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                  <text>Page-1 0-Tt:1e Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

It i~ time to reflect on
where you have been this year
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
several parades to be held over the teer work with the MGM Scout
Sentinel News Staff
following weeks as war in the Gulf District. .
John M. Causey entered a plea
It's almost 1992. Happy New continued.
year!
The new elevator at the Meigs of guilty to a. charge of voluntary
Isn't it nice to throw away the County Courthouse was dedicated manslaughter in the Meigs County
old calendar, pick up a new one as the John Stahl Elevator. Stahl Common please Colin for his role
and start all over again.
was a longtime courthouse custodi- in the October, 1990 death of his
The time has come 10 reflect on an.
next-door neighbor, Edmund
where you've been and where
John Lewis Young was found Shamp.
you're going and it's reassuring to guilty of kidnapping following five
Richard E. Jones was appointed
believe that the mistakes of tHe past and half hours of deliberation by a chairman of the Meigs County
will remain just that.
jury. He was returned to West Vir- Republican Party's Executive
Look at the New Year as a time ginia to face a 15 count indictment Committee replacing George
of challenge and promise, as anoth- following his conviction in Meigs Collins, now working in the Marier chance 10 go for those dreams, to County.
etta office of ODOT.
reach for the best and 10 forget the . Local businessman Charles
FormJ:r Meigs County County
Lcgar, a former Pomeroy mayor Auditor Gordon Caldwell and longrest.
But 1991 has not been without and long-time Pomeroy fire chief, time Pomeroy businessman Leo
events creating major changes in died in Grant Hospital in Colum- Vaughan died.
communities as well as in the lives bus.
Demolition began at Kerr's Run
of those who live here.
The threat of losing 1,258 jobs in preparation for the highway conSome long-established busi- at the Meigs Mines owned by AEP struction at (he intersection of
nesses, like Excelsior Salt Works because of the costly compliance Route 33 and 124.
of Pomeroy, have closed or are with the Clean Air Act surfaced for
Pomeroy Village Council and
preparing to close. Several others the first time, and still hasn 't gone several church groups protested the
under economic pressure are lrying away.
issuance of a liquor license for
new management as a way 10 revi"Smi!ty's Bar" in an East Second
talize business.
FEBRUARY
Stteet siOrefront The license, howNearly 200 coal miners have
The Racine Emergency Squad ever, were issued and the Bar
lost their jobs and hundreds of oth- covered a huge evergreen tree at opened.
ers live under the threat of being the firehou se wilh more than a
About 60 students of Southern
without jobs because of the Clean thousand red, white and blue rib- High School formed the letters
Air Act by which utility companies · bons to show their support for the "USA:" by candlelight at · a
must comply, one way or another.
troops in the Persian Gulf.
"Thanksgiving in March" service
Ravenswood employees have
The United Mine Workers made held at the high school in obsermarked more than a year of being American Electric Power aware vance of the end of the Gulf War.
off the job due to a lock-out as they that they are in support of installaArea miners and their families
call it, a strike as the company calls tion of scrubbers at the Gen. James joined in a "give scrubbers a fair
it. Both have had a financ1al impact M. Gavin Plant and will do every- chance" rally in Columbus with
on businesses in the Bend area.
thing possible to protect jobs at the American Electric Power being
On the positive side, Rutland's mines.
urged to install the equipment so
Approximately 600 people par- that coal from the Meigs Mines can
2.2 million waste water collection
and se-wage treatmeiu system got ticipated in a parade in support of continue to be used.
under construction, as did the $1.2 Operation Desert Storm in Racine.
million expansion of the Meigs The American Legion led the
APRIL
County Depanment of Human Ser- parade to the high school gymnasiPetitions containing 2,327
vices building in Middleport and um where the Southern Band and names of area residents in a show
the $750,000 Ohio Jl,iver erosion Choir performed and several minis- of suppon for keeping the Meigs
project below Hobson.
ters spoke.
Mines open and in production were
Meigs voters in a special elec- mailed out to American Electric
The intersection at U.S. ltoute
33 and State Route 124 in upper tion turned down tax levies for the Power, state and local officials by
Pomeroy was completed, and last Carleton School/Meigs Industries Mayor Fred Hoffman.
week plans were announced by the and the Southern Local School DisThe public defender's program
Ohio Department of Transportation trict.
was credited with saving Meigs
John D. Dowler was appointed County money in the defense of
for an $11 million first segment
co nstruction of the Pomeroy- 10 replace Democrat Joe Leach as indigent criminals.
head of Marietta's office of the
Ravenswood connector road.
A ci vii suit was filed in Meigs
Ohio
Department of Transporta- County Common Pleas Court
1991 came in with a flood, then
came the Gulf War, the hot dry tion. The appointment came after against Jason Riggs, Douglas Harsummer, and the full-blown reces- weeks of speculation that Meigs ris and others by the family and
County Engineer Phil Roberts estate of ViciOr Will.
sion of fall.
would get the appointment.
And we remember........ .
The First Southern Baptist
The names of the more than 200 Church dedicated its new building
service men and women serving in located on Pomeroy Pike.
JANUARY
There was plenty of action in Operation Desert Storm were
A three mile nature trail at
Pomeroy to usher in the New Year. placed on a banner 10 hang in The Camp Kiashuta blazed by the
As the bells rang flood waters were Locomotion.
Civihan Conservation Corps and
Jim Tompkins of Am erican orchestrated by the Meigs County
already across Main Street and
merchants were busy unloading Elecllic Power and Bill Oiler of the Park District Board was opened.
shelves of merc~andise as the UMW workers at Southern Ohio
More than 1200 children turned
murky Ohio lapped at their doors. Coal mel with Middleport Village .out on Easter Sunday for an egg
Before the first day of the New Council to discuss lhe Implications hunt at Middleport's Hartinger
Year had passed flood waters of the Clean Arl Act and how it Park.
reached 49.4 feet, 3.4 feet above will affect the local operation of the
Conlnlcts tolaling nearly $2 milflood level and several businesses Gavin plant and the lives of miners lion dollars were awarded on the
of high sulfur coal.
Rutland waste water collection and
saw a foot or so of water inside.
Demolition began on Nyc sewage treatment system.
Several emergency situations
Heavy wind and rain storms
were created by the floods around Avenue in Pomeroy as the Ohio
Department
of
Transporlation
predamaged
the historic Meigs County
the county. Five hours of one
for
highway
work
at
the
pared
courthouse in Chester and the
man's New Year's Day was spent .
on the top of his truck which had mlcrsection of U. S. Route 33 and Meigs County Commissioners
autho(ized repairs tolaling $7,209.
flooded out as he attempted to go Slate Roule 124.
More than a 100 Ravenswood
Those opposed to the proposed
through high water, three families
had to be evacuated in Rutland, and Aluminum Corporation workers closing of the Portland Elememary
five trailers had to be moved in from Ohio filled the Meigs County School by the Southern Local
Common Pleas courtroom to dis- School Disllict Board of Education
Racine.
By Jan. 3,just two days after the cuss their three month old labor staged a successful protest rally at
river crested, most merchants had dispute with a representative from the school. Just a couple of weeks
cleaned up and it was back 10 busi- Congressman Clarence Miller's later the board voted to keep the
school open.
office.
ness as usual.
Discontinuance of the Elders for
A Red Cross l:&gt;isaster Service
Attorney I. Carson Crow was
team moved into Meigs County 10 elected a director of the Farmers Options pro~ram proposed by Gov.
access flood damage and assist the Bank and Savings Co. succeeding George Vomovich sparked local
his father, Fred W. Crow, Jr. who concern from the Meigs County
victims.
The Meigs County Commis- resigned from the board.
Council on Aging for those resi Kelley Grueser was the grand deniS who have come to depend on
sioners adopted a $3 'fllillion ~ener ­
al fund budget. Title 10 the h1storic champion and Brandi Reeves the home services.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple with runner up in the annual Meigs
Stale Rep. Michael C. Shoemaker came ui Meigs County to speak
land adjacent 10 the Meigs County County Spelling Bee.
Central Trust Co. of Middleport at the Jefferson-Jackson dinner
Court House was accepted by the
made a nice donation 10 Middleport held by the Meigs County DemoCommissioners from the Masons.
Twenty-six welfare recipi ents Mayor Fred Hoffman to be used as cratic Pany.
lames Diehl, longtime Meigs
were charged with fraud and part of the local share of monies
ordered to pay back $27,566 in for the $112,500 improvement pro- County educaiOr, died.
ject at the levee.
AddingiOn, Inc. of Ashland, Ky.
benefits.
purchased the .Jaymar Coal Co.
A budget with anticipated
MARCH
which was expected 10 terminate
receipts of $7,793,300 and expenThe
candidacy
petitions
of
approximately
100 local jobs.
ditures of $8,949,200 was adopted
by the Meigs Local Board of Edu- Republican Fred Hoffman who
Fifty-six Southern students were
cation. The $75,000 deficit will filed for mayor of Middleport, and recognized for academic excellence
come from a spending reserve of Democrat Larry Wehrung, who at a banquet held at Southern High
filed as a candidate for mayor of School.
$310,189, it was noted.
As hope faded for avoiding war Pomeroy were not validated by the
The Eastern Concen band made
in the Persian Gulf, signs of con- Board of Elections. Both later ran history when it achieved its first
cern and compassion began appear- for the positions \&gt;" the indepen- superior rating at a stale band condent balloL
ing in Bend area communities.
leSt .
Jobless statislics for January
An $80,000 in Issue 2 monies
The rec~tion complex at Royal
Oak Resort Club was named in were released by the OBES and was approved by the Ohio Public
honor of Horace Karr, founder of Meigs .County's stood at 11.6 per- ' Works Commission for the Pearl
Street reconstruction project in
the pal'k in the mid-1960's. The cent.
School proficiency test results Middleport.
resort was earlier sold to Family
Meigs County's unemployment
Reson, Inc., William Stuckey, vice showed the academic perfonnance
of
Meigs
County
students
considerdrogped
to II percent.
president and manager.
ably
below
the
state
average.
Meigs
.Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's new Executive Direc- County teenagers recorded the third
Leverage is the use of borrowed
tor/Development Director Eliza- highest birth rateS in the state.
assets by a business 10 enhance the
beth Schaad, reported for her ftrSt
Meigs County Treasurer George return of the owner's equity. The
Collins was appointed 10 the posi· · th h ·
day at work.
The war to drive the army of lion of District 10 Administra.tive . expectabon IS at t e mterest rate
Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait Assistance, Ohio Department of charged· will be lower than the
began and The Daily Sentinel put Transportation. Howard Frank was earnings made on the money.
out an "Extra':, the first on the appointed to fiU Collins' unexpired
The International Monetary
term of ueasurer.
s~ree~S in this area with the printed
Ted Reed·Of Farmers Bank pre- Fund·is a supply of money supponword concerning the start of the
sented Mayor Fred Hoffman w1th a ed by subscriptions of member
Persian Gulf War.
A yellow ribbon campaign in sizable donation toward the local nations, for the purpose of stabilizsupport of those fighting in the Per- share of funds needed for the levee ing international exchange and promoting orderly and balanCed lrade.
sian Gulf was in full swing in improvements in Middleport.
Member
nations may obtain forTwo ·hundred of the GOP faith· Meigs County.
eign
currency
needed, mating it
A JIIOUP or Eastern High School ful turned out for the Lincoln Day ·
possible to correct temporary mal.rudents carrying 1he American flag dinner.
adjustments
in their balance of payGeorge
Wright,
Danny
Will
and
and signs With f11CS&gt;&lt;16...S ~f ' "!"Jport
~ent
~
"
'!!h0!Jt
~l!rrt"nr:y flepret:iRMary
Powell
were
rcc~;;~:z::!
~~:!
for Desert Storm paraded through
tlOn.
presented
pla9ues
for
their
volunTuppers Plains. It was tb~ first of
;

.,

· Vol.

167
1891

'
2S.CUona, 12 Pogos 21-.la
A IIUIIlmedlo lno. -.,..,... ,

December31, 1991

Electric customers get
temporary reprieve
BODY REMOVED -New York City police
and EMS workers remove a body from the gym
at City College in New York Saturday night.
Eight people died and at least 28 were injured in

2~.5 percent rate

a stampede outside the gym berore the start or a
sold-out rap celebrity basketball game. (AJ'
Laser Photo)

Eight die in stampede
NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor
David Dinkins ordered an investigation in10 the deaths of eight people crushed outside a set of gymnasium doors in a stampede to ,get
into a charity basketball game put
on by rap stars.
The crowd surged iniO a narrow
stairwell leading to the already
overcrowded gym at City College
in Harlem. Most victims fell down

the stairs·and became pan of a pile thau also assigned a homicide prosof bodies against the gym doors ecutor 10 investigate possible crimiSaturday night
nal charges.
•'We're going 10 find out why it
"It was a cone effect," said rescue worker Sy Collins. "There happened, how it happened, who's
were bodies on the floor and r,:ople responsible, if someone was
were just running over them . '
derelict." Dinkins said.
Dinkins on Sunday assembled a
The mayor said he had no
task fori;e that included police, fire, answers Sunday, but he did say the
medical and university officials. event was oversold.
District Attorney Robert Morgen-

PAITY WEAVER

.

By Ed Peterson
Social Security Manager in
Athens
Social Securily beneficiaries
will receive statements in the mail
in January showing the benefits
they received in 1991. This statement is used to determine if any
benefits are subject to Federal
income tax.
At least nine out of ten of those
who receive the statement - Form
SSA 1099 - will not have 10 pay
taxes on their Social Security benefits because their total income is

less than the taxable ceiling. If you
receive Social Security benefits as
your only source of income, you
are unlikely to owe Federal taxes
on the benefits.
An Internal Revenue Servic e
(IRS) worksheet - IRS Notice 703
- comes with the benefit statement. The worksheet shows you
how to determine if .your Social
Security benefiiS are subject 10 tax.
If, after completing the worksheet,
yo~ have questions on filing, you
should call the nearest IRS office
and ask for Publication 915.
To be taxable, you and your

JANKNAPP ,

:Residents
:look toward
:new year

Importance of benefit statements
.

LINDA MAYER

spouse's adjusted gross income
plus nontaxable interest, plus onehalf of your Social Security benefits would have to exceed certain
base amounts of income. The base
amounts taxable are:
- $25,000, if you file as a single
taxpayer, or if you are married and
filing a separate return and did not
live with your spouse at any time
during the year;
- $32,000, if you are married
and file a joint return, or
- $0 if you are married 'and lived
with your spouse at any time during the year and ftled separately.

COLUMBUS, (AP) - Customers of two electric utilities were
temporarily spared higher rates
after the companies and state regulators agreed to delay increases
associated with the costs of building the Zimmer power plant.
The Public Utilities· Commissian of Ohio on Monday approved
a 10-day delay for a 28.5 percent
rate increase proposed by Colum- .
bus Southern Co. and allowed
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Elecllic 10 defer
its proposed 21.4 percent increase.
The $202 million Columbus
Southern increase was to have
takC/1 effect Friday.
PUCO Chairman Craig A. Glazer said he had pressed Columbus
Southern and groups opposed to
the utility's increase 10 keep negotiating.for a suilable increase.
"ln the spirit of cooperation and
continued negotiation, the parties
have agreed to postpone the rate
increase in an effort 10 achieve a
settlement," said Harry D. Post,
vice president of Columbus Southem.
The Ohio Office of Consumers'.
Counsel, which opposes the
increases, said it would join the
negotiations.
"We'U continue to put our best
effort forward in that direction;
however, if the settlement auempiS
fail, we and other group opposing
the increase are prepared 10 go to
•

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Congratulations, Meigs County!
Throu~h both the good times
and bad umes, you have kept your
collective chin up during the past
year. Bul 1991 is over, and as we
look IOward the new year, we can't
help but be optimistic.
The Daily Sentinel took·to the
streeiS over the holidays and surveyed citizens to see what's on
your mind as the new year gets
CINDY PRATER
~KEWALKER
underway.
Patty Weaver, a paralegal in the
"My wish for Meigs County is piness in the new year" for all of
law offices of Meigs County Prose- for everyone to 'take chargf and Meigs County..
,
- cuting Attorney .Steven L. Stocy, . work. in some way to make this a
"To my husband, Bill Prater,
has an optimistic wish for Meigs better place to live aM worlc," she who will graduate as a Registered
County in the new year.
continued. "I would also like to see Nurse from Hocking College by the ·
. "My wish for Meigs County in the Meigs County Infirmary end of 1992, I give my love and
NEW YORK (AP) - Lobster
1992 would be economic stability
receive their much-needed piano." support as he begins his new
parfait lOps the seven-course menu
regarding the,.AEP/Meigs Mines
"And last, but not least," Linda career."
¢'1,
for revelers willing to pay $110
issue and eco'llomic growth with
concluded, "my prayer is that God
Jan Knapp of Langsville, who is each to gorge in the new year at
the possibility of a new prison site
will ·bless us all and go with us a customer service specialist at
Alison, a trendy downtown reslauthat would create several 'hundred
through this new year."
Bank One's Rutland office, rememrant that has been booked for
new jobs for Meigs County",
"A prosperous new year for all bers loved ones who were lost in
weeks.
Weaver said.
Meigs Countians, and academic 1991, and says this about what she
Recession? Not at the opulent
..., wish for myself a hapPy new
excellence in the Meigs Local has learned from tl!at experience:
Rainbow Room, 65 stories above
year, surrounded by family and
School District" was the wish of "liS kind hearts are the gardens,
Manhattan's Rockefeller Center,
special friends."
Pomeroy resident Mike Walker. A kind thoughts are the roots, kind
where leggy showman Tommy
Linda Mayer of Pomeroy hopes
sports fan, Mike also included his words are the flowers, kind deeds
Tune
will tap. at a $395-a-person
that peace will prevail in the new
favorite teams in his new year's are the fruits."
black-tie
bash - tax, tip and bubyear.
wishes. Mike, who is employed by
Jan also offered two more
bly
excluded.
"My hope for 1992 is for a betAmerican Electric Power at Philip "thoughts 10 grow on" as her Meigs
After a year of scrimping a.nd
ter world where we can live in Sporn .Plant, staled that he hoped County neighbors enler iniO a new
worrying
about everthing from job
peace by learning io love one ' for a "TVC Championship for .the year: "Remember, that 'American'
security .10 credit card debts, many
another," she said.
Meigs Marauders football team and ends with 'I Can'!"
Americans are eagerly anticipating
Linda, who serves Farmers a Super Bowl championship for the
And finaUy, Jan offered ll)is bit
a
night of indulgence. Whether at
Bank and Savings Company as a Cleveland Browns."
.of advice, which we can all make
quiet
gatherings at home or at
customer service representative,
Meigs EMS Dispatcher Cindy into a useful New Year's resolupricey
prix fiXe restaurant parties,
also has a special wish for her com- Prater hopes for a "safe New tion: "Do something - either lead,
they
are
opening long-shut wallets
munity.
·
Year's holiday and health ~d hap- follow or get out of the way."
for New Y~'s Eve.
•
. ''People held back all year and

increase delayed 10 days

the hearing," said Beth Gianforcaro, spokeswoman for the agency
that represents consumers in utility
rate cases:
A bearing on Columbus Southem's rate increase request had been
set for Jan. 6. The utility requesled
that the hearing be delayed until
Jan. 13. It also said ·it would delay
imposing the increase until that
date.
Under state law, Columbus
Southern and CG&amp;E could begin
c)larging their cus10mers the higher
rates on Friday because the
requests will have been pending
275 days without a PUCO decision.
But if the PUCO later rejected
the increases or granted smaller
ones, the u~lities would have to
refund the difference, plus 10 percent interest, in the form of a temporary rate"reduction.
The rate for a residential cus, .
tomer using 700 kilowatt hours of
electricity per month would
increase $16.21 under the Columbus Southern plan. The current
monthly rate is $52.98, the utility
said.
·
The deferral for CG&amp;E is in
effect until the PUCO decides the
utility's rate case. The CG&amp;E rates
would brin~t in $204.8 million.
CG&amp;E spokesman Steve Brash
said the cost deferrals will allow
the company's current rates to stay
in effect for three months. He said
·co&amp;E now proposes to decide

