Joan Kerber,. said she
wants 10 combat the stereotypes of

_______

old age just as the women's move·
ment and tbe civil rights movement
combated stereotypes about women and race.
"I don't care what anyone says
... we're still roo yomig to be this
old!" one card says.
"Most of the people I know are
very lively'' said Ms. Kerber, 65.
"They're ~ot walking around with
canes or anything."
In Wisner a town of 1.300,
located 71 ~iles northwest of
Omaha, Marlene and Bob Colligan
asked their son to help develop
Christian greeting cards for older
people.
Tom Colligan drew the cards,
and the family wrote the captions
together. They began shipping the
cards to Christian card and·book
stores in the Midwest earlier this

year.
One card says "Glowing Strong
at 80" with a picture of an oil lamp
on the cover. Inside, a verse reads:
"You are the world's light, a city
on the hill, glowing in the night for
all to see," from the Gospel of
Ma,t~ew.
. .
Our Slallst•cs tell us there are
27 million people in our country
?,ver 75," ~rs_. Colligan s_a.id .
Maybe were JUSt not reahzmg
how many active se~!or citizens we
have m our country.
Gene Shermer of The Abbey
Inc .•. a N~rfolk card shop. smd the
Co)hgans cards were sellmg .'7'ell.
The cards., ~nder the log~ Rays
of Sonshme, also are bemg sold
m Sterhng, Colo.; Langdon, N,D.;
and Bozeman, Mont., Mrs. Colll gan s31d. Sales m1ght branch out
. farther if things go well, she said.

State Farm
Annuities

' .
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Vol. 42, No. 157
Copyrighted 1991

.,...

$80,000 for short-term
care of elderly residents
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
An $8J),Ol)O graQUo provide
shon,terin care for older adults in
nine Appalachia counties including
Meigs has been announced by the
office of Gov. George V.
Voinovich.
The grant will be administered
by the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Area Agency on Aging. Most
of the elisible older persons who
will rece1ve services under the
grant will be those recuperating
fr_om a recent hospital stay and
needing short-term home care
assislance to remain in their homes
safely ...
Home care services to be provided through the grant include
home-delivered meals, personal
care assistance, homemaker service, adult day care, transporlation
assis1ance to doctors' appointment,
iiiii!•-1-J!!J~i· ,ng J:epi!lr;· and resp!le for carehie." .Thank you, Santa. Love Carrie. By now
g•vers.
Santa's mailbox is surely ov'erflowing. SevenSuch services will be handled
year-old Carrie Abbott, Pomeroy second grader,
locally through the cooperative
settled down Sunday night to write her letter to
efforts of the Area Agency on
Santa.
Aging and the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
The counties where the grant
money will be used include Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,

Don't SatUa ·for Lass,_~111 You Gill
••-

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•

WONT YOU LET US TAKE YOU ON
A-SEA-GRUIS£?

•

.. .....:_WRITINlrr·o- SANT · • "Dear Santa,

SELECTION-LOW PRICES AND SERVICE!

please bring me a baby doll with plenty of
clothes, bottles and diapers, maybe some furni ture, and I also would like to have a new Bar-

Any dealer - anywhere "7 will gladly sell you a new car. SEFJVICE
IS THE DIFFERENCE. We want your service business and are
dedicated to offering you THE BEST SERVICE for your
Satisfaction.

Missed
deadline
could be

"

~A55A~ -

JANUARY31- FEBRUARY2, 1991

$619 PERM£MBERI

($644 NON-MEMBERS)

Coo-wee baby! Thafs what your spouse wiU SJ:i when you surprise him or
her on Christmas.morning with a aulse'to Na5saii! Join your Peoples Choice
liiends In February for a three-day trip to The Bahamas aboard the brand-new
aulse ship Fantasy.

1992 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LE
Til! cr Lll'~t'. c

.DisCOUit............~.-1 ;250.00
••~t•••

,.•~~·-

~-

,.

.'

'

Sunday, februaly 2: Another wonderful day of doing whatever you please!
Monday, febiUiU)' 3: An1ve back In Miami and board plane for home.

rr,
Your cost Includes: round trip airfare from Charleston to Miami, airport to
dod&lt; transfer, double oo:upancy accommodations on board The Fantasy,
and all meals (lndudlng snacks and midnight buffet!). Mary Fowler, Peoples
Choice Coordinator, will accompany ~ triP as your hostess. AD for only_

I' ~l'tl1· p(J\'J~'t

~ Factory Lls~!!!"''S ,16,4t0.00_

Saewday, febiUiU)' t: MornJng aQ'Ivalln Nassau, where you can shop In the
- Straw Market, visit- the Casino, or slmplyJounge_on the beautifUl beadles.
.

,.

...................-750.~ . ,

.

·$ _

YOUR PRICE.....

. _ _,:-~ ,

14 4 t ·o :·
,

'92· SUNBIRD LE COUPE
- ..• '

Autom atlc,c
AJC,AM·FM

Cauette

$10,595 ,

~~19 per meft:a&amp;erl$644 per non-member).

· For more Information or;reservations, please call Mary at Peoples Bankln
Point Pleasant at (304) 675-1 121. Qft certlllcates are also available.
-

~-

~--------------=--~-----

- -

. --- -=--==-=-- - ---

haphtCb I Cloolce• #~.............
._. 1P ' llltlwpena•·--·
Chalca to. tllo!lllon Cl
PI mr,MonariDIC. 1Aellht_,.....,..•
ntil'll SIO.OOO bollncelna ...... link -..1np

die,....,.. ....,...... ,.;,p...'

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- . ! , ........ olclapcllllclopaolt,IM •"''
-.~~~~reo~: No......... ~

so ......... lor

., .......... 1M oiSZS I*,..._.. s.tmnllll penalty
lorellly-

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v.1ndO\'J~ r\',lf d~ foqq~'r I'lL

friday, January 3 t: Depart from Charleston via U.S. Alr eAroute to Miami.
Board ship for 4:00 p.m. sailing time.

'•

Muskingum, · Noble, Perry and
While the grant money will cerWashington. How it will be appor- tainly not replace the Options for
tioned was not announced.
Elders l?ro·gram' whiclrwas- n·ot In making the announcement, funded 10 the Gov. Voinovich's
Gov . Voinovich said that with the biennial budget, it will perhaps
grant money many older pick up some of the services which
Appalachian Ohioans can receive have discontinued.
some vital assislance at home , until
As of July I, the local Council
they are back on their feet.
on Aging working with the Area
"It is imporlant 10 suppon older 1\gency discontinued actepting
persons so that they continue 10 new clients into the Options for
remain independent in their homes Elders program . Se..Vices 10 those
and communities - this $80,000 already on the rolls will· continue
will do that," he said.
on a limited basis through June,
In discussing the new money for 1993 at which. time the Options
use in bett.ering the lives of senior program ceases to exist.
citizens, Cindy Farson, Area'AgenWhile the Options program is
cy on Aging director, said that being phased out, Passport, another
"ex perience indicates that home assistance program was better
carc.assis1ance during a recovePy funded for the biennium. One of
penod can prevent unnecessary the major differences, however, is
nursing home placement and the financial guidelines for serreduce incidents of return hospital vices. Under Options residents
visits."
·
received services and comributed
"_we are..very happy. the ARC according to their ability-to-pay-,. has provided funding to take a clos- while under Passpon, only those in
er look at this important issue," she extreme financial straits, qualify
said.
for services.
Nancy Hollister, director of the
In other words those with a few
Governor's Office of Appalachia, thousand dollars in the bank do not
also expressed enthusiasm about qualify for Passport until they
the additional money coming into "spend down" at which time many
this area of the slate to provide ser- have little choice other than to
vices for the frail elderly ,
leave their home and go live with a
relative or enter a nursing home. ·

Betting
bill heads

costly

~~'E~A~

ONLY

AMultimedia Inc. Newopapet

:--Christmas Is ... -----.._____, SEO counties receive

•

"':

1 SocUon, 10 Pages 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 16, 1991

A

L-•&gt;

For Small Town Friendly Servie·e See....
·Don Carter, Brett EpJins, Hoyt Mullins, Mare Cannan,
.
or Greg Smilh

r

Low tonight in mid 20s.
Tuesday, high In mld·40s.

•

Ohio Valiey Bank

MYSTERY FARM· This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici" pate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the .farm 's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess orr to the Daily Sentinel,l11 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 third Ave., GallipoUs, Oh\o, 45631,

- ..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A
utility watchdog and a slate senator
say they fear a missed deadline that
allowed Columbus Southern Power
Co. to impose a temporary rate
increase may prompt other utilities
to follow suit.
Columbus Southern announced
last week that il would raise its
rates 28.4 percent as of Jan. 3., after
the Public 'Utilities Commission of
Ohio missed a 275-day deadline to
re view a proposed rate increase.
The Columbus Dispatch reported today that the PUCO has mi ssed
deadhnes in '78 percent of 23 major
rate cases since 1984.
· &lt;Slate regulators have beaten the
deadline in only five of the 23
cases, including two that the parties
settled in advance , and take an
average of 330 days lO resolve a
case.
Columbus Southern mvokcd a
!hat-allows utilities to raise
rates without PUCO apprra~ if the
275-day deadline passes._,' • t year,
Celumbia Gas invoked the law.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
William A. Spratley, who once
worked for the PUCO. was not crit·
ical of the agency.
But he said he fears other utilities will boost rates when th e
PUCO fail s 10 meet the deadline.
" I would be very surprised if
th e commission docs not try to
tighten the process down, given
this is the second time this has hap. WASHINGTON (AP) - Six Tsongas and former California .. pened," Spratley said.
Democratic presidential hopefuls Gov. Jerry Brown.
He has said the PUCO should·
sought early support Sunday iry a
Cuomo and Tsongas have been
Continued on page 3
nationally televised debate on the leading New Hampshire polls, and
heels of th!&lt; ftrst beauty__wrucst oL cuomo is followed by Brown as
the 1992 campaign, a Florida straw the early favorite in nationwide
poll won convincingly by AH(lrnsas polls of Democrats.
·
Gov. Bill Clinton.
But those results are beli eved
Missing from the prime-time tied mainly 10 the name recognilion
event was New York Gov. Mario enjoyed by the New York governor
Cuomo, who hopes to reach a slate and Brown, who ran unsuccessfully
budget agreement that would clear for the Democratic nomination in
the way for him to enter the race 1976 and 1980.
tllis week.
. The other candidates arc new. JlrM:.s .debate marked the comers to the national s~age. For
111- I blllr~ril-ni'em: ilie""debate was an exuaordicarnpaigti. At stake was momentum nary opponunity to introduce them·
for holiday-season_fund-raising and selves 10 vot.ers at .a time of growthe crucial campaign in New ing domestic discontent and falling
J:lampshire, which holds the . approval .ratings for President
nation's first presidential primary Bush.
ih two months.
"My goal, and I believe all of
· Joining Clinton at the NBC stu· us feel the same way, is to use this
dios were Sens. Tom Harkin .of opportu·nlty to describe what I·
DAYS UNTIL
fowa and Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, think this country should be doing
CHRISTMAS
Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, and where we should be going,"
f~rmer Massachusetts Sen. Paul
Kem:y said in.a recent interview .

Six candidates take part
in first national TV debate

.9

• )1

.J

for vote
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich has taken
no stand so far on a bill that would
allow owners of horse racing tracks
to open up as many as 14 off-track
betting parlors around the Slate.
The measuie is scheduled for a
possible vote- Wednesday by the
j!ouse State Government Committee.
Jenny Camper, a spokeswoman
for Voinovich, said the bill is under
rcvlew .

AND ONE MORE THING • Santa Claus (in the form of Max
Whitlatch) heard Christmas lists from 176 boys and girls fr om
Gallia, .A!hens,. Meigs, Vinton and Jackson Counties on _Friday,
when ~m.~l~yees ot:.S.outhern_Ohio Coal Company held t!!~Jr.~n~u­
ai ,Christmas party for needy childr~n a_t SOCCO's main o!'f•ce.
·Here, Becky Garvey, 4, of Ironton llllks w1th Santa about her hst.

" The governor is still giving it
lull consideration and is not ready
to say one way or the other," Ms.
Camper said. .
No witnesses spoke against the
bill dunng its fir.;t two hearings.
Rep. William Healy, D-Canton,
the commi ttee chairman, said the
lack of opposition was .unusual for
gamblmg legislation.
" I guess I am a little surpnsed
because there are a number or people and organizations in th is s!3tc
Continued on page 3
'

.

Southeast Ohio benefiting
from decision to keep raillines
JACKSON - Local officials
say they're seeing the benefits of
th eir decision to buy 61 miles of
railroad track that CSX Transporla.tion was going to abandon.
Safety-Service Director Ron
Speakman believes that saving the
track has helped retain more than
3,000 jobs and has created others in
southeast Ohio.
·Myra Ross, director of economic development for Vinton and
Jackson counties, ·said Jackson 's
decision was visionary.
"It was probably a concept.
abead of its time," Moss said.
Lou Jannazo of the Ohio
Department of Transportation said
the Slate has invested more than S2
million in Jackson's railroad. Jannazo said the state recognized that
rail service is vital to southeast
Ohio.
,
,"Jackson is a case study on how
to revilalite a railroad if the government is willing to be a partner in
the whole deal," he said,
In 1987 , the city bought 52
miles of track extending !rom Firebrick in Lawrence County through
Jackson County 10 Richmond Dafe'

in so utheast Ross county. Last
year, the city bought mne miles of
track between Hamden and Red
Diamond in Vinton County.
The city this month began building two miles of uack and re~abili ­
tating two miles to accommodate
AluChem, ncar Jackson. Those
four- miles of--rail will-create 61
jobs at AluChem, Speakman said.
Altogether, there is a $4.6 million investment in the city's railroad. Most of the money is from
federal and state grants, Speakman
said,
The city is paying back a
$600,000 loan that financed pan of
the original rail purchaSe, he said.
The lQlln is being paid off through
rail lease proceeds from·the Indiana

and Ohio Railroad, which serves
•ustomcrs on the line.
·
One large dividend carne in the
past year when Pillsbury decided to
expand its Jeno Pizza plant outside
Wellston. Employment at the plani
has grown to 1,350 from 750.
Mo ss said Pillsbury officials
indicated the expansion-would·nmhave happened without the rail line.
Government officials also have
looked beyond their own communitics to save jobs.
The city of Jackson last year
helped procure federal and state
grants to buy the nine miles of
tracks in Vinton County. Moss said
retaining the Vinton County line
helped· Austin Power, which has
250 employees.

.--Local briefs-_,
Bloodmobile visit set Wednesday
The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit the Meigs
County §enior Citizens Center on Wednesday from I p.m. to 5:30
p.m.
"Everyone lookS forward to the holiday se.ason with great anticiContinued on page 3 -·

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Monday, December 16, 1!191

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OP THE MEIGS-MASON ARU.

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itoBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associaled Pre sa, Inland Daily Press Association and
lhc American Newspaper Publisher Associalion.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
wolds long. All letters are subjecllo editing and must be signed wilh name,
address and ~elephone. number. No unsigned let~en will be published. Letters
sbou1d be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Thirteenth Amendment
Adopted in the waj(e of the Civil War, the Thineemh, Founeenth and
Fif1eenth Amendments are commonly known as the "Civil War Amendments." The command of the Thirteenth Amendment is simple and
straightforward: "Neither slavery nor involumary servitude, except as
punishment for crime whereof the pany shaU have been duly convicted,
shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction." In less than 50 words, the Thineenth Amendment outlawed a
morally indefensible practice that had plagued the republic since its
founding, and had been a recurrent subject of heated debate between
Nonhem and Southern leaders, finally culminating in a bloody war.
In 1787, the participants in the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia believed themselves unable to resolve the issue of slavery, so they
chose to postpone it. Under Article I, Section 9 of the Constitution,
Congress was barred from prohibiting the "[t]he Migration or Importa,tion
of ... Persons" into the United States for twenty years. In addition, Article IV, section 2 protected slaveholders by requiring free states 10 return
escaped slaves to their masters.
.
At the time that the Constitution was ratified, there were about 500,000
slaves in the United States, and many hoped that slavery - which was
already under attack from many quarters - would gradually perish of its
own accord. In 1793, however; Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin,
which made possible the efficient separation of seeds from cotton lint.
With the· widespread introduction of the cotton gin, the southern cotton
industry boomed, creating a corresponding increase in demand for slave
labor.
By 1861, the frrst year of th.e Civil War, the slave population in the
United States had grown to apJfroximately four million, with the vast
majority located in_lhe South._Ihis growth had-occurred-despite biller
.opposition in the·Nonh to slavery _and legislative effons to curb its spread.
The growing ranks of abolitionists- led by individuals such as William
Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, and Sojourner Truth - decried the
"peculiar institution" on the grounds that it was inconsislent with the ideals exP.ressed in the Declaration of Independence and the moral dictates of
the B1ble. In Congress, legislative measures such as the Missouri Compromise of 1820, the Compromise of 1850; and the Kansas-Nebraska Act .
of 1854 bad attempted to strike a delicate political balance between Nonh
and South and stave off a civil war by controlling the expansion of slavery
in the territories.
In its decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393
( 1857), however, the Supreme Coun made any funher hopes of compromise legally unworkable. In Dred Scott, in an opinion by Chief Justice
Roger Brooke Taney, the Coun ruled that a slave Yo~ho had lived with his
owner in a free state could not sue for his freedom, because a slave was
propeny, not a "citizen" entitled to sue in federal court. Going a step further, the Coun ruled that, because the Constitution did not grant the feder' al government unfettered authority to interfere with private property
rights, the
.
Missouri Compromise of 1820- which prohibiled slavery in the remaining Louisiana Purchase territory north of the States of Misso uri and
Arkansas - was unconstitutional. By undoing the Missouri Compromise
and casting doubt on the constitutionality of other political compromises
on the issue of slavery, the Supreme Court's decision in Dred Scott
brought the slavery issue to ·a head and accelerated the onset of the war
that Chief Justice Taney thought he .was avoiding.
The Thineenth 1\fnendment, ratified on December 6, 1865, gave meaning to the Union victory by conftrming the principle espoused in Lin•coln's wartime Emancipation Proclamation and formally abolishing the
institution of slavery throughout the United States. If the Thirteenth
Amendment abolished slavery as a matter of law, however, it did little 10
accomplish racial equality, and it would be nearly another century before
the effons of the Civil Rights movement abolished the pern~cious "separate but equal" doctrine and eliminated legally sanctioned racial discriminat ion once and for all.

WASHINGTON - Presidents
come and go in the White House
but the rats remain.
"
The vermin squatters- rats and
mice - have been holding their
ground despite eradication effons
by ·the best and brightest of several
administrations. Some of this saga
of mice and men has been publicized, but· some is actually classified. Along the latter lines, we
uncovered a report, still classified
"lOp secret," from the Ford admin- .
istration when the National Security Coundl was run out of the Situauon Room by a rat.
The secure basement room is
where the president and llis brain
trust gather for National Security
Council meetings or during a ~risis.
On Nov. ~5, 1975, there was no
crisis, except the one stirred up by
a large rat that derailed the NSC
meeting.
The elassified journal notes of
one NSC staffer explains what happened. "Meeting was held in the
Roosevelt RQOIIl rather than the
Situation Room because one of the
ladies saw a large rat in the Situa-· tion Room immediately before the
meeting," the staffer wrote. "I

•. ' I could not possibly be sane at
:lhC time of the i~cid~nt fo; l had
:just walked ·away from i&gt;.thens
' Mental Health Center where I had
:t&gt;een diagnosed as possibly border•
: m~e schizophrenic with dual per-

sonalitiesjustpriortothc incident.
Another Chri~unas is going to
&amp;a by and I am sull bemg h.eld capuve m my own country wa1t1ng my

Somebody bring in the eggnog birds ·'huddled miserably in the
whtle you test the hg~ts on the snow. They had been caught in the
Chnsunas tree. Then well all gath- _ stonn and in a desperate ·seareh for
cr 'round as I tell you some Christ- shelter had tried 10 fly through his
mas stones....
window."
Louis Cassels was the religion
He knew he couldn't let them
~riter for UP! until his early death freeze so he put on his overcoat
on the 1970s. Unlike some rehg.1on and boots and went out to open the
wnters, he was a man of deep fatth. barn door. But the birds wouldn't
. He,v.:rote "The Parable of the go into the barn.
Btrds m 1959 and the story has
Then he made a trail into the
been reprinted many times since by barn by scat1ering bread crumbs on
popular request. In ihe parable Cas- the snow. But the birds ignored the
sels was trying to explain the rea- food.
son for the Incarnation - why it
The man then tried shooing
was necessary for ~od to take on them into the· bam by wildly wavthe fonn of a man m order to save ing his arms. That only got the
and redec.m mankind.
birds to scatter in every direction.
•, He ,told ~e story of a man who .
" They find me a strange·, terridido t behev~.all that stuff abo~t fying creature," he said 10 himself.
an lncamauon. S? whtle h1s farn1- "If only I could be a bi~d myself
ly went off to m1dmght serv1ces for a few minutes, perhaps I could
one snowy, blowy Chnstmas Eve; -- fet them know they can trust me
he sat down by the ftre and read his and lead them to safety."
.
Here is Cassels' ending to his
newspap&lt;".r.
.Later he heat:d strange thumping parable:
notses at the wmdow and went to
"Just at that moment the
investigate. He found a flock of church bells began to rin~: The
·

~~::~e:~;:n~~~fiha~y~v::~o~~ ·

ing and supportive family . Let's
help make this a very special
Chnsunas for Joses and his family.
Pl.easc allow me to come home. I
wtll. be appearing live on the Jerry
Spnnger Show and 60 Minutes.
Thank you for listening and please
open your heans.
Joses P. Scott
236-222.
P. S. Joses Pearl Scott was con:
victed and guUty.

1oday.
] n.history
.

_

.

'.

