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                  <text>.Pial 14-Tbe OaUy Sentinel

Pomeroy--MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Buckeyes
win sixth
straight
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=Pick 3: 549
Pick 4:0021
Cardsi 9-H, LO-C,

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

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aIVot 42, No. 160
Copyrighted 1991

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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.

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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.
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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
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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·

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

Sugar Creek

·Bacon

Rolls

Pacl~

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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--

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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

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32 oz.
Ctn.

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·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
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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

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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 ·
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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.
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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. '
.
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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

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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

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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.
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~comment~ry
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Behin.d hars,~_aRnu.cite_still'.airits3ligh_~-

Area de~ths

Dale Warner·

Hospital news' :-;.

Fo~~es~w:~~c~;,0~~n~ ~f~!~~lict~:~~lwillbein~ee Ad~:~s~ar~~ie~l~l~~= - i
Home with Re"V. R. Keith Rader

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTEII.

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Store closing raises co~cern
about downtown Dayto1;1

Bl d

b '[e...

Announ·cements

f.

Weather

,t

F.

Hostage's freedom elicits·refl~ct!on

Sarah Overstreet.:.

Letters to the editor ·
. Responds to Crow's remarks

life

Bush .campaign: Whete's "the teeth?

•

WedneSday, Deeeinber 18, 1991 at
Fnends may call at ·the fyneral Davis, Mrs. Theodore Fisher and '
' The-Meigs· eoimty~eommon , ·Ho~~~~L~toy-~~lsh,' J?Qmer~y;.. ~Rut!and,_Shawnette-Marie..Cun- hiuesidence-fQIIowing a brief-ill~ home f9 2 Q.mThto 4~~J-:c son, WilliaGray,-'Fammy-Johruou, l
Pleas Court.~as sele,f~ 300 names _,_ Tony ·A. Sl!oel!\aller, .Mid~pgtt~.J!ingh~•.Racine; Roy.Alwt-HQ!ter, ness.-~-- . ·
- - - p.m . to- -p.m. on urs Y··
:Charles Leffingwell, and George . j
as prospecuve ·peiUt jurors for the - Fioya·L. Brickles, Shade; lesste L, Pomeroy; PaQla N. ·Slater, Racme; ·- He was born on August 17. E
Ul II
Stewan.
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January, 1~9Item\.
. ' ' Orueser, Rutland;Eioise Adams, Ronald Lee Salser, Racine. '
1919 in Mef~s County,' the son of
rnest ne s
' 'Births, Dec. 18 : Mr .. and· MrS. I
Thoae names selecied were: Pomeroy. .
·..
Jody Ann GQCglein, Long Bot- the late Dayton and My111e' Bailey
Ernest Wells, 85, of Middleport, Albert Hall, a daughter, Athens. '
Anna 'Marie St•rclter, R:utland; · Miltlnid Mae Hubbard, Syra- tom; Bryan S. Shank, Pomeroy; Warner.
·
died Thursday morning, December Mrs. BoQita Stumjlo, a son, Bid- !
Debbie L. Dailey. Reedsville; Jack- cuse; Myrtle H. Stanley, Albany: Sheryl Lynn Rose; Racine; Carrie
A fOundry in older. he- was 19. 1991 at Veterans Memorial well.
~
ie"S. Elani, Pomeroy; Mary Vir- Danny L. Burbridge, Albany; April M. Wears, Rytland; Michael. T. employed by Parkersburg Rig and Hospital.
.
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giniil Oibson, Pom~roy; MarY E. Jean .Nazarewycz. Racine; Rick' Struble, S)ll'acuse; Helen·F. Smith, R6el and Pio_ne.er CJJy_Casting
Arriong· the survivors are fiTs ~
-~
Sllyder:,_l'tlmeroy;_Martha,L. Fry, -Allen-Walker, Raeine;"-Y.idli-Mae -PomeroyJ John T. Wolfe;·Racine; .Company ill·Belpre. · ·. .
wife, Mary Wells.
l
Pomeroy; Donna Kay Wo~yard, Green, Vinton;' Letha' F. Cotterill, . Patricia Ann Shain, Racine; Sharon
He was a veteran of the U.S. . Arrangements are under the .
1
Albany; , Shirley ;Ann Baity, Pomeroy; Delbj:r( H. Bollinger, · J. Jewell; Pomeroy; 1ames W. Army Air Corps during World War direction of Fishtr Funeral Home
~
, Pomeioy.;' Vio)li Mae ~en~ach, Pomeroy:. Ora Watkins. Middle- . Johnson, Pomeroy ; Sharon"M. II,
.
iri Middleport , and will ·- be
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·Pomeroy; " Linda Lou Bates, port; Bryan P. Zirkle, Middleport.
Darst, Pomeroy.
·He is survived by his wife, Flo- annoupcect.
iuut• '""""'
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Pom~roy.
.
. Betty L. Triplett, P.omeroy; , Burl D. Walker, Shade; Chester renee Hawk Warner of Syracuse;
,..." otiHT "'!!''.,.· .-., ,
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Terrx. Scott Fields; Pomeroy; Amy Ruth Mann, Pomeroy; Stan- Junior Coni,bs, ",acine; James N. two sons, John G. (Irene ) Warner, L es t er 8 ai'Iey
·
HatiMY liFT «nrFtCAm ·1.._
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Elvira Barr, Pomeroy;' Franklin Y. ley William Holter, Racine; Stan- Wright, Coolville; Robin T. East- Athens, and James 'D, (Patsy)
Howard, Pomeroy; Ma'cy M. Buck, , ley William Holter,:Racine; Ray- . man, Coolville;. George Brent Sts- Warner of Syracuse; a daughter,
Lester B. "Odie" Bailey, 82, of
,
Pomeroy'; Qilbert M. Zwilling, · mond•Ellis Donohue, Pomeroy; . son,. Pomero~ ; Olive C: Mil~td. . Mrs. Clair (Dorothy) Morris, West- Overbrook Center in Middleport,
)
Pomeroy; Wendy Lynn Swann, Reva.N. Beach; Middlepon.
Albany; Chnstopher D. Smith, erville; and three grandchildren, died on Th~rsday, December 19,
l
Pomeroy; Brenda D. Neigler, MidBrenda S. Morgan, Albany; Pomeroy; Reva·Sinith, Mtddleport; Mauhew Beaver of Athens, Trisha 1991 at Holier Medical Center
j
die port; Christopher D: Haning, Donna Jean Grueser, Mi~dleport; Sh~rry M. Miller, Rutland; Lori B. Warner of Syracuse and Catie Mar- after a brief illness.
181.;.,
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Albany; Pauline G. Labonte, Long Elizabeth Jean Hood, Pomeroy; . Hill, Racine; Stella M. Fleshman, ris of Westerville.
He was born in Salisbury Townl '
Bottom; George L. Wright, Andrew E. Batey, Middleport; Racine.
Besides his parents, he was pre- ship. the son of the late Benjamin.
~
P,omeroy; l:eona K. Martin, Charlotte·M. Armes, J,..ong Bottom;
Rhoda G, Gomez , Rutland ; ceded in death by a grandson, H. and Eva Hysell Bailey. He was
1
Pomeroy; .C~d Eu~ene Mit~li. . Spencer .Buchanan, Reedsville; Delma I. Karr, Middle~t: Hattie JimF~~e%~~ces will be hel~ on a retired carpenl!lr and a member of
.i
Pomeroy; D1ana Lynn While, John Paul Hensley, Long Bottom.
E . .Sellers, .Pomeroy. Tma M.
the Middleport Church of Christ
·Pomeroy; Na~cy Sue Thoene,
Vonda Rene Wolfe, ~ortland; Butcher, Mld.dleport;. Owen A. Friday atl p.'m. at Ewing Funeral
Survivors include his wife,
Pomeroy; Ceba Rose McCoy . .Eunice Q. Wilsqn, Racme; John Nutter, ReedSVIlle; Ju,dy I. Molden,
Mary L. Bailey, Middleport; two
. Pom.eroy; Roger J_ee Hoffman ; . Avery·Goeglein, Pomeroy; Yvonne Pom.eroy; Jenmfer L. Couch,
00 fn0 l
sons, Richard (DoriS) Bailey, MidPomeroy; Hermetta Kay Hysell, Sisson Reedsvillt'; Samuel E. Cur- Pomeroy; Paul D. Anderso)l,
dleport. and Stephen (Djane) BaiRacine; Robert Eldon· ·Bowen, tis R~cine"· Michael J. Deem; Pomeroy; Oscar Allen Maynard,
Continued from page-I '
ley , 'Belpre; nine grandchildren, '
Pomeroy&gt;·
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Ra~ine ; Ja'mes Leroy Jarvis , Racine; Julie Houdashelt Tho~ton, William M. Radford, Howard P. and nine great-grandchildren.
' Ernest V.an ;lnwagen, M1d~le- Pom~roy; Earl W. Fields, Pomeroy; Racme; Merle G. ;ManJe~. Mi,ddle- Logan, Fanna K. Cullums, Linda J.
Graveside services will be held
port:· Charles G. Dill, Ppmeroy; Allen Hamm, Syracuse; Eleanor port; Perry E. Wtse, M1ddlepon; Foreman, Timothy M. Hall, David · on Saturday at 1 p.m. at Riverview
·clareit~e D. Mclntyre ; Rac\ne; Jean Duerr, Syracuse; Wanda Lau· Foster G. Niday•. Reedsville,. M. King, Don E. Follrod, Virgil K. Cemetery in Middleport with AI
Donald Ray Van Meter, Racme~ dermilt, Racine.
Evelyn E1leen G1lmo~e, Windon, Gerald E. Rought, Randy Hartson officiating.
Paul Ray Stewart, Cheshire; Jessie
Christopher Robert Deemer, Pome~oy; John T. Denms, Churilla, Sara Folwer, Carolyn A. · There will be no calling hdurs.
Yvonne Jarrell, Pomeroy; Anita J. syracuse; Frederick Eu~ene Cheshtre; Gale Eugene Osborne, Charles, Gloria K. Kloes, Donald
Arrangements are, under the
Aeiker, Pqmeroy; Ralph Sylvester Pullins, Middleport; Claudta Jo Reedsvill~; Kathleen Fmk, ~ut- R. Smith, Bryan S. Shank an~ direction of Birchfield Funeral
Frarik, Pomeroy; Mary Lou Shut~. Albany; Robert E. Hayes, Ian~; M1chael Lowell Bmg, Edward M. CoZart.
Home in Rutland. .
Speneer;C~ester; Richard E.,Cook, s'yracuse; Caroll. Justis, Racine; Racme; Florence I. .:-varner, SyraMIDDLEPORT - George L .
Pomeroy.
.
Donette Talbott, Racme; LeJean . cuse; Candace Elame Carleton , Harris. Dorothy C. McCloud.
Ira Oscar McCoy, Reedsville; Armstrong, Middleport.
Coolvtlle; •D.reama S. . Bentz, Tamara J: Nelson, Nancy Beaver,
Christmasproiram
Waid Ray Spen.cer, Long Bott~m;
Christina Lynn Barber, Pomer~y; Dav1d Lee Vance, Port- Donia R: Crane, Shannon M.
.The HobSon Church of Christ in
J(eith Ray Dav1s, Tuppers · Plams; . Reedsville; Richard E.' Ours, li!lld; .Tm10th~ A. Hysell, Syracuse. Hindy, Richard E. 'Chambers, and Christian Union will present it~ ,
William R. Cl!ll, Lopg· BottoJ!l; ·Racine; 'Larry J. Normart, Pomeroy; · Mike E. King, Racme; Arlene L. Gloria I. Peavley.
.., .
Christmas p{Ogram on Monday·atAitiliaG. Butch'er, Pol!ier!!Y.i Thor, Lowell Eugene Plainer, Racine; Ritcnie, Lo~g Bottom; Nanc~ W.
LONG BOTTOM - Ralph H. p.m.
.
·
leif Victor Bentz, Racine; Joan Daniel Alan Nease, Racine; Mark Woolard, Mi!ldJc:port; Laula Eileen Ballard, Laura L. Hawley, Bruce
Watcboiaht services
Martin , Albany; .David Allan Ainhon Ma es Alban . Darrell I:lr~wer, Coolville; Karen Fay Hawley, Robert Burdine, and
The Hobson Church of Christ in
S·later, Pomeroy; Donald Lerpy Napper,YPom~oy'; Helen Diddle, Gumter,· Syracus~; · S. Irene Henry E. Bahr.
Christian Union will hold "watch
Hunnel,.Pomeroy; Clyde Edward S racuse· JoAnn Adlcins Pol1land . Hoback, Syracuse, Berth~ ·M.
RACINE - Marie Bush, Grace night" services on Dec. 31 with
Ken~edy, P~meroy ; Patricia A. . YFranc~s Ida Stewart: Middle: C~nde, Pomer~y; Don Wendell E. Hojter, Harry D. Holter, Ruth E. Sarah Durban will be the pastor.
Hysell, Pomeroy.
rt· Ra ·ena McGuire Pomero . Wilson, Albany, Robert L. Reeves, Shain, MJiry E. Curtis, and William
Earold J?ean, Albany; Daniel ~b~rt Cunningham: Syracus~; Che~ter; Glenn A. Grueser, Mar- H. Hoback.
South·Ce)!tral Obio
Thomas Wtll, Pomeroy; Clarence William-Brad-Ma nard- S racuse·_lene !..Hemsley,.Pomeroy. .
RI:JTI,AND · Gregory M..StewTonight, clear. TllelPW: t·~~,.,---A'IBer! Cam15ert';"Pomeroy; Dale Wanda Lea Riff./ Radn/ Alisha
Rtchard .Henry McKee, Port- art, Mary E. Davidson, Marta H. . 20 . Light winds . Friday, mostly
Edward Sisson Pomeroy· Frances
F10 df S ·
B ' . - A land; Denms Mattnew Donohue, Blackwood, and Donna M. David- sunny
and warmer. The high 45 to
·E R h Middi - · R 'tand Lee A.
ey; yracuse; ermce · Pomeroy· Frimces Mae Holsinger son.
.
.
•
. 1. ou~, I d·e~rt, ~
d
Durst, Mtddleport; Ivan Douglas Reedsvihe· Kathryn . Jones'
SHADE - William Milhoan; 50
.
WM 1'dsed,Iepuotrt~nRo'dneayryE ~~~/r· LavTender,NSyrdacuse.KI 'b L · Reedsviile; Evelyn G. Stanley: SYRACUSE -.Darla N. Thomas; Extended forecast:
•
·
. •
racy a me at cr, ong p
J
A M .
PORTLAND Ste hen H Nease·
Saturday through Monday:
Rutland; Tammy L,ynn Batley • Bottom; Delbert A. Smith, Racine;
omero~; 0.eua nn orns,
· •. P . ·
:
Warmer through the period.
Albanr,,; James R. Acree, Jr.. Don M Rose Portland· ·Darla Pomeroy, Regma R,. Kimes, Syra·_ MASON, W.VA. · Bnan E. John Fair Saturday. A chance of rain
Pomeroy. .
.
.
L nn K~rinedy' Rutland· Rick C cuse; Crystal E. S1mpson, Syra- son; MINERSVILLE - Ma~y L. Sunday and Monday. Lows 25 to
Cecilia Mitch, Pomeroy; Loretta Jerry Pomeroy· Ralph· Neigler' cuse; Robert F. Jeffers, Syracuse.
Voss; LANGSVILLE - Eilts E. 35 Saturday, around 30s Sunday
Cecilia Murphy, Tuppers Plains; Racin~ · Gary Lee Wainer Long
Owen Dailey, Portland; Karla Myers.
and 35 to 45 Monday.
Kimberly Ruth'Jones, Shade; Betty Bono~· Anna Bell· Barrett Rut- Sue Osborne, Rutla~d; Susan
J. Wilbur, Albany; W~yne E. Peck, land· K~ Platter Middleport'
Elayne Ro,essler, Racme; Shetla
~lbany; David Lawrence Grate,
Wahlr J Robb Albany: Ken- Ann Proffm, Syracuse; ~ar-y F.
Long Bottom; Judith Elaine Wlllfe, neth M caic Middleport· 'Renee . Bumgardner, Pomeroy; Clif~ord ~·
Pomeroy; James Wirt Nelson, ' Ric·hard Long Bottom; ca'rol Sue Whjtti~gton, Jr.,,Rudand;· VU"gtnta
.Pomeroy; Gene Lowell Jeffers, Oliver Racine· Manilyn Lou Bar- E. Whttlatcllf9¥tddlepon; Paula J.
:Albany; · Gladys M. Blessing, _ ·ton, R~dsvill~; Juanita M, Bable, Hal~ •. P.o~er~y; ~art l. P~gn,
Sha~. .
·
.
· Racine; Steven Ray Hupp, Racine; Rac.me, 0 . ert : amp e :
Ktmberly L. DaVIS, Pomeroy; Paula L Sayre Portland· Brenda Rattne, Cectha G..Ltsle •. S)'l\lcuse,
:Paula Jean Wood, Long Bottom; . Sue Vic.kers, Ew.ington; 'Herman SteRphame ltEII EKn~hsh,RMidddlepolrtl,.
· Her be n Don andy
-. mg,
ee sv1
e,
Dwayne L. W1'll'1ams, Ch es ter,· Leonard Lawson, Racme;
·e Freeman
Syracuse·
Wayne
Clarence Clyde Wolf, Jr., Chester; Barker, Racine; Harold Argyle R C~tt ·u Po~eror w~sley M
'Gladys E. McGh~. Rutlan~; Lora Sedgwick, TuppersPlains.
.
S;.ith,erPdmero ; Tina Mari~
Jane Wolfe.• Long Bottom, Mem
Charlene · Edith · Hoeflich, Miller Pomeroy· Uelen Alice NorAngel Moms, Long Bottom; James Pomeroy; Paul D. Nease, Pomeroy;
. p'
. Matl'da M. R
1
'R. Frecker, Pomeroy; James C. Flossie Myrl Waldni~. Racine; ~~·m~;-::er_oy.Mamte M ~~~~·
BircHfield, Pomeroy; Margaret L. Clarence S. Frank, Racme; .Ralph Pomero~: Robert L. Sheppard'
Henderson •.Pomeroy.
. Ed:vard ~russell, Long Bottom; Syraciise;' Ernest Charles Schaer:
Opha Wilham Offutt, Pomeroy, Avtce Elizabeth Spencer, Long Long Bottom; Resa Jae Sawyers,
John G. B8lley, Pom~roy; Pamela Bottom; Wtlltam Edwm Snouffer, Racine; ·Harold E. Rose, Racine;·
Jean Jones! Pomeroy, Arnold W. Pomeroy; Sherlyn M. Butcher, nd John A. Van Reeth Syracuse.
Hayes, M1ddlepor.t; Wendy J. Pomeroy ; Jean Irene Sandy, a
'
·. Halar, Pomeroy; Virginia Lee Langsville ; William . Scoll •
Brannon, Reedsville; Emma Lee Cranston, Tuppers Plains; William
·Bird, Racine; Carol A. Frecker, J:homas Kerr, Albany; John E.
.
'Racine; Michael C. Custer, . Werry, Pomeroy.
V.ete.rans Memorial
Pomeroy; Murl V. Gal away ,
Evelyn N. Icenhower, Portland;
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
, Albany.
Patricia Anne Houdashelt; Syra- ' -= Margaret Casto, Lakin, W.Va.
Barbara E. James, Pomeroy; cuse; Grace Price, Albany; R. lay
WED~SDAY DISCHARGES
.Jam.es Oren Huffman, Pomeroy; Reyoolds, Pomeroy ; Phyllis E. - Marte Phrlltps, Elma Epple. and
' Emma English Ashley, Pomeroy; Rice, Reedsville; H. Glenn Brown, Lee Bmg.
.
Chester E. Wells, Long Bottom;
, Edna M. Clark, Pomeroy; Giles
:Glenwood Smith, Rutland; Kathryn
' Nell Rizer, Racine; Ruth Ann
' Smith Racine; Jack Henry Adams,
Racin~· Carl E. Morris, Rutland.
Jewe~y
'. Gre'gory H. Boatright, Long
. Bottom, John W. Van Meter, Syra•
.
.
- .
, c\lse; CharlesN. lhle\ Racine;
Kathryn E. Gilmore, Middleport;
Clarence Edward Fral,ey, !-lbany;

:By Jack
d D ,.
A,
an . . a e an

'

'

.~,·· ~

,N· "amis·
.4rf:lw_Y:far Januqry term ~
'·
··
· ·
-- ofMeig·S· Co.mmo:n~P. . leas Court

