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-·u-1 he uat1y

Tuesday. November 28, 1989

Pomeroy-Middlapon, Ohio

Sentinll

;n.
Oh K.l•••

,___ I.A,cal news briefsPatrol probes two-car mishap
The Gallla·Metgs Post ot the State Highway Patrol
Investigated a two-car coutston yesterday tn Meigs Couny, on
SR. 684, 1.9 miles north of SR. 143. No one was injured. The
accident is still under investigation.
Troopers said a 1981 Mercury Lynx driven by Shirley A.
Hudson. 41, Pomeroy , slid lett of center, coutdtng headon with
another vehicle. The patrol says the unidentified car len the
scene. No one was InJured. NO one was cited.
•
A box has been set up at the Davls·Qulckel Insurance Agency
In Pomeroy to take donatiQns of Christmas gifts tor Meigs
Co unty patients at the Athens Mental Health Center. This
project ts conducted each year by theauxtllaryofDrewWebster
Post 39 of the American Legion. All gtn Items will be
appreciated, however, glass ttems are not acceptable.

EMS has four rolls Monday

Salvation...

continued from page 1

In 1901, kettle contributions In
New York City provided funds
for Madison Square Garden's
first mammoth sit-down dinner,
a custom that continued for
many years. Today, however,
families are usually given groc·
ery checks, or food baskets, so
they may prepare their own ·
dinners at home . Countless
numbers of homeless poor are
invited to share holiday dinners
and festivities at hundreds of
Salvation Army centers.
Kettles are now used in such
distant lands as Korea, Japan
and Chile. and in many European
countries. Everywhere, the pub·
Itc contributions to the kettles
enable the Salvation Army to
make Christmas a little brighter
for those who need a helping

Ordinance •.•

meeting was to dispense wlth the
operation.
Mayor Hoftrrian reported on second meeting of December
the recent visit of a representa- which falls on Christmas Day.
Attending were Mayor Hoftive from the Department of
Natural Resources, Division of fman, Council members Dewey
Waterways, at which time the Horton, James Clatworthy, RoMiddleport levee was viewed and bert Gilmore, Paul Gerard, Wilsuggestions made on how the liam Walters. and Jack
Satterfield.
$25,000 grant will be spent.
It was proposed that boaters be
encour:.ged to make sugges lions Corredion
on Improvements and a meeting
Friday's report of Soutl!~n
will be ~ ll!ter tor that
Hlrh
School's annual fall sports
pul'JIO'I"'. Construction II not
.banquet
mistakenly listed the
ex peeled to begin until next fall,
last
name
of cheerleader Tam· Mayor Hoffman reported.
.
ara
Hayman
as Hill.
The final action at (he Council

Meigs County Court

i
I

I

-

I •

Forty-four cases were pro- Lawson, Milton, W.Va., $70 and
cessed last week by Meigs costs, spotlighting; Robert M.
County Court Judge Patrick Johnson Jr., Racine, 30 days tn
O'Brien. Of the 44, eight were jail suspended to five, $75 and
DWI cases.
.
.costs, license plates and reglstra·
Fined for DWI were Calvin R. tlon to be surrendered to the
Dowell, Long .Bottom, $300 and court, no operator's license;
costs. 10 days In jail, 120 day Mike Darst, Pomeroy, $75 and
license suspension; Bobby R. costs, three days tn Jail, one year
Stewart, Pomeroy, S250 and probation, restraining order
costs, three days In jail, 60 day issued, assault; VIvian Garnes,
license suspension: Jerry L. Pomeroy, $25 and costs, restltu·
Lambert , Ewington, $250 and lion ordered, passing bad checks.
costs, three days in jail, 60 day
Samuel Alexander, Coolville
license suspension; Clarence E . 30 days tn jatf suspended to tw~
McDaniel, Dunbar, W.Va., $250 days , one year probation, res·
and costs, three days in jail, 60 training order Issued, costs,
day license suspension: Ralph A. domestic violence; Brenda Hoi·
Blessing, Belleville, W.Va., $250 singer. Thompson Court, $10 and
and costs, three days In jail, 60 costs, assured clear distance;
day license s uspension; Robert James R. Dalley , Middleport, $10
A. Baker, Reedsville, $250 and and costs, expired registration;
costs, three days In jail, 60 day Carl Evener, Syracuse, $5 and
license suspension; William S. costs, unsafe vehicle; Suzanne
Levacy. Bidwell, S250 and costs, Richmond, Middleport, $10 and
three days in jail, 60 day license costs, tailed toyteld right of way;
suspension; Ronny L. Roush, Michael Custer, Pomeroy, $10
Racine, three days in jail sus· and costs, failure to tarp; James
pended In lieu of driving school, Shafer, Henderson, W.Va., $20
$250 and costs with $150 of fine to and costs, seat belt violation;
be suspended upon completion of Steve R. Lambert, Rutland , $10
driving school, 60 day license and costs, stop sign violation;
·
suspension.
Brent L. Arnold, .Pomeroy, $20
In addition to the fines and and costs, failure to control;
sentences for DWI, Dowell was Jason R. Black, Rutland, $30 and
fined $30 and costs for failure to costs. assured clear distance;
control; Stewart, $40 and costs, DQntta J . Manuel, Racine, $30
reckless operation; McDaniel; and costs, "failure to control;
$75 and costs, three days tn Jail to Lawrence JohnsiOn, Tuppers
be served concurrently with DWI Plains, $20 and costs, seat belt
sentence, no operator's license:
violation; Jane Michael, PomeBlessing, $75 and costs, three roy, $10 and costs, stop sign
da ys In jail to be served concur- violation; Harry P . Price,
rently with DWI sentence, no Tuppers Plains, $15 and costs,
operator's license; $25 and costs, sell belt viola lion.
left of cenler; Baker, $25 and
Fined for speeding were DQttle
costs. left of center.
Hatfield, Pomeroy, $20 and
costs; Charles Ritchie, Tuppers
Also fined were John H. Col·
Plains, $20 and costJ; John R.
fman. Portland, $100 and costs,
Jeffers, Pomeroy, $20 and costs;
six months in jail suspended,
Shawna
A. Tackett, Racine, $28
three years probation, no driving
and
costs;
Clifford Griffith.
privileges; Donald E . Pierce,
Reedsville,
S20
and costJ; ThoPomeroy, 20 days In jail susmas
Shriver,
Huntington,
W.Va.,
pended to three days, two years
$24
and
costJ;
James
Russell
probation , restitution ordered,
Blain, Galltpolls Ferry, W.Va ..
costs. on each of three charges of
$22 and costs; Patricia A. Antle,
theft of utlllt$' services; 20 days
Athens, $20 and cos Ill.
In jail suspended to three days,
Bonds were forfeited by Rotwo years probation, restitution
nald
A. Carpenter, Zanesville,
ordered, costJ, on each of three
180;
and
H. Kent Dowdy. Guys·
charges of lampering with utility
$60,
botll for speecllnc.
ville,
equipment; Eric W. Stm, Pome·
Dallas
Young,
Hartford, W.Va.,
roy, $100 and costs, transpordng
forfeited
a
$40
bond on each of
loaded firearm In motor vehicle;
two
charges
of
failure
to d!1play
Roger Alford, Milton, W.Va. , $70
valid highway use tax sticker.
and costs, spotlighting; Randle

(

UNITED EFFORTS • COIIJI' esaman Bob Wise (D..Cllarleston,
W.Va.) points oat to state aDd local ollkials and COJDmunily leaders
tbat botb Oblo and West ViJ1lnla need to join together to pusb lor tbe
cCRDpletion or tJ.s. 35. Indlcallna oa a map parts or tbe rour.lane road
oot completed In Ohio, Wise said despite Gallia County's award or
$61.2 mUiion lor tbe highway, U.S. 35 needs to be·c:ompleted across
the region. (OVP photo by Margaret Caldwell)
NATIONAL WI:ATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11 ·29·89

hand.
In the United States, the
Salvation Army Is believed to aid
more than two mtlllon persons at
Thanksgiving and Christmas.
The kettles have changed over
the years since that first pot In
San Francisco. Now they are
usually bright red and some are
even outfitted with self-ringing
bells and a booth complete with a
public address system over
which Christmas ca~ols are
played. But whether , or not
today's Salvation Army kettles
are mechanized, or the old
fashioned kind requiring a volun·
leer to stand alongside and ring a
hand held bell, the -message ts
stU! the same - "share with
others."

&lt;Continued rrom Paget)

tance ol" pUlling the money whm
the best retwn wlll be found.
"'ur s~r~~egy must look to sell
the project- how the money can get
the I1IOil jobs. Where roadl ao. jobs
go. That lhould be the theme and
that is where we will reap o6r largest rellll'll,K Jones Slid. ''Wilen the
money is spent 10 help pjlerate
a good tecum
new jobs. we will
on the money. II IS maximized on
the economic development basis."
Throughout the discussion, the
leaders reller.ted on the May 8
meeting of congressmen Wise.
Clarence Miller 111d Bob McEwen.
Wise made mention of the accomplishments made in the past 6
months since the meeting and noted
that the momentum should coolinue.
The roalltlon
Wise, joined by state representatives and state department
officials. CJ&lt;plained that the purpose
· of the coalition is not to debate the
routing o{ the highway, but how to
get the road compleced - not just
through Ohio nor Just through West
Vmtlnia, but through the regiQ!I.
''We · must come together and
work as a unit to make the road a
reality," Wise said. ''We are here to
discuss funding as a package. The
road will not happen strictly as a
federal project. The road will not
happen strictly as a state .Jli"Oject.
We must coordinate the elforts of
both Ohio and West Vu-ginia. and
federal delegates in Washington."
Although Gallia County recently
received the amouncement from
Ohio Gov. Richard Celeste on oCt.
23 of the $61.2 million highway
project to begin in 1990, U.S. 35 is
not yet completed on the western
side of the Ohio River. Pressure
remains on both states to work to
complete the road.
Those in atrendance. included
Wes Holden, representing U.S.
Senator Jay Rockefeller IV; Jan
Denney, representing U.S. Senaror
John Glenn; Ayris Lyskawa,
representing U.S. Senator Howard
Metzenbaum; Lucille Morgan, with

•et

Box set up for donations

Four calls for assistance were answered on Monday by units
"' of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
At 10: 58 a.m .., Pomeroy was called to Mulberry Ave. for Helen
MUler wllo was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 7:58 p.m. transported Francis Lew!$ from
Page Street to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:17 p.m.,
Middleport went to South Fifth St. for Carla Davis to Holzer
Medical Center an&lt;l at11:36 p.m .• to South Second Ave. for
Martha Wiseman who was treated but not transported.

Continued from page 1

Common

~SNOW

-RAIN
(-j)?,1sHOWERS
FRONTS: "
Warm "
Cold _ . . Static . . Occluded
Map shoWs minimum temperatuies. At 'east 50%ol any shaded area is forecast
to receive precipitalion indicated

UPI

WEATHER MAP - Rain Ia forecast for parts of the extreme
Pacific Norlllwest Wednesday. Snow Is forecast for paris of the
extreme norlh Atlantic Coast stales with showers and
lhunderstoi'IIIIJ forecast for parts of the south Allanllc Coast. Snow
is posalble In llle Ohio Valley and mostofthe norlh Atlantic Coast
states. (uP I)

High winds damage
several Ohio· homes
By Untted Press ln.t ernallonal
High winds In advance of an
arctic cold front blew across Ohio
early Tuesday, with a possible
tornado Injuring at least one
person in Huron County.
Sheriff Dick Southerland said
about a dozen homes were
damaged about midnight near
North Fairfield, about 50 mUes
southwest of Cleveland.
A Fltchvllle Township suffered
head lacerations when the.storm
smashed windows tn her mobile
horne. She was treated and
released at a Bellevue hospital.
Southerland said he anCI Na·
ttonal Weather Service Investigators were to assess the damage
Tuesday .
"I would say II was (a tornado)
because I've seen several be. fore," he sat d. "There was metal
on buildings twisted and twisted
trees. Even people said they
heard the sound of a train."
In northeast Ohio. t-h e Cleve·
land Electric Illuminating Co.
reported about 2,200 families lost
power at times during thl' night ,
but all were restored by early
Tuesday.
After hitting 60 Monday night ,
the temperatures began falling
as the cold front approached, and
temperatures were In the 40s at
mid-morning. Wind-chill read·
logs were· down In the single
digits.
Windy conditions were to COD·

tlnue through much of the day
over most of the state. The cold
air was to sweep across the state
from the northwest. with the core
of the cold air over Ohio late
Tuesday and early Wednesday.
Some drizzle was to accom·
pany the leading edge of the cold
air Into Ohio, mainly over the
northern half. As temperatures
fall, some of the rain was to
change over to snow flurries and
snow.

Weather
South Central Ohio
l Clearing Tuesday night, with a
1ow between 15 and 20. Mostly
sunny Wednesday, with highs In
the low 30s.
·
Extended Forecast
Thunday through Saturday
Unseasonably cold through the
period, with a chance of snow
each day. Highs will be In the 30s
and overnight lows will range
from 15 to 25.

U.S. Representative Bob Wise;
Bill Fawley, representing CongteSStnan Bob McEwen; John
Smith repeaenting Congressman
Clarmce Millcr;
Paul Wiltinson, W.Va. Deoartment at Tnnsportation; Fred YinKirk. W.Va. Deparllllent of
Transpor)81ion;
Ken Dunn, W.Va.
.
Department of Transpor18tion; Joe
Leach, Ohio Deparllllent of
Transportation; Keith Swearingen•
Ohio Department of Transponation
District 9; Shenie Lanier, Ohio
Department of Transportation District 9; J(aren Pawloski, Ohio
Department of Transportation, District 10;
Bob Dittmar, W.Va. Senaur, Ned
Jones, W.Va. Senator: Rick
· Houvouras, representing • Chuck
Chambers; Mary Able, Ohio
Representative;
Delmer L. Bone, Greene County
Commissioner; James H. - Lewis,
Peoples Bank; Beth Vaildawalker,
Gallipolis Chamb&amp; of Cornrnen:e;
Steven l&gt;isseler, highway committee, Galllpolis Chamber of Commerce; T. Kail Burleson, president
of Gallia CQunty CQmmJSSioners;
Bob Evans, SEORt;; James M.
Stewan, Henderson. W.Va.;
Dennis R. Salisbury. Gallia
County Sheriff; Howard E.
Thompson. Cenual Thlst Company; Brent A. Saunders, Gallia
County Pro5eeuting Attorney; Thm
Wiseman, pn:sident Gallipolis
Chamber of Commen:e; Jeff Smith.
president Gallia Cwnty Community Improvement CorporatiOn;
Beckie Stein. Mason County
Chamber of CQmmen:e; Frank Lee,
· Economi~ Development, Mason .
County; John C. Wiseman, Mason
County Roundtable; Jack E. Fruth,
West Virginia Roads · Committee;
Sran Evans, Gallipolis Chamber of
Commerce highway committee;
Dale !man, Gallipolis city manager;
Russell V. Holland, Point Pleasant
mayor; Joe Ellison, Peoples Bank;
Charles C. Lanham, Citizens National Bank.

Jodie L. Flowers and Robert the vehicle went left of center,
Lewis Flowers, Point Pleasant, ran off the road and hit a ditch,
W.Va., have flied suit In Meigs causing Flowers, the passenger,
Common Pleas Court for a to suffer alleged pa.tnful and
judgment of $35,800 from Vonda permanent injuries. Plaintlcts
R. Wolfe, Portland. and Marvin charge that the accident, and
L. Teaford, Racine. The suit subsequent Injuries of Flowers.
stems from a ·motor vehicle were the result of the alleged
accident on May 28 of last year In negligence of Wolfe.
which Jodie Flowers was a • PlalntiCCs are asking for dam·
passenger In the vehicle driven ages In the amount of $35,800 and
byVonda Wolfe. The vehicle was a trial by jury.
The Meigs Common Pleas
owned by Teaford. The accident
occurred on Tanners Run Road Court action ot Peggy McBane
Will against Harold J. Will has
near Racine.
According to the complaint, been dismissed.

Meigs announcements
Weber anniversary
James and Katie Weber will
observe their 60th wedding annl·
versary Wednesday at their
home, 814 Page St., Middleport.
Reunion planned
All graduates of the 1940 class
of Pomeroy High School are
encouraged to attend tonight'~
(Tuesday's) meeting at the
Grace Episcopal. Church parish
house to make plans for the
upcoming 50th reunion. The
meeting starts at 7 p.m. and
more help Is needed to organize
the reunion.

Hospital news

Scipio Trustees
Scipio Township Trustees will
meet Friday, 6 p.m. , at the
townshiP building In Pagevllle.

Licenses is8ued
Marriage licenses have been
Issued tn Meigs Probate Court to
David Powell• Dowler, 31, and ,
Anna Lillian Williams, 31, both of
Pomeroy; VIrgie Williams, 67,
and Lillie Bevan. 68, both of
Rutland.
STAT£ OF OHIO, DEMRTIIENT OF ...,.._
ANC£, C£11T1ACATl OF COIIIPUANCE. The
u~ . &amp;IPI41fltti...,IIOI'Insuranc.Oflht

511111 or Ohio. t'leflbj certlfin NWOWEST MU'f.

UALINSURANCECO..af.,.. O..MoinH, SUM
Of ICMe. has ~ with tnt ._. at til llMt
IIPPI'clbtl 10 it lndlt auttiOrind dl.lring . . cur·
,.,. ~ kl l~in lhiiJtaillw+• tJus..
WIMI ot iMinnCt on the Mt.ltt-' Plwl . .. lnancill
ConditiOn is shown by
PI~
bMn • tollows on Otctmt. 31 , 1. .: Admitted
MMtl 14V,f11,78100; ~ 1 'Y',.."ill1 .00;
Svrplvt: 111,142.8111.00: hlCOme 134 ....., 00:

hi...,.._......,.,..,

Veterans Memorial ,
Monday admissions - Debora
Michael, Shade; Lily M. Ran·
dolph, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - James
Rlckmaq, Donald Little.

ExptnGitutel $30,880,916.00. IN WITNESS

WHEAEOF. IIIM'e~"""tiMd~,..,..

.and ce.Md my . . . 10 bll . . . . . . Columl:u,
Ohio ~ cs.y Mel diM. Jul'f 1. ,... a.org. Fa,
Suptnnbtndenl of lnaurance Of Cltllo. (SEAl)

And all tllrough tilt stort ~
•
T!tert rtm't savings and bargains
Likt never !Jefort.

DallY stock prices
(As of 11:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmUll
of Blunt, Ellis A Loewl

Start Your Chrlttlllt Seaton Off With
The Preterlptlon Shop! I
You'll find tre11endou• iavlngt for everyone on your
81ft 81vl•g Lttt?

Am Electric Power ...... ....... 30\7
AT&amp;T ... ............. ... :.. .".... ..... .. 43
Ashland on ........................35'iJ
Bob Evans ......... ....... ....... ...14%
Charming Shoppes .............. 10%
City Holding Co................. .14%
Federal Mogul... ................. l9% ·
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. ... ........ .. .47
Heck's ............. ......... ..... ..... ...5
Key CenturiOn ... ~ ........... •. .. .14'4
Lands' End ......................... 26'!4
Umlted Inc......•................. .32'4
Multimedia Inc...................92~
Rax RestaurantJ ..... ............. 2',1,
Robbin! &amp; Myers .:.. .... ... .....15%
Shoney's Inc ............ ... .. ......12\i,
Star Bank .................•.........2114
Wncly's Inti........................ 4)1
Wortblngton lnd .................. 24%
(Key Ceattii'IOII BaoealrareB
ral.,. qtr. dlvlde.tl to 1.11 frem
ua. Payable Ju. a, 1•; to
lharebolders of record Dee. 11, )

•Selacted Giftware
•Timax Watchls ·
•Christmas Candles
•Stika Watches
•Toys
•Christmas Wrapping l'apar

•Christmas Cards
•Amity Wallats &amp; Billfolds
" •Silk Flower Hanging Baskets
•Candy
•Perfumes &amp; Colognes

PLUS MUCH, ·uCH, 11011111

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
271 Nort• Second

,

992-6669

Shop early,
shop locally

Piek-3
171

Pick
1017

IIWclltport, .OH.

Low toailht 111 mid teeu.
Partly cloudy Tllunday. Hlp
near 40.

•

•

•

at

2 Sectoona, 16 Pog.. 26 Centa
A Muhimadi• Inc. New...,_

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, Novemw 29. 1989

Vol.40. No.142

.

Ci&gt;pyriJ!hted 1989

a

,

'·

.

,

-

Ohio House panel
studies drug legislation

Pleas Court

was the month
before Christmas:

Stocks

Ohio Lottery

HOLIDAY NEEDLEWORK- Band crocheted,
knitted and sewn orname1118 adom the tree In the
sewing room at the Melp County Museum. The
sewing room Is a new display for tbls season's
ChrlslmaS Wonderland open house at the

museum. The open boWie Win be held Sunday,
from Ito I, at llle museum. Otber hand sewn Items
wllt also be on display In the room lncludln&amp; quilts.
(See story, photos page 12)

Cable firm .starts switching·

suhscriber8 ~~~~new..
TUPPERS PLAINS- Charter
Cabll, Inc. is completing recon·
struction and consolidation of
cable-televlson systems serving
communities In Athens, Melgs,
and Washington Counties.
· Subscribers are currently beIng converted to a new system.
which offers high quality recep·
tion and program variety.
Charter Cable Is commttted to
• providing its customers with the
best In cable television service,
according to a spokesman from
; the company. Over 65 miles of
new cable lines and state-of-the·- art cable television equipment
are the result of over $700,000 the
company Is currently Investing
, In the area. The dependable new
system makes It possible for
Charter to concentrate on serv·
tng subscribers quickly and
efficiently, II was pointed out.

