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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Bulls post

•
VIctory
over

Pick-3: 707
Pick-4: 9775
Cards: 7-H; 9-C;

Pistons

-Page 3

6-0;2-S

•

•

at
Vo1.4 1, No.172

Wannth,
•
.ram set
for Ohio's
weekend
By United Preas International
Moderating temperatures are
In store for Ohio by the end of the
week.
.
Clt;~uds Increased over Ohio
Tuesday night as a reinforcing
shot of cold air moved across the
state. The cold front triggered a
few snow flurries over the state
and produced up to four Inches of
. .snow over extreme northeast
Ohio early Wednesday.
Temperatures early Wednesday fell into the single digits over
northwest Ohio with readings In
the teens elsewhere.
The National Weather Service
· said It will be clear and cold
statewide Wednesday night as
high pressure drifts across the
region. However, clouds will be
on the Increase late Wednesday
over southern Ohio. Lows Wednesday night will range from
zero to 10 above zero.
Clouds will spread over all of
Ohio Thursday as a warm front
moves north toward the· region.
By afternoon, snow Is expected to
develop over southern Ohio and
possibly spread Into central
sections of the state by evening.
The snow may mix with or
change to freezing rain over

•

2 Section a, 1 8 Peg.. 26 Cent•
A Multimedia Inc. Newepeper

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 26, 1990

Copyrighted 1 990

Union denieS
involvement
in shooting
-

APPROACHING WITH CAUTION - Despite
three days of dry weather, high water from last
week's heavy rains continues to be a problem for
southern sections. Highs will be
mostly In the 20s except for lower
30s In the extreme south.
The warm front will move
across the state Friday, probably
accompapled by rain and maybe
some mixed preelpltatlon over
northern Ohio early In the day.
Temperatures are forecast to
warm above the freezing mark
statewide Friday and remain

motorists around the area. Hopes the waters may ·
rec:ede soon are threate11ed by a forecast fallbag
for mixed p~clpltatlon over the next few days.

mild through the weekend along
with a continuing threat of rain.
On the weather map, an Arctic
cold front stretched from east of
James Bay southwest through
western Pennsylvania Into
Texas. The northern portion of
the front will move off the East
Coast Wednesday night while the
southern portion becomes stationary over the deep south. A

high pressure system was centered over Iowa.
The high will move east over
Ohio by Wednesday night and
reach the East Coast Thursday.
As the high moves east of Ohio,
the front over the south will move
north toward Ohio. The front will
move Into southern Ohio early
Friday morning and cross the
state during the day.

.

A security guard, working for a
subcontractor of Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp., was shot and
severely wounded by an unknown sniper late Sunday, RAC
officials said Monday afternoon.
The sh90ting occurred around
11 p.m. while the guard was
seated In a van parked near the
plant's construction gate.
The guard was taken to Jackson General Hospital In Ripley
for emergency treatment, but
was then transferred to another
medical faclllty for further care,
RAC said.
The extent of the Injuries to the
guard were not fully known.
Monday, but officials said It
appeared he was wounded 111 the
knee and the eye. The sh90ting Is
being Investigated by the West
VIrginia State Pollee.
Tuesday's edition of the Parkersburg Sentinel Identified the
guard as Richard Barker, 24, of
Kentucky. He was reported In
fair condition at Charleston Area
Medical Center.
United Steel Workers Local
President Dan Stidham told the
Sentinel he didn't believe any

·Navy's .second-wave ·se'ls·sail
for troubled Gulf on Friday
By MITCHELL MILLER
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) -The
aircraft carriers USS America
and USS Theodore Roosevelt and
close to 16,000 Atlantic Fleet
personnel will leave Friday for
the Persian Gulf region as part of
Operation Desert Shield, the
Navy said.
The crewmen deployed with
the second wave of the U.S.
military buildup will come from
ports all along the East Coast.
About 10,500 of the sailors scheduled to l~ave are stationed .In
Norfolk.
The Navy has been In what Is
known as Its pre-overseas movement period during the past
month, working to give sailors
military leave before they deploy, ·said Lt. Gordon Hume, a
spokesi'J}an for the Atlantic Fleet

Stock prices
on upswing
in trading ·
NEW YORK (UPI) ...,.. Stock
prl!!eS moved higher In early
trading Wednesday as trading
slowly resumed after the
·Christmas holiday.
The Dow Jones .Industrial
average, which lost 12.37 Monday, was up 5.19 to2626.48at 10
a.m.
Advances led declines 462343 among the 1,325 Issues
crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape. Volume was
very light, amounting to abOut
10.42 million shares during the
first 30 minutes of trading. ·
The market was closed
Tuesday. Stocks closed lower
Monday In a shortened Christmas Eve sesslqn that saw the
. lightest trading of the· year,
with the market pressured by
concerns about the Mideast
crisis.
The market closed at 2 p.m.
Monday and .volume did not
. even match the paltry 63.4
million shares that changed
band• on the day after ThankslivlDJ, which had been the
tllbmest trading seen so far
tbil year.
.
Trading was the lightest'
. since the day after Christmas
In 11116, when· 48.86 million
1barea changed hands.

r

Becoming partly cloudy late
Wednesday night, wltb a low
near 10. Mostly cloudy Tbunday, with snow likely, poulbly
mixed with or chanriDr to .
freezlnr rain. Wghl will be In
the low 30s. Chance of preclptatlon Is 80 percent.

In Norfolk.
"With Christmas they were
trying to get as many people as
they cpuld (on leave) and at the
same time keep enough people on
board to keep the supplies
coming on," Hume said.
The carrier battle groups are
tentatively scheduled to leave
after noon ·Friday, he said.
The deployment will leave the
piers at Norfolk Naval · Station,
the nation's largest naval installation, virtually empty. Shortly
after Iraq Invaded Kuwait on
Aug. 2, a steady stream of ships

began leaving for the Mlddie
East, as the (,Jnlted States sought
to bolster Its Navy presence In
the troubled region.
More than 35,000 military personnel from southeastern Virginia have been deployed with
Operation Desert Shield. Their
departure has hurt the region's
economy, taking away a large
segment of customers from area
businesses.
Virginia's military Installations and their personnel have
played a major rple In the U.S.
military buildup.
'

Columbus
fires leave
six dead
OFFERING ANOTHER MEMORY - Comedian Bob Hope,
right, 11poke at a news conference Tuesday In Saudi Arabia,
accompanied by fonner Cincinnati Reds stsr Johnny Bench. Hope
Is on a five-day holiday tour of U.S. troops stationed In the Persian
GuH over the Christmas period. (UPI).

Mariettan will direct Meigs County Chamber
Af1er several months of search· the City of Marietta.
The chamber's search committee
ing out and interviewing candidates
for the position, the Meigs County - composed of Chamber President
Chamber of Commerce has hired a Bruce Reed, Tom Reed, Lenriy
Marietta woman to be its new Ex· Eliason and Ron McDade - began
ecutive
Director/Development advertising for applications in
papers in several cities early in the
Director.
Elizabeth Schaad of Marietta has summer.
The committee then began
been named to the position, and
will take on the duties of the job reviewing resumes and ap·
beginning in mid-January. Schaad, plications, IUUTOwing the field
who will be moving to Meigs down to a group to be interviewed.
Schaad's appointment to the
County as a condition of the job, is
currently employed as a Com- position was announced late last
munity Development Specialist for week following interviews with the

two "finalists", culled from over 30
applications received.
Schaad will be Meigs County's
first full-time development director,
although the Meigs County Commissioners · have retained current
Development Director Kim Shields
on a part-time basis for several
years.
The commissioners have pledged
the money paid to Shields for the
new director position, and the
chamber has also received pledges
of financial assistance from public
and private sources within the

county.
The location of Schaad's office
has not been announced, though the
chamber has pledged to· keep its
storefront office in Pomeroy as a
visitor's center, and both Pomeroy
and Middlepon village councils
have offered office space for the
director's operation.
Filling the director position has
been the major thrust of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
since it was fonned in early 1990 •
following the merger of the
Pomeroy and Middlepon chambers.

Ohio Stln'ey chief calls for tax on minerals
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
chief of Ohio Division of Geological Survey Is proposing a $1.2
million Increase In state severance taxes on minerals, excludIng coal, oil and natural gas.
Thomas Berg said the division
needs new revenue to pay for the
research needed to s.upport a
resurgence of Ohio coal mining In
the 21st century.
. A falloff ln.coal mining and oil
and gas development has re·
duced the agency's serverance
tax Income, whlc~ provides
about 30 percent of the geological
survey office's budget, Berg
said.
He said · at least 10 staff
positions have been eliminated In
recent years, and without more
taxes; money for ,a statewide
mapping program will run out by
1993. Federal research money contingent on matching funds also would be affected If state
budgets shrink.
Berg proposes a severance tax
Increase of a half-cent to 1% -cent
per ton on limestone, dolomite,
'
~

union members were respouible
for the shooting. He later told a
Huntington television station
that If a sniper Is stalking the site
of the labor dispute between the
union and RAC, no one Is safe. ·
•'I don't want to put any blame
on the company, but It could have
easily as happened Inside the
plant as outside,"· Stidham told
the Sen tine!. "I've heard of
several disruptions Inside the .
plant since Nov. 1."
In Its news release, RAC
reported another Incident In
which an employee of an RAC
subcontractor was reportedly
beaten In a local motel parking
lot around 6 a.m. on Dec. 20. The
company said a group of men
armed with clubs and tire Irons ·
ganged up on one subcontractor,
knocked him to 'the ground and
beat him. The men then set upon
another subcontractor, who man'
aged to escape, RAC said.
,
· The company said three •
members of this group have been ;
positively Identified and RAC has :
asked the Jackson County pro- .
secutor and the local magistrate
to file criminal charges against
those who have been Identified.
The beating Is being lnvestrgated
by Ripley pollee.
A third Incident, around 6:30
p.m. Dec. 21, was also reported
by RAC. The barn of an RAC
hourly employee was burned, ·
with severe damage to the bar,n
(CoaUaued 011 Pa,e 7)

of the 46 billion tons In the ground
at the time pioneers settled the
state two centuries ago.
Berg said there also may be
some uncharted deep coal deposIts Ul)der counties along the Ohio
River In southeast Ohio.
However, debate has centered
on how much of. the coal can be
Coal mining was an endan- recovered economically. In 1960,
gered Industry In Ohio during survey geologists said that about
most of the 1980s, with employ- half of the coal, or 21 billion tons,
ment falllng from 17,121 to 7,282 could be removed. Seven years
between 1979 and 1989.
ago, however, they revised that
Coal could be the bridge down ~o 10.4 billion tons because
between today's oil-and-gas de- much ' of the coal Is In thin,
!lfmdent economy and the age of uneconomical seams or toO close
nuclear fusion by the mid-21st to towns, highways or similar
century, Berg said In an article In · developments.
"Ohio Geology."
Even 10 billion tons would be a
In the Interim, engineers have 2()().year supply at expected
to develop cleaner-burning coal production rates.
·Berg said as Improvements In
boilers and aeologlstJ need to
pinpoint the location and compo- boller technology Increase, demand for Ohio's high-sulfur coal
sition of re:~llinl coal re·
will need better lnfonnatlon on
serve~,.Bera
.
where to find coal with the right
The Jut c:ompreheutve estl·
chemistry and configuration.
mite )y tile Oblo Geo~al
The survey division's stateSurvey 30 year~aao lhowed Ohio
still bu more than t2 btiUOI) tons wide mapping program, for
sand and gravel, shale, sandstone, clay, conglomerate, and
gypsum. The tax on salt wouLd go
up 3 .cents a ton;
Berg said no Increase Is
proposed for coal, oil and natural
gas In view of the slowdown .In
these Industries.

~

example, will produce some 700
section maps, each charting the
geology to bedrock across an
area 70 miles square. Also, the
U.S. Geological Survey and the
U.S. Department of Energy are
providing nearly $200,000 a year
for more studies of recoverable
reserves.
About half of that money Is to
determine whether current estimates are too optimistic In view
of continuing development In the
state and such economic factors
as sulfur content

Pomeroy man cited
John Amott was cited for improper backing following an accident on Union Avenue in Pomeroy
Saturday afternoon.
Pomeroy Police ~ that
Amott backed from his driveway
atl09 Union Ave., into the side of a
car driven b~Gillespie, Wolf
Pen Road,
y. The impact

caused JD9C1er11e dlml&amp;e to both
doon on lbe pauenaa' side of the
Gillespie ~le, and light damage
to the rear ~f the Arnott car.

·t

•

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Careless
smoking Is believed to be reponsl- ·
ble for two residential fires that
claimed six lives In the city In a
26-hour period.
A cigarette smoldering on a
couch apparently touched off a
Christmas Day blaze In a house
on the city's east side that killed
five people, Including. two child·
ren, fire officials said.
Early Wednesday, one man
was killed and another was
Injured In a fire at the Ede~~
Gardens Apartments on the west ·
side. Officials said that blaze :
started In a bedroom of th«:; .
second-floor apartment and ap- •
parently was caused by a cl:
garette Igniting a mattress.
The body of the dead rna~ was •
found In a hallway ou tslde the •
bedroom where the fire started.
Kenneth Baker, 27, another rest;
dent of the apartment, escape(\
by jumping from a bathroom
window. He was undergoing :
surgery at Mount Carmel West :
Hospital and his condition was :
unavailable, a hospital spokes-.
woman said.
The Identity of the dead mao·
was being withheld pending,
notification of relatives.
.
Killed In Tuesday's fire were
Ronlna Hammrlck, 30, her sister,
India Hammrlck, 25, and Ronlna's two children, Natasha, 10,
and Rashawn, 4. Gerald Givens ~
39, the ex-husband of the Hamrick sister's mother, also died In'
the that blaze.
All five died of smoke Inhalation, said fire Capt. Bruce Sutton.:
Givens' body was found on the •
front porch of the two-story brick'
home. Witnesses saldGivenswaa,
seen outside the house shortly
after the blaze began. He appar-.
ently died·attempting to go back' .
Into the burning structure to save :
the other residents.
.
.·:Another man In the house:·
survived. Todd Allen Quail(·:.
Identified as India Hamrick'.: ..
boyfriend, made his way out
second floor window onto the- ~
porch roof where he was rescuect: .,
by firefighters.
&gt;• ::

•.
a: ...

~

....
...
..,

,;...
. •.r

·..,•.

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Wednesd•y. Decembl!r 26, 1990

· page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'l'ERE8TS OF THE MEIGS:)IlASON AREA

Alb,

i!:!m;:::! ......._.._.....,,..,.....,c::::~,.,.
'

'qlv
.

.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

ROBERT L. WINGETT

· Publisher·

PAT WlOTEHEAD
Aaalstant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing arrd must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unslgjled letters will be published. Letters sbo:Juld be in gQOd !liSle, addressing Issues. not personal!·
ties.

Washington Windmv ·

New Congress·
-will eye largely
familiar issues

By ~OBERT 'sHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) ,- A new Congress -the 102nd- opens next
week for a two-year run, but most observers will not see much that Is
new. The cast of characters will be largely the same and many of the
·
Issues will have a familiar ring.
In the case of major legislation It Is not unusual for Congress to take
years to finally resolve an Issue. Congress and the executive branch
wrangled for most of the past decade before finally agreeing this year
on an increase in tile federal minimum wage an.d an overhaul of the
clean air act, for example.
The next Congress w!ll continue to work on issues that previously
got a great deal of attention, but fell short of final agreement.
There wiii be new Issues, of course, with the crisis In the Persian
Gulf continuing to be the subject of much debate and committee
hearings. Even If the controntailon with Iraq is resolved peacefully ,
Congress w!ll have to decide hbw to pay the cost of dep)oying .
hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops to the region.
·
·'
The more crucial decision for Congress will involve the question of
war powers, and whether the House and Senate will vote to give
President Bush authority to launch military action against Iraq .
But for the most part, Congress will seem to be going through an
instant replay of previous sessions.
Bush set the stage for some of the replay with his vetoes.of bills
strongly backed by the Democrat majority in Congress, chief of
·. which Is the civil .rights bill.
· "·
The bill was Intended to reverse or modifY several Supreme Court
decisions that narrowed workers' protections in job discrimination
cases. Backers of the b!IJ spent several months negotiating with the
. White House trying tocomo;&gt;upwlth a b!ll that Bush would sign, buqhe
effort failed.
·
Bush, saying the bill would result In hiring quotas, vetoed the
measure, but supporters vowed to try again early next year. The
president Insists he wants to sign a civil rights bill, so more
negotiations can be expected.
Bush also vetoed the bill that would grant unpaid leave to workers
caring for newborn children or sick relatives. Democrats say there is
wide public support for the bill and plan to make.a new effort to enact
it.
A third veto killed the bill that would have limited imports of
textiles and footwear, and the fight will almost certalilly be renewed
In the next Congress .
,
All three bills carry potential for considerable political gain. and
with Bush coming up for re-election In 1992 both parties can be
·expected to use the Issues (or their advantage.
The savings and loan Industry is ·still in trouble and· costing
taxpayers a bundle of money. Just before Congress adjourned In
October. regulators sought an infusion of cash to pay off depositors In
failed thrifts, but the move was blocked In the House. That decision
will have to be reconsidered almost immediately after the new
session opens or the government may be forced to·suspend lis thrift
•
salvage operations .
The health of the banking industry was much discussed last year
and the new session of Congress will see an all-out effort to pass
reform legislation.
.
The lawmakers also will be revisiting such perennial favorites as
campaign finance reform, cable tele.vislon regulation, abortion and
possibly even tax simplification.
In theory at least, the budget package worked out during the last
session settled things for five years, but already there are disputes
betweeo Congress and the W)lite House about key features of the
agreement and spending priorities will continue to dominate debate
on Capitol Hill, just as In years past.

Berry's ~orld

On Christmas Day,

dese~e praise.
Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Aua

'

i$N"J" 'THe NaV'I'~

,, NeW kl~ 5Te~L.TH arracK

PJ.a.re a ~?
THeV Tei.L. Me iT'$

~fliP

~l(eaP

oF Sc;JofeDUL.e aND lii-IPeR
BUDGoeT, 'f'ao !

f ..

"

has worked hard to rebuild his
war-torn country. Zam&lt;~n has
established several schools in his
home district. Including one for
girls -often the forgotten sex In
the Afghan education system.
-In 1988, a military doctor,
who wants to remain anonym.
ous, reported irregularities In
patient care at y.s. mll!tary
hospitals overseas. For speaking
out, he lost promotions and pay
raises, but that did not silence
him.
He madecontactwlthdozensof
other doctors whose experiences
were far worse than his own,
including some who had been
forced to undergo psychiatric
treatment when they reported
Irregularities at other hospitals.
The doctor set up a· computer
data bank where doctors like
himself could be linked with
others and find legal help.
Hundreds of physicians have
contacted each other through the
computer, and the Jnfo;rmatlon
they shared gave Congress proof
It needed to begin cleaning up
mU!tary hospitals .
-Children In New ,Jersey are
enjoying the generosity of Sen.
BUJ Bradley , D-N.J .. this year.
Bradley won an award from the
Max Schmidheiny F011,11dation In
Switzerland for his otoiltrlbutlons
to International .economic
thought. And ·with . the· award
came a cash prize, '$28,500.
Bradley wouldn't accept the
money and asked that It be given
to non-profit groups. Now the gift
is funding recreational programs
for the Boys and Girts Club of .
Newark and thEil Camden Youth .
Commission.

ri
&lt;' ·

;

I

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)

·-

'

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.

~THe DeFsMse. SeCReTaRY$ NeW ai*:PLaNe

They are good ;friends. And In the
elevator other network and stu·
dlo chieftains, the brutes, gently
rib each other. Why not?- Many
New York network guys used to
be Hollywood studio guys, and
vice versa. ·They've argued both
sides.
So how do they argue? It's tl\e
principle of the thing, not the
money, they say. My colleague
Mlehael Novak point outs.
"When someone says it's not the
money, It's the principle of the
thing- it's the money." .
~ FCC rules say networks can't
own a financial Interest In the
·Independent entertainment serIes they broadcast. That means
networks don't get "backend"
profits, particularly from "syndicating" the programs after
original broadcast. Networks
want these financial/ syndication
("fln-syn") rules repealed. Producers don 't.
'
Should you care about this
conflict between the wealthy and
the very rich? About whether
New York beats Hollywood?
You should care. These enter·

talning entertainment folks be·
lleve they are the annolnted
purveyors of the global culture.
They may be right.
Both sides say that America
will produce more and better
artistry If the rules go their way.
The producers say the nasty
networks are monopolists, and
would stifle talented young ar·
tis Is by COefflVely SUCking away
their profitability and freedom of
expression.
·
The networks-say that's baloney from yesteryear, before the
three big networks had to compete with cable, VCRs, Fox,
syndicators and studios. The
networks say repealing the rules
would provide more Incentives
for fresh talent, spurring
creativity.
Is this creativity Important?
Yes. The cover of . the current
Fortune screams, "America's
Hottest Export - POP
CULTURE."
Not surprisingly, foreigners
are buying Into American cash·
cow entertainment companies.
But allegedly pro-free-speech

-A quadraplegic man IMngln
Metairie, La., spe'nt Christmas in
the new electric wheelchair that
he got because his congressman
cut through the red tape._ The
man, 51, could not hanjlle a
manual wheelchair and could not
afford an electric one. He ..
wrestled for months with the
bureaucracy, and then . called
Rep. Bill Livingston, R·La·: Llv·
lngs t6n leaned on Medicare and
Medicaid, and they ..came
through with more than haiHhe
price of the $4,000 chair. .

foreign governments also try to
impose anti-American quotas to
keep our seductive pop culture
away from their virginal teenagers, who are interested In little
·
else.
Alas, say the networks, the
"finsyn" rules also prohlbltthem
from selling syndicated reruns
abroad. That, they claim, lm~
pairs U.S. competitiveness.
At Issue is the principle of the
thing. Jus,t when we're allegedly
losing our national influence, It
turns out that America's No. ·1
export Is - get this - The
American Way Of Life. We may
be doing something right. We'd '
better encourage it.
. It Is said that the FCC decision,
due In the spring, wllrtry to let
the networks and the studios
compete more fairly, wlt.h safe· '
guards, bolstering American ar·
tistry at home and abroad. If
drawn wisely, the new rules can
be a solid step toward unleashing
the whole brutish, hating, nlhllls·
tic, wonderful entertainment In·
dustry - In the American
Interest.

20 ·m illion Americans go hungry

...

..
IZ-ZS
® tHO bW' NEA. Inc

1

OXNARD, Calif. (NEA) Behind Food Share's cavernous
warehouse, volunteers operating
fork-lifts are unloading a tractor·
trailer. Tile truck's cargo: 200
cases of tomato sauce purchased
at a bargain price ·from an
overstocked Oregon producer.
Inside the 12,000-square·fQ9t
warehouse, metal shelves •are
filled with cartons of powder.ed
milk, corn meal, flour, peanut
butter, soup, canned tuna fish
and dozens of other !terns. Many
of those commodities were donated by supermarket chains;
others came through
government-funded food assist·
ance programs.
Also within the warehouse are
walk-In refrigerator and freezer
units that hold broccoli, peppers,
green onlona, beets and other
vegetables grown on nearby
f~rms . Commercial growers al·
'low volunteer "gleaners" to pick
those crops at no cost to Food
Share.
Amcing !he most successful of
the community food banki oper·
ated In hundreds of cltiE!S and
counties througho~t the c~untry,

Food · Share typifies a seldom
publicized but unusually gener·
ous effort to provide nourlshmen t ·
to the chronically hungry.
Those people in.clude the vic·
Urns of everything from natural
disasters to domestic violence,
mothers and children at nutri·
tlonal risk, the disabled, the
homeless, the working poor, the
ment.ally !II, tbe unemployed,
and the elderly.
• "Twenty m!l!lon Americans
are hungry for at least a few days
every ltlortth. Tl)ere are more
hungry people ... thai! at -any time
In the last 25 years," says the
Chtcaao·based Second Harvest.
"Seventy percent of tllose seek·
ing help , are families with
children."
'f!lat oraanlzatlon serves as a
'national clearinghOuse for about
200 affllltated local food banks. It
solicits food donations, conducts
training sessions, establishes
standards and offers other servl·
ces to them.
second Harvest regularly receive~ contributions of dairy
productl, f.rults, vegetables,
meats, poultry, bread, cereal ·

'

and other Items from 250 food
manufacturers and retailers ..
Donated produce RIJIYbedlscolored, bruised or otherWise lm·
perfect, but It Is neither offered
nor accepted II It poses any
health or safety risks. Similarly,
contributed packaged food might
be flawed only because It Is In
boxes, cans or other containers
that are underfllled or carry
Inaccurate labels. · Most community food banks.
rely upon local •upermarkets
and restaurants for donations of
excess food. In addition, big-city
charities such as New York's
City Harvest and Philadelphia's
PhUabundance turn to bakeries,
caterers and hotels.
In the suburlla, country clubs
can be a major source of
contributed food. In venues with
nearby agricultural operations,
food banks often aeek and receive
permission to dllpatch volunteers to pick crops that the
growers might otherwise plow
under or allow to rot In the fkllds
because they grew In an odd size
or shape, are blemished or are
for limited market
.too plen\lful
'

~obert

Walters '

demand.
The sources of food are "as
varied as the communities
served," notes Linda Saran, a·
Second Harvest spokeswoman.
More uniform are the organizations through which the food
banks distribute the contrlbu·
!Ions - Including senior citizen
and child day.care centers, drug
and alcohol treatment centers,
l)omeless shelters, church pan·
tries and soup kltcllens.
Here in California's Ventura
County, Food Share last year
worked with more than 150 local
charitable groupe to distribute
7. 6 million pounds of food. About
87,000 people were assisted every
montll.
Among Its approximately 550
volunteers, most olthem retirees
in their 601 and 'lOs, are !lbollt 200
"aleaners" who reaularly ao Into
the area's farm fields to h&amp;rvest
the growers'• donatlou. Other
Food Share workers ~~:rm
chores ranatna !rom pic
up
day-old bread at bakerll!l to
stocking warehouse sbel.ves.

