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                  <text>. Paga D-8-Sundly Tin• Sentinel

December 23. 1990

. PorMrov-Mhidleport-Gellipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Meigs County Agent's Comer
By John C. Rice
The Energy Crisis: It's Effect
On Agriculture - the following
Information was taken from the
"1991 Ohio OutiOok 'Gulde" published by The Ohio State Unfver·
slty's Department of Agrtcultu·
raJ Economics and appearing in
the Ohio Fanner.
Increased energy prices will
,• Impact negatively on farm pro·
ductlon costs, farm Income, and
farmland values ln. 1991 and
beyond.Whfle the extent of these
changes is uncertain, It Is clear
that energy-related · production
costs, which are dramatlcally
higher for autumn In 1990 harv·
est, will not return to pre·
embargo levels soon, It ever.
Higher oil prices affect agrlcuJ.
tural profitability" on both the
cost and revenue side. The
lnc~ease ln fuel costs Is imme·
dfate
and clear. increased.costs
a Q ·ellall prlle from tile Olllo Valley. Publllihlng
MYSTERY FARM - Thla week's mystery
of
other
energy-related Inputs,
Co. Le'ave your aame, address and telephone
farm, featured by tile Melp SoU and Water
such
as
chemicals
and ferttlfz.
number with your eanl or letter. No telephone
Ce-rvatlon Dlslrle*, II J.cated somewhere In
If
energy
price In·
ers,
follow
·calls wiD be acceptd. All conlellt entries should
Melp Ceunty. IDdl~• wishing to participate
creases
are
sustained
for any
be turned In Ia lbe 11ew..,aper afflce by f p.m. each
Ia tile weekly conlell 1DaJ do so by guessing the
leligth
of
time.
If
the
price
Wedlleaday. ID case of a lie, lbe winner will be
!ann's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
Increase
continues
long
enough
chat!en by lat&amp;ery. Next week, a Gallla Ceunly
&amp;IMl GaiUpolll Dalb' Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
farm
will be featured by the Gallla SoU and Water the machinery and other capital
GallpoUs, Ohio, 4$111, er llle Dally Sentinel, Ill
costs will Increase as well Land
Conservation Dlstrlel.
Court St., Pomeroy, Olllo, 4$'789,and you may win
value Is likely to be onelnputcost
that will decrease as a result of
the energy price Increases.
A slight bufposltive Impact on
revenues will occur as ethanol
fuels receive renewed Interest as
an alternative energy source.
Ethanol, made from corn, ls an
alternative source of octane and
Its use reduces levels of certain
undesirable pollutants asso·
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pan financing to cover Its financial would be "futile'' to enter Into a elated with 'petroleum-based
Am's chairman Thomas Plaskett needs during the several-month transaction without any provf· fuels. Ethanol use, however,
opened the way for an acquisition
period - coinciding with our low sion for bridge financing, "espe· unless It Is subsidized Is not
trafftc season- that 'We expect It ctally I! TWA were not to commit competitive unless aU exceeds
of the airline by Trans World
Airlines, depending upon bridge wlll take to obtain necessary to close the transaction regard· $40 per barrel. The ethanol
distillery capacity we have right
regulatory and shareholder less of our financial situation.
financing being provided by
approvals.
"We would not w~tnt to enter
TWA.
A TWA spokesman said Icahn Into an agreement If we had
In a letter sent Friday to TWA
chalnnan Carl Icahn, Plaskett Issued a statement saying, "I reason to believe that lt was· not
sald "the time Is right for us to
view the response of Pari Am as a capable of being perfonned. I am
• •
•
sufficient basts· for contlnung to sure that you share this view."
see 11 we can put topther a
evaluate finanCing and merger
proposal that can !Kith win
Plaskett said as a first step,
possibilities. and we are In the TWA should send a detailed term
approval from our shal'l!holders
CHESHIRE - ' Calvin R.
process of doing so."
·and have every Ukellhpod of
sheet lridfcating the terms of McDaniel , Maintenance
being consummated."
In a memo updating TWA bridge fi11anclng, the conditions Mechaillc·A, and Richard L.
Responding to an offer from employees on the J;&gt;an ·Am of closing and the terms of the Lewis, Maintenance Mechanic· B
.Ieabo to buy most of Pail Am for situation, Icahn noted TWA has ~urities It Is offering.
at the Ohio Valley Electric
$1.50 a share ln cash, and $1 a
been "consldertne the possibility
''It therefore is Important to Corporation's Kyger Creek
·share In preferred stock or of providing Pan Am with debtor· make sure that what your letter Plant, received their annlver·
promissory notes, Plaskett sald in-posses~lon financing .
refers to as 'closing conditions sary awards for 35 .years of
' It would be ·futne for Pan Am to
"This Is the type of financing customary for a transaction of service to the company, was
.enter Into a transaction without which might be possible If Pan the kind' are not conditions that, recently announced by Norman
· any bridge financing.
Am decides to flle a petition lor in fact, it would be impossible to H. Tarr. Plant Manager.
Pan Am has 150 mUllon shares reorganfzfltion in bankruptcy, " meet."
.
~cDanlel joined OVEC on
outstanding, so the valu. of the he said .
Pan Am, with a heavy debt Nov . 15, 1955, .a s a laborer In the
deal would be $325 mUUon at the
In qebtor-in-posessiOn ffnanc· load and payments of $32 million labor/ janltor department. That
fng, the lender .g et priority liens due Imminently, reportedly dis- san\e year he transferred to the
most.
The acquisition would exclude
on unencumbered assets and can cussed flllng for Chapter 11 Maintenance Department and
some of Pan Am' s route~ to expect to be paid back before bankruptcy protection.
progressed through the various
London that have been pur·
other creditors In bankruptcy
TWA last Sunday agreed to sell maintenance mechanic
chased by United Airlines In a
proceedings. .
six London routes to American classifications.
sale currently under review by
In trading Friday on the New Airlines for $445 mllllon, and Is
In 1979 he was prpmoted to
the U.S. and Brltlsh
York Stock Exchange, Pan Am expected to use the proceeds of Maintenance · Mechanic -A.
governments.
, stock closed up 12.5 cents to $Ui0 that deal towards paying for the McDaniel and his wife, Marilyn,
Plaskett's letter sald, "The
a share ln active trading. TWA Pan Am deal.
reside at 112 Pleasant St., Point
proposal contained In your letter
was acquired by Icahn in 1986.
Plaskett's letter added, " I am Pleasant, W.Va.
,
could form the basis of a
Pan Am spokeswoman Pamela In complete agreement that
Lewis joined OVEC on Nov. 22(
comlllnatlon that would llf' ad·
Hanlon sald Plaskett's letter given the state of the Industry, 1955, as a laborer In the Labor'
· vantageous to our shareholders,
indicated that Pan Am ls inter· the time is right "I look.forward . I Janitor Departmeni. The fol·
employees and other
es ted In the Icahn offer but needs to hearing from you In the hope lowing year he transferred to the
constituencies."
"clarillcation" on lt.
that we can reach agreement Maintenance Department,
"Pan Am requires bridge
Plaskett said In a letter said It promptly."
where he advanced to Matnte·
nance Mechanic·B In 1965. Lewis
and his wife, Susannah. reside at
Route 1, Letart, W.Va.

Pan Am ·chairman· says .'time
is right' for airlirte acquisition

OVEC notes
anntversanes

Judge says Buchtvald contract unfair

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - In a
" Paramount's charge of a flat 15
stunning blow to Hollywood stu·
percent for overhead yields huge
dlos, a judge ruled Friday that
profits, even though the over·
Paramount Pictures' contract
head charges do not even rewith humorist Art Buchwald was
motely correspond to the actual
unfair In the way It calculated
costs Incurred by Paramount.
In rullng against a 15-percent
profits from the ·hit film
overhead on Eddie Murphy Pro"Coming to America.",
Superior Court Judlt Harvey
ductlons' operatlonalaliOivance,
Schneider "Said the practice
Schneider said seven parts of the
amounts to "charging over bead
studio's formula for deliPrmlnlng
net profits from the film -which
on overhead," since an add!·
grossed more than S300 million
tiona! 15-pereent charie was
worldwide
Were · allowed for overhead "on top of''
"unconscionable." .
expenses incurred by Murphy's
The ruling could have far- company.
'
reaching Implications for how
"The court is able to'J)erceive
studios conduct their bualness
no
justification for this obviously
since It goes to the heart of !low
one
-sided double charge and
payment ls made to 1M people
Paramount has offered none," he
who come lip with the Ideal for
said.
.
·
. movies, Including the rare one
· . Paramount bla!lted the ruling,
that becomes a blockbuatrr.
The judge did not rult on how · calling It a " dangerous" pr.cedent and saying that ·the judge
· much Paramount should pay
had gone "far beyond" exis ling
Buchwald, who wrote tilt atory
treatment on which tile 1988 law In the ruling. It said It would
appeal.
Eddie Murphy fllin wo Naed,
"The court has ~!ted
and Buchwald's producer, Alain ·
sophtstlcated
and experienced
Bernheim. But an aitoney for
businessmen
to gain In tht!
the palr, Zazl Pope, predicted
that the award, which Schneider courtroom· what they were un·
able to galn at the bargaining
will determine, ls gotne to be
table," the studio said. "This
"very substantial."
decision Is a threat to the free
''Thls ls an overwllelflllng
market sys tein."
. victory," Pope said. "It has
''Our position Is that the ruling
far·reachlng lmpUcattoa, .ln
that It restOres a certala degree is unprecedented," Aid Charles
of , fairness and ~ulty In the Diamond," an attonwy for Para·
mount. "The studio never afJ'eed
treatment of screenwrllers."
to what the plalntlffl ~-king
Paramount has arJIIId thai the
and
lt never would hAw rnade
film lost ! $18 mllllall, while
bargain."
,
that
attorneys for Buchwald and
"I think the ~ Ia off the
Bernheim claim the ftbn earned
track when he eotehad• It's hla
a profit of $39.8 million. Under
prerogative to to Rt tile ecotheir contracts, Buchn.ld was
nomic terma of a Olllltract,"
entitled to 1.5 percent ot the
Diamond satd.
movie's "net profits," a .. Bern·
Schneider ruled Jut January
belm between 17.5P~:rceatand 40
In
the trial's flrat phaae that
. pe1cent.
.
"Coming
to America" was based
Schneider's rullni contained
on
a
story
that Buchwald, a
harsh language aimed at · the
·atudlo. In explalnfnl W'IJy Ill had Pulitzer Prize. W'llllllnl colum·
ruled agalut 111 claim , el 15- niBt, had sold to Paramount In
1983 as a three·pip treatment,
pet cent overhead tostl. N aid,

titled "King for a Day. "
Schneider said he will co~ct
a new phase of the tr
of
Buchwald and Bernheim's s it
and seek expert tes I'IIOf on
how inuch the pal sbouldr e·
ceive. He said he
I determine
how -muc;..ll Bernh m should be
pal~, bu(WaT
that It will not
be a "windfall," before set ling
Buchwald's award.
·
·The case has been closely
watched as a serious challe11ge to
the way HoUywood studios make
their deals and calculate profits.
Most major movies that fea·
ture top stars and directors are
made with "eross participation
contracts" that allow the actors
and !Ummakers to receive their
money directly from box-office .
receipts, before the studio starts
accounting for film costs.
Attorneys , for the plaintiffs
have maintained ihat the pair
had no choice In the negotiation
of the agreement and that It was
lllmpolld' I

on them.

0

COlli.

- Cllarrinl Interest on nega·
tlve COlt balance without credit
tor dlatrlbutlon tees.
Charging Interest on
overhead.
· - Cllai'Jing interest on profit·
.
participation payments.
- Chllliftlan lnterenr~ie not
In proporlltln to the actual cost of
funds.

1

#..;,..

......... ;q

CONNIE JOHNSON

Presentation
made at
•
meeting
GALLIPOLIS - Monroeville,
Tenn. · was the recent site of a
Multi-Regional Community Men·
tal Health Center/ MIS User
Group Meeting. Connie Johnson;
MIS IFfn;mce Assistant at Wood·
land Centers, Inc., presented a
payroll workshop dUring this
twa-day event.
The purpose of the user group
was to promote the exchange of
Information, training and re·
search on the CMHC, Inc.,
computer software. This soft·
ware Is used In mental health
Industries n·a uon wide.

By John C. Rice
was down, but was more than '
offset by production because
more acreage was grown and
yield was up. Expected usage
will be down. Expected usage Is
Influenced by many things. A few
of thelje are: non-feed usage such
as corn sweetener's and the
making of ethanol. On the feed
side, · woUld be livestock and
poultry feeding and exports.
Each !tern can affect the supply
or demand which Influences the
price of corn. The bottom line:
the price per bushel should be a
little less than last year. The 1989
, ~rop averaged $2.56 In Ohio. The
1990 crop should run from $2.20 to
$2.50 per bushel wlth a midpoint
estimate of $2.35 per bushel.
Reme111ber, Meigs Coun)y ls In a
deficit area. We ~ se more corn
than we produce, which means,
· corn has to be brought ln . For
corn to be brought In, transporta·
tlon costs must be jlald' Corn
prices ln Meigs County are ·
.usually higher than the market
price quoted . Transportation
costs is the main reason.
Cattle - 1990 has been a good
year for us. Everyone ts buying
expensive cars and going South
for the winter. High prices
usually trigger an exp~tnslon In
beef herds, but it has been slow.
Because of the slow growth, beef
production ln 1991 will be about
the same as 1990. Prices of teed
caitle are expected to average
between $74 and $77. Feeder
cattle prices should remain high
for 1991. For 600 to 700 - pound
feedpr cattle, prices should be
around 90 cents per pound.
Dairy -no expensive cars and
not even a vacatlon. Cow
numbers are rising along with
production per cow. Government
purchases ·will be up due to a
forecast increase of 4 billion ·
pounds of' milk. The Mlimesota·
Wisconsin forecast Is to drop
from $13.50 In 1990 to $12 per
hundred weight In 1991. This will
greatly affect profltabllliy ln the
dairy Industry. Remember, for
many dairymen this Is the main
means of support.
This Is the forecast based upon
the Information gathered by the
Agricultural Economics Depart·
meilt at The Ohio State
University .

Meadaws gets pharmacy award
ADA , Ohio - , Charles T:
Meadows, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Meadows, Route 2
Gallipolis, has received the Na·
tiona! Association of Chain Drug
Stores·scholarship at Ohio North·
ern University for 1990-91. He ls a
fourth year student majoring In
pharmacy.
On campus, he is active on the
men's golf team and RhO Chi
Society pharmacy honorary .
The National Association of
Chain Drug Stores sdtolarshlp Is
awarded to worthy students
majoring ln pharmacy.

Hosenfeld
licensed as
psychologist
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Charlene
Rosenfeld, of Woodland Centers,
Inc. was recently licensed by the
Ohio Board of Psychology. She
received her Ph.D. In Counselor
Education.from Ohio UniVersity.
Dr. Hosenleld, a resident of
Athens, Ohio, has been an em·
ployee of Woodland Centers since
1984. Currently, abe provides
diagnostic assesament, emer·
gency ~ervk:ea, and individual
and group counsellng/ther apy
through the Outpatient ServiCes
Department. Her profesatonal
Interests Include: Co·
dependency and Adult Children
of Dysfunctional Famflles, Wei•
!ness Psychology, Reminiscence
therapy, Stress Management,
and Grief Couueltnj.
The 'staff of Woodland Centers
held a reception to honor the
achievement&amp; of Hosenfeld.

LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Spec·
ulation that troubled Orion Pictu~e;~ may be sold to a foreign
buyer rose again Friday on a
report that Hong Kong investor
Raymond Chow may make a bid
for the studio's motion picture
arm.
Orion's stock, which has been
gaining this week on the rumors,
was up 12.5 cents to $14.37 a share
ln early afternoon trading on the
New York Stock Exchange. It
gained $2.50 since Monday .
Chow controls Golden Harvest
Films, which produced the sur·
prise hit "Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles" earlier this year. The
movie, released through New
.Line Cinema, has grossed more
than $133 million this year and
trails only "Ghost" and "Pretty
Woman" In ticket sales.
Rumors have also Identified
Chicago-based Tribune Co. as a
prospective buyer for Orion's
television arm.
A spokesman for Orton refused
to comment on the reports.
Orion, which is 70 percent
owned by billionaire John Kluge,
has been the focus of takeover
speculation for most of this year.
But some analysts doubt that
many potential buyers are Inter·
ested, slnceOrlonls saddled with
close to $400 million In debt and
has been posted poor earnings
this year.
The most attractive parts of
the company are Its distribution
network and Its 800-fllm library,
which Includes "Amadeus,"
''Platoon," · HRciboCop," a
n uni ber of Woody Allen movies
and the "Cagney &amp; Lacey" TV
series.
Orion, ·which had revenues of
about $485 milllonlastyear, Is the
smallest ol Ute eight major
Hollywood stucUos. It had been on

Ohio Lottery
1 d~y
·until
Christmas

Super Lotto:
15-16-37-41-50.53
Pic.k-3: 439
Pick-4: 1613
Cards: 6-H;
A-C; 9-D; J-S

•

•
Vol.41. No .171

.

say shooting
being pro
About 1,740 members of Local
5668 of the United Steelworkers o(
America were locked out after
union negotiarors could not come
to tenns on a new contract.
The state Department of
Employment Security, reversing an
earlier ruling, said Friday it would
unemploy!Rent
benefits
grant
beginning next week.
.. We ruled that the men had been
locked out and were willing to continue working under the terms of
the old contraCt," said Chief Ad· ·
ministrative Law Judge Robert .
\
Smith.
On Nov. 30, a state panel had
said
the
workers · struck
Ravenswood, making them ineligible for unemployment benefits.
.. Going into these negotiations,
the total hourly employment cost at
Ravenswood was more than $27
per hour. The final Company offer
Continued on Page 7

25

Cents

A Multimedia lne. Newi paper

Ohio receives
major snowfall

RAe·officials
Mike · Ruben, spokesman for
Ravenswood Aluminum has confirmed that there was a shooting at
the plant Sunday nighL .He said
there will be a statement released
later this morning on the incident.
The shooting is being investigated
by. the Ripley Detachment of the
West Virginia State Police.
A hearing is scheduled Thursday
on Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.'s
appeal of a state agency ruling that
idled employees are entided. to unemployment compensation checks,
officials said.
The hearing is scheduled I:30
p.m. · Thursday before Kanawha
County Circuit Judge John Hey.
On Friday, Kanawha County
Circuit Court and the state Supreme
Court both refused the company's
request to delay the disbursement
of unemployment compensation
checks to Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. employees who have been
out of work since Nov. 1.

2 Sections. 32 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday, December 24. 1990

Copyrighted 1990

.

Monday night, partly .cloudy
and· very cold. Low 5 to 10. West
winds 5 to 15 mph becoming
soutljwest. Christmas, becoming
mos(IY cloudy and breezy. A
sHghl chance of flurries during
the afternoon. High around 30.
The chance of snow is 30 percent.

FLAG PRESENTATION- Mary Kay Yost, right, of Return
Jonathan Melp Chapter, Daughters of the AmeriCan Revolution,
presented a flag on Friday to Dixie Sayre, kindergarten teacher at
Chester Elementary , for use in that classroom.

By United Press International
There's litde doubt a bout It
now, Ohio Is ln store for a white
Christmas.
The first significant amount of
a snow for the season waS'
dumped on Ohio Sunday night
and Monda)( morning. More than
six Inches .of snow was reported
in ~orne areas of the northeast
Ohio snowbelt.
The Nati9naJ. Weather Service
said snowfall from the storm was
generous E:nough to ensure a
white Christmas to all of Ohio.
One to two Inches covered the
ground ln southern Oh,io, while
the northern half had from two to
four Inches of snow cover.
A snow advisory for the ex·
treme northeast corner of Ohio
was continued through Monday;•
but other advisories .were dlscon·
tlnued before daylight hours.
The weather service said the
heaviesi snow was fa!Hng over
the northeast part of the stale.
Additional accumulations Mon·
day were expected to be under an
inch in most pwces, except the
nor!heas t corner where another I
to 3 inches was expected.

In Medina County, two fata l ·
traffic accidents were reported.
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
Barbara Lawrence, 41, Medina,
died in a two-vehicle accident on
State Route 57 near Wadswor th
just after the beginning of the
storm at 8: 10 p.m·, Sunday.
Details· of the other accident ·
.were not available Monday
morning.
,.
·
Low temperatures are ex·
pected to drop into the single
digits across the state Christmas
Eve. Slightly warmer ai r will
return for Christmas as another
low pressure system moves
toward Ohio from the northern
Plains . This will bring a chance
of snow to Ohio Christmas
afternoon and then much colder
air for Wednesday.
· Highs Wednesday will struggle
to get above 20 degrees and, with
breezy northwest winds, It will
feel below zero. Lows wednesday
night will be In the single digits.
It now looks like warmer air
will return to Ohio for the end of
the week and we could see above
·freezing temperature by the
weekend.

Defense chief .reaffirms U.S. readiness to .fight
CHARLES T. MEADOWS

Hong Kong investor
may purchase Orion

DR. CHARLENE HOSENFELD

Paramount bad also argued
that the Buchwald·Bernhelm
contract ahould be considered as
a whole, rather than by indlvld·
ual provisions. Schneld&lt;er dis·.
agreed, saying the following
parts of the net profit formula
were "unconscionable:"
- The 15-percent overhead
charge for Eddie Murphy Pro- ·
ductfons' operational allowance.
- The 10-percent advertising
overhead not being In proportion
to a't!tual costs.
-The 15-percent overhead not
belnf In, proportion to actual

now Is less than 1% of the U.S.
gasoline 11se.
Outlook For Corn -the supply
· Is upandtheuse Is down. The 1990
corn crop will be the fifth largest
crop ever produced. Corn prices
as well as other grains are
primarily Influenced by three
things. First is surplUs or carry
over from the previous year.
Carry-over from a previous year
Is referred to as a carry-in In the
p~esent year. The second Item Is
production. Production, of
course, Is determined by yield
per acre and how many acres
were harvested. Third,' Is demand or usage. So, the carry-In

a losing streak of more than a
year as . Its major films flopped
untfl it released "Dances With
Wolves" last month.
The three-hour fUm is expected
to garner several Oscar nominations and has grossed more than
$40 million In seven weeks of
release.
" One could make a strategic
argument that Orion would be
attractive to someone like Chow,
but it is encumbered with debt ,"
said entertainment analyst Paul
Marsh of Bateman Eichler. HUI
Rlcftards of Los Angeles .
"The key advantage for Chow
would be that he would not have
to use New Une to get films
dlstribu ted," Marsh said. New
Line was reported to have pald
Golden Harvest $3 million for the
domestic distribution rights to
"Turtles.':
Earlier . this month, Orlan's
stock jumped from $13 to more
than $15 a share after a report
that K~rean electronics gain!
Samsun'g Group was considering
buying It for about $300 million
· and making a cash ·Infusion of
$500 million. The stock fell after
Samsung denied the report.
If Orion were acquired by a
foreign buyer, It would become
the fifth studio to fall out of
Nnerlcan control., assuming
Matsushita Electric Industrial
Co.'s pending $6.6 blllfon buyout
of MCA Inc. goes through.
Other studios that have been
acquired by foreign interests
Include MGMUA , bought In No·
.v ember by· Italian financier
Glancarlo Parrett! for $1.4 bll,
lion; Columbia Plciures bought
by Sony Corp. 1ast yea~ for $5
billion, and Twentieth Century
Fox, acquired several years ago . •
by Australia-based News Corp.
'

•

By JONATHAN FERZIGER
Cheney, wrapping up a five -daY
DAMMAM , Saudi Arabia
visit to Saudi Arabia In which he
(Uf'I ) -Defense Secretary Dick
met with U.S. and allied com·
Cheney, seekfngtodlspel appearmanders to plot war strategy and
ances of disunity ln the Bush
brought Chrfsimas greetings to
the troops from Bush.
· administration, echoed the pres!·
dent by asserting America was
Cheney later flew to Cafre for a
capable of striking "today" to
one-hour meeting with Egyptian
drive Iraq from Kuwait.
President Hosnl Mubarak, a
During a news conference
staunch supporter of U.S. efforts
to oust Iraq from Kuwait.
Sunday at Saudi King Fahd's
Persian Gulf palace before flying
Cheney characterized his talks
to Cairo, Cheney also said
with the Egyptian leader as
prospects for a peaceful solution
"excellent" and reiterated that
to the gulf crisis were growing · the -U.S.·led allied forces dedimmer as the Jan. 15 U.N. · played against Iraq would not
deadline for use of force draws tolerate a partlal withdrawal
near.
from the oil-rich emirate 1t
"The clock Is ticking," said invaded Aug. 2.

Swift current
limits activity
•
upon nver
By United Press International
'The Ohlo River crested at 53
feet at Cincinnati Sunday, one
foot above flood stage where It Is
expected t() stay until Christmas
Day .
U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer
Mary Allee Wysock said the
current ls still running about
seven knots, slx knots above
·
normal.
· Because of this, she said, the
rlver.wU!continuetobeclosedat
night to tows whose barges are
longer than 600 feet and are
carrying hazardous material or
oU.
She said the Coast Guard Is.
Investigating two accidents that
may have been caused by fast·
running high waters. ·In one, a
barge broke loose, apparently
because of thick debris the liver
. was carrying apd In the second a
tow hit a railroad bridge.
• Harold Opitz, hydrologist at
the River Forecast Center said

the crest was the highest In 12
years. He said In March, 1978, the
river reached 58.6 feet.
"I can take a break," he said.
''We are exhausted." ·
City employees In Covington
and Newport, Ky., were told not
to report "to work during the
holiday season as the river
threatened to splll onto city
streets;
"I think all the worries are
over, and I think . everybody Is
more secure ln their thinking,"
said Peter Hesser, the director of ·
general services In Newport.
Mark Van Huss, deputy director
of Covington's municipal works ,
ordered theflrstgateoftheclty's
floodwall gate erected Saturday
morning.
"You can never predict what
the river will do," he said. "It's a
matter of protecting the city and
the citizens. And so, It's never a
bad decision."

.He told reporters there were
"no indications" Iraq was pre·
pared to comply with the ·u .N.
resolutllon that It leave Kuwait
by Jan. 15.
Cheney left Cairo in the after·
noon on a flight bac k to Washing·
ton, where he was to brief Bush
on the outcome of. his tour.
Earlier, In Dammam, Cheney
grew testy over suggestions the
administration was .speaking
with several different voices on
the wisdom of going to war,
blaming the news media for
trying to stir up controversy .
"I have not seen any funda·
mentally conflicting statements
made by arlmlnlstratlon offl·
clals," Cheney sald.
Cheney's vfslt to the oil-rich
kingdom got off to a rough start

when Lt. Gen. Calvin Waller said
in an interview last Wednesday
that certain armored tank divisions would probably not be
ready for combat Jan. 15 a nd
could use another month of
trai ning. National security ad·
vlser Brent Scowcroft also has
preached res tralnt.
But Saturday, Bush sald at a
news conference at his weekend
home In Camp David. Md .. "If
there was some clear provocation 10 mlnuies from now, the
allled forces are ready to res pond
vigorously.''
Asked to clarify.the question of
U.S. readiness Sunday, Cheney
sa id:
"We would be prepared today
if we we re ordered today to
undertake military action. Ob·

viousiy .o ur capa bilitles will grow
w1th the· passage of time and I'm
not ggolng to speculate about
what capabilities we may havton exactly what dates. Obviously
Jan. 15 figures prominently in
that ."
The U.N. Security Council set
Jan. 15 as the date it would
authorize the use of force against
Iraq If Saddam does not with draw from Kuwait. Twenty·
seven nations, · including the
United States, Britain, France,
Egypt. Syria and Bangladesh ,
have sent troops to the gu If In the
ailled effort agai nst Iraq.
On other topics:
·
-Cheney . said the United
States has been getting "better
all the tlme" in protecting its
(Continued on ?age 7)

READY TO FIGHT - Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
stressed that troops In the Gulf
would be ready for combat by
the Jan. 15 deadline for Iraq to
withdraw from Kuwait. Cheney spoke at a weekend press
conference. ( UPI).

Weekend wreck kills 2 · more soldiers
CAIRO, Egypt (UP I) -Two
U.S. servicemen from the air·
craft carrier USS Midway were
killed and five others were
injured when a vehicle taking
them on an off-road tour of the
United Arab Emirates over·
turned, the U.S. Embassy in Abu
Dhabi said Monday.
The accident occurred at 11
a.m. Sunday about 50 miles south
of the town of AI Dofra while the
sailors were riding in off-road
vehicles, said Lt. Dane La Joye, a
Navy spokesman In Washington.
The names of the dead and
Injured were withheld, bu I La
Joye said two people were
seriously Injured and helicopters ·
from the Midway were used to
evacuate the victims.
The cause of the accident,
which occurred during a shlp·
sponsored liberty trlp, was under
investlgatlon.
The deaths bring to 79 the
number of U.S. servicemen
ktlled In Operation Desert Shield
since troops were deployed to the
region In the aftermath of the
Aug. 2·1raqilnvaslon of Kuwait.
Twenty soldiers were killed
over the weekend when a ferry
carrying them back to their ship
overturned off the coast of Haifa,

TEARFUL SALUTE - An
American ~allor wept while
saluting his dead shipmates at
a memoflal service lor 21
crew members of the USS
Saratoga. The !ll'ilor was one
of the survivors of a capsize~
ferry accident In Haifa Bay .
(UPI).

.

Israel.
Sailors aboard the USS Sarat·
oga offered a. 21-gun salute and
tossed a wreath Into the sea ln
tribute to their 21 mates who
drowned In a ferry accident
within sight of the aircraft
carrier.

Divers broug ht up the 20th
ferry, which was bringing. them
body Sunday, morning, several
back from shore leave ln Israel.
hours before the memorial ser·
The service took place ln one of
vlce .for those killed. Another
the aircraft carrier's hangars, its
large bay door wide' open with a ·
American serviceman was missIng and presumed dead in the
view of the Mediterranean Sea.
deadllest accident Involving U.S.
Arranged on top of a flag-draped
table were 20 white hat s and one
·servicemen participating In Op·
chief petty officer's cap to
era lion Desert Shield .
" We have suffered a very great
symbolize the 21 lives lost.
tragedy. Every man on this
Marines marched into the
mighty ship has had his heart In
hangar, carrying the T,J .S. ·fla g
this throat, tears In his eyes and a
and two other pennants In what is
knot in his stomach since the
called the posting of the colors. A
event," Capt. Joseph Mobley,
chap lain recited the 23rd Psalm,
commander of the USS Saratoga,
"The Lord is my shepherd,"
told reporters after the memorial
during the Interdenominational
service. "It Is 21 lives lost. We
ser vice.
·stiUllave the man whom we have
Both Israel and the United
not recovered. We have the States launched Investigations .
utmost confidence ihat he did Salurday Into the cause of the
perish."
accident.
Helicopters off the USS Sara!·
oga crisscrossed the water dur·
lng the service In their search for
the body ol the last man the U.S.
Navy said was klllell.
At the memorial service, a
The Dally Sentinel will not be
1,200-man American honor guard
published
Tuesday so that Its
paid tribute to the men who died
employees
may observe the
when the Israeli terry AI tuvla
Christmas
holiday.
Regular pub- •
capsized In rough seas roughly
llc.allon
and
business
hours re200 yards from the ,USS Saratoga ·
sume
Wednesday.
shortly before midnight Friday.
About iOO men were aboard the · _ _..__...;.._ __.__ _ __

No Sentinel
on Tuesday

~

I

�"'""
Monday,
December 24. 1990

..

