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                  <text>Pag 1 16-The Deily Sentinel

Pomel{lf-Midlllpol't. Ohio
In 1835 the Condor was bullt.
This was the first steamboat built
here for towing coal. From that
Continued from page 1
day,
mining and •hipping coal
12 famUies residing In the Nar·
became one of the most lmpor·
rows. In that year the famU!es of tant
Interests In the county. The
Mr. Pomeroy's sons and sons·ln· mining of coal was principally
law came to the county and
carried on for some years at
began preparations for mining Coalport,
then a separate town,
coal.
but later Incorporated with

--Local news briefs... - - - Or.igin...
Continued from page 1
Firefighters restricted the blaze to the building Itself.
Adjacent frame structures sustained no significant damage,
but some loss due to smoke was reported to have occurred In a
neighboring building.

Foundation funds distributed

Thut'lday, December 7, 1989
Pomeroy.
. town, extending from Kerrs Run
A posl ol!lce was established In to about where the roll!ng m!ll
1827, at Nyesvllle, as the Nar· was located.
rows were then called, and Nlal
Captain E. Williamson had a
Nye was appointed post master. store and wharf boat just below
Untll the Incorporation of Kerrs Run, and Messrs. Horton
Pomeroy In 1840, and Its being and Crary each had.a small store
made the county seat In 1841, the lor goods and groceries. This was
settlements were m(llltly con· the extent of mercanllle business
fined to the upper part of the at that lime.

HOLIDAY
'OIFlSALE!
.

'

87 KATIE CROW
lleallnel Cql'l't!llpondent
It. was fareWell and• hello at
Thursday night's meeting of
Syracuse VUJage Council.
Honoree) upon their leaving
their ·councU postS were ·Jack
Williams and Ernie Sisson. Wllll·
alliS has served the vtllaill !or the
past 10 years. The two men dld
not seek reelection In November.
Welcomeil to the !old as new

Wh1t AW•••erful Olftl

GLIDER ROCKERS
Auorttd styles in either· solid
older or sohd oak. Beautifully
upholstered 1111t1 and backs.

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

Four calls !or assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Wedn~ay.
At 9:29a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to West Main Street lor
Elizabeth Horak who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at9: 36 a.m. the Middleport unit took Vera Smith from
the VUlage Manor ,Apartments to Veterans and at 4:02p.m. the
Pomeroy unit transported Charlene Yonker !rom Foodland to
Veterans. Yonker was later transferred to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
At 10: 04 p.m. the Pomeroy,unit went to Ball Run for Connie
Schoederer who was taken to the Holzer Medical Center.

bearing five of the numbers and
4,772, worth $75 apiece, with lour
of the numbers.
In Wednesday's accompany·
!ng Kicker game, there wu one
ticket sold with all six numbers In
exact order. The correct comb!·
nation for the $100,000 top prize
Wal 25734}.
There were three !lve.of·alx
Kicker winners of $5,000 each, 68
!our-of·slx winnen of S1,000
each, 610 three-of·slx winners of
$100 each and 6,519 two-of·slx
winners of $10 each.

DESK SALE

Sl 99

Reg. 1249.00
.... S219.00
Reg. S369.00
S419.00

.

ACCESSORY
SALE

Jim H!ll, councUman, pres·
ented councll with a check In the
amount of $50 from the Big Bend
Midget Football Association for
use of t~e fields at the· par!&lt; this
past season. The money wUI be
placed in the park fund.
According to Minter Fryar,
councilman. Joe Lynch w!ll
begin ditching and replacing
culvert next week.
Gene Imboden, fireman, In·

DESIS ....................................................;....... SALE

SWIVR lOCKERS

famous quality construction

SALE PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!

Hon•av
CARPET .SALE

Saxony Carpet. Berbers, Cut Loopa. Level Loop
Carpet and Sculptured Cerpet. Stalnmaater and
Stain Releue Styles Included.

SNOW BUSIN1!'8S- Marion Wa&amp; son clearslllls
mornlnl's snow from the steps and sidewalk of
The Dally Sentinel office. However, no -ner had

THERE'S PlENTY OF TIME TO HAVE YOUI CAlm
INSTALLED FOR TIE HOUDAY SEASON.•

Priced As
Low As

$1 399

sg.

Snow advisories are issued for
Southern Ohio; temperatur~s drop
:-

yd.

lndudts Carpet, Pad and Labor

,,

'Put ft'LVANIA Oil your list

Watson swept the ste]lll and sidewalk clean than
they were covered aifaln with that fluffy wblte
sluff.

By Ualled Pre11s lnternallonal
The'Nat!onal Weather service
Issued snow advisories lor much
of southeu Ohio early Friday
after snow swept Into the C!nctn·
nat! area, with accumulat!6ns of
as much as eight Inches In the
forecast.
The, weather. serviCe urged
people planning travel across
southern Ohio, as well as In
eastern Kentucky and West Virginia, to prepare themselves for
snow covered roads and trav~l
delays.
Across northern Ohio, how·

.

ever, only flurries In some areas
were expected.
The snow and clouds were
expected to leave Ohio by late
Friday night and winds were
expected to become light.
But temperatures Saturday
morning are expected to be In the
teens, with some Isolated higher
terrain spots dropping Into the
single digits.
Saturday ls shaping up to be a
nice day · across Ohio as weak
high pressure crosses the state.
Clouds will Increase across the
state during the a!tefnoon and

some flurries might fall In
extreme northwest Ohio toward
.evening.
Temperatures wlll moderate
In to the 30s.
Storms Strike East
Wintry storms struck across
the nation Fr!~ay, pU! 0g up snow
In the Missouri and Ohio valleys,
whitening parts of Texas and
New Mexico and threatening
large accumulations along the
mid·Atlant!c Coast
The National Weather Service
Continued on page 12

It was noted that the area at the donations !or the purchase of
marina had been cleaned and Christmas candy that will uSed
was looking good.
for treats at Christmas.
CoUncil also discussed the
Attending In addition to those
hauUng of cinders when It snows. named were Mayor Eber
They also discussed the posslbll· Pickens, Kenny Buckley and
lty of purchasing a pickup or Kathryn Crow, council
dump truck that Is needed year · members, Janice Lawson, clerk·
round.
-treasurer, and Mrs. Fryar and.
It was announced that the !Ire daughter.
department Is seeking money

Nation's unemployment rate
up 0.1 percent in November

S389

Beautiful. yet dirable, fllbrica and Bertdine's

. __

formed council that the Syracuse
Fire Department Is glv!ng the
firemen's quarters a new look by
purchasing new furniture, upgrading the bathroom !aclllties
and painting the areas .
The room wUI be tor the use of
firemen only. The only organlza·
tlon that will be permitted to use
the facility w!ll be the Third
Wednesday Club.

DESKS:..........................;......................~········.. SAlE S199
DESIS ............................................................. SAlE S239
DESIS ...................................................~ •••••.••• SALE 1299

BERKLINE
SALE
WAUAWAY IE(UNEIS, IO(K·O·LOUNGERS, and

LAMPS, GUN CABINETS,
CEDAR CHESTS, WOOD
KNICK-KNACK STANDS,
CURIO CABINETS, HAll
TREES, CONSOLE/MIRROR
SETS AND ACCENT
TABLES.

--Area deaths--

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Ohio Lottery said Thursday there
were no tickets sold bearing all
six numbers In Wednesday
night's Super Lotto drawing !or a
$6 mUUon jackpot.
That means the top prize !or
Saturday's drawing will be at
least $9 million.
Wednesday's winning
numbers were 3, 4, 31, 39,40 and
42.
The lottery said 106 tickets
were sold, worth $1,000 each,

STUD£NT D£SIIS, SECmAllES,
INEE·HOlE DESKS &amp; IDU·TOPS

members, who will · begin their
term In January, were Teresa
Drummer and Jim Pape. Re!reslunents were served In their
honor.
During the business session
counc!l discussed at length the
repacement of street signs. A
survey wUI be completed by next
month In order that signs may be
ordered. Drummer offered assistance with the orol!'ram.

Speelal Furniture
For That Speelal
Plaee In 1our Home
At A'lery Speelal
.
Prleef

Squads have 4 calls Wednesday

Ohio Super lotto ja~kpot growing

2 Soctiano. 11 Pq• 28 C:.nto
A Mu-atnc. _..,.P.,

Pomeroy-'- M'ddl
t
epo rt , Ohi o, Fn'd ay, 0 ecem ber 8 , 1989

'SyracuSe Council .to replace old street signs

The Ohio Department of Transportation announced today
that It w!ll accwt grant applications for programs that w!ll
provide Independence and the freedom of mob!l!ty to Ohio's
elderly and people with disabilities who use public
transportation.
Grants w!ll purchase vans with wheelchair lifts, light transit
vehicles with lifts, buses with lifts, and wheelchair accessible
mini-vans. In addition, the grants w!ll pay for the mcld!!lcat!on
of previously awarded ve]j!cles and other related capital
equipment.
Funds w!ll be made available during federal fiscal year 1990
for purchasing these and s!mllar Items under a section of tbe
federally funded Urban Mass Transporratlon Act of 1965.
Inquiries should be made prior to Jan. 1, 1990.
Private, non·proflt organizations who serve the ell!erly and
people with dlsab!lltles are eligible and are encouraged to
participate. Organizations located In rural areas of the state
can obtain Information by writing to the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Dvllslon of Public Transportation, PO Box 899,
25 S. Front St., Room 716, Columbus, Ohio 432166-0899.

Ra:

Low ton~&amp;bl In mid te-.
Pull)' cloudy Sa&amp;uniq. HI. .

..

Voi.40,
,.,:141
c,.
1ottuod 1188

.

'

Hospital new8

Pick 3
660
Piek4
5661

•

ODOT grant applications available

grandchildren.
Philip Will
In add!tlon to his parents, he
was preceded In death by two
Ph!l!p F. Will, 79, ot German brothers, Floyd and Douglas,
VIllage, Columbus, died unex· · and three.sisters, PearlMarklns,
pectedly Tuesday at his Leanna Grover and Alma
residence.
Rathburn.
Born on July 2, 1910 In Chester
Services for Mr. Darst will be
Township, he was the son of Saturday at Bunker's Chapel, 33
Wllliam A. Will and Edna Garen North Centennial Way, Mesa,
Wlll. He was a retired hair· Ariz.
dresser. a World War II veteran
and a member of Drew Webster
.Post 39, American Legion.
Glenn C. McCasland
Mr. Wlll Is survived by three
brothers, Montgomery Will and
GREENVILLE, Texas
Victor Wlll of Canal Winchester,
Glenn C. McCasland, 54, a
and William ·L. W!ll; Pomeroy;
resident of Hempstead, Texas,
three sisters. Florence Ferrell,
c?led Dec. 1 - following a brief
Bexley, Mary Kilpatrick, 'Colum·
lllness.
·
bus, and Betty Loucks, LakeMr. McCasland was editor of
worth. Fla., along with several
the Waller County News-Citizen
nieces and nephews.
In Hempstead.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by three
brothers, Roland, John and Mil·
He was born Dec. 3, 1934, In
ton Will, and a sister, Louise Greenville, Texas, son of the late
Fisher.
Albert and Wilma Creel McCas·
Funeral services will be held land. He never married.
Saturday at 2 p.m at the Ewing
He Is survived by one half·
Funeral Home. The Rev. Robert .brother, Pat Nell, Dallas, Texas,
Sanders wlll of!!clate and burial and several nieces.
will be !p the Mt. Hermon
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Mr. McCasland was employed
the funeral home, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
by
the Ohio Valley Publishing
p.m.
Co., serving as a member of the
Point Pleasant, w. Va., Register
Walter Darst
news starr the past two years
prior
Walter Darst, ·84, a well-known sp.ring. to going to Texas last
Kyger area resident, died Wed·
He was a member of the
nesday at Mesa, Ariz.
Methodist
Church.
Mr. Darst was born at Rutland
Funeral
services were held
In 1905 and was a son of the late
Tuesday.
Dec.
5, at the Coker·
Alonzo and Elizabeth Simms
Mathews
Funeral
Chapel In
Darst. He was retired from the
Greenville.
Burial
was
In the
University of Arizona ExperiEast
··
Mount
Cemetery
In
mental Farm and was a lifelong Greenville.
member of the Old Kyger Freewlll Baptist Church.
Survivors Include his wile,
Chloetta Robberson Darst; three
sons, Gary, Mike and Terry
Darst; and a daughter, Jennifer
Velerana Memorial
Pierce, all of Mesa, Ariz.; a
Admitted - Cecil Karman
brother, James !Jim) Darst, ·of Mlddieport; Lora Circle,
Albany; a sister, Mrs. James cine; Charles Ohltnrer, Rutland.
Stewart Hat, of Toledo; eight
Discharged - Samuel Mea·
grandchildren and three great dows and Bernice Fry.

Shop early,
8hop locally

In mid 3011.

The total amount of basic and transportation allowances
coming Into Meigs County schools for November, 1989through
the State School Foundation Subsidy was $771,435.86, according
to a report from State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson.
In the Eastern Local School District, the total amount was
$151,805.89 with ~,019 going for school employees retirement
and $15,315 !or state teachers retirement, leaving a net payment
to the school district of $131,471.89.
In the Meigs Local School District the total was $426,051.30
with $13,904 gotnr to school employees retirement and $43,166 to
the state teachers retirement leaving a net payment to the
·
school district of $368,981.30.
In the Southern Local School District, the total was$159,479.55
with $7,706 going Into the school employees retirement fund, and
$22,0511nio the state teachers retirement with a net payment to
the district of $129,722.55.
The allotment to the county board was $34,099.12. The total
amount from the November subsidy going Into school
employees retirement was $26,629 with $80,532 going Into the
state teachers retirement fund.

'

Ohio Lottery

WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) ' - The
nation's unemployment rate
climbed 0.1 percentage point to
5.4 percent In November despite
stronger-than-expected new job
growth during the month, the
Labor Department reported
Friday.
The department said that
210,000 new jobs were added to
the nation's non-farm payrolls In
November, considerably higher
than was generally anticipated
by economists, but It revised
sharply downward Its !ugures on
job growth In October to just
93,000 from the prevlousestlmate
of 233,000. ·
The downward revision for
October was attributed to a huge
overestimation ot the number of
new teachers hired for the new
school year.
·- The 1'8atOR the-unelflploprumt
rate Inched up' despite · the
healthy new job growth was that
the labor force expanded by
410,000 people during the month.
The 5.4 percent unemployment
rate . was the highest since
January when It also was 5.4
percent and was !denilcal to the
rate In November 1988.
As In recent months, the
November job growth was en·
ttrely In the service sector while
manufacturing lost 27,000 jobs,
pushing the total losses In that
sector of the economy to 133,000
jobs since July.
It was the eighth month Is a row
that manufacturing has lost jobs.
The losses continued to be
concentrated In b!g-tlcket, dura·
ble goods lactorle,s, which
dropped 24,000 jobs.
Overall job growth has slowed
considerably as the year as
progressed ·from the average
270,000 new jobs created each
month during since the middle or
1986, reflecting an overall slowdown In the economy.
Economic growth Is expected
to decline significantly In the last
three months of this year and
early next year with some
economics saying that a brief
recession Is poss!bl.e.

The Federal 'Reserve, which
helped bring about the slowdown
by pushing Interest rates higher
through most of 1988 and early
1989, has let Interest !all some
recently to provide stimulation to
the economy.
''The economy Is weak and
slowing down, with some sort of·
recession In manufacturing and
weak momentum In other
areas," said Allen Sinal, chief
economist with The Boston Co., a
New York Investment advisory
concern.
The 0.1 percentage point In·

crease In the unemployment rate
follows no change In October and:
September.
The rate tor adult men climbed
to 4.7 percent during November
from October's 4.5 percent while
the rate !or adult women s taye4
even at 4.7 percent.
The jobless rate lor teenagers
climbed to 15.5 percent from 14.9
percent during November.
As a whole, whites saw their
unemployment rate rise to 4.6
percent from 4.4 percent whll~
the rate for blacks worsened to
Continued on page 12

Three from Racine
chm-ged. with arson
'

"

On Thursday, Sheriff Souls bY
l'hree arrests have been made
In the Nov.l7 theft of a 1988Ford and deputies executed a search
Escort belonging to Oretha warrant at the Carroll residence.
Snider, Racine, reports Meigs Assistant Meigs Prosecuting .At·
County Sheriff James M. torney Linda Warner assisted In
. the preparation ·of the search
Soulsby.
The owner herself and two warrant to obtain evidence In the
other people have been charged alleged arson case.
Carroll and Winchester are
with arson In connection with the
disappearance of the vehicle confined to the Meigs County jail
which was found the next evening while Snider Is being held In the
on White Oak Road off State Gallla County JaU.
In other matters, deputies on
Route 681 where It had been
Wednesday morning recovered a
abandoned .
There had been ari imsuccess· large spool of alum Inurn-covered
ful attempt to set the vehicle on wire at a Reedsville residence. It
lire. The keys had not been lett In had been left at the residence by
the vehicle and It had not been a suspect wanting to sell it.
According to the report, the
hotwlred either, authorities
wire was stolen !rom the Belpre
report.
area. The case Is being turned
Arson charges have been filed · over to the Belpre Pollee Depart·
ment for prosecution.
against Benjamin Carroll, Mel·
20-year·okl Charles P. Ed·
ody A. Winchester and Snider, all
wards,
of Brick St., Pomeroy,
of Racine.
arrested
Wednesday morn·
was
. Sheriff Soulsby reports that
!ng
on
a
felony
auto theft charge
Racine Marshal Rick Rahn obflied
by
Middleport
Pollee for the
tained Information which led to
alleged
Tuesday
evening
the!! of
the charges while on a domestic
violence complaint at the Carroll a 1980 Chrysler belonging to
Patricia Hayman, of Hobson Dr.,
residence.
Winchester Is also wanted In Middleport. Special Deputy SheShenandoah County, Va. lor riff Charles Rife found the
vehicle later Tuesday evening on
falling to appear to answer a
Leading
Creek Road. The sus·
charge of malicious burning by
fled
Ihe scene.
peel
use of an explosive device .

Local news briefs--Patrol probes 2 tiro-car mishaps

HQGE 46....IN(H S(REEN

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1t1o Qolollly

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en the piCIUfe. Vou don"t h . .

IMII'I room. ....

The State Highway Patrol Investigated two car-deer
accidents last night aand this morning In Meigs County.
· An accident occurred at 3:45a.m. today on SR. 7, at milepost
seven, near Union Avenue at Pomeroy. Troopers said a deer
was k!lled when It ran Into the path of a tractor-trailer driven by
James Thompson, 33, Hodgenville, Ky. Damage was moderaoe
to the big rig. No one was Injured.
Another car-deer accident occurred at 8:10p.m. Thursday on
SR 124,ln Salisbury Township. Troopers said the animal was hit
and killed by a 1981 Buick Skylark driven by Janelle Hysell,18,
Pommeroy. Damage was moderate. No one was Injured.

SYLVANIA VCR

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COLOR TV

Remote • 2 Heads ·
On Scrttn Display
YHS Format

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II

, lfi.M14ft.

·Speeltl

s.,., Sp..lel $1,999

D-Day obsroed by local post

S2 75

FREE
DELIVERY
OPEN

Mon. 1:30 am-8 pm

r-.·••·

8:30 am·IS pm .

•

'

· - Iill, APPUAIICIS, 1¥'5, noot C6¥...G

'"J.J671 .

DOWIIIOWR fiE ?lOY,

•

•o

TO TOWN - ..... Uti 1111 Nladeer are comlag &amp;o
after-an- tbeJ mQ be Men oa 1118 *'eat
&amp;uta ... llllllldereol collorlll wm be part of
ClllriRmaa procram wlllell

...

Malde-."lloeS.••-IIudwlllaiHpert- a -baralllolldQ
Mledle• llllller &amp;lie IIJndl a ol ,.... Vaa Be • Tile Jiilllllc Ia
welcome to attnd
PI •tattoL Tv be • - · s.ataa..
(01'111 Garrete.), ... lllliltP--- taiWwlkldq n-la•eer,
!rom left &amp;o rlP&amp;, Clom Cleluol, DavW 8mllll, Todd GptUIII,
Cllad DIMe,,_ Oaolaar, "-'1- Cer7 Jlatlleld
LaJae, are anre lo l•pllaloolldii,J n-.

