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                  <text>Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio '

THIS

1990 Local Schedules

WEEK'S
.
GAMES

Ohio Lottery

Eastern girls
beat Southen

Pick 3: 044
Pick 4: ·2853
Cards: 7-H;

Page 4

7.C; S..D; 8-S

Mostly cloudy Tuesday
night, with occasional snow
Hurries, and a low In the low
20s•

•

SOUTHERN
·BoYs
liEC. 4- Eastern, Aw11y
DEC. 7-Southwestern, Away
DEC. 1-GrHn at Ohio Univ.
Convocation Center

Vol.41, No. 158
Copyrighted 1990

Pomeroy--'Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, Oecember 4, 1990

'Tis the season.-------__,

GIRLS
DEC. 3-Eastern, Home
DEC. 6- Southwestern, Home
DEC. I 0-llyger Creek, Away

MEIGS
BOYS
DEC. 4- Belpre, Away
DEC. 11-MlHer, Home

GIRLS
DEC. 3..... Mlller; Away
DEC. 1- Eastern, Home
.DEC. I 0-Nels.· York, Away

.tNSTAtlMENT
LOANS

EASTERN
1

992 .. 3077

DEC. 4- Southern, Home
. DEC. 7-Symms Valley, Away

. • MEMBER FDIC. :\.

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BOYS

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downpour rain during tbe· parade, Saota was
taken to tbe covered drive-through or CeotrBI
Trllst to talk to the childrea and distribute

A VISIT WITH SANTA • Jennifer Ebersbach
of Minersville was the first to take a seat on Sa•·
ta •s knee to diSCUS!! her Christmas
following
the Middleport parade MoDda)' aight.
to tbe

GliLS
DEC. 3-Southern, ·Away
DEC. 5-Trimble, Home
DE(. 6-Syuwnes Valley, Home
DEC. 1-Meigs, Ho1111

_treats.

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· ··LUMBER· -----1BOYS' SCHEDULES~----'

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SOUTHERN

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SSS PARK ST.
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MIDDLEPO~'f ,
.

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992-6611 .

Nov. 27-North Gallia .,.,,,,,Home
Nov. 30- Hannan Trace ......... . Home
Dec . 4-Eastem ..... .. .. .. .......... Away
Dec . 7-Southwertern,,,,,, ,,,,,, Away
Dec . 8-Paint Valley .... ... ....... Convo
Dec . 14- Kyger Creak .... ........ Home
Dec . 15-Symmes Valley ...... .. Away
Dec . 21-0ak Hill .. ......... ....... Away
Dec. 22-Southaastarn .. ......... Home
Dec. 28- Athena .. ...... .... .. ...... Away
Jan. 4 - North Gallia .... .. ......... Away
Jan. 5-Gallipolis ............ ....... Away
Jan.11 - Hannan Trace ........ .. , Away
Jan. 1 8-Eastern ...... ... .... ....... Home
Jan. 22- Ravanewood ... .. .. .. .. . Away
Jan. 25- Southweatern ....... .:. Home
Feb . 1- Kyger Creek .. .. ...... ..... Away
Fab. 8-Symmes Valley .. .....•... Home
Feb, 12- Warren ... .. ............... Away
Feb. 15-0ak Hill ......... .... .. .... Horne

MEIGS

Dec . 1 - Athens .... .......... .. ...... Home
Dec. 4 - Balpra .... .. .... .... ... ...... Away
Dec. 11-Miller .. ..... ....... .. ...... Home
Dec . 14- Vinton County ....... .. Home
Dec. 1 &amp;- Alexander ... ............ Away
Dec. 21 ~Wellston .......... .. ..... Home
Dec. 28-Logan .. .. ....... .. ... .. ... Away .
Jan . 4 - Trimble .. ..... ............... Away
Jan . 8 - Faderal Hocking .... ... .. Home
Jan . 1 1-Nelsonville-York .. ..... Away ·
Jan. 15-Belpre ..... ......... ....... Home
Jan. 22-Miller .. .. .......... .. .. .. .. Away
Jan . 25 - Vinton County ......... Away
Jan. 29-Aiexander ................ Home
Feb. 1 - Wellston .................... Away
Feb. 2- Athens .. .... ........... .. ... Away
Feb. 6-Warren , , ... .. .. ....... .. ... Home
Feb. 8-Trimble .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. . Home
Feb . ~ 2 - Federal Hocking ....... Away
Feb . 1 5 - Nelsonville-York ... ... . Home

...-....----GIRLS'
' •• t

SOUTHERN

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Farmers

Bank ·
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MEMB£11! FDIC.
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221 WEST SECOND
JIOMEIOY, OliO

tas:s:lat '

STAtE IOUTI 7
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Nov. 12.:_Nelaonvilla-York .... .. Away
Nov. 19-Meigs ...... ........... .... Away
Nov. 26-North Gallia .. ...... .... Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Traca ..... .. ... Away
Dec. 3-Eastern .. ..... .......... .... Home
Dec. &amp;-Southwestern ............ Home
Dec. 10-Kyger Creek ............ Away
Dec. 13-Symm• Valley ... ...... Home
Dec. 1 7- Watarford .......... ..... Home
Dec. 20- 0ek Hill .... .............. Home
Jan. 3-North Gallia .. ........... .. Home
Jan . 10- Hannan Trace ...... .. .. Home
Jan . 14-Meigs ........... ........ .. . Home ·
Jan; 18- Nelaonville-York ....... Home
Jan. 17- Ealltern ................. .. . Away
Jan. 24-Southwestern ......... . Away
Jan. 28-Waterford .. ............ .. Away
:Jan. 31-Kyger Creek .... ......... Home
Feb. 4- 0ak Hill .................. ... Away ·
Feb. 7 - Symmeli Valley .. .... .... Away

EASTERN

Nov. 20- Millar......... .... .... .. ... Away
Nov. 23 - Fadaral Hocking .... .. Home
Nov. 27-Kyger Creek .... ........ Away
Nov. 30-Southwastern ......... Home
DEC. 4 - Southern .................. Home
Dec. 7 - Symmes Valley .... .... .. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .. ... ....... Away
Dec. 1 5-0ak Hill .. ..... .. ... ...... Home
Dec. 1 &amp;- Waterford ............... Home
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek .... .. ......... Home
Jan. 11-Southwastern .... ...... Away
Jan. 15- Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 1 8-Southem ................. Away
Jan. 25-Symmes Valley .... .... Home
Jan. 28-Millar ......... ............. Home
· Feb. 1-North Gallia ............... Home
Feb. 6-Faderal Hocking ..... ,... Away
Feb. B- Oak Hill ..... .. ..... .. ....... Away
Feb. 1 2-Watarford .............. .. Away
Feb. 16-Haiman trace .. .. ....... Away

SCHEDULES~.----MEIGS

Nov. 19- Southarri ...... ... ....... Home
Nov . 26- Trimble .... .. ............. Home
Nov. 29-Vinton County .... ..... Away
Dec. 3 - Miller .. ........ .. .... ... ..... Away
Dec. 8- Eaatern ............... .. .... Home
Dac. 10-Nelsonvilla-York .... .. Away
Dec . 13-Balpra .. ... .. ....... ..... .. Home
Dec . 17- Aiexandar .......... ..... Home
Dec . 20 "-Wellston ................. Away
Jan. 3-Faderal Hocking .... .. ... Home
Jan. 7 - Trimble .. .... ............. .. . Away
Jan ~ 1 0- Vinton County .. .. ..... Hqme
Jan. 14-Southern ... ... .. ......... Away
Jan. 17-Miller ...... ....... .. .... ... Home
Jan. 21-l;astern .... ....... ..... .... Away
Jan. 24-Nelaonville-York ... .... Home
Jan. 28-Belpre ........... ... ... .... Away
Jan. 21 - Aiexander ... ............. Away
Feb . 4-Wellllton .. ....... .... ... .... Home
Feb. 7'- f&amp;deral Hocking .. .... :.. Away

EASTERN

Nov . 19- Faderal Hocking ..... . Homa
Nov. 28-Kyger Creek .. .. ........ Homa
Nov. 29-Southwestarn .. :...... Away
Dec. 3- Southern ................ ... Away
· Dec. 6- Trimble .. .. .. .. ... .... ...... Home
Dec. &amp;- Symmes Valley .... .... .. Home
Dec. 8- Melgs ..... .. .. .............. Away
Dec. 10- North Gallia .. .......... Home
Dec. 13- 0ak Hill ........ .......... Away
Dec. 20.,-Hannan Trace .......... Away
Jan. 3-Kyger Creek ....... .. ...... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble ............ .......... Away
Jen.10-Southwestern ..... .. .... Horne
Jan. 14-Fadaral Hocking ....... Away ·
Jan. 17-Southem .... .. ..... .... .. Home
Jan. 21 - Meigs ... ... ... ...........;. Home
Jan. 24-Symmes Valley ....... . Away
Jan. 31-North Gallia ... .... ...... Away
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace ....... ..... Home'
Feb. 7-0ak Hill .... ....... .......... Home

PATRIOTIC THEME· nese junior members
or . the Womea's Auxiliary of Feene)',Bennett
Post 128 waving American flag&amp; -rdled behind
the color guard which led the parade. Tbe color

auanl." cooslsled aot only ol legiDDDBires rrom
Middleport and olber Meigs County Posts but or
several aatioaal guardsmen au&lt;! other ser·
vicemen.

·

Rain doesn't dampen .Middle.p ort parade
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Seatinet news.starr
Despirc a sprinklbig .o[ rain early
on and the heaV)' rains thai followed, hundreds of people lined the
succts of downtowa Middlcpon for
the annual Christmas ~ MondaynighL
Participants p~t 011 • happy face
even though most of them were
drenched, and one group, the Shady
River Shuffters, performed in midtown despire the doWIIPQI!J'.
·
The harder it rained the faster the
units moved through the business
section.
This year the pamde formed in

Jury seated

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in Young trial

lowe,r Middlepon, moved up
Second, and into the downtown
area, and then disbanded on the
Se$' parking. lot in upper Mid·
,dlepon . . It was sponsored by the
newly formed Middlcpon Com·
munity Association.
· The highlight of the JlWll!te, of
course, was the arrival of Santa,
who was taken ui the ·covered
drive-through area of Central Trust
to distribute ·treats 10 the children.
Trophies were awarded in six
categories with the Meigs High
School Band taking first in lhe band
category; the Midnight Cloggers of
Bruce Wolfe, the best ~~~~~~thing
unit; Heath United Methodist
Church with a nalivity scene, the
best reli$iOUS ftoa~ Manley Recy. c~ w1th a ftoat in segments
depiCting the anntd forces in the

Persian Gulf, along with a religious
and oon-religious theme, for the
best patriotic themed ftoa~ the National Guard lank for the best
vehicle, and the Fanners Bank for ·
the best overall Boat.
Several clo!!$ing and baton
teams, boy and girl scout units, and
several businesses with ftoats took
part in the parade, along with the
horse drawa wagon of the Vaughan
family, and emerg(ltiCy and lire
uuits of several communities.
In conjunction with the parade,
of the stores had extended
hours. The Middlepon Arts Council
was open and served refreshments
to visitorS. Their display featured a
variet)' of holiday wrealhs. and they
sold homemade candies as a fund
raising project for the Council.
man)'

Potential eD"rand.
d
announce

A jury hti been.sealed by Meigs
County Common Pleal! Col!rtiudge
·
Fred W. Crow m in the case of
•
Joh11 L. Young, who is accused of Juro~
kidnapping a minor fmln her Mid·
'.&amp; 0
. d1epolt home across stale lines into
.
Mason Couilty, W.Va. in August of
The following · individuals haw
this ~.
,
been selecred as. potential grand
Young, according 10 a coun doc- jurors in Meigs County Common
ument filed in the case by Meigs Pleas Court for the January. 1991
CoUhty froseuctor Steven L. Srory, · term: Richard A. Pe)'lllll; De~tter; .
allegedly raped his victim, a ClaraE. TipiOn, Milkjlepon; Gloria
female, on at least two occasions . June
Compston,
Middleport;
before returning her home the next N011111i Jean Arnold, Albany;
day 10 Middleport.
Mk:bac1 · Riclwd
Hayman;
As charged, kidnapping is an ag- Reedsville; Donald Calrol Riffle,
gravated . first degree felony. The Jr., RaciDe; Pamela A. Riffle,
peualties that Young faces are in- Racine; · Eliz.qth A. Thomtoll,
~I'CliSed. as weB, due to his )l!evious V'mtDn;
Manha v. Moore,
felony conviction in West Virginia.
S)'fl!Cuse; Larry G. JohDson.
Young was convitlal of murder Racme;
several )'W$ ago in the death of
Eddie J. ColliDs, Reedsville; Jo
Mary Berry in Muon County Aim Hays, Rutland; Brenda D.
W.Va.
' Niegler, MiddiCipOn; Pamela s.
Young was also indicted in Sep- Stealer, Reedaville; TrudY A.
tember b)' the Mason County, Swua:, Miclcllqnl; Jamea P: Will, .
W,Va. Orand Jury cin IS' counts Po111eroy, Ioi!D Charla Hobaln,
Slanming from this incidonL
. Racine; Hollier Earl Hr.aell.
He is represented in . the Meigs Pomeroy; Qllldys Vida Dillon,
, County ~ing cue b)' Meigs Reedsville; Nancy R. Radford,
~htyl Pubho Defender O!arles . Pomeaoy;
kuigl
James Edward Mcloin. Pomeroy;
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Dessie Perry, Albany; C.n A. J..of.
tis, Ponieroy; Michael Edison
Pooler, ReedsviUe; David J. Dailey,
Reedsville; Mike Roush, Rutland;
Debbie Kay Ma~. Racine;
Keith Weber, Pomeroy: Jenny L .
Manuel, Racine; Ralph Edward
TrusseD, Ll&gt;ng Boaom;
Melvin R. Cremeans, Rutland;
Francis E. Roush, Middleport; Billy
Wayne West, ReedSville; Charles F.
Wagner, Racine; Ernest D. BarriD·
ger, · Reedlvillc; Monre D. Chap~~ PomPonlaneroy;d; OrePa!..~. AllanL
v •
"""'" ~
Wolf, ?omeroY; Joseph 0. Run~.
Coolville;~ 0. Eynon, Racme;
Kalhryn J. Sm1th, Pomeroy; Beulah
E: Grate, R.ulllntl; ~ Lee
Johnson U, Middleport; Linda Lou
r:~Racine; Ernest L. Smith,
n; Carolyn K. Barton,
Rcedlville; Jeftiey D. Canon,
Middleport; Vickie EBen ' Bil·
LoDiingslgO)', I'OI.neroy; . Earl lUI:bie,
Bouon1

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. 1 Section, 1 0 Pages

2 5 Cenu

- A Multimedia Inc. Newsp• per

HAC ·reclassifies 400·
workers as permanent
By Michele Carter
wage and benefits paekage by $10 resources and we're not going to let
· OVP Staff .
million over the three-yell' term of these folks down."
Ravenswood Aluminum Cor- the contract; the lalest offer submit·
According to Chapman, four of
poration released a statement Mon· ted by the union'would cost an ad- the live companies that RAC
day announcing that the company ditional $76 million over thn:e Chairman Emmeu Boyle is ashad changed the slatus of more than years.
sociated with are represented by the
400 rcmporary employees 10 perThe corporation extended an of. USWA.
manent erDJ?loyees at its reduction fer to the members of Local 5668
Chapman said the union· has
and fabricauon plant.
to return to wort on Nov. 29, under done their best 10 main lain peace
'Q!e release stated the employees a partial!)" implemented version of and order during the labor dispute.
were given permanent employment RAC's final proposaiiO lhli·union. He admiued th!ll it was geUing liard
as a pan of the corporation's goal According to the statement, this uf. wilh the way the company has ac·10 return to nonnal opemting con- fer still stands, and RAC will im- ted and what they have done· 10
ditions.
medialely reipstate members of Lo-, union members.
"We consislenlly slated we must cal 5668 as long as jobs are availOn Friday, Nov. 30, the West ·
continue to opemrc the RAC able.
Virginia Department of Employfacilities during this strike. With the
"As we are now doing, we have ment Security · denied the un·
superior efforts of our salaried . preciously offered the members of employment benefits for the union
work fon:e and remporary the USWA the opponunity 10 return . workers. An appeal hearing has
employees, we have accomplished 10 work. We also have offered the been set for Dec. 18 in Charleston.
this goal to a grearer e~tlent than we union many opportunities to
An injunction bearing began
e~tpected ,"
!IBid DOnald W. negotiare realisticall~.· said Earl today at the Jl\(;ksOn County
Worlledge,
president · of Schick, chief negotiator for. Courthouse wilh Judge Fred Fox
Ravenswood .. Aluminum Coijiom- Ravenswood Aluminum Corpom- _from Fairinont officiating. Judge
lion. "We are pro~iding and must lion. "Since the · majority of the Charles McCarty excused himself
continue ·to provide our customers members of · Local S668 have from the hearing due to a dislallt
with prompt · service and the chosen not to retum 10 wotlt, we family relation with one of the
highest-quality aluminum products. wiU continue 10 hire new · sreelworkers. Chapman feels the
We. must now increase production employees."
.
hearing will last a couple of days,
volQme to ensure the long-rcrm
According to Joe Chapman,
The injiDICtion request from
growth of Rllvenswood ·Aluminum
USWA Staff Representative, this RAC asks for the limiting of the
Corporation."
move by the company doesn't nwnlier of picketers at the picket
Many of the key manufacturing
chan~e the union's objective 10 get · points to. two on all shifts. Accooljobs at RAC have l)een· performed a fair conaact for the union mg 10 wuon members, a couater mby salaried ~mployees working 12
workers.
jUDCtion has been filed which will
hour shifts, according to the
· . Otapman said it is " almost limit the ability of the RAC
release. To allow these people to idiotic" to believe the scabs that security guards .coming out lil the·
evenwally return to .their normal they brought in in vans from nor- picket lines.
.
dunes, RAC has connnued 10 hllll them Ohio would be able 10 be·
The morale of the union memJelllporary rep~t worken.- ,., ~Oine ~petJ:IIR~t citizens .of the bers. is \OCI)' hi~. according to
These woJ!cers. who hllve &amp;en community and the wortc fon:e. "I ChajMnan. He wa the IDiion wiD
em11loyed by RAC for varying don't believe that wiD happen," he continue 10 work so the members
penods of time since Nov. 1, now added. "I believe this is an in- ·can gel back to producing
have been named pennanent limidation liiCtic'by the company.•
aluminum and earning wages.
employees, the release slated.
Replacing the experience of the
The RAC slatement said if the
The S!Biement said .thai after employees who have worked .there .members of the USWA, Local
monlhs of negotiations with the for better than lluee decades is '5668, choose not to return to work
steelWorkers,
no
substantial something · Chapman · c:anno! at Ravenswo® Aluminum Corprogress toward a settlement has believe. ''The union is not gping pot11ion, the corporation will be
occurred. The final offer submiued away," he said. "We're going 10 looking for several hundred more
by RAC would increase the total · negotiate, we wiD use all of our new employees.

Village insurance merger approved
By BJUAN J ..REED ·
Seutillel aews stan
An insurance paclc;a8e .{rom
Downing Childs Mullen Musser fu.
surance of Pomeroy, consolidating
all of !he village's inSUiliiiCCII, was
accepted at Monday night's regular
meeting of · Pomeroy Village
CoUDCil held in chambers at village
hall

The pac'!Bae, which. comb~es
general, police and pubhc .officials'
liability, fleet coverage and inland
marine 11JK!. prQperty coverase. will
cost the v1Uage a tolal of $25,706
per year.
The package policy is the
product of discussions between viiJage council and several local insurance providers. The village
previous!)' had separa1e policies for
all those ilems covered..IIJid the in·

surauce was provided by various
insumnce companies in the-.
The only other ~.agency
submiuing a proposed. package to
council was The Davis-QWctel
Agency of l'llmero)'. That linD,
however, was .unable 10 );1!'0\&lt;ide•.a
pan of the paclaJF.requin:d for approvalby ·COUIICi •
The council also ,gave final approval to the minutes ~ ·a s¢cil!l
meeting last week, at whicll coUDCU
approved an cmplo)'ee medical insurance ,;KllicY. fw!n the W'JSeman
Agenc)' m Oilllipolis.
·
The new ~~ is a mllior medical and life 1naurance policy,
eliminatin~ the dental insurance m
the village s old plan.
Offered through Bl~ Cross.Biue
Shield, the new plan offers the vii.a .
of almost $20,000.