By The Associated Pres.~

.
:- Today is Monday, Dec. 16, the 350th 'day of 1991. There are IS .days
'left in the year.
·
: Today's Highlight in History: ·
•
, On Dec. 16, 1773, the Boston Tea Pany took place as American
·~olonists, disguised as Indians, boarded a British ship in Boston Harbor
4nd dumped more than 300 chests of tea overboard in a protest against tea
raxes.
.
: On this date:
.
.
:• In 1653, Oliver Cromwell becaine lqrd protector of England, ScoOand
'
I
•
:and Ireland.
:: Jn 1770, composer Ludwig van Beethoven was born in Bonn, Ger- .
·1)\any.
.
,• In. 1809, Napoleon Bonaparte was divorced from the Empress
Josephine by an act of the French Senate.
• In 1905, the entertalnment trade publicatioJt Variety carne out with its
· first weeldy issue.
·
; In 1916, 75 years ago, Gregory Rasputin, the monk who wielded poweiful influence over the Russian coon, was murdered by a group of con•
servative noblemen.
,:

\'

.,

IND.

Uf!a

•I Colvmbus I 43° I.

•

By The Associated Press
At least 13 people died in traffic
accidents on Ohio highways this
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said
Monday.
·.
Showers T·storms Ra~n Flum·es Srrow
Ice
The
patrol counts traffic fataliSunny Pt. Cloudy Clouoy
ties
from
6 p.m. Friday to midnight
VIS A~ialed Press GraphicsNer
C19,91 Accu·Wealher, Inc.
Sunday.
.
The dea,d:
SUNDAY
SWANTON - June C. Coates,
South-Central Ohio
Extended rorecast
63, of Fayette, in"a two-car acci. Tonight, mosw· clear. Low In
Wednesday through Friday
dent on Ohio 2 in Lucas County..
•&gt;the m1ddle 20s. Sourh~~r&lt;Wiil\ls ·'"'" Cold ·with a 'llhance of snow ,
SANDUSXY - Laurie Lynn
10 to 15 mph. Tuesday, becoming northeast and flurries over the rest Riordan, 17, of Meadville, Pa., in a
cloudy and warmer. A slight of the state Wednesday. Fair and two-vehicle accident on U.S. -250
chance of rain showers : Breezy warmer Thursday an(f Friday. in Erie County.
with a high 40 to 45. Then the tem- Highs in the 20s Wednes@y, lower
POWHATAN - Renee J.
perature falling during the after- 30s. to lower 40s Thursday and in Brown, 24, of Zanesville, of in a
noon. The chance of rain is 30 per- the 40s Friday. Lows in the teens one-car accident on State Route
cent.
.,
Wednesday, IS to 25 Thursday and 148 in Belmont County.
25 to 35 Friday,
WARREN - Michael D. Laird,
22, Warren, in a one-car accident
on Ohio 11 in Trumbull County.
SATURDAY
SPRINGFIELD - Billy M.
continued from page I
West, 2, of Columbus, in a one:car
pation, bin the joy of the holidays doesn't stop the area's need for
crash on Old Columbus Road in
blood and blood products," Meigs Bloodmobile Chairman Brian J.
Clark County.
·
Reed said. "Meigs Countians can make someone's holiday even
more wonderful by donating blood on Wednesday."
Donors must be at least 17 and not over 66 years of age, and
must weigh at least 110 pounds.

---__;,--Weather-----

,..----L.ocal briefs... - - -

-Four people were treatea at Veterans- Memorial Hospital after a
car wreck on .C.R. 17 in Scipio Township Sunday morning.
According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Tracy F, Hysell, 27, of Lancaster was eastbound on .
C.R. 11 when he lost control of, his 1984 Chevrolet Cheveue in a
sharp right tum which slid off the right side of the road into a ditch.
Hysell and his passengers, Barbara A. Rope, 32, of Syracuse,
Paul B. Mitchell, 37, of Langsville, and· Vicky A. Abbon; 32, of
Long Bottom, were transporled by the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service to VMH where they were treated and released,
with the exception of Mitchell who was held overnight.
Damage to Hysell's can•.las listed on the report as hea~y and dis·
abling.
No citations were listed on the repon, however the report satd an
alcohol test indicated that Hysell bad been drinking and his ability
10 drive was impaired.
·
0

Squads answer 9 weekend calls

:' ·

Meigs County.Emergency Medical Services units answered nine
calls for assistance over the weekend.
. \
- On Saturday at 2 p.m., Middlepon ·squad went 10 the Middleport
Police Department. Keith Petrie was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 4:56 p..m., Middleport unit was sent to Cole Street.
Barbara Harris was taken to Veterans. At 6:16p.m., Pomeroy squad
was sent 10 Chester Road. Blaine Qualls went to Ve1erans. At 8:07
p.m., Middlepon squad was dispatched to Zuspan Hollow Road for
Ken neth Madden, who was treated but not transponed.
At4:12 a.m. on Sunday, Middlepon, Pomeroy, Rutland and Scipio units went to an auto accident on Cotterill Road. Vickie Abbott,
Tmcte Hysell, Paul Mitchell and Barbara Rupe were transported to
Veterans. Abbott was later taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:08 p.m., Middlepo11o unit went to tfverbrook Center for
Lester Bailey, who was taken 10 Holzer. At 2:32p.m., Pomeroy unit
was sent to Old' Route 33. Richard Fin law was taken to, Veterans. At
9:32 p.m. , Racine squad went to Main Street and B.roadway. Sarah
Congo was laken to Veterans.
On Monday at 12:32 a.m., Middlepon unit went to Overbrook
Center. Betty Templeton was taken to Veterans.

'
Wishing to give him a gift o(
money, St. Nicholas crept to tho
window of the house and saw the
old gentleman asleep by the fire.:
As the·good·bishop d1d not want to
be seen, he climbed the roof and
dropped his gift d11wn the chimney;
thinking it would fall on the hearth
at the·nobleman{ feet.
'
•. It happened, however, that the: .
nobleman's daughter had hung : •
"Some stocking by the fire to dry ·
and the money fell into one of·
them. When the daughter went to '
lake her stockings down from the
fireplace the next morning, she ·
found the money.
· - ·
And so, the legend goes, from
that kindly deed of St. Nicholas has
grown the custom of hanging
stockings by the fireplace on
Christmas Eve ....

-- -· Area deaths-Eva Nicinsky
Eva Nicinsky, 81 of Chap manville, W.Va. died Sunday,
Dec. 15, 1991, at a hospital there.
-She is survived by a son,.John
Nicinsky, Rutland; four daughters,
Mildred Maynard, Chapmanville,

WJ..t-tO-IS
·• reaI hero·-In·h· OSt~age d r-am· a-.')
1

- "

B 1I1'll' A R ·h
Y
Jam •
er

,
·
•
Amid the rejoicing ove~ the bargain with our government for
•
·
rrl
US .
release of Te~ Anderson, the last his release, and walk away with a .
of the Amencan hostages, 1n series of concessions.
Reagan, she was injuring "the one played in the final stages by U.N.
Lebanon, the role played by his sisBut our policy inevitably meant American official who, almost Secretary General Perez de Cuellar ter, Peggy Say, over the past ·six that there could be no early release more than any other, was carrying and his personal negotiator in the
years h~ not been forgouen - nor of the hostages the terrorists his empathy for the hostages to Middle East. No doubt Mr. Perez
ought u to be. lmmed1~tely after already held .. There was nothing for seriously questionable lengths. de Cuellar deserves congratulations :
. h1s release, Anderson !'~gled her them to do but wait, year after year, Peggy Say just didn't know that, in for his efforts, but I suspect he '
out for spectal recogmuon and a until some unforeseeable event supersecret negotiations with Iran would be the first to acknowledge ·
special dedaration of gratitude. It changed the minds of the kidnap- conducted by members of his that they were successful only
was a touching moment, and one pers. And that just wasn' t good National Security Council staff, because of far greater achievements
supremely weU deserved.
enough for Peggy Say.
Mr. Reagan was jeopardizing the attributable to others - most
. More. than any other hostage rei- · . Unfortunately, if understand, whole American policy, and his notably, again, to.Ronald Reagan.
auv~, th1s detennmed tittle woman ably, she allowed herself, late in own reputation for constitutional
earned the battle, day after day, 10 the Reajllll administration, to be _pl.opriety, in a.desperate attempt-to'' ---~------.-l!lake sure that-neither- the-govem:-arawn into charging publicly that free the hostages.
ment nor the. Amencan people ever President Reagan wasn't doing
Moreover, in her first statements
The ieoaraphic ci~ter of Nortb
for~ot t!Je phght of the h?stages, or enough, to free ~he hos.lages. The after her brother's release, Miss Carolina is Chatham, 10 miles northever d1d l~ss than theu best to irony was !hat,·~ bashmg Ronald Say was effusive over the role west of Sanford.
secure thetr freedom . Again and _____:..._'_ _ __:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,...,~------.;_--_:.:____
again she could be .seen on TV
interview shows, or reading some
HOW TO MAKE A MERRY C~RlSfMAS by Lane and Miller
new statement to the cameras,
demanding fresh effons, new ini •
tiatives.and quicker results.
In doing so, Peggy Say necessarily collided with the official policy of the U.S. ·government. That
policy was to refuse- in my opinIOn nghtly - to bargain with the
kidnappers, and instead simply
insist that these innocent people
must be freed at once, without preconditions. Any other course would
have set up a deadly routine whereby any Middle Eastern terrorist
group that wanted something could
kidnap some innocent American,

- TI1e Daily Sentinel
(U8P81111'1110)
Publi1hed every . art.emoon, Monday

th._h Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Ptabli•hins

Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohlo 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second claoo
jloolqe poid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member:. The Aalcx:iat.ed. Preu, J nland
Daily Prua Al•ociation and &amp;ho Ohio

W. Va.; Dorothy Keevill, Susquehanna, Pa.; Mary Jane Talbott,
Tuppers Plains; Sylvia Donahoe,
Cumberland Gap, Tenn .. numerous
grandchildren and great-~randchil·
dren, lwo nieces and one nephew; a
brother, Brownie · Vujaklija ,
Louisiana; and a sister-in·law , ·
Ruby Nicinsky, Hemloclc Grove. •
. She was preceded in death by
her parents, Nick and Vasilia
Vujak:lija; her husband, John Nicin. sky , Sr., two sons, George Nicinsky and Louie Nicinsky; and a
grandson, Tracy George.
Funeral arrangements are being
handled by the Evans Funeral
Home, Chapmanville, W. Va.

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Worthington Ind................ 20 1/ll

',I

STAIESBORO, Ga. (AP)Hotel operators say rooms are nearly all booked by football fans planning 10 be on hand Saturday for the
. NCAA Division 1-AA championship game.
Marshall University fans in
Huntington, W.Va., kept telephone
lines busy Sunday night, making
reservations for the weekend.
Marshall plays Youngstown
State on Saturday for the national
title.
Some callers were referred to
Savannah, about 50 miles south·
east.
"We're not completely sold out
but pieuy close," said Jenny Star·
ling, sales director at the Holiday
Inn, the city's largest hotel.
"We're working together with
the other hotels to make sure everyone has somewhere to•stay. There's
not much competition for the business because there are so many
people we will all be booked full
by Friday."

. The game will be played on the
campus of Georgia Southern University . .
The crowds are expected to be
bigger than they were in each of
the past two years, when Georgia
Southern played in the champi onship. .
\hi!, ti.me, two visiting teams
will face off.
"This year there is at least twice
as many fans coming in," Starling
said. She said she has handled
nearly twice as many inquiries
from Huntington as from
Ydungstown, Ohio.
Several gropps affiliated with
Marshall University are planning
chartered trips. The fees include
lodging. ..
The Big Green Scholarship
Foundation, Marshall University
Quarterback Club and Marshall
University Alumni Association
have chartered a plane and a bus
for the trip, officials said.

conduct regular reviews of utility
rates and profits to help even out
rates and speed the review process.
State Sen. Eugene J. Walls, RGalloway, is drafting legislation
that would let utilities enact half of
a requested rate increase if the
deadline passes without a PUCO
decision.
It would also make utilities put
the increase ·in escrow until the
PUCO reaches a decision.
He said Columbus Southern's
rate increase is "anti-middle class,
anti-education, ami-small business
and anti-industry" and " will result
ih severe hllrdship for citize ns at a
time of economic hardship."
Columbus Southern said it must
incrcaseratesor lose $17 million a
month it could not recover.
"We've said all along we would
have preferred pha si ng in th e
incrc·ase 10 lessen the impact on

Licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been ·
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court 10 Paul Richard Rou$h, 49,
Reedsville, and Barbara Ruth Talbott, 49, Racine; and to Richard
Allen Adkins, 25, Bidwell, and
Beverly Kay Baylor, 30, Rutland. ·

--Meigs announcements-

The Middlepon Child Conserva tion League wiU bold its annual
Christmas pany on Thursday 6:30
p.m. at the home of Helen Black·
ston. Gifts and food for a needy fam tly should be brought that
evening. Secret sisters will be
-revealed.
Special meeting
The Lebanon Township
Trustees will hold a special meeting on Friday at 10 a.m. at the
township buildin~ .
Trustee meetmg
The Bedford Township Trustees _
will h ave th eir end-of-the-year
mectmg on Monday, Dec. 30, at 7
p.m. ut the town halL
·special meeting
There will be a special meeting
't
of the Shade River Lodge No. 453
OSpl
on Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Work witl
Veterans Memorial Hospital
be in the E.A. degree. Refresh-continued from page 1
SATURDAY · ADMISSIONS . mf:nts will be served.
customers," 'spokesman Roger . None.
• SATuRDAY DISCHARGES.
0
DUIQ
Dyer said.
Virgie
Felly
and
Ethel
Koenig.
Super
Lotto.- PUCO spokeswoman Stacie
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ·
!0-28·29-34-38-47
Gilg said it has been an exceptionAngie Hill, Racine; Maredith Bing,
(ten, twenty-eight, twenty-nin~
ally busy year.
The PUCO had five cases at Pomeroy ; and Sarah Congo, thirty-four, thiny-eight,fony-seven)
The jackpot is $4 million.
once and was handling the Federal Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES · Kic ker
Clean Air Act's impact on Ameri·
6-8-2-6-3-6
can Electric Power and other utili- Richard Finlaw, Marie Roy , and
Bessie
Gilmore.
·
(six, eight, two, six, three, six)
tics, and with a "Caller ID" phone
Pick
3 Numbers
service proposal by Ohio Bell TeleHolzer
Medical
Center
5-8-2
phone, she said.
Discharges Dec. 13 - Carol
(five,eight, two)
Benneu. Melvin Carter, Mrs. John Pick 4 Numbers
Coon and so n, Ida Cra,btrec, Mrs.
4-7·6-4
Sherman Jordan and son, Mrs.
(four, seven, six, four)
Roger Keefer and son, Mrs. Amho- Curds
Continued from page I
ny Kopec and daughter, Mrs . Greg
4 (four) of Hearts
McKinniss,
Kennison
S
a
~nd
ers,
4
(four) of Clubs
that very strongly oppose gambling
7.(seven) of DiamonM on a moral ·issue ®d we -generally Susan Steele and..Taniara_Wclch.
Births
Dec.
13
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A
(ace) of Spades
hear from them on these kinds of
Christopher
Wyatt,
son,
Wellston.
issues," Healy said.
Discharges Dec. 14- Rebecca
" On the other hand, the policy
Bi
as,
Dave-Daugherty, Carolyn
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
issue of gambling has long been
Nicholson,
Vincent
Varney,
Rus446 4524
".. ' .
established in thi!' state. The policy
se
ll
Willis,
and
Mrs.
Chri
stoper
iss ue of whether we'll have
WGAtN ~TIJII[(S SA~' I !IUIIA't .
SAAGAIN IIGMT JU[U.,Y .
parimutuel betting has long been Wyatl and son.
ltOI.IIIAl Gin aiTJFICAT£S 101 AVAIUil[t
Births
Dec.
14
-Mr.
and
Mrs.
established," he said.
Although no opponents testified, Kevin Siegell, son, Gallipolis.
Discharges Dec. 15 - Chester
some members of the commillee
Bums,
Jessica Hamilton, Elizabeth
raised questions about the measure.
Hopkins,
Anna Knou s, Charl es
Rep. Daniel Troy., .D-Wi119wick,
Kuhn,
Mrs.
Shawn Lanhart and
wondered whether alll8 communidaughter,
and
William West.
ties wanted a betting parlor.

Missed deadline ...

Christmas dance
The Royal Oak Dance Club will
hold its ·annual Christmas dance on
Saturday from 8 to II p.m . at .
Royal Oak Reson. Music will be
provided by the Doug Hess
Combo. There will be a snack buffet. The 1992 club membership
du~s can be paid any time before
March I.
Square dance
The Gallia Twirlers Western
Square Dance Club will hold a
dance Saturday from 8·11 ·p.m. at
the Henderson Community Center
in Henderson·, W.Va. The ca ller
wtll be Bill Gene Evans. The dance
IS open 10 all western square
duncers.
MCCL to meet

H

a1news

L ttery

Betting.. ~

WORLD WAR II.
I I I Y Yl Alb i\(;Q 1OllAY

Dec. 16

1·9·4·1
Japanese troops invade B&lt;1rneo ,
seeking to capture the Dutch and
Br~lsh ollllalds and refineries; the
:ou!nurnbered defe.nders manage
.wto s'etlhe installations on fire . On
the central Soviet tront, the Red
Army recaptures Kallnln.

Scuice: "2194 Cays ol WOJ.' w. H. Smill1
Publlshtrslnc.: 'WoM Almanac Book or Wo~d
I!;;;;;;;;;;_ _ _ _;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Vial II,' Bison Books Colp., 1981

--- . ....

.

.

--- .,,

.....

th
·d· AUantic Slates A
e
ml
·
stonn out of the •Canadian· Rockies
·~
will dust the Ohio Valley and Oreal
Lakes with snow. Rain was expect;
ed in Texas and soutllern Florida
and in the.Nonh)llest.
.
. :
Temperatures were exJle;cted in
the teens in Wisconsin, northern
New England and Pennsylvania; in
the 20s in New YoJ'!(, the Ohio Val:
ley and Idaho; in the 30s in the .
Rocky Moun[llins; in the 40.s iii
Montana and New MexicQ; in th~­
~50s in the Plains and Nonhem Califomia; in the 60s in the Southwest
d lh D s th and in ihe 70s
an Ph e . eep ou
_
10
· T~nh: · h temperature for the
nation Su~da was 83 degrees at
. M. ·
y
·
tamt. ·

A WELCOME GUEST • Santa Claus visited the Southern
Ohio Co~ I Company',s Meigs Division on Friday, and preseated
gifts to needy children from five Southeastern Ohio counties. The
gifts were made possible by funds from the annual Coal Miners'
Jamboree, a payroll deductitYn program and other company - .
fund raisers.

Rutland Furniture
Will Be Open For Your ·
Shopping Convenience·
Monday • Saturday, 9 AM·8 PM!
Wltere You (aft Juy Ouallfy lur•lture
'' You Doft't Ml•tl Pa,IIIJ A Little tess!

RUTLAND ·FURNITURE
~ RUTLAND, OHIO

STATE ROUTE 124

Stock rtporu ar1 lht 10:30 a.m.
quOits provldtd by Blunt, Ellis
and Lotwl of Gallipolis. -

. .... -·

1hroug h

COSHOCTON - Virginia L.
Johnson, 46, Zanesville, in a twocar accident on a county road in
Coshocton County.
BOWLING GREEN- Michael
Freeman, 56, hometown not listed,
in a one-vehicle accident on a road
in Wood County.
YOUNGSTOWN - George K.
Jahnke, 58, of Solon, in a one-vehicle accident on Interstate 76 in
· Mahoning Coonty.
FRIDAY
. MIAMISBURG- Stephanie L
Dyer Booker, 21, of Dayton, in a
four-vehicle-crash on Ohio 741
Montgomery County.
UPPER SANDUSKY - Barbara S. Monroe, 28, of Upper Sandusky; Brian E. Dunlap, 28·, of
Upper Sandusky; and John A.
Myers, 51, of Findlay, in a twovehicle accident on U.S. 23 in
Wyandot County.
.
SOUTH AMHERST - Shirley
Mitchell, 44, of Wellington, in a
one-vehicle crash on Baumhart
Road in Lorain County.

Marshall grid fans are
making plans to go South

Four injured in .Sunday crash

ly.

.

Thirteen people die in Ohio

W. VA.

By George R. Plagenz
man stood silently for a m-oment
listening to the bells pealing the
glad tidings of. Christmas. Then he
sank to his knees in the snow.
"'Now I understand,' he whispered. 'Now I see why you had to
doiL"'
The stockings were hung by ihe
chimney with care
In hopes that St. Nicholas soon
would be there.
·
. The custo!'l of hanging stockmgs by the ftreplace on the night
before Chrisunas has been traced to
St. Nicholas, a bishop in Asia
Minor in the fourth century. Evidentlr an immensely wealthy
churchman, he was credited with
helping those in need- always in
secret, however.
·
According to legend, St.
Nicholas knew an old nobleman
who was very poor but who did not
.want anyone to know of his paver-

~

r---,--.::;
~

Parable reveals spirit of Christmas

Still waiting appeal

:~chizophrenic.

The Auocl1ted PJ'eu·
Warmer wea, ther wi,ll return
Snow and ht.gh w·nds turned
Another ,...
'••t mov·l·r:/ low pres- Th ursday an d FndaY, as h•ahs move Michigan roads into Jce1 sheets over
sure system and col front will through the 30s and mto the 40s.
the weekenli and were blamed in an
approach .Ohio late tonight and that
.The~ hiah temperalure for acc.ident that killed two peopie
will help to keep a chance of flur- thts date at the Columbus. weather ·" when their car slid into a on-com·
ries over northern, Ohio tonight. stauon was 64 degree~ m 1984. mg salt 1ruck near Dc1roit
The south~ pan Qf the .state will The m~rd low. was- 14 ,m 1951.
Metropolitan Airpon, state police
remain dry. Skies will be·moslfy 10
Sunnse th1s mornmg was at said.
A 20-car pileup was reported on
partly cloudy in the north and 7:47 a.m. Sunset will be at 5:07
mostly clear in southern Ohio. p.m.
Interstate 75 in Michigan on Sun·
Lows will be in the ~Os. .
Around t~e n~llon
day, and a sudden storm in VerLow pressure w11l race .acr~ss
But~r c.old gnpped the North- mon! closed a large section of
~onhern Oh10 Tuesday brtnj!tng east, bnngmg the coldest tempera- Interstate 91. ·
.
snow to nonhem ?hto and ram .o~ _ tures of th~_te ~all_!!&gt; the regton.~ . A ':"ind stonn toppled telephone
-snow showers to s.out.hern Ohm. Bnsk norlfiem wtndS austea snow lmes 10 New Jersey, cut electrical
Temperatures wtll nse mto. the 30s across upstate New.York, Pennsyl- power to tens of thousands of pea·
to lower 40s before tumbhng dur- vania and the Ohio Valley.
pic and blew away part of a junior
mg the afternoon.
.
Clouds and frigid air extended high school gymnasium roof.
Lake.eff~t snow wlll regenerate across the southe1'" Great Lakes
Severe cold was expected in the
Tuesday mghl across northeast mto Wtsconsm. Much of the South Northeast today, extending -south
Ohto and last mto Wednesday.
was fair and breezy.
·
.