In addition. the firm offers contac-ted by service representa·
Uves to schedqle conversion of
subscriber~ a program variety
that Includes sports. cultural homes to the new system.
· In accordance With Improve·
events, and new films . The
company ts adding up to 10 new ments to the cable system. as
channels to communities In the subscribers are switched over.,
rebuilt area. Additions Include their ·service rates will be ad·
JC Penny Shopping Television, justed to $11.95 per month lor
Nickelodeon, the Discovery basic service.
Subscribers also have the
Channel, A and E. WGN. USA.
option
to receive the additional
and CNN as well as premium
premium
channels. These In·
channels like Showtlme, Cl·
elude
Sbowtlme,
Ctnemax, and
nemax, and the Disney Channel.
Cable service has begun and the Disney Channel offered Indithe company Is now Installing vidually for $8.95 or In packages
new converters In area homes. ' of two channels, $16,95, or all
Communities with the opportun· three for $21.95. HBO Is avatalbe
lty to participate Include for $10.95.
For the convenience of resiTuppers Plains In Meigs County,
dents
to order cable or request
Porterfield: Corner and Little
service
tnfonnatlon, the com·
Hocking In Washington County,
pany
Is
mainlalnlng
a toll free
and Coolville, Torch and Hock·
number, 1-800-458·7098.
lngport In Athens County.
Residents are currently being

.' Fourth District Court of Appeals
overturns Gallia drug conviction ,
Rees received sentences totaling cocaine confiscated In the raid at
~ to 33 years, to be served · 1155 Second Ave. was the largest
conSecutively. and 'flnes totaling amount of cocaine ever confls·
cated In the city of had a street
$20,000.
.
This Included 5 to 15 years and value of $20,000.
Judge Donald A. Cox Issued an
a $7,500 fine each on charges of
possession of CQcalne and de- order yesterday to return Rees
merol, and 18 months and a $2,500 from Lebanon Correcllonal.Instl·
fine each on counts of possession tutlon at Lebanon, OhiO, to Gallla
of possession of morphine and County, so he can set bond
pending, a new tr-ial or an appeal.
dllaudtd.
'The Gallla County Sheriff's
·Officials said the 55.7 grams of
Department sent an officer to
Lebanon today to return Rees to
GalUa County.
Judge Cox said yesterday that
the Rees conviction was over·
turned on the grounds that the
search warrant tor that residence
at 1155 Second Ave., was
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The billion during the quarter.
·not
in
compliance
with the law.
A better-than-expected trade
Commerce Department upped
Upon
his
return.
Rees will be
Its estimate of the nation's picture in September reduced the
In
the
county
jail
until the
held
economic growth In the third act ual·drop In net exports to $12.4 court sets a new bond. Judge Cox
quarter to a 2.7 percent season· btlllon, boosting the domestic
said a new trial date will be set
ally adjusted annual rate Wed· GNP figure.
The slight upward revision tn aner the prosecu dng attorney
nesday, reflecting a lower· than·
decides whether to appeal the
expected trade deficit during the economic growth was widely reversal of the appellate court to
expected by economists but
; three-month period.
the Ohio Supreme Court.
: Meanwbtle the department growth during the summer quar·
Gallla County Pr01ecut1ng At·
conflnned that Inflation during ter was nevertheless much
Brent A. Saunders said
torney
. the July-September q•Jarter rose stronger than analysts originally
"It Ia my Intention
tbla
morning,
at an annual rateof2.9percentas had expected.
to
file
an
appeal
with tbe Ohio
Still, economists warned that
. measured on a fixed weights
State
Supreme
Court.
We know
growth In the quarter was
~basis, the lo)Yest quarterly rate
we
bad
two
local
judges,
common
Inflated by car sales pushed
since the third quarter of 1986.
pleas
and
municipal
court,
who
The department last month artificially hillier by sales lncen·
be1d
tbat
the
~earch
warrant
was
had estimated growth In the tives and Inventory butld-upe In
gross natiOnal product - the the manufacturing sector. Few sufficient, and tbe people who
spoke at the trial obviously ... 1
total of goods and services analysts expect the growth to
totallY disagree with the court of
continue
at
the
same
pace
In
the
produced In the ecQDotnY -at 2.5
appeals. I'm aonna continue to
percent during the July· fourth quarter. ·
fight
.drugs In thla courtly lrre•
'The
economy
Is
definitely
September quarter. But that was
•
·gardless
of what the court or
based In part on an estimate that slowing down," added David
appeals
thinks."
Continued on page 5
real net exports declined by $22.9
...... '·' .
'

our penitentiaries with these
county prosecutors.
By LEE LEONARD
. In addition to establishing the people ... we bet1er make sure we
UPI StalelloUie Reporter
mandatory minimum sentences know what we're doing," said
COLUMBUS - Members of a
for a variety of drug offenses, the Beatty .
select Ohio House committee
''This is exactly what we need
bulk amounts of drugs were cuI
assembling drug:fighting Iegtsla·
to
do," argued Rep. Richard
In
half,
meaning
it
takes
the
use
lion clashed Tuesday over how
R·Milan, who said his
Rench,
or
sale
of
less
drugs
to
get
a
tough the state should be with
niece
was
killed because of
Cor
a
serious
violation.
conviction
penalties for drug abusers and
•
'Send
a message that
drugs.
Shivers
said
only
25
percent
of
peddlers. .
we're
not
going
to do this to our
the property forfeited by ar·
The winner may be determined
kids.
"
rested drug dealers would be
by the cost of sending convicted
"We need to start with Noriega
available for education, Instead
criminals to jail and keeping
or
somebody, not some guy
of 100 percent as originally
them there.
·
on the corner," restanding
proposed. The other 75 percent
Hard-nosed representatives
would go to local Jaw enforce- sponded Beatty.
applauded the terms of a subsll·
The bill calls tor a statewide
tute bill calling tor ttve years of ment efforts.
policy to be developed by
drug
Rep. Otto Beatty Jr., D·
actual Incarceration, on top of
the regular prison term, for using Columbus, tookparllcularexcep- Jhe Governor's Office of Crimi·
llon to the liCe-without-parole nal Justice Services In conjunca firearm while committing a
drug offense, and lite Imprison- provision, which he said might be tion with an 11-member state
ment without parole on the applied to someone who sold 100 Drug Advisory Board.
It also recognizes after-school
second offense of trattlcklng In grams of marijuana on two
drug
programs and provides
separate occasions.
'
drugs.
stricter
penalties for drug of''The Idea of saying we're
But other members warned
fenses
commltted against .
going to take someone who
that prlson,space Is limited. They
juveniles.
makes two small sales and fill up
said, · and were b.!cked up by
George Wilson, director. of the
Ohio Department of Rehablllta·
tlon and Correction, that without
additiOnal cells, murderers and
rapists could be dismissed early
to make room for inmates given
mandatory sentences for drug
offenses.
The panel, chaired by Rep.
John Shivers Jr., D·Salem, will
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPil- C. fot non-profit groups to be under
.
take amendments Wednesday In William Swank, executive vice ftre fr~ the IRS.
''TheY- us u a IOid mine,"
hopes of reporting bill out In president o! the _Ohio Farm
· .·•a~"A.&gt;-r
House-tiOOJ' vote next .~au Federation; sallf·· ~· {CJIII!Imet· IU;I. "We coarlli
r:.
'"(·,,,4 .
day the group will tight . a g!Viilg them"$piice lor 8!1 olfl~
But
said that vote may
reported claim of $1.8 million In when I was president of the Iowa
have to be delayed jn view o( a
back taxes and Interest from·the iarm tilll'i!au.l.
Swank said the Ohto farm
cosi estimate cited by the Legis- Internal Revenue Service.
bureau
has flied Its annual tax
lative Budget Office of$1.4 billion
At a news conference before
return
the
same way for 30years.
for additional prisons, and Tuesday's annual meeting of the
Calvin
Staib,
a delegate to the
another $1 billion over the next group. Swank said the farm
meeting
from
Seneca County,
five years In operational costs for
bureau will go to court If
said
he
was
surprised
by the
the drug leglslat lon.
necessary to fight the claim. He
"Obviously, we're very con·
said the taxes In question did not news about the IRS claim.
"I had not heard anything
cerned about that," said Shivers. stem trom any one aspect of the
The Ohio Senate unanimously
non -profit organization ' s about the IRS situation," Staib
said. "There have been rumors
passed legislation Monday prooperation.
viding for six new prisons and
"We're answering their ques· about the salaries. We thought
alternative jail space, as well as
tlons and asking for a confer· they were pretty high, especially
state grants for community drug
ence," Swank said. " This has considering they just raised the
programs and drug education In
been In the process for two dues and some farmers are
having a tough time."
schools. The Senate already had
years."
Tax returns tiled In 1988 show
approved strict penalties for
He said tf the organization Is
the
group paid Its top six
drug felons last spring.
forced to pay "even a third of
Wilson said Ohio's prisons what they require, It will make a execu tlves $608,628, Including an
already are dperatlng · at 151 difference" to the group's annual salary of $200,884 for
Swank.
percent of capacity. He urged the finances.
The salaries were revealed
For the fiscal year ended Aug.
committee members to "look
when
a group called Members tor
31,
1987,
the
farm
bureau
remore closely at" the mandatory
a
Responsible
Farl"l'\ Bureau sent
ported a deficit of $607,2231. The
sentences proposed In the btll.
copies
of
the
organization's
tax
The select committee Is consld· following fiscal year's deficit
ret
urns
for
the
pas
I
thfee
years
to
ering legislation drafted origi- was $293,020.
the
county
presidents.
Dean Kleckner, pres lden t of
nally by Speaker Vernal ,Riffe
Swank has said the salaries are
Jr. , D·Wheelersburg, and since the American Farm Bureau, who ·
In
line with what similar organl·
modified on the basis of commit· delivered the keynote address at
zallons
pay tbelr top managers.
tee testimony, chiefly from the meeting, said II ts not unusual

Farm Bureau to
fight IRS claim

a

•t

The Fourth District Court of
Appeals has overturned last
fall's drug conviction of John
· Rees, 39, Rt . 3, GaiUpolls, and
remanded the case to Gallta
q ounty Common Pleas Court.
· A jury deliberated three hours
Sept. 20, 1988 before they con·
victed Rees on four counts of
drug trafficking, Including one
each on possession of cocaine,
demerol, morphine and dllaudld.

Nation's third ·quarter
·growth up 2. 7 percent

,

•
•
•

i-

..

oaeu uUqtae urdtlle ...._...,... .. , _ . , .. .

am-. ...

fram wood fram an olll obtaroll, are
bolldQ dllflaya at the Help Coail&amp;, m....,..
Pa&amp;'JCeok, mu.un waner, p.._tlaeiiiiiiC.,_
on Ole dllplay. A Qarlltmal 'IIDClrllllllullal ••
tbeellll of tile larpr bedbelonpdtolbe We Clara

\4

efller

· - - - IP'tliJ,rlllwlved wi&amp;lltlle MelpColalt)P l - lllld = MlealllooleCy. Tile " - r Mil
m.Wklal lloeletJ ..., ...... tile 1ft . . . .
ClarlialnUII WOIIIIerlllad ..... . . _ tllllhaday
from I to I p.m. (See 81Dry, P'""-• 111111 11)

�Conimentary
The Daily Sentinel
•

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO 1'HE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AltEA

~~

~~ "'-''-""T""I,.,._c:l,,=o

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisber
PAT Wllft'EHEAD
Assilltuol Publlsher/ConlroUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ge!!eral Mua&amp;er

By SCO'JT WOLFE
Coach Charles Riley said, "We
SenUnel Correspondenl
were very flat tonight, but also
Eastern took a script from Its very fortunate to win. Our senior
last victory and altered 11 very leadership really came through
. little In scoring a 73-68 victory tonight. North Gallla came preover North Gallla In the league pared to play tonight and Coach
opener for both clubs Tuesday Riccardi did a good job adjusting
night.
to us defensively. Overall the
Eastern Is now2-l and l-Oin the kids had fun and I anticipate all
' SVAC, while NGis 1-1overalland our games to be similar to this
0-1 In the SVAC.
one."
Eastern was led l)y the game's
Eastern and North Gallla each
leading scorer Shaun Savoy, who showed their presses early and
quietly racked up28polnts. Other also used potent running attacks
point totals were recorded by In an attempt to breazk the full
Scott Fitch (14). Mike Frost (10), court pressure. The result was a
Jeff Durst (12), and Mike stalemate as no one ·took the
Wheeler (4) .
early upper hand.
North Gallla was led by a
North Gallla once led by four,
tremendous effort from Brian
then ttiree points, but the tide
Stout, who led with 23 points,
changed when Kenny Caldwell
Including five three pointers.
drilled a three pointer to pull
D.J. Hainmel also had a good . EHS close, then Shaun Savoy
game with 19, whlleTerryFarley
grabbed two steals and drove
had 10 and Chris Tackett had
them both In for layups to give
eight.
EHS the lead 12-11. Ji'ltch hit a

Vietnam vets reach out Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

A MEMBER of 'nle Assoolated Press, Inland Dally Preis Asllod.._ lllld tile AmericaD NewSfiiiiiB" Publishers "-'!.&amp;loa.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be leo11haaM
wo........ AU letlers
s•bjeclto edllla&amp; and mulli be olped wllh
ume, ...... and lelepbone pumber. No unslped !ellen wW be publlobed. LeUers .-ld beiQ .... tule, addreosiDr lssueo, not penonall-

are

tles.

Florio: CongfeSS is a
frustrating pla~e to work
WASHINGTON (UP! )- Members of Congress usually portray the
House and Senate as great deliberative bodies, but one departing
member candidly describes Congress as a lethargic, frustrating,
less-than-satistylrig place to work.
Rep. James Florio, D-N.J., leaves Congress Jan. 16 after 15 years to
become governor of New Jersey . In a recent Interview, he said things
have gotten so frustrating on Capitol Hill that If he had lost the Nov. 7
gubernatorial election, he planned to serve just one more term and
then do something more challenging - perhaps teach college.
"I don't want to say it's VIncent Van Gogh frustrating and I would
cut off my ear, but It's just less than satlstylng- putting In a lot of
time and energy and having some serious questions about output,"
Florio said. "The new reality is that the legislative process Is much
1
tess satisfYing ... than it used to be."
He contended lawmakers have abdicated control to special
Interests, regulators and the courts and simply look for the lowest
common denominaior to get legislation passed.
"In order to come to agreement now- with allthecontentiousness,
with all the outside forces that are playing a very Important role one consciously strives for ambiguity In order to get people to sign on
to things." he said.
. "Stalemate Is the process here. Nobody has power," he said.
''There's a minimum degree of civility and as a result, there's
extreme contentiousness and the whole process is not working well."
As one example of his frustration, he discussed legtslatlon he
sponsored to allow state officials to use Medicaid funds for
community-based facilities for the developmentally disabled.
He said he held some hearings, bu 1the bill never received debate on
the House floor. Instead, It got included in the budget reconciliation
package.
"And therefore, people who don't know anything about the process
at all (decided) in a conference that has nothing to do with Medicaid
... that for symmetry, we're throwing this piece out and keeping this
piece ln. That's frivolous, arbitrary pollcymaklng," Florio
·
complained.
•'There Is no rational explanation because it wasn't rational. That Is
not satl&amp;fyiDJ and that's what's·causln11 popular discontent with the ·
M&lt;Jvernment.al system," he said. "It's not a pleasant picture."
He condemned David Stockman, the Reagan .a dministration's
budget director, for precipitating the downfall of the budget process.
He said Stockman and !he Reagan revolution came In with a
"conscious effort" to disrupt the budget process and put the Office of
Management and Budget in full control of the budget process.
While Florio was quick to criticize, he had no alternatives to offer,
othec than a general outline of the proper balance that needs to be
strucll..
"You've got to figure out some new ways whereby you can
harmonize the legitimate desire to have execu tlve control over ~
system that has gone astray and yet be able to factor In appropriate
legislative monitoring and representallve Input Into the process," he
said.
The lame-duck congressman said he anticipates much more
satisfaction as a member of the executive branch. It will be
Interesting to see the balance he strikes wl th his state legislature once
be becomes governor.

Eastern posts 73-68 league victory over North

Page 2-The Deily Sentinel
Pometoy-Middlaport, Ohio
Wadnuday, Nollanbar 29, 1989 .

WASHINGTON _ The probSoviet veterans of the war In what to expect.
!ems of Vietnam veterans wllo
Afghanistan are reaching out to
Just as American soldiers
't
I
the
vt
len
beAmerican
vets
to
learn
from
found
lndlaerence when they
ldII eave
0
cou
ce
hind them have been duly retheir experience.
returned home, so are the Soviet
corded In the Soviet Union. For
Thanks to the propaganda, the soldiers becoming a lost generayears, the government·
Soviet vets developed an early lion of dlsUlusloned and emblt·
awareness of the problems that .tered young men. Some are
controlled Soviet press has disstemmed 'from a prolonged and turning to drugs and alcohol.
paraged the United States by
of
hopeless war. Now they atron ..Iy
Their complaints sound haunt...
wr ltlng a bou t . the t rau rna
IdentifY with their American lngly similar to those of AmerlAmerican veterans.
Soviet soldiers were reading
counterparts. Some Vletnalfl can VIetnam-era vets. One djswhat was supposed to be antivets have recently visited the abled Soviet vet, a double
American propaganda, but It
Soviet Union to share their amputee who had stepped on a
land mine, had to visit 10
h rd N
d I II th So I t
I
struck a responsive c o . ~ow~"""e:.;x;.:pe.;..r;..e:-nc.e_s_a_n__e--e--v·e-s------------~

Miners pan for
gold with cyanide
Robert Walters

CARLIN, Nev. (NEA) -With
none of the hoopla that accommillion. Mine operators say they
panied the fabled Gold Rush of
the mld·1800s, a quiet boom In follow elaborate safety procegold mining Is underway dures tb protect both their
employees and residents of
throughout the West.
Production has soared from 1 nearby communities from expomillion ounces In 1980 to 5 million sure to a substance so toxic thalli
ounces In 1987 and almost 8 can kill people .almost Instantly.
In addition, thi!Y claim that
mUiion ounces this year, accordIng to Philip M. Hocker, presithere has not been a single
dent of the Mineral Polley reported case of Illness attrlbuta·
Center, a Washington, D.C., ble to cyanide exposure related
· to gold mining anywhere In
public Interest organization.
Califo~nla, Oregon, WashingNevada.
"The global mining Industry Is
ton, Montana, Colorado and Utah
are among the states experienc- the primary user of cyanide,"
Ing a gold mining resurgence. accounting for about 80 percent
New ventures are also underway of all sales In recent years, notes
In such Improbable Eastern Du Pont, the world's largest
states as Maine and South producer. "Global de.m and (for
cyanide) In 1988 outstripped
Carolina.
Nowhere are recent deveiop- supply, primarily due to the
ments more apparent, however, second gold rush and accompanthan In the barren high desert of ying explosive growth ·rate of
nor theas tern Nevada. Deep In sodium cyanide of 19 percent."
the Tuscarora Mountains, the
To meet that demand, Du
nation's largest gold mining Pont's cyanide production grew
companies have buUt elaborate by 32 percent In 1989 and Is
Industrial complexes to wrest expected to Increase another 26
from the earth gold that pre- percent In 1990. Domestic usage
By United Press International
I viously was unrecoverable.
now exceeds 200 million pounds
Today Is Wednesday, Nov. 29, the333rd dayof1989with32tofollow.
Gold mining always has re- annually.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
"A substance as toxic as
quired that the precious metal be
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
extracted from rocky ore - a cyanide must be the subject of
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
process that traditionally has more concern and more policThole born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
required that the gold particles Ing," says J{ocker- but the gold
Include Austrian physicist Christian Doppler In 1803; author Louisa
be large enough for prospectors mining Industry Insists there Is
May Alcott In 1832; Chinese Empress Dowager Tz'u Hsl In 1835;
to see . In the past, stream beds, no cause for concern.
English electrical engineer John Fleming, whp devised the radio
mines and other locations were
tu~lode, 1849; film choreographer Busby Berkeley in 1895; Irish
abandoned when those visible
novelist C.S. Lewis In 1898; and pop-jazz flugelhornist Chuck
placer or lode depo~~lts were
Mangione In 1940 (age 491 .
·
depleted.
Left behind were microscopic
On this dale In history:
gold
· partiCles known as
In 1877. Tllomas Edison demonstrated his Invention, a hand·
miCro-gold - embedded In geocranked phonograph that recorded sound on grooved metal
logical formations such as the
cylinders. Edison shouted verses of "Mary Had a Little Lamb" Into
38-mlle-Iong Carlin Trend just
the machine, which played back his voiCe. ·
north of this community, whlch
In 11!10, the first Army-Navy football game was played. The Navy
contains the largest knOwn gold
Middles won, 2i-O.
deposits In North America.
A commercially feasible process capable of stripping thoee
Invisible specks from low-grade
ore was developed a century ago
In Scotland and promptly employed In South Atrlca. But the
Interior. Department's Bureau of
Mines did not propose uilnglt In
this country until 20 years ago.
Known as "-heap leaching," It
lnvolvea blasting or aouallli
gold-bearing formations Into
boulder-size rocks, crushing
them Into particles the si:le of
baseballa, then stacking vaat
amounta of that ore atop heavyduty plutlc liners
Commercial Irrigation
sprinklers are used to spray the
ore with a solution of sodium
cyanide diluted In water. AI the
cyanide washes through the
rock, II releasesthegoldfromthe
ore. A single leach pad can cover
1
dozens of acres, with 2 mlllloll or
more Ioiii of rock plied 150 to 200
feet blp.
But cyulde Ia extremely lethal. 1boui8Ddl of blrdl die
every year In Nevada after they
dr,lnk from open pondJ built to .
hold the cyanide and rold
"/., plrrNd to ,..,art to you, our Rockholdsolution.
·
It~ to hud Mid m!RNnThe proportion of cyanide In
IIJI'I'nlflf- WE'RE NO. 1."
the solution that courlill lhrouah
the ore Ia 125 to 350 parts per

different offices before he could
get the paperwork that verified
his Injury· He complained about
the terrible artificial legs he had
been given that made what was
left of his own legs bleed. The
doctor responded, "So what? I
dldo't tell you to go to war."
The Kfl!mlln refuses to divulge
tile number of men who served
the Sovle.t army during the
_~ar Afghan conflict. Our

10

lnte llgence sources estimate 1t
at about 1 million. Some 15,000
were killed and another 25,000
wounded.
Despite such losses and the
suffering that continues to
plague the vets, they get little
support from older veterans who
served In World War II. That
experience mirrors what Amerl·
can vets found when they faced
th~lr older counterparts who
remembered war as a more
noble experience.
One veteran of what the Soviets
call "the great patriotic war
-a gainst German fascism," recently wrote to a Soviet newspaper. He complained about
special privileges the vets of the
Afghan conflict were getllnl- He
called them "Afghantsl," and
questioned wby they deserved
priority for scarce housing, or
the right to free pllbllc transpor·
tatlon or the right to go to the
front of food lines.
Those were the same benefits
that the World War II veterans
enjoyed In the Soviet Union a
generation earlier. But the old
soldier and otbers like him fall to
see the similarity between the
unpopular pollee action In Afgh·
' anlstan and the glories of a real
war.

~
·~

•
,
:

~

MAKING HIS MOVE- Southern's John Hoback (left) makes
his move as Kyger Creek's Phil Bradbury lrlelllo bait hla progret11
In the fourth quarter of Tuesday nl&amp;ht's SVAC came In Cheshire.
The Tornadoes picked up lhelr second learue victory with a 76-44
decision. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Hannan Trace beats
Symmes Valley 7.4-53
'

The game was a closely fought
affair until Symmes Valley center Carl Robinson twisted hls
knee at the end of the first
quarter, which gave the host
Hannan Trace squad the oppor·
tunity it needed toposta 74-53 win
Tuesday night.
Junior guard Eric Lloyd. who
led Trace's attack with a gamehigh 27 points. got plenty of
offensive help from center Craig
Rankin (18 points, four assists)
and forward Todd Boothe 110
points, seven rebounds) .
Robinson, who may be out for
the rest of the season, and Shawn
Mootz were Valley's lop marksmen, scoring 11 points each.
Teammate and point guard Paul
Hayes chipped In with 10.
In the reserve game, the
Wildcats won · 43-23. Trace's
Brian Unroe led all cagers with
22 points. Andy Lester and Eric
Wall led Valley with six each.
On Friday night, Hannan
. Trace will host Eastern, while
Symmes Valley will travel north
to take on North 'Gallla.