· -.·~

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bengals .down Oilers 40-20

Page-2-The Daily.Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio
Monday, December 24. 1990

··

Ill Court Street

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

Ajb

~m~ ...,..,__.'-...,....•~=·-=­

'qlv

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Maaarer

PAT WJIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBE):to!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association arid the American Newspaper PublistJers Association .
'

.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should. be In good taste, addressing Issues, not persona II•
ties.

en ·AIDS suspects
fuse to get tested
By Sarah Overstreet
It sounds like the premise for a Stephen King novel: A
pregnant woman is abducted, ·raped and stabbed repeatedly,
then .b urled alive. Her abductor even sits atop her and smokes a
· cigarette before leaving her for dead.
Miraculously, she survives and bears a heal.thy ·baby. But
during the six months the woman walls to deliver her child, she
~as to wonder whether her rapist has given her AIDS and If she
will be giving birth to a baby Infected with the fatal disease not because a suspect hasn't been found and not because there
Isn't plenty of evidence to establish probable cause, but because
to give him an AIDS test would be to "violate his rights of
privacy."
If this were a Stephen King novel, the woman would wreak
some horrific revenge on the man who violated her. A Ia
"Carrie," the victim would be vindicated. A movie might even·
be made.,and the audience would Ieavechllled but satisfied. The
cycle we have come to believe in and demand of our fiction that evil is eventually punished and good ultimately triumphswould be complete.
.
Unfortunately, Hollywood wouldn't make a movie about this
woman's story because there Is no ultimate triumph of reason
and gbod. No one would to to watch 11. While this inan awaits
trial. the Jaw forbids testing him. If he were tested and found to
'be Infected, the woman and her child could undergo AZT
treatment, which shows some promise In arresting the
&lt;!levelopment of the AIDS virus. But as the law dictates, the
;woman Is denied this knowledge as precious time she could be
;taking treatments tkks away.
· The story Is t,rue; It was one of three showcased recenily on
:connie Chung's "Face to Face" television program. Fortu•nately, the woman was raped In one of 10 states which allow
:testing of convicted rapists. So If tills man If found guilty after
:the wheels of justice complete their slow turn, the woman at
;least has .a chance of gaining this knowledge. If the rape had
-happened In one of the. other 40 states, she would be forever
;denied this critical Information.
: The reason, say advocates of the Jaw, Is that by determining a
.suspect has AIDS we may subject him or her to discrimination.
;He or she might be dented a job or Insurance.
· Have we completely lost our minds when It comes to
:preserving the rights of suspected criminals? To say that we
;can't test a suspected rapist for AIDS, even when there Is
;overwhelming evidence that he Is the perpetrator of the crime,
.makes as much sense as refusing to search a robbery suspect's
;home before he or she Is convicted, even though we have ·
.probable cause to believe the person committed the crime. If
,people In the community find out pollee searched the suspect's
;home and found the victim's belongings, might not the
.community discriminate against him? What about his "rights
to privacy"?
'
AIDS Is so new In comparison to our privacy laws that legal
·ethicists haven't caught up. I believe these cases and others like
them will eventually force us to revise our thinking and our
laws, before too many more Innocent people are victimized by
the justlc system as well as their attackers. But considering how
long It's taken us to enact any kind of compensation laws for
victims of other crimes, we don't have any time to waste In
demanding some changes.

Syria wins in Persian Gulf ·standoff

DAMASCUS, Syria- So far,
the only clear winner In the
Persian Gulf standoff is the man
whO has ruled Syria with an iron
first tor two decades - Hafez
at-Assad. .
The crisis ~as fit conveniently
Into his plan to win the Golan
Heights !~om IsraeL Some observers In Syria and Washington
_a re going so far as to predict tn
classified reports that Assad will
have what he wants in less than
two years. .
.
.
That breathless prognosttcatlon would be absurd if notfor the
radical changes -In the world over
the past year - primarily the
Gulf Crisis. the end of the &lt;;old
War and secret talks Israel has
already begun with Syi-ta over
exchanging property for peace.
Assad has seen his near and
dear patron, the Soviet Union,
backing away from him, and he
needs to make new friends. And
the world ~lliance against Saddam Hussem has provided him
the entree.
His behind the scenes promises
to the United States that he. wlll
renounce anti -American terrorism have led some intelligence
analysts to conclude that Assad's
short-term goal is a peace treaty
with Israel along the Egyptian
model - a promise of peace in
exchange for land.
Assad has never been a raving

Arab Idealogue. He is first and
foremostan opportunist. Saddam , his arch enemy, has provlded the current opportunity 10
join In a -world alliance against
the Iraqi InvasiOn of Kuwait
Assad Is tire(] of Isolation and 1~
broke. So standing up 10 Saddam
was a natural for Assad and his
reward for doing whai comes
naturally has been ; ubstantlal.
Last month In Geneva, Assad
was rewarded with a-face-to-face
meeting with President Bush,
who knows that Assad sponsored
the terrorist attack ori the u.s.
Marine barracks In 1983 and
harbored the terrorists wh~ blew
up Pan Am flight 103 in 1988.
Bush was the first president to
.meet with Assad since Jimmy
Carter in 1977. The intervening ·
president, Ronald Reagan .
shunned him for his refusal to
renounce terrorism and still has
not done it.
'
. In addition to a meeting with
Bush, Assad has won open and
secret promises of the riches of
the Gulf. Our intelligence sources say Saud! Arabia has secretly
proinlsedAssad atleast$2blllion
for sending Syrian troops to the
Saudi front and for complying
with the economic sanctions
against Iraq. 1 Exiled Kuwaiti
leaders have promised him.
another S1 billion if things go
their way.

I have previously noted In this
spacehowbusyourllberalmedla
are, rewriting the history of the
1980s. They were notably unsuc·
cessful In their efforts to d~feat
Ronald Reagan, but that has only
whetted their appetite for trashlng him retroactively.
So we are .constantly belabored
with the Big Lie that-the 1980s
. were a decade of greed, corruptlon and self-preoccupation, and
that Reagan was the symbol and
cause of-Its alleged defects.
That Isn't the way most people
remember the 1980s, nor should It
be. Those were the years In which
the federal strangulation of
America was Slowed to a near
halt, launching the longest economic boom In modern American history. Eighteen mllllon
new jobs were created. Our
defenses were rebuilt and our
free-world alliances Intensified,

also whispering offers of aid, and
In any new world order - will
Assad even has hope for some always do what Is best for him. .
U.S, aid if he can get his name Some State Department analysts •
taken off the the list of terrorist in classified reports are predictsponsors as Saddam once did.
ing that Assad would make a
Finally, the United States and
private settlement wllh Israel
Israel murmured not a word . over the Golan Heights If he :
when Syria asserted ultimate
thought the Issue of of the
control over northern and eastoccupied Palestinian lands
ern Lebanon In October, destroy - would bog down his own border
Ing the last visible opposition
talks.
from Christian Gen. Michel
Once U.S. lntelllgenc.e report
Aoun. The current Lebanese
warns that Iran and Syria have
government now cannot make a
agreed to jom forces to challenge
move without asking Assad.
future U.S. control of the Persian
He has sought control of
Gulf. It q.uotes "reliable sourLebanon for 15 years. Now that
ces" as saying that a September
his enemy, Iraq, Is abouttoget Its
meeting between Assad and
comeuppance, It makes sense the
Iranian President Hashemi RafAssad will concentrate all his · sanjani ended with the two
efforts on achieving his goal for
a.greeing to oppose any postthe past 23 years, the return of crisis U.S. presence In the Gulf
Golan Heights, taken by Israel in with bellgerence and terrorism if
1967.
necessary.
.
.
The pressure on Israel to give
Assad ts sull ·a spotler. No
up occupied lands will be Intense
meeting with President Bush wlll
once the Iraqi occupation of change that. In an unchecked
Kuwait is resolved. The same atuance with Iran after Saddam
worldwide coalition that deis out of the way, Syria could
manded the withdrawal of Iraq
dominate the Persian Gulf with
will turn its attention to Israel.
its own brand of aggression. If
The United States, to prove Its
that happens and the United
commitment to a "new world States is summoned to settle yet ·
order," will be pressured to go anotherPerslanGulfcrlsls, Bush ··
along.
will not have to look far for ·
someone to blame.
·'

with the result that the Soviet
In this, they have had considerUnion simply stopped trying to
able help from Carter. In the
compete with us and threw In the
years slrice the Amer-Ican people
sponge. Above all , perhaps, our threw him out of the White
self-respect was restored, after House, he has been busy with a
Its battering In Vietnam and the whole series of activities calcu- ·
Iranian hostage crisis.
Ia ted to Ingratiate him with the
But the media tell us otherwl- llberals who dominate the media.
se,and now they are moving to
He has associated himself with
shore up another wall of their . all. sorts of "human rights"
flimsy revisionist Jean-to. They causes · and campaigns. Wheare actually trying to rehablll- never there was an election In
tate the reputation of Jimmy some Third World country, CarCarter.
ter was on hand to "observe" It

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1

1,

Internal Medicine

I

...

Nelsonville, is a Service Teclmicia~n at Microdish, in Logan, Ohio.
Nichols began his po• high school career as a student in FO&lt;eslry at
HTC and mDYed t~ Toledo, Ohio, Wlere he was employed in law

~-~

.

·''

.-~"~
=--··

·=··
~~
.~l

· "/

'

Dear Patients And Friends,

~
~•

As we approach the Holiday Season, we would like to express our
feelings of gratitude and thanksgiving to you people·· our patients. We
thank God for this ·opportunity to be able to help restore and"maintain
health to so many. We often wish it were possibleforallofyou to hear
how our patients relate to us their problems and how they thought they
..VOuld have to live with these conditions. Your comments of appreciation make Ow- day. We completely realize thai our success is directly
~ to our patients. You people just amaze us, the way you keep
filling this office with new pa!ients and we want you to lcoow we
appleCialc your confldence in us. We h011C8dy believe we have the best
gtoup o( patienu that could be had by any doctor anywhere.
·We are also thankful for Ill the "goodi~" we have received through·
oiat the year. Tho vegecablel,c:andy.apple butter. fruit, cards and !etten

;

fer

:q

Office Hours
Monday through Friday
9 a. in. - .S p.m.
Suite 13,
PVH Medical Office Building

-

~

;~

(304) 675-7700

lin The bnily ol ptaleuioltols

~

'

van.v Drive, P131nt Pleasant, w. va. 25550

CHAPMAN
SHOES

from your vacadon spots, eiC. .
'Cbrlllmai is upecioJ dmeofyq when we all pause and give thanks
our Saviour,Jesu.s Cbrllt. IIIII for friends like you. ·
: We W/J/11 you w 1rtm avery ~~rry Clrrismras IJIId God bless you!
;
You' rt Tlw Btstl

~

0

m

~

.,

_.___...__ J
,

TAYLOR CHIR.OPRACfiC CLINIC

'
•'

Dr. and Mrs. Randall A. Taylor
Connie - Flo - Shirley - Mailrica

•

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE ·STORE

•

enforcem.,., Before enrolling at The Adult Education Center (AEC) in
Electronics Servicing, Nichols was employed by a landscaping firm in
Toledo. ·
·
Nichols found thai AEC met his n~ for 51able employment in his area

'-

.

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.
&amp;

E~y Olivarez~Orteza,
M.D.
.
.

.

General Pediatrics

. Adolescent Medicine

R'J
V"J

AIC ••• Why It Works!

Working in a maze of wires, l...,sistors, and other electronic

items, John Nichols h.. found his career niche. Nichols, a resident of

~

.

if ,Babe Laufe~berg can lead
them past Atlanta next Sunday.
The New Orleans Saints remained In contention with a 13-10
upset at San Francisco. The
Saints, tied with Dallas at -7-8,
will make the playoffs If the
Cowboys lose next week and New
Orleans wins at home against the
Los Angeles Ramms Monday
night.
At San Diego, DeBerg connected on a 65;yard pass to Todd
(See NFL on Page 4) ·

Student/Employee John Nlchols

- '
' ~

IJd PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

On a day. when six backup
quarterbacks started and three
more starters were sidelined by
Injuries, Steve De Berg played
the whole way with a broken
finger and led the Kansas City
Chiefs Into the playoffs. · ·. · •
·DeBerg, who has a fractured
finger on his non-throwing hand,
passed for 251 yards and two
touchdowns and Jed the Chiefs 85
yards to Nick Lowery's decisive
field goal with 2: 46left. Lowery's
32-yard kick gave the Chiefs a
24-21 victory In San Diego and put
Kansas City In the playoffs for
the first time since 1986.
The Chiefs were the only team
to clinch a playoff spot Sunday,
leaving two berths open In the
AFC and one In the NFC. Tampa
Bay, Phoenix, and Indianapolis
were eliminated, Buffalo sealed
the AFC East title with a 24-14
victory over Miami and the New
York Giants gained a first-round
bye with a 24-21 triumph at
Phoenix.
·
The Dallas Cowboys lost quarterback Troy Aikman and blew a
chance to clinch their · first
playoff berth since 1985 when
they lost 17-3 at Philadelphia.
The Cowboys can stili claim the
lone remaining NFC playoff spot

.........,.

.

'

Elsewhere in the NFL. ••.

..•'••

~

.' .

Randall F. Hawkins, M. D.

..'··

Barry Foster led all rushers with "Our defensive football team has
100 yards on 16 carries.
gotten the ball for the offense,
The Browns set the tone for the and they've been very stingy
loss on their first offensive play, y;trdage:wise and point-wise."
when Pagel fumbled on a sack by
Pittsburgh held Cleveland to
Brian Hinkle sack and 'Donald 158 yards of total offense.
Evans recovered. On the next
"!was happy with the way our
play, Brister connected with t~am stayed toJused coming Into
Mularkey on their first TD. '
the ball game," Noll added. "I'm
The next two times Cleveland happy with the way they kept
took possession, Eric Metcalf alter it."
lost the _ball to Jerrol Williams
Cleveland 's Interim head
and Kevin Mack fumbled to coach, Jim Shofner, was at a Joss
Evans.
to analyze the game.
Tyronne Stowe reco.vered two
"It's really difficult to talk
fumbles and Bryan Hinkle, Car- about the game past the fumnell Lake and Dwayne Woodruff bles." he said. " It's hard to tell
one each for Pittsburgh. Delton whether we were playing or not. I
Hall added an Interception In the felt like you couldn't tell about
fourth quarter, and Gerald Willi· the defense. Obviously In the
ams had a sack.
'
. second half they didn't score, but
"The defense played well and they certainly had put the game
has played well all year," Steel- under wraps."
ers head coach Chuck Noll said.

.,

But there's just too many of youl To all
our cherbhed customers and friends
we wish a very merry Christmas.

(304) 675-1244

By POHLA SMITH
UPI Sports Writer
PITI'SBURGH (UP!) - Perhaps the Cleveland Browns were
. In the mood to play Santa Claus,
or maybe the Pittsburgh Steelers.
defense was at Its stingiest,
Scrooge-like best.
Most likely, both teams contributed equally to Cleveland's
NFL record-tying eight lost fumbles and an Interception. Pittsburgh entered the game with a
plus-4 turnover ratio and the·
Browns were a league-worst
mlnus-17.
·
The Steelers took advantage
for a 35-0 triumph that left them
at 9-6 and still ·ln the hunt for a
playoff berth. The rout also
avenged a 51-0 loss to their AFC
Central Division rival Browns In
the 1989 home season opener. The
hapless Browns, playing without
injured quarterback · Bernie
Kosar, dropped to 3-'12.
It was,only Pitts burgh's second
victory over Cleveland In 10
games •and the Steelers' first
home triUmph . over their long-time rivals since 1985.
The Steelers registered their
first shutout of the season, while
Cleveland has been blanked
three times.
"I guess what goes round
comes around.': said Mike Pagel,
who completed 12 of 29 passes
wllh one Interception filling lnfor
'Kosar. "! don't know. We were
here a year-and-a-half ago talkIng about It the other )Vay."
The Browns fumbled on their
first three offensive plays, and
Pittsburgh turned the turnovers'
Into a 21-0 lead .
. Bubby Brister threw only 19
times and completed just 10 for
139 yards, but four ' or those
completions went . for touchdowns. He connected with Mike
Mularkey on TD passes of 20 and
2 yards In the first quarter, with
Chris Calloway on another 20yarder tn' the first quarter and
with MerrU Hoge on a 12-yarder
In the second quarter.
Before Sunday, Brister had
never beat~n nor thrown a TD
pass against the Browns.
Warren Wllllams capped the
. scoring late In the second period
will! a one-yard plunge. Rook!~

.

Tho
the oldlr .
lllfer d...., with oubotentlol rat8
ond reductlonoolld br- - age. Roto roductlonobegln 10-.ly
• 21 ond !IN penlaololly ot·
troctlvo far the 411 to 64 old.
If you h... o 10t. driving ~­
)lilt
how low
y0111
- the
- Mo.
once
pfomium
con be
with
delia Auto Pallcy ITam s- Auto

ball for the fui'nble recovery In ihe first quarter of
Sunday's game In Plttsburrh• Tbe Steelers, who
scored as a result of this turnover, won 35-0, (UPij

Steelers thump Browns 35-0

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WE'D LIKE TO SEND
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moments earner, as Pittsburgh defensive lineman Donald Evans (right center) scoops up the

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Today is Monday, Dec. 24, the 358th day of 1990 with seven to follow .
This Is Christmas Eve.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

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Today in history:

'·

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta .·
&lt;
Several Western nations are
Assad- with nothing invested :-

Carter _tries to undo Reagan legacy
B w·'ll'

The Bengals, who need a yard passing day - the second
1-!ouston victory next week to win best In NFL history - against . •·.
the division, were not happy to Kansas Cfty. The Bengals held
see Moon hurt.
him to 288 yards on 25 compleBy RICK VANSANT
''The tragedy of this game was tions In 48 attempts.
CINCINNATI (UP!) -James that Warren Moon was hurt,''
Brooks gained a club- record 201 Bengals head coach Sain Wyche
yards Sunday to keep the Ben- said. ''He's a tremendous player.
The Daily Senti!'el
gals' title hopes alive, and . He deserves the chance to finish
( V8PIIl4J.HI)
Houston's playoff hppestumbled this sea s on and beat
A Dlvilloa of Mulllmedla. Jae.
when quarterback Warren Moon Pittsburgh."
sutfered a dislocated right
Publllhed ev~ry afternoon, Monday
"You hate to see It happen to
throueh Friday, 111 .Court St., Po·
thumb.
such a good guy and such a great
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohto Valley PubBrooks paced Cincinnati's 40- player, '' said ~lnclnnati quarterJtshtng Company/ Mult imedia. Inc ..
20 romp over Houston with a back Boomer Eslason, who viPomoroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Poineroy,
· 56-yard touchdown run and gal- sited with Moon In the Houston
Ohio.
lops of 45 and 40 yards to set up clu.bhouse after the game.
other scores.
Member: United Press International,
. Moon's Injury puts a Jot of
Inland DatJyPress Association and theMoon suffered a dislocated pressure on Carlson for next
Ohio Newspaper Au~latlon. National
thumb on his passing hand In the week's game against Pittsburgh.
Adverttstnt Representative, Branham
!
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue ,
closing minutes and will be out
" People on this team are going
New York, New York 10011.
for three to four weeks. That to have to rally around him to get
'
means Moon will miss next his coilfldence going,'' Moon
PCeTMAS'I'ER: Send addresi changes
to The Dally Sentinel. 111 C'.Dwt St. ,
l
Sunday's crucial game . against said. " Our players know he can
Pomeroy, Oblo 45"769.
. ·
Pittsburgh and be replaced by do the job. They see him In
SUIISCliiPl'JON RATES
Cody Carlson as the AFC Central practice every day. They know
On
By
~arrler or Metor Route
division title chase goes Into the Cody can play.
o W!!"k ........ .. ..... ... ...... ...... ... .. $1.40
!lnal week of the season.
One Month_..... ...... ,........... .......... $fl.10
"Next week Is one-we're going
One Ye8r ...... ... .. ....... .... ... .... .... $72.80
Pittsburgh, 9-6, heads Into the
to have to win If we're going to
SINGLE COPY
last game with a one-game .I~ad
have a shot at the playoffs,''
PRICE
over 8-7 Houston and Cincinnati.
Carlson said. "l'mgolngtogoout
Dally ......... .. ....... .... .... ... .. .... 25 Cents '
;·
The Steelers can win the division
there and do everything I CliO to
Subscribers not dealrlna to pay the carwith a victory over Houston next beat Pittsburgh."
rier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on al,&amp;or 12 month
Sunday. If Pittsburgh loses , the ·
Whlle Brooks gained 201 of
basis. Credit wut be gtven carrier each
Bengals can claim the division Cincinnati's 222 rushing yards,
.,.,.eek.
IItle with a victory over
he accounted for only one of the
No subscriptions by mall permitted IIi
Cleveland.
team's five toucjldowns Sunday.
;~reas where borne carrier service II
Brooks, who also set a ClnclnavaJJable.
Ickey Woods scored twice · on
• nail record with his 15th career one-yard runs while Eric Kattus
Mall Subo&lt;rlpjtOOI
100-yard game, carried 20 times.
caught TD passes of 16 and 22
I•hte Melp Caulri:J
13 Weeks .. .. ............. .... ... .......... $19.24
"Everybody was saying the
yards from Eslason, who com- . ;~
~eoks .. .... ....... .. .. .......... ,.. . $37.96
Houston defense was so tough
pleted 11 of 21 passes for .184
eeks ........... .... ... ........... ·' ... $74.36
you couldn't n~n against them,"
Outolde Melp C.Ualy
yards . Clncinnatl''s Stanford Jen13 w..t&lt;s ................... ............... m . ~
Brooks said. "!said, 'We'll see.' I
nings also had a one-yard TD run.
26 Weeks ... ......: ., .. .. :.. .... ... .... ... . $40.30
told my linemen that If they could
52 Weeka ... ... . ~ ... ................ .. .... . l75.40
Moon was coming off a 527get me started, I can finish II.
Today, the line was blocking and
I just ran.
"Last time we played Houston, .
I was hurt. !showed them today!
could still run against them
anytime. There's a whole lot of
people who don't know how to
tackle me. Each time I run, I feel
I can get at least 20 yards."
Moon, the NFL's most prolific
passer this season, said he was
doubly disappointed that ' the
Oilers hurt.thelr playoff chances
announce the ·opening of their
in a game in which he was
injured.
· practice in
"It's devastating," Moon said.
"You work so hard to get to this
point. We've been close so many
times. It's frustrating.
"It's one thing to have a
and
division title taken away from us,
It' s another thing to . have my
season taken away from ·me. I'm
not used to this. I'm not used to
at
being Injured."
2907
Jackson
Avenue
Moon was Injured when he hit
his thumb. on the helmet of
Point Pleasant, .West Virginia
Clnclnatl's James Francis after
a pass.
Seeing patients
"It's not a broken bone, but It's
an open dislocation In the middle
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
of the right thumb," Oilers'
trainer Brad Brown said. "The
bone popped through the skin.
For appointments call
The big worry Is InfeCtion. We
cleaned It out after the game and
(304) 675-4107
we'wlll take Warren to a hospital
when we get back to Houston to
have It cleaned out again.
"It's going to be three to four
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
weeks before ~e could play
The family ol proleuionals
again. There's a lot of swelling
and It's going to lake time for the ·
Valley Oriw. Point l'leMinl WV 255liO (304) 6~
soft tissue io heal so he can grip
the footbalL"

Brooks sets record;
Moon injures thumb

r===================;---=:----:--~--=-----=---=-=--~~~_,;_;..;...;... .·

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei-PIIge-3

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�Monday, December 24, 1990

,.,I

,In the NBA Sunday,

\

Souihem downs Ross SE 74-54 for fourth straight win

Boston beats Atlanta 132-104 to complete suspended game
BOSTON (UPI)- The Atlanta 'Hllwks returned to Boston Garden
Sunday to complete a suspended same and the Celllcs wiped up the
floor with them.
The last time the teams tried to play Nov. 28, the parquet floor was
unplayable because of condensation caused by heat at the Garden. It
became so wet and slippery, the referees called the game with 10:30 to
play In the second quarter.
They resumed Sunday with Boston leading 37-22 and the Celtlcs
·rolled over the Hawks by hitting their first 10 shots en route to a
132·104 victory. ,
·
Before play resumed, there was concern the game would be
postponed for a second time: Unseasonably high temperatures, which
caused the original problem with the floor last month, hit the Boston
area Sunday. The thermometer reached the upper 60s In the
afternoon and there were some slick spots on the Ganlen floor before
the game.
.
"I'm very relieved that the longest game lnhlstory Is finally over, "
Ceitlcs serilor executive vice president Dave Gaviit si!.ld. "I was
concerned earUer this morning that we might have another real
problem again. Fortunately, some of the precautions that were taken
took care pi the problem. We had been talking about It for two days,
ever since we heard the weather report."
The extra precautions Included the use of electric fans before the
game and during halftime to keep the surface dry. A different type of
insulation was used between the age-old parquet floor and the Ice
surface below. The playing surface was also swabbed by large
brooms during all time-outs.
Larry Bird scored 14 points, grabbed 10 rebounds and handed outlO
assists for his 'Second triple-double of the season (and 57th of his
career) as the Celtlcs ran their winning streak to seven co~secutlve
games. Kevin Gamble scored 25 points, Robert Parish 18 points and
Brian Shaw 16.

NF'L act•";On •••

(Continued from Page 3)

___:__:::::.:::.:::..::..:.::.=.::..:::;:..~-

McNair to set up Lowery's
game-winning kick. On third·
and-six from his live, DeBerg
found McNair at the 10 and·
McNair raced to the Chargers 3~.
Barry Word added 108 yards and
a TD for Kansas City.
DeBerg's playing status was
uncertain .because of his injury,
but he went the whole way completing 19 of 27 passes for 251
yards and two touchdowns.
"When you have an Injury II
tends to make you concentrate
very lnteently. I kind of thought
t)llngs would go well today,"
DeBerg said. ''Basically we were
able to control the line of
scrll)lmage a little bit In the first
were able to run and·
half, and
throw.''
The Chiefs, 10-5, ' earned at
least a wild-card spot and can
win the AFC West if they defeat
Chicago next Saturday and the
first-place Los Angeles Raiders
lose to San Diego Sunday.
At Philadelphia, running back
Keith Byars threw his fourth
scoring pass of the season and
E;rlc Allen returned an lntercep·
lion 35 yards for a TD to lift the
p1ayoff-bound Eagles. Aikman
s}l!fered a separated shoulder In
the first quarter and will be lost
for the year. He was hurt when
Clyde Simmons hit him and leU
on his shoulder". Aikman was the
sixth quarterback knocked out of
a game by Philadelphia this
season.
"We're fighting an adverse
situation when Troy goes down
with a separated shoulder and Is
lost for the year," Dallas head
coach Jimmy Johnson said.
The oth~r playotr spot open Is
the third AFC wild-card spot.

we

.

'

Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Houston
and Seattle are in contention. ·
At Seattle, Eugene Robinson's
Interception and 39-yard return '
set up the Derek Fenner's
game-winning TD to keep the
Seahawks In the playoff hunt
with a 17-12 victory over the
Denver Broncos. Seattle Is 8-7.
·Playoff-bound Buffalo, Chi·
cago and the New York Giants
won wlth No. 2 quarterbacks
starting Sunday. The 49ers lost
with Steve Young starting In
place of Joe Montana.
At Buffalo, Frank Reich
started for Jim Kelly and threw
two TD passes. Thurman Thomas rushed for 154 yards to help
the BillS to a 24-14 victory over
the Miami Dolphins.
The BillS, 13-2, avenged a 30-7
loss In Miami 14 weeks ago,
· clinched ·the AFC's best record
and home field throughout the
playoffs. The Dolphins, 11-4, will
settle lor an AFC wild-card spot
Kelly Is out with·a knee Injury.
At Chicago, Mike Tomczak
threw for two TDs and ran for
another In his first start of the
season, leading the Bears to a
27-14 victory .over the Buccaneers. Tomczak filled In for Jim
Harbaugh, who Is out for the
season with a dislocated
shoulder.
At Tempe, Ariz., Jeff Hostetler, filling in for Injured Phil
Simms, threw for one TD and ran
for another to lift the Giants, 12-3,
who assured themselves of receiving a bye In the first round of
the NFC playoffs and playing at
hom·e In the second round. The
Cardinals, 5-10, lost their slim
playoff hopes. Simms is on the
Injured reserve with a sprailled
right foot.

The Celtlcs have won 18 of their last 20 and 12 in a row at home. For
the Hawks, who had won eight of their previous 10 games, John Battle
was the high man with 17 points, followed by rookie Duane Ferrell
with 16.
Already leading by 15 when play resumed, theCeltlcs hit their first
10 shots In a span of 4:50, swelling the Boston lead to 57-28. Gamble
had four baskets during the 20-6 run while Bird had three assists and ·
four points.
•
·
· .,
.
"We all wished that this was over a month ago," saldShaw, who hit
seven of 10 shots, pulled down siX rebounds and dished out nine
assists. "We didn't really want to be here today. It's the holiday
.
season and we wanted to be with friends and family.
" It's one of those days where you say, 'I don't want to go to work.'
but since I have to, might as well go out there and get the job done.
Everyone came In here focused and ready to get It over with."
About three minutes lllto the resumption, disgusted Hawks head
coach Bob Weiss cfeared his bench. .Boston led 69-41' at halftime and
Increased its lead to 37 several times In the third quarter. The lead
peaked at 120-82.
·
"It looked like we were worried about the floor," said Weiss. "They
weren't and they hit their first couple of shots. Our guys just weren't
ready."
·
When the teams first met Nov. 28, the Hawks were In the middle of
an eight-game losing streak. Since then, Atlanta's play has Improved
considerably and the Hawks came Into the game having won four of
five on the road.
"We're going to play them again Friday (In Atlanta) and you can
bet your life they 'll play a lot better than that ," said Boston's Kevin
McHale.
·
In other games Sunday , Miami cooled down Utah 99-93, the L.A.
Lakers routed Minnesota 118-94, . Portland romped past Denver
132-101, and the L.A. Clippers overcame Sacramento 1()9-99.
Heat 99, .Jazz 93- At Miami, Sherman Douglas scored six points In
the final 3:24 to break the Heat's 10-game losing .streak. Douglas
finished the game with 23 points and 10 assists. Rony Selkaly scored 21
and Glen Rice added 20.
Lakers 118, Timberwolves 94- At Inglewood, Calif., James Worthy
scored 24 points to lead the Lakers. Magic Johnson scored 15 points

.

'

CHICAGO (UP!) - Tile Chicago White Sox completed their
Christmas shopping Sunday
night, trading Ivan Calderon and
Barry Jones to the Montreal
Expos lor outfielder Tim Raines
and two•minor leaguers.
· Although a White Sox spokesman would not confirm the deal,
.general manager Ron Schueler
said -the trade was done. A
Calderon-for-Ralnes deal was
discussed during the winter
meetings, but the hangup at that
time was Expos general manager Dave Dombrowski's Insist·
ence on getting more than
Calderon.
Raines, 31. hit .287, with 49
stolen bases and 62 RBI. The
swltch·hitter, whose best season
offensively was- 198fi when he
batted .334, will 1111 the White
Sox's needs for a: leadoff man.
He played In 130 games this
season, his lOth In the J!lA)on, all

with Montreal.
The trade fulfills the Expos'
search for someone to drive In·
runs. Calderon, 28, batted .273in
1990 with the White Sox, hitting 14
~orne runs and 74 RBI. He also
stole 32 bases In his fourth season
with the· White Sox, and was a
· much Improved defensive player
once switched to left field.
Jonesappearedln65gamesfor
the White Sox, primarily as
Bobby Thigpen's setup man. The
right -hander, who was hampered
in 1989 with elbow problems,
compiled an 11-4 record with a
2.31 ERA In the just completed
season .
•
· It is the White Sox's third
transaction since the end of the
season . Chicago also acquired
outfielder Cory Snyder from
Clev.eland for pitchers Eric King
and Shawn Hillegas, and signed
free agent knuckleballer Charlie
Hough.

l '•

1•.

