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                  <text>•
Tuesday, December 17, 1991

'T~as

The Night Befqre Christmas' tp
be performed;.cast members named

Cards: 2-H, 3-C,
. 8-D, 3-S

PageS

Pomeroy~Middleport,

)lr
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WASHINGTON (AP)- Feder- by consumers and corporate Amer·
al Reserve Chairman Alan ica : ·He said that the fledgfing
Greenspan said today the U.S. recovery tllat began in the sprjng
recovery has faltered, but he cau· .JosL steam during the summer as
tioned Congress against rushing to both busineSI&gt;IlS and consumers,
enact quick fiXes that would inflate worried about the future, decided to
· the budget deficit.
· use their incomes to reduce old
. In his most pessimiStic com - debts rather than spendirfg the
ments lo date, Greenspan said tllal money on cars and other investa huge overhang of consumer and men~ .
business debt and a financially
"The bottom line of this brief
strained banlcing system were hin- · account is that the national balance
derin~ efforts to get out of the
sheet has been severely strcLched,"
recessron.
Greenspan said. "These events do
"The upturn in bu,siness activity not necessarily mean that a prothat began earlier this year clearly , longed period of economic weakhas faltered," Greenspan said in ness is inevitable, but they do mean
-testimony before the House Ways that poliCff!lakers musL consider
and Means Committee.
these unusual forces when shaping
"It is apparent that the economy their response to tile current snua·
is struggling and that there have . tion."
been some strong force_s working , Sincnhe recession began in
against moderate cyclical revival,'' July 1990, the Fed has moved 14
he said.
• •·
times to cut short-term inLerest
Greenspan blamed the econo- · rates and many economists believe
my's present problems on the huge with the economy doing so poorly
buildup of debt in the 1980s bo.th that more rate cuts are imminent.
- However, in his prepared

flt

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TIN SOLDIERS • Danny Buffington and
Donald Call, pictured here, along with Kris
.Jenkins and Kris VanMeter, will portray Tin

Soldiers in Tuesday's presentation ol' "Twas the '
Night Before Christmas" at Pomeroy Elemen·
tary at 7 p.m.
' .

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~&gt;;•

The following students have
made the A honor roll for the second six weeks: ('Indicates straighl
A's)
. First grade: 'Dcan qq Bryan ,
•Jerem)' Ev ans, 'Scottie Fran s.
•Chelsea·Gooch, •s tephcn Henry
• John Polcyn, 'Christiana .Taylor
'Rachael Walker, Zach Brumfield
William Burleson, Ryan Carter.
Malcolm Gwinn, Lyndsay HOrton,
- Kevin Queen, Kelsey Salisbury,
Maria Wagner; Troy Wood.
Second grade: • Am it Agrav.:al,
'Dawn Chamberlain, 'Dcidm Hall,
'Chad ·Dailey, ' Michael Jenk s,
•Virginia Miller, Hannah Beaver,
Lauren Browning, Ashley Brum field, Adam Holcomb , Rach el
Tucker, Jessica Barker.
Third grade: Brad Bowman,
•Tommy Dayton, Kent Halc.y,
Erica Mass ie, *Charity McQueen.
\.. Nicholas Mulholand, Andrea Sims,
· Amanda Wil cox, ' Nathan
Williams. · ·
Fourth grade : April Ag ustin ,
MerediTh Clark, ' Travis Frasher,
•Courtney Gooch, • Laura Pollard,

Jo nathan Taylor, Erin Walker ,
'Christen Zirille.
Fifth grade: Rebecca Birchfield ,
Dani Jenks, Natalie Pyles,
' Stephen Roberts , Daniel Sizemore, Jess ica Walker , Andrew
Williams.
Sixtil grade: •vandana Agrawal,
Suzanne Clark, Daniel Hall, Steven
Rice, 'Lisa Vollbom.
·
Seventh grade: •Melissa Brown,
Joy Chaksupa , Rachel Hamrick,
Micah Lanier, Nathan Smith , Benjamin Taylor, Leisa Walters.
Eighth grade: Aaron Holley ,
Amy Pollard.
·
Ninth grade: Emily As bcck.
Jenn y Hager, Robin Rice.
Tenth grade: ' Jodie Hager ,
Anna Hamrick, Adam Meek. Am y
Wood, Elizabeth Woote n.
Eleventh grade: • Sandra
Adams, Christy Mock, 'Meredith
Pollard,' Brian Rice.
Twclvcth grade: •Beth Blevins,
Pam Holley, Jenny Hughes, Darin
Peck, (:;indy Sh eets . ~ _
Th e followrn g students have
made the B Honor Roll for the second six weeks:

how

thought a business srmulauon game
would help," sa id James R. Frederickson , ass istant professor of
accounting.
The game's Community Chest
and Chance cards were altered to
reflect real business conditions.
The students were divided into
groups of four or five, with each
student forming a corporation and
issuing stock. Each player rolls the
dice 40 times. Every transaction is

accounting works in the real world .
" In trying to m a ~ : :! fun , I

dent submits income, balance sheet

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) The world of acco unting can be fun
and gam es, even when !here's
unrest on Baltic Avenue, tornadoes
on Indiana Avenue or brimming
trash dumps on New York Avenue.
About I ,400 students in
· accounting clas.~es at Indiana UniversiLy arc, playing Monopoly this
semester - for a grade.
Prnfe&lt;sors picked the board
::n u~ ~ f'lf (1

. game lo show
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recorded and

a fte r•.•/ ~.!' ~ ~~ ,. h ~ ·~~ ­

PREPARING FOR THE SCHOOL PROGRAM - The students at Pomert,y Elementary
will present their annual Christmas program
tonight (Tuesday) at 7 p.m. at the school. The
. play, "Twas The Night llefore Christmas," will
l'ealure students in kindergarten through third
grade. Pictured, in no particular order, in th•

c

living room scene, are Jessica lllaeu_nar, l~en
Carroll, .Joel Clelland, Jaynee Dans, llrran
Klein, R.T. Roush, Brandy Thomas, Aja Blackwell, Brittan¥ Power~, Shannon Price, Josh .
Simpson, Nicole Davrs, Crystal Lemley and
. Corey Woods.

First grade: Joshua Evans, J.P.
Fetters•. Heath Mass ie, Jeremy
Slayton, G.E. Woodward.
Second gmde: Molly John son ,
Ehzabeth Rice.
·
Third grade: Donnavan Ashworth, Seth Easton, Jason Holdren,
Joey Johnson.
Fourth grade: Amanda Brown
Mike Fraricis..
· .· '
Fifth grade: Gabrielle lllack woo~, Lisa Bowman, Emily Null.
Smh grade : Donovan Davis
Leah Hall, Deanna Martin, Bo Pol :
lard, T9ny Staley.
. · ..
Seventh grade: Ginger Franklin,
Matl Holley.
' Eighth grade: Ruebel Cochran,
Nathan Lusher, Gabe McQueen,
Jill Mock , Shawn Ri ce, Anesa
VanMatre.
Ninth gra de : Abigai I Henry ,
Kristin Torres.
Tenth grade: Jeremiah Brown,
Andy Brumfield, Amy Carn es ;
Sarah Miller, Noah Smith.
Eleventh grade: Nilrki- Saun ders.
Twclveth grade: Hollie Bartel,
James Black.

and cash now statements.
To promote teamwoik. each
group must analyze the game and
determine who wins.
Grades won't be based on
whether a student's company made
money, Frederickson promised.
"The grade 1s dependent on how
reasonable.their argument is. ''
That's a relief to Stover, whose
company is S650 in the hole:
" I think it's maybe not as easy
"'-"1

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lllilJ

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:.~ 111

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1'l ""'' '":
.J&lt;.&lt;ol,...

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Parents should be selective, read labels, and
watch for toys with small parts that may break
orr and.be swaUowed. Here Melissa Wise or Middleport and ber 11-montb-old son, Nicholas

Parents should keep safety in
mind when buying toys for kids

THURSOAY
MI DDLEPORT - The Middleport Child Conservation League
wi ll hold its annual Christmas party
on Thutsday at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Helen Blackston . Gifts
&lt;md rood for needy .families should
be brought thai evening. Secret sisters will be revealed.

Accounting is fun and games at IU

..

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CAUTION WITH SMALL TOYS - When
selecting toys 'remember thai small children .like
to put things in
mouth. Little loys Pr toys .
with
and small

SYRACUSE - The Thrra
Wednesday Club will meet at the
municipal building in Syracuse on
Wednesday at noon. From there the
group will go !O Mason ResulUrant
to cat at 12:30 p.m. A pany will be
held !mer at tile home of Mary Kay
Yost. There will be a gift exchange.

Ohio Valley Christian announces honor roll

~

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·remarks, Greenspan gave no hlnt
about what the Fed's next move
might be on interest rates.
. Greenspan did say that lower
mterest rates can help. in the process .of working down high debt
levels by reducing interest payments that must be paid by borrowers. But-he warned that credit easing could only be pursued in a context of guarding against a rise in
inflation.
·
·
·
Greenspan was testify_ing at tile
end of a series of hearings held by
the Ways and Means Commiuee on
responses Congress should mal&lt;e
QIJ _
spending and taxes to help a
srcJt; economy. · .
-·
He gave a limited endorsement
,to tax cuts to help individuals and
corporations reduce !heir debt burdens, but he· said that Congress
would be wrong to grant any package of tax cuts that worsened the
federal budget deficit, already forecast to hit a record $362 billion this
year.

·Community calendar

RACINE - The Racine American Legion will meet Thursday m
7:30 p.m. at the post home.

'

Christmas Is ...

'

at 7 p.m. Pictured; in no particular order, are
Ashley Thomas, Andrea Krawsczyn, Melissa
Houser, Adam Shanks, Katie Jeffers and Emily
Stivers.

POMEROY - Ohio TOPS Club
No . 570 will have its Chri stmas
TUESDAY
party on Tuesday with weigh-in al
RUTLAND - The Rutland . S p.m. and mcetiQg at 6 p.m. All
Friendly Gardeners will judge all members urged to aucnd.
homes in the village of Rutland mi
CHESTER - Shade Ri ver Lodge
Christmas decoration on Tuesday.
Winners will be chosen in both No. 453 will hold a special meeting
religious and non-religious cate- on Tuesday a1 7:30 p.m. There will
gories. All homes within village be work in the E. A. degree.
limits will be considered by Lhe Refreshments will be served.
judges.
RACINE - The Racine Rurilans
POMEROY - The Ameri can wi ll meet Tuesday at ?p.m. at Siar
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39, MiII Park. Dinner will be served.
Pom eroy, will meet Tuesday at the
WEDNESDAY

-

Cautions Congress against quick fix

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post home. Dinner will be at 7 p.m.
followed by meeting at 8 p.m. All
members are urged to auend thi s
final meeting of 1991. .

•·

2 SeCUona, 14 Paget 25 cen11
AMulllmedla Inc. New•IN'Pif

Ohio, Wednesday, December 18, 1991

.

.p'

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event ·
and the day of that event. Items
must be received welt in ad vance
to assure publication itt the cal·
endar.

"--

Greenspan Says U.S. recovery ·has falter~d
~~

THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS- Children anxiously awaltlhe arrival of Santa Claus
on Ihe night before Christmas. This scene can be
seen ·in Pomeroy Elementary's presentation of
"Twas the Night Before Christmas" on Tuesday

Pick3: 840
Pick 4: 2845
Cold tonl&amp;ht. Tbursdlly,
sunny. High near 30.

Vot. 42, No. 1S9
Copyrlghled 1991

garten teacher, Susie Abbott, are Carrie Abbotl,
Heather Hysell, Christopher Neece, Brandon
Ramsburg, Michelle Runyon and Shannon
Soulsby.

Ohio,Lottery

·Miller
Clefeats
L
Marauders

"Twas The Nigtu_Before Christ- Blaeunar, ·Bcn Carroll, Joel Clcl Tin soldiers will by played by,
mas" will be pr~Mnted tonight land, Jaynoo Davis, Brian Klein, Danny Buffington, Do.nald Call: ·
(Tuesday) at 7 p:m. at Pomeroy R.T. Roush and Bmndy Thomas.
Kris Jenkins and Kris VanMeter. ' '
Elementary.
_
Sugar plum fairies· will include _ Narrdtors are Ben S.ee, Michelle~
Music will be provided by Mrs. Katie Jeffers and Emily Sti vcrs. Drcnncr, Sara Moon. Jonatllan WiiMary Stewan. .
..
and mice will be played by Brittany · son, Sarah Houser, Ashley' Han- ~·
Michael Stacy will portray ' Powers, Shannon Price ~nd Aj a nails, Breyden Haptonstaii,- Chris :
Santa and Nicole Davis will por- Blackwell.
Ward, Kelly Canan, Stephanie Bur- •
tray Mrs. Santa.
Crystal Lem)ey will perform as dcttc, Andy Davis, Tiffany Qualls, ·
Elves include Cairie Abbott, the cat and Corey Woods as the Andrea Burdette, Straud Liulc :.
Heather Hysell, Christopher Neece, dog. Children will include Ashley Substitute narrators arc Ashley ,
·Brandon Ramsburg, Michelle Run ~ ~Thomas.and Andrea.Krawsczyn.- · - J homas an&lt;I-Andrea-J{rawsczyo~ ;~.
yon and Shannon Soulsby.
Melissa Houser, will be th e
The public is invited to attend ,
Portraying gifts will be Jessica mother and Adam Sha!ik tile father. the performance.
. ,
.

ELVES- These students at Pomeroy Elemen·
tary will perform as Santa's elves during .the
annual Christmas play, "Twas the Nrght Belore
Christmas" on Tuesday at 7 p.m. Pictured with
Debbie B~ennan, school principal, and kinder- .

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Christmas is a Lime of wonder
and excitement for everyone - but
most of .all for children.
Making it a safe and happy time
is important and with that in mind,
Norma Torres, R. N., nursing
director for the Meigs County
Health Depanment, cautions anyone giving toys as gifts to keep
safety in mind while shopping.
. While toy safely is a year-round
concern. Torres says iL should especially be a ooncem during the holidays since over half of all .retailtoy
sales occur before Christmas.
"Careful selection and proper
supervision of children .at play are
HELPING THE NEEDY • Seventeen volun,
' ing those or other faiths, as. well. Pictured with
the best ways to protect children
leers assisted with pre~aring Christmas food
the finishecl product are Mary Starcher,. Rev.
from toy-related injuries," said
baskets at the Meigs Umted Methodist CooperaKen Baker, Rev. Keith Rader, Maybelle Ihle,
Torres, who urges parents to be
tive Parish on Monday. 200 Meigs County ramiRev. Roger Grace, Peggy Crane, Rev. Sharon
selective and read tile labels when
lies will receive the makings of a holiday meal
'·Hausman, Rev. Eu.nhlfe Kee, Belly Dean, Liz
making their purchases. Choosing
through the work-or the parish and its donors
Ayres-Thoren, Raymond Furbee, Toby Curtis,
toys right for the child'sage, abiliand volunteers, made up mostly of United
li.J, Spencer, Leona Machir, Thor Carsey, and
~Y, and maturity are important, she
Methodists rrom all over the county, but includllelly Weyersmiller.
-·
said.
She advises parents and others
buying- toys to check for small parts
that may break off or be ,swal low cd, to be aware of shaped
pieces or toxic materials, and to
GM will shut plants '" Arllng- 3,800 hourly workers.
DETROIT (1\P) - General
look
for durable construction.· -Lon,
Texas,
and
Moraine,
Ohio,
the
·.
GM's
North
American
opera-,
·
Motors Corp. IYiUcJose two plants
"New,
unfamiliar or inappropriFree
Press
reported,
citing
·
tions
are
losing
about
$15
million
a
·Deuolt
employing 6,400 hourly workers in
ate
toys
are a major cause of
sources
iL
did
not
identify.
Each
day
$5
billion
to
$6
billion
a
Texas and Ohio aild lay off up 10
Continued
on page 3 · ·
15,000 white-collar employees next •plant employs 3,200 hourly work- year - and pressure has been
building to cut costs and reduce
year to offset record losses, a news- ers.
The automaker also plans to factory capacity.
paper reported today.
GM Chairman Robert Stempel
Union contracts ensure tllaL the close a plant in Oshawa, Ontario,
after
1994
,
The
Detroit
News
planned
a satellite broadcast to
blue-collar workers will keep getreported
today.
That
plant
emplOy$
employees
today and a news conting nearly all theit pay .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
ference to announce the cuts, end- $202 million increase in electric
ing weeks of speculation.
rates sought by Columbus Southern
Company spokesman John F. .Power would be slashed if rccomMueller refused to comment early mendations of-consumer represen-today.
.
tativesinthecaseareadopted.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
The Ohio Department of Health has approved a continuation
William
Spratley on Tuesday cited
grant of more tllan $62,000 10 the Holzer Black Lung Clinic's profrom seven expert wittestimony
gram, according to -an announcement made today by State Rep.
nesses
in
asking
tile Public Utilities
Mary Abel (0-Athens).
Commission
of
Ohio to limit the
Abel said tllat the funding will be used to provide treatment,
utility's rate boost to $85 million.
rehabilitation, and educational services to coal miners who suffer
But if the PUCO adopted the
from black lung disease.
·
combi01:d rei:ommendations from
"This program is vital in providing much needed care to minel'1!
Spratley's office, the city of
in SoutheasLem Ohio," Abel said. "We will continue to make such
Columbus,
and Industrial Energy
' programs a priority." ·
Consumers
in
the case, tile increase
Abel said tllat individuals with questions concerning black lung
would
amount
to $34 million. .
medical benefits or treatment could contact tile Ohio Depanment of
Columbus Southern is one of
Healih or the Holzer Clinic.
.
thre'e utilities seekinl! rate increases
to offseL costs of budding the Zimmer Power Plant along the Ohio.
A Tacoma, Wash., ll)an was injured when his tractor-trailer rig
River near Cincinnati.
overturned on U.S. 33 near Darwin Tuesday afternoon.
Other owners . of Zimmer, a
According 10 a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
coal-burning
plant originally
Highway Patrol, Dallas C. Hanners, 57, was driving eastbound on
DAYS
UNTIL
int.
e
nded
to
be
fueled by nuclehr
U.S. 33, whCn his uactor/flat·bCd trailer rig, carrying' general' cargo,
CHRISTMAS
power,
are
Cincinnati
Gas &amp; ElecContinued on page 3
tric and Dayton Power and Light

GM to .clos·e two U. S. plants

WHAT A GREAT CA,R!- Five year old Randy Hudson, son or
Kevin and Kimberly Hudson, Rutland, was really impressed with
this bright yellow battery powered car as he looked over all the •
Christmas toys at Dig Wheel Tuesda-y-anernoon. When selecting·
toys it's important to consider the child's age, abilities and maturi ty. A small child in a car like this requires adult supervision to be
sure he stays safely out or the way of motor vehicles.

Sharp cuts sought in rate hike

--Local briefs-----,
Continuation 1Jfgrant approved

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Man injured when $emi overturns

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Spratley critici1.ed the utility for for Columbus Southern.• ·said the
exercising its option under state decision. to put the rate boost into
law to put the average 28 perc em effcct Jan. 3 was not an attempt LO
rate boost into effect Jan. 3 before innuence negotiations .
"The primary reason tllat...we~ve ~-,
the PUCO issues a decision.
"Som e beli eve this is an taken advantage of tile law is that
attempt to force these fanies to set- this is tile first time that the statuto·
tic this case. Some o us settled a ry time period has expired in which
similar case with Dayton. We had public h~ngs haven't evcn .taken
long negotiations that failed with place," Holliday said.
Cincinnati Gas and Electric," he
State law allows a utility to put
said.
a rate increase into effect if the
"Cincinnati Gas and Electric at PUCO f~lls LO rule within 275
this hour is not threatening its cus- days. In the event the PUCO grants
tamers to put an automatic increase less tllan the amount sought, a utili-'
(in effect). It's sitting in tile same ty is required to apply a credit to
position time-wise as Columbus • customer bills for the difference
.
Southern,' ' Spratley said.
plus interest.
SpraUey's office will file its recExpert testimony before the
ommendations today on tile $204.8 PUCO begins Jan . 6, with conmillion rate request from the sumers scheduled to appear at hearCincinnati util'ity. A negotiated set- ings Jan. 16 in Columbus and Feb.
tlement among parties iq the Day- 4 in Athens.
·
ton case reduced the utility rate
(:olumbus Southern Power, a
boost from '$186 million to $57 subsidiary of American Eleetric
million.
Power, has 473,000 customers in
Thomas Holliday, a spokesman 25 of the Stale's 88 counties.

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:commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel ·
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Wednesday, December. 18, 1991

r----·~Local ~riefs.~.-~contin.ued from page 1
went off lhe left side of lhe road and ovenumed.
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Service transponed ijanners to Vetetilns Memori~ Hosp!_tal where he was tre!!led l!!!!l.
released.
·
.
~Damage to Hariners' tractor-trailer was listed as heavy and-disabling.
'The 1991 Interiiation3l ca6-over and tlie 1988 Great Darie trailer
are owned by J. B. Hunt Transportation Inc.
Hanners was-cited by lhe patrol for failure to conlrol.

'

The_Dauy Sentinel
111 Court Street .
Pomem. Ohlo 1
DEVOTED TO THE INTIRESTS OP THE DIG$-MASON AREA

ltOBERT.L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUslier/Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Allletlers ... subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

.GOP says issues, not
Riffe, are focus of House bid
.

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U.S. Customs plane shot at b~~Mexican army ·
WASHINGTON - A U.S.
Customs plane on a narcotics mission was peppered' with bullets
· fired by Mexican army soldiers last
month in an incident that ·both
countries would rather keep under
wraps. ~ • - -- .
The shootout on the ground at a
remote airstrip near Veracruz,
Mexico, on Nov. 7 made headlines
because Mexican soldiers, apparently protecting drug tunners, shot
and killed seven Mexican narcotics
agents auempling to arrest those
drug runners. What neither country
wants to publicize is that sometime
during the firefight, the soldiers
realized they were being watched
from the air by a U.S. Customs
plane; and they turned their guns
on the Americans. ~The incident began in the early
morning when Customs picked up
on radar a drug plane on a flight
from Colombia to Mexico. A joint
team of Mexican drug agents and
U.S. Customs officials in their
respective airplanes tailed the traffickers to the airstrip.
The drug dealers landed, and
then the Mexican drug agents followed them in while the U.S. plane
circled above, filming the arrest

with an infrared video C$1lera. The
Mexican agents stepped out of their
plane and were inspecti·ng the drug
haul- 800 pounds of cocaine When · Mexican army soldiers
guarding the airstrip began firing
on them. ._
~·
. -~
At some time during the firefight, the 3(my general in charge. .
Alfredo Moran Acevedo , was
informed that his targets were
Mexican drug agents. But his men
kept on firingcThey killed seven of
the Mexican drug agents, two at
close range. One was shot point
blank in lhe mouth.
· Customs sources told our associate Dean Boyd that the Mexican
soldiers ordered lhe surviving Mexican agents to radio the Customs
plane to land. They refused, and
told the soldiers lhe whole episode
was being recorded on videotape.
Atthat point, the soldiers began firing into the air, hitting the Customs
plane four times and severing a
cable in a wing flap.
The Customs pilots had no idea
thcy had been hit until they had to
lower their wing flaps to land at
another airstrip after th,ey fled the
shooting. The plane landed safely
and none of the CustOf!!S agents

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Ohio Republican leaders apparently have changed
their minds about designing their 1992 campaign for control of the House
.around an assault against longtime Speaker Vern Riffe, D·Wheelersbllrg. ,
•: ·: State GOP Chairman Raben Bennett and his new strategist and fund:- ,-raiser for the House races, Thomas Van Meter of Ashland, said lastlveelc
-: ·)hey intend to focus mainly on policies and issues.
;. · Riffe aide Kent Carson said the Republicans made a wise decision.
;: . "They attacked the speaker two years ago, and wound up losing two
·: seats," said Carson, referring to the last legislative elections.
_
; : Carson su~gested that Bennett max have decided to fo,rego some of the
-; ·attacks on Riffe thatmvolve fund-r8lsmg among lobbyists because Van
;. ·Meter, a former 'state senator, is a lobbyist ' ·
;
;: : Bennett announced the appoinlrnent of Van Meter at a news confer•: · ence. They said Republicans will benefit from newly drawn House dis;. :tricts as they seek to claim the last bastion of Democratic power in
:: :Columbus.
·
;:
Democrats have a 61-38 margin in the House, but Republicans have
;.. .the governor's office, a 21-12 edge in the Senate and a 4-3 majority on the
;: ;bhio Supreme Court.
,
,. ·~ The GOP-drawn redistricting plan, desrgned to enhan-ce GOP voting
;. :slrcngth, is under coun challenge, but Bennett says it will be upheld. He
;: :said it voids past Democratic manipulations and creates "a level playing

r: .ricld ."