Apri12 '.)'hether 10 impose the higherrates.
CG&amp;E estimates that the Zimmer operating and maintenance
costs total $80 million per year.
Permission 10 defer those expenses
allows CG&amp;E 10 protect Its 1992
corporate earnings by not having to
charge those costs against e&amp;n}ings,
Brash said.
Ms. Gianforearo said th{ OCC
opposed the CG&amp;E deferral.
..
"Our general position is that
this iu company that is in a very
healthy fmancial condition and was
not in need of deferring these op&amp;ating and maintenance costs," she
said.
The converted $3.4 billion Zimmer p1ant in Moscow, along the
Ohio River, began commercial
operation in March, 22 years after
construction began as a nuclear
power plant. The· project's original
_
cost was $240 million, but overrun~J--'~
and years of construction delays
and problems increased its price.
Zimmer's three owners Columbus Southern, CG&amp;E and
the Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. all have sought rate increases to
offset costs of converting the plant
from nuclear to coal-fired operations.
There was a settlement in the
Dayton case, reducing the DP&amp;L
rate increase from $186 million 10
•
$57 million.

New Year's :revelers,defy recession ·
wantiO blow it now," said Victor
Masullo, owner of Soho Wines &amp;
Spirits Lid.
In San Francisco, champagne
sales at Colt Liquors are going well
as customers say, "'Oil, to hell
with everything. It's Christmas ani!
New Year's,' said manager Paul
Riley.
For some, the focus is off alcohol and abundance in favor of quieter gatherings around the hearth.
"People are doing a lot of
things at home," said Liz Neuman,
president of Great Performances
Catering Inc. in Manhauan.
Neuman's company, like many
others, is sacrificing a bit of profit
10 keep the parties roUing.
In Atlanta, reservations are
steady at the Buckhead Life
Restaurant Group, which operates
six restaurants there. But
spokes man Brad Anderholm said

he wouldn't be surprised if couples
spend a bit less than the average.
$125 last year.
Fort Worlh, Texas, has taken
some heavy recession wallops this
yClli because of layoffs at companies ranging from General Dynamics Corp. to American Airlines. But
that hasn't held back New Year's
festivities at· warehouse-size Billy
Bob's Texas country and western
nightclub, which expects to be
filled 10 capacity.
For those unwilling to cast
financial caution 10 the wind, there
are First Night celebrations in
many cities that allow the reveler to
sample a variety of entertainment
for a single ticket.
First Night originated over a
decade ago in Boston, where it
atttacts more than 500,000 revelers.
It has since spread throughout
Continutd 011 pagt 3

the explosion wn1cn occurrell between 6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m., Sallaz
said. The cause of the explosion is
not yet known, Sallaz said. but
there was no evidence of natuzal
gas in the area.
Aeconling 10 Sallaz, no one was
present 81 the building at the time
of the explosion.
The Division · of Alcohol,

Tobacco and Firearms was 81 the
scene S81urday collecling Slllllples
which were sent 10 their lab in
Charleston.
· An investigation is ongoing with
A.T.F. and the Point Pleasant Police
Department, Sallaz Slid.
The Point Pleasant \l&gt;lunrcer
Fire Department also assisted at the

Schools, others dislike cuts Explosion causes $20,000 damage

'

lver

'et APol

1
•

••

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State education officials were
expecting Gov. George Voinovich
to cut state spending, but said that
doesn't lessen the impact those cuts
wiD have.
Regents Chancellor Elaine
Hairston said cuts Gov. George
Voinovich announced Monday will
Jiave a devastating effect on slate:
supported colleges and universities.
Voinovich ordered $196 million
in cuts to help deal with a $457

million slale budget deticit projected for the fiscal year ending June
30. The cuts take effeot Wednesday.
Higher education wiD be cut by
$57.2 million.
Ms. Hairston said colleges and
universities were reduced $44.9
million last Februar)IIO help solve
an earlier budget problem.
"Together, these cuts will force
virtually every institution in the
state to focus on crisis manage-

---Local briefs----.
Patrol probes two-car wreck
No injuries were reported in a two-car wreck on· slate Roule 338
in Letart Township Sunday afternoon.
Atcording to a report from the GaiJia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Eugene L. Porter, 44, of Belle, W.V.a., was westbound on Route 338 when an eastbound car driven by Jennifer L.
Couch, 22, of Pomeroy went left of center striking the left-rear of

fAKE THE KEYS

CAll ACAB .
TAKE ASTANO .

~~

.

The patrol listed damage to Porter's 1988 BMW and Couch's
1991 Honda as light

ment, instead of important issues
such as improving access, building
An estimated $20,000 damage
academic excellence and contribut- w~ the result of an explosion
ing 10 the economic growth of the which occurred Saturday evening at
state," she said. "The easy cuts the law offices of Shaw and Slein
have been made. We are coming on Main Stteet, Point Pleasant acperilously close to negatively cording 10 Point Pleasant l'citice
affecting the academic core or our Chief J.D. Sallaz.
colleges and universities."
A busted window, wall damage
Similar reaction came from as well as damage io a computer
Robert Moore, spokesman for the system in the secretary's office
Ohio Department of Education, . were listed as some of the results of
.
..
which will lose about $88.8 million
of its $3.4 billion annual budget.
But he said the department
uppreciates Voinovich' s decision to
limit its cuts 10 2.5 percent, compared with an average of 3 percent6 percent for most state agencies,
and to spare 172 poor school districts from any cuts.
"We would have been reeling,"
if the S~;hools had been cut 6 percent, Moore said.

.

scene.

WOIILDWMII

EMS units answer eight calls .
Eight caDs for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early Tuesday.
On Monday at 12:07 p.m., Racine unit went to Number Nine
Road for Carl Smith, who was taken to Veterans Memorial HOSpital.
• At 12:29 p.m., Pomeroy squad .went to Lakewood Road. Anthony
Perry was transported 10 Veterans. At 3:35 p.m., Syracuse unit went
• to Block Plant Road. Lillian Napper was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 3:57 p.m., Pomeroy unit went 10 Flatwoods Road. Tm.
Hoslcins was treated at the scene. At 5:17p.m., Pomeroy transported
· lj:oskins to Holzer. At 11 p.m., Racine unit went to Old Portland
Road. Jerry Hayman was taken 10 Veterans.
On Tuesday 8l 7:39a.m., Bashan unit wen110 Bashan !toad for a
chimney fue at the Tom McKay residence. At 7:45 a.m., Racine unit
went to the scene of that fue for Randy Friend, who was tle8led at
Ve1erans for smoke inhalation.
·
.

~~U.S.~ DflrrlljiQI'IIkWI

.,
\

,,

','';

Sourte: "2194 Daya ol war.·
Publishers Inc.

w.H. sn;!h

('

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'

LAST OmCIAL ACT· Outgolna Syracuse
Mayor Eber Pickens, tblrd from left, performed
bls last orfiCial duty IS mayor Monday night
when be swore in new mayor, Jim Pape, riRht,

IDd two COIIDCO.tn, SJmia tUlia tllelr oatil ~
omce are, Jell lo rlabt, BID Ro1ib aad Deulll

Wolfe, coundl membtn, Plck-.o~s and l'llpe.

•

..

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•.

•

••

111 Coart Street
~IOf,Ohlo

DEVOTED TO THB IN'l'BIUIIITB OJ TIIIIIIEJQS.IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publbbtr
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associatod Ptess,loland Daily Pross Association and
lbe American Newspaper Pllblisber Association.
LETI'ERS OP OPINION ue welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Alllettm ue subject to editing and must be sigoed with name,
addms and telepbooe number. No unsigned 1ettm will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addn11ing issues, not penonalities.

Resolutions of the
rich and famous
By USA LEVI'IT RYCKMAN
AP National Writer
Mike Royko doesn't make them, Andy Rooney won't say if he docs
and Bozo the Clown is too pooped from holiday appearances to come up
with a list. But when the rich and famous do make 1\jjaw Year's resolutions, r.hey sound a lot lite the ones everybody makes every year.
Aging sex kitten Joan Collins vows to exercise every day ("It is one I
make every year"), syndicated radio broadcaster Paul Harvey wants to
improve his golf game ("I'm emharassed ·to say it I'm a bogey golfer"),
and horror writer Stephen King promises to give up sweets ("No cookies,
cakes, pie or chocolate' ~). ·
And anyone who has sent recently sent a gift to "Today'.' show cohost Katie Couric will be happy to know she is resolved to write thank. you notes more promptly in 1992.
'
There are always those, of course, who aspire to something higher,
acuess Marlo Thomas among them.
"My wish for 1992 is that Americans will seize the opportunity to
reach out to the millions of courageous people of the fonner Soviet Union
... who are now free to touch other people of conscience everywhere in an
alliance committed to the same ideal: peace on earth."
Opera star Luciano Pavarotti wants to "sing in every comer of this
earth, to bring happiness.''
"In the season of Peter Pan ... my main resolution is not to get old, and
to keep chasing after the Captain Hooks of the world," said Harvard law
professor and writer Alan Dershowitz. ·
·
"I'm· going to try to lose 10 pounds, too," he added, "but I know real·
I'ty •..

Oklahoma State football coach Pat Jones, whose team just suffered its
ftrst winless season,.in ·71 years; just wants the fust game of the new sea·
son to "hurry up and get here." He said when it comes to resolutions,
he's determined to go to a bowl game. ''I should say to quit snioking. But
I'm not going to do that"
Singer Dolly Parton reeled off a dizzyin¥, lise making really great
records, doing another TV show, recording children's albums, putting out
a line of cosmetics, publishing her writings, appearmg in more great
· movies and starring in a Broadway show.
And if that's not enough, "I want to make the most of what I'm doing
so far," she said, "and wake up tomorrow with a new dream and get to
work on that''
The recession inspired a resolution and a wish. Texas Gov. Ann
Richards said her resolution is to sell her state and create jobs, and TV
producer-reponer Linda Ellerbee wished "that everyone should have that
status symbol of the '90s -a job."
·
Royko, the syndicated Chicago Tribune columnist, said he hadn ' t
made any New Year's resolutions. "I never de," he said. "I simply have
nothing to resolve,"
Neither does veteran baseball announcer Red Barber.
"When you reach my age, you don't worry about resolutions," he
said. "I'll be 84 in February.ljust look forward to making it."t

.'

S ununu will tumble in reverse
order." (Well. one out of two ain't
bad; but I confess, I'd rather co- .
exist with Sununu and see Fidel
exiled to sunRy North.. Korea.) I'
also wrote that "Bush's new
sununu will be either.pollst~r
Robert Teeter or ex-Nixon aide
Fred Malek; the other will head
Bush's 1992 campaign." (OK, so
both are headint~ J3ilsh's '92 cam-

p8ign; i·came williin a mere S,kinner of hitting·.the entire new ~ush
\C811l-)
..
,. .. .,
· THE ·)U&gt;SIGNATIONOF~D
SECRETARY Jft,C~ KEMP"He'.s had it wi.th the demagoguery
of his ~oss." (quibblers might
insist that Kemp tS still in 1!usfi's
Cabinet; Ijlrefer ·ro notice that he's
speaking as though he's already
gone, publicly blasting
eco.
.Bus~·s.
'

.

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rtl Ave., Gallipolis

iiomic-inaction at every turn.)
. , ~d fi~ly:
·
.
: THE ·SLID!! OF THE U.S ,
.• ECOI\IOMY ANP; WIT~ IT,.
BUSH'S ·
RE•-ELECTION,
. PROSPECTS "The rece~sion,
:·-which Ilush ·officials we~ late to
r&amp;Qgnize, will be worSe than they,
feared. Also longer,... Prosperity
Y'on't be a believable Bush thCP\e
m 1992,"
•

~

.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

..

HAPPY

NEW YEAR

Tncnk you lor puHing your
trust in us.
We look forward to your
.
continued support.

... ·

mo•
SECURITY
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MASON, W.VA. '

614-9U·6611
555 PAIKST.
MIDILIPOIT. OH.

Watch oigbt service
. , . can Legion Hall on Satwday from
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are . The Wesley~n Bible Holiness 8 p;m. to midnight.' Music will be
Monday night's Ohio Lo ttery · Church, 75 Pearl Street, Middle- provided by Country Kin Band.
selections:
pon, will hold "watch night" ser- Ray Fitch will be the caller. The
•'
vices
tonight (Tuesday) beginning public is invited !0 attend.
P.tck 3 N01;nbers
at
7:30
p.m. There will be different . Literary c!ub to meet
·
·. 8-0-1 ..
P,re~chm~ltin g ariosl'ectal ~Tile 'Miild1lporlTilerary ·cliili
- (eight, zerO. one)
smgmg. Rev. Roy McCarty tDvites· Will meet Jan. 8 at 1:30 p.m. at the
· the public.
·
.
home of Mrs. Chester Erwin. Mrs.
Pick 4 Numbers
Legion to meet.
Dwight Wallace will review "Mur9-9-5-1
The Racine American Legion der at the. Palace," and Miss flo,
(nine, nine, five, one)
Post 602 .will meet Thursday at renee Smith will review "Nehru."
Cards
7:30p.m., not Friday as was repon- For roll call members bring a
7 (seven) of Heart$
. ed in yesterday's edition of The rec~nt newspaper clipping about
Q (queen) of Clubs
· Daily Sentinel. The meeting will be India.
.
2 (two) of Diamonds
held at the post home.
Garden dub to meet
. 6 (six) of Spades
Dance plaltoed
The Middleport Garden Club
' The Super Lotto jackpot is $12
There will be a round and will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. a~
million.
square dance at the Rutland Ameri- the Middleport Presbyterian
.

-llr

·

! . ·•

1111 PIIIC'I· Eoill

011;011 I-to !oqutroclto
lllo!o- • 'l :&amp;d)NMid·ltllNIId.lfwdorunoutotwultat' .J ..... wewilaftlryau,..tftallllof .....

·

11
19101
"' 'J::.a30ln9!!
· - bt
-IICJOIOI:Id
... - PI'...
_,...~::::' YlndatI
~Will
....to,...

It's time once again to send
our greetings to you!
With heartfelt thanks,
·
we wish you all ·
·
a very happy and healthy New Year.
.,..~ - ·

~---

~2
212 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

•I

Hospital news

t

••

VETERANS MEMORIAL
:
Monday Admissions: George :
Baer, Racme; Ruth Greene, Hart· •
ford, W.Va.; and HarveY Erlewine, : ·
Rutland.
Monday Discharges: Violet Jar· 1
reD.
·

'

[,

a ,/..,..

COPYRIGHT 1991 ·THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD WIDIUSDAY, JAN. 21HROUGH
.
~IURDAY, JAN. S, 19921N POIUROt

WE RESERVE THE RIGHI TO UMIT QUAIInltES. NON£ SOlD TO DIAtERS.

,.,,

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•
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HOUIS

MON.-FI.
7100-hOO
SAT.
JzOO-JzOO

&amp; SUPPLHO~J
tl v~J ~·:-

E8

·:.

Leida B. Frost. 79, of 7901 State
Route 144 in Guysville, died on
Monday, December 30, 1991 at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
following an extended ilness. ·
She was born in Frost, the
daughter of the late Richard and
Minnie May Brandeberry Linton.
She was the owner and operator of
the Frost General Store and served
as the postmaster in Frost.
She was a member of the Ladies
Auxiliary #108 of Son s of the
Union Veterans of the Civil War
and was a member of the Rome
Grange #224 7.
She is survived by her husband
of 62 years, Clarence Frost; two
daughters. Mrs. Jack (June) Rosser
of Athens and May Frost of Frost;
two sons, Ralph (Faye) Frost of
Nelsonville and Leonard (Karen)
Frost of Frost; four sisters: Mrs.
Denis (Lucille) Martin and Mrs.
Everett (Vergene) Parsons, both of
Florida; Carrie Beyler of Alabama
and Mrs. Lester (Ceolo) Welch of
Lakeview; a brother, Leonard Lin·
ton or Florida; a sister-in -law ,
Thelma Linton of Coolville and a
brother in law, Ira Hunter of Vincent; eight grandchildren; and eight
great-grandchildren. ·
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by a sister, Wandalee Hunter; and two brothers,
Richard and William.
Funeral services will he held at
1 p.m. on Thursday at White-Blower Funeral Home m Coolville with
Rev. Phillip Romine officiating .
Burial will be in Butts Cemetery. ·
Friends may c~ll at the funeral
home on Wednesday from 2 p.m.
to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

..•.

lb.

