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                  <text>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

'

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

'

., ..

' ' I'

'

-·

-

·•

• ,

, ,

••••

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

..

'

. 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-

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Friday, December 2Q, 1991 .

Commentary
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The

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__-, _-__-_ Local b'!!_fi_s.._.. . -.,.=-----Rain-wi-ll-mo¥e-across
.
Continuectrrom pa'g d
Racine. There was light damage to the front of the Stanley vehicle,
and
to the from end of Hunnell's car. Hunnell
told
!hat the
stopped abruptly and she was unable to

Daily~SentineL

l'olllei'01, OIIJo
•
DEVOTED TO THE INTERI8T8 or THE IIEJQ8.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
Publisher
CHARL~ HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstant,Publlilber/Controller

General ·M8Jilll!er ·

A MEMBER.of The Associ at!&gt;(~ Preas, Inland Daily Press Assoc;iation and
the American Newsj)jper Publisber Association.
·

LEITERS Of OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words long. AD lettcn are 'ubject to editing and must be signed wi~ name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issueJ, not personalities.

Letters·to the editor
Another view
closer look ·at home and test the
feeling here.
.
If ·Mr. Bush can solve the
worlds' problems why can't he do
the same thing here at home? Now,
I know he h!IS a tough job, but, it
won't be long until it's time to put
and x in front of a name ... ifyou
know what I mean.
Virgil Wallen
Racine

Dear Editor:
I would like to take a bipartisan
view of a recent incide_nt. A rew
days ago our vice-president was in
Cleveland shouting the praises of
his boss, Mr. Bush. He told how he
(Mr. Bush) was admired and
respected around the world for his
ability to solve the world's problems and his generosity. Now
maybe the .VP should be taking a

· Appreciates teachers
Dear Editor:
.
..
We wan! to tell how much we
appreciate the teachers of Ru~and ,
Elementary school. The Christmas
propam was about the birth of
ChriSt Jesus. And that is the real
meaning of Christmas. It seems
tha! Santa Claus is bein~ held up as
the·reason we have Christmas. God
gav.e us His Son Jesus, born as a
babe, as a gift to all mankind, that

Railroa4 improvements a·nnounced

By Jack.A
.· nderson

11reoart Street

,.

we could be sa~ed for our sins. So
God gave us, the first gift, and
since then, gifts· are given on
Jesus's birthday, down thru th e
centu'ries. So we say thank you,
tho5e who put the program together.
Mrs: !:&gt;oris Richmond
Mr. Robert Richmorul
Rutland

Thanks parents, visitors

'WAS'HJNGTbN- President . hoilsing.
Bush's tilt away from the far riRht.
Bush no doubt wishes he .had lisA well-placed administration Kemp's boldness has earned him
tened.IO Jack Kemp sooner.
source told our associate Jim attention from those 'people, even a
Ever since Bush picked Kemp Lynch that it was Kemp's airborne few in Congress who think Bush
..
,
as Secretary of Housing and Urban pep talk that day that persuaded should make Kemp .his 4omesi.ic nothing else, Bush ' should have•
Development, the former pro-root- Bush )0 cancel his trip to Asia and c~ar. Others are hopm~ Bush will . been listen in~ 10 the howl -of ,
ball quarterback has been trying to . stay home to.takecareofbusiness.
fife Kemp and _m~..:.~rn the..~er- Kemp'-scown-politicafsrirviYifl:i
'help_the president call.Some plays ~., .. -But the-rapportiletw~il the·two 1'ecr nnrrtyr fort~e rtg6t. That msunct. ·
,
on the domestic field. But for men faded when they got back to wouldset!Cemp~p·forhisownrun . SICK SYSTEM_ Money- :
draining, diseases such as AIDS, :
almost three years, Bush's eyes Washington. At .a meeting in the at thePre;&gt; 1dency'" 1996. · . .
have glazed over whenever Kemp White House later in November,
Kemp s Sights are firmly. fixed crack addictioQ and the ailments of ,
insisted that the globe-trotting pres- Kemp grew exasperated with the .on ~eWhite H~use;,He sull. has . the aged have ·overloaded the -1.
ident needed to champion housing reluctance of l!lish and other Cabi- h1s kitchen c_abmet of advisers health-care system. Deficit-ridden :
issues and other problems on his.· ·n'et members to champion · more m place from his 1988 ron. Sourc_es private hospitals are refusing to •
own turf.
. aggressive domestic policies. "I told us that. those 8dVISCrs have diS· treat those who cannot pay. Public
_finally_, in_early .No\'emb~r. gooss I'm the only failure in your couraged hlfD from ru~nmg for the hospilals are running huge deficits,
Kemp got the presidl&lt;nt's attention. Cabinet, Mr. President," K~mp Sen~te_ from Cahforma next y~ar faci ng bankruptcy, firing personOn a flight ba~k to Washington said. Then he grabbed his papers - an Idea that he had toyed with nel, closing their emergency rooms
from the West Coast, Kemp got and stormed out.
until recently. !fe spent much of that have become dumping grounds c
past Lite palace guard and cornered
Soon thereafter, Kemp took his the summer Jetting bac~ and forth for everyone who has no other
Bush for a long lalk.
case to the public, appearing on to ~os Angeles, but ~n the end . medical care 10 turn to. Doctors
Bush heard the conservative line national television to advocate lax ~~d~ not t~ bother· With a Senate have been raising theirfees 14 per•
as only Kemp can deliver it. He has cuts and complain that Bush was b1d. HI~ advisers told !)1m that 11 cent 8 year. Now Lhey're beginning
a powerful memory that allows him getting bad information from his wouldn t help h1m become pres1- to turn away patients covered by
to pull up anecdotes that he colleciS economic advisers: The palace dent any QUicker. .
Medicare and Medicaid. Federal
around the country. He can explain guard hit the ceiling at the White
They are lookmg for a .ne~ Medicare is projected 10 run out of
America's economic ills through House. Kemp's chief of sta(f was stage for theu man. T)lere 1sn t mOney by the end of the decade.
the countless conversations ·he has chewed out ·again for not keeping much more Kemp can do at HUD. Alid state Medicaid is breaking .
had with middle America. He even Kemp in check.'
He has already performed CPR on down in state after slate. President
remembers all of their mimes and
But pleasing the president. may the agency and nursed It back to Bush's advisers have told him that
has been known to rattle off the not be Kemp's priority right now. reas?nable h~lth. He has used his ultimately the federal government
names. for example, of a dozen He is a hero of the conservative Cabmet jlOSIUon as .a.p.Jatform to.. _ .will have 10 insure tne uninsured
black women whom he considers wing of the·GOP- the same Rea- further h1s nauonal VISibility and and _finance long-term care for Lite
to be champions of low-income __ gan alumni who are unhappy .with . go .toc4o-toc . with the president. If elderly anq the disabled. Bush has
·· ·
·
. . .
0-fOII:t'HGinl,._·1t!Ea'"' P..er,.. always been fiercely opposed to
I~ HUl.Me
socialized ·medicine, but his ad vis- ..
·
ers have dared to suggest that he
should s1a11 thinking about nationalized health care.
MINI-EDITORIAL - It was a
· brulal year for women 'in' the legal
~· system. Anita Hill went through the
horror of a Senate hearing_!&lt;&gt;_ !Yll
her story abouT-alleged se.xual
harassment by Clarence Thomas,
but not enough senators believed
her to stop Thomas' appointment to
the Supreme Court. Meanwhile. a
woman in Florida bared the explicit
delails - her ~ersion ·- of a sexual encounter wi!ll William Kennedy
Smith. But not enough people in
the jury believed her either. lin each
of these cases, only · two 'people
know who is telling the truth. In the
end , it doesn't matter except to
those two people. whether or not ~ ;
the truth emerged. The message to ..
women overrides the truth: If they
try to gel justice when sex is the
crime, they will be raked over by •
the system and subjected to public
humiliation. And even if they win, •
the price of victory may be too ·'
high.

and Diile Van Atta

happening throughout the year .and
Dear Editor:
On behalf of the Meigs Junior I encourage everyone to continue
High personnel, I th~nk all parents the suppon given to our school.
Wishing all parents and studeniS
and visilors who took the time to
enjoy our choir presenlation direct- a very Merry Chri~tm.as and a
ed by ~&gt;irs. 'Ieresa Davis, last Fri- Happy New Year, we at the Junior
High thank you for caring!!
day.
.
Pride swelled in my heart to see
Sincerely,
so many parents taking time from a
John T. Amott
busy workdaY. to share this event
Head Teacher
WASHINGTON (NEA) -'- A to borrow construction funds witli their children and to _encour·Meigs Junior High School . bitter dispule between the White either privately or from the !reaage' them by therr presence.
621 South Third Ave. House's Office of Management and sury :- like a private corporation,
Our school has wonderful things
Middleport, Ohip 45760 Budget, Congress and the General or issue construction bonds like
Services Administration is costing . state and local governments do.
. tax parers ~ntol~ millions annlJ!IIIY. Thes.e loans or .l!Pnds would then
What s at 1ssue IS a problem wnh a be repaid over an extended penod.
simple a~wer, bu1 OMB refuses to But OMB insists,. and Congress
approve the solution.
.. · ·
agrees, that this would subven the
Frorri time to time we all receive only the channel to attend it)
The problem involves the. more current budget process.
pleas for money. Plea·se do not
If you would lilce ·to contribute · than a million square feet of office
However, there is almost univertowards the piano, send check or and other space leased each year by sal agreement that a simple soluthink of this as just anolher plea.
Here in Meigs County we have cash to Rutland .Church ·or Christ, GSA on behalf of various federal tion does exist.
.
a County Home, housing at present Box 16, RutlandiOH 45775, Atten.' agencies. This year the rent bill
The cheapest wa~ for the federal
twelve (12) men and women. Vari- tion: Joan May. Or you ma"f drop it will be $1.2 billion, and it will governmem to acqwre space would
ous churches in the county hold off af Bank One, Rutland, OH escalate to $2 billion by fiscal be for it to "lease-purchase" new
serVices each Sunday, and on other attention of Joan May. If more con- 1994.
buildings. Developers would offer
venient, send to Jane Wise, Box
occasions, at the Home.
There
is
almost
uni~eiSal agree- to construct new buildings for the
The present piano has seived its' .113, Rutland, OH 45775, (742ment that it would be cheaper for government, lease !he structures to
purpose, and is beyond repair. 2131), or to Eugene E. UnderwOOd, the governmem to build a building GSA (or a certain number of years,
There is no funding to replace it. 38300 Bradbury Rd., Pomeroy, OH than to lease comparable space · and then simply tum over the !(eys
We are IISking that you prayerfully 45769 (992-6803).
ove~ an extended period. However, and ti~c at the end of the lease.
·consider a donation towards a new
Please designate on check for: under OMB regulations, if GSA
But OMB has turned thumbs
piaoo. Jane Wise of Rutland is at County Infmnary. lf sending cash; wants to build, Congress must down on this method also. I! GSA
p~~ent trying ·to locate one for please give your name and address
appropriate the entire amount in Lite comes to it with a lease-purchase
with the amount given.
th~.
current fiscal year's budget - prqposal, it "scores"··the lease ~
'•This is a total county project;
Every dollar will-be used for the
any denomination, any local con- Home, and an accurate accounting regardless of whether the building that-j, OO percent of the cost IS
might have a useful life of three or aurib~ ted to the current fiscal year.
gr~gation, any Sunday School wt~·- ~ available. For further inforfour decades.
Thus, from a budgetary slandpoint,
class, individual, club, organiza' mation contact, and God bless you!
Given
the
budge!
crunch,
this
it cosiS GSA's current bud)tet the
Sign~.
·
tioo, business, etc. is asked to conmeans that it is vastly cheaper for same if they. build a building or
sider a donation towards this •worGSA to lease space, even for an . lease-purchase it.
thy cause, please. (Please note:
Eugene Underwood extended period, even though iris· · GSA Administrator Richard
·
Jane Wise
This is not a project only of the
clear this practice · ~nds up costing Austin says, "I would love to be
R~tland Church of Christ • We are
Ru~and
the taxpayer much more.
able to lease-purchase new buildOne solution to this situation ings, it would save taXpayers a conwould be for 9MB to all~w GSA · ' ·
. •

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO)' has
announced the locations of -38 railroad cro~sings \bat Qlll!l,i,fy for
protective
for by federal funds.
_
I -----~~Taii;~~~~-~~N~~~-Ncfa- the~t!le-CSX:.Transportation, Inc.,
1~
on
Gallipolis Township near SR 160. ·
The PUCO ordered the railroad companies to submit site plans,
cost estimates, and proposed time sc~edules for the ins~allation1 of
·Lite flashing lighiS and gates within 90 days,

EMS units answer eight calls

Melgs County Emergency Medical Services units~ti'nswered eight
calls for assislance on Wednesday and Thursday.
On Wednesday at 12:27 p.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 U.S. Route
33 and Swindle Road for Eleanor Riel, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospilal. At 8:49 p.m., ~utland unit went to New Lima
Road and took V&amp;lerie Richmond 10 Pleasant Valley Hos~ital. At
9:58p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Spring AvenQe. Donald Saxon was
laken to Pleasant Valley ..
On Thursday at 12:04 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to New Hope
Road. Otis &lt;:::asto was taken to Veterans. At 12:09 a.m., ~acine slation went to Slate .Route 124 for a tractor trailer fire. Ellis McMillan
was the owner. At 1:06 a.m., Middleport unit went to Pearl Street
for Fern Grimm, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 6:3H
a.m., Syracuse unit went 1.0 Slate ,Rou~e 124 for Alison Kreiss, who
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital. At 8:44 a.m .. Middleport unit
:went to Mill Street for an auto fire. The owner's name is unknown.

Greetings in the Name o.f ouriord

today In-history
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By Tbe Associated Press
!roday is Friday, Dec. 20, the 354th day of 1991. There are eleven days
left in the year.
. ·.. . .
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lfoday's Highlight in History:
t;ln Dec. 20, 1803,_the Louisiana Purchase -.:as .formally transferred
fro)n France 10 the l!nlled States dunng cerem.o~1es m New Orleans. The
UniJed,Swes h~ plld the French ~ut $15 m1U1on dollars .for the ternto.ry .wh1c~ effecuvely doubled the SIZC of the country.
On thiS dale:
__ ~ .~ . ~.- - . - -- -~-~190,thdirstsuccessful Cfitton lmll m the Umted States began
op&amp;aung at P~wt~ R.I.
'
.
.
:Jn 1820; Missoun Imposed a bachelor taX on unmamed men between
th&amp;•ges of 21 and 50. The taX: $1 dollar a year. /
l!l 1860, South Carolina became the first state to secede from tile
U.OOO.
· ·
.
~ 1864, Confederate falCes ~vacuated Savannah, Ga., as, Umon Gen.
William T. Shennan conun~ his ~ed Marth to the ~ea..
. Jil 1879, Thomas A. Edison pnvately demonstlllted his mcandesceot
hgln 11 Meolo l'llrt, NJ.
1n 1922, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was formed.
! fn 1963, the Berlin Wall was opened for !he flfSl time to West Berlin1 ers;:who were ~wed one-day visits to relatives in the Eastern sector for
the:~lidays.

.

·

1968, author John Steinbeck died in New )'ort at 118e 66.
1976, Chica&amp;O ~Richard I. patey died at age 74.
m1978, former White House ch~ef of staff· H.R. Haldeman was
~ased.from prison Iller serving IS months for his role in .the Watergate
G~·

.

.

In 1980, the aovernmeot or the SOVIet Umon confirmed that former

I'IIIialer Aloxei N•. Kosyain 111111 ~ tw? da~s earlier.at the ag~ ofl76.

1111982, plan11t Arthur. Rubmstem d1ed ~~ h11 home In Geneva,
Swkzelllad. ••e 9S.
.
,
•.

I.

Who is-the-re.al'·George Bus:h?
No, I know he's the president. I
mean who is he really? What does
he stand for? He's been your leader
for three y~ars, and you'll soon
h~ve to ~ec1de whether to vote for
him a~am, so you ought to have
some Ideas. Is he really a good guy
who-has-to play rough-onee-in-awhile to keep the opposition hanest? Does he truly comprehend and
care about the ptight of Lite average
person? ~f you had to list, say, three
moral pnnc1ples Lhat he holds invielate, what would they be?
While you're studying, I'll
throw out some though IS.
On a superficial level, he 's a
nice, proper WASP who takes his
roast beef on white with mayonnaise. He is the chairman of the
church picnic committee. He brings
the softball equipment and makes
spre everyone gets to play. He batbecues the burgers and dogs, keeps
the Cokes cpvered with ice and
takes pai~ to praise Miss ~(s
three- bean salad with the secret
dressing.
. But theie are some other layers
in the artichoke 1ha1 is the Bush
personality:

· He is 'more than a bit of the
bully who usually attacks safe targets. Who has he taken on that
could be considered formidable?
Mi.chael Dukakis? ll's arguable at
best. Congress? The last time 1
looked, the lawmakers were rated
lower-than cigarettes.-Gertainly notManuel Noriega. Saddam Hussein
the "loser" who is laughing up hi;
sleeve? With the world united
against him, he was hardly ,a controversial foe.
Bush has also come down hard

.

J

committee on Public Buildings
says "our counsel and counsel on
the Senate commiucc have looked
11t this ci~»Soiy and simply don't
agree with OMB 's interpretation."
Actually, so urces within OMB
and on Capitol Hill say that OMB
reallr'has another fear. It believes
that If GSA is allowed to lease-purchase buildings, no matter how
much fiscal sense it migh1 inake,
olher agencies will want to leasepurchase major acquisitions. Soon,
the argument goes, OMB would
effectively lose control over the
budget.
"They tell us," says one congressional source , ' ' that if they
allow a building to be lease-purchased, then tomorrow the Pentagon will want to lease purchase
aircraft carriers and submarines.
They se~ it as a critical control
issue and they won't back down an
inch .
(C) 1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

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- By Joseph Spear I'

1

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-weather .

The ,Daily Sentinel ·
· (U8P8111-IMO)
Published every aRehloon, Monday
lhi'CNih Fridoy, IU Cow1 SL,I'Gmeroy.
Ohio by lhe Ohio Volley Publlohlng
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se&lt;ond cia•
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Member: The A..ociat.ed. ?reA, Inland
Dsily Pre.. AuociaUon and the Ohio
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Newtpaper Sale., 733 Third •Avflllue,
Now YOrk, Now VOrt 10017.
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Sol&gt;a&lt;ribfin Mt desiriiiiJ lo .. y tho carri·
er may nmiL in advance direct to The
Gallipolis Dstly Tribane on a 3.6 OT 12
· month ~~· Crfldlt will be pnn cal'lier
. ..eh .....

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New...

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' No 1ubstrlptions by mail .per:roitted tn
· areaa where home unier serviee ts
anUable.

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

IMide Oolllo 'Coon!J

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IS w..u. ........................................$21.11&lt;4
26 Weeki ..........................................$4:3.16
152 Woeb ..........................................$84.76
O.toldoGallla c-.nty
t3Weeb ....................................... ... l23.40
28Woob ..........................................$46.60
u w..u .......................... ................l88.40

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··Christmas ...

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Continued from page l
ers" at Overbrook ·center, Arcadia :
Nursing Home, the ·Pomeroy Nurs- :
_lng and Rehabilitation Center, and :
Mercer's Personal Care Center . •
Poinsettias were given to each or •
the facilities to decorate the dining · ~­
areas, nursing s.tations. and 10 each ~
. one of the resident veterans.
· ··
Fruit trays and $2 from the Post
were also presented to all the resi- .
dents of Arcadia, Overbrook and the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabil- .,
ilation Center.
·· ·:-:
The sick and shutin members of
the Post and Auxili~ were taken• ·.
flowers, candy, cookies and fruit;. .'
and poinsettias were presented to", :
The Maples and Stonewood Apan•· •·
ment Complexes for use in decorat-' :
ing their recreation rooms.
· ·
The project wa:s extended this '"
year to include 37 disadvantaged' ''
.children referred though the Gallia; · "
Meigs Communi1y Actioh Agency.
Again this'year San1a will be at iary. Among tho~e assisling in preparing the
the Legion Annc;x on Christmas
goodie trays were, from th~ lel'l, D~nnie Kraut·
Eve from 5 to 7 p.m. to dCjtribute
ter, Doris Deeter, Etta Will, Debbie Krautter,
candy and fruit to any child who
and Pauline Greathouse. More than 200 pounds
comes. The legionnaires are
of candy were made and 88 dozen cookies prepreparing 600 bags of candy and&lt; ··pared for the annual Christmas project of . buying that many apples to be' '
given to the youngsters.
· .,
remembering others.

H

GSA Administrator Richard
Austin says, 'I would love to be
able 10 lease-purchase new buildings, it woull[ save taXpayers a con- siderable amount. But I am pre- .. r
eluded from doing so.'

.

