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'

'

Wednlld8y, [)ecemb8r

.
20. 1989

•

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3

We Reservt The Ri&amp;ht To
limit Quantities

' HELPING TOU
CELDRATE THE
CHRISTMAS
HOUDAYS

681

Shop today,
shop locally

Pick 4

2786
Super Lotto
9-16-18-29-32-38
Kicker 533512

thru

Now
Dec. 24
wt will have a daily
drawing for free
groceries. Sign your
caihier tapt and if
your name is drawn,
you will bt
reimbursed i,_ cash
for the amount of
your purchase.

STORE HOURS·

Monday thru Sundoy
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., DEC. 17, THRU SAT., DEC. 23, 1989

•
Christrrws is ... ...........__.............................................................._,

-

---LAUST w•NIIS IN 011
CIIIISTIIAS GIOCIIY
GIVEAWAY All."
CheriiM Swartz
Sonya Wayl.-4

Ohioians brace for
record ' cold 'weather

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

Predict 10 below tonight with wind chills of
40 below in some areas of Buckeye State

Joyce lysell

·

Rump
· · Roast
· ••••••• ~. S1 79

·

ll

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Chuck Roast ••••• ~~. S1 .89

TURKEY

Drumsticks.•••••••~~~. 49&lt;.

CAROLINA PRIZE

Bacon ••••••••••• ~ •••• ~~ •• 79&lt;.

GRADE A FLAVORITE

Turkeys ••••••••••••••••• 59&lt;
CORN KING BONELESS
$ 99
HAMS ••••••••••••••••••• 1
12-20 LIS.

t

6-1 LIS. AVG.

. , . leutll'
Ykkiellarrh
Naill Morrison

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

SIGN UP FOR
OUR
sso Gin
CEniFICATE
and a

$25 Gin
CEmFICATE
To It Given Away

Each Saturay From·
Now to ChristMas.

'

...

Ll.

,

·

j

RED EMPEROR or
WHITE CALMERIA

ECKRICH

Smoked Sausage ~ S199

99&lt;

Bologila ••••••••••••~·•• S149

the •• "~ituaUon i well. , l~~oo, hand' ~

LB.

APPLES

'
' $
Bananas .•••••••••• 3'Las. 1

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
GALLON

$

NEW COUNTRY

Yogurt ••.•••• :.~·~::•• 1/

SUNSHINE

.·

·

1

· TONY'S 15.5 - 17.5 OZ.

.

$179
Pizza
•••••.•••••••••••.
•
.•
Dog Food ...... !!:~:-:. S4 99

3 LITER BOTTlE

BANQUET -9-12 OZ. BOX

,

s·

Lotsa Pop ............. 69&lt; Chicken Snacks ...~ 149
Ll.

CAIIHATION

HOT COCOA MIX
10 1-0l.
o ENYBOPES
o

'

99C

..r I ra CUSTOIB
tOOl CINL YAY POWil 'S SIIPIIYMU
10011
. ... DEC. 17 Mil SAT. DEC. 2J

...., -

Fruit Baakat Or4era.
39 OL'CAN

DOMINO SUGAR

$149
1.-riPaCUSJ-1
HWal'S IUPIIYMU ·. ·
17 , _ SAf. DEC. 2J

•••••

MAXWELL HOUSE

s

COFFEE

49

•

100 COUNT GOLDEN
or 100 COUNT RED

6/Sl

_he is not a "wimp."

:
•
:
.
.

·113 COUNT NAVEL
· OR

100 COUNT FLORIDA

ORANGES

6/Sl

'

Sea Our Pro•uea D•••· For Your

By United Press International
Ohioans generally supported
President Bush In his decision to
send American troops into Pa·
nama Wednesday In an attempt
to oust Gen. Manuel Noriega and
lnslllll a civilian government.
The support has come from
both sides of the pollticlll aisle,
while others say Bush has shown

DELICIOUS
APPLES

FLA·VORITE

10 COUNT

.TANGELOES
01 150 COUNT

TANGERINES

6/Sl

--·------ -- - - - - - - - ------------"--------:::__

Ford France catches lots of attention from those
passing by. The France children, Andy, six, and
Alex, three. really enjoy tbe reindeer. and were
dellr;bted to pose lor a picture.

s
l
u• •assau t

"After Noriega declared war,
he left us little alternative but to
respond," said Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D·Ohio. ·"It ap·
pears the effort has been success·
ful. All Americans join In ex·
pressing our sorrow that lives
were lost and we remain con·
cerned about the safety of all

By United Press International
Such ' temperature readings to remain bitterly cold -from 5
The cold wave that put Ohio in are unusual this time of the year to 15 below zero Saturday night •
a deep frme the past week not in Ohio. -·
from zero to 10 below Christmas
only continued, lt got worse on
"One after another, arctic air eve and from 5 to 15 above
the first day of winter.
masses are coming do.wn on us... Christmas night.
Temperatures fell into the said Daron Boyce of the National
Wednesday's temperatures
single digits across most of the Weather Service In Cleveland. wereinthe.teenswhenamanwas
state during the early morning "That in itself is not unusual. found at a freeway underpass In
hours. and the National Weather What's unusual is that It's Columbus. The man. believed to
Service said they would dip to as happening so early. These arctic be a transient, had a low body
low as five below zero in air masses are unusually strong temperature and died at a
· northwes I Ohio and to zero in for this time of year.
hospit,al.
eastern Ohio by evening.
''These cold winds are forming
The man, not Immediately
Brisk west to northWj!St winds way up in the arctic and blowing identified, Is at least the seventh
were expected to prolluce dan· across Canada right Into Ohio person to die in Ohio since the
gerous wind chills Thursday, and the entire eastern half of the cold spell and snow set in last
with wind chill values falling as United States," Boyce said.
Fr!day.
low as 40 below zero.
However, there IS a bit of
Snow spread over Ohio Wed·
Record low temperatures are warmer news on the horizon. In nesday night and continued to
expected Thursday night, with an extended Ohio weather fore· fall early Thursday in a large
lows of ~0 below zero to 20 below cast issued Wednesday night for portion of Ohio, with up to one
zero over most of Ohio. In areas Saturday through Christmas inch of new snow across northern
near Lake Erie, 'however, the _ Day, a "warming trend" was . Ohio by the morning. ·
lows are expected to be between predicted .
The exception was in the three
Highs Saturday are expected extremenortheasiOhiocountles .
five below zero to 10 below.
The weather service said the to range from 5 to 15 above zero, Up to nine inches of snow fell
cold weather will continue on !rom 10 to 20 on Sunday and from overnight in AshtabUla County,
Friday, with highs struggling. to 25 to 35 on Christmas.
up to seven lnchesinLakeCounty
reach the zero mark.
But, those nights are predicted ~~~~~;o~:~~7inches in northern

:~~~~~~[;~~~~~~;s~ ~~~ m~~eet~:~!~: :ro~~:ef1~st

Meigs Commissioners accept
ita~~:~\~~so~~~~!~!~~~.es:::~~ -~;;,r'X~a~r~v"a~f~~~2~~~P.;;~~ .HaJ1 S bid ,- for' office space

ser• r-lega -~-1&gt;1!~-IT!I~oups&gt;-··- • . vlcemen· killed In Panama wete •
Vietnam left 18 U.S. military
personnel and one female civ·
ilian Defense Department dependent dead, one soldier '· miss·
ing and 117soldiers wounded, the
Pentagonannouncedi~Washing·

ton. However, a count of military
hospitals in San Antonio showed
152 wounded had been flown In
from Panama.
A Panama City hospital admin·
istrator said more than 100
PanamanianS' were (lead and

others in Panama."
As many as 11 soldiers and one
clvllian Defense Department dependent were killed, one solider
was .reported missing, and at
least 59 were wounded.
''When you have a government
that declares war and starts to
target U.S. citizens down there, I
think the president had no
choice," said Rep. John Kaslch.
R·Ohlo, a member of the House
Armed Services committee.
Kasich said there was "tre·
mendous frustration" several
months ago when the president ,
did not act to support an
attempted coup by Panamanian
troops opposed to Noriega.
"At the time, both Republicans

-

planned with each service re·
presented at the two·star levei
and above.
The United States hit Panama
with tanks, helicopters and about
24,000 troops early Wednesday.
Numerous strategic points of
Noriega's Panamanian Defense
Forc~s were either knocked out
of service or seized.
The attack also allowed for the
swearing In of Guillermo Endara
Continued on page 5

· Ohioans generally support
.president's action on Panama

99 ~LI.IAG
•

·

Thursday but Pana1naruat
strongman Gen. Manuel No·
rlega, hiding with a $1 mllllob
bounty on his head, remained at
large and urged his supporters to
resist and "overcome or die ."
Mercedes Morris, spokeswoman for U.S. Southern Com·
mand, said in a brief statement,
"We have the situation well in
hand. We are working arduously
to capture · Mr. Noriega , the
fugitive."
Troops hunted down pockets of
loyalist members of the Pana·

RED or GOLDEN
DEUCIOUS, ROME
WINESAP

•

d
d
l 0 riega
0 ges

1\. T

PANAMA CITY, Panama
(UP!) - U.S. assault troops had

GRAPES

ECKRICH

'•

DECORATING IN A NOVEL WAY - This
famUy of rustle reindeer with colorful wreathes
around their necks displayed on the lawn at the
North Third St., Middleport, home of Mr. and Mrs.

NEED IIOT a PIISIIIT

L1.

2 Sections. 12 Pages 2S Conto
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, December 21. 1989

Vol.40, No.1 58
Copyolghtod 1889

I

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS ·

Record low temperatures of
10 below zero toalght.
p.creulnl cloudl~~e~~• Friday
a hl1h bel ween zero and
above zero.

and Democrats In the House went
on record that we should. do
something in Panama," said
Kasich, who added he thinks It
would be difficult for some
members of Congress to stand up
and criticize an action they were
demanding only a few months
ago.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D·Ohlo,
said she saw the attack as a way
of sending a "strong message" of
support for all democratically
elected governments.
She pointed to Noriega',s al·
leged involvement in drug trill·
f!cking and called the Panaman·
ian strongman "a ,fugitive from
justice."
Continued on page 5

,I

"

·

The commissioners have been
approached hy Ferrellgas. Mi·
nersville, about subleasing a
portion of the building.
In other business matters, the
commissioners passed a motion
giving Meigs Auditor William
Wickline authority to make all
end·Of·the.year transfers, as
required.
The commiSsioners also ap·
pointed Pat Mills as a member of
the Meigs County Library Board
of Trustees.
Commissioner Rlcllard Jones
reported that one unit of a
courthouse boiler will hav.e to be
replaced. Problems with the

courthouse heating system deve·
loped this week, leaving some
offices without heat. Repairs
have been made but the one
boiler unit cannot be repaired,
Jones said.
Jones also reported that the
courthouse elevator project
should be completed by Satur·
day, with the exception of paint·
lng the outside doors, due to
weather conditions.
Finally, interdepartmental
budget transfers were approved
by the commissioners in the
amount of $1,287.27 for the county
court, and $7,149.50 for common
pleas court.

Ohio -employment up in November
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Non-agricultural wage and salary employment In Ohio last
morith rose by 18,000 jobs to a
record 4.8 million, the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
reported Wednesday.
Settlements of labor·
management disputes in prim·
ary metals, fabricated metals
and non·electrtcal machinery,
and partial .recalls In transporta·
tlon equipment boosted employ·
ment In manufacturing to 1.1
million, up from the 1.09 million
in October.
Non-manufacturing employ·
ment rose 10,000 from October to
November, primarily because of
Increases in the service sector,
especially )luslness and health
services. Slight Increases OC·
curred In retail trade, construe·
tlon and wholesale trade.
Employment In the services
Industry surpassed employment
In manufacturing by 53,000 jobs
In November. Manufacturng em·
ployment rebounded by 7,000
jobs In the past month as workers
In durable goods Industries re·
turned from labor-management
disputes and layoffs. Non·
durable goods increaesd by 1,000
jobs.
Non-manufacturing employ.
ment rose 10,000 from October to
a record high 3.47 million In
November, OBES said. Most of
the Improvement occurred In
services and retail trade.
Smaller gains were recorded In
construction and wholesale
trade.
Empoyers In mining, transpor·
tatlon and public utUitles, and
finance, iuurance, and real
estate reported no change from
October. Employment In gover11·

'

Middleport; Susie Souls by.
Pomeroy; Dee Brown, Miners·
vlile; Martha McPhail, Syra·
cuse; JeanAiklre,Raclne; Millie
Midkiff, Yvonne Young, Bedford
Township; Karen Werry, Ches·
ter Township; Kay Proffitt,
Lebanon Township; Terri Shain,
Letart Townhshp; Grace Weber,
Olive Township; Anna Black·
wood, Orange Township; Janet
Bolin, Rutland Township; Linda
Montgomeroy. Salem Township;
Helen Blackston .. Sheila Harris,
Salisbury Township; Rachel
Lefebre, Scipio Township;
Rhonda DaIley, Sutton
Township.
The group approved a thank·
you note to be sent to FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, In acknowledgement ota
contribution of $275, and prepared a get-well card for Bob

· ·

The Meigs County Commls·
stoners accepted a bid from Jay
Hall Jr. for office space to house
the county's litter control program, the department of devel·
oplj1ent, and the GaiUa-elgs
Community Action Agency Out·
reach office. The bid Is for the
same offices now occupied by
those agencies at the intersection
of Union Ave. and Route 7.
The bid from Hall was for a
three-year lease at $950 per
month for the first and second
years, and $1,000 per month for
the third year. The •$950 is $100
more than the current lease for
the premises.

:Morris
welcomed as new member
.
~ of Meigs County Heart ,Association
Dan E. Morris, retired super in·
tendent of the Meigs Local School
District, was welcomed as a new
member Tuesday when the
· Board of Directors of the Meigs
Division, American Heart Association, met for a luncheon
session at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
,
.
Dr. Wilma Mansfield, board
president, conducted the meet·
lng during which a discussion
was held on the annual house- tohouse fund drive to be held
throughout Meigs County In
February. Donna Carr reported
on chalnnen named to head
village and township collections..
They, in tum, will select other
workers to carry out the
campaign.
The county chalnnen are
Kathy Hood, Lois McElhinny,

., · ~ · " ·

•

Tewksbary, a heart patient who
has been returned to his Middle·
port home from Riverside Metho·
dist Church In Columbus.
An educational cartoon on
functions of the heart was shown
by Rhonda Kincaid, field repre·
sentatlve. This film along with a
second cartoon Is available to
students of elementary schools.
However, teacher training Is
required before the fllms can be
dlstrlbu led to the schools so that
teachers will be knowledgeable
of the subject matter. Morris, the
new member, agreed to serve as
teacher trainer for the county.
Attending the meeting were
Dr. Mansfield, Morris, Rhonda
Oatley, Nora and Denver Rice,
Donna Carr, LlindaHaley,Sandy
lannarelll, Scott Lucas, and Bob
Hoeflich.

ment agencies declined slighty.
In the past year, Ohio has
added 111,000 payroll jobs. Non·
farm employment' has increased
2.3 percent, from 4. 72 million one
year ago to the record 4.83
mllilon in November, OBES said.
Non-manufacturing added
120,000 jobs in that year. The
construction industry had the
fastest growth rate, 6.8 percent,
or 13,000 jobs, followed by the
services Industry at 4.7 percent,

----- -

I

f

or 51,000 jobs . Other Industries
with above·average growth rates
were retail trade, up 3.5 percent
and wholesale trade, up 2.9
percent.
Manufacturing employment ,
at 1.1 million, is still 9.000 below
the year-ago level. Since No·
vember 1988, employment has
declined 11,000 in durable goods
but lncrased 2,000 in nondurable
goods.

Local news
Racine Council pays routine bills
Racine Village Council, meeting In recessed sessio n Monda.v.
authorized Clerk Jane Beegle to pay any end-of-the· year bills
and to make any end·of·the-year budetary transfers.
Mayor Frank Cleland asked. and Council agreed, to hold the
firstmeetingofl990on Monday, Jan. 8, at 7p.m . Mayor Cleland
advised that the pennanent appropgiations for the year could
be ready for adoption at that time, thereby eliminating much
bookkeeping since a temporary appropriation.~ measure would
be unnecessary.
Council discussed needed replacement work on th e roofs of
the Star Mill Park building and the fire hou&lt;e. The rep lacement
work is to be done In 1990.
Thanks and appreciation were extended by Cou ncil to fellow
Councilman Richard Wamsley Sr., for whom Monday's
meeting was the last. Wamsley did not run for re-election.
Prior to the start of the recessed meeting. a Christmas
potluck dinner and gag gift exchange were held . Guests at the
potluck were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolfe, Malcom Parks of
National Gas Company and spouses or councll members.

Name lighting contest winners
Wln.ners of the 1989 Pomeroy Home Lighting Contest
sponsored by the Winding Trails Garden Vlub and the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce were announced today.
In the category of best overall, the winners, in first . second,
and third places were Bill Young, Spring St.; Dale Thoene,
Union Ave.; and Roy Betzlng, Mulberry Ave .. and Ardith
Continued on page 5

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�1911

·Commentary

U.S. Customs takes it easy on Congress

·The Daily Sentinel
•

. 111 Court Street
Pomero:r, Olllo
DEVOTED TO THE n.'TERESTS OF TBE MEJG!I-MASON ABE.4.

~'b

\

'·

ts:m~

q,v

.

......,__,._.,...,....._=·-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WBJTEHEAD
.4.ssis&amp;aftl Pablloher/ColllroDer

page-2-The Daily Sentin"'
POITMII'Oy-Middlaport, Ohio
Thursday. December 21, 1989

CH.4.RLENE ROEn.ICB
General Maaacer

A MEMBER of The "-dRied l'rfss, Inlallcllblly Preu " - '
dation and tile Amerlcul Newspaper Publlshen AModltloa.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. ~y sbotlld be 1 - llum 3M
wo...., long. AU letters are subject to edltiDJ and mag be olpetl wllb
name, address and telephone nomber. No onoiped letters wW be polllis bed. Letlers should be In good taste, addret&amp;IDI Issues, aot perooaalltles.

