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..... .

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WSI. . ...

THIS

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3
012
Pick 4.
6719

Shop today,
shop locally

EEK'S~

GAMES

•

MEIGS
BOYS

IIOtiiSI
. . . . . . Fri.

7:.So ....... s:ea,...

r------.,..--.

,

Dtc. 12-NelronvHit·Yol'k-Home
Dtc. 15-Wellston-Away
Dtc •.19-Vinton County-H01111

Vol.40. No.111
C.Wrietlld 11..

GilLS

....... Dtc. 11-Nelsonwillt·Yol'k-Away
Dtc. U-Wellst1111-Homt
Dtc. 11-Vinton Co.-lway

716 .. 2nd

Middleport council OKs ChristmaS bonuses
By CllAIU.ENE BOBn..ICH
The 'village signed fire protec·
tlon contracts with Cheshire
Dall7 Seallnel S&amp;aH
Christmas bonuees for village Township In the amount of $4,650
emp!O)'I!H were given final ap- and Cheshire VIllage In the
proval at Monday night's meet· amount of $2,800 tor 1990.
ln1 of J\lllddleport VIllage Council
Mayor Fred Hoffman dis·
at vtllase hall.
. cussed Increases In health lnsu·
FuUtlme employees will re- ranee premiums for employees.
ceive $:110 each while the part· · He noted that the AdvaCare
time emplOyees will receive $150 program In which the village
each. The ordllance provld lng participates wlll have a 47
for the bonUIIeS was given a third percent Increase on Jan. 1. He
and final reading and then listed the cost Increases as going
adopted at the meeting.
from $105 to $148 for slngles,.$210
Other ordinances on which to $296 for two party. and $270 to
action was taken Included a · $415 for famllles. Despite the
second reading of the one es tab- Increase In cost, there wUlalso be
llshlng court costs at $35 with $16 a decrease In coverage, the
of that going to the State of Ohio, mayor said. He noted that the
and another regarding perm It cost or $46,000 In 1989 will go to
charges which remain at $10 $68,000 In 1990, an Increase to the
except In the case of political vlllage of $22,000.
signs where the charge Is $25.
It was decided at !he meeting

BOYS
Dtc. 15-Southtm-lway
Dtc. 16-Srn-s Valey-H01111

GilLS
Dtc. 11-Southem-Home
Dtc. 14-Syrnmes Valley-Away
Dtc. 16-FHirai-Hodring-lway

SOUTHERN
BOYS
Dtc. 15-Eastem-.llome
Dec. 16-Easttm-Pike-at O.U.

that the Insurance with Adva·
Care wUI be extended on a
temporary basis. Meanwhile,
plans were made for the vlllage
to check Into self-Insurance to be
admlnl-tered by Buckeye Hllls·
Hocking Valley Regional Devel·
opment District. The mayor
explained that an eight county
area Is Involved In the distriCt
which Is administering several
self· Insurance programs at this ·
time.
·
A representative of Buckeye
Hills has been asked to attend the
first meeting of Council In
January to explain the program.
The clerk was authorized to
make necessary transfers to
bring all the village funds Into
Une before the enlf of the ,year.
A letter was read from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour·

GilLS

...s

CALL 992-3311 or

992-2342

·CLEVELAND (UPI) - The' expanding economy during most
number of Ohioans Uvlng below of the decade.
George Zeller, senior re!he poverty line In 1989lncreased
to 13.7 percent - about 1.5 searcherforlhecouncll,saldthe
mUllon people - reversing a number of Jobs In Ohio had
four-year decline.
Increased by 15 percent since
The annual Ohio Poverty lndl· 1983, when the economiC recov·
cators report was released by !he ery began, but the poverty rate
Councll for Economic Opportunl· dec;llned by only 4 percent over
ties In Greater aeveland Mon· the same period.
day, the same day Gov. Richard
At the Columbus seminar, Eric
Celesteandbuslnessleadersheld Berkland, president of the Ohio
-a -~tnar tn Colllmblts to boast ·Manufacturers•· Association.
about :tbe'state•s @C!OIIDI'IIle )ler· sald('"i""le 'revitalization ot our
formance over !he past decade.
manufacturing base Is the grea·
The councU said the poverty test quiet story of the decade."
rate Increased by 25.4 percent
But Zeller said In the report,
during. the 1980s, despite an ' 'Most of the jobs created In Ohio

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE----------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. !-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 8- Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. IS-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co. .......... .......... Home
Dec. 22-Belpre ........................... Away
Dec. 29-Lopn .................... ....... Home
Jan. 5-Aieunder ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Ftdetal Hockin&amp; .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 16-Warren .......................... Away
Jan. 19-Trimble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ............. .......... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens ............................ Away
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........... , ............ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 21-Mill,tr ............................. :Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hockmg ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ...... .. , ........ Home
Dec . 1-Hannan Trace ........ : ......... Away
Dec. 5-Kypr Creek .................... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
Dec. 15-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 16-Symmes Valley .............. Home
.Dec. 22-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Dec.~30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Federal Hocking ......... ...... Away
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace .................. Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia .......... ......... Away
Jan. 19-Southwestern ................ Home
Jan . 26-K~er Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 27-M Iller .... , ...................... Home
Feb. 3-Southern ........ ................ Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. 1600ak Hill ......................... Home

SOUTHERN HIG~ !ICI:IQOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALl
Nov., 25-Southwestem .......... ..... ,. Home
Now. 28-Kypr Creek ................... Away
Dec. 1-0ak Hill .. ....................... Home
Dec. 5-North Gall ia .................... Away
Dec. 8-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 15-Eastern .:........... ........... Home
Dec. 16-Eastern Pike .................. It D.U.
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern .... l ............ Away
Dec. 29-Athens ......................... Home
Jan. 5-0ak Hill ...................:....... Away
Jan. &amp;-Gallipolis ........................ Home
Jan. 12-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswocid .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ................ ,.......... Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ....... ........ Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern ........ ........... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ............... Away

''DIGNITY AND
SEIVICE AlWAYS"
IM .H. Ewillf-Dirtctor

PH. 992-2121

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Southern ............................. Away
Nov. 30-Miller ................................ Home
Dec. 2-Eastern .......................... ....... Away
Dec. 7-Trimble ................................ Home .
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-York .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wellston ............................ Home
Dec. 18-VInton Co ............................ Away
Dec. 21-Belpree .. ............................ Home
Jan. 4-Aitunder .............................. Away
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking ..................... Away
Jan. 11-Miller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eastern ............................... Home
Jan. 11-Trimble ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Ntlsonville·York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ............................... Home
Jan. 29-Vinton Co ........................... Home
Feb. 1-Btlpra ................................... Away
Feb. 5-Aieunder ............................. Home
Feb. 8-Federal Hocking .................... Home
Feb. tO-Southern ........... :................ Home

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-9D GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 27-North Gallia ........................ Away
Nov. 30-Hannan Trace ..................... Home
Dec. 2-Meigs .................................. Home
Dec. 4-K~pr Creek ........................... Away
Dec. 6-Tnmble :................................ Away
Dec. 7-Southwestern ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Southern ............................ Horns
Dec. 14-Symmes Valley ........... ......... Away
Dec. I&amp;~Federal Hocking .......... .. ....... Away
'Dec. 21-Gak Hill ....... ...................... Home
Jan. 4-Hannan Trace .. ,...................... Away
Jan. 10- Tnmbla .... ........................... Home
Jan. 11-North Gallia ........................ Home
Jan. 15-Meics ................................ .. Away
Jan. IS-Southwester~ ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Federal Hoekma ..............:: .. Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek .............. .......... Home
Feb. 1-South~rn ............................... Away
Feb. 5-0ak H1ll ................................ Away
Feb. S-Symmes Valley ......... ............ Home

VALLEY

•

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,

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989·90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-Mei&amp;s ................................ Home
Nov. 27-Kypr Creek.. ...................... Home
Nov. 30-Dak Hill .............................. Away
Dec. 4-llorth Glllia ......................... Home
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ....................... Home
Dec. 11-Eastern ...... :........................ Away
Dec. 14-Southwestern ...................... Away
Dec. IS-Waterford ........................... Ho111e
Dec. 21-Symmes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Nelsonville-York .................... Away
Jan. 4-0ak Hill ................................ Home
Jan. 11-Kypr Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace ... .................... Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ................ Home
Ja. 25-North Gallia ........................... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford ........:................... Away
Feb. !-Eastern ................................ Home
Feb. 5-Sytnmes Valley ...... &lt;.............. Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................... ... Home
Feb. 10-Mei~s .................................. Away
-

.

during the 1980s have paid less
than $12,000 per year. This
Increased ,Ohio's nofmber . of
workinf! poor, and It was an
Important factor underlying the
slate's modest poverty decrease
despite beallhy job growth dur·
lng the las I six years."
For a sl~le person, the feder·
ally def~ver,\Y level Is an
annual Income ofless than$5,980.
For a famlly of four, the
threshekl.ls-Sl)..659-a year;-;
Vlntoa Tope Llsl
The state's highest poverty
rates are In the traditionally poor
Appalachian region In the souContinued on page 5

Eastern, Southern school boards
approve routine matters .Monday

_ _.;...__________ GIRLS SCHEDULE,--------

't

demnlflcatlon clause. Councll
EmplOyees were commended
members were In agreement for the attractive Christmas
that they want to do ever ything decorations at village hall by
possible to make It easter for BHI Councilman Paul Gerard.
Haptonstall, owner, to continue
It was repdrted that Mitch
with his expansion plans.
. Meadows' plans for construction
The construction of restrooms ot a two story building on North
at Hartinger Park was discussed Second St. are progressing. The
and CouncU passed a motion to Prescription Store, now next
assume responslblllty for any door, wlll move Into the flntnoor
cost over $10,000. A letter re- of the more spacious bullding
questing that action was re· once It Is completed. The second
celved from the Ohio Depart· floor wm be another Meadows
ment of Development following rental unit. It was reported.
the awarding of a block grant for
The mayor's report showed
the $10,000.
receipts of $12,112 for the month
Councilman Bob Gilmore re- of November.
ported on the erection of a sign by
Attending. the meeting were
the Ohio Department of Trans· Mayor Hoffman, Clerk ·
portatlon at the Intersection of Treasurer Jon Buck, and Coun·
!he Route 7 bypass and County
cllmen Dewey Horton, James
Road 3. He proposed that the Clatworthy, Gilmore, Gerard ~
village put a directional sign at Wllllam Walters and Jack
the end ot Route 3.
Satterfield.

Oh-o poverty rate up in '89

WE WILL'.

ALL YO.·
INSUUNCE

ces, Division of Waterways,
regarding the $25,000 grant
which the vlllage received to
upgrade the Middleport levee. A
meeting was announced for Dec.
l4 at 1:30 p.m. In Columbus for
the actual awarding of the funds
and signing of the contract.
Mayor Hoffman will attend.
Presented at the meeting was
an amended agreement pre·
pared by Attorney Steve Story
between Pomeroy and Middleport regarding handllng of the
sewer service charges on bus!·
nesses In the area near the north
corporation limits.
Action on the agreement was ·
tabled pending approval by
Pomeroy VIllage Councll. The
agreement addresses the points
of connecting areas and rate
Increases, and contains an In·

Meigs fourth; Gallia seventh

Dtc. 11-Eostll'n-Away
Dtc. 14-Southwmern-Away
Dtc. 11-Watll'ford-Home

TAlE CARE OF

1 Section, 10 Pogoo 25 Cento
A Muh-o Inc. N-opopOt'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, December 12, 1989
'

EASTERN
•

ae-.

Low &amp;oaf&amp;bt Ia mill
Cbaace of 180w It perceat.
Wedae-dll)', cloudy, blp Ia .
mid U.. Chuce of •now SO
percent.

WINNERr· - These alx Meigs County younp&amp;era aent &amp;he m011&amp; mice to coUege during &amp;he
Melp County Cbap&amp;er of the American Cancer
Soclti&amp;y'a annual Send A Mouae To College
campalp. UIUan Moore, director of the local
chapter, preaented cheeks &amp;o &amp;he &amp;op money
collectors. From, left &amp;o right beside Moore .a re
!!rat place winner John Cleland, from Pomeroy .

Elementu-y, recelvln1 $100, ud sixth place
winner Marjorie Halar, SaJJabury Elemenlal')'.
receiving 125. From left &amp;o rlr;blln troat are Jenny
Hower&amp;on, Middleport Elementary, second place,
S'75; Ashley Hanaaha, Pomeroy Elementary,
lhlrd place, $40; Amber DufJy, Raclne-8outhern
Kindergarten, fourth place, 1211; and Nicholas
Dettwlller, Pomeroy Elementary, fifth place, $25.

Icebox door
closes on Ohio
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
The Man Behind the Town.
This article about Samuel
Wyllys Pomeroy, whose family
name was given to the village, Is
taken from the dlaryo!Valenllne
B. HoriOn and was recorded by
Grace Horton In April or 1954.
Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy was
the son of Eleazar and Mary
Wyllys Pomeroy. He was born In
Hartford. Conn, In 1764, and his
parents were of English descent.
He lived as a boy at the home of
his maternal grandfather, called
Wyllys Hill, and as a boy played
In the hollow of the famous
Charter Oak, which stood on his
grandfather's lawn.
As a young man he moved to
Boston, Mass. where he was a
merchant and ship owner l.n the
East India Trade. He built a
hoUJe at Brighton, Mass. on the
Charles River. He married Cia·
rlssa Alsop, of Middletown,
Conn.
Early in the century, he bought
some land warrants from Revoludonary Sokllen .'Thls land was
located In Green Township, Gal·
lla County,. whlch later was part
of Meigs County. He also bough!
land In Sutton Township ~hlch
wa1 limber land and farm land,
·and at ·Graham Station, now
Racine, be sold land.
The land he owned In Salisbury
to1'1hlp extended along the

J!'urnace repairs at Tuppers
Plains and Hlvervlew Elemen·
tary Schools and Eastern High
School were approved at Monday
night's meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
The board voted to contract
with the Columbus Heating and
Ventllatlng Co. to tear down and
rebulld the units at !he Tuppers
Plains School. Supt. Dan Apllng
was authorized by the board to
proceed with the job of caulking
and packing the furnaces a
Riverview and high school.
· Again discussed at !he meeting
was the dis trlct policy on honor
roll attalrunent and the K
through 12 grading poUcy, Action
on a recommendation to modify
the existing pollcy was tabled.
Edna Householder was em·
ployed as a half-time teacher
aide, whlle Ralph H. Werry and
Nancy L. Basye were hired as
substitute teachers for the re·
malnder of the 1989·90 school
year to be used on an as needed
only basis. Also employed was
Teresa Evans as a substitute ·
teacher aide for the rest of the

By Ualted Press ln&amp;ernatlonal
The Icebox door has closed on
Ohio - and It wUI remain closed
for at least the next four or five
days.
Snow was likely over much of
the state Tuesday, with some
spots In eastern Ohio along the
Ohio River, as well as the east
lakeshore counties, to receive
Robert and Per;r;y Lewis of
about 1 Inch. A dusting was Middleport are looking for an
expected over much of the rest of unidentified woman who Mondll)'
the state.
nlr;h&amp;, came to Mr. Lewla' aid
Some flurries may bang on In after he was Involved In a
the northeast, but for the most one-vehicle accident on Sand mu
part the Buckeye St4te was In for Road near Letart, W.VL
partly cloudy and dry conditions
According &amp;o Mrs. Lewis, her
Tuesday night. On Wednesday, buband's vehicle weal over a
clouds are golnl to Increase &amp;lid slx·foot embankment between
a chance of snow will return.
5:30 and &amp;Jut nlr;lil. It was about
While the majority of Ohio U mlaules however, before
should avoid getdng much snow . . , _ spotted lbe vehicle and
through Wednesday, &lt;;old came &amp;o bit l'etCIIe. · The helper
temperatures will be wu a wamaa, whom Mr. Lewis
Inescapable,
tblalta mil)' have beea tram
· Highs were forecast lobe In the GalllpoU.. She came &amp;o hill aid,
20s or near 30 Tuesday and &amp;ook &amp;he al&amp;uadoa Ia bud and
Wednesday. Lows Tuesday night weat to a bo- where lhe lllked
are expected to be from 5 to 10 In for the ap(II'OJrlate authorltlea to
the northwest counties and from be called. lr all lbe coar.lloa,
10 to 20 elsewhere. Such readings &amp;Jr. Lewla did 110&amp; ret &amp;lie
are 5 to 10 degrees lower than woman's name.
what would be normal during the
LeniiiiRalaed minor lll,larlea
coldest part of the winter.
In tlae aecldeat, aad be aild IIIII
There Is a chance of snow wife would like &amp;a lhanlt &amp;lie
statewide Thursday, with a wamu periOIIaiJy. The)' ulllllat
chance of snow In !he north but If p aJJ'Ible, de call ctem collecl
fair In !he south Friday and II*
home at
Coni!Dued on page 5

Good Samaritan
sought by couple

river tor about five miles from
Kerr's Run, nearly to Leading
Creek, and back about one mlle.
Most of this was coal land.
In 1825 Pomeroy made a
journey to Ohio and saw his land
for the first time.
Pomeroy's future son-ln·law
was Valendne B. Horton, son of
Zenas and Nancy Seaver Horton,
Windsor, Vt. wbowereofEngllsh
descent. He was born Jan. 29,
1802.
He studied law In Middletown,
Conn. under the honogable Sa·
muel Dana and was ildmltted to
the bar In 1800. He moved to
Pittsburgh, Pa. which he thought
would "someday by a city." ·
On Nov. 30,1833, In Cincinnati,
Valendne Horton married Clara
Pomeroy, daughter of Samuel
Wyllys Pomeroy. They came to
Nyesvllle at the moulh of Kerr's
Condnued 01\Fge 5

••Jr

-·---- ..

•18'73.

,year.
hired and the resignation of a
The .board authorized partici- substitute bus driver accepted at
pation In underwriting Its share a meeting of the Southern Local
of the excess costs of a teacher School Board Monday night at
aide for the County SBH unit for the high school.
the balance of the school year.
Added to the substitute
Modifications to the Class of · teachers list were Ralph H.
1991 budget, the Chester Elemen· Werry 11nd Carol A. Smith. Don
tary Activity Fund budget, and Smith ·resigned as a substitute
!he 1989 Chapter II budget were
bus driver.
approved.
The board au lhorized the re·
The hid of Nationwide Insu· · pslr of the film strip projector at
ranee, the John Turner Agency, the high school and approved the
for fleet Insurance for 1990 was district remaining with COG·
accepted.
SEOVEC, the minimum pre·
Appropriations for the 1990 mlum dental Insurance program
Title III fund were approved.
with J.W. Didion and Associates
Wednesday, Jan. 10, at 6: 30 for the period of Jan·. 1 through
was set as tlie time for the June 30, 1991.
organizational meeting, to be
The Nationwide Mutual Trust
followed at 7 p.m. by the regular lnsural!ce Co. was awarded the
meeting In the high school liability Insurance contract for a
premium of $2,923. Johnson Con·
cafeteria .
Members met In execu tlve trois of Nitro. W. Va. was
session to discuss personnel authorized to proceed with heat·
lng system repairs · at the high
matters.
Attending were Jim Smith, school.
president, Kathy Manlcke, vice
Attending were Scott Wolfe.
president, and members Ray Charles Norris, Denny Evans,
Gary Wilford, and John Murphy.
Karr and Charles Knight.
board members and Supt. Bobby
Southem Meeting
Ord and Treasurer Dennie Hlll.
Two substitute teachers werP.

Local news briefs--.
Patrol cites driver after accident

.

One driver was cited In a three vehicle colllslon at 5: 45p.m .