.

;. : Bennett said earlier that Riffe would be targeted because of a fund;: :raising system that he says has drawn millions of dollars into Democratic
·:· campaign offers from lobbyists for labor and other special interest groups.
;. : The Republicans say Democrats reciprocated by adopting laws or poli;; :cics sought by such contributors in what has been called a "P.ay-for-play"
:: government in Columbus:·Riffe denies tlie-allegations.
.,.. i

Carson. said Van Meter looms as someone who would be "in a. posi-

:: tion to make a lot of money'' if Republicans were to win the House.
·· Republicans also had said they would point out that Riffe, speaker
: since 1975, enjoys unprecedented fringes· that include an office tower
: bearing his name, with a sculpture of himself in the lobby.
that helped the GOP win control
.· . But Van Meter,
. credited for strategies
'
~ of the Senate m the 1980s, sa1d vaters "don ' t care about towers and
: busts.,.
.. · He said efficient government and spending curbs arc real issues. Gov.
George Voinovich wants .them, "but there is a stop sign at the Ohio
House," he said.
·
He cited a bill to turn Ohio's liquor stores into private operations as an
example of legislation blocked by Democrats. "This would save more
than $50 million a yeas," he said. S)lch estimates are in dispute.
Van Meter said Republicans will take on Democrats in campaigns tailored to the individual dislric!S.
··All )JC!Iitics is local,'' he said.
"I thmk it was Tip O'Neill who said that," Van Meter said, referring
to former Democratic speaker of the U.S. House.
~

Today in history
,
By The Associated Press
·
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 18, the 3S2nd day of 199L There are 13
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 18, 1940, Adolf Hitler signed a secret directive ordering
preparations for a Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union. (Operation Barbarossa, as it became known, was launched the foUowmg June.)
·
On this date:
In 1737, lhe most renowned violin-maker in history, Antonio Slradivari, died in Crern,ona, Italy.
.
.
. .
· In 1787, New Jerney became the lhird state to raufy the U.S. Consutu-

•·

.

.

In 1813, the Bljtish 190k Fon Niagara in lhe War of 1812.
,
· In 1865, lhe 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, abolishing
'slavery__w_as dec~j!l efl~
.
. In 1890, Eqwin Howard Armstrong, the inventor of wide-band FM
radio broadcastin~. was born in New York.
In 1915, President Wilson, widowed the year before, married Edith
Bolling Galt at her home in Washington.
..
In 1956, Japan was admitted to the United Nations.
In 1957, the Shippingpon Atomic Power Slation in Pennsylvania, the
first nuclear facility to generate electricity in the United States, went on
line. (It was taken out of service in 1982.)
a
~
In 1969, Britain's Parliament permanently abolished lllc death penalty.
In 1972, the United States began its heaviest bombing of No!lh Vietnam to date during the Vietnam War. The bombardment ended 12 days
later.
·
.
· . . .
---'~n~L97.2,_1he \'.auCll!l_cen~ured.lhe Re~.~Hans-!'ung! a leadmg-hberallheologian, declanng h1m guiltY. ofheresr and barn~g h!m from teachmg.
In 1980, former Soviet Pre!"Ier Ale&lt;ei N. Kosygm died at age 7_6. .
In .1987, Paki~tani opposiuon lea~ Benazlf Bhullo was married m a
tradiUonal Isla!!!!C ceremony to bustnessman As1f Ali Zardari, lhe man
selected for her by her mother. ·
Ten years ago: The f.!nited States announced it had suspended a strategic al!'"eemcnt s.Igned w1th Israel less than three weeks earlier because of
Israel s annexauon of tbe Golan Heigh_IS.
Five y~ ago: Surg~ns ID \Y~hington removed a f~cerous tumor
(rom tbe bram of CIA DireCtor Wtlltam J. Casey. (Casey s tllness came at
a time when he was testifyi'!&amp; before congressional panels about what he
knew of lhe !ran-Contra affatr.} .. ...
.
. One year ago: Less tban,a month before a U.N. deadli~e for 1raq ~o
wiihdraw from Kuwwt, President Bush told reporters he believed Amencans ~ould suppo~ a ·miliciry strike, if one were nece~; In Baghdad,
the ruling Revoluuonary Command Council S8ld Iraq was ready for lhe
decisive showdown."
Today's Birthdays: Actor Ossie Davis is 74. Former Attorney General
Ramsey Clade is ~· Ra&lt;;k star Ke~tb Ri~hards is 48. Movi~ ~reducerdirector Steven Sp1elber~ JS 44. ~o\'1~ rtv1ewer Leonard Malu~ IS 41 . .
· Thought (or Today: . The only thtng we have 10 feas on this planet Is
man." - Carl Jung, Swiss psychologist (1875-1961).
.
,~

--

By Jack.Anderson

were hurt. They emerged with an
infrared videotape of most of the
shootout. Customs he'adquarters before they were allowed to_r:elu!"
confirmed for us that the plane had to the United States. A Venezuellin
been hit.
,
Embassy offiCial downplayed t~e
A Mexican. investigation into incictent as being "of no cons~the murder of !lie agenis . blamed-~quence. " But the U.S ..Embassy i)J
the military, but it carefully avoid- Caracas is investigating to dete!ed Jhe question of whether the sol- mine if the American plane had
diers made a mistake .or whether wandered into Venezuelan alr
they were paid tO provide cover for space as that government claimed.~
the drug plane. The three smugThe Mexican shootin~ has tlic
glers were allowed to escape from greatest potential for political bac~the air strip, and U.S. Customs offi· lash. the Mexican army's cooperacials are .convinced the soldiers tion with ilie United States in t~e
were working for the smugglers. • drug war has been growin'g-i:rl
In another hair-raisi ng incident recent years, but the new evidenoe
on Dec. I, three U.S. Customs offi- of corruption in the army docs little
cials in a surveillance plane were to bolster the confidence of U.l
mtercepted by a Venezuelan fighter narcotics agents. Plus, as one conoff the no!lhern coast of that coun- gressional source told us, lhe incilry. The fighter pilot, with a dip of dent "adds to the already trouble!~
his wings, motioned for the Cus- aLrnosphere" surrounding the U.S.tom s plane to land . The agents Mexico free lradc talks.
' :
flashed their badges thro~gh the
DOUBLE DIPPERS - Som;e
window, but the fighter pilot was · hospitals and insurance companiGs
unimpressed . He fired a burst of are taking double dips on the Mediwarning shots across the nose of C\U'C pool. Congressional investiMtheir plane and they followed him · tors looked at the Medicare books
to a landing strip.
and found out that in some cas~s
The Customs agents were ush- the ·government was paying twice
ered out of their plane at gunpoint for the same procedure. For examand held for the night in Caracas pte, a hospital would bill Medica(e
for a procedure and get paid. Then
it would send a follow-up bill wi(h
. final adjustments adding up to~
higher charge. Instead of payil11l
the difference, Medicare woul):l
repay th G-entire bill. The General
Acco~nting Office looked at 1.7
hospitals around the country ar(d
found that they owed Medicare
more than $1 million in refund~ .
some dating as far back as 1986. ·
MINI-EDITORIAL- Secretary of State James Baker has
declined to say whether the Unitc'd
States will pursue the kidnappers ef
American hostages now that all 6f
those hostages are home. "T~e
chapter .is not finished;" Baker
said. But don't hold ·your breath f6r
any action. President Bush adopted
a policy of benign neglect toward
J- the hostages, b'elieving ihat any
effort to win their freedom would
make them more valuable in the
eyes of their captors. That policy pf
benign neglect still applies to the
pursuit. of the terrorists. Not onty :is
the chapter finished, but the book;is
closed.
Copyright, 1991, United F~ture
Syndicate, Inc.

Pomeroy man cited in wreck
... ~..,·~--

-.--

Three thefts and a vandalism incident are being investigated by
the Meigs County Sherifrs Deparunent.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Tony Blackford of the
C_ountry_ Mobile Home Park in Shade reponed lhat someone had cut
the tires on her Ford Escon.
On Sunday, Carolyn Gilkerson of Welch town Hill reported that a
trailer that she owns on Welchtown Hill had been en.tered and that a
ced!lf jewelry box and two jars filled with change were missing.
Donna Stoban of Yellowbush Road reponed on Monday that a
Myers water pump had been stolen from the Arthur and Susan Park
residence. Stoban reported that the Parks had .borrowed the pump
from her.
- Viekie Smith of Mile Hill Road near Racine reponed onTuesday
that a ring was missing from her residence. She advised that when
she returned home on Tuesday evening, the lights were on in her
house, and lhere was no sign of a forced entry.

Juveniles caught, returned
Two 14 year old girls from Athens were picked up at Tuppers
Plains on Tuesday after running away from the Athens Middle
School on Tuesday morning.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby,_thc girls
were returned to Athens County authorities.

----------

.' Bessie Stokes
Word has been 'received of the
death of Bessie Stokes of Raleigh,
N.C., formerly of Pomeroy, who
died on Monday, December 16,
1991.
Among her survivors is her
· daughter, Allie Simon of Pomeroy.
Funeral arrangements are
· incomplete.
•

Bessie R. Herdman
Bessie R. Herdman, 75, of
Letart, W.W•. , died Tuesday, Dec.
17, 1991, at Plea~t Valley Hospital in Point P.leasan~ W.Va.
A homemaker, she was born
·May 16, 1916, in Leon, W.Va., the
daughter of the late Maryland and
Cola Anderson Thornton. 1 •
She is survived by her husband ~
Charles W. Herdman. ·•
Survivors inc Iude: a daughter,
G~raldiQ~ ,'Nalls of Mal!ll. Ill.; two
sons, Ray of New Haven, W.Va.,
and Hersel of Letart; 13 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren.

The Daily·Sentinel
(U8P8111·980)
the ~

Ohio by

P&lt;~~neroy,

Ohio Valley Publithing

CompanyiMalttmedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, l'h. 992-2168. Se.ond eta•
poatqe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member; The Nlociated Prua, Inland
Daily Preu Altoeiation and the Ohio
Newtpaper Association, National
AdvertittnJ Representative, Branham
-~

Newtpa~ Sale•.~.-?.3~L't hird

-N.., YOrk, NewYunt t00t7.

Avcmuc,_

POSTMASTEJI, Sencl1ddroll changea w
The Daily Sentinel, lll Court St.,
Fo.....,y, OHio 45769.
8U88CIUFI10N RATES
• 87 Corrier or Molar llotile
One w..k........................................... ll.60
One Monlh.............................. ........... l6.96
One Year. ......................................... S83.20
SINGLE COPY
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DaiJy.............:............................-.2&amp; Cent.
. Bubtc:riben not desiJina &amp;o pay the carri.·
eT may remit. in adYince dir~t to The
Gallipolia Dally Tribune on a 3.6 or 12
month bula. Credit will be given carrier
each week.
No tubtcripUona by mall permitted In

Continued from page I

~=~~~:---

injuries to young· children," metal edges. Toys for children
explained lhe nurse, who said lhat under lhree should not have small
many 'injuries are not necessarily pieces lhat niay be swallowed.
caused by -~ toy itself, .l!!!lsaused - Loud-(lojses . 'foys ll)aking loud
whe~) child is left unsupeJ:Vised or
noises or using caps may-damage a
when-a toy falls into the hands of a ~child's hearing. Watch .for warning
small child for whom it was not · labels stating for use only ouldoors. designed. ·· ·
·
Electric toys. Improperly manuTorres encourages parents to factured or wire&lt;reteetric toys may
always supervise their child's play,. shock or burn children ..Electrically
11nd to bc,alen to toys that should . operated toys with heating elebe· handled by a small child only ments are recommended only for
when an adult is watching. .
c~ildren over eight__y.ears old._
~- Slle suggests that parentsW!i~ Teach children to be cautious wilh
plan to give a bicycle as a gift this eleclric toys and use under adult
Chrislrnas, also give a helmet.
supervision.
Read l)irections. The instruc" A bicycle is more than a toy, it
is a vehicle and every day one child lions should be clear and under·dies and another 1000 children are standable to you, and when approseverely injW:ed from bicycle-relai· priate, to the child.
.
·
ed accidents in this country. Most
Supervise P.lay. Proper supervichild cyclist fata-lities involve head sion of children playing with toys
lrauma, and a properly fitted bike is essential to prevent unintention ~l
helmet is a must to prevent head injuries from toys.
.
injuries," Torres said. Children
An estimated 129,000 toy -rel~t­
aged 14 and under are at the high- ed injuries occurred to young children last year in this country and
est risk for bikin$ accidents.
As for what to look for when aboui. half were preventable
buying toys, Torres had these sug- injuries involving young children
under five years of age, Torres
gestions:
Remember that all toys are not said. She noted that during the past
for all children. Selec.t toys easeful- two years, 37 toy-related fatalitie s
ly. Cl)eck lhe. manufacturer's age to children occurred nationally.
recommendation. Many toys are·
"Most of these tragic deaths
involved
children being struck by
designed for children over three
years old and may be dangerous motor vehicles while on riding toys
when handled by a younger child.
and small children choking on
Be a label Reader. Look for key small toys or small toy parts, balwords such as "nontoxic" for lead loons, marbles and small balls, she
in paint and toy surfaces, "flame said,
"Following the toy buying
resistant/retardant" for fapric prodguidelines
here will help assure
ucts, "washable material " for
that
parents
and others are choosstuffed toys, and "U.L. approved"
ing only safe toys that are best suitfor electric toys.
· For Infants and toddler. Avoid ed for an individual child's age and
toys with small removable pieces developmental skills, said Torres.
"To avoid lragedy 9hoose you
children may put into their mouths,
avoid long strings, cords or ribbons child's toys with care. Avoid toys
with propelled objects, sharp edges
in baby cribs.
Look for safe construction . Toys and points, and parts small· enough
for children under eight years old · to be swallowed .. We want your
should be free of sharp glass or chitd's Christmas to be a safe and
happy one," Torres concluded.

Marvin ·p, Cremeans of Antiquity was arrested on Tuesday
evening by deputies on a domestic violence charge following an
rncident at his residenct.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that other
charges are pending against Cremeans as a resut~ of several incidents that took place on Monday night and early Tuesday.

Area deaths

I.

Stocks

Am Ele Power ................. .31 S/8
Ashland Oil ......................26 3/8
AT&amp;T.. .............................. 38 '118
BanH)ne ......................... .47 .
Bob Evans ........................22 If}.
Charming Shop..................23 3/8
CityHolding ..................... l6 S/8
Federal M(lgul .................. .13 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .47
Key Centurion ................... 14 3/8
Lands' End ........................27
Limited Inc ....................... 26 7!8
Multim~ia Inc ..................22 3/4
Rax Restaurant ..................?/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 35
Shoney's Inc ......................20 1/8
Star Bank ...........................24 3/4
Wendy Int'l .................... ....9 If}.
Worthington Ind................ 19 1/4
Stock ·reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis

-----Weather.;;.. _..;;..---~South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear and cold.
The low S to 10. No!lhwest winds
10 10 20 mph diminishing to less
than 10 mph by morning. Thursday, mostly sunny with the high
aroiini130. ~~
Extended forecast:
· ·

She· was preceded in death by and Robert Brown, Binghamton, N.
two sons,. Floyd and Charles Jr., Y.; four grandchildren; Brent
Hauck of Hilliard, Brenda Hauck
and II brothers and sisters.
. Graveside services were held of Dayton, Jeff Evans of ColumWednesday at 2 p.m. at the Bethel bus, and Cpl. Scott Evans, Camp
Cemetery with the Rev . Herman LeJeune, N. C. , a great-granddaughter, Lindsay Marie Evans,
Jordan officiating.
Columbus; seven sisters-in-law and
several nieces and nephews.
Marie Pickens
Besides her parents she was pre- ·
Marie Webb Pickens, 72, of
ceded
in death by her ftrst husband,
Cheshire," died Tuesday, Dec. I 7,
Charles
Hauck, who died in 1945'
1991, at her residence following an
at lwo Jima while serving in the
extended iUness.
1.
Born Jan . S, 1919 in Clothier, armed forces. six·brothers and two
W. Va., she was t!Je daughter of the sisters. ·
Funeral services will be held
late u.s.and Eloda Webb.
She was a homemaker, a 1937 Friday at 1 p.m. at the Fisher
graduate of Middleport High Funeral Home in Middlepon with
SchQOI, and a former employee of the Rev. Harold Tracewell officiatImperial Electric Co. Mrs. Pickens ing. Burial will be in the Gravel
was a member of Evangeline Chap- Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
ter 172, Order of lhe Eastern Stat, may call at the funeral home Thursthe Middleport Church of Christ, day, 2 to4 a·nd 7to 9 p.m.
and the Auxiliary of Middleport
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, AmeriPick 3 Numbers
can tcgioli~ and was·a·pas't ·presi8-4-0
dent of the Middlepoit Child Con(eight, four, zero)
servation League
She is survived by her husband,
Pick 4'Numbers
Richard E. Pickens, Cheshire, a son
2-8-4-5
(two, eight, four, five)
and daughter-in-law, Jar\ and Susan
Hauck, Minneapolis, Minn ,. a
Cards
daughter and son-in-law, Janice
2 (two) of Hearts
3 (three) of Clubs
and Ronald Evans, Columbus; a
sister and brolher-in-law, Cress a
8 (eight) of Diamonds
3 (three) of Spades

Lottery numbers

HOLIDAY HOURS
Thursday.--Dee.--19 -- 9 am-5 pm
Friday, Dee. 20 . -- 9 am· 7 pm
Saturday, Dec. 21 --9 am-5 pm
Monday, Dec. 23 -- 9 am-7 pm
Tuesday, Dee. 24 _.. 9 am-5 pm

MASON

CO.

Friday through Sunday
Warmer through lhe period. Fair
Friday and Saturday. A chance of
rain Sunday. Lows mostly in lhe
-fos Fri&lt;b\y;.around 30 Sa~y IJICI ·
m lhe 30s.Sunday. Highs m the 3Ps
to around 40 Friday, in lhe ~ S$1·
· urday and in the 50s Sunday. !

.
- - -........-Hospit~l
.

news----

Veterans Memorial
Holzer Medkal Center
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Dec.17 Dl~~~:~:._,.
. Marie,l'hillips,-Racine;-~ ~~ Slraron D'epue.
fii~·~.er-~:'l
TUESDAY DISCHARGES - Faught, Doris Gilmore, BeatriCe
· Paul Mitchell, Robert Dempsey Haller , Doris ijensler, Michael
and Betty Vining,
·
• Malone, Ruth Roth and Erma
.. ' · ·- - • - · · · · Roush.

Squads make seven runs
.Seven calls tor assistance were
answered on Tuesday and Wednesday morning by Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services units.
At II :28 a.m., Racine unit went
to Apple Grove-Dorcas Road.
Chelsa Imboden was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At II :44
a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Success Road arid took Harold Boston
to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
At4:46 p.m ., Pomeroy units
wbnt to U.S. Route 33 at Darwin
for a tractor trailer accidenL Dallas

.,.Hanners was taken to Veterans. :At
. S: 13 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
· Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabiliiation Center and took Mary
Williams to Veterans. At 5:33 P-11'·•
Bashan and Racine units 'went to
Bentz Road for a brush fire. f;.t
6:18p.m., Middleport. squad w~nt
to Second Avenue for Helen Boyd.
She was taken to Holzer Medi~l
Center.
On Wednesday at 8:03 a.m ..
Middleport unit went to 'South
Third Street and took Ernest We)ls
to Veterans.

_Meigs announcements __

Four fined in
~

Middleport Court

Four were fined and three others
forfeited bonds in the coun of Middlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday nighL
Fined were Douglas G. Raines,
Long Bottom, $425 and costs and
three days in jail, physical control ·
of a motor vehicle while under the
influence of alcohol or drugs; Max ··
Ge&amp;l)'. Middle~. $10 and c~sts,
runmng a stop 11gn; Belh A. G1bbo,
Syracuse •. $10 artd costs, expired
. registration; and Carolyn A.
Atkins, Racine, $10 and costs, fictitious tags.
Forfeifing bonds were Todd E.
Evans,
Middlepon, $60, driving the
and Loewi of Gallipolis.
wrong way on a one-way slreet;
'
Joshua J. Fox, Little 'Hocking, $52,
speeding; Clyde Gilbert, Parkers- - - - - - - - - - - burg, W.Va., $50, speeding.

Program location changed
The Christmas program to be
presented by Middleport Elementary on Thursday at 7 p.m. will be
held at the elementary school rather
than at Meigs Junior High School
as originally planned. A dress
,rehearsal will be held tomorrow at
the grade school at 9 a.m. for any' ·
one interested in attending at that
time.
.
Grangeto meet- The·Hemlock Grove Griilfge No.
2049 will meet Saturday at 7:30
p.m .ljl the grange hall..
Dance. to be ~eld
There will be a round and
square dance at the Rutland Amencan Legion Hall on Saturday from
8 p.m. to midnight. Music will be
provided by~the Country Kin.Band.
Ray"Fitch will be the caller. The
public is Invited to attend.

ter will reopen on Dec. 26. Addi·
tiona! information on the closing
may be obtained from Karen
Bump, patient relations administrator, 593-2512.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

•'

~ •.

aAKArll *fiiiW WIIIAT I .._,.
~Ill III&amp;HT TU£SMl .

- HOLJ~l l'ilfT

.

a:RTIHCATIS D A'MU.MLEI

To be closed
The Ohio University Osteopathic Medical Center will be closed
Dec. 24 and Dec. 25 in observance
of the Chrislrnas holiday . .The ceo··
·

DOWNING .CHILDS
.

MULLEN MUSSER .

INSURANCE

•

~1
· ~,;;:

.

111 Second' St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

YOU HOLD SOME PEOPLE'S
WINTER HOPES .
IN YOUR HANDS.
Many people face the bleak prospect of
winter with too little money, too little heat in
their homes. They may be living on fixed or
low incomes. or be out of :o~:_ _
HeatShare

r - .-

for Citizens,

\ HeatShare
1 ·tor Citizens

administered
by The Salvat.tOn Army, ·IS one
way all of us can
help. Columbia
strongly_supports

-J- __ -:-

.'

''
ern: - - - - - - '
''
'
coUJMB'AGAS
''
J
---

NIIME - - - - - - ' - - -

I
1\0DP.ESS - - - ' - - - - I

.

Enclosed is my contribution at

1
1 0 $2 o $50 S1oo s-

I

----

ZlP ___:.-STIIIt - - - , .,.yable to CQLl)I.'I!IA
mal&lt;e yoor cllet .h entire amount ~HEATSHARE, and rfla~ toe
1 understand t ~Nation Arfll'/ in

1
will go to The . ·
nd that
I Ohio tor distnbull~nm~ gitt $1
I columbiaw•ll mate
4132
0t ()hio
tor ever", $2 donated.
.
c~
mlltl'
OH
43272·
P.O. BO~ 2586 • u
'- __ 1
I
___ - - - - / l-----this program, and
.
will match your contribution •$1 for every $2 you give.