WASHINGTON - Dozeu of
memben of Congress will soon
be wlllllni bQmeward from
official trips overseas. their
IUQage bulging wltll Cllrlstmas
presents for the folks back bQme.
Many of them wUI slip through
customs witbQut declaring a
single knickknack or paying the
Import fees that customs charges
ordinary citizenS.
When hotel rnagaate Leona
HelmsJey said taxes were for the
"little people," she was expess·
lng a sentiment common to
nouveau royalty. Apparently
some members of Congress feel
' the same way about customs
duties.
Smuggling Is de rlglleur for
congressional scofflaws. accord·
lng to an Army sergeant who
worked as a military escort on

Bush wanted Noriega
removed to help Panamanians
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
United Press International
WASHINGTON - Since May 13, when he first appealed to
Panamanians to rise up on their own, President Bush has promised
that their lives would take an instant turnforthebetter liGen. Manuel
Noriega were ousted from power.
If Wednesday's U.S.-englneered overthrow holds and Panama
makes the full transition from dictatorship to democracy,
Panamanians can look ahead to better times, though the
improvement will not come overnight.
One of the most Important economic consequences of the
Installation of a democratic government may be an infusion of cash to
help repair an economy crippled by corruption, capital Oightand U.S.
sanctions.
,On March 11, 1988, Jess than two months after No~lega prevailed In
a showdown with President Eric Arturo Delvalle, the United States
began a campaign to force him Into a !lnanclal choke hold and erode
hiS grip on power by starving his regime of casll.
First came the withholding of a $7 million payment by the Panama
Canal Commission. A month later, President Reagan took the more
sweeping action of barring payments oftaxes. fees and other charges
by Americans to the Noriega regime and freezing all Panamanian
government assets in the United Stales.
Over the e·nsuing; !IIOnths, additional measures were instituted to
tighten the economic screws on Noriega, Including a ban on business
dealings with companies connected to him or his cronies.
All told, an estimated $375 mlllion in cash and other assets owed to
or owned by the Panamanian government has built up In sealed bank
accounts, escrow funds and on the books of American companies.
Noriega survived without those funds, due In part to loopholes that
prevented the United States from completely shutting oil the now of
dollars to his government. The new Panamanian leadership should
not have to do so.
In a memorandum Wednesday to Secretary of State James Baker
and Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, Bush lifted the ban on
payments to the Panamanian government and directed them "to
effect an orderly unblocking of Panamanian government assets In the
United States."
The directive was issued after GuUJermo Endara, the opposition
candidate in the Norlega-brutallzed May 7 election, was sworn In as
president. The frozen assets have been held In escrow pending a
~ return to civilian democratic rUle.
The benefits of Bush's action, however. will not be felt
Immediately.
Should democracy now preva II, Panama will find a much more
sympathetic climate in Washington for ald.
And analysts have said the prospect of a more stable political
.. climate, while maybe still some time away, coUld send a needed
· signal of reassurance to foreign Investors and traders who avoided or
!led Panama under Noriega.
Until Wednesday, Bush was preparing to tighten the sanctions Feb.
1 by barring all Panamanlan·flagged vessels from U.S. ports. Now he
looks for il return to business as usual.

- ----------~------------,

.. l

Berry's Wodd
•

•

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COIIJreSIIonal overseas sbQppiDg

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

souvenirs, they are supposed to
declare them. "Tiley are break·
Army Investigators looking Into lng the taw no matter bow you
the escort assignments that some look alit If they are not declaring
members of Congress and their It," a customs official told us.
spouses sUp forelga goods Into
The only way to catch congres·
the country wltbQut so much as a
slonal smugglers would be to
mentiOn to the customs agents.
search their luggage. But cusEscorts like Riddle should toms agents are understandably
know. They act as a sort of reluctant to shake down a
congressional moving company member of Congress, especially
during the trips . In addlt ion to when the standard procedure Is
lugging baggage and boxes from tosearchbagsonlylfthetraveler
one stop to the next, they are Ia fits a smugglers' "profile."
charge of wrapping the more
The Army Inspector general
fraglle booty In plastic bubble was officially Investigating not
wrap so It won't he broken.
Congress, but the Army office
For anything costing · more that escorts congressional tra·
than $400, returning American , velers. But the more Interesting
travelers are supposed to pay a partsoftheprobeobtalned by our
10 percent duty. Even If they associate Stewart Harris reflect
bring back less than$400worthof badly on the lawmakers and thel.r
sprees.

Sgt. Cloyed Riddle lias told

spouses, not on the poor escorts.
Those people joined the Army
to see the world and ended up
seeing It as congressional lack·
eys. While lawmakers are meetlng with whatever forelga dlgal·
tarles can be rounded up to
justify these " official" trips,
their spouses are bused to
shopping bazaars, several es·
corts told Army Investigators in
sworn depositions.
The shopping tours are ar·
ranged by staffers from the
American embassy. Tbe red
carpet treatment may Include a
van, a driver and an· embassy
officer. One State Department
o!flclal told us tllat the salaries
and transportatiOn costs for
these shopping sprees probably
run about $50 an hour.

I

.,.

Fifth-ranked Dlinois.
Outlasts
.
.
.. No.4 Missouri· .five,.lOl-93

..

•

··::;owe ra/1: rc .vou aDout the aeficir thin a?'
~

Today in history
BJ' UDited Pr- IDterllll&amp;lollal
Today Is Thursday, Dec. 21, the 355111 day of 1989 with 10 to follow.
.This Is the flrstdayofwlnter. Thewintersolst1ceoccursat4: 22p.m.
EST.
Tbe moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mara and Jupiter.
"The evening stan are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Thole born on this date are under the slga of Salittarlus. They

.

.

B:r TOM WITHERS
good defense, handled the ball
VPI Sports Writer
and IICOred a little."
It's all very simple to Kendall · ''That Missouri team was the
Gill.
· ,best we've played In tile four
"We just play," said the
years I've been here," said Gill.
Dllnols guard who scored 27
"We got lucky I guess."
polntsinleadlngNo.5Illlnolstoa
In the second half, Missouri
~Ol-93viCtoryoverNo . 4Missourl
was able to close the gap to two
points twice, the last Ume being
Wednesday night'. "It doesn't
.matter what kind of ranking you
62-60 with 12: 30 remaining.
But llllno!S· responded with an
have. You just roll the ball out
and play and see who's better."
8·2 run over the next 2:59 tor a
Marcus Liberty added · 26 7.0-62 lead. Steve Bardo and Gill
points for th~ Fighting Dlln~ 7·0, each had four points during the
who ha\re won seven straight run.
from the Tigers.
The Fighting Illlnl never
Dllnols CQach Lou Henson has looked back, leading by 13 with
no explanation for Ills team's 6:55 to play.
success against Missouri.
Elsewhere In the Top Twenty,
•There are ·some things you No. 3 Georgetown pounded Vlrgl·
· can't figure out In sports," said nla Tech 97-64; No. 8 Louisiana
Henson. "We always seem to State ra!Hed to down Northwest
play wellagalnst'Missourl. Don't Louisiana 73-63 and co-No. 20
· try and figure It out, It'll drive Memphis State toppled New
·
you crazy. It . was just our best Orleans 59·55.
game of the year."·
At Landover, Md., Mark .Til·
. Missouri was Jed by Doug lmon scored 18 of his 29 points in
Smith's 22 points and Anthony the first half and Alonzo Mourn·
Peeler and Lee Coward who ing ad&lt;kid a career-best 27 points
to power the Hoyas.Georgetown
added 20 apl~e.
"I've been trying to figure scored the final 13 points of the
them (Illinois) out for four years flrst 'half to lead by 29 points.
now and they've just got good
Tbe Hoyas led by as many as 39
·athletes," Cowa~d said. .
points In the second half, In
After ttiree early ties and five Improving to 8·0.
lead changes, llllnois took 12·11
Virginia .Tech; 4·3, had won
' lead· before.Missouri went on an their previous two games and
·u.s run to take a 22·17 lead with · earlier beat highly-regarded ·
10: 45 remaining in the first half. . Alabama.
· Smith scored eight of the Tigers'
At Baton Rouge, La., Wayne
Sims scored 16 .paints, Including
points during the 'purt.
Illinois reboutlded to tie the six during a key 15.0 run In the
. score 24·24 wllen Andy Kauf· second half that helped the
mann drnted a 3-polnter with 9: 05 Tigers assume control.
lefi in the half.
The Tigers, 5·1, were buoyed
"We bad some rote players by Stanley Roberts and Chris
that did a job for us," Henson Jackson's 13 points and ShaqUIIIe
said.
O'Neal who bad 12 points and a
"I haven't been shooting the game-high 7 rebounds. Tbe Dem·
ball too well this year," said Gill, ons, 1·7, were led by Eric
who finished 10of21. Thecoaches Scanlan's 14 points. '
At Memphis, Tenn., Elliot
told me not to worry about It and
jUst go .out and play."
Perry scored 25 points and
,., . . Henson was very pleased with Cheyenne Gibson added 18 points
Gill's performance.
. and 4 assists.to spark the Tigers,
"Kendall Gill did a lot of good 5·1. New Orleans, 2·4, got 14
things," he said. •'He played points and 9 rebounds from Tony

Harris .
In the first round of the
·Richmond Times· Dispatch Invl·
tatlonal,.lt was Richmond 69, Old
Dornl11lon 62 and VIrginia 63,
VIrginia Comm11nwealth 46.
In other games. It was: .
Georgia 91, Jacksonville 62;
SMU 63, QNC·Cha'rlotte 55; ·
Tennessee 92, Western Carolina
66; Dayton 84, DePaul 73;
Marquette 77, Chicago State 45;
Mlchl&amp;an State 80, Evansville
66; Minnesota 77, Washington
60; Purdue 60, California 55;
Texas El· Paso 77, Creighton 66;
Colorado State 74, Baylor 55.

· Two Arizona
players
fail·
.:.1
UnJQ'liil tests
e..,..
TUCSON, Ariz. ( UPI) - Two
senior University of Arizona

::~~~::~sfr~~o~~~!~

C~GERS-

Newlalid, Matt Martin, Jefl White, ·aad Paul
VIneyard. Back row - David Koenig, Robbie
·c alaway, Buddy. Kenney, Robert Reed, Jar.ed
Ridenour, and Wes Arbaugh. Absent - Coach
. Don Eichinger.

EA8TE1lN EIGBTII GRADE
The
Baatern elgllth grad4r b•ketball team of Coach
DoD Elcblnger hill receatly bepn Ita season With
several victories. Pictured are front, left to right,
team members Rantly Kaylor, Scott Golden, Pat

M · D ·d
- l
•
d l
ets, o gers c9mp ete wr,nter .. ea

· ·
In the Copper Bowl following · NEW YORK (UPI)- The New spring tr~lning and he did not
center field and he brings to our
drug tests conducted by the
York Mets further clouded their adapt well.
· ballclub s~. power and a
first base-outfield situation Wed·
As a Met, Samuel batted .2281n tremendous makeup. He loves to
NCAA, sci!Ool officials said.
neaday by obtaining Injury-prone 86 games with three homers, 28 play the game of basebaiJ."
Leading rusher David El·
drldge and offensive tackle
Mike MarshaJJ from the Los RBI and 31 steals. At the end the
MarshaiJ, who ·has spent his
Angeles Dodgers for outfielder season, he reques·ted a trade.
entire career with the Dodgers,
David Roney were found In
Juan SamueL
"Juan Samuel Is one of the gives the Mets a right-handed
violation of the NCAA's ellglbll·
lty rules and were declared
The Mels also acqljlred right· great talents In the game of power hitter to flllnto the middle
lnellglble for post-season compebander Alejandro Pena, who will baseball today," Dodgers Genof an order that includes Darryl
tltlon, said Arlzoila Athletic act as a setup man for recently era! Manager Fred Claire said.
Strawberry, Howard Johnson
acqUired bullpen stopper John "He can answer. our needs In
and McReynolds.
Director Cedrk: Dempsey.
The ruling followed the admln·
Franco.
lstratlon of drug tests on 36
The addition of Marshall
members of.tlle team conducted creates a logjam In the New York
by the NCAA Oec. 3, said team
outfield and a duel at first base
SJ?Okesman Butcll Henry.
between Marshall and Dave
The Wildcats are scheduled to
Magadan. Those positions will be
pbiy North ·carolina State in. the
settled during spring training.
Copper Bowl In Tucson Dec: 31.
"Competition l.s · the best
Roney said he tested positive
thing," said Joe Mcilvaine, the
for testosterone, a steroid which
Mets .. vlce president for baseball
Is banned by the NCAA. He said
operations. "To say (Marshall) ·
lie took the drug to help recover
will play here or here Is a
from a severe ankle sprain he
disservice to the Incumbents.
suffered In the Nov. 11 game
He'li have to battle for a position.
against Southern California..
It's up to the manager where he
"1 took small . dosages of · plays."
testosterone under the lmpres·
·, Mcilvaine says he Is hopeful
slon It would speed up the ·Keith Miller ca·n step forward
- - . recovery process," Roney said In
and take the center field job. If
a statement. ·~o one associated
not, the Mets have the option of
· Emerson
Gold star
with tile University of Arizona
moving Kevin McReynolds to
Shin
Samsung
athletics department advised me center and placing Marshall in
lefi.
to take this substance.
Multi Tech
Soundesign
"I am sorry for the embarass·
'This organization is bullish on
men! this causes me, my family
Keith Miller," Mcilvaine said. ·
Scott
Zenith
11nd the football program," he "He shows promise .as a leadoff
said.
hitter 11nd a catalyst. He does
· Wildcat Coach Dick .Tomey well defensively In center field.
said he supported drug testing on The opportunity Is there for him
players prior. to bowl games.
to capture the job:"
Samuel, 29, a former All·Star
''.The fact tile NCAA Is doing
this Is great for college athlet· second baseman, performed
lcs," he said. "Unfortunately. it poorly for tile Mets after they
is not great for these Individuals. .obtained 111m from Phllad~lphla
POIMIOY, OHIO
Iwlshtlleseguysweregoingtobe last June for outfielder Lenny
with us but they aren't."
Dykstra and reliever Roger
Eldridge did not admit to McDowelf. The PhiWes con·
taking banned substances, but verted_illinlntoacenterflelderln
said in a statement: "I looked
forwa~d to playing In this game
and repnisendng Arizona and
,.
Tucson ,to tile best of my ability.
I'm sorry I won't have that
opportunity."
.
.

a

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
tom

,Pro reBUhs
NATIONAL J"'O'nAU.. LEAGUE

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at NY ,...,It:• p.m.

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

W•M•II" .. fle,.llf, t p.m.

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ClevriMII .. W•••a. I p.m•

.

LA. &amp;IIW• at NY GIMh. I p.m.

Huge Pentagon cuts inevitable
WASHINGTON (NEA) - At
the Pentagon, the nation's mil·
ltary establishment is about to go
to war. Those Involved know only
too well what is at stake survival.
No, the coming conflict is not
against communism or terror·
Ism. But to many In the Pen·
tagon, II wlll be fought over an
even more Important Issue.
This ·war Is over the· much
smaller Pentagon budget that Is
coming In future years.
Defense Secretary Richard
Cheney stunned the military
establishment this fall when he
ordered the armed services to
prepare long-term budget projectiOns Incorporating cuts of up
to $180 billion. While he has made
public the $180 billion cut order,
Cheney, has refused to answer a
number of critical questions
about the coming cuts.
For example: Over how many
fiscal years will the $180 billion
cut be spread. and what will be
used as a base !lgure? The latter
Is critical. It wUJ make · q

tremendous difference If the cuts
are based on current spending
levels or on spending projections
made during the "all for the
military" Reagan years. Fi·
nally, it is not clear if Cheney Is
talking in terms of actual dollars
or "lnfiatlon-adjusted" dollars.
One number being used around
the Pentagon Is an Inflation·
adjusted $160 billion from cur·
rent spending levels spread over
five to six fiscal years and
starting In fiscal199'1 or 1992. But
no matter how the blanks are
eventually filled in, Cheney Is
about to order the most slgnlfl·
cant Pentagon budget cutbacks
since the post-VIetnam era .
Cheney's order came even
before recent events In Eastern
Europe. More than 6fJ percent of
the Pentagon's budget Is geared
to !lght(ng a major East-West
land war In Europe and then
containing and responding to
escalations. Now It Is Impossible
to justify that expenditure to
counter a threat that no one

believes exists anymore.
For example, insiders expect
that a major confrontation is In
the offing between the Army and
the Marine Corps .
Today' s Army Is geared to
defending Europe and fighting
an East·West land war. the
Marine Corps, however,ls mean I
to be a quick-response force that
can be rapidly lm;erted into
smaller conflicts anywhere on
the globe.
As a result of recent cllanges In
Europe, Army planners are
actively talking up what Is being
called "the new Army" - the
conversion or the Army's current
heavy divisions Into what Army
Chief of Staff Gen. Carl Vuono
calls a "smaller; more versatile
global force."
Does that sound strangely like
the Marine Corps? It does to the
Marines, who believe this Is the
Army's attempt to usurp their
traditional role. This Army·
Marine confrontation will he one
of the central battles In the

Robert Wagman
'
coming Pentagon budget war .
The coming war will pit service
against service, the services
against the Pentagon's civilian
leadership, and the Pentagon
against Congress.
Congress receives great pub·
llclty when it blasts the Pentagon
for the waste represented by
thousand-dollar toilet seats or
$300 hammers. However, what
gets much less attention is
Congress' frequent demands that
the military spend money for
what It doesn't want.
What the Pentagon spends has
a profound effect on almost every
community from coast to coast.
One out of every three scientists
and engineers employed In the
United States Is paid - directly
or Indirectly - from the Pentagon' sbudget. One oul of every five
production workers Is employed
by a defense contractor. More
than half the research sponsored
at major U.S. universities Is
defense-related and Pentagon·
!lnanced.

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ultra-right Conservative Party.
Which will we llve to see first?
But
a large majority did not. in
A decentralized, democratic So!act,
a new party called the
viet Union or a decentralized,
Democrats picked up nearly as
democratic South Africa?
many seats In parliament as the
Most Americans, encouraged
Conservatives while campaignby recent events, proba)lly would
Ing lor universal suffrage.
select the Sovtet Union. But don't
Press coveralil! of South Africa
be too sure. South Africa has
- unlike coverage of the Soviet
been undergoing change as· weJJ
Union- Is Invariably cast In one
- both political and economicor more shades of glOom. The
and Its prospects are growing
brighter as a result.
predictable script: Blacks protest, tile government cracks
The latest evidence Includes
down, and life limps on, while the
President Frederlk de Klerk's
rest of the world seethes in
decisiOn to permit peaceful anti·
Indignation.
apartheid protests, the first in
Lost In this tragic (but true)
South Africa In many years.
cycle Is the fact that South Africa
Even de Klerk's election Is
Is not quite the same place It was,
evidence of evolving a ttltucles
among whites.
lillY, In 1978 when de Klerk' s
predecessor, P.W. Botha, rose to
If white South Africans had
power. Tbe government has
sought to restore the pure aparrecogalzed black trade unions,
theid invented lleVeral clecadn
ago, theycouldbavevotedforthe . dumped laws against Interracial

Include British statesman Benjamin Dlsraellln 1804, Soviet dictator
Joaef Stalin In 1879, Austrian Prnldent Kurt Waldhelm lnl918 (age
71), talkshowbostPhU Donahuelnl935 (age 54), actress Jane Fonda
In 1937 (age 52), rock mullclan Frank Zappa In 1940 (age 49) and
tennis player Chris Evert In 19M (age 35).