$35

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Score by quarters
Symmes Valley .... 14 13 8 18-53
Hannan Trace ..... 19 18 18 19-74
HANNAN TRACE (74) Lloyd 1i-0-5-27; Rankin 5-0-8-18;
Boothe 3-0-4-10; Cornell 3-0-2-8;
Bevan 1-0-0-2; Black 1-0-1-3;
Klinger 0-0-2-2; M. Sanders 1-0-02; Woods 0-0-2-2. TOTALS 25-0-24-14
From the floor - 25-51i (43.1
pet.)
From the line - 24-37 (64.9
pet.)
.
Rebounds - 32 (BoQthe and
Cornell, 7 each)
Assists- 16 (Bevan 5)
Steals- 12 (Strow 3)
Turnover• - 12
SYMMES VALLEY (53) Robinson 4-0-3-11; Mootz 1-3-0-ll;
Hayes 2-2-0-10; Nicholas 3-0-2-8;
Renfroe 2-0-0-4; Pierce 0-1-0-3;
Darren 1-0.0,2; Justice 1-0-0-2;
Wall 0-0-2-2.1'0TALS -14-41-1·53
From the field - 20-48 (41.7
pet.)
At the line - 7-12 (58.3 pet. I
Rebounds - 29
Turnovers - 21

SWHS claims 71-64
win over Oak Hill

•

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with their lenghty reaches. but
after three NG led 58-54.
In that third round, NG went
ahead 56-50, It bluest lead, but In
the fourth Eastern started to turn
things around. EHS picked up the
temp with a trap press and a lot of
pressure out front and around the
perimeter.
As a result NG forced a couple
of shots and showed signs of
tiring. From the 6: 49 mark to the
3:24 mark EHS outscored NG 5-2
to take a 63-60 lead. Two Savoy
drives, some Fitch Free throws,
and a Frost tip In were crucial In
the comeback bid.
Both clubs went to more
deliberate attacks. With 1: 081e!t
EHS led 65-62, when Frost hit
both ends of a bonus to make the
score 67-62. Stout quickly drove
downcourt and hit a threepointer for a 67-65 score with 56
seconds left.
On an lnbounds play on the
sideline, Savoy .hit Frost In the
back door for a 69-65 score, then
after a NG travel Savoy hit Fitch
on a hall Mary where he scored
on a lay-up untouched, 71-65.
NG muffed a couple scoring
opportunities In the waning se-

conds but didn 't give up.
On Fitch's score NG hit the
backboard for a technical foul,
but EHS missed, but on the next
lnbounds play Frost was fouled
and hit yet another bonus for a
73-65 score.
Stout hit a desperation three
pointer with six seconds left, but
time ran out as EHS won 73-68.
EHS hit 5-7 at the three point
stripe (70 percent), was 27 of 56
from the floor for 49 percent, and
14 of 17 for 82 percent at the line,
which was the difference in the
game.
NG hit 5 of 13, 26-63 for 41
percent, and 1 of 2 respectively.
NG won the batUeoftheboards
34-231ed by Hammel's 11 , Stout's
9, and Farley's 7. Fitch and Frost
each had 6, and Savoy 5 for
Eastern.
EHS head 8 steals, ll assists
led by Fitch's 4, and 9 fouls . NG
had 7 steals, 6 assists, and 17
fouls.
NG won the reserve game 45-34
led by Brad FuHer with 12, Casey
Staton and Charle~ Peck with 11 ·
each, and Rob Canaday 9. Matt
Flnlaw was top scorer with 14 for
EHS, while Chad Savoy had 6,
Wes Holter 6, and Jason Hager 5.
Eastern plays at Hannan
Trace Friday.
Score by quarters
Eastern ......... l4 21 19 19-73
N. Gallia .. ..... 13 25 20 10-68
EASTERN (73) - Caldwell
0-1-0-3, Fitch 5-0-14, Savoy 8-3-328, Frost 3-0-4-10, Jeff Durst
5-1-3-12, Mike Wheeler 2-0-4.
TOTALS 27-5-U-13 '
NORTH GALLIA - Tackett
4-0-8, Stout4-5-0-23, Farley 5-0-10,
D. Smith 2-0-4, S. Smith 2-0-4, ·
Hammel 9-1-19. TOTALS 241-5·1·

In to take passes from swamped ney 3-0-1-7; Sipple 2-0-2-6; Polcyn
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
balthandlers, forcing the player 2-0-0-4; Swisher 0-0-3-3; BradOVP staff Writer
with
the ball ~ho was lo9klng to bury 1-0-0-2; Kingery 1-li-0-2;
Southern's tough defense and
pass
to hold It longer than Slone 0-0-1-1. TOTALS- 15-0-14Kyger Creek's offensive mls·
allowed
or setting up opportuni- 44
takes spelled win No. 2 for the
ties
for
steals
by the Tornadoes.
Fleld-~~;olli pet. - 15-53 (28.3
Tornadoes, who notched a 76-44
victory over the Bobcats Tues- At one point In the third quarter, pet. I
68
a frustrated Markham barked,
Foul-line pet. - 14-25 (56 pet.)
day night at Cheshire.
Rebounds - 37 (Sipple 8)
"Our plan was to put pressure "Are we gonna stand there and
Asslsta- 9 (Bradbury 3!
on them and run the ball up the watch?" after one of these
The Daily Sentinel
Sleals- 10 (Bradbury 3)
floor. but we dldn' t do that to turnovers.
A somewhat happier Caldwell
Turnovers - 30
start off," said Southern mentor
(USPS 141-HI)
said "Though we didn't do too
A DlviiMD ol Maltlmedla. Inc.
Howle Caldwell.
In fact, Southern had to be well with our shooting from the
Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, lll Court St., Po·
jump-started Into . its game, .as field (see stats), It's not every
meroy, Ohlu, by the Ohio ¥alley Pub·
3:21 had licked off the clock day that everybody scores,"
lishlng Company/Multimedia, Inc..
before Tornado guard Chad pointing out that each of his
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 9!12-21:&gt;6. second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Taylor connected on a layup to · varsity players got In the game
Ohio.
cut Kyger's lead to 5-2. The and scored at least one basket.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UPI)
In the preceding reserve game,
Bobcats would hold the lead for
Member: United Press Internatloi.at.
· The state Department of Natural
Inland Daily Press Assoclat ion and the
another 1: 45, after which the the Tornadoes won 47-17. Jamie Resources said Tuesday Its preliOhio Newspa_per Association. National
secood of two consecutive base- Proffitt and Jeremy Roush led minary figures show Ohio hunAdvertising Representative. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
line jumpers by junior guard the Whirlwinds with eight points ters killed 25,656 deer Monday,
New York, New York 10017.
Andy Baer, who tied teammate each, while J . Barrick led the opening day of the state's six-day
Roy Lee Bailey. and KC forward Bobcats with six.
POSTMASTER: Send addrf5S changes
On Friday's agenda, Southern deer gun season.
to The Dally Sentinel, U1 Court St.,
Bryan Hall for marksmanship
The department's Division of
Pomeray, Ohio 457fi9.
will
host
Oak
Hill,
while
Kyger
honors with 12 pointS, put Racine
Wildlife Identified the counties In
ahead 6-5. The Bobcats never Creek will · entertain whlch the most deer were offiSUBSCILIPTION IIATES
lliy Carrlfll" or Molior Route
,
Southwestern.
regained the lead after that.
cially checked and tagged as
One Week .......................... .........11.40
Score
by
quarters
Hall, a 5-10 freshman; cut the
One Month ......... , ......... .............. $6.10
Guernsey (1,094) Musklngum
One Year ............. .. .................. $72.80
aobcats' deficit to single digits Southern ....... ..... 18 23 22 13,-76 (1,0041, Coshocton (921), TuscarKyger
Creek
.......
10
11
8
15-44
SINGLE COPY
with 10 seconds left In the first
PILICE
SOUTHERN (16) - Baer 5-0-2- awas (881) and Harrison (836).
quarter when he connected on a
Dally .. .. ,...... ·........................ 25 Cents
layup with Bailey In his face. 12; Bailey 4-0-4-12; Grindstaff
Subscribers not desiring to pay the carThat was typical of the resist- 4-0-1-9; Maynard 4-0-1-9; Kincaid
rier may remit In advance direct to
ance he faced throughout, but 3-0-1-7; Rose 2-0-2-6; Codner
Th~ Dally sent lnel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts·. Credit wDJ be given carrier each
Hall accepted the challenge and 2-0-1-5; Murphy 1-0-2-4; Shuler
week.
never backed away from the 2-0-0-4; Taylor 2-0-0-4; Burgess
No subscriptions by mail permitted In
newly warmed-up Tornado 1-0-0-2; Hoback 1-0-0-2. TOTALS
areas where home carrier service is
- 31-&amp;-14-76
·defense.
available.
Fleld-goal pet. - 31-61 (50.8
"Hall did a helluva job, and
111 Second St., Po-roy
Mail Subocrtptlons
whal he did out there tonight pet .)
Inside Melp County
Foul-line
pet.14-25
(56
pet.)
YOUI INDEPENDENT
should be an Inspiration to the
13 WeekS .. .•..... ;....•....•..•........ ... $19.24
26 Weeks .................................. $37.96
Three-point pet. - 0-8
rest of the team," said Kyger
AGENTS
SEIV_,.G
52 Weeks ............................•..... $74.36
Rebounds38
(Rose
6)
Creek head coach Larry
Out51de Melp County
Steals - 17 (Codner 4)
13 Weeks •............... .................• $20.80
Markham.
·MEIGS COUNTY
26 Weeks •...... .. .....•................... $10.30
Turnovers - 13
A layup scored off an offensive
52 Weeks ... .. .. .............. ..... ........ $75.40
SIN(E
1868
KYGER CREEK (44)- Hall .
rebound from KC guard Sean
Denney with 6: 55 left In the 5-0-2-12; Birchfield 1-0-5-7; Densecond quarter marked the last
time the Galllans would be
behind by less than 10 points.
From that point on, the Torna·
does survived the madhouse
atmosphere under both boards
created by the hosts' aggressiveness with a magnet-like sense for
the ball and superior quickness
that helped them run the fastbreak offense that netted them
layup after layup.
·~(hey were trapping the ball,
and we don't handle the pressure
well- yet, " 'Markham said of his
•ENGINE BLOCK • DIESEL ENGINE
troops, who committed 30 turnov240 THIRD AVENUE
ers, some of which were travel• KINGPIN
•CYUNDER HEAD •CRANKSHAFT
Ing calls, but some others were
GAIIIPOUS, OHIO
•
the result of players not coming

Hunters in Ohio
kill 25,656 deer

•

SMALL

WANT ADS
fWX
A811 PliCtl

J

;

''

'

key jumper to end the frame.
the night.
,
In the second frame North
Hammel again gave NG some
Ga!Ha began to take the upper momentum In the second canto
hand and domllated the next when he blocked a shot and
18-19 ntlnutes of the game, at grabbed the rebound, sparking a
drive by Stout that gave NG a
least by a narrow margin.
Hammel tOSIIed the boards In 36-3llead. Farley had a three ~tty
the first half (7) and also hit three goals In that stretch to compound
straight buckets to give NG a Eastern's frustrations.
On the other end of the court,
lead they would bOld until a tie In
the third frame. Hammel hit two however, EHS showed Its deterfollow-up jumpers off the boards mlnation when Mike Frost
and also hit a 16-footer from blocked a shot, which was
behind the foul line.
recovered and sent to Savoy
Stout illso made his presence onthe outlet, where he canned a
known throughout · the game, three pointer to p 11n EHS close at
breaking the EHS press with his . 38-35 at the half.
fine ball handling and taking
North Gall Ia came outln a 1-3·1
charge of the NG offense, where zone In the third frame, but EHS
quickly broke that up and tied. at
he was a key factor.
EHS went zone early, then 38. After a NG tlme out, the
switched to man-to-man and Eagles took control and went
alternated throughout the back up 42-38.
contest.
Tackett aided that NG comeOne key factor In the game was back attack with good ballhanthe foul situation, where NG put dllng and eight second-half
Itself In early trouble with a little points. while Savoy led the EHS
over anxiousness. Shane Smith charges.
Jea Durst drilled a threewas the most unfortunate with
lady luck as he picked uphls third pointer to pull EHS back Into the
foul with 4:20 left In the second hunt, but Stout shot that down
quarter. Later Smith picked up when he countered with a three
his fourth with 7:22 left In the pointer of his own. Hammel and
third round, limiting his play for Frost again each blocked a shot

Galli~

Southern's defense hammers
KCHS in 76-44loop verdict

A CHRISTMAS GIFT ·
.• FROM
,
CHAPMAN SHOES
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Today in history

Thit Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 29, 1989

'

A pair ,of 19-polnt performances by frontmen John Ehman
and Chris Metzger pushed
Southwestern to a 71-64 victory
over visiting ·oak Hill Tuesday
night.
The Highlanders' swarming
defense took lis toll on the Oaks
early, as the Oaks could only
manage nine poinls In the first
frame, while the hosts got
additional scoring help from
senior guard Joe Hammond, who .
pumped In 15 points and forced
the Oaks' defense to spread Itself
thin to stop him as well as John
Ehman and Metzger.
Junior forward Shane Maynard sank a ganje-hlgh five
three-pqlnters en route to a
game-high 21 points tor the Oaks.
In the reserve game, the Hill
won 54-41. R. Morgan led the
guests with 11 points. while
Southwestern's Aaron McCarty
led all scorers with 19.
On Friday's schedule, Southwestern will plaf at Kyger Creek,
while Oak Hill travels to Racine
to face Southern.
Score by quarters
Oak Hill ............. 9 l7 21 17-64
Southwestern.; ... 12 27 16 16-71
SOUTIIWESTERN (71)
John Ehman 3-4-1-19; Metzger
9-0-l-19; Hammond 5-1-2-15; Beyant 2-0-2-6; Jeue Ehman 3-0-0-6;

,.

B. Potter 3-0-0-6. TOTALS
25-1-6-71
Fleld-goal pet.- 30-77 (39pet.)
Foul-line pet.- 6-16 (37.5pet.)
Rebouncla - 27 (Metzger 12)
Assists- 11 (Jesse Ehman 4)
Sleal'- 12 (Hammond 6)
Tumovers-6
OAK HILL (64) - Maynard
2-5-2-21; · Smith 7-0-0-14; Davis
3-1-1-10; Simpson 3-0-1-7; Haines
2-0-2-6; Jones 2-0-0-4; A. Potter
1-0-0-2. TOTALS - 28 I I 84
Foul-line pet.- 6-11 (54.5 pet.)
ReboUDda - 31

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.111111 •

�•

November 29. 1H8

Kentucky edges
ou quintel, 76·73

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WIIHim ,lrwell In, lr~d.llle M
w-.'0111'1• 81. N•rfl Oak• Kt . SJ
"'"~ - -Pla""Uietl, wt...-rar•t• H
Wls. -"Whlf.ewater 81. Manu 1J
IIMylar Ill,

~W

Tnu St. IH

llaanthHJhmto• H. DaliiM 11
Oklalllama Nl . t-1, No,. Te-n•' M
Texas Ill. Teu~a--Arii•Jian II
Tnu Tech IS, Mllhfftlkon St. i2
WNI
•11ennt~•
Jn. S1ullllu11St. i t

*·

Brip.un Y41111111K 81. Weber !M . II

Gelera" 5L llil, N. Calon. . . ll

neM•Rrllif7, Llnw. U .. a71
Nl"\'d~••11. s ..... Clan II
New 11~11.'9 Itt. N.M. -~~~~--II

NOI ..... III• • l_.. • •

:Kyger Creek girls romp
ll

The Kyger Creek Bobcats
opened up a 31·6 halftime advan·
tage over the Southern Tornadoettes at Racine Monday even·
lngenroutetoa 5943SVACwln In
girls' high School basketball
action, The game was the league
opener for both schools.
Southern drops to 0-2 overall,
while Kyger Creek Is 1'1.
Southern hit just 7 of 28 from
the foul line, while KC didn't fair
much better at 7·20.
Bobble Jean Shaver led the KC
~ attack with 13 points, while Lisa
Swisher had 12, and Yon Ragland
and Beth Bradbury had 11
apiece.
Junie Beegle of Southern provided most of the SHS offense
with a game-high 21 points.
Wendy Wolfe and 8 and Tonya
·Ingles had 7.
: Score by quarters:
•Kyger Creek ...... 17 14 21 7-59
Soulhern .............. 6 10 13 14--43
Box Score:
SOUTHERN
Michelle
McDa nlel 0-0-0, Mica Jones
1-1-3, Sarah Duhl 1-2-4,

TVC standings
(All Gamea)
TEAM
WLPOP
Miller ..................... 1 ,o 90 78
Vinton County .........1 0 56 53
Belpre .......... :......... l 0 74 rl
Alexander ..............1 0 75 11
Trlmble .................. o 0 0 0
Wellston ................. 0 0 0 0
Fed-Hocktng ........... o 1 7l 12
Meigs ..................... 0 1 48 Sl
Nels-York ...............O 1 42 77
• TuesclaJ"'• realllta:
Belpre 74 Marietta 57
Alexander 15 Hunttnston Roas61

t

Salem Fire Chief Dick Lambert commends his department
for outstanding efforts which saved the mobile home of the .
Walter llirrett famlly on Nov.l6. Ftrwmea-re called to the
hom. wlllcb t.located on Route 325abellt12: 115 p.m. thatday,as
wu reported In the Nov. 17 Dally Sentinel.
It t. not unusual for a fire to destroy a mobile home within 15 to
20 minutes, Lambert says, often before flref!shters ean even
arrive.
As seven Salem Township firemen arrived at tile Barrett
home juat 11 minutes after recelvln&amp; the call for llelp. amoke
wu alreadY sllowlq around the roof, Lambert reports.
Fortunately however, the firemen maftaced .to save the
Barrell trailer. Smoke and water damages were estimated at
$l,(J()O, Chief Lambert says.

..

SOUTHERN JtESEBVES - Tile Soulbera
reserves wUI be looking forward to a eiiOII~e...a
this year under Coacb Ronnie QuWea. Plcture41
· are team members, 1-r, Jeremy llelllllt, Jeall•a

CoDer, 8cett Lilli, llllellMl

a-, Clull8n.e

... JErk Slln" llllall-1.... Pnllltt, ......
Sl•&amp;letell, Mlcllllll a til, "'•• arete, JUJr
Davia, and Coull . _ qdi8L
•

.

j

'

..' .

',..
I
•
,.
•

••

..

'

\

Trlcla Wolfe 0-0-0, Junle Beegle 9-3-21, Wendy Wolfe
4-0- 8, Hea t her McPhail
0-0-0, Jane Ann Williams
0-2-2, Tanya Ingles 3-1-7,
Michelle Lyons 0-0-0. Angle
Swiger o-o-o, Jennifer Cross
OT"0-0. TOTAU118-7--4t.
KYGEit CUEK - Bobble
Jean Shaver 6-1-13, Joy Skid·
more 1-0-2, Yon Ragland
4-3-11, Beth Bradbury
5-1-ll,Lisa Swisher 6-0-12.
Sally Saunders 0-0-0, Luciana
Scott · 2-0-4, Jenny Gardner
0-0-0, CaraLee Martin
0-2-2,Amy Glndlesberger
1-0-2, Angle Bush 0-1-1.
TOTALS ZC-7-st.

positive thing. We got our butts
kicked, but not through lack of
effort. It was more through lack
of performance. We anticipated
a tough game, but not getting
beaten this bad."
The Bears sank a total of 31 of
82 attempts In shooting for 37.8
percent, while the Redmen connected 39 times on 76 trlesfor51.3
percent. Rio Grande was successful on 17 of Its 24 free throw
attempts for 70.8 percent.
·
Shawnee went to the line 18
times and hit on 11 for 61.1
percent. The ' Redmf!n outre·
bounded the visitors 37·33 and
ended up with 19 turnovers
compared to Sbawn·ee•s 12. Craig
Allemeler was the Bears' top
rebounder with seven.
The Bears (0·3) host Walsh on
Saturday. Rio Grande, now 4·1,
travels to Urbana on Tuesday,
Dec. 5, for Its first Mld,Ohlo
Conference encounter of the
season.
Box score: '
RIO GICANDE (101) - Gary
Harrison, 6-1·5·19; MarkErs~.
0-1·2·5; Brad. Schubert. H·0-18;
John Lambcke, 3·0-6; Tony Ew·
lng, 16-7-39; Jeff Brown, 2·1·2-9;
Troy Donaldson, 2-1·5. TOTALS

.NOW lltmNG

1 LADIES

I LADIES'

HARDIAGS .......... 20 Yo OFF
' .

'

.

NINIENDO
SYnEMS
AIID

CAMCOIDEIS

lENTILS

·.~ . :

______ _ _____,

.., .__

__..

·--Area deaths---

I LADIES'

• Clyde C1'088

.

I LADI£S'

.

1
I

. . . ."

:
Clyde El·lhu Cross, 74, of
' Columbus, fonnerly of Racine,
. died Sunday at Mount Carmel
• .:, East'HospUalln Columbus.
He
a retired elilfneerlng
technician for the 01110 Depart·
meat or Tr11J18110rtatloq, Loca":
.: tlon and Deai&amp;Jt Department
where heWOI'ked for20 years. He
also llad taught school In Ru ·
tland, Kilbourne and Sunbllry
Schools .
•
A graduate of . Ohio State
University, be was a member of
• the Knlchls of Pythlas Lodgt&gt; In
Suabucy, tile Falrmo1"! Presby·
; terlan Ch11re11 1.11 Columllus, and
. ~cine Grante 2&amp;06.
·~ ,., He was a aattv•ofRaclne and
• wai the - of the la\e Alvin
.,Beltton. Cross and Blanche Par·

1.

. ., . ..

I

l

iii

I

I

~

"

.I

I

I
I

·-------------------·----'
290 North S.CDnd, Middleport. Ohio .

rettMr.Cross.
Cross Is survived by his

i

11 LEATHER I~OT~ •••• 25°/o-50°/o OFF. II

SHAWNEE STATE (Ill- Jay
Jones, 1·3·0-11; Mike Dietz, 3·2·8;
Joe Smith, 8-1-1-22; Brian Willi·
ams, 6·2·14; Craig Allemeler,
2-0-4; Alan Alley, 3·2-2,14; Craig
GUllland, 0:3·3; Darren King,

tUu four ooUs Tuesday

Four calla for uslstance were answered Tuesday by units of
the Melp County ~ergency Medical Services. ,
Pomeroy. was ealled at 12: Of a.m. to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Hazel Roaers, atld at 2:17 ,a.m. to the
MlcldleiiOrl Pollee Dtpartmeat for DIVI• Persoaa. Bot1l were
triiii8POI'IIId to Veter8U Memorial Hospital
··
At 12:07 ll-111-. Syracuie was ·catleci to Mile HII Road for
Kennetll Klier to Veterans M~ortal H011pltal.
Pometoy at 1:31 p.m. transported Edna Leach ftom 'Wblte
·Oak ftoad to VeteraJII Memorial ..;.....;;.
Hospital. ,

I

I
I DRESS BLOUSES•••••••••••••••••• 20°/o OFF I

3~7-li-101.

~

1DRESS PANTS .................... 20°/o OFF 1

wu

..

wife, Selma, a daughter and
son·ln·lllw, Lynn and John Nl·
chols, West Lake; a son and
dau&amp;hter·ln·law, Raymoad and
Jemllfer Cross, Hilliard, five
gr.andchlldren, and two llrothen,
Gtfille 111 . .Ft, Waltoll •acll,
Fla., and Earl of 1\aclne.
Friends may can at the Wood·
yard Chapel, 2300 East' Living,
ston Ave., Columbus, 2 to4 and 7
to 9 p.m. today (Wednesday).
Funeral servi~ will be held at
1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Letart
Falla c.metery Chapel and bur·
lal will take place there. Memor·
tal Sl!rvicw will be held at the
Falnnore Presbyterian Church,
360 S. James Road, Columblls,
Friday, at 7&lt;30 p.m. with Pastor
Evan Wall officiating .

Northern Ohio to get
more .snow this week
....

'•

PROMISE.

