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                  <text>Page-1 0-The

S.atiahll

Beat of
the Bend..
by BOB HOUU:CH
You might not bav.e IIOiiced but
Saturday yOU began PIYinJ live
cents more on, the . gallon for
gasoline.
·
What with the high prices we see
at the pump these days - and this
has been going on since the Persian
Gulf situation barely got off the
ground - it's difficult to ~ \IP
with it aU. The latest addition,
however, doesn't go into the oil
company till, however. The new
live cents increase is a national tax
which is supposed ID help reduce
the deficit. Congress and Mr. Bush
- who really weren't especially upset when prices at the pump
skyroeketed - must have ligun:d
that a new gasoline tax was a good
way to go since we were being
stonewaUed anyway. :ren to one
says that tbe someone along the
way will find a way ID expend the
additional money being collected
other than applying it to the deficit.
Aren 'I you just delighted with th!:
scheme of things when it comes to
government - I am.

Tuesday, December 4. 1990

By
Bob
Hoeflich
area, uses ihe visit of
Betty to stress the need for keeping
up the older cemeteries throug~
· Meigs County since many times
people come here from far and
wide to visit the cemeteries which
provide many times a great deal of
inforrilalion.
ihe Pcxtland

Genevieve · Schneider · sends
along li big Thank You to everyone
who has been so helpful and kind
since her injury.
Genevieve received a broken
arm and shoulder injuries as the
result of a fall onto concrete. She
comments tliat at one time, she
thought that if she ever became disabled she wouldn't have anyone 10
care for her. Genevieve has. found
that she certllinly was wrong about
that Her family has been fabulous
in caring for her and friends have
sent cards, flowers, food and gifts
to again show that impOrtant support which is at limes so vital to
each of us. Believe me, Genevieve
really appreeiares all you've done and you know what? She's making
progress.

Katie Gulh, long-time Pomeroy
resident and a beloved soul to many
The Middleport community
of us, observed her 97th birthday really pulled it all rogelher in a
Monday. Katie has · long been a short time.
resident of Pomeroy ·Americare on
The town found itself wilhout
Route 33. DOn't hesitate to send a · any . otganizatiou to handle the
belated card.
· promotion of lhe Christmas season
recently and so a last minute meetBecky Nease Anderson carne · ing was called. The interest was
home Monday night from Buffalo, there and Monday night the comN. Y., where she underwent surgery munity held its annual Christlnas
at a cancer center there. She's ex- parade complete wilh Sanla.
hausted from the ordeal, but you
Unfortunately, the rains carne
know Becky, she'll be sailing about and near the end of the parade, it
soon. Meantime, I know she'd like poured. However, it didn't seem to
that support !hat you are so good in dampen the enthusiasm of the parproviding.
ticipants. Paulew: Harrison and her
Shady River Shufllers presented a
Betty Lou Wilson of Olney, Ill., terrific routine at the Central Trust
· recently spent_ a couple of days in Bank comer in the rain. They had
the Portland area illtempling to SQ much enthusiasm and so many
gather geneology material on ht;r smiles. They just plain refused to
ancestors.
· ,.
•recognize · that downpour. . The
She was looking into llle Martin Shuffters were dressed in red and
Adams Family. Martin was a white and wen: kind or the lead-in
prosperous resident of lhc Portland to Santa. Good group!
area He was the Son of Marjorie
Adams who died in Portland at the · . I know it's the Chrisbnas season.
age of 76 in 1842. Marlin had lhree I i:l!ll tell by lhe sea of crazy wiring
sons who were RoBert who moved suung throughout the house so that
to Illinois in Jg81; Jacob and Wil- all-of the decorations can be lighted
ham who stayed on in Meigs. Then: - now if I had just one more extenis, of course, much family back.- sion cord...... Po keep smiling.
ground involved. but Gayle ,Price of

Ohio Lottery

Han-isonville happenings

Willing Workers
plan bazaar
Plans -for the annual holiday
bazaar of the Enterprise United
Methodisl Church were made when
the Willing Workers Class met
recently at the home of Dorothy
Clark,.
The bazaar will be held on Dec.
7 from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. with the
place to be IIIIIIOIIDCed later. The
Super Sewers are working. on itelils
to be sold at the bazaar.
'111e Chrisbnas party was set for
Dec. 14 !11 7:30p.m. at the home of
Maljorie Bowen. Fruit and cookie
ttays will be prepared at that time
for the shutinS o( the churCh, and a
gift exchange will be held.
Delores Will pesented the
program. Phyllis SpeiiCCf was welcomed as a new member. A soup
dinner was served to eight members and four guests by the hostess.

Middleport
literary club
Mrs. Bernard Fultz spoke on t)le
four act play, ''Caligula~ by Albert
Camus, at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club held at
the home or Florence Smith.
Members had Parts in the play
which was Camus' most popular. It
was about his madness: He was a
roman emporor and his original
name was Caius Caeser. The scenes
of torture are terrifying and painful
but they lend immediacy and subs~ce to the hero's inner sb'Uggle.
His Dicks, poses and brutality are a
part of his driving inttospection.
Mrs. James Dicltl gave a brief
insight of her life so the members
become acquainted with each per-

Mr. and Mrs. Orville Phillips
spent several days visitina his sister, Ethel May and family in Jlardy,
Ky.
Bessie Graham and the Harold
Graham family had as guests,
Helen Young, Karen Lowerys,
Kathleen Price, Ruth, Nellie and ;·
Jeremy Lowe.
Mrs. Geraldine Ross, Ona,
W.Va.. was a dinner guest of her
uncle and aunt, Duane and Hazel
Stan! ·
MrC:·and . Mrs. Orville Phillips
spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and .
Mrs, Virgil Phillips, W115hington
Court House.
·
Mr. and Mrs. John W'tlliams
spent Thanksgiving with relatives
in Kentucky.
Mr. ' and Mrs. Russ Eshelman
spent a day with Louise's sister,
Virginia Casteel in Columbus.
Nellie, Ruth
and Jeremy Lowe
,·

GREGJUSTIS ,

Justis
graduates

.

Greg I ustis, san of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Justis, !{okomo, Ind., has
graduated from Tri State UniverSity
at Angola, Ind. with a hacbelor of
science degree in eleclrical engineering and has accepted
emplo,YR!ent with the Edison
Electnc.Co. at Crystal Lake. Ill. as
a disaict engineer. He is lhe
grandson of Audrey Young and
Irene J,ustis of Mason.

son.
Mrs. Clarence StratiOn was voted

·

Alpha Delta
Kappa meets

TOPS meets

into membership.
The hOSleSs served refreshments.

Wanda Faulk was the best loser
at ~recent meeting of Ohio TOPS
No.570.
Linnie Aleshire conducted the
meeting. It was noted that the
Christmas party will be held Dec.
· the Soulhern Local Chapter of 18 at the Carpenter's Hall in
·
.
the National Honor Society will Pomeroy.
All
members
are
urged
to attend.
sponsor a toy drive Wednesday
Weigh-in
will
be
from
5-6
p.m.
through Dec. 14.
New or good used toys may be
cootributed. Toys may be taken to
Southern High School during the
hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p,m.
All roys will be given 10 the
Meigs Couniy roy bank.
For more information caU Kim
Phillips, 949-2611.

Southern toy
, drive planned

Pick 3: 932
Pick 4: 3736
Cards: K-H;

A..C; A-D; 10-S

Officers were elected at a recent
meeting of the H~viUe Senior
Citizens held at the town haU. A
Tbllliksgiving dinner was.a!So held.
Elected were Louise Eshelman,
president; FtaOCes Alldre, . vice
president;
VIrginia
Oibson,
secretary; and Hazel Stanley,

treasurer.

Voi,:41 . No. 159
Copyrighted 1990

·

TRADmONAL CHRISTMAS • Legloa Post 128 of Middleport
featured a tradltioea' Cbristlllas as the lheme or its float in tile
Middleport Christmas pantde. Pl!cb(lft surrounded a deeorllled
tree and m-ben oldie Awdlim'y on tbe lloat distributed candy
along lhe pantde I'OIIte.

She was nominated by htz
sororitY,. Alpha Mu Beta and the
fraternity, Alpha Sipna Phi.
At lhe universlly, she is the
secretary for Alpha Mu Bela and an
active '"Iii sis" of Pi Sigma.
The crowning of the q_ueen will
take place Thursday everung in the .
student center.

t~~.!!!I ·i.~!?.!!~~. . ~~~~m~

RefreshmentS were served· by
Helen Woif, and Everett and Charlotte Grant and a silent auction was
held by the ways and means committee.
Helen Wolf was pianist for the
meeting.
Attending were Mae .McPeek,
Octa Ward, Eva Robson. Virgin\3
Lee, E~rett -GI'II)t, Dorotliy
Ritchie, Esther Smith, Goldie
Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes, Helen
Wolf, DOris Grueser, Beulah
Maxey, Erma Cleland, Faye
Kirldtart, Lola Damewood, .Opal
Hollon. Thelma 'White, Charlotte
Grant, Sandia White, Mary K. Hoi·
ter, Betty Young, Betty Roush,
Mary Jo Barringer, Jean Frederick,
Marcia KeUer, JoAnn Baum, Alia
BaUard, Ethel Orr, Sadie Ttussell
and Ada Bissell.

Gary . Walker presented a
program on caving at the recent
meeting of the Alpha Delta KaJllll!
Sorority held at the Racine Uruted
Methodisi Church.
'
The m~ting was conducted by
Karen Walker. Yearbooks were disThe Willing Workers Class will
lributed and the Cllrisuiw party · have its Christmas bazaar and bake
was planned. Members are to·meet sale on Friday at 112 West Main
at the church on Dec. 18 at 6 p.m.
StreeL

.

. Middle~rt

Willing Workers
have meeting

wbo served as retreat racllltBior. Guest speaker
on Friday evening was Fred Hennis of MedOfllce Mangement, Inc., wbo used marketing
medical services In tile 1990's as his theme. Tbe
· hospital's board of tr~ees and the hospital's
medical staff also beld business sessions during
the retreat activities on Friday evening.

RETREA.T - Scott Lucas, center, is pictured
with two or tbe key participants in the annual
retreat or Veterans Memorial Hospital staged
Friday evening and Saturday morning at the
Holiday Inn, Kanauga. On tbe left . is Peter
Pavarini, Columbus attorney, wbo moderated .
tbe retreat sessions. On the right is Dr. Richard. '
Bradley, Ohio State University faculty member,

Sentinel News Stalf
of murder in the death of Mary ·chain of custody of evidence in the
The victim, her boyfriend, Berry several years ago.
case.
neighbors, and medical staff from
Young is represented in Meigs
Dr. MJ. McGinnis of the
Pleasant Valley Hospital were County by Public Defender Charles Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
among the witnesses for the H. Knight.
Pleasant, W.Va. and Emergency
prosecution as the jwy trial of John
Detennination of the chain of -Room Nurse Sandra Roush discusL. Young got underway in Meigs custody of evidence in lhe case sed the procedure, both in $eneral
County ·common Pleas Court on took up a lar~ part of Y-esterday's and. in this case, of gadtenng inThesday afternoon.
testimony, w1th sheriffs deputies fonnation in sexl)al assault cases.
Young is charged in an in.dict- from bolh Meigs and Mason
Bolh McGilDiiS and Roush went
· ment wilh kidnapping, an ag- County lakin~ the stand to diseus,5 into specific details surrounding the
gravated felony of lhe first degree. their .roles m the galhering of completion .of what is known as a
He is accused of uansponing an eVidence and subsequent investiga- "rape kit", a box wherein aU
underaged female from Middleport lion.
evidence surrounding a rape case is
to Mason County, W.Va., where he
Deputy Georg~ Plants ~f Mason· deposited, sealed, .and sent to law
aUegedly raped the victim at least County told of hiS mvestlgauon of enforcement officials for examinatwice before returning her home 10 the crime scene, located in Mason · tion.
Middleport the following day.
County off U.S. Route 33 near
Olher witnesses yesterday on beIn addition to the Meigs County Sand Hill Road, and Meigs County half of !he state included the viccharge, Young was indicted on 15 Sheriff's Deputy Bob · Beegle tim's boyfriend, Jo Fink, the viccounts in Mason County, W.Va. related his Dip to Veterans tim's neighbor and friend of lhe
stemming from the August 12 inci- · Memorial Hospital with Young for victim's family, and a pathologist
dent.
the collection of the defendant's from !he West Virginia State Police ..
The penalties !hat Young faces in blood, hair and saliva samples.
The defendant's case is expected
Meigs County .ate considerably . · Eventually, Prosecutor Steven L. to .begi~ on Wedilesday !l)Oming,
more severe due to Young's Story, Assistant 'ProseeuiOr Linda and Yot~ng remains housed in lhe
prr:v!ous felony conviction - a jill)' · R. Warner and Public Defender Meigs County Jail.

'

Six inches of snow falls across Ohio
observations Indicated the snow
By United Press .International
went !rom Indian summer to
over norlheast Ohio was tapering .
Ohio received Its first signlfl· arctic conditions, and it sur·
off to mainly flurries. Skies over
cant amount of snow Tuesday · prised everyone."
the remander of the state re·
night and Wednesday morning,
: Robert Blankenship, supervlmalned·mostJy clouily wllh~lear· leaving from a trace·of snow In
southern portions of th~ state to 3 . sor of snow and ice relflova·l !Qr i11g aver.,, ·the .,., southwehern
to 6 Inches in ·the snowbelt of !he city of Akron, said that when corner. Temperatures were
snow hit at about 5 p.m. It was
mostly In the lower 20s.
extreme northeast Ohio.
A high pressure system over
just
bad
timing.
.
Muct/ of the snow came during
"It
hit
at
the
worst
time,"
·
the
Gulf Coast states was ex·
Tuesday evening's rush hour.
peeled
to take control of Ohio
Blankenship
said.
"Some
of
the
"The storm was a nightmare,"
got
caught
In
trafflc
.
weather
Wednesday afternoon
salt
trucks
said Bruno Bornlno, spokesman
and provide variable cloudiness
It backed up on us. AI !It takes is a
. for the Greater Cleveland Re·
for most of the state.
Utile !enderbender."
glonal Transit Authority. "Our
But by daylight hOurs Wednes·
Skies are expected to be clear
buses were gridlocked In the
day, the National Weather Ser· to partly cloudy Wednesday
traffic just like the automobiles,
vice said radar and surface night as high pressure streng·
and the roads were solid ice. We

NEW YORK .(UJ?l) - The
Federal Reserve Board moved to
!!ase the pressure on U.S . banks
and, Indirectly, on the economy
Itself, saying It will let banks
make use of certain funds they
must now let the Fed hold as
reserves.
Analysts said the reserve pol·
icy change Tuesday would
mostly help a banking Industry
whose profitability and lending
capacity have been undercut by
real estate and other loans gone
sour. But It could give the
economy a slight boost.
The U.S. central bank said it
will ease reserve requirements

No PIAa LIKE HOME!
Your Bankfo't~...
Fs

Orders for Meigs
Marauder books
are being taken
BEST OVERA' I FLOAT • 11te F-tr'l Bank w1t1t ill loat
CIIIT)'IDI Ollt tile tl!aM "Citrtlmlu Aloat.:~r'' woa the
tropb;r for lhe 11e11 - . 1 .... Ia die
Cl!rllllltu
Plrade Moaday lllpL The loU '-tu ed a patrltidc ~7 lkme
· will! tile ••• 11 ol BIDd .... Rn'lce IDID aDd ~en u..ed oa a
ICroll, clllldrea oll!uk •ployeellll mllltary and aww uall.....,
· ,and lite Farmer's Blllk Cbolr liDP.I tradliJonal carols.
·

.,

.

•

The Middleport Community Association will meet Thunda~
5:30 p.m. at Middleport Vi
~ Council ctu.nbers in viUage
I.
The Associalion n!places the Mid~ Cbamba' of Commcn:e
which m~ed into the Meigs .
Coanty Chamba' or Commerce.
Emphasis ·wiD be on joining merchants, businessmen and com. munity minded indiViduals into an
organtzation 10 promote village ac.
tivities. The first such 'actiVities will
be the Christmas parade .scheduled
for tonight II! 611m.

' .... t

POMEROY ·- Orders for the
1991 Meigs Maurader Yearbook
• will be taken 11 lhe high achool on
Thunday anc1
is
Nadle engraving IS $2. Plaslic
COVel1 ar $1.

992-2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO
'

Fridar. ec. s20.

T·
. ...

.

,,

. . . . .. 0

'

•••

: . . . . .. •- ••

)

....

Farmers
Bank
MEMBER FDIC

915-3315
STATE ROUTE .7
TUPPEitS PlAINS, OHIO

on time deposits by non·personal
customers and Eurocurrency
Uabllities, that is, borrowings by
U.S. banks from foreign lnstitu·
lions, to zero from 3 percent.
That means beleagured Ameri·
can banks will have an additional
$13.6 billion In montes which until
now were left with the Fed as
reserves -a collective nest egg
that also !unctions as a Fed
monetary policy instrument.
The central bank · took the
action "in response to mounting
evidence that commercial banks
have been tightening their stand·
ards of creditworthiness and the
terms and conditions for many

Soaring Medicaid costs
cause budget problems

When you coqsider the gas, time and energy saved
at ho'me, it·just dOesn't pay to shop around!

Community
group meets

'··

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio Human Services Director
Pamela Hyde says Medicaid
nursing home costs are contlnu·
lng to soar and she sees no end to
· ihe problem for the state .
"I wish I could tell you it's
going to get better, but I think I
have to tell you II will get worse, "
Hyde said Tuesday btlore a Joint
Legislative Commltt~e on Medicaid Oversight.
'
Hyde told the panel she Is
working on some options for
stemming the Medicaid deficit,
which have grown by nearly $200
million since. the Legislature
dealt with the problem last
spring.
·
"Every one of them (possible
alternatives) Is politlcallyunpop·
ular - but so is continuing to
pay, ' 'I she said.
Ohio expects to spend $199.4
mUllan more than It has bud·
geted ,or Medicaid through June
30, and nursing homes . are
responsible for $182.6 mUllan of
that total. Hyde said. That deficit
Is part of an overall state budget
!leflclt that has been estimated to
be $262 million by June 30.
.
'
Las.t March, the General As·
sembly pumped another S92

types of loans, " the Fed said.
"While much of this tightening
has been welcome from a safety
and soundness standpoint, It has
in recent months begun toexerta
contractlonary Influence on the
economy." the three·page Fed
statement said.
Lower reserve requirements
will reduce bank costs, ".provld·
lng added Incentive to lend to
creditworthy borrowers," the
'Fed said.
•
But Chris Kotowski, Oppenhei·
mer &amp; Co.'S' bank ·analyst, said
the move won't end the credit
squeeze. "Banks ... are scared.
The only thing that's goi!lg to
alleviate that is the passage of
time," he said.
Added Moody's Investors Ser·
vices analyst Christopher Maho·
ney: "It's strictly symbolic you won't see it In the (bank)
Income statements."
Analysts added that much of
the benefit of the change could be
wiped out when the rates banks
pay for,federal deposit Insurance
rise in 1991.
The Fed said tha~b~ Jan. 10 it

million Into Medicaid appropria·
lions, but it wasn't enough.
,
Medicaid costs totaled $2.8
billion the,flscal year that ended
last June 30 and are expected to
climb to $3.4 billion in the current
fiscal year :.. for a two·year total
o! $6.2 billion.
"We're always behind the
eight ball," Hyde said .
Last year. the Legislature
created the joint oversight com·
mlitee to try to keep on top of
Negotiation sessions between the
growing costs In the state and
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporafederally funded program of tion and the United Steel Workers
health care for poor, elderly and
of America, Local 5668, have been
ordered to resume on a daily basis
disabled people.
. Hyde and Kathy Glynn, Medl·
lleginning Monday.
caid chtef for the hull')an services
Jud~e Fred Fox presiding over
department, could not explain
an inJunction hearing Tuesday at
exactly why the state's previous . the Jackson County Courthouse,
ordered the RAC and USWA
estimates for nursing homes
officials hack to the bargaining
costs are coming In so far above
projections.
table begiiUiing Monday from 1 10
About one third of the pro4 p.m. at the counhouae.
jected nursing home .deficit Is
Negotiations were ordered to condue to a hlgher·than·expected . tinue daily 'until some seUlement is
number of days Medicaid recipreached.
· 'nle number of penions at the
Ients will spend In nursing
homes, Glynn said. The rest Is
picket points was limited to six and
attributed to higher costs for
guards for the RAC were ordered to
remain on company. property. The
dally care, but just why tbose
judge further oi'deiecl that neither
costs are so much higher Is
unknown by state officials, Glynn. side are to catry weapQDS nor use
.\ •
bright lighiS. .
said,

thens over the entire stale.
Overnight lows will be in the mid
20s. ·
Clouds will Increase on Thurs·
day •a·head of -a --w."'~•rn4~:rea I'·~­
Lakes cold .. lr.ont. Afternoon
temperatures. will be much
warmer with highs In the 40s.
On the Wednesday morning
weather map, an Intense low
pressure system was located
over northern Maine with a cold
front trailing south &lt;'long the
Allan tic Coast. A high pressure
system was centerd over the Gulf
Coast states and extended to the
western Great Lakes .

would release to banks $11.7
billion !hat was held against time
deposits and some $1.9 billion
held against obligations to for·
eign branches of banks or other
foreign ins titutlons.
That $13.6 billion represents
some 23 percent of total reserves
of depository institutions, which
earlier this monlh were about
$59.7 billion.
U.S. financial markets initially
responded positively. On the New
York Stock Exchange , the Dow
Jones Industrial average., dOW!]
at the time by a bout 18 points,
rallied quickly to gain 2 points on
the day.
That effect wore off, but the
Dow finished the day ahead by
14.11 points, at 2,579.70, on
reports of Iraqi peace proposals.

!'lEW PLATES ISSUED - Tbe new Obio license plates are now
avililalile from the Obio Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Pictured is
Charles Manley, Pomeroy, rec;eiving a set of the new plates lro!D
Sue Malson, Meigs County Deputy Registrar, The plates are available at the license office on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy or by
mail from Columbus at an additional cost of $2.40 per vehicle.

Albany youth injured in wreck
An Albany youth was Injured Patrol, Swearingen lost control
when the car he was driving' of the 1980 Datsun 310GX, strikTuesday wen! out of control, . jng an embankment on the left
striking an embankment and side of the road, and came to rest
coming to rest back in the · partially on the highway, turned
roadway.
in the opposite dlrecllon.
Michael L. Swearingen, 18, qf
Swearingen, whowasnotwear·
Route 3 Albany, was taken ta l ing a safety belt at lhe time, did
O'Bieness Hospital in Athen . serious damage to the car. He
following the '3 p.m. wreck on • was treated at O'Bleness for a
State Route 143 in Columbia laceration to the forehead and a
Township,
concus sion , but wa s not
According to the Ohio Highway admitted.

RAC, union

ordered to talk

'

~ ·
~

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

Victim, medical staff

· The Farmers Bank is proud to be a part of the
Big Bend area. Our success comes from the
,people and merchants of our area. When shop·
ping for Christmas this year think of your lbcal
'
merchants first.

.

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday. December 5. 1990

Mrs. Margaret Douglas of The
Maples in Pomeroy was the winner
of a hand-made quilt.

Homecoming
candidate .
Queen.

a

•

Seniors meet

Fed lowers bank reserve requirements

Deiclre Lea Harnm, ChiHicolhe,
has been nominated for the University of Rio Grande Homecoming

Mostly · clear Wednesday
night, with low In the mid
20s. Partly cloudy Thurdsay,
with bighs between 45 and 50.
1

Chester Council D of A meets

Several matters were" discussed
at the recent meeting of the Chester
Council No. 323 Daughters of
America with Beulah Maxey
presiding.
.
It was reported that Thelma
McMannis, a member, Athens, was
in a car accident and was in Mt.
Carmel East Hospital, Columbus.
Faye Hoselton, Belle Prairie
Council, Belpre, had hack .surgery
at Cleveland Clinic.
m~ting
Eslhcr Smith read a letter .from
the national councilor.
The Rutland Township Trustees ·
At TUesday's meeting officers
will. meet in rcglilar Session will be nommat® .· and quarterly
Thilr$day at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut- birthdays Will be observed.. ·
, land 'Fire Sration. The public is invited to attend.