I

We'll match donations up to a total of$100,000.
Please join us in supporting this important program. If you itemize,
'-../

.

your contribution may be tax deductible.
Maillhe form above with your check, 0r use the HeatShare form in
your next Columbia Ga~ bill .

an .. where home carrier aenlt:e is

available.
Mall S.blertptloNI
ltwlde Gallla County

Mason, WV

O..lotde Galllo Coanty

Phone

t3 Wooko......................... ................l2t.84
' 26 Woou.......................................... $43.t6
.52 Woou.......................................... $84.76
t3 Weou .......................................... $23.40
26 Woeu.......................................... j45.50
52 w..u .......................................... l88.40
.)

....~ .. •. .._........... ------..----·- -.~- 1 ·

Parents...

Cremeans arrested

Publithed every af\emoon, Monday

I

-

Vandalism, theft probed

lhrough Friday, Ill Cout1 Sl.,

-.

-

An undercover drug agent for lhe SECO Task Force was among
the witnesses who testified in the LSD trafficking trial of Trudy
Swartz Dent, as the trial got underway before Judge Fred W. Crow
III in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun.on Tuesday.
Upon the agent's request, his name is not being reveale&lt;! outside
of the courtrOom.
·
Also testifying yesterday was Greg Kiddon, a forensic chemist
for the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation,
who 'testified that the :'blotter paper" sold to the undercover agent in
March, 1990 and submitted to BCI did indeed contain lysergic acid
diethylamide, or LSD . .
Meigs County Prosecutor's Investigator Don L. Snyder also testified in the case yesterday, as much of the testimony was aimed at
establishing lhe "chain of custody" of the evidence.
Dent is represented in the case by Athens Attorney Susan Gwinn,
while Prosecutor Steven L. Story and Assistant Linda R. Warner are
lrying the case on behalf of the state.

Don't drink~ and=- dtive ____se_n._Ja_nM_-._Lo_ng~~
Alcohol is America's number is that a few beers will affect a I and driving, they will have to pay if sec so meone who is drunk and
one drug of abuse. The lragedy of 25-pound person more stron gly caught. Drunk driving laws in Ohio attempting to drive, take the key$,
this abuse is no more apparent than than a 200-pound person. Alcohol are among the toughest in th e call a cab and take a stand! It's a
,when someone is killed or injured cqnccntration depends on several ·nation. First offende{S who are fact; friends don'tlet their friends .
in a car crash where alcohol is factors : amount of alcohol con- caught driving under tJte· influence dnve drunk.
.
.
:
As always, please feel free to
involved. In Ohio, 31,908 aceidents sumed, body weight, time elapsed will face a minimum .of a $250 fine
occurred last year lhat were alcohol since drinking began, amount and and 3 days in jail. An individual call or write me, State Senator Jan ·
related crashes and 38% of all traf' kind 6f food eaten, physical or who is caught drinkingJI!ld driYi~g- M1ch.ad.Long, JLyou hav e-any
fie accidents in_Ohio.JifC.the result~mental-Gondition-of-person-;-pres- could also face additional attorney quesuons or ~omments about the~
ence in the body of other drugs, and court fees anll increased insur- or any other ISSues, my number u;
0 f the deadly combination of drink:
anee rates.
(614 )466-81 56, and my address i;l
ing and driving. This trag~dy is and even mood or temperament. .
even more profound when it occurs
However, for those who decide
The iss ue is simple. If you are the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio,
during the holiday season, an ordi- to ~ ng in the holidays by drinking going to drink, don't drive. If you 43215, , .
·
narily joyous time for many.
·
"
The State of Ohio through the
Ohio Deparunent of Highway Safe- ·HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISTMAS
ty, declared the week of December
7th thru the 13th, National Drunl&lt;
and Drugged Driving Awareness
Week
· · We all know 111e realities about
driving drunk. Alcohol and/or other
. drugs and _driv_ing m~e a dangerous coinbmat10n. Th1s year, the
State of Ohio is asking Ohioans to
do what many other Americans do
before g~ing out to celebrate the
season: designate a driver.
Every rerson react_s ~ifferently
..
to alcoho . Many mdmduals feel
that "a couple' of beers" won 'I
affect their ~b(lity to drive. The fact

.,..,..,---

Witnesses ~ailed in Dent ca_se

The year in review_____c_on_g._C_la~_en_c_e'M~r_'tle...;...r
For these same reasons, ttie
same type of involvement plays (o
our advantage in the l\1iddle East
where, at long last; the wairing factions arc talking to each other .
Admittedly, a solution does not
appear imminent, but at least the
willingness to talk suggests that a
peaceful solution may ultimately be
found .
.
Perhaps the major legi slative
accomplishment domestically was
the recent passage of the $151 billion Highway Reauthorization Act
which should help significantly in
getting the construction industry
back on its feet. Oilier major legislative actions include an extension of unemployment benefits for
those hit by the current economic
downturn.
In summary, reaching meaningful resolution on the major prob·lems threatening our economy and
our society will not get any easier
in the coming year for, as we
know, 1992 is a presidential election year, a year when political
sniping is at its peak. In closing, 1
would like to appeal to my C9l·
leagues to roll back the rhetoric and
instead roll up their slc.evcs and do
. what. the~Aifrcri can pu51ic elected
us to do; bj: part of the solution, not
part of the problem.

~

A Pomeroy man was cited following a two-car accident on C.R.
25 (Pomeroy Pike)in Chester Township Tuesday morning.
According t9 a repon from lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Rodney S. Carr; ~0. of Pomeroy was southbound
on C.R. 25 and failed to slow down for another southbound vehicle,
driven by Ronald J. Weade, 39, of Washington- Coun House, that
had slowed down. Carr's 1983 Pontiac Firebird then struck the rear
ofWeade's 1991 Oldsmobile Cutlass.
No injuries were reparted.
Damage to Weade's car was listed as light. Damage to Carr's car
was listed as moderate.
.
.
Carr was cited by the patrol for failure to maintain assured clear
distance.
·
·
·

..

1991 was a year of contrasts for I'm afraid the crux of this problem number of fronts, not the least of
the Congress and for the Adminis- relates to the divided nature of our which was the fact that for the first
tration. Sandwiched between our federal government. Instead of time since lhe start of World War
country 's striking success in the joining hands, our elected officials · II, the question of going to war was
Persian Gulf early this year and the in Washington are too busy point· a decisH;m shared by the executive
euphoria felt at lhe final release of ing fingers at one another. Instead and legislative branches of governthe American hostages in the Mid- of serving the public they were ment. Unlike Korea and Vietnam ,
dle East two weeks ago, were a elected to represent,' some appear the Congress had a say as to
series of developments that were more intent on serving the interests whether or not -'fie as a nation
riot so pleasing.
of their respective political parties.
should use force against Iraq.
These dark chapters of the 1991
Political posturing has taken
· I would also like to comment
Congressional yearbook include : precedence over political problem on the very positive developments
the Clarence Thomas debacle, the solving. Unfortunately, this con- that the Administration and the
serie s of distasteful disclosures frontational approach has Jlrompted Congress have had a hand in with
concerning the internal operations many to question the sincerity of respect to other lrouble spots in the
of the House of Repre.sentatives, those serving in Congress. On this worJd. We arc all deli~hted to sec
from check bouncing to check stiff- point, perhaps my colleague from the demise of communism throughing at the House Restaurant; the Texas, John Bryant, said it best; out Eastern Europe, a demise
mounting impatience and mounting "Inaction is not the result of bad fueled and facilitated by our willcosts associated with lhe Savings people, but the result of good peo- ingness to take a ftrm stand in our
and Loan crisis; and the failure of ple who come here and don 't agrel\... dealings with Moscow and its WarCongress to deal effectively with with each other" Unfortunately, - saw Pact allies. ·
its own internal ethical breaches, be such disagreements have a way of
At the same time, we mu st
it the handling of lhe Keating Five, turning nasty and before you know remain watchful and helpful where
or the leaking of F.B.I. reports to it any hope for compromise is lost possible, in seeing that the evoluthc·press by Sena!e staffers during in a fusilage of charges and coun- 11on to democratic govern mcntm
the Thomas hearings.
tercharges.
theSe form er communist cou~tries
Perhaps the most negative
Enough about the failings of the remains on ~ack.These are volatile
aspect of this past year for the Congress. Let's Iook.at the positive and lrymg umes m Eastern Europe.
American public _and for many of developments of the past,Year. As I Our nation's security, and the secuus here in Congress who would like said at the outset 1991 started out rity of the free world, demands that
to see meaningful action on the with a bang, bolh,literally and figu- we maintain an active role in guidpressmg_-Issues facmg the nation ·· ratively. · .. · ·. . . ,
, mg this ' tra~ S IU on to democracy
was !He 1~ab1llty ~f Congress and
Our accomplishments in the_ and m ehmmaung the nuclea r
the Admmistrauon to come to Persian Gulf were significant on a threat that exists.
terms on what needs to be done.

-.-

~

The Dally Sentlne1-P119e 3

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 18,1991

. ·,

Remember every $2 you donate will

COLUMBIA GAS

give $3 to people who need it.

of Ohio

!' . '

~773-5592 .

'.

�.

-

'

.

)

•

'I'~-

.(. ' .

Sentine~
Wednesday, December 18,.1991 t
.
.

The _Daily

Sports

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

flAVORITE
CONFEOIONARY or

Pag~ ·

LT. BROWN

Wilm.ingtnJtJalls to Red men 104-714
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dh·l•lon
Tt•m

W L
i
NewYa:i: .............. J5 7

Pel.
.682
.682

Ba~ta~ .................... IS

Pllilullliphia ..... ...... ll
Mami .................... 11

GB

11 .lOO
4
12 .478 4.5
New Jency .............. 6 16
.213
9
Odmdo ............:.......6 16 .Z13
9
Wuhington ... ............ 6 17

.261

9.5

Ctnln l Olvlllon
Chicaao.................. 18 4 .81 8
C l e•eland .--~13

I

.619
.522
.478
.440

Atbnto ................... !2 II

MUwaukoa ............. ll 12

Ildroit. ................... ll 14
lndian1 ................... t t t4

Chul""'-""'":........7 18

...S

6.5
7.5
8.5
a.s
Ill

.440

.280

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t Dh'blon

Ttarir.

t

W

Pc:L

GO

.143

1.5
2
5.5
l.5
11

Uuh ....................... 16 9 .640
S1r1 AnLoni.o ....., .... .ll 9 .591
"""'""' .................12 9 .l71
o.u.......................to t4 .417
Denver .....................9 ll .409
Mi.nncl~ ................ J

II

•

Paclrk: Olvlllon
L.A. L.aken ........... .l6 1 .696

L.A. Clil'l""'••· .. ····l4 II

.661
.625
.609
.l60

.I
1.5
2
3

S•crarnmL0 ..............7 IS

.318

8.5

Golden s.............. 14 1
Ponllnd .................15 9
Phocnil. ............ ...... l4

9

SuttJe ..........t .. . •.... . l2 11

•

.522

Tuesday's scores

Whcutonc68

Tonlgbt's games
Milwaukee at Botton, 1:30 p.m.
CltvtiMd al New Jmey, 7:30p.m.
Uuh II Philulelphia, 7:30p.m.
lndilna at Miami, 7:30p.m.
.
Chutoa.o ll Dcuoil. ,.:30
W" hi.naton" San Antonio, 1:30

p.m.

p~m .

PhoaW. at Dalvcr, 9 p.m.
Golden State at L.A. Clippen, 10:30

p.m.

Thursday's games
M.ilwa~cc

at Orlando, 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Lalr.cn at Minnc.ot~, 8 p.m.
Sacramcrno 11 Houaon.l:30 p.m.
Denver at Sclule, JO p.m.

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE
Palrlck Dlvlllon
Ttam
W L T PU. CFCI\
WaUdnJtqn ........ 23 10 0 46 1501 03

N.Y.R'"'las ..... 20 12 I 41 116102
New Ieney ........ ll12 4 34 119 9l
N.Y.lllillden .... II 14 l V 112 117
Phllulclp!U&gt;....... 9 ll 6 24 ll104
Pin•but&amp;h .......... J7 IJ 4 38 141 Il l

Adam• DlviJion

12 2 46 116 18
Botl0n .... ............ 13 13 .5 31107110
llanl&lt;ri ............. \2 \4 •. :It · "\10
Buffalo............... 9 11 4 22 9111 3
~- .............. 920 3 21 102 129
22

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Nlrilo Dl•lllon
W L T PU. GFGA

Team
OetroiL ...............
SLl...oW. ...... ......
OU.caao ..............
Minnclou ..........
Torvnto ..............

2010 4. 441 33106
14 11 7 3.5 11 2 11 0
13 13 1 33 113 105

13

ll ) 29 101108

9 19 5

23 1411 1

Smyt h1 DlvL.kJn
v .. ncouvc.r. ........ 19 11 4 42 121102

"

Winnipe1 ...........

11 11 1
Edmontoo ......... ll ll 5

LoJAnade. ....... 1213 7

C1lpry .............. 13 ll

4

San J010 ............. 1 2S 3

Col. Eutmoor 73,1lilliud 53
Col. Hanley 18, Duley 72

Col. Linden -McKinley 96. Col.

New York 102, New Jmey 94
801tm lOS, Orlando 9,8
ULah 122,Chvloue 102
Atlant.l 117 ,Indiana 11 3
Clntland 14, Ml1miiO
L.A. Lakm 102. 0Uc.go&amp;9
San AnlOnia 98, Dallu 81
HOUitua 100, Walhitlaton97
S..ule 116, L.A. Cli_ppen 99
Golden S111e 119, Minnaou lOS

MOIIUOII. ........, ..

Cold first half shooting'plagued 43) and Wilmington was 35. per.. for 42 percent. The Quakers had 36 •:
both the University of Rio Grande cent (J3 .. J7). From the three, John rebounds, seven from Eric Sears,.·
and Wilmington College men 's Lawhorn's club was 26 percent and and committed 15 turnovers.
,
32 Brioeford.'Mich. 71, Emonuel B•p"''
00 1
Btool&lt;fiold6&amp;.B•dsor40
, ___,_ _tol~htsikoettlllll_h!ICignhrusc,_h____ ~ -+-ib~as~ik~e~t:ba:;;ll~learns Tuesday at Wilm- ;the Qu~~~\\'e_~ ~8 percen!: ... _ ......WilminglQ'!-(~:3)...110~t.l Denison :' .
Brookly,67,A..onl4
llre·Redmt!n ·bum&amp;nneTile pace piCICed u p" ID [fie . on Saturday. The Redmen (9-3).!·
48
~;:;;~~ ~~: l£~~.rl':lf.
Ai..,. 49,z.nerncc 41 .or
nets for a 51 percent finish on field second half, but with a 3jl-point will be Jdle until Friday, Dec. 2-7,:'
Buckoye l.oc.oi70. Mlnins Forry 47
Akniil Ceno.·Howor l3, G=osb"'8
goals 10 wirt ~~~71.
-~
'lcadc(@l-34) crealed by the visitors when they meet J~y City (N.J .) .;
Cooiiz
49,
Weinon
011.
V•.)
ModOMo
0=n
3
8
Rio
Grande
center
Troy
Donald·
the Quakers were unable to make State College in the opening round ~·
43
5
C•mbrioge6l.M•ri"u54
~l~;. 13,'t.:'3f'lholi&lt;11i
son fired in 27 points an.d brought any funher headway unti~ the last of the Shrine ToumMJent at Mari·, i
CompbeU •s. Yowos. Moonoy 59
Oellbrooit 72. w,,.,.,illc19
down 12 rebounds ~ II m the first seven mmut.es, led by Chns Sonne.. etta College.
Canal Ful~on NW 64, Mulington 59
,._I
~ 41 c· ,..,_ · ·- 35
h f
f'
• h h d 26 .
f h '
Cooo!Wiocn ..,.,n.cirol"ill'62
~"IJ'c"'· • '"· ~""''"
al
to
pace
the
Redmen
e
o
ort.
man,
w
o
a
pomts
l e . Box·score:
•
Calvuy,Pa. SO,VictoryChr. 45
Senior co .. captain Mark Erslan game, an dC hns
· Mitc he11 , whor
C.nflclo 74, Youn8. Soooh46
c.,
10, M&lt;Kinloy l5,ContonTimk&lt;:n
o net·
WILMINGTON (71) - Chris ·:
29
chipped in with 24 markers and six ted 14.
.
Arri'ngton, 1-2-4; Jason Johnston,::
56 c...,.,M,Kinloy?l,C•ntoo Timk&lt;:n
29
Olillicolhe 71, Porumouth 70
~r:.':;Jk"J ~: ~:rt/1':~':, '?8'
assists to help swamp the Quakers'
Brad Setlubert had II points and I .. o.z; Tim Edmonds, z. o. 4; Eric: ·
Cut A.!ken 94, Cin. Moeller 87
cJn.DoerM46. Cin.T•yl"' 27
offense.
.
seven boards· and Christian ended Sears, 1-J . (h5 ; Chris Mitchell, 4"2-&lt;
Cin. Anderson 73, Amelia 52
Cin. Colerain 63, Cip. SL Xavier 50
~: ~-;:,:;;~:~~tt.~,:"2u
Wilmington was in charge for with 10 markers to complete the 0-14; Aaron Williams 3·1-7; Chris :•
Cin. Hughe~ 61, Cin. Northwest Si
the
most of the half' s opening 10 high scoring for Rio Grande. Jeff Sonneman, 4-6. ()..26; 'Eric Winner, ;;
Cin. MeNicholu Sl, Cin. Bacon 47
Cin. McAuley 57, Cin. Woodwatd 48
Cin. N. College Hili 75, Clermorn NE
minutes,
but the Red men caught Brown cowibuled nirie rebounds.
3.. 3. 9. TOTALS 19-9-6-71.
.;
Cin. McNicholu46, Goshen 44, OT
11.or
Cin. Mt. Hcallhy 61, Cin. Seton 45
up,
tied
twice
and
got
ahead
for
the
The
Red
men
sank
43
of
84
RIO
GRANDE.
(104)Lyn
.
:•
Cin. Oak Hill62, Cin. LaSalle 57
Cin. Mt. Nouc D1me 62, Day,. StebCUt Summit 6.5, Cin. Christian 47
first time (17-15) on a Tim Chris- auempts from the field, including dell Snvder, 0·1-0-3; Kyle Schroer,::
bi.nsSS
Cin. Tu1pin 67, Cin. Tafl65
Cin. Oak HillJ 61 , Cin. Sycamore 41
tian two . pointer at 10:07. From )5 of 37 three-~oint tries for 40 0-( . Q.. 3; Mark Erslan, 4.. 5.1 .. 24;;'
Cin. Walnut H.ilh 81, Cin. Harrison
Cin. St. Unula 64, Cin. Withrow Sl
46
there, R1o Grande remamed on top percent. At the line, they were 37 Waller Stephens, J.. J.Q-5; Brad ;
Cin. Wyoming 61, Cin. Reading 50
Cin. Woodward 87, Cin. Glen Este49
Cie.
Adams46,
Cie.
Kennedy
34
·
as
Donaldson penetrated the percent (3-8). -The team recorded Schubert, 1-3 ..0-11; Man Powell,: ·
Oaymont 64, New Phi.bdelphia 59
Cle. Bcallmont 76, Oc.. St. Augu·sunc
defense,
and Erslan and Matt Pow.. . 44 rebounds and had II turnovers. Brett Coreno, 1-1-3: Jeff Brown I · •;
Clc. Hay 97, Cle. Collinwood 69
22
Clc. Kennedy 72, Cle. Adams 66
ell
hit
some
key threes, to put the
Wilmington, under the supervi- 0-2; Tim Christian, 5-0·10· T;oy ;.
Cle. Collinwood 61, C\c. Hay S9
Oc. Rhodc.s68, Clc. Marshall 54
Cle.
E.
Tech
Sl,
Clc.
Sm.tth
40
hosts
behind
by
17
at
halftime.
sion
of second-season coach Bill Donaldson, 13 . 1·27; Rob Meade ::
Ck.. South 84, Clc. Eut Tec h 75
Cle. Erieview 59, Clc.. St. Jospch 40
Cc. West T~h -85, Cle. Ent 66
Nei
ther
team
's
shooting
had
Newland,
was 34 percent on its · 1-0..2. TOTALS28-1S-3-104.
·,.
Cle. GlcnvWe 43, Clc. Lincoln-West
Oeu Fork 47, Can:!inglon 46
29
been
effective
during
the
early
part
overall
shooting
(28-82,
9-26
from
Halrtime
score:
~io
Grande
;
Cleveland Ht&amp;. 68, LU:cwood 59
Clo. Marshall 65, Cle. Rhodes 34
Col. Dccchcroft 59, Col. Nol'lhland 48
of
the
half,
but
the
Redmen
.fin·
the
three
for
34
percent)
and
con..
47,
Wilmington
30.
C l~. Villa Angela 80, Clc. Regina 17
CoL Driggs 75, Col. South 71
ished !he period at 46 percent (20· nected on six of 14 trips to the line
Cle. W. Tech 63, Clc.. Eut S3
Col. Brookhaven i2, Col. E.nt 69
BriJIOll6, 0nNIV•U•yl~Ol'

In the NBA ...

Col. Marion· FnnkHn 64, CoL lnde·
pendente 62
Col. Milfiin 66, Col. Ccntcnn1al64
Col. Re~dy 92, ZanCiivi.llc ~OIIXnns

60

Col. Walnut Rid~c 86, Col. We:s t 69
Conneaut 92, Ashtabula 79
Crooksvi lle 61, Maywillc 56 ,P ,
D1y. CarroU57, Miamtsbu rg J4
Day. Chaminadc-Ju licnnc 65, lhmil·
ton Dadl.n 57
Day. Oakwood 76, Grecn~:vi..:w 4S
Day. Paucrson 85, raitbom 58
DcGnff Riverside 71, Rids.e:mont 64
Ocl•waM 63, Pickerington 61
Dovel 68 , Mincm 67
'
E. Cleveland -shaw 72, Normaridy49
E. Live:rpoo190, Wcinon, W.Va. SO
F1irbarW 63, W. Libtriy·Salcm 52
f•itficld Union 62, Tuys Va U. 35
f•irland 43, Gallipoli1 33
Feder• I Hocking '?1, Trimble 67
Franklin 69, Lemon-Monroe 61
Fnnklin Furna ce Green 65, Cod
Grove49
franon1 Roa: 51, Foctoria 44
Frontier 58, Skyvue47
Gahanna 67, G1lloway WC!i lland 56
G1t1way 16, Ridgewood 55
Geneva 61, Ash11bula St. John SO
Gnham 49, Urbina 40
Gnnd River .59, Orang~ Chr. 38
GnnviUc 54, Millersport ·H
Gm:non 77. Spring. Soulh 75
Grove City 55, Grov~pon 54
H.tmihon Rou I 00, New Miami 62
lhmiltc;Jn Twp. 74, Bloom-Ca rroll SB
llawken Sl , Lake Ridge 42
Hc.th 56, Berne Union49
Heritage Chr. 61. Menlor Chr. 4G
Hlllsboto44, Paint V1!. 39
Holland Spring. 57, Mllbury I..akcSl
Howland 88, Newton Falls 64
Hundrul, W.Va. 86.Beallsville 58
JCffcistw1 56, J•aincsvillc R.ivcnide 51
Kcnston 16, Otanac. 60
Kettering Alter '56, Cin. 1\itecll•Miri·
an46
Kc:!ttenng f ai.nno!"J_L63', F1irfh:ld 43
Keystone 61, Dlack Ri~cr 60
La_Dnc 56, Champi oo 55
' Lakt.land 68 , Newcomerstow n 49
Lancuw 83, Athens 60
Liberty Union 53, N~:w Alb1ny 50
Uc:iing Bu. 71, Fisher C.lh. 62
Little Mi•mi 76, CllnlOn·Maule 42
Lockland 52, Cin. St. Demud 47
Log1n Elm 69, ..Aman.da -C1elrcrcclt

Chr.41

Lulhonn W. 82, lnt!eorrtdenee 60
Lync:hllu'J Clo) SO: b nchcsoer 61
Malvern 1S, Tuacamwu C.th . 11

37 103101
31 lll 119
31 1'10 122
30 11 8113
;.&gt;r

Me;"

N.Y. hlllllden 4, Hanford 2

PiouburJh10, Sollooo2

Wuhlnaton 3, Quebet ·t
C•laary 7, WiM.ipe&amp; 4
Minn""" ~ lA Anp I
V1n&lt;:OJ.Vct 1, Dcltoit l
't.