Monday In Meigs County on SR. 7, at the Intersection of CR. 75,
at Pomeroy.
Troopers said southbound Sue P. Murphy, 43, Racine, driving
a 1987MercuryTopaz, attempted to make a left turn onto CR. 75
Into the path of northbound Kenneth B. Bol!O, 34, Mlllfleld, Ohio,
driving a 19lll Olds, and the vehicles collided.
The Impact of the collision knocked the Murphy car into a 1986
Plymouth driven by Richard L. Gilmore, 58, Pomeroy. Gilmore
was stopped on CR. 75, at the Intersection. There was heavy
damage to the Bobo and Murphy vehicles; minor damage to the
Gilmore car. Murphy suffered minor Injuries but was not
Immediately treated.
The patrol cited Murphy for !allure to yield the right of way
when turning left.
·

Squads luzndle 3 calls Monday
Three calls for assistance were answered on Monday by units
of the Melp County Emerpncy Medical Services.
At 8:45a.m., Racine went to Brewer Road for Edcar Brewer
who wu taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3: :M p.m., Pomeroy waa called to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center for Fred Shain to Veterans Memorial llotpltal.
Pomeroy at 5:411 p.m. tranaporll!d Sue Murphy from an auto
accident on Hlgbland Church Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospl&amp;al.

�-.

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Commentary··
..

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The Daily .Sent~nef
•lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~~ ~._...,..,....._d....

ROBERT L. WINGETl"
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manar;er

A MEMBER of 'lbe Associated Press, fnland Dally Press"elation and lhe American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTEIIS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesslhaa 3M
words lonr. .ut letters are sub)ecllo edltlar aad mu• be slped wltb
name, address aad telepbo•e number. No IIDSiped.le&amp;ters •DI be p•b·
llsbed. Leiters shQuld be In rood tule, addressing Issues, not personall·
lies.

2-The Deily &amp;em.. .
Pol• .. oy-Middlaport, Ohio
Tuntlay,
Decambar 12, 1989.
.

Drug war funds go to ·the wrong place
WASHINGTON - Geor1e
Bush Ia the perfect president to
tackle the tough job of d~fense
budget cuts without breaking a
sweat. After all, Bush h~ plenty
of experience fighting a war
without money - the drug wa·r.
II he complains about how hard
It Is to pare the military, we wlli
remind him that he and his
predecessor, had no trouble
grandstanding about one war
worth fighting In the 1980s ~ the
drug war - while they devoted
minimal resources to the battle.
II the Pentagon puzzles about
how to stay at maximum ef!i-

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Att~

clency with mtnlmumdollars, we
will refer them to the National
Forest Service, which has been In part because pot crops are
doing It for years - waging an booming on public lands, lnclud·
all·out war, ·without enough mo- lng the national forests.
The Agriculture Department
ney, against marijuana growers
who plant their crops In the has recently finished comparing ·
its 1987 drug war to the 1988
national forests.
When Bush announced hli battle, and the figures, In an
massive strategy !or a $7.9 billion ' internal USDA rep&lt;irt, aren't
war on drul(s In September and pretty. Nearly 415,000 cannlbls
sent his battle plan to Congress, plants were eradicated from
the Forest Service was not even 3,280 pot gardens last year - an
mentioned. Maybe Bush Isn't 841lercent increase over 1987.
Like the poor· stepchild of the
aware tbat America, once just a
marijuana Importer, is now Bush administration, the Forest
becoming a marijuana exporter, Service must pay for Its own drug

Peace dividend
fight ahead
ByARNOLDSA~LAK

UPI Sea lor Editor
' WASHINGTON- President Bush doesn't want to talk about the
so-called peace dividend that may result from easing Cold War
tensions, hut there are several hundred Democrats on Capitol Hill
who will want to discuss it.
The peace dividend is the name given to billions of.dollars that Is
supposed to be saved when the need for heavy mllltary spending
lessens.
Talk about this still theoretical pot of gold Is not new: Advocates of a
number of programs that were blocked by heavy mUitary spending
during. World War II, the Korean War and Vietnam all hoped the end
of hostilities -would free large sums of money for their pet projects.
In some cases, long delayed federal social or other domestic
programs were funded when the need for wartime expenditures went
down, but more often than not, Inflation and military modernization
ate up the money befot(! it ever left the Pentagon.
The sad truth ts that'll' dollar given a bureaucrat, In uniform or not,
ts a dollar regarded as a permanent bequest, to be renewed every
year. Witness the extreme difficulty thiS year in trying to cut back on
a relatively modest list of military bases that have outlived their
usefulness.
~ There is one big difference between the earlier peace dividends and
!.he putative windfall now being discussed. Those expenditures, even
,D the case of the decade-long Vietnam experience, were for
rilatlvely short, specific conflicts.
·
; ~The new dividend is based on the Idea that it will be possible to 'c ut
pack the enormous permanent military establiShment that has
lfeveloped over the 40-plus years of the post-World War II
C&lt;)nfroiltation between the SOviet Union and the United States.
:; Asked about the possibility of diverting major sums from military
t1l social spending If and when military reductions actually occur as a
result of the new air of arms control cooperation between the
iupoerpowers, Bush waved aside the prospect.
.· Any Immediate savings, he Indicated, will be needed to reduce the
J!lderal budget deficit, which still exceeds ,$100 billion and which
un!)er the Gramm-Rudman law Is due to be cut about $40 billion next
~ar.

;. "I doni want to hold out to those who wanttorushoutand spend a lot
rj!ore money the hope that that is going to happen," Bush said. "We' ve
got some tremendous economic problems that have to be solved."
Bush has some public backing there. An NBC poll after the Malta
summit showed more people favored using any peace dividend for
deficit reduction than for new federal programs or for tax reduction.
. Administration and some congressional budget experts don't
tjlrsee any big peace dividend soon. but their estimates of how soon
~n,sions ease in Europe and major arms control agreements can be
):eached could be far too conservative gjven the pace of events In
£astern Europe this year.
; : In any case, a lot of Democrats in Congress are not going to be
~tisfied with Bush' s airy dismissal of the Idea thl\1 at long last there
1~ going to be money for programs stymied by Cold War defense needs
and by the government's recent heavy deficits. ThiS is one area where
the president can look for opposition and the better he does in his
J!egotlations with President Gorbachev, the sooner it will happen.

';foday in history
By United Press International
: Today Is Tuesday, Dec. 12, the 346th day of 1989 with 19 to follow .
· The moon is full.
: The morning star is Mars and Jupiter.
• The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn. .
: Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
iaclude John Jay, first chief justice of .the U.S. Supreme Court, in
1745; abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison in 1805; French noveliSt
qustave Flaubert In 1821; Norwegian painter Edvard Munch in 1863;
actor Edward G. Robinson In 1893; singer Frank Sinatra in 1915 (age
~); TV game show host Bob Barker In 1923 (age 66); New York
Mayor Edward Koch In 1924 (age 65) ; and singers Connie Francis In
~ (age 51) and Dionne Warwick in 1941 (age 48).
,
On this date in history:
In 1901, a radio message was transmitted across the Atlantic Ocean
for the first time.
· In 1937, Japanese planes bombed and sank the U.S. gunboat Panay
10 the Yangtze river north of Nanking, China. Japan later said it was a
mistake.

,
·'

·r-----------------~

Berry's World

Syracuse retains top. spot in
UPI ratings; Kansas second

Pllga

.

Ben Wattenberg

war through the operating funds
It gets from the Agriculture
Department. When' the speCial
drug-fighting money Is farmed
out, it goes to the high-profile
projects and agencies such as the
Drug Enforcement Administration or the Customs Service, or
fancy radar balloons in Mexico
and hlgh-pronle eradication efforts In Bolivia.
Advocates of legalized marl·
juana, looking lor a case study to
bolster their argument, need look
no further than the forests where
the federal government ' hun't
devoted enough money to the
fight. Forests Service agents
step up their activity a little, and
the growers step up their activity
a lot.
The drug farmers used to Jive
by a simple business standard.
They grew three times as much
as the market would absorb one-third to be sold, one-lhlrd to
' be stolen by patch pirates and
one-third to be confiscated by law
enforcement agents.
Greed and aggressive law
enforcement have made the old
formula obsolete, and the d01g
growers are now ·determined to
keep the whole crop.
.
In 1988, the number of booby
traps 'found around Illegal po'
patches in the national forests
increased by 36 percent. There
was also an Increase In the
fireflghts between the good guys
and the bad guys. Drug growers
have always carried guns, but
today they are more Inclined to
shoot It out. Last year the Forest
Service seized 165 ~rcent more
firearms than were taken from
dealers in 1987.
Drug growers have also responded to Increased law e!lforcement by moving around and
by moving Indoors to
greenho!Jses.
The Forest Service thinks It
was able to wipe out about 60 .
percent of the total marijuana
grown In public foreSts last ynr.
On paper, that looks good, In
reality, It means that the drug
growers will respond by becomIng more violent and agresslve:

BELLSCORFS-LARams'runnlnKbackGreg
· . Bell ( 42) IDe&amp; over the top for the first score of

Germany, and Czec-hoslovakia.
Enough already. Message re·
celved, Americans are saying,
and It's great. Now, let's see
·some pictures about a kid
trapped in a well, an earthquake,
trapped whales, or those crooked
politicians.
And cautious. You bet. Americans are smarter than experts.
That's clearly revealed in the
"public opinion report" sectlon
of the forthcoming wonderful
brand new m!lgazlne called "The
American Enterprise," published by the American Enter·
prise Institute. (I work at the
American Enterprise Institute.
The preceding will be nominated
for a Gulness-level mentioning
spasm.)
The collected recent public
opinion surveys (from Gallup,
Roper, NBC, etc.) show that
-'most Americans believe that
Gorbachev Is different from
previous SOviet leaders, that he
can be trusted more, that he Is
more peacefully inclined, , and
that he Is sincerely trying to open

the Soviet economic and political
systems.
Americans like Gorbachev a
lot. Gorby has learned Reagan's
secret: If you denounce Soviet
life and SOviet policy, people
think you're wonderful.
Americans, despite their cau·
tious skepticism, are ready to
play In the new world. Foreign
aid is ·almost Invariably re·
garded as a bummer by Americans. · Yet, today, Americans
favor economic aid to Poland,
Hungary and East Germany.
Alas, pollsters don't always
ask all the right questions. The
unasked question In the surveys
Is the most important one. This:
Are you proud of what the United
States has done?
But you know the answer. It Is
Yes. That affirmation will provide the political force to let
America keep on shaping his·
tory. Americans like what they
did, and they're going to keep
doing it.
·
In years to come, Americans
will get a dividend from what
they have accomplished. Human

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) -Joe
Montana and John Taylor, the
pair who combined lor the
winning · points. In possibly the
most exciting Super Bowl ever,
may have outdone themseives
Monday night.
Montana threw for 458 yards 286 of them to Taylor, who caught
scoring passes- bf 92 and 95 yards
- as the San Francisco 49ers
rallied from a 17-point deficit
with 10 minutes left for a 30·27
victory over the Los Angeles
Rams.
' 'I guess they thought they had
our number, bulweshowedthem
we're still here," Taylor said
after catching 11 passes .for
team-record receiving yardage.
In boo~tjng th§)~fgl!e' s best
record to 12·2, the 49fors clin&lt;!hed ·
their fourth straight NFC West
title- and sixth in seven yearsand secured the home-field ad·
vantage through the conference
, .
playoffs.
Roger Craig put San Francisco
ahead for the first time; 30-27,
with a one-yard TD run with 3:42
left, less than three minutes after
Los Angeles' Ron Brown fumbled
the ball away oil a kickoff-return.
It was the Rams' second
turnover In a devastating 26·
second span that Included Tay·
lor's dynamic 95-yard catch and
run.
The Rams, 9-5, who 'failed to
clinch a playoff berth, had a

beings seek a transcentte'nt role
In life; they want to do something
larger .. and greater than
themselves.
Shakespeare said It In "Henry
V." The king addresses his
troops prior to the battle of
Agincourt. "He which hath no
stomach to this fight, let him
depart .. . But we In It shall be
remembered; we few, we happy
few, we band of brothers; for he
today that shed his blood with me
shall be my brother ... Gentle- ·
men In England now a·bed shall
think themselves accursed they
were not here, and hold their
manhoods cheap whiles any
speaks that fought with us upon
St. Crispin's day."
Americans were there on St.
CriSpin's Day. They held the line.
They won probably tbe most
Important, and certainly the
most costly, Ideological conflict
in history. They shaped the
world. They should · tell their
grandchildren war stories about
it, or rather, Cold War stories.
They're entitled.

.

sands of discarded milk, water
and juice jugs that have been
crushed and strapped to Industrial pallets In bales weighing 500
to 1,000 pounds apiece.
Leaving the plant dally are
dozens of "gaylord boxes," each
containing 750 pounds of clean,
reclaimed, pebble-sized · plastic
pellets ready to be fabricated
Into new products.
The facility Is open around the
clock, with three shifts of employees operatl!lg a trio of
regrind machines. They work
behind locked doors because
Eaglebrook has developed a
process to remove the paper
labels from the jugs. "I wouldn't
let my mother see It," says
Andrew Stephens, lhe company's
president.
Eaglebrook was founded only
five years ago and Is a pioneer In great meuure because the
plastics Industry long refused to
accept any responsibility for the
vast amounta of waste Its products generated.
The newspaper, aluminum and
glass Industries have grudiJngly
operated recycling programs for

, A thought for the day: Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison said,
Wherever there Is a human being, I see God-given rights Inherent In
thst belnl, whatever may be the .q or complexion."

more than two decades. Today,
almost 30 percent of all aluminum and more than 20 pj'rcent of
all newspaper Is recycled.
But only 1 percent of the 15
billion pounds of plastics produced In this country annually
currently are recycled. Almost
all of the rest goes Into over·
loaded landfills, where Its contribution to the nation's solid waste
.stream is only 7 percent by
weight but 20 to 25 percent by
volume.
By manipulating molecular
configuaratlons, melt Inches,
densities and weights, thousands
of different variations and
grades can be produced to make
various products - and they
must be separated before they
can be successfully recycled.
Thus, Eaglebrook specializes
in recycling hlib·denslty polyethylene or HDPE but wants
nothing · to do with low-density
polyetbylene or LDPE, used to
make supermarket, dry cleaner
and 1arbage bap.
Another firm, Wellman Inc.,
with plants In New Jersey and
South Carolllla, Is the country's
leading recycler of polyethylene
.terepbthalate or PET, llled for ·
soft drink or IIOda bottles.
Another realn. polypropylene,
Ia the principal component of
everything from auto battery
cues to dliposableUllaper Uners,

while polystyrene is the material
of foam coftee cups, meat trays
and the "clamshell" containers
used by fast-food restaurants.
Political pressure from a !n'OW·
lng number of people concerned
about environmental degrada·
tlon has convinced some of the
country's largest chemical and
all companls, which provide the
feedstock for makln~ plastic, to
belatedly launch recycling operations. Among the recent en·
trants In the field are Du Pont,
Dow, Goodyear, Eastman
Kodak, Mobil and Amoco.
They have discovered that
relabrlcated plastics can be used
for an ama~ing array of products, Including automobile pan·
els, boat hulls, agricultural
drainage pipes, bathtubs, shower
stalls, toys, Dower pots, coat
hangers, trash cans, insulation,
pac'klng materials and truck
mud !laps.
In addition, plutlc can be
molded Into a wood substitute
that cannot be damaged by water
and doet1 not splinter. It already
Ia being used for park benches,
picnic tables, piers, decks, leneel and Industrial pallets.
Finally, lhe bot tom line: Even
with reprocessing ex~naes, recycled plastic Is about 50 percent
less expensive than virgin
plastic.
•.

that's putting It mildly."
The 49ers also capitalized on a
Los Angeles fake field goal play
that failed In the second quarter.
The Rams led 17·3 at the time.
Shortly after holder Pete Holohan was stopped inches short of!
the goal lne on a run, Montana
and Taylor hooked up on their
92-yard play.
"I thought the fake field goal
was a great call, and stlil do ,"
Robinson said.
"After we defended that field
goal I knew we had a great
chance to win," said San Fran· ·
cisco coach George Seifert,
whose team Is now 8·0 on the road
this year.
Trailing '17-10 after Mike Lans·
ford's second field goal of the
game with 13:34 left, the 49ers
marched 66 yards In six plays to
get within 14 points as Montana
found Mike Wilson on a square·
out In the end zone with 10: 04left.
Los Angeles, aided by a 36-yard
pass Interference penalty
against Don Griffin, marched to
the San Francisco four, but
quarterback . Jim Everett
fumbled a snap, and Matt Millen
recovered for the 49ers.
On the next play, Taylor
caught Montana's pass along the
right sideline, picked up a
number of blocks and rambled
all the way to complete the
95-yard scoring play.
Mike Cofer, though, missed the
extra point , and the Rams led
27·23 with 6:27 left.
.
Brown then fumbled the ensu·
tng kickoff, with Keith Render·
Valparaiso hit 10 of 26long shots. son recovering for the 49ers at
Valparaiso stayed close and the Los Angeles 27. With Taylor
.. commlted fouled In the last catching, a 15·yard pass on
couple of minutes in an attempt thitrd·and·flve at the 22, San
to get the ball. Youngstown Francisco moved to Craig's
outscored its visitors 12·3 In the go-ahead score.
last 1:47, all at the line.
At Ada, Mike Bertke scored 17
points, but a three-point basket
·by Chris Sweeney provided the
Insurance Ohio Northern need~d
for its Ohio Atheltic Conference
WE'LL
win.

four·game winning streak
snapped. They have lost eight of
the la~t nine games to the 49fors at
Anaheim Stadium.
"Anyone that says we blew It
doesn't understand the team we
played or the kind of· game It
was," Los Angeles coach John
Robinson said.
"We still have a chance at the
playoffs. If we win tour in a row
we' ll meet them again (in the
conference championship
game)."
Montana and Taylor, who
combined on the winning 10-yard
· pass play with 34 seconds left in
last year 's 20·16 Super Bowl
triumph over Cincinnati, were
simply fabulous Monday night.
Montanl!, playing despite
bruised Jibs, completed 30 of 42
passes for three touchdowns and
two Interceptions'- only his sixth
arid seventh ptckof!s of the
season - and a team record for
yardage.
·
Taylor finished with 11 catches
and the second and fourth longest
pags plays in franchl:;e history.
"I was just running !or day·
light," said Taylor. whose team
also trailed 17·0 after 12 minutes.
''Fortunately things kept open·
tng up as I went up the field.
Jerry Rice got great blocks for
me on both runs."
Added Montana, now 8·0 as a
starter at Anaheim Stadium:
"Taylor had a great day - and

By United Press International
Akron's Anthony Buford put on
a fr-throw shooting exhibition
Monday night, but Ohio Univer·
slty didn't have much of an
opportunity to try his techniques.
Buford, who had 118 poiQts,
connected on 11 of 14 free throws
in Akron's 66-60 win over Ohio
University . As a team, OU hit on
only eight of 11 attempts.
Akron was leading late In the
game when the Bobcats began
desparatiOIJ fouling, giving the
Zips more chances at the line.
In other games, Youngstown
beat Valparaiso 89-71, Baldin·
Wallace beat Bethany (W.Va.)
97-75, Ohto' Northern edged Hei·
delberg 58-55 In overtime, and
Wheeling (W.Va.) Jesultdowned
Ohio U-Belmont 93·67,
· Tuesday night's games lind
Findlay at Ohio Dominican,
Central State at Rio Grande,
Urbana at Lake Erie, Bluffton at
Indiana Tech and Shawnee State
at Georgetown (Ky. l

Sports briefs
Speed Skating
American world sprint champion Bonnie Blair broke the Eas~
German dominance of the World ·
Cup championships Sunday, win·
ning the women's 1,000 meters In
1:23.32 at Karulzawa, Japan .. ·
East German Angela Hauck beat
Blair In the 500 meters.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

'

EIGHT POINT BUCK- Tbls elght·point buck was killed during
the 1989 gun season by Jack Handley Jr., Route' I, Langsville.

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

YOURFIBST

The Daily Sentinel

.... ,.U ........

Published every afternoon, Monday

thr,qh Friday, . Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Qhlo, by tho Olllo VaUey Pub·
llshln11 .Compony/Muft!medla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 65769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond ctus postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
.