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Merry Christmas!
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

WGAJN !¥.TIMES

~ILY ,

(EXtEPT tHRJSlMS DAY}
NICii!T l'UES~Y .
GifT U~TIFJ~TES 101 AY ILABLE.
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Have Your
Child's Picture
Taken With
Santa - '3.50

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FRIDAY 1:10,9 : 10
SAT/SIJ!j/0 . 1: 10,3 :10,1: 10, 1:10 I
TUE SDAY 1:10,) :10,7 :10 •
- WEDIIESIII'Y 1:10,9:10

'·

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FRIDAY 7: 10,9 : 10
SATISUflfiC)It.l : JQ,J :l0,7 : 10 ,!I : 10 I
TU~~y l : IQ,J :I0 ,7 : 10
IIEDIIESDI\11 :10,1:10
S. I : IO ] :10 7:10 9:10

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SALE NOW IN PROGRESS!
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SALE ENDS 1213.1
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Santa Claus Will
Be In Our Store
On Saturday,
December 21st
from 1:00 p.m.
-- to -4:"00 p.m. ·---''-

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FUIIAf tt.n ~YI -

._

Pomeroy Court-----

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Ohio
tb
_
is
· evening ~
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--Me.igs announcements-

on tho·. totally defenseless, alld that somewhere big enough to cover . :,,
speaks a shipload aboul his essen· e~cryb?dy's opinion. ·we heard ·
tial character. Minimum-wage him clrum he was colorblind, then · •
workers, poor women who need he played the qu01a ~arne. We hear ·:
abortions, the unemployed. And him lalk of our precious freedo,ms. • '
broccoli. It am't the NRA, but hey, then. he advoca~es five -count em . ,
it takes a tough guy to stand tall -SIX consutuuonal amendments. . :
against Lite salad bar-lobby.
--11--gets,e~en-more--baslc--than -: 1
He is a cipher when it comes to that. Where IS George Bush from? :
matters of principle. We read ~is . Massach~setts, where he was born'/ : i
·lips about taxes, Lhen he agreed 10 Ctl~necucut, where ·he .grew up? : :
raise !hem. We heard him say over .Maine, where he has a httle beach 1
and over that he was opposed to place?
abortion, then he found a tent

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this date at the Columbus weather California blew down power lines, '
station was 62 degrees in 1895. toppled uees and fanned brush fires ·~
The record low was- 10 in 1963.
across Soulhem..C,afi(omia ...Winds 1
SUnserwill oe at sr09 p.m. Sun- gusted to 70 mph.
~
.·
rise Saturday at 7:50a.m.
,
Sou!h-Cen.tra! Ohio .
Around tht:;~~ation
Tomgh~ ram likely With the low
Snow and freezing min rendered
Continued t'ro.m page 1
:
~5 to 40. Breezy south winds 15 to roadways. dangerous and m some perCCf1l more area tO the state,
•
25 mph .1Jecoming west. Chance of cases Imp.assable early today m the.... Changes in how the buteau ;
rain 60 percent Saturday, mostly uppe! Midwest. and pans of.ihe defines land and improved.comrM- : _
cloudy with a chance of rain in the Great Lakes region and the Plams.. cr• mapping techniques ,have • ··
mommg. Partly cloudy in the after- · Ram fell further south and clouds changed the si'ze of most states, t
noon. High in the mid-40s. Chance covered most of the East. .
said Joel . Miller, a geographic speof tain 40 perceijt:
It snowed this mornmg m parts cialist for the bureau in WashingExtended forecaSt:
of Colorado, Wyoming and Michi- ton. ·
Sunday through Tuesday:
gan. Freezing rain fell in Minnesota
The country has become :
Fair Sunday. A chanqe of rain and Iowa.
Su_nday night through Tue'Sday. - on· Thursday, fierce winds asso- .J68,655 square miles farger than it :
was in 1980, according to census '•
HIg hs 45 to 55 and Iows. 35
, .. to 45. ·
ciatcd wilh an early winter storm in bureau maps.
·•

son. Russell Johnson Jr., Ricky
Ernest w. Wells, 85, of Middle- Johnson, Bob.by Watson, Roger
pon, died early Thursday, Dec. 19, Johnson and Dll&amp;n Ramey.
1991, at Veterans Memorial HospiFriends may call from 6 to 9
Ia!.
p.m. Saturday at !he funeral home.
Born on May 6, 1906 in KenNile Strait
tucky, he .was !he son of the late
Word has been received of the
George Washington and Marth~ death of Nile E. Strait, 67, of
Webb Wells. He was retired after Cocoa, Florida, who died on
30 years of. service with Marietta Wednesday, November 20 at his
Manufacturing Co.
residence~ ae. was a 23-year
GOODIES GALORE· Cookies and candies
He is ,.s urvived by his wife, employee of Kennedy Spqce Cenmade
by Auxiliary members of Feeney-BenneU
Mary Wells, Middleport, three ter, where he was retired from a
Post
128,
American Legion, were arranged on
daughters, Mrs. John (Katheryn) positio.n as a water and waste
trays
for
delivery
Thursday to residents or nursMe!Zger, Mrs. Enoch (Mary Jane) . mechanic.
ing homes and personal ~are centers, as well as
Statts, Ripley, W. Va.; and Mrs.
Mr. Strait is survived by his
sick
and shutin members or the post and auxilJoe (Eloise) Puly, California; a son wife, Betty Fink Strait, formerly of
and daughter-in-law,- Donald and
Rutland; three sons, ThOI!!JIS Strait
Maxine Wells of Northup; three of Cocoa, Ronald Strait'6'f Orlando
step-daug hters , Mrs. Richard and Bill ~trait of Norfolk, Va.; a
(Donna) Jones, Pomeroy; Mrs. brother, Paul Strait of Memphis,
Chester (Marjorie) Wigal and Mrs. Tenn., and a grandson.
a.m. to noon al the old high school
Watch night services
Robert (Jean) Fisher, both of Mid·
Burial was in Brevard Memorial , The Hobson Church of Christ building in Cheshire.
dlepon; two sisters, Amy Mullen, Park in Frontenac, Fla..
Cantata tO be presented
will have "Watch Night" services
·
The Victory Baptist Church in
Portsmouth, and Erma Poner, AshDonations may be made .in Mr. on Dec. 31 at 7 p.m. Pastor Theron
&lt;Middle1Jort will present "An Old
land, Ky.; 18 grandchildren, 28 . Strait's memory to Brevard Hos- Durham invites the public.
Fa.shioned Christmas Cantata" on
great-grandchildren, eight step- pice, P.O. Box 560965, Rockledge,
Free clothing day
grandchildren, and .five step-great- Fla., 32956-0965.
The Gallia Meigs ·community Sunday at 7 p. m. Rev . James
grandchildren, several nieces and
Action Agency will have a free Keesee invites the public.
.,epheo/;s.
.
clothing day on Monday from 9
He was preceded in death by his James Young
first wife, Ruth Pearson Wells, and
a son, William "Bill" Wells, five
James F. Young, Sr., 59, of
brothers and three sisters.
Letart, died•liriday, December 20,
Two men were fin¢ on multiForfeiting bonds were Linda
ple charges when they appeared Holter, Racine. $48. speeding":
Funeral services will be held 199l,alhisresidence.
He was born May 23, 1932, in . this week in the court of POmeroy Shannon Cremeans, Portland, $47,
Saturday at 1 p.m. at th e F'ts her West
Columb.ia, the son rlJ
of the late Mayor R'IC hard seyer.
1
Funeral Home m Middlepon with
spec d'1ng; Roger Pu11'ms, Coo lvi'11 e,
the Rev. George Hoschar official- Willian) and Rosetta 1noffman)
James Smith, Long Bottom, $43, stop sign violation; Ray Red'
in·g: Burial will be in Suncrest YoAunreg.tired 11131.ntenance employee charSged with breakliing out windows man . Mason, WW
. va..M63d·.dt raffic
1
·
p
·
t
PI
t
at
uper
10
and
ood's
Shoe
Store
vio
uuon;
Anna
11I. • 1eport,
Cemetery m 010 easan ·
w1'
1
h
Amencan·
Alloy
m·
New
M
·
s
·
$48
d.
d
on am trcewn.P-'lmeroy last Fri, spec mg; an Aaron ScarbcrFn·ends may call at the funeral
F 'ila (toda ) 3 10 5 and 7 ro Haven, he ·was also a member of day night wa.~ fined.$313 and costs ry, New Haven, W. Va. $50, speed- h
orne 0 Y
Y
the Uru'ted Steel "'o~ers
Un1'an, on cat h of two charges of destruc- mg.
·
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9 p.m.
Local 115171.
...,
E Wh'
tion of property, and $113 Qnd
't
. 1erry •
tte_
He was preceded. in ~lh by a . costs on a charge of public intoxi•
OSpl a DeWS
Terry E. White, 31, of Gallipo· brother, Lester Young~ a sister, cation .
.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
lis, died Friday morning, Dec. 20, Doris Eads; and a grandSon, Roben
, Raymond Landers, Pomeroy,
' Wednesday Admissions: None.
1991, at 1-lolzer Medical Center.
Keathley, Jr.
was fined $43 and costs for disorDischarges: Robert Canaday
. White was born March 3, 1960,
Survivors include his wife, Betty dcrly conduct, $213 and costs' for and Russell Cline.
in Gallipolis. He is survived by his S. (Fetty) Young; two daughters menacing threats, $213 and CO&gt;IS HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
parents John and Mildred Johnson and sons-in-law, Patsy and Roben for trespassing, and $213 and costs
·
White of Gallipolis.
Keathley of Letart, and Joanne and for assault.
Discharges, Dec . 19 - Cora
Employed al A&amp;R Sani~ation of David Siders of Gallipolis Ferry;
Also fined in the court was Jcf- Campbell. Mrs. Lawrence Goheen
Kanauga, he was a member of the three sons ami two daughters-in- frey Milhoan of Nonh Carolina, and daughter, Jerry Rowe, and
Moose Lodge 731 and American law, James and Cheryl Young of $49 and costs, speeding. Todd Kec- Danicllc Thomas.
· pOint
·
Gaha nna, OH. ., an d pete and nou·Ie bier, Mason, was fined costs only
Births, Dec. 19 · Mr. and Mrs .
Legion Post 23 , bot h In
·
d
M
o..
All
Yi
11
Glenn
Y
W.Va.
I
oung, an
ar.. en oung, a
on a charge of failure 10 yield .
. Spencer, a daughter, Gal peasant,.
In addition to his parents, he is .of Letart; two sisters, Mildred
1ipol1s.
survived by a son, Piketon, and a Brumley of Centenary, OH., and Name contest winner · .
daughter, Florida.
· ·
Voneda Powell of Mason; two
,
COLO NY THEATRE
Other survivors include a broth- brothers, Bill Young of New
J. R. Hysell of Route I, Wes1
cr, John White Jr. of Gallipolis, and Haven, and George Young of (Jel.. Columbia, W. Va. was the 'only
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
four sisters, Penny White, Sherry lipolis,
OH.;
and
nine person to correctly identify the
Cooghenour, Tammy Martin and grandchildren.
Meigs County mystery. farm picCarol Davis, all of Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be conduc- lured in The Sunday Times SenHe was preceded ill' death by a .ted Sunday at 1 p.m. 81 the Crow- tine! on Dec. 15. The farm was that
brolher who died in infancy.
Hussell Funeral Home, with the of Edison Hollon, 452~3 Vinegar
. Services will be held Sunday 2 Rev. George Hoschar officiating. St., Racine. Hysell will receive a
p.m. at the Willis Funeral Home in Graveside and burial will follow at check for $5 from The Ohio Valley
Gallipolis with the Rev. Arnold · Union Cemetery in New Haven.
Publishing Co. which co-sponsors
Olll MNING SHOW'7:30
Skaggs officiating. Burial will be at · Friends may call the • funeral the contest with the Meigs ·county
lllMI$SION $1.50
the Swan Creek Cemetery.
home Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m . ...Soil and Water Conservation Dis44"'"23
Pallbearers will he Ronnie John- and.from 7 to 9 p.m.
tnct.

· Robert J, Wagman

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISfMAS b:u Lane' and M'lle

south.
The record high temperature for

-_
Area
deaths.;.;....
·
Ernest Wells

Budget office:won't budge on offic·es
siderable amount. But I am precluded frOAI doing so."
To what extent OMB ca·rries
thi~ rule is shown by a story that
Austin repeats often. GSA leases
two-thirds of a building that was
owned by a developer 1\'hO went
bankrupt. The bankruptcy trustee
carne to GSA with a proposition. If
GSA would change the lease to a
lease-purchase, it would get immediate control of the entire building,
and it would cost not a cent more
than GSA was obligated to pa~
·under its lease.
·:
"I went 10 OMB," ISays Austin,
"and was told the entire lease-pur- .
chase cost would be scored in the
current fiscal year. I did not have
the funds in my budget, so I had to
~ay no. So now we are paying the
same rent to a developer who
bought the building, and at the end
of the lease .the building we are
actually paying for will belong to
·him." ·
.
Asked to explain this "scoring"
poJicy.,_OMB explains that under
the buag~! agree111ent worked out
between Congress and the White ,
House two years ago, it is forced to
treat construction funds and lease,
purchases in this manner.
But Congress docs not agree.
Re~. Gus Savage, D-111., chaiJT(Ian
of the House· Public Works' Sub-

·

· By The Associated Press
Rain is expected to move across
Ohio tonight.
Bteczy-winds-oHS-to-25 mph
will accompany the front which
.will help keep ovemight lows well
above normal. Temperatures will
fall little once the front moves
throug~ as the clouds and winds
combine to keep readings in the
30s. _ _
•
The rain will linger in the south·
cast half of the state Saturday
morning. By afternoon, partly to
mostly sunny skles should prevail
over the entire area. Temperatures
will again be at or above normal11.1 .
~igh.s .r~ge from the_. upped.Os in
the nor(h .to the mid-40s m the

:t

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

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Page.,-2-The:Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO.
.December 20, 1

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$30·$300 OFF
- TV'S

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

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STEREOS

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Sports

The -Daily Sentinel·

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,Viola, Winfield am.o-ng·baseball "" ~~-­
free agents fi'nding new teams ' ~~

.Friday, December 20, 1991

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Page-4

Meigs_, Eastern girls
win; Southern loses
Meigs outscored Belpre 11-3 in
the secon!l period to turn a I 0-6
firs t' p_eriod deficit into a _29-24
halftime lead and the Marauders
Went on to hand the Golden Eagles
their first loss off the season 42-35
Thursday evening at Meigs High
School.
The win gives the Lady
Marauders of Coach Ron Logan a
7-0 mark overall and a 5-0 marl( in
the TVC. Belpre with the loss falls
10 5-1 overall and 4-1 in the TriValley Conference.
Belpre behind the six fllst quarter points of Tami Gray jumped out
to a I0-6 first period lead. Meigs
used a balanced scoring attack led
by Mary Cremeans with four points
to outscore Belpre 11·3 and go into
the locke' room at the half with the
five point advantage.
In the third period Belpre cut the
lead to two pomts on two different
times, but each time the Marauders
came up with the big bucket on the
other end of the court to kill the ralley.
' Kim Hanning had some big
bucketS down the streteh for Meigs
scoring 10 of her game high 14
points in the second half. Belpre
could get no closer than a fo~r
points deficit in the fourth quarter.
' Joining Hanning in double fig ures was Vema Compston with II.
Meigs hit 19 of 59 from the floor
for 32% and nine of 14 from the
line for 64%. The Lady Marauders
had 19 rebounds with Tricia Baer
g ra~bing six. Meigs had 13
turnovers and 12 steals with Compston coming up withj fvie. Vema
had four of the Marauders six
assists.
.
:Gray led the Golden Eagles with
I()' points, Belpre was 14 of 36
frbm the floor for 39% and six of
I Lfrom the line for 55%. They had
30 rebounds with Beth Reck getting 8.
· :In the re~rve game Coach Beth
.,.__Sc~nei der's Marauders used balan£ed scoring to defeat Belpre 3726. Amber Blackwell led Meigs
wiJh eight, Joy O'Brien, Danielle
Scali, Mindy Findley and Erica
Robie had six points-each.
&gt;Meigs is now off until January
2rid when they travel to Alexander.
Quarter totals
. Belpre :............ :.. 10 3 II 11 = 35
Meigs ...................6 If 12 13 = 42
::Meigs (42).:... Verna Compston
4-0-3= l I , Mary Cremeans l -03;o5, Tricia Baer 1·0·2=4, Kim
Hanning 6-0-2= 14, Lori Kelly 2-0·
. 0,;,4, Lee Henderson 1·0·0=2.
Missy Sisson 1-0·0=2. Totals-...,..
16r0·10=42
;-Belpre (35) - Christy Bartlett
3' 0·0=6, Tarrii Gary 4-0-2= 10,
!i~th Reck 1-1· 1=6. Jenny Kruger
o:o-1=1. Julie Grimm 1-0·2=4,
Jamie Colebank 4-0-Cl=8. 1;otals13,1.6=35 .

throughout: At the half, KC had cut
the score to 25-20, b'ut could get no
closer .until the_final round,_when
they cut into Eastern's lead on several occasions.
At the 1:21 mark in the final
canto Kyger Creek tied !he .~Cf&gt;re a1_
45-45 on a long three point goal by·
Mary.Jo Wolfe. The Bobkittens,
however, were experiencing the
result of two starters on the bench
with five fouls, and literally fell
apart the last minute of the ~arne.
Ironically, the game-savmg goil
camewhen EHS pushed the _ball up
coun quickly and Jaime Wilson hit
Metzger nearly untouched on the
fast break to give EHS the lead for
good. EHS sprinted on to a 55-47
finale.
Eastern hit 20-32 from the line
as opposed to 7-20 for Kyg er
Creek, while EHS hit 16-45 from
the floor.
Senior Lee Gillilan, a top defensive performer, hit for eight points,
senior Tabby Phillips canned 7,
Tiffany Gardner had 6 and 9
rebounds, Ruby Burke_had 4, and
two each from Jenny Roush (five
rebounds) and Wilson one.
Ward and Bush each had nine
TO THE HOOP - Meigs Marauder Mary Cremeans (12) goes
for Kyger, Wolfe 7, Black 7, Jones
to
the
hoop in front of Belpre's Christ Bartlett (23), while Marauder
6, Drummond 4 and Gindlesburger
Jenny
Kruger (33) looks on from a distance d_uring Thursday
4 and Polcyn I.
night's TVC contest on the Marauders' court, whoch the hosts won
42-35.
North Gallia 49, Southern 31
At- Racine, the North Galli a
Rutland site of junior cage holiday tourney
Lady Pirates of Coach David
Moorerolledtoa49-3 1 SVACvicThe seeond annual Rutland Hol will be allowed.
.
.....
tory _over the Southern Torna- iday Tournament will be held from . teams
·For more lnformatioll; ..call
doeues to remain unbeaten after six Sunday, Dec. 22 to Sunday, Dec. Danny Tillis tournamen t director at.
games.
29 for boys in grades 4-6 and com- 742-2572 or Joe Hawkins at 992North'.s Nickie Meade led all. bined grades for girls. No all-star 2400.
scorers with 18 points, and Jennifer
•
Cross led the Tornadoes with 1.2.
Southern will remain idle until
Jan. 6, when the Tornadoes play m
Symmes Valley . .
Quarter totals
Nonh Gallia .........8 15 15 II= 49
Southem ...............6 2 8 15 = 31
North Gallia (49)- Meade 5·
1-5=18; McCormick 5-0-4= 14 ;
Myers 2-1-0=7: Salisbury 2·0-0=4;
Twyman 2-0-0=4: Winston 0-0·
2=2. Totals- 16·2·11=49
Field goals - 18-76 (23.7%)
Free throws- 11 -15 (73.3%)
Rebounds - 44 (Meade 11 )
Assisls- 19 (Myers 5)
. Steals - 15 (Myers &amp; Salis·
bury 4 each)
Turnovers - 7
Southern (31)- Cross 2-22= 12; Ohlinger 2·0-4=8: Moore 20-0=4: Codn~r 1·0·1 =3: Mangeroy
()..0-2=2. Totals -7·2·11=31 ·
Free throws- 11 -16 (68.75%)
Rebounds - 30. (Codner ,
Moore &amp; Ohlinger 7 each)
Steals- 15
Turnovers - 28
.
(The Belpre-Meigs game was
written by Sentinel corresponSLIM CLASSIC, CLASSie &amp;RELAXED CLASSIC
dent Dave Harris,· and the East·'
'ALL WASHES -·
ern-Kyger Creek and North GalEastern 55, Kyger Creek 47
lia-Southern games were wrillen
At Cheshire, junior guard 'Shelly by Sentinel correspondent Scott
Me~ger poured in a game-high 28
Wolfe.) ·
,
points to lead the Eastern Eaglettes
• '.
to a· 55-47 SVAC victory over the ·
MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica
host Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Eastern of Coach Dawn Heide- ()\}&gt;) -Bernhard Langer shot a 4mil\l is now 3·2 overall and 3-0 in under-plir 67 to take a one-stroke
lead over Greg Norman and Craig
the SVAC.
MelZger' s effort came as a result Perry after the first round of the
of 8-16 from the floor and a 'Tough World Championship.
Paul Azinge~ Andrew Magee
12J.l,8 effort fro·m the line, while
and Frank Nobilo opened with 69s
s~u;~ l so_ garnered 6 rebounds and
on the 6,848-yard Tryall Resort
dnli'stcal.
Eastern once led by nine points course. Seve Ballesteros shot a 70,
SAT. 9·5 &amp; SUNDAY 12·5
earli{ in the game, but for the most followed by Fred Couples, Tom
OFFER VAUD DEC..21 &amp; 22
parf the game was a close affair ~urtz~r. Rocco Mediate, Eduardo
1&lt;omcro and Steve Elkin~ton at 71 . '

Marshall to play YSU SaturdaY'
The Marshall Thundering Herd
(11 -3) and the Youngstown State
Penguins (11-3) will meet Saturday
for the Division 1-AA national
championship. ·~
The kickoff is at 12:07 from
Allen E. Paulson Stadium in States-·
boro, Ga.
·
CBS will carry the game live
and it will be shown in this market
on WOWK-TV (Channell3), with
Dan Jiggets and Brad Nessler providin~ th~ play-by-play.
'
Mtke Bllllrum, a 1988 graduate
of MeigsrHigh Schooj, will start his
15th consectitive game at tight end
for· tile Herd, He is-the season~is the
teams scc9nd leading receiver with
35 passes for 366 yards (10.5 avg.)
and one touchdown. The 6-S, 235-

pound junior alsa handles the long
snapping for the_Herd. He has
caught at least one pass in each
game this season despite playing
the last month with a broken right -hand.
In Thursday's edition of the
Huntington Herald-Dispatch, former Marshal! ·and current Navy
head coach George Chaump was
quoted as saying that when he
recruited Bartrum, he knew he had
great hands and was as close to a
Division I-A player that you could
be.
Bartru_m"-nai!led to the a)l,
.Southern Conference seeoii"d team,
missed all of last season with a
severe knee injury.