••..,•a

••llevla

1.·

Troopers of the Gallia·Melgs Post of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol wlll be partlclpatlng In National D·Day, today, Dec. 8,
reports Lieutenant R. J. Woodford, post commander. D-Day Is
an Intensified drinking driver enforcement program which
focuses on removing as many Impaired drivers as possible from
the roadways during a 13-hour period beginning at 6 p.m. this
evenlfti, Woodford said.
Thousands of Jaw enforcement aeenc!es nationwide will
participate In National D-Day, which has become an annual
event In the fight a&amp;alnst drunk drlvtng. In Ohio, the highway
patrol and dozens of municipal and county pollee agencies w!ll
put as many offtcen on the road as possible between the hours of
6 p.m. today and 7 a.m. Saturday.
"Impaired drivers were Involved In 44 percent of the fatal
crashes on our rural bl&amp;bways In 1988," said Woodford. "We'd
like to see that percentap decreue and Natlonlll D·Day can
help us accompllib that aoai." be IBid.
''D·Day ahOWI In a dramatic way lbe vast numbers of drunk
or clruugged driven lllarlng the roads with responsible
CcnUnued on page 12

I

�The o.ily Sentinei-PIIge-3

'

Commentary

Friday, llecembll 8, 1888
.

.·The Daily Sentinel
•

111 Coun street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIG8-MASON ABEA

gf:h

Bm~

."qJ

............._-'r1......_c::::l..-

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publllller
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Conlrolb'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General

Man~~er

A MEMBER of 'l1le AS'" r&gt;tet\ l'reu, lalud D.oy l'rel8 Assoda&amp;looo a tile Amerlcaa N!'fl'apaper l'ulllltllen heeci!!IH.
LETTERS OF OfiNION are weleome. 'nloy -dd be le011hu . .
words ._,. All id1erJ oro a•bJecl lo odlllBIUd mlllt be alped wllb
name, ....,.... ODdtelep-• •umber. No •lllllpedletten wll be pabllobod. LeUero oboulll be Ia JIOOd lute, a d - • r l o - , 1101 ponooal~
ties.

Letters to the editor
To whoever stole my car from the
church parking lot on Dec. 5.
U only you had come Into the
church, you ~ have received
the gift of eternal life, which Is
worth more thaJI all the cars In
the world. I've heard the saying
"overlooking an orchid searchlnlt for a rose," but you overlooked Christ for a Chrysler!
WUh the Chrysler, you're fortunate to get to Pomeroy, but
Chr~t wUI take ,y.ou all the way to
•
•

•

Heaven.
Anyway, you're stUIInvlted to
church anytlme, Sat. 7: 30, Wed.
7:30, Sun. 10:00.
Christ forgave me of all my
sins, so It's no problem for me to
forgive you.
Les Hayman, Pastor
Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church
P.S. It takes 15011 nuts to hold a
car together, but only one to
scatter It all over the road.

Berry's World

.

~;

WASHINGTON -For years
we have broiJiht you· reports on
the peru of taxpayer-financed
CO~~~re&amp;~lonal travel, but untO
now we dldn' t know the full scope
of the trilla.
Booze, and plenty of It, flows
freely - . which Is not to- be
confu.led with "free." You pay
the bill so globetrottlng lawmakers can have plenty of liquor for
"representational purposes."
That's how congressional dlgnltarles solemnly explain the cases
of hooch packed onto mUitary
jets befOre every departure of an
official delegation.

•1tepre~e~~tatlonal

purplll'!""
meau that the lawmakers need
liquor to entertain their hosts In
foreign .countries. Evidently
these fol'l!lgn hosts subscribe to
the BYOB philosophy of
partying.
The Army Inspector general
Investigated the expenses of
mUitary escorts wbo act u
travel guideS for congreulonal
delegatloDs abroad. A report of
that Investigation obtained by
our associate Stewart Harris
reveals that members of Con·
gress themselves occasionally
111\blbe the taxpayer-financed

spirits. A "control room" (a k a
"hoapltality suite") Ia set up bY
the mUitary escorts at every stop
and II stocked with liquor and
munchies.
Lawmakers have been known
to hold meetlnp and entertain
forelin dignitaries In the room,
but they also kick back there,
military escort Staff Sgt. J,
Carroll Creekmur told Army
Investigators.
The Army was looking Into
controls on the cash that the
military escorts take overseas to

~HU;R.
1$..

.,_,, .,., thtl 'War on Drug#' ~
.tllliiw,
6Chtldi.Jd«J to thtl 'War on .
Llltflr' p«J(JJtt ... ..
"

you·,.

f

pay for mlacellaneous congres.
atonal expenaea. In the p~.
the Inspector general stumbled
onto several tntere~tlng facts
a)Wit lht hablta bf our globetrot·
tbtf lawmakers and the mUitary
escorts who must cater to their
every whim.
Tile Army can be a little
sensitive about acting as bar·
tender to Congress, so several
years aao Army officials started ',
having the liquor · delivered
. rather than sending uniformed
Gls to the store to stock up.
As much as some drink, ·;
lawmakers often touch· . 'Clown · ,
stateside before they can .finish •
off every last drop. Here aaaln ·
the Army takes pains to make
sure each trip doesn'tlookllkean
airborne party. The boOle Is
discreetly unloaded througll an
elevator and packed Into a van.
One escort, Sgt. Cloyed . Riddle,
told the Inspector general, "If
there's press or somebody out
there, tbey. kind of frown on It,
unloading that kind o! stuff,
cases of beer."
Where do the leftovers end up?
The Army hosts "photo parties"
for the delegation to reVIew.and .
pick up anapshots from the trip,
and the liquor Is brDIJiht ouV
again for tbose parties. ·
If the liquor Ia not used for a
photo party, It Is reopened for
Army Christmas parties.
The Inspector general'slnves·
ligation did not tally up tbe Uciuor
costs and .did not change much. .
Thedelegatlonscontlnuetobrlnc
your own bottles and the service~
continue to throw parties with the
leftovers.

Bishop bars pro-choice politician
WA'SHINGTON (NEA) There have been slgnlftcan developments In various stories
reported In past weeks In The
Wagman File. Here are the latest
details:
- At Its recent meeting In
Baltimore, Catholic bishops approved a new get-tough policy on
abortion. Under the ruling, Cathollc politicians who want to
remain In the church would have
to abandon active pro-choice
positions.
The bishops downplayed possl·
ble actions that might be taken
against pro-eholce politicians
ltke Sens. Ted Kennedy and
Danlel Moynihan.
But already, wtthln days of the
meeting, one bishop bas acted.
San Diego's conservative bl·
shop Leo T. Maher has barred
Catholic California Assemblywoman Lucy Kllea from receiving
the sacraments, Including communlon, because of her mUitant
pro-choice stance In a current
special election for an open state
senate seat.
Kllea has run television ads
saying voters shollld elect her
because she will see that Callfor·
nla remains. pro-choice. She bas
made abortion her primary campalgn Issue.
The bishop's action might

actually backfire. With polls
showing that 71 percent of
CallfOrnlansapproveofabortlon,
political observers believe the
action wUI work In Kllea's favor.
She Is now expected to win
what was a highly contested
race.
• rbmputer makers consistently have denied that electromagnetic radiation emissions
from computer terminals pose
any health hazard.
Typically, the computer Industry acknowledges that VOl's do
emit loW levels of etectromagnetic radiation, but their experts
argue strongly- even In the face
of a growing list of studies to the
contrary- that those levels pose
no health rlak.
Now,lnamovethathascaught
the rest of the compull!r Industry
off guard, mM has announced
that ltwlllbecometheflrstmajor
eomputermaker to acid electromagnetic shielding to Its
terminals.
The company • however • contlnues to deny that any health
hazard exists. It Insists It Ia
making the change because of
user concerns and because severa! European countries have
recently Introduced standards
that would prevent unshielded
sc~ns from being ~ld there.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. IUPll The third fliht between Sugar
Ray Leoll&amp;l'd and Roberto Duran
was dull enOUgh to make the fans
chant "No mas" to the dec;adelong rivalry between two boxers .
whose betler days are behind.
Actually, the crowd used
stronger language to expreu
their displeasure at rlnplde and
probably In closed circuit sites
and In front of television sets
around tile world. In a fliht only
Lf!9nard and the anti-boxing
American Medical Aasoclatlon
could like, Leonard danced his
way to a unanimous 12-round
declalon over Duran.
Leonard outpuDCbed Duran
227-84 and landed nearly all the
meaningful punches In the fiasco
that drew boos from the fans
throughout.
"I think this Is the result or
Roberto Duran being 38-years·
old," Leonard summed up. "He
Is a veteran, however, and he
came to flgllt. My lep really got
me In and out. That was the game
plan (to move).
"I knew he was going to be
tough, but speed would be the key
falter."
Duran repeated · charges he
made before the fight that judges
In the .United States favored
Leonard.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

@llleCIIt:lltfiRl ft;;r.19'11,__..

"I came here to fight," Duran
LEONARD RETAINS Trl'LE - Suaar Rll)'
Leoaard aenda contender Robert.o Duran nellna
In the sixth round of tbelr WBC Iuper

One thing Americans are entitled to expect out of the Malta
mini-summit Is some effective
pressure by our pal Gorbachev
on his singularly uncooperative
fellow communists In Central
America.
I realize there are limits to
what Gorbachev can reasonably
be expected to do about tbe
Sandlnlsta regime In Nicaragua
or the FMLN terrorists In El
Salvador. The fOrmer supply and
encourage the latter, and are In
turn supplied and encouraged by
Fidel Castro, who publicly disapproves of perestroika and Gorbachev's policies In general. It Isn't
as simple as lnsllting that
Gorbschev get on the phone to
Castro and tell him to cut It out.
On the other hand, the Soviet
Union remains such mainstay as
the communist world enterprise
has these days, both financially
and mllllartly, and neither Castro nor Ori!!Ba could afford to
dlaregard a blunt request from
Mikhail Gorbachev to atop mak·
Ina his life Impossible.
Here he Is, doing his best to
per.uade President Susb to
cooperate In a mutual diplomatic
and mUitary llaJtd.down that will
effectlwly end the Cold War and
(juat maybe) eoable Gorbacbev
to racue tbe SoYtet eecmomy,
and thele two clowns are fomellt·
lng disorder and terror all along
the 1plne of Central America.
Just a few -a
the
Salvaran guerrWaa tauDcbed
amu•tveattackontbecountry'l
capllal city, In an ob\lknul effort
to destroy govenuneatal c.redJ.
blllty and clvlliU morale. Tbe
effort wu flillnl Ylllbly wheD
ICIIIIebocly ruthleul,y murclered

six liberal Catholic priests- the
equlvalent of mouth-to-mouth
resuscllatlon for the FMLN,
since the atrocity was quickly
blamed on "right-wing death
squads." (How do we know they
were rlght·wtna? Why, they were
all wearing Salvadoran mUitary
unifOrms, that's how. I'm surprlaed they weren't also wearing
big •liDS reading - In English "I am a member of a rlght·wtng
death squad.")
But that epllode, whoever was
actually responsible for It, barely
had time to register on American
public opinion before a plane
loaded wltb Soviet surface-to-air
mlasUes took ott from a Nlcara·
guan airstrip and then unh&amp;ppUy
crasbed In El Salvador en route
to Its deltlnatlon: the FMLN
guerrUias.
S&amp;lvadoran President Crlstlanl broke off diplomatic relations
with Nicaragua when the plane' a
cargo wu discovered. But there
was no comparably dramatic
gesture to make when a defector' I Up led S&amp;lvadoran police to
dig up the prem!RI of a well·
known American "peace·
worker" (! ) named JeDDifer
Jean Cuolo, formerly of
ComteOtlcllt.
'1'1111.youqlady. wllo bas beeD
AIMrll:llll eaqr011 ~CIISuSalvadol'ua
NPJUentattw ot an "ecumenl·
cal aroup" called Cbrtatlan Edu·
cation Seminara, bad tbe prCJb.
tern of explalnln&amp; to the
aulhorttlel wllat IIVtl'al thouland I'OIIIIdl of ammunition, two
dozn SO-millimeter mortar
• . .lla, - - 1 bloc:!rl of plastic
explollvel, and a biiDCII ot
electric limen were
burled

. .· .

Robert Wagman '

'"l'hlslsamarket-Grlvenattua- ·
tlon, notahealthorsafetylssue," among the Jo-t of any prime
said IBM's project Jnlln&amp;ger minister lntbllcentlll)'. 'l'berels
Paul Snayd. He also said that now a growing question about
IBM would not advertise tbe wbetber she may be asked to step
change "because we don't want doWn by her own Conservative
to alarm people," nor would It Party-lfltbecomesclearltwm.
consider retrofitting the mUIIons . lose parliament with her 81 party
oflBM screens In use.
leader.
But those In the lndustey who
A newly released Harrta' poll
do believe emlsslona present a shows that two-thlrda of voer•
bealtb risk are pleued IBM's feel Mn. Thatcher shcnlid quit
decision.
before tbe next aeneral electiOn.
"I'm conftdent other computer
Mrs. Thatcher's respome to
manufacturers will now follow this bad news has been tjplcal
IBM's lead," said Michael Hiles, defiance. .She bas previously won
president of NoRad, which manu- three general elections and Is
factures an electromagnetic em- . already the longest-serving Brltlsslon shield. "But now Is the Ish prime minister In this
time to also focus on the dangers century.
from the 40 million screeus·
Only a few weeks ago she
already In use in American announced her Intention of seek·
homes and businesses."
tng a fourth term and then
- During the late summer, retiring. But now she says that
several public opinion polls she Intends to run, and win, at'
showed that BritiSh Prime Mints- least twice more,
ter Margaret Thatcher's popuHowever, the Market Opinion
larlty was dropping sharply. poll showed that 23 percent of
However, several British com· Conservative respondents be•
mentators bellevE'd that because Ueve Mrs. Thatcher should quit
Thatcher would not have to call a
before the next election. More
new election for almost two than 30 percent of those saying
years, she would have enough they are Conservatives said they
time to repair her Image and win now favor former defense minisanother term.
ter _ and Thatcher toe _
However a new series of polls Ml h 1 H
ltl
·
shows that her popularity Is lea~e~.e
ese ne as party ·

-una

do..,

ll

In her garden.
There Is a limit to how
sophisticated and above-It-all
our leaders can afford to be a bout
this sort of thing. We are being
set up to regard Gorbachev as
something altogether new and
dttferet In the Soviet firmament,
and I'm prepared to agree that he
may be all of that. But If he
seriously wants to cool commu-

.Today in history
By Vnlled P..- Jnlel'DM!onal ·
Today Is Friday, Dec. S. the 342nd day of 1989 with 23 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward full.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and saturn.
. ·
.
Those born on this date are under the sign of S&amp;gittarlus. They ·
Include Ell Whitney, Inventor of the cotton !lin, In 17~ General
Motors founder William Durant In 1861; FinniSh CoffilKJSf!l' ·Jean . '
Slbellus In 1.865; Mexican tnurallllt Diego Rlv~a In 1886; humo,ut
and artist James Thurber In 1894; acton Lee J. Cobb ln.19U and
MaxlmUian Schell In 1930 (age 59); enlertalner $ammy Davia Jr.ln
1925 (age 64); comedian Flip Wilson In 1933 f•Kl! 116); IJ.'IIh nutlst
James Galway In 1939 laae50); rock musician Jim Morrison In 19a, ,
and actress Kim Basinger In 19113 (age 36).

HOUSTON (UP!)- Michigan .
State linebacker Percy Snow,
who earlier this week won the
Butkus Award, was named
winner of the Lombardi Award
Thursday night, becoming the
first Spartan to be named college
football's top lineman.
The 6-foot-2, 240-pound senior
from Canton. Ohio, was selected
over Colorado linebacker Kanavis McGhee, Southern Cal defen·
slve tackle Tim Ryan and Notre
Dame nose tackle Chris Zorich.
Snow earlier thiS week was
named the nation's top collegiate
linebacker. He was also the first
Spartan to be a finalist for the
Lombardi Award.
"It feels really great. especially after winning the Butkus
Award," Snow said. "I dldn' t
think I would win them both. I
really didn't think about winning,
but I felt confident about my
c.hances.
"The other three guys had just
as good a chance. When I was
younger I knew I had a lot of
problems. I didn't know If I was
going to see the light at. the end of
the tunnel, b.lit I knew I was going
to have loget up and work hard If
I wanted to be a success.
"Accepting this award Is not
going to make It any easier for .
me In life. Of course, there will be
greater expectations."
The four finalists were honored
Thursday night at lhe 20th annual

Lombardi Award dinner, attended bY more than1,000guests.
Snow was presented the 40-pound
block of gran lte named after the
legendary Vince Lombardi.
Proceeds from the dinner
benefit the American Cancer
Society. Lombardi died of cancer
In 1970. Last year's winner was
Auburn's Tracy Rocker.
Former Chicago Bears running back Gale Sayers gave the
keynote address.
Snow finished his career with
46t total tackles, only the second
Spartan to break the 400-tackle
barrier. The senior led the Big
Ten this IM!ason wtth 163 tackles,
Including 94 solO, and wtll lead
the Spartans against Hawaii
Dec. 25 In the Aloha Bowl.
Snow had no less than 12
tackles In any game and had 23
against Dllnols. He Is expected to
be Mlcblian State's · seVenth
first-round pick In the NFL draft
In seven years.
"People thought I was going to
be a Prop 48 player and people
always said I would never make
It, academically or otherwise,"
Snow said earlier. "\\'ell, being
here with these players proves I
have made 11."
McGhee, a 6-5, 240-pound junIor, had 75 tackles, Including 46
solo stops, for C.o lorado this
season. The Buffaloes were first
In the Big Eight In scoring
defense and fewest touchdowns

Scoreboard ...
This week's games

nlst Initiatives In Central Amer·
lca, he can find ways of cooling
them.
.
I serve notice, here and now,
that my willingness to go along
wtth the proposition that Gorbachev really wants to reform Is
going to be pretty tightly tied to
developments in Central AmerIca. Let reform start there.
.•

.

mlddlewelpt title bo•t Tbundll)' illlllt 18 LU
ve,aa. Leeaard retained the mle . with •
unanimous deelslon. (UPI(

MSU player wins Lombardi award

Make Gorbachev cool Nicaragua wul~m Rusher

aao.

... ~
,..,
.......

'

Taxpayers pay bar. bill for lawmakers

Bush fears Americans may
want troop out of Europe
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White Rouse Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Bush Is reluctant to say the Cold War
Is over despite the new era that has emerged In superpower relations
as a result of the Malta summit talkS with Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev. And he has a candid reason.
On the eve of ThankSgiving, Bush delivered an address to the nation
and called on Gorbachev to "end the Cold War once and for all."
But at a news conference In Brussels, asked If the Cold War had
ended, he ~ed that "we're fooling around with semantics here. He
said the t ~ni was a code word and be feared It would "send different
stgnals"·t o different people."
·The Cold 'War got Its name when Winston Churchill proclaimed at
Missouri's Fulton College In 1946 that an "Iron curtain" had
desCended In Europe.
Bush displayed his candor with reporters when he said that' 'things
have moved dramatically" In Eastern Europe with the overthrow of
totalitarian regimes. "But If I signal to you there'sno Cold War, then
it's 'what are you doing with troops In Europe?"'
So why shouldn't Americans think that after all theSe years the
309,000 troops In Europe could be reduced drastically. partlculai-ly In
view of the reduction In East·West tensions, tl\e weakening of the
Warsawfi,,,;t; and the Increasing prosperity of Wesll!rn European
nallons·'l!f,Hiittling them to contribute more to their own defense.
But Bush won't hear It Before the sea change In Eastern Europe he
proposed that the United States and Soviet troops In Europe be
reduced to 275,000 each. The president assured NATO allies on his
stopover In Brussels after the summit that the troops would remain as
long as they are needed and In significant numbers.
So the president makes It clear that he does not want Americans
·thinking that once the Soviet threat has truly lessened there will be a
"peace dividend" with funds returning to the Treasury for "worthy
causes," including pressing social programs and the urgent need to
bring the nation's bridges, highways and other public facilities up to
safety standards.
So the new euphoria that the United States and the Soviet Union can
be friends, working together, Is not designed to spUI over so that
suildenly there will be more money for the needy. Bush said lfthere Is
any money around It will go to reduce the defiCit.
"Why will there always have to be a NATO lfth~re Is no potentlallly
for a third world war, Bush was asked.
"Well, If you want to project out100years or take some years off of
that. you can look to a Utopian day when there might not be. But ...
t~t day hasn't arrived, and they (NATO aiUes) agree with me. And
s&lt;Y·the United States must stay Involved.
"What we don't want to do Is send the signal of decoupllng ... from
Nato, particularly at this highly senltlve time," he said.
It appears that even when wars and conflicts are resolved, some of
the money thai has been poured Into military programs cannot be
sh,lfted to programs to Improve the quality ·of life of Americans,
particularly those living below the poverty level. It Is noteworthy thai
Bush thinks that the United States should keep a top heavy mnttary
bll'dget when war clouds have dissipated. That Is not realistic nor will
It prevaiL
.
Congress and the American people will eventually seek a
justification for sending troops to protect Europe after Germany Is
urillled and remains In the Atlantic Alliance. The justification also
wOI be severely tested whE'n AmeriCans become convinced that the
affluent people In a Europe "whole and free" do not need their
military support, only their good relations and economic cooperation.
So the world Is changing on many fronts and rto matter what the
president says, things will not be the same. .