'
Member: United Press Internattonal,

Ohio Newspa_per A~~«latlon.-Nallonal

Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper S&amp;lt!l, 733 Third Avenue,

At Akron, OU held a 25-23 lead·
POSniASTER: &amp;end addreos cllantp!l
at the half, and the Zips were
lo The Dally Sentinel, ill Court St.,
unable to overcome that deficit
Pomeroy, atlo 411'181.
until Buford's dunk at 10! 03.
8Uli8CIIIPTION IIATEII
After trading baskets for a
_
B)' Carrier or Molcw Bnte
couple of minutes, a Torrey
On'i. Week ............................ .... ... SUO
One Monlh ..... ............................SUO
Kershaw jumper at J: 38 gave
One Year ............... .................. 172.80
Akron a 4H71ead, which the Zips
SINGLE COPY
1\ever let go. ·
PBICII:
Dave Jamerson, who led all
Dally ................................... 25 Cents
scorers with 28 points, 'hit a · . · Subocrlbera notdeolrtnalo poy tbecaro
thr-polnt shOt to pull OU to
rler _!119 rernlt in aavance direct to
The Dally 'Sent !Del on a 3, 6 or 12 m~nth
' 56-54, but the Bobcats were
bull. Credll wll bo 111ven ••n• Heh
forced to foul in an attempt to get
week.
the ball and Akron stretched the
No llllllcrlplloN by mill ,.,.ttted In
lead by hltdng foul shots.
area wbere borne clrrla' Hn'lce II
avallllbie.
At YoUJIII!OlWD, Reggie Kemp
scored Z7 polnta Monday nllbt to
lead YOUIIII~ Stste over
-MolpC..alr
u w..a .................................. $19.116
Valpara!IO. YSU, wlllch held a
.. :...............................SI'f.M
40-37 lead at halftime, wa1 unable IIIW..a
52 Weeki ................. ................. S76.III
10 pull away from their vllltors.
. · Molp &lt;:tollllr .-.10
..................................
· wliO kept the 1ame cl01e with . uw..a
xw..a .................................. t&amp;O.ao
tl)ree-polnt shots. For the nllht,
52Weolcl .................................. m.tO

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' . : •.

OVERLOOK

New York, New York 10017.

:.'

;

Completing the Top 20 were
NEW YORK (UPl) - Syra· remained the same, with GeorgeNo. 14 UCLA , No. 15 North
cuse held down the No. 1 position town holdl!ll down third with six
in United Press International's first-place votes and 524 points Carolina ·State, No. 16 Georgia
college basketball ratings Mon· and Missourt In fourth with 470 Tech, No. 17 Iowa, No. 18
day for the third week Ina row , a points. The Hoyas, 5-0, defeated Michigan State, No. 19 Alabama
week more notable for the North Carolina and Rice last and No. 20 Oklahoma State.
week: Missouri, 7-ll, heat HawaiiIowa and Michigan State made
absence of North Carolina.
their 1989 debuts on the lis t,
The Tar Heels, long a mainstay Loa and Old Dominion.
Losses by Nevada-Las Vegas giving the Big Ten five teams in
In the ratings, failed to crack the
Top 20 for the first time In nearly and Duke caused movement the ratings , the most of any
nine years, breaking a string of among the rest of the Top 10. conference. The Big Eight was
118 consecutive UPI basketball lllinoiS, 5·0, moved up two places next with four teams . Each
ratings In which North Carolina into fifth place, followed by conference placed three teams :
among the Top 10.
Arkansas, 5.0, which took a
was listed.
Oklahoma State returned to
Syracuse, 6-0, received 23 of 41 three-spot jump. No. 7 Michigan,
first-place votes this week after 5·1, also moved up three places, the ratings after a one-week
victories over Duke In the ACC· foUowed by Oklahoma, 4·0, which absence. Along with No rth Carol· ·
Big East Challenge and over catapulted five places on the Ina, also dropping out were
Arizona and Oregon State.
Canisius. The Orangemen re- basis of Its victory over UNLV.
The ratings list was the first
No. 9 Louisiana State, 4·1,
corded 585 of a possible 615 points
from the UPI Board of Coaches. dropped one place despite an not to feature North Carolina
Kansas remained second and easy victory over Los Angeles · since Dec. 28, 1982, the season
closed the gap on the Orange· State. Indiana, 6·0, moved up two after Coach Dean Smith's only
men, taking 12 first-place votes spots into lOth after winning national championship. The Tar :
Heels, 4-4, lost Thursday to ·
and 555 points. The Jayhawks, three games last week.
Louisville, 5-1, remained 11th, Georgetown In the ACC-Big Eas t
9-0, defeated SOuthern MethodiSt
and Kentucky last week, setting followed by UNLV, 3-2, which Challenge, then dropped an 87·74
a scoring record for a Kentucky dropped seven spots. No. 13 decision at Iowa on Saturday. ·
The Tar Heels may have faced
Duke, 3-2 , also took a seven·place
opponent In a 150·95 rout.
the
toughest travel schedule:
The next two places also fall.
among any of the top programs:
They opened the season at the
Maul Classic, then came home
for one day before traveling to
Alabama, where they lost. Home
victories over Central Florida
and Towson State were followed'
by the losses to Georgetown, ·
played at East Rutherford, N.J .,
and Iowa.

Ohio University drops 66-60 contest

Recyclers tackle .plastic mountain
Robert Walters
CHICAGO (NEA) -The physical characteristics of the dreary,
dank Eaglebrook Plastics Inc.
factory here are reminlscent.of
the gloomy Industrial plants of
the 19th century - but the work
being performed Is a harbinger
ol a booming 21st century
industry.
At a time when the recycling of
solid wastes, In general, and
plastics, In particular, has become a national If not a global
concern, Eailebrook Is one of
relatively few companies that
transforms used plastic Into new
products.
Delivered by truck dally to
Eaglebrook's factory are thou·
san~ of discarded milk, water
and juice jugs that !lave been
crushed and strapped to indus·
trial pallets In bales welihlng 500
to 1,000 pounds apiece.
Leaving the plant dally ire
dozens of "gaylord boxes," each
containing ~ poullda of clean,
reclaimed, pebble-sized plastic
pellell ready . to. be fabricated
Into new products.
Delivered by truck dally to
Eai)ebrook's factory are thou·

Monday niKbl's NFL game In Allahelm. The San
Francisco 49ers rallied to win, 30·27. (UPI)

Niners:erase 17-point .deficit
to hand Rams · 30-27 defeat

From the folks who brou,g ht you Malta ·
Let us say a word about the
folks who brought us the Maltese
spectacu tar and the end of the
Cold War. They shaped the
modern world. They may keep on
doing it.
Who did It? Americans, that's
who. For almost half a century
they ponied up both the bucks and
the votes to lead an alliance to
success In the effort to keep the
SOviets In their pen until they
finally came to their senses.
What do those successful
Americans think about things
now? Americans are bored. And
cautious, hopeful, ready to help,
and ready to do business. They
are also damn proud. Americans
don't know It yet, but they are
going to get an unexpected bonus
!rom all of this.
Bored? Of course. When things
are going well people In democra·
cies are bored by public affairs,
perhaps properly so. AccordIngly, the television programming about the Incredible politi·
cal events In Eastern Europe
have not drawn big ratings.
Poland. Then Hun11arv. East

The Daily Sentinei- Paga-3

Ohio

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..Your Hometown New•

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aper~'

...

�·Tua1dey, Deoember 12. 1989

Pornerov Mlddl1port. Ohio

Cavs slip past Jan 113-110 in overtime
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) - U lilted as questionable before
the Cleveland Cavaliers, who . Monday's came with a JI"'in pull.
"We were just lookiDa for any
have been beset by Injuries and a
Jlhot,"
Eblo said of hlllut·IUP
losing record, ~ lookinJ for a
lip that their luck has turned came-winninJ shot. "We were
ll'OUJICI, they may have found It lucky, but we deserve a little luck
with all we've been thrqh."
Monday ntaht.
Bobby Hanaen or Utah hit a
Reserve Craig Ehlo hit a pair
of 3·point shots In the final five 3-poiDter to Jive the Jazz a
seconds, the secollll with no time 110.107 lead with 1:091ett In the
left on the clock In overtime to 5-miDute overtime. Utah's Thurl
give the Cavaliers a 113·110 Bailey then blocked a shot by the
Cavaliers' John WiiUams and
victory over the Utah Jazz.
The Improbable win, just Utah got the ball back with 40
seconds ID play.
Cleveland's third In 10 road
games, Inspired Ehlo to specu·
Utah's John Stockton was
late, "We haven't been lucky all called for a foul and Cleveland
season by maybe that's going to got the ball with 17 seconds to
change with thiS win."
play.
Injuries have dogged the Cavs,
Ehlo hit a 3-pointer with 4.3
wbo have seen four starters lost seconds on the clock to tie the
at variOus times in the still· game at 110.110.
relatively young season. Per·
The Jazz lnbounded the ball to
haps appropriately, Ehlo was Darrell Griffith, who took a shot

that wu blocked by Reale
Williams, gtvlna Cleveland the
ball with 1.5 M!COIIIII left. .
Larry Nance took the IDbounds
pus and flipped the ball to Ehlo
outside the 3-point stripe In the
center or the floor. He fired and
hit as time expired.
Cleveland coach Lenny Wil·
kins said, •'There waa no ques·
tlon the shot wu JOOd ~before the
buzzer) . The referee was right
there watching the clock. I was
just worried It wouldn't JO ln."
· ''We got some great play from
our bench. We made (Utah) take
some tough shots down the
stretch. I give (my players)
tremendous credit because they
kept hanging In there."
Utah, which had Its four·game
winning streak snapped, was led
by Karl Malone with 32 points
and 17 rebounds. Hansen added

23 points.
Stockton banded off 22 assIsts
to become the team's all·tlme
leader with 4,171,
Mark Price paced the Cava
with 27 points. Ehlo came off the
bench to finish with 17 points,
Including four 3·pointers. Center
Chrta Dudley had 15 points and 17
reboundll.
Nance hit a 15-foot shot with 7
seconds left to sendtbegamelnto
overtime with the teams dec! at
10].]01 at tlie end of regulation.
Utah's Bailey said, "When we
came out ,after halftime we just
didn't have any continuity. Our
defense wasn't up to par and we
weren'tlooktng like we should. "
''We turned It on the lastcouple
of minutes, . but baslcally, they
played tough and you have to
give them all the credit."

McBeth and Jude top Division II All-Ohioans
EVADES DOUBLE TEAM - Cleveland' s Larry Nance (!2)
evades double-teaming by Utah's Mike Brown (441) and Eric
Lockner and scores two as the Cavs edged the Jazz, 113-111 In
overdme Monday In Salt Lake city. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
La Sane, M•mfllll• !lllle, -....,:...
NDrtJt Car..l-. Orepa st.ltt,
Plthhu Jlh, St . .........
Lo.UJ.

NFL results

a1111, Tnu, Tex.&amp;~· !I P•o. VlrahU.

By Untied Pft!iK lnterraUolllll
NA.TIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGut:

...,

1\mer ~ u

Conferen cr
Pd. PF PA
I D .571 H t 301

i 0 .111 293
lndlanap.o ls ...... 1 1 D .HO Ut
NfW Enalud ..... l ' o .u1 n7
Nl' .lel !r! ............. f 10 D .!AI 2!1

:no
U7

sn
331

Central
Hou!llo• ............. I lli D .&amp;.13 3311 3!7

On·e h•d ..... ..... ~
f1Min..a1.. ........ 7
Pllttltul'lh ......... 7

I I

• · DI&gt;nwr .......... 10

.. 0

lA Rl&amp;ldrrN ........ II
K. .lillll flly ....... 7
Sunk-." ............ 1

I 0
6 J
H 0

.UI l!l7 '!17

7 1 , .ao 3rt ~u
7 I .Ill HI tU
Wod

.1U 301 2G7

.m

281 Ut

.U&amp; 218 2U
.UD ll!il 268

San Olt'IQ ...... ,... f ID 8 .!MI 22't 261
NaUo~al

CGRitrellt:f'

""''

\\' L rJ'
Phlladelphl• .... .It

Pet. r_F

.&amp; I

Nl' GI!Uil!ii ....... .IO .I 0
M.' ao~hl•BI•• ·· ····" II 0
Phwnb: ............. 5 1 0
DaiiM ............... 1 13 D
Cutral
Mln••!Ultli ......... ! S 0
Gret!D Ill)' ......... 11 41 II
Olltalle ............. li A a ~
Detroll .............. 5 t 0
Tam,. Bay ....... 5 t II

.7U
.1U
.1171
.3$7
.11'71

PA

191 t 3G
HI 2D
S21 2111
tu 301
194 S:Ul

.643 305 !31
.571 382 3111
.41!1 :UO 311

.357 t-6!1 333
.3117 !ftl 355

WNt

11:-thn Fran ... ...It

t 0 ' .151 :!115

LA K . - ........... 1

5 9

'l~

.&amp;43 314 110

New Orieu!l ...... 7 1 I

.stO SIS t'JS
Atlanla .............. 3 II D .:m !U :11!1
Hll~hH division tiCk-.
S1111day

n, Vouap R-117ra.
Brooldl~d H. IUniMU ladpr N

Boardm&amp;D

W...l ... on~I . San

Buckeye Trail 7t, MelldntlrMII U
Centenllko $7, h,y WhMe It
Chwnpton'7ll. VIMa Mlllllew••

Ll•ebaek•r-orel Tllom••••·
IIINIII)', 1-1, M Bnlar. Dnlll Oluner.

...................aero ltrth ......

IIIQ vmaae. 1-1, 111, . . . .r, ,.. Ae.,,
Han..... ••· hL lnt.r.
&amp;cb-1111 111 ~~a•rer, Ptu Mia, loJ',
tJI, .Jttlllor; . . . . . . .\'el' ..
Beeclter•. N, IN. Btalcar: ftawn
Wo..,, Colnltao ........... Rei ....,
H.llt,le•..r.
rr...--Pit
Vo ....&amp;owa

Conlad Lakrvlt:W' 4A, Ltlru •
Cre.twoell 54. WtRrloo tl

Cel--·

01..-.o .. SE It, Whlllllh- 48

F..dlaon S 58, "'lntft'a~lte :n

Ft"deral H.cklnrM. Trimble II

G'vUif' Garldd 55. Mopdore Sl
Greenleldl1. LyM:•burt S4
lndepet~~dfnct at. Bedford CIIINJ M

B•t:n.....,..

lndiMII Valley 16, llhrichsCIQmolt n
U!ip!li(' 54, va Ban!ll n
M1U1 8 Sl PE'tl'nf.t. Akr Hob•. (oil
Medina Hlahiud H , Colwn .. a4K

• .,ttl, ................
/ · rlt ,•. .
,....Hu·l.-·"
,,,..;...

YI' wr - ( .'•u·~·

1.i n.-m•" ·" I·'" •·· ~-.· nr -

Me lp 4K, ~t'lson\'llle-Yortt U
Stf'f'et!iboro 541. R4otlltowa n

l'i r lo•r i 11,1111111.

,..... ,.,,t•lt... •u/· 111 '"
( ,',.~

WllU!If'Gn ~ . Delta S4

M' l'llsvllk 5t. Stevhu•le CC -4~
M'oodrJae 5:1. Akr Our L1d;t' Plm11 tt
l 'ouars Libert)' 37. NewiM Falll»

~·o •

\lrli1• 1 lt.

:0 ,., 11 /u ,/r-,

11r-IJ/ .-It 1\ lt/o,... II .

Olllo CollfJt' BaRt-ball Seo~n
Dec. II
Akroa 86, Ohio U H

\'owaplown Ill, Val ...r .. o 71
1\b.ltlwht·Waltaun, Btthaal(WVa)'l'l
Oh.. Norther-aSK. Heldf:l~rJIS (ol)
TuN~

Bradmton lll Fori M)'I'FR, 7: 1S p.m.
St. Lucie at OrlaadD, 1:1$ J.m.
Sl. Pderlihurw M Go(d Cout, 7:15p.m.

Box:ln&amp;

Ju nlor 'A'elter•l PI•

AtiiUitll' Ctl y, N.d . - Vllt"1 lurt;e~e "'Owen McGt'lk:hy

n. DT

Melli I,)' Rl'!'iult

Mlddi~II'IJhl•

AUantlt' Cll)', N..l . - JDIIa Scull)' n .
Billy &amp;'ldKII'!I
Hockey

NHL

f'ranci~~Ce

31, lA KIH'nS '!1'
SMurday, Dec. 16

DaiW. ~NY Gh1nt,;. n :• p.m.
DE&gt;nwr a1 Ph(W'nl!l , 4 p.m.
Sunby, O.c. 17
Green Bay at Chit:M«&lt;, I , .m.
Hou••• iU Cl nr.l••ll- l ·, . m.

Miami atlnliallllllpol\i!l, 1 p.m.
MJniW'!Iola at Cll'\ll'lud , I p.m.
NN f.aliandlll PltUibUI'II:h. I p.m .
SIUI Dlei(O Ill: KanMM Clly, I p.m.
TampL Ba)' al Drlmlt, I p.m.
NV ,Jfts at LA Rv.m11, .f p.m.
BuU"'oal Sanfrand~~t•o , 4 p.m .
WI&amp;Shl~on U At lulu.• .f p.m.
lA Rllidrr!i at Stoalllr. Mp.m.

··~·
Ill
Phl.. deiJ*lulU
NnvDtc.
Ork.oul!,
9 p. m.

UPI ratings
NEW \'ORK (UPII-TheUallit'dPrf'!l~
lntrrtllt.tklrlll Board nf £:oac he~~' Top ~0
t.'Oih!jlf' h~Mkethall ratlal':l, wllh first·
plll.tr \'Qlft lUtd r.conb thro..-h Sn. 26
In pareniJf'!lel, illlal polnl!l ( h~d on U
polnl11 for flrlll pbM:t•, 1-1 for ltl' Corlt, M l' . )
"ad l.alll wrrk'A nl.nldn~
Tcoarn
Tri!m
I . Syral'tl -* (%3) 11-8) ................... ~ 111 I
t. Kut11s 021 t!J.01 ~ : ........... ....... ~ S5 t
3. Gt&gt;o~l't-n(li) ($-0 \ ................ ~ :!~ 3
I. ,"'III!IOUrl (7-01 .......................... no 4

5. llllaohl (S.O) ........................... ~ .\II 1

fl . Arll:inMII tHI ........................ 3! 2 9
7 . MlthiKII.D (5· 1) ......................... 31711
II. Oklahoma tH!) ........................ 31 $ 1%
9. Lou•diWIStalt&gt;IJ.Ii .. ......... ... .. 2511 11
IA. Indlarnt ( IHI ) .......................... t i S 13
I I. Louls•,me (i- 1l ....................... 1!9 11
1:!. Nt&gt;ud11·L:Aii Vt' Kall (3·:! ) .......... 1119 3
1:1. Duki' Cl-2) . ..... ........................ 1-U 1i
1-4. IJCLA cS.I ) .......... ,, ................. It~ 1~
1~ . North farolha~o~ St . (I-I ) ~ ......... .Ci 1 ~
II. Gt'o'Kta Tt"ch 13-1) ................... ~ 3 Ill
17 . 1owu (U ) .................. ,, ..............fl 1
Ill. Ml cbljiU ShUt' { 6-0 ) ................. H 1
lB. Ahthama iH l ......... ....... ......... ~10 HI
2(1. 0k. lilh0fflll~lltf'(4-l) .. .............. zt 1
'

rll'tehinl( VolE'S: Artzo~.
Rtlt'k, Clem•on. FlorIda. Fult-r1on StiUt•. Grorp;la. Hou~un,

Otht•r,.

Al'kan · &gt;~aii · Uitle

"Over the years, he has bea good student," said
Kidwell. "But, lie was one of
those young men who found out
too late they had to study, too. He
had ll disastrous freshman
~me

year.''