Trustees

.20.days
until
Christmas

visited Nellie's sister, Lena Pauley,
in a rest home in ~oulh.
Mrs. Margaret '"Peg" DOug~ of
The Maples in Pomeroy won the
quilt from the senior citizens at the
Thanksgiving dinner held recently
and spousored by the group.

..

M:id~-:-a~n~d~bb;ome=~m:ad~e
~ca!:n~d~les~w~e~r;e~so~l~d~a~sla~::~
lund nlslnl projecL Tbe display

ARTS COUNCIL CHRISTMAS -Tbe
dleport Arts Coundl beld an open bouse M:~day nlgbt In conjunction with tile annual
Chrlstmali parade. Relresbments were served

holiday wreatbs. Susan · Baker, lert, and Mary
Wise were two ol the hostesses for the open
bouse.

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. December 5, 1990

COmmentary
lll Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AIJEA

~~
ts:m~

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........... ~-.-:21
I,m . 01=0

. ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl~her

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General

A MEMBER o!THe United Press lnte.rnallonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
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. name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!-

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:Give the sanctions
~some time to work
•

.• •

By BERL SCHWARTZ

:
UPI Wuhlngton Bureau Chief
' • WASHINGTON ( UPI) - Now we have · the Bush administration
,knocking down its own best strategy - economic sanctions- lor
, pushing Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait while still averting war.
•. Defense secretary . Dick Cheney told Congress Monday the
, administration doesn't knpw If the sanctions will cut it. "They
-might," he said, " but then again there's a lot of evidence that they
won't."
If the evidence Is plentiful, Cheney certainly didn 't reveal much of
It to the senate Armed services Committee. To the contrary, he
' testified the embargo is doing its job in the crucial areaofcuttlngolf
·military supplies and spare parts from Iraq's major suppliers, the
Soviet Union and France.
In fact, the strongest evidence he cited that the sanctions won't
work was to call the load and agriculture picture "somewhat
Well, the point has never been to .starve the Iraqis. The
administration granted almost Immediately after organizing the
blockade In August that humanitarian aid to Iraq, if it become
·necessary,- would be permitted.
:. Cheney believes that a failed embargo will only strengthen
:saddam, and there's no question about that. But the secretary said 'It
•was better to deal wlih Saddam now , "while we have some 26 other
nations assembled with military forces in the gulf than it will be for us
to deal with him five or 10 years from now," when the coalition will
·have broken up and Saddam Hussein will hi! even more of a ihreat to
peace.
WhO, though, is talking a bout five or 10 years? Th!! advocates of
giving the embargo more time - and their numbers, by the way,
:include virtually all of Cheney's living precedessors at the Pentagon
~.;:.. are talking in terms of two years at the most.
: Two years Is not a period just picked outofthln air. The Institute lor
.International Economics, a Washington "think tank," says based on
historical experience it takes "one to two years to wear down the
•(llrgeted economy."
:-:The institute's trade eJ1perts have no illusions about theaifficultyo!
/ noun ling a successful embargo: a historical analysis of the use of
s anctions in 115 cases in the 20th century says sanctions succeeded
'only 34 percent of the time.
But the chances are better against Iraq, in part because Iraq's
economy is largely based on one product. Oil constitutes 90 percent of
· Its exports, and virtually all oil has stopped !lowing auto! Iraq. Iraq is
Hurting, and will feel it even more as time goes on.
Cheney is right , of course, that other countries are also hurting
because of the oil embargo, and their pain is a threat to thea!Uancein
tile gull. But rather than giving up on the sanctions', we ought to
.encourage more oil production from Saudi Arabia and elsewhere-and
·reconsider releasing oil from American, German and Japanese
reserves.
Can we afford to give sanctions a chance?
Yes, when compared with the mllitary ·alternative Gen. Colin
Powell soberly_described to the senate Armed Services Committee.
.- The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff dispelled do11bt. If there
was any, about our military strategy. The allies · are not
contemplating surgical air strikes or ' "other nice·, tidy , alleged
!ow-cost opilons," because Saddam could "hunker down" and ride
out any ''single-dimension attack ...
: Terrible p11nishment is In store for Iraq, and significant losses are
11kely lor U.S. and allied forces. The sanctions could work, but it Is
50unding more and more like we will never find out.

---

' . t&gt;,

•

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I .

.Berry s World
'

•

The Oftlce of National Drug
Control Polley was created by
Congress In 1987 after · several
years of bitter debate, and the
very active opposition of the
Reagan administration.
Leading the fight against creation of the drug czar position was
then -Vice President George
Bush' He had been delegated the
job of leading the war on drugs on
. the nation's southern border.
For years; as the. nation's drug
problem worsened, Congress
complained that the federal
government had no compre)len·
siV!! strategy, no one person In
overall charge who could be held
accountable for success or failure. This resulted In a fast·
growing duplication of effort
among various federal agencies
and an almost destructive level
of Inter-agency rivalry. So the
drug czar was created.

murkier.''

,·
.
• A thought for the day: Author Joan Didion wrote that :'to have that
sense of one's intrinsic worth which constitutes self-respect Is
~K&gt;tentially to have everything."

OPEN : DAILY 6 AM-MIDNIGHT • SUNDAY a ·AM·10 PM
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Firm · •

IA:gislative· accomplishments
The record of the 118th General
Assembly moved a step closer to
completion with the passage of
several bills by the Senate In a
recent post-election session.
More bills wUl be considered by
the Ho.u se and Senate in other
sessions, up until the week before
Christmas. But already ltls clear
that a resolution to many of the
thorniest Issues before the General Assembly will have to walt
until next year.
Earlier this month, the Senate
passed and sent to the House the
following bills:
- House Blll103, .which would
require that school boards be
notified when tax abatements
are proposed.
- House Bill 576, which would
make It easier for officials to
seize .and sell property of delinquent taxpayers.
- .House Bill 615, which would
provide legallinmunity for medical professionals who report
drug abuse by colleagues.
-House Bill 764, which would

All -Purpose
p, White · ·

By ]an Michael Long
simplify the application process
for pregnant, low-Income women
seeking Medicaid benefits.
- senate Blll396, which would
prohibit the use of federal money
for construction In certain flood
plains.
The Senate also approved a bill
bringing nursing home regulatiOns Into compliance with federal statutes. This action avoids
the loss of as much as $750 million
a year In Medicare subsidies.
Under current law, the state
can cancel Medicare contracts or
revoke licenses, but has no
In-between remedies to allow
homes to . remain open while
making corrections. The Senatepassed bill allows the appoint-·
men! .or "special masters" to
operate homes until they bring
their operations up io standards.
Just as Important, bowever, Is
the fact that many issues won't
be resolved until the new session.
One of these Is campaign finance

otatoes

reform, an Issue I was deeply
Involved In earlier this year when
I offered a proposal to limit
spending In statewide and Ohio
legislative races. Those of us In ·
the General Assembly now await
Gov.-elect George Volnovlch's
proposal on campaign finance
reform, -promised early next
year.
Other Issues likely to come up
In the 119th General Assembly,
which begins January 7, are toxic ·
waste regulation, the bottle bill, •
school finance reform and Improving the delivery of health
care. These are all divisive •
Issues, and easy solutions are .
unlikely.
If you need Information on any
of these Issues, or on any other&lt;
111aiter involving state govern- ~
ment, please write me, ·State
senator Jan Michael Long, at the
Statehouse. Columbus. Ohio,
43215, or call me at !614) 466-8156.

\ rtlu.\Ult• Coupon

But to overcome a threatened
Reagan vet~, several key compromises were made. It was left
up to the president exactly how
much pilwer the office would
actually have .and whether the
office-holder would be a member
of the Ca blnet.
u·was mandated that the new
drug czar must come up with a
comprehensive overall anti-drug .
strategy within six months of
taking office. Congress wanted
the position to have full Cabinet
status with wide-ranging powers
WASHINGTON_ Somewhere and hire the illegal aliens. As
In hopes of ending Interagency
In between the last two attempts . long as there are Jobs, the
squabbling.
at Immigration reform, the bulk Immigrants ·will come, and as
To be fair to Bennett, the
of America's Illegal immigrants long as there Is a cheap supply of
cept all comers as · residents-·
slipped tl)tough, unaccounted tabor, employers wUJ use It
president has denied him a place
entitled to their piece of the pie., ',
In the Cabinet, and has not given · for. The landmark Immigration
America . needs a realistic
There Is only so much to go . •
him the clout needed to knock
Reform and Control Act of 1986 approach to these . quasi11round. But branding the unwel- :
heads wlthlng the Bush admlnls- , was supposed to account for Americans. The Issue ts unpopucome as Illegal and then allowing '
tration to bring a halt to the turf . them. And this year's expansion lar because It Involves jobs In a
them to come ahead anyway ·
of legal immigration leaped over depressed economy, but If emwars.
settles
nothing. .
.
.
It soon became apparent that
h
1
f 1
1
Bennett had neither the patience
t em. Illegal aliens are stUI here p oyment o llega aliens Is
nor the Inclination for admlnisby the millions.
undermining . the job market,
tratlve tasks. He was much more
The 1986 .law granted amnesty Ignoring them won't make them
In 1776, the first ~chola!ltlc .:
to some 1.7 mUllan Illegal aliens, go away.
In America, Phi Beta ;
fraternity
Greater development aid fro,m
comfortable touring the country
but mUlions - probably the
Kappa,
was
organized at William •
giVIng rabble-rousing speeches
majority - of Immigrants be· the United States to Its Latin
and
Mary
College
In Virginia.
,
than moving through Washinglleved to be living In the United American neighbors would
In
1848,
President
James
Polk
·.
,,
ton's back rooms to coordinate
States were not covered by the create inore jobs there and
confirmed
the
discovery
of
gold
work between agencies.
amnesty because they entered helpto stabilize the region. That
the country too late in the game aid should be carefully crafted so In Call!ornia, leading to the "gold
According to most Insiders, the
rush" 'of 1848 and '49.
..
to satisfy the law. Their number it Isn't wasted on projects that
turf war-problem Is worse today
•
In
1933,
prohibition
of
liquor
Is growing.
·
don't employ people.
than when Bennett took office.
was repealed wheri Utah became .
Any reforms would have to be
The soluilon to the problem of
Though the head of the Drug .
the
36th state to ratify the 21st :;.
hemorrhaging Illegal lrnmlgra- coupled with more stringent
Enforcement Administration
Amendment
to the Constitution. •
Uon Is elusive and varies with enforcement so the United States
and the commandant of the Coast
political philosophies, Some does not become what It cannot
Guard may testify on Capitol Hill
prefer a law enforcement ap- alford to be - a sanctuary lor
as to how closely their organtzll.proacll
- bee! up the border cheap laborers.
tions are working together, conpatrols
and
penalize employers
Not all of the approaches are
gressional Investigators are rewho
hire
Illegal
aliens.
Others
viable
or even mutually compatlpeatedly hearing of Incidents In
argue
that
there
is
noway
to
stem
ble,
but
the greatest folly Is to do
the field where the two groups
the flow, and why should we nothing.
.
,
are, In fact , actively working
.
bother
when
the
lllegals
take
jobs
Currently
most
Illegal
lmml- 111
. against each pther.
that Americans either won't do grants are Ignored. The enforcefor the same price or won't do at 411 ment agencies try, but the laws
To further complicate matters,
all?
·
lack teeth and the borders are too
there Is now a new major player
· If It's unclear who Is right, it Is
long.
In the drug war. The Pentagonpainfully obvious who has been
Americans don't have to acIn its attempt to justify continuwrong - policy-makers In WaIng sky·hlgh Reagan-era milshington. Congress In particular
Itary budgets - has suddenly
Is unwilling to muster the politideclared the drug war a major
PLUS MUCH MORE ~
priority.
cal gumption to address the
TO PLEASE
1t
problem. Radical reforms might
One major problem Congress
even be necessary, and any way
thought the drug czar could end
ANYONE FOR
the government goes It Is likely to
was costly duplications or efforts
CHRISTMAS.
bump Into opposition. Yet all
In different' agencies. However,
Congress has been able to do Is
most experts now believe the
111 Seconil St., Pomeroy.
pass laws that skirt the Invisible
duplication Is even greater than
majority of Illegal Immigrants.
when Bennett came to town.
YOUR INDEPENDENT
A recent study by the Rand
Since 1974 the DEA has operAGENTS SERVING
ated the El Paso (Texas) Intelli- . Corp. gave the Immigration and
Naturalization Service high
gence Center (EPIC) as ·a
MEIGS COUNTY
'
marks for the way It handled the
centralized collection and distriIII
MASON, WY.
111
SINCE 1868
bution point for all federal 1986 reforms .. In the eyes or some '
!s::!W ~- el::!fl::!lii¥Wfd' ;
Immigrants, the law trans·
anti-drug Intelligence. But now
formed
the .INS !rom bad Cop to
the Coast Guard has created Its
own Maritime Intelligence Cen- good cop. Instead of spending all
ter. The CIA - which also now of Its resources manning the
sees the war on drugs as a budget border, the INS became social
booster - has established a worker to the masses, helping the ·
Counter Narcotics Center, The qualified Immigrants win legal
Treasury Department 'has status. But there are still loopstarted . the Financial Crimes holes - the biggest being the
Information Network to track employers who flaunt the Ia w
'
drug money and m()ney launderIng. Meanwhile, the Pentagon
haa tried to establish an antidrug Intelligence operation of Its
GOOD USED
own.
peteated Florida GOP Gov.
WASHEIS, DIYEIS,
Bob Mantnez Ia reported to be
IEFIIGEUTOIS, TYs,
• the No. 1 candidate to replace
Bennett. Given hll complete lack
GAS &amp; ELEC. UNGES
· of Washington experience, he
rnay get a very chUly reception
"At tM W of tM ,_,.,••_ .l..e"
on Capitol Hill. A number of
angry senaton wUI be asking
POlUIOY, OliO
PH. 992·1556
I,
hard que~tlons about hla ability
6:J7 Jrd An., Wlltlolls
to tackle many of the problems
.... 446·1699 .
that Bennett either Ignored or
HOUtS: I AJ1..6 P.M.
was powerless to solve.
·

Regular or Bun-Length

Regular/Perk or ADC

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39 ounce can -

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By Jack Anderson·
and Dale Van Atta

Today in history•.:;

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CHRISTMAS I :
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FOR I
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SunRinse frerllt:rqlllll

Assorted Vilrieties

Frozen ._Regular or Home Style

Downy Fabric

Seven

Troplcana ·
Orange Juice

Softener

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Quarters

jet-Puffed or Miniature

Kraft Parkay
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·Kraft
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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

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Assorted Varieties

HANDYMAN •.. 1:

~ •Hand Tools
I•Power Tools

INSURANCE

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Gold Medal
Flour
5 pound bag

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DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN .-MUSSER ft

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All Purpose

101

louis Rich
key Franks

Folgers
Coffee

Policy makers skirt .the problem

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. •UPS &amp; Federal Express •Shoe Repair &amp; Cleaning
•Video Tape Rental •Western Union Servi~e
• Traveler's Express Money Orders

WASHINGTON (NEA)- William Bennett Is withdrawing
!rom the war on drugs whUe
declaring victory. However, despite glowing praise from President Bush, the consensus Is that
In 20 months as drug czar Bennett
completely failed to do the. job
Congress envisioned when It
created the position. ·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslsll!llt Publisher/Controller

'

MIDDLEPORT~ ·oHIO

•

Mana~:er

Sentinel- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, December 5, 1990 .•

By Robert Wagman

.-utLENE HOEl'LICH

Da~y

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

' Did Bennett
.leave drug
war mess?

The Daily Sentinel

·.
..

The

Northern

~

�Page-4-The Daily SentinBI

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

'

Wednesday, December 6, 1990:v

By beating Eastern 94-68.

Southern knocks Eagles out of SVAC first-place share

-

BY SCOTf WOLFE
Sentinel corrnpoodent
Like an old rope, somewhat ragged on the edges, the Soulhem Tornadoes got the job done, as they
defeated defending · SVAC champion and longtime rival Eastern 9468, Friday evening in boys' SVAC
baslcelball action at Eastern.
Southern is now 2-1 overall and
. in the league, while Eastern is 3-2
overall and ·also 2-1 in the SVAC.
Winning coaeh Howie Caldwell
said, "I was very pleased with our
intensity. nus is the first night we
came inn a game to play with intensity. I wasn't pleased with the
number o ·fouls, but when you play
with inte1 sity your going to foul
more."
" ! wasn t pleased with our shot
selection a~!llnst Hannan Trace, but
tonight l W&lt;\S happy with our sl!ot
selections. We got some good shots
and tOOk higher percentage shots
overall. That's what it takes to
win."
''Going inio this season people
said we'd he a one man show. It's
not going to be that way. We
pfaved that tonight. We pla~ed
good team hall. It's 12 guys puUmg
tclgether for one common goal ... an
e~tire team effort. That's what we
needed to beat a team like Easlem.
'Jl!ey (EHS) fought hard to get back
into the game and l give them
creditfortheirfineeffort."
Southern placed three men in
double figures led by senior ftoor
leader Andy Drew Baer who rossed
21, 14 in the · first half. Todd
Grindstaff had a fine second and
thir(l quaiter to notch 19, while
Jeremy" Rose dominated the inside
with 20 points and 11 rebounds.
Michael Russell h~d eight, Roy Lee
Bailey six, Michael Kincaid six,

and Jeremy Roush five, as 10 men only 11 at the buzzer.
Despite Southern's dominance of
hit the scoring column.
the first quarter, the Tornadoes let a
Eastern also placed 10 · men in
the scoring column, but four camed chance to blow it open early slip
the bulk of the sc&lt;ring load. Tun through their fingers.
Southern 100 goi in four trouble
Bissell led the team with 18, Randy
in
the second can10 as theY. had 16
Moore had 13, Matt Fmlaw 12, Jeff
first
half fouls. Baer, Bailey, and
Dum nine, and four each by Mark
.
Kincaid
each . had three, Bissell,
Murphy and Chris Adams.
however,
played undaunted with
Eastern grabbed the opening tip
three
personals
the rest of the half,
and quickly pushed !he hall upleading
Eastern
to a ll8!'lliw 46-37
coun, where senior guard Matt Finhalftime
deficit
law swished a three pointer for a 3Bissell had · nine points in the
0 EHS lead.
second
round as he Jed an Eagle
Michael Kincaid pulled SHS
comeback.
Todd Grindstaff had an
close at 3-2, Baer hit a free throw
eight
point
quarter
himself to equal. and Jeremy Rose sank two straight
ize
Bissell's
marksmanship,
' buckets to give ·SHS a 7-3 lead.
Bissell pulled EHS to within two at however Southern scored just once
7-5, but Roy Bailey launched a in the final 2:42 after leading 44drive of 11 straight points that gave 27.
In that stretch Eastern outscored
Southern an 18-5 advantage near
SHS
10-2. Bissell had four in the
the three minute mark.
drive,
Durst four, and Mark MurLed by Baer,Grindstaff, · and
phy
two.
·
Rose, Southern swept to a 30-11
At
the
half
Southern
led46-37.
score with 57 seconds remaining.
Southern
picked
up
the
tempo in
Circumstances that could l!ave led
the
third
round,
but
not
before
to an early onslaught by Southern
Eastern
pulled
10
its
closest
point
were avotded as EHS dodged a
since·
the
first
half
at
46-41.
Randy
deadly bulletL At the :57 mark Tim
Moore scored on an inside jumper,
Bissell picked up his third foul.
While waiting for a dead ball to and Bissell drove the Jane to make
get a sub in place, Eastern picked it a four point game.
Todd Grindstaff then sparked the
itself up by the bootslraDS with a
gutsy charge·led by Bissell. On a Tornadoes with six straight points,
Bissell steal Chad Savoy picked up and Southern outscored EIS 11-4
the outlet and netted a quick three in the next four . minute stretch,
pointer for a 30-14 score as the capped by a three pointer by Andy
EHS press surprised the Thmadoes. Baer, the score now 61-45 with
Bissell grabbed another theft and 3:43 left·in the third round. During
scored on a baseline jumper. then this stint Rose had several key
after another SHS m1SCue too1c a rebounds an&lt;l six poinrs in the
pass from Jeff Durst to the gQal frame.
Baer picked up his four foul near
where he scored on a bang•bang
this
point, but John Hoback came
play with 19 seconds left He canoff
the
bench and did a great job
ned the free throw prior to the sub
finally getting in, apd the score ru.nning the SHS offense. Hoback,
stOOd 30-19 with Eastern down by

whO replaced Baer in the fllst half
and also did well, scoml two poiDts

in the third I,'OUIId and had two assists to lead SHS to a 69-51lead.
Southern outsCOred Eastern 2S17 in the finale to claim the 94-(;8
. win.
·
Southern hit 35 of 71 for 49 percent, I of 6 three poinlen, and hit
21 -31 at the line for 68 pereenl
Southern dominated the boanls 5537 led by Rose's 11, Baer with
eight, Rl!Ssell, who had a fine inside game with seven; and
Grindstaff and Bailey each six.
Mark Murphy led Eastc:m with
nine, Moore hail eight, and Finlaw
five.
Southern had 13 stealS, 14 IUrnovers, seven assists, and 28 fouls.
Eastern hit 22 of 48 for 44 percent, 3 of 8 three pointers, and was
15-28 from the line for S4 pereent.
EHs had 13 steals led by Bissell's
six and Fmlaw's four. EHS had 21
turnovers, 6 assists. and 24 fouls.
Eastern vion. the reserve game
66-39 led by Michael Evans' gamehigh 20 jloints. Jamie Proffitt had
seven, the triumvirate of Kyle
Wickline, Josh Codner, and Mark
Allen each with six, Bracken McFann with five and Chris Weaver
five.
For Eastern Randy Karlor .had
13, Wes Albaugh had rune, and
Mike Newland eight.
Southern goes to Southwestern
on Friday, whil~ Eastern travels to
Symmes Valley.
Score by Quarters:
Easiem 19 18 14 17-68
Southern 30 16 .23 25-94

inserting f•rank: Blake, .Phil Hovatter and McGuire in the line-up to
go with Mitch and Shawn Hawley
in the paint. The quickness paid off ·
as the Marauders came out in an
aggressive defense to cut the 'lead
to six points with two minutes
remaining, but Belpre was able to
cash .. in on the free throw oppor-.
tunires to pull away for the win.
Belpre placed three players in
double figures, Chris McGregor led
the way with 18, Wilcoxen added
17 and Gandee 11. Belpre ~it 26 of .
S6 from the floor for 46 percent,
and 16 of 23 from ·the line for 70
percent. Belpre had 29 rebounds
with Wilcoxen and Hall grabbing
eight each. The winners had eight
assists, 14 steals and 18 turnovers.
Mitch led the Marauders with 17
points, Terry McGuire had an OUI·
standin~ game off the bench with
16. Me1gs was 19 of SS from the
floor for 35 percent including 3 of 6
from three paint range (60 percent),
and nine of 17 from the foul line
for 56 percent. Meigs giabbed 30
rebounds with Shawn Hawley leading the way with seven, Mitch and
Mike Van Meter added five each.
Meigs turned the ball over 19
times, had 11 steals led by Hawley
and Robbie Fields with three each.
Jason Wright had · five of the
Marauders 10 assists.
Belpr~ made it a clean sweep in
the reserve game by defeating the
Little Marauders 37-31. Meigs held
a one point lead at the end of the
first period (9-8) and at the half
(19-18), and heading into the final
period the score was was tied at 26.
i

In the NBA...

p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Chicago, 8:35
p .m .
Toronto at Mi nnesota , 8: 35 p.ni .