Leonard retains crown with
12-round decision over Duran.

Page 2-The Deily Sa•dloal
Pon'•ov Mi:ltl1port. Ohio ·

;.

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You Are Invited To The
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On December 14, 15 &amp; 16
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N.w-1'.,. ... C.. . . n (el)

: WATCH FOR SIGNS

GRAVELY

ltJIIPil-)
.\ IN•- o1Mu81mda.lllc.

ait~G,.. .. IM.O••IIIfta

On this date In history:
.
•
In 188&amp;, deJeiates fr01'!125 unions fOunded the American Felleratlol\ · '
of Labor, forerunner of the modern AFL-CIO, In Columbaa, Olljo,
In 00, the United States, Britain and Austr.alla decla~ war..on , · '
Japan.
.
.
.
.
·
In lNI, the Cbtm• Nallonalllt aowrnment, defeated by tbe
Communllll, rwtrealed from the matllland to tile Island ot TalWU.
In 1880, tanner Beatie Jolla 1-.m wu allot to death out~~* bll
apartna~t boiiM ID New YOrk City.
.
·
In 1988, Secretary of State Georp Shultz told 1ft Houle Foretan
Affaln Committee the transfer of Iran &amp;1'11'11 money to Nin.raiUII
Contras was Illegal.
'

He•rs

"2 IIOW .Ill STOCI"

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......... v.. ..

Mllllldapm.• , ... ear ..
Otltrhela at 011.. Norlleu
DtaMa IIi Aollll.. t•dl)

;

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GO IN THE s·NOW!!

New ....., . . . . . . .....

HlnmaiC.,...
Mull lJaiOa a1 ••l . . btf'l

Pro results

was down In the fourth round of
and rocked the Panamanian.
that bout, gave up the 175-pound
Leonard began the damage light heavyweight championship
wttb a left hook to the head that aster the fight .
sent Duran Into 'Ills own comer.
He beld his super middle·
Leonard landed a right lead to wetgbt lrown with a 12-round
the head and left hook. then spun draw with Thomas Hearns June
Duran around and landed a right 12, despite going down twice.
and two left hooks In mid ring.
Leonard won the WBC welterLeoll&amp;l'd dug a left hook to the weight title wtth a 15th-round
bodY and followed with a right· knockout of Wilfred Benitez Nov.
left combination that knocked 30, 1979. He lost that crown on a
Duran off balsnce.
153round decision to Duran June
Strangely, It wu Leonard who 20, 19110 In Montreal and regained
was cut In the fliht. His lower lip It when Duran quit In the eighth
bled from tbe fourth round on pnd round ofthe "No mas" fight Nov.
Duran opened slit on 'Leonard's 25, 19110 In New Orleans.
rlibt eye In the 11th. Still, Duran
Leonard also won the World
stood passively through most of Boxing Association junior mid·
the 12th and final round despite dlewelght Iitle from Ayub Kalule
trailing by wide margins and June 25, 1981 and took·the WBC
looking at an opponent with blood middleweight crown with a stunstreaming down the side of his · nlng 12-round decision over Marface.
vin Hagler Aprn 6, 1987.
Leonard wu most effective
Duran won the WBC middlewhen bouncing right-hand leads weight title In his previous bout, a
off Duran's chin and fought an 12-round spllt decision over Iran
outstanding defensive fight. Du· Barkley last Feb. 24. He won his
ran's flnt meaningful punch was first world title as a lightweight,
a short right to the head midway stopping Ken Buchanan In the
through the fourth round and he 13th round of a June 26, 1972 bout
rarely bit Leonard with solid at the age of 21.
combinations.
He also won the WBC welter·
A confused Duran twice weight championship from Leoheaded to the wrong corner after nard and captured the WBA
rounds bUt was never In serious junior middleweight Ill 1e with an
danger.
eighth-round knockout of Davey
Leonard weighed 160 and Du· Moore June 16, 1983.
ran was 158 but Leonard did not
capture Duran's 160-pound title
because the fighters' camps
signed an agreement after
GRAVELV TRACTOR
Thursday's weigh-In, saying only
SALES 8r SERVICE
204C-8t.
..........,, OH .
the 168-pound crown would be at
stake.
Ftll &amp; Willer
Leonard, of Potomac. Md., was
OPEN TUESDAY THR'-' FRIDAY.
9 A .M.· li P.M.
guaranteed $1;1.6 million and
SATURDAY
9 A.M.-1 P.M.
Duran $7.6 mUllan for the bout
CLOSED MONDAYS
wblch was televised around the
world on closed circuit and
~THE
pay-per-view.
Leonard won the super middle-'
weight title and WBC light
heavyweight title with a ninth·
round knockout of Donny La·
lo;nd;e;,N;,;,ov;,;..;7,;,,.19iii88···Leo·na-r,;;d;.,w.;,;,ho_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Sports briefs

........... .1&amp;11111.

"nlhi&amp; ... G,_.

~

me.''

Leonard retained his World
Boxing Council super middleweight title and denied Duran,
allowed, and second In total
the WBC mlddlewlght champion,
defense.
a chance to Join him as a
Ryan, a 6-5, 260-pound senior,
lhamplon In five weight classes.
was a four-year starter for the Leonard outpunched Duran 227·
Trojans. He flniSbed the season 84 and won bY wide margins on
with 96 total tackles, 19.saclls and all three judges' cards befOre a
forced three fumbles. The 12th· disappointed crowd of 16,305 at
ranked Trojans will meet No. 3 the new Mirage Hotel and
Michigan In the Rose Bowl.
Casino.
Zorich, a 6-1, 268-pound junior,
Judge Bob Loglst of Belgium
finished the season with 92 scored It 120-110, Jerry Roth of
tackles, Including 43 solo stops,
Nevada scored It 119-109 and Joe .
five for losses, ttu'ee sacks, a
Cortez of New Jersey had , It
forced fumble, two recoveries 116-Ill.
and two broken-up. passes.
Leonard, 33, won the rubber
match In his bltll!r decade-long
rivalry with the 38-year-old Pan·
amsntan. The two split 19M
fights - Duran won a decision
Baseball
June 20, 1980 and then stunned
The brother of free agent Robin
Yount says the American the boxing world bY uttering "no
mas" and quitting In the· eighth
League's Most Valuable Player
Is notln financial trouble. United round of their Nov. 25, 19M
Press International has learned rematch. He waited more than
Robin Yount owes the Milwaukee , n lne years for a chance to erase.
Brewers more than $5 million on the blot or bls legendary career
but fought without fire or passion
loans of $5.7 mUUon he took from
Thursday
night.
the club In his last two contracts.
Leonard Improved to 36-H
while Duran fell to 115-8. Leonard,
Sklllla
who
fancies himself a crowd·
Matti Nykaenen of Finland,
was content to keep his
pleaser,
winner of three gold medals at
the Calgary Olympic Games last distance from Duran despite
year had the best performance of repeated boos and jeers frcxn
the day Thursday during trahtlng discontented fans who paid frcxn
runs for the Subaru Ski Jump belween $100-800 tor tickets. He ·
International. Nykaenen has tried some of the taunting tactics
jumps of 82.5, 89 and 89.5 meters that worked In New Orleans,
Thursday on the 70 meter jump, slicking out bls chin, wlndmllllng
located alongside Its 90 meter his right hand whUe jabbing with
sister on the slopes of Whiteface his left and shuffling his feet.
Duran did not quit this tlme, but
Mountain In Lake Placid.
offered little ~slstance.
Leonard was at bls besttbefew
Soccer
times
he stepped Inside to ex.
Defending champion Argen·
change
punches. His best round
Una, Italy, Brazil, West Ger·
many, Belgium and England are
the top seeds for the 1990 World
Cup. The draw for the 24-team
tournament Is Saturday In Rome.
.. . Chilean goalkeeper Roberto
Rojas lost an appeal to soccer
au lhorltles and will be barred for
Ute from International $C)CCer for
faking an Injury during a World
Cup qualifier with Brazil Sept. 3.

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Pri..,Gam•
at.__
':at,.m.

said. "I knew Leonard was going
to clown around. Leonard-didn't
beat me. Flg~tlng against Leonard and fighting In the United
States Is Impossible.
"I don't think Leonard ~at

Duran tor the final 90 seconds.

Boboorlbon ..Cdellrlll&amp;toJJI)' Cl»cor·
rt• !1'"1 ...... Ia . . . . . dlro&lt;t to

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1912 EAGU FIONT WHEEL DIIYE

$1495

"nOP • AND CHEQ OUT OUR COIIPLm
. . OP fiONI WHHL DRIVE CARS"

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Jim
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•an••

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE
CADILAC, GEO ..c.

PO_.,Y, 0.0

''

�-~.

Govermnent outlines case for seizing Lincoln

Georgetown tops North C8•tolina, 93-81

BEU.. STUFII'8 IT - Georretew•'• Mnto• Bellllollll . . &amp;o uae
buket after be s&amp;ldfa 1ft NIL Nertlo Carolaa clef 11 • • • - Kevla
.Middea aad Mui .Weialll'eiiL Tile Royu woa, tJ-111. (UPI)

Redrnen trample
Cincinnati Bible ·
Cincinnati Bible was all but afterward, Rio Grande's defense
shut down in the last three prevented the Golden Eagles
minutes at Lyne Center Thurs- !rom scoring again until Warren
day as the Rio Graade Redmen postl!d the final basket at 43
surged to a 114-63 victpry with a seconds.
primarily youthful lineup finishThe Redmen led !rom the field
ing the job.
in shooting with . 53.6 percent
''We had good intensity and (44-82) and netted 17 of 23 foul
pressure and we made some shot attempts for 73.9 percent.
things happen. I felt very good Cincinnati Bible sank 23 of 56
about that," Redmen Coach John attempts on field goals for 41
Lawhorn said as his team percent, and was 66.6 percent
bounced back from a 99-95 (14-21) from the tree throw line;
overtbne loss to Urbana earlier The Redmen recorded 33 rethis week.
bounds to the Golden Eagles' 25.
- "Our young people played
Double-figure performances
well. and Brad Schubert had one for Rio Grande were offered by
of his better nights, defensively," Jeff Brown with 19poinlo and Ove
Lawhorn added. "We did some rebounds, while Gary Harrison
things very well."
added 18 points and elibt aslists.
The infusion of the freshman Darius Williams had 11 markers
bench came after Rio Grande and Schubert connected for 10
esta~lished a 24-point halftime
points and five assists.
lead, supplied In part by Tony
Besides Taylor, Cincinnati Bi·
Ewing's contribution of 14 of his ble drew 12 points from Aristl!de
· total 25 game points during the Epbron and 11 points and 11
first peri~. Ewing was also the rebounds from Warren.
Redmen's top rebounder with
The Golden Eagles, now 5-7,
six.
host Johnson Bible CoUege on
· Jim Cor rona's Ciocinnati Bible Saturday afternoon. The Redclub was down 4-0 before it put men (5-2) face Tttlln at home,
any points on the board, and only Saturday at 7:30p.m.
came close at 16:04 when Tim Box .con:
Warren's baslcet put the Golden
810 GIIANDE (lit) - Gary
Eagles behind bY two (11-6). The Harrison, 7-1-1-18; · Mark Erslan,
Redmen then embarked on the 1-1-2-7; Lyndell Snyder, 0-1·0-3;
Orst of their periOdic scoring Brad Schubert, 2-2-0-10; Terry
spurts to lead by 20 (31-11) at Farley, 2·2-6; Joe Edwards,
8:02, despite the efforts of Cincin- 0-1-1; Gregg Frist, 2-1-5; Tony
nati Bible guard Jeff Taylor, who Ewing, 11-3-25; Darius Williams,
led all visiting scorers with 13.
4-3-11; Jeff Brown, 2-4-3-19; Tim
Playing without the services of Christian, 2-1-5; Troy Donaldson,
center John Lambcke - side- 2-0-4. TOTAlS aH-17-114.
lined due to an ankle injury at
CINCINNATI BIBLE (83) Urbana - Rio Grande inserted Aristede Ephron, f-4-12; Jeff
ll'eshman Troy Donaldson in Taylor, 1-3-2-13; Chuck Souder,
Lambcke's place, only to have 3-0-6; Rob Hall, 1-3-5; Greg
Oonaldson fail viet bn to ankle Zbnmerer, 3·3-9; Michael Wilkintrouble.
son, 2-1-5; Tim Warren, 5-1-11;
Canal Winchester standout Roger Unk, 1-0-2. TOTAlS,~
Lyndell Snyder broke the cen- IUS.
tury mark with 3: 45 remaining
Ralltlmueore: RloGraadeH,
on a 3-point shot, and shortly CIICIIUIII&amp;I Bible 30.

Gullett named minor league
pitching coach for Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (UPI)
former Cinclanati Reds pitching
Slar Don Gullett will be the
pltchiDg coach for the club's
Class AA Chattanooga, Tenn.,
farm team next season, team
officials announced Thursday .
Gullett, 38, compiled a 91-44
record and a 3.03 earned run
average for the Reds from 1970
fhrougb 1976. He finished his
e11reer with the New York
Yankees in 1977-78, going 111-6.
Since retiring from plll:hlng,
Gullett has been a farmer In
Maloneton, Ky., and also in the
trucking business.
Tbe Reds also announced that
next season Rich Bombard will
be a roving pitching Instructor ln
the club's farm system, Terry
Abbott will be pitching coach tor
the Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Class A

team and Mack Jennlnp will be
pltchlna coach for the Bllllnp,
Mont., rookie team.

.,.,.. WINBM
New yon, .. • playp'ouad •• u1 and a travel 1IIC lllat
UPI8pu 61 Wrtler
perfllru 1r Ill 1M nw.t aeue ot Wllllld rival any NB4 team. After
II wu billed u tile premier the ..-d. He drives, spins, ciiJII, . . . . ll1e year .. Hawal~ tile
matc:llup of tile IIIIUIUral ACC· Pll
llelllnd his back and teun flew bome tor twoda)'l and
Bl&amp; East Cbal)!qe Series. Tbe 1 e nlly maUl lite miserable theJI flew to Alabama tor 1 1ame
long awaited matchup between for the 01'11 wltiDn. But It's not before c:omlttlto New York for
two of college basketball's top euy for 1111 coach to watch.
tonl&amp;ht'a aame.
PJ'OII'am&amp;. And Georgl!tOWD and
"We have a lot of WOfk to do
''Eltller he's eo In&amp; to kW me or
North Carolina did not I'm eoln&amp; to kW him," said and then we 10 to Iowa,'' Aid
disappoint.
Georgetown Coacll Jolln Thomp- Smith. But It Ia cert'alaty &amp;Ond to
Meeting for the first time since son. "But we both suffer peace-· play &amp;Ond leanul, maybe we can
1982 wben, the Tar Heels beat the fully and have a mutual gel better. That' a tile object rlaflt
now.u
Hoyas 63-62 for tile NCAA title, undenlalldlng."
Thompson was pleased _with
1D the only other eame involv·
the natiOn's No. 3 and No. 15
teams matched up In the final his team's performance, pardcu· log a Top Twenty team, No. 18
game of the series with school larly the 111ards. ''llilouPiallof Nord! CaroUna State beat Duand conference pride on the line. them did a &amp;Ond Job. At t111a point qlll!llll! 122·77.
AI RaJel&amp;ll, N.C., Rodney MonMark Tllbnon scored 2'1 points, of the year, everytlllng 11 nne&lt;!
and
It
ellould
be.
Tbe
only
learn
roe
scored. 22 points and Bryant
Alonzo Mourning added 18 and
thaty
l'w
aeen
io
far
t111a
year
Featu had 211 to pace North
Dlkembe Mutombo had 10
CaroUna State. Tom Guallotta
blocked sllots tO lead Georgetown that looked ftuld was Kauu."
1be two conterenceo are con- added 18 polllta, Chrll Cot'C!hlsna
to a 93-81 victory over North
tracted
to meet the next four 15, Brian Howard 13 and Mickey
CaroUna, evening the series
between the two conferences at years an Idee that Thompoon is Hinnant had 10 as the Woltpack
yet to embrace.
Improved to 6-1. The Dukes, 1-2,
4-4.
"Not one bit," was Ills reply were led bY Mark Steven10n with
Going Into the g&amp;JI)e everyone
knew about Mourning and Mu· when uked If he's changed his 2'1 points. Brian Allaeimino added
tombo, who combined last year mind about the Mrles. ''I dlda't 12, and Tony Petraea and Clayfor an NCAA record for blocked bale wllat I iflld totally on ton Adams had 10 each for .
shots. But what Georgetown competition. But as J Hid, I Duqlll!nse.
1D oilier games, II was: Beaton
unveiled to the college ~sketball respect the man th&amp;t made the
world was a backcourtthat Is just declalon and that's wily I went Colle&amp;e 92, Brown 63; Fordham
along with II. But I 11111 don't 77, Army 64; Lelll&amp;ll !Ill, Colgate
as deadly.
agree
with II."
54; Vlrglnla 73, VIllanova 65;
Tillmon, a senior, hit 11 or 17
Thataune
was
also
a
matchup
sbots from the field bu 1 it was a
freshman that had people shak- of two of llle aame'a areatest
coaches. North c.J'olina Coach
ing their heads and talking.
Freshman David Edwards Dean Sl:nllll and Thompeon are
scored 12 points, several coming also areat friends. .
"John had them extremely
off spectacular drives to the
any
basket and handed out seven well prepared mucll better than I
assists to help the Hoyas Improve did out team," nld Smith. 'They
are a betll!r team than we are,
to 4-0.
Edwards, who averaged 41 certainly today."
The Tar Heels, f-3, have had a
points a game last year at
Andrew Jackson. Jf!gh School In rugged ear)y schedule so far this

...,_.. ll11lletlllll IJlllllll ..tp

.........