WASHINGTON- The "o~ly ~proved federal agents spied on him ter/ embrace L_aRouehe publici~.
AJideiiim~.' ~
presidential candidate running his . forpolitical·~ns.
·· ~. altnqu~~:h he Clail'flS some ~?m pnTi
H
·
campaign from .behind bara is politl ail time• has . not slo"':ed va~; He says he IS not an extremI'
uU ,
ical maverick Lyndon H. LaRouche. In addition to run.nmg 1st, .the.Iabel m.ost often used. to
,.
DEVOTED TO THE JI'I'J'IRISTS or THJIJ'IIEIQS..IIASON AREA
LaRouche Jr. And it looks like U.S. his campaign, he has written three explam hiS eclecuc pohllcs because have bandied the Persian Gulf cri- .·
taxpayers may help him fi.nance books while in jail; spreadin$ .the the usual tags don't lit. . . ,, ·
sis? "We didn'r have a Gulf cri- ..
that campaign.
g~spel of his unorthodox pohhcal , L.aRou~~~ calls his·poliu.cs old · sis,' •·he says. "We manufactured ·:
.--LaRouche is.one of nine.Demo- vtews. .
· . . - - · ~--- • · fashloned.~He_say.s Amencans 11!. it. Bush wanted-it: He got it, ana-c
cratic candidates who have applied
LaRouche, 69, spoke to us by .!he. CameJo! years were .more the ·British backed us up.' • ,.
I
1~9BQ,'lL. WINGEIT
for fedelal funds to match the c.am- phone from prison in Rochester, mclmed to think as he.and his fol- LaRouche firmly believes Bush '
paign contributions they have Minn. He told our a~sociate 'lif!! lowers do ~day. For msta?ce, he. wanted Iraq to invade Kuwait.
.
&lt;{ Piibllsber
raised To qualify a candidate must. Lynch why he IS runmng for pre~- shares Prestdent Kennedy .s bold
The Federal Election Commis- raise ~t least SHiO,OOO in private dent for- the fifth time: '.'1 don't ideals about space expl~rahOl\. In · sion has not officially determined
·; PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICI,J
money from contributors in 111 least thmk anyone else can handle the . fact, bolder. He once srud ~at the whether LaRouche qualifies for :. ·
· A.ulstant PubHsheriController
General Manage
'
20 states. Thanks to his minions job. I'm afraid if I don't run, my · Umted States .could energtzetts matching funds yet. But his track .;
hustling money in airports across policies won't be on the table."
economy by !XlPulabn~ ~s. Does record 111 fund raising is not shab- •
. AMEMBER of 1bc Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the
country,
LaRouche
will
easily
He's
ri~ht
on
that
s~ore.
he really beheve ~at. · Oh sure. by. He received more than · ·
: 'the'American Newspaper Publisher Association.
meet those requirements.
LaRou.che 1s the only candidate We need to do !hat.
.
$800,000 in matching funds for his . ' ·
ihat means he could be taking who thmks the federal government
Smce ~ ts a long way off for 1·988 presidentiabbid. The FEC.is , .
lETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess thap 300
money from ·the government that should put itself into Cha~ter II a construct!on proJect, LaRouche stewing about whether it could ·;
words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
he claims conspired to throw him bankruptcy and start agam. He proposes usmg the Moon as a way withhold money from LaRouche ,·
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten wiU be published. leners
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
.
in jail in the first place. (His cam- labels the last 28 years as "th.e stauon where a ctty V(Ould ~ pre- because he is in jail, but that isn't • -:
paign posters say, "Lyndon Yeat:S of the cover-~p of the assass1- . fabncat~d m red~ed gravtty and covered in the regulations. .
LaRouche for President, the Only nauon of Pres1dent John F. ,shipped to Mars. G~.gave us the
·NO CONTROL_ An estimat- •.
Opponent George Bush Feared Kennedy." He calls George Bush Moon to get to Mars, LaRouche ed 27,00() nuclear warheads are _·:
Enough to Put in Prison.")
"insane, a new Emperor Caligqla says.
.
' ..
" d'e' Jo ed · th 'o ~ormer Soviet ·
LaRouche has been in federal of sOrts.' • He reads The Wall Street
As. for h1s well-~ubhc!Zed quote
P Y m e " ur
"·
prison since January I989.after he Journal in jail so. he knows what-....~gcu~mgQueen Elizabeth of drug ~!':~~~~~fa~~s~:·J!r~~~~~sT~~ ~:
was convicted of illegal fund-rais- the enemy is thinking. In fact, he ru.nnmg, laRouche says. he was fll'St concern of the Bush adminiS- . ;.
ing tactics and sentenced to 15 calls the .newspaper an "enemy misquoted. He was only saymg·~ tration is seeing that those weapons , ·:
years. At .his trial, LaR9uche was publication," and philosophically the queen should d~ somethmg . are put under a political authority.
denied the chance to introduc3 evi- "hilariiJUS."
about .the laundenng of drug Now they are controlled day to day .
By JAMES HANNAH
dence that he claims would have . No big-name Democrars, or any money·moffshore banks.
Associated Press Writer
•
by lhe Soviet High Command and ;
DAYTON - Phlns to close the downtown ~ building, a retailmainstream politicians for that mat· How would Prestdent LaRouche guarded by the Soviet Special ·. ·
ing landmark since the early 1900s, have caused concern about the eco&lt;i)t~ f&lt;ll!l-s--m'!641!;•"· ~ ......
Weapons Custodian Section. These •' ,
nomic future of lhe centtal city,
.
1'" are
·
·
IU.
H
crack troops who are reponedly ·
"WiD the last person out of town please tum off the lighrs?" lamented
• ~
under tight control by military · .
on~ concerned reader in a letter to the Dayton Daily News. ·
.
hardliners, some of whom wouldn't · .
The Ltizarus siore was built in 1912 and operated by Rikes. Lazarus ·
mind smuggling a nuclear bomb or ·:
· took over the building in !he mid-1980s. .
two to such hardline countries as • ·
Last month, Lazarus· officials announced that they would close the
China and North Korea, or even to
store Jan. 31 because of declining sales and try to sell the .eight:story
rogue regimes such as Libya, Iraq ·, ·
building and two parking garages. City Manager Richard Helwig called it
and
Iran.
·
a "blow to the gut." ·
MINI-EDITORIAL
....,
In
the
'
An Indianapolis retailer who opera~s a discount department store has
d'ays
w6en
Ronal&lt;!_Reagan
was
:.
exp~sed interi;st in buyjng the buil~g. · ·~ ··
· · ·
COiivinc~·d ·tllat the COmm'unists ·;
The move will leave only two major department stores downtown. And
were taldng over Latin America, it . .
it has city officials looking for answers.
would have made big news. ~ut : ·
:City Commissioner Tony Capizzi, who has promoted Dayton as the
today,
almost no one pays attenuon ·:
hofDe for a new minor league baseball team, said a downtown stadi~m
to
the
fact
that EJ Salvador is still a . ·.
would be part of the answer.
brutal
place
to live. Back when ,".
'"I don:t think we. can discount the need for additional retailing downthere
were
two
superpowers and
town," said Capizzi.
they
were
supporting
opposite sides .
He said he is hoping the Lazarus building can be used as an ou~et
in.Jhe_Salvadoran
civil
war,-death.:....
. mall.
squads
in
that
country
were
a cause .. :
~There aren't many-cities in ihe country thai have downtown-ou~et
of concern in the Untted States.
stOtts, and I hope thai catches on," ,Capizzi said.
.
The random executions continue ..·
:Mary Ellen Mazey, chairman of the department of urban affaU's at
and the government still leiS it hap- .·
Wright Stare University, said downto.':lln probably won't rebound until the
pen, according to a recent U.N . . ·.
ecimoiny does.
·
human
rights repor~ The dtfference · "
"And when it does, it will be on a smaller scale," she said. "It's not
is
that
now
Americans are not per- . ·.
going to be the big department stores."
·
sonally
threatened
by who wins or
Ms. Mazey said the fear or crime might dissuading some potential
loses
in
El
Salvador.
There will be downtown shoppers.
no
communist
invasion
from the .:.
"One or the real sad things is the perception of crime ... that keeps
south. The only invasion is the one .
\
'
.
.
people from Dayton," she said. "And the statistics just don't bear it out."
has been going on all along ...C ·.
Ms. Mazey said city officials should conduct a good marketing study
''I've been a good little ·retailer and I want a nice increase in sale~ this y~ar athatsteady
stream of illegal immi- ..
in an effort to find what would likely draw people downtown.
grants
fleeing
repression.
or
we're
both
out
of.
a
job.
Got
it?
''We've got to get into the mind sets ofpeople," she said. " ...The city.
of Dayton aild downtown has to fmd its niche." .
,
One idea might be the establishment of a few one-stop shopping stores
.'
like the retail wareho\1Se8 that have become popular in the suburbs, she
said.
,
"If Day!Qn is going to compete with the suburbs, it's probably going
In listening to an interview with goes by at breakneck speed with bte schedule of things we have to
to have to look at those sorts or things.·'
newly released hostage Thomas literally no spare 15 minutes to do as we try to keep from losmg
..
Sutherland, I was struck by this 'make a long-distance call.
our jobs or shortchanging ouMami-, I think my largest slllmbling block ·;.·.
ol)servation: Of all the totture, iso· Some people (not me, it's the lies, what ·are we doing that we is probably my unwillingness to ,
lation and deprivation Sutherland one last practice I withhold from shouldn't be? sr:nding time with face the fact that I cannot hang on . :.
endured in his 6 1{2 years in cap- the technology gods) use their people who don t enrich .us in any to everything I'd like to and sur- , .
ti-vity. the thing he found most answering machines to screen calls; way, out ofa sense of obligation?
vive.
·
..
amazing was that he could ever not so much out of rudeness, but ·
The work world has changed
Hearing about the experience of . :
reach a point in his life where )le from the sheer triage of having to · dramatically in the last 20 years, a man like Sutherland -a bril..,
had absolutely nothing to do for 24 parcel out precious minutes.
but our soc1al and cultural worlds lian~ vital man forced to sit out his ... .
I have soine disagreemen!S with for the name change ts lhat the hours.
Sutherland's remarks also have not altered all that much. The exciting life blindfolded and sh~k- .. .
Mr. Crew's locations. Stingberg is German settlers wanted to disassoBefore his capture, there had reminded me of a recent Elaine changing wor.kplace has been ; led - does make one apprectate ·.
in Let art Township formerly the ciate themselves from Germany in been not enough hours in the day to Vie!S column in the St Louis Post- extremely stressful on women, who the simplest joys of life, no matter . :.
area of the Saxon post office. I WWI to show their Americanism.
do all the exciting things
Dispatch: A friend of hers decided
Let me give you some ACTU- offered, B:Jl.d even the time needed not to go to a relative's traditional have careers their mothers didn't how hectic. But once something . ,'
have a newspaper anicle in the late
but who are expected lo continue has focused one's attention on the : ~:.
1800s refemng to the real or ficti- AL post offices that existed in to sleep was an impositiO!I.
Christmas celebration because he shoulderin~ many·of the non-career wonder and brevity of me, the •. :
tious "Battle of Stringberg. " Meigs County..: Alberta, Artie, .. Sutherland's sentiments sure put always hall such an awful time in responsibilities their mothers did. prospect of only 30 more sweet ..
Devil's Hole refers to the mouth of Turner, Echo, Elden, Fayal, my life into: clearer perspective. I . the past. He decided that having The changes are stressful to men, . occasions to come makes wasting :.
the Shade River where the maraud- · Guthrie, Hanesville, Hobaugh; often feel the way he did before he just turned 40, ~e has only a finite too, and I think largely that both · one seem criminal .
'
ing Indians (called red devils) Ledlies, Lotta, Lulu, McKinstrys, was taken hostage, and I don't number - about 30, if statistics are sexes have refused to face the fact
As it happens, I just turned 40 . • ,
attacked settlers in the late 1700s Merritt, Nyesville, Randolph's know anyone with a job, a family correct - of Christmases. left. As that we can't do everything socially Only 30 more New Year's .Eves? I , ..
landing, Spiller,, Sterling Bottom, or especially both who doesn't. It's precious as they are now, he and culturally that we ·used to do, think I'll do some of the. things I · .
and early 1800s.
I seriously questipn "Permon- Ulric, Welsh, and Zeal. There is no gotten to the point ·of ridiculous ~ _ argued, how could his wi[e ask him even if holding on to some tradi- love best in' the world with the peo- .·
ka." Before the Minersville sign inforgtation ·as to the location of ness with my friends and me- we to spend one of them having a tions makes us feel safe while so pie I love best, an.d skip the parties . . · .
was for some unknown reason Turner or lulu in postal records. I promise to call, to keep in touch, to gruesome time? She didn't. ·
many oth.er things are changing.
Simple joys, and a fi~te nUI)lber of • ·.
. moved from the fuel tanks to a would welcome information on get together for lunch, we make
I think what he said makes per-..
As
the
new
year
approaches
and
them left. I tmagtne Thomas .·
mere few feet fiom the Syracuse them.
plans and then end ·up canceling · fee t sense and more of us should I take stock of how last year went Sutherland may be doing the same ,..' .
Sincerely,
corporation limit, this area is called
more often than not. A weekend follow his lead. With the impo$si· and how I'd like the next one to go, · thing.
Keith D. Ashley,
Carletonville after Isaac Carleton
'
'
· President Ewings Chapter,
of Carleton College renown. The
Sons of the American Revolution
area where Kroger is located was a
P .~ .-The oldest post office in
pan of o.ne or the siste.r comm~ni­
ties of etther Grantsburg OLDllls- the county is Ru~and, which began
burg, which were ·li!te~ annexed to Feb . .5, 1813 , aild th,e second is
Pomeroy just as Coalport was.
Long. Bouom , which began on
He is righi that Germany is in December 29, 1815. AND bol}t still
(
Chester Township, but is now operate.
knqwn as Pine Grove. !he reason

111 cOurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

!lh~~~r!sd~a~y~,D~ec~~e~m~b~er~1~9~~1~9~9~1----~-------+----------------~P~o~m=e~ro2y~·:l:~~:d:le~p~o~rt~,~O~hl~o~._~~~----~~----~-·--·--n.~~D~a~lly~S~e~n~tl~ne~l--_P_ag~e~3 .

).

Page--2-The Dally S.ntlnel
Pomeroy-MlddlepQrt, Ohio
Jhursday, .December 19, 1991 .

•

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Sports

The DailY. Sentinel-:~

•

·

· · ~,

'··

,,

By The Associated Press
Shoot 37 pen;ent from the field
and 35 percent from the free throw
hne and most coaches are preparing to talk. a\J&lt;'ut his team's loss.
. Georg• a s Hugh Durham saw
JUSt those nun:'bers·oo ~e-stat-sheet
Wednf!iday mght, b~t hiS Bulldogs
gave h1m a 66-65 VICIOry over No.
.13 Georgia Tech at The Omm.
"One of the reasons we got so
many 'offensive rebounds is
because of all the shots we
missed," Durham said, referring to
the Bulldogs' 22-5 edge in that category. . lc
questionbl" We
h d1d ta
thee some
d f th
a e s ots at
en o e game,
but our defense _pulled us out of it.
We d1d what :-;e had to do.on the
defensive end.
.
.
In other games mvolv10granked
team s Wednesday mght, Jl was :
No. 2 ~r~on: 1~7, ~ortheT cAr:·
zona ; o.
10 tate • a ·
Santa Barbara 75; No. 20 Alabama
107, The Citadel67; No. 21 Wake

0

8

8

Forest 74, VMI 43; and No. 23 career-high 26 points io lead six
Georgetown 89, St. Leo 51.
Wildcats in double figures. .
Georgia (5-2) led 66-61 on LitJeff Plank led the Lumberjf!CkS
terial Green's short shot in the lane (3-3) with 15 points.
with 3:03 10 play....., the Bulldogs'
No.4 Ohio State 82
final points Of the night··
Cal-Santa Barbara 75
Georgia Tech-(6-;2-)·didn't do
Jim .JacJcson had 24.:piiin!S-and
much better, geuing a dunk by seven assisls to lead the visiting
Malcolm Mackey with 2:51 left Buckeyes (6-0) in the matchup of
and two free throws by Matt Geiger unbeateils. The Gauchos (5·1) were
47 seconds later.
·
within 76-.70 with 1:3010 play, bu(
Neither team scoreli in the final Ohio State, which dominated 10side
two minutes.
throughout, made six free throws in
Green and Charles Claxton led the final minute. Lucius Davis
. Georgia, with 14 points each, while . pacec! Santa Barbara._ with 30
Mackey' paced .the" Yellow Jackets points.
with 23.
·
N.o. 20 Alabama '107
·
No. i Arizona 127
The Citadel67
Northern Ariwna 81
Andre Perry and James RobinThe Wildcats (5-0) beat the son each scored 23 points as the
Lumberjacks for the 18th straight Crimson Tide (7·1) had their highlime, extended the nation's longest est point total in four years. Alabahomecourt winning streak to 66 rna led by 30 points five minutes
consecutive games and scored their into the second half and had its ·
second-highest point IOta! ever.
biggest lead at 104-58 with 2:02 to
Reserve Deroo Johnson scored a play. Andre Harris led the visiting

•------Sports briefs----- Rutland slte of junior
TORONTO (AP) - Jack Mor- will receiye a$1.85 million si~ing . cage holiday tourney
ris, the MVP of the World Series bonus, $3 .5 million in 1992 and
last season for the Minne~ota $4.5 million in 1993. The Blue Jays
Twins, agreed to a two-year con- · have a $5 million OP.tion for 1994
tract with the ToroniO Blue Jays for with a $1 million buyout
$10.85 million.
Morri s joined the Twins last
Morris, 18-12 with a 3.43 se ason after 14 seasons with
earned run average last season, led Detroit. He's fourth ammong active
· hers wit· h a $3 .7 ml'11'100 sa1ary pitchers with 216 victories, fourth
p1tc
in 1991 and declined to exercise a in strikeouts. ( 21,43 ), fifth in
' opt'1qn WI'th M'mneso- inning~ (3,290) and .seventh in
$3.65 m1'II •on
ta. The 36-year-old right-hander shutouts (26). ·
·

"We were flat-tooted and kiild · scored i 7 of his 23 points in the Antonio 93; Denver i23. Phoenix ·
'·
of sleep-walked," Cleveland head final period.
109; and Golden Suite 104, the Los
coach Lenny Wilkens said.
. At Miami , Glen Rice hit five AngeleS Clippers 100. ·
.
The Cavs sh6t 38.~rcent from three-pointers and scored 22 points,
Rik Smits, held to seven pomts
the field and tume&lt;nfie blill over 22 · and Grant'Long scored-six of his- in regulation,- took advantage of~
times,-including 16 steals by- Ne w 20 P.&lt;,!Ints in overtime fonheHeat. - R·ony Seikaly's-disqualificationJersey, which got 22 points from
'This was as rewarding a victo· wilh six fouls to score the fust four
Derrick Coleman and 20 from ry as we've had because of the cir- points of overtime, giving the Pac· Drazen Petrovic.
cum stances last night," bead coach ers a 107-103 lead.
.
The Nets, leading by .four,. at Kevin Loughery said.
But Miami dl(ln't fold this time,
halftime, used 17-6 and 14-2 ~purlS
Elsewhere in the NBA, it wa.s scoring seven consecuuve
in the third qlU!l!et_JQ.!JQt:n an ~1- Boston 131, Milwaukee 117; Utah on a basket by .
· Smith,
60 lead, and Cleveland-couldn 1 - 107, Pliilaaelpllilfl05; Detrcriclli; · · fth-threeopointe:r-alld ·liwoc:.rrc:e~catch up although John Williams Charlone 97; WashingiOn 96, San throws by
to move in front
110-107 with
left
After another basket by Smits,
Long hit an 18-fo.ot baseline .
jumper and Smith added a lS:foo!
turnaround JUmper to put M•am•
ahead ,114-109 with 37 seconds
left.
Smith finished with 19 points
the
disease
and
the
disease
kills.
This
program
will
open
a
dialogue
By HAL BOCK
and Keith Askins stored a career· •'Five years ago; it killed with between dociOrs and our players.''
AP Sports Writer
high 18 for Miami. Chuck Person
twice
the
speed.
It's
grim.
I
"Should
an
individual
request
NEW YORK (AP/- If a routine blood test for an msurance pol" wouldn't want to be mv positive. testing, we would assist him in led the Pacers with·26 points.
Nuggetsl23, Suns 10~
icy had not revealed the AIDS But it's not as grim as five years finding an appropriate medical
Dikembe
Mutombo scored 27
facility," Goldberg said.
.
virus, Magic Johnson might have ago. There's always hope."
points
and
Reggie
Williams ,24 at
" Magic's
announcement
continued playing in the NBA with ' Teams of physicians from Som'
.
no suspicion that he had the mv mer's school have been enlisted by shocked us and raised the aware- Denver.·
Denver
turned
cold
in
the
founh
the
NBA
Players
Association
in
an
ness
level
of
the
urgency
of
a
cominfection, according 10 the dean of
the Johns Hopkins School of Public effort to educate ihe league's play- prehensive program ·for the play- period, shooting 28,6 percent as ·the
ers about the AIDS virus. The aim ers," Grantham·said. "We needed Suns rallied behind !be shooting of
Health.
"He ·could have gone years is to have the Hopkins doctors meet to be better informed. Let's be edu- Jeff Hornacek, who scored 22 of
witho'ut knowing," Dr. Alfred with all teams by the All-Star game cat&amp;! by.a compehensive, extensive his 28 points in the second half.
·
f-?utombo ' s two free throws
9
Program." · '
Sommer said. "The incubation on Fcb..
Grantham said it was essential witfi 3:221eft started a 9-3 burst.
period for the.disease can be very . . "There are thr~ eleme.nts to the
program," said Dr. Alan Goldberg, that the initiative for the AIDS proWarriors 104, Clippers 100
long."·
associate
dean
for
research
at
Johns
gram
come
from
the
players,
not
Golden
State snapped Los
Retiring as an active player
Angeles'
six-game
hqme winning ·
Hopkins.
"There
will
bil
straightthe
league.
.
rriade sense once Jolinson learned
forward
information
provided,
fol"In
the
1980s,
the
NBAPA
inistreak
behind
Chris
Mullin' s 23
of his condition, Sommer said.
lowed
by
sessions
with
groups
of
tiated
&amp;
·drug
program
that
evolved
points and 21 by Sarunas Marci" I would think anytime you get
something that the body tries to players for question and' answers into the lea~ue's drug policy." he ulionis.
Charles Smith, back in the linekeep under cqntrol, the less stress and discussions, followed by other said. ''This IS a similar situauon.''
you put your body through, th e information such as audio casseues · Dr. Alfred J. Saah, director of .up af~r a three-game absence with
and printed materials."
Hopkins' infectious (lisease epi · a swollen right knee; scored 19
more fit you are 10 fight it off."
The
players
willbe
informed
of
demiology
program arid one of the points, leading a balanced attack
Sommer said the prognosis for
available
AIDS
'tests
but
will
not
he
physicians
who
will be part of the for the Clippers.
Johnson, while not good, is better
required
to
be
examined.
·
NBA
program,
said he did not .
Bullets 96, Spurs ~3
than it would have been five years
"The
NBAPA
opposes
mandaexpect
that
the
AIDS
problem
to
he
Michael
Adams scoreq 35
ago.
.
"The useful.)ife Span has more tory . testing,.'.'_ .said_. Cha.rles :. any ~reater .10 .the ·basketbaU com- points and Washington ended an
tlian doubled in the last five . Grantham executive direciOr of the mumty than It •s 10 .the gene(lll pop- eight-game losing streak~by winning at San Antonio.
. . ,
years," he said. "He doesn't have union. "We encourage voluntary. uta~.on. .
MCIVE:- Charli)lte's Kenny
' Harvey Grant of the Bullets and
anonymous
testing,_
The
question
of
We
f10d
about-.one
10
I
,000
the disease yet, just the infection.
his move to take a shot while Detroit forward Dennsi
Right now, given what we know, if confidentiality is a dehcate one. infected, .I percent," he said. "I David Robinson of the Spurs were
defends on the play during the second quarter of
don't expect any difference."
ejected with 5:59 remaining af1er a
you are infected, you will develop
night's NBA game at Aubum Hills, Mich., which the
brief flurry of punches. _
117-97. (AP)
San Antonio trailed 89-78 at the
time, but the Spurs rallied without
Robinson , who scored 25 points.
=~~+~T;;;hey scored nine straight points to
'
Nouo
Domo
C
ollogo
72.
W
ohh 58
pull· ur 95-93 wilih-:f4-i!ecJJndls-lleft----"
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
In theNBA ...
Wiumbi:rg6UWone49 ·
on a three-pointer b.y Sean Ellioll,
Norrll Division
Team
W L T Pu. GF CA
who also finished with 25 points.
Deuoi.L ............... 20 10 4 44 133 106
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ohio
high
school
But Washington ,comrolled a
SLLooio ............ 14 II 7 35 11211 0
Allandc Dlwtslon
ChiCIJO...... ........ 13 13 , . · 33 113105
baskelball scores
Team
W L Pet. GB
jump ball with 6.5 seconds remainMinne.ou. .......... t:HS 3' · 29~1
108
Ba~ton. - ................. 16 7
.696
.
ing and Pervis Ellison hi t. a free
New YOik .....-...... .lS 7 .682 "J .s
Ooys
TorontO .....~...;.... 9 20 5._ D 911 8
4.S
MJ.mi ................... l2 12 .500
throwt'lat the 3.3-second mark to .
Cin. CAPE 93, Cin. lndian Hill 52
s
Phiaddpuo .......... .ll 12 .478
SIDck t 20131 , 4 doors, sedan,
Smythe Division
Cin.
LovclaOO
92,
Cin.
Rudin$ 60
build me margin to three.
9
New Jersey ............. .7 16 .304
f!ont wheel drive, 4 cyl., air, auto:,
· Vancouver ......... l ~ 1J 4 42 121 102
Cin.
Maricmont
67,
Cin.
Madwa
61
· Jazz 107, 76ers lOS
9.5
Wuhinpa... .......... .7 17 .292
Winnipeg ........... 15 II 1 37 103103
Cin.
Taylor
58,
Cin.
Finney1.0wn
49
PS, PB, AM'FM radio, radials,
9.5
Orltni1o ................... .6 16 .273
Karl Malone scored 30 points
EdmontOn .......... 14 15 S 33 120.124
Cin. Wyoming S4, C'Ln. Deer Padt 2&amp;
win.
defog.
Los Anaelca ....:...l1.2 13 1 · 31 l JO 122
Cilc:nvU!c 97, Shaw 76
and
John
Stockton
had
17
points
,,.. ' . .
Central Dlwlalon
Colg)ty'
..........
-.
'131l
4 30 118tl3
" Orcch 19, Springfield 53
Chioogo ..........11 4 .811
and 18 assists.
·
S anJ~ c ............. 7 25 l
17 89158
Stow 73, Hudson 53
Cleveland, ___ .. u 9 ' .!91
5
WAS.
The
Jazz
took
a
106-IO!lead on
6.5
Girls
Adant1 ...... .....;....... 12 I I .522
Wednesday's
sco&lt;es
'11,995
8
Oelroit................. ~ .. l2 14 .462
Admin! Kin&amp; 66, Sandusky 37
two fiee throws by David Benoit
Wuhinaton 2, B~ffal o 2, tie .
I
MilwaukeO: ............ ll 13 .458
Akron Ellet 4&amp;, Mogadore 27
N.Y. Rangm 6, Philadelphia 3
with 1:26 remaming, but a jumper
lndi•na .................. .ll 15 .423
9
Akron St. Vincent 59, Norton 50
Edmonton 7, Toronto 5·
13
ClwiOWJ ..................7 19 .269
A&amp;ht1bula Edacwood 75, Conneaut
by Johnny Dawkins and a dunk by
35
Charles Barkley made it 106-105
'J:onlght's games
Aahtabula Harbor 37, Ashtabula St.
1987 DODGE RAM
Pituburah u Boston, 7:35p.m.
with 47 seconds to go. Barkley
John 29
New Jcney at Hartford, 7:3S pm.
Slack t 20541,4 wheel drive . V-8
A~ on Lake48, Amherst 45
scored 25 points.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
N.Y. Islanders at Philadelphia, 7:35
Berea 59, N. Royalton 41!
360, auto., PS, PB, 3/4 ton , long
Celtics 131, Bucks 117
Mldwe.t Diwlslon
p.m.
,
3rccluivill c: 41 , Strongsvill e TI
bed. rear s1ep bumper.
GU
Montreal u Oticago, 8:35 p.m.
Te1m
W L tct.
01\U\swick 42, Medi na 37
Kevin McHale scored 20 poiniS
Ul&gt;h ....................... 11 9 .6l4
SJnJoseat St. Louis, 8:35p.m.
Cardinal 46, Pymawning Vall . 39
against Milwaukee.
~
HOUI\M ................. ll 9 .57 1
25
Qut:bec: nC~I"l'· 9,35 p.m.
·Ch agrin f aUs 38, Ora n&amp;c 35
San Antonio ........... 13 10 .565
lS
Winp.ipeg at Vancouver, !0:35 p.m.
Larry
Bird,
Kevin
Gamble
and
Ch Jnel 66, NDCL 36
Denver ................... \0 13 .435
5.5
Cin. CAPE 93, Cin. Indian II ill 52
Ed Pinckn ey scored 15 pomts
o.u. ..................... 10 14 .417
6
Cln. Lovelan 92, Ci n. 1-/. e~ ding 60
Friday's games
Minneaou ................3 18 .143 11.5
apiece
for Boston.
Cin.
Maricmon
~
67
,
Cin.
Madeira
61
EdmontOn 11 DuffJlo, 7:35p.m.
Cin. Taylor 58, Cin. Finneytown 49
ToiOtllO at Wuhington·, 7:35 p.m
The
Bucks were led by Fred
PadRe Dlvls ion
Cin. Wyomin! 54. Cin. Doer Puk 28
Roberts
with 19 points.
L.A. Wm .......... .. l6 7 .696
Cle. Hawken 3, Andrews 47
Major college
Golden St.at~: .......... l5 7 .682
.5
Cle. Hei&amp;hu 53, Valley Forge 46
Pistons 117, Hornets 97
Pm11ond ............ .... IS 9 .625
L5
C\e~ rvic w SO, Elyri• W. 38
basketball scores
Bill Laimbeer , whese season
Phocnix.................. l4 10 .583
25
Qovcrled 53, Midpark 24
L.A. Clippero .........14 12 .538 3.5
Firelands S6, Wellington ~5
high for an .entire game was 16
.. Easi
Sattlo .................... ll 11 .m . 4
O.tfield Uts .Trini ty 78, Padu•3 1
points, scored 18 of his 26 in the
Sammento .............. 7 15 .318
&amp;.5
Georgetown 89: St. Leo S I
.GcncYI 34. P, RiYCr.tidc 32
POM Sl. 80, !lmd 6 ~ .
first quarter.
Grand V• tl. l 9. Kirtllnd 26
Rider 79, Long Island U. 60
Jcrrcrson 46, Madiwn 30
Wednesday's sc:ores
Detroit led by_27 midw ay
Like Catholic 68, Clc. Cath. 33
8011011 J31. Milwaukee 117 '
through
the second quarter and setLcd gcmqnt 49, Bcrb hire 46
South
New Jttaty 102, Clndand,. 93
Luthcnn 1!. 31 , llatha way lJrown 26
Uialt 107,Pitiloddphio iOS
Alabam1 107. Cil.ldcl67
tled for a 68-50 advantage at hal fPaima 59. Lakewood 54
Miamlll8, lndianii112,.DT
Austin Peay 71, Tenn.·M•rtin 64
time. The Pistons built the margin
Perry 4S, Fairport !larding 41
Detroitll7, Charlouc 97
Georgi a 66, Georgia Tech 65
Rocky·RiYcr
Mag
nific•t
56
,
LU.e
to 99-69 after three quarters.
Wuhinston 96, San Antoni() 93
Ja me1 Ma dison 118, Mou nt S1.
Rid c 29
DmYct'll!, Phoenix 109
Mary'1, Md . 68
'
Johnny Newman and Kendall
~ooo1own 47, Woodridge 44
Golden Su\.6 104, LA, Clippers 100
N . C . · Wilming~.a n 75, A pp.~ lichia n St.
Gill,
each had 14 points for CharSha
w
53,
Shaker
llu.
44
12
Solon 61, Wickliffe 27
New Orlcms 54, ViJ1ini• 52
Tonight's games
loue.
W. Gcaug• 55, Chud on 40