Tue!ida~ 's re!iults
Orlando llJ, ~~York 100
New Jersey 106. Seattle 102
Philadelphia 109. Mllwauk,ee 108

tOT I
Portland 98. MJami 95
Cleveland 121. Denver 117
Chi cago 155. Phoenix 127 .

Transactions
Rae boll
Baltlmore - Traded outfielder
Dave Gallagher to California for
pitcher David Martinez and minorleague pitcher Mike Hod&lt;.

MinJK&gt;SOla 83. lnc:Uana 81
Atlanta 113. Houston 110
L.A . Lakers 114. Detroit 90 '
Sacramento 103, Dallas 83

.

.

'

Boston

Wednesday 's games
Denver at Boston, 7: 30p. m.
Portland at Orlando. 7:30p.m.
Phoenix at Indiana. 7:30p .m.
CIE'vf'land a t Milwaukee . . 8: 30

-

Signed tree-ag(!llt ·

pitCher Matt Youttg to 3-:year
co ntract.

cantornla ,.-

Trade:i minor
league pitcher Marcus Moore to
Torcnto for minor league- catcher
Ken. Rlvers; agreed to terms on a "'
minor-league contract with pitcher
Ed Vosberg.
Cleveland - TradEd outfl~der
Cory Snyder and minor league
Infielder Undsay Foster to Chicago
(AL l for right-handed p itchers
Eric King and Shawn Hillegas.
Kansas City - Signed pl~her
Dan Schatader to1-~ar contract:
waived ou.ttlelder Jeff Schulz.
Milwaukee - Signed pitcher
Edwin Nunez to 2-year contract .
Toronto- Infielder Rance MulUnlks agreed t o tenns on a 2-)ear
contract.

p.m.

At lan ta at San Aritoolo. 8:30 p.m.
Dr-t rolt at Utah. 9: 30 p. m .
Dallas at L.A. Cli ppers, 10:30
p.m .
Washl ngtoo at Goklen StatE',
10: 30 p.m.
Tbur&amp;day 's games

Seattle at Miami, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Charlolte at Houston , 8: 30p.m.
Washlngtrn at Sacram ento,lO: 30

p.m.

In the NHL".
Tues~a'y •a 1ams
Boston 5. Detroit 4 (QT)
Vancouver 4. N.Y. Islanders 2

POINSEniAS

WedneedA)''II&amp;mS
Montreal at Hartford, 7:35p.m.
Quebec at Edmontm, 9: lS p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Calgary, 9:35

p.m.

Vancouver at New Jersey, 7: 45
p.m .
washlngtm at Pittsburgh, 7: 35
p .m .
Mlnnesd:a at Tormto, 7: 35p.m .
Winnipeg at Los Angeles. 10:35
p.m .
.
.·• '111unday'•.11met
Montreal at Boston, 7: ~5 p .m.
Bullalo at PhUadelphla. 7: 35

I

.

they host Miller.
BELPRE 20 10 17 22-69
MEIGS 11 15 9 21-56
BELPRE-Bradley 2-0-2~, Fusselman 3-0-0-6, Gandee 3-0-5-11,
Hall 1-0-3-5, Jacobs 2-0-04, Me
Gregor 7-0-4-18, Wilcoxen 6-1-217, Wilson 1-0-0-2, 10TALS 25-116-69.
MEIGSWright
1-1-2-7,
Hawley 3-0-0-6, Van Meter 1-0-02, Mitch 7-0-3-17, Fields 3-0-1-7,
McGuire 4-2-2-16, Harr'ison 0-0-11 TOTALS 19-3-9-56.

Last-second jumper
gives
Rio 65-64 win
'

With barely seconds left, Rio
Grande's Debbie Fredrick saved
the day by sinking a jumper shot
and led the Redwomen to a 65·64
victory over Cedarville Tuesday
at Lyne Center.
Fredrick's goal capped a tense
encounter between th.e teams,
which was Rio Grande's first
District 22 gaine of the season.
"That's a big; big win for us,"
Coach Doug Foote commented.
"It's importan Ifor us because we
have three tough road games
coming up and we needed a win
going into those games ."
Cedarville, which dropped to
3-5, took a sllin lead in the first
half after an early start by Rio
Grande. The Redwomen were
ahead twice by one point, but
advanced ·on a basket and free
throws in the last few minutes.
Jenni Couch's two points at the
buzzer put the Rectwomen ahead
34·29 at the half.
Poor shooting plagued the
hosts, who were 37.8 percent on 25
of 66 attempts to Cedarvllle's63.6
percent (28-44), allowing the
Lady Yellow Jackets to post two
eight-point leads In the second
half. Wtth 2: 37 remaining, the
Rio ladies cut the deficit to three
(64-61), partly through llmltallon
of turnovers (Rio Grande hacl13
to Cedarville's 26).
Michelle Crouse's goal at 1:31
put Rio Grande behind by one.
Amy Zehr's free throw attempt
for Cedarville in the last minute
failed, and with ·less than 10
seconds left, Fredrick snatched
the ball and raced down court to
post the winning basket.
"Our kids never quit," Foote
said. "The play was to get the

.
ball to Fredrick and have her do
the rest. Gena Norris hit some
big three-pointers for us, and we
played an absolutely great defensive game. The kids played hard,
kept up the pressure defense and
wore them down."
F:oote praised the work of
forward Kathy Snyder, who held
top Cedarville scorer Diane
Rank to 13 points.
Both teams were nearly even
on rebounding . as ~darville
brought ~own 22 (six each by
Zehr and Rank) and Rio Grande
had 21 (five apiece from Snyder
and Kerr! Kidwell) . Scoring
leaders for the Redwomen were
Kidwell with 14 points, Norris
with 11 and Fredrick with 10.
Zehr hit 27 markers to lead the
visitors. From the foul line, the
Redwomen were 75 percent (912) and Cedarville was 66.6
percent (8-12).
.
Now 5-3, the Redwomen .travel
to Mount St. Joseph Saturday for
a 2 p.m. game. Cedarvtlle enters
a tournament Friday at Grace
(Ind.).
RIO GRANDE (85) - Jenni
Couch, 2-1·0-7; Michelle Crouse,
2-0-4; Debbie Fredrick, 3·1·1-10:
Kerr! Kidwell, 5-4-14; Mindy
Montgomery, 0-1·0-3; Ann Barnltz. 1·1-3: Stephanie G~dorl,
2-2·6; Kathy Snyder, 3-1-7; Gena
Norris, 1·3-0-11. TOTALS 19-6-1115.
CEDARVILLE (84) . - Dawn
Phillips, 1-1-3; Sarah SIDes,
2·0-4; Denise DeWalt, 3·2-8;
Cindy Weibert, 1-0-2; Mindy
Humble, 3-1·7; Amy Zebr, 1·2-J.
27; Diane Rank, 6-1-13. TOTAlS
!8-8-84.
Halftime BCore: Rio Grude 34,
Cedarville Z9.

MOTOR CARRIER
Are you in coMpli•ce
· . with

FHWA

$299

Drug-Testing
Rules?

VIDEO

Holzer Clinic can helpl

TOUCH
Mlddlepert l Pomero

..

But. Belpre held Meigs to only one
basket from the ftoor in the final
period to post the win. C. Copen
Jed the way for Belpre with 12, C.
King added 11. For Meigs John
Bentley and Shawn Hamon had 10
points each.
Belpre is now 2-0 on the year
and 1-0 in the Tri-Valley Confc;rence, the Golden Eagles travel to
Trimble on 'Friday night Meigs has
it's record drop to 0-2 and 0-1 in
the conference, the Marauders are
off until next Thesday night when

;

Col 614·446·5141
Or yevr 11111'111 lll11r CWc ••nell

forMOrtlllfor••tie•.

deaths-~ - - Meigs announcements-- ·Group /(holds re~ent dinner

Hobart L. Young

employed a§ a consultant to the
Monarch Company.
Mr. Young was a member of the
National Management Association
in Sidney and the Monarch Old
Foreman's Club, and was affililllted
with the St Patti's United Church
of Christ in Sidney.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m ThurSday at Cromes
Funeral Home in Sidney with the
Rev. Warren Smith officiating.
Burial will he Friday at 10:30 a.m.
at the Beech Grove Ce'metery in
Pomeroy. . . ·
Graveside services will be conducted by the Rev. Roland
. Wildman.
Friends may call at the Cromes
Funeral Home in Sidney Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.

'•

I

':Sixteen· were fined in the court of
;Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
TUesday night
,Fined were Paul Wolfe, no ad"
dress, $25 and costs, disorderly
m&amp;nnei; · · Billy Jo · Thompson,
CQ1umbus, $425 and three days in
jail for physical conuol of a motor
vehicle while under the influence of
alcohol or drugs; Bruce A. Wilson,
COOlville, $25 and costs, no
operator's license, $425 and costs
aJ¥1 three days in jail for physical
conb'Ol of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs.
Joseph ·Anthony Wilson, Middleport, $25 and costS, disorderly
manner, and $425 and costs and
lhlce days for physical conuol of a
motor vehicle while under the inftuence of alcohol or drugs; Kevin
Cashin, Middleport, $100 and ~sts
and 10 days in jail, petty theft;
Bailey J. Pugan, Rutland, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner; Charles
McOoud; Middleport, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner.

. .,

(Overall)
TEAM
W L PF
Hannan Trace .... .3 o 234
Symmes Valley ... 3 0 171
Southern .............. 2 1 227
Eastern .... i. ......... 3 2 367
North Gallla ........ 2 2 320
Oak HHI .. ::, ......... 0 3 179
Southwestern ....... o 3 153
Kyger Creek ........ o 4 217

PA
138
141
201'
404
· 341
235
209
252

Kyger Creek at Oak Hill
Southern at Southwestern
Eastern at Symmes Valley
•.
Saturday's schedule
.
Southern vs. Green Local atOU's :•
' Convocation Center, 10: 30 a.m. -~
Oak Hlll at South Webster :•
Chesapeake . at · North\ GalUa •,:
Raceland (Ky.) at Symmes Val· .
ley
·

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 3 0 234 138
Symmes valley .. . 3 o 171 141
North Gallla .. .. .... 2 1 240 237
Southern ..... .... .. ... 2 1 227 201
Eastern ............... 2 1 203 215
Oak HHI .............. 0 3 179 235
Kyger Creek .... .... 0 3 172 ,203
Southwestern ....... 0 3 153 · 209
TOTALS ........... ,12 12 i5'19 1579
( Resl!rves)
(SVAC only)
W L PF PA
Eastern ............... 3 0 168 122
Oak Hlll .............. 2 1 176 174.
North Gallla ........ 2 1, 174 139
Southern .......... .... .2 1 132 150
Hannan Trace ..... 1 2 144 131
Symmes Valley ... 1 2 132 147
Kyger Creek ..... :.. 1 2 128j 149
Southwestern ....... Q 3 103 145
TOTALS ........ .... 12 12 1157'' 1157
TEAM

'

(U8PII141-111)
A J)tvlllon of Mttlllmedla.

to Tile Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St., •
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9
2 P.M. TIL 4 P.M.
BRING YOUR CAMERA

transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital
OVER THE HILL - Misty R. Hayman, 16, escaped serious Injury wben ber vehicle went over · , wbere sbe was treated and later released. Tbe
accident was investigated by the Gallia-Meigs
an embankment and overturned late Monday ar.Post .or tbe State Highway PatrOL Sbe was cited
ternoon in Lebanon Township. Tbe RaciDe
for failure to control. Pboto by Dennis M. Wolfe,
Volunteer Fire Department and . Emergency
Racine fireman.
Squad responded to tbe scene at 4:10 p.lll. with
14 firemen and six squad members. Hayman was

SUBSCBIPTION RATES
ly Carrier or Motor Route

One Week .................. ................ '.11.40 •
Onto Month ... ........ .......... ........... ;tfi.lO ·

'

PRICE
Dally ....... ........... , ............... . 25 Cents

SubScrlbfors not desiring top'ay thf.ear·
rler may remit In advanC'e direct to
The Datly Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis . Credit WUI bE' given carrier each
week.

.._

.;

No subscriptions by mall permitted tn · ~
areas where home carrier service Ia ·1
available.

1·

Mall 8abocrlpllooo
IMide Melp Ceanty

.

~

1

;J

13 Weeks ............... :.-................. $].9.24 • r,
26 Weeks .. .. ..... .... ..... ... .. :......... . $37.96
'

52 Weeks ............. .. ... .......

........ $74.36
Outekle Melp County
13 weeks ........ ,.................... .... . S21l.IIO

''

26 Weeks ... .... ...... ........ ...... ...:... $40.30 '

•
r

52 ~eeks .................................. som.fO ~-~1
I

For·Dependab~ HOme

·· and
Other Propane Services...
Cal Ferrellgas

.

units of the Meigs County
Emetgency
Medical
Service
responded to five calls for assistance TUesday.
At 11:42 a.m. the Syracuse unit
was ealled to Spring Ave. in .
Pomeroy, for Audrey Arnold, who
was taken 10 Pleasant Valley; at
2:31 p.m. the transfer squad went to
State Route 681 for Jesse Reeves
who waS transport.ed to HMC; at
3:03p.m. the Rutland unit responded to School Lot Road where they
· joined the Columbia Fire Department at 'the scene of an auto aceident. Mike Swearingen was taken
froin there to O'Blenes~ for ~~-

.,
I .

'

Providing you and your neighbors with friendly, safetyconscious propane service is a Ferrellgas commitment. .
For 50 years. we've handled the everyday and emergency
needs of families like yours.
.
Ferrellgas ... the folks to rely on whether it's the
coldest day of the year, weekends, evenings, even
holidays.

Call about our special Customer Programs: ·
• 24 f1our EmerQency Service
,
, • Level Payment Plan • Ferrellgas Installation Review

992·5097
POMEROY, OHIO

Extended lorecast: A chance
of rain or snow Friday, and a
chance of rain or snow again in
the northern part of the state on '
Saturday. Fair across the state
.Sunday. Highs will range from
the upper 30s to the middle 40s
Friday and Saturday, and in the
40s Sunday. Overnight lows will
be in the 20s through the period.
~uth Central: Mostly clear
Wednesday night, with a low in
ttie mid 20s. Partly cloudy
T~urdsay, with highs between 45
and 50.
•

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA
446 4524
t

. . ; ..

12.75 IIAIUIIIIMYIN££5 SAT I SUfi
12.75 IAIIGAUI NCGIIT tti(SI]Af

' 7:00 I t :lO
fiAIU
S4f I U *11110

I

To 1end a betullfully
ment of injuries. At 4:31 p.m. the
dealgned fanenl
Middleport squad went to Nichols
•nan[lemena.
jual
Road to transpon Charlie Smith to
ull or 11itlt
Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
POMEROY
7:59 p.m. the Middleport unit went
to Cedar Hollow Road in Mason
FLOWER SHOP
''ThE" Woy Americe S~nd• Love"
County to assist the Mason squad
PH.-992-6454
which tOOk Melissa Curns to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
~&lt;::UjOI:EO:&lt;~~~'(j:ll~!~llll¥1""'1i::&lt;!ls::&lt;l!ii::!s.=s.•!!:JJ!~"ltloi:\'jlr\'jltBI'~
11

COUNT

1II!
I!

B·
I!

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions: None.
Dischatges: Leo StorY, Lola Barber, Dorothy Higgins, Mary Burton, and Blanche Scragg. .

PEPPERONI
PIZZA

5

•UT~N

ONlY

'

DEUVEIY

URGE DELUXE .
PIZZA

. LAIGE

$ 99 IPICI-UP

•

4 FlEE 16 OZ. PEPSI'S .
.

...,.

$999::'' ·

WE'VE DEliVERED LONGER THAN ANYONE ELSE IN IEIGS COUNTY
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK AT 4:00 P.1.
POMEROY AND MIDDlEPORT'S ONLY LOCAllY OWNED PIUA SHOP.

'

..
'.

P~e-ChlilfMII

·Ssle Now Going On/
Boys ·Shirts
&amp; Sweaters ........ ~ 30% off
Boys Pants ............. 25% off
Jogging Suits ... 20-2S% Off
Girls' 2T -14 Tops ••• 30% otf
OTHER SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE
. STORE
.. TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION.

Get those holiday socks ordered early!
Over 20 beautiful colors available!

BUTTONS AND BOWS
992-S 177

POMEROY~

220 EAST MAIN

OHIO

SYRACUSE, OH,
992-5776

ENJOY CHRI

'

.'

NOW AT

PAT HILL FORD

D 0 WN

TO

~

1

Weather

Heating, Water

liM EMBER
WITH FLOWERS

----EMS runs---

For The lo•ecl One's Grawe:
Bla'*•ts, VnHS and Sprciys

Hospt"tal news

. 992~2228

DEUVUY

OPEN DAILY 9-5
SUNDAY 1-5

POINSETTIAS
1 Colors ·- All Sizes
POINSETTIA BASKETS
HOLLY TREES
FOLIAGE BASKETS
LIVE &amp; CUT TREES

family in lhc community, and S2S
to Rev. Joe Pow las of S.Stem KenI~ where it will be given to a
n y family.
Devotions were given b~ Faye
Wallace, "A .Grateful Heart, taken
from the book, "When You Lead
Devotions," by Rolla A. Swisher.
Dorpthy Morris gave the book
study, "Justice Will Prevail." The
closing prayer was given by
Katherine Brown.

MAIN
STREET
PIZZA
FUE LOCAL
FlEE LOCAL

Mo• Op111 For
c•rltt••• s...... ,

POSTMASTER: Send address cha,... •

Friday's slate
(·
North GaiUa at Hannan Trace

Stocks

A Thanksgiving dinner was held
recently by Group II of the ' First
Presbyterian Church at the
American Legion hall. Following
the dinner was a meeting at the
church.
Faye Wallace gave the opening
prayer and Kathryn Miller gave the
treasurer's report and collected
dues. The $CCJ'Ctary's report was
given by Elizabeth Burkett.
Katherine Brown read from "The
Leaves of Gold on Thankfulness"
and the Least Coin was taken .
A $3 donation by members will
be given by each 'member in place
of a gift exchange for Christmas.
The money will be given to the
miDisterial association.
The group gave $25 to a needy

The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Office and the
Soil Conservation Service Office
will be closed Dec. 12 due to an
out-of-town staff meeting.

IDe.

One Year .............. ................... 1'(2.80
.SINGLE COPY

Diabetes Support Group
. The Diabetes Support GfD~!P will
meet Dec. 1-3 at 7 p.m. m the
French 500 Room at Holzer Medieal Center.
Marie Hl:lms, Dietitian at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, will
present a program, "Surviving the
Holidays."
The December meeting will include a $1 gift exchange for anyone
desiring to participate. Bring a
favorite holiday snack. Drinks will
be provided. The meeting is open to
anyone wanting to learn more
about diapetes.

Office closed

· !'.Jember: United Press lnternattonal,
Inland ~lly Pre:_ss Association and the- .
Ohio Newspaper Ass~latlon . ~atlonal
Advertising Representative, Bruham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue, •
New York, New York 10017. I
:

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Court news

Published every afternoon, ·'Monday
throogh Friday, ll1 Court Sl., Po· ·
meroy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Pub- ,
llshlng Company/Multlmf'dla, .Jnc.... .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S.· ,.
cond class pa.tage paid at Pomeroy, '
Ohio. ,

i

FRUTH PHARMACY

Bloodmobile comiDg
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will
be at the Pqmeroy Senior CitiZens
Center 011 ~. 12 from 1-5:30 p.m.
· A release from the Meigs County
Chapter of the American Red Cross
state&amp; that blood is needed during
this holiday season.
. .· The canteen at the Bloodmobile
will be furnished and served by the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday's varsity scorl!s
Hannan Trace 84, Southwestern
41
·i .
North GaJUa 86, Kyger Cr~ek 73
Southern 94, Eastern 68 ,
Symmes Valley 64, Oak Hill 51

SANTA WILL BE AT

Cliristmas party
The Preceptor Beta Beta ChaP.:
. ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
have a Christmas party Ill the holll\1
of Charlottt Elheifeld on Dec. 13
with social hour beginning at 5:30
p.,m. and dinner at 6:30 .p.m. followed by enteitainmenl Members
bring staple goods for Serenity
House.

Quiz to be televised
The Mei!IS High School National
Honor Soc1ety Quiz 1\:am will appear on WTAP-TV, Patkersbwg,
W.Va., on Saturday at 6 p.m.
The team consists of Aaron
Sheets, LIJcy WinebreMer, Randy
Corsi and Jarney Little. Rita Slaven
Christmas potluck
Darrell F. White, New Haven, W. ·
The
Harrisonville
Senior is the group's advisor.
Va., $15 fine only, speeding; Randy Citizens will have a Christmas potK. Lee~ Middleport, $2S and costs, luck at noon on Dec. 11 at the · VFWtomeet
failure to maintain control of his townhall. A gift exchange will be
The . TUP.Jl.er5 Plain VFW Post
vehicle; Paul L. McDaniel, held and all members lite urged to 9053 Auxilialy will meet Thursday .
Minersville, $16 fine only on attend.
'
at 7:30p.m:
speeding; Jilnmy Harris, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
~ner; . Clay N. Fahner, Middlepon, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner.
Dally stock prices
Mark McCloud, Middleport, $25
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Divorce sougbt
and costs, disorderly manner; Lora
and Mark Smith
Bryce
Agnes M. Haught, Middleport, is
Rayburn, Middleport, 550 and seeking a divorce from Rooald M. of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
cosrs, giving false information to a Haught, Crooksville, in the Meigs
police officer; Chris Rayburn, Mid- County Court of Common Pleas.
Am Electric. Power .. ........... 28%
dleport, $50 and COSIS, giving false
Ashland Oil ........................... 29
infonnation to a police officer;
AT&amp;T .. ............................... 30~ ·
Marriage licenses ·
Rick Little, Middleport, $10 and
Marriage licenses have been is- Bob Evans ............. :............14*
costs, expired operator's license.
sued in Meigs County Probate Charming Shoppes ........... . 10~
Court to Lee Tracy Swain, 26, City Holding Co ......... :......... 15
Reedsville, and MegiUI Lisa Smith, Federal Mogul ............... .. ... l2')4
Board meeting changed 24,
Long Bottom; Darrell Lee Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ....... ..16
Thomas, 47, Rutland, and Sharon · Key Centurion .................. 11 ~
The regular meeting of the Ann Wliitlow, 42, Rutland; and Lands' End ......................... l2%
Meigs Local Board of Education Dwain Eric Hendrick, 19, Letart, Limited Inc ............... ,........ 16'%
scheduled for Dec. 11 has been W.Va., and Aimee Cher Rupe, 18, Multimedia Inc . ... .. ..... ........ 61 '%
changed to Friday at 5 p.m.
Rax Restaurants.... ............. 3,4
Middleport.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 17 ~
Shoney's Inc ....................... 10 ~
Star Bank ...................... .. ... 15~
Wendy's Int'l. ..................... 6~
Worthington Ind .................. 20 34
(Limited Is ex dividend today)

¥iddleport court news

Newland O-O-O,Ho1ter 0-2-2,
Hunter 0-0..0, Chad Savoy 0-1-0-3,
Matt F'mlaw 3-2-2-12, B1ssell 6-04-18, Durst 3-3-9, Murphy 1-2-4,

'

The Daily Sentinel- Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---Area
Hobart L. Young, 76, of 1818
North Main Ave., Sidney, former
Pomeroy resident, died at his
residence Monday Dec. 3, 1990 following an extended illness.
Born on Nov. 16, 1914 in
Pqmeroy, he was the son of the laie
llarl and Sylvia Smith Young .
He was ,married on June 25,
f972 to Evelyn Fick who survives
a)ong with one son, John Earl
Voung, and two grandsons, Philip
SCott and David Bradley Young; a
bfother, Clifford Young of
Pomeroy, and a sister, Dorothy L.
Ackley, Guysville.
.
:.fie retired from tl]e Monarch
M,achine Thol Co., in Sidney in
1983 afrer 41 years of service. Untii Jan, 8, 1990 he was self-

Michael Kincaid 3-0-6, Grindstaff 4
6-7-19, Codner 1-0-2. Hoback 2-1- ·1
5, Bailey 3-0-6, Davis 0-0-0, Lisle 1
1-0-2, Russell 3-2-8, .Singleton 0-0-..i
0, Rolle 10-0-20. Totals 35-1-21'-94.