................. 111'*11_.._
r

1&amp;1 U 8ol. .lll&amp;l -

Tl 'v, Dec. u.
Ill 1 1 a a&amp; •·e

....

n Traoe,

Galla • Ou Bill, pJIIIIII
KJ'pr Creek u 8J
w VIJIII!J,.,..
~

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Attorneys for A.rizona businessman
Chllrles Keatln&amp; Jr. began their
le11al challenge of the govern.
ment's seizure of Lincoln Sav·

~~~!~dm~:~~~~c;;.t!:~r~~

. '",['be government has taken
over Uncoin and we're here .to
challenge the conservatorship,"
Charles Stern, a Keating lawyer
toid.'U.S. District Judge Stanley
SPQrkln on Thursday.
Keating's company, American
Continental Corp., ·of Phoenix,
claims ~hat regulators d,ld not
have oufficlent sl&amp;tutory cause to
•etze LlncoJD on Aprill4.
Protectini •Lincoln's ~eposl·
tors from losses is expected to
, cost taxpayers as much as $2.5
, b!IU_on_. making It the costliest

:flic~:

DAN'S in Mldd..port With 1'11h Ad.',

Raisin Bowl opens ·
football postseason
FRE~NO,

slow down the Fresno State
Calif. I UP I) running
game." .
Fresno State, a team that thrives ·
on the grOIUid, opens .the bowl
The Bulldogs scored 38 of their
season Saturday against Ball 52 offensive touchdowns rushing,
State In the California Raisin
with Jones eetting 14, Carver
Bowl.
nine and Barsotl eight. Barsotti,
Fresno State, the Big West a sophomore, also tbrew for 14
Conference ~hampion, brines a
touchdowns.
10-1 record into the game against
Riley's top receivers . are
the Cardinals, 7-2-2, the Mid- flanker Sean Jones and tight ends
American champions.
EuJene Riley. Ball Stale's run·
The Bulldogs llave relied on nlng game is led bY Bernie
strong rusblng to carry them to Parmalee and Adam Wilson.
victories in their Orst 10 eames.
Fresno State is vulnerable
Ball Stale oUers a more balanced against the pass, giving up more
attack and IS led bY quar!l!rback lllan 205 yards per game but less
David Riley, his league's Offenthan 100 yards on the ground.
sive Player of the Year.
"We've been vulnerable all
Directing the Bulldogs' attack year to a good passlngaltackand
is quarterback Mark Barsotd.
Ball State has a fine passing
On the ground, Fresno State is game with Riley at quarter·
paced by tailback Aaron Carver back," Fresno State coach Jim
(1,248 yards) and fullback Myron Sweeney said. "We're going to
Jones (863) .
have to find a way to keep them
'Those two are as good as any
a lot
"
runners we've faced all year
long," Ball Stale coach Paul
Scbudel Slid. "We bave to take
them both Into consideration in
trying to llgure out a ocbeme to

1

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MilWAY
TAVERN

•

SAIUIDAY,
DEC. 9, 1919

•

"Delli• ..... land"
.......1:11-

sue C0V11 CU1t1
IIIST IE 11

AI 7 and 143
POMEIOY I OHIO

We Are N- Taklns Reaerva-

tleu For Oar New Year'•
Party With Wyoml111 Wolf

aaDee.Je.

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1 YEAR GIFT IUIICIIIPTION ........................... :... t)itf'M1.88
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your tpeefet gift.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

•.

..

company 's consolidated taxes.
Reguaitors claim that'Lincoin
did not owe any taxes and that
American Continental did not
pay any taxes on Lincoln's
behalf. Murphy said the payments amounted to a no-interest
loan !rom Lincoln to its parent.
"It is absolutely prohibited for
a savings and loan to make a loan
to Its parent company," he said.
"The regulation is pretly ex·
pliclt: That one is pretty clean
c.u t."
American Continental has said
previously that It chsnged the
agreement to conform with regu Ia tory wishes and that regulators
approved the revisions.
Murphy also outlined two complex real estate deals involving
Hidden Valley Ranch, an 8,500-

'

.No plans .to cut :132-plane stealth fleet

.
.
Cong1essman seeks
antitrust mvestigation
of. Nintendo InC.

toWn."

4 apud. Sharp trudc.

Jameo Murphy, a lawyer x;epresentlng the Office of Thrift
Supervision, th,e succes~or of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board,

which seized Lincoln, told Sparkin that the four transactions
represen 1 scores of other questionable transactions found by
the government.
"We have literally the lip of the
iceberg," Murphy said. "We
have only four out of a host of
. transactions. There are a lot
more that are just as bad."
The trial will cover four
disputed transactions, including
a controversial tax-sharing plan
that Is the basis lor a $1.1-billlon
civil racketeering suit filed by
regulators against Keating and
others.
·
Under the tax-sharing agreement, Lincoln forwarded $95
million to American Continental
as its share of the parent

e

e

we need to go forward with. "
Rice said the stealth Is needed
for strategic nuclear deterrence
as well as for conventional
bombing missions where its
radar-evading ''stealthiness''
may come in handy.
Rice said more and more Third
World countries are obtaining
the Soviet M!G-29 and advanced
surface-to-air missiles ·that could
threaten the B-52or B -1 bombers,
but not the B-2.
The Air Force secretary sa,ld
fiscal 1991 is "a kind of a
transition year" for the Pen·
lagon. He said the military
budget President Bush will present to Congress in January Is
"inevitably going to have to be a '

kind of holding action, at a lower
fiscal level," pending the out·
come of strategic and conventional arms co)l.trol talks .
He also reinforced the view ,
Bush wm propose a defense
budget that is 2 percent lower
than this year's spending plan,
marking the first time the White
House bas sought a reduction
since President Ronald Reagan
began the military buildup in the
early 1990s. .
"I thl!lk It's going to he
somewhere in the vicinity of the
trendiine that we have seen for
the last five years ... steadily
declining on the order of a couple
percent a year in real terms."
Rice sa.ld.

MEET PAUL

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
PoiMeHias (7 colon)
Painsottia
lcnbts and Tr•s.
Chistmas Codls, foilap lcnbts,
ltniod H..y Tras and Largo Show
Plaots. Uwa and Cut Owislnlas T.-F.- tho Loved Ono't Grove llcdlets,
MowMownt Sprays, C-•Y Yo•.

Hew+•

IWatch for .., Chrittmcos Op• House)
Open Daily 9 AM·!&gt; P.M .
Sunday 1 P.M. -6 P.M .

HUBIAIDS GIEENHOUSE
992-5776

Syracuse, Ohio

,,,

p==o=NDER=-=-::OS~A

Paul E. Kloes ia Senior Vice
President with Fannen Bank.
Paul haA been em.ployed with
Fannen oince 1962. ReoidiiiiJ
in Mlnenville with hla wife,
Gloria, and hio oan, Mlehael,
he Ia aeti•e with tho American
Lqpen, Muonie Bodiee and
the U0111 Oub which he Ia a
former pUt preooidenL Paul
KJoee hao ...,....,.j ao Melp
C•l!mty Recorder. Hio hobbie8
include golf and worki"8 In
hiA yard, He attend• the A.
bury Methodist Chureh of Syraeuoe.

•

''We're Committed To Our
H ometown ... ''

The Shining Light In Banking

IFn J

Farmers
Bank

Your Community Owned Bank
MEMBER FD(C

992-2136

.

98S-338S

221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

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•

Nlntendo did this ''by l!~ectine
physical, contractual and
market barrl~ to access to .
amall bu!lini!U In America and to
•Hush Puppies
•Neturelizer
•Red Wing
conaunlera. ''
' ~
•Kengerooa
•Jubilee
•LA Geer
Nllllepdo's representatives
Issued a sialemet~,t saylq IIIeY
•Tumbleweeds
•Nursemetes
•Cherokee
are contldent their marliletiiiC .
• Coming So~n ........... Fiorahelm • .
practices "comply tully , wlth
U.S. laws" and expresllllf "re.IIIAY SA'IIUAY
. t TO I P&amp;AIIIIAY 11110011 TO S PA
aret" that Eckart sent hla
Jubcommltlee's findings to tbe
.
..-..JJ.- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:._...,;-_ - - - -

.

lean Continental recorded a
pr ofit that s hould have gone to
Lincoln on the purchase.
Amcor Funding, a Lincoln
s ubsidiary, bought the Me morell
stock and sold It to a third party
for $1 million. The third party
sold it to American Continental
four months later for $2 million.
Six months later, th~ compan:9
sold the stock for $13.3 million. •

In our community, we're committed to offer
the kind of services and eersonal atten·
tion you want and need. When you bank
with us, you'll find that we're much more
than just a financial institution, we're a
hometown frien'd.

·

Eckart said Nintendo wili soon
have one of its game systems In
one out of every five •American
l homes and that the company has
done "a• brilliant job Iii market, lng their product. " • . · ·
"But the· slmjile fact..remalns
·, that our subcommittee lnvestlga1lion. has revealed there is no
' competition among the compell·
tors,'' he said. "Our subcommll·
·tee investigation has revealed
-strol)g evidence or a pervasive
pattern and practice bY Nintendo
to unreasonablY res train compel"
ltors from producing, manufacturing and marketlng, computer
'hardware and software in the
video eames Industry."
••

acre planned community sout!twest of Phoenix.
The government alleges that
loans were made bnprudently to
borrowers who could not repay
them - or had no intention of
repaying them _; and who acted
as " straw men" to artificially
boost Lincoln's profits.
Lincoln recorded nearly $15
million in profits on the two
transactiOns and sent 40 percent
of that to American Continental
for taxes when it should not have
recorded any profits on the deals,
Murphy said.
"Our position Is that the
accounting treatment Is Improper. There has to be some
economic reality," Murphy said.
The government's fourth area
of concern is a stock transaction
involving shares of Memorex,
the magnetic tape maker, purchased by a Lincoln subsidiary.
Regulators contend that Amer-

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!

WASHINGTON .. (UP!) - A · Justice Department "without
congressman accused Nintendo providing Nlntendo an opportunof America Inc: of using Illegal Ity to be heard."
marketing practices to win near
Howard Lincoln, Nlntendo's
total dominance of the lucrative senior vice president, was quoted
computer game industry and as saying Eckart's action "was
asked lhe Justice Deparimenrs based on incomplete and , mis·
antitrust division to Investigate.
leading information" given to the
At a, C~pllol Kill news confer· panel "by a competitor, Alar!
.e nce T!iursday ; Rep. Dennis GamesTengen."
Eckart, D-Ohlo, chairman or a
Nlntendo has sued Alar!
House· Small Busl~s anutrust Games, of Milpitas, Calif., for
subcommittee, released a letter allegedly obtaining a copyrighto the Justl'ce Depariment seek- ted Nintendo computer program
ing the Inquiry Into what Eckart In an attempt to crack its
called Nlntendo's "significant security system.
i~tllmidatlon In the retail
Dennis Wood, seniorvlcepresi·
market" to sliDe competition.
dent pt Atarl Games, said the
. Eckart said his request for a company applauded Eckart's
Justice ~partment invesl!ga- action and said "Nintendo has
tion followed a ·lengthy ·Inquiry attempted to force Tengen out of
into Nlntendo' s fl\ar~etin'g prac- the home video game market
tices l&gt;Y his panel's start.
through·&amp;deliberate campaign of
He said Nintendo's antl - distortion , intimidation and
·compeliti"Ce practices may·hllve coercion. I '
Inflated costs for Its popular
•Eckart saidNintendo'saccusa·
computer games, which cost up tion that he received misleading
to S60 each. by "between 20 and 30 Information was "ludicrous" and
percent."
said subcommittee staffers had
Those questionable marketing two lengthy recent meetings with
practices have won Nintendo of Nintendo officials.
Amerlc'a, with headquarters in
Redmond, Wash., abol!t 80 percent of what is projected to be a
$3.4 billion corripu~r games
market in the United Stat.e5 this
year; he said.
·
"Niillendo says you ·can buy
our .rnachlnes bu I you can on)y
play our games,,:· j;:ckart said. ''I
don't think the rules ought to be
constructed that way. . .. The net
, result.is there Is only one·g ame In

THAT'S ·
NEW
EVERY
DAY

a..u•a

thrift rescue ever.
American Continental, which
filed for bankruptcy protection
April 13, wants to retain certain
Uncoin assets so that it can
reorganize Its finances and repay
creditors, including about 22,000
small investors who bought $200
million In now-worthless Ameri·
can Continental debt securities.
During a morning session,
Sporkin heard the government's
opening slatements, an outline of
four complex transactions that
led thrltt regulators to conclude
Lincoln was operating In an
unsafe and unsound manner:

WASHINGTON . (UPI) .-. Air of lime," Rice said.
Force Secretary' Donald Rice
said hi! Is cOnsidering' stretching
Lengthening production of the
prnductmn of thp ·f70 billion B-2 B-2 could raisetheoverallcostof
&amp;tealth bomber pr~am to lower '. the progtam, but lower the
annual costs rather than reduc· annual expense . by stretching
ing the proposed ,132-plane fteet.
spending over a longPr period o!
Rice said Thursday he is time.
"absolutely" oommllted to the
Memben of Congreos howled
' Air Force's !llan to build a11oftbe when the Air Force this year
radar-evading bombers, which released year-I:IS'-year projected
cost· $530 11\lllion ·each. But cos II showing it would need as
·Defense Secretary Dick Cheney much as Sll.f billion in·fiscal1993
, said recently that building the for the stealth program.
·endre fleet fs still open ·to
Eight B-2s were built in fiscal
ques lion.
1989 and three more are expected
The Air• F.orce secretary said tp be'bu.lll this year. Current Air
there are no lmmedlate'plans to · Force projections show five
reduce the' prograrnf but left · bumbers would be built In fiscal
' open the possibility a decision on ' 1991, 10 In 1992, 21 In 1993, 24 in
that issue could be. made In the 1994 and 56 in future years . .
"fairlY dlstant"·future..
.
Rice sald he would sl!'etch
"I thirik 132 Is a good number production of the alrcran, buill.
and, !fltweretobequestioned,ll by the Northrop Corp. or PalmIs something that does not need to ·dale, Calif., only if it could be
be .decided for quite a few years "done efficiently."
to come," Rice told reporters.
"We understand the major
"Any question having to do investnlent that the taxpayer is
wl.th ihe ultima,te 'buy ql!lntlty' · making here and we're doing
is In fact .one for some distant everything we can to hold down
future." Rice Said;
the cost of that program," Rice
," Wearelookloliattheopllonof said. "I continue to see it as an
procuring It over a longer period essential program and one that

AI 1111101 usa CAl IUYII I
luy
Ytld car from IIAII'S
AUtO SAUS and receive S100
Worth of FlEE clothing from

1968 Chevy C-30 •••••••••• S995
Br a r ,. IIIII .,..,. z'•
tl w I lUI, tile to....... IVA&lt;:

s.m

Loulllul Teclt . .
Hounm
81; MJululppl State .. . Otrlllllan Bra!Mn 51; NC-AIIIevllle
71, W••n CUoliDI '10; DllaoiiCIIIc:qo 10, Loyola of Dllaoll 51;
Iowa It, Iowa State 87; Purdue
83, Dllnola State Ill; Soutltern
Dllnoll 74, Eutern Illlllola 58;
1\larabelle&amp;, Texas AAIII 86.
Alao, 11 was: Coanecttcut 79,
Hartford ;14; Jamee MldlloD 102,
Vlrr!nl&amp; Tecll 88; Wtaco111la 69,
Western Dlinola 42; Ore&amp;on 73,
Utab 118: Wyoming ~. McNeese
Stale 110; and ~DI State 10,
San Fraactaco f/1 In double
overUme.
•

OFFEI GOOD DEC. 11111 DEC. 15, 1919
(IHI let Apply To Prior Sales)

The Daily Sentinel Pege-6 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 8, 1989

o.-nbll •• , .

or•

.

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PONDEROSA.

········-·····--···

o 1115 Pooidlo- me.

Gallipolis
Upper River Rd.
Ae~W•

from Airport

�o..wt~~r

e. 1888

T~e Daily Sentine~

' .

·By The Bend
•

and Church
. Ytferans ··
tmorial Hospital

,_,

~~ j~t

: sERVICES

992-7075

Soc_, Au.
Matto,.,r, Olio

214 E. llairi
992·5130 Po•iroy

172 Nwill

IDt

(I

H2·2l11 Pomtrav

•

TRINn"'i &lt;XlNGREGAT!ONAL CHURCH.
O..rch SchJol 9:15 a.m.: won._, Servke
10= ll a Jn. Choir ~hew sal, 1\M.&gt;sdllf, 6: 45 p.m.
under dlrtetlon ct Lois Blr1.
POMEROY CHURa! OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Cor,..,. lllllon Mid Mulberry, Rev.
Thomas Gle&gt; Mcalrv,!*IOO'."N"""" Prer
ley, s. s, Supe.. Surmy School, 9:ll a.m.:
llD"dng...:ntqJ
lO:.J)a.m.:
evGllngii!M::e6
p.m.:--'""""'·
w~.
7p.m

GRACE EPJSCOPAL CHURCH , 326 £ .
MUI Sl., Parnerov. &amp;u~ ooMces: Holy
cornmu.liononi!ThrstSu_.oteacbmont.lL
and comtmed wtrh JT\Ol'"dnr prayer oo the
. !lird Sundoy. Monmg ~ Md........, on
oD othl!rSundoys ctlhemonlh.OurchSChool
and Nunrry c.-e JrO¥ided Cole. l'llur il t!P
Pal'Bh Hall mmedhUb' ~_itti-81!'1Vk:t&gt;.
, POMEROY OfURCH OFCHRJST, 212 W.
Main Sl., !..eo !..ash. .,... ..,. llllio Schod
9::11 a.m.; -g"""'llp. lll::lla.m.: Youth
,_llqjjl, 6:00p.m.: E-.g~Knbtp,
m Wedlmdly n1gti. ~meeting and

7';:'Je

7:00p.m
111E SALVATDN ARMY, 1l5 Blderm.d