~

'

· Tonight's games

Wllhin11011 ll Buf"C&amp;lo, 7:35 p.m.
Pbi.bdclphi• 1t N.Y. Ranacn:. 7:35
p.m.
.
Edmon~d\ 11 Tororuo, 7:35 p.m.

Mt. Onb Watem Brown 71, BCLhcl·

TateSI

l6

Thursday's games
Piwburglo llDOIUln. 7:3l p.m.

New Jersey &amp;t Hartford , 1:35 p.m.
N.Y. lslanden at Ph.UJdelphi&amp; , 1:35

p.m.

Monttc~latChieaao.l:lS

p.m.
San JOJe ll St. Louil,l :" p.m.
Queboc •• CaJaur. 9:35p.m.

Winl'lipc&amp; 11 Vancouver, 10:35 p1'm .

Major college
basketball scores
•

East

Ouunouth .56, Harvard 53

57

SOYLhum U. l&amp;, Aorida A&amp;M 72

Midwest

B•U s,.6l,lndiana Sl. 59
Muq~ 11, Miu. Valley SL 62
MichiJan Sl. 75, Ill...Qticaao 51
MinnCIOll 61, Octroit66
Ohio U. 7t1 Colorado S1. 54

Puniuc!Ol , SIOIIOn75

S. Wined 91, Sl. l..ouiJ 66 ,

Southwest
5l

Sculhcm Mall. 66, William &amp; Mary

UNLV", Aubum82

Ohio boys high school
basketball srores
Abort EUet 70, Copley 42
AkfCif\ Oarf'~ 61, Akron Hobtn 53
Akron So.Y·SI.M 69, ~ E. 63
An1hooJ W•yt~~-59, R~ll'ord 45
Aoioobtlll 91, M1dioon 40
A1wawCbr. 74, Kina'• Academy .58
Avon Lake S9, AVOII ~9
~
D~rncaville S2, B.U•RS,. lohn'•43
B•&amp;~vi• 62, Cin. Severt Hills 60
Sty Vi.llaae7-4; Garfield H11. 65
8-wood ll, Columb~ 56

s..-

11, o.r.Jctr"""' 65
Belloilol2. Edlo"' S. 54

Belp&lt;e 17. Nollon.Vl,.Yolk S6
Benjamin Loaan 67, Mochanltlb!.tf8
I

'·

Iedin Hi&amp;and 7l,Jeweu-Scio•l
Bioomlldd 69, Howlortd Cht. l6

..

New Richmond .58, Feiirity40

Newbury 16, Willo-Hill69
Nilct67, Young. Wiboo 54
Northwood 91, l&gt;anbury Lake~ide 47
Norwayne 52, l...ouiJ\'i.lle Aquil\ll 41
Oh.io Deaf 20, Xc:ni• WU.m 19
Olm•toi Falb 81, N. RidJeville 15
&lt;maon Clay 70, Syln!UI North.vtew

Ou.awa Hill161, Tol. Woodward 60
Painenillc Harvey 59, A1h~abul 1

Col. Independence 6S, Col. Muion·
Fmnklin 22
Col. Li nden-McKinley 53, Col
Whetstone 18
.
Col. Mifflin 61, Col. CenlCtlnial 39
CoL South 82. Col. Briass :11
Col. Wa!nut~idge 4 3 , Col. West 42
Columbia 31, Elyria Open Door 24
Copley 7.5, Akron Kenmore 34
Cuyahoga Falll S4, NordCI'Iil 46
Danville 84, E. Knok 20
Dublin Si, Grove City 46
E. Canton 53, Tuscanwu Vall. 42
Fairfitld Sl, Cin. Wesu:m Hills 34
Fairlcu 60, Air. ron Manche!tcr S7
Fra nklln·Monroe 52, Milton-U nion

31

OahaMa 39, Newark 33
Huntin&amp;ton 52, Wca;dall23
Kenton Ridge 60, Sprina. Catholic 39
Loaan 88, Llncaster 26
Lon in48, Lonin Ctth. 46
Loveland 67, C'tn. CAPE 29
Maple Hts. 54, Garfidd HLS. 48
Mitmi E. SI, Bradford 44
Norwood 43, Cin. GlCll Este J4
Ravenm 81, Barberton 51
Rev en: 62, Akron Elms 21
Reynoldsburg 61, Mt. Vernon S2
Sandy VaU. 59, Covcnll')' 40
Spring. North 42, Spring. Shawnee 31
' Springboro 46, Day. 01kwood 43,

OT

~

Tol. Wa ite 48, Fremont St. Joseph 37
Tree of Life 57, Sprin&amp; Vall. 22
Tusl1w 2!1, Kidron 25
UniotoSS, Richmond Dale SE44
Upper Scioto Vall . 79 . New
Knoxville 33
Vcruillea 75, Tri·Villlge50
W. Chester Lakota .54, Centerville 36
WapU:OIId.l4 1, St. Hen')' 26 1
Warmuville 44, Oc. Catholic 39
Wat.lr:in1 Memoria1 76, Franklin Hts.

30

62

Sorubu'l 67•Doltoo 60
SltOR&amp;J'ille 16. Bcru 49
Stn1ilicn f/1, Youna. Chaney 62
Tala wanda 119, Ecfaewood. 70
T""""Hb 66, Sprint. C1tholi&lt; 47
Tipp Citf 76, Day. Nollhrid&amp;e 43
To!. a.,;,;., 75, Mo"""' V•IL 6l
To!. R~cn 66, Del~ ll
·
Tot. Wbi.ura 71 , Bodford, Mich. 52
T0100107l. WelJ.,ille69,0f
Tree dl.ife7~ Sprina Vall. 69
Tri· Vdley 13. Philo"63- Triad 60, WaynCIIfield.Ooahen 53
Union Cily, Jnd . 76, Miuiui na 'f'a
Vall. 66
··
Union. Loca164, Shady1ide 43

Vallay View 94, Midd lt\own Madt·
100 70
•
VcnnilJon 51, E&lt;U.on 42
Victor)' Cu. 68, Calvary, Pa. S)
W. Bnach 12, CulQI S. 66
W. O..up .a, Twinlbwa37 .
W. Holnl• 'I • CoMOQCII 39

w.........,
CH 93, W
.Jetrm..,74
w•..a.. C..wooolli
62,

5&lt;

w.~~~~no

M.,orill 57, l'nnklin Ho.
0

Wnor!y II, Whoellnllu1J11
Wollio .... 64, Monnllhl Clv. 41
Wellaan 54, Vintot~ County 51

w-.;u. s. 60, Thomu Wonhina·

... 55
W1Uohlll70.~e43
Wi&lt;tllJfe60, O.•lrin fli11 Tl
WWllmlloora71, P•~ 64
WilJouahby I. 74, Kh1101d 11
)VinlorM!fe l2, o..... Loo:1149
Wol1hblpon Kilbow'ltu!l 52, Wut.er·
.W.N.47

YoWia. Uberty 62, Cortland Lake·
.•dow 39

In last season's District 22 play ..
offs, the College of Mount St.
Joseph women's basketball team
eliminated the University of Rio
Grande i~ the first round. At Lyne
Center Monday - the scene of that
earlier defeat - the Redwornen
turned the tables and toppled the
Lady Lions 71·66.
Coac hed by 21 -year veteran
Jean Dowell, MSJ entered the contest undefeated in eight starts,
ranked third wnong all all NAIA
schools in defense for holding their
opponents to an average of 45
points, and ranked in scoring mar .
gin. Small wonder, then, that Red ..
women Coach Doug Foote took
pleasure in the victory as his team
w.entto JO.. I overall and pushetl its
winning strealc to seven.

"This was a sweet win," Foote
noled, his hoarse voice . a testament
to the bigh level of personal
involvement he brought to the
game. "We played well defensively .,
·and we rebounded well. Other than
shooting ihe ball, we played very
well and very smart down the
stretch."
The-Redwomen opened s!rQngly
against MSJ, placing seven points
on the board and holding the visitors' offense down for more than
three minutes. But the Lady Lions
soon made up for lost time,
advancing to a one-point lead (8· 7)
at 15: 28 on Carla Siegel's field
goal.
From there, and for the remaindeY of the half, the teams
exc han~ed the lead by one or two

298 SECOND ST.
POMERO't OH.

DE~ru DEC. 21,1991

·REG.

Sp9rts briefs

s
09
Breasts•••••••••••••• 1

ZESTA
SALTINES

LB.

'14·Pork

Loin••••••

CUBED

$139

1POUND BOX

LB.

99(

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Pork Steak••••••••
'

LB.

9.
t
LunchTurkey·s.............. 9
$. 29
T·Bone Steak•••••• 3

FLAVORITE ASSORTED

~

BUnERBftLL lO·LBS. &amp; UP

WELCH'S
GRAP-EJtL[
32 OZ. JAR .

t••

99(

USDA CHOICE BEE~

.

'·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS B_
EEF

Baseball
Leaaue
MINNESOTA TVIINS - Agn.:cd to
tc.:nna .with Bob J(jppcr, piu:her, on 1 one·
yu.r COillliC\,
Am ~ r lcan

c.,,,.,

Dasketbatl
N• tlonal Duketball Auotiation
SAN ANTON IO SPt1RS - Sisncd
Morlon Wil ey, guucl . Wa ived Avery
John•on, 4uud , and lu d Buec hl er, forWitd . Aettvlled. Terry Cummings. for·
ward, from the injured Wt.

••

IJtllllnt Eilll1n

Football

,.,,~,,

NaUona l FOOI.ball League
NFL - Fined Eus_e nc Rob inson
Se~ttlo dcfen1ive back, SS,OOO fo r urin8
the crown of his hdmet to au-ike 1nolher
player during a game played Dec. 8.
CINC INNA TI BENGALS Pl1ced Ltwls Blllupt •nd Mad Jonet 1
corner.Q.ukl, and P1ul j euon 1 aua rd,
on lnJurtd re1uve. Signed Jay Kodt,
ll&amp;ht end; Tom Wa11on, llnllhllcker; and
Mel W11era, runnlne b11ck, In Lh c prac.

Chuck . Roast•••••••
BALLARD'S l :LB. ROLL or 10 OZ. LINK
.Sausage.......

L••

$ 159

'

DEL MONTE .

$149

32 OZ. BTL

991(

·.

,,,.,, 14

PAGE

PAPER
TOWELS

~q uad.

R, .
signed Steve Pclluer, qua11.crinck. W1 ivt:d
Troy Sadow&amp;ki, ti&amp;ht end.
· NEW YOR )( JETS - Placed Dale
D1wkins, wide tceciver, on the non-foot ·
br.U injury ~It, .A3nled to term~ with Raul
Allegre, placclt!ckc.r.

RED EMP~ROR or WHITE CALMER lA

Hockey

LB.

Lc.gU&lt;.

ChridmaaJa
coming,
Santa it
near.
Sfiop at
Piekena
Hardware
For Sleda,
"
Wagona and
Trieyeltt thi1
'

rear~

PICKENS
HARDWARE
&amp;WON,WV.

..

9(
6 3
$] 79

Grapes••••••• ~·····
BRgUGHTON.
_
2%» Mdk••••••••••
. , BSLUE BONNdEt
··~ ' s129
prea ••••••••••••.

Nallunalll odtcy lA'IIIIUil
1-L\RTHJRO WHALERS - Sent Joe
D1y, c~nter, and 01r1s Tancill. right wing.
to Spnngficld of the Amencan ll6ckcy

Wguc.

-

SQUEEZE
CATSUP

LB.

KANSAS CITY Cfll EFS -

SAN JOSE SllAR.KS- Recalled J'lc.
let Lappin, right wing, and Rick Lcmrd
1nd Pat hh cleod, dcfcnscmcn. rrom
K ll n U&amp; City of the lntcma t.ion•l Hockey

OZ.

SPLIT CHICKEN

•

·:

•

$~.49-14

$1 59

goat:

TRUMBULL, Conn. (AP) - &gt;
Ian Woosnam of Wales. who won &lt;
five events worldwide including:
the Masters, has been named World;Player of the Year by Golf Digest.··
Woosnam_ was selccte!l. by editors:
of Golf Digest and its sister publi-; ·
cation, Golf World of Britain.
•_

MR. BEE

POTATO
CHIPS:

times before Kathy _S~yder's basket' ,
at 2:18 put the hosts ahead by three;.
(28 .. 25). The visitors, led by bal::!
anced ·scoring from guards J od1,.
Pacltz and Amy Sutter and 6-5 cen ..•.
tcr DeAnn Schroeder, quickly woO:.; ·
back the lead (31·28 with 1:14;
remaining. Stephanie Gudorf's
for Rio Grande put tlie Redwomen. ~
(See RED WOMEN on Page 8) •.

Transactions

ShenandOah 66, Watel'ford 61
Sheridan 65, Riv et View 40
Solon 10. Clwdon 63 ·
Soulhwc.tem 13, Elyri• Fint Baptist

Steubtnville 1S, Whec.tina (W.Va.)
Pari 70

1rr --

.

•
••.
.
po ints"and tied the score three ·

--

tlt:c

32 OZ. BAG.-r.

Redw.omen edge district leader 71-66

Wellingtpn 47, M~rtnatha Chr. 41
Wh.ilChaU 66, Mary1ville 3.5
Z..nesville 84, Marictt146 ·

Rod&lt; llillll, P""""..U. E. 71. or
S. Webct.cr 12. Lu.cuvillc Vall. 6.5
Shaket Uta. 72, Panna 59

Urblo•~9.tn.luon40

Far West

51

New BOlton 6l, ln1111on S1. J01eph 52
New Lninaton 58, W. Muskingum

H.ubor 54 .
Pcrryablll&amp; 79, Sylvania Southview
ll
Pon~mou1h W. 97, Porumou.lh Nolle
Oame51
·
RcynoMibwJ 49, Ml. Vemoo.41
R.ichmood-Hw. 66, €\ayahoJ• Hu . 63
Ri,., 104. Woodll'tcld 60
Ri...,;de11',llidacmon• 64

Soulh
Ala.·Dirmiftiba.m 90, Tulu 7S
Arbnut Si. 64, Miuiuippi 62
•:
Ooorai• Sou\hcm 106.Bn:wton·P11k·
,- er9 1
·
~" ·
LSU 101, SI!.Lou.ia i•m 64
North C..rolina 98, Jacksonv ille 81
ScuLh Alablma lOS. NoM Teut 98
Soulbem M.iu. 95 , Tenncucc Tech

10

Maplewood 66, Windham S6
Maumee 44, Bowlin&amp;
Moyfiold ll, Loke Ci~ . 46
Medina 6I,Brtd.avi.Ue 50
Middlaown Fen wick 66, l.d».non 63
Midviow 60, Mcdim Buckeye 44
Miller 73,
68
Minen-1 61. Dover 67
Minford 63, McDermOtt NW 40
Mirtao 81, U.on N. 44
Mopd«t 74, Rittman .59
Moqan S9, John Glenn S6

Green,.,

17 191.51

Tuesduy's scores

Col. Dcechcroft 6S, Col. Nonhland 46

Col. Brookh•ven45, Col. Eut41 ,_

63

Louisville 15, CarmUton .5 1
Li.ither.tn E. .59, Cuya hoga Valley

STORE HOURS
·MQnday thru Sunday
· ·aAM·lO PM

YoworR•)tii&amp;6,AklonBucl&gt;"l77

•

With wreaths of holly and misaletoe, slockings hung
. by the fire and scenes blank~~~.~ . withi11o~,
Christm~a8 encompasses warmth and good cheer as we
cherish the blessings we've shared ahis pasl year.
For us it means saying ~~thanks'' to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always
treasure. Doing business with you is our
greatest p~easure!

GAUON

•

3 LBS. ·

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6'
9
(
TV Dinner·····••tJG-12 oz. .
Flour-......:.................s
69(
Hot Cocoa Mix.1omv. 99 Frozen Pizza•••

GOLD MEDAL

LB.

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
Decerp,ber 24th.

.

CAf:NATION
•

99(

BANQUET

_:_ --·

.

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(

GAR-

· CRACKE~S
16 oz.

THE I)AILY SENTINEL

5

49

1 ..

v•

Gted Only AI Powtll' I Sopor
Oflor Gted bet. 15 Ifill Dt&lt;. 21, I991
IJonh I Por C11lt111or

Gted Olllr At Powell' 1 SuP!' Valu
Offor Goo• Doc. IS thro Doc: 21, 1991
• . lllllltl Pll (UtOlllif .

~·

TOILET TISSUE

]49'

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~·-

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$1

GRO·UND -~

BEEF

•

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$

3 9_0

CHEF BOY·AR·DEE
•,

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRENDA
OR DAn:
..
992-2156

LARGE lOLl

12
ROlL

$2' 59

Good Only At Powell's Supor Valu
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Umltl Pw &lt;u11omor .