Eastern (68)

Belpre posts 69-56 victory ove.- Meigs
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinelc6rnspondent
Belpre held off a fourth quarter
Meigs Marauder comeback attempt
and defeated the Marauders 69-56
in Tri-Valley Conference action
Tuesday night at Belpre.
Belpre wo~ the game at the foul
line as the Golden Eagles hit 10 of
12 foul shots in the fourth quarter
to pull away from the Marauders.
Meigs had pulled to within six
poiDts with just over two minutes
remaining but they had to foul to
get the ball back and Belpre took
advantage with ·it's red hot shooting.
Belpre came out of the blocks
quickly and built up a 20-11 lead at
the end of the first quarter. The
Golden Eagles used a balanced
scoring aitack in building the lead.
Jason Gandee led the way with five
points, Matt Wilcoxen and Chris
McGregor chipped in with four
each. L. J. Mitch led the Marauders
with seven first quarter poinrs.
1 Meigs came out in the second
pCrlod with Mitch again leading the
Yiay to outscore the .Washington
County team 15·10 to pull to within
30-26 at the half. Mitch scored six
more in the period, Terry McGuire
and JasOn Wright added four each.
Belpre trying 10 put the
- " Marauders away in the third period,
Wilcoxen score nine of his 17
poinrs in the quarter as Belpre built
up a 47'35 lead heading into the
final eight minutes. The Golden
Eagles had as much as a 18 points
lead during the third period.
Phil Harrison went with a
quicker l'!le-up in the fourth period

Hager 1-1-3, Miller 0-6-o; Adams
1-2-4, and Moore 5-3-13. Totals
20-3-17-68.
Southern (94)
Roush 0-5-5, Baer 6-1-6-21,

.

Wednesday, December 5, 1990

! CHRISTMAS
I
SAL'E '•
1
I(

Toys ....................... Goon sELEcnoN 25°/o off
Christmas
Deco(ations .........,..................... 30°/o off
MINIATURE COLLEcnBLE

Col.ognes ............................:.......... 40°/o off
Silk Poinsettia .~.................:.. 30°/o off .
SPECIAL

Red Tag Gifts

.
, j .....................

40°/o off

1:110 I :J :20
Mtn! ....UI

Prescription Shop
992-6669
253 North Second
Middleport, Ohio

FORD, INC. ·
461 SO. THIRD

MIDDLEPOIT

992-21
.I

.'

•'

�Wednesday. December 6, 1990 . !

.POf'IWOV-Middleport, Ohio

_"Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

-z.

· We're

Low.;Priced Supermarket

Chester area news

'~

ODLAN

r-J"\-

HOLIDAY

POINSETTIAS

AND UP

8 INCH FOILED POT

~--------------------------I\'
I fllllll \'\II I 1111'11'\

I'""'

. -~·

CHILLED

- ·- ...

. FOODLAND ORANGE JUICE
64 oz.
CTN.
I'
I

r.--

limit I Wilh Coupon ont1

or Moro

Good Tllru 12/1/90.

I Clfllll\'\11\ \II \1111 I 011'11'\

FOLGER'S COFFEE
·'

oz.

39
CAN

$
AdditioiMII Purchose.

GRADE A
TENDERBEST

BONELESS

~

89

•'

LB.

.•
~.S.

TENDERBEST QUALITY

'•'

'•

$

LB.

NO. 1

RUSSET

ASSORTED PORK C

''

POTATOES

ITEII
of
odvertiled ~ems il required to 1111
readily available for sale in eac" Kroger Store. except ae specific.aV'noted
in this ad. ff we do run out of on odvortiled ~om. "" will offer you your
choice of a comparable item, when available, reflacling the ume ..vinga
or a raineheck which wijl entitle vou to purchase rhe edveniMd item at
the advertised price within 30 days, Onlr one vendor coupon Will be
accepted per Item purchased.

For
'

Every
.Good
Boy&amp; .

Girl On
Your List

.

•

.~

'•'

•

Disney
Fire Truck

.

Each .

New young adult
group formed

Christmas party set

$199

49

Mr. and Mrs. Clay10n Allen
spent several days in Greenwood,
Ind with Dr. and Mrs. Bill Allen,
Katie and ;Bobby. All the Allen
family spent Thanksgiving week
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bater,
Marieua, Ga. There . were 38
relalives at the Bala:n for
ThaDiisgiving dinner. They also
toured Georgia's SlOne MOuntain
l"ark, the Cyclorama in Atlanta and
LookOut Mountain: Parle . in Chat·
tan&lt;ioga, Tenn.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Roben Wood spent
Thanksgiving weekend with their
daUghter, Sandra Wood in Nashville, Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. VCI'!Jon Cleland,
Columbus, spent Thanksgiving Day
with Enna Cleland Afternoon
visiiOrs were Rev. and Mrs. David
Tysihger and ·children, Johnson
City, Tenn.
·
.
Greg Hibbs, Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leol)811! Myers and Chris,
Keno, spent 1bank5giving day with
RE&lt;;OGNITION PLAQUE • Ka~l Kebler, manager of H &amp; R
Mr. and Mrs, Larry Cleland.
Block tn Pomeroy, was presented a plaque iD recopltion of bis out·
Mrs. Clara -Conroy has returned
standinll achievement in the·operation of tax serVICe in Pomeroy at
horne .afrer several days visit with
a recent convention in Cincinnati.
.
.
her daughter · an&lt;! son-in-law,
Roben and Rose · HUIChinson,
Benview.Neb.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Biggs,
Karl Kebler, manager of the H &amp; and employees were ad~ssed ~Y Unionpon. were wee~nd guesis of
R Block office located in Pomeroy Corporate Representative Chris Mrs. Bonnie Landers.
recendy attended the annual H &amp; R. Meek and Clare Gustina. A lOur of · Mr. and Mrs. 1 Hobart Newell
Block convention in Cincinnati.
the .Internal Revenue Service Cen- were dinner guests on ThanksgivThe three-day convention is ter m Covmg10n, Ky., was also of· ing of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Newell
geared 10ward providing uaining in fered.
.
, ,
· and Jeanie. Other guests were Mr.
business management, display of . Area restdents are mvtted 10 stop · and Mrs. Keith Curtis, Katie and
new supplies and complller equip- m ~ the ~ffice located at 618 East . OJ. of Charleston, W.Va They also
ment designed toward accurate, ~ St. m Pomeroy for prepare- visited with ·Denver Curtis in
simplified processing of tax fonns, bon ~r tax fonns and answers to tax Pomeroy.
and sell)inars and workshops on tax questJons.
.
.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
changes and updates .of Federal, . Awards are p~sented mrecogm- Mr. and Mrs. Scott Smith were
Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia 11on. of outstanding ach!~vement in Elizllbeth Ha&gt;'es• Bonnie Landers
tax returns
semcmg the commumtJes by the . and Lowell Ridenour and sons.
Special ~mphasis was placed on ~ndividual business owners operat·
Opal Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs.
"Taldng Care of Business" in.order mg under .th~ :f!: &amp; R Block. Denrils ·Eichinger and Dane, Mr.
10 accomdate the expected inllux of franchise organtzallon: Karl Kebl~ and Mrs. Don Eichinger, TdTany
clients due 10 the wide acceptance was ~~ted a ~ial plaque_ m and Justin and Laura Nice were
of electronic filing and the Rapid req~gruuon _of hts Ojltstanding Thanksgiving Day f!UCSts of Mr.
Refund program.
acht~v~ent m the ope~llOn of tax and Mrs. Charles· Etehinger, PickOver 200 Block business owners servtce m Pomeroy.
· eringiOD. Other guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Hartung. Louis·
ville, Ky. 311d Edgar Hartung,
Cleveland. .
Jean Frederick spent ThanksgivRevival
Cantata
The Raeine Baptist Church Choir . Revival with David Carpenter, ing day with Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
wiU present .the cantata, "Love Bellville, W.Va. will be held at the Ballard, Lo!lg Bottolil.
Transcending," at 7:30 p.m. on Stiversville WOrd of Faith Chitrch ·
Dec. 16 under the direction of Bar- on Couniy Road 31 Thursday
bara Gheen and Lillian Hayman.
through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
· nightly. Paslor Gary Holter invited
Christmas program
the public.
• A children's Christmas program
A new young adult group, ages
will be presented at the Racine
·
VFW meeting
18-40,
is bein~ organized Thutsday
Baptist Church on Dec. 19 at 7:30
The TuppcJS Plains VFW Post
at
the
New
Life Covenant Church
p.m.
9053 will meet Thursday at 7:30
of
God,
Chester.
The meeting. Gary
p.m. Each member bring candy or a
Hines
announces,
will be held at 7
Watch night service
' Christmas treaL .
p.ni; at the cburch and wiU deal
There will be a watch night ser·
with
"God's Methods for Thday's
vice at the .Racine Baptist Church
Bazaar
Problems.
~ It will lie followed by a
on DeC."31 Troni 9 ' p.m. 10 mid~
The. ellowship Church. of the
f~owship
time. More informatton
nigth. A music hour w.ill ·be held Nazarene in Reedsville wiU have a
may
be
obtained
from the pastor at
from 9-10 p.m. followed by a fel- · bazaar on Saturday. 1b reserve a
985-41.57
.
lowship hour from 10.11 p.m. and table call378-6422 or 378-6371.
worship · Service from II p.m. to
midnighL Rev. Steve Deaver in· ·
Group to meet
vites the public.
The Pomeroy group of AA and
· AI·Anon will meet Thursday at 7
The Racine Gun Club will have
Christmas dinner
p.m . at the Sacred Heart Calholic its Cluistmas party on Dec. IS from
Tile
Burlingham
Modern Church. Call I-800-333-5051 for . • 7 p.m. 10 1 a.m. at the Racine
Woodsmen will have a Christmas infonnation.
American Legion Hall.
dinner at the hall on Saturday at
6:30 p.m. Family, friei11ls and
. Rlfte shoot
.
guests bring .a covered diSh and .
nie Ken Amsbary C~rer of the
table service. The camp wtU Izaak WaliOn League will have It
'
~ Southetn High School Choir .
provide turkey, ham, dressmg and muzzle loader rifle shoot beginning
drink. Prior to the dinner, meals at 1 p.m. Sunday at the club house. wiU I present its annual Chrispnas
musiCal on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
wiU be delivered to the sick and There will also be 22-rifle shOots.
high) schooL
shui in.

Announcements

TURKEYS

CHUCK ROAST

,;

'.

.
1990-THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND ,
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, DEC, 2,THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, DEC. 8, 1990. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTtTIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

Manager attends convention

------------------------------- - -------------------i1:l:J
1

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The Daily Sentinel- Page-7

\!_''Vi.,

PIG BEND ...Your Locally Owned

t-

· Wednesday, December 5. 1990

DISNEY

Chatter .
Clock

Christmas musical

.

'·

•

•

•

SUPER SAVINGS FOR. YOUR
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING

..

'

ANY

· KRAFT

g:r:i,'..........................,.$499

•

N A T U R A .L I Z E R• .

CHEESE
12 OZ. PACKAGE

Ql

99$
.., fof the mOlt
• , dramatic carpet
: · cleaning retultl

PIES .. 2/$3

~· vou-v...,., '""'
•: el'rofell~onal .
; . hluh at o Low Do·tl·
• 1\&gt;uiMII Pllcel

•

e Loo-•

: t&gt;rlgl·•n.,.,o anvr,pe
,. cof'J)etl Cleans.

, •

:: :~~~~~:~um•
•" vour carpet oa ••
~ ; It clean&amp;! • • •

.....: . .. ..

191

•

,.

beOfer 10 SJ 00 OFF
me regulor renkll oro

~

t: ClUE I rMI: "STEM" MM:III

··•
.•

OFFER EXPIRES DEC. 31. IMO

ASST. FLAVORS

PPLE SAUC

ONION PATCH
CHIP DIP

.f.

'

~ =-

•

l.

=-

FOODLAND

CANS

PLAYSCHOOL

Mr. Potato

'

·

5899

I

'

Head Family .................... :...... Each·

DISNEY

Play 'N Carry_
· Train ·
Each

,,'
I

••

FlEE GIFT
. WRAPPING .

,·$

'.

CHAP.MAN ·SHQES

CTNS.

Prices.

IN IHE HEAIT OF POMIIOY

Wo R u - The Right to Umlt Quantltleo • Priceo Effective Thru Saturday, Dec. 8, 1990 • USDA Food Stampo and WIC C.oupano Acceptod. • Not ReiPonolble For TYJ109raphloel "',._..,1 Erron.

I

.

OPEN MON.-THU~ •. 9-6
FRI &amp; SAT. 9-8, SUNDAY 1-S

19

LUCKY LEAF

••
•

DRESS SHOES, CASUAL OR
FASHION BOOTS AT
REGULAR PRICE AND GET
THE SECOND PAIR OF
EQUAL VALUE OR lESS FOR
. 1f2 PRICE

HERR'S
POTATO
CHIPS

BUTTER·
MILK .

.. .

..

79
ASST.

FOODLAND

~! and Hftl me deepett dlrtt
- ~ hltor• ccMor and

oa Auditions.

t

I,

.,

..

�'

Wednesday, December 5, 1990

.·~~.··

··-

.

Wed~.

I

c

~ ~~

DOUBLE Manufacturer's

/!
,.,

COUPONS~~~

. ,,
,,."'

~

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.. ..,,,

iU DOUBLE THE VALUE on -:Size Item Nomed On Tho OUI&gt;O"
Betr Storti wO' for "The &amp;pecllic Brtnd t
.,...CS. c;garottu. lie ...,
Couii&gt;Of'S of up to 5
Of &amp;O• Or t,.ns. ~otTo I .
The Vllut Qt The
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c:~..:. Rot-• And Nor To ~':!".::nricollt"'"' And
coupon• Of ThOH
- - AddldoMI CoupOn•

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.......... - -.
c~ Bo Re&lt;~Hmod "' F -

11.,.. limit ano
eoupono Ove&lt; SO

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lib. Pkg.
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family. Pleu.'

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1 Free Per Family PleaAe•

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Fresh From The Dell V2 Lb. Pkg. '

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&gt;,.,
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Limit 1 ·Free Per Family Please•

Limit 1 Free Per Family PleaAe•

.....
Limit 1 Free Per F~lly Please•

'

HOME CTR. (5
.
VaUd
Sunday, HOME CTR. (8) .
Valid
Sunday, I HOME C!~ Valid
Su114!ay,
----------------r---------------~---------------,
1 ........
n.,.,.
1
Dec.
1 ~ -. .
t Dec.&amp;,
1

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thru
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December. 6, 1990

.,'"

.!

,.

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

!Beat of
.
1the Bend..
__.._________
1;.;..~-........_

With the approach of Christmas
cames again the reminder that
county funds cannot be used to
provide Chrisunas gifts for
residents of the Meigs County In•-·w n;;~· year six men and six
women are maldrig their home at
the Infinnary. There are few parties
scheduled and no~ much word
forthcOming on any gifts. You al·ways do so much to make
ChristmaS a mem()Cllble time of the
year for ~se restdents. I am sure
. this year will be no excepuon.
MoSt anylhingJ.oes as far as
gifts are concern . However, for
clothing sizes p~ease. ca11992-5469.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey •s mairon at the
county facility. D1d I mention that
· the infinnar)r ~:ontinues 10 he in
desperate need of a decent piano?

birthday on Dec. 13. The address is
P.O. Box 326, Brooklyn, Conn.,

06234.

If you thought that was Cathy
Blaettnar Johnson, fonnerly of
Pomeroy, that you saw on the
Channel 10 news one evening last
· week, you were right. .
..
Kathy's kindergarten . class m
Circleville as weU as she, were on
television Pointing up a special ac'
tivity Cathy was ~vin)! in ~er
classroom in con}uncuon w11h
Operation Desen Slueld.
·_ - The ~eigs County Healf!l
Dej:larbllent did a land office bus•·
ness in ftu shots dttS year.
A tolal of 1,458 residents
. received their immunizations
through the health deparunent.
Among the tolal, there were. 281
Visitors from afar and not so afar .under the age of 54 receiving their
were with Mr. and Mrs. Thoii)IIS shots through the depanment w11h a
Ables at their Pomeroy home for total of 80 from 55 through 69
the Thanksgiving weekend:
receiving immunizations. In the lige
Guests included their daughter group from 60 through 69, 459
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Agus- · went the health deparunent route.
tine MonlaneZ, and son, Shawn, of There were 450 from the age of 70
Arecibo, Pueno Rico; Todd and throu~h 79 receiving ftu shots in
Carolee Montanez of . Milwaukee, the J!COgram and 165 more in the 80
Wise., and Mrs. Charles Smidt and through 80 age group. 1\venty-four
Margaret Allman, both of Charles· persons, 90 through 100 receive ftu
ron, W. Va.
1mmunizatirn\s in· the program inIncidentally, the Ables grandson, cluding one. I 00 year old reside!!I.
First Lieurenant Agustine MonNeedless to say, . health .depantanez. )r., who is a pan of Opera- ment staffers were really kept busy
tion Desen Shield, was able to with the j!rogram for a bit : but it is
telephone .on SaiUrday following so worthwhile and certamly has
Thanksgivmg and chatted w11h aU . won public acceptance. · ~
of the family.
·
I know it's the Christmas season
Of course, you remember Joe 'cause people are begiming to .
and · Caryl Cook, fonnerly of cooiC up all that good stuff. Now
Pomeroy.
that's another pan . of the season
They are both making_lheir ho~e that I could accept aU year. Do keep
at the Pierce Memonal Bapust . smiling.
·
Home. Caryl will mark her 91st

'~'

.'

"
f

I

I

•

Star Grange holds recent meetmg
.
"Christmas 'Round the World"
was the theme of the program,conduciCd by Katherine Riley at the
recent meeting of the Star Grange.
Reading included "Introduction
to o come All Ye Faithful" by
Neva Nicholson: "lnttoduction to
Joy to the World" by Waid Nicholson; "Christmas in Australia and
New Zealand" by Patty Dyer;
"Ouisunas in Two Lands" by
Freda Smidt; "Introduction to It
Came Upon a Midnight Clear" by
Catherine · Colwell; "Foods Malee
for Celebration" by Opal Dyer,

"lnttoduction to Deck the Halls" by
Christine · Napier; · ~Christmas
Cards" by Maxine Dyer; "Inlrod~~;
tion to Go ThU It on the Mountain
by Bemice Midkiff; "Christmas
Carols" by Rick Macomber,
"lnttoduction to "0 LitUe Town of
Bethlehem" by Katherine Riley;
"The · Christmas Story" by
Kadterine Riley; and "Introduction
to Silent Night" by Pauline Rife.
Chrisnnas carols were sung
throughout the program . · . ·
Wlliners in the subordinare
baiting contest for apple crisp were

tsn

Catherine Colwell, first; Fred
Smilh, second. In the junior baking
for brownies, ages 5-9, first place
went 10 Eric Montgomery and
second place to Ashley Colwell. In
age group I 0-14, Chip Macomber,
first· Bryan Colwell, second. In the
young adult and ~oung marri,eds .fo.r
quick nut fudge m the men s divi·
si9n, Larry Montgom~ry, first;. and
in
the
women s,
Lmda
Montgomery, first In the yo~lh
· division for Speedy Little Devils,
first place wen\ to Patty Oyer.
Upcoming event discussed were

Athens County Degree Day on
Saturday at 3 p.m. Star Grange has
been asked to put on the second
degree.
The Star Grange Chrisnnas dinner and party will be held Dec. IS
at 6:30 p.m. at the Salem Center
Fire Station. A $3 gift exchange.
will he held following the meal.
The group wiD go Christmas
. caroling and deliver frult baskets
on Dec. 21.
A poUuck su~r ~as !tel~ fol·
lowing the meeung w11h 31 m attendance.

0,
•IUIR
• I
•
.c:hristmas
.Gifts

ehristld8S

Gift

To

Givin~

Rutland Garden Clu~ plans dinner
Several items were discussed at that the mum was developed in
the recent meeting of the RuUand china and Japan. The · name
Garden Club held at the home of chrysanthemum means golden
flower. Flowers may he single lilce
· Neva Nicholson.
.
Mrs. Nicholson had devotions, a daisy or double.
.
"His Mysterious Ways," and roU
Kathy Dalton . presented "~
call was answered with "I Have a Review of Malena! on Mums,
from Hubbards. She said to get
New Mum."
Binda Diehl; Kathy Dalton, · mums in the spring as they were'
KeUy Dalton~ Eva Robson and much hardier. New shoots should
Pauline Atkins fwnished arran- be puiched off and t!tis should be
gements for the Meigs County . done no later that July 15.
The meeting closed with a
Garden Clubs' ChrisUnas Aower
Thanksgiving
poem from Ideals by
Show. Stella Atlcins, Neva NicholDorothy
Woodlirtl.
son and Binda Diehl worked in the
kiichen at the flower show as hostesses .
It was announced that bulbs have
been purchased and planted in the
planter at the mini-park.
The Christmas dinner and party
was discussed and plans were
made. Each member is 10 bring a
handmade favor for trays at the
nursing homes.
·
A uiur of Stahl's Nursery has
.
· been set for Dec. 12.
Pearl Canaday had the arrangement for the night featuring "Fruit
for Thanksgiving" in a basket
Bernice Nelson had the hint on
cold weather wonies. She stated
that a sharp drop in temperature
before plants become donnant is
often a greater factor in winter kiU
than an average low temperature.
Stella Alldns presented "A Bit of
History of the Mum." She Stated

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

· Please ...
An.~o,ef,.

Ideas!

....

'

Celebrates
birthday
Kaylyn

Renee
Spradling ·
11\:r first birthday
recenUy with a pany a_t the home of
her grandmother, Dotue Tum,er. .
A Big Bird theme was earned
oui. The party was given by her
parents, Jerry and Charinelc Spradling.
_
.
Attending were Dotue 'fumer,
Frank and Lorene Spradling, A1ka
Marble, Willard and Jerry Luc_as,
Denise Bunce, Monica and Kaa-ma
Turner, Vicky and Jeremy H~dnall,
. Rose and Renee Edmonds, Jtmm1e
Cain Sean Dodson, Raben and
· Stephanie Ohlinger, and William
and Melissa Myers.
.
Sending gifts were Clmto~.
Teresa and Steven Twner, Goldie
Allen, Dale, Angie, Nathan and
Derrick Brickles.
celebra~

KAYLYN SPRADLING

Sentinel Calendar
·-

'

Hoeflich

---:---:----~

'

I_ ___ ~J!q~!._~l--~~!t'!f!t!~!!tlfll.
__
~JJ!.~~-~J
Stated Limits Are Per Family With Any Other Purchase (excluding Items prohibited by law)

~
8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. .!f'

· Community CaleDdar Items
· appelll' two da;s before an event
· . and the day of tlat event. Items
must be retelved In advaDCe to
insure pubUcatlon In the calendar.
·

bury United Methodist Church will
have a Christmas bazaar on Wednesday from 9 a.m. to S p.m.
Homemade P.ies, calces, cookies
and breads wdl be available as weU
as crafts, gifts and comforter.

WEDNESDAY
.
POMEROY ; ...... Ohio Era Phi
""'
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorol:i'Y
will meet at S:4S p.m. 81 the ¥c•gs

County InfirmarY. A party will be
given for those residents.