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NATIONAL BMIETIALL .UtDC

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(All Games)
TEAM
WLP OP
Miller ................. .4 0 287 244
Wellsion .............. 3 1 253 219.
. Vinton County ... ... 3 2 311 303
Belpre ........ ......... 3 3 411 401
Alexander ...........3 3 390 388
Trltnble .......... .. ... 2 3 319 330
Meigs .................. 1 2 136 177
Fed·Hocklng ........ 2 4 400 431
Nels-York ............ O 5 234 336
Friday's games:
Millet at Alexander
Federal-Hocking - Open
Meigs at Belpre .
Nelsonville-York at Wellston
Trimble at Vinton County

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IIUIISCIIJniON B.\TIIll
B:r Carrl• or Mot• Route
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I

312 GIFTS

NFCwDI-e . . I..W

sex and marriage, Ignored the
technically illegal Integration of
some neighborhoods, restored editor of The Sowetan, the
country' s· fastest growing news·
blacks' right to own title to a
house and land (a rlgllt IQst In paper, recently told a writer for
Reason magazine that "for polltl·
1968) , and scrapped the lnfiux
cal
kingdoms to be effective,
·
control that restricted blacks
lasting
and particularly demofrom entering "white" towns.
cratic
(they)
need ... a backup of
Meanwhile, a number of faclll·
strong
people
who have clout
ties, including many private
economically,
clout academl·
schools, have begun welcoming
cally,
(and)
who
have the
members of all races.
strength to recogalze the value of
Critics dismiss these changes
as cosmetic. And maybe they a free press and free religion."
Such words will never lngra·
are. But like many of Gorb.a ·
tlate that editor with revolutionchev's equally reversible mea·
aries determined to transform
sures in the Soviet Union, South
South Africa Into yet another
African reform Is edging toward
dismal, one-party dictatorship
the point of no return.
such as those scattered across
As In the Soviet Union, reform
the African continent, but It Is
In South Africa Is propelled In
precisely
such vision and matur·
large part by new economic
ity
that
could
preve,nt his country
realities. As black labor grows In
from
degenerating
Into chaos.
Importance and black buying
It
may
be,
of
course, that
power equals or exceeds that of
President de Klerk bas neither
whites, apartheid has begun to be
tile courage nor clout to neeotiate
recoplzed by the ruling race as
boldly with blacks aver future
the ugly relic It Is.
power-sharing. But tllen again,
Meanwhile, modest but steady
who knows? Stranger tlllngs
strides by blacks offer hope for
have happened, as evenllJ In the
economic as well as political
Soviet Union confirm nearly
empowerment - without revolu·
every
day.
tlonary apocalypse. The black

. '.. . .

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

Dl•,..

White South Africa. votes for change·

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4-Tha Daily Saltine!

Thuradlly, December 21, 1989

Ttusday, Dacembar 21. 1989

--Local news briefs ....---. Noriega...

For yet another night,

Eastern, Souther•• favored to continue sharing spotlight
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Wrtler
For yet another night of SVAC
action, Charles Riley's Eastern
Eagles and Howle Caldwell's
Southern Tornadoes are favored
to continue sharing the spotlight
at the top of the league after
Friday night's action, which will
feature the Eagles at Oak Hill
and the Tornadoes at home
against Symmes Valley .
The Eagles, who are 4.0 In the

SVAC standings ·
(All games)
TEAM
W L
Eastt&gt;rn ......... ... ... 5 1
Southern ..... ...... ... 4 1
North Gallla ........ 4 3
Southwestern ...... .3 3
Symmes Valley ... 2 2
Hannan Trace ..... 2 4
Oak Hill .............. 0 .5
Kyger Creek .. ...... 0 6

PF
451
374
475
440
248
342
308
325

PA
406
319
441
403
271
368
382
507

(SVAC games)
TEAM
W L PF PA
Southern ........... 4 0 317 239
Eastern ....... .... .4 0 291 245
North Gallla ..... 3 2 342 306
Hannan Trace . .2 2 253 238
Symmes Valley 2 2 248 271
Southwestern .... 2 3 351 360
Oak Hill ...........0 3 192 238
Kyger Creek ..... O 5 284 381
TOTALS ........ 17 17 2278 2278
(Reserves)
w L
TEAM
Southern .. .........4 0
North Gallla .... .3 1
Oak Hill ... .. ..... .2 I
Symmes Valley 2 2
Hannan Trace ..2 2
Southwesto&gt;rn ... . 2 3
Eastern .. ......... .1 :t
Kyger Creek ..... 0 5
TOTALS ........ 17 17

PF
212
238

140
166
165
202
149
139
1411

PA
136
179
131
174
152
231
177
231
Hll

Tonight's game
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
Friday's slate
Eastern at Oak Hill
·
Kyger Creek at Hannan Traco&gt;
North Gallla at Southwestern
Symmes Valley at Southern
Saturday's game
Southern at Ross SE

conference, will have to knock leaner than Smith, must control
the dust off their three-point in the paint If the Eagles are to
shooting attack, which bas basi· have at least half the layups
cally been parked on the shelf In they've been getting In recent
the last three games. The Eagles games.
shot 14 from beyond the arc in • But Smith isn't the only south
their first three games, but have Jackson eager that Eastern must
only three In their last three watch. as junior forward Shane
contests. Some of that has to do Maynard, the Oaks' long-range
with the fact that they have bomber, will seek to add to his
played more aggressively and league-leading total or 23 bonus
have gone to driving the ball baskets. However, If ·the Oaks,
Inside for lay ups, something they who are In the midst of a
won't have as much of a chance six-game losing streak that
to do against the Oaks.
started with last year's 59-50 loss
Chad Smith, the Hill's 6-4 to Division Ill state semi-finalist
postman and a converted for- Wheelersburg, can't lind someward, will he the formidable one to take some of the scoring
presenceEHScenterMikeFrQSt, burden off Smith and Maynard,
who also stands 6-4 but Is much the Eagles will chalk up their
sixth straight vlctQry and keep

Uchtenberg named·
OU football coach ·
berg's family . Part of my family
By GENE CADDES
now
Is Ohio University. "
UPI Sporls Writer
Earlier, Lichtenberg was in·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII ,... A
traduced to the media in Athens
" thrilled" Tom Lichtenberg was
by OU athletic director Harold
officially Introduced Wednesday
McElhaney,
who said the Mid·
as the new Ohio University head
American
Conference
school
football coach.
"a
very
tedlus
and
conducted
Lichtenberg, whose appoint·
thorough
search''
before
coming
ment had been one the worst kept
up with Lichtenberg.
secrets In recent years, takes
"We're very proud of the fa ct
over an ou program tliat was
that
we were able to secure a guy·
9-44-1 the past five seasons under
such
as Tom Lichtenberg," said
Cleve Bryant. Including 1-9·1 this
McElhaney.
" All our finalists
year. Bryant was fired with two
were
not
only
head coaches, but
games remaining in the season.
successful
head
coaches. Tom
" I don't have to tell you I'm
won
by
an
eyelash
and we're glad
thrilled." Lichtenberg, a former ·
to have him on board."
assistant under Earle Bruce at
Lichtenberg, 49, a native of
Ohio State, told th~&gt; Columbus
Cincinnati, came 10 Ohio Univermedia. "It's a great for Tom
sity from the University of ·
Lichtenberg and Tom LichtenMaine.

Tlie Tornadoes present, as
usual, a balanced attack that
averages nine men on the scoresheet In each game, a tribute to
unselfish play and Caldwell's
extensive use or his bench. The
Vikings will counter with 6-1
junior Chad Renfroe, whohasput
together back-to-hack 20-polnt·
plus per!ormaces In the Valley's
last two games. ·
Plrates·HiiJhlanders
North GalUa has won its last
three games, and with Its height
advantage, centered primarily
in 6-5 pivot D.J. Hammel, and

at Gage on Feb. 5, 1988, under the
administration of Scott Stemple.
From that time to this, that
comes out to 12 straight away
losses for the Bobcats.
Eric Lloyd, Trace's 5-lljunlor
guard, has scored In double
figures In all but one of the
Wildcats' six games, and against
Fairland he scored 20, the third
time he has scored at least that
inany In a game this season. But
he needs offensive help, namely
from junior center Craig Rankin,
who was held to less than 10
points for the second time this
season by Fairland. If Rankin
doesn't return to the aggressive
form In the paint that netted him
35 points In the Wildcats' first two
games, Kyger Creek could have
a chancf&gt; in this one.
However, between the Wild·
cats' quickness and an anemic
Kyger Creek offense that has
netted only two efforts of 20
points or more - from John
Sipple (23 vs. Eastern) and So&gt;an
Denney (21 vs. North Gallla l, the
Guyan five should pick up their
third win of the season.
Game rescheduled
The Symmes Valley-Oak Hill
game, which was set for last
Friday night but was postponed
because of the weather, will he
played tonight.

qulckneu , should be a I
Southwes!l!rn.
However, the Pirates would be
well advised not to take the
Highlanders lightly, because PI·
rate head coach Tom Riccardi
said that "If those three guys
(Highlanders John Ehman, Joe
Hammond and Brad Bryant) hit
from outside, they'll be tough."
Southwestern has the quick·
ness to make North pay for
errant passes and any other
goofs the Bucs . may make.
Because of this, the Pirates can't
tolerate sloppy play, because
their blunders will be turned Into
Highlander points off the fast
break.
But Southwestern can't afford
to rely solely on outside shooting
and quickness, thOugh without
them their chances would range
!rom slim to none. The Highland·
ers must get Into position under
the boards andjumphlgherln the
lane, but most of all they must
shoot Intelligently so that the .
Pirates won't get many chances
at defensive rebounds .
Bobcat~t-Wildeats
~annan Trace, hammered

by
Fairland 75-46 Tuesday night, Is
Itching for a win, and they should
get It against a Kyger Creek
squad that hasn't won on the road
since beating Southwestern 48-45

;

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Pomeroy
court news
Individuals forfeiting bonds or
fined In Tuesday night's court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard So&gt;yler
were, Cathy Hart, Racine Route,
forfeited $48, speed; Jodee
Sheets, Pomeroy, forfeited $43,
failure to yield; Sherr! Butcher,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, failure
to comply; Wllliam Reeves,
Pomeroy, $43 costs, failure to
yield, $50 and costs, no Insurance, and $63 and costs, no valid
operator's license; Earl Phelps,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, opera!·
lng under suspension; Terry
Hutton, Rutland Route, $375 and
costs, DUI; Ruby King, Pomeroy
Route, $20 seat belt; John AI·
bright, $63 and costs, operating
under suspension: William
Woods, forfeited $43, !allure to
yield; and Terry Hawkins, Piston, W.Va., $63 and costs, expired
vehicle registration.

SAVE BEFORE
CHIISTMASI

Middleport Court
is available lor a
. limited time only.
For more Information contact
your nearest

Karen L. Davis a nd Keith R.
Davis.
Granted divorces were Cindy
L. Richardson from Thomas J .
Richardson, a nd Tonya Lynn
Watson from Ricky Dav id Watson Sr. Tonya Watson was
restored by the cour t ' her
maiden nam e, Blackford .

Largest Ohio
Lottery jackpot
split three ways

VIrginia Hendricks, Racine,
received word of the death of her
grandson, Travis Thorla, on
Wednesday. ,
Travis was killed In an au tomoblle accident in North Carolina.
He was the son or Robert Thorla,
who lives with Mrs. Hendricks.

C.D.

H you've been
holding back waiting for a great rate,
thills it. But you've
got to act .....
This olllr '"""
Canbll TIUII

have filed in Meigs Common
Pleas Court for a dissolution of
their marriage.
Gran ted dissolutions of their
marriages were Steve n A.
Yonker and P a ula J ane Yonker ;

Travis Thorla

lliddle_port, OH.

A SPECIAL 6

Valeria M. Bailey, a nd Brian
K. Bailey , both of Long Bottom,

____ Meigs announcements ____

"2·6669

1 Nerth Secentl

Meigs couples to end marriages

Weather

HOMELITE

~=11$2.00

.

ill-conceived Canal treaties of
1978 will not create further
threats to peace in Central
Amer ica."
The commander of the Ohio
Am erican Legion, Sam Barney,
said he opposed those Panama
Canal 1'reaties and urged his
mem bers in 1979 to tell their
co ngressmen to "light wllh penells today or guns tomorrow."

Stocks

eslt ~~aas ,

=· ss.aa
Prescription ·Shop .

qu ite far," she said. " It is
Importa nt to have a government
there who is friendly to Its own
people and to ou rs."
Rep. Bob McEwen, R·Ohlo,
sa id the " action sends a n impor·
ta nt message to the world by
affirming that t he Un ited Staes
will support democracy and its
democratic fr iends ar ound the
world. "

EMS has 3 calls for assistance

last ~1enute

Caldwell member
of Marietta team
Jeffrey Todd Caldwell, son of
Jim and Sally Caldwell, Racine,
is a member of the Mark&gt;tta
Pioneer boys' basketball team,
pla ying a perimeter guard post·
lion lor the 1989-90 academic
year.
· According to head Coach
George Freebersyser, "Every·
thing we do this year sets
precedo&gt;nt . It's a very exciting,
interesting, and challenging time
for our program. With a very
young team, we have the chance
to create a !oundatlonoftnchlng
the fundamental• without a lot of
past habits to reteach. There 11
the enthusiasm that naturally
comes with a fresh start and Jeff
Caldwell is a part of that
enthusiastic approech."
Caldwell Is a 19811 graduate of
Southern Local High School.

Offices closed Dec; 23-]an. 1

10208

Your Cost

as president. Foreign observers plan~&gt;s and helicopte rs flew over
agree Eiodara won presidential the city constantly. Gunfire and
elections In May but Noriega explosions could be heard until
annulled the results within days about 5 a.m. when the city
when It became apparent his beca me quiet .
hand-picked candidate had lost.
One plane, apparently a U.S.
Endara's U.S.-recognlzed go- mllltary plane, bombed a depar t·
vernment has been in hiding ment store on one of the m ajor
since being sworn In, w'aiting !or freeway s leading out of the city.
the nation to settle.
Widespread looting was reThe vital Panama Canal, ported throughout the area and
jointly run by Panama and the the U.S. spokeswoman said the
Robert F . Snowden has been appointed as a member of the
United
States, was closed · be- Southern Command was consid·
Board of Directors of the Leading Creek Conservancy District
cause of the fighting, but reo- erlng using U.S. military pollee
for a five-year term from Dec. 16. Snowden took his oath of
pened at 3 a.m. Thursday. The units to restore order. The routed
office on Dec. 20:
canal's
closure marked the fir st PDF, in addition to being the
TheaclionofWalter A. Crosby against Diana L. Crosby, eta! ,
lime
shipping
has been halted country's military arm, .also is
has been assigned to Probate-Juvenile Judge Robert Buck.
Its 75-year the police force.
along
the
waterway
The cases of the State of Ohio, ex rei, Meigs County
history
because
of
military . Arthur Davis, U.S. ambassaCommissioners, against James E . Husk and Gwen D. Husk;
Intervention.
dor to Panama, returned to the
and Kathy Ann Barringer against Donnie Wayne Barringer,
night
,
air·
Throughout
the
capital Wednesday for the first
.
have been dismissed.
tlme since the May election, and
he 'told reporters he was brought
an economic recovery plan for
discussion with Panama's new
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient Services
leaders.
oftices will be closed Saturday through Jan. lin observance of
President Bush, who recently
the Christmas holiday season. Offices will reopen on Jan. 2 at
expressed
fr ustration over No8:30p.m.
riega's continued stranglehold
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The on the Central American nation,
largest jackpot In the IS-year and Pentagon officials said the
history of the Ohio Lottery will be operation was successful, except
Three calls for assistance were answered Wednesday by
split In three shares of nearly that Noriega had gone Into
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units.
$11.7 mlllion.
hiding.
At 12:37 a .m ., Pomeroy was called to Kingsbury Road for
Ohio Lottery officials said
Michael Brumfield who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Thursday three tickets sold for
Hospital.
the Wednesday night Super Lotto
Pomeroy at 2:35a.m . went to Spring Ave. for Harole Will to
drawing carrying a $35 million
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
jackpot contained the same six
At 11: 32 a .m . , Pomeroy went to Condor St . for Kelly Brewer to
numbers drawn- 9, 16, 18, 29,32
,Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
and 38.
Dally stock prices
Some 21.8 million $1 tickets
(As of 10:00 a.m.)
were sold; so the number of
Bryce
and Mark Smith
winning tickets matched the odds
·
of
Blunt,
Ellis &amp; Loewi
Meigs County Sherltf James M. Soulsby reports that
of the game. Each ticket has six
Wednesday evening, Adelio Zamorano, of Bearwallow Ridge
·n umbers from a pool of 44 for a
Am Electric Power ..... ..... .... 33
Road, Shade, found a sack containing a jewelry box with some
1-in-7 mUllan chance.
AT&amp;T .... ........ ..... ........ ... ... .'.. 44%
J~&gt;welry and s.e veral U. S. Savings Bonds. The Items were found
Ohio Lottery spokeswoman
Ashland Oil ... .. ........... :... ... :37')4
at the Intersection of Swindell Road and Route 33.
Anne Bloomlierg said before the
Bob Evans .. .... ..... ............... 13'4
The sheriff's office teletyped the Franklin County Sheriffs
drawing an estimated 95 percent
Charming
Shoppes .. .... ....... .lOY,
Department to contact the owner, Thomas Watkins, of Dublin,
of the possible combinations
City
Holding
Co . ............. ..... 15
were covered.
·
who reported that he and his wife had stopped along the road
Federal
Mogul.
... ...... :..... .... 20 ~~
Wednesday marked the first
that day and apparently the sack !ell out of the vehicle as they
GQodyear
T&amp;R
.....
............. .43')4
were changing drivers.
time there was a jackpot winner
Heck's
......
..
....
..
......
, ............ 3¥.,
in the twice-weekly drawing
Key
Centurion
..
..
......
.. ....... .13'4
since Nov. 29 .
Hospilal news
Lands'
End
...........
........
.. .... 19',4
The holders of the winning
Limited Inc ....... ....... .... ...... 31 ¥., .
Veterans Memorial
tickets could go to regional
Soutll Central Ohio
Multimedia Inc . ... ..... .......... 90')4
Wednesday
admissions
lottery
offices Thursday to claim
Mostly clear Thursday night,
Rax Restaurants .................... 2
with record low temperatures of Terry L. Watson, Racine; Wil· their shares.
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. .. 15'4
Each $11,666,666 share will be
liam G. Peck, Cheshire.
near 10 below zero. Increasing
Shoney's Inc . .. .. ............ .. .... 11',4
Wednesday dlscllarges -San- paid In 20 annoial Installments of
cloudiness Friday, with highs
Star Bank .. ... .... ... .... ...... ... .. 20¥.,
dra
Boothe, Marion Ehersbach, $583,333, or $466,667 after mandabetween zero and five above
Wendy's Inti. ... ......... ... ...... ..4%
Ronald Collins, Ruby Frederick. tory federal withholding taxes . .
zero.
Worthington lnd .......... .... ..... 23
Extended Forecast
Saturday throu1h Monday
Licences issued
Mainly fair eeach day, with No service Dec. 25
Emergency meetong
highs ranr;:lng from five to 15
The Meigs Local Board of
Manley's Trash 'service will
A marriage license has been
Saturday, 10 ·to .20 Saturday and
not run on Christmas Day . The Educallol) will have an emerin Meigs Probate Court to
issued
25 to 35 Monday. Overnight lows
Monday . route will be run on gency meeting tonight nhursSeldon Randolph Sr., 49,
Therlll
will range from five below zero to Tuesday.
day) at 7 p.m . for the purpose of
and Wanda Lee Grose, 52, both of
15 below zero Saturday morning,
personneL
Reedsville.
from zero to 10 below zero early
Sunday and from five to 15 above
-~~~~~~~,·~~~~~
·
zero Monday morning.