,,

coach Bill McCartney, but Ble- ·
ByLES KJOS
.
nle·m y admits he can also lie a
UPI Spons Wrtter
problem.
. · .
. MIAMI (UP!) , ..., Colorado
"I'm
nerve
wracking
to every
running back EriC Blenlemy
coach.
I
just
get
a
little
hyper
out
redeemed himself this season
there,
but
It's
all
a
part
of
the
after .an Injury-laden 1989 season.
game,"
he
said.
But he wants even more redemp~ Blenlemy has not been as
tion In the Orange Bowl against
nerve
wracking to the coaches as
Notre Dame Jan. 1.
AU-American
linebacker Alfred'
Blenlemy returned to the 11·
the Buffaloes
Williams
since
neup In -last year's 21-6 Orange
arrived In Miami Friday night.
Bowl loss to Notre Dame after
Because of a mlsuf!derstandrecovering from a broken leg. It
was not a happy return to actl~n . . · lng, Williams missed the team.
plane when It lett Denver and
He contributed to a number of
became sick when he (lnally
Buffalo mistakes In the first hall
arrived Saturday afternodn, He
by losing a fumble .In the open
missed
his second ptactice befield.
cause
of
bronchitis Sunday, but
Because of Blenlemy's mls·
McCartney
did not see It as a
takes and those of his team.
problem.
mates, the Bulls went Into the
''This Is not anything to be
second half In a scoreless tie
concerned about," McCartney
InStead of a lead.
said. "It's not as ilthls was game
"I do think a lot about It,'.'
week."
. ·
. Blenleiny said Sunday. "We had
McCartney sent reserve defen- .
a lot of opportunities, and we just
' to'
slve back Eric Hamilton back
blew II. Wedldn'ttakeadvantage
Boulder alter the team arrived In '
of those opportunities. "
This year, Colorado finds Itself Miami. He learned from a
reporter that HamUton had been
In near 1y the same sltua lion. The
charged
with driving under the
BUffs, 10-1-1, are ranked No. 1
and 11eed a win over Notre Dal)le,- Influence Nov. 30 and after he ,
confirmed It with the player, he
9-2, In Miami New Year's night to
suspended him .
win the natlona:l championship.
"If we lind ourselves In the
sarr.e situation, we can take
advantage of those opportunities," the 5-foot -7; 19~pound
senior said. "This year Ithlnk we
will because we're more mature.
We've overcome a lot · of
·
adversity.
"It's been a hard-fought season. We've been ranked as low as
.J.
20th, but It we come out and do
Transmission fluid should be
the things we're supposed to do
c~ariged as recommended ~Y
your car's manufacturer. It can
against Notre Dame, I think we'll
become "gumtny.. over tlme, adbe ranked No. 1."
dlirg resistance and making the
Blenlemy has overcome some
transmission work harder tllan It
should. That can led to an expen·
adversity himsell. After a year In
stve repair. • • •
which he missed live games with
New antifreeze made with pro·
the broken leg, he started the 1990
pylene gly,ool lnsl!!ad of ethylene
season on the bench, suspended
glycol is said to pose no toxic dan·
for one game because of a dispute
ger to sewer systems If It Is ,
with pollee and firemen during a
dumped or to pets or other ani·\
mals tllat lick 'it up. Antifreeze
fire at his home In Denver.
properties ol both chemicals are
The All-American running
slmtlar.
•••
back more than made up for It the
Corrosioa buildup on battery
rest of the season, bursting for
connectloas acts like an Insulator
so the battery won't work. Dlscon·
1,628 yards and averaging 140
nect the cables, scrape them
yards a game, second best In the
clean
and put tllem back. A mild
country. He was named UP!
baking iroda solution helps re·
Back of the Year and finished
move the corrosion. Preventive
third In the voting for the
anti-corrosion f~a~ls available. ·
Helsman Trophy.
New-Used Cars Do It Youroetl: Test·
And a big part of his value Is his
drtve a terrtftc llN' (or lite-model
knack for late-game heroics.
used) car at Smtih Nolam Moton.
"Basically I'm just out there
doing my job. The offensive line
seems to want to play harder In
those situations," he said.
99!-2174
Bleniemy Is described as a
"fiery competitor" by head

......

D~'tory

SMITH-NELSON.
MOTORS, INC. .

sao rent .. ... ••••••Y· oH.

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~ ALITD

JheA11~

--

••
REJECTED - Boston forward Ed Pinckney (rlcht) blocks a
shot by Atlanto frontman Duane Ferrell (33) In the third quarter of
a game suspended from Nov. Z8 on Sunday In the BosiOn Garden:
The Celdcs won 132·104. (UPI)

I

5

i
I

llll J1a- J1a . . . . fClB:I 1&lt;:l&lt; r&lt;::s 01:&lt; 6::&lt; J~.:UIOI g:.; tjOI liilEo=:l fj::lll::llf

Everyone _s hould

~~buckle

up

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for
.
safety

5

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M ,.

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I
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. Enjoy a wonderful holiday.

QUALITY PIINT SHOP
MIDDUPCIII', .a

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SVAC standings

(Overall)
at the half.
,
TEAM
W L PF PA
WellSton was able 10 climb back Hannan Trace ..... 7 1 584 418
iniO the game in the second half as Southern ............. :7 2 658 542
cQ~~ch Roger Foster substituted Eastern ............... 6 3 610 623
freely and the Marauders dropped Symmes Valley .. .4 4 . 462 480
off their'pressing defense. WellsiOn North Gallla ........ 4 5 714 733
OUISCored the Marauders 34-17 in Oak Hill ............ .. 3 6 611 639
the seeond half but ~~&amp;ver seriously Kyger Creek ........ 1 •7 456 582
threatened the Marauder lead.
Southwestern ....... O 7 386 507
The Marauders placed four girls
in double ligures Jed by sophomore
(Conference)
Vema CompsiOn with 16, Tricia Hannan Trace ..... 6 0 476 304
B~r added 12, and Kelly Smith Southern .... ..;... :... 6 1 533 429
and Missy Nelson added 11 each. Eastern ... .. ........ .. 4 2 434 431
. \ \,
Jeenifer 'Illylor led the maroon and North Gallla ........ 4 3 577 537
gold In rebounds with nine, Baer Symmes Valley .. . 4 3 400 417 ·
and Smith grabbed ' eight , each. Oak Hill . . .. ... .. .. .. . 2 5 456 515
Taylor arid ~ps10n added four Kyger Creek ........ 1 6 411 533
'
assists each.
Southwestern ..... .. 0 7 386 507
Th~ ,J,ieigs · Marauder freshman
Laura Canter led the Rockets TOTALS .. ....... .. . 27 27 3673 3673
av~.. OPI;ned up their SCliSOn with a
with a game high 22 points, Kim
ect 5-0.record.,
•
Smith added 10 for'
hosL I
(Reserves)
Meigs opened up it's season with
In
the
reserve
game'
Meigs
jum.
(SVAC
only)
'
50.21· Win over ViniOn County.
ped
out
10
a
22·3
lead
lead
and
shot
TEAM
.
W
L
l'F
PA
ter a slow stan, the Marauders
lib
Rockets
with
a
49-8
win.
Southern
.......
...
....
6
1
397
283
down
pened
a 25-10 lead at the half
nd rou'ecl 10 the victory. .The Joy O'Brien led Meigs with 10, North Gallla ..... ... 5 2 418 298
uders defense held the Vrlclngs Misty Powell added nine and Missy Oak Hill . .. .. ... . .. .. . 5 .2 40s 359
o six points or l.ess in all four Sisson eight to lead coach Kim Ad· Hannan Trace ..... 4 2 326 256
Eastern ............... 3 3 284 317
· uarters. Eric Wagner led the way Ieins' gals.
Meigs
is
now
7-2
on
the
year
and
Symmes
Valley ... 2 5 318 412
ith J 2 J10ints, Anderson added
5-2
ill
the
Tri-V811ey
Conference,
·Kyger
Creek..
...... 1 6 272 , 378
ine, :while Shawn Creineans and
.
they
will
host
the
undefeated
·
Southwestern
......
. 1 6 234 354
ott Peterson added eight each. ·
Federal
Hocking
Lancers
on
TOTALS
............
27
27 2657 2657
In \heir second game the
u&lt;Wrs slipped past Trimble Thursday January 3.
Saturday's final ~
"tit ,a ,4241 victory. The
Southern
74, Ross Southeastern
MEIGS
13
23
10
17-63
uders ,were down 39-31 head·
54
WELLSTON
11
8
16
18-53
ng iniO the final period but out·
MEIGS-KEllY SMITH 5-().J.
ored the Cat's 11-2 in•the fourth
11,
TRICIA BAER 3-0412, JEN.
Com Inc Ibis week ... '
uarter 10 post the win. Once again
NIFBR
TAYLOR
3-0-2·8,
VERNA
Thursday
- Kyger Creek vs.
agner led Meigs with 12 points, ·
COMPSTON
7.0-2-16,
KIM
Sharples
in
Wahama Tournae was joined in double ligures by
HANNlNG
2-0-1-5,
K1M
EWING
ment,
7
p.m.
.
rad J\jtd!=Jn with II. CampbeU
0-0-0-0,
MISSY
NELSON
3..().5Friday
In
Wahama
Tourna·
eel Trirj~Qie with 15.
In ~it ·third 1game Meigs roared 11, ~y CREMEANS 0-0-0·0, · ment, Thursday's Kyger Creek·
Sharples loser. to face Thursday's
ut to a ' 30-9 first half lead and · TOTALS 23-0-17-63
Hannan-Wahama loser in cansofeated
Miller Falcons 53-32.
ANGIE ARTIIUR 0-0-0-0, KIM lation game at 6: 30 p.m., with
ack Stanley led the a balanced
SMITH
5..()..()-10, HYL.A FYFFE Thursday's winners to play for ,
rintrrattack for the winners with
11..()..()..22,
KACI SHERMAN 4-0- championship at 8:30p.m.; also,
poltits, including eight of nine
0-8,
HOLLY
MAXWELL 0-0.0-0, Southern at Athens , and Jackson
i!ftfwm the,{roo ~w line. Sexton led
JENNIFER
OUSLEY 2..()..().4, at Oak Hill.
~~ die Faloons wtth 17.
AMBER
LOTI
4-Q-1,9, TOTALS
Salurday- Hannan Trace at
·i The Marauder freshmen are 26-0,1-53
Fairland
~ cqached'oy Gene Wi!e.
'·

Ross had four steals, 21 fouls
and tell turnovers.
Caldwell concluded, "It was a
good overall effon; our best of the
year. I'm starting to see this team
come around. We had good balance
and I was pleased with the effort.
They were much bigger than us, but
we manhandled them inside.
Maybe we've turned the comer."
"I don't really want 10 name individuals, ·but everYOJIC did What
they were supposed 10 do. Each
player has a• role and each one
fulfilled that role. We shut down
Lawhorn and Jordan even though
they were bigger thai!, us. Jeremy
(Rose) and Roy Lee (Bailey) did a
great job Inside."
Caldwell continued 'in praise of
his team and by the time he had
finished had mentioned by name
every player on the entire team;
praising each for a job well done.
"We had hoped to be it least 8-2
by Chrisun~. That was one of our
goal~. We have a tough road
schedule ahead, but this game
should give us some momentum.
This was a fun game to coach."
In a pregame ceremony, Mrs.
Earl Cross was presented a game
ball' signed by members of the
boosaer club and by Southern
players In memory of the late Earl
c;ross, who ofaen bought items ror
the team and was a long time SHS
fan.
The reserve game was quite a
warm-up for the varsity tilt as SHS
claimed a big 73-63 win over the
little Panthers. Ross had been
beaten just once on the reserve
level by Columbus Werhle, 62-60.
Ross is now 5-2 while Southern
is 8-1 overiill.
. Scott Wickline's club was led b)'
Michael Evans with 22, Braclcin
McFann with 10, and Josh Codner
with "10. Ross was led by Jason
Adams with 23, Dana HutiOn with

14, and Tom Kitchen with 12.
Southern plays SEOAL foe
Athens in The Plains on Friday,
Dec. 28.
Score by quarters:
Southern 2A 14 1917-74
Southeastern 7 18 12 17-54
Box Score:
Ross Soulheaslem (54)
Q-an ~whorn .iO-O-O, Rick Scar·
berry 0-0-0, PhiUip 'Hartman 2-21·11, Mike Collins 3-2-0-10, Jim
Dray 0-1-2-5, Shannon Weese 0-1 ·
0-3, Dave Hutton 0-0-0, Tom

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Monday, Dec. 24
No games scheduled

Tuesday, Dec. 25
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Wedn ....,_,, Doc.~
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Thunday, Dee n

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.

Ritchens 1-0-2, Staeey Ragland 1-:
0,2, Chad Jordan 5-0-10, Jason Adams 0-3-3, Mau Ralm 2-0-2-6,
Totals 14-6-8-54
•
Southern (74)
.
Jeremy Roush .1-0-1-3, Andy
Baer 6-2-10-28, Michael Kincaid
4-0-8, Todd Grindstaff 2-2-6,
Jayson Codner 0-0-0, John Hobaclc
0-0-0, Roy Lee Bailey 3-6-12,
Scott Lisle 0-0-0, Michael Russell
. 0-2·2, Russell Singleton 0-0-0,
Jeremy Rose 7·1·15, Totals 23-222-74.

eigs freshmen
• rfirst three

.MJarl\l i(\hloJ vs Mlami !Fia.)
'OhiO\Vnlyersity at Hoosier Classic
Toiedp Qassic
Coi~lal City Classjc
..
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Friday, Doc. 'Ill '

I

Season's
Greetiags
Your friendship means a lot to us.

and the Marauder offense kick in
high gear opening up a 36-19 lead

· Sentinel Correspondent

~

I
I

I
I

~

The Meigs Marauders outscored
Wellsilin 23•8 iri the second period
10 blow·open a two•point game and
defeat the Golden RocketS 63-53 in
girls ~-Valley Conference action
·
last Th,utsdaY night. ·
In die ·first qUatter the Marauders
opened' up,a· 19-11 lead at th~ end
of the ' first qriatter behiild a balan·
ced scoring attack. Tricia Baer Jed
the Marauders in scoring in the first
quarter with live points.
.Missy Nelson came off the bench .
score;eight second period points

N

I
I
I
I
I
I

.

. ,' By DAVE HARRIS .

w

ll

·

eyes, a lriok of confidenCe !bat SHS
Man Rahn and Chad Jordan
has not yet had this season.
sparli:ed an SB comeback a&amp;r SHS
Coach Howie Caldwell said, led 34-17. SE cut the lead to 38-25
"We got oil 10 a good stan and at the half. Baer had 12 at tbe half,
played with very much intensity. Bailey ha~ eight, and Rose seven.
This was withOut a doui!t the best
Earlier this season Southern had
game we've played this season. We a tendency to let its fallen op·
played with intensity for a full ponents back up off the lilat, but
thiny-two minuteS.
Everyone SHS came liom the loclceroom in
played their role, the bench was In· the second half with renewed intenvolved In the game, and the fans sity and a decisive lmockout punch.
enjoyed iL"
.
Southern outscored SE 19-8 in the
Paced !ly seyen · points from third frame for it biggest lead at 57Andy Baer, the Tornadoes ran a 37. Jordan and Rahn, Ross's two
suing of eight straight points 10 biggest scorers in the second frame
push · the score 10 17-7. Jeremy were held scoreless the entire
Roush had three points in the second half.
.
frame, and Thdd Grindstaff four.
Meanwhile, Baer hit 7-7 from
As the SlatS indicate, Southern's the line to notch twenty . points,
auac~ was very well balanced as while Bailey hit 44 from the line
the T!lffi8(1oes played ~ team and Rose canned six from the paint.
ball 10 lceep the taller Panthers off
Sowhem's aggressiveness and .
balance.
.
upbeat tempo left Ross somewhat
Although Roy Lee Bailey had lethargic along the baseline. When
just two points in the opening · . SHS didn't get the shon shot in the
round, he and Jeremy Rose were paint it drew the foul with consisjust warming up for a dazzling in-· tency.
side disP.IaY of high schopl basket·
Southern
· continued
. its
ball. Bailey and Rose were 111$tched dominance in the final round, and
against Cmn Lawhorn 6-4, and 6-6 . with a few words of caution from
Chad Jordan, but the SHS inside Coach Howie Caldwell, were caremen out quicked their lOwering op- ful not 10 ease up. SHS rolled on 10
portents. Rose had four in the the giant 74-~ win.
'
Overall, Southern hit a very
frame. ·
Soud!em :went on 10 claim an in- , warm 25-51 for 51 percent and 22
credible 24r7 lead at the end of the of 32 at the line. It outrebounded
first frame, bringing a long round the much bigger Panthers 37-36 led
of applause from the SHS fans.
by Baer and Bailey with nine each
The firm of Baer, 'Bailey, and and Rose six. ·
Rose arrested any thoughtS of an
Jordan had nine for SB.
SE comeback in the second frame
·Southern had 8 sfeals, 14 turas Southern continued its offensive novers, 5 assists, and 16 fouls.
surge.
Grir$taff had a great floor game as
indicated by his three assiSts and
six points.

eigs girls beat wellston

5

Hope your
Christmas is sparkling!

'OMEROY, OljiO
.•'

Bieniemy ~eterntined
to redeem himself

WAY

OYOUS
NOEL

G&amp;J
AUTO PARJS

1

STEER
THIS

ChiSox deal Calderon, ]ones
to Montreal Expos for Raines

11t;r SCOTT WOLFE
Selitliiel Correspolldenl
The Southern TanadOes picked
a line .time 10 play their be$! game
of the, ·season and ultimately
defeau:d the towering Ross74•54,
Soqtheastem Panlhas,
Saturllay night before a packed
ho~ in Charles W. Hayman gytn·
nasmm.
Tire. IIOII·Ieague victory over last
year's :stall: semi-litlalist Panthers
pushes ,Southern's fllCord 10 8-2
overaU,·IH in the SVAC. Ross, still
!lying 10 overcome some holes left
from last year's departures falls 10
2-5, a . somewhat deceiving mark
considering
Ross's
premier
schedule.
so~·s newest :;outhpaw
Af!dy Baer -again claimed top sciJr.
ing honors with a game-high 28
points . and nine rebounds, while
Jeremy Rose notched runner-up
honors 1 "(tth 15 points and six
rebou~tls, , Roy Lee Bailey ha\1 an
equally lOugh inside game with 12. '
Mich~J Kincaid had ·eight, Todd
Grinds'!Pf six, Jeremy-Roush ihree,
31)!1 Michael RuMCI!two. ·
Phillip Hartman had eleven for
the Pa!llhers. Chad Jordan hail 10,
Matt ~~ six, Jiri! Dray live,
Shann ;Woose and Jason Adams
three ' '~eli, Thm · Riichens and
'5tace:(~gland two each, and~
Collin,IO. ,
Sollih~ grabbed the opening tip
and nlc~ for the game's first score,
a shon junwer by versatile forward
Michael Kincaid. From · that Jl(lint
on So9#m 'had that Joolc in 'its

and handed out 13 assists. A.C. Green came oft the Laker bench to
score a season high 20 points. Gerald Glass led theTimberwolves with.
a career-high 32 points.
:
Bluer• 13!, Nu11eta 101 - At Portland, Ore. , Jerome Kersey
scored 23 points and grabbed 14 rebounds and Danny Young added a :
career-high 21 points, and the Blazers held Denver to Its lowest point•,
total of the season.
·
Clippers 1119, Klnp 119- At Los -Angeles, Ken Norman scored 12 of
his ·season-high 34 points In the fourth quarter and Charles Smith .
added I9to help the Clippers snap a five-game losing streak. Wayman
· TISdale paced the Kings with 27 points, but only two In the final ·
quarter.

In Jan. 1 Orange Bow~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

28 points from Baer,

,fJ'ith

Monday. December 24. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pege-4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

'

•

~

I

�..
Pllu•

'Battery wars' of the holidays
By PAUL DECKELMAN
Uaited Press lllternatlonal
With the holiday season fast
approaching, a "power struggle" Is shaping up In the$7blllion
U.S. battery market, pitting the
makers of traditional dry-cell
throwaway batteries against the
manufacturers of upstart hightech rechargeable celts.
The end of the year Is prime
time In the batrery business.
Many people who give batteryoperated holiday gifts, like toys ,
appliances, portable video
games and the like, usually buy
batteries to go along with them.
Once those batteries run down,
the gift recipients also · buy
batteries.
Industry estimates show U.S.
hOuseholds use over 2 billion
batteries a year - enough to
circle the globe three ttrries. Most
are traditional throwaway bat.
terles - either the cheap zinccarbon dry cells that were the
Industry mainstay for decades or
the longer-lasting but more
costly alkaline cells.
Now the rechargeable-type
batteries are trying to· gain
ground in the market . Nickelcadmium rechargeable batteries
have been around for years, but
manufacturers hope to parlay
heightened environmental
awareness and Improved technology Into a bigger slice of the
sales pie.
"Rechargeable batteries hold
about" 6 percent of the battery

Monday. December 24. 1990

,Pomeloy-Midcleport. Ohio

8-The Daily Sentinel

market now, and we're projectlog 10 percent. by 1992," says
Janet Watson, a consultant for
Gates Energy Products of Gainesville, Fla., which makes and
markets rechargeable batteries
under the " Millennium" trade
name.
Gates, the largest rechargeable manufacturer In the United
States and the thlrd·largestln the
world, is hitting the ecology
angle hard in its pitch to
consumers.
The company emphasizes· that
the 2 bliUon-plus conventional
batteries trashed every year
taile up a lot of Increasingly
scarce landfill space and add a
sizable amount of highly tolj'ic
mercury, a key throwaway bat·
tery element, to the waste
stream.
Besides appealing to consumers • environmental con·
science, Gates and other rechargeable makers are · also, of
course, touting more direct benefits of their products - cost
and convenience factors. ·
Whlle a set of rechargeable
batteries and a charger cost
substantially more than a package of ordinary alkaline batteries, Watson says they save the
consumer money over the long
haul.
Watson says she uses rechar·
geable AA ' cells in her
"Walkman' :-type headphone
tape player. which she runs for

openers, clocks and TV remote
control units work b!!tter with
throwaways.
And whlie rechargeables come
In the same sizes as most
conventional batteries - AA,
AAA, C, D and 9-volt, a~ well as
camcorder battery packs there are some specialized batterles for which there are no
rechargeable' equlvalen ts.
There are some cautions 10
also be observed, Watson notes.
"Never put a throwaway battery In the recharger," she said,
and don't mix throwaways and
rechargeables lri the same device. Rechargeable batteries us·
ually come packaged uncharged
~d cannot be . put right Into a
device without having been
charged first.
If the rechargeables have the
makers of throwaway batteries
worried, the latter are not
showing it. Daniel K. Matthalliess, a spokesman for Eastman

CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - Egyptian President Hosnl Mubarak
renewed a warning Monday that
Iraq would suffer massive
numbers of casuallties If war
erupts_in the Persian Gulf, and
said the llklihood of war is
increasing as theJan.15deadllne
for Iraq to . withdraw from
Kuwait dr.aws near.
, '"E;very day that passes Is
bringing Iraq closer to a war,"
Mubarak, a strong supporter of

EMS runs
• Units of the Meigs CoWity
Emergency
Medical
Service
rc$ponded 10 12 calls for assistance
over the weekend and early Montlay morning.
On Saturday at 10:07 a.m. the
Middleport unit went · to Powell
~treet for Faye Manley who was
transported to Holzer Medical Center.
, At 4:01 p.m. the Rutland Wlit
was called to the Civic Center for
Shannon Petry who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit, at 6:24 p.m.,
responded 10 Pomeroy Pike on a
motor vehicle aceident in . which
Nicole Pickens was taken to
.Veterans. Patty Pickens ~efused
'treaunent.
·
i At 6:17 p.m. the Rutland unit
went to Hysell Run Road for Robin
.'Pridemore who was transported to
.'Holzer.
.
.
.' The Syracuse unit went.IO Bar·
.ringer Ridge RQild at 11:06 p.m. for
p oldie Lawson who was taken to
'Veterans.
,. On Sunday at 1:29 a.m. the
:Pomeroy unit was called to the
&gt;Pomeroy Police Department for
:&gt;ames Hannan who was taken to
'Veterans.
t The Middleport unit, at 9:48
!a.m., responded to Overbrook Center for Blanche Scragg who was
taken 10 Vetelalls.
· . . At 5:03 p.m. the Racine unit
!Jient 10 Third Street for Nell Picklens who was transported to.
~terans.
•
·
t · At 9:09 p.m. !he Middleport unit
•was called to South Fifth for Carla
!DeWeese who was taken to
•Veterans.
; The Middleport Fire Department
;was called to North Second 111
•10:02 p.m. for a report of an odor
:Or gas at the Clara Hawley
)"esidence.
·
I The·Pomeroy unit, at 11:23 p.m.,
:responded to Mulberry Avenue for
\Nancy Ackennan who was
trn~nspdrted to Holzer.
1 Finally, on Monday ~ 5:26.a.m.
~he Tuppers Plains unit went · 10
'Swan Ro~ for Ruth Sletham \Yho
· :was taken 10 St. Joseph Hospital.

and.how we clean up

~urveyed.

: Factors cited as important to a
~ty ' s success were good food
and niCe people (84percenteach)
~Dd · good CQnVersation
percent).
, However, along with .all the
good times a party can generate,
an equal amount of stress comes
;~long with
the pressure of
~ntertalnlng, the survey said.

ns

The survey reported the top
reasons for stress for the host or
hostess were: having everything
ready on ttme (36 percent);
seeing that ail the guests have a
good time (33 percent); seeing
there is adequate food and drink
(26 percent); spending time
personally with guests (20 percent); and cleaning up afterwards (20 percent).
The survey also showed that
many people feel they have less
leisure time available, creating
even further pressure to make
the most of their entertaining.
Despite the fact that dual·
career marriages and relation·
ships are fairly commonplace,
the survey showed that women
still shoulder the primary . re·
sponsibility for entertaining, the
survey said.
Although 59 percent of the men
polled said they help their wives
cleaning up after a party, only 30
percent of the "women reported
their husbands pitch ln.

'

--Area deaths--

Ida Faye Machir
U.S.-IeQ efforts to oust Iraq from
the occuple&lt;l emirate, told repor- · ·
Ida ·Faye Machir, 67, of Point
ters In Cairo.
Pleasant died on Sallnday, December 22, 1990 Ill Plea$11111 Valley
The U.N. Security Council has
Hospital.
authorized multinational troops
She was Je!irM from Union CarIn the gulf region to use force
bide
in Oak Ridge, TN, following
against Iraq I! It has not with·
41
years
of service and was a
drawn from Kuwait by Jan. 15.
member
of
the 'Iiinity Uniled
Mubarak's statements came
in Oak Ridge.
Methodist
Church
one day after Defense Secretary
Born
February•26,
1923 in Poln.t
Dick Cheney sal$! during a visit to
Pleasant, sbe was a daughter of the
Cairo that there were no signs
.late
Harry and C~na (Edwards)
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
Machir.
She was also pn:ceded in
was golng to pull out of the
dealh
by
four brOtbers, Gilbert,
emirate, which he Invaded Aug.
Frank,
Cliffool
and Olarles.
.
2.'
Survivon
include
two
sisters,
''The Iraqi people will sUtler
Mrs. Howard (FicRnce) Love of
severe casualties if a war
Lewt
and Mrs. Axtell (Frances)
erupted," Mubarak said.
Dudding
of Leon; se-.1 nieces
The Egyptian president, who
and
nephews.
has sent 20,000 troops to joln the
Setvic:e will be held at I p.m. on
U.S.-)ed force In the gulf, said the
Monday,
Decem!!« 24, 1990 II the
world was united against
Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home wilh
Saddam.
the Rev. Louis Hussell officiating.
"When a leader of a state faces
will · fQllow at SlDICrest
Burial
danger against his country, he
Cemetery
in Point PlcasanL
should return to his senses and
.Visiting
hours were held on Sunprotect his people, even If he Is
day
atlhe
funeral
home.
forced to retract his word 500
tltnes, so long as It is In the
Blanche Scragg
interest of his country," Mubarak said.
·
Blanche Scragg, 86, formerly of
''The political solution does not
Rutland, died Sunday morning Ill
mean a surrender," he added.
VeteranS Memorial Hosiptal.
"'We have to be realiStic, but
Born in Coal FOlk, W.Va. on
regretably some are still
March .24, 1904, she was a
stubborn."
daughter of lhe late Morgan and
Nora Lee. Fostrz Stewart. She was
employed with the former Owen Dlinois Bottling Company in Chllrleston, W.Va. She also Jail the
Scragg
Grocery Sum: in Tad, W.Va.
. _Hymn sing,
She
is survived by four
Dan Hayman and the Fonner
daughters,
Barbara Comer, CornCountry Hymn Timers will appear
ing, N.Y.; Helen Brown. Colum~.
at the Faith Temple Church on
S.C.; Carole Noonan, Orange Ctty,
Debby Drive in Gallipolis on New
Fla.; Lynn Swackhammer,JohnsvilYear's Eve from 7:30 p.m. to midle; three sons, John Scragg,
night. Pastor Joe Gwinn invites the
Radcliff;
Joseph
Scragg,
public.
Parkersbrug, W.Va.; and David
Scragg, Blepre; a sister, Irene
Offices closed
Henry, Daytona Beach, Fla.; 20
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
grandchildren aild several great
Ohio Patient Services offices will
be closed Thesday in observance of grandchildren.
Besides her parents she was
the ooliday season. Offices will
preceded ln dealh by her husband,
reopen on Jan. 2 at 8:~0 a.m.
Clyde Scragg 1n 1988, fo!ll' sisters
and five brothers.
WIC picltup dates
Graveside serVices will be
Pick-up dates for W.I.C. have
Thursday
at 1 p.m. at Miles
been announced by the Meigs
Cemetery in Rutland..
County Health DepartmenL Dates
Friends may call 111 Fisher
are Fnday from 9 to 11 a.m. and I
Funeral Home in Middleport on
to 3 p.m.; Jan. 3 and 4 from 9 to 11
Wednesday from 7 to 9 .p.m.
a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. Malee up days
are Jan. 7, 14 and 22 from 9 to 11
Stanford Stockton ·
a.m and 1 10 3 p.m.
Shot dates for January are Jan. 8
Stanford . Stockton, 83, 38146
and 22 from 9 to 11 a.m and 1 to 3 Hemlock Grove Road, died on
p.m.
Sunday 111 Arcadia Nursing Home
following a lengthy illness. He was
Thustees to meet
a retired Bedford Townshi~
The Bedford Township Trustees and a retired inspector
the
will hold their year-end meeting on Ohio Department ofTratls~(ln.
Monday, Dec. 31 Ill 1 p.m. Ill the
The son of Stacy Stockton and
town hall.
Blanche Birthissel, he was born Qo

Area events

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

the joy of

December 24, 1906.
LONDON (UP!) - The U.S.
Surviving are his y.oife, Alice
dollar opened mixed against
Holder Stoclcton, Hemlock Grove;
six daughters, Mildred Bernard of .European currencies Monday ,
with markets in some countries
Coolville; Rulli Carol Bernard,
already
shut down for the ChristStewart, Linda Watson, Canal
mas
break.
Wjncltester, Marilyn Manin, GalNews that the Soviet parlialipolis, Donna Stockton and Emes·
ment
had voted to support a new
tine Stockton, Dayton; and an aunt,
union
treaty made little impaci
Lena Baxter, Pomeroy; seven grand
on
the
markets, dealers said .
children and one great grantlcbild.
The
pound was slightly
·He was. preceded In death by•his
stronger
at the opening, at
parents, a daughter, Alice Louise, ·
$1
.
8855
from
$1. 8840 on Frldav.
and a grandson, Michael Bernard. .
The dollar opened lower In
He was affiliated with the HemZurich at 1.3080 Swiss franc s
lock Grove Christian Church, Hem·
lock Grove Grange, and Cbester F · from 1.3113 on Friday.
In Brussels, the U.S. currency
&amp;AMNo.453.
Funeral Services will be held on opened higher, at 31.74 Belgian
trancs against 31.54, ' and in
Thursday 111 1 p.m. Ill Hemlock
Milan, the dollar was also higher,
Grove Christian Church with Rev.
at 1,152.50 Italian lire from 1,140
.Charles Domigan officiating. Burilil
at Friday's close.
will he in Hemlock Grove
Markets were closed in FrankCemetuy.
Masonic Services will be held on
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Burial will be in Hemlock Grove
C(lllletery.
(Continued from Page 1)
Friends may call at lhe funeral
hoine from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m., and troops against chemical weapons
and said It had a "complete
Thursday from 9 a.m. Wllil 11 p.m.
spectrum" of countermeasures,
which he would not specify. to
launch against Iraq. He would
not answer questions about
Continued from Page 1
whether the U.S. forces would
would have increased labor costs use chemical or nuclear
by more than $10 million over the weapons.
life of the proposed agreemenL In
-He said the thOusands of U.S.
this situation, Ravenswood strongly citizens who live and work In fhe
questions the applicability of unEastern Province of Saudi Araemployment compensation," the bia, which Is closest to Kuwait
company said.
and Iraq, should not feet the need
Each uniQn member will receive to evacuate by Jan . 15: "My
a Check for more than $1,500 for perception Is that this is one of
benefits retroactive to Nov. 1.
the more carefully guarded pieUnion memben said getting un- ces Of territory in this part of the
employment compensation will
world," he said, referring to the
give them 'economic security for massive U.S. and allied troop
the first time since the dispute presence.
began.
-Cheney mourned the drown·
"It's a big renee," said union
lngs of 21 U.S. sailors whOse boat
member Franlc Ashworth. "I thinlc capsiZed as they were returning
it will belp us in our fight lJ811inst
this company."
"Santa Claus was awful nice 10
us," said union member Jim Williams.
·Ravenswood
manufactures
aluminum products for the airline,
automotive and food and beverage
•
·
industries.

furt and Paris for an earl~
Christmas break, and in Tokyo
they were shut lor the emperor's
birthday .
. Elsewhere in Asia, the dollar
climbed in Singapore, closing at
1.7450 Singapore dollars against
1. 7445 Friday .
In Hong Kong, the U.S. dollar
closed lower at 7.8050 Hong Kong
dollars againsi 7.8090.
Gold In Hong Kong closed
higher at $Jl!4.25 an ounce
against $382.85,
In Zurich, gold opened lower at
$383 an ounce from $384, and in
London gold &lt;;~pened higher at
$384.25 an ounce, against $383.50.
Silver in Zurich opened lower
at $4.10 an ounce !rom $4.1750 on
Friday . In LOndon. silver opened
lower at $4.15 an ounce from
$4.16.