By The Associated Press
Coaches are always telling their
players that blowouts are best for_gotten -::- both for the winner and
the lOser.
.
- •
~he Miami Heat followed that
adv•ce Wednesday night, and the
Cleveland CavalierS ignored it. As
a result, one day after Cleveland
routed Miami 148-80 in the worst
blowout in NBA history, the Cava_lier~_jQst 102-93 at Ne_w Je~y_and
the Heat defeated Indiana 118-112
in ovenime.

''"'

NBA Rlayers Association ..enlists Johns
II_ opkin.s doctors for AIDS education

,;

.,

'I
,I

'.

"

Scoreboard

.
...
2177

: : JAM SESSION- Georgetown for;.ard Alonzo Mourning
·(above) jams the ball through the hoop over St Leo of Florida for:w~rd Gary :Uitsliil&lt;ifilring .the firs! half orWednesday night's coJo:!e~e game in Landover, Md., which the Hoyas won 89-51. (AP)

·~0TECTS

'

'

..;:·;;.;.··----Sports briefs-----

ENGNES FOR
SO,OOO MILES AND MOREl

Sup.,r.~ry PTFE retin9
rtduce lnctkl!1 dui'Wlg 111it·
upt;

~

Football
79-73 in nine seasons under Robin ' ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - John son.
liobinson, w~o. IOOk the Los Ange....,.
l ~s Rams· within a victory of the
CHICAGO (AP) - Northwest5-uper Bowl two years ago, ern named Colorado offensive
announced his resignation as the coordinator Gary Barnett to replace
learn 's head coach. .
Francis Peay, fired after going 13· Robinson, 56, will direct the 51-2 in six seaSons. ·
·
team in the final regular-season ·
Barnell, 45, was 8-ll-1 at Fort
game against Seattle on Sunday. Lewis Smte- in 1982'83:-He joined
~he Rams are 3-12 this .season and Colorado's slllff in 1984:

and llrentl.

on.

.

trulmtnt protects for more
than 50,000 miles.

'

.,

...

--Rutland Furniture
.

Will Be ·Open For Your
Shopping Convenience

.

'Monday· Saturday, 9 Ai.1·8

PM!
Where You C•n iuy Qilllllfy E~rnilur: .•

" You Don't Minll P•ying A Little Less!

RUTLAND .FURNITURE
RUTLAND, OHIO ·

STATE ROUTE

124

.

14

...

88~7
,.,,
12511 -

Milwaukee It Orlando. 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Laker~ at Minnesoll, S p.m.
Sacramemo at Houstoll, 8;30 p.m.
Denver at Se~tlle , 10 p.m.

Friday's games
Uuh 11 Bost.on.7:30 p.m.

-· FROM THE
POMEROY MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION
. , ~.---

Cefe6rate tlie drama of tlie season
tfresseiin fw{itfay styfe ...Witli a toucli of
tfazz{e, a cfCJSh. of al{ure anti a sparf&lt;i11tJ
efegance a£{ . own. 'Y[iJ tfW- season
to ring in·tlie most festive time of tlie
'
.·year 6eautiju{{y/

Wuhin&amp;~ at Dallas.. &amp;:3l:Jp.m.

San Anlocuo at Phoenix, 9:30p.m.
Portland at Golden SUite, 10:30 p.m.

rti'

-

dJ '['

Chicago at New Jc.rsey, 7:30 p.m.
Miami u Phila~lphia. 7:30p.m.
Hou.ton at 0\arlone, 7:30, p.m.
Clneland at Allanu, 7:30p.m.
LA. LU:e:n • Detroi.t, S p_.m.

'

.....
.
..... .
~

. Inthe.NHL .. ~-"'

?IF

WALES CONFERENCE
Palrkk DIYI&amp;lon
Team

W L T PlJ. GFGA

Wuhingt.on ........ 23 10 1
N.Y. R•ngen ..... 21 12 I

Pi••b&lt;ugh ..........

47 152 105
43 122 105

1111 4 38 141118
New Jersey ........ IS 12 4 34 119 95
N.Y. lal•nden .... 1114 S 'l7 11 2 117

.,.....

Philldelphi• ....... 9 16 6

:""

24 88110

Adams Division

Mon~.retl.. .......... 22 12 2 46 11 6 7R

1J'Ill·.,o,Hoo

o..................... n 13 s 31 1071 10
""tf&lt;&gt;&lt;d ............. 12 t4 4 21 99110
8\l!fllo............... 9 17 5 23 93 l lS
Quoboc ............... 9 2o 3 21 1021 29

PrincetOn SO, N. Carolina St. 47, OT
Tcnnc55CC 93, Eut Carolin• 58
Virgini• 1'1lCh 93, 1..ibt:tty 64
Wake Forc.101. 74, VMl43

Transactions

For West
Arizonl 127, N. Arizona

Aulo racing
NAS CA.R -· Na med Andy Ha ll di·
rector of public rc.lllion.s and Dill
Sc.~bom. Jr. licensing din:ctor.

Oas•ball

Southwest

Ark.·l..iule Rod~ 91, Lewis 79
Llmar 95, Cent. A01ida 89 ·

1

~~

- -Boise St. S4, St. Mlry'i;'"Cil:-50
BYU-Hawaii &amp;6, ldlho St. &amp;3, 0T '
Ohio St. 821 UC S1nla Barbara 75
Oregon St. ~ 12, Oral Robens 87

Other Ohio college
basketball scores
M-en·

Capiu ! 79, Hc.idClbc.t~ 17 OT
CicvclUld St 76, E'rcJA)\ton 68
Muskingum l4, 0hio Nonhcm 31

Women

CJcye\IJ'I d SL 92, SL Fnncis, Pa. 67

DINO-MITE

SHOP FOR CHRISTMAS ALONG
THE ,RIVER IN POMEROY, OHIO

Wcrtlakc 70, Rock)' River 24

Midwest •
Chicago St. 101. Ferris St. 94
Clc:Yi:land St. 76, CrciR,hton 68
DePau.190, N. !Uinois 77 .
Mo.·K•ns u City 86, h ckson St 74

~===::::::::;::::;;:;:::;:;:::;;::;;:;;;:;;::;:;;:;;:·;;;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::ii:ifi

'

CO MMI SS lONEH. ' S O FFI CI! ~
~ 1mcd Rick ·Dudley dm:ctor of oorpor~ t c
~pmrorshi p.

Am"'" " 1" ''"'
KANSASCI'I'Y ROYALS- ~•m"'
!lobby MCllcham manMgcrof~ujCnc of

Lhc Nonhwo.:s t l..ci!!I.IC and Tom Poq ucuc
ma nager of App leton of the Mldweat league.

OAKLA ND ATIILITTICS -

Reach ed . (I~C·)'Cif phycr development
ag reement with Reno of· the Cali fornia

' .

D~sketbull

OPEN
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
llanlloura: 1::10 o.m.ID I p.m. lllllndoy _ . . , Fttdoy,
1:~ o.m.ID 1 p.m.

,,

-

_do,,l!ld

GALUPOUS

I..,,., to I p.m. - Y
-~m.:.-:or-

SAVINGS~••

in the Classifieds%

.- -Sports briefsFootball
NEW YORK ~AP) - ~obby
Hebert, who retUrned after missing
six weeks with a shoulder injury 10
. lead tile New Orlean,LSain~ in19
- the playoffs , was named NFC ·
offensive player of the week.
Hebert completed 28 of 39 passes
for a career-high 320 yards as
S·
b k
810tS ro e 8 10~:~~~~~~~~~:~~~- -~
streak with a 27·0
Over lhc
Los Angeles Raiders on Monday
night.

Chicag'b defensive end 'Richard

Dent, who had three sacks and an
U:aguc for 1992. Named Gary Jones man·
•scr •nd Scou lludr'IL!r pitching coac h or
interception in the Bears' 27·0 vicRen o: Diclt StoLl manager 10~ Gil PalL et·
tory ovet Green Bay on Saturday,
ao n pitching coi ch of Mad1 5on of the
Mid wel l Lca~uc, and Rick Rodr iguez.
was named NFC defensive player
mlnagea- and P:~~ g coachofScotlSdale
of the Week.
or th. Arilono ~sue.
• '
SEATILE MARINERS - Nomod
San Diego running back Rod ·
Dob 11 r. ld
or 1 k ill · r
B
·
dH
dt ·
· lh~: S~:~
t !•: :gcr ac sonY 0 0
erns~n~ 30
OUStOD e enSlVC
mxAs RAIN&lt;iaRs _ Fi" d uiu
end Wtlham Fuller were honored
-2tiglr6.lo~o BLUE JAYs _ Awoor _ iuhe .AEC..B.emstin~ rusbed.Jor_
10 tonno wi1h h &lt;k M
om•. pitoho.. on,
104 yardS 00 13 Carnes and had
1wo-yooroon"'"·
three founh-quarter IOUChdowns m
.the Chargers' 38·30 victory over
Nallonal Luaue
Miami on Sunday. FuUei had sacks
CUI CAGO CUDS - Named Mark
'McGuire ~uc utiYc Yice p residen ~ for ·
.on consecutive third-quarter plays
busineu operations, Keith Bode vi ce
in the Oilers' 17,14 victory over
president for fin•n•~ •nd information
systcm•·•nd John MeDonou&amp;h \. ice prai·
Cleveland on Sunday.
de.m for mulccting and broadcastitla.
NEW YORK METS - N•mod Clim
llv.rdle m1nagcr of Tidc:wJter of the Inter·
national LCIJUe and SteYc Swisher m1n·
agcr and R1ndy Niemann pitch ing COJch
of OinghamtOn of the Eastern lclguc.
I'IIILAD ELI'III A I'IIILLI ES ~
Agreed to lenns with Mil~h Will i1 ms.'
pi1chur, on 1 lh JCC·ycar contract.

SOON IT WILL
BE
•

HRISTMAS .•

The Dally Sentlnei....Page.-;5 -

Pomeroy.:...Middleport, Ohio·

N.J. N:ets top Cleveland 102-93; Indian,a defeats Miami _i,n OT

)

Bulldogs (4-6) with 16 points.
No. 21 Wake Forest 74, VMI 43
"
Rodney Rogers scored a care&lt;lrhigh 29 points and grabbed '13 · ,..
rebounds for the Demon Deacons
(5-1), who played without slatting , ·
forward ·Chris-King, ·who·was-sus~ '
pended ·by coach Dave Odom. fo;
academic reasons.
"
Wake Forest closed the fust half
with a 2!-0 run for a 23-JXlint haif- \
time lead and led by at least 20 J.
points throughout most of the secqnd half. Jonathan Goodman led ·~
the Keydets (2-4) with 13 points.
•
No. 23 Georgetown 8~, St. Leo 51
AI onzo Mourning scored 21
points, grabbed 12 rebounds and
blocked six shots as.the .Hoyas (5I) crui&amp;ed against the Division 11 ·;
Monarchs.
,.
Georgetown outscored the
Monarchs (4-4) 30-8 over the final •;
nine mi~utes of the frrst half for a ,1
53-25 halftime lead. Joey Brauer's
,,
10 points led visiting S• Leo.
"

The second annual Rutland Hoiiday Tournament will be held from
Sunday, Dec. 22 to Sunday, Dec.
29 for boys in grades 4-6 and combined grades for girls. No all-sta.r
teams will he aflowed.
For more information call
Danny Tillis tournament director at
742-2572 or Joe Hawkins at 9922400.

..

Thursday; Decem'ber 19, 1991

Thursday, December 1'g, 1991 :

Georgi3~ Ohio State-- riost wins~Wednesda~

.-

.. -.

'

. National Oalktlblll Auocl•llon
MILWAUKEE BUCKS - Wa ived
Bobby PhiUs, au•rd.

MINNllSOfA TIMDERWOLvES -

AcUva&amp;cd felton ~. center, ham the
\ injurOd lin. Re:lel1ed Myr()n Bt1wn,

, , auard . .

,

..

Baseball
PHILADELPHIA (AP) MilCh Williams agreed to a threeyear contract with the Philadelphia
Phillies for $9.2 million, making
the 27-year-old reliever the team's
highest-paid player.
made
The
left-bander
S1,912,500 last season when was
12-S with 30 saves and a 2.34 ERA
in 69 games. He'll receive, a $1.2
million signing bonus, $2 million
in 1992, .$3.5 milliori in 1993 and
$2.5 minion in 1994.

siOCkJ~~~raq. Jel~~-e.

air, vinyl roo!, aulo.,.PS, PB, power
windows, po- saal, powwlocks,
tik wheel, cruise, AMIFM • tape, radials, while waHs.

1985 OLDS 88
4000R

• 98841, 4 doors, sedan. 6
air, auto., PS, PB, rift wheel,
AMIFM slere&lt;&gt; 1ape, whi1e

' N'OW

'3,995 '

sa

1986VWJffiA
Stock t 111152, 4 doors, '"""""·I
fronlwheeldrive, air, auto., PS, ,
power windows, poweriod&lt;s,crui511,
AMIFM stere&lt;&gt;lape.
•

WAS

'3,995

1984 MERCURY MAn'WI;:!
$10Ci(t96al1,4 doln, V.S,air,vinyl roof
a~lo., PS,PB,~rwindows, pawer ...~
powei ktc:til, nh wheel, eruisa, At.Wil
sll!ao • · lldu, while wols, -win.
qofog.
WAS

'3,795

NOW

sa

�•.1"'.

.

.