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(UBP81lil-91101

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SURE OR

Published every .Ct.ernoon, Monday

throU£h Ftiday, 1U Court St., Pomeroy,
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The D8ily Sentinel ,

Tol.l Frt• 1-800·733·33341

on any

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.
"UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE
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Whole Boneless. .Doughtles
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Ohio 46769, Ph. 992-2166. Se:ond clau

Out W~h The Old,
And In With The New!

Church Social ~oom, 'Miss Jady :
Arnold will have a Pl'o~tram on
."H9use ~IS- Our Living Room
LandscaPe." from Plants Are Lib.
People by Jerry Bater. All mem- •
. bers ate.askccltQJring.• bousepl•t:
to show and exchanae. RoU Call is •
"What do gardeners do in wimer'r :
•

Leida Frost

Ready-MIXed JOint

S UR SGtloo

-.;.._------Announcements.--------

Richard Wesley Flowers, 63, of
Hardeeville, S. C.; formerly of
Middlepon, died Saturday, .December 26, 1991, at Hilton Hc;ad, S.C.
Boin in Mason, w. Va., Oct. 31,
1928, he was the son of the late
Oscar and Edith Young Flowers.
He was a Korean Conflict veteran. .
He is survived by his 'wife, Mar·
cella Leasure Flowers, H;trdeeville,
S. C., ftve sons and dailghters•in·
law, Rick and Ellen Flowers of
Easely, S. C., Gene and Lin{la
Flowers of Hardeeville, S. C.,
Robert and Carol Flowers of
Bluffton, S. C., Timothy and Amy
Flowers of Hilton Head, S. C., and
Mark and Trena Flowers of Co!Um·
bus; two daughters, Mrs. Timothy
(Jennifer) Marcum of Columbus
and Mrs. Ron (Brenda) Ebbinghou se, .Co'!umbus; a brother,
Eugene Flowers, Letart, W. Va.; a
sister, Kathrine Rose of Gallipolis,
and 14 grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was pteceded in death by ftve sisters.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday (today) at 2 p.m. at the
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Burial will he in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral .homc Tuesday from !!a.m.
until the time of services.

COMI'\.En WITH

lOINIMDlllllNIIOMIOOCIOOiop

The Daily Sel'ltlntl Page '

Richard Flowers

.'$28'. 9

·~·

..

--~--------~.--------------------------------~-----------------·'
~
att&gt;o.....,
. ~----~.
Area
deaths
:.nCI)Pf•':
=
'Pauii'ne Burton
'"' ;..":"..:.;'-'
...-lllo ..
Pauline Burton, 75, of Coolville,
died early on Tuesday, December
31, 11)91 af,C!Illlden-Clark ~mo- ·
rial Hospital in Park17sburg, W.Na.
Arrangements are under the
direction of White-Blower Funeral
Home in Coolville and will .be '
announced.

·. MRCIIIIY

20 SptHt
100 Amp

'INSURANCE
Ill Second St., Pomerof
YOUR INDEPENDEN
AGENTS SERVING
.
MEIGS COUHn
SINCE 1868

.

•

Homeli"'

Lottery numbers

North America. • · ·
.
. . throng - there will be the tra&lt;ltWhile festival admission llut!Oils tional dropping of the ball at Times
cnsl $10, a growing number ofp®- SqU4fe.
ple took advantaee ofadvance ~
'
thts year so they could receive a $4
discount. .. •
· .
·-~Hospit~i -news~.~
• Thefii'S{. ew . ink version at
'
•
1•
-.
$9 a person, giv,es ·ihe pariygi&gt;er ,• 'IIOi.ZEl{
MEDICAL
CENTER.
entry to any of 40.events thilt begin
Discharges l)ec. 3.0 - Howard
al 11:30 a.m. and run to the wee Brannon,
Mrs. Charles. Conley and
hours, includinp .~1onnan~ by daugnt.er, Tiana. D~yto.ri'; Homer
sttlt walkers·. antl an mvitatitin tp ·Denney, Lottie Holmes, Richard
fox ttot on tlie city's biggest marble McCartney, Albert Roush, Debra
dance floor - Grand Central Ter·' Stull)p.and Mi~hael Zinn. .
minal.
Births Dec. 27- Mr. and Mrs.
For those on an even tigljter ,Thomas Gilil:ey, daughter, Jackson. ·.
budget - and who ar.e willing io Mr. and Mrs. Terry Vance, son,
brave the ~ameraderie of. a row~.Y Ham~.
.

.

161403 LH While Trldltianoll 32L

By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 31;the 36~th and ftnal day of !991.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 31st. 1946, President Truman offtciaUy proclaimed the end of
WorldWarll.
On this date:
In 1775, the British repulsed an attack by Continental Army Gens.
Richard Montgomery and Benedict Arnold at Quebec. Montgomery was
killed.

614-992-)194

•

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ElEC. RANGES

PH. 446·1699
HOURS: I A.M.·6 P.M.

Today in history

z, 199Z.

Pa~-The Oilily Sen•IIWI.
•l;'omor.oy-,MI~dleport, \Qhlp
Tuesday; December 31, .1991 .

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Cominue~from pag, 1

NeW;,,, ·

..

.. •".. '.
• ·' ,. ·~·•

. ' .,

Punditry, like proctology', is a
noble calling practiced with the
conftdence that nobody really cares
enough to look back and inspect
the eaduring qualil)i of one's handiwork.
Not so fast, Mr. Pundit.
As a public service of sorts, here
is one practitioner's attempt to look
back tn augur. These were my
"can't-miss" predictions of 1991.
Just relax, it won't hurt but a bit.
On the eve of 1990, I appeared
on CNN's year-end special and in
your local newspa,{l7r~ to assure:
"The Iraqi crisis wtll end in peace.
Saddam Hussein may be a madman, but he's no 'fool. He knows he
faces annihilation if war comes. He
will pull out of Kuwait." (But,
unlike the Democratic leaders in
Congress, I would have voted to ·
authorize President Bush to use
military force if Saddam wouldn't
withdraw - how else could Bush
negotiate?) •
Mercifully, my year quickly got
better and Saddam s didn't. Building prognostic steam, I wrote a col·
umn on the eve of the new year,
declaring that we would see in
1991:
THE FALL OF ONE NOBEL
LAUREATE- "Mikhail GoFbachev, no longer able to keep
together his economically crumbling and nationalistically clamoring union, will resign." (Bingo! bull was mildly out of synch; for I
went on to predict that Gorbachcv
would be succeeded briefly by "a
KGB/military hard-liner." Who'd
have thought they couldn't even
coup straight?)
THE FALL OF ONE SUPERPOWER - "Moscow's new,
repressive communist regime will
collapse in just a few months. The
Soviet Union will break into a confederation of nation-states, sharing
a military but little else. The world ·
will wotry about who controls the
nuclear weapons:''
THE MISSING LINK - " ...
the convening of an international
conference on peace in the
Mideast. Its agenda will include
creation of a demilitarized Pales•linian homeland and the require ~
ment that all Arab countries not
on! y recognize Israel but end their
state of belligerence with Israel."
(Truth be told, I thought this historic meeting would he the aftermath of Bush's skillful forging of
' the Gulf War coalition ·and Saddam's withdrawal from Kuwait.)
THE FALL OF TWO DICfA·
TORS - "Fidel Castro and John

.

••

,. '.

.M.OSt -can
' . 't·"'-.m -I•SS
· ' · pre..d._ lC
• t•IOfl.S~
: .. d. 1\li~~t"&amp;'ifmm
..~ '~ Mariin

The Daily Sentinel

Manley's Tralh
Service wiD not
run Wednesday,
.ran. I, 1992 but
wiD run
Wednesday'• route
on Thunday, .Jan.

•

l ·••

Commentary

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslallt PubUsber/Controller

•

..

4-lb.

Kroger Pinto Beans

1_.. .
~.

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14.75-0Z.

,.,.,.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 Th.e Dally Sentinel

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TUeSday, December 31, 1991

TUe-day, December 31 , 1991 :.

I

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A

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fTlte

992-5627

1992

$5.00 Gift
Certificate
and
. 10% Off On All
Prescriptions Until The
Age of 6 Years.
'

253 Nort'- Second
1111ert Ohio .

-·l992 ., ~
WILL .· ·..~.RECEIVE
..
A DIAPER BAG

..

.•
•
•

'.•,
•

•'

~

••

"•
••

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WITH $10.00 WORTH OF

t

PRE-SELECTED MERCHANDISE
FROM

•
•

FRUTH 992·6491
PHARMACY
716 North Second

•

*•

..

•

93 Mill Street

••

Ohio'

1992

112 EAST MAIN

. $1 0.00 GIFT
: CERTIFICATE TO THE
~... FIRST BABY OF 1992.
.
•

/

(TO IE USED IN STORE)
~

FOOD
SHOP
"I·SSS2 .

. .
PO-OJ, OHIO ·

,
~ ·

+

.-•
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...
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97 IIIOIYH

992-6661

SECOND

Member FDIC

•

MIDDLJPOIT,
OHIO

•••
•••
•

OUR GIFT TO
THE FIRST
NEWBORN

••
••
•

•••
•

'

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••
•

A.BOX OF

!
:

NEWBORN ULTRA
P PE·R DIAPERS
'

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GIVE THE
· FIRST
BORN OF
1992 A
3 P'IECE
FEEDER SET ·

iw

OF 1992
.,

WE WILL
GIVE 10 THE

WE WILL

••
•

MOTHER OF
IHE NEW
BABY
.

••

. A S5.00
GIFT CERTIFICATE

!

FIOM Till

~

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·Dairy Queen

'~

992·3322
· 700 11011'H SICOID

MIDKIPOIT, o•o ...

.... -~~-

.
.•

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A''FREE'' ICE
CREAM CAKE!

-

--.

TO THE 'PARENTS OF
~
THE FIRST BABY OF 1992 .';

VAUGHA_N'S

•1

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POMEROY, OHIO

.

S25.00 Gift
Certificate

"

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BABY ·
.••
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Middleport

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
WILL GIVE A
FREE MEAL ··~

•,

WE WILL HELP THE BABY LOOK
TOWARD THE FUTURE WITH A
Sl 0.00 SAVINGS ACCOUNT

992·6657 .

MIDIUPOIT, OHIO

CURl'S
OUR GIFT FOR · JEWELRY .
THE FIRST
STORE

1992

WE WILL GIVE A

,.

0

Lots Of Luekf

TO THE ·
PARENTS
OF
.
THE FIRST.
·. BABY OF

MARAii'HON

'

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

"

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992-2955

POMEROY, OHIO

'

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PHARMACY .

992·5177
100 EAST MAIN

'

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(t ..J

. OUR GIFT TO THE FIRST
BORN OF 1992 A
3 BOXES OF
$10.00 GIFT
. NEWBORN PAMPERS
CE l~CATE
· SWISHER·LOHSE
BUTTONS and BOWS

f

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••

.'i.JI

TO THE
FIRST. BABY
OF 1992

•

·

•.",
••

OUR GIFT
.

·

.

·. 1. Winning baby must be born to parents who are legal residents of Meigs
County.·
. 2. All such babies are eligible.
.
3. Exact time of birth must be specified in written statement by attending
physician•
4. Application must be filed in this office by noon, January 11 , 1992.
5. In case of tie, award will be distributed at the discretion of the contest
committee.
6. Prizes must be claimed by January 31, 1992

BABY OF

992·6669 ' .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

"

·

I~

THE FIRST

To The First
· Arrival Of ·

Prescription Shop

SHOE PLACE

· I

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·F IRST BABY ·o F 1992 RIJLES

•

St5 GIFT
CERTIFICATE

'

U. Dilly Ientine! ·.

,

---

1992 A

'

Listed On These ,.,•• .Are Gill~ Ollerell By lolal Merllt,ants That Go ro
. flte first Baby o~ Jf92. 11W!_!fM~ifl Courtfy~_PQrellll.~lara.tJ ·tJL..
Children Born Alter MIIInlgltt, De1ember 3 JI J99 J, .Are Asked To Send
Their Name/.Ad~r·•· and·Dolftit1S Report To rite 'Daily S~ntllleiBy No'
. later·Than J2:00 Noon On January J.J1 J9g2.

~·~-·

The Shoe
Place In
Middleport
Will Give ·The
First Baby of

'

. · Pomtroy....Middleport,·Ohlo

POMEROY, OIRQ

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FABRIC
SHOP
POMROY, 01110

We WIII'Oive
To The Firat · .
81~y of

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t••
Ye1r.,.

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ACCOUNT

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·:Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pof11eroy--Middleport, Ohio .

Tlles.day, December 31, 1991

CRISCO
SHORTENING

.

By The Bend

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The Daily Sentinel
1\Jelday, December 31, 1191
Page 7

-3-LB. CAN

Corner

STORE HOURS'
Monday thru Sunday
··aAM-10 PM

by CharleneHoejlich
Chrisun3s, 1991 may be history, with her son and daughter-in-law,

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

PRICES EFfECTIVE DEC. 2_
9 thru

but the memories linger on.
. _Those ttaditional family gather!ngs, bountiful dinners, the exciteinent of exchanging gifts, the
~hared joy and laughter, even the
confusion, contibuted to make it all
a time to remember.
And wasn't it great!
But now the house is quiet •.. a
little awry with laundry p.iled high
,.. the refrigerator still f1lled with
plenty of food for which no one
seems to be in the mood.
For many of us happiness was
tQgetherness and· there seemed to
be plenty of that in the Bend area

SUNSHINE'
DOG FOOD

4, 1991

I

20LB.BAG

Loin•••••••••••~ . 1
HOMEMADE PORK
(
Sausage•••••••••••• 99
5 39

Meigs newcomers Jim and Barpara Grueser had a delightful
Christmas surprise. Their two
daughters, Christina Grueser Irwin
and her husband , Orlando, and
Michelle Louise DeSoto, all of San
Diego. came in for the holidays.
That left the couple's two sons and
eight grandchildren in California so
there were plenty of pleasantries ·
exchanged by phone.
The Gruesers, who reside ·on
Crew Road, Pomeroy, have been
here since Nov, II. Jim graduated
from Rutland High School, went
into service, and then settled 40
years ago in California.
: His mother, Hilda Grueser, 86,
has been in California with the
family for the past 27 years and her
wish when she became ill was to
return to Meigs County. It was to
comply with that wish that the
Gruesers are here. She is now in
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

ME RICO

TOASTER
·PASTRIES
11 OUNCE BOX

LB.

$1.89

LONGHORN

Cheese••••••••••••••
$219

CHOICE

Round Steak•••••••

LB.

SPLIT CHICKEN

Breasts••••••••••••••
CHICKEN .
Leg .Quarter••••••••

LB •.

ners •••••••••••••

December
meeting ·

LB.

$139

ECKRICH .

ologna•••••••••••••~~. · .

GOLD MEDAL

The traditional holiday family
gathering of the Burnside family
was held at the Pomeroy home of
Ruby Burnside.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Grate of
Columbia, Tenn., Rob and Audra
Harrison of Georgia, Gail Thoma
of Lincolnton, N.C., joined local
family members, Mary Lou and
Richard Houdashelt and Betsy,
Grace and Glen Thoma, Kenny and
Marcie King, Kay Koehler, Pat and
Suzan Thoma, and Linda and Jeff
.. .Jones ~d son,.Bradley Dean; at the
Buinside home on Christmas Eve.

FLOUR
SLB. BAG

9··9(

39('
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DUNCAN HINES

CAKE
MIXES

LB. ·

$139

Joining Bob and Jane Beegle at
tlleir Racine home for Christmas
were tlleir daughter and son-in-law,
K~rri and Greg Millick of Mansfield, and Kelly Taylor and a friend
from Columbus. Missing from the
family group was Kim Taylor, who
is a commentator with USA Radio
Network in Dallas, Texas, and for
her, Christmas was a workday.

'

18.5. oz.

LB.

Maxine Gaskill flew to West
Plains, Mo., to spend Christmas

Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Coates and
their six children; Sean, an environmental specialist in Clearwater,
Fla.; Wayne, a sophomore in medical school in Tulsa, Okla.; Beth
attends William-JeweU College in
northern .Missouri; Andy, a high
school senior; Scott, a sophomore;
and Christopher, an eighth grader.
·
....:.'_
Harold and Sue Roush and
Cindy traveled to Pataskala and
then on to Newark to spend Christmas with family members, Becky
and Michael Branham, and children and Marty and Joyce Seelig,
Newadc.
David Ebersbach and his
fiancee, Ellen. Chapman, Warrenton, Va., came home to spend
Christmas with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Ebersbach and Chris.
Joinng the group for a holiday
dinner were Edna Roush and Twila
Roush, New Haven, W.Va.; Joyce
Carson, West Columbia; Aimee
Manuel, Racine; and Libby
Roberts. Syracuse.
Patricia Circle, her son, Mark,
and daughter, Marianne, of Wichita, Kan., were the Christmas guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C E.
Blakeslee. The Circle family also
visited with other area relatives and
friends.
Christmas dinner guests at the
home of Veda Davis were Bill and
Margaret Lehew and son, Billy,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Sadie Thuener,
Syracuse; Vicky and Ted Lehew
and sons, Ian and Nate, Chillicothe;
and Cheryl Lehew and Matthew,
Gallipolis.