REEDSVll.LE - The Coolville
Community Choir will oerform a
Christmas cantata, "A Touch of
Christmas," at the Reedsville
UniiCd Methodist Chwcll on Wednesday 81 7 p.m. Refreshments will
foUow;

MIDD~RT • Revival 81 the
Old Bethel Freewill Baptist
Church, south or Middleport, 7will
'
be held through ~ at :30 ·
p.m. Rev. Miles nout.will,be the
·evangelist Speelal siJiillll JUihtly.
.. SYRACUSE '-11tC Syracuse As-

REEDSVILLE _ The Olive
Township Trustees will meet Wedn-A·y 81 7 p.m. at the Olive
""""
Township Firehouse.
EAST MEIGS • The Eastern
(Continued on Page 10) .

,,

DICKENS CH.RISTMAS
VILLAGE · SET
Buy The Set Or Piece

Prescription·Shop
992-6.669 '
253

MIDDLEPOIT,
OHIO

...

I

�'•
I
\

Page

•,
·I

'

10-The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar
(Continued from Pagp 9 )

Aiiii'etic Boosters wil meet at 7:30
;w'edncsday in the high school
~a(eteria. Officers for 1991 will be
~lected.

'.• · POMEROY - Eight and Forty,
Meigs County Salon. 710 wiU have
Its annual Chrisunas dinner Wednesda~. Members are to meet at
Larry s Gas and Grocery in
Syracuse at 5 p.m. to car pool to a
restaurant Each partner is.to lalce a
$5 gif~ for an exchange, a gift for a
C¥Stic fibrosis child~ and food for a
15asket for ..a needy. famtly. .

..

• PAGEVll.LE . The Scipio
r ownship Trustees will meel Wed-

nesday at 6 p.m. at the hall in
Pageville. ,

RACINE - The Southern Local
Chapter of .the National Honor
Society will sponsor a toy drive
Wednesday through Dec •. 14. New
or good used !Oys may be con·
uibuted. Toys nlay be lalcen ·to
Southern High School during the
hours of !}; am. to 3 p.m. All toys
wiD be given to the Meigs County
lOy bank. ·For more information call
Kim Phillips, 949-2611 .
.
RACINE
The Southern
Boosters will meet Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at the hi~h schooL

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio
THURSDAY
geline Chapter, No. tn, Mid·
RACINE - The Racine American dlepart, OES, will meet Thursday.
Legion Post . 602 will meet There will be a $.5 gift exchange.
Thursday at 7:30p.m. Plans will be Officers wear Street dresses.
finalized for giving fruit to health
~e centers. Refreshments wiU folLOTIRIDGE - The Louridge
low the meeting.
Community Center will have a patluck dinner Thursday at 6 p.m. folVIN10N - The Pine Grove lowed by a meeting at 7 p.m.
Holiness Chapel, Route 235, Vin- Officers will be elected. The public
ton, five miles from Route 124 is invited.
·
Rowlesville Road, will have revival
Thursday through Dec. 16 at 7:30
POMEROY • Orders for the
p.m. nightly. Rev. and Mrs. David 1991 Meigs Maurader Yearbook
Ugh~ evangelists. Public invited.
wiU be lalcen at the high school on
'
Thursday and Friday. Cost is $20.
POMEROY • The Salisbury Name engraving is $2. Plastic
Township Trustees wiD meet covers ar $1.
·
Thursday a1 7 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run
RU'Il.AND - The Rutland
Road, Pomeroy.
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session on Thursday at 6:30
MIDDLEPORT • The Evan- p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

DIC"lmber 5, 1990

Wednesday. DeCember 5, 1990
geline Chapter No. 172 Order or
the public is invited to attend.
the Eastern Star, Middlepon, will
POMEROY - The Pomeroy meet Friday for installation of,
Group of A.A. and Al-Anon wiU officers. Installing officer will bel
meet Thursday 11 7 p.m. at the Mary Porter, past grand matron.
.Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call Refreshments will be · served.
Members bring. sandwiches and
1-800-333-5051 for infoi'I'IU!tion.
relish !Jllys.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TliP.:
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 w11l
ENTERPRISE - The En~rise I
meet Thursday II 7:30 p.m. Each United Methodist Church will have ·
member is to bring a candy or a Christmas bazaar and bake sale .
Christmas treaL
on Friday from 8 am .. to 9 p.m. at :
112 W. Main St. in PO!lleroy, forSTIVERSVITl.E - David Car- maUy Corky's Oassics.
pentec, BeUville, W.Va. wiU conTUPPERS PLAINS - There will :
duct revival at the Stiversville be a round and square dance at the !
Word of Faith Church on County Tuppers Plains VFW. Post on j
ROad 31 Thursday through Sunday Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring
at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Pastor Gary True Counll'y Ramblers. Ronnie •
Holter invites the public.
.
Wood will be the caUer. Cost is :
· .
FRIDAY
$2.50 for adults and $1 for childen :
MIDDLEPORT. - The . Evan- under 12. Public invited.
1

~

'
•••
Monthly

'

'

Sfi/ING VAUEY I'KOFESSIONAL BUILDING
'06/ACI(SQN l'll(fi . S,U/1I lOJ

Giii.UPOLIS, OHIO 4"JI

(6 I 4J 446-6000

I · M.lflp ~ Alt
1 - LoJt..,dfownCI
J . 'hrd liai• IP•d "' 1(to1nte1

1 - '""llloc ' -'' •

l'MII $ to~ •

DAY S(HliH PVI LICA.fi O r.

MONDAY PAPER
'UUDAY PAP,I II '
WEDIIillf5DAY ,.AP(H

-

Tt11JAIDAY P'APEA

- 2 00 PM WEONUDAY ·
-

ll ·· lti11H1n u
14 ·· 1111111•• tr .. nlflt
11 l ciiOIII 1o ln tl rlie t!Ofl
II - lhdig. fll. Cl fl•p..,

I 00 PM TUl lO •¥

2 00 PM THURiiDAY
fRID~Y

17 - MII t olll.,.oil •

a 00 P floll

11 -WII'!Ill To Oo

------------1
C/ali.lii/i(•d
lh(•

'

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Go Ill• Co.-n l y
Are1 (octo 814

•
"

44l ·- G.II•Pol•t

'f.

J•l · Yif\1&lt;111
241 - *'ID Oo1nd•

Hl Ch•ho• •

~·

261 - Guyon

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]7~ w .. ,. ...

U - MOII ... ,IO lOoll

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l;fiiMMli

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A•u Codol l"'

l1 - 11Jomo1101 .illl

11 2 Mododl.., o•l

U - Moblloto!O""H lor SilO

676 - ,, " '•••" •
458 - lton
671 · Apple Goo••
,13 - Muon

PomOO'Dy

••• -c .. .. ,••

843 ll otl~ l\o
241 - leun h t11

112- llltw Htvlll

141
~·"·
742 · ··
R .. lllncl

if7

U·- ~••m•lo•

.

~

Publl~:

Tr o~m 1111r 1,111011
71 '""" lot llli
7 2 "''"'"• too l olo
73
- ..,..,, • 4 tWD 'I

74 -· Molooeycl•
71 - IDD!I .• Motor&amp; lOt Biolo

71 -

.l ~ IO

)7 ....... .

P"U. AcC.IOI'I.

,,'-11 ...

71 • COmiJ'IIIJ f:CII*'P""_,I

1!1 - CimP•t. MoiOI HGm•

I; ntHIll

lt&amp; - teu n
'JJ7,..,8ullolo

Co o• ~•lll

s••

]4 - lkltlll.. l Build•nt'
n Jolt' Aco• .. •
36 - Aulltlolo ~...._ ...

R•n•
43 -· hrrn• •o• Jhl\l
44 Aperlmtl\l tor At"l
41 - Fu&lt;llllhOd ,. .., .....

H.. m.l m~,.... m ..~a
l l - l'lumt&gt;•nt i "ulong
13- hcwllllll

41 - WOI'II to;l to A1n1
41 ·· fq., •pmonl lor A,nl

li ·· &lt;ion11.r Hl ~ lin t
11 - MO_..I"O"'oll•~•·•

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

u -•·~·········~··""'

-

1.:1
~

EQ UAli&lt;OUSONO
OPPORT'.JNITY

Assorted
Pork Chops

•

- ~·~---

lANGSVILLE ~Big Level Lot- Side sittmg porch, newer
kitchen, vinyl siding, new carpeting, 2 bedrooms, big living
room. plus a 3 room house lor storage or rental.
·.
J UST$25.000

tieagi_v en :

!SOLO IN PKGS. OF 10--11-LBS.I
FRESH "SILVER PLATTER"

.,

POMEROY- NO DOWN PAYMENT- Owners will carry ~nd
mortgage on this lwo story home on agood street. Has a large
family room, some hardwood lloors, 3 bedrooms, and a din·
ing room. Has vinyl siding lor low mainlenance.
_.
.
ONLY $24.uw.

·tard of Thinks

MIDDLEPORT- Abargain ola .home. A.I ~ story home wrth
3 rooms up and 3 rooms down. Carport, part basement,
equipped kitchen. Great starte~ or rental home.
·
JUST 18.000.

We would like to
thank our neigh·
bors and friends in
· Middleport for the
flowers and everyone for the food
provided at the
time of the death
of Harry C. Surface.
The family of
Harry C. Surface

RUTLAND- DEPOT ST. -A large lot with a new sectional
lhat is 28x52. Really beautilul with .cathedral ceilings, skyl.
ight bay window. garden bath lub, 3 bedrooms, dining room,
and lwo balhs. The kitchen has gorgeous oak cabinets.
$46.900
BOWMAN'S RUN RD. - Alona home lor Alta- Big open
ki1chen and living room with cathedral ceiling. A balcony
bedroom overlookingliving room, 2 other big bedrooms. Has
a full basement wtth utility room and workshop. Approx. 10
acres ol land wilh 2 caves and an abov&amp;-ground pool.
•
. $79.900

ber 17. 1890, and will be
at that time.
rThe Bolrd of Education
'II
the
r""ht
to occept
reject any 1nd Ill

!•r:.:r:::

Help Wanted

'•

·Jop .Round
London Broil

POWDER

Cheer Laundry
Detergent
3kz.

j

'

!
.'

:
I

•I

ATTENTION:
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation is now
accepting resumes for parman~nt employment at
its plant in Ravenswood, ,Jackson Cou_ntv. West
Virginia, in various production and mamtenance
classifications such as .

!
SH
IN-STORE MADE CHEESE

Cheese
Balls

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

'

Aqua-fresh
Toothpaste
&amp;.4-oz.

I
l•
''
''\

l
I
I

For

Air Conditioning Repair
Brickmason
Craine Operator
· . .
Electrician/Electronics Reparr
Equipment Operator
Garage Mechanic
General Laborer
Hydraulic Repair
Machinist
Millwright
Roll Grinder
Welder

. Anyone' interested in such positions should direct
resumes to the attention of:
·
NO_NRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
'CAFFEINE FREE OJET COKE,
DIET COKE OR

Coca Cola
Classic

Personnel DapJ!~!!'.ent

•

•
•

RAVENSWOOD ALUMINUM CORPORATION
P.O. Box 98
Ravenswood, West
Virginia
.
. 26164

I

I

Ir
•
'•

l
I

I
....

Labor Dispute i'n Progren
We are looking for permanent replacement workers.
AAE/EOE
M/F/H/V

I.

,,,

MOBILE

HEATING &amp; COOLING

Located on Sofford School I d. off lt. 1~ 1

Reoyele or
Chrllf11111 Ce1hl

WANT ADS GET

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING

····· ..,

OPEN EVERY DAY AT
POMERPY LOCATION
'7 DAYS 9 AM·7 PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONLY
Call 992-$114
For Current Prices
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK.
ALBANY, OH. LOCATION
10 AM-!5 PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
We Will Close At Albin

pertt of liny 1nd all bide.

Board of Education
Eaat8m Local School

.'.

Call 698-618$
For ·currtnt Pricts

Experienced Body
Shop Manager and
Experienced Body
Shop Technician

11·30-90·1 mo.

UK~

992-2156
The

GROOM
ROOM

· Chrlatmaa Vacation

NEEDEP

RESULTS

· ~ '';~ ,_ ,, DIAMONDS

· ' Dec. 24 to Jan . 2 For

Co~~piii;te Grooming

for 'All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator ·

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

SEND RESUME ...
c/o The
Daily S1ntinel
P. 0. Box 7298
Pamero , Ohio 457 6 9

ALL MAKES

Bring It In Or
Pick Up.

.

614-992-6120
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

10·6 1 mo.

We

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Real Estate General

.

992-5335 or 985·3561
Acrooi From Post OHice
217 E. s.c. Pomoroy
POMEROY, OHIO
3/&amp;/'90/Hn

CHRISTMAS
TREES
5 Ft. to 12Ft.
*10andup
FRESH CUT DAILY
White &amp;
Scotch Pine

BOB SNOWDEN
Ma~

E.

POMEROY,O .
992· 2259 .

POMEROY - 5 acres, va·
cant ground on top ol a hill
near town. Great location lor
house or trailer. $3,900.00.

'
~OMEROY - Older Z story
home, gorgeous woodwork.
lireplace, nice kitchen cabi·
nels. 3 bedrooms, equipped
kitchen, central air, garage
and storage. $39,900.00.
RUTLAND .:.. Must see to
appreciate. 3 bedroom; I\!
bath, ranch. Beamed ceil·
ings. Hea1 pump, CIA, patio.
garage, carport plus other
buildings situated on ap·
prox. 6 acres. $44,000.00.
DARWIN - Counlry setting,

3 bedrooms. I bath, all elec·
tric modular home with 2

t1

ALL FURNAcE PARTS

In order to be considered.

TUPPERS PlAINS -Arbaugh Addition - I story ranch wtth
3 bedoroms, equ ipped kilchen, garden area, and approx. ll
acre of land. ·
.
$32.000

11215, I , 7, 3tc .

Breasts ... .tb.

.

POMER()Y - Children Will Love II - Because there's a
bedroom lor all in this 4 bedroom home, also a big nice pool
for children to swim. Huge rooms, full basemen!, rock llower
garden, a view of the river, and a lireplace.
$46,000

Further, the above collateral will be sold In the con·
dition it Ia in with no tJC·
pressed .or.., implt.cl .warran-

1

*•!•.

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS

veer.

Wanted

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
OFFICE 992-2BB8/HOME 992-6892
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER

oubmltted.

·

!f/JJYJ/J/JS

PIIOD_UC~

StoekU "

1•141 446-9416 or t-100;172·5967 · ·.

Diotrlct
38900 SR 7
Roedovlllo. Ohio 4&amp;772
Eloi• Ionon, Treea.
(11) 14, 21. 28;
(12) 6, 4tc

.
ia.'.i;''
~
~~
j

SEO SECURin

. P. 0. Box 190, Po-roy,

trict deilrea to receive
Meled bid• far fleet inanance fDr 'the 1991 calend•r

Real Estate Genei111

ings Company reservea the
right to reject any or all bids

Kroger
Buttermilk
Gallon

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho Boord of Educotlon of
Eutom loclll School Oio·

Qn8ned

''

• - - - - - - -...llilllllli..ll.i~li'-!i'ir~•.·····-111!-•'•'-li"""'lil"'lli••---~

PUBLIC .NOTICE
NOTICE lo hereby giYen
that on Saturday, December
B. 1990. ot 10:00 a.m. a
. public oolo wMI be hold ot
1011 Union Avenue. Pom- ·
oroy, Ohio. to ooll for caoh
the following collateral:
1987 Plymouth Turlomo
S#1P3BM44C4HD278817
fbodvmon'o -ciol)
1985 ChevY K5 Bluer .
#F 1G8EK18H4FF1132B6
1114 rod bearing out of mo-

Notice

all -led bldo oholl be received by the Tre~surer'a offico by 2:00P.M.on Decem·

•i§fi!IM

:J·-:~":.:~:~~'.,!'!":0.

G.t ·R·· cuffs F'a·~·

•••

,

~

12- w..,,.., t o luy
IJ - LW1noclo
U - MIY &amp; Gfl•ll
IS - lieN • ftrUoier

li"ihiifiil

fo/ltlldllj.(_ h •/('JIIHHU' ('.l"diUUJ!eS.. .

'

U.S.
RAOED CHOICE, .
GR(1\IN FED BEEF BONELESS

KEY CHAINS IN HAND
DON'T BE NEXTf
Protect yourself with the
•
STUN-UM kay chain sprayer
STUN-UM is the most advanced chamical
self defense weapon available - your edge
·against peraonal crime.
To Order Stnd Chttk or Money Order ·
for $19.95 To:

11 - hrm 1!,....,.....,

2l - a ....., 111 oppootu"'''

IJOJit!S .t' OI '(•r

.

&lt;\ l1 ~ , I

12 · S II ult!Oft ¥11'-.IICI .

· I I 00 AM SAl lo/IIDAY
~ 2 00 PM MOND AY

fiiiDA'( IIAPiiA
IUHQ:A~ PAP ER

Mow I•

.a .. u JOn

1 - W•u.Sto '"'

1 I · l'ltlp Wtllttoell

COI' Y Ot-.O~II'ft:

tor)
The Fermera Benk end
Sevinga COfl.'lpa.,y. Pome·
roy. Ohio, reMNII the right
to bid 11 this 1111. end to
withdraw the above' col18ter.. prior to. sale. Further.
the Fermerw Bank end Sav-

Chicken '~

.01/ dey

F.t'!!l S1 111111' )

Pillsbury
Hot Roll Mixes
16-oz.

Gallon

..c)

· 11 .30/ day

J - N!I'IO¥Cim . .t•
I - Q iytlwty

1ft

Public Notice

·

11l,OO

•ON-SITE C.USTOM TRIIINING

:u

01.00

2 - l n '-•mOly

}jl' rl/11/!l!t(!f..)Jnm'] 1/ili!fJ...

Split

11

-11

.20
.10

1 - C••d of fh.,til .

P «C• Ol Ill CO l i

on ''"''
"'"*•

In M1onb"M01

~

Chilled Kroger
Orange Juice

11

•s11LES

WOf.

1ft

CIO~tlh

-~

.S. Grade A Holly

o.,,,
1I
.

R111

1• .00
11.00

11

•ON -SITE SERVICI!; Il EPIIlll
•c u sTo M PROGRIIMMtNG

Mll fo~tnd ... o ""d • 11 .. .,.11t..,,II DI

~~~ tll r"""
1:111 b•looo 2 OOp
p..olr c• oon t o
CO.,Icllon
• Ach ttl.. "'"'' II~ l*d in l ct\1111C'I ~ '
c;:.,ll o l Th-h
"''PP' Aa.

sakt in ea~h Kroger Store , excep1 ·as specifically noied in 1his ad. if we c;lo run out of an ;

Each

,.

3

~~~:~~·K~O~-·~,~~·~O:O:~PI':'' •CJto lfl~l
1

WE RESERVE THE RIGHTTO LIMIT .QUANTITIES. NONE ,
SOLD TO DEALERS.
•

California
Head·Lettu

RATES
Word1

DIY I

,-•&gt;.C:~ -".'.C: lltsi,GRiobiiiO. ''' ~ -~ 1tltf fn•L dllf tC htct,

COPYRIGHT 1990 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND ;
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. DEC. 2, THROUGH SATU_R· !
DAY, DEC. 8, 1990, INPOMEROV
i

advertised item, we will offer yOu VOI.ir choice of a comparable item , when available,
reflecting the SB!m~ savings or a raincheck wllich will enlille you 10 purchase the advertised
item at the advertised price within 30 davs. Onlv one vel\dor coupon will be accepted per
item purchased.

O.C.L. COMPUTER

' ' ' """' "'"'"' · ~oNn " ll•~ •wiM M "'•••

•

- POUC'f'_.. Each or these advertised items is r~uired. to be readily avaita!lnj for
ADVERTISED ITEM _

·11 Up-

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO I'IAU AN AO CALL 992-2Ub
MONDAY tmu FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATUIIDAY

Page-: 11! .

The Daily Sentinel-

Business Services

Pick

·Classified

I

'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

car garage and storage
building si1uated on approx.
I acre ol land. Immediate
possession. $34,000.00.

PDIIEROY - One of Po·
meroy's most unique struc·
lures. The old Elm Hurs1 Tavern is now lor sale. This
building has a variety ol PO·
tential uses. Call today lor
· your showing. $12,500.00.
POMEROY - ROCK SPR·
'INGS ROAD - Nice quiet
location is the selling lor this
3 bedroom home, conveni·
ent% located short distance
oH our lane. Full basement.
large yard and garden area.
Call lor complete details.
$35,500 00.
POMEROY - Nice neigh·
borhood. 4 bedroom home.
sltding glass doors in livmg
room, oak trim woodwork,
carpeting, air conditionmg,
apl. over garage lor rental or
workshop. And much more!
$39,300.00.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING

"FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USm RAILROAD nES
6·1

St., Rutland

742-3051
11·29·1 mo. pd.

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING
Commercial &amp;
Residential
•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows

hn't

~

Worth Doilg Right

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-5009

10-1·1

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES

Ba~ks

For Your
Sporting Needs
Buy, Sell or Trade
Guns

See

Ul

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5
742-2421
36496 SMI1II IUN ID.

IU1WID, OHIO·
10·01 ·'80·1 mo.

Construction

NEYER CLEAN YOUR
GUnERSAGAIN
OUARANYEEDI
FREE

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
614-949-2734
or

614-949-2635
11·2 ·1D-1 MO.

GUN SHOOT

•VINYL SIDING '
•ALUMINUM SIDING .
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL •
SIDING CO.
NowH-It;lt
"Froa Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

110 SUNDAY CAllS
4-16-JS.tfn

'··~­

PRICE REDUCED - Deer
hunters! Own your own
huntin«land!! No more per·
'!lission · from land owners!
No shares hunling! Just you
and 1he deer! Approx. 57
acres - part mea~ows lor
deer ·to leed and part
wooded lor cove~ Own.,
will listen to yoor OFFER!! Re·
duced to m.90D.DO.

Bashan luildinQ

· 205 Ill. Second StrHt
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO 45760
Office 614-992-2816

WE MEEO LISTIIIOSI

LINDA'S
PAINTING

COAL
UNLIMITED

FREE ESTIMATES
Take tht pain out of
paintl~. Let me do
it. or you.
Very R11110nablt
have ltftrtnces

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

JEAN JIIISSR1 ... t49-2660
OffiCI-·····-· 992-2259
OUR 8AI.E8 VOLUME ·
HAS BEEN GOOO AND
WE ITILL HAVE IUY·
Elll LOOKING· FO"'
MEIGS COUNTY P.flop.;
EIITY. IF YOU WANT TOf
SELl. CALL ClELANO
REALTY TODAY ANO
UST WITH U811WE8ER..
VICE OUR LISTINGIIII

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Horne 614-992-5692

6:30P.M.

· Factory Choke
12 Gauge SholgUIII Only
Strktly Ellforcool
9-2!.'99-

INTEIIOI • EXTERIOR

614-915-4110
10-10-10-1

100.

DOYTII S. T-~ 11010

HOUSE8oi.OTI•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTJNGS!
ll-S-90-tfn

PLUMIING &amp;
How Locations
•
161 North 5oaliMI •
~loport,

SER~ICE

PAl'HILL FORD

c:.,.y Flohlnt luptllleo•

Your Pho~e
t:;,eble Bills Here

: IUSIIIISI l'iiiHII
16141 992-6550
JUIDINU PIIOIIl
:(614) 992:J1li4

992-5009
ID-1 I

We can repair and re·
core rad1ators and ·
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Olie 45760 '

SALES &amp; SERVICE '
Wo

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION ·

992-2198
Middleport; Ohio

992·6648 or
698-6864

MOVING SAU
CARPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMMO

J&amp;l
INSULATION

9ll HyuU St.
Middleport, Oh.

992-2034

11 00 Remington
Slug Guns
870 Ramington
"slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Guns
11·13·1 mo.