Page 6 The Dally Senllnel

So~t~ern
By G. SPENCER 'OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Two· of tile SVAC's top three
teams will tangle Friday night
V(hen John Nichols' Eastern Eagles
meet Howie CalllweU'SSouttiern
Tornadoes at dte Charles w. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine.
Senior point guard Jerem,l'
Roush and senior forward Roy Lee
Bailey have emerged as the big
guns in the Tornado offense in me
wake of their double-figure scoring
efforts in both iif Raci~'s gaiiies~
The only other Tornado to have
scored 10 or more points is senior
guard Scott L.isle, who had 10 in
last Friday's 78·60 road victory
over arehrival HaMan Trace.
With his five three-pointers
against the Wjldcats last week,
Roush has established himself as
me outside threat, while the agile
Bailey, who can take care of business inside or ouiSide can disman·
tie any zone he faces.'
If the Tornadoes are to put form
anything resembling the kind of
team offense performed by last
year's club, they will need more
offense from their twin towers _
6-3 junior Russell Singleton and 65seniotMichae!Russeii.Aftertwo
games, these two have combined
for 20 points, compared with Bailey's 21-point effort against Hannan Trace.
·
Eastern has a pair of mobile
missile launchers m senior guard
Tim Bissell (55 points) and senior
forward Jeff Durst (54 points), who
have been involved in each of the
Eagles' three games, but if the Tornadoes expect to win merely by
containing these two marksmen,
they could be in for a rude awakening~..
•
Why? Senior forward Terry
McGuire, like Bissell, has seored in
double figures in each of the
Eagles' three games and has 46
• points on the season." And thoughhis production has slipped a little
from where it was at the start of the
season {he had 12 in the Eagles'
64-53 win over Southwestern after
connecting for 16 against Miller
and 18 in me opener against Federal Hocking), Southern should pay
him some attention.
Another Eagle the purple haze
shouldn 'r ignole- is-fronll!lan Wes
Holter. This ·6-1 senior racked up
12 against Soumwestem after scar,
ing as many in the Federal Hocking
and the Miller garnes combined.
In Saturday night's games,
Southern will be North Gallia's
guest. and Eastern will host Kyger
·creek.
. North Gallia vs. Kyger Creek
The clos10g of the Symmes Valley Local School District last week
denied Kyger Creek a chance to
open iiS season-against the Vikings
at Aid, so Tom Riccardi's Bobcats
will do so at home against Pat
Stout's Pirates.
• Two weeks of no game actio·n
after the rest C!f the conference has
l)egun play should have given the
BobcaiS plenty of time to fine-tune
their game plans. and to see what
the rest of the association is doing.
With that much· time on their
hands, they have no ex.cuses for
being anything but ptepared.
" Norm Gallia started the conference ponion of its slate on me right
foot with a 69·66 ovenime win at
home over Oak Hill last Friday, but
lost its third g3J11e in four tr•es in

~~~~ 64-44 to Rock Hill last Sat-

, Smee Riccardi promised a harder·working KCHS squad this seaSOn, it seems that the Bucs' cruise
to the .500 mark this weekend will
be; similar to sailing from Labrador

SVAC cage standings
(Overall)
Team
W L
Southern ...........:.. ! I
Oak Hill .............. ! I
Eastern ....,........... ! . 2
· Norm Gallia ........ ! 3
• llannan Trace ......o 2
SouthweStem .......O 2
Symmes Valley ...0 2
l&lt;yger erea ........o . o
•'

PF PA
127 131
121 113
207 237
212 287
109 162
108 163
86 . 142

0

0

.

•
~

Thursday, December 19, 19:9't--

Pomeroy---Middleport, Ohio

'

(

to host neighboring Eastern ~iti Frid~y ·night b.o.tit . -L.
~"

oo Munnansk in January during U- opemng overtime loss to Trimble.
boat season (1939-45), considering
who Uley will play Saturday night.
With this in mind, the Pirates
will need a reversal in the offensiv,e
fortunes-of forward~ob eanady.
The 6-3 junior has scored a totallO
pomts m the three games- he had
none against Unioto- since he
. chalked up 15 in North's .season-

wood Chris Sim]Json to 10 ']JOints
Kevin Hunt, me Pirates' 6-4 junior last week.- w1ll be cruc1al to
center, will need a sim~ar inflation Norm Galha's plans, regardless of
of his offense, as the 10 points he whedter n's Kyger Creek or Sout!J·
had against Oak Hill is a long way . em.:..:__
_ _· _ _ _
down from the 26 he-had against Hanna!l Trace vs. Soutliwestern
Trimble. ~·
.
.
. Hannan Trace's W1ldcats, havOverall defense wtll be hrghly mg lost theu:last three games, wtll
stressed, but defense in the paint have thelf hands fulloface shooter
the kind that held Oak Hill red- Aaron McCarty and Jumor postman
Chns Mande~dle when the Guyan
hardwood society neads to Gage to
face So~thweste_m.
.
But 1f the Wddc_ats thtnl\~thcy111
have thmgs ':'ell ~n hand 1f they
control McCarty (h1s qu•ckness can
make any .J~-. 17- or 18-year-old
defender turn gray before halfume)
and Mandeville, they could be in
trouble if three-point senior SJ!e·
ctaltst Adam S1mpson aqlj Jumor
forward Jamte Morse start connecting from beyond the arc. In the
Easte.m game, Sunp~n ca~ned two
on h1s way to sconng moe, and
M~rse had one en route to a 12pomt effon.
.
The.Southern game wasn~t what
the _WIIdcats wanted _(example~ :
semor pomt guard Bnan Unroe .s
two poiniS and sophomore .forward
Shawn Cox's eight, drop-offs from
their effons of 16 and 10 pomts,
respectively' in the opener ag~inst

K~ly, .l\LJ;~on-,-.Richter

among
NRLers chosen for·Pro B.owl

a

Raceland), but they got taste~ o.f against Norm Ga)_lia last. ~ecl(; was.·_
better days to come when senior on me disabled hst agamst Norm~
forward ' Chad Swain pumped in a west. The rest of' the players.
game-high 28 poiniS after scoring except for jumor forwar~ Gent~
only two a$ains_!,Raceland. There's ·H~l!, who scored ~e_ven~each
more. Semor guaroiimmy~Brace,__ game., slipped offensively. _ _ _
· __
held to four ag_ainst R~celand, got
"0 Christopher, O,Anar.ew.
loose for 13 pomts agamst the Tor· Where Have You· Gone c~ld be
nadoes.
the song of the moment .1n the
_In Satur~ay night's action, the Symmes Valley cam~. constdenng
Wtldcats w11l host Oak Hill, and that senior center Chns Blake, ~ho
So.uthwestern will head south to had 10 poiniS in the opener agamst
Atd to take on Symmes Valley. . ·' Ponsmouth -Notre Dame, was s~ut.
-· Symmes-Valley vs. Oa.k Hill
out against Racvland,.and_semw.c
. . Even though they lost by three forvmd Andy Lester, who had 13
10 overume to North Gallta, 'Doug agamst Notre pame, was held to .
Hale:.S Oak Hill squad (1-l)"tan be five against Raceland. But the ·flu,
called "The Comeback Kids."
which came on the wmgs of last
· Any team, e~pecially one Ulbbcd week's .chinook winds, may hold
by some to win the conferenc7. the answer.
who cah double_ ll~ &lt;;&gt;pponent s
In any case, theNor~emen, who
offenstve output m pnme t1mc to will head mto Fnday s game at
force three more minutes of basket- Oak Hill after IO .days of gam.e
ball.deserve~ some respect.
inactivity, mus\ learn to score earl_l·
Thts 1s allowable even though cr and more often than they have m
. only one player - senior guard the past, because. 14 points in the
Devm ·Hale - who scored 10 both first quarter aga10st Notre Dame
of the_ Oaks' games improved his and two against Raceland aren't
offens1~e production from wherc1t part of the way basketball games
stood m the season,open10g ww are won.
over McDermou Northwest. Senior
shooting guard Bill Pouer , who
scored a team-htgh 20 pomts
•

~
AKING AIM -Southern's Roy Lee Bailey (31), shown shooting against Hannan Trace in Chapter I of this year's rivalry series
last week, will take aim against Eastern's Eagles Friday night at
Racine. He and rellow senior Jeremy Roush, the Tornadoes' scoring
leaders, will put their marksmanship skills to the test against a team
that rfbounded from-lwo.season·qpening losses with a win against
SouthWes.tern iii 'lbe nrsrweek of SVAC play last week. (OVP lile
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

.

ketball. My thinking is, if you've
got the horses, let the horses run."
In recent seasons, the horses
have included Chad Gill and Rush
Floyd, both now at Ohio University, and Scoll Davis, a freshman at
Toledo. Each averaged more than
20 points his Senior season.
They helped }'ickerington make
an average of 113 three-pointers
the last three seasons, nearly five
per game.
In that span, the Tigers were 5912 and won or shared ~o Ohio
Capital Conference Capital Division titles.

victors"; Washington, Buffalo tie

su1nr:ta1v 1 to 4 p.m

'

I'

(.\r\r\;ff .
5trW a3o~h.s
93 Mill Street

Middleport · . ·
1.

. ......_"!!i"!!ii"!!!"''I"':iiiP!I"':ii~"!!I-"!!!"!!!"'"""''IJ!)iotl!1i"':ii"''l1!1!i1!1!i-"!!ii_...."'!!......_"':ii_"!!l"!!l.....~""i-.;-....,_'IJ!)io.....'IJ!)io ...li....._....,... .....,......_.,;;.,....,......
•

1

' .

'

chuk while chasina the lose puck in the first
period of Wednesday nlgbl's-.)\IHL game in Buffalo, N.Y., which resulted in a 2-llie. (AP)

:.N.Y. Rangers, Edmonton NHL's

SHOPPING HOURS
Qaily
9;30-8:00 p.. m.

.

-

STICK DANCING - . Washington right
wtgir Peter (Jqndra. (dghl) hilS to dance over · .
, 't e s lcli or Buffalo lert winger Dave Andrey·

PiCkerington loves three-pointers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (toP) Some schools are notorious for
their big men, some for meir point
guards, some for their defense.
At Pickerington; the Tigers
never met a shot they wouldn't
take.
Since the. three-paint field goal
was introduced to high schools in
, 1987, head coach Pere Liptrap .and
his Pickerington teams have lived
and died from me perimeter.
"For five years now , we've
been blessed with-shoOters," Liptrap said. "We always seem to
have kids who can shoot the bas-

•

•

t

j
~~·
J.

J
'

.i

By KEN )1.APPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
NEW YORK (AP) _ It's been
. ~ tough month for New .York'
Ranger goaltender John Vanbies~rouck, who has bee'n mostly sit'~ng and sweating out trade rumors.
•- -Wednesday·nigllt, he continued
to !)ear_the riunors- bittobviously
it didn't affect his play.
Making 39 stops in his ftrSt start
since Dec. 6, Vanbiesbrouck keyed
the Rangers' 6-3 victory over me
~hiladelphia Flyers.
, "He came in with. good focus,"
Rangers captain Mark Messier said
0f Vanbiesbrouck. "He's a profes-

since a 6-5 oveniine loss at Detroit and kept the puck in the Buffalo
on Dec. 6. He relieved Mike zone before. Hatcher's slapshot
Richter for seven seconds at Pitts· from the point beat screened goalie
burgh on Dec. 10, and then for 21 Clint Malarehuk.
seconds at Washington on Dec. 13.
Oilers 7, Maple Leafs 5
Messier delivered the gameKelly Buchberger broke a J-5
brea~er for the Rangers with a tie midway through the third period
breakway goal at 4:30 and Mike and Edmdni.Pn went on to win in
Gartner connected from the left cir· Toronto.
cle at9:41.
Craig Simpson added an insurThe Rangers had taken a 3-0 ance goal with 1:451eft.
lead on fust-period goals by Darren
Peter Zezel led the Maple Leafs
Turcolle and Sergei NemcMnov with two goals and two assists.
and one in t!Je secon~ peri~ by Joe
Ctrella. Bnan Leetch ass1st~d on
the goals by Turcotte and &lt;;illllla,
MIDDLEPORT
both o~ the power play, to extend
sionai.He~realized-that-he-had-to-- .h~ ass~st.streak.to.a.club record. MERCHANTSplay as hard as he can."
tymg nme games. II had been joint·. In the locker room after the ly held by Jean Ratelle and Turgame, Vanbiesbrouck was besieged cotte.
l!y reporters foUowing up a story in . M~ Pederson sco~ from the
~ local newspaper that his trade nght CI!CI~ atl2:25 to gtve the ~y­
-.
'tlas imminent. Before the game, e~s 4helf. ftrst goal, but ~IS Kmg
Rangers general manager Neil . fltpped m a backhander f1ve secSmith held an impromptu news onds before. the end of the second
~onference in the press room penod to g1ve the Rangers a 4-1
~egardiilg -Vanbiesbrouck, but , lead.
~··
..
would neither confmn nor deny the . Then. the ~tyers iltadc things
'trade reports.
mterestmg w1th goals by Kerry
: How tough was it for Vanbies- Huffman at2:39 and Mike Ricci; u
FREE PARKING!
brc:iuck to play in the face of !he 4:(19 of the third before Mes§ier
rumored trade?
·
took"charge.
_; "Fortunately, we liave a great
Capill!ls 2,Sabre52
team spirit," ·Vanbiesbrouck said.
Buffalo set a team record of II
''How do !feel? !feel the team has straight games wilhout a win,
a great futuro, I'm a Ne'w York blowing ·a 2-1 lead at home when
~anger right now and until they Washington's Kevin Hatcher
~ade me. I'm going to work 100 scored dte tying goal with 9.2 secpercent."
.
onds lefl in the third period.
:. In.other games, Washington tied
The Sabres are 0-8-3 in their last
Buffalo 2-2 and Edmonton beat 11 games, breaki.ng the club mark
toronto 7-5.
of 10 straight without a win set in
; Vanbiesbrouck looked especial- 1971.
·
I&lt;y shnrp, considering that he had · The Capitals pulled goalie Mike
only played a total of28 seconds Liut with 1:06 to go in re.gulation

OPEN ·

'6

:The Dilly sentinel '!•9~ . 7 ~

Pomiroy-M,Iddlepert, Ohio

..-.

By DAVE'GOLDBERG
on the NFC ~am ..:... center Bart defensive erid William Filllct, ciJr. ~:
Writerbiggest,..tee
Oates
is aI!:=~A~no4:18:b~le~absen~~~-~;l:~-~Ci~r~i:s~~D~ii~sh~m~a:n~~·~!"~cl.~-~~
MostAPbfFootball
the NFL's
was
names are ihere -Jim Kelly, War- lor, who had set a
by
nained were defensive taCkle
reri Moon, Reggie White, Dan ing the Pro Bowl in each ofhis first Ray Childress and quarterbad: :
Marino, Barry Sanders, Thurman 10 seasons. Anthony Munoz of Warren Moon, who with Miami's "
Thomas. All were named to the Pro · Cincinnati, who has an injured Dan Marino will back up .Buffalo's ;
Bowl on Wednesday.
knee, made the AFC squad for the Jim Kelly.
Nobody apprectated his selec- 11 tli time.
·
·
There are !lee players who
tion more than}im Rill:her.
' ." ' The i'IFC dcfen~ is &lt;lOQiinaled , be changing sides.
· . ,,~._.c..""---41
c-Ritcl!et; Ule Buffiloguard ~h.C! , by Philidelphia, which was elimi- . One is ~onnie Lou C!f the .Los A'
was.one of e1ght B1lls named, tsn t· . naied from the playoffs last week- Angeles R81ders, who will start fot,'~ ·
e~tly obscure- as a collegian at · end, and playoff-bound Ne.w the AFC at safety. AS a San Flln·:.:
North Carolina State he, w~n the_ Orleans.
cisco 49er, he made nine appear&lt;
OutlaiiQ Trophy as the natmn s liest . The Eagles.will have the entire anees for the NFC.
.• .
lmeman.
starting defensive front- ends
A second is recei.ver James ;,
But for 12 years in~ NFL, the · R!kgie White and Clyde Simmons Lofton of Buffalo, last named to - ·
the Pro Bowl in 1985 when he:.:
3.3-year-old has worked !n the rela- and tackle Jerome Brown.
. U_ve anonymity of Buffakfs.offooPhiladelphia also placed-outside .played for Green Bay~ This will-be-t
~tve line1 suffenqg through 11_span linebacker Seth Joyner as a starter. the e1ghth Pro Bowl for Lofton; ~
~n th~ m1d-80s "':hen the BillS won The other three starling linebackers · who needs, 55 yards Sunday to sel i.
JUSt etghtgames m three years..
are from New Orleans - Pat the NFL s all-time receivi!lg·:·
"It's very .hiud to put into Swilling on the outside and Sam yardage record.
·
,;:
words~· the 33-year-old guard said Mills and Vaughn Johnson inside.
· The third is Manta. tackle.Chris ·.
after he was chosen. "When they
Houston's starters are receiver Hinton, who mrule five Pro Bowls::
·!Old me, I didr!'t know w~ to do. I Haywood Jeffires. center-Bruce for the _Indianapolis Coli$ iind "'ilr;
JUSt kept walkmg around.
Mallhews, guard Mike Munchak be playtng m hts first for the NFC. i
''I'd be lying if I said when the
·
'
"
selections came around and gurs
made it, I sort of wish I made 11,
·
.
too," Ritcher said. " It never boUt·
eredtometothepoit\twherelgot
~~
1
biller, but !think in the back of
'
. ·
,
your mind everyone· likes to be
ByJOEKAY •
'We're going.' l! ' s still seven"
noticed for working hard."
AP Sports Writer
weeks away . If I can 'I get thiS.
Ritcher's reward was the kind
C~CINNATI (AP) - Injured ready in seven weeks, somethjng's:;.
that comes to winners· - the offens1ve tackle AllthonfMunoz wrong," he said.
· c
majority of the players chosen by will get to play one more game · It's the second consecutive yeaif.
the league's players and coaches to after all.
·
that Munoz has been limited by:·
the Pro Bowl are from winning • Munoz was the only Cincinnati injuries. He had a tom rotator·cuff.
teams. But another player who had Bengals player chosen for me Pro and a shoulder separation last yean•.
a long wait, Gill -Byrd, comes from Bowl on Wednesday. The Bengals' requiring shoulder surgery after the.•
SanDiego,whichis4-ll.
2-13 record and his injuries had season.
. . · IT
"I. think as a defensive player, made h)m wonder whether he'd · He admitted Wednesday that her
especially. in the secondary that has ~in the honor for an Hth consecu- had some doubts abOut his shapefinished 28th in the league so many hve year.
.
before this season started.
~
" It's my 12th year, and as I•
. times, you look at it and you say . . "It's .still tough as far as indithere's nobody back there~thaLcan vtdual,thmgs because of me type of entered the year I had that q~
play,'' said Byrd, whose 21 infer- season we're having,'' he said. in mind: can I sliD do it?" he said;;
ceptions the past three years are the "h's tough to say it makes it all "To see after the season that thet
most of any player in that span.
hetter, because it doesn'L It's nice. guys 1 play against still think I'm'&gt;
Still, the winners had the major- It's a real big thrill."
one of the best. that feels good." ,z
ity of players on \he two squads.
This_ has been perhaps his most , •~ith the exception of the Ben"):
Houston, the AFC Central frustraung season. Munoz, 33, has gals' loss to Washington, Munoz;·
champions, placed six starters on !Jcen. slo!Ntd by a variety of injuries thinks he played well enough th~
the team among its eight players, 10 h1s 12th season. His season season to merit another Pro Bowlt
and Washington, ~uffalo 'and the end~ prematurely when he severe- selection. Head coach Sam Wychci: .
Los Ang~s Ra1~ers also ha.&lt;!..Jy-,!!ISlocated his el!lll.w in a'Dec~l agr,eed, saying Munoz _i_s...slilt:__
etght. All fo~r are m U1e playolls, game against the New Yort Giants aTI)_ong the best even if he ·didn'tand the Redskin_s (14-1) ~nd Bills
The elbow i~healing and should play a full seaS9n.
·~
(13-2) have dommated thetr cbnfer- be ready for the Pro Bowf, Munoz
"He's earned it and I think he!
ences all year.
.
said. He's al'ready told his wife, deserves it again," Wyche said.:
By corltrast, the defendtng DeDe to count on a trip to Hawaii " Even though this year has beei .
Super Bowl champion New York forth~ gam~. ·
awful for the team, it has not beel(.
Giants (7-8) landed just one berth
"I talked to i:&gt;ee and said. awful for him.
;;

Munoz to get seven we.eks· .
top'repa•e fior p ro B ow [ :

.,MIGHT

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AT
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MASON FURNITURE CO.

,~·.

Prices In Effect Now Thru Tuesday, December 24th-

·~-. ·.

Youngstown State ch.ief looks
*o
follow
in_fatber's.footsteos
· YpUNGSTOWN, Ohro (AP)- . Jim Tressel played for his fadter

DELNERY AVAILABLE THROUGH DECEMBER 24TH
·! ·.

HAPPY HOLIDAY SAVINGS

·,·

DESKS AT SALE PRICESJ
1
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ON

LA·Z·BOY ·

·.. - ·

•

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'J
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(Conrerence)
Southern ............. .! 0 78 60
Norm Gallia .. :..... ! o 69 66
EaStern .......,........ ! 0 64 53
Oak Hill .......::::: ..o 1 66 69
tfannan Trace ......0 I 60 78
Southwestem .......O I 53 64
Symmes Valley ...0 0 ·0 · 0 ·~
Kyger Crecl( ........O 0
0
0 ·
3 3 390 390 ---1
tOTALS

'

RECLINA-ROCKERSI

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NIID A PISIC1

MANY STYlES &amp; SIZE$/
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COME IN SOON!

Come in and see our newly
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top and student desks In '
stock. They're ·going fast •
Get yours today!

8149

ZENITH 19" DIAGONAL SENTRY 2 .
REMOT~ CONTROL COLOR TV • SG3935W
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Our Selection Of Styles
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CHRISTMAS/

'
'

8 STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

s55 &amp; UP

'

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. (Reserves· SVAC only)
· J
Team
W L PF PA
Southem .... :......... l 0 65 35
eastern ................ I o 43' 23
~oM Gallia ........! 0
43 41
Oak Hill ..............o 1 41 43
Hannan Tmee ......O I 35 65
Sbuthwestem .......O I 23 43
KYgerCreek ........o o o o
$ymmes Valley ...0 0
0
0
TOTALS
3 3
0.. -~ 0 '

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AUNIQUEGIFr
.FOR DAD FOR
CHRISTMAS

TIIIJ week'•aames
Frlcla7 - Eastern 81 Southern:
Hannan Trace at Southwestern:
North Gallia at Kyger Creek;
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
· · Saturday - Kyger Creek at
:...;tcr::: "'·'· Hill at Hannan Trace;
Southern at. Nonh Galha; Suuth-·
· ~estern at Symmes Valley · ·

Youngstown State ;football 'coach ·at Baldwin-Wallace, but it never
-lim Tressel has a shot at a record seemed to matter.
lflis week. If·he gets there, it will
have more than the usual meaning
&lt;or him. .
·
~ Tressel's team ,faces Marshall in
~aturday's NCAA Division 1-AA
championship game.
.
· His father, .Lee Tressel, died of
' dancer in 1981. Lee Tressel led
~aldwin-Wallace to the Division
jll title in 1978, and if Youngstown
State wins Saturday, the Tressels
will become the first father and Son
~mbination to win national ~col­
Iege football championships.
; Jim Tressel, 38, says his father's
· memory-is·strong.
• "I think my dad had a major
ibfluence on my life," he said. "It
wasn't from an X and 0 slandJioint, because when 1 w~s young I
i/iasn't awarf, of X's and O's. His
IJ!Ost important influence was how
he cared for his players, not j~t as
rootball players, but as people. !
could see It as a yC&gt;ung person an~
mis always stuck with me."
~ In his sixth year at Youngstown
S,tate, Tressel has led the Penguins
tb a 56-31 record.
.~ The elder Tressel died at age 56.
1)1 23 years as a head coach at
!Jaldwin-Wallace, Lee Tressel
chmpiled a 154-53-6 record and
elirnCd numetous honors, including
CQNNIE •. NATURALIZER •
&lt;)hio, regional and national coach
AUDITIONS • SOFT SPOTS • NIKE·. •
eft \he year awards.
! Footballj s big in the T-ressel
REEBOK • DEXTER • CHIPPEWA •
f6mily -Jim's brother, Dick TresSLIPPERS • HANDBAGS
sjll, couches at Hamline University.
••
~ Another brother, Dave: teaches at a
~iddle school in.. Berea. But it is
the human angle that figures most
~minently in the Tressel family,
~ys Jim's mother, Eloise.
• "Jim has the same people skills
that Lee possessed," she said.
'
·;They had the sense of the importance of other people:
., : "Happiness is a by-product,"
'· stJe said. "It comes with achiev.~- .
men1. All the men in our family
_ ,
'
h'ave achieved.''

Wrap Up _Christmas At

~.

Chapman's

FRIDAY,

SPECIAL HOLIDAY
HOURS

Frida_y, Dec: 20-9:30-&amp;:oo- - (
Saturday, Dec. 21-9:30-8:00
M?nday,

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Dec~

23-9:30-8:00

·BAH It CLOTHIE.RS

cPomeroy'• GUilty SHOES
.
ihoe Store · ,

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Tuesday, Dec. 24-9:30-5:00·

81FT CERTIFIC.ES
FREE OIFlWRAPPIMO

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Sunday, Dec. 22-1 :00-5:00~ f..&lt; · ·

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. &amp; SUNDAY

145 N. ~l.d · . ·

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· MiddlepOrt

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Page

~The

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Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Thursday, December 19, 1991 .

,.~By

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n·il·
·s·
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Th
- .· -. e·. · a ~y - en:t~c-

Tbe :Bend-

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ThU'1'8day, Decltmbtr

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Reception honors authors Dinl).er h~ld .._·. t

Three of Jones' busts, on loan
A Christmas party for ihe .Prewere guests Sunday at a reception .frotn the Ohio Historical Society; ceptor Beta Beta Chapter ;-Belli ·
held at the Rbbbins Hunter Muse- were on display~~ therece~Lion .' " Sigma Phi Sorority, was tiel~
, um, Avery , Downer ·Ho.use ,
Some of the 60 major works recently at the home of Charlollfl
Granville, in honpr of three listed .~Y .IJI~ sculll_t~r ,bef~r~hls Elberfeld.
.- , -- · ~ ~~·
-authort, William. G. Stewart, G. dea(]j mcluooo a meaalhon oT Hon.
· A turkey dinner was serv~ !It
-Willlace C~essman, and Cunis W. DanieiWebs.ier.modeled from life, the social committee Q(,Mrs:~lbet·
Abbott.
.. .
~~~2 .. Busts mcluded General Win- feld, Jane Wal100, Clarice~
. B.lakeslee said that .the event field Scott; Henry Clay, Hon. Rose S1sson and Roberta 0 Bnen;:
was particularly s1gn1f1cant to Thomas Ewing, Chief Justice
Carols were sung and otiJen
Meigs County because Stewart has Chase, and General Zachary Tay- attending were Joan Corder, .An(l
·just published a booklet on the life · lor.
~ . Rupe:"Maidie Mora, Nonna CIIS!i:r;
· of Thomas D. Jones, 1811·1882,
The ·Lincoln and Soldiers
Betty Ohling_e~. Jeanie Werrt.;
Outstandmg Sculptor of the Nme· Memorial done in 1868 and erecaed Velma Rue, Lillian Moore, .odn"'
teenth C~mury. Jones was sculp.tor in \he rotunda of the State C~pitol, Jones and Mary Morris: · · t ~:
of the CIVIl War monument wh1ch Columbus, in 1872, appears m the
:'
stands next to the Me1gs County Jis~ing following the Meigs County
'·
Counhouse in Pomeroy. Blakeslee statue.
said that the sculptor's own
Blakeslee said that the author ·
~~
•
description of his work was "a said that "all of the some 60 major
A conglomerate is~ cor~nuiofl:
colossal statue ~~ a sol&lt;!!er, 12 feet works are pronounced by compe· . that has diversified·· iu operation~
h1gh •.executed m stone. A s1mllar. tent judges not only to be excellent usually by acquiring enterprises in
but d1fferent statue was executed m likenesses. but the most beautiful widely varied mdusui~.
:
·stone for the state of Indiana in works of art ever produced in the
The term "cross rate" refers to
1866 and now sl;lnds at Green Cas- United States."
the rate of exchange between twc
. tle,..lnd.
.
Jones was bom ihto a family of currencies calculated by refCrring .
. Stewanhas been workmg on the six sons and four daughters, a to 1he rates between each and abookl~t smce the early 1960's, Welsh family living in Remsen, N. third currency.
•
accprding to Blakeslee, ":'ho noted Y. In 1837 the family moved to
that Paul Gowdy, execubve d1rec- ncar Granville. He is buried there
!?r of the museum, poi~ted Q.l!t !!!at in the Welsh Hill Cemetery.
Thom~s !ones cut a wwe. S"(ath m
A'·copy of the booklet on Jones
the arusuc world of Oh10 m the will be placed in the Meigs County
19th century."
Library, according to Blakeslee.
McDonald's Day Ciasslc tournament held at the
Jones was described as having
Ohio. University Convocation Center,,Athens.
known many of the leading politiThe cheerleaders are, )eft to right, fronr; Jody
-cal figures of his time, for having a 1 1
,
Hayes, Marcy Hill, Michelle McCoy, second
"real feeling for the historical value
The Rutland Township Trustees
row, Julie Hill, Valerie Connolly, Raberta Cald· ·of his worlc." His weeks spent with
will
meet in special session on
, well, and Nikki I hie, and back, Tamara Hay·
Abraham Lincoln in Springfield in
Monday
at 7 p.m. at the Rutland
man, Sherry Frederick, Brandy Roush, and
early 1861 resulted in a well·
Fire
Station
to conduct end-of-the
Tracy Pickett. Amber Cumings, a member of
known bust of Lincoln, according
year~
business.
The meeting -is open
the squad, is not pictured. Sandra U~er is the
to Blakeslee'.s account of informato
the
public.
,· liilvisor.·
" . tion provided at the reception.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee

News notns •:

~PRICE

Last .Minute Gift Ideas
For That Special Person
On Your 'Gift .Giving List
Can Be .Found Right
Here At Home.
!.Don 't~Do.uble~lJ
p-¥ourExpenses . By Going Out
Of Town... Shop At
Home!
.

BID FOR· NATIONALS · As a resull of
their participation in tbe Regional competition
on Dec. 8 in Bloomington, Ind., the Southern
High School Cheerleaders have received an at·
large bid to participate in the National Cheer·
leading Competition in Orlando, Fla., Jarr. 30·
Feb. 3. The event wlll be televised on ESPN
which can be seen locaUy on cable. The·cheer·
leaders are pictured here with the trophy they
won-at the·district meet, and uiSC! witfi'the first
place·trophy awarded to the team at· the Dec. 7

The Trinity Church of Pomeroy
has announced plaris.for its ~oliday
serv1ces.
On Thursday the youth group
will meet at 5'p.m. and have prac·
tice for the Chrisunas program. On
Saturday the group will meet at 2
p.m. for their final practice and a
party for the youth will foUow. ·
The youth will present their program during the Sunday' worship
service. Following the service a
·coffee hour will be held to honor
the youth. Light refreshments will
be served.
"
The annual Christmas eve can-·
dlelight service-will-be held at 8
p.m. with quiet time.and meditahon
music to begin at 7:30p.m.
· The senior choir will present the
Christmas musical, "One Night in

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Tbe }'ollowing Local Merchants Are Working' Hard. To Please 'You. They
Urge You to Shop At Home Before You Consider An Out-Of-Town Shopping
'
Trip For Those Last
Minute Gifts.
·
·
·
,
R EVERYONE.
LET'S MAKE
S A MERRY CHRISTMAS
..

BANifEONE
Whate\uu

MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES
AND TEES --

50 RIVerview Place 992-6128 Middleport,

.

Bethlehem," by John Innes. The
choir, women •s chorus, men's chorus-arrd~Dixi-e-Sayre, soloist; will
present the musical in. verse an·d
song. .
The service will conclude w.ith
the traditional lighting of the. can·
dies and the singing of "Silent
Night."
Mrs. Marvin Burt is choir director, Mrs. George Stewart ·pianist,
. Ralph Werry, organist, Jim Huff is
the director of youth, and Dixie
Sayre and Ralph Werry are in
charge of the youth program. Dr.
James Schmoll is narrator for the
musical.
The public is invited to attend
the services and participate in the
· coffee. hour.and candlelight service.

·HASSOCKS
..
On Sale
Now For.
Christmas.'

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SHOE PLACE
North SKond

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Middleport, Ohio

. ..

...

K&amp;C JEWELERS

.MILL·STREET BOOKS

: 9~2-3785

. 992-6657

.-.~

212 East Main ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DOWNING, CHILDS, MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE AGENCY
111 East Second

~~99J-3311 --- 99M342

l'ameroy, Ohio
• 992-26nft-- -

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
992 ~ 5432

Middleport, Ohio

SHO~

ADOLPH'S DAIRY. VALLEY
992-2556
570 Wilt Main

BTHE

GRAVELY

VALLEY LUMBER CO.

PomtrOy, Ohio

.Gravely Trac~or

· 204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, Ohio ·

1 WEST MAIN

..

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CHESTER, OHIO

.

PRESCRIPTION SHOl»

Middleport, Oltio

992-2054
POMEROY,
OHIO

.

SALES AND SERVICE
992-2975 · Ponltroy, OhiO

Middleport, Ohio

992-3T48. ~Middleport, Ohio ·

446~269ll

992-2955 '

GAlUPOUS,
·OHIO

111 Court St.

; t ··-

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE DAILY SENTINEL

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992-2156
Pomeroy, Ohio
•

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ERIN DUNN

.Country ~ifts
For Christmas!

-

VARIOUS SIZES

ENAMEL WARE,
CHRISTMAS POTIERY.
TINWARE,
BASKETS
AND MUCH MOREl

·. I I. _ ___:_:___
I
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- . 1'1"' -.. ....

Linden . and Melinda Dunn
• Pomeroy, are wu\.ouncing the birth
of a daughter, Erin Machelle, on
Oct. 4 at Holzer Medical Center. ·
..She weighed eight pounds and
e1ght ounces and was.&gt;21 inches
long.
;
The c()upJe also has a son, Evan.
Maternal giandparents are Larry
and Donna Thomas. .
Patem~ grandparents are H;mdley and Lmda Dunn. · ·
Great grandparents ·are Don and
Marie Rea and lhe late Doro~hy.
·Rea, Harry iln'd Evelyn Thomas and
the late Marie Thomas,' and Nellie
Dunn.
,

STORE HOURS
.JAOIIIIay 9:30·8:00
TMIIay·Salurday
9~30·5:00

.....

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fltiDERSOtt•s

... . . .. ,.._...__.,.,.. , .,..,.__ ..,, ·--....-...- ---.·----· ,..
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FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV's, FLOOR .C()YERING,
992·3671
.
DoWNIOWI PO.IOYi OHIO

,,

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-·-·-~-

'OAK and PECAN
...
· FINISHES .-.·

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On Sale
Now For
.Christmas.

New arrival

·SWISHER LOHSE PHARMACY
112 East Main

~-

BERKLINE
RECLINERS I ...........t

NEW.
SHI1MENTS OF
CURIOS ON
SALE NOW ·FO
CHR.
- ISTMAS..

A bridal shower honoring Deb· Lennie Haptonstall, Whitney Hap·
bie Brennan. bride-elect of William ton stall, Pam Zirkle, Michele
Haptonstall, was held at the Trinity Zirkle. Maye Mora, Maida Mora,
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday Lindo Mayer, Evelyn Gilm,ore,
afternoon.
. Qianne Hawley, Donna Cart,
Games were P.layed with Gay . Eleanor Werry, Ralph Werry, BQb
Perrin, Evelyn Gilmore. and Linda and Wanda Fetty. Bobbie Archer,
Zamoch winning the prizes.
Carla Sue Saelens, Emalene Pratt,
Attending or sending gifts were Judy Carter, Debbie Seben, Linda
- Carolyn Thomas. bois-Bwt,-bi~da Stanley, .elarice-~rautter; Marty
Zarnoch, Gay Perrin, Pauhne andJoeSuuble.
Mayer, Peggy Harris. JoAnn WildDecora~ions ·and ·refreshments
man, Mary Skinner, Nonna Lou1se for the hohday season w~re served
Jewell, Mary Virginia Kautz, Marie to the guests.
Hauck, Lesley Carr. Pat Holter,

.MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT
STORE ·

101 Mnrst.

FLAT TOP
AND ROLL
TOP DESKS
Various Wood
Finishes

Brennan bridal shower held

-'

.

992-6611

CANCER SANTA· Anica Blllsoly, 2, is greeted by Santa,
Hubert L. Hofl'll!an, al tbe Festival of Trees. Hoffman loves to play
Santa Claus and was di1111nosed with cancer ellflier this year, so he
asked-his doctors to delay chemotherapy trealments for re·ar they
would cost him his beard. T.he cancer instead has been checked by
radiation. (AP)
.
_

' 985-3301 .

253 North Second

SIDEBOARDS,
CURIOS, DRY
SINKS, PIE SAFES,
HUTCHES, FARM
·TABLES.

••

992-6669 '
Middleport, Ohio

255 Mill

SYSTEM

Pomeroy, Ohio

221 Wilt Main

~

992-3345

992-2121

101 Mulberry Ave.

5S5 Park Str•t

l06 North steond ·

s

BAUM LUMBER C0.

992-2635 - .

. QUALITY PRINT

EWING FUNERAL HOME
-·'

I80 Mulberry Ave.

.INGElS FURNITURE. &amp;JEWELRY
.

FRUTH PHARMACY

716 North Second .·

Middleport, Ohio

93 Mdl St.

SUGAR RUN .FLOUR MILLS ·
992~211

CHRISTMAS
DESK
SALE.

NEW
SHIPMENTS OF
DININO ROOM
FURNITURE.

992-5627

-RX.

-

ASSORHD
SIZES AND
COlORS.

'J1fe

takes- .

.

"~

Trinity Church announces
plans for holiday services

.

,

'T'rustees to meet

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-Page-10-The Dl!ily Sentinel

Thursday, Dece-mber 19, 1991 ;.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

E·a:rly viewin·gs show Dallqs
.
.
'
ready fior 'JFK' . opens Frz·day

Community __calendar

========~================~~

Community Calendar items
HENDERSON, W.VA .. The cantata:pageant, "Let Us Go to
appear two days berore an event Gallia Twirlers Western Square Bethlehem" on Sunday at 7:30p.m.
'
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· .
and the day or that event. Items . Dance Club will hold a dance Sat· Soloists are Jennifer Walker, Chad
-must-be-reeeived-weU-in-advanc(-urday-from-8-to~tr at the Hender---Hubbard-and-Heather !:)ailey.
~-By-TERRJ-1,-~NGFORD
some.have..called-it.an.anistie-suc·~ stayed.,. an&lt;Lthe Texas Theater,
to assure publication in the cal· son Community Center. The caller
Associated Press Writer
c~. It SWS Kevin Costner as Jim where he was arrested.
·
endar.
will be Bill Gene Evans and the
RACINE - The Racine Baptist
D~LLAS (AP).: - A~out a Garrison, a N~w Otleims district
.r&gt;qwn1own. \fUS were trim~ed
public is invited 10 attend.
Church will present its children's thousan_d people will wall:h tonight . attorney who tned alocal b~~mess• -to li1ell' 19.63 hetght and s~t stgns
program, "He Is Born" on Sunday as the hmousme rounds the comer, man on charges of conspumg to were changed to preserve the look
THURSDAY
at7:30
p.m. The public is invited to shots are fired and a president is ldU the presid~nt.
·_
of the motoroade ~
•
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
HEMLOCK GROVE
The
attend.
kiUed
in
Dallas.
But
unlike
on
Nov.
.
_
.Dallas
reSidents
braced
for
the
The
scene
most
cnucal
of
Dallas
port Child Conservation League Hemlock Grove Grange No. 2049
22,' 1963, they will consider it a wor~t when ther heard Stone· was ~~ delet~ ~editors ~mect-- the ~
will hold its annual Christmas party will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at
privilege~
. ~
.,
- - - · · makmg the mov1e.
- -.- ~-ftlm, whtch ts more&lt;halflhree
CHESTER
·
The
Izaak
Walton
on Thur~day at 6:30 p.m. at the· the grange hall.
Club
will
have
a
muzzle·
loader
director
Oliver
Stone's
Dilllas
and
Texas
were
roundly hours long. It implicated former
"JFK,"
home of Helen Blackston. Gifts
look
at
the
assassination
of
Presicriticized
after
the
assassination
for .Mayor Earle Cabell whose brother,
RUTLAND - There will be a '' shoot on Sunday at I p.m. at the
and food for needy families should
Charles, had been a Kennedv
be brought that 'evening. Secret sis- round and square di111Ce at the Rut· . club house near S:.ttester. Open dent Kennedy, premieres in Dallas· . accommodating far-right fanatics..
.
land American Legion Hall on Sat· stghts only. Pnzes mclude turkey, amid hopes it will help ease the .. . .-In an editorial a year after enemy.
ters will be revealed.
city's 28-year-old guilt complex. Kennedy was killed, !he Dallas
Robert Johnston, a~ soc tate
urday from 8 p.m. to midnight. bacon and cash.
"JFK" opens nationally on Fnday, Morning News spoke of the researcher at t~e JFK Informauon
RACINE · The Racine Ameri- Music will be provided by th e
.
POMEROY
·
Pomeroy
Troop
Stone's premise is that the mili· "scathmg and unjust criticism" of Center, a combmed research house
can Legion will meet Thursday at Country Kin Band. Ray Fitch will
249
will
have
a
vegetable
soup
sale
tary,
CIA and defense contractors Dallas-and obserVed how the city and retatler of bou~s. magazmes
_7:30p.m. at the post home.
be the caller. The public is invited
on
Sunday
from
II
a.m.
to
4
p.m.
conspired
10 kill Kennedy because stood alone.' 'in the spotlight of ~d other memorabilia, gave Stone
to attend.
at
the
Pomeroy
Fire
Department.
he
planned
to pull out of Vietnam unfavorable conspicuousness."
h1g~ mar_ks. . .
..
SYRACUSE - 'The Mall and
Bring
your
own
container.
and dismantle the CIA and was
But Stone won residents',coopI enJOyed 11 very much, John·
the Night Visitor" will be presented
RUTLAND · The Rutland
"soft" on communism.
eration during a month of filming, ston said. "I could tell he d~d his
by sbidents at Syracuse Elementary Nazarene Youth Group will be
CHESTER · The annual Christ·
"I think this is going to alleviare then their approval of the complet· research. He tned to mclude ~~ the
on Thursday at 7 p.m. The public is conducting a !cdvenger hunt in th e
mas
program
will
be
p111Sented
at
those
old attihldes of blaming Dal· ed v~rs10n. Local journalists and film ~.s much as he posstbly
invited to auend.
village on Saturday from 2:30 to 5
Mount
Herm
on
U.B
.
Church
on
las.~
said
Nancy Cunningham, pi'O· film. mdustry workers got a sneak co~l~..
__
_
.
p.m. Items collected will be food
Sunday
at
7:30
p.tn
.
Everyone
wel·
duction
coordinator
for
the
North
prevtew
Wednesday.
I
m
completely
comfortable
MIDDLEPORT · The Christ· which will be given to a needy
Dallas Film Commission. ''It will
Ston\1 h~d local actors and fea- ~ith,~ur involve~ent with .the,P.romas program to be presented by family. Participation from village come.
help to dispel the last vestiges of tured htstonc sues: the old Texas JCCt, Ms. Cunnmgham S31d. We
Middleport Elementary on Thurs- residents is requested.
POMEROY - The Laurel Cliff blame."
School Book Depository, Dealey think it was worth it. I hope it's
day at 7 p.m. will be held at the
Free
Methodist
Church
will
present
Most critics have lambasted the Plaza, the rooming house where something we can feel proud of at
elementary school rather than at
MIDDLEPORT · Job's Daugh·
Meigs Junior High School as origi· tcrs will be wrapping gifts on Sat· its Chri stmas program on Sunday · movie's v~rsion of events, 'though gunman ,Lee Harvey Oswald Oscar time.''
nally planned.
•
urday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the at 7 p.m. The public is invited to
Masonic Temple in Middleport. attend.
Cost varies with the size of each
FRIDAY •
RUTLAND · The Rutland
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith package. Proceeds will be used to
Na
zarene
Church will presen'i the
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot' fund the Hearing Impaired Kids
ca
nlllta,
"Call
Him Jesus" on Sun·
tom will present its Christmas pro- program.
day
at
10:30
a.m.
The children's
gram on Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
program
will
be
presented
at 9:30
Steve Reed invites th e publ ic.
POMEROY · "Charles Dickens
a.m.
Refreshments and fellowship will Christmas" and "On the Twelfth
follow.
Day" wi)l be shown a1 the Meigs
County~ublic Library ' in Pomeroy
TUPPERS PLAINS · A round on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m.
and square dance will be held Fri· and at the Middleport Library on
day from 8 to II :30 p.m. at the • Monday-31 4:30 p.m.
Tuppers Plains VFW Hall spon _J_ sored by the VFW Post No. 9053
POMEROY . Brother Da¥ id
a-nd Ladies Auxiliary . The band Wed! and, Columbus, will be at the
will be CJ. and the Country Gen- Faith Tabernacle Church on Bailey
MOST STORES OPEN
tlemenc The public is invited to Run Road on Saturday and Sunday
LATE UUI. CIIIUSTIIAS
auend.
at 7 p.m. Pastor Emmell Rawson
invites the public.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER · Star
POMEROY · The Royal Oak
Dance Club will presenrits annual Grange and Star Junior Grange will
Christmas dance on Saturday from hold their annual Christmas dinner
8 to II p.m. at Royal Oak Resort . . on Saturday at 6:30 p.m.at the
Music will be provided by The Salem Center Fire Station. Meat
Doug Hess Combo. The 1992 club will be provided. Those atterding
membership dues can be paid at bring a covered dish. There will be 11
any time before March I.
a $3 gift exchange ~nd a visrt from
San ta. All members urged to
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist attend.
Church will present its annual
Christmas program on Saturday
PORTLAND · The Lebanon
and Sunday ar 7 p.m. nightly. The · Township Trustees will meet Satur·
.adult play is titled " A Family day at 10 a.m. for a special meeting
Christmas Eve" and is under th e at the township garage. This meet·
direction of Dan Hood. The chil· ing was originally scheduled for
drens program is titled "The Birth Friday at!O a.m.
of Baby Jesus" and is under the
direction of Mrs. Sandi Jones. PasSUNDAY
RACINE-The choir of the
tor James R. Acree Sr. invites the
public. ,
Racine United Methodist Church
will present an original and unique

· To J!(lct AN .AD cau 992·%1 s6
MOND4Y thru FRIDAY I A.M. t.o S P.M.
, _ !.

. U.M._unlil

LOS ANGELES (AP) "Addams Family" stars Anjelica
Huston, Raul Jutia and Christopher
Lloyd are considering a sequel to
the box-office hit.
· The deal ~inges on developing a
good script and coordinating their
schedules, the Hollywood Reporter
said Wednesday, citing publicists
for Paramount Pictures.
The movie has grossed more
than $73 million since opening
Nov.22.

L

LOS ANGELES (AP) Roseanne Arnold',s sister claims
she helped create ll)e ABC sitcom
star's "domestic goddess" character, and she wants a big share of the
profits.
Geraldine Barr filed a $70.3
million breach-of-contract lawsuit
in Superior Court on Wednesday ,

claiming Arnold promised half her
earnings from the hit show
''Roseanne.''

Arnold stars as a sardonic moth·
er of three. Barr contends she
helped invent the character in 1981,
serving as "writer, organizer,
accountant, bookkeeper and confidante. "

Da:_vid Brokaw, a spokesman for
Arnold , called the lawsuit "just
plain preposterous."
The lawsuit also names Tom
Arnold , claiming he conspired to
exc lude Barr from his wire's
"inner circle" of adviser's.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Star
Trek' ' actor DeForest Kell ey
nashed the Vulcan hand sign that
means "live long and prosper"
when his star was unveiled on Hol·
lywood Boulevard.

Sa

~CALiSI7C..

1 1 9 95

·Duai~Cassette Ta ble_top S~~~ .
- ve '60
~r:J~~
113-12••

• Fits Almost Anywhere • AM/FM
• Synchro·Start Dubbing • Turntable

'hve "'OO sagg
LowAII30

Por - h ·

'

~ - O"'""'Y

1 - Htppy Ad1

O.lllt County

Meigt Count!

Attt Codt 114

Atu COdt I 4

MJon Co., WY
Area Code 304 •

441-0ellipaU•

tt2 - MIHI.on

11!1 - Pt. Pletunt

317- Ch•hht

311-VInlon
Z41-1Uo Orende

.

.

247- Lttert F1111

371-WIIMI

141 - Rectn•
742- Autllnd
11117- Coolville

Public Notice ·

.•..
..
..

.•

'

'·
'
•'

!ncr-• to ~1150.
Sewage Revenue Fund -

,

ARNIES SPORTS
LOUNGE
675·5789 , Gallipolis Ferry, WV.

APPALACHIAN
CRAFT HOUSE
199 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy
Holiday Hours
Wed.-Sat. 11 :00 tif 5:00

•
•

•

In memory of
ELIZABETH
(Tib)
STEWART
who passed
away 12 years
agotoday, .
December 19,
1979.

l

Deer Morn: -·

ttl 12 yo1r1 1lnc1 God took you, Oh how tht UIM
oloaafty, ·
twe'll !ttl th1 ••,., though we try hard no1 to
Af':.. U1M of
how you would walk, artd, c1111dln

'

I

I

u,;

. !

and everyone of ue, auch

!

gono, at Chrl1tmu Uma,

e~ndlts

"""" ...

