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Eastern,
.-Southern ·

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Ohio Lottery .·
•,

Rain tonight. Low in mid 305.
Ttttsday, cloudy. Hlgb In mid
• 40s.

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Vol. 42, No. 162
Cop~rlghted 1991

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Monday,·December 23, 1991

'

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cent a :
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Religious leaders call for
Ravenswood settlement
.

PROVIDING FOR OTHERS • Tbe Salvation
Army in Pomeroy distributed food baskets on
Saturday, .as well as toys, to families in need.
Enough was provided for 150 families. Pictured,
l·r, are Salvation A~y representatives, Norma

Boggess, Carrie McMillan, Dora Wining, Eloise
Adams and Pam West. Not pictured is Margaret
Robinson, wbo also assisted in preparing tbe
baskets.

.

By The Associated Press
The head of West Virginia's
Roman Catholic diocese said he
- and ·other churclr leaders have
entered the bitter fray between
Ravenswood Aluminum" Corp. and.
the United Steelworkers because of
their unique position.
"All the denominations find the
same thing. They've got people on
boUt sides of the issue," said Bishop Bernard W. Schmitt.
.. "They've got union peDjlle in
their congregations. They've got
management people in their congregations.and they've got replacement workers," he said.
"We're not conciliators. But we
. would like to offer -our services.
Sometimes people will listen to
religious leaders because they feel
we're not there to -take sides,"
Schmitt said Sunday.
Schmitt and Ute leaders of seven
other church groups in West VirginiaandOhiolastweeksentalet·

1er to Ravenswood Aluminum and
Steelworkers Local 5668 in
Ravenswood, calling on them to
settle their bitter, 13-month-long
labor dispute.
.
The leiter also was published as
an advertisement Sunday in The
Parkersburg News and the Sunday
Gazette-Mail of Charleston. It
appeared earlier in the week in The
Jackson Star News and The Jackson Herald.
About 1,700 Steelworkers have
been off the job at the Jackson
County alum_inum plant since Nov.
l, 1990, when their contract
expired. The union says Utey were
locked out, and the company says
they're on strike.
.
S in~;e then. both sides have
accused the, other of violence.
The dispute is "breeding great
division and great pain" in
Ravenswood, Schmitt said Sunday
from Wheeling.
.
T'heleuerfro!flthechurchlead-

ers said Christmas seemed the
appropriate time 10 caii for an end
tolhe dispute. _
"You wilf probably be singing
these familiar lines. 'The hopes and
fears of all the year.; are met in you
tonight,"· the letter said . "The
'you' this night is Ravenswood.
"If we can help you bring
together the jagged pieces of your
broken conversation or can· assist
you in any other way, please call
upon us," it said.
.
Beside Schmitt, oUters signing
the letter· were the leaders of the
Episcopal Diocese of West Virginia, the West Virginia Baptist
Convention, the Church of the
Brethren, the West Virginia Area
United Methodist Church, the Ohio
Conference of the United Church
of Christ, the West Virginia-Western Maryland Synod of the Evangelical LuUteran Church in Amcri..
ca and the Christian Church DisciplesofChristofWestVirgini~~ .

Voinov !ch warned last \veek ·
that if legislative leaders do not
want to cooperate in solving the
problem, he will do it by slashing
spending.
"If they're willing, I think we
can work out some altem;~tlves,"
Voinovich said. "if they don't
want to take responsibility. I'll do
what has to be done. l think it all
depends on the cooperation,that I
get from the legislature.' '
Voin~vich said he would
impose drastic cuts in government
programs to save the necessary
money. Fiscal experts have said 20
percent cuts may be necessary in
sorrle programs.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and House
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, won't say whether they
would support any tax increases.
even minor ones.
· ··'I'm not going 10 speculate on
that," Aronoff said. "It's premature. The governor is going to have
to do his constitutional duty and
come up with a balance-the-budget

program.
"I want to see the whole (financial) picwre before I see what I'm
going to do," Riffe said. Whatever
the solution, it should last through
l une 30,. 1993, Ute end of the bien
1
ni urn, he said. ·

.
d
t
t
d
t
•
·e
uce
s
·
.
a
e_
fOOD
a
100
.
R d
funds topic of ·Eastern board Governor offers choice of tax
increases or spending cuts
..
~

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ma was approved as a tuition stu- resolutions of commendation being
Sentinel News Starr
dent retroactively 10 Aug. 1991 and adopted by the board.
The possibilities of reduced for the remainder of the school
The bid submitted by John
funding in State Foundation monies year.
Turner for Nationwide Insurance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) and the effect it will have school
A resolution of appreciation was was accepted and modifications of Gov. George Voinovich said he
operations were discussed at the approved for I. 0. McCoy for his Title 6B 1991 Fund lO allow the won't seek big tax increases, but he
recent meeting of the Eastern 12 years and Charles Knight for his fund to be closed was approved.
is not rulinB out smaller ones.
Local Boanl of. Education.
two years of service 10 .the Eastern
Wednesday, Jan. 15, at 7 p.m.
Volnov1ch will not seek major
Supt. Richard D. Smilh reponed Local Schools is members of the ~as the dateese!};o! the.~!~lZI!: .... IW\..ins;!eaJcS)O balan~e ~ "sUite
10 lhC 'Boafdilha( siate lludget culs Board of Education. lin\" Slnith Pre- Ilona! meetmg w·ttfi tne regufar
budget, Curt Steiner, the. goverinvolving State Foundation pay- sented both outgoing members with meettng to follow at 7:15p.m. nor's deputy chief of staff said
ments 10 the•school is a real possi- plaques honoring their service.
Attending the meeting were Ray Sunday night.
'
bility. He said that projections
It was voted to join the Ohio Karr, president, Charles Knight,
But Voinovich said he plans 10
range from one 10 three ~rcent in School Boards Association for the vice president, and members, Bill propose smaller tax raises the Legstate funding due to a projected calendar year 1992. Honor rolls Hannum , I. 0 . McCoy. and Jtm islature hasrejectedinthepast.
shonfall in state revenues.
were approved for the second and Smith.
The governor will announce a
It was voted during the meeting third six weeks grading period with
plan in the ne~t two weeks to fend
to join the Ohio Coalition for Equioff a state deficit which could reach
ty and Adequa.cy of School Fund- .
$440 million by June 30, Steiner
ing for lhe 1991-92 school year.
said.
The Board discussed general
Increasing the cigarette tax by
discipline at the hi~h school and
10 cents a pack, emptying the
changed the polictes governing
state's '$100.4 million 'rainy-day
conduct in the hallways and fightfund" and repealing the.credit on
ing.
horse racing taxes that tracks
Dr. Donald Shue reported 10 the
receive for making capital
Board regarding .Farmers Bank's
improvements are among his prodonation for field trips and the
posals.
Board expressed appreciation for
Voinovich also supports letting
the generous donation.
private business instead of the state
Dawn Heideman, girls' varsity
run liquor sales and ending the 1.5
head basketball coach, addressed ·
percent of sales taxes retailers colthe board regarding assistant baslect for acting as tax collectors for
ketball coach payment.
the state, two proposals Ute legislaPersonnel employed during the
ture rejected this yw.
meeting include&lt;! Lilli Van Meter
Gregory Browning, state budget
as pan-time assistant to the 'treasur·
director,
said the proposals do not
er, effective Jan. 2 through June 30,
violate
the
governor' s campaign
to fill a vacancy left by the resignapledge
not
to
raise taxes~ Browniryg
tion of Linda Spencer. The hourly
has
said
the
promise relates to
rate for Dorothy Calaway was
major
tax
sources.
adjusted to cover payroll duties
The five measures could genef'
retroactive to Dec. I.
ate
an estimated $280 million a
James Bradbury, Richard King,
year,
about three-fifths of the budand M:iry Bush were employed as
get
gap.
··· substitute teachers for the balance
Only use of the rainy-day .fund
of the current school year, and
is
expected
to go unopposed by
Patsy Prater was hired as substitute
special
_interest
groups and their
GOING TO ENGLAND , Amber Cumings, left, daughter or
secretary for the balance of the
lobbyists.
None
of the measures
year. Nancy Morrissey was named Mr and Mrs. Rex Cumings, Syracuse, and Michelle McCoy,
can take effecrwithout a vote of
volunteer senior class play director. da~ghter or Mr. and Mrs. Barry McCoy, Syracuse, will leave for
the General Assembly.
London,
England,
on
Thursday.
They
will
perfor111
in
!be
Lord
The superintendent w~s given .
Voinovich has said he will order
authority to change the ume and Mayor of Westmins1er New Year's Day Parade. Cummgs and
deep
cuts in government spending
wages of the existing appwved McCoy, both seniors at Southern High·School, attended cheerlead·
if
the
legislature does not support
eKtra duty drivers as needs and lng camp at Kent State University where tbey were chosen as Allhis
proposals.
·
conditions warrant. Mariko Taya- Star Cheerleaders.

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OhioY!Mer !!~~

;faJ:j f/. / .J,y
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Consumer spending records big jump

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. . .--Christntas Is ... __,

Ashland man
killed in crash

WASHINGTON (AP) - ConConsumer spending represents fell $500 million after falling $5.1
sumer spending jumped 0.7 percent two-thirds of the nation's economic billion the previous month.
ROCK, Ohio (AP)
in Nqvember, the largest increase activity and thus is necessary to
., ~ HANGING
'
One
person
was
killed in a plane
.in six months, &lt;lespite a 0.1 percent sustain any economic recovery.
MONDAY
crash
which
toolc
authorities
about ·
decline in incomes, the government Many analysts questioned whether
DECEMBER
23
six
hours
to
locate,
the
State
Highsaid today..
.
consumption could continue to
way Patrol said.
The Commerce Department said ~row' without any increase in
John C. Preston, 39, of Ashland,
personal consumption .totaled $3.95 mcomes.
·
Ky., was -killed when the singletrillion at a seasonally adjusted
The department also said perengine plane h.e was · piloting
annual rate, up from $3.93 trillion sonal incomes totaled $4.88 trilcrashed about 10 p.m. Sunday in a
in October when•spending fell a lion, down from $4.89 trillion in
wooded area off Rock Hollow
revised 0.1 percent. The depart- October. It was the first decline
·Road
near U.S. 52·, said Cadet
ment originally estimated October s.ince.a 0.3 percent drop last July.
Chris
Smith
of the Ironton post.
spending dropped 0.3 percent.
The Labor Department, m an
The
wreckage
was fdund about
··The November gain was the earlier sign of falling incomes in
4:02a.m.
tOday,
he
said.
largest since an 0.8 percent rise last November, had reported that
Preston was the only per:son on
May.
241,(/00 jobs ":ere lost Utat_month.
the craft, Smith said. No, other
Still, most of the advance repreDisposable mcomes ~ mcomes
injuries were reponed.
sented a $19.2 billion. increase in · after taxes- fell 0.2:percent af~r
Smith said Preston attempted 10
services, rather than m goods; A a 0.3 percent advance !D October.
land
at the Ashland-Boyd Airport
spokesman said utilities purchases
The difference between in®.mes
in
Kentucky
but decided to make a
·represented $6._7 billion of t~e and spending meant· Americans'
HANGING THE STOCKINGS • Justtwq days 'til Christmas,
loop for a second attempt to land.
increase and medtcal care, $6.0 bll- savmgs rate edged down 10 4.7 perand like most yqungsters, Arcellla Laude~mi.lt is ucited as she
The airport lost radill and radar
hangs her stocking by the fll'eplace. Arcelha IS lhe four-year-old
lion.
cent from 5.5 percent a month earDAYS UNT'IL
contact• with the craft when it
Spending on "durable and non- .lier.
.
•
.
daughter or P~ul and ~ouise Lauder milt, Legion Terrace,
attempted the second pass, Smith
durable goods increased just $6.6
A key component of the ~~!come
Pomeroy.
·
CHRISTMAS
said.
billion.
category - wages and salanes t
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Monday, Dec~mber 23, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

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·Dairy farmeFs getting. milked by Agriculture-

111 ca11art $tJeet
PomeJ07, Oblo

_WASHINGTON - American · him the rental !ncome. He could
~
da1!Y farmers walh~gly marched not keep up wath h1s own lease
I
DEVOTED TO THE JNTBRE81'8 OF 'lD DIGS-MASON AREA
thear cattle to the slliughter houses payments to the landowner. He
_
Jnn e19t·o86fferweche_n the federal govern- defaulted on the ,land I~ •..arul..the1 1
•'
,- 11 1 . 1110_p&amp;y"1lfern- !Ogetoutl analord rented the property to
'
of the milk busmess. It was cheaper someone else- a dairy fanner.
'•
for Uncle ~am to takUhe~ws..out
Without doing anything himself,
of p~~ucuon !IJao to conunue to Juekoff had broken his deal with
'
subsHiize the malk glut. .
the federal government. The land
ROBERT L. WINGETr
But
for
a
few
fanners
who
were
the government paid him to keep
Publlsbtr
I
dazzled by the cash, the backlash out of dairy production was once
I
from the Drury Termmallon Pro- again the home to a herd of cows.
• PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
gram has become th.e Termmator T·he Agriculture Department
••
Assistant Publlsber/Controller
General Manager
ll.
demanded a $40,000 refund from
In all •. the program ~d farmers Juekoff, ia)chiding payment 'for the ·
AMEMBER ollb~ Associated !nss, Inland Daily Press Association and
$1.5 bllhon to slaughter 9r export years when he kept his end of the
lbe American Newspaper Publisher Association.
1,636,979 cows .. The program was bargain.
tn part responsible fora drop tn
Pieter Sybrandy of Washington
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less dJan 300
dairy suppon payments by the gov· state is in debt to the Agriculture
words long. All letters are subject Ill editing and muSt be signed with name,
ernment from $2 billion a year Departf\\ent $250,000 because he
!lddress and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
before the fanners were bo•ght out, took the government's money and
sbould be in good taste, addmsing issues, not personalilies.
to$500 million last year.
then defaulted on a property lease.
All the farmers had to do was The Iandlord-re-rented the property
take the mone~ and promise that to a,dairy farmer. Sybrandy, who
the land on which those ·cows had had to declare bankruptcy,
been kept would not be used for appealed to federal district court
daory producuon for the next ftve and the judge ruled in· his favor
years. Some of th?se farmers have saying that the government's deci·
•
•
learned how hard lias to keep that. sion was "patently absurd." Ilut
promise. ·
· the U.S. Cotirt of Appeals reversed
Wolf Juekoff of N~w York got the lower court, deferring to the
$50,000 to slaughter his herd of 50 authority of the Al!riculture Depart·
cows, and he agreed not to make ment.
By ROBERT E. MILLER
avaalable to other dairy fanners any
Ralph Martelle of Vermont
Associated Press Political Writer
farm he owned or rented. What he made $29,000 when he disposed of
COLUMBUS - Richard Celeste showed ilp at a Democratic Party didn't anticipate is that the house his herd of 26 cows. B.ut when the
fund-raiser and sparked new speculation that he may be wanning up for a on the land he rented would bum 10 Agriculture Department sent some:
campaign to return as governor in 1994.
the ground. Juekoff had su~let the one around to make a spot check of
He let go last week with a shot at Republicans, including Gov. George house to tenants, and the ftre cost his bam 10 malfe sure it wiiS·empty,
Voinovich, apparently ending· almost a year of self-imposed political
abstinence.
The 53-year-old Celeste was invited to the event to imroduce Arkansas
_. Gov. I!ill Clinton, an old friend and colleague who is running for the
·. party's nomination for presidem in 1992.
·
Celeste did it with gusto: "Bill Clinton has been a thoughtful leader of
.· his state. He is !)right, experienced, and he is still a young man. Bill Clin.. ton is ready to become a great leader for the United States."
. .. That, in addition to his GOP-bashin~. also prompted the curious
. · among some 200 party faithful to wonder af Celeste may be pondering an
invitation to be Clinton's vice presidential running mate.
He did not endorse Clinwn 1 however, and indicated he has not picked a
favoriie among the early Democratic contenders.
·
"I came to introduce, not endorse," he said, smiling, as he and his
wife, Dagmar, shook hands among the county chairmen and $1,000 contributors 10 the party.
·
In an interview, he said: "I'm out of politics." He handed over one of
his business cards, listing his new fmn, Institute for Training Intercultural
•. Management.
Celeste, who led frequent international trade missions as governor, said
.. he has been helping U.S. and Japanese business leaders understand cultur: al differences that can hamper world trade.
· He held a recent seminar for IBM and said he has five more scheduled.
·: In his speech introducing Clinton, Celeste lashed out at the disastrous
- ,policies of President Bush and his predecessor, R~nald Reagan, in allow.··ing the federal deficit to soar to $3.5 trillion.
,' The increase has been greater than those of all ~residents "from
George Washington through Jimmy Carter combined,' he said. " We've
been am-Bushed."
Then Celeste said: ''We're going to get rid of George Bush. And that
: mher George, whatever his name is, over in the Statehouse."
The Democrats gbve him a standing ovation.
Celeste considered a bid for the 1988 presidential nomination but
backed away after deciding he ~auld not taise the $5 million he said it
would take to wage a viable campaign.
:: · Wh'en he ,left .the governor's office, lie refused to rule out a return 'to
;~ national or state politics. He said he wanted 10 spend some time " in the
When conservative commenta- tion of hooliganism. He lost a year
. ; ;l.l'ced patch," an old Statehouse term that means political seclusion.
tor
Patrick Buchanan announced he of collese and a scholarship after a
.J • .
would be a Republican candidate fight WJth cops. Buchanan's chro.._... ·
for the presidency, he promised his mosomes simply do not carry a
lilt wit() George Bush w.ould be a gene for peaceful discourse.
clash of ideas and not of personali· Indeed, if they did, Richard Nixon
tics.
might have finished out two full
The exact words he uttered in terms in office and be more
:::
By The Associated Press
respectfully regarded today.
-: Today is Monday, Dec. 23, the 357th day of 1991. There are eight days Concord, N.H., were these:
"This
race
will
not
be
about
How so, you say? Because Pat
:: left in the year.
persona
lities
....
George
Bu
sh
Buchanan was the afflatus behind
j Today's Highlight in Histol)':
.
·
~.
Fifty years ago, on Dec. 23, 1941, Amencan forces on Wake Island served bravely in America's great Nixon's vicious attempts to pum.
war; George Bush is a man of gra· mel the press iniO submission, and
~ surrendered to the Japanese.
ciousness,
honor and integrity who that contributed substantially to the
·' On this date:
·
has
gi_
ven
half a lifetime to his president's downfall.
; ~ In 1783, George Washington resigned as commander-in-chief of the
cpuntry's service. But the differ·
It was Buchanan - then a
~ Army and retired to his home at Mount Vernon, Va.
ences
between
us
now
are
too
deep.
White House speechwriter and
~
In 1788, Marylan4 v01ed 10 cede a 10-sqllljre·mile area for the seat of
He is a globalist and we are nation- media watchdog- who proposed
I' the national government The area became the District of Columbia.
.
~: In 1805, Joseph Smith Jr., the founder of the Mormon Chu(Ch, was alists .... He would put America's in November 1969, that Spiro
wealth and power at the service of Agnew be designated the point
-' born in Sharon, Vt
some
vague New World Order; we man on the press assault team.
~ : In 1823, the poem "A Visit from St Nicholas" by Clement C. Moore
will
put
America first."
·: was published ooonymously in the Troy (New York) Sentinel.
·
It was Buchanan who wrote the
If
this
is true, i~ will be a memo- infamous Agnew speech about the
•• In 1928, the National Broadcasting Company set up a permanent,
rable political season. Pat-the- "gaggle Of commentators' ' who
: coast-to-coast network.
·
: ln -1947, the transistor, a milestone in the field of electronics, was pugilist playing political patty- demonstrated their contempt for
;. invented by Walter H. Brattain, John Bardeen and William Shockley of cake? I'd sooner put my money on Nixon "by the expressipns on their
;: llell Laboratories.
. a Jerry Brown landslide.
faces, the tone of their questions,
Patrick Joseph Buchanan was and the sarcasm of their respons·: In 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and six other Japanese
born bellicose. His 1987 memoir, es."
·~ war leaders were executed in Tok,yo.
: In 1967, President Lyndon B.Jolmson, on his way home from a visit to " Right From the Beginning,"
It was Buchanan who coined the
gleefully chronicles his youthful term "instant analysis," fJTSt used
~ Southeast Asia, held an unprecedented meeting with Pope Paul VI at the
rumbles and amounts 10 a celebra- by Agnew in that very speech, to
• Vatican.
·
-;.: In 1968, 82 crew members of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo were
~ released by Nonh Korea, II months after th~ir capture by the commu• nists.
In 1975, Richard S. Welch, the Central Intelligence Agency station
chief in Athens, was shot and killed outside his home.
The Ghost of Christmas Past· the good old days or just the! year
In !980, a state funeral was held in Moscow for former Premier Alexei stands at the table and proclaims in 1991.
N. Kosygin, who died Dec. 18 at age 76:
a very loud voice, ''Things have
Which is the way it is as Christ·
In 1987, Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, serving a life sentence for the really changed."
mas 1991 gives way to the New
attempt~ assassination of President Ford in 1975, esca ped from the
The Ghost of Chrisunas Present' Year of 1992. It has been an
Alderson Federal Prison for Women in West Virginia. (She was recap. elbows him aside and impatiently incredible journey over the past 12
tuned two days later.) .
asks, "What have you done:'for me mq,nths, but in the classic words of
Ten years ago: President Reagan announced a set of economic sane· lately?" No one knows who he is the vaudeville routine, we're con·
lions against Poland's military government in response to the imposition asking, and so no one replies.
stantly reminded that we "ain't
of martial law. Poland's ambassador to Japan, Zdzislaw Rurarz, was
The Ghost of Chrisunas Future seen no thin' ye~"
granted poUtical asylwn in the United States.
·
stumbles into the room, moaning
Take the old year first. It began
Five years ago: The experimental airplane, Voyager, piloted by Dick and crying aloud, "Re~n~ repent, with George Bush, sitting on lOp of
Rittan and Jeana Yeager, neared the end of its non-stop, round-the-world for the end IS at hand.' He mourn- fast·climbing popularity, making
night as il flew along Mexico's Pacific CoastiOward EdwardS Air Force fully refuses to say whether he final decisions about the shape and
Base in California.
means the end of the bad old days, timing of Desen Storm. T~ economy was in trouble, but just about
everyone was optimistic that things
would tum up by late summer or
fall. With the speedy victory
against Iraq, confidence and pride
soared. The nation's mihtary
machine seemed invincible, the
United Nations appeared to -be
working at last and the Americarf
century, far from coming to a close,
gave promise of enduring into the
third millennium.
The main reason for optimism,
however, was that the Soviet Union
was disintegrating before our eyes.
The Cold War was over. National-

.