.

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

q/J 'f.

·t etters to the editor
Last Chrisunas I wrote 10 you an
article, a very true and special article entitled I was convicted of
attempted murder and burglary .. .
I J:lad been diagnosed two
months after the incident by
Michael Adams of Shawnee Foren~s ic ·center, In his oprnion I was
~s ane. I was convicted and sen·~ tenced to serve 16-)6 years at
~Lebonan State Penitentiary to be
(under closed psychiatric watch .
' Immediately upon arrival I was
(«iag nosed
as
bi-polar

forecast for

state. But the inice kept intruding.
One died .and stunk up the Oval
Office just before the president of
Italy was ushered in. Another was
rottin~ in S(,lme unknown spot
when Latin American heads of because of "several incidences of
state arrived for the signing of the foul odors."
Panama Catial Trea!)'...
·. · _ O_n__Sept._22,_the_GSA reponed
Carter lost his patience. The that they were winning the battle,
General Services Administration and as evidence pointed to the deslakes care of the White House and perate mice that were eating roots
the Interior Department grooms the '" the White House flower pots
lawn, so Carter summoned officials because they were starving . .On
from both to his office for a dress- Nov. 4, the GSA declared victory.
ing down. He did not understand They had deployed 296 traps and
how he could rid a peanut ware- 141 poison "bait stations." The
house in Georgia of rodents and tJle enemy casualties had risen to a
federal bureaucracy couldn't do the high point of 38 in September, then
same for one little house.
fell to 10 in October and only one
The GSA blamed the Interior in November. The rodents were
Department, saying all the rats beaten.
were outsiders . . But Carter
Almost. Perhaps Carter wanted
wouldn't let the GSA off that easi- to leave .behind a little something
ly . In the summer of 1917, he -for th·e incoming Republicans,
demanded a purge of the rodents because the vennin reared their lit·
and wanted confidential reports tie heads again in the Reagan
from the front. The GSA filled the White House. Reagan may have
house with 48 traps baited with beefed up the nation's military to
nearly I 0 pounds of poison. On be the premier fighting force on the
Sept. 12, the GSA claimed a body globe, but he made no headway
count of 19, boasting that they against the mice in tbe house.
believed the kill was higher
Bush inherited them and, today,
the sweet smell of air freshener is a
Sllre. sign of a cover-up in the
White House.
SEPARATE WAYS- Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Jack Kemp is close to a
break with. the White House. Bush
and Kemp are not on the same
wave length. Kemp advocates a
dynamic growth package to stimulate the economy. Bush is cautious
about making moves that might tilt
the economl. later. He believes the
economy wtll straighten itself out if
the political fixers leave it alone.
Kemp would like the Republicans
in Congress to begin the fixing
now. Bush wants Congress to get
out of town for the holidays to give
him some time to prepare his own
economic program.
MINI-EDITORIAL- The 50th
anniversary- of Pearl Harbor
prompted a spate of apologies,
semi-apologies and not-quiteapologies for specific acts of war.
We're puzzled that a country, once
it has decided to wage war, would
apologiz~or any particular battle
fought to in an advantage in that
war. Thos apologies tend to be
.
politically convenient and hollow.
fm
Nations should instead feel remorse
riA\
111
for thei.r misguid.ed foreign policies
1
that pamt them mto a comer from
.
which the onlv way out is violence.

looked, but couldn't find anything
to club. The rat probably escaped
into the wall space where the sliding·map boards fiL"
Assuming the rat wasn't wired,
then the only damage done was to
the woman who Saw it. The meeting w~haired by none other !l!l!n
the current National Security
Adviser Brent Scowcroft. And he
ordered the move in deference to
the woman's repon.
Descendants of that rat still
inhabit the White House. Barbara
Bush found one doing the back
stroke in the swimming pool last
year and George carne to her rescue
and drowned the offender. First
dog Millie was bitten by a rat while
cavorting on the South Lawn, and
has since become the Bushs' premier rat hunter, although her practice of presenting the kill to the
First Lady is unsettling.
Our favorite chapter in the
rodent wars comes from the Caner
administration when the president
threw his full weight behind ' the
batt!~. A small mouse scampering
through Carter's office staned it in
1971. Carter called for traps and
tried to get on with the affairs of

-

Southern half of o·~io · expected-to r_einain dry

( iiiiU Wt•.tllii~l
Tuesday, Dec.17

Page-;..,-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Monday, December 16, 1991

The White House smells a few rats

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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-- ·····-··--·· ·- · .. -· - ·-·- ---

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berS

�..... ·· ~··. .. ..-------····--····----·- -------

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-- ---- ·- - ---·---·-..--.... _

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;·

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~-

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--

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...,

~- -· ~·-· ·

,.

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-. - - .

Sports

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•.

. _.

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UNDEFEATED SEASON -After trying for
some time, we've finally acquired a picture of
the 1991 Southern junior high football team,
which posted a 6·0 record. This is believed to be

only the second undefeated team in school h
ry; the other undefeated season was the 1971
edition. The 1991 Whirlwinds were only scored
upon twice during the entire season, with the

offense being just as good with an awra~e or 23
points per game and at least 20() yards per
game. Coach Scott Wickline said , ·• All this "':Is

Piige.....4 -

Sentinel Correspondent
.
Meigs outscored Athens 40-28
in the second half to pull away
from a three point halftime advantage and go on 10 defeat !he Bull· .
dogs 77-62 in mon conference
action at McAfee Gymnasium Saturday evening . The win gives
Coach Phil Harrison's Marauders
their secq~d win in as many tries,
while !he Bulldogs under first ye;uhcad·coach TimSmith fall$.10 t;f cTrevor Harrison continued his
torrid scoring for the Marauders as
the 6-1 junior poured in 31 points,
hitting 11 of 14 from the floor and
six of six from the line. On the season Harrison is 23 of 29 from the
floor ~ nd 18 of 20 from the foul
line. Harrison's 31 points came
despite !he fact he failed to score at
all in the first half, but Trevor .
poured in 15 points in !he second
period to help give the Marauders
TO THE HOOP - Meigs Marauder Trevor Harrison (35) goes to a 37-34.1ead.
Meigs came QUI of the blocks
airborne toward the hoop between two Athens defenders during .
fast
grabbing a 6-2 lead on threy
Saturday night's non-leag11e game at The Plains, which the
point shots from Frank Blake and
· ~arauders won 77-62. ,

not handed to them ... they were a hard working
group, a dedicated group, and an exciting group
to coach." Assisting Wickline was Mike Kloes.

j

.

~y HAL BOCK

Ang eles Raiders. A Saints' loss
AP Sports Writer · "·
wo uld keep Philadelphia and Sun
Welcome back, strangers.
Francisco alive for one more wee k.
The NFL playoffs, off-limits
The weekend got started Saturlately to teams like Atlanta, Detroit da y with Chi ca·ga shu !ling a ut
and Dallas, will have a .new look · Tampa Bay 27-0and San Francisco
this season, thanks to the remark- dcfcming Kansas City 28- 14.
·. able recoveries of the Falcon s,
In Sunday's playoff-clinchin g
· Lions and Cowboys.
games . it was Detroit 21, Green
· All three advanced to the y,ost· Bay 17; Manta 26, Scaulc 13; and

i:~!ow;~~icto~e;esi~n~~~i, ~~: Miami
oa~~:e~h:,~:·~~P~\~;~ovcrtaak
38-30, New England edged

:
, ference- still open.
·. ' Miami had a chance to claim !he
AFC berth, and until the fourth
quarter in San Diego it seemed the .
Dolphins would do exactly th at.
· Then ~1c Chargers rallied with four
tou chdowns , keeping th e New
York Jets, losers of three straight,
still in the postseason hum. The
winner of next Sunday' s gam e
.between the .Jets and Dolphins m
Miami gets the berth.
• In the NFC, New Orleans ca n
lock up tbe.lasLSp_otby_winning
tonight at horne against th e Los

th e New York Jets 6-3, Houston
defeated Cleveland 17-14, Mi nncsot a downed th e. Los An geles
Rams 20-14, Washington pounded
the New York Giants 34-17, Denver defeated Phoenix 24-19, Pi tts burgh beat Cincinnati 17 -10, and
Buffalo walloped Indianapolis 35·
7.
•
Lions 21, Packers 17
" We ' re in the playoffs and 1
can' t believe it," head coach
.Wa yne Fontes said a.fter Detroi t
won in Green Bay with the wind

HOWARD WINS HEISMAN - Michigan wide receiver
Desmond Howard Oashes a big smile after being presented with the
Helsman Trophy -Saturday night at the Downtown Athletic Club in
New York. (AP)
·

.

,

ch ill hovering between 10 and 20 world coming to?"
degree.' below zero.
Sanders intercepted two passes
Mel Gray returned a punt 78 and racr;d 48 yurds for a .touchdown
yards for a fourth-qu arter touch- with a lateral from Tim McKye r
down and Erik Kramer threw two after another pick()ll
.
touchdown passes to Robert Clark .
Cowboys 25, Eagles 13
Falcons 26, Seahawks 13
Dallas compl eted its tw o-year
"Falcons in th e playoffs," turn -around from the 1-15 disaster
Dcion Sanders said. "What is this nl 1989, returning to the pla yoffs

MI.Chi·gan· 's Howard
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
NE W YORK (AP) - Will
Heisman Trophy winner Desmond
Howard skip his-·senior season and
go pro?
For now, at least, Howard sa ys
no.
" I' m not even thinkins of !he
pros right now, " the M1chi gil n
wide receiver said after winning
the Heisman on.Saturday.:Tm-just
concentrating on getting my degree
and playing Washington in the
Rose Bowl."
Howard, .the fourth consec utive
junior to win college fo otball 's
biggest award, is scheduled to get
his degree in May. But he says he
plans to play another year at Michi · ·
gan whil e atte.nding graduate
sc hool.
That would give him a chunce to
become only the second player to
win two Hcismans. a feat accom pli shed by Ohio State 's Archie
Griffin in 1974-75.
"Education can take you furlher
than anything in the world ,". said .
Howard, whose viclbry margin was
the second-largest in Heisman his·
.tory. "I ' ll. have a more concrete
future if I concentrate on gelling
my Ph.D."
·
Many people expect Howard to
change his mind and enter April 's
NFL draft or possibly join Rocket
Ismail, last year's Heisman runnerup, in the ,Canadian Football
League. One of those who thinks
Howard should turn pro. is former
Mi c.!Jigan ,auartcrback Jim Harbaugh, who now plays for the
Chicago Beurs.
" As a Michigan alum , I'd love
to see him stay. But I would strongly recommend he comes out now "
Harbaugh told the Detroit Nc...:s.
' ' No way should he stay. Th e
·chance for an injury is ju st too
great. He 's the most marketable
right now."
· Barry Sanders and Andre Ware,
the Heisman winners in 1988 and
1989, passed up their final year of
eligibility to enter the NFL . The
1990 wi nner, -Brigham Young
quarterback Ty Detmer, returned
·for his senior season and finished
third in this year's Hcisman voti ng
be hmd Howard antl Florida Sta te
quarterback Casey Weldon.
·
Howard, who scored many of
his 23 touchdowns this season on
spec ta cular diving catches. bem

FRANK BLAKE

·~

SHAWN HAWLEY

Blake, Hawley get UPI
all-state football honors

-

Two Meigs Marauders have
. been selected to the United Press
Inr.emational's Division II all-Ohio
Football ream. The team is picked
·by a panel of football' coaches from
around !he stare of Ohio.
Frank Blake a 5-9, 165-po,und
senior fullback/defensive back was
named to the firsl team defense,
while tight end Shawn Hawley a 60, 165 senior was selected to !he
honorable mention was selected
honorable mention.
Blake was second on !he team in
tackles with 82 (32 solo, 50
assisJB), one sack am! one interception. He closed out his career with
ascbool rec&lt;Xd 16 inlelteptions for
214 ylltds and one touchdown in
addition to his 2.28 tackles (Ill
aolo, 117 aisisiB).
· '

-

- -----:-----

On offense, he carried !he ball
418 times for his career for 2,275
yards and 30 touchdowns. That
puts him. unofficially in second
place in career rushing at Mtigs
bchtnd 1986 graduate Brad Robinson~ who finished with 2.585 yards.
Btalce is the flfst Murauder 10 be
namea first team all-state since
Mike Chancey was tabbed first
team quarterback by the UP! in
1986. Blalce, selected on the second
team by The Associated Press, is
the only player in Meigs High his·
tory to be named first-team allconference three ye;u-s in a row.
Although records arc in com - ·
pletc, Hawley is believed 10 hold ·
the receiving records at MHS with
73 catches for 1.238 yards and 13
touchdowns.

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.
EAR·NOSE~THROAT

AlllRGY
1-~·IOAID atnFIED-

·: · SPKIAUZING IN
•Ad.. &amp; Pediatric AlleriJ

•H..... ·Aids

•RICUINIIt Ear lnf«tfons

In Children
•Astllllt
•Htatllches ·
•I~ Nose

Weldon by 1,574 points. Th e
biggest Heisman landslide-was OJ .
Simpson' s 1,750-point victory in
1968, although Howard got a high·
er percentage of t~c first-place
votes.
" Desmond deserved it," sai d
Weldon, whose chances crumbled
when Florida State lost its final two
gam es to Miami and Fl orida .
" He's a great player and he had a
fantastic year. "--~--

IIDIWI ASSIINMDm ACamD

675·1244
tl

'

In the NFL ...

drdn ' t lose by much." he said .
" We just lost."
II ills 35, Colts/
__
Buffalo went indoors to the
Hoosier Dome to clinch homefield
advantage throu ghout the AFC
playoffs. routin g Indianapolis
despite a first-quarter injury to
(See NFL on PageS)

•

Eutrm Division

Tum

~-Bulfalo ..~--- ·····

Miami ................
N.Y. leu ............
New fn&amp;land .... .
lndianapolil .. .....

W L
13 2
B 7
7 8
6 9
I 14

T
0
0
0
0
0

PeL Pf PA
.167 444 301
.533 123 326
.467 291 273
.400 204 276
.067 140364

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvidon
W L l'cL
U~ton ................... !4 7
.667
New York ...........14 7 .667
Mi •mi ................. l\ II
50U

Pi•u""'g)l ..... ..... 6 9 0 .400 27Sl34
Clndnnall .... - .. 113 I .13J 234428

Watrrn Dlvhlnn
y-Denver .......... .. II 4 0 .733 287 221
y-L.A. Raiden ... 9 l 0 .643 2n2A3
rKansu City .... 9 6 0 .600 295 231
e~ulc ........... ..... 6 9 0 .400 ~~ 252

PhiladdphiL ......... l1 II

.500

New Jcncy ............. 6 15

.2!1 6

Orl~ ndo ._. .... .-........... ..6 1 ~

:~~

Wuhii1 &amp;Lon. . .. ..... 6

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

' scores
Sunday's
Pllllburah 17, ClnclnnaU 10
DaU.1 25, Philadelphia 13
Atlanta 26, Sc.ltle 13 ·
Deuoh 21 , Grun Bay l7

Houston 17, Cleveland 14
Min!ICIOtl 20, Los Angelca Rams 14

J"lew Eng! a~ 6, New _Yor~ leiS l
WashinJton 34 , New York Gianu 17
San Dieao 38, Mi~rn i 30
Deti'IICT 24, Phoenix 19
Buffa!~ 35, Indianapolis 7

·

lnd ianapolil at Tampa Ba y, 1 p.m.
Ntw Enallnd 11 Clnclnnall, l p.m.
New Yotk Jets at Miami, I p.m.
Kansu City 11 Lot Angclea Rai ders, 4
p.m.
New Od.U!I.! 11 Phoenix, 4 p.m.
Denver 11 San Diego, 4 p.m.
Wuhi.naton 11 Philadcl phia, 4j .m:
Los AnJ,Clea ·Rams st Sc.ulc. p.m.

Mooday, Dec. 23
Chicaa,o a\ San Francisco, 9 p.m.

In the NHL...
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrick Dl11lslon
W L T PiS. OF Gl\

Team ,
WashingtOn........ 22 10 0
N.Y. Ra n ger~ ..... 19.12 1

44 1471 02
39 112 99

4

3613m 6

New Jeney ........ IS 12 4
N.Y. h landttS .... 10 14 5
Philadelphia ...... 9 15 6

l4 119 95
2S 1081 1,5
24 &amp;5 104·

"-d•m• DiwiJion
Monttcll ........... .-.:__21 I ~ 2 44 112 ?6
BOlton ...........-:-: ... IJ 13 5 ]1 10711 0
Hanford.. ........... t2 13 4 21 97106
Buffalo ........ .-...... 9 17 4 22 9111 3
9 19 3 21 1011 26

Quo..,...............

CAMPBEl-L CONFERENCE
Norris Dl11illon

-

W L T ~· · GFCA
4

44 1321 04

1410 7
13 13 7

3.5 110 106
JJ 113 105
Tl 99 107
23 114 111

12 ll 3
'919 5

Smythe Dlvi•lon
Va ncouver ......... 18 11 4 40 119 101
winnipeg........... 1no 1- J7 99 %
Edmonton .......... 13 15 5 31 113119
Los An scle~ ....... 12 12 7 31 I ~ 120
Calgar)l .............. 12 IS 4 2K I I 1\09
S~n l011c ........ ... 7 23 3
17 114 \44

·Saturday's scorts
Ch.icagO'l, Philadelphia I, Lie
B011lon 4, Toronto j
N.Y. Ranac116, Hanford 2
New Jency 3, N.Y. blanden 3, tic
W11hin_a1on 7, Pin.sburgh 2
St. LoUIJ 4, Queboe 2 ,
Dwoi\ 4, Calgary 3, OT
Edmonlon 7, Winnipeg 5
Montn:al4, Buffalo 2
Minnc.IOla J, S1n Jose 2
Vancouver 4 , 1.01 Angeles 4. ti~

Sunday's scores
Philadelphia 4, Chicago 4, tie
Oclroit4, Edmon\on I

..

4.5
4.5
9.5

I

I.S

MiaS&lt;&gt;lri 90. UNLV 78

1.5

Mo.-Kansu City 84, Miss . Valley St.

68

2
4
8

Mont.ana-St. 87, St. Lou is 78
N. lowa 76, SW Louisi1na 71
NorthwClt.em 93, Nol\heast.c:m 66
Ohio SL 11•, ltoward 53
Ohio 75, Manhal!U
Soulhwest

B1ylor 67, SW Tcx u St. 55
Cmneeticul94, TeJ.u 77
Drake 69, Lamu67
Lona Beach St. 70, Stephen F.Austin

62

Ok.Jatkxna St. 82, Wichita S1. 54
Te1u Southern 91, DiUard 69
Tulia 91, O!arle.tlon So.nhem 46
,

E. Tennessee St. &amp;6, NE Louisian~ 71

Idaho &amp;7, Alcom St. 75
Mon1,1na 89, Pcpperdine 88 , 301'
Qreaon St. 72, SW Mis.souri St. 63
S. IJI.Ih 102, Weber St. 89
San Dicto 62, San Ir:.ce St. 54
San Fran ci&amp;co 112 , Pacifit U. 68
Stanrord 75, Santa Clm 59
UCLA 84, San Diego St. 64
Ullh 75, Cal. St.-Northridge 51!1Wy:omirig iWI , Troy St. 92

Tuesday's games

Tour-namcnlJ
Couear- Clusif:·
Championship
Bri&amp;ham Young 65. Prin ceton 59
Third Place
Utah St. 109, Oral Roberta 91

Dutmouth Invitational
Cbamploru hlp
D1ttmouth 90, CampbcU 74
Third Plate
Waan er 74, Cent. Cmncelicut _St, 55
E.rly Seuon Tournam ent
Champloni hlp ·
Hawaii &amp;5, McNcetc St. 65
Third Place
St. Mary 's, Cal. 67, Tc~ U- P1n /\mer·

l llc Top Twen ty Five 1c. m1 in th e
· Associated Press 199 1-:9~ ~ollcie ba,k~t ·
ball poii, with futt -placc veta in parcn \hcsea. records through Dec. I S, total
points b.ucd Ofl 25 poinu for a fmt pil cc
vo~ e through one poin t for a 15th pla ce
liOte and lut wecl: 1 s ra nk inss:

·

ican 62

Indiana Classic

Lu r ·

Championship
Indiana 99, Cent Michigan 52

Team
Record Pis. Week
I Duke (62) ....... ........... 5·0 1,591
1
2. Arizona ...................... 4-0 1.473
2
3. UClA (1 ) ..............4·0 1,447
4. Ohio Sl... - ....... _ ... .l -0 1,380
3. OklahOma St. ..... :..... 9:0 1,334
6.- Kanm .................. ."... .S-0 1,2B2
7. Coni"IC(ticut (l) .......... 5-0 1,171
8. Kentucky ................. 6-1 1,061
~ - Nonh CaroWu ....... ...6-1
957
10. St John's .................. 4-1 947
II . S_clOO tfall ................ ,S-1 .&amp;25
12. Michiaan SL.... ...... :6-0 808
I 3. Gcor&amp;J• Toch ............6-l 7&amp;9
14. lndia na..................... 5-2 7!t0
15. M 1c h i g~n ................ .4-1 714
16. Oklah0011 ............... 5-0 706
17. Missouri ..................6-0 595
IK. Utah ........ ................. 8-1 523
19. Arlr.ansu ...............S-2 444
20. Allbam. ...................lt-1 438
21 . Wakc Forest ......... .. 4-1 248
22. lowa, ......................... 6·1 233
23. Georgetown .............. 4·1 179
24. N.C. Charlouc ......... A-1 162
25 . Louiaville ................. 4-0 153

Third oPiate
B01ton U. 67, Tmn .-Mattin 64

3
4
6

Runnln' Joe Classic
· thampi0.11hlp
,
Arluns u St. 68, S. Carolina St 56
Third Pl~ee
NichoU.. St. 86, Southcm U. 74

7
&amp;
9

S
II
12
13
13
13
lli

YSU llollday Classic
ChampiOnship
W. lllinoiJ 6S, Youngstown St. 59
Third Place
Cani!ius 71, Buffalo 67

17

Sunday's scores

21
10
19
20
22
16
23
· 24

Eul
Uoston College 94, Holy CrC1"i s 8 ~
California, Pa. 95, KlllllOwn 67

South
Flonda St. 86, Nonh Carolina 74
Soo th Rorida 73, AoridA71Midwut

Marqucue 79, Sacnmcn10 St. 3-'

Olhcr rcrthinll: voles: Syracu se 104 ,
Fl orid• St. 6 1, LSU 54, Virginia 47 ,
Houston 46, Jow, St. 36, E. Tcn o~ s ~.
28, Pim burgh 26, Drigh' m You n&amp; 25 ,
Penn St. 20 1~ W u .::urecn D1y 16, Mn ·
sachu11:11.1 10, Missiuippi 9, Monuna 9,
Do~tM Colle8e &amp;, UNLV 7, Widlington
St, 7, Tcin ple 6, N.• Cuolina St. 5, Ne·
brule a S, Arizona St. 4, G.orgi a 4, Ala.·
Birmingh•m 3, New Orleans 2, South
Aorida 2. Ne w Mex ico St. I, Ru~s cn I ,
Su nford 1, Tulaiic I.