Aw.. l'lllnerw. Mr&gt;. D&lt;n Wtnlnglnm...,.
stWy.

&amp;1-

&amp;lndoy hllllneso .--... IJ a.m.; Sundoy
Schocl. 10::11 a.m.
School. YPSM
£IOie Ad.,.., ~. 1; ~ p.m. S.W.~n
lnll!tlng varklus spNkersandR'UIIk'spai•
'nl.ll'!ldly, U::lJ a.m. to 2 p.m. Ltclll tlornt
League, members ln cba'l!. a1 wunen
'lnvled: 6:11 11m 'llluwdor. Corp! Cadet
CIMIS ~Yauow I'Oo. .llllioi, 7::11 p.m. Billie
Stuly andf&gt;rayeo- ma!IID&amp; &lt;11&gt;8' to the !dille

POMEROY WESTSIDE OIIJRCH OF

OIRIST.33Z360dlcteislbni!'ROIII~Crurty
Rood '!til. !11n3117. Vocal""'*· Sundoy - ·
•sljplla.m.; BIIRS!ulylla.m.: Wcnljp;6p.
m. W-fl'. Bllio Sluly, 7 p.m ~-....
!Micl&gt;nllorle. ....- .
OlD IlEXTEif BI!I.E CHRm'!AN
OIURCII, JadtC!OUnd ...cr. Alll!yGioyd,
&amp;lpt. &amp;lndoy SchJollO:OOa.m: Yruth m£el.
lng 7 p.m. """Y Wedladotr.
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
- Pomeroy. Mser. MJcta.el HeUmer, Ph.
- - SatlardaueveniJiaMass, 11:-~.m.
nv-.
"
"
~
; Sunct.y Mass, 8 a.m,. Ud 10 1.rn. CD
claues, 9 a.m. 111 and 3rd SUaday of each
moat h.
Conlelsioat: Ole-half hour bftore
eo&lt;h
MasL
OIURCH OF JESUS CHRIST ·~

ru-v.3"

TOL!CFAITII-NewLimaRIJad.n,.lto
Fort Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards,
pastor. Sunday tnviCB, 10 a .m. and 7 p.
-•
hi 7
m.: W edn -IY .,.,.. P. o.m.
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODisT,
Preecb1Da9:3Da.m.l!ntandiOCOIII!Sun·
days of eech IIUJIIth; third and fourth Sun·
• dayeachmcmtbwonblr....-vlceaat7:30p.
.. m.: W - = Ice -II at 7:!:1 p.m.
•.Pnyer and Bt e Study.
. SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·
berryHelPtsltoa4.Pomeroy.Put•Bob
Snyder. S.bllalb School Supertatendenl,
Rodney SplreL Sabbath Schod belfu1t 2
p.m . on Saturday llflorDOOII wHb wonlllp
oervlce foDowlnl at 3:011 p.m. Everyone
weh»me.
• RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Sister llan1ett Wlll'll•. Supt Sunday
';school 9:30 a .m .: Mora1D1 Woroblp, 10: C5

..a.m.

• POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. East
Main St. Stew FuUC'. put«. George
. lildnne!', Sunday SciiOal Superlnl .. dOIIt.
Sunday School, 9:,;) a.m.: Morntoa Wor·
• lhlp 10:30 a .m.: WNDesday evening
prayer and Bible lhady, 7: 30 P.~·' • FIRST SOUTIIE!tN BAPTIST, Po~ meroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, paat(t.
...Jack Needs, SuadayScboal Dlrl'ctw. Sua::.ay School, 9:3D a.m.; Mornln&amp;Worlldp.
10:45; evenlncwonblp, 7:00p.m. (D.S .T. ~
·• 7:30 ~ES.T. J: Wedll-y Prayer Ser·

vlce,7:00 p.m. ID.S.T.) .7::.» P.M. (E .S.
T .); Mission Friends (qes 2·6), Royal
• Ambassadors (boy a aeet 6-18), and Qlrls
' In Action 1aaes 6-18) on Wednesdays, 7 p.
m. (D.S.T.) '7 :30p.m. (ES.T. ): Tue&gt;day
VIsitation, 6:30p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bat·
Jey Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawsoo, pastor. Ha ndley Dunn, 1upt. Sunday Schod,
tO a.m.; Sundayevenlneservlce. 7:30p.m .
; Bible teachiDJ, 7:Xl p.m. Thunday.
. SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St. , Sy• racuse. Mark Morrow, Jalt«. Servlces,10
a .m . Suaday . Eventna ter\'lces Sunday
and Wednelday at 6:00p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
1N OIR!STIAN UNION, Dwllht Hal~.
.fltlt elder. Wuda Mohler, SundRy School
Supt. SuMay School 9: .:1) a.m.; Morning
Won hip 10:00 a.m.; Even las Won' 7: 30
p.m.: WeodnetdayprayermertinJ7: 11p.m.
MT. MOR!AII CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine. Rev. James Satterfield, past«.
Fr~an

WIIUams, Supt. Sunday School
9:45 o.m.; Sunday and Wednl!lday even·
big services, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
·c orner Stxtb and Palmer. James Seddon,
Paster. Edna WUam, S.S. Supt.; Ca th y
RIIJIS, .Usl. S.pl. Sunday School, 9: 15 a .
m.; MornlngWonbl.p, l0:15a.m.; Sunday
Evn1n1 service, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
.. nd Bible Study Wedll-y OYenlng, 7 p.
m.; ChUdren's choir practice, Wednesday, 7 p.m .; Adull chOir pracrJ~. WH., 8
p.m .; Radio proaram, WMPO, Sunday,
B:J)a.m.
MIDDLEPORT
OFCHRIST,
Maln,

~

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

dren' s Church 11 a.m. Su~ Ewalnl

S.rvlet' 7:00p.m. Wed., &amp;p.m. You1111La·

cUes' AuxUiary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fam·

Uy Worship.
·
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHUROI . 011
Rt. 124, 3 mll!!i from Porlland·LongBot·
tan. Edsel Harl, put or. Sunday SchooL
9: :D a.m.: Sunday morning pre~chlnl

10::1) a .m.; Sunday evening services. 7:•

p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Corner Ash and Plum. Nod
Herrmann, past or. Sunday SchoollO: 00 a.
m.; Mornlna Worship, 11:00 a.m.: Wed-

nesday and Saturday EvenlngServk.'Hat

7·:11 p.m
,APPLE GROVE UNITED METHQ.
DJST CHURCH - Putor, !ln. Clrl
tllcks. 10 mile~ above RadDe on Rt. 388.
Sunday School 9 a .m .. worship servl~ 10

a.m. Sunday evenlna service. 6:00 p.m.:

Praytor metttne and Bible Study T'bunday, 6: :II J&gt;m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST-

011124, behind Wllk•vUI~ ChotiEOJon..,
pastor.SundaySchooi,9::Jia.m.; rrllll'1liJI«
worship, 10: ~; Sunday and Thurlday
evening services, 7:00p.m.
IIEIIlS
COOP~TIVE P.WBB
VNfi'ED IIIIITIIODIBT CIIVIICII
NOBTBIIAST aAJIITI:II
- ·.r....,..
Rev. F .... C.... ei
lev. S.!doaiALFRED- Cllurth Scllool9:30 a .m.;
W ·•• 11
UMYFI a»
UMW
or-p. .t.m.;
: ~_p. m.;
Third Tuesday, 7: 30 ' p.m. Communion,

first Sunda}'. ~Archer)

CHESTER - Wonblp 9 a .m.; Church
Schooi!D a.m.; Blbl • s1--~- .....
,_y, 7 P·
m.; UMW, ftnt Thundoy, I p. m.: O&gt;m·
munton. ftnt SUnday (An:btr) ,
JOPPA- Worship 1:311 a .m.; Cnor&lt;h
School ID::II a.m. Bible StUdy Weda-y,
7IJ-~- 1
:-p.m . -qoa ·
LONG BOTTOM - Church Sc- t: 30
a.m.; Worship ID: 30 a.m.; Bible StUdy,
Wodneaday, 7::11 p.m.: UMYF Wedtl•
day, 6:00 p.m.: Comlnun!on Flnt Sunday
ot Month tCro!oot).
RE~VILLE-ChurchScboolt: 30a .

m.; Worship Servke U :OO a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church Sc:bool9 a .m. ; Wonhip 10 a.m.;
Bible Sludy, Tlleoday, 7: :II p..m.: Commu·
nlon Ftrlt Sunday ~A reb«).
CIINTIAL aAJIITI:II
lev.- l i e - a
Rev. Wni4!1J
....
h
lev.lialllrJa RD'I'
.... P ..lllbrtlo

a....,. -,_ell•
..

Bn. An•r CraiJtree
.... Ro-ltoolo
ASBURY j Syracu~')- Woraldp lla .m.
: Church School9 :65 a.m.: Cllarp Blblo
Study, Wednelday, 7:l) p.m. ; Ul'dW, nut
Tuet4ay. 1:30 p.m. : Cholr Rl'hearul,
Wednesday 6: :II p.m. (Thatcher I
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;

Chul't'b ScboollO a.m.; BlbleSh.idy, Tunday, 7:00p.m.; UMW, Flrsl Mondly,1:30
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir~
hearsal, Chlldrtn'a at &amp;: 30 p.m. AduH lol·
towlntr. Wtdnesday. tRIIeyl
FLATYIOODS- Church School,lOa.m.
; Won;hlp, 11 a .m.: Bible Study, Thurs.
day, 7 p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m . (RI·

ley).

FOREST RUN -

Worohlp 9 a.m.;

Chu rt&gt; h School 10 A .M. : Choir pnctlce,

Thursday, 6: 3Cp.m.; UMWihlrdMonday.
!Tha tcher)
HEATH (Middleport I - Churcb School,
9: 30a.m.: Morning Worship 10:.JI a .m.;
Youth Group, 4 p.m .; Wednesday, Blbl~t
sludy 6:00p.m. Choir reheoarsa17:00p.m.
!Rtndfielsch) .
MINERSVILLE - Church School 1:00
a.m. ; Worstup sl"r'Vlce 10:00 a .m.; UMW
third Wedn ..day, I p.m. tThatch•J
PEARL CHAPEL- Cllurth !lchoolt:OO
a.m.: WorshJp Service 10 :00 a.m. (Mat·
lin )

POMEROY - Church SChooL 8: 15a.m.

: Worship 10:~ a.m.; Cbolr rehNIWl

Wednesday, 7: :11 p.m.; UMW, lfO)IId
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: UMYFSunct.ay, 6p.m..
(Meadows!

ROCK SPRINGS- Church School. 9:15
a.m.: Worship 10 a.m.; BlbleSiudy, Wednesday, 7::1) p.m .: UMYF ISontora),Su•
day, 6 p.m.: {Juniors) every other Su•
day. 6 p.m. (Riley ).
RIJTL ~ND - Church School, lD o.m.;
Worship, 11 a.m.: UMW F1r.11t Monday,
7:'l J p.m. jCrabtr E&lt;P)
SALEM CE!'ITER - Cllurch Scbool9: 15
a.m.; Morning Worsblp 10:15 a .m.
ISIHieJ
SNOWVILLE- Mornln1 Worthtp, 9:00

fiLLOUICKEL

..,.,., J..,,., '""e.,.., .

(row's Family ........,
221 W. a.in St., ,_,.,

3lfl1lo

$Mi• ~~

And chilling winds will fill the air.
Then' one day soon, without a sound,
The snow will spiral to the ground,
In tiny Rakes like lace so fine,
With each one different in design.
The ~peens will be aglow
When weJsbted down with clumps of snow,
And colder weather &amp;om the storm
Will freeze the lakes, so Ice will form.
Your House of Worship has enoUed
God's love that shows, despite the cold,
HIB promise of a new rebirth
From winter's whiteness on the eanh.
I -Gloria Nowak

service-, 7::tt p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPriST, Bill Lillie,
pastor. Sieve Utll•. S. s. Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; Mora1na worsfp, 11 a.m.;

Sunday "erdnawanblp T::ll p.m. Prayer

meet In&amp; and Blblealudy Wedn-y, 7: :II
p.m.; Youth meetilll: Wl'dnaday at 7 p.m.
REJOICING LIFt BAJPriST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Aw .. Mldcll-'· Snlly
Sclloollla.m. lutlday evenllta 7:110 p.m.:
Mid-- a...,tce. Wed., 1 p.m.
LANCBVIU:E OIRISTIAN CHURCH.
&amp;.nda1 Sc- 9: 30a.m .: Jeff Pan......_

aupt.; MonllDa wcnta 11:» un.; Sua·
day . .eldaiHrVIce, 1:30 11m.: Wedll. .

da~.ev-....,1~.

7: 38jl.m.
EDEN 'UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIIT, Elden R. Bla-o, paot!X'. Sullday
SChool 10 a.m.; Gory ~~e.der.
-Monlla oermoa. II a.m .: .
alalt1
.....,_, Cltrlolln Etldeovor7: p.m..
SonR HI'Yft a p.m. Pr•dalaa R: 3D p.m.
Ml&lt;l·praYft meetkfc, Wedlloaday, 7

t

"2-6669

rh•ft!M1 u 18M! p erled clotiiiQ ud tarnl&amp;ure
exlll111t a&amp; llle Melp Coaii&amp;J Ubrary. Plana for tbe
. exldldl, &amp;o be lltld ID ~ane, were llepm ••

i71 ......

lie-'
••• ;ut,

. •992-5141

264 South 2nd

lnl wonblp lla.m.; t:VMWI&amp;I«Yic»&amp; p,

EWING FUNERAL HOME
EstabliShed 1913

H2-2121

·-rey'
L.-----------..1
tll6 . . .rryAYL

-~Bible

Sillily and Youth Fellow·

"''!'HJ~cJl'~F

GOD OF PROPHECY.
Localed 0110. J . Wblle Road of HllbWay
1110. Pal H............... SundaY School 10
o.m . CJu101lor all ill•. JuniOr Cb.,.h 11
a.m.: Morai.Da wonhip 11 a.m. AdalU
Cllolqnctlwl p.m. Suaday. 'founc...,.
Cbll*""'• Cloa"'b ud Aduk Bible
, Wedl-y at7:311 p.m.
PE IIAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 G~
St., Mlddl,...n. Alllllallld wllb Soul
Baptltl~tloll. Dawld Bryan, Sr.. Ml·
ntater. Sunday SchoallO a.m.; MoralDJ

wonblp tt a.m.; Ewnln&amp;wcnblp 1p.m.;

Wedn-Y ..,ealac Bible tlud)' and
prayer mNIInl 7 p.m. OF CHRIST St
.
BIIADFORDCHURCII
, .
Rt126u4Co. Rd. 5. DorekStump. put..-.
Wllllalll Anlborpr, S. S. Supt.: Sunday
Scbool9:30 a.m.: Mornlaa Woraldp 111:30
a.m.; EwnlnrwunlllpT:I) p.m. Wedn•
day woroblp 7:30 p.m.
ST. PAUL LlJ111ERAN CHURCH,
CorHr S}'eamore- alld lrcond Sts., f'o..
m.-oy. 'l'be rtev. Wlllalll Mldcll-arl,
pul,.., Sutlday llcll&lt;&gt;ol 1:45 a.m. Chur&lt;h

aervk'e 11 a.m.
SACRED HEART CHURCH MIIJ'.
Aalho!QI GIIBDaJllllft. Pb. - - SatMI'
day E ...lnl lolua 7::11 p.m.; Sunclay
Mus. 8 a .m. aacl 10 a.m. Conf••lon~ one

ball boor-re ea&lt;h MuL CCDcl•-·

Su.._

p.m.

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CIIRlS'IlAN UNION. llarlford, W. Va.
!ln. O.vld !llc-1&amp;, puter. Cnon:ll
School 9:30 a.m.: Sutlday 1DG11t!n1 oer·
Yl~. 11 a.m.: l!ootlday OYftlac
7:30p.m. Wedntlday ....,.........., 7:

llrvlceil

P·;AmVIEW BIBLE CHURCH,

LIWI,
W. VI., Rt. 1, Jam• Ltwtl. JIUl•. Wor&amp;blptei'Yiceoi:3Da.m.; 1111-,-11
a .m.: EwallaWII'IIldp7:30p.m. ~

-•lltldJ
~edllaclay

7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LtrniERAJI CIIURCII,
Walaut and IIMI'I'
R a . - , W.
Vo.
Welrldl, puler.
an.; 111111117 wcnblp

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gary Hlne, putor. Sunday
Sch0ol9:Jt ro 10:20 a.m.: Worahlp arvtc:e10:30 to ll::tla.m.; 8undly f"Venln« service. 7 p.m.; Midweek Pruyer Servl~.
Wed. 7J&gt;m.
fri. OLIVE COIIMUN!TY q«&lt;RCH,
.....,..,.,. Buab. potl1lfl'. SlllldaY Scbool
9:311 a.m.: kntloy aad -eaday ..,...
lncwtnhlp HrY1Ct. 7:00p.m.
Ullfi'EDFAITHCHURCH Ill. 7• Po-

mtrO)'~!In. RollortE , Smllb,Sr,

- e r.
Ia Drlte. s. s. Supl. Suaday
Scboo!l::ll a.m.; Mo-g Worilllp 11: 3D:
· E ...... l WGrllblp 7:110 11m.; Wedn-,o
Prayer lervt... 7:110 ~.'!'•
'
FAITII BAPTIIT pruRCH, Rallrcad
St., Mu~ ~~ndlly ~ol ~a.m.; Morn-

.,...,p.t'

The employees or Ohio Valley
Publishing Company held their
annual ChriStmas party Thursday at the Elka Lodge In
GaiU(lOUs. with 81 attending.
Entertahunent was provided by
Dr. Clayton and the Vaudeville
Magic Show or ChllUcothe.
Bob Wingett, Emma Lou Davis, Helen DaviJ, Donald E .
Wright, Evelyn Wrl&amp;bt, Jolu)
Wright, Mathew Rodgers, Betty
Tope, Paul Tope, Paula T9111!,
Brian Billings, Shari Cochran,
Gary Cochran, Larry and Pat
Boyer, Jack and Margaret FIDal·
cum, Bill and Margaret Lehew,
Fred and Pauline Horrmim, Mllce
Jenkins, Tom and PhyUIJ Roach.
Dick and Dot Tbomaa, Amy M.
Wedemeyer, Jeff Cocbran, Matt
Hasseman, Patty Simpkins.
Henry Rayburn, Jr. Pearaon.
Tommy Lona. Ed and Tammy
Moore, Lee Ann Welcb, WalterO.
Mattox, Elb:abetb Mattox. Eustace Wllson, BeUJe Wlllon, Hobart Wilson, Bev Wilson, Cblp
Young, carolyn Young. Krlllteo

m. Prayer meet loa u4 BIIII•Study Wocl-

"Dipliry ond Ser•ice Alway•"

n - y. 7p.m.
FOREST !tUN BAPTIST. Fin. Nyle
Bonita, putor. Coradlua Buacll, aupl.
Sutlday School 9:30 a 1m.: Semlld aad
rounh S.adayawonblp aervtce'at 2:3011
m
MT. MORIAH BAPri!IT Foonb ud
MaiD St .. Mldd!eport.ltev. GUblrl Crall.
Jr., puler. Mrl. Ervllt lllumaardll•.
Suodat-Supt.Su-Schoolt:30a.
m.; w~r:/ Servlc.'f', 10:t5 • .m.
SUC
ROADCHURCHOFOIRIST
- Jooeph B. Hookblt, '"'aagdllt. Su!tday
BlbleStudyh.m .: Woroldp,10a.m.: Sun·
day '"'"'lnl ....,..., 6 p.m.: Wedllfoday
tvftlin&amp;llt'Yice, 1 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMIILY, Racine,
Rt. IJt Will!.., Hollock. putor. SaDdaY
ScbooiiO a .m.: S..tldtly - • aOtvk» '7
p.m. Wedlleaday ~enln.l~l&lt;e 7 p.m.
CARPENTER IIAPTIST. Don Cheod!e,
Supt. SundaY School t: 30 a.m. Mornlrll
WOn!tlp IO :IIa.J'II' Pra,.eraii'VIOe, altatf! SUDd~y-~.

'

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•

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·

THE CHURCH OF JESUS OIRIST, ·
APOSTOLIC FAITH- New iUma 114..
-Rldlardl,
10 Fort
Mo1p Servl&lt;a
!'arlo. !htliiUL
""'""
putll'.
II 7 p.m.
..
Wedll-yo u4 SUodayL
.
HARRISONVILLE HOUNESS CHAP·
TER or the Wealeran Hollnes• Churcb.
Fin. Earl
put«. lleary Ebl!a.
Slltlday Scboo1 Supt.: Suaday Scllool10 a.
m. ; Moi'IIIJII Worahll&gt; 11 a.m.: E-IDI '
. HTVt..7:30 p.m. w.da-y ....W.caer·
vice 7: 30p.m.
STIVERliVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
Gary HollO&lt;, put..-. SundaY servl&lt;a9: 30
a.m.aad7p.m.: MldwHiuenb. 7:30p.

n-.

m. Thurtday.

DONATION - Ana VuMa&amp;N, rlpt, on bellllf or tlie Oble Eta
Pill (:11.,...., IIIia •pnai'IIISorarttJ, neeatl7 pl't!Mtlted a eheck
Ia 111e-- I Ill 1111'111 BollertSmltb, Bay 8eou&amp; representative for
Camp IU~ Tile moaey will lie uaed &amp;owud npall'll al the
~eoat camp leca&amp;ed Ia the .C heater area.
·
.

MIDDL...
EPOJt..nii'Tr PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. rtev. Cai11 Baker1 putor. Carl Not·
,.....,.., 90'""" ...... S.allay
School !0 a .m. With
lor II! .....
EVID~ItrVIcet It 6J&gt;DL,Wedntlilay Bl·
at 1:31 p.lh. Yoatl'JerVIta Frible
day 11 :30 p.m. • _ _ ,_
tCCLESJA FELLoVw....,.,l28MIIISi.,
Mldcl-'· Brotller Cllue~ Me~.
pulor. SundaY Scllool lD a.m.: Suallay
................. al7p.m . aadWitllttlday

&lt;1•.•

Hn1c:s at 1 p.m.

.

Garden Club meets

•

Kitty Whitehead, Angela Hall,
Charlie Hall, Dave Harris, Cleo
Llevmg, Mark and Nancy Yoa·
cham, Scott anll JuUe Dillon.
Charlene Hoeflich, Bob Hoeftlth,
Barbara RIQS, Keith RIQI,
Patrick B. Hill, Laura D.
Brewer, Janice Veazey, Joan
Errett, Rob Shinn, Dlsna Slllnn,
Brandon Shinn, Paul an'd Terra
s&amp;rker, Christl Hempblll, Randy
Lively, Margaret Caldwell. Pam
Dotson, Steve Halstead and Jean
Davllon.

-til,

P.;b111'11 BETHF.L NEW TEBTAMEHI'

·-i·

·Grande dinner set

Bft. &amp;n..U. 111111:8'
an..., .. Oraoe
.... CoriBidls

APPLE GROVE - Cllurch School 1:00
a.m. : Morn Ina Worlblp 10:00 e .m.; Bible
Study Sunday 7:00p.m .: PraYW mto~~a~
7:00p.m. Thursday. lillcb)
BETHANY - Woralltp t a.m.; Clluldl
S&lt;hooi iO a. m.; BtbloStudy Wedntlday»
a .m .; Dorcas Women's tellowlldp Wednesday ll o.m. ~ Bak•l·
CARMEL - Church SChool t: 10 a.m.:
Worlhlp, 10:15 a .m . S.&lt;OIId u4 P'oll'lll
Suadaya; Fell-*lo d l - w1111 l!oolt•
lhlnl Tbunday, 6:311' p.m. (Ball•l ·
MORNING STAR- Chtlldo lkbool t:e
a.m. ; Wonlll_p 10:30 a.m.: IMIII• Sltldy,
Thundoy, 7:30p.m. (Bailor).
SUT!'OII - Qnorch SChool, t : IJO • ·•·:
Monlnl IJ~It6h.ID. -tllldtSulldl:n; Fill
dtlrtl
'lllunday,
EAST
LETAln'Wonltltt:OD
a.m.; llltan:k-.-11:01...,.; UIRUnt