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Celeste surfaces
at political event

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

they found 20 cows standing '
around. The dry cows- not being
u!'ed in milk production at that time
-belonged-to-Manelle!s-son•in· ::~=:-:2::::~:..:_;::::::;;:::::;:-~
law, who, unbeknownst to
Martelle, was keeping them there
temporarily . On the advice of a Dairy Termination Program. The
local agriculture offiCial, the son- dairy farmer who had signed that
in-law slaugHtered 20 of his own pact was fined _$8,500. Then, sym·
cows, thinking that the federal gov- pathetic congreSsmen on the House
emment would be satisfied. B.ut it and Senate Agriculture Commit·
was bad advice. Martelle was fined tees, Sen. Slade Gorton, R,Wash.,
$279,000 anyway for breaking his and Rep. Sid Morrison, R-Wash:,
deal.
,
solved the farmer's problems by
· The· appeals system ·is stacked tailoring some legislation to him.
against these farmers. Their first Tiley inserted a clause in a 1991
coun is a county committee for the . Agriculture bill that exempted
federal Agricultural Stabilization farmers who were victims of natu·
and Conservation Ser~ice. From ral disasters for a· brief five-month
there, the farmer appeals to a state period.
.
ASCS committee and then to the
Congress has shown some signs
federal ASCS. The oqly hitch is
.that the local and state committees that it doesn't trust the Agriculture .
have no authority -to grant relief to Department to use common sense.
a farmer due to extenuating cir- In the 1990 fann bill, Congress ere·
cumstances, and the federal board · ated a separate appeals division in
is 1101 obliged to look at the case the Agriculture Departm ~nuo
unless the farmer brings new infor- fanners rould gefa more.fair shake
mation that wasn't considered by from a host of programs. Sources
the local boards. It's a Catch-22 on Capitol Hill told OYr reporter
that leaves the fanners knee deep in Nick Budnick thatthe impetus
debt
·
.
behind the bill was Congress' susQne Washington state farmer picion that the dairy terminators
finally got someone to see how were not the only heavy-handed
silly the system is. When his barn bureaucrats in the Agriculture
'
was destroyed by a flood , he got Department.
permission to park his cows ternporarily on another farm that had
For some of the farmers we
been taken out of production by the talked to who have already been
victimized , the relief comes too
late. The appeals process is not
retroactive to their cases.
MINI-EDITORIAL ..., The Pen. tagon has been casting about for a
defense for its indefensible ban
against homosewals in the miliJary. The old excuse was· that the
presence of gays would demoralize
other soldiers and threaten the dis·
cipline of the military. Now a federal judge has given the Pentagon
another excuse - AIDS. Banning
gays from military service is a justifiable way to keep AIDS out of
the services, according to a ruling
by U.S. District Judge Oliver
Gasch. The decision came from the
appeal of a gay midshipman who
was forced out of the Naval Academy for his sex ual preference.
Maybe the Pentagon 1\lissed the
news, but AIDS is no longer confined to the homosexual communi·
ty. If the Pentagon is &amp;oing to usc
AIDS as an excuse to discriminate
against gays, it will have to eliminate some ·long-held military traditions, including shore leave.

UOUOUOI
\

Bellicose Pat Buchanan runs hard

~.. Today
.

in bistory

The Dally Sentlnei-P8Q~

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

'

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By Joseph Spear

describe the co-mmentary·that routinely follows a presidential
address.
For six years, Buchanan pound- closely with Reagan during the first
ed the anti-press drum. He urged six years." As Speakes described it
Nixon to veto funds for public tele- in his 1988 book "Speaking Out":
"We wasted more time and
vision; he campaigned to break up
energy
in meetings uying to pacify
the networks; he called on co!'J]Ora·
lions to use their advertising dollars Buchanan on every conceivable
to bring the networks to heel and subject than we did making decion viewers to boycott the products sions. In dealing with Congress,
of companies that sponsored news Pat lived to veto. He was always
looking to pick a major fight .... I
shows.
It cannot be argued that Pat hadn' t encountered anyone like Pat
Buchanan ignited the anti-media since I had to deal with the White
fires thai burried within Richard Citizens' Councils in my days as a
Nixon, but he fanned the flames . Mississippi newspaper editor.
with gusto. Thanks to Pat That's not to say that Pat was at all
Buchanan, the press was in no racist, just that he was so blindly
mood to show mercy when the reactionary."
On the continuum of conser·
Watergate scandal erupted.
vatism,
Pat Buchanan is to the right
After a hiatus as a putative jour·
nalist, Buchanan returned to the of respectable, just to the left of
White House in 1985 as Ronald rancid. Call it the Rancorous Right.
Reagan's director of communica- Indeed, I would go so far as to
lions and immediately resumed his argue that he is as responsible for
rabble-rouser role. ·'From my point the acrimony that has permeated
of view," wrote press secretary politics over the past two decades
Larry Speakes, "Pat Buchanan as any person in the counuy.
So, will it be Pat the Pacific or
caused more trouble in only two
Pat
the Provocateur'/
years than anyone else who worked
. I'm betting cin a brawl.
.

Will the future pass America by?
H odding Carter III

ism· had triumphed ovet ideology.
The hard facts of economic failure
had crashed down on commu.nism's Potemkin village, leaving end of history t~an history ' s
rubble in their wake.
reassertion of itself. .Given its pre·But 1991 was not in the mood . communist past, that was a less
for straight-line projections, or for inviting prospect than many Amerivictory parades uumpin~ victory can triumphalists appeared to
parades. Saddam Hussein s refusal believe.
to leave the stage became a symbol
The 50th anniversary of Pearl
of the past's stubborn legacy. Harbor on Dec- 7 provided a vivid
Yugoslavia becam~ an unavoidable reminder of history's fondness for
reminder thai while nationalism ironic jokes. Japan, brou$ht down
might be a political fact of nature, by the hubris that sparked Jts daring
it was more often akiri 10 an Ciu1b· attack on the U.S. Pacific fleet in
quake than a spring rain. The econ· Hawaii, has emerged like the
amy drew a deep breath, Ioo.ked ··Phoenix from the ashes.of defeat. It
around, and wenl baciC'· into the does not-yet bestride the world, but
tank.
·
it is hard to find any place in the .&gt;
" Be careful what you ask for, world without its footprints . At
because you might get it,'' our par- year's end, the Japanese challenge
•ents used to warn us, and by the had come to rest at the center of .
middle of December, that admoni- American policy, domestic as well
tion blanketed most of the former as foreign .
. .·
Soviet Union . ,Gorliachev had
No one needs the pollsters to tell
woathered the anev1table coup him that our national mood is sour ·
a~empt in Augu~t, but the agents of . an~ co~fused. The simplest expla·
h1~ phy_sacal .~ltverance .turned out nauon IS the economy, which mul· •
to be h1s pohucal ex~uuoners. For ishly refuses tp respond to rhetoric
the huge land mass that was once and lower interest rates
the Soviet Union, 1991 was less the _
·

.

dle~~~~~·~;~r~~;J:l~~·~;~~~~: ~~~:~r~$.~~:r~
Dec. 21, 1991 at the Exren@d Cafe

Facility
pltal. of•.Veterans MemoriaJ·Hos-

.
m une •
.m
MJddlejlort, the son of the late..
Harry Ra~hard and Helen Marie
_ Rus~ell Mills. He was a statiO!J!!lY. engmeer ~or the Cove~t 'Bakmg
Company m Middlepon and Ban·
quet Foods m WellsiOn. .
·
. He was a member of Middlepon
Farst Bapllsl Churc~ and the Mid·
dlepon Volunteer.r~ Depanm.~nt.
He was the fi!St hfe member of
the M1ddlewn yPD.
.
.
_He IS surv1~ed by ~as wafe,
Alace Gnrnm Mills of Middlepo~;
two daughters, Mrs. Harold (Adri·
enne) Muns o~ Lynchburg, V~., and
Rae. Ann Gwtazdowsky, M~ddle• port; a son, J~mes Russell Mills of
Pomeroy; a s~er, Irene ~bert of
Columbus; eaght grandchaldren;
and fiv~ great-grandchlldren.
Bes1des h1s parents, he was preceded m death by. a grandson,
George Muns, and a brother·tn·
law, Max Lambert. .
.
Services ~til be held Fnday at
II a.m. at FISher Funeral Home m .
.Mlddlepon. ~~~h the R~v . lames
Seddon omc1atmg. Buraal will be
mGravel Hill Ce111.etery.
· Friends may call at the funeral
· home Thursday 'from 2 p.m. to 4
p,m, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
There will be a firemen's
memorial service at 6:30 p.m. on
Thursday.

Betty Templeton
Betty' Templeton, 64, of
Pomeroy, died on Saturday
evening, December 21, 1991 at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was born in Racine ; the
daughter of Margaret Johnson of
Middlepon and the l81e Lee Stanley Johnson. She was employed by
se verallocal businesses.
Besides her mother, she is survived by a son, Roy (Judy) HQwell,
Comfon, W.Va.; a daughter, Mrs;
Gary (Dorothy) Lee, Amherst,
Ohio; a sister, Kathlyn McNichol,
Racine; three brothers, Stan Johnson of Racine, Caroll Johnson of
Middleport and FJed Johnson of
Columbus; seven grandchildren;
five great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Private funeral services were
held on Monday.
Arrangements were under the
direction of Fisher Funeral Home
in Middlepon.

Charles Sears

Legic
Feeney-Bennett
~t
I~,
Midillepan, and DAV, Pomeroy, ·
·· C WASHIN. GTON (AP) -

In

gressional district is dubbed ."the
earmuff." Texas has one that's
shaped like a tarantula crawling
oyer Dallas, ~ · ne.l'L,black-majarityc
.
.
. .

.
district in Vitginia. reac~ out with gave rise to·the word gerrymander.
All are pan of the messy decermial
some places by no more ·than a process of redrawing America's
riverbed.
political map to keep up with popuAll
modem versions of the ·Jation shifts revealed the census.

OHIO WuolhRr
tuesday, Dec. 24

Aecu~Weather• foreCast for daytime conditions and
MICH.

•
IToledo I 34~ I
PA.

.

IMansfield I 33•1•
IND.

i)

i)

•I Columbus I 33° I
i)
•

James Plants

lames "Jim" Plants, 65, of Henderson, died Sunday, Dec. 22,
1991, in the Cabell-Hun!ingiOn
Hospital following a short illness.
Born May 17, 1926, in Henderson, he was a son of the late lames
Ottmet and Tbelma c;, (Barker)
Plants.
.
He Was alSo preceded in death by

a sister, Carrie l..o!me. ·
Retired from the Mississippi Valley Bllll!e Line, he was a veteran of
the Korean War.
Survivors include two sistm,

Mrs. Eugene (Margaret) Pon.er of

HuntingtOn, Mrs. Dale (Virginia
Ann) VanSickle of Gallipolis; five
brothers, Dorsal of Point Pleasant,
Alfred of Point Pleasant, Samuel of
Middleport, Ohio, Charles Carroll
of Ga!Iiwlis Ferry, 11J1Ci Daniel
"Danny" of Henderson.
The funeral will be Friday, I
p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Odell Bush
officiating. Burial will be in the
Coocord Cemetery, Henderson.
Friends may call al the funeral
home Thursday, S to 9 p.m.

George Stutler
GCOfje Enoch Stuller, 88, of
Leon, died Saturday, Dec. 21, 1991,
in Pleant Valley "Hospital following a short illness. ·
Born OcL 19, 1903, in Leon, he
was a son of the late George, Sr.
and Melissa (Stover) Stuller.
Surviving are one si,ster, Mrs. Ivy
Snyder, Leon; a brother, ~
Stutler of Gallipolis; and several
nieces and nephews.
Graveside rites will be held lit
the Pine Grpve Cern~. Leon,
Tuesday at 10 a.m. With the Rev.
Herman Jordan officiating.
There will be no visitation. Ar·
rangeinents are under the direction
of the Wilcoxen Funeral Home.

Charles W. Sears, 68, of Columbus;· died on Sunday afternoon,
December 22, 1991 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mr. Sears was
visiting friends in Meigs County at
the time of his death.
He was born on February 2,
1923 in Hinton, W.Va., the son of
the late Clarence and Sylvia Sears.
He was a self-employed mainte·
nance man and a veteran of the
U.S. Army during World War II.
· . Surviving are special friends :
Ruth Gilkey, Kathy and Mike Powell, Carolyn and Darrell Bechtle,
Joseph Gilkey, Sr., and Jerry Hawley and Jane Gilkey, all of Middlepar~ Earl and Nancy Gilkey, Judy
Gilkey and Herman Taylor,-all of Maude Bias
Pomeroy; Kenny Gilkey of ColumMaude Ellen Bias, 90, of Point
bus; and se veral other special Pleasant,
died Sunday; Dec. 22,
friends.
1991,
in
Pleasant
Valley Hospital
Services \Yill be held on Tues- following a short illness.
day at I p.m. at Fisher Funeral
Born Sept. 13, 1902, in Hendel·
Home in Middleport with Rev .
son, she was a daughter of the late
Lamar O'Bryant offaciating. Burial James
and Frances (Shiftel)
will be at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Wamsley.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
She
was
also preceded in death
home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
her husband, Haley Bias.
Monday and until the time of ser- bySurvivors
inclt~de a daughter,
vices on Tuesday.
Elaine Shively of Point Pleasant;
son, Glenn Simpms of Gallipolis;
Helen Bail
10 grandehililien, 17 · great·
Helen Bail, 78, of Route I , grandchildren, and 13 great-great·
Hamden, died Sunday, Dec. 22, grandchildren.
1991 at Holzer Medical Center.
The. funeral will · be Thursday,
Born Oct. 17, 1913 in I :30 p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Langsville, she was a daughter of Home with the Rev. Marshall
the late Marian and Dessa Daily Bonecutter officiating. Burial will
Phelps. She was a member of the be in the Lone Oak Cemetery, Point
Puritan Free Will Baptist Church Pleasant.
and the Hamden Eastern Star.
Friends may call at the funeral
Mrs . Bail is ·survived by a home Tuesday, I to 3 p.m.
daughter and son-in-law, Shirley
and Cecil Carter, Oak Hill; a
grandson, Jason Carter, Oak Hill;
and a sister, Elvira Barr, Pomeroy.
• Besides her parents she was preCLEVELAND (AP) - One
ceded in death by her husband, ticket
sold naming all six num·Ronald in 1982; a daughter, Mil· bers inwas
Saturday
night's drawing
dred Bail; sisters, Flossie Phillips, for an $8 million Super
Lot!O jackMaude Phillips and Bessie Siders; pot, the Ohio Lottery said.
and one brother, Dale.
The winning ticke.t is worth
Services will be held Tuesday at $307,692
a year for 26 years before
II a.m. at the J.P. Rogers Funeral
taxes.
Home in Wellston with Rev. David
Tuesday's Super Lotto jackpot
McKnight officiating. BW"ial will is wonh
$4 million.
.
be in Harnden Cemetery in Vinton. Super Lotto
Friends may call at the funeral
5-23·25-~-42-45
home on tonight (Monday) from 2
(five,
twenty-three, twenty-five,
to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
twenty-six, fony-two, forty-five)
Kicker
Charles C. HotTman
7-5-9-7-4-5
(seven, five, nine, seven, four,
Charles C. "Mouse" Hoffman, five) .
68 of 744 Generai Hartinger PaJX. . Pick 3 Numbers
9-3-4
w~y. Middleport, died Saturd~y,
(nine, three, four)
Dec. 21, 1991, at Veterans Admin·
istration Hospital, Huntington, Pick 4 Numbers
3-7·9·7
W.Va.
(three, seven, nine, seven) .
He was born Aug. 30, 1923 in
West Columbia, W.Va., son of the Cards
J (jack) of Hearts
late Walter James Hoffman and
Maud E. F.oglesong Hoffman
10 (ten) of Clubs
J (jack) of Diamonds
Young.
He was a police dispatcher for
10 (ten) ol'.Spades

Lottery numbers

..

orward to red~stricting wins

1

Martha F Tripp Hllffntan Middle- ·
port, wh~m he married 'oct. 10,
1945· one son and dau~t.er-in-law
GeorSe-Ar and-Joan-A;-Hoffman-of
Middleport; one daughter, Mrs.
David B. (Vicki L,) ()wens of Gallipolis; one foster son, Raymond F.
Rider of Lakenhealh Air Force
Base, Unit.ed',JGngdiiiJ; one sister,
Mrs. Oscar (Betty) Roush of
Mason, w..Va.;,three grandchildren, Lisa D. Rider, Tami S.
Sheets, .and BryanT. Hoffm.an; and
four great-grandchildren.
· . .
He' was preceded in death by
one sister, Ella Rose Grinstead; and
two brothers, Winifred Walter
"Red" Hoffman and James Roben
"Jim Bob" Hoffman.
Funeral .serviees will be condue ted 1 p.m. Tuesday at
Foglesong Funeral Home, with
Andrew Miles officiating. Burial
will be in Grahi!JII .Cemetery.
Graveside military. rites will be
conducted by the American Legion
Feen.ey-Bennett Post 128.
_
· Friends may ~all at the. funeral
home from 2-4 -and 7-9 on Monda
,
y· ·

- ' ,......
Am Ele J&gt;ower.- •••••••'•••••••••••32
Ashland Oil .....................:J7
ATlT.. ;, ............................38
Bank ~ ::... :., ..................48
Bob Ev311s ...... ,.................24
Shop..... ,............ l9
:...16
.................. 13

appear to
gains in the num.bers
seats they ·can hope
to capture in the 1992 elections.
''I t1tink we can 't help but end
up better off tpan in the past 10
years," said Spencer Abraham, co·
chairman of the GOP House cam~
paign committee.
A decade ago;· state legislatures
produced "uniformly Democratic
plans" that squeezed Republican
voters in'to the smallest possible
number of congressional districts,
Abraham contended in an i~terview
last week.
"We're ~oing to do better" this
year, he saad, as legislatures and
· cotirts stfuggle to redraw· the congressional lines.
'

(f ·kl\
&amp;mny

we~: ~;:~~i~~~al~~~r~auzn;:

A

McHaffie was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At I:13 p.m.,
Middlepon unit took John Arnold
from ·the station ·to Veterans: At
6:49p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
East Main Street for John Guinther,
who refused treatment. At 8:36
p.m., Tu~pers Plains squad went to
Fellowshap Church of the Nazarene
on State Route 124. Keith Putman
was taken to Camden-Clarlc Memo'nal Hosp1tal.
At 12:25 a.m. on Sunday, Rut·
land unit wsas dipaEtched CitatoUnion
and Long b'eets. mma
pman

Pr. Cloudy Cloudy

th ·

--------- rrea er------Soulb-Cenral Ohio
Rain likely early tonight. Possibly becoming mixed with snow
before ending. Low 25 to 30.
Chance of precipitation 60 percent.
Partly cloudy Tuesday with the
high 35 to 40. Fair Chrisunas Day.
Low in the mid 20s. High around
40.

Christmas Day
through Friday
A slight chance of flurries nonheast Christmas. Otherwise fair
through the period. Highs 30 to 40 ·
Christmas, 35 10 45 Thursday IJ!ld ·
40 to 50 Friday. Lows in the 20s
Christmas and 25 to 35 Thursday
and Friday.

• •
•
Rain Will continue
through Tuesday

By The Associated Press
Rain and dfizzle will ·linger
along the Ohio River. early tonight
and may be mixed with snow. The
precipitation wiU push south of the
state by midnight. Otherwise, mostly cloudy skies will prevail with
some partial clearing taking place
in the nonhwest toward morning.
Temperatures will continue to fall

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSCecil Maynard, Racine.
·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES None.
·
SATORDAY ADMISSIONSEmma Chapman, Syracuse;
Charles Sears, Columbus ; and
Mabel Shields, Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
(Discharges)
(December 20)
Mrs. Albert Hall and daughter,
Audra Helrich and Deborah Johnson.
(Births December 20)
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Beaver,
Gallipolis, son and Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Wayan, Gallipolis Ferry,
daughter.
(Discharges)
(December 21)
Harley Crouse, Barbara Dickens, Mrs. Glenn Spencer and
daughter, Mrs. Bonita Stumbo arfd
son and Mrs. Dallas Wayan.
(Births December 21)
Mr. and Mrs. James Davis, Pt.
Pleasant, daughter; Mrs. and Mrs.
David Johnson, Vinton, son; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald O'Dell, Patriot,
son and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Williams, R.utl!lfld, a daughter.
(DischarReS)
· "'
(December 22)
Mrs. Michael Beaver and son;
Mrs . Chris Capehart and son:
Angell Marks and Mary Wood. ·
(Births December 22)
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Capehart,
Middlepon, son.

WORLD WAR II
11\ IYY\ fii1C&gt;fiGO 'OIJI\Y

Dec. 23 •

·1·9·4·1
Japanese troops
expand their:_hold on Hong
Kcng, cutting the Brrtish
colo.oy:s defenders i~ two.
In uie:Phlllpplnes. MacArthur
nicves his headquarters ro
fortnied island of Ccrregldor.
~orth · Airi'ca, the Germans
· evacuate Benghazi.

In

SOY reo; •21114 Days ol war; W. H. Smith
PubliShers Inc.: "World Almanac Book ol WOrld
War II," Bison Books COrp .. 1981

with the inuusion of the cold air.
Overnigbt lows will end up in the
20s.
The record high temperature for
this dati at tile Colum6us weather
station was 62 degrees in .1933.
The record low was- 14 in 1989.
Sunset will be at 5: II p.m. Sunrise Tuesday at 7:5 ~a.m.
Around tbe nation
Drizzly weather dampened parts
of the East.toda_y, including Buffa·
Ici, N.Y., and Pittsburgh. Rain fell
across much of the South.
The torrential rains that soaked
Texas for five days stopped, but
many rivers in the state today
remaineq above flOOd stage.
About 80 people were put up in
a motel for the holidays after being
cut off froin their homes by the
rains that have claimed at least 13
lives across the state. Another five
1
'ned · · oda
peop e remai
mJssmg t y.
Skies were expected to remain
partly cloudy across much of Texas
as the rainy system moved out of
the state and into the lower Missis·
sippi Valley. Rain was probable
from the Ohio River 10 the central
and southern Appalachians.
·
A cold front was expected to
bring a few showers to the Nonheast. Light snow- 2 inches or less
- was possible from southern
Pennsylvania to southeastern New
York tonight and Tuesday morning.
Widely scattered showers were
likely in Southern California.
Tlxlay's hi~hs were expected t9
be in the 20s m the northern tip of
Maine and around the Great Lakes;
in the ".lOs in upstate New York and
in much of the Midwest·

newborn scin ~ere taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 10:21 a.m .,
Middleport unit went to Locust
Street and took Mary Ward to·Veterans. At 10:23 a.m., Middlepon
unit went to Railroad Street.
Charles Sears was transported to
Veterans.
At I : 52 p.m ., Tuppers Plains
unit went to Third Avenue in'
Reedsville. Martha Bailey was
taken to'Camden-Ciark. At 2:27
p.m., Racine unit went to Fourth
5treet in Racine and took Mabel
Shields to Veterans. At 4:06 p.m.,
Racine squad went to Slate Route
338. Clarence Hayman was taken
to Veterans. At 9:28 p.m., Racine .
unit went to State Route 338 for
Zelpha Stewart. She was taken to
·Veterans. At, 9:41 p.m,;--Rutland
unit went to Beech Grove Road .
Roma Cremeans was taken to
Holzer.
On Monday at 3:08 a.m., Mid·
dleport unit went to Broadway
Street. Stella Thomas was taken to ..
Veterans.
·

Meigs County Emergency Med·
ical Services units answered 15
calls for assistance over the weekend.
On S81urday at 11:44 a.m •• Middleport unit went to Riverside
Apartments. Larry Hendricks was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi·.
tal.
.