OTHER CHIC PATTERNS &amp;
All SUNSET BiUES
25%oFF

.•

I , ~' I

,,

Philadelp~ia_ a~ong

NHL victors Tnursday

FOR THE SPORTS FAN
MARSHALl
UNIVERSITY
HERD :
T•SHIRTS

"

' ~J. 6''

·Minnesota survives -· L.A-;·Laker
comeback to record 93~85 win

FIVE POINTS AREA
POMEROY, OHIO

JR. &amp; MISSES CHIC

Sports briefs

•'•'

BREAKS TACKLE- Marsbill University light end Mike
Bartrum, a junior from Pomeroy breaks a tackle and picks ujl' a
crucial first down in thi!; year's game with The Citadel. Marshall
was behind in the game in the final minutes arid B_artrum's ea!Ch
and run help set up-the Herd's winning touchdown in tlie 37-31 vic·
tory.
'

·DAN'S

JEANS

By RONALD BLUM
year deal with Detroit.
in 1993 and $4 million in 1994. H~ .
AP
Writer
In addition, outfielder Jim Lin. _ ·
~ Franl(- deman1.who was elullble for sa!ary season
or
Viola is_going to Boston, -Dave arbitra!ion but wasn'~'i a free agent, innings.
'
_·
· Winfield is_go"!~U&gt; _Toionto and agreed .to~ $260,000 contract with
He becotnes the fourth-highest..,
R:1ck Sutcliffe IS ·gomg to Balti· Philadelphia. · _
paid pitcher in baseball by averag.e.:
more.
With the arbitration deadline out annual· value, trailing Morris
, .Pedro Guerrero, Ron Darling of t~e way, teams prepared for ($5,425,000),
Clemen.s
and .Brian Harper are among those todats-deadline.- Players who ($5,380;250)-and Dwight Gooden "
going back to their former clubs.
aren t offered contracts by mid- of the Mets ($5.15 !Dillion).
,-1
On the busiest night of the free nightbeeome free agents, too.
Winfield, whose ·406 career "
age~t season, fOur players agreed to
Seattle said it woul&lt;\ not offer home runs lead.all active players, "
contracts Thursday night ·and eight deals to pitchers Rob Murphy and agreed with the Blue Jays '1 day "
more agreed to accept salary arbi· Scott Bankhead, Philadelphia said after Toronto si~ned World Series !
tration offers. And Viola and !he it wouldn't give a contract to pi_tch· MVP Jack Morns for a guaranteed ,.
Red Sox just about finalized a er Joe Boever and Texas ·said it $1().85 million over two years.
three,year contract for $1).9 mil· wouldn't make ar&gt; offer to short- ·
Sutcliffe, a 35-ycar-oldformer .'
· lion. ~ ·
stop Jeff Kunkel. ~
Cy Young Award winner, was 6·5 ·
Winfield's one-year deal with
Other non-tenders were expect- with a 4.10 ERA, He was bothered :.
the Blue Jays was for $2.3 million ed today, as was the finalization of by shoulder problems, then came •
and Sutcliffe's Contract with the Viola's deal with Boston.
back from the disabled list Aug. 6.
Orioles was for $1.2 minion. Pitch" We're very close to getting and finished the year 4-1 with a
er Joe Hesketh returned to Boston something done," Red Sox general 2.33 ERA.
. "
· with a $3.55 million, two-year deal, manager Lou Gorman said Thurs''Physically, there's no prob ~"
while Harper went back to Min· day evening. "Hopefully, by !em," Sutcliffe' said. "The season_..
nesota for $5 million over two tomorrow we'll have ii finished."
just ended too soon for me l ~st .,
years.
_
Viola, who last spring rejected a year."
· 1 '"
Guerrero accepted salary arbi- $13 million, three-year extension
Harper, who made $737,500-,:·
tr_ati~n with S!, Louis, which ~lly
offered by the New Yorlc Mets, ge ts a $200,000 signing bonus,'•
dtdn t want hun back, and Darling must pass two physicals in order $2.4 million in 1992 and $2.3 mil... THREE'S A CROWD - An unidentified
went back to Oakland, which did . for the deal to take effect. The 31- lion in 1993. The Twins have an.'
durlog Thursday night's ·NBA game in MiD·
Minnesota playa- (center) slicks his band Into
want him . :fh~ six others w~o year-old left.hander slumped to a option for 1994 at $2 .6 million••
neapolis, which the Timberwolves won 93-85.
(AP) .
the fray between the L.A. Lakers' A.C. Green
accepted arbttrallon before the n:nd· 13-15 record last season, only his with a $'100,000 buyout. .He hit·..
(45) and the Timberwqlves' Doug West (right)
mght d~adlme were Atlanta rehev- second Iosmg season since 1983.
.311 last season with 10 homers.,
er
('lejandro
Pena,
Los
Angeles
"Boston
was
always
one
of
and69RB!s.
•.'1
'•
, reliever _Jay Howell and_s~econd Frank's lOP choices," Viola' s
Hesketh, who made $525,000-in
baseman Juan Samuel, New York agent, Craig Fenech , said. "He 1991, gets a~$35 0 ,000 signln!!"
Mets outfielder Daryl Boston, Cali- likes the park. He likes (Jeff) Rear- bonu s and $ 1.6 million in both,.
fornia shortstop Dick Sc_hofi~ld aild don and (Roger) Clemens. They' re 1992 and 1993. Boston has an ,.
Kansas Ctly outfielder Jun Eosenre· a contender, and he knows how to option for 1992 at Sl.75 million or --.
ich.
pitch well" in Fenway Park.
$1.85 million, depending on how "
Twelve free agents rejected
Viola, who ju st co mpl eted a much Hesketh pitches the next-two
arb!tration and may negotiate w_ith $7.9 million, three-year contract, years . He was 12-4 with a 3.29. ·,
By Tbe Associated Press
48th loss in 49 road games behind late rally wi;h five points and three thetr former clubs through Jan. 8. gets a $1 million signing bonus, ERA in 1991, making 17 starts andThe Los Angeles Lakers, com· 21 points and 17 rebounds by rebounds. Malone finished with 13 Among them are Danny Tartabull, $4.4 million in 1992, $4.5 million 22"relief appearances.
,,,
ing off the emotional_high or a ~c- Hakeem Olajuwon and 21 points points and 10 rebounds.
Kirk McCaskill, Kurt Stillwell and
tor~ over the defendin~ champiOn and 14rebounds from.Otis Thorpe.
Terry Catledge'scored 20 points
Ch•~3!1~. Bull~,. were npe for- t~e -~ Ola)uwon sc!)red_IO points in for Orlando.
Dan Gladden.
was
nearing
agrCl;m~nt
on Gladden
a $2.2 mil
.lion,
two· - . .- - - - - - - - - -. .- - - - - - - - - .·"
P•pk•ng, even -lly tlie wQJSt team m the ·th•rd quarter' as the Rockets ~ SuperSonics 119, Nuggets 106
theNBA. .
.
.
boosted their -55-45 halftime l~d to . Ricky Pierce scored 29 points -La Salle, Duquesne
The Mmnesota T1mberwolyes 90-69 going into the fmal period.
and Seattle shot 50 percent from
·'
outscored the Lakers by _ l~ pomts
Mitch Richmond led Sacramen- the field for the first time in 15 to join new conference
m the first half, commttung one .to with 24 points.
games in its defeat of Denver. .
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - La
turnover to eight by Los Angeles ·
Bucks 95, Magic 87
The Sonics made 47 of94 shots.
Salle
University and Duquesne
and outshooting the Lajcers 58 perMilwaukee shot 39.1 percent
Seattle led 74-58 with 5:24
.,
University
are joining the Midwest'
cent to · 38 perce~t- 'Then the from the fteld, but Orlando folded remaining in 'the lhird quarter and
Wolves held off the mev1table Los down the strelCh.
put the game out of reach with a em Collegiate Conference, accord!
A:ngeles _mlly and wo~ 93-85, sn~pDale Ellis scored 27 points for 17-4 burst for a 91-62 lead with 22 ing to published reports. , •
Duquesne, a charter member of
_ pmg a ~e-g~me losmg streak and the • Bucks, who outscored the seconds left in the period.
the Atlantic 10 Conference, was
tm~~vmg their reco~ to 4-18. .
Magic 14-4 in the final 2:3 L
. Eddie Johnson scored 28 points
,Needless to say, tt was a d1sasJerry Reynolds' three-point play m a reserve role for the Sonics, and expected to announce the move at a
'&lt;,
~ .loss f~r us, ~mg off a great gave Orlando an 83-78 lead before Marcus Liberty led Denver with noon news conference, The Pitts·
·:
burgh Press reponed its sources as
wm 10 Chicago, Lakers head ·Moses Malone keyed the Bucks' 18.
saying.
coach Mike Dunleavy said.
·
·
The Timberwolves led 37-31
Duquesne officials did not
..
midway through the second period
immediately return calls seeking
comment
·
before an 18-li surge gave them a
Storage Unit Sizes Sx 10, 1Ox 10, 1Ox 15, 1Ox20, 1Ox30
55-39 halftime lead
La Salle, a member of the Metro
, ''We should liave been ready,"
Atlantic Athletic Association, was
*U·STOR • U·LOCK • U·KEEP KEY
ltak~ forward James'\Vortby said.
expected to make the announce"U~fonunately; it took us until the
ment at an 11:30 am. news confer·
second half to get started. They've
little."
ence. The Philadelphia Inquirer
By The Associated Press
said.
been very carer to win. They are
The Philadelphia Flyers.had not
Blackhawks 6, Canadiens 4
one tough bal club. You can't play won in eight home games, tying a
The Inquirer quoted its sources
Michel Goulet scored twice,
~
their record."
ieam record. The N~w York inclutijrtg his 495th career goal, an~ as saying details of the move were
. .
The Timberwolves, who have Islanders had not won at the Spec- Chicago stayed unbeaten at home.
ironed out by MCC officials and La
made a habit of folding in the trum in 12 games.
Goulet's s~cond goal put the Salle athleb'l: director Bob Mullen OPEN7 DAYS A WEEK-Gate Hours 7:00A.M.-8:00 P.M.
fourth quarier this season, saw the
Kind of suprising tl]ey didn't tie Blackhawks ahead 5-4 at 14:09 of· at the league's headquarters in
For Mort laformatioa tall Our
.
Lakers closed to 88-84 with 4:24 to Thursday night, isn't.it?
the second period. Goulet had not Indianapolis Wednesday.
play. But Sam 'Mitchell made a 15· _ Instead, the Flyers won 6-2 on s.cored a goal since Nov. 14 until
. According to a source at MAAC
. Gallipolis Locatio•
..
foot jumper and Los Angeles Steve Duchesne' s three goals. tallying .earlier in the second ,peri. the league received a letter or resigmissed its fiRal nine shots, seuling Duchesne became just the second ,od, finishing Montreal goaltender nation from La Salle's president;
the outcome.
Philadelphia defenseman to reeord Roland Melanson,
Patrick J. Ellis. And, in an inter·
"You learn certain things from a hat trick, joining Tom Bladon's
Chicago goalie Ed Belfour made view with the Inquirer Wednesday,
defeat. I like to believe you learn a effort in 1977.
26 saves, Goulet's go-ahead score
whole lot more from winning,"
"It's ·a good feeling to win. carne against Patrjck Roy.
Wolves head coach Jimmy Rodgers Hopefully it will get u~ going," he
Blues 4, Sharks 0
said. "The discouraging · thing is said.
Goaltender Curtis Joseph.
we had opportunities to win and
In other games, Pittsburgh beat recorded his first career shutout ·
were not able to put games away. Boston 6-4, New Jersey defeated and set a team record with his fifth
From that standpoint, we needed Hartford 4·1, Chicago downed assist as St. Louis stopped San
Montreal 6·4, St. Louis stopped Jose. 1·
one. We needed one badly."
· Elsewhere in the NBA, Milwau· San Jose 4-0, Calgary tied Quebee
Joseph made 21 saves. He also
kee won 95-87 at Orlando; Houston S-5 and Vancouver beat Winnipeg . broke Mike Liut's Club mark of
defeated Sacramento 109-102 and 3-1.
four assists in 1983-84. ·
,
Seattle beat Denver 119-106.
Philadelphia, which began the .
Brett Hull scored his leagueThe Timberwolves - whose 43 game as the lowest-scoring team in leading 30th goal. Adam Oates had
peri:ent shooting Is la5t in the NBA the league, went ahead 1-0 on Rod two assists.
- made more attempts than they Brind'Amour's team-leading 14th
Penguins 6, Bruins 4
missed (51 pe~cen t) for only the goal of the season 41 seconds into
Jaromir Jagr scored twice in the
1
the game.
second time all season.
first five minutes of the third peri'Tony Campbell led the Wolves
Just 1:15Iater, Dan Kordic od, putting Pittsburgh ahead to stay
.with 23 points.
scored on a slap shot from 45 feet at Boston Garden .
Wonhy and Sam Perkins scored for his firs t career NHL goal.
Jagr picked up the puck in his
'
lsla·n-ders head co4ch AI Arbour own zone, skated through center
22 points apiece for the Lakers.
· Randy Breuer ad~d 17 points then removed goaltender Steve ice and scored on a shot frbm the
and Pooh Richardson 16 points and Weeks in favor of Glenn Healy. faceoffJor a 5-4 lead at 5:00 of the
APR
nine assists for Minnesota, which Weeks had lost only one Q{ his last final P.,(lOOd.
made II of 13 shots and racCIIto a 10 games . .
• Flames S, Nordiques 5
"You can't blame him,"
AVAILABLE*
' 22-7 lead with 4:53 left in the first
Gary Roberts scored two goals
Arbour said. "We were in a daze. I during Calgary's three-goal rally in
quarter.
thought it would give . Healy a the final7:45 of the third period.
Rockets 109, Kings 102 .
HQuston hanCled Sacramento its cha~ce to pick us up. He did for a
NHL-on
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Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Frlclay, Dec;ember 20, 1991

.Arkansas beats Montevallo 91-70; Louisville downs Morehead State
---'

By JAMES JEFFERSON
Associated Press Writer
UTILE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Arkansas beat Montevallo, butlbe
Razorbacks had Arizonaton their
mind.
-'-----~ 01 iver Miller scored IS points .

-~

•

-

• '

~

_,._,

'

ByThe .Bend

1-o

and grabbe~ 12 rebounds as the
No. 19 Razorbacks breezed past the
NAJA challengers 91-70 Thursday
night..
After nine days off for final

game as a tuneup tbr its game with Richardson said. ''It's not a game · lead, 6.9·34 with 12;1810 play.
No. 25 LouisviUe 90
No . 2 Arizona on Saturday in we played to ~iJI, but rather to exe·
When the Arkansas substitutes
Morehead State 76
Fayelleville.
cute. We g01 the eobwebs out and took over, things_got sloppy and
At LouisviUe, Dwayne Monon
•:we tried to do some things now we'll see how we can do Montevallo (8·3) rallied to close scored 12 of ·his 33 points in the
with otfr lOp seven players. that we against ArizOna."
the gap to 83-68 with 3:43.1eft. .
final 5:08 10 spark the C~nals.
exams,_Arkansas-(6·2-)~used~the-.ha .v.e~to_do--llgainsLArizona,,..c.."c____~lnJhursday-'s...only_otheLgame_-----c
"l was-real groud of our-guys:~-Morton-also-opene&lt;l~the_game- ·
- Arkansas' ·head coach Nolan involving a ranked team, No. 25 They gave a great effort," said with· a hot hind, scoring 15 points
Louisville beat Morehead State 90· Montevallo head coach Rob as Louisville (S·O) took a 20·14
76.
1
Spiyery, who was. . an assistant -lead with 10:141eftinthehalf. ,.
MiUer mlsied two piactices this under Richardson at Tul~.
Trailinjl by 14 points, ·Morehead
· week after flying .to Fort Worth,
RobertoShepherd had 12 points, Stilte (4-4) rallied to make it 74·69
l·, Texas, to be with his sick gtand·
five .assists-and six steals.for the on-a jumper by . Brett Roberts,w,ith
mother, and hlf_ wasn't expected to Razorbacks. Isaiah Morris scored 6:06 ren'IQining. But Morton helped
Miuissippi Il l, Alcom S1. 67
Mid.view 47, Blyri13S ·
Miuiuippi St. 74, Vandcrbil17l
~rt 47, New Albany 35
play Thursday n1j!ht. But he flew to 13 and Lee Mayberry 1l for the Cardinals p~~ll away.
Paine 79, Howard U. 78
Minford 73, S. WeblterS6
Little Rock earlip- in the day 10 be Arkansas.
-·
'
PIUabureh 89, Manh11ll 65
MialiuinaWI ValL·36. Tri-County N.
SW Louisi1na 53, Nicholl&amp; Sl. 52
with the team.
Nate Driggers led Montevallo
27
W, Kcntuc.ky 93, Murray St. 89
Mowt)'IICOWn·Whitcoak 65, GeorgeMiller scored II of his points with 17 points. Keith White added NHLgames ...
town 39
·
~· during a 25·10 second·half run that 14 and Greg DeJarnett 12 for !he
Hew London 58, Mantficld Cu. 36
Midwest
(Continued
from
Page 5)
Now Philadelphia 64 , Union1own.
gave the Razorbacks their biggest Falcons.
,
. ·
.
Ccn1. Michigan 74, Oakland. Mich.
Lo1te JO
62
Nomundy 49, Oomctd Hu. 47
Evansville 80, Coutal Carolina 57
Roberts' 23rd goal of the season
NorUunor SO, Plca'iant 29
Loyola, ill. 84, UC Irvine 51
came on the power play with 2:38
NorwOod 52, Cin. Huriaon 48
Soulhwost
Pain!. V1.l1. 63, Pi.kCLOn. 49
left. Sergei Makarov drew goal·
heble&amp;68, Lathan Weatcrn SS
Ali: anus 91 , Mom&amp;:vallo 70
tender Ron Tugnuu 10 one ,side of
.Piqu1 38, W. C.rml..lton 26
Houston 94, St. Mary 's, TeAu 67
Port.lmoulh Cl•y 72, Pommooth E.
New Me xico SL. 76, Tc"as Tech 68
the net, then centered it to Roberts,
IS
Rice 101, Gn.mblml!. St. 61
who tied it at 5. . ·
H.avcnna
54,
Nordonil
T1
SE Miuouri 70, Tcxn ·Jian American
Ridaedolo so. Cmlinl!lon 26
Canucks 3, Jets 1
68
Rivu61, Shady&amp;ide47
Te.us·El Paso M9, Texas Wesleyan 73
Greg
Adams scored the go·
Rocky River 51 , Cle. St. Augustine
abead
goal
early in the third period
3
S
Fur West
Rocky Rivc.r Mlgnifica16!, Ce. East
and Vancouver and visiting Win·
Brigham Young 104, McNceie St. 64
Nevada ii7,NW Low,iana SS
27
nipeg got imo a wild brawl a little
S. Charles10n SE 83, E. Clinton 40
while later.
Shaker HIS. 59, Regin1 54
Ohio high school
Adams gor his 15th goal of the
Spring Valley Academy 44 , Xenia
basketball scores
Willon 34
season at I : 18 when !te took a pass
Spring. Kenton Ridae 71 , Belle·
from Gerald Diduck and broke
,
f0t1tiine
21
,
~
lloys
Sprina. Norlh 38, Sprin 8. Colh 34
around defenseman Mario Marois
ilMmesville 71; Manuu Feny 73
Spring. Shawnee 46, Enon Orecnon
Cin. Woodwud 68, St. Al ba ns,
for a 2-1 lead.
41
W.Va. 49
Midway through the third periSl
Ursula
S9,
McAuley
43
Col. Brookh av~ n 84. Col. Mifflin 56
Stow 47, Barbc.non 34
Col. Ccntcnni•l 76, Col. East 64
od,
a brawl broke out involving all
·, SLn&amp;burg 57. Newcomentown 43
Col. Entm oor 71, CoL Driggs ~ 9
10
skaters
on 1he ice. Jets head
Sylvaoian North~ i cw 74, Or~igon
Co l. LJndc n· McKinl e y 87, Col.
Clay 55 ..
Becchcrot't. 69
coach
John
Paddock
threw a water
Tecunuch 64, Sprina. NE 2B
Cal Marion-FranlUin 107, Col. West
bottle from the bench at Vancou·
Tipp Ci1y 8Clhcl52, Be~vcrertd 46
60
Tol Rogcn49, To!. ChrU:tian42r ver's Gino Odjick as he pounded
Col. Northland 64, Col Wheutone 56
Toronto 71 , SJeUbctlville 43
Col. South 70., Col. Walnut Ridge ~ I
Winnipeg's
Thomas Steen.
Tri-Vill•ae 86, Natiooa11'rail 35
CVCA 60, HawkCll 51
Tri•d
53.
Ridaemont
44
Devils
4, Whalers I
Elyria rDCS !12, Ct~$ road s Chr. 46
TuiCirawu V1ll. S!i·, Ak.100 Covwtry
G 1en~ille 59, Lil1coin-Wcstl9 .
Claude
Vilgrain
and Scott ·
21
Heri11ge Ctu. 89, Akron Chr. 35
Stevens
scor~d
on
the
power
play
Upper
Scioto
VaU.
86,
Allen
E.
27
Lincoln Oaptl.st 66, Liberty Chr. 63
Uticl SO, Lakewood 39
as
New
Jersey
took
advantage
of
Ohio Deaf 60, Mmn•lha Olr. 39
Vandlllia Butler 47, Sidney 36
W. Fainnoot, W. V1. 80, CUt With·
the
team
with
the
worst
penaJty.
Vermilion 62, Sylv1nia Southview 43
ro w 72
W. Union 53, N. Ad•m.t 46
killiniunit in thcNHL.
Xcni .. Wil son (,9, Spring Valley
W~rrenavillc !2, Clc, South 43
Academy 60
V
ilgrain
got
two
goals
and
Wultin&amp;ton Ck 59, Adena 23
Stephane Richer had a goal and an
W•ynesvillc46, YcUow Springs 42
tarls
Wellavillc 56, Mingo 36
assist..
Akron E. 61 , Akron Fin:.stonc 29
Wutcrn Resczve 37, Cratvicw 35
Akron I::Uet SS, Akron Uuch t.,:) 50
Devils · goalie Chris Terrcri
Whcelusburg6S, Fairl&amp;nd 58
Akron Gi rficld 34, Akron Ccn t·llow·
Z..neavillc
56,
Ncwuk
Cath.
43
needed
to make just 18 saves in
cr 26
Akron N. 60, Ak run Kenmore 36
ending his seven-game winless
Transactions
AmeLl~ 66, CU1. h rt 24
streak (0-4·3) . Hartford went 0-for.
ll e&lt;~v cr Ea~tum &amp;3, New llostoo 64
Bc..ver Ux:~l (,],Edison N. JIJ
7 on the power play again st the
Baseball
11d b in: St. Joh n's 80, lJnion l ocal
league's best penalty killers.
Anwrlan lA1•aue
ll
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - As='

Saturday's games
Houaton
p.m.

11

·

New York Oianu:, 12:30

.Green B1 y at MinnaOll., 4 p.m.

Sunday's action
Al.lanu. at Dallu, I p.m.

Clevtland at PIU.burJh, 1 p.m.
Detroit n BWfalo, I p.m.
lru!ianipolia at Tam~ Bty, I p.m.

New Enaland 11 Clndnnall, 1 p.m.
New York Jeu 1t Miami, I p.m.
Kanua Chy at 1..01 Anaelu R.aiJcn.

4p.m.

_New OdCifll ll .Phoc:niA, 4 p.m.

Denver u San Ditao, 4 p.m.

Washington 11 Philadclphi1, 4 p.m.
Lol AngclCI Raman Seattle, I p.m.

Monday's finale
Chictgo 11 San Funcitco, 9 p.m.

In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
A.llanlk Oivi.Jion

Team

B~IM .................. ..I6

W L

PeL

7

.t)96

New York ........ .... ..15

7

.682

.5

Miuni ................. .12 12

.SOO
.478

4.S
5

.304

9
9.5

Philadclphia ........... l l 12
Ncwlcncy ..............7 16
Washin&amp;ton ..............7 17
Otlando ....................6 17

.292

-

. ~1

Centnl Dlvlilon
Chica!o.................. l8 4 .81 8
Cleve •nd ........- ...13 9 .591
ALlanta .. ..... L ..... I2 II
.522
Mi.lwaukoc: .... ., .......12 13 .480
Detroit.. ............... 12 14 . .462
Indiana ... ..... ........... ! ! IS .423
Chulou.c .......... ........ 7 19 .269

GB

10

5
6.5
7.5
8

9
13

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwt~l

Te1m

Olvillon

W L

Pel.

Utah ............ .......... .17 9
HousLOn ................. l3 9
San Anl0fl..io ........... l3 10

.654
.591

2

.565
.417

2.5
6

DaUu .................... .lO 14
Dcnver ................... IO 14
Minnc~ou ................4 18

GB

. .417

6

.l82

II

Paclnt Division
Golden Stale ......... IS 7 .682

L.A. L.kon ............ l6

8

Portland ................ .15

9

.625

I

PhOQliJ. ..................14 10
Sctulc ......... ........... l3 11

.583
.542
.538

2
3

L.A. OipPtn ......... l4 12
Sacnmcma .............. 7 16

.661

.304

3
8.5

Thursday's scores ·

13cllsvillc 62, Frunwcr 00
Ben Log11146, Fairbanks 32
Berlin ~lila.nd 46, Tu1carawu Calh.

4S

•

Bet.hcl Tate 69. New Ric hmond 34
Bi&amp;W1l11uL51, O!cntarJgy 44
Black Ri vcr 43, Pl ymoulh 32
lll oo.n-Ca nol rs. f aiificld Union 63,

Milwaukee 9S,Orlando 17

Minneo&lt;U 93. L.A. L.kon iS
HoUlton 109, Sacramento 102
Scau.lc 119, Dcnvcz106

OT

Tonight's games

36

Ullll at 8Mttlll, 7:30p.m.
CJ:ic•JO lll'!cwJcn.cy, 7:30p.m.
Miam1at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Hot~~lelfi 11 Oulou.c, 7:30p.m.
Cltveltndlll Alltn11 1 7:](1 p.m.
L.A. LU.m at Delroi1., 8 p_.m.
Wuhin&amp;lan 11Dallu, 8:30p.m. ~
San Antonio 11 PtioaUA, 9:30p.m.
Ponland 11 Golden Slii.C, 10:30 p.m.