RAC officials

·Noel!
Cheers!
Happy Holidtlgs!
Merry CluistmtJs!
Season's GreeUngs!
. .
Glad Tidings To You!

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
SXIURDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
SA'ruRDAY DISCHARGES

Geo-ge Warner.

·. SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Goldie Lawson, Portland; Toni Cheek,
Gahanna; James M. Dawson, ·

Gahanna.

SUNDAY
Done.

DISCHARGES · -

No matter how you say it, we hope a great holiday
·
is in the cards!

MEIGS COUNTY LinER CO

2nd set·· of prints!

to oil

M!ly peace and joy.fill your heart and home.

RI.DENOUR SUPPLY
CHESTER

A'F

'From The Employees And Management Of

Carolina Lumber
&amp;: Supply Company
812 8th street

676-1160

Point Pleasant

Sto_re Houri!: Monday-Friday, 8 am-5. pm; Satur~ay. 8 am- 12 noon

CHAPMA.N SHOES

STARTS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26 AT 8 A.M.
WOMEN'S

MEN'S

Sport
Casual
Dress
Naturalizel'
Connie
Footworks
Soft Spots
Nike ·
Reebok

Dress
Casual .
Tennis

Reebok
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llANDBAGS

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DRESS - CASUAL - TENNIS
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SAU STAllS
WED.SDAY

DEC. 26 AT 8 A.M.
.

.

CHAPMAN SHOES
POIIIIOY'S QIAII11 SHOI ROll
.I

-

I
'

l

l
••

to the USS Saratoga from shQre
leave i.n Halla, Israel. "The
accident involving ¢rew
members off the Saratoga Is
obviously a great tragedy,"
Cheney said. I suppose you could
say that . it was related to .
Operation Desert Shield. The
Saratoga's been deployed In the
Mediterranean. It's a different
area of operations ... but that
really doesn' t matter to the
young men whose lives were lost
or their families. "

your days be blessed wilt
happiness. Thank~

I

Defense chief reaffll"lllS -·

your hearts and lives. and a ll

1 GIOIP OF .

·PGIIDDY

Dollar earns ntixed ranking .

'

Christmas beam through

r.

IEWIBAIY
111•1 SHOP

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

.Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Mubarak: war getting likely

How we party
By United Press International
. Putting in eight hours a day at
the office does not-mean women
cannot find the time to throw a
party, a survey says, and with ·
.' the upcoming holidays, more
.working women will be hostess·ing right along with full- time
homemakers.
:; Women who work full-time
outside the home are as likely to
:entertain at least as frequently
'is women who work at home,
4ays "The Dixie Survey of Party
~nds," a study conducted on
'l)ehalt of Dixie Products.
:• More full-time working women
i'han homemakers (31percentvs.
~6 percent) said they were
;~ntertalning more today than
~lve years ago, the survey said,
and at least as many working
*omen as homemakers said they
currently entertain two to three
times a month.
, The survey, conducted . by
;Research &amp; Forecasts · Inc.,
'poRed 1,007 individuals ages 18-80
lon their attitudes and beliefs
•about parties, and foWid that
:people are looking for .more
:tnttmate settings for their home
·entertaining.
,
: Small gatherings are pre'ferred by 81 percent of thoSj!
!polled over large parties, indlcat:lng that thts trend makes it easier
·for both working women and
:full-time homemakers to ·
:entertain.
; Of those polled, 46 percent
U"eported they are entertaining
'more casually than they did five
!years ago, whlle 5 percent said
:their entertaining leans to more
lonna! affairs.
: Fictors cited by those sur•veyed on the casualness of
:parties were the type of people
:Invited (38 percent), the type of
dress (37 percent) and the '
lpresence of children (30
:percent) .
·
' When asked, "'How often do
:you use paper or plastic cups and
plates when you entertain at
tJome? ," 70 percent of the work:lngwomensaid '"mostorsomeof
~he time" compared with 58
percent of the homemakers

Monday, December 24. 1990

Get a 2nd
set of 3" or
4" prints
FREE with
any roll
developed.
C-41 process
for 110, 126,
disc or 35mm
full frame color
print film. Write
"2nd set FREE"
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Expires 12/29/90

I
I
I

�.Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Mondlv. Decemt.. 24. 1990

Monday. December 24, 1990 .

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Deadly
drug ring
operator
gets Uje

Deg•ee prograni produces new breed of toy makers
By TERENCE FINAN
United Press International
• Some children may still think ·
elves are behind the production
of Chrlsttnas toys, but today·•s toy
maker Is more likely to be
hunched over a drafting table
Instead of a work bench and
equipped with an education ihat
Includes knowledge In subjects
ranging froin computer-aided
design to psychology.
• The U.S. toy manufacturing
busl.ness Is not child's play: it
employs some 50,000 people at
more than 250 companies nationwide. Between 5,000 and 6,000
new toy products are expected to
crowd the shelves this year,
competing with more than
150,000 different kinds of toys for
a piece of the industry's '~12.5
billion In annual retail-sales.
. More and more, toy companies
need designers in this competi-

'

tlve atmosphere who can create
toys spanning that market, from.
"hot" Items like Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles to classics that find
new buyers with each generation, such as Yo-Yos or Legos.
To meet this need, the Fashion
Institute of Technology In New
York, one ofthecountry's largest
design schools, has added a new
degree program In toy design.
The program's two-year curriculum shows that toy making has
long way from Santa's .
come
workshop.
Students are required to have
at least an assocla te-level degree
In art or design to apply. Once
accepted, they must develop
rendering skills for three. dimensional toys; study materials and methods used to manu·
facture both plastic and
non-plastic toys; master safety
regulations; and understand ad·

they (the children) are not going . a·dvertlslng and promotion. But
.we also brlngconsumergroups In
to Interact."
Although Ellis said no particu- to speak. We expose them to the
lar design philosophy Is pushed realities of ll!e," EIUs said.
"What we are really .trying to
on students, her personal belief Is
that "less Is more.''
· 'do Is to understand what Is bQth
"If you have a eoncept that Is wanted and needed. The toy
really excellent and understand Industry Is really market driven,
what play Is about, you don't so It Is Important not only to
need to jazz It UP,, unless It's an provide what Is wanted, but what
addition to some' basic concept, Is needed."
like new clothes for ll Barbie
· ·doll," she said.
Although reluctant to directly
attack the often crass commercialization of toys -with movies
ahd television cartoons produced
simply to selllterris - Ellis ~aid
MIDDLEPORT
the school tries to keep students
f!)Cused on the creatlve aspects of
FLOWER
toy making . .
SHOP
"We want them to see that
there Is something to creating
toys that are not dependent on
commercials - toys that child·
ren can play with for extended
periods ofllmewlthoutbecomlng
bQred.'' she said. "A toy should
have a life. It shouldn't be played
witli for five minutes and then
Jorgotten."
Yet the school also recognizes
It has "to be respol)slble with our
students," Ellis said .
"Since advertising Is part of
the Industry, we have a ·co~rse In

vertlslng, promotion and other
aspects of the business.
Department Chairwoman
Judy· Ellis said the school's
requirements reflect the demands and responsibilities toy
designers face.

a

Merry Christmas
To All Of You!

A visit from St. Nick

We're proud to be of service
• throughout tht• year.

10

ntnn

't980s.

Me,g Ch,litm••
To All 01 You//
EBER'S GULF
949-9200

Jogous TUJings

. ·, .

MERRY
CHRIST:MAS

the spirit r

all the delights /hal this holiday brings. You've bem1 !il
_a delight to know and serve. Thanks, friends.

l:clieritm·rP

you

ROGAN
1\.RN ER ..

SUGAR RUN MILLS

NC! " "'

Insurance Services

MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY
'

992-6687

214 EAST MAIN

NEW YORK (UP!} - A
llrooklyn man was convicted
·~unctay of running a murderous
rnultlplllllon-doUar drug opera.Uon that dominated the bQ•
rough's heroin market In the late

POMEROY, OHIO

·• Ricardo Melendez, 28, faces a
· mandatory ll!e sentence for his
conviction In U.S. District Court
;In Brooklyn, said AsSistant U.S.
'Attorney Peter Ginsberg: ·
• After deliberating for six days,
't he jury acquitted only one of
·Melendez's eight co-defendants
·rn the wi_de-ranglng conspiracy
case.
• Melendez was . convicted of
drug conspiracy, six counts of
.money laundering, 'a nd of violatIng the Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act.
His second-In-command, · Manuel Concepcion. was convicted
of two murder counts, drug
conspiracy, ltldnapping, RICO
and several money laundering
counts.
, AuthOrl\leS said the Melendez
organization dominated the borough's heroin market In the late
19!Kls, racking up sales of $8 to $10
million a month.
The Melendez gang was directly linked to five drug-related
murders and numerous kidnappings. shootings, stabbings and
beatings.
Melendez was arrested In 1985
but jumped ball and vanished the
night before his trial was to
begin. He was convicted In
absentia and sentenced to 25
years to life In prison. but
continued to run the drug ring as
a ·fugitive until his arrest In
September· 1988, prosecutors
said,
Law enforcement authorities
said they confiscated $2.38 inlllton In cash and $50,000 worth of
jewelry from Melendez's Queens
home.
The ' drug distribution ring,
which prosecutors say got heroin
from a supplier In Chinatown and
cocaine from the Call, Colombia,
drug cartel, was broken with the
arrests last year of 38 highranking gang members and
associates.
'•' Ginsberg said Melendez would
likely be sentenced In two
months.

Pomeroy-:Middleport. Ohio

•

W~ter's · icy

---

grip may .promise white Christmas

By United Press International
four - 30 below below In Delta,
Cold air stung most of the
Utah, 18 below In Wendover,
United States Sunday, numbing
Utah, 16 below In Tooele, Utah,
the Midwest and the Rocky
and 13 degrees In Red Bluff,
Mountains and threatening. to
Calif.. · the National Weather
snarl holiday travel, while . Service said.
spring-like weather warmed the
Meadow Lake, Idaho, was the
Atlantic Seaboard two days benation 's cold spot at 55 degrees
fore Christmas.
below zero.
The massive cold front that has
Wind chills dipped to 28 below
slowly crept over the nation with zero In Illinois apd up to 61nches
the advent. of winter pressed of snow blanketed the central
farther east•. forcing tempera- part of the state, with smaller
tures down as much as 40degrees amounts to the south.
and promising a chilly- perhaps
Chicago was 8 degrees at 11
even white - yuletide.
a.m. -onltswaytoahighofonly
• Record cold chilled 47 cities 11. Weather fQrecaster Steve
and it was the coldest day ever In Kahn said his children called him

to Say they had four tickets to the
Chicago Bears football game
that they weren't planning to use.
"They're too smart to use
them, " he sa.ld .
· .
At least one weather-related
death was reported In Illinois.
Pollee said a 30-year-old alco·
hollc was found frozen lying dead
In a parkway Sunday morning
just a block from his home. The
man had been released 'from a
hospital Sa~urday, where pollee
said he had been treated for
setzilres.
.
In Texas, about a dozen
weather-related traltlc deaths

were reported. Authorities said
most of the weekend accidents
were caused by slippery highways and poor vlslblllty . ,
Dozens of streets, highways,
and freeways In Houston· and
Galveston were closed by auth~or­
lties because freezing drizzle and
Ice were making them too
dangerous to drive on.
In Baytown, Texas, a tank
truck skidded on Icy Interstate
10, spUllng 10,000 gallons of
hydrocholorlc acid solution and
closing the road for eight hours
until crews cleaned up the mess.
The driver suffered only rplnor

Violence could nix ·u.s. aid to Soviets
'

.

.

By JANET BASS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
American officials said no U.S.
aid should be sent to the financially alllng, politically unstable
Soviet Union If blood Is shed In a
possible crackdown.
The views come as the chair·
man of the KGB, Vladimir
Kryuchkov, accused the ·the CIA
and other western Intelligence
agencies of engineering a collapse of the Soviet Union. And he
warne·d Soviets to "accept the
possibility of bloodshed" to restore order in the Increasingly
rebelllous republics .
And, In a stunning blow to
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's tortuously _difficult road ·
tuward reforin, Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
resigned, saying he could not be a
part of an administration veering
toward dictatorship.
On NBC's Meet the Press,
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell, D-Malne, said Congress should nix any flnanciat'aid
to· the Soviet Union If It regresses
to Its Cold War mentality and
uses force to achieve its desired
ends.
.,
"I think we ought to have
substantial aid unless and until a
crackdown occurs. If It does ...
then we surely should not be
providing aid at that time,"
Mitchell said Sunday.
"I think the signs coming out of
there are ominous In the last few
days. The possibility (of a
crackdown) are Increasing. But I
don't think we should be providIng any form of . assistance If
there Is a · crackdown and a
recurrence . to au thorltatlve
rule," Mitchell said.
Zblgnlew Brzezinski, former
national security adviser to Pres-

~

!dent Jimmy Carter, agreed It
would be "dlltlcult to jU:stlfy"
U.S. economic aid to the financially troubled Soviet Union If a.
move toward dictatorship results
In bloodshed.
.
'''What I would like the West to
do Is provide a lot of aid to the
local governments, to .the national republics and to Gorba·
chev - a lot of ~ld so there Is an
Incentive In the Soviet Union In
having a relationship with the
West," Brzezinski said, "but
make It clear at ihe same time
that If there's bloodshed, If
there's a crackdown, there would
·
be no ald."
He predicted the republics of
Moldavia and Georgia may be
the first victims If the Kremlin
uses force to bring a bout political

.

stab11lty lti the · Independenceminded republics.
Speaking from Moscow on
ABC's This Week with David
Brinkley, Georgi Arliatov , a
deputy In the Soviet Congress of
,People's Deputies. did not rule
out the possibility of civil war In
his countrY.
,
"I hope It will never come to
It," he said. But noting growing
ethnic unrest, he said, ''When It
comes to violence,. the mllltartes
have to be used to end the
viole~ce, to prevent the violence.
... There is some yearning for Jaw
and order, more for order than
for law. This has · to be ·
understood.''
He seemed to echo Kryuchkov's contention that Western
Intelligence ·ts In some way

aiding the rebelling republics.
· "I wouldn't like the United
States to help (the republics),"
Arbatov said.. "I'm sure the
United States 9oesn't plan it. But
I think when KryUchkov complalils about some misdeeds of
American special services, coverup operations, etc., there
·must have· been some facts."

500/o
LOVID

erry Christmas To Our
Customers And Friends
Hope your season is filled wltb joy!

m

Joyous Noel

Injuries.
Homeless shelters throughout
Texas were packed as the needy
tried to survive the frigid air, In
Dallas, pqllce combed the streets
In search of homeless people
needing shelter. About 2,000 out
of a homeless population esti·
mated at more than 5,000 stayed
In heated shelters, while others
chose to bear the cold outside
under blankets or near makeshift
fires.
The frigid weather hadn't yet
reached the Atlantic Sunday as
36 cities set record highs for the
day. Records Included readings
of 73 degrees In Atlanta. n In
Washington, D.C., 66 In New
York and 67 In Boston. '
The unseasonable weather
wasn't forever. though, and the
cold front was expected to press
Into those areas Monday, with
' highs falling Into the 40s- a drop
of as much as 30degreeslnaday,
the NWS said.
'
Florida, not surprisingly, was
an exception. Miami was enjoyIng readings of 80 mid-Sunday,
and more of the same was
forecast for the day before :
Chrlsttnas.

• Selected Trim-A-Home Items
•
• Selected Trim-A·Tree Items
• All Christmas gift wr11p, tags, ribbons and bow$
• Selected boys action figures, dolls and plush toys
• All Christmas jewelry
• Selected novelty Christmas candles
• Selected Christmas novelty items
• All Christmas tin boxes
• Selected giftware
• Selected Christmas k~chen towels
Hundreds of Christmas items at half price. But its not a sale.
• Selected Christmas pol holders
Its a clearance, and when these goods are gone, theyte gone for good.
• Selected Cht:istmas placemats
• Selected Christmas tablecloths •
Don, miss out on the savings at the half price Christmas Clearance.
• All Christmas socks
Due to the nature of a clearance, items may vary by store.
• Selected Christmas pantyhose and knee highs
• Selected Christmas cookies, candies and jellies
• All cheese and jelly gift sets
• All.Christmas cookies, candies and jellies
• All cheese and jelly gift sets
• All Christmas candy canes
• All Christmas aprons
• All Christmas sleep shirts
• All Christmas pajamas
• .All C~ristmas sweatshirts
• Selected Christmas turtleneck knit tops
• All girls 416X and 7114 vel'19t dresses
• All infants and toddlers velvet dresses
• All infants and toddlers velvet slack sets
• All mens Christmas fleece tops
• All boys Christmas fleece tops
.
• All girls and toddlers Christmas sleepwear
• All infants, to&lt;ldlers and girls Christmas tights
• All girls Christmas fleece tops and fleece.sets

... .L . . .

-:~c

The Daily Sentinei-PIIga 9

,.

May the light of His love shine upon you this
Christmas season.
Our best wishes are with you.

ALREADY
ES

We're the Store For
Great Family Values

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 West Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Open New ~ar's Eve 9:30AM to &amp;PM ..
Open New ~ar's Day Noon· SPM

992-5432

IviSA I

DIJCeVER

Lind~

Lambert, Dave Harrjs,
Mar~aret Lehew, Brian Billings,
Brian .Reed, Julie Di_llon,
Mike Jenkins, Charlene Hoeflich,
Laura Brewe~

..
Nobody 81crls Hll/11
• .. _..., loclle«:; 111"~ cu111111
..UIJIIII. -~~~~~~- ~ limtiiJ ~rlllgln tfteifld.
DMio . . . . _ _ ... ,~1-llgeoll

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The Daily Sentinel
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.
. Mondav:oecember 24. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. December 24, 1990

I

UPI news around the world update
• United Press lnteraatlonal
DAMMAM, Saudi Arabia Defense Secretary Dick Cheney,
seeking to dispel appearances of
disunity In the Bush administration. echoed the president by
as.sertlng AmeriCa was capable
of s triking ·'today'' to drive Iraq
from Kuwait. Cheney headed ·
back to Washington to brief
.President Bush on his trip.
Sailors
HAIFA, Israel aboard the USS Saratoga offered
a 21-gun salute and tossed. a
• wreath into the sea in tribute to
their 21 m'ates who drowned In a
ferry accident within sight of the
aircraft carrier. 1n another accl'dent, two men from the carrier
Midway were kllled and five
injured when a vehicle taking
them on an of!-road tour of the

Thanks "fur" getting to kriow us!

Santa Claus Is
.Co~gTo Town!

~

Ashland®
~

BOB MYERS ASHLAND

Santa knows the greaiest gifts are peact•
and love. May your heart
· be blessed with botlt.

St. Rt. 124, Pomaroy, OH.
992-5111

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

.

'

.

Holiday Greetings
We thank you all for the gift of your friendship and trust.

MERRY CHRISTMAg snd
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
From All Of Us
Dr. James Conde, Rhonda &amp; Family .
Nita, Brian, Jan, Donna, Gene
Our wish for you and your family
is a world filled with Jove.

' Mq1g Lu 8, Lionel,
Linda, Beffg, Nola and Jtnef ·

OWNER-AL CONARD
KERH KINZEL
MARSHAL DEAL
nM CONARD
EVELYN ROUSH
STEVE STANLEY
DANNY GIUISPIE
/ RIC:HAIID BAILEY

POINT MASON AUTO GLASS
304·773-571 0

THE "T"

IN

Many
Thanks For
Your
.Patronagei,
and A Merry
Christmas

Merry Christmas
To all our friends-on the farm and in town we wish a holiday season filled with His peace and love.

To All!

700 NORTH SECOND

· Meigs County's Only Full Line
Authorized Purina Chow Dealer.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MOSCOW - Eduard Shevardnadze' s fears he was to be the
latest vtctiiJt of President Mlk·
hall Gorbachev's politics may
have affected his decision to
resign as foreign minister, lawmakers and Soviet journalists
say. Shevardnadze's feelings are

so 'strong he most likely will ·
never take another job under
Gorbachev.
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - Four·
teen government soldiers and
three clviUan women were killed
Monday when Tamil rebels detonated a land mine beneath a
mUitary truck that was taking
sick troo!is for treatment at a
hospital. Another five soldiers
were critically wounded.

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Natali
of Gov. Richard Celeste's decl·
slons to commute the sentences
of 25 women convicted of violent
felonies committed during domestic disputes Is being greeted
with appreciation.
Medina lawyer John Porter,
who as an assistant Cuyahoga
Co11nty prosecutor helped convict Asya Cole In the April3, 1985,
killing of CQie's boyfriend, Kenneth Moore, said he cOuld recall
SOWETO, South Africa - - no evidence of Cole being a
Black leader Nelson Mandel&lt;&gt;-. battered w,oman.
preparing .to celebrate his first
. "I thought It was· a real
Christmas In almost 30 years as a cold-blooded, premeditated kllfree man, called on the black ling, and I think, had she been.
majority to vow never to spend charged with murder, she would
another Christmas In chains. have been convicted ot murder,"
''The South Africa so many have Porter said.
sacrificed so much to achieve Is
Celeste on Friday commuted
within sight," Mandela said.
the .sentences of 25 women,
Included 10 convicted murder·

ers, serving time for violent
felonies committed during domestic disputes.
Celeste said he ordered the
women released because he
found evidence they were ·victims of "battered woman syndrome" which caused them to
lash out In sell-defense at their
husbands, lovers or companions .

early January.
In €ole's case. theAdultParole
Authority opposed clemency by a
5-2 vote, but Celeste ruled
otherwise.
"Gov. Celeste Is a godsend. He
really is," Cole said. "I didn't
want to dle In prison. I wanted to
come home. I'm so happy to be
here."

The governor reviewed 105
cases and dented 48 requests lor
clemency. He sent 32 others back
to the·Ohio Adult Parole AuthorIty .for further review In hopes
additional evidence would produce a recommendation lor
commutation. Gov.-elect George
Volnovich will have to deal with
those cases, he said.
Another 10 or 11 cases are still
under Celeste's review, and
decisions will be announced In

Cole, 38, plans to move In with
her aunt in Cleveland. She was
released Friday.
"It's just starting to hit me that
I'm free; that I don't have to .go
back," Cole said Sunday. "Right
now I'm scared to be around lot
of people. but I'm excited to be
back With my children and to get
my Hie back."
She was serving a 10-to25-yeat
prison sentence.

''MERRY CHRISTMAS!''

MIDDLEPORT

DAIRY992-3322
QUEEN

WASHINGTON - American
officials said no U.S. aid should
be sent to the financially alllng,
politically unstable Soviet Union
If blood Is shed in a possible
crackdown. The views come as
the head of the KGB accused the
the CIA and other Western
intelligence agencies of eng!·
neerlng a coUapse of the Soviet
Union.

Some of Governor's decisions drawing criticism

FARMERS BANK WISHES
ALL AREA
,
.MEN AND WOMEN SERVING-IN THE
ARMED FORCES OVERSEAS .AND ·THEIR
••
FAMILIES

to the Best Neighbors in the World

ON

United Arab · Emirates overturned.

~

11
11

11
11

i R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO•. ~
·t

~

: 399 WEST

M~IN

992-2164

CARL E. ALLENSWORTH
SHANNON T. AULT
BRIAN BALLARD
ROYCE A. BISSELL
DAVID CARLETON
KENNY COOKE
PHILLIP G. COOKE
PAUL DAILEY
JERRY ALLEN DERENBERGER
BRin DODSON .
TIM .DURHAM
WALTER G. FRANCE
BENJAMIN S. GEYER
STEVEN E•. GRADY
LAYNE GRAY
MARK GRIFFIN
HANS HANSON
ROBERT W. HARRISON
DAVID HAWTHORNE

PATRICK R. PARSONS
EDWARD E. PAnERSON
JERRY S. RANSON
JACK PEA~LY
JOE .RIFE
JEFFERY D. SAUNDERS
FREDERICK J. SMITH JR.
ROBERT L. SMITH
VAUGHAN SPENCER
ROBERT STAATS
ELTON M. STEEL
GAIL E. ST. CLAIR
. STEVE TURKOVICH
CHARLES A. WEDDLE
THOMAS G. WOLFE
MIKE WOODELL
TROY D. YOUNG
BILL ZEIDLER
JAMES B. ZINK ·

KENNETH HAYES .
MARY HAYES
JESSE HOWARD
. WESLEY J. HOWARD
TONY HURLOW ..
JERRY JACKS
KEVIN L. JAMES
CURTIS JONES
JIM KELLER
DALE A. KING
TIMOTHY T. KLEIN
HARRY R. LYONS JR.
FRANK A. MARTIN
MANUEL MARTINEZ JR.
SCOTT MILLER
· JONATHAN MILLER
PAUL L. MULLINS
GREGORY A. MURRAY
MARK F. NORMAN

11

POMEROY, OHIO

Y1

~---------~-------------"The Stockings Were Hung
by the Chim~ey With Care..!'

THIS LIST COMPILED AS OF TUESDAY, NOVEMBER

Your BankPt~... .
Fs Farmers
t

••• d

992·2136
221 WEST SECOND

POMEROY, OHIO
For all the world to share,
simple joys of a country Christmas.
Thanks, friends, for !lOUr kind aupPort.

DOWNING, CHILDS,

NORRIS NORTHUP
DODGE-CHIYSLEI-PLYMOITH

MUL~,~~~~d~t~SER
HZ-3381

Your partner in protection

27,

WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY NAMES THAT MAY HAVE BEEN OMITTED.

A little extra CBJ'C is a)ways a good idea
around potentially hazardous .holiday fireplaces, candles and decorations.
, '' '
So please~ c~ful! Happy Holidays from :,
your Grange Insurance agent.

•

11

The Daily Sentinai-Piga

Bank
MEMBER FDIC

985-3385
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO .

1990.

a

�Monday. Decembet 24. ~990

...... 12-lhe Dtlily Sentinel

Merry .Christmas To All

•••

Mandat. Decllmbel 24, 1990

,

PomaG¥-Middlepart, Ohio

temperarure
is the key
.

The Daily Sentinei- Paqe-13

H olida!JJ alleroies
beoin
·
0

f~~~~:~ ::::r~~o~~e-=-~:~ ::a~~~r~a.

destroys Salmonella
should dlacard tbem.
- Cook eggs thoroughly untli •
"J
0
place the serving dishes on Ice, or
Some recent outbreaks of food·
both tbe yolk and white are firm,
By United Press lnteraalloqal
refrigerate these prepared foods bornelllnesswerecausedbyraw
not runny, In ordfi!r to kUI any
In containers that can be brought eggs that were contaminated
bacteria that may be present.
CHICAGO (UPI) - Hours of
to the table for serving. You can with Salmonella enteritidis bac·
There may be some rtsk In eating
shopping,
cooking and decorat·
use small serving dishes and terla. Scientists sttongly suspect eggs that are lightly cooked, such
lng
may
lead
some people to
replace often to keep foods cold that Salmonella bacteria can go as soft-cooked, soft-scrambled.•
proclaim,
jokingly,
that they are
as much as possible.
from infected laying hens df. ·or sunny·slde-up.
sick
of
the
holidays,
but orte
Alter the meal, hot food leftov· reetly Into the interior oftheeggs
- Realize that eating lightly
doctor
says
complaints
of holt·
ers need to be cooled quickly. before the shells are . formed.. cooked foods containing eggs,
day
allergies
are
nothing
to
·Cool large quantities by placing While the scientists work to find su~b as soft custards, meringues,
sneeze
at
.
the pan In Ice water and stirring solutions, the U.S. Department of ~nd french toast may also be
Runny nose. Itchy eyes, cough·
the food periodically. Ice water Is · Agriculture offers the following risky to people l~t blgb·rlsk
lng,
and tightness In
20 times better than cold air tor
egg. handling safety Ups:
groups. These include the very the .cwheezing
hest
are
all commori at
reducing food · temperature.
- Avoid eating raw eggs and youilg, the elderly. pregnant
Christmas
among
people with
Transfer small amounts of lef· foods containing raw eggs... for women because of risk to the
lover food to shallow pans and example, home-made Caesar · baby, and people already wea· · allergies, and It's not just a
store lilicovered·ln the retrlgera· salad, egg nog and Hollandaise. kened by serious
or whose . coincidence, said Dr. Mary
Tobin, chief of Loyola Universi·
tor. Cover the food after It bas sauce. The commercial formS of Immune systems are weakened.
ty's section of allergy and
cooled to 40 degrees F.
these products are safe to serve Happy, Healthy Holidays.
Immunology.
If either the bot or cold foods since they are made with pasteu·
have been at room temperature rlzed eggs. Commerchll oasteur·
'

'

By Cindy S. Oliveri
Coualy E:deaalon Agelit,
• Rome Eeonomlce and 4-H

&amp;Good
toYournolf j
ThiR
J
ChriRtmagl

"The 'Christmas di.To ratlon •
syndrome' occurs wh!'ll people
take out their holld av decora·
ttons. bring in the trec• ,tnd roast
chestnuts on the OP"'Il fi re,"
Tobin said.
All these joyous acti vities .. :
Include cond itions that Wi ll often • ,
set off allergic rea ctions. and ,
holiday stress and loss ,,f sleep ;,
can aggravate the sit uation, she '.
said.
•r
""':
"A natural tree carrl&lt;·s a lot of
dust and mold, and the•' ontlnual •
watering p romo tr· ' mold ·~
growth," she said.
:The answer, Tobin s&lt;~id , is to ~.
put up an artificial tr~ c
...,

Christmas Day and New Year's are just around the corner.
This week's focus Is healiby tips
for serving buffets and holiday
dishes with eggs.
'T emperature Is a key word to
remember as you prepare and
serve tl)at special buffet meal to
· family and friends. Bacteria that
c•use food poisoning .Reed the
right combination of time and
temperature to grow. Because
these bacterl.a grow best In
lukewarm foods, the basic rule
Is: keep bot foods bot and cold
foods cold. Never let these foods
stllnd at room temperature for
mpre than two hours :
·" Hot" means above 140 de· r-----~~----------:---:----------'---------:---'---:·
grees F. Keep protein foods such
as seafood, poultry, and cooked
meats hot by using an electric bot ;
tray or chafing dish. Small ·
warming units may not keep hot ·
foods hot enough. Another option
Is to keep the serving dish small
arid replace as needed with fresh
food kept hot on the stove or In the

Warm wishes
for a truly
grand
Christmas!

Illness

992-3$16
POMDOY, OHIO

oVen.

~ ·Cold"

means below 40 de· ·
grees F. Foods needing this
temperatures during storage and
serving include cream pies,
seafood salads, and many other
dishes. made with eggs, fish,
meat, or poultry. If possible,

Video
Views
By JEFF HILLEARY
This monib, in ibe continuing ef·
fort 10 find ibe perfect movie that is
not only fun but also is paten!}y in·
offensive 10 everyone, which is a
lot harder than you might think, I
might have found at least one ibat
comes close.
•·
If you hate Cats and Dogs than I
might suggest that you clo~ YOI!f
eyes until I am through wtth ibts
review, I promise I'll tell you when
10 open ibem again.
·
MILO AND OTIS is one of
those films that yo\1 are .eiiber going ·
to like or you are gomg to hate.
You·· n eiiber like ihe cuteness or be
·sickened by it. ThiS film is one ·of
those dreaded Cute Animal Movies
or in the parlance a .CAM. But that
aside, this is a ·funny, fast movmg
stoty that is wann and wiuy and.
has one of the beSt story lines since
the.old Walt Disney True Life Ad·
ventures. In effect, it tells the srory
of Milo, a yellow ti~er striped kit·
ten and his friend Ous, a pug·nosed
pup, who gets into a series of
misadvenwres ibat leave you
laughing and crying il) joy 81 the
way it all ends. I would tell You ·
about it, but seeing how ·I feel lazy,
I'm !1Q1 going 10, so ibere.. You're
just going to have to go see '.t. Trust
me you 'II ibank me for malting you
work at this.