Dumars tangled at mldcourt.
" He (Dumars) hit me with an
elbow and I retaliated, ... Grant
said. "The elbow should have
been a flagrant foul."
"I 'm sorry for what hap·
pened," Dumars said. " I had just
gotten caught with a hard screen
and I threw out ari elbow In
response. Horace Is a good guy
and It was just an unfortunate
incident. I apologized to him
before he came over and left the
• ·
court."
Chicago started th.e game with
a new look. Stacey King was In
the lineup Instead of Grant,
marking the first change in 27
games . Grant was not happy
about that , either.
" It was weird, really weird, "
· Grant said. "It's something I
don't want to get used to."
Detroit led 30-29 with 10 min·
· utes left In the second quarter
before putting together a 10.2
spurt, with four points each from
Mark Aguirre and Thomas, to go
ahead 40-31 with 5:13 remaining.
A layln at 4: 48 by King ended the
Pistons' spree and three baskets
at the end of the quarter by
Jordan pulled the Bulls within
50-45 at halftime.

Buffs get second shot at national title vs. Irish

Pop goes the culture! ____~B_en_~_a_tte_n_be_;;;;_rg
Listen to the delicious dellbera·
· tlons at the Federal CommuniGil;
tiqns Commission last week: · .
. Jack Valent! (President of the
Motion Picture Association of
America) has this little problem
with television networks. The
networks, he testifies, are "lnt~l·
lectual nlhl!ists, smashers of
truth. faithless to facts." They
are "corporate recidivists" and '
"brutishly antagonistic to a
creatively diverse arena."
Questioned .by commissioners,
Valent! drops the pl~trles ,
Producers, he says, ' properly
spurn the fiscal kiss of the
networks because •:those net·
work lips are dipped in ·anti:
comll).petitlve curare."
'
But Barry Diller, chairman of
Fox. Broadcastlltg, fast becom·
lng America's fourth network,
sees it dlfferelltiY. He says
producers wrongly have a "liv· .
lng hatred of networks."
Ooh , the venom . Living
hatred! Dipped in curare!
'Except that minutes later
Valenti and D!ller are whisper·
lng to each other and laughing.

the flnal 2: 41 , Including Jordan's
three-point field goal at the
buzzer, to lead 73-64 after three
quarters.
"We just said we had to get the
ball out of the (Detroit) guards'
hands," Jackson said of the
Bulls' second-half strategy. It
worked, holding the Pistons
backcourt to eight field goals In
the second' half.
"Credit them (Bulls) with their
good , aggressive defense." De·
troll head coach Chuck Daly
said. "We just couldn't score in
the second half. Thirty-six points
just Isn't enough to win In this
building. They double· teamed
Islah and we just didn' t adjust.
We should have come back to the
ball and didn't and it took us out
of our offense."
The Pistons closed to 80-76 on
Thomas' free throw with 6:58 left
In the game, but Chicago com·
piled another spree, outscoring
Detroit 9·2 ~ Including five
points by Jordan - to make It
89-78 with 3:25 remaining.
Grant was ejected with 3: 05
remaining In the game after
taking a swing at Dumars, who
gave Grant an elbow. Grant,
charged with a technical, and

In Orange Bawl rematch.

.)

....
·,

(Thomas) said?." Chicago head
coach Phil Jackson said. "It was
a good game for us, emotionally
packed. "
" All of them are for Marcus,"
said Jordan, whose second son
Marcus James was born Mon·
day, weighing In at six pounds,
two ounces.
The next heir Jordan can only
hope dad keeps up this pace. He
surpassed his league-leading av -·
erage of 29.4 points. hitting 14 of
23 from the field , 8 of 10 from the
free throw line, and had•eight
rebounds.
Joe Dumars scored 24 points
and Thomas had 23 to pace the
Pistons. For the Bulls, Bill
Cartwright had 12, Scottie
Pippen 14, and John Paxson 15
points.
Detroit led 50-45 to start the
second half arid Thomas scored
from tl)e top of the key to make It
52-45 before Chicago went on a
spree with 11 unanswered points.
Pippen capped the rup with a
layup at 6:43 that put Chicago
a head 56-52.
A basket and free throw by
Dumars pulled the Pistons within
56-55 with 6:19 remaining. But
the Bulls ou !scored Detroit 11·5 in

By CARRIE MUSKAT
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UPI ) - Michael
Jordan stuffed his Christmas
stocking with olie more present
Tuesday .
Jordan celebrated the birth of
his son b by scoring 37 points
Christmas Day, Including 12 in
the third quarter. to lift the
Chicago Bulls to a 98-86 holiday
victory over the Detroit Pistons.
· " It was a great win and Santa
was here and gave It to us," said
Chicago' s Horace Grant. "This is
the biggest Chrisimas present I
have ever had. And probably for
·
this team also. "
It was a gift many of the 18,676
jammed Into Chicago Stadium
had hoped to find under their
trees.
The win avenged a 105-841oss to
the Pistons on Dec. 19 at the
Palace. It also moved the Bulls
within a half game of leader
Milwaukee in the Central Dlv·
Is ion, and was Chicago's 13th win
In Its last 16 games.
The decision dropped DetroUt's road record this month to
1·8.
"The grlnch that stole Christmas - is that what Islah

'

WASHINGTON- Selfiessacts
Then. about a half m!le from
by government officials usually
t!U! diplomat's house, Bush or·
go unheralded in Washington
dered the lights and sirens turned
where the public and the press
on. HI~ Secret Service agents Earnest's mother had refused to
are tough tas kmasters. A job
jumped out of the car and ran leave his bedside, fearing that
well d~ne is not news bee au ~ Itis
alongside. He sent ~omeone the Army had decided to ware- or should be - the norm. .
ahead to alert the Afrlc;!b dlplo- house her son as a vegeiable.
From the chrqnicles of , the. mat to meet him on the lawn In
norm, we pulled these stories to
full vie~ of all the neighbors.
Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fla., read
remind our readers that their
BusJtarrlved, Invited the dlplo·. the column and called the Pen·
public servants do serve them
mat's children to get in the l!mo tagon. The Army changed its
well:
·
and play with his ~og, and he mind and announced that Sgt.
·-We start at the top wilh
went inside to chat. He emerged Earnest will get the recomGeorge Bush . Several years ago,
10 minutes laier, reassured the mended treatment.
-A young commander of the
someone placed a burning cross diplomat that many people would
on the Washington lawn of a
stand by him If he was ever Afgahnlstan resistance is recupmlnore mbassyfunct!onaryfrom . harassed again, and drove away. erating at home from surgery
an African nation. The victim
'rhere was , no press, just performed for tree In the United
was humll!ated and his family enough nelghiJ9rg to .s pread the States, thanks to Rep. John
badly fr~htened.
wor.d that the -:vice pt.esldent df Porter, R·IIl. 'it marks the thltd
The newspaper accounts
the United States thought an time that P&lt;)!ter has arranged
medical care.in the United States
caught the attention of a man Injustice had been done. ··
living not too far away at the
-We recently reported on the for members of the Afghan
Naval Observatory . then-Vice tragic case of Sgt. ,-,Charles reslst~nce.
President Bush. From the news, Earnest, a . Green Beret InJured ·
The most .recent patient was
he got the Impression that the In the crash of an Army Black · Commander · Mohammed Za·
diplomat's neighbors were not Hawk helicopter In a . training man. whose feet were shot up by
terribly sympathetic.
exercise last summer. He lies In machine-gun fire. Porter arBush called the command post .a coma at Walter Reed Army ranged for free surgery to be
of the Secret Service and ordered ' Medical Center In Washing!on. performed at .Highland Park
up a convoy of police cars and his We learned that civilian doctors Hospital in Illinois because £8.
own limousine for an "off the had recommended a course of man could not get the ·care he
record movement." That meant rehabilitation therapy for his needed at home.
they were to follow normal :h ead Injury, but that the Army
Porter was touched by Za·
traffic patterns so as not to draw had refused, saying it was too man's plight In parti~ular beattention to themselves.
e;&gt;&lt;penslve and too unproven. cause he Is a tribal leader wl)o

• .,.f'

Chicago posts .98-86 win over Detroit

PomerOy-Middleport. Ohio
Wedntllday. Oecembl!r 26, 1990

Goods works

J.,.'

,

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·

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,;
•

~
~

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ByLESKJOS
UPI Sports Writer
MIAMI (UPI) -:- No. 1 Colorado gets a second chance at the
national championship in the
Orange Bowl against No. 6 Notre
Dame. But star Colorado line·
man Joe Garten says the Irish
have more talent this year than
last, when they beat the Buffaloes ~1-6 .
"It's ironic that we' re going to
play Notre Dame this year,"
Garten said. "They've got a lot
more talent than they did, but we
don't play college football to be
No.2 or No. 3. We'reheretobeNo
1."
The 280-pound senior offensive
guard says the .dlffe:ence this
year will be the experience and
maturity of the Buffaloes, 10-1-1.
"People look back at last

Garten said many perceived
Colorado's year in 1989 as a fluke
following the emotionalism gen·
erated by the preseason death of
quarterback Sal Aunese.
"Coming Into this season everybody wanted to dump Colo·
rado," he said. "Cover story,
1989: Colorado riding an emotional high. 1990: back to normal,
"Last year wasn't a fluke.
That's what we're down here to
prove. We've had to grit our
teeth, scratch and claw our way
out of som~ things this year. It

MAIN STREET PIZZA
FBI LOCAL
992-2228

PEPPERONI
PIZZA

.. .

.

4 fill 16 O'L PEPSI'S

ss••~~·
,

$999="
,

WE'VE DHIVERED LOII8ER THAN AMYOIIE EU£ Ill MEIGS COUNTY
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK AT 4:00 P·. l.
_,

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

CARTWRIGHT PASSES- Chicago postman Bill Cartwrlght
(top) passes the ball over outstretched band of Detroit point guard
Islah Thomas during the first quarter of Tuesday'&amp; NBA game In
Chicago, which the Bulls won 98-86. (UPl)

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Heating, Water Heating and
Other Propane SeNices...
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yuu arro your n~rgnoors wrm menCIIy, safety·
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For 50 years. we've handled the everyday and emergency
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• 24 Hour Emerqency Service
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992-5097
POMEROY, OHIO

~
Fenellgas

STREAK AT STAKE- Tile Southern Tornadoes, 7·2 overall and
winners of their last four games, will pullhelr winning streak on
the line Friday night against the Athens Bulldogs at The PlaiDS.
The veteran Tornado backcourt of marksman Andy Baer and Todd
Grindstaff (left) wUIIead one of the SVAC's elite squads against
the defending SEOAL champions, who are 3-5 overall.

.

.
all individuals, organizations and groups for your
volunteer help this year toward a cleaner, healthier Meigs County and Ohio~
Special Thanks also to:
.
.
.
.
•
Division of Litter Prevenli_!~~~~.!I.!~.!'!.~.:.':~.!!.Y_~_c.!!~!'~.!».!.5!·_1.!_~.:C!!~!.n.!l!!.'.!.------

THANKS ••• To

•James Proffitt-Ohio Dept. of ~ransportation
.
•Board of Trustees-12 Townships
•Mayors/Village Officials of Middleport, Pomeroy
Racine. Rutland and Syracuse
•Cindy Oliveri, 4·H Extension A:gent
•Daily Sentinel and Times-Sentmel
•WMPO Radio
•Leaders ... Advisors ... and members of:
4-H Clubs. Garden Clubs
Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts
•Supt./Administrators/Staff of Meigs County Schools
•Bank One Employees
•F•ir Board-Wm. Radford, Pres.
•Kroger Co.-Pomeroy
•U.S. Forestry Service
'
•Manley's and Tri-County Recycling
•Isaac Walton League and Meigs Fish and Game Assoc.

----------COUfnYOFFi'CIALS

Richard Jones
. ,
David Koblentz - Board. of Comm•sstoners
Manning Roush
Phil Roberts-Engineer
Ted Warner-Highway Supt.
·
Mike Swisher-Dept. of Human Services
James Soulsby-Sheriff
William Wickline-Auditor
Bob Byer-E.M.S.
John Jacobs &amp; Keith Little-Health Dept.

ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS
•David Koblentz-Chairm!ln
•Sheila Curtis-Garden Club
•Charles Barrett, Jr.-Trustere
•Robart Bowen-Co. Supt. (Ret.)
•Victor Brown-Historic!ll Soc.
•Roy Miller~Agriculture
•Pat O'Brien-Judicial
•John Raibal-C.o unty Supt.
•John Rice-Extension Agent
•Keith Wood-Wildlife Officer

I

DONATION~
•Pepsi Cola Bottling Co.
•Dominio's Pizza
•Pieasars Restaurant
•Kroger Co.

·····-· ........

~·

... ---··-····---····- ....

•Powell's Super Valu
•Pizza Hut
•Continuity of Care
•The Hermann Family

-

.

•946 Road mlles cleaned
•6,420 Large Bags of trash collected
•76 Illegal dumpsltas cleaned by program
•24 Illegal dumps cleaned by offenders ·
•32 Litter Citations
•99 Hours of Community Service (~ffanders)
Funded by:
Ohio Department of Nt!!tural Resources
Division of Litter Prevention and Recycling
Richard F. Celeate, Governor

•220 Hours. ($4,275) Donated Equipment
•Educational Materials in all schools
•26 Presentations by program
•120 Spacial Evant Containers pl11cad
•3 Recycle Days held
•760 Major Appliances recycled

MEIGS COUNTY unn CONTROL
UNION AVENUE AT ST. IT. 7, POMEROY
PHONE 992·6360

.

------·---· -'~---···- ·

T!l PROGRAM

PROGRAM ACHIEVEMENTS THIS YEAR

DIUYIIY

LARGE DEWXE
PIZZA

LAIGI

AII-Amerl~a lineman Alfred Wll·
Iiams and wide re~elver Mike
Pritchard, the team's Most Valu·
able Player. Williams has bran·
chitis. Pritchard fractured his
hand during practice Sunday and
will wear a protective device
against Notre Dame.
The Irish arrived individually
Tuesday night and began practice today .

Ski guide
for Northeast

WOODSToCK, Vt. (UPI) New England Ski Areas Council
year," he said. "We weren't very official summary of snow condimature. We'd neve{ been In the tions at New England ski areas
limelight like that before. Now as of 7 a.m. Dec. 26, 1990.
we're In the same position and we
Sk!lng conditions are subject tD
are a lot mental tougher .."
change due to weather, skier
Garten, who holds a school . traffic, and other factors. Be
record for most' career starts aware of changing conditions.
(44), was second to Miami's
Legend: new-inches of new
Russell Maryland in·the Outland snow snowfall ending In last 24
Trophy voting for best lineman. hours, pdr-powd~i snow. ppHe allowed just three sacks and packed powder, wet gr-wet gran·
and was flagged for two penalties ular, Isgr·loose granular, frgrover his four-year · career. He frozen granular, com-corn snow,
says the thought of last year's mgs-machine groomed surface
loss to Notre Dame st!ll stings.
(where two such terms appear,
the
former shows conditions on 70
"I think maybe we were J1.1st
satisfied about getting here," he percent or more terrain, and the
said. "Last year we had it In the latter the next-most· prevalent
palm of our hands and just let it condition) vc-varlable condl·
slip through. We're working as tions, sc·spring conditions xx of
hard as we can to prevent that · 00 trails-number of trails open,
sm-snow made In last 24 hours,
this year."
tc-thln cover, wbln·windblown
snow, var· variable, ns-n!ght
skiing
available. no-not opera!·
The Daily Sentinel
lng, apr-operating.
Connecticut
(USPS 115-84101
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A Dlvllloa of Multimedia, Inc.
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Publtsbed everY afternoon, Monday
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FID LOCAL ·
DEUYIIY

shows the kind of team we are,
the character and
determination."
Colorado held a team dinner
and Christmas program, leaving
the team free the rest of the day.
H~ad coach Bill McCartney said
his players would not practice
Wednesday either because of the
SO-degree heat.
McCartney 's worries concern

"··-·-··· ......-~ ...- / ;.....,.....,. ··· ·-·· - -· ··· .... ___ .. .

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J,,

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In Aloha Bowl, .

.

Syracuse beats Arizona
HONOLULU (UPI) - The
Syracuse Orangemen saved
their best for last.
Freshman quarter.back Mar·
vln Graves threw for two touchdowns and and ran for two others
Christmas Day, leading Syracuse to a 28-0 win over Arizona In
the Aloha Bowl.
. "Our guys played the best
game of the year." Syracuse
head coach Dick MacPherson
said. "We had good field position
most of the day."
· Graves waltzed Into the end
zone untouched on both his
touchdown runs of five and seven
yards. Terry Richardson caught
a 44-yard touchdown pass and
Chris Gedney caught a sevenyard scoring strike.
Syracuse, 7-4-2, dominated the
game played In alternating sunshine and pouring rain. Arizona,
7-5, had not been shut out In 214
ganies dating back to Nov. 21, .
1971 when they lost 31-0 to
Arizona State.
It was the first shutout In the
nine years of the Aloha BowL
The Orangemen were led by
some of their younger players.
Richardson, like Graves. Is a
freshman and Gedney Is a
sophomore.
"It wasourbestcomblnatlonof
offensive and defensive football
of the year," MacPherson said.
"We reminded our plliyers that
they didn' t have to worry about
next week. They really threw

THIS

28~(l

Syracuse rolled up 73 yards In the
their bodies around."
Graves was voted the outstand- opening quarter.
Things might have been differIng player lor Syracuse. He also
contributed to the selection of ent If not for a penalty on
Todd Burden ·as Arizona's out- Arizona's first offensive play.
standing player. Burden had a . The Wildcats' Terry Vaughn
pair of Interceptions, just about connected with David Lockhart
the only blemish on Syracuse's for 45 yards on a fake reverse.
The 'throw, Vaughn's first of the
day .
Graves completed 10 of 19 for year, caught the Orangemen by
145 yards. Arizona alternated surprise. Unfortunately It also
quarterbacks . · Starter Ronald caught a Wildcat lineman as he
Veal completed only 3 of 9 for 22 was flagged for being downfleld
yards. His replacement, George betore the throw.
"That was'h't one of my better
Malauulu, hit on 7 ofl4 trlesfor55
Christmases," Arizona head
yards.
coach Dick Tomey said. "All the
things they did well - protect,
Graves was also Syracuse's
block and tackle...:. wedldn'tdo. "
leading rusher with 45 yards on 11
The Wildcats got the offense
carries. David Walker added 44
going In the second ·quarter.
on 10 attempts. The quarterbacks were the Arizona rushing Arizona gained 92 yards and
recorded seven first downs. The
attack. Veal gained 26 on eight
though, twice failed to
Cats,
carries and Malauulu added 24
convert
fourth-down attempts.
yards on 13 tries.
.
Graves, meanwhile, connected '
The weather smiled on Syracuse In the first quarter. The With :r"erry Richardson on a
Orangemen received the opening 47-yard scoring strike. Three
Wildcat defensive backs watched
kickoff and moved down the field
to score before the first rain of
as Richardson was 10 yards past
the coverage and could have
the game. Graves ran Into the
walked Into the end zone.
end zone untouched from the five
After a scoreless third quar.ter,
for the score.
Graves again took control. He
The rains came before the
ensuing · kickoff and Arizona' s capped a 90-yard scoring drive
offense never got started. The with the touchdown pass to
Gedney early In the quarter.
Wildcats failed to get a first down
Graves completed his MVP
In the Initial quarter.
Arizona gained only 11 yards In day with a 49-yard drive which
resulted In his seven-yard scorthe first QW\rter, eight on the
ground and eight In the air. Ing run.

Haase or Grant
who will start
at quarterback vs. Georgia Tech?
ORLANDO,' Fla. (UP!) Nebraska head coach Tom Osborne spent Christmas Day
watching practice fUm. Tom
Haase visited Sea World and
Mike Grant watched television.
Apparently Nebraska Isn't
·.. ready to panic, although Osborne
has yet to decide whether Haase
or Grant will be the starting
quarterback against No. 2 Georgia Tech In the Florida Citrus
BowL
The Cornhuskers may have a
lot of questions on who will lead
their offense on New Year's Day,
but nobody seems overly concerned with the uncertainty.
"In the long run, It's making
Mike and I better quarterbacks,"
Haase said. "With neither one of
us knowing, it keeps us on our
toes. Either one of us can step in
and run the offense. Because of
that , Coach Osborne Isn't making
that big a deal about it."
What has the quarterback job

hi a quandary at Nebraska Is ihe
loss of regular starter Mickey
Joseph. He was tackled Into the
bench aga!nst Okla!)oma, cu ttlng
the calf muscles In his left leg. It
took 125 stitches to close the. cut.

1

WEEK'S
GAMES

SOUTHERN
BOYS
Dec. 28-Athens, Away

..