The 10lal cost for the plan will be
· $37,000 per year.
Ia other action, council:
· approved the mayor's repon for
fines received for the month of
November in the amount of $2,585;
• tabled. further action on a
proposed village zoning ordinance;
• set the village employees'
Christmas party for November 16;
· complimented Brenda Morris
and the vdlage street crew for mSf:alling.
exterior · Christmas
4i:Coralions at Pomeroy Village
Hall;
• .thanked Clarence Maltox and
Norma Parker for donating holly
and eve~n boughs used .to
decorate VIllage hall;
• thllnlced Frances Goeglein for
the village Christmas tree, now installed in the municipal parking lot.

�'
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Commentary
The Daily

Senti~el

2-The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-MicH'aport, Ohio
Tua•t'aY· December 4, 1990
Page

,..

Saudf.s accuse Iraq, Yemen. and Jonlan of plot
By Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

tn c...n Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

DEVOTED TO TilE IHrERE81'8 0!' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA.
A~

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. ~m~ ,......_.._...,..., I"T'W!!!c:::i'""" .
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ROBERT L; WINGETT

Publisher

..

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GMeral Mioaal'!r·

PAT WR11EIIEAD
Alelltaat Publ.,ller/CoiKreller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlsbers Assoclatlori.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed wltb
name, address and telephone number. No unslgtled letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.

Wind winds up the
cleanest energy

WASHINGTON - Is the Iraqi
Invasion of Kuwait the first step
In a larger plot by Iraq, Yemen
and Jordan to carve up Saudi
Arabia and Its oil among them· .
Selves? Saudi Arabian · leaders
·firmly believe It's true, and that
Is the compelling reason behind
their secret pressure on Pres!· 1
dent B!1$h to get Into a war soon
and getlt over quickly.
"The Plot," as the Saudis call
It, Is detailed In highly classified
Central Intelligence Agency
reports.
The Saudis belieVe the plan
was for Iraq to take Kuwait and
the northeastern oil fields of
Saudi Arabia. Yemen would get a
part of southern Saud! Arabia
that the Yemenls have long
claimed as their rightful land.
Jordan would regain the western

Yemen untU they were annexed
by the Saudis In 1934.
Whether or not Yemen cut a
deal to slice up Saudi Arabia Is
now moot with the presence of
U.S. troops In the region. Now .
Yemen Is asking the Unlted
Nations lor $1.6 billion In com- '
pensation for abiding by the
sanctions against Its old friend
Iraq. As long as Saudi Arabia
believes The Plot was real,
Yemen cannot count on the
continued foreign aid It was
getting from the Saudis.
The CIA does not know whether
or not to believe The Plot, bu I If
President Bush gets desperate to
rally support for a continued
military presence In Saudi Arabia, stories' of a larger consp!·
racy will come In hapdy.

Hljaz region Including the holy expected a cakewalk If II
cities of Mecca and Medina. That Invaded.
The Saudis have a superior air
region was ruled bY the ancestors
or Jordan's King Hussein until force compared to Yemen, but
the House of Saud booted them the CIA reports Qote that Iraq's
Saddam Hussein sent a squadron
out.
. The Invaders WO!IId let the of Iraq! l'~t!G-lls to Yemen just
Saudis keep the middle region of' before his Invasion of Kuwait.
Since the Invasion, Yemen and
the Arabian Peninsula where
there Is little oil or anything else Jordan bave leaned toward Sad·
dam. Yemen abstained In U.N.
of value.
Like all conspiracy theories, Security Council resolutions conthere are elements of truth to this demning Iraq. Similar .absten·
one. Until U.S. forces moved In, lions In Arab League meetings
Yemen was perfectly capable of are Interpreted by the Saudis not
taking a cbun.k out of Saudi as neutrality, but as Jli'OOf of The
Arabia. The Saudi army Is Plot.
The CIA reports say the Saudis
slightly larger than Yemen's, but
the Saudi troops are preoccupied believe that Yemen's reward for
on their northern bordi!r · With Joining Tbe Plot would have been
Iraq and K!i'!'alt. Yemen, south . the three southwestern proVinces
of Saudi Arabia, could have of Saudi Arabia that were part of

II'IVe
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By Robert Walters
LIVERMORE , Calif. (NEAl - Finding a breach In the
mountains of the Coast Range, a cold Pacific Ocean wind roars
through Altamont Pass Into .the warm Central Valley. At!lP the
ridges .of the nearby ll!lls, hundreds of wmdmllls rely upon that
natural ·phenomenon. · to produce electricity for nearby
communities.
·
Known as wind turbines, those high-technology machines have
little In common with the quaint but crude Dutch \VIndmUis of
earlier centuries. At the base of each tower here, for example, Is a
control box packed with electronic devices.
Computers automatically ·adjust the variable-pitch fiberglass
blades atop the towers so they operate at the angle most efficient to
harness the wind's energy. Engineers In a control room miles
away constantly monitor the power generating process.
Wind power Is typical of the alternatives to traditional fuels cited
last year by the World Resources Institute of Washington, D.C.,
when It concluded that "over the longer term, the U.S. must begin
the.Inevitable transition to non-fo~sil energy technologies." ·
The virtues of wind as an energy source for the future are
described by U.S. Wlndpower, a Livermore-based firm that is the
'world's largest manufacturer of wind turbines and Its leading
producer of wind-generated electriC power:
Although wind turbines now are used as commercial power
generators In the Netherlands, Denmark and India, California
accounts for 80 percent' of all the wind power produced on the
planet .
· Moreover, 37 percent of the world totatl comes from Altamont
Pass, near San Francisco. Tehachapi Pass outside Bakersfield
contributes 21 percent and San Gorgonlo Pass accounts for 20
percent.
All of the.w!nd-generated electrlty pro&lt;!uced In California could
be equalled by a wind fai'm Installed at Buffalo Ridge In
· southwestern Minnesota - and a site near Browning, Mont. could
produce 17 Urnes as much as Buffalo Rldll'e.
A new study funded by the U.S. Department or Energy Identifies
16 states with commercial wind energy potential greater than or
equal to California. They are North Dakota, Texas, Kansas,
Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Oklahoma.
Minnesota, Iowa. Colorado, New Mexico, Idaho, New York, Illinois
and Michigan.
There are limitations, Including dependence upon seasonal and
hourly wind flow variations that precludes reliance upo.n the
technology as a source of around-the-clock "base load" power.
More than three-fourths of all production occurs from May
through September, with peaks typically occurring In the late
afternoon and evening.
Generous federal and state tax benefits available to wind farm
Investors In the late 1970s and early 1980s burdened the promising
new energy source with hustlers promoting get-rich-quick
schemes.
Turbines burned out, blades new orr. entire wind farms failed,
companies went ·bankrupt and the Industry acquired a bad
reputation that took years to overcome.
· Today, however, tbe fast-talking promoters are only a bad
memory a nil the leaders of the maturing Industry are responsible
companies. Moreover, almost half of California's wind generating
capacity has been Installed since the tax breaks expired In 1986.

A thought lor the day: Novelist Samuel Butler wrote that "If life
must not be taken too seriously, then so must neither death."

Berry·'s ·Wor.ld

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''As the politicians say - your 'negatives' are
very high!'"

. WHeN iHe.Y
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ReacH •
·1tH$ PoitJT,
GeNTLeMeN,

we arracK!

IRAI-l

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Who does 'prior· restraint' protect?
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The head·b!lttlng occurs when
This probably Isn't the first
we believe you have
Information
heated editorial you've read on
Ight to know Is also lnfor,ma·
a
r
tbe Supreme Court's decision to
lion members or the legal profesbar the Cable News Network
slon
want to supress. There are
from airing tapes of Gen. Manuel
any number or reasons they may
Noriega's conversations with his
want ·to suppress It, and It's
attorneys. There are few subjects guaranteed to push journal· · almost Impossible to tell which
one
ists' thermostats to "Broil"
the Is roperative If you don't have
In or,mation which they want
faster than restraint of our
to keep secret.
freedom to report.
.
So und complicated? It
Is.
And with good reason. We
They may want to suppress
believe our Jobs are trust, ours
Information because they truly·.
only as long as we agree to bring
pre-trial knowledge may
you Information you have a right believe
prejudice a jury against a
to know as guaranteed to you by defendant and therefore rob him
the First Amendment to the
1
Constitution. It's a simple rule, o his Sixth Amendment rights.
but one ,doomed to run at odds Or,
he depending on whether
t
y're defense attorneys or
with another profession with
another set of rules; the legal prosecutors, 1hey may think that
Information will
profession, whose rules Include suppressing
h I
I
a
facilitating the Sixth Amend- defp dto t acqu
I ht or convict
f
an . n t e case o a judge,
ment, which guarantees each of Ite en
may simply be a zealous
us a fair tralllfwe're accUsed of a Interpretation of .the Sixth
crime.

a

By Sarah Overstreet
Amendment, or It may Involve
personal po· 11·tiCs or power. Some·
times the reasoning can be
arbitrary: A Judge once tried to
deny me access to a government
agency's public records, because
hewasafraldthepresldentoflhe
agency's volunteer board would
quill! 1 made him mad. .
Whatever the reason In the
Noriega dispute, the Supreme
Court has sided with the suppres·
t blddl CNN I
ston ethic bY or
ng
o
broadcast the tapes. It Is the first
time the high court bas held the
.
.. r fr
Ideal of "prior restra1nt o ee
speech to be constitutional.
Why should that make you as
hot as It makes me•.
Well first, history has proven
thatdefendantscangetfalrtralls
even when much 1s publicly
known about their cases. we
can't ensure that pre-trial public·
. .
I
tty will not Influence a ury 1n
some manner. yet there Is also no

evidence that a defendant's right
to afa1r1r1a1 s
1 lmped edbythe
public's knowing the truth about
a case before that truth Is
presented as evidence In a trial.
On the other hand, none or us
have to search our memories
very far to come up with cases ·
where 1awyers and judges have
tried to keep crucial' truth from
s urf ac Ing. The potent Ial for
b
I
ltl II
·
a use s mu p ed when Judges
put themselves In the position or
"screening" the news toseelfthe
bll b
r1 h
pu c as a g I to know It, as
U.S. District Judge William
Hoeveler did at one point In the
Noriega case.
If you haven •I 1ooked at the Bill
f
1 te1y, take a ·gander at ·
o Rl g ht sa
Amendments I and VI. Does the
hi g h court•s ru1lng make you feel
"" as a citizen, or
more protect.,..
Ilk
·
more
e your freedoms are
losing out to the protection of the
government's backside?

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136,102•.( Ulll(

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Thatcheror stoOd for freedom
for
all
or
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gender as serenely as she did,
and look at her two most Import·
ant achievements.
She came to power In Britain
for the same reason that Ronald
Reagan, just one year ' later,
came to power In tbe United
States: She stood lour-square for .
·the proposition that free men and
women, making their own economic choices with their own
money, could do far better for
themselves, and In the process
benefit society far more, than a
Nanny State that wanted to tax
their resources away and spend
them on what ·It considered the
public weal.
Like all who labor In the vineyards of politics, she had to
make compromises. But there Is
no doubt at all that she lett Brl·
taln far freer and stronger than
she found It, and she may well
have made the differenCe bet·
ween Its total collapse and Its
survival a1 a viable nation.
In the field of International atfairs her performnacne was al·
most equally spectacular and
probllbly even more Important.
ThrouJhout almost the whole de- ·
cade ol the 1980&amp; lbe was 'one ol
four Western
leaden wbo
formed an ablolutely Implacable
front aralnat the advance of
world communiSm. The others
were Ronald Rea~ran, West Ger·
many'a Helmut Kohl, and Yuu·
biro Nakuone, the longest Ja:st·

'

lng a steady succession to con- .
servatlve Japanese premiers. '
These were the four leaders who
together formed the stone wall!n
to which communism helplessly
drove Soviet society, mashing II
to smltl)ereens.
It Is Idle but amusing, In the safety or retrospect, to speculate on
what might have happened durIng the critical decade or the
1980s if the four nations In question had been led by (say)
Michael Dukakls, the British
Labor · Party's Nell Klnnock,
West Germany's Social Del)'lo. cratlc standard-bearer Oskar
Lafontaine, and Japenese socialIsm's Miss Dol. To be sure, not
even they could or would have
saved the Soviet Unton from the
dire economic consequences of
communism; but Brezhnev 8r

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Today in history••• .
Today Is Tuesday, Dec. 4, the 338th day o! 1990 wlth.27 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Thole born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include historian Thomas Carlyle In 1795; English novelist Samuel
Butler In 1835; actress-singer Llllilih Russell in 1861; Spanish dictator
Francisco Franco In 1892; actreas Deanna D~ln In 1921 (age 69);
actor Max Baer Jr. In 1937 (age 53), and actor Jeff Bridges In 1949
(age 41).
·
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iD·9-4.roul-

By William Rusher

Co. might well have scored en·
ough exploitable advances Inter·
nationally to enable their system
to survive.
At last the accumulation or re·
sentments. that Inevitably accompanies a Ute In politics m•de
Its weight felt, even by Margaret
Thatcher. She may never have
beard Harry Truman's salty obs·
ervatlon that "U you
stick
around this eame long enough,
you'll g~t beat," but she knew Ita
truth InStinctively. And I, for
one, am glad that she chose tq
step down wheil she did, rather
than rtsk endlnll' her magnificent
career with a defeat that mleht
seem to tarnish it,

.rv

1~e In tbe Bntun Garden, which the Celdca w'a
1

One Of the most remarkable
the many
remarkable things
about Margaret Thatcher was bow
little her career oWned to rtben·
o1sy feminists who presume to
speak for lllday's women.
I cannot recall ever having
bean! Mrs. Thalcher corriplaltl
about t~ discrimination she undoubtedly experience In
the
"man's world" !1f Britain's Tory
poUt!cS. One the contrary, she rose
firmly up the ladder With the rest
or her generatiOn ol aspiring poUt!·
clans, ousted and replaced the
dithering Ted Heath as leader o!
the Conservative Party, won the
prime mlnlstershlp In her own
right, brolle the power of Britain's
arrogant labor! uniOns, reversed
the slide or the Brltlllh economy towan! IOC!allsm, lnltalled the prin·
clplel or tree enterprise 1n its
place, restored her country's pride
by retaking the Falklandl from
Arpnttna, became the only B11t·
Ish Prime Mlnllter In thll centurY
to win three general electlona In a
row, and stepped dowa IClnowl·
edged, even by her eneinmln, u
the moat lmpreulve bolder ol that
otrlce alnce Wllii10n Cburchlll
.kAnd all the while the Betty
Frledana and Gloria: Stelnema oa
both sides or the Atlantic were
yakklnl (quite profitably, or
course) about how a woman
COI!Idn' t ~ret an even break.
Let us do Margaret Thatcher
the cour.tesy of Ignoring bet

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Rio Grande ·cagers gear for Urbana, Cincinnati Bible

Carr&gt;;i~ll a 104 ·points per aame averqe IDto acUo11 :this week, Rio
Grande s Redmen wlllliost the up-and-cominl Urbana Blue Kal&amp;hts
· today at 7:30p.m., and ClnciDnBU Bible Thuraday at 7:30p.m. for
lhelr last two home games prior to tile Chrlsttnas break.
· After. knocking oft Wisconsin·Whitewater, 102-87, In the openln&amp;
round of the Sub(U'u Classic at Olivet Nazarene (DI.), the Rio men
toook the tournament championship Saturday with an 89-73 defeat of
lhe host school.
·
·
. Senior point guard Gary Haqison netted his second most valuable .
player of the tournament ~onor, and teammates .Jeff Brown and
Mark Erslan earned spot&amp; on the AII·Tournament team.
The wins boosted Rio Grande's record toG-O. Earner, the Redmen
posted vl,ctorles over Kentucky Christian (91·69), Summit Christian
&lt;Ind. l &lt;124-421, Malone (103-98) and Shawnee State (115-61). .
Re~IJJI skUII)!elp.- While effec!lve shooUng from both t~e
two· and three-point ran11e have lifted the Redmen offense, Brown s
reboUJidlng skill has played an lm.portant part In the tea1J1's lort1lnes.
A 6-5 sophomore !rom New!lrk, Br01!;'.JIIs brlnllina an aY!rage of 10.5

Scoreboard ...
NFL action

Iletroit ................ 1310 130100100
Mintlelota .. .......... 71~ 6 20 77 97
\ Torooto ................ 6 221 13 79 133

-·

America Co..ernce
Team

'

Smjllbelll¥t.lloo
Los Angeles ........ 16 7 3 35110 82
Cal pry .............. 15 9 4 34119 91
Va~&lt;ouVer ... : ...... \312228 83 .87
Wlnnlpe1 ...... :...... 9174 22 98 108
Edmonton .. , ......... ~ 14 2 20 77 76

W L.:l Pot. PF PA

Buffalo .... ......... 10 2 0 .833 342 200
Miami ............ .... 9 3 0 .750 252164
· Indlanapcils ...... 5. 7 0 .U7193 250.
N.Y. Jets . ......... 4 90 .308216~
New .England .... I 11.·0 .0831!1342

' '

•.._...,,,,am•

P·RI·
Washlneton

N.Y.f:;Jants ., ..... 1020.833262!48 .
Philadelphia :.. .... 75 0 .583 3D! 252
Washlnetm ......... 75 0 .583289233
DallaS .......... .... ... 6 7 0 .j62193 2!!
Phoenix .............. 18 0 .333192 29!

at Pittsburgh, 7: 35
.p.m.
.·
Mtnnesd:a· at Tor&lt;:rno, 7:35p.m.
WIMipee at Los Angeles, 10: 3~
p.m .

centrsl
Chicago ............. 10 2 0 .833 281197
Minnesota ...... .... 6 6 0 .5000 282 229
· Green Bay .......... 6 6 0.500227 250
Tampa Bay ... .. .... 58 0 .385210311
Detroit ...... .......... 4 7 0.364270307

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\

Transactions
-ball
Atlanla- Signed free agent third

baseman Terry Pendletm lo4 -~ar

m

contract. •
Baltlm&lt;ft - Released pitcher
Mike Smith.
Chi'i','go CALl. ~ Named BuQdy
Bell 41rector •I minor league
• · .
Instruction. ~
Chirago CNL&gt; Released·
pitcher Kevin Co!lma9. ·
· Detroit - . Signed free agent
pltcr.er 8111 Gulltcksori ro ·2 · ~ar

San Francisco .... lll 0 .916
182
New Orleans ....... 57 0 .4172U 219
L.A. Rams .......... 57 0 .417285 322
Atlanta .: .. ......... .. 3 9 0 .25021! 308
Mondilf'l llttal

sa11 Frartelsco_7, N.Y. Giants 3
.- Suiiiii.Y. DeC:' . '

MJnnescia at N.Y. Giants', I p.m.

contract.

Buffalo at Indianapolis, 1 p.in,

Los Angeles -

New England at Pitlilluilh. 1

p.m.

been destanated for asQnment.

Sealtlft vs. Green Bay·a t Mllwau- f
ket, 1 p.m.
Cleveland a t Houston, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Washlngtm, 4 p.m .
Denver at Kansas Oty. 4 p.m . . ·
New Orleans ar L.A. RaJI\S. 4

p.m.
Philadelphia at Miam-L 8 p.m,

nee.

It
. Monday,
L.A. Raiders at Delrol1, 9 p.m.

Eu1era Collferenet ·
Atlanli&lt;DI¥1ta.
WL Pol. GB
Bostm ..................... 13 3 .813 Philadelphia ............ 11 6 .617 2\S
New York ................. 7 8 .461 ~I&gt;
New Joroey .............. 6 10 .37~ '7
Miami... ................... ~ 10 .333 7%
Washingtoo ... .. .. .... .... ~ 11 .313 8

Team .

-

,

WeUera ConfeA!nct
MldwestDh11._
Team
WLPd. GB
San Antonio .. .... .. ...... .9 4 .692 Houston .... .... ... .......... 9 7 .92 1\1
Utah ........... .. .... ......... 9 7.56311&gt;
Dallas .......... : .... :........ &amp; l . 461 3
Mtnnesota ................. 5 11.312 51&gt;
{)enver .................... .. 312 .200 7
Orlando .................... 3 13.188 712

Padftc Dlvlllon
· Portland ...... .. .. ........ 14 1 .933 Gold~ State ............. 11 6 .64\ 4
Phoenix .. .. ................ 8 5 .61~ ~
L.A. Lakers .............. 8 ~ .615 ~
L.A. 0 ippers ........... , 8 8 .500 6\1
seattle .................. .... . 4 ~ .308 9 .
Sacramento .... , ...... .. 113
121&gt;

.on

Me.tay'1 ICO~et
Celtles 135. Super~tx~ks 102
Utah 135. Wa.hlneton 101

TModay'• cam•
Orlando at New York, 7:30p.m.
Seattle at NewJeney, 7:30p.m.
MJJwaukee at Philadelphia. 7: 30

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Portland at MtamL 7: 30 p.m.
Dtn~r at CleYPiand. 7:30p.m.
Pl\oonix at Cbia~go, 8 p. m,
Indiana at MhmHCU, 8 p.m. ·
Atlanta at Houltm, 8:30p.m.
Dttrolt a~ L.A.·Lakera. 10: 30p.m.
Dallas at Sacrament"' 10: 30p.m.
WedlleHiat• r&amp;~~~a

Denver al Boston. 7: 30 p. m.