1 OL

CAKE MIXES

5
~~~2

/1

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on. Gte• Doc. IS thruDtc. 21, 1991
llollt 2 Por (111tomor

GROUND
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10 LB. PACKAGE

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s9o

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�-.
Page 6-The Dally

Se~n~t~ln~el~llllll!~-""""~~~---~~~=2;~~~~~~-.;;._;;_..,111111~-..:_~...........~~=:=~:=:=~~~

otu·
unity
Minded Superm.arket

~
.

· .

·.

Wednesday, Dec:ell!ber 18, 1•1 :
.
...... 7:

~~: ------~-------~--------~---------------------------~------~----~~~---·
~
----~------~--~-------------~r----------------------

"

. . •

rj

~ -·-.-.:eat vfthe Bend::;:

,.••

by Bob Hoeflich

•'

.,'
I'

----

:·

., """"'-~~
.
;; · The emphasis tbc put rew days
&gt;" niis lieen on ""lailt minute shop·
·: ping•. That's according 10 the
:• advertisements. How quaint of
:· me-l thought last minute shop·
;l ping_was 'Yhat one did on tbc day
,; bet'ore Christmas. Well, wbatever,
'· the ~ig day is just a wedc away so I
.; will concede that if you aren 'I
• ready you'd beuet be getting lhere.

·
·
Vaughan. She and-her husband-.
Your-f'riMd, ~ Dick, went out or town fQl' a few
Jessca Roush
days--lo the nor)hem -~ of the •
state. RubY. beeline ill. The problems didn t let up and Rubf. was
Dear Santa
hospitali?tJC! A gall bladder opera. tion wa~ necessary. By the time
If I would haVe got three more
you read this Ruby just ·may .be
ints, I would have been on the
back to Middleport. A revoltin' honor 1'911. I hope you have a good
Christmas. My. home number is
development, to ~Y lhe least.
~
~-·
160 Butternut Ave. All I want for
•: Seasonal congratulations to
Jane Brown of Pomeroy has ·Christmas is a football outfit, bas·• Clarence and Julia Boyles. Tiley received word of lhe death of a ketball, super Nintendo, and bas·
: will be observing their 58th wed· nephew, Michael DOman ·or Seai- ketball court.
. , ding annivmarton Dec. 21. Both Ue, Wash .
.Your friend,
:• are lifelohg resulents ol Meigs and
Oerek Waller Michael
Michael ,was a medical doctor
l cards will-reach tbcm at 778 Oliver involved in researc~ of rare dis,: St., in Middlepon.
eases. He recelved his training at
Rice University and then Baylor.
; Paul Voss whom many of you He was wrapped up in his work.
Dear Santa
,, know is se&amp;IChing for a copy of lhe Dr. Doman was the s6n of Leona
I have been good, San~ Claus. I
J l960 paperback publication called Priode Doman, Jane's yOwlger siS· like' you; Sania Claus very much. I
I The Harris History. It was wnnen
ter; and Bob Doman. Mr. and Mrs. hope you bring me what I want
by the' late Charlie Harris, a fonner .Ooman visited Jane in Pomeroy Santa Claus. I want a Nintepdo and
editor of The Adlens Messenger. If only a couple of weeks ago. The a doll.
, you have a.copy of lhe book a 101 Domaris reside in Danville, Ky.,
Garnett Bonecutter.
:: of which deals with Meigs County these days. They lu!ve two others
•~ and you are willing 10 sell it, just son, Eilward of COnling, N. Y., and
': let me know. I'll be glad 10 get in Robert of Lexinglon, Ky. Dr.
.• touch with Paul.
•
Dear Santa
Doman was the eldest of the !rio.
I have been good this year. Even
The heart tree at tbc courthouse
Speaking of doctors, ~r. ~nd you been g09d this year. Thank .
: done during the holiday season by Mrs. Marie Brown are expenencmg you for last year's !lifts. I'm in sec· the Meigs Division of the Amen- a bit of homesickness in lheir new ond grade. I wisli you Merry
• can Hean Association has 10 dozen location after leaving ,good old Christmas. I want a bike and my
• hearts on it now. Two more dozen Meiss County. You might Want to brother wants Tomado-re~.
: hearts have arrived and 12 of lhem cheer them up a bit with a•ChristYour friend,
: are lllready taken leavjng 12 more . mas card. The addressjs.4 Fe4eral
J. D..Jenkins.
, hearts available..-- If you'd like to St.. P.O. Bo~ 243." Bar H~rbor, .
: place-one of the 1Jqe puffy-hearts 'MaiRe; 04609. They'd love 10 hear
• on the tree in memory of a loved from their Meigs Couniy friends .
: oiie just contacl Sandy Janoerelli •• and patients.
Dear Santa
: 992-7039 or 992-7606; Denver or
I have work~ hard in school,
• Nora Rice; 992-3759; Donna Carr,
If you're having trouble' getting second grade. I am seven years old.
: 992-3222, or Millie Midkiff, 992- the wrapping done, perhars, you I want a tornado-rex and a army
: 5728 or 992-21~. The cost is $5 can brown ba~ a few o those hat.
·
: per heart. •
Nicholas
Bowles.
·
gifts-after aU, if it's good enough
•
for lunch,J t can ..be good enough
• A- bad-experience for Mid&lt;lle- for Christmas. Do keep smiling.
., port business woman, Ruby
' · ·
Dear Santa
I love you Santa, and I am in
:,·l
second grade. Will'you be nice to
me arid I will be nice to you. I want
· and
~..Nintcndo
andfootball.
a gun, and truck,
:'l• Community Calendar Items and square "·--·
""'""' wil1 be held pnknife, and
·'appear two dllys before 1111 event day from 8 to 11:30 p.m. at the
DonaidEaki
~laJld the day of that eveJ!I. Items Tuppers Plains VFW Hall sponns
' •must be rteelved well in' adVllnce sored by the VFW Post No. 9053
: \to usurelp\lbllatlon In tbe tal· .. and Ladies Au;tiliary . The band
• 'endar
·
will be CJ. and lhe Country Gen':
'
tlemen. The .Public is invited to
Dear Santa
,
WEDNESDAy
auend.
I liked the gift you brought me
l~ SYRACUSE • The Third
·
last year. I think Cbrisun~ is good.

rim Your
Holiday Bud
.

SUPERIORS

TAVERN
BONElESS ·HAM
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

12·15 LB.

AVG.

,

IS SEEN

Llmll One With $1 0.00
or More Addlllonal

ON

LB.
~--

..

I have worked hard at s~;hool
and I have been ·good this year. I
would like a Santa Claus suit and a
puppy for Christmas.
. Caleb Ellis

p
. o

·-.•

- .

Dear Santa
I love you, Santa..My Dad and
Mom love you too. I been very
gOO&lt;!. I have a neat [I)Cket. Merry
Christmas.
.
.
.Kennetl! Edward Large

Dear Sanla
I have helped Uncle Mark work
on·Dad's car. Can you bring my little sister a baby doll that crawls
and walks and Dad a tool set and
me a basketball hoop and Mom a
brass doll.
Your friend,
Kris Van Meter, People's Terrace.

l

DiiJ

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

..

l have been very good: 1 want a
new Ninlendo and a new bike and a
baby doll.
. .
Carolyn Bentz

DeitSanta
Thank you for all the gifts you
brought me. l've ,been ·good this
year. I'm sev.en years old. If you
· can. please bring me a swffed Dal·
malion and a peppa- mint kitty~

Purchase

ASSORTED

P·EPSI ·COLA
2 LITER

BOTTLE

PEPSI

I

1

Llmh one with coupon and $10.00 additional purcliaae. Good thru

:

I

12/21191.

I

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24 PACKS
CANS

5

I

$ 9.9

I

I

'f

····---- ~ --- ~ -----~---·-···············

Your friend
John Wilson

Dear san~a •
I been very good this year.
Santa you gave me good things last
year. 1 lo_ve you Santa. 1 have one
sister, her name ~Kimberly. !like
a pQny and Some the hedgehog,
and I wish that I have medicine.
y
f· d
our nen
Crystal Lemley ·

Dear Santa
My name 'is Kris. I'm 7 arid I
want a wrestling ring. My brother,
Tyj).r is 3. He wantS a movie. My
twm brothers"want a shoe to chew
on.
Byc Salila
Kris

Woodmen celebrate holidays

.. ,

.$

·
2
5
iCE CREAM
VELVE~ OLDE MILL

HERR'S

POTATO

ROUNDS

FOR

•

'

CHIPS

l60Z.

· ~. .

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-·

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TUPPERS PLAINS • A round
: . .--------,

In the
•
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•

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SWEET EMPEROR

GRAPES
I ILl

SHELLED

· .lULl

SHELLED
PECANS

$49f Ll.

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LB.

•

Let Us. larva
Your
.
leads
For the
'
Holiday Ieason~
We have Party Trays,
Fruit and Chiesa
Baslcats which make
.
great gilts.
.

FOODLAND COUPON
I

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ASST. FLAVORS

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BEm CROCKER

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WITH COUPON. GOOD THRU 121211111

Wo 11toono 111o A""' Ia Llml _.utloo,• Pr1aoo EfllcH.. tllru Sit., Doo. 21, t881 • USDA Food 81- ond WIC Coupono Acolplod • Mol RMponlllblo lor Typogtophlcol or Plctarlol EIIOIO.

•

,

mJ

I

•

• · Ainnan Timothy R. Parsons has
: 'graduated from Air Force basic
• training a1 Lack! and Air Force
: Base, Te~as.
·
' During the six weeks of training
,the ainilan studied Air Force mis·
:'sion, organization and customs and
~· rt&amp;Cived special training in human
• relations.
·
' In addition, airmen who com: plete basic training earn credits
:toward an associate degree through
: the Community College of the Air
..'rorce.
,: He is. the -son of Jackie L. Part~ns of Gallipolis, Ohio and·Sandra
K Rash of 301 Avondale Road,
jAbingdon, Va. .
&lt;(oC •
~~ . The 'airman is a 1991 graduate
of Gallia Academr High School.
j)allipolis.
·

,.,

I

food fish

.

FORTMYER~. Fla. (AP) w~ wale!S. off Flonda, Cuba nd
_Wahoo fJSh , ~.h.!.ch live. in the _~~est Ind1es, ofte!l 81'Q.W 10 S Of-

Program sla't'ed

6 feet long and about 140 poundS
in weight
•
. The Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
, Fishermen know the wahoo q
an energetic fighter and a go~
Church will present its annual food fish. ,!t .has a poinred snout;~
Christmas program on. Sunday at 1 long cigar-shaped body and a dol'•
p.m. The public is invited to attend. sal fin. .
'

·•

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·II

·

Santa.Claus bad treats for the
· children and Frances Henderson,
Coolville, led Chdstillas carols·. .
Drawings for pmes from the
Christmas tree were held following
the Christmas dinner. A Christmas
sharing collection was taken to provide food baskets for the needy.
Edna Forrider, Torch Food Pantry, ·
thanked members of the camp for
the 2,3'25 received from Camp
10900 Malf:hing Fund Drive.
Camp officers were elected and
include John Breedlove, Coolville:
C.W. Henderson and Gamer Gnffin·, Alfred: Donald Elliott. II,
Guysville: Donald Dunfee, LJttlc
Hocking: and Louise Dav• s,
Coolville.
, Fruit plates and oyster stew
were takClno shut-in members.

-~-

: · PORTLAND· The Lebanon
· Township Trustees will meet Fri: day at 10 a.m. at the township
: building'for a special meeting.

•

mas. •

:fcOffiffiUfll•ty ca1endar.

Club will·meet
at the
POME~~~~R-&amp;!YRoyal Oak
·-ljWednesday
municipal building
in Syracuse
on
: !Wednesday at noon. From there the . Dance Club will present its annual · The annual Christmas party of
. ;:1group will go to Mason Restaurant Christmas dance on Saturday from the Modem Woodmen of America,
, :to eat at 12:30 p.m. A pu:ty will be 8 to .11 P:m. at Royal. Oak ResorL Camp 10900, '!las held I'Cl:ently at
;.held Iacer at the borne of Mary Kay Mus1c w1ll be provided by The the Coolville L10ns Club. .
·!Yost. There will be a gift exchange. Doug Hess Combo. The 1992 club
The opening service included a
:•
membership due's can be paid at prayer by Thelma Clegg, Torch:
::
THURSDAY
any time before March I.
the Pl~ge of Allegiance by Robert
•· MIDDLEPORT · The MiddleDaugheny, Nelsonville: the Wood: 'port Child Conservation League
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist men's Creed by Roberta Pullins
; ·will hold its annual Christmas party Church will present its annual and "God Bless America" by MarO:on Thursday a·t 6:30p.m. at the Christmas program on Saturday jorie Malone, Cooiville.
...
: 'home of Helen Blackston. Gifts and Sunday at 7'p.m. nightly. The.
Peter Couladis, · Auditor of
• 'and food for'needy families should adult play is .titled "A Family Athens County, and Howard Rus· be brought that evening. Secret sis- Christmas Eve" and is under the sell, Mayor qf Coolville, and Fed: ters will be revealed.
·
direction of Dan Hood. The chil- eral Hocking School Transporta,
. drens program is titled ''The Binh tion Supervisor, were chosen as the
: RACINE . The Racine Ameri· of Baby Jesus" and is under the 1991 recipients ofthc ·Modern
• can Le$ion will meet Thursday at.· direction of Mr$. Sandi J.on~, Pas- Woodmen of America Community
; 7:30p.m. at the post home.
.
tor !~mes R. Acree Sr. mv1tes the Service Award for conscientious
•
pubbc;
and dedicated community service.
~ SYRACUSE • "The Mall and
·
; the Night Visitor" will be presenred
HENDERSON, W.VA. : The
• by swdenrs at Syracuse Elemenrary Gallia Twirlers Western Square
; on Thursday at 7 p.m. The public is Dance Club will hold a dance Sat:
! invited to aucnd.
unlay friim 8 to II at the Hender.'
·•
soo Community Ceqter. The caller
:
FRIDAY
will be Bill Gene Evans and the
LONG BOITOM • The Faith public is invited to attend.
l Full G9spel Church in Long Bot( tom _will present its Chrisunas pro- . ,--~~------,
.' gram on Friday at 1 p.m. Pastor
~ teve Reed invites the public.
MIDDLEPORT
: Refreshments and fellowship .will .
-' follow ·
-'
MERCHANTS-

•

Dear San1a
I like what you got me and my
brother for Christmas. I like what
you got me. I want another teddy
bear, I want a new Nintendo'. I
.want to go to Wisconsin ori Christ- ..

a

c

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM • Hllblde Baptist Church will present Its ainual Christmas program on Saturday·and Sunday at 7
p.m. nighUy. The adult play is titled "A Famil~ Christmas Eve"
and Is under the dlrectioo .ot Dan Hood. Tbe'chlidrens program is
titled ''The Birth ot Baby Jesus" and is un,der the direction 'or Mrs.
Sudi Jones. Pastor James R. Acree.Sr.lnvites the public.

liT. 2

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PRONE 675-1S7l

GALUPOUS FERRY. WV

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�.
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Miller hands Meigs
~

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-,-

7_3-~S ·loss
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··:·

· Wednesday, December 18, 1991

'

-weanesday, Decem tier 18,1991

Tuesday

+.""

I

By DAVE HARRIS
·
Dougheny.
But the Marauders.could get no County 54·51. Meigs will travel to
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs came QUt in the secon·d closer, because rwice Meigs missed Vinton County to tangle with the
Miller outscored Meigs 23-llil, period and took a 19-14 lead on a foul shots in the last minute that Vikings on Frid;!y evening.
_
the third period to pulhway frollla-.basket py !-lawley and a three- c-ould havecut the leano -two. Qu~rter tQtals
,three-point ~ftime lead IIIII . .. pointer from . Trevor Harrison. Larry Lannin$ i~ the win for the Me1gs ................. 14 15 12 27- 68
held of{ a furious Marauder tli~Ro-~- Miller came-back and regamed tJ:ie:__-Falcons by.::hnung both-ends of a M{ller:;;-.:::;;::;:;;:;t4 18 23-18 = 73
~-baJ~k to defeat-Meigs-73-68 in Tri~
- ~lead at 22:21 ona bucket by Larry one-and-one with 48 seconds left to
MEIGS (68) ...... Frank Blake OVa !ley Conference basketball Lanning with 5:381eft in the half.
give the Falcons a 72-661ead.
. 1-0=3, John Bentley 5-4-0=22, L.
action Tuesday evening at HemIn the_m~time the Maraud~rs
Miller placed four players in J. Mitch 2-0-6=10, Jay Creme;ms
lock.
. .
were. gettmg mto fo~l tro~ble, w1th double figures with Joey Smith 3-0-0=6, Shawn Hawley 5-0-0=10,
ne loss was the fustm tl!ree_. Hawley and L.J. M1tch Sittmgout · leading the way with 17 points·, Trevor Harrison 3·-2·5"17.
games for the ~uders, and Jtves the fmal two mmutes of the penod. Bruce Lanning added 16-;- Brady TOTALS....: iH-7·11=68 ·
Me1gs a 1·1 marie~ the TVC. The M11ler · took advantage of the Dougherty 13 and Larry Lanning ~MILLER~(-73) -~ Larr-y LanFalcons. even the1r record at 2·2- Marauders foultrobbl~ and took a 12. Miller hit 29 of 54 (one of ning 4-0-4=12, Bruce Lanning 6-0and 1-2 m.the TVC.
. .. 1, 32-29 lead into the locket room at seven treys) from the floor for 54% 4=16, Shad Watkins 0-1·1=4, Paul
Both teams traded baskets ll'ille the half when Dougheny came up and 14 of 26 from the line for 54%. Dougl)erty 0-0·1= I, Willie Peyton
flfStperiod, with the Falcons ~g with a steal and a lay-in that just Miller grabbed 33 rebounds with 3-0·0=6. Eddie Paige 2-0-0=4,
the early 12-81ead at the 2:17.mark beat the buzzer and gave the Fal· Willie Peyton and Dougheny get· Joey Smith 7-0-3= 17, Br·ad
on a bucket by Bruce Lanning.
cons the momentum heading into ting six each,
Doughty 6-0·1=13. TOTALS The Marauders took a ~4 : 12 the second half.
.
.
John Bentley led the Marauders &lt; 28-1-14=73
lea? Wllh 49 seconds left 11 tbe
The. Falcons came out on fire m with 22 points including 12 from
'
penod on a bucket from t h e - the_second half ~nd outscored three point range. Trevor Harrison
by Shawn Hawley; but the Fllcons Me1gs 17-6 aud taking a.51-351ead added 17 despite double and triple
tiedthegameat14attheendollhe w1th 1:361eft on a ba~ket by . teaming al\ night, and Mitch and
penod on a bucket by Brady Dougherty. John Bentley h1t a long Shawn Hawley chipped in with 10
three pointer to cut the lead to 13 each. Meigs htt only 25 of 73 (7-22
w1th I :28 left, but the Falcons built in treys) from the floor for an ice·
the lead back to 14 (55-41) on a cold 34% and II of 21 from the
(Continued from Page 4)
bucket by Dougheny with six sec- line for 52 %. Meigs had 35
onds left. ·
rebou'nds with Mitch and Harrison
behind by one at the half.
Miller kept ~p the pac~ in the getting seven each and 'Bentley six .
Rio Grande's offense, wb:•
Meigs won the reserve game 42included 38 percent shootinJ i(tle final pen~ takmg a 19 pomt lead
first period, exploded soon tnl&amp; the (61-42) With 6:40 left m the game 32 giving the Little Marauders a I·
second half as Gena Norris and on a short Jumper by Larry Lan- 2 mark and 1-1 in the TVC. Brad
Mindy Montgomery broke loose to ning. With 4:07 left the Falcons Anderson Je(l tbe way with 11, Jack
give th.e Redwomen their first still held a 65-48lead when Eddie Stanley added 10 and Jeremy
breathing space (45-38) sinc_e ~e Pa1ge scored off the offensive Grimm and Eric Wagner seven
boards. But Meigs picked up the each.
game's begmning. ·
.
tempo
and outscored the Falcons
In other action around the TVC
MSJ crept back to again 811111:~~
BURONS and BOWS
18·5
in
the
nex~
3:14
cutting
the
Tuesday
evening, Federal Hocking
REVERSE LAYUP'- Meigs Marauder Trevor Harrison (rig_ht)
away the advantage, but lhe, ~
gets past an unidentified Miller player for a reverse layup durmg
capitalizing on their 47-reMiililll lead to 70-66 with 53 seconds left defeated Trimble 77-67, Belpre
Tuesday night's TVC contest at Hemlock, which the Falcon~. won
performance for the game lid m the game on a bucket by Ham- down ed Nelsonville- York 77' 56
and Wellston knocked off Vinton
some of MSJ's 21 turnovafs, son.
inched ahead. Snyder's three-peillter 314: 32 gave Rio Grande a 64-59
lead, but MSJ once more tied dle
or buy one at regular
score at 64 (2: 46).
·
]ll'iat &amp; get secand one
Michelle Crouse' s trey ·24
onds later helped lift the Rio -!!'\·
lei
Out•of danger.
· /2
Norris and Snyder Were lhl·iJilh,~~
. (Equal or:l!sHr Value) ,
· scorers with 15 points apjece, - ... ,~.IJI1C
Snyder also brought down nile
Savings throughollt
boards. In addition to Mclllt· ·
the store on all fall and:
gomery's 14 markers, Bllflitz
AM·
PM!
chipped in 10. Norris, the w.il's•
holiday clothing.
starting point guard in aU II ~
Wirer; You C11n Buy Ou11lity Furniture
to date, held her turnovers
If You Don't Mind P11ying A Little Less!
while the team as a whole had 21: '
Riu Grande was 35.5 percCII on
its shootin~ .~o nnectillS._Dil 22 of
-62 attempts, mcludmg e1gfit of
STATE ROUTE 124
(rom the three .for 26.7 percent At
MAIN ST.
RUTLAND, OHIO
the foul line, they were 63.' 3 per·
POMEROY, OHIO
cent (19·30) .
Christina Schreiber le41
teammates with 13 points,
Janine DeLong came off u •. , . _...
to add II. Suncrr.and Julie LiellleJJ·
ner eaeh
had 10. Schroeder had nine of
MSJ's 44 rebounds.
The Lady Lions were 38.4 percent from the field (24-66) and
• "
failed to connect on its twe .
attempts at the three. At the lile, f .
they were more successful, ~I · .
18 of 25 for 72 percent.
~.
••
. '
The Rcdwomen will breat:foc
the' holidays and resume plax Fri- ·
day, Dec. 27 against Baldwiw-Wal- .
lace in the opening game of B-W's
two-day tOU(nament in B«ea, ;·
Ohio. MSJ (8-1) faces Urbana on
the road Thursday.
Box score:
'
RIO GRANDE (71)- Otna
BAGS DEER- Chad Schuler, 12, killed his first deer as a first· Norris, 3-2-3-15; Michelle CI'IIB,
lime hunter d~ring this past deer harvest. Here he is pictured with 1-1·4-9· Jackie Hannon 0-3·1·
his prize, an eight-point buck. The deer was shol'on the farm of his Mindy Montgomery, 1-3-3-14;
Ann Barnitz, 4-2-10; Stephanie
great-grandparents, Everett and Teresa Schuler, near Rutland.
.. .,.
Gudorf, 1-1-0-5; Kathy Snyder, 41-4-15. TOTALS 14·8·19-71. .
MOUNT ST. JOSEPH (U) N~Y
Jodi Paeltz, 2-3-7; Amy Suuer.).,
......
4-10 ; Janine Delong,3 -S-U;
~- Meigs held off a last second
Nelsonville-York (52)- Susan DeAnn Schroeder, 3-3-9; WrayNelsonville-York comeback bid Crawford 1·0·3=5, Jill Shafer 0·2· Jean Connor, 1-0-2; Julie Liedhegand went on to defeat the host 1=7, Christina Warren 7.-0-1=15, ner, 4-2- 10; Carla Siegel, 2-0-4;
Buckeyes 53-52 in girls Tri-Valley Stephanie McLaughlin 4-0-2= 10, Christina Schreiber, 6-1 - 13.
Conference basketball action Mon- Debra Balckburn 3-0-1=7, Becky TOTALS 24-18•66.
day evening.
Halftime score: Mount St.Rosser 2-0-4=8. Totals- 17-2- ,
The Lady Marauders remain 12=52
Joseph 31, Rio Grande 30.
unbeaten in six ~ames and hold a
4-0 TVC mark tied for first place
with Belpre. The Golden Eagles
,
travel to Rock Springs to play the
Marauder$ on ThurSday evening.
It was a see-saw game all the
.
.·
··- ·... -way as neither team led by more
..
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•
than three points. NelSOnville had a
,
· chance--to win the. game late but ·
missed a three-point
the
.. .
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--Marauders cleared the -rellOUild:--:-- 1~ -·
·
· ·

Past Councilors Club
meets
~S~lth; "The
illa ,;

••i

The' Past Councilors Club of Esther
Me..
Chester Council No. 323, D@ugh- Chnstmas by JoAnn Bawn;"' AI(
ters of America, ha!l.its_Christrnas .December!' bY lnzy Newel;~
.
·
meeting, pro~ and gift hercjs Story" by Lallfl _Mae Ni!x!~- __
at the 'Farnlly~RestauranT- ''Reminders ~f Cfiristm~a· bY:
recendy: ~
~-Goldie Fredenck; "A CbriltDiif
The
asked by Mae Quiz" by Ethel Orr; "A ~
McPeek and
Maxey presided Prayer" by Erma Clelan4. · . ~
at the meeti!ig, She read' ffom the ' Christmassongs wereJ uni ~ .
book-of Luke. ·
the members and a gift eJ~.C~
The Lord's Prayer and Pledge of was held. Door prizes were won· .'
Allegiance were given in unison.
Sadie Trussell, Erma Cle1an ,
Mary Jo Barringer gave tbe sec- Bulah Max_ey, Mae
· •
-,,_,.,_.n~&lt;Wrand JoAnn Baum
.,...Bary Roush7Miey .
gave
treasurer's repon.
and lnzy Newell
Betty Young thanked the club cookies and punch.
,. ~ •
ll)embers for their gifts and cards
Attendtng ..,er~ Ada Bi11c11;.
while she was in the hosjJiial.
Alt;l Ballard, Marc~a Keller, .L!lr( •
Eliz~beth Hayes gave each Damewood..Ethel Orr, Opal Hoi-; ·
member a copy of the new hostess Ion, Erma Cl~land 1 ~aragre~
committee for 1992 as well as a Amber~er, Goldie Fredenck, 1.,1111(
·homemade key chain she made.
Mae Nice, Sadi~ TrusSell, lbelmat
Thelma White ·and Faye White, Faye Kirkhart, Charlot~
Kirkhart conducted the Christmas Grant, Mary Jo Barringer; Beti~
program in ,which the followin g Roush, Inzy Newell, Mary I(~ ·
poems were presented: "The Little Holter, Esther Smith, JoAM Baum;:
Toys of Christmas" by Opal Hoi- Elizabeth Hayes, Bulah Maxey,:
lon ; "No Room in the End" by. Betty Young, Mae McPeek, and·
Betty Young; "Christmas Gift" by guests, Scottie Smith and Harlan~
Ballilrd.

Redwomen •.. ·

INDUCTEES • Fourteen students at Meigs High School were