Ttieadoy 7::11 p.m. 1cno.1.
,
LETART FALLS - Wonlllp t a .m.; :
1
Cllun:lt Schooi!D a.m. ~ar..,.,.
RACINE- Olu"'h School, »a.m.:
lhlpllo.m.; UMW-bliiDIIIItrlll7:10,.
m.: Mell' tl'ra)'erllrHidMI,W. . 'J,l 1
a.m. ~llracle) .

*--ca.-

•=•.t:".t:a-···

""" I

m••

iiiioliV'iOik:.~ ~
=~=-=
'loitiili. llltittllr ....~

.- . . . . . 2 ' · · · · · - ·

...

.

) .,

·-

{

~ .•

··,,j· .. ~· •• .: '

'

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'

· Tile Star Gran~re will hold Its
annual Christmas dinner and gift
exchange on Dec. 16, 6: 30 p.m. at
lhe Salem Center Fire Statton.
All members and friends are
Invited to attend.
Ham will be furnished by the
1ranp and members and guests
ukl!d to bring a covered dish.
A $3 gift exchange will be held
following the meal.

•re

Menu set
The lunch .menu for tbe Ca·
rletOII Sellool Mel&amp;&amp; Industries
lull been aniiOIIIICed for the week

or nee. n.

Molllay: bean~ welnles, com
bread, cheese wedge, fruit, and

aallk.
·.
Tuuday: pizza burien,
rn dl frlel, pickles, fruit, and
)

'·

1111111.'
w· 'h s'ay: ham

slice, pasta
p 1id,lteleult. fruit, and mllll.
1'1tiU'q: 1111'-b-qw cblelletl,
• ....potatoel; roU. ~t.

... mlllr.
J'rlday: eoek'• cllolee•

... t: ..... -

..

-.;..

....

SUNDAY

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and the
Ladles Auxiliary will hold their
regular meeting on Monday, 7
p.m. at the hall on 124 Butternut
Aye. This will be the Christmas
dinner.

MIDDLEPOR'l' - The plano
students or Kathy Johnson will
present a recital Sunday at2p.m
at the Bradbury Church of

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP- The
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet on Monday, 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

MAmi'S ......
FURNITURE
&amp;,_.,,
MOlEOlile.
lwlta• I llws

222 E. Main St.

I

2 5°/o Off ON ENTIRE STOCK STOR£WIDEII
i lr
EXCWOING BASEBALL ITEMS

CAll H2-6172 or - : 915-4396
HOURS 10 AM·I PM

Buying Good C..., Fumltu-Compi&lt;M Auction S.rvloe

.

..

.

.

..

.. ..

.

.

A SPECIAL 6
NTH C.D.
FROM

CENTRAL TRUST

Slinderella meets
Cindy Lambert Jolt tbe moat
weight Ia the Monday nJahl Five
Polnll etau of Sllnderella. Tbe
runner up was Mary BrownJng.
Ill the Tuesday ntabt Muoa
class, Betty Burton loa! tbe IJIOII
weight and there was a tle for
runner up between Lots Ann
Reltmtre and Marilee McDade. .
One new member waa taken ln.
Starting time for both classes Is 6
p.m.
Tbe group hu a cookbook out
which Is available In time for
Christmas.

.

.

II you've been
holding back wail·
ing for a great rate,
!his Is II. But you 've

r-:;;;;;;;;;;;:_;;:;:;;:;;;:;-

gol to act fast.
This offer from
Central Trust

is available lor a
llmiled time only.
For more information contact
your nearest.
Central Trust office
or cal G 11 als ....otcli
.....port 992-6661

THE CENTRAL TRl.Sf UMA\NY
1Jtt &amp;rit 17toJ Mas 77ring.&lt; tlaj'l(lnL

.,

........."' . . . . ..ooo.oo. .............. ,....,....
.._ ....... 11/ M/D,

fot.,., .........
·

·

_

I

Ilk- FDIC

CHRISTMAS 'tREES
.THI Jfon' BBAUTJFUI, TJlDS

FIIDAY, DECEMIEI I, 1919
SAUIOIII PATIII PUll ....................... ___ •1.19.
Trwfhor _ _ _ _ l o . - Wlth..,ooy, c .._ M _ a a o - a
(AIIHOoa....,.._A ~~ooa...- 114111.11uu=••-.... -

IN TD TRJ.COUNTI' AREA
Select From Either Beautifully
Sheared Frazier Fir,
"The EHte In Christmas Trees";
Or Traditional White Pine.
All Trees Are Perfectly Shaped
And Reasonably Priced.
Sizes Range From 6' to 12'.

........

SUNDAY, DECEMPI 10, 1919
"AIL·TGI.UI.O'f"' fAMT SJnl

CHICDI .....

. . &amp; Chrisllartlto, o-.

"CHRISTMAS SPECIAL"

will bave a poUuck oa Saturday,
6:30 p.m. at the Woodmen hallln
BurUDabam. Tbere will be tur·
key, ham, dreaslng, rolls, and
coffee. Each family attendlnl
should bring a covered dish
dinner and their own table
service.

•

With_._. Puii'IIM 1M

MIIHttttlll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., .

T.cy Heni. . DII8d CN*•IAI You can Ell), Strved

MONDAY
CHESTER - The River Valley
Herbalists will meet Monday, 7
p.m. at thehomeofLila Gldenour
on Route 248 near Chester.
Members are to bring a wrapped
Christmas ornament and one
dozen cookies for the exchange.

POMEROY - The Rev . Chris
Meenac:h, ventriloquist, will be
speaking at the Pomeray Naza·
rene Church Sunday, 9:30 a.m.
He uaes the Sun1hlne Gang
puppeta to present his ministry.
Tbe Rev. Glen McClung Invites
the public to attend.

BURLINGHAM- The Modern
Woodmen or America Camp 7230

RUTI.AND -Tbe Rutland
Church of tbe Nazarene wlll bave
Its 11ospel concert on Saturday at

Chr ist. Family and friends of the
studen ts are Invited to attend. A
social hour will follow the recital.

HARRISONVILLE - TbeHar·
rllonvtl~ Lend- A- Hand So·
clely wlll ba~ ramuy nlllht on
Sunday at the church. A potluck
dinner will begin at 6 p.m.
followed by a Chrlstn\as
JX:OKfam.

be an Inspection or Pomeroy
Chapter Ill R.A.M. In tbe past
mul!ra depee oa Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the ~ddleport
Muoalc Temp~.

Harrisonville
OES wilt meet

£111111CH, Sllwl Rld&amp;e. Daaao S)'tleaslrldler. paalcr. ~-~ ScMol t a.m.j

Do you know Cbrlstlanlty IS a cheap relllllon? You need not .
have great wealtb nor IJ'UI lntelletJence nor coatly houn,
weeki or yeara to learn about Cbrtst. You need not take tong
voyaps to the aeat ola great learned someone to study, to learn, '
or be toucbed. No, all you aeed ~ an enexpenatw bible or
aoinaone to tell you· about Cbrllt Jl!llus and God's low tor you
rllbt now. He loves you now and not alter you bave learned a Jot
or memorlaed lota of lntormatlon and pasaaaes. Cbrtstlan faltb
Is simple and eaay to bave. It bolls down to bellevina Cbrllt
Jesua died for your aiDs and tbat you are made In the Image of
God hlmaetr. Tbls makes you apeclal and above tbe animala of
the WCD'Jd.
After you obtain faith, It 1811:1!11 work to IJ'OW and often we need
to ebanp our way ofllfe to God' a way otllte. Tbll alsq IS not out
or 11111 or dlftlcult. we - wbat ts expected or 111 and are llad
lind luqJpy to oo.y. Tliat wbkb we liVe up, we do so lladly
.,...... w want to. No -Ia forctnl u• to do so. We dellgllt ln
pllulla God and 0111' . _ lilt.
Belnl• Christian ts a ruu tbneltibbutwearenottorced IDtolt.
We • tbe lllbt and atldly tallow lt.lll Cbrllt we fiDd tbeCOitW
pay or lhlllal we live up are ao amall and lnii&amp;Difteat
eompaJ'ed to tbe reward or llalvatton, 111r utlllractlon and
beaven u a bome, that we elauJ tally pay the price and reeeiVt
. tile 1101'7. Tbank God lie
It ao lneXpeul\le, no Ollfneect be '
acllldecL Tldl mtt"'you, .....,evwyouilre, readliiJthtsiiOW'.

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -'flieR will

7 p.m. followed by a pizza party
ror the teenagers .

Trustees to meet

SETn.EMEifl' CHURCH, Sua·
day ·anemooa ......... 11 2:30. Thurlllay
evea1Da..-.t. . a17:30.
.
F!Rft lloi.PTISTCHVRCH,
W.
Vo . .Putor, Bill Marplql. Bullday Scllool10
a.m. ; Sunday ....,... 7:30 p.m. Pnyor
maet~DC tllld llltlulucly Wedoltlday,T: 30
p.m. E v e r y - - - ·
'
RUTLAND FREE WILL IIAPT!ST, l!oo·
ltmlt. R... Paal Taylor, put,.., Soliday
. SchooiiOa.m.: Sunday ewnlllaT:IIOp.m.;
Wednetlday eveoq prayer m•lll 7:110

Worlltlp·Servt.., illo.m .. Sunday ........
,........, 7:00p.m. Wedllaclay ofaltl Blb!o
It
1:00 .m.

Cocbran.~eOsborne,Patand

A memorial tribute was held Resorl were Evelyn Hollon. 14
for Mrs. May Holter at the recent ribbons; Connie Hill. three ribmeetln1 or the Wildwood Garden :· bons; Betty Milhoan. one ribbon;
Club beld at the home or Betty and ~eldl Elberfeld, one ribbon.
Milhoan.
Mrs. HoUonalso won the horllcul·
Mrs. Holter was a long lime ture sweepstakes In the senior
member of the club, and Mgs. division.
Members drew names for the
Milhoan had a reading, "The
PoiiUielta, the Green Sunshine," gltt exchange and the Chrlstma s
lllnner will be held Dec, 20, 6 p.m.
followed by a prayer.
The ChesterTowruihlp trustees
The meetlnll opened with Doris at the Country Kitchen In Racine. will have their regular meeting
Dorothy Smith and PauUne Ey·
Grueser· having devotions by
non Wl!re · put In charge or . on Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the ·
readlntl "Forgiven," '"The Gltl
preparlnll and delivering the town hall.
or the Pilgrims," and "Extra
.T hings."
trull bukel1.
For the program, Mrs. Miller
For roll call, members brought
·a dried specimen aDd named It.
Introduced Rev. W!Wam Mid·
dleswarth, who showed a medley
Doris Grueser, !kitty Milhoan,
Janet ' Theiss, Kathryn M!Uer,
or sUdes. He bad pictures or
.Peggy Moore, and Juanita Will landscapes, things or nature,
The HarrJsonvUie Order of the
11ave a reportonthemeetJngwllh numerous wildflowers and slides Eastern Star No. 255 will meet
tbe garden club at the Gallipolis or tlower arrangements from Tuesday to honor the officers and
Developmental Center In area fairs and flower shows. The members.
meeting closed and refresh·
GaiUpolls.
A $3 Christmas gtfl exchanae
Members recelviq rlbbona In ments were served by Mrs. will be held and practiCe 1or thl!
the flower show at Royal Oak Milhoan. Juanita Will won the 1990 Installation of officers will
hostess altt.
be held. Installation will be held
Thursday.

ANTIQUrrY lloi.PTIST. KentoetbSmHh,
puler: Suallay Scllod t :IJO a.m.; cbuldl
aorvke7: 30p.m.; YGtltlllaiiOWIIdpi:IOp.
m.; Bible-· Tllul'l!l.ll, 7:1l0J!.111,
rou. GOsPEL L!GIITIIOUSE, 33IH!i
JUiand Road, Po-oy. TOrn Kolly, pu·
ter. DaiUiy Lamblr~ S. s , Supt. Sua~~ay
momlq: llfi'VI-=e at 1G a.m.; Sullllay evtD·
lncaorvke T: 30 p.m. Tuelday lltld 'nund a y - at 7:30p.m.
·
NEW HAVEN CIIVRCH OF 111E N.\ ..
ZAI\ENE, Rev. CI-a Slroud. puter.
Stlllday8dlue!9:1J0a.m.:Wonhlp_.,ce,
10:30 a.m.; Youtll .......,. l!oollday 1:15 p.
~- S.aday PVftlna.-.lce7:00p.m. Wadnoaday Pnyft' Meetlnl and Bible Study

7:~

MIDDLEPORT -Tbe Return
Jonathan Mel&amp;&amp; Chapter, D.A.R.
will meet Friday; 1 p.m., at the
home or Mra. Arthur Skinner,
Middleport. Mrs. Elmer
Grueter, cbalrman or public
retatlona, . . . _ Couaty Exten·
alan Homemalcara will be tbe
gueat 1peall:er, using the topic,
"A CallcoCbrlstmu." HOItestes
are Mrs; Skinner, Mrs. Edward
Foater, Mrs. Harold Hager, Mrs.
Ray Hoi!A!r, and Mrs. Gene Yost.

OVP employees'
POMEROY -Tbere will be a
Christmas
tree blood pressure screening
service on Friday, 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. at Rite Aid In Pomeray.
party held

FISH£R
FUNER~~ HOME

11a.m. SUnday.
VICI'ORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2ad Sl.,
Mlddloport. Jam&lt;1 E . Keeaoo, pul,...
rn.
.
Sunday momlna woroblp 10 a.m.: Evon·
Ina llt!I'VI&lt;e 7 p.m .; Wedl&lt;1day evoolnl
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amoa
wonldp 7 p.m. Vllltatlon Tbunday 8: 3D p.
'nllls, pallor. Sonny Hudson. supt. SUnday
m.
SchooU:30a.m .: IIIDrnlllrwOI'Ihh&gt;.I0:30
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: O.vltl
a .m.;
""'~~~' lfi'Vkeo 7:00 p.m.
Curfman, puler. Sunday Scllool, ID~.m.;
WednEOdoy Hrlb 7 p.m. WMPO pre&gt;
"orshlp s..-vt.. 11 a.m.: Sunday Dllllt
~rram 8 11m. !'arh Sunday.
wonlllp serviCe 7::11 p.m.: ~
RUTLAND CHuRCH OF THE NAZA·
prayer ..,.,1.., WedtiOiday 7 p.m.
RENE. Semuet Baayo, puler. Sunday
BIBLE
HOUNESS
SChool9:Jt a .m.: Wonhlp leniN lO:llla. . WESLEY AN
CHURCHollllldcloport.lno.. 75hwlS1 ..
m.: Young people's aervlee 6 p.m.
ReY. Ivu Myen. pastor; Roaer Manley,
Evanal'lllt1caervlco6:30p.m. Wocla-y
Sr.. Sunday School Supt SundaY School
I«YICP 7 p, m.
9:30 a.m.; Mornlaa Worlhlp ill:lll a .m .:
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
Eveolltlf Wonlllp l:30 p.m. Wedll-y
St .. Moson. w. Vo. Sunday Btbi•Siudy 10
a.m.: Wonhlp lla.m. and 7 p.m. WedDee- · even!na Bible tludy, praye&lt; and pralae
....,..., 7:311 p.m.
day Blblf Study. voeal mu&amp;lc, 7 p.m.
· FAJTHroU.GOSPELCHURCH.Lona
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. DudBolltm, Suaday School, t : 3D a .m.; Moro·
dina Lane. Muoa, W. Va. J . N.Thocker,
Ina Worlhlp ID: 6&amp; a ..... ; Su~ ...,....
pastor. EvtnfQ" III'Vft 1:1:1 p.m.; Wo7:00p.m taammer7. 3D p.m. ), Wedn..men'~ Mln ...try, Thundly, 9:» a.m. ;
day nllht 7:00p.m. taummer 7::11 p.m. I.
Wodneoday Prayer ond Bible Sludy. 7:1.5

t:DIIIIt
- Wonlllp
-•
ad
t:30
uri.;
III'VIet,

-..apa.ao.) tllel•q•.-teaa~a~Commhell

'l'llanday when Calherlae McQuld Stet-,
Ph.D., left, and Scbu;ylar Coae, rlJII&amp;, both ol Ollie
Unlvenlty'a Interior Deslp Deplll1mellt. me&amp;
wttb the exhibit's planning commhtee ai tile
llbnry. Also pictured are committee membera.
Brian Reed and Mary Powell.

'AWUNGS.COATS .

•OIJie

praYft servtoo Thunclay, 7: :II p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINAT!ON·
AL CHUROI , Klnplllry IIDod. !ln.
Clyde W. llfndoncn, j)Uier. &amp;lnda~
Scllool t :30 a.m.: RllphClrl, &amp;.pt. EYl'll'
log worlhlp 7:110 p.m. PraYft meeting,
Wedntoday 7:00p.m.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPl1ST
CHURCH. IMm State Route 7, Mldd!~
pori. Sunday Sclloollla.m.; Stilldayov...
1111 ....,.., 7:30 p.m.: ~ aervlce,
1:30 p.m
•.
,
HYSELL RUN IIOL!NI!!IS CHUROI.
Bob Grimm, put or. SulldaySchool9::11a.
m.: Worship 10:C5 a .m.: Sunday...., ..,
HrVIce.7p.m.
FREEDOM &lt;JOSPF.L MISSION 11 Bald
Kaoll. toealed on c..,IIIY Road at ~~n.
Roar WOIIortl. -er. Suaday SchOol
9:30a.m.: llom!aa- 11:611 a .m.;
SUday evetdJitr wonblp 7:00 p.111.: Woe!....... Bible Sito«Y 1:110 p.m.
WHri'E'S CHAPEL WEBLEY.t.N
CHURCH- CoolvlleRD.Rn. PhRIIp Rl·
......,,, past,.., Suada1Scllooll:30a.m.:
worship aervt.. ill:30 a .m.: Bible lludy
. ud wonhlp tervt... Wedll-y,J p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF OIRIST.
Roy W. Carler, p.~ator. Sundly Mornln~
Woroblp, 10:00 a.m.: Sunday Billie SchOol
1:00 p.m.: Wedneaday Bible Study 7:110p.

80UTBDN'CIAI...:il

-----·

••'*'

Mldoloport. Ohio 41780
llt418ii2·1117-IIIB·OOKBI

~-~-~~DI.EPOIT~,~Oit~IO~'="=-+..;;C.;.,H.;.UR.;.C;.,H_a_u;.PP_LIE-8-·-·-··-LE-8-f

The frost descending in the night,
Dispelling autumn's alowing sight,
HaS left the trees with branches bare,

nelda)'

PlANNING ii&amp;BiihG - As a part or
Paaoiaw1'•
1 aalal (lll&amp;b blrtllflai of

13 MIIBtrMt

716 NOITH ,SECOND AYE.

Sc-

989-2667.

. 992-5432

GOD'S LOVE FROSTED THE
OF WINTER

a.m.; Church SchoollO:OOt.m. 1Miinln ~

mlnlltw;

.

992-2975

10:30 a.m.
HOBSON CHURCH OF OIR!ST IN
OIR18TJAH UNION, 'lbtr• Durham,
'· Sutlday
•rvlce.
1:10 a .m.;
.._
IDe' "oervl&lt;e
7:00
p.m. Prayer
meetbq.
Wedn-*f, 7:110 p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, "-11 IL llooldlt&amp;, (101100'. Blb!o
Cl- t:3Da.m.; Mont!aaWorablpiO::.a.
m.: Ewai111Woraldp,6:10p.m. 'l'burlday
Bible StUdy; 6:30a.m.
•
ZION CJIURCH'OF OIRIST, Pomeroy.
llarrloiiWII!eRd. (RI.Id) RobortE.'Pur·
lei!, mbllater; Stew IliaD!~, BlllleScllool
&amp;.pt.; Rodl~"l,• Alit. Sapt. SUN·
DAY: Bible
:30 a .m .; Wonldp
11: 30 A.M. ud 7:30 P.M .: Wedn-y Bl·
bleSiucly,7: 110 11m.
ST. JOHN L11'111ERAN CHURCH, Pine
Gr...,. The !ln. WWialll Mlddl-h,
pu110'. Cllurd!MI'VIoe t:30 Lm.; Sutlday
Scmol10:30a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF OIRIST.
Tom Ru.,tll, pater. Stnlday School t: 30
a.m.: l..an7 Ra~ S. S. Sapt. Momlnl
wOI'Uip tO: at a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF 'niE Noi.ZA·
RENE..._ ft:ov· Jolm van... putcr. Ora
Buo, \.liOU'tllaD of the Boord ol Cllrlttlan
Life. Soliday School 1: 30 a.m.: lloralla
WOrllbl ll::iJ a .m.: i:walellcal .-.....
7: ~g;rr.: Wedntlday IIIVIce, 7:011 p.m.
L
TY CHRISttAN CHURCH, Drx·
101'. Woody cau, (101100'. Servl&lt;a llanday
10 a .m. alld 7 p.m. Wetlo~, 7 p.m.
·
DYESVILLE COIOIU
CHURCH,
Uoyd Sa)'ft, SUpt. lloondoy
t: 3D a .
m.; mondnl wcnldp 10:30 a.m. SUnd.ly
eveatnc tei"V&amp;ce T D.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Strvp
Deaver, Paster. Mike- ,_lf(er, Sunday
School Supt.; Suadly Sc-hool 9::1) a .m.:
MornIn&amp; wonhlp 10: 10 a .m. : Sunday
ovenlna wonltlp 7:30 p.m.: Wedll-y
......,lng Blblestldy 7:30p.m.
BURI.lNGIIAM C0111MUNr1Y CHURCH.
8\dnahlm. Ray Lluderulllt. p11rcr. fto.
bert Colan. - - ....... !kindoy School
!Da.m.: Wll'lhtP7J&gt;m.: -..-..6p.m.
youlb ,_lnrt: Wecl, 7(1-m. clurcb-.
PINE GROVE IIOUNESSCHURCH.%
mlleotrRt.325. Rev. liN J. Waitt. pulor.
IIDbert Searleo, S.S. Su... Suoday School
9:30 a.m.: Moral... Wor1blp 10:30 a .m.:
Sunday ..enlaaaervlce 7::11 p.nt.: Wed·

FROST - There will be a two
day revival with Rev. Franklin
AdklnlfnmBeckly, W.Va. at the
.Faith Chapel Church In Frost on
Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m.
nl&amp;btly. Call the following
numbers for lnrormallon,
86'1 6280,423-9766, 378 6238, or

POMEROY, CMI0--992·6677

204 (liMier St.
,_,.,, Olt.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
~~~~-.""':'!--.::-~":':"~~