CAIN'S

Of M"•l••ort

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapas
38 Years Experience
614-992-2321
213 North Secand

We Soy What Wa Oo.
We Oo Whet We Say
11~1

Tuii'Ncll Rc.:1n

JO llll ....- ..... 915-4466

Residential end
Commercial
REWIRING AND
TROUBlE SHOOTING
Certified EltctrldaM
Fr• Etlmates

UPHOLSTERY

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

MAE HUPP . ..... t4f·2257

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

10-U-'10-1 mo.

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•I nsu lation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 742-2251
539 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio

11 / 1./tfn

HILL'S DEER
CUfiiNG
CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHE_N RD.,
RACINE

949-2206
11·5·90·1 mo.

.., .....

, YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addltlono
-Gutter Wort&lt;
-Eioctricol lk Plumb~ g
-Concrete Work
J
-Roofing

RACINE GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS'
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

-Interior • Exterior
P•lnting

(FREE ESTIMATES!
V. C. YOUNG HI

12 Gaup Factory
. Choke only

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

SHOOTS STAU
SEPT 1 1

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742-2421

BISSELL~

11 / 1 .. / tfn

2'12 MI. outside

Rutland on New

Llllla lei.

HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday
. 10arnto5pm
We .Are A Deer
Checking Station.

11·21·1·1 ...

CHRISTMAS TREE~
FOI SALE

BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGEI '
"At RIO~It

P'-. 949-2801
..

11r R.es. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY WLS

BISSELL &amp;
CONSTIUCnOII
··~ HOIIIts
-claragn
-c-pe.te .

$50.00,., to•

White &amp;
Scotch Pine
5 Ft. end Up
Well She•red, Grown
on the Wabll Farm In
Rutland

Lump or Stoker

sn. •20

R....od~lfla
Stop &amp; C0111pare
Fr." .l lflllatn

READY DEC; Inti

286-2689

742-2143

985·4473 .
667-6179

10.24 l 110. pd.

11·26.'90'1 mo.

I

�n,e

Page-12-

Daily

Sentinel

8th, II 10

_......,Doc.

a.m. to I p.m.

42

81: tM

114 a• 1111, tt4 •

Gold CI'IIIH Coni, cllh ldVInCI

Extra niDI M 'x1'0' I '

I ....0 lnctudld, .,.,_or11411f12.
3014.
For Nnt 01 Nil, 1170 CltiOImobllo homo. 12lt60, 2 bodNquil.t d.

AKC roglo11Nd bill moll Utlza
Apso 7 mo ~ adorn chlldr~n,

~~C~
. ~· S

YOU l OSe, I. ge t
'
Re. ady ••·go I"
•
.

GPMtt

Cape.

tlll2.

1-------1-------32 Mobile Homes
11 Help wanted

6

Lost&amp; Found
for Sale
FOUND: Lorge Nd dog. 81. Rt. AVON I All Arou I Shl~oy 1---,.,;.;;.:_:;;,;:;;.;____
233, Patrtoo. kllrttlty: 114-379- Spootos, 304ol75-14211.
1111V Scltt!1112ttll, 2 bodroorno,

AN"I $30/hour, LPN'I .S21/hour. all Mtctrtc, blockl and underAulgnsmnll In Ctnlral &amp; ~nnlng, $1,000. C.H 30ot-17&amp;- .
Southlm Ohio. ICU, ettp down,
33 ..,.,.lnge.
mltd • aura • Galli
nu,..~ilhomes,
- -- correctlonala,
lnl«.. 1-•~ Sltul z 141 70• 304_,.,..,.,.
or 8l'll-t833.
vlewa st Holiday Inn T~.~tlday,
Dacomblr 111h, 1pmolp.m. Dac 1m Boy Vlow 12180, Goo, tully
12th, la.m.•12:30p.m., CIU tor tuml-. good oond. Flrot
appointment, Wnttrn Medical UODD tak• 11, can bl ._n al
SoNica 612-148-8311.
Sltloll Rd. Diller 114·1112·2813.

Chocolatt

Llbndor, Lllort Park, REWARD,
304-1~.
.
L.oM· Black. t1n and whlt1
pM,

TtKII

Road area. A...rd,~

-r

L.ol1: Doa, Small b&lt;wm ml•,
part Chll'IUIIhw, hl.a collar.

Tuooday, Navombor 2?,. tHO! · RN'o l LPN'I wnh '-J)~ol ••· 1m WI.-, MK70. CA, urt•
- noldld tor oud~lltg l dlrplnnktg, buln In dllhwaioltlr,
VI~~=¥' 3118, 1'14-441ootM;J4.
Alroort1 _~onl 51
rev6tw In Pomeroy, 4tg1n am. microwave, altctrtc •o~ built

7

No Wltkendl 01' Holld1y.. Btnd
rHUml J. B•IIIUIIJ, 421 Chi~
licothl Sl,..l, ·-suite 8031

Yard Sale

In al1r.a, am1ll front porch, All
llloctrlc, $7,110G 814-441-4201.

Pcrtomcuth, OH 4\le82.
1180 Porkvllw lrlll.r, MXU on
The Gallia • Mtlga Cofnmuntty 1 1/4 acrn land. 2 btdroom1,
n.w carpet, wind br. .k built on.

Gallipolis .
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Ylnl Solei Mull 81 Pold In

A"dvanc.. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befara tM ad Ia to run.

Exe~~llenl: condttlon.

Action Agency Ia currently ac-ceptlna appllcaUons tor a van
drfverrcu.-ocllan pothlon to M
bsHcf at our Pa,n~rov Office.
The pereon . . lacted muat hne

acrnlancf. 304-'M3.S323.

(or obtaln.wllhln 10 days of hire)
a comm•clal drlvera llctnH

1987 14x70 ' Clayton, 2 bed, 2

Gat. Texaa

•••m• ...rn
· "'"'·- - •
1981 Liberty Mobile Home on 2
Road

Sunday ldHion • 2:00 p.m. (COL). Thlo 11 1 lul~tlmo 1!001· both~ 1-d. con bo loft on lot.
Fridoy. MondaY ldMion • 2:00 tlon. AppUcatlonl and rHUmM 304-o75-2425.
p.m. Slturdlir.

8

may bt 1ubmltted attht 0.1111 • 1987

Molgo CAA OHico, N. Sot:cod l

E. Main Streit, Chuhlr•, Ohio
45620 until Monljiy, Dacombor
24, 1110. Applicants must lUI).
mtt • current drivers abstract
along with their appllcatlona. An
Equal Opportunity 'Employer.

Public Sale

&amp; Auctloh
Rick Pursori Auction Company

now booking tuctlonl, ••·

fMMnce makH the diffllrenct.
Llct~nHd Ohio. Kentucky, Wilt

Truck drtv. ., n.,.rtenced onry,

locol

Vlrglnll, 304-1'73-S785.

9

HOME
noodld.

o.... Phon•

Must 1M woodltd whh no oil or
gal .Willi. Mineral rlghtl 10 go

cash.
114-446-3449 - It no

Phone:

•n...r l•av•

will

eotl 1-100-'121-4041"" dltlllo.

8 acrM whh boarding alab'-,
loafing ahed, MW ru.tlc home,
.will Hll land contract, 304-675-

only, $4.00 on hour pluo Dpo. 6711.

pay

Third Avo., Goll polio, OH 45831.

14

or squarebaclcll. Alto vlnyll. No

Business
Training

1960'o or plullc. Bottlll not

Call Marc 1141992-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

certlllld child care In my home~ 51'11-2331.
actlvltln. lllrary

Pr...choot

tripe., llc. EliJI"rilncod ana 36

,.r.ranc..l141112·7532.

HOLIDAY SPECIALS • lrtlorlor

Top pricM poldll ~240.
Wonlld To Buy: J..,. Autoo
with or wtthout motor.. call
Lorry Lively. 614-31111-11303.
Woldld: Smoll Rototllr.r. ~~
446-tt60.

Real Estate
wanted

Vory Choopl Odd Jabo. 304-875- contract. 304-175-7'180 tfter
27DI ar Bl'S-1821. ·
1:00PM. ·
Infant Co~: my horne, 11 yur W.nt~: ANI Elllat• To Buy,
~xperltncti
CtavcaN.
Hav• amall tracla • vacant Iota within
education on chUdcllre. WOJktd tho cny ot Galllpollo oncl Galli•
wnh Infanta. 448 Spruce Str• County. Nood _.,, wotar 6
Ext., Downtown Galllpol!s lf'la. ...ctrk: anllabll. Gaa prtft,.

.814-441-1!504.
rlbll. Mutt ·be Z0111d retlcllnCall StiVIIn K•lly, OBERER
Magic! Vurw Dar Cart C.ntlr tlal.
o.vo.-nt
Co. 1-222.at37.
,..uonable,
depends~.
11 Help wanted
llctnll, qu.ltty child can. Mon·
day thru Frldoy, 7:30 till 5:30.
Renlals
~0.00/Diy · Proceollng Phone For mort Information or Ia
'

a..t..l PIOpfo Coli You. No EK·
Nec:HNry. 1-315·733110121tc1. P-2113881-bll)

,.•••., 3()4-875-1147.

Btddlna and CMal of DnWif'll

-k.

Fumilhtd APIItiMnl:, . .xt ta
Llbmy, portcll\8, control - ·
.
. - 114
requllld,
"'"..... tor
1 ,.,.an.
411 M".

lncludoil, ..3.14 .. ,..,
SWivel Rockor, 14.44 par --.11.
Rocllnor S7.7S par WMk. Dl-1
wHh 4 Cholro, S7.60 per-· 4
Poet• BriM Bed, $12.20 pilr
..._ 4 "'a. .r Chat of
DriWIN, 13.50 ~ Wllk. Rt. 141,

pakt, 114 448 ..,, a . . 7p.m.

4 MillO ott Rt. 7 In Co.-.ry.
HOURS: - . lltru Sllunfoy,

Fumlahtd tfflcltncy •.-rtmtnt:
Upttalr11, quMII:, we0-klp1, oar·
pMid, otkl- porklng, tor one person1114-4414102.

...'"' ..p.m.; su.-y, 12 .._.

Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bodroom oportmonto ·11 Vltlogo

AUCTION 6

Manor

'ahd

ap.m.

SWAIN
FURNITURE.

Alveralie

In Mlddlooort. flam
.... Clfll14-112·771t i.OH.
Lligo Soc:ond Floor ....~-:
Klehon Fuml-. :138 Flrot
A - , S21Q1..,. pt• utllllloe,
Apo~monto

12

Olivo St., Odpollo. - • Uood
~mRuro, .... Wlllom 6
.!:""' - ·· , _
UniQuo ond bolutllut Anwlcon
of tlolllnnfllo dining raorn

,.,llnOr, HomINIJ .... taiH, Dllil occallortlll 111111, dlolcort'o bonoh.
~. qtlllhy twnlture. 11'14-317...... Luy ....

6 ,....,_, no poll,
11.........1121.