Portland at Orlando, 7:30p.m.

Phoenix at Indiana, 7:30p.m .
Cl"""land at Milwaukee, 8:30

p.m.

-

Atlanta ar San Antonto,S: ;.,p.m .
Del roll II Utah, 9: 30 p. m .
Dallal at L.A. Cllppero. 10:311

p.m.
Washinglm at Goklf'ft State,
10: 311 p.m. • ,

In the NIU..WaJ•CoaJ......,,
Palrldtot...._
Team
W L T I'lL GF GA
N.Y. Rangero ...... 17 8 !391:1) 91
Philadelphia ....... 17112 3U!D 9.!

Nf'l' Jor.oey ... ,..... 1410 432107 93
WashlnJllm ......... 1514030 98 12
PlttJbulJh .... ...... 1213 2 281151111
N.Y: blandora ..... tl! 2 20 71 ff '

MamaDIYit._
lloltm ....... ......... 14 U 32
Montrui ............. 1U2 3211
Hart!ord .... ........ . 1fl2UI
llulfalo ................ II !0 7 25
Quebec .... 0........... 5 18 611

81 78

i7 t1

78 16
10 81
10129

Campbell C o - e

Norrto- .

Team

W LT Pia. OF GA
OtJcaao ..... ,......... 18 t2 38 t1 11
!I. Loull ............. 1!
11 71

Johnsm roat'h .at Denver ollnler-

natlonal

Le.a pe IAAA); an·
nou.nc:ed Dave Huppert and Paul
Lindblad will retum as manaaer
and pi1Cblng coach at E1 Paso or
Texas League' CAAI , ChriS Bando
and Mitch Zwolensky wm return as
mana,er and ptrhtnc coach B.t
stcoktoo ol CaiUomla League CA 1
and Rob .Qerksca will return as
Manager at Beloit of Midwest
pltchln&amp; COICh a' Beld.t and Harry
Dunl~ manager' and scout at
Helena of Pioneer League rt. ).
·
Monlreai - Signed pitcher Den·
nis Martinez to J.year contract:
releaaed outfleJder RPlan.,o
Roomes and pilcher Date
Mohorcic.
Oakland - Signed outfielder
Willie wuson.
New York tAl&gt; - Traded
ourftelder Oscar A'ZDCar to San
Dteco for a player tp be namOO. ·
Philadelphia .Named ' Bill
Dancy manager, FlOYd Raylonl
coacl!, Jim Wrlaht pitching c01cl!
and Barney Nuaent trainer at
Scranton·WUkesBar.e of Interna·
•. tiona! League IAAA }, Don MeCor·
mack manager. Al Leboeuf coach ,
John Martin pltc~lng coach and
Mark Ruffner trainer at Reading of
Easlt!rn Le&amp;KUO' CAAJ. Lee Ella
mana1er, RamOn Hendeuon
coat'h, Darold Knowles pitching
coaclt and Craig Strobel trainer at
Clmrw,ater d. Florida State League
lA t, Mel Roberts manacer, Buzz
Capra pltc:hln~t: coach and Brent
Spartanbu~

Leiby trainer al

of

SoulbAtlantic League &lt;AI. Ramon

. AvUes

Maaa~~:er.

Tony Scott coach

and Car Joo Arroyo pitr:hlng coach
at Batavia or New York-Penn
Leque fA I, Roly Dearmas man·
ager, Qleaa Brummer eoach, and
Ell Grba pncbJngcoacha! Martins·
Ville or Appal a ell ian League 'A"
na.IJ'ed Don ~astngamfl minor
leogue field COI&gt;rdinat&lt;r. Jim Ffe.

KOsi pitching coach and ,&amp;Pf:dal

&amp;JIIprnrnta .l nstructll", ~ Qeorge
· Culver nwtna pltchlnalnsrructm-,
Dave Cash roving irlfield ln•truc·
tor, Glenn Brwniner ra.rlna catchlnglDatructCI', Jerry Martin rmlng ·
hltUn11aatructor and Hap Hudson
ll!habliilation trainer.
San FranctiCO - Signed OUt·
fielder l!'llile ~e to , .,...,
contn.ct.
•
. . . _.. I
Cedar Rapids (CBAl - Signed
forward Roy Marble: waived cen·
er Da'm m Vance.
.ClOYeland - Signed guard Dar.
qen V!ill!ltlne.
..
MtatnJ - Releued center Alan
OaJ lr&lt;mlnju!Od reserve.
NBA"" FinedllewJer.ey•,Jack
Haley ctl. MIIJI'add Derrick cOleman Cll.IIOOi and otlando's Mark
Acm 'c$lJOOJ lor Dec. I Hahl: lined
Walhitwtm's Rar,..Y Grant ell.
11001 . Gree Fosr.r tl2.000J, Darrell
Walker. 111,5001 and Detroit 's Joe

Duman lh,OOO). DPnnls Rodman

·Cli,IIOOl, Mark Agulne t$ll00),
WIU~ Bedford ($500\ and James
Edwards Cl500i lor Dec. 1118ht. ·
New Yort - Fired head coach
Stu Jacltl111and repla&amp;id him With
John MacLeod.
San Jo .. CCBA I - Signed guard
Koruty Travis: waived guard Mar·
cboll Hent)'.

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Colore

nlmlfalla.

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Foillham - Sllned buketblll
coecll Nidt Macarchu~and !ooll&gt;all
coocl! 1-ar'tY Gluj,d&lt; to contract
Knt Sta"' Named Petl!
Conlelll- (OOCh.
llortll.. MldtiJIIUI - !lamed
Mark Manna football coo ell.
VID4Irllllt Namtd GertY
DINaitlo loalball coocb.

r.oiwJ

Dtttolt - · R1lnlld untbacktr
,

Jllltnl)' WUIIallll.

N.Y. Gluu - Activated lin..
bad&lt;er CUI Bonks lrtltl inju!Od
Ult.
Tampa Bay - Fiftd hOld cooclt
Ray PoridJaa ODd tllf'ned. ~dlaill
Wlbiam~tx~ lnlorlm COicl! lor tht
tell

ol RPCII•

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Junior center Tainmy Tho·
mas, who led Trace with 22
points,' got major offensive help
trom sophomore guard Lucy
Mullens, who had 16 .
In
datebook, Han-

nan Trace, the odds-on favorite
to stretch Its winning streak to
five, will travel norlh to lake on
Norah Gallla, while Soulhwestern wlll travel to Racine to play
Southern:

room.

League lA 1: named' Dave RaJI!IIch

In the NBA."

I
3
41&gt;
5
7
8

Named Lamar

Milwaukee -

p.m.

Central Dlv .. ...
Detroit ..................... 13 3 .813
Mtlwaukee ...... ....... ... Jl 4 .687
Chicago ...... ...... .. ...... 10 6 .625
Cleveland .... :... ...... .,. 9 8 .~29
Charlotte .................. 8 8 .500
lntllana .......... , .......... 610 .315
Atlanta .... ..... : ........... 410 .286

Signed pltr:her

Kevin Gross. to 3-~ar contract:
announeed catcher Luls Lopez bas

.

Phoenix at Atlanta, 1 p. m .
San Frandsco at Ondnnatl, 1 ·

p.m.

'l'loeMQ'I (atnOI

Montreal at Hartford, 7: 35p.m.
, Quebec at Edmmtm, 9: 35p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at calgary, 9: 35
p.m.
.
vancouver at flfew Jeraey. 7:45

Eul
W LTPol. PI! PA

Telllll

Ourscoring lhc . Soulhem Tornadoettes 13-2 in lhc lhin1 ftame,
lhc Eastern Eaglcnes rolled 10 a 3728 SVAC girls' baskelball vicrory
over the host TornadoelteS Monday
evening in Charles W. Hayman
gyannasi!lf1l.
Easrem is now 3-1 and Southern
is04. ,
·
Sophomore . guanl
S~~k
Metzger paced lhe Eastern a
wilh 11 points, while juniors nr.
fany Gardner and Lee Gillilan each
toSsed in six, Thbitha Phillips had
four; Suzanne Clay three, and two
each from Karen Morris and
Stephanie Otto.
Souahem's Slirab Duhl shared
game-high honors wiah 11 points to
lead her club, while Mica Jones had
seven, Junie Beegle fi-:c. Wendy
Wolfe three, and Jenmfer Cross
two.
The fust round was typical of all
· Eastern-Soulhem games, close and
competitiv~. In lhat frame Eastrm
took a 6-4 advanlage.
Solllhem ouascore&lt;~.Easti:m 12- .
11 in ahe second round 10 pull to
within one at the half 17-16.
Up unlit the lhin1 frame defense
had been ahe name of lhc game, but
in lhe ahird round Eastern got hot
and opened up some brealhing

Boston at Detroll, 7: 35p.m.
Vancouver at N.Y. Islanders,
. 7:35 p.m .

WMt
Kansas City ....... 8 40 .667 283179
L.A. Raiders .. .... 8 4 0 .667230 1114
seat~ ............... &amp; so .500222226
San Diego .......... 6 7 0 .462 272 220
Denver .............. 3 9 0 .250 257 303
Natlollal Coafereace

"

~rospective

··

pettit jurors names·r~leased

_ __;,_Area ·d eaths--

re~unds l. with Greg Davis (6-6, sen lot, 21.8 polnts,8.5 rebOunclll and ..
Todd Charles (6·5, junior, 7.5 points, 3.1 rebounds) ·ase the~·
At center will probably be 6-6 freshman N't James, C111'11111IIY.
perlorrnaDCes tram his youqer ptayers, Including guards Jawanza
averaglng6.4 points and 3.6rebounds. First off the benchlorauardlll
Childs and Kyle Schroer. ChUda (5-10) came to Rio Grande from a
Kerwin Thompson (6.0, senior, 9.9 points).and. Cornelius Woody (6-8,
noteworthy career as a point auarcl. for Columbus .Northland, the
junior, 12.1 points, 5.1 rebounds) for the forwards. •
... ,
alma mater of teammate and backup center Tim Christian, while
CB at Z-8 - Cincinnati Bible, an early victim of Urbana, .entea:a
Schroer (6.0) playedatNewKnoftvllleHJghSchoolforKentWolfe, lhe
action this week at 2·8 and Is scheduled to play Circleville Bible
Souahern Tornadoes standout who played for Lawhorn In 1982-86 and
College Tuesday night. Over lhe weekend, the Golden Ea111es apUt a
was a member of Rio Grande's l985 championship team.
pair of road games, defeating Tomlinson (Tenn.. ) a.nd losing Saturday '
Lawhorn will probably start Harrison (22.5 ·points, 9.1 assists per
to Trevecca Nazarene (Tenn.),
.
·
·',
game) and Mark Erslan (17.2 points, 3.1 assists) as his guartjs, wJth
With a 20-13 record from l;ist season, CB'head coach Jim Corrona
Brad Schubert (11.8 points, 3.3 rebounds) and Brown (12.8 points) as
has opened the new campaign with with some experienced players In ' ..
the forwards: Donaldson (9.8 points) Is expected tocontinue at center.
lhe starting lineup. Greg Zimmerer &lt;6·0, senior) and JeffCJirry, aG-O
while Darius William• (12 points, 4.7 rebounds) will be first off the . junlor from Chesapeake, are at the guard R9,SitiJ&gt;I)S.•..J!!~,Ile .JQ))!) '
bench for tbe forwards.
·
Garrett (6·3 junior) and Paul. Carpenter (IH, freshman) are starting
F1nt MOC came -The Urbana contest will 1&gt;e the first Mid-Ohio
forwards. Denny Jenkins (6-4, freshman) will probably start at1the ~·
Conference ou11n111or the ~edmen, who were 5-7 for slxah place last . center.
.
· · .
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: .
season. Bob Ronal's Blue Knights were 18·11 overall and 5·6 In ahe ·
The Redmen split with Urbana last season, losl~g 99-951n overtime ·
conference for fifth place. A preseason MOC (!oaches' poU has picked
and then capturing an 86-74 victory later in theseason: CBlastmet the
Rio Grande to finish third and Urbana fourlh lq the conference,
Redmen In Cincinnati In February, where Rio Grande posted a 1~
preceded by Tiffin In first place and Cedarville in second.
win.
·
·
·
Urbana Is 4-4 entering Tuesday's game, coming off an encouraging
ItEDMEN NOTES- The Urbana and Cincinnati Bible game~ will
87-80 victory Saturday over Kentucky NAIA power Cumberland. The
be aired live on WGTR-FM (101.5) with Chris J11sUce dOinll the
Blue Knights also own wins over Cincinnati Bible, 135-90; Shawnee
play:by-play and Matt Moss providing the color commen'*ry....,In
State, 86-71; and Anderson (Ind.), 100·78, Losses have been to Goshen
another media -related matter, Walsh College announced Its Feb.,23
(Ind.), 84-81; Morningside, 102-86; Central State, 103~98; and Malone,
game with the Redmen will be televised on SportsChannel Ohio as lhe
84·82.
Mid-Ohio Conference Game of the Week. The taped-delay broadcast
RonalwlliprobablystartashlsguardsJerry Ligon (5-9, freshman,
Is one of six MOC games 10 be aired as part of an arrangement ,
16.3 points, 7.4 assists\ and Will Goins (6·2, senior, 9.5 points, 3.8
between Walsh, SportsChannel Ohio and Prismatic P~oductlons. .

Eastenn, Hannan Trace, Kyger Creek

Pitllburgh 9, N.Y. Rangers 4
Hart!oill 4, JI!Ontreai 2
New Jer_,y I , WiMipeg I

I

The Daily· Santinai-Pltge 5

Pomeroy-'Middleport, Ohio

boards IJito the Urbana game, and center Troy Donaldson Is backing
him with 5.8 per game.
,
.
UtUizlna Ills bench. Coach John Lawhorn has drawn Interesting

.

MoiiiQ''• ICOrea

Ceatnol
Cincinnati .. ... .•... 7 50 .583275:174
Pittsburgh ...... :.. &amp; 60 .5002101ff
Houstm ............. &amp; 60 ~266229
a ....land .......... 2 10 0 .167187338

r

Tu~tcteY.
'Dec,mber 4, 1990
.
.

Tunclev. December 4, 1880

4

Pea•

Southern scored just two points,
while Eastern had lhcir biggest'
scoring game of lhe night wilill3
10 take a 30-18 lead: ·
'
·Southern coached by David Gaul
made a late game rally, but feU
DRJ'VING
...:. Eastern's Tabby PhlUips push!ls the ball
short it 37-28. •
.
downcourt
qalnst
the
delenae ollered by Soulbern'!i Je'!nller
Southern hit a frigid 8 of 57 for
Ct'OU
durlag
Monday
night's
1ame In Racine, which the Eagles
19 pcn:cnl, while hitting just 12 of
37 at ahc·Iine. Eastern hit 13 of' 46 l WOD 3'l.z8.
from ahe floor, while hitting II of
21 from the line.
Southern had ·32 total rebounds .
led by Beegle's eiJ!hl. Wolfe's :
seven, and Duhl's S!ll. Otto had
eight for Easaem and Gardner had
seven ofEasaem's 38.
Southern had four turnovers, two ·
steals, and assists by Wendy W,olfe,
Sarph,Duhl, and Amber·Ohlinger.
Eastern hosts Trimble Wednes·
day,
while Soullicm
hosts
Soutl)wcstern Thunday.
Score by quarterS:
EaStern 6 1113 7-37
· Southern 4 12 2 10-28
·Box score:
Eastern (37)
· Stephanie Otto 1.0·2; Tiffany
. Ganlrler 3-0-6; Suzanne Clay 1-13; Shelly Metzger 4·3-11; Lee Gillilan 2-24; Tabitha Phillips 1-2-4;
Lorrie Baker ().().(); Ruby Burke 01-1; Jaimie Wilson 0-0-0; Karen
Morris 0-2-2; Nora ~an 0-0-0;
Pemy Aeiker 0-0-0; Jennifer Rousl\
0-0.0; Debbie Gray 0-0-0; Aubry
West0-0-0. Totals 13-11·37.
Southern (28)
Mica Jones 1-5·7; Junjc Beegle
1-3-5; Wendy Wolfe 1-1-3; Sarah
Duhl4-3-11; Jennifer Cross 1-0-2;
Beth Clarlc 0-lHl; Amber Ohlinger
0-0-0; and Aimee Mills 0-0-0.
Totals 8-12·28. '
Wildcat• 55, Hlptandera.M
At Mercerville, Kim Triplett's
steal of an lilbounds pas' near
l)alfcourt . and an Immediate
three-pointer from the halfcourt
, stripe with six seconds ten gave
• Hannan Trace a 55-54 comeback
win over Southwestern.
The Wildcats, unbeaten In four
games (three In the SVAC to
sbare first place with Eastern), ·
took a six-point lead Into the
second quarter, but Southwest·
ern puahed ahead by one at
· halftime by outscoring their
hostll8·1llnacttwo. After Trace
led by live at ·the end ol the ahlrd
quarter, the Hlgblanders revolted, and wltb six seconds left,
Wildcat head coach John Lusher,
forpttlng that he had no tlnle
outs· ten, called time and lmme1 dlately.recelved a technical foul.
SW's Usa Hall, who .drUied
home an SVAC seaaon·hlib 40
points, canned a pair of technical
lou! shots to give her tJeam a 54·52
lead. Then SouthwestJern Inbounded the ball, aetiq ilp the
pivotal steal by Triplett, who
ended · the lilibt with seven
PQints ..

The 10181 number of deer killed
during !his year's gun is up
slightly both in Meigi County llld
IIClOSS the stale.
According ID Meip County
Game Prolector Keiah Wood, 1,957
deer were killed in lhc county last
W«.t. while 1,91 S were killed
during the 1989 1C11101L
Staiewide !his year, 79,143 deer were killed, up considerably from
1989's tally of 76,620.
·
WoQd also reports that 16 11011·
fatal accidents, or self·inllicted
gunshots, were tepcxted swewidc
this ycir, down from 20 last ~·
HOwever, one fata1 lldf·inOicted
wound WaS aqxxted in M~
. County last week. No falllilics
were reponed last year.
•

Photo ID winner
Frances L. Robens, Racine, is
the wimer of lhc "Arowlil Town" •
photo identification series on Nov. •
21 .
She correctly identified lhe ~
as a detaiL on the ·facade of the
Eag!Cs building on Main Street.
She will . receive: a landnuwk
sesquiccntennia Chrisbnas oma- •
ment from Bank One.
·
:
· There was no wi1111et for the •
Nov. ~ photo. That photo was a ·
detail on lhc overhang of the
Pomeroy l"ost Office.
·

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vrctorwus ·
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Quarter totals
Soulhwestern. 7 18 14 15-54
Hannan Tra.ce13 11 19 ·
12-55
•. ' .
Hannan Trace (55 J - Thomaa. .
8-0·6-22; Mullens 7.0.2·16; Trl.'
plett 2-1-0-7; D. Nelsop 2·0-2-6; ·
Dillon 1-0·0-2; Sanders1 1#2. · .
.
.
Totals .- 21-HO.U
Field 10als - 20-67
, ·
f'rt1e thrOWS -.. 10.~4· ·.' · · .
Rei!Ounds -:-' 4.5' .(Thomais ,13&gt; ·
Assists - 14
.. . ' ..
Steals- 17
· ·
''. •,
Turnovers - 22
Southwes~rn (MI ..;, lfall ·
13-0-14-40; Ochs 1·1.0.5; · Donta ·
1-0-2-4; Hale 0·1~0.3; Wiseman
0-0-2-2. To&amp;als - 15-Z-18-M

Bobcats 39, Pirate. 18 ·
At VInton, nine Kyger Creek
players made.the scorlngeolwnn
to push the Bobcats to anU•PCIIDt·
victory over Norah GaiDa, · ·
After the Bobcats led .by six at ,
halttlme, both teams essentially!'
traded baskets In · \he · ih.lrd
quarter, but KC lced.t,lu! win by
outscoring the Pirates 15·10 In the
final eight minutes:
·•
·
Senior guard/forward ·Yon Ragland, who led thE' Cheshire live
with nine points and caniied the
game's only trey In the first
quarter, was closely followed by
senior center Lisa Swisher, Who
had seven. Pirate forward Dee ·
, Dee DObbins, wbo led all scorers
with 10, was followed by six
points from freshman ' Dama .
Twyman. who wears tlie same ' .
number (22) as her brQI1!~... - ,
senior Brandon Twyman, on the
Pirates' boys' squad.
"
In the preceding Junior· hlih
game, the Pirates salted ,away
with a 48-11 victory. Mindy Pope
and Amber Staton ·paced,Nofth'
with · 10 points each, antLStephanle Jones led KC 'wltl).fl\&lt;j!.
On Thursday's agel)da, Kleier
Creek (3·1, 2·1) wlllhostOakHIU,
. while , Nortll Gallla will host
. Hannan Trace.
Quartler lotliJs
,
Kyger Creek .. :... 9 9 6 '.15-39
Norlh Gallla ...... 4 8 6. 10-28
Kner Creek (88) - .Ragland
. 2·1·2·9; Swisher 2·0·3-7; Glndles·
berger 3-0-0-6; Skldmore.3.Q.0.6; . ,.,
Drummond 0-0-4-4; Bradbury
1·0·1·3; Shaver 1·0.1-3; ·Black·
0.0·1·1. TO&amp;ala'"" li-HH8 . ·
Free throws - 12·18
·
Nord! Galla (:Ill) ·- Dobbins
5-0·0·10; Twyman 340-6; McCor·
mlck 2-0.1-5; Roble 0-0-3.3; Hill
1-0·0-2; Myers 1-0·().2.' To&amp;a11 ·1%-0-4-:111

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4514
. .