MORTON HOUSE

Lettuce••••••••

'

2% Milk••••••••••

Cat Food•••••••• oz..
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GAL

79

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Gtttl OI!J At Powol't S.,. Yah!
em. Gtttl Dec. n ttn Ja 4, 1991 ·
LIMit I p., C.sl-

"

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99(
TV Dinner•••••••
3 $5

5

10·120Z. ,

oz.

Pizza•••••••••••••
MUELLER'S

C.••·•• ••••••••••••••••••
•

NOODLES

$599

Gto4 Oily At Powtll's S.,.r Yalu
Of(., Good o.c. 29 .... ~ laL 4, 1991
-_1,11111 ,.,

·

BEEF

Kathy Essman, Susan Pullins, Lisa
Henderson, Dan and Shelia
Spencer, Joe and Laurie Boyles.
Lisa Henderson read "Night
Before Christmas" for the children ,
who gathered on the stage.
Philip Boyles presented a solo,
"0, Holy Night"
Rev. Hausman presented th·e
children's sermon entitled, "Little
Things."
Members of the nativity scene
were Lloyd and Doris Dillinger as
Joseph and Mary; Stacie Watson ,
Sarah Yost, Ashley and Jessica
Boyles, Danielle and Tiffany
Spenc.er, as angels; Aaron Yost,
Matthew Boyles, Kirt Spencer, as
shepherds; and Kevin Brooks, Joe
Boyles and Tim Spencer portrayed
the three wise men.
Kirt Spencer presented "Good
Night, Merry Christmas," and
Matthew Boyles gave the closing
thoughts.
The program concluded with a
visit from Santa.

.80Z.

3/$1

Gtttl Oily At Ptwol'1 Slplr Yilt
011er GeH Dec. n,.,. Jaa. 4, 1991
JJ.illPIIC.IItH

'

PAIL ·

PEAK NAVY OR
PINTO BESNS

~G4/ s.,.1y.

·

One, Athens, who submits the best service
improvement ide&amp;li each month. The winner is
presebted a traveling trophy which is displayed
in that respective office or department tbe fol·
IQwing the month. Pictured, 1-r; are Jan Knapp,
Gayle Chasteen, Joan May, Joanie Collins and
Tina Johnson.

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
POMEROY - The Belles and groups of the church. Rev. James
appear two days before a11 emil Beaus Square Dance Club will Acree invites the public.
and the day of that tYtllt. Items have a dance New Year's Eve from
. SYRACUSE - An organizamust be rect/Yed we/lin adYance 9 p.m. to I a.m. at the Meigs Counto assure publication In tht calen- ty Senior Citizens Center for all tional meeting will be · held

dar.

TUESDAY
CHESTER - The Chester
Township Trustees will have their
year-end meeting on Tuesday at 10
a.m. at tile town haiL An organizational meeting will be held Thursday.
LONG BOITOM _ There will
be a New Year's Eve service at the
Mount Olive Community Church
in Long Bottom on Tuesday. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the public.
,.
PAGEVILLE - The ~cipio
Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 10 a.m. to conduct year -end
business. An organizational meet. ing will be held Thursday.

western square dancers and Conner Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Syra·
square dancers. Dress in informaL
cuse Municipal building for the
Sutton Trustees.
MIDDLEPORT- There will
be a !\lew Year's Eve dance at the
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
· American ):.egion Feeney Bennett Oran~e Township Trustees will
Post No. 128 at the annex on Mill meet m special session on WednesStreet in Middle~rt from 8 p.m. to day at 3 p.m. to being the new year.
I a.m. Music wtll be by "CJ. and The meeting will be held at the.
Company." Refreshments avail- hOme of the cled, Susan Pullins.
able. Members may attend at no
charge. There will be a minimum
THURSDAY
fee for guests.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
PORTLAND _ The Lebanon Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
. Township Trustees will meet Toes- 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will meet
day at 4 p.m. An organizational Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home. Officers will be installed.
meeting wiU follow,

RUTLAND - The Rutland
WEDNESDAY
Freewill Baptist Church will have
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
watch services on Tuesday from 7 Church will have regular church
p.m . to midnight. There will be services on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
several speakers. Rev, Paul Taylor There will be special singing by
invites the public.
LO'ITRIDGE - The Lottridge
Community Center will host a New
Year's Eve pany on Tuesday from
8 p.m. to midmght. Refres hments
wiU be available. Public invited.

Township Trustees will meet
Thursday to conduct an organiza·
tional meeting for I992.
·
·
CHESTER - The Chester
Township Trustees will hold an
organizational meeting on Thursday at 7:30 p.in. at the town hall.
REEDSVILLE - Tile Olive
Townshii? Trustees will hold an
organizauonal meeting on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
Fire Station.

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

'. ;

I

AUTO

H ME
•. { e ' l ,
State Auto's alreacly
low premiums can be
ll!duc:~d)l~~n ~"by -~
lnuqj bolh,cuc.
and home with the Slate
Auto Companies.

cu.~

Beautyn~

Let us lell you just
how much your savings
can be.

..Beast
(&lt;I

1:20,3:20,7 :20 ,
t:DO

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

.1/j

J :2D.S:2D,7 :20,
9:20

St_,o Auto
fnsuronco Com,anlo•

IN-IJ)

THE SALE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR!

RIPLEY, W.Va. - The Libeny
Mountaineers will perform Tuesday at Skateland in Ripley.
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the Syrac~ se
Municipal Building, An orgamzational meeting will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m.

(

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Nazarene Church will have a New
Year's Eve service on Tuesday at 8
p.m. with special services at 11:45
p.m.

POST HOLmAY SAl.£ S,.IRft JAN. 2

20%

10 LB. PACKAGE

$1390

)

40% 50%

30%

•All
•ALL
CAROLINA BOOTS
ATHLniC SHOES
•ISOTONER &amp;
•ALL
DEARFOAM SLIPPERS
MEN'S DEXTER$
•All
•ALL
CONNIE &amp;DEXTER CONNIE DRESS
SHOES
CASUALS

TONY'S FROZEN

SURF DETERGENT
136

$129 GROUND

BANQUET

6

CLOROX BLEACH

99(

GALLON

Spread•••••u•••••••3llt
.

24 OZ. CAN

$179

BLUE BONNET

MIN PET

$1

2·

HIAD.

BROUGHTON'S

Saltines.~ ••••••••rouND

BEEF
STEW

AWARD WINNER • Tbe RuUand office of
Bank One, Atbe~, N.A., bas been presented tbe
Quality Service Improvement Award for the
month or November. OctoiJer was the flfst time
the award was presented and the Rutland Office
was the winner tbat month also. The award is
given to the branch or department within.Bank

Coming from Wolfeboro, N.H.,
for a holiday visit with his mother,
Mrs, Dorothy Downie, was Chuck
Downie. A Christmas dinner was
hosted by Mrs. Downie and other
RACINE _ The Racine Ameri.
guests included Rachel Downie,
can Legion Post 602 will have a
New Year's Eve pany on Tuesday
Bill Dowriie, .Allen and Janet
Dowme and Elizabeth, Pomeroy.
fro 8
"d · h t the st
Mrs. Edison Baker, Middleport,
HOBSON - The Hobson
m ~.m .. to mt mg tan po
and Rodney ~d ~bbi~ B~egle Ch~rch .of Ch~ist in &lt;;:hri~ti~n home. ostts $5 perperso - .
and ·SOB , Ryan,--Cincl~,On.~';J.!IIIOD -will hokl ,;watcb.,111gh,t; ~~ · .:; LONG BOTTOM ..,. The F:ulh
CHristmas Eve follo,itlns the VIces on Tuesday. Theron DUrhaiil Full Gospel Church in U&gt;ng Botchurch candlelight service, Janet wiD be tile pastor,
tom will have a New Year's Eve
Downie entertained with a buffet
service on Tuesday beginning at 9
RACINE- The Racine Baptist p.m. There will be special singing
Christmas dinner guests of Gene Church will have watch night ser- and fellowship. Pastor Steve Reed
Grate were Leland and Mary vices on Tuesday from 9 p.m. to invites the public.
Brown Brown, Middlepon; Leland midnight. The public is invited to .
and Brenda Brown and children, attend.
MIDDLEPORT - There will
Powell; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
be a combined watch night service
Tewksbary, Wellston; and Charles
.RU1LAND - There will be a on Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
and Rita Tewksbary, Warren; and New Yeilr's Eve dance at the Rut- Middleport Wesleyan Bible HoliMr. and Mrs. Tom Tewksbary and land American Legion Hall on ness Church on Pearl Street with
children, ZanesviUe.
Tuesday from 8 p.m . to I a.m . · Calvary Pilgrim Chapel from RutThose attending bring a covered land, Rutland Bible Methodist
dish. There will be $5 donation Church and Harrisonville Holiness
, Happy New Year!
taken at the·door. Music will be Chapel. Speakers will be Rev .
provided by the Country Kin Band, Steve Tomack, and Rev . John
Ray Fitch will be the caller. Public Neville. Special singing, everyone
invited.
welcome.

Children:s recitations
highlight UMW program
The Alfred United Methodist
Church held its Christmas program
recently at tile church.
After the congregation sang, "0,
Come, All Ye Faithful," Rev .
Sharon Hausman gave the opening
prayer.
Children's recitations included
"Welcome" by Tiffany Spencer;
"When I Have a Birthday" by Ashley and Jessica Boyles; "Two
Words" by Sarah Yost; "Happy
B.irthday, Jesus" by Hollie and
Aaron Brooks; "Who Do I Smile"
by Stacie Watson; "God Sent
Jesus" by Aaron Yost; "The Wft
to be Happy" by Danielle Spencer;
'~ Merry ChristmaS" by Alan Wat·
son.
. : The Alfred Choir sang "Home
f~r the Holidays," "Infant Holy,
Infant Lowly," and "Joy, Joy, Joy."
. Nellie Parker read "'Twas the
Night After Christmas."
A play, "Hill Billy Christmas,"
was presented by Lloyd Dillinger,

Lavina Brannon was hostess ftt
the December meeting of the Joppa
United Methodist Women.
Margaret Grossnickle presided
at the meeting during which reportS
were given on fruit baskets, gifts,
poetry booklets, cards sent, and
o(feriilg ·expenses paid from the
treasury.
The program consisted of readings from Helen Steiner Rice and
Christmas ~ms.
A gift exchange was held and
refreshments were served to con·
elude the meeting.
Attending were Opal Harris,
Gladys Dillon, Cindy Durst, Virginia Hines, Glenda Benedum,
Helen Kibble, Mary Harris and
Tim, Margaret Grossnickle, Vir- ·
ginia Brannon and the hostess,
Lavina.
Gladys DiUon is the hostess for
the January meeting.

•GROUP OF
MEN'S DEXTER$
•ALL
PURSES

•GROUP OF
CONNIE SHOES &amp;
BOOTS
tGROUP OF BOYS
REEBOKS
•ONE RACK
T's&amp;SWEATS

PLUS MORE IN STORE SPECIALS-ALL SALES FINAL

GROUND
.
CHUCK

fl1feSHOE PLACE

10 LB. PACKAGE
WINNERS • Pictured are winners or the
recent Christmas coloring contestspoosored by
Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport. Winners, I·
;, front, are, Page Bradbury, Alexander Sisson

. 'G.H Oily Ai Paw.il'I

Off• Good O.C. 29tfnlaL 4, 1991

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and Kathy Joblson. Back, Ashley Burton,
A!Danda Fields, Cassie Will and Melissa Cremeam.

21911. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

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. . • ruesC;Iay: bt~n'l~ed1.1 ~1

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men . split in-B-w-invitationa-l;-£-rouse·,n-am-erJ.tutill;;to-urne
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Pa~ing Crouse's high scorin_g which they connected on ~ee for th~ Redwomen broke ~tfor a 13·

In spite of a 21-point performance by sophomore guard
Michelle Crouse, the University of
Rio Grande women's.basketball"
team fell ~o Alma (Mi~h.) 7.4-60
Saturday m the champtonshtp of
!he Baldwin~Wallace Tournament
m Berea. Ohio.
Alma, propelled by Katie Mans'
21 points and 10 rebounds for the
pe. outran the Redwomen long
eliougb to hold a slim margin at Jl!e
hilf, but poured on the offensive
PJ:e!~Sure in Jhe second period and
benef!~ from an 83 perce~t (2125) ftnuh from tlte foullme to
score the win.

for Rio Grande were Gena Noms 75 percenL The team commuted 20
with 13 points and Stephanie tumoven.
Gudorf with ~0. Ann Barnitz
Alma shot 3&amp;.4 percent (25-65,
broughl down etght of the team's ~of five from !lJe ,tluee for 60
41 rebounds.
percent) and held tts turnovers to
Backing ~p Mans' game were 13. ·
.
Andrea Balliet and Amy Doucette
Alma had entered the champ1with ll points, and Coleen Wruble onship round after defeatmg Wilmwith 10. In ~dition to Mans, Amy ington Friday, whi!e Rio Grande
Elbers prov1ded 10 of Alma's 45 knock.ed off Baldwm_.. Wallace .82:
boards.
62, wtth Crouse sconng 19 pomts
The Redwomen were 34:lper- ~o lead her teammates. Her efforts
cent from the field (23·67, mclud- m both games won her a spot on
ing 11 of 32 from Jhe t1uee for 34 the A~-Tournament T~. . ·
.3 ~t) and were allowed only
Wtth Crouse pounng m I~ of
four Jnps to lhe free throw line, on her total marken mJhe ftrSt penod.

Scorcboat·d
NFL playoff slate

VanOII!var """"' 11 11 6
WiMpea ........... 16 15 8
lldrnailull .......... llll 6
Calp'Y .............. ll 17 l
u.Ao1doo ..•.... 14 u 1
s.. 1... ............. 121 1

Second round

s.-,.J...

4
Atlana. at w~. 12:30 p.m.
lb.tm 1t. Dcnvar, 4 p.m.

Suaday, Jan.$

K.anJu Cily •~ Buft'alo, 12:30 p.m.
D&amp;llu 11 Dctroil. 4 p.m.

Midwest

48 134 112
40 120123
36 137149
3l 139 133
3l 129140
t9 91171

Akron 82, TcnnePtc St. 11
IJJyum 14, VM1 56
E Michigan 89, Dcuui.t 81
lllinoil 94, JU..Chie.ao 17, OT
Muqueuc 93. Md.-Baltimore County

63

Monday's score

Mw...ri 13, E. I11inOO 56
Nebrub 76, WiJ .• Qm::n Bt y68
W. Dlinoi.IIOO, OUcaao St. 98, OT
Wri$ht St. 95, Yo~anown St. 81

~obecl, T...,...2

C011ferenc. clwnplonsblps
Suaday, lin. u

TonJcbt'll811lts

New lawy a1 Pi~ 6:05 p.m.
N.Y. Jtanaen at W'JIUiliiCI, 6:35p.m.
SL Louia atBulJalo, 7:35-p.m.
B0110n It Dewk, 7:35 p.m.
M~ueal at C;al&amp;UJ, 8:0$_p.m.
Chi.~::~ so at Minnolaa, 8:0S p.m.
Vancwvcr It U. An,cekc,9:05 p.m.

AFC cllunpionohip
NR: chlmpiooobip

Super Bowl
Sundlf, Jan. 2'

AI Mlnntapolil
AFC dtamplcn VI. NFC champion

N.Y . I•lander~at Wubinaton,

X.VIct, Ohio 84, N. Dlinois 1..

Southwest

ar

1:35

p.m.

Monday's scores
AIS..Diqo
low•ll, Brfaham You.na 13, lic

basketball poll

Frood--

JolloH-Bowt
AIBIPUo,TeuJ
lllinoit (6·l) ••· UCLA (1·3), 2:30
pm. (CIS)

c--

WI

--

4. Kanna .......................l-0 1,400
l . c"""'u.u1 (1). .........1.o t.m
6. Arizona .................. ~ .. 6-J l ,IS7

AtAtlula .
1!111 C...... (111-1)., Nonb Com!i·

•
•
•

c.... _

AI o.Jlal
FlDdcSa Sll\0 (10-2) VI. Tu.u A&amp;.M
' (ll).l),l :lOp.m. (CIS)
Fltola low!
'
At Tempe. Aria.
l'wl S1111&gt; (11).2) •• Tonn- (9-2),
4:30pm. (NBC)

'

7. Ohio Sl.- -- -.7·1 1~17
8. North Carolina ..........1.1 1,050
UlichipnS• ............ IG-0 1,042
lO. lndiana ........ ~ ............ l-2 966
11. Michiaon ....•.............7·1 899
12. S""" H.oll .................7·l llO
13. Miuowi ...................9.0 719
14. Okllhoma ................. a.o m
1!. Ooorp Tech ............l·2 741
· 16. Mw.....................9·2 719
17. X..'",«,l' ................. .1-2 690
II. SLioluu ..................6-2 !49
19.Allblma .................l1).1 471
:10. WU.f&lt;nol ........•... 6-1 346
21 . N.C. Olui,.. .......... J.l 201
22. Clootplown ..............7·1 199
7.o
:14. t.wvillo ................. 6-1 132
2!. Swlhanc.t .............l ·l 111

n.s,..... ...................

lwehwl

At Paoad01a, CoJir.
Wllllinlloo (ll.Q) " · Miclllpn (11).

I~ S p.m

Or•·-

(ABC)

At Mllllll

Miami 01.0) ... NcOrub (9-1 ·1), 8
pm . (NBC)

Suprlowl

AtNtwOrlull

-

o... (9-3) .. FkaiU

l ;lO P'"· (ABC)

(11).1~

AU.tlc DINhlo
L
I
10
16
16

Pd.

.B-.. . ... . ... . .
w.....,.... . .... .ll 11II

.692
.65!
.467
.441

.:119
.n9
.'Jf!T

0Nodo.................•.6 23
'

.!
6
M
1.!
8.!
13.l

.ll7
_,,.
.500

,
to

Milwaubo ............ .l4
Allan.. ...................13
lftdW!a .......... ........ .l2
Clwlollo ..................l

.500
.%4
.400
.2!1

10
11
13
17.!