Buckeye Local47, Wilucn vill c 34
Buckeye V1U. 67, N, Union 31
Cadiz 54, Uri d g~pnn ~ ]
Cambridge SO, St. C!lir.wiUc 47
Ca n1l W in c helt~ r 51! , Aman da
Clearcrcek 33
Cclin1 49, Wa pakonCLa 46
CenteJburg 67, Mt Gilead 43
Cin. Aiken SJ, Cin. Mt. Hea lthy 47
C'Ul. Colerain -49, Cin. Western 1-liUs

Saturday's games

43

Ullh at New York , 7:30p.m.
8 01ton at M;ami, 7:30p.m.
Charlollt It Ck!nland, 7:30p.m.
N~w J'=!"y 1tlndi~na. 7:30p.m.
L.A. Cippcn 11 Minncaota, • p:m.
Atlanllat Olicago,I :JO p.m.
SacramcnlO 11 Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Phil.adclphi1 II Milwaukee, 9 p.m.
Wuhinat.on 11 Dcnvu, 9 p.m.
Golden SllteatSc.au.lc,IO p.m.

Cin. Deer Park 39, Cin. CAPE 30
Cin. El stcm Illown 68, Wiufam,burg,
Fauiicld 31
Cin. Glen 1!~1c 49, Cin. Anden.:m 31
Cin. M1d ~: in M, l .o v cJ~ nd 56
Cin. Mari cmonl 69, Ci n. Finncytow11
l3

Cin. Mercy 90 , Ci n. Jlurcc ll Mu i•n
Cin . M1. Now l) ~ mc 6). Urs ul i n ~: 44
Cin. Oak lliiJ g 73. Cin. Withrow 57
Cin. S11.un 110, Cin. McNichnlu 47
Cin . S ~ vc n lhl ls 29. Cin. Su mm1 1
Coun Lry IJ1y 22
Cin. Wcs 1 ~:rn Hruwn 62, Wilh •ms·
burg 20
;
Cin. Win 1on Wood• 73, Cin. llu,. hcs

Sunday's games
HOUlton II Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle 11PorUand, l 0 p.m.
PhocniA at LA.. W en;, 10:30 p.m.

In

the NHL ...

2!1

P1lrkk Dlv llllon
W L T Pta. ct' GA
WuhinglOO ........ 23 10 l 47 1 ~21 05
N.Y. ManJcn ..... 2112 I 4l 122 10S
Pitl&amp;but&amp;h .......... II II 4 40 147 122
Ne w Jcm y ...... .. \6 12 4 36 123 96
N.Y. Islanden .... I I IS 5 27"141 23
Phi.Jadclphil ....... 10 16 6 26 94 112

Team

Adamt Dlvldon
Monltcll............ 22 13 2
80110n ................ l31 4 5

46 120 84
Jlll \1 16

Ho.Cord .............

28

12 IS 4

Uuir.Jo ....
9175
Quebec ............... 9 20 4

36

100 114

2393115

22 I01 I34

30
1

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrl1 Oh•l•lon

Milln,...• ..........

13 ll

l

Toronto ,_............ 9 20 'S

. •3&gt;1

44 133106
31 116110
35 119109

29

101101

SmJih! Division
20 11 4 44 124 I03
Winnipea ........... I ~ 12 7 37 104 106
Edmonton .......... 1415 S 33120 114
Calaary .............. IJI S 5 31 123 1U
l.oiAngclu ....... 12 13 1 31 I l l \22
,. , San Jose ............. 7 26 .J . 17 ~y 162

Tonight's g~mes

~

~ mont.on

al Dulfalo. 7:35 p.m,
Toronto 11 Wuhin&amp;LM, 7:35 p. ~ .

· Saturday's games
•
Philldclphi1 11 M.imCIOI.I , 2:05 p.m.
7:0l
p.m.

1

40

basketball scores
,.

East

",.
,,

Manl'llatan 71, Colauc 46

•

O«&lt;r&amp;i• St. 79, Mctcct ?I; OT

South

h ; bonvi.lle 110, Bdhunc•Cookman

93

Looilville ~. lol""""d 51. 76
Mcwnphil St. 65, MiM.CIOU 62

nowicod ~~ R09 Darling, pitcher, accept·
ed u lar, arbitral&amp;on.
TEXAS RANGERS - SillJled Many
Scou, director of player pcnonnul. to a
two-year conltiCl Cllelttion through 1993.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS - AgNed
to 'tmll with O.vc Winfit.ld, oulficldcr,
on a ont·)'Cir conlnCl
,

Nillonll u;liJ,U4!

'

ATLANTA BRAVES - Announced
1h11 Alej~nd!o Pena , pitchet, • cc~ rtcd
u .lary arlntnllm.. ·
.,
COLORADO ROCKIES - Rood&lt;.!
• onc·rar pl•ycr development agreement,
in eonJuncdan with the Minnesota Twin&amp;,
with Visali• or the Cali(omia lM~uc:.
LOS ANGELES DODOERS - Announced that Juan Samuel, ICC«&lt;4 bas eman, and
. Howell, pitcher, accepted

It's Time For Dur Great

PRICES GOOD THRU .TUESDAY, DECr.24, 1991 .}'

OPEN SUNDAY 10:00 A.M. To . 4:00 P. M.
AMITY BILLFOLDS
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

WOMEN'S

a-v;u. 43, Troy 37

Or.enwich S. CannJ 48, Monroeville

Jock1011ll, Perry~

Jewett·Scio 59, Ridacwood 56
Jolwtown 44, W. Jcffcnon 34
JonalhlnAldcrS3, Madison~~ 41
Kecterina Alter 29, Centerville 26,