Purdue 6S, Georgia 62

t'ar WC5t
Wuhlli&amp;IOn 67
On:gon 911, E. Tcnncuc.e St. 83

Transactions
· Basketball
Nallonai lla ~ kelball.o\s.~ IICI II I illfl
PHILADIZLP}UA 76 ERS - Jllaclold
Srian Ollv llt, auard , on lhc: injun;.d li~a.
A cUvat~

I

Fool ball
National Football Lea~&amp;u~:

£ail
Failleiah Ditki1110n 64, Maine 51 · . ,

An.ANTA FALCONS- Activate-d

Brtl Fratic , fUi rd; From injured reserve.

Ooorao Wuhington 77, Mu ·
u chuscw:65
Gcoractown 91, OiSL of Columbia 48
lm• 74, Pordhlm 73, 0T
Loyola, Md . 71, M.d.-Bahimore

Waived William Even, dd ertailie back.
DENV ER BRONCOS - Waived
Barry Johnson, wide recei ver. Acti u t.ed
Tim Lucu, linebacker, from injur«:d re-

N.Y, b landen.at Hartfon_l, 7:35 p.m.

St. John's 86, Manhauan SO
SyraC\110 89, Tc~u Cluinian 12

·

ltr'o'e.

Monmouth, NJ . 71, New Hampshim

69

Miu;:heU Wiuin•. guard. f1001

lhc injured lin

Saturday's action

Penn St. 51, Bowlins On:at 48
Selan Hall66, St. 1\.'\Cr'• 44
St. Pta neil , N.Y. 73, Brooklyn Col.

--,_

Conzago~ 7 4, ~ -

Major college
basketball scores

l4

Far Wtsl

Arizona 66, New Mexico S4
Cal SL-FWJ.crton 98, Ponland 94

APTop 25
basketball poll

St. LouiJ at Montreal, 7:35 p.m.
San J01e •~ N.Y. Jhngcn , 7:3.5 p.m.
.

1.5
2

c a.w,76

. Tonight's games

I
\.

Dukc 88, Michigan 85, OT
Eva111Ville 99, S. lllinois 98, OT
Houston 75, 1U.-Olicago66
lllinoil St. -9Sr ldlho St. 6l
Iowa St. 98, Iowa &amp;4
Kanus 104, DePiul75
Kan111 St. 99, Alabama St. 81
Kent 76, Valparaiso 45
Loyola, Ill. l OS , Mo ~an St. 55
Miami, Ohio 73, XaVIer, Ohi o 58
Michigan Sl. 91, Deuoit 7S

Tuesday's ~o;umes
NewJerscy 11 New 'r' &lt;;~rk. 7:30 p.m.
!Jogton at Orl ando, 7·30 p.m.
U~h I I C!Jar] Ollll, 7:JO p.m.
lndia~a at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m
Mlaml al ClcvclancJ, 7:30p.m.
LA. Like n at Chi CI &amp;o. 8 p.m.
s ~ n Antonio al DaUu, 3:30p.m.
Wuhin~on 11 Houstoo, 8:30 p.m
L.A , Clippers at Sc.atlle. 10 p.m.
M i n n e~o u at Golden Sute , 10:30
p.m.

Allanta ~~ Dallu, I p.m.
.
Cleveland at PittsburJlh, I p.m.
Detroit 11 Buffalo, I p.m.
·

9

GU

MinnuOUI •t~ P,ortla nd,IO p.m.

Sunday•s actlon

20

Oa ylOn 107, Moun\ St. Mary' s, Md81

Dcrwer a ~ Dclrolt, 7:30 p.m.

Next week's games

Detroit ................
SLI..ou.is ............
Chi caso..............
Minn&lt;IOI&amp; .....o.. ..
ToronlO ..............

Ball St. 73, DYU-IIa w&lt;ui 68
Buller 80, Indian1 St.' 6S
Ciev61and St .74, E. Michigan 60

Tonight's games

o neans, 9

Suturday's gum ~s

Team

9.5
125

L A. Clippers 119, Orland o 104
L. A. Liken 110, Sac ramen~o 94

Houuon a\ New Yl'lrlr. Gianu , 12:30
p.m.• ,
Oreen Bay It Minncs01.1, 4 p.m

by the •fire and sceoes blanketed with snow.,Christmas encompasses
war·mth and good
cheer as we
.
.
cherish the blessings we've shared this past year . .
For us it means saying "tha~ks" to you, our many
friends, old ·and new~ whose kind support we'll alw~ys
treasure. Doing business with you is our
greatest pleasure!

7.5
8
8.5

Sunday's scores

Tonight's game

Wit~ ·wreaths ·o r holly and mistletoe, stockings hung

5.5

New Yotk 111. Boston 101
Otarlou.e 109, New Jer&amp;cy 102
Philadelphia 104, Sea\Lle 95
C'h1cago 113, Wash ington 100
Miami 121 , AIIanul 01
Dal'11 99, Cleveland 97 1
Indiana 129, Denver 108
San An~oriio I (17, Hou51Cll 100
Milwaukee 103, MinnCIOI.a 92
Uuh 102, Detroit tOO
Portland liS, Sa crarn(l!to 110
Gol den State 128, Orlando 107

Chicago 'll, Tampa Bay 0
San Franc:iico ~ . Kansu Cil)' 14

· t~l r

KcntlXk)' 94, Arizona St 68
Libolly 19. Md.·E ShOR 64
Louisiana Tech l ll ,Centenuy 89
Louisville 8S , George Muon 66
Mcrccr 73, Tn.-Chatllnooga &amp;9
MiuWippi S~. 71, Ja cksonville 74
Mu.my St. 98 , Middle Tertn. 74
N.C.·Ash"cville 81, M.i.l.ligan 63
Tcnnwce 6S , Memphis St. 611
W. Kentudly 16, Austin Puy 67

Saturday' s scores

Saturday's scores

- Pi••bJ.1h ..........

il

8.l

Padnc Dhillon
LA. Lakcn ............ l5 7 .682
Goldt:n Slat.e ......... 13 7 · .650
Phocn ix .................. l4 9 · .609
PO!\Iand ................. 14 9 .WJ
L A. Clippen ......... \4_ 10 .SSl
Seattle .................... ll ll
.500
S aer~me n l0 ..............7 15
.318

y-clinthcd playorr berth

...:.

""

T"m
W L PeL
Utah ...... ............15 9 .625
SanAmoltio .......... 12 9 .57 1
llous\on ~ ............... U _____2_ __,_55Q
D1Uu ..................... IO 13 .435
Den ver .....................9 12 .429
Min nesota ................ ) 16 .158

L.A. Runo......... 3 12 0 .200 22l367
1-dincheCI divilion.

Tu11d1y;
Deeember 14

35
3.5

Mldwcsl Division

Western Division

II 'New

E. Kentucky SO, Colon~do St. 66
Furman 80, Georgia Southern 77
Ocorjia Tech 90, Georgia St. n
hmca Madison 108, South 1\labama

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Central Olvlskln
y-Chi~IJO .......... )J 4 - 0 .733 285217
y·Dt.troll ............ II 4 0 .733 3222!11
Minnc&amp;c:u. .......... 8 7 0 .533 294 279
·Green Ba y.......... 3 12 0 .200 2A6 306
Tampa Bay ...... 2 13 0 .133 182362

' Lol Ansad"Ra lde'B
p.m,

1

Toc!o l9

Mldw~ t

Easlem DMslon
Tt!am
W L T PeL PF I'A
1-Wuhinl'on .... 14 I 0 .933 463 200
y- Dallu ............. 10 5 0 .667 311 283
Philadelphia ....... 9 6 0 .600 26 1 222
N.Y. GianLs ........ 7 !I 0 .467 257 2n
PhOUIU. .............. 4 II 0 .267 193 317

y·Atlan!-1 ............ 10 S 0 .667 33007
New Orleans ..... 9 S 0 .643 287 208
San Francisco .... 9 6 0 .600 341 22:5

Wi-s-h- all your eus-t-ome-rs ant-1:-------,friends a very Merry Christmas in
Gree-ting Edition on
our. Christmas
.
Dece1nber 24th.

Gil

Central DI Yisiun
Chieago.................. \8 3 .857
C lc ve land. ~--~--~ ·M ll
8 .0110
Allanta ................... l l 11
.500
Mil waukt.c ....,.., .. ... ll 12 .478
lndi;ma ................... \ 1 13 .458
Dcu-oit.. ................. lO 14 ".417
Charlotte ..................? 17 .292

·s an Diego .......... 4 II 0 .267-260-llS

I

Soulh
&amp;6, Minnc:soLa.80
Alabama tO!, Old Domi nion 67
Aubum 93, Southern Mill. 78
CIL1del69, Cabrini 47
Clemaoo IS, Tcnneucc: Sl. 60
Coll. of CharleSLon 75, T~nn ~u ee

In the NlfA...

Cenlnl Division
1-HooJton .......... 11 4 0 .733 366227
Cleveland ..... _.. fi 9 I .400 283 2Kl

Chrlllm11
Cr111111g Edition

TOW&amp;M SL 74, Wuhinstm. Md. SO
Vill~nova71, American U. 64
Wat VlrJinla "· Pllllburah 85
Ali~·Birrn.in&amp;h.m

Tc11m

Detm er. the NCAA'S&lt;tii·Lilil0 lounh in I~~ 6 . No pure defender
leading passer. said he wasn' t dis- has ever won !he Hcisman.
· ·
appoin ted by his th ird·place finish. .
" It's hard to judge a defensive
" I knew going into the season
pl ayer becau se th ere's no real
that it woLid be hard for me to win st:tL,," said Emunan, who will mce
again," he said. " The expectations Howard in the Ro se BowL " A
were JUSt too high. Every game.hml quarterback has completions, a runto be better than the previous one. "
ning back has rushing yardage and
Washington tackle Steve Emt- a receiver has receptions. But with
man fini shed founh,the best show- a defensive play er, especially a
ing by a defensiv e player sinc e linemun , you can' t tell how good
Oklahoma 's Brian Bosworth-was ·he is by looking at a st:tt sheet."

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'

SanJoie at Pitllbuigh, 7:3'_p.m.
Quebec at Wuhingm, 7:35p.m.
Winnipeg at C.l&amp;&amp;ty, 9:35 p.m.
Minnesou 11 LoJ Angelea. l 0:35 p.m_.
Oeuoital Vancouver, 10:35 p.m.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Hei·sman Troph.· Y

1992·2156. ..

FacWleslons

·•

Wl.DS

.

ADV£RTISING \ . ·
ASK FOR BRENDA O~DAVE .

•$1m•
•M.....ent of Skin &amp;
Wle 112,¥.., ... Pt. ...

lo r the ttrst Lime si nce 19X5. THe
Co wboys got !here with a 17-poult
l'ourth -quarter mlly that was ign ited
by Kelvin Martin 's 85 -yard punt
return.
- Wid e rece iver Mi chael Irvin ,
who caugh t a clinchi ng four-yard
·TO pass, remembered the bml old
days . " When we were 1-15, we

•

Scot.. eboard

Atlanta, ·Detroit, Dallas win to make NFC -playoffs Sunday
-

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Meigs -gents hand Athen-s 77 -·62 loss

Monday, Dec~t;n_ ber 16, 1991

By DAVE HARRIS

I

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

·

·

Hoc:key
National HbckeJ l.elillt

, ..

SAN lOSE SHARKS - Ass igned
Artu ra lrbc, 4a.ltcndc:r, tu Kanm City of
1hc lntcmallonal Ho cker ,League.. Rc·
c•llcd Drbn lb ywud, i Oih en dcr, from

Kin••• City.

John Bentley wrapped around a 2=12, Shawn Hawley 1-0-2=4, Jason Reed 0-3-2=11, Jason Repp
bucket from Sunny ·Kalu for the "Trevor Harrisop 11 -1-6=3), Bobby t -0-0=2, Dan Kiger t-0-2=4, Scott
Bulldogs.
Johnson 1-0-0=2: TOTALS- 24- Hillkirk 6-0· 1=13, Ry1111 Colley 3·
The Bulldogs toot"' their first 5· 14=77
0-0---6, Sunny Kalu 7.0-5=1'7, Kyle
lead of the ni~ht (9-8) at !he 3:36
ATHENS (62) - Mark Fales tonas 1-0-0=2. TOTALS - 19-4marl\ on a palt of free throws py 0-1·0=3. Justin Scholl 0-0-2=2, 12=62
Scou Hillkirk. Athens increased the
lead to 14-8 on a bucket by Kalu
with 2:13 left in the period. But
LJ . Mitc.h caught fire for Meigs as
the 6-3 senior scored seven of !he
games next.nine point$ iCLthe__fin.al
I:59 of !he peri!X\ to eutthc Bull•
dogs lead to 16-15 at the buzzer.
The Maraqders opened up a 26Balanced scoring and rebound20 lead at the 5:21 mark of lhe first ing boosted the Uni.versity of Rio held turnovers to 14. Notre Dame
half on a long three pointer by Grande women's basketball team's brou ght down 34 rebounds and
Bentley. But the Bulldogs came winning streak to six when they commilled 17 turnovers.
Overall, the Red women were
storming baQk and took a 34-32 defeated Nolie Dame (Ohio) .10036.4
percent from the field (28-77;
lead on tlvo Jason Reed free throws 61 in Cleveland Saturday.
11
-22
from lhe three for 50 perwith I :36 left in !he Half.
· Michelle Crouse, 5-8 guard cent) and had II of 18 free throw
Harrison tied it at 34 with a cou- from McArthur, scored 16 points to
ple free throws of his own at the lead Doug Foote's Rio ladies to a attempts conne&lt;:t for 6U percent.
The Blue Falcons shot 30.8 pet·
I:,26 mark and the junior gave the ,quick lead in spite of a strong scorcent
(20-65, 4-15 from lhe three for
Marauders a 37-34 lead at the half ing ef(ort from lhe Blue Falcons'
26.7
percent) and connected on
when he hit a three pointer from Hollie Ksiezylc, who hit 20 points
nine
of
13 auempts at !he line for
deep in !he right comer with I :07 and snatched nine rebounds.
69
.2
percent.
left in !he half.
N.9trc Damc._coach~ by Debby
The Red women are-back in
Meigs ·opcned- uiJnix poilll Ghezzi and the runnerup in last
action
today when they meet Dislead when Bentley hit another three month's Bevo Francis Classic at
trict
22
leader Mount St. Joseph at
with 7:05 left in the third , but Rio Grande, outshot !he Redwom5
p.m.
in
Lyne Center.
Reed's bucket at the 5:50 mark cut en 34.3 percent (20-65) w 32.6 (15Box score:
the maroon and gold lead to 44-40. 46) in the first half. However, the
NOTRE DAME (61) - .
Two free throws by Harrison , a team faltered on its o utside shootMi
chelle · McHenry , 3-0 ~6;
bucket by Mitch and ·a steal and a ing , sinking one in six tries while
Michelle
Hess. 2-0-4; LaMesha
lay-up by Harrison gave Meigs a the visitors netted three of 10. with
1-0-2; Lisa' Oravecz, 2·
Spinkston,
50-40 advantage.
Crouse leading the way for the 0-4 ; Mi ss y Rizzo, 1-1-3; l.issa
_Kalu bit two free throws with 53 game -with a 4-6 showing. That and
seconds left in !he period to cut the more trips to !he foul line allowed Latina. 2- t ~0-7; Hollie Ksiezylc, 6Meigs lead to 54-46 at the end of Rio Grande to establish a 17-poim 1-5-20; Ann Duhigg , 3-1-3-12;
the period. Those free throws gave lead at the half the hosts were Erin Kvach. 0-t-0-3. TOTALS'l04-9-61.
Kalu his only points of·thc second unable to match.
RIO GRANDE (100)- Kim
half after !he 6-4 sophomore scored
Also scoring high for the Red- Sowers. 2-1.0-7; Gena Norris, 3·1·
17 in the first half.
women were Stephanie Gudorf and
The Bulldogs continued to claw Jackie Hannon with 13points each, . 2-11 ; Michelle Crouse, 2-4-0-16;
ba ck into th.e game cutt ing th e Ann .Barnitz with 12 and Gena Elizabeth Gannelli, 2-0-4; Jackie
Meigs lead to six (57-51) bu1 once Norris with II. Ann Duhigg was Hannon. 1-3:2-13; Tricia Collins,
1-0-2; Mindy Montgomery, 3-1-0again Harrison took matters in his the only other Notre Dame player 9; Ann Barnitz, 5-2-12; Stephanie
own hand s scorin g six of th e to make it into !he two-figure range Gudorf. 6-1-13; Melanic Miller, 0·
Marauders next nine points gutting with 12 poinl';.
1-1-4; Kathy Snyder, 3-3-9.
the Marauder lead back to 10 (63Gudorf led !he rebounding for TOTALS 28-ll·U-100.
53) with 4:32 remaining.
Rio Grande with eight, but nearly
Halrtime score: Rio Grande
Blalcc came up with a steal and every member of the team con 48,
Notre Dame 31.
lay-up to increased the lead .to 12 tributed for a total of 57 boards and
less th an a minute later and th e
game was all but over.
. The Marauders increased th e
Meigs outscored Eastern 22- 10 lloor lor 43%, but only seven oC 21
lead to 18 (73-55) with just over
in
!he
second period to turn a 17-10 from the l1ne f!lr 33%. The
two minutes on a bucket in th e
into a 38-27 halftime lead . Marauders pulled m 37 rebounds
deficit
paint by Bell!!ey. At that p_oint
Maraud er coach Phil Ham son and the Marauders--went- on to w-ith Katarina Turner grabbing
cleared his bench.' Mark Fales hit a defeat the host Eagles 67-40 girls seven and .Missy. Sisson and Baer
three pointer for the Bulldogs with non-con ference basketball ac tion grabbmg SIX. Metgs turned !he ball
over 23 times and had 15 steals
28 second s left in the gam e to Saturday evening.
outscored
!he
Eagles
29wtlh Mullen geumg five.
Meigs
make the final score 77-62 in fa vor
13
in
the
second
half
and
win
the
Amy Metzger led the Eagles
of the Marauders.
game
going
away.
with
18, Tabby Philli!)s added 10
Harrison ' s 31 led a trio of
Verna
CompsLQn
led
a
trio
of
and
Lee
Gillian nine . No other
Marauders in double figures. Bent·
Marauqers
in
double
figures
with
E&lt;JStcrn
statistics
were available.
ley continued to show area coaches ·
Meigs, now 4-0 on !he season,
that is also a scoring threat as !he 6- . 20, Tricia Bear added 14 and Kim
Hanning
added
10.
will
travel to Nelsonville on MonI junior hit for 15 points, including
Me1
gs
hit
30
of
69
from
th
e
day
evening
and will return home
nine from three point ran ge and
to
host
Belpre
on Thursday.
added five assists for good mea~
Quarter
totals
sure . Mitch added 12 and continued
Meigs .......... ....... 16 22 15 14 = 67
unselfish play on !he offensive end
(Continued from Page 4)
Eastern
............... 17 10 8 5 = 40
of 'the .floor. Meigs hi,t 29 of 53 Thurman Thomas.
Meigs (67)- Compston 9-0from the floor for 55 % and 14 of
Kenneth Davis rushed for 90 2=20, Bacr 6-0-2=14, Hanning 5-017 for 82% from the line. Meigs yard s and one tou chdown and 0=10. Mullen 3·0·2=8, SisSon 3·0out rebounded the taller Bulldogs caught one of three touchdo wn . 0=6. Kelly 2:0.0=4, Henderson,_ ..
28-25 with Mitch grabbing nine. passes by Jim Kell y as the Bill s 0-0=2, Turner 1·0-0=2. Cre,means
Shawn· Hawley led Meigs with nine (1 3-2) scored on thei r first three ·0-0-1=1. Totals- 30·0-7=67
assists. Meigs had six ~teal s with possessions. Thomas spramed h1s
Eastern (40) - Metzger 6·0Blalce leading with two.
left ankle the nrsttime Buffalo had 6= 18, Gardner 0-0-1= I, Phillips.5Kalu led the Bulldogs with 19 the ball.
0-0=10. Wilson 1-0-0=2, Gillian; 3points. Hillkirk added 13 and Reed
Oilers 17, Browns 14
0-3=9. Totals-15-0-10=40
II. Athens hit 23 of 48 from the
Like Detroit, Houston has the
floor for 48 percent and 12 of 16 reputation of being an indoor LC&lt;lm.
from the line for 71 %. Kalu pulled But Warren £tvloon , who set a
in 12 rebound s to lead Athe ns, record pushin g hi s season tot al
Hi I!kirk added 10. . .
completions to 382. dro~c !he OilAthens defeated Me1gs '" the crs 82 yurds through the snow for
reserve game 44-36, Troy Balm led • the wmnmg touchdow n with two
the Bullpups with 14, Eric Wagner minutes left 10 beat Cleveland.
led Meigs with 10. Jack Stanley
Steelers 17, llengals ttl
SHOPPING HOURS
and Brad Anderson each chipped in
Bubby
Bri
ster,
who
ha
d
not
with eight. The Bullpups arc now
. Daily
3- 1 on !he season and Meigs drops played in two months, returned LO
9:30-8:00 p..
Piusburgh 's starti ng lin eup and
LO0-2.
threw
touchdown
passes
to
rookie
Meigs will trav el to Miller to
nday. 1 4 .,.... ~
play the 0-2 Falcons on Tuesday ti ght ends Adrian Cooper and Keith
eve ning, and the Marauders wtll Cash as Piusb urg h withstood five
close out !heir three game road trip turnovers to beat CincinnaLi .
Chargers 38, Dolphins 30
on Friday at Vinton County.
Miarni controlled Its own playQuarter totals
Meigs ................. 15 22 17 23 = 77 off des tin y when th e New York
Athens ........... ..... l6 18 12 16 = 62 Jets lost, b~t the Dolphin s surren93 Mill Street
MEIGS (77) -Frank Blake 1- dered four touchd own s in th e
0-2'=5.- John Bentley-2--3-2= 15, . fourth quaru!r. sending lh.c. playoff
Carlton Drumm er 0-0-2=2, Jay race do wn to nex t week' s·finul
Crem~n s 3-0-0=6, L J. Mitch 5-0- game against I!Je Jets.