• Adjueta-tl~"
~laplay

~· wert

1hort when we .would ling, ttch Umo

WI

". ' Yliu'd
fOUII"'-•·
. . gat your pad and poncll out •nd than ackt •no-

-•.

'i

.

.

I

At- gdta by, ow thoughts ga an, Oh how • rornlnl-.
Wi- ahalllorglt tho day, wo un• you thlt loll kilL
._. llh you're 1111'1 at U11111 wllh uo, wluot o1n't Ml
iallriMt..
.
lilt one cloy _,, we,lba with you, lri th1t at~m~l pl10o.
,
Wy mlllld by your /llmlly 1nd lrtond1.

...
I,

--Dee. 19, 1986.

••••

Pr•''"' God lhere'a one
'' who can brlng-pooca
And qulolall your foaro.
He' yurna to comfort
and guide your, path·
way everyday.
He II the truth, He II the
light.
And 1UII, our only w.yl '
- . Mlllld by hu1b111d,
aona, daughtar·ln-lllw
lind granddaughlll'.
11 · . Help wanted

1

FULL TIME
REGISTERED
NURSE
Melgt . C:ounty Tubar·
culotl• .Office. Car
Required. Mall reaume

~tlo~ n~•~-!:~~~~:•n~d~··~· HI-Malge
~~Ja;nuary
6, 1992
to
County
Tubar~hence for

with rofaronc11 to
Box 7211D% Dally
Seritlntl.

P.O. Box447
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lhlga County Ia an Equal
o.,..-nlty Employer.

R~N.'s
Overbrook Center, the area's newest end
most modern long term care facility, has
an immediate full time and part time 3·11
position available.
For more Information reg11rdlng
Overbrook Center Employment which
features a very competitive wage and
benefits packaga, ple. .a call Karla
Hunter, Director of ~uraing, at (614) 992·

6472

'

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
-CONSTRUCnON
•New Homes

'

•Garagts

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

.0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

.,

HILL'S DEER
cuniNG
CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

$10.Uup

BASHANRD.,
RACINE

6T4·742-lu51

949·2206

lHII

•Com plate

•-.Wing
Fraa Estimates
iJIS-4473
667-6179

111141111-

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

TIUCIING AYWIII
1111 £STIMAm

992·3838

SNODGUSS
UPHOLSTERY
uHelping You To
,Recover Your
· Investment"

14·949·2202

. .EOE

90 OAT W&amp;ll&amp;lln
WASIIOS-StOO up

UCINE, OHIO

up

I

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SHOOl
IAONE ..
FIRE DEPT: '
Bashan Building
EVElY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Starting Sept, 28

FIICiary Chokl
12 Gautt 5hoftlun Only
Stlldly lnlarud
·.
9·13-'91-dn

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

12 Gauge Fadory
Choke Only
·
. 9-6-tln

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAm .
S!*lallzlng l1

C,rto• F..- lapalr
.N£W &amp; USED PAll'S

FOI All MAKU &amp;

MODRS

992-7013
or992·5553
01 TOll flU ·

1·100·141-D07ti
. D&amp;IWII

o•o

7t 31 / '9t

CLARENCE ATHERTON . ,

C. L. Heating &amp;
Refrfgeration
We Sell &amp; Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalre, lnsldiJ, _
Heat Pumps, fl!macea,
Air Condltfoner•

- ...

.....

c

.....

8t700 SA 124

&amp;Operalor

J&amp;L

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ,and
REMOVAL

•VInyl Siding
·Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
•Insulation

-

•LIG.!:IT HAULING
•FIREWOOD ·_
.
BILL SLACK .

-

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

992-2269
USED IWUOAO nts

53tBryanPiaca
Mlildleport, Ohio
11114111n

FOR SALE

CHRISTMAS
'RE. ES
RWONAILE

HARLEY H·- 11 ING'S
RESIDENCE

PIIHIIID
~="~"='
30yuraaxpertence.

Fourt-...or

reco:,:=:-..'
:
'
*
1..... II .. .,

1

·

2

I4

· 35975 Flatwoods Rd.
· Patntroy, Ohla . ·

I~·

-

q)

Cell Ed Battin

1·&amp;=.:!.74
11·1 B, 1 mOlJMI I'L;.---~1.!:1N1:!,!::;,!~: ~

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp; ·
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmellone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucen1acl and Bondacl

PH. 614-99N591

CHRISTMAS TREES .

&amp;CRAm

BRAD FORDS

BLANKE~
Homemade with
Long Lasting Green
Scotch Pine.

$20.00etd
Order Now for Your
Lost Loved Ones.

.,

Fresh Cut Trees • ·
· Cut Your 'own.
CHERRY RIDGE,-

Ealt of Dtrwln on fit.
681 on Gravel ROIICI

..
!·

1Y. Mllea to Grove.

WATCH FOR SIGNS

_YOUNG'S

GRAVE

614-949·2058

Long Bottom, Ohio
1fn

Ow111r

INSULATION

DIYIS-$69 up '
,
IEFIIGIUTOIS-$10G up

Starting

for All Br•ds ..
EMILEE MERINAit

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBII::E HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOMEPARK .
Starting at $235 per mo.
.Yery ·nlce 2 or3 BR;2
bathhouae
·
wlbMtment and
carport, 1- gas.
Call614-982-6528 or
385-8227
1 •

992-5335 ., 915-3561
Aaou Fr.. Past Offic1
POMIIOY, GHO
10130flflln

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Complete Graaming

Pomeroy,

OVINS-$79.,

Stop .. Co111para

GROOM
ROOM

614·9f2-6820.

USED APPUAJICES . . .

UIIGIS-Gtt·Dt&lt;.-$t25
flllliiS-S 125 up . '

OURONLYWAY
The du1t of dying
memorila
May blur your ayn with

Are you a •eH atart'ar,
able to h•ndla dlllall8
•nd work wl1h ppie? Experience In
.Ccountlng, cuttomar
eervlte, Hlaa, collec-

thtrt 11 11111 1tnpty

fto11or• _In that -~ lind, we know you
when th1y looked hill d11d, you.ltlll could makt

116·1416

.

11 1· Help Wanted

In m,mo..Y of Svl\fla.l
Zwilling who died

you could

v;~ =I ~~:~~~ln~~your
111ct goodbye .
'II
ourtlttp,
dear you
Lord,novtr
we muat
nov•r 11k

•t

·'\p

.

949·2734

In

In Memory of VIRGIE
MAE KLEIN who11
blrthdly )VM Dec. 18
and VfhO pa&amp;llld away
NQv. 18, 1882.
:The dlrte of today Ia
one apaclal of.. all
the data of
today God hlld cralll·
ad one ol the be•l
Grandmaa. He too.k
her away, but not too
lar 'cauta tha'll
alwaya be lo.ved and
remembered In our
heart•.
.
• Sidly ml"ed by Granddaughter,
Tammy,Klein

1cht 10, to .Ht your emile, 1ncf touch your lov-

!

· Thoofolt, i11ilu hiYiog onlj PI'OIIro111)'·diol)linH,

0

0,.. 1117:00 !-!'·

RACINE, OIL

ORDINANCE NO. 1250-11
An Orcin-• to provide
odcltionol com.,..ation for
vllll1go..,p...,_ for 1•1.
Be It ord•lnlld by the
Council of the Vllloge of
Middleport • followe:
Sec. I. That for the year
1111 tha VIllage ahall JNIY
NOh full-time ..,ploy11 In
the active emplo.J!":.::! of
the VIUage as ol
bar
15, 1"1 f"r • partoc1 of 1Ix
monlha In HdlUon to •II
other 11lary and fringe
bene lila
hereto lore
provided the •unfbl ThrM
HundrH Doll•• IUOO.OO)

In Memory

2

FILL YOUR
STOCKINGS WITH
GIFTS FROM

•.

1

STORES ANO DEALERS

'

lil.,..e to $1115,400.
ARC · Houalng Fund !ncr-• to P5,000.
Swimming Pool Fund
!ncr••• to S48,35a.
,
Mini-Golf Fund • lncrMU to Mllddltlonal ......,.
$17,100.
lee. 11. Th•t be It further .
G,naral Fund - Increau to· r11olvacl lh•t ·the Vlttage
1&amp;41,~
ahall pay IIICh. part·llme
Sao. U. That thla , employM In the active
ordlnenca Ia hereby omploym""t ol the )llllage
deolored ,to be an u oiDtoember 15,·tlt11or
order tl)at the • period ol wlx monlha In
ol addition to •H othar_ulary
bo and Iring• beneflta
heretofore provldH the
oum of Ono Hun*od Fifty
vlllao•
l$150.00) •• additional
1811.
'
aaiAry.
.
Sec. Ill. Thlo Ordinance . Sac. Ill. Thla Drdln•nca
ahall taka el/ect and be In •hall.taka offoct and be In
Ioree from and lfllr Dto. 10, force lrom ·and altar the
1.1.
.
ealla1t date provided by
P01aad tho tth day of law.
.
December 1811.
Pauad the 8th day of
.ArnST: Jon P. Buclc, Claok . Dtolrnber t•1:
Dewey M. HortDn, ArnST: Jon P. BucR, Clerk
Pl'llldont ol Council
O.W.y M. HoriDn,
112) 19, lie
(12) 19, ~lc

ARNIE'S FIRST ANNUAL
CHRISTMAS PARTY
ThutSday, Dec. 19 with the
Band High Edge &amp; D.J.
. Randy Smith.
,Prizes, gifts, subs- .
Compliments of the 'new Pl.'
Pleasant Subway.

•j

.

0

llriHM.wMi.

LAIE

:

Notice

1o $504,300.

•

183.t74

.

0

fna c.t DaiiYI ~ Gnwl

·po.ROY
last markdown
on shoes ·
before closing store.

Water Revenue Fund -

•
•
•
•

-1915 :.:-..

pllona m on botll lOot iod PUit •

MAPLEWOOD

31

Public Notice

'
''

...'•.

• Great On·the·Go
Stereo Sound

0

TREtS RW)Y
NOV. 211 1!91

. SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

PubliC Notice

•

whl1 .. Ill.

f.HII' \llili'lli s

I

,.

,

' !log. JUS •

0

IWI Stillltl-. OIL

OPEII FRI. &amp; SAt
I0:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

PUiliCADON

..

••

&amp;•::

~s C•t &amp;Wroiltlell.
5
5 Extra to~

773 - Meton
112-Nw;- Hl'ltn
1911-letert
937 - luffllo

4:30 P. M. DAY IE~ORE

.:1~43·554

21!!

WUPPING

59-for lilt or~Trad•

Be It ordolned by tho
.~DINAHCE NO. 1252-81 AddllloMI Appropriation• In
Council of The Vllloge of
-~to Provide for
V.ri- Funda Few 1111
Middleport • followo:
Sec. I. Thol tho 1111
opproprlollona ·In th_11
follawh\g lunda ' be
lncteaolld to the epeclfled
omounta:
Fire Tru.. Fund - !ncr...

Low AI S'll Ptr Month•

Cut~

0

FOR SALE AT
SNOWDEN'S LOT

1211211 mo.

'

-

.

11- Mi.uMe" ·lnltruments

11 - fruilsA Ytt•tbl•

!71 - Apple Orovl

981 - Ch"hl'
143..:..Portlend

Ott Rttrdft Fist

'
..'

45% Off

0

CHRISTMAS

and

•n-Leon

Pom•ov

211-GuYin Di11.

t•:I-Attbil Din

~

lllldllt

0

BENNE_TT'S~~:o'

DEER CUniNG

following telephonp cxclwnges ...

•.,

Picket LCD
CllculltDr

0

Tr 011 stlllr I.1 I11111

.'

AMlFM Stlreu

0

Locatecl. On S.Hord SchMI
(614)416·9416 or 1·1100·1171·591~7

H-lwldlnt IUDDii•

a Ortln

I

1-'-----.-.-_,....;;.---.....,....;~..li ..

U-Mitc . Merchlndilt

11- PIIt tor lilt

I

11-:!t-1

3~ ' 0ff

.

.

I

MOIILI tiOiM -

. NO SUNDAY

66-S.edl Ftttli.ltr

Anlnar

Cut~

0

SEIVta -

.
) or ln. 949·2160

11-H~IIhoi4G . . .

U - LIYeiiGct&amp;

'

Tllepllone

.

-,H.~949~101

12-:lpettlrlt cao..
n-Mtlqut•

14- Hty

•

DUOFONE&amp;

KEN'S APPLIANCE

n!~

'I

TonelpuiM dialing

Spell Cllecker

.eo
.05/dly '

ez- Wanttd to lilY i·

•

5
Packet·Size

tt;OO -

on.oo
IUOldoy

81-,erm l•u9fn~n ' .

-

M5:,:i

MICRDNTA8

"FrM Ettlmet11''

lf.OO

I

AIR
• IIAT PU..S a!lll
FURNACEHOI MOilLE. &amp;.DOUIUWIDE HOMn•

· 992·5335 or

.\ ! , . " I'" k

•'·

.,..Ina

• Digital Tuning

n

••.oo

S''' • :( I"

====~~t:~l~~~~~D~ui.o~FO~N~E~­

118·158

-

Rett

illljlllyl'l!'lll

• World's Smallest, Lightest Full-l![ze VHS
•1-Lux Sensitivity • Case • Aceessorles

Low AI 115 Per Month •

n

7.'"- V•d lllttpald in tdvtnc:t)
1- Pubi!C lilt I A~o~cllan
8- Wiftledlo IUy

.

Cut 25%

i&amp; ~

8 - Lo" tnd 'ound

.·•'

Save•30
1-&gt;.1915,~.

1&amp; ,

1-Ctrd of th~r~••
Z- ln Mtmorw
3- Anno.x:emtnts ·

·'

Conllll Pllonl

a-~-

A·nHitJ'Ir t·rrp

'

Pocklt·Size
LCD Color TV

3

--

··

u

btoi&amp;M 'u pdl'fiWill Itt ctl . . . .

·'•

Rig. lltt.OG 116-827

Wotdt

. Monthly

'

12x -VIIS ca-rder .

D•v•
1
10.

S'rtlllSSII

~M.DAtiX"'

NOON SATUROAL

SIDING
co. '
,... __ Wit

RATES

'

. Irina " Ill Or We
, Pick· u,. ' ·

~

'

.

'

It pays to check those old lotto tickets

People in the news ____

. ..

• Thtlrea'INumber
1 Miiketaliiica-:---,
...

'

. •VINYL SIOI
o.(LUMINUM BlptNG

•

.. '

-~

.ces

•·

·B iness·"- se ·

'Classified::

\

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CARPENTER

SER~rKE:Ii

· - f'IDDM Addttton1
- Quner wortl

- E - wortl
0011
-concrete
~ RaeMe

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--~~
·
'

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- lnttflot • Exc.rior
Pointing

~

lF'!EE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-62 .

•

,.j.
.•• '
:

11-251 mo. pd.

••
r------i

DK's-FARM TOYS.
by ERR
Displayed a~ Tke
Quality Prlllt Shop
8:30 am-4:00 pm

614-992·3394
Or Call
742·3020 Evenings
12·2·11-1 mo.

'

'BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
~

f49-2101
949·2160 .

or.••.

Hlec:tlon of

large ttws.
614-742·2143 or

" Day or Night ·-·-

742·2U9

NO SUNDAY CALLS

11f2l

RIGGS
TREE FARM
Choose and Cut
Your Tre.e or We'll
Cut h For You,

39507 Racksptlngsld.
lA• c.... .ru.s. »J
~oy,OhiD

614·992-5702

12·2·91·1 mo.

..

~

':(&gt;·

�I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce..Beattle

44 '

.

t:f,t:f,t:f,

.

t:f. t:f. ll&amp; t:f. M t:f.

1·bdrm elllclancy opt, portlolly
lumlllhed, dlfiGIH roqu,lrod, 3rd
tlocl&lt;1 no pota, Pomeroy, lt4o

182..177

.

·Television

51

Apattmel'it
for Rent

Viewing

AAt&gt; ~ PAATR.I~
ltl " !QR,rn£ !
I \
J

•

112 mi.
WV,

caii:JO+f7S·I4!0.
RENTZ OWN
114-141-3111

Vl'r11 FUmlturt

Sola &amp; Chair, $11.10 Wllk;
· Rtctlner, · SU1- "'NM'- .Swlv.l l
Rocker, l3.63 Woak,Bunk kd~
Compltto $1.41 W•k, 4 Dfaw.r
Cheot, l3.26 W•kl Potter kd·
roOm ·Suite, 7 pc:.; $18.17 WHk,
lncludn Blddlng.Counlry Pine
Olna111 Whh ••nch &amp; 4 Chllro;
$1M8 . WMk.OPEN: Monday
Thru Saturday, h.m." lo 8p.m.1
Sunday 12 Noon Till !jl.m. •
Mlli• on Rout• 7 en Rout• 141,
In Centenary.

ME WHV WE PUT A

Coroplete lite chuckle quatocl
· by filling In the mlllinV
L.....I......L.......L-~..t-....J you dovolop from !lOP No.~ ~ ~.

·

Pets for Sale

245-6926 after 5.

Found : Dog, Medium Size Long

33,000

mlltt,

Yard Sale

9

coupla lor apa_rtmant . complex

Full·llmt .wllh

TX 76101.

Wanted pe11on or mturied
couple to assist wllh milking
125 c:owt, 6 dly wark weak:,
housing, pay by the hour, other
benafits depending on Ill·
perienca. R11pond to Box C·9
car1 Point PltiNnt Register1
200 Main St, Point Pteaunt, Wv

25550.

Wanted to Buy

Wan1td to buy, Standing timber,

Wanted: Truck Driver To Hl"l

Coal. 614·256·1011.

Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614-m-

WAREHOUSE

,

5449.
To $12 HR Will Train' Sovoral
Top Prlc11 Paid: All Old U.S. O~lngs. Alto Part Tim•: 1·
Colne, Gold. Rlngt, Sllwr Colna, 8
21-8543.
Gold Colnt. M.T.S. Coin Shop, Wtrthoutt; to $12. hr, will train,
111 Stcond AnniJI, Oal/lpolla.
HYirt:l openings, also pill

Employment Services

11

Help Wanted

.,

tlmo, 1..!10D-5214543, •
Worohouu

To $i2hr, witt train, stveral
openings, also p1rt time, call 1800-521·8543

$3!0.00/Doy Proce11lng Phone 12
Ordtral Ptoplt Call You. No Ex·
P.,ltn'c t N~enury. 1..aG0-255-

Situation
wanted

1864 JMp ChorokH, 4 Wheel :
Drlvo, Loadodl 814-148-3869.
·

1·8G5-564·8500 Ext. HQ968 For

1986 Dodge Caravan LE, l~dtd,
7 p11unger, nice cond, make '
an otmr.. 304-175-5306. ·

FOR 11,600 Full Price. Govern~
mtnt Agencies Now Liquidating.

lmmadlllt Anlatanct.

·for Sale

964-3673.

· 1873 Roelcwood Mobllt

. ,

.$11ppi$1P TO (;o

derplnnlng, Porch, 2 Awnings.

liM, nice truck, one owner, :

1919 Clairmont 14x70, 3 b.drooms1 1 ba1h, w/undlrpennlng
and uont porch, gas keit,
central air, must move, $8,500.

3173.

1~000

mltaa, $9,Sit5. 1.aoO-i64""" •

74 -

Motorcycles

OfF' :

THE 'f'lf&gt;CT
- -(;tf.JfFAfloN.
Vf'J'riL

&lt;

814·446-7046.

1

!

ALLEYOOP
•

1QI87 Suzuki lntrudtr, 1,400 Cc, &gt;
viny fast, wry b11utltul, 2,500 .,
mll11, U,!OO. 304-882-3'1111.
·,

.

198'1 Nul'lua mobile homt,
14xiS4, 2 BR, 1 baltl, naw
retrlgmlor, newt~ recarpattd,

8x16 front porch.
Park Lane ~ourt. 614-146..!1732 45
after 5. $9918.
Wlllltrldryt~

couch,

it'IIO
wlbolgo
Mllchlng

1982 Oakwood mobile home, 3
bedroom, 2 baths, double car
garaQt, city water, 8.5 l'cr11,
owner · •t1n1nclng, Somervlllt

All heme
newlllf lnttr·

11

Alao tralllt lpact. All hook·upa.
Call aftlf 2:00 p.m.; 304·773-

5651, Muon wv.

. ::'
IIO.
~::OI:-:R-,poo--0'-,..L"t""'='s.'-'lt-c"
lid Doubla Wldat • $1,000 Down

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

_Autos for Sale

..•

'

1985 ltlds· Cutllall Suprtmt

8raubhm1n 47, 000 mllea. $2,100
1187, 1888 Nlsun Stntrl 81~

.

446·7278

Merchandise

51

.,'

14ft bOal with 40 hp ond troller,·::
$400, 814&gt;143-!161

Transportation

In eoftwart also other txlrat.
Grtlt Chrlatmn preaent, $300.

304-175-5431.

Roolly, 304..!175-3040 or 5754431. SiHplng roomt' with cooking'

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

75

Soaoono.d Aohl Oak And Hick·
ory Fh-ood, 55 Plck·Up Load
Dollvorod And Stocked, Don
Waugh, 814-146-11848.
Sogo Gonlolo with over $1,000.

• •

1048 Wltl~'s 3-pals )11p, IXC.
cond, · $1700, 132 Butternut

Ntw gaa tanka, body parts, ·one ·

1on truck whHIS. rtdietors, ···
floor matt ate. D I R A\lto, ·'

Pomeroy;OH, 614·992·2529

Household
GOOds

Ripley, wi/. 304-372-3133
800-273..!1565.

I Della 88, Good

$500. 614·

or·l· ·;
• :.

c'

EIHI Homt Ctnltr! Whtn PUr·
c:haalng A; New Or UStd Mobllt
liome With Approyad Credit.

Thla w•k only Irregular Jeans
U .OO or 3/ftO.OO, 110-paggy, 132
Bulttmut ~a~rov, OH

Upright fretztr, 3yr stud colt
Ouart•r Horst, n,ol warttad with,
good contut horse, •venln9s

614·148-2355
~ITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Will

Ron

Alllaan,

1210

Stc.ond

Avonuo. Galllpollo, Ohio, 614·

441-1338.

·sioux . V11w Grlndtlr, 3 Yea;• ::
1977 Voltswagon Bttlll, conver- Old, Ukt New; Sioux ·Stat Otrt- .•
tlblt, Wfti,ktd, runs good, S600, fh, GUide Toot•bAimoat 5K•)n· ,.
tl14·247·2961
YHIId. Offers r TrtdH Con- .'

.:,;,,:..:~.:.:...-.,--.....,.---·

mt

Chryolor Cordobl,
paint, now urn, s1ooo"304-t7s.
6155 oft or 5pm

1

oldorld, 614-148-2306.

79

3182.

1870 Scony Camping Troller, &gt;
1979 Ford Thunderbird 289" 81Hpt 4, $500. Call After 5p.m: .'
.
motor, naw tl~ts , ntw ban,ry, 304-m.8154..
.
"
runs good, nHdl somt work,
prlcearlghl, $500. 614·245·9573.