Bostnn at Pltbbur1(h, 7: 15p.m .
!\'t&gt;w JerMey a1 NY lslandeu, 7: u ,.m .

VII.DC'ouwr at Mlnllt'll-. II:SS,.m.
Sk·n~
•
~htere, Italy - World Cap men'•
taCt!

Soct.-er
MaJor Indoor Socc"' Lnpe
!\'o ll:&amp;mt.!O !il'hedllled
NATIONAL BASKETBALL A.S80C
Morday 'A· re!iult
C1e\'eland IU, Viah IJO. OT

Tuesd 1Q' Gamll'll
~1111AntonJol\t AUan&amp;a. 7: Mp.m.
Mlntlfllol:a at lntlaDIII, 7: 3t p.m.
PhUadelphlaat N~ Jrney,ll p.m .
L\ Laker11 at Ch .Wk. Mp.m.
Daii.ILi! a1 C'hlcajl(l, 1 : ~ p.m.
Orbndo al Mllwaullfe. ~ = • p.m .

Nevertheless, schools like Pitt,
Michigan, Tennessee, Colorado
and Nebraska are seeking his
services.
Jude, a 6·foot·5, 29().pounder,
played both offensive and defen·
slve tackle · for Coach Jack
Johnson at Pickerington.
"He's a gQOd one," sal(! John·
son, who claims Judesdlldoesn't
realize bow big he Is and just how
'· good he can be.
"He's got good feet and his
mobility and size are probably
his greatest assets," said John·
son. "I can't think of anybody
who beat· him this year. He just
dominated everybOdy he !aced."
Johnson said Jude, who also
played basketball tor two years;
came back from a trip to
Kentucky to visit former team·
mate Greg Lahr raving a bout the
size of the Wildcat players.
"He (Jude) just doesn't realize
how a big a man he Is," said
. Johnson. "Once he finds out, he'll
play with them. He lacks a little
sell-confidence.'·
Besides Kentucky, schools
showing Interest In Jude Include
Colorado State (Earle Bruce),
Kansas, Florida, West VIrginia
and a number of those from the
Mld·Amerlcan Conferen~e.
The rest ofthe first o#~:~slve
team backfield Included quarter·
Honon
back Keith Creech of Franklin,
Junlqr forward Hassan Dun·
Akron Buchtel's Ricky PoWers, combe of Pennsylvania, scoring
last year's back of the y~a~ ; ·~nd 44 points against Navy, has been
Darin Ford of Cambridge.
· named Ivy League Player of the
Creech, a 6-foot-6, 195-pbund Week. The women's Player or the
sen tor and another In a line Qf top Week was senior guard Sandi
notch quarterbacks at Franklin, Bit tier, who scored 30 points for
completed 99 of 179 attempts (~5 Princeton against Army .... Alan
percent) !or 1,665 yards and 17 Ogg of University of Alabama·
touchdowns. He also averaged Birmingham was named Sun
38.2 yards as a punter.
Belt Conference player of the
Powers, a power!u 1 and yet week. Jacque NerB of UAB was
speedy 6-foot, 195·pounder, women's player of the week... .
rushed for 2,014 yards and scored Wlsconsin·Eau Claire was rated
21 touchdowns In 11 games for No. 1 In the latest NAIA men's
Buchtel, averaging 8.6 yards per basketball ratings. Southern
carry . He finiShed with 5,631 Nazarene was No. 1 In women's
career yards and 69 touchdowns. basketball and Adams State
Those ligures InClude 1,229 yards (Colo.) was the top NAIA wres·
and nine TDs In eight playofl !ling team.

CHRISTMAS .••.

PhOI'nlx at HoU!ilOIL. 1'1: 31 p.m.
Detroit at ~nwr, 9;31 p.m.
Goldf&gt;n Sl.llte 111 sa...-nmento, II : H p.m .
I.A Clipprrl!l a1 Portlud, IO:JII p.m .
Wedftt'Kd ll)' Gamf!l
8e..ttko .-t &amp;!lion, nlpt
Atlan&amp;ll. aa Phlladdphla, niKN
LA Laken at Mluni, lip!•
Mllwau 11!-eatCifi'\'eland,nll(tM
Oallwi al Mlnnrllo&amp;a, nlpt
Phoenb: at Utah. Alldtt
Oct roll aal LA Cllpprr"' nllh\

THAT Will LAST A UFETIME! .
Kidwell Division II coach of the year

Dtn ¥l'r at Golden Stalll', a I«hh

NI\TIONA.L HOCKEY LEAGUE

Monl" Rn"h

Lo!t r\ngt&gt;leA 'l, Montn-al Z, tip
Toronto :t, St. LouiN I

. f'al ~ ry :1, Edmonton 3, 11.Tul'.!id.-y Gametl
·
Bo!!!IOn at PlttJibu rs;h. ~:SI p.m .
fli t'W J €' r~ atl\'1' Islander-. 7: Sip,m .
V!Uit.-euw.- at Mln~e~ola, 8: SJ p.m.

M'e dae!todQ Gam•
St . Loul'l at NV Rupra, nldlt
DoMton .1111
niP&amp;
Lo t&gt; An p!lt'!i a1 H1rtfonl. al~:hl
l 'hll'lt.JO a1 Mo•real. nlrN
Tort'lalt) at Oft roll, •llhl
N\' Islander~ at Nll'a' .lenl'y,nllbt
Vlllk·o uwr 111 Whtnlpea. 'ftiPl
Quehtt•IU E4m!)nlon, nlll:ht

•n ....

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) Dick Kidwell, who guided Fostoria to an unbeaten regular se~son
and the No. 1 rating, has been
voted the United Press InternatiOnal Division II coach of the
year.
· Kidwell, whose team finished
13·1, with a 2H4loss to Cleveland
St. Joseph In the Division II title

game its only setback, edged out
Solon's Jack Ruvolo In balloting
by coaches from around the
state.
Others receiving more than
one vote Included John Aregood
of Franklin, Ken Hockman of
Harrison. Bill Gutbrod o! Cleveland St. Joseph and VernLongot
Westlake.

HALL
log.$109.00

Salt

·~

manager Billy Martin, 61. nar·
rowly escaped a bullet from a
Derringer that was accidentally
fired In a bar Saturday night.
Chief of Detectives Ray Watts
·said the bullet struck above the
ba r where Martin. was sitting at
Larry Bird's Boston Connection
Hotel in Terre Haute, Ind.,
missing Martin by about two
feet. .. . Joan Downey, a famlliar
figure in the Oakland Coliseum
stands when son Billy Martin
managed the Athletics, died
Sunday. She was 88.
Boxing
Former heavyweight cham·
pion George Foreman and Gerry
Cooney will take time off from
preparing for their Jan. 15 fight
to share the holiday spirit with
more .Jjyln 800 underprtvUeged
children. 'The two boxers will
help the children select a Jlft
during the 39th annual "Opera·
lion Happy Children" at Macy'a
In New York Wedneaday
morning.

ulebrEZZe makes it official
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Altar·
qey General Anthony Celebrezze
offtclally declared hl.l c andldacy
for governor Monday, stressing
educatiOn, economic develop.
· meat, the environment and law
enfon:ement.
Celebrezze, 48, who spoke
~tore abot 500 people at an
evening rally, becomes the first
Democrat to ortlcially enter the
race, joining two Republicans Cleveland Mayor George Volnovich and Hamilton County Com·
ml.lsloner Robert Taft.
Celebrezze's candidacy Is al·
ready enveloped In controversy
over the abortion Issue, which Is
likely to affect elections across
the United States next year.
On Dec. 2, he announced he was
switching from an anti·a bortion
to a pro-cbolce stance on the
Issue, saying: that while he still
opposes abortion personally, the
government should not prohibit
women from seekinJ abortions.
Voinovlch himselfswltched hiS
position on ttie lnue, bilt In a
private Interview with one news·
paper reporter, rather than at a
news conference as Celebrezze
did.
Previously, he &amp;(lid abortions
should only be legal wben the
health o! the woman 1.1 threa·
tened. However, hiS latest post·
tion Is that a bordons In the case
of rape or Incest should also be
legal. Taft has not changed In
r!!cent months - saying abor·
!tons should be allOwed In cases

of rape and Incest, and when the
woman's health Is threatened.
The state's Roman Catholic
bishop&amp; are expected to llsue a
statement on the llsue, and bow It
relates to the J)OIItical arena,
sometime thl.l week. Celebrezze
and Votnovlch are both Catholic.
The first Indication of how the
switch would af!ect bll candl·
dacy came out negatively for
Celebrezze. The Ohio chapter of
the National Organization for
Women, meetlna In Akron over
the weekend, declined to pass a
resolution supporting the attor·
ney general.
"Ohio NOW appreciates the
fact that Mr. Celebrezze has
correcily read the public opinion
poDs on the Issue of abortion
rights and birth control," said
Ohio NOW President Joyce a&amp;·
rolak. "However, we . question
the sincerity of his seemingly
politically expedient switch on
this Issue."
About two dozen antl·abortlon
prates tors piCketed the hall
where the rally. was held.
At a news conference after his
speech, Celebrezze said he had
not changed his position on the
Issue, that he still remained
personally opposed to abortion.
"It's my hope we will get
beyond thiS (the abortion Issue)
and talk about the real issues of
the campaign," he said.

The .man... Continued !rom page 1 .
Run to stay with Col. Nlal Nye
who had the only frame house
there. The other houses were log
cabins.
At this time, the village of
Pomeroy was only a forest. It
was later called Salisbury or Just
the ''Banks ." It wasn't until later
that It was named Pomeroy.
Pomeroy persuaded Horton to
give up Is law practice , In
Pittsburg and come here to
manage and develop . his coal
Industry under the name , of
Pomeroy Sons and Co. with
offices In Cincinnati.
The llrst coal mined was the
vein' behind the sandstone cliffs
along the river. Many Germans,
Welsh, and Irish came to work In
the mines. Someofth.elr descend·
.

S7900

WALL CURIO

MATCHING
CONSOLE

Mid-Atlantic states brace for winter stonn
By Udad PrMI lnlernatioaal
flurries overnight.
Snow, alee! and freezing rain
The weather service posted
threatened to anault the mid·
winter storm watches over the
Atlantic Coast TueSday, a cold entire region and also warned of
snap gripped the southern Plains snow In Mlssl.latppl, the Caroll·
and the nation's midsection ahl·
nas, Alabama and Georgia,
verecl In below·zero tempera·
where temperatures fell to the
lures, the National Weather 30s and 40s.
Service said.
The coldest weather o! the
The storm front that was season chilled New Mexico,
expected to bring snow lo much
Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and
of Virginia, Maryland and Wa·
Louisiana with the passage o! a
shlngton, D.C., started as lilht · cold front Monday, At one point
snow In West Virginia overnight , Monday afternoon, II was 21
dropping !rom one to three
degrees In Amarillo, Texas .
inches. The lows were In the mid
A ridge of blah pressure
to upper 20s.
brought bitterly cold tempera·
Light snow developed In the
tures to the· Midwest Tuesday
early morning over parts of
with lows dropping tQ zero and
Maryland, Delaware and south
below across the Plains and
New Jersey and snow was
upper Great Lakes.
predicted to continue during the
It was 10 below zero In Norfolk,
day. Pennsylvania caught some
Neb., 8 below zero In Sioux Falls,

Ohio poverty... _c_o_nu;,;.;.nue;;;..d;;,.;fr;;,.;om~pa:;:g.:...e1:...__ _

'· Stocks

Middleport fll'e report is. released

Fire ·department
makes report

Clarification

Ho8pital news

Divorces sought

'.

Icebox...

Meigs Court News

Case dismissed

The Middleport
Chamber of Commerce

S9900

Salt Sl9C)OO

ROUER

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$19995

COMPUTER

DESII

The Stlhl chain - you get thia Chrlltm• to cut the Yule IOQ and
u.p the woodpile lloeked wiH be doing the ~~~me lob neoct year, and
the ned, and the next ... 1t'1 the IIIII gift~ could get. Or give. .
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-RAIN

[ill] SHOWERS

9W

FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
" ' Static
Occluded
Map 1'-1 minimum te:r.,raturee. At leas! 50,.. ot any shaded area is lofecast
to ree.lw precipitation I,
ted
UPI
'

WEATHER MAP - Snow Is forecast for the central and
norlliem Plains 81 well 81 the mid to north Atlantic Coast States.
Snow Is posalble In most of the Plains slates, upper Great Lakes .
. and parts o! the Ohio Valley. (UPI)

- - - - - -·Weather-----South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Tuesday night ,
with a low between 1~ and 20. ·
Chance of snow · is 20 percent.
Becoming mostly cloudy Wed·
nesday, with a chance o! snow
flurries and highs between 2~ and
30. Chance of snow Is 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
, Thunday throu1h Saturday
A chance of snow statewide

Thursday, and a chance of snow
again In northern Ohio but fait; in
the south Friday and Saturday.
Highs will range from 15 to 25
Thursday. and !rom 10 to 20
Friday and Saturday . Overnight
lows will range from !lve to 15
early Thursday and from zem to
10 above Friday and Saturday
mornings.
·

BE AHAPPY 81~ER
DONATE BLOOD
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13
POMEROY SENIOR ClnZEN CENTER
1:00·5:30

A SPECIAL 6
MONTH C.D.
FROM

CENTRAL TRUST

- ----

.Retail Merchants

sw·

-.-..

r
-

Merry Christmas!

PIICI

.. .... --~1

I

•Stores now open nightly for your
shopping·. convenience
•FrH Parking
•We appreciate your ·business~

U!!:lSHOW .

--~-- ·

Wishes everyone a
''

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 12·1HI

Need••••

NOW

$7900

S.D., 4 below zero In Des Moines, teens. Light snow !ell over parts
Iowa, and 1 below zero In of Vermont. where temperatures
MlnneapoUs. The wind chill were In the single digits.
Strong high pressure has kept
made It feel like It was 25 below In
conditions In the Northwest clear
South Dakota, forecasters said.
Moist Atlantic air fueled a and chilly, but strong winds were
storm system that produced reported in the Rocky Moun·
snow over parts of Kentucky and talns. A snow and blowlng·snow
Ohto. A winter storm warning advisory was Issued for the
was posted !or southeast Ken· northern mountains of Colorado
tucky where from 4 to 61nches o! · for Tuesday. Wind gusts In
excess of 60 mph were reported
snow was forecast.
Clear skies prevailed across Monday evening 111 the .high
much of New England early exposed areas of the northern
Tuesday as cold temperatures mountains adjacent to the front
remained In northern parts o! the range.
A high·wlnd warning was
region. Boston reported clear
skies and temperatures In the Issued. lor areas In and near the
low 20s, while Providence was mountains of southern Wyoming
sllgbtly warmer under partly for Tuesday . Winds of 30 mph to
45 mph were reported In the
cloudy skies.
· Further north, temperatures Interstate 80 summit miles west
dropped to zero under clear skies of Cheyenne. Gusts as strong as
In northern Maine. while New 60 mph were expected In and
Hampshire reported clear skies near the southern mountains of
and temperatures In the low Wyoming later Tuesday·.

For Those ChristMas Toys, ·
laM Boxes and Any Household

and

OAII

009

rates are six times higher than
those of other families.
-The poverty rate for black
Ohio's Is three times the compar·
able rate for whites.
-Even when educational level
Is considered. black tioverty
rates are more than twice as high
as white poverty rates.
The council criticizes the use of
the unemployment rate to deter·
mine economic disadvantage
levels.
'The federally mandated of!l·
clal definition of unemplOyment
leads to quite significant local
underestimates o! both poverty
and the Jobless population," the·
report said. "Official unemployment statistics continue to be
based on a 'those looking !or
work' definition of the labor
force, which excludes )lizable
numbers of 'discouraged
workers' from those considered
to be officially unemployed."
Further, the report said, large
numbers of low·pald workers are
counted as parto!the labor force,
despite the fact . many tens of
thousands o! them are living In
poverty.
Also, children, the dlsa bled
and the elderly, which are
excluded from the Jobless fig·
ores, make upsignlflcantpropor·
liOns of the population living
below the poverty level.
In Cleveland. !or example, the
current poverty rate Is five times
higher than the city's offictal1989
unemploYJ11ent rate, the report
said:

tbeast. The 14 counties with the
highest rates were all In that
region, led by Vinton County's
33.7 percent. Adams County,
which had the highest rate ln1988
(33.3 percent). dropped to second
with an Identical rate. Meigs
County Is fourth on the list (28.6)
and Gallia County Is seventh
(25.7).
In eight counties, the number
of people living below the poverty
line more than doubled !rom 1980
to 1989.
Harrison County, in the sou·
theast, experienced a 163 percent
Increase. Ashtabula County was
second, with a 132 percent
Increase, followed by Belmont
(112 percent), Columbiana (109
percent), Monroe (108 percent),
Guernsey (105 percent), Jetter·
son (104 percent) and Carroll
(104 percent).
But while the Appalachian
region contains Ohio's highest
poverty rates, the report says
most of the state's poor people
live In urban areas. Three-fifths
o! Ohio's poor live In the 10
largest counties, with more than
one-third living In the three
largest C1.1yahoga (Cleveland), Franklin (Columbus) and
Hamilton (Cincinnati).
In the clUes o! Cleveland and
East Cleveland, about 40 percent
of the population lives below the
poverty level.
Among other findings In the
report:
-Among families headed by a
single female parent, poverty

ants still live In or near Pomeroy.
The first steam towboat, the
"Condor," was built In Pomeroy
by Horton for the Pomeroy Coal
Co. In 1836. The ~aptaln, or
master, was Edmund Gray. The
boat was a sldewheeler and was
arranged to carry a lew pas·
sengers . also. Records show
"eight ladles and five
gentlemen."
. Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy had
two sons,. S.W. Pomeroy Jr., In
business In South Amerl.ca, and
Charles Pomeroy, who lived In
Pomeroy and married Elizabeth
Worthington, daughter o! Gov.
Thomas Worthington, of Chilli·
cothe. Their home was later
known as the Vorhes house.
In his later years .Samuel
Wyllys Pomeroy, Sr. !lullt a
house In Pomeroy but did not live
• long to en)oy it. It stood where the
MasQPic Temple now stands.
Dalt7 'J ti6k prri:ei •·- ,.
Pomeroy Is burled In Beech
(Aa of 10: Ill a.m.)
Grove Cemetery. and In 1849 his
'
..ryce 8lld Mark Smith
widow deeded the homestead to
The Middleport Fire Depart· ·Salelft St. In Rutland, and
of Blunt, Ellllt It Loewt
the County for an academy. II
, ment answered a total of 46 calls
was opened In May 1849 by during the month of November handled a vehicle fire In
"
Middleport.
Am Electric Power ....... :.. .. .32% Chauncey Giles and for many
Including
five
fire
and
rescue
and
·
AT&amp;T ................................. 44% years was a successful school.
41 for
emergency medical
Ashland 011 ........................ 3814
accord!~ to a report
service,
Bob Evans .......................... 14%
from Jeff Darst. ~Ire chief.
Charming Shoppes .............. 1014
The structure fires were on
City Holding Co.............. :.... 15
North
Second St. In Middleport
Federal Mogul ....................19)1,
The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
The Susie N. Abbott of Shade
and
Turkey
Run Road at Che- ment answered 14 alarms during
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .. ........ 47
recently fined In Pomeroy May·
Heck's ................. ................ 3* or's Court Is not Susie Soulsby shire. The department also gave the month o! November accord·
Key CenturiOn ............... ...... u
Abbott o! High Street, Pomeroy. mutual aid assistance to the lng to a report from Danny S.
Rutland Department at a !Ire on Zirkle, Pomeroy fire chief.
Lands' End ......................... 21"'
Limited Inc.' ........ ...............33%
Six calls were In town and eight
Multimedia Inc .................... 88
were out-of-town. Seven were
structure fires, six were vehicle
Rax Restaurants ................ .. 214
Veterau Memorial
fires or wrecks and one was a
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 15
Continued !rom page 1 ·
. Monday admiSsions - Gary
mutual
Shoney's Inc ....................... 12%
aid call.
Saturday. Highs will range from
Snouffer, Pomer.oy; Fred Shain,
!Ire
department's vehicles
The
Star Bank ........................... 20% Pomeroy.
1~ to 25 ThurSday; and from 10 to
traveled
222 miles during the
Wendy's Inti ................... ,... .4)1,
Monday discharges - Steve 20 Friday and Saturday. Lows month and firemen accumulated
Worthington Ind .................. 23% Pickens, Charles Ohlinger, Otis
will be from ~to 15 Thursday and
(ChiU'IIIinl Shoppee Ia ex dlvl· McClintock, Lola Barber, Marfrom zero to 10 above Friday and 250 man hours.
· dead today)
Saturday.
garet Edwards.
The early morning weather
map showed Ohio was between a
' combined cold front and low
William Boyd Deem, Long
pressure system over East Coast
A Meigs County Common and an area of high pressure over
Banp&gt;hlo NatiOnal Bank h.a s
, Bottom, and Beth Ann Deem,
Long Bottom, have flied In Meigs Pleas Court action by John C.
the Plains. All o! these weather been awarded In Meigs Common
Common Pleas .Court for a Hlte against Cella A. Hlte has
systems ought to move over the Pleas Court a Judgment of
$6,949.72 from Shari A. Cogar.
been dismissed.
dissolution of their marriage.
Atlantic by late Wednesday.
In another court matter, the
A low pressure center that was
Dec.
7 appointment o! William E.
just north of Montana Tuesday
Sorden
to a term on the Leading·
morning will aiart to Influence
canceled due to unforseen clr·
Party called off
Creek
Conservancy District
Ohio's weather Wedneosday as It
A Meigs County employees cumstances, reports Larry
Board
has
been vacated by Judge
moves to nllnol.l by late In that
Christmas party which was sche. Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of
Robert
E.
Buck.
day.
·
doled for Friday ntaht has been Cour~.