"'-.~ .

,...

arid has no objectjonable Jllll!S· .
Now, as promised those (\f you
wlio closed your eyes can open
them now. Maybe I ought to teU
you someibing more about MILO

Among the services provided by Burlile Oil are
delivery offuel oil, gasolines, diesel fuel, motor oils,
kerosene, racing gas, and LP gas for residential
and commercial customers.

gd.
kid
Seen TOTAL RECALL yet, •
dies? If you like special e~ects, rm
sate you li)ted it: If you like acttng,
wily did you bother? For enter·
talnment ibis film is great but
otlierWise it is just one very long
.ial
effects catalog.
.
1
1bis movie is about Doug Qurud,
played wiib professional vacu!ty
QOOk lha1 up on your own, I m
being lazy, remember) by Arnold
Schwarzenegger, who has dreams .
about being on Mars. He makes a
trip to Rdcall, Incorporated .and
decideS to have the memories of a
spy on Mars fed into his brain 10
take a little vacalion and sudden~y
finds that his friepds .1!1111 even hts
wife are out 10 ldll him and that he
is actually a spy named ~ ~ho
uncovered some secret. alien ~
on Mars. Confused? B~ed'l DOn t
blame me, I just review ihtm, I
don't write them.
.
This movie had so many tnte and
hackneyed plot devices that almost
was teinpred 10 get back 81 ~
sCrlptwriias by making the!ll Stt
through · ibis thing but the Geneva
COnventton wOUktn 'I let me.
, This film ih!lllld be packaged
and seM pos~ due 10 Saddam
MUSlin. aGy, he d ..U us Mriously,
if. we coald be so ciuoL
"
.TOTAL RBCALL is rared "R
f&lt;l" s"MIIrinl and violenc:e and
s!louJcl be viewed only by
me'IIX'N•s. I'm sciry, but TOTAL
RJiC41 J lhould be totally recalled
8lld folgoaon.
.
'1b
:
''MILO~ OTIS is a must •
movie about a mlsl:hlevous kitten
llldapup.
.
"TOI'AL RECAll., however, IS .
for these die bani Amokr
Sc:liwan:lleJ8e fans Mel lbOUid be
awicled by OYeeyOIIC e1Jo.
Undl • t mQ!IIh, be kind IIIII

GOES A LONG WAY!
Best Holiday Wishes
frQm the Management
and S.t aff of
· McDonald's®
in Pomeroy ,

tJI WIST . . . Sl&amp;i

,.

That firm is Burlile Oil Co., Inc.

ANDOTIS...
.
Sorry, I couldn't resist. I plead
the Christmas spirit.
I have been told by some people
that I am at my best when I am at·
tal:king some helpless movJe so to
meet the nUJ11Crous requests for the
legendaiy HiUeary venom, here we

LIITLE GOOD CHEER

•'.

ate many altematives to natural gas and
Fuel oil, .coa.l, kerosene, to name some of the most .
· co"mmon. Of course, to heat comfortably· with these
fuels, you need to know a competent distributor
who can be depended upon to provide you with
. p7ompt deliveries and first quality products.
Such a firm is available~·to se.rve businesses and
residences in thiS and su"ounding areas.

MILO AND OTIS is rated "G"

Burlile Oil Co., Inc. would like to take this
opportunity to wish everyone a very
Happy Holiday Season!
I

•

nrlile Oil

Co.~

'·

Jet. Rt. ,7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis, Ohio
'
Phone (614) 446-4119 :

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�tt.ga 14-The Daily Seuti1.al

Pomiroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Beat of

By

Bob
Hoeflich

the Bend..

UBveling ibout aeeing rclalives.
However, now they are at the home
of bis pnnts, Janet and Carl Morris in tbc Rutland area and will be
there uruil J111. 11. John would love
10 see his friends from bis days at
Meigs High and you're invited to
visit the Maris home at anytime
while John is there 10 renew old

~~~~----~~--------~--~------~----~
memori~.
true tli0u$h her recent gradualion
by BOB HOEFLICH
While I'm not exactly a "bab

froin

Ohio University. Sharon
humbug" pcr11011, don't loot to me graduated just from the university
this late hour before the holiday for . receiving her bachelor's degree
a bunch of ho ho's.
. with a double maj« - p\ano and
The holiday season has been h~­ voice. She has been worldng pantic - I'm sure many of you will time at the offices of AUOI'fley Beragree to that. Whalever happened nard Fultz while auending O.U.
to the "simple life" - you know, and even at that graduated summa
when the best things· in life were cum laude with a 3.8 grade point
free? We've managed 10 make the avetage • that's out of 4 points • for
Christmas season one heclruva busy the four year period. She was

- arid expensive - time. We bring
most of 11 on .ourselves as we cut

out our schedules during the weeks
before the holiday - and does the
entire ·siwation create stress - your
durned right, it does. Would we settle for less? Probably not.
At any rate, by now it's almost
time f&lt;l' the children to be nestled
all snug in their beds with visions
of mulant ninja turtles, remote controlled toys, and space gadgets
dancing in their heads. Whatever
happened 10 sugar plums? You
should be able at this point in time
to give yowself a pat on the back.
What with the help of the plastic
and giving up a few things - like
food and utilities - you've done

named to the National Honor
Society. Phi Kappa Lampda. the
university's honor group for music
Jllajors.
Sharon's Dad, the late Frank
Wilson, would have been so proud.
1t was also a dream of his that
Sharon get her college education,
Meantime, Sharon's husDand,
George, and her mother, Kate Wil. son.· must really be bursting at the
seams, in recogn\tion of the accomplishment
·
Sharon is continuing pan-time
employment' in the Fultz offices
where she has been since 1985.

wen.

As if the season itself isn't hectic
enough, this year we'ye been bugged with Oooding - thank heavens,
so far, it got cut off at the pass. Do
relax while you can because
Jilnuary is coming up. Not only will
you be getting the Christmas bills
which are generallY. more than you
anticipated, but we have that Persian Gulf thing going - and that will
affect all of us. January is traditionally known as a month of
depression - in 1991 it's almost
guaranteed to be a real dandy.
And all this from the person
who, for the past 364 days, has urged you to "keep smiling". It's still
a good idea - hope you can at least
manage a little grin.

Capt and Mrs. John Morris and
daughter, Michelle, are home from
the · Phillipines and have been

Maxine Griffith who had a bout
with CIIICcr lllrived home froin
vacation 10 learn she had IOSI her
doctor - and rightfully, she had
such faith in him . He was Dr. John
Minton who was world renowned
in his · expertise wilh i:ancer. He
died in Columbus as the result of
being injured in an auto accident.
Dr. Mitten was affiliated with
University Hospital. Maxine has
done so wen;· ' ~ .
Margaret Parker, actiYe member
of the Meigs Coun!)' Pioneer and
Historical Society, has been a busy
one
compiling
sermonettes
prepared by the Rev. William Middleswarth, retired SL Paul Lutheran
Church pastor, for publication in
The Daily Sentinel.
The sennonettes, J.lDblisbC(j over
the past 16 years, have materialized
into a 170 page book. If you're interested in a copy you can secure
one through the ·Meigs County
Museum - the cOst is $12.
Okay. okay. Just one liUle "ho,
ho" -just for you. May this be this
best Christmas ever for you - and
do keep smiling.

Monday, December 24, 1990

Party panic? Call a caterer
By United Preu International

rangements - rates, required have.
-Work with the caterer on the
deposit, refund provision for
You'd like to plan a party cancellation, ·charge lor extra layout of.the party - traffic flow,
during the hoUday season but the guests and payment schedule.
placement or food, bars, tables,
thought of all that organizing
-Find out whether the caterer coat racks and the like.
puts you Into a panlc..There Is an has Insurance In case of an
. -Take. Inventory - crystal,
alternative, says the owner of a · accident. Of course, get every- dishes, linens,' flatware - so the
catering service.
caterer can order rentals If you
thing In writing.
Professional caterers can take
Neumark said that most cater- need them. Make a check-list of
a lot !&gt;1 the headaches out or party ers have your best interests In everything you provide.
planning and give you more lime mind, so don't be afraid to ask a
-Prepare your home for the
to relax and enjoy your guests, lot or questions. Inquire whether caterer. Clear kitchen counters
said Liz Neumark, co-owner of the caterer has anY specialities and refrigerator, and provide
Great Performances,
New or If a theme lor your· party Is bathroom facUlties and storage
York catering firm.
possible.
space for the staff's needs.
A good caterer will provide
Discuss different types of par-Rent a ·coat rack If you
professional staff to tend bar and ties - a stand-up cocktail party, expect a lot or guests.
serve, prepare a menu - every- a seated dinner, a buffet with
-Order extra liquor. Most
thing from hors d'ouevres to only "!Inger food" or another · vendors will take back unopened
desserts - or supplement your format. Are there any unusual or · bottles. For a cocktail party,
own homemade dishes. Perhaps seasol\al drinks you might figure on an average of one drink
best of all, they'll clean up alter .s erve?
per person per hour, s!JI to seven
the party's over.
Also, caterers can probably glasses of wine per bottle, and 20
Neumark had the following recommend a good florist, enter- good-sized drinks per IJter of
tainment, party location and liquor. A caterer can coordinate
suggestions for those who may be
other rental services.
thinking abou.t hiring a caterer
the proper . amount with the
vendor.
for a holiday party:
Neumark also had a list ol
-Make sure the caterer Is ~~dos" Snd 11d0n'ts" for having
-Let the caterer bring the Ice . . •
·
· -Give your caterer clear •
accessible and flexible and wil- · are' catered party: Do
ling to" work closely with you.
-Let your caterer do the
ins tructlons lor garbage dl$posal, cleaning up and putting
-Ask for a port1ollo and letters worrying, not you.
-Be realistic about the size
things back In order.
.
of reference, and Inquire
and
kind
of
party
your
space
can
-Keep
notes
a
bout
the
party
whether you can visit another
for future reference. Don't
accomodate. The caterer can
party they are catering.
-Enter the kitchen. Be a
-Inquire about how the staff Is determine what kind of food Is
guest.
trained and what they will be appropriate and how to serve It,
wearing.
based on the number of guests
-Forget to hav~ someone at
home before the party to accept
-Determine the' financial ar- and the amourit of space Y.Ou
deliveries .

a

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
First~ome·First~erved Basis!
NO DEALERS PLEASE .

Sale Begins Dec•. 26th at 9 a.m.
Ends Dec. 31•t, 2 p.m.
OPEN SUNDAY, DEC. 30, 1

USED CARS

I
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1986 DODGE CHARGER

Stockt-4213, 4doors,sedan, V-8,air,au10., PS,
PB, 'power windows, power kx:b, power Ilea~
till wheel, cruise, AM.fllstan1o 11i1Jt1 radials.

Stock 1 6701 ,tiUll Wlleol driYa, 4 t)&lt;l., 5 &amp;IMd. 1ra11s., PS, AMA'M stereo !ape, radials,
bucket soall. g01Jg08.

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NOW 83699

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GRAND MARQUIS

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.

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Unlled Press International

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Stock # 13960,

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4 doors

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Stock' 3551, 4 ~.sedan, V-8, li',III1D.,'
PS, PB, power windows, power 1881. power
loeb, till wheel, cruise, AINFM .,..., llpl,

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WAS

.

radial&amp;.

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Stock I 4052, 4 ~. V-8, air, auto., PS, PB,
power wir&lt;lowl, ...~ power locks, tih

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1984FORDLTDWAGON
' ,,1
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4

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Emergency Care Center

Wellness Center

root, auto., PS, PB, power windOWI, power
seat, power locks, tih wheel, cruise, AMA'M

4999 ·~~r· r:;w *10,899

1985 UNCOLNCONTINENTAL

..' .. "'
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Stockl6133, &amp;tationwegon, V-8, air, 11110.. PS,
PB, power windows, power seat. power locks,
tiM whae1, cruise, AMIRiotarao tape, radials,
-win. defog.

WAS

N~W 13999

1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY
STATION WAGON
Stock 14422.

WAS
' '6995

Now*8999

1988 MERCURY COUGAR.

Stock I 113422, 2 doors, coupe, 6 c:yl., air,
auto., PS, PB, power window&amp;,
rad&lt;&gt;, tin
wheel.

AM.fM

WAS

NOW

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Stock I 2092, 2 dcxn, V-8, PS. PB,
radiO, aulD., au~ fuel tank, gauges, &amp;tiding rear

"'

glass.

1982 FORD BRONCO

1984 OLDS TORONADA

win-.

Stock I 5871, 2 dcxn, hard 109. lrunl Wlleol
driw, V.-8, air, a~ll., PS, PB, power
power ,..~ power loclol, ill -1. cruise,

1988 FORD ESCORT
STATION WAGON
Stock' I 19791, ~ doors. station wagon, llvn1
W11eo1 drive, 4 cyl., air, aulD , PS, PB, AlotiFM

~~- AM.fMs::•4i'l9 S::stape, rao:,w *1811 -

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$17 • 995

stock # 13620.
4doors

Now

$20 ' 995

1990 FORD CROWN VICTOIUA
Stock# 13920,
4doors

Now

$

1 2 995

4doors

Now

$ 10

Stock# 13780.
4 doors

Now
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WAS

995
,

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1986CHEVYCHEVmE

NOw*9999

Stock I 113441,4 doors, hard Ill!. ilontwheel
drive, 4 c:yl., IIi', 4 spoad stand. llans., bucket
seals.

~:~~

S1oc11 t 1374t, ..,, 4 cyl., air, auto., PS, PB,
power seal, power locks, tin wheel, cruise, rear
win. defog., AMII'M stereo tape, bucket seats.

:E

$7,995

Now 83219

slant!.

$9,995

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Stocl&lt;f 11371, 2dcxn,4cyl., air, auto., PS, PB.

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1981 GMC ~ERRA

1984 FORD F-150 EXT. CAB
Stock 1 113271, 2 doors, V-8, air, 3 speed
llans., PS, PB,
radio.

NOwSI491

1980 TOYOTA CELICA

1984TOYOTAVAN

1990 FORD TAURUS
Stock# 13970,
4.QQQ!!!!

NOW 87819

'10,995

1990 FORD ESCORT
'

raar

Stock t 82482, 2 ~. 4 - driYa, V-8, air,
auto., PS, PB, tih wheel, cruise, AM.fM radio,
bucket 1881, gauge&amp;.

1990 MERCURY SABLE
Stock# 13990,

::~~

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1986 FORD BRONCO

t

STATION WAGON

1986 JEEP GRAND WAGONEER
Stock 1 W1, 4 doors, station wagon, 4 wheel
driYa, V-8, air, aull., PS, PB, power windows.
power sea~ power locks, tilt wheel, cruise,
radials,
&amp;tiroo tape,
win. delog.

Stocl&lt;l 19801 ,2dcxn,6cyl., air, IIIlO., PS,PB,
long wide bod, """step bumper, gauges.

Now*3891 ::~~

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Home Health Service

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'91 FORD RANGER
Save Up To S3,QQQ

PLEASANT VALLEY

PLEASANT VALLEY

Nursing Care Center

Home Medical Equipment

,. . ..~ .

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, •• f'i\&gt;;

4x2

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'

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Stocl&lt; 14631, llontwhoal drive, V-8 351 eng.,
air, auto., PS, PB,cruiH, AIM'II radio, rad~.

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

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Now

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4 cyl., air, auto.. PS, PB, AM.fM radio.

1990 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

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STATION WAGON

1990·FORD TEMPO

.

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Your Good Health!

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2 doors

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Stock t 11361\, 4 dcxn, sedan, llvnt wheel
drive, 4 c:yl., IIi'; 11110., PS, PB, AM.fM stereo
tape, radials, rear win. defog.

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4 cyl., air, 5 speed stand. bans., PS, PB, tilt
wheel, cruise, AMII'M radio, bucl&lt;at 1881&amp;, rear
.win. delog., ga~ges .

WAS

AM.fM

glass.

1989 DODGE
Stockt6152, 4 doors, sedan, 4 cyl,llir, auto.,
PS, PB. power windows, power 1881, 6n whoa!,
cruise, AJ.WM steruo tape, radiol&amp;, roar win.

SlocU4692,4 doors, 6cyl., llr, auto., PS, PB,
power locks, cruise,
st8rao tapo.

'7495

Stock 1 6;!42, 2 docn, 4 Wlleol dri¥!1. 4 c:yl.,
IUIO., PS, PB,
radio, radial&amp;, liiding

NOW 87111

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1986 SUBARU DLXT.

Stocl&lt; 15891, 4 wheel driw, 4 c:yl., air, 5 apeocl
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bucket

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.

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Stock I 113581, dOOII, sidon wagon, V-8,
IIi', auto., PS, PB,powerwindaws, power seal,
power kx:b, ~~ wheel, ...... AM.fM ,,...,
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Stock 1 6455, 2 dDOII, coupe, V-8. air, auto.,
PS, PB, power wir&lt;lowl, power 1881. power
klclcl, tit wheel, cruise, AINFM radio, radials,

=cru-..AM.f;:.17ai'

•

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WAS

....,

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Stock I 19081,4dcxn, V-B, air, oulli., PS, PB,
power windows, 1811, power lockl, tih

•

There's a
reason for
all those birds
II you've ever wondered why
someone would glv~ their true
love a partridge In a pear tree for
Christmas. you're not alone.
Edward Phinney knows. It all
has to do with fertility.
Some time during the holiday
season, you're bound to hear the
familiar strains of the song
featuring a true love who gave
the following to his object of
desire:
12 drummers drumming 11
pipers piping 10 lords 'a leaping
nine ladles dancing eight maids a
milking seven swans a swimming six geese a layingflve
golden rings four calling birds
three · French hens two turtle
doves
and a partridge Ina pear tree.
The t1 tie, of course, Is " The
Twelve Days of Christmas."
Phinney, a professor of classics at the University of Massa·
chusetts at Amherst, has researched the origin of the song
and the meaning behind all those
gifts In all those lyrics, and has
turt)ed up some Interesting
interpretations.
"'The Twelve Days of Christmas' was a secular ballad that
was first published in 1868 in a
book of Christmas songs In
England, but It's probably been
around a lot longer than that," he
said.
"It's primarlly a love song, It's
a game song, too, The point Is to
remember every Item and not
get twisted up."
The elements of the song
reveal Its secular origins. ''If you
think of all the things being
presented, you realize they're all
gifts from a lover to a woman,"
Phinney said.
"Some of them are rather
impossible to gtve, like eight ·
maids a milking and nine ladles
dancing. All those ladles and
dancing and pipers and drums
Imply thlals a wedding.
" In this case, It looks like a
young man trying to Impress his
Intended by wooing her with
many gifts. They're all 'things
that wo\lld be useful at a
Wedding."
Somewhere down the line, said
Phinney, It 'got turned Ito a
ChriStmas song, or more properly, a Tweltthsnlght song.
The 12 days of Chrlatmu are
the 12 days foUowing Dec. 25, ,
ending with the Feaal of the
Epiphany. The last of thoR 12
days - known as Twelfthsnlght
In Enrland - was a time when
k people traditionally gave gifts.
TraditiOn also holds that Jan. 6
was the day the . Three Kl ngs
arrived to pay homage to the
newborll ChriSt.

•

"

P.M.

1982 CHEVY MONTE CARLO

r, .•

Things aren't all bad though.
Just think of the feeling of accomplishment that Sharon Hawley
of Middlepon must be enjoying
this holiday season.
Sharon has had a dream come

~~~

4

TRUCKS

1984 BUICK PARK AVENUE

WA_;' defog.NOw *2499

;.

..

AND

P.M. -

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.... •

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The family of professionals

Valley Drive, Point Plaulnt, VN 25550 (304) 675-4340

'

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)

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 24. 1990

Pomeroy-Middl9port, Ohio

Monday, December 24. 1990·

Porileroy-MiddlepQrt. Ohio

Reader is in the same boat
Dear Ann Landen: Recendy I
learned that my dad fathered a child
by ~ sinl!le woman 10 years ago,
dunng hu second marriage. His
cum:nt wife had children by her first
husband and lhe youngest child was
legally adopled by my dad.
My dilemma is this: The woman
doesn't know when: my falher is and
$e needs his address in ordeno sue
lii111 for child support. We met
briefly and I was shown several
phocographs of lhe child as well as
. the birth certificale. After our meet·
ing, I was convinced lhat she was
completely honest' with me and that
my dad did indeed falher her child.
· Allhough my relationship with my
dad is not a close one, we communicate periodically and get along
fairly well. I would never confront
him since I'm sure he would deny it
and never speak 10 me again. Y ct I
find it difficult 10 turn my back ~n
the woman b~use I, 100, am a
single mother raising a daughter
wilhout any child support or state
aid and I know how hard it is.
I hope you will give me some
advice so that I can· make the right
decision. Just sign me-- BE1WEEN
A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE

'

_easons
rom our

IN LAKE COUNTRY
DEAR ROCK: While a small part
of me says you owe your father
loyalty, a larger part of me says
JUStice needs 10 be served and vou
are in a position 10 see that it is. I
say, help the woman get what she is
entitled 10. If she has an ounce of
integrity, she will not betray you. If
she's lying, a blood test will exonerate your falher.

Dear Ana Landen: Early last
summer you r:an a letter from a
woman who wished her family
would stop nagging her to quit
~eking. At filS!, I was furious witb
her selfish _indifference towaid her
·family, because I remembered how
my father and I used 10 beg my
mother 10 quit smoking. It hun me
10 think that maybe Mom felt the
same way toward us. Then, I felt
strangely comforted by yOW' n:ply.
It is so IJ'Ue, AM, the only person
who can make an addicted penon
quit is the addii:L There is not -one
thing anyone can do until he or she
makes that decision. Feeling guilty
because someone you love is killing
him or herself is not only useless,
but it will drive you crazy.
My mother died of emphysema
last July Fourlh. after suffering for
six horrible years. She was 56. I
thank God that she is finally free of
the pain, but she left behind a family that mourns her daily and curses
her life-draining addiction.
Please keep telling your il:aders
that if they drink 10 excess or smoke
they should listen to their families,
their doctors and their own bodies.
Keep begging them 10 quit before it
kills them. Because my mother
couldn't or wouldn't listen, she. is
gone and my father and I must go
on without her.
·
I miss my mother's support, her
humor and •• just her. My heart
aches that my own son will never
have the privilege of knowing his
marvelous grandmother •• a woman
who could have added so much 10
his life. -- HER DAUGIITER IN

Historic sites reopen in 1991
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) ment temporarily ceased opera!·
Eight historic sites that closed lng while Congress haggled over
this fall because of a ·federal a new budget.
budget crunch will reopen in
Cawood said the National Park
1991, federal officials said Service, which oversees the
Monday.
historic sites, was able to free up
A combination of public out· some discretionary funds for
cries and loosening federal PhlladelphJa and federal offl·
budget s trlngs made the open· cials have promised Increased
ings possible, said Independence funding In the next fiscal year .
.National Historic Park Superln·
He said the eight sites now
tendent Hobart Cawood.
have enough funding to remain
"Because of the. concern, not open through the current fiscal
only In Philadelphia but across year. Iti addition, other,
the country, and the real need· unspec1!1ed, funding sources
that has been brought to ·the were being explored.
attention of those who could do
In October, U.S. Rep. Thomas
something about It" all the sites Foglletta, D-Pa.; was able to
'!"ill be open by the spring, shake loose $650,000 for emer·
Cawood said.
gency repairs to the roof of
The portrait gallery in the Independence Hall.
·second Bank of the U.S., which
Eight of the city's 19 .historic
hosted.140,036 visitors last year, federally run buildings closed to
wil!. reopen Feb. 17 and seven the public Oct. i amid an
other tourist attractions In the anticipated $483,000 budg~t
vicinity' of the Liberty Bell will ·shOrtfall for the current fiscal
reo!ien April 21, Cawood said.
year.
The structures were shuttered
Besides the Second Bank, the
in October when the federal affected sites and their 1989
government failed to provide attendance figures are Old City
enough money to keep them Hall, 77,271; Graff Hou&lt;e, 36,931;
open . The ·Liberty Bell and Pemberton House (ArmyNavy
Independence Hall, the area's · Museum ), 102,286; New Hall
most po'pular tourist destlna· i (Marine Corps Memorial Mu- .
lions, were not affected.
seum), 83,255; Todd House,
The bell and hall did close, 15,941: Bisl)op White House·
however, for three days In 12,869, and an architectural exOctober when the federal govern- l)lblt at 318 Market St., 93,658.

Point Pleasant Office

The Daily Sentinai-Page-17

Hospitals lose millons on Medicare

Ann ·
Landers

By United Press International

receives 40 percent of its patient
revenue from Medicare.
The downward trend will likely
continue because Congress re·
duced Medicare payments to
hospitals in 1990 and 1991.
Nationally, the hospital associ·
atlon said, hospital Medicare
payments were cut SL6 billion In
the 1991 budget, which w111 result·
In about $160 million fewer
dollars to hospitals in Ohio.
"Congress and the administra·
lion must begin to recognize that
cuts In the Medicare budget also
hurt people, nor just hospitals,"
said James Castle, president of t
the Ohio Hospital Association.

In 1987 and 53 percent more than
In 1988.
Urban hospitals lost 4.6 cents
on each dollar of care given to
Medicare beneficiaries last year.
The average Medicare loss for all
hospitals last year was 6.2
percent.
"In an environment where
hospitals are experiencing negative Medicare margins, with
Medicare patients representing
35 percent to 70 percent of most
hospitals' activity, the long-term
viablllty of many hosplt;ils continues to be threatened," the
report said.
The .average hospital In Ohio

ANN LANDERS

Ohio hospitals lost $173 million
providing care to Medicare pa(,...eun Sy ndlco• ..
tients last year, the third consec·
utive year the state's hospitals
MIDDLEBURG, f1.A.
have lost money under the
DEAR DAUGJITER: Well said. program, according to a study.
Tl\e study, bY the Ohio Hospital
Thank you. ·
Association
and an accounting
Gem of the Day: Some students
firm,
said
the
hardest hit were
drink Ill the fountain of knowledge.
Others merely gargle. -High School rural hospitals which lost an
Teacher for 21 years, Paducah, Ky. average 11.5 cents on every
DEAR READERS: I drank at the dollar of care provided under the
fountain of knowledge when I was Medicare program.
The study said last year's
in high school. It was in college that
Medicare tosses for rural hospl·
l~led.
tals were more than double than
'' 1989. Lo,. A.njiM,..
Tim.-. Sy ndl C'Ait' &amp;n'd

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Dozens of adapters are in-stock.
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High-profile attorney.dies at 63

Mason Office

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
lawyer who represented fired
Ohio State University football
coach Earle Bruce in 1987 died
Sunday of complications from
surgery. JohnS. Zonak was 63 .
ZOnak, acknowledged as an
expert on election law and tax
law, was one of the most
politically attuned attorneys In
central Ohio.
ZoiJak, a Democrat, represented clients from both parties.
Democratic clients InCluded
the Franklin County Democratic
Party; Ohio AudiiOr Thomas E.
Ferguson, Larry McCartney ,
former finance chairman of Gov .
Richard F. Celeste's re-election
committee; and former Colum·
,bus City Co~ncll President Jerry
Hammond.
Zonak's Republican clients icnlud,ed Rep. Donald Lukens; Paul
Rinehart, the mayor's brother;
and Gisela Rosenbaum, former

New Haven Office

Poinl Pleasanl
675-1121

New Haven

882-2135

Mason

773-5514

•

MEM!'JER fD.LC

Columbus Service director.
Zonak represented Bruce in his
contract battle with the univer·
sity and Ohio State President
Edward H. Jennings . .
He also defended former OSU
fullback Roman Bates on assault
and sexual imposition charges
and former Upper Arlington City
Manager Hal Hymeonembezzle·
ment charges.
Although Zonak was wellknown within political circles, he
preferred to play a !Jehind-the·
scenes role as advisor · and
fund-raiser .
The most prominent public .
post he held was chairman and
member of the Ohio Board ofT ax
Appeals In the 1970s.
"He's been an Inspiration and
friend for years," said former
partner John Poulos. "He is a
great loss not only to our friends,
but to this community."

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Most Stores Open
9:00 AM Til Late
On Dec. 26
Ringing In new Joy for
the Holiday season.

RUTLAND DEPARTMENT STORE
OHIO

....... ; ...- .

Check YDur Phone Book for the Rldlo Shack Store or outer NHrtat You
llbOratorin Lk:tnSinQ COrp. YS-005 licensed from MicroSofl Cotp. Most blftery-powel'ld equipment exelulle$ blntfies
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PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

_~·-· :.·.··· ·

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Canla Welcome

�Page 18-The Daly Sentinel .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Troops prepare for ·desert holiday
EASTERN SAUDI ARABIA
(UPI) - Far from home, In a
country that has little use for any
religion but Islam, U.S. troops
are doing what they can to make
this desert Christmas a merry
one.
.
From caroDng abOard aircraft
carriers In the Persian Gulf to
planting Christmas trees In the
sand, Amerlca's 270,000 servicemen and· women are determined
to observe the holiday the way
tl)ey remember at home. even If
they have to use a little
discretion.
For Christmas dinner, the joint
mUitary services plan to cook
151, 000 pounds qf turkey, 172,000
wunds of roastbeef and 34,500
pliunds of shrlmp. Dessert will be
sllced from 34,500 fruitcakes
being imported from the United
· . States, according to a menu
prepared by the U.S. Central
Command.
Eggnog Is a certainty, but only
tl\e non-alcoholic - and some
say, undrinkable - variety, In
keeping with strJct Moslem laws
against Imbibing liquor.
Across the desert kingdom,
little signs of the season are
a ppearing. Blow-up reindeers
have alighted on the tops of tents
not far from the Kuwaiti bOrder
and stockings are hanging from
mess tent walls.

" Hopefully, I'll have a nice
dinner In the desert with the unit
and relax a Ilttle bit, not be so
much on the go," said 1st Lt.
Anthony Super, 30, of Mobridge,
S.D., who has a wife and five
chlldren at home.
The plans are modest not only
to avoid offending Moslem sensl'
blllttes but also because the
holiday hoopla Is bringing on
serious bOuts of homesickness
for a lot of the soldiers.
" I think Christmas Is doing
more to lower the morale than to
raise It," said Pfc. David Wilson.
19, Blcayune. Miss., whose wife
Is. seven months pregnant.
' Things are so far from home,
people who are getting things
from home are getting them a
month early or they're going to
be late. A lot of people have
families and stuff and are used to
being with them . "
But there are many who are
trying to get Into the spirit of the
seaso~." In much the same way as ·
they would ln. Kansas or Oregon
or New York, bu I with slight
variations.
Several Navy carriers will hold
"steel beach" cookouts on the
ships' main decks. The USS
Trenton will hold a fishing
tournament while the USS Guam
has scheduled Its own version of a
New Year's Rocking Eve, com-

plete with a DJ and talent show .
The USS Shreveport will hold a

rt~~~:~~o~:.ntata
featuring a
In the desert, one Army lnfan·
try division plans Io dlstribu te .
ab0ut20,000Chrlstmas stocking
stuffed with all sorts o.f goodies
as well as provide 30 Santa suits
for the fattest , joll1est guys In
every unit and more than 100
Christmas trees.
Saudi au thorltles have gener.
ally overlooked these.mantfesta·
lions of Christmas as long as such
religious symbOls as the cross
are not openly displayed.
And of course It wouldn' t be
Christmas on the battlefield
without a visit from Bob Hope, ..
who, although well Into his 80s,
will arrive this weekend to kick
off his famous USO tour for the
troops. ·

Monday. December 24, 1990

Merry Christmas To All Our .:
.
.
.·
Troop
· s Whereve· r Yo· u· Are.
r--·---------.,_;----------------,··

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.,."',..,.'flU, "MERRY

'•
•

CHRISTMAS FROM ALL OF US TO ALL OF YOU a· 'frUr 'fr"t?'ftitr \til

Glortul

•
'

••
The Daily Sentinai-Pago-19·
•

Monday. December 24, 1990

NOEL:

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Away In
A Manger

......
•·

'

The power of His love

is everlasting. ·

AB- reflect and
remember, Christ'a

mea••p is forever.
, We take this joyous
• oeeuion to express our
: th•nkstoalfofyou.

..
.•

2400 Ea81em Av11111lt
(A!li'O.. from K-Marl)
Galllpolla, Ohio

1/4 MilaN ·
Of Pomtroy-Mason Brldga

-..,'•.

.