2(Jf

Kinp 65, Uu.lo Miami 36
Lakeland 51, Oanway46
lanm-Monmo47, Fenwick 46

'·

COLOGNES
and PERFUMES

~~~E

" Reg. S2JS $ 199

·

MEN'S COLOGNES; .
AFTERSHAVE
GIFT SETS

20°/o on 25°/o OFF

For More IDformation
Bia...cau or Stop In At

Chuck Wingett
Builder$--

•

EXTRA SPECIAi: THE FIRST 8 WATCHES
SOLD SATURDAY, SUNDAY, ~ONDAY &amp;
TUESDAY-WILtBE 50~0FF
(Limit 2 Per C1stomer)

1f2 PRICE

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'

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40o/ooFF.

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STOCK

On Hpw You can Save

592-4119
592-3749

.

Alfred UMW pf.anfor ·'92 activities -

Pe/fa Kappa Gamma gathers

Tuiii-Xlt.lnot:~Avoilo!&gt;lo
F st ... BlooaY l!llolooljltlll'lunpl

D•lbllillu'...er
\

I

.

.

·~

Southeastern ; I
Business.College .

l 'i

POMEROY · The Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church will present
its Christmas program on Sunday
at 7 p.m. The public is invited to
auend.
'

RUTLAND
The Ruiland
Nazarene Church will present th e .
can1a1a, "Call Him Jesus" on Sun· ·
day at 10:30 a.m. The chi ldrcn's ·
program will be presented at 9:30
a.m.

POMEROY · There will be a
12-step AA m~ti ng on Sunday at 7 ·
p.m. at the JTPA offi ce in
Pomeroy. 11 7 West Second Street. :
MONDAY&lt;;) .
RACINE · The Raci ne Ameri·
ca n Legion Post No. 602 will hold
its Christmas dinner. on Monday.at
S:30 p.m. for th e needy, legion
members and au xili ary members.
Those aucnding brin g a covered
dish dinn er.
•
RUTLAND · The Rutland
Town ship Truste es will meet in :
special scsson on Monday at 7 p.m. ·
at the Rutland Fire Station to conduct end-of-the year business. The
meeting is open to the public.
HOBSON --The Hobson Church
of Ch rist in Christia n Union will
hold a Christmas program on Mon·
day at 7 p.m. The public is invited ,
to atiC nd.

TOPS meets

Tina Geery was the best weekly
loser at the recent meeting of Ohio
TOPS Club No. 570 held at the
Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
.
Virginia Smi!ll and Bernie Durst •
tied for the titl e of bys t weekly :
KOPS loser and all KOPS mem· :
bers were honored with a Christ·
mas dinner.
The group meets every Tuesday
.
'
at5 p.m. for weigh-in wi!ll m ~ting
Soulllside, WV: and Elmer and at 6 p.m. New members are wei·
come.
Mike Newberry, Letait, WV.
Rolling Haven Farm, Tom Burn·
gamer, was also presented with the
prestigious
Distinguisbed
The following students have :
Dairyman Award. This award is been selected as students of the '
presented 10 only the top producers week for the month of December at :
m each Slate based on DHIA rolling Meigs Junior High School:
herd average. The Bumgarners'
Rick Curti ss for sc ience and
were the ,first producers in this area Dorothy Leifheit for reading and :
to receive this award.
,
spell in g. The meeting was adjourned after
This honor is achieved through ·
. door prizes were awarded.
academic excellenee and improve- :
ment in behavior.

Yau$ers Feed Supply of
Southstde, held their annual dairy
·ca1~e ptoducer meeting on
. Tuesday, December 10. The dinner
meeting' was co-spons&lt;ml by
Purina Mills, Inc. and Diamond V
MiD, Inc.
After dinner, Allen Ryback, Dis·
triet Manager with ,Diamond .V
Mill, spoke 10 the producers about
the features and benefits of feeding
yeast 10 the dairy herd.
Angela Hor., Dairy Specialist
with Purina Mills, Inc. then presen·
ted a session on raising herd
replacements-nutritional
needs,
management goals and the value of
feeding BovaiCC and Rumensin,
Production awards wert; presen·
ted to the outstanding dairy
producers in the area that had an
mcrease on mllk production while
feedin~ Purina products. Those
receivmg awards were:
Danny Jones, Oak Hill, Ohio;
Dwight Baker, Letart, WV: llj!tch
Brown, Mason, WV: Tom-1\,urnkar·· ·
ner, Leta11, WV; Henderson Dairy,

~-

I

•

.Annual dairy cattle producer ·
meeting held at Southside

The Alfred United Methodist . at Scarritt -Bennctt Center 1n son, Martha and Warren Elliou and
Women held their Chri sLITias party Nashville, Tenn. The group signed Nellie Parker.
'
recently at the church.
The_next. meeting wjli be Jnn . 21
a birthday card for her.
· Ten members were present and
The group Jhankcd Sarah Cald- with Osie Mac Follrod 1hc hostess
57 sick calls were reponed.
and Nelli e Parker will be Jhc pro~
well for girts given to the soc iety.
Charloue Van Meter and ·Nina
Gr eetings fr om -Janet Moo re gram lender.
Robinson were in charge of dccora· were read . The group signed
tions which i~ c ludcd a lighJCd tree Christmas cards for Mrs. Moore ,
and iable candles. .Gertrude Robin- Eleanor Boyle s. Jun e St~u rn s .
son gave thanks before the holiday Emma Lou Finch and Kate Rodcineal.
.
h a~&lt;er. Gifts were given for comMr s. Helen E. Reynolds,
: During the busi ne ss meeting munity shut·ins.
.
Pomeroy,
is in critical condilion at
names were ex changed for 1992
Present were Osic Mac and
Holzer
Medical
Center in Galliposecret sisters. The members drew Clair Follrod, Florence Ann ·
lis.
tim es for servin g and programs Spencer, Martha and Will Poole,
Mrs. Reynolds, age 97, suffeied
during 1992.
Nina Robinson . Gcrj!.Ud e Robina
broken
hip earl ier in December
, Th elma Henderson hail th e son. Melvin Tracy, Charlotte and
and
has
now
had a mass ive stroke.
prayer calendar and ·chose Mary Warren Van Meter. Sarah Cald Her
son
,
William Reynold s,
!-&lt;Ju Moore, education mi ssionary, well, Thelma arid Clarence HcncterKalamazoo, Mich., and her daugh ter, Mary E. King, Kee Largo, Fla. ,
are here to care for her during her
slay in the hospi!al .
Alpha Omicron Chapter. Delta Doroth y Woodard a n ~ Rosu li c
Card s may be sent to her at
Holzer Medical Center, Room 314,
Kappa Gamma, met recentl y at Story.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45761.
Saints Peter and Paul Pari sh in
Wells10n.
Elizabeth Lentz gave the inv0cation before the chicken casserole
iuncheon was rved by the ladies
of the church. abies were decorated with ' red c les set in wreaths
LET US HELP YOU CHOOSE THE
of greenery..
ors were appl e
Christmas tree nament s and
RIGHT GilT THIS CHRISTMAS.
candy canes.
President Susan II asked all
members to inlroduce .themselves
during the business meeting. Nellie
· Parker, secrelary, read thank·you
notes from My Sister' s Place and
Serenity House and a Christmas
greeUn~ from- Rotierta Wil s
129 Jaeluon Pike - GalllpoUs
Legislauve chairman Viola Gettles
t:eported on education bills.
446-4367
Policy chairman Eleanor Ess·
rilan presented a commemorative
• Small Classes
pin to Esther Macrkcr, ue asu~er.
• Flexible Schedule
who is retiring after 27 years of
service. A book , "Handboo~ for
•JndlYldualbed.lautructlon
Genealogists," will be presented to .• Job PlaceateDt Aulstanee
the library in her honor.
, President Will announ ced th e
• Approved For Tralnlnc
.joint Mai'cil meeting will be held at
oiVeterans
WaverlY on March 14.
• Flnan~l Aid Available to
·: Sandra Nodruff led the society
.ill the singing of Christmas .songs.
~J
Those Who Qaa1Uy
, The next meetmg will be a
¢u:ry·in dinner on Jan. 25 at Healll
R• . 190.05.J274B
~oiled Methodist Church in Mid·
"-'•eredllool M-lwr c.._ Colop A.ot101loo"
dleport.
Present ' from. Meigs County
l"ere Fern Grimm , Nellie·Parker,
Margaret Parsons, Saundra Tillis,

Card shower

attend .

GHESTER • The lzaak Wal lo~- Club will have a mu.zzle load er
RUTLAND • The Rutland shoot on Sunday ai 1 p.m. at the
Nazarene Youth Group will be club house near Ches ter. Open
conducting a scavenger hunt in the sights only. Prizes incl ude turkey ;
village on Saturday from 2:30 to 5 bacon and cash.
p.m. Items collected will be food
POMEROY · Pom eroy Troop·
which will be given to a needy
249
will hav e .~ vegetable soup sa_Je
family. Panicipation from .village
on
Sunday
from II a.m. to 4 p.m.
residents is requesled.
at the Pomeroy Fire Department.
MIDDLEPORT - Job's Daugh- Bring your own con1ainer.
ted will be wrapping gifts on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
CHESTER · The ann4al Christ-: .
Masonic Temple in Middleport. mas program will be presented at
Cost varies with the ·size of each Mount Hermon U.B . Church on :
package. Proceeds will be ·used to Sunday at 7:30 p.'m. Everyone wei·
fund the Hearing Impaired Kids come.
program .

TUPPERS PLAINS - A round
and square dance will be held Friday from 8 to 11:30 p.m . at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Hall spon.. sored by the VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary. The band
POMEROY - "Charles Dickens
will be C.J. and the Country Gen·
Christmas"
and "On the Twelfth
llemen. The public is invited to
Day"
will
be
shown at the Meigs
auend.
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m .
SATURDAY
and
at th e Middleport Library on
POMEROY • The Royal Oak
Monday
at 4:30p.m.
Dance Club will present its annual
Christmas dance on Saturc!;ty from
POMEROY - Brolher David
8 10 11 p.m. at Royal Oak Resort.
Wedland,
Columbus, will be at the
Music will be provided by The
Faith
Tabernacle
Church on Bailey
with Japanese trade restrictions to a large crowd
Doug Hess Combo. The 1992 club
GRAND OPENING • "Geoffrey" the mascot ·
Run
Road
on
Saturday
and Sunday
eager for the stores huge selection and deep
membership dues can be paid at
or Toys "R" Us speaks with shoppers at the
· price cuts (!Ompared to the traditional mom·
any time before March I.' '
. at 7 p.m . Pastor Emmell Rawson
grand opening of the store in Ami Town, Jap~n,
invites the public .
and·pop
stores.
(AP)
•
Friday. Opened after struggling ror three years
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
SAL·EM CENTER - Star
Church will present its annual
Grange
and Star Junior Grange will
Christmas program on, Saturday
hold
their
annual Christmas dinner
and Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. The
on
Saturday
at 6:30 p.m.at the
adult play is titled "A Family
Salem
Center
Fire Station . Meat·
Christmas Eve" and is under th e
will
be
provided.
Those auending
direction of Dan .Hood. The chilbring
a
t:overod
dish.
There will be
drens program is titled "The Birth
of Baby Jesus" and is under the a $3 gift exchange and a visit from
Rev. Trein10ng stated her moth· mas poem.
Rev. Krisana Treintong, of the
Santa . All members urged to.
of Mrs. Sandi Jones. Pas- auend.
Presbyterian Church in Har· er and nephew are coming to visit
Rae Reynolds stated in the direction
tor James R. Acree Sr. invites the
next summer but that they had a national defense report that she had public.
rison~ille, Middleport and Syracuse
spoke on Christmas in Thailand at hart time gelling a visa since there read several papers including Jhe
PORTLAND - The Lebanon
the recent meeting of the Relurn might be a chance they would not release of the final hoslage, Terry
Township
Trustees will meet Satur·
HENDERSON, W.VA.- Th e
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters return .
. Anderson, jy hO attributed his sur· Gallia Twi,rlers Western Square day at 10 a.m. for a special meeting
of the American Revolution, held
She showed pictures, accompa· vivalto hilJ faith , family, ,doing Dance Club will hold a dance Sal· at the 10wnship garage . This meet·
at the home of Mrs. Vernon Weber nied th.e group by gujtar sing1n g what you have to do, and stuboorn· urday from 8 to II at the Hender- ing was originally scheduled for
with 14 members and two guests Christmas carols and hymns. She ness.
.
son Community Center. The caller Friday atiO a.m.
present.
S~aron Jewell described a paper
concluded by performing a native
will be Bill Gene Evans and th e
Rev. Treintong stated Thailand dance of Thailand.
she -picked )UP in an office telhng public is invited to auend.
SUNDAY
was formerly called Zion which . The business meeting opened in about Madalyn Murray O'Hare's
RACINE · Th e choi r or th e
means "Lord of Freedom." The ritualistic form by the regent, Anna latest attempt to get all Christian
HEMLOCK GROVE · The Racine United Methodist Church
pi&gt;pulation is over six million peo· Cleland. with prayer by the chap- broadcasts off the air. Forms will Hemlock Grove Grange No. 2049 will present an original and unique
pie. They have no snow and March, lain, Eileen Buck, fpllowed by a be made to distribute to members.
will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at cantata-pageanl, "Let Us Go to
April and May are the momhs of salute to the flag. The American's
In lieu of the January meeting the grarig~ hall.
Bethlehem" on Sunday at 7:30p.m.
there will be an officers meeting at
summer. They eal rice at every Creed was given in unison.
SoloistS arc Jennifer Walker, Chad
•
meal and their food consists large! y
Frances Roberts, recordin g sec- the home of Phyllis Skinner on Jan .
RUTLAND • There will be a Hubbard and Heather Dailey.
or stir·fried vegetables and fruit as retary, read the minutes of the pre- 10 at 12:30 p.m. 10 make reports.
round and square dance at the Rut·
The meeting was adjourned by land American Legion Hall on Sat·
well as chicken and pork.
RACINE - The Racine Baptist
vious meeting and Phyllis Skinner
the regent prayer by Eileen Buck
Thailand has a king and queen gav~ the ll'ellSUrer's report.
Church
will present its children's
urday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
which, according to Rev . Trein·
program,
"He Is Born" on Sunday
Members are urged to collccl and Lord's Prayer in unison.
Refreshments were serv ed by Music will be provided by th e at 7:30p.m. The public is invited to
tong, are untouchable .and nO! sub· Campbell's Soup labels, cut out
)ect to jokes, criticism and ridicole stamps and turn in th eir mile af Mrs. Vernon Weber, Mrs. Cec il
Blackwood, Mrs. Stephen Jenkins,
as are the rules of England. Ninety pennies contributions.
percent o( the population is Bud·
Eleanor Smith, vice·regent, gave Mrs. Robert Jewell , Mrs: Pauline
dhist, one percent is Christian and a reading in the form of a Chri st- Atkins and Mrs. Daylon Parsons.
the remai~der is lslilflliC.

.· ·

56, C'alvUJ0.. 36

J

(
ONLY 59

TIMEX WATCHES

JEWELRY

MIMficld Sr. 71, ManAlcld Maclilon

trfd&amp;ec-n

BIC
LIGHTERS

-

1-TileeDelliW~YdYourNewlbne
Between laD. 1st and March 31M,
1992 ADd Rtceive Y011' Special
Winter Calslnactkla Di.:O.I~

l.ulhonn W. 45, Rithmond Hu. 39

- -...!4.
cr.,,

ONLY

' NOW.
l'litbue YOII' New Home

Ubotly u.u.. 73, Uddna u~. 2A
Li&lt;tlna v.u. 49, IIWoy ~
LDpn l!im 62. T•y• V.U. 44
Lonln 53, N. Ridpvillo 47
t,ue. 43, NMhridat 37
Lueoovillo V.U. 61, WOY«Iy 29

70, 20T
Manaraew St. Pcten 41, Clcar' Fort
%
Muon 44, SprinJb.o&gt;o 34
•.
lol,.illooTww 12, Sondy VoU. 42
Mc.DNmiu NW 76, Ponamoulh W.
39
MMoa
..ddowtoih.....
okl2, B.Uo)&lt;TnU 44
Coon DoorlO

RIISSELI STOVE
CANDYBOL

COLD POP

Le.Unat&lt;&gt;n 64, Marian Hudin&amp; 40

11&gt;1

.

.

Dd'WJ.oe 73, Ottawa..OI&amp;ndod 52
DoOrIff Ri~~nide 52, W. Libcny-

OlenOak 47, Canton TUnken 40
Ol.,villo51, Jolin Hoy 28
Of'llwn 71, Hubetllta. Wayne 63
Grandview 69, l.Gnclon 61
Granville 42, Bcmc Urtion31
o...nr..w MoQoln 51. Miami T....

..

I

'A·, P~ICE

Ham.i.lton Badin 55, RMuB•con 36
- - - uiiftilUiii R&lt;iU 49, Bl~""' •o
Han01n Tnco 52, Olk Hill 44

Wuh inalon 11 Philadelphia, 2:35
p.m.
80110n .11 Man~. 1m p.m.
SLlcluilal Chiuao,l:35 p.m.
QIMbe; II Vtr~ca&amp;vct, 10:05 p.m.

Major college

OAKLAND ATHLETICS - An-

Dar. MeadCI\IIId&amp;le 50, Day. JctrCliOII ·

Day. Carroll49, O~fotd Talawanda

........ :15

Sunday's games

j

lWD-YCII CMIJ'Ict.

Inn ville 81. Marion Cath. 33
Day. Bellbrook 73, Pubic Shlwncc

Orovc Chy 'l9, Worthin&amp;ton Kil ·

Cli&amp;-o· 11Winnipeg.:8:~·;~.

N.Y. lll.,dlltl 11Sa. l...oula, I :JS p.m.
~I at l..o&amp; AnaclcJ, 10:35 p.m.
Qveboc 11San Joee, I 0:35 p.m.

TIDS ONE'S MINE- Louisville's Dwayne Morton (50) reaches
to the heavens for the rebound in front of Morehead State's .Doug
Bentz during the first half or Thursday night's non-conference col·
lege game, which tbe host Cardinals won 90.76. (AP)

Coldw•t&amp;T IUu!t""y 47

""""""'"'
i1omoS7,
20 Beu.avi.llc
c
Fran"'tN..,.
S1. Je&amp;epn
IS
Ft. Fryt 67. skri.cw 36
f\. Rocovery S , Ntw Kno•ville 21

Piuaburgh 6, ll01too 4
N~Sw h my 4, llan!ord I
l'hi!ldcipk.ia 6, N.Y. It Ianden 2
Chi~ao 6. Monl.rUI 4
. St loW. A, San J011c 0
Qul:bao: 5, Oal111rY 5, ~e
Vancouver 3, Winnip!g I
..,

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•
- Announced that Jim EiJcnreich, outfielder,
•cccptcd ulary ubh.ration.
MINNESOTA TWINS - Agn:cd 10
t.tllT\I .wilh Briln Harper, ca lchcr , on 1

CITY ROYALS

Coluinbi.a Si ,Auroca16
Cuxaboga Falla 49, Kent Roru.cvc lt

Faitvl.ew5l , Bayl7 ~, · Federil Ho&lt;kin 1 l4, Mlll" 35
Felicity 47, Cin. NaMeutcm 43
f'ltldlay 73, To!. Bowlhar 39
Fr•nklln Furn1cc Green 39 ,

Thursduy•s scor.s

•,.

CALIFORNIA ANGELS - An-

Le.aue.
KANSAS

Country Kin Band. Ray Fitch will
be the. caller. The public is invited
to atte.hd.
·

Rev. Treintong speaks to DAR
about Christmas in Thailand

noWiced thu Dick, Schofidd , &amp;hortstop,
aeccpted ulary ubitration
DETROIT TIGCRS - S i&amp;n~ .\tikc
Wa lk'cf, pitcher, to 1 minor lca!IUii con·
uac1 whh Toledo of lh ~ lntcm~1 i o n al

Salcm4&amp;
E. C.."" 71, F.Uieu 43
E. Knox .SO, Worthington Olr. ~
l!aslwood 62, OibtonbuiJ 31
El~ lO, SpoN lliahlw141
Foirficld li, Cin. PM""'"~~

23 89 1II

Vanc:ou ~cr .........

•

23

FRIDAY
LONG BOlTOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot·
_I.Pm will present its Chrisunas pro·
gram on Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public.
Refreshments and fellowship will
follow.

ye&amp;rCOJ\LriCl

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44

W L T Pu. CFCA

Dcuo~L. ............... 20 10 4
Sc LoW ............ ll 11 1
Chi ~go .............. 14 13 7

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Community Calendar
Hems
appear two days before ao event
and-the day-of that event. Items
must be 'received well in ad vance
to assure publieation in the cal·
endiu.

lO lCiml with R\clc Sutc:liffc, pitchc1, on 1
one&gt;ycu cmtn~ .
BOSTON RED SOX - Agreed to
I.Cmlt with Joe Hcaketh, ph.chc:r, on &amp;IW"O ·

Cin. Woodw• rd 54, Cin. Turpin 52
Cin. Wyoming 60, Cin. lndi1n lliU 33
, CiiclcviUe S2, llamilton Twp. 44
Cle. S1. Joseph 37, Elyria C11h. 36
Col. Becthc ro(l 62, CoL Linden·
Mt Kinlcr. SO
Col. DcSalcs 39, N cw~ rk ] K
- ·i
Col. Eut 17, Col. Ccnt.cnnial SO
.
Col. Eu~moor67, Col. Bri&amp;l,&amp; 31
Col. Mifllin l6, Col. BrodtliiYen ll
Cot Nonhland 52, Col Whcutarie 27
Cot Soul!t 66, Col. Wolnu&lt; Ridae 36
Col. Wqt 47, Col. Marion.ful\klin

WALES CONFERENCE

Tum

11rooldyn 60, Cuyahag• HLJ. 28
11roo.kvillc 73, Mid dletown Mad i$00 ·

Friday, December 20, 1991
·Page- 7

- community calendar

Scorcboar·d
NFL schedule

The ·Daily Sentinel·

Students named

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year long.!he Dally
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news and photos .
from all over Meigs
County six times. a

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The Daily Sci1tincl ..;
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''Your Hometown Newspaper"

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Page 8 The Daily Sentinel '.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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·Friday, December 20, 1991

•·
December

William Kennedy ·Smith's accuser
interviewed on national television
footage of. her Wednesday.
By DAN SEWEll
The
ASsociated Press Writer
edited ThursMIAMfTA"P)--=tnewoman
" PrimeTime
who all eged she was raped by day afternoon,
William Kennedy Smith decided to Live" spokeswoman Rena Terratell her story on national televiSion coso.
because " it's too late to hide," her
Smith apparently planned to
stepfather said.
·
watch the show but had decided
beforehand no1 to-comment, a
Patri ~ia Jlow_man, 30, was to
appear Thursday night on ABC's spokeswoman said. "He's just
"PrimeTime Live" in her first eager to put this whole experience
lengthy interview since she said she m perspective and get on with his
was raped nine months ago by the life,'' said Barbara Gamarekian.
31 , year-old nephew :or Sen.
Smith hopes to begin his medical career in January as a resident
Edward M. Kennedy.
A jury last week acquitted Smith at the University of New Mexico
in a trial that included nearly I 0 hospital, although details haven't
hours of testimony by Ms. Bow- been worked out, she said.
man, her face hidden by an elecAttorneys for Smith also
tronic shield. She claimed Smith planned to watch the show, and
attacked her on the grounds of the questiqned Ms. Bowman's motives
Palm Beach estate in the early for drppping her opposition to
hours of March 30 after they being Identified.
Her appearance on television
returned there from a nightclub.
Ms. Bowman, of Jupiter, Aa., shows "her desire for auention ...
was interviewed Tuesday by Diane What I think she always wanted,"
Sawyer for Thursday night's seg- said attorney Mark Seiden.
Jack Freese, a prosecution
ment.
.
With her decision to go public, spokesman, said: "That's her deciThe Associated Press and many sion."We think she's a courageous
other news organizations that had individual. ''
Ms. Bowman 's stepfather,
withheld her name identified her
and carried photographs or news Michael "Gerry" 0 'Neil, said in

''

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,1 __ -

Thwsday's Miami Herald that •'it's
Now's the time to let
know and get on with olil' lives.''
O'Neil is direCtOr and former
chairman of Generkl Tire, now
known as GenCorp.
Ms. Bowman's lawyer, David
Roth, emphasized she was not paid
by ABC. She rejected offers of u11,
to $500,000 from other sources
before the trial, he said.
A Palm Beach County grand
jury declined to return an indictment after mvestigating possible
obstruction of justice at the
c&lt; Kennedy estate. Longtime
Kennedy family friend William
Barry had been identified as the
investigation's target.
. The grand jury, which heard
secret . testimony from Sen.
Kennedy last August, indicated evidence was lacking to return an
indictment. .
"Without any new evidence
'coming forward, this case is over,"
State Attorney David Bludworlh
said.
Palm Beach police claimed that
Barry misled them when they went
to the estate March 31 and asked to
see the senator and Smith.

c•urcll or J - Chriii-Apookiii&lt;Falth~
New Lima Rd., next to FL Mcio• Parle
Pastor. Robert W. Richanls
__).
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E...W.a - 7p.m: · ·
Wednt~day Sel'lioes ·1 p.m.

~

Campbell, a community south o( with benefits.
The Oakland Police Department
Palo Allo, was enthusiastic about
the program after one of h1s offi · . has asked about Clone-a-Cops, but
Lt. Fred Peoples said he didn't
cers posed for a cutout.
Co st wrotc to businesses in know of.plans to buy them.
Campbell urging them to use the ·-· "It sounds good on paper but
cutouts, which cost S400 apiece. you wonder whether it' s worth
The department plans to buy them, going through with. I don't think
then distribute them fiee to interest- it's a high priority at this time," he
said.
ed business owners.
In Colorado Springs, Colo., ·cub
'.' If we' ll pay $400 foi ~ gun,
why not pay $400 for a cardboard Foods produced its own cop clones,'
cutout? People sort of snicker. But •paying police officers to model.
if it works let's go give it a try," The flat cops watch over health and
cost the beauty aids and the tempting bulk
said·Cost, noting a real
food bins.
··
department about ol&gt;OIJ, Ulru

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PaiiiJr.

I

Kate Smith was honored rece~t­
ly with a baby shower for her
infant daughter, Nancy Elizabeth,
by the Evangeline Missionary
Group of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
.
A decorated baby cake, tea, and
Kool-aid were served to Debbie
Miles, Charldine, Roger, Chris and
;Debbie Alkire, Naomi Ohlinger,
,Eileen Bowers, Kathy Lehew and
Missy, Wilma Mansfield and
Sarah, Charlene Smith, Maggie and
Lindsey , Rilla, Bill and Tracy
Smilh , Lester and Luke Rowley,
Belly Spencer, Janet and Ed
,.Veney, Linda Lauderrnilt and Pat
Thoma.
Games were conducted by Pat
Thoma and prizes were won by
, Wilma Mansfield, Janet. Veney and
lllebbie Alkire.
·•, Sending gifts were Elizabeth
,Puffy, Frances Eskew , Craig,
llrendn and Megan Venoy, Sherii
Might, Olive and Melvin Smith,
Jl;fary A. Fields, Shelia Coza rt,
Elizabetll Ohlinger, Ruth, Wilber
pnd Mindy Young and Jenn y
t,Vcll~.
·
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· jStreet1artist fbund
!guilty of litte~ipg
; DETROIT (AP) - An artist
:who dumped hundreds of shoes on
· ;a city sueet as one of his art works
•was cqnvicted of lillering and
,given two weeks to remove the
•Oattened footwear.
~:- District Judge- Norm!!Dnlson
:Convicted Tyree Gu yton on
•Wednesday despite testimony on
' is behalf from Jan Vander Marek,
hief curator of the Detroit Institute·
f Arts.
.
Van der Marek later paid Guyon $50 for defense exhibit 19 - a
~eather boot.
·
: ' Our ton has received national