.... $199.00
Now

111.•2"·"

AT

The Daily Sentinai-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- - - Mei@s announcements----

MIRROR

Sports briefs
Hockey
Rangers center Corey Millen is
to undergo arthroscopic surgery
Wednesday io repair torn eartH·
age In the lateral side of his left
knee . The knee was originally
' sprat ned In a preseason game
· against the New York Islanders,
and Millen tore the cartilage
during hls recent conditioning
stint with Flint of the IHL. A
Rangers spokesman said Millen
Is expected to be sidelined lor
three weeks alter the surgery.
AuloRacln1
A world championship for
marathon automobile rallles,
· such as the Paris· Dakar race, is
being considered by the Interna·
tlonal Automobile Sports Federation iFISA). FISA President
Jean·Marle Balestre says the
·' bOdy wants to establish an
annual rally In every continent
under Internationally accepted
standards.
Bueball
Former N!!W York Yankees

games.
}\ord, althOUIJh missing more
than a full game with a shoulder
Injury and playing hurt In a
couple other contests, rushed tor
1,331 yards and 17 touchdowns,
averaging 6.1 yards per carry.
Like Powers, Ford also was a
first team piCk a year ago.
Rounding out the first often·
slve team were wide receivers
Ryan McElroy of Harrison and
.Todd Taylor of Sidney, tight end
Chuck Hython o! Steubenville,
down linemen Alphle Hill of
Cincinnati Forest Park, Fred
Durr o! Nordonla and David
Corson o! Cincinnati Turpin and
center Mike Sterling of Fostoria .
Hill Is a juniOr, the rest are
seniors.
The placekicker was junior
Jeff Rohrer of Westlake.
The defensive squad consisted
of linemen Eddie Esquivel of
Fostoria, Andy Utz of Shelby,
· David Neal of Columbus Walter·
son and Tony Gray o! Cincinnati
Forest Park, all seniors.
The linebackers were seniors
Tony Etter of Franklin, Nick
Inabnltt o! Goshen, Bill Splete of
Cleveland St. Joseph and Chris
Sammarone of Youngstown
Chaney.
The deep backs were Vonn
Banks of Clncl!lJUiti Taft, Mike
J..oclgno of J:&gt;arma Holy Name
and Gregg Genovese of Solon,
while Columbus DeSales' Andy
Mahle was the first team punter.

Spor.ts briefs , ,

Spftl'ts C&amp;lfftdar

1: 28 p.m.

Dit"~ · 2 1

Z· llrlnuiW&gt;d

Division II UPI All-Ohio Team

-boll

Snitlt U , {'lndniiLII 17
J(oW~ton a , TIUilllllaY 11
NY G\ ... !114, Dea~r,

LA Ral*rs li, Ph~ix 1.1
. . . ....,all8 u. C1P\'el..ct
Ml.,.\31 , New r..pand 10

6.2 yards per carry average, and
scored 19 touchdowns.
"He's a great football player
and a great young man," said
Fostoria· Coach Dick Kidwell.
"He's got great strength, plus
good vision. He'sjust4.61n the40,
but he's got real explosiveness.
And, of course, he has
durability."
McBeth, who ran the ball 47
times In Fostoria's playoff win
over Sidney, fumbled just ihree
times In his 413 carries the past
season.
McBeth's only negative comes
In the classroom, where a slow
high school start may prevent
keep him from being eligible !or
college ball next season.

Sen!Dn Profte••l Bueball
Wl!lll Palm Beac• at Wllller Hnea,

Kd!IMI Ctty21. GrHn Bit)· 3
N~ Orlt!Ulli t'l, Buflalo It
Pht!ftuwh 13, N\' .Jrts 0

!

Anlwerp97, Fort W~eBiacllawlltl
Bell\'ercrt'!!k U, DIQ Oiom-j11IM
B!!llalf'f' 65. C..mbr(dp It

Re.ullt~

Mlnlll!sGta U, ·AIIanll 11
Phlla*iphla !0, DaJII&amp;al 10
DftnMt n, Otlcqo n

SUI

Cage resuhs
Girls Ohio
&amp;»Reb all
Monday '• Rt.s••
All'Dn•r .U, 'A'elhtoniK
Hl~~:hSchool

W L T
Buffalo .............. 11
Miami. .............. !\

s..-....

Stat~.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sport. WrKer
COLUMBUS - Fostoria's Ca·
sey McBeth and Scott Jude of
Pickerington, a pair of two-way
performers, head tbls year's 1989
United Press International Dlv·
lston II all-OhiO football team.
McBeth, a workhorse running
back and defensive back for
Fostoria's No.1 ranked Redmen,
was selected the UPI back or the
year. In Division II by coaches
from around the siDle, while
Jude, a tWD'way tackle, was
picked the lineman of the year.
McBeth, a 5·foot-11, 202-pound
seniOr, carried a staggering 413
times In .Fostoria's 14 games the
past season, gained 2,563yards, a

Tumlav. Deolmber 12, 1989

-

'I

.

--

ss.aa

:,.s2.00

.

:h 1 .. :

.. _.

~· -·i '

Your Cost

If you've been
holding back wail·
ing for a great rate,
this .Is it. But you've
got to act fast.
This otfar from
Central Trust
•

is available lor a
limited time only.
For more inlor·
mation cootact
your nearest
Central Trust office
cal G t 1t.lis 446.ni2
......,..., 992·6661

·THE CENTRAL TRlSf CU\t~Y

Prescri,t!!:' 'ShOp
171 laslh Slclllll·

••••_,.,., 011.

,.

'

Tht BaM 'TJrlt MtJa T7rinlf$ /hf1/len.

.........,,.. ..,..,. "1,000.00• ......_,._. penott._ for ..,~y Whhdrtlwel•.

-

...._._,.,.,1/Mta.

�,..

By J'he
-

.u

~

ft

Reedsville
Builders meet
A video program on skin
cancer was p~nted by Inez
Boring at the recent meeting of
the Reedsville Community
Builders held at the hclme of Mr.
and Mrs. Denver Weber.
Ronald Osborne conducted the
business·· meeting !'nd Grace
Weber served as Secretary .. The
plants for the cemetery were
dl!cussed and It was decided to
purchase any replacement
plants, as well as mulch In the
·
spring.
Refreshments were served to
Ronald and Ella Osborne,
Warren and Lillian Pickens,
Ernest and Maxine Whitehead
and guest, Sarah Frydman, and
Denver and Grace Weber.
The next meeting will he a
potluck dinner on Saturday at the
Whitehead home.

Bloodmobile to visit
The American Red Cro.s s
Bloodmobile will he In Pomeray
at the Senior Citizens Center
Wednesday from 1 to. 5:30 p.m.
The canteen will he provided by
Friendly Crlcte, Trinity Church.
Donors are encouraged to donate
blood since each honday season,
the blood supply dips below
. acceptable levels. Red Cross
officials feel this is mainly
because people are so busy and
forget to set aside time to donate
blood.

Tickets on sale
Tickets to the "Tales and
Treasures" production of the
Columbus Junior Theatre's Professional Adult Trouping Com·
pany to he presented Dec. 20 at
the American ~glon Annex In
Middleport are now on sale.
· Advanced tickets may he pur·
chased from any member of the
Junior Cllvllan Club, Fruth's
Pharmacy,. or Pleasers Restau·
. ·~ant. Advance tickets are $2 for
adults, $1.50 students, and $1 for .
children, while tickets at the door
will he $2.50 for adults, $1.75 for
students, and $1 for pre-school
. children.
The program ~ being spon·
.sored by the Middleport Cjty
Recreation Deparlment. .

Be~d

TVBSDAY

RUTLAND -The Church of
Jesus Christ Apostollc Faith,
New Lima Road, Ru !land, will
have revival through Saturday at
7 p.m. nightly. The evangelist
will he Lovie Foster and there
will he special singing each
night.
·
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce will
bold Its monthly meeting Tues·
day ,12 noon, at Veterans Memor·
lal Hospital. Final plans for the
Meigs County· Chamber will he
· discussed. All members are
urged to attend this last offiCial
meeting bf the Pomeroy Area
Chamber.
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Cool'fratlve Parish Food
Pantry will he taking appllca·
lions for food baskets based on
low Income on Tuesday, Wednes·day, and Thursday from 9:30
a.m.-12: 30 p.m.
liARRISONVILLE -The Har·
risonvllle Senior Citizens will
bold a free blood pressure clinic
on Tuesday from 10 a .m. to noon
at the townhouse. ·The cltlb will
meet following the cliniC and all
are urged to attend.
HARRISOVILLE -The Harrl·
sonville Order of the Eastern
Star No. 255 will meet Tuesday to
honor officers and members. A$3
Christmas gift exchange will be
held and there will be practice for
lhe"1990 Installation of officers.
Installation will be Thursday .
POMEROY - The regular
December meeting of the Meigs
County Board ·of Education will

Chrisnpas program

ughting contest
in Middleport

Guests named

Christtru1s cantata .

The Racine United Methodist
Church will present Its arinuaL
Chrllltmas program on Dec. 20,
7: 30 p.m. at the church. The
public Is Invited to attend.

Omitted

A Christmas cantata, "'Christ·
mas From Scratch," will be
presented ~~ the Racine Naza·
rene Vhurch on Saturday and
Sunday at 7 p.m. The children's
program will he presented on
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. The public
Is Invited to attend.

Library to close

During the recent report of the
Middleport Garden Club, the
n~~me of Cindy Harrll was
unintentionally omitted.

The Melp Couaty Library will
clOII! at5p.m. on Thursday for lis
staff Chrlltmu party.

HOliNG TESTS

•• ••as cou•n

,,. EIKINIIn I •lat te1t1 . . . . ., .. lly
• llll~...
=liiil It .... Alii c.ter ..

....

•
.IIUFOII
PAMY PIAmcl CINIII

Tuuttey, Dealmber 12. 1989 .
T1.1111day, December 12. 1989
~11911

he held on TUesday at 8: :iop.m. at
the Royal Oak Resort sales
building.

..

POMEROY , - The regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Education will he held
Tuesday, 8:30p.m. at the Royal
Oak Resort sales building.

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees will meet In regu·
lar session Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m., at the town hall.
SYRACUSE - An Informs·
Ilona! meeting to discuss Social
Security benefits for workers
who have handicaps will be held
Wednesday, 1 p.m., at Carleton
School in Syracuse. The meeting
Is sponsored by the MeigS Board
of Mental RetardatlonDevelopmental Disabilities. A represen·
tatlve from the Athens Social
Security office will he present.
All enrollees of Meigs MRDD
programs, their parents or
guardians, and other Interested
parties are Invited to attend.
· Parents of school-age MRDD
program enrollees may · also
receive useful Information.

day, 6:30p.m. Instead of a $5glft
exchange, the money will do·
nated to the American Cancer
Society. The party will he a
potluck.
· POMEROY -A represents·
live from Congressman Clarence
Miller's office will COnduct an
open door session on Wednesday
from 11 a.m. tol p.m. In the court
house In Pomeroy. Anyone havIng questions Is urged to stop by
and discuss them with the
representative.

THURSDAY
· ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thurs·
day, 6:30 p.m. This will be a
potluck and members are to
bring canned goods to the
meeting.
POMEROY -TheLaurellCllff
Better Health· Club will have Its
ChrIstmas party on Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at the home of Marge
Fetty, Route 143. Dinner will be a
potluck with salad and dessert.
There will also be a $3 gift
exchange.

POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
MIDDLEPORT- The MiddleSorority,
will meet Thursday,
port Literary Club will meet 1:30.
6:30
p.m.
at the home Ann and
p.m.· Wednesday. Mrs. Daniel
Richard
Rupe, · Wright St.
Thomas will be the hostess. A
Members
are
to bring secret
review of the, book "Snow Leo·
sister
glfls,
an
ornament, and
pard" by Peter Malthlessen, will
he given by Mrs. Wendell Items for the needy family.
Hoover. Roll call will he "your
REEDSVILLE -The River·
personal Shangrl La."
view Garden Club will meet
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle· Thursday, 7:30 ·p.m. at the home
port Amateur Gardeners Club of Gladys Thomas. Co hostesses
will have Its Christmas party a I will he Grace Weber and Polly
the home Gene Moore on Wednes· Baker.

.

'

DKG chapter meets

Christmas . ~tory from Luke;
Mrs. Fetty, 'Through the Com·
lng Year." Chris Rouse gave a
brief history of Christmas an~
led the group In singing.
,
Mrs . Zurcher led the group In a;
momentofsllentprayerforOIIv~
Page, deceased member.
'
Nan Moore gave the invocation;
before the roast pork lunciiiOn~
Tables were decorated wltli
hurricane lamps and Individual
red Christmas ornaments In•
scribed with DKG .
,
The next meettng will be a
carry· In dinner at the McArth~
Elementary School, on Jan. 27, ,
Attending from Meigs County
with those named above, were
Suzy Carl'fnler, JoAnn Hayes,
Pauline Horton, Donna Jenkins,
Nellie Parker, Margaret Pari
sons, Carolyn Smith, ·Anna
Turner, and Paula Whitt ..

The Alpha Omicron Chapter,
Delta Kappa Gamma Society,
met recently at the Ohio Unlver·
slty Inn, Athens.
Rebecca Zurcher presided at
the business meetlng ·ln which a
Chrlslmas letter was read from
Roberta Wilson. The society
signed Chrlstini:s cards for Ger·
!rude Trace, Martha Greena·
way, Maxine Philson, Harriet
Wood Roberta Wilson, and Jane
Bou.,;e.
Sandra Nodruff Introduced a
special guest, Kat Unger, and
exchange student from West
Berlin
The ·group donated paper probucts to Serenity House · In
Gallipolis.
Marjory Fetty conducted the ·
Christmas program. Rosalie
Story read "AChrlstmasMedlta·
tlon;" Saundra Tillis, the :Bible

Riverview Garden Oub meets
A Christmas workshop was
by Nell Wilson and
Ruth Anne Balderson at the
recent meeting of the Riverview
Garden Club In the social room of
the Reedsville Church of Christ.
Each member made a Santa
from felt, cotton, and other
materials.
Devotions, "Fruit of the
Spirit'' was given by Betty
Boggs.
The meeting was conducted by
Marlene Putman. Thank you
cards were read from Delores
Frank and MarUyn Hannum for
flowers received while they were
Ill.
Betty Boggs was Installed as·

the new secretary and wa~
presented a carnation. Plan~
were made for the annual tree
llghti~g and the Christmas party
will be held at the home of Gladys
Thomas on Thursday. Giftswere
brought for patients of the ·
Amerlcare Pomeroy Nursing
Center.
'
Flngerfoods and punch were ·
enjoyed by the above named ancj
Mary Allee Bise and grand:
daughter, Pamela Smith, Janet
Connolly, Mary Grace Cowdery;
Margaret Grossnickle, Phylll~
Larkins, Ella Osborne, Nancy
Wachter, Grace ·w eber, Maxine
Whitehead. Janice Young, Klla
Young, and Opal Harris.

condu~ted

Reedsville UMW .meets ..~.

This Is a contemporary Christ·
mas · cantata dealing with the
coming of the Lord as an Infant.
It uses old famlllar hymns and

NOTICE$3.00 BOOKS
OF
U.S. POSTAGE
STAMPS
MAY NOW BE
PURCHASED. ·
ATOUR ..
TELLER WINDOWS AND
DRIVE-THRU FAOLITIES

Stock Up For Your
Holiday Cards &amp; Letters

2212JACKSON Av "'·"''""
MEMBER P.DJ.C.

•

•

Days

1
10

15
16

&gt;

$6.00

. 30

19 .00
113.00

.42
.8.0

t1 . 30 / day

.OIS i d•y

~.

Mr, r cha n111 sP.

.

1-Card of lhlf'lkl
2- ln Memorv
3 - Annoucements
4- Giv..w.,.v

•Price of d iOt all c:IPitallenfH't is double pnce of ad c6st
•7 peNni IRe tw.- only u1ed. .
•Sifttintll ;s not rnpontuble for' errors after first d-r (Cheek
tor errors firti d_. ad runt in paper\ . Call before 2 :00 p. m 1
d_, 1fter publiutiGf'l to mak• correction.
•Ada th.t must be JYid in advance are
Card of Th.,ks
Happy Ads
In Memor•.m
\'ard Sal•

COPY OEAOLINE -

11 -- Help

- 2 :00P .M. WEDNESDAY

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry, '"'·

992- Middleport

448-GIIIipolit

367 - Cta•hire

Pom•ov

381- Vinton
24t5 - Aio G11nde
256 - G~o~.,.n Diat.
143- Arebi• Oist. ,

915-Ch .. let
843-Portland
247 - Letatt Falla

379- WIInut

742-Autllnd
66 7-Cootville

949 - Racine ~

Supp!IP.~

Lllii'SIIICk

62 - Wented 10 Buy

63- Livettaek
64-Hay &amp; Grain

TV. CB Rep ..r
W-Miscellaneou•

'

Mason Co .• WV
Arlll Code 304

675-Pt . Plenanl
•sa- Leon
576- Appl• GtO\Ie
773- MitOn

812- N..,., Have.,
81&amp;-Lillfl

93-7-Buthlo

71 - Autoslor Sale
72 - ·Trucks tor Sale
73 - Vens &amp; 4 W0'5
74- Motorcycles
75 - 8oeu &amp; Mot ora for S1lt!

Heol blole

76 - AU10 fl1r11 1: Acc .. sor~•

31 - HomH far Sale
32- Mobile Hom• for Sale
33 - Farms for S.le
34-Buaineu Buildings
35- LOII &amp; Acreage ~
36- Rul Est.te Wanted

7? -- Auto Repair
78 - C.Imp•ng Equipment
79 - Campers &amp; Motor Homes

SP.rviccs
81 -· Home lmprowmant s
82 - Plumlling &amp; Huting

'86 - G•neral H•uling

47-WMted to Rent

86- Mobile Home Rep•ir
87-Upholtterv ·

48 - Equipment for Aent
li - For Lute

""'* 7 . . . . .
• HO """""'
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.