..
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MAIN STREET
PIZZA
992-2228
POMEIOY, OHIO
IIMI!ia fjO:&lt;fl:ll Alii¥ g" ll!l:l'i&gt;::&lt; lEI:tB"

Christmas Is

His birth gives us cause .
celebrate, and to say tha~nk~
you for the many
blessings we enjoy.

For Sharing

LARRY'S
WOODWORKING
992·5492
222 EAST MAIN
POMEIOY, OHIO

1'1! :k l!Q: B¥ !fl¥1!0:1 li:¥'11':&lt; B:l&lt; g:;: l&lt;::&lt;'P::&lt;

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Milson, WV

•,•

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We wish you
all the best!

Behold. Ihe ·
•Souio( Is 80(fl

...·';

GLOECKNER'S
992-5153
11 0 EAST MAIN

POMElOY, OHIO

.

Pral.Ged

n Olde Fashioned Christma.fl •··

truesp"itor
·Ire .;eason warm your
: nearts ancr mrnCls.
:

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&amp;He.

Maytn~

..: CARTER'S

•

~umbing &amp; Heating
992-6282

"•

GAS SERVICE

Race be with you.

D. MICHAEL MULLIN

BLUE STEAK

AnOINEY-AT-UW
992-6417
105 EAsT SECOND

. ' .:MIDDLEPORT, OliO

&amp;ason'
s
Greetin3s
.
And Many Thanks
To All.Our
Valued Customers
.

MULLEN
LAW OFFICES

POMEIOY, OHIO

......

.

CInspired by the carols of
C Yuletide, we celebrate
CHis birth with reverence,
joy and happiness.

CAB CO•

992·6471
MIDOLEPOn, OHIO

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As you ·and your family

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enjoy. this festive time,

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please accept

'"·

our ·sincere wishes for
a holiday filled .with
dreams come true.

. ••

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.

•••

•

.• ••

. MERRY
eHRISTMAS
We wi8h you and your
family good health
during thi8 fe8tive
holiday 8e880n and
throughout
'he new year. ·

MEIGS COUNTY
CHIIOPIACTIC CLINIC
. 992-2168
963 o-ral Hartinger
Parkway
Ohio

Holiday

WISh

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From Your Friends At

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May the warm glow
of Christmas
light up your life.

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£

....

STEWART'S .
·GUN AND SUPPLIES
742-2421
RUTLAND, OHIO

Happy
Holdqys
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
992·2725
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

a down home,
old,fasbio~ed Cltristmas .. .
complltll wltb fu1, friends
11d feStivities.
We thank reu for 1111
~easure of rour business.

•••
.
..

~

On this day, ·
and every day, ·
• may peace and
happiness be
yours.

992-7075
MIDDLIPOR, OHIO

�Monday, December 24, 1990
Pege-20-The Deily Sentinel .

Updated holiday cJaaeic8...
[n every family, it is important to
maintain holiday traditions for the next
generation ... and those to foUow. Many
fond memories are cttated durin&amp; caroling parties, family dccoratina sessioos aod cookie bakina· Every family
has its own unique .traditioos ...aod as
children grow and begin their own
families, s0n1e old traditions take h.old
and new ones begin.
Update your redpes

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 21

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Make holiday entertaining healthful and fun
1

. caa (12-) cbllled Iii· .

gerlle

Put grapefruit juice, lemon juice and
susor into blcqdcr container. Process
11 low speed until sugor is dissolved.
Add Jllii'IICbino chenies and process
11 high speed, remove feeder cap and
add icc, processing until slushy.
Slowly pour in ginger ale and pulse
once at low speed to combine. Serve
immediately.
.
Yield: 4 cups

. As famitics get busier, som~ tradi·
![your family loves egg nog, f?ut the
cusloms need to he modified to cholesterol level scares them away,
fit mto the': schedules. And, some Ira· . they' ll love this low cholestm&gt;i, lower
ditiOnal hohday foods rrnght need to he calorit vtrsion.
updated to reduce their caloric and fat
content. People are getting fit and try·
LOW CHOLESTEROL
ing to stay that way. They are watching
EGGNOG
their weight, blood preuure and
cholesterol levels, too.
1
cariOII (8 -)frozen 0U
Creating warm memories for the
substitute, lbawecl .
family during the holidays doesn't
'/•
cup water
have to he difficult or time consuming.
1. · cup lusllnt nonfat dry milk
A simplified hotiday treat will take the
powder
·
stress away from the baker...and the
5
talllespoons Sllllf (or 6 pack·
family will still love the tradition it
ets supr substitute)
represents.
teupooaYinDia
Dash nutmeg .
Start a new tradition
11 Ice cubes ·
u~al.

GINGERBRE
. AD COOKIE BARS .
I •/,

'/,
,,,
1'/,
I •/,

•t,

&lt;ups aD purpose Rour
teaapooa baltin1 soda

teaspooa lilt

,_pootiSground ginger
te.pooas dtlllltlloa

•/,
•/,

teaspooa ground doves ·
wp sbortl.nlng
wp sugar

'/,
'/,

wpmol.-s
cup buttermilk or sour mUk

leags

Preheat oven to 350° F.. Gn:aSe and
tightly flour a 13x9x2 inch pan.
Assemble miser.
Sift flqur , baking soda, salt and
spices together and set aside.

Cream shortetiing and liUgor togelbcr
in large bowl a1 a medium speed until
fluffy. Add eggs, one at • time, healina
well alier each addition.
Mix buttermilk or sour mill with.
molasses. Add io creamed mixture
alte~nately with. the dry ingredients,
mu.mg well.
Pour into prepared pan and bake 2S?O minutes or Until toothpick insened
m center comes out clean.
Cool completely. Frost wi)h. Apple
Cream Cheese frosting (below).
Yield: 24 bars

APPLE CREAM CHEESE
FROSTING
4

2

2
2

HERE'S TO YOUR a·EALTH!
Wishing you a good measure of
happin~ss and a large dose of cheer
to last throughout the entire year!
Merry Christmas and many thanks to
all our valued customers.

. CREATE NEW HOLIDAY TRADmON8 thll yeu bJ uptlallnl ~ ~ !
elc holiday reeipeac.
fat !
ounces cream c~, soft.
18
noJI!dc;ohollc. Low
.._
read c ki Ban are aimple to
ened
· . than atandard q11 nOll ~ .?1 :~rbof
t!..ty Kitchen Center !
cups powdered sugar
make...and tuty, too. Wit t e -~~•-•-- will be ~
,
tablespoons butter or mar·
applianee, thil year'1 holiday enw........
prt..,, softe~

hos~~~= t:'f!~!,P~

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tablespoons apple juice coocenlrllte, thawed ·
WAS STIU. A NOVELTY In 1884 wm;n ThoiiUUI Nut crea~ this pair of illustrations of a little
who picks up the receiver In hi• toy"11!1d·packa&amp;:e-fllled workshop. A jovial fellow with.
capacious belly and while bean!, Nut'a Santa, who graced the Jllllle&amp; of Harper'• Weeltly for
the bulo for today'o moat famUiar Image of St. Nick.
.·
.

Assemble mixer. In small mixer
bowl, combine all ingredients at a low
speed until smooth. Increase speed to
medium and mix until a spreading consistency is reached.
•·
Yield: I 'b cups

Sometimes creating a tradition can be
Put egg substitute, water, instant
.as easy as updating an old favorite. The
home economists at Oster have updated nonfat dry milk powder, sugar, vanilla,
three h.otiday favorites that your family nubneg and 6 ice cubes into Osterizer
blender container.
will love. Why not try all three som?
Cover and process at a high speed ·
Here's a nonalcoholic replaCement
unttl
smooth. Wuh motor running,
for champagne punch. Sparkling and
remo.
v
e feeder cap and gradually add
delightful, it is sure to please.
remammg ICc cubes.
Contini!&lt; processing until smooth.
SPARKLING HOLIDAY PUNCH
. Pour into cups, sprinkling with addi·
Ilona! nutmeg.
'/, cup uDJWeeteMCI lflpe(nilt
Yield: 4 servings
juice
If making gingerbread cookies rakes
Tablt$J100ns lemon juice ·
2
too much lime , why nor make deli·
'/, cupsupr
cious gingerbread bars ? They're
'I• cup drliaed marasclaino
q•ick and easy ...and the house will
cherries
smell so good!
cups lee cubes
2

Create a Christmas comucopia ,ran 'Inn JN
'
;Filled
with candies and ot!lcr sweets,
decorated paper cornucopias were tradliionally hung on the boughs of
Cliristmas trees in the 19th. century.
'f!liese cornucopias were made by avid
of the ladies' magazines of.the
d~. w~• frequently printed insuuc·
tiOhs f~i:reoring them.
if&lt;ll' djq&amp;e who wish. to bring a touch. of
';jctoriaili to a qllitemporary Ch.risanas.
cornucopias are easy to make.
. .
: Draw quaner circles on thin, bend-

able 'cardboard (using a compass for
accuracy), leaving a margin on ope
side for the seam. Using the same pat-

.rs
'.

.

.'
I

786 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
992-6491

Glue loop of ribbon or decorative
cord to the top of each. cornucopia to
form a handle for hanging. Add other
tern, fonn more quarter circles out of decorations-stickers, tinsel, bits of
decorative wrapping paper, two for doily-as imagination dictates ~nd,
each cornucopia (to serve as lining and after they have thoroughly dried, fill
with candy, nuts or other treats.
outer surface).
Cut the shape out, glue the lining
and outer paper to each piece of card- .
hoard, and aUQw to dry. Then, form
into cones, gluing on the iilside where
the cxlrll !1181J!in is tucked.
'

First gr&gt;eeting

'

l

I

1

CENTRAL TRUST

OYOUS IDINGS
As the Yuletide bells resouqgJ joy and laughter all around,
Filling every heart and horne with merriment and cheer.
\A/hat better lime tor us to say, '1Thanks to you in every way.
May this Christmas holiday be the start of a great year."

A PNC BANK
992-6661
97 North Secl!lld. Middleport; Ohio

.

FROM OUR FAMILY TO YOURS ....

'·II

,

•~IimRRY CHIUS1'MAS AND .A HAPPY NEW~ TO YOU," read the

fir.tt commercial Chriatmaa card, above, from the collection of the
Pl~rponl Morpn Library In New York. Deaillned In 1843 by Jolm Calcott ·
lfl&gt;raley at the initiative r#. ~ Cole, 1.000 copiea d the hand-colored
h were printed In JJOit""*' 'rol'JD', 'it) be aent to the recipient•
v
and'• recently lnaUIIUrat,cl ~penny po1t.• Thia innovation
people to forward trilditlonal New Yeanlll'OOtiJIIII (previously
&amp;!!Uiirevliieratedlebi;Y hanil, .an arT8lllltli!lefll which ·Could be u costly 81 it 'W8ll
1
ii
both. inexpenaively and efticlently.

m

'

. MEMBER FDIC

VALLEY LUMBER,
MIDDLEPORT
,, ..

..

•

.•
•

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HAPPY

Children of Farmen

•
'\

HOLIDAYS
We can't thank you enough for making
1990 a wonderf"W year.
Have a great Christmas!

We wish to a11, a warm,
Joyous Holiday Season.
Your frieJ1dship means a lot.

,.

,, ,

·;t}•'

...
I

I

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Oene Jo~n·so·n

. 992-2174

500 WI Ull

r

POMEROY, OHIO

DIRECTORS
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Paul G. Eich
Thereon Johnson
Ferman E. Moora
Ban H. Ewing
Fred W. Crow, Jr.
Richard C. Follrod
Paul E. Kloes
OFFICERS
Theodore T. Raed. Jr.. Pre1ident
Paul E. Kloe1, Senior Vice Prell dent
Roger W. Hy-.11, Vlca Pralident
Bruce J. Raed. Vice Pre1ident
Paul M. Reed, Vice Preaident ·
Jon P. Karachnik, Assistant Vice Pr11ident
Joanne J. William•. A11i1tant Ca1hler

446-3672
1616 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

.l

''

'

Employees
Malinda Dunn
Vicki Hoffman
Kathy Pickens
Larry Thomas
Donna Thomas
0('Val Wiles
Mike Kloes
Tricia Wolfe
Beth Mayer
Cryatal Simpson
Edna Householder

..
•••
..

..,'

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TUPPERS PLAINS
OFFICE
Jiii .Dixon
Linda Kaylor
Angie Morris
Mary Grover
Jon P. Karschnik
Assistant
Vice President

Your Bankjn,~...
Fs Farmers
.,
Bank

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
GEO

, ,-~··

Smith-.Nelson ·Motors, Inc.

·Donna Schmoll
Vanessa Miller
Tammy Sheets
Robin Burnam
Shannon Hindy
Christopher Yeauger
Pamela Foreman
Jeffrey Gilkey
Sandra Beaver
Peggy Cremeans
Betay Hawthorne

EMPLOYEES
JoAnn Crisp
Dottie MIISSer
Linda M11yer
Edward Durst
Donna Knapp
Carolyn Elam
Amy Bissell
Kay Gillilan
Ann Browning
Iris Payne

.

Bank

...

-

,

992-2136
221 WEST SECOND . MEMBER FDIC
POMEROY, OHIO ·

985-3385
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OKlO

•

OF THE OHIO ·-vALLEY

.
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�Page 22-The Daily Sentinel

Monday~ December 24.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1990

- ~------~------~--~--------------~~~--------------~==~~~~~~
At·bome entertainin1 is flourishing
all over Americo os hostesses are lavishin&amp; taste, time ond dollars on dining
accoutrements with drama and style.
Acconling to Focd &amp; Wine mogazine.
frequent hosting of parties is defutitely
on the upsutBe. with 30 percent of U.S.
households entenaining more lhon five

When iii a dilemma of whallo IJrios,
here are some sterling gill ideo$ for the
hostess:

a selection of fresh

pasta with

a pasta scoop. a sbirnrnering VictoriaQ
Christmas tree ornament, measuring
spoons with your favorite family
recipe, an eJJ timer IS the perfect

•
• Suddenly, days are getting shorter.
• Twilight comes early, mistily, and the
• deep, translucent blue of the evening
•s ky is frosted , as snow hovers over.
, Chrjstrn'3s is indee~ coming, and the
~ winter chiiJ in the air is almost unno. liced in lite merry bustle of the holiday
season.
Buildings don lheir Yuletide finery,
• as garlands in red and green and innu·
merable evergreens festoon lighted
windows and welcoming doorways.
Shoppers return home, day after day,
laden with mysterious packages. An4,
indoor s, boxes of ornaments are
brought down from the anic and lov-

Remember
Christ, our Savior,
wasbomon
Christmas day.

Make any occasion special

What would the grandest celebration

:Kids' holiday

be without your finest linen , china,
: crystal and sterling flatware and table

; accessories? They make lhc occasion

:fun

· ever more special. A napkin threaded
~ through a shimmering sterling silver
~ napkin ring becomes a wprk: of art; a
• Cornucopia of fresh fruit, pine cones
; and colorful Christmas ornaments in a
• silver bOwl becomes an elegant cen~r·
piece; an eclectic mix of new and heir.: loom sterling flatware and serving
~ pieces expres~s your individual flair;
• and a sterling gift at each place setting
; thanks your guests for the pleasure of
• their company.
.
• Although grandmother may have
• taken the family sterling out of the cup' board only for special holidays, the
• Silver Information Center suggests
: making every meal into one that is a
• renection of your good taste.

:

i finish. or pmina."
•
•
Gifts for tile hosta
••

••
•

·

One time-honored tradition that still

; endures year after year is bringing an
! appropriate house wanning gift for the
• hostess. Linle things mean a lot;
! whetber sem or bond carried, a gift is a
&lt;fitting way to say !honk you.
: This Christmas there is an ·abundance
• of delightfully luxurious silver gift
:choices in all price ranges: Items for
• the home, those related to a hobby or
career, ond fun personal indulgences.

Happy
· Holidays
SAY SPECIAL THANKS· TO THE HOSTESS with a 111ft ahe'll treuure
loq alter the celebratlo- lift ~ aterllnl allver. Shown here, clock·
wlae from the top: tree bookmark, ea timer; al&amp;lllp holder and cake
teoter, all by Leonore Doakow; heart·ahaped pill bOll: by Cazenovia;
wreath and _heart ornament• by Gorham; pula ocoop by Reed A Barton;
and measur1111 spoom and memo pad holder, allo by Leonore Dookow.

ft~t~e

!'4;

6'4 .

We've come a long way since the horse-drawn
carnage, but our commitment 'to family traditions
and old-fashioned values rematos the $allle.
Happy holidays ;md heartfelt thanks
to our many good friends.

JIM COBB

Chevrolet-Oidsmobilt·Cadlllac-Geo, Inc.

Hope, faith and belief
in Him will Illuminate
our holidays, bringing
joy and unity to all
Merry Christmas
and thanks.

McCLURE'S
3-IN-ONE

POMEROY, OHIO

McCLURE'S
DAIRY ISLE

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

An of us wish to thomk all of you
for your patronage and support
this past year. Merry Christmas.

FOREST RUN BLOCK
AND READY MIX

992-2067

MINERSVILLE

•

.• ••.
.

And to Alia
night. I

•

Cheers lo all our friends 1
Hope you hove lhe best
holiday ever!

e'd Like to Send Each
and Every One of You a Card
But there's just too many of youl
So please accept this message as our
thanka and best wishes to you alii

•

WREATHS. CANDLE RINGS·
GARLANDS-POTTERYSWAGS-ARRANGEMENTS

ALL CHRISTMAS ITEMS

50-75°/o OFF
Have a lioliday w
reinember. I r' s. been a
joy ro serve you.

tft-7161
.DDIIPOIY, OliO

lo------ -- '

CASH AND CARRY

GOOD DICEMIII 26lH lHIU DIOMIII 31St

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
992-6454
106 BUTTERNUT AVE.

POMEROY, OHIO

R y
H

spirit.
Stuffmg the stockings is the centerpiece of one family's holiday festivi-

·'~'
. ... ~

.

0

.cm

•

Irvin &amp; Glenda Brumfield,
Scott Brumfield, ·Greg Brumfield,
Phyllis Holley, Mike Deem,
.Jan Cox &amp; Terri Long~

IRVIN'S
GLASS
SERVICE,
INC.
GALliPOliS .
PT. PLEASANT

A~ve

and beyond the CUStoms dw
have been handed down through genet·
allons, individual family traditions
make the holiday season truly special.
These are penonal exp&lt;essions of the
Christmas spirit, a spirit that lives ond
flourishes in an atmosphere of loving
and giving, caring ond sharing, a spirit
that is as old as Christm•s itself, yet
forever new.

At The .Holiday Season More Than Ever,
OurThoughts Turn Gratefully To Those Who
Have Made Our Progress Possible.
It Is In This Spi.r it We Say, Simply But
Sincerely . . . ''Thank You And Best
Wishes For The Holidays And A
Happy And Safe New Year."

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.

5
E

POMEROY, OHIO
Meigs County Display Yard Near ,Pomeroy-Mason Brldgi

6

L., l. Vaughan, Mgr.

992-2588

7

j)

A N
A L

,.

.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-543-4814

s
N

0

:1''
,. {'·

3
4

s

A

M

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2

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family and friends uns •u , ,..., , ~

Peace, Joy, Love, Hope, Charity

E R

r.

h
.
a n

CHRISTMAS!

1

L

;· ~ ilt:l t il!U t 'l'fil , 'l'f:J , \

.f

Merry

s

i'

~,: Christmas

308 East Main, .Po111eroy, Ohio

•

For c hildren eagerly awaiting
Chri stmas, the days often go by much
too slowly. One solution is to involve
youngsters in holiday preparations such
~ as making home-made ornaments.
. Children can· easily make stuffed fell
ornaments wilhout using a needle and
'· thread. Materials you'll need are: fell ·
·: in bright holiday colors. scissors, con~ struclion paper. Elmer's Glue-All', and
\ lrimmings. Draw si mple patterns of
~ stars. diamonds. animals. teddy be~rs,
the outline of trees. or even Santa .
._ Older children can use the patterns to
: cut the'r own felt pieces, and parenls
' can help the young ones. Cut two or
; each pattern .
: Next take one piece from each pair
; of fell shapes and glue a small wad of
· cotton in its center. Glue a loop of yam
'• or ribbon at one edge for hanging later.
Now lhe creativity begins. On the
~- s econd piece of felt, children can
~- arrange sequins, faux je~els or beads 1
: c-olored pipe cleaners, scraps of felt,
:_ macaroni...the possibilities are endless.
' Once the decorations are arranged. glue
~ each piece to the felt. For heavier
objects (such as large beads). try a glue
: with a quick tack and strong hold, such ·
• as Elmer's Tacky • Glue. Glue both
; pieces or felt together (If)/ damping the
'. edges with clothes pins) and let orna·
(. menls dry overnight.
SX902067

!

992-6614

•

means

·
ingly uncrated. as me tantalizing aroma
of home-baked' cakes and cookies fdls
the air.
Indeed, the traditions of Christmas
are many @.Dd vari~d. and each is an
immutable part of the season. Yet, each
individual family has its own tradilions, too, and .il is tbese thai are often
the most treasured.
·
While one family trims its tree with
.heirloom omamenls, brought over from
Europe generations ago. anotlier brings
memories to life wilh homemade omaments saved from year to year, the collection growing as the family does. .
Yet anotber family ties special omaments to beautifully wrapped ChrislmiS
presents. After the gifts have been
opened, the new decoraliops, symbols
of both givers and recipients, are hung
on the tree, where they will appear
again and again in foUowing years.
In one family, it wouldn ' t be

;crafts.

"Using sterling silver flatw~ every'

; day actually improves it." says Katherine
. • Wolf. director of rrlllllcelina- "As swling
: is used, it takes.·on a beaulifullusii'OUs

The Daily Sentinel-Page 23

Christmos without
bullery ties. Each Chris,l mas Eve, after the night, to be opened first thing in lhe
spntz coolues; another schedules an Midnight Mass and a late supper, morning .
.
afternoon of bakin&amp; tlw they can enjoy everybody hurries about, hiding treaSome families orgaruze skating partogether. While mom lights the oven sures in the long, bulging stockings ties each Chnstmas; others have
and oversees the process. the kids hap- that have been hung carefully on hooks evenings of caroling, culminat ing
ptly roll and cut, and later decorate, over the ftrer.lace.
· . around a steamy howl of wassail. And,
thetr own gingerbread men.
·
· Another amily, ·in a modem home while some go out for innumerable visSome families go out each year to a without ftreplaces. hiS made il a tradi- its to family and fri.ends. others lake
lree fann, where they can select tbe
lion lo lay the already-ftUed stoCkings joy in staying home with those dearest
perfect evergreen, chopping it down at tbe foot of each child :s bed during and closest to them.
themselv~s . Others make a ritual of
decorating living trees in their own
front and back yards, willi garlandS of
lights to beguile the eye, and birdseed
bitlis to encou,.go ,those birds that
haven't migrated 10 visit throughout
the winter.
Some families keep a living tree
indoors during the holiday seoson. then
plant it after all the ChriSimiS decora·
liqns have been taken down. Others dry ,
the branches and trunks of their cut
trees, saving them to throw on the ftre
the foUowing Christmos. Both achieve
a sense of continuil);, something that is
very much at the heart of the Christmas

,_· tradJ'ti'ons begm' m' the hom··e

yeon aeo.

'

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

. 't, Iook no 18.rt
~ her t
.·ur''"'·•·•F
· · ; or t rue Christ mas spu1
· temporaey h0 l'da
Gran~ma's
..Many con
} y.

accompaniment to this year"s neW
board 11111e, a bookmark lUded inside
a book by bet favorite author, a golf
tee for the weekend golf pro, or a
memo pad and stamp holder or key
rina for the executive.
·
The beluty of sterling silver gifts is

Traditionally, the holidays usually
mean lots of festive celebrations, from
small intimate dimlers and family galh~ erings to elaborate gala affairs.
Whether the party is large or small,
fancy or siQiple, impromP!U or p1110110d,
; more entena:iners are rediscovering the
•. charming old customs of their grond, mothers. who set their tables with such
; loving care. After all, ·just like in the
• good old days, it still holds 1111e that
hospitality can he judged by the allen; lion paid to details.

•

• Monday. December 24. 1990

JAMES L. SCHMOR, O.D.
Doctor of Opto.metry
443 Gtowal Hartinger
Parltway

MIDDlE PO IT, OH.

MEIGS
COUNTY
EMERGENCY
MEDICAL
SERVICES
Wishes One and·All
.
A Safe and ·Happy
Holiday.Season.
We Also Wish To Say Thank You
The Citizens Of Meigs County For
Your Continuing Support
.of EMS. ·
•Columbia Township Fire Department
First Responders
•Middleport Fire Department Squads.
•Pomeroy Emergency Squads, Inc. ·
•Raci_ne Emergency Squads, .Inc.
•Syracuse Fire ond Emergency Squads
•Tuppers Plains Area Emergency Squad ·.
•Emergency Medical Services Business Offices,
, Services and Central Dispatch Center

Jor unto you is bom this day in tht tity of
llavid a JaviDr, whidt is thrist tht lord.
.

·--

·lukt 2:11

At This Special Time of Year We
Extend Our Than-ks and Best Wishes to
Everyone in the Meigs County
Community
The Staff At . (},~ ·~/)'lie?(.
"Special Care For People Who Are
Special To You"
992-6472
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1.. .
--

--

¥

-·

'· ~ · '·

.J •

•

~

.... .

.'

�:Page 24-The Daily Sentinel

'

Party panic? Call a caterer
thinking about hiring a caterer
: By United Press lnlernatlonal
for
a holiday party:
:. You'd like to plan a party
-Make
sure the caterer ls
&gt;during the holiday season but the
accessible
and
flexible and wll·
.;thought of all that organiZing
ling
to
work
closely
with you.
•1puts you Into a panic. There ls an
-Ask for a portfolio and letters
:, alternative, says the owner of a
of reference, &lt;~nd Inquire
"~catering service.
• Professional caterers can take whether you can vlslt another
a lot of the headaches out of party party they are catering.
-Inquire about how the staffls
1&gt;lanning and give you more time
· to relax and enjoy· your guests . . trained and what they will be
·
'said Liz Neumark, co-owner of wearing.
-Determine the financial ar·
Great Performances, a New
..York catering firm.
rangements - rates, required
·• A good caterer will provide deposit, refund provision for
,professional staff to tend bar and cancellation, charge for extra
guests and payment schedule.
~erve, prepare a menu- every·
-Find out whether the caterer
)bing from hors d"ouevres to
'desserts - or supplement
your · has Insurance ln case of an
'
, &lt;!W" homemade d1shes. Perhaps accident. Of course, get every·
;!iest of all, they'll clean up after thing ln writing.
:the party's over.
Neumark.sald that most cater·
.. Neumark had the following ers have your best Interests ln
"}uggestions for those who may be mind, so don't be afraid to ask a

Monday, December 24, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lot of ques lions. Inquire wheth~r
the caterer has any specialities
or If a theme for your party [s
possible.
Discuss different types of par·
ties -a stand-up cocktail party,
·a seated dinner, a buffet with
only . "ltnger food" or another
format. ~re there any unusual or
seasonal drinks you might
serve?
Also, caterers can probably
recommend a good florist, enter·
talnrnent, party location and
other rental services.
Neumark also had a list of

caterer. Clear kitchen counters
and · refrigerator, and provide
bathroom facilities and storage
space for the staff's needs. ·
-Rent a coat rack U you
expect a lot of guesis.
-Order extra liquor. Most
vendors will take back unopened
bottles. For a cocktail party,
figure on an average of one drink
per person per hour, six to seven
glasses of wl!je per bottle, and 20
good·slzed drinks per liter of
liquor. A caterer can coordinate
the proper amount with the
vendor.
-Let the caterer· bring the.tce.
-Give your caterer clear
instructions for garbage dispo-

"dos" and "don'ts" for having
are catered party: Do ·
-Let your caterer do the
worrying, not you.
· -Be realistic about the size
and kind of party your space can
accomodate. The caterer can
determine what kind of food Is
appropriate and how to serve It,
based on the number of guests
and the amount of space you
have.
-Work with the caterer on the
layout of the party- traffle·flow,
placement of food, bars, tables,
coat r~cks and the like.
-Take lnventQry - crystal,
dishes, linens, flatware- so the
caterer can order rentals If you
need them. Make a ,check·list o!
everything you provide.
-Prepare your home for the

sal, cleaning up and putting
things back In order.
-Keep notes about the party
for future reference.
Don't
-Enter the kitchen. Be a
guest.
-Forget to have . someone at
home before the party to accept
deliveries.
·
-Skimp on ·staff. You need
enough people to replenish plat·
ters and bullets or pass hors
d'oeuvres and io keep everything
running smoothly.
-Forget to give the caterer an
accurate guest count by an
agreed-upon date before the
par.ty.

.

Holiday.
WISh·

:Monday, Decemb8r 24, 1990

HATS OFF

May your gladness
know no bounds on
this joyous occasion . .

To Our Customers &amp;Friends
You rriake it all worth·
while! A very, merry
Christmas to all.

Celebrate the JOY of
giving, the magic of Jove
and the warmth of
friendship this holiday
season.

ROSE'S
EXCAVATING

K. A. KElLER Ill
992·7270
P'OMIIOY, OHIO

...
;.;·,..-.;.' :

..

,.'!Yt~~~~--

...·

I

'

CONTINUITY
OF CARE, INC.
115 EAR MEMORIAL Dl.
POMEIOY, OHIO
992-2310

CPA

IACINE, OHIO

",

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) could ·also Indicate an lnfesta·
Poinsettia buyers may be carry· tlon, Steele said.
lng home more than plants.
In the home, whltefly·lnfested
Consumers In several parts of poinsettias should be lmme·
Ohio have reported finding Whl· dlately Isolated ln a 'room where
teflies, a common plant pest, on there are no other houseplants,
poinsettia plants brought home Steele said. Large whitefly popu·
trpm shopping trips.
lations on a plant spread the
''That's trouble because whl· fastest. Because whiteflies need
tefiles will attack houseplants," sap to surylve, they're also likely
Julie Steele of the Ohio State to spread from dry or dying
University Plant aQd Pest Dlag. . poinsettias, She said.
·
nos tic Clinic said Thursday .
"If a poinsettia has only a few
Whiteflies feed on plant sap files and you don't plan to keep
and can cause plants to become the plant after the holidays, then
off-color and stunted.
just Isolate lt, keep lt well·
"Infested poinsettias probably watered and ·healthy to keep the
came from greenhouses that cut flies from wandering, and plan to
corners on pest control," Steele. throw It out as soon as possible."
rsald. ''Respectable greenhouses
"But lf a poinsettia holds a
are less likely to produce plants large. Infestation of whiteflies,
with pests. This is just another and your home has many house·
.reason why consumers should plants, I recommend throwing
look for hlgh·quallty plants, even the poinsettia away lmme:
··
If they cost a little more. Cheap dlately ,'' she said.
poinsettias are cheap for a
Shoppers who find whl tetlles
reason.
on a . poinsettia ln a store ·
Because most people have ,shouldn't buy any planis in the
already purchased their polnset· store, Steele said. Go elsewhere
!las, an 1mmediate check for to buy plants, she said. ·
Poinsettias are difficult to
bugs ls .ln order, Steele said.
"Whiteflies are usually found treat for whiteflies because the
under the ,,leaves," she said: colorful bracts surrounding poln·
"Shake the plant. U whltefiles set tla flowers are easily spotted,
are under the .leaves, they'll fly even with water, Steele said.
Those who try to treat a
when disturbed. Then turn the
leaves over to look for the wh ltefly·l nfested polnset !Ia
Immature whiteflies, which will should use a household aerosol
be stuck to the underside of the Insecticide containing pyrethrin
or resmethrln; Steele said. Spray
leaves."
Adult whiteflies resemble mln· lightly on the underside of the
ute chips of snow-white paint. leaves. A heavy spray could spot
Their young are smaller, flat, the flower bracts and ruin the
oval and more translucent. Im- plant's appearance. The aerosol
mature whiteflies do the dam· is most effective against adult
age .. As they feed, Immature . whiteflies, she said.
Insecticidal soap will also
whiteflies secrete a sticky sub·
stance on which a black fungus, control whiteflies, Steele said.
called sooty mold, wlll grow.
Sticky leaves and black spots

Hsppg Holldeg1

...__

~~

f

To One
AndA/11

{j

In thoughtful
appreciation of your
kind patronage
Bill Wickline and Staff:;;~~~:::;
MEIGS COUNTY
AUDITOR'S OFFICE

BEST
WISHES

Fora
fine-tuned
holiday

Ridneour

TV &amp; Appliance
CHESTER

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The Fabric Shop

MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

POMEROY

·'
~~-~~~~~lB¥S.•a.!B*I~l~~~~B*~~B*B*~~B*B*B*~,!e•g•BIMI~:~:~~!~I~5~!=g•g¥~l~l~:~s.·~:B¥t~!-·

Have a Very, Very
·. · Meny Christmas!
If Santa is as good to you as you've been to us, '.
you 're in for a wonderful holiday season!
Thank you, friends.

eWish You
Our Holiday .......
:...
Best
............... .....
I

RESTAUR~NT

304-773-5891
MASON, WY.