Defense, shooting lead
to vietoryfor-CRio

Meigs girls defeat Eastern 67-40

NFL games ..

to

m.

0\r\iff
5t~t:Et a3ooks

�.

By The Bend

-

The Daily ·Sentinel
·

Monday, December 16,' 1991

. Monday, December 16, 1991

.......p.~ii~

-=====·======~;;;;==~~~~~~7;~~--i·~·~~· ;;~-~~-~-~~~-.!· Community
l Carrier
I • r""

r

',.

•

L----------------------Meigs County Health Department

t

;
Sam and Bonnie Scou,
:·Langsville, had a successful day at
; the recent North AmeriCan lntema! ti'onal livestock Show held in
; Louisville, Ky. Since the Show is
the largest east of the Mississippi,
:.and it was the first Texas Longhorn
show for the Meigs Countians, they
~ were especially pleased with their
r wm.
f. Their three-year-old female,
· :Miss Lena, placed second in her
· large class, That entitled the Scotts
to show her in the prestigious
Texas. Langham .Exposition June
24-28 in Fort Worth, Texas. The Scotts began using Texas
Longhorns in 1988 for calving purposes. Since that time they have
phased out their mixed breeds and
: arc working with only Texas
: Longhorn crosses. ·
Miss Lena was shown by the
Scotts' daughtei,'Mich elle, 17 .
Their other daughter, Rebecca. 12,
also shows the unique breed. Both
girls are active in 4-H.
The Scotts are members of the
Tcxas Longhorn Breeders Associa(ion of America. He is a director of
· the· Heartland Texas Longhorn
Breeders Association, and both Mr.
·and Mrs. Scott arc the youth direc· tors. They are in the process of
. organizing a Heartland Branch of
· the Texas Longhorn Breeders of
·Tomorrow. the national youth
,group.

C:lasSi

•

..Business Service.s

II

-ro· ·PLACE· AN AD· CALL
992,2156 .
·
·

Mo
. NDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M•.until NOON SATURDAY

RA
_Days

-

Meig~. aetiia or M&amp;aa"' counrl•
··~~::";. 1 .50 dltcoum

t

•Sent inti it nof rtlpontiblt for errors&amp;ftiJ firtt ·d~ . !Check

S- Heppy Adit

PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS • These students wDI perrorm in
the Christmas program at Salisbury Elementary on Tuesday al 7
p.m. Piclured, 1-r, front row, are Tirzah Dodson, Megha n Haynes,
Jenifer ~organ, Mindy O'Dell. Second row, Zach Glaze, Marc
Smith, Jon Halar, Marc Barr. Third row, Heather Whaley, Amy
Frecker, Billy Soulsby and Carson Midkiff.

Classified

- 2 '00 P.M. THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M. FRIDAY

pa~es .corer) he

Gtllil County

Ara1Codt614

Salisbury Christmas musical to be performed:

81 62,6364 -

Schooll &amp; lnlfruction
R'adio, TV &amp; CB Rep1ir
Mitctlltneout
W1nted To Oo

V. C. .YOUNG Ill
992-621$ ...

LlVI~SIIIL k

Ferm !Qulpmen1
Wanttd to Buy
Livettock
Hey &amp; Gr~in

IJ:!~~~~w~~::.:.o.

Real Estale

· Pom•oy, Ohio
·
.
'11-14-'90 tfn .

WEBER'S
CHRISTIMS TREES
Homegn&gt;wn,
sheared.

s.,.

76 - AU1o Par11 &amp; Ac:c•sorl•

AreaCode304

5 Ft. and up
Good selection of
large trees.
614-742-2143 !Jr

77-- Auto Aep1ir
78 ..... Cimplng Equipmenl
79-Cempen 6 Motor Homes

367-Ch•hire

JIB - Vinton
246-Rio Qrende
256-Guvan Dist
143- Arebil Oltt
379- Watnot

742·2979

Serv1~es

87-Upholttery

·
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
real estate taxes.

!IX".

Parcel Audllor's Parcel Number: 1S·

"•·

•

Cat 1 Sentinel

•

•

~LASSWIEDS!
••

992·2156

••
•

...

_

.•. ··- ..... ...

HillEY lllllt'l
-IESIDEICI
35975hadslt

PH. 614-992-5591

Pomeror~ OWo

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAm

SHRUB &amp;-TREE
TIIM .and
RlMOYAL
•UGHT HAUliNG
•FIREWOOD .·

mo.

11- 8, 1.rno. pd

· 12-5-lfn·

Homtnlllde with
Long Lasting Green
Scotch Pine.

BRADFORDS
Fresh Cut 'tees ar
Cut Your Own.

S20.00eaa
Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Ones.

614·949-2051
11-251

A

CHERRY RIDGE,
of Darwin on Rt.
681 on Gravel Road
1Y. Milts to Grove.

mo. pd.

...

'

•

BILl SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD

WATCH FOI SIGNS

AUTO AND PICKUP GIFT SPECIAL!
Ground Elfecta.:..,... ,. ...........lnlllalled from C.l
Luggage Racka.................. lnatalled from $65.00
Spollt1'8.......................... ,..... 1nlllllled from $145.00
Braa. .• Le Br.Wotf....................................... 10% Off
Bed eovera...........................lnstalltd from $125.00
Molded C.rJ)Bta. ...................carryout from $fe.OO
PERSONALIZED Bug Shltkla ... .Installed $55.00
TFX/Burg Graphic Klte ...lnatalled from · $30.00
Mirror Finish Molding Kha ..lnatalled from $75.00
fllnllrlpea. .............................lnlllalltd from- $15;00
Custom S.•ts.........................................- .... 10% Off
Truck Seat Covera................lnlllalltd from $80.00
Sunvlsora, palnted ............... lnetalled !rom $140.00

·.

Great Lakes Windows
·Fusion Welded Sashes •Tilt-In Sashes
•7!8" lnsulated·Giass •LifetiiJie-warrantyLow·E Gluslllltd with Argo~ Gas at Factory Cost.
Add 111 txlra 4" of Yowl-in ils..atloa
It J011! atlk.
Wt dt rnodtllng - kllcheu, llathroonu,
family r-L cmllwlltlllates.

-

AUTO ftlll Cllftl

•BmWNIN
JNSUlATION

SIDING CO.

28

~t.

Starting
fodory

Public Notice

•VINYl: SIDING
•AlUMINUM SI!)INO

SAT. NIGHT ·
6:30 P.M.

a.o•• -

12 Gaut• ..... Dilly
.

Stridly lnt.nod

9-13·'91 -dn.

GROOM
· ROOM
Complete Grooming
for All lrftds .

EMILEE MERINAR.

"Fr01 Ettllllltet"

I'M. 949-2101
..., .... 949-2160

SNODGWS

I&amp;C EICAVATIIG

UPHOLSTERY

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

FOR SALE AT BOB
SNOWDEN'S LOT

Ml* Sl RIIW IlL

11/20/1 ...

RACINE GUN
CLU8
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M. :
lUNDAYS
Stahing Sept. 22

'25 C1t &amp;WraPIIed
ss Extra to Skit·

NOV.21~l:l

614-9f2 -68~'0

9·11·1 mo. Jill.

.DEER CURING
and
, WRAPPING

MAPLEWOOD

lratlt Coli DolyJ J.cah GrtWI
lty ... s-M.

$10.1.,

HAUliNG:
UmHtone. Dirt.
Grovel ond Cotl
Ucen•d end Bonded
.PH. 614-992•5691 .

UCINE, OHIO

TREiS READY

0,.. !117:00 HI·

WATER.

SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES

614·949·2202
.-

NO SIINDA YCAIU
3·11·1fn

CHRISTMAS TREES

_,II.DOZIIG

"Helping You To
,Recover Your
· lnvestmen,t"

,. •• . _ ltollt

Owner &amp; Operator
Pomeror.

11····-

-·-

BISSELL

1~----;

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE!!

ULLIPOLIS

Bashan luUtling

EVElY

UKE
.RACINE, OH.
949·2734

614-742-3051

JJ~III ... " r

.. •-

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

,_,_, .

11-&amp;l'mb:

•

MICIOWA E.
OYENIEPAII

·flll&amp;lliiilJj:

lri"ll It In Or ••
Pkk Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or
- 915·3561 -

,.,., .. p,.. Pest OHict
117 I. loctool St. .
POIIIOY, 0110

5

l/&amp;/90/!ln ·

PERFEC]
RESUMES

Geaeral Word

....

-

. .,

ond d.,..dlble.

(

''

I'

~

ea'r:~f:tun

collect at
1-614-667-6474

I

I
I

111111

•

Processl~g

Temporary
Seuelarial Jobs
lndlvldnltzed .
Tltorlals

EttgiS./W/S'Jlllls•

Now0...01~S

Hand-Carved
Solid Wood

.for ... Clrlslllu ....
Glvt a lt.tlwovta ......

Ducks

to lMliJI!dals- o•
'"' Orlsl•slsl.
also II _
·
stolE"
.

Wettv!l••

located on Rocksprings
Rd. In Pomeroy, .3 ~t~lles
from the Meigs Co. F•lr·

Each dilleranl I col~ valuo.
Native oak, pine, i:ha!ty, poplar
or walnut A\IOJtable ·

grounds.
.
992-6855

11115/1

(6141256~6710

mo. pd.

THE BASKET WEAVE

HOME or OFFICE

mo. pd.

or

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARS
Spedalll... In
(Mstom f r - hpalr

NEW I USED PAllS
lOR All MAlES I
IIIODELS
992·7013 ~
or 992·5553
01 TOU. R!D ·
1-IG0-141-41070
DAIWII OliO

7131 /'9111n

N1w_h.

:St~ei/1
:· .
All CONDI110NfRS. • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNAQS FOR MOBILE&amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

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

Allii&amp;DS .

•

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

'

0

0

o

~

0

o

o

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

o

0

0

0

MOillE HOME

BENNETT'S ~:::o'

'

Lecatetl 0. SaHord Scheol ld. off lt. 1'41
("41 446-94U or 1·100·17:r.n•1

."

BISSEU &amp; BUill
CONSTIUCftON

eo!:;&amp;
Gtll

etlew 11111181

k.
Sets
Gr.... ,

•Garages
tCesnplete

.........c-.ar•

...

'9154473

.....
614-985·3961

MtttiCIIM

c.....~
- .... -

Stop I

FrN Elfltn.tn

667-6179

&lt;mrs. tic.. .

Pnftsllelltl
~

11/1111 ...

'I

'

I

•I
I

I
I

I

even

I
I
I

u ... , . . .

I
I

hitting 40,

all
you're

•'I
'

..