II)' Ualleil P,.. J•tenatloalll
occupied much or the continental
Much of IIOI'thern Ohio Is United States, with major cen·
. , gettlnl ~ batch or snow ters over Idaho, Missouri and
1 with ttte. medt lltrlll weather
Olllalloma.
~
'
'.,~ . monthtiiDeeliilberjust.acouple ., Allleakcolllfrontwasoverthe
. · ... ~ days aVI#,y _. ·
, Hs111!h Great Lakes. Low pres·
·; • The NatiOIIAI Weather Service 'sure 'was · over Lake WlnniJM!i
t ' ·~ ~aid WedMSday a ·fast 1110ving with a warm front Into the
"
' storm system will continue to Dakotas and a cold front just
bring cold air over Ohio with north of the border.
occasional snow flurries over at
By Thursday morning, the low
• least northern parts of the state pressure will be just northeast of
· for the a.xt couple of days. ·
GeoJ'I:tan Bay with tht c;old front
, · As much aa'Unches toll Inches acr11111lakel Ontarlp and Erie to
1
of snow coul4 aCClllllul&amp;te In the NorllterJ! .llllllots. Thll fr011t will
.. extrellle 11i1J111Nat.
proballlf'l stall Its soatllwant
•· .· : ' On ....l.l~!il'lt a.... MJther ~ 'C!?tral Ollie IJy
~· maP• : ~·· Iillll pn~~~aure ~·
..,.. ,
·
~
.· .
. ""'·
,

:, c---·--~-~
L"..l. School.... - h *hot
~ aueu
--eZ ~ ~

There il a fuel with :W,ich Amarica can live and ~ comlortably

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI) p.m ..
- An East Cleveland Shaw High · Authorities said a group of
School basketball coach was boys was gathered near ihe bus
hospitalized In satisfactory con· when Ollf! boY pulled out a gun
dillon Wednesday after being and betan ihootlng. A buUet
shot In the leg following a penetrated the metal llde of the
basketball game)Tuesday night. bus and hit Allen.
youth ln~olved
Youngstown pollee said Robert
also Involved
Allen. 40, ·Who coaches the
betw.en
11111schoofa )unlllr val'illty team, wu
two
lcbOOis
11bot In tile rtpt ·tllfllt willie In a
bus rljfq awily from Younc· durlllellle ......
atown South High School at 9:45 . EarUer Ill the evening, Shaw's
·
varsity team defeated Young·
Drug sweep continues
stown sOuth: '19-63, and Allen's
Shaw Junior varsity team defeated South, 78-36.
SPRINGF~LD, Ohio (UPI)A apokeawoma11 woman · at
Arrests of drug trafrlcklng sus·
pects continued Wednesday In a Southside Medical Center · In
sweep that· followed an under· Youngstown aald early Wednes·
Ill satisfactory
dB¥ Allen
cover narc:otlc•u:=~~:;;
.lltl otlle!'
~relala. .

that won1 darken our waters or spoil our earth.
Thars always been the promise o1 natural gas.
There are th.ousands of people linding new ways to meet
your energy needs, and keep our air purer and our forests greener.

..

Thil fuel and there people willllecomt more imponant
day by day.

DING THIS AD
IN ON SUNDAY
AND
ALL MOYIE

EMS

r~wmiiDS;EciAUl
i .TH~SIAY, PIIDAY sam:'' 1

That's always been the promise ol Columbia Gas.

PEOPLES CHOICE :VIDEO

Sherlft's o.p&amp;rtrnent.
Aceordlngto Information frnm Sllerltf .lames M, Sou11by, Bnl
MaYnard, of Syracu•, repol'llld 1\lollllay that ·a dualn AW llad ·
been atolen from ht.eara.-t !lyr&amp;!!U•· Value ot th• saw was
listed u • · The exact date vf tile tlleft " Ulllalown .
Dould Randolph, Route 1, l'tHdlviUe&amp;. r~ted that
sometime Friday, someone 'ntered 1111 ralaeJICe and stole a
10111 riiiJwilll a blur stat •J)plllftandasllveneltbucklewtth
pink and blue atone&amp;.
'
Alto, th~rdlpartmentl.s ln~IIPUat• COMPlwl•t from 1\(ark
Gro.aaleli.Je,' Of JoJ)J)&amp; Road, me ,Ill Ole JtHdaville arR, tllat
someUnte Satllll2af·nl&amp;ht or •arty ~ay· JIIOfll!nt,.aomtolle'~ .
velllrile ra11 a.~r Ids mallbox.~&lt;t· ,
.
· ·
'
'

Because the lime has come for all ol us to work together
to reclaim our environment.
To ensure its future so that we can pass on to the next generation
the most valuable things we have.

Sl 00

The trees. And the earth. And the waters. And the air.

•••

a Kilcer.

to remove

the bullet,
tt a nurse at the
holpllal, wu expeeted.

ac:c:onl:ill

Lieena• ileued
HMI 511111
II

•

I.. ' ..

,

... . t

.

: '

A marrtaee license has been
llaued In Melp Probate Cout to
Eqar Harry Florian, $7, Pomeroy, aft4 Naree Andrew Hale, 42,
~lllr.
I

••

'

.•

Leon C. Pierce, trackman at
the Meigs No. 31 mine, has been
recognized for 15 years of service
at Southern Oho Coal Company's
Meigs Division this month. He
and his wife, Barbara and
daughter, Samantha, resld.e at
Langsville.

I

'

WELCOMES GUE818- Elubelb Smtlll, RN,

rl,lll&amp;, , head of tbe V eleraaa Memorial Home
Jleallll NunlngService, ereeta 8uall Oliver, 01e
of tile peals atteadlne Tlleaday's open bo- lleld

Two tMtta.have been reported recently to the Melp Coullty

. :r

&amp;

Trackman reoognized

'

I

Ewing's 39-point perfonn~ee
spurs 101,-81 Redmen win
Posting a career high of 39
points, Tony Ewing led the Rio
Grande Redmen to a 101·81 romp
over visiting Shawnee State
Tuesday, knotting the series
record at 2·2 and providing the
Rio men with their fifth 100-plus
points game of the season.
Ewing scored 21 points In the
first half to gave Rio Grande a
healthy margin of victory enter·
lng the second period.
''That was a big win for us, and
the big thing was that we got the
ball to Ewing in areas where It
would count," Redmen mentor
John La.whorn remarked. A 6-4
senior, Ewing connected 16 times
on 23 attempts (69.5 percent) and
netted seven of nine foul shots
(77.7 percent), in addition to six
rebounds and an assist.
Lawhorn noted the performan·
ces of two of his other starters,
Jeff Brown and Gary Harrison.
Brown, a flrst·year player, was
paired off with Shawnee veteran
Brian Williams, the Bears' top
scorer, while Harrison sparked
the defense.
"Brown played really well
against a tremendous player like
Williams. It was 'freshman on
senior and he did a terrific job,"
Lawhorn said. "Gary got the ball
In where we needed it."
Brown, who scored nine points,
hit the boards eight times and
offered two assists. Harrison,
rapidly establishing himself as ·
the assists leader, recorded 11
and had four rebounds In addition
to gaining 19 points. Brad Schu·
bert had 18 markers, Including
four of eight tries on 3·polnt
shots.
Jim Arnzen's hard-working
Shawnee club was successful In
the opening· minutes of the game
In leading or trailing the Redmen
by a slim margin, but was unable
to contain the Redmen offense.
John Lambcke's field goal at
10: 21 put the hosts a head by five
(22·17), but Rio Grande didn't
begin pulling away until 2: 52
when Ewing's basket put the
team 10 points ahead (;!5-25) .
Although plagued by cold
shoollng and rebounding problems, Shawnee remained In a
threatening posture until a series
of goals by Ewing, Harrison,
Lambcke and Schubert gave Rio
Grande a 63·43 advantage at
12; 23 In the second period.
Shawnee guard Joe Smith, who
scored 22 points, and forwards
Wllllams and Alan Alley, who
each had 14, kept the offense
cooking but were unable to dent
Rio Grande's double-figure lead.
Schubert's two points with 50
seconds remaining sent the home
. score Into triple figures.
"There's always something
p6slllve In a situation like this, "
Arnzen said. "Rio Grande was
ahead by 26 and our team could
have given up. But they didn't,.
they played hard and that's a

CouiiCII to meet
The Racine VIllage Council
will meet In special session
tonl&amp;ht (Wednesday) at 6 p.m . In
the council chambers .
Letar1 Tr,.tees
Tile Letart township trustees
will meet Monday at 6 p.m. at the
office building.
Eulern meeting
All parents and students of the
Eastern Local School Dis trlct
are Invited to serve on the
committee for the kindergarten
through grade 12 grading poUcy
and honor roU attainment.
The first meeting of this
commlltee will be held Dec. 6 at 7
p.m . In the high school cafeteria.

Deputies probe theft complaints

I

~«1'2,~'11

N. C:ot~eer II, "-._plkn II
New &amp; . . . . 111.
ft
PIIU.. Pll.-maq

· Mlr....•laee Ill Dnwr, •l&amp;lll

New

M•..... \'Uk- H, IAMI G.l'll 11

,.

Aat-'•· aiJW

a.cke)'t- 18. 01"'*11111Falki31
•t"keye CNI lt. Marprt'tla
CeaWrvillfo :n, llam•ea lt

1oa. J,. at. • .,., CeiL a
LRJ·8r_..,.. 'JI, c...... 11
Lewtll a , UIIM•AM_.. M

, Dileo• 17, New

o.-.... .. ....

Ho•--. •lcflt

DaU.s ~ Su

se.

Gl..-rofil. 111. lito *'air
11
Grew CMy &lt;leL 71. Mt. U•••-48
Bar\tWIIIIItt, N'"" llaM. .Ire 7t

a.,.... Ill._) II, ll. Dhl. Cohmbla 41
. . . ......_ A. Otlwabla 11

Dft,...u......_,t:•p.m.
New l'erk II

'h..-mt!lll

c...-. ...

Ora.do 114, MlamiJII
O.k:a,p Ill. .\~ ......
lh-*MIIt, LA Lakeft IN
su ..-..• ..- 117, Sull* IM

Cle\'t!la~~ •

a..,.....,

Ce.ct~ ..

Eve Ball planned

. Fire chief praises department

C..te . . . .llallll:••·
U•lllt• Pn~~• .. lei' . . . . . .

Year~

The American Lt!lfon In Middleport wlllllave Ill annul New
Year'sli:ve Ball at theanaexoaMIIISt. on Sunday, O.C. 31, from
9 p.m . to 1 a.m. Mullc will M by •rnard CoDDDlly and The
Travelers. Admt.11lon Ill $10 a couple and the public 111nvited to
attend.
·

scores

c..co ... u . ..u.............. ,s

Botii.Oa.al New.lerw,,1:11p.m.

New

eon•

1'vesllat'lti!S . 11
0eftlullt!. w..t.P .. tl

w·e~Q'

Y.t 11, Newee-.--aU

1%
7

S.-'IW ............... ,.......... 7 1 .IN

s s .511

'1¥.

'h1UMQ .. T•I . . prs11
Ta....ae .......,eNII

YdwS,rtapU,EOI ... •IS

P lci ft (' IN\'illoa

LA Clippen .................. -1
Sati'IUWI Htao ........ ........ .. 4
Gol._ &amp;ate ............... .. :S

......... .,.. ...... "

........ 1M., 8e_.IM 11" (M)

ttn

1%
S

u t.akenr. .. ................... s .ass Portluld .... ................. . ll

-

....,. ... ., ........ ,..a
....................
....... ........ ...
.._.vt.n.w.w-•

.... w. ........,

~ ..... ..................... , ... 1

......................... ,. ..au

tt. ~a.- creelM

...._a 11. N o.HIIi II

a.-.a.-c..tlfo, E Uver,..lll

11111-.. ........................ 1 .. ... Detroit ......................... ,8 S .I ll ·Bk:ap ................. ....... 8 t .S'7l

o..~aec~~~

::-s-o-••
...........
,.. .. ..,..
r...w•n. hkUtl
., "......... ,.
..... a
~

r--LocaJ newS briefs----.

LEXINGTON. Ky. (UPI) Regie Hanson cciuected for M
polllll, lncludilt&amp; 15 Ill th• t1rst
balf, to lead K•ntucky to a fS.73
wtn over OhiO UniVersity the
~but of Wildcat Coach Rick
Pltlno.
The Wildcats jumped out to a
.10.0 lead and held a 44·30 margin
at the half.
Ohio cut the lead to two points
early In the Sl!cond' half, bu.t
Kentucky managed· to hold off
the Bobcats, 1·1, and win Its
sea1011 opener.
O.rrlck Miller added lS points
for Kentucky while Dave Jamer·
son paced Ohio with 30 points.

,.,. ............. t ......
o• t •

Meip
announcements

~

at lbe aervice quarten located Ia Melp Medical
CoAiflex, a41jacent to Veterans Memorial Hoapl·
tat. Tolll'll of ibe facility were provided an4 pests

Zwlllcll blcluded the p,ubllc and hospital employees

I

were HI'Wd a variety of II&amp;ID refrellhments. Mrs.
Smllll and Mn. laabelle Couch are the veteran
empJOyeea of the home hellllll nunlac service,
Mrs. Smith havlne bqiiD with lbe department
wben It wu follllded In 11'71 and Mn.. Couch,
secretary, belflmblc Iter dulles there In 1875.
Tuesday's ebservanee wu held In conjunction
with National Home C::are Week, Nov. Z6ec. 2.

I

Pomeroy court news

Divorces sought

• ' ...
1tat wns
1\T

Divorce actiOns have been flied
in Melgs Common Pleas Court by
Wyss, chief economist with Data Harold Dwight McDaniel, PomeSixteen charges of speeding Ga., $43, Illegal turn; William
Resources Inc., a consulting roy, against Janet' Kay McDa·
were settled In the. court of Gilmore. Middleport, $63, driV·
concern
In Lexington, Mass. "We nlel, Albany; and by Martha L.
Pomeroy Mayor Ric.hard Seyler lng under suspensiOn; Jim Ben·
think
that
the third quarter will Ord, Pomeroy, against John H.
Tftsday night. Six were fl~ nett1 Clifton, W. Va., $63, traffic
be
the
t._t
quarter or real Ord, Pomeroy.
and the other 10 forfeited bonds. light violation; Vaughan Mit·
strength.
In
the
fourth quarter
A divorce has been granted to
Fined were Ronald Fry, Mid· chell, Ru Uand, $43, stop sign
we
get
the
payback
for
the
third
both
parties In the action · of
dleport, $45 and costs; Mike violation.
.
quarter
au10
sales."
. Shelly Denise Friend against
Randall Carl, Pomeroy, $63,
Hlndy, Middleport, $50 and
The 2.7 per&lt;:ent annual rate of Jeffrey Don Friend. Shelly
costs; Carl Sue Nottingham, traffic, light violation, and $63,
increase In GNP during the third
Friend was restored by the court
Middleport, $49 and costs; Mar· open container; Julie Wand ling,
quarter
was
slightly
higher
than
to her malden name. Clark.
ion Ohlinger, Letart, W. Va. , $54 Albany, $63, open container; Lisa
the
2.5
percent
rate
In
the
second
and costs, Ronnie Taylor Akron, BB.xter, Pomeroy, $63, failure to
quarter.
$47 and costs, and· Larry Sellers, stop tor an unloading school bus;
To reach the administration's
and David Dye II, Detroit, Mich.,
Portland, $48 and costs.
prediction
of 2.7 percent growth
Forfeiting bonds on the charge $63, traffiC light violatiOn .
In
GNP
for
the entire year, the Dally atock prlcea
· Others fined In the court were
wert' Scott Van Meter, Reeds·
economy
would
have to expand ('AI of II: 38 a.m. )
vile, $46; Robert Eastman, Galli· Timmy Johnson, Independence,
at
a
1.8
percen!
rate during the· Bryce and Mark Smith
pollll, $44; Mark Williams, Pome: Ind., $63 and costs, traffic light
fourth
quarter
,
the
department of Blunt, Ellis .t Loewl
roy, $51; Nlda Unroe, Galllpdlls, violation; Herbert Rose, Akron,
said.
$47; Betty Massie, Middleport, $43 and costs, defective exhaust;
Separately, the department Am Electric Power ......... .. .. 30~
Ronald
Hawley,
Pomeroy,
$63
$47; Todd Lambert, Belpre, $45;
said
that after-tax corporate AT&amp;T ................................. 42%
Barbara Lively, VInton, $45; ···and costs, open container; Matt
Felicia Reitz, Elizabeth, Pa:, Van Vranken, Pomeroy, $375 and . profits declined 7.2 percent dur- Ashland 011 ........................ 35%
Ing the Septelllber-July quarter, Bob Evans .......................... 14\if
$50; Christopher Longgrear, Ma· costs, DWI; and $63 and costs,
the third consecutive quarterly Charming Shoppes .. .. .......... 10%
rletta, $47; Dennis Glaze, Clncln· expired vehicle registration; An·
drop
and the steepest for a City Holding Co ............ ...... 14''!1,
nat!, $46; and Richard Mlller, thony Smith, Pomeroy, $63 and
three-month
period since a 16.5 Federal Mogul. .... ............... 20\if
Ona, W. Va. , $45 who also costs, open container; David
percent
decline
In the first Goodyear T &amp;R ................... 46JI
forfeited a bond of$63 on a charge Persons, Long Bottom, destruc·
8
quarter
of
1981i.
tlon of property, $313 and costs;
of driving under suspension .
Heck's ...... ............. .. .......... .. 4%
A substantial part of the Key Cen turton ....................14\-2
¥atthew Burke, Pomeroy, $63
decrease
was due to losses from
Lands' End .......................... 27
Others forfeiting bonds In the and costs, under suspension, and
Hurricane
H1110,
which
ravaged
Limited Inc . .......................32~
court wj!re George Horak, Porn&amp; .. $63 and costs, expired plates; and
parts
of
the
Carolinas
ln
Multimedia
Inc .................... 92
roy, S43, failure to yleld tbe rllrbt Brian Bealer, Cortland, $63 and
September.
Rax
Restaurants
....... , .... ...... 2}1.
of way; William Stone, Conyers, costs, traffic )lght violation.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................15\4
Shoney's Inc .......................12%
Star Bank .. ........ ............ .... .21Y.
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 4JI8
.
'
Worthington Ind .................. 24%
Continued from page 1

Stocks

:' At least six Ohio deer hunters
wounded on opening day,Monday
around to shoot at a deer, a
By u'nlled Press laternatlonal.
Authorities said at least sill spokesman for the sheriff's depeople were wounded Monday In partment said.
hunting accidents during the
He was In stable condition
opening day of the ll'lln season for Tuesday at Pomerlne Hospital In
deer In Ohio.
MIUersburg, a hospital spokes·
Acclden ts were reported In woman said.
Fairfield, Musklngum, .Holmes,
In Seneca County, Allen
Seneca, Morrow and Adams Streng, 35, of rural Tiffin. was In
counties .
fair condition at . St. VIncent
Thomas Reynolds, 60, of Canal Hospital In Toledo with a ll'llnshot
Winchester was shot . In the wound In the arm. He was shot
sho11lder as he hunted alone In while hunting In a wooded area' of
Fairfield County, said sheriff's the colinty late Monday, author!·
, Lt. Paul Kllbarger. He was In
ties said.
William , Malone, 33, rural
· seriOus condition Tuesday at the
Mount
Gilead, was In stable
prant Medical Center In
condition
at Mansfield General
Colwnbus.
Hospital
Tuesday
after undergo·
Kllbarger said Reynolds aplng
surgery
to
remove
a shotgun
· parently was mistaken for a deer
his·
back,
said a
slug
from
even though he was wearing
orange clothing for safety. Au· spokeswoman for the Morrow
, tborltles would not Identify the County Sheriff's Department.
The spokeswoman said Malone
other hunter Involved In the
was shot as he hunted 'In North
accident.
Michael Adams, 29, Philo, was Bloomfield Township on Mon·
day . The slug entered his neck
sbot In the rl&amp;ht arm In a
Musklngum County ac:cldent, and lodged In his back, she said.
satlsldAibed. riff's d~pltubty Er.nte f&lt;furd·
. .amswas
yaaug re
from a 12·gauge shotgun ,f ired by
Keith SuUivan, 23, Reynolds·
burg, Curtis said.
VeteraDS Memorial
Adams was In satisfactory
Tuesday
admissions - Hazel
· condition In Good Samaritan
Rogers,
Pomeroy;
John Tilly Jr.,
Medical Center In Zanesville,
Columbus;
Magda
Wolfe. Ra·
Curtis said.
cine;
Mary
Page,
Langsville; ,
In Holmes County, Lloyd
Forrest
Teaford,
Portland.
Miller, 38, Holmesville, was shot
Tuesday admissions - Flo
In the left leg when another
hunter swung his 12·gauge gun Strickland.

Hospital ne":s

s&lt;-•ir

r

( ...

... · ·~;~~1•1 OITj, Wuk/
*
:IIJII//JF......,....

r . . (' • ·•

.'

••

, Cb1lttm11 f
'Cilt Clrl•gldut r
·Power Tools f

i

•. •Eiectdc Drills
·••Saws
f
•Sanders
•Grinders

f
f.

PLUS IIUCH MOlE f
f

PICKENS
HARDWARE
t-:~...-~~~

I

.AnENTION
NEW CAR OR
TRUCK BUYERS!!
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
NEW BUICK-PONTIAC OR GMC
TRUCK •••• YOU'LL RECEIVE

100
GALLONS OF

. GAS
"FlEE"
c.n ......... ..,

89C

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

_ , . ......, ..... W!I

Will ·~---·· •••

ADOLPH'S DAllY

l

In Adams County, Clifford
Edwards, 61, Peebles, was shot
In the thigh while hunting, said a
spokesman for the sheriff's department. He was in satisfactory
condition at Adams County Hos·
pltal In West Union.
State wildlife officials said the
number of shooting victims was
not unusual.
"When you look at the number
of hunters In the field and the fact
·we had the same number of
·accidents In 1988, this year's
opening day of deer season was a
typical one for Ohio," said
Clayton Lakes, chief of the state
wildlife division .
"The fact we had sill non·fatal
, Injuries Monday among more
than 375,000 hunters In the field
still reflects that hunting Is a
very safe sport, especially when
you consider the few accidents
which do occur among the many
· people hunting each deer sea·
son," I:.akes said.

FISH SQUARE

••

r.,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

,Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.
992-21U

HO lAst 111111

POIIIIOJ, 01110

•

�Page 6-The Daily Sa ntil'lel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

_,

1

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednelday, November 29, 1989 ~ -

•
I

I

'

..

vaDOI

•

•

.
'

We Reserve The Right To
Li1!1it Quantities

•'•

GENERAL·
STDR.ES

I

•

•t

THE ~~ina/HOME OF EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
..

ll!llll!llll!ll.:;;ll!li~.IILI

t~ru

Sunday ·

..

8 AM-10 PM

,.
•'

298 SECOND ST .

POMEROY, OH .

\

'•

PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., NOV. 26 THRU SAT., DEC. 2

'

.•

FLANNEL SHIRTS

.

• Siza'S, M. L. XI.:

SIZES ZX-3X SUO ·

$

Monday

••

101!111

c

STORE HOURS

..•

......

. .. ---~

_.

.'

__..

r·itll~~--,

1/4

Pork Loin •••• ~••• S1 39

$1' 79
Chuck Roast ••••••••
$1 29

• S\zH S, M, L, XL

,.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS . LB
EA.

FLAVORITE ASSORTED

LS' FLEECE SETS

"''

• Sizes 7-14

.•

IOYS' TUIE SOCKS

Bacon ••••••••••••• !2.~~..

""-

IXll!AR-. '310
LOWI'IICE

flt

---~A'S
IMLIN
REBATE -

a0

5
•1 00

OCWAG&lt;HEFIIL • 1
LOWPIIICE
. ........AC11.10ER'S
MAillHREBATE -

..