304-773·5321
MASON, WV.

I

~

'

·

.

* .. .
·. •.. ...........
'

.. . . ·-··. .
....
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"

••

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(Fait For Ul

•

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'

MASON EXXON MASON FAMILY

'

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She brvught forth her firstborn son, and ··
wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid
him bi a manger; because there was no
room at the inn. ·
-Luke 2 :7

I

At this spedal time of year, we offer
our thanks and join with you in
celebrating the birth of our Savior.

~

i
!•

t
•t•

I

Here's to a wonderful Yuletide season, and I
the very pleasant association we've enjoyed w
with you.
Thanks, friends:

Dr. and Mrs. Larry D. Kennedy
Beth Cremeans
Sherry Chapman
Sheri Johnson ·
Denise Ragen

By United Press International ·
' The "hot" new toy this
·season may be the latest
:high· tech video game or a
'simple set of blocks, but
parents cail choose ln toys that
will not only entertain their
"children but also stimulate
,their vision development, says
the American Optometric
Association.
( The association said certain
kinds of toys can help chlldren
,llevelop or sharpen the following
skills:
· -Eye-hand-body coordination
skills, necessary for writing and
~ports.
·
. -Shape and stze dlscrimlna·
tioil skills, needed for reading.
-VIsualization and memory
skil ·ls· , needed · for
comprehen'slon.
Parents also should keep toys
age-appropriate for their child·
ren, the association said.
' For babies, large. bright rat·
lies, squeaky toys, stuffed anim·
als, sturdy cardboard books,
take -apart toys, blocks,
stacking-nesting toys, zipper
.toys and brlght·colored balls can
be stimulating and fascinating . ·
· For active toddlers, the associ·
ation su~:gesled peg-hammering
toys, simple sorting shapestze
toys, crayons and puzzles.
'· Preschoolers' vision develop·
ment can be enhanced through
snap· together toys, stringing
!leads, pegboards, puzzles, slm·
pie sewing cards, modeling clay,
fllatch·up shape toys and
. tricycles.
•
·
' Suggestions for older children
Include bicycles, simple compu·
.ter programs, building toys,
remote-controlled toys, jump
·ropes, pogo sticks, safe dart and
and c:&gt;ther target games and
batting trainer devices.
• Home video games also can
help children - as well as adults
!.. Improve such vision skUls as
pand·eye coordination, the asso·
elation said.
. However ,when playing a video
game, both children and adults
should take a flve·minute rest
break every 30 minutes of play to
relax and re· focus their eyes at a
distance.
• ' Parents also should be re·
minded that toys and games can
help a child'svlslondevelopment ·
but that they are nota guarantee.
Optometric exams are a good
.Idea for chlldren· beginning ai .
age 3, then·at age 5 and annually
through the school years.

Swert
Titrittss
To
. v. •
Here's hoping good times
follow wherever you go. We.
wish you a Merry Christmas...

,

You've been o pleasure ·
to knowl

'

~

EACE ON EARTH

Merry Christmas from us to you.
,We appreciate your friendship and trust.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to all
servicemen and women and their families
everywhere, who are separated from
their loved ones this holiday season.
We wish all of you a fast and safe return
·
home.
Larry &amp; Paula, Ruth &amp; Ed,
.Suzie, Diana and Becky

Our entire staff would like to
wish you a merry, maJlcal Christmas.

MEIGS COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT

MILL STREET BOOKS

93 Mill Straet

Middleport, Ohio

sight skills

JOlt.

'

But its use carries a large risk of always been hard to control In
spotting the flower bracts.
greenhouses but that control has
Adult whiteflies are attracted become more difficult since the
to bright yellow objects. Some Insecticide Temlk was banned
stores sell a yellow sticky-tape · from greenhouse use. ·
.
"Poinsettias can't be sprayed ·
trap for Whlteflles, she said.
An effective control for the with Insecticide once their flower
Immature whiteflies Is to wipe bracts turn color or the spray will
them off with a cOtton swab spot the bracts.'' she said.
dipped ln rubbing alcohol, Steele "Temlk was applied to . the
sal d.
potting mix and moved up
Because controls must be through the plant. Whltefiles
effective for all 30 days of the feeding on the plant Ingested the
pest's llfecycle, Steele recom· Temik. which kUled them. Temlk
mends repeating the swabbing was effectlye but carried ~afety
plus use o! an aerosol spray or questions.
Insecticidal soap every 5 to 7
"The bottom line ls that
days.
producers.have had to try harder
Steele said. whltefiies have to produ~e pest-free plants."

Toys to aid

'&gt;"~~l!ttiia'4MI.'Oiillo ................ ,.,.,~

·

The Daily Sentinel-Page 26

Poinsettia b~yers ..may take home pests

It

May the warm glow
of Christmas
light up your life.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh'io

May your Christmas carol repeat the sounding joy.

DO

Merry Christmas
DON'T MISS OUR BIG

.1/2 PRICE SALE
What ajoy it is for us to celebrate Christmas with so many
longtime.frieTuis. Thank you for making tt pos,sible.

WED., DEC. 26, 1990, 8 AM SHARP!

SWISHER LOHSE

ELLIOTT'S
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Pharmacy
IC . . . . . MCCul*'lfl• R.rlt.

C,_.lnRIHtl. 1,1'111.

ROM lei HMI. ., • . Ptl.

~. tltru Sit.

I:••·'"· tt tp.in.

14tnAr 1t:H to U : JO•ncl s fo' ·"'·

PRESCRIPTIONS

PM. fft•2tiJ

�Monday, December 24, 1990

'

1'age 26-the Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, December 24, 1990

The joyous bells heard this Christmas have roots dating ba~k to historical times
· all of
We experience Christmas with
our senses, enjoying the evocative fra grance of evergreens. the bright colon
of the decorations fe stooned every\\·here, the haunting, spicy flavor of
freshly baked cookies.
The traditional glass balls hung from .
rhe tree have a particular feel to &lt;hem
smoo&lt;h and cool to lhe fingertips, and
: mar.k:edl)' in contrast to the roughness

, of bark or the stinging prick of pine

i needles

; Bul, ;nos&lt; of al l, we hear Christmas
I iQ a myriad of ways-the joyful car·
l ois, &lt;he laughter of children as.the hoii lday exci tement builds. and the ring·
• ing of bells... eve'Y.where. the ringing
; of bells.
, Jus&lt; walk downtown, and listen to
' the bells rung by the Santas posted at
:·every streer c.orncr. Their bells serve as
~h

·
of England. church bells would nng
each mormng for ~hree day s before
Christmas as a rc:mmder of that holtday's approach. .
One Engli~h custom, still practiced
in some h~alltles even today,,. Tollmg
the Devil s Knell. also called The Old
Lad 's Passing Bell, which occurs on
Christmas Eve.
. ..
The sonorous sc:-upds of ch~h bells
ringing the Devil s Knell- a death
knell because folklore holds that the
Devii died at Christ 's birth-_Pre~ede
the.JOyous nngmg after m1dmght h~s
struck, to mark the day of Chnst s
binh.
.
.
An eene ·folk story of Chnstmas
bell·ringing comes from the French

· of Bnttany.
·
· sanctity.
·
reg1on
.
·
flouted us
Accordmg to th1s tale , a blackChurch bells were: not the only bells
sm1lh chose to 1!ln~re the bells associated with traditional Chris,t~as
which rang for Mldmght Mass on celebrations . In many commumhes,
Christmas Eve and. despite th e carole~s were accompanied by hand
sacred nat~re of the evenmg, conun- bell-nngers when they made their
ued wuh hts work .
rounds.
He was interrupted by a customer, .an
In other communities, bell-ringers
qld, crooked man carrying a broken donned masks and went from door to
scyt~e, w~ich he asked t~e s~tth to ~o~r on ChristmaS !J.Ve. These bell·
repa1r. Th1s the blacksmith d1d, not ·nngers, called Belsruckles. were often
knowmg that the old man was the per· repaid with a plate of cookies, also
sanification of Death, and his scythe called Belsnickles, a recipe for whic,h
the tool be used forh~s work.
[reproduced {rom M1m1 Sheraton s
By d~wn of Chrtstm~s Day, the cla.Sic cookbook of Christmas sweets,
blacksmith was dead, a VICtim. of hts Visions of Sugarplums (Harper &amp;
own blasphemy. for by wo~ktng on Row)]" g1ven below.
such a holy day he had gnevously

B.ELSNJCKLES

•;,

reminder, no1 only of the season's

~ the imponance of giving to those less

i fortunate than we are.
; . Merry lillie bells decorate Christmas
i stoc kings and hang from tree branches,

tinkling every time the tree is touched.

~ And , grea t1 sonorou :s bell s call the
1failhful to pmyer, their ringing adding

,

cup ('I• pound) melted wisalt·
ed butler
cup sugar

~n

itnportant top note. to the Christmas
; tableau.
·
1.

Pour butter over sugar and beal until
creamy. Add eggs and beat well. Sift
flour twice with baking soda and salt.
Resifl gradually into butter mixture,
adding only enough flour to make a
dough yoli can roll. Beat thoroughly
until mixture holds together. Chill sev,
era! hours. Roll out to paper thinness
on a lightly floured board. Cut into (.
inch rounds, sprinkle liberally with
granulated sugar and place on a bu&lt;·
tered baking sheet. Bake in preheated

:

Like so man y other 3/ipects of the.
t C hri s tmas seaso n, bell-ringing has
t nn t ient ro ots. During many pre~
~ Chri s tian mid-winter celebrations; bells

i 'were

rung because it was believt4 that
·. fe peated loud noi se would drive away
" the lurking evil spirits that caused the
"f-rightening phenomenon of winter, and
en s u re the rebirth -Of life which
~ccu rred in spring.
·•
): Early Christians believed bells to
:: have powers over their physical well·

:!

Even after being taken down and
~·buried (in war time . for instance),
\:church be lls can still be heard ringing
;-on Christmas Eve. according to legend,
:,' al least by true believers.
; ' In medieval times, &lt;he church bells
;\ we re ru ng to announce Christ's
j.redenopti"on of the world. And, in parts

May your hollday Qe filled with cheer.

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE COLLINS

and STAFF ·

We wish you and your entire family a
Christmas blessed with happiness.

was written for a Boston Sunday

MEIGS COUNTY
CLERK OF COURTS
LARRY SPENCER &amp; STAFF

School event, is probably the most

i
w

~

THE JOYFUL RINGING OF BEU..S ushers In the merriment of the
Christmas season. Here, in an 1874 Illustration from Harper 'I Weekly
entitled "Santa Claus is Coming!" by Thomas Worth, a bearded angel
rings the bells as Santa arrives in his reindeer-driven sleigh. SX901859

i1

w

Iw
w

. HappinesSis ...
Christmas! And good
friends like you!
Thanks for the privilege
or serving you. .

~

W

Sandy, Janice
Cathy, Dixie,
Amy
.

~

5
W

~

g
g
g

OOOR PRIZE WINNERS
Helen Fields
Charles Grueser
Tad Kittle

~

~

CHATEAU
BEAUTY
SALON

!

helped during the fire .in March and '
remaining with us as a loyal ·customer
when we reopened.

1t

.

w
w
w
w

W We would like to thank all of you who

HAPPY NEW YEAR
'

W,

May the Spirit of Christmas .
embrace you and yours.

~

··

w
w

Joy of the Season

MERRY CHRISTMAS
and

1.(

~

992-7606

W

304-773-5575 or 1-800-755-0250 ·
. . 112 N9RTH SECOND, MASON, WV.
·

I
ll

THE
~FLORAL
BOUQUET.
!

POMEROY

I~
ll

, .~

Barbara VanMeter, Owner

~~~-~-~~-w~~~~~--~-~-~-~

A Christmas story,

a Yuletide song,
love Is knowing
that you belong
to our family.
Many thanks.

SEARS

·-· We appreciate YO\Ir continuing business.

CATALOG MERCHANT

•u NAPrOIISlAU

Pll II. 21111 ·

Middleport

992-2171

·WHALEY'S
.
AUTO
PARTS
992·7013
992·5553
STAR IOUJE 611

I

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~.

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.. .

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... . ..

Season's Greetings

DECK THE HALLSI

Today, some of our most popular

holiday songs evoke the cheerful chilD·
ing of bells at Chtistmastime.
"Jingle Bells," which dates from the
middle of the 19th century and which

;. 1 s H~cple.

12 cup mayonnaise
2 drops Tabasco sauce
Slice one end of! each roll.
Scoop out bread with fork,
leaving about 14 Inch around
shell.
Blend all remaining Ingredients. Spoon filling Into rolls,
packing well. Replace ends.
Wrap In plastic or foil and chUI
several hours. Cut Into heels.
Makes 6 or more servings.

•

faintly golden around the edges.
Makes 4 to 5 dozen cookies.

1

;, A.D. pries&lt;s regularly blessed bells
·~, be fore they were hung in the church

6 cans chicken broth or stock
1 can (14-12 ounces) tomatoes,
cut up
1 package {10 ounces) frozen
peas
14 cup chopped parsley
14 tsp. nulmeg
2 Tbls. !lour
14 cup water
2 cups shredded Jarlsberg
cheese
In large, heavy, deep saucepan, brown chicken in butter.
Add onion, carrots, celery,
pepper, wild and · whl te rice,
garlic and curry. Cook several
minutes, until vegetables are
crisp-tender, stirring often. Add
chicken broth, tomato with juice,
peas, parsley and nuune~.
Simmer 30 minutes, stirring
occasionally.
Gradually blend flour and
water until smooth. Stir into
soup. Cook, stirring, until thick·

6 hero rolls (about 6 Inches
long)
2 cups shredded Jarlsberg or
Nokkelost cheese
12 pound ham, diced
12 cup chopped unsalted
pistachios
·
14 cup chopped sweet gherkins
14 cup shredded carrot
14 cup chopped green onion
(scallions)
dash of celery salt

Who's coming down the chimney'?

400° oven for 8 to 10 minutes, or until

'1•being as well as their s piritual health,
~so much so that in the early centuries

'

Buffets • taking a holiday break.
By United Pret18lllternational
3 cups shredded cabbage
Everyone loves a big celebra·
2 cups caull!lowerettes (fresh
uon for Thanksgiving and Christ·
or frozen)
mas, but the days lnbetween can
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
best be spent relaxing and
broccoli flprets
regrouping. That's the time
12 tsp. garlic salt
buffet lunches and dinners work
18 tsp. pepper
best.
·
1 cup Jarlsberg cheese
For casual entertaining or
In large, deep saucepan, cook
family (are, buffets ease the
bacon unttlcr!Sp; remove and set
strain of preparing a big meal
aside. Pour off all but 2 tables·
and give everyone a chance to poons drippings . Add onion and
pitch ln.
red pepper and saute 3 minutes,
In Scandanavla, where winters stlrrl!lg often. Bleqd In soup,
· are long and outdoor sports are
broth and cream. Add cabbage,
popular, getting together with cauliflower, broccoli, garllc salt
friends usually means simple,
and pepper. Simmer 10 minutes,
make·ahead foods that are both
just until vegetables are tender.
nourishing and appealing.
Gradually blend In Jarlsberg
Following are several Scan· cheese. · Garnish with bacon.
danavlan recipes for soups and Makes 8 to 10 servings.
sandwiches that are perfect for
Norse Mulllgalawny Soup
casual evenings or weekend
2 whole chicken breasts, boned
·afternoons gathered :aroun.d • and skinned (about 2 pount1s)
watching the football game:
2 Tbls. bu iter or margarine
Cabbage and Potato Chowder
1 medium onion, chopped
. 8 sllces bacon, cut into l-Inch
1· 12 cups sliced carrots
pieces
1 cup sliced celery, with leaves
. 1large onion, thinly sliced
12 cup cubed yellow peppers
1 medium red pepper, chopi&gt;ed
12 cup wild rice
2 cans (10 1:2 ounces each)
12 cup white rice .
condensed cream of potato soup
1 medium clove garlic
3 cups chicken broth
1 to 2 tsp. curry powder
2 cups light cream

The Daily Sentinel-Page 27

ene&lt;l and smooth. Graduahy
blend In 1·12 cups JartSberg
cheese. Pass remaining cheese.
Makes 6-8 servings.
Norwertan Reubena
12 slices rye bread
1 thinly sliced purple onion,
separated Into rings
12 pound sauerkraut'
1 medium apple, chopped
14 tsp. caraway seeds
14 pound sliced pastrami
12 pound sliced Nokkelost
cheese
14 pound sliced turkey
2 to 3 Tbls. butter or margarine
Top 6 slices rye bread with
onion, dividing evenly. Combine
sauerkraut, apple and caraway
seeds. Spoon over onions. Top
with pastrami, Nokkelost cheese
and turkey. cover with remainIng slices of bread.
Melt 1 Tablespoon butter In
large skillet over low heat. Grill
sandwiches until golden on both
sides turning once, adding addl·
tiona! butler as needed. Makes 6
·
sandwiches.
Ham turnarounds

.

with
pain caused by war and
killing.the
The poet cries out in anguish,
bot the bell s peal th eir rea ss uring
response:
"The Wrong shall fail
The Right prevail, '
With peace on eartb, good-will 10
men'"
It is thi s messag~ that Christmas
brin s to the world each ear remiQdin ~S anew of the im lane~ of love,
cogmpassion and kindne ss-the most
b . ~ b . f the Christmas s .. t
asiC a nc 0
P'" ·

I
1 wholeegg
2 egg yolks
Ito 1'/, cups flour
'!. teaspoon baking soda
Pinch of salt
Granulated sugar, for sprin·
kUng

r pleasures. but of rhe season's spirit-

I

famous of these, but a1S? very ~e Jl.
known IS the enchanung . S1lver
Bel.l s ," a, paean to t~e JOYS of
Christmas m the cny, whtch Wllll v.er·
formed in the I9SI Bob Hope mov1e,
The Lemon Drop K1d, but populanzed
by Bmg Crosby.
.
More: meaningful by far is the poem
"Christmas Bells," by Henry Wads·
worth L:o.ngfello:-v. which. h~, smce tts.
compos1t1on dunng the CIVIl War, been
set to a vanety of tunes. In II, the JOY
th~ Christ~~lls evoke is contrasted

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

··· ·

-

~·

__ _

,.-

--

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..

OHIO

. . ....... _. --·-- -- --·

Caring for
holiday
'linen
By United Press International
It's the season to bring out
those heirloom linen tablecloths
and napkins for holiday enter·
tainlng, and it's also the time to
watch out for such, hazards as
melted candle wax, spilled wine
and grease, and damage to
delicate cutwork.
"When you have an accident,
except (or wine spills, less Is
more," advises Liz Barbatelll of
Linens Limited, a national specialized laundry care. ·service.
"Most of the time, too many
operations and cleaning ag!!nts
are tried In the home, which only
mak·e the situation more
difficult."
A survey done by the company
Indicated that the holidays are
the No. 1 period for linen usage,
with 71.4 of the respondents
saying they always use fine
linens for the Christmas and
Hanukkah holidays, and 80.4
percent saying they use fine
linens frequently during this
time.
. Of those polled, 68.4 percent
said they always use fine table
linens for Thanksgiving and 76.8
percent said they use them
frequently or always.
Although cleaning stains from
fine linens is not a project for the
do·l t ·YOU rselfer, BarbatelU
offers the following precautions
for linen .owners should damage
occur:
-Can~le wax. Allow It to
harden. Do not scrape, as this
wlll damage the fabric. Dyes tn
some .candle wax will penetrate
and stain the fibers . both can
removed only through profes·
slonal laundering, since the
chemicals required to remove
stains and wax are available only
to commercial operations. Water
will not stop the stain action.j
'-Spilled wine. Soak tablec·
laths or napkins Immediately In
cold water; this releases the
stain so It will not set. Have the
.linen proiesslonally laundered as
soon as possible.
-Grease. This Is !he toughest
of all stains so don't try to treat It
at home. Grease-stained fabric
must be hanated. by trained
.professionals and the procedure
Involves boOing the fabric In·
copper kettles.
-Damaged cutwork. Items
such as tablecloths, napkins and
runners with cutwork usually are
family heirlooms and may re·
quire professional repair and ,
res toratton. Remove any dam·
aged Items Immediately to avoid
additional tearing.
"Providing linens the proper
care as soon as possible Is the
best .h~ aratnst permaQI!nt
s.t alns and damage."

.

'

,..

....

~,.the S,irit

o~~uin~···
May the warm,
wonderful season of
Yuletide brin~ happiness
to you dJid yoiU'8.
Vou've been wonderful
to know and serve.

c•·~·'
M1ettr

1.-_TILLITf
EAfii;TH

ITAT10N

446-4517
Gallipolis,
Ohio

We remember everything Christmas has meant to us ov~r the years.
and hope that you find the joy that this season brings .

Our many thanks to

•John Fultz
•~arilrn Fultz

eac~

and all.

•J. Marcus Fultz
•Larry Sigler

•Bill Williams

MEIGS
TlRE_
£ENTER
.
POMEROY OHIO
.
•

...

\·

�•
P•ge 28-The D•ilv Sentinel

Mond•v. December 24. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

n-lici·ous
&lt;Coau•ued trom Pa~re tz&gt;
~
. .... ___!:====!...._-------

-

~~~~'~'l::w Year he was thanked for cheese and liome-baked delicacies,
his e
with a glass of whiskey and such as black bun, ankersocts and

shortbread.
a slic:e of cake.
Black bun, a spiced cake studded
It was considered unlucky for the
r..-.fooler to be dad&lt; or blond-haired. with dried fruits and nuts, and laced
or.to carry a knife or other sharp with brandy,. was pemaps the richest of
object; A female f~rst-footer was the the offerings; the oddly named ankersocks were loaves of rye gingerbread.
unlol:kiest of all.
Shortbread, a buttery cookie tradif,D fact, this tradition w.a~ taken so
·ously that mony famthes would tionally baked in a circular fo111) with
arrangements for the proper firSt· ridged edges, is the descendant of the
~
to be wailing on their doorstep oat bannock that was inlrinsic'to pagan
as tho. chw"ch beD tolled the beginning Yule rites, and whose shape was meant
to mirror the sun and its rays.
of the New Year.
The following recipe for Scotch
In addition, as the New Year
arrived, a great &lt;;lam~:lf would begin, Shortbread is reproduced from Maftha
as ~veryone in the househol4 rang St~wart '&lt; Christmas (Clarkson N.
beDs and clanged pots to frighten any Potter, Inc.), a personal celebration of
!orting evil spirits from the premises. the season with Stewart's own invenT)lf front door and the windows tive recipes, plus instructions for creatwquld be opened to facilitate their ing striking homemade decorations,
departure; later, all possible points of ornaments and gift wrsp.
eniJ:Y would be shut tight. to prevent
SCOTCH SHORTBREAD
lhejl; return.
Makes I giant cookie
There are several tradilional Hog l cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter
mallay delicacies. The beverage of
•t, pound sugar
cbclk:e is bet pint, a blend of warm ale
l
pound sifted all..purpose flour
and whiskey that's been flavored with
Preheat the oven to 350" F. Butter an
nutmeg. This "cup of kindness" would
wash down quantities of homemade 8-inch round baking tin and line bot -

Mond•y. December 24, 1990

Greetings (rom the pa8t

·vote signals move· toward independent Yugoslavian state

tom with ~paper.
ere.m tile butter and susar. Add tile
flour and mix weU; the mixture will be
very C111Dlbly.
. Pack the mixture into the tin,
smoothins the top with a ru~ SCI8per. Milk the top with a decorative pat·
tern (we used a butter knife and the
tines ofa fort).
Bake for about 2S minutes; do not
allOW to brown. Cool 10 minutes in tin,
then tum onto rack.
Remember that it's considered bad
luck to cut the shortbread with a knife.
Break it for serving and have a happy
. Hogmanay!

.j( , ""
ft1r2

By NESRO DJURIC
LJUBLJA.NA, Yugoslavia
(UPI) - Voters In Slovenia
endorsed an independent state In
a plebiscite Sunday, authorizing
the republic's nationalist government to secede from the Yugos lav federation, officials said.
However, leaders of Yugoslavia's most westernl2:ed republic
said they did not plan to Immediately leave the Increasingly
precarious ·m ulti-ethnic
federation.
Slovenia, along with neighbor·
ing Croatia, wants the country of
23 million founded In 1918 transformed Into a confederation of
independent states linked by a
common market. Their sland Is
rooted In fears of economic and
political subservience to Serbia,

•1 , ""ilt ··1 , 'ffif , •1 g 'ff'l ' 'Jl11 .'!til
A' Christmas classic
·*·

TIDS TURN-oF-THE-CENTURY POSTCARD offera warm New Yeu'o
wiJhel, It1 colorful IUuatration, of a girl in a IarKe hat and muff ltand-

inlln front or a onow-covered cottage, evokeo the oeaaon, and Is similar
to many which n.ooe.t tlie po8t nearly a century ago.

SX902459

Great expeCt(ltio~s for a great
Christmas ... thts year and
ei·ery year. To our customers
we wish a ...·onderjul holiday!

the nation's largest republic,
whose communist leaders have
been stoking ethnic tensions by
fanning Serbian nationalism.
With 55 percent of the votes
countl'd In Slovenia, 94 percent of
voters endorsed an Independent
Slovenia, 5 percent against and 1
percent of the ballots were
Invalid, election commissiono!!lClals said late Sunday.
About 4,200 polling stations
closed at 7 p.m. (2 p .m. EST)
Sunday after 12 hours of voting
during which 1,279,870 people, or
88.2 percent of nearly 1.5 eligible
voters, cast their ballots, the
officials said.
The only sentence on the ballot,
to which voters had to respond
with "yes" or " no," read, "Are
you in favor of an autonomous

. TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992 -2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
B·A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

·'

'

I

'

'

.POLICIES

992-5101
POMEROYI OHIO

FLAMING TORCH HELD IDGH, !lcroote'• Third VWtor appean belore
him in tbil orillnal dnwlna by artilt ,John Leech. The detlln eflll'll-.ed

from tbil facet~ page 78 In the ftnt edition of the Charleo l&gt;leiEeM clullc
tale, A Chrutmae Carol. Waterrolor over peneU. Illuatratlon courte.r.
Pierpont Morpn Library.

paod
'AllCt!tYI~

.,

$.b0 dtscount to1 adl pa1d 1n atlvanc u
'f " :t! 01dS
Gnre o.way and Found ads undet 15 words Will be
nm l davs at nu e h•g e
"Puet: of ~d lo1 all capullf!lhir!. IS double pn c~ ot ad cost
•7

t:Wh&amp;. ·O iul y TrdJI.IIl tl. ltHIChlll~l OlltH 18 .000 hO!Ul'S

CO P¥ Of A DUN E
MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAV P,APER
WlONFSOAV PAPER
. THURSDAY PAPER
HIIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

a christmas
_._~With

1'ha11k you.

CROW, CROW
&amp; CROW
. ATTORNEYS-AT-lAW
POMEROY,
OHIO
,.

A
JIMGIII BE11113
0Hl13'1'M.U.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY'
2 00 PM MONDAY

2 00 PM . TUESDAY
2 .0 0P M . WEDN ESDAY
2 ·00P M THURSDAY

2

~OP

'

.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

FOR SALE IN RACINE

VERY NICE LAR GE HOME ON APPRO X. 3'h
ACRES- 4 BR, 3 baths, 2 gatages, rented I
BR apattment. Ptaperty includ es pond. ap·
PIOJ&lt; . 4,800 sq. n. fatm bid&amp; and mobile
home. A real bargain at $89,900.

; CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.

With resounding good cheer we
wish all our friends and customers
a very merry Christmas.

Keith Oiler
Ray Mcfarland
Kevin Hoffman
Mary Parker
Otis McNutt

Shelia Westfal-l,
John Foreman
Brenda Randolph
Shirley Coleman
Bernice Durst

Public Nollce

be rocoillad In tho office of
NOTICE T.O BIDDERS
The Ohio Dopenment of tho Olvilion of Porl&lt;o and ·
Noturol Rooourceo. through Recreation untl 2;00 p.
tho Dilllolon of Plrknnd Ro· . m, Thurldey, Jenu•ry 17,
crudon, punuont to and In 1991 . Bldo wit bo publicly
IICCOt'dlnco with the provl· - t d thereafter by tho
oiono of Section 1101 r10 of Chief or hio outhortztd
tho Ohio Rovtled Coda pro- - t . Tho right io ,.aarvtd
poaao to loaaa for tho opera· to nojoct any end ott bido .
Thelel18 will befor•term
don of tl!o bolt rental 11
Forked Run ltoto Pori&lt;. of oparoxlmotoly four (4)
y"ur~ from execution of
lloloigo. County. Ohio.
teooe
to Docombor 31,
Offtcle( bid propoaalo wit
1994. Sold teooe may bo ro, . . - ot tho option of tho
2
lnMamory
Director for 1 period not to
exceed four (41 yeoro.
. · Tho Dlvllion of Porl&lt;o and
R-tlon wit fumloh ono
conceallon building epprox·
lmoMty 32'x20', oto,.go
orM. 11 docko for ,.ntot
· oqulpmont oo ItemIzed In tho bid opedflcottona, 111d ell weter end

wa81t weter tMitment neoe~~ury for the conceeeion
QPetodon.
.
Tho con-•nolre will

2

lnMemOry

In Memory Of

Nathan &amp; Nick Goodwin
Alan Durst
Jeff Hillery
J. C. Varner

J
6
10

Rates are f« conMc:utive runs.. broken upd~s wdl be ch•gecl
lo' each dav .as ~rare ads

~r.1ouncemen1s
Ctrd ot Th.n•s
In Memory

1
2
J
4
5

Annouc;~ents

Giwuway

Happy Ads
loll and found
7 'l•d Sele!patd tn &lt;Jdllancel
8 PubUc Sale &amp; Auclion
9 W..tvd to Buy

d

Empluyl!len t
Services

C/a .~.~ifi!'tl fJR!{I'~

SHELLEY MAXINE
SMITH
ON CHRISTMAS
We"d bring you home
tor· Chr111m81
If only wellould;
We'I! .., be together
Ute • fltmlly t~ld.

We'll let you go tile

- nutdey
111011 to 'IOUf l!lllllell

......

.

If only - could
you
And IJitl your -ttvl

llltli . . -

For __

mo.. Chrllt,

Cllrtatmn.

· ·m·••r rlt i•

fulluwiiiK 11•/t•pholll' l•xdwugt•.L.
Go~llia

Counly

~gs

Area Code 614
446 CNihpolis
367 Ch•htre
388 Vinlon
256 GuYI!n Dtst .
643 Ar•bt• Dts• .

w..nul

M ilson Co , WV
A111 a Code 104

992

675
458
&amp;76

P1 PI•~Unt
Leon
Apple G1ove

7 73
882
895
937

M"on
t.ew H•nn
letort

Mtddlepot1

Pom•oy

245 Rio Gr•nde
379

County
Area Code 614

90S Chester
843 PoniWld
247 . let•r1 Falls
949 ·R•an•
742 Ruthtnd
66 7 Coohlille ·

Uullafo

11

Helo Wmled

12 Situetfon Wanu.t

,.