ChrlttMat
8reellrig E•ltlo11

Mon•ar, ·
·Deee111ber 24
'

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. Free throws - 4-18 (22.2'!f,)
'.

\

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

. .lONES DRIVES - Seuthern pard Mica Jones (10) drives
downcoart agalut tie defenae offered by an unldendlled Eutlern
pla)'er durlo1 Monday night's SVAC contes~ at Racine, which the
,:a11es
woo 37-28. '
.
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r

Randall F. 'Hawkins, M. D. ·
Internal Medicine

9 a.m. - ,5 p.m.
Suite 13,
'
PVH Medical Office Building
(~04)

Rtn ,..

675-7700

JI.I PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
I

bal~ ol proleuionpl.

.

·. A Rutland man'suffered minor. not· te$ted for driving' under lhe ·
IJII!I.rles Suf!day nlghJ af~r\ the lnfl;uence. . ,
\
,
car he .was riding In struck a
Donald Yost was not Injured,
brtd&amp;e.
'
and was not cited In the accident.
Rlcky.L. Yost, 20, w8S'taken to
A Portland youah suffeied
-Veterans Memorial Hospital by a · minor Injuries Mond!ly after her
Me'- COunty EMS squad follow- car flipped over on State Route
~··
lqu;'e accldentaround 8:15p.m. 124.
·
$clplci ·Townahlp Road 52 near . Misty R. · Hayman, 16, was
O~EN D~ILY 9·6
·. State Route 143. Yost was later taken to Veterans Memorial
transferred.to St. Mary's Hospl· · Hospital by a Melgs .COunty EMS
SUNDAY 1·6
'
tal'!!) Huntlnaton, W.Va. where squad after ahe crash In Lebanon
,.
POINSEtTIAS
' ·~e WB,I lllled In 11ood condltlo!l · Towllihlp around 4 p.m. She was
7 Celors- AI Sl~a
Monday, · a h011pltal s~keswo- treated and later ·released, a ·
.,
.. .: P.OINSEJT.I~ IASim
eald •., , , ,.
lw,SPI.!Airdspokeswoma.n sta,t!!d,. ·,
''
·• • •.·;, . ' .
.
Acco lng to a report from the r--- , .JIOI.L,Y.TIEES . ·
: y~j wli riding In a car driven GaiUA·Melgs Pcist of ahe Suite ·
FOUAGE IASIEIS
llf nQJJiJd E. Y011t, 31, of Hlibway Pattol, Hayman !"as
'
UVE &amp; CUT YIEES
Rudalld. Donald Yost apparently · eastbound '\Vhen her car ·appar·
IOit 0011~ ~ the 1978 Chevrolet ently went ofl the rllht Illde ot lhe . .Foi l'hll.owd·OM'I. G111n: .
$pnlyl
· ~· ,;MOiltia:'CUJO, ~t otr ·the rllht '· roadway, alld over an e~biuik· • llanllttt,.
. .·ildtbf,thero&amp;dW.y andatrucka ment; and' overtuJ11ed. She-was ..
·,brktp ralllna. accol:dinl to a traveling at apprOximately 45
tram ahe Gallta·MeJis miles per hour at ahe time ol the
ia!llt ot 1111 StAte Hlpway Patrol. accident, the re)IOI't eta!ell.
.
SYUC E, OH.
:n1f rtpc1rt ~tiled: that Doaiald
Hayman was cited for ~allure.
t ~~: .
992-5776
·• Y'olt bad' been drinking, but was .to contro.l.

·II..

Offtce'Hours
Monday through Fdday

.

Valley Drive, P'olnt Pleaiant; W. Va. 25550

Foi

o•r.llfti•• s.....,

.man

.

report

I

'

Deer tally
released

v.....
HUBBARD'S
GREEN-lOUSE

With wreaths of holly~~nd mistletoe, stockings hung
. by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow,
Christmas 'epcompasses warmth and good cheer as we
cherish the blessings we've share~ this past year.
For us it means saying hthanks ,, to you, our many
friends, old and n~w, whose kind support w~'ll alw.ays ·
'h you ts
. our ·
. .J.
··
. I reasure..D' omg
uusmess wtt
greatest pl~asure!
·
\.

Wtsh all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
our Chri·st·mas Greeting Edition on
December
24th~
,
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t .u ·E DAILY SENTINEL
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.AQVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN O.R DAVE
992-2)56

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�.fl:y . .Sentinel_

By The Bend
...'

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. PaD•

6

Pomeroy - Middleport. Ohio

Delta Kappa Gamma meeting held

Seoul awlnl witll pic 10

Donna chairman
Jcnkms. conducted
scholarship
commiuee
the
~ilcm auction wh~n . the Alpha
Omicro11 Chapter. Della Kappa
Gamma, met ·recently at the
American Legion Hali m Middlcport: . Cheryl Nisley was
auctioneer.
The legion auxiliary served a
Thanksgiving .dinner 10 33 mcmbers of the group. Margarel Parsons

asked
the WJI.h
b!cssing.
Tables8owers.
were
decorated
autllflln
Local . businesses and 01e hostess
commmee ~umJSh~d favors.
. Susan W1ll pres•ded at the meet·
mg. She !111nounccd that the date of
the March meeting had been chan·
goo to March 23.
Nclhe Parker read a thank-you..
note from Seremty House andolet·
tcr from Judy Fetherolf slatmg l.hat

program , "Scryicc, The Need to
Serve and It 's Rewards ," at the
recent meeting of the Xi Gamma
Mu Chapter, Oeta Sig mu Plu
Sorority. held at the hom•· of A.R.
Knight in Pomeroy.
She stated that personal snusfa-;·
lion is obtained from serving others
but only if the person enjoys his or
her committment.
An invitation was read from the
Xi Gamm Epsilon and Ohio Eta Phi
Chapters to attend a .Chri sunas
party.
11lc social committee reported
that items and dm~tuons arc sull
needed for the local scrvtcemcn
proJeCt. Letters were received and
read to the group from the serviccmcn expressing their_opprccia-

~

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.t:

~liorior,ir"dli

'

list ·

smilh lmdiloinmy Smith: .
~ 'F'lfth lllide • Chad ~· 'lY~n,

Evana ftyan . Grac;c, ,N•cole . Hill,
· Alicia~ Mulforii:i Nikki ·Robinson .
'and'Jessica ROush.
.•
·SiJllh ~ -..Amy,) o Northup,
'aU ,A's. Maaliew Bradford, A;ngu:
Tm 'Obeen, Kristen

Dianne · Jones. Jesse ·

Tonia ·Nazare'l'Ycz, · Jen:
· •. Melissa Smilh,
WritesCI · .and Carl)illa
'

'

q.
. A card 'ihowe'i has OOc:n P~1
for 1James Thaford, Syracu~. who
. will!obsetvelhiS 82ritbirthday on .
Swlday
.
·
·
1 ' CantS mAy be sent•to him at P.O. ·
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The chapt.cr is scheduled to work
the Bloodmobile Qn Dec. 12.
A "clo your own thing auction"
wi ll be the highlight or Tuesday's
meeting.
Sandy Iaonarclli rcporte.:l on tJ1c
City Council meeting. It was
decided thnt Founder's Day expcn·
diiU]'es wiU he controlcd by. the
hosting chapter. Mrs. lannarclli will
represent l.hc chapter at fair board
meetings and Linda Bates will
represent at the Chamber of Com·
mercc meetings.
The next meeting will be held
Tuesday at the home or A.R.
· Knight in Pomeroy at 7:30 p.m.
Hostesses will be Pat Arnold and
Charlotte Hanning.

The Daily Sentinej - Page- 7

Business
Services
.
-~p=jr;;~~~=~rr~~~~~;~Ffj~~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~r

she
would miss
lhe November
Docember
meenngs
because and
she
and her husband ar" ~orltin~ at the
Beillany, Chnst.an M1ss•on m Ken·
lucky.
Esther Macrker repo11Cd the
de&lt;~ill of Anna M~de Fehrman on
Nov. I and th~. wnhdnlwl of Jane
Bourne, Cee•lla Maerkcr, and
Patnc•a Peoples. .
.
Lcg1slauve chainnan _Y1ola Get·
tles reponed on the mceung of stale
nominations committee on Nov. I?.
She· Iaannounced the
a
b results
Del v of
.. pa
1eg1s uve s urvey y
ta
.
....,P
Gamma mcl)lbcrs.
Lee Lee led the singing of
Thanksgiving songs . .
.
11lc next meeting will be held
de.c s at 11 a.m. at the Univcrsicy '
Inn in Athens.
Attcndjng from Meigs County
were Carolyn Snowden, Rebecca
Zurcher, Miuinda Young, Dorotl1y
Woodard , Saundra TiUi&gt;. Jeanette
Thomas, Rosalie Swry, Emily
Spr.tgue, Chris Rouse, Gay Pemn.
Margaret Parson~. Nellie Parker, .
Nan Moore, DOnna Jenkins.
Pauline · HortOn, . Joann Hayes,
Wendy Halar, Fem Grimm, Marjot)' felly, Pam Crow, Twila Childs
and Shelia Beva.

M
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XI• G
. amma U meetS
S!ll1dy lanarclli · prcscnt.cd a tl·o·n.

BUSTER WAR'IU

ChrllfiiiU Cuhl
I COUNTY
TR • ·
RECYCLING
·

OPEN EVERY DAY AT
POMEROY LOCA.TiON

c~8::~ ~HAR~s~~~s
DAY ONLY

Call 992 •5114

For Current Prices

DEER .CUT,
WRAPPED &amp;
SKINNED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
614-949-2134

614-949-2635
ll -?J ·"9Q-lmo.
CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SALE
White &amp;
Scotch Pine

• The Area's Number 1 Market plate ·

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUND AY
POLICIES
'
'Ad ~ OIJIS tde Me ogs G~ll 1 a or Muon cou ntoes m ... st h e prO}
Ptt ld
"A eceNe $-S O dtsc oum- l o r ens pate •n B; dl&lt; i!nct.
"Free ads - G•llf!!IW&lt;'I'f a.,d fou nd a(l '&gt; u n t.lt:~ 15 ""' n tdli ..,.., n b€'
run 3 r:t~s at M ch arge
"Prt!;'w ot 1d lor #II teP•Htl le'l'ter!&gt; '" d!)ublc pr~ c e o f ~tl co~1

• 7 potnt line type on ly us-ed

· sentinel •s not res po"s•ble to; errors af1er ,ftrst dav tC hectt
m IJ ilpf!r l c ~ ll
dll&lt;f ·ahef pubh ca!•un to make co nectto n
'A ds th;rt must be pard 1n iH1vcul ~; t:! are
l or error s hrs t Cllly &amp;t 1 run~

Cerd of Th ank.$

Happy

In Memortam ·

Yar d· Sales

'A clns•l•ed

achlert•st~met'lt

ce p1 - da$st lted dr~plav .
wtl1 al :u :l Bppear m the Pt
JlOII5

~u&gt;!(Hf!

Oa•IV Trtbune.

MONDAY PAPE:R
TUESOA't' PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THU RSD AY PAPER
FfU OAY PAPEJl
SU N OAV PAPER

Ca rd

~nd

1S
15

s6 00
59.00

15

91J 00

1S

sn - 520

Over 15 Words

S4 00

·

•

20
JO
42

READY DEC. 2nd

742-2143

,60

$1 JO / day

11 ·26."90't mo.

.05 / do.y

R ,, M ,;u e lo1 i;Df1.e't:I.IJ !\'tl ru n11 br o lo.•r'lu p d lf'( 1 wol l b~ ~..,lit gAd

tn• ,. .. r h rt .&gt;W

" ~ seo ~trA tl!

11ds

1 -- C~trd

LINDA'S
PAINTING.

'

Announcements

Merchandise

n l TI1Miks

51 62 5J 5 .1 -

2 - ln Mem ory
3 - A nnovcemt'f"'ls
4 - Giwl!a,.,a~
5 - ~htp py Ad,
' 6 - Lo st and Fouri d
8 - Pubhc SaiP. &amp; A ·l~t o on

g .... wan~eO to Buv

pla cco on ThcOati'l' Senttnel
B ~siOU$5

0

~ onlhly

Rutland .

16

7 -. Yard Sa l~ IP&amp;•d '" adlo' ancel

Ad~&gt;

Household Good li
SpOrling Goods
Ani1QUE'5
M ,,c Merch MdiSe

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

57 - M vsH:at ln st ru~tlnl•
58 - fiU i tS 1\ Vl!;gtnlhles

·

59 - FIJr Sale or. Tmk

\ tt~

lfo9al r\oN:es!

homn

OAV BEFORE PUBLI CA TION
- 11 OOAM SATURDAY
- 2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TU ESDAY

-

2 00 PM WEONfSOAV

-

2 00 PM THU RS D A Y
200PM FAIOA'!'

16 - R11a10 TV i\, CB RRpllor

17 - M1scetl• neous

6S - Seed S. FertdJte'

1 9 - S c: hoolt &amp; h•urvCt•on

Rr.o l

wen,

""
.....
,
.
•
........
GlOOM

;

let R11uHe flet

•

'

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
. 4:30 P.M. DA\' BEFORE
PVBLICATION
·

LAURIE'S
CUSTOM CAKES

'I

M.D~.
•

992·6194

•'

Decorated cakes lor •II
occiStons d@slaned
especially {or youl
Need 1 large cake for your
Christmas party7 Afull
sheet cake will s11rve 50 lot
only $25.00. ·.

•

...'

~.

!.

. ,,

,, .
.•,
..·

"

'

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', {

,

I.UI . .M
I Op•u
...."16111

o.,...,

1-------'!'"~~~~~=-=-==:'"'1

..

.

lOOM

I

·Tanya Will and

•••

t

FOR SALE IN RACINE

Vfll l Nta i.AROI' IILIM!' ON ~'I'Ri l! J• ,
A L'R t~ q Uft J bulh•.? ~"l~C,:. ll•nle&lt;l.l

~H
I"'!' J,kfi f) "U 11 l~~rnl hl, l ~ .uul 11 1(~'''• 1
ll~tllfl ~ tr·,rl h.lll '·ll •t ,i ! $8!J.fl0l'

IJR .II)Ou lmt• nl PtOPI'IIy rnr lurtr.•, pt.ollll
{:~.11 1.j&gt;~ qq ) Jlf)t) l l)!

AU. MAKES

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPliANCE ·
SERVICE
992 -5335 or 985-H61
· Ac:ro'SI from P;,t Offite

'217 L Set., Pomeroy
POMEIIOY, OHIO .
·

316/'90/ Hn

GUN SHOOT

70%
VIOLF.NT C!liMES ARE
IN AREAS WHERE VICTIMS ARE liKELY TO
HAVE KEY CHAINS IN HANO
·

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

DON'T BE NEXT!
Protect yourself with the
STUN-UM key chain sprayer
STUN -UM is the most advanced chemical

Bashan Building

EVERY

self defense .weapon available - your edge
against personal crime .
To Ordtr Send Che&lt;k or Money Order

SAt. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
f&lt;Kiory (hol&lt;t

For $ 19.9S To:

12 Gougt Sltotgvn1 Only

SEO SECURITY PR.C)bUIClS

Strictly lnfontd

P. 0 . Box 190, Pomeroy,

9-25.'99 ·Hn

lfta.rlllilll' H fiiiiWII

;1:r::!::~1::::

White &amp; Scotch Pine
BOB SNOWDEN
MAIN STREIT
RUTLAND, OHIO
742-3051 .

.......

CAIN',.,.
S

...IOLIT8Y
"'"' Tufllnl

·irrl-D·
........ w.Do.
lti ...... IIURd

We Di Mit WI IIV
.
thtMI.II.

CAI'INYU SIIVICI

= lleertt Ailllillt111
= luftll Werlt
= llltlrilll • llll'll~u•llltllllilllltl

............
u...u.

- GIAINtiW81k

llntlrtt
= lltlfti • htlltillr ..
il'tiltlilll

HOUflll: Mondly
thru laturdty

.....,,.

!PIIIIllfiMATIII

v. c. ,.....

10 Mttolpm
WtAr'4 0...

PIRIIfly, 1~...,

Chi!l!klnl !Jtitletl
•
lt,ll,f&lt;J 1111

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COIPUTI

Alto till IOiiowlnt Nil"'

tlllllillletei illllleiftTM~~o

tht,, MtJ1ta OowfttiJ, llllt of

T-•·

n.
Atfttt11,011io
~1¥'1 ......., . ,..

MIL'S DEll
CUTTING

hi • fttllowr,

lltillllilll II I tlnlll ltJ ~~­

HIIcl.. wlllih II wtll I 7
lhlltll 111• 17 lifllot tnd
nollll 10 all tlfllllli llllnllt
from 1110 I . I . Jill~ OIJJIId
..Von: Thtnct loulh •
ohlllno oncl 11 liMo; tiiOnct
lOuth 81 dt!JIOI .... B
ollolno ond 10 llnkl to •

CUTTING,
SKINNING;

WRAPPING
IASMEN 0.,

11an1:

tht no• nor1h 01
dttlj)UNI w ut 1 dr ,.ln !'t and 89
link • h' th.- pilton ot lMtgin ·

RACINE

;$6 tc r•'"·

949 -2206

'
' I'

'!

't

•

'

.

hilt• COI'It, W1 DIIIICW lloll IIIII rW

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

ltSSI&amp;L&amp;IIIU

llltrlllllltw~olh•

(011SmtC1101

•llw lunu

:co:=:~

PAT' MIU Pial
812-2111

Middleport, Ohio

.

.

~··•"Inti
Stop
&amp; C•par•

''" .....,t.. .
915-4473
667·6179

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUllT

t .' !ll!....
'' "
.... -.~ ···- ·~- ._ ,..... ~-l..._

....

H"PI.f&lt;,

•

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.

1· 1:1-llc

'

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.

.

IUC'IIJCAL SIIYICI ··

......t,..

COI'I

Ohi!J llllnl In IHIIOn Nu,

h

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YOUI01

141·1411

'

•••

•••• ".......
mwAIM

IVI&amp;IItr'•

Fire department·
party Deco 16. '

•

•WiniOwt

GUAfiiANTIIDI
IIRIIIITIM!Tl!.,

_., .....

'

,·

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

NIVII CUAN YM
OUTYIIS AGAIN

tjiMlflt, I I MIIM!Ifttll M,.l 1

I

IIMODILifiO ·

. Cltftmtroltl •
fllelidtntiel
•fiiOtfint
•lllling

~Hm111d

II 1 ..,,., Wfll 1• tadund
10 -~~~· Ill 1111 pildl ., ...

i1t' •I

BUILDING &amp;

~Cultor

"""'
I? ...~.
"'""'1L
Will 1011111
.. "A,....
• • llftti
II Hilla! .. I , W. llllffltiBI
uld l~~ttlotti ti!Mot IIOtth

111c· ' 'l

HO lUNDAY

••

llllli trill I, W, Mllllr1 "'""'

1

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949· 2860

Conat,.ctlon

..
,.,. .te lint 1111 •nn A 1.

#\Inn- c r•n t J•tr••'1(1

New Homts l~ilt
"Free E$timates"

Dee. 4 tfn

:r.rr,~ 'r:~::"J

t

. BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Fresh Cwt Daily

or11111 tllln• ""'" ••

.!

•AL UMINUM SIDI.NG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

s n .- 12 n.

Oltlltt
Lei, Hill
tl•
'"•
"' Mllh
liil ''"'"
.. Otlllt

Ill IIIII

•VINYL SIDING

Bank•

'Joey 'BiiiTeit: ·,:.

•

•

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

286·2689

',1"1 VII I"

.

(4141. 441&gt;-,411&gt; .;, 1-800.812 -5941

r r. t ~ lr.