~ublicuy for using junk - includ~na discarded mannequins and hub!Caps - to festoOn abandoned houss and vacant lots in Detroit. The
hoes, .scattered l!)o ng Heidclber.g
ueet m Scptemlier and squashed
"y pass ing cars, were meant to
osymbolize the plight of the home.

I

YOU BETTER NOT CRY -Two-year-old
Rachel Marita Hurley cries out for her mom .
Rocjelle while Saota, otherwise known as Cecil
Howsen, tries to hold on· to her at Brooklyn,

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~ess.

: "I feel like I got my point
~ross," Guyton sa~d ~ the ver-

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By KILEY ARMSTRONG
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - From a
laid-back Santa in a Saks boutique
who gently lilts "Ho, ho, ho" to a
muscle-bound Jolly One at A&amp;S
who gets requests for cold cash,
there's no lack of. v¥iety among
department-store St. Nicks this
year.
Macy's, the setting for the
movie "Miracle on 34th Street," is
not alone in insisting that "the real
one" can be found only at its Santaland, which is drawing thousands
of youngsters each day.
Besides, this is a city where a
score of Clauses, mostof them collecting ior charity, cA be spotted
during a stroll in midtown Manhattan. Parents are practiced in the old
explanation about Santa's helpers.
At Abraham &amp; Straus in downtown Brooklyn, families can
choose between a black Santa and a
white one, a choice the store says
has been available for 25 years.
Tbe blaCk one is mild-mannered

LOS ANGELES {AP) - Former President Reagan drew Christmas cards with youngsters during a
hospital visit in which he learned
- for the first time - about a popular video game.
"What's Nintendo?" Reagan
asked when a teen-age patient
inquired whether he liked to play
the electronic game. After hearing
· a description of the pastime, Rea-

Cecil Howsen, 29, who has no
trouble dealing with the occasional
obnoxious kid. He has 19 1/2-inch
biceps and a black belt in kung fu.
Howsen balances 150 to 300
lapsilters in a six-hour shift, cutting
Christmas deals from his red throne
in a curtained cubicle as list-bearers
wait outside in a maze of white
picket fence. a!J(I traditional decomtions.
"Some of the kids want a Mercedes-Benz - the actual car,"
Howseh marveled. "And lots or
cash: hard cash. One kid said he'd
prefer hundred-dollar bills."
Saks Fifth Avenue's Santaland
in midtown Manhattan is tucked
into a comer boutique: Hang a right
at the S170 girl's party dress, just
before the $115 boy's Ralph Lauren sweater.
Visitors this week included a
morning-long crush of frenzied
grade-school classes - "It was
soooooo exciting!" shrieked one
boy - and a well-mannered, well-

President and Mrs. Reagan. ''
LONDON (AP)- A rhinestOne-encrusted glove worn by
Mi.chael Jackson fetched $30,030
at an auction of show business
memorabilia.
The Ja~kson trademark was
bought at Christie's on Thursday
by the Dublin, Ireland, branch of
the Hard Rock Cafe chain . The
restaurant opens next summer.
The-New York restaurant Planet
Hollywood paid $5,605 for a chair
that once belonged to Marlene
Dietrich and $4,004 for actor James
Dean's school yearbook.
NEW YORK (AP) - Jane
Pauley will team up with ABC's
Stone Phillips for a new prime-time
news series on NBC.
The still-untilled series begins in
March.
Phillips has been a reporter for
"20-20" since 1986. Pauley's
"Real Life With Jane Pauley'' was
axed by NBC because of low ratings.

heeled, teatime floek: kids in patent
leather Mary Janes or prep-school ·
blazers alongside adults in fur or
gray flannel.
A r¢ carpet leads up to Santa's
plaid easy chair, and cuddly animals are in abundance. There are .
two understated Christmas trees
and a life-size rocking horse. ·
This Santa, actor Mark Boehm,
31, chuckles "Oh, ho-ho-ho-ho!"
in a lilting, non-threatening voice
-even to the day's 300th lap-sit·
ter.
Uptown' at Bloomingdale's, the
approach is glitzier: Future consumers snake through a m'aze lined
by white tree branches, white lights
and mirrors to reach Santa's dou- ble-wide, white-pillowed throne.
There was no Santa oii one
recent VISit, and a store
.spokeswoman said be was late for
his shift because of a family emergency. Three elves mmded the
store.
John Riley, 35, who works as a
clown when he's not Santa, later
explained that " Dasher had a broken antler" but is " doing great;
thank you."
'
Then there's Macy's . The
extravaganza features .what seems
like hundreds of costumed elves,
all "Merry. Christmas; '-ing their
hearts out.
.
Christmas music fills the
13 ,000-~quare- foot Tyrolean vii lage. The 20-minute stroll to Santa
is enlivened by toys, toys, toys,
moving mannequins, a train emerging from a 4-foot mountain, and
sky-high candy canes.
Kids can line up for a personal
·· ' audience with Santa, or after a
shorter wait stand on a "magic
star" and look through a one-way
mirror to see Santa entertaining
other children in his toy-filled cottage.
·

~PRICE SALE
~--'1tw,

11

Rr. 33

CHEESEBURGER

~ f/1 ~ M 0111 AIID 11'1 011(

of" 1

-.:\_"\ .

ti\ ,.ti\ '\

4!; ~

,r
fiiE '

nan

........

~ ·I

NEXT TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL

Sunday t1vu Thullday, 10 am-9 ~;Friday a Sl!urdlly, 10 am-10 pm

Make
Planl To Rave Suday Dbmer With U1I

~

,
.

ROAST BEEF DINNER
Choice of Potato,
Green Beans, Soup and Salacl Bar

1"-(~~~!-

eo&lt;! .

A so •erving Hot ilomemade Vegetable Soup, Homemede Spicy

Chill and Beine whh Cornbread.

O...Hrilllf ~·
IIDDlDOIT
614-992·5241 •

·

Or TTJI One Of Our Other·Great Jfmu ltemsl

.

OPEN SUNDAY, 1.'

AM TO

9 PM '

3S4Eat . . St.

POIEIOY
614-992-6292

••

-, 1

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Sliver Run Baptist
Pa51or: But LiuJe
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wprship • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~· 7:30p.m. ~
Mt. Union BapUst
Pastor: J~ N. Sayn:
Sunday ~chool · 9:4S a.m.
Everuna ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Bapusa ·
Founh &amp; Main S1., Middleport
Pas101:.Rev . Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m:
Worship · \0:4S a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Putor: Kennelh Sinilh
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip , IO&gt;IS a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

t-

VISA • MASTBRCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPIED

REGISnR TO WIN IN
OUR Gin CERnFICAn
. DRAWINGS!
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
WINNERS/
Dec. 2: II Aspeck........ $160
Mldtlleport
Dec, 9: bla ,Helsler.......$240
Mlcldleport .
Dec. 16: W Pa1lty... $400
NewHav11
Dec. 23: ???.................$100

Merry Christmas

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Syracuse Churth of God
Apple and Sccood Sts.
PaslOr: Re\1, David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 9:30a.m.
Evcnina Services- 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Hcalh (Middleport)
Pastor: Frank Smilh
S\Jnday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serv.ices • 6 p.m.

Chu·rch or God of Pruphc.'Cy
OJ. Whil~ Rd. offSt Rt !60
Pastor: Pat Ucnson
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship · ll11.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Minersville '
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

'

33226 Child,.n's Horne Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School · It a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneacby Services • 7 P:m·

'
Holiness

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Chun:h
,lfl mile of! R1 . 325
Jla5tor: Rev. O'Dell M111ley
Sundoy Schoot~Q:30.a.m. - - Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ScNice · 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
1S Pearl SL, Middleport.
Pas10r: Rev. Roy M~any
. s... day school . 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Pvmeroy Church or Chrllt
212 W. Main SL
PallOr: Andrew Miles
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 1 p.m.
WediiCiday Services · 1 p.m.

,. · Hysell Run Holiness Chur&lt;h
Pastor: Raben Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m. .
Worship · 10:4S a.m.. 7 p.m.
Thursday Sel'\lice - 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy
l,aslor: Eunhae (Grace) Kee
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.
W\'(lne!day Services · 7:30p.m: ,
RC.Ck Sprlhils - . Pastor:Keilh Rader
Sunday School • 9:IS a.m.
_ Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.

-=Veterans
'dMemorial Hospital
Pemeror

Rutland

-

Pastor: Anhur Crai'.tree
-·, Sunday School'- 9:30a.m.
WoJ&gt;hip - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pas1or: Ron Fierce
· .S unday-School~ 9: I s-a. m,~
. -Wonhip · IO:IS a.m.
Snowville
Pastor: Florence Smilh
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo~&gt;hip -

9 a.m.

7.. NOiiTH SECOND AVE.
, OHIO

Nazarene
Racine Flrst Church orthe Nourene
Pastor: Thomas L. Gates, ll
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · to:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Church or the Nozarene
Pastor: Rev, Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hJp • 10:30 1..;;.-, 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Church ol the Nuarme
Pastor: .lolvl W. Douglas.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · t0:4S a.m-., 7 p.m.
.Syracuse Church oft he Nazarene
Pu1.0r. Rev. OleM McMillan
Sunday Sdtoot - 9:30a.m.
WoJ&gt;hip . 10:30 a.m., 6 pm .
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Poml.'fOf Church of Ihe Nazarene
Pastor: Rc~ . Thom115 McClung
Sunday School '· 9:30 o.ni.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scl'\liccs . 7 p.m,
Cheb1cr Church or the Nalllrtnc
Pastor: Rc\1. Hcrbcn Grate
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Dasyc
Sunday School • 9:30 •.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:3Q p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
P11rlland First Church or the Na1.arcnc
Pastor: Will lam Juslus
Sunday School · 9:30 ~ .m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wcdn~ sd ay SerVices · 7:30p.m.
Ha~en

'Church of lhe Nalilrcnc
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
· Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
, Wedncoday Services ·· 7 p.m..

Other Churches
Trinity Congregational Church
P11stor: Re\1. Roland Wildman
Church - 9:15a,m.
Worship - 10:30 11 .m.

Hazel C001mun1ty Church
orr Rt t24
·
Pas ton Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WoJShip · 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.

C•lvary l'lltp'ha Cloapel
Harrison..,.ille Road
Pastor: Rev. VlC10r Rouah
Sunday S.chool9:30 a.m. ·
Wonhip ·.II a.m., 7:30.p.m.
Wednesday Semoe -7:30p.m.

Uurllngton Community Church
Burlingham
Pastor: Ray U udcnn iiL
Sunday School·IO a.m.
Worship · 7 r·'ll·
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

ReJotctna Ltre Cllla'clo
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pas1or: Rev. Michael Pqio
Sunday School - I 0 Lm.
Wednesday Se111ices · 7 p.m. ·

Christian Fctlowship Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert C. Mu55cr
Sunday School · IOa.m.
Worship ·ll :l5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service· 7 p.r:n .

Pentecoslal
Pent-! AMenlbiJ
SL RL 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hobock
Sunday School ~ l 0 Lm.'
Evening - 7 p.m. •
Wedneoday Service• - 7 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Pastor: DaVid Curfmltll
Sund11y school - 10 a.m.
~ Worship· llll.m,, 7 p:m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.
F~llh

Gospel €hur&lt;h

Middleport

Long Bouom

Unllcd Faith Chur&lt;h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy Dy-Pus
Jl.asmr. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Scflool - 9,30 •.m.
WoBhip · 10:30 a:m., 7 p.in.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

p..,_

1hlrdA..,.e..

Pastor: Rev. Clarlc Balter
SIRiday School C 10 Lm.
Evenin&amp; - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servica - 7:30p.m.

Presbytemm
Horr'-vllle Ptl!tbylerl• Ctourclo .
Wo11hip • 9 Lm•
Suoday School · 9:4S a.m.
Middleport l'tesbJierl•
Sunday School • 9 Lm.
Wo11hip • 10 a.m., 4 P·!"· (2nd .t 4th Sun.)

Ecctesla Fetlowlhlp
128 Mill St, Middlepon
~~..P.&amp;stor: Oiuck McPherson
Sunday School · tO Lm.
· Evmina · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

SyracuH Flrst United J!teobyteriao
SIRiday School • 10 a.m.
'
Wo11hip. It a.m., 4 p.m. (Ia .l3nl Sun.)

Full Gospel Ughthouse
3!04S Hilond Road, Pomeroy
PastOr: Roy Hunter
Sundsy School· 10 Lm.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thunday - 7:30p.m.

Sennlh·DIJ Advenlht
· Mulberry HIJ. Rd., Pomr:roy
Pas10r: Bob Snyder
Saturday Service•:
SabiJalh School- 2 p.m.
Wo11hip - 3 p.m.

Nease SetdCmml Church
Sunday WoJShip ·2:30p.m.; .
lllundly service•- 7:30p.m.

United Brethren

S..;th Bothd NewT-mMt
Silver Rilla•
Pastor: Duane Sydennridr:er
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

ML Hermon Unked Brtltiren to Ctorltl
Cllure•
·
Texas Canmuni1y orr CR 82
Pastot.: Roben. Sanden
. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - to:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Services - 7:30p.m.

Carlelon Inltrdenomln1tlonll Church
Kingsbury Rood
J,astor; Clyde W, HendcnCII
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
EvcniniJ - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Advent1s1

Eden Unlltd Brclhren In Cluia

Sundoy School · tO a.m.
· WO&lt;ohip · 7:30p.m.
·
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Frc•'ilom Gospol Mlssloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pu tot: Rev. Roser Willford
Sundoy School -9:30 Lm.'
WoBhip· 10:4S a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pntor; Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
- Wednesday Service · 7 p.m .
Fairview Dible Church
Lc~n. W.Va. RL l
IJilstor: James Lewis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m:, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrviet · 7:30p.m.
Calvary Dible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip I0:30a.m., 7:39p.m. Wednesday Scr,;ice - 7:'30 p.m.

IAWUNGS-COAn

FISHER
FUNERAL HOM£

271 llerth

s.c.io4

992·5141

llddlfport,
Dlolo

2" South 2nd

Milfdltpert

· SWISHER &amp; lDHsE ·
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

John F . Fulll, Mgr .
Ph. "2-1101

172 Ntrth Stcond A...

Pom\"roy

Middl1110rt, Ohio

We Fill Dacton'
Prtsc: riptions.
"2-2911

OliO

992-5432

PO!III!foy

RIDENOUR

(row's Family Restaur·ant
"fnflrl•l ~ttlteir Frltl C61d,."
221 W. Main St., Po1111roy
6GI fAST MAIN

.SUPPLY '
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelite 5~AW\

· H2-2259

n~

0\\ifl Strut

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Q3...r.,

83 MHI StrMI

Mldlleport, Ohla 41710
11141,112-1117 -)IIII·OOitll
CH~ACH IUPPLIEI • IIILES

,.

l ,

·92·6"9
214 E. Main
.992-5130 Pomeroy

,'

Sttvei'IVIlle Word t1 Fllllo
Pii10r: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m. ·
Thursday Service • 7:30p.m.

PRESCRIPnON SHOP

992-2121

992-2975

Spiritual FaltlJ ClulrdJ
S1a10 338, Anliqui!y
Pastor. A. St.ewltl
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
·
EvenLna · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Scrvi~:e ·7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Community Chur.:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Service . 7 p.m.

Established 1913

204 Condor St.
Po1111rey, 011.

Syracu&amp;c Mission
141) Bridaeman St., Syrawsc
Pastor: Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday Schooi · IO a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Slrect
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Faith Tabemade Church
Bailey Ruo Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmw Rawson
Sunday School · I0:00 a.m.
·
l!vening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · t0:45 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship :-{ij;J(j a.m-:-

Ncw

.

Middleport Comnfunlly &lt;;;hurch
51S Pead SJ. , MiddlepOrt ·
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

ll&lt;:thd Church
l'own&lt;hip Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 o.m.
Worship·lOa.m.
Wednesday Se.vices · 10 a.m.

"/)i!l'lif)· and S&lt;•rl'in• .·llu·n•·•"

tp6 Mullltrrr A... .

~ ..

fM\\.

115 r.'MimO&lt;Ial Dr.
9U-2104

Pearl Chapel
Jlastor: Aon:nce Smilh
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

326 E. Main St, l,omcroy
Pu1or: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers
Sunday achooland worship ·11 :30 a.m.

'·~ Poml'I'Df .Westside Church of Christ
- $.

Forest Run
Panor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30p.m.

Episcopal

Church of Christ
\'

Rutland Church of Cod
Pu tor: John F. Corcoran
Sund11y School -.10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

" .
Crace ~: plst:opal Church

+I

Flalwoods
P11.stor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Thursday Services -7 p.m.

~

:~
SKred~He•rt C1thollc Churth
•· 161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992·5898
Pastor: Rev. W1lter E. Heinz
iSat..Con. 4:4S-S:t5 p.m.; Mus· 5:30p.m.
S101. Con. · 8:45·9: IS a.m.,
- Swt. Man --9:30a.m.- - ~
Dally Ml!ss · 8:30a.m.

'

Enterprise
llastor: Kcilh Rader
Sund a~ School - 10 a.m.
Wo~h•p · 9 a.m ., 6 p.m.
Tuc~ day Services- 7 p.m .

New Lire Chun:h of Gud
-, Chester
Pastor: Gary Ilines
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 6 p.m.
Wedncsd•y Services· 7 p.m.

I

I

Ccntral .buster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School • 9:4S Lm.
Worship - II a.m.
Wcdncsd~ty Services · 7:30p.m.

Mt. Morl•h Church of God
'
Racine
'
Pastor: Rev. James Saucrficld
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesd3y Scl'\licc~ _- 7 p.m.

•

Rutlaod Free Will Baptlsl
Salem St
PaslOr: Re\1. Paul Taylor
Sunda' School • tO a:m.
Evening ' 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Middlepon
SchOol • 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hi:o - II a.m.

••;_
•''

Tuppers l,lalns St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon tJausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m,
Wonhip - to a.m.
Tuesday SeMces - 7;30 p.m.

Church of God

Forosl Run Baptist
Pastor: Arius Hurt
Sunday SchoOl · 10 o.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

,,•

Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Charles Eaton
WorslJp - 9 :~0 a.m.
Sundoy School · l0:30a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Union
Hartford, w.Va.
•Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wo11hip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Faith Baptlsl Church
Railroad S1., Mason
Sunday School'- tO o.m.
Worship . II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7_p.m.

Rulland Bible Melhodlst
Pastor: Rev. l'llan Myen
SW~day School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesd~y Serv~es - 7_ p.m.·

.r

Long Bottom
Pastor: Charles Eaton
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
. Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

HMrlford Church of Christ in Christian

VIctory Baptlsl
525 N. 2nd S1., Middlepon
(lastor: lames E. Keesee
Wonhip · tO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Laurel CUrt Free Methodtst Church
Pastor: William Williams
Soodoy School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - to:30 a.m., 7 p:m.
Wl!dnesday Servica- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Brenda Weber
WoJ&gt;h:p · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wcdnesday Services· · 7:30p.m.-

Hobson Church or Christ. In Christian
· · Union
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Everting " 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hope' Baptist Chapel
Cr111t SL, Middlepon
rastor. David Bryan, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
WoRhip . II a.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

'
,.'

Chester
Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - IOo.m.
Thursday Servi~es · 7 p.m.

.

The Salvation Army
II S Buttemul Ave., Porn~: roy.
Sunday Sch0()1 · 10:30a.m.
Worship · 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Dycsvllle Community Church
Sunday Scflool · 9:30 •,m.
Worship · 10:30 11.m., 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Coolville Unlt•'il Mclhodlsl Parish
Pastor: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Chun:h
Main &amp; Fiflh S1.
Sunday School · lO a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooporatlve Parish
Northe.st Cluster ·
. Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausmm
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Christian Union

' S10

•

Mt. Olive Untied Methodtst
011 124 behindWilkesville-PaslOr: Charles looes
Sunday SChool - 9:30·Lm.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

HemJO(k Grove Church
Pastor: Charles Domigan
Sunday school · 10:,?0 •.rn .
Worship ~ 9:30a.m. 7 p.m.

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 juol oil RL 7
PaSLor: Rev.,James R. Acrae, Sr./
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneulay Services - 7 p.m.

' .'

Graham Untied Metllodlll
Worship · 9:30a.m. (Ill &amp; 2nd Sun), 7:30
p.m. (3rd &amp; 4Jh Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Langsville Christittn Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
wo .. hip . 10:30 • .m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Bcthldlem Bapllst
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School • 10:30 Lm.
. Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
·• " Thuljldl),' Services - 7:·30 p.m.
Old Bethe FrH Will Bapllst Chun:h
.,
28601 S1. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thursday Sel'liceo - 7:30p.m.

East Letart
PaslOr: Roger Grace
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

· St. Paul Lutheran Chun:h
Comer SycamOre &amp; Second St, Pomeroy
PaRor: Laura A. Leach Slue!Oer
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • II LID.

Llbcr1y Chrlsttan Church
Dexter
Pas10r: Woody Call
Sunday School · l 0 a.m. ·
.Evcn4'g · 7 p.m.
Wcdncsday Servico · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service•- 7:30p.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School-9 :30a.m.
Worship · t0:45 a.m. (t sl &amp; 3rd Sun)

Our Saviour LutheriJ) Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravemrood,
·
" W.Va.
' · l'anor: Re~.. Georae C. Weiri
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- II a.m.

Success Road Church of Christ
J&gt;as10r: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sund11y School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Worship-10:40a.m.,7:30p.m.

•• i

SL John U.tbenn Churcb
Pine Grove
Pastor: Laura A.-l.eadl Shreffler
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm. '
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Bradford Church olthrist
St. Rt 124 &amp; Co. Rd. 5
Pas1or: Derek Slump
SW1day School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.rn.

Racine Flrst Bapllst
Paslor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Morning Star
·
Pastor: Kenneth BUer
SWiday School · 9,45 a.m.
Wonhi'p · 10:30 a.m. ·
Thmday Services ·7 :30p.m.

Lutheran

Mason Church or Christ
Miller SL, Mason, W.Va.
- SundaySchool - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p . II a.m ., 1 p.m .
Wednesday Scrvi~ - 7 p.m.

· Middleport Flrst Bapllst
Comer Sixlh &amp; Palmu
PntOr: R$v. James A. Seddon
Sunday School· 9:1S a.m.
Worship - IO:lS o.m.
Wednesday Service• -1 p.m.

&lt;'

MASON, WV

F~atw1ng

~ !o}ft
~ ~

'·

~

OPEN
· 'ONICH'

•3•
~~ ·

Pomeroy Flnt.Baptlst
East Main S1.
Pastor: Sleve Fuller
• Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
_ Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wcdne"t.y Services • 7:30p.m.
Flrst Southern Baptist ·
41812 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lam.u O'BryMit
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Carmel
Pas10r: Kennelh Baker .
Sooday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m. (2nd &amp; 41h SIRI)

United Methodist

Rutland Church or Christ
Pastor: Euaene E. Underwood
Sunday School, 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

";~::~~~~~~
7:30
:
. - -7:30

DECEMIEI 23·29

IMIIIIPLift ·

Dexter ChiWch o( Christ
PastOr: Chris Stewart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rulland First Baptist Churclo
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
WoBhip • 10:45 Lm.

,,••''•

MERCHANTS

' car·
CARDBOARD COP •'Campbell Police Officer Greg Finch
ries a life•siu cardboard cut-out or himself out or a drug sto~e in
Campbell, Calif., Thursday. Several stores in Campb-ell will -display the cop clones to deter burglar, and theft, as they act like a
scarecrow and intimidate would-be shopliFters. {AP)

Tuppers Plalno Church or Christ
Pas.lOr:: Robert Foster
Sunday Scnool · 9 a.m.
Worship · 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Free Will Baptlsl Chun:h
Ash SJr&lt;et, Middleport
Pastor: -Mark Morrow
Salurday'Seivice • 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

New York's Abraham &amp; Straus department
store. Howsen, who works O!Jt for two hours a
day, is weU-ai'med for bis Santa role, possessing