S.Aso

v0011

...__.._...._........

. . PI&lt;.

FINALCOST
'

•
• ..

'

VOUfl

Jpr. plr..

•

..

ANotoi,.COIT

lilt.

· . · .. • LAOIES' 8WEATEII KNIT

PK.

.

'100

GRADE A

BOOTIES

Whole Fryers ••••~•• 49

$2SO . ...
.......................
YOUR
FINAL COST

IllS

PI&lt;.

'.

,.~

ONEUGHT

..

50

-_,ol(:lllllfl'l~..... 1..11 -

.,.

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters ...'!•••• 39

25 CT. SncK.()N

CANDOLIER

•1

f£1
$1•
3••
I
,..............................................................
XTRA HEAVY DUTY

• 2 pk. 9 Vott

YoUR
CHOICE

Sausage •••••••••~·.....

FOR

.

.

1 Oreal Tasting Oift Ideas

• Available in blue,
mauve or beiae

ROYAL OAHSK•, 16oz.

4 PIECE

DANISH BUTIER COOKIES
IIEIISIIEY 'SO; g oz.

.

FOIL WRAPPED KISSES
CAIIDYCOATEO, 16oz.

$150

PEANUTS OR BUTTONS

CHOICE.........

i

EA.

.--

·. 11112" DOLL

a-

Sj

•s
350

$1
.•DOLL DRESSES!.........
· 11 112" FASHION

•f

$

'

FASHION •

DOLL
CASE

SATURDAY, DEC. 2
SATURDAY, DEC. 9
SATURDAY, DEC."1.6
SATURDAY, DEC. 23

..

~....................

.. ACCESSORIES ..
, ' II
................
.
.
.

ZACHARY- ASSORTED
CHOCOLATES
or GOO GOO• CLUSTER

f

75

•'

:i•

•••

.,.

SANTA'S
-PRICE!............

9
11
Cauliflower •••• :E:~ •••
FLAVORITE .
.
.
$
69
2°/o .Milk ••••••••~~.... 1

,,

;,:,

••

..•

d

••

"'
.,

WAGON OF BLOCKS

I
f
I'

D

..·:'
"

75.

$

........

THs

'

!-1

.,'

.•.

You'll Find Thesi Plus
· Many More Savings!

I

•
•
'""·

•

FLAVORI!E

..;

0
•

U'rtodc-

Holldll' Prlcoc1

•3

HOUDAY FOOD BASKET .

·-~~m~.
IOI'ooond-

•4

•
I

STORE HOURS

· 9 AM-9 PM f
· Monday thru 1·
,
Saturday ·
•.

.

..

•

GENERAL·
STDR.ES
234 EAST MAIN
992-3516

POMEROY, OHIO

12 Noon
to 8 PM
Sunday

ELECTRIC.CERAMIC
POTPOI,JRRI WARMER

·I~ $750
10 gms. polpCIUI1I

COMBO DRYER, BRUSH
and CURLING IRON SET

··~~10

•••

••

•
•

·

·.

·

STOVE-TO~

•

(
(

Stuff1ng •••••••••~~~•••• 79.

.''
~

•

'·

Hurryi-

•

lll.

BANQUE!-28-32 OZ. .

. _

now

to Christmas•

NEE' NOT IE PIESEIR

Tow•

$

149
Fam1ly Entree·••••••

.

.

• ••••
• • • • 'C CIJP(ft ••••••.•
•• •• • •

:

:

DR. PEPPER
DID 01 IEGULAI

,,~

On any Items!

Saturday from·

Ice Cream ••••••••s.~r•

,
-~.

Qat•tltl•• Lim it ad

CERTIFICATE.
Will ·be given
· away each

KEMPS PAIL

• . 1d 1" ?" Q . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . ,b ........ . . . .._ ........ .,. ...

7-UP

69( - :
.... .,",_....,.,. ;
___ __ ____.....,

2UTII

~

t

1111111 1 ...
:••·. a..l ....,,
llew. 16 'lllrl s.t. Die. I
(lit-

'
~

•
•
•••
.

:

MUG lOOT IEEI

••
. •
•

.•.

'

.

·Salt1nes •••••••••• ~•••••• 59

.••
~

..

$25 GIFT

..

..•

-

and a

2'/
Sl'
-Margarine ••• ::!HZ~!. · .
BLUE BONNET

•••
•'
-~

CERTIFICATE

'

-·! ••.

. VAlpE PRICED...............

$50 GIFT

$

FRESH_ .•

•j

~

• Za:hlry . 16 (It
• Goo Qog - boJc ol 8 Wlll'l 2 FREE

HOUDAV FOOD GIFT PACK

1

-----

BRAIDED RUGS

DR.V ROASTED PEANUTS

YOUR

.

HEART SHAPED

BEST VALUE ', 16oz.

r

Now thru Dec. 24
'
we will have
a
daily drawing for
· free groceries.
Sign your cashier
tape and if your
name is drawn,
you will be
reimbursed in
cash· for the
amount of your
purchase. .

$ 29
Sausage ••••••••• ~..... 1 _
ECKRICH SMOKED
$ 99

TAPE

4 pit C·Cell,
0-Cell or M

YOUR
CHOICE

19
1

BALLARD'S LB. ROLL OR 10 OZ. LINK.

TRANSPARENT ar INVISIBLE

BAnERIES

$

(

· (

HELPING YOU
'
CELEBRATE THE
CHRISTMAS
HOLIDAYS

.

·BALLARD'S

IIIIL.,_QI.IW, ••210
..... ...., lOIIOI!Q
N.
Wtllle01

.s.z.~
...

LB

Lunch Meats ••••••••

'·

• Assorted prints
• Assorted colors

.

.

r

..

·~

.....

•·· '

~

~

•
......
.

,,

•

,e
••••••••••

·-

.,

I,

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

~

�•

V!ednStday, Navembar 29, 1989

Y~em•day. November 29, 1989

Pomeroy-Mklclaport. Ohio

Beat of the bend

Northeast shivers; wind hot in West

D

~SNOW

By Ualtecl Prela IDII!rutloaal
Powertu I winds blew frigid
Aictic air Into the Northeast
Wednesday, sent snow squalls
across the Great Lakes, fanned
flames In southern California
that ravaged 1,400acres of brush
and kllocked out power to
thousands.
The gusts of up to 66 mph swept
Into parts of northern New
England and upstate New York,
and the National Weather Service posted high wind warnings
for major parts of Vermont, New
Hampshire and Maine.
Frigid temperatures in the
teens and single digits chilled the
nation's midsection early Wed-

nesday and snow fell over coastal 1,400-acre brush fire near San
Diego, knocking over several
areas or the Great Lakes.
Tbe mercury dropped to 4 semi-trucks on, Interstate 15 In
degrees In MlnneapoUs and San Bernardino County and
single-digit temperatures also knocking tree limbs into power
chUted Iowa, Nebraska and lines, cuttlhg electricity to thou·
Michigan. Temperatures were In sands of people.
the teens In Illinois, Missouri,
The fire was contained by
firefighters Tuesday evening,
and the Dakotas.
A snow squall warning was but continued to belch thick
posted for northern Ohio alohg -clouds of black smoke that could
the Lake Erie shore. The squalls be seen In downtown San Diego,
were expected to produce 3 to 6 20 miles to the south.
.
Inches' of show. Snow also fell
Sustained winds of nearly 50
over Indiana's Lake Michigan mph with gusts to 70 mph forced
the California Highway Patrol to
shore.
In the West, dry Santa Ana close a 7-mne stretch of the
winds blew throughout Southern highway, a major artery that
California TUesday, fanning a links Lcs Angeles to Las Vegas,

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON

f... ..... .

Pel-ttlas (7 celenl

PoiuetHa IteM ...11 ... lr•~
ChristoMI c.tw,
lenWIWy ,,.. Mll\artt'Show
P1ant1. II" ... Cot Clorilh1• TIIH.
for 1111 loWed One's Ora" llu'*l~
Mau•st Sprays. Ca:st• r v...
lw.tdJ for our Christ- 0,• H-)
Open Deily 9 AM-II P.M.
Sundey 1 P.M.-&amp; P.M.

HUIIAIDS GIEENHOUSI
H2·5776

Syt•••· Ohle

-RAIN
SHOWERS
Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Warm "

FRONTS; "

ft

WEATHER MAP - During early Thursd~!J momiDc, snow Is
forecast lor pans of the lower Great Lakes. Rain Is poulble In
parts of the southern Plains with saow poulble In moat oft he Great
Lakes and parts of the north AtlaDtlc Coast Slate~~. Sbowers and
thunderstonns are possible In the extreme south Atlantic Coast.
(UPI)

One busy weekend...

for tour hours. None of the
drivers whose trucks were blown
over was hurt.

•

·

Weather

Lottery numbers ·

South Cenlrat Ohio
Mostly clear Wednesday night,
with a low between 15 and 20.
Partly cloudy Thursday, with
highs near 40.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of snow each day.
Highs will be between 35 and 45
Frl&lt;lay, in the 30 Saturday, and
range from the mid 20s to mid 30s
Sunday. Overnight lows wUI be
mostly in the upper teens and 20s.

CLEVELAND ( UPll - Tues·
day's winning ·Ohio Lcttery
numbers:
PICK-3

171.

PICI&lt;-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,129,043.50. with a payoff due o't
$1,433,785.50.
PICK-4

1017. .
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$211,133, with a payoff due of
$530,300.

::

P o/idsg SsrinRI

25°/o OFF STOREWIDE
Corky's Classic

112 W. Main

992-2851

'·.

Porner•llv

IBI-MADE------····----·············· s•EDDED '2.19 •:

BOILED HAM SLICES......... Sl.99tb.

IIOMEMADE

MEAT

SALAD.~ •••••••••••••••• ~·•••• ~.89c

ECIIICH

.

CHOPPED HAM ••••••••••••••e-••$1.39

'•c
''rr
€

HDII'S

COUNTIY CROCI
SPIEAD...................\.JL ••• 99C

PUa VAWY

HOT PEPPER
CHEESE ...............l.J.!~~ •• S2.99

IEAVB VAWY

SMAll EGGS .........l!9.J.-.....13c

CARIOTS .........1!:.......... 39(
GOLDEN DEL.

APPLES ..........!.¥..~!:..2/ 59&lt;
CAUFOINIA
CEURY ............~P..~L..... 79&lt;

~
C

f
f

'AIIII FARM

.

CHICKEN LIVERS •••••••••••~!.~!•...... 95c
APPLE JUICE ................~!.~!•.. S1.19
GIEEN GIANT
NIBLET EARS CORN •••••• !~~ .. S2.29

FIRE TRUCK AND STAIION HOUSE
MUSIC BOX

Classic camp
moe crafted from
soft, supple leather.
With the hot knot that'll
make you look cool.

STOP IN AND SEE THESE PLUS OTHER
ITEMS FOR A SUPER Gin IDEA.

THE SHOE PLACE
heritage house

3 Gallon

1

l

-TruGuard
-

•Full Cotor G•tf Box
• Coneeot~ Air PumQ
•liiMtkt Greenerv

• t.lgnt Svntcn Witn
llult&gt;s
Co~n11

$

:;:;:,.... 2499'
• •tumraea Tonk

-

• Short• Proof rontc
• Comgltte Core

'

• Eor;o Acce• Peeaino
• ronllll One ,:Ji.c•

·
1/~t

H.P. GARAGE
DOOR OPENER

JID'

BOUNTY TOWELS ••••!.~•..... S1.09

MR. JUICf ••••••••••••••••!.~!•.... 3/3·9c

•••

fair, and professtonal clatml

DEXTER - The Women's
Fellowship of Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
Dexter on Thursday ,at 7:30p.m.

FRIDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange No. 778 and Star Junior
Grange No. 878 will meet In
regular session on Saturday , at
7:,30 p.m .. at the grange hall on
County Road 1 near Salem
Center. State youth, young ad~ I·
tyoung ,marrieds, · mens and
junior baking contests will be
held.

SATURDAY
GALLIPOLIS -The third annual Christmas Praise at the
Faith Temple Church will be held
on Saturday at 7 p.m. Groups to
sing Include the Zion Hill Singers
from Columbus, and the Ga brlel
Quartet from Middleport. The
church Is located of Route 141 on
Debby Drive between GalllpoUs
and Centenary.

AlzheimerI
rupport group
The Alzhelmers Support Group
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
Overbrook Center In Middleport.
A fUm will be shown, and the
evening topic will be ,;Coping
With the Holidays."
Shirley Finley, group leader,
Invites the public. Refreshments
will be served.

. ALFRED -The Alfred United
Methodist Church will have Its

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a homemade craft and bake
sale on Friday at the Sears
Catalogue Store from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. sponsored by the Middleport Presbyterian Church. There
will be decorations. toys, Christmas Items, pies, cakes, cookies,
and more. On Saturday the sale
will be from 10 a.m to 4 p.m.

RACINE'- The Racine American Legion Post 602 will have Its

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department will
have Its Christmas auction on
Saturday at the station at 7 p.m.
Refreshments will be served.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County REACT will hold Its
monthly meeting on Friday at
7:30 p.m. at Pleasers. Officers
will be elected and all members
are urged to attend,

.Shop 'Til
You Drop
Be Our Guest

$45 00•

* Free Shuttle SeNice
CityAve.
Center
Mall &amp;
, to
Lane
Center

* Champagne &amp; Bubble Bath

·

to warm you when you return.

* Complimentary Continental
Breakfast

plus tax
~

~

·

* Fr~ Hotel Pa(king

'\\~

~~

328 West Lane Ave.

9

1141214-4841

"

·service.

Your home and car ... two
reasons to have Na·
fion1N1de on your side. Call a

JEFF WliNER INSUIANCE
302 Well 2nd Str•t
P-roy, Oh. 45769
Ph. 614-992-S479
RK" 614-992-2477
Claims: 1-100-421-3535

ll(l1'\1 NATIONWIDE

~t~!~~~~~~

Pomeroy Chaner Office

$14995

The Daily Sentinel

614594

786 NORTH
SECOND
MIDDlEPORT
992-6491

Nationwide ·s homeowners
and auto policies are. two ot
the finest on the niarket today. providing complete.
solid protection tailored to
meet your specific needs .
Both policies offer a number
ol money·saving discounts
lor those wflO _Qua~fy. And.
lhey're backed by our fast ,

1/z H.P. DOOR
· OPENER

$11995

lntKfiOn Mol4ea ro

THURSDAY
POMEROY - There will be a
tree clothing day on Wednesday
at the Salvation Army In Pomeroy from 10 a.m. to noon. All area
residents in need of clothing are
encouraged to attend.

LEBANON TOWNSHIP- Tile
Lebanon Township trustees will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
township building.

soup supper on Saturday at 5
p.m. There will be vegetable
soup. chill, hot dogs, and pie
available. Donations will be
taken and containers must be
provided for carry out soups .

Columbus, Oh10 .

FOR A VERY SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS Gin, ORDER .·
YOUR UMITED EDITION
COOIIIOOI AT THE".

• filtration Svsrem
Wifft Gta¥et

• AI UL Liate&lt;l Eleclricol

CHESTER -The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 7: 30
p.m. on Wednesday at the home
of Betty Milhoan. Rev. William
Middleswarth will have a slide
presentation.

TUPPERS PLAINS ...;. The
VFW Post 9053 will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home.

Pro•ect your
''
HOME and
CAR!

1990 POMEROY
SESQUICENTENNIAL ·
COOK BOOK

- - - - -- - - · - - - -

~ lj
t¥d3:i.)

CHICIEIII~

MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Literary Club will have a
play reading from "The Vlsltr"
lead by Phyllis f!ackett on
Wednesday at1:30p.m. Rollcall
will be "A Play I Would Like to
Read.''

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and Al-Anon· will
meet Thursday evening at 7 p.m.
at t~ Sacred Heart Catholic
Church In Pomeroy. For lnfor·
matlon ca111-800-333~5051.

have Its Christmas bazaar on
Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m . There will be home.made Items including pies,
cakes, cookies, breads, comfor·
ters, crafts, gift items, soup,
sandwiches, and coffee .

-~---~~

v ---""

FROSTED FLAKES •••••~~.~!•.... S2.79
CAMPBELL'S SOUP .m~~!•. 2/S1.29
DEL MONTE PEAS ••• H.~!•• 2/S1.39
TlYlWS
SWEET POTATOES••• !].~!•• 2/S·1.99
SURF DOERGENT ••••••~.~!~.. S2.79
UQUID SPIC &amp; SPAN ••1.S.!!-. S2.59

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Ladles Eagles Auxiliary 2171 will
have a special meeting Wednes·
day at 7:30 p.m. to discuss the
menu and reservations for the
Dec. 13 Christmas party.

Christmas party on Thursday at
7 p.m. at Country KJtchen Res·
taurant!n Racine. Tberewillbea
$2 gilt exchange.

Over 400 Unique
Recipes, Remedies,
and Ideas are now
available in the

Middleport, Ohio

'-

Complete Aquarium

IBLOGG'S

J\

271 North Second

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -VIctory Baptist Church In Middleport will
have revival through Thursday
at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev. PhU
Porter will be the speaker. Rev.
James Keesee Invites the public.

'

992-6669

-

season and you can view these
samples at the Treasure Housea gift shop located on to riner
Route 33.
And - before the Big Bend
musical fades too far out or sight
- I want to thank and congratulate a great cast, orchestra and
llghtlngpersonnel fora jobwell
done. So many people do so many
things to make the show a
success year after year and, of
course, It was a pleasure this
year to honor Joe Struble and
Ken McElhinny of previous
shows during brief ceremonies
&gt;Saturday night.
Moving right along, let me pass
on a very vital telephone number
which you should jot down In a
very convenient location. The
number Is 992-6663. Bob Byer,
director of the Meigs County
.Emergency Medical Service,
tells me that this Is the one
number for all Meigs Countians
to use now In ca!Ung for a fire
department or an emergency
squad~ this, he says, you use no
matter where you live in the
county. It'.s going to do about the
same thing for you that 911 does
In other localities - and by, the
way don ~ t look for 911 here In the
near future. Bob says the costs
Involved are beyond our means.
So do write that number down
and keep It handy - 992-6663 I'll bet we can even remember It
.If we try. Do keep In mind that
quick response Is pretty lmpor·
tant In making these calls and if
you have the number handy It's going to help.
· Meantime, get out those boxes
of good stuff and get the tree
ready - . If it were only as much
fun to putlt away and Ills togetlt
O)lt- oh well, keep smUing.
__ ·- - - ·- - - - - - .

Community calendar

I

PRESRIPTION SHOP .

':.._~.,.._.,.-..,..,
MIDDLEPOIT ...........-...~~..---...,.~~~,..,._w_..
992·5627

IIIINurE MAID .

''

By BOB HOEFLICH
WOW! That was a pretty busy
weekend tor a lot ot people. Ifthe
holiday season
e&lt;.ntlnues at that
pace, the January blahs will
really be extreme come
1990.
Was n ' t It
great that the weather cleared so
:beautifully for Sunday's parade
;in Pomeroy and Middleport and
:by the way, I thought it was one of
the best local Christmas parades
;rveseenlnawhUe. There were a
;number of good - and clever •entries - showing a lot of
·creativity. or course, tile banks,
'F.armers and Bank One had
:outstanding floats which could
;have flown anywhere. They were
•a contrast In theme and color:00th exceedingly well done.
'Congratulations to both banks- ·
'pretty dumed smooth.
And, of course, when we
welcome Santa on a day like
Sundaywithweatherthatgoodso
fhat' everyone can really get out
:and mingle, It's realty old home
:~eek. One sees so many friends
and acquaintances - 1 keep
wondering why don't we do this
more often.
Genevieve Duckworth was en·joying the outing and summed It
;up when she said that the
:christmas parade Is really the
only time that she.gets to see so
many people.
, Adding to the weekend actlv• lty, of course, was the annual
: musical of the Big Bend Minstrel
; Assoclatlo.n which played to a
receptive audience of about 600
people at the Rutland Civic
Center Saturday night The cast
of the show moved through the47
. numbers making up the musical
- In about one hour and thirty-five
: minutes which means that II had
: to roll. The audience was really
: gracious and that's encouraging
since the cast members taking
part do spend a great deal of time
in getting the show ready. They
· deserve that audience approval
· and II was there Saturday night.
Sunday, of course, found a
' number of cast members either
: taking part In the parade or
· working In some of the stores and
businesses - ·and people talk
. about the slow pace of life fn the
small community. Somehow I
can't go along with that - busy
people who are Interested in
participating In community
events are busy people no matter
where they are.
By the way, Roger and Mary
Gilmore - who are active with
the Big Bend Minstrel Associa·
lion musicals- saw to itas one of
their many phases of working
with this year's show that a video
was made again this year. They
tell me that! tis wonderful". Two
cameras were used this year and
Roger Is in the process of doing
mixing to enhance the video even
more. The tapes are for sale at
$10 each and can be ordered by
calling the Gllniores at 992-62.03:
They had already received 27
orders Tuesday night - and
there undoubtedly will be a lot
more orders coming in so the
Gl!mores are going to be busy
making videos. In between tapes.
Mary will be creating her cookie
bouquets which are really grow·
ing In popularity In the Big Bend
area- and ~all wonder- they
are so novel and attractive. By
the way, Mary had created
samples of what she will be doing
during the Christmas holiday

The Dally Sentinel-"-¥• 9

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

. liAIN mBT

462200

MIDDlEPORT

992-6611

'

Anrual
Rate

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ONE has something special just
that entitles }'01.1 to free interest
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It's our extra-high rate
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BANKE
ONE.
n... 711,.

OlliE

VALLEY LUMBER

555 PARI ST.

.

If you're 55 or over, BANK ·

111 COUIT mDT
POMIIOY,O-

Elfll*•
.

......,.F'DIC./Wa•_.. .....

ar~

.,., car..

.

......

(tANK ONE, A1'7fE!o6 NA. AtAnt, c».io,
A-...~l;.M...,..,....,....tlti(ll ~,...,
i'
I. n..w--a.~.,
&amp;4NCCM: TRAVEL OORI"'RRtTKW, a ,giiWit t{ BANK eN, MANSF7£UJ. ......,_ eMit • •
..t .......... MNC ONE OOIIPORA'IDi.

h¥11fs••,..., .-,

I

�%g

10-n. D..t Sa ldtill

~ov-M'c'dlaparto

Ouistmas pany

Pansh taking
applications
The Melp County Cooperat ive
l'arlah Food Pantry will be
lakilll appUcatiOns for food
baskets based on . low Income
throuch Dec. 13 on Tllesday .
WedDesday, and Thursday from
9; 30 a .m.-12:30 p.m .

meat and
awarded.

Slug and mMzzle
loader shoots

Wednaad~. NcMmbar 28, 1889

Ohio
money

will

be

•

A

The VFW Post9053andLadles
C' _/
•
Awdllary in Tllppers Plains will
Jfii.VatiOn
have a Christmas party tor
The Ken Amabary Chapter of
J:..L
members and famUy on Dec. 16 the
Walton League will
ORUaJ a! etJ
at 6: 30 p.m. The auxiliary will have mUZZle loader shoots beeln·
fllm!sh the meat andevt!ryone!s nlngDec. l7,Dec. 24,andDec. 31.
Tbe Salvation Army, Pometo bring a covered dllll. S.nta The shoots will consist of free roy, will be taking appUcatlons
Claus will be pi'e5ent to give out · hand and bench rest events at · for Christmas food baskets and
treats and a gift exchange tor the variOus distances. RIDe and toys for low Income resldenlll, on
kids with a $3llmlt.
scopes will not be sbot In the Dec. 5and6,trom10a .m . tonoon.
saJt:~e category. Various prizes ot
and from 1-4 p.m. each day.

rz.u

.