Snowden named to board

ENERGIZER.

tens recently i n a non-conference

he

Continued from page 1
Barton, Mulberry Ave.
In the category of best entrance, the winners were Wayne
Davis, Mulberry. Ave.; Russ Moore; and Jim Soulsby, Unloo
Ave., and Joe Clark, Lincoln Hill.
In the religious category the winners were Marge Bowen,
Butternut Ave.; Rick Blaettnar, Butternut Ave.; and Larry
Lehew, Union Ave., and Sonny Gloeckner, Mulberry Hefghts.

· SIOQ\ UP FOR CHRISTMAS RJN W11H

The Southern Tornadoettes fell
victim to the Waterford Wlldkit-

0"!hthink
ioans
..
- ....:C::o:.;;n:::li.::.nu::e:.:d....:f:.:.ro::m~p~a:::.ge_
I - - -.,..--....,.,.,th at he has pushed us
McEwen said
hopes "the

Conilnued from page I

.Valuable items found in sack

For Those Christmas Toys,
Jam Boxes and Any Household
Need....
.

Southern gals
drop 50-31 tilt
girls basketball contest.
Both teams battled evenly
early in the game, but WHS soon
grabbed an edge, pushing to an
eight point lead at the end of the
first quarter, H -6.
·
Good defense a ilowed Southern
to pull close at the half, 20-15,
keeping eV!&gt;n throughout the
third quarter. Waterford
s tormed to a victory wltll a big
final round barrage.
The Hinto sisters double
whammied the Tornadoettes
with 38 points between them, 21
by T. Hinton and 17 by sister L.
Hinton. .
·
Southern was led by Tonya
Ingels 10.
Waterford had 12 fouls and
Southern 14. Waterford hit 8 of!O
at the line and Southern hit I of 6
from the line. Southern had 30
rebounds, Beegle led with 12
caroms.Waterford hit 21 of 45
from the floor while Southern hit
a cool15 of 48.
Southern hit 17 of 45 from the
floor
Waterford ............ l4 6 12 18-50
Southern .. .... ........ 6 9 12 5-31
WATERFORD (50) - Dem·
ming 1-0-2. Doak 1-0-2. T.
Hinton 9-3-21,L. Hinton
6-5-17, Harra 1-0-2, Huck
1- 0-2, McFadden 1-0-2, Nick·
els 1-0-2. TOTALS 21-8-10.
SOUTHERN (31) - Michelle
McDaniels 0-0-0,Mica Jones
3-1-7, Sarah Duhl 0-2-2,
Tricia Wolfe 2-0-1 . Junle Beegle 2-0-4, Wendy W.o lle2-0-4.
Jane Ann Williams 1-0-2, To·
nva Ingels 5-0-10, Melanie
L.yons 0-0-0, Jennifer Cross
o.:...o-o. Michelle Carauthets
0-0-0. and Heather Mcl'hall
0-0-0. TOTALS U-1-31.

themselves on top In the league
race.
In last year's encounters the
home teams won, with the Oaks
winning 79-67 and the Eagles
pleasing their fans with a 74· 70
victory.
VlklniJO'TOmadoes
Southern, who lost Its first
game of the year by dropping a
23-polnt decision to Pike County's
Easter11 Eagles last Saturday,
returns to the James W. Hayman
Gymnasium to become practl·
cally a lead-pipe cinch to put an
end to Symmes Valley's recent
run of luck, In which the. VIkings
won their last two home games
against Southwestern and Kyger
Creek.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 6

Pomeloy-Middleport Ohio

Four defendants were fined
and two others forfeited bonds In
the court of Middleport. Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were David L. Skeen,
Kenna, W. Va., $10 fine o~ly for
running a stop sign; Joseph
R,lme, Middlepart; $10 and costs,
fictitious registration; David
Lynch, Middleport, $12 and costs,
failure to pay parking tickets;
and Timothy W. Fife, Cheshire,
$10 and costs, failure to pay
parking ticketa.
Forfeit Ina bonds were David L.
Jones, Point Pleasant, $460,
DWI, and $60, left of cea!l!r; and
Tommy Quillen, Mldleport, $210,
driving under suspension.
Transferred to Meigs County
Court were charges against John
M. Harper, Dexter, DWI, failure
to control, d.rlvlng under suspension, and fictitious tags.
"·~-

3 Big Days!
FRIDAY -SATURDAY -SUNDAY
ALL

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('Ye , .... Oft OrlgiHI

Price)

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THDE'S PlENTY 0' 11• TO PICI OUT A IECUJIEI, CUIIO CAiiNET, STEREO RACK
StmM, HAS~OCI, COLOR TY, DESI, SOFA, VCI, GUN CAIINE1, WOOD IOCIIER,
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arnu

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m-1671 •
•HI!WlltWnteo. . NUIVI, • •

.,._.,1__ ,_.,.,. _ __ _~-----~----

.- -

z

•--

�·\'
Ohio

December 21. 1989

•

House judging 1o be held in .R acine

Pleas Court news
A $600,000 judgment actiOn ha5

Thursday and Friday are the
last days for residents In and
around the Racine area to
register for the Racine Mer·
chants Association sponsored
hoUday house decorating con·
tes 1. Homes will be judged
Friday evening with first, second
and third place prizes to be
awarded In both traditional and

alleges that Joseph Kirby, travel·
tng two cars behind her, was
operating his vehicle In a negll·
gent manner, falled to stop,
struck the vehicle behind Grind·
staff, causing that vehicle to
strike Grlndstaffs vehicle, caus·
lng the plaintiff serious Injuries .
The plaintiffs iJie requesting
the $500:000 judgment. jointly
and severally, from the defend·
ants, for Injuries allegedly sus·
talned by Sandra Grindstaff as a
result of the accidents.
In a criminal matter, David
Dillard was sentenced by the
court on Dec. 14 to one year In
prison for trafficking In drugs.
Actions by Jacklyn J. Dalley
against John Cline Dailey, and
Clarence E. Fraley. etal, against
Ashland Petroleum Company, et
a!, have been dismissed by the
court.

been flied in Meigs Common

Pleas Court by Sandra Grind·
staff and David Grindstaff, of
Racine, against Huston E. Call,
Crown City, and JosephL. Kirby ,
Racine. The acllon stems from
two separate auto accidents. one
In Gallipolis and one In Pomeroy.
Accortllng to the complaint
!lied by the plaintiff, on Jan. 3,
1988, Sandra Grindstaff was
operating her vehicle on Pine St.
In Gallipolis, and was attempting
a left turn ontQ Second Ave. Call,
who was traveling behlod the
plaintiff, was allegedly operating
his vehicle In a negligent
manner, failed to stop and struck
the pj;llntiffs vehicle In the rear,
causltlg serious Injuries to the
plaintiff.
On Jan. 4, 1988, Sandra Grind·
staff was operating a vehicle on
West Main St. in Pomeroy. She

Meigs announcements .

Seeks divorrei

religious categories, according
to Bev Moore of tbe merchants
association.
Anyone wishing to have their
home Included In the judging
should call the Racine eut Rate
at 949·2942, or the Racine Depart·
ment Store at 949·2800, by 5 p.m.
Friday .
Homes within a three-mlle
radius of Racine are ell¥lble for
judging, Moore said.

autgned to Probate-JuvenUe
Judge Robert Buck.
Dissolutions have been
granted Pamela Miller and
George Dliyld Mlller, and Kathy
A. Davidson and Benjamin F .
Davidson Jr.

Christina L. Couch, Middleport, has filed In Meigs Common
Pleas Court for a divorce !rom
James R. Couch, In care o!
Robert Couch, Pomeroy.
·
Filing for dissolutions are Jody
L. Gum. Pomeroy, and George
G. Gum Jr., Moore Haven, Fla .,
and Vicky Nlclnsky, Middleport.
and John Craig Nlclnsky,
Middleport.
The Gum action has been

licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Dennis Lee Richards
Jr., 20, and Melissa Lynn Casto,
18, both of Racine; Perry Alan
Smith, 27, and Margaret Marte
Amberger, 28, both of Syracuse;
Larry Sherman Hoschar, 21,
Pomeroy, and Shelby Lynn
Napper, 18, Rutland; Lester
Michael Lewis Jr., 20, and
Jeanette Luclll Henllne, 17, both
of Middleport; Kirk Patrick
Flck, 20, Long Bottom, and Lee
Ann Robinson, 20, Coolville.

Lynagh to head Multimedia, Inc.

Christmas party
The annual Christmas party of
GREENVILLE, SC- James
the American Legion, Feeney· T. Lynagh, President of Multime-Bennett Post 128, and Its dia Broadcasting Company has
Auxiliary wlll be held Thursday been elected President and Chief
night at the hall. Dinner will be Operating Officer of Multimedia,
served at 6 p.m. Following the ' Inc. by the Company's Board of
dinner, auxiliary members will Directors. Lynagh takes over the
have a $5 gift exchange. Candy office from Walter E. Bartlett
will be sacked by the legion·
who was recently elected Chair·
nalres for the annual Santa treat
man of the Board and Chief
to be given out on Christmas Eve.
Executive Officer of Multimedia,

Inc. In a further action, Wllllam
L. Bolster was elected to succeed
Lynagh as President of Mulitmedla Broadcasting Company and
was also elected as Vice Presl·
dent of Mulitmedla, Inc. Bolster
has been VIce President and
General Manager of Mulltmedla's St. Louts television station,
KSDK. Both executives assume
their new offices immediately.

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late

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DECE BER 21st

WE WILL BE OPEN
FROM 8:00 TILL ll :00

S·PE·C·I·ALS

FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

WE WD.J. CLOSE AT 7:30 THURSDAY TO
GET READY FOR THIS SALE
31/2

••
•

!

THURSDAY NIGHT

3 Gallon Complete Aquarium

GALLON

DECOMTED
CANS OF

bv

#14000

ci1f :rrr:
~ .J-.

Com~lele

AQuartum:
• j;ylt Color G.n sox
• F~tratlan Sr-uem

POPCORN

Wllh GrO'o'et
• Concealed Air Pumo

REUSABLE CANS

• ~ile•ke Greenerv

• llgnt S-ren W1Tn
2 8uibl
• o\11 Ul Litteo Elec;tflc:ol
Comoonen1s

:~:~:~:~reo ron~
•thermometer
• ~notter Proot Tonk
• Cama1e1e C:::re

Stuffed·
·mal

Pepsi Produ(ts

30°/o OFF

$5 29

$1 799

Mcnuo1
• Ecsv Access FeecuntJ
• ranK 11 One Fl i e-~;e

By The Bend

INCLUDES ALL PLUSH

Page-7

Calendar

By WO.LIAM C. TROTl'
United Press International
FRIENDS OF JACK: Jack Nicholson has lots of friends.
"Everybody's been great to me and I've been great to them,"
the actor says In the January Issue otCentlemen'sQuarterly. "I
don't have- that I'm aware of- a single enemy out there who
hates me because of some business venture and I can't think of
any collaborators of mine where we don't have not only respect
but certain pleasures In our relationship." Nicholson finally has
"The Two Jakes," the sequel to "Chinatown," under way and
he's directing It himself after several blg·name directors were
unable to take the project.
SALVADORAN SOAP BOX: JennUer Casolo wants to make
the most of her Imprisonment In a Salvadoran jail by going on
the lecture circuit. Casola, 28, speaking Tuesday night at a
church service In her hometown of Thomaston, Conn., says she
plans to hit 10 to 12 cities after the holldays to talk about the
plight of the Salvadoran people. Casola, who was freed alter
being Imprisoned 17 days on charges of abetting communist
rebels, said she hopes her time In the limelight wlll end so that
she can .go about her work and carry her message to the people.
"I don't want to be Jennifer Casola," she said. "I want to be
someone who witnessed the pain and suffering In El Salvador. I
don't want to be special." One person· she plans to speak to Is
Sen. Christopher 1. Dodd, D.Conn. ,'who was Instrumental In
securing her release. She wants him to reverse his position and
call for an end to U.S. military aid to El Salvador.
"60 MINUTES" IN THE '80s: The people at ''60 Minutes"
have been giving some thought to the storl~s they'd like to cover
In the 1990s. "The big stories of the '90s wllllnvolve the coming
of the 21st century" says Mike Wallace, "and the story I'd like
to cover is New y'ear's Eve 1999. I'll be 81 years old." Harry
Reasoner says he's Interested In the changes In Eastern Europe
and another special topic Cor the '90s. "Another story I'd like to
· cover Is Mike Wallace's retirement- butthat's unlikely," said
Reasoner, 66. ·
• PICTURES ON THE BLOCK: Grall am Nash of Crosby, StUls
and Nash Is putting more than 450 works from his photograph
collection up for auction next Aprll. The photos are expected to
bring In $2 mllllon, some of whlcli will go to. the Los Angelt&gt;s
County Museum of Art so It can acquire more photographs.
Nash who also Is donating 140 works to the museum, started his
colle~tlon .with a Diane Arbus photograph back In the 1970s.

Dance Club will have Its annual Sunday at 7 p.m. The public Is
THURSDAY
Invited to attend.
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith Christmas dance on Saturday
Gospel Church, Long Bottom, · from 8-11 p.m. Music wUI be
RUTLAND -The ZIOn Church
will have Its Christmas program provided by "Monpage."
of Christ. Route 143, will present
on Thursday at 7 p.m.
RACINE -Santa Claus will
POMEROY - The Pomeroy make an appearance at the
Group of A.A. and AI Anon wlll Racine Fire Station on Saturday
meet on Thursday at the Sacred at noon. The visit Is sponsored by
Heart Vathollc Church. For the American Legion Post 602
Information call and auxiliary .
1-800-333-5051.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A Christ·
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Elementary School will present mas Eve service, with open
Its Christmas program on Thurs· communion, will be held Sunday,
day at 7 p.m. The public is Invited 11 p.m.. at the Hope Baptist
Church, Middleport. Everyone Is
to attend.
welcome.
PAGEVILLE -There will be a
POMEROY -Christmas Eve
ChriStmas party for Scipio Town·
services
at the Grace Episcopal
ship residents, sponsored by the
Church
will
begin at 6:30 p.m. .c~•­
Scipio Township Fire Depart·
wlth
music
and
a program by the '4
men!, at the !lrehouse on Thurs·
children
of
the
church. Rev. AI · j
day from 6-7 p.m. Santa Claus
McKenzie
will
be
there lor the j
wlll pass out treats for the
celebration of the holy eucharist j
children.
at 7 p.m. Children are to be at the j
RUTLAND -There will be a church at 6 p.m.
~
regular meeting of the Racine
SYRACUSE - The Mission
Post602 on Thursday at 7: 30p.m.
Refreshments wlll be served Church In Syracuse wlll have Its
Christmas program on Sunday at
following the meeting.
6 p.m. Christmas morning servl·
ces will be at 10 a.m. on Monday .
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
REEDSVILLE - The Reeds·
Township Trustees will meet In
ville
United Methodist Church
.special session on Friday to
conduct end of the year business. will hold its annual Christmas
eve serviceonSundayat 7p.m. at
POMEROY The Meigs the church. The service will
County Fox Hunters Club will
Include congregational singing, a
meet on Friday at 7:30p.m. at the short skit and seasonal readings.
club house to elect new officers
The service wlll close with a visit
and collect dues.
from Santa Claus. The public Is
Invited to attend.
SATURDAY
CHESHIRE -The Silver Run
BRADBURY Christmas
Baptist Church wlll present Its
Eve services at the Bradbury
ChriStmas program on Saturday
Church of Christ will be held
at 7: 30p.m.
'Sunday at 7 p.m .

CONTACT DAILY SENTINEL

992-2156

Ask For Mike Jenkins

HELPED IS

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Church dates to 1847

CHRISTMAS
·ITE S 1/2 OFF

ALL NAPIER JEWELRY

50-0/o OFF

EXCLUDING CANDY

-·--~~;f~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~=!~~ i~-~t-~~~-~~~~!~l~I·!···~¥S~~'BI:BI

.... ~TRATEMP KITCHEN TOOLS

.CASE

4 PIECE GIF"I' SET
FOR CORNING. VISIONS COOKWARE

$899
BOXED

MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

/

COLOGNE

FRAGRANCE GIFT

KNIVES

'

t

SETS

40°/o OFF

:

'

25°/o

ji

tllH E ROlli

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OFF

·------.-

25°/o

OFF
EVERYTHING IN OU.R
GIFT SECTION
(EXCLUDING

PRECIOUS MOIIIIIIS)

SEE OUR TABLE WITH
ITEMS REDUCED UP .TO 75°/o

MANY IN STOlE
UNADVERTISED SPECIALS

786 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT
992-6491

Chester trustees
will meet
There wUI be a Chester Township Trustees mE&gt;etlng on Dec. 30
at 9 a .m. at the town hall.
There will be an organtzatiQnal
meeting of the trustees on Jan. 2
at 7: 30 p.m. at the town hall.

••

Is ,.;ithout debt. The membership
and attendancE&gt; is in the 30's, and
it Is non-denominational. The
pastor Is·Steve Reed, and the lay
leader Charles Humphrey.
Sunday school begins at 9:30
a.m. with Sunday morning war·
ship at 10:45 and 11:30 a .m .
Sunday evening worship Is at 7
and 8: 30 p.m. Wednesday even·
lng worship is at 7 and 8:'30 p.m.

Slinderella meets

Mary Browning lost the most
weight in the Monday night Five
Points class of Sllnderella, and
Cindy Lambert was the runner
up.
In· the Tuesday night Mason
class. Mary O'Brien lostthemost
weight and Kate Stone was the
runner up.
The Christmas week and New
Year's week Monday night Five
Points class wltl meet on Tues·
day at 5 p.m.

!·OPEN SUNDAY 1
I ·12 Noon-4 P.M. I
I
Last Minute
I
I 81ft Suggestions! i
I \. •DEARFOAMS SLIPPERS I
I *SHOES with PURSES TO MATCH I
I NURSEMATES. CONNIE. DEXTER I
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HUSHPUPPIES. CAROLINA

I

ALL SNOW BOOTS •••• 1/2 PRICE

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and NOVELTY ITEMS

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Many 8od Bartalns

I BRinSH KNIGHTS • REEBOK • NIKE • AVIA I·
w BROOKs &amp; coNVERSE ATHLmc SHOES
1
I NFL and COLLEGE SHIRTS &amp; JACKETS 1
Ia Our Slle RooMI

Ihtrita_gt hou$t
fiU'h

I SHOE PLACE
'
. • IIIIDDUPOft
I

INGELS

.

f.·U.RNITHE &amp; JEWElRY·,· -IN(.
106 North Second lY•.
701 Second lYenue
hi
31
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Gallipolis, .o o 456
(6141 992·2635
(6141 446·8084
8
TOLL FIB (8001 426•55 1
CHRISTMAS HOURS: M-S 9 a.m.-8 p.m.