MEIGS
PURSUED - Blue quarlerbaek Grady Bennett
(6) of Montana Is being pursued by Gray
llnebaeker Reggie Burnette (left) and a few of bls

Blue All-Stars
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!)
- Cary Blanchard of Oklahoma
State kicked a 24-yard field goal
with 8:02 left to give the Blue a
17-14 victory over · the Gray
Christmas Day In the All-Star
college football game.
Midway through the fourth
quarter, with the score 14-14, the
Blue put together an eight-play'

In Nebraska camp,

promised to make an announcement Tuesday. The decision has
been pushed back to Wednesday
afternoon.
"At first, not knowing was a big
distraction," Grant said. "But
not any more. It keeps me
"They both have their
mollvated to play well In .
EL PASO, Tems (UP!) -The
strengths," Joseph said of the practice."
M!.chtgan State Spartans arrived
Grant-Haase battle. "Tom's
. Nebra·ska, which lost two of Its
(n El Paso Tuesday afternoon to
smart and he knows the offense. last three regular seas01i games,
begin preparations for their New
Mike has the most experience.
has other positions up for grabs,
Year's Eve battle against SouthI'd go to war witli either one of Osborne said.
ern Cal In the John Hancock
them. We're not worrying about
Besides quarterback, Osborne
Bowl.
it. There's no rush because said the job at tailback, offensive
The Spartans, 7-3-1 and tied
everyone here knows either one tackle, defensive tackle, tight
with Ohio State for the 20th spot
can do the job. Whoever gets the end, offensive guard and cornerIn the United Press International
job, they needs to stay within back still are open.
football poll, wlll face the 18ththemselves and follow the game
"It's nothing new for us to go
ranked Trojans In the 12:30 p.m.
plan. They need to get the offense right up to game time not · MST kickoff Monday.
Into the right plays."
knowing who the starters are,"
The Trojans, 8-3-11 are scheOsborne has filmed each prac- Joseph said. "I didn't know until
duled to arrive In El Paso
tice session, hoping to get a
the Tuesday before the first
Wednesday afternoon.
better look at both prospects game that I was the starter. I
In the traditional style of the
before making a final decision. guess It's a big deal to everyone
John Hancock Bowl. the SparHe promised to make a choice else, but -not at Nebraska. We'll
tans were greeted at the El Paso
after Monday's practice. He theil be fine."
International Airport by a marlaI
chi band and dancers.
"I don't think I could dance to
that music," said Michigan State
head coach George Perles. "But
"We won a lot of games, but I Miami Dolphins and Dexter
I think I could celebrate to lt."
expected more from myself," he Carter comes off the bench (or
· The Spartans will begin pracsaid. "I dldn' t reach some goals.
tice Wednesday morning and
the San Francisco 49ers.
I wanted to gain 1,000 yards and
practice every morning except
On Friday night, Florida State
score 20 totichdown·s. Maybe I'll
Saturday. They wlll work out
plays In the Blockbuster Bowl
reach them next year."
Saturday afternoon because of
against Penn State, a school that
He follows a strong running
the annual bowl luncheon.
recently has produced such runback tradition at Florida State.
ning backs as Blair Thomas and
Ex-Seminole Marlon Butts starts Curt Warner.
Perles said that his team,
for the San Diego Chargers,
which shared the Big Ten ConferSammie Smith starts for the
ence championship with Iowa,
Lee, a 6-0, 200-pound juke
master, suffered from the FlorIda State's success. The No. 5
Seminoles, 9-2, jumped to so
many big leads he sat on the
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
bench late In the game while
(UP!) - The son of Penn State
Sean Jackson took over.
Portland at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
football coach Joe Paterno, In
Seattle at Washington, 7: 30p.m.
''I feel like I'm a part of the
south Florida for the Blockbuster
Goklen State at Chicago, 8: 30
offense,"
said
Lee,
who
has
no
Bowl, was robbed at gunpoint by
p.m.
.
. ld~a where the nickname Amp five teenagers as he and a woman
Miami at Denver, 9:30 p, m .
originated except that It might sat on the beach, pollee said
Dallas at Utah, 9:30p.m.
have come from his real names Tuesday.
of Anthonla Wayne. "I expect to
Joseph "Jay" Paterno Jr., 22,
get the ball and I do."
In the NHL...
and Shari Critchley. 27, of
"I get enough opportunities," Harrisburg, Pa., were robbed at
Wales Conference
he Insisted. "I just didn't do 2:17 a.m. Monday. The thieves
Patrick Division
enough with the ball when I got took $62 In cash ·along with
Team
W L T Pto. (iF G!\
N.Y. Rangers ...... 20 13 6 46147121
lt."
· Critchley's purse and an aquamNow Jer"'y ......... 1913 644149 126
That
was
hardly
the
case
In
arine and diamond necklace.
Philadelphia ....... 1917 5 43134130
Pittsburgh ....... .. . 18 17 3 39 157 142
Florida State's regular-season
They were caught within mll)Washlngtoo ....... .. 18 191 37124119
finale, a 45-30 thumping of utes because a pollee sergeant on
N.Y. Islanders .... 1318 ~ 30 100 123
Florida. He ran for 147 yards, survelllance watched the entire
gained 43 ards on three passes episode. several young couples
Adams Dlvitlon
Bostoo ........ .. ...... 20 116 46129117
and scored three touchdowns.
have been robbed and assaulted
Montreal .... ... ...... 1716 5 39119119
Lee would like that kind of recently on the quiet stretch of
HarUonl .... .... ..... 1518 4 34 102122
game F;)day night against No. 8 beachalong,State Road AlA .
Bul!alo .. ...... .... ... 1216 7 311131lll
.Quebec ......... ....... 8 23 7 23 105 168
Penn State, 9-2, bu I he knows
The robbery occurred three
what
he's up against.
·
days after the Nlttany Lions'
Campbell Confereaee
" I know they have a sound footballs and practice jerseys
Norna Division
Team
W L T PtL GF G!\
defense,"
he said. "I think they were stolen from an equipment
Chicago ..... .... ..... 2~ 12 2 521281110
rely
on
their
defense to keep room at South Plantation High
St. Louis ............. 21 9 547124 93
Detroit ......... .. ..... 19 15 4 42 138130
them In the game rather than on School. Those Items were not
Mlnnesota .......... . l121628111128
the!~ offense to score points."
recovered, pollee said.
Tormto .... ........... IO 26 2 22103153
. Both teams practiced two
Sgt. Cliff Douglas watched as
Smythe DlviiJion
hour,s Christmas Day and have three 18-year-olds and three
Calgary ....... ....... 20 13 4 44150119
one more day of serious workouts juvenUes approached Paterno
Los AnaeJes .. .. ..... 1811 5 41140 113
before winding down for Friday and Critchley. One of them asked
Vancouver .... .. .... 1718 3 37121131
night's game.
Ed malton . .... .. .... 1517 2 32112111
Paterno for a light and anothor
WlnnlpeK .. ......... .. 10 22 7 27123146
'
.
Tueld&amp;J'• rHulta

Tuesday teammates during · the Blue-Gray
Classic held Christmas Day In Montgomery, Ala.
The Blue won 17-14. (UPI)

~dge

BOYS
Dec. 28-Logan, Away

Gray 17-14

leading to a seven~ yard scoring
run by Sheldon Canley of San
Jose State.
Later In the quarter, Bob
Christian of Northwestern ran 15
yards to make It 14-0.
The Blue defense answered the
call at the end of the quarter. The
Gray went for the touchdown on
fourth-and-goal from the one, bu I
Chuck Weatherspoon of Houston
was draped for a one-yard loss.
In the second quarter, the Gray
drew within 14-7 on Zolak's
39-yard scoring pass to Kentucky's Phil Logan. The Gray's
Kasay
missed a field goal from 50
Ohio State and Dllnois; should be
yards
just
before halftime,
ready for the game against USC,
Midway
through the third
a rematch of the 1988 Rose Bowl
quarter,
the
Gray drove to the
game won by Michigan State
Blue's
one,
but
was· stopped on
20-17.
third-and-one
and
fourth-and"All of our players came down
one.
After
the
Blue
failed to
here heal thy," Perles said.
"(Tackle Toby) Heaton Is down convert on fourth-and-one from
Its 22, the Gray scored In two
here too, and he should be ready.
plays
- a 21-yard pass from
But he won't start. (Roosevelt)
to Kirk Kirkpatrick of
Zolack
Wagner, who has. been starting
Florida
and
a one-yard sneak by
for the past three or four games, .
Zolak.
. '
Is going to start."
In
the
third
quarter.
Perles said that he was pleased
In the fourth quarter, Zolak hit
about the, weather In El Paso,
Logan
with an apparent eight·
compared to what It was like In
yard
scoring
pass, but the play
Lansing, Mich.
was
called
back
for offensive
"We left Lansing and It was
colder than heck," he said. ''The pass Interference.
Scott Evans, a defensive linewind-chlll factor was below zero.
man
from Oklahoma, was named
We're very easy to. please. With
the
Blue's
Most Valuable Player.
the temperatures In the 40's here,
Larry
Brown,
a defensive back
don't be surprised If you see some
from
Texas
Ch.
: ·'lan, was the
of us swimming at the hoteL"
Gray
MVP.
Senior quarterb.ack Dan Enos
said he was looking forward to
see the sights In both El Paso and
Mexico.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
"The more a person can learn
446 4524
. '.. :, ..
outside of school makes him a
WOltl IIITIII€1S Dm Y
$2.75
.
l.llltGlll IUGHT TUESDAY
better person," said Enos, a
native of Dearborn. Mich. "With
l : lS,J : 30,7 :1 51 ~
9:30
.,
this bowl's reputation and the
DAIU
two teams Involved, this is one of
MT£0 !"· lll
the best bowl games this year."
75-yard ,drive to set up Blanchard's winnmg kick. The Gray
had a chance to tie but John
Kasay of Georgia missed a
40-yard field goal with 1:36 left.
The Blue broke head 14-0 after
one period. The Blue capitalized
on a fumble by Gray quarterback
Scott Zolak of Maryland at his 36,

Michigan State, USC
preparing for H~cock Bowl

Florida State's Lee- a high-voltage runner
ByLES KJOS
UPI Sports Writer
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(UP!) - Florida State has
produced some top NFL running
backs, but Amp Lee might yet be
the best.·
The sophomore from Chipley,
Fla.. this season averaged 5.2
yards a carry for 825 yards and 18
touchdowns.

- - ··_......._.___.goys'
SOUTHERN
Nov. 27-North Gallia ............ Home
Nov. 30-Hann·a n Trace .......... Home
. Dec. 4-Eastern . , ~ .................. Away ·
Dec. 7-Southwestilrn ...... , .... , Away
Dec. &amp;~Paint Valley .............. Convo
Dec. 14-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Dec. 15-Symmes Valley ........ Away ·
Dec. 21-0ak Hill .................. Away
Dec. 22-Southeaatern .. .. ....... Home
Dec. 28-Athens .................... Away
Jan. 4-North Gallia ... ............. Away
Jan, 5-Galllpolis ................... Away
Jan.11-Hannan Trace ...... ..... Away
Jan. 18-Eastarn .................... Home
Jan. 22-Ravenswood ............ Away
Jan. 25-Southwestern .......... Home
Feb. 1-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Feb. 8-Sym!fleS Valley .......... Home
Feb. 12-Warran .................... Away
Feb. 15-0ak Hill ............... .. .. Home

Eutern Conference
..\tlantlc Division
Team
W L Pet. GB
Boston ...... ..... .. ....... 22 4 .846 Philadelphia ............18 8 .692 4
New York .... .. ...... .1 2 13 .480 910
New J ersey ..... .. .... 10 15 .400 lllf.t
Washing1oo ........... l0 15 .400 11.\h
Miami ..................... 5 19 .208 16

Central Dl\'lllon
Mllwaukee ... ........... l S 8 .692
Chicago ................. .17 9 .654
I
Det rolt ................... l610 .615 2
Atlanta ................. .1213 .480 510
Clevela nd ..............1116 .407 7'h
Indiana ............ .....10 17.370 810
Cha r lone .............. .. 8 16 .333 9

Western Conference
Midwest Division

Team
W L Pet. GB
San Antmlo ... ......... 17 6 .739
Utah ...... ..... .. ........ , l7 9 .654 110
Houston .................1511 .577 3\1
Dal las ................ .. ... 9 14 .391 8
Minnesota ........... .. . 717.292 1010
Denver .................. 519 .208 1210
Orlando .... .. ........... . 5 22 .185 14
Pacific Dlvlllon
Portland .... .......... ... 23 3 .885
Phoenix .................. 15 9 .625
L.A. Lake-s ........... 11 9 .609
GoldenState .... .... ..l510 .600
Seattle .................. IO 13.435
L.A. Olppers .. .... .. 10 15.4110
Sacramento .... ....... 617 .261

7
710
710
1110
1210
15'h

Tueada:r:• game
Chicago 98, Det rolt 86

Today'• ramea
Atlanta at New JerJEy, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 7: 30
p.m .
Houston at Orlando, 7: 30p.m.

Indiana at Boaton, 7: 30p .m.
Portland at New York, 7: 30p.m.
Seattle at Cleveland, 7: 30p.m .
Charlotte at Detroit, 7: 30p.m .
Miami at San Ant&lt;lllo, ll: 30 p.m .
Golden State at Milwaukee, 8: 30

p.m.

Dallas at Phoenlx, 9:30p.m.
Denver at Sacramento, 10: 30
p.m.
L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippers,
!0: 30p.m.

ftanday'aaam•

'

No gamesacheduled

Toda7'• runes

Hartford at Quebec, 7:35p.m.

Bo1otn at Buffalo, 7: 35p.m.

PlttlbUIJh at Washlngt&lt;n, 7: 35

p.m.

.

St. Louis at ChlcaKo. 8:35p.m.
Wtnntpea at Minnesota, 8:35p.m.
nt.nday'aaunm
St. LouJsat Tol'(llto, 7:35p.m .
.N .Y Islanders at New Jer.!Ey,
H5p.m.
Cal pry at EdmCIU&lt;JI, 9: 35p.m.
Montreal at Vancouver, 10:35

p.m.

Philadelphia at Los Angeles,
10: 35p.m.

"

..

, . GOOD USED
1 WASHERS, DIYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

, COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe., Gallpollt

.

DOWNING CHILDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

.

Pll. 446-1699
HOUISt 8 A.M.-6 P.M.
,,,

Ill Second St., Pomeroy
i

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENn SERVING
.. MBGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868
•
•

.•.

EASTERN
Nov. 20-Miller ...................... Away
Nov. 23 - Faderal Hocking ...... Home.
Nov. 27-Kyger Creek ............ Away
Nov. 30-Southwestern ......... Home
DEC. 4-Southern ..... .. ....... .... Home
Dec. 7-Symmas Valley .. ... .... . Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia ............ AWay
Dec. 15-0ak. Hill .... ...... ..... .. . Home
Dec. 18-Waterford .... ..... ..... . Home
· Jan. 4-Kyger Creak ....... .. .. .... Home
Jan. 11-Southwestern .... ...... Away
Jan. 15 ~ Hannan Trace ....... .. . Home
Jan. 18-Southern .... .. .. ... ...... Away
Jan. 25-Symmes Valley ..... .. . Home
Jan. 26-Miller ................... .. . Home
Feb. 1-North Gailia .. ........ .. ... Home
Feb. 5-Fadaral Hocking ......... Away
Feb. 8-0ak Hill ... ....... ..... ..... . Away
Feb. 12-Waterford ... .. ... ......... Away
Feb. 15-Hannan trace ....... . : .. Away

.

.

'

..

,,

.'

.,

SCHEDULES§-------•'

SOUTHERN
Nov. 12-Nelsonvilla· York ...... Away
Nov. 19-Meigs ..................... Away
Nov. 26-North Gallia ... .. .. .. ... Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Trace .... .. .... Away
Dec. 3-Eastam ..................... Home
Dec. 6-Southwestarn ............ Home
Dec. 10-Kyger Creek ............ Away
Dec. 13-Symma Valley .... .. ... Home
Dec. 17-Waterford ............... Home
Dec. 20-0ak Hill .................. Home
Jan. 3-North Gallia .... .. .. .. ..... Home
Jan. 10-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 14-Meigs ................ .. .... Home
Jan. 16-Nalsonville-York ....... Home
Jan. 17-Eastern .. ~ ................ Away
Jan. 24-Southwestern .......... Away
Jan. 28-Waterford .. .............. Away
Jan. 31-Kyger Creek ............ . Home
Feb. 4-0ak Hill .... .................. Away
Feb. 7-Symmes Valley .......... Away

quickly pulled out a gun, pointed
It at Paterno's head and forced

him to lie face down In the sand.
Douglas called for backup as
the five suspects fled In a 1985
Nlssan Maxima.

SCHEDULES~----

~
M.EIGS
.
Dec. 1-Athens ...................... Home
Dec. 4-Belpre ..................... .. Away
Dec.11-MIIIer .. .................... Home
Dec. 14-Vinton County ......... Home
Dec. 18-Aiexander .............. . Away
Dec. 21-Wellston ................. Home
Dec. 28-Logan ..................... Away
Jan. 4-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan. 8-Faderal Hocking ......... Home
Jan: 11-Nelsonvilla· York ....... Away
Jan. 15-Balpre .. .. ................. Home
Jan. 22-Millar ...................... Away
Jan. 25-Vinton County ...... ... Away
"Jan. 29-Aiexander ... .. ........ ... Home
Feb . 1-Wallston .................... Away
Feb. 2-Athans ....·.................. Away
Feb. 5-Warran ...................... Home
Feb. 8-Trimble ...... .. .............. Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ... .... Away
Feb. 15-Nelsonville·York ....... Home

-----GIRLS~

Paterno, girlfriend robbed by youths

In ti,Ie NBA•..

1990 Local Schedules

'

'

Mason family Restaurant
Thursday Ni8ht is

MEIGS
Nov. 19-Southern :... .. .......... Home
Nov. 26-Trimble ................... Home
Nov. 29-VInton County ......... Away
Dec. 3-Miller ............ .. ....... ... Away
Dec. 8-Eastern ..................... Home
Dec. 10-Nalsonville-York ...... Away
Dec. 13-Belpra ...................... Home
Dec. 17-Aiexander ............ :... Home
Dec. 20-Wallston .......... ....... Away
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking ....... .. Home
Jan. 7-Trimble ...................... Away
Jan. 1 0-Vinton County ......... Home
Jan. 14-Southerri ..... .. .. .. ...... Away
Jan. 17 ~ Miller ............ .. ........ Home
Jan. 21-Easterri .................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville· York .... .. . Home
Jan. 28-Belpra ..... ................ Away
Jan. 21-Aiexander ... .. ........... Away
Feb. 4-Wellston ............... ... .. Home
-:eb . 7-Fadaral Hocking ......... Away

EASTERN
Nov. 19-Faderal Hocking .. .... Home
Nov. 26-Kygar Creek .. .. .... .... Home
Nov. 29-Southwastern ..... .... Away
Dec. ' 3-Southarn ..... ..... .... ... .. Away
Dec. 5-Trimble .. ...... .. ..... ... ... Home
Dec. 6- Symmes Valley .. ........ Home
Dec. 8-Meigs ................. ..... . Away
Dec. 10-North Gallia ............ Home
Dec. 13-0ak Hill ............ ...... Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace .. .. ..... . Away
Jan. 3-Kyger Creek .... ... .... .... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble .. .. ..... .. .... .... ... Away
Jan .10-Southwestern .. : .. ...... Home
Jan. 14- Fadaral Hocking ..... ... Away
Jan. 17-Southern ........... ...... Home
Jan. 21-Meigs .. ....... ....... ...... Home
Jan. 24-Symmes Valley .. .. .. .. Away
Jan. 31 - North Gallia .. ...... ... .. Away
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace ... ......... Home
Feb. 7-0ak Hill .... .. .. ... .. ... .. ... Home

.,
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·'I

•
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4 P.M. - 9 P.M.

!
''

•Spaghetti

I

•Lasagna
••
•

•Chicken
Cacciatorie

•

{

All Dinners
Served With Our all-U-Care-To-Eat
.
Soup, Fruit &amp; Salad Bar &amp; Garlic Bread,
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections.
Take Out Orders Available.
"Senior Citizens Receives 10% Discount
'

Mason Family Restaurant
Rt. 33

(304) 773-5321

Mason. WV

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•

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t
j
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iOiili;;;i,;ll .. - -~

�...._....;..;;;.-....--..;;....________
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

__ _________ ___...,;'

Pomeroy-Middleport.
..;,.._.;.... Ohio·

Wednesd8y,
....;,;, Deeerriber 26, 1990

..;,..

•

Wednesd8y, December 26, 1990

there Is n.o t a genetic Influence In
alcoholism . What this tells us Is
that we may have a long way to
go to Identity the specific gene or
genes, " said Dr. David Goldman
of the National Institute of
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism,
who led the study.
Plnp6tntlng the gene or genes
associated with alcoholism could
lead tQ better ways to Identify
people at risk of becoming
alcoholics, as well as a greater

Union denies

Announcements
New Year's Eve service
The Grubb Family SingeiS, Gallipolis, will perfonn at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Chlirch in RuUand
on Monday at 7 p.m. for the New
Year's Eve service. Pastor Paul
Taylor invites !he public.

"DIG BEND•••

"

'

UNIVERSITY OF RIO

},

(Conilnued from Page 11

and contents. Tlie fire Is under
Investigation by the state fire
marshal.
RAC announced It would release more details on the status
of these lnclden ts shortly.
In other developments, Kana-

The two-story fraJne hqme or
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Searles on
Collins Road, · Pomeroy, was
destroyed by fire on Chrisanas Eve.
According to Danny !fukle,
Pomeroy fire chief, !he couple was
downstairs watching television
when they smelled smoke and then
discovered !he fire well underway
in the upper part of the house. Mr.
and Mrs. Searles escaped without
injury but were unable to save anything in !he burning house.
The structure was fully. engulfed
by ·the time Pomeroy firemen arrived on the scene. The call came in
at 5:45 p.m. and fireme11 remained
at the scene until 8:27 p.m. A few

Round and square' dance
There will be a round and square
dance on Friday from 8-11:30 plm.
at the Tuppers Plains VFW Building featuring !lie Rocky Mountain
Bluegrass. Ronnie Wood will be
the caller. Cost is $2.50 for adults
and $1 for children under 12. The
public is invited.
The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday at I p.m. in the
Syracuse Municipal Building for
the final business meeting of 1990.
The organizational meeting for
I 991 will follow. ·

URSDA Y,. JA.N. l;P

understanding of the underlying
causes of the disease. which In
turn could lead to new treat·
ments and preventive measures.
In April, a team headed by Dr.
Ernest Noble, director of the
University of Callfornta·l;!ls Angeles Alcohol Research Center.
reported that the D-2 receptor
gene was present In the brains of
nearly 70 percent of 35 people
who died of alcohol-related Illness, compared with ' just 20

.wha County Circuit Judge John
Hey Is scheduled Thursday to
hear an RAC appeal to the
unemployment benefits granted
to the workers last week by the
Department of Employment
Security.

P.orne roy home destroyed . ,

Trustees to meet

'

The Daily Sentinei-PIIgt 7

'•

New findings dispute belief ·in genetic ties .to alcoholism
By REBECCA KOLBERG
UPI Science Writer
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - New
findings cast doubt on the much·
publicized discovery of a gene
linked to severe alcoholism, but
scientists who conducted the
original research Insist their
·
discovery Is solid.
Government researchers said
Tuesday their study of 40 alcohol·
lcs and 127 other patients did not
find widespread or consistent
ties between alcoholism and a
type of gene known as the
dopamlne-2, or D-2, receptor
gene.
"Even though we have not
found a linkage to this particular
gene. It ls wrong toconcludetMt

PLUS A CHANCE FOR

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

percent of deceased non- receptor gene may Interfere with
alcoholics.
the dopamine response so people
That finding, published II\ the •who have the gene need to drink
Journal of the American Medical · more alcohol than other people to
get the same pleasurable effect.
Association, represented the
first reported link between a
However , Goldman and .his
particular gene and alcoholism,
colleagues said their work failed
although there has been a grow- to uncover any strong tie beIng body of evidence sugg~ting
tween the D-2 receptor gene and
susceptibility to alcoholism.
that heredity plays a role rn the
"Close linkage of the (dopamdisorder.
Ine) genetoalcohQllsm was i:uled
Scientists think dopamine -a
brain chemical - c&lt;iuld be out, " the NIAAA researchers
associated with "pleasure seek· wrote In their study, also publng" that allows alcohol to . llshed In JAMA.
The conflicting results lndlca~e
stimulate brain cells In a way
that results ·In a sense of " there Is either a subgroup of
enjoyment. A defect In the D-2 · alcoholics that have mutation In

the D-2 receptor gene" or !bat
Noble's finding repr:esenll , a
statistical fluke, Goldman aalcl.
However, Noble said some
results of the new study could'ln terpreted to supllOrt his 01'111nal findings.
The new study showed the type
of D·2 receptor gene that Nobel
Identified was more commoa Ill
severe alcoholics, with about ~
percent having the gene, he aalcl.
In contrast, only about 30 perc:eat
of moderate alcoholics had tile
gene. That supports the lllu!U·
hood that the gene plays a role Ill
severe alcoholism, he said.

Sheriff's department investigates accide,nts
Six motor vehicle accidents have
been investigated by the Meigs

~~=y~heriff's Depanmept since

According to a deparanent news
clothes !hat they were able to throw released dated Wednesday, Sheriff
from the house were later damaged James M. Soulsby reported that
by fire and water. The Middleport Patty A. Pickens, Texas Road, was
Fire Depanment was called in to westbound on Pomeroy Pike when
assist and had one truck on the she failed fO ·make a curve and went
scene.
into the ditch on Saturday night
At 10:08 p.m. !he fire rekindled
Moderate damage was listed to
and Pomeroy firemen reiUi1led to the 1989 Mercury that Pickens was
!he scene to extinguish the fl!upes.
driving, and Nichola Pickens, 16,
The fire chief was unable to give was transPorted to Vete!'&amp;nS
an estimate of the damage although Memorial Hospital by Pomeroy
he said the house was totally squad.
destroyed by t!le fire.
On Saturday evening, Keith HarOn Monday at 3:51 p.m. the ris of R~ville was traveling west
Chester Filii Department reponscd on State Route 124 and struck and
to a call at the Allen Dill residence
killed a deer that ran into his path.
on Texas Road. There was repor- The accident caused moderate
tedly only some minor smote damage. damage to Hanis' 1977 truck.

Moderate damage occurred to
two vehicles in an accident at Big
Wheel on Sunday afternoon.
According to the department
news release, Pamela A. Wolfe or
Syracuse was backing from a park·
ing space at Big Wheel and struck a
vehicle driven by Christi Hoffman
or Pomeroy. The right rear bumper
of Wolfe's 1990 Honda vehicle.sustaincd light damage as did the left
rear fender of Hoffman's 1982
Plymouth ..
On Monday, deputies investigated a report or a deer/eM acci·
dent on State Route 7 one-half mile
north of State Route 248. Josephine
L. Hill of Long Bottom was
northbound when she struck and
killed a deer that ran into the path ·
of her vehicle, which suffered
moderate damage.
Roger D. Boster, Gallipolis, was

.

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traveling southbound on New lJma .•

Road in an Empire Fumitiae INCk
on when he hit an ~ lllltllld
into the ditch. M
tiM . r
was listed.to the truck.
On Tuesday morning, ctq n&amp;es
took at deer/car accident report.
According to the dc.piiUIIWl, Judith
A. Avis, Coolville was w'tlbl 1
on State Route 681 in a 1991 Cllevrolet when she struck and Jdllecl a
deer that ran into the vehicle's ,-11.
Light damage was listed to die
vehicle and two passengers in die
vehicle escaped injury.
Sheriff Soulsby 1eponed thll·1t
year old Ron Capehart. who involved in an accident on Saturday
morning on the ftood road has l)een
cited to Meigs County Court for
driving while under the inll-.
failure to control and drivillglllder
suspension.
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Movie.to be shown
Movies presented at !he Meigl
County Public Liblllf}' in Pomerol
will include "A White Seal" ant
"Rip Van Winkle" on Saturday at :
p.m. All area children are invited tl
attend at no charge.