- " lurnl- niobllo homo, 1

~Danllt Cull"'" Bldchortna, 41 Houses for Rent
mile below lawn cweriOokl'~·· Cattle and DMr. 304-882· 1
~;4~41~3:.-'•
bipM~t, . At.
4•
3· Br,
opl~.foHI, o:::'~K
Miss Paula's Day Cart Center. ,..n c II I d, 14251mo••
. North Thlnl
Mtddllport. .::.53~::-:-::A:-nt.::l:;:q~u~es~=~
Soli, atlonlobll, chltdco~. M·F roqulrod. 814-448-4222.
Ohio. 2 bedroom tumloftod opt, "'~
111 R"~- • 1q
• ·-·~
8 l.m: · 5:30p.m. Agel 2·10. 2bldroomhonwln'N.wHavon, reflnitco ond ...,... -ul-'
·~ •-. ' t 4 Of
E. U.ln
81,..,, ~~~~
P. . .uoo,
,.,.
llltoro, onor ochool. DPOl&gt;lnl
3CI4o812-2111.
Houro:
M.T.W.
10:00
o.m.
8:00
w . -. 814-44U224.
wv ~77Uiel.
ono bod,_ opto. far ront. 1 r~= 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
Will do bobf ·omlng bf hour or 2br - · 128 Stoll St-. 1225 month. Dlpooft roqulrld.
dtV In your home. Barbara Securtly Deposit, &amp; rtfwenc. 114-112·2218 ollor 8 p.m.
Tygroll 304-6715-1224
roqulroil, $250/mo. 814-4411Gro0n
ond oook
IIOVI 1100!1 cond. 2 gil.
,
·
~~~4~,1~1~1~41~8~a~s~~~
---~--~
Oonoghllo Stono Jllr. Wooclert
2br hou•, kitchen wfllova a
lloro ,lorooy CoffM Box. Bmoll
Financial
~trlgM'IIOI,
U5Qimo. piUI
tltlllllcl boK. 304-1711-2101.
ldiiMIOI, &amp; rofl,_.o,
no polo. 2311-R•r ANt Avo. 114OuiRI
441-4028.
coltoltlon.
Business .
2 bldniOitt lum- Nood pro 1MG 21
Send jlltotoo onil doocrlollon to
rtmonl. WID,, polio
nt~r
:zbr, hou• on At. 7, S27S rent.
1
Pitton,
Alltlrto,
Ohio
457Ut or
Oppor:tunlty
yg....nd. lllcutly d..,;;d,
pluo.._n.l14-251o6813.
II . - r 1:00 p.m. iif/ii2. call 114/lt2 1151 or 8141512~
2411.
INOTICEI
3
ltodroorn
homo Paint
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. ~-. 2 bolhl1}'mlly room,
Ncom,.nd• thll you do bval- gange, etc. 104-4N-10'78.
nHI wilh people rau know and
NOT to oanc1 money througn tho 3 B1droom howe aood
.mall until you hlva ln-lgotld ~ood, iiOW'ii-etol or

$40 0011/Vrl READ BOOKS AND
TV §cRIPTS. FILL OUT SIMPLE
"UKI'/DON'T LIKE" FORM.

St-.

E,\SVI FUN, RELAXING AT
HOME, BE,lCH, VACATIONS.
GUARANTEED
PAYCHECK.
FREE. 2A HOUR RECORDING.

•·-h

101-379-2155 EXT. PTEB.

AVON • All orilo, Coli Morllyn

W11ver 3()4..882-2145.

A. .mble prodUctl at hom.

W.lkiY, no tX·
po-, oooy work. For ritan
lnlormotlon coli 1·-3oi1M
En 1727. .
Rm up to ·S400

to

-y.

HOME~TV==~~s=Ts~.~PC~-w.--~­

~

-·

noldod. 135,000 pollltlfol.
Dotalla. (1) 805-887-1000 Ext. 11.111189.
C!lrrently

· IICCeptlng
ap-pllcollono 101 lui 01 pori41mo

dant•l hygiene poeltlon. Mull

bl lk:tnMd to practice In th•
•ate ol Ohto. AHumee msy bl

thlollorlng.

-

: clo ,048, o1o Golllpatlo
Dslly Tribune, 825 Third Av ..
.O•IIIpolil:, OH 45831.

----------1
31
for
Homea

Sale

All

bnlnchle. US Cu•om•, DEA,

72

·,~

51

11Je Dodal plctwp, 311, PS/PB;
air -llreo, gaad oondHion,'

=~"' topfll', 8750. .,......,;

1m Cttovy Truett, t\1100, 1""
01 1180 Cflovrolol Cullom Vori,

FlmrOod.
100% honlwood. 61 Fann Equipment
Llnlo !old, dlllvlrod •nit Forau- troctor with loldor,

once. Paid 1250, wtll Hll tor

tt20.114-44M2113,

Good uttd

r~frlgerator,

2811,.522.

good Jlm'o Fonn Equlpmonl, SR. 35,

ablt, round ar tpllt. 614/843- Nil, trade, 8:00.5:00 WMkdiVI,
Sot. till Hoon.
5481.
Martllln 4000 BTU, natunl gs.•,
a.nventtd hut«, Ilk• new
IH.Aiumlnum 8 ft. truck topper

$10 814447-42112.

==rnt!
3881822.

saw cholno -uy 2 got 1 .....
Slllln Eqitlprnortt, 30Wl'll-11121.

63

Livestock

74

NOW,. WITH

J"'t'I/V #~I VA'-~

you~ ~1'101&amp;1

~Ef'o~'r tiE~E.
·Fo~ WING-S,
fi~p~, ANP

fl08fl

__,

@~
~....a:::z._~-,

g

=-·s;r:

~

noW

Up!, $800.
anytlml.

oeq;
~

1881 Hondll1211our wh...tr,
cond, 304..714771.

l9i!'

E-.

IJ. · &gt;

THE F!&lt;ONT WAW&lt; .

Comploto Mobile Homo . .

•

ropol~,

1110

U~·

plumbing &amp;•

lNG! RofarartCIO, Ell!~
814-256-1811.
' ., .
R!&gt;ll'l TV ......., opoclolfzlng;
In Ztntlh nlla urvlclng rnolil ~

olt•r bt1nd1. .MouN calla, a~aa .
oomo opptto- r:c~· WV•

304-1714311 Oh~.

2454:·

BARNEY
THEN THEM
THREE LITTLE PIGS
WENT PLUMB
HOG WILD--UH

LDDICY THA(l It
TH' LITTLE
ANGEl'S SOUND
ASLEEP!!

ONE MORE
TIME It

..,200. 1187

304o6711-2A4G.

1m Comoro, S1,17~""""
dHion,
IHtlo
wooft,

no-

1~1, 814

I oall

lltytlmL

=•

lnlmm lullderl: New horne..
cultam remadallng, 114-'NZ·

:me.

GT, 15,000

82

NbuiH
.,._
Interior.
Sl,lOG.

omlfm
1507.

call 114-4t6-1'150,
Rldgo Rd. E.O.E.

1114 CIIIM, olr, 40,000 mlill,
cloln, ..,500: , . . LIM1n1,
aUiomldC, I*, 13,001. 8ltl or

rooldlnll. Apply In PII'IOtt or

C I - L P.~.l .

-··--·

Buck

32 Mobile Homes
for8ale

1114 Cltlwy C...flor -

14170 homo, .,.. cond
oil l'lpl_ltf Rood, GaNipotlo

EKOiflerl

~-hoH-

-lon.

14-192-

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
or

oom1111rcl•l
wtrtng,
or iopllrL
Llctnnd ellctliclen. Aktinottf

Elootrfooi,IOW7tl-1718.

1114 Fwd T.,... 4 door, a.-o,
AII-I'II • • - 12,11110. 010.
304~ onytlrtta.
1114 ClU1m1I:IM1 Cut...........

85

General Hauling

), ·

RIR.- - P o c l o ..••

oi

17,000
rnltoo. · ...........
I1W7S41JI.

- --r,

=='"""

1111T-h4115,1111=

1111 ,
· · m-.
w.torVOlume
Houuclio
rw mn*

---.-oond,

=,.

84

~ wiU

10-

tro... . for hoPIH.
lCIWCiml.

..... WIIIL 1-•1,000
dlffvory. Coli -

- . a.ooo to 4,000 cora~
~ a11, ..a., ..C:

1

'

" I fell great all year .•. tlltllhrew my.back out
shoveling the driveway to gat hera."

•

-·

-·-

···- ..

-~

..;,."'....J•_,.. ,,r___ ,·__
I

..

Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help you GEMINI (Mar 21-June 20) Someone
lo understand whal to do to make the . who Is 1rylng very hard to plea"' you
relationship .work. Mall $2 to Match- might give up on you today If you crltl·
maker. P.O. Bo• 9t428, Cleveland, OH clze instead of· compliment his/her ef·
44t0 1•3428.
·
loris. This relationship Is too valuable to
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 1i) If you jeopardize.
do more talking than llslening today,. lt
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) Be very
could weaken your negolialions. careful today you don't think only of
BERNICE
Chances are the person with whom your Interests to the detrlmenl of othBEDEOSOL
you're bargaining may give you bolter ers. Selfish motives can yield you profit
term• than you have In mind.
tor the pr,_,l, but what abOUt later?
. AGUARIUI (.len. 20-Feb. 1., In order LEO (Jutr 23-AIIt· 22) People o -.
..;;._...;_______ tor a partnerlhip to succeed !Oday, whom you have IUthorily todoy ohould
each party should have equal autono- be given the benefit of the doubt. Don't
my. If one pe..on has more po- than jump to conclualons lltet they are going
!he other, lhe team won't function to do something wrong beloretha event
properly.
transpires.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Your pos- VIIIQO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Try to follow
slbllftles tor achieving an Important ob- . your humane lnlltlncts today lnllead of
jectrvelook very good today, In eplte of being vindictive. Even If your r _ ...
the fact you might do · a number of Ia juet, the enlmoalty you'll generete
Dec. l,1110
wrong things. Thank goodness, Lady won't be worth It,
LIIRA (lept. 23-0Ct. :13) You might
Social conditions appear e•tremety In· Luck likes you.
ARIEl
'
(~II
21-Aprll
1t)
Otllerl
lind
youraelf In an aWkward polltlon toterestlng tor you In the year ahead . It
won't
perform
effectively
lor
you
today
day
e a11ranger can do sometlllng
looks !Ike you'll develop two distinct
If
you
keep
looking
over
their
shoulders
lor
you
more economlcelly thM a Crtend
' seta of frlenda: one group will lltare
JOUr C&amp;rMr lnlerell, while the others and making changes. Once you dele- can. Let your purse, not your llllttlment,
gale an Ullgnment, lhow faith In those make the choice.
wilt liven up your private life.
ICOIIPIO (Ool. . . - . :13) Don't ,..
IAGITTAIIIUe (llof. :13 Dec. 21) Be you've Ch01811 to do II.
TAUilUI(Aprlla.Moy:IO)
It's
ball
to'
·
'
nege On an ~Qteemettl today-e.,.
IIGvlled IIIII II not 1 good doy to try to
doy
to
dlplnd
only
on
people
wno
have
other
played a koy roll In Mlping you
~lip something o - on ., lnllrnate
friend. Your moll- will be u transpar- · proved reliable In the pnt. If you put too ac~leve a.critiCal objective, ~ally If
.ent aa a picture window to ftlm/hlr. Try- much atocl&lt; In the untestad, dluppolnt· thlllndivtdualwee promlaed aome type
of lee or commtulon.
Ing IO j)llclt up a broken.r~? The 11*11 llltkely.

ASTRO-GltAPH

114 448 3881

1141111241111oftor 4:10p.m.

=7114~PI

2 bedtoom mobl.. .......
~:;.~lhtd, Ml1dl1p r1 'M.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Corlor'o ~-bing
lnd HNIIrtg •
FowtltondPlno
Gattlpollo, Oltlo

AnldanUal

A/C.
11400.

of recommendation. Stereo.

iFatmen
IIJ e Jake and ill•
I\ICCebe iS

••
...

...

,.

•

Rock VIcki

and Campo are reassigned
to wildly lnappropr&lt;eta
panners. Stereo. !;I
91 1121• WIOU Hank and
Kelby are visited by his
ex-will. Stereo. D
lllle Star Trek: 1tte Nell
Oerterallon

Ill CNN Evening Newa
il)) 700 Club Wltlt Pit

t913

+to 9
!;OUTH

+2 .
• A 61
tKQJ I06
+AQ71

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Soalb

W.sl

It
2+
2•
3t
5t

Pass
1•
Pass
2t
Pass
3+
Pas8
It
All pass

Norlb

Eut
Pass
PISS
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • J

L---------------.l
a heart. That will be won by the king In
dummy, but declarer cannot get to his
hand to play the good queen of clubs
and shed a heart.

James Jacoby's books ~Jacoby Oft Brldfe~ 11Dtd
•Jacoby on Card Gimes· (written Jritb ltis IIlitH,

the laie Oswald Jacoby) are· now avaiJa/)Je at
bDOkstores.·Both •re published by Pharos 8DOh
lS) 1 - NEWIPAPB INT!RrlliiE AIUI.

Anewer
21 Broadway 35 Commo·
musical
tions
22 Freoch
36Gooseegg
painler,
37 Balloon·
bursting
Edgar sound
24legal
declara·
38 Woods·
lion
man's
25 Lamb's
need
.mom
40 Great
amount
30 Suave
41 Heady
33 Daho·
·may's
brew
new name 42 Allow

31 Grt~uk's li
· 32 Print shop
outpul
33 Bikini
halves
34 Burning
37 Heming·
way
nickname
39 Kind of
hygiens
43 Yoked
beasts
44 Maryland
player
450ne
Dumas
46 Poem
type

DAJI .Y (:tlYI"''OQtJOTES- Here's how lo work it:
AXYI&gt;LBAAXR

11:oowe
w we '91 o•.
OINewa
&lt;II Night Court 1;1
1[11. ArMnlo Hill Q
(J) Miami VICe
all Comedy Concert Hour II
Corr!adllna Fred Travoltna,
HMry Cho, Jell Dunham end
Olharllra Ctetured. (t :00)
Ill Moneylna
lcaracrow and lllro. King

8

e

· 11:30 (J)
iiJ Tonight Show
Starao.
.

CRYPTOQUOTE
C II II X I. R () U
() K N Y I. C

Q G I. ' U
Q II I.

f)

OHGN . V,

G N II,

II

1.1

N I.

CIIIIX
AIII.ZPAYP()
Y••••..d•ll' • C111fploq-l•: llllo GOOD WOHI.n IS
NOT INNOCENT. IT DOES NO'r IGNORE EVIl.; IT
POSSESSI;:S AND STIJ:I. C()NQUERS a:vu..
.
JOSIILIA ROYCE

lpDIIICJ 1111
, allpofla T~t

,,,.wm-.Q ·

12:00 (I) IIIOVII: The MatiiH
, . . , (2:10)
(I)
Into 1111 Hlglll Staroo.

.

'.

V N I' H

G W W

IEL~
G

12/5

is I.ONG F El. LOW
One lu
· stand~ for another. In this sample A is ust:d
for the 1 c I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
aposlrupheli, the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hints. Eaeh day tht: code letters are different.

l N II lJ

R-

-'

• J 10 9 7
t67
+J 8 s 3

1 Food fish

a

e

EAST
+AQJ 103
.Q82

WEST

.K84

DOWN

Roblrtaon
t0:30 (I) lradlltaw on
Home coming Q
(!) The Gift
Crook and Chua

'· (I) Tlte

11-$.10

+9765
.K53
I A 52
+K6 2.

29 la sts

·

(I) (I) II Cop

NORTH

2 Supefb
serve
units
3 Sleep
7 Scandina· ·
slate
4 Island
v.ian cily
greeting
11 Spotted
5 Dorothy's
cal
12 Crop
dog
Juiner
6 Rag01,U
13 Drop in
7Tara
1ank
family
14 Poker term 8 Shore bird
1!! Cosell or
9 Ignited .
10 GrandHughes
17 Tower
Opry
16 Actrelts
selling
Moorehead
20 Stood
17 Newsstunned
caster
,1!3 Pilching
Jennings
stat
24 Thought · 18 Actress
· ful
Dunne
26 Sawbuck · 19 Wood·
working
· 27 Reverence
aid
2811og

/ilM.D. VInnie
II Doogle Howaer,
pursues a letter

· ~Nawa

No. 3 below.

1 Diamond

(0:48)

111M

l1ep

ACROSS

10:00 W• 01 Hunter Hunter gets
Involved In a gang war while
helping a young man. Stereo.

CltiY fnlck
""'"' $2,100.

you dovolop lrom

'by THOMAS JOSEPH

e

tiUirlcal, raaflng, F'llltOd.:llng, •
1111101' docko ole. AEIIODEE-'

Complete lito chuckle quoted .
'by filling In the "'lssing words

CROSSWORD

a

t1W18mlt:81an, A-1 mechanlctl
body _.._ Coli

Covolllr S1,1

Jessya Norman sings a
variety of Christmas hymns
and carols in a performance
from England's Ely
Calltedral. C1 :20)
Ill 48 Houro Stereo. Q
illle MOVIE: Amazing
SIOflee: Tlte Movie II (2:00)
&lt;IJ • Billy Graham Eaatem
Europe Crullde1 Billy
Gral\1m takes his ministry to
lite Soviet Union and easlem
Europe. Stereo. D
(J) Murder, She Wrote
1J1 Comedy Concert Hour II
Comedians Fred Travolena,
Henry Cho, Jell Dunham and
otlters are featured . (1 :00)
8Prirt11NaWI
il)) MOVIE: Denver end lite
Rio Grandi (2:00)
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Munier In TeKia
(3:20)
1:30 (I) (I) • Growing Pain•
Jason's mother's second
marriage appears to be
headed lor divorce. Q
g:OD ale 01 Midnight Caller
Killian helps a cop who is
kidnapped by a vengeful
Vietnamese orphan. Stereo.

· suspicious of a kidnapped
heiress's miraculous escape.
CR) Stereo. ll
(J) MOVIE: Not a Penny
More, Not a Penny L111 (PI
1 al2) (2:00) Stereo.
Nalltvllle Now
rD Cotllgl Blaltelbell
Ill Larry King .Livet ·
8:30 (I) (I)
Mllrrlad People
Elizabeth Is ollertd a
partnerShip at her law
practice. Stereo. 1;1
(I) Chrla-a Willi lha
Monnon Tabamacle Choir
From th8 Tablmacle In Sa~
Lake, lite choir presenls
seasonal favorltaa including
0 Holy Night; Joy to the
World and Mozart's Alleluia.

lhllll, -

cl- to

l)ara

(I)

SHE STARlS ~NG '8~-~H' 'M-IEN
sHe Gees ME CO\r\INEr LJP

Q

'roday1s aeal is taken from a new
World Bridge Federation event, first
held in Geneva last September. Twenty of the world's premier players were 1
selected to compete in a par contest.
The idea was for the competitors to ·
play the deal on a computer, with
points deducted from their score for
mistak!!S made in the play. And how
should Ieday's deal be played ?
First, the opening lead should be
taken by the king of hearts in dumtny.
Declarer should next cash two high di·
amonds from his hand, leaving the ace
in dummY,. Next, to provide for the
possibility of a bad club split, the ace
and king of clubs should be played, in
that order, and then a club should be
played from the North hand up to the
queen . East would be out of clubs, but
be could not gain by ruffing. (Declarer
would then play low, establ~hins the
club queen as a parkinB place for one
of dummy's heart losers. After cash'
ing the heart ace, declarer would ruff
his heart loser with the ace of dia- ·
monds.) Wben East discarded on the
third club, declarer would take the
queen and ruff his last club with tbe
ace of diamonds. He would lose only a
spade ti·ick and a ·heart trick .and
would make his contract.
Notice the pitfall in winning the
first heart trick in the South hand. If
the play proceeds as above, East can
ruff the third club trick and play back,

Cllrlttmel Sympltony
Celebrated international diva
,.

~~

BRIDGE

(!) Jeeoye Norrnan'a

!llc

·I I

S(:U" LITS ANSWIIS
'"'
Tiptoe - Ankle - Hovel - Nicety- POINTY
Didja ever notice that whether the pen is mightier than
the sword depends on who gets the POINT?

illle Three'• Company
8Cro11ftre
7:35 (]) TJte Jelieraona
I:OD al • 01 Unaolved
My..,... A woman survives
a gunshot to the hud: a
murder weapon is found .
·
Stereo. Q
&lt;II Nlalll ot the Fo• (PI 2 of
2) (2:00)
.
(I) (I) • The Wonder Yeare
A visit tums sour when
Kevin's dad and grandpa
argue constanlly. (FI) Stereo.

'TOffiN(;I":

16

I
I .

·

(J) 8 Mema'a Family

Transportation

114-31'7-o311 '"" 5p.m.
11711 Cldo~MOO.

.

7:30 w • 91 JeOpardy! Q
· &lt;II Night Court Q
&lt;II &lt;!Jill Entarlelnmant
Tonight Stereo. Q

OF

I~

L--.1..---L.-.L.-.L.-..1.-J

Q

.,5

=·

I

e

.

Building
55
SupplieS
71 Autos lor Sale
Block, b&lt;lck, oowor rolpoo, wineta., _lintel., eto. Claude Win· ~.$5N.1~
1967 MUlling
Runo
CB~
ton, Rio Grondl, OH c.tt 114- aoubit
over
Mad
cam.
NcL
:zu..tn
$550. 1141247-42112.
SIMI
ltllltdlngo.
Y11r-ond
CICIIDuta, Aft lhauundll 11J111 Ford LTD, rune go:~ood
$0140, 40d0, 101100, 100J:200. cond, oomo t'\111, aoOiiW&lt; cor,
Quick dlflvary, will orocl. Solo ms. oao. 30M"Indo 010. :n, Wonor 303-JIQ. 1~ CldOioc Dlvllll. Good
4880.
condhl011. Ram charger top.
81412A7411111.
56 ~ets for Sale
1111 Chivy 11 Pa Inger
School · Bua; ·Y-8, aldo-naUc

I

w llnalde Edition 1;1 ·
(!) ~II Lehrer

7:05 (]) Happr

R0 SRY

"You ate two pieces of pie at
one time!" admonished the
.L.....J.-..L.-.1...-L..- l ; wife . The husband, who was
r--:---......."'"""'---. always dieting replied, "I think
A WN E E K
of it as two pieces in------·!"

NeweHour
I[JI
Night Coull 1;1
&lt;IJ • Current Affair Q
1121 l"or Klda' Sake The
differences between today's
teenager and teenagers a
generation ago are
·
highlighted.
(J) MacGrver r:;l
rD Colllgl Blokttlbltll
8 Moneyllne
illl B~:arecrow and Mre. King

''

Motorcycles

tll84 ICIWIOIId

1911 Olda Dtltl 'II. Exa111 •

·

(I)

1

1

· I" Is 1 1. I

1Ji Abbott and ColtiiiO

~ I o...m ot Jeannie

A' 2y r Ll y
;:_i:.....
1

gWonllarwortce Stereo. Q

condiUdit. Air, 111, obiJ 11fticruloo,

- .. . ...

WORTfl FIFTV CENTS

1918 Vamahl VZ 250 wstar

..per.
vlaora. You can malcl a .cfiHtr;.
ence In 1he llv" of our

I

I TAKE IT SACK ..

l-IE'S PR06A6LV ONLV

CII

.

Joe-.

3 bldr001n, untumilhed.2 ttory,

2 lA mobllo homo In Porlor, you
poy utlft._l clop. 114 IU ttiZ.

'(OUr&lt;. D06 ...

PROBLEM

Sor..tl Goldlng'a ,._ quolfty, 2135. .
' .
SIIOi A.O.H.A. ..-.:1 lllrw, In
tool to A.O.H.A. Cltlntalon 75 Boats &amp; Motors ~;
tor Dakobl PenLinar. :104-t'fS. .,,000: Regilt- SOrrofl I
7111•171-tmonth cllf -uno. $400:
for Sa111
. ~·
SaVINI otltlr quollty 1 1m
17
ft.
81orcroft
Trt-HUII
OUIIrt~ntMd
prompt
~101
far. horllllor-.~.
"... 0rylfl.
Boot, 125 HP, E aJI IMkM, madtla. The Wathtr Sot Point Pluo tor your -lo cornplllo
top now uohololooi.
D&lt;yor Sftoppo, 114-441-21144.
ond lick . - , 2415
Cott 114-216-IN ollior t:OO p.no.
Roglolor to win lrM turjloy Avo, Point P-.nt, WV. gl.,.., 8WIIJ 1ach Saturday until 1'15-4014.
76 Auto Pans &amp;
Chrialmu. Paint Plua, 2415 Spoclal Fo- Colt Salol
., .
Accessories
Joe-. Ave, Point P - t . Dacombor ~~~-~~ 1p.m. With
3QW7S.ll0114.
Ngullr Solunay Soli. Ll. . . 1183 Mercury Marq~ll for parta: 1
toCII con bo clllcHid In oftor C.ll 304.a7S..e711 aftlf' 4 p.m. ,
Ring•, 10 point Karwt, whl1e gold 4p.m.
en FridtiJ. Truok!ng , , .
~
I · wlddlng Ill
Budaot rn... r..lono, Uttod ll
tta.llll. Milo! clclh• '*'!!!to able. IJ14...5I:Z..2322,11+10 3131. rwbuln,
Marting at sn; 114-:Z4S.,
11clflottl oond. $40.00. uoa
1177, 11447N213.
\
64 Hay &amp; Grain
=~~"" Oood ns.oo. 814Small
truck
toppw mRSurn :
Gn&gt;und, lhlffld """" Sl.50 per
Stump r.moviil, yard wark, 100 lb. 1no colflo - . se.oo per s·.rs·2 .,oa. Four Pzo&amp;.75R·tl ,
SeUOnld olh, ook, hickory 100 lb. Alfltfl . Hoy. Morgon't 11roo ( •..-dl $25. ~711- ·
. ,'
fiN\IfCCd, $10.00 Plck~p Load, Form1 Rt. 35, 8 om-12 .-., 5301.
Don'l Llndoclplng. 814-446- Mcnaoy.S.tuntoy, 304-13ll-2011•
79
campers&amp;
M41.
Ground. shelled '*'"• M. per
Motor
Homes
t
SUI'JII,. Army · Comoutlago, 100 lb. 12% canll told Sl.60 per
Donlm, Corhun, Roniol Clolft. tOO lb. Alfltlo hay. Morgon'o
24 ft. c-hmon =-~~.,;
lng, · lnoulotld Blbo, Mllltory Farm, At. 35i 8:00-12:00 naon, oqul(lltld,
12,000.
:;
Pticka. Sam Somarvlll•"a, East Mon thru Sat. 304-131-2011.
RaveniWDOCI, Rt. 21. Open 3;308:30 PM untU Chrlol.,.., Frl, Hay tor Solo. Clo- 6 Tltttothy.
Services
Sol, Sun: Noono6:30 PM. Coli Round BoiM In tho Fllfd. 814245-lstlll
Olhor dlyo :JG4.273.6155.
V..hy llyle dre...,. wtlh mln:o:r, Hay, Alfalfa and lin• mix,
HOine
81 .
full .Jze bed, kitchen dlnlttt aquara balll, 304-882-2137.
tiiiM, 8md yard lrall.,, 12~ Llrgo round bot• 01 hoy tor
l.mprovemellls
1221, or 3f7.7'1M.
1111 .
- h. Dlllvary Avol~
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
- ' 814-441-11152.
Ron Alll"!!t. 1210 - - Avo,
Galllpollo, utf ... 338.

Cll'ned ao-worura I

·CLRSSFIED RDS

MAVSE VOV
COULD SELL

Will Galllpollo, 814-441-1777;

114/192-IIICI.

·Read the Best Seller
·Read the

T~E

condltlcrt. 81.wgz.mz.
Wide atl.ctlotl new &amp; ulld firm
LoCuli polio, All olzoo uall• traeto·r t &amp; lmpl~mtntl. Buy,

grow111
oppo~un~iii.THREE ·
RAISES FIRST YEAR
Tuition ,.lmbUr~~ment. Cl'ld~
Union Servlcoo1 ca~ng l con- .

CfodH oaU 1-IC)C).Ua.etltO Jchn
Bollly. '

TI-IAT'S

601N6 TO 6ET
TWENT'r'· FIVE
DOLLARS?

i

1~- - r-t. : . ~~~"
E 1 ~~~I

illleALFC
(J) CartQOn l•preaa
1D Spcwtalook
8 Woold Today
il)) Our HouH
·8:05 (]) ..Vartr Hltlbimee
8:20 (!) Square One TV Q
8:30 ~ • 01 NBC Nightly Newa

1[11. AnciJ Grlllltlt
ID SporteCentw
8:35 (]) Allciy Grilftth
7:oaw• 91WheelotFottune

'::~"r.n1~:.
III!Ckld $45. CIIIIM/llt24473.
S2,f50i Super T7 Ollv• DieHl, c&lt;CLOI~.
Fomtot: Burgundy lltloto ond 1915· !504 lntomolional Dtulf, 1084 Bluer 110, N, nuto, air,··
veiVIII with crlnoll111 and match.. 13,ii6o: 1200 Dlvld Brown with ·
241 lnter1111t10MI round blltr, cnaln, tiiiiWirhMI.L !!!'_tO• PW;:
lng - o. AI llzo 5. Worn $5,150;
•.'
Owner will IINnco. 114- PL, 15,100, 304-6~

mllol Good
on
gino.

Black howl! Road. $500 - t

LV~ ERE ARE 'f'Oll

11~-

3'111-21157.
,.'
1171 Joop CJ-7, hord top, 814-'

379-2!171, ony1lml.

1~

1121e

ill 1121• CIS Nfta Q

~~
'
1m Dldgl Powor Wigen: 311•1
aulomadc, PS, PI, $2,f00. &amp;M-

liD Ford -

10 pera.n1 APR whh •pprovea

low ro form four slmpt. _,... ,

(i) (J). "IC NIWI Q
(I) WfkfAmenca Q

381400'1.

FirewOod For Soli:
All
ho-ood, lrM cllflvory, 114-

711-lH'f.

' REPOSSESSED -ES
3br, 1 IMth, htlt acre MIL on

Trucks for Sale

bod, G
lon. . _ .,
114-411·1025.
·- GIIC 'IIrue.,
• PS • p B, •It
•
~
IICIItont condftlon,
coli

wuhtt $45. Sharp C.rsol
m5erowave 175. Commodore 64.
304o67WTIO.

provldM IXCitltnt bil"'lfltl A

I

-;;.

-H--

Scenic Hilla Nursing Ctntar

311

CM¥Y Monte .Cnrto. $4.511.

(J). 91

-=-----

Rearrange lertlfo ol
0 four
scrambled Words

~ ~~~~!:~.r Q

.,5.

SR 160, now -pot. -IY
3 bedroom houM, one aera pal_~td, aVJIIabll lmnwclatiiY,
wooded tat. Rockoprlngo, Ohio. 1375 ptuo $100 dopooll, lt4-241114-tl2.a25 aft• tpm.
SIU. .

otc. N- Hiring. Coli (1) 805-ei7IOOO bt. K·t0f81.
NOW HIRING STATE AP.
PROVED NURSING ASSISTANTS

lltiiiH loy ClAY I , I'OUAN

EVENING

s.,._

.choot, no Pitt. nterence snd
3 bedroom homo, Millon Rood, ~.taOS. 304-671-2681. .
Com/; Conlly, 141,000. Will IIIII. 3br - · lllochld on
304

for Immediate reepon...

T~~:~' S@~4llA-4£~s·

M

WED.. DEC. 5

8;0D al. (i)
1121 Newl

Musical
Merchandise
Instruments
114-1o2·2138.
.-;.
35 mm SLR comora, 2 lono, ono Bllctwln • ocrooonlc cot\ool 1183 Ford F-150, 4WD, PSIPI!,
1101200, - · flloh, 21 ond 3K plano, bolutlful wood tlnlllft wi ~
.., ~· 114-381-1413, ~~
convortore, corrylng cuo, 304- · matching bench .,:ZOO 814-192·
1711-1111'
.
3200.
.
tll84 Chovrct• SIIYINdo, plc:IJ;' ·
Amorlcln Weill Tonnlng Bid, 2 Out-0-Tuno plonoo juol don~ up: Ill olltru. Exc. cond. I!+