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STEREOS • PHONES • COMPUTERS

Xi Gamma Epsilon chapter meets ..

Inng Bottom Christian

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The Faith Gospel Church,
known recently as the Long
Bottom Christian Church, dates
back to 1847, and was known at
that time as the Disciple of Christ
Church.
AccOrding to Information pro·
vlded by Grace Price, a member
of the church, the building was
originallY located In the village of
Long Bottom, which was then
located on the low flat fields
below and the west of Sa~dhlll.
The 1884 flood washed the village
away but lelt the church.
Tl. . village of Long Bottom
was rebullt one .half mile down
river on 1\lgher ground, but the
church continued on In Its loca·
tton until the flood of 1913. During
this flood the church was swept
from Its foundation, and came to
rest Jn some large sycamore
trees.
The church was disassembled
and relocated halfway between
Long Bottom and Its old location,
on the higher ground of Sandhlll.
It was rededicated where It
stands today,
The church had a high attend·
ance record of approximately 70
during the 1940's and 1950's, but
In 1987 Its membership was only
eight. The last Christian Church
pastor was Vernon Eldridge and
In the fall of 1987 the final service
was held and the church closed.
In the spring of 1989, a newly
formed and organized group
from the Long Bottom and
Reedsville areas purchased the
church from the Christian
trustees.
The first service of the new
congregation was held Aprl116
and rededication was held on
April 23. The church has been
updated and modernized with the
help and labor of the congrega·
tlon. Information provided by
Mrs. Price noted that the church

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A Chr~tmas party was held by Iva Powell; "What's An Old
MIDDLEPORT -The Ash
PORTLAND - The Rzorgan·
recently when the Laurel Cliff Christmas Card Anyway, " and Street Freewill Baptist Church
!zed Church of Jesus ChriSt of
Better Health Club met recently "Your Christmas Guests," by wlll have Its Christmas program
Latter Day Saints Portland-Ra·
at the home of Marge Fetty, Carta Kimes; "Throughout the . on Saturday at 7: 30 p.m.
cine Branch, located on County
which was decorated In a holiday Coming Year," Marge Fetty;
Road 35 wtll present the cantata
theme.
"Christmas Gifts," Jean Wright;
· "Joyful and Triumphant " on
POMEROY
-The
Royal
Oak
A potluck with salad and
and "Santa's Lap," by Donna
dessert was served, and .Nara Gilmore.
Hartman asked tbe blessing.
Iva Powell had the closing
Readings were given by the
Christmas prayer.
following members, ·'The Night
Following the readings there
The annual ChriStmas gift Phyllis Hack~tt. sponsor of the ' ·..
Before Christmas Came," and · was-a glft exchange.
~~~c~dl~~p.~~~
"A Child's VIew of Retirement in
Attending with those already
was held recently for the XI with a gift.
a Mobile Home Park," by Eliza·
mentioned were Eva Robson,
Gamrrla
Epsllmi Chapter, Beta
Secret sisters were revealed
beth Hayes; ·"Christmas Is
Genevieve Ward, Susan Hayes,
Sigma Phi Sorority at the home andnewonesglvenfornextyear. '4
Costly," and "Bethlehem Babe,"
and Mabel Tracv.
of Richard and Ann Rupe In
Items were collected for the
Pomeroy.
needy family to be given for ti
An ornament exchange was Christmas distribution.
held following the dinner. and
The next meeting will be held .
4
on Jan. .

!

ALL

INGELS i

Your One Stop Shopping
J
FULL LINE JEWELRY DEPT.
j
Diamonds • Watches • 14 Kt. Gold J
FULL LINE FURNITURE STORE
J Daybeds • Accent ~ieces • Rec:liners !1
J FULL LINE APPLIANCE STORE
i. Microwaves • Laundry • Refrig.
J. FULL LINE ELECTRONIC STORE
!
J.
TV's • VCR • Camcorders
~

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$799

a cantata by John Jacobson and
Ed Lojeskl, entitled "The Birth·
~ay of a King" on Sunday at 10
d.m. The public Is Invited to
attend.

·CARRIER NEEDED
MIDDLEPORT AREA

1

IOtOC:"pnMClC80 To

ONLY

Thursday. December 21. 1989

-People in the news-...,

lAurel Cliff Better Healtl.~
Club holds Christmas party

24 PACK
CANS

The Daily .Sentinel

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SUPER. SAVINGS FROM THE
.
PRESCRIPTION SHOP OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFERS GOOD DECEMBER 18 THROUGH DECEMBER 23, 1989
•ALL CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP .................................. 50% OFF
,; ............. 59C
°
.10 ROLL RIBBON
................... 49C
Bows (25 's)
GIFT
'
................... 39C
°
N.AME TAGS
o

0 0

oo

0

oo o ooo ooo

1 0 0 0

ooo o

0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0

··········································

oo o ooo o o

0 0

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CHRISTMAS GIFT BAGS, Reg. 99¢ ................... ON SALE 59C
BOXED AND MUSICAL CHRISTMAS CARDS ............ 50% OFF
ALL CHRISTMAS CANDLES ....................................... 40% OFF
AMITY BILLFOLDS &amp; WALLETS ................................. 40% OFF
ALL MUSIC BOXES ................................................... 30% OFF
ALL CHRISTMAS CANDY ................... , ..................... 30% OFF
ALL TOYS IN STOCK ................................................ 30% OFF
ALL TIMEX WATCHES ................. ; ............................. 30% OFF
MINI CHRISTMAS DECORATED TREES .................... 30% OFF
ALL CHRISTMAS GIFT ITEMS ................................... 30% OFF
ALL OTHER GIFT ITEMS .......................................... .. 25% OFF
LIGHTS IN MOTION ..................... ; ............................... '15.99
100 LIGHT SETS ................................................... :........ •.&amp; .99
JACLYN SMITH'S CALIFORNIA, Reg. '17.50 ... ON SALE '12.60
JONTUE GIFT SETS, Reg. '14.60 .................. ON SALE '1 0.99

"Shop Where Sa1t1 Shope ......"

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669
· 271 NOITH SKOND
- ..........

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�p.ge

8-The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

. Ponwoy

address by the way Is 34046 Ball
Run Road, Pomeroy.
Sarah recalls that Dude was
making $12 a week working as an
all around · handy man on the
farm of his uncle, the late Russ
Bailey, In Bradbury at the time
she and Dude were married. 0!
course, many of you will remember that Sarah and Dude
operated the Gibbs Grocery on
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, for 33
years - and what good service
they gave- even delivered. How
green was our valley?

By BOB HOEFLICH
Congratulations to Sarah and
Dude Gibbs who wlll officially
observe their
50th wedding anniversary
Saturday .
Actually, a
celebration was
staged In August
by the couple's
two sons to mark the occasion.
Their sons thought the weather
might be a problem If they waited
until the actual date of the
ob.;~rvance and they were
right.
So Sarah and Dude will mark
the official date quietly at their
Their
home this Saturday.

The active Christmas
Commpttee of Racine American
Legion Post 602 took eight cases
of fruit to the Amerlcare Health

Thursday. December 21. 1989

Middleport. Ohio

A golden anniversary
Center and Overbrook Center
today In addition to making a
visit to the Meigs County Inflr·
mary. Nice gestures. On behalf
of the post, VIrgil WalkerelCtends
best hoHday season greetings to
the public.
Members of the Royal Oak
Dance Club will be kicking up
their heels Saturday night when
the annual Christmas dance Is
held at the Royal Oak Resort.
Music for dancing, which Is 8 to 11
p.m. , !"Ill be by Monpage.
George Yakoublan; son of

------~~--------~----·------~~~---------~----·
Thursday. December 21.-,989

more farewell visit to the county.
Harold Is now 88.
He Is
especially fond of the Rock
Springs communit y and its
residents.

Peter and Zana Yakoublan of photo, Eileen' s mother appears
Grove City, Is librarian with the to be about 20 years old . The
192 piece Grove City High School Individual sent a tetter with the
Band which has accepted an Rhotograph but forgot to sign it.
Invitation to participate In the At any rate, Eileen really appre·
Rose Bowl Parade In Pasadena. elates getting the photograph.
Calif., New'Year's Day .
By the way. Eileen and her
George, 15, a sophomore, will husband, Albert, who reside at
be marching In the area of the big 37906 State Route 7, Pomeroy,
banner when you see the band on want to extend best holiday
TV. The band will leave Colum· season wishes to their friends
bus on Dec. 27 returning home and family . Both have under·
from Ca!Uornla on Jan. 2.
. gone surgery and so are notable
George Is the grandson of . to get out and about yet.
Gretta and Edgar Thomas of Nye
Ave., Pomeroy, and his mother Is
G. Harold Martin, Fort Laud·
the former Zana Thomas.
erdale resld@Dt, who has held
· such an affection for Meigs
Eileen Martin wants to extend County over the years even
thanks to someone who sent her a though he's been away for such a
picture of her mother. In the long, long time hopes to make one

..

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WASHINGTON (UP!) - The Initial $270 million estimate In Its
State Deparlrnent said It has fiscal year 1991 budget reques tto
decided to demolish the U.s. Concress for razing the building.
Other options that had been
Embassy office building In Mos·
cow because it Is hopelesslY conSidered to fix the building
riddled ·with Sovij!t listening Included turning the building Ilito
devices.
'
an unclassified buslnees center,
After more than two years of or just r~moving the top three
study, the department an- .stories ahd rebuilding them Into
. nounced Wednesday that the new a classified "bubble" where
office building, which h_!ls never classified Information could be
.been occupied, must be torn dlscusaed.
,
The State Department review
down and a new, secure chancery
bu Udlng must be put up on the showed that, "among the realls·
tic alternatives, the teardownsame site.
, Until the new U.S. office rebuild option" offered the best
building II finished and occupied, solution.
The red·brlck building was
Soviet diplomats In Washington
will be unable to occupy or use found to· be riddled with tiny
the.l r completed embassy office listening deviCes and the entire
b\lildlng Just north of the GeQrge- steel frame of lite building was .
. town area In the District of apparently designed as a giant
antenna to br01.dcast conversa·
Cplumbta.
In. making the announcement, lions to nearby liltenlng stations.
Under the plan ptoposed by the
the department said, "The dec!·
administration,
the building's
son was taken after a careful
foundation,
with
the heating
review of the alternatives for
dealing with the bugged new plant, will remain, but II will be
lllllulated from the newly rebuilt
building."
.
The department $Sid "lnnova· part of the building. .
The security ·of the Moscow
live security measures will be
employed'' to make sure that the embassy came under close scrut·
new structure Is secu.r e from lny In 1987 In the wake of a spy
scandal Involving U.S. Marine
eavesdropping.
The cost of the original buDd· guarils who were acculed of
lng was put at $1,90 million, The aiding Soviet sp~.
After a study was ordered of
Soviets, under the terms of the
security
at U.S. embassies
~tl•lnal construction agreement,
, will have to bear the undeter· · abroaf;l, a report Issued In 1987 by
m lhed cost of razing' the building James •Scblellnger, former O.S.
and putting up a replacement on def11nse sl!cretary and exdirector of the CIA, found that the
.
the same site.
Slate Department spokeswo· )\!oscow chancery was filled 'with
"Ingenious" bugs and should be·
man Sondra McCarty said that,
while the United States 'will ·overhauled. The Senate ~lect
pursue claims and arbitration to Committee on intelligen&lt;;e voted
get the SovietsJ to pay for 15-0 to demoliSh the !aclllty.
At about the same time, some
revamplng the embassy, the
members
of Congress suggested
deparlrnent did not want that
that
the
Soviet
embassy under
ptOceSB to delay completion of a
construction In Washln..on, on
new_building.
· For that reason, McCarty said, one of the highest points In tbe
the department Is making · an district, would be In a position to

TODAY'l QUOTE: "I may not be the
prettiHt girl in the world, but I'd like to
see Bo Derek look ttke a '10' aller play·
tng 18 holes of goll In too-degree
weather." - Jan Stephenson

STRIPED SUNFLOWER
SEEDS
FOI STIONG BIWD BI!JDS
Preferred by llueiays,
Evening Grosbeaks and
Tufted Titmice

BLACK OIL SEED

These sNds have the highHt oil and c.Jorie content o~ eny ot~er
seeds. They are IIITIIIII and soft ohelled for ...y prHitng. Being
smaller in ai%e you get more seeds per pound, therefore they lett

Sale! 286-BaSed Tan"y 1000 TL/2
For Small Business or Home Office

longer in your feeder.

180 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy, Ohio

·

992-2115

TANDY®

~~~.::~~

NOTICE!

Tandy Service

~.PEOPLES BANK
WILL BE CL08ED
CHQI8TMA8 DAY
DECEM5EQ 25m
Regular Hours Will

J)e

Reg. Separate

(#25-1043)

Items 1598.95

PEOPLE8 BANK
Nc:w Haven Doinl DlceBBnl MMOn

675-11'21

129895

Letter-Perfect Printer for Any System

·

·we Appreciate Your PatronBge"

ffi2.2135

,.,.

moMor

111scmr till DeskMate D1Her11a ••.
Tile Frletldly Face in tilt PC Crowd'"

Observed

Tue&amp;iay, Dec. 26. 1989

Monitor

LowAI$40
Per Month•

773-'7.i14

Lowest· Priced
PC-Compatible
for Home or
School Use

1299.00

Plan Available
• BMHz Intel• 80286
Microprocessor
• SmartDrlve~ Gives
You Affordable Hard
Disk Expansion
• DeskMate® 3
A high·perlormance computer that leiS you run sophisticated business
software on 31/•" diskenes. MS·DOS•, and the DeskMate Graphical
User Interlace are bui~ in, The Desktop application greets you with an
organized list ol your programs, including Text, Calendar, Worksheet,
Address Book and more. #25·1602

With CM-5 Color

Save
•300

999112,

1000TL/2

ALL LOCATION8 Of

Ei!sy-to-Use Tandy 1000 HX
With MS-DOS Built In-Just
Power and Run

Save '300

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS

.

Save
$110

399Q@.

Reg. 699.00

Per Month ..

Lesa monito;r

Tendy Service Plan Available

BONUS

Up to

Reg. Soporote

Hems 998.,95

Low As $25 Per Month.

•

Chooae From Thfte• And Other Titles- .
Comptet• Llttal Any Rlldto Shtekl

• f ·151trikt Eltft
• ~nl'l Duat III

a Ultllq V
a hlllllp
a Prill a.,
• ~
• $ptler Bet

• ,.......
• Fllllt Si•'*'
• TV lllmtiH•
·Nor All Tilles at Ewer't Stofe

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

Sale! Ideal Christmas Gift for the
Entire Family
~

POLICIES

'Ads ouls.de Meigs, ~Ilia or Mason counti• mutt be pre·
ptid.
.
•Re'c:.We $.&amp;0 dilce~unt lOr adt .-id m •ctvence.
•free 1dt. Giv..waY and Found adt under 15 words will be
fl.ln 3 dil¥• at no ch•ge.
'Price ol ad tor .. c•it•l letten il doubla prict of 1d cost.
'7 po•nt line trpe onty \118d .
,
.
'Sentinel il not r•ponaillla tor lfi'OII after first dirt , !Ch•ck
tor errors tint d-r ad nina in papftl.- Cell belora 2 :00p.m.
d., attar pubhc.tion to meka correction.
'Adl th.t musl tM paid in advance•e
Cerd of Thanks
Happy Ads
In Memori1m
Vard s•es

Less momro'

Reg.
199.95

low As $15
Per Month•

• A cl•siliad advertisemtnt pi~BCI in Th• Daily Sant.nel (ex·
upt
c:lat,.fied disp6-v. Bu1in•• C•d and lag• notic•l
w11l al1o app. . in I he Pt. Ple. .RI Rqilt•r and the Geli·
pulls Daily Tribune. rtedting over 11,000 hom•.

• Attaches to Your TV or Add a Monitor
• Choose From Ready-to-Run Software

Save

·•so

HALl
MIRROR
Rag. $109.00

Sale

$79°0

WAll CURIO

MATCHING
CONSOLE ·

Rag. $199.00
Now

S9900

log. 1299.00

Salt

S19CJOO

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The power ol1·2·3® and
the ease ol use of the
DeskMate User Interlace:
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First Publllher Bonus
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no charge when )IOU buy
S
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125·1279, 121.00

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,;

$7900

COMPUTER

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"
FOf
.!oMs
•nd the La!
f u ~tl! Cruucle.
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on your trail!
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NOW

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Fr• Dtli••Y

..........

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Computer PC-6

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programs in BASIC. 24-charaeter
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.30
.42

.60

· .05/doy

.. ...,.,. tOJ con•c:utiw '""'· brokenupd.,twitl baeh•ged
for eKh d• .. ....,.,•••

...

'*' ·

1'. LtvRstock

1 ~ Card of Thenks

2 - tn Memory

61 - Farm Equipment

3 - Ann.oucements

62 - Wanted to Buy
63- lNestodl
64- Hey &amp; Grain
65-- Seed &amp; Fertilirer

41- GNe~Way
6 - Happy Adt
6 -·lott 1nd Found

7 - y •d s ... ,.,..d in ~·nee!
8 - Public Slle • Auctiofl
9-Wtnted 10 Baay

Tron"~ortalton

41 - Hou'" fOf Aent

".
l ., '1'"1'
,',1' I V,

Cla.•.•ifi••d page.• cot'f'r 1h(•
Joftowing h•l(•phom~ exchang(•.~...
G..lia Coumy
Ar" Code614
•.a- Gallipolis

'
Metg~Cauniy

M..an Co.. WY

Area Code 114

· A,.• Coct. 304

992 - M-.......

Pom•ov

986- Ch••r
143- Pontend
247- letMtf....
949-Radne

675- Pt. PIMNM
468-Leon
576- Appla Grove
773-M•on
182- ,._, H•en

••s- Letlf1

937- BuH.