inducted into the Natiqnal Honor Society on Tuesday morning.
Inductees are; 1-r, seated, Mike Thomas, Marjorita Tromm, Kelly
·Doidge, Michelle Young, Debbie Alkire and Linda Chapman.

BEFORE
CHRIITMAI IALE
AT

FURNITURE~ .

20%·50%off
Jows

312 ~GIFTS

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING

1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

Meigs girls slip past

'

J

I

53-52

..

VI'RA FURNITURE

$49
95
CHILD'S RECLINERS......................... - ·
sl·'

The Marauders then preserved the

win when they rebounded their
own missed free'throw attempt and
ran the clock out.
Tricia Baer led the Marauders
with 13 points and nine rebounds,
Verna Compston added 12 and
Reva Mullen 11 for the Marauders.
Meigs was 17 of 48 from the floor
for 35% and 19 of 37 from the line
for S2%. Meigs had 10 turnovers,
eight assists with Mullen getting
four and nine steals with Mullen
art&lt;fCoriipston getting
each. ·
Chrisbna Warren led the Bucks
with 15 points. Nelsonville hit 19
of 59 from the floor for 32% and
12 of 19 from the line for 64%.
NelsonvillC had 25 rebounds with
Warren and Stephanie McLaughlin •
gelling IO·each.
· ' Meigs won the reserve game 3532 behind Heather Hu~son' s nine
points:
Quarter tota'Meigs ...................913 14 17 = 53
NebclnviUe·York.9 11 15 17 = 52
Meip (53) - Reva Mullen 3-05•11, Vera Comfston 3-0-6=12,
Mary Cremeans -0·1=3. Tricia
B.er4-0-S~ I3,Lori Kelly 3.0·1=7,
Kim Hanning 2-0·1=5, Lee l;!enderson 1-0..0•2. Tot!lls - I? ·0·
19=53
'

.l

(BONNIE) BEAM

••

Beams to celebrate 50 yeats ~
SERVICE PROJECT ~ Tbe National Honor
, Society at Meigs High School is conducting a
; setvice project ror Christmas • one or many
throughout the year • in which members or the
' group will travel to kindergartens in the Meigs
J;ocal District and present stockings to some of

nie M. Reece were marr.ied Dec:
24, 1941.
.
Mr. Beam is a retired Kaisel'
employee.
They are the parents of four•
sons, Dale, Dan, Dennis and Doug}
They have five grandchildren, and'
Lwo great-grandchildren.

GALLIPOLIS · Mr. and Mrs.
Dale M. Beam of 1697 Neighborhood -Rd., Gallipolis, will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary
. with friends and family on Dee. 22
from 1-4 p.m. at the DA V building.
Mr. Beam and the former Bon·

the students. Boxes of the stocl;in'gs have bee·n
donated by Fruth Pharl)lacy in Middleport. The
• group will also travel to Carleton School. Pictured, are Robby Wyatt, Misty Butcher, Tricia
Baer and Mrs; Dana Kessinger.

i

0

·Rotarians hold heliday gathering
Christmas music and medita · Gene Riggs, Mr. and Mrs . Joe
tions, along with a visit from Santa, Young, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd BlilCk·
pighlig.hted the annual holiday fam· wood, John Rice and son, David,
ily .gathering of the Middleport- ·Howard Frank and granddaughters,
Pomeroy Rotary Club at Heath Jennife r and Tara Norman , the
United Methodist Church Monday Rev. and Mrs. Frank Smith and
night.
. , children, Ryan; Matthew and Jen• Lloyd Blackwood read scrip· nifer, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Murphey.
tures concerning the binh of Chnst Bernard Fultz, Mr.' and Mrs. Dick
to open the program and the Meigs Owen, daughter-in-law , Jeannie
High School Chorus under the and gra ndchildren, Jon ath an,
~
direction of Teresa Davi s had an
outstanding program of Christmas
and secular music and dance. After
David Rice had read the story
''Yes , Virginia, There is a Santa
Claus"Curley Wiles in the disguise
pf Sania presented gifts to the children and grandchildren of members
lu the party.
~
· Gene Riggs, vice president,
presided at the meeting in the
absence of Dick Vaughan due to
family illness. Penney Cisco, Jack·
son, the governor's &lt;listrict represenlative and district literacy chairman, was a special guest.
. Attending were Mr. and 'Mrs.

-

Michael and Rebecca, Mr. and
Mrs. Jeff Warner, Mr. and Mrs .
Tom Bowen, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Blakeslee.
John Rice had charge of the program, and Donna Jenkins was at
the piano for singing of carols. A
centerpiece was sent to Betty Fultz,
who is recuperating from surgery,
and other centerpieces were given
to the wives of Rotarians present.

Who's Who
Bobbie- Barrett, Danville, has
been selected .10 Who's Who
Among American High School
Students.
A 1991 graduate of Meigs High
School , she is a student at Vinton
Couhty Vocational School/Buckeye Hills.
She was a member of the Business Professiona ls of Am eri ca
Club, a junior class officer and secretar y for stud ent council. An
honor roll student, she competed in
several regional events.
She is employed with Beneficial
i~ Pomeroy on a pan-time basis.

FRI·.: Beef 'Burgundy '6"
SAT.: Stuffed Ml,nic~tti '5"

Dinner held

CIVE AGILMORE'S CIFT CERTIFICATE!

Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Ables were th ei r
daughter and her family, Mr. and
M&lt;s. Agustin Montanez, Agustin
Jr. and Shawn, of Arecibo, Puerto
Ri co; Carolee Montanez , New
York; Todd Montanez, Zanesville,
Wise.; and Marilyn Batlle, Milwaukee, Wise.
. .

~YEBES

offers
!retirement tips

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Pomeroy, Oh.
(614) 992~6632

BOBBIE BARRETT.

Order Your ChrilbDu CoDJde
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great gifts!

. ·

Closed Wed. &amp; T~urs. Eve~llgs II
December due to private p«tles•

Alsefwil•• Prinle 16, JIQ Riehl~ .

II'IIW Alasbn Pllack, Dup frW l1tlwflr Slllltp
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NEW YORK (AP)- " The
Silence of the Lambs" won its second best picture award iil as many
days Tuesday when it was honored
in the 57th annual New York Film
Critics Circle.
The thriller, based on the book
by · Thomas Harris, also took
awards for best director Jonathan
Demme, best actor Anthony Hop·
kins and best actress Jodie Foster,
the pollof 25 critics determined,
· Hopkins J&gt;layed the_cannibalistic
~Hannibal Lector and Foster his FBI
agent nemesis in the movie, which
... was cited Monday as movie of the ·
year by the National Board of
Review.
·
The board honored Demme as
best director and Hopkins as best
supporting actor.

Price

•e.er

t

'The Silence of the
'Lambs' wins awards

CT

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Rutland Furniture·
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·Monday •.Saturday, 9 I

Standing, l·r, Lori Kelly, Stephanie Hag'gy, Courtney Mldkirr,
Kevin Lambert, Randall Johnston, Alison Ganaway, Katrina
Turner and Lorena Oiler.
•

COD£ of

HOLIDAY DRESSES .

RUTLAND

'

10% OFF CASH &amp; CARRY ANY Ina

NAME: - - , - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - -

ADDRESS: ---------~--------'---

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 8:00A.M. "TIL 1:00 P.M.
SUNDAY 12 NOON 'TIU:OO P.M.

, c1n: _______________________

·OFFRT.7bN 141-4MILESINQNTENARY
61H46-315l

STATE: _ _~------------ZIP:.__,_,_ __
.

. . ...

'"

-: Retirement usually comes much
!Ooner than mosi people realize
according to Ed Peterson, Social
Security Manager in Athens.
• Everyone should begin planning
now for their retirement years. The
people at Social Security can help
r.hem get started with their own,
':Personal Earnings and Benefit
Estimate Statement" (PEBES).
, Th.is statement give valuable
information to help people with the
important decisions about their
future retirement income.
.· To get a PEBES a person should
first call Social Security's toll free
number, 1·800-772-1213 and ask
for Form SSA-7004 . Fill it out
completely ..In a few weeks the person will receive in the mail a print·
out showing total earnings under
Social Security ,. the numb er of
SOcial Security credits currently on
record ,, estimated future Social
Sf(:urity retirement benefit amount
at,age 62 and at,age 65, as well as
what the worker and h1s or her
fa,mil y could receive in Socla)
Secunty disability and survivors
benefits.
•Social Security benefits are not
intended to rt\place.a_!l pre-retire·
ment earnings. Pe..le')hQuk!'jilan
to supplement them with saving~ rand other investments. .(
i}

)

PLAY -PREPARERS -·Salisbury Elemen'tary presented its
annual Christmas play, "The Three O'Clock Rehearsal" on Tuesday evening. Costumes for the play ·were made by Eddie Whaley
and Kim Peavley, pictured in front, with a student being fitted,
and back row, Janet Peavley, PTO president, Coleen Whaley,
Jeanie Witherell and Debbie Glaze. Absent when p,hoto was taken
were Belinda Soulsby and Wendy Halar. A variety of costumes
were ma!l,e by the gro..up_who.worked for two days to complete the
outfits.

CELEBRATE THIS HOLIDAY
365 DAYS A YEAR!
Big selection of Recliners,
Swivel Rockers and · ' Accent Chai rs
Sp~dr1 fly ;;n/e Jll:iced for
Jro/irlny 8ift giving'

PRICES START
AS LOW AS

FULL LINE OF BAKED GOODS

$199

Freslt ••d Ho•• IDktd DDily
Our Sped!!lties Are:
•PIES' '.
-&lt;AKES
•FRESH CINNAMON ROLLS .

We Deliver I1i Time For
Christmas Gift Giving/

Walk-b.. ond Coll-Ino Are Welcome

ORDER AHEAD FOR ALL OCCASIONS

...day
IIIII

Frlilllf

6:00UA.
It 7:00P.M.

,,

MILLIE'S
RESTAUUNT
lradburr RoacJ
Middleport, Ohio.

....
.
lullday

lalurl!ay

8:00A.M.
lo 3:00P.M.

FLAIR
"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES"
RT.2S
GALLIPOI.!IS fERRY, WV

PHONE 675·1371

S~HOURS:

~.

~

DAILY,9AM-5PW;FRIDAY,'9AM-7r&gt;t;SIJNDAY,1·5PW

LAI~::iJJ
~
~ ·- ·
..

FREE DELIVERY
I

�•

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel -

· W!dn~aday, December 18, 1991&lt;

Pomeroy-Middleperi',"'iifo-

AIMJmiED m1 I'OIJa' • Each Of lheoe advertloed iloma IS required 10 be r18dily available for Hie In IIICh Ktogtr Storo, .
opoclflcaily nottd In thlo ed. If we do run oul ot an advert lied ilem, we will offer you your choice of a comparlbfo
ltom, when ovallable, reflecllng lilt aame aavlnga or a reincheck which will entitle you to purchue lhe advortloed Mam 11
lhlldvtrtll8d price wilhin 30 days. On!y one vendor coupon will be ecoepled per item purchaud.

COPYRKJIIT IIIQI· TilE KROOEil Co.iTEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUN·
QAY; 15, Tlll!QUGH SATURDAY, DEC. 2f, IIIQI/N Pomeroy _·

·OJH:Ipl u

Wedneaday, December 16, 1991 ,_.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT O.UANTITIES. NONE SO~O TO OEA~ERS.

Unt~

.. By RUST¥ MII:LER
·, _ AP Sports Writer

Aptitude TesL
Ohio Sl81e 'has received commitments from:
. Unt!l the~ name~ actuall~ appear on the do}ted
- Neal Hawkins, a 6-5 ,-230-pound defensive
l"!e, 't.s all speculatt?n. Bu~-i!-some ?f Ohio's pre18cklefrom-Bue)'!Us. A second-ream·DivisiO'II'III'Al]m!er·high·sc~ool semors ab!~ by lhetr verbal com- . Otiioan, he had 13 sacks and S6 tackles last season.
mttmen~! tins could be an Interesting year m tenns ·He is the frrst majOr-college football recruit from his
o[recrut!lng.
.
high schoo\ since Dick Mack wem 10 Ohio State in
. Almost two mom~s before rhe frrs1 day for lhe
1970.
.'
· ·
. ·
·
signing of national leuers of intent, most major col·
- Jayson Gwinn, a 6-3, 230-pound first-team Alllege p~ograms already ~e lining up pros(iecrs.
Ohio linebacker from Columbus Brookhaveif.'Gwinn
. Oluo Stale~ ob~n.ed verbal co!"mtlments from
had 123 tackles, lhree imerceptions_And_two SliCks
) 1. play(ll's,_whtle Mich1gan has-apparently won the · during the regtilar season. He ·also caught 15 passes
heart of one of lhe most highlv touted players in
for 299 yards and six rouchdowns as a tighl end. The
Oh .
·
&lt;'
10.
ohly other school he consi dered was Kansas. He has
The· Rose Bowl-bound Wolverines were the
not f!iet eligibllily requirements. .
choice Mgnday of the state's - pre~ier big-sch~ol
-A pair of West Virginia prep Slars, lineman
quarterback. Da~~on M~ad?wdale s Er.'c Boyktn,
!lrian Smilh, 6-1 , 265, from Nitro, and fullback-tight
first-1e8111 AII-Ohto as a Jumor before m1ssmg most ' end Eric Moss, 6-3, 250, fro!ll Belle. Moss did not
of lasl season wilh a shallered knuc.kle on his throwvisit any other school but Ohio Stale. Smilh chose
ing hand, commilled to Michigan. ·
Ohio Slate over West Virginia.
Boyldn, a 6-foot-4, 210-pounder, chose Michigan
- Running back-defensive back Rob Kelly of
over Ohto State, UCLA, Notre Dame and Illinois. As
Newark Catholic, the Division V back of the year.
a JUmor, he passed for 2,480 yards and 22 touchThe 6-3, 195-pound Kelly rushed for more than
downs, He had run for 443 yards and five scores and
1,000 yards and 15 louchdowns, plus starred as a
passed for ?86 yard~ and seven touchdowns before
Hnebacker on defense. He did not visit any school
sustammg hts mJury .m the_fourth game of ~c season.
other rhan Ohio Suue. He expects 10 play free safety
He has a 3.36 grade-poml average and has already
in college.
scored a 25 on lhe Amen_can College Test. A 17 ts
- Tailback-defensive back Eric Starks of Colum·
requued for freshman ehgtbthty under NCAA gutdebus Ready. Starks, a 6-0, 172-pounder, also consid·
hoes, or a score of at least 700 on the Scholastic . cred Kansas, Hawaii, Ohio U. and Cincinnati. He

All .STORES
Open Christmas

.

·

·-·

6:00pm

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A•.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICil:S
'Ads outsid e Mlllgs . Gallla 01 Ma~011 cou ll1H~ must hi!
P!t•d
'Ae tt~llll~ ' 50 d•scounl lor ;tdf paul. 1n otllvanct!

.·

, C;ud nl Thank ~
Ito Mt:llllH16fl1

~

I
I

z

1-lb; PkQ. - .
~9C

::l

Imperial
Margarine'
.
1·1b.
.

0

u
a:
w

Pound

.•

QUARTERS

0..

(!)

0

a:

-

LIMIT 2 1-LB. PKGS. WITH COUPON &amp;
1 D'"' $10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

semi-Boneless smoked Hams

I

Cook's Semi-Boneless Smoked Ham Portions 17·~/b. AVg.J lb... $1.19

LIMIT ONE COUPON PEI?FAMIL Y

.

.

COIJIION GDOO SUN. OK. 15-SAT. DEC. 21, 1991

'·····························
BUY ONE
Whole Boneless
smoked
Hams sea/test
·pound·
FI?ONTIEk 8/?A ND
17·9·LB. AVG.J .

'A·PINT

Sl

Whipping cream

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLEJIN B0ARDDEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DJY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

t---;====:::::::::::=::=:==;--7j
NEW YEAR'S EVE
~

_,
_.
_.

AT OSCAR'S
RESTAURANT
GAlLIPOLIS, OK.
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL 446·9545

.

:

I
I . ..

.

....REWARD:
,_ . $300

.-.
'
.,'

superMoist
.cake Mix

•

18·18.25-oz.

•

,'

Cln.&lt;.&lt;i.fit•d f'fiK&lt;' .&lt; l'tll't'r f lw
Gall1;, County
Are a Cod!!!! 614

367 Chesh11e
J88 Vintoo

245 Rio Gr1nde
256 Guv•n D•sl
643

Arabia D1st

379

Waln~o~l

Metgs County
Ar eo1 Code 614

Muo11 Co . WV

992 M•ddlll!pllrt
Pom111oy
985 Chester
8 43 Portland
247 lttlt1 hils
949 Rac•nt

6'75
458
576
713

742
667

Areil Code J04

_, _

•

·,

895 LU;ut
937 Bullalo

. Public Notice

11

'

Help Wanted

DRAFT PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Vlllogt of Synocuao
FULL TIME
hoo folltd to monitor lor
REGISTERED
rtdlologlcol tcUvlty In the
drinking water lup~ly u
NURSE
rtqulrtd by tho olllo 1 """ Meigs County Tub•er· I
drinking woter Iowa. Rula culoalt Office.
3745·81·26 of lha Ohio Required. Mall reo1umrt 1
Admlnlotrolive Code rt·
January 6, 1992
qulrea o community water
C
Tb
ouppty to coUoct four lniUal 11 ctdo.olo oun1Y u er·
conatcutlvo quortorty ..,.. 11
Ofllce.
ptao lor dottrmlnolton of ·P.O. Box 447
compliance wllh .tho PomeiOy;~Ohlo 45769
rtdloioglcol moxtmum con· Malgo County 11 on Equal
tomlnantlovefo. Tho Vlflogo
Opportunity Employer.
of Syrecuoa hoo complottd

1"-------....,J

avetage of the-four con••
11mpl.. I• 1111 than · 3

WANTED

water m11lrrium cOntU'II·

PART·Tit.IE
CERTIFIED MEDICAL
ASSISTANTS.

pCVt , Thll level II within
tho olllo'a oafo drinking

nant lavol olondard of 15
pCIIL fof groao alpha parti·
cit tctivlty.

'·

'''

•
''..

OFFICI; m-2886

205 North Second Av•.
Middleport, OH

starter home.

Pound
u.s. Grade A f1D-Ibs. And UpJ

Deli
BBQ Chicken

Each

NONRETUI?NABLE BOTTLE
CAFFEINE FI?EE DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE CLASSIC,
DIET COKE OR

...
'

I

·;

,.

. _ .. _ _ _ _ • _ _ _ : : . . _ _

modern total electric home that has large family room lor
r ela~~:ing. after a hard days work. Included is 3 bedrooms , 2
car garage, an9 a treated •deck. All sining on approx. 25
$59,900

POMEROV..Oak St.-Nice CIJZY 3 bedroom , 1 112 slory
NOTICE OF EXPLANATION nopractlcalelternatlwtothll
proposed project. F1llure lo
home with a pretty open stairway , garage, and a carport.
FLOOD PLAIN
releaae -gr1n1 fundi lor lhe
Nice slarter t)ome or rental property.
$10,000
DEVELOPMENT
DATE OF PUBUCATION: prcjocl would .continuo to
limit tho availability and If·
LOOKING FOR ACOMMERCIAL LOT? Just oil the Main
,.. -Dec. 11, 1181
lordablllty
of
houalng
to
the
Street
You really need to check this one out. located on
Tho Vltlogo oiMiddltporl, low Income rHidenll of the
3rd
St,
Middleport. Has an income.
$10,000
Ohio lnlondl lo undtrtlko • county. 11 11 the Vllloge'o •
CQBGComprohtnolhHou• udgmenl thot the ovollobll·
DEXTER'A large 2 story hO/ne with 3 bedrooms. open
lng (Spoolll Houalng) proj- ty of houllng lo low Income
porches and many outbuildings. Sining on a little over an
OC110 purohaoe'lllo proparty lamlllea oulwofgha oon1ld·
acre.
$15,000
known ao tho •Bolly Roaa
Bokery" fof lhl purpooe of erallon of Exocullvt Ordara
MIDDLEPORT·1at St.·lf rental property is what you·ve
dovtloptng lilt p1oporty for 11988and
A more 11990.
dettlled deac~~
bean looking lor we've got II.. In th'IS house you have a 2
roafdtntfol building lola and
,.-bedroom apartment doWnstairs &amp; .a one bedroom apart·
ment up also has alumtnum siding and a one car garage.
ptoctng flight homu on tho lion of the prolecl 1nd lhe
FLA flood Mopuroovollabte
'
$18,000
1IIft oncl offor lhtm for pur• lor
clllzen
review
at
the
VII·
ah..• Ia tow Income t1ml·
, lin. Tht profoctlllocoted In
.
Frtd Hoffman
BRENDA
the 500 y•r flood ploln.
propootd p1ojtct connol
Mayor _ DARUNE"'J.'!I~
iage Hall,
.
Vlllogo Hall
SANDY u•
undertektn ln •ny oltwr loMiddleport, Ohio 45760
SHERYL
.....,...3117•0421
oallono There 11, thertfore,
16;JTC
,

l1DO~TI~lE~'~~~;·~~~~~~~~~~J

•'',

_

~p

.
_

_

_

Moltllu Hornm; tOr Sale

45
4&amp;
47

61

.,.

6J

-

Tr ans or talion
.,,
7~

75

76
77
78
79

Merchandise

Mul!llcycltJS
BUiiiiS &amp; Motots"lor Si!l u

Auto Parh &amp; Ac c es~tll$
Au to Rep.ur
Camp1n9 EQrt~pnl1lltl
Curnpeno &amp; Motor Honms

Servi ces

Household Goods
ft2 ~-Sporting Gooda
53 Anltque l
54 Mtsc Merchandise

81

Home l1npro vument~

82 Plumbtng It H111 •rnu
83 E~~ewatmg
84 ElecUica. &amp; Rttlr~jliromou
85 G!mt..'lal Hauhny
86 Mobil e Hunte RePiltr
87 Uphulst11ry

8u1ldrng Suppht!S
Peu t o r Sale
Mll51tallnnrwnunt s
Frutts &amp; Vegtft•blos
Fo• Sale 01 Tr acie

58
$9

AutosforSe~IH

72 Trudls lor Siiltl
7J V;rns &amp; 4 WO 's

51

55
56
57

Ltll~to clt.

· 64 Hay &amp; Gr ;un
65 St!ell &amp; Fertdr11;11

Spa ce lur R elll
Wanted\() Re"t
EqurJUlH!Ill for Fhmt
For Lease

48

Farrn Equlpmbnl

62 W ;m ted t o Buy

Furnrshud Room s

49

Businms Opportunny
Monev lo Loan
ProfesSional Serv•ces

.•

..-..

Business Services
CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SALE AT BOB

GROOM
:ROOM

SNOWDEN'S LOT

1

L... . . _. . __.. . . ·•

__ _

.

.

ri

___

.,. _ _

.. J&amp;L

INSULATION
. •Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation ,
JAMES KEESEE

Complete Grooming .
for All Breeds ..

EMILEE -MERINAR

· 9f2·2772 or
742-2097

·ownlr &amp; Operator

614-9'12-6820

53t Bryan Place
. Mlddloport, Ohio
1111411fn

USED APPUANCES .
90 DAY WAIUJITY

WAINIRS-$100 up
DIYIS-$69 up
IEFIIGIUIOIS-$1 00 up

lANG IS- Goo·OH.-$12 ~ up :

11Eiliii-Sl2l up
MICIO

OVINS-$79

up

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

DK's

HOWARD
·EXCAVATING

Displayed at The

Quality Priat Shop
HOURS:
8:30 am;4:DO pm·

614·99H394
Or Call
742-3020 heai1gs

992-5335 or
985-3561

From Post Offlct
217 E. lo&lt;an4 St.
POIIIIOYI OHIO
3/6/90/tfn

Acro11

PONDS
- SEPTIC S:VSTEMS LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITEs ·
HAULING:
Umestone, Dirt,
Gravel end Coal

You To
,Recover Your
lnve&amp;lmenl"

992-7013
or 992·5553

614·949·2202
RACINE, OHIO

01-TOLl FIEI
1-100-141-0070

U/20/lllo.

DAIWIJI, OliO •

Teaford

Cou1try Cltlll
Jr. Goll Stts
Gr..Wtl&amp;

Metal aubs

Cutt111 RHIIg
lags,HIIII
Covers, 1IC:
Proftstltttal
bpavllg

614-915·3961

Now 0..• 01 Satwdtrys
"' ,.. Ort..... s.a.....
Gtvo 1 . .llwonn basbt

,, thll ~claiiNIIOII ••
ylllll' Orlstllllslbl.
WtaYIIg IUpfllos also In

stodt.

.

located on Rocksprings
Rd. in Pomeroy, 3 miles

lrom tho Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.
.

1111511

MAPLEWOOD
UKE
UCINI,OH.
949·2734

11·21-1 mo.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory

Choke
6-lfn
ClARENCE

C. L. Heating &amp;
Refrigeration·
We Sell &amp; ServlC.
Wea1hor Kl~g, Miller,
Luxalrl, lnaldtr,
Heal Pumps, Furnac.a,
Air Cond"lonera

BISSELL
BUILDERS

mo.

-- -------~~ ···- -

_

_.........___

-~

____.,, ..

~

.

'fl

''JlRtasonablt Prir11''

PH. 949-2101
or •••· 949·fl60
Day or Night .. · ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

•VINYL S

oA!LUMINUM SIIJINO

•BLOWN IN
JNSULATI!)N

BISSELL
SIDING CO•.
flow ~Anon lullt

"Free Ettlm1t11"

PN. 949·2101
· or les. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY

~-

.......

)

.•

.

...·

•

CUSTOM,..ButRAL,TGE
ROMrs &amp; v•1

tfn

THE BASKET WEAVE

992-6855

·~5 Ctl &amp; Wrapped
1
5 Extra to ~ ' .

Licensed and Bonded

~l!_elp_ing

USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MODElS

7/ 31 / '91

.DEER CUTTING
and
WUPPING

PH. 614-992•5591

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

SfMCiallzing in
l~~~_,:.:~lll._lFrame ltpair

667-6179

KEN'$- APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

•

9-11 · 1 mo. pd .

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAITS

'85-4473

AiL UICIS .
- Iring It In Or Wo
Pkk Up.

BULLDOlltG

12·2-91-1 mo,

•Complete .
lemodellng
Stop &amp; Cotnplll'•
Fr" Estimates

MICROWA E.
OVENRE,AIR

R&amp;C E CAVATING

TOYS

· bynn

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITI'S,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAILIBU
FREE ESTIMATU

•N•w Nom••
•Garag•s

NOW $15,900

l

Kroger Fresh ·ru~keys

21
22
2!1

Homm;. IIH Sale

32

l;ttdtfid

liiUfihiiijjl

WAS $17,800

acres.

2~Uter

~-

Public Notice

Public Notice

coca Cola
Classic
·

'r!

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

41 Hot1seslorRent
42 Mo btle,Homes lm Rc"t
43 Farms tor Rent
44 Ap artment tor Runt

1 1 HelP Want tid
Situatron Wanted
13 Insuran ce
14 Busi11ess Tra tntiiU
15 Schools &amp; lnstnrCittro
16 Radio. TV &amp; CB R~!p~ t r
17 Mtsc ellam.•(•u s
1.8- W;tnl&amp;d-To Co

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

LANGSVILLE·Otxter Rd.·Neslled in the Pines-is this

caliFornia
Navel oranges

Happy Ads
lost and found
1 Yard Salelpiltd Ul il~ ilrt ttJI
8 Pubhc So1l11 &amp; AucltOII
9 Wanh!t:fta Buy

St.· If you need to be close 10 the school

this is the house lor you. Thts house has 2 bedrooms, large
living room, dining roM'!, and newer wall furnace. A great

IN

:::led

31

POMIROY, ONO ·
10/30t89 tfn

Mlddl~port-3rd

· ·

TALLAHASSEE Fl (AP) _:. Fl 'd S · ,
.
. . . ' . a.
. 0 ~ a late-'
leaaldlt~grl~sheblr, JrumlhortCailbackBoAmp Lee, ts academJ·
c "I
y me- rgt he or the Olton
Ul' h w1h. · d " h d ·
hi ~s :b s
at -d~ a~ •Pp,~n:_' Aea
~a~ e.ci~ed ~bou~pl~~i~~ in~~~ cltion Bo:l":u,d
has indicaled 1o me that he is lookin forward to his
senor e al Florida Stale"
g
}h y f~th · k d s :
(!0 ) 1 N
e &amp;M·(r~g {) · tl,m 1(:0 1es
· 2 P ·~I o. 9
~~~asY~ar's Da · 10 e Olton Bow1 al D as on
Lee who af~ed 977 ards rushin and cau hl2
passes for 3\6 yards t~is season , gfailed tog meet6
NCAA academic standards in the just-completed
se mesrer.
He could still have qualified for the game, because
NCAA rules say the player's ineligibility starts lhe
first d~y of classes in the next semesler _Jan. 6 at
Florida State. But-the
policy is that !he play-