~~--~~~~~;;;;;~;;;;.;.;;....;;;;:........;;;:::;;;;;...,:..:;.::::::::;~..::::;=.
v;a Associated Pre" Graphicsller
01991 Accu·Wea\11"', Inc.

• UT

Democrats oublumber
cans in the House by 102 memberi,
268-166. Abraham hopes redistrict·
ing can help the GOP mountiOO or
more competitive races in ,J992,
without which a House majority
will seem a more distant prospe~;t
than ever.
, .·

EMS-units have busy weekend W. VA.

Ice

...."""""":.46

:.~s.~~~.e~~~~:~:~t~t~~g
Second. Connie Capehart and .her

-Meigs announcements __
.../

Senior Center on Friday, frorri 8
Trustees to meet ·
.
The Letart Township Trustees p.m. to II p.m. Admission is '$2
will meet Monday (Dec. 30) at per person. Music will be provided
10:30 a.m. at the efface building to by The Happy Hollow Boys. The
public is invited, and those auendcondu~ end-of-the-year business.
ing are to brinK snacks for the
Services set
The Faith Full Gospel Church in snack table.
Christmas Eve service set
Long Bottom will have preaching
The
Reedsville
United
and singing on Friday at 7 p.m .
Methodist
Church
will
hold
its
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pubannual
Christmas
Eve
service
on"
lic.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Rev . Charles
Eaton, pastor, invites the public.
Christmas services
. -.
Christmas Day services· will be
held at the Hillside Baptist Church
in Pomeroy on Wednesday at 7
.Merry Quistmas!
p.m. The church choir will present
"The King Is Coming" under the
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
direction of Dan Hood. All other
446 4524
church groups will be performing
MTIIIUS tliLY, fOWT Oltlrnll
also. Pastor James R~ Acree Sr.,
IAIIIYJI 111111' MSM• .
~~~' liin arrmc.urs IIIli AYlllAILI .
invites the public to attend.
.

'

Names omitled
The names of Mr. and Mrs.
James Bowles, Point Pleasan~ were
. unintentionally omitted from the
guest list of people attending the
Christmas pany for the American
Legion Lewis-Manley Unit No.
263 . The group also sang '"Happy
Binhday"w Bowles.
Dance scheduled '
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Dance Club will hold a round and
square dance at the Meigs County

The Daily Sentinel
Published every at\emaon, Monday
throllih Friday, IU Coarl St., -erof,

Ohio by the Ohio VallO)' Pubtlohlnl

ComP.any!Mial\lmedia Inc. , PomerOy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2U56. Second cluo
pcootqe paid at i'&lt;&gt;mel'll)l, Ohio.

M•mbor: The "-ialed Prao, Inland
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"'

Join U1.A1 Wt telebrtile The llrlh Of·
Our Savior
Christmas Eve Candlelight CoMmunion
Dec. 24 - 6:30 p.m.

13 Woelta.........................................r.lt.IK
26 w..u ..........................................$43.16
52 Weekl .......................................... $84. 76

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH·OF CHRIST
Flftlt at Mall

IS Wo0b ..........................................r.l3 .40
28
f46.ro
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Wise men still seek Him."

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
0.111... GotHa C...nqo

1:

.

�!...

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·-.·~-----.

----·-·

"

~~-~---T
_h
_e----'----:D_ail
-'-c-e~ y Sentinel
. .

..

". ~ .. . ..

MondayrDecember 23, 1991 ·
· Page--4

'

By SCOIT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
. The.]astem Eagley.feruled.oJta
late ~arne challenge by the spirited
Kyger Creek Bobcats to claim a
55-51 SV AC basketball victory
Saturday evening at Eastern High
SchooL
Eastern is now 2-3 overall and
2- 1 in the SV AC while KC is 0·2.
Trailing 44-33 at the end of the
third quarter; Coach Tom Riccardi 's Bobcats methodically quick·
ened the pace wilh full court pressure, upbeat offensive tempo, and
intensified man"to-man dyfense to
pull within two points at the 5:38
mark, 45-43. That came on a Marc
Villanueva field ~oat from the right
elbow, precluded by baseline buck·
ets and steals by Chirs Crace and
Phil Bradbury.
'
The next ensuing minutes saw
both clubs play shoestring basket·
ball at a hectic pace, committing
.numerous turnovers, .with neither
taking charge of the many opportunities given them to .ake full command.
After Jeff Durst widened East·
em's lead to 48-43 with a baseline
jumper at the 4:22 mark, Paul
Covey canned a baseline jumper
for a 48-45 score. Eastern's Tim
Bissell retaliated for a S0-45 score,
but J.P. Roberts nailed a fre~~ throw
for a 50-46 Ially at the 2:01 mark.
A Durst free throw made it 51·
46, but a Craig Kingery goal with
:58 seconds made it 51-48.
Two Eastern misses and a Villamleva free throw attempt, nullified tiy a lane violation, set the
smge fQ!: a Chad Savoy drive. At
that point KC lost its fourth player
to fouls, Marc Villanueva (others
lost earlier were Kingery, Bradbury
and Craoo), sending Savoy to the
line. Savoy hit one for a 52-48
score with :35 seconds lefL
The KC foul situation lefl them
with only four players on the court
as they lost one player (Richie
McClam) to an ankle injury on-Friday and anqther to an injury (Shane
Polcyn) in the reserve contest Sat·
urday.
A steal with 19 seconds and a
dr-ive the lenghth of the court by ·
Tim Bissell more or less sealed the
gaine for the Eagles, 54-48, but a
three pointer by Covey mad it 54·
51 with 11 ticks left on the clock.
The clock ran down to one second
b~fore KC could get it stopped,
where Durst hit a free throw to end
the game, 55-51.
Eastern took a 9-6 lead in the
first period, then broke open a 2417 advantage to a 31-17 score at
the half on a three pointer from half
court by Durst at the buzzer:
·
KC then cut back into that lead
to 35-30, before Eastern called lime
in the third frame, widening the
lead to 41-30 after the break.
Eastern led 45-33 after three
frames, before KC set up the excit·
ing fmish.

Eastern was led by senior Jeff
Durst's 19 points, Bissell had 16,
Jreshman Charlie Bissell-9, andTerry McGuire six. KC was led by
Paul Covery with IS, Chris Crace
had 7, Phil Bradbury 13, and Viilanueva 5.
.
Eastern hit 18-83 (two-pomters)
and 1-3 three pointers, while canning 16-31 from the line. KC hit
20-72 overall and 3-17 three pomters fOF 18 percent, hitting 8-20.
KC won the battle of the boards
48-39 led by Villanueva with 11,
Brian Davidson with 7, and Bradbury 8. Durst had 15 for Eastern
and Bisselll3.
Eastern had II steals, 22
turnovers, II assists, and 22 fouls,
while KC had 16 stea ls, 18
turnovers, 14 assists, 7 blocked
shots, and 28 fouls:·
Eastern won the reserve game
40-30 led by Wes Arbaugh with
13; Robert Reed 10, and Pat Newland ?. ·Covey's 18 paced KC ,
while Crace had 7.
Eastem is idle until after Christ·
mas.
.
Other varsity ac tion in the
SVAC sa w Southern knock off
North Gallia 70-48, Oak Hill defeat
Hannan Tmce 71 ·61 and Symmes
Valley edge Soutl1westem SS-54.
Quarter totals
KygerCreek ......... 611 16 18 = 51
Eastern .......... ....... 9 22 14 10 = 55
. EASTERN (55)- Durst 5· 1·
6=19; T. Bissell 6-0-4=16;.C. Bissell 3-0· 3=9; McGuire 3-0·0=6 ;
Savoy 1-0-2=4; M. Newland 0-0·
I= I. TOTALS:.. 18·1-16=55

'

'

• --/

•

I

-- --

Field goals...: 28-62 (45.2%)
Free throws- 13-17 (76.5%)
Rebounds-43 (Simpson 19)
Turnovers- !'!
HANNAN TRACE (61) Swain 10-2-2=28; Unroe 1-'4'= 1=15;
Brace 1·0·6=8; Poling 3·0·0=6:

.v

64

l -Wuhi.nJI.On 1... 14 2 0 .875 485 224

o
0
0
0

.688
.62S
.lOO
.lSO

342310
285244
2&amp;1 297
196 344

Ctnlral Dlvlllon
y·Dettoit..,......... 12 4 0 .750 339 295
y~C.ao .......... 11 4 o .733 2!5 217

8 • 0 500 301 306
OnocnBoy .......... 412 0.250273313
TampliBay ........ 3 13 0 .1$119936.5
70

We~ltrn Olvlllon
· 1-New Orlea111 ... II S 0 iiSI 341 2U
y·Ailama ............ 10 6 0 .62S 361 338
San Francisco .... 9 6 0 .600 341 22.5
· L.A . Rams ......... J 13 0 .181 234 390
1-tlinchcd division.
y-tlinchcd playoff berth

Saturday's scores

N.C.·WilminJIIOO 90, SlCtSOn 87

Sunday's scores

Tcnneuoc; 92, Va. Commonwcal\b 71
Tn ..Oatunoop 19, S.C.·Aiken 66
Tulane 82, Mcm.r S6
Vondcobiltl4, lloy~M 64
Wake F~;~mt 74, Ridunmd. 60
Wu t V1ralnla 66, Vlralnla Tech 65

DaUu 31, Atlanu.n
Pllbburah 17, Cleveland If
Detroit 17, Buffalo 14, OT
Tampt Bay 17, lndianapoJU 3
Clndnnad 29, New Enaland 7
New Yod: Jeta 23, Miami 20, OT
Kanua City 27, Lc. An.JC!a Raiders 21
New Orteana 21, Phoc:nu. J
Denver 17, San·Dieao 14
Philadelphia 1A, Wuhin&amp;ICI'I 22
Scau.le :13, LA. Rama 9

Mldwe~l

D1USL 67,.Va1plrl.i10 46
Clc:vcl1nd St.. 9.5, fi. Mich igan 6S
Drtie 65, Tcua Wetleyan 47
Duqueane 108, Xavier, Ohio 104
Winois 34, Md.-Daltirnore County 71
Winoia SL61. SW Missouri St. Sl
KINU 97, ScauJc Plcific: 62 ·
Loyoll, Ill 81, Northwcsl.cm 73
Marqucue &amp;9, Bdhune-Cooiman 53
Michia'" 87, Rice 70
Mic:hig•n St. 90, Cincinnati 19
Mislouri 99,Ja~an St. 76
N.'Cuolina A&amp;.T IS, St. Lou.isll
Nic:holla St. (1} , NE lllinois 61
Purduo 76, Bullrr 70
S. lllinois 74,lndian• St. S7
Stephen F. Aualin 68, Cent. St. , Ohio

Tonight's game

Chicago It San Francisco. 9 p.m.

Ead rqular auson
•,

In the NHL ...
·•

WALESCONFERENCE .
Patrick Olwlalon
Te1m
W L T Pta. GF GA.
Wuhing............ 1A 1t l 49 ll9 112
N.Y. Range.n. ..... 22 12 I 4S 129 110
Pitubwah .......... II 12 . 4 40 ll2 129
New Jeney ........ 16 12 S 37 124 97
PhUodclphio.. ... :. 12 16 . 6 30 !OlliS
N.Y. blander~ .... 1\ 16 S 271 16 129

'

Adami Division
Montreal.. .......... 24 13 2
Botton................ 14 15 5
Hu1Iord.. ........... 12 16 4
BWTalo............... 10 17 6
Quobec............... 9 21 s

New Haven

Dec. 23: ???.................$800

Christmas .

2&amp; 102117
26 101120
23 114 144

Sou1hwest
ArkaniU 6S, Arilona 59
AJi.llllll SL12. Ark.-Linle Rock 19
DePJulSl, Bay10l' 67
l.amu 116, Karuu SL 7S
Oklahcrna 144, Mcqan SL 81
Ok.lahom1 St. 100, HoullOn B1ptllt

Norill Dlvlllon
W L T I'll. GF GA
IJcuoiL .......... ""' 21 10 4 46 138108

Team

St.l.ouit· ............ 16 12 7
Chicago.............. IS 13 8
MinnCKU .......... 13 16 3

39 12.4117
38 115 112
29 101111

TorooiO .............. 9 22 S

23 93126

l7

TCIU•Ptn American .56, Mo.·K.ansu
Cil ll
· )'Te~u·Sa.n Antonio 99, Tuu Soulh·
cm72

Smythe Dlvl.don

Ymcouva ......... 20 II 5
Winnipeg ........... 16 12 7
Edmonton .......... 14 16 6
Coi&amp;uY .............. 13 16 5
l.oi:AnJclCI ....... 12 14 1
San1&lt;~~c ...........
I 26 3

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING

4S 130109
3911 11 08
34 127 134

31 125 125

61

M

N .Y . R~n,~en7,Pilllbwxh

s ... u..m Cal79, Ohio SL 77, ar
SL Mary'r, Cal69, PacifiC U. 61
S~nford 74 , Virginia 60
U~o~h St. 78, 8YU·lbw1ii 74
Wuhinglon St. 77, A1aaka·Anc: hor·

wm.upeg7, c.tauy 2

aae68

Philadelphia 4, Wuhington 3, 0T
MontJal 3, Botton 2
Chicaao S, St. Looil 2
QuGbcc 6, Vancouver 6, tie

Nebru\c&amp; 102, E. Wuh~n~ton 67
Third Plate
Ttkll A&amp;.M 69, Odawue St 61
Blue Anatll Claulc

Ch•mplonlhlp

Tonight's games
Bu!Talo 11 HtrtJ'ord, 7:3.5 p.m.
Piuaburgh at N.Y. lalandeu, 7:3.5

-

p.m.
New Jene' u N.Y. Ranam. 7:35
p.m.
Winnipc:J II TIWtlnW, 7 :35 p.m.
Calp.l')' al Edmonton, 9:3.5 p.m.

Tuesday's games

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

~ · ··

No a:ame~ achcd llle-1 ·

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

In the NBA •..

Call Sentinel

52 WEEKS

~LASSIFIEDSl

PA
114

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic: Division

FOR
ONLY
$67e60

p

.

'

'
'

.
.

Te1m
W L
New York ........:..... 16 7

.696

BOILOn .................... 17

I09
73
133
149
128
120
907

·

8

.680

.SOO
.480
.346

4.5
5
8.l

New lettey .............. 7 18
Orlando ......... ..... 6 18

.280

10
JO.!i

,,25

5

Milwaukcc ....... ...... IJ
llcln&gt;it... .. ............... l3
Allanta ................... 12
lndiana ................... 12
Charlonc .................. 7

13

.500
.431
.480

8
8.l
8.S

.444
.2SO

9.!i
15

13
IS
21

W L

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Uuh ....................... l7 l l
.San Antonio ........... J3 11

"
"Your Hometown Newspuper

- Prt-llolldayTournamtal
ChampiOillhtp
Detroit 83, Hawaii II
Third Place
tdohoSt. 93, Atrm 87, 2&lt;Yr
Tcxa c:o Sl1r Cluak:
" ClumplonJIIIp
Sm1th C• ro1ina 7.1, San Dic;o S1. 69,
20T

This week'sxames
Friday - Kyger Creek in Wahama Tournament (opponent _and
timeTBA)
Saturday - So~thern vs. Lo·
pn Elm at.OU's Convocation Cen·
ter; Fairland at Hannan Trace;
Kyaer Creel! in Wahama Tournament (opponent and time TBA)

STATE::-------.....,..,-~----- ZIP:. _ _ __

.

w-..IMitMIIMIIMIP!I~-..tiM·~~-II!'llii_,.8.-..I!!. ...... ._._ •

I

'

t '

I

PMWtd 96, s.. u~e 11
PhooniR. 100, L.ol\. Laken U

._• • IM._._._. . . ..,
l

Damo6l

New ~~villo &amp;6, Arlin&amp;lon 45

N'Otthmont fiJ, Milton-Union 56

llonllmor 11, Cenlato~~r&amp; 63
Norwood 61 , M.•on 47
OK Hill71, Hannan Tracc61
Omillc90, Wol'ft0dole50
Partrici Henry 6:5, Tinora 53
Philo l5, Buckeye Trail69
Pikelon73, Lucuville Voll. 63
Piquo 10. Miam; E. 64 or
Preble Sh1wncc: 17, Tri-Countv N 111
RacineSoulhetn 70, N: Galli• 48
RoediVille Eutem SS, Kyger Creek
ll

River Vtll. 17, R;dgedale 68
Rocky River 66. Maple H11. !i9

S. Caml S6, Mapleton .54
Sandy Vall. 46, Cad.iz 44
Sardinia Eutem S4, Ba1.1via S1
Sherwood Fairview 62, Miller City 46
Smithville 68, Kidrm 64
Sparta Hi&amp;hland S2, Coloacl Cnwfortl43
Spring. South 80, Day. Jefferson 78
Stow 76, Wal"l'CC'l Jluding 60
·
Symmes Vall. 55, PnriOL Soulhwtst·
cml4

Tol. St. John 62, Cin. Elder S6
Tol. Sa.an 72. Clc. Lincoln-West 61
Triw•y 51, CanlM C1th. SO
Upper SanduU.~ 49, Elgin 43
em w r Sciolo VaU. 80, Ha rd in North·
Wca68 , Ucl.ing VaU. S6
Van Wen 78 , P•ulding 63
Vt.rtnWon SI, Lorain OcaiView 35
Wapakoneta 51, SL Henry SO
Wanauvillc n, Clc. Adam' 12

48

DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Woadaficld .58, Shady,ide 56
Wowter~. Mmillon Ja cklon 62
Wynford 81, Galion 73
Yellow Spring• S2, Spring. Catholic

l3

INSURANCE

ZaneaviUc 68, Marieua 63
Zane~viUo

Roncran1 84, Cambridgo

Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

80

Girls-Saturday
Akron Hoban 46, Cuy•hosa FaUs 36
Akron Manchoner 46, Akron Fire ·
J'one 33

Alliance 56, Canton Glc:nOa.k 29
Avon 37, KeYttooo 36
Avon Lake 49, Olmned Falls47

1-15 team.
.
But for thi s one day, they
looked more like the 1990 Patriots
than a team already talking about
next year's playoffs. They had two
interceptions, losl three fumbles
and drew nine penalties in their
most lopsided loss of the season.
" We were looking forward to
next year so much, ·we forgot we
had to play at I o'clock today, "
quarterback Hugh Millen ~d . .
The Benga ls are looking forward 10 the next few weeks, when
they expect to start learning the
magnitude of the fallout from their
.disastrous season.
Wyche sidestepped all questions
Sunday about whethe~ he'll return_

as head coach. He has two years
left on his contract valued at 51
million, a major factor in his, favor,
but has indicated he wants more
say in personnel decisions. That
could set him at odds with geneml
manager Mike Brown, who runs
the team.
Wyche will meet with Brown a1 ••
some point this week, but showed .
no sense of urgeocy Sunday. He .
said he had no meetings planned ' :
for today. .
.,
"It's one of those years you
have to get away from for a
while," Wyche sail!. "Thea you've ,
got 10 have a plan - a disciplined
plan 10 get back into it next~·,.

Sometfling (jootf's %way CooK:Jne. Jlt _
-~-----

MASON
FAMILY
1
RESTAU~RANT

.,'

Located on Rt. 33 beside Maon Exxon IIlii Muon llotll, lilian, WV

'.

S&lt;.lnday lhN Thursday, 10 am-9 pm; Friday &amp; Salurday, 10am-10 pm

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIAL.'')
J\1unduy Friday, 11 a.m. to :1 p nt.

' ;

·Cabbage Roll, Baked Potatoe, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
• Chopped Steak, Choice of Potatoe,
s·oup &amp; Salad Bar
TUESDAY 8: TIIUIUIDAY, CIULDREN UNDER 12 EAT J'REJt
J'ROM CHILDREN'S IDIW. (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER11
IJIOT 1 CIULD PltR ADULT

TO All ORGANIZATION GROUPS AND INDIVIDUAU FOR VOLUNTEERING YOUR HELP ·.

Sunday's action
Eul

•Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.
Athens- (Cheshire
Distribution Center)
•Kroger Co.
•Pieasers Restaurant
•Pizza Hut
•Domino's Pizza
•Craw's Family Re!&gt;ta~•rantl
•Five Points Express
Boy Sc:ounts, Girl •Forked Run Concession
CIL1b"
•Sugar Run Mill
•Bank One Employees
lng
•Subway
Game - Forked •Big Bend Food land ·

Holy Crool7, St. Pcw'1 13

Soulh.

N.C.·Aihe'liUc 77, Warren Willoo 42

Mldwtll
Sien•7 1, CrcighlOn 60
Wyomin&amp;60, N. low• 55

Far Wat

.tm

PacUk Dlwls1on
Golden SlllC .......... J6 I
.667
L.A. Laken ............ \6 10 .61S