MT. VER

Trustees to meet
The Lebanon Township Trustee1
will meet Monday at 4 p.m. at the
township garage for the year-ent
meeting. An organizational meetin!
will follow.

Pick Up Your FREE
Ticket (in January) At:

EM~

•Ohio Valley Foodland
•Gallipolis Foodland ,.
•Big Bend Foodland
•Wellston Foodland
•Twin Rivers Foodland
· ,.Point Pleasant Foodland

Four calls were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service on Monday
evening and .Christmas Day.
All four were taken to Vetemns
Memorial Hospital but only one
was admitted to the hospital. On
Monday evening at 7:25 p.m. the
Middleport unit went to Page Street
for Nellie Connolly and at
p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to
Ave. for Teny Day.
On Chrisunas Day at 2:23
the Racine squad went to Fro&gt;ni I
Street for Teny Hughes who
taken to Veterans and admitted
treaunent, and at 1;54 p.m.
.
Pomeroy unit went to
. Avenue for Mildred Fultz who was
also taken to .Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatinent

Come Out and Help Us
Support The Redmen.
We're Proud To Participate
In This Community-Minded Event.

•

nms listed ·

FRESH

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15°AJ to 40°AJ OFF
LOVE SEATS&amp;
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From Country To Classic!

DellaloU. ....

Reductlou Oil
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ll:aMmblle,Tool

Hospital news
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Valid Dtc. 23 thr1 IlK. 29, 1990

limit One With CotlfiOII Ami Additional PurchaH
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Not Just Selected Specials ... Everything
On The Floor I~ On Sale! if You See It Here,
You Can Take It Home For UJ? To 50% Olfl

15°AJ.to .40o/o OFF

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Middleport businesses are reminded
that ali amusement
machine licenses expire on December 31 and must be renewed
by that · time. All coin-operated
amusement machines In the village are required to purchase a
yearly license. the proceeds of
which asai.St with recreation pro·
jects within the vlllaae. .
The charge for thl!se licenses
are S50 for a juke box, $50 each
for the first three amusement
machines, and S25 for each
machine after the first three.
Llcenaes may be purchased at
'the mayor's office between 8 a.

~::: 4 ~.m.

Monday through

'

CHAIRS, RECLINERS, ROCKERS· •••
EVEN ALL
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS.
AND DELUXE WALL SYSTEMS

lOOAJ to 50°AJ OFF
.
CURIOS, DESKS, ROOM DIVIDERS, ~
DECORATOR TABLE GROUPS, ~
PICTURES, WALL DECOR
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'
&amp; AI,L ACCENT PIECES
'
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Amusement machine
licenses expire

FOOD LAND VALUABLE' COUPON

FOODLAND

•

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Dally atock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of ,JSlunl, Ellis &amp;: Loewl
•
' Electric Power ..........
. .. .27""
Am
Ashland Oil ..... ....... ............27¥.
AT&amp;T ....... .. ................ ........ 30~
Bob Evans .... ...................... 14*
Charming Shoppes .............. 11 \1,
City Holding Co .................. 15~
Federal Mogul. .... ......... .. .... 13%
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ........... .... 17!){,
Key Centurion ....................11*
Lands' End .......... .............. J3*
Limited Inc ........................17¥.
Multimedia Inc. ..................67}S
Rax Restaurants............ ..... ~ ·
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ......... .. 19~
Shoney's Inc .......'................ 11\1,
Star Bank ..... ......................16*
Wendy's Int'l: ..................... 6%
Worlhlngton Jnd ..... .....: .......22y.

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19

99

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.Orange
Jui'ce

Veterans Memorilll Hospital
Monday admissions: none.
Monday discharges; James M.
Dawson, Toni Cheek, Mary E.
Pauley, and Ricky Johnson.
Tuesday
admissions:
Peny
Hughes, Racine.

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ENSEMBLES

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L_______,!~SI!'!!'!!"!!...~----..;;..______~CJCWJ!
' !!17~7.!3-~55!!!92!._________~--~-!M4~CIII~Qn~,wv~~-:--T___...;,~
"

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...,. 8-The Deily Sentinel

Wst•dav. December 26, 19"

Victim
of rape
doesn't
appear
CU:VELAND (UP!) - The
19-year-old Cleveland State University coed, who charged she
was raped by CSU basketball
player Roy ·zachary Williams,
failed to sllow up at a preliminary
nearing Monday In Qeveland
Municipal Court.
Williams, 25, is accused of
raping the woman Nov. 3 at an
off-campus Della Sigma Phi
fraternltyy party.
A Cleveland pollee detective
told Judge Shirley Strickland
Saffold the woman would continue to press charges and that
she had been getting harassing
telephone .calls, but not by
Williams, The Cleveland Plain
Dealer reported Tuesday.
Saffold told Williams to do
what he could to stop the
harassing calls.
Williams' lawyer James Caywood asked the judge to dismiss
the rape charge since the witness
did not show up.
lnsiead. the judge continued
tile hearing for Jan. 4.
Williams has pleaded Innocent
11114 Is free on a $5,000 bond.
The 6-foot-8 transfer from
Compton (C&lt;!lif.) Junior College
was i'ecruiled In September 1989
bf .former CSU coach Kevin
M'acitey.
·
'rt!e Wllloughy News-Herald
Saturday published an article
'revealing Williams was con· ·
vlcted of murder In 1981 at age 14,
and served five years in California juvenile Institutions.
., Terry Frala, clerk to the
presiding judge of the Juvenile
Court of the Los Angeles Court of
Los Angeles County said Monday
juvenile court records are
confidential.
Williams was also questioned
by California au thor! ties last
year about the suspicious death
of a 19-year-old Compton Junior
Col],ege student, Llna Aldridge,
whose body was found In the
trunk of a car In July 1989. The
cause of death was undetermined
and Williams was not charged
with any crime.
Because the rape .charge Is a
felony, Williams also faces a
hearing" Thursday morning be·
fore the Ohio Board of R,egents to
determine whether he can stay
on at p&gt;U as 11 student.
-~Williams was suspended. from
the team Dec. 11 for academic
problems involving incomplete
course work.
Jan P. Muczyk, CSU's senior
vice president for planning and
operations, said recruiting Williams showed poor judgement.
"I don't expect an FBI Invest!·
gallon of every athlete recruit,
but this kid was a media star on
the West Coast for a while
(because of his status as a
suspect)," Muczyk said. " ... I do
'expect good judgement or
coaches and of everyone else
associated with the university,
and I expect common sense. The
recruiting of Roy Williams did
pot evidence either.
"You've got to err on the side of '
caution... "
Mackey, who Is a drugrehabilitation program, could
not be reached for. comment
Mackey was fired from his head
coaching job July 19 after being
arrested for using cocaine.

''I understand the population of
Cuyahoga County Is going
down," Mattern said. "(But) our
easel are going up."
In particular, drug violations
lncrealed in 1989, Mattern said.
He predicted, "1990 not going to
be any different."
Court officials last week said
they didn't J&lt;now the exact
·reasons for the Increase .

products for poor
STORE HOURS
.,

Monday tlH:u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., DEC. 23, THRU SAT., DEC. 29, 1990 .

Martha Brown, a proba tlon
maaaaer in the court's East
, Qeveland branch said, "The
IJUbllc Is saying they are tired of
cr1me1 against themselves and
tbeJr property as well."
~

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By TOM TROY
and 80 families a month.
Untied Press lnleruatlonal
Nora Johnson, executive direcFood bank(ng, a concept that tor of the Rainbow Kitchen
was once radical, has become so Community Center, said starvawell-established that one foodtion does not appear to be a
banking agency has come out Problem In her economically
with products under its own distressed area.
label.
But food needs are not the only
Food banking was founded at a needs of the poor. Employment
St. Vincent de Paul soup kitchen and health care are also.
In Phoenix In the 1960s. Since essential.
then, It has spread through the
"The best thing Is for people to
country as a way of channeling take their )lard-earned dollars
waste and excess inventory pro- and go to the stores and choose
duced by the food Industry to what they want," said Johnson.
charitable organizations. ·
"The best thing would be full
The biggest food bank Is employment and a really adeSecond Harvest, founded ln. Pho- quate social network where peoenix In 1979 and now located In · ple's basic needs are met. The
Chicago to be near the nation's food situation cannot be seen in
annlvenarle. of both the Mercury space procram
OFF WE GO -Santa Claus, takJngareslfrom
lood Industry. It Is a national Isolation. A huge component Is
and lbe Brecldnrldre Ski Area In Colora!lo as they
his'
labors,
joiDed
Mercury
space
program
network serving 183 food banks the health care system, which is
dedicate/ ride the new Mercury Space&lt;: hair,
astronauts Alan Shepard, Scott Car~nter and
around the nation and, by exten- failing a lot of people.."
(Ul'l).
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohlo, lo celebrate the 30th
~ion, 40,000 charitable agencies
providing help to the needy,
Linda Saran, spokeswoman for
the non-profit Second Harvest,
said It moves 400 mUllan pounds
important victory that helped our freedom and yoq want that' from the Thomas Paine pamBy LARRY LEVINSON
of food annually, equivalent to
keep together the ragtag army remembered ...
WASHINGTON
CROSSING,
phlet Washington read to his men
about 400 mllllon.meals, and with
the colonists had sent into the
Gallagher .noted that on the eve before the battle in Trenton,
what would have been a retail N.J. (UPI) - With American
field to challenge tlle armed of battle Washington was faced about 6 mlles to the south.
troops poised for action In Saud Ia
value of $600 million.
forces of the world's largest with the posslblity of mass
'These are the times that try
"I think we look at our Arabia, more than 200 history
mtlttary power of tlle time.
defections of his forces because mens' souls," he read. ''The
organization as more of a stop- buffs re-enacted one of the
James Gallagher, marking his the Continental Army's enlist- summer soldier and the sunshine
gap and Band-Aid to help people nation's first military successes,
sixth
appearance at the head of ments were about to end.
patriot wtll, in these times of
who would nol'!llally slip through Gen. George Washington's crossthe
troops
as
Washington,
said
"One
of
the
reasons
the
ba
tile
Ing
of
the
Delaware.
crisis,
shrink from the service of
the cracks to get the assistance
In
the
presence
of
military
forces
had
to
be
fought
was
because
the
marked
The
crossing
Tuesday
his
country,
but he who stands It
they need to be able to putfood on
the
field
half
a
world
away
to
end
at
enlistments
were
going
the
38th
time
enthusiasts
now
deserves
the the love and
their table,"-sald Saran.
to
this
brought
special
poignancy
the
end
of
the
month
and
the
equipped
With
colonial
military
thankS
of
men
and
women."
She said the people helped
year's
celebration.
·
army
was
going
to
melt
away,"
regalia
climbed
into
a
quartet
of
A
crowd
of
up
to
6,000 people
range from the chronically lndl·
the
Newtown
Square,
Pa.,
resi40-foot
boats
to
duplicate
the
on
both
banks
of the ·
gathered
gent to those who are temporardent
said.
"He
had.
to
have
Christmas
morning
1776crosslng
"You
see
the
events
In
the
river
to
watch
the
troops,
In
their
Ily disabled or unemployed.
something
to
reverse
the
trend
.
that
led
world
and
you
realize
the
things
to
the
first
Battle
of
historically correct uniforms,
Second Harvest Operates by
obtaining donations of surplus Trenton during the Revolution- the troops are facing In the They couldn't get anyone to join row across the river.
because they hadn't won any
Mideast this year," he said.
ary War.
"This Is a wonderful way to
food from food producers and
battles recently."
Washington's rout of British ."You try to remember that the
spend a Chrlstmi!S afternoon. It
directing It to their member food
As the forces assembled for the really Is delightful,'' said Val
and Hessian mercenary troops things the colonists endured and
banks based on population and
river
crossing, Gallagher read Hoskings of Lahaska, Pa.
quartered
in
Trenton
was
an
the
sacrifices
they
made
ensured
level of poverty In their region.
The food banks are all certified
by Second Harvest and are
non-protlt organizations. They
are audited for quality standards, and are, in turn, required to
monitor· the quality standards of
the 40,000 agencies whom they
supply,

•

Gulf crisis lends new meantng to· re-enactment

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1/4 Pork Lo1n ••.•~.... · 59.

SLICED

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Beef Chuck Roast.~:· 1 ·
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

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HOMEMADE

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$129
Chicken Breast •••••
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PORK

Spare Ribs •••••••••'!·. $1 49
HILLSHIRE FARMS ·~.
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$
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9
Smoked Sausage .o.:· ·1 ·
$·

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Cabbage ••••••••.••••l:... 1
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$2
99·
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Pizza
•.•
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6
9
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FOX DELUXE

CHARMIN,

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7 oz.

We· ill Be Closed Christmas Day

•

Media attention to gangs and
c1rug1 may have prompted more
complaints from the public and
more pollee arrests, Mattern
uld.

Wednesday, December 26, 1990

Food banks move

Juvenile cases
•
pos.t lncrease
CLEVELAND (UP!) -While
Cuyahoga County's population
shrinks, the number of cases that
fllld their way into the county's
juvenUe court system Is on the
rise- especially drug violations.
"We certainly have had more
cases come to the attention of the
court this year than any other
time," said Mark Mattern, the
court's manager of community
relations, The Cleveland Plain
Dealer reported. "There's been a
steady Increase since 1987.

·.. ~

Second Harvest,and other food
banks flll what Is often the most
difficult need In getting food to
· the hungry - collection and
distrlbu lion.
. A Pennsylvania food bank
director said the hunger crisis In
the Soviet Union, for example,
·. was due notto·shortages ·but to
' failures in moving the product
around.
"We have some of those same
problems in this country, like
Gassaway, W.Va. They have no
locai advantage so we have to
send food from here to there,"
·said Tim Whelan with Central
Pennsylvania Food Bank In
Harrisburg. "So we don't always
have the type of distribution we'd
like to have to target the need."
Whelan said when he joined
Second Harvest in 1982, there
were 14 food banks on the East
Coast. Today there are 75.
Nationwide, the number grew
rapidly from 30 to today's 183.
Growth came fast In the early
years, but recently, the amount
of product distributed by Second
Harvest has leveled of!. Saran
says the organization has
reached a natural plateau. But
another reason Is thai the food
Industry has become more efficient, reducing Its waste, she
said.
Producers are better able to
match production, distribution,
inventory and consumption
numbers, leaving less surplus to
be disposed of. To make up for
the decline In surplus goods, the
agency is establishing contacts
with major food producers to
encourage charitable giving as
part of normal production.
.As an example, the American
Meat Institute has pledged Its
members to contribute meat
products through the
cooperative.
In a recent project with Pillsbury, the company provided
product, labeling and processing
to produce cans of green beans
.and sweet peas under the Second
Harvest label.
One Pittsburgh organization
that Is at the bottom of the
charitable food · distribution
chain feeds about 130people In its
soup kilchen each day· and
provides groceries to between 60

SMAll
WANT ADS
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$679

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lAG
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$299

a-1 Ollly At ....., S.,. Yllu
CIMd Doc. II tin Dec. H. 1"0
u.Jt 1 ,., c..-

ABmPLIDI
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide ..

Gunfire
disrupts
movie's
showing

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VALLEY · STREAM, N.Y..:::
(UP!) - At least one gunman: ·:
opened fire In a packed movie;::
theater during an opening night&lt;showing of · "Godfather Ill'' .;,
wounding four bystanders, lot- ::
lowing an argument over noise," ;:
authorlttes said Wednesday .
:·:
The gunshots rang out about :_
11: 50 p.m. Tuesday at the Su~ :
Cinema In ·a New York Clt1. ~
suburb and the wounded, lnclud~ :
lng two teens shot In the head·. '·
were all Innocent victims,. saict :
Nassau County pollee spokes-- :
man Howard Grandjean.
·•
'There was a verbal argument :
between two groups of male$ '
when shots tang out," Grandjean: •
said, adding no arrests were :
made.
The shouting match began 2Q :
minutes Into the screening of the·:
film, which opened nationwide on .
Christmas day, and the gunshots ·
sent about 700 viewers fleeing .
Into the cold for safety.
~
Detectives did not know how ~
many gunmen had fired shots but :
reported that all -of those hurt ·
were "Innocent bystanders,'' ·
Grandjean said. According to the
Initial Investigation, the conflict
began when some patrons complained aboUt noise, the sergeant :
said.
A 15-year-old shot In the head :
was "very seriously hurt" In ·
Mercy Hospital and a 17-year-old:
teen wounded In the left eye was .
In Mary Immaculate HospitaL .
A husband and wife, both IQ
their 20s, were wounded. The·
wife was shot In the neck and her·
hus!J,!~d ~as sllot Iii the left arm.:

·=·

�Wednesday, December 26, 1990

''

!~~g~e~1~0-~n.~~D~-~~~s~~~~~~~-~------------~----------!P~omao~~v~M~o~~~~!-~~~~Oh~~~~--------------------~W~N~~~-~~~·1o~.-~m~bw~~2!6.~1~9~9~o ~

Calendar
Commulty Caleadar items
appear n.o days before a• event
and the day ol that eveat. Items
must be receiwcl in aclvauce to
inslll'1! publication In the calen·
dar.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. and AI Anon will
meet Thursday a1 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. For
more infonnation, caU 1,800-3335051.
' .
. .

By Unite~ Press lnler.,atlonal

CHICAGO (0PI) -Cancer has 35.6 percent- between 1950 and phtcs resulting from postponing chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease and cancer, both of which
overtaken heart disease as the 1986, falllngfrom841.5deathsper death to a later age,' ' they said.
are often caused by smoking
le&lt;~dlng killer of middle-aged · 100,000 people to 541.7 deaths per
The researchers analyzed Na·
cigarettes, they said.
Americans, researchers re- 100,000 people, the Southern tiona! Center for Health Statts·
In fact, for those ages 35 to 64,
ported Tuesday .
Dllnols School of Medicine re- tlcsdataonU.S.deathrates!rom
cancer
has "now overtaken heart
SATURDAY
The overall death rate among searchers said.
1950 to 1986 from Illnesses that
disease
as the leading cause of
REEDSVIU.E _ There will be a Americans dropped sharply " It Is evident that the patterns
are or had been the six leading
death,"
they
said, adding that "If
of proportionate mortality In the causes of death.
special meeting of the Olive
trends
continue,
It could overUnited States are changing," the
The overall death rate drop
Township Trustees on Saturday 819
take
heart
disease
for those ag~
•
researchers wrote In reporting
was caused by a decHD!! In deaths
a.m. a1 the Reedsville Fire House to
conclude year-end business. An ortheir findings In the Journal of
from such Important kU!ers as 65 to 74 years."
Heart disease Is currently the
the AmerIcan MedIc a I
cerebrovascular diseases, lnjur·
ganizational meeting v.:ill follow.
leading
cause of death for those
les, chlldblrth compUcatlons,the.
The Believers Fellowship Mini- Association.
SCIPIO • Scipio · Township
POMEROY . The Salisbury stry, formerly !he Poor Man's
"We are 'dying differently,'· · flu and pneumonia, the re- · age 65 an!l older, accounting for
nearly hall of all deaths In
Trustees will meet Thursday a1 6 Township Trustees will meet for Grocery on Kingsbury Road, will both because of the progress In
searchers said.
p.m to finalize out the year and their year-end meeting 011 Sawrday hold a New Year's Eve Service on preventing and treating specific
During the same period, bow- persons age 85 and older, they
reorganize for the coming year.
at 2 p.m. at the borne of clerk, Dec. 31 at 7:30p.m. Rev. Margaret diseases and because of the
ever, the proportion of deaths said.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _S:;arah::=.;.;G::i:::b::bs::.·.:Ball=.::R::un::.::R:::oa::d.:__ _ _R_o_bi_n_so_n_in_VI_._tes_the-=p=ub=li='c:-.-===re=s=u=lta=nt=c=h::::an=g=e:::s=l=n=d=e=m=o=gr=a=·=·::::;;';nc;reased "dramatically" for

New Year's Eve
d
Servzce Slate

COPYRIGHT 111911 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS
AND PRICES GOOD WEDN£SDAY, DEC. 26,
THROUGH SATURDAY, DEC. 29, 111911, IN
POMEROY
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUAN·
TITlES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.
IUMIITISED lltM POliCY-Each of those a.w.tised ~ems is required to be readily available for

'·

;·

·•
'·
·•
''
· ··

'.
•'

."
•.'
••

an

sale in each Kroger Store, except as specifically rioted in this ad. If we do run out of
advenlsed item, we wHI offer you VQUr choice of a comparable item, when available.

reflecting the same Hvlngs or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised
item at the advertised price within 30 days. Onty one vendor coupon witl be accepted per
item purchased.

Green
Cabbage

Salad

...
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Tomatoes
Pound

sgc

Pound

·,~,

..'

·~ I

·.

"'
'.'
.. ·- ·- -

Bush's Best
Chopped

Bush's Best
Blaclceye ·peas
16.8-oz. Cono .

16-oz.
4FM

HOPE IN THE DESERT:
Maintaining a USO tradition he
started In World War II, comedian Bob Hope once again
brought some holiday cheer to
American Gls stationed In a far
corner of the world. This time It
was the troops massed In Saudi
Arabia as part . or Operation
Deserl Shield. Strict Moslem
restrictions on public entertainment forced Hope had to delete
some of. Ills jokes ami apiJear
without his usual bevvy of
starlets, but nothing could
dampen the 87 -year-old performer's spirits.
"They couldn't hide this war
from me. Boy, they tried,'' he
said. "This Is our blood and guls
out here. And this Is the day of all
days. Christmas."
In addition to banning press
coverage otthe show, the Saudis
refused to grant visas to actress
Brooke Shleld!l, or singers Janel
Jackson, Jllarle Osmond and the
Pointer Sisters, who will perform
with Hope at a USO extrava·
ganza In nearby Bahrain, which
Is co·nslderably more liberal.
For the troops In the Saudi .
desert, Hope had to make It an
all-male show, bringing along
former all-star baseball catcher
Johnny Bench and Nashville
counll')l singer Aaron Tlppon.
CARING, YES: SLAMMING,
NO: Manwatchers·lnc. released
Its annual list of Most Watchable
Men for 1990, with the president
of the Hollywood- based organ!·
zatlon noting that "we have a
new concept of men In .the '90s .."
Spokeswoman Suzy Mallery
said, "Women are getting tired of
violence. The men who made tills
year's list were selected particularly for being examples or men
who enhance our lives not only by
performance and appearance
and who sometimes use their
celebrity status to Influence

By TOM TROY
United Press International

.'
FROZEN
LEMONADE OR

Minute Maid
Limeade

Center Cut ..... . .... ,~.~.:·:-·:·.- ?... . .

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Boneless Pork
Loin Cho s....... lb.

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U.S. GRADE A

FROZEN
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Pick Of
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Sealtest
Ice Cream
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Pound ·

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%·Gallon

II

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FROZEN ALL

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Chick'n Quick

100 SHEETS PER ROLL 1-PL

Big'n.Soft

3-ROLL PACK

Big'n Thirsty
Towels
GET ONE

9-1 0.5-o.z.
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Bathroom TISSUe
B-Roil

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Cheese
Balls

--

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4-PACK 55, 70 OR 95 WATT

G~E.

Miser
Light Bulbs
GET ONE

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat
GaiDI

88

KROGER

Grade A
Larlf: E11111
8-Ct.

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BACK ON STAGE: Soul singer
James Brown gave his ·first
performance In two years Tuesday , In an appearance before
troops at Fort Jackson, S.C. The
Christmas show · was . organized
by community leaders as enter·
talrunent for nearly 10,000 soldi·
ers In training whose regular
hoUday leaves were canceled
because of the Persian Gulf
crisis. Also on the program Is the
rock group Wet Willie. Brown,
who currently Jives In a·halfway
house, was Imprisoned twoyears
ago for leading pollee on a chase
across two states.
DAPPER DON BEHIND
BARS: As ·moviegoers packed
New York City theaters to see the
Christmas premier of "Tile Gold·
father, Part III," reputed real·
life mob bossJohnGotU spent the
holiday In his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center .
Gatti, who has been jailed for 10
days awaiting trial on racketeer·
log charges, was to dine on the
same fare as his less notorious
fellow Inmates - a· traditional
meal of turkey and stuffing,
prison officials said.
GIVE PEACE A CHANCE:
ActlvlsHomedlan Dick Gregory
spent Christmas morning picketIng and praying In front of the
White House In a soUtary protest
for peace In the Middle East.
Gregory is on the 34th day o( Ills
fast for peace.