thl

~~~~IRTHDAY
Rick, Dick, Shellll

Newly Re-done
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
hia nice homealtes
available for up to
80' homes. ·

IIIDIPDIDIIIT ·
Cl.IT CliAIIIS
and nu PlOOI CAll
•RIIIOAtbil
.. at..
•
•Quellty Work •
•F- EotlmttH
•C•rpat H11 F11t Dry
Time '
•H lgh GlOM on Tills ,
Floor Flnleh
·

o..

Mill lEWIS.
. lit. I, lutllllll, OH .

rr

ISID AI'PUAIUS .

.. DU WAIUtm . '

WASHIIS-$100.,

DIYII-$6t ., ... - .
llfllfiWTDII- $100 "

IAIIIIS-:O..Boc.--$11\" I
FBIHII-$US., ·
,
•ao OYINI-17' "

JUST OFF RT. 33

Only $75

. Cal

i

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

mo.

61.4-992~5528

. 385-8227

"I·SUS • 915-3161

or

Acren fl'OIII .... Office . ·

PDIIROY, ONO

12·11·1 mo.

-··· ·- - - ·- 00··-

IWOIAIU

U-..cl111d llollded

GRAVE
Bl.ANKETS

foam filed

FIRE DEn. - ·

•

-~·

CHRISTIW
TREES

PONDS

.

RACINE ..

I

roESDAY a: THURSDAY, CHILDREN UNDER 12 EAT rui
FROM CHJLDRI!'f'811EN1l. (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER'Il
WOT 1 CHILD PER ADULT

·--~

I

GUN SHOO.t.

&amp;Cornbread, Soup &amp;Salad Bar

.. ,,_...,., ____ _, __ .,. ......._...

11/1~1111

·--

I

I

I

. 949~2206

FOR SAU

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER I
SEWER UNES
BASEMENTS I
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmetlone,
Dirt, G..vel Mel Colli

446·4514

.

TUESDAY- Ham, Mashed Potatoes/Gravy, Green Beans,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
WEDNESDAY· Stuffed Green Peppers, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar ·
THURSDAY -Grilled Cheese, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
fRIDAY· Mushroom Bufger, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar

BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

CHRISTIAN CONSTRUCTION

1 MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

History - Larkin (1908) for $19.00.
lht iodtty haJ copies of the ~elgs C:ounty
History, Volumi II available for $49.00
anil a very limited number of the new pic·
torlal history . of Meigs County; lhru the
Years In Picture for $37.00. lhest books
may be purchased at the Meigs County
Museum, 144 Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy,
during regular hours, Tuesday through
Saturday, 1:00·4:30•.F.or mall orders add
$3.00 per book.

-.- .1.,.. 11114 .

R&amp;C IXCAYATING
BUijDOZING

Re~acement Windows

The above d01crlbed real
REAl ESTATE AP·
PRAISED AT: Parcel One and eitale hat been aulgned

INSURANCE.

tOUIIIIY

0

'4.:9l
614-9 :5702

CUmNG,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

111(

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Monday Friday, 1 I a m. to :J p.m.

IAI c... • u.s. :PI
Ohio -

WINTER IS APPROACHING•••
WARM UP YOU~ HOME WITH

85- Genertl Hauling
s-a::. . Mobile Home Aep1ir

Officers elected

History of Meigs

39507 Rockrulng• ad.

82-Piumblng • HellinliiJ

83-EIICa&lt;ltlng
.
84- Eiecnlctl &amp; Atfrigerlllon

Your Social Security

reprints of the

I'H. 949-2lcl1 \
., 111.949-2160 .

11125.

.'

HOMESTYLE UTNCII SPECJAL.'i

. '~11 unllll1 Pri·g s"

Wtlltl I 81nlal
Wllthtr King,~~-•
· Luull:e, 1nalcllr,
Hut. Pumpa,
. , . , _ .,
. M'Cond~
'I I I
IJ

8, - · Home tmpro...,.ments

Community calendar

·:st. John's professor updates
·calculations of Santa's speed

C. ·LIIH,tlac
Rtfrl.ll'llt

66 - Sttd &amp; FtrUi;ttr

446 - Gtllipolis

Students at Salisbury Elemen- Eblin, Ashley Fields, Meghan Noah Chasteen, Yancey Hunter, the Christmas Train." Fifth and•
tary will present "The Three Haynes, Kristi Lambert, Shawna Bobby Johnson, Carson Midkiff, sixth graders make resolutions fot ·•
O'Clock Rehearsal of Combined Munley, Heather Riffle, Lois Still Michael Salser, Budd Smith and the coming year and join the choir
Band and Chorus for the Very and Alicia Werry.
Billy Soulsby,
in singing, "Resolutions." The
Merry Christmas Musicale" on
Candles will be portrayed by
Portraying angels will be fourth angels·remind all not miss the 'truq
Tuesday at 7 p.m.
second grade girls Bobbie Burson, grade girls Beverly Burdette, meaning of Christmas and lead thq
Santa Claus will be portrayed by Elizabeth Bush, Ashley Hoschar, Lceann Dill, Tara Gray, Marjorie choir in sinrring "Q Little Town of
Mick Barr and Mrs. Claus will be Addie Hubbard, Jennif!lr Morgan, Halar, Tiffany Harder, Michelle · Bethlehem:· and the bell ringed
played by Tarii Michael. Portraying Mindy O'Dell, Amber Proffitt, King, Morgan Mathews. Kim tell about school closing dow~
the children of Mr. and Mrs. Claus · Michelle RifOe, Elizabeth Russell, Peavley, Christy Phalin, Brool&lt;;e because of 12 inches of snow . They
will be Billi Jo Bentley, Lauric. Cindy Six, Allison Story and Singleton, Kristy Six, Anna Story sing "Merrily, Merrily, Merrily.
Blankenship, Heidi Legar and Cyrstal Richards.
and Marissa Whaley. The Chinese Merrily" with the choir. The canMelissa Ramsburg. Myca Haynes
Elves will be portrayed by sec- girl will be portrayed by Kim dies sing "Bright Candle Lights'" to
':~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ will play Elf I and Josh Leach will ond grade boys Aaron Bowersock, Conde.
remind all of candles of light The
play the comic elf. All of these stu- Richie Dill, Anthony Doerfer, C.J.
Bell ringers will be fourth ~ade third grade toys and dollies arc .
dents are sixth graders.
. Estep, Zack Glaze, Justin Hoschar, boys James Billingsley, Clmton ·excited about the parade coming to
Portraying
reindeer
will
be
first
Josh King, Marc Smith, Jacob Wil- Horn, Eri~ Jarvis, Jeff Michael, town with soldiers, lions, tigers ,
•
grade
boys
Marc
Barr,
Ben
Bookson
and John Witherell
-- Ryan Well, Shawn White-and-Paul -bears and monkeys while singing
•
man.
Jonathan
Didale,
Evan
East~
·
Portraying
dollies
will
be
third
Williams.
·
"Christmas Toys."
·----~------------------------------------, Community Calendar items followed by meeting at 8 p.m: All man, Justin-Gilkey, Jon Halar, grade girls April Blankenship,
Portraying children in the play
Mrs. Claus tells 'of Chrisunas in
• ~ppear two days before an event members are urged to attend this Christopher Haning, Bubby Haye, Reatha Bush, Sarah Clifford, Amy will be fifth grade students Lacy .her past and sings with her four
r and lhe day of that event. Items final meeting of 1991.
Timmy Hubbard, Taylor McGraw, Frecker, Sandi Gilkey, Brandy Gra- Banks, Todd Billingsley, Melinda girls "The Echoes of Christmas."·
1111us1 be received well in advance
Isa iah Riffle , Jason Rosier and ham, Sherry Haye, Abby Hubbard, Clark, Tiffany Curfman, Tanya The elves talk about what ChristPOMEROY - Ohio TOPS Club Charles Richards.
1 (II assure publicalion in the calGrace Kitchen and Heather Wha- Dill, J.T. Humphreys, Tamra mas means to them, while the
: endar.
No. 570 will have its Christmas
In the role of trees will be first ley. . .
.
O'Dell, Ryan Ramsburg, Courtney comic 6if discusses wh~t it m~ans
party on Tuesday with weigh-in at grade girls Dawna Bhimfield,
Toys wdl be. po~ayed by .thud . Scarberry, Mitch Waugh, Melissa to him with another elf who helps
'
MONDAY
· 5 p.m. and meeting at 6 p.m. .0:11 Tirzah Dodson , Ashley Eblin, Juley grade boys M1chael Brumfield, Werry, Abby Wilson, Josh Wilson. him understand the meaning of
. RUTLAND - The Rutland Gar- members urged to attend.
Other children will be played by Christmas.
·den Club will have its Christmas
sixth graders Tom Billingsley, SabStudents sirig "Chinese Fortune
{!in ner meeting on Monday at 6
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrina Smith and Lacy Dickens.
Cookie Song" while the Chinese
·p.m. at the home of Mrs. Vernon risonville Senior Citizens will have
Sixth grade elves will include gue.st tells fortunes. The tre es
Weber in Rutland.a Christmas potluck dinner on
By Ed Peterson
arrangement and the doctor's certi- Vincent Broderick, Carly Chasteen, remind all to make each day ChristTuesday at noon at the town house.
Social Security
fication must be submiued with the Brad Davenport, Jesse Eastman, mas the whole year through and
TUESDAY
Three month birthdays will be
Manager in Albens
notification within 90 days or by Sarah Grueser, Michael Leifheit students conclude the program by
RUTLAND . - The Rutland observed and a gift exchange will
'
and Jared Warner.
singing "Be Kind to Each Other."
the day of release.
:Friendly Gardeners will juage all be held . All members urged to
Everyone
is
~ctting
ready
for
The public is invited' to attend
The pefS!&gt;n getling SSI bcnefiiS
homes in the villa$e of Ru~and on attend.
The Social Secuiity Adminisa-a: doesn',t have to be the one notifies Ch.ri stmas! The rcinoeer lead the program and Santa Claus will
Christmas decorauon on Tuesday.
tion stresses the importance of Social Sec.urity. A relative, doctor, everyone in singing "All Aboard make an appearance for small chil:winners wiH be chosen in both
WEDNESDAY
early notification when a Supple- social worker, representative
•dren.
·~e li~ious and non-religious cuteSYRACUSE - The Third mental Security Income (SSI) payee, or other interested pany can
The sixth grade band students of.
ganes. All homes within village Wednesday Club will mect\at the recipient ent~rs an institution . do it as well as help obtain the neeDave Bowen .will play "Up On the
limits will be considered by the muni~ipal building in Syracuse on However, a new Social Security essary statement and certification.
Housetop" and "Jolly Old St.
Officers were elected at the Nicholas/Good
jydges.
Wednesday at noon. From there the rule substantially increases the
Health care professionals should recent
King Wcnceslus."
React meeting held at Plcas- Flute players are
group will go to Mason Restaurant amount of time a recipient who is also be aware of the pre-release
Melissa Rams: POMEROY- The American to eat at .J2:30 p.m. A pany will be temporarily institutionalized has to screening procedures for people er's Res.taurant in Pomeroy.
burg,
Sabrina
Smith.
Trumpets arc,
New officers are Neal White , Sarah Grueser, Tara Michael,
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39, held later at the home of Mary Kay take action to continue receiving who are cwreQtly ineligible for SSI
Holly,
president; ·Bob Bowles, vice presi- Milhoan, Michael Leifheit. Clarinet·
pomeroy, will meet Tuesday at the Yost. There will be a gift exchange. · benefits.
. because they are in a public institu- dent;
Nancy White, secretary; Earl player is Myea Haynes. Trombon-.
pQSl ~omeJ?inner.:.-:ill be at 7 p.m.
Under the new rule, Social . tion where Medicaid ts.not making
Snyder,
treasurer; Barbara CoJmer, ist. is Jeremiah Russell alld playing:
Security must be notified within 90 payments. If the person is about to
publicity.
.
days after admission, or on the day be released from the instituti9n, he
Refreshments
were
and the drums is Jared W-arner.
of discharge, whichever is earlier. or she may apply for SSI benefits gift exchange was held. served
·
Previously, Social Security had to ~nd get a tentative decision prior to
Members
attending
were Neal
be not1fied within 10 days from rile being released. This provision is White, Bob and Mary Bowles,
Earl
end of the month the person designed to make it easier for eligi- and Mary Snyder, Deloris Hawk,
COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. (AP) its all children in North America entcred the institution.
ble persons ui"move from an insti- Santa and his reindeer may have and Europe whose families· cele- . SSI ~ecipients who enter a pub- tution b:!ck .into the com(llunity. .. Guy Hysell, Avanelle .Evans, Jerry
Barbara Colmer, Brenda Tem,slowed down a bit in recent years, brate Christmas.
he med1cal mst1tuuon, or a public
You can obtain further detailS and
pfeton
and Harlan Aleshire. Paul
but they ' re still about a hundred
He multiplies the population of or private medical facility where about these provisions from any
Evans
was
a visitor. .
times faster than the wink. of an North America and Europe (780 Medicaid is paying more than half Social Security office. The Athens
Ill Second St., Pomeroy
Anyone
interested in joining
'eye, says an associate professor at million) by the percentage of chil- the cost of their C3!'C, are ineligible office is located at 221 1/2 North
YOUR' INDEPENDENT
St. John's University.
dren in that population, about 20 for co~tinued SSJ payments or Columbus Road anlf the phone may come to a meeting held every
Urst
Friday
of
every
month
or
call
· Santa now has about a millisec- percent; and again ~y an estimated receive a reduced SSI pa.yment. number is 492-4448.
AGENIS SERVING
Neal White at 698-3411 or Bob
ond to visit each home on his route, percentage of families celebrating However, they may continue to
MEIGS COUNTY
Bowles, 992-222 1. The meetings
.Says Stephen Saupe, who r~cntly Christmas. The result is divided by receive benefits based on the full
arc held at J&gt;lcascr' s Res~1urant at
. Emission con1rol
.updated the calculations he created the average nuljibccof children per SSI rate for· up to .threc months if
SINCE: 1868~ ~
7:30p.
m.
.
• 11 rew years a~o ofSanla' sC:Speed .
family (2.7) to arrive al42,466,666 the'y need to maintain and pay
Oq
thJ!
positive
side
of
air
pollution,
·
• ''I've never seen Santa Clau s, visits.
expenses associated with a perma1990 finally saw the passage of a bill
but that's never bothered me too
Next, he divides 43,200 seconds nent residence. Additionally, a doc· that
revl.sed-the Clean Air Act anct
milCh. I never expected to sec him· (12 hou rs) by the number of tota,l tor must c·enify tllat Ute recipient's
f~tfling (jootf's %ways Cookjng ;It ·
contained
the first regulations of
when I was little ~ecausc I knew visits to reach the conclusion tha~ . stay is expected to be 90 days or emissions linked
to
acid
rain
and
the
that Santa didn't visit ·our house Sanw has 0.00102 seconds, oi 1.02 less . The statement of need to first tightening of tall-pipe emission
)Inti II was asleep," said Saupe.
milliseconds, per house.
.
maintain the permanent living standards in 20 years.
, "As an enlightened adult, I've
"Considering this is about a
1carncd that the spirit or Santa is hundred times faster than we blink,
,qery real, but I still don't expect to if you blinked on Christmas Eve,
·sec him - becauSe he's too fast." chances are you missed Santa,"
lhe Meigs County Plonttr and Historical
~ , Saupc, a biology professor, Saupc said.
Located on ~ 33 beside Malon Exxon 1nd Mason Moltl, Mason, wv
:assumes that in 12 hours ·Santa visSociety Is offering a Christmas special
Sunday lhlll Thurlda 10 0
Friday &amp; Sat
•
through the · month ·of · December on

IFREE ESTIMATES)

Tr ons pori ali on

23-PrOt•lioall Serviell

M•iiJS County "-·· M11on Co ..JNV

·AreaCode614

&amp;

21 - Butin•• Opportunity
22 - ~ontY to Lo1n

following telephon-e exchanges ...

· -lntoflor • !•Wrlot-

F ~rin Sti iiPi tPs

14-Butin•• T.r1ining

:: rgg ~:~ ~Eri'~tsVDAY

.,ilooMo - ... ....

·

Pllntliig

1_3- lntuflnce

16 16 1718 -

-0--

-~oomAdtltlotlo

-E~ end l'hlmbllla
-ConCNU WDril

57 - MutiCJI lnstrumttntl
158 - Frultt l V1getebl•

11 - Help WII'Uid
12 - Situltion W•nttd

.
DAY BEFORE PUBLICAT,ION
~ 11 , 00 AM . SATURDAY
- 2 '00 P.M. MONOAV

·

59- for Salei or Trtde

CWIEHCII

Choooe and Cut
Your Tree or We'D
'
Cut h For Yo~.

HILL'S DEER .
CUniNG

CARPENTER

18- Pt1t for Slle

Eill pioy111 P. ill
Sr.rv1cr.s

.

YOUNG'S

56-Building Suppli•

6-Lolt and f=ound
7- Vard Salt (paid in 1dvtncel
8-Publlc S111 &amp; Auction
9 ~Wtnted to B\IY

•A eltttified ectvtrtiMm.nt pl1eed in TheD1Uy Sentinel IlK ·
cept - cl•tified ditpi.V. Butin•• Cttd end legtl notices)
will elto IPP• In tke Pt. Ple•en1 ft . .itter end the Galli·
potit Dilly Tr.i bune. retching o.,., 18.000 homn--

·CUSTOM IUilT ·
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

RIGGS
'TREE FARM

12·2·11-1

53 - Antiques
'•
54 - Mise: Merchtndite

4 ..,- GivtM~V

for erron Ura1 d-ad runt in paper). Call befo;e~ : OO p.m.
diV lhll' publicthon'to mike correc'Cion.

-·

.42

61-HouNhold Gooch
&amp;2-lportlng Goo!H

3- A·nnoucem.-.u

'Ads thll must be plid in advance are
.
C~rd of Th1rtkl
. Happy Adt
ln.Mflm(iiramYll'd Sal•

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM - StudeniS at Salisbury Elementary '
will present· "The Three O'Clock Rehearsal of Combined Band ·
and Chorus ror the Very Merry Christmas Musicale" on Tuesd.ay
at 7 p.m. Pictured are program participants, J:r, front row, K1m
Conde, Tirfany Harder, Marissa Whaley, Shawn White, Ryan ,
Well. !lack, Melissa Ramsburg, Heidi Legar, Laurie Blankenship,·
Jared Warner, Brad Dav~nport, Mick Barr, Tara Michael, Myca ·
Haynes and Josh Leach.

.

w~ment•nd

'BISSELL
BUILDERS-:

runt, brokenupdayswlll bech.,glld
ads.

1- Card ot Thlnk:l
2- ln Memary

•PriCll of ed for all upitelltUIII is double price of ad con
•7 poinflint type only uMd, ·
.. ~ . ·

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAl PAPER
S,UNOAY' PAPER

,_

.20
.30

A111111 uII cI! till! ill s

run 3 days 11 no Ch•ge.

.

•

• , 3.00 -~___.._,. 10.
li .301doy ' .05/doy

tnr. ter.h it..,

for ada paid in adwance

14.00
16.00

.9.00

Rat• ar1 for

mu 11 tie pre·

- GNtaway end Found ada undlt' 16 wordt will bt

•p

·~

·

Ov•r 10 Woids

Rete

Wordl

1e
~
~~
2!;Y;;;.,;;;;:~~ ~~~Donthly - -~ 1:

.

1 andZBR
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME'
RENTALS
Avallllbllln
COUNTRY MOBILE .
HOME PARK
•rllnrl .t $236 por mo.
. Very·nice 2 or~ BR, 2
· blllh houee ·

• _the.Area's Number 1·Marketplace

'

was rccen.tly contacted about a
baby car seat problem. She said
that the car seat had been used for
about seven montliSwithout problcm . The just a week ago when the
17 month old was put into the seat,
it' s shou lder harness belt began
tightening up around the baby's
throat and eventually had to. be cut
off with scissors.
The manufacturer was contacted
and arranged to pick up the defective scat so that it could be sent
back to the engineers for evaluation
of the problem. A new scat was
provided to the family.
Now, the Health Depanment is
wondering if there are others who
have had a similar problem. If so,
please contact Torres, 992-6626.

More than 200 have contributed
to the Senior Citizens Christmas
"Tree of Light'" taking the proceeds
well over the $1,000 mark.
The project is one of dedicating
a light to a special friend or relative, perhaps as a memorial. The
name of the one remembered and
the donor arc attached to a light.
Each light is $5 and the money
goes into the home delivered meals
and chore service programs of the
Ccntei. One gift will provide two
hot meals for some frail elderly
perso n or homemaker ass istance
for an hour.
The Center staff is excited about
C: ,. Every once in a while a defect in the response so far. But the needs
t~ product creates problems. That
many and if you would like to
r ~owcver , does not red uce the are
have a light on the tree in remem: importance of using that product brance of someone specia l in your
: since most times the defect IS not in life, JUSt send SS to the Senior Citi: all the proilucts, just a few . But it zens Center.
• docs pay to be alert.
:
Norma Torres : R. N. of the
Enjoy the season!

.J.,

~·A •·· -~A ·O

I

·--

IO/H/1t tin
· - - ·· ---·~-

' ...

.

'

.'

'

''

..

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PIIR

DK's FARM TOY·S
by ERn
Dlspli!ytd at1H

last markdown
onslloes
before closing
store.
OPEl FRI. &amp;SAt

Wty Prllt Sltop

HMIIOY

10:00 U.-3:00 P.M.

1211211 mo.

HOURS:
8:30 am-4:00 pm

614-992-3394
Or (all

HOWARD

EXCAVATING
BULL DOZER llld
BACKHOEWOM,

HOMESITE8,
LANDSCAJitNQ

WATER IIKIIIWih

UNII

.,._"EMil
All lSI

742·30~~.Evtllltgs

a

M2·1111

12·2·tl·1 --pd.
f

•

••

:

•'
I

'l

.

�'

Page

'

.

'IJle Dally

Ohio

8

The Dally sentinel

Monday, December

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Announcements

16,1991

Television

71 Autos lor S81e

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lllrry Wright

- . ~ ""'·
.....
..• -

__-yiewiifg

· ' t&gt;"''lllftnounctment•
BAHAMA CRUISE
5 Doya, 4 Nlghlo, OVw 8ollahl
Travll PlcU..; Rec.-rGri
Prl-, Muti .IIOIII $11111Couplo,
Pl .. Pott&amp;rvlco Chargoo. 4414'
394-8233, Mol'.

•

MON.. DEC. 18 • .
C 1VII1 TV Llltii'IQ

II)C ,

fl ~ . f,l

!V!NING
I:GO W Iii i])

(1). • 0.
!IJ"""
.
(J) Y1tllo , _.

;--a.TVs;·

9a.g .~-

'I'ESAIEWA5WILDLY

•=ttlp0rll.
Allllllali .
!DWOIId Odar

Furnished
Rooms ·

r..:.~

Stortlng II $120/mo. Golllo Holll.
614-441'11!180 . .
SIHplng roorno whh cooking.

Merchandise

mull ull,

•Pirtmtnl &amp; uUIItlll included.
S.nd ruume ta:· Box 1320
WaynMvHit, NC 28786.

..,, Point Ploooant Rogis)~!1
200 Main Sl, Point Pl8111nl, "v
25550.

Wanted: Truck O..lvtr To Haul

7

Yard Sale

&amp; VIcinity
=-::--:-=-:-~~:-::,.,.,.,-1
ALL Yard Soloo Mull Bo Pold In
Advanco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dor boforo the ad lo to run.
Sunday tdhion • 2:00

Fridoy. Monday odhlon •
p.m. Saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
- -All Yard Soloo llull Bo Paid In
Advance. Doadtino: 1:00pm tho .
day boforo tho od io to run,
"'.•nda•
'"" • odhlon· 1:OOpm Frldoy,

PASSE·517L, 161 S. Uncolnwoy,
:N::.A::u::r0:,'"~·.;.;11.:,60;.:54.;:2::·===-c:: 14
Business
FEDERAL GOVERNME'"" IS
Training
HIRING It&amp; 000 $"72 000/Y 1
· ' Elll.
• Go968
"
r.For" Rllroin
805-564-5500
Nowii!Soulhoootorn
Monday
tdltlon
10:00un. lmmtdlatt R11ponsa.
Busln... CoUt~, Spring Vallay
saturday.
Plaza. Call Todlr, 814-446-436711
lnoldo Solo-Syrocuoo, boforo
To 14 ~~~~ now . hiring Rogiotorotlon 1110-05·12748.
you got to pool, t.4pm, oign In housokHpors, cooks, oorvoro.
18 W
r.ord, coato10-t2, llltfo girt coat, maintonanco, 1-1100-882-21110
-=~=a_n.,.ted...,._to...,.,.D_o...,.,._
ott of JG. tlzt clolhH, Dingo
;;:WI
Booto, loft of Chrlllmllltomo
LABORERS
I Babyah In My Homo

8

Now Hiring To 116-HR, P•id
WHicly. 1-800-5214313.

Public Sala

PHaFO TRIMMERS: Wlohing to

&amp; Auction

st•rt lmmtdlately. No ••P·
Rlck Ptarson Auction Co.mpa~ny, necesury. Earn up to $,0 per
trlmming photograph. 1·
lull llme aucllonMr, comP'IIe
auction nrvlca. LlcenMd Ohio,
)6.800!.
West VIrginia, 304·~785.
.

::X· 3

- - . .. .,.

.

·- .

.DINO-MITE

c;:

Anr.lme.
Rodney
Area.
At trtncn Available. Call 614-

245-51117.

441-4782.

tfterl.

dl...t engine, only ,
mllas, lUper 1harp, 1

61

1111 8-10 EL, btdtln~r, bumper,
radio, SRWI bluo 1 .£~,1115. 1.8QO.
1164-3673, Rploy, ....

73

Farm Equipment

I

I

-

2 bodroom lurnlshod mobllo
homo, Rl. 2 Applo Grove, $250.
mo. $100. damogo dtposll. 304·
675·2029·

1175 Dodgo von, &amp;M-4~59
E on1
v ngo.
1877 Dodga van, 360 outo, for .
oalo or trodo for car or truck of ·
;oq;.ua;;7lv;;";;;'"';·-';;'4-;;;111;;;2:-25;:;;;02;;-'v:;
. Ford Conversion van, 1,
164-3673.

WantH: Uted farm equlpmtnt,

1187 Ford Conversion Van, aUio, •·
dual, AC, PW, PL, crul••· tMt, .:

onjlhlng you wont to ooll. 114·
:,;:~011, 114-256-8040 Aftor

63

dorson, Hud, roland dopcolt ro·
qulrod, call aftor 5:00 PM, 304675-11172.
2 Fumiohad Mobllo Hom11, 2
Bedrooms $'175 And Up, $100
Dopooll Pluo Utlllllos. 304·675Racine aru,

'-~!500. .

P"-L.f/•

:.:.

opl:iona

Transportat ron

2213.

Cll Oltet i!llplctallolll

c .
(I). Mtoti)Wif M8c·. ~
Ia lntpllcat.d lrt lite riMlld8l Of

a Ql!1g member. Sllllo. Q

a

a•~w~t~t~g

....,..

Tht ftrt deplttmlnt , _ .
Wood from a bllltroorn

~;r~.£-Tite
.....,. I'Olt lflallllt the
Mo'IIM (PO) (2:011) Stereo.

9 Munier, . . W.O.. c

••••ar1M'WIII

• Chl1lna
Steve Wlllttlr Claeelcaland
popular Chrtllmas aonga.
Including Let ~ Snow and
Put Three O'Cioclc.' (0:301

I+JO •••

Sllllo.

' Ill NFL Monday Night
Mallllt Up

Ill Pllncl Vllllnl Sllllo. Q
· I:OI(J) MOVIE: Chutt (PG) (2:151
1:30(2). 0 lllottall A
mualclln'a llrlkalorcea NICk
to taka a dlflftltt to urn

ton tNck whHia, radlatore, '
lloor m111 ate. D &amp; ·A Auto,

"Ripley, WV. 304-372·3833 or 1·
800-273-8585.

~~~~

color and

outlook. Stereo. 1::1

Building
Supplies
Block, brick, ....., olpoo, win·
dowt, llnttll, ele. Claude Win·
,.,., Rio Grand•, OH Call 114·

245-512t
UtiiHy Building, 30x40x11 oavo,

101:12 alldlng door 1·3' 1n1ry

door ortdod prlca $58111.00,
Pr;;ioian ~ Framo Bulldoro,
614·1112-3541 ..•

56
Miscellaneous
· Merchandise

Pets lor Sale
Groom and Sul&gt;tllv Shop.Pot
Grooming. AU lll'oOdo, otyloo.

lams Pet Food Diller. JUI!t

Wobb. Call 114-44~.
2-Fomalo AKC Rog Lab pupo,

8wkl old 1 biCJnde l chocalltt,

Doa.

p:

AKC booglo pupo: 7 wko, W.,.
mid,
sao.

lholt ..artld, tri-color,

Call Doyo 114-441-1172,
anytime
251·1118,
Stave

Sllpltton,

AKC Dolmotlon, 2yr old mall,
netdt • spaalal home, 814-188-

2711
AKC Gorman Shoporit pupttloo,.
roodr for CMotmu, lt4-8e~

114-llt2-2820
19M Oldornobllo Omega, 1700.
61'1-267·7054.
1181 Pt~h Roliant, runt
....,,

,..,

mo.

cuua-.

Rng.
Curtll Home lmprovamtntt: ~ ·

=·

1I·

215

82

tion oar. "l''500. For ...,. lntor·
"'"lion Ca I 114-441-2142, All&lt;
tor PaUl. .
1117 Dodge
2.2

r.:=X.

1\.rbo tnt.aaaled,

u::..'f~~· -·

S'-4.
_ _--....-_ __

!'!7 ,Z,••
T~­
:1..1!;.-r,
-

S;

·------

OodiJll

•

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

OllllpoUt, Ohio

,114-441-3881

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
iiA:H:;;ido;::nt:la;::i;-'':or:--•.:.om.:.m_o_rc..,.,lal ~;;

wiring, new ..,vtce or

Jeltllra.1fol

llaMor . u - -dolon. "'
~ .... Is.~

'

1110 Oodgo Rom IN 4 WD,
Super Cab, "':/ ~ulppod, low
miloo... IM ' to.

lng tri _ , oralll~ro. The ,.
btit In tumhuro u
llorlfttl. "
CaU :104-171-4il4 tor 11 •
tlmlloo.

:v~·

Filii To~k, 2411 Jackoon Avo.
Point Plouant, 104-871-201:1,
tun lno Tropicll fllh blnlo,
small 1nlm111 and euppll...

.

.....,...:! .
-----------------87
Upholltery
_..,..., ..t•~·

_l'ontloo,__,Nouto,
T·T-....,""' mil'!!. alril='

6. _ _ _ __

5~.

,_

1114~...

llowroy'o up~~o~;;;rli ....,.. ••·

- '.

Opening lead: + 2
· L----:=~---......~-..J

two aces or one ace and the trump
' king) but denied the trump queen ..

Ute·:

:king

•

.

.

'I

.,

:I''
'I
'I

'I

..w'
'

...,''
''
'

56~

57 S.ncUon

DOWN
llnMCUCidl
2 OYir (polL)

3 Somawhll

. 28 Actr111

tftltl

grl...

C.rrll30 Author Jorc•
C.rol134 !acorl
-3511ymn

c

''

,I

50 Joumill
54 Compound
·55 11011

....

rr.ttlii'iMt-

-worto PnHiotro Puzllo

ldlho

'
! 28 Conan flbrfc

8FOIIIIII'YugoaiiY leldlr
9 AclrHJ

colored
4 Acta out
wordiNIIy

_..

5 Slrllford'o

10 Punctuation

riYir

, 38 !xCUMI

~ 6-

39 lllna~ol

aCorl&lt;y••
Murpllr . , _
gila Into a

mark

AY..

II

7 H1t1dtomt

Drum1111r

a--

~~wllfl .

9 WWF PrltM Tlml

Wl'llltlng Tht Matador (Tito
Sa-l VI. e.rzlrlttr.
. • NIIIMII Now Stt!to'
Ill The Olr• pi I ' Tht IIOry

Roofing,:

Cartor'o Plumbing
,._h.ondPino

, 1 of

- - -~.....
1
......
- ...
AC, PI,
. . . _ lnqullloa
onlyi ......... tt4-IIN1lll.
1117 llaroury Gronll 111"11111,

1•_- - - - - - - 2.
_ _ _ __

YOU PLAY
COWBOY AN'
INJUN II

KHchtne And Blth1. Fret Et· ,:
llmi!HI Alftrtncee. .No Job To
Big Or Smollllt4-441.0225.
'.