1J

lnsuum~:e

8u tin•s Tr••ntng
IS Schools &amp; lnsttuc hon
16 R•d•o. TV &amp; CB Repau
t 7 MtSCell..,tfOU I
18 WJnted To Do

ljhfihiiijil
.21

Susin•s 'opportumtw

22 Monuy to Lo•n
21 Prolasion•l Slfvictl$

at Chrlotmeotlme :
tn J - God took you
aw1y.
We oouldn 't under1t1nd
tl!ot day. ·
Dod, h lo Chrlotmoo time,
Our holno wilt olwoyo
pint.
Only time con mend our
loa.
It -mo like thore'o ono
more gift to buy,
Then WI - - ·tho
,._why.
ChrlltmloiaJ-•'binh-

Real Estate
31
32
Jl

HomU5 lor Sale
Mobt h; tiom~:n lor S01lc
Farms lor Sale

31

8u11neu Buildings

15
36

Lott &amp; Acreage

Real

61

Es•••• W~nted

e;mma

Trans ortatl

41 HOuMS lor Rent
4 2 Mobile Homes fur Rent
43 hrms 101 Attnl
44 Apartment tor Run t
45 furnis hed Roon1s
46 Sp•ctt tor Rent
•U W •nted lo Rent

48
49

Equ•pment for Rl!nl
For Le•e

51
52 53
5"
SS

Household Goods
SpOtting Gooch
Antiques
MISC . Merch•d• n
Bu1lding Supplies

Auto s 101 Salu
Tw cks to. S;•h~
Varn &amp; 4 WD' s
Molo• c ycl..s
Boat s &amp; Motn1s lor ·,,In
Aulo Pan s 8o AC CI"'·~ l!rf!S
77 Auto Aup ,111
78 Camp1ng Eqm11nwn1
79 Ccunpen, 8o Mm or H '' HS
71

Services '
81
82

~u5t cal lnst rumentli

sa· Fru111 &amp; Vegtrtabl •

· 59 For Sale or Tr•rle

85

Go:n l!'fa l Hauhn"'

86
87

Mo b1 lt: Honl!l
Upholslurv

. . . Ulft---r-•to

i:llary to
tho boot
rent.l can:a 1!C111 to epproved _ , . . . during tho
of .,.,..ion end dilly
houro dlftnld In tho • llltclllcltione.,.· -..--; - ·· :..~
tt ohotl be.tho intent of the
INN thlt tM minimum ....
oon of operation for the boet
rome! cone•-• ohatl be
from Moy 1 through SIP·
tomber 30.
Requeoto for bid propoal
lormoohould bemodetotho
Ohio Ooponment r/1 Noturo!
AIIOUI'MI, Divltion of Perko
and Rocroatlon. Concoo•
olono Section, 1BII2 Botcher
Drive C-3 , Columbuo, OH.
43224-1388.
Telephone;
(8141 2811·8140.
JoiiPh J. Sommer,
Director
(t2J10, 17, 24, 31, 4tc

LEGAL NOTICE ·
Not leo io horebygillon thlt
the Board ·of Educotlon of
the Molgo Local School Dl•
trlct, Melgo County, Ohio
dealrea to receive ••led
bido for tolophon11 for verlouo ochoolo in the diotrict.
The number of phoneo being
bid In aach builclng io oo talIowa:

Brtdbury Eternentory - 2
phon to
HerrloonvHto Elementary 4 Dhones
'
Mlddlopon Elemontory - 3
.
phonoo
Pomeroy Elementary · phan11

6

Rutlend Elemontory -

3

phonea

'

Salem Center Elementary 4 phonoo

to hive:
1 . 4 ttnoo x 8 telephone cepoclty whh oxpanolon copobillty
2 . 1nt•com
3 . Memory dtollng
4 . Conferlncocallcopobillty
11. Phone coli hold button
I. iJne atatualightl
7 . Dtotlnctlvo ringing
8 . Hondo free o n - bock
9 . Hold line rornlncllr
1 o. Loot number rediot
11. All coli peglng oyotom
12. Prlvecy on ItBid price lo to Include tnotollation, wiring and o two
121 yoar worronty .
In order to bo conlidlred,
oil 11olod bido ohlll bo roceillod In tho TNoourer' o Offico, 320 Eoot Main Stroot.
P. 0. Box 272 . Pomeroy.
Ohio 41789. on or blforo
12:00 o'clock noon on Tu••·

day, Jonuary 8, 1881 .
All 111led anvel-o contlintng bido eroto be cteorly
mort&lt;o on tho outoldo "TEL·
EPHONE BIDS'".
Tho boord of education Intendo to occopt the lowoot
rooponoibla bid for tho tetophoneoy.,.mo. but roaorvH
the right to rljeat any and oil,
or porto of loy and ell bi~o.
By order of tho Boord of
Education, Moia- Loco!
School Diotrlct. 320 Eeot
Main Stroot. P. 0 . Box 272.
Pomeroy, Ohio 417&amp;1. Tetophono j8141992-1810.

J1ne Fry, Treeeur•

112117, 24, 31: (1 7 , 4tc

Pick

911 Hyllll St.

Mldllllport, Oh.

992-2034

11 00 Remington
Slug Gun•
870 Remington
Slug Gune
Ithaca Slug Gun•

11-13-1 mo.

STEWAIT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742-2421
. 21/t MI. ouhldtt

lutlatld on lhw
Ll-ld.
HOURS; Monday
thru Saturd1y
10 em to 6 pm

We Are A Deer
Ch~klng Station.
.
ll·Zl·t-1 ....

It - Up~
USE THIE CLASSIFIED&amp; TOD~Y

992•21

MOVING SALE
CARPENTER
GUNS&amp; AMMO

I,

•

GUN SltOOT
RACIME
'fiRE DEM.
Iathan luldlng

·sat. NIGHT
6:30 ....
I«Wy Chlltt

12 .... !hilt• Ooly
Strictly EnflnW
2 .,_

· THE

YARDMAN &amp;
ECHO DEALER
•Any length SIW
chains end accessories
•Kerosene Stoves Ill
Wicks
We Do Wick Repair

USED APPLIANCES

GROOM
ROOM
Con~plete Grooming

All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operotor

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

614-992-6820

742-2455

Sltltlill Road, lutlallll
12-24-90-1 mo.

MICIDWAYE
OVEN JEPAII
ALL MAlliS

Iring It In Or
Pick Up.

We

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992,5335 or \IS-3561
,.,... ,,.. , ... Office
217 I. S.C. '-•Y
I'OIUIOY, 01110
315/'!lil/lfn

YOUNG'S

CARPENlR SERYKE

- Room Addhiono
-Gutter Work
-l!toctrlcel • l'tumbtng
- Concmo "Vorl&lt;
- Roofing
- l n t - • Exterior
Plinting
!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUIIG II
"2·6215

you

Ilk

Ul

''· ~­

-ruil"N 1: ll Rc "IT y

· 205 N. S.on4 Str"f
MIIIDUPOIT, 0110 4576
OHke 614·H2,fll6
lloltll 614:992:56'2

s. , _

•om

110m1
HOUSESoLOTB•FARMS
oCOMM~RCIAL

11'ENEEDUSTINGS!

.....
..........

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 9'85, 3561
Acro11 From Post Office · ~
Y

l(l

;_.

DEER CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
614-94 9-2734
or

614-949- 2635

1..----..:,11~·5-;:90-!::l:lfnil:J &amp; . - - -....!\' :H o-1 ...

KOUNTRY KLUB

J

BROWNING
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE
Drlv.-o ... IB
Wodgeo .. $&amp;
,
Puttoro ... U
GRAPHITE SHAFTS '
INSTALLED
BAGB .. .............. ... .. t211
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES • PLAQUES

("'"

JOHN TEAFORD

,_,.,,Ohio

11 / 14/lln

._.

'

'
'

....../ ..

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C'W"Y Fls hi•1g Supplle

Yo ur Phone
Bill s Here
: BUIINISS PHONI
' ES!Pf~ (E

ti·III-10-IMO

....

New Location:

168 Nort h Sec on~ ·
'!'idclloporl, Ohio 45760

16 14! 992-USO

kootC.. jtloetl
Cllatw, Ohio

,.,_.....,.,

.hill ilhllm• • - , .• c_··· 1

RANGES-Gas·llec. ·- 1125

FREIZERS-- $125 up
MICRO OVEN S-· 179 up

' J.,..

""*of
-

90 DAY WARRANTY
WASHERS-- 1100 up
ORYERS--$69 up
•
REFRIGERATORS·- $100 UJ&gt;

.POMEROY,

you In _.; wey.
WloM - l i n t
WI
you.
.
'fbe J 1swllon• IN prettyN--IIIu•
aonuii:JIIH we 1M and

UWhy?··
lo ld, wt.- tooltlng II

F! ..,,h,,

equipment.
fMI'Chlndlle, iiWtsilllll, IUP"

..,,
..,

Hom e lmp1 ovem nnt
Plumb tng &amp; Ht:! tthn~ 1

83 Exc.J~ta t tng
84 Electrical &amp; RtJifiYI'I,Iltllll

56 Pels tor S.te

.
Our tfloutlhll wit bo wlllt

WI

·~

72
71
74
75
76

Merchandise

!;7

Farm Eqwpmcn1

62 W•nted t o Buv
6 3 Ll\lt: stock
64 Hay &amp; Gram
65 ~ced &amp; ft:rtthl e!

furnloh oil -

EVElY ,.

In Loving Memory of
Edward Templeton

HOME DELIVERY CARRIERS

15
15
15
15
15

Public Notice

Public Notice

MOTO-RCARRIERS

Over 15 Words
Rate
.
. 20
$4.00
. 30
$6.00
.42
$9.00
,60
$13 .00
.06 / doy
$1 .30 / day

Words

Days
1

M . FRIDAY

BULLETIN
BOARD_
·----

Enjoy this festive season,
Celebrate the day,
May your holiday ring out
With joy in every way.

From Your
Daily Sentinel
Carriers! '

• .The Area's Number l Marketplace

•St!nl •n ul

·A cl t5$111ctl advttrttw rn unt placud tn Th~ Datly Sw11u1~ (~•
cept
classtft ud tltspl.ty. Uusuu..,;s Card tuHIIt.'9i!l nohcesl
will ills u dpfJt:ilf 111 th u PI Pleasant Re!t•stcr and th~ Galli

nomic reforms des! ;te wldl!l· •'
pread fea rs it h close to •
bankruptcy.
""
" If we secede, pe ril • ps it w~···
be better. I am n •t agam.t ,
Yugoslavia, but bec:liJ~e of !be •
domination of the h .tdcrshl p ot ~;
Serbia, Slovenes fee· I hat the)'" _;
will not have a good future, •: :o
Loreria Dobrila, 24.. J studentt
said after voting in t h• capital of,,,
Ljubljana,350mi.les norr hwestof -t
Belgrade.
.
·· -~
Sloven ian Defen se Minlster .. •l
Janez Jansa no ted t~e decree:&gt;
au lhorizing the ple bi" tr forset!S ·:
a "six-month transi tic-n perlod''-u
in kwhic h the gove1 nment wtU~,,',
see ta 1ks with o ther
•ublics Oilthe constitutional rri" s while_ .
preparing "all law; needed to.,;:;
begin fun ctio ning as " n ndepend: ·'""
ent state."
.,._.,
,. "

~uml

hn t! tnnt only ust!d
•S no t tH spons•blt! tor tnrOrs dlhtJr tn ~t •Iii¥ {Chuck
101 tnrun flrsl dav ad wns m papcrl . Ca ll tletorc 2 00 p tn
diN ilflm pubhc01ti011 to rnak tt c;;or rect•un
'Ads thM must be PiMd m •dvomc.::c itl'• :
Card o l ThiN1k11
HilllPY Ad ~
In Mum(lflitlll
Yard Salt.-s

•;

RATES

Monthly

.

'Ad1 o uts1de M e1g1 , Galllil 01 M a.un ~;oun!le'i musl be ptt!

ASSOCIATED
FABiiCATORS, INC.

and independellt Slovenia?"
multi-party assembly elections,
lion. Results wre not expected
Slovenlan Prime Minister saying It trounced the ruling
untU Monday .
,
Lojze Peterle, toUowlng jublla-. communists In Belgrade and
In Slovenia, the ruling Demotlon among Slovenlans when the several other towns .
cratic Union - a coalition of
election commission announced
But opposition ' declined to . nationalist parties that ousted
the plebiscite was a success, told . forecast whether they would
communists 111 April- has said It
reporters, "Now, we have to achieve their longshoi'' goal of
would not declare independence
make new steps to build· Slove- denying a majority hi the 250·
Immediately, but use the plebls·
nla's independence and stateseat unicameral Serbian Assemcite as a bargaining chip In a
hood. But, the path which is In bly to President Slobodan Milodispute over the future constltu·
front of us will not be an easy sevic's Socialist Party of Serbia,
tlonal framework of Yugoslavia.
one.''
thenameadQptedbythecommuThe Croatia n Assembly
Franc .Bucar, President of the .nlsts 1" July.
adopted a constitution Friday
Slovenlim Asembly, said SlovenA.t stake in the runoffs were 154 containing a secession process
tan leaders should have much
seats for which no candidates
prompting the republic 's largesi
patience tor dealing with Yugos- won more than 50 percent of the enclave of minority Serbs to
lav federal In months to come.
ballots cast In the first round on declare itsel! the autonomous
In balloting e lsewhere, an
bee. 9.
province of "Krajina."
alllance of the major Serbian
In Serbia's neighboring repubSlovenia, the most Westeropposition groups claimed an
lie of Montenegro, voters also nized and economically deveearly lead In returns from the
castballotslnthesecondroundof loped republiC, also objects to
final round of the first post-war
that republic's presidential elecproviding tinanclal support to
Serbia, which has resisted eco-

•
·Classi 18

A Special Star
A Special Night

wewisb~aw

The Daily Sentinel- Page 2ti

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

16 141

PIIOif(

�Monday, December 24, 1990

LAFF·A·DAY

Arum u 1ee rn~ ~nt ~
. r

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~.

44

11 . Help wanted

"~~ ~...IWW'l.l ~ IIA'/e .

Apartment
for Rent

·~.- **"""-:
zutllltloo
• -2 8R,
. ·
1171.-·'
All
•Jndudod. Dopce. ....

.......-.

Nunlng --~~ or Full
tlmo, ctOod bonflto, llow-ccd
C.N 'bent.,- 304-2'73-1813 aek
far PflrUio ar Juno, ApptJ In

Old, Spodo,

ferMte, gDDd .......... • .....

.

--

.

bl..,. doa. oeml 10na llalr,

Jig

;;I.good -·~ dog: · KttteM, 2

Il'll.

c1&lt;1or -

30W7!1-

.0 1990 TV L+lllf\0 Int . fl

•PIIrt~..t, .
both, ou

14

Lcol: "-••• Baogte, In 'IYeoon
Lake Are~. ~" Pit. Not a
114-245·Hunter, Injured
150117: .

tbr - - whh -lanooo.
Nloo. Wat• pold. Ctlf Southern

Hit.. 111111 &amp;tate, lne. 814 ue

1124 or 114 Ill 1030.

Yard Sale

·

Do

-·-

Cl

.

•

!"fort:h, TX

low to lo"rm four Jirnple wOrds.

I

E NKRIJ ·

I
•
•. !'i

-r.o-·.,I1_R-,..G_N"T
·
1·
~
:
.
~
I ·I .

~
I

It's a strange phenomenon
~~
:~;_ that nothing.seemstobringon
L-...1. -J.
. ....J.L ...J. ..,...J. 0 an !lmergency as quickly ·as
. - - - -- ------. putting money aside ... -·.
OWLFOL

I

1--.1.;..5.:.;.l..::....rl....::;..,l',::...,...l-1 O Comp lete

...

,,"'
•

rho chuckle quc!lod

· . bv filli!"g 1" the ,.istino words
L-L.- .L -L.-.L-.J.L.....J you
develop
from srep No. 3 ~.
.
.
'

.

Cll
. CIJ Ill ABC New1 r:;l .
CD Wild America 1;1

·~

·
r:;l

'"'

•• • !&lt;!

SCRAM-~ETS

young woman search for
lncan ~reasure in the Andes.

i

SporttCentar
.
18M-yllne
«JJ Scarecrow end Mrs. King
1;1
.
.

· 7:05 (I) HtpPJ Days.
7:30

Business Services
CHRISTMAS TREES
SAL~

White 8t
Scotch Pine,

Cll 1121111 Enlertalnrnen.t
Tonlahl Slereo. r:;1
CIJ Ill Mama's Family
(J]) Ill TIUH'I CompenJ

--·

··_...,...-'-·

Real Estate

31 Homes for Sate

~

QJ Motorwoek llluatreted
18 Cro1lflre

...

7:35 (I) Tile Jelfero"!'•
8:00 Cll D iiJ Freoto Prince ol
Bel Air Will convinces Ashley
to p~wn her violin and Put_&amp;
set ol drums . (R) Stereo. !;!
&lt;!) MOVIE: It's a Woilderlill
Lite (2:00)
Cll (JJ Ill MacGrver A lriond
or MacGrvor's becomes a
dupe . (R) Slereo . C ·
CD (!) Wondilrworka Stereo .

'

ALLEY OOP '

RACINE .
GUN CLUB·

rn II Ill 1D1 J~erdyl Q
&lt;!l Night Court r:;l ,

5

GUN SHOOTS

i

SlJ. S20

12 Gau11 fac~ry
Choke only ·

2111 MOVIE: A Chrlatrnao
ftory
(PGJ (2:00) .

Ft. end Up
Well Sheered. Grown
on .t he .W eber Farm In
Rutland ·

IEADY D,C. 2nd

742-2143

11·2&amp;-'!0'1 mo.

1:00 ....
SUNDAYS

J&amp;L

INSULATION

01 Middleport

UPHOLSTERY

Hand Tufting
Culltom Drapes
3ll Years Experience
614-992-23!1

213 Nortll Second
We Say What We Do.
We ·Do Whet Wo Say .

•Virwl Siding

JAMES KEESEE
539

742-2251

ryan Place

Middle,port,

.

2722.

.

R - 2 Alhlon, 1 acre loll, 3
miiN . _.h Ollllpollo Loclll,
public

•.

80tM

wit.,, no ,. .. rlctlone,
wlh rlvar trontagi. 3Q4...

611-2331.

NO SUNDAY CAW

____....__--..141

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOWDONS, INC.

i

Rentals

4-16-86-tln
r-----~.;_..:...

3

992~5009

:!i~Grzner
~Helmet"

~SAI.ES

•oN.SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

Brl

oplh~owal,

I SHOULDN'T
ex PI:CT TOO MUCH

ntwlr,

R:R CHRISTMAS.

2br brick In Ala Onndo,
-urttr .a-h, no polo,
$2SIIImo. 814-2411-S03V.

~1'/1/NG VAUEY 1'1/0ff.SS/ONAL IJUIWING

GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMAT.E S

GAWI'OLIS, OHIO 4J'JI

JIJ6 /A CKSON /'IKE . SUITE 10J

Wonn llcrnlng LP OU heater,
u,aao BTU, .-ed lour montllo,
.-.oo. Phone 304-182·3311.

2br· houM, khchen wletove I
ralrlgorotor, J2SO/mo. pluo
utllh~ ...... &amp; refe,..,.a,
no polo. 23SRNr Firat Avo. 014-

Farm Supp li es
&amp; L1veslock

3neighborhood,
ledioom 304-175ollt04
- · geed
ot
111'1381.

(614) 446.6000

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent
14115 moliilo homo, 1200/mo.

BISSELL &amp; BURICE
CONSTRUCTION .

114-317-7102.

.

2 bedroom moblla homo ,....
tlally lumlohod. Mldcloport 1114·
112-1031.

•New Hom11
•Garaps
•Complete

2

bedroom, . tumlahad, saox110

lot, no pete, 101 Ced•r St, NIW

Hann,304-182-242CI.

l~modelh•

.

Stop &amp; Compare
''" Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

--or~IIIO.

5-31-'!0 ttn

Mobile Homo Far llont, Coli 11444B-ol27 altar 2f.lll. .

45

s::,':Z

Furnished
Rooms

rent·-

A-lor
or-month.
at StZOinlo. Clollla Hctol.

I

11110.

·

-!Ill·

cuniNG

Mow In

Stock II

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

949-2206
mo.

Unlumlohed lloblla Homo. V.ry
Nloo, No ""'· 114-445-31111, 114211-tll03 bofaro tp.m.

54

pr1

lin":...

w.t-: \'1

elect~l, _roo11na: NmaHTI~,
t&gt;atloo I docko oli:. REMODEL·
INGI ....,ell. Eldmatu.

__

BARNEY ·

..,_

!•

,•

"This consumer giJide you gave me uys all
the other stull lro'l' you Is junk ."

FILL'ER UP AT TH'

,,,.,

SILF-SEilVICE

__lon_,_ .....

t-oro •

•..~.. luy,

-~ \&lt;ode, 1:011-1:00 _ , ..

--

SOttfn-..

Tromm lulldora:

Mlscallaneo~

cuotom
~lng,
.

Merchandise

revealS which stgns are romantically

114-111:1-11321.

Plumbing 1o
Heatlng ·

Electrical I
Refrigeration

••

perlecl lor you. Mall $2 10 Malchmaker,
clo ·this newspaper , P.O. Box 9.1428,
Cleveland , OH 44101-3428,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. til You won't
be lacking lor brilllanl Ideas today, bul
you might look to olhers to execute
BERNICE
them lor you instead ol implemenUng
lhem yourself. Unlorlunately, delegal·
BEDE OSOL
ing won'l cullt.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March'ZOIII you have
' \ •,
accumulated a little llnanclal surplus at
lhis lime, I his is nol a good day lo start
loosening your purse strings in order to
graUiy an extravagant whim. ConUnue
10 be prudent.
ARIEl (March 21·Aprll til Your basic
inclinations will be posmve today. but
you could be unfavorably Influenced by
persons who don'l share your optlmls·
Uc outlook. Don't let them cast shadows
', Dec.
tiiO
on your thinking .
.
In the year ahead there are lndlca,Uons TAURUB (AprH 211-Maj 21) Guard
you might become alllllated with an or: agillnsl tendenciHtQdey to prematureganiZIItlon In which yoo'll pl~y a·promi- ly judge others. Give lhem lhe ume
nent rclla.,.Thla posiUon could cr~te beneftl ol doubt yclu wanl lor yourself.
~flta 10( you lhat you'd least expect. What you Initially surmise could be way
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 'ZI..Jen. 111 It's e ott target.
good policy today not 10 Judge others GEMIII (Mar 21-June 211 Most or your
by your llllnd&amp;rdl, becauae there Is a social enc:ounters should w11rk oul well
POIItbHHy"yoo mi!Jht be a trifle blued lor yi&gt;u today, ptovlded tnay don'l repabOUt, thing~ they are not. Know where reeent unexpected expenses. The best
·
10 IOOic for romance. lnd you 'll find II. thlnga In lila are free.
The Aatro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly CANCER (June_21~_uiJ 22) Fav~rable
1.
•

-~
a;

-yQur

-.

121 NalhVIIII Now Chrlltrnas

11+211-1111.

84

L-ttd 111 Safford Scheel 111. off lt. loll
16141 446·M16 er )·100·172·5"7

0 P~me Time WreoUing

ComPIICt Mabile Home ut 1.1~ • j •
I -Ira, aloo plumbl!lg 1
'•

eu ue 3118

MOBILE
HEATING &amp; COOUNG

usm RAILROAD TES
I

Qlilhll

-

••'

9:00 Cll D 1D1 MOVIE: 'Chrlebnaa
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Ute Movteo (2:001 Slereo. 1;1
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The Olft' AliC Monday Nlghl
MOVIe (2:0011;1
Ill C Ill Murptty Brown
Murphy's mentor, now a
retired journalism laacher.
~ns a school. (R) Stereo.

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Coltor'o Plumbl!lg
and Hooting
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Clolllpollo, Ohio

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1140 condition.
SO!&gt;d photoo
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Home for Ute Holidays
Baillie and tho Boys, Clint
Black, K.T. Oslin, Paul
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Hoar:t colebrale Chrislmas.
(0:30)
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Houses torRent

ramodo od, ..2&amp;'mo., Dopos t
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12·19-'90-1 ,m

LDI'I FOR SALE In OoUipi&gt;llo
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qualhy) $30,000 (nogctloblol •

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C~ar~o Daniels sings holiday
songs from his ,album. (0:30)
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Best ol Football Follies
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· Midnight Clear (2:00)
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prompting children to request
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developments shoUia run .vour way today if you remB;In your old , sweet self.
HO\Yever, il you suddenly become de·
mandlng or assertive , It's a whole new
ball game.
·
LEO jJuly 23-Aug. 22) Dlhe.rs will be
willing lo be helplullowards you today,
provided you don'l ask · them to do
things lor you lhat you can easily take
care ol yourself. Imposition invlles
resistance.
,
VIRGO (Aug. H · Stpl. 22) Guard
again&amp;~ lendencles loday to be a trllle
too possessive or persons you love.
Help them In conslrucUve ways, but
don't try lo smolher them.
,
L•RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 There's a posslbiMiy disagreements could arise t.oday
bel-n you and your mate over lnslg·
nlllcanl matters. If you do not see eyeto~ye. don't sir · your differences In
public.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2'-Nov. 22) Your powers ·or obaervalion are extremely acule
today and you should be ablt to easily
spOI the lhortcomlng ol otl)ers. Hoviev·
er, you 'd be wise nolto reveal what you
perceive to anyone else.
SAGmARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec. 211 Gal·
ety and laughtar should be your com· '
panlons whet:eyer you go today, provld· ·
ed you don'l poke your. nose Into a
relative's personal business. Don 't Ires·
pass where you're not wante&lt;! .

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music's hottest stars perform ,
holiday favorites. (1 :30)
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reunion w"h Antho!!Y and his
father. (R) Stereo . Q
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photographers ol lhe pasl
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works. Stereo . r:;1
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curse is ~laced on her. (R)
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the defenders' strategies outlined by
Frank Stewart in his excellent
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EAST
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strate the advantage of usin·g the "rule
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"7 6 2
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highest card, subtract that spot from
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Vulnerable: Neither
many cards of that suit in the other
Dealer: South
three haqds are higber than partner's
lead. Notice the value of being able to Soutb
West
Nortb East
apply the rule in today's deal.
Pass
Pass
Pass
Partner leads the seven of diamonds I NT
All pass
Pass
3 NT
against three no-trump. Declarer
Opening lead: t 7
plays low from dummy , and there you
are. If you subtract seven (the· spot;
card led) from 11, you get four, which ..__ _ __ _ __ __ ..___.
should be the number of higher dia'~
monds there are in the other three
hands. There are three such cards in perts who use modern methods?'Some • • .
your ~wn hand. and the king in dummy would lead their lowest diamond, the !
makes ·four. So you confidently duck four, as a low-from-strength lead, tell- •
with 'the deuce, and South follows with ing partner that tbeir diamond suit
the six-spot. That leaves West on lead was promising. However. when deto come through dummy's king of dia- clarer played low from dummy , East. •
monds one more time, and the con- . would have to win the n.ine or the jack,'
·and declarer would get on lead and run · :
tract is set.
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at times
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shoe
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antelope
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Dumbo
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instrument
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landmark
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�Page 32-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 24, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Recipes with chestnuts add flavor to the hqliday season
You know that Christma,s is just
around the comer when the chestnut
vendors come out. Setting up shop in
places as diverse as New York's Fifth
Avenue, Lisbon's Black Horse Square
and Rome's Spanish Steps, these. roving merchants are as true a harbmger
of cold weather and holiday meniment
as the frrst evergreen garlands strung in
store windows, or the first signs
reminding browsers how many shopping days are left till Christmas.
In fact, lhe heady fragrance of chestnuts roasting on an open frre, lhe smoke
from the braziers, drifting lazily into a
twilit sky, perhaps, to contrast sharply
with the autumnal chill in the air, are an
invitation to begin dreaming of the joys
of the most joyous of seasons.
It simply wouldn't be Christm31&gt;time
without little paper bags or crumpled
newspapers filled with dark-roasted
chestnuts, their shells split crosswise,
their butter-colored flesh slig htly
charred, adding savor to their characteristic mealy sweemess.
But, chesmuts aren't simply for eating out of hand, while strolling lazily
through a city decked out in its holiday
finery. Rather, these flavorful delicacies are traditional components of festive meals, incorporated into stuffmgs
for goose or turkey, roasted as a vegetable, or as marrons glaces, candied
chestnuts, the most characteristic of
French Noel sweets.
If you'd like to .add a chesmut dish
to your holiday repertoire, the recipe
below will get you started.
Reproduced from The Joy of Christmas (Barron's Educational Series, Inc.), by
Helen Feingold and Mary Lee Grisanti,
Chestnut, Herb and Sausage Soup is
warming and hearty. It would be a perfect starter for winter dinner or, accom-

panied by crusty bread fresh from the
oven, could serve as a main-dish soup
at lunchtime.
CHESTN~ HERB

AND

SAUSAuE SOUP

Makes 8 Servings

1
1

1
1
8
S
'/,
3

1

pound chestnuts
cup chopped carrots
cup chopped celery
cup chopped onion
ounces bulk sausage, crumbled
cups (or more) chicken broth
teaspoon each dried thyme
and rosemary
eggyolks
cup ('/, pint) heavy cream

Salt aDd pepper
.
Fresh herb sprigs (optional
garnish)

carrots , celery, onion and sausage.
Sautt! for about 15 minutes, or until
sausage is brown and crumbly. Drain
excess fat.
. 3. Add .chestnut puree, five cups
chicken broth and herbs. Cover and
simmer for 20 minutes.
4. Beat egg yolks with cream in
small bowl. Grapually stir this mil[ture
into the hot soup; reheat but do not
boil. Season to taste with salt and pepper. If soup is too thick, lhin it it with
additional chicken broth. Serve topped
with a small.herb sprig, if available.

1. Slash one side of the chestnuts
and strip off the shell. Place in a
saucepan and cover with water. cover
and simmer for 40 to 45 minutes or'
until easily pierced. Cool chesmuts' in
water. Remove them one at a time and
strip off the thin brown skin. Place
peeled chestnuts in a food processor
and puree.
2. In a 3-quart saucepan, combine

a

A STEAMING KE1TLE of Chestnut, Herb and Sausage Soup, bottom,
ma([es a delicious and satisfying holiday dish. Both recipe and iUUitra·
tion are from The Jay of Christmas (Barron's Educational Series, Inc.),
by Helen Feingold and Mary Lee Grisanti.

Antique
Christmas
ornaments
add style
While the first Christmas trees were
decorated with fruit and nuts, and other
edible ornaments, by the middle of the
19th century, elaborately decorated
objects began to adorn the increasingly
popular evergreen.
Handblown glass balls, called kugels,
have added shimmering beauty to pine
boughs since they were first made in
Germany in the early 1800s. Available
in elongated as well as round shapes,
kugel s could be had in a variety of
sizes and colors, as well.
Molded glass ornaments originated
in the latter part of the 19th century,
also in Germany. The earliest shapespine cones, fruit and icicles-were
joined by a wide range of others, from
fairytale characters to animals, Santas
to edifices. as manufacturers became
ever more inventive.
Paper ornaments were also popular
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
These took two major forms : "Scrap
ornaments," colorfully printed, thanks
to the newly refmed process of chromolithography: and Dresden ornaments,
whose cardboard base, both die-cut and
embossed, was painstakingly decorated
with gold, silver and other colors of
paint.
Among the most popular subjects for
scrap ornaments were angels and snowmen, and Santa himself starred in many
an eye-catching chromolithographed
scrap ornament.
While scrap ornaments were always
two-dimensional. Dresden ornaments
were often carefully worked into threedimensional shapes. such as vehicles
(including early depictions of airplanes
and ze ppelins) and animals. Superb
detailing characterizes these ornaments, which are among those most
treasured by co llectors of antique
Christmas decorations.
Considerably less elegant, ornaments of spun cotton were popular for
their low cost as well as for the wide
range of subjects they represented.
Animals. fruits , clowns and angels
joined in.numerable Santas in these
three-dimensional ornaments formed
by comb ining cotton and cellulose
fibers. over a base of cardboard or
wire . Their hard outer surface, on
which decorations would be added,
was created by the application of glue.
By the 1930s. virtually· all of these
charmin g. ear ly decoration s had
become obsolete. However. today they
are heirlooms. prized by collectors and
exhibited in museums.

ORIGINS

OF
RUDOLPH
One of the most beloved figures
in modern Christmas lore, Rudolph
the Red -Nosed Rein(jeer. was born
when a Montgomery Ward advertising copywriter named Robert L.
May was told to create a booklet
which could be given to children at
Christmastime.
That was in 1939, and "Rudolph
with hi s nose so bright ," the no se
which mad e him a laughingstock
among the other reindeer, has charmed
generations of children for over 50
years.
Interestingly enough, the words ·
o'f the song, " Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer," were not included
in the original booklet that told
.Rudolph's story, and were not written by May.
Rather, 10 years after May's original
creation, his brother-in-law, composer
Johnny Marks , put Rudolph 's tale to
music, and wrote the lyrics with which
.we are familiar today.
Cowboy-singer Gene Autry recorded
lhe tune, which was released in lhe fall
of 1949 and quickly became a smash hit.
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992-2133 - · POMEROY, OHIO

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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1824">
      <name>machir</name>
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    <tag tagId="3358">
      <name>scragg</name>
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    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
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