.:•

Aritilida

10·01 ·' 90· 1 mo

Lump or Stoker

,, .

•

located on Safford School Rd . oft Rt. 141

tun&amp;IIO, OHIO

10·24 l mo. pd.

'""'.,

BQLLETit4 BOARD.

36496 SMITII 111.11 ID.

SSO.OO par ton

'

•

BENNEfl'S MOBILE H
HEATING &amp; COOLING

742-2421

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

;

•

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
•
ALL FURNACE PARTS

SlO &amp; UP

.

POMEROY - The Wcmcri's
PAGEyn.LE - 1'hC 'SciP,io
AIIXiliary of Vererin's· Memorial To\wshm 'Ii'ustees will meet WedHospital will be :having its nCscday 81 6 p.m. at lhe hall . in
Clufslmas party on Tuesday 11 6 Pageville.
p.M. in die hospiral cafereria. Meal
and polaiOeS will be fumisbed.
RACINE - The Southern Local
.Members bring a covered dish, . ChapiCI' of . lhe National Honor
· vegerablt, salad or . ·c~essen. . AU Sociel)' will sponsor a toy drive
IIICIIIbers and hononuy members Wednesday lhrough Dec. 14. New ·
invited.
'
or good used toys may be conMIDDLEPORT - Middlepon aibured. Toys may be taken to
Lodge 363, F&amp;:AM, will ll)CCl Southern .High School during lhe
Tueada,Y at 7:30 at lhe Mid~ hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. AU toys
Masoruc Ten)ple. OOicers will" be · will 'be pve11 to lhe Meigs Counly
insralled and refreshlnentsJ,~ ~ bank. Filr more informatiOn call
· Bruce Teaford, wanhipful. 111111er Kim Phillips, 949-26tl .
IIIIIJ()UIICed.
THURSDAY
RACINE - The Racine American
•
. MCARTHUR • The AGHJMV Legion Post 602 will· meet
Solid W8Sle Disaict Polky · Cotri- Th~ 81 7:30p.m. Plans wiD be
miiiCC will mee1 Tue,tday 81 7 p.m. final'
for giving l'n!it to health
at d)e McArthur Community Build· 'care cenrers. Refreshments will foliJII. Details of the solid w~ plan low tile meeting.
·
• will be discussed.
.
VIN'ION • The Pine Grove
CHESTER • The Cllesler Holiness Chapel, Roure 235, ViiiCouncil No. 323 Daughrers of · lOll, five miles from Route 124
AroerU will meCt Tueaday at 7:~ Rowlesville Road, will have revival
p.m. Nominations of officers WID Th~y !JuouBh Dec. 16 at 7 :~
be held and quarterly bin)ldlys CJ!I- p.m. nightlY. Rev. and Mrs. David
IICMd. Poduct refrelhmcnts WID Light, evangelists. Public invired:
be l!li'Ved.
"
' WEDNESDAY
POMEROY ! • The . SalisbJicy
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse As· Township Trustees will · meet
bury United Med'Odill Chun:h wiD Thlnday at 7 p.m. at lhc horne of
. have 1 Cbristmas bazaar on Wed· lhe clerk, Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run
neldly from 9 a.m. to S p.m. Road, Pomeroy.
Homelllllde P.ies, cakes, rookies
and breads WID be available as weD
MIDDLEPORT - The Evan• Cllftl, Jilta llld comfcJrter.
~ Chapter, No. 172, ~­
dlcpart; OES, WiU mee1 Thqlay.
REEDSVILLE - The' Coolville :I'hele will be a SS gift ~change.
Colllmuni1y Choir will pcd'onn ~ Offlcen wear street dl'cslos.
Chdllmas CIDIIIa, "A 'lbuch of
Chdllmas." al lhe .Reedlville
LOTllUDGE - The lolaidae
Ullitecl Mallodil! Cludl 01 Wod- Community CeNer will ha~ a pol:
n 1 - II 7 p.m. Refrallnnll will luc:k dinner Thunday • 6 p.m. ,folfollow.
lOwed by a meetina 81 7 p.m.
001cen Will be elected. The public
itEEDSVILLE
The Olive is invited.

Set ut For Your
Sporting Needt
Buy, Sell or Trade
Guns
OPEN MON .-SAT. 10·5

UNLIMITED

,,

:
,,
·

446 6000

Mow In
Stock!!

614-985-41 8 0

22 - Monw to loan
2::1- Prot e:s soon a I Serw tc es

J&amp;mlll Folmer!
Hill, Heidi
Janey, Adam
LeF,Erita
MeiCI', . Shilo.
Piau; : ShCri
Sheets, Brian
iason Taylor,'
Allen W&amp;!tl.

16/41

COAL

Transportalion

21 - Bus•neu Opponun1t v

Couna,

~

1 a - Wante d To D o

liUfl!Hijfll

lDoclsollt· Ben •1

SI'/IING I'ALLEY PIIOFEWONIIL BUILDING
106 JACKSON PIKE · SUITt' .lOJ
GAIUPOLIS. OHIO 4J&gt;JI

CHRISTMAS
TREES

6 1 - Ftrm EqUJ!'I mem '

62 - Wilnted to Bur.
6 3 ---l wt:5to o!.
64 ~ Hav &amp; G n 1n

' ON 511 [: I t.STOM rR /1 11\IN(,

it for you.
Very Reasonable
hove References
10-10.'90·1 mo.

1 1 - Help Wa11ted
1 2 - S•tua t•On Wanted

13 - lnsuran·ce
14 - BuilnUU Tram1ng

Bill _SlACK
992 2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do

55 - Bu•l d•ng Suppl•m
56- PillS lor Sal '!

Pleasant R e9r1Jte• and t/le G11llo

r~ac tlmg OYer 18 , 000

CO PY D EADLINE -

2 00 p m

5 Ft. and Up
Well Sheared. Grown
on the Weber Farm In

RATES
Davs
1
3
6

• ::&gt;A 1.1:~

SUPPLIES

Classifie
Rate

' CUSTOM PR{&gt;(oi\ AMMtN(,

GUNS &amp;

.'

Word s

' ON -~IT c ~ t RVItl IH· P~l\(

STEWART'S

1

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

:~~

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
L
•REM OVA
•LIGHT HAULING
•fl REWOOI)
·
.

-IONS lNC
O.CL. COMPU1'E.R SOWJ _ __:__ _-~

e-12-90 '"'

or

'''Box
261~
'
. Syr8cuse,:oruo'45779. .. :

-·

•

Tuesday. December 4. 1990

•

come.
~
·
· -~
- Donald Todd Snudl, somof Mr.
aod Mrs. Robert Smitll, Pomeroy,
received his El&amp;le Scout awud in a
recen1 c:cranony at die Sacred
Helin CalhoiK: Cllllldt. .
.
Msp. Donald Holalt ..~ die ioVOCIIIOIL The Elgie Scout .can. didue was csconed 10 die front o!
lhe churdl by Eas~. Scouls; .S~ac;ey
Shant, Dan Tbomu llld Danny
Will, Foiiowins lhe · chlrge, lhe
SCOUIOIIb was pven by ·'l)oop 249
wilh visiting Eagle Scouts pat·
licipaling.
'
' . ·•
· The ceremony mcludcd lhe
pRSCnWion of lhe Eagle Scout pin, .
cenificate aod 8 miniature El&amp;le
pin to Mrs. Smith. Malting up lhe
cemnonial coun were Pal Wood, .
liOop committee chainnan; Bob ·
Arms, scoutJnasltZ, 'DQop 249;
Damy Will, assisrant scouiD18Sler;
Paul Reed, troop commiltee member and Monre Hunrer, senior patrol
· leader, Msgr. Donald Hor8k and
Rev, Waller Heing.
.
Reficslunents were served fol· in July, 1985. In Sepu:mber 1987,
he received his ·Star award and in
lowin' lhe c:cremony.
.
August,
1988, his Life award. He
· Sm1lh joined lhc local scouung
. program in· 1983, became a boy was vmed into lhe Order..of the ArseOUl in . 1983, a renderfOOl in row in 1986 and joined lhe dance
January, 1984, a second class scout team in 1988. ·
He held many offices during his
in June, 1984, and a firsl class scout

.,

TUIIdey, December•4; 1990

·Smitli ta:Ies
scout oath ..
EqJC

.•

llllldelllil! llld
Cammltalal

IIWIIIIII ANI
1'MIUILI SIIOOnNO
1

.............
IANICS

.

C.ifW lutrlll••

CONSTRUe nON
112·10C)t

··~

.

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Page-s-The Daily 'sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

42 Mobile Hom..
lor Rent

LAFF·A·DAY

Announcements

3 Announctlments

uoturn ..

2 BR.

,.415·U502 Of

Moblt. Hom. Ptfk.
Rovt• 33 , N:ortf\ of PomtrO)'.

--

--~

ooeurily d•f&gt;'l"•, 51
614-446--6189, 114-445-11865.

$2$01,... plvt

·3()4..

1175-2931
~'"h_o_mo·_p_u_
l»___
,..
-rt"""
aol
~et rlever ,

2br, III'QI ltVII lot elou to
h~plt•l. Central air, wat•r paid,
$240/mo. ph• tft~h . 614 .. 46-

fl. wks &amp;14-4ot6o

1012

&amp;
aernn1, can Rotr~n Nortl'lup,
1057 Setohd Avonwe, 814-«02$43.

r

•I

lo8t • bltek c(lw If" Vifllott '""'
PIHM Cltl 814/3!Uh8592..

7

"Kitty is a little nearsighted."

Yard Sale

Mobllt homt tor

rw~t ,

b aby b•d• S110 Mattrtuu or
boll tprlngs tvH or twin S18, nan
$88, artd $98. O~an uta $275 &amp;

.-11
Help Wanted

Ga ll ipolis
&amp; VIcinity

td11l;on

Scenic Hills NurtJng Cen!e r
pro.-ldu" •1e.::•Jhmt benallts &amp;
g rowltt
oppot1un1tias TH REE 14x-70 mobll1 hornt, axe eOrld
ott Plym al Ao11d, Ga lllpolli ·
RAISES FIRST YEAR
Tuition reimbun~ment. C'ftc:JH S:erry, sitting o n nie-• h.llt a~r •
Unlcn Servli:ua, caring &amp; eon. ._
,.,_,3_1~~~-!99~~~~~­
eornod eo-workort &amp; •Upar· ,g7o Set1ult 12x65, 2 b•drooms ,
II'I,OI'l . You e•n- mJke 1 dlrf•rall e)Gchic: , bl;ocks and un&lt;t tt•
l!'lc' ·tn lh• il'itS &lt;1f our pinning, J6,ooo. C.JI 304-675rosldon1 s . Ap ply m per:~tltl or S-133 • .,.ni,g,.
oall 6~4·445 ·7"150. 311 Buck
Ridge Rd. E.O.E.
1916 Windsor, 14r7.0, C A, undarplnnlng , butn In dlsh washtr,
REPOSSESSED HOM ES
microwav e, • l.ctrtc lfOVt, bu ilt
3br, 1 bath, h•ll aero MIL on ln s1a reo, small fron! pore t1 , All
Sla(:k hawk Road. $~00 d04&amp;n., e t•cnle, $1,0 00 614...U 6--4~08.

------

~

~- "" S~n u,da-y.

Poml!roy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlly

a...ment Sal e Nov, 29. 30
1·3,

9:00

• 5 :0Q,

$500 Dcwn On S.leet UHd
Mobile 1-! orrt n , fJ:laymen_ts A•
Low As t l 25/mo . Financing
av • liable. 1·000.5lt9·57'11.

TA ~TS

2:00 p.m.
Frld..a_y. Mo nday f'd ition • 2JXl-

d~ratlone ,

1

Oero:.

Chr lslmu

old d lanes whll

nOta, drop lllf table, old wood
coal . CQOk stove, ~ill( ~•n
Al'-on tun tamp, eopym.ate

..

10 ptre tnl /APR wl lh approved
c~ll

erodll

COpltr, mlac., 327'1.5 Hiland Ad.
PotMr O)',
·

1PBC P.arhitw tra lhJf, 11X65 on
1 1/4 acr11 land. 2 bed rooms,

1·800448-6910 John

_
Ba_II•_Y_·-----~--~-­

neW e•rp•l, wind br.ak buill On.
AN's &amp; L~N 's with hosplh 1l •• · EJ:ctltent c:ondlli9f'l. Gaa. T• x••
Pub lic S ale
8
p•rionc:• need ed tor 11.1dltlng &amp; Road . 61 4 /;aS~!-75 .
r•vlew
In Pomeroy, Loga n 1r11.
&amp; Auctio n
No wukends or Hol[daya. Stnd • 1981 Libtrty Mobil• Home Of1 2
Rick Pa·• rson Auction C o mptn~ rea~o~m t J. Btlltmy, 428 Chll· a&lt;:fH li nd. 30'·i'lt3-6323.
803,
now booltlng •uct lonl. IX• lt c:olhe Stre•t. Suitt
19:87 14x70 CII ~On , 2 Md , 2
ptrfeni.: t malr11 th• dltferenca, PonS mo-uth, OH 45662.
bat h, loa dttd, c1n be l•ft an lot.
Lleansed Ohio , Ke ntucky, Wes1 Truck drlvt rs, np.,lent4td onl y, $04-67.5-2425.
Virginia , 1 04·773·5785.
loeal driving. a pply 510 Fou rth
Ave, Ktnau gt , Ohio. N~ phon• , 987 Fairmont 14K70, 2•2
$9,995;
19112
Ouplar
9 Wanled lo Buy
clt u .
Apartm1nt1, 14 x68, elec: trlc1
2 or 3 Aegul1r G••••· Pt",o n• HOME TYPISTS, PC UUfl $9,995; 1Q88 Chevy C u~onduo
nted•d.
$35,000 ' pottntlll. Van, $9 ,995. 614..446-9662:.
30H75-2658.
Otl•fls . Cl ) 80.5..667-6000 Ext BSPECIAL. F1elory to rou1991, 2
30 to 50 1ern In Galli• County. 4562.
or 3 ~room14a 70 modele It
Mutt bt woodltd vr lltt nC'I o il or
911 Willi. Mln• ral rlgl'l!s lo go Wuutd: P811·tlmt bartender for th•
u n ~ llitv abl t
ptle• of
wilt! properl y, plu s gaurtntud lac a\ private c:tub. ·Eic. wor ldng $12,900 deli ve red 1nd ·• •• up.
UU•. Buyer will pa~ ca&amp;h . cond iti ons. w.. kend n ig hts Call 1·800-729·404.5 tor dalalls.
Phon•; 614·446---J4&gt;19 1r no only., $4.00 an l'!our plu!ll flps .
enswlf faaVe mesaagt and I'!! Send resume to bo1 Cia 052 clo Mobile Holtlt for Sal• or Renl: 2
Ntum c all,
G1ll~olla Dally TribUne, 825 miles cut of VInton, 6t4-368·
8306.
Thlr Avl., Oa lhpoltt, OH 4.5631.
~1mch BoxH
,960'e-197'S'a matal clom• 1op11 14
33 Farms for Sale
Business
or •9 uartbach . Alao vinyls, No
~980 t or plulfc. Bottles not
Training
12 112 1 erts, 2 11rge b1ms,
n•cnstry. C• lf M•rc 614/9!12·
tobicco bast, tra il•r hook·up,
!65~
Ret i'al n
Nowl !!Soulh•ast •m Rt. 7, $37,000. ~1&lt;·"'3-6196.
Buslnu11 CoUe gt , Spring Valley
Want'td to buy: Standing Tlm - PIIU. Cal l Today, 614·446...,3 61 [1 8 tern wll h boarding ltablt,
btr, Small or lirg• aereage , 614· Reglsteratlon 190-0S..l2748.
loafl n!l shtd1 n•w ru11lc home,
3&amp;7-1519, ahtr 1 J).ni.
will s ell 11na contrtct, 304-6756799.
Want ed to Do
Want To Buy or Ren.t : Tra iler 18
WJ)ICI to 1eeomodal•, 14x'i'4 or ::-=-:-=:-:-'":"':':-::':"'::'::::':~. B~ 4br D•kot• Farm Home,
.24Jt48, 614·245..5964. ---=--c:Cer11flod child cart In my hom•.
Pr ...sehool aetlvillas, l jb r~ry bu tl l for yau, $25,995 a nd up.
Wa rned by C1:1Hector: , Barb-It trir,s . · !!tiC. £xp1rlencad a nd 614-88&amp;.7311.
dolls • nd Gl Joe dolls-, 1960,. re •r•ncu~.&gt;; 6'14 1~2 ·7532.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1970'1, e!otl\as. and aeea.ssortes.
Top Jirlc•s p•ld!! .304·273-5240.
HOUOAV SPECI ALS · Interi or
_,_________ und EJ:IUrlOr Painllng, 10 y• q;rs LOTS FOR SALE In Gl111poll~
Wa nt ed To Buy; Junk . Au1os exp•rllijlt('!d, Mav• rtt•,.ne... for"1. Will acc•pt 1r1l11rw, city
with or whl'l out motors. Cftt V•ry Chnp' Odd Job s . 304·675· wa1 ar a Ytllabla. Phone 304~752722.
Llrry Llv•ly. 614-38tf.9303
2108 Of' 675·6926.
W1ntltd: Small Rototillor. 614· lnl1m Cars. my home, 11 y e~ r Ro ute :z Aahl on, 1 ac,. k&gt;ts 3
mllea s outh Galllpoilt Locka,
441-neo.
• xporlc.nce,
daycar..
Have P'*ic wlter, no Nllrlctlons,
oauaatlon on chiiGcoro. WarUd

Employment Serv1ces

----··-r
- ..--...-

wtth lnlanto. W s.r- 111011
Ex1. D&lt;Mmown OOlilpollo - ·
1-1-11104.
lloglo , . , . . Ooy
r

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Sl l ll'iTr~de

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1111.1717. •

hHSII,

___

!)iek up truCk "f ~ame ~Ai,J't'

·

r~u,:&gt;

21

B~alneu

~

&lt;

-

$4,!195. lD47H930
1888 Ford~anga7il.r A:·G~V-6
•nglnt, $6 300. 6141 99 2-f-144

qulred. Call Lalayene M1ll 614~

44&amp;-m 3 "' 446-4222.

sto ve &amp; r.lrig•r•tor tw rnl&amp;h•d ,
Wl ltr I IriSh tu rnl•hfd. 614t1&lt;li 6.!J840.

Ba1ulfful dining rQOm sutt• 1
pecan ; triple d r•s,.r, eh•st or

2bt, f\lrnlt hu d Apl , all 1.1lllit\u
p1 ld, downslllrt, S285Jmo. 9llil
Se~:ond

446·3945

2br, unfuml l f,td .apt., 1.5 Vine
St r1et ,
n11 r . rtv1r,
.tove
re rrlgtntlor, good nrtighbot•
h ood, dtposft , ret•rene•. w atlr
pakf. CIII _ B~2 , 6-10. 814 ~t146--241 t.

3 b4Kfroom 1pt. for r•nt In

dlopon. 114·992-2554.

M id~

3 rumlshtd room• A balh,
C:.. ln, no , pels. R•ferw ne• &amp;
dtposit r~ulred . 814 •.U8·151 9,
Ap•rtme "ta, 2 IMMfrooms, nlt t,

:104-1175-5104.

comple~• ·

dra wert. Bt d

Aven u•, Gallipol is . 614·

J&amp;Hfl~on

2312

Avenue.

-:-:-:---=c7::::Ciothu dry•'• $60.00. 304-675-

Fumlttled

Efficiency,

UIIIHin Pold, SNrw

$150

both, 607
Second Awl, &amp;14-446--4416 1tt.r
7p-.m.

Orop-l•tt table, 2 cha.J,., tMnch.

1!171 Fotd Ecq nollna Vaft, 1514·

R•el

good

condition.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Phone

304-675 -5192 a fi.r 6 p.m.

388·9601. '

Fl-

F0&lt;

Fl,...ood.

100% ltl..twood.
.doiiYtred Ond

Sale:

All

horvwood, rr.o delivery, f143N-2871, anytime.
LII',IO

load,

atackod .$46. Call 5Wl1124m.

tl'*• and
velvet wtth crlnollne and metcho-

Form11 : Burgundy

lng thai. All a4ll I . Wom
once. Pakl $2.50, wiH Mfl tor

t120. &amp;,._._283.

Sofa bed ex c. cond; Ukt new,

614-446-4752.
SWAIN

PURNITUIII. Ill

Olin II., Qol11polle. • -lumK..... hullll, - - I
. . . boot&amp; 114 ... , . .

61 Farm Equipment
5000 ford diHtl tr•ctor wit t'l
ltuah hog , mewing . m~~ctl lne ,
ntke, IMI•r, post hoi• digger,

. . .522.
lntemall~l

o-.el:

$.3,150; 1200 Davld lrDWn with
241 lnternallon11 round baa.r.
Q,I!SO; OWner wlllfjnAnce.. 814·
~.