. 19-inch biceps and a black belt in Kung Fu. (AP)'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Soul
gan said, "No."
singer James Brown will join the
Reagan and his wife,. Nancy, ranks of such musical greats as
. went from bed to bed giving chil- Bing Crosby, Irving Berlin and Ella
·dren with cancer T-shirts reading, Fitzgerald when he receives a spe"Happy Holidays ; With Love, cial American Music Award next
month.

SUIDAl, DECEMIE122

Bradbu'l Church of Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:30 a.m..

Baptist

NEW YORK (AP) - Nick
Nolte says the movies he stars in
aren't career moves - except for
the sequel to the box-office hll "48
· HRS."
" .
"My interest was in the stories,
the·literature, not in being in New
York or L.A.," he said in the January issue of_Us magazine. ·
Nolte, ·whose recent films
include "Cape Fear~· and "Prince
of Tides" said he rejected advice to
"do commercial films with ·big
budgets so that afterwards I would
be free to do what I want to do.' ~
One exception was ." Another 48
HRS." with Eddie Murphy. "I'm a
hypocrite. No question about it,"
he said;

AND
MEDIUM (RENCH FliES

Dan s. Eiton

Bei!Jany
PutQr. Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
_Wonhip - 9 un.
.W.sday Setviccs- IOa.m.

P6nland~Racine R~ .

Pastor: William Roush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won:hip · 10:30a.m.
Wcdnesd~y Scrvi'~s · 71J..O p.m.

Zion Church otChrlsl
Pomeroy, Huri10nvilleRd. (RL 143) .l
P11tor: Rober E. Punell
,
SIU1day School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne&lt;day Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday Wo11hip • t0:3a p.m.
Thunday Se~ ·1p.m.

I'

Names in the ·newS:-.·...

Shower held

oi

7

.

Reorganized Church or Jc.ius Chrlsi In
Latter DaY Saints

BeiJ'Willlow Ridge Church &lt;irist
•
Pa11or: Jack Colegrove
' Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
1
Wo11h1p- 10:30 a.m., 6:30.p.m.
Wedneoday Services. 6:30·p.m.

Assembly of God

Southern Ciuster' Apple Grove
Pastor: Cad Hicks
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip · .10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday SeiVice_s . 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Keno Church oi'CIIrlll
Wonhi~&gt;.9:30 a.m.
· Slinday School . 10:30 a:m.

Churdt or JuUJ Christ Apostolic
VanZandt ond Wild ltd.
Paator: Jain·es MUier
Sunday 'Scbool· 10:30 Lrn. ,.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~- 7:30p.m.

Liberty Aalmbly oi'-God Duddin&amp; Lane, Ma1011, W.Va.

H1rrlsonvllle Hollnm C_ttaptcr
PasLor: Re\1, John Neville
Sunday School tO a.m.
Wonh~
' - It a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne ay Service - 1.:30 p.m.

Mlddl-' Church
. 'Slh &amp;r~d Main
Paaor: AI Haruon
Sunday School- 9:3oa.m.
Wo11hip- 8:15, IQ:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday S.Niceo -.7 p.m.

Apostol:c

Santa
-shopping
in
Ne,w
York
City
Cardboard cop clones crush crime
-

By ELISABETH DUNHAM ·
Associated Press Writer
PALO ALTO , Calif. (AP) Tht latest cop on the beat in this
town and other American cities is
flat, lifeless and a stiff conversationalist.
But the life-si ze cardboard
cutouts are helping cut down on
crime.
The photographs are credited
with reducing shoplifting in a Colorado food store by 25 percen~ and
the Pallas Police Department
praised their deterrent effect even
though a supermarket chain there
quit using them.
.
"It's like a scarecrow. People
see the image and they think of a
real cop," said Ron Jones, president of Palo Alto-based Colossal
Graphics Inc ., a manufacturer of
Clone-a-Cop cutouts. "It's the psychological intimidation factor'. "
The cutouts are popular in
Britain with women living alone.
they buy them on the theory that
t riminals wiD mistake them for real
officels and stay away.
In the United State!, flat cops
are standing guard in Illinois,
Texas, Colorado and California,
usually to deter shoplifters.
Manufacturers photograph real
I)Oiice officers to make the models..
0ften police depanments send letters to stores, telling them of the
product.
' .
Poli ce Chi ef James Cos t in

·Ohio

~:::~~~:~i;,:.~ ~
Co.

'r

POMEIOY, OHIO-t9J... 7J
BILL QUICKI!l

·~

�l

Frlcjall December

Sentinel

Business Services

Classified

.

HOME PARK
MONDb thru FRIDAY I
I A.M. until NOON

Days
3
6
10

y

o .., 15 Weirdo
•
.20
.30
•e.oo
,42
u .oo
.eo
•13.00
•1 .30/ dov ·.OS/ day

Words
15
15 .
15

I

Rite

04.00

15

Monthly

16 '

1- Ctrd of Th~r~h

.... ... In MiinOiliiTl

-3 - Annouctmtnts
4 - Giwuwty ,.

MO~DAY

PAPER

TUEIDA~ PAP!A
WE~£SDAY f:!APEA

'nfUft.SDAV PAP£A
FA IDA·'( PAPER

IUNOAY PAPER

.-

ti - Atdlo. TV' Cl Rtolir
17- MitteHtneou•
11-Wtnted To Do

011111 Count 'I'

Me•g• County

Muon Cc .. WV

AruCodt&amp;14

ArttCode304 .

311- VInton

571 - Ap.,lt Grovt
773 - M••on

911! - Chtllll

211- Gulln Din.

14,l- Artbit Ol1t

311 - Wtlnal

7t - Auto Paru• Acc•IOfl•

32 33l.t 31 -

77-- Au'to Rtptlt

MobiltHomn for hie
flfmt tor Stlt
Butln•• 8uildings
Loh' Acre~ge

Fitt ;

78- Ctmplnt Eaulpmlt'lt
79 -" Cemper~ &amp;

Speclallrlng Ia
(IIstoN fi'GIIMI lepalr
NEW &amp; USED PAll'S

Molar Homn

MODRS
992-7013
or 992·5553

• 41-HOUIH for Atnt
42- Mobilt Homn tor Rent
•3-- Ftrmstor
•4
AptPimentRent
for Atnt
41 - Furnlshtd Room•
47-Winttd~lo Rent
U - EQuillrnlf't tar Rent

jFREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

the

Cut Your Own.

~lasslfteds!

Help Wanted
,.

FULL TIME
REGISTERED
NURSE
Melga County Tuber·
culoal• Olfice. Car
Raqulred. Mall'·reaume
by January 6, 1992 to
Meiga ~ounty Tuller·
culoale Office.

·
STOCKINGS WITH
. GIFTS FROM

P.O. Box447
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lhlga County 11 111 Equal
Opportunity Employer.

APPALACHIAN

"Helping You To

GUN SHOOT

,Recover Your
I nvestrnent ~·

l:OO~P.M.

614·949·2202
RACINE, OHIO
. .11/20/1

11

CHERRYlUDGE,
East of Darwin on Rt.
681 on Grilvel Road
1'1. Miles to Grove.

Help Wanted

"

WATCH FOR SIGNS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES

TRUCKING AYAIWl£

•New Homes
•Garaps
•Co..... to

lemtdallng ,
Sto, " Compare
FrH Estlmatis

''5-447~

FIEEESTIMAm

667-6179

NEW YEAR'S EVE
AT OSCAR'S
'RESTAURANT

--

GALLIPOLIS, OH .

FOR RESERVATIONS

CALL 446-9545

lpl ldrl
Call Ed Battin
collect at

For more Infor-mation regarding
Overbrook Center Employment which
features a very · compelitive wage and
benefits package, •. pleese call Karla
Hunter, Director of Nursing, at (614) 992·

6472

SHRUB &amp; TREE ·
TRIM ,and

GROOM
:ROOM

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
:
••
BILl SLACK
992-2269
•

USED RAILROAD TIES

Complete Grooming
for All lrftds .. ·

EMilE£ ,MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

.614-9f2;6820

NOTICE OF APPUCATION
Public notlc4 lo horoby
given 11111 R • C Excovellng,
34055 Pine Grove Roed,
Rldno, OhiO 4Sn1, h11 flied
with tho Public Ulllllleo
Commieolan af Dhlo en epo

2

In 111mory

pllcotlon lor 1 CerUI!cete ol
Public Convenience and
Nocesalty t~ operete on celi
of the· public over lrr~gulor
rou1eolo ond from 3.4055Pino
Grove Road, Recine, Ohio
4~n1 : Number and capacity
ol vehicleo 1o be uoed: 11,
Copeclty 20,500
12, Capaclly 24,00D. Int.lf•
eoted partleo mey obtll~ lur·
thor lnlormallon by eddrooa··
lng ,)hil Public Ulllllla&amp;
Commooaion oiOhlo, Columbua, Ohio ·
·· '
Roy lludormll1, R&amp; C
cevotlng Name oi_Appllc.nt
34055 Pine Grove Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(12) 6,13, 20, 3TC

'

Happy Ads

Happy 35th

Teaford
Co•ntry Clllb
Jr. Gtll Stts

OFFICE 992·288b

Gr..wtt&amp; .
Mtlcll Clulls
Cus10111 fll!'rl. ·

Bags, Htatl
Covws, lie.

,-

'

i. ·205North Slcond Ave.

o.

--,...,.,.
.....
-_,_111_11.

nme
')

nn wtpe out tnanr

lulltll ...... out ·
TM •••arlee of · thoH

---lltOOIIhlr.

IIIIa

l1te ..... would -

I f I IOIIId hivo ,... blok

IIIIL •

I!
!

.

Fro"' Your
Ne~Jh-•

ct

Nieee•
L-...;.;..llrtt..;.tlttl_tnd_.,_""'*.-•_,• ...._______,

TRE 5READY
• ~ NOV. 21, 199J
rr.. Ctrt Wrt '-!If GnWI
$101111.,

BASHAN Ri?:•
, RACINE

614-742·3051

9·9·2206

Mall Sti I.W Oh.
lly ...

ll·lllu.pL

111141111 1 mo,

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SlpiNO
•BLOWN IN
JNSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO•.

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

MIDDLEPORT·VIne St.). nice area to ive ln. This home
• eoukthav, 3·4 bedrooms. All rooms are nice sjz@.~s
dishwasher, stow, re~ig. , disposal, and fireplace. Sits on
2 lanced flat lots.
S3&amp;;&amp;oo

992-6855

"FrH E!ltlmateis"
PH. 949·210 I
· or las. 949-2160
NO SUNDA,Y

:Ua-lot...rom..

.0.tCJm fit•ID lnMeUMIM 11MM
•NeYer teqUiret JlliDUII
•s.bel Ult·ia f« _,. c:Jt.IDI
o!Jiotl.. , . . , . _

.,, ...

c.llfwfroo

JAMUUIIII
H2·1771
IIIIIIINif

1111o111 mo.

..___........:=~
~

42

•.
· ,
", ·:

Mlddltpor1, total tltclric, 814-

1185-4233

~ ... · '

.
'

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llrnmone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Uoen aad _,.. Bon did

EVElY
SAl. NIGIII'
6:30 P.M.

Business
Opportunity

For Rent Or Sate On Lind Conlrad : 3br Mobltt Home, 14x70,

Toto! Eloctrlc, On 3 Acres Lond,
8 MIIH From Oolllpollo On At.
218: 814-3811-11946. -~

...
'

44

'"

Starting ~t. 21
factory' a ...
11 Gooo]t Sho""" Ottly
Strictly EllforcooP

~====9·:13:·:·9:1·:d:n~-.

'

•·

Atlldent Managlf lo llvt on 11t1
and manage mlnl•slorage com·
pltli Five l'olnta Pomeroy, 614;

881-73$7

..

Rnldent m' nager, maintenance

coup.. for

apt~rtmtnt

complex

.In Golllpollo. Full·tlmo wllh

lpirtmtnt &amp; utlliUte Included.
Sand rasumt to: Box 1320

Muon County, Lion, 66 acres , 3

One Bedroom Alrortrnont In
P~nt PIHNnt. ¥1'1. Fumllhld,
very CIMn And Hlce. No Polo.

25QO, -

WAREHOUSE

·

To $12 HA Will Tr1ln Several

bluo · ~500.
Rlptty, wv.

"
• ,

1-·31173

•

I

:

1111 ~'ISO XLT, 4x4, At;, eMu, :
tiiiL. __nlce truck, OM owner, o~
57;uuv mil•, lt,ltl. 1aD M t ' ~

3873..

.

·_

~

.•
l

74

1

Motorcycles

••

'.,

ce~

1

:::71~A~ut~os~to~r~Sa~le~~ l75

Boats &amp; Motors

for Salt

14ft -

wlllt 40

1400, 114-14U111

1148 Willy's 3-pata jeep, tiC.
co.nd. $1700, 132 Buntmut

Doc, 23rd. Dopoolt will hord. Pomeroy, OH, 614·11112-252t

.•'
•

.

hp lind trollor,

76

1

•••
'

''

••'
,

•
:

~

4
~

,•·
~

I'

•
•

motor, ntw tires, ntw bllttry,
WATERPROORNQ
rune gOod, need. 10m1 work, Uneondlllonal llteUrna guaran-prlcocf rlght, le00. 114..245-IIIT.t, tk Locol roloroncn lumllhod.
FrM MllmotN. Coli collocl · t.
tiiO Iuick R"!llli, 2 Door, Good 114-237-0411, day or night.
Cond~. Coli Allor 5p.m. lt4Rotoro a-monr Wat"'ff'oo388-13llt.
llng.

Openln;t. Alto Part Tlmt. 1·

~SUBTRACT'

1....._..___ _ __

ThrH t•bdntl 1Pt. In Racine, WI

2;-'"_. -:--:--:--·3.- - - - - 4.1_ _ _ _ _ __

867-8220.

-

THosE

8ATIRII Dllt r

WDOU.ARS
TO

Call our oj]ice for paid in advance rated

304-871-1311.

Approx, lOA.: lroroo old Rt.7 11
mllll S. of Galllpollt. Tobacco
baH, $29,500 whh lttiTtl. 614·

800oll21-3.

COOUNG

Shlh·ll:U pups: AKC, rNdV to go

2053 or 6711-4100.

ptrltnct. Rnpond to Box C.t
cart Point Pl11nnt R~llt1!1
200 lbln St, Point Pltallnl, Wv

LocaiH 011 Safford Sdcool ld. off lt. 141
16141 446·9416 or 1·1410·1171·591~7

'

1H7 Ford Converskm 'hon, a~o.
dull, AC, PW, PL crul1t1 til,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
$200. $225. 61.·255-1066.
t970
Buick
Skylolll,
Good 150,
Block, brick, MWtr ·DifMI, wlnDopoolto On AKC Roglo· Auto Trant, 2dr, Good Transpor. B - Tro..mloolorw, IJMd •
dowa, llnttft, etc. Claude Win· Tolling
tared Sm111 D1ch.tlunds $250 t1tlon, Asking, $250. 614-:r71- rebull. ttltllna It Ill; Aulo
tera, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614· -Each. For Mort · lntonnatlon, 2256,
.Porto, lt4-24U.Tf, &amp;14-:m245-512( . .
2213. 1
.
304-875-2193. '
.1972 Mcinle Cario, 2dr auto
trans, new paint, rail., whHit, F« Sole: Robuln Turlro 350
Musical
duel · nhaust, h11dtrt, 11.15 rr.n.nlulon, I Yoor 0 tat. IM-24W821
obo, 614·11112·25451 11112·2720
Instruments
Now
tonko, bad)' po~o. - .
1H'I Glbtof1 Ln P1ul Studio 1976
tOfl ruck whlllt, rtdl1tcn
Running Condhlon,
Guhar. Black Wllh Chrome 3111-2)15.
lloor mot~ ole.. D I R Aulo,
Hardware, Pearle Tr~puold In·
55

Turn yom; clutter into cas"/1.,
Sell it the easy way... by phone,
no need to-leave your home.
Place your classified ad today! ··
·15 words or
3 days,
. less,
.
·3 papers,$6.00

'.

houolng, poy by lho hour, other 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
btntflll depending on tJ.•

·~EI.I11~~5· · ·~~~~a~·.

Bulldlnb
Supplies

v.ttict., .rtchltver, $1,400. 1..,. .:: •
MWI71
•

:::.~~~.2,500 ~

.

bedroom home, bam, 2 ponds,
Wanted person or manlecl clly Wlltr, 304-458·1tl8 or 458·
One
ond IWO bed_,.
couple to 111111 with milking 17!5.
.
oportmonto lot ront. 304-17!125 COWl, &amp; dly work WHkt

CONDtnON£RS • HEAT PUMPS anti
FIIINAC£S FOR MORE &amp; DOUBI.EWIDE HOMES

388-9354.

1117 Ford Connrolon V•n.
clean, tun optionl .....

euper

1111 I111.Ykl tntraar, 1.400

CA~H?H

••

Last markdown
on shoes before closing
. store.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt . ,

.

Transportation

14-940-2355.
WHITE'S.MI!'TAL DETECTORS 4701 Aft•~ 5p.m.
l~85 .tds Cultl1n
Ron Allison, 1210· Socond Aotlwollor Pupo, AKC Rogls- Broubhmon 47, OOQ mllu.
1181,
1988 Nlsaan Stnlra
Avenue, G.Uipolle, Ohio, 814· ttred, Champion BloodiiM. 6144411·7279 .
446-4338.

I

'S .

.'

Roltwollor Pupplu AKC R..dy
For Chriotmaol Coli 614-441-

Want to:
PIN·'down EXTRA

531 Bryan Ploce
Mlcld lopor1, Ohio

· ·s~o~m

SlamtH
kittens, no cheek•, 614-912-2607

,.

JUlES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

.Nott" /t.

Quarl:er Haru, nol worktd with,
contnt horH, evenings.

-~ood

Hlm111y1n, Persian,

moko

1

•

•

"

PICK~A·PAIR
POMERO~ •

I. . ~Jodie c.irovon LE, loodod,

7an· nice cond,
ollor. 3114-17S-530e.

Few Monlhl Old. HardlY 1m VoUsw1gon Bettie, conYtr· ~sis.304-372-31133 or 1·. :
Groom ond Supply snop-P-t llya,
_ seoo.
Ployod
304-875-'1167, tibia, w~kad, runs good. $100
'•
Grooming. All br..d•• stylt1. l.Nve 1MHNgt ForS~ .
614·247•2'i61
lima Ptt Food .Ptaltr. Julie
Flrol&lt;l"'l wood I cool otovo,
Serv1ces
Coll6t4-448-023t.
•'
VIntage •drum 111: Rodgtrl, 1979 Chrysler Cordoba, new
J;t condition, $250. &amp;14·3n- Wobb.
•
USA . maCta1 4 pc. sat, plus 2 ptlnl, ntw tires, $1000, 304-675AKC Bnut pupplts, I wks otd, cymbolo I high hot S450. 814·
l
will . hOld lor Chrlstmll, 1100, 245·5i26-ohor 5. ·
'6955 '"" 5pm
Firowood: 814-446.08'11.
81
Home
614-667·38511
1979 Ford Futura, bl1.11, 304-882·
•
3182.
Improvements
•
1m Ford Thunderbird 289
BASEMENT

.

'

INSULATION

111141tfn

1976 Dodgo Von, 814-4411-0151 "
Ennlngo.
,
tN4 J.,.. Oher&lt;rk'!'" 4 Wheal
Drlvt, Loiicltdi6M-4...31H, -

614·251-6040 Anor
.

1

J&amp;L

•Vinyl Siding
·Replacamenr
Windows
•Roofing
•lnaulatlon

colt

•

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

Wanted : Uttd farm equipment,
anrthing you want ta nit. 814·

y•

4

.

--------·
y, ....

tii4417J,

1111, lradt, B:D0-5;00 WHkdaWS,

Sotti!INOO&lt;!.

Sun. Noon • fpm. other dayo
GOOD U~ APPUANCES hOU&lt;t coli ·304-273·51155 (until
Waohoro, dryoftl, ro,lrle-tton, Chrlolmtrol IOthor doyo 3-lpm)
....... Sbp Aoiillonct .. All Chrlotmoo ••cltonan In by
Upper Rlv• Ra. IIMlclo llano January 5, 1992. lnsullted
Dacron ClmQIIougt coveralle.
Croot llolol. Coll814-4411-nN.
$30.00. .
Wood drwlte tit, ~ •xc
oonrl, fi.QO. ~· eloctriC blanket Stationery Bicycle, RIMing Ml·
chlnoc $17S BOth; IBM PC Jr, Puro bloodacl Cocker Sponlel
tull atu. n-vr 131, &amp;14-IU.:DOI
$100. •04-875-4241.
pupplll, $75, 614-667-6630
Hay &amp; Grain
52 Sporting Goods
Thl1 wttk only lmgular jtlnl Rabb~.. lg,.,~. Holland
$5.00
or 31$10.00, aN-Peggy, 132 ....,. &amp;
groid A.., coli 614mixed hty tor Hll,
F.. Solo or Trtclo: Horton Hun· Buttomul Pomoroy, OH
l4l~
.
IqUiri bal11 call 992·5533 or
I• C"'" Bow Whh Elctrool Coli
m-n82
Typhoon Hover Craft ..., boat,
114--7.

BR opt. VIand St. 1275 whh A Joy Octo Qrm AMF e..rclu
Blko, Worlng . Blonder, 814-446·
3968.
1SIO.
Lobrtdor Pl/f&gt;"
6 w-Old,
Wormod. Rudy ~o
814-441-8111. .
I

!HI

percent diiCount, Junior cli'n·

Apartment
for Rent

ulllltl"' paid. Call 304·675•

EL, -~-. """"'"''
.....11-10
8R~•,.~,IItl. 140t):

Wide 11lectlon naw a. uHCI t1rm
tractora $ !mpltmtnts. Buy,

tlaug... rt;ullf prlctt. · Hew
hoLira after Chrlllmll. Fri., Sit,

Upright lrHl.,, 3yr otud

..

:n:ooo
•.•1•••am.

Wnt Gallipolis, 514-441-9777;

2$6-1308,

.

1110 Fold F·tiO XLT, auto, AC,'
m11oo,
truclc,'

Jlm'l Farm Equipment, SR. 35,

&amp;p.m.

-n

WV.

C.tnflaugt clot~!ng, Clrhar\1 10

~llttrtd partl-colored Coektr
ramote control wlballtry pack, Spinltl
pu~.
mlnature
$70, cou 514-1192-8137
Schnauzer,
registered

,·

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE .
991·5335 or-

.

·

lor 2p.m. 614-445-0527.

RlUICAYAtiNG

AUUIIS .
lrilltl It In Or We
.
Pldc Up.

.

coli 814-985-4233

2br O.poslt And Rtflfancas Af.

r - - - - - - - i ·.·

OVEN

.

2·bdrm trailer In Raclnt art1,·

Financ 1al

.:. '

BUUDOZING

Mo~Ue Homes
~for Rent

2 bdrm mobile home tor rent,
apprax. 3 milts from Pomeroy &amp;

Woynoovllle, NC 26786.

.IlL BLOWN INSULAtiON
MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMEN'l' WINDOWS

..........

Condlllontd, No Polo. 614-4410893.

1. • .

''

AKC
rwglolorod · Cocker
Sponlo!o, 81110 Lhau·Apoo'o
1'11,100. 1riOCI Mt 3173/ Rlpte'y,
lhota and wormtd, rndy to oo!
wv.
304-175-21113.
.
Cutluo lntornotlonal, .
BMutltul AKC Reglotortd Gthl grinder mixer, Ntw Holland 1. . otdo
opllon cor tow mlloo,.
-Ito, 12 WHkll Old, $50. 614· 7ft. hayblnd, Now· Holland t ft. lull
$8,115, 1.-M:wa?i, Ripley,
2!6-14011.

Buy ENFORCER, Klllo .roto &amp;
mlce In : only 1 fetdlng, Coeur SJN1nlol puppln, Buff
IIUARANTEEDI Avolloblo at: color, AKC reg, 7wko, SI!O 114·
O'Dell Tnro Voluo Lumbor, 634 1112-2233
Eaet Main !WMI, Pomeroy, OH
Dragonwynd Conery Porolon,
Souonod Aoh, Ook And Hick· Siam.. and Hlmallyan klnan1.
ory R,...ood, US Plck·Up Lotd 614-441-3144 aftor 7 p.m.
O.llverecl And Stacked. Don
Fomolo· lloglllered Roll Tonlor
Wrough,ltl-4*-9146.
Puppy, Vaccinated, And WorSam SomtrYIII•'• Army Sui'JIIn. med, $35. 814-446'-1354.

On• Bedroom Haute In City Air

;, ; ,.

1.0:00 A.M.·3:00 p.M. . \.

r

LAUREL CUFF-Pomoroy·Silling on a liiUe less than 1
acre of levelland is this 3 bedroom house with an open
stairway, lireplace, and maintenance ~ee siding.
.i
$23,000

.I

s..-.

0,.117:00~

RUN:5~~~~=~'1~~~ie~·

SYRACUSE-A fanrastic thriving grocery store business·
This money maker cernes with everything Including the
stocl&lt;. It hes a dairy case, walk-in cooler. all kinds · of
shelving, 3 deep freezers, meat sijoer, grinder, meal block,
and·lot&amp; ol other items. The upslairs coulc:r be remodeled
i!Jto a 2 bedroom apartment so you could live on top ol your
business. If you want to all/1 making money-give u• a call.
'
$131,1100
DOmE TURNER~roltM- ...........,.,,.............112-Mta
BRENDA JEFFEIRI...........................................J..SOSI
DARLINE ITEWART.............. ~........................tl2-1311
SA.NDY BUTcttER............................................tl2-1371
SHERYL WALTERS..............- ........................317-11421

HILL'S DEER
CUniNG
CUITING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

E.,mng
. 614·985·3961

MALLON'S
and feel n .
pea6efulness. This 130 aere farm with large boltoms. a 2
story house with 3-4 bedrooms, barn, oilier outbuildings,
and free gas. ,
'
$64,900

POMEROY·Make your apP.,inlment today to see this 3
bedroom home with an pP&amp;n srairway, french doors, fire·
place. and a lull basement .
$23,900

To havo1olovo. then to ptrl
II tho gNM torrOW of

FOR SALE AT 101
SNOWDEN'S LOT

Proltslitlal

LEADING CREEK·Higloy Rd .-Hunt or farm on this 18
acres with a nice big barn. This land lays flat, has a great
building sile, and water and electric available.
$18,500

lfllll.

CHRISTMAS TREES

•·

ILT

Loriol,
angina, only
33,000 mllot, · . ~.

hayblnd, AC 2 row, no till com
8aum Tlut Vol~t 51~~1 .11 Wool
llaln StrHI, ctt.~r, OH
Chrlotmu Pupplu, AKC Ger· pllnttr. AU good cond. 304·21:1n Shopord Pu~ . 304-875- 4215 .
R.l:• Or Mlcil? In Your Hou11'P ..
$724.
I

Owner· l

Bash111t Building

Clll614-992-5528 or

385-8227

King ol• wotorbed, Comp_ltt.,
oxc. cond, $2$0, 814-112·'1153
Rita or Mica? In Your HCXIII?
Buy ENFORCER, Killo rota &amp;
mlct In llnly I IHIII"'I,
GUARANTEED! AvoNoblo tl:

1'

~·

d- a_..

lllh Ford Fo/110

CUSTOM BUILT _
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonalrle Prlcts" . ··.

RACINE , .
FIRE DEPT:· ·,

Public Notice
Real Estate General

.•

GUN SHOOJ

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHI;D
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Stirling at $235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2
Nth houae
wibMarnent end
carport, free pi.

EOE ·
Pl,lbllc Notice

,..._...._____, .,

''

992-5335 or 915-3561
· lam Frortt Port Office
POMOOY, OHO
10/30/19

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

Pets for Sale

12-5-tln • · •

•no O¥EIIS-Sn .,
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Pomtroy,

.

I'H. 614-992·5591

WASII?IS-$100 up '
DIYIS.,-$69'op .. - .
miiGEIATOIS-$100 op
UIIGIS-ho-lltc.-$1 r~ op
FIIHIIIS-S us ., .

. ,-

Overbrook Cenler, ,the area's newest and
most modern long jterm care facility, has
an Immediate full time and part time 3·11
position available.
·

....

81700SAI24
Long Batt..., Oltlo

111111 mo. pd.

·

..

- ORUHDO FIDRID"
IIAOICAL VACATION PACK·
AIIE. FO~ THE F~ILY

•Relieonilbla
fletill
••
'
•Ouallty Work
·
•Free Eatlmatea
•Carpet H11 Faet D!'Y
Time -'
•High Oiri!ll on Tl\1 ;·~
Floor Finish
· . .
. MIKE lEWIS. OwiMI
i ·~
II. 1, lutltrnd, OH.
'

. . . . . .eCw•-.:111

1·614-667·6474

BISSEU .&amp; BUllE
CONSIIUCnON

ca•IT au•m · ··. .

A

and nlE FlODI CAU

We Sell &amp; Service
Weather King, Miller,
Luxalril, Insider,
Heat Pumps, Furnaces,
Air Conditione,.

••If

Ate you a
ehlrter,
lible to handle detalle
and work ~lth people? Experience In
ICcountlng, cuatorrier
Hrvice, ui.., collectione - Trelnlng and •
chilfce for ltdvanc•
ment. Send reauma
with rll!ferencaa to
Box 7280% Dally
sentinel.

'

_ Giveaway

C. l: Heating &amp; ! :·
Refrigeration ! :

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

Pomeroy, Olllo
11 -18,1 mo.

4

Lr--;i;;;;;-:--,.
n
, ...

CLARENCEATHERTON

end dopendeble.

35975 Flatwaocls Rd.

.

No~Chanc •. Write: Slngln, P.O.
. Bo$ 1043, G~lllpotlt, Olllo 451131,

•

Starting SeP!j2
12 Gouge Factory
C~e

(

Mo'i' Ar.. Slngloa By Choice

,...---,.....;.~--..

Interior l'lrlnllng,
Fr• Eetlrna1H
30 Y...,. experience.
Four lellera ol
recommendltloJI. Hon11t

HARLEY HANING'S
RESIDENCE

o

..

We'U

~tNifPN

ED'S
PIIITIIG

REASONABLE

•

NO BLIIID CllU

SUNDAYS

FOR SALE

q

•
• 0

PH. 949~2801
or 949·2860 · ·

- CLUB

.

'

•

o •.___

C:,:ut

.. BISSELL
BUILDERS

Ones.

RACINE GUN

, R.N.'s

Register For Daily Door PriZes
HOLIDAY HOURS
Wed.·Sat. 11 :00 1i15:00

$20.00 eadl
Orcler Now for Your
Lost Loved

SNODGUSS
·- - ··-·
UPHOLSTERY

992·3838

..

.Homemade with
Long Lasting GrHn
Scotch Pine.

11·251 mo. pd.

BRADFORD$ CHRIST
TREES
Fresh Cut Trees or

Read .

FILL YOUR

BLANKETS

614-949·2058

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAm

Seatings At
J, 3&amp; 5 P.M.
$7.50 each
$4.50 children under 12
Make reservations by
calling 446·9545

""'"'"'•II

E•Potntlng

DAIWII, OliO
7/ 311'91 ttn

41 - Far L..•• .._

11

•

- lnt•lor a

01 lOU FilE ·
1·100·148·0070

41 - S:peee for Rtnl

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

119 Buttemut Ave.
Pomeroy

-E~octr~ut """
-con-wolll
-Roollllg
,

FQ- 4U b!AKES &amp;

BUllEnN BOARD DEADliNE
4:30 P. M.. DAY BEFORE
PUBliCATI.ON

CRAFT HOUSE

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

lklilihl

9l7 - Bufhlo

---------~-----~

Oet ReeuMt

73- Vtnl&amp; 4'WO ' t
74- Mbtorcvcl•
71 - lolll &amp; Moton far Sele

Fs lol ~

ll -: Homn for Stte

896 - lltlrt

· -Room Addltlont
-Outltrworlt

71 - Autos fOf lilt

li - Ahl E1t111 Wtnttcf

!82 - Ntw HIYen

· CARPENTER SER,riCE I

72 - TruC:IIt for 1111

23 - PrOt•liaall SffYICH

4!58- Lton

GRAVE

11125.

Tr onspn rloiiOII

22- fiJon., 10 Loan

Rr.ol

YOUNG'S

742·2979

• . liUHUiihil

!115 - Pt. PIIHint

1!113.. :. Poit!t;nd
247- Lit•n F1111
949 - Rtclne
712 - Rutlend
667- CoolvMit

241-ftlo OFinde

66 - Slid • Ftrtlinr

21 -tlutln•• Oppo,rlunltv

Art1Codt614

Pomtrov

61 - flfm EquiP"""'
12- Winltdto lluv
13- Livtitodt
14 ""' HIIV &amp; Grtln

15 - lchool•&amp; ln•truclian

P.M. tUI!IDAV
- 2 :00P.M. ~EON!SDAY
- 2 ·00 P.M. ~HUASDAY
- 2·00
. P.M.. JIIIOAY

992 - Middteport

~ l lV'' \II IL k

13 - lntur~nct

jol/otvin/( I ~lep/wnt&gt; exc~a11ges ...
JI7- Ch•hirt

r~r111 SIIPiilll!s

1.t - Butln•• Tflining

2 ~ 00

Homagrown,
beautifully sheaM.
White and Scotch Pine
5 Ft. and up
~ood aelectlon of
large tiM&amp;.
614-742·2143 or

"

11 - Help Wtnted
12- SIIultiOn Wtnttd

Classified pa~es ,cm·eir 1he ·

•41-0tllipolit

&amp;9-FOf Stlt or Trtdt

f mplnyllll' nl
SI' r VII' I"'

MO P.M. MONDAY

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS TREES