S64995 ,_a...•1,088

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DaiJIIj.l Arj '"' VIIIIIQ

VCII ,

......

"-~

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319

o:.
°FUINITUI£ &amp; JEW£LRY INC.
l,g"'

'~t'41

1
I

701 SECOND AVENUE
GlWPOUS, OliO 41631

NEW C. . . . .S IllS• t All-7

·---··--- -

,'

.,

INGELS

"""

...

•

S299

limn•~

'

I'!L SUNDAY

1·5

· IIRVIOE

Ohio

lhlleotl!,llucll.

i

f=l't'IIW

._,....,,

I

ion ....."Po-oy,
41711.

llollorl E. luok.
Probllu Judge
........ Judge Lene K. NniOiroecl.
i Leno K. N•IOiroecl. Cioltt 1121 12, 18, 21, 3tc Clerk
•. 112111. 12. 11. 31c

Ctwtr~n! t•

106 NC11111 SKOIIIl¥11111
...wolf, OliO 45760

' CeuJt.

'

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ew~;~"'

M411rT.DUnly l'robeto tho Moigo County Probeto
No. &lt;21010, Court. C.e No. 28410,
· ~ -·I. ooglolll. 34114 Frod w, Crow, Jr., P. 0. lox
,Felrpound ft. . . II. D. 2, Ill. l'omwoy..OIIIo 41-lll,
' Pomwoy, Olilo 41718 oppointod ~-" of
~ e-utoc·ot tho WIO
tho oouto of Lillie F. Fulll,
'
Of~G'Uoln, _ . . _ leto of 112 Un·
· . 'tile

( _..... •••

· II~ Cotrr

ftl' "

1111, in

f:t:. .::. D~ ~~

• 157 ChMiotl

appointed E••cutria, of lhe
..tete of Glenn L. Hentler.
do..oud. ioto of 480 Un·
coin Str-. Middloport.
Moigo Cou.-y, Ohio. 4117e0.
Robert E. Buck,
~
Pr-.Judgo
l.ono K. -IOirood, CIOt"k
111i 21; 112) &amp;. 12. 31c

NOTICE Of
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Decombor7, 11111, in

FIOUCIAIIY

up

~~~:';lup
UN;S APPUANCI

SDVKE

,.

992-SU5 w 915-3561

\,

Acrea • - Peet Office

· WtNJ TO GIVE SOMI1IIIIG

•. . . . . . ..01
. • • 1...:..•pQnJ

,A,l.

--~~··I

8 ,....,,.

...,_,
.-imn.tO:.
t
tt·••a•
'
POl t'TAMING aiTIFIClm"

6 tAilS •12.10 PLUS ONE "FREE"
1 - C&amp;I!IICA'IIS WI • PKDD
.. 01 WftL ... TIM tO Yil.

'

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Sale• St., lutland

' 985-4422

L. W.
STEWART
TRUCKING

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

II 10, "19 tfn

742-3088

•Gravel

•Tire Salas

•Limestone
•Fill DJrt
742-2421
CHIPWOOD
WANTED
W. Va. Chipping,
Inc.
Rocksprings ld.

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-3561
Buying Hours;
Mon. thru Fri.
7 :30-4:00 Saturdey
·til) 7·'89-1 mo.

83- Ea:c..,ating
84-Eieetrieal &amp; Refriger•tion

,..,... 111110....-d

r

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING ,
AT ALL

Located Behind
Tractor Dealership

7:30-8:00

I;IQIIII
4i- Mobile Homes lOr Rent
43-Farmt lor Ren•
U-Aperunent tor Aent
46-Furn•sh..t floomt
48-S"ce for Rent

\O'CCO

:71 a....:
Cicljllillill'
"""'""
CGrMII

'

CHES!EI, OHIO

•Front End
AHgnmant
•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Brake Work

MAIN n., IIU1LAND

9·20·tfn

Transoortalinn

21 - Butin•• Opportr.tnlty
22- Monl'/ to Loan
23 -- Prol•sionel S~vice:s

41 - Hautes for A•n

wllt:AidDFacue&amp; '-Zo.l:

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

·~

. R. L HOLLON
TRUCkiNG

"NEW" RECLINERS

65 -.Sud &amp; ferUi.t:~r

liiifiiiNRII

sa. VHI HQ Clmcorder

·~

the Hong Kong governor. Sir would not accept the return of
David Wilson, as he left a boat people who were sent baek
meeting Tuesday .
against their will.
·•
The Vietnamese official in
" Never will we accept forced
Hanoi said procedures for the repatriation, but between the
latest group of Vietnamese were voluntary repatriation and the
modeled after those used by the fo rced repatriation there Is a
U.N. High Commissioner for great majority not against repa·
Refugees for the more than 600 trlatlon, " Thach said.
boat people who earlier had
returned voluntarUy from Hong
"The United States remains
Kong.
opposed to mandatory repatria·
The main difference was that lion, " said Daniel Sreebny , spothe latest repatriation was car· kesman for the U.S. Consulate In
rled out without UNHCR partlcl· Hong Kong. "AU the signatories
patlon and without Independent of the Comprehensive Plan of
observers.
Action, Including Britain · and
"We have nothing to do with Hong Kong, agreed to give
this repatration. It Is not one of voluntary repatriation every
the scheduled, voluntary repatrl· ' chance.
allons," said a UNHCR official
"'Voluntary repatriation has
who declined to be Identified or not been given that chance."
give further comment.
Canada said It " profoundly
Western reporters · In Hanoi regrets' • the decision to be'gin the
were not allowed to observe the repatriations.
British opposition politicians
arrival and were refused perm is·
slon to Interview the returnees.
lambasted the government · of
A Vietnamese Foreign Minis· Prime Minister Margaret
try official admitted that the boat Thatcher over the repatrtatlon.
people had not volunteered to go
' 'It Is a wretched, dlscredlta ble
back to VIetnam but he said they
had not objected to their return. and shameful act," Paddy Ash·
A statement Issued by the down, leader of Britain's Liberal
Foreign Ministry Insisted VIet· Democratic Party, told Radio
nam rejected forced repatria· · Hong Kong from London.
Amnesty International's Hong
lions as a violation of human
Kong representative, Robin Kll·
rights.
It said, however, that Vietnam patrick, criticized the selection
had reached agrel!ment with process that determines if boat
Br(tlsh au thor Illes and Hong people are actual refugees or.
Kong to step up '"the acceptance economlc migrants seeking a
of those who do not object to better life overseas.
being repatriated."
'"There Is a tendency aii)ong
The Involuntary repatriation Immigration officers to screen
came one day after Vietnamese out boat people rather than
Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen screen them In," Kilpatrick said.
Co Thach told .United Press ''They are not looking lor refu·
International In an exclusive gees. They are looking for Illegal
InterVIew In HanoHhat Vietnam immigrants."

12.J."If.l mo.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS
4 / 8/88/tfn

•VINYL S ICING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

....._...

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
,
·~Free

Eatim8181''

PM. 949-2101'

· or Its. 949-2160
NO SUIIDAY

UNDA'S .
PAINTING &amp; CO.
JIITIIIOIIIIWOI
Rental CleailllfiS &amp;
Painting

......

FREE ESTIMATES
Toilt t:. •• •• of poiotio'
~~,

...

vaY •u-1
HAVI-11&lt;15

Afm' P.M.

16141 915-4110

ltfort 6 p.10. Llero . . _ .
11 -1&amp;-·89-.1rno.

COUNTIY :
MOBILE

HOME PARIC
•Mobile Home
P8rta
·
•Mobile Home
Rente Ia
•Lot Rentela

9412-7479

,_,,Ohio

lt. U 11111111 of
l·l2·' .. 11:1

18-Want•d To Oo

Cla.~sified paj!:e.~ cm·er I he

Area Codel514

59 - For Sale or Tr1de

6, - Ferm Equipment

~ 16-Aidio.

- 2:00P.M. THURSDAY

58 - Fruits &amp; Veg«abl•

&amp;

W~nted

·-J 5..-Scnoots &amp; lnnruction

- z ,OO P.M. TUESDAY

55 - Building Supph•

56 - Pats for S1h1
57 - Muticallnstruments

F"rm

12- Situation Wtnltd

WEDNESDAY PAPEfll
THURSDAY PAPEfl

- 2 :.00 P.M F'RIO~Y

Lost and Fo~omd
Yard Sale (p11d in advance!
Public Sale I Auction
Want.t to luv

1 J - tnsur•nce
.14 - lu.,n•• Tr1ining

_,, ,oo A.M. SATuRpAv
- z,oo P.M. MOND"V

FIIIOAY PAPER
SUNDAV PAPER

53 - Antiques

54-Misc. Merctltr~di ll

Employmrnt
SRrVICe"

OAV BEFOAE PUB~ICATION

MONOA'Y PAPER
TUUDAY PAPER

1

51-Hounhold Good~
52-Sportint Ooodl

5 - Mappy Ads

6789-

"A claniti.:t 1dvertilltmein1 plac:«i in The Olil¥ Sentinel.lell ·
cepf - cl•sified displ~. Busln•• Cerd: 11nd ltt9al not•ce~!
will lito •PP"' in the Pt . Pl•••nt Reg•Sier 1nd the Gelll·
polis Daily Trillune. ,. . ching over 18,000 MomH

Meigs County

-·-..............
---'
...........
--.... ...

15

Monthly

O~·r 1S . W~2~

14.00

15

USED' FURNITURE
DINElTE SETS

Rete

15

:

follotdnj!: telephone exchan(.ws...

Full

Words

, .
adl - G"'•'r'•v..and Found adt und• 16 wcnc;fs will be

MASTERCARD-VISA-GOLDEN BUcKEYE

SF270B

forcibly returned to their home
country If they are found not to be
legitimate refugees.
At the detention center where
the 51 refugees had been held for
nearly six weeks In anticipation
of forced repatriation, some of
the Vietnamese began shouting
and weeping when officers ar·
rived Tuesday morning.
"The forced repatriation Is
Inhumane, " read a makeshift
poster in a detention center
window. Another sa ld, "We
would rather die than return to
VN."
But after talks with officials,
the VIetnamese quietly packed
their bags and left peacefully for
the airport. Hong Kong said no
force was used against the boat
people, all classified as Illegal
Immigrants.
The predawn drepatrlatlon
conducted by nearly 200 Correc·
lions Deparment officials In full
riot gear and plainclothes pollee ,
set the stage fpr what was
expected to be a greatly In·
creased outflow of Vietnamese
from Hong Kong- voluntarily or
otherwise - In a bid to dlscour·
age further departures by boat
people from Vietnam.
Hong Kong government sour·
ces said authorities hoped to send
back up to 4,000 boat people
already classified as Illegal Immigrants this month and In
January - before the monsoon
winds shift making It easier for
refugees to reach the crowded.
colony.
The beginning of the lnvolun·
tary repatriation program drew
strong criticism from the United
Stales, Canada, opposition Brit·
Ish politicians and from human
rights groups. Protesters booed

LIVING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SIITES

RATES

~·- 1 .10 diacGunt for ads P,ei~ in advan~e.

RACINE DEPARTMENT
STORE
311 STilET
949-2100
IACIIE, OliO

27" Dlago::::l c..tan: S1riH
RIIMte Catitrol Calor IV

.'

'

•,ttUfl tor con•cutrve runs. broken updi/VSWill be charged
""
••
ads .
'

AlE SUIE TO PLEASE. ·

(6141 "2·2615
(6141 446-1014
t...at ...
1'011. , . ,...,.u.ssll

..

.,

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A:M. .to S P.M.
I A.M. until NO_ON SATURDAY

--- ----------~·-

The Dilly Seati1ei-Paga 7

·~

~

run 3 dl¥1 at no ch•&amp;e·

_.

Business Services

'·"' •. Th~ Area's Number l'~Marketplace

"ChrlttiiiU Sa~lagt"

new carols In presenting the
birthday of the baby Jesus.
Choir members Include Ida
Murphy, Kathryn Johnson, Ann
Lambert, Bonnie Arnold.- Ro·
berta Napper, Rebecca Napper,
Tammy Dummitt, Missy Foster,
Marge Purtell. Kay McElroy.
Steve Stanley, Jeff Arnold, Cathy
Hess, and Robert E·. Purtell,
minister. ·

HANOI, Vietnam (UPI) -The
first Vletnameae boat people
forcibly returned to their homeland from Hong Kong arrived at
Hanoi's Nol Bal Airport Tuesday
and were quickly whisked to a
transit center, wltnes~~es and
officials said.
The 51 Vietnamese, mostly
children, were rousted from their
beds In a refugee camp In Hong
Kong In the predawn darknes_s,
taken to the airport and put
aboard a Hanol·bound chartered
jetliner, all within about two
hours.
•
"They came down the gang·
way looking tired and depressed," said an official who
witnessed the IU"rlval of boat
people from Hong Kong.
The witness said the returnees
were met by C)fflclals of the
British Embassy and by repre·
sentatlves of Vietnamese govern·
ment departments.
.
He said th~re were no tears qr
emotional Incidents as the refu·
• gees carried their meager pos·
sessions down the gangway from
the chartered Cathay Pacific
Airlines jetliner and passed
through normal Immigration
procedures.
The eight men, 17 women and
26 children were put a board
buses for a transit center a bout9
miles from the airport, where
they were e~pected to stay for
two or three days before return·
lng to their home area~, said an
official who spoke on coildltlon he
not be ldentlfted.
There were no Immediate
reports of disturbances. among
the 57,000 Vietnamese remaining
In detention centers In the
crowded British co)ony. About
40,000 of the Vietnamese could be

.-Classified
.

"'

The Zion Church of Christ,
Route 143, Rutland, will present a
cantata by JohnJacobs'onand Ed
Lojeskl, tilled "'The Birthday of a
King" at the 10 a .m . service on
Dec. 24.

...,_

;)

Ann
Landers

Zion church cantata scheduled

- - - --- - __

Forced repatriation of boat people hegins

HANOI, Vietnam (UPI) - Foreign Minister Nguyen Co
Thach denied that U.S. servicemen are still In Vietnam and
challenged .anyone with contrary evidence to "rent a
helicopter'' and search for then\.
''Anyone who gets some lnformallon on living MIAs can come
here without telling me about the Information they have,"
Thach said Monday In an Interview with United Press
International. "They can come and rent a helicopter with the
Information In their pocket and they can ask the helicopter to go
In any direction they wish to check whether there are any
MIAs."
Thach, who also Is a senior member of the Communist Party
Politburo, said he has privately offered this challenge to visitors
expressing doubts about the VIetnamese denial of holding any
prisoners.
-"Now you can tell the public that I have Issued such a
challenge to anyone ... he said.
Vietnam has long denied holding any U.S. POWs but Thach's
.,
stalf!ment was his most categorical rejection of the possibility
some U.S. soldiers have stayed behilld voluntarily.
"(know there are no (missing) Amerlcanshere,"Thachsald.
"It Is not the case as In the Philippines where the Japanese
sollders still thought the war w.as not over.''
•
J:i 1979 , u.s.·Marine Pte. Robert G~wood was allowed to
leave Vi~tnam more ti:ari six years after other U.S. p~isoners
•.
were released. Garwood later was convicted of sta;ving
willingly with .VIetnamese communist forces.
Garwood claimed he saw some U.S. soldiers belpg held ,
prisoner after the end of the war In 19r5 but the U.S. governmf,nl
has not accepted those claims. .
·
'
·
The government, however, has said there Is evidence that
some of the 1,690 0 .S. soldiers still listed as missing In action In
Vl~:tnam were captured by Vietnam and not returned.
Thach also complained that despite the Vietnamese
withdrawal of troops frOm .cambodia and Its assistance In the
search for evidence of MIAs, the United States has reneged on
• promises to lift Its embargo on aid, trade and investment In
VIetnam.
Even telephone calls from the United States to Vietnam are
prohibited
by Washington, causing hardship to Vietnamese·
,,
Americans
with relatives In Vietnam, he said.
.
'j/.
•'II Is very . barbarous. It Is the thinking from the Middle
Ages," he said.
·

· The November meeting of the
Buckley, Mrs . Frances Reed~
· Reedsville United Methodist
Mrs. Salty Brown, Mrs. Pea l'.!:
Women was held at the home of
Osborne, Mrs. Grace Weber,,
Mrs. Nancy Buckley.
Denise and Sandy West, and Mrtl
Devotions were, led by Mrs.
Joan Lawrence, who wl!lli
Sandy West, and readings on
ANN LANDERS
awarded the door prize.
,J
"1989. Lot Anfl'l"'n
Thanksgiving were given by
Tln1f'tl S:vndhtll• and
Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs. Mamie
Eighteen months later I was
Cn'al~ Syndh·••
NOW OPEN OR THE . :.
Buckley. and the scripture was
treated for postpartum depres·
given by Mrs. West.
·
CHRISTMAS SEASON : ~
sian. It helped to know there was
PoiMettlas 17 celenl
·,
Mfs. Buckley, president, cona medical reason for my negative
Poinsettia lluasgi:4 Wets . . Tr•s.:
ducted the business meellng In
feelings about motherhood. Now seems to me that God could do a
Chon:ow; Cactu;, Foilogo ~on~~a~;, , •
which plans were completed for a
the l!lilt Is gone and I truly love better job of sending children to
...
.w Hply Trwi ..t '-It Show,' 1
people who would love and
Christmas visit to the county
my child.
l'lao:t;, lin and (ut Owls- Tr..c 1
home and a dinner 'and gilt
From L.A.: When our son was cherish them.
for
tho Love:l One'; Gn:vo ll:nm, . ,
Jacksoavllle, Fla. : Every
exchange.
born I went back to work as soon
.........,.,
s,rays, c...t•v v-.
Cards were signed for shut-Ins
as pos11ble and took on a second mother has fell like "Southern
tWat&lt;h r.r - Oorlit.,. Op., IINHI
and several shut·ln calls were
job io I could he away day and Dilemma" tor at least onedayln
Open Deily 9 AM·Ii P.M.
1
made. A whltz elephant sale was
night. After a while I knew I her life. She needs a good doctor,
Sunday 1 P.M.-&amp; P.M.
•
also held.
needed therapy and got it. End a good friend, a good laugh and a
HUBIAIDS GIEENHOUSE '
Refreshments were served to
reault: My son Is now grown and good night's sleep.
m-sn6
syr.... !JNo ·:
Atlaata: Motherhood Is not for
Mrs. Mamie Buckle~, Mrs. Peg
we have a terrific relatlo~hlp.
G-'"'ro,N.C.: Wheniread everybody. Neither Is father·
letters from women who can't hood. My husband and I married
stand their children I could just. when I was 28 and he was 30. He
bawL I've been trying to get had a vasectomy and I had· my
pregnant for six years. This tubes tied. We may be missing
STOP IN TODAY AND LOOK
morning I read another news out on some of the pleasures of
OVEI OUI GIEAT SRECnON
story about a perfectly healthy .life, but we are also being spared
a
helluva
lot
of
grief.
baby found In a trash c~n. It
OF GIFI GIVING IDEAS, THAT

PEOPLES BANK

-~ ··~·-

'

__

Pomeroy-Middl1port, Ohio

Vietnam denies any
US servicemen remain

6

.

Moms clairn mixed
feelings on parenting

Dear Ami Luden: This Is for
"Southern Dilemma," who des·
crlhed herself as a washout when
It came to being a mother. She Is
not alone. Many of us feel
trapped and resentful because
we can't stand our klda. "Mater·
nallnstlnct" Is a lot ot bull. It's
just another way to make women
feel gullty. (You'll notice nobody
ever talks about "paternal
Instinct.")
I've been staying at home with
our 2-year·old son because of
The Sliver Run Baptist Church pressure from my family, but
will have Its Christmas program I'm·COUD,ting the minutes until I
can go back to work. Meanwl!lle,
·on Dec. 23 at 7:30p.m.
my most comforting thought:
Eventually, they do grow up. . ld....
De.Widabo: )'ouhaveplentyof
company. I could not believe the
volume of mall on this subject.
Want
to read over my shoulder?
The Middleport and MiddleTake
a
look:
port Amateur Garden Clubs are
From
Vaa Na;r1, Calif.:
· sponsoring a Christmas lighting
"Southera
Dilemma" Is a soul
contest for the town.
sister
for
lllll'e.
At age 36 I finally
The three categories to be
became
jayoualy
pre.nant. Ev·
judged are, best overall rell·
erythlng
was
great
untn the baby
glous. best overall secular. and
came. I had planned to st&amp;y at
doors and windows.
Judging will take place on Dec. home tor three mo11,ths, but after
eight weeka I couldn't stand .II. 1
19 .at6 p.m.
went back to work, where I was a
respected executive. (At bome,
the kid was In charge.) I fell
Inadequate and resentful. My
Agnes Dixon visited over husband was disgusted with me.
Thanksgiving with her son and
daughter-In-law, Roger and
Suzy Dixon, Victoria, Texas, and
grandchildren, Jeff and Melanie
Dixon.

Christmas program

The

COrllinunity ·calendar

•

,..

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

We ca11 ;~ ond re·
core radiltors aM
heater
We caw
also •ill lllil 111111 roll
aut retlilltws. Wi alat
rtllllir Gas tllllcl.

t-.

FOlD

MY-I-SHOP
CUSTOM SCinN·
PIIN11NG
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
CHEnEI, .OHIO

985-4'3 00
GUN SHdOT
lAClNE
FilE DEPT~
lasha• llullcling

EVDl

SAT. NIGHT ·
6:30P.M•
(hob

12 Ga-.

Only

Strictly

.:a

~ "CUSTOIIMT

HOMES &amp; GAIAIES

"At I

u ..l: ,..._..

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII
Located at v•y
1n ......,.,,,

L......,
o•.

PARTS AND SERVICE
For MOiit 2 and 4-cycle

en gin•
Stock Pllrts for
Homelite, Weedeatar,
Tecumseh, Briggs &amp;
~ Str8tton.

PH. 992-3922

KOUNTRY KLUB
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP
•Naw Grips
•Clubs Cua·

tomized

JOHN TEAFORD

46317 Scout Con:p R::atl
Chester, Ohio
lt-17·"1!1-11110.

MIWE'S
IESTAUUNT

Is still ow1111fand
Dpii'Dtlll by Millie
Duncan.
For Go...t Home
Cook In' Come See U•!
HOURI: 8 AM·t PM Dolly
CLOSED SUNDAY

•

·Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, l'omoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alii TtiiiMittl••

PH. 9~·5682
or 992-7121
•
DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

.NEWLAND
ENTEIPIISES
DUMP TRUCK

FURNACE
FUINACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE

992-5335 ... 915-3561
Acr- ,,_
217 E.

OHke

DEER

CUT AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAD

Sand-Stone-Dirt
(614) 667·3271
Gr•t A. llewtCniii"

614-949-2734
or
614-949-2635

I
TACK SHOP .

RACINE

J.IS.'ft.lfn

ALIANY, OliO
691-6500
Weatern Boote, Heta,
Shilts, llelta For
Man. LA:dl• tit
Children.

SADDLIS &amp;
HOUIEQIIf.fiT

11·24·1- pf.

-....----~-

ClliiSTUS.
·Min&amp;
SCOICII , _
FRESH CUT ·
•sHEARED

..

PH. 94t-1101
,., .....t4t·ll60 .

S12 to Sll

NO SUIIIAY CAlLS

.741-1143

..,:. ......

FURNACE

fA.

GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT"
EVERY SUNDAY
lleginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Fact•y Chol:td 12
Gauga:

�-

-----

•

,.., ,

Television
Viewing

3 AnnouiiCMiellls

•

....... ClllonnoJ _ , ...

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

..

.....,_ei11M1tl..elnlng. W.

Nlllll

TUES.. DEC. 12 . •

:, .r--+T...;.Rn-0=-r-F....;;;E~F-r--t

EVENING

--.D -~
,..
4111,
a ......,.. ,,... tor .... 11L
llorllng

~And
McCormlolt ~

. I II I 1 I
2

I:OO(JJ

lllllt'a
- - _,
Rd.. -10potli1...Z·7T11.

LMuu ,_ -

4

- - ··

.., ......Of

r,1erch,md I Sl'

• Oolllpalla F..,y,

~71~-----------2'/22.
...
-

s1

• &lt;JJ

I I, I I

ACE LOOKS LONEL'( ..

2 ....,_
-~
· Z llocfroom
...
4 1 ....
J04.17f..
2722 W an 1:00 AM to 1:00
Pll.
t

PERIIAPS ANOTJ.IER ROOT BEER

1:30!!!! &lt;JJ

s

NIC

;,..... IN El p IY HI7H I

'Nigl••• -

·

(lj 8porloLooll (0:30)

[fl

::l::ft:

"Remember," lectured the

• mom, ",YOI.! are hera to help
ohn: The young boy

L..: : : : ·

Alfte1C IR I' IB!'ne

1:05(JIIevllly H•lllu

Lost a. Found

t

I I=-I==·I::::·I:::.....,I-

IIJ ......
•

1~ _.! 1

.
D .R y U D
.. s

IIJI WOIIcl tau,
til ClleoiH In Clwgl

WOUI.D 1-lELP TO CURE
J.IIS LONELINESS ...

,!:!,

0 M S U E.

AmMCM

PlalarcJcll A••aclsMan

TI-lE WORLD WAR I FL'(IN6

- n poll«o on tlnCtiNl-HrYe ba~a. Inquire In ,..._
- ot Galllpoilo OlAV Tuttlune
alllco,IZS Third Avo.• Ooiilpollo.

ea

&lt;ll Long Ato I l'ar A..,
lj;3!1l 1;1
.~,_,::,~ 1;1 .

Goods

F,. kltlllna, 304-al'l-2315.
Long-ll.llrocl ldltiiiO to g&lt;!Cid
homt. ,..... Dlck~p ....,
5:DOp.m. lt4-843-&amp;445.

Cll 111

(1) •

I]) leal

HouMIIokl

Rent&lt;Jls

6

..

Ohio

1989

I=-= ~:·:~:klo qu~od
quizzed, "And whet are the

by nllint~ In lho miOiing ,_dJ
L.__1.-._-'----''--~-' you do.olop lrom np No. 3 below.
•

•

-1;1

(!) 1-2·1 CGnl8ct Q

•ac•NeWaJ:;J
lIHI tiDWKIIP
l'tne'l CD....II\1
In CtuiCiootell

IIJ He-Min
1:35 (II Andy Orlflllll
7:DC (JJ MOYIE: llhlttock Ho111,.1
And Till .....
(1 :30)
• (JJ Monl You KnOw

Gallipolis
a. VIcinity

w......,.

ALL Yiild Sollo Muol 8o Pllid In
Advuunco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lh• day before lhe ad il to "'"·
Sunday edition ~ 2:00 p.m.

. 171o...,..~
1;1
1H1 Clleln

a. VIcinity

11J

Porcli ..,• . 324 E. bohlnd
Yllligo Hall. 131h11411u,11. Gltla,
toyt,
Cheap.• , •..en.ocn .

250 or 1100 gol. LP Clu Tanlu.
can 614-145-4257.

,... ANOTI4ffl .
MONTH . TO

or wlthoul

motoro. can Lorry Unly 614-

388-1303.

Qulfta

614-5112·2461 .

~~_.- ..

Ueld furnilwe IIINI hot••hold
~

114-74Z-

204t.

Employment Serv1ces
11

-

. • (J)UIAT-y

.,,A,~rdyii;J
IIJ)Crollllle
IHI Nlgllt c-t

Ill Top C.ICI

7:35 (I)Ianfold And Son
I:DD (JJ iiJl M - Matlock

J

e

if

reopens 1 35-,tear-old

murder caa. 5!

I

Cl) • (J) Who I TlllloH?

•

Mona uses "ngala's
diamond necklace and
Juager to cover her looses ..

lischoolboys
ID Nove
tracl&lt; down a
English

Y'KNOW, UM~ME­
I'M NOT AS Tha::O 1&gt;8 I
THOI..ISHT! WHERE 00
t SlcaNUP~

Help Wanted

·

secret Soviet 11unch littu. 1;1
!!II .1!21 11110'* 111 A
New Year's Eve lire - .. a
crowded

reeort liotlll. Q

.llll MOYIE: PMy MMon
RIIUmo(2:00)

a:J PIIIINHeWI
1H1 MOVIE: A SwiCIIrl-1 (2:CD)

I I J - , I h i ·WIOII

Ill~- Otnlll
8:05 (II MOYIE: Tlllllrtdal On

TIIIRivlr KWIII (2:4ij
a:30 (JJ MOVIE: ........k ........
In T - Jly NiiJIII (1 :30)

Wondlr , . , .
Kevin Ia sorely tllmptld to
cheat to keep up In math

(I) •

()) , . .

Ciiii.Q

,

Ill CroOk I Chae

Of

1:00 • (JJ llllln Till Till Nlglll Bubba killl a
former Sparta lacll during a
holdup 1ttempt. Q
Cl) • (J) ,._ _ Becky
wages war by giving her
mom t11e silent treatment. Q

Cll 1D Amar1cen ElpllteoBacorn Lamar Lunsford
started "merlca's flrst folk

music festival . D
Ill) • Ill MOYIE: 'llllu1r

cas

A DIMS, IHREE NIQ&lt;:EL'o,
NINE PENNIES.ANDA
NJ&gt;.Qt:.INAW BUTTON.

RACINE GUN SHOP

49919 NEASE HOUOW ID.

IACIIIE, OliO

GUNS· AMO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• S2.20 Box
GUITARS &amp; GUITAI STRINGS
OPEN 9 AM·7 PM Monday-Friday ·
Saturday 9 am-5 pm

949·2168

11-6-1 mo. pd.

~~MAIN STIEET

•

PIZZA

•

lOWm PIKES
HIGHEST QUALITY
FREE LOCAL DRIVEIY

POMEROY AND IMIDLEPOIT'S ONI. Y
LOUUY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

And Till ...at'
Tundly Movie (2:00) 1;1
IIJ) ..... , King U..l
IIJ MOYIE: " - ' 8u1 Go1
Mlrrlld (PG13fll!:OO)
IIIN1111vllle1:30(J) Top lllnkloling
Cll
CGech Hoydln

--·In---

Qracloue Mvhlg. 1 and 2 bed-

,_aport- M VIManor
and
Rlvwllilo

114..U.1111.

F1nanc1al

21

t..._.,
March
uont lroo to • -

stu. -

11.
p ,_

Flnt .....,h
who quality. caN 114-112-7717.

EOH.

Business

llodom

Opportunity

1111.

s ....,,_,

1·tiZ both

In PomoJOY.. E.,lppod

Musical
pou1o

TV $110. S t - far
uoh mora. All prtcoo

sa...

=:a:.-::='.r.::.:u ~uo.. -

=· .-_,

I1000.0ROIWK

YENDIICIIICIOAISNACKI
l'octaoy I111K unin. Kon
- · 1 ICIO Ill 1111.
Pt 11 t1. and '
nuob11o - . IIIII uotum tn•-••"' Iii

45

7=:t;;.a~·i0..
,:!.;;;;;
.;;ct;d:"~
iiii.~-.ih.i

·
Furnished

Rooms

Roouuuo far ronl · - orOIOIIIh.

ltllllng ot $120/uno. GotUa
Holol.l1""'*-·
Slooplng with ~
- . outo.'"!: A1oo trotlor opoco. All -~

'rJ:"'.Can::=...:.
.,:,~11•
-.. PI,,.,.._ - ·
...,._
2411

=1.~~#,. p.un.,

*'

Flew d,Bo anodoolo,aoh,l
hlcllo&lt;y, nice 100d1 ally, Ml;
"""'*Y. S50. 111 hi 1111 Dori
Wuuuglu.
Hall carot diamond_,.....,.
rina. whfto aolcl, • • a.~
:DIIaftor£30.

lnd-

...... - -·

82

1111 Otdo CUI- · - ·
~., .... aM.

............ 304-67WIOII.
~Min ., nytan volow, vwy
!Milo. .......

kitchen. Reference, ..,_.,. ,.
Emo...., V£A~!Iaft• 1:00 Pll
qulred. 114-1815 1141 .,.., 5p.m. Gilly,
INOTK:al
304.e ,_,..,
.
CHO VAllEY PU8UIHING CO. - 1 b&lt;, opl, 61 I CCI 0310.
1u mmende lhll pu do
Aw adtor ..... l14 1121244
bl•ln
with---~
'"-• 0no ~
--...a ...,_
r--rllllf.. 1um. or unlum. ·•
...,.. In flu•oad ~ - · 1
uod
- - - · lo ..
114-112-1304 or
-

Mlddlocr.

lnttrumenta

•w
hldea In the woods to avoid

attending Kelly's ·woddlng. 1;1
10:DD (JJ 700 Club With Pit
llobertlon
• (JJ Ill) II dnlgllt Clller
Jacl&lt; llnds in the hoiMat

Plumbing &amp; .
Hllltlng

---cc.~~m.~·~·~"~;.~~;.;---- ~

•1111"-.

Fcuth •nd Pile

.. ~Ohio

,.
!

when his frtend shOOtS en

innocent man. (R) Q

:

~~~~------~. ~
84 Ellctrlcal
.....

a

r ,11111 ~~u~-~: ,,.
~. ~ 1.' ·' 1 r 1 ,,

'"'

- - .. '""""" .

~OfiRefrlg;r;erat~lon;;;.;;;ij;
.-,
~ ldle4W
Gf
OIIIWCIInlll :

Cl) • (J) tllirtyiCIINIItlng A

TWO

DOLLERS

.........
''
I

h , tclan. Rlllinlur •
II 17 '.10W11-1..
~1

PLEASE,
MA'AM

i

85 01,..1 Hauling

power struggle ot OM
causes Michael to reminisce.

BARNEY .
OOC: II HOW COME
TWO DOLLIIlS IF
YOU DIDN'T FIND

a

Gary Morris and Minnie Peart
join Okllhomana to celebralll
the stall's tOOth anntvarury.
11 :DC ()) lenin

fiMu Air compnn H.

:..'IT.,a:: f:':z.~ ., 1,.,

• &lt;JJ Cll •

w

111 • o

AIM*...,.

~~~.a])

IIJ) , . _ .

®Newlllrt

.·

11J Miami Vice

'

11:20 (J) MOVIE: TIIIS.ncf

Pebbloe (2:58)

11:30(JJ llatlnln
.
'
•(JJ 1111 Tonlgllt-

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

LAMPS
BOOKCASES ·
OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS I
CROCKS
lEOS
·:i:
DR EllERS
PRIMITIVES
"
DRY SINKS TABlES
~
POCKET WATCHES
~

i

992·252.

32 Mobile Homll
Devices
for 8111
Dlpei!Mit llllri111 Aid Salts &amp; SlnltCII -:::,171
:;;-;;.,=
4~:=::::o:~~~---"'

1llllri111 bllutions for All Aln

"a::. f

11

. .,...

=LISA
M. ,KOCH, M.S.
-

,., ... ,.......
:::':~
...........
,
..
,.1_
• .. - ..... .....

z

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

c 'licenllfCIInical Aulloloitlt
-~~~~
:z: &amp;14) 446-7119 or (614) 992·2104
17 SICIInd ....... 1213

-. "'F--•· Gio 45&amp;31
or It

.....,., ...,rill llotpitll

JtuiNrry lflb, l'onlero,. ·

.:=..........

IHI,_._..._Moon

31 Homll tor Sill

..,., '"" .,.. *- ,., ........
1124 L MAll

!tl =:.'i Art TOU,
i~J~-cr~

r:.-:•-,:r:.r
.. - ...........
illw_,

33

ISA
AD

·e
'

l

'

:

over UriiiUI
-~·Cline
12:00 (JJ MOVIE: ' - - " - And

'hlr

'Blrthdl\v
;

ACROSS
info
9 Region

e&amp;.~~allllliiWIII

(J)Afllr ......
• (JI Hint ca.., 10:30)

.........

• e 0 ' - CuiUis:Man
_

~
s•

l!oot

P•

OpeniDa lead: • .o\

and bad to win tile 1llit two tridai.
It wu well done, bat llllppOII! West ·
bad one !ell beart and tbe 8·1-7 of "
apades. There II IICitblq immoral
about bls plli)'iDI 1-1 of spade~, caoI'NIInl tbe lt!VetHpOt. ID tbat .-e declarer would bave pne dowa. I lite
deelam's play, but bear in milltl tllat
there w u - ;u - k ilmll......

..........,

lilt--.-,.,.,1.,..,..,.
.-·-•
....·
_
~~--.-,.

'J....,•Cunla-",_..IIIIJu ... - .
t.

1

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

42 Salver
43 Eilgendered

1'~

DOWN
1 Lealy,dlsh

nole

2 Sports
selling
3 Blow off
steam

Philippine

4 Munch
5 Widow's

tree

111 Each
19 • - the
last rose
'
20 Seasonal
song
22 Guilarist
Atkins
23 Tread
25 Nesl

10 Judicial
symbol dl

27 Tower city

28 lntlmldale

authoflly
30Uke some
13 Mean
socks
lnherilance 15 "The Naked 32 Cut il out
8.
33Showed

standstill 21 Choose
7 Go to jail 22 Sedan
8 Artist's
23 Clean
milieu

24 Outburst

concern·
31 Milkflsh
• 39 Priest's ·
vestment

28 Expense

(abbr.)

_, .

34 Vessel
35W.Ind.
sorcery

311 -green
37 Treat
regally
' 39 From a

distance

DAD..YCR YProQUOJ ES- Here'allow to work It:

1:1112
t

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
'One leMer stands for IIIOther. In this sample A ill used
·for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophe~, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnll. Each day the code letters are different.

VMXU

Dlv1il' 1 an
(J) OIIJIIIM liFt ill llil
1000, Fram ..... ell (T)

4. AUst

40 Stairway

10 Influenced
11 Church
season '
12 Arouse
14 Emmet
15 Blvd.
' 111 Guido's

ii:iil
1111 T0111g111
Ill
...... . _
11:10e&lt;JJ

-

1 Except
posl
5 Computer 41 Misplace

(J.JJ

Olllw
~~~-·z·liM..,
•llut . . NIIw

lloltl1

lir fHOMAS JOSEI'H

Till Loll City 01 Gold (1 :30)
(I) !!POne-~ .

eoAfllrHouN

Vlalnerable: Eut·West
Dealer: West

CROSSWORD

(I) lp arb:Cistter

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL '

tQt

+qu

tile beart ece UJID etltry. But Eut bad
to follow. Declarw pla)'ed a ..,acle
back to bls 10 and tben cubed the
spade ace. Notia&amp; tbe fall of Welt's 1-t
of apades, be deeided to reed tbat u a
doubleton. So be led the club queen.
East won tbe kiD&amp; and returned the
beart jack. West took tbe ~ IDd
plli)'ed a IICOIId beart, tbe kin&amp; wiDniDC iD dtiDIJil)'. South DOW ruffed 8
beart and led tbe club jack, over~
with dummy'sece u West &amp;bowed out.
He ruffed aaotber heart and got back
to dummy wit1a • club. Tbat left tbe
lead In dummy with East boltiiJI&amp; tbe
Q-7 of spades. But !lOOth beld .tbe lt..J

herself
29 Now (II.)
30Hemand
31 Financial
statement

10:30 ~~~(l) 11-'-llonl (1 :CD)
.. llll CrlmeW.tcll TOiilgllt
Okllllom8 Ces .... wtlal
CIII1»1'8Uon ConWiy Twitty,

...

inK tbe jadt ulllit-preference to lbow

27 Roseanne

o E-"''J - ·

us

.KIU

SOliTJI
• .o\KJIDU

be bid tbree bearll. Soulll would bave
liked to bid tbree ilpldel if It wu fore·
in&amp;, but be was not sure tbat North
would bid apiD. So be jumped to four
opaclel, eliding tbe auction.
After tbe ece of diamoDds lead,
West saw tbat be could euily defeat
tbe coatract if East beld •lln&amp;letGo ciJ.
amontl. So be eontimled tbe lAiit. pili)'·

gNniWIIcll

•llll .llew Twllglll z-

NOTMIN'?