&lt;.

Services

' '

81

Home
.
lmproveme11ts ·

1980 Chevaroltl Caprice Cln·
sic:, 4dr stdln, exc. oar, 50,000
actual mltu, tunv equipped, 305
1081 Plymouth Atlllnt, runt

uc bonolht pocklgo, all 3

thlftt 1Ytllablt1 contact ptr·
10nnt1 PlH:IInl Ytllty HO.Jp,

3044711-1340, AAIEOE.
,
Child caro IO&lt; 8 mon. old In my
homt boglnnlng Jan. 6th, ~on '
tmoker, rat. 'MI· S14-H2·3~2

DRIVERS WANTED

$4004050 Wkly. Win Train. Drive

co. car. 1-8C)0.~1-7750 .

EttV Wortcl Excellent Pay! At·
Nmbla Prochlclt At Home. Ctll

Toll F-. 1-600-167·5556, Ext.

BASEMENT

v.e $1100, 614-812..!1719

CerUI*f nursing attlttant, full
' p1r1 tlrfta poaltlont tv,llable,

good, $!00. 1..!100·964·a3173.
Rlploy, Vf:(.

Furniture Stripping Rtfinllhed
And f':epalr, Quality Work, FrM

1182 Uncoln Town ctr, exc:etlant
eond, new Mlchtlln tlrll new
vinyl roof I htadllner, 71,ooo

Eotlmatotl 304-!75-5529.

~eorgea Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your logs to 1he mill Juat

sedan, tautltut car, every op.
tlon, n.w llrea, 307 V-8, $1950

Miss Paula'• Day Cara Canter.
sate, aHordablt, chlldcare. M·F

614·892·6719

8 a.m. • ! :30 p.m. Agot 21\-10.

1983 Oldt Omtgl, 4 cyl., 4 dr.,
$900i 1983 Dodge · Diplomat, 4

Btlore, · atltr ~e:hooL Drap-lna 2br Conags In Town, Rtl•tn·
welcome. 614:446·8224. New In- cn Required. $250/ma. 614·245fant Toddler Care, 614w446-6227. 9375.

dr., &amp;,cyl. $400. 614-256-t554 coli

71eavt msg.

3 BR home, newly rtmodtt.d
with partial battfMnt Exealllnt

1984 Camaro l-28, T·topo, 350

eng, auto, toadtd, $3200; 304·

location In Pt PIHNnl: area.
$400 mo. plut depotlt. Rtl•tn•

AKC Raglottrod· Cairn Torrlor

roqulrod, 814-141.0228.

Pups. Cul•' Chriatm.. Pita. Will

Hold Till Cllrlolmu, $150. 614·
317·noD,
AKC Samoyod Pupt 1 Milo, 1

t~ marvest A~in...
Reap The Rewar~...
When You Tum To
The Classfieds,

F•malt, Exctllant ~allty 112
Prlct Saltl $200 H..lth Gturan·

t11l Evonlng~, 1-304·757-1996,
WNktndt: 1·-·562-9532. I
Bautiful

Of\41 Bedroom Hou11 In City Air
CondiUontd, No Pets. 614·4415·
0893.

42

I6UE55 AU':

..

··' _. ..

Unconditional llfellm• gua rin-~ ·
Local rtftrtnCft hirnlat\ed. ··

'THE. I!III&lt;DS
MVE FI.ONN
.saJIH R:R 'THE
:;WINTER.

collecl
t·&lt;·•:.
night.
;~~~~~~~·~iC.~II W1tetproo-

.'

qr.

·:

:-"'"-:--...,,.,....,..,.-:-;---,--

Complete
Homt Stt·Upt:, :•
mllos, $5,000, 614•992·3410
Rt))llrs; Commarlc1l, Rtsidtn• -'
1983 Oldo 0.111 88 Royal, 4dr llal tmprovtmtntt. Including: -'

Rentals

caii30H75·1957.

WATERPROORNG

Mobile Homes
for Rent

+--•~ ~Ml-The-Boun~Is Youri!-

Tum your clutter into cash, •
Sdl it the ea~y way.~by phprw,
no need leave your /lQrne, . "
PWce your cbusified qd today!
15 worm or le .., 3 •dqp,
3-puer&amp;;$6.00

Raglstared

afteri:OO PM.

'o

Colt our. o!Jje. for paid U. adoaru:e ra101l

Now that the weather lw coele•
cfewn, whj not heat thlnp 1p a bit
by dearlns lour dosc:ts, a~tlr or
baleme•t o thole unwanted llems
and ltlmtlsln1lhem r.r Ule In
the a.llledsr
•
Aid, yeil ru put thlt ntl'll
c:uh lo pMlue lly dteckln1
the CWIIRea fer t.l..,.le
ula, nea 111.tda ... lllrphu
In ,.ur ned of the ....,,

AKC

BotQiot, 12,WHkl Old,$50, 8t4·
256-1406.
Bluo H11t.r pupo, 304-675·3,27

1984 Celebrity e cyt.,
crUitt, cttan car.

446-11552.
1984 ~go 50, • c I, 4 opd.
$1350. 304'875-2148.
&lt;.
1984 Dodge Arln, 4 door, bt1ck,
AMIFM, e~ ...u., 4 cyl, naw ••·

hault, 614·002·7236, eveningS

1985 Mercury Cougar, ntw tn·

gino. Good cond. l3 500. 614·
448.0840. Afttr S Call 614-448-

87112.

1886 Eocort $850; 1NI Horizon
$1.100; 1886 TurltmO, loW miiM

$1100i 1887 Horizon, $1700. 304·

675-2440.

•

Claim• ACcoptld. 814-256-t6~( •:·
lmprov.~m•nta:

Home

·•

Yom E•porlonco On Oldar ' &amp;.Newer Home a. Room Addltlont"' .' ·

Foundation

Roofing,-~:

Work,

loctlonato 150; boby parakHtl,
recently weened $10; Lutlno

Poon, Cinnamon Poarl ' Pltd
Cockllltl brto&lt;llng palra. 814·
381-IISI.

·- -------..,.. ..

Plumbing &amp; :: •
Heating - --;-

'

-

BERNICE ..
QSQL

~-BE:DE

-

-

C1ner's Plumbing·
Fourth tnd Pint

Oalllpollo, Ohio
61-8-3888

B4

Electrical

A

&amp;

or

, new urvlca
Ucenatd

Rlironour Elactncol,

..

'

.W
-.

"Your
CIJirthday

Dec. 20, , ..,

You could do rather well In venturea
- ..you,.,; operate In anlr!dependeril ~ In the year ahead. Part·
nerl,mlglrt tum out to bo llllbiiHIII rath·

...... _...

.. ,

-- ·----- _.

.._

'

';,.,..

•

..

-

IAGmARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Even
!hough your way of doing thlngl might
billie bolt, you court(_have an ext.......
1y dlllciul1 time oonvt~ your mara to
IQIW your JNd lodly. And I compromlil( 10
to avoid a conftlct" Gel •
~pn Hie by underellndlng lht lnftu·
enc+lfO'*lllng you In the year lhled. ·
'
.

.u

; ·

12 """'
bandorl
ormedlllo
18 Unclllmld
mill dept.
21 Loanllherk

.

1t87 Ford Eacon, $2000. or aa..
\umt lotn. Cell ' 304"75·7121 or

JtJ.toiS.

11 RlghHully

GRANDMA AN'
GRANDPA!! '--

..

-

814-148-7051.
11187 Morcury Orand Marqull,
aut~ AC1 _~rUIM1 tift, loaclld,
ss...s. 1.....864 ..173.
8halby Z, T~opo,
1.000.864·

.,

LONESOME

UmatHI Aef•rt~ncu, No Job To ..
Big Or Smtill 6t4-141-0225.
·•
~rooman'o Plumbing And Ho!l· ::
lng, e14·256-1611.
~ ..
Ron's TV Service, tRtc.!fllzfng: .•
In Zlnlth also strvlclng most ·'
other brtnd1. Houae c1lls, ilsO ·:
soma appUenca rap1lrs. ~v ·,
304-5M·2!118 Ohld
. 114-146-2454, ·,
Room additions, tiCIIng, roolhig, ::
vinyl l'lplactment wlndowa, .·
carpontry by AI Tromm, 814·742· :
2321. CALL COLLECT
' . •:
O.vlt
Stw·Vac
Strv,ica.,. .'
a...,. •• Crook Rd. P•~•. IUfl' ...
plln, pickup, 'Uid dollvtry. 114-· •
441.0214.
:"
.
Will buikf paUo co.,.,.., decks, .
acr..-..d rooms, put up Ylt,YI tiding or lrallor oklrtlng. 11+ ·

82

lid pooch loco lovo blrdo:

,.

44
47
48
51

IT SHORE GITS
WITH TATER
OFF lllSITIN' HIS·

Kllchtna And Baths. ~Frse .1..- ·..

~24~5-~~·5~2·----------~·~·~· ··

IWHI, IDVelbll IICiremely If•

7•,- ------·l

675-3319

11-if

Plumbing, Etactrlcat. Insurance ·:

Curtis

Vulnerable: lieilb~r
Dealir: Welt ~

Nw.. Eul
llool'
Bridge In acbools is commonplace
Paa
everywhere except in Nortb America. . Dbl:
p. .
p. .
Perbapslt II time prlncipali were per· ; st
p..
p. .
p. .
suaded that playing bridle II em:elleat s NT
lllll!ntal em-else. ·
...
I
Opening lead: • 7
· Today's East wu Malgorzata Za·
1. 1~= playing In the liil Pollsh
15
Team Championship. u you
wisb to test yourself, cover tbe West
and Soutb cards. Agailllt three no.
trump, your partner leads tile spade , Wbat could Soutb dilcanl? Utile beart
seven. How do you defend after win· king, tile defeoden would 11111 that
nlng trick one?
.
lllll Ua dla!I!Ofld, East would c:uh ber
Tbe contract seems to bave nine 'leCOIId lipide boaor and ail witlaa red
guamteed tricks: one beart, six dla· card, leavlD&amp; declarer witb only eipt
monda and two clubs.
triclt:a. He 1IOtlld loee a spade at tbe
Zalewska · wm trick one witb lbe end. spade kill~ and led a fieadilh dl•""'!ld
His only cbaace wu tbat East had
at trick two. Tbls destroyed der;larer's the A·K doubleton of spades, But w11er1
communication. South roae witb tbe South pltebed a spade, Eut led the
dlommd ace, llflllloclled tbe club tiDe. opade q-. l1lllt ....n..alt willl the
played a dlaiiiOIId to dwiuny's 10 and ace tiDd ran lbe llllt for ~ down. .
cubed lbe club ace, dllcardlDc a
Wbta liked bow abe bad fOUDd this
bear!. True,-Zalewska abould bave 1111- delet11e, Zalewska repUed, "We jlave
blocked the queen - but she II only 13. ' - ! taU&amp;bl to lead up to dum'my's
Now came a beart. Zalewska put up- weaknru:" OiitOf lbe 'moutba ...
.. ·
ace and cubed tbe clu~ queea.
Cl---•railw-

SwHt potato
Wet ground
1 ........
Pork IOUICI
7 - llla)COI
F101111 Willi
13 ·postld
column .
14 Cot1111eUCI
53 Drtll
15 Cams forti!
55 Lobtlor claw
14·Type olstork 58 Llbortr
17 Tennis
57 Procla,.
equipment
aUons .
18 nnrinHCt
· 58 Kkkotflypo
· 20 Unl of light
21 Of no value
DOWN
23 Clllll
26 CoVIf wfth
1 - -lilt
turf
MOOd for
27 Blogiaphlr
LOYI
Ludwig
2 Emil coher·
31 a.ln fOJ holy
enl llghl
weltr
3 nn, •• a ship
· 33 Threefold
4 Eskimo knife
134 Tum•
5 Look•
· 35 - - barrel
6 Whirlpools
' 3411'111
7 Portrsyld
37 Favo~le
8 Fem11t
40 City In
hollll
Okl1hom1
9 IIID'I chlrl
41 UprOirioUI
10 Jump

.

1980 Buick Rogal, 2 Door, Good
Condition. Catr •har !p.m. 614·
386..!1374.

OAKQJ76

~K

I'Wip Alder

ACROSS

Motor Homes

1979 Ford Fulura, blue, 304-882·

•xJ z

The World Almanac•Crossword Puzzle

.;
,

Campers &amp;

+au

·•QH
sotiTII
OJU

Bridge survival
need~ young blood
By

•uus

. +u
•Ju

s•

...,..,..,._;.,..:..;.....:.,..._.,...,.;......
· ..
1

304..!182-2341.

NO PAYMENTS UNTIL APRIL At

/UP6fT
C0MMITTfF

EAST
tKQ

WDT

. OAIOI7S
• .Q71

17'1 A TIMf -~ELfASfP
IUIJ6fT. ITJ" NOT

duai;A:c, PW, PL. crulto,dllt, ··
bluo $3,500. 1..!100-984-3873, -:
Rlplty, WV.
&gt;
1989 F-150 XLT, 414, AC, cruise, ··

$3,800. Ed Brown. 614-3B8·99'1J'
1973 Shultz 14X70, 3br, CA, Un·

And Slnglt Wldn • $500 Down
With Approved Crtcll. Call Mid
Ohio Ananct AI GM·m•1220.

~

CONG~fffiONAL

1887 Ford C0nvel"'lon"VIn; auto, :.

H0h'i¥; 3bi'l, 2 Baths~-Aim'osfAII
New
Ctrpet,
Unlurnlthed.

Bank repoa, 2·3 bdrms, mu..
Hlllmmldlalely, llttlt or money
down, call 1-800-466-761'1,· Ilk
tor INndl

PHILLIP
ALDER

FRANK AND ERNEST

1887 Ford Convti1:1on Van,
auper ctttn, full options •
vahlcle, relllaltver, $8,400. 1·800. .·

32 · Mobile Homes .•

Call1·800-561·5710. •

0242.

. .,

OWN YOUR 'OWN NICE HOME

14~70

0103

o.nou.n

-----------------~
73· vans &amp; 4WD's
~

JZ.It.ll

•to•

radio, SAW\ bluo 1 .~~,995. t-1100, ::
164·3673, R pity, wv.
.,

EvMtlngs. ·

~-:..

NORTH ..,..
0812

BRIDGE

199'1 S·10 EL., btdllntr, bumper, ··

31 Homes for Sale

Resident manager, malnttl]anct

Friday. Mon'day tdlllon • 2:00 Uatul'l Ptl'lon. Training and
p.m. Salurday.
banams available. Regardless
of uperlenct. Write; LK .. Hopo
klns, Pras., Box 7'11, Ft. Wonh,

Rick Pearson Auction ComPany,
full time aucllonear, complete
auctlon service. Llctnnd Ohio,
W11t VIrginia, 304-773-5785.

truck, ·•

$9,995. 1.000.984·3673.

1875 Dodgo Van, 814-146-0159 :

In- GallipOlis.

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

ctaan

milts,

27,000

,

·"

ALL Yord Saito Muii Bo.Pald In apartnrent &amp;· uUIItlis Included.
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Sand resume to: Box 1320
the day belo111 lht ad Is to run. Waynesville, NC 28786.
S1.1nday edition • 2:00 p.m. TEXAS REFINERY CORP. Noeds

B

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-'19-'9'-0-F-or_d_F--1-50~X-L"'t,-.-u-to-,"'A..,-C, ::

Belmont Drive, Gallipolis. 614·

7

Rlpi•I· .:

CUtlass lnttl-nallcinal, ·: ~
mllea, .:
Ripley, .,
.,

446-9364.

plex, Flvel&gt;oln'f Pomaroy, 814·
886-1357

ICIAMoliTS ANIWIII
. •1-16
Plu~ j.ocsi-Tatry Helfer..;.TAKEOFF
Our flighl ad bee!'l delayed numerous Urnes. People
were getting very agitated. One fellow commented that
. a journey of 1000 ml~ begins with a ·dozen delays
before TAKEOFF.

super ahlrp. .;

~.800. - 1~84-3673,

Hair Male, Friendly, Vlclnltv,

bllllold, please return with no Rnldent Manager to IIYt on tilt
qu111!ons asked, 614-992&lt;&gt;6906
and manJgl mlnhatoragt com-

.

1989 Ford f·250 Suporctb l!ll'
Lanai, dltMI onglno, """ ·.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Lost &amp; Found

-d•

" '•

6 'UNSCRAMBLE
FOR
AN$WER
.

cymbalt 6 high hot. $450. 614·

1·216-967·1537 7am·10pm 7days.

A T ET 0 p
I~-.
•
•
•
•

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IJ. . ,,

Vintage drum set: Rodgers,
USA meda, 4 pc. sat,, plus 2

Lo1t: at Krogtfaln Athens, gray

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TREES?

Musical.
Instruments

LOST, Blue Tlek Beagle, lost

I
One _,.
I' e

• . being late...two WO!klng par·
,......_ _ _ ___, enll, lour children, and only

STAR ON TOP OF OUR

Shlh·IZU pupo: AKC, roidy to go
Doc. 23rd. popoolt will hold.
$200 &amp; $225. 8t4•256·1086.

around lha MOGH, collar reads Pomeroy POSTAL JOBS $11.78·
Robtrt N. Farley, 304·675-7242, $14.90/hr. No exp. ntaded. For
Reward ..
exam and ·apJ)IIcatlon Info., call

I

Att
CAN TELU
. RI6H'f.-WHO
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56

6

~-ton
needed an exatee _, ____ _
.•~J• 10r
6iing 1a1e to schOol. My
hulbancr wrote, 'Aaeeon lOr
·

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· y
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.- -0,•.I·
15 1 1

Send lor Sagittarlua' Aalro-Graph pre- GEMINI (MIJ 21-.llrno 20) USOJall)',
dletlona today by mailing $1.25 l)lua a you're alloctlve- dealing with othlong, 11811-add-. stamped anve- era on a -to-one bull. H..-,
lope to Aatro-Graph, c/o this _ . . th- arrangements could bo your
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH grMieet IIOUrce of Irritation today. a.
· 4410t-342~. Be SOJre to slate your zodl· patient llld t-1111.
·
ac algn.
· ·
·~~·---- -.--CAIICIII.(.IUM Z1..!UIJ D)-Someone
CAJIIIICORN
22"""" 11) You're you've receritl)' helped might come Ia
likely to handle your personal dullte you tor Ullltii!CI again today. II
and reeponalbllltles rather well today, lui allorta - · t properly idc.nO..r- ,j
but you might not gel a pBIIIng grade edged, Ch.,_ are· what you do now
It come&amp; to doing thlnga lmpoeed might not bo either.
on you by other1.
LEO (.lulr a.Aug. :12) In lilvoh....,ta
AQUAIIIUI(.Ian. 20-Feb. 11)11 you are with your I)MII1oday.lull boone of the
encouraged to do tomethlng you do not · ·group lnateed ot trying to dOIIIIMtt
belltve your bell lnleroota to- . -events. You may not think you're com·
day, don't yield to peer Pr'eM!l'"· Bel ,lng on too strong. by they COUld find
your own IndiVIdual, not one'WIIO 11 '!II' i ywr IICIIonl abrulw.
II)' manipulated..
· ; · YIIIQO (Mg.
lapt :12) Sue em
PIICI!I IF"'- JO.Mmlt 20) H It Ill might elude yCiu today - II yoillillkt
~blo, try not to bring outSide prob-1 your . lg..._,tl more dllflcult , than
lema Into your hOUMIIold today, _ . . they ICtually n. Appri!M Y!M tn•
Cllll)' during din'*· II Introduced, they·- deavofe rv' lklllly, not omollcinllly.
could generate a dlarupllon.
UIIIA ( ...... a.o.t. D) OthariCM bo
Alllll (lllnii11·Aprll11) If you p,.. . awayed to ywr point Of ¥lew 'today
...t .yourallfuanllulhorltyonapart~ : ~through ·alrlendly dllcotlllon, but torcular IIUbJoct today, you'd better have. lbly lmf)(!llng your f)(!lltlonl on lhtm
tilt fllcll to back you up . Your clalma could produce *Y u-rable
may bo challenged.
·
1 reactions.
TAUIIUI lltlri ...., 20) a. Qtnll· ICOIIl'IO (OoL Moflow. 22) A1o1nt venous wiU!In llmHI today, bul lure tor 1 mat.rtll purpoM hal both ill ,
bo *Y careful about maldng 1 ftnanolll lldvlntegtl and dlledvaniiOII . today. •
Joan to IOiileont whO lu poor rllk. You Unfortunately, - .· the u . - .
might have to write 011 thll debtlltor.
able m1g1t1 outweigh any blolellta.

to.c.

1011 to be ...

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "By all means .,joy the appi~H and lht
adulation of the publle. But - · never . believe it. Robert
Montgomery.

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• ttl1 br NIA, InC.
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�Mother turns _in
son as bank .robbery suspect

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich

J!RIE, Pa. (AP) - A robbery
was attested afrer his moth·
in

in the county; and a canned food drive for the
Meigs County Cooperati~e Parish. The club is
composed or Me1gs ·High School students
enrolled in the business and office education
program. Pictured (top) .are club members- as
they wrap girts for needy children, and (bottom)
as-several collectt:l coats are inspected: ~ ~

Pick 3:117
Pick 4:0825
Cards: 10-H, -_.,_.=-.c_
2-S

--~~

'Tis lhe season to be joUy-lhe
'
took Reginald season of sentiment. The phone
of Erie, to the rings. I pick it up expecting a lillie
police after arrived at her home senti mental experience wHh the
caller. And what do I get? The perin Ashtabula.
She had seen her son's_photo· sistent voic, of a salesperson, obvigraQh in news reports about·lhe ously reading from a script, telling
- baiikiQbbery, siiia Capt. Dennis me I'm a lucky due&lt; Because I
Tobin of lhe Erie police. ·
· have been "selected" to be contactTobin 81lid Corpening has been ed about t~e latest in phone sercharged with robbing the Mellon vices, storm windows, siding, windows-regardless of products, the
Bank_branch in Erie Monday,
Ashtabula police said Corpening lingo is pretty standard.
None of these callers ever ,have
.waived extradition proceedings and
the courtesy to ask if I'm busywas-returned to Pennsylvania.
having a heart -attaek-eating din~ Corpen·ing was -arraigned
ner~ripping
wet from getting out
Wednesday on charges 'of robbery,
of
the
shower-{)r
whatever. The
theft and making rerroristic threats.
·
beat
goes
.
on-and
on-and on. He was ordered held on $25,000
until
rudeness
becomes
a necessibond. •
ty-most of !hem just leave you no
polite way to get off the phone.
Frankly, I'm declaring war-. I
resentlhese calls intruding into my
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) There is no apparent limit to the life and my free time-and I intend
range of topics !hat have been pre· · to react. If rude it takes-I can
senred to U.S. colleges and univer- handle that. Put me ~own, tele·
sities for f)octoral degrees in recent phone sales person, as having had
it to _the eyebrows-enough is
years.
Included among more tlran a enough. If any of you need these
million dissertations preserved by cal ls in your life, please let me
University Microfilm Internation- know. I'll be most happy to pass
al's extensive database are theses my calls along to you. Or have you
·
-- - ~on such~subjects as soap operas, .had it too?
Elvis Presley, Fat Albert and the
The Women's Auxiliary at Vet·
Cosby Kids, finger painting and
erans
Memorial Hospital is launch·
"The Electrical Mtasurements on
ing
a
public campaign t_o raise
Cu-ticles of the American COck·
funds for the -purchase of furnish·
roach."
ings for the new enclosed patio
area in the Skilled Nursing Facility
at the hospital.
The Auxiliary is hoping it is not
Dumping is the selling of a
product in a foreign market at a too late to be added to your Christ·
,pric~ lower than lhe dom!:l_
tic price. c mas ~~t: _If you'd•like to coQtribute
It is usually done-by a monopoly just-send your donation to lhe pro·
when jt has such a large output !hat jectto the Women's Auxiliary,
selling entirely in the domestic Veterans Memorial Hospital, 115
market would subStantially redUce E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. And
believe me, no contribution is top
the price.