·

Mi4dlaown Fatwick 75, Middletown
Moditoo 62
MMtpelier 17, Pelll.,illc 4L
II. VlliM 73, Bucllcyo Voll. 71, OT
New Boston 10, Porumoul.h Notre

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
· CINCINNATI (AP) - It
· seemed like old .times. That's what
was so surprising.
There was Boomer Esiason,
throwing a season-high three
touchdown passes; the Cincinnati
Ben gals' defense making clutch
plays; coach Sam Wyche exchang·
ing congratulations on the ·sideline:
the New Englan~ Patriots bumbling
around.
..
Just what might be expected,
based upon the teams' 1990 seasons. But the Bengals' 29-7 victory
Sunday at Riverfront Stadium was
more of an aberration· than an
appropriate ending.
The Ben gals (3-13) finished the
worst season in the franchise's 24year history with their best overall
performance. They scored a season-high number of points, and
allowed a season-low total.
Who could ex plain why they
saved their best for last?
''I wish we could luive done this
the IS previous weeks," said Esiason, whose completed 20 of a season-high 40 passes for 333 yards.
' 'This shows what we're capable of
when we're at the top of our
game.' '
The Patriots (6-10) bottomed
out after an otherwise remarkable
season. They've made the seoondbest turnaround in the American
Conference under first-year coach
Dick MacPherson, who revived a

Third PIICI
S9, SW Tcus SL 37

San Dieso 10, CS Nanhrids&lt; l9
Tournamenta

Kaual Clalll&lt;

Champk&gt;Nhlp
N.C. Charlat1t. 110. Oami.nade 11
Third Pll(t
Portland 71, William A Mary 67

'

Tonltlht's games

Allal'!ll at Now lmey, 7:30p.m.
CMrlouc at AI.Uadel.ph11, 7:30p.m.

'

Ohio high school

basketball scores
Boys-Saturday
Akron F'ucttono65, Stow 47
Akron Ma.nc:hlll&amp;e:t 19, Field 14
A.k1U1 N. 57,Nordonit 31
Allianc:o 63, New,P!Wadopbia •2

Amhem 69; 1!1)'!1163, ar
Anna 59, S!*lcoMI1e: 53
AniOI'Lia 16. Mendon-Union~
Austintown FilCh 67, Oo. Ella 55
Avm Lalr.a 74, 0.. Sa.llh 67
Bu.WRI'IIIk ,~~White 61

BiJWolnul&lt;CI,
'f44,&lt;Yr
tlcirinon 71, s.tom 51

81711'72.- 51-

- 9 9 , Odondo94

'

NL Giload 44
M1111ftcld 62, Newuk Cath. 59
Manlf)Old Sr. 71, Sanduaky 71
~1ewood 60, Wam:n Konnt:e!y 54 ..
Moiloio C.Th. 10, Mwfillld Cbr. 67
Monon Hudin&amp; 62. Col W,.t43
Mutillon 75, ClaymM~ 40
.
Maull1on Cor. 53, Haitagc Chr. l7
Mauillon Perry 54, N. Canton
Hoow:r!liO
Miami TACO 63, Sprina. Northeastern
34
Middlo&amp;own 16, Sycamore S6

cm69

Sunday's scores

'

l.ale~.s 53,

UAB lnvttltlonal
Chompk&gt;Nhlp
Ala.·Binningtum 17, Gcoraia South·

New YOlk 106, Ut.h 91
Mi..Utt~ a.... 101
CleVellnd Ut, Charlotte 111
Indiana Ill, New .le.rscy 109, OT
L.A.-Ciippon 100, MiMOIOll 81
ChiCI&amp;O ll7,AtJan&amp;a 103
n.llu 109, Sacmonento ~~
MilwaukooiiO, Aoilodolpoio 97
Wuhin&amp;&amp;on 117, Denvec 102
S•tl•l20, Ooldon S~ate 112

CITY: _ _ _ _ _'---------~------

London 11, W. Jdl'ononSl

Lonin 64, 0.. Cotlinwood·5l
l.ouit.W. Aquinla 63, Coplcy44

Go.wgo 80, ldoho 62

2
S
S.S
lO.l

ADDRESS: ~----------,---------

Cincinnati beats New England 29-7

ar

Third Place

Saturday's scores

PLEASE SEND A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAIL:Y SENTINEL FOR 1 YEAR FOR
ONLY $67.&amp;0 (Payment Included).
•
NAME= -----------~----------:-

slamming bim to tbe turr ror the sack during
Sunday's regular-season ftnale ror both teams In
Cincinnati, which tbe Bengals won.29-7. (AP)

SAC!' ATTACK :._ Cinclooatlllnebacker
Alex Gordon (right) pves New Eagland quarterback Hugh Millen a lovidg embrace before

Chami.nlde 99. Portland 84
N.C. Charl&lt;Kie 83, William .t. Muy

GO

Pl-"' .................. 16 10 .615
1
Podbnd ................ .16 lO .615
I
L.A.Clippcn ........ .ll 12 .ll6
2.5
Sooulc .............. ..... .l4 12 . •l38
3
S•cramenl0 .............. 7 ' 17 .292 . 9

.

Elyrio Calh. l4, Elyrio w. 62

FoirmorA, W.Vo. 60,Cio. VASJl2
Findlay 89, Co. W• 71
.
F01toria St. Wonddin 69, Libeny·
&amp;...... 66
Fnnklin·M,.,.. 76,Eotonl4
Ft. Recovory 63, Muion '~at 62,
4&lt;Yr
Ouficld Hli. 7S, Parma -Pad~• 71.
201'
Onloun 52. Sidney 44
Grandview·64, Maditoo PJ1ins S'l ...
Oteenville .56, Cdin1 S4
Hunil""' R,.. 80, Milfot&lt;l 32
Hicktvillc 72, Fayette 60
Hilhop 67, Dolo 56
HolaatoS1, Pcuiaville 41
Huliorllll. Woyno 14, Tmy 68
Jon•lh• Aldor 74, Johnaown 68
Koucrin&amp;Alter74, Cin. Ba1X1161
Labwood 63, Wanlakc 49
UbettyC...la60,UW,•tol9
'
UcknJ Hu. 71, Won1un ..... Chi. 63,

Southwal
Tnu 90, UC Santt Barbtn 71

..s42
.423
.400
.174

DaUu..................... l1 IS
Dcnvcr .. ................. IO IS
Minn..... ................4 19

Se11tit1el

•
(reserves)
e&amp;stem 40, Kyger Creek 30
Sak Hill 46, Hannan Grace 43
(OT)
.
Sobthem47, North Gallia 36
Symmes Valley 37, Southwestern
35 (OT)

FlnlRound

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
................. IS 9

a.r.52

~Inc:

9

t4

lMolin77,CIII. Whola"'""l9
E. U""l'l'O ctu-. 104, Akron
l!diJoo 61, Sqlica E 60

6l

Clewland.- - - -15

Ho~ston

.

.250

.

D1y. Nonhtidac 91, Twin Valley S.

Oo;:.o'Bc Wa~hingwn 71, Florida A!:M

Miami .................... \3 13
PhiJJdelphia ........... l2 13
WolhingtOn.............. 9 17

Team

54

Gll

KaualCI~t

Ctnlral Olwlslon
Chico8o.................. 20 4 .8l3

81

Saiurday's scores
:
(varsity)
!:astern 55, Kyger Creek 51
Oak HiU 71, Hannan Trace 61
Southern 70, Nonh Gallia 48
Symmes Valley 55, Southwestern

PeL

Soulh A1•bama 101,Aubwn 17
Third Place
Middle TO'In. 12, Slippery Rock 46

75

D1y. Moadowdalc 63, SprinJ. NoM

Youna. Unulinc 63; Young. Chancy

Tournilmenlli
Amtrltu CIUIIc:
Chlmp10n1hlp

Sunday's scores

---···~

67

San Ja~e St. 61, Sana.a Clan 60

l

PhiladeJpnia 3, MiMesou. 0
SL Louia 6, N.Y. blandcn 2
Detroit S, Loa Angdu 2

-

61

Monu.na St. l03, S. Utah 91
Ncv1d.a 87 , San Francilco 13
Now Mexico 107, Tennectcc SL S9

Montrr.ll 3, Hartford 2, 0T
Dulfalo4, Tcxvn10 1

DOWNS 12-POINT BUCK - Rantly Carl of Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, killed this 12-point buck during deer ~ason on Saturday,
Dec. 7.

l6

M....., 74, COulal Carolina l 2

Saturday's scores

1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

'1

Arizona SL 88, Appalachi111 Sl.
BriJham Youn&amp; ff, Wobu St.68
Cal St.·Fllllonon 82. CS Nonhridae
Freano SL 13, Oqon St. 72
HOUil«&lt; 81, California 7S

Botton 6, Edmon !.On 3
Chicago 1, New 1usey I, tic

Cmuln.ua16t,Aruw"P16 . .
v.u.1 a.r. BQ,.o,,. a.r.

SL Muy'• 64, Dclphoo St.John'• 42

Colondo 90, N. Arizono 66

31 113 127
19 93163.

Lakewood St.

Cuyohop

Far Wut

Air p,... 72. Kcnl64

Jpati~.~t 72 ,

Cleu Fodl62, Danville S1
Clylio It, Bollwe ~9
Col. Academy 60, COL RCidy ll
Col.l!ulnuoOr l6, Nowul!l4 .
Col. W1.._.on 70o 'i'Dif' Vlll. 43
Caklwata' 53, WaynoTnce Sl

UNLV 791_E. Michia•n 59 .
ULih SB, Wichita SL. 36
Wd.·Ot'W1 Da1 ?2, Ch.lcago.St. 53
Wilcauin 64, Howud U. 57
WriJht St. 95, Allbama Sl. 89
Yaun&amp;~town SL 7S,Jbdford 70

SO 126· 8&amp;
33 119122

Clc. Catholic 61, Ulll.vettit~ Hll. S1
Clo. Hciaku 94, B. Cleveland Shaw

Cle. $1.

UCitvino 61, Dndlcy 57, 0T

.,

Cia. Bcncdictine 87, O.•rdon. ND-CL

Edwant6l

l6

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

"'"'

Alabama &amp;7, So~lhcm Miu. 64
Austin Pery 89, E. Tcrmcuee SL. 85
Cent. Florida 95, Gc«gi• St. 94, OT
Coli. o( Charleamn 79, W. Carolina
Evanavillc 87, Muq11y St. 80
florida 69. Aa. Intomation•l44
Furman 90, S. Carolina Sl S9
Ocor&amp;it 70, Penn S1. 54
.
Georai• Tech 11 , KenUK:i:y 80
Jamu Madison 100, Coppin St. 18
Ubony 100, &lt;leoti• Muon 89
Louiai1na Tc:ch 91. SE Louililna 69
Louilville 93, LSU 92
"'hryilnd 83, TOWIOO St. 76
MWiuiP,pi St.\90, Tennc,.co Tech 84

New York Gianu 24, Howtoo 20
Green Bay 27, MinncsoLI7

.

10

South

Minn..... ..........

San 1CJ1!o 4, Quebec 1

(Overall)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ............. J I 281 232
Oak HiU ............. .3 I 262 236
Eastern .......... ...... 2 3 315 372
North Gallia .. ......2 4 313 401
!ilmnan Trace ..... .I 3 244· 281
Symmes Valley ...1 3 203 266
Kyger CreeL .....o 2 95 108
s'Outhwestern .......O 4 210 292
••
(Conference)
SOuthem ............. J 0 232 161
Oak Hill ..............2 I 207 192
Eastern ................ 2-- I 172 188
North Gallia ........2 I 170 180
SymmesValley ... l I 117 124
Hannan Trace ...... ! 2 195 197
Kyger Creek .. ......0 2 95 108
Southwestem .......O 3 155 193
TOTALS .......... 11 11 1343 1343
(Reserves· SVAC only)
Team
W L PF
Southem .............. 3 0 168
9ymmes Valley ...2 0 84
Eastern ................ 2 I 126
Kyger Creek ........ ] I 70
Oak Hill .............. ! 2 133
Hannan Trace ...... ! 2 118.
North Gallia ........ 1 2 112
Southwestern ....... O 3 96
.TOTALS ..........11 11 907

basketball scores

Coluvillo74, ~42

·c......w.72.0.y. s-..ll
Chonol 61, Oloodln 61
Oteu[&gt;Nl&lt;o61,S.l'UillSl '
Cin. AikM 66, Cin. SL Xavier S9
Cin. vn..-12. Ftid'odd 60
Cin. Wilhrow 52, Pui.cnbuiJ, W.Va.
Cln. Woodward 64, 8eU.JC)', W.Va.'

Brown 86, Bry1nt 10
B11ffslo 71 , Mariat67
. Col8'1067,8nooklynCOL65, &lt;Yr
Georgetown 79, Md.·E. Shore 37
HQ(11.ra 71,St. Fnl\cii, NY S3
lndi1111, 82, St. Jolin'• 77
Iona102, N~ C.rolina St 86
Lchi&amp;li 71, Allentown 69
Manflauan 69, Army 51
Miomi. OhiO 7l, FWfield 66
Nrioutt:m 75, Niaau• 71
l'rin«lon41,LoS.Uo46.0T
.Proviclcnco 74, Vermont 67
Rhodoblood 1l, Hanford 68
Rutau. 86, Long Island u .12
St. Fnncil, Pa. 83, Drtlcl73
St. Joteph'sl7, Fordham 1S
S)'T'IC:UIC 17. l..afl)'c.llC Sl
W. Michigan 67, Fairlciah DickiNan
.. .59
,._.
:- -...
-,Wagner 84, St. BonavcntW"C 83

W L T PeL PF PA

11 l
!0 6
8 8
4 12

Major college

l9

Balurd~ action

Eutn Dlvl.ai6R

r·O.tlu .............
Phllodolpllio .. .....
N.Y. Gian.• ........
Phom.ix..............

40

0 .375 193%98

0 J88 163 435

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

SVAC cage staJtdings

I &lt;

0 .638 316251

o

Tum

.

' No aamea •chOduled

0'-:433 292344

Wallrn Dlvillon '
l·Dcnvt:r,........... 12 4 0 .750 304235
y·K""" City .. :. 10 6 0 .62S 3Z22S2
y•LA. Roiden... 9 7 0 J6l 298 297
S..ule ........... ..... 7 9
.438 276261
San Diego ..... ..... 4 12 0 .250 214342

Middleport
Dec. 16: Sarah Pauley... S400
Merry

Tuesday's games

·Ctnlnl Dlvlllon

·l·HOUilOn .......... It S
Pit•t.u&amp;h ......... 1 9 Clenland ..." ..." ' 10
ClndnnaU ...,_., l 13

'

U&amp;ah.al Clenlarict, 7:30/.m.
New Yodc at Minncaou, _p.m.
Dlllu It HawiOn, 8:30p.m.
Sacttmento ll S1n Anu:rtio, 8:30p.m.

CONFEkENCE
Eutem.Dlvlllua.
Team '
W ,L T PeL PF PA·
x-BWI'•lo ........... 13 l 0 .113 4S8318
y·N.Y. leu ......... 8 8 0 JOO 314293
MWni ................ 8 8 0 .l OO 343 349
Now Enl)ooo ..... 6 10 0 .37l 211 305
lndiln1pollc ....... I IS 0 1163 143381

OPEN
TONIGHT

MAKE IT ARlH.L
USE WANT ADS,
AHANDY
lOOL

Orlando 11 Miami,7:30 p.m.

AM~RICAN

Field goals- 19-86 (22.1%)
ship medal with 23 points in spite Cox 0-1·1=4 . TOTALS - 15-7Assists -11 (Dillon 4)
Three· pointers- 1·3
of piclcing up .three fools in the first 10 =~1
.
,
Turnovers -12
- Free-lhro'ws-- -16-31-(-!i l-.6% )-quartcr-and-sttung-out-th e-se~ond----Field ·goats~"'22c58-(37:9o/,;)--~~S()lJ'F-HWES T-ERN-(S-4)-=~Rebounds- 39 (Durst 1$)
frame. ''That and our shooJing hurt
Three- pointer.s .
7-18 McCarty 7-0-3=17; Mandeville 6Assists- II
us," said North Gallia head coach (38.9%)
0-2=14; Morse 3-1·1=10; Newber·
Sieals- 11
Pat Stout.
Free throws -10-14 (71.4%)
ry 3-0·0=6: Simpson 1-1·0=5; T.
(
Turnovers- 22
Quarter totals
Rebounds_ 28 (Poling 9)
Ashworth 0-0·2=2. TOTALS Fouls ..:... 28
Southem ...:.........20 16 15 19 = 70
Assists_ 14 (Unroe 4)
20·2-8=54
KYGER CREEK (51)
North Galha ..... ....9 7 16 16 = 48
Steals _ 4
Field goals- 22-55 (4.0%)
Covey 4-2·1= f5; Bradbury S-0·
SOUTHERN '(70) - Evans 3Turnovers_ 13
Free throws- 8-13(61.5%)
l= 13; Crace 2·1·0=7: Vtllariueva 3-0=15; Smgleton 7-0-0= 14; Bat·
RESERVE GAME_ Oak Hill
Rebounds- 27 (Mandeville 8)
1-0-3=5; Kingery 2-0-0=4; Lear 2· le_y 5·0·2=12; Ru ssell 4-0·1=9; 46 , Hannan Trace 43 (OT)
Assists -15 (McCartr 7)
0-0=4; Davidson 0-0-1=1; Jl,oberts Ltsle 1-2·0=8: Rou sh 2-0·3=7;
Scoring' leaders- Detty &amp;
Sieais·- II (McCarty &amp; Simp'·
0-0-1=1. TOTALS-17-3·8=51
Davis 1-0·1=3; Allen 0-0-2=2. Haislop (Oak Hill). 10 eaeh; Mul· son 3 each)
Field goals- 20-72 (27.8%)
TOTALS- 23·5:2=70
lens (HT). 11
Turnovers -14
· Three-pointers 3· 17
Free throws -9-16 (56.25%)
RESERVE GAME- Symmes
(17.6%)
NORTH GALLI A. (48 ) Symmes Valley 55
Valley 37, Southwestern 35 (OT)
Freelhrows-8-20(40%)
Peck 8-1-4=23; McCarley 4-1.·
Southwestern 54
Scoring leaders- Robinson
Rebounds - 48 (Villanueva 2=13; Hu~t 3-1·1=10; Adams 1-0- . At Aid, Symmes Valley eked (SV) • 13; Newberry (SW) · 10
II)
0=2. TOTALS -16·3·7=48
out a one-point victory over South·
(The nnalthree SVAC games
Blocked shots - 7 (Davidson
Field goals -19-58 (32.8%)
western in spite of. forsaking its were compiled by G., Spencer
6, Bradbury I)
Three-pointers- 3~7
perfect foul shooting prior to the Osborne of the OVP start) . .
Assists- 14
Free throw~- 7-12 (58.3%)
fourth quarter in favor of a 4-for- 7
Steals...., 16
Rebqunds · - at least 25 effon at the line in prime time.
Turnovers- 18
(Canady II)
The outside shooting of Jeremy
MIDDLEPORT
''Assists -6
Fuller, who canned threnhreeSouthern 70, North Gallia 48
Steals- 15 (Peck 5)
pointers en route 10 a ~arn-htgh 16MERCHANTS
At Vinton, North Gallia's conTurnovers-23
point effofll· and the ms1de offense
centrating on Southern point guard
RESERVE GAME -South- of senior postman Chris Blake,
Jeremy Roush ljlld forward Russell em 47, North Gallia 36
whose 14 points made him of three
Singleton in Saturday _night's
Scoring leaders- Grucscr Vikings to score in double figures , .
SVAC contest had its stron g and (Southern) · 13; Lloyd (N. Gal.) · helped Valley (1 -3 overall) to gain
weak points, at least as far as the 10
its first win of the season and boost
host Pirates were concerned (seven
its conference record to 1-1.
points for Roush, ,14 for Singleton),
Oak Hill71, Hannan Trace 61
Aaron McCarty, Southwestern's
but that opened the path for junior
AI Mercerville, junior point junior point guard, led all shooters
guard Michael Evans to score a guard Benji Lew is and senior with 11 points and had seven
team-high 15 points to pace the guard/forward Bill Potter fired in .assists. Junior center Chris ManTornadoes to a 70-48 win.
17 points each to help drive Oak deville contributed 14 points and
FREE PARKING!
Keeping Roush in ch eck was Hill to a 10-point win over Hannan eight rebounds for the Highlanders
Pirate point guard Charles Peck, Trace.
(0-4,0-3).
who won the game's marksman· Breaking a 35-all deadlock at Quar1er totals
REGISTER TO WIN IN
halftime, the Oaks (2-2, 2-1) took Southwestern ..... 14 18 11 11 = 54
advantage of Trace's offensiv e Symmes Valley .. !! 19 8 17 =55
OUR GIFT CERTIFICATE
brownout in the third quarter
SYMMES VALLEY (55) Hannan Trace forward Chad Fuller 3·3·1=16; Blake S-0-4=14;
DRAWINGS!
Swain led the court with 28 points.
Lester 5-0-3=13; DiUonJ-2·0=8;
Quartertotals
· Jenkins 1-0-0=2; Wall 1-0-0=2. . NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
Oak Hill ..;........ .. \3 22 20 16 = 71
TOTALS -1~·5·8=55
.WINNERS/
Hannan Trace ..... l7 18 11 15 = 61
Field goals- 21-56 (37.5%)
Dec. 2: Bnl Aspeck........ $160
OAK HILL (71) -Lewis S·O·
Free throws-8-11 (72.7%)
7=17; Potter 5-1-4=17; Simpson 6·
Rebounds -47 (Blake 11)
Middleport
0-2=14; Turner S-1·0=13; Hale 3Dec. 9: Ella Hensler.......$240
0-0=6; Hall 2-0-0:4 . TOTALS2~-2-13=71

'

In the NFL. •.

EaStern edgesKCHS 55-Sf; SOuthern downs NortliUallia
t

· Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

Monday; Decembar 23, 1991

52

...

_ . , . Locd 56, Moa&lt;l-39
Canol w-. ..... 69, Col. ltanlcy61
Camon CJIIaOat 15, Uniontown L..to

c..- Molloloyl2.- 69

c..... s.63, I'U.S.. 56

Connot, Ind. 71, W. Ch- Lak011

"

•1 ,258 Road Miles Cleaned
-6,705 Baga of Trash Collected
o45 lllepl Dumpeltee cleaned by program
o241llepl Dumpa cleaned by Offenders
•14 LHter Cltatlona
•11 Non-litter Citation•
o27Wamlnga
•2M Hra. Community Service (Offenders)
FUNDED BY:
Ohio Department of Nltural Reaourcea
Qlvlalon of Litter Prevention and Recycling
George V. Volnovloh, GoVIIIIOr

.v

•115 Hours ($2,800) Donated Equipment
•Educational Materials In all·Schools
•41 Presentations by Program StaH
•110 Special Event Conlalners placed and used
•2 Special Recycle Days
~1 ,200 MaJor Appliances Recycled
•240 Volunteers In the Ohio River Sweep
•2 Park Type Highway Signs placed
THANKS FROM:
Paula ..:Ben •.. Roger...Kenny
Melgl County Litter Control
Union Ave. at St. Rt. 7••.Pomeroy 992-63&amp;0

.
'

I

�Monday, December 23, 1991