157- Mulietl lntlrum.nts
151 - Fruils A V•gtt•bl•

9-Wtntld to Buy

CAY 8Ef:0AE PUBLICATION '
;- 1 1:00 A,M_. SATURDAY •
~

55- Bulldlnt Suppll•
II- Pet1 for S.h1

Ill - Public Sale &amp; Auction

Y•d S1lw

12·2·9f·1 mo.

&amp;• - Misc. Mtrchtndl••

15 - Htppy ftdt
G- Loat tnd Found
1- Y~rd Sti'J (ptfd in tdYtncel

•A cltstltied tlh-ertiHm ..t pltced In Tht 01ily StntintlleN·
ctPt - ci•1Hied dllpll'(. llusin•• Ctrd end leg .. nolictsl
Wlft 1110 IPPW In thl Pt . Ple•tnt Regl1ter tnd th. Oelll.
polls Dilly Tribune. .. tchln9 ovtr 18.OOG hem".
..
COPY c)'!ADi.tNE -

614·992·3394
Or Cal ··
742-3020 Evealags

151 - Hou...,aWOa...
12- lporllng OOIIcfl
53 - Ant)Qutl

· 2: - ln Mtmory

16nttype oi11y- u•d. ·
·
•ltr~tinellt not tftponliltle fOr Arron thllf firlt'd.,- . (Chtek ,
lor llf'tort tint d811 1d runt in P•~rl . C1ll bero;• 2 :00pm
dat afl• publlclllon to m .. e contcUon.
·A~ thM mutt be ~dIn 1dV1nte 1ft
C~td of Th.,.kt
. Hippy Adt

0

I

8:30 am-4:00 pm ·

mo.

•1 point

- - ·~ · -

HOURS:

Call
614-992·5528 or
385-8227

'""'""' t .IO ctiiCDIIIIl for tdl p.tid In ltfvlniCI ·
edt - Oiwuw1y lnd Found tds undlll' 11 WQrdt will be

run 3 d1n 11 no ch•ge.
'"l'rlot ot ld tor ttl u.,tht IMt•t It ddu~t pr'l'e. of td colt

Cho!!!l!l and
Your Tree or

.•

Displayed at The
G.alty Prlat Uop .

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

RATES

A.M. to 5 P.M.
SATURDAY
.

RIGGS
TREE FARM
Cut If For You •

~•~The-Ar,a!s-Numbe~~Marketplace ~
TO I!LACE AN AD CALL 992·2156 .

,,. .

poy

w•~".'l

$1Uino $100 dop,

814•112-owl t

45

'

Furnllhld

Room•
Roornolor rtnt. wook '!I month.
Stortlng ot $120/nto, llrolllo Hotot.
114 44U580.
.
S l - ,_. Wllh _..lng.
AIM troltor · Allhooll-upo.
CoH aftor 2:00 p.nL, 304-n:lo

-.-wv.

9,_ _ _ __
----·

~~-

5 . _ _ _ _ ____
6. ______________ 14._ _ _ __
7•._ _ _ _ _____; 15.....__ _....--

8-·- - - - - -

•

tiM Colobrhy 6cy1.1 f51PB, AC,
446-i552.
1tl4 Dod~~!~ eo, 4 cyl, 4 Ofl!d,
$1350. 304'675-2941.
'
crui11, clt1n car. t&gt;Z,OOO. 114--

ltl4 Dodgo ....... 4 - · block,
AMIFM ctDitt1 4 cyt, new ••·
haull, t14-112·7238, ovonlngo
1

:
•

•

;

�'•.
;,

____
· -~-1

.Pomero.y.=Middlepert,J)hl~

Page-12-The Dally sentinel

.

*

I

· Friday, December 20, 1i91~.

'Child of the BrideLpremieres Sunday-· Sexuat harassme!l~-goes-both~ays , ·
• ly, ·her offspril!g are as nasty as a Florida custody dispute with th.e
Dear ADD Landers; .I don't
bag of slugs; with the. emotional girls' mother. His plan? Take 'ein understand the sexUal.· harUsment
•
&lt;lepths of a 4-year-old who's lost 10 Canada!ll
issue. I IIR a male com~ lXIIINEW YORK (AP)- "Child of the tce cream fn&gt;m a sugar cone.
Given that Il.ue-Margaret raised · sultant IIIII have worked ror 20
Bride," a preposterpus, i~f~nHere's the rosier of mutant chit- these bratty, selfish, emotionally dilferentcompllllies in my life. :::.
·somehow entertammg dren:
retarded
is it
surprise
fYCscen
kindofhnnrent
. By SC01T WILLI,.,.MS ·
AP Television Writer

wlt\lle SC~UP stink.ll but dill's the way
it is llld I see no !diet in sight. Do .
you? -- NO NAME ON LONG
ISLAND ·
.
·
~ DEAR ·LONG ISLAND: You
don!t seem 111 reali2ic lhll
laws

'

Sundav• ·

1

!healers nationwide today.
In remarks before the viewing,
Stone said, "I'm so glad that here
tonight, and a'l over the country
tomorrow, we finally will get out .
into what Thomas Jefferson called
the free market of ideas."
The movie "w ill cease from
being precensorcd and prciudgcd,"
he said.
Some of those involved in the
film hope it will help the city overcome its decadcs'old guilt complex.
"Dallas just drew the unlucky
bean, it happened to be the place
where it happened," said Jim
Marrs, author of "Crossfire; The
Plot That Killed Kennedy,'' one of
the two books Stone based his film
· on.
Marrs, who has taught the "JFK
Assassination
Conspiracy
Revealed" course at the University
of Texas at Arlington, compared
the film to Stone's acclaimed Vietnam War epic "Platoon."
· "'PiatoOl'i' was not a factual
movie but it told the truth of Vietnam," Marrs said. "!think we

B-1

'

·m:es ..-

I

By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
PO~ROY - Several properties
in Meigs County are under consideration as potential sites for a medium security state prison, and community_!9.aders hpve come out in
vocal support of such a facility.
Governor George V. Voinvoich
announced earlier this mqnth that
Meigs County, along with Belmont
and Noble Counties, is being considered as the home of one of four
new medium-security prisons to be
built in Ohio. Sites for three of the
fac 'il ities have.been determined,
with the fourth to be located in one
of the three Soinhern Ohio counties.
Under Governor Voinovich's

• Econamle~l C111mlc Hilt ·
• Hntt WIIIMIII Ctllllf
Ftmtl

o,mu.. -

79.88

duced in the Legislature since
Kevorkian announced he would aid
terminally ill people who wanted to
kill themselves.
·
One bill would regulate assisted
suicide, another would ban it and a
third would create a commission to
deal with issues of death and dying.

7"1U

IIOIIL-.99.11

bers. h received its name from two
W.Qrld War I veterans, George
Lewis and qarles Manley. The
charter was i.ssued from Ohio
.Department Headquarters on April
8, 1938. Florence Richards, a member, was elected in June 1975 as
Eighth District President. She
served her term and pan of another.
Guests of the party were Rev.
and Mrs. Gilben Craig Jr., Mr. and ,
Mrs. Risden Miller, Ira Patterson, · '
Robert Casey, !lobart Goggins,
Minnie Doss, Cecj) Vinson, and
Ramadon Mohammed.
The president, Lonene Goggins,
asked for remarks from the guests.
The next meeting will be held
the second January with Louella
Patterson as hostess.

12 Strctiono, M PogH
A lllultimldia Inc. Nowop- ,

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, December 22, 1991

.Colll!henour, 32, who were also
involved in the stabbing, were
treated and released, a hospital
spokeswoman said.
Many details about the stabbing
haven't been released. However, a
sheriff's department spokesman
said that the fighting took place
outside the'club.
'
Gallia County Sheriff Dennis
Salisbury commented Saturday

son Club near Gallipolis Friday
morning. White later died at the
Holzer Medical Center from
wounds inflicted in the incident.
In addition to White, the state
contends Simonaux stabbed three
other people.
.
Daniel Darst, 27, was in stable
condition at HMC, a nursing super'
visor said late Saturday morning.
James Taylor, 25, and Dennis
•

14.99

I

519291

34.99

8·POCKET ·1
HANDYMAN'S APRON
HMvy IUidt, ICIIUIII """' 28

lo41lnohw .... a.

..

S20ft4

TWO·DRAWER TOOl CHEST

HMYy pugo, olool, coilecllock .,d

·

'

22.99

7.99
7P&lt;.

472SU

Ill

6JS02

·
'"''"t' a o HI·SPEED CORDlESS
10.99r-v...n ...., SCREWDRIVER
...~~~
rum, l~~·~~I~9J;I~H~,~~·s''~'l1~~~~~====~
... .......
COMPOUND

MJTRE
SAW

15

CHILD'S RECLINERS.~......................~$49 -

2~~D,AA

SOFA &amp; CHAIR•••• ~. •...............~•••)

IAlllRIIS

plan; 12 new prisons and other correctional facilities will be built as a
way of relieving crowded prison
conditions statewide.
The I ,250 bed prison 10 be
located in Southern Ohio will cost
an estimated $25 million to build.
When completed, the prison is
expected to employ as many as 300
people.
Although no Meigs County sites
have been "officially" submit)ed to
the slate for ·consideration, county
officials had earlier mentioned a
128-acre plot located in Pomeroy
which had previously been car ·
marked for future county development.
That property is located off
Hiland Road so uth of Veterans

-.J'629U

.• i

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)United Steelworkers union officials
said their complaints against
Ravenswood Alummum Corp. have
been vindicated by the issuance of
231 safety . and health citations
against the eompany.
.
The citations issued by the
federal Occupational Safety and
Health Administration Friday cenlered on a high rate of work time
lost by workers at the plant and carried $604,~00 .in proposed fines.
The company has 15 working
days to respond, said agency
spokeswoman Kale Dugan:
OSHA's action "completely vjndicates what the Steelworkers have
been saying about Ravenswood all
along," said Bill Doyle, vice president of Steelworlters Local5886.
"We said they probably weren't
recording (injuries) properly,"
· Doyle said. "'rliey have a record of
11\ling cited,:.
~• _
,

Ravenswood Aluminum officials
declined immediate comment on.
tile citations Friday, saying they
still haven't.reviewed the citations,
spokeswoman Debbie Boger said.
Ravenswood and about 1,700
members of Steelworkers Local
5886 are involved in a labor 'dispute, The worlters have been,off the
job since Nov. I, 1990, when their .
contract expired.

'morning that phone c~lls have been death of another. Whoever violates bond.
According the Ohio Revised
received threatening the Addison this section is guilty of murder.
At the prosecutors request, act- Code, murder is punishable by an
Club if the owner kept it open.
Gallia County Prosecutor Brent · ing Judge D. Dean Evans dropped, indefinite tenni of imprisonment of
Saunders said Saturday that other at the objection of Simonaux' attor- . nml ~suhan 15 years to life. In
charges may' be pending against ney, Ronald R. Calhoun, a mtsde- addtbon, the offender may be fined
meanor .char~e of disorderly con- not more than $15,000:
Simonaux.
.
A prehmmary heanng has been
Simonaux is currently' accused duct by mtoxtcaudli.
Evans
set
cash
bond
at
scheduled
for Monday, Dec . 23 , at
of violating section 2903.02 of the
$1
00,000
,
denying
Simonaux
'
.
3:30
p.
"
m.
at
the G.allipolis MuniciOhio Re~ised Code, which states
atto
rney's
request
for
·a
$10,000
pal
Court:
,
no person shall purpose Iy cause.the

129.~9
162931

.....; ..

UDJlNT 10
KEROSENE HEATER

0.
11105111 HEAlER
S71611 129 99

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

SAVE 10% OFF CISII,, &amp;CARRY ANY 10M
OfiEN IIIONDAY 1HAU IATURDAY t:OOA.II. ''11L 1:00 P.M.
, IIIIDAY t2 NOON '1L 1:00 P.M.

O'DElL

Off 1y. 7Ott 141 - 411LIS IN GlltDIAIY
614-446-3151
•
,
......... ... .
~ -~

634 E, MAIN ST.

1 .

-

'

The wOrkers say they were
locked out. The company says
they're on strike.
The investigation began June 23
after complaints were filed br a
worker
and
the
Umted
Steelworkers union. · It initially
focused on conditions resulting in
"a couple of accidents,"' Dugan,
said.
·
Continued on A-3

nuclear weapons are strewn renege
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) on promises to impose strict con- Striking workers and manag er~ at
trois, they can expect a very rocky the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffu91on
relationship with Washington, Plant have said they will try to
according to U.S. officials.
meet more often in hopes of rcsolvBut with no history of demo- ing lengthy contract negotiations.
REVIEWING PROJECT- Here Bill Miller,-left, Middleport's
era tic practices or free market . - Officials of Martin Mliri ella
director; discusses progress with Brian Sayers of the
development
economies, they will not be held to Energy Systems and Oil , Chemical
Alan
Stone
Co.
surveying team. Sayers said he ·expects the work to
exacting standards and can expect and Atomic Workers' Local 3-689
U.S. diplomatic recognition, begin- met in Cincinnati for about seve"' - be completed in latdleb~uary. 'fhe bank reinforcement was necessitated because Of Se!ere .erpsion.
ning for some in the last days of'· hours Thursday but said they were
, 1991.
'· talking, not negotiating.
Secretary of State .James A.
Martin Marieua operate s the
Baker Ill preached adherence. to plant for the U.S. Departm ent of
such democratic practices as pro- Energy.
'
Local 3-689 President John
tecting minorities and peaceful
political evolution on his trip last Knauff said the talks were "open
week to Russia, Ukraine, Byelorus- and honest but nothing to be opti.. sia, Kazakhstan and Kirghizia.
mistic about."
·
imminent threat grant was obtamed
8y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
from
the Ohio Department of
Dutifully, the leaders Of all five
The union hopes the company
Times-Sentinel Staff
Development.
republics, including Ukrainian will allow local management to
President Leonid M. Kravchuk, take a more direct role in negotia MiDDLEPORT - R.Qpair__gf the_ " Another $30,000_w11S.awarded- J!JOsLrccently a senior Gommunist tions, Knauff said.
crodmg Ohio River bank near the 10 the v1llage by the Comm•sstonparty official, publicly declared
Middlcport sewage lagoons is crs from the Commumty Developthey were enraptured with Baker's
underway.
mcnt Block G~t Program, and the
principles.
Tota l cost of the project is . v•llagc put m $12,000 toward the
"They embraced the principles
$741.300.
·
total cost.
. .
almost like a Bible," a close aide
Con tractor on the JOb IS th e
A- threat that the bank might
to Baker confided to r.eporter.s
weake n enough to allow the Alan Stone Co. of Chesterhill.
aboard his U.S. Air Force jet.
sewage from the lagoons to seep .
The work IS ex~e.c ted to be
Ukrainian citizens ace able to
into the Ohio River prompted the • completed somcume m. late Febru~
stand. outside Kravchuk's opulent
U.S. Corps ofEnginecrs.two years ary, accordmg to Bnan Sayers,
palace and hurl invective at him,
ago to declare the erosion an cmer- . who •s a member of the survey
Kravchuk ~id Wednesday night, "
gcncy.
crew wil;h th~ Stone Co. In addition
to personnel from Stone, there ts an
and not be toUched by police.
·
"No one has b~n arrested for
on-site
engineer from the U. S.
At that time the project wl)Sput
that or will ever be arrested for
Corps
of
Engineers to supervise the
at the top of a list of erosion prbb:
that,'· he sAid.
.
lem areas along the Ohio River, work progress.
Bake( is inclined to give
The two lagoons, each more
accordi ng to Mid41eport Mayor
Kravchuk and the others the benefit
than
1,000 feet long, are located on
Fred Hoffman, and tbe Corps made
or the doubt.
village
propeny in the area below
a $500,000 commitment to correc· The democratic principles "are
Hobson
which was annexed to
tive work.
DAYS UNTIL
not conditions," a senior U.S. offiMisldlepon
last year.
Through efforts of the Meigs
cial said Friday night. " They arc .
'1\ccording to Bill Miller, Mid·
CHRISTMAS
County Commissioners and MidContinued on A-6
Continued on A·4
dleport village officials, a $199,300

Work underway
.
..
on erosion proJect

BENCH
TABlE SIN

houn bum time..

.

rock· down the siO!Ie to another piece or equipment which packs II against the bank. The rock
is put .on top or a rabric filter .wbich holds the
san~ and gravel soil mixture. against the ·bank to ·
prevent future erosion.

BR USSELS, BELGIUM (AP)
- The Bush administration is setting limited standards for the. new
countrij&lt;s emerging from the crumbling SbvietUnion except on one
front: controlling nuclear weapons.
If the four 011 whose soil 27,000

I0 llch 2 hp 1!@1:11!1

9ft.,..99

PACR:ING IT IN ·' Trucks are hauling in
load after
or soil and stone to be used in
restructuri11g the river bank near the Middleport lagoons. Here an excavator transfers the

Piketon union,
Administration takes soft m1anagement
approach to new republics ·agr·ee to ta~ks .

~tatAIGWil

0

Memorial Hospital and is currently
the location of the Meigs EMS
radio tower .and a Pomeroy Village
water tank. However, it has been
learned that the property falls short
of acreage requirements set forth
by the stale for the new facility. ·
Now, county officials and members of the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce are exploring other
site options.
The announcement from Governor Voinovich that Meigs County
was "in the running" for the new
facility c~e only after a letter was
sent to· the state from 'Meig~ County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill. Crow's letter asked
that Meigs County be considered
Continued on A-7

OSHA cites RACfor
231 alleged violations

219.99

•

50s,

sought in Meigs County

10,000 BTU, double

'

Partly cloudy. High today in mid

Potential ·prison sites

• Dalgnllllcw 24-Hr.

••

· Along the river ,............. Bl,8
Business/Farm ...............D1-8
Classified ....................... DJ-7
Dea.ths...............,................ A3
Editorai ..........:..................A2 I
General ........ ;.... ,............El-8
Sports .. .'........................... Cl-8 ·
Weather........ ,..................A·4

-

••

.

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALL'IPOLIS - A Pomeroy
man accused of murdering a Gal·
lipolis man early Friday morniog
plead not guilty during his arraignment in Gallipolis Municipal Court
Friday afternoon.
Lloyd A. Simonaux, 25, is
acc used of stabbing 31-.year-old
Terry E. White outs.ide of the Addi-

.__.. . _.. 32

't

f

Meigs man Pleads not guilty to murder charge

have that situation here. l think the
movie told the truth."
Last spring, Stone lobbied Dallas County commissioners for use
of the former Texas School Book
Depository, now a government
office building, where Oswald was
perched on the sixth Door.
Stone spent about a month in
Dallas, hired local actors and featured other 'historic sites: Dealey·
Plaza; the rooming house where
Oswald stayed; and the Texas Theater, where he was arrested.
Downtown, trees were trimmed
to their 1963 height and street signs
were changed to preserve the look
of the motorcade route. A fake
masonry facade was constructed to
make the book depository appear as
it did 28 years ago.
Sandy McDonough, 49, who
appears as an extra said, called the
movie "spellbinding."
" I was one of those ,who fully
believed in the Warren Commis-.
sion. I gues.s back in those days I
was programmed to believe that
way. Here of late I' ve changed my
mind," he said.

'

•

Inside ......

·

Vol. 28, No. 48

199°
- . $9900
,SWIVEL ROCKER ••••••••••••••••••••••"••••••
. CHEST of DRAWERS........$4495
4 DRAWER
s
·oo
GUN CABINET............................... 199
fiiDmE &amp; 4 P'•DDED CHAI.RS · s149oo· -

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - A
jud~e ruled that Madonna's biB
btoiher may punue,his. liP linsin•
antl.:dna Cllllet, delpite alawswt
.by his rormer ~~W~~pr. '

.-1

Christmas oilly 3 days off. Are you
organized?~- Beat
of the
-B-5
.
- .Bend
.

Copyrighted 1991

VI'U ·FURNITURE

'
Supports
brother

•

Journal describes Christmas Eve in
Gallipolis in 1873 -·James Sands-A 6-7

·Legion holds. holiday dinner

I

•

'

Prosecutor says grand jury wi~l
decide on charges against Kevor~ian
By ALAN L. ADLER
After Kevorkian helped Janet
Associated Press Writer
Adkins of Penland, Ore., commit
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - A suicide in June 1990, Oakland
prosecutor said he won't allow his County Circuit Judge Alice Gilben
county to become a "suicide ordered Kevorkian not to use his
mecca" and is counting on a grand suiCide machine again or otherwise
jury to indict suicide-machine help anyo(le commit suicide.
inventor Jack Kevorkian on murder
Several bills have been introcharges.
. But Oakland .Countr Prosecutor
Richard Thompson sa1d he would
drop the case if the grand jury
The Christmas party for the
doesn:t indi~t Kevorkian in the American Le~ion Lewi s Manley
October deaths of two Michigan Auxiliary Unit No. 263 was held
women. ·
recently in Gallipolis with Dorothy
_,''I can think of no fairer process Casey as chairman.
· ihan to ·leave the dec is ton of
Each member brought a covered
whether to charge Mr. Kevorkian dish and turkey dinner was also
up Ill his fellow citizens," Thomp- served.
·
son said.
The Christmas theme was curA medical examiner ruled ried out in the decorations and a
Wednesday that the deaths assisted gift exchange from a lighted tree
by Kevorkian were homicides. not was held. Games were also played.
,suicides. .
Margaret Bowles, immediate
Thompson also said he would past president, gave the wekome.
seek to have Kevorkian held in A brief histo'ry of the unit was
con'teinpt of court for violating' a give~ by Lula Hampton, the only
jqe's order, imposed after a 1990 lividg charter member. Mrs. HampassiSted suicide, that he refrain ton was also the flfSt secretary. ·
from helping people .kill themThe unit was organized Nov. 1,
. selves.
1937 in Middlepon with 16 mem· A ftrSt-degree murder charge in
that case was thrown out by a judge
last year because Michigan has no
law prohibiting physician-assisted
1
suicide.
The 63-yeai-old retired pathologist's medical license was suspend·
· cd- after the--:Octobcr deaths.
Kevorkian is appealing thil suspension.
Kevorkian's 'auomey, Geoffrey ~
Fiegcr, exchanged barbs w i1h
Thompson ·in separate news conferences.
...,
Fieger accused Thompson of
waging a vendetta against the doctor, while Thoi!Jpson said
Kevorkian and Fieger were
"attempting to turn these serious
. proceedings in111 a media circus.' ;
· "As a prosec;,uting attorney, I
am not going to sit on my hands
- and-by-default-tum Oakland-eoun~
ty into asuicide mecca," he said.
111ft
A
Dr. Ljubisa J. Dragovic, the
Oakland County medical exami~r.
filed amended death certificates
Wednesday for Marjorie Wantz,
S8, of Sodus, and Sherry Miller,
43, of Roseville, saying their deaths
were homicides. The two died Oct.
ZJ after using suicide devices
Kevorkian created.
.

•

.

'JFK' a hit with moviegoers at
Dallas premiere; 1,OOU pack theater
By MISE D~AGO
Associated Press Writer
DALLAS (AP) -Not everyone
ar the Dallas premiere of "JFK"
was persuaded by director Oliver
Stone's conspiratorial view of John
F. Kennedy's murder, but many left
tile !healer impressed by the contro~ersial film.
· "I think it's a very dangcwus
film, but on the other hand it's
beautifully made," said Patricia
Patlerson, one of about 1,000 people who packed into Thursday's
premiere.
.
The' 3-hour movie starring
Kevin Cosmer as the New Orleans
district attorney who investigated
the case puts forth the view that
Kennedy's murder was arranged by
the military military, Central intelligence Agency and corporate
defense contractois. It rejects the
Warren Commission repon, which
said Lee Harvey Oswald, acting
alope, shot the president
Since the plot became widely
· known, Stone has beelf exCoriated
by historians, public officials and
media critics. The film opens in

Youngstown tops Marshall25-17 -C 1

Mcintyre
liked winter
.most of all

· Ofl

will undertake a
pregnantl)e "family ·.t~•m•"
· ·
·
~;~~1~?;
and mysle- cy to $ive Hix a
ri
pregnant.
and Who?
of its flaws.
Is •t any surprise that her husAnd what flaws they are! And
never explained. Kristy plays band of a few weeks decides 1) that
what a family! It's like watching a the emotional pincushion for her · he doesn't want to be a daddy, 2)
movie entided ''Train Wreck of the tacky sibs.
that she's being manipulative an'll
- Anne (Anne Marie Bobby), 3) he's going to deal with it by
Damned.''
Ru~ McClanahan, far from her
twice-divorced at 26, is a really walking out?
"Golden Girls" persona, plays nasty piece of work. She runs a
Not in Hollywood.
-,
Margaret, a newlywed, the mother stop sign for her "cute meet" with
Thanksgiving comes, and Hix is
of four adult children, who discov- her love interest. policeman Nick.
invited to the family dinner by
ers she·'s pregnant at an age when
- Dennis (John Wesley Shipp spunky Mluy, who seems desperate
most women are becoming grand- - "The Flash "~) . 34, divorced, is to effect a reconciliation. "I don't
mothers
·• ·
·
astonished when he's fired from his want to bring a baby into a situaTonight's fwure ,is a sequel to a fast-track stockproker's job by the tion where there are doubts and
previous CBS· telemovie, "Chil- w.oman he's having sex with io the resentments,'' Rue-Margaret says.
dren of the Bride," in which Rue office. He returns to the nest, where
Of COURSE there are sibling
was wooed and won and wed by he meets his younger, even-less- conflicts and reconciliation . Of
mlllliY man Jobn Hix (Ted Shack- successful brother ...
COURSE the big payoff comes on
elford of "Knots Landing") to the
- Andrew (Concrr O'Farrell), Christmas Eve. Of COURSE the
chagrin of her grown children.
31, never married, but the father of finale is as mind-hogglingly con· Amd what children! Collective- two daughters, Jersey and Amy, trived as television can get.
who's returned to the nest, fleeing a
Isn't that w~y you're watching?
•

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ALL t WANT FOR CHRISTMAS- Cassandra Cox, age7, made·
sure she stopped by to see Santa Claqs before be headed ba~k to
the Nortb Pole to prepare for bls big olabt. Cassandra, daughter or
, L'ula Cox, told Santa that all she•wanted for Christmas was a bike,
She is a student at Greea Elementary, Triose still needing to show
. Santa their Christmas list' have until Monday, Dec. 23 between the
hobrs or 5:30-7:30 p.m . to visit hlm in his llouse)ocated in the city
· park. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kris Cochran)
••

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,

,

•'

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