J im'• Farm Equipment , SA. :S5,

WIOI Oolllpollo, 8144411-1777;
Wide ..._.ton MW I uNCI farm

Jackaoi1A... ~4.
tractona 6 lmpltm•ntl. Buy,
RobbM 1ur laoH1 tor oale, 11111 toll, trodo, a,oo-a,oo waokdayo,
MW . $1!, Calf

a,oop.m.

114/11.'1-1134 Obr

Sot. 1111-.

s.iw chelnt

buy

2· get 1

frM.

441,4•.

........

ar, ..... on

~~.

-

Rt. 7,

$211 rMI,

dlpoelt. 11+211 1111

Poln1
,_.,room,
..,...,llo.I04-UI-1t17•:
S

b 1-

-

- . . , 2 llolho,

-ng Route, Locol lot ale
CHEAP: Muot Hll quloldy 1 - ,
291M100.
'

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II-~_,!,-­

1972 17 fl. Starc raft Tri-Hull
801t. 125 HP, Evinrude Engine,
OO"l"Pittt top, new upholstary.
Call ~n4-286·1 3f6 aher '7':00 p.m.

•

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as -

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Slerao._Q
aOnl18ge
.·
t:oo !lle o In 1111 Heal of 1111
Nl(lht VlrgH'a anampt&amp; to
reconcile a family feud ere
hinde~Stereo. Q
Cll (I) • Ro-nne Becky
and Darlene are grounded
lor brt,king curlew. Stereo.

- .............
1

.................. Ciil

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

m•

-·-

ludall

Tr~~ntmlatlohl~

Ultd •

·•

Nbuln, lltrtlna at $98; 6,4o-245-

1177.·1""37t-2263.
.
truck topJ* muturtt
f1DO. Four P205-75R-15

Antlqu..

53

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....
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lumlalwd

CAlli

Anlr.-,

luy or oal. -

1114 I. Mlln .,..., Pa•e..,.

Hotlll: M.T.W. 10:00 0.111. tof:IO
C:ia~ 1:00 to 1:00 p.111.

125.

liJKingTheColeUnlorgeltlblo
Nat
This special

304..71-

'

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fwd I J

MY MOM e.A.'IS '0-\AT
INS"T&amp;'DOF'Ot-JL.Y H.AVII-IG"

l"alt._tc,,

.c

Improvements

I

F- ooti-M. Call

Building
Suppllll

-ollooboL~

Outllo

coi11C1

1·

a

-loot, ..,..lng, I'OJMdollng,

a Nulnrlllo llow
a c.._ Baoltl1ball
121 Lorry l&lt;lng Llvol

9:30Cil Clle c-Arter
Hayden's behavior becomes
testy, he aHands a self-help
gnoup. Stereo. Q
10:00 !lle IIJI Law • Order
GrHvey and Logan
investigate the murder of a
controversial artist Stereo.
Cll

llllrty1011101hlng
Feeling lonely, Gary and
Ellyn form an unllkalf
friendship. Stereo. Q
(I)IIradallnon

AN' DON'T
SWEEP IT OUT

TH' FRO'NT
DtHJillt

114--1111.

45

1325 mcntt",ly plus deposit. 1149~~·n9t aHe• 7':30 pm.

IOUA
R - tor,.,.. • WHil or mont..
lltr1111llll tiA11t0. Goi!ll-.

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Sl7e•,11!l :n•l tl,":ltf 11 w~~,·~ ·

, ~ '" n (l fll'! ,. lo o'l

f

11111- LTD, run• good, good

cond. •orne ,uwt,good work car,
$315. OBO. l0ot-815-46fi3

' ,.. .

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. . ,.,.

il)l. SagiHarlus; treat yourself to a birth· strategies 1n your own anaus.

ASTRO-ORAPH
.·...

day gift ·Send lor your Aslro·Graph GEMINI (llaJ 21.J- 201 'rhe 1ype of
predictions for 1he year ahead by mall· reward YO\I're likely lo garner today
ing $1.25 to Aalro-Graph, c/o 1his can't be measured materially. Instead 11
newspaper, P.Q. Box 9'1428, Cleveland, will be the good will and golden
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to stale your thoughts ol a lrlend you'll help.
zodiaC Sign. ·
..
CANCEII (.NM 21.July 221 You could
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 1tl Lady be rather lucky today In
In·
Luck lends to favor you today, but she's · stances. The mostlmpreulve st1uatlon,
not apt to do so In an obvious lashlon. however, might be ol a flnanclel nature.
Shewlll,hOWO'Ief,tryioseelhatyouare Be alert for ways to add to your
involved with the rlgh1 people at the rOIOUrces • .
righ1 lime.
LEO (.luiJ :a-Aut. 221 You are likely 10
AQUAIIIIil (....,, »FH. 111 Mixing , be more lor1unate today In dealing dl·
business and pleasure 1odey could turn · reclly with the person W!KI can glvol"'"
out to be a homogeneous blend. Dis- a definite yea or no than going 1hrough
cusslon1 ~ lunch or dinner wHh lm· lnterrnedlarlea. Make your pi1ch lo 'the
portanl clients or frl,.,da Should turn head honcllo.
,
'
out succesolully.'
VIIIGO (A1111· 23-lepl. 221 An arr~~nge­
f!ICII (Fob. 20 Morell 2111 A factor ment wtth which you've·.,_, rather un·
thai could ldd broader dlmtnlfono to comlor11bte mlgllt undergo some ciaoyour elfecll-- today wiN be In In- lie lmpr~ttloday. Think poelllve,
volvemenlllhl1 challenge your cr•tlv· · becauM condition• may end ·UP bet1er
lty. Your lm11glnetlon Ia your greatest than you clar..s hope.
-·
L.IIRA (..,._ a-oot..al You've lull
AIIIU (llleroll 21·Aprll111 Be all ayes on1- a ralher hopolul cycle _ ,
and earoiOdll)l, becauM you might 81· your expectallona nave good c h ther -or about an opportunity of of .being lulllled. You'll still have to do
oubotantlll m11gnHude. One with whom yOU&lt; part. ol courae.
you'r11 chummy l«ielly could be lhe' ICOIIPIO (Oat. M NOtr. 221 A poelllve
lipllW.
IIIHude II a mind oet lor which we
TAUIIUIIApriiiO May 201 Somellllng·, . llhould -ys atrlve. Today. hOWl*·
of value can bo.plnectlodiY by ctoeaty 11'1 doubly olgnlflelnlln your caee, boo
watching how one you ICimtre operl1es. ctuM n cOuld have a biG lnllutnclDeveiopmenll mlgh1111er ariM thai will ljnanl:lal .....Ua.
'•
give you a cltanct 10 !~11• hltith•

-•1

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Carter'a Plum b!n" ·
1 r1 d t-l !,'&gt;lt i~l~
.
~ ..... 17' ,\ ,. p, '1 1.

l

Dec. I, 1110
In lhe year a11eac1 you may make lome
.. lnter..Ung changea 111a1 will produce
lor1unala c:ircumllances. AHhough they
might not _ , 11111jor a11he lime, their
peripheral tlfeGtO will be QUHe
~

IAQITTAIIIUI (Hotl. 21 Dec 111 You

eiiOtlld do well today In . . , . _ .

..._. the ftnll dleltlona 10 have
your otiiYIP olapprovol. Don't l e t - .
one ~tao competent uaurp your aulhor·
I

t

10:20 I]) MOVIE: M..- lly
Narurat ea.... (2:00)
10:30 (I) Winlet'o Eve ,
IIICraokandChaH
11:00 ()) e Cll Cll 8 Ill ID 8

'

"

iiJ) Howl

'

Cll Night Court E;l
till• Areanlo Hitll Q
0 Mleml VIce
. •
a ChUICh s""' 11111on
8Monortlne
0 Scareerow and Mnt. ICing
Q
t1:30!ll8 0 Tonight Show
Stereo:
(I) lUker

~-..~~9

.

11218 Alnertca l"onlghl
IIIOnStaoe
. =~
f 8 lpor1l Tonight
11:35 (i) Cl'!~l Q
12:00 (I) 8 Into tl1l Nlghl Stereo.

ie'·'· '
CIILole=NIIW
•"••II•
=
.............
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Ill! 8

De •

Tallt Show

OTME

CROSSWORD .
ACROSS

thick of
2 Painler

1 Hyrrin
finishes
Set a
maximum
11 Confused
state
12 Get the
lead 'o ut
13 Noted
dancer
15 Dopey's
pal
16 Topper
17 Farm
bird
18 Tartan
pattern
20 Merchan·
dise
23 Po!ile
. relusal
27 Way out
28 Costa29 Started in
31 Female

Joan

e

:1 Business
bigwig
4 Sister. of

a sort
5 Trances

,.., .

6 lntto

7 Tax

Yesterday's Answer
21 Woods·
33 Balloon
man·s loaf
conlenls
22 Big lruck 34 Distantly
24 Deep 35 "~ La
Uettison)
Douce"
25 Rink ·
36 Ames o'1
surface
Spinks
26 Cam38 Flank
. paigned
39 Ange1ed
30 Profes·
40 Reiuse
sional
42 Exca ·
witness
vated
31 Singer
43 honor
Bobby
Bmnze

agency
8 School
subject
II Man. lor
one
10 Adoles ·
cenl

14 KGB's
counler ·
pa1t
18 Rose
piece
19 Column
style
20 Nelwork

reasoning
·
queasy
37 Earthy ·
color
38 Comic
Caesar
41 Noted ·
dancer
44 Love
aHair
45 Poet
Nash
46 Long·

34 Feel

Robo-

Fumllhld
Rooml

:loot ........

'

(I) •

Tho Nol1
. O.neriiUOn
18 CNN E-lng Nowl
18 700 Club With Pat

MIIChlndl..

.,0

It's remarkable bow !he mind can
malfunction at the bridge table. A detJUS
fender caa get caught up in a fizatioo. :
+AB S3
to tbe point that he will not allow logic ·.
to rule bis tactics. Place yourself in ' WESl'
EAST
tbe East position. After a weak two- · • 8 7 2
• 10 t 3
bid by East and a pre-emptive raise : ~ s 4
• A KJ t I S
lroin West, North doubled lor takeout. +K Q J 7 6 4
: ~ 10 1
South had no way of telling that _his
most profitable action would be to
SOUTH
pass, so he tried four diamonds.
• QJ s
West led the king of clubs, taken by
9 Q6 2
dummy's ace. East immediately be• A74s z
gan thlnlting bow clever it would be,
+I 2
when be got on lead with a diamond
Vulnerable: Both
trick, to underlead his A·K of hearts to
Dealer: East
bis parlner's presumed queen, so thai
Well
N•tlt l!ut
West coold then cash out whatever s....
29
.club tricks tbe defenders had. coming
39
Dbl.
Pus
to them. Declarer played to his ace of Pass
All
pass
diamonds, dropping West's kiDg, and 4 •
led aiiOtber diamond. East took his
Opening lead: + K
two diamond tricks, as West discarded
lint the four of hearls and then a club,
Still mesmerized by his .opginal plan, ..lo-g-ic.-.s_bo_u_ld_dl_cta_te_to_E:-a-,-1tha_t_be_ca~n
East.played a low heart. Soutb ·put up set lour diamotlds with nonnal dethe queen, bopinc for a miracle. And fense regardless ol declarer's band.
the miracle allowed him to make the Let blm cub the kinl of bearll and
contract
Forget that West's discard of the exit witb tbe 10 of spades. Declarer
four .Of bearts was meant to warn East will run tbe spades and ruff oae bearl
against a foolisb underlead. Simple loser, but be will still come up sbortin
bis quest for 10 !.ricks.

fo~

=i~~..il

•.

NORTH

.AK64

32 Correct

~Now•

••
•

Nlloo I dockl Ole. REMODEl·
!HOI Aet..Mcll E1tlmat11.

54 MlscellaiiiOua

~--41112
~ 2br,llll-. both,

Slleel (2:00) C

5 •

-·...

Complolo Mol&gt;llo Homo Ht upoo'
._lro, Oloo plumbing

a

.s·:.~:£1on.

CHAI-J~'F:I

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•
ioftle
1
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.......
Ohio
•
Clll .....,..., Of' IMJIII.

ON 63

'

day or night
A.,.. Batomam Wotorpr-

114-:m.04&amp;1,

NOW we CAN'T F'INO
ANYTHit-1!5i- TO WATCH •

'

UnDDndlttonel't llfetl,.. guaran·

· . wa
I olen
...
,.,,
ll_.....,_loL'-

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

Home

tM. Local refaNncM tumlsMd.

'

'

chronicles 1he life of the late
jazz pianist Nat King Cole
who found lome aa a singer
with his unique style. (A)
(1 :18)
~
Ill 1121e MOVIE: 'Menll or
Mu- CIS Tualday·
(2:00) Stereo. D . · . •
t!! MOVIE: Mlriclti on 34111

'i

BASEMENT

....

Tf!N Cl-1ANNEI..5 ...

'·

WATEAPAOOI'INQ

~~.-!1
Oonef"M
·110M-

~ e'l';, ,c:'to=~
-~
l::l - 1:00 ...... -

WV ,
por-h. SOM1S-7241. - - - ..... ' - -

:.::..:...o:~un~~':::.ll~

~- -

'

Auto P l(rts &amp;
Accessories
1
Duroc botlr, tJ'o
Ringo, 10 point Korll, whHoiOid Ell~~! 340 poundo. 1863 Morcury Marqulo 101' po rt•.
,..i,!!' ~
Call 304.e7s-871U11f!t.• p,m.

----..l.::::::::::::::====::.J -.

·~ --- --- ~--·

(2:00)
8:05 til MOVIE: In 1111 H•t of 1M
Nlglll (2:15)
1:30 Cll (I) e_Head of 1111 Cleu

RocondHionod Wnltlra, Dry.... Slcllro Equlpmonl, 30t-1175-.,.21.
GuoroniNd prompt _,loo for
76
'"
""'""· - ·· Tilt _,.. --.,-..,...----,,---63
Livestock
DryarShappo. 1~.

:&amp;'.&amp;:":...'

UNSCRAMIILE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

by THOMAS JOSEPH

® MOVIE: The Tin S1ar

75 Boats &amp;·Motors
for Sale

-·
~as •a
T h - n f - • - . - C' 11 ....,. IIIIo I , .. .
llfTILUQ~
~ · "
114-81l2-5225aftor
.
3br, Ha,.,.n ' Troco Dlotrlct. 111t1fll10
181Ciov--Duolatdiiuot .... l&amp;c.lllll'llllll•
• • -· US Cuot-. D!OA,
l250/mo. pllfl' . , _ . , 114.211 •
•700, 114-liiUlll.
110. Now Hlr::fl. C.ll Ct} 80s.&amp;a7- l blctJoo•u• houtl, lind con-- 13841
Slnplng roome wtth cooking.
Ctn 111 ·6 tndar R11rll ar
Trolllm Builder~~; New homes ,
- Eol k· 89.
1fl&lt;1 , 304-675-5104.
~=-·:7:-:-::---:-=::-:---= AIOO troller-· All hook .... 29 pHon Aquorltrm, WI ..., ........ ..., 011. 11111. - a Tf Aulo. for Slit
cu.tom remodtllng , 614·742·
Fumlthed 4 room houe• on 131 Call ••• 2:0G • • ., JM.m.. ~~-~-~fth Ill ICCMIOI'~ 1M- ,_.._ Mt l1rl 1 fill, 11t ••
1·_ _
,__.or Hurting &amp; Rthabllilt· GOVERNMENT HOMES from 11 Fl 1A
..151
...
111
-·
. - .,_,.
--•
•
I I - CauDo. Auno 1•23
_2_
. ----Uon Center h•• Jmmadlala (U repala. o.un~uent tu
,.. nnue,
•• mo. plue
••oo ~:1111::::,=-=.:W'l:.::...
.
depoett
$14-446-3038,
,,......,...
lllod. - · 1117111antla Cl 100, I -82
opening lor rtglst.,•d nurs•. prope"'r· eposussons. Your 1615.
Coalllr lpMIIf P'FJ' , Mllll. . , . ..... "'"'·
Plumbing &amp;
Prevkaus e)(ptrlence In long are• (I 805-687· 6000 Ext. GH·
SNAFU"" b 8
Be It"
'~ 2 ,.,_.. tiO. ...... _. MI0.11t114r-t292.
Heating
tarm caro perfarriod . Bonotno. 4562 for .c urron1 rlpo lilt.
Middleport 4 bedroom l!oUOI.
,... Y ,ruce
B te
l,_,.lftW
, t :OD;ii
__. - - Fa r Sale · S tal1 er
1'\.:!n~blo: !c...•d no

ta PrlmeNewo

1111 '111,

-· = ::.:--...-.-..oau.
-.. 1--- -·
-. . . . . .........
I

Aold, Gelllpolil ,.,..

3 MdrDOm houH, .,.. ••• Mhool, no Mta, ,.,.,.net and
wooded 1o1. Rock=to. Ohio. "-lt,UII. :104471-:ltlt

Silary butft on yean. o f Ill·
JM!r!tn~tl Can L.a R.J~t Hill R.N.
O.ON . !'or m!tr\ifiW I&gt;! 'j~_t'jQ.,,

a Church StiHI StaUOn

,...,tA .,

I

31 HomesforSIIt

'
1988 Yt maha YZ 250 wat1r ·
coo led SSOO 1112·314 2 or 992·
2135.

Serv1ces

7UU£ ..... 1orNIII.

pluo Potwon 2

na polo. _,._r Flnt Ave. 114-

PC ..a

COf1(1, 304-675..:Jn3.

24 ft. CMChmtn cempilr, fully
.......... P,OOO. 304-1171-:ztltll.

IZIII OoPooll NqUINd.
--lp.no. '
OM ll•llroom unfurniiMd
If . . . ., . . .II for OM or
2br
.......
.....
·
......,~

ur•TM. _ . • ,.,.,• ..,.,,

. . . ,.,..

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

OM'

._

•

tlrts, garag• kepi, saoo. 080.
304..S82·3656 lllytlmA
1986 Honda 125 Jour wheeler, ex

otuclcled)

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

l14-441a

'

AC • 01S with bueh h0a, plow, 1983 Shih dr lvt:~ 3 ¥rhueter
dfM, 12,850; 504· lnt 'f d itsel 2250X, IXC cCJnd, 304-675·2~3.1
tr.ctor, h,UO; 240 lnt'l tractor, o r 304·516-2528.
11,HS. Owntr wfll II~ . 614- · 1984 Kawasaki KX500 , new

SMitS; . 804

Pelnl PIUS now llodtlng lrt and
cretl au•U•, Nov. .-cltl
1lx20 oil · ..._
" ·" · 2411

-

'-:---~-__:
.
,....... . . .

1985 S-10 picku p, 6 eyl 5 tpal!ld 1
4 whHI drive, sxc body, goaa
motor, good g~s mdva9e,
$3,200. 304-11765·1155.

$3,150. Oioner wiuunan ... 614· 74
Motorcycles
~-~~~
==~~~~~~~

FerguHn tractor wfth loldtf',
12,f50; &amp;uptr T1 Ollnr Dlnel,

614-44&amp;.3153
Sofa and CN ir, $1.95 per -~.

8 Petce Woodgroup, $14.01. ptr
WMit l .Shaptd Bunk Btdt,
Btddlng tnd Ch111t of D,..w1ra
lnc:tudtd, $13.14 PI' WHk.
Swivel Roc ke r, $4 .44 per wetk.
Recliner $1.75 pttr wHk. Dinette
with 4 Chalra, $7.50 per w•k. 4
Poster 8r111 Sltd, $12.20 ptr
wMk. 4 Drlwtr ChH1 ot
OralWel't, S3.50 per w..k . At 141,
c· .Miln Ott, Rt. 7 In C,nlenlf}'.
HOURS: Mond1y tAr~ SatLJfdly,
9a.m ...6p.m.; S unday, 12 Noon5p.m.

·-··--

PL, $!,600. 304 ·511i·2383,

lncludlld, 1100. 614-3811-9.,..,

7:35 (l) The Jeff-•
1:1111 (!) Night of 1he Fox IPt 1 of
21 (2:00)
Cll (I) e Wha'o tho ....?
S'tereo. D
CD Nove lhe llama of SOulll
America Is examined. Q
(I) American PllyhouH A
malll teacher In East L.A.
has success with his La~no
studionts. D
. Ill 1121e f111cuo: t11
Stereo. D
(!]) 18 MOVIE: The Bldroom
Wlriilow (R) (2:00)
IIJI Mattock Jui~ investigatas
· the suicide of a man accufled
of murder. Stereo. D ·
II! Santll and 1111 Tl\,..
Boara When a friendly lorast •
ranger tells a mo1her beer
and her cub about
Christmas, the two decide to
skip hibernation and flnd the
true holiday splrtt (1 :00)

Jfft JusT flli'NT '
Tt' powPI~
Ht1 NO.JE.