Dear Ann Landers: I was a liule
miffed when I read the letter from
the man who wore silk panties
under a girdle yet insisted that he is

not a aoss-dresser.
It irks nie that these people feel
compelled to make excuses. Many
husbands have written to you
saying they have "tired legs" and
poor circulation and must wear
support hose. Others say they have
"bad backs" and have to wear
girdles.
I am a 40-year-old cross-dresser,
110 percent heleTOSexua), 200 percent faithful to my wife, and the
father of three fine cliildreil. I am
also a successful family practice
physician.
The wearing of women's lingerie
under clothing is usually an indication that the cross-dresser is too
repressed to talk franldy with his
wife and is fearful of her
disapproval. In talking with other
cross-dressers. I learned that many
servicemen took their panty hose
everywhere under the guise or using
them to shine their shoes. I was
amazed at the ingenious schemes
several cross-dressers came up with
so they could lake their women's
clothes to Vietnam. ·
Cross-dressers are not necessarily
kinky or pervened. I am acquainted
with several who are, like me, loyal
husbands and good fathers. They
simply have a strong need to
express tlie feminine side of their

Quote ·of the Day

Food banking, a concept that
was once radical, has become so
well- established that one foodbanking agency has come out
with products under Its own
label .
Food banking was founded at a
St. VIncent de Paul soup kitchen
ln Phoenix In the 196()s. Since
· then, It has spread through the
country as a way of channeling
waste and excess Inventory produe~ by the food Industry to
charitable organizations.
The biggest food bank Is
Second Harvest, founded In Phoenix in 1979 lind now located In
Chicago to be near the nation's
food Industry. It Is a national
network serving 183 food banks
around the nation and, by exten·
slon, 40,000 charitable agencies
providing help to the needy.
Linda Saran, spokeswoman for
the non-profit Second ·Harvest,
said It moves 400 million pounds
of food annually, equivalent to
about 400 million meals, and with
what would have been a retail
value of $600 million.
"I think we look at our
organization as more of a stop·
gap and Band· Aid to help people
who would normally slip through
the cracks to get the assistance
they need to be able to put food on
their table,' ' said Saran.
She said . the people helped
range from the chronically lndl·
gent to thpse who are temporar·
lly disabled or unemployed.
Second Harvest operates by
obtaining donations of . surplus
food from food producers and
directing lt to their member food
banks based on population and

Mikhail Gorbacbev on his new
presidential powers:
"Life has put forward demands. If we do not orient our
poUcles toward life, then we are
not worth a penny."

level of poverty In their region.
Inventory and consumption
The food banks ·a re all certified numbers, leaving less sur121us
by Second Harvest and are to be disposed of. To make up
non-profit organizations. They for the decline In surplus goods,
are audited for quality, stand- the·agency Is establishing
ards, and are, In tiU'!l. required to contacts with major food
monitor the quality standards of producers to encourage charitathe ·40,000 agencies whom . they ble giving as part of normal
· production. '
.
supply .
Second Harvest and other food
As an example, the American
banks fill what ls often the most Meat Institute lias pledged Its
difficult need In getting food to members to contribute meat
the hungry - collection and products through the
Jilstrlbu tion.
cooperative.
·.
A Pennsylvania food bank
In a recent project with Pillsdirector said the hunger crisis In bury, the company provided
the Soviet Union •. for example, product, labeling and processing
was due not to shortages but to to produce cans of green beans
failures In moving the product and sweet peas under the Second
around.
Harvest label.
"We have some of those same
One Pittsburgh organization
problems In this country, ·!Ike that Is at the bottom or the
Gassaway, West VIrginia. They charitable food· distribution
have no local advantage so we chain feeds about 130 people In Its
have to send food from here to soup kitchen each day and
there,'' said Tim Whelan with provides groceries to between 60
Central Pennsylvania Food Bank and 80 families a month.
In Harrisburg. "So ·we ·don't
Nora Johnson, executive dlrec·
always have the type of dlstrlbu· tor of · the Rainbow Kitchen
tlon we'd I!keto have to target the Community Center, said starvaneed."
tion does not appear to be a
Whelan said when he joined problem In her economically
Second Harvest In 1982, there distressed area.
were 14 food banks on the East
But food needs are not the only
Coast. Today th~re are 75. needs of the poor. Employment
Nationwide, the number grew and health care are also
rapidly from 30 to today's 183.
essential.
Growth came fast In the early
"The best thing Is for people to
years, but recently, the amount take their hard-earned dollars
of product distributed by Second and go to the stores and choose
Harvest has leveled off. Saran what they want,'' said Johnson.
says the organization lias "The best tiling would be full
reached a natural plateau. But employment and a really adeanother reason Is that the food quate social network where peo·
Industry has become more effl· pie's basic needs are met. .The
clent, reducing Its waste, she food situation cannot be seen In
lso,latlon. A huge component Is
said.
Producers are better able to
the health care system, which Is
match production, distribution,
faiUng a lot of people."

there was clear evidence Cruzan
MOUNT VERNON, Mo. (UP!)
would have asked that the tube he
- Nancy Cruzan, whose feeding
tube was removed Dec. 14 ending removed. Judge Charles Tee! Jr.
allowed the feeding tube to he
a legal battle that reached the
taken out and Cruzan's parents
U.S. Supreme Court, died Wedremoved It about 24 hours after
neSday alter almost eight years
In a vegetative state, hospital
the deCision.
Tee!' s ruling · differed from a
officials said.
previous decision that was over·
"Nancy Cruzan died at approxruled by state and U.S. Supreme
Imately 3 o'clock this morn.l ng,"
courts
because he said this time
said Barbara Shoun, a spokeswo·
he
had
"clear ·and convincing
man for the Missouri Rehablllta·
evidence" that Cruun would
tlon Center. "I do not have a
have wanted the tube removed. .
cause of death yet. Her family
The evidence consisted In part
remained with her from the time
of testimony from three friends
the tube was removed."
who told of conversations In
Cruzan, 33, who had heeli In a
persistent vegetative state since which Cruzan said she would
never want to live "like a
a car accident In 1983, has been
steadily deteriorating since her vegetable" on ml!dlcal
machines.
parents, Lester L. and Joyce
A federal appeals court Mon·
Cruzan, won their battle to
.
day
had refused to Intervene IIi a
remove the tube that was bringcourt order that allowed the
Ing her food and water.
The Cruzan rlght·to-dle case Cruzans to remove the tube. A
three-judge panel of the 8th U.S.
was the first In Missouri to deal
Circuit Court of Appeals Issued a
with the withholding of food and
hydration, while other cues one·page ruling dismissing the
Involved respiration or motion for a temporary Injunction filed ·On behalf of Cruzan by
ventilation.
the Rev. Patrick Mahoney, dlrec·
About 20 people prates ting the
tor 'of the Center for Clirllltian
removal of the feeding lube
Activism In Boca Raton, Fla.
remained outside the hospital
Tl\e ruHng said Mahoney's
during t1te morning Wednesday.
motion
was denied •'for failure to
The feedl!la tube was removed
after a C01Jllly probate judge said demonatrate ' il basis for a stay .

.,'

makeup. Our cross-dressing group
has a terrific-loolcing macho Air
Force officer who wears his Hanes
Ultra Sheer panty . bose under his
combal jumpsuit He once told me
that if he is injured in an accident
and must go 10 the emergency room,
he wiU explain .that nothing keeps
the legs Wli(Diiikc women's nylons.
Sign me-· NORMAL AND HAPPY
IN TEXAS
DEAR TEXAS: I've received
many leuers from cross~ who
insist that they are straight -- and I
believe them. 111 say it one more
time at the risk of being a bore -some cross-dressers are homosexuals, but the vast majority are s!rnight
as a string.
Acwally, I don't care wlial kind
of underwear people wear. It's
nobody's business.
Dear Ann Landers: Several
months ago a friend of mine called
to inform me thai her daughter was .
going to be married · and the
wedding was going to be small. She
said ~he was terribly sorry she was
not able to invite me and hoped rd
understand. The woman spent 20
minutes apologizing.
Two months later she called again·
to say several out-of-towners were
not able to come and I was now on
the list Two weeks ago I received
yet another call saying she had to
lake me off the list because the
groom's mother had added several
people at the last moment. She
signed off by saying, "Perhaps when
our younger daughter gels married
the situation will be (jifferent and
you certainly will be invited to
1liAT wedding." What do you think

11

Property transfers

Ann
Landers .
ANN LANDERS
... J9~, Loe

"•fll"',.

Ti m .... SyndicW~.- and
(l't'alon. Sy ndi l"'l~

abOut this, Ann? -· OFF-AGAINON-AGAIN IN D.C.
DEAR D.C.: I think you should
be splitting your sides laughing. In
the meantime, rd be wiUing to bet
that you haven't beard the last of
this. You're going to get another call
when the last-minute cancellations
come in. , I hope · you will have
another engagement
Gem of the Day: A Texan, trying
to impress a Bostonian with tales
about the heroes of the Alamo, said,
"I'll bel you never bad anybody so·
brave around Bosion."
"Ever hear of Paul·Revere?" asked
the Bostonian.
"Paul Revue?" said the Texan.
"Isn't that the guy who ran for help?"

Planning a wedding? What's
rig}JI? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Bridd' will relieve )lOUr aruiety. Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope
afl(l a check or money order for
$3.65 (I his incl!Uies poslage and
handling) to: Brides. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 1/1.
60611-0562 . (In Canada. send
$4.45.)

Now You Know
By Unlled Press International

The barrow ground squirrel of
Point Barrow, Alaska, hlher·
nates for nine months of the year
- more than any other animal.

CompUed by:
Emmosene Rolateln Congo
Recorder, Melxs County
J .B. O'Brien. Roberta C.
O' Brien and J.B. O'Brien, Agent, parcels, to J .B. O'Brien . and ..
Roberta C. O'Brien, Rutland ,
Orange. Salisbury.
Kent A. Biggs, dec'd, cert. or
transfer, to Janlne A. Biggs,
Pomeroy VIllage.
VIrginia E. Pratt, dec'd , affld,
to John C. Pratt, Lebanon.
Mattie J. Ball and Allen E .
Ball, lots .3098 A, State of Ohio,
Pomeroy VIllage.
Edgar F . aka Edgar Thomas,
Gretta M. Thomas, lots 3,600 sq.
tt., State of Ohio, Pomeroy
VIllage.
PearlS. Peterson, fka, PearlS.
Howery, Donald J. Peterson,
right of way, to State of Ohio,
Columbia.
··
Rpbert Cowdery and Melanie
Cowdery, Pt. lois, to Ronald
Cowdery and Mary G. Cowdery,
Olive. ,
Irma L. Ackley, lots, to Sandra
Ackley Kirk, Middleport Village.
McDonald's Corp. dba, Delaware McDonald's Corp., .05A., to
VIllage of Pomeory, Pomeroy
VIllage.
Hayward Bissell, dec'd , cert.
of trans. to Kathleen Bissell,
Chester.
Pomeroy Hea.lth Care Corp.,
8.09A., to, Northern Health Facll·
ttles, Inc., Chester.
Rolland L. Halley and Marilyn
Sue Halley, rlglit-of-way, to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
Chester.

By Unlled Press International

Cruzan's legal battles end in death

IN-STORE MADE CHEESE LOGS OR

·

events In the country."
The winners for 1990, In alpha·
betlcal order, were Helsman
Trophy Winning quarterback Ty
Detmer from Brigham Young
University, operatic tenor Pia·
cldo Domingo, actor John Forsythe, talk show host Aresnlo
Hall, actor-director Kevin
Costner, actor Ray Liotta, broadcast journalist John McLaushlln,
actor Robert Redford , actor Tom
Selleck and soap opera heart·
throb Michael Swan .

Food banks·part· of helping network

$

%-Gallon

The Daily Sent~•-Paga

Oh~

- - -.People in the news-- Cross dresser isn't shy

Cancer overtakes heart disease ·as leading killer

LETART _FRIDAY
The Letart Township
Trustees will meet for their yearend meeting on Friday at 2 p.m. 81
the office building.

Pomaoy-Middeport.

pending appeal."
Doctors had said Cruzan would
die within two weeks wltliou t the
feeding tube that had kept her
alive since the 1983 car accident
left her brain damaged.
In June the U.S. Supreme
Court upheld the Missouri Supreme Court's ruling that the
Cruzans could not remove their
daughter's feeding tube without
''clear and convincing evidence'' ·
of her wishes In the a hsence or a
written statement
The 5-4 ruling said that a
person whose wishes are clearly
known has a constitutional right
to reject llle-suslalnlng technology. But the court said the state
of Missouri could sustain Nancy
Cruzen's life, because her family
had not shown by "clear and
convincing evidence" that she
would have wanted the treatment stopped.

....•

Willi fLOWIIS

To-ollooutllally
dealped r.n...al
..,.......,~juot

eaJI or ~•••

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

"Th•

pif.fH:6~54 Love"

RUTLAND FURNITURE COMPANY

OFF·
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Savings •••••

Our Largest Group Of Selected
Furniture Ever!!
THURSDAY
DECEMBER 27

'am·5 pm

MONDAY
FRIDAYI DEC. 2 8
SAT., DEC. 29 DECEMBER 31

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Tlw l.ar~t·~l lrn t·ntor~
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�~~;g~a~1~2::n.~~D~at~v~S.~~~·n~·~------------~--~~~~~P~~~m~~~oy~~M~M~~~~~~~~~~~OhO~·~~--~----~~~~----~~w~~~,DecNnbw26, 1990 •
Contest win"ners announced ~~~011J':en will be Adams persona
~=~ his soiJhomore
delivered the sponsoring garden
club.

Chris Adams, son of Cliff and
Judy Adams. Reedsville, was elected 10 the Nalional Honor Society
at Eastern High School where he is
a senior.
He was elecled 10 Who's Who of
American High School Sludents
a.m. and 1 10 3 p.m. Make up days
are Jan. 7, 14 and 22 from 9 10 11
a.m and I 10 3 p.m.
Shot dares for January are Jl!l\. 8
and 22 from 9 to 11 a.m .and 1 10 3
p.m.

WlllllCf"S of the C11risonas light- Sllernum Mills, 131 Ebenezer,
ing contest in Pomeroy have been third. Hooonlblc menlioos in Ibis
announced.
category are Dale Thoene, Union
·
In the religious category winQers Avenue; and Artis Barron, Mulberry
depanllle t
are Edward Bowen, 126 Buuanut. Avenue.
n
first; Rick Blaetlnar. 148 Buuanut.
In lhe category of cnllanCc or
second; and Edward Cozart, 160 front, winnell! are James PeuiU. 8
Locust, third. ·
East Street, first; John Hunnel 110
Pick up da••s •or "'I c h
~ "
" · · · ave
In lhe overall category winners High Street. serond; and Wayne
been announced by the Meigs
are. Roy Betzing, 280 Mulberry Dl!vis, 2 15 Mulberry, third. County
Heallh Depanment Dares
first; April and Tom Smith. 169l Honorable mention goes 10 ·WJ?. · are Friday from 9 to
11 am. and 1
Li ncoln Heig hts, secoild; and Aull, Lincoln Heights; and James · 3
J
to p.m.; an. 3 and 4 from 9 10 11

County health

announces dates

He has played junior varsi(f and
varsity baskelball and baseball
during high school. .
He was a niember of the Natiorial Art Honor Society during bis
sophomore year and has been involved in many other si:hool activities.
He is also planning 10 enroll at
Ohi u · · · Athe · the
o ruvers1ty m
ns m
fall of 1991 10 begin a six year
Master's
Program for· physical
the
rapy.·

Classified
• TO

CALl 992-2156
FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P .M.

MONDAY thru

8

A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

CBRJSADAMS

p a 1d
.
'Rt:CtHYII $,.!io0 d ! $~Ount to r iidl pa id 10 alt\l,m cc
'f rt!'f a ds · Giveilw.Y l'lll d Foul\d a ds undP.t 1 5 w o rds Will be
run J di!Ji s_a1 no ch• ge.
·

OFFERING SOME 3/4
DOLLARS WORTH OF
RE AND ACCESSORIES·
TO ANY ONE AND EVERY ONE FOR A PERIOD OF 6 DAYS ·
NO

to r .lll. cap•tallettvs ts. doubltJ

p11 o~

'A ciOASi h ud ;u.NtH t1 nmH..'Iil plo~ r.:o..'\.1 111 Th ~ O ;:uly Stml mlll'l lea
ct~-p l
diiS s•l• ud th splay. 8u s 11r t..oss Card omd lt.~ l ;II notJ C:tsl
will ;.lso 41 p pet~r 111 lh t.! Pt Pl t.!aSant RI!!JI!l l er and lh t! Ga lh
pullS Oouly Tubu nc . m achrny ovm 1 8.000 hon u~s

D AY BEFORE PUBLI CATION
, COPY D EA-D LINE
t 1.00 A.M . SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
2 00 PM MONDAY
'TUESDAY PAPER
2.00 PM TUE SDAY
W[DNESDAV PAPER
2 .0:0P M W EDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
2 ;00 PM THURSDAY
t-HIUAY PAPER
2 OOP M. FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAP ER

~

,,
'•

BULLETIN
·----- BOARD

I

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

•

.. ·· -

'
•'

•'•
••

.,'
r

I woukl like to lhank all my customer.;
who gave me gills and catds th~
holilay seasm on my Sentinel paper
route. They were very much
aJlllreciaed by my family and me.
Thank you,
Kevin Hoffman

I

MUST BE

3f4

MILLION DOLLARS

'II
,.•'

AUTHORIZED AND CERTIFIED REDUCTIONS
ON All QUALITY FURNITURE OF UP TO

SOLD FOR

IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY

·'·''
·!I
.:
I

•''
•
AU QUAUTY

STATEMENT OF CONOITIONS:
Everyone lo _,,.that 1990 io en extNmely bed yNr for
Nteil 11lea, 10 EmpiN FumltuN 11 trying to Nduce Ito
ovet eto,ckecl Inventory of quality fumltuN by UOO.OOO.
So we ere merklng down ltemo of qu1llty furniture et up·
to 70% ••vlngl. 100'• of it1m1 merked down with first
come. flrtt lerved. The best financing of e month1 with
no lnteren end no payment till June 1991 pluo Free dolivery end EmpiN'I 77 years of aelllng quality furniture to
the Ohio Valley Tri-County oree.

FURNITURE IN
STOCK WILL BE
REDUCED AT

·NAME BRANDS TO IE REDUCED

LEAST 200fe TILL
S P.M. JANUARY

* lASSEn •

*

31st, 1990.
FIRST COME;

SOFA, LOYESEAT, OYER
SIZED onOMAN
White background, grey &amp; beige etripe,
~Orse pillow back.
$
95
'1"9.95

AS

IS

* KINCAID * RIVERSIDE •
* JIMSON • LEA • ORT •

A PUBUC

THE EMPIRE
FURNITURE CO.

COROLlA CLASSKS • IMPEROR •

'

142 2ND

GAlUPOI.IS, OHIO

UPTO

70%

OFF

"FREE DELIVERY"

NO

PAYMENT TIL

AZTEC OITHOTONIC
MAnRESS &amp; BOX SPRING

Beautiful floral covllf, ,..rvelouo middle by
Aeotonlc.
S3ftft05
fUll SIZE NOT sn".90 ONLY n· ~

QUEEN SIU l«lfi1399.9S ONLY

5

$4999

SET

JUNE

3 drawer, 4 drawer, 6 drawer, aev-

ENGLAND SECnONAL

Inclining ends, multi color. oak trim,
pieces.
NOl

""FREE DELIVERY"

CHESTS

eral finiahes

S89995
6 GUN CABINET
$18995 '.
ONLY
ONLY

S1199.95

WNII.I THEY

3

Solid oak or pine.

101 1399.95

un

nAmNG

4t 5 99 5

AT

COME EARLY AND SAVE

"NO PAYMENT TILL JUNE"

SECTIONAL
, 2 piece loose pillow back, black with
silver.

~;99,95

95
OIL1999

waye thlit aren' t paklln rua. Allliated ttemaiUbiect to prior
Ale. Mon listed Items are one of 1 kind. So It's fird come.
first IOrV8d starting It 8 A.M. Docember 26th. A1 io ~omo

.,. marked.

iiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiii

FUXSTEEL WING IECUND ·

~C:.us

ONLY 539995
6 PIECE SECDONAL

Blue Inclining ende, corner table with AM / FM C81aette pllyllf, matching ends 8o. coffee table.

WALL HUGGER RECLINER

Flaxsteel with liflttime WIIT8n~ on ·
frame, machaniam, Hat aprlng.

NOT

'"9 .95

$39995

OILY

~:99.95

.SWIVEL ROCKERS
~... 5 Only $9995
IZ9t.95

NOT

1149.95

NOT

$79995

ONLY

NOT

QliEN SIZE AIR MATTRESS &amp; SPRING

ONLY$119995

TRADITIONAL SOFA CHAIR

WATERBEDS

1149.95

Only
Only
Only

$

14995
$
19 995
$
14 995

58 'HOURS
LEFT IN 1990
TO SAVE AT
EMPIRE

:::9.95

ONLY

SlAiliiiiG u$2 39 9 5

$399 95

"WING CHAIRS"

:'::,.,,

o•Y

$15995

••COME EARLY AND SAVE~

"TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS''

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTERS

Meple flnlllh. colonill atyle, formica top.

:-::us

ONLY · $39995

Buy 1 lamp,

For the new TV or VCR or stereo.
Several stylaa.

4t7995

"LAMPS"
matching lamp
FID. Floor Lampl 1/1 lagular Price

Mory Hobotettor. Clerk
Board of Meigs County
Commilllonera
(121 211; (1 I 2, 2tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF ADUCIAAY
0n01CI ik10, t99Q.in1hl
Moigl County PrDboll Court.
C.. No. 211827.
Bog·
- · S. A. 338. Aedno, Oliio.

llobert E. Buck,
Probito Judgo
Lim• K. Noooolroad, Clerk
(12112. 18, 26. 3tc

-

Dark brown v•lvet. cherry lega.

of .

411771 , - - Adn...bib ik of tte 8ltlt8 of
Donford 0 . Dougla d - .
1m of 231110 RIB lone. II•
clnt. Moigl County, Ohio
411771.

Several styles. Complete delivery
and setup.

Beige b1ckground, mauve 8o. -foam print.

Chippendale exposed leg, Colonial blue cov•.

NO INTEREST TIL JUNE

e ladder bock cheiro.

r::99.95

be rociolved by tho Boord of
Meiao County Commlollion·
-·Court Hou•1 Pornoroy,
Ohio 411789, untU Noon,
Jo~. I, 1981 . The bld1 wHI
be open lid •nd rMd •loud ••
t o'clock P.M. on Jon . 9,
1991 for the purchoHI of:
One new t89t Whool
Loodor 3.0 cu. ydo.
· one now 1991 lingle exit
dump truck,
0... new 1991 single axle
flatbed tntck.
Bid speclflc.ltiona m•y ba
picked up at "'' Melg1
County Engln-·o Office or
the. Office of tho Moig1
County Commi111onero.
Tho Melg1 County Com·
miuioners may accept tha
lowHt bid , or ulec1 the belt
bid for ttte intended pur·
poH. end reHrve the right
to Kcept or nject eny or Ill
bid• •nd/or •ny p•rt thare-

o.•

Little pine aldeboerd by Beuett, table 1·1eaf,

TERMS OF SALE
AI purch•- mull be paid for by co1h, chock, Mo1to&lt;card ,
Vlu ond/or occeptlble credit opplicltiono only. No loy·•·

NOTICE TO
TIIUCK DEALE liS

ETAL.
Caoo No. 89·CV·302
LECIAL NOTICE
SHEIUFF"S SALE OF

Public Notice

.· .

COUNTRY DINING
ROOM SUITE

Public Notice

!~:C.~~dae~ ~':t ~~: :~

CLOSIOUl IIAmESS &amp; 101 SPIINGS .
1 -QUEEN SET WOOL TONE
NOT'1599.11
OMY 1699.95
1-QUEEN SET STEALING
NOT '1098.95
_ , 1499.$2
1 -FULL SET STERLING
· NOT•899.95
OMYI399.95
1- FULL SET LUXUAA SUPREME
NOT 'tiU&amp;
OMY~499.95

PLEASE.
CONDUCTED ON THE
PREMISES OF

Public Notice

In Ar.enrtlant"A with let•

* CHATHAM COUNTY • SPRING All • BIZ •

SALE. NO DEALERS,

79 9

OILY

*

* ILACKSMrTH SHOP •

FIRST SERVED.
· THIS IS

ENGLAND

FlEXSTEEl
RESTOMC

·

Public Notice

.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
. COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
BANK ONE,
ATHENS. N.A.
Plaint HI
VI
MGM FARM CITY, INC. ,

SlAmiG Af'

ONLY $29995

QliEN SlEEPER w/MATCHING CHAIR

I ·

Blue country atyle, innerapring mattr-.

NOT 51199.95

ONLY $5 9995

CORNER TV-VCR CABINET

; Ctwrry flnleh.
' tamboll doorl.

NOT S699.95

ONLY $49995

OAIPADDED IOCIEI

Green, ruat, beige plaid. comfortable &amp; eolid.