-TIEl Ita

~

'f'fnJ

h

-

·Each

of , _

b Je

- ·u~

lo Nqund to bo

. - y - fa&lt;- in NCh K._ SION. -~- _.,.,..., nol8d in

thlo oct ~we doNn out or on ICU•f • hom,- wilollw wau your choico
at • ~item, when 1~, 11na...'1ing lhriiMII ~ Ot 1 rainchecltwhichwil-youto~thud•w I lllomMtllold\OC1iood
prico within 30 dlyo. Only ona coupon wa bll r ; lwd PIC' 11om

purct JJd.

Visitors

Craft sale
There wlll be a homemade
craft and bake sale sponsored by
tile Presbyterian Church In Mld.d leport at ·the Sears Catalogue
Store on Friday from 10 a.m .-5
p.m. , and on Saturday. from 10
a .m.-4 p.m .
There will be decorations, toys,
Christmas Items, pies, cakes,
cookies, and more available.

•

.

-.
.

n
.

.

f t. . ,

Middleport, OH .•Comer of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy. &amp; Peiut St.•992-3471
A CARDINAL-AFFILIATED SUPERMARKET

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

)

COUNTR1 SPARE RIBS

ore.

.
.

.

.. ,

$389

i"

.
..
.
.•

SO Lh. Bag

HALF PORK LOIN

$169 lh.SIIe..

LB.

SEEDLESS

1ELLOW
COOKIMO
OMIOMS .

,,.

.

I.

:

.

25

•

• ••

$349

..

1~ ............ $369

SNOW WHITE

CAULIFLOWER

'

OREEN.
BROCCOLI

ORANOES

'

*4

ICY

. NA~EL

SL~.

•Oro••• Chuek .......S.W·.f.ftlll... $1491~.
,•Oroa•• Beef..........•.-JP.I;I,,I'JI,G~... $1291•.
. .•Ballar•
. Litk Sa • .....~!~~~ 99

69

to Lh. Itt

.

.

,,.

uneh

Large H•••

·,

••'

Sawi Kroger register receipts for

•

- - - - - - -......~free IBM computers in schools.

...

CALIFORNIA TENDER SWEET

MICROfiA~E

CARROTS

HERR'S POPCORN

$119 s·LI.
lAI

l /

U.S. GRADE A

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

.

•

•

•

••

U.S. GOV'T
BEEF, "UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE
CAP-ON 10.12-LB. AVG .

-..• .
• .

-.

•
•
•

BROUOIITON'S

Cottage
Chee.ce

Margarine
·1-LB. QUARTERS

2'/o

Pound

Fr~zeuouurt .

Milk

OIIID'

$169

Kroger
Pinto Beans

24-u.

4-lb. 811

.

PEPSI-COLA
$169 16aPAK
oz.

Armour ~ie1na S1u1111

c

.•

Sealtast
Cottage Cheese

Post Toastles

or Potted Meat

99

2/99+

·

SHOPPE

Made
Italian Bread
11-oz. l.olf

4-Roll

•

+110%.
BOX.

Mueller Noodle• .....t!.~~~ .... 99•

.... ., QtiOIC

Chrl•t•a• Cru•eh ••tl.tlh *1.99
Ar11our Treat .........t~.tl~ .. *1.19

OMnBEDY ·

Ctptal• Cruneh or

·

'.

LIOHOY
ODL! I'INIA"'L! IN JUICI! 20-CIZ... 71¢

SU.PERIOR
BOILED HAM

'n'
Dip

'

SWIFTNIN8
$139 420Z•

Soft

·,

Pound

t:::·

*2.491h.

16 oz. Ct•.

HOMEMADE .

,,.

HAM SALAD
46 oz.
PUMPKIN PIES

'

lh.

$249

.

FRESH "SILVER PLATTER" BONELESS

Center Cut
Pork Loin Chops

·$149

*5'' ••••,

''

NONRETURNAILE 18-0Z. BTLS .. DIET COKE OR
COCA COLA CLASSIC 12·PAK . . . • 3.48

Shelled
Pecan Halves

POTATOES

·FANCY FRUIT BASKETS

C~lp

'

$159
4/*1

2-ltr.

"AS ADVERJIIEO DillY'

U. S.IIO. 1 WHITE

Tlla Parfaet Chrltf••• 81ft!
~••th••'• Cer•l••l Fraeh

BROUIIITON'S

BROUOIITON'S .

..

SLICED
FREE

I

J.

· .I=-~··
••AP

..

21 Oz. Ctn.
I

c

••

.
..·.··.

. RO~AL SCOT

Diet Coke or
Coca Cola Classic

Pound

89.,

RD HLIGIOII

'

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,

Whole Boneless
Sirloin Tip

. $119 ~ 0~:.1•

S·LB. BAI APPLES

.

FROM OUB DAIRY DEPARTMENT

Call your local Kroger Store Manager and enroll in this
exciting new educational program to obtain a FREE IBM
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Pound

•

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..
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.•
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'.
•.

1491•.

POTATOES

.-

.••
.

$ 59

.

.ALL PURPOSE

•

'

$ 19

•Balk Slle.. Bteon .ut-.s.~.'Hfl. *1 t91• . •R.. Skin Bolognt ••••••••••••••• 79+1~.
•Chopp.. Sirloin ....5.lM~S~9\. $8991•. •franklu ................ JI.Jh·.fP!'. •• 99+
' .............
.
89•
•Crlspf Serve Baeon .....t·f!·.r!~••• 99+ •1-Lh. Roll Saaaage
. 1•.

•

.

1-LB. ROLL or 12 OZ. LINKS

BONELESS HAMS

CHUCK COMBO PACK

•ROAST
.,_
•STEAK
'f
•GROUND CHUCK

BA LARD SAUSAOE

SUPERIOR
TA~ERM OR FARMSTEAD

$699 S L~. Paek•t•

1.

.

......

COPYRIGHT 111118 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAJA. NOV. 28. THRI)UGH SATURDAY. DEC. 2,
191111 IN POIE1111Y OHIO.
'
•
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.

•
rtces.

•

Get The Best

TbankBglvln&amp; Day gueslll or
Ken and Carol McLaughlin were
Cheryl, Bill, Scott, and Casey
Howell, and Lynn Davia, St.
Clairsville; Robbie Howell,
home from Ohio State Unlver- ·
slty; Alan, MarUyn, and Rachael
McLaughlin, Eden Prairie,
Minn.; Kevin, Terri, Nick, and
Autumn McLaughlin, Middleport; and Debbie, Bethany, and
Johnny Cooke, Pomeroy.

Ramen Noodle• ......Uh •• 5/99•
)I

'I'

.

STORK

CREAMmES

KINO SIZE BREAD

MAC. &amp;CHEESE

. · 5·9·+

MeJiean Manwleh

.-2/$149 1slA:z.

a••••, o·•••··········'·'•h •1.29

·leaf Stew .............\u.•~ *1. 99
c•ef ••f·Ar-Dn lttflrtll, c•m

M11\rt1l, Lltltll, IP•t••HI •!Meat ....... 89

W11101

t ·

Oll •••• ~ ••• uJt.\\, .. *2.29

2/79+ .

200%.
LOAF

Mou1talneer Bacon

7.9+

12 OZ. PICC.

Fryar Leg Quart.ars

AUIIT .lliUA

39+

LB • . SLB. PKO.

.

Pa•••k•
Ml•
...
~ ....t.~•··•q~ .. *1.19
PIIRPAII
Pa1111 Bajtar ........1u1.. *1. 99

ue••••m•u

.

Sp•ghettl Sauoe ·v:Ri~"'~.t~a.!

�•
------------~----~~----~----~------------~--~-----------------~------------------~

----

•

PngJ 12-The o.ily Sa 1tinel

Wadn11day, Novu~•ber 21, 11ft,

Pomaoy-Midcl..,rt, Ohio

..... 1•v.-unber
NO!
21, 1111
.. ,

I

Workers at the Melas County
will enjoy a holiday Theiss, of Racine, and a youth 1932,justbetoreshewas born, by
Museum are placing the finiSh·
diiiiM!ratthl!omu-.n-another bed made In 1!81 from wood . hermother,MaryF'r«kerHlll.
lng touches on holiday displays
annual event -where they will which was salvaaed from the old
Yoacham's bed waa made In
get a sneak peek at the open Racine United Methodist 1981 by then Racl-arl!o&amp; car·
for this ' Sunday's ChriStmas
Wonderland open house. Hours
house displays.
Church, prOVIded by Nancy Yoa· peu~r. Harvey Leamond. The
for the annual open house
This holiday season, 111useum cham, also of Racine.
bed was made for Camllla
sponsored by the Meigs County ' goers can look forward to seeing
Theiss's bed belonged to her Yoacham, who is now 10, so she.
Pioneer and HistoriCal Society
handmade toys which are being grandparents, George and Lu- wouldn't feel so bad about giving
will be lto 5 p.m. Sunday and
provided by the Meigs County cindaFrecker,oftheFlvePolnts up her baby bed to her new
refreshments wlll be served
Granges. Each year, the granges area. The bed now belongs to her sister, Lena.
reports museum worker Mar:
make the toys which are dlstrlbo Aunt Esther Frecker, who still
In another room of the mu·
garet Parker. The museum Is uted to children In the hospital.
resides on the family farm at seum, a fan tree from the
located on Butternut Ave. In
A display In the main room of ·Five Points. The bed is covered Goealeln family of Rock Springs
. Pomeroy
the muii'WIIincllllla an antique
by Theiss's own baby quilt made graces a display case. This was
· On Friday even Ina museum youth liN, prOYldld by Janet and emln'olderted for he; about traditionally a German adorn·
'
·
ment which was created either
from aoose feathers or paper.
Among trinkets displayed beneath the Goegleln tree wlll be
two clothespin dolls from Bar·
baraMurray,ofPomeroy.
A. sewing room has also been
created this year where hand·
made quilts and hand sewn, or
knitted, or crocheted, or any
other type of needlework, orna·
ments and decorations will be
displayed.
The handmade toys of Jerry
Black, Rutland, will rest beneath
a tree In a parlor-'type display
illong with .several older toys,
Including a horse-drawn car·
rlage and a steam boat which
were actually rescued [rom the
garbage by a history-loving,
toy-loving area resident, re·
ports museum worker Patty
Cook. The carriage and steam
boat will receive some tender
loving repairs once the holidays
are over.
In addition to these and other
items which may be seen
throughout the museum during
the open hciuse, the doll collection '
of Middleport resident Judy

Thanksgiving
guests named ·
'NEATH TBE 1'IU!:E- ToyaH sa&amp;llllle&amp;reeta
one of tile holiday dioplays at lite Melp C.llll&amp;y
Muse•m will caplllre tile atteadea ef IlleR wilo
attend S.nday's Chrlslmas WonHI'...d open

..._ at llle Melp County Museum. Many of tile
woodea teys, lnciudlftl the' train, were made by
.Jerry Black, of Ruiland. Open holllle hours at llle
museum will he from 1 to 5 p.m.

Helen "Sam" Pickens enter·
talned guests at her Tyree
Bouiev¥d residence In ~aclne
on Thanksgiving Day.
A turkey dinner was served to
Corby, Cleek, Rob Cleek, Jane,
Mike, Tracy., . and Stacy · Fry,
Amy and Eric Wagner, Joe,
Brenjla, Tyler, and Adam John·
son, Lena and Dutch Hewitt,
Marvin, Jan, Andy, and Jenny
Hill, Chuck and Jean AI klre, Jeff,
Nada, Trisha, and Jeannie AI·
klre, Sean, Dale, and Jodi Gibson, Jim and Tashull Johnson,
VIrginia Burke, Renee, Justin,
and Ashley lloschai, Javier
Bosollo, Aline Weaver, Coelle
Campbell, Tom, Pam, Chad and
Justin Diddle, Ryan Adams, Ann
and Max Kale, Stephanie,
Tanner, and Jennifer Hunt, John
. Henry Spencer, Robin . Stouts,
Evonne, Terry, and Danny Bopp.

Arnold will also be exhibited.

And table le!IIIIJI. prept~red
by the Melp Vounty Garden
Clubs usin&amp; the old-fashioned
theme of the open house, will
enhance the upstairs rooms of
the museum.
To add a spiritual note to the
Christmas Wonderland open
house,
Rev. Mel Franklin,
formerly of Meigs County but
now of Hamden, Ohio, wlll
present slides of the Holy Land.
Rev. Franlllln'spruentatlonwill
start at 2 p.m.
Another nrw featwe of this
year's open bo- Is to be a
gingerbread house contest. Entries fortheeontestarestlllbeing
accepted with ludlln&amp; to take
placeonDec. 2andawardstobe
given
Th~re are three categories to

1' : (o)ne;: :
1
0

lit&gt;.

1

16

14.00

15
1i

11.00

6
10

ee an mu~t~ n ~ ~ce a
e·
museum on
rnu venue 1n :
Pomeroy by 1 p.m., Friday • Dec.
1·
i Anthyone wlshlhng 1d0 parltlcipabte •.
n e contest 1 ou1 reg ster Y •
calling the mu::;:m at 992-3810
as soon as pos e.
The heartfelt work of volvn~ri have llr'OUJbt t!te bolll!ay .,
displays to life, reportaMarpret ·
Parker. And monetary donations
from area residents !lave IH!lped
make possible new additions,
sucb as the sewing room. for
which necsaary funds were
provided by· a grant from the
Modern Woodmen of America
Camp 7290, Burlingham.

Mon1hl1•

r~ola:ger~: ~o~eet~~ :

16
11 . 30 •o• l ·
.Of&gt; l cllly
lhles are to: coirMcu1rve run•. llfo... n wp!lov • w1tl Dt cn•olld
fnr a lt:h n.av as

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1- Cerd of Thonk&gt;
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f

14 - luarn•l Tr1mmg
111-SCII..II. 1nsuuc1ren
· 11-AMtll. TV io Cl """""
17 - Mrtcllltni8WI
18-Won1eollo Do

t ll&gt;.llli.ac11

It

21-lwetn•• Opportunnv

i•v•c••

MIDDLE~ORT- This would
mal&lt;e a great rental or a
home for a young couple.
Has 2 bedroom~ dining
room, one floor, all carpeted,
new root, and 2 lot~

$14,500.

&lt;ifi'&gt;Jllll t ,Jtllifi

ABOVE lUPPERS PlAINS
ON ST. RT. 7- FREE gas on

8 acres. Water tap in place
with electric available. Convenient location. nice building sile. $25,000.

76-lo•u a. Moton tor S.t*
· •76-Auto P•ru &amp; Acc:•aor••
77--4U10 Pl111il&lt;

lilltt

32-Melltle He,_ tor Sole
33-hrmo t•r hi•
34-luetn•• 8uilthngs
lli-leU .. AC&lt;IIOt
3i -llnl b1a11 Won11d

NEWEST RELEASES FROM ......
Debby loone - "Be Thou My Vilion"
lllftn Cros~ ~ ... SUite of Control"
S•ndl Pi~- "Finalt Momente~· :.

41 - ·HOulll tor Rena

Petra - ''Petri MHns Rock''
CarrRan • Forre~er Silters · Oak Ridge Boys

"•

Boys ,
ALSO IILMAS AND ACCOMPANI.NT TAPES
Florid•

CI\-Ap~rtmenl

$28,000.

81· · Homtt tmproltftmtttn)
82- ·Piumbtng &amp; ' tteatin!=f

tor Rent

Rem

41

tor Rttm
,

10
- - ictulpmen~

L•ue:

POMEROY - Nice home
with 2 to 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, WBFP, carpet and
NGFA heat Full basemen(,
nice yard. $29,500.

Sr.rvt..t:.,

,

47-Wented

.tl ··: feu

;

8 3- i:xuva llnQ
84- EloC1r&lt;cal i. Retr~garauon

· TWP. ROAD 348 - App:ox.
93 acres of vacant ~nd wrth

l i - GenMal hauhn~
8i- Mebile Hom&lt; Rep•"

2 story barn, stocked pond,

old house site with well. Ap·
prox. 25 acres tillable wrth
balance in timber. abundance of walnut. Get a r'efurn on you: investment
lrom sale ' of timber!!

17 · Uphol5h1''

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FIIOAY I l_M. to S P.M.
' a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

..

,ALL MUSIC BOOKS
'

71 - C•mperi &amp;. Motor Hom•'

46-furnoshed Rooms
46-lillece tor Ronr

•

RUTlAND - 26.2 acres in
the Country. 6 rooms, 3 bed·
room home. Private and secluded. Needs some work.

78- C•mpmy E"u'prnenl

· 42 ·-Molrite Homes tor Rent
43-ferms tor Ronr

,.

I

$60,000.

_.,l.Q&amp;AND-"2·61tt
JEUI TIISIIU-949·2660

DOTTII 'IUI!IIIt-"2·5692
JO.IIIl-915-4466

POliCIES

THURSDAY·
FII.AY ·SATURDAY
•

'Adlli

OUliU)t

M••Q$. Gttllua

~~ MaiOO ,;.~o..unll-. ntu51 bet

•

1

Middleport

(614} 992-6657 or 998-00KS

~

OfRCI-"t-2259

pre

SELLING 1 Moip County
prop.-Jy likes work, not an
Ac:diltnt. Clllllld hiiiJ

~o~•id

.
·R•cerve • 50 G••cuunl tGr"aG• patd en itdlii"Ct:
• Frett ad• ... G•veaway 1nll Found
und• 11 Wl•uh will De
1Jn l
at no ch•l• '
,
'Prico of oa fer oil c.pnll t'•11&lt;o •• aoublt proc;oo ·ol tP gust
•
•
· 7 ftOtnt 6inw lype only u.n
.
1
'Stth&amp;tn• is not reaponaibl• tar •rron •"•' ,.,,, d-r tCh•Q.
for err Of I ft;lt d-v ad runs tn paper, C•ll before 2 .00 P m
d.,. ah• publication ao m•• corrlf;&amp;ton
·
"AG• that mual b~ paid •n advance are ·
Cotd ot .Tnonko
Hoppv Act&gt;
In
1.n
V .,d S1lt16

ad"

a_.,

93. Mill St.

$10,500. : .

7•-Mosercvc••

ll -Home&amp; tor

RELIGIOUS - COUNTIY - CONTEMPORliiY
IEYIOAD MU5JC • CHRISTMAS

' House on I!
POMEROY .acre lot, 2 bedrooms, I bath,
carpeting, : ·part basemen!
and ulilit~ room. REDUCED

•

H,l-

WI

•

'

0

71-Ausea tor lialo
72-lru ... a tor lialt
73-Vons a. 4 WD &gt;

' 22 - Monev 1o Loan
' 23-Prot•t~enal

TO CHOOSE FROM

.2,5!/o' OFF.

I'I'I I

&lt;:.,

13-~••nsec~
14-t1•v ' Grjtm
l&amp;~li•ed• fen~""'

MANY DIFFERENT lRDSTS AND STYLES OF MUSIC

,

I'

61 - F1rm tqu1pmena
12-Wan1otd 10 Buy

13 - lnawen&lt;;~::

•

&lt;•

,'\I

12--·iihooiiCin Wan11o

RELIGIOUS CASSETTES

Trade

i

1 1 . - Ha&amp;p W1nted

••

S~tlt: or

··-2251

NEW LISTING - Here is a
lot 60'xll3'; You can set 2
trailers on ~and have a good
rental income. Has electric,
water and sewer. '11.000.

67 - Mullcolln11riiiTI&lt;111U

t'

w II

luMdmg Supple•

11 - for

PGAIIROY, OH.

$37,500.

11-,luler , ...

7-Y•• Slltllllld on ~clolon~•l
1 - l'ulrhc Solo&amp;. 4ucli&lt;rn
I-W ..11111o luv

··--

c--·...,
.
.
.
. --1. . . . . . .
9

WOIItS to SnL JOUr hll

Eslltl not to jlist put a sip
In JOUr ~d.

[H
REALTOR

' IOUSH

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

·-rey.

1

lod!spr!&amp;•• Ill.
Ollie
Pll. 992-3561

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt .

7:30-8:00

Mon. thru Fri.

742-2421
g.zo.tfn

7:30-4:00

Roger Hysell
Garage
Ill. 124, , _ . , 01111

•IN STOCK•
zrTOI liACTOIS
INTEISTATE IAnEIIES
AUTIIOIIZED
ECHO-YAIDMAN DEAIJI
WEDO SAW
REPAIR
•Sow Suppll•
•Choina •Choin Oila

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI" Trell•lttle•
PH. 9\2·5682

IIOIIIS

or 992-7121

KOUNTRY llUI
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
illgiMing Slpt, 17

•N- Gripe

•Club&amp; Cua-

....

St.n at 1100 PA
, ...., o.lred 12
Gaup Onlv

JOHN TEAFORD
46317 Scout

SaiHo

. .. . .... tfn

USED FURNITURE

GUN SHOOT
lA ClNE
FilE DEPT•

UVING lOOM SUITES

IEDIOOM SUITES
DINmE

srn

PI.UMIING I IlEAliNG
Now._....

lath•• lulkling

"NEW" IE(LINERS
loce18CI Behind

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

Troctor Desl111hip

MODIS
EQUIPMENT

G~~~p

Shottp111 Only
Strictly Enfort~d

==

10-9-lln

lhn,UHalet

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

992-2156

Will Video Tape
Weddings,
Bit1hdaya.
Reunions, Interiors
of Homes for
lnaurance.

~awn~

ThefamHy of JOHN C .
(Johnnie) FRY wish•
to 1henk everyline for
all the klndn•• ahown
during the loss of our
beloved hu!lbend and
fathar. El!*l:tlly for
the prayers, food.
carda, flowers, dona·
tlons. end axprasaiona
of aympatlly. Mey God
bt.U...., end· - v ·
one of you.
Mlldrlld Fry,
James i. Barbara Fry
and FomMy
Max llo Judy Eichinger

SALES &amp;SEIYICE

' Your Phone
Bilk H«e
IUSttiiSS -~

.C~ble

f•tery Chtb

742-2455
. SaliM

-a, ..., "2·6550

t6UI

DEER
CUT AND
WRAPPED

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN

' MAPLEWOOD

SIDING CO.

614-949~_2734

..F,.. Estirnllt•''

INSULATION

liSSELL

'LAII

Call 742·2416

or

5

614·949·2635

AftJr

SAVE

ss THIS WEEK AT PICWAV

Slll12-17..

FAN TltEE - Tltlalype ef hoiWIIQ' deeon&amp;iea
oJ'illllated' Ill Germuy wiMre faa tree. w.e
made ellller rr... poee Ieath er or paper. Tllla faa
tree, on display at llle Melp Coull&amp;y Maanm; Is
from the Goeslein famUy of Beck S.rinp.

Trustees to meet
The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday evening at 7:30
: p.m. at the resldenceoftheclerk.

Beneath the tree re~~t small holiday lrlllkets
1nc1•1• two clothespin llolla rr... Barbara
MtllftJ, Pemeroy. The very eld tree and maay
oilier lleliliQ' !&amp;ems may be ~een8undar,from Ito
S p.m., M the Melp County Maaeum In Pomeroy.