1984 Blazer 910, V-6, at.Jto, air,
eruisa, IIJttwhaal, !11ar oo, PW,

For S1lt : Bunkbtd 11t wHh mat.
treas es, naw c ond ition, bt•nllttl

a Croaafti'll.-

,rm· $Vfll $HI'/.I. J'F
ALONG- ANY ' fllltNIJ'ff •••

SEJZED. FREE 24 l'lour r&amp;eot~~
ing. 801 -379·2930 ext . P'TLC.

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

AUCTION I

•••• 1,111

.....
.
==
.• ,.._,
_____

s;o,

--..

....

SQU~RES

THESE

BRIDGE

7:05 (l) Happy Dayo
7:30 (!) Night Court Q
Cll t121e E-ln1MIIt
Tonight Stereo. Q
(I) • ,..,••, Family
QJ IIJ JeopardJI Q
tJ]) • ~·• Compeny
II! lcO!Iby Doo: The

CAR SII $&gt;00, '84
87 BMW s2oo, U S-

lipoila, OH

w..

Fumleh.S tHie~ncy lf)llrtment:
UpelaiN , .qul•t. well·ktpt , car·
petld, atf·suett pat'tlllng. Ideal
tor one person. 614--446~2"802.

lfW

County App f!ancl, Inc. ·Good
used appllaneu , T.V. aele . Optn
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ..Stl. 614446·169Q, 627 3rd. An. Gt l·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT GE Hotpolnt rt tr lg•ratar, 2 1t.Z
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON yr• old, 304-11754861.
ESTATES, 536 Jackaon Pillt
lrom l192frno. Wtlk to thop I GOOD USED APPLJApjC£5
moylu. Call CS1.c...t46-2568. EOH.
ht rl, drytrs, refrlg•r:t:tort,
rongn.) Skoggo Appllaf!&lt;al,
Frtnchtown AptrtrMnta. n1 Upper Aivar .Rd . Bt$lde Stant
Fourth Avenue, Aprtmenta tor Crtst Mqt•l. Calll1 4-446-13~ .
I hi elderly; mutt be 62 or old1r.
PICKENS FI.IRN1TURE
Rent lncll&lt;ldi ng edjuetm•nl lor;
Naw!Und
Wlltr1 IIWI QI, I eleetrie II
balta on tenant'• lneome. E- Household hlm lstli ng . 112 mi.
qu•l Houolng Opportunity, .Ap- J erricho Rd. Pt. Plt1sant , WY,
plication• mar bl picked up 1t caii304-675·145Cl.
Spring Vtllly Plaza. Cell 81t1 ~
RENT2DWN
448-4631.
Fumlshld ArH~I1mlnt , next to
Library, parking, untra! heal ,
rafertnc. reqt.rir.ct , aultabfeo for
t ptrt.on. 6¥-446-0338.
FumlthM Apt.., 2 br, 1136
Second, Gtlllpolt l , $175, wat.r
paid, ~14 446 1416 aftor 7p.m,

...... :_ ... _

--~~:

ORUOLO!IR

8787, at11ro$ p.m.

that

"Oh no,~nned, "tttis i1 fun. It's like a long playing
VIDEO
."

Q

•.·

notice

SCI AM I.ITS AN1W111S •• ·,
Addlc:t-Valve-Rough-Emblem-VIDEOGAME
"Oo you want me to drive awhlle'r I asked my son.

® Bcarocrow and Mra. King

84 Fo-rd"""'E.':'350~C::-"'b tnd Chassl,:
wfs!aop&amp;~1
46.1)
•r.g . C-6
lransmlltfon, e.:ooo m1IB.ll; naw
palnl &amp; lire.&amp; hot t~hoi .spocial
142~ . 614"7i.'I2·2Q72,.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

8

I

ta Moneyllne

san S!I,OQO. 614/992·

Load ed,
5223.

ever

I

E N T I .C y

121 CDIIge a.aketbllh

1990 Ford F ISO, 4:~~4 ELT L.arlat.

Didja

whogetsthe -····?
1--a,~,..;,
- .-r,~~~~~~ Q Comp~ot,t tho .chuckle qtiolad
.....
&amp;..-.L.-.L.-.L.-.L.~"'
~Y lillinv ln.tho milling -do
..
yo• ·d... lop · - No. 3 below.
rRJNI NUMBERED LETTERS 1N

tJ]) • NIGht Court E;1
.
IIJie eu...nt AHali Q
II! linurt.: ....,•• Flilt
Clwl-a The Smurls
celebrate Baby Smurl's first
Cltrl5tmas. (Anlmal8dl Q

1988 Ran ger, 4 oyt, 5 spd.,
$3800. 61 4 ~ 384-4435 or 446· 76'l&amp;.

9x1 2 brown, h lg e scut ptur•d
ru.g wil t", loam pad, $100. 8i1 t 1
Unwored oriama! rug wiiH
trln g:e, $7~ Ailason for . .IIII)Q:
Jf\OYing. 61 41992·2938.

2br t partment, first floor, bed·
room &amp; livi ng roam c:arp•leQ,

~

· I!IIIJ~oiF-neQ

---·

~~

1
~~:;~~;:~•:,
whether the pen is mightier
lhan lhe sword depends on

e

·

J

1-.,VOHEL
,.,~-.,-T,-.-,~

6:35 (l) Andy Orlflltll
7:00 !ll• Cohoe IIIIt-H
(!) I - m of Jeannil
Cll (I) lnllcle E (I) (I) Mecllell Lohler
NenHour

·

-

Is I I I .

al~r

- - - -

'19'76 Oudgo.•pldi.LIP, Jt-$ F'S PS
atr. good tha.t, ~ood C&lt;H""tdltk~rt.

3 grevn Uvlngroom c hair~ , ont •
rec ilntr, ·Se'tlfl ng rn achln• . '304n l-5346 or J.o4-a&amp;2-l4SS.

...... "'*" ......

,.trtaonlor,

Real Estate

GO ~ r.r

...

gr,x.-.d.

p.m

ONa 1 • , _" ""'...., ..-!,

1381

Dotlllo. (1) - - - lxt...

1

FOR CHRISTMAS?

7'1. Trucks lor Sale

10 'ttoer Nf..A

Rcnlols

...

2 411dror', .....
.. -.11WJ1.1'111.

. . , - ......
C.K. .
,._,
Dorton.
Olllo

..,_

WANT TO 8W PE66V
JEAN Tf.IOSE 6LOVES

t919 c .. ~,:~ro -rr.r

1 OR , $300/rn a .: 2 DR, S400/mo.;

••r ..._..,

a I Cl oolng. Lol ,. • ~- In limo ... tltl
44Wii w. lim to ..-1.1114-

--QICe.-.
.
.
.
..............., ... ~
, ••1'1 ......... •..
-.................
to -

1~iJ!i

2 r~e I bath, :tf7S. Ali
utllill" lnc:ludtd. De~OIIt rf.

36

I

ii-li!!iillo•

'i'OU KNOW WHV I

Ct:avy

1--i'LI"""A.,..
· K...,E_N~
· ~~

al lpa(ULook
18 World Today
(I)OUrHouH
1:05 Cii llevot1y HMIIIUiila
1:20 (I) ~qua,. Ona TV Q
1:30 !ll. 11)1 NIC Nlgh1lr Newt
~ Abbolt and Coor.t:o .
Cll (I). AIC Q
(I) Wild Amorlce Q
Ill . ID • CIS Nfta Q
tJ]) • Andy Ortlltlll

ettfupe •blnllltl,
30
ln!l26,
ul af•d !Opper $750 6l4·448
arnnd
1o 165 90haadboardt
days um•l 1.
1 r;;~;;;~;.::=:;:;::==l-;::::::;======::1 80
ml•hed,
2 bedroom,
l•rgo fuyon!,
corntr
ot Rand nlc:•
and euh w!H' .eppro ....d endit 3 mt. 54 Mlscella""""US
-:-,..-:'=--·
- -Porch St Konouga . ~14-44&amp;..,.13. out Bulavlllo Rd. Open 9 A.ll . 10
"'"'
56
lor Sa le
1982 G1,1C Truck. PS, PB. olr
5-P. M. Mqn , Um.1 $11. can 814Merchandise
ccnd, •xca!itmt coodlt!ort. e-tll
Apartm e nt
44
4-46 ..0322.
6_
14·1112·21:ltl
_ _ ---- . $i•l'n1M. ktn•na. $5 0 cuh oniY
·
- --~1
t14-381·1't23.
·
1984 Chu VtrJhll Stl'Vttlild~J,. ~Ide.•
for Rent
2' w!ng 'baek c hairs, very old,
up, All' 8..-tras Exe ccind tH·1·
wood condl11on, New !lYing
4464053.
1 OR llpt in Rio G~anrit , $165 room IUIII, eoueh n.. two
57
Music
a
l
........ ----·--per mo nth. 814·l88-9D46 or 614· ro e!in•rs buill ln . Ch1ir Is rocktr
1987 Rang.,, " t yf, 5 !!t.p...d, Af.i~
245-5401.
lnstrumenls
gli der. 614/992-2908 tritr ~ : 00
FM caUtJIIe, new lc.ppnr,

'

~:rue.

............... lhlld •• ...,
I Lin. • 1:30 P,IO. AaN 1·10.
- - . olw .......- DNp.tno
12M

.....

t937

$2 !:9&lt;:

t\4·388·803, looks

=-Collie ..... Dilr. . . . . 1111. Clll I I - Kllly, OAIIIR
DMIIOprnllll CO. 1 a 22M4l
1r11n _._ Oor eo.. Conlor.

.....

$1,500:

tho
be-

•
•

POITTE

H&amp;!.':n~-

L----------.----~·

....

Cl'levy Monltt ca,lo.· \2,1'100. 1":l61
Ch•vv Mont• Carlo. ~-4 t,1t5

--~llly--­
!!Or
IIIN Ftkli!J, 7:10 Ill I:M. Wllntod: "-ol 1o1ote To 11uv.
, _ . - -1111111ii
,..
_.In- • to IMCIIyoiGa
... ' ontl...... JOW7WI47.
lloDoniOI CUllom luto11011na, ~--.-·
..... ....... zoned , , .......

~

•~

...

-.....

low 10 , _ lour t11oPio -.Is.

1:1111 !ll. Cll (I). Ill 0 .
GJNewt
(!)Cba-lnCMrgeQ
(I) 1-2·1 Canllict Q

j

HIRiNG STATE AP,
PROVED
NURSING ASSIS'
NOW

· ALL 'Vard Salts M~ st Bt P1ld ln
• dvanc:• , OE40UNE : 2:00 p m.
the d•y b• fore t he ad Is 10. """
Sunday

32

~

;

019 Sl•rr• $V~~6 1lJ94 Ouk:.
laSabr•, $1- 19!1
!(1015 ferd., ·
Crown \fft;'On n $U9; t9d2 ·

a

$45. B.d tramn US, Oue1n

Sin S35 &amp; kln ll frame SSO.• Good
n !tc:tlo n of ,.droom suftn,

&amp; uUIHift. 6141ii:Fl'I7R.

MobiiA Homes
"
tor Sate

us

gun. Baby '"'""',.'

tumlll'ltd

with WlO. $250 tn.o. ptu• depoalt

-=========: r;.:========:r~~~~~:;:::::==~ ~let
_

yellow,

•

EVENING

~ dr. !li,!)OO mua~.

Chltvette, G.rty,

TUES.. DEC. 4

......
01... t.ttwi ol
lour ...,..led _,js

P•·u

···--

..,U.

up, King $350, 4 dr1wer chn t
$69·. Gun Cabl nt ta ·e, e,. l 10

..toll
Of
stole . Ctloc ol.&amp;t!t
Labradcr, Letart P•rll, AEWARO,
304-IIRS·:l-159.
.

Grand

AI"'' Vallty AV!D Sate$ OHici
6t4-446·t1'22, Hom,. Pfl•ln•;- Sl"-'
992·2845 1987 Cht~y Ctos\ltlte

$14! tip Ia $375, Hutches 141)0 &amp;.
\ip , bu nk b• da compt••• .Jih
man rets $295 1n1t U!) 10

~-

•

...._

loa !fed, 614...44t:i ·Cilll5

IQ $t25. Hld...a•bttdt $3i0 IO
$S95. Recliners $225 to $375.
lampt~ S28 to $1:25 ~ DtneH H
$'109 11rid \.Ill- to SUS .Wood ltbl t
w-6 cr.. ,,. $205 to $195 . o.tkt

30M.

5

-------

Sotat ll'!d ehalr» ptlc.cl froft'l·

Extra 11lc t 1'4'x:10', 2 bedroom
l'lelr Oal!ipolft: PlnJ . Wat er,
SIWIQ't, !Jirb.gt !nCIUd~ . $300
monlli. O.po.-}1 &amp;. retertneH
,..qu b ld. M!CfCWav• I •1erlo In·
cll.ldtd, t l4/"-46-020B or 614JW2•

1-t,:,r~.

1989 PMii~ G.rartci Prnt $£, .9JI• ·
"ier, tCI.1 ried, •h~rp 614 ~S..11S5~
•tt•r !i 00 Jl m.

Househo ld ·
Goods

$395 to S995. Tabt .. $50 1nd u p

. mon th. 1!1 14-:188·9141.

Lost &amp; Found

Pool!i'Ci

or

(..Ond r

____

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

3 SA mobile hQrM, 1otet tltc. 8
mt. tfom town in 218. S22S

9"&lt;&gt;d

lo11dlld, grtily &amp;- 111,1\ltr aH uttl·
1$1 4--446-...,.....,...
~ 3 -·
filtlor···-F..ll·'"·

1;90 E.seor1 LX

o.. s.

Wlnd.:-0-:WI-,-.t:-0-mi-W&lt;-:.-~OWS.

6

1889

Merchandise

51 .. ~8418.

--

-

1$86 Ford hecu'!,
$'1.200. will tr2da
;104.ij62-3739

2br yJry ni·o t , lOIII I Jt(trl.e,

Full bfoudtd W• lm!!riln'ilt
del"!

----

614-992·"' 18.

Television
Viewing

$350

Omn'

The Daily Sentinei-Paga 9

·~

Autos for Sale

1981 Dt&gt;dgo
511i·2l2l

Lots, r•nrtl l , Pfl"'l, .. ,... Call

bMutltul rlvtr·

'lbr traif•r for rent, Part•r eret,

Giveaway

.

~4e.Oi60 .

~14-388·9696 ,

4

1'1

.KIT 'N' CARLYLI® by Larry Wrilhl

Country

wlew, wa11r turn,. 1 no c-ity tun.
Faster's Mobrl• P1'om• Ptrk. IIM-

Poma-oY-MidcfepCn.
- . .. OhiO
- -... -

Tuesday, December 4, 1990

48 Space lor Rent

'

• lmpan'lb'l'

ar

•

...

Hmbed
471mpover·

ished

OOWN
11n the

PAll.V l.'R, VPTOQUOTES -llere's how h&gt; work It;

1'2/4

One letter stands for another. In this samplt' A as use&lt;l
for the three I.'s X for the two O's, etc. Single lelte1·s,
apostrophes, the iength and fonnatio~ of the won I!! m :~II ·
hines: Each day the'code tellers are d1rferent
CRVPTOQUOTE

f\ X Z

S M MG

D M .I. R

1: U U M Y Z ll A

FA

ZNf R :

E S U MI. Z

E.l\

.r V

liM/\

GMZV

liMA

~;

H M V V Z V. V Z V

Lltll*t . . of lpor1l

1811onanaa

12:8111) Nlgltlllnl Q
12:20 (I) MOVIE: Marlowe (PGI
(2:00)
11:10!ll8 D Lela Nlgllt Willi
. Dlwld L&amp;att'IIIM
(I) MOVIE: l1lt Wlcliacl Clly

(1:30)

'

T l) G

Vfi.EHR

Y M I I I K 7. 1. V

Z N E 8 . -· II M V X K T
I. M I' ·Y Z
VHterdllt'• Cryptott110te: ONf. MOMl:: Nt IN 1\
MAN'S UFE IS A FACT SO STUPENDOUS AS TO
TAKE TilE LUSTRE OUT Of' ALL FICrtON. .. RAI.PII
' WAUXJ EMERSON

'

.,

.i

�Page-1 0-The

S.atiahll

Beat of
the Bend..
by BOB HOUU:CH
You might not bav.e IIOiiced but
Saturday yOU began PIYinJ live
cents more on, the . gallon for
gasoline.
·
What with the high prices we see
at the pump these days - and this
has been going on since the Persian
Gulf situation barely got off the
ground - it's difficult to ~ \IP
with it aU. The latest addition,
however, doesn't go into the oil
company till, however. The new
live cents increase is a national tax
which is supposed ID help reduce
the deficit. Congress and Mr. Bush
- who really weren't especially upset when prices at the pump
skyroeketed - must have ligun:d
that a new gasoline tax was a good
way to go since we were being
stonewaUed anyway. :ren to one
says that tbe someone along the
way will find a way ID expend the
additional money being collected
other than applying it to the deficit.
Aren 'I you just delighted with th!:
scheme of things when it comes to
government - I am.

Tuesday, December 4. 1990

By
Bob
Hoeflich
area, uses ihe visit of
Betty to stress the need for keeping
up the older cemeteries throug~
· Meigs County since many times
people come here from far and
wide to visit the cemeteries which
provide many times a great deal of
inforrilalion.
ihe Pcxtland

Genevieve · Schneider · sends
along li big Thank You to everyone
who has been so helpful and kind
since her injury.
Genevieve received a broken
arm and shoulder injuries as the
result of a fall onto concrete. She
comments tliat at one time, she
thought that if she ever became disabled she wouldn't have anyone 10
care for her. Genevieve has. found
that she certllinly was wrong about
that Her family has been fabulous
in caring for her and friends have
sent cards, flowers, food and gifts
to again show that impOrtant support which is at limes so vital to
each of us. Believe me, Genevieve
really appreeiares all you've done and you know what? She's making
progress.

Katie Gulh, long-time Pomeroy
resident and a beloved soul to many
The Middleport community
of us, observed her 97th birthday really pulled it all rogelher in a
Monday. Katie has · long been a short time.
resident of Pomeroy ·Americare on
The town found itself wilhout
Route 33. DOn't hesitate to send a · any . otganizatiou to handle the
belated card.
· promotion of lhe Christmas season
recently and so a last minute meetBecky Nease Anderson carne · ing was called. The interest was
home Monday night from Buffalo, there and Monday night the comN. Y., where she underwent surgery munity held its annual Christlnas
at a cancer center there. She's ex- parade complete wilh Sanla.
hausted from the ordeal, but you
Unfortunately, the rains carne
know Becky, she'll be sailing about and near the end of the parade, it
soon. Meantime, I know she'd like poured. However, it didn't seem to
that support !hat you are so good in dampen the enthusiasm of the parproviding.
ticipants. Paulew: Harrison and her
Shady River Shufllers presented a
Betty Lou Wilson of Olney, Ill., terrific routine at the Central Trust
· recently spent_ a couple of days in Bank comer in the rain. They had
the Portland area illtempling to SQ much enthusiasm and so many
gather geneology material on ht;r smiles. They just plain refused to
ancestors.
· ,.
•recognize · that downpour. . The
She was looking into llle Martin Shuffters were dressed in red and
Adams Family. Martin was a white and wen: kind or the lead-in
prosperous resident of lhc Portland to Santa. Good group!
area He was the Son of Marjorie
Adams who died in Portland at the · . I know it's the Chrisbnas season.
age of 76 in 1842. Marlin had lhree I i:l!ll tell by lhe sea of crazy wiring
sons who were RoBert who moved suung throughout the house so that
to Illinois in Jg81; Jacob and Wil- all-of the decorations can be lighted
ham who stayed on in Meigs. Then: - now if I had just one more extenis, of course, much family back.- sion cord...... Po keep smiling.
ground involved. but Gayle ,Price of

Ohio Lottery

Han-isonville happenings

Willing Workers
plan bazaar
Plans -for the annual holiday
bazaar of the Enterprise United
Methodisl Church were made when
the Willing Workers Class met
recently at the home of Dorothy
Clark,.
The bazaar will be held on Dec.
7 from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. with the
place to be IIIIIIOIIDCed later. The
Super Sewers are working. on itelils
to be sold at the bazaar.
'111e Chrisbnas party was set for
Dec. 14 !11 7:30p.m. at the home of
Maljorie Bowen. Fruit and cookie
ttays will be prepared at that time
for the shutinS o( the churCh, and a
gift exchange will be held.
Delores Will pesented the
program. Phyllis SpeiiCCf was welcomed as a new member. A soup
dinner was served to eight members and four guests by the hostess.