· small-the group will welcome" · .ALL donations. Be sure to denote.
on your check or will! a note !hat"
the donation is for the funrtture'
project. The furnishings ar11:
cxpeqcd to cost several thou~and
dollars.
.
In case you're not really up on· whatthe.new enclosed patio area.
is, let me explain, !hat there was a~
spaCious outdoor patio as a pan of
the facility. However, it didn'tget.
all that much use because it could
only -be used in warm weather .
Even summer rains cut down on il$
use .· Scnhe· Jarge area hat n-ow
been enclosed so that it c_an be used
effectively all year-round. ·

The lighter side

PROJECTS SPONSORED • The Business
Professionals or-America Club at Meigs High
School has been busy during the holiday season.
The 29 club members have sponsored several
service projects including a $250 donation to
Special Olympics at Carleton School; a coat
drive which collected 61 coats for needy children

Ohio Lottery

-Meigs, EHS-girls post
•
cage WIDS

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News briefs

Page4

Ohio Lottery announces new game

,-,

·COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Lottery will launch a new
game early next year that offictals
541id will be easi~r to win than the
Super Lotto.
"Buckeye 5" will be a 1wiceweekly game that requires match•,
ins five' numbers from 37 drawn,
Lottery Director Virgil E. Brown
said Wednesday. _
A person who bets $1 will have
one chance in 435,897 to win lhe
gran!~ prize, although one in every
8S tickets will get at l~st a small
payoff, authorities said.

It was unclear when the new
Mmrow predicted aboui 1.2 mil·
game would start or what the jack· lion tickets will be sold on ;ach
pots will be, said Martin Morrow, Buckeye 5 drawing, which w 1 be
lottery-marketing director. ·
heldl!n Tuesdays and Fridays.
People who match'all five numAnother Ohto lottery game, the
bers will win the entire jackpot, Super Lotto, begins with a jackpot
rather than share with other win- · l)f $4 million and increases $4 milners: If there are no winners, the lion each time a drawing passes
jackpot will not change for the next wilhoul a winner.
·
drawing,Morrows;lid.
A $1 player has a one-in-10.7
''Somebody will win ... and million chance of matching six
maybe two or three people,'' he numbers from a field of 47.
said.
The Super Lotto will continue to
have dro~wings on Wednesdax;; and
Saturdays.
_ There was speculation earlier
!hat the lotte!~·ght.add a new online game to p ace CARD.S next
The Heath United Methodist
year, but Mo w said CARDS
Women held !heir Christmas meet·
·
may be revamped insread.
ing recently at the home of Emma 1 , -~llf.l9; ' , _·
In that game, players try to
match
four randomly selected play·
Clatwonliy. ,,
1:! . 9 . ~4'1
?auline Honon,·vice-president.
'c&lt; '"
·
· ing cards for a top prize of $1,000.
conducted the meeting in which
Altlefremoves .. .
CARDS is the only game operated
devotions were ~iven by Billie Jo
ar~ifCjii(Sth as head
.
by the fl!uery that has declining
sales.
lWwsczyn on 'Christmas Glitter , _oi_t~~ :Gti.(ri)~n ariny..anqtake&amp;
and Glow,"
on·II\~ rtilt1 ~II'I)SeH. Rommel'S
Joh~t!::f:s ':Jt/~ .~~~~~ Af[lk~:Kqrpscontlo_ue~ to r~lreat
NEW YORK (AP) - John
die Christ of Christmas."
:w~;~r«e.\ll:ln Li()~~(gi~lo~ Op
Howard 'Payne (1791-1852), the
Readings .were by Marilyn
Piirp~, .9ongre~s!)i~kes all
Alflerican playwright who wrote
Anderson,. Beulah McComas, · ·rn~h 20'to 44 subject lo
the song "Home Sweet Home,"
Twila Childs and Vicki Houchins . . · nillhary service.
spent inost ol his life overseas.
Euvetta Bechtle gave the closing
Payne became an actor at the
age of 16 and from 1820 lived in
prayer.
•
~
Hosresses were Beulah McCo-. Sou10e. Worki-AimanaeBookorwork!War u; . Lontlon, where he wrote several
mas,Jlonna Byer and Jane Regan. _ Bison BOOks Corp., 198t unsu~ces'sful plays.

Heath UMWmeet WOILDWAIII

Nostalgic melody

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••••

Sarita Claus Wlll .
Be In Our Store
On Saturday,
December 21st

from 1:00 p.m.
~to___4:0.0~p.m.--

Have Your
Child's Picture
Taken -with
Santa ... '3.50

~e!;i~~f·lk~~~ k~~~s:~:~~

Vol. 42, No~ i61
Cop~rlghted 1991

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. to6 N,

!adi!?A{llae~-ms
aiRISTIIIAS TOYS .

COMPUTERS " '
ELECTRONIC
PART!!

'k:-·-. . . . --·~--~=
-....

c.a.• .

~

RADIOS
Tf~PHONES

FULL LINE

VH8 T-120

sAVE $40. Reg. $268.15

fl!a. SUII Eoch

. LAY-AWAYS WELCOME
Ono-touch Quick· Timor Rocordrng. 14·
dly/4-o-IIIMr lnd 110..110nnot c:oblo·
compltlbM IUMr. HQ for thafper picture.
118-617. Rtn'ICite bed"'" tl1rt.

-

Prime
interest
rate slashed
1 per,cent.

iO)i~,;,.,-.,.,~..,~,.,...,.,...,.~--~-"""""''

.come·On -Ov.ertJo fJJob -s·•••
For Delicious Fruit Baskets
PACKED FULL OF BOB'S
FRESH FRUITS, NUTS, AND CANDY..
*IN AVARIETY OF SIZES*

The Perfect Gift For The Hard-To-Buy-Person! ·,.

se{ec . ,..v_,_.,.__ t~o-tro--------.

•

ciii by a full percentage
point its discount mtt - lhe inter·
est it charges to loan money to
.
FOR DELIVERY • Tbese 325 -beautiful poinseltia
banks. . .
plants were deli~~red by Feeney·B~nnett Post 128 legionnaires and
It marked lhe first time.the disauxiliary members to sev~{al nursing homes, elderly housing facili·
count
ra~ has been reduced by a
ties, the innrmary, and sbut-in ~eterans Thursday anernoon as a
full
percentage
poinrin a decade
part of-the annual Christmas project or remembering others.
and
it
pushed
lhe
mre to its lowest
Assisting in getting the nowers ready to go out were from the' lert,.
level
smce
Nov.
24,
1964. A cut in
Kim Fife, Howard Pinpell, Ardella Johnson, and Loyd Johnson.
' the discount mte is the most dm·.
matic signal the central bank can
send of its desire to sbove interest
rares lower to prod a sluggish econ·
amy:
PftSident Bush commended the
' .
move as a "signifi~t step." The
than $2,800 raised through various president, who has been under fire
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
activiui:s during the year.
Sentinel News Start
and sinking in vopularity with lhe
Thursday afternoon 325 poinset- · waning economtc picture, said in a
"It takes long hours of hard tias, 420 bags of fresh fruit, 225 written statement, "Lower interest
GIVING TOYS TO OTHERS • Bro.wnie
Carolyn Bentz, Nicole Da~is, Jennifer Fife, Ash·
work and hundreds of dollars, but pounds of candy, and 28 doze_n rates are important to spwting ecoTroop
1271
donated
toys
to
the
Sal~ation Army
ley Hamilton, Jessica Hooten, Rebecca Houser,
it's all worth it when you see lhe cookies were packed up and deliv· nomic growth and creating jobs
in
Pomeroy
on
Thursday
anernoon.
Accepting
Sarah
Houser, Kimber!; McDaniel, -sara Moon,
ered.
smiles."
and investments."
tbe
toys
Is
Dora
Wining
or
the
Salvation
Army.
Brenna
Sls.son, Andrea and Stephanie Burdette
Every resident at lhe Extended
Thai was lhe comment of one
''The discount rare cut will help
Brownies
pictured,
in
no
particular
order,
are
and
Aja
McGlothin • .
Auxiliary member of Feeney-Ben· Care Facility of V.ettrans Memorial when it is passed on to consumers
nell Post 128, American Legion, as Hospital, lhe Darst and Mercer Per- and businesses."
she talked about lhe annual Christ- ~nal Care Centers, and those at the ·
mas project of remembering veter- Meigs County Infirmary were
ans and other residents of area · taken a flower, candy, cookies, and Tr~sl, one of the country's largest
0
nursing homes.
• fresh fruit, and ,given a gift of $2 banks, to cui its prime lending rate
Wednesday's "conviction o( agent for the SECO task force. belief that we have made solid
This is the eighth consecutive rrom lhe Post.
by a full percentage point to 6.5 Trudy Swartz Dent on a [e!Qny Dent's was the third of 41 cases 10 cases and that juries will convict
Gifts were presented to lhe vet· percent. Similar sharp cuts in !his drug charge brings to a close the 41 end with jury convictions. The olh- drug dealers in !his county."
year [or the project, a combined
or lhe legionnaires and auxil- crans and the "adopted grancfmoth· benchmark rate for many business . felony drug eases which began last ers were settled with plea bargain
The first trial of the week was
•• effort
iary members at a cost of more
• Continued on page 3
and consumer loans were expected summer.
; agreements between Story and not relate!f to the dru~ indictmC!\lS.
tobemadebyolherbanks.
In lhe second criminal trial of defenSe counseL
On Mon_day evenmg, a jury
0
Ill
10
The Fed move had been widely the week in Meigs County ComStory recommended that Dent returned to lhe courtroom Wtth·a
""
expe'cred although lhe full percent- man Pleas Court, a jury-convicted be scment&lt;ed to.the maximum sen- guilty-verdict a~ainst .Oladatun .
age point reduction caught analysts Dent of aggravated trafficking in tence of seven to 25 years 10 Fasheun followtng ft~e days in· ·
by surprise. Tliey said it show,ed LSD.
prisoh, with an actual incaree~ation court and eight hours of delibera- '
· CLEVELAND (AP) - A~ per said.
the concern with which the central
Prosecuting Attorney Steven
of five years, and Jtrdge Crow sen- tion . Fasheun was convicted of a
many as 700 jobs could be elimi"We don't know if this is part
bank views the current sluggish- Story reported Thursday that tcnccd' Dent to lhe maximum sen- count of engaging in a corJupt
natcd next year at the General . of the grand scheme, or if there. is
ness of the economy. .
Dent's trial commenced on Tues-. tcnce.
activity , a felony of the first
Motors Corp. plant in Moraine, a - more fil come," one executive lbld
11"\:omes in the wake of an day morning and concluded late on · "l '·m quite pleased with the . · degree; a count or aggmvated 'theft,
·· newspaper .reponed today.
the'ii'ewspaper. The newspaper did
admiS§iOn by lhe Bush administra· Wednesday. The jury in lhe Dent result (of the Dent Uta!)," Story a felony of lhe second degree; and
: The Plain Dealer reponed that not identify lhe executive.
tion earlier this week lhar"for all case deliberared for an hour and a 'said. "We have baued 'a thousand ' two felony theft offenses of the
!Jenera! Motors officials and state
On Wednesday, GM Chairman
practical P.urposes, the recession .• half before finding her guilty of the on the three drug cases that have third degree.
records indicate that the company Robert C. Stempel announced a
contmues. . .
.
,
first de~rec felony charge of uaf. gone to coun. The balance of lhe
Sentencing or Fashuen has been
intends _to eliminate nearly 10 per- massive r~trenchment program. He
The admmtstrall?n, warned ficking 10 LSD.
,
defendants have pled guilty. Addi· deferred by Meigs County Compep! of the employees at its light· said GM would close 21 of its 125
about the ~res1dent s plung•ng
Specifically, Dent was indicted tionally, lhe speed with Which lhe 'man Pleas Court Judge Fred w.
truck assembly, dtesel engine and North American assembly and
approval mtmgs, had stepped up 1ts in June on a charge of selling 50 ·juries deliberated reaffirms my Crow Ill until January 6, 1992.
automobile air-conditioning com- parts·manufacturiQg factories by
pressure on the central bank to pro· unit doses of LSD to an undercover
plex.
. the mid·l990s and eliminate more
vide more credit relief
Q~C) ~~~~!'I--'~~
. Company officials the newspa- than 70,000 jobs in the United
.
-I - '-')-;:,-----per did nohdentify--said~lhfli_i'Q- Stales - and- Canaa acS temper - - · posed job cuts were planned late declined to name any plants that
this year.
the' automakerplannedtOClOse:
. Company officials could not be
The company is facing a loss of
S OW
ZO S
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will hold its Free
reached to comment early today. $6 billion to $8 billion !his year,
•
Clothing
Day for low-income persons, from 9 a.m. to noon on Mon1
:felephone calls to company and Stempel said GM hoped to
day, Dec. 23 at !he"old schoolhouse building in Cheshire.
spokeswoman Sheila Main in Day- eliminate ov~r~&lt;tpacity.
1'
'Y
ton were not answered.
Ron Gilvin, an officer in ElecD'i·
;_ The newspaper also said it cal Workers District 7, said ThursCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Two minor accidents were inve$tigated by Pomeroy Police
ob,tained documents.forecasting a day that union officials had not
New U.S. Census Bureau figures
Thursday
afternoon.
·
· loss of S60 jobs by July of 1992.
been told of any cuts.
that ind_icate Ohio has grown in
o-.
Brian
Conley,
Pomeroy,
had
stopped
his
1987
Ford
in traffic
. · One of the documents shows
"The only thing we've heard is
size since 1980 are not quite what
near
lhe
inrersection
of
East
Main
and
Nye,
when
the
vehicle
was
lhatthe assembly plant would lose that there's been no decision on
they appear to he, officials said.
struck
in
lhe
rear
by
a
small
white
car.
Conley
told
police
that
the
pboul 300 workers out of 3.407 ,!he closing the P.lant," said Gilvin.
The 1990 census shows that
two
male
subjects
in
the
car,
got,out,
argued
!hat
!here
was
no
dam·
Harrison Radiator Qi vision plant
·He said tf !here was a cut of 700
Ohio is larger !han it wt~Se'i.u 1980
age, got back into !heir vehicle and left lhe scene. There was minor
would lose about300 of 3;007, and ·jobs, it would nor be~ bad as the
only because part of Lake
that
rear Cl)d damage 10 lhe Conley car. and some damage to lhe front :
~he diesel engine plant would lose possibility of lhe plant closing. ·
was excluded before is ~ow countend of the other vehicle. Both were uaveling west on East Main.
SO to 100 workers out of 549.
, "Any job loss is critical to us,
ed as pan of Ohio.
Police are continuing investigation of lhe accident.
._
: Currently, GM has abour6,960 ·but it's not a sign that lhe plant's
The portion of Lake Erie south
The
second
accident
occurred
at
6:32
p.m.
at
East
Main
and
workers in the Dayton suburb.
gain~ to close," he said.
of the U.S. border was considered
DAYS
UNTIL
Kerr.
A
1991.
Gco
being
dri~en by David Stanley, Ravenswood, W. ·
_: It .wasn't clear if lhe cuLl would
Gtlvin is lhe chief GM negotiapart of Ohio in the 1990 census
Va. was struck in lhe rear by a 1986 Buick driven by Edna Hunnell,
CHRISTM~S
lnvolve hOUflY workers, white-col- tor with the International Union of
maps for lhe
time, adding 8.46
Continued on page 3
·
!ar employ~ or both, the newspa- · E!~ctrical Worlcers. ·
Continued on page 3

n"e'nt convz•c:ted onfielony.drug charoe

h . o·h •. ,

*Bulk Christmas Candy
*Bulk Nuts

L ocal b....

Free Clothing Day scheduled

ponu,ation un

Police probe 2 accidents

*Fresh Florida Citrus
•

1/4 Mile North Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, WV • 773-5721
........................
2400 EAster~ Avenue (across from K-Mart}
Gallipolis, OH • 446·1711

_

Elie

-· 5

s
· 'We:ma

-----

details, but.he was unavailable f(lr
commllllt as of press time.
AccgJding to_the EMS, three
Gallia County ambulanc~s
responded' r.0 lhe scene. "Two Point
Pleasant squads also responded.
Berkich said a full autopsy
would be performed at the stat~
coroners office in Col tun bus.
The body was released to the
Willis Funeral H6me in Gallipolisl
Berkich 311ded. ·
·
&lt;
According to lhe funeral home:
Whitt is survi~ed by two childreg
and was employed at A&amp;R Sanita·
lion of Kanauga.
-_ :

·christmas Is...- - - - - - ;

New fiigu_re s

(shelled or unshelled)

I

.

A Pomeroy man is currently
being held in lhe Gallia County Jail
as a suspect in connection to the
in~i~~!..sald Gallill Couoty Sheriff
Dennis Salisbury. However, many
details concerning lhe actual incident are not yet available.
Salisbury said charges are currently pendmg. Galua·County Pros·
ecutor Brent Saunders said he
expects charges to be filed ·later
today.
The Gallipolis Tribune attempt·
ed to contact club owner Sam
Salem of Point Pleasant, Yf,V.a., for

r::

'1Jo6 Wislies 1'ou ~ntf'Yours 5l '1/ery . :f rry Cliristmqs!
1Je C{osing 5tt 4:00p.m. Clil!istmas 'EVt, ~~ 'IIUJt 'Emp{qym May Spentf'lfu J;vening 'ltit~ 'lfr!;~~ l.IJtietf Ontsl
.I

'

ered a homicide.
White, in a critical state, was
transpot'led Ill Holzer Medicid Center in Gallipolis by lhe Galli a
- Count~ Emergency Medical Ser·
vice where he died in lhe emergen·
cy room, Berkich said.
Daniel Dars~ 27, wbose address
was unav-ailable, was taken to
HMC where, according to a hospi·
tal spokeswoman, he was lisred in
stable condition as of 9:30 a.m .
Two other men, 1arnes Taylor, 25,
and Dennis Coughenour, 32,
addtesses unknown, were ueattd at
_HMC and rei~.

. . oh·
.GeneraI.M' t ors pIant
_Cotird los·e 700 jObS next year

I

*Beautiful Poinsettias

2Sectlono, 16 Pogoo 25 cent•
Alluhlmodlo Inc. No11 1p1per

Friday, December 20, 1991

WASHINGTON (AP)--:- The
Federal Reserve today slashed a
key interest mte to its lowest level
in 27 years as the central bank
intensified its effons to sustain an
economic recovery on lhe brink of

rat~~r~ma;;'t~~c~~r~a~G~~~~~;

NOW40%
. OFF
$3.511 EL

- ·- · - ·

~-~-tf3
~~o~6~s~~~--"a....kotar'I'TI'I

.

Christmas made brighter for
veterans, nursing home-residents

• STOP IN AND SEE OUR FULL LINE OF RADIO SHACK
,
THANK YOU SPECIALS
I

PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
One man is dead and three olh·
ers injured after a stabbing incident
-- shortly before I a.m:-Friday at the ·
Addison Club, north of Gallipolis
on state Route 7.
Terry E. White, 31, of 2216
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, died at
a_pproximarely 2:30 _a.m. from mulUple stab wounds to the chest and
heart, said Coroner Edward Berkich. The wounds were inflicted
with a Sha!\&gt; inslnlment, probably a
• knife, Berltich added.
Berkich said lhe death is consid·

Even Mr. Bush now agrees !hat
we are ~ in a recession.-oThe
economists recommend that we
spend more money . A brilliant
solution in view of the thousands of
layoffs Laking place across the
nation. Do keep smiling\\·

IN~ELS ELECTRONICS

.·

One dead, three injured after
..
Friday morning stabbing

Modem Woodmen of America,
Carnp10900, will stage a holiday
smorgasbord at lhe Coolville Lions ·
Club from 12:30 to 2:30 p.rp. !his
Sunday. Price or the dinner? A_
free will donation (money) since
the dinner is a matching fund benefit affair for the families of Barry:
Russell and John Tracy. The pub~
lie is invited.
'

.~~--·~-.;~~--~-~-..._or.;.,..,,.,. ,

ed.
In filing the two women's death ' .
certificates Wednesday, Oakland
County Medical Examiner Dr. Ljubisa J. Dragovic said the deat~s
were not suicides because "suicide.;. ,' ·
is reserved for self-inflicted ' .
death." ·
"In this situation, ali the evidence indicates these deaths were
brought about by another peJSon,"
he said.
On Oct. 23 ,' Kevorkian called
police to a cabin where he had
helped two women - one with
multiple sclerosis and the other
with a·painful pelvic disease commit suicide. One was hooked
up to a machine that adminis~red a
lethal injection, the other inhaled
carbon monoxide through a mask.
Kevorkian invented both devices.'
In 1990, Kevorkian hooked an
Alzheimer's patient to a machine
that gave her a lethal injection
when she pressed a button. A mur- · ·
der charg!l against him was dis· ,
missed by a judge who ruled
~iChigan ha~ no law_!gainst assist- ·

-

•

Mrs. Ruth Carr and two of her
daughters, Charlotte Wolfe and
Rita Stobart, enjoyed a recent'
Eddje Arnold concen in Wheeling,,.'
W. Va. It seems lhat Mts. Cart andEddie are cousins. · Charlotte con·
tacted Eddie_and explained the ' . ·
relationship so as a result, Mrs.
Carr and her daughters were per-·
mined backstage for a visit and~
photographs with Eddie after lhe
concen-a nice reunion.

ed suicide.
Wednesday that they expected
The law still stands while law· murder charges to be filed today.
makers consider proposals to
Attempts by The Associated
change it
Press Lo reach the two men were
The Michigan , Board of unsuccessful. There was no answer
Medicine voted unanimously last at Kevorkian's apa(tment in the ·
month to suspend Kevorkian's Detroit suburb of Royal Oak on
li,cense for helping the three women . Wednesday night or at Fieger's
fdllthemselves.
offtce tn nearby Southfield.
Kevorkian and his lawyer;Geof- Fieger's home number is not listed.
frey Fieger, told WXYZ-TV on

Rlln tonlg~t. Low In mid 30s. ::
Saturday, sunny. High In mid '·

40s.

Women's deaths ruled homicide;
Kevorkian expects murder chargePONTIAC. Mich. (AP) -Jack
Kevorkian, who used his suicide
machines to .help two women kill
themselves in October, ex~ects to
be charged with murder now that a
medical examiner has listed homi·
cide as lhe cause of their deaths.
. Oakland County Prosecutor
Rtchard Thompson sa1d he would
announce today wh~ther to file murder charges agamst the 63-

__~
1

mst

', )

\
'•

••

•

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