:- .,:P:,::a:!!q::e::::S:,:T:,::he:_D::;a=.:l!!ly_:S:;e~n!:;tln~e::_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.__ _ _ _....:.,P,:om:.:,::er:o!.y=M:Id:d::;le;:p:o~rt:.;,O:.;h:io:_,...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;........,-~M~o;.;n.::d::a:;.:y,~D;;ec;.e;,;,m;.;;b;.;e_r_23..;,_1_99_1

:~;-Yeu~&amp;o-cial-Security
·

·
By Ed Petersoa
Social Security
MIDiger iD Athens
People nearing retirement age
who vi ill soon be applying for
Social Security benefits can savetime and energy with a little pre·
planning.
·
·
· People should contact Social
Security two or three months
before the date they wish 10 begin
receiving benefits..This will allow
sufficient time for processing the
claim so that the first benefit payment will, arrive the month retire·
ment begins. People can apply by
telephone,.pr they can go to their
local Social Security offia.
Whic. hever is chosen, they can
save time by having cenain documents handy. They will need their
Social Security card or a record of
the number. They must also have a

'
birth certifiCllte and the birth cerLificates of their spouses tind chi!·
dren (if they, 100, are filing for benefits), as well as evidence of recent
earnings. This would be last year~
Form W-2 or a self,ernployme'lft
LaX return for last year.
People who want their benefit
payments deposited directly in10 a
bank account should ha\1\llfcheckbook or bank passboo~ order to
give the correct Pank account information.
Anyone with questions about
applying for benefits should contact Social Security. The people
there will-be glad to help. The
Athens Social Security office is
located at 221 1/2 North Columbus
Road. The office is open from 9
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday. The toll free number is 1800-772-1213.

Names in the news
.CAPPS, Fla. (AP)- Ted Turn·
er and Jane Fonda, multimedia
power couple, got married at his
ranch on her 54th birthday.
·
About 30 friends and relatives
auended the ceremony Saturday at
the ranch near Capps, about 20
miles east of Tallahassee.
"It is a fact · :_ that longrumored wedding," reported CNN, ·
·which Turner owns.
Miss Fonda wrote the couple's .
vows and was given away by her
18-year-old son, Troy.
The couple announced their
engagement Dec. 7, 1990, when
Miss Fonda displayed a diamond
and opal ring.
The marriage is the third for
both Miss Fonda, a two-time
Academy Award-winning actress,
and Turner, chairman of Turner .
Broadcasting System Inc . and
owner of the Atlanta Braves and
the A~ailta Hawks. .

mother died in 1975 and her father
died in a gruesome acciden~ but no
death has affected aruess .Katey
Saga! like the recent stillbirth of
her daughter. ·
"It's still scary," said Saga!,
who plays Peg Bundy op Fox's
"Married ... with Children."
"This is not any less or an
impact than losing my parents. "
Her mollter died after a long ill·
ness when Saga! was 19, and' her
father was killed by the rotor
blades of a helicopter while filming
a miniseries in 1981.
Sagal's 7 l/2 months of preg·
nancy ended Oct. 13 after 32 hours
of labor. For the prev_ious two
weeks, she and her boyfriend,
drUmmer Jack Wllite, had watched
the fetll$ develop ~home moni·
tor.
"It was a girl. We would watch
and talk to her," Saga! said in TV
Guide.
Saga! safd she hopes to try
again.
"I have my dark moments, but I
never, ever throw in the towel,"
she said

-At t~e movies: ·'The Prince .of Tides' ·op_ens We~n.~sday
'By DOLORES BAR"CLAY- · -- "lraied on!Henovcl'b'fPiitCon· about an unspeakable act. AP Arts Editor
roy, "The Prince of Ttdes" is a
This is Nolte's finest perfqr·
It is billed ''The Prince of study of a. dysfunctionil family, of mance on film , Unfortunately,
Tides," a film by Barbra Streisand. · dominant men and endangered Streisand destroys the l!lOment ·A more apt ti~e JUSt might be "The women, of abused children and and lite integrity of the siOry- by
Princess ofTides."
-- ·
'confused adults.
·
turning the camera on herself. For
Streisand directs, produces and . Tom Wingo (Nolte) comes' to some odd reason, the rilmma\cer
stars opposite Nick Nolte, who New York from the lovely South decided that audiences would
gives an outstanding perfonnance Carolina seacoast town where he rether see Lowenstein blink and
as a Southern teacher and football lives with his wife and daughters 10
coach wh.ose tortured childhood see his sister Savannah's psychiamemories become his own saJva- trist, Susan Lowenstein (Streisand).
lion.
Savannah (Melinda Dillon), a
.,. G
R Cl
f h
Streisand is a talented direc10r, noted author and-poet, has attempt• he olden u1e ass o t e
and she draws some wonderful per· · ed suicide.
First Baptist Church in Middlepon
formances from all of her ·actors,
Lowenstein, a stunning, fashion- met recently at'the home of Man·
especially Nolte, Kate Nelligan and able doctor who keeps long. sculp· ning and June IQoes.
Blythe Danner. But her camera tured nails, is married 10 a tyranni·.
Devotions were presented by the
work is only pedestrian, relying on cal violinist and has a troubled, hosts using a readmg from "Decistock shots and angles.
teen-age son.
sion," entitled "Reflection of the
In. analyzing Tom, Lowenstein LighL"
.
tries 10 unravel the Wingo family's
The group discussed the possi·
history. And as Tom and Lowen· bility of a sleigh riding pany in
stein taelde lite demons of the past January, weath~rperrnitling.
· The Rock Springs Beuer Health and reconstruct Savanna)l's life,
A Christmas auction was
Club met recently at the church to they tum 10 each other for a brief enjoyed by.all with the proceeds to
prepare trays of fruit, homem~de !o,ve affair.
__
be used to assist a neeoy family
cookies and candy for the shut-1ns
Streisand moves-the siOry very and lite building program.
of the community.
nicely and easily between past and
Attending the meeting were
The trays were delivered to the present, and effectively uncloths Manning and Ju.ne Kloos, Bob and
pe(jple and visirations were made.
the eccentricities of thiS troubled Violet CampbeU., Randall and Car·
A Christmas tarry '~n dinjler was
family. All"hs horrible secrets olyn Davis, Jean Thomas, Donna
also held as was a gtft exchange explode in a stunning climax in Grindstead, and John and Glenna
with the 10 members present.
which Tom finally tells Lowenstein _ Riebel. ·

h ld
C/asS 0 S party

show."

•'

CLOSED

01y1

Wordo
' 11
11 .
11

,
3

· I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

•

10

11
1I

Monthly

Newly Re-done

Roto · ~ 1I W~~ .
14.00
11.00
...00

"",

.42

~13.00

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

-

et .30/dey

.eo

1-Loet end Found

.

1-Publle .... • AucUon
t-W~nttd •• luy

illli'IIF'IIli

FIIIII Sililllili'S

\• r v 1 J"

1\ lr,•r·lrr

~

t1-flerm lqu..,men1 •
11- Wenttd to luy · 1
13-Uv"lltock ·
. . -Htv I Grein
II .:.: Seed &amp; Fertlller

107 Mill, Street='

Middleport,

Ohio _

Cllffi• Courttr

•

ANI Code 114

._.It• Courtt'
Ar11 Codel14

.••

•••-oeHipo1'-

112-Micktl.,rt

•

SI7-Ch•two

111-Yinton

'

141-ftto Ot~rtde
211-0ullft Dltt.

141-Artbb Dlst.

White .nd Scotch Pine

5 A.lndup
Good llllctlon of
- 1.1f9e treu;
614-742-2143 or

·------·
-1-·ECAIPINTEI
-lleaatoll -

-c........

.

.

gram, "The ABC's of Christmas."
She also read "The Story of Christ·
mas" from lite Bible.
Attending were Norina Baker,
Louise Bearhs, Betty Dill, Sharon
Folmer, Linda, 'Missy and Becky
Foster, Mildred Jacobs, Dorothy
Jeffers, Thelma Jeffers, Fern Morris, Virginia Wears, Betty Wills,
Pandora Collins, Iris Collins,
Roberta Dill, and Keith, Dee and
Becky Rader.
·

3t - Homaforltlt
32-MolllleHomtt for S1lt
33:...''""' tar lilt

171"; Pt· ,.... ..,1
111 - Apple Grave

111-Ch•ter
I43..:.Portllnd

. . 31-lutln•• lulldinOt

11- Lolt, .......

247-lollrt Fo11o

141- fllldnt
742- Rutllnd
le:? ,.,Coolvlte ·~

137-lutf•~

71- IOitl I MDtOfl tor ... ,
71-Auto Ptrll I Acttltorl•
77--Auto fll~•if

71- Cem,lnJ E~u_,m.,.1
71-CtmPifl I Motor Hom•

31- Atlll•c.•• w.,ntcl

771-M•son
112-New"-ven
111-1.11111

......

IMII

~

/•

'

992~621

41-li~tKtlor

11-211-pd.

WHALEY'S
AUTO PliTS

•Re.toi;tlltle tllt3jl
oOulllly Work .
•FOM·E..,...

Time •.
otllgh GIG• on
Floor flnloh

47-Wint.lo ~lftl

41-E.,Ipmertt for AW~t
41-For

Ll'•• .._

UPHOLSTERY
"Helpin8 You To
, Recotlflr Your·
1n,e,tment"

OIRISTMAS TREES
&amp;CRAm

BUD FORDS
Fresh Cut liees or
· Cut Your Own.

CHERRY RIDGE,
ol Dlrwln on Rt.
681 on G111vel Rold

' With Color Monitor
Reg Separate Items.
1199.90
Current Sale Price
899.95
Less Bon.us Coupon - 200.00

UCIIIE, OHIO

11.1,......,011.

-:BISSEll :-.· ·
BUILDERS
CUSTOIIIJIJ
HOMES &amp;GAilGES

c

drive and real-time ClOck. Aeg.

TREES

Four lllllnl ol

l'ICOIIImtnclldon.

BUllDOZING

,.._, 71. . 11.,
Itt I 'rl

RESIDENCE
35975 Fltttwu•s U
·Pollltroy, Olllo

PON08
SEPTIC 8YITEIIS
LAND Cl EAMIG
WATER&amp;

call Ed Blt11n

COllect at
1-614-667-6474

11·18, 1 mo.

111111 .... pd.

USID APPUAias . .
tt NT WIIUIIIT
WAIIIIIS-SIM "'

. tt~m-:-ht.,

.. '

EEI&amp;UliiS-SIOI.,

IMIIS-.......--411\

IMIDti-SUS., ·
IICIO CMIIS-S7t .,.

KEN'S .APPLIANCE
SEIYKE

fi'MEsti..tn

ITanav 1000 RL •25-1450 ~~ nal tJe ava1lillle •n ar1 stores Mos11y tlemos 1ThiS Coupon musr be sur1811tleled ar
1HT'II! olpurchase L1m11 ooe coupcn per sales IICket CouPOn•s wah!! ar part•c•parmo Rad•D Sha~k Stores anti Oeil·
e r ~ VotOWllere PIOMI•IM b1law

Honoet

and depondablt.

Stop &amp; Ca Ill!''

11M3. Now Ill.•.

(hoke

fMEdlllllle

•Garapa

Withou1ham

Starting Sept. 22

30,..,. •perloltce.

.........
•c'"""
........ .

125·145111043

SUNDAYS

tnllrlor Pllnllng,

BISSELL &amp; lUlU
COIISTIUtnOII -

69995

......,.

. PlllfriiiO

REASONDLE
HIRUY HAIIIIII'S

WATCH FOR SKiNS

... 949·2101
tr949·2161
10 ILIID CILU

12 Gauge foctory

11/20/1 ....

1Y. IIIIo to G10ve.

Separate Items 1799.90. Curren1
Sa~ Price 599.90. 125·14501

..J.sm .,

'85·U73

tU-U61

Acroa Frtlii Pllt Offico - ·

I'OiiDOY, OliO

667-6179

10/lO/'H ll1t

UCIII '
F•E DDi".
la1h•t lal' 1
EYIIY
SAT• • • .
6:3oP.&amp;
Startiit• ~. 21

a...

NICE 1 1nd 2 BR ~

FURNIISHED

MOBILE HOllE
RENTALS
AYIIIIble In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOllE PARK
Sbotlng.t $235 per 1110.
YIIY nice 2 or 3 BR. 2
blth houee .

GROOM
· ROOM
Co.te Grooming
· for Alllrllds ARClofER ~

~ . 331

SIN.S70-3DD·t"
IO·Coltllla Prlmr

24918

Sit•=

Cit 1~-Cerdless
PencilExtra·
Willi

IIIS,-2795

~£Af::. 1Sf1C:.

~~L ISf1C...

:.1&amp; 5995

11915

.•~:\s

40~

OH-IItllnrul
8·1n·1 R-11

S5G 011-Porllble
Progr•llllble CD

Low Al$115 p., Month•
115-1903

Low A.a S15 u 2•5017
Ptr Month.

EMilEE MERINAR

I\II&amp;MCMX "

,_.,,

DUOFONE e

:Is

6911

Cut3~-lll~lrlest

,._All•••

Low At $15 Ptt Month•

143·399

MICRDNTA

Rfll,•
1.11

615

DUOFONE

2~'1s1985

~'15

33~

3~

Gfi-JtiiUelCI .
WltCIIWIItl Alina
Alii Crll Ct

Cllt 2~-Cardlns
Phlae Wltb Paging

Oil-Picket

s,.ll Clllcktr With
88,000 Wtrds

H.l-5064

5915

Low As S15 Per Mon1h.
143·554

1163·674

2~es

~EALisnc_

23995

Save $48- VCR With

tlll-Scrllll - . ,

Low Ao 115""' -

2~is1J995
Slwe $811-AIIIFII

StereoSrstNI

•

Law AI 111""' - h ·

~£4LISF1C..

:15

1415

Cit 25~-AIIIFM

. Cl4ck llldlo

Fir Trlwrltn

~£AL ISF1L

::.1&amp;

2915'

~ 011-letlnner's

Keyboard With Ftlll
2~·0cllvt 1111!11

~,;
1~

.....

1088

Olf-Dtluu

Electrollc IIIIIIV .

Tnt•

122·032

CmtryO..

n.aeli
1Rfll.
• ·95

1488

=~

Bracket

0

U3·50Q

No •.I1.CV·2011n
l wlll o!fer lor 1111 II the front
doot of the -rlhouoe ln
Pomoroy, Molgo County,
Ohio, on tho 1Oth cUy of
Jonuory, 1112, It 10:00 o,m.,
the following rooloototo ond
mobile homo alluato4
thormn, looolod ot243 P•rt
Slllll, Mlddloport, Ohio
45710. A contpllll llgll d..
ocrlpllon ol the ••• eollte
and 'mobile hOme lo 11 lotlowo:
&gt; Tile following deocrlbed
propor!y tocoto4 In tho
County ol Molgo, Slota of
Ohio:
Btlng L.ot No. Forty-throe
In Lowor Pamoroy, now ln-

:J

3915

33~ 011-AMIFI.

Sl•eoC-Itt
11pe Pllrer
114·752

11

Help wanted

'·
to

'

....,... lltlld•, ,.,,,., •••~•••,.,
PRICES

AT PARTICIPATING

STORES AND DEALERS

relit
Who eenl
food, flo--, or epoke
11dncl word In our lime
of eorrow. Spec:IIII
thenke to Rev.-8111
Little end Fllher
Funtl'lll Ho1111.
Fon•Bmlth

• Audio/Video Tapes • Computer Disks
• Splitters • Batteries • Adapters • Cables

·~ lnttrtll end No Ptymtnlt until hlarth 1Q$2 on approved RSVP accounts whh slngle·tlckat purcha1e9 totaling $50,00
or mort. Following the no·lnllf111 period, 1ny remaining balance laaubJtcl to a finance Charge of up to 21% APR, dependIng on your state of residanca (50C minimum monlhl~ l1nsnc;e charge). Reltr to your RSVP Account Agreement. Offer 11a!it1
tl'lfough Oee. 21. !WI .

. . Middleport, OH.

frlende~lghbore, tnd

'

Moot

:=•

CNdll

Canlalcome

Mota blltery -powerta equipment •~~ludel baneries. SWITCHABLE TOUCH-TONEIPULSE phones wor\ on boltltone and pulse linea. Th&amp;relol'e , In areas hav lng pulse (rouwy-dlall tinea, you Cln 11111 uae MMc:es r~ulring tonea. FCC registered. NOI !or coin« patty linea. We service whal wt sell.

~

u . ~x

Are rou • MH ~tarter,
llble to hllndle dtellll
1nd work with p -

ple? Experl•nce In
.ccountlng, ctlltomer
MrVlce, Nlel, coiJec.
tlon• - Trelnlng 1nd 1
ch•ne• for Fldv1nc•
ment. Bend reeume
with merenc11 to
Box 72tD% D1lly

Blntlne!.

. SNOWDEN'S LOT
, . . SI~.WOl

TREt) READY
NOV. 21r.: I

fr... (It Dtlri!Mir Gmll

., .. s-lai.

DECK THE HALLS· Olthl1 2.slq!y bl·level home. Then
relax and wait !cii' Sanll in Iron! of 1h8 stone front f•epi&amp;C1/.
Home fearureo 9 rooms, 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, upper
deck over 2 car gal8ge, gazebo, storage_bUJid~ng wlfruil
cellar, beaudluf landscaping. Many allracliOns too numerous to menllonl ASKING $76,900 MUST SEE I

~··fit
614-985·3961

sra .. .,

6l4·742·;w51

949·2206

11·111 ... ,..

111141111 1 -

--•VINYL SIDING
•.t:LUMINUM SlptNG
•ILOWNIN
JNSULATION

JINGLE YOUR BELLS IN THIS NEW USTING· Pomaroy1 floor hme homo w~h 3 bedrooms, 1 car garage, new
deck, narural gas tumance. new root, lull basemen! on 2.
13+ acres wilfi .gardon space. WBFP. ASKING S 31,900
HANC YOUR WREATH· On lhe door of this brickllrame
Ranch Sll'le Home. Tltis is an invi~ng home wrlh 3 bedrooms, lufl.basament, fireplace and 26 x 14 ,garage. Lo·
cated In Baum subdivision. ASKING $59,900
·
CHRISluAS MEMORIES. Have been made in this His·
Iorio Homo In Racine. Many mare are walling 1o be made
by your lamiyl Tltis 2 story brick home ol 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms Ills 2 fireplaces, aclequale room &amp; CjUBhll' oon·
s1ruC1ion awaidng the i&amp;rli&amp;Sl ollamily ga1henngs lor lhe
holiday season , ASKING $53,900

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHAN RD.,
RACINE

.... 117:0!.!.-!:

1111tlt mo.

•.

902-6855
. 1111511

OVEII ·IEPAII

. Pldr.,. .

Ill'S APPUANCE

"F- Ettlmlltto"

H2·5US tr
915-3561

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

SDVICI

......

Last markdo. .
before closing
store.

OPEl Fll. &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 p...

DEEI CDniNG ·

••d
WRAPPING

'25 Cat &amp; WI'IIP!II4
ss btnr tt' SUI ·
MAPLEWOOD

LliE

Acre• ..... Pest~

ltACII, OIL

110 SUNOlY UUS

949·2734

!-ll·ll1t

REINDEER VACATION SPOT! In Lebanon lWP. 146,5
acres ol VACANT WOODED LAND where eve'\' smart
reindeed would want to' lay back and kick up !hen hgals
aher a hectic Christmas run. Properly also offers _FREE
GASI and IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! $36,700
TAKE TIME THIS HOLIDAY SEASON TO REMEMBER
AND EXPERIENCE THE TRUE MUEAR.FNAINMIGUOEFS A
CHRISTMAS. WE WISH YOU 'YO
VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM
CLELAND REALTY I
..
~NAYE • CLE'...,....
• .,0..............................
. ...........
ll2.$fti
nc
·
1~1411

:.2tl0 .

TRACY IAINAGER ...........................................

. JEAN 1RtJIIELL......................................:···-· til ·eell

JO: HILL........ ~ .....................................................i.••
OFFICE..- ........·................................................ ~ .

·

,.

~Ohio
111141tfn'

PO.IOY

AU lUllS .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

·-

'

PICI·A·PAIR

lritltlt .. OrWt

PH. 949-2101
· or lies. 949·21.0
mo. ,

'lUI pa

HILL'S DEER
CUniNG

FOR SALE AT BOI

PreftssltHI

theraln

~£AL IS nC.

:Is

Cmn,etc.

lendanta,
mond

PIIIGllll Pltl111

CHRISTMAS TRHS

wi•RIIflt

hp,Htatl

A.~~~~~ow;a~n~,~·ot;~·l~-~·;·o.;. ll

25~ Gfi-Dn111WIII
Tone/pulse dialing

Jr. ~olf Stls
,.., _.Gr.,lite I
Melli a.lts

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on Ordor ol
Sill looued out of the Com·