If you
have diabetes,
get '100 for
taking better care

:: ::~~~~~R~tM:'..::•
: 1818 Nil- P.U. 'h lon
•' 1• 1 N8ND1 112.1C307991
: 1. .4 For&lt;l Eoaort 2

*·

•'!"! 1fAIP04Z2EWUII037
;

Ctxx..tQm il's' Hllll!*MigG tich VIIVIII
lltd 1eny. . . . . . . . &lt;IIIII II up will,
dllcoc . . . d8IU lor 1111 holidJ)tl
(a) lamy•Jtll aNI ,tllnt Drll8 ........ in
lll1lck will rhin UICi'lUCC:t!lll. ~·· . . .5-11.
!bl H'a II ;penlng• 'hlvet CIWI Jillell in p1t.m,
I'I1U8IIIrd Or black. Women's sizfl8 6-11.
·
lei YIMI_Pumpa wilh side bow, rhinestone
accet t1S. In black. Women's sizes 5-11.
•t.amy . . . . . .

; ' lloe foNowlntl coil_.:

The F•-• • lattk and

Savin"

10 Ilia. Fu.-.
(:oltlpeny ,..,,.. ttw

11-27-'89·6'

Our sincere thanka
for the many kindne.... ahown et
the dnilth of ZELMA
STEWART. To the
l'kltland EMS, EwIng Funerel Home.
the
pallbearere.
those who brought
food, nnt cords end
flowera, our apeclel
thanks . .
The Family

DAVE'S
SMAU. ENGINE
IEPAII
.......tY...yh I
e. ··tc e r t, 011.

I

r

PAATS 4ND SERVICE
For Mo1t 2 and 4-cyde
·
engin•

Stock hna for
Homlfite, Wnd•••·
Tecum..h. Brigp

Stratton.

aubmin8d.

further. the atr9ve coU•
111tsl wll be oold In the con·
dition it ia m with ne axpr•MCI or imPI*' Wlrf'IR•

tl.,.....

(11128, 211; 1121 1, 3tc

'

(at

--111.

C~rlet••• atOt••

H••••

FOI THI
OF JEWELRY WITH
· · SENTIMENTAl VALUE
Man'' silww ring with 3 small diamonds,
geW rillt with W.k cameo·lik• setting,
..W
tie t• with two diamonds,
w.lthoM peck~t watch, woman'1 dia·
IIIII. . . . . . . atiMI ring, giW ring with
I ··~·Ill* rlftl with apal, lilvw ring
witllllil1 · · IJ.. dve,r 111111 turquoise bract·
Itt Ulll II F1 II gg, gold wet.lding band, and
pld leclret with inscription both sides.

a

PH. 992·3922

.,.

,1 l4 ACRES LOCATED IN
ORANGE TOWNSHIP, OFF
CHERRY RIDGE.
l

PLIASI CAU. 992-7376

992-2136

S-•h•p••

CONTACT:
PAUL KLOES 01 IIUCE liED

CODY PATTERSON

Patterson birth
Terry and Mindy Patterson,
Orrville, formerly~ Racl~ are
announcing the birlll of a son,
Cody Joel.
Born Nov. 14, the Infant
weighed seven pounds and If and
one half ounces, and was 20
Inches long. ·
Maternal grandparents are
Henry and Kay Hill, Racine.
Maternal great grandparents
are Carroll and Eva Teaford, and
Inez Hlll, Racine.
Paternal grandparents are
Jim and Linda Patterson. Paternal great grandfather Is Ooua
Circle ot Racine.

GWCOMETEr II Blood Glucose Meter
.

with Memory

AIJTOMOTIVE SALES

J

TURNPIKE
!No Peonutll)

Mfr. RA!bllte

FINALCO!rl'
&lt;llltrfiU'Kir.c'"'r*•I-Dn:-31. t911&lt;1.

'~;w~-~~~.u'.,;!''!.:'US 111.

a.oo

.:work Wea · · ~· SUndays

•No Ezperlence Neceaiary
If You Ar• Not lat....... In A
DoN.e

992-6669

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

•Tremendous Benefit Package .
•OD The Job And Factory Tratntng
Working COatlf,JtOns ·

itd rl"'dc:""" ofMUr!' In,·

Ptescription Shop
271 Nerth Second

• •

MicWieportr 'DH.

DOZEI
SITEWORIC - ROADS
CLEARING

I

NEWLAND
ENTEIPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

CHRISTMAS
.TREES
WillE &amp;
SCOTCI Pill£
FRESH CUT
6 SHEARED

su to su
WDEI FARM
~.OliO

- -

*'

,_

- -

MTII 6 P.ll.

1614)915-4110
lthro6p.a

ALLEN'S
HAULING

'MOO GALLOII

WAIII SEIYICE

LIIIEno•
SPIUD

DIIT HAIRiD
. 992-5275

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

ALIANY OliO
691·6500
I

Wutern loots. Hots.
Shir11, Betta for
Men, Lodi• l!r
Children .

SADDUS I
HOISE EQUIPMENT

USED APPliANCES
M DAY WA.AIITT
WASHOIS-$100 up
DtYERS-$59 up
REFRIGERATOI$-$100 up
IIAIIGIS-GH-Eioc.-$125 up

FREIZE15-$t25 vp
IICIO OVENS-$79 vp

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVEN.GS

.-

DOUBLE I
TACK SHOP

11·24-1 ....

.ll/ . ./11rt

MY-T-SHOP
CIS1M SCI

HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
tiMSI&amp;, OliO

915-4300

1-l-tfl

-

Tobt.,,_ •I

11

•LIGHT HAULING

UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALUPOLJS, OHIO

sus ..

(llhlw. Pilcts '"' ''·" ·--..W. 12.H •
Dllvx (lu., lis,.. tS.tl-.-!dt 14.60 •

Regular Price
Special Price ·

fiiJI(XJAfl:'llllt M1;Q1

'dt

....... -of,....
l'aillti..

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4422

•SHRUB 6 TREE
TRIM end REMOVAL

~91

,_, c........ f7.4t-

l11111101llliilt01
lsnt.tCIMIIIIPI &amp;

5-17-tfn

APPLY IN PERSON!
•.

NO SUNDAY

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FlU DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

(6141 667-3271
Grant. A.

AREA'S' LARGEST MULTI-LINE
NEW CAR DEALER NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR SALES POSlTIONS.

of yourself.

PH. 949·2101
or lts.9•9-2160

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

PARADISE
•

Ohio Vahy lulk Foods
.Dec. 1·2·3 ·
Frid11y·lilltutrd1y 9-&amp;

...........

UNDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.

DEER HUNTERS

prior

inll
rlghl to rtj1C1 any or Ill -

MOilLE
HOME PAB

W. c.ny Flshlng klpllll•

6:30P.M.
12

I 61 Nortlr SocOIIII
llidollopor1, ONo 45760

COUNTRY

CIISIU, 01110

....,,
- ·· ·. Md
till
ript 100..
!ilhl at,thfo
TheformanllnkMid ...·

(USTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

I'lL 949-2101
ar lel•.949·2160
I Day· or Night
NO SUHDl Y CAllS

Buying Hours;

:-t ·.:.....-------~

-

13

"It I••• #It 'rices"

ltullllc Natice

;
·PU•LIC NOTICE
.. •. NOT
~ .,.....
.Da ...,
:) ~ 1•11. oil
:IIOa.m.,a
• ', -jrullllc u11 w be hold It
•: 101 Union A-..o. l'am·
• ' ~· Olllo. 10 ... "" - h

Pag1

•sSELL
BUILDERS

W. Ya. Chlpplfll,
IIIC.

TRUCKING

JIEW LISTING- COMMER·
CIAL BUILDING - Start
your own busineu On Main
Street in a good location.

51 -Houleftold Good•
12-lpooling Goodo ·
63-Anlique•
1• - Mosc Morcn111d"t

2 - tn Memor1
3 - AnnOYcem•ntt.

The Dilly 81 1tiNII

L W.
STEWAU

IOi .

Mia

___,

OUI FINE SELEcnON OF .

,,

.20
.30
.42
.60

11.00
U3.00

11

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

usiness Services

(JV~&lt; 1 b Worcta

"•Ito

3

res •
Oilier structu~. EntriH are to.

25°/o OFF

•...

Wordt

_..,...._.,

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

RATES
001y&gt;

---·-

Pomeroy-Mic*llaport, Ohio

l7

~

Christmas
Wonderland
open
house
scheduled
suppor~rs
~ cc::: (::

~~--~ · _..

KEN'S APPliANCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 or 915·3561
Acrlll F.- Peat Office

I'OIIIIIO'T oilo

10/lOfH tin

....
,.. ........ ..
. . . . , . . . . . . 1'1_

hMtw """

w. -

also •itl lttail ... red
out r ...twn. We ....

.... GnT.U.

" '112-2111
1111. fOlD
Mldtlllpan,

•

�P&amp;Q• 14-The

Wadna1day. November 29. 1989·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

LAFF·A-DAY

------:----..

35 Lot1 l Acruge

71 Autos tor S818

=-- - .........

Viewing

- !MIIIpolio ~-.

...... ,., -

71-

-____
=·. ..,. .
lt"H~Pt1 C.'

11

...--·-

-·l!o

!Ill Howl

f

I

LMoon ...
Ill or -

.y 'ie

on!ll7tn-

Vlotlltoc. .... -

1:00.

a ta J can.

••a.

4

lor rwW

- ••oo.

CN' .....

11~117.

t. 114-1111-7713.

1121 .....nth. c.l

I KNOW THE ANSWER, · .

••7
Pont Tempo, c:a.ooo """'•·
puraMMtl101-.aott!nalor

T!-IIN!&lt;. .. BUT I KNOW THE
ANSWER .• I KNOW IT...

Mil.AM .. I

-11..-DU ailar 1'p.o1.
orl14-2,......anyt1Mo.

t. ,..,:. Cail 114-

I lr, 141 DMO.

QO'IIPNIIENT SEIZED - - '
FOIIit. lloo~odaa. ·•
Corwttoo. Chovyo. lurptua. •
auyaro out• (t) 105-117-tOOO •

IEIIf. ..... u .

uoo
.... - OH. .,· 4-IJI.U11
!Ia-.
..... loitoon,

.

• 11,.
' mil•
•tt.
Claist
• - t. aa1o.
lillie.. p
,_, !lrodbury
114, 115~115 '

-"tty -011.
· 114-74NI41 a!lor

bt~IDM,

2

c ...

pi

FOEF .ET

8:00 I])
And
McCormick~
. • I]) &lt;ll • (I) 9l •

I

,.,.._

....

ilo
nigh! huntlne
.,
001..
-

II I J I I I

EVENING

1141

......

8

WED., NOV. 29

1111
""
:,.,:;

.... u ....

\,1

•

~--r-W...:;R~O~N....::E:.::--~1~

1. I I I r .

(!) o.a&lt;ooli Junior High
Bottled Up (R) C
IIl Squore Ono 'tV 1;1
1D I!] Andy Grtllllll
IIJl World Todly
® Ch1~11 In Ch1rge
11) Jom
Amortcaon Moge•lne

IT'S RIGHT ON THE TIP
OF M'&lt; TON6UE ..

JUST CAN'T

ilJ

.I
I1

RASH H

:a

6:05 ()) ......, - ' "
8:30 81]) !Ill NIIC Nigtltly Non

~

8 (I) AIIC Nowo 1;1 .

•

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

Room•

,_tor-......

,..,.,
11.-n
Hillooill,... tHI-

-11.

......

Hoell.·
114-146-1110
'
.. · · - .Gaii!e
Bt..,tne will _ , .
Allo
AI I
Cal 1:00 ,.... -771-

.,.Tier .,...

I

SCIAM LETS ANSWBS
Gender- Mourn-"*'"' -lll&lt;iiiiiJr- NEED each OTHEfl
Sign in cooose:ora olfice: "The middle years ol marriege are
the most criticaL In the early years. apoe ... want eacll other.
In the la!er years IIIey NEED each OTHER."

lpcNUContor
CIJ e Cll Cu,.nt Affair
&lt;ZJ IIl MocHel! Lohrer

7

-

Til'*;

WI 5

I

IC11

KMinel.

-

a- -

.,

.:0- -.

-Go

-

1141.

0

'

..

luJOp5y ...., ""
INA!I-AIIIrtoo.
... Daator. Jutto

Comer- and- AMIIIO

Yard Sale

peltlfW. Call ., 4 •••

2UI.,Wt• tGI.

NowaHow

illl • 1121 !Ill Whoot 01
Fortuno 1;1
. I ! ] Nigh1 Court 1;1
llJl Moneyilne

tate. . .

Mullcal

1n1tn.ment1

:a Vldoocountry .

~......

7:05 ())

ploil·

••• Clio- a-10 pio5l . ,.

FRANK AND

...-*47-.a.
73 Vanl &amp; 4 WD'I
•'
1m Chovy con...:on Yan. ;
Auto, lir, g.c. hfOO. .,,.__ •
ms.
'
~ 4 WO, JIIIUII
lnloatton ....... llli5ao, 10,000
.,...,. boa.
1117 Pont

IIJl c.....rlro

'IV ITH ALl. THE

® Night Coun

AuToMATIC .Sif&lt;VICf
CHA/lGE$, :r: NoW HAvE

)

:at Top Cerci

7:35 ()) NBA Bookalbe5!
8:00 I]) MOVIE: Fury AI Fum1co
CI'MI&lt; (2:00)

81]) !Ill Unoolved

A $ELf-CLEANING

gANfc
!

Myotortoo Look Into the
alleged curse tllat was put
on James Dean's car. 1;1
(I) C1 (I) Growing P11111
· Mike, Carol and Ben each
receive $5000.00 in early
Inheritance. 1;1
(!) l!llnftnll8 Voyqo Man's
upsening of the groonhousa
effect Is explore~ . Stereo.
illl IIIIIJJ Candid Comere On
Wheelo Allan Funt hoots this

,4.CCOVNT·

• • •

Jlat Pant or - : I trattan on 1
114 4414420, 114-2111411.

Apprn. 1100 ""- II. ol -

'=rl: ........

: . : : · - alliO"""'-.
all,
...IIMie.l11
U71(1~
!MI:I.

Ftnanc:al

a

I DJJNNO! \NH...-rEVER
IT IS, IT SUitE iS
INTERESnNG!

look at America 's hilarious
relationship with the wheel

r.1erchar&gt;cl"r

Bulllllll

as captured by Funt's
legendary candl~ cameras.
(R) (1 :00)
811!]) MDV!E: t~n Eagle
iPG13) (2:30)
IIJl PrimaNowo
® MOVIE: A Chl!d Catted
Joauo (P1 2 01 2) (2:00)
11) Murder, Sho Wrote
Broadway Mala~y
IB Ricky Yin Shollon: From
Grit To Gold A documentray

'

Opponunfty

51

Apartment

Hotl88hold

Goodl

for Rent

LAVNI'8 JIUIIMI'UIII

-N t land
t o- - . - ·ll!ilod
a n -d ·
a 1 ..
..... Rwll•• . . . to an.
~ . . to . . . 11!1.... and .. to Dleb
tl41·Ul't• "
1171.
NutlllMi
"
" to
1711.
to $121. tlllt •

Employment Serv1ces

Sltllltlon

12

Wanted

"'Rio-· .......
'

2 '•=•~; "'pall Flny,

wv.

For lale or a...: 1• Urbld
lo ri I in - . WV,
~.~m.oe

torlp.lll.

=
wa

...

tor -- """ -

....d.

VENDING ROUT£

aoo

UIDMAII MOWIIS
ECHO SAWS &amp;' na.IIS

Real Estate

P-. 114-

ecstatic about a job ofler

from a top New York law
firm . 1;1
(I) Ill (I) Daogia Ho-r,
M.D. Coogle illegally
~rforms

[!) Moyoro: Tho Public
Mind America's political

DKC 11,100
wintar,
StOO.,ITIIIII&lt;
Ootoiioiftj: - . 2 ..... :..... • - . .

loa toilio, OIM5iarll - . . .,..
441~2. . . . . .,,.,..

.......

i

I'

Closed Sunday

-..n.ltM.
5 - . woN Ia • • _,.., =a-=EAIIIl:-:-'=,C,PU,C,L::.:,;;APA.:,c,.ATII='='=E:'=tmi,:,....'=AT
3M-17S.1770.
IUDOET PP!CEI AT JACKIOII
lricUbr, 2 bath, 110hQ!t. UTATEI. Ill I I r Pita
pump, """ _ . ' to I
ciiJ aciMO:a~\4-2o4Mm.
' - · Cai5 11 U41 2111.1011.

949·2'"

10/ 10/ 89 ttn

:DependHit

Wd a

n.c.ntNIIr

IJ!Iiat..:...i...lood. U

• ••

idt-.
gillaood - - ....
"'""" - · iJVtnt1 - .

z ·LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a;

1111 I

I ,.; -

011imatoo. Cali 1· '
gerelaaemenl ~
W.t.-'"'!1.
I
fot1r .,_ Trtmmtne 1111111111

'i ~-1Ne
......, ..
1_11_

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

tumt-

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or """""
gonga
Ali
ut55ittoo
.
.
fool, ~rtna. Prioall to aol. ~tal . ..__..
wt51 - ··11+.
-·11101-21107.
-

~ 'Licensecf Clinical Audiolocist
::z: \614) 446-1119 or (614) 992·2104
z 1417 SICOnd Mitt, Bait 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Yeten:ns lltn:orial Hospital
-Mulberry Hcta. Pomeroy,

l
,

-ll.eoiiM-Ils.'!'ut.

,..,.. TV 8aMoo, -'&lt;Jill

Qto5'ro whMo iiwll .... wllh two IIi

ca,tol!l'l

I ......

Hannah invites Marty and

THEY'LL GIVE US
TH' DETA(LS AT
'LEVEN O'CLOCK

TH'SCHOOLTEACHER
ELOPED OFF WITH
HER PRtZ.E PUPIL!!

DAD BURN
TEASERVtSION !!

..,

I ....

I

,.,....
wv
Ohio
.,.....

:'

llotory or oallio taot . . _.

'

-:IOWTI-2311
-

t:llrlob . .
- - 2D ...

MM.

I:IOPii

•

::OM'" and - - . 1M- I
o.vto

..

....,..,. .... Pt. 1111

.., _ _ ., 000 1m
.,.,._, - , . • .~
-

I

a retros:pective look at the
economics of the 80's and

~

••

looks ohead Into the 90's.
(1 :00)
1IJ Loulo RukoyHr Looka AI
Tho Eightln Rukeysar takes

loptto Tank Pu...:na HOJ!!o,!!!a
Co.RONEVANSlNTERP"'"""•
- - · 0111-11:17..111.

82

a retrospective look at the

Plumbing &amp;

-~ca:;.i".,..;:;~Pil~-;...~k;;;.;-"':";.

•""
-""'
.,........__,
'

0

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am-6 .pm

0

949-21 68

0

11-5-11510. pd.

•
0

-'

,_ollliPTne .
Qatii""""-Ohlo
.

..

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

•

.......

~;lUll

STIIn
PillA

WW61 PIKES
_.SYQIMITY
-IAKM IRRII1

'.'

POJJIIOY - ...UPOIJ'S ONlY
LOCAIL YOWJIBI PIZZA SIIOP,

l

.\

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992·2221 IJ.Ii-'~l !110.
(

..

Graph, c/o this newapaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
ourelo llate your zodiac sign.
CAPIIICOIIN (liM. zt..lln. 11) Not
what you do lor youi'MII, but wttll you
do lor ol!lorl w!U be lite things that give
youtheg,..._.gratlflcallontoday.Le1
your compMOionlle lncllnallona . . .biiah your prlorfllel.
AQUAIIUI (..._ »Fitt. 11) Close,
peraonli retalionllllpe lhould prove to
be extremely llfgn,_l today. Friends
could do conolruc:llve thlnga lor you
and you coutd be..- ilelplullo them.

you cannot accomplish on your own today looks ill&lt;~ II can be achieved though
an etlectlve Plrlnerahlp arrangement.
attles In areas - e you teet

s-

wellc.

,

CANCIR (JuM 21-Julr 22) Work you

looks ahead into the 90's.
(1 :00)
illl Ill 02l WIIIIIUY Vinnie
investigates a counterfeiting
ring In Washington. D.C. 1;1
IIJl Evening Newo
® Nowo
10:30 .. 1!])CrtmoW11Ch Tonight

hove neglecting lately can
brought under control today If
On Stage
tile mind to do 10, Being inolluslriOII&amp;I ~ 11:00 (l) Botmon
and productive
prove to
8 (l) (I)
(I) 9l
grllllytng.
• 1121 !Ill Now•
LEO (....., 21-A... 22) Try to
. I ! ] AIMIIIo Hill
away from your norma:
IIJl MOMylllll
loelay and do eomethlng
® Nowhlorl
PIICII ~ • ": Itt 2D)
11111 II I bH CIMittlnging but fun.
11) ........ V1co Knock,
to - • • yow llghla 1 bH - . your clllnge p-. will be.,...,_,, now.
1
Knock ...WI)o'll There Stereo.
goelllltd objOcltwo n 001-nod. VIRGO (.... llllpl, ill) Sltivo to be
• Vk1ooCountrr
, . Whal-hardloryouto-... ~- ·. PCJ111he10Ciayrogercllngtheoutoomeor 11 :30(l) ••:IM
coutd be - l o r you oow.
_.., becll•1hll will heve 1 11rong 1·
•I]) illlllelt 0! Canon
ln'1he,..,.lllald you I"IIJ mHI 8 con(IIINIIIt-Aprll 111 Your "''"" llleol uponenclrtl dll Myou think you ,
aJ lllortoCae-.
certed effort 10 _ . your Nlallon- nton pertalnlnflto 111e _...., 0111o0me QIIIOI!IIIIIIIIfl done, you 0111.
&lt;ll
a
1
oillpl..:::t:.wliodOnotmetcllor- 0 1 - might be moNon 1-aet lhln ' a..A (. . . 114NIII)
&lt;D Amollalft AIIFOM!I

0

,.

eon.-

j,

'.

a

wtn

.lOIS

•Qn

+QU

'

EAST
tJIOS

ByJUIIftJICOby

.KJ

Declarer was lucky to cet a iipAde
lead roUter than a diamond, but be
failed to take 11f01M!r advutace. Now
play lair ~ cover the East and West
hands with your th:unbl and plan your
own play in lour hearts witli a ipade
lead. 01 coune you Will get rid of a ell·
amond 011 the ::ec:ond )tip spade, and
then you will have 10 tricks, provided
the club IW:c,bappeu to be iJ: the West
band. That'll easy enotJ&amp;b, but a resourceful declarer sbould look a little
.
further.
Today'• declarer went Wl'OIII after
wlmtlnc A·K of spades. He cubed bla
heart ·~and led a heart. East Willi~
::ec:ond heart, casbe:l the ldng of ella·
monds, and then led bla last spade. Declarer bad to ruff and eventually lead
to the club queen. Becauae East
!he king of clubs, South could take
ouly nine tricks.
Alter declarer wins the A-K of
spade$ and throws a diamond, It costs
him notbil:g to ruff the third spade. On
this particular deal, that play ill crucial. Now the heart ace followed by a
heart puts East on lead u before. East
can play the kinl of diamoodl, but

+KtsZ

.AKil
SOOTll

+z

.71

.AI7H4Z
tAU

Vii!Del'able: Neither

Dealer: South

Opeaioglead: • 5

1----------.1
wbat nat? He baa ::o a.e spades,
IIIII eo mast ellber pial: other ltiflb
dlunond 01' lead ...,
Ute IWtc of
cl::bl. Eltller w1y, declarer Ia pre~ent•
ed with the 10th trick.
r-MI: Even when It aeema ualikely that an·eadplay will OCC!II', It CGIIs
notltiD&amp; to ll:ortea a ttlde-Ait In Ute defenders' baQda before throwiJ:c a defender oa play with trump trtct. You
may um a dividend nen the defender ill alaaiilted of cards iJ: that llidesult .

a

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

45 Devolloo

1 Bowler's
DOWN
problem
1 Eur. fish
6 Good buddy 2 American
9 Demonstrate soprano
10 Dry
3 Romeo,
12 Tears apart
Co Juliet
13 Undl!fstand 4 "- been
had"
15 High card
16 "Mento
5 Examiners
Park"
6 Court
monogram
attendant 20 "The 29 Dead heat
18 Yale man
7 -you
Taltoo"
32 Maxim
19 Harness
kidding?
23 Mass. city 33 Basic
• pad ring
8 Verbatim 24 Rocky
precept
21 Tease
11 Make
Balboa, e.g.34 Veslibule
22· Great
wider
25 Tire type
36 Bitter
Lakes·
14 Cornie strip 26 HeHish
39 Gl!fman
~argo
tyke
27 Apple
article
23 Dllalory
17 Consumed
variety
41 - bono?
24 Gross
27.Director
of "Miss
. Miniver"
280wn
29 Stannum
30Ending
for lemon
31 Inborn
35 Me (Ger.)
36 Golfer's
gadget
37 Cozy room
38 Tibetan

pet .
40 Meager
42 Beastly
place
43 Carpentry

bit
44 Allow

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's lmw tnwnrk it: .

til29

·II-

or

'

a-.

a-..
10
;':'&amp;_.
~f:•
lrlfl ,. oWF
~n..••who•?E~
yow1~J
~yow Oft g~~...
I
OOIL= 151 you_
• ":'ou

. , lllhera Ia a ,giW you
~~~~~~WI . .on not ,..., ,1~ '
lpeclai typa or'- you requlra today to OII!WI. Belli atlellllwelll1...,.
IMI be granl8cl by • peraon you'.. 'ICGR.'IIO (Ot:L I t ltn. Dl You conttnMlpld
don't be lfnold to ttate . ueto be In Illig •JWIII Willi PCJII11ve
your 1111111. 'lhll lncllvldual Willie 10 terfal INndl again today. GM ma11er1

T

~~~:J
~ft.ult

CAINI

-tty.