NOT 1449.95

ONLY $21995

ENGUND SOFA

Traditional dllrk prlnt, unique atyle

ONLY

$29995

NOT S799.95

ONLY $39995

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.P HO• .... 1.05

Card of Thanks
In Memory

.6 0
.05/ day

3

Annoucemenl s

$1 3.00
S1 JO / dav

4

Grveawa~

5

H.appy Ads

6
1
8

lost audfou nd
Yard S.al e {pa rd •n advance)
Publi c Sale &amp;.. Auchon

R a 1es are leu consecut nr ~&amp; ru ns. brokenupd.ys w ill be- c h •ged
for each da1 as sep.u a1e ads

9

Cla., ., jfil'd l'n!{t' .'

&lt;"fll '&lt;'r IIi &lt;'

W ant ed 10 B uy

13
14
. 15

followill!{ lt'll'l'h 11111 • I ' xdw11 W'"'"- .
Gallia County

Me •gs Counl.,

Mason Co , WV

Ar eaCod e6 14

AreaCode6 14

AreaCode304

16

17
18

446 Ga llipolis
367 C h .-hK O
388 Vinton
2 45 Rio Grande
256 Guv•n Di$1.
64 3 Ar•bi• O isl .
3 79

Walnv t

992

M•ddlepon

Po men;.,
9 8 5 Ch es ter

84 3 Ponl._, d
247 letul hils
9 4 9 R acine
74 2 Rutland
66 7

31

H onws lor Sale

32

MolMI 11 Ho nltt5 for Sal~

33
3l
3"5
36

Fa ..n s lor Sal e
Bus1nOS$ Burldmgs
Lots &amp; Acreagf
R eal Estahl Wanl~d

41
42

Hou!ies lor Attn!
M obrl e Ho mes hH Rent

E~lo~ment

43

FarmsJor fh:nt
Apartment for Rm1t

Services

45

44

lnsl4rance
Bustne55 Tramrng
Schools &amp; ln ~tr uc t mn
Rad•o. TV &amp; CO R t! fHIH

21

B'usm en Opportumt y

2~

93 7

23

Money 10 l oan
Pr o f essional Senu ~ e!o

Fwnlshed Ro oms
Space lor R en !

47

Wanted to Rent

48
49

Equlplll!!Ol

AIIAJI)Y
TOOl

~

,l

Public Notice

Public Notice

~- of
tot1 numb•__.
r••
~
E ~·~· 1111. T··~·e
- · (t2),
Thirtloen (1 Jl. Foull_, 11 4).

by Tha Naw Pittaburgh Coal

Company toW S Flnlew at
dote of Me• · 1·1 1928·
•
·
•·
thence along u id dividing
l•"no • North Fourt-n
dogr-o
...... (N ....
fi"'o
·• Welt
. . minute
· · 14
deg.
06 ' W.}, eighteen
1 ,_d
threa-tenthal 18. 31 feet 101
corner of tract. daacrlbed in
following Paragraph, North
fourteen dagreas five minuteo (N . 14 dog. 06" W.l.
forty-five end no tenths
.
(46 ·0 1feet to 0 point on aaod
dividing line. teld point also
being a cornerofotherproparty conveyed by said The
New Plttaburoh Coal ComPlOY to old Finlaw and the
Northarly cornll!r of tract de scribed In following parah th
I
"d d'
1 ong 111
grap
encebetween
•·
viding; line
Lots
Ten (10) and Eleven {11 )and
· F"tn 1ew. nort h
a1ong 111d
tourtee,. degrees five minutes Welt (N. 14 deg. 05 '
W.). ninety-nine 199) feet to
1 point on the southerly line

Flft-(1&amp;1, SI~-(16),ond

·
- - (171,· bound~ ond
S·~"
~
d..en"bod u folo. w.; BEn'N
Yt
•
NING It the Northeast comer
of Lot Seventeen 117) where
the Southerly line of Condor
1tteet

lnter•cts the

wa.terly

For lease

Antrq\JeS

• 59

STARCNER ROAD - POMEROY - 6411 acres, vacant
ground, gas and electric·
available. Spring .for devel·
opment Call for details!! RE·
DUCED $48,000.00.

OUII BALIS . VOLUME
HAl liEN GOOD AND
WE snLL HAVE IUY·
EAS LOOKING FOR
MEIGS COUNTY PAOPI!IITY. IF YOU WANT T :&gt;
SIEU. CALL CLI!LAND
RIALTY TODAY AND
LIST WITH USIIWESEII VICE OUII . uanNGIIII

Services
Hom~

Ell
82

Improvements

Plu mbm g &amp; He• m9

8 3 ~ACil\la t i n g
,
9 4 E l ectr~cill &amp; R • h l{lur t~ IKI•'I :.
85 G·~nl!fal Hau llnu
86 Mob 1l ll Humc R t!pau
87 · U p hol stery

·'

of Condor Street.

said

point also being corner ·com·
mon to Lola Ten 11 01 and
Eleven it1 1; thence along
the Southerly line of Condor
Stroot, North a~entyfive
.....
degrMJ ten minutes Eaat {N .
7&amp; deg. 10' E.) lix hundred
1600) feet •. more or leas, to
the place of beginning.
PART Ill:
Part of lot
Ten (101
bounded and dascribed as
followo:
BEGINNING at 8 point on
line of t ract, described in
preceding paragraph, said
point also being on line dividlng loll Ten (1 0 ) and
Eleven 111, and
di atint
South fourtean degrees five
minutes .East (S
Deg.
. _ 14
06 . E·1 n1nety-n1n1
19911aat
from
corner the
of lot No'rtheasterly
Te.n {1 0 ). of·
which tha herein dascribed
tract is a part; thence by line
through ooid Lot Ten (tOI ,

Public Notice

five minut11 Weat (S . 26
deg. 06' W.) aixtyentl sevantenthol60.71 feet, thence by
a line curving to tho right.
having a radius of three
h~:~n dre d f"1fty -one
(3611
feet, one hundred (100•
feet. more or lest, to a point
in .the Northerly Una of Main
Streat, 11id point being dilt·
ant north 18\/enty·flve do·
gree• t an minutiiJ; Eut(N.,75
dag. 1 o· E.) nine and sixtentho [9.61 feet from the
Southweat comer of uid Lot
Number Ten (10.); thenca
-along the northerly line of
Main Streat. North IIIJ'Ventyfive degreee ten mlnutel Ealt
(N. 75 deg. 10' E.) thirty·
thrue and fou ,...tenths (33 . 41
fMt; thence by a tine through
said lot Ten {10) North thirtyeight degrees to-.
. minutu
·. ~-,
Eut {N. 38 deg . 40' E.) one
hundred nine (109) fHt toe
po1nt on th e I"tne dl v ldl ng lot
. 1
Ten (10) an d Eleven Itt I:

thence bu said dividing line

along line' of tract described "•
in preceding
pantgreph, •
North fourtHn degreea five .•minutoo Well fN . 14,, ..-...,
..,. ' -'' .. .
05' W.l forty-five (46) •fee~,
to the place . of beginning. II •
Alto Including all tracts and -' .
switch••·
~ :
Said real estate was ap· • •
prai1od et One Hundred Fi~ •·
Thouund and 00/ 100 Dol 1 ~ ,.:

Business
Servi
es
~;::;~;:==::::::::::::;~t=======:::::;it;::~~~:;::;=:::;i1ir=::::=:::::::::::::::; :;
~

end
(40.01
felt;
. 18tontho.
dog. 68'
E.I. forty
E. (5no
South oovanty·one degreel.
two minutes West (S, 71
dog. 02' W.l. one hundred
ninoty·four and no tenths
(•~g9ht4.0dlefg',"
..·.snoouthm"'o
·nulrtyt••.

THE

GROOM
ROOM

Welt (S . 38 dog. 00' W.l.
one hundred (1001 feet.
more or lou. to point on tho
dividing line· between Lot1
Ten (101 end Eleven (111,
uid point el1o being e
cornerofproportyconvevod

Cotftpllete Grooming

GUN

as an

1ng

Ul

EVERY

,.

SAT.. NIGHT
pM

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

suooT
llJ

RACINE
"FIRE DEPT.
B h B 'ld'

All Breeds

6: 30

614-992-6820

• •
F«tory Choko
12 Gaugo Shotguns Only

PolmOI'OV. Ohio

Strictly Enforced

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
Bring It In Or
. Pick Up.

We

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 ... 985 -3561
AcroJS From P;.t cOffico
217 E. Sec. Pomeroy
POMEIOl', 01110

YARDMAN

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
742-2421

Read the

21ft Mi. outside

Rutland on

lew
Uma Rd.
HOURS: Monday
thru Saturday
10amto6pm

CLRSSIFIED
RDS
I
Real Estate General

-·
G)
..
~iii
. .

MORRIS

/Jjl''
'
•J. I

~

\ p----~

.

742-2455
Sidehill Rood, Rutland

12·24·90·1 mo.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGEi
"AI Reasonable Prices"
or

992-2034

Slug Guns
870 Remington
Slug Guni
Ithaca Slug Guns
11 · 13· 1 mo.

KOUNTRY KLUB

J..
....... •

BROWNING
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE
Drivers ... sa
Wedges .. S5
, ·
Puttoro ... $'3 0
GRAPHITE SHAFTS
INSTALLED
BAGS ........... .......... $2&amp;
CHRISTMAS
TROPHIES &amp; PLAQUES

·'.

NG

OPEN EVERY DAY AT
POMEROY ro'CATION
7 DAYS 9 AM ,? PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONLY
Call 992 •5114

JOHN TEAFORD

for Current Prices
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY, OH. LOCATION
tO AM·&amp; PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
We Will Close At Alban
Dec. 24 to Jan. 2 For
Christmas .Vacation
Coli 698·6185
for Current Prices
11·30-90·1 mo.

Seoul camp load
(hosllf, Ohio. ,

SKATE-A-WAY
O'IN WED. ·Flll. -SAT.
l:la-10:00
Birthday. Church.
Pr1vate Part1e!
Availabl~

IAJ. .WN. AFTERNOON
Ph.Ji 'ikot@ Rental (75q
CHRIITMAI PAR'!

fRI,OEC.ll

:

.,

·'
~

~~

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING ,
Now lo&lt;ation:
'••
168 North Sotond
•
Middleporl, Ohio 45760
:·
•
·'

&amp; SERVICE

We C..v Fishin g Suppli e~
Your Pho.~e

YOUNG'S

.._uu•u

CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Addition•
- Gutter Work
- Eiectoicol &amp; Plumbing
- Concrete Work
- Roofing
- Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESl:tMATESI
V. C. YOUNG II

Billo Hero

·'·'
•'

••
,•

IU!lNI!! PilON!
141 992-6550 ' •
~SlDENCE PilON! ::
"

....-------:;.
•'

USED APPUANCES

'
'