mon Pleai Court of Molgo
County, O~lo, ln the cue Dl
Tile Pooplea Bonk ol Point
Pleoun~ PtalndH, va. Ray.

•

2'9

oll'lllllltl'on

n2·20t7

Clrd of Thlnka

·~

Clll61._192-6528 or
385 8227

Ia Bryan Plica

. *Regular Priced Merchandise
bcludlngllre.ady .Low Priced Carhartt
Products

VISIT AMERICA'S FAVORITE
ELECTRONIC :::.
TOYLAND
as

Wlndowa

•Roofing

l.OW AI $30 Per Month •
W11:1·827

•

MEMOMX

•Rep'-&gt;'111111

l'EIIESII
H2·2772or

PubliC Notice

MICRDNTA

·VInyl Siding

Cast

StDD Olf-121-ZOOm

Teaford

0

INSULAnON

c-.port, frM Ill'·

. 614-9f2-6120

....

J&amp;L

MMintenl end

Owner &amp; Op.ratar

~oosagg
CJ~Korder With

.

l:OOP.M.

614·949;2202

~/31/'91 lfn

Tandy 1000 RL·HD

TANDY

·

a.

. •r lEWIS, o.. ·

RACINE GUN
ClUB
GUN SHOQT

SNODGUSS

,• .
c.mSpedallll
••,_.......
,

DITOU ..a ·
l·IDO·I48.0070
IQ- OliO ·

llient•

·MINUTE SAL

SAVE ON THOSE LAST •INUTES
SHOPPING IDEAS

107 Mill St.

·c -.r (101111'. . .
_. 1U PUIGI CUI :

Homlrnlde with .
Long Lilting GNin
Scotch Pint.

. 614·949·2051

11125.

992-7013
or 992·5553

"

EXTRAVAGANZA

*Off Your Total Purchase
fou Pick four Savings From
Tlte Christmas Present

•

Order.Now foi Your
lolt Loved Onta.

V. C. YOUNG II

MODB.S

I,

SHOPPI

SAVE
10% • 20% •30%

... c.. Ju.s."•

$20.00 ...

(Fi!EE E8TIM~TE81

NEW I USED PAll'S
fOil AU MAKES I

' 41-HOVi. lor Rent
U-MobHtHam• tor Rtnt

let . Ruuftt fief ,

r

IS~

TONIGHT
8 P.M.·Midnight

195071. . . . . . .

•A1I•IIIIIItl1 Prbs"

74!- Motorcvcl•

Ar11 Cod~ 30• ·

Pam•oy

,...... '

-,;"-** - -

·Rock Spri11;gs UMW gather
· The Rock Springs United
Methodist Women held their
J:hristmas dinner recently at the
thurch.
· Rev. Keith Rader gave the
blessing and a gift exchange was
. held as a game of musical chairs
was played.
The group voted 10 sponsor a
·needy family for the Christmas sea,son and other matters were also
;discussed.
.
• Fern 'Morris presented the pro·

Cut It For Y-.

BLANKETS

73- vansl • ·wo·, .

MJOtt Co .. WY

UP- loon

GllAVE

7 t -'Auto• for 111,1
71- Trucllt ter.lele

oU-Fifme tof flltnt
44- AI*'fmtnt for Rant
U-Furnlthed Roome

r

1'IMy 10111 RL

Or(al
742·3020 Eml1gs

or ·

Homtg10wn, ·
beiUtlfully lhlll'ld.

Tf1nsp1rrlr1111111

Classified po~es,corr1r thr .
following lelephone e~changes •..

•I

Low A•l25 Per Monlh•

614-99H394

742·2979

. I

~':y

61~992·5528

WEBER'S ·
CHRISTMAS TREES

.

7- Y•d Sllefplkl in altianctl

171-Wtlnwt

•'Playing Fred is a double-edged
sword, ~ou know," he said in TV
Guide. 'I may get 10 hear 'Yabba,
dabba do!' for lite rest of niy life.
And my daughter will hear, 'Isn't
youi dad Fred Flintstone?' ... I'd
Her beUer make a pile of dough.''

Only~mo.

1-01¥1....
,1 - H•ppy Adl

5f'GRS~

·

·choc.elll!llc.t

eCaiOet Hu flit Oty

MOST STORES OPEN

200
OFF SALE PRICES!

TREE FARM'

' .HOURS:
8:30 lm-4:00 pm

JUST OFF AT. 33

12-2-91·1 - ·

LATE IIOIDAY IIIHT!

5

COUNTRY MOllE
HOMEPARK ·
nice homealtu
avlllable for up to
· · 80' homlf.

•

'

SAVE AN EXTRA

DK's
TOYS
- lly ER11
Dlrfl.,eilatl\e
.oi•Ir rn.t.51tep

.01/doy

. . . . . . . fotcontecu1MIUM, bt'Dkan 1:*Pda¥1~1tbt charted
.
.

OPEN DEC. 26
9:30 am·S:OO .pm

.

usiness -Services

RIGGS

Yoar Tree or We'l
-

RATES

TO lll.cE AN AD UU 992·2156
MOND.Y 'thru FRIDAY. I A.M. to 5 P.M.

•.

Leno.said he'll devote consider- able time 10 politics.
·
: "The public seems to enjoy
· material with political bite," he
said.
RADNOR, Pa . (AP) -

OPEN CHRISTMAS
EVE
9:30 am~8:00 pm

CHRISTMAS
.... . DAY

-·

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Club visits shut-ins

RADNOR, Pa . (AP) - Jay
· Leno will just say no 10 sex and yes
to politics when he takes over for
Johnny Carson on the " Tonight"
.. show in May.
The talk show runs up against
an explicit dating-game series in
some areas.
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - During
"I'm tired of watching shows
a
break
from the ABC comedy
willt stupid sex themes," Leno said
"Roseanne,''
John Goodman will
in the latest issue ofTV Guide. "In
play
another
hard-working
bluesome markets, we're up against
.
collar
husband:
Fred
Flintstone.
'Studs,' which, as far as I'm conlo
cerned, is for people who have no
But Goodman says there's a
mating skills. I'm never going to
: try to compete with that kind of downside to his latest movie role.
~

Elassi·fied

·-

flash her nails than stay
Tom's emotioritil -and mo•llna
pouring.

The. O.ily Stnllntl P'IIQI 7

,.

..

t.. --"'-

�.

'

Page

8

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

'

.

41

Houses for' Rent

2br Cottag~ In Town, Rtftren- Roqulltd. $250/mo. 614-2451375.
.
3 BR home, newly remodlltd
with partial baum~nt. Excellent

45

.

.

:.64.:__;.;;Hay~•-G_ra_ln~....::·

.

KIT 'N' CARLYLh by Larry Wright

Furnished
Rooms

$400 mo. plue dtJ)O:!IIt. Refenm·

42

- Mobne·Homes
for Rent

2 .bdrm mObile home fot rent,
"pprox. ~ mllll from Pomeroy·I.
Mlddltpol1, total tltctric, 614·

11115-4233

2·bdrm tralltr In ·Racine ar&amp;a,
eaii.OI~,f85-4233

2br Dtpolit And References AI·

"Dear Santa, My nelghbor'a·lawn mower
wok~ . me every Saturday la6t summer.
Please brlng·hls kid a drum Set."

Lost : Foma 11 WhHo Spoeklod
Beaglo. Approx 16 liontho,
Vk:lnll~: Golf CourH,

304-675-l-------...;;.....,.----------1

6056.

7

'

Yard Sale

Employmenl Serv1ces

11

Help wanted

1112p.m. 8M-140.0527.
For Ronl Or Solo On Lond contract: 3br Mobile Home, 14x70,
Total Eloc1rlc, On 3 Acros Land,
8 MIIH From Golllpolls On AI.
21a, 614·38&amp;.11146 . .
Nlco 12x80 ~ bldroom, largo
Ylrd, City School District. rent
1210 montk, Includes water,
trasl1,
dtpollt
ftqulred.
Kana~ga, 614-448·74'73.

44
11

Gallipolis
&amp;_VIcinity,

Help wanted

Carti And Man~gernenl Exptrlenca Oeelrtd Bill Hoi

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

Nectssarj~. Good GuHt Relation Skills Eauntlal. Excttlwll

Solary And Fririgo Bonolh Poek·
Send Rnuma To: Roelt
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In age.
Ward, Director Of HUman

Adllance. Deadli ne: 1:00pm the

day belora the ad Is to run,
Sunday edition· 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
edition
tO:OOa.m.
. Saturday.

Rnourcas, Hplur' MediCI!

c.n.

tor, 385 Jaekoon Plko, Golllpcllo,
OM 45631. 814-446-5105, EEO
Employer.

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU ·
Excillonl
Pay, , Bonolhl,

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Transp0f1atlon,

407-2~-4JI7,

Ext 571. 9a.m.•111p.m. Toll
Rolundod.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
tu ll lime aucllonHr, complete AVON I All Aluo I Shl~oy
.
auction strvict. LlcenHd Ohio, Spoors, 304-87s.142t.
West Virginia, 304-~5785.

Bebyslnar . Monda~ Thru Friday,

A.M. To 4:30 P.M. Muat a.
9 wanted to Btiy · 7Prompl
And Rllloblo. Sond
Wanted to buy, Standing tlmt.r, Rooumo: To Babyllllor, 403
Bob Williams I Sont-e14·il2· Grover Road, Chllhlrt, OH
45620 ·
5449.
Top Flrlcet Ptld: All Otd U.S. Clnlllld nur= autatant, full
Coins, Gold Ring!! Sll1o1tr Coins,

Gbld Colno. M.T.o. Coin Shop,

151 Second A~o~enue, Gallipolis.

1 &amp; 2 bdrm
In Middlapcn ,
Utl1lt11 Fum, . tp req, no pets,

814·992·2218 ..

ASSISTANT DI~ECTOR

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
FOOD SERVICE
lhe day before tha ad 11 to run. Progreulv. 2&amp;9 Bed JCAH kSunday edition - 2:00 p.m. ered'lttd, Adla Clrt . Hotpltal
Friday. Mcmday edition - 2:00 Seeking Rtgllttrt;d Olltlclen
p.m. Saturday.
Wllh BS In Food/Nutrhlon Or
Ralalad Field. Prtvloue HNtlh

a

1.

AVQN :: All ar. ., Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2645.

ALL Yard Salta Muat Bt Paid In

Apartmenl .
for Rent

&amp;. put dme
tlons avalltblt,
exc blnefltt packlge, all 3
ehltt1 available, contact per·
eonnll Plnunt Valley Hosp,

304-675-4340, AAIEOE.

t ,bdrm efficiency apl, partially

tumlal'led, dtpoalt required, 3rd
floor, no peta, Pomaroy, 614·
.
Manager to live on silt 9112-6677
managa mlnl·atoragt com·
pltx'r.iFivt -p0Jnta Pomeroy, 614· 2 BR deluxe: equipped kllcl1tn,
wash1r, dryer hook-up. Exc .
888· 57
location, no pels. 6'\A-446·7071.

Rnldtnt manager; maintenance
couple for tplllr1ment compleJC
In Gallipolis. Full·tlmt wllh
apartmtnt &amp; utllltll!l Included.
S.ncf resume to: Box 1320
Wa~nesvlllt, NC ~8786.

-41

· Wantocl: Truck Driver To Haul

Coal . 614-256·1011.

14

Business
Training

Rtt~ln

Nowi11Soutl1easttm

Businns College, Spring Valley
Plaza. Call Today, 614-446-436711
Reg ltteratlon 190-05~12748.

Wanted to

18

Do

:-:W::::lii~B:-o-:-by-ol""t.,.ln-::M-r.,~-om.;o-.""R_od_·
ney Area. Rtftrtnces Available.
Coll614-245-5687.
Georg•• Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your logs to 1hl mill Jutt

eoll304·875.1957.
Handy lion Barvlcos.. Will Oo
Atmodtllng I 'Minor Home

omokor, rol. roq, 814-992-3542
Mill Paula'• Day c.,. Center.
EXCELLENT PAV For •Typing Solo,
affordable, chlldcore; M·F
Narnta &amp; AddrHMI 'From 8
a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10 .
Home. No Quotas. Call 1·900- B.,o,.,
scl1oot Drop-Ins
BV6·1888 1$0.99 Mlni18Vro. +I Or wtlcomt.1Her
614-44&amp;.822.-. New In·
Wrlto: PASSE • 331.. 181 S. Un· tant Toddltr
Car~, a14-441S-t227.
calnway, N. Aurora, IL 60542.
SMklng

contractor

FuiHimo Socrelary For Job Sho
Ollloo. Expo~onco Whh Com•
putore Holplul. Ploou Forword
Roou,moo To: P.O. Box 113,
Chuhlro, OH 45620.

Financial

1--------21 .
Business

Rooms for rent. w•ek or month.

_________
-

bath
kltchln ... Ntwly
remodeled. N1c1 area, big yard.

$325/mo., $325 dop. Doyo 614·
446·1157, Evo. 6M-ll94·450t
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES,. 536 Jackson Plki

from S192Jmo. Walk to ahop &amp;

movlu. Call 614-446·2568. ~OH .

Complttly Furnlsl1td Small
House, $250/mo. PluS Utilities,

And Otpool(. 814-446.0338. Call
Batore7p.m.
Ettenclenc~

1pt In Pt. Plusant,
nlct neighborhood, Hud acctp·

lod, 1·301·675·6042

Furnlsl1ed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Clean, No Pets Reference &amp;
D1p~slt Required. 614-446·1519.

Fur1tlsl11d
Ettlclency,
All
Ulllillos Paldc Share Both,
$90/Mo. 91i ~tcond Avenue,
Galli polio. 614-448-3945.
Gracious living. 1 aod 2 bed·
room apartments al VIllage
Manor
1nd
Rlveralde
Apartmtnts In Middleport. From
l19ll. Coll814·992-7787. EOH.
In Mlddlopori, Ohio. 1 and 2
bedroom tumlsl1ed apt, some

wllh ullllllos pold, reloroneo ond
dspooll roqulrod, 304·882·2586.
Modern 2 &amp; 3 bedroom. aPart•

ment In Mlddlepor1, , 2-balhs,
washtrldr~er hook-up1 • equip·
ped
kltcl1ans.

304-1182·2568,

Furnished mobile
homt, 1 mile below town~ ovtr·

ComPtttly

Real Estate

looking ~vor.
44~-4338. -

for Sale

·"

12x60 Holl~park Excellent Con·
dltlonl Ntw Carpet, And VInyl,

mestA Bargain...
Reap The Rewards...
When You Turn To
The Classfieds,
Ml The Boun~ Is Yours!
Now that the weather bas cooled
dowo, why not heat thlnp up. bit
by clearln&amp; )'Oir closeta, attic or
. baellaf .r thtiC an•cd Items
... lltlatlslq them ,., llle Ia
tile ClullllcdiP.
Aad, )111 an put that extra
ask te pa4 ue by chccklua·
the ~- f'tr local ..... .
sales, .ftes llirkdl Ull barplas
In yeur lledl .r the woedt.

$6.900. 304·773-5640.
1173 14•70 Shulll, mobllo homo,
Qood

cond,

1i7l Shultz 14s:70, 3br, CA, Un·
derpinnlog, Porch, 2 Awnings.

614·446·71!48. . .
.. .
197g Clolrmonl 14x70, 3 bod·

roams, 1 b1th, w/underpennlng
and front porcl1, gas · 11111,
central air, must move, $8,500.

304-1182-2341.

ttl ion. Asking, $250. 614-37g'

Merchandise

duel exhaust, hladtrl, $11UUr'!J

Hpolls, OH

1978 Chrysler Cordobl, l'flw' ·
paln1, n•w: tires, $1000, 304-675-·:

446·1699, 627 3rd, Avo. Gal·

· B95hftor 5pm

Elaelric Range, Almond,

1125. 614·368·9734.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Ford
motor, new

1979

Wasl1ers, dryers, refrlgtfatOJI,

ranges. Skaggs

289 :

$12,000. 614·286·2554, 614-286·
4a06.
Great Selection Of . RtpottiS·
old Doublo Wldoo • $1.000 Down
And Slnglo Wldoo • $500 Down
Wllh Approved Crodll. Coli Mid
Ohio Finance At 614·m·t220.

NO PAYMENTS UNTIL APRIL AI
EIHI Home Center! When Pur·

choslng A Now Or USod Mobllo
Home With Approved Credit

Crest Motel. Call 614-446-7398.

LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
Complete
home
tumi~I~C·
Hou10: Moi&gt;SII, 11-5. 01
0322, 3 mlloo out Butavlllo Rd.
Frel Delivery.
PICKENS FURNITURE

N•w!Uald
Houtthold fumllhlng. 1!2 mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. PtNIInt, wvl

c'll304-ll75·1450.
RENT20WN
614-448-3158 .

Vl'l'l Fumhurt
Chllr, S11.10 Wttki
Racllner, $5.47 Wetk, Swivel
Rockor, $3.83 WHk.Bunk Bod

Sofa I

Dr-•

Complolt $11.41 WHk, 4
Choat, $3.21 WHk; Poollf Bodroom SIJHI; 7 pc., SIU7 'Wook,
lncludu lloddlng.Counlly Plno
Dlnolto Wllh Bondi • 4 Chal10,
1\0.98 Wook.OPEN: Monday
Tl1ru Saturdty, la.m. to Sp.m.1
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. "
Mile• Off ROute 7 On Aouta"141,
In Ctnttnary.

Solo On All CoiJIOI In Slockl
Vinyl, $4.99 yd. Cof!IOI $4.00 Up.
Mollohan Carpels. 41l-441-'M44.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 52
Olivo St, Golllpollo. Now &amp; Uoad
fumlture, huter.,-· Wntem &amp;
Work booto. 614-446-3151.
VI'RA FURNITURE
614-440-3158
LIVING ROOM: Solo • 'Choir,
l199.00i. Roc:llnor, $141.00;
Swivel Hacklr, SH.OO; CoffN &amp;
End Tobin, 111.00 Sai.OINING
ROOM : Toblo Wllh 4 Poddld
Chalrt, $149.00i Country Pine
Dtnattt With Bench Aod 3

Chalro1• $291.00; Mo1chl.ng 2
Door Milch, .$341; Or $58.00
Sot; Ook Tobla 1 42X82 Whh 6
Bow

Bleil

Chalr11,

I629.00.BEDROOM: Pollor Bid·
room Sullo (5 pc.), $341.00; 4
Drawer Chest, $44.i5; Bunk

Bod, $229; Comploto Full Mon
Sol, $105 .00 Sol; 7 pc. Codor
Bedroom Suite, $80I.OO.OPEN:
Monda~ Thru Salurdly, 8a.m. to

6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till

!p.m., 4 Milts Ott Route 1 On
Route 141 In Centenary,

Antiques
53
::---,.,.,,.:..,.....,..,..Buy

tell.' Riverine AntJqutl,
1124 E. Main Street, PomerOy.
Hourw: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6;00 p.m.
614-992-2528.
Of

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

A Jay Ooto .Gym AMF Eoi&lt;CIII
Bike, Waring Blender, 614-446·
1510,
.

pl11, Beautiful, 6 WHkl Old,
Shots And Wonnect RNdy To
Be Placedl614-448-8111.

54

Miscellaneous

Merchandise~

1111 Woold Today
stereo.

830a.

Scollloh Torrlor puppln,
non ahtddinQ, very sman,
huttl1 guar~~niH, now taldng
dopoollo, 614-594-4677 Athans
Black Lib pup lull biOodid but
not regleltred, rMdy now, $100.
304-li7J.5110t.
.
Chriotmu Pupflin, AKC Gor·
mon Shapol&lt;l Pups. 304-6755724.
Cocklr Sp.~nlel pupplu, Butt
· ~olor, AKC reg, 7wb, $150 114·
1112·2233
~ Houlft For Salt: Several
urvlct allmak•. T.. Walher &amp; .Sizao. 1 112 Milo OU1o 141,
Dryor Shoppo. 614-448-21144.
Wayne Shotmaklr. 814-446Aoh Dill And Hick· IXII3.
OIY A__., iei Plek·Up Load Drlgonwynd Ca«ery Persian,
Dotlv- And -kad, Don Slamne and Himalayan kittens.
Wougll. 814-1441-.
a14-446-3844 after 1 p.m.
Som Somorvllle'o Army Surpluo. Fish Tank, .2413 . Jackson Alii.
Comllouoa clOthing, Clrharto 10 Point PIINUnl, 304-675·2063,
PtJCtnl dl10ount, junior cam.:
lllugoo. rogulor prlooo. · Now lull Una T10plcol Hohl birds,
llo&amp;n aftv Ctvlllmaa. Fri., Sat., email animals and euppiH.
SUn. Noon • lpm. OChar doya Had ftd peacl1 flee love birds:
- . con 304-~5 (unlll 1WIIt1 IOYIIblt extremely 11Chriotmu) (Oihar daya 3-llpm) fectlonatt $50; hab;"garaketJt,
All Ch~llmoo oxr:llangoo In by rocanlly wrroniif-~ ; tullno
January a, 1M. lnlulated
Poort, Clnnomon P""' Plod
Dacron camollouge ccwer~~lla·, Coc:kotiol
brooding pain. 814·
$30.00.
381-1151.
91Mionory Bicycle, Rowing MlHimalyan... Kttten1 1 2-maln,
chlne, S111 loth; IBM PC Jr, IWody lo go lor Chnotmll
$175,
$100. 304-675-4241.
. 114-1112-2153
Typhoon Hovor CIWft boal, Pomoronlan ouooln, puro brod
remole control wlbattery peek, . no poport, SCI4-805·3126.
S70, calllf4.62-t137
Uoriahl lrHzor, 3yr Olud cot1 Pure blooded Cocker Spaniel
OU.ilor !lorN, nol workld wHh, pupploo, $75, 814-667-8630
good contllt 11ortt, 1\'tnlngt Roglllorod porti-Colorod Cockor
Spanlal
pups,
minatwe
6-1-2355
Schnauzer,
reglstertd
Himalayan, ·Ptralan, Siamese
Building
55
.kltltns, no ch.eks, 614-992-2607
Supplies
.Aoto Or Mlco? In Your Houao?
.Buy ENFORCER, KIHo rato •
miCe In only 1 llodlng,
GUARANTEED! Avollebll ol:
Baum·Tr111 Valua Slo~1 .11 WHI
Moln
Challor, "" , ·
Ralo Dr Mloo? In Your Houod
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo 1010 l
miCo In only 1 llodlng,
GUARANTEED! · AVIIIeblo ol:
O'Doll TNI V.lue Lumber, 134
Eool Moln Stroot, Pomeroy, OH ,
R-htOnod wuharo &amp;
drtoro, -h $100 ·ond up. Wo

St-.

Aottweller Puppln AKC Ready

Condf..
Paint,

loiod, Champion Bloodline. 614·