14
U
11
23

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ml-DI•-

WL

Uull ....................... l9
H""""" ................. 16
SanAnt«aio .......... .l6
Den..,. ................... 12
n.uu .....................l2

12
1l

~

16
17

.613
.ll2
.5S2
.429
.414

- - . .......••..•....4 23

.1&lt;1

J3

1!
17
11
20
22
2l
2A
21

Iowa 13, Houaon 69, South Florida 58,
Waahiftaton St. 24, Wii.·Gtecn Bty 23,
Bnpm Youna21, Ala.·Blminlhamll,
Clni:inood 12, JA&gt;ui,bno Toch f2, iJe«.
1Pa 11, T•plalO, FtoW S• 9, Nel&gt;rulla
I, VUJ!nio I, N. Carolina S• 7, UNLV 7,
Maoai:.._. 6. Jloaon ~ l , Ari·
1ana St. 4, LSU 4 , New Meuc:o SL 4,
Piuab11rP, 3, Princeton 3, ClCimlon 2,
2. Soulll C...W.o 2. Sllnfonl
2. TOUI Ouioliul2,
2. E. Tm·

w,...,.,.

Gl
2
2
H
6

I

63

JU,. 78, Fairf'llld 77

St FranciJ, Pt.. 63, Cani.Jiu.t 6l '
s, _.,60,Almy47
Syt~CiliO II, Wichita St 6l

· I'Grlland ................. l9
• L.A. Lattn ............ l7
. S..llo ................... ll
L.A . Clippt~~ ......... l6
s ......................J

10
12
13
ll

. l'llomix .................. l9 10

:10

.65!
.65!
.ll6
.!36
.!16
.216

-

Tournaments
CardJnal Club Claal:c
Flrdrouad
Lamu 126, Sam Houatm St. $7
Okl.ahom.all7, Mi.u . Valley St 9S
Flotta Bowl Clara It
· Champkrllhlp
Arilono!Ol,Ru..... IO
Thlrdplaft
EvwvUJ.e 7S, Maryland 64
MniCiuok
ChanlpkNhlp
79, N;...,. 71, ar
Third plaee
Dartmouth SO, Marilt 48

Cola•"

w.........,

Cl,.tlaod Ill, "-IMJt
l'boa!U.llO, Doro;1 103
Chicaao 109,lndiono lot
Sacnmento l17, Mimeaota 109
o.n.... t09, Philadolphla 93

B - 97, L.A. ClioiNa 16
Ooldoa Slaiell4, t.:.A. ~.a~~.. 99

Tonlabt'SIIDIII

No_och_

Wedlletday't &amp;IDles

No-~

:In tbe NHL...
WAWCOI'IfDINCI
PalrtdiDI-

W L T Plo. GFGA

w................ :Ill! 1 ll 171129
N.Y............. 2A I&lt; 1 4!1 1&lt;71:1'7
4 41112131
6 ..., l!S109
7 II 103121
6 !0 1!31!0

-01-

~ -···-·-- 1122

0

--

,._
W L T Plo.
- ................ 2310 4 50
17 13 1 4!
---· I! t! 9 :It
"
• - ···· ll 16 , :13

!;¢; . . .. .

GPGA

Ill t:M

109115

T -·-- -·· 10 25 S 25 101 149

•

8_A,M. '
1

Meigi, G•ll•

tul'l

··

.

-·,

'"d lfqund 1dl und• "11 worda wilt be
cl._,,., no ell•ge.
·
. ,
_
•

•Price of td ~ 1H ~•tt!tl•t•• ta doublt.Jtf'ict of eel cott.

• f ,.tnt Moo ''" ooi; uwd.
~I,..IMI ~

not,rotpOnaiblo.fO&lt; orrorufte·fiftt ·d&amp;¥, IC~tcl&lt;

for tffOft lir.t d"l\' td,funt tn tttJ*I .'" Cefl befoie 2 •00 p.m
diV eft•IIYIMicMkln to' m.. ecorreeUon
·•
• Ap thlt ""''1 be peld In Hva!'ct are . '
. Clfd oflh.-kt
~. Heppy Acta·•

- 4 n"·Miii!Orrim.
&lt; •

•

..

·'r

.

.

Ywd hi• .

·~ clttlifi~

tdltthiHmlftt pltQtd In Tht Dtltv Stnttnll Cell ·
1 Ctbt- cl•elfitd _..,play, Bulinllit Clfd lnd leg II notic:PI
w'tlt liltD.tpp"' ln.1ht Pt . P'l•••n• flt ... ttrJifUt the qtlli·
P••• Otly T{jbunt. rttetHnt &lt;Wtr 18 .000·homlf:.. .. .

.

.

.

· fhr e'er.h

PubliC Notice

PUbliC

G11111 Coumy

M1 l on Co., WV

ArooCodo814

AruCodo304 .

441.....,.Qallip,olil

tl92 ....: ~iddl.0on

1711 - Pt . Pltnent

3e7-Ch•hi!•

··

311-VInt~ ' &gt;. •

Z4e-Aio G;tndo e43-'Ponland
211-Guvon Diu . 247-'L'oton Fall•
14t..... Attbl• Dl•.r. 848 - lll•clne
311~-WtiMt
' 742 - Rutland

117- Coolvite

PubliC Notice

-11

·, ~

-

380 E. SECOND ST.

OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY
3:00P.M.
992-3432
?:

•.

"

Mwaa 101, s- Alabama 12
Dute 97, William 4 Mol}' 61
Ge.q;a Tooh 91, S•
60
Howard U. 74, TOWIOI'I St·69 ,
loaaiOS, S\ctlan 101. OT
L!U 1:13, NU:holla S' 61
Louioiana Tedl76,ladllon s, 72
Miooluippi S' 72, Somlon141 .
N.C.-Oaua 1 w II, W. Caolina19,

a..,,...,...

N.C .·WUmioal~&gt;~l7,

Q.,_, N.C.

70

New Orw.: 60. Bmwn 59
SW l..ooialona IIM,l'la. lnlomotional ·
93,20T
Swill c...Jina 14. o..w-56
T-92.Fwman74

T.....,.Tooll92.a..q;,S...Ihem

o I o o o o I

Public Notice

t

ooted partioo in order to
mako thia important and
·greatly·neod~d project a

ycu eattnct.

WINNIPEG lETS - Traded Warren
Ryclld. left wina, 10 lhe Mlnneo"" North
Sl.ltl for Tony TOIC!ph, riJtll wins. and fu.
EW'e QONidentiON. 1.11&amp;ried Moe Mintha
defaucman, to tbo U.S. Olympic Team. '

SEE YOU NEXT YEAR!

MO.LE HOME

~::.:6'

reality.

'

.

Thl
1 ti
uc1 thl
• ruo ~ on pao
o
26111 day of December, 1991.
(12) 31 f1c

.C~alom

rrt-110 iDJta)latioa IDSI

•NeV« require~ paintlaa
•Suhcl tilt-in rcr euy c:leuina

•Urdime frame WIJTIII.ty

·;,._itf$· '""

w:::S'!.s:-:m

Over6roof(Center

IANGIS-O...Boc.-$11~ up

FIEEZIIS-$115 up :
•cto OVIIII-$79 up ·

••"'-'"' .

IAMIS IIIISII
. 912·2772
MIIDUJIOIY

Acro1s From Pod Offict
POMEROY, OHO

:
.

=~=

.:.':

~Aoollng
..
- 1-lor • Extwlor
1

(FREE· ESTIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621$

Pom~roy,

Ohio

Displayed at The
GINI&amp;ty Prill Shop
HOURS:
8:3Q am4:00 pm

.614·992-3394
Or Call
742·3020 Eveni•gs

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PH. 614-992-5591

12.S.tfn

12·2·91-1 mo.

J&amp;L
INSULATION·
•Roplacamllflt

Windows

•Roofing

•lniUIItlon
JAMES KEESEE

992·2772.,
742·2097

205 Nort~ s.-ld Ave.
Middleport, OH

531 Bryan Place
Ml~dleport, Ohio
11114/tln

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD- Approx. 7 acres of vacant
ground. Most 11 hay la,nd and has a goaat building site:
Water and electric Ia available. Owner will finance with a
reaaonabll down payment
$10,500

Grant StiMt in Mlddeport. 2 stoiY frame homo siluated
on 2 lots, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, lull basement. ca1port,
firtplace also a 2 stall horse shad w/attachad feed &amp; tack
room. Fenced lot. ASKING $34,900. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! COME SEE I
THIS COULD BE THE YEAR TO START YOUR OWN
BUSINESS! -In this small building with an oven smaller
pricel Located on Main St. In Pomeroy. Showroom "wilh
p~nty of storage space. Rooms upstairs with goeat view
ole nverl ASKING $15,000.

will find

at our
offices
throughout southeast
Ohio are now
available in Meigs
County. We want you as
a customer, so stop by or give us
a call today. We have a vision for the
'90s, and beyond. We want you to be part of it.

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - A beautiful .comer lot with a
Pond, frtt1 nai!Joal gas, woot&lt;shop or garage with a 5 b~y ·
equipment ahtd. Has oloclnc In workshop and publoc
water Is available. This approx. 10 aero parcel has a
beautiful building aitt ovortooking lhe Pond.
$30,000

HAVE YOU RESOLVED '10 GET AWAY FROM IT ALL?
- How about a little house that would make a groat cabin
or hunting lodge. Located In Antiquily ctoso lo lha river.
li)NLY $5,900 VeiY basic.

MIDOLEPORT - P-1 Sli'Mt - Anice 2 slol'{ homo wilh
3 bedrooms, II\ balhs, vinyl siding. now windows, lull
baument. fioust Is on a Good Street. Pnce was
$39,900.
NOW $31,000

IN THIS NEW USTING YOU CAN MOVE UP WITH
STYLE - POMEROY - 2 story !ramo homo w/lull
baaemont, 3 bedrooms, 2\\ balhs, 2+ acres wilh a garden
area, 1 car garage with woi1&lt;shop, shod, patio, built-in
bookshelves, fireplace, central air. ASKING $31 ,900.
.
·COME TAKE A LOOKl

ROUTE 124 - Have you aver dreamed of owning your"
own bualnoss- Well, now's lha time to buy. This business
ia aqylpptd with shako machine, 4 lreozort, Ice cream
machine, dotp ll'{er, lc~ machine, grill and lots mora.
Sitting 011 approx. ono acoa comer lot along a stall route.
ONLY $60,500

~Member; FDIC

WELCOME TO 1122... THIS IS FOR YOU I A beaulilul
modem 2 atol'{ contomporal'{ home with 4 badoooms, 2:.1
balhs, fireplace, bay window, pine walls, baseman! on 3:.1
aco11S. ASKING $t09,900.

'

THIS IS THE YEAR TO BUY THAT NEW HOMEI WHY
WAIT ANY LONGER? GET OUT OF THE OLD AND
INTO THE NEW...WE CAN HELP YOU DO BOTHI GIVE
llll A CALLI IF YOU WANT TO BlCi OR lfl.L. ..YOU
GOT THE RIGHTONEI

MJDOLEPORT - High St. - Tirtd of starching lhrough
lht nawapoper'l WaiT, soarch no luo1htr. Thlt 3 bedroom
hoult hal central air, Lennox pui11 G.F.A.Jumaet. I car"
garage, oqulpptd kl1chtn, privacy lance In backyard, lnd
a baatmonl DON'T LET IT PASS YOU BY.
$31,100

~

HAPPY NEW YEAR/

DOniE TURNER, Brok•................,_.......... -. tt2·56t2

HENRY E. CLELAN0.........................................8D2~111
TRACY BRINAOER...........................................I41·2431

BREPI)A JEFFERS............................................ ttl-30151
DAR LitE STEWART......................................... 112..385
SANDY BUTCHEA............................................. tt2-5371
SHERYL WALTER&amp; ....... !·•··········~-·
387-0t21

With full-service offices in: Marietta, Athens, Belpre, Nelsonville,
The Plains, Middleport, and Lowell.
·

JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................Ni·2660
JO HILL...... - .....................................: •••:...........18S.4466

. ·········•·····

.I

,II

OFF1CE..............................................................."2·2251

.,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.:

.

NEW &amp; USED PAll'S
FOI AU lUllS &amp;

.t

MOIIBS

,

992-7013
or 992·5553

:
:

01 TOll , _
1·100·141-IIM

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 .,

915-3561

Acrosa froM Peat OHlct
217 I. s.c-1 St.

.,... -

;

.. :
'•

~--

•

•
'•

Plllftllll
......, Pslnlll..

.._Ed_

,._~ ....

1

Owner &amp; Operator

C81'7Edilitln

614-94'2-6820
Pomtroy,

l

recamm•.,....a.ltDII 111
ancldap•' 'Ia · ·

•
1

•

colectat

:

1-614-667-M74

:

•••

1111/1

SHRUB &amp; TIEE.
TRIM ,and ·
IEMOVAL :
eUGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD ·

••
BILl SLACK ' ·:
992-2269

r.:~~==~~~~
R&amp;C EXCAV , _ :,
II"DOUIG

:
••'

PONDS

SEPTIC ltYSTEMI

· LAND CLEARING .
• WATER.
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS •
HOME SITES

l

t
'
:
•

!
'
!

HAULING:
Umaa10ne, Dirt,
Gn1Yal end Coal

Uc:enMandlonded

J

PH. 614-.~,~~-~~ . .
.

'

•

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
Stirling ot $235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2
bllh hoUH

wlbaeement 11t1d
Call614-992..S528 or
3SS.S227

RACINE GUN

949·2734

11·2t-1 mo.

PUBLIC
AUCTION
SATURDAY, JANUARY 4 AT 1 P.M.
LOCATION: From Galllpolle take Rt. 35 Watt to
Thunnan, turn right at cltv park. Watch lor
Auction eigne.
LISTING IN PART: Electric range, relrlgerator, 4
piece bedroom suhe, loS bed &amp;-dresser, microphone
table, several boxes of dishes, 3 bar etools, sofa, 2
end tables, table lampe, bookcase, set ol
Encyclopedias, single pedestal round table, electric
heater, 2 hall trees, 175 bales of hay, 50 wood fence
poets, large chain holst, wire stretchers, post hole
digger, several axes, antique wheelchair, 2 Rece
hltchu, blacksmhh tongs, 3 piece wood lawn furn~
lure, picnic table, hand saws levels, 2 squirrel cage
blowers, ox yoke, boy•elron runner-sled, step ladder,
log chains, 'come·a·long, 20 lbs. propane tank, mowIng scythe, l•g• hay rope, 50 h. 1013 extension cord,
4 house trailer tiree, large grind stone, truck running
boatds &amp; rear bu~r. aeveral rolls balbed wire. platform scales, several pocket knives, birdbath, 3 girls'
blcycl11, may have 11veral guns, 4 house trailer
axles, house lraHar tongue, horse harnen, several
set ol hamee, 2 hillside turning plows, horse cuhlva·
tors, slip ecraper, aeveral elngle &amp; double trees,
horte collar with hlmes ready lor mlrrow.
OWNER; MR. l MRS. PAUL SMITH
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
KEifflETH SWAIN
44C41St
DIAN CALLAHAN
Oolllpotla, Ohio
Oolllpola, Ohio

'

I
I

·i

GUN SHOOT

I

l:OOP.M.

!•
j

SUNDAYS

I
I

\
Starting S.,t. 22 . ,.

12

Gauta '-'•'

......

Cho.. Oily

WUPPING

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

•

I

CLUB

12-11·1 mo.

and

'25 C1t &amp; Wrapped
1
5 btra IO Sli1

•

!
j

carport, free gae.

DEER CUniNG

.•
:

,L_ _ _.;.'+;.;":.:,:./'1.:,1:.""::::.&amp; :

OYEN-IEPAII
AU IIAIIS .
lrl111 " In Or We
Pkll Up.

~

EMILEE MERINAR

&amp;-12-90-fln

RAONE, OIL

a

i

Spld.....

c.nt- p,_ . . . ,

1

USED RAILROAD TIES

POJIIIOY,

RACINE -Family Needod- For this 1~ stooy. 3·4 bodroom homo with 4 porches, hall basement, d.nlng room,
family room and a small outbuilding. Good siztd lot.
'
$28,500 1

pol.

30c:=:r--

Co~1111i1'fe GrOoming
~or All irietls . ·

'• "'inv

'

-

GROOM
. ROOM

Plumblntl •

~--~-~~~~·o~~;.~~~~'~"~~' ~:-:--:=-:-:-:--~~~~:~:4~~·so~-~~~DK's FARM TOYS
by ERR

We may be new in Middleport, but we're not new to southeast Ohio.
We're the Bank with a mission that hasn't changed in ninety years.
You can count on us to serve with pride. and work toward the
growth and prosperity of our Cl!stomers.

614·98$-3961

-Gu--

992·5335 ., tas-3561

OFFICE 892-2886

Proftnlottal
USJIIIa.

· - R - •~~~tltlono

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Real Estate General

Jr. Gall Sets
Gr.W.t &amp;
lttal 0Rs
C.st• Rllill
Bags, Htatl
Cov•s, lie.

CARPENTER SERVICE ·

DIYIS-$.69 1 ~ ·· - ,
RUII1GRATOIS-$100 up

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
lAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASE14J'NTS
HOME SITES '

EAGLE RIDGE - A~prox. 40 acres of land, of which
about 20 acret ara tillabll. Hat a bam with hay loft and
an aqulpmont shed. PubUc water and elacfrlc available.
Many great building sitos and water lot animals.
$30,000

:

__.Ji

11-211 -

L...-_

YOUNG'S

USED APPUAJICIS .

Wanted

a

The same quality products,
services and
banking
conveniences
that you

614-949·2051

1111511 mo.

r.1

PONDS

DARWIN- Fann- Approx. 151 acres olland wilh older2
siOIY homo. Has six rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 bams, and
tree gas ID htat your homo. Approx. 20 acral tiRahlt.
$70,000.