90 DAY WA'IUN"Il'

992·6215
Pomaroy, Ohio

11 / 14/ tfn

MICRO

~~~~#;:2·s

up

up

'"

::

.,
.,
~

KEN'S APPLIANCE -.
SERVICE

;;

992-5335 or 985-3561 ':
Acro11 from Post Office ' •

L'.~~ '~

205 N. Second StrHI
MIDDLEPORT, 0110 4576
Office 614-992-2186
Home 614-992·5692

lfn

•

''

..-------PEER CUT, ·
''•

aom• s. tu••· aom
HOUSESoi.OTS•FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGS!
IJ.5·90·1fn

WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD -..,
LAKE
614-949-2734

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

N.V nE PAm 130 1,00
PH. n\.9996 ~ 911·3929
0&lt; J04112·l9l4

or

"
614-949-2635
'
11·23·10.1 ••. '
'..

12·7 I mo. d.

CLOSE TO TOWN - YET PRIVATE - This 211 acres is easy to
mow, because rt is level. Comes,w~h a large living room aod
dining room. Also has a family room, 2 bedrooms,and central
air conditioning.
$26,900

"
:

~

MON.-TU£1.~ !HURl ~IGHII

sss

&lt;

::

C:10r'"::"it-r--. -·

SALES

•

.

11·29·90·1 mo. "

..

NO SUNDAY CALLS

1 1 00 Remington

RtC"Cie
for
'
Ch r1I tIn·• I CIIhi•
TRI·COUNTY
RECYCU .

949·2801
R•s. 949·2860

PH.

Checking Station.
11·21·9·1 mo.

Middleport, Oh.

STORY$ RUN RD. - Country Selling - Appr.ox. 211 ac res
w~h a 3 bedroom home. Sits across a little creek and way
back off the road. Has a large garage with storage room
above. Call about owner financing.
$29,900

BISSELLBUILDERS

Day or Night

981 Nynll St.

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2886/HOME 992- 6692
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER

EQUIPMENT

We Are A Deer

MOVING SALE
CARPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMO

....

&amp;·

ECHO I)EALER
•Any length saw
chain&amp; and accessories
•Kerosene Stoves &amp;
Wicks
We Do Wick R e p air

3/ 6/ '90/ lfn

OPPOAT"UWTY

78
79

Public Notice

Public Notice

9·25·'99-lfn

EQUAL ttOUStNO

·.

75 Bua is &amp; M o t ors fur Sale
76
Parts &amp; Accessones
77

fo r Ru111

M 1sc . Mer chandrsc
Bu•lding Supphos
Pets l or.. Sal e
MuSical in s1rumen1 s
Frurts &amp; Veg~ilbltlS
Fqr Sale or Trarte

57

Aulos fo r Sale

~

POMEROY - LONG HOLlOW - Approx. 113 acres
of woods and meadows.
Older 4 room home for lhe
handyman. Has barn and
misc. sheds. Call for details.
$45,000.00.

RACINE - Nice ranch
home, 3 bedrooms, I bath,
carpet, F.O. heal.- CIA, re·
creation room in basement.
Range and freezer. '2 car
garage wilh cement drive·
way. Garden
space.
$74,900.

71
72

·-·,·-'•

-

.. ,,9?2-2259 '

LETART - IIANUAl ROAD
- Mobile home site. One
acre landscaped for mobile
home or buildings~e. Asteal
at $3,500.00.

Trans ortation
74 M otrncvcl di

5)

58

·'•--·

line of . Cherry Street; thence
along Cheny Street.ou1h Seven degren fifty-one mlnUt81
1 (t160 000 00)
~ •
Eeot (S. 07 dog. 61' E.l thirty
orS..te of ~old .:..1 ~lllte t~· ·:
and threetentha (30.3) feet to
be for not less than two- ·.'
e point aid point baing the
thirds (2 / 3t tha eforanid •
appraiaed value. Cash. in •
Northeast comer of e tract
~· 1 1 69
corhaln ng • . acre~ con·
hand on day of sale.
'
veyed by A. W. Vorh• Eatata
Said 1118 Ia subject to ap- :
to the. Martin
Eberablch
proval by he Common Pleas ,
Company by deed dlted OcCourt, Meigs County, Ohio . ..·
tober 14, 1920; thence along
Jam11 M . Soullby, Sheriff ..:
•kl property and through
Meigs County , Ohio
:.
Loto
El--(11itoSewnt-n
Approved
:
...
.
..........
......
·
(17) , incluaive, ot which the
1. Ceraor't Crow. Anorney ...
herein-described tract Ia a
for Plaintiff. Bank One.
~
.
At h.ens. N.A.
1our
fo ll owtng
pa rt • th e
~ .t
.
(121 12• 19 . 26 3t c
'.. ~
courMs an d d·lalancas. Vtl;
St;)uth seventv-one dagree• ~---------~So;;;u:.;.th:;...;t~we;;;.n;;,;t.:;v'~li;;,x..;d:.;e::or;,;;H;:;•~--------+~------_.:
two minutee west (S. 71 r"
dog . 02" W.l, threo hundred
.
twetve
and . six-tenths
'
(31 2.81 feet. ooulh eighteen
.
degrees fifty -eight minutes

POMEROY, 0.

THIRD STREET- MIDDLEPORT - 1otally remodeled
2 to 3 bedroom. One ftoor
home. Beauliful cond~ioo.
carpet lhroughout New wir·
in g. vinyl siding, one car gar·
age, insulaled and all
storms. Nice
I o I.
$29,900.00.

Slled &amp; hr11h l e l

C ool'llill f.

• Public Notice
The 1ddre11 of uid reel-estate it 640 EaR Main Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Sold reel••
tate ia more fully describad
11 follows:
PARCEL 1:
Trect 1 , beingperttoflotl
No. 10 . 11 , t2,13, t4,1&amp; •
16. end 17 in uld Village,
IDCIIted between Condor
and Main Street1 In the Vii·
togo of Pomeroy, end do·
scribed 11 follows:
Beginning at the lower intersection. comer of Cherry
Stroot end Moln StrHt:
th..ce with Main Street
oouth 70 dag. 16' Welt
374.71eet to 1 turn: thence
South 76 dog. 10' Welt
196.1 foot to 1 1teko &amp;.9
feet southweat of corner of
Lot No. 10; then~ north 16
dog. 09' wm 40.4 feetto.
otoke thence north 38 dog .
00' out t 08.8 foot to 1
stake: thence
north 71
dog. 02' out 194. feet to 1
lteke; thence north 18 deg.
68' welt 40 feet ,to e stake;
Ill once north 71 dog. 02:
Hit 312.8 teet to • atake in
the well line of Cherry
Stroot, thence oouth 7 dog.
51' oolt 16t .7 felt to tho
place of beginning. contain·
lng 1.69 ocr11.
A180 ell the river landing
lying in front of Lots Nos.
12,13.14,16.16.171nthe
Village of Pomeroy, Meiga
County, Ohio: subject ho·
wever. to ell right a therein
of. end control thereof by,
T~ GrHt LokaoCoel Mining
..Company. doted June ' 1 .
1920. 1111d recorded in Volume 18, P111e 338 to 341 .
of the lAaae Recorda of
Meig1 County, Ohio.
PARCEL II: ,

Hay &amp; Gram

65

Trucks t or Sa l t!
73 Vans &amp; 4 wo ·s

54
55

Uutt alo

l1VI11111Ck

64

Merchandise

56

•'

63

5 1 Househo ld Go od"
52 - Spor ting Goods

M1u::eUanoous
W01n tud To Do

675 P l P l eas;:~nt
458 ltto n
5 76 Appl e Gro~te
773 Mason
882 New Have n
8 95 Let art

46

-

61 - Farm Equ •pmunt
62 Wanttd t o Buy

liMIIld

'

11 · Helo Want lid
12 S•tua11on W ant ed

E . Moit&gt;W

1W M... ~.,.949-2257
,bit 1IUSSBi - 949-2660
JO 1111-- 915-4466
OffKI -··-- 992-2259

MAKE nAR\IE....
UsE WANT ADS.

.

.•

1
2

AU MAKES

•
WE •10 LIST.ISI

·FURNITURE COMPAN·Y
1•2 SEco•D AYI.UE
-DOWNTO--

t5
15
15

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

.J O
.42

S6.00
$9,00

Read the Best Seller

REEDSVIllE- 51o 7 acres
of vacant land w~h a view ol
lhe Ohio River. Wiler and
electric avaiielile. $25,000.

FUXSTEEL QUEEN SLEEPER'
NOT 5975

Ao =~~~ESTA~E Meigl
LC:ou,nty, Ohio. I hereby offer
11 10:00 A.M.. on
·Jonuory 25, 1991,
A.O., on the front 1tep1 of '
tho Meig1 County Court·
hou•. Pomeroy. Ohio, thtt
following deocribed reol """
toto:
-------R I E"'
G
I
ea ...ate enera

lANGSVIllE- Country Es·
tate - Ranch home silting
on 40 acres. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths. carpet, heal pump. 2
car garage, basketball court,
bam and pond. $64,900.00.

gat

Adju.ta each aide aeparately, Individual covering•. looka 1•e • regular mattr-.

NOT 5999.95

.20

•.

•'

NAME BRANDS IN THE AMOUNT OF:

.·

$4.00

of ad coli

&lt;~ h e r l 1r st llwt !Check
lor e rro rs firs t d av ild run s ni pa pm J. Cllll belori:l2 00 p m
d if\' &lt;~ h e r publi cat ion t o milk e co rrect km
· ' Ads th~l rnu st "be paid 1n adva n cv arr!
Car d o ll hanks
H &lt;1pp y Ad s
In M l.!mon ;nn
V;nd Sal ~os

TILL JUNE 1991

THIS IS A CRiliCAL SITUAnON THAT
REQUIRES AN IMMEDIATE REDUCTION IN
EMPIRE'S 3/4 MIWON DOLLAR INVENTORY
OF QUAUTY FURNITURE. REQIIRES
EMPIRE TO REMAIN OPEN EXTRA HOURS
TO ACCOMPUSH TitS REDUcnoN.

J
6

Announcements

Over 15 Words

Rate

15
15

• s .,nt m d IS n o t responstbl " 101 e rrors

NO INTEREST IF PAID BY JUNE 19 91

OF

~d

Oav s
1

" 7 ~ml "" ~~~' l ypou unlv ~ · s t!d

NO! NO! NO! NO!

OFFERING
QUALITY
FURNITURE

NOTHING HELD BACK
REGARDLESS OF NAME BRAND FREE DELIVERY STILL INCLUDED.
INVENTORY WILL BE SOLD AT UP
TO 700fo OFF

PAYMENTS

' Pu ce ot

Words

10
M o nt hly

PO LI C I ES

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

PlACE AN AD

'Ads ou1sldc Me1gs. Gatlla or Masun c:ou ni iM must be pn;l

ALL FURNITURE AND RELATED ITEMS
INCLUDED IN THIS UNPRECEDENTED

----

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

.....-------..!-- - ------.-·
THE HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNING .,
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT

HAYMAN ROAD - Approximately 50 acres of vacanlland.
Electric available. Has a great wooded buildin g site, Some
large trees.
$20,000

a tew pennies spent here
comes back folding money

BAILEY RUN RD.- BEAUTIFUl START- This 1973 Kirk·
wood mobile home has been reconditioned. Has new cirpet·
inglhroupout, new ouler doors. looks like new. Nice bay
window and two bedroom's. Pius approx. one acre of nice lay·
ingland.
MUST SEE $14,500

WANT
ADS
WORK!

MIDDLEPORT - Great neighbohrood - corner lo~ ~ II on
one floor plan. 21o 3 bedrooms, larflll pantry.and a part base·
ment Enclosed nice front silting porch and a nice lot
$27.900
POIIEROY- Uncoln Hit•.- "Cute as a button · Neal as a
pin" describes lhis two-bedroom ~orne dh an /!CIUiPIIed
kilchen, nrport, and pert basement. Has a Hoored attic and
50x288 loot lot.
$25,000

!PATENTED)

oNoomoi" - "woodiiiSIIiooidohoooe. ::
' -Boo.. " " I ~ido diome• n ood
'
-H• Wll•lu hoUMhold UN
~

. - " "3Q.ido lOIII wood
1

co-

olilti!W--~1"""'

,

oUtrblkicaod10.111011tt ioomu.·STII-IIleli

LOAD MRY 12 HOURS
CALL

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
Dll""""""lloM, - -WY-

Phonl (IOC) 17W255 llllor 5 p.m.

..
' I

,

rn&lt;--..,....,

..... .,.,

-

. ,.

•~,
·,

�Wednesday, Dacember 26. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

11

64 _ Hay &amp; Grain

. KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lllrry Wri11ht

41 Houlll for Rent

Help Wanted

Wedneeday, December 28, 1990

.BORN LOSER
Alnlllo, 2 _ . old, llpodo,
~... good ... chdog, ......

ue.,...

Big block

• '" ...., . 42

ctoa, oeml Jona holr,

. ~- good Wlilcll dog, · -

(

2 ballrOOih,

sm.
' 6

~;oUar, Camp Conley a.-... Otd

nMda medtcatton. 304-11S-e217.
LOST· In oroo of St Rt . 7 ond

Story

Run

AOMI,

3 .....

B.atlea, A..a"" 114-11~.

1

oblo. -11-1052.

tu~,

., ;

r
•" l ~ , -, . \.. ) .._._.
:.&gt;

I

(_,..

Yard sale

Nelded: mala. ferMie ar couple
to etar' with ltlderly man
hla
homo lull limo. P - coli e14MH2111 or Ns-4104.

'n

,_'\

71

2 BR, untum., boo ..ltul rl-·
Nw, . .ter fum., no ahy lun.
Folder'• llobl~ Ham• '-rk. 114-

tor Hidl.l14-4411-4113.

al~~~Q

441-4527 oftor ~.m.

Apanment
for Rent

I' I ·1~ I I~
B R E E L ~~~
t-tl..:-'
""'~1'~1--r-1
I~::::::::::-:~.,

Q

lilli .., 010.114-4411-21131.
·,
1181 M4 PCN"Khh, crutN, powr '
eun roof poww nrror, aect.~rtty ~
otonn, Bloupunld otoNO t -.
Po""'no doOIIIft lntorior, 50DOOd, 111,100 Ol&gt;o 114-MII-2311
ohor 5 p.m. Mll-28~.

iloblte H&lt;&gt;lito For Ront, Call 814-

SOASI-11

ii:!?nt...

1114 Ford Rang~r, 4-.:4, 131,000
mltoo. wOrk, 0~ Polin-

441-1110:11 or m-tiiiiG.

("--- ·

:1••

ID Wa...n Mllltf't Unllmit8d ·
llltNng
.
8 World Today
~OurHou.. .
8:05 (J) 8tw.iy Hlllbllllu

WOULD VOO LIKE
TO ADD ANVTHIN6?

8:30

-1

•

131• 01 NIC Nlglnlr iii Abbott and Coetdo

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

f room onlclenc:y opor1mont,

:=:i t.aE,:;•~O::,'f,., -7l:.

TAL HYGIENIST lo join our procttco port-limo. You'll wont to ·
Move oil t i - r y quollllloo
of 1 tOll not den~•r hygl•n....
YUill till I nud In the etlte of
Olllo. WI "11 to WOfk Mini?
Sind ..
, ,....... lnd lllary
hii4CHY t Bor CLA 0154, c/o 011llpollo
Tribuft!1.1Z5 Third
A-uo.

llpollo, "" 454131.

14

WANT ADS
AREJUIPIIi
liTH BARGAINS

Bu11nesa
Training

RMroln
-IIISouthMot. .
Buol- Coliljll, SiltinG Volloy
Piau. Cell Todiiy, l14-448-4317n
Roglo4erotlan -12li4B.

..

;VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Worn.~.

MuM

HaYen, WV. S.Curlly depqeft
ond retoroncoo roqulrod. 304882-3211.

c.,. Ctntar.

446-31140.
3 Hdroom In Pomeroy, $170. 1

8

•oN -SITE SERVICE/ REPAIR
•CUSTOM PROGRAMMING
•SAtES
•ON -SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

In Pomoroy, 1175, ulllhln
pokl. 2 bodroom In Roclno, 1185.

I~6~1·4~1992~-33~25~.--;;;;;;;;;;-a:t;:;;h,

Financial
Business
. OpponunHy
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

V.ndlng Mlchlne M1nuflctu,.r

Notianll 1a Yoor Old Finn Wllh
Locol Routt For Solo. R-1

I"*- S.CuN Locatlone
Abaft A - 1 . . - , 2111-7111:MI4Ert.2.

ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Residential and
Climrntrtial ·

Real Estate

REWIRING AND
TROUBlE SHOOTING
Certified Electricians

ocro
Ohio.

frH ElthRatM

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-S009

APARTMENTS

AVAILABLE

OOYERNIIENT HOMES from $1

(U

ropolrl.

Dolln&lt;tuom

lu

property. Reponnlllont. Your
.,.. 11) aos-es7-6000 Ell. OH·
4M2 for currenl rwpo lilt.

992-5009

a! Gutter

MOBilE HOME FURNAClS
. • HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS
~~

~llelmel '

MOBILE
HEATING &amp; COOLING

NEY£1 CLEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

12-19-'90·1 m

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1m mobile home tor salt. C.ll
- n 8-9p.m. 1141992-3121.

Aceta to

Blink RttcalmH
Mobile Homet. Many at $500
down.~. And take over paymtnlt.
Call -=.i... Horne Ctnttr, 1-814894-3112.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Located o• Safford School ld. off It, 141
I614l 4U-9416 or 1·100-172-596~

118 ICrtt. 8.8 mlln .outhNtt
of Point Pl....nl an At: 12 and
Rock Cutlt r01d. 20 acr. . patlure, bllance woodland (pulp
quoiMy) $30,000 (nog«labiO) •
Cell Pelt SOIMMr 81'5-3210
T-. or Fri. 8:30 ~ 4:30.

SHRUB &amp; TIEE
TRIM..-d
REMOVAL

*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-_
2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
1-12-10

RAPE

ROBBERY- MURDER

70% OF VIOLENT CRIMES ARE COMMITTED
IN AREAS WHERE VICTIMS ARE LIKELY TO
HAVE KEY CHAINS IN HAND
DON'T BE NEXTI
Protact yourself with thB
STUN-UM key chain sprayer
STUN-UM is the most advanced chemical
self defense weapon available- your edge
against personal crime .
To Order Stnd Check or Mdney Ordtr

For $19.95 To:

SEO SKUim PIO~~~P. 0. los 190, Pa-roy,
4~l'!l9

LOTS FOR SALE In Oolllpollo
Flfi'Y. Will trolltro, ely
-27ZZ, ovolloblo. ~

H-••
eGaragn
aNew

•Corwplate
l.••odaling
Stop I Compare

FrH Elfimates

985-4473 ..
667-6179

SlRYKE AND REPAII
ON Z£T0111ACTOIS
P1111 Other,._._.
Chldl Out Our lar
Prkn on "New" lttor
Tradon tnl (qulpmtnt
Now .. Stock!

MOIIIS

cuniNG

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.,

GUN SHOOTS

RACINE

SHOOTS START
SEPT 16, 1990

949-2206

11 -11-90·1 mo.

.J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows ·
•Roofing
•lnaulatlon

JAIIIS DESU

EQUIPIDT
742-2455

992-2772

SidtWU ....,Iutta.l
12-24-tt-1 mo.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

742-2251

138 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
tt / 14/tfn

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

12

abltd ond handlcopp«&lt;. Equal
houolng opportunMy. 304-675-

Aooma lor rtnl · wellk or month.

814-446-9580.

space for Rant ·

llobtlt Harne Park,
Rout., 33, North . o~ Pomeroy.

Lott, rentala, pU11, .. ,... Clll
614'992·11179.

4514. FMHAIE.O.E.

51

Llbrory, porklng, control liNt,
rer.rence required, tultabll for
2

br,

1136

Socond, Oolllpolla, 1175, wolor

pild, 114 441 4411 after 7p.m.

.

F~mlthld

tfftcllncy, all utllttiH
pild. Share bath. $135tmo. 118
Second Ave. 114-441-3141.
·
Fumlohocl offtcloncy: 1175,
uUIIIIH paid, 120 Fourth, Gal~

llpolill. 114-441-4411oRor 7 pm.
Oroclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
room

Monor

tplrtmtntl tt . VUIIQtl

a

Nlrlgerator, 1250/mO. p1u1
Ullllll•. dtlloett • rt...... tetl,
no paCt. 231-AMr FJret Avre. ,..._.

tt1g1 blower, $225. 614-446860"5 ~ve mMitgt.

lo 1121. Hid• a bade $310 to

114/J up to $3711. Hutchoo $400 a
up, bunk btda cbmpl.tt with
molt,.. $2911 ond up lo $315.

u.a,._
SBB. ond JN. o.- Mto 1275 a

boby 1110
01
box aprlnga full or IWin •_78, firm

up Klnv $310. 4 dra- choot
Gun C.blnoto I, I, &amp; 10
Boby m o l t - $31 •

545. ltd lram• .121, auooo
Sl11 S3l &amp; klnv lramo $10. Oood
HlacUon of Dldroom auhtt,

1111111 cobl.-, hoodboordo $30
ond up to $05.10 .dar• oomo ·..
caoh whh opprovtd Cftdll 3 mi.
out lulovlllo Rd. ODon I A.M. lo
5 P.M. Mon, lhru Sot. Coli 814~6-11322.

Ave, 1 bedroom tumllh.c:l apt,

d-M ond rotonncoo
qulrod, 304-812·25118.

,.

Tractlori . . .nd new tlret
dual uhao.t S&amp;Oo · e·~

7056.

73 Vans&amp;4W -..

.

Pets for Sale
Oroorn ond SUpply Shop-Pot
G,_lng. All brlldo. All olyloo.
lomo Pot Food Dooler. Julie
w11&gt;11. Coll814 448 0231.
10 wkt.
01

1112·

AKC roglotottd Cockor Sponill
pupploe, oholl ·ond wonntd,
Mlhh 11"1-11- 3114-675-2113.
BEAUTIFUL . RED COLORED
AKC REO. BEAGLE, tomolo, I
montMI old, _111111"11 to run,
$100, "' oool oliO&lt; o!Mir
booglo'o oloo, 814-Mw-!43.
Drogc&gt;nwynd Coftory Porolon,

Slam... and Hlmtllyan ldttent.
114 4ta 384Hfttr 7 P."'-

Flth Tank, ~3 Jackton Ave.

304-8'J'I..20S3,

full Uno Troplcol lloh 1 blnll,

-:=

ourgooy my
ntrnorilo · will
ullnv. I ool1 your

m

-il.:..-...c

hld'a Hobl!r Ho,. Country

Ci- Ou~

1411; I
Country
Pint, With Ctrved Dttr ......-,
1111, ~ 1341;

c:ountry RUI41o Table And~ Chllro . . . .
~--1111•
OR Roulo 7 In-141.4
car....,.
Houra: -~. Th!U llob!ldai'.
11.111.10 llp.m., - · t1Nooi1
Tlllllp.111.
.

CAIN'
S
Of Ml ••ltptrt

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Blu•attr Yactl 1171 35ft. T/270
CruAdiN Kohler Otn., Snifter,
AIC, Hoot, Vory nlc, tumMuro
ond look Int., Battery cMirgor, 2
marfnt radlot, FLWuno radar•

Call 814-441-6253 oftor 7p.m.
76

38 Yean Esperlence

53

614-HI-1111

21 s llarlll --~ .

Antiques

I
.

-

c.

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

robutft, otortlna ot Sll:
5877, 614-379-Z:Ie3.

814-2~

79

campers&amp;
I'
Motor Homes
I
I
'85 C011chman P1rk llodtl, 35 ft, • ~
2 llpouto, roof olr, rot with leo , ;
molorr, $7,100. :104-1711-3000 or 1
.

I

tm Chom&gt;tot moblto homo

=::.'•=-=--·
38,000 mllet,

•

runt

•

I

or

eorghum.
N
dolly,
Mandoy. 814-1111-8211.

59

ForSile
or Trade
Worm MO&lt;nlnv LP Gol1 hootw,
u,ooo BTU, liltd lour 1110ntho,
$3011.00. --2-33111.

Filrm Suppltrs
&amp; Ltvrstock
61 Fann Equipment
110 N: XT- t Trod0&lt; With
Cob, ...., lllolor, ~ Point,
St.IIO; 017, At; ·-01, Pl. 3'
Polnt ..... $1,111; eoo F'onl
wlh Fanll.otdtf, $3,511; OWnor

~TASSeLS.

I'M RUNNINEiCIUrOF

PLACe:&gt; 10 ~UR:-1' 1"HQ56.
THINGS.

.... Local ........ IC.. fumlahtd.
F- 1111-oo. Col oolloot 1·

114-237-0411, doy ... night.
Rogoro -mont Wlllorprllng.
Compl«o Mobllo Home Ill upo •
1 ....,., olio plumblnv a
tiHtrlcal, roofing, remodtllno.; i
ootloo I dacko ole. REMOOEL· •
Atfwtnete.

~~1~1.

&amp;tlmatH. -.

304-6114:111 Ohio 814-&gt;141-24114.

:

.

·;

I

-!

Tromm Bulldt,.:
Ntw hornea,

....

814-1112-2328.

..

Plumbing &amp;

Heating

-.

Plumbing
and Hilling
Fourth tnd Pint

C.~or·o

·- '
;·~~~O~'I~p
... 448 3.1 o~I-,~OIIio:::~
84

a

Electrical
Refrigeration

Sot.llll-.

85

General Hauung
R a R Wotw Sonlloe.- ....
ttma, wlla. II'IIMCI...,1,000 or

:=.-doll"''· c.n-

H-.

W.W Haul!~,
N.anoble IIIII, votumo dlioounto, 2,000 to 4,000 c~Nd~Y. · ~
~Will, ttC. Cl1l f.'
~=;.;,;.;.;;..

--

87

LI4Nt0ck

·'""

llfeU; ~Voor Dl AQHA
Chollnul
I AGIIA Wllni-

Jntlhow

.lt4211t=

_____ .d 4

Upholltery

· ·e

::~~~~~~--~ -~
_ , .. Uphol~ · :-.
1"11 trl
Tho .....
baM tn tumMu,. ~ 1 h'l~'"'"'
Col 111W71-4tM 1i1r - Jt"O:"
••
tlm.e...

county-.,....

,!)f',

lf .,,. . ....

oa•1

SOtJTR
a11
.AQI
+KJIOU
+AKQ

Vuln.erable: Neilher

I.

Dealer: South

Seaill

'lfel1
PID
PID

2NT
&amp;NT

"''-

E

Ntrtll
Ia
. 4NT

Opening lead:

+9

.

the king of spades. Declarer tetll 1
to b~ band and played lliOtller IIDada

to dulnmy. When be went up wtti llle
queen, East won his ace and easlled
the jack and nine to set Ill no-tn111p
·lwo '. tricks. Wu declarer p!lllllel
Perhaps, but West gave 111m tile
chance to err.

...

hide and
saak
I Actress
AimH
11 Dealer in

A.D. ·
41 Yemen

DO~

1 TrHe
2 Charm
3 Beginner
40wlng
hot goods S Bartletl,
12 Orange
e.g.
leature
6 Salad
13 Soup
green
belore '
server
7 Bakery
moving· .
· 14 Francois'
treat
18 Painter, :
friend
&amp;Nancy
Paul- ·
15 Spaniard,
Drew
21 TV's
e .g.
wrhar
Gomer
17 Place for 10 Noted cat 23 Get by
valuables
cartoonist 24 Be
'
19 Contend
11 Contract,
encour20 Take~
as a
aged by ·.
easy
musde
25 Cheye!int21 Apiece
16 Packed
or SKJux
22FoB
away,
27 Tolara~
24 Cry of
impa-

28 Medicine

cabinet
item

29ballerina
30 Copier '
mishaps
31 Heavy
gaseous
element
33 Oz visRor
37 One million

-.
.-••..

•

bid)

40 Part ol

DAILY t"R YPTOQUurES - He~'• haw to work It:

12126

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for lhe three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, lhe length and lonna lion of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are different:

•~

CRYPTOQliOTE
11-16
ZCKUDNRPD

01111111

..

+915.2

(bridge

«&lt;ll--=--

8

•tta7u
t5 2
+H

t9&amp;7

SUII'Oll1dats

a-.

W.tter.on'•

53

you to urKieratand wn111 to do to mllce Ions and views are Important today and
Qanwa11on
lhe relatlonlhlp work. Mall $2 to Match- · your friends will be lnt-lod In what
mllcor, P.O. BOK 91428, C-and, OH you have to say. However, this doeen't
8 CHN Ewanlna - •
mean they want you to domlna1e the
U 700 Club Wlih Pat .
44101-3428.
Rabecteon
AQUARIUS (.1111. »f'llb, 11) Whll1 conversat6ons.
Spirit W
your beal Interests todey might LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have 1he 1
•~t -·nttlel
thet · 0:30 (I)
Ea....,.
litem
not be equally advanlageous to sorn&amp;- ability today to ..,...
v....- •v
World
Patt meets present
one with wnom you're closely llnkecl. others may overlook. HCIWI'o-.r, you
and Eaat meets weataa
BERNICE
Hard decltlont mlgl11 be roqulrod, 10 might uae lau11y measures that toll to
cultures combine In 1 proflle
BEDE OSOL
brace you....,.
maximize your advsntages.
of celabrltod
PIICII (l'llb. 30-" ell 20) Thera Is a · VIRGO (Aug. 21-lepl. II) Ulually
ChineM-Amertcan anisl
Diana Kan.
pollllbllty you might .-.a good news you're a rather methodical peraon who
'\
todly from two unrelt18d IOUrcea.
doeathlngo In p•oper
but to8 Crook and ChaH
Should thie occur, H't beat not to dis- day,ln order to get thlngl done In 1 hurMOYIE: On lht
10: 35 ...,
w
. 011111 1 - metlera un111 they're IUO- ry, you might put 111e cart before the
horse. Slow down.
WolailtOitt (2:15)
C811fully llntiiHd.
•
Alllll (II ell 21·Aplll1t) CondHiont '--A (lepl. 23-0at. 23) A bull-. ar- I 11:00 (2) e (I) (J). Gil ID.
In genetal look good lor you todl)l, es- rangementlnwhlchyou're~lyln- .
IJl . . Caurt Q
pecially mattera thlt ralttct upon your volve&lt;l hal profitable po1enllll, but
(I) Noiwawalatl
. ftllt.-111 wall-btlng.
there are there s111 are lmportlfll elemtnta that
HaN Q
omo lndl0811o111 rou mlghlnol Clpllallze have to be _..eel out. a. 1111rt for hklden co111.
Ill
Y1aa
0111- poulblltlel.
Dec.'Z7,1. .
8 Clll~rlllll OOtf"lltltgelge IIJX
TAUAUI (AplllaHiar 10) You might ICOIIPIO (Oat. :14 Now. II) Don't let
yqur ego get In the wsy 1odl)l anc1 Lorlanna Crook Interviews
. BIG lmprovamtntl In ,our 1100111 life be upoiOd lo aome Important knowl- you
to lbklt by a .,_ decillion you've
popular country mullic 111ra
could be In thO offing for you In tilt r-' tclge todl)l that you CCJUid put to
lnciuding Rtbt McEnllra.
lhead. Vou may be IIIIa 10 do thlngl• valuable uaa. Ia 1 good 111udant the ftl'll recently madol. A_.atal w111 raeptet
(I ''f.~
llllltdllrrour,_~thalrou- time srounc~. betw• thlt lnlonnlllon you mora ~ you lry to ..atlfy blld
judgriiOitll.
•
unable to do pmlaully.
.
, may not be I'IPtltad.
lea-ow ancl MN. King
CAPRictJIWI (Dee. .....,._ 1t) Your
(111)1 11....... 10) H you ..ty UOITTARIUI (Now. 11 Dao. 11) a.
.
dnii1QI wiiiiiiiOII ptap11 todl)l IIIOUicl mart · upon your ptfOiptlon&amp; lll1d very oaratu1 today you do not !Ut tuN
11:30(2). IIJ Tonlgllt Show
be·~ and r..IIIGIIIoul. How- ~today than you do upon your crodH for aomethlng 1110thaf played en
lmport11111 role In helping you bring
SW.O.
- · you m1a111 have ta 001oll!1d w1111 common- ancllergiC, you could be
(J) Tlla 11114M4M~•.••.,.
..
· 0na llidivtcluil whO nollody aan p1M1e. doi!'Q rourat~~a diiiMI!ot. Retllatlc ... about. If you fall lo lhare, 1!lll penon
won't
~
sroultd
when
you
natd
(I)
AMMaa
•
Datoilll
Trying to paWl up allnlktn rom-? - • - • nlmpatatl...
·
Mottllor
The A~ro-GriPh Mll1cllrnakw aan halp CAJICIII (,_. 21~ Ill Your opln- him/her again.
.:r· '
'
·
' • ·'
r
•
- •
~
Cf' - ~'""" .. c

•su

39-trump

seq-.

'iEJ~!*"'~
IR. 31,
IM-tiSII#j

- - ... a.-torm
• ln1pllllll1111. luy,
1411, hdo, 1:00-1:00. _ _ , . ,

1

' I.

82

LaRusso Is freed and rejoins
his IOnner aquad. Stereo. Q
(J) Kenn)woOd Mamorlea
Kennywood Amusement Psrk
ill) (II)
WIOU Hank faces
a jail senlenca lor conllmpt
of coun. Stereo. IJ
ill) • llt8r Tralc: 1'ht Nell

e

cuatom remodeling.

EASr

+AUZ

26-Lama
29 Corral
30 Cafe
music
maker
32 Symbol of
bureaucracy
34 Chemical
suffix
35 Figure of
speech
36 Murdered
38 Caslla

(J) (I). Cop Rock

l

WEST

t!OSS

tience

w-•

Crook Rd. Porto, ...,. \

tAQ4
+JIOU

....--..........,...,...-

!Working

-'

441-dZM.

(AI

9:30 (2) •
It Out
S'lereo.
(I) (I)
Mllrrlecl People
Russell gell a_1!8rmit to
dr1VI. SWeo. Q
DCOIIItllik-1
10:00 (2) • 11J Huntll Hunter and
McCall lnvestiglte a series of
b1nk robberies. (R)

StMco, "'!

plloo. pickup, ond doll-r. lt4-

h)m ·to fear the loss of his .
)'_OUth.
Stereo. IJ
(lJ Amaz ng Grice 'With IIIII
MoyeN Moyers examines
one of the most popular and
enduring hymns In the
· Engilsh language. (1 :30)
Stereo. Q
w Mozan it caaaa wo~~agg
Gil IDe Jika snd lht
Fs-n McCabe, an
eyewitness, relu- to rely
on what he sew. (R) Stereo.

a .....,"',.

NOW!!

•uo

v.,.,..,..,.,.• Anawtr

Now
8 Llrry King Uval

YONDER
SHE IS AT·
TH' GOSSIP
FENCE

Sopdo Tonk Pu"""nv SIO~Oolllo ~

o~·

•

MOYIE: Mllttera of tilt
Htlrt (2:00) Stereo. Q

BARNEY

I

Saw-Voc

e

g

'
Ron'o TV Sorvli:o, -""llzlng '

WH1 Finance. I'M . . 1122

ollm'e
w.t

A NE:Wco-.T,WITH
R05EESUD6 AND

FOR CHRISTMAS ...

-Home
lmprovemems

Dovlo

-

&lt;SOT THE: e.AMe

THINe I ALWA'r!S EiET

INOI

Nlmacl 0utN (2:30)
(I) (I)
Clrowlng Paine
Ben justifies a date y,:lth a
p!,rl scomecl by his pe!lfs. (R)

t'M.D.
il ciJ.
Doogle Ho-,
Ooogie's duties cause

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

$31011 •{ .

Services
81

8:05 &lt;ll MOYIE: A hwlclr

(!) Jon . . _
.. Tlla
Fradclla S.tlllonl This
whimsical tribute to vocalese,
a YOCBI jazz style that aell
lyrics 1o )nsuumental solos,
features Jon Hendricks, a
• master of 1he form . Stereo.
g:oo (2) • IJJ) Dtar Jolin Kirk Is
forced to te111he truth about
his personal life. (R) Stereo.

•

ctmP'!,

1 Rlvar part
S Cheal al

lfi

•

875-1277 lftW 8:00.

ACROSS

~n(2:00)

1:30

v ,·.

j

'

.

11--

NORTH
+KQU

bV THOMAS JOSEPH

8PrlmaJt!tWI
~MOYIE: Angtland lht
I

I I I I I I 1· I

CROSSWORD

(1 :00)

T-y.llundoy

_,..._~_Old

"I dldn' l know my habli of sav)ng used .
wrapping paper bothered you that much!"

;
•

I

honey

rnent

Lorlanna Crook lnterviewl
popular country music s1ars
including Reba McEntire.

I

nut8,

6 FOR
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS I
ANSWER

defending a hand propj!rly
usua\)y involves determining wLere
partner's bigb cards are and how best
to utluze them, one can spmetimes
know- immediately that partner has
nothing at all. In that event, the reaponaibllity of the defender is to lind a
way to make the declarer go wroog.
Place younelf in the East position in
today's deal, and listen to the bidding.
South plays si1 no-trump after
jumping ta lwo no-trump u a rebid,
traditionally showing 18-20 high-card
pointl. West leads tile nine of clubs. M
soon 41 dummy is tabled, East should
calculate with little effort that West
cannot bold any high cards at all. (At
most, West could have the jack of diamondS.) Therefore, If declarer needs
to lind the 12th trick in the heart sull,
a s~ul heart finesse wUJ provide
it. East needs to smoothly provide declarer an alternative in the play, analteflllltlve that will fail.
So declarer won the opening lead
with the ace of clubs and irllmedlately
pia~ a spade to dummy's king. U
East took the ace, whatever the subsequent defense, South would fall back
on the heart finesse and make his con·
tract. But East cuu_!IIIY_play~_ low on

Murder, She Wrote 1J
a0 calebrltle•
Ottatage lx

Boot. 125 H
. P, Evlnnoclo Engine, '
complete top, new uphollleryt-r ..f

JocUc&gt;n, OH 1-t00-137-eiZI.

w.•bed with mlnaw and llhtl...... t71G.-..

Hand Tufting .
Custom Drepae

'"'1

~1m=-1=7~n.-=at'"•,.-,.-:-n-,=-~'"'-H.,..,un 'l

I'

Al~ugh

«&lt;l.
(2:00)

olhor bnlndl. Houoo collo, oleo )
oll041onco ropolro. WV '

--.- ..........

UPHOLSTERY

~--·

Co. RON EVANt 'ENTERP"ISES, ~

$71,

Plno IZU5, Rogulor Prico
MUI; Ook
T- Wllh
I Chon 1121, Rogulot Price
Hilt ono1

.,•

lood .otompo. Vorioly o f · omloh o h - ond butttr, irilltd

Socllonol Wllh 2 lncllntro, ....
Rogulor Prico, $1J.HII; &amp;Wi¥01
Rogulor Prlco, 11241; COdor
Chill 1111, Rogulal Prlce,IZII;
Country
Pl-.Rogutor
·
niRIIItl $2711,
Prlco,
H With OIIH Arid Mlmonr;

1

-~

_

In :Z.nlth at. NrVICina moll. •,

Durvovln Fnlll Farm lu.l off Sr
1111 1111 ol Albany. Wo .-pi

com:ow

...BUT tP SURE AS HECK
!lATHER SE IIIDIN' 10 IT
lHAN WALIUN' TO IT!

BASEMENT

J&amp;M (.loouw &amp; _, plono vlco. :1041882-2325.
For Soil: 18 Conlury, Baby
Grand Plono, a - n i -~
tlon, bll8t otter, 114-2~

Rocker Wlh Back

1

WATERPROOFING
Un=ndltlonol lllotlme guoron·

Musical · Instruments

Doc..Jon.
notd Ntc

·-58 .

·l

lor Sale

8mllllanll'ftllltland 1upp1111.

HAPPY JACK MANC;E LDTION:
promotn hilling ond hllr
g - to ony mongo, hot opol

pnoyora, potlonco ond loyolty.
God BJttt you alii Bill Ward ;

SNAFt!® by Bruce Beattie

.•

Budget T,.ntml•lotw, Uttd 6

Do to

low!".&amp;:::

. ...

worrontr,. $!1,415 or S15lffl por

3111.

Point Pleuanl,

LETTERS IN SQUARES

By Jame1 Jsccrlly

Tonltltll Stereo. Q
(I) D Mime'• Family
ThNe'l Companr
all Cobgt Btikllbltll
8Croali!IN
7:35 &lt;ll Tlla .latlenonl
8:00(2). IJJ) Unealved
Mpterlaa Stereo. Q
(I) MOYIE: The Men With
lht l'oftr (2:00)
(I) (l)e ~ Wondar Yurs
Kevin Ia trlckecl into running
lor president ol1he atudent
counciL Stereo: Q
(I) (!) Mark A. . . c-My
llptc)el In his la1t special of
199o, Mark Russell caps 1he
year with a reVIew of 1he
most unforgettable political.
social, and cultural events of
the year. (0:30) Stereo.
Ill 1D • 41Holn ~t
lour \IIC11ms of
alcohol-relatecl crashes. (R)
Slereo.IJ
MOYIE: Tsnk (PGI

calti'M-28&amp;-1318 afttr 7:00p.m. .... ~

56

57

NEWLY REMODELED with
RENT ond o
to Ill
your bu-. t bod!
$138.
piuo Ulllllln, 2 "'orge" bod1111. pl~o utiiMloo. ldNI
SWAIN
tor
olnglo
- · workMt
morriod AUCTION I FURNITUII!. 8Z
ooupta, conttrucUon
-1"11 IO ovoid high 0011 Olivo St~Oolllpolill. - I Ulld
rnoctla. For mON lntormltton tumHure, hlialtN, WtttM'n. a
call 3CM-&amp;~100, nt.2013 or Work boOit.IM-4*-3151.
171-3411.
VYRA FURNITURE

.- .......

108t Ford Bronc: ·,, ~- . ~··
whitt, t owner, nc. cond, auto, '
air, eatHttt, txtril ahtrp, haa -'

wlthoul Cortlaonal southern
Stat.., 304-875-2780.

·-a.

·

75 Boats &amp; Motors

or fungua on dagi &amp; horus

Nlcetr furnlthed moblla home, 1
milt bllow town, OVII'tooklng
rt:-o~r1 .~.!- hut, Dlpotlt, Rtf.

'

•
•

· 11111 Chivy HaiHon pick-up
380-lour .!&gt;ortll, 4ptd.. Pooti

month/ II14-44M751.

Household

ond
Rlvorolao
CARPET
In MkldloiiOft. From
FURNITURE
$1118. Coii14-IID2·7787. EOH.
Mollohan Fumhurt A Ca,...L
In Middleport, Of:tkt,~ N. Third At 7 No~h. l--~-

Sept. 4. tfn

11·14-t.IA

grotl &amp; two

Block, bflck, olpoo, windoM, linter., ate. Cltudt Wlntoro, Rio ~ondo, OH Call 114-

Apo~monto

Gauge Foctary
Choke only

We Say Whet Wt Do.
Wt Do What We Say

Takt ordtnt for locu81 pottl,

614-m-8057.

Merchandise

$395 to $115. Tablta $50 and up

see.
gun.

PoM

Oftlco, now houro, Frf._Sot, SUn.
NOON-1:30 PM. All Amat tx·
chlngn tt- bt ~· by Jan. 1,
1901. ·Htavy work clothing new
In tl~h all winter. 304-273-5155.

58

rtmodalad, $425/mo., Otpoah

~-

SAM . SOMERVILLE'S . Army 72 TruCkS fOF Sale

Rocllllllll $221 lo $375.
~~~~.PR~iiES~CK~ S!181.
Lompo $28 to $125. Dlnottoo
from 11ftlmo. Wolk to ohop a 1109 and up to 1485. Wood loblo AKC Bn:tr pup8, t.wn,
movloo. Call 814-448~118. EOH. w-e cholro $215 to $795. Dookl old, 1180, 814-1112-2218
Furnished Apartment, next to