742-Rutlend

I

.t
"'
L

\

11 - HelD Wantecf

12-SiUIIItlon Wamad
13 - lnturwte&amp;
1•- Bu1in•• Training
15-Sc:hOOIJ &amp; lnJINCtion
16- Aadio, TV. CB Rep1ir

71 - Auto1 lor Slle
72 - Trucks for Sele
73 - vans &amp; 4 wo·,
74 ·· Motorevcr·•
75- lo.u&amp; Motors tor
76 - Auto P.,ts I Acc•IOf'itll

49 - For L•••

78 - C1mp1ng Equipment

S••

77- Au,to Repair
79 - C•mpers 6 MotOf Homes

Mer chontltse

Servtces

51 o-- Hou•hold Goock

17- Miscellan.ous
18 -Wanted To Do

52-Sporting GDDdl

.21 Sutm•s OppDrtunity
22- Mon., to loan

23 -

42 - Mobile Hom• fo• Rent
43 - Farms tor Rent
44-Apartment tor Rent
46 - FurnishMt Rooms
46 - Space for Rent
47- W..,ted to R.,t
48 -- Equipment for Rent

Prole~uionel Ser~~Lic•

t

81 - Home lmprowm.,ts
82 - Piumbtng lo Ha•ing
83 - EilC...,Itlng
84 - Eiec:tricel &amp; Refrigeration
85 - Gcneret Hauling
86 ·Mobile Home Repair
87 ·- Upholsterv

S3 - Arn6quet
54 - f.llise. Merctlandite
56 ·-· Builctintll SuppliM
56-Pttl tor Sale
57 - Musicll Instruments
58 - Fruitl &amp; Veg••b4•
59 - For Sale or Trade

: ~~------~~~~-,--~--~-----r----~------~----GOLF &amp;
TROPHY

SHOP

•!llew Orlpa .
•Ciubl Cua·
tomlzed

Easy to use because MS-DOS, DeskMate word processin
9
and a 90,000-word spell checker are all buih in w 1·th
DeskMate's Graphical User Interlace. #25·3530

JOHN TEAFOID

46317 Sc.ut Camp load .

Chtstar, Ohio

SPECIAL

Sale I Computer
GAMEBLASTER System Desk

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9995

low

Aa$15

Per Month•

Reg. Sep.rate ltema 214.85
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GAMEBLASTER. Includes
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Slipheed and Intelligent Qr.
gan software. Supports lndi·
ana Jones and the Last
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#25-1039

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ZETOI 'IIACTOIS
MIEISTl'IE ll'maS

GUN SHOOT
IACIIIE
DEPT.

ECHO-YliiiNH DWEI

ladrs+ 'hiding

KOUNTRY KLUB

Cut '30 ·

=es

'

&amp;gas
Compuler, printer and
acceaaories no! inclUded

Computer Worl&lt;center.
Allows plenty of room for
your computer system.
Full·width monitor shelf for
InCreased space. *26·1350

11·17·'19-1 mo.

. AUTHOIUD

WE DO SAW
REPAIR
·s-suppll•
•Ch81ne •Chllln Olla

MODIS EQUIPMENt

742·2US

SaliM St., btllllllll, 011.
II 10 ' tin

BISSEU
.

\

.1,1

1

CUSYOM
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

'"l_t le1U1111il1 Prim"
Lcq term

c:are

flclllty

his lmltlldlatt fttll 111111
positions for R.ll. SuperviSOIS. CollpeiiUw . .
lnd bllllllt pc• .
....e.

, Pl. 949-2101
iar lu. 949-1860
I Day or Night

IVIIY
SAT. -HT
6:30P.M.

FacseryChob
12 , .... Sllett- Only
Slrictly EltfiiCH
10·!1-tln

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

EY~Y suNDAY
ltginning Sept. 17
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factary (hctked 12

I NO SUNDAY CAUS

•UOHT HAUUNO
•

.....
COIIIICt tltl 0.0.11.

•FIREWOOD

It PI-

•mz.

'j

Fl.

..

- -.

IILL SLACI ·
992-2269

iv•••s
""'"'"'"

J&amp;L

USED FURNITURE

INSULAnON

1111100111 SIIIIS

.,...., .,....1o.
VINYL SIDING

VINYL REPLACEMENT

DINEm sm

iUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

"NEW" IEOJNEIS

7t2·3018

UVIIG lOOM Sllns

Locetedthttind
'Trector l)e..,lhlp

WINDOWS

MOlliS

FREE ESTIMATES

-EQUIP-NT

992-2772

742-2455

12·U·'IH •o.

RADIATOR ·
SEaleE

w.-_. ... ,..

core l'ldhttan and
hMtwr cens. We can
.... acid IMtil and rod
ciut rlllatan. We alto
repair Got Tris.

PAT.lL FOD
912·2188

I

dLUJ'
HATS
T·SHIRTS
JACKETS
c•ma, 01110

915·4300

SIIIWOIIC •

ClEA...

1!-7·'89-11110.

USED APPUANCIS

' Roger Hysell

.. lAY WADAIIJY

Garage
••

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

992·SUS • 915-3561

...
·····...

c. . . .
•12
to Sll
'
FARM

••II A.

II. 114, l'wnw111 Ohio

RESH CUT
SHEARED

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
......... llult

"FrM Ettimates"

He¥
MILUE'S
RESTAURANT

Is still ow111111 and
operated by Millie
Duncan.
For Good H umt•
Cook in' Comt&gt; ;;,.,. UH!

PH. 949-2801'
or les. 949·2860

HOURS: 6 AM-9 F'M Daity
CLOSED SUN' lAY

NO SUNDAY CAllS
3-ll·tln

lraAwr Ill. Mir •dlta&lt;ort

992-7713

UIIDA'S
PAI~G

I CO •

WIIMIEIIWOI
lhntal (laerwp• I

'•ilttitltl

AUTO &amp; TIUCK
REPAIR
Altt Tr11•lat••

'"' ... , . ... ot .....

PH. 9··5612
or 992·7121

(614) 915-4110

4-25-tfn

DUMP TRUCk
S•nd-Stone-Dirt

667·1171

••

DII'S APPUAIIa
SIIYIU

NIWLA•
(614)

MAIN Sf., IUTLAND

II 10. 'I'"

SCO'tCI . .

INTI. .ISIS

•Tire Saln
•Front End
AHgnment
•Oil Ch•nge 8t Lube
•Brake Work

5a1en1 St., lutlellll

Midcltpol'l, Ohio
1·13-tlc

.!!;!11£'
MCNit en Clnllr, sss
Jl:ltlol Pitt. WlllaliJ.
0111o 4501.

I

.20

LH'TT St:ppl:~;"

Annuu nee IIi En ts

W1&gt;1ds

Business Services

• 6.4 lba.• 2.4 X 9.8 X 12.t
• 640K I 5 Hours Belween Charges

SUNDAYS 1-4

•

~

.•

667 - Cootwilla

fi!J~~~~~!

Check Your Phone Book for tht latlleiiMek Store or Dealer Nearest You
Moat Mll,lor
• Radio Sf1ack revotving credit. PayrMnt nwy vary dloendtng uplfl account t.~ance. lnteltfleg. TM Intel Corp: Personal DnkMIIIe 2fTM an~ Credit Carda
OookMateiReg. ™Tandy Corp. MS·OOSII.,._ from~~~- COrp. IBM/Reg . TM IBM Corp. 1·2·3/Aeg. TM Lo1uo Deoalopmont Corp.
Welcome

nllt &amp; OUVf. GAIII'GUS - 446-1045
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9-8

Monthly

379-WIInul

Finanlin!l

&amp; Visa. MIC

6
10

143-A,._.a Diet.

low As $30 Per Month •

Per Month•
WP-2 Wordploceeeor. From boardroom to corporale jet, you can
. take notes, prepare reports and write memos in style. The jet-black
case houses a spell checker/thesaurus. 1' thin. #26·3930

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15
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Reg.
349.95

o..,

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14.00
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89.00
813 .00
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Words

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THAT WILL LAST A UFmME!

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WASHINGTON (UPI)- Businesses In the United States plan
to spend $505 billion for new
plants and equipment next year,
an lncease of 6.4 percent from
1989 spending levels, the Com·
merce Department reported
Thursday.
'
The department's Bureau of
Economic Analysts also said Its
latest estimates for current year
capital spending • show busl·
ilesses have put $475 billion Into
new plants and equipment, up
10.3 percent from 1988 spending
levels. ·
The revised third quarter estimate for 1989 capital spending Is
$},5 billion greater than previously reported.
Real capital spending, which Is
adjusted to remove price
changes,ls estimated to Increase
by only 4.9 percent In 1990 to$490
billion, the smallest Increase
since 1987, the department said.
Breaking out the spending
projections for next year, the
deilartment said -m anufacturing
Industries plan to spend 3.8
percent more to upgrade or
expand their facilities. ·
Industries specializing In dura·

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

12995

MIMBI:Q f D.lC,

Capital spending up

are single men. more than
one-third are families with child·
ren, one quarter are severely
mentally Ill, one quarter are
employed and one quarter are
children.
"And as quickly as we are
building shelters and transitional
housing, the demand continues to
graw," Flynn said. According to
the survey, 25 of the 27 cities
expect requests for emergency
shelter to Increase In 1990.
On hunger, Flynn said. "Our
survey found that Increasingly,
the face of hunger In America is
the face of a young child."
He said the demand for emer·
gency lood assistance Increased
In all but one of the survey cities .
by an average or 19 percent. In no ·
city did the demand decrease. :
•'The demand for emergency :
food assistance by families In· ·
creased by 14 percent," Flynn ·
said. ''Today. more than three .
out of five - 61 percent - of
persons requesting food assist· :
ance are either children or their .
parents."
·
According to the survey, 17
percent of the demand for .
emergency food aid went unmet .
last year and 89 percent of the .
survey cities expect another
Increase next year.
Cities surveyed were: Alexandria, Va., Boston, Charleston,
S.C., Charlotte, N.C., Chicago,
Cleveland, Denver, Kansas City.
Mo., Los Angeles, Louisville,
Ky., Minneapolis, Nashville,
Tenn., New Orleans, New York
City, Norfolk, Va., Philadelphia,
Phoenix, Portland, Ore., Provi·
dence, R.I., St. Paul. Minn .. San
Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Monica, Call!., Seat·
tie, Trenton, N.J., and Washington, D.C.

MS·DOS Loads
Automatically
In Seconds

Save $70

Reg.
379.95

eavesdrop on U.S. government
communications.
As the "spy mania" tntensl·
fled, Soviet otnclals took reporters on a tour of the new Soviet
Embassy and pointed to places
wbere they said "many dozens"
of eavesdropping devices were
placed by U.S. spies .
A State Department au thorlza·
tlon bill signed by President
Ronald Reagan In December
1987 Included a provision barring
the Soviets from occupying their
new embassy until the U.S.
embassy In Moscow was certl·
fled to be secure from espionage.

a gathering of AmeriCans that .
would exceed any gathering you
have seen In Warsaw or Prague
or Budapest," Boston Mayor Ray
Flynn told a news conference In
releasing the report
''This morning the Bush ad·
mlnlstrat ion has demonstrated
Its commitment to removing
Gen. Manuel Noriega from Pa·
nama," Flynn added. "It has
taken th~ sicps It feels are
necessary. to do this. If that same
level of commitment was aimed
at the removal of hunger and
homelessness from this nation's
cities we would never again have
to Issue the kind of report we are
Issuing today ."
Flynn heads the conference's
task force on hunger and
homelessness.
Local officials pointed to the
lack of affordable housing as a
ble goods production plan a 0.2 chief cause of not only homeless·
ness but also of hunger, as those
percent spending Increase.
who are not homeless pay
poor
The largeet planned purchases
Increased
·portions of their In·
liivolve · blast furnaces and Income
for
shelter,
thus depriving
creates also are expected In the
them
or
money
for
food.
P'lrchases of electrical machln·
According
to
the
survey. reery and nonferrous metals.
quests
for
emergency
shelter
Companies pJan on buying
Increased
by
an
average
of 25
fewer nonelectrical' pieces of
percent
In
24
of
the
27
survey
machinery and fewer glaas materJals, aircraft, fabricated metals cities, the largest single Increase
since 1985.
and motor vehicles.
"Requests for shelter by home·
Non-manufacturing Industries
plan to spend 8 percent more next .less families alone Increased by
year. Large Increases are an average of 23 percent In all but
planned fqr the air transporta- three of the survey cities," Flynn
tion and electric utility indus· said.
He said cities reported that 22
tries. Decreases are planned by
percent
of the . requests for
rail transportation, mining and
shelter
by
homeless people went
gas utilities.
the
past year.
unrnet
in
Spending by manufacturing
"As
the
drug
·crlsls tightens Its
companies Increased 3.4 percent
grip
on
our
nation,
we see a direct
during the third quarter foUow·
between
the spread
relationship
lng a second-quarter Increase of
of
drugs
and
homelessness,"
3.6 percent. Durable goods manu·
faclurers Increased third· Flynn added. He said In the 1988
quarter spending by 3.5 percent survey, 34 percent of the homeA modest 0.3 percent spending . less were reported to be subIncrease Is forecast for the fourth stance abusers but that In 1989
q1111rtPr among manufacturers, the number rose to 44 percent. ·
The survey provided a snap·.
foUowed by a 2.-9 percent In·
shot
glimpse of the homeless
crease In the first quarter ofl990,
showing
slightly less than half
the department said.

WASHINGTON !UP!)
Hunger and homeleesneso
steeply In the natiOn's cities in
the past year, with requests for
emergency food assistance up an
average of 19 percent and tor
shelter up 25 percent, the U.S.
Conference of Mayors said.
The conference released Its
annual report on hunger and
hom~lessness Wednesday based
OJ\ a survey of 27 cities and found
that homelessness among !ami·
lies and drug abusers was
parliCI!Iarly acute at the end of
1989.
"If you could bring all of the
people who have been homeless
and hungry In the 1980s to our
nation's capital, you would have

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Save . 698'5
AIUf
$4~-

PomaO'f'-MidclttpOrt. Ohio

U.S. decides .Moscow
embassy must Mayors see rise in hunger, homeless
.
be razed; 'riddled' with bugging
rose

FEED THE BIRDS

Attracts Chickalle~~, Carllnals, Dons and Bluejays,
Evening aiNII lon-brMsttd Grosbeaks, Mournin1
Ions, and Tufted Titmice.

"r:---------------------------------- ·--- ..
•

------As you tangle with all of the

final details of matters which
must be handled by Monday, I'll.
bel your ho , ho, homay begetting
a little weak. That's okay. A
smile will do II.

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

FRI:E E!TIMATES
lot .... 1 ... , ..

vaT •AS-I
HAVIIIIIIBim

MTP 6 P.ll

..,.,•.• ,....11·11·'11·
It•• ..._
I mo.

Dill
CllIIAPIIWOOD

un

61'4-949·2734
or

DOUILE R

TACI SHOP
ALBANY I OliO
698-6500
Weotern Booto, Heto,
Shirte, Belto For
Men,1Adl01 a.
Cttlldnn.

SIIDIIS.~I

-·-

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10-The

_______

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wanted

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'tiiii'R£ IG.DIIIG
ITfOO

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,.. . . . . lnooll a,J00.114o17W417.

ctss"*

1m
S/4 ton witts ••
por. 114417-7411.

. ."Tf1i~i WAS' AN DLP WOMAN
WtfO 1-IVeP IN A sHof,

-r

A pLACE Stff

l'or Bolo: tm CIIIC Trl4xle
. . _ 1m lm-lonol l'lot·
11oe1.
1m P l y Yin, oa In gocid cond. 114-al1141.

wou~p N~vt~ PfP~r.

-

com""'" -

1-

'THE TflOU&amp;LE I$

Wh~re

Santa ~hop!l!

"llt ~lftt Thl tt..ll., lltilf"
1124 E.IWN

HJ-2526

,;
•

.-.
-±

POMEIOY OliO

I

.

&lt;MiiMliiiMaMIIIIIIIlllllllllll\lllllllliiiMiiMllll•liiiJ

MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER
97 .ECH mDT, .DIUPOn, 0110

locahll

nr.. .., W.. S.,.. l1111rlctt . ..,

...... .,........ ,...
=..
,,..... .,.... ..
:::u,
-

Tank, 2411 1!1 I

_

... ,

.. Con- Von.

f

0 IMUI.

!'!!f!t

R. L HOLLON
TIUCIING

eo~e':':'J=.'r

- · - 121-. Mu now,

FURNACE
FURNACE

14X70 W/ewdral .... Ill
p i - lnclucllng -

dryw, uc cond, '!,100.
171-1437 oft• 4:00 P•.

SPECIAl ACCOUNTS FOR

liN'S APPliANCE

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

992-5335 .. 915-3561

lei'• p,_ Pllf Office
217 E.

.... l11,!00 ...... ., ...

IIT-12211.

·-or will
onol...
-rlally.IIOOO.
on Janel COIIbect.
lolplo T-lp.I14-74MOeO.

Jortl

bu"'::l

lolo,

:=:"..:::-:.:=..~~
DAVE'S

SMAll ENGINE.
IEP.II
&amp;oc.IWtJtValeyl l1r
Ill "'til I I, oto.
PARTI AND SERVICE
For MoOt 2 ond 4-cyole

•

en gin•

St- Porto lor
Homell1e.w_,.,,
Tecumsoll, Brig11 •
Strotton.

wlh
- · · CJrdo
- ·......
.... :IOUl'l-2331.
Loll for • Gollpollo Forry,
~~ PubJie
30W7i'

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41 Houses for Rant

Of--

.

78

Auto Parts &amp;

-

Accanorlel

.~:==~

I

I

typj tMII:rubuler, ,_ TfiW, MY

till _ , 110 FoN 1nc11 oR 171.
.,.. drum •re 1111. Phone
.Wl'l-1154 lftlf I, N 11........-n,AKtarloft.
1'0011 lOT TIRES, _,...

_...._

1311,

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front

•
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, •:

Mlrehandl•

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49
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ICDW &amp; .......... prorld d
Galli~

· ~ecl.l11441

4421,111141
for

GI-CI~

lor 4 WD Cliolwulol
1o.to-1L l'ln• 1111

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

1211.

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ond

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....., IJttllol:l or 0-

: .. .

-

or ooiiJo -oompiolool

l'lollry

...-. 114-

.--,0111-7-1121.

82

RACINE GUN SHOP
49919 NEASE IOilOW ID.

IACIIII, 0110

GUNS· AMO
. s
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ... 2.20 lox
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS
OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
Saturday 9 am-6 pm

949-2168

COUNTIY
MOilLE
HOME Pill

g

Santa's elves are

Plumbing •
Heating
.·

•Mobile Heme
l"'lrU
•Mobile Home
Rente Ia
•lcrl Rent•l•

Electrical i
....,.,....

•

-

CIOINISelcilll '
01 _

orlty. Trying to patch up a broken romance? Tile Altro-Graph Matchmaker
can help you 10 understand to do
to make the relatlonohlp work. Mall $2
to Matchmaker, P.O. Box 91428, Clevelind, OH 44101-3428.
CAJIIIICOIIN (Dec. :12........ 111 This can
be I IUCCIIIIul day lor you, provided
you don't do thlngaln a piecefnealluhion. Coordinate your ellort110 lhat your
loren .-el!'t aprud too thinly.
AQUAJUUI (.len. 20-Feb. 111 Don'laay
anything about a friend today that you
wouldn't dlreolly say to hlalher lace, becauee flnY unkind commen1s you make ,
are likely to be reported to the large! of

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Refrigeration
!'!MI. -

....