Middleport
literary club
Mrs. Bernard Fultz spoke on t)le
four act play, ''Caligula~ by Albert
Camus, at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club held at
the home or Florence Smith.
Members had Parts in the play
which was Camus' most popular. It
was about his madness: He was a
roman emporor and his original
name was Caius Caeser. The scenes
of torture are terrifying and painful
but they lend immediacy and subs~ce to the hero's inner sb'Uggle.
His Dicks, poses and brutality are a
part of his driving inttospection.
Mrs. James Dicltl gave a brief
insight of her life so the members
become acquainted with each per-

Mr. and Mrs. Orville Phillips
spent several days visitina his sister, Ethel May and family in Jlardy,
Ky.
Bessie Graham and the Harold
Graham family had as guests,
Helen Young, Karen Lowerys,
Kathleen Price, Ruth, Nellie and ;·
Jeremy Lowe.
Mrs. Geraldine Ross, Ona,
W.Va.. was a dinner guest of her
uncle and aunt, Duane and Hazel
Stan! ·
MrC:·and . Mrs. Orville Phillips
spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and .
Mrs, Virgil Phillips, W115hington
Court House.
·
Mr. and Mrs. John W'tlliams
spent Thanksgiving with relatives
in Kentucky.
Mr. ' and Mrs. Russ Eshelman
spent a day with Louise's sister,
Virginia Casteel in Columbus.
Nellie, Ruth
and Jeremy Lowe
,·

GREGJUSTIS ,

Justis
graduates

.

Greg I ustis, san of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Justis, !{okomo, Ind., has
graduated from Tri State UniverSity
at Angola, Ind. with a hacbelor of
science degree in eleclrical engineering and has accepted
emplo,YR!ent with the Edison
Electnc.Co. at Crystal Lake. Ill. as
a disaict engineer. He is lhe
grandson of Audrey Young and
Irene J,ustis of Mason.

son.
Mrs. Clarence StratiOn was voted

·

Alpha Delta
Kappa meets

TOPS meets

into membership.
The hOSleSs served refreshments.

Wanda Faulk was the best loser
at ~recent meeting of Ohio TOPS
No.570.
Linnie Aleshire conducted the
meeting. It was noted that the
Christmas party will be held Dec.
· the Soulhern Local Chapter of 18 at the Carpenter's Hall in
·
.
the National Honor Society will Pomeroy.
All
members
are
urged
to attend.
sponsor a toy drive Wednesday
Weigh-in
will
be
from
5-6
p.m.
through Dec. 14.
New or good used toys may be
cootributed. Toys may be taken to
Southern High School during the
hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p,m.
All roys will be given 10 the
Meigs Couniy roy bank.
For more information caU Kim
Phillips, 949-2611.

Southern toy
, drive planned

Pick 3: 932
Pick 4: 3736
Cards: K-H;

A..C; A-D; 10-S

Officers were elected at a recent
meeting of the H~viUe Senior
Citizens held at the town haU. A
Tbllliksgiving dinner was.a!So held.
Elected were Louise Eshelman,
president; FtaOCes Alldre, . vice
president;
VIrginia
Oibson,
secretary; and Hazel Stanley,

treasurer.

Voi,:41 . No. 159
Copyrighted 1990

·

TRADmONAL CHRISTMAS • Legloa Post 128 of Middleport
featured a tradltioea' Cbristlllas as the lheme or its float in tile
Middleport Christmas pantde. Pl!cb(lft surrounded a deeorllled
tree and m-ben oldie Awdlim'y on tbe lloat distributed candy
along lhe pantde I'OIIte.

She was nominated by htz
sororitY,. Alpha Mu Beta and the
fraternity, Alpha Sipna Phi.
At lhe universlly, she is the
secretary for Alpha Mu Bela and an
active '"Iii sis" of Pi Sigma.
The crowning of the q_ueen will
take place Thursday everung in the .
student center.

t~~.!!!I ·i.~!?.!!~~. . ~~~~m~

RefreshmentS were served· by
Helen Woif, and Everett and Charlotte Grant and a silent auction was
held by the ways and means committee.
Helen Wolf was pianist for the
meeting.
Attending were Mae .McPeek,
Octa Ward, Eva Robson. Virgin\3
Lee, E~rett -GI'II)t, Dorotliy
Ritchie, Esther Smith, Goldie
Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes, Helen
Wolf, DOris Grueser, Beulah
Maxey, Erma Cleland, Faye
Kirldtart, Lola Damewood, .Opal
Hollon. Thelma 'White, Charlotte
Grant, Sandia White, Mary K. Hoi·
ter, Betty Young, Betty Roush,
Mary Jo Barringer, Jean Frederick,
Marcia KeUer, JoAnn Baum, Alia
BaUard, Ethel Orr, Sadie Ttussell
and Ada Bissell.

Gary . Walker presented a
program on caving at the recent
meeting of the Alpha Delta KaJllll!
Sorority held at the Racine Uruted
Methodisi Church.
'
The m~ting was conducted by
Karen Walker. Yearbooks were disThe Willing Workers Class will
lributed and the Cllrisuiw party · have its Christmas bazaar and bake
was planned. Members are to·meet sale on Friday at 112 West Main
at the church on Dec. 18 at 6 p.m.
StreeL

.

. Middle~rt

Willing Workers
have meeting

wbo served as retreat racllltBior. Guest speaker
on Friday evening was Fred Hennis of MedOfllce Mangement, Inc., wbo used marketing
medical services In tile 1990's as his theme. Tbe
· hospital's board of tr~ees and the hospital's
medical staff also beld business sessions during
the retreat activities on Friday evening.

RETREA.T - Scott Lucas, center, is pictured
with two or tbe key participants in the annual
retreat or Veterans Memorial Hospital staged
Friday evening and Saturday morning at the
Holiday Inn, Kanauga. On tbe left . is Peter
Pavarini, Columbus attorney, wbo moderated .
tbe retreat sessions. On the right is Dr. Richard. '
Bradley, Ohio State University faculty member,

Sentinel News Stalf
of murder in the death of Mary ·chain of custody of evidence in the
The victim, her boyfriend, Berry several years ago.
case.
neighbors, and medical staff from
Young is represented in Meigs
Dr. MJ. McGinnis of the
Pleasant Valley Hospital were County by Public Defender Charles Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
among the witnesses for the H. Knight.
Pleasant, W.Va. and Emergency
prosecution as the jwy trial of John
Detennination of the chain of -Room Nurse Sandra Roush discusL. Young got underway in Meigs custody of evidence in lhe case sed the procedure, both in $eneral
County ·common Pleas Court on took up a lar~ part of Y-esterday's and. in this case, of gadtenng inThesday afternoon.
testimony, w1th sheriffs deputies fonnation in sexl)al assault cases.
Young is charged in an in.dict- from bolh Meigs and Mason
Bolh McGilDiiS and Roush went
· ment wilh kidnapping, an ag- County lakin~ the stand to diseus,5 into specific details surrounding the
gravated felony of lhe first degree. their .roles m the galhering of completion .of what is known as a
He is accused of uansponing an eVidence and subsequent investiga- "rape kit", a box wherein aU
underaged female from Middleport lion.
evidence surrounding a rape case is
to Mason County, W.Va., where he
Deputy Georg~ Plants ~f Mason· deposited, sealed, .and sent to law
aUegedly raped the victim at least County told of hiS mvestlgauon of enforcement officials for examinatwice before returning her home 10 the crime scene, located in Mason · tion.
Middleport the following day.
County off U.S. Route 33 near
Olher witnesses yesterday on beIn addition to the Meigs County Sand Hill Road, and Meigs County half of !he state included the viccharge, Young was indicted on 15 Sheriff's Deputy Bob · Beegle tim's boyfriend, Jo Fink, the viccounts in Mason County, W.Va. related his Dip to Veterans tim's neighbor and friend of lhe
stemming from the August 12 inci- · Memorial Hospital with Young for victim's family, and a pathologist
dent.
the collection of the defendant's from !he West Virginia State Police ..
The penalties !hat Young faces in blood, hair and saliva samples.
The defendant's case is expected
Meigs County .ate considerably . · Eventually, Prosecutor Steven L. to .begi~ on Wedilesday !l)Oming,
more severe due to Young's Story, Assistant 'ProseeuiOr Linda and Yot~ng remains housed in lhe
prr:v!ous felony conviction - a jill)' · R. Warner and Public Defender Meigs County Jail.

'

Six inches of snow falls across Ohio
observations Indicated the snow
By United Press .International
went !rom Indian summer to
over norlheast Ohio was tapering .
Ohio received Its first signlfl· arctic conditions, and it sur·
off to mainly flurries. Skies over
cant amount of snow Tuesday · prised everyone."
the remander of the state re·
night and Wednesday morning,
: Robert Blankenship, supervlmalned·mostJy clouily wllh~lear· leaving from a trace·of snow In
southern portions of th~ state to 3 . sor of snow and ice relflova·l !Qr i11g aver.,, ·the .,., southwehern
to 6 Inches in ·the snowbelt of !he city of Akron, said that when corner. Temperatures were
snow hit at about 5 p.m. It was
mostly In the lower 20s.
extreme northeast Ohio.
A high pressure system over
just
bad
timing.
.
Muct/ of the snow came during
"It
hit
at
the
worst
time,"
·
the
Gulf Coast states was ex·
Tuesday evening's rush hour.
peeled
to take control of Ohio
Blankenship
said.
"Some
of
the
"The storm was a nightmare,"
got
caught
In
trafflc
.
weather
Wednesday afternoon
salt
trucks
said Bruno Bornlno, spokesman
and provide variable cloudiness
It backed up on us. AI !It takes is a
. for the Greater Cleveland Re·
for most of the state.
Utile !enderbender."
glonal Transit Authority. "Our
But by daylight hOurs Wednes·
Skies are expected to be clear
buses were gridlocked In the
day, the National Weather Ser· to partly cloudy Wednesday
traffic just like the automobiles,
vice said radar and surface night as high pressure streng·
and the roads were solid ice. We

NEW YORK .(UJ?l) - The
Federal Reserve Board moved to
!!ase the pressure on U.S . banks
and, Indirectly, on the economy
Itself, saying It will let banks
make use of certain funds they
must now let the Fed hold as
reserves.
Analysts said the reserve pol·
icy change Tuesday would
mostly help a banking Industry
whose profitability and lending
capacity have been undercut by
real estate and other loans gone
sour. But It could give the
economy a slight boost.
The U.S. central bank said it
will ease reserve requirements

No PIAa LIKE HOME!
Your Bankfo't~...
Fs

Orders for Meigs
Marauder books
are being taken
BEST OVERA' I FLOAT • 11te F-tr'l Bank w1t1t ill loat
CIIIT)'IDI Ollt tile tl!aM "Citrtlmlu Aloat.:~r'' woa the
tropb;r for lhe 11e11 - . 1 .... Ia die
Cl!rllllltu
Plrade Moaday lllpL The loU '-tu ed a patrltidc ~7 lkme
· will! tile ••• 11 ol BIDd .... Rn'lce IDID aDd ~en u..ed oa a
ICroll, clllldrea oll!uk •ployeellll mllltary and aww uall.....,
· ,and lite Farmer's Blllk Cbolr liDP.I tradliJonal carols.
·

.,

.

•

The Middleport Community Association will meet Thunda~
5:30 p.m. at Middleport Vi
~ Council ctu.nbers in viUage
I.
The Associalion n!places the Mid~ Cbamba' of Commcn:e
which m~ed into the Meigs .
Coanty Chamba' or Commerce.
Emphasis ·wiD be on joining merchants, businessmen and com. munity minded indiViduals into an
organtzation 10 promote village ac.
tivities. The first such 'actiVities will
be the Christmas parade .scheduled
for tonight II! 611m.

' .... t

POMEROY ·- Orders for the
1991 Meigs Maurader Yearbook
• will be taken 11 lhe high achool on
Thunday anc1
is
Nadle engraving IS $2. Plaslic
COVel1 ar $1.

992-2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO
'

Fridar. ec. s20.

T·
. ...

.

,,

. . . . .. 0

'

•••

: . . . . .. •- ••

)

....

Farmers
Bank
MEMBER FDIC

915-3315
STATE ROUTE .7
TUPPEitS PlAINS, OHIO

on time deposits by non·personal
customers and Eurocurrency
Uabllities, that is, borrowings by
U.S. banks from foreign lnstitu·
lions, to zero from 3 percent.
That means beleagured Ameri·
can banks will have an additional
$13.6 billion In montes which until
now were left with the Fed as
reserves -a collective nest egg
that also !unctions as a Fed
monetary policy instrument.
The central bank · took the
action "in response to mounting
evidence that commercial banks
have been tightening their stand·
ards of creditworthiness and the
terms and conditions for many

Soaring Medicaid costs
cause budget problems

When you coqsider the gas, time and energy saved
at ho'me, it·just dOesn't pay to shop around!

Community
group meets

'··

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio Human Services Director
Pamela Hyde says Medicaid
nursing home costs are contlnu·
lng to soar and she sees no end to
· ihe problem for the state .
"I wish I could tell you it's
going to get better, but I think I
have to tell you II will get worse, "
Hyde said Tuesday btlore a Joint
Legislative Commltt~e on Medicaid Oversight.
'
Hyde told the panel she Is
working on some options for
stemming the Medicaid deficit,
which have grown by nearly $200
million since. the Legislature
dealt with the problem last
spring.
·
"Every one of them (possible
alternatives) Is politlcallyunpop·
ular - but so is continuing to
pay, ' 'I she said.
Ohio expects to spend $199.4
mUllan more than It has bud·
geted ,or Medicaid through June
30, and nursing homes . are
responsible for $182.6 mUllan of
that total. Hyde said. That deficit
Is part of an overall state budget
!leflclt that has been estimated to
be $262 million by June 30.
.
'
Las.t March, the General As·
sembly pumped another S92

types of loans, " the Fed said.
"While much of this tightening
has been welcome from a safety
and soundness standpoint, It has
in recent months begun toexerta
contractlonary Influence on the
economy." the three·page Fed
statement said.
Lower reserve requirements
will reduce bank costs, ".provld·
lng added Incentive to lend to
creditworthy borrowers," the
'Fed said.
•
But Chris Kotowski, Oppenhei·
mer &amp; Co.'S' bank ·analyst, said
the move won't end the credit
squeeze. "Banks ... are scared.
The only thing that's goi!lg to
alleviate that is the passage of
time," he said.
Added Moody's Investors Ser·
vices analyst Christopher Maho·
ney: "It's strictly symbolic you won't see it In the (bank)
Income statements."
Analysts added that much of
the benefit of the change could be
wiped out when the rates banks
pay for,federal deposit Insurance
rise in 1991.
The Fed said tha~b~ Jan. 10 it

million Into Medicaid appropria·
lions, but it wasn't enough.
,
Medicaid costs totaled $2.8
billion the,flscal year that ended
last June 30 and are expected to
climb to $3.4 billion in the current
fiscal year :.. for a two·year total
o! $6.2 billion.
"We're always behind the
eight ball," Hyde said .
Last year. the Legislature
created the joint oversight com·
mlitee to try to keep on top of
Negotiation sessions between the
growing costs In the state and
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporafederally funded program of tion and the United Steel Workers
health care for poor, elderly and
of America, Local 5668, have been
ordered to resume on a daily basis
disabled people.
. Hyde and Kathy Glynn, Medl·
lleginning Monday.
caid chtef for the hull')an services
Jud~e Fred Fox presiding over
department, could not explain
an inJunction hearing Tuesday at
exactly why the state's previous . the Jackson County Courthouse,
ordered the RAC and USWA
estimates for nursing homes
officials hack to the bargaining
costs are coming In so far above
projections.
table begiiUiing Monday from 1 10
About one third of the pro4 p.m. at the counhouae.
jected nursing home .deficit Is
Negotiations were ordered to condue to a hlgher·than·expected . tinue daily 'until some seUlement is
number of days Medicaid recipreached.
· 'nle number of penions at the
Ients will spend In nursing
homes, Glynn said. The rest Is
picket points was limited to six and
attributed to higher costs for
guards for the RAC were ordered to
remain on company. property. The
dally care, but just why tbose
judge further oi'deiecl that neither
costs are so much higher Is
unknown by state officials, Glynn. side are to catry weapQDS nor use
.\ •
bright lighiS. .
said,

thens over the entire stale.
Overnight lows will be in the mid
20s. ·
Clouds will Increase on Thurs·
day •a·head of -a --w."'~•rn4~:rea I'·~­
Lakes cold .. lr.ont. Afternoon
temperatures. will be much
warmer with highs In the 40s.
On the Wednesday morning
weather map, an Intense low
pressure system was located
over northern Maine with a cold
front trailing south &lt;'long the
Allan tic Coast. A high pressure
system was centerd over the Gulf
Coast states and extended to the
western Great Lakes .

would release to banks $11.7
billion !hat was held against time
deposits and some $1.9 billion
held against obligations to for·
eign branches of banks or other
foreign ins titutlons.
That $13.6 billion represents
some 23 percent of total reserves
of depository institutions, which
earlier this monlh were about
$59.7 billion.
U.S. financial markets initially
responded positively. On the New
York Stock Exchange , the Dow
Jones Industrial average., dOW!]
at the time by a bout 18 points,
rallied quickly to gain 2 points on
the day.
That effect wore off, but the
Dow finished the day ahead by
14.11 points, at 2,579.70, on
reports of Iraqi peace proposals.

!'lEW PLATES ISSUED - Tbe new Obio license plates are now
avililalile from the Obio Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Pictured is
Charles Manley, Pomeroy, rec;eiving a set of the new plates lro!D
Sue Malson, Meigs County Deputy Registrar, The plates are available at the license office on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy or by
mail from Columbus at an additional cost of $2.40 per vehicle.

Albany youth injured in wreck
An Albany youth was Injured Patrol, Swearingen lost control
when the car he was driving' of the 1980 Datsun 310GX, strikTuesday wen! out of control, . jng an embankment on the left
striking an embankment and side of the road, and came to rest
coming to rest back in the · partially on the highway, turned
roadway.
in the opposite dlrecllon.
Michael L. Swearingen, 18, qf
Swearingen, whowasnotwear·
Route 3 Albany, was taken ta l ing a safety belt at lhe time, did
O'Bieness Hospital in Athen . serious damage to the car. He
following the '3 p.m. wreck on • was treated at O'Bleness for a
State Route 143 in Columbia laceration to the forehead and a
Township,
concus sion , but wa s not
According to the Ohio Highway admitted.

RAC, union

ordered to talk

'

~ ·
~

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

Victim, medical staff

· The Farmers Bank is proud to be a part of the
Big Bend area. Our success comes from the
,people and merchants of our area. When shop·
ping for Christmas this year think of your lbcal
'
merchants first.

.

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday. December 5. 1990

Mrs. Margaret Douglas of The
Maples in Pomeroy was the winner
of a hand-made quilt.

Homecoming
candidate .
Queen.

a

•

Seniors meet

Fed lowers bank reserve requirements

Deiclre Lea Harnm, ChiHicolhe,
has been nominated for the University of Rio Grande Homecoming

Mostly · clear Wednesday
night, with low In the mid
20s. Partly cloudy Thurdsay,
with bighs between 45 and 50.
1

Chester Council D of A meets

Several matters were" discussed
at the recent meeting of the Chester
Council No. 323 Daughters of
America with Beulah Maxey
presiding.
.
It was reported that Thelma
McMannis, a member, Athens, was
in a car accident and was in Mt.
Carmel East Hospital, Columbus.
Faye Hoselton, Belle Prairie
Council, Belpre, had hack .surgery
at Cleveland Clinic.
m~ting
Eslhcr Smith read a letter .from
the national councilor.
The Rutland Township Trustees ·
At TUesday's meeting officers
will. meet in rcglilar Session will be nommat® .· and quarterly
Thilr$day at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut- birthdays Will be observed.. ·
, land 'Fire Sration. The public is invited to attend.

Trustees

.20.days
until
Christmas

visited Nellie's sister, Lena Pauley,
in a rest home in ~oulh.
Mrs. Margaret '"Peg" DOug~ of
The Maples in Pomeroy won the
quilt from the senior citizens at the
Thanksgiving dinner held recently
and spousored by the group.

..

M:id~-:-a~n~d~bb;ome=~m:ad~e
~ca!:n~d~les~w~e~r;e~so~l~d~a~sla~::~
lund nlslnl projecL Tbe display

ARTS COUNCIL CHRISTMAS -Tbe
dleport Arts Coundl beld an open bouse M:~day nlgbt In conjunction with tile annual
Chrlstmali parade. Relresbments were served

holiday wreatbs. Susan · Baker, lert, and Mary
Wise were two ol the hostesses for the open
bouse.

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