NC~pr.,:-te.

""tell Clll mlkl or -

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELL.OW.

One letter stands for another. In .this samplr A is usf.'d
. for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
· hints. Each day the code letters are different.

m•

·=.

'""'
IAQITTMIIUI (oauldbeua•dlclout
..... 11111o i1) You'R
1unc11on bee! today Myou " " yw .,_
toeadom of aotliln and mobility Don'1
get Involved 1n tlluMionl 111a1 i:.n 11e
you Clown or 11ow yw up. ~
treat ,_. 011110 a birlhclll)t gm. 8llld
lor ,OW Alllo GIIIPh PNdfa!IOI•Ior the
.,..,. 1111a51 by mlltng . ,21110 Allro-·
.

JJ.II·H

economics of the 80's and

ASTRO-GRAPH

Heating

lAC., 0110

GUNS· AUO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• S2.20 lox
GliTARS &amp; GUITAI STRINGS

10:00 I]) 700 Club Willi 1'11
RoberUon
eill llJl Quontum Lelp
Sam defends a Southam
black woman accused of
murder In 1957. C
(I)
Cll China llooch
McMurphy arl!l Dodger como
to terms witll a tough ledy
. photojournalist. 1;1
(D LOUII Ruko- .__.AI
Tho N - • Rukeysar tokes

f1M Creak Ad. Parte, ·~ 1
r:_~:,:.kup,
"""nrr· 114- • •

0

I.Mna..... - .....
14 4tiiiU
PICKI. . PVJINIIURI
Nca..nd
Houaaheld awnl&amp;hll .. 111

...... .,.,

--v..""" -.,

Gail lor dinnar. l;l
9:50 ()) MOVIE: Thl Duchlll I
The Dtrtw118r Fo1 (PG) (2:15)

e

'

Watto compialod- Mi'.

-

RACINE GUN SHOP

,

·-

BARNEY

.

(!) Coltego -·ibe5!
(i) Ill (I) Any1hing But Lovo
To pt'ove she's not jealOus,

tnZontth--·~= l
other bnlnd&amp;. MouN 08

~'-'!""-....
___nu,.._~
::1ft. ""' -

teachinQ_!tConomics at night

school. Q

81+23'7-. day ar night. R o. .

••a-. -

Television Listeninc Devices
llllrinc Aid S.les &amp; S.n•i..l
c:J ·Htlrinc Eval11.1tions For All Aces

Michael is conned into

•

• IAII!IIINT
'
1
WATI!IPIIOOP!NO
UnDWI ..IIIII lllltiiM ~ I
tM. Local .......,DII turftlllllall. ...

Sat. I·&amp;

4"19 IUSI IOILOW II.

EARTH~

Home ··
81
Improvement•

HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 9· 7

..,_ ,,.. Pllf Offko
217 I. Soc. Pr :roy
.
11113/'I'J flo

witnesses a murder, but no
body can be found. 1;1
Q]l Larry King Llvel
11) MOVIE: Final Notice
(2:00) Stereo.
IB N10hvll!o Now
9:30 Dill !lSI My Two Doda

I

VISA · MASTEACHAAGE

SEIVICE

M~,WKYWERE

W5 R.!TON1HI5

Serv1ces

• - • SonlcoO•

992-5335 .. 915-3561

I

DO 'rOU EVER
WONDef'l. WKi
WE.'R&amp; HER!&lt;~

1171 .... Filih Whaal11otwoool ',
Traitor, -ton. 17000. •
114-1111-1017.
'

lYAII LW:E CENIU

In'S APPUAICE

culture relies on images to
escape the ttuih, I;!
illl II ilJ Jllce Anil The
Fatman A former TV hero

MORK MEEKLE AND

I

'

surgery on a dog.

ffi

, ............ c....

uu nN. . . . . 1144111101
• w......
2 br., 1 pr5wolo
d .... Clolil to
rar, ~-.
-~-prota'rd
tall-.
~ :r.h
t1~

lleOd Of The Clan

septum, Arvid has further
queslions . I;J
9:00 8 CD !lSI Night court Dan's.

a· •••·

llrall•••• SSG_. .. te ...

Ill (I)

After repair. of his deviated

OIIG. . UIS, CU..S

PARTS AND IEIIV!CE
ALL MAKES
GAB OR ELECTRIC

8:30 (I)

. . .•. .""
. . . GuriCS'
-......
N7l
l!5otl - ·....•

10- ...... - - .
...... --~- ... 1111 ....
lid. Qpon I A.M. to I P.M. - .
ttw lill. C.IIU 4. I ill

•"" ........... '"""'""'·

CC1-ozt:l

Shelton 's road to success.

c:LEJW PAST

or 1101! ~••• ""' or -

eputiMIII:,

No""'"' 114-146-

30U71-1010• .
•

special featuring a fook at
country music star Ricky Van

AS A

c:u. . W·. 'Lf."-.:rt:"'"-:.'::

I , . . . , a.th. ..... loCIIIIon1

GALUPOL!S AREA
UCITING NEW Aim IIIMid
gapar- -UII
CASH tncamo AND your in- n ! GUARANTEiDI Cai5 1•
100 ttl lUI.

-

m1EOH.r::.:.~-= ::·&amp;.!d-~=::.
...._
...._.

MI-Ia.

UGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

F...ACE

""'"' . . - -

4121.
' ·" '"'" aplo. in

-Business Services
•••acE

~ ~I mil

I ,.... t.u; ... Nid

lnOoMI holM. Clalll1t . . . .,
EARN IIOilti'l' """' at .- ..
.1
ooo1,..r
) _ - . .. IEJI.·
1- attar 7:00 p.111. lor 10111.

FURNACE

I

-

padtnow_ll_,
-Janco.
LPN on .... lAw

....=:.r~;
....., .,,..:~f.-:.
m. """ -. ........ -

==i:--·-·--·
--··-....
- ·- """""'"' -- ··1br, • •

Joflom~no

7:30 . I ] ) F""5!J Foud
(!) Ptoloollonet Tonnto
&lt;ll E-nment Tonight
8 Cll USA Todly
illl .. 01 !Ill J-rdytl;l
ei!]J M'A'S'H

114-117·,.

NOilTB

+AKU

Strip-and-pray
end play

Dangerous Stereo.

,_r
m:o·· --~ - ·

,...:--------

BRIDGE

®Choo,.
iiJ Miami VIce Uttle Miss

--·
11,~10
... . . . . .. ..... •"" 10 ... 1117 Pont
a.a

. . .

........_'f!N.
48 Spece for Rent
C11 IMIDW ~ 1400

C.ttilry

Complele !ho chuckle qualed
by fil li ng in the miumg words
you develop trom step No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

V

(!)

.......

_

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

A

6:35 ()) Andy Grtllllll
7:00 1]).OUr HOUIO
81]) PM Mogeztno

Furnished

I

L...L....JL..:..l.......l-..L.....J

casc........,

Dog
... ·.... •to.
--1\tOI!:.outRJ.
141 .
au 411 aru. w.,...

, itse~

~-T..,:...::;.,15,:::.,.:
. 1...:.:1r-=:-,I:--I. O

(!) 8ocly Eioclrlc
IIl 3-2·1 C9ntact 1;1
illl • 1121
Nowo 1;1
1111!]) Threo'l
IHl WKRP in Cincinnati
11) He-Min

GIYMWI)'

I

Each generation imagines
to be more intelfigent
.I _ . .
' than the one that went before
. - - -- - - - - - - . it and wiser than the one thai
CE N T H S
comes ----- il .

1 1 1

I

you

money M

W-1. ~ .2 1.,_. •1 Thel Wlttcll .'!Ouch alllllllon u 1hey require.
. . .
.

ill .,.... T
• 1121 ...,....., 111ow
illl._ IINII lluatl Olllcor

01 The Year
• CooK I ChHO
12:00 (l) MOVII: l'ury At ,...,_
CNek t2:00)
aJ .... 01 Mlllolo Mag1•101e '

'

CRYPTOQUO'tt
11-29

•

Q'MV
IICVL
QU

XVJELVG
Q'W

UJTVA

HCVL

FBZ

UB

JGWQU

ASJEVG
SBZEJOV

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PVSJZAV
UB

BZOCU

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JKEJQG. - DJWVA WQSCVLVE
Yaa._ ..... C.fPiaqaate&amp; PRAISE? UNIMPORTANT, Btrr JOU.V TO REMEMBER WHEN FALLING
ASLEEP. - W.H. AUDEN
() ~ 919 K.ng Features Syndiclitl.

tnr.

,

�BIG BEND

IEGIS1EI TO

Join In
Celebrating Wellston Foodland's

•••••

'

Wedn81day, November 29. 1989

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Pag1 16-The Deily Sentinel

WIN A
FREE
MICROWAVE
A Winner At
Eve.ry Store
'

We Reserve The Right to Limit Quantities • Prien Effective Through Saturday,
· December 2 , 1989 • USDA Food Stampo and WIC Coupono Accepted. • Not
Reoponsible for Typographical or Pictorial Errors.

Ohio Lottery

25

Shop early,
shop locally

Piek-3

228

Pick
8013
Super IAJtto
9-14-22-25-29-39

Low tonlcht Ia mid I!Js.
Sunny Friday. HIKh near to.

Kicker 083ll0 •

· L-----------------------~

•

•

STOP IN FOI DETAILS

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND'S ENTRY BLANK
2 Sections, 14 Pogoo 2&amp; Cents

'LOADED .FULL OF.

. GROCERIES.

Win An S-1 0 Chevy
Pickup Truck!!

vot.40. No.143

Subdivision project prOposed in Sutton Twp.

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

NAME: .......
AODRESSL ........... .

'

By NANCY YOACHAM
Dally Set~tlnel Staff
A housing subdivision which Is
belrig proposed for property In
Sution Township was discussed
at Wednesday's meeting of tjle
Meigs County Commissioners.
Eugene Triplett, of Triplet t
Engineering Services, and Bruce
Teaford, ol Teaford Realty, .
attended Wednesday's meeting
to apprise the commissioners of
the propOsed project.
Although much of the· ground·
work Is already laid !or the
subdivision, fl~al approval on the

. . . . .. ....... STATE' ..............ZIP: ... .

CITY: ...... .

No Purch•eJNece~ury ; Must be 18 Years or Older to Enter.

JlrawlnQ te&gt;be held Soturday, Dec. 23. 1989
. ,
.
famiil• of Ohio Vollev &amp;upem- ""' elogoble.

and

project must come fr om the
Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission which will rneet In
January.
Developersforthe subdlvlslon,
which Is being laid out on the old
Jividen !arm In Sutton Township,
are Richard and Sherry Payne,
of Englewood, Fla .
According to Teaford, the
agent for the developers, the
subdivision will be called Robin's
Crest Subdivision and will contaln 4llots of five or more acres.
Teaford pointed out that "only
the lots'' are being developed.

..........

There are no plans at this time by
the Paynes to build houses , he
said. The lots will be sold and
then purchasers of the lots can
make · ar r ang e m e n ts for
construction.
·
The commissioners com·
mended the project as one that Is
greatly needed In the area. They
also offered suggestions a§.tO the
type of Information that dl\ist be
Included In the January presentation to the planning commis·
slon, In order to meet review
proeess requirements.
·
Teaford reported that there Is

something the county needs, ..
Teaford said, "and hopefully will
be something most anyone can
afford. "
Meigs County Recorder Em:
mogene Congo met w it~ the
commissioners to discuss the
possibility of purchasing a new
microfilm camera which Is necessary In the safeguarding of
many county records . The camera currently In use Is outdated
and no longer does an adequate
job of filming, Congo reported.
Congo Is to gather Information
on new microfilm cameras and

pending litigation regarding
rights-of-way for a road which Is
needed to connect the subdivision
with Pine Grove Road In Sutton
Township. The commissioners
said the pending litigatiOn would
be a factor taken Into consideration by the planning commission
before their final decision to
approve or disapprove the project Is made.
Teaford and Triplett are- encouraged that any problems will
be worked out so that development ot Robin's Crest Subdlvl·
slon can · n~ove forward. "Ws

The fire department was again
called at 1: 50 a.m . to another

•

..

MIXED
FRYER PARTS

f

' .

DISH
LIQUID
22 Oz. Btl.

TENDERBEST
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

GREEN
GIANT

GRADE 'A' MEDIUM

•vrr.n ABLES

FOODLAND
EGGS

12-15 Oz. Cans

'

T-BONE STEAK 5/S2

••

LB.

RI!;LIGIOUS TROPHY WINNER - The
Pomeroy Uailed Methodist Chureh float took first
plaee In the rellgloua catel(ory In Suoday's
Cbrlsbnaa parade apon80red by the Middleport
and Pomeroy Chambers of Commerce. Here Dick
. Owe11, pr:esJtleat of the Middleport Chamber,

ARMOUR

SLICED
BACON
12 01. Pkg.

$ 19

ICE CREAM .

LB.

1!2 GAL
FOODLAND IUnEIMILI"...'h.W.....99c

1UIIEY FU·S-JA.... 99c

NON~O~UL ~ER - A ftoat
featurlnK a wlntor eeeae wltb a Jarse snowman
surrOUIICied by children woa ftnt place In the
nolt'COmmerclal catepry at Suoday'a Cbrlltmas

DIET OR REGULAR

S!VEN-UP
2 UTER
B.OmE

MA,RTHA WHITE

FROZEN TROPICANA

FLOUR

ORANGE JUICE

SLI.

12 OZ. CAN

BAG

PILLSIUIY CAKE MIXH.......II!P.... 79'

TIOPKANA

•

MAXWfU

MASTER

COFFEE

89

preoente a trophy 't o Geoqe Wrll(ht, theme
coordlaator, Su11811 Clark, chalraman, and Rev.
Don Meadows, pastor. The float featured a
nativity theme with Wesley Thoene, Clay Crow,
and Eric Qualls as wisemen.

I

·_: .j ,.

; cause
is unknown

.Weather

ORANGE JUICE .............~$ 1.69

Chamber of Commeree oa behalf of bulb
Chunben presented a trophy to bank repneenta·
llvetl, Mellada Duan and Chrll Venpr.

fire, this time on Lovers Lane
where three large bales of hay
owned by Brian Windon were·
burning. The second fire was
discovered by Deputy Ralph
Trussell.
The sheriff again today Issued
an appeal to the public lor
Information on suspects with all
tips to be held confidential.
Sheriff Soulsby reported that
the Nov. 24 breaking and enter·
lng of the Don Randolpoh home
on State Route 681 has been
solved. Four ,juveniles have

admitted to the offense. Soone of
the Items were returned and
restitution for damages will be
paid. Randolph declined to prose·
cute, Sheriff Soulsby reported.
Under Investigation by the
deparbnent Is a breaking and
entering at the Pomeroy Gun
Club. According tq the sheriff; .
the Gun Clob building was
entered sometime between Nov.
16 and Nov. 29 by breaking the
glass In a rear window. Charles
Goegleln discovered the entry
and reported the Incident to the
sheriff's department.

· ,Marsh.tl coed arrested
in death of newborn

Galllpolls Pollee are lnvesti·
gating the suspicious death Wed'n esday night of a Mason County
youth who was rushed to Holzer
Medical Center after he was
• found unconscious In a car at
Young's Trailer Court. 307Upper
River Road.
Pollee said Thomas E. Huddleston, Jr .. 14, of 2116 Lincoln
Ave., died at 11 p.n •. last night In
the Emergency Room at the
hospital. Huddlelston was the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E.
Huddleston, Sr. , 2116 Lincoln
Ave., Point Pleasant.
Gall Ia County Coroner Dr.
Edward J. Berklch ordered an
autopsy on the body last night to
determine the cause of death.
The body was transported to the
Franklin County morgue at Co·
lumbus for the autopsy.
Officials said this morning that
the cause of. death has not been
determined.
Pollee said Huddleston accom·
pan led two other youth to GaiUa
County. They stopped at the
trailer of Everett King at the
trailer court. The two other
youths went Into King's trailer,
pollee said, while Huddleston
panade for lbe RocIt Sprlap Grup. Weclllerday
In the car.
remained
afternoon the winners were anaouaced and here
Officers
said when the youths
Dick Owen, left, presents a trophy to Bunny Kuhl
returned
to
the car several
and Roy Graeser.
minutes later, they discovered
Huddleston unconscious and
found a small butane canister on
the seat beside him. Officers said
Mrs. King attempted to rescusltate Huddleston with CPR (cardia pulmonary resuscitation) before the arrival of the Gallla
County EmergeJ'!CY Medical Services to take Huddles ton to the
hospital.
The body Is at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home at Po lnt Pleasant.
Arrangements will be
announced.

aoon, Dick Owen, pneldetll of lbe MldtDeport

-.--

their costs, and report back to t(1e
commissioners at a later date .
Congo also made a request for
carpet and paint for the recorder's office. The commissioners said they are committed first
to repairs In the office of the
probate judge but that they
would be In favor of some work In
the recorder's office as soon as It
can be afforded.
"What we're trylng to do," said
Commissioner Richard Jones, Is
to Improve one or two offices a
year, as we can afford.

DeputieS probe two more
hay fires early Wednesday
Two more hay fires are under
lnvestlgailon by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Deparbnent.
Sheriff James M. Sokulsby
reported that the hay fire vandals struck again early Wednesday morning. The nrsr report
came In at 12: 57 a.m . on Sand
Ridge Road with the Chester Fire
Department going to the scene
where 23 large hay bales were
destroyed. The hay belonged to
Paul Baer.

HOLLY FARMS
GRADE 'A'

A Multimedi• Inc. New..,aper

Pomeroy-Middieport. Ohio, Thursday. November 30. 1989

copyrig~ted 1989

Soutb Ceatnl Ollie
Clear Thunday nllht, with a
low Ia the mid 20s. Mo1tly sunny
Friday, with hllhl near to.
Ex._W Forecut
Satlll'daJ tllr..;h Mollday
Snow Saturday and partly
cloudy with acatlim!d flurries Ia
the aortheastera part of the state
on Sunday. It will be ~lr acr011
the state Monday. Highs will be.
between 30 and 35 Saturday and·
Sunday, and ranging from the
upper 30s to the middle 40s
Mbnday. ·

"It was just a bad reaction,"
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (UPI)
Pollee
Lt. William Sinnett said.
- A six-day search, triggered by
recalling
his Inspection of the
the grim discovery for a frozen
death
scene.
"To see a newborn
newborn child on Thanksgiving
It wasn't stiff
covered
with
blood.
Day, led city pollee to Hunting.yet
.
It
was
still
flexible."
ton, and the arrest of a Marshall
Sinnett said the medical exaUniversity student on a first·
estimated the child had
miner
degree murder charge.
been
dead
abuut three to four
Pollee Identified the suspect as
Amy Elizabeth Pyatt, 20, of hours when found.
Pollee Chief E.E. Speece, who
Ravenswood, whO Is a junior at
Marshall. She Is awaiting a made the arrest In Huntington,
Intensified the search for the
hearing before a circuit judge.
child's
mother, assigning three
Pyatt was booked at the Wlrt
of
the
city's
seven-member force
County Jail, since It Is the nearest
to
the
lnves
ligation.
laclllly that accommodates feThe murder warrant contained
male Inmates.
no·
name lor the victim, but
Following her arralnment
simply
referred to him as a
Tuesday, she was sent to jail
"male
Infant,
newborn. "
•
without bond, as mandated under
said
the
Investigation
Sinnett
a capital offense In West
led pollee to question between 25
VIrginia.
The bloody body of the child, an and 30 pregnant women In the
11-pound boy, was found around city :·until we narrowed It down
8:10a.m. on Thursday, Nov. 23, to this particular subject.
:'The public really came
by a caretaker at Recency
through,"
Slnnell said.
Colonial VIllage Apartments. Po"We
asked
for assistance, and
llee said the medical examiner's
the
public
came
through. An
office determined that the child ·
early
tip
came
In,
and we
was born alive, based on the
followed
It
up,
and
It
led
to this
expansion of Its lungs.
female at Marshall University ."

-Local news briefs----.
Meigs receives litter grant
A $59,475 grant has been awarded to Meigs County to
, Implement a comprehensive Utter prevention and recycling
program In 1990, according to an announcement today from
State Sen. Jan Michael Long (D.Circlevllle) and State Rep.
Mary Abel, (D-Athens).
Meigs County Is, one of 79 communities which will receive
portions of nearly $4.3 million targeted for local Utter
prev~tton and recycling activities.
PrO(Il'am activities which Will benefit from the receipt of the
grant montes Include recycling promotion, litter collection and
containment, enhanced Utter law enforcement , public aware ness and ·education.
''l'hese grants reflect our commitment to making Southern
Ohio's communities clean and healthy places In which to livE'
and work," said Long and Abel. ''Preventing litt~&gt;r and
promoting recycling helps us save money and energy."
The grants are awarded by the Ohio Deparlment of Natural
Resources and are administered through Its Division of Litter
Prevention and Recycling.
Since Its creation In 1980, DLPR has Implemented a
statewide, comprelit!llllve Utter prevention and recycling
program. The grants are part of an effort to help local
communities establish self-sufficient local programs.

Immunization dates are changed
Regular Immunization days at the Meigs County Health
Depllrbnent In December have been changed. Norma Torres,
R.M. nursln&amp; dlrectcr, announced today .
IDI11!ad of havln&amp; the shot days on the usual second and fourth
Tuesday of the month, the ImmunizatiOns (OPT, Polio, MMR
and Hm) will be gtven 011 Friday, Dec. 8, and Wednesday,Dec .
.13, frtllll9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to3p.m. Thesbotsaretreeand there is
'
Contblued oil page 14

..

~l

.-..,.

...

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