L'n • • ....,_, Ridenour
.........1,104-175-1711.

11-6·1

your - · ·

PIICEI Cl'lb. »March 201 Think
twice belen gMng lriendl tlpe today
• lhat you 1811 could mtka or them '
monay. llyourlnlormlllonlat.ulty,thay
Dec:.21,1•
might try to hold you -nlllble.
Your poulblllllel lor succeaa In your , AJiliU (......, 21·Aprtl 111 Tile opln·
1on1 of othlrl are Important, but your
enc~aavora lOOk _good tor thl yeer
IJewJ merit u Will. Don'l It·
-.ct. provided you can IUPjll'.a your own Imp t1 IGt. 1e content wtth ateedy pro- tMipt to pieMe campanionl today II
or-lnlt 1 t of lrylng 10 ~ to the top thl - of IUbdulng your own better

STIER

PillA

LOWISJ NICfS
IIIIIISJ IUAUIY

fill . . . . . .,

,

......

POMROY Meiiiii&amp;EI'OII''S OM.Y

Pl.ftt..JS.1

LOWLY OWIB PIZZA SHOP.

IUIIInltbn;
7:30-1:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7:10-4:00 laturday

Pizza·S•-Sai•Dtily ·Specials
.
992-2221

.... ., ,.. ... .·
'

.

Ill 7-'"'l•t.

' f

,.,

~

.

of thl'- In -jump.

. :z
"The Srnlltll ... 10 llloughtful. Tiley Qlve us anything unleu they're aure we

have epece lor It In the •tile. •·

"'
"

IAIIfTAMII (IIIW. II DM 11)
Sclll.... your OUI1Ikle IICIIvltlel ·
thCJughtluiiY today or 1111 IIIey might
tum out ta be both time lind money .
-tlrL Tty to llleblltlltn order of prt.

•

•

'

! .

'

.

=

t.

(April »Iller Ill) Allllttnta ;
or co-•01keo1 will puN away lrom you
today II ,au're -'Y critiC* of their ef· ,
10111. Guild IQIIIII making eoto01181ola.
IIIII coWd maD tlllm 1811 lnfertor or ·

T

•

-~ .

'

•

201 You're likely
under conlrol today
expendllures are
concel'ned, but
could be the small
dollm and dime siuH that teaks havoc
on yow budQel.
CANCIII (,_ 21-.luiJ :12) Todly you
might be sub)ecled to 1 ter1e1 of minor
lrustrallona and, Instead of dealing with
them 1nd dl1mllllng them from your
mind, you might bring your troubles
home and lake them out on the family.
UEO (....., II •t• :121 Double atandarda could othera to 1ote re' apect lor you today. Don't toll another
not to do -hlng a certeln way and
·
llilld lind do It youi'MII.
lAIII- IIPI 21) lt'a 1n ~1!Ute ettrlbute to be the ftral one wllo
grabllor the-· Today, 110-.
· you miGht be Mejdled with a companion
who dl*ll't pr8CIIce lhll geelure.
LIIIIA (lept. a-oat. II) E - lhough
othlrl w11 be ttytng, you might prove to
be I dNIIcult .,.._ to pia-. today. II
your lrlendaloel p1t11nc1 with you, they
could tlka 111 oppollte tppi'Citllll.

=

I

.

a

ICON 10 (OoUt Ra:. 21) Your.-.
mtll1lhtp wt11 not be very lflactM today

.II ,ou'relncltnad to bel8bor ,our polrltl.
Don't befit aboul thl buill, mtkl your
..,_llltlollolmple, ciNr lind CCIO'I..
j

~

t _ --------------U•'U'k''''j~,,~~~'~i·~·--~
··~~-------J·------------~----~--------~----_;1_________~--~~~_:~--~~~--~~--~----~~~~~------~-----

e1!211sland Son A

group of men dressed as

••
'•
•

C..- EVAHIIHTlRPhiiU,

snake
33 Island
(Fr .)
34 Swiss
river
35 Norse·
healing
goddess
38 Desert
wanderer
40 Unusual
42 Ceremony
43 Spanish
or Bermuda
44 Hipster
45 Biblical
food

Nigel Timpson is suspected
of insider trading. c:;1
CiJ (l) Young Ridero Settlers
in Sweetwater tear an
imminent Indian attack . (R)

WANTED ON '
TH' PHONE!!

••
......

Sollllc T l l l k - HO Qolllo

l-21·'1!1-ifn

PAW II YO'RE

'

•

•

•

hospitalized. C
I!J llnry King Llvel
II]) MOVIE: It Hep~ned One
Chriotmaa (2:30)
at Nashville Now
9:30 Dill il1l Dear John Kale
agrees with the group to be
more accessible to men. Q
({) College Basketball
9:50 (IJ Billy Graham Crusade
10:00 tD 700 Club With Pot
Robertlon
D (]) il1l L.A. Low Becker's
in troutMe when he spends
the ntght with a client's wife .
(R)C
(i) Ill (J) Prlmellme Live

Q

(!J NewoWatch
(!) Under Are
l!ll IIII!J Knots Landing
Linda contesses to Michael
that she lOves him. Q
1!J Evening News
®News
10:30 CZJ Maaterpitce Theatre
Woman spends holiday in an
attic with with ugly yellow
wallpaper. C
(!)

Ryen'e EJen

•

&lt;IJ) CrltneWIIch Tonight

at Whlt18ker Ftmlly

Chr11tm11 Show Features
holiday music by England 's
Roger Whittaker and his
daughter, J.J.
10:50 (IJ MOVIE: Shalt In Africa (R)
(2:15)

11:00(Diatmtn

• Ill rn ero l!ll 111 a21
1111 Hen
&lt;Ill A - Hall
I!J llorleyllne

e

II)) Nlwllart
18 Vlte0Count1y

•..,.

29 Enjoin
30 Old times
31 Sea or

him. (A) Q
(!) Mystery! Stockbroker

.......

~............ 11...

(2:30)

CZl

•

....._

-Yic
-.
.
'"' CNoli
lid. ,_,
....

&lt;Ill MOVIE: Time Bandits

discovers that Rebecca is
having erotic dreams about

BARNEY

· · ,a,

Llvllllllll
..

ACROSS
DOWN
I Medii.
I Colombian
tree
city
6 Barracks
2 Granditem
parental
9 Spanish
3 Unpliant
province
4 "- Butterto Feral abode milk Sky"
12 Beer
5 Employee
13 Aquatic
of 2 7
Yesterday's Answer
mammal
Down
15 Asian
6 Emmell 20 Fume
31 Wesl
Kelly
23 Senora 's
Poinl
river
16 Grimace
was one
title
appointee
18 The gums
7 Cereal
24 Group
32 Allow
19 Deplete
plant
of geese
ingress
21 Droop ·
8 In name 25 Paleness 36 - aut
22 Trouble .
only
26 Indigenous
(smoothen)
23 Fruit
11 Pertain 27 Where 5 37 Rockfish
24 Use up
14 Ran
Dawn is
39 One
27 Overcome
unchecked found
- lime
17 Iran
29 Feather
41 Actre ss
by ennui
28 Immanuel
"capital"
scarf
Merkel

Special Christmas
13 Crook I Chaaa
9:00 D (]) il1l Cheers Sam

.....

FL

PH. 992-3922

..... - - . l:ON:OO a

by lHOMAS JOSEPH

favorile Christmas songs . !;:t

lniplseses... lur,

loltiH-.

IIIOWl I Nlr¥ I r P.ICUid 1
No~~-··&amp;11

..-. a

CROSSWORD

II) ll2l Time To Cano wnfrid s

•

.Q 9 53
t K74
+QB6 3

and Historical context of

I

1%-ll-11

West's opening lead Is a good choice,
EAST
after South bas shown a four- WEST
+QB
card spade suit. H East has a spade +KJB 72
•
J 74 2
.Al06
honor, even as little as tbe lO. it may
•
10 8 s
t962
be the only chance to beat the con+Jl09
2
+7 5
tract. And we can see that East t1oes 1
have the queen of spades. So what
SOUTH
should happen?
+10943
Declarer needs to know bis card
.KB
t AQJ 3
· combinatioua here. If he ducks at trick
+AK4
one, East ·will take the queen.and play
another spade. West now comes in imVulnerable: Both
mediately with his ace of hearts and
Dealer: South
cashes out the spade suit to defeat the
Wel t Nortb East .
contract. Of course South might try to
Soaltl
Pass
Pass 2+
I NT
run the clubs, but East bas that suit
All pass
2t
Pass 3NT
stopped.
There ·are good reasons for making
Opening lead: +7
the winning play. Obviously West is
. not leading from K-Q-J-x-x of spades.
(With that holding, he would lead 111,
king.) And if West is leading from a ning tbe spades. So declarer makes his
four-card suit, it doesn't matter. But game contract.
declarer .can protect agai.Dst West's
~n: Against a no-trump conhaving five spades headed by only two tract, don't be afraid to lead into dehonors, by rising right away with dum- clarer's known four-card suit, if catch·
my's ace. He then plays a heart. West ing a good card in partner's band can
can take the ace but has no way of rl'"· . beat the contract.

comically provide the cultural

I

Home
lmpi'OVeJII8nta

; , . £lllj
_~·z'.t••~~o

=-...,..IIIDr.-GIIIItt

4241.11 ........

Loooo:- - , -

R::.R Me ...

NORTH
+A 5

By James J~by

characters, including the
popular California Raisins,

;

.

For LeaN

SUPPER ...

'TH~TVa-.1

.'

St·l VIC?~

-110111 lor
otortna your- or-· 114-

Ei1\.1:NMEMY

10TURN

I

'

I-IAV£;N'T

"1'0.1~

,

tlloo,

'VOt.J 5TII... L

YOU'RE
HOPEI..e.e5!

I

.........

.,.... 4.000 ..... -

Go-

~IZI.

....

BRIDGE

8:30 f) tD i111 Different World
Whitley learns the meaning
of Christmas .after dream ing
she is Scrooge. Q
(!J Sneak Previews Goes
Video
(!) Trying Times Couple
deals with tension when
husband's old girllriend
comes to town . Q
9 A Claymalion Christmas
Celebrellon Ciaymalion

;'

11·40

Kingly_ - Valid - Berth - ~nch - TAKEN
"The trouble with advice," mumbled my sister, 'is lhat you can1
tell if it's good or bad until youve TAKEN it!"
~--------~~~

Jessica Behind Bars

4 ....... l'enl truck . . . . . .

0

SCII•M Lm ANSWERS

ii1J Murder, She Wrote

'

I

..

· at Conversation With Dinah

............ .._..._
_,,21..-olol
,,.._-·-N--2
................ ----.-

OINTIE

L.,.

(2:00)

"

said

Comol•le ohe chuckle ~uoied
by filli n~:r in the mi!.sing wo rds
-l-,-..L.......I-..L....I........J you devl;'lop from step No. 3 beiOV(.

1Bi MOVIE: Swing Shift (PG)

Coli,,.__.,,..,..

54 Miscellaneous
14111.Q

114-lt2·7471.

Hootod

I

(g) PrimeNew1

___
... .,_
1101·-·
4--·-·-......
_
.
·.
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....,....,.,_._ ;~~--~11~4~~~~~~;;
=· :-;.,. . ,. "" ,::. .....,,........ ..... ----·IF =------=·
couniry llolollo· .......
AooM U, of Pill~
L.,..,.-..,porlo,-

No.-.a.Dt,ailt:•nds ..wo:na•

Rentals

r:c,:'

po~&lt;~.
Old· Aloo troller • ...,.. All ...po.
......
- . .....
.
CoH ollor 2:00 p.IL, 304-771- ou
6111,..._WY,
poinlll9l.
..,.,
ooU- .... .,....
»4-IZMIM.

46 Space tor Rent

4 112 .,.. ltolloen land, near

Aohlon

IUJ w ..._ IIIW.:.• Ani.....
1124 E. lllifl . . - . Po11-.
- . . : II.T.W. 10:00 LOI. to 1:00
£;~-=- 1:00 to 1:01 ......

~~--wnh-..g.

At.7,10 I'IILSoul:h?sSfalll. 41+
8CfWt
houu nuc11 rep~lr,

SilVIa

Rooms

•
3CM-

33 Fanns for Sale
-

Fumlshed

a~

PARTS AND SERVICE
All MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

FUIIIACE

45

75 Bolli &amp; MolOI'I

(PG)

ooll Mklng

,,. -

Note left to dad: "Some guy
called and
it was important

~..,.:;~,~~~~7i-TI....;;..,I-i

bed to travel to the country

i

-

1172 17 I. S,_.ft Tri-Hull
· 121
..........
_....,
• ....
..._ now
....,........,.
7:01 ......

Mullcll
lnltnlllllnts

llobAe homl far .... or rent.
114-HI-7471.

--lor•lo,3bodroom, 1 112 bathe, on -trlc,

1..

CII llJ Cll ABC News Q
(!J Body Electric
&lt;!l 3·2·1 Contoct Q
9 Ill I!]) CBS Newo Q
18 &lt;Ill Three's Company
1Bi WKRP In Cincinnati
II]) He-Man
6:35 (I) Andy Griffith
7:00 (D Our Houee.
D tD PM Magazine
Cll SportaCenter
(i) Ill (J) Current Affair
(D (!) MacNeil Lehrer
NawoHour
9 IIII!J il1l Wheel Of
Fonune C
&lt;Ill Night Court Q
I!J Monoyllne
IBl Cheero
II]) Mlomi Vice Tubbs wants
.to prove his old New York
cop partner is clean .
at Oklahoma Cenlennial
Celebration Conway Twitty,
Gary Morris and Minnie Pearl
JOin Oklahomans to celebrate
the state 's 100th anniversary .
7:06 (!) Jefleraona
7:30 f) (]) Family Feud
Cll College Bukatball
(i) Entertainment Tonight
CiJ Cll USA Today
9 e I!]) il1l Jeopardy I Q
Ill &lt;Ill M'A'S'H
.
I!J Croaafire
IBl Night Court
7:35 (I) NBA Basketball
8:00 (]) MOVIE: We're No Angela
(2:00)
D (]) il1l Cosby Show Theo
and his new roommates run
into trouble with their
landlord. (A) Q
(i) College Baol&lt;etball
CZl (!) This Old House
Thomas and homeowners
discuss the heating and
plumbing systems. Q
CiJ Cll Psychic· Deteclives
Anthony Zerbe hosts th1s
fascinating program

11,200. :IOWa-»71.

I

to call him back, bul I
,...:=·==·=~-;::;·~~-~"., for
can'tyou
remember·-·:··!'

with Jon and Odie for a
traditional Christmas. (0:30)

for Bale

AT ALL

985-4422
11· 8-119-tln

•

•

HI

I

where psychics ha&gt;Je aided
law enforcement agencies in
solving mysteries.
l!ll llll121 A Garfield
Chrltlmas Special With great
irritation, Garfield aUows
himself to be draQQecl out of

oolllorllon.

..

rr !

N U QE E
1---rl~;,lsr.l;:-;;-1-.-l ;:;,

documenting actual cases

,.7 KK to ICnaokl ...._

"1.:-lfl. AICC....JI'w.

_ _ _ . . ond - ·
114-117·

•ANYTHING

=·

-:

='I . . . . . . .

•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

•

1171 Do-110 .......
IIOCIIII alilpl, 11.1....~
~
, ........ 1:00 ... 1:00
Mft te 1:00 IHI'o 114 ??tll?2

- .............
oonciMion.
li
4:...... Coli
lkJ.Dao U . ••euwmolllle,

. . . . ...... .... •

CIES1D, OHIO

•

171CJ0,114-tt2·713G.
.
, . . All.. c-orolon Von,
11,000 nolloo. U L.V-1,lted. 111,aoe. 114 Ul IUO

,_7,_4~~M4;Dt:.;;_;;on:tc~~lal~~~

•• - - - . , .

OMoM 1M """'
. . . ...,. ......... ~.~

te "II I ; 1 t Yrw;hln
BUYING ALUMINUM CANS, GLASS,
PLASTIC, COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM. RADIATORS AND MORE

NON-PIOFIT GROUPS

ALLEY OOP

..,._.n

•GRAVEL
GLASS
LAMPS
BOOKCASES
WICKER ' OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS
QUILTS
CROCKS
BEDS
ClOCKS
DRESSERS
PRIMITIVES
CHAIRS
DRY SINKS TABLES
POCKET WATCHES

, .,.. .•,011

CObra Cl, 30,000 rniiM
on new engiM, new tltM.

CAll

·

•

4 -

VI 301 onglno, 4 COJiloln cllolro,

Sllollo
Silop!lo.
114
.....
1111. AI. :Ia. Doy - ·

ShoP..

po

,,

...... a:l'-~

, ... _

•

TffiN(j TO CHEW~

1tn Fonl Cluti ~ ..... - ·
11,100.-11.

,.., Fonl
~~ 30U7

;

IT'S A Btu t&gt;IL•clou.f ~

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

u.od Poclo Model 100
bulft.
In moclwn or othor . computera. Call Pit ,,..._
2342.

\s lu

e

72 Truckl tor Bale

-. ...

TACSOM

e I!])

~ Sportalook (0:30)

18 Wanted to Do

6

I

e

for rent.

CU. Y I . POWIN

low to form four simple words

1111 Newa
(j) ESPN'o S~ldWMk
(0:30)
.
(!J Shining Time Station
(0:30)1;1
&lt;!l Square One TV Q
&lt;Ill Andy Griffith
I!J Wo~d Today ·
IBl Chtrleo In Charge
II]) Jam
at American Magazine
. 6:05 (I) Beve~y Hlllbllliu
6:30 8 (]) i111 NBC Nightly Newo

lllrt-

Pupploo
to - ·
Booglo. 114-+lf:ns.
·

Q

~y

Reorr~ ,e- lttttrs of th e
0 ·four
ICromb led wards be·

EVENING

- . ... 110. One
- h Golllo Hlah
Uma.. Dlpoel. lf4-

'IWD

_....;.,....._;,_.:, 14ilo4

1:00 (]) Harclcaolle And

u-. v...

-

....... ~ 72,000
14,101....,...n01.

wo..

M

THURS., DEC. 21

•

'

42 Mobile Homll
for Rent

2bt, -

1---:l;,;:nstructlon - -

"-

.,,._1'114,

ot1'71t-ta1.

C. 114 IIIWh

SChools &amp;

M

,-.-.oeo.eo••••,...
. . 41,100--.....,.
_. . Lo--·

... '
tlli-11 .......
I
ll'll,tiOO. .....~=
. ....., ldJ • •

-7:GOp.lll.lor_l_

J

.,.._.7211.

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December 21. 1989

Ohio

Sentinel

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�Thursday, December 21, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Daly Sentinel

'· I

VC!I.40. No.1 59
Copyrlghtod 1888

-Christnurs iS... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

DECEMB.ER 22
8 AM to MIDNITE

DECEMBER 23
8 AM to MIDNITE

DECEMBER 24
8AMto6PM
40

33%·
OFF

ENTIRE STOCK
SWEATERS

MEN~S

LONG SLEEVE
KNIT SHIRTS

ALL FAMOUS BRAND
WATCHES

,,. ·.