"0

DryotS"--81._~:

245-6121.

PRINT NUMBERED

chuck'• qUOitd

by filling In the mt•nv _ ..
you d~lop lrom 11op No. 3 below.

BRIDGE

.o•

bundle. W1111doyo 7:30 o.m. •
3:30 - p.m... .Ohio Pollo4 Co.,
Pomeroy, un10. 1M-882-a411.
Ricondftiontd -horo, Oryoro.
Ouorontttd prompt oorv!Ct for

IUI'PfYI bfeldt Sandyville

.E. . . .

(I)

Building
Supplies

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sotn and chtll'l priced from

eoun

7:30~~'~T""' Q

$45

For aalt Shp lnaouw Lind, air
comp. l)iut ace,• • than 1 y•r

55

41 Houses for Rent
3 Br,
oplh-tovol, nowty

2br howt, ldlchan w~ov•

Fl,..ood. Lorgo lood,
dollwtrod. 11~2-2473.

Wondtrcoal eoara Woodbllmar

Goods

o•

• • 1::,mber who wears rubber
ts or · an elactriclan with

It's a strange phenomenon that nothing seems to
bring on an emergency as quickly aa putting money
aalde FOR ONE.
.

7:05 &lt;ll Happy Dar•

In good ohopo. -

Rent whh ·optlon to buy or buy

MllcNIM/LOI1..,

lc8-row lnd Mrs. King

111· nktt, r:ftodtle. Tht W.tlwr

SIHplng rooma whh cooking.
Alto lrlllltr tptct. All hook·u~

(I) (!)

•

SCRAM LITI ANSWIIS
11·1~
Jerkin - Wharl- Grind- Follow~ FOR ONE .

8:=:-

Concrett a pl..tlc septic tanke,
Ron Ewn• Enterprlstl, Jackoon, OH 1-«&lt;lh'I37-0528.

45

Rentals

rwcpllrod. 114-441-4222.
Zbr brick houoo In Rio Gfondo,
-wHy
no poto,

ohtlvlng. 814-441-

llllrtd Monlwood lillie 110.00 •

Slll11ng It 1120/n&gt;o. Golllo HOIII.

Anclr Grtflltll

Newutow
.
~
Q
ID. Cu.....,l AtiHIJ
0 ~Mac IS fed into
1 confusing maelstrom of
murder and extonlon. Q

Merehancllae

old, 114-185-4301..

. Furnished
Rooms

•

(I) I DIHm_of .... Mie
(I) (I) . .Edition Q

6679.

public Wlltr, no rtltrictlont,
tomt whh river frontap, 304ll'II-2Ue.

-K.

HILL'S DEER

located bthlnd Hotzer Clinic ol
Will Ylrglnlo, S250. por month.
614-448-5t811. . .
Vacancy, Twin River.' Tow1r.
Hooa!ng . for tht tldtrl)', .d lt-

t1ct DeniH or Barry S14/8t3-

reduced. , Rtferencaa, O.poett
required. 814-44&amp;-8568.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

p.m.

UnfumltMcf 2 bedroom apt,

Aouto 2 Aohlon, 1 • .,. 1o111 3
mllll oouth Oolllpollo LocKO,

~.1114-245-8431.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTIUCnON

117&amp;-17111 or 675'31111.

land, 304-171-7110.

Fumlthed Apt.,

Mow he
Stock!!

ltnt neighborhood, ""' bollment wlfaundry hook·upe. 3Q4.

AJC, all electric appllancet,

,,...., tumlahed, 111 month rent

6;~

.

7:00~0:,.~01Whtel of

3 door cooler, frMHr. .;uh

f»d kitchen, wall to wal carpet, on land COfltract, Hou• and

Apartments, 2 bedrooma, nica,
304-675-5104.
S..utlful 1br, khchen, ....,,

1:35 &lt;ll

54 Miscellaneous

~~IIIIi, &amp;

47 Wanted to Rent

laundry &amp; ploy ground tocllhlto.
Projocl It FMHJ. tundod. Con·

ttll. · Alwtrlne Antlqw:t,

ThrM bedroom duplex In ax.col-

M..an
County,
W.va •
Ap1u1ment1 are now available
for rerd to qualified applle~nte .
All appartments .,.. 2 bedraom
flata and lncludaj 1 fully aqulp-

1 per.on. 614-44&amp;-0338.

Banks
Construction

&amp;.4338.

Nltrtnet, 8

Ca~otry

mall unlll you have lnvestTgated
lhoolforlng•.
,.._,. In Our Prom.... Water

(61 . 446-6000

FurnloMod Efficiency,
tuhablt tor 1 ptrton, cenleral
hoot,
po~~nlt dopooM I

46

21

011

Rt. 2 ·North, 2 -00111 lpl, lOIII
lil&lt;:lrlc, $150. dopooll ·$200. . p.n1., Sunday 1 :00 to
month l)lut utllhl•, 304-l~ · 6M-m·252&amp;.
3000 or ~277 after 8:00. · ,

Cell oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Maaon WV.

recommtnda that ,ou do butlwith pooplo you k.-, ond
NOT 1o sand money throuan tha

JPIIING VAUEY P/IOFESSIONAL BUILDING
JCHi JACKSON PIKE . SUITE lOJ
GALUPOLJS. OHIO 4J6JI

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Antiques

1124 E. M•ln Stre", Pomeroy.
Hour.: M.T.W. 10:00 •.m. to 8:00

btdroomlnAaclnt,$150.2btd·

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101.110
lol, no polo, 101 Cedor 8~ Hliven. 304-812-2420.
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The Daily Sentinel-Page 11 :•

Pomaroy-Midclaport. Ohio

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Wedneeday. December 26. 1990

Pom.-oy-Middleport. Ohio

hge 16-The Daily Sentinel

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Vo1.41 , No.173
Copyrightod 1990

•

2 Soctiona, 12 Pag•a &lt;16 Conta

Pomeroy-. lill iddleport, Ohio, Thursday. December 27, 1990

A Multimedia Inc. New.,aper ..

U.S. intelligence: Iraq dug in 'for long haul' .
'

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·
·Jngs by the U.S. Central Com·
We . presently assess that mand In Riyadh, said Iraq has
Saddam Hussein intends to re- . strongly fortified its position In
main .. In Kuwait for the long Kuwait and has puUed troops
haul, said Coury, an !ntelll- from the Iranian border to
gence officer on the staff of Gen,
reinforce Its western flank.
Norman Schwarzkopf, comIn Washington, a Pentagon
mander of all ~ .S. forces In the ·spokesman said Iraqi forces
Persian Gull. He continues to launched another surface-'topour both men and materiel Into surface ballistic missile Wednesthe country. "
day. He said It took off from Iraq
Asked if that means Iraq will &amp;nd landed within Iraq and
have lobe forced out of Kuwait, "appe;~red to be part of addl· ·
Coury responded, ' ~ 'Well, it's . tiona! testing or training" lor
looking In that direction."
Iraol forces ,
Coury, speaking at the first of a
About tWo weeks ago published
series of weekly military briefsaid the
s net-

Umit, I,
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4 Roll~kg.

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI! Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio c)latrwoman Jolynn Butler
has been asked to remain in her
post until at least April by
Gov.·elect George Volnovlch.
Curt Steiner, a spokesman for
Vo!novlch, said, Wednesday that
Butler, a Democrat, is the only
member of Gov. Richard Celeste's cabinet that has been
asked to stay on after Volnovlch,
a Republican, takes office Jan.
14.
However, Steiner said, there
could be others because Volnovlch wants to take all the time
necessary to name outstanding
·"people to eaeti'"p'ost. '""':"' ' " •
"We want to be sure we don't
name a wrong individual,"
Steiner said.
.
'
In April, Volnovlch will. have
his first opportunity to f!ll a
vacancy on the flve·member
PUCO as a result or a lerm
expiring. Butler's term does not
expire until 1996, but the gover·
nor can designate a chairperson
any time, Steiner said.

Meanwhile, John Meyer, com·
munlcations director and longtime advisor to Columbus Mayor ·
Dana Rinehart, w!JI take a
s!mliar post with Volnov!ch, the
Columbus Dispatch reported·
Thursday.
The newspaper quoted unidentified sources as saying Meyer
will become Volnovlch's deputy
c\)mmunlcatlons director next
month, working 11nder Steiner,
who is expected to be the
governor-elect's deputy chief of
staff and . communications
director .
• Meyer, .1\,.Jonner high school
. EngliSII' and•journalls!JI] ejl!:IJI:r,
has worked with R\1/j!hatt ' ,tbr'
n~arly 12 years, first at the
Franklin County treasuer's of·
flee and later in the mayor's
office.
He took a leave of absence
from his city job for two months
during the gubnernator!al campaign to serve as a speech writer
for Yolnov!ch.
Steiner said Meyer impressed
Voinovlch with his pollt!cal,
wrllln~ and people skills.

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Scud·B surtace-to·alr missiles.
He said the Iraqi Air Force's
Russian-made MIG·29 Fulcrum
fighter jets with "look-down,
shoot-down, all aspects capabil!ty" present the greatest rhreat
to U.S. and allied forces , but can
still be defended against.
French·made Mirage F·l jet
armed with Exocet missiles can
perform strikes on shl In and
gulf oil facilities he aJ'!d g
· "While Iraq has a larg~ a~d
relatively capable air force they
are no match for the combined
strength of coalition air power,..
said.

The briefing on !nteiUgence
data came in the wake of mixed
signals from Washington and
commanders in Saudi Arabia on
whether us forces will be ready
to fight a· .,.;ar In mid-January ,
when th,e United Nations has said
force may be used to oust Iraqi
troops from Kuwait.

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NEW CHAMBER DIRECTOR • Following several months or
searching and IntervieWing, Elizabeth Sc'hadd of Marietta has been
named as the new Executive Director/Development Director or the
Meigs Connty Chamber or Commerce. Schadel Is currently
.employed ~s a development specialist for the City of Marietta.

.

oury said Saddam s continued. threats to attack Tel Aviv •
I~ra~~ sb ~':t pofulors city,
s ou
e
en ser ous y.

M·'e•• gs DHS'

;;,...,.....;

bids opened
By BRIAN J. REED

Sentinel NeWS Staff
Bids for new office spate 31!d
computer equipment for the ¥eigs
County Department of Human Services were opened at Wednesday.
afternoon's regular meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners.
Bids were received on !he office
space from Maxine Gaskill and the
Village of Middleport, and action
on the office space bids was labled
pending review of the material by
DHS Director Michael Swisher. ·
. The space will be occupied .by
the department's new JOBS
program, which is now undeiWay. •
The
offered to the depart..

NEWSPAPER
Newspapers pubtisbed in Meip' County since
"•
1173 ca"' hrnd M tllil!' lp Coee&amp;J Y
144 ·Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, in tbe new
newspaper reading room. The newspapers have
been catal11211ed ror easy location and wrapped

ease in
were built liloag
both sides or
former storage room by Leland
ud.llllllt.!Mrt MILIRIIA.~ ......
dleswarth. Here Margaret Parker looks over ion ·
old newspaper on one or the reading tables in the

.. ,~~~~~:~~which
is 1ocated
i.n ~
is currently
·: departments of
fS.)Oasldll's bid offers the
space,
square feet on .!lie
building's second floor, to tl!Jl.
department at $325 per month with

a-yw.J:

I

The Village of Middleport is offering the department 636.5 square
room.
feet of space in Middleport Village
Hall at a cost of $260 per month
. •
plus $100 for utilities.
According to Swisher, who
present at Wednesday's meeti!'&amp;,
the bid advertisement specifies ~
the office space should be no leis
than 700 square feet Swisher alio
expressed concern that siil;Je
auditors could find fault with :UW:
separate utilities charge in the Mii!Pomeroy Telegraph and the Meigs available 10 purchase a building.
: :'
County Republican of MidcDeport,
Herscher contributed $30,000 dleport ViUage bid.
The only bid received for J)W:
both published in the mid and late and an additional $10,000 was
1870's, the Middleport Hc:rald, is· raised under the direction of Edison computer equipment was receiv~
from Office World, and was a~­
sues dating from 1880, The Hobstetter for the purchase of the
led yesterday by the board. The !&gt;il1
Mosquito, put out on the sareetS fonner Finsterwald Funeral Home
was submitted for the base figlll6 b,f
from 1882 to 1885, the Racine at 144 Butternut Ave. The miniTribune, issues of .1889, The thealre in the museum was a gilt $5,629.
The new equipment - consisting
Republican Hc:rald, The leader, from Mrs. Nancy Reed and !he now
and !he Democrat, all published in late Betty McGmnis in memory of of both hardware and software ·lhe late 1890~ and several years their mother, Mrs. Julia Baker . will be used ID upgmde an existing
DHS · computer system for the
following the turn of the century. ,
Bean.
.
JOBS
program. According 1D
The museum has been buiJl, on
Also included are copies of the
Swisher,
the new system will
l'omeroy Independent, The Daily donations of artifacts. monetary .
JOBS
program administrasatisfy
News, and the Pomeroy Democrat, contributions and hours and hours
all published in the early 1900's, of volunteer labor. In fact !his year
tion requirements from !he s~.
automaung job assignments anll
the Middleport Review of the an average of 250 hours were conkeeping time records for the
1940's and The Daily Sentinel.
tributed each month.
program's clients.
::
. It's 20tb year
.
The newspaper reading room is
In other Wednesday Co~
The ~e1gs Ct?unty Museum IS · just the latest addition to !he conCommissioner Richard Jones an·
no)V mo)'mg mto Its 20th year.. .
slllnt refurbishing and expansion of
nounced !hat the Meigs Count¥
It was m 1971 that the building the facility which operates on a
Courthouse will be closed all ~
on Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy was budget of $23,000. Of that amount
on Monday, December 31, w
purchased for a museum near!~ a the funding of $6,500 comes
enable
offices there ID complete
hundred years afte~ the Meogs through the Meigs County Comyear-end
bookwodc.
•
County Pioneer Soc1ety was for- . mssioners amual budget.
Jones
sttessed
.
that
most
county
med.
,
The rest of the money comes
offices housed in the courthouse
Act~:~ally the first meeung was from sale or publications, member·
would be working, but that the
held. m October, 1876. Annual ships, donations, special projects,
closing
of the courthouse to the
meeungs ,were ~ld ~gh the copier fees, ·room renial charges
public
was
necessary for the yea(years but •t wasn t unul 1969 fol- and interest from an endowment
end
closing
out
of books.
.,
lowing the death of A. V. Howell fund of money paid for life memPresent
at
the
meeting
were
and J. William J:Ierscher, both berships.
Swisher, Commissioners Jones,
hon_orary VICe·~restdents o~ ~.
Margaret Parker is the president
Manning Roush and David
Meogs County Pioneer !l"d Hisron- of the Society as well as the
Koblenrz. and Cledc Mary Hobstet·,
cal Soc1ety, thl!t funding became Museum Direcror and works as a
ter.
volunteer in both capacities. ·

Reading room'-completed
at Meigs Cqunty .Museum
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

•.

Jt••nbo Roll Towels
Umit, 1,

work of spy satellites failed to
spot preparations for the launch
or several . short range Scud
missiles until th~ liquid-fueled
motors were Ignited, giving
forces within Saudi Arabia just
minutes of warning that rockets
were being launched. Those
missiles were npt fired toward
Saudi Arabia and also landed
within Iraq .
Coury said at the Riyadh
briefing the Kuwait border with
Sau~l Arabia has been seeded
with mlne!!elds, barbed wire,
trenches, mortars and anti-

Butler to stay PUCO
chairman to April

- Holly Farms
· Fresh Grade A,
G(,v't. lnspect~d
Lim~t

a~~lnst him.

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (UP!)
- U.S. mtl!tary leaders now
belteve Iraqi troops are too
deeply dug Into Kuwait to with·
dr~w before Jan, 15 and will most
likely have to be removed by
force, an intelligence officer with
the U.S. Central Command said
Wednesday .
Lt. Col. Tom Coury also told
reporters at a briefing that If
Iraqi President Saddam Husseh1
feels completely cornered, odds
are he wlll , launc)l a "provoca·
lion" agalnstlsrl!el!nanattempt
to peel Arab countries from the
28-nat!on coaiJtlon aligned

'
••
'

Sentinel News Staff ·
The recent conversion of a
storage room 'iniD a newspaper
reading room has been the !990
improvement highlight of the
Meigs County Museum.
·Refurbished completely . with
voluntellr help, the room features
shelving for newspapers from rop
to botiDm along the side walls,
counters on which visirors can dis·
play fragile newspapers, a reading
table, and c.opying equipment.
All of the work in preparing the
room was clone by Leland and
Mike Parker and the Rev. William
Middleswarth, avid. supporters of
the museum's objective of preserv· .
ing the past for the furure.
Many of the old newspapers .
and they dale from 1873 to 1985 •
were contributed to the museum by
the Ohio Historical Society which
records almost . exclusively on
microfilm.
.
The newspapers have been ,
caialogued according to years of
publication and wrapped so that
they ·can be handled by those coming in to do research. Copies can be
made ri&amp;,ht there on equipment
providedby the museum.
In the stacks are copies of the
Meigs County News published in
Middleport in the early 1870's, the
.

was

Census up 10~2%, 249.6 ~million people living in the U.S.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
quired by the Constitution and Is
There . are 249.6 million people used to determine the size of each
living "in the United States, state's congressional delegation
census officials said Wednesday · as well as the make up of state
In releasing the 1990 count that
legislatures. In addition, census
showed a 10.2 percent Increase In ligures are used to allocate
. populallon during the last money !rom federal agencies for
deeade.
·
j!ducatlon, health and welfare
The Census Bureau said the programs.
Vo(est and South experienced the
Census o!!lctals said the !Ina!
largest population Increases and total ','came surprlstnaly" clhae
will gafn the most seats In to the federal projection of 250
Conaress In two years, while the million, altht;ough tbere were
Northeast and Mldwes t had complaints that cities ' were
·smaller Increases .and will lose undercounled,
th~ most seats.
·
''The dramatic part of this
· The decennial census Is r&amp;- ·decade Ia the chanae ~ region

\

)

;

~

that the West Is the big popula. , count, which lnciude!l the popula· ·
lion gainer,:• said Census Bureau lion o! . all 50 states as well as
overlieas muttary and federal
Director Barbara Bryal!t.
Ail four geographic regions of personnel and !heir depende,nts.
The reapporUonment o! con·
the country experienced growth,
gresslonal seats will a!!ect 21
according to the 1990 count,
states as eight will ga.ln seats on
which cost roughly $2.6 billion to
conduct. The exact population Capitol IDII and 13 will lose them.
figure reported by the Census There are 43!1 seats In the House
o! Representatives and the aver·
B11reau is 249,632, 692.
age
alae Of a congressional
Figures showed that the West
district
' under the new census 1
grew by 22.3 percent and the
ligures
will be 572,466 people.
South . by 13.5 percent. The
California will gain seven
Northeast grew by 3.4 pm:cent
seats; Florida, !ow-; Texas,
and the Midwest by 1.3 percent.
three; Arizona, Georgia, North
The bure~u did not release
·
Caroltna
, VIrginia, and Washing·
.dem.ograpblc statistics tn its
"(

ton w!JJ gain one seat.
New York will lose three seats;
Dllno!s, Mlchlgall, Ohio and
Pennsylvania will lose two and
',Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Lousl·
ana, Massachusetts, Montana,
New Jersey and West Virginia
will lose one.
The bureau makes annual
population esUmates for states,
towns and counties using previous census data and lactating
In births, deaths and migration.
The populatiOn has grown by
roughly 10 percent each decade
this century except between
1930·1940 when growth was 7.2
'I

•
•

percent, census figures showed. '
Census of!!clals· said they had
no Information .on the federal :
moioey programs that might be .
affected by the new count, saying
the complete data will be sent to •.
state officials within three ·
months.
'
Some cities have .complained:·
that the 1990census, touted as the ,:
most comprehensive in history. :
would result In an undcrcount as':
the bureau would miss hard-~~
reach populations like the pooo'~
and Illegal immigrants.
~
There was an estimated
Continued on page 12

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