~~~~~~~~~:·
675-3319

.

•

1984 Coloi&gt;'lly 6 crt., PSIPB, AC, '

00 I Drelril ol Jeannie

446·9552.

Ill lna!deEdlllon
(l)·m
MltcN

~~~~~--~~~ ·

cruise, clean car. 12,000.

.

614 ~ ·

\:

'·

. Dodge Aries, 4 door, black,•,
1984
AMIFM1 cassette, 4 cyl, new fx.•.
11aull, o14·992·723B; evenlriga :.

NawaHOur
I]).Ca
CaiMnl
!II CUI'1'tlll Allalr 0

198!1 Plymouth Aallant Lt PS,, •
PB, Air Console, 2 Door, 53,700
Miles, $2,995. 614-446-8143 Ahtr' '
Sp.m. Or Weekends.
::
1988 Escort $950; 1986 Morlzon

Otnerlllon
!D.
E

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Appro1. GOA.: fronts Did Af.7 11
miles S. of Gllllpollt. Tobacco
INIH, $28,500 with t•rma. 814·

H7-4220.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent
2 Story Houoo In Golllpollo

Farry, 2-3 ledroolftl, $3.,mo.

OtDolh, Aeftrtncn R•
qulrod. 304-llB-3433.
PtUI"

--·--

1....__ _ _ __

2:---------

3.,-----4. _ _ _ _ __

9, _ _ _ _ __

1 o_·_______:.....
11.-------

12 . _ _ _ __

5.,________ 13 . _____
6. _ _ _ _ __ 14 . _ _ _ __

·--------

7.

8---.. _ _ _ __

aJ. 811P.T:TIM

sa,

10 Tht

(II.

8:00

7 panenger, nlca cond, $4,900, .,
make otfar. 304-675-5306.
,:

r..

M t

I

,,

0 OrCyC es .

,
1987 4 WhHitr Yamal1a, 350 ~:

Warrior, $1,800. Good Condition, •
614-~67·7517.

75

·

,••
~
,,
•
·,,

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

76

Auto Parts &amp;
r
Accessories
"B-ud.,-g-oi~T=-r.-n-o-m'"ts"'slon-. .;s.:,u""ood-.,..,..&amp; ,,
· robuiK, olartlng al 199; Auto ,
Ports. 614·245-5677, 614·379· .
2263.
.. .

aso&lt;:

For Salt: Rebuilt Turbo
Transmission, 1 Year Guaran· •

Ill. 614·245-5823.

,.--_....,~...,....--·· ·
New gas tanks, body par1s, on1. :

Rlploy, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1-" •
800·273-11565.
•.

•'

"VaJ'Re NOT TAI&lt;ING-

15..,;.__ _ _.,.:;.......

'YO.IR L...LlNCH 10
eoiOOL TOOA.Y~

NCPe .. . IM~Na
10 e.AT IN THe
Ol.FETeRIA .

HAVE -.t)U NOTIF"IED
'rU.IR NEXT-OF-KIN~

10!11 Gibson Lis Paul Studio
Hardware, Peerll Trapezoid lnF.w Months &lt;Md. Hardly

la~s,

Ployod 1600. 304-875-7167.
Leave MtSsagt For S1m.
'

245-5128 oftor 5.

BARNEY

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

THEM TWO

e

REALLY

KNOW HOW TO

Rft.AJC II

61 Farm Equipment
2030 ·JD dlnol lroctor $5995;
424 lnl'l dloHI wHh buoh hog 1
giodor blodo, $3650; 3400 Fora
with loodor $5150. Ownor Will
Flnonco. 614-281-11522.

Will build patio CO't11'8 1 decb, '
ICrHned roomt, put up vln~l
siding or lrallor okl~lng. 814·

245·g152.

82

wHkda~s,

Wanlld: Ulid f•nn equlpm1nt,

Ctfter't Plumbing

814·251-t040 Aher

For 1111: Pwtbred rH

84

Llmousl~

bull, 3 yre, old, good nature,

114-1112·3151

64

Hay • Grain

Goad mind hay for
IqUiri ...... ..~

1112·7712

Hit,
1112-5533 91

.•

·Fo1111h ond Plno
Golllpolta, Ohio
114-44...1&amp;1

anylhlng you w1nt to ••II. 614·

2 Bull Colvn, 4 Months Old,
Rod Angua Slmmomal WHit•
Foco Ciou A.l, Top Llno
B10odlngo. A.B.S. Slro Powor,
Co~ W. GUIIopla. IM-448-31111.

SOVTR
+AQI
• .BZ
IAQJI07
+It QB

Technical play
from the Carrot

Electrical •
Refrigeration

Rooldontlel
w&amp;rlng, ""

or

'

.~

commO&lt;Ciol·

-me. or ,_.,.,

fl'altlf Ucensed lllctricllln
Rldonour EIIOiileal 30W75:
1788.

117

'

Upholstery

Mowny'o Upholotorlng - · 1
rt. The ',. •
bHI In lumlluro u~or!ng&gt;"•
Coli 304-675-4154 lOr .... " ' "
lng trl county .,.. 21

tlmatn.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveals CANCER (JUM 21-.luly 22) lhis could
whlellllgns are romantically perfect lor be a tough day on your budget. II you
yo\J. Mall $2 plua a long, sell·ad· run out ol cash, you might give your
dreued, stamped envelope to Match· credll card more use than Is prudent
maker, clo this newspaper. P.O. Box and end up regretting it later.
BERNICE
LEO (July ZS..Aug. 22) In your haste to
91428, Cleveland, OH 44 101·3428.
BEDE OSOL AQUARIUS (Hrl. 20-feb. 18) Evan p1ea1e others today, you l"lght act
thou(jh It may lll8r11 simpler ,to you to- against your better judgment and leopday, letting others ma.ke decisions lor ardlze your own Interests. ll's be!ter to
you could be a mistake. II might put you risk offending than suffer setllnftlotlons.
at lhe marpy of poor judgments.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mitrch 20) Your lnltla· VIRGO (Aug. ZS..Iept. 22) Your hunchtlvo might be at a low today, and there's es might be given precedence over your
a chance you'll procrasllnate unlll the ·usual logical perspecllvt today. This Is
lut minute. And when you do get In OK on oc:caalon but, preaenlly, your In·
gear, II Isn't likely you'll make up lor loet tunlon might not be thai great.
I.IIIIA (lepl. 2S-(Ict, D) 11 you can't
tlmt.
AJIIII (MIIrch 21· April 11) Try to avoid kNP a tight reign on your purse alringa
llnancta! gambleS today. especially today, don't be amazed by what might
o.c. 24,1111
thoee In whtch you're Inclined to Involve happen Ialor'. When you do gel IIIII fig·
others. !1"11 be bad enough II you !ose, ured out, It could be too late lor your
•
but even worse II you lake others down · wel!et.
Don'llllter your methods of operation In
ICOIIPtO (Oct. 24-No¥. 2:11 Your Image
the yeer lhead on a pro(ect you·ve been with you.
dauloplnQ lor eome ume. Your chance TAURUS (Aprllzo.MIIJ 211) Matters of Is more Important to yooJ: than·fteetlng·
;ror a.-ccm 11 gree)er by adhering 1o · prlfiiiii'Y concern to you today may not , wcoeu. Don't do anything today that
~rei. '
be o1 equal olgnlflcanct to your mate. could afford you temporlll"f recognlllon
(Die. 22-JM. 111 Unch"!'· , Thlre'l a Chance you might bump Into but also bring you lu:&amp;:_tor!ety.
211 UnbeICIW:I r '*'·you might be a trifle care- . one another pursuing Mtfllfl purpo-. IAQITTAIIIUI (Noor.
- w111t the poqeulonl of others to- QEIIIIIII (._.J 21..,_ 20) Guard knownlll to lfllm, you n,ighl MCtelly
day. 1&lt;11p In mind that II you bOrrOW ' agalnat lpt'Oid!ng youralllt too thin to- give friends and relallvM a tat today
IOmlllllng and loee !t, you'D have tore- •day, KNP In mind: It's better to do one rtglt'dlng their generbllty. Unfortu~ IL Know where to 1001&lt; lor rothing well tMn attompl a number of nately. you may not be a lalr· mlnded
,_
end you'll ftnd 11. The Astro- thing&amp; and accomp!llfl nothing.
lnqullltor.

By PbiUlp Alder

~~ur

,, -~rthday

~

In London, tbe top bridge players all
bave nicknames. Tbis is a character
trait of that area, but the monikers
doo't mean aaytbing to oul.liidera.
However, there is one bridge player
whcJie nickname is known worldwide.
Anders Morath I rom Sweden is called
the Carrot. T.be Swedish word for car·
rot is 'morot," wblc,b iS .pronounced
almost like his name, and his hair is
light red:
Tbe Carrol is ao,~remely genial
penon, and be speaks EDgllsb better
than mo!it natives.. He also plays
bridge better than most others.
U you would like to test yourself 011

.....
W..t

J!aol,

1t
2 NT

Pass

p. .
p. .

PUB

Opening leJd:

a....

11:GO(II. Ill 1Dfb0 .....

ffi::r.!:.
Jll• Al'ltlllo Hill Stareo.
il
MacGyvtr c
Ill Home lor ttii HolkiiJt

•

+3
•
•

suit.

u YO¥ misg!lesa

:yJJU

mlcbt w ·

three hearll, one ~ llld oqe
elub.
.
•
Morath !GUild the ricbt lint~ lj.~~ ··
At trick two be led lite dub IIID&amp;. ·
• had to duck;' Olltenriae cleclinr
todly'a buld, cover the Eut-Wat hate two dmoo) eatr1e1 - tile 111arr-: .
cards and plan ~ play in three 110- ace llld elllb jack - to ta1te ,two ellatrump, West leadmg the spade three: liiOIId flllmn !tloratlt CClllllned w1t6
10, jack, queen.
· the club queen. Wbea Eut c(pcbcl lUI
You have only four top 'l~ks. but as well, Morath mtclted to the Ia! ·
there are three tricks eslllbhsbable In and queen of di•(I(OII!Ja Bavilc got
clubs, and .probably four m dtamonds. two clab trieD ill, Morath "'•Nirtz •
However, if you attack diamonds lm· the four dlamond trieD be llleded for
mediately, the defenders might switch his coatracl.
)
:
to hearts,.leavinl! you with· an awk·
In eaeoce, a simple ltaad. bat poet
ward pess about how to play that technique eao llways be apprecla(ed,

-$
i

-.
-,
Tbe World Almanac~ Crossword Puzzle :-

-AC-Ro_s_s-------.-.- -.-..- - .- - - - - ".

I

ittl
'
35 Crony
38 Future altyo.'

1 Brownish
6 Topp!l
11 ChaHda
rodent
.13 Rooi!IOIIIII&amp;
t 4 Slunlod tr"
t5 Fala, o.g.
t6 Crk:llot
poalllont
17 Smtlllitld
19 Flower
necklace
20 Studio
22 U.ul.'a bon
' 25 Dakota
!ndlan
26 Off·whlle
30 Doltal
soundly
31 Actor James

• \

eum

39
42
45
46
49

Confusion
12, Roman
Cornu c!oae
Anlmtl loot
Ctl of
commarcltll
51 Mlotro1t
53 lo In otore lor
54CtoHdup·
55 Buebllllr
Koulu
56 Laver•

••'
••

•

DOWN ·
1 Center of
ahltld
2 Night at9ht
3 Rolla
4 Highway
curve
5 R'spond
6 Join
7 Carbonated

32 Gtaltad, In
heraldry
33 Bomb shelter
34 AnU·
prohlblllon-

beverage
8 Actor
Jannlnga
9 Nut of

12 Mora Hriouo
13Michlal .
Cline 10owlt
18 luUIIghl
cheer
20 Carltly
21 Bring to mind
22 Group ol
Hamtn
..
23 First-rata
(2 Wdl.)
24 Cr"n ahot
27 Tulo
28-1¥11
21 Enut~ ·
35 Iron clothes)
36 Phv lana'

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1ll·8and!lldar
Arnaz

.

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,
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37Tr...
dwa!Mng
animal
40 Onanuo
41 Aloft
42 Dec. holtd1y
43 Hawkayo
State

:

•
:

44 01 IIIJIOrlar • ,

41Whlmper
....
· 47 Jacob'uon · ·~·
41Marrltlll
. ,;

aWCHiciNtwa
(D 700 Club WHI1 Pill
Roberteon

Texas canyons calVed by the
Pecos mike up one ol the
greatest treaauraa of
prllfliatorlc art. 10;40) Stereo.
Ill Clooll and

J

Allpoa

gz.=...

on the WINS ol Soulhwnl

.,
-.
..'

Soolll

Stereo.'ljl
9:30 Ill 112) • Dellgning Women
Julia feels ready, but Allison
thinks it is too soon to date.
(R) Stereo. Q
10;00 (I) Newa
(I) MOVIE: Thly Only Kl!l
Thalr Maaten (PG) (2:00)
!II 1121. Not1llom ElpoiMJtw
Adam's wHe holds Joel
captive. (R) SIJ!.eo. Q

t0:30 (lJ Chrlatmlt Willi the ~ Dame Glte Club The Notre
Damt GIM Club sings Hare
We Come A-Caroling, Lo
How a Rose E'er Blooming
and The SutHx Carol. (0:30)
l!l Spirit o1 !he canyon
Ancient pictOgraphs ~In~

-..

Vulnerable: Both
· Dealer: North

a Llnry Kino 1.1ve1 ·
10 Folf1tLDowllng MytleMI

Plumbing &amp;
Heating/

Ll~estock

tKU

0 Tho Olympiad The
panorama of the Olympics is
captured through the·muslc
of classical composers.

Gel11 grinder mlxtr, New Holland

63

+A&gt; I

WIWIIIIng

Box 12 Voriablo Spoado For
Limo And Llmlllono. 6M-44S.
1044.

258·1308,

+972

Q!l Nlllfl.vl!!e Now Stereo.

Dump Truck, Hydra.llc Spreader,

I p.m.

e

e

Vintage drum tet: Aodg~rs,
USA madt1 4 pc, st1, plus 2
cymbalo &amp; high hot $450. 614·

Sol. lUI-.

Traditional muak: end
readings of the season are
lea!ured at the 15th-centtJry
Gothic chapel at King's
Colage In Cambridge,
England. (1 :00) Stereo. C
ill 112). Evening Sllalil
Wood tries to show his
family the ll\lt maam~l
Christmas. (R) Stereo.
aJ•c:oa..Beak
Unl'lrsity ol Kentucky"at
Ohio (L)
11J Murder, She Wroll Q
121 Home lor 1111 Holclaya
Baillie end the Boys, Clint
Black, K.T. Oslin, Paul
Overstreet and Resltess
Hasrt celebrate Christmas.
(0:30) Stereo.
0 NFL Monday Night
Match·Up
PrtmtNewo
10 Prince V1Nanf Stereo. Q
8:30 Ill) 1121 Mo(or Dod Casey's
Christmas gifts are
accidentally given to a needy
child. (R) SteriD.'Q
1B Chrialmll Wltlllhe
llatllna Classic Christmas
songs, Including Silent Night,
Sweet Baby Jesus and Whne
Christmas. (0:30) Stereo.
ill Schalp 'tile
10 lllack S - Stereo. Q
9:00 ()) I]) ASC Monday Night
Footbll Chicago Bears at
San Fran~sco 49ers (L)'
Stereo.
(lJ i!l G 11 Plflonnoncoo
An aplc retelling of lhe
shepherds' visit to the ChMsl
Child. Stereo.
·
ill) 112)
MUI!IhV BIGwn The
FYI tasm lacas cutbacks
after the network Is sold. (R)
Stereo. C
11J WWFPrime Time

a

Guitar. Black With Chrcme

Mil, 1rade, 1:00.5:00

I at Klnt'l

(lJ i!)

1976 Eblldo 8111 Bool Whh 80 ·
HP Jol1neon Motor, Very Good •
Condition, 11,900. 614-367·75n :

Musical
Instruments

i1J1 MOVIE: 'Tho

•ltu

EAST
+JU
.Q 10 8 7

uu

c

Sound ol Muak:' NBC
Mondly Night at lltt Movteo·
(3:00) Stereo. r:;1
()) Magic of Mullc Five
distinguished composers are
Inducted into the
Songwriters' Hall of Feme.
Ho~ts : Ole~ Clark and Anita
Ba~er. (2:00)
·
()) I]) • MtcOyver
. MacGyver races the clock to
sava a i7:~ life. (R)
Stareo.

'
1986 Dodge Caravan LE, loadtd,' ~

.,A

(II.

WEST
+1t7U .

ALDER

(L)

I'

112

wenona

MqiZlnt
.
1111 Croaalire
· 7:35 (I) NIIA BetketbaH AHanta
Hawks et New Jersey Nets

lys, Whitt leHtrl, 36,000 Mllta,

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

.AJSS

. PHILLIP

IB Be I Ster Stereo,
Ill NFL Monday Night

4 Spd, 15,000. 614~46·3528, 614·

11-U-11

+1011

+J 10 8 4

55 Whttl ol FOliUM Q

I

•

NOiml

Next

IIJ). F11)11ty FIUd

4 cyl, 4 apdi "j

446-4387.

BRIDGE

nmtnt Tonight

7:05 (I) Addamo Family
7:30
IIJl JeopardY!
()) .It Can Be 'tokJ
Ill Ente!l!!lnmenl Tonight
Stereo. 'II
~. MliTiecl •••Willi Children

a ·
~

11350. 304-675•2949.
1987 Chtv. S-10, Air, Topper, Ral·

·

1111 Moneyllne

1981 Custom deluxe Chevy.'It
truck, hall ton wllh lojlpor, 6 cyl1~
standard shift, exira lires, goodP,
cond, 11,800. 304·675·1504.
~

1984 Dodge

u-to

Whaler--J/ffy--&amp;llctlxygen-HOW to FAX
One yuppie to another: 'My dog is in.the advanced
course at Obedience school. He knows how to Sit, heel,
letch and now he even knows HOW to FAX. I"

IIJMacG arC
0 Sportaeentli

nMds repair. Good tranaporil ·~·
tlon car. $1,500. For more lnfar-J
mallon Call 614·446·2342, Ask..'
for Paul.
.. ~

.72 Trucks for Sale

SCIIAM-LITS ANSWIU

Stereo.

MEEKLE.AND WINTHROP

Wide llltdk)n new &amp;~lid farm

PRINl NUMBERED . · .
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Q

a.verr,

1984 Camaro !Z-28, T·lops, :150 :
eng, auto, loaded, $3200, 304· ·

Serv1ces

Call our of!icefor paid in advance rales!

A
V

CIS Newo Q
• Andy CJrifllth
fiiUpCioea
10 New Zorro Stereo. Q
6:35 (I)
HIIIIIHiea
7:00 \1j • IIJ) Wl1HI ol FOitune

1
1

381-1354.

••

. -,

R.!D.

true~ wl1eels, radiators, ·
Uoor mats, ate. 0 &amp; R Auto,"'~

Aottwtlltr Pups, AKC Regis·

...

Be~111J

Square One TV Stereo.

For Chrlolmosl Call 614·446· ton

4701lher 5p.m.

.'

-

Ill I]). AIC Newt Q

675·2440.
'
::,9::8:-7=cho~,,-N:-:-o-,.,-:h-:-lg.,.h-m""ll-..-g,;'.:

57

Q

. . .Na.
8:30 (II. 0 NIC Newt Q
. .00 SMil by lltt IIIII .
8:05 (I)

$1100; 1986 Turfsmo, low milts ~ '
$1100; 1987 Horizon, $1700. 304- ~:

King Woodbumlng Slovo With
Stornt- Stool Plpo. l'\4-448-

•

10 Rln Tin Tlil, K·• Cop

,.

iii5'1..ncy

:-~II

+.T.:.:,A.=..B;.:-A=r.:E

Q

(lJ Wild An.ICI Stereo.

.
Coloco Vlolon Vldoo O.mo Sptem, Acctuorltl, 20 O.me•
Alari Compollbla, $100. AMIF~
Car Stereo, C.allttl Plt~r, 8~4446·2340.
AKC Bt.... puppl•, 6 wka old,
Fondor, lllllopLguhor, IXCOIIenl will hold lor Chrlolmao, 1100,
condition, ull RH' $110, 114-182· '514-881'·3856
8921onor 4pm .
AKC Mlnatura Dacl1shund,
Flreklng wood I COl!! otovo, $200., ready Jan. 15, takln"
aood condlllon, $250. IM-3711- dopoollo, 304-675-3528.
2~2.
..
AKC Poodlo r,upplao, lor• I
Far Sa• SttNO, TV, VCR, gu tinY 1op, min ature Schnauzer,
apace heater, 8..,-112·2111
malt, utt &amp; pepptr, CoolVIlle
Golllo Tlmbor Proclucto Spl~ 614-167·3404.
Flrowood Dlllverod, Wo Acc191
H11p And
f4.a..
litlnct, 114-4 4
•

.~ I' I I 1~ .
.

.

Amerlcl·Klnnty Crou
Country Championships

56

1ntciOIW &amp; lmplomonto. Buj,

1755,

I
Ill lcholltatlc

I·~========T,;;;~~~~~~ 16,000.
1980
Pacomlln,
Cor, :,
1xc:. Turbo
cond., Trans·Am,
loadtd, low
614-446-6630.

33 Farms for Sale
Mason County, lean, 16 acrn, 3
bedroom home, barn, 2 ponds,
city water, 304~58·1tl8 or 458·

iiJ

e ,., "" NEA. w:.

Poymonl. Coli 1·600·56g.S71t

Shon Tlmt On Job? Past Crtdlt
Hlatory A Problem? Many
Et~HIHd Mobile Homes To
ChooN From. Small Down

aJ=!i!Q .

WHAT HAPPENED TO
.MONDAV NOON FOOTBALL?

~J1

Upper Rlvar RCI. · Seslde S1one

711. hoyblnd, Now Hollond 9 ft.
hayblnd, AC 2 row, no 1111 com
plonlor. All good cond. 304·2734215.
Jlrn'o Form Equlpmonl SR . 35,
Waot. ,Galllpollo, 61444&amp;-9m;

Coii1·8G0•51i-5710.

())Vldao " ~ aqu.. One TV Stereo.

·l. · J.t

Appllancol,

Turn your clutter into ·cash,
Sell it the· easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 papers,$6.00

Mobile Home With 2 Rooms At•
tacl1td On 1 Acre, 1 Milt Out Of
Centerville, On County Aold 87,

'

,

!111121.

(I) I]) •

IIJl .....

"'

County A'ppllance , Inc. Good
used appliances, T.V. se:ts. Open
B a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sal. 614·

19n VoUswagon Bttlle, conver-... ~
tlblt, wreckeCI, runs good, SIOO,
614·24.7·2961
. ~~

G.e.

I:GO (II.

it

obo, 614·992·25451992-2720 ·

1

II 1'. 'Ill 11.

EVENING ·

lr•ns, ntw paint, ralty whHilll. '

Household
.Goods ··.

CA~H?H

Elaine

.,. _

11

1972 Monte C.rto, 2dr 1uto·~

51

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

clal finance flits, wlll deiiYir &amp;
level, eatl t-800·466-7671, ai k for

(lu• ,. · , ·l t.'" '"

~

2258.

plication, 4·bldroom apt. Must
mut qullllicallon under Hud
Stand1rd1, mui\ i11VI at IIIII 6 Comforttl'l· all new material
peoplt, between 10.3pm 614· $45.00oo, Applo bullor S3.00ql,
992·7712
614·949·2450

1982 Fairmont, 70xt4, 3 bdrm,
new carpet, new kitchen, t pt·

MoN.: oec. 2a

•

~uto T~ane,-2dr, OOod Tl:'lntpor·~

Pomtroy CIIHs accepting ap·

1011 Nashua mobil• home,
14x64, 2 BR, 1 bath, new
refrigerator, newll recarpeted,
waafierldr~'(:~~ front porch.
Park Lane
. 614-446-3732
oft or 5. SHI9.

·-----... ---

,.

ml,mum-otfer

$5500, 814·992-2111

·-

,.,.r.

71 Autos for Sale
"
~~~...::--.:-:-::-::"·"
1971i .Buick ~kyta(k, Good 350,':

304-675·1386.

Mobile Homes

~ -

Transporlation

Also traiiRr apace. All hook·ups.
Call after 2:00 p.m., · 304·77'J.
5651, Mason WV..
.r

No Pols, CA. 614·
'
. Adun Air Rilla RWS modo! 4B
caliber .1nmag, nven gun
One
and
two
bedroom ckerry gun cabin.,, 614-llt2·2768
·~artmtnll ror rent. 304·675·
AKC Chocolllo Lo...-r Put&gt;2053 or 175-4100.
One Btdroom Apartmant In
Point Pltannt, WV. Fumlt11td,
Very Clun A'nd Nice. No Pets.

32

____.._ ..----.

814-446·3870.

Teltwision-:· - ,_
Viewing

'

Slartlng oll1201mo. Golllo Hotol.
614·4411-9580.
. .

NeW Haven one bedroom apl, · l Wood Port A Crib, A·1 Condeposit and referenca required, dllton, $25 Firm. 614-n2·!S1".

THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

446-2342
675-1333
992-2156

GalllpoUs.

6:00pm. ·
Modern 2 BR opl. 614·446-4390.'

·IS lYTER

all - 111-Ntn, fl!tllday-Prlday at

Avenue,

Stove, Refrigerator, Water Fur·
nlshed. $240/mo. $100 Deposit.

Refertnca/Deposlt
required.
Pl1one
614·i8!i·4448
attar

OF CASH

Tt put die Clullfkde tt writ. ftr ,...,

Founh

2BR ,

Aep~lra.
FI'M
Esllmat..,
Child ca,. lor 8 mon. old In my Au.son~ble
Ratn,
Have
horn• btglnnlnQ Jan. 6th, non- Govornmont Rol. 304-1182·2244.

G•ntral

2br Apartment, Located, 466·112

()hlo .

Hay tor ....; llrgt round blln •
$12 oxcollenl quollty, 01ehard, 1
gi'IU &amp;' clov.r, t14-31M451
\..

loeotlon· In PI Pllooonl oreo. SINplng ' roorT!s -With ·· coo~i('lg .

- roqulred.l14-441-4228.
3-BR on Lincoln Hglo.,
Pomoroy; 814-912,76811 onor
5:00pm
·
·.
•·.

991 .

Mo1nda&gt;v. December

Pomeroy..:....lddleport, .Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

50
Milke ""
52Medltval
poem

••

.....
,

"

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' .

CELEBRITY CIPHIR

~-..,."'a'"•:t..,*•"";&gt;""n;:':...:'.:.!!..,.~:--=~·---·
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Young actoiT' Iovo mt. They think ~ thai big -

.,
'·

can make II, there's a chlnce lor uo." - A-. Mitchum.

I

I '

..•
' .