West was vulnerable, be
tbouPlil wu Olt to opea prHIIIpti·
vely with two aees. It was ciiJIICifOUI
for North to bid. but wone to pua, 10 ·

(!)

OnlTM UuM

'

JWl'l'
tQ7$S
.JIU

Bera111e

(J)Callegi-CI) ~-- TOiilgllt

~

~fPARE ·
FO~ IT·

-ion.

Cash PakL Call 114.ea-1157 Of

appllanc

M...., VIce

7:05 (II JelleNonl
7:30.(JJ fllllllt , _

wanted to Buy

·· ltQI U
tJ[IO
+AIUH

Jalllel Jlellby

lilY~

•c.

Pn 1140 qulho. Any

·Good play
and good guess

,~-~Of

Pomeroy,
Middleport

Junk e~rs with

NoaH

Cll • (J) Cunent AIIH
(l) (!) lui- ~
Na•aH••

p.m. Saturdly.

9

r----------------••

Cll Spa tsC1ntw

Frlduuy. llondly odltlon • 2:00

•t·"

SCUM LIT$ ANSW11S

Gypium-Lotry- Hutct! - 14bldar-GETOIJT
MilA to cabbie: "Can1 you go any Iuter?
. ""Sulll," laughed
!he cabby, "bull'm not allowed to ~OUT."

CllYPJOQOOTE

DN

UXUFC

LSTWA

p~

MAV UXUFC FMVLD DLWD CNS
QBWMT KNF CNSFYUBK.- FNPUFD
MAVUFYNBB

•

•

YMtafa,'e CafCI4B...I 11IE SECRET OF
WRITING WEll..
KNOW THOROUGHLY WHAT
ONE WRIIU AIIOUI", AND NOT TO BE AFFECIED.
- AI EXItNDfJI POPE
•C&gt;
s,ndlcele. Inc ..

,.King ,_

•
•

•

�Ohio Lottery
Shop today,
shop locally

Pit'.k 3
860
Piek 4

]..ow toallllt lS. Cllance of

7596

enow te perceat. Tll•rdaay,
cllance of aaow fiu.rrlel. Hlp
211. Cbaace of
percent.

DI!U'

IDOW

i5t

•

•
•

2 S.Ciionl, 20
A Multlmecllo

- · · Ohio, Wedneaday, December 13, 1989

.

EVEfW
TOY ON
SAlE/

l

r-1

------- -- ,r ----------- -,r---

: $5.00 COUPON

II
II
II
II
II

$10.00 COUPON

New Meigs chamber
picks officers, board

-- ..... -- ·- --,

1I

I

I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I
I

$5.00 COUPON .

I
I
I

BRING IN THIS COUPON AND GET $5 OFF PURCHASE
BRINO IN THIS COUPON AND GET $1 0 OFF PURCHASES
I BRINO IN THIS COUPON AND GET $6 OFF PURCHASES
OF LADIES' I MEN'S DENIIIll JEANS DEC. 13 114 ONLY.
OF $100 OR MORE DEC. 13 AND 14 ONLY.
OF $50 TO 99.99 DEC. 13 AND 14 ONLY.
I
JEANS ADVEATISED IN OUR CHRISTMAS SALE CIRCULAR STAAnNG
. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER PER
ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER PER
.
FAL DEC. 8 ARE EXCLUDED. .
_J
PURCHASE OF $100 OR MORE .
.J L
L - - -P~H~E2: !!0 ~ 9~9- . - - .JL-

--------- --

25Conu

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

By NANC" YOACHAM
Dally Sentinel Staff
Board members and officers
for the new Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce were
announced at Tuesday's regular
- and final - meeting of the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com·
merce which was held at Veterans Memorial HospitaL
President Bruce Reed an·
nounced that bOard members for
the new organization will be Ron
Ash, Tom Reed, Bruce Reed, Joe
Clark and Mary Powell from
Pomeroy; Nick Robinson, Lenny
Eliason, Chuck Kitchen, Dick
Owen and Mike Gerlach from·
Middleport; David Baker, a
member-at-large; and Bill
Nease, representing Racine.
These 12 board members wlll
begin contacting other areas of
the county so that by the end of
1990, the executive board will
consist of three members each
from Pomeroy and Middleport.
CHRISTMAS IS .••tbe blrtbda, of .Jeea. At
CbrlltmM II the time ol the par wllea tile
and the rest will be from other
times the true meaalll&amp; ol Cbrlltmu &amp;ell tbrown
blrdlda, of .J•• II eelebnied• .Jesllca II ~eft~
parts of the county, hopefully
by the wayelde, but IDIIk uk little Je811lca
bere with her nativity scene wlllcb Ia displayed In
Including
the Tuppers Plains,
BlaettnU", dau&amp;hter ol Rick and .Jamie Blaettnar,
the yard of the Blaellllat realdeace on Butternut
Chester,
Racine,
Syracuse and
~
~
Pomeroy, and she'D be glad to tell you that · Ave.
:lj.utland areas. The new 'Meigs
County Chamber will be officially enacted Jan. 1.
Officers for next year will be
Prelter
Nld
the
extremely
low
Bruce
Reed as president; Lenny
TheOiilo"TutuonTrustAuthor· to assist Ohio famUies with
purchase price, about $30
, El~ ._,:~;and
lty (ATTA) today announced the planning. saving and paying for
wU1
~ Ow!lil.
urer. ..
-· · ::·~ 1111 ... 1.. ZLJUII.aal•· ,fll9f'ture.cDbaJieaek_!.IIIUDQ..br, _.. h• :. 1;,
~..: .. re at all ...._.
· · '""'W\IJ
,.._. · ~, •·, . .,...
'"'' c "'eaCIIl oc
""
f UJ.'II..,.
'h
•
·
'
SchQOis.
an
·
enrollment
form
or , e
1
creBSel In tuition. Four hundred be $10 for no11-votlni asaoclate
I Sen, PaulE. Pfelfi!I". R-Eiu~y- Guaranteed Tuition Pr.ogram,
units ' would' tullY' 'tuafa child's members: $35 for l/otiJ18111dMd·
rus who co-chairs the OTTA whicH allows college tuition to be
ual members; $55 for vodng
account.
with Rep. P.aul H. Jones, D- pre·purchased at today's prices,
FamUies need · to enroll their businesses with one to 25 em·
Ravenna, said schQOls will be with guaranteed payments when
chUdren before the Dec. 31 ployees: . $75 for voting busiselldln&amp; brochures home with the child attends college.
deadline expires. Avoid the last nesses with more than 25 em·
students before the holiday vaca·
The OTTA Is currently offering
minute rush. Brochures are ployees; $125 for banks and
tlon. FamUies with pre-school an open enrollment period,
utilities. Two part-time em·
children should contact their through Dec. 31 for the tuition available at local schools, the ployees constitute &lt;me full-time
local schools and request pre-purchase program, Prelfer state legislator's office, or at the employee, Reed said. And any
brochures.
said. FamUies need to complete OTI'A directly. Addlt!onallnfor· member joining during the or·
the enrollment form and submit matlon on the program may be
ganlzatlon's first membership
The brochures explain two It to the OTI'A with a one· time obtained by calling 1-800-589drive
will receive charter mem·
non·retundable $30 fee for each 0TI'A.
programs the Ohio General As·
bershlp
status and a certificate to
sembly adopted earlier this year child being enrolled, he said.
that effect.
Reed highlighted 1989's
chamber·sponsored activities,
stalin&amp; that "Overall, It's been a
successful year." He extended
special thanks to members ofthe
Pomeroy Area Chamber's Executive Board for making the year
a success.
The Gallla County Grand Jury the Gallla County Prosecutor's $10,000 . .
Among final events being sPonAdditionally,
the
grand
jury
completed a two-day special office.
session In which It bas returned
Prosecutor Brent A. Saunders considered drug rei a ted cases as sored by Pomeroy Chamber are
78 secret drug charges, the Indicated that all 78 secret developed and Investigated by a Christmas lighting contest,
which Is being co-sponsored by
largest number ever returned In charges presented to the Gallla tile Ohio Department of Liquor
the Winding Trails Garden Club. ·
the history of Gallla County .
County grand jury are drug Control. The Ohio Department of
Anyone
In Pomeroy who decoLiquor Control, In cooperation
Judge Donald A. Cox, of the related.
rates
their
home will automat!Gallla County Court of Common
They Include trafficking In with the Gallipolis Pollee Depart·
Pleas, convened the grand Jury drugs of all types, from cocaine ment, assigned undercover
on Tuesday, Dec. 12, at the to LSD. These defendents, If agents to work In the GalUpolls
request of Prosecuting Attorney. convicted, fa~e sentences rang· area In June of 1989. Through
Brent A. Saunders. This grand · lng from six months to a their efforts, offenses such as
WASHINGTON (UPI~ - Rejury· culminates a 10-month un- · maximum of 25 years In the state trafficking In food stamps and
tail
sales rose a seasonally
Illegal
drugs
were
Investigated
dercover drug Investigation penitentiary with fines ran&amp;lng
0.8 percent In No·
adjusted
and
presented
to
the
grand
jury.
under the exclusive direction of from $1.000 to a maximum of
vember,
rebounding
from a 1.3
The Ohio Department of Agrlcul·
In
October,
as
percent
drop
ture In cooperation with the
consumer
purchases
picked
up
Department of Uquor Control
across a wide range of products,
was Instrumental In developing
the Commerce Department rethe. Illegal food stamp
ported Wednesday.
Investigation.
'lhe $1.2 billion surge In sales to
Task force undercover agents,
who conducted the greatest $144.6 bllllon was bigger than
share of the operations, were w~~&amp;t was generally expected by
located In the Gallla County area economists and reflects resl·
!Ieney In retail spending In the
and resided there lor approxlmat.eiy 10 months. Through their fate of an lncreas lngly s)uggish
efforta, purchases of drugs such economy.
One reason for the rebound was
as cocaine, LSD, marijuana,
that ·automobile sales rose 0.5
amphetamines, barbltuates and
percent during the month after a
other Illicit drugs were made
terrible month In October when
from over 57 defendants. The
dealers saw sales drop 5.3
purchases from the drug offendpercent.
ers were collected throughout the
Auto sales were pushed up over
lnvestl&amp;atlon, held and presented
the summer months by manufac·
as a group to the grand Jury. Thla
turers' sales Incentives but fell
was done to maintain tl)·e lnte&amp;·
off
when the Incentives ended at
rlty of the lnvestl&amp;atlon.
the be&amp;lnnlng ol the 1990 model
Michael FenderboiCh, Invest!·
aator with the Gallla County year.
Excludlq automobiles, retail
PrO&lt;teCUtor's Olflce .and corrdl·
nator ol thla multi-county drug sal• I'OIIe 0.9 percent In No·
vember after declining 0.3 per·
tuk force, stat• that the opera·
cent In October .
tloa was hl&amp;bly suceetatul beOverall retail sales of durable
eau~ It remained covert. Fen·
derboiCh Indicated that thla &amp;OOda - products auch as cars
operation remained secret due to dellpecl to Jaat at least three
the nature of druisand thesalety yeara - climbed 0.7 percent 1!1
tiNVIIU.U. 011"1' - Yet MOtller frGIIor lonner Orud Crealler
November after a 3 percent
of undercover a&amp;ents.
F"'Cl~wllebroapl:fametolllellelld-wll•lle......._, .
decline
Ill October.
Fenderboech al10 noted that
tror J-mPlal, lhella a..._ at 1
la!IJ...- wftll a
ltetall &amp;ales of non-durable
Ropr Brandeben :y, Special In·
rror ~~at• •• the lan ... a troc- llW wHII trea
&amp;OOda
roee 0.9 percent In No·
VII
tip
tor
lor
tbe
Gallla
County
._.... '1'1111 nlftJ fro&amp; caned Ia a - • waa a llolldaf 11ft trem
vemller
a drop of 0.3 percent In
p~tor·a
offlce
pi'OYlded
allr·
Walllae Bradford ol Cllerrr Rl.p,lel. B wfU talle a placle btalde
October.
Continued
on
paae
10
nun•- oilier frop Ia Fref'• free-.

cally be Included In the Jud&amp;ID&amp;.
Reed said, or If someone lives
outside, but near village ltmlts,
and wants to be Included, they
should call .Kay Frederick at
992·5rol, or the chamber office at
992-5005.
A Chamber appreciation
dinner will be held sometime In
January or February, and although Pomeroy Area Chamber
will be defunct by that time, the
new Meigs County Chamber
Board lias agreed to allow
Pomeroy sponsor the event even

though It will be held after the·
Jan. 1 date.
In other Chamber business,
Gary Bates, of GTE North, spoke
to chamber members about the
Llneskeeper program, which Is
explained In the most recent
GTE North customer bills.
Mary Powell apprised the
group of scheduledSesqulcenten·
nlal events.
,P lace and time for next
month's meeting of the new
Meigs County Chamber have not
yet been announced.

Tuition trust for'lns available

~=~··

$4.00 OFF
LADIES' NOVELTY
WOVEN SHIRTS

.
GIRLS'
FASHION FLEECE TOPS

SALE 6.49
REG. 12.99

•

SALE 4.99 TO 9.99
REG. 8.99 TO 13.99

S10.00 OFF

$4.00 OFF

LADIES' SWEATERS

BOYS' LONG. SLEEVE TOPS

SALE 14.99... REG. 24.99
SALE 19.99... REG. 29.99

WOVENS: SALE 6.99 ... REG. 10.99
KNITS: SALE 5.99... REG. 9.99

13
COLOR TELEVISION

ROTATING CHRISTMAS
TREE STAND

SALE 159.99 TO 199.99
REG. 199.99 TO 239.99

SALE 24.99
REG. 49.99

$5.50 OFF

$2.00 OFF

Gallia Grand jury returns
78 secret drug indictments

25 LB. BOX PUREX
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

BAMBI
. VIDEO TAPE
liMIT 2 PEA CUSTOMER

SALE 9.97
REG. 11.97

SALE 16.49••• REG. 21.d9

$7.99 OFF

$4.00 OFF

$1.00 OFF

SALE 4 FOR $3.00

LADIES'
NOVELTY FLEECE

BOYS' LONG SLEEVE
FASHION FLEECE TOPS

ENERGIZER BATTERIES

KLEENEX HOLIDAY
80 CT. TISSUES

SALE 10.00
REG. 17.99

SALE 5.99 TO 10.99
REG. 9.99 TO 14.98

4 PK. (C,D) SALE 3.49 ••• REG. 4.49
8 PK. (AA) SALE 3.99 ... REG. 4.99

LIMIT 4 PER CUSTOMER

$2 MFG. REBATE AV~ILABLE

•

'

50% OFF

$40.00 OFF

SALE $1.50

SALE $1.99 EA.

FULL FIGURE
NOVELTY FLEECE

MEN'S, LADIES' ·
SEIKO WATCHES

(15 + 3 OZ.) FINESSE
SHAMPOO AND CONDITIONER

SALE 7.99
REG. 15.99

SALE 59.99 TO 109.99
REG. 99.99 TO 149.99

4 PK. GE SOFT·WHITE
LIGHT BULBS

50% OFF

$40.00 OFF

$3.50 OFF

SALE 2 FOR $3.00

LADIES' HANES HER WAY
6 PK. ANKLETS

ALL 5 PIECE
DINETTE SETS

2 DRAWER VIDEO
STORAGE CABINET

COLGATE TOOTHPASTE
FAMILY SIZE

SALE 3.99
REG. 7.99

EXAMPLE: SALE 79.99
REG. 119.99

SALE 6.49
REG. 9.99

LIMIT 4 PER CUSTOMER
WEIGHTS VARY FROM 8.1 to 9.1 OZ.

LIMIT 3 PER CUSTOMER

,

.

•

$3.00 OFF

$10.00 OFF

$2.00 OFF

SALE $3.88

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE MOCK
TURTLENECK KNIT TOPS

ROCK 'N FLOWER

100 SQ. FT. FLAT

SALE 19.77
REG. 29.77

CHRISTMAS WRAP

DOWNY
FABRIC SOFTENER (120 OZ.)

SALE 6.99
REG. 9.99

$4.00 OFF
GIRLS'
PANT SETS

ALPINE SKI
STAIR CLIMBER, EXERCISE liKE
SALE 88.88... REG'. 88.88

SALE 5.99....... REG. 9.99
SALE 17.99... REG. 21.99

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER

HO

SALE 1.49
. REO. 3.49

liMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER

SJ 00 ()IF

SALE $1.67

90 SQ. FT. CHRISTMAS
WRAP WITH 12 BOWS

8 PK •.
BATHROOM TISSUE

SALE 2.89
REO. 6.99

LIMIT 3 PER CUSTOMER

•!•
••

.

Retail sales ·up 0.8 percent

....._lllri.

UMITED TO

SILVII RIDGE PLAZA, GALUPOUS, OHIO.
1

•
'

•••
I

i

•I

'

LOW WATER MARK REMEMBERED - Pomeroy Area
Chamber ol Commenie Presldeat Bruce Beed may have met bls
"Waler'1oo during this summer's chamber-spoaaored PbU Dh1
and· the Dozers concert. Anyone who at tended tile coaeert will
remember that the raiD poured. And IOIDe wllo attended,
especially chamber memben, will remember Reed bopefuUy
checking the rain guage atop the press box at the Melp Football
Field where the concert wu held. Cbamber bad purchased a
quarter·lnch rain IIUiuraace for the event. Sa.ys Reed Ia retrospect,·
"It takes a lot of rain to make a quarter-Inch." Chamber IC18t
about $2,300 on the concert. Ia honor of Reed's "low water mark" In
his year as Pomeroy Chamber president, he was presented at
yesterday's Chamber meetiDI with a rain aua&amp;e --JustllketbeoJte
on the press box. His brother, Tom Reed, made the pgesentallon.

rep.,..

---

~

Wednesday's report Is ad·
justed for seasonal variations but
not for the effects of Inflation. As
a result, overall sales for the first
11 months of the year were up5.7
percent over the same period In
1988, but the jump was largely

due to price Increases.
Nevertheless, the better-thanexpected sales may cause the
Federal Reserve to stay the
course In Its monetary policy and
not lower Interest rates any
further for the time being.

-Local news briefs ---~
Sheriff probes more hay burning
Hay bale burners were again at work In the county. Meigs
Sheri!! James M. Soulsby reports that Ills department was
notified at 5: 20a.m. Tuesday that bales on Mudsock Road had
been burned. Bales were also burned on Sumner Road.
Sheriff Soulsby reports there Is a Farm Bureau reward for
Information leading to the arrest and conviction of vandals
responsible for burning hay bales belonging to Farm Bureau
members. Anyone with Information Is asked to contact the
sheriff's office.
A deer-car accident Tuesday evening on Route 124 was
Investigated by the sberlff's department.
The accident occurred about 9:15p.m. at the six mile marker
near Southern Ohio Coal Company Mine 31, reports Sheriff
Soulsby. Charlotte E . Jacks, 23, of Langsville, was traveling
westln her pickup truck and struck &amp;;deer that ran Into her path.
There was light damage to the truck.
Raymond Litchfield, of Welsh town Hill, Minersville, has been
arrested on a bench warrant from the Meigs County Court for
failure to comply with court orders. Litchfield Is confined to the
county jail, reports the sheriff.

Driver injured in accident
One driver complained of an Injury In a two-car collision at
3:35p.m. Tuesday In Chester Twp., Meigs County. on SR. 2t8, at
the Intersection of Twp. flC, the State Highway Patrol reported.
The patrol says Allee E . Mays, 66, Reedsville, Ohio, stopped
Continued on page 10

,.

•

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