Will build polio covora, docko
ecrHMd rooma, put: up vinyl
oldll or troll• oklrtlng. 114· ,

6+

47 ~orbld
48 Cttpbl Of

25JipaneH

altrlctlon cltlnged hlltory
art lmmortallzad. Sllllo.

LET'S ME AN'

not

24~,.

Two lovtn wltoH 111111

Y11n ExpsdMCt O!l Older &amp;: '•
NtWtr Hom11. Room Additions, ,~

carponi!J' .., AI Tromm, 114-742.
2328. CALL COI.l£CT
Dil•l•
Sow-Voc
Sorvtc:o,
Goc~ Crook Rd. Po~o, oup=::.~!..~~ dtiivory. 614·

2+
4NT

Nortb Eu1
2t
llbl.
3+
Pass
''
Pass
All pass

IOUfCI

(poll.)

AIC Monday Niglll

(lJ (!)

1'

Weot
Pass
3+
Pass
Dbt.

2+

46 TVMWI

21 Cant
, 23 Ker011n1,

Rakllfa II Ntw Orieens
Salnta ~tno.

614-237-0UB, d1y or night ~
llogara 81Hmtnl Watorproo- •

Work,

'

F114141111 Lot Anoelll

Room lddhlonl, 1ldlng, roofing, ..
vinyl ropt.......,t wl-,

tlir Chevy_,
IIIah
MICII
rtpa~r. · Ooacflrt

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

(I) Cll

of outallndlnu Olympic
atltlllta Marte Spitz or lite
Unllld Star.. and LUM

Froornon'o Plumbing And H01t· '
lng, 114-211-11511.
·:
Ron'o
TV
Sorvlco,
opociollzinll
..1114 Ftreblnl, v.. auto, block
ln Zonhh oloa ..ylolng mool i'
wllllvor bini, 82500 - . mar othlr
HouH ells, alto
conoid• portlol - . 114-1112· ooma bl'lndL
oppllonoo ropako. W
2357
304-871-211!1 Olllo 114-441-2454.

lull ........!llploJ,
- · ....
.~r-·
1114-3173,

3 puers,l6.00
.

'

,

Sootb

44 Indian lllbe

Ylbrlllon ·
15 Anklebone
17 E-(potL)
' 18 lilw lpraJ:)
Uf!9oM

i:

(

FrM lltlmatlt. Call collect 1·

Foundltlon

-

111c11 or Tlml' NIC Mondllr
Night
MoviMl2:00)
Sllllo.

I

Unconditional lifetime guaran- •
I H. Local r...rencn tumlshld. ,~

Vulnerable: North-Soulh
Dealer: South

450nt-kind

14 llultlcll

W... KINiad7 lmllh Trill
(0:301 .
llllllaclc 8tlllon Sllllo. Q
1:00 (J). !1J MOYIE: 'In the

11110 ScoHy Camping Troller, '•
SIHpo 4_,)600. Call Aftor 5p.m. ;
304-773-1154.
•

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

t8
+AK7

40 Cluater
43 Ptcln, e.g.

t2 Orlglnaled
l131ei1YI-

Ill CNN lpectallllpQtt.

AIIIFM,
- · · 41cyt,
01•
hlult, 114-112·7231
evening~

1. . fllun a»ZX, wwy allln,

lm~tt Atllltance.

Chrlltmal. (0:30) Stereo.
·Ill lcltup 'I'all

1Nollodgo Arlao, 4 - . black,

39711

Doubl• wide, ane acre pro,.,.y,
GaltfPGIIo Forry, tor lnlonnatlon
304..75-7217. Hay lor oalo.
OWN YOUR OWN NICE HOME
FOR ll,IQO_Full ~rico . Govom.
mont Aoonoloo Now Llauidatlng.
1-805-SM 1100 Eat. HOlliS For

or 1*367- ...

81

new .

s - Beby JHus and White

THAT FoL..~/'N!
WHERE.\IeR I: &lt;SiC&gt;.

. Good condi·

• 1-800-1114-o3673.

Ripley, wv.
1982 Uncoln Town a.,., na1U1nt
cond, lllcholin II~ now
vinyl roof &amp; Madllnor, 71,1100
mlln, $5,000, 114-1112-3410
1182 Oido Ftlonu, 4-oyf auto,
runo ~.boon ..- .
~.
bodJ good,
bid motor, ~ ""' parts0
f!IQOI14-965-:1314-Iipm • 1"'
1112 Oldo a.-, 4 cyt., 4 dr.,
$1100; 11113 Ood"gli Dfoifomat, •
dr., loyl. $400. lt4-2IU584 call
71tavornot1114 Camaro :W., T~op~, 350
eng, auto, folded, $S2001 3041'114311
.

.AKQ

West thinking he had two trump ·
trlc~ doubled.
~
nec'larer won the diamond lead with '
dummy's ace and embarked on a plab ~
:to reduce his trump length, rufling a ·
.diamond at trick two. A spad~ to
confirmed the bad news, but :
auction
was
partly
convention·
South
continued with his plan, ruffin~"·
1
a!. Two clu_bs was strong a~d artifi; another diamond. South cashed the A·"
· cra~ two dia~onds was a wattutg Kofbeartsandrulfedthebeartqueen
response, showmg e1ther a bad hand or in the dummy. A third diamond rut('
some values but no gOOd suit to bid. Af· •· followed. South cashed the A·It or
ter spades were agreed on, South used clubs reducing West's hand to th"'l! ·
Roman Key Card Blackwood. North's · ·trumP.. and theh led his last club. :
response showed two key cards (either . West had to ruff and lead into Soutb'il
A·J of spades: 12 tricks made.

' 1 lllllela
a Pull into 1
fold

Gltllna Cleaalc Chrlatmaa
songt, Including Slltnl NIQht,

IW SOT A FRY\~ PAN

camper. ',
tub, fumae•. ~

Services

I have mentioned before that at rubber bridge or international match·
scoring, if you make a penaliy
lltlotible, normally you should be dou·
at least two down. Warned
~=\~~~~ are lying badly and that
Ill
aren't dividing evenly; a
IcompE,tent declarer will usually play
to make at least one trick
~n be would If nol doubled.
. Today s band Is a class1c example
1- though it Is lrue that a good declar·
would make this band doubled or
fl ~=~~~- To test yourself, cover the
~
cards and plan the play m
spades doubled, West leadmg a low

ACROSS

• a ....... Wlilllhe

campers&amp;
Motor

llhocka, no Nit, nMda trana,

+···

Ill

:r;:=,~ Gunny
changlln

11171 Monto Carlo, dull, olr

'95432
+KQI05
+QJ96

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle

...Job

boolle her ap!ltll with l

tm Clwyolor Conlobl, p.lnt, MW lire~, 11000, 304-175.
61155aftor 5pm ~· · ··
· •

+QIOVS
'JIOB
' +J78Z
i +l03

IIPt•:aNawa

614·379- ,

Nn gae t1nks, body pans, one

304·773-5158.

.

(lJ (J) ........ ~~~~ ltiJ

57,000 mltoo, $0,995. 1-800-964· •,

Porto. 614·245-51177,

ALDER

By Pblllip ·Aider

(2:00)

· 1-80().964-3673, .,:

Budgtt' Transmlulons, Ulld I
rtbulH, atartlng .t SH; Auto

70 tt trailer, 2 BA, niw clrptt,

Q

7::11 Cll Sanford I Son
I:OG W. 0 Frtth Pllncl Of
lei Nit WIH lacn a
lamily-orlenlld Chrletmaa
without preMntl. Sllllo. Q
(J) IIOVlE: Car Walh (PGI

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

EAST

The penalty double
was ill-advised·

• le I Stir Stareo.
!II NPL Monday Night

1188 F-150 XLT, 4x4, AC, crul11, ~
tilt, nlc. INc~. ona ownar, .,

76

611-1112·2732 or 1112-2475 bofoto

··----8.

~

j--:~~,.~
·=-=-:-:-:::-=-=-=-=-··:

Livestock

. WEST

SOUTH
+AJ7643

Cltllthn

Wheel or FOliuM

Ylhlc~, recUIIIver, S8,400. 1-8()0.·

In Rac:ln1,

Want to: .
PIN down
EXTRA
•

15.~----

-

ea-.

6512.

Apartment
for Rent

32

full

•
.-.=:r-..Wlth
1........, .

1188 Big Chootnut Gotdlna Son
••
Of Billy Bll~ Bayou; 4 ftoroa
Troller, 15 ~lfl Show Saddloo. 74 · Motorcycles
114-2N-8522.
11113 Ha~oy Dovldoon FLT, aood ,
314 TIM. Walker WICOft, taddlo, cond, 1~88-17113 1111 tor fttve ·:
304..71-Ut2.
1118 Handa 70~ 4 whltlar, ~ka ..
~
5 " " ' - Blmmontll Bullo, liko now, $150. 30'1-875-2457.
Ono 3 Yoar bid For llV!I; 2 Y-· 1U7 Suzuki Intruder, 1,400 Cc, ~
lingo, MOOJ.~
$500 vory tut, vory boautlful, 2,500 ·
Eoch.l14mlloo, $3,500. 304-1112·31111.
·

2 bedroom mobile home, Htn·

in the Classifieds%

C.U 011r o/Jiceforpaid lA adN~~ee l'flle1/

c111n,

PHILLIP

c

f.:.O~ Tonight

3173...,...
. _ _ _ _ _ _ ..
-

'

, 'lUm your clnuer into ctuh,
Sd it the eaty way... by phone,
- no need I~ le~v.i your home.,, .
Plqce wur clgujfied ad IQdgyl
15 UIOnfl or leu, 3'11qyt, _

:r

vans &amp; 4 WD's

eupar

Sot. till Noon.

m as rom omeroy

1

rHe &amp;Af oFF;
wout.I&gt;N'T Nfip
ANY fNf~Y

IZ-11-11

- ·- . - ··~8 5.4"2

7:1111 Cll Addama Fltinllr
7:30(2). 0 Jaaptl'flrl
(J) Now HCali le Toil

IF :t COLI/.!:}

c;tr

1

Wldt ttltctlon new &amp; uMCI farm
tractol'l &amp; lmpa.m1n11. Buy,
Hll, lrodt, 8:0().5:00 WHkdijl,

/,Oo/'1

•

.7 6
+A90

• Moo..,tlnt

/

NORTH
+K 5Z

Tonight

, Ill The Wlltonl

&amp;ruck, •
.
'

IH3

BRIDGE

-~ ~-lpD1taC

'

21,000 ~ mlln, CINn
11,1115. 1-800-164-31173.

AC 165 Tl'lctor, Sharp, $5 1 ~50;
Lato. Modol 5040 AC WHh nyd·
t'IUIIC Loodor, $5,995; 9N Ford
With Buoh Hog, $1,9o5i_OWnar
"WI.;.;II;,;F_Ina,;:;._nc..;•-::
;,
· 6-'t'~-2~6-8.,...--,5,..""-::·=-:::Jim's Fann Equipment, SR. 35,
Wtll: Galllpol.., 614-446-1777i

Business
Opportunity

Real Estate

Riptoy,_;

wv.

Frnancial

CA~H?!I

••
· Stereo

full option car, low mllea, l
$1,1115. t-8Q0.964-3173, Rlploy, .

Sewing Machine Repair And For Rent ·Or Silt On Land Con·
Sal••· Over 28 Y11ra Ex- tract : 3br Mobile Homt, 14x70,
ptrltnc.. All Work OUirlntHd, Totti Electric, On 3 Aerts land,
Hau• Calls, Scluora Sharpen- 8 Mlloo From Gallipollo On Rt.
Ing. Potrlol, OH 114·371-2921.
218. 114·388·9946.

SAVINGS
•••
.

~;s -

111811 Ford F~50 !klporcab XLT :

Furm Supplies
&amp; Lrvestock

S.fl, aHordabla, chltdcart. M·F 9755 anyt ime.
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agao 21&gt;-10.
B.tfore, ·•fl•r achool. Drop-Ina Compltltl)' tumlshad mobile
w•lcoml. 814-446-8224. New In- home, wuhtr &amp; dryer, 1lr c:ond,

21 .

.

1110 Fard F-150 XLT, aula, AC, ;

Mill Ptula'l Day C1r1 C.ntar. on Noighborhood Rd. 114-448·

font Toddler Care, 614-441-6227.

~ ~~

oumo loon SS67a 611-446-7527 '

SCRIM LETS ANSWERS

Viscid - Inlay INTERVA.t.S
During a political discussion one fellow commented
that at the heart of our political system is one basic •
fact. The voter has the right to change lheir leaders
at regular INTERVALS.

.~

•

1187 Dodge 150 PU, PSIPB, air, .
48,000 mi., 4tpd,, ovtrdriva. M- •

G110rps PonJbl• Sawmill, don'1 2br Otpotll And R•l•rencet AI·
haul your logs to It'll mill just ttr 2p.m. 614-446-052l

COJI304o875·1957.

,.

ItA TOyota Pickup, 5 Spood, '
Good Condltlonl $3,400. 614· •

Rottwlllor PupjliH AKC Roady
For Ch~otmoo l Coli 614-446·
4701 Ahorlp.m .

2br Home In Thurman, $200/mo
Plut Olpoell And Rtftrtnc••·

33-

lVI

1·

.
Print - Kettle -

.

Ill Now z- Sttreo. I:;L
1:11 Cll Andy Otlllllh
7:ta ~ • o Wheel or Fortune

full oizo pick-up ;

cond, &amp;14-6G8-6743

I

Houses for Rent

approx.

9 Cartoon !Jqnaa

!DUpCioal

1188 Oldl CuUau lnttmatlanll, ,

Rental s

r

Fuml1urt Slrlpplng Rtllnlshad
And Repair, Qualhy Work, FrM
Eatbutasl304-875-6529.

'iW

1o80CJ.Itl4~~.

~~;~g~~~c=loa=n~ln=g~, ~g~~~~:~~~~~P~~:&amp;
Middlopcrt, total oloctrlc, 614·
98542
arau, rtf

1111·

truck,
Ilk for

$5000, 614-949-25211

=·

qualll. Call 1.90().896-1668
&amp; oddroosn
from homo.
No
($Q.99
_mintt6yrs.+l
., wrlto:

.

I I
pupt,

Coal. 614-256·1011."
614·388·11061.
WAREHOUSE
2br Home, N11r GalllpoUs And
To $12 HR Will Train Sovorol Gallipolis
City Schools. 814-146·
Clork/BookkNpor tor loco! Opanlng1.
Alto
Part
Tlmt.
1·
bualntet, mu.t matt public
1617.
800-521-8543 .
wall, axptrlanca nMd~. Sand
re1uma Box C·11, care Polnl
Ploooant Roglotor, 200 Moln St,
Pt. Pit, wv 25550.
.
DRIVERS WANTED
$400.$150
WiU Train. Drivo
Co C 1
·
21 .,-·~·
· or. •
Eaay Work! Exctlltnl Pavl A•
oomblo Products AI Homo. Coli
Toil F,.., t-800-467-5566, EX1 . 12
Situation
313.
Wanted
Excellent pay fdr tYping name•
2 bdrm mobile home for rent ,

---------·1
..---------·1
· Gallipolis

Pets tor Sale

Walar front lot It Raelne Dam,
raduced price, wat $7000 now

41

. i:&amp;rc:-Q

tnuc;k. Loodod. Good condition. '
Call oflor lpm. 114-3111'02011. · •.

Had fod poach loco love blrdo:
twett, lovublt extremely atfoctlonllo $50; botiy PilrlkHio,
recently WHntd tiOi L!Jtlno
Pearl, Cinnamon Pearl Pltd
Cockotlol brHdlng polro. 614·
388-915t
Poodlo Pupploo1 AKC Tiny Toy
And Toyup; Alto Mlnioturo
Schnouzoro SoH And Poppor,
Coolvlllo, 114-667-3404.

Full-limo with

Wanled person or marrttd
coUpli 10 --aasl.t wllh ,milking
125 COWl, 6 day WOrk WHk,
houal~, pay by lh1 hour, olhlr
bentftt1 Clapendlng on tX•
f*ienca. Rnpond lo Bo• C.9

1!5:-'l!.

u,ibo .. 1-800.114- l

1----------r-~-----..;_..j ~-~,Riploy, WV.
:::,m==OM::,c:-7.nH::11g::-h-=s::lo-rro---:-,4.:-w::-h.-d=-r. '

R•l•nt man~g.r, maintenance
couple lor IPirt..,tnt complex

Employment Servrces

:r.:

l:aO W. 0 NIC Nlwl Q
(J) livid the ...

~~1184~~C~htii=~C.-10~=good~=t-ruc=~k, :
56

In Golllpollo.

Cop

1:01(1) ....., , • • • •

Rooma for r1nt - w..k or month.

Alto tralltr space, All hook-upi.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-713~51, M11on WY.
.

,_, K·•

Vlrtn Of Finland.
• Lany King U..l

·which algne are rorillnlk:ally perftct for · GEM~~ (Iii, 21-.lune 1201 Jumping J
,you. Mall $2 plus a long, eelf·ad· .concfulionltodaycouldtte\81elyimpalr'
drttlad, otamped liwelope to Match- ,_. probabllnlee for succeoa. It will
; rna~&lt;•, c/o thla ntwtflll*, P.O. BoK ;be euy 10 get blck on traclt - If
Cleveland
, .111r1 ofto(;()Ur-.·~~:fo~~~~j
- 91428,
C"APIIICOM
(DiG:01144101..:1428.
~f.) II you----c-IJICIII (.luna

.

p.:.C,~Dowllng MM!Y11111tilltlti1111

.

1:30a
a:a•oulanlna
Ar1thany
_ _Carteitewto

to

:haV81l'tm~yourreaourcttWI881y

·olllle, you might not have the money
:nee mtty to partiCipate In IOinelhlng
fun with your frlenda. Instead or brooding, don't~ thlt'" -· again.
AQUARIUI (,..._ 20-Fib. 11) Tlte. re·atrlctlona you might IKPII'Ieooe today
will not be fully the faun or the lndivld·
·uals with w1tom you'H be InvOlved. Oon'l
make mlltera by blaming them.
PIICEI(Feii.IOIII ahiOIHihelooklltrlfllgloOmytoday,lwltdtyollr
thinking to the
or 0111811 In·
.steed or dwllllng •KcluaiVIIIy on your
own llllf4nl.-.lla.
,
ARtiS (illllroiii1•A!d 11)11 you art
~tly operllllng on • stringent fl.
nlllclal bUdget, don't try to keep up todey with 11\e oponding ,i1111111 of lrlendl
·whO don'11hare you! predicament
)AUIIUI (ApriiiHIIriOI MtMinglul

,

lntprMs an unfrllnl!!r law

prolwuor. Sltreo. r:;l

IO:GO(J)NIWII

.

Ill tD • Nollhlcn ' t at n
Joel n,ta a s.rn._Ckf3_
wOrilef, lind hi buyl I
Ch~ ~Stareo.

· ~tty und8l
to a trterld. ll
-eave jOUteell..,barfuament ·-··• w,

I!:=. -a:. ..

Q

.mentioning the rnllt81 flr8l before
Sltllrta ld far San Oligo.
indMcluJI hU 10 remind you or n.
Ill
CNH•1tinttt
.. .
LIO (...., IW.ug. Zl) People you
Yw-tnftlilla(1:011)
.cloeelyallllllladwlthwlllha'4fi&amp;Con:ald··ll
0 100 au. Willi Pat
;erable lntluettcl on the outcome ,
RalltJ11on
' ~" today. Be certain you do
·11tl0
Cll
MOVIE:. Cllll ltappr (2:001
•teem up with
l VIRGO lAIII- D-lepl 211 0...'11otp. JJ -10:10. CNol1 and Cline .
Dec tl·1111
, mentltltll pop up today which
• ' ,
.
ha-'1 plenned .for could overwhelm• .11:GO(J) • • ·~· ,._
You might have to lltoulder mOre re.you. Oon't view what occurw through
ejlonllbiMiy wttere your work or career .
.magullytng giUa; n
only make ,
AnlttiO .... Sino.
'
11 conoemec1 111 the year ahead. Don't
; rnounlllnl out or molehills.
. IIUGujllll 1::1
.
1
~ thll dllm"¥ you, becl!l88 new re- .
1a..b (a.pt.II-Oot; :II) In • convMIII i,
&lt;w.c~l wiiiiC: ;f«!tJ your , _ d.utlet.
.Mltfng IOCiay, 111111 1 a CltlltCI you I.
Clvlll II fltmot1ll Willi ..
tAGm~.... 21 Dec 21) Do
might run ln!O one Of your- favorite ,
llevl WILIIII CJee•k:al and · ·
not criticize U.llltk Of another today;
~ people. Oon t let lhlalndMdual dampen ,
popullr Clwlllmu IIOngl,
~ will not ~- lndlvldual'o p811or·
. your artlllrlaulltM:IInatlona.
,,
Including
Snow and
menc:e. In lei, title peraon could ioee
ICOIPIO(OoLMoNow.:II)Malfoevwy
Put TltrM 0 CloGic. (0:30)
Starto.
1nt81881 comPJetely end even doe , oblecl""'rNI)'notbeNI}'IOc:omtby Allor! to lid lit; voletMe-.today
_,.lob Know wltere 10 look for ro- today, bee- In ord81, to llcltleve ·that mlgltt ~ lf*1CI beh•••~ you
menc:e ~ you'Q find 11. The Astro- them, It ml(lhl Nquire more effort than, ·end your mate. If they art intrqduced,
1
the day could tum Into a ~IJ!mer: ..
. Grlplt Matcltmekw i~stanlly reveals you're prepared 10 expend.
==Tonight •
••••••

"'\!"""',.

I

aera.

wt•

.

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................".

-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

EICft ~etto~rln tM

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YUMV

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K

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CloiW ~CI'J'PI""IOI
.......
,. . . c=r...a f!'Orft QUO Iiane OyfwncM people, PIIUNI P'Mft.

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NUYZHUZ.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "MGM was my mother and fllhei", mentor and
guide, ITIY all-powerful end benevolent crutch ." ~ June Allyaon.

I

lr

t:M.·

..

1

..' ..'