3 1 Busrness Butldrog s
35 lots &amp; Acreage
3&amp; Real Estat e Vll;tnted

Memorlall!ospltal

POMEROY-Mulberry Ave.·loo~ at this Historical home.
This homo has cherry cabinets in the kitchen. a beautiful
wooden archway, ani:t large wooden pocket doors seper·
ating the living room from the dining area, Also has an open
• stairway, 3 bEidrooms, and a garage.
.
$3_
2,900 .

I

113 SIZE

-Fl Ori'da State'S Amp
Lee
.
_ineligible-for Gotton-Bowl~ ·

33 Fdrm, lor Sale

Gtveawa~

Dalley, RN, ilsN

Make reservations by
calling 446·9545

•'
'

4·ROII

Annouc ement s

• Fringes and A Good
Place To Work .

(12) 13, 16, 17 3lc

1, 3&amp; 5 P.M.
$7.50 each
$4.50 children under 12

.

Cottonelle Bathroom Tissue

3
4
5
6

•. Pameiay,

cuUYt quortorly rtdlologlcot

Seatings At

·,
·,

300 SHEETS.,PEI? ROLL

;

Pt Pl easant ,
Leon
Apple Gro111e
Mason

802 New Haven

Rutland
Cuotvtl\4! .

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

'-'

·-

.

The Division I co-backs or the year, Toledo
Woodward's Chr,is Jaquillard a_nd Travi~ McGuire _of
Massillon Washmgton, are~rdhondecldc!l:• Jaquil·
lard, the back of the year _each ?f lhe lastt':"o seasons, has nol narrowed h1s cho1ces._McGut!e _wrll
VISit M1am1 \Fla.), Oh10 Slate, M1ch1gan, Mtchrgan .
Silttc_and lnd1an~.
. ___
_
· .

Real Eslale

.992-5335 or 985-3561
Across From Poll Office

'

•

Announc ements
1 ~citrd of Thank'
2 In Memorv

Employ ment
Ser vi ces

614·992· 7694

.GI!I' ONE

.06 / day

R•tesarc for con~ecuhve fUll!!&lt;. bro•enupd~ s wlllbech..-ged
lor uch day as sep;u•te • ds

of J:lovombtr 6, 1110. Tho

For information or return of
our 7 mos. old Rottweiler .
'"
that was stolen
Wednesday morning, Dec.
4 on Skinner Rd. Answers
lo name Cody. Anypne.
with information please
contact us at

-.
·.
'-.
--..

BETTY CI?OCKEI?

S1 .30/ day

15

the quArterly monllorlng_••

-..

..

15

446 Gall•pohs

DAY HHORE PUIIliCATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY ·
2 .00 PM TUES0AV
2 .00 PM . WEONE~DAV
2 ..00 PM THURSDAY
2 1)0 PM . FRIDAY

..,

'~

J

I
I
I

I

sO

ditSSt h l-'(1 tlt~j!l i ty . BII SIIII~!&gt; Card ,md ll-•Ual nOiu;ll'!o]
,olsu .tpp~at 111 litI! Pt Pl~t.ISitlll Rt&gt;w s tcf ~ tHIIht! Gath

COPY Of AD liN E
MONDAY PAPER
TUESOAV PAPER
W£0NF.SOAY PAPEn
THURSDAY PAPER
~HIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

~

I

~

cook's Whole t14·1B·Ib. Avg.J

6
10
Monthly

.ft~llowiiiK ld&lt;'plu;,,. t•xclHUIJ{f'.&lt; ...

wtll
pults O.lrly Trtblllltl. maclunu OVIII 1 a . ooo-hotntJS

I
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. .....:
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I ·.•,
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,

15
15
15

12

Hoi!tJPV Atb
Y&lt;lltl Sa lt: $

·, A ci;IISStlll!d atlvP.rttSt:tnt~ tl pldt:t~l -111 lh~Omly ,Sm1111tl!ll~~

••••••••••.• ;.-......
;;;.;;;-;!,••

Rate
. a~,, 16 w~;'!;
$4.00
$6.00
. 30
. 42
$9.00
. $ t3.00
.60

Words

Days
1
3

rtm J tl.av_s_atno chargu
..
~-"P, cl! ol ari lo1 all c'ap •tallette• s •s doullh.1·1.111Ce o l ntl cost
'7pumt hlleslypc only ust:(l
'St•l1lltll~ IS nOirtnpO t\ Stb l~ lur t!IIOIS ahttr lu st tl&lt;ri (C h ock
l~r t:rrors lu s t day ad'runs 111 paptJrl C itII hclorC 2 00 p tu
' d~ alwr publtcatmn. t o m.Jkt! t !IIIP. t lmn
'Ads that mu st be pard 111 a dviiO CtJ &lt;Ill!

Ct'l)l

0

pr~

.c

.,

....--~~· ·
RATES .

GwtOIWiiV i'ltld found ads u'"l' ~ 15 words Will be

'F rel! 011b

AL
I

~~Dally ~entlnel Page 11

.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

I

,......

,

rushed for ;ilniost1,1200 yarils 'and scored 15 tOuch·
downs as a senior. .
·
.
-Offensive Unell!an ·Chri$ Holbrook. of Sl, l'aris •
_Grihaiii: 'Holbrook, 6'-3 and' 265 pounds, was firs!·
ream All-Ohio as a defensive lineman in Division Ill.
-Mike Mezgec of Easllake North, a 6·5, 250·
pound first-team Division I All-Ohio offensive lineman.
·
- Michael Tillman wide-receiver, Steubenville.
Tillman, ·a 6-1! I75-po:mder, was second-ream Divi'
sron II All-Ohio, He caught-34·passes for 63? yards
and nine rouchdowns in 10 games.
- Eddie George 6-0 195 pound running back
· (Va.)
' 1vuhtary
..~ · Academy.
from Fork Umon
-Steve Sheets, Columbus West offensive tackle.
Sheets, a 6-5, 238-pounder, was a Division I firstteam AII·O~io selection.
·
Meanwhtle, some of the lop prospcciS around the
state have yetlo commiL
Derek Kidwell winner of The Ass.ociated Press'
fifth annual Mr. Football award, will choose from
among Michigan, Ohio State and Indiana. Jim Bai·
ley, athletic direclor at Fostoria High School, confirmed that lhe 6-4, 225-pound left-handed quarterback has now met NCAA requircmcms for freshman
ehglblllly. ,
Korey Sl~tnger, a 6-5, 29 5-~ound tackle from
Warren Hardmg,_the blg-school- li~cman of the ~ear,
ts reportedly dCCictmg berween Ohm State and Mrch1·
gan,

•

ClOSED CHRISIMAS flAy
Ro.,.. Tionlliy. lite. lit~
And A-.. N•••l Haura
Sn Stort F11r Htur1

IMPERIAL

.

OSU, 'Michigan leading way~ in lining up gridiron prospect_s

•

"

·

Eva

Pomeroy-MI4dleport, Ohio

�,_

18, 1991

Ohio

-~
. -

Paae-12- The Daily Sent.inel
. SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

Oetember

Ohio

11 Help wanted
• 44.·
_ _..;..:;...;.;;;.;.;.;..;;...__;
Wll'lhoUII

To $12hr, will 11111n, ..veral
openings, t lao part time, call 1·
800-521-6543

12

-~ Situation

. YIITIIAY
"IIUI

Apa11ment
for Rent

•:r.

' &amp;· 2 bdrm
In Midditport,
U'lllt11 Fum, ep raq, no pill,

614-9112-2218.
2 BA apt. lbove Holzer Clinic;,
Polin Ple..ant, ·w.v..· 304,.&amp;75·

Home &amp; office t iNning
Pomeroy 6 Mlddl~l't arMI , rei

A C0 L L

1• ·. 1 I' I
f

AT YF

....

I I' I I

- \..0

-~
wtth -

-.