Yll~ old. Aoklng $2,500. - k won of you! You n11d tho 446 4053.
"
11411112-2233.
' "affordttblo" J&amp;M PIANO SEfi.
VICE (Prv. 22 :1). Bill Ward 1981 Ford AangM' XLT. NC, H
Armltrong
Woodbumer, 304/882· 2325.
onglno. Sl500. 11411112ol244. •
wlfurnoco, K~ .,50, 114-245,
Wl
tl88 Rongor, 4 cyt., 5 •"'!,,
$3800.114'384-4438 cr 44f.'ll2-.
Chrlotmu
T.-Norwoy,
$11. Mochlno 58
Fruits &amp;
Cloer, dug t-,
11110 forci · F-1501 ~•4 ELT Llrlol.
and Whlto Plno su orovo
Vegetables
~· " " ...ooo. 814 ~
bllnkoto $20. WrNtho
Tltornoo TriO Form, AI. 2 North Dunrovln Fru~ Farm lu• off Sr DAUGL.ORD CARSII $1011. •84
Flil,_ ocroa frDm Good 681 0111 ot Albony. Wo -pt VW tso: '87 B11W UOG: u.s.
Sltlpltlrd Church, 304-875-404\ food lllmpo. Vorioty of oprt - 1 SEIZED. FREE 24 hour roconleor-o &amp; ptllllc -IC llnko, . omloh ch- ond buttor, ml- lng. IOt-3111-21:10 0111, PTLC.
Ron Evono E~o, Jock· nula, honey or ~hum.
Tuo:::=ndoy .1-6 dolly, 73
· V S &amp; 4 WO'S
eon, OH 1-.&amp; 121.
·--d
an
,.
cJ. ·~~--·
Dark plno hldch S37S. Dllh·
1Vl'T Ford Econollno Von, 614&gt;,

'*·,..,

Ylrd.

M

p,:

o:• Ml see II aneous
"""

ltodroorn - . Plv..lo
Rood, Galllpollo Forry, WV ,
month. 304-1711-7241.

batt-·

1"1'®' ~

114-418-711.'111,
I · cyl. Sltort.
1181 F~=.,u

3

Real Estate

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING .,1,000-412&lt;000 yoar.
Coli 1 11011 1114 UOO ut.GI HI
JOBS.

~~

Sola ond Choir, SUI fll' -11.
I Pltco Woodan!UP, $14.01 por
- . L.Sitlpid Bunk Bodo,

Fumllltld Apt, 2 11&lt;, 1131
Se~ Gollljtolta, tml, wlllr

and Exterior Painting, 10 yu,. Houae whh -=re or mara, l"'nt
aptritnced, have refeNI'ICI:I. whh opllon tq buy ~ on land

Employment Services

INTELLIOEHCE

REN1'20WN

~

,.

Offtco '

new. $11. Call 6141112-6834 afttr 3 yoer old t:09lotlrld A.O.H.A. cooled $500 1112-3142 or

NoWI\JHd

coll304o6l'll-141l0.

FOR SALE In Golllpollo

Plozo. Coli Today, 61
-436711
Roglotorotlon IIIM5-12748.
Route 2 Aahlon. 1 acre Joti;, 3
miiM IOUih Galllpollo Locko,
publla ....... no rwat~loM,
18 Wanted to Do
oomo wnh rl,. trontlgo, 304-

dolls and Gl Jo. dolls, 19601170'1, ciOitt. and l!ftCCaaorlls.

·

tumlo!tlnl. t/2 mi. 5:00p.m.
.ltnfcho Rd. pt. Pt-nt, WV, RCA colol'ld TV, truck botllnor
,..,.,t~taotdfd

Ferry. W111 accept trall~.;ttv
Nowll!$outhuatam wat~r
avalleblll. Phone
75a
BusJn... Colllge, Sf~41 VaiiQ 2722.

Want To Buy or A•nl: Trailer
1pace lo accamodltl, 14x~ or
24146,114-2&lt;15-5814.
Wantld by colleCtor: larbl•

IUIJI\l

AabbH fur jlckll tor ..It, Uke

H
. otH&lt;

Retrain

5657.
Wamod lo Buy: Sllndlng Timber, Small or lalgt ac,.._., 614387·7511, .,., 7 p.m.

't;:

, PIOKE. . FURNITURE

814-81111-7311.

~

-

.a
=:to..:...~.r~:...~ ~~========:;=====.,=·""::":.::·
. :"'·:~ ~·

1150, 1\enmor• microwave oven,
tiOO. tn 3M 84ts, 114388 oe01.

S.na rHurne to box Cia 052 c/o Big 4br O.kot• Farm Ham..
Glf!lpollo Dlllr.· Tribllno, 125 bultl for you, 125,095 and up.

m•uge and I'll

Ntum call.
LunchloJM
1060'•1110'• mtlal domt tope
nt&gt;e~~Nry.

or 3 bec:lroom14x70 modtll at
the unbtlltvablt prJct ol
$12.to0 dellvtrH and ut LIP•

TVPI
~·...
135,000

Wsntld: Part-tlma blrtendlr for
locsl private club. Exc. working
condHione. WHbnd night•

WHh properly; piUI gaurantHd
Buyer

Fou~lt

S - · 1 • ..
an, ,...... 1SPECIAL.. Ftctory 10 you199'1, 2
y

....~ ,;.;.,;.;;._,_
8301.
potontlal.
_ _ _ _ __
Datoua. 111 805-617-6000 Ext.. a- 33 Fanns for Sale
4582.

304oi7S.2658.
30 ta 50 teres In Gal!l• County.
title.

opply 510

$9,1115il· 1988 Chl~ullomlzoa

Avt, Kanaug.. Ohio. No phone
c1111.
Mobile Home for Sale or Rent: 2
~
PC
•
mil .. · out ot Vlnton, 014-388-

Wanted to Buy

2 or 3 Regular

d~vlng,

Fairmont 14x70, 2+2
Dupin
1182
Apartmentl, 'Md8J.. eltci__I'!CJ
II, SIS;

I• ·~

Ut

Mu. Ltl'&amp;'(

~ Oroy, 12,1111; lid -.
Oldl Siorrl, 1!,.!'5: 1114 Bulcfl
L.I8Mro, .......: Ford
Crown - . . ......: 1182
Clilvy Coilo, P,400; 1117'

· COli

.--....-:'r'.;::

1

!!E.S(OIV,; .. '

:

l'!!"!.!'2l ~0

Household

to

'

att•I:OOIUft.

Merchandise

51

'f,., 1ttt: e-L6~

~L~ ..

--~~-=.,.,=.e-..
.eoo~~= ··

Goode
&amp;ld11Rioo.l1411112•11171,
• LAYNE'II'UIINITURE
Nlco tumlohod, 2 bedroom, nlco
lorgoo ,.,., · - of Rona ond
Porch Sl K.inougo. 114-4441-1117:1. 10 l121. Hldn b 1da to
$585.
1221 to
44
Llmpo·Rlctm.t'l
tal lo t121.
DS3TI.
lApanmem
S101onduptoS4111. Woodllblo
for Re!ll
w-4
chlfN PM tollfll, - •
-•
1 BR opt.- In Rio G~ndo, ..66 l14ll up to 1211.
._.._ Hutohll ·
"""
por month. 814-388-IIMe or 814- ~
241o6401.
l::'lljtr~f:.,f.J"-"TA,:
1 BR, $300/mo.: 2 BR, $400/mo.l·
,- 2 roamo 6 . both. .. 75. AI .... IPid
6
Kl- $310. 4 chill
ldllftill lncholod. bopooft ,..
...
. Guil Clbf- I, I, • 10
qulrod. Coli Llflyello Moll 114'Me-7733 or 441"'222.
. gun. lllbf , . . . , _ $S8 6
141. Bod ffotn01 12!1_ Duoon
2br opo~mont, flrot tloot, bod- SIDI3811dng- ...,,
Good
of l:lldloam eultle.
,_. •I living
"""" fvmlah.d,
· - · MIKIIon
81ove
rwfrtDf!I'IIOI'
.,.11 Clbl-, - - $:110
wot., l truh' turttl-. 114- ond up SIS.IIG dlyo 11
441-3140.
.
cuh with oppRI•Id crodll 3 mi.
oul Bulovlllo Rd.
t A.M. to
Zbr, untumloftod opt., 111 Ylno • P.M lion 1ft
·
'
'
ru
·
-~-u -··
•~
Strlll,
Mllf river,
alow
441-032Z.
··
:~-or, good nolgltbor• c11.,..11, Nflnnct. water 2 wing -.ck Cltllra, very old,
polcf, Coli~ 1-10. f14.446.2A11. good -lon. Now living
roam .,Ito, couclt 1.- two
3 tum- roomo I both, roc!"- ltlllft ln. Clio~ lo rocklr
clean, no pete. Alfa,.nct &amp; glldlr. 114111112-2IIGII onor 4:00
dopooft roqulrld. 814"'4f.1511.
p.m.
.
35 Well Apt. 2br, 1 both, prfvlll -liut dlnl- OUftl
enclottd Plltlo, etc. to groct!'Y pocon; t~pro .i;;..,!L~- ol
' atorM &amp; lhoP.plng ctnllr, wattr, d - . Bod com-•· 2312
NWW, tNah provldM, $265Jmo. Jetteraon Aven...
614 4111341.
Ctothoo d,..; SIO.OO. 304-1715~br apartment, I mlln from Qal.
llpollo en St. Rt. 141. 1250/mo. 1717. Iller 5 p.m.
wllor pold, ,.lo,.... ' dlopooH County Atlplllnol. Inc. Good
rwqulrld, 114-44f.31117.
uold oppllo-, T.V. ooto. o-t
a.m._to 8 p.m. llon.-lat. htAPARTMENTS
AVAILABLE I441-111!..
127 :lrd. Avo. Ga~
MoCourtly,
W.Vo.
Apartment• .,. now nallablt Upollo,UOf
101 ~nt to -lltlld oppttconto. llrop.tool llblo, 2 chllra, bonoh.
An oppo~monto oro 2 bedroom Rill condhlcn. Phone
IIIII and lncludl; 1 fully oqulp. *M-17U712 oftor 5 p.m.
pod kH.,_, ..U to ..U corpot;
F- Cl'!lll ond pod,
lt/C, au . lfoctrlc o!lllfla-. rutt
cofOr recliner chair. 304-loundry 6 DIIY ground loi:tlltlooL 8'/tlo6120.
Pro~ Ia. FMHA tundld. Conloci DeniM 01 Borry 1114181S- GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
4814. FMHAIE.O.E.
W.lftorl, dry ..., ro)rigM'IfSIOtggo Apj'&gt;lla-.
Aport_,o, 2 ltodroorno, nlco, rongoo.
u - Rlvor Ra. Booltlo Slono
304o675-5104.
CfHt Motol. Coll114-418-7311.
Montgomory
lli'ord upright
~ t7 cu. ft., good col\d.

1...--------,..--r----------j

den Aetrltver, 0 wU. 114-441- 'r

Booglo, mole, Chlldl

2 ba*oom, ~75-1112 after
1:00 PM.
.
.
Mobllo homo far ront, tumwHh. WID. 1250 mo. pluo dlopoolt

IT'S~'(~~

Television
Viewing

- · lcodld, lltlrp. 1141192·7512'

-of , . .Pork,
.roy.

North
I~--··
porto, I
""'-

'1231. ,.

1... Porttloc Grond Prl• BE. 81~ '•

Space for Rant

Country
3S.-

llpoctrurrt~ml._,;

114 41-1403aftertP:.m.

·

6141,111-WY.

46

Goo

1... . Pcntloo Gnnd !'rlx.t
toodldiiiNY I tOW., allextru. •

Fumloltld moblllltorno tor-·

,...s:b

304.80&amp;-

ortHiclf Chrlotmoo tr11
whh oomo trlmmlngo, 304-6154464.
Robbno fc&lt; 11111. 114-'JSB 8813. .
To good homo: pupo, port Gal-

-

11 11 n111do, 11.100.31

.••••.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

BORN LOSER

t~tseo.

-.30W7HIM.

· Giveaway

etolt

' wn

-·e!-·

--Ina

No Hunllng or
day
or night on Alymond SmHh
proporty. Vlototoro will bo
prooocutld.

2924.
L.olt or

eu

- r Galllpollo . Pt.ia: ~
monlfi.
I rMenc II

program. VtuiUuter eard gu1r.
No •ecurtty ~it. 1.0 118
OOM.o. $21. • -

=~~~o:~t..!ri:-·

aut

t••••

Wednesday, December 5, 1990

Rooms

31Rmol!llohotno,--.l - - - - h - n g .
mL trom 1 - In 211; 1226 AiaO' trillor · Allhook·UIIL '
c.tt oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·1'73- .
monlh. I'M

slcs)

Autos for S:sh.

71

·-or

Ent- M - Churoh
Chritlmu BIUir • Bako Solo,
Friday, Doc. l'lh from I Lm. • 1
p ,jn. at (Foomolty Corlty'l Clu-

.·

Fumlal1ecl

2 IR, untum., bolutltUI' ri- R - oVIIilllfl far 2 or 3 C:onvtow, wotlr lumi~Cl!ty tll!IL llructlon - . , - ·
FOIIor'o llabflo
PWk. 114- 25111.
'Me-1101or4411•
:;::;:=:::-;-:o~::-~-:-==:Roiorno tor Nnl
month.
2br INI!Ir far - · Porllf ONI, 81ortlftl II t120/mo, - Hotlf.

h - of GMolclno Cfotolld i.
Main Sl- A~ OH.
'

4

45

Mobile Homes
for Rent

f' , .....

3 · AMOUnc:ements

Cli-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wriabt

LAFF-A-DAY

Armouncen1en·,

Wednesday, December 6, 1990

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy

-· ~·

.. .

.........,

•

.,

�Wednllldlly, December 5, 1990

Ohio .Lottery ·.

.

STORE HOURS
Mon•y thru. Sunday
· I AM-10 PM

'

CHICKEN
LEG 1/4

'•.

Vol.41, No.160

lQ LB. PKG.

Deliberations end. in
hung jury for Yotlng

BREAST

$ 99
10 LB. PKG.
Chuck Roast •.•••••• 1
$1190'
HOMEMADE · .
.
$ . 29
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB

LB.

Pork Sausage •••.••

T~ORN APPLE VALLEY-5-7 LB. AVG.

$

l

ROUND
BEEF

Boneless Ham .•• !B•• 219

$1390

7
·
9&lt;
.
Sliced
Bacon
•••••••••
29
Chicken Breast ••r:. S1
LB.

·GROUND
CHUCK

.

GRADE A __, 12-22 LB. AVG.

Flavorite Turkeys·••~·. 6.9 ~
M~RIAH •SMOKED
..
.
$ . ]9
LB.

P1cn1c Hams •••••••••
SUGARDALE 1# ASSORTED

.

Lunch Meats ••••• ~B

$

••

10 LB. PKG.

$1590

1

ASSORTED

PORK CHOPS

11 9

10 LB. PKG.

$1490
PORK
STEAK

10 LB: PKG ..

3 LB. BAG

Yellow Onions •••

$l
21

$1290
EY
DRUMSTICKS

'2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $1 89
PLASTIC GALLON .

$ 69
.Orange Juice · ::.o~~ •• 1
MINUTE MAID

SLICED

B.ACON

KEMPS

(rackers •••. ~ ..••••• ll,..

------------

5 QUART PAIL

Paper Towels ••••·••••

$299

)

I
I
1117·12·088

FLAYORITE SUGAR

99(

Geed at Pow..• S.,. Vohl
. Geed Die. 2 tflnllllc.•• 1990

.,.. .1••

IEGUUI • •

cUNA-

•us•auow

cocoA •x

99(
..............

• lOENV.

PIG.

~

.... Ill. I tin lie. I, 1tt0

----------~

save on
Maxwell House~
INSTANT COFFEE

ICE CREAM

BOUNTY LARGE ROLL

GIF'l' ~OM THE IJEART· A special gift

fr001 the heart . for needy Meigs CollDtians
durmg this holiday season was made by the
· employees ot Pomeroy Branch of Bank One to
the Meigs County United Methodist Coope111tlve
Parish. The employeeS made seve111l gravevine
trees whitb they decorated and displayed in the
. bank lobby. Patrons were invited to place a pur·
. chase bid on the trees. This week the trees went
!' to the highest bidder and
.. . tbe proceeds amounted

.t . ,

{

t1

1 -- \
c,;

Maxwell

• PUREX DETERGENT

12oz~jar
Plus save an additional uoo
with the attached coupon

House
. . -. I

1360Z.$399
BOX

FINAL COST

CIHd at Powlll's Supor Valu
GOIII Dtc. 2 tllru Dtc. a; 1990

$339
~-----------------------------·

•

.
to $365. A check lor tbat amilu•t was pres~ted

to the Rev. Roger G111ce, parish director, by
· Diana Lawson, bjlnk employee, on beball of the
Pomeroy group. Pictured with the two are others
wbo were Involved In the pi'Qiect, from the left,
MarUyu Wolfe, MarUyu RobinsOn, Millie Midkill', l)ezl Jeffers, and Doris Snowden, and front,
Maryln WUcox, a9d Gerrl Walton. Tbe money
wiD go into the various bollday projects of the
Cooperative Parish which maintainS a clothing
bank and food pantry.
.

·
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Following almost seven hours of
deliberation, the 12-member jury in
the case of John L. Young became a
"hung jury", placing disposition of
the case on.the back bWl!er until a
P,1ea bargain agreement can be
reached, or until another jury can
be seated and the case re-tried.
• Y6uilg had faced the jury and
Meigs . County Common · Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow since
Monday afternoon. He is charged
with kidnapping, an aggravated
felony of the first degree.
He is accused of uansporting his
17-year:ald niece from her home !JI
Middleport 10 a remote spot m
Mason County, W.Va. in August of
this year. According to testimony
presented !hi$ week, Young raped
his' niece at least twice and then
returned her home 10 Middleport.
Law · enf.:&gt;rcement and · inves,tigawry agents from both Ohio and
West Virginia, medical experts and
friends and relatives of both the alleged victim and the defendant testified in the trial, which ended with
closing arguments on Wednesday
morning.
Much of the state's case centered
, .on genetic testing of semen found·
on gannents entered as evidence in

men and live w~en, reiUmed to
bl&lt;IOO · testing of the courtroom at 8:30 p.m. on
Young and the victim's boyfriend, Wednesday, only to report that they
Jefr Kauff, it was. deu:nnined that had not come up with the unanithe semen found on clothing could mous verdict required tor either
be traced to Young but not to Kauff. conviction or acquittal.
"She's a victim and John Young
is a victimizer," Meigs County
"I believe this reRects the inProsecuJQr Su:ven Story !Old the sufficiency of the evidence ai!llinst
jury ·in closing arguments. "He John Young," Knight said in · a
knew exactly how 10 get her alone prepilred statement on ·Th.ursday.
and he did iL"
,
"While I have the greatest symStory refers to an alleged plot pathy for victims of sexual assault,
used by Young 10 persuade the vic- I believe that no one should be
tim 10 go 10 Mason Cowny with convicted on uncorroborated teS·
him.
timony."
Aecording to testimony offered
In the meantime, Young is
during the trial, Young told the vic- scheduled 10 appear before Mason
tim that her estranged sister was County Circuit Court Judge James
visiting relatives in Mason County Holliday to answer 10 15 charges
and offered to take the victim there related to the August incident.
to visit with her sister.
Young's trial there is set for
Meigs County. Public Defendc;r ~onday ·morning, Assistant .Meigs
Cllarles Knight, who represented County Prosecutor Linda Warner
Young in coun, tried to persuade stated. Warner tried the. case along
the jury that the state had not of- · with Story on behalf of the state.
fered enough evidence to prove that However, she anticipates Young
· being held in Meigs County and the
John Young was the offender.
"Without any physical evidence, Mason Coilnty case being conseveral jurors correctly were of the tinued until the case here is comopinion that the state failed 10 pleted.
Warner was unable to say how
prove the guilt of John Young
beyond a reasonable doubt," she expected the case to end.
Ho\Yeyer she did say, "I am ready
Knight said after the trial.
The jury, consisting of seven to go to trial again."
the case.

Fo~owing

Saddam wants negotiation of Palestine ·issue
.By GAYLE YOUNG
invasion of Kuwait.
ous source,. reported Tuesday
United Press International
President Bush, in Argentina that Saddam offered to witdraw
Iraq and three Arab allies have during a six-day swing through his troops from Kuwait to avoid
agreed that the Palestinian Latin America, ruled out making war provided he is allowed to
cause should be on the bargain- any concessions aimed at allow- keep the oU field. which straddles
Ing table in talks with the United ing Saddam to make a gracious the Ira9-Kuwait border and was
States but denied reports It was exit from Kuwait.
captured during the invasion.
•'When naked aggression takes
willing to withdraw from Kuwait
Baker, appea~lng before the
in exchange for a captured oil place, It Is not a question of Senate Foreign Relations Com·
field.
.
saving face for' the aggressor,;' mittee, said his mission to
· Meanwhile, the first of some Bush told reporters at a news Baghdad "will be an attempt to
3,300 Soviet nationals held in Iraq conference.
explain to Saddam the choice he
beganleavtngthecountry,and43
Saddam 'has agreed to meet faces: Comply with the objecmore hostages from Australia with Baker In Baghdad later this tives of the (U.N.) Security
and Japan were to be released month and, wlll' send Iraqi For- Council or risk disaster for
Thursday, according to officials eign Minister Tariq AZiz to Iraq."
and news reports in those Washington for talks with Bush
He lnsls!ed the United States
countries.
'
·
in an effort to avoid a mllltary would settle for nothing less than
Iraqi President Saddam Hus· confrontation after the U.N.
fulfillment of U.N. resolutions
Sein met ih Baghdad Wednesday draline of Jan. 15 for Iraq to calling for the unconditional
with Jordan's King · Hussein, wi.thdraw from Kuwait.
.
withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait,
.Palestine Liberation Organjza Cable News Network, quoting the release of all hostages and
lion Chairman Yasser Ararat a high Iraqi official who re- · restoration of Kuwait's legit!·
and the vice president of Yemen. quested · anonymity, reported mate government. .
Jordan's Amman Radii&gt; re- Wednes(lay that Saddam was
"Nor is this the beginning of
· ported all four Arab leaders . · feeling t'he pressure of the forces
negotiations on subjects which
~oncluded that Saddam should· . .arrayed against him and the Jan.
are unrelated to Iraq 's brutal
pres,s to niake the Paies.tinian- . ·,:15 deadline, and that during his o~cupation of Kuwait," Baker
Israeli · conflict a negotiating .;:·&gt;meeting with Baker, "all Issues said. "I will not be negotiating
point in ·the hlgh-levellraqf·U:S.' · · are on the table - everything."
the Palestinian question or the ·
talks planned for later ·tlils ·. • However, Iraq rejected Wed·
civil war in Lebanon . . Saddam
month.
rtesday as "absolute nonsense" a
Hussein did not Invade Kuwait to
' However, Secretary of State British Independent television
help the Palestinians; he did It
James Baker rejected the notion report saying Saddam was wil·
r o· r h 1 s o w n s e I f ·
of a negotiated settlement to the ling to withdraw from Kuwait In
aggrandizement.' '
Persian Gulf crisis altogether,
exch11nge for keeping the RuAmman Radio also reported
and specifically reiterated U.S. malla oil field . ,
Wednesday King Hussein would
Opposition to linking the Palest!· · The Sky Television News sate!·
try to meet Saudi King Fahd and
nlan Issue with Iraq's Aug. 2 lite network, quoting an anonymthe exiled emir of Kuwait In an
.

effort to arrange a meeting
between Saddam and Fahd In

Algeria. Saudi officials said any
such meeting would give Saddam

even more time to consolidate his
position In Kuwait.

OVERTURNED • A logl!lng truck overturned
when it went off the side iifSrate Route 681 West
about 8:21 a.m. Tllursday mornine. The driver,
Martin Bailey, Athens, was take• to Veterans
Memorl!ll Hospital by the Pomeroy Emergeacy

Squad ror treatment or injuries received in the
accident. Tbe Pomeroy Fire Department was
also on the scene. The accident is under Investigation by the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State
HIRIIwaY Patrol•

MONEY DONATED · .The BusiDess Prol'essloaals of America Club at Meigs High School
recutly llpODIOred I walk-a·tholl to beueflt the
Carleton Special Olympia Program. This Wlllk
was done u i service prvject Air the JI'O!P ud
Is held each year to nile llmds for Melp County
athletes to pay expe- to compete with other
Special Olympics students at the rqi01 and ltate
'I

levelS. l'lle Buslnea Protealouls fJI Alllerlea
Club. is a vocatiODII dub open 1o atudeall enral~
led In the bUIIHsa program~ llld Is llcllve Ia
community projects IIICII u Special OIJDipkll.
Shown bere prt~e~~tlnt ..e cheCk In the amount
of $"2 to Bette Hollbuaa, rlpt, ot Carletoa
Sebool, are dub otllcers, l~r, n.- Deem, Kba
Os.borne,'!M
I andle Harris ancl Sprln1 ~eed.

.

·Collecting. ~elinquent taxes
:topic of cotnmissioners
.

Burrito ..•••.•••• ;.o:•••••

ZEST A

BAG

$490
10 LB. PKG.

PATIO

.5LI.

10 LB. PKG.

I

.FLAVORITE

I

10 LB. PKG.

RED OWL BRAND

2 Sections. 16 Pages . 25 Cents
A Multimedil Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 6, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

Mostly clear Thursda
night, wltl,l a low In the ml
20s. MosTly sunny Friday

•

r

298 SECOND ST.
PO.M_EROY. OH . .
PRICES GOOD SUN., DEC.2, THRU 'SAT., DEC. II, 1 YYU

Pick 3: 770
Pick 4: 0727
Canis: 4-H;
J-C;4-D;9-S
Lotto: 10, 23,
39~ 43, 44, 50
Kicker: 707273

19 days
until
Christmas

.

By BRIAN J. RF;I!:D . : · :
arter a ~el with delinquent taxes
A joint letter writing campaign
..
Sentinel News Staff .·
is published, the Prosecuting AtiOr· of the County Treasurer and
• How the county can collect over ney must wait one year before that Prosecutor resulted in the collection
.,\lalf a million dollars in delinquent pro~rty can be foreclosed upon.
of approximately $80,000 in delin·
{"optll} taxes was the topic of dis·
• At least two thirds or more" of quencies this year, but S10ry reports
·'cussion at Wednesday's regular tho properties published recently that the focus wiD tum 10
'lneetiD$ of the Meigs County are now.able 10 be f&lt;eelosed upon foreclosures instead of letters in
J:ommiSSioners.
for failure 10 pay, according 10 Col· 1991.
• · Acconling to Meigs County !ins. · Commissioner Richard ' "I · can assure you that Meigs
Treasurer George CoUins, who was Jones pointed · out . that ap- County is going to see a substantial
(ll'*nt at yesterday's meeting, proximately 70 percent of the 10ta1 increase in the number of
~767 .000 in property Wles COUnty· delinquency in question, if · paid, foreclosures next year," Story said.
, jyide are now delinquent, and would in tum be paid out to local
Before entering executive sesMeigs County Auditor Bill Wiele- school systems.
sion, the commissioners also apline estimates the parcels involved
"We as county officiols need 10 proved an inteldepartmental bUd~
.10 !'Cat least 1,700.
.
let those delinquent Wlpaycn know tranSfer of 51,546.18 for the Me~gs
'Our propeny WI collectiOn ~te that we·~ let this 110 as far as County Departniellt, of Liaer Coil·
~about 92 ~ 93 ~1. wh•ch we're going 10 let 11 go," Jones trol, and approved a transfer of
·~ t . !DC:! bad, Collins Jold the said. "We need 10 say that we are ssoo from the Meigs Countv
comiiUSSioners
yesterday. going 10 get serious about this and Probate Court's "other ,expenseS~
'1Jowever, ':"hen you add interest · that f&lt;eelosure actions will be aecountto its "mileage" accounL
aild pena!ues 10 those delin- .filed."
Present at the meeting, besides
q~ICS, the!' you're IOQking at a
Acc:ording 10 Story, some pf the Collins, Wickline, Story aild Jones,
161 of monoy.
.
property WI delinquencies date
were· Clerk Mary Hobsrcaer,
. ProllertY taxes must be delin- back ~ far as 30 years, and 10 at Commission President MinDing
q.uentl~!f i fn!l year before lhey can least four previous prosecutiilg at· Roush llld ·County CommisSioner
be puhllshOO.. m the newspaper, and 10111eys in the county.
II
David Kob1entz. ~
I

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