--!to ---

40 017[0 OFF
EVERYDAY

ALL STERLING SILVER
JEWELRY

LOW PRICE

SALE 1.79 TO 45.59

12 99.
•

TOP 20 COMPACT DISCS

3.00
OFF
2~~-~~~9
NINTENDO®
VIDEO SOFTWARE
SALE 26.99 TO 51.99

5.99
EA.
LADIES' TULTEX

NOW

BASIC FLEECEWEAR
WAS 7.99 EA.

33% OFF ~~:;l~5T
ALL LADIES'
HANES HOSIERY
SALE 1.84 TO 2.64

30

01
7(0

OFF

29.99
BLACK &amp; DECKER %INCH
SALE

VARIABLE SPEED DRILL

~

MEN'S HANES
10 P.R. PKG. TUBE SOCKS
I

6.99
GAL.
PRESTONE

SALE

ANTIFREEZE

SALE 2.79 TO 8.29

GLASSWARE SET

ALL LADIES'
BOXED SETS

SALE 2.09 TO 9.79

30

01
7(0

OFF

ouR REG.
3 .89-11 .99

ALL LADIES' PURSE
ACCESSORIES
. SALE 2.72 TO 8.39 ·

33%
OFF
~:::~9
SELECT LADIES' and
FULL FIGURE ROBES
and LOUNGEWEAR
SALE U9 TO 20.09

SELECT FLANNEL SLEEPWEAR
SALE 5.11 REG. 8.99
SELECT FUU FIGURE SLEEPWEAR
SALE 8.11 REG. 9.99 ·
LADIE8' FLANNEL SLEEPWEAR
SALE 1.11 REG. 8.99
FULL FIGURE FLANNEL SLEEPWEAR
SALE 1.11 REG. 9.99

33 %OFF 1~:1R2E~9
SELECT MEN'S
BOX~D ACCESSORIES
~ALE

12 PC. DECORATED or 18 PC.
UNDECORATED SALE 3.98 EA.
REG. 5.99 ea.
24 PC. UNDECORATED
SALE 5.81 REG. 8.99
41 PC. UNDECORATED SALE 8.89
REG. 12.99

30 Ol70 OFF

99• TO 8.70

4.49

SALE
1

MEN'S
FLANNEL SHIRTS
1

; REG. 5 .99

I

SALE 2 FOR 5.

RI'JS,R QUEEN NUTS
(10 OZ.)

25 ot0 OFF

ALL NOVELTY
GIFTWARE

SALE 2.83 TO 13.84

26.66
6 PC. CORNING VISIONS
SALE

COOKWARE SET
IIV300 REG. 34.44

2.99·.7.49

SALE 2.24 TO 5,81

25% OFF ou~:iG
ALL POPCORN FILLED
TINS (30 ,OZ.-40 OZ.)
SALE 7.49

25 o1
0 ·oFF
7~ELECT

.
OUR REG .
3.77·19.n

ouR REG .

ALL HOLIDAY
BOXED CANDY

SALE

REG. 3.99
ouR REG .
2.99·13 .99

MEN'S ROBES

"/,(

2.99
12 PC. UNDECORATED

OURREG.
5.99·19.99

SALE 4.01 TO 13.39

RECHARGEABLE
FLASHLIGHT

REG. 8.99
ouR REG.
3 .99·8 .99

A~L

SALE 12.99
$3 MFG. REBATE AVAILABLE
REG. 16.99

t~Unlted' Siatessetaone-month

REG. 1'0.99

.

33' 010
7[ OFF

#7144 REG. 34.99

ALL LADIES' BOXED
HOSIERY, PANTIES

30 01
7[0 OFF

"

ouR AEG .
2.99·75.99

points In the capital. routing
. pockets of'l'I!Sistance and: pi'HI1ng the search fqr. stronam!ln
aeri:' Mimilel Antonio Noriega,
Panama's irewleader saldhearid

7.22

:sALE

ouR REG .
15.99·399.99

SALE 7.99 TO 199.99

Sf)'Jit! 1M)' .,.,., bf s/Ort

P~AMA ctrY, Panama

REG . 14.99

(UJfl) •- As u.S. troops held key

ALL 10K and 14K .
GOLD JEWELRY

REG. 1 .... 17.99........ 8.69 TO 12.05

,

, FLANNEL SHIRTS

SALE 29.99 TO 112;49

50 017(0 OFF-

11.44
MEN'S QUILTED

I .

OUR REG .
4 a7-9.99

PHOTO ALBUMS
SALE 3172 TO 7.49

E~

»• ~ t&gt;h&lt;JIQ a.b1m not fti:Wed

25 01
7(0 "'FF
v .

ouR REG .

6.99·14 .99

ALL POPULAR
FRAGRANCES

SALE 5.24 TO 11.24

1 89

'

2PK.C,D,AA,

33%MEN'S
OFF 1~~~-~~9

ENERGIZER BA TIERIES

WOVEN SHIRTS
SALE 10.04 TO 11.38

4 PK. AA SALE 2.91 PK.

a

AAA, 1 PK. IV

REG. 2.29 PK.

REG. 3-49 PK.

Middleport, admires a pretty package wblcb Is
sure to dell«ht some relative or friend on
t~hrli!ltmas monlng.

A llo!ultlmodio inc:. N-opopor

Record low readings
recorded around Ohio
below In Youngstown, all records
for the day.
Friday's artie air was just the
latest bout with record low
temperatures this month.
"lt's too early to tell," Bill
Sites of the National Weather
Service In Cleveland said, "but If ·
we were going to make some kind
of projection, II looks like It's
going to be one of the four coldest
December's on record. "
The weather service projected
the average temperature for the
month will be lit the 21-degree to
23-degree range In the Cleveland
area.
1983 Was Also Cold
The record of 20.5 was set In
1876. The coldest December
during the 1980s was 1983, when
the average temperature was
23.2.
Some people refused to let the
weather get the best of them.
"I'm a Clevelander, not a
whlmpy southern Californian,"
Mark Kaufman said. ·'This
weather would be news In
Florida."
,
The warmest parts of OhiO
Friday were expected to experience only 5 degree above zero

By RICH EXNER
United Pretia IDler national
Friday was )he coldest De·
cember day on record across
much of Ohio, with temperatur~s
dipping to 20 degrees below zero
In some areas and wind chill
values as low as 50 below, but the
records might not last long.
The National Weather Service
predicted lows of 10 below to 20
below zero again Friday . night
and early Saturday.
GaiHa Just Mluet1 Mark
In southern Ohio, Gallipolis
just missed a record December
low reading with a low overnight
of minus 12.5 degrees. Gallipolis'
record low was minus 13, which
was established on Dec. 21, 1942
and equaled on Dec. 25, 1983.
Record low December 2.2 Gallipolis reading prior to today was
minus four, established In 1963.
The 20 below zero readings
Friday morning In Dayton and
Cincinnati set records for the
month, ·a s did 17 below readings
In Columbus and Mansfield and a
15 below reading In Cleveland.
It was 18 below In Toledo and
Findlay, 17 below In Zarreilvllle,
16 below at Akron-Canton and·ll

readings.
Several schools across ,the
state canceled their last scheduled day of classes before the
Christmas holiday.
The weather service warned o{
the ·d angers of exptosure to wind
chUI values far below zero, but
notalllnhabltan ~ o!Ohlowere ln

danger.
"The animals are pretty adap·
table to any environment that
they're In," Toledo Zoo spokeswoman Betsy Warner said.
Warner said the bears and
cheetahs, which are native to
Africa, llave thick fur and were
accustomed to the cold. Most
animals are moved Indoors
where they can bevleweddurlng
the winter.
"We start preparing for this In
the summer." Warner said. ''We
make sure the exhibits are easily
converted."
Snow Ia Some Areu
The cold temperatures were
accompanied by snow In some
areas of the state, especially the
snow belt of northeast Ohio,
where three to six Inches were
reported overnight and the snow
continued early Friday. ·

Phillips
home
leveled
by
fire
Endora· believes ·he c~ he in
complete contrOl withi.fi month

SALE

OUR REG. 39.99·149.99

GIRLS', 4-U

•

GJVlNG AND RECEIVING - Cbrllltmu .. a
tme for rememberlllg otben aad having otben
remember you. Here JenoUer Ashley, elpt year.
old daugb&amp;er of Dwight and Wanda Ashley of

ouR REG
8.99·19 .99

25-30%0FF

t.

IIE0.12.1..27.H .......8.70 TO 18.75

BOYS', S,lt,L.XL
RE0. 11 ....11.H - ..8.03 TO 12.05
.Ill BOYS', 4-7
REG. L ...10.11....... 8.02TO 7.36

·33 017[0 OFF.

' SALE 8.02 TO 13.39

.

REG. 17....22.H....12.05 T015.40

Ol!R_REG.
3.99 6.99

SALE 2.39 TO 4.19

REG. I ...H.H ...- ..6.62 TO 20.0V

BIG MEN'S. b•:Uc

OFF

ALL LCD WATCHES

LADIES', S,M,L

liEN'S. S,M,l,XL

01
7(0

3 s.ctiono. 21 Pogeo 211 C.ntl

Pomeroy-Middleport. ·o hio, Friday, December 22,1989

•

'

tareet date for removal of
American Invasion forces.
U.S.·Installed President Gull·
lerrnoEndaraspokeofthetarget
date even though Panama City
was beset by confusion. Loo11ng
was rampant, with thousands ·
breaking store windows and
carting off goods, taking time
only to wave at passing u,s.
troops and duck stray bullets.
u.s. soldiers and vehicles took
positions around the Cuban,
Nicaraguan and Libyan embassles Thursday, witnesses a.nd
sources Inside the ·diplomatic
misSions said. The Cuban and
Nicaraguan embassies denied
l'lll'hors they had granted No·
rlega refuge and Libyan officials
could not be reached for
comment.
Nicaragua retaliated by surrounding the U.S. Embassy In
Managua In a standoff that
became increasingly tense as the
day wore on'.
The United State!!' most ex ten·
slve foreign military offensive
since Vietnam also continued to
take lis toll on American and
Panamanian lives. The Pen-

.

lagon reported 21 U.S . servicemen kUied, along with an Ame&lt;"l·
can woman c I vIlla n
schoolteacher, and 208·wounded. ·
Four .other servicemen were
missing.
A Panama City hospital admln·
lstrator said more than 100
Panamanians were dead and
more than 1,000 wounded. The
Pentagon said 59 ·members of
Noriega's Panamanian Defense
Forces were killed and 66
wounded.
A U.S. newsman was missing
In the capital and a photographer
lor . a Spanl,sh newspaper was
reported kllli!d by gunfire from
U.S. troops outside of the Marrl·
ott Hotel Thursday morning,
according to an account by a
Reuter photographer,
In Washington. President Bush
said he was satisfied with the
military action to oust Noriega
but admitted his frustration that
the Panamanian strongman,
wanted In the United States on
drug charges, had slipped
through the net set by 24,000 U.S.
troops Involved In tile operation
that began early Wednesday.
The United Slates has offered a
$1 million reward lor the capture
ol Noriega, who thanked his
supporters In a radio broadcast
Wednesday on National Radio.
U.S. military sources told pool
reporters that U.S. troops may

have missed Noriega by minutes
In the first hours of the Invasion
W~es:daY ,whep they !Jt'Oketnto
-one of . his hollies' lin~ found
clgarepes smoldering In
ashtraxs.
"The cigarettes were still
smoking In the ashtray and the
women left their purses, which
no wOT(lan would ever usually
do," satd a soldier familiar with
the - dw~lllng, called the "Witch
House"; becau~ of black magic
paraphernalia· found at the
scene.
Endara said In an Interview on
ABC-TV's "Nightllne" that he
and the; United States have set a
one-month target date lor with·
drawal of U.S. Invasion troops
from Panama and said he was
busy establishing a loyal pollee
and military force to support his
government once the troops
leave.
''We are right now putting a .
target date of one month," he ·
said. :
In W~jshlngton, Lt. Gen. Tom
Kelly t"ld reporters most of
Panama City was secure, giving
E!!dara 1a chance to be formally
Inaugurated In the Legislative
Palace Thursday afternoon. Endara, wbo had apparently won a
May election Noriega annulled.
was swprn . Into office minutes
before the Invasion began shortly
after midnight Wednesday.
'

Nationwide shortage of p~pane
.
M
.
~ having affect m eigs!area
I

I

NANCY YOACHAM
patty Sendnel staff .
A nationwide shortage of liquid
propane gas Is haVIng Its afiectln
MelgB and sur.roundlng counties,
Ia Licking County, an estimated
5,000 residents are said to be In
potential danger because of the
continuing bitter colb and a
dwindling propane supply. Most
of those residents live In mobile
homes.
Here In Meigs County, "Ferrel·
!gas bas a severe shortage on
bottle gas, "Iva Sisson, customer
service representative for Ferrellgas, of Minersville, said this
morning.
Currently, Sisson reports, her
company Is not seiUng any tanks
and II only supplying 200 gallons
to th0110 customers most In need.
In addition, Ferreltgas Is urging
customers to conserve propane
lliJiplles by turnln&amp;' down therIIIOitata and dressing warmly.
On the otlw!r hand, George
Grate, of Rutland Bottle Gas, Is
net laaulng conservation warnlllp to bls customers at this point
b«au• Grate feels the shortage
lajlllt a ploy to raise prices. "It's
aobll ally high," says Grate.
I

Grate's ~ostto buy the gas which
he then supplies to customers Is
Increasing from six to 11 cents a
day , he says, which of course ·
means a cost Increase to
customers.
Likewise, Ferrellgas, and Fer·
rellgas customers, are also payIng considerably more for
propane.
"Basically," explains Brenda
Clevenger, an employee of the
Ferrellgas Communications De·
partment, Liberty, Mo., "there Is
a supply and distribution shor·
tage throughout the country
whlc)l Is affecting all fuel supp·
lies·, not just propane gas."
The shortage Is caused by
extreme cold temperatures not
only In the United States but In
Europe as well. According to
Information being suppUed to
Ferrellgas companies In 46
states.' cold weather In Europe
means that European pi'OIIuct
which would normally be lm·
ported to the U. S. Is staying In
Europe.
But Grate believes the current
shortage exists becau&amp;C a large
Texas refinery has put a halt on
operations and shut down pipe·

line sup~ly to the east. "They can
refine as easily In winter as In
summe!l. They're just trying to
create~ shortage," he says.
So far. Grate bas adequate
supply lo meet the needs of his
custom~rs. but be Is monitoring
the sltu~jtlon and Is not taking on
new c:Ustomers. Grate antlcl·
pates thht as soon as the weather
warms little, the ptpeltne will
start tlo\vlng again •'and by then,
the prlcfl will be out-of-sight."
Just lin case the propane
shortag~ becomes worse Instead
of bette~. Sisson says thai Ferrellgas ha~ contacted appropriate
authorities Ia the area, such as
Bob B:Y,er, director of Meigs
Emergehcy Medical Services,
regardtrjg emergency sheIters
and suppUes tor customers of
Ferrellg~s. "We hope It doesn't
come to .that," says Sisson, "but
If It doe$, our company Is trying
to do anything It can to meet the
needs of•our customers."
Jim Ridenour, of Ridenour's of
Chester, another Meigs County
propane gas supplier, was un·
avallablz this morning to report
on his oompany's propane gas
supply . ;

a

home at the time because he has
been staying with relatives.
The exterior of the house was
stone but the frame Interior was
destroyed. Darst stated that the
fire burned three rooms downstairs and also Into the attic.

The home of Elwood Phillips,
971 S. Second, Middleport, was
destroyed by fire this morniRg.
The Middleport Fire Depart·
ment was called out at 7.: 24 a.m.
and according to Middleport Fire
Chief Jeff Darst, Phillips was not
. •

1·

..

- •

•'

y'

/~

HOUSE FIRE- The unoccupied home of Elwood Pltllllpl,l71 S.
Second St. In Middleport wu deslroyed by fire this· momlng.
Phillips was aot home at the time because be bas been staylag wltb
relatives. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris, )
.

Local news briefs----.
'No paper Monday
The Dally Sentinel office will closed on Monday , Dec. 25, In
order to permit employees to observe the Christmas holiday .
Normal office hours and publication will resume Tuesday.

Deputies probe two accidents
Deputies of the Meigs County · Sheriff's Department
Investigated two accidents on Thursday.
The first accident was a hit skip accident that occurred at9: 15
a.m on private property at Reedsville. According to the report, .
a 1981 Chevrolet operated by Irma Bay, Barr Hollow Road,
Reedsville, was parked at Reeds Store. When she came out, abe
discovered that an unknown vehicle, she believed to be a pickup
tguck. had backed Into the left front fender. The vehicle
sustained moderate damage and the Investigation Is
continuing.
·
The aecond accident occurred on Sharon HollOw Road just off
County Road 35 around 2: 22 p.m. According to the report,
James Smith, 52, Portland, was northbound on Sharon HoUow
Road wben he collided with a vehicle operated by Jerry L.
McPherson.
The reported •tated that McPherson had backed out Into the
roadway and was not able to eet bla vehicle movlna In time
because of the snow covered road. McPber1011'1 veblcle wu not
damaaed, and Smith's vehicle was lightly damaaect. 'n1ere
were no Injuries and no cltatlolll.
Deputies . also took a report of a car fire at 3: 30 p.m. on
Thursday . The !Ire occurred on Seneca Road near Rock
Sprlnp. According to the report, Martha Vanarl, Seneca Road,
Continued on page 16

Phillips had no Insurance and
Darst noted that house " will
pr~bly be ·a total ioss. "
The department was Qn the
scene for approximately three
and one half hours, and there
were no Injuries.

Report
Ceausescu
has fallen
BUDAPEST, Hungary (UP!)
- The hard-line communist
government of Romania " has
fallen" and President Nlcolae
Ceausescu, the last holdout
against reforms sweeping Eastern Europe, has disappeared,
Hungarian radio said Friday.
A former foreign minister •'has
taken charge of a group which
wants to save the country and
Ceausescu Is reported having
fled or about to flee to Tehran or
BeiJing," the radio said, quoting
a Hungarian reporter In
Bucharest.
The reported ouster of Ceausescu came after he declared a
nationwide state of .e mergency
Friday and the defense minister •
committed suicide amid growing
pro-democracy protests that
haVe swelled In the nation's
capital, foreign news agencies
reported.
French radio , citing French
diplomatic sources, also reported Ceausescu's fall and said
the Communist Party Central
Committee building wa s
evacuated.
Israeli Ambassador to Roma nia Zvl Maze! said Inan ln1erview
with Cable News Network,
" Ceausescu has disappeared."
The latest dramatic developments follow recent Uj)heavals In
western Romania , where pallce
and soldiers clashed with prodemocracy protesters, report·
edly leaving thousands dead . The
protests spread Thursday and
Friday ..to Bucharest, where
more civilians were reported
killed.

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