-. I
• '

. II

~J

�Page-.10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Con~emporary Living
Cindy S. Oliveri
Co. Ext Agent
Home Ec. and 4-H
Have you thought about ~iving
gifts of food for the hohday?
Homemade food gifts are special
and can be made-persona-" for
friends and relatives.
Cookies, muffms, breads, snack
mixtures. jams and jellies are all
fun to make and fun to receive. Try
using recipes that have peanut butter, pumpkin, nuts, fruit, oatmeal or
nonfat dry mille in~ents. They
will add to the nutritional value of
the food product.
WQen giving. food as a gift,
attach the recipe or add kitchen
utensils, dishes or towels. Also
consider when you will make your
gift and how long it must stay fresh
before you give it. The following
information may help you with the
storing of food gifts.
Fudge. Store in a tightly covered
container in a cool place or wrap in
moisture-va porproof wrap and
store in .the freezer. It will stay
fresh for two weeks; three months
if frozen.
Divinity and pralines. Store in a
tightly covered container in a cool
place. They will stay fresh for 2
weeks.
Hard candy. Store in tightly
covered container in a· cool place. It
will stay fresh for one month. .
Crisp cookies. Store in a loosely
covered container or wrap in moistpre-vapo!p!OO{_wrap and freeze. If
cookies soften, heat 5 minutes in a
300 degree oven. They will stay
fresh two weeks; 9-12 months if
frozen.
Soft cookies. Store in a tightly
covered container or wrap in moisture-vaporproof wrap and freeze.
They will stay fresh two weeks; 912 months iffrozen.
Calces. Store tightly covered in a
cool place or wrap in moisturevaporproof wrap and freeze. Thaw
wrapped at room temperature 1-3
hours. They will stay fresh 1-3
days; 4-6 months when frozen; 2-3
months with a cream frosting .
When thawing a frosted cake,
unwrap so the frostin$ does not
stick to the wrapping as tt thaws.
· Qui'ck breads. Store tightly
wrapped in mois1ure, v.!!pQrproof

TYLER ANDREWS
,I

.,

'

New-a~r.iua/ __
Tyler Ray Andrews, son of Raymond and Megan Andrews ,
Chester, was baptized Oct. 27 at
the Heath United Methodist Church
in Middleport.
Rev. Frank Smith performed the
baptismal rites fot Tyler, born Aug.
5. The entire congregation took
part in the ceremony with Tyler's
family standing by him at the altar.
Tyler's parents hosted a buffet
brunch in his honor after the ceremony.
In attendance besfdes his parents
were his grandparents, Ken and
Nancy Cale, Marprct Andre.w~.
Susie, Roger, Jess1ca and Valene
Karr Melissa, Drew and Mason
Conde. Marcia and Jessica Cale
and Laurie Wayland.

.,

Guests attending were Sister
Fidellis BeD and Rev. G.race Kee.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace· presided
at the meeting in which two members wel'e reported sick MrS. ·Nan

ML Club celebrates the holidays ·

Moore and Mrs. Bernard Fultz. .. - ·
The hostess served refreshments
· and the theme of Christmas-was;
carried out ·ln the decora.tiQ!is~
throughout the home.

Mrs. Wendell Hoover presented having the members arid gu_ests
wrap in a cool place or m the freez- a program of Christmas. music and . singing "Silent NighL"
· ·
er. Iffrozen, thaw wmpped at room sang som.e of the songs as .she
temperature I 1/2 hours. They wUI accompanied herself on her elecstay fresh 2 days or up to a week if tronic keyboard at the recent meet.
very mois~ 6-8 months if frozen.
ing of the Middleport Litelllfy Club
Yeast breads and rolls. Store • held at the home of Mrs. Richard
tightly wrapped in moistwe-vapor- Owen. ~
proof wrap in a cool dry place or in
Mrs. Hoover stated Handel's
the freezer. If frozen; thaw Messiah was written in 24 days.
wrapped at room temperature 2-3 Her selection of songs included
hours. For a crisp crust, thaw "History of the Carols" which has
unwrapped ..They will stay flesh 1- pagan origins. "I Heard the Bells
3 days; ·9-12 months frozen on Christmas Day," "Away in a
unglazed; 6 months if glazed.
Manger," "In a Bleak mid-Winter"
Cheese balls and cheese.spreads. by Christina .Rossett_i wnich ·she
Store tightly wrapped in plastic wrote for the poor chtldren of her
wrap or foil in the refrigerator for Sunday school class in London in
3-4 days.
1870; : 'Rise Up Shepherd and Follow" a Negro spiritual; "Some
Margarine spreads. ·store tightly Children See Him" a modem day
covered in the refrigerator for up 10 carol. She closed the program with
one week.
Home-canned fruits, vegetables,
•You want alter1ative heating
pickles. Store in sealed jars kept in St. Nick delivers marry
a cool dark place for no longer than
one year.
·
Dry snacks. Store in an airtight Christmas to woman
•You don't Willi a chimney or you CIJA'I pill a
container at room temperature for
chimney on your house
_
up to two weeks.
Just to get you started, here is a
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) ~
GREAT
reeipe from The American Heart , Santa Claus delivered a present
Association Cookbook that you early to a 21-year-old woman.
•You don't need onel
could make for a food gift. The
Bentley Richert talked his girl Come In and see the finest pellet stoves
cookbook makes for a nice gift friend. Connie Penner, into sitting
also.
available today. They do not smoke and do
on Santa's lap Saturday night dur·Raisin-Oatmeal
Cookies ing a visit to. Hutchinson Mall and ·
not need a chimney.
(approximately 70 calories per getting her picture taken.
cookie)
When Santa asked her what she
I cup flour, sifted
wanted for Christmas, Miss Penner
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
laughed and said "a Mickey
1/2 teaspoon-baking soda
Mouse sweatshirt."
I cup brown sugar
"Anything else?" Santa asked.
I teaspoon salt ·
"A diamond ring, but I know
1/3 cup oil I 1/2 cups quick I'll be geuing one," Miss Penner
cooking oats
said.
1/2 cup skim milk
But she didn't know that Santa,
2 egg whites, slightly beaten
also known as Tim Barnes, would
614-446·7 400
I teaspoon vanilla extract
pull out a small white box and hand
I cup seedless raisins
it to her as Richert and some
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
friends looked on.
• COST EFFECnVE • SIMPLE TO INSTALL
Sift together flour, baking soda,
Miss Penner of Arlington began
• HASSLE FREE • EASY TO OPERATE
salt and cinnamon. Stir in oats . . laughing, then crying as Richert
Combine egg whites, brown sugar, walked over and gave her a hug
• EPA EXEMPT • LOVELY TO LOOK AT
oil, milk, vanilla, .and raisins and and a kiss.
Heatiftg, lno.
Come BUY your WHITFIELD today.
add to flour mixture. Mix well.
"He always told me I'd nev er
•
Drop batter a teaspoon at a time expect it when I got it," Miss Pen-l~1 SECOND AVENUE
Your WHITFIELD dealer is offering deals you111a/llor'
onto an oiled cookie sheet. Bake 12 ner said. "No wonder you wanted
GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631 .
to 15 minutes, depending on tex- me to put on my makeup and curl
ture desired. Shorter baking time my hair. And to think I didn't want
PELLET STOVES
&amp;
FIREPLACE
INSERTS
· results in a chewy soft cookie, the to come to Hutchinson tonight." .
longer time fin a crisp one.
Malces approximately 3 dozen.

'

'

Southern

Page 5 -

1 Section, 10 Pa,ges 25 cento
A Mulllmedia Inc, Newspapet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 17, 1991

C?.!!!l~il ~2!!!!!.1.~~-."~!scuss~~~· o!rsewage ~lternates
Sentinel News Staff
Still more discussions concerning a deductive alternate for
Pomeroy's new sewage treatment
system were held when Pomeroy
Village Council met for its last regular meetin of the ear Monda
night.
g
y
y
· At th eir December 2 meeting,
council voted to approve a vacuurn-type sludge de-watering system
10 usc in the new plant. The system

villa e ~n the c~~t sa 1 to the
ty sy~te'm ins;~:o:~o~a~u~Jravt:
tern
sys
Th e ravit _1 ·e -s stem d
not meef specfric~Son/as the ~~
now written for ·the pro¥ect
ahhou h h
.1 . . J •
0
be mJifi~d ~J~tf~u~~ ::O~d
Environmental P:o:ti~~ A one c
At the December 2 meetinff.e Vil:
!age Administrator John Anderson
pointed out that the location of the

by the proJeCt engtneer as a
The gravtty iYStem is made up
"deductive alternate" to the base of interlocking square-foot plastic
btd rl! the system, after the vacu- panels, whtch form the floor of the
urn system. included in (he original system. Gravity forces the sludge
plan came mabove cost esumates;
to de-water through the holes in the
However, at Monday mght s panels, leavmg the dry sludge susmcetmg, council heard a presenta- pen~ed on a dry surface.
tion Jrom Laura Tegethoff of RusCouncilman Larry Wehrung had
sell ~·: smith Equipment Company recommended _funher investigation
of Htlltard, Ohto, regardtng an mto th~ gravity system prior to
enttrely different type of de-water- council s approval of the vacuum
ing system, ref~rred to as a "gravi- system on December 2. Wehrung

•
EnYitoRame

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel New5 Staff
Jeffrey Arnold was hired as the
full -time vocal music teacher for
the Southern Local SchooiDistrict
at Monday night's meeting of the
Southern Board of Education held
at in the high school cafeteria.
Arnold has been substituting as
the district's music teacher since
the first of the school year for
Roberta Maidens who is now on
disability retirement. He also han dled th e school's marching band
during the football sdson.
AIso hired at the meeting was
Garry Smith head bus mec hanic,
effective Jan. 2. Daniel Riffle was
employed as the transportation
supervisor in conjunction with his

Holiday Favorites

as

Just In Time ... At Your Nearby Rite Aid

job as assistant mechanic. The
supervisor's position is to be taken
care of without additional compensation.
The Board accepted Nationwide
Mutual Insurance as the carrier 'for
the di strict's liability insurance.
Harcum Irrsurance Co.. of Columbus is th e agency to handle the
msurance contract. It was noted
that ~ new siate law now makes it
ilie gal for PTO or other volunteer
organizations to be a part of the liability insurance.
Membership in the Ohio School
Boards' Association Legal Assistance Fund, Consultant Services,
for a fcc of $250 was approved, as
were required bonds for several
school officials.
Scou Wolfe who presided at the

plant would pr~bably P.r!Jhtbllthe
use of thf gravtty-type. system, the
destgn o whtch requtres a large
space.
Anderson ~I so reponed on a
p~ant thathe VISited recently whtch
has JUSt mstalled ~ vacuum-type
system ltke that b~mg considered
by Pomeroy councll, and reported
~~:t~~;~~d be an effecuve system
U
Y· .
.
B ponRthedmouodn of Counc!lman
ruce ee , an the second by

Thomas Werry, counCil voted to
recess :the meeting pen,din~ further
mvest1gat10n of the gravuy-type
srstem . At the same time •. council
d1d nol .vote to rescmd thetr acuon
approvmg a less-expcns1ve vacuum-type system.
In his motion , Reed suggested
that th e plans for the ~roposcd
plant. along wah mformauon about
both de-watcnng systems, be sent
to an 1mpan1al engmccr for rev1e~
Contmued on page 3

hristmas Is ...- - -

Southern board names Arnold
full-time vocal music teacher
mee ting was named the pro-tem
presiding ·officer fur the organizational meeting which will be held
on Jan. 7, 1992 at 7:30 p.m. in .the
high school cafeteria.
After a discussion. it was decided not to put a levy on the May ballot for funds to construct a new
kindergarten through eight grade
building.
Approval to acc~p.lJLD_\I'ight
David Eisenhower grant in the
amount of $3,507.35 was given by
• the board. The money will be used
for various projects and activities
in the Southern Junior High
School.
..
1
· Attending were Wolfe. Sue
Grueser, Gary Willford, Joseph
Thoren, newly elected member,
Tommy Roseberry, Supl Bob Ord,
and Dennie Hill, treasurer.

Report' say~s rural·kids·face
crisis of poverty; poor health

Names in
the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joan
Collins says she sees few simllarities between Amanda, her role in
the play "Private Lives," and
Alexis. the character she played for
7 1/2 years on t~levision' s
"Dynasty."
"Alexis was ruthlessly ambi tious, and Amanda is frivolous and
hopelessly romantic," Miss Collins
said.
But the 58-year-old actress
~clcnowlcdges the two share one
major attribute.
"They don't tolerate any nonsense from men," she said.
"Private Lives," a 1930 play
written by Noel Coward, is touring
and arrives this week in Beverly
Hills. Jt is scheduled to open on
Broadway in February. The role has .been played by
some of the world's most accomplished actresses, including Elizabeth Taylor.
"It was very gratifying to finally get to play a role that I'd been
wanting to play for decades," she
said.

.

'

three-fourths of non-rural earnings. - ..
At the same time, the share of
rural poor families with at least one
worker has been increasing and is
higher than fpr families in nonrural areas - 65 percent for rural
families compared with 57 percent
for non-rural families in 1988, the
study said.
.
The study defined rural areas as
those outside metrppolitan regions,
exdluding Puerto Rico and the U.S.
ter•itor·ies. Met_ro areas. were
defined as cities and their suburbs
containing 50,000 to 100,000 people.
·
"
The study also said:
~ Rural pregnant .women and
children face· greater obstacles to
health care than' non-rural women
and children.
' - Rural children are shortchanged when it comes to early
childhood education services,
school reso urces and quality and
youth development services.
- Millions of rural families lack
FUNDS FOR NEEDY • Traditionally Ban'k '
United Melhodisl Cooperalive Parish. That
affordable housi ng. Somewhat
One employees make grapevine trees, take donaamount, according to the Rev. Kenneth Baker
lower rural LCPIS and home owner- . t.ions on them, and then donate the .mone.y. to
who works in the program, will purchase about
ship costs arc more than out·
some organization carrying out a spedal projecl
5,000 pounds of food to be distributed to need y
weighed by much lower rural wage
of assisting the needy at CHristmas time. This
Meigs Countians. Here Diana Lawson on behalf
rates, the study said .
year the check was for $720 and went to the
of bank employees presented the check to the
The Children's Defense Fund
lla~er. ·
A fire at a two story fmme house in Antiquity owned by John
cal led for creation of a package of
Hunnell, Pomeroy, late Monday night resulted in only minor darngove rnment se rvices for all chilage to the structure, according to John Holman , Racine fire chief.
dren that would cost from S29 bilHolman said that the Racine and Syracuse Fire Departments
lion-Lo $47 billion.
responded to the call at th e unocc upi ed house at 11:03 p.m. A
The package includes a refundneighbor called in after seeing fire at U1c house, Holman said.
able children's tax credit; immuThe fire chief said that the fire appeared to have started in three
ni zations for all chi ldren ; basic
different locations in the house. The State Fire Marshall .has been
health insurance coverage for every
called in to investigate, Holman reported.
.
uninsur ed child and . pregnaht
F1remen were on the scene about an hour. Holman said the cause
By .UM FREEMAN
undercover SECO task force invcs- ficking , a violation of Ohio
woman; and. expanding the Head
of the fire is undetermined at this lime.
OVP
News
Staff
Ligation
revealed that drugs were Revised Code 2925 .03 (A)('6)
Stan preschool program to all chilAn
undercover
investigation
and
being
sold
at the Butc,hcr residence. whic h states no person shall posdren by 1995..
a Saturday night search warrant From this, enough evidence was sess a controlled substance in an
execu tion netted approximately obtained to get a search warrant, amount equal to or exceeding.lhree
Nigerian native Ollldatun Fasheun wasc onvicted late. Monday on
S
15,000 worth of dried marijuana Saunders added.
times the bulk amount.
six theft-related charges following a week-long Jury trml m Metgs
and resulted in the arrest of a · Sheriff Dennis Salisbury , Co·
According to Saunders, traffickCounty Common Pleas Court.
.
Cheshire Township man.
Ta sk Force Coordinator Rog er 1ng is a 1hird-degrce fe\ony warFasheun, who was represented in the trial by Metgs County Pub. Dennis Carl Butcher, 39, was Brandeberry , Prosec utor Brent ranti ng an actual incarceration time
lic Defender Charles H. Knight. was convicted of two charges of •
arrested early Sunday morning and Saund ers, Assistant Prosecutor of 18 months.
thefl two c har~es of grand theft. a charge of aggrnva!ed theft and a
cha rged with trafficki ng by th e Mark Sheets, Juvenile Officer Gary
Butcher plead not guilty at his
coun't of engagtng in a pattern of corrupt activity.
Southeastern Counties of Ohio nar- Bane and se·veral deputies conduct- arraignment Monday afternoon
The charges relate to the embezzlement of more than $300,000
cotics task force, represented by the cd the raid on Butcher's house before Judge Joseph L. Cain in the :
from Lee 0. Wood and Beatrice I. Wood through the Athena Trad·
Gallia
County Sheriff's Depart - trailer.
Gallipolis Munic1pal Court. Cash .
ing Company of Athens. .
·
.
mcnt and the Gallia County ProseInside, law enforcement officers bond was set at $10,000 (no ten ·
Fasheun will be sentenced by Judge Fred W. Crow 1\.l on Jan·
cutors Office. Officers confiscated found 4.3 pounds of marijuan·a, percent) and a preliminary hearing :
uary 6, 1992, _pe~ding the completion of a pre·scntence mvesttgathe drugs while executing a searc h w.eighin g sca les , drug parapherna- has been scheduled for Dc,c . 23.
tion and a vtcum tmpact statement.
warrant of Butcher's residence on lia , evidence of cultivation and 1991, at 1I a.m.
Zuspa n Hollow Road in Cheshire more than $500 in cash, SECO
The SECO narcotics task force
The trial of Trudy Swartz of Middleport was set to get underway
Tow nship.
officials said. In addition, accord- is made up of law enforcement
Butcher resides in Gallia County ing td Saunders, Jaw enforcement officials from Gallia. Meigs, Yinin Meigs County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday morning.
.
Swartz now known as Trudy Dent, is charged with trafficking in
but lives near the Meigs County officials found a map in Butcher's Lon, Jackson, Athens, Hocking and .
, LSD, and 'was one of 41 defendants indicted on drug charges earlier
line and has a Middleport mailing residence that appeared tO·corre· Washington counties. In the period
DAYS· UNTIL
this year. She is represented by Athens Attorney Susan Gwmn.
address.
·
spend to· marijuana growing locu- covering 1989-90, the task force :
According
to
Gallia
Counly
"·tions.
. ·
·
netted more than 70 drug-related ;
CHRISTMAS
Butcher was charged with traf- , mdtcuncnts.
•
Prosecutor Brent Saunders, an
•
•
•
•

WASHINGTON (AP)
Poverty, poor health and rickety
housing are hitting rural children as
hard, or even harder, than their city
and suburban cousins, an advocacy
group fQr children said today.
The portrait o~ the I 5 million
children in rural America also
found that poverty beyond th e
boundaries of the nation' s cities
and suburbs cuts across racial lines
and touch es many working families.. .
,
"In a few respects, rural children resemble suburban children .
They are more likely to be white
and are slightly more likely to have
two -parent and worki,ng families
than city children," sai~ Marian
•· Wright Edelman. president of the
Children's D~fen se Fund, w.hich
conducted the study.
"But on other measures of fundamental well -.being they fall
behind just like urban children.
They are poorer, less healthy and
less educated,"' she said.

The study, whtch cuea a variety
of government reports, said 22.9
percent of rural children were poor,
compared with 20 percent of non·
rural children in 1990. The federal
government's poverty ievel that
year was $13,359 for a family of
four .
But because many eligibility
requirements for welfare programs
arc skewed against two-parent and
working-poor families, the rural
poor benefit less from public
income and food assistance. Transportation problems also contribute
to the situation for rural families
and children, the study said.
It said families with poor children in rural areas receive about
half the welfare benefits than nonrural families under Aid to Fanii·
lies with Dependent Children .
The study also said family
unemployment rates arc high er in
rural America than in non -rural
areas. while rural ~mings are only

..-----.Local .briefs ------.
Fire causes minor damage.

NYQUIL

RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- Cher,
who has a successful new exercise
video, says hard work, not plastic
surgery. put her body-in-shape-for~ 1---those revealing outfits.
"I wish to God you could just
go get plastic surgery and have a
great body. I'd take the ~sy way
out. But I •kill my~elf for my
body," she said.
The 45 -year-old singer and
actress admitted in the Dec. 21
issue of TV Guide that she's had
plastic surgery - a breast job see
says was "botched."
"If anything, they're worse after
than before," Cher said.
The article did not say what
went wron,.
·
Cher satd she was paid $1 million for "CherFitness: A New Attitude."
· "Almost every other woman on
the tape has a better bodr and was
in better shape than me,' she said.

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Fasheun convicted on charges

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ALKA.SELTZER

300 EAST MAIN

'I

~·~--

Vol. 42, No. 158

Copyrjghled 1991

fitw ~

--.

..

;::;._·-·.:--·'- '

.

Partly cloudy. Low tonight :· •
near 20. Wednesday, high in mid
20s.

·a1·

BUT

!lest documentary honors w.cnt
10 " American Dieam." "La Belle
Noiseuse" was the voted best for·
eign language film.
Composer Zbigniew Preisner
was honored him for his body of
work, including his scores for
"E uropa Europa," ''The Double
Life of Yeronique" and .. At Play
in the Fields of the Lord."
· Elmer Bernstein and Vincent
Price were honored with lifetime
achievement awards and the critics'
'New Generation award went to
writer-director John Singleton for
" Boyz 'N The Hood."

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Los Angeles film critics
vote ~ugsy' best picture
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
movie critics closest to Hollywood
Iike "B ugsy" best.
The gangster saga starring Warren Beatty was voted best picture
by the Los Angeles Film Critics
Association on Saturday during
selections for its 1991 Achieve·
ment Awards.
"Bugsy'' also won for best
director, Barry Levinson, and best
screenplay, James Toback.
Nick Nolte was voted best actor
for hi s role as a Southern
shrimper"·s son in "Prince of
Tides." Mercedes Ruehl was chosen best actress for "The Fisher
King."
Michael Lerner was named best
supponing actor for "Barton
Fink." Jane Horrocks won as best
supporting actress for "Life is
Sweet."
Roger Deakins was voted best
cihematograph'er for "Barton.
Fink."
,
"Beauty and the Beast" was
chosen as best animated film .

Monday, Decembe'r 16, 1991

I

J,

,..

j,

·r•
'

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