Loll Loved OnM.

UWII

~Mastic

985-3929 - 985-9996

You'll fmd us at 97 North Second Street.
the old Central Trust location. The same
. people you have come to know and trust
will still be there ready to assist yoi.t. The
big difference will be our added banking
services.

$20.00-

0rder Now .... 1.,__

Located on Rockspringa
Rd . in Pomeroy, 3 milea
lrom tho Meigs Co. Fairgrounds.
992-6855
.

•UabaUble eacre.y uviDp

•VInyl Siding

LOS ANG
KINGS - Recalled
Scott Bju.,..d; riaht wina. fnm Pboen~
ot lho In1emalional Hockey Lr.ape. As·
•i&amp;ned llk.h Siniulo, riaht wmJ. •nd
David Ooverdo.IO&amp;ltt~~dcr, to Phoeni..:.
WASHING'rON CAPITALS Si1J1ed Don Bot\lpte, aoalio, lO • fo ur·

yowa.ls... llt.
Wtavlng .,.., •••
,
stocL ·

o o 0 o

1 RF;PLACEMENT WINDOWS
c.u,.,,,..

;1

Ucenud 1nd Bonded

Scn1

I

~~~~~~~-.~..-.-----. . .1 r-----I..---:::W~HAU:-:-:=Y'S="""-1 :
IlL
INSOLAtiON
Teaford,._._
(ollfry
AUIO PAm · . •:

Hats, Horns, Noisemakers

•

t

•

Real Estate General

7:30-12:30

o 0 I o 0 o

'

CHESTER, OHIO

.

0

011 SaHord Schlolld. oH.It. 141
1614) 4U·9416 or

HAUUNG: Llmeetone,
Dirt, Gnmtl and C:O.l

Michd Picard, left Yt'i.ftJ, to Sprin&amp;field of
lhe Amaic01 H~ Leoa"'-

HAPPY NEW YEAR!-

o o I

Located

Hockey

we d like to extend our warm wishes and
heartfelt thanks to all the good folks we've
had the privilege to know and seiVe.

0

333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760

NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY

Nadonal Bukttball Auoclatlon
CHAIU.OTI'E HORNETS - Signed
RGn Orandison, fcnard.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES Pl•ccd Tod Murphy, forward, oo the in·
;...I tin.

~ ~other great year comes to a close,

0

.ENNE_TT'S

'

Basketball

National Hoe:kty Ltatue
HARTFORD WHA LE RS -

o I

.

Certified or Trained Nursin~ Assistants
Our rapid growth as the areas newest and
finest Skllled Long Term Care FaciHty has
created Immediate opportunities for Certified
or Trained Nursing Assistants.
Come for a visit, talk to us about your
experience, and we will talk to you about our
wage program which begins at $4.60 par
hour, PLUS experience compensation,
offered In what Is truly a "State .Of The Art"
Nursing Facility. Stop by for an interview, or
phone Silly Cloackner at (614) 992-6472,
and let us show you that all nursing homes
anrnotillke. •
, ,

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES

9l35·3307

o o o o o I

882 - Naw Haven
181-LIIItt • ·
937- Bufflla

.

BLANKET~
Homemllclt Wlllt
Long Luting Grwn
Scoich Pine.

lt!Ht '!l!eM.it•llll 01

~""'"""J
· MASTIC®'("
~, I
_
THE NATION'S FINEST

employment opportunltiel. · Fuf!her, BE IT RESOLVED
THEREFORE, BE IT IJuttQto ·VlUage of Pomeroy
RESOLVE~) that tho· Vlliage lil ree~y and willing to work
'oupporta the ellprlt of tho wlth the Chamber of
Chomber of Commerce to·
hove the propoatd :cor-· Commerce, the County
·- Commlotlone"' tho State of
tlonol lac lilly locottd In Ohlo; and ony 'other Inter·
Melga Countv.

1111-lloo.·

New 0,.. II 5tlriJr1·
"' .. Grla. 5NsiL
Gin aillltlwn11 Nskll

118 - App,le GtDve
"773- Meaon ·

.Oat . RuuJI~ F•st ,

Notice

949·2206

THE BASKET WEAVE

458-Loon

Pomaroy

9ie - ChnMt

RACINE

'

Meigt County

ArotCode&amp;l4 .

BULLETIN BOARD

R'ldenour's lVGAS&amp; APPLIANCE
SERVICE

"''

.

dia1JI11

'

REioLUTJON1226.1t
WHEREAS, !hero Ia I crlti·
col .noad far llll!playment
opportunltloo In Melgt
County.
WHEREAS, ""-re.,.. 11,_
v..
avellable for ouch lnc,.aoed

c

at Nllltltl ldl .

BASHANRD.,

(No Suadoy Call) .

Classified' paf{es .corer t h,e
folloUJing I ~lephonf! exc~anges ...

'
COPY MADLINE - '. 01\Y BEfORI,PUIL!CATION
.. :"11;00A.M. SATURDAY
· MOI'IOAV· PAPER
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
TUUDAY PAP.ER
.- 2'00P.IIt . TU .. DAY
MOIIE.DAY ~APER
- 2:00 P.. M . WEDNESDAY .
. TNUIIIDAV PAPER
- 2:00P.M . tHURSDAY
FRIDA, ~APER
- 2;00 P. ~; ~AIOI\Y
' lUNDAY PAPER ,

I

O..r 16 Worclt
'
.20 .
. 30
es.oo
.42
113.00
. .IQ
11 .30/'doy . .o&amp;tdoy

16
15

SKINNING,

WRAPPtNG

FREE ESTIMATES
614·949·2101 or 949~2860

Roto
. 14.00
18." 00

e.
1s
· . )O .
1&amp;
....__,.......,_.,.I' ,; N!ontttlv . , , 1&amp;
Mn~ c:ountt.i ~vlt · tie j)rt·
.•~ A~ttl .,. ta, ~onttanlllt runt. brDIItn UlldiViWIItbtchlf'led

•!l"a~i;O&gt;Je l.'~ discount tof adi ~id In' tdvlnce.

Here's to a
fantastic '92,
from Qll of us
to each of
you!

CHESTER

Ot"

.

Words

. · I·
•. 9 -

. . SATURDAY

•.

I

.DI~I

cumNG,

co.......rclal and Reddentlal

"RATES

AN
CALL 992"-21 So
MOr.IDl'l Y thiu '· FitJOA Y~a A.M. to 5 P.M.

There's a new bank in town
with a .90-year tradition.

..,.
1&lt;9116
129123

:. to

•

SKATE-A-WAY

Third place
Penn 93, New HamP'hft SS
Rainbow Clualt
Chtmplouhlp
Allbama 71, Wuhir!I'OO St 68
Third place
Hlwli.i &amp;6, ViDIIlO't'a 79
FIR.h place
Frelno SL 71, Wiiconlin 68
· Se\'tnth place
Novy 65, Brldley ll
Rtd IAblttr Claulc
ChampiONhlp
.
Mic.hipn 63, VUJinia Tech 51
Thlrdpl1ce
Briaham Youl'l&amp; 79, florida 73

:1111)1151

CAMPBEU. CONFERENCE

'

BULLETIN·BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P•.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

s

s

'

OVERBROOK CENTER

:16 IS 2 54 1U 10
• -................ 16 t6
n 129135
'"""'.,( ............. 14 II 4 !l!U 131
.• ..,............ - .. lilt 6 :II tt212J

'

t •

·INC. HILL'S DEll

· · · · New Homes • Vinyl Siding ·
New Garages • Rep!ace~~ent Windows
.,
R0011 Additions • Roofing

' ..

r

.,
..
.

'":....,i..~"-''---&gt;..;_..,l.

Nlnnber .1 ·Marketplace
··• .Jhe
.
, . Area's

fs;

••

BISSELL BUll

.

.-

... '

from the tluee (ll-20). ~i the line, M~; 7·7-21; ~elly Jaster, 1·2·0. :.
pomt advantage entenng the sec- . lher, were 75 percent wtlh nme of 8· Amy Elbers '3-1-0-9· Andrea ·::
ond half and kept up lhe pressure thefr 12 attempts going through. ,
il'aniet, 4-3·11 TOTALS• 22·3-Zl· . :
ag~st its NCAA opponen~ limitThe hosts n~tted 22 of 49 · 74." '
· · · ·
.:
mg Its turnovers to 12. whrle ~e attempts on sh~bng for 44.8 perHalrllme scqre: Alma. 3,7, Rio •
hosts suffered 25. Banutz fired m cent (one of four from the t1uee for Grande·33
'.'
''
·
15 poi,nts .and had six . ~f Rio 25 percent) an'd recorded 7,7.'f per- · .
• .· . '
1 · :
Grande s 32 boards to conJnbute to cent from the free throw lme (17·
RIO' GRI\ND~ (82) - Gena ·
the win.
.
22):
·
Noriis , ! -3:o: t"1· Mind)o":Moni. :
In ~ther 'top scot\Dg from Doug
The Rio ladies will ~e the.ir
ornery, 0·2-2;· A~n Damitz; ~·3· ·:
Foote s c_lub, Noms and Gudorf ll-2 reco_rd mto Mi~-Ohro ConferStephanie ·Gudorf, 1:3-0, 11; ·
had 11 pomts each, ~d Kalhy Sny· ence acuon when It commences Kathy Snyder,- 3·1+10; Mich~lle ~ •
derpi!ffi~tR lOpomts.
..
Th'!fsday •.5 p.m .. ~t Lyne C~nter · Croilse, s-3:0-19:Jackie H~on. :
Enn Fttzgerald led B·W wtth 19 agamst Oh10 Domm1can.
0-1 -0-3· Tricia Collins, 2:04; Kim
points, while JeMifer Wi'!is ne~
Box scores:
'
Sower~ 2:().4; Melallie Mi}ler, 0-~ 1
13 and Amy _Sander chipped IR
RIO GRANDE _(60)- Gena 3. TOTALS 20·11·9-82..
.
wllh 10. W1lhs had seven of the Noms, 2.3-0-13; Mich~lle Crouse,
BALDWIN-.WALI,.ACE (62)
hosts' 35 rebounds.
3-5-0-~ I; Ann Barmtz, 2-0-4; _ Tammy Busser, :1.-0· 2; •Amy .
The Re~women connected on Stephante Gudo~. 2-2.0-10; Kathy Sander, 3·1'-1-10; EriQ Firzg~d,
31 of 67 ftel~ goa~ attempts for Sny~r. 2-().4; Kim Sowers, P·2-?; 7-5·19; Jennifer Willis, 6-1-13;
46.2 percen~ mcluding 55 pen:ent Ia~kle Hannon, 0·1-l-4; Mj:lame Tiffany Lockett, 2-5·-9; Shannon
Mille,r, 1.0-2. TOTALS 12-11-3· · McQuade, 0-2-2; !..all(!!.\Yes~ ·2:2· .
60.
.
6; Nikkie Dawson, 0··1·1.
ALMA (74) - ·Amy Doucette, TOTALS 21-1·17·62 • .
4-3· 11; Tara Sherman, 1-2-4;
Halftime score:. Rio Grancje .
Football
Co
teen
Wruble,
2-6-l
0;
Katie
40,
Baldwin-Wallace 27.
NEW YORK (AP) - Wide
receiver Michael Haynes of the
Atlanta Fplcons and safety Deron
Cherry of the Kansas City Chiefs
were named NFL offensive and
defensive players of the week for
the fti'St round of the playoffs.
Haynes had six receptions for
144 yards and two touchdowns,
including a 61-yard game-winner
with 2:41 to play, in the Falcons'
27-20 victory over New Orleans.
Cherry had ei~ht tackles and two
interceptions m the Chiefs' 10-6
victory over the Los Angeles
Raiders.
Tennis
PERTH, Ausb'alia (AP) - Germany ' s Boris Becker and Steffi
Graf beat Jhe French team of Henri
Leconte and Julie Halard to
advance to the semifinals of the
Hopman Cup.
Graf beat Halard 6-0, 7-5 and
Becker defeated Leconte 6-2, 6-4
for an unbeatable 2-0 lead. The
mixed doubles match was canceled
when Graf withdrew with an illness.
Becker and Graf wiU face the
Czechoslovak team of Karel
Novacek and Helena Sukova in the
semifinals. Novacek and Sukova
beat Derrick Rostagno and Amy
Frazier 6-2, 6-1 in mixed doubles
for a 2-1 victory over the United
States. In singles, Sukova defeated
Frazier 7-6 (7-3), 6-7 (5-7), 6-2 and
Rostagno beat Novacek 6-0,6-3.

·" '-1"

Mu1le CltylnYilltlonal
Champlouhlp
Vondcbll1 76, Holy Crooo 72

4.!
l
u .l

Hew1-y lll. Orlando 112
94, Son Aa10niol4

-...r ............

Pcppcrd.ine 76, Laft yettc 63
PollloM 101 , Poe. Lulhenn 76
Steramcnto St 60, Drlke58
s.... C1m 81, S•Low. 76
St Maey'1, Cal. 12, ,UC Davd 57
J'ulanc 96, UC lrvinc 77
UNLV &amp;8, San Di.cao St 72
Utah 70, Wii.·M.ilwauk~S4
Ullh S• 14, Weber S• 72
WaWngton 77, UC San Diego 53

I
1
l

Monday's scores

~- ········ · 2ll2
- !'?! ........ 1714
Ptrihlalpli&lt; ....... 1217
N.Y. llliodM .... 12 II

South

13

'

Business Serv·

Transactions

East

90

.104

Colilomia 12, M.nlu111n 56
Colorado SL 11, Idaho SL n
Colwnbia 82. San Fnncilco Sl. 76
~ Be~ch S1. 84, Robert. Morris 91
Loyoll Ml:ymounl 106,Lchl!lh 97
MonLina St 11, Appalachian St 73
NE l..oWaiant 81,·£. Wuhington 77,

Comoll74, Wlnduop l2
PnMdcnoo 7!, CenL Connocticut St.

or

PacllkDI...,_

Golden Su.~a .......... l9

, T-

10
11
12
16
14
13

Oilier recel•lna votu: Utah 9S,

GB

•
.c - d.- - t t t
Doln&gt;il. ...................u tl

•

7
8
9

Ctlb'llt:Jhtilloa

.~ ....................24

Tam

l
6

Major college
basketball scores

'· EASTERN CONFERENCE

,

m

4

-SLI,lbqca1,TW...l.

In tbe NBA •••
;T W
.New Yodr. ..............ll
19
Mlaml ....................14
Pbl1adolphla .......... .13
· New.l«iey ............11

ar

Team
Record Pta. Wtek
1. Duke (63) ..................!.0 1~99
1
2 UCLA .... ....................7.0 1~09
2
3. Oklahoma SL ...........IO.O 1,474
3

WednMday, Jan,l
PH low!

•

wilh

vote and lut week'• rankinp:

AtTu-,Arll.
Bl)'lDr (1-3) va. Indiana (6-4· 1), 1
pm. (W!BS)

' HaD of r•e Bowl
At T111pa, Fla.
, S1'!'0* (9-2) " · Ohio SU.Ie (1·3), 1
p.m. (NBC)
CllrwAI Ortudo, Pia.
Califomio (9·2) vs. ClaDoon (9·1·1),
I ;30 pm. (ABC)

the

buk...
vote. in parm·

lheHa, recorcll thrO\Iah Doc. 29. total
poirt1 Nled on 2.5 poinll for a futl place
VOl.l throuab one point tor a 25th place

Tuetday, Dtc. 31

.
•

Far West
ICift!l in

b&amp;ll

OtalRobedi 71, Stephcl F.Austin 51
TeAu OlriJtian 96; San Francisco 66
Tex.u · San Antonio 80, Southern

All- FO&lt;CC 9~ Doone 89

Tho Top Twenty Five
Allocilled1991-92 eollcJ•
pdl.
fim·place

Al AIIIIWm, Calif.
Tulsa :U, S..~Mto s.... 17

Baylor 80, North Texu 66
Houaon 83, Cal St.·FulleMn 67
Mo.·K.anllt City 85, Teu• .A&amp;M ?9,

MCih. 60

AP Top 25 college

llolfda)' Bowl

All.-Liulc Rock &amp;5, SE Miaowi 77,

ar

Wednesday's game

College bowl slate

.

--Sports briefs- .

SmJih&lt; DI&lt;!IIM

~ naSt."'(9·2).1J :30a.m. (ESPN)

.

The Dally

·...~·:.::·r~-

:

-~ · Pag~ .

I ·'

I

Dec:eni!Mir 31 1991

.· ~w()i9ly.S.eJ}tjile(

Sports

.,

•

Newly Re-done
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOM~ PARK

SNODGWS
UPIOLSTEIY

has nice homesites
available for up to
80' homes•
JUST OFF RT. 33
Qnly $75 per mo.
Call

"Helping You To

614-992-5528 or
385-8227

12·11·1 mo.

,Recotlflr Your ·

'

•,••
,

.

''' .
•

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I

'

lnve&amp;tmelll"

614·949·2202 .•
RACINE, OHIO

•

11/20/1

•

•

•

'

L-------...1 ~
I

I
I

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

POMEROY
Last markdown
on shoes
btfort closing
store.

OPEN ~11. &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·l:OO P.M.

1211211 mo.

r----.i-~- '
Owner '

CLARENCEATHER'IOH

1:

C. L. HHIIRJ &amp; ' ;
Rtfrlgerat... ' ~
Wt Sell &amp; Sarvloio