•

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

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Monday, .December 23.l991·

'The Weeders Guide: Last-minute Man who barbecued .neighbor's
-Chrisimasgiftsforgardeners~

·By GEORGE BRIA
For AP Special Features
What's the most use(ul tool in
my garden? That's easy- a U'OW·
cl, which is really a powerful
extension of the hand. I have several , but give me another one for
Christmas, and you ' ve chosen a
welcome gift for a gardener.
So what else can you get a gardener who has just about everything? Well, a person with a U'Owel
spends a lot of time on his or her
knees.
1've found a foam rubber kneeling pad keeps. me comfortable and
dry . A nice one for $8.95 is offered
by Gardener's Supply Co .. 128
Intervale Road, Burlington, Vt.,
05401 (Phone: 802-863-1700).
Go up in price- $24.50- and
.you can get knee pads that auach to
your jeans with Velcro straps. Gardener's Supply also offers a foam
padded aluminum kneeler that
becomes a sitter by turning it over
-$49.95.
You can;!, go wrong with watering cans. It's handy to keep several
filled-up ones scattered around. For
the indoor gardener, you can find
waterin~ cans that are objets d'art
- shinmg copper with long slim
noses. Kinsman Co., River Road,
Point Pleasant, Pa., 18950, (Phone:
'215-297 -5613), features some
English-made beauties for $31.95
and $35.95. A gift like that gets the
·giver points for good taste.
Brass nozzles for garden hoses
arc lioth handsome and efficient.

They're also easy to take apart for ticulture, P.O. Box 53879, Boulder,
thorough cleaning - a blessing, Colo., 8032!;)'1ational Gardening,
since nozzles tend to clog. Look fo1 P.O. Box 51106, also Boulder; Fine
them at garden centers or hardwarl Gardening, 63 Souih Main St., Box
stores together with other durable 355, Newtown, Conn., 06470 and
hose fittings made of brass. ·
Flower &amp; Garden, P.O. Box 7503,
A leaf rake is bulky to package, Red Oak, Iowa, 51591.
but nev.ertheless gratefully
NiceJy ·written pieces on herbs,
received. There is lots of wear and attractively illus11ated with drawtear in rakes, particularly in the ings, are featured in the Herb Quar"country, where you sweep up tons · terly, P.O. Box 275, Newfane, Vt.,
of leaves for com posting.
05345. A new _British magazine
Plastic leaf-toting sheets with named Hortus, aimed at literaryhandles ·at the four corners are minded gardeners, has been attracthandy. They can be dragged easily ing U.S. readers. Subscription
along the lawn to your compost information is available from
heap or wherever you want to Green Shade, I~c. P.O. Box 547,
dump the load. Kinsman offers CapeNeddick,Maine,03902.
them at$12.95.
Mosquitoes, thankfully, don't
Like neckties and scarves, buzz around Christmas trees in
gloves usually gel a place around most pans of the country. But lookthe Christmas tree. Gardening ing ahead to summer, you might
gloves come in various prices an11 consider putting bats - the furry
materials, ·some adorned with green kind with wings - to work as
thumbs . Nurseries and hardware exterminators.
stores as well as many gardening
For under $30, two catalogs catalogs stock them.
Real Goods, 966 Mazzoni St. ,
Gardeners tend tO"'tle fussy Ukiah, Calif., 95482 and Gardenabout pruners and shears, so it's er's Supply- are offering wooden
wise to learn what they like before · bat houses whose 30 or so occuyou invest. A safer choice would pants can consume 500 mosquitoes
be sharpeners for pruners, shears an hour.
and scissors. Kinsman has a pruner
Bats, in case you haven't heard,
sharpener for $8 and a shear sharp- are acquiring a better image nowaener for $9.
days.
If your friend or relative likes to
Merlin D. Tuttle, founder of Bat
read about gardening, you might Conservation International, Austin,
scout around 10 see what ma~a - Te~as. calls them "among the most
.zines they don't already have. I ve sophisticated, gentle, beneficial and
enjoyed many ~ood articles in Hor- even likeable animals on earth."

aog-corivicted-of animal cruelty
VICTORVILLE. Calif. (AP)- then placed the animal's severed
A carpenter who bludgeoned and head on the neighbor's gate was
barbecued his neighbor's dog. and convicted for felony animal cruel-

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event, Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

its annual Christmas Eve service op
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Rev. Charles
Eaton, pastor, invites the public.

A jury deliberated two hours ·
Friday before finding Jose~h Vera .
guilty of cru¢lty for eaung the
mixed collie-pit. bull terner on
Sept. 19.
Vera, a resident of the -desert
town of Adelanto, faces a maximum three~year sentence. Defense
attorney Mark Shoup said he'Would
appeal.
•
Vera, 29, said he killed Astro
when the dog attacked him in his
back yard. He said he had not eaten
in two days because he hadn't been
paid.

RACINE - The Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
•Day .Saints· will hold a candlelight
MONDAY
service on Tuesday at 7 p.m. The
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- public is invited to attend.
can Le~on Post No.
will hold ~================::::::;;;:::::1
it,s Chnstrnas dinner on Monday at
5:30 p.m. for the needy, legion
members and auxiliary members.
· Those attending bring a covered
dish dinner.

602

.

CHESHIRE - The Gallia Meigs
Community Action Agency will
have a free clothing day on Monday from 9 a.m. to noon at the old
high school building in Cheshire.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy will
hold Christmas Eve services on
Tuesday with mass and a children's
program at 7:30p.m.; a choral presentation at II :I5 p.m. followed by
midnight mass. Christmas morning
mass will be held at 9:30a.m.

3" Double
Print
Special

. t-~·:
.

..

'--

.

.... ' .:

.
.

3" Double print special
available from oriigil1lal.,.
rolls of 110, 128, 135. or
disc.

$6 million worth of Colombian
cpcaine found in parked car
·LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
dnig dealer apparently lost track of
132 pounds of Colomb(an cocaine
in the trunk of a car parked near
Los Angeles Intenwional Airport,
an official said.
The cocaine was in packages
marked with the word "uno,"
Spanish for "one." That indicates _
it came from the Cali Cartel, a
Colombian group that is the main
..:c:., c. ~ l'f1 orn1a'
suvyu~;, h,,, ••.~., ....
drug dealers, said John M. Marceilo, a spokesman for . the Drug

Enforcement Administration.
" It's not going 10 be' a white
Christmas for some of these traffickers," he said.
The cocaine, with an estimated
value of S6 million, was found 'Friday night in an abandoned luxury
car near Ute airport, Mlircello said.
No arrests were made. The car's
owner was being sou~ht. The
address given for the vehicle registnltion was a post office box, Marcello said.

;;;&amp;om11Tv SCENE • Amid· all of the
commericial holiday trim, the figures or Mary,
·Joseph and'The Christ Child continue to remind
us of the true meaning or Christmas. In many
churches and homes, the figt,tre or Jesus Is not

Outgoing Meigs board
members recognized
for years of serviCe
King, learning disability.
Kathy Haley was granted tw()
and one-half dock days for an
· emergency of a family member.
The organizational meeting
were set for Monday, Jan. 13, at 7 .
p.m. The flist regular meeting of
the year will follow.
The board moved into executive
session to hear an appeal of a bus
suspension which they later voted
.to uphold.
Attending were Banon, Snowden, Werry, Vaughan·, and Larry
Rupe, SupL James Carpenter, and
Treasurer Jane Fry. Also at the
meeting and included in on the
executive session were the newly
elected board members, Roger
Abbott, John Hood, and Randy
Humphreys.
The group enjoyed a holiday
social hour following Ute meeting.
c

placed ill tbe nativity scene utitU arter midnight
9n Christmas morning. Here, Christie Barber or
Reedsville, Melissa Saylor of Guysville and
Stephanie Barber of ReedsviUe assemble a tabletop nativity scene.

·simonaux case-b(}und over-.to Gallia CountyGrand Jury
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Sta"
After listening to almost four
hours df testimony starting at 3:30
p.m. Monday, Gallipolis Municipal
Coun Judge Joseph L. Cain bound
the Simonaux murder case over to
the January term of the Gallia
County Grand Jury.
Lloyd A. ·simonaux, 25, of
Pomeroy was arrested Friday and

charged with murder after allegedly
fatany stabbing Terry E. White, 31,
of Gallipolis. Three other men were
injured in the altercation: James
Taylor, 25, Dennis Cough~nour,
32, and Daniel Darst, 27.
· Ronald R. Calhoun, defense
attorney· for Lloyd A. Simonaux,
subpeonaed 12 wiblesses present at
the Addison Club at the time of the
stabbing,

Gall[a County Prosecutor Brent
Saunders, representing the State of
Ohio, called three witnesses to the
stand.
,
Most witnesses said the stabbing
resulted from a fight between
White and Simonaux.
One of the slabbed men claimed
to have wiblessed the fight. James
Taylor , 25, said White and
Continued on page 3 .

Unemployed put on Santa suits
for the work, not the Ho-Ho-!fos Gorbachev ·plans TV statement ·.
l!,RESENTED PLAQUES • ''In recognition
or service to education" was inscribed on tbe
plaques presented to outgoing board members,

·suNNYVALE, Calif. (AP) When out-of-work Tony Castro
applied for a temporary job, he
. d1dn't know what he would be gel-ling into - a big red suit and fake
white beard.
.· Unemployed workers this year
from laborers to executives hoed
up for jobs as Sanla Claus in-what
has become a booming industry
created by hard times, job agenCies
said.
''When I applied for temporary
work, I hesitated a bit befor¢ I
· marked the box next to Sanla. But
I'm a little chunky, so I thought
.' What the heck.' But I didn't
expect to get this kind of work,"
Castro said Monday after a monthlong stint at Sunnyvale Town Center.
Wcsterq Temporary Services,
which hires-more than 3,000 Santas
nationwide each Chiistmas season
saw a broad a range of applican~
· this year, said Sharon Burns, a
spokeswoman for the Walnut
Creek-based COI!lpany,
· "We had everybody from labor
to middle management... We got

•All Wedding Bands
Diamonds.:...2S%·SO%
14K Gold.....20%·50%
•Birthstones •••20%·50%
•Pendants...... 20%·50%
•All Giftware Is On Sale
FREI
FREE
FREE
GIFTWRAP ENGRAVING PARKING

GOLD
&amp; ONYX RING
WAS

·~: 1 16200

our regulars like college students
and retired people who just enjoy
playing Santa Claus," Burns said.
" But we got a lot more people
coming in who were just looking
for some work. It's hard times out
there."
•
Bums said he,rcompany didn't
keep 1(3Ck of how many ·applicants
were moonlighting as Santa, compared to those who had no other
job. But she said the " Sanla business'' was up by about 15 perC\lnt
this year and she ·noted that most
people who apply for temporary
JObs usually are not employell.
Castro, 38, is trained as a
machinis~ but was unable to find a
job for two years in the area. about
' 40 miles south of San Francisco.
His unemployment had dwin died to $73 a week, so he weicorned the chance 10 bring home ·
about $150 a week by working 20
hours as Santa.
"My daughter came by and
took a picture of me," said Castro,
whose wife works in the eleelronics industry. "And I started feeling
pretty goOd about the job. It was a.

Confiscated chickens may
be returned to their owners

CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY and DEQMBER 26
••••
OPEN DECEMBER 27

9.am·S pm

93 Mill $trtet
llllddltport
. 992·6657

.

. . $6.89

992-6491

AMultlmtdlo Inc. Ntw~p~per

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
trict's financial straits. The Slate
r Sentinel.News Starr
Auditor's office has· completed an
: Outgoing members of the Meigs audit and steps 'are curr;ently being
Local Board of Education were taken 10 go into the state loan prorecQgnized in a brief meeting held gram.
Monday night in the board office.
After some discussion about the
Plaques were presented by Bob condition of the gY,m floor, the
Barton, president, to Robert Snow- board voted to authorize Phil Harri. den who has served 18 years, son to go ahead with the fefmishing
Richard Vaughan, 11 years, and over the Christmas hdliday. PayJeff Werry, four years.
ment for the job, expected to cost
New insurance rates were adopt- between- $1,700 and $1,800, can
ed effective for December for non- probably be made through the princenified, single, $153.2Z. and fami- cipal's fund which has a balance of
.ly, $407.52; and certified and $3,700 and the high School athletic
exempt, single, $163.79 and fami- fund. The Athletic Boosters will
ly, $442.31. The board pays 100 also be contacted for a coritribupercent of the cost of insurance ·for tion,
all employees.
•
· Three teachers were added to
Previously the board has paid the substitute list for the curr~nt
into a reserve fund 25 percent over school year. They are James Bradthe actual cost of the insurance to bury, physical education, Mary
handle large claims. That has now Bush, learning disability and severe
been discontinued due to the dis- behavior classes, and Richard

Up to 72 prints ~

••••

MILL STREET
BOOKS

Christmas Is ...~---____,

$4.89

Sex video queen applies for
job as Missouri police chief

Mill Street Qooks Will
Be Open Chrl~tmas Eve
9 am·S pm

r-

..

. 2 Section, 28 Pagn 25 cO.Its

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday; Oecec:nber 24, 1991

Up to .30 prints

handicapped players that wu recently donated
to Children's Hospital in Columbus. (AP)

Officials also were embarrassed
to learn four St. Charles County
sherifrs deputies had worked for
the Wahls, putting together sales
fliers and sluffing envelopes as
they watched videos in the Wahls'
living room. .
Bass-fiShing videos, Wahl said."
Four of the deputies ended up •
resigning under pressure and the
bote bed raid cost the police chief
his job.
Wahl said none of the videos
features children, animals, bondage
or violence.
"I'd rather. watch an X-rated
movie than a Bruce Willis action
picture any day," Wahl said. " You
won't even see any sharp objects in
our videos."
Ms. Wahl conceded she never
wanted to be a home movie star.
"I've never even taken good
photegraphs," she said. "The people in the videos are not necessarily
beautiful.
·

Vol. 42, No. 163

Copyrighted 11191

. '$2.49

786 North
Second Street
Middleport, Ohio .

ne.

a

Up to 48 prints

REEDSVILLE - The Reedsvlne
United Methodist Church will hold

36, have run out of their home
since 1987.
She's the star, under an assumed
name, of three amateur home
videos. Ms. Wahl bares all in
"Daydreams," "Heather's House
Guest" and "At Last We Meet,"
available in the couple's Video
Alternatives catalog.
"One of the things we're fight·
ing is the stereotype that if a girl
takes off her clothes and does
movies that she doesn't have any
brains," she said. "That's not Ute
case. We look at sex as a natural
function. It's no big deal ."
If Ms. Wahl becomes poli.ce
chief, she said she would have
more pressing matters to ~ursue,
like real crime and·real crimmals.
Not like their case, said the
Wahls.
In September, police raided the
Wahls' home on a ~uiet street, confiscating tapes and most of their
equipment and inviting the media
along, The Wahls were taken into
custody briefly but never charged.
The obscenity case began 10 fall
apart when a detective was charged
with lying to get a search warrant.
Detective Mike ReynQlds told a
judge Wahl was recruiting young
women at a local reslaurant to act
in the movies.

•

Up to 24 prints

$3.49

,·

~

I

RACINE - The Racine Baptist
Church will have Christmas Eve
services on Tuesday at 7 p.n\.

'
By R.B. FALLSTROM
Associated Press Writer
LAKE ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) Pornographic movie experience
doesn't exactly look good on an
apPlication for police chief, but it's
not stopping Suzi Wahl.
If there's a contradiction, she
doesn't see it.
. " Just because a woman is beautiful and allows you to look at that
beauty, docs not mean that she's
not qualified to do millions of other
jobs that require brains," Ms. Wahl
said.
Police raided her-sex• video
business this fan in Lake SL Louis,
a town of 7,500 about 40 miles
northwest of St. Louis, but did
more damage to themselves: Four
deputies ended up resigning, and
Police Chief John Selby lost his
job.
Ms. Wahl, 39, stands out among
SO or so people hoping 10 replace
him. But not because she was the
directQf Qf public safety in a small
Illinois town for 18 months and has
a college degree in criminal justice.
lt'sfbecause her story was
picked up by television's "A Current Affair," which referred to her
as "Sexy Suzi." And it's because
of the mail-order video business
she and her husband, Tom Wahl,

.

...-

POMEROY - St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, will have Christmas Eve services on Tuesday at II
p.m. The public is invited to attend.

DISABLED DESIGNED NINTENDO • Thirteen-year-old Allee Robinson of Portsmouth,
plays a Nintendo video game developed for

ty.

MON.·SAT.
' 9:30-1:00
SUN.
12:00-6:00

~t

--~~-

113 COUll n.
POMEROY

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - About
liOO chickens confiscated in a cockfighting raid near Athens in May
'can be returned to their owners, a
Vinton County judge said.
· Common Pleas Court Judge
Michael B1111le ruled Monday that
if the owners can identify the ·
chickens through banding or other
means, they.can reclaim them.
·
The hearing Monday hl!d been
contiilued from Dec, 5.
. All attorney for the Ohio Gamefowl Breeders Association argued
for the return of the chickens to
their owne~. but pr&lt;)secuters said

there are problems of proving.owriership.
When Ute Ohio Department of
Agriculture ·examined the birds in
November, they found silme chickens had received duplicate numbers.
·
The birds not claimed wobld be
destroyed, Vinton county Clerk
Regina Brisker said. Sh~ did not
know the time frame.
Bram.e had earlier ordered the
birds deslroyed, but the: decision
was overturned on appeal.•
The agriculture department had
suggested Ute binls be auctioned.
•

(lert to right) Je" Werry, rour years; Rkbard
Vaughan, 11 years, and Robert Snowden, 18
years, by Robert Barton, board president.

moral(\ booster. In our ho~se. we
.
don' t even have a tree thts year.
,
. .
.
.
. .
But I got a big tree here at the
MOSCOW ,(AP)- Mtkha.tl eral repubhcs to send representa- unrest 1f the economy and hvmg
mall."
Gorb~chev satd good~ye to h1s tives.
.
.
co_nd111ons contmue to worsen, b~t
Brian Snyder, who managed the Kremltn staff ~y. wh~e the rem- . In a newspaper tntemew pub- sa1d he d1d not expect another mthSan las at the Sunnyvale mall thts nants of the nanonalleg~slature put hshed today, Gorbachev reiterated tary coup.
.
·
year and worked as Santa himself,· off blessing the new CO!flmon- his criticism of the new CommonGorbachev and Yeltsm met for
needed the job after three years of wealth and ack~owledgmg the :-vealth of Independent State~. say- more than Stx hours on Monday 10
doing it ju~t ~or fun. In April! Sny- demJSe of the SovJet U~ton. · .
~~g 11.was unclear whether 1~ w~~ d1scuss the !&gt;f'(lerly transfer of con:der lost hts JOb at LSI Logtc, an
Gorbache~ met ~tlh RusStan
a umficauon or a fragmentauon.
mand over the late Sovtet Umon s
eleclronics fll11l.
Pres1dent Bons Yeltsm Monday to
Gorbachev told K~msomol · 27,000 nuclear ~capons and oth~r
"At ftrst it was to~,&amp;h· !0 be jolly dtscuss the transfe~ of_ JX?:-'Ier and · skaya Pravda he warned about ISSues ofsuccess1on.
when I really wasn \ satd Sny~~r, was expee~ tQ, ~gn 1D, the ~ext
~
25 . "But then as soon as you SIIID . 24 hours, _ Sal~ ~USSian Fust
that seat and kids start co_ming up Deput~ Pnme Mimster Gennady
.
to vou all excited 10 see thts btg fat Burbuhs.
C
'/
t
guy, you become happy. too."
Gorbachev t~ay schedule~ a
OUnCl 0
David Seeberger, 34, a Sanla at speech on ~auonal televiSion
Pomeroy ViDage Co~cil will meet in special session Thursday
the Valley Fair mall in San .Jose, Wed~esday rught and was expected
at 7 p.m. in council chambers.
·
was too embarrassed to tell to _qwt then. The Tass ~ws ag_ency
·•
prospective employers about what . S31d only that the.SOVIet preSI~~nt
he has been since he was laid off in would use the ,a~dress · · to
A Pomeroy man ·was found innocent of assault followmg a JUry
October. He simply wrote on appli- announce the d~cts)on he made.
trial in Mei~s County Coun last week.
cations that he was working "part- about lhe formation of the ComMark Wtlliams, 37, was accused of assault by Ron Ash. and was
.time at Valley Fair."
monwealth of Independent _States."
represented in the jury trial .by Pomeroy Attorney Charles H.
"I just found a permanent job at
Press spokesman Alexet KozheKriight.
..
a travel fll1ll," srud Seeberger, an mrakov sat~ ~orbachev met wtth
· The state was represented by Meigs County Prosecutor Steven L.
accountant. "! start m February. hiS 30 remrurung staff members to
Story and Assistant Prosecutor George McCarthy. .
.
I'd just as soon forget about this ~!d th_em fare~cll and dtscuss
The trial, held before Meigs County Court Judge Patnck R
Santa stuff."
. pracucal quesuons of transfon:na·
O'Brien, was rescheduled for last week followmg a m1str1al m
uon of the state and some pracucal
issues of our work/'
November. ·
The tegistature, meanwhile; met
for about two hours and agreed
l'
.,
without taking a vote to hold its
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service respondfinal session aftet the next meeting
ed to seven cans for assistance on Monday and early Tuesday momof the new Commonwealth of lndeiilg.
·
·
pendent States on Dec.' 30.
· On Monday at 9:33 a.m. the Rutland unit was called to Route
Jlut the lawmakers then decided
124 for Violet Jarrell who was transported to Veterans Memonal
to reconvene at an afternoon sesHospital. Atll:30 a.m. the unit went to Main_ ~trect for Vona
sion, said Zheken K. Kaliev. a
Ginenwatclr who was taken 10 Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal.
deputy from Kazakhstan.
The Syracuse unit, at 1:20 p.m., went to l_'toute 7 ~or Sandra Mas.
··
It was not clear if they would
sar who was taken 10 Camden Clark Memonal Hospttal.
take up a resolution acknowledging
The Middleport unit at 2:37p.m. went to North Third Avenue for
the demise of the Soviet Union or .
Jim Youna who was transported to Veterans.
whether Gorbachev would attend.
At 8:42p.m. the Rutland un~t responded to Edmundson Road for
Only about one.-third of lawWendell Barrett who was taken lii':Veterans.
makers attended the morning sesAt 111:29 p.m. the Middlepon ~nit was caned 10 Chestnut S1ree1
sion of the Council of the
for Ruth Schramn who was treated but not transported.
Republics, the upper chamber of
· On Tuesday at 5:05 a.m. the Pomeroy umt responded to the
DAY UNTIL
the national legislature. The lower
Meigs County Sherifrs Office for Tara Wolfe who was transponed
CHRISTMAS
chamber has effectively been shut
tll' Holzer Medical Center.
I ~----~------~
down already by the refusal of sev- ./ 1~----------------------1

L. ocaI bri.•eJ s
t mee

Jury finds Williams innocent . .

EMS res·nonds to 7 calls

\•

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