r r r 1' . r-r 1·

~~~~!tt~~E~ETlERS I! ·
g~~~EER LETTERSTO I I

•
•

Employment Services 11

Help Wanted

Mlss Pilula'l Cay Ctra .Center.
Safe, affordable, chlldcare. M·F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agts 2)1,-10.

.ICII•M-Im ANIWIIS

tanl Toddler Cara, 614-446.fi227.
Cats

and

kltlans

lo

Sewing Machine Repair And
Sales. Over 28 Y11r1 Ex·

good

Kit tens: 4 female, 1 mala.
Weened &amp;. llttar trained. 614-446·

215:J anytime.

6

Lost &amp; Fo und

LOST, Blue Tick Beagle, lost
around the Moose, collar reads

Robert N. Farley, 304-675-n42,
Reward.
.

Losi : at Krogars In Athens, gray
bil lfold, please return with no
questions asked, 614·g92-6906

7

Yard Sale

ALL Yard Salas Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
t ha day before the ad ' is to run .

Sunday Gdlllon · - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00

p.m. Saturday.

AVON • All area&amp;, Call Marily n
Weaver 304·882·2645.
AUSTRALIAWAiJS YOU
E:rtellent
Pay,
Benefits,
Transportation,
407.292-4'747,
E.:c I• 571 •
a.m.-10p.m. T0.1
Refunded. '
AVON ·, AII Araas I Shirley
5
4·zY:.:'_:
~',P':7',:
'":.;
· 3:.:0.:,
·14:2::::9·'-:--c_ _
Cartll!ad nUrsing assistant, lull
.6: pari lime poslllons available,
axe benef its package, all 3
shifts available, contac t per·
sonnol PI
· v
aasanl allay Hasp
304-675-1340, AAIEOE.
'
Child ca ra for 8 man. old In my
home beginning Ja n. Sth, non·
s mokar, ref. raq. 614·992-3542

4

Cler ki BookkMper for local
business, must m.. t public
well, eJ~ peri~nc e needed. Send
~
resuma Box .C·11, ca re Point
· Rick Pearson Auction Company, · PI ~~asant Reglstar, 200 Main St
'
lu ll time auctioneer, com~eta pt, Pit, wv 25550,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.8

auction service. Llconsed Ohio,

Wost VI rgi nia, 304-m -5785. •

9

Wanted to Buy

DRIVER S WANTED

PHOTO TR IMMERS : Wishing to perltnct. All Work Guanmteed,
start Immediately. No Uf). House Calls, Scissors Sharpen.
necessary. Earn up ttl $110 per lng. Patriot, OH ~14-379-2921 .
day, lr l_mmlng photographs . 1800-336·8005 .
Financial
Pomeroy POSTAL JOBS $11.78$14.90/hr. No axp. nNdtd. For
tum and application Info., call 21
1·216-967-1537.7am-1op·m 7days.
Business
Resident ml nager, maintenance
Opportunity
couple·.
lor
apartment
.
complex~;~~~~£~:~
In Gallipolis. Fuli·llme with
apartment 6: utilities lncludad. OHIO
CO.
Send resuma to: Box 1320 recommends th at you do busiWaynesville, NC 28786.
nasa whh people you know, and
TEXAS REFINERY CO
NOT to sand mona~ through the
RP. Needs mall until ~ ou have In vestigated
Mature Parson. Training and the offering.
benallts available. Regardl81s
of experience. Write: l..K .. Hop- VENDING ROUTE: Get Rich
kina, Pras., Boll 71J, Ft. Wor1h, Oulck? No Way! But We Have A
TX 76101.
Good , Steady, AHordable, BuslW
nt~s. Won't Last 1-800.264·
anted person or married 8363.
couple to an isl with milking
125., cows, 6 day work wuk;
Real Estate
housing, pay by the hour, other
benafita dapend lng on experiente. Raspond to. Box C·S ------~-cara Point Pleasant Raglster, 31 H
f S·
200 Main Sl, Polm Pltlllnl, WV
Omes Or ale
25550.

$400-$650 Wkly. Will Trai n. Drive
Co. Car. l,-BD0-521·7750 .

Double wide, one acre property,
Wanttd: Truck Driver To Haul Gallipolis Ferry, for lnlolmation
Coal. 614·256·1011.
304-675-7217. Hay lor u .le.

Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As·
Wanted to buy, Standing timber, .. mble Products AI Home. Call
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992· Toll Free, 1-800-467·5566 Ext.
313.
'
5449.

WAREHOUSE
To $12 HR Will Train Several
Openings. Also Par1 Time. 1·
800-521·8543.

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING. $16,000 • $72LOOOfYr. 1•
. Gold Coins.- M.T.S_.---Coli'i Shop, 805-564·6500 Ext . 01:1 968 For
Immediate Response.
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.

Warehouse, to $12. hr, will train,
••v•r•J_ O.ptJlings, IISo_ part
lima, 1-&amp;D0-521-8543.

Coi ns, Go ld Rings, Sliver Coins,

OWN YOUR OWN NICE' HOME
FOR $1,600 Full Price. Govarn·
ment Agenclas Now Liquidat ing.
1·805·564-6500 Ext . H0968 For
lmmadlate Assistance.

_....;.__
."- Merchandise

roo~m~~~~~~t=

~

Manor

Apartments
$i96.
In Middleport, Ohio. 1 'lnd
bedroom furnis hed apt, soma
with utllllits paid, reta,.nct and
deposit required, 304·882-2566. ·
Modern 2 BR apt. 614-446·0390.
New Haven, ont badroom apt,
deposit and referante required,
304-882·2566·
Nict 1br, Par1 1ally Furnished,
Water And TraSh Provided.
Convenie nt Location, Deposit
Required. 614-446·8588.
Complttly F. urnishiSI. mobilt
home, 1 mlla _bttow_t!Wn oVerlooking rlvtr. No P.t!J, CA. 614·
448.0338. - -.
·
One Bedroom ~ptr1mant In
Polnt Pleuent, WY. FumJihtd,
Very CINn And Nice. No Pets.
304-675-1388.
POf!'lrOY Cliffs accepting ap.
plication, 4-bldroom IPI. Mult
mnt qualification unMr Hud
Standardl, mUll han at ll&amp;lt fJ
poo~rb botwoon 1o-3pm 114-

ggz.

CHRISTMAS
TREES

i'

brown,
$550. 2 couch,
larg1
d1oarkpc open
pJt ..Ctlonal
Pap~san

chairs
wlbtiga
1cuahlona $75. aach, Matching
couch &amp; chair $225. AU ltema
exc cond,lustlikt new!! If Inter·
tlltd 304 ~75 :-8&amp;7'1.

•

REASONABLE
HARLEY HANING'S
RESIDENCE
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pameray, Ohia ·
11 · 18, 1 mo. pd

Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Ones.

Merchandise

614-949·2058

51

f'/liP'CI&lt;L. CLINIC ·
~

•Reuo~able

Ratea

•Quality Work - '
•Free Estimates '

•Carpet Has Fast Dry ,
Time '
'
•High Glon on Tile .
Floor Fin ish
I
. MIKI IIWIS, Ownor
Rt. 1, Rut~nd. OH.

P';1Gf'I0$1J oF
··yo,_, f'TArf tJf

·

742·245"1

3-14-'91-lfn

(AI

.
Call
.
614-992·5528 or
385-8227

c..... ru.s. Ill

Pomeroy, Ohio ·
614·992-5702

- ~

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
: · - Aoom Add l t~ n•
- Gutter worll
- Eimflcel tnd · Ptumblng ·

SoUd Oak hobby horus, Grtal
Christmaa glflt lor 111111 0.,. 1,
145. Only 6 feb. 614-367-7512.
ORLANDO FLORIDA
A MAGICAL~ VACATION PACKAGE FOR THE F•"I' Y
,.."" ...

Household

-Concr~te work

"":'"Roofillg
- l'nterlor &amp; E11ttrlor

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomoroy, Ohio
]
11·14-"90 lin

76

&gt;

Llvestoc.k

Thrat purebred Slmmetsl bulls,
614-742-2660

79

H~y &amp; Grain

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

71

Autos for Sale

"Home
Improvements

lp ,..,, .
Call Ed Battin
&lt;;OIIect at .

1·614--667-6474
11/G/1 mo.

/1.

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAm

:~$tolill

CHERRY RIDGE,
Eali of DaiWin on Rt.

681 cin Q,.vel ROICI

1'h Milia to Grow.
W~CH FOR SIGNS

AIR

• HEAT PUIII'S and
FURNACES FOR MOllE.I DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
t

t

•

t

t

I

42 Apart.,.

44 CouDII
46 - tlnieYel
48~~~1c 47 Tlllt thlng'a
48 NIAOUI ,50 Wlpaa out
53 Ia 1lrtold of

element

PINS- ·
PANELl-ING MY

14-H)oYhtl

15 FICI paris
16 htroyor (11.)
17 Drench
19 PIICI '
20 Hooting
malarial
21 Hindu

. PL.AYRCio'.\ . .

WINTHROP'-?

!14

Tunis

56 Trou ....

~ymblll

22 Duration
23 Nymph
:18 Prtdlct
28 PUIIPY oound
30 Women'• pa-·

DOWN
1 Cor part
12 well.)
2 DaMtrl

trtoUc ....

paltry

31 CIO partnor

BARNEY
WHAT'S

T•••tr ·

55 - - World

3 Tidily .

u.-

4 hlora Nov.
5 Nonnl 7 Unlallhlul

eC'aOrrow

BORRY THIS
• TIME?
Seaaontd Ash Oak And Hick·
ort Firewood, iss Pick-Up L.oad
Dtillver.d And Stacked, Don

Approx. 90A.: front 1 old Rt .7 11
mil•• S. of Gallipolis. Tobacco
bas.e, $29,500 wllh terms. 61•·
867·6220.

Waugh, 114-4U.f648..

.

~

O.nlsis wfth over $1,000.
In 10ftware 1i1o other '• xtriS.
Graat Christmas prnent, $300.

Rentals

304-6711-5431.

UUtltv· Building, 30x40'1 11 eave,
10x12 alidlng door 1·3' •ntry
door eraclaCI price $5699 00
Precision Peat Frame Bulld9rs'
614·192·:1541.
•

42 Moblle·Homes
tor Rent

I

41 Clb'l kin

Anlarcuc

· ELVINEY

111141111 ma.

I

IN'THERe,

part
37 Conotruct

an-_dot~endablo.

USED RAILROAD TIES

t

.,WH.ATAAIO
'IOJ DOIN9-

33 Of I larynx

illndtciPI
Kom
13 Nonmotalllc

Services
81

-:.;..

"COMIN' TO

992-2269

t

I

Sioux Valva Grind•, :1 Yur"J.
Old, Ukt Naw; Sioux Stat Oltt· ·
tit, Guldt Tool a. Almost 5K In·:
Vllttd. Of1trt Or Trad11 Con· ,
sldartd, 614-446-2306.
.

Block,-brlck,-.uwer- plpes, win·
dowa._ llntals, ate. Claude Win·
ltr1, "lo Grande, OH Call 614·
245-5121. .

t

Opening led: • &amp;

hurrk:lnt

1Quortot
member
8 Hoellkl
animal

11

Building
Supplies

I

~ ~.I'
Puo p.,.

32 Canter at

.

304

•LiGHT HAULING
EWOOD ·

t

ACROSS'

Ground shall corn, $120flon 12 187'0 Scolty Camr,lng Trailer ;
percent Feed, $'13011on hay Sit~1 .!~DO
. · C. I Aflar 15p.m: :
V1M
rolls, $25. Morgan Farm, At. 35.
304-937·20'18.

REMOVAL

t

4'

t

I

o

I

t ,t

t

I

o t

t

t

t

t

I

t

o' t o

Pets for Sale
Groom and Supply Shop·Ptt
Grooming. All IHHdl, 4\yles .
l1ms Pit Food Dialer. Julia
Wlbb. Call614-441-0231.

2' bdrm mobiJe home for rent

~pprox. 3 mills from Pof'!Mroy ,;
Mlddlepor1, lotal l ltc::trle 114·
185-4233
'

AKC Bataet puppin, 6 wks ·old
will hold tor Christmas $100'
614-167•3116 '
'
I
I

2 bedroom mobila homa, Hen·
daraon, Hud, raland dt_pos lt ,..
qu lrec:t , cell efttr 5:00 PM 304·
d75-11l72.
'
2·bdrm trailer In Racine arta
'
call 1514-98!1..&amp;1233
2br Deposit And Rtlereneu AI·
ter 2p.m. 114-446.0!127.
For Rent Or Salt On Land Contract: ~br Mobile Home t4JI7U
Totti Electric, On 3 AcrH Land'
8 · Mll11 Ff(.lm Gallipolis On At~
218. 114·388·9948.
.,

AKC Poodll r.upplea, toys I
tiny toya, ·min alurt Schnauzer,
mtla, Hit 6: pepJ*, Coolville

114-667-3404.

52 Spol11ng Goods

.

.

AKC registered Boxer puppllt,
Champion bloodii"!J. very nice,
For Sate OJ Tr1d1: Horton Hun- Bom Nov, 2!1, 119'1. ;su4-882·33V7.
ter Croea low With Extr11! Call
114--7.
lK6 A~tgtltered C..rn · Tenler
Pur:· Cult Chrlatmae Pets; Will
Handmlde Solid CIHirry . Qun Ho d Till Chrtolmll, StiO. 114·
Cllbfn.t, Holdsl1, SHO. IM-441- m.noo.
7720.

1984 Cama ra Z.28, T·tops, 350
eng, auto, loaded, 53200, 304·
&amp;75•331Q
I

82

C.rttf'l Plumbing
Four1h and Pine
OtlllpoNs, Ohio
.,......1-3181

1984 Clltbrlty 6 cyl ., P$/PS , AC
cruis e, ctun car. $2,000. &amp;14:
Ul-9552.
1i84 Dodge Artn, 4 door, 1
AMIFM1 casHIIe, 4 cyl, new I X·
hau11, o14·D02·7236, ev-nlngs
1985 Mtreury Cougar, ntw en·
glne. ,G~:~od cond. s3 !1oo. 614·

448.01140. AMor • 5 Col 1 614·448·

1102.

1986 Escon $850 ; tl88 Horizon
$1100; 1Q86 Turlsmo, low mllaa
$1100; 1g87 Horizon $1700. 304·
675·2440.
'
1987 2!Jivy Nova: high mll••:r,
nMdt rtpelr. Oood lranspo e!
lion Cll'. 11.aoo. For more lnlor-

mo11on Ca1I 614-441-2l4Z, Aok

torPIUI.

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

-I....

The Wor~d Almanac" Crossword Punte

-::::::~:"::~~~::-~
Budget ·rransm-~rw, UNCI &amp; ·
rebuilt, etar11ng 11 SH; Aw('p-- '
Psrtt. 6't4-2"5-5e17, 114·31'f' :
2263.
• . .. .

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ,and

Fresh Cui Trfts or
Cut Your Own.

tEK AND MEEK

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

Reg lstertd 2 year old polled
Hereford buill, big framtd, par·
tormanca tested , r81dy for
ht1vy servicl. Sired by Top A .l.
s lrts. Also, yea rting bulls. Plna
Hil l Farm..l Jim a Rfck Starr, 846
Austin Hd. Wuhlnaton C.H.,
Ohio. 614·998·5341 Cocated' 17
miles East ol Washington C.H.

64

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

1112&amp;

BUDFORDS

~-·

"'"'*

To test youroelf on today:s deal, cov- . played, SOuth won the flrlllrkt: with
er the East-West cards and plan the thespadeaceandimlutllaUIJnntbe
play in four hearts, West leading the heart qUftll. Wbea LUI ... I.e the
spade si1.
king, be bad four 1--.: ...n..rt, 01111..
South had an awkward bid Over dtamoad aDd two cllk •
lUther tblll COiAiiiilil I '
l'la•ueEast's one-spade opening. He might
bave bid lour hearts, but that action Is dtately, South llbould te.lllll ~
usually tteated u p.....,mpllve, and he king at Irick two. """"lUI I I - by
·
far too strong. U only be had been · West, it marta the burt kiiiC ill East's
using strong jump overcalla, be could band; otherWise, where are the values
have bid thrte hearts, but be wasn't. for bill opemng bid? •
·
That left two hearts or a takeout douWinning the return, South sbould
ble. The latter would work if West lea4 the heart queen (tempting a cover
didn't jump the bidding in spades. from West, just in case) and put up
Wlaely South preferred to show his dummy's ace. When the king ilri&gt;ps. be
suit
is home.
When the deal was originally
e -.,••• ..,...,. •- ua

tor Sale

Jim'e Farm Equipment, $R. 35,
West Gallipolis, 614-4116-Sm·
Wide salactlon new &amp; used terrri
t ractor~ 6: Implement•. Buy,
1111 1 trade, 8:00.5:00 WHkdayl1
Sat. till Noon.

Four lettero of
recommendallon. Hone1t

5 R. and LIP
Good selacllon of
·· latgetrees.
614--742·2143 or
742-2979

PelnllngIFR EE ESTIMAT ES!

~,

~w~l~lh~·~loo~do~r
~$1~9~10~.~Ow
::._,"'~'-W
::_:III 75 Boats &amp; Motors
. 614·281-6122.

30 yeara experience.

White and Scotch

-

Motor&lt;:ycles

1187 Suzu~ ljltrudor, 1,400 "ci,
2030 jo dlt11l tractOI' $56!5 ; "'Y hun, vary boa1111tul, 2,5110
424 lnt'l diesel with bush hog, miiH, $3,500. 304-182-S"IIIt grHer bladl, $3650; 3400 Ford

Want«!: Used farm equipment,
anything you want to ssll. 614·
258·1308, 614-Z56-604b . Alter
&amp;p.m.

On Job? Past Credit
Problem? Many
Mobil• Homes To
, Small · Down

74

Interior Painting,
FrHEaUmatn

Homegrown,
beautifully she11red:

lint

Soolll

Basica)ly,_bridge is a simple glliJie.
There Is a lot to learn, but most hands
are easy to play if you count. Still,
there are deals in which the 'aimpte• .
play doesn't rate to be best, and this
helps to retain bridge's appeal. For example, if you are faced with a straight
finesse, normally you will take il, hoping it will win. However, there are
times when you don't take the finesse,

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock

Myer-. anow plow : model STtO
electric over hydraulic 1 w•wo
with llghla. &amp;14-245-9:.118 aher
6p.m. ~

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

By PbUUp Alder .

.:.. D IM1..,IIU, IIIC.

Transportation

YOUNG'S

tKI

.All
Vulllera!U: Nellber
Dealer: East

for one r.easoo or another.__

12: 2·91-1 mo.

t2·11 · t

1'4tAJ.TH

•QJ IOUS2

Playing
to uncover

Good Firewood for Salt, Will
Deliver, 814-258-6202.

Choose and Cut
Your Tree or We'll
Cutll For You.

39507 RtKksprlngs Rd.

-

. (OMptf.Tf CO,IPUTj~\

~ll;:ll=n;-co-;;,11~4-4_4:-:6,:·685
.;-:::f.-=-,.-,.,:-.

TREE FARM

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

tiO 12

.ltQJLO
IOOTI

Qallla Timber Products Split
Firewood Dtliverad, We Accapt
Hup And Emergency As-

RIGGS

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

•tJUI

n:

4

.A

tfA,PWA(lf If Tflfi!N/f'IG
INfO

-~-

~30;:;2.:-;;;-:--::-~--­

11-25 1 mo. pd.

Newly Re-done

•a

IT .JAYI"
. A/.4 .MY

. AuTOIIIATif&gt;

63

INDEPINDENJ ·
CAIPET .CIIANEIS
and liU FLOOI CAIE

EAST -

WES1'
.10111
tAJU

61 Farm Equipment

$20.00 eadl

PH. 614-992-5591

1

.

..

PHILLIP
ALDER

•au

Armstrong nlturtl gas, 20,000
blu, ventld heater f10. Hail LP
a••~ 22,000 to 70,000 btu, van·
fed n1tt1r wlblowtr &amp; auto control 150. 304-675-2902.Big 48R, 2 bath, O.k0.1 dream
home built for y,ou $29,995. 614·
886·7311. Dtsp ay model now
on.8n.
·
,.Fender, flattofr gultar, excallant
condllion, ••• TOr $'150, 614-9921929 attar 4pm
Flmklng wood &amp;- coal stove
IOCJIII condition, $250. 614·379;

11-1&amp;-h

tQ911
+!H

Mobll!fl'tomes
tor Sale

Homemade with
Long Lasting Green
Scotch Pine.

eQu
·•u1

j

BLANDTS

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Uconaod and Bonded

I'IOJml

I

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZING

_ _ _ --;=-·=· =::;='-----.,

BRIDGE

54 Miscellaneous

Furnished
Rooms

. FOR SALE .

,..,,

Wintry -Eall9&amp;-lbuiV-Candor-cARRY .
Our friend was enxlous tolind out how his ,_ book
was received. One critic noted that the book'llmm111
was so poor that not ewn a pigeon would CARRY ft.

Bafo111, lftar ecllool. Dr9p-lns

w.tcoma. 614--446-8224. New In·

ho me s. 614·843-5445

I I 'I IJ I

to mako the relallonohlp work. Moll $2
plus 1 l_ong, ull·llddr-. stomped
envelope to Mstchmaker, c/o this
newr-. P.O. Sox 91428, C-and,
OH 44101-3428. BERNICE
CAI'IItCORH (Dto.-22.,.,_ 11} A mat·
BEDE;OSOL . (or
thlt Is mlterlllly meaningful to you
--~
might bo rHONtdto ~our ldvanL!!!!Uodi y:troWii""', you may ·1111 le04 _you
you
·didn't ~ everything to which you'ra
chaff.
entitled.
your time to whet Ia ablolutely
AOUAIWI (.ian. -ab.11) II you do necr rary.
·
not modlty . -y0u leelltrongly about LIO (...., :11-Aut. 22) Evelt' In group
Just lo pi-to olhorl, lrtondo will re- !endMY()(I today, mllco an eiiOrt to lin·
spectyoumoretodly. hyourownper· :gle out lndlvldUIIt who . . w0r111y
son and let Lho chips 1111 - · they your pertOnll •-tlon. Herd -nga
may.
· ·could r11111t II d 111 trMtlld tho 11m1.
PIICEI (P'A »l!laroll 20) Do not WIGO (Aorg.ll llp4 II) Cadtlona In
brolldcut 'JOU!I lnientlono In adwnCI -~~.,.
today,
-~ Doc. ,., 1111
today, ~lily In mitten that directly but thlngl...,'t Nkely to be hlndtd to
Severer valuable lrlondlhlps might bo altlct your caroor. What you uy could you on 1 -pllttar. - d l muat be
oltabllohed In tho yoar &amp;hoOd with lnd~ be used to your compotltor"a . won by '/OUII OM1 merit.
·
~ (llpl. II) Hyou•rit rnovlduall w11o hiVO much In common with tdvantacle.
you. ~ pall w11 lnltuonCI your Hie Altlll (,._ 21-Aplll 1t) Hyou oreln tllo ~I ell end priCIIcll today, PGMibllltho company ol ~dfl who havo 1 dla- . .11M lor fulftllng your lima wit blaubIOCIIIIy 11111 mlterlally.
"IAQITTAIIIUI (No¥. II DIG. 21) AI· lgloornont today, bt)'il guard. Try to at111tlljlyonhlnclld. llyou'ruot. thfngl
boor1 doni won't bl.
thOUgh you might bo lnc:llnod to bolleVe etear 1 middle COI!rot 10 that you e1n .thol could arbitrate
the
mattor
rather
than
an
togo·ICOIIPIO
(Oot.
~.II) In order to
ottlarwiM. """"',. you'! have lmpor·
'
ibl IIICCUJM today, you know
tliit dllllnga with t~ II llkf.IY tO bl nt.- tt.
""'" conalderlll and tolerant tflln TAUIIUI (Aprii»MMJ 20) Your flnan· '-to millet proper Yllul Jutlgmtntli. tt
a
, you'll bo. Trying to patch up a broken clailtrondo 1r1 11vor- today, prOYid· 1won't be to your tdvlnt~ge to romance? Tho AatrO:.Orlpl\ Matchmak· od you are prudont In the managemerlt •tot Of time on thlnga that w11 yllld
too
"-'~•·.
er ..., ho4p you undontancfwl111 .to do ol your roeourcoa. you do not -

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�.Pial 14-Tbe OaUy Sentinel

Pomeroy--MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Buckeyes
win sixth
straight
--···~

...

=Pick 3: 549
Pick 4:0021
Cardsi 9-H, LO-C,

-

4-7-29-38;39-44
Kicker: 973072

Page4

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•

aIVot 42, No. 160
Copyrighted 1991

.

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,.

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2 Socllono, 14 Pogeo 25 cento
AMultimedia Inc. Newspoper

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 19, 1991

.---Christmas Is...----------.... .Roberts,

commission ·
discuss Issue 2 projects

4 to 7 lb. Average
Water Added

_Whole. MEGA

Limit .I Per- Family

·o n.

lb.

By BRIAN J. REED
· Sentinel News Starr
Meigs County Engineer Philip ·
RobertS .dis.cussed the coumy's
1992 Issue 2 projects wit8 the
Meigs County Commi's'sioners
w~n. the-.boanl met in regular ses·
sion Wednesday afternoon.
The county and :village governments will receive $371,179 to
assist in funding $478,883 in projects for 1992. Those grant awards
were made at a recent Issue 2 meet·
ing in Marietta.
. ·,
The grant applications
approved, according to Roberts.
were: $65,505 for resurfacing and
~. paving work'-within the village. of
Syracuse; $9;130-foi diainage and'
roadrepairinthevillageofRacine;
$26,100 for paving in Middleport,
village; $28,515 for paving on
Sumner Road, Hemlock Grove
'Road, Pine Grove Road and Flat· woods Road; $76,594 for paving
on Wolfe Pen Road and Royal Oak
Road.

'

1--Ac,:onlin~:-to· Roloorts.-uneaward

place on a cold evening to Wrap girts for family
members. The twins are Southern Junior High
School students.
'·
.

REMEMBERING OTHERS Wl1JI GIFTS
• Paul and Jessica Chapman displayed the spirit
of Christmas giving as they sat befor~ the fire·

of grants for
Issue 2 Year
Five projects will made in April
instead of December, so planning
for those fifth year projects will
probably ~in in January.
When it ~gan, ~e Issue 2 pro·

gram was pl!(nrieelto take place Roberi Buck, for i~digent
over a ten year peiiod, aJid Roberis guardianship funds and encumreported to die commissioners that be red $245.20 for county court
the Issue 2 program should contin- computer repairs.
ue for.five more years, as was orig·
In another related action, the
inl!lly planned.
board ~uthorized Auditor William
Year-end work
R. Wickline to authorize any blanIn other business, the commis- ket funds transfers that are nccessioners approved resolutions in sary for closing out the year's blidsupport
of the
"Ah
' Meigs County Hous · get.
mg ut bnty, and authorized the
Parks district
..
board, .under the direction of
MaryPow~ll and Lloyd Black·
Administrator Jean Trussell, to · wood disciiSsed the 1992 budget of
apply for Section 8 HUD rental the Meigs County Parks District
vouchers for use by I01'4·income
According to Blackwood, ihe
Meigs Countians.
district board projects a· $1 ,579
The board approved the follow- · shortfall in next year:S budget
jng year·.elltl interdepartmental based on this.J'~' (~xpenditur_es :_ .
..flinds-uansfer requests: $2,775 .55 and receipts. The board, did not
· for the EMS department for take any action-on the district's
,salaries, supplies 'and material; request for additional funds, since
.S865.58 for the EMS transfer unit · the 1992 county budget js not yet
budget for PERS; $7,129.84 frotn complete.
.
·.
the general fund 10 auto license and
In other action, the board:.
gas .fund and $31,712.07 from the
, discussed several matters wr·
general fund to the DHS building taining 10 the new Department 'of
fund, both requested by the treasur- Human Ser.vices building with
er's-office:and both for-interest- DRS Director Michael L. Swlsner;
earned through 1991; $1,092 for .
. set next week's regular meet·
the juvenile court supplies fund and ing for December~ at 11 a.m.
$886 for the prohate coun supplies
Presem were Commissioners
account.
Richard E. Jones, Manning K.
Additionally, the board set up a · Roush and David Koblentz, and
fund, upon the request of Judge Clerk Mary Hobstettcr.

loodmobile collects 50 units o
blood during Wednesday's visit
..,_ ... .,. ' .. _ .. ,..

..n•· ..

~

Fifty units of blood were donat·
ed when the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile. visited the Meigs
County Senior Center Wednesday.
Recognized as multiple-gallon
donors were: Brian Nitz, Pomeroy.
one gallon; Taniara J. Nelson, Mid·

•,

Betty Br.own
Partyflake Or Cloverleaf
Brown &amp; Serye

Sugar Creek

·Bacon

Rolls

Pacl~

_.,

'" "· ~

.,,.• ,.. i"'"· ri'·_,,.___. "··

dleport, one gallon; Bryan S.
Shank, Pomeroy , three gallons ;
Walter Couch, Pomeroy. four gallons; Don B. Cullums, Pomeroy,
four ga,llons; Paul S.· Marr,
Pomeroy, seven gallons: Sarah J.
Fowler, Mid~leport, 12 $allons;

Ice Cream
Gallon
Carton

t/2

99
--Local briefs--

'

coolville woman hurt in wreck ·

A Coolville woman received minor injuries resulting from a onecar accident on U.S. 33 in Bedford Township Wednesday afte01oon.
- - According-to-a-report from the Gallia-Meigs-Post of the .'itate · · Highway Patrol, Eleanor V. Riel, 55.• was southbound on U.S. 33
1 and lost control of her 1988 Chevrolet Corsica in a curve. Her ca!
went off the left side of the road and into a ditch '
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Service transported Riel
to Veterans Memorial Hospital where, according to a hospital
spokeswoman, she was treated and released.·
·
Damage to the front-left of Riel's car was reported by the patrol
as mode!llle.
.
• Riel was cited by the patrol for failure to control.

_Egg-Nog _

Breast

,, ~ ~~

32 oz.
Ctn.

..

·Police probe tirf incidents
Monday 7 a.m. thru
Saturday Mldnlte
Sunday 7 a.m.
'Ill 10 .P.!D·

Prices Good·4 Days
.December 1991
Wednesday, December 18 thru
Saturday, December 21, 1991

Bear
Minilnum
Prices
Items an rices E fective only at.:
GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR SIDRE
.•

·,

.

'

c"· · .~.--.-.1

and .
First time donors were Nancy
Beaver, Middleport and Randy J.
Churilla, Pomeroy.
·
Regi stered nurses worlcing at the
center were Beulah Ward, Lenora
Leifheit, and lane Brown.
Working' as RSVP volunteers
yesterday wer.e Helen Bodimer,
Doris Carder, Mary Nease, Lula .
Hampton, Peggy Harris, Emma.
Clatworthy, Goldie Fredericks ,
Jean Nease, William Hoba~k.
· Joyce Hoback, Jack Sorden , Florence Richards; Jeaneue Lawrence.
~nd Gerald Wildermuth . •
Ed Cozart and Wilma Davidson
volunteered as donor auendanis,
and the . canteen waS' served by
Asbury United Methodist Church
in Syracuse.
Donors, by community, were:
POMEROY · Walter R. Couch,
Billy J. Spencer, Paul F. Marr,
Debra D. Mora, Don B. Cullums,
Patricia J. Barton, Brian Nitz,
Continued on page-3

M.eigs ~chool ·
districts receive
educational kits '

Food Club
Regular Or Lite

· Qur ~ry Beat Quality
Sliced The Way You Uke II

_., .,

Borden~ Elsie ,

Regular
Or Light
Flavors

12

'

Pomeroy Police are investigating three reports of tires being slit
with a small blade knife on parked vehicles sometime overnight
Tuesday.
Two of the incidents happened on Condor Street, the third on
Mulberry Ave.
·
The re110ns were li:om Howard Logan, 201 Condor St., who said
that the nght front tire on his 1975 Ford Pinto was cut; Candy Van
Meter, 218 Condor St., who had both' tires on the right side of her
· 1981 vehicle slit, and Lee Layne, Racine, who had a tire on her
1992 Ford Escon slit while it was parked on Mulberry Ave .

McDon~ld's of Pomeroy has ·
presented four educational kits to
the three. school districts in Meigs
CounlY ·
.. .
.
Two kits were presented to
Meigs Local and one each to the
Eastern and Southern Local School
Districts.
The kits, geared 10 students in
kindergarten through the fifth
grade, include three video cassettes, '"When 1 Grow Up," which
stresses the importance of staying
in school and obtaining an educa·
tion · "Plan to Get Out Alive"
which focuses on fire safety; anct'a
canoon -"AII Stars to the-Rescue" ·
centcri~g on drug awareness.
•'
The kits also feature nutritional
· informatiM, safety tips for kids, an
environmental action pack to
encourage preservation of th e
earth, and a "Learning About
Learning" packet to teach young
students how to learn.
TheSe educational kits were ere-..
alcd by the McDonald 's Research
and Resource Center for tri-state
area McDonald's establishments.
According to Sandee Mills, who
owns the Pomer{)y McDonald's
with her husband, Roscoe, the program is now becoming popular
nationwide. '
.
'
The kits were ' presented
Wednesday to the nurses of each
district as they have contact with
each e~ntary school in their dis·
tnciS.

Ten perc~nt of Ohio's residents
had~no' medical insurance in 1990
By KATHERINE RIZZO
increased by 211 ,000, according to
No Ohio breakdowns were
ASSociated Press Writer
the study . Only in Virginia ,did available to examine the kinds-of
WASHINGTON - One m more people drop fr1lm the rolls of people who joined the pool of unin·
every 10 Ohioans had no medical the insured.
surcd between 1989 and 1990. But
insurance in 1990, according to a
Dr. Sidney Wolfe of Public Citi· nationally , about three-quaners of
new study.
zen Health Research Group said it them were families with incomes
The study, an analysis ofCensus is part of a national trend.
above. $25,000, the study showed.
Bureau,data cond.ucted by groups
Working people who consider Fewer than 9 percent lived below
that favor national health insur · themselves part of the middle class the federal poverty line.
ancc, showed that more than ·I. I are surprised to find they can't hanThe analysis was conducted by
million Ohioans had to fe~d for di e the increasing chunk health the Public Citizen Health Research
th~msel~cs when they got stck or in surance premiums take out of Group , Physicians for a National
'"Jured art 1990. In 1989; one of thw budgclS.
.
Health Program and the Center for
every 120htoanshadnoinsurance.
" We' re ta lking about people Nationall:jealthProgram Studies at
· In just o~e year, the number of mak ing $25,000, $30,000 .. $35,000, Harvard U~iversity, All throe supO.hiQll!lS..Wtthout such -tnsurance.-$40,000 a year and they rc mcdt ·~ port ~-nattOnal-health-IOSurance
cally indigent. They can ' t afford program to proyide medical coverhealth care," Wolfe satd.
age to all Amencans. ·

Ashton man killed in wreck ·
~

· An Ashton man was killed in a
two vehicle accident on SR 2 Wed·
nesday night, according to MillOn
County Sheriff Ernie Watterson.
Stephen T, Alford, 2l •.of Ashton·
Upland Road, Ashton, was
. :Tunced. 'ilead at St. Marys
'tal in HuniinBIOII following
the :55 p.m. ICCideDllll the nonh
ennnce or tile &lt;loG ..
PIMlt,
Wattmon said. He wa a i"IAXI
to St. Marys by HeallhNet.
Aqcording to wimesses, AlfOid
was trav.e!ing south on Sit' 2 -.. a
high rate of speed. RusacU · E.
Thomas, 52, of !'oint Pleasant was

=

DAYS UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

.•.

/

\

each school in iheir district. Pictured, l·r are
Sand,ee Mills, co-owner or McDonald's, J~yce
Thoren, Southern Local Nurse; Mary Price
Eastern Local Nurse; John Hoffman, a manage;
at McDonald's; Sharon Birch, Meigs Local
~urse; and Roscoe Mills, owner of McDonalll 's
m Pomeroy . .

EDUCATIONAL ' 'PRESENTATION • .
McDonald's of Pomeroy has presented lo each
school.district in Meigs County educational kits
featuring a variety of teaching tools fontudeniS
in grades kindergarten through grade five. Th•
· kits were presented on Wednesday to the nurses
or each~district as they have easy accessibility to

)'

!

I.

.

.

' ,~ • .

.

-

entering ~ 2. fmm the Gocidyeu :
"entrance and apparently did not see.
Alford's _1984 Honda t11010reycle
approaching. Thomas pulled into
the path of Alford, Wattenon lllicl. .
AlfOid's mOIOI'tyCie wu lillccl as.
a c~lete loss. -Damage 10
ThomiS 1978 Chevrolet lr!ICk was·
esllmatod II $500.
Thomu ltld )lis J,l8S9CIIgen·,'
Georle Shell of Point Pleasant ltld
Jfm ~~ of Mason. were not
injured.
'fl!e ICC idem is lli\1 wx1er invea-.
liplion.
. -·,

' i!

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