WeaJhtr King,".,..,,

;
·•

l

Luxalre, lnllder,
Htllt Pumps, fu'"-1, 1
Air Condhlonera
l
w D
'
II i
j
I

81700 IR 114

Long lattam, Olllo

"'-111..

•I

~

.(
IIIQINIIOIIIT

ca•n call•IS

and

n1.1 ROGI CAH

•RHtonoble ftet"

•OuelJtY Work , '

•F- Eotimlt11

•Corpet Hu Fut Dry

Tlrna '

•High GIOu on

Fioor Flnlah

Tl'-

. • I lEWIS, Owow

111. 1, htloM, OM.·

.

BISSELL &amp;IRa
. CONSIRUcnGIII(

.........
ec.. •'•"

eNewlhtAII

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

'

.,\

Step .. C1 ; - ..

'IS·C47S ·

"'·•1

�'

Deceniller

Ohio
Announcements

3

44

KIT _'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

53

Antlquts
Buy at Nil. Rlwwlno Ant~
lo r Rent
1114 E. Main ..,..., P-JOII.
1 - - Untumllhod," wllh . Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. II 1!110
......,...~,., No
·-And ....
": p~
~~ . I
2121. 1:00 .' o 1:00 p.m.
. , _ Wltor lno.,..., ttw
llopooit. 114-441-3611

Announcements

Apanment

_M.

Moll AIOI Slndiol By a.O!Co
Not Chlnce. WrTtt; Slnaln, P.O.

Bo• 1043, Cloii!Potlo, Otilo 4!131.

'

1','

Tuead8y, December 31, 1991
BORN LOSER
P"fB Um.E
IN ~

1991'

Ohio ·

riiiDfl(-

16 Auto Parts &amp;

Television

IJ6T

P;'titt'.',.V.

4

Merchandise

Motor Homes
.

1U-bdnn lfllo, In Roolno OH,
unturnlohod, 114--tllt
1-bdnn,
tumlohod
opt.,
- • l r o1 utllklollum, booutltul vljiW or ~vlf, ,$210mo, IMt4HIH
1br Ajllrtmont, Corpotlno, Fum,
Kltllhon Wlior And liMn Pold.
i:OCiMd In Butovllto . Plloe. 614-

dc!t· lilrt Colllo
ond AotiWIIIor, w/Houo &amp; mloo.
304-67!1-1!130.

6 mo old moll

Chow puppy: whhe, 1ppror. II
wks. 614-446-64!1.
frM 12 wk. old mlxtd brMCI

pupploo. 614-381·8011.

Fr• calal 614-tt2-68M

Old upright plano, call 614-912-

sne or 912-3673'

Part Border Collie, 5 moe, aid,

shots, very twHI , 614-992-5486

"Tum down the electric blanket, will you?
I'm tired of dreemlng I have malaria."

Lost &amp; Found

Bl~io

Lost : malt, Slt.rtan Huaky, 1 Houukeepera, Cook a S.rvtrt,
blue oyo, 1 brown •-.
·- very llalnlononco. H00-'82-2970.

lrlondly, Crow rd. "

11 •

614·992· Hotol, to $.450 wk now hiring
houllkHporo, oooko, oorvoro,

Loat : Ring of Uy1 , 10m1whert
around Vaughtn'l parillng lot In

Home

' 01o1

1

malnllf'ltnce, 1-IQ0..882·2910 bl
IUrt to dial aoo tlrll.

Middleport or IOWir ond ol Mid·
LABORERS
814 ~14 2-2894
E1rn to- 14.50 wteldy, will train,
oovora1 oponlngo1 oliO pa~·
7
Yard Sale
umo, 1-1100.551-154•
MEDIA SALES
Tolovlolon Advortillng Soloo
Rop Noodod For 'Tho Go~
Gallipolis
111&gt;0111/Polnt Ploooont Aroo.
Wo'ro !!Mfrlno ACondldlto Who
8r VIcinity
'Enthuoloom And
ALL Yard $1111 Mull Bo Paid In WilllniJ!IIII To WOrk Hord.
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Soin Explfionoo Cold Coiling
Strong Ct;lino Sklllo
lht day Hlort lht ad 11 to ~:~.~n. 91dlle;
Preferred. Draw /Con'imlttlon
Sunday odltlon • 1:00 p.m. /Car
/AIIowonoo /Bonolllo. Bond
Friday. Mondfly ldh&amp;on • 2:00
RHuma In Confld•nca To: 2120
p.m. Saturdly.
Homlllon.Ttllddlttown
Rood,

t:IO[~JU

2·BR , •"" - •
-• h, kl tenon...
"Y
ro-.d. Nloo oroo, big yard.
$325/mo., SS21 do~ 1144&lt;11·1157, Evo. &amp;14.e
.
tully Olrpolod ond tumlohod,

"lett

Smtll

Souonod Alh,.~k And Hick·
Houoo, · 82501mo. Pluo Utlllllo~ 1 !&gt;'I'
F l - , ... Plcll.fJp Laid
21
Business
And Dopooll. 114-441-41331. c.u DOtlv- And lloo~ Don
Wlugh,l11 ... 1111.
0
rt It
Bolora 7p.m.
ppo un Y
Curvod GIUI a.1no
!NOTICE!
Round Ook Tobloo.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rooommondo thlt vou do bullwith poopto you know and Groctouo llvlno. 1 ond 2 bod· Som Sonwrvillo'o Anny 1 .......
NOT to lind money tiro;;;!, tho rvom apartm.ma at VIllage Comlla. . clothlnQ, carhlrto 10
and .
Alvtralila
moll until you hovo invoOiTptid Manor
Apo~ . .nto In lllddilport. From """'"" dlooount, Jo!nlor tho ollorlng.
!lou- rogutar ........ $1tl. Colll14·11112·1787. EOII.
houro oft• CMIImu. F~ .• Sot.,
All Typo LoonoLo,.ro Spoollo~ tn lllddioporl, Ohio. 1 ond 2 Sun. Noon • lpm. othol dop
Ill In CrodH Pr-mo. Tol Uo
bedroom tumlahtd apt, eomt houri 0111 !04-27WBI5 !untH
Your-· tos-213-ltltt.
wllh
u1llltln poltt, roflllnoo ond Cl!riotmn) (Oihor dip ·UpmJ
Hamilton, OH 45011, AlTH:
.._a
NqWJrwd, 304-182·2!11. All ChMimll OlohlnQII In by
B
PubliC Sale
Reglon•l Manager.
Jo-ry 5, 1112. 'l n-od
Real Estate
llodom 2 &amp; 3 bldroom oport· Dacron camaflougt eov..,tl.
&amp; Auction
mont In lllddioporl, 2-bltho,
woohorldryor hook·up, oqutpo
Rick PNr10n Auction Company,
full time eucllonMr,. cofnltllt•
ood
.
•llch~n~.
RotoroOOWOopook
roqulrwd.
tuctlon HNict. LlctnMd Ohio,
Phon•
1114·115-4448
1tter
Wool Virginia, 304-773-5711.
1:00pm,
Wlddlno gown: olzo f.10• 11t1n
9 Wanted to Buy
New Hav~n1 ont bedroom 1pt, llaco. GOOd oond. 114-311-1111.

Polo-• .

ana raterenct required,

304-882·2681.

Nloo 2 BR, 4-112 mi. ~om Gol·
llpotlo. Stov o ~ r:~· Ho polo.

123!11mo. l14

Top Prlc11 Paid: All Otd U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Colnt,

11

.

Employment Services

12

Building
Supplies

Int-.

1111 NloHn ""'""' 11,1!00 ml,
roditr"Y
iiC, P.!'; lib. !1.,..od, 11210 olio. 114-Mf.2t00
'Wpm, t4W144·obor 1f!ni ..
1811 Pantl.a Grind Aril, run•
good, . aood. Loodld.
13,001. 114-~10. ooll oftor
I::IOp.m.

32 Mobile Homes

aile 1111oo1 Bod -;2,too
lllloo, 44.3-V-1, lllpd., Loodod
l1o.t100; Aimlnoton 11-41 11 GA.
FuN ~~~ALilomlllc, I Shol,
•.
7357.
For Solo: 1tt4 Ford Tempo GL,
l1,1tl. 114-31'7-Gi!lll.
Wo buy loll ar trodt. Jim
Cochron Auto ~i!''!'i 15th ond
Vilnd " · Pf. Pit. :1114•411!1-1185.

lte
lf.~e-

~-

1m ~J;. Jilek up, 310 outo,
ltotl.
11-2457.
1m .Joop truok, quodra~roo,
ll2111m4, 11M82-6305

1

111110.

$310o. 114·

llllllon Cll 1--2342, Alk

lor' Pout.
1tll Ford F·Z!O, V.e, 414, 47,000 .
lNT ~- Automotlo WHh 111111, Coli Aftor 5p.m. 614-448Air, lilUO; 111M .Edut 11,000 · .:,4413
;,;;.:.·=--...._,,--- - lllloo, t1,200. 114415f1.1:mt.
1181 Cltovrolll Scotodoll 350,
Aula, Low Mit•, Olragt Kept.
1111 lllzcll RX·7 (wit~• with 114-ZM-1181 Evonlnoo.
_ _ , , _ rihlrgod
Air, I opOod,
Clllltte.
,.., 73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

82

=-=·

..........

wlndowl,
re~r windoW louvert
powlf'

moon root,
INn! ond -

a

ono -

Included.

· Elooliont _ , . ._

12.1100 inllol. Qorogo - kopt,
112,1100. 'frliloo -lilblo. Coli
-.11011o1or 1:00 p.m.

Ford Aono• $Tx. 4 whlol
drivo. $3200.1M-441-0731.

i&amp; . Auto Pans &amp;
Acceasorles

••

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Cartor'o Plumbing
Fourth ond Plno
Golllpollo, Ohio

•

7 10
:

·~feyC/../NG

.1. . -

.

CFNTF(2

ft!o~ Tonight
~
Cttlkhn
WltNI of Forltlna "
• Farirllr Feud ¥

e1ea11arstereo.
~ CI II II lnkatball South
Ftortda at Cincinnati (L)

NEw
'{fA (I

11-5-3816

8CroNftfe
0 New AlcltiH
7:311 (I) Allin Ita Family
1:01 (2). ' Q King Orange
Jarrtborte ,..... The 58th
annual , _ , ftaturlng the
11192 Orange Bowl auand her court, wiH kiCk oil
COYelaiJI of 1110 New Year's
Orange Bowl FOOiball
Clallllc. (1 :00) Stlreo. C ·

~iSDWTIINS

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
_Roo_ldo__;,nt;.:lo.;,;l.;::.;or:.;.:.:;.co:..m.;..
,m_orc-1-•1 :

wiring, new III'Yict or ~Irs.
Ucennd · eladrlclln,
22 ft . tona truck bod. or:,~:~ Mawttr
Rldtnour Elootricll, 304-67!1- •
roduood b quick 1110.

3368.

1786.

lito fiord EIICOft CIT. Alklng
III00.114-441-e731.
-

AKC C'7

Furnished
Rooms

·•• Le'INLhr P.,..

..... -Hul,

I - · Old,

· And Wormed. lloody To
BoP-11-11.

AKC Poodle - · toyo &amp;
Room• for rent -week or month. tiny toy1, mlnr..tur. SchnaiRif',
Stortlng 111120/mo. Galllo Hotot. 11141t, oliver, Coolvlllo 114-81'1'

' j

Budoot Tronomlnlono, Uood &amp;
,.bull, ttlrllng at Sili Auto
Porto. 114-245-8171, 114-37f.
2213.

~m

.
arvest. Bargain...
A

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

·=

'

I

...' •
I

~

·~

.,

'

'

a

'"I

Now that the weather bas cooled
down, why not heat thlop up a bit
by clcarlas your closets, IItie or
basement ef those uawaoted Item•
and advertlslns them (or ale In
the ClaulftccbP
~d, you can put that eJtra
c:ash to pod use by dwtdll
the Clwlfleds ftr leal JlftiC
sales, Rea awkcts ad llarplu
In your neck of the ~·
To puttbe ClaBIIflcdt It writ Itt yea,

call eur III·YIMn, Mtadtly-rrl4ay 11

446-2342
675-1333
992-2156

lbr Homo, Nur Clolllpollo And

IJolllpolll Cllr Schooto. 1 - ·

1111.

Houu
VInton
Ar..,
Aolorii!COI And DopooJI R•

2br

qulrod. 114-318-8171.,
,
3 BR ....,., In llon:lfVIiio. Rol.
• Dop.l14-448·11!1.
3br 2 Clr Gtl'lgt, Brick Home In
Country. No Plio.
1400/mo, Pluo Dopooft, • -·
1012.

Hou- lor ront or 1110 on lind
Pomoroy ond Autlond,
0111114..112·3027
..,. ....1

tor ront· ono In llld·
dlloor1, 2 In Ponii!Oy, 0111 11411112-2403

42

Mobile Homei
lor Rent

1 bedroom trailer, pay own
u111Hiol ptuo dlpooH, 3041-17!12131.
1 Ill oportmord l 2 BA troller.

1-·1111.

'

Clohlgnndlf mlnr, - Holland
711. hiyblnd, -nd • ft.
hoyblncl, AC a row, no 1111 oom
pllntlf. All good oond. !04-273REN1'20WN
42111.
IM-441-311t
Vl'rt Fum•ure
Jlm'o Fonn hul-nt..sR. 31,
Soli I CNir, 111.10 Wook; Will Gllllootlo, 1141'11-fm;
Rootlnor, 15.41 Wook, Swtvot Wldo ooilollon now &amp; UMd llrm
Rookor, IU3 Wook.Bwnk Bod trootoro a lm~o. luy,
Comploto 18.41. -k,. 4 DroWir uti, trodo, 1:00.1:00 -kdor•,
Chill, SS.Zt Wook; - · Bod· Sot. Ull Noon.
room Suno, 1 po., 111.17 Wooll,
lncludoo Boddlllg.Courtry Plno
Wontod: Ulod
""" to
·ooll.
-114·
,.,. wont
Dtnoao With Sorii:h I 4 Cholro, onythlno
110.11 Wook.OPEN: llondly 256-1SOI, CI14--2St 1040 Afttr
lhru Sot-Y•. lll.m. to lp.m., lp.m.
Sundly 12 Noon '1111 &amp;p.m. •
1111oo 011 Routo 1 en Rout• 141, 63
Livestock
In Contonory.
-------Solo On All C,lpll In ltocld 1 Y11r Old Anguo lull, tBIO.
Vlnyt, l4.tt rd. carpo~ M.oo ~~p. 114&lt;2111311.
lloflohln Colpiii. I14-141-'J1144.
2Honill--PIInt.SWAIN
'llroo,_l1,1tl· 1110 AQHA AUCTIOit I I'URNITIJRE. 12 lnQ, e-; I Y- Old Pltnllllfl,
Otlvolll, Cloillpolll. - I Ulld MIO.t1WIItl22
tumlturo, hllloro, -om I
Worfl-o. IM-448-31Q,
For
- ·with
I -old Anguo
holforo
Cotl11+441o4441.
. $1.00 lb.
VI'RA I'UIINITIJAE
1-81
LIVING ROOM: loto l Choir,
T1 JllsporldiiOil
$1ti.OO;_ RoollnorJ... $141.00;

-1

"ooltlf, . ..uv; Collll &amp;
End , _ , ....00 Sot.DINING
ROOM: llblo With 4 , . _
CNIN, $141.00;_ Col•nlry Plno
Dtlllftl - h And 3
CNn, S2II.OOl . . . . z
Door
HloiJ;Jlbto,
.00•
......
; 011!
....
Choh,
tiH.IO.IIDROOII: , _ .._

71 Autotlor Sale

··~~

_ , .... (I

po.J,

~1.00; 4

Orner CMit, 144.•; lunk
2-lldnn ,....., Ill Roolno o101, Bod, 1221'1..C.•lfllo!ll fill Mon
lot, ...... Ill; 1 po. Oodor
0811114..11!111
hd:oom . ., IIIUO.OPIN:

........ ·-.-llllolholfnr....,_

.....,,.,.~

Nlc:l
311f And- lllpooll-111· llp.m., lundoy 11 Noon THI
RoloiMIOI
autrod. VlntonliOH. 114--3 &amp;rt.m., 4 111101 Oft " - 7 On
. . _ 141 In OlnllnlfY.
'
U.ll. TotO P. •
·

-~"- ... ltlllnl

vtnyt
I 11t
· 71,000
ml,_, roo1
ti,OOO.
•1110

91QJ!tt
tiQt
+AUU

...

SOUTII
.AQJIUIH

...

97 54 2

H

Vulalera~le:

By~pAIIIer

Eut·w.t

Deller:Eut

Everyone lleKins a new year Willi

Nertl!

reaewed hope. l'erbaJII tbis year it ill ;

••

Eul
19

more justified than usual. World tea- 1 4•
Allpua .
slODI relued clwing lbe put :rar,
eM! in the Middle Eut. South Afrka ill Mlng readmitted 1A1 tile internatloc- ·
al sporting com-ity. It ill)l OIJIII- ~1...-----------J
pic year, With lbe games Ill Spain net

.' .

- . r ! l y.staying on 1M plain.
·
To the :rar off to •lnteawtlnc
- and tuinC - start lot llrltlce play·
tl'l, cover tile ll:ut·w.t ca. . in tile

cet

'

'

r.a

!:'

Stereo.

:~...,.

·.

8:10 ()) (I). Homo
llllfiiO•- Tim promises
Jill an e¥ertlng out, but 1

footlla~l lnterftrls. (R)

•

Stereo.

•
SINatStdon
t.GO (2). Q In till Heat ollhe
Mgltt GIHupie and Tlbbl
search for 1110 killer or two
drug puehers. (R) ,Stereo. C
(J) ll)eii:DIIlnM o...ni
has a cese of 1110 bl- and
Bac:ky nMCis transportation.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I OPE'I-ID A

l

l..OT' QF. TIME

I' '

TALKit-.6 10
IDIOTS.

I

'
•'

1hnr. ymu· du Ue1· into cush,
Sell it d1.e easy way••• by phone,

•
'"I'

no neetl to letl1'e yow· home.
.Place youl' classified ad lo(lay!
.l5 woniB m· leBs, 3 days,
3 papel's,$6.00

'
,,'

(R)

l:===;l/

Stlreo. C

(PGI (2:30)

~~~f

e

8:30 ()) (J) Cllaclt Hayden lies
about lilt marital status to a
Jitl"hY widOw. (R) Stereo..

I'M OFF
TO SHOOT
MARVELS

~

(J) New v.... !,a Wl1lt
tile lerlln Phlr.nnallla

l'M OFF
FER TH'
DAY!!

1 Ring

50r-t

13 Styta of IJPI
14 Nawlgato In
air

C1•1th
53 SIR1IIIc
55 CNtt .......,

11 Rtflgloua

wamony

58- er-t

11 lllcldlt
t7 Curvy lltllf
tl Poet Ogden

OIIIMif:

57 -

baakldon

tile ltaactl
58 Jokl (Ill.)

21 Ankll
co..nn,•
24 lllnaral ar
27 Shy
31 Young hawk
32 lillllnchofy
33 Cttortt

Movie (2:00)

43 Hebrew
46 furtiiCI
47 Haflm

7 Trill at cloud

~ TUMCiar

• Nalltvlfle Now Stereo.

I'M OFF
TOTH' CARD
GAME .

ACROSS

20 Lantlllllll

0 MOVIE: Tltt F~oco Kid

BARNEY

The World Almanac11 Crossword Puzzle

G1 De MOVIE: 'WOIId'a
OlriNt IJ¥Ing llrtclnmakl'

·••

•

61 Farm Equipment

1044.

••
UIOI
+QJ!ti75U

ada.."'

'il:w.• .3

'
Atllo Cholmoro Dllool Trao·
tor, $1,150; D-M AC With Loldlr,
12,8!0, 0.11 AC With Plow, Cu~
IIYIIOf, IJrofn DriU, 11,810; 1142811-6522.
Dump lruok, Hydrollo a,-,
~o• 12 Vlriobto 8poodo For
Limo And Ul'lllltono. 114-441-

£All'

o•

I
I

1t5

WEST

Happy New Year
to all my readers

1-

•On

&amp; L~&gt;estock

When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
Ml The Bouncy Is Yours!

PHILLIP
ALDER

dlqnm IIICI decide bow )'011 wouW play a tAMp to lbe ~~~~~- l'llff •
play Ill lix spades. West leadlq lbe lither di ..... ,.. - . . • 111
heart
eJcbt.
·
the suit, INt 11111 bave • I
1 _._
Indiana at TUCIOII, Mz. (L)
-~ •
Tlte deal Ia bued on oae I wu remaiJilac.
(I) (I)
1'1111 MouN Joey Ia
lltown by a Belgian frilad. Later I
·given the Cllance to become
You IIMIII t11e 1be I aled&amp;e IIIII
learned
that
it
illn
Donthy
Haydea
the
lead is a linllelota. ,.. • • •
~vtalcn se-. (A)
Tnllcott's boot "Winnilll lleclarer trick oae, cull tile dla
'ace, natf a
CD !!I ~ In lui
Pia •
diamond
,.,
lllld . . . . . apade nw.
1a1t1n Born.-.n·a hlttorlc
~ kDowa lltlw IAI 1114 lracda 111Mt WIIID
W. WI wa wta lila ill, p11J
lolr , _ .... .......,, '
.
Chilli- Day
"'-~-·
ptr1orm1nce il E11t -"" ol - ·-- · ' All tile
"
'
e
,
tltavcfl the final contract lea- a lot
u ........ d! •. naff llid
llellltovln'a Ninth SYiftllhOny
IAI be desired because of the abortap CI'OIIS IAI the lpAde kine fat :roar til-.
Ia preaented. (1 :30) Stoieo.
of dummy llltrles. YOII IDIIII find ella· canis. U Ill 1eada 1 ~. ruff lD lila
a•11e-•11A
hong g11c1tr falls'Into 1110 sea;
lllllltds breatlnc 3-3. But if you Win the dummy, naff a dl•..,...llld......,. to
lead With the heart ace, cub tile dla· dummy Willi 1 spade Ill llltaln lila YlI chlltJ
his mother. (R)
Stlreo.
moad ace, ruff a diamGntl in baad, tal dllcaaWI.

'

F,1rm Suppl,r·s

Renta ls

. .

tA7~U2

e

h3-f4211Uwt --~·

· Reap The Rewards...

nma.

~
,.._ (PGJ (2:00)
(I) Coppw lowt BaylOr ...

()) MOvtl: .....

3404.
814 U6-MIO.
Slooplno raomo wMh oooklng. AKC - h Toittor pupptu,

Aloo trolllf 1p101. All hook-upo. non lhoddlno, • .., omort,
Coli olor 2:00 p.m., 304·173- hllfth guoranloo, now ll!dno
5151, ,....., wv.
~1, 114-8114-4177 Athoftl
1HZ Dlkwood mobllo homo, 3
Bluo pupo, 304-17!1-3127
bedroom, a belhl, doubll car
oftlfi:OO PM.
ga111ge, city water, e.s .,.,,
Merchandise
Drlgonwynd' eon.., Poroloo,
owner ftntnclng, SomerviUt
~....... and Hlmaa.ran ldlt.ns.
RHIIy, 304.e7!1-3040 or 17154431.
114141364hftor1 p.m.
181'1, Bretuwood 14x10 3br\ 814- 51
Household
Floh Tonto, 2tt3 Joe- Avo.
44e-1121.
Point Plolllnt, 3041-17!1-2013,
Goo8s
2-bdrm tr~ller, twnllhtd 6 new
full llno Troplcol tllh; blnli,
oorplll3000, 114-14t-2621
tmlll anlrnalt and IUI&gt;J)IIM.
AH now, pointed drywoll
Rat T•rrt• pupp&amp;tt, lntldl or
modullr, opoolol lootory lnoon·
outllldo docl, poronto on
~ .... thoullndl, ooll 1·
Prlftllooo, IM.atl-1071 at 11416-7171, uk.lol'lodd

iL:ue:r:fJi

.....

....

Tonight

• 0 FlntiiOniiUdl
7:111 (I) Udalll8 Family

holt ton pickup,

NOiml

.KUI

·•Au

===-

auto. topper, new tranl: ur..,

tlon ...~ 100. For moowlnfor·

BRIDGIC

Ill

ConrliiiOnlng, lhlrpl llamoono

Pets lor Sale
GlOOIII ond Suppty Shop.Pot
GroOming. All bioido, otyloo.
lomo POl Food lloolor. Julio
Wobb. Colll14-441 0231. .

45

No. 3 ......

· ~:~~

56

lor Sale

b;"mlli; ;-...-.no";;;

.you 4owlop · - lllp

\11•

72 Trucks lor Sale

~~::'-:or.'.~~

11n loyoto -~ 5 llpMd, Air

245~2t

Situation
. Wanted

1811 ,._ ""' Rod Oroy,
~. With ,.,.,., 1:00 '
1:00, 114 Ut n ut. H.

1111 ' Sontra, Alklno
11,100.114-441~.

1m, Rio Orondo, 011 Colt 114-

Nursing
Allfttantii'Homt
HUIIh Ald1, Home M1k1r1 Win·
t.cj. V1rlout hours IVIIIIblt.

lop Wlgll pold. 304·776-a421. ,
Help Wanted

55

11M !!odgo A~n. 4 - · blook,
Alllfll,
- · · 4 oyt, .now II·
~.........n., tvenlngt

loki over Poymonto, 114·
Biooll, brlcll, l!lpH, !lin- To
181·1111.
- · lntole; oto; CloUdl Win-

Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avonuo, Golllpollo.

£•"=

I
:::_~~ :_~
.~.:. _.. . .
I' I I I I I' .,
T0 N K YT

• Andy Gl1llltlt
OICoollrlloo
~ IN!tl liP. CtOIIe Joe
Pllamo
'
'
0 ...... Marla s
8:31(1) Andy Gllllltlt
7:01
g WlrHI o1 FOIIIM

11to

3 room tnd blth 1r. ..ddleport,

depo8h

I

aecuN.w.Q

Or lllco? In Your HoUoo?
Solon, oftor oohool. Drop-lno BEAutiFUL APARTMENTS AT Rato
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo roto I
wolcorno. 111 4111224. In- BUDGEt PIUCES AT JACKSON mlao In only 1 -..,,
fant TodcUer Carl, 814-44M227. ESTATE!t.r.. 531 JackSon Plkt GUARAIITEEOI Avolllbto ..l al:
•
from S1nnno. Walk to • • • Soum lruo Ylluo III"'!J.11 WNI
movlltl. Colll-.:1581. EOH. Mlln StNit, Cheltlr, utt

Wanl:ed to buy, Standing timber,
llbb Wllllamo &amp; Sono 614·992·
5449.

~I

. . . . One TY Stereo.

.

nllhod. S24CJ/mo. s100 Dopooll.

Fumlthad

Ill~.

I I' .I' .I . ~. =~~J"'"
.want to 11e
.
lor 1111, lorllli 10

=~=~~a:a

.;.";-:=1141:.=10:.:·~.,....,..,.....,.,-

Complltly

I'I

AFT LA . :, • MAce llf'IIIIV ;iva~ to . .

IIIII (I) ...,.,., ... 1111

s.:ir,

,.'J·

L E\i 0 L

~Q

IT15 ANEW YEAR, AND
WE WANT VOU TO DECIDE
· W~ICbl OF US VO\J LIKE
SE5T...
.

Improvements

2M-1443.

SIM, aflordtbfe, chlldcll,.. Y..F $221 ph.w
ric and depoth,
•- ~
:.81:,:.4-lf2.:;::..;
··!0:.:11.:..__..,...____
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. ...,..o
·~10.

dltport, l'llward,

11

m

R,ulllng Rlinllow Stereo.

Fourth
Avlnue;
Ollllpotlo.
~========:-r========::12br
Allortmord,
Looalod,
4111-1.'2
Stovo, Rofrlgorator, Wolof Fur·

Fomolo
loll Wlidlllo
,.., Aowordl Coli
Colloot.304-lzt.727l.
11 Help wanted
18 Wanted to Do
Found· A~ng In ~ant ot Franclo
od
11 8 1
Fiorill · tho
day
biiOI'o · Wookdoyo • No Shift Workl Wln:t A r11
by.•:,,'~,!,.~0~ill:b~
Chrlstmll,
&amp;l4-'lll2.e29S
Apply In Poroon. To lho Medfol Co I 614-24!1-5817.
Lost: Gold braoolot In Gallipolis Pfu.o, :103 Jooloeon Pfko, Bll· Goorgoo Portablo Sowmlll, don't
noJr Arlol lhollra, Hlllo, or tho woon 9A.II. And 4:30P.M.
houl YO\I' loti to tho mill lull
Pomeroy Krogtrt, call a14·949HOTEL
e~~U 304-t7S·1U1.
.
2881
To 1-410 WK Now Hiring. 11111 Poula'o Dly Coro Contor.

Me CIIntooh

7'16&amp;

Serv1ces

between ta.m. 1 ;o p.m. 114-

(I) (1). • .• • '•

()) VIdeo Power
Squire 0na TY Sino.

Not..,..

w"'·

6

zooo:

t:OO~·

ito llorol Loll u....ntod
Poundo And lnchol. Eol Your
Z opto. In llldd-rt, 1 opt. In "-tor· 'Millo. loki
Pomeroy, Cllll14-ti2·240J
Hoilt c."""""' R-ita a.....
z bdnn opt, 211 Sprtno Avo, 1tld. 1144411111.
Pomeroy.
.
-For
Fill Bod
Laodo, 141, Dol
' 114-441t~=!. :=.:r·.:!.~~":': 13211.
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Male, bl1ck, Lib mixed puppy,
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1110 Scony Complno
91- 4, 1100. Coil Aftor 5p.fll.
304·'1'11'11114. '
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C.B. rodlo, Cobrl
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104 lllloe Doey PBL II
Ant. · 4 -Iorio. Towor, eo.ax
lllroo. be. oond. 8100. Colt

The Dilly Sentinel hge 11

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2 HoWiWMI

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3 Vermin
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Claudio AllbedO conduCtl 1110
Berlin Phlfhltrmonle In 1
B11~111m from
Berlin;
all include Chtryt
Studlr and pianist Evgeney
KIBifn. (1 :301 Stereo.

Tin Tin

Sault-

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Fordhlm at South-

Millourl State (L)

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maker can tJP you ~ndnt1111d what to
do to make 111e relallonllllp WOI'k. MaK
$2 plus along, lell-ecldmled, stamped
envelope to Matellmliltr, c/o thlt
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, C-and,
OH 4410t-3-421.
AQUARIUS (.lan• .,..,_ 11) Through
the actions of an extravagant friend today, you might bl drawn Into aomethlng .
that coo,dd pro"' to bl e•pen-. Don't
let olhtra mllklt declllionl for you.
PISCES (l'tlt. 10 Maralt 10) Agreeing
to aomethlng you're unaure about In Ot·
der to appeue a demanding UIOCiate
could turn out to be a big mlatlila. H'o
Important tOday to look out for your
own lntonioto. .

4,_._____!.._ _ __

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446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

0 Prince Valiant
10:aa (2). IIJ Law • Onler .
Parents claim a religloul
defanse alter their child dies .

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llal amount 01 dleclpllne will bl required
(I) (I) • !klmefrM'' The
. MatciH famHy IIIII o..edy for
tOday - if you are to fllnctlon 81 an at·
Hank IIIII Slrllll's rna!Tilgl.
lectl"' prod..-. It's not time to throw
In the towel lull beca- oamethlng
lon't aooompttllled with ·
wtt1t Pit
LIO (Jtllr II-A... II) Be en lljleClalfy
BERNICE
llolleriiOrt
prudent lltopper, because you get
BEDEOSOL
Into financial problema down the road , 10:10 CIOolt and Chase
they may bl tr-.ble 10 today'o ex(I)
!II
travagance and mismanagement of 11•w•
QNtwt
your resourcea.
·
Y1IIGO (Afll. 11-hpt.ll) Piecing em·
phlltl on your lnttrelta whfla Ignoring
Arnartaaa Clalllcal muak: by
thole of your ~Ions -.•t win you
Mexico Cfty'l Cuartato
points In a popularity contest tOday.
latiiiOimtriCIIIO (Latin
The concerns of all mutt bl equally
Amlrlcan Sta1ng Glulnlt) and
considered.
Uruguaylt't gubrllt EduWo
ARIES (lllniii1-Ajlrlllt) You may Ill ·LIIIIA (..,._II-Oot. D) II you are Mlf.
FtmlrtdllllfMiurttl. (I :00)
lnctlned totltlltll t1 I IIIII raauna for lilt or p~ -••'11 ·81 ·
Anlldc IIIII Sino.
why you lltoulrl ..... d todltJ. Nonl . ........ loday, HI lllat not to ""llllllah
are ep1 to bl Vlllkl, but you mtgltt mM- o your salel 'pltell. Thent'a a ¥IIY good
On~Stereo.
' age 10 convtnoe your1e11 tMI thrlv n . Chence you•n 11e lilted to Ytrffy your
More opportunlllal thin uaualerellkety TAURUI IAINII 10 M., . , Try not to - 1 1 .
I
In the yeer ahltld, but you mull be tiC· place k1o ntuCIII .... I In a
ICOIIPIO (OIL M-Ntotr. D) Trying to
tremety cn1u1 not to treatlhem lndH•. L.ty Lucie te*y. 'IIIINIIu p a - kelpupwltlryourrlt;lt !rlendtilnotonty · 11110~-..D
•1r:o-'Ooolay ..... (PG)
ferenHy nor teke them for granted. 'IIIII· lite mlg~t itl!llll cnlla!ll tile moment. wuteM toUy, H't totally ~"' • • If
'
DIGit Clart'l ....
trend hu limitations.
you need hor lite - ·
J0U tltlnk thlt II IIOUnd WfltiO make a '
CAJIIliCOIII (IIM.II-.Ian.1t) UIUIIIy, m
II (lllr .......... -.t ThiN IIIlO' IOOd lmPIIIIIOn, you're only kldcllng '
.... lllaldn' lw ..
your IUIIIIT*III an baled on thel gtlltlnlea t - lltlil J11K pl-. wll youraalf.
Mullc llr Barry Manlkiw,
prac:tleal upac:ta of a propoul. but !hili . WOt'k oul exaally • JOU .,..lfon.tt.n,'. SADITTARKII(IIov. D DM.I1) LUCk
lloyz II Men, DJ Jazzy Jell &amp;
might not bl the c.a 1odoy. Don't let , Toblontho .... llida,ltbla.....n.u.. ancl chance lkinelt'ert't Nicely to help
tile Fllllt flr!ra and athlrl
lllfnl In till new yw. Hilla
your optlntlam paint you a distorted, reldy, jutttn JIIK eflllttll IelMa , JOU llellitvt ., Jntponent o•tacu.. t~
lllphtn lllltwitt, Shltnntn
roay piCture. Trying to patell up a bro- . liZZie.
.
~. You're~G~nttohltvetOdUiheold
Ooltlrly. ,, ;JOI
ken romait&lt;:e? 1'ha Mlro-&lt;lraph Match• CANCER (.lllne .,......, . , A Milan- luhloned way and Nm it.

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,._ a Dllttalr 1o get INnge." - Hlrry
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. Page-12-The Dally Sentinel.

Tuesday, December 31, '1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Your

ew Year's DrilaQI
·. Come-1'nte~
••
•
•

HlOill. \\II

•

~I'LU \1. COl

1'0\

•
I
I
I
I
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ASSORTED COlORS

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Martha White Flour

FRESH

snu

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PORK ROAST .

9
C
.FRYERSu...4 .
GOLD "N FRESH
WHOLE CHICKEN

IIIIR

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IUC 'N CHEESE ••••••••••••4 7 oz. lloxts

•SPINACH

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. MOUNTA,INEER •

1 . PORK SAUSAGE••••• t·lb.

99C

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Bush's Beans or Greens·

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DIAPERS..............
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BIG lEND FOODLAND

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Mo•.

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4

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