992·3325

(614)992-2039 or
(614)992-5721

••

ZJ2 E. lllhl Str"t
992·37S5. Po11t10r

POMEROY - Tbe Pomeray
S..lor·Cltlzena Dance Club will
haw a r'OIIDd and square dance
011 Friday framl-11 p.m~ Mulllc
wlll be provided by True Country
Ramblers. Thole auendlng are
to br(Jii snack&amp; tor the snack
table.

ROIIIIS fOIIVIIY . OC&lt;AIION

John F . Fulll, Mil'·
Ph. tt2·2101
Pomeroy

w. Main

ntDlAY

~ 16P-roy
S. Second
.

·· ~· ·

p,,,, Flow" 16•,

MEIGS TIRE
CENlER, INC.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT'

~ . f'-P\
11

992·l971

Pomoroy

INSURANCE~

SAlES I SUW:E

ol Columbus, o.

S,raew11

Brogan-Warner .

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Nationwide Ins. Co.

1111 Work·
Clbln•t lakiRt

Prtscripttons

ttntss

Community calendar

Listed On .This Page.

RACINE PlANING MILL Tl.fO!ID

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

~~~

Friday, December.8, 1889
Page 7

HMI"MtdT QrtVy, ttom-ollllll o,... • • • With Muahroom&amp;. Homau •• •

ouii.NOI .... •""""-•twlthHonoyl.Fmhlya.-eonoo..._wa&lt;Daoal., Toe. a - nmk oi Mtllt. .
.

C. .'S POIIION _,,......................................_, SJ,JI
OP£N: 9 A.M. 'TIL 7:00P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

J10W oPIII POl m•DASTt lry Ow let c.bt, Pn dl
IMSt, Om1hts. Oel ... &amp; lrltl.

I

SUpplfes Of Taller n ea Are Umfted - So Shop Early!
Both Varietfa Retcdn Needles Ver'JI Weill

BOB'S MlRKEt• AND GREENHOUSES

¥•••·

Ja8t .Abcmt The Pomeroy-M•eon Bridge
wv
773-&amp;721

�Plrl• 8

Mangagement changes
announced at company
Two changes In sales managemeet have been announced by
Frank Boyd, Jr., VIce President
Sales for National Refractories
and Minerals Corporation.
Jobn Enright has been promoted to Regional Sales Manager for the company's Chicago
~glon and Dan Huston has been
promoted to District Manager In
Indianapolis, Ind.
Huston Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Huston of Syracuse.
Enright joined National Refractories In 1972 as an hourly
worker In the Dearborn, Mich.
warehouse. Since then he has
served the company in a number
of capacities, Including three
years as a field Installation
representative and four years In
sales before being named
Manager-Territory Sales In 1981
and District Sales Manager in
1982 for the Salt Lake City area.

Meigs MRDD hosts
SocSec information
meeting next week

Prior to his latest appointment,
Enright was North Central Area
Manager for the Chicago a rea. In
his new capacity, he will supervise the sales efforts of district
and area managers In the
Greater Chicago area, Indianapolls and St. Louis In addition to
having direct account
responsibility.
Huston started with -Na.tlonal
Refractories In 1980 as a field
Installation representative after
working as a quality control
superintendent for General Refractories for two years. He
entered sales In 1981 as an
Associate Sales Representative
and worked his way up to Senior
Sales Repre$entatlve, a position
he has held since the beginning of
the year.
Huston has an associates degree In ceramiC engineering

An Informational meeting on
the topic of Social Security
benefits for worker• who have
handicaps will be held at 1 p.m.
on Wednesday at the Meigs
MRDD facility (Carleton School)
In Syracuse.
'
A representative of the local
Social Security office In Athens
will be on hand to present
Information and answer ques·
tlons. Issues planned for dl59us-

DAN RUSTON

•OHN ENRIGHT
\

from Hocking Technical Collei@
In Nelsonville, and Is a member
of the American Ceramic Society
and tbeAmertcanFoundrymen's
Society.
According to Boyd, both men
bring a wealth of refractory

experience to their respective
posltlnm and look forward to
helping provide customers with
the Improved service and quality
refractory products that National Refractories bas to offer.

NEW CHURCH - This aew church, the
Beedaville Fellowslllp Church of the NIWU'eae,
loelded on Route W between Lonr Bottom aad
BeeclavUle, was co•tructed by volunteer
worllers. The sbellls all that was completed when

vohmteen bepn the IDterlor wel'k appro:d-•
malely lour moollla ago. Tile buUdfar haa a
larr;e sanctuary, larl'! lellowulp hall, ud roar
clusroema.
·
..

A Christmas dinner was held
recently· by members of the
Mlclclleport Garden Club at the
legion ball in Middleport.
FollOwing the dinner, the
group met at the home of Mrs.
·Betsy Horky for a meeting and
gift exchange.
Roll call was answered with
members Introducing their gu.
es ts and reading a card which
described plant materials that ·
could be used for Christmas
decorations.
Christmas readings were
given by Mrs. Ruth Arnold, Mrs.
Ruth Anderson: 'and Mrs. Rae
Reynolds.
Dorothy Morris served as ·
judge of gift wrapping for the gift
exchani@. Mrs. Lennie Hapton·
stall was awarded the prize for
most original.
The meettna concluded with ·
refreshments served by Mrs.
Horky and Mrs. Irene Davis.
The refreshment table was
decorated with a centerpiece
cohslsilng of a tall crystal bolder
wltll a tall while candle. This was
flanked with crystal hurricane
holders and white candles on
each side. Angelbalr and bead
garland was Intertwined at the

MIAMI (UPI) - The streets

were calm Friday morning In the

slon Include reimbursement of
employment expenaes to baJIIII-'
capped workers, such as some
traDaportatlon coati' related to
employment whlcb, may be deducted from declared 111c0me. '
All enrollees of·Melal MRDD,
their parents or guai'dlana and
other Interested parties are
urged to attend. ParentJ · of ·
.school . 8i@ pi'OIIJ'am enroDees
will also receive u~eful . lnforma­
tlon and are Invited to at~nd-

-People in the news--..;.._,_ _ _ __
behind. But I realized at some
point that gymnastics was part of
me, that we belong together."
Nonetheless, Comanecl already
has a jobofferfromWXDJ·FM,a
Miami radio station, that wants'
her to be co-host of Its early
morning show. Panalt's wife,
Marla, Is understandably miffed
by Nadia and her husband and
has hired a lawyer.
CARSEY-COSBY MOVE!:
CBS Is trying to entice star
producer Marcy Carsey Into
heading the network's entertain·
ment division and hopefully
bringing Bill Coahy wlth her,
according !o The New York
Times. Carsey a!ld partner Tom
Wer...,r, who worked for her
when she was an executive at
ABC, not only produce television's top-rated "The Cosby
Show" but also the highly ranked
"Roseanne" and "A Different
World." The Times quoted sour·

ces as sayl!lg CBS Is negotiating · Stelnem called Tanuny ~e
with Carsey to replace Kim Ball:ker a "sad case" whose
LeMasters, who quit last week as thick, garrlsh makeup Indicates
president of CBS Entertainment, a poor self·lmai@ but said she
and also wants her to shift thinks Cber Is wonderful. Asked
"Cosby" to ABC. Carsey wasn't about Prlaceaa Diana, Stelnem
available · for comment but said, "Basically, the royalty Is
NBC's Brandon TarUkoff and kind of a joke." Rivers 'then
Cosby's agent uld he wouldn't be asked Stelnem to rate herself.
switching networks.
"She's a happy person," Stelnem
said. "A little messed up, a ·very
STEINEM RATES WOMEN: slow writer, not very neat but
Gloria Stelnem uys Barbara very lucky to live In this time."
Baah's opinions are being held
hostage. In an Interview taped
for Friday's ".lou Rivera
Show," Stelnem assesses some of
the leading women of the 1980s,
saying, "I think we should free
Barbara Bush. She used to work
for Planned Parenthood and
have a whole other set of views.
Now, obviously, somebody's got
a lock an~ key on (her). She may
be the Martlla Mbcllell of our
generation." On other women,

'

•

21. .
'
' -\.
Jeanneite Brown has ~n
named director of Project Rehab ·.
In Lima.
· '

'

·'

•

base of the holder. This was a vase of Christmas gree~•
mounted on a mirror base and wlth · ted candles ud bi'us .
accented with crystal Christmas holders on e8ch side.';
,·
trees to . complete the
· Thearrani@ment'for tb_eeven·
_arrangement.
lng was for a coffee table and was
A Christmas display was made by Mrs. Allee Neece.
•.
trimmed with red candles, w.hlte
The entrance wa1 a~nted
crocheted ornaments, and white . with aarland and . miniature
lace garland on a table covered IJahts.
with a red cloth formed the
Guests present were .. Mrs .
display for gift packages.
Helen Mogg, Mrs. Marilyn AndOther decorations Included a erson, Debbie Brennan~ fo{ra. ·
basket of holly with red ribbons Mary VIrginia Stewart, ai!d.Joe
made by Nellle Zirkle.
Hill, grandson of Louise.
The mantel was decorated'w lth Thompson.
,,
.J . .
·;4

i'

• '·· :

.

•

. r

,.--~-·
· ·.-~~..-. .................-.. . . . . . , .• • b ...... , • • • •.,

.·r

SUNDAY ONLY

ALL JEANS _O'LYJ. .

20°/o oFF
j

r

·'

-.

.,

LEE, LEVI'S, CHIC,.SUNSO iLUES :
WRANGLER, CAIHAm DENIM :.
FASHION, BASIC, SPOm,
ACID WASHED, STONE WASHED ·
'

Ponwov MlcUapon, ONo

The Dally Sentiial-ft-al 9

Sb eets caltn after I .ozano conviction, conun~nities split

.Projea rehab gets new director ·:·
FOSTORIA, Ohio (UP I) -The
executive director of the Fostoria Economic Development Corporation for the past 19 months
said she will leave her post Dec.

--

, ...., • .,.... . 8,1989

Middleport gardeners hold meeting

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press lnteraatlonal
NEWS OF NADIA: Soviet
gymnastics legend Olp: Ko.r but
was very diplomatic when asked
about Nadia Comaaecl's defection and her relationship with a
married man who helped her nee
Romania. Korbut, 34, who
charmed the world at the 1972
Olympics before Comanecl came
along In 1976, was In Indianapolis
~ursday to raise money for
ctllldren who contracted cancer
from the Chernobyl accident and
was ' Inevitably asked about Comanecl. She said Nadia's defection and romance with Constant!•e Panalt were personal
matters and she wished her "all
tile best." Korbut said she also
hope Comanecl changes her
mind about quitting gymnastics.
'1 went through this myself," she
llllld. · "It Is common to many
athletes to want to leave that lite

---

Fridey, Declmber 8. 1981

The o.ily Senti1al

I.

•

. 011111 IVIIY DAY IIIII: · ·• •
CHIIIS1'IIAS, . . .AY IIIICLUDID

calli from uptet Hispanics, Including members of the Lozano
family, during Ita early morning
talk show "Buenoa Dlas Colom·
bla" Friday.
Donald Jones, an associate law
professor at the UniVersity of
Miami and a civil rights expert;
said the verdict offered a "spark
of hope" for all Miami.
"I think that this change~~ the
social reality that exl.!ts In
Miami, not necessarUy by a
degree, but at least a fraction of
that," he said.
''I think that many of the pollee
ofl1cers who are Latin will
·somehow feel that their sltuatton
has suffered," he added. "But I
think IIi the long run, everyone
has won, because the nature of
the system has to be seen as
capable of produc·tng
accounta blllty."
A Miami pollee major said
fellow officers were feeling "empathy" for Lozano.
"I think most pOlicemen are
feeling that there for·lhe grace of
God go I," Major Ivan Fernandez said. "Any of us could have
been In that circumstance a11d
they're all feeling a great deal of

· empathy for William 'Lozano
rl&amp;ht now."
Lozano, wboll! lawyers were
preparing an appeal, claimed he
fired In Rlf-defenR as a blah·
powered motorcycle bearing the
two men raced toward blm. The
prosecu don claimed Lozano
fired needlessly.
The jury of two willie women,
one white man, one black man,
one black woman, and a Hispanic
woman deliberated for eight
hours over two days.
Circuit Judge Joseph P .
Farina set sentencing for Jan.
24 and allowed Lozano, 31, to
remain tree on $10,000 bond. He
was released Into the custody of
his wife and his brother, both
pollee officers.
Lozano wept as he left the
courtroom.
At the office of his lawyer, Roy
Black, Lozano said: "I wasn't
given a fair trial. From the
beginning a lot of the evidence
was denied ... but I am going to
keep fighting for my job and for
justice and we are going to
appeal."
Lozano said be believed evidence favorable to him -was
excluded and the judge refused to

dlamlaa a black juror his lawyers department accepted the verdict
and would follow procedure.
felt waa biased.
That juror, Ezra Simmons, "I've never seen a pollee officer
became foreman. The black remain a pollee officer when he's
postal worker refused to discuss been adjudicated," he said.
the verdict. " I was called. I
Lozano shot and killed motor·
didn't volunteer for this ... and I cycllstClernentlloyd,23,Jan.16
did the best I could." he said.
In the predominantly black
Assistant State Attorney John neighborhood of Overtown after
Hogan said oft he verdict, "It was a parade celebrating the birtha jury that represented all day of Martin Luther King Jr.
segments of our community, and
Allan Blanchard, 24, Lloyd's
we think that the verdict was passenger, later died of Injuries
fair. I think the statement Is the sustained when the motorcycle
slammed Into a car.
justice system works."
Roy Black disagreed. ''There
In the three days of riots that
are many people In this town who followed, another person was
are afraid of another distur- kUled, six others were shot,
bance," be said. "And when you nearly 400 were arrested and
add It up, It's cheaper toconvfct a more than $1 million In property
pollee officer than to have a riot was damaged.
Lozano's trial aggravated ra·
that will cost mllllons of dollars."
Lozano was relieVed of duty clal tensions In a city that has
with pay when charaed. Asked If seen two other race riots this
Lozano would be fired, Pollee decade -In 1980 and 1984- after
Chief Perry Anderson said the pollee kllllngs of blacks.

SPRING VAlln CINEMA
446 4)24

Witness describes fatal dog attack
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI) - The Introducing an enlarged color
man . whose pit bull savagely photograph of the black pit bull,
kUied a · 2-year-old boy had · sitting sullenly on the bloodtrained the animal to be viCious drenched ground.
and to guard a marijuana patch,
Blood could be seen spattered
prosecution witnesses 'testified at on the wallS of a metal storage
the trial of the first U.S. pit l!ull shed and on Berzy's house, which
owner charged wltb murder for formed a ' '3-foot-3-lnch wide,
6-foot·long corridor the chained
his dog's actions.
' Pollee Investigators testified dog Plltrolled.
Thursday that Michael Berry, 39,
The prosecu lion's first witness
kept llierature focusing on dog was a volunteer fireman and
fighting, and had equipment used neighbor who struggled to save
to train and condition the the dying boy moments after his .
animals.
mangled body was puUed tree of ·
Berry's 60-pound pit -bull, the dog.
Willy, kllled a neighbor, James
Fernando Rulz fought back
Soto, 2. Jan.13, -1987, after the tearsandturnedhlshead,unable
l!OY wandered within rani@ofthe to answer Immediately wben
dog. The pit buB had been Sanderson asked him what he
INshed on a 6-foot chain and saw when he ran to the neighbor
gu~ a corridor that led to a
boy's ald.
patch of 243 marijuana plants,
accordilll to testimony .
Rl!lz, wllo lived about a hall·
Deputy District Attorney Dale block from where the fatal attack
!landerson set the bloody scene, occurred In suburban Morgan

Hill, said the boy's hideous because Berry had trained Willy
Injuries sent him Into kind of a to light other dogs and had failed
trance as he struggled to admln- to take proper precau lions even
though he knew the animal was
ts ter first ald.
"I couldn't hear anything. I conditioned to a life of vicious
looked up ancl asked people to encounters.
Three other pit bulls and a
help. I could see their mouths
German
shepherd also lived at
moving but I couldn't hear
Berry's
house.
anything. You gi&gt; to movies and
Pollee testified ' they found
see this stuff but I never thought
Issues of the •'Sporting ·
numerous
It could happen to me," Rulz
Dog
Journal,"
and the "Amerisaid.
When Rulz arrived, he took the can Pltbull Terrier Gazette" at
unconscious child from the arms Berry's house.
A crude treadmUI a bout 4 feet
of · his crylna motller. Jagged
holes were ripped In 'the boy's . high was set uplnfrontofthejury
box. Sanderson said the apparaT-shlrt and shorts, be said.
The defense has described the tus would be used as evlderu:e to
mauling death as a "horrible, show Berry was serious about
tragic accident," but not training_flghtll)g dogs and keepIng them In shape.
murder.
Willy was ordered put to death,
Berry was Initially charged
but
Is currently at the Santa
with Involuntary manslauehter,
Clara
County Animal Shelter
but the chari@ was upgraded to
while his death sentence Is
second-degree murder In November 1987, alleging malice appealed.

THE BANI ONE ADVERTISEMENT
THAT IAN 011
DECEMBER 5, 1989,
THE TEIM
•
011 THE SENIOR CHAMPS AD
WAS LEn OUT.IT SHOULD HAVE
lEAD AS FOLLOWS:
''

. Doctors," begin .second live~onor _ transplant

:f

'

· •. ·

wake of the manslauehter con·
vlctlon of a Hispanic pollee
ofl1cer lor llllllng two black men,
but Miami pollee remained on
alert and braced for possible
violence.
A jury found Officer WilHam
Lozano eullty Thursday of one
count of manslllughler With a
weapon and one count of manslauehter wltbout a weapon. He
faces a possible !'•bon sentence
of45 years.
The verdict In the . racially
charged trial drew divided reaction among Miami's ethnic com·
munltles, with blacks balling the
decision as justice and Hispanics
·upaet by the outcome.
Pollee remained on 12-hour
shifts Friday morning and field
forces were standing by. A
directiVe posted Wedneaday that
prevented officers from !&amp;king
time off stayed In effect.
But tbe feared outbreak of
violence had not come. Miami
Pollee Department spokesman
Anaelo Bltsll said the streets
were "very quiet" Thursday
night and Friday morntng.

The January shooting that led
to the conviction trtaered three
days of racial violence In Mia·
ml's predominantly black com·
munltles, and some had feared
there would be a recurrence If
Lozano were acquitted. Others
were concerned about potential .
backlaah from Hispanics over
the guilty verdict.
Pollee were expected to decide
Friday whether to call off their
alert status.
"We have not had to send out
special field forces or anything
like that. We did not have any
problems In the His pan 1c areas,"
Bitlis said. "We bad no history of
trouble there and we did not
expect any trouble there even
with a eullty verdict."
But the decision did not please
Hispanics, who said they believed Lozano was convicted to
ease racial tensions.
"I would say almost all of the
Latin community dlaagreee with
the verdict," said Auaustin
Acosta, a disc jockey at popular
Spanlsb•language radio station
WQBA·AM.
. Spanish-language radio station
WKAT ·AM fielded telephone

'

OPEl 9·1 IICNI.-Pa, 9·5 SAl, 11-S . . .
UYAWAYS .WILC-

..

,.

"

.,.,.·'

"

Schertz, Texas, had been kept single segment can be removed
hospitalized, In part, bee au se of a without harming the donor.
Since the liver reaenerates
complication that arose during
Itself,
the donor's liver wlll grow
the 13 ~-hOur operation to
back
to
Its original size within a
she's ever been. u
transplant pari of her liver Into
The segment trans·
month.
·Sarlna, like Alyssa Smith, Alyssa. Doctors had to remove
planted
lntothechlld
will grow as
suffers frmn biliary atresia, a the mother's spleen after It burst
the
child
grows
and
function
as a
blockap of the bile ducta that during the transplant.
The live-donor transplant, normal liVer.
can be fatal.
,
U the new procedure becomes
called
a ••segmental transplant,"
Alyua was In RriOUS bu I
successful
and widely used,
offers
hope
to
children
suffering
stable condttlon Friday, Fetsch
say
there would be
experts
from
the
disease
whO
mJaht
uld. The toddler was under a
significant
reduction
In a backlog
otherwise
die
while
waiting
for
a
regular diet and went for a _w alk
-of
nearly
700
U.S.
babies
who
compatible
liver
from
a
dead
with her lather Thursday In the
need
new
livers
each
year.
About
donor.
hospital's hallways. Fetsch said
In the segmental liver trans- half of those children die waiting
the girl -would remain hospitalfor compatible organs.
Ized for another two to four plant, just a piece of the liver Is
Alyssa's operation was the
removed from tlie donor and
weeks.
.
first
of Ita kind In the United
Her mother was discharged placed In the recipient. The liver
Stales; although two have been
from the hospital Thuraday, . has eight distinct ~egments, each
. performed In Brazil and one In
with
Its
own
blood
supply,
and
a
· Fetsch said.. Terri Smith, 29, of
Australia.
point In waiting any longer.
''Her condition has Improved,"
Fetsch uld of the Millington,
Tenn., baby. "She's as healthy as

An Open·Letter To The Citizens
Of the Bend Area

~8.00%

BANKEON£

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
5ANH ,'\E .HH£NS. NA .A PAATOF THECAAIIIG TEAM

Atnf ,$, On·o

-

•Easy returns

•Heavy traffic

•Lower prices

•Expensive commercials

25°/0oFF
SIUCTED

In order for small towns to exist, the people must depend on
one another. You depend on .us to support your groups. We also
need you to support us. The next time your group needs a donation,
will the Mall help! So why shop at the Mall?

CHRISTMAS
CARDS
'

250fo
.,0 OFF
SOOfo OFF

.
•

'
'

...

BILLFOLDS
WAWTS

•

AMITY

•

•
'

0°/o OFF

......

Charbrolled Chicken, Steak and Shrimp.
Now your family can enjoy their favorite cqarbroiled dinners without firing
up the grill. Just come to Shoney's for our Charbroiled Dinriers. Chicken,
steak, shrimp, or steak and shrimp grilled to perfection over an open flame.
And with rice or potatoes, plus unlimited trips to our Soup, Salad and Fruit ·
Bar, that's quite a meal. So grill out at Shoney's tonight.

Will 1110.10

Merry Christmas From The Businesses
of The Bend Areal

•nfJICIIASL

•

-

-

, ---- --------=---··· ---- t - --- - --

'

- . - - ...--...
~-·

...... ,___....

--

--.

,

r-

i

~

------

'

,

•

~

•

SEIIO
$6.900
WATCHES •••••••

SBECTID

•Expensive displays
•Higher prices

FDIC

TIMEX WATCHES

Local Merchants Have: Malls Have:
•Support for local schools and •Exotic plants
civic and religious organiza•Fountains
tions
•50-60 Mile trips
•Local taxes
•Unknown owners
•Local owners
•Live models
•Local employees
•Glass ceilings
•Hometown concerns
• Rude crowds
'
•Low overhead
•Long lines

V~MDrtr

...

____

~.-

'

-•

�•
December 8. 1918 .

Ohio

Sutinel

;.

Prosecution PI esents rmal
witness in drunk driver case
uted to the passage of time
CARROlLTON, Ky. !UPil Three blood·alcohol tests rein· between the accident and the
force tile charges against a man tests, to the difference of time
accused of ramming a church between the tests. and to the
bus and kUling 27 people In tbe different testing methodl at the
nation's worst drunken driving State Pollee Crime Lab and at
accident, a chemistry expert Humana Hospital-University ol
Louls villi!.
said.
"If the test results match; they
Prosecutors put Dr. Kurt Du·
be suspect," said Du·
would
bowskl on the stand Thursday to
bolster their case against Larry Ilowski, an expert In .forensic
Mahoney, a chemical plant chemistry and toxlcotoeY at the
worker from Worthville charged University of Oklahoma, who haS
wltb 27 counts of munler and 55 spent 40 years studying the
lesser offenses stemming from ettects of alcohol on humans.
Other medical experts and a
the accident.
Dubowskl said the three differ· state chemist testified Wednes·
ent blood·alcohol samples taken day that Maho~~ey's blood·
after the May 14, 1988, wreck on aicohollevel was well above the
Interstate 71 near Carollton were .legal limit of ~ 10 percent.
Dubowskl was the onlY witness
compatible even though they
to
teo tlfy before the trial rewere not Identical.
cessed
Thursday. The prosecu·
Together, they indicate Maholion
said
It would compll!te Its
ney's blood-alcohol content at the
time ofthe wreck was .21 percent case Friday with the testimony of
- more than twice Kentucky's state Medical Examiner George
legal limit that presumes drun· Nicholl, who found following
autopales all the 27 deaths were
kenness, Dubowskl said.
He said the differences In the caused by smoke Inhalation.
Assistant Attorney General
blood test results can be attrlbPaul Rlchwal&amp;ky, special prosec·

STEWART
TRUCKING

utor In the case, has called 106
wttnesaes since the trial began
Nov. 8 In Carroll County Circuit
Court.
The defense was expected to
beatn Its cue Monday. Lawyers
said they will maintain the 1977
former school bus owned by the
Radcliff First Assembly of God
church was defective and tbat
the bus manufacturers. Fonl
Motor Co. and Sheller-Globe
Corp., ·are at least partly to
blame for tbe deaths caused
when the gas tank burst and
sparked a fire throughout the
vehicle.
Earlier witnesses testified the
pickup truck hit the bus loaded
with 67 people head·on and then
slammed another car while goIng tbe wrong way on the
highway. Twenty-four or the 27
killed were 10 to 19 years of age.
Mahoney, 36, also Is charged
with 12 counts of assault, 42
counts or wanton endangerment
and one count of driving under
the lntluence of alcohol. He bas
been free on $540,000 ball.

..........

"FI'M EatlmllM"

Pl. 949·2101,
., .... 949·2160
J-IJ·Ifll

UIDA'S
PlltmiG I CO.

IUTLAID TltE
SALES and
SEIVICE

IIAYIIIUIIIIGS

ana •••

16141 915-4110

n .. lz.7.'1t-IIIO.
IU1LAftD

Classifie
Wo&lt;CII

Day a
1
3
6

MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P;M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

16

1&amp;
16
16

_Monlhly

•.so

•Ada

ret. mulll bt pelcl In advance ••
c.,d ol Thenka

Happf Ads

u.moti.,.

'f•d Sll•

In

•A clauifi_.t

2-··-..

1-C.d ot Th.nks

DAY

~ 11o00A . M .

IIOND&lt;IY PAPER
TUESDAY

lEFOR£ I'UILtCAliON

WEDNESDAY PAPIEA

THURIDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Cla.~sified

SATURDAY

- 2:00P.M. MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M . lUEIOAY .
- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- Z:OO P.M . THURSOAY
- Z:OO P.M. FRIDAY

PAOER

3673112·U261643379 -

Ch•hire
V,nlon
AW. Grande
Gu.,.n Dtst.
Ar•bi• 0'-t
Witnut

678-Pt. Pl . . . nt
4&amp;1 - LeOfl

571-Apple Gnwe

115-Ch••r
143-Ponlond

n3-Meton

247-L .. •rt Fall•

•41-Aacine

182 - NW~~

Haven

57-Music:lllnstruments
51 - Fruits. Vev••W•

[ffqilr \111'111

Tecumolh. Brlglfl &amp;
Str.tton.

F,lll' SlliiiJIIPS
6 .IVI",flllk

11 --Help W•ned

12-Situttion Want.cl
1 )-hiiiUrllftU

14-lwtin•• Tr,.ninv
1&amp;.-Schooft • lnstrw::tMm
11-Raclio. TV. Cl Rt~~t8ir

13-Livootoc!&lt;
14-Hey • Grain

es . . . Seld. Fertilizer

t?-Milcall..,toul
11-WMIHToOo

to

23 - Protw•rw~S..-vic-.

74-Motorcvct•
311 - Hom• tor Sale

32-MobHeHom• for Sale
33-Farms for S.te
34- lutfn•• Bvildinga
36-LOII 6 AICIIIgl

ttUYWAIIAIIYY
WMHEI$-$100 op

WATEI SEIVICE

FIEfl£15-$1Z5 ~P
IICIO OV£15-$71 "'

'1600 GALLON

71-AUtOI for S .. e
72-Trvdlt for Slle
73-Ver~~• 4 WO"s

Loan

u•no11

75- hstt I Matars for S•l•
71-Auto '•'• • A~r::•ear••

77·- Auto Repair

SPIEAD
DIIY IAULED

.

71 - Camping £quipm.nt
79-C•mp•• • Motor Hom•

St'r

.a1-Hat.tMt for Rent

VII t'

s

-

Public Notice
PUILIC NOTICE
In ICCCI . .iOI wtth leet1on 107... O.R.C. -od
bido wl be riCIIYod by tho
C.Unty - d of
Conw11l · • • in tMir of·
Ia nod In tho Court·
....... ,.,_oy, Ohio. untl
20,
1981· Tile Ill.- tw

-.o

-

on_,.,..

--

pu-.,.__.

- . . o..Mpmont Ottloo.
UtW c-or,~ Oftl... ....
11i1e111 CAA. A - m of
2100 ..,. ft.
i1 NqUired 0011181nina not
-lhon ollc-. l,.ci-

.....,...-..v

-o.--It
Inti muot be """"" with h.,dlcop
men .,.,
a elllft' • Nit·

be...,.....,_
_..,.., e.ld oftloe • ..... ..... loDth -.... ...

eir -dltiD • • odequ1t1 flou,.unt laJ'l111•
oufll- for oflloe _ . .
Muot_ofl.-_.....,.
to ICDDntG . . . . I rnlainlum
of11....
Rentol -lrod fat llld
bulclng ollould be -

Public Notice

Po-.

11- lu.-1 - o d ""
Multwny Heiglrto, Pomoro¥,

'---=-=-:-:--,....--

••a.

c-11.

1

~

•........ lid". ef CSwllli H ........
Oflel ' - ' "· J IIJJ.S..ofll&amp;..,..,..
... """ "-'- .... _oy,
OSIIe 417t1.

: :.... :.-:. .
_..............
~:.r

r

LoC81od Behind
Trac:tlll' Deolorohip

lEI'S APPUAIIICE
SEIYICE

MOiiiS

EQUIPMENT
7U·245S
Weaat

....... .......
,1,111~

a-SC.N 1 '

11211.1.11....

1

fM"

....... ,...... , '•

:!:.:.1:: 'i'r=~j

PAT IILL FOlD
992·2196

Middleport. Ohio
1·13-lfc

B

Hey

MillE'S
HSTAIUNT

Ifill awnttl 1111111
eptratlll by Millie
Dullcan.
Ia

ForG..,d Homr
Coekln' Comr Ser Uo!
HOUII8: 8 AM-I PM Dolly
CLOSED SUNDAY

GUN SHOOT
IACIIIE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

FilE DEPT.

CUSTOM.,
I HOMES &amp; GARAGES

lashaM luilding

EVDY

"At ll1nn..l1 Prkts"

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 , ...

PH. 949·2101
;or Its•.949·2160
; Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAW

Focfory (hob

12 G.,.. Shott- Only
Strlrlly &amp;11•1111
IO·S.Ifll

lngllttSie

I

I

II 4 . . . . .

·

......... ..........-. -.
·-··
,.

......_Nit-.
~~~. !i~~~~~~~ ...............
-.
,, -

. RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

''

.....

11~70.

eu,: ...-

11a1'111.

pdoN.

114-IJ'I..

2

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

too

rwnanalllr

who helped In
any wey du"ng

theiiMIIInd
dellth of their
hiMHndancl

loaea.

GOLf &amp;
TIOPHY

SHOP

ALL NEW MERCHANDISE
FOOD AND DRINKS

JOIIIII TWOII

(

•

2211.

1m 171. lloaol ~
-ooat'l'
111 •... ·
........
new~:

.'

~.....
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j' -

11

leginning Stpt. 17

AVON I All I Sltlrlllf
........ *-'ll-1421.

Starts at hto P.M.
F•tary Chob4 12

AVON • All Coli illorlllll
._..t-.a14L

11111. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1. . 10 . . -..,.,
- · Roady .... - .... ~

Uno-·

Building

Gauge

forSala

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Buelnau

.• 1;,.

Training

S. SHEARED

su to S18

••

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nnAIIII, 11110

.~ ..-.

.-.

Serv1ces

.

--

Ia 7 I C ... • • rMr

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c. .., - - .......

•

a,tle ...... 1,000 .... I, ef OJ!HO
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Pilla
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a,~Nhl~ ~. If
5-11111

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WYl011ta.._ ..
Lito ...... - Oolllpoll• .......
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Improvements

TransporiJIIon

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7471.
==~ ;;,..==,~or~L-

1

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llolort ., .... lool
-

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.........plotod- dri.

,.,...,_ ..... OOIVIoo.ICM--*2

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.....

01 D... CrMII Rd. Pill-. • •

~-~

&amp;.: 1.:.."-:~':=Aicm''

.1Mb • OH 1-.:17..521.

82

PlUmbing &amp;
HeMing

84

Electrical &amp;
RlfrlgaretiOn

•........

J111t . . . ri ..... PIIII
R1gl ..w. 100 Main . . . . Pelnl

-.wv-.
•

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

15 General Heullilg
~
....
-lt-·7181.

DOZEI
SITEWOII • lOADS

CLEARING

IIEWLAID

I

..

-446-2342

Sllilk 11 - S215&amp;

...... -&amp;75-I!D

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Home

81

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35 Lola a. Acruge
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WEHI FAIM

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Chi¥,

. . . . .

Choo UUCit ... Oltlo, ........

33 Fanna for Sale

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FRESH CUT

. Colli

I

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-·-..:=. . . . . ._. . . . -. . .-... ---. .
In...... -.
front.
- --·=. . . . . . . .. . . __
III•J:OOp.m.... . . . , -

..
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..

Willi I
SCOTCH PINE

I

3

!.PHon-. .... 13-on RL 11,3nt11MEIII
em .. · - ,........, ClorJ'I

CHRISTMAS
TilES

, . .• • •

........., .. Oueranuad.

. .,, 11 ........... Otl't
I ...
Uurtud homl; . . . . IIIII - . holnn 1dr ,..w,
..... tlt,IIID ..........
=:rt'
lltt44'1t- 117
.. 220.

-.'·
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SADDLES I
lOlSE EOUIPI

Fumllhed
Roonle

,:. . ........
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.......... .._

•
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•tta
.
-'
, _ llln:hiAprtl. t14-441- 76 Auto Parts &amp;
-..
'
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Acceuorlts
64 Hay &amp; Grain
POOII lOY THIU, IJI4.t7l. ,;:
·n:·~
~=--.

C\I.TIIM SPICIAI.I No
~~~-....
t4i171 p ... lllrch.
c.. ,1Wo
.....,..

•

Weotorn BootL Hata,
Shlr1a. llelta For
Man, t:.di" •
ChHdren.

45

32 Mobile Homn

DOUBLE I . •'·
TACI SHOP ..
OliO
691·6500

..

-Totlw:--lo

SUppllal

A~AIIYI

•

Collt--1311 ••• 7:00 ......

... -

-~. 11llton. 011 44a ...atl

HelpW.nted

Scwt

Col. W. Keitll lolden, Auctioneer

Chlt&amp;ll:nK gil. 114 • • • at.

Employment Serv1ces T'II'IIT- ~ • -

EVERY SUNDAY

F ~

10110.1

,~

711 Boatl I Motors
lor Sale

0110

IOUHTIY lUll

-lon.•
........
11..,.7121.

1177.

c•m•.
985-4300

HARRISOIYILLE, OHIO .

(

t

HATS ·
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS

SAT., DEC. 9, 1989
7:00 P.M.
Scipio Township .
·Volunteer Fire Dept.

74 Motorcyclel
1- K·X 121, .... concl, $2200.

31 Hom• for iele -

PllllliNG

Public Auction

Jarnee D.
Mudowewant
to expreu their
thltnb to uch
end everyone

= ' t:..l!:
.................
~

wt ·

R. J. ¥a:a a ,_ 'CtFtRI:\ .....

IUPUWOOD
LAIE
614·949-2734

CunOM SCIBN

Public Slla
&amp;Auction

The family of

You'l elwl,. be
remembared In
ourhelrte.

.:a:

CH111'111M
AUC'IIOII1:00
- p.tW.
Co
nly 8ulltll!lt8un. DrN. 10. lUchini RtYRaldt
Aual•. ,..,. 30111. .,...275-.

·'

DEEI
CUT AND
WIAPPED

MY·T·SHOP

flther.

......file . . . . . . . . .

PubliC Sale
• Auction

-

11-&amp;-1

.

et.SISI . . . . . . . . ~

00101 11 siS HNSISI -.;

8

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41211, - . .
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a11111 ltl . . . .d,...

_"" ....... ......

Wtcan,.......nrt·
cor• radlaforl and
lleattr corea. Wt can
also •itl boll 111111 rod
lilt r.-forl. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Ohio.
Coll112-211tlotfurther - DIII-IIlloulonatioNt·
intornwtiou.
.... Ill QoiiJa C.nty. 1 Card of Tililnlce
Tllerlglrtlln,.
..o•nwvodMito,.
jeciMflll'llllll•.
- · · · "' Ohio
.... food
:1701.21,
tho lr:=======~
....... White, E.....-t.or CedoiiOtlool
eo.nt
...._II

............ c.....,,, ••• IOI.YID 111M • ,.._,
c.. No.
... ., ..,.U n'II' :
Jo:Siott w. Caito. ano lit tile I
-·--tlie'-lf .. 011111011
Dr. N.. CIS!•

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

SibleE

A REGULATION
EBTAatiHJNQ THE
LICENIING Of TRASH
HltULEIII
WMEiliAI. tho Qollo
C.nty-- o f -

--· ,... . _
-·

,

-

IIIOoN IMMM. c-1114 •

Public Notice

tho_....

......
·~ •

"NEW"' II(UIIEIS

985-4422

41775.

ofTheE-of
!dno Coapor
WMIIIIAI. tho 11213, 4. II. I. 7. I. 10. 71c of.,_ ,.....,._ II to ....
tho ....., tho ..... to ....
clown foro 3.,_ .._... AI ,.
_ . ............_alii
bi•ohouldlndu•-lllcl..., 11 to .,. ..._ ...-.
Public Notice
tNih heu... to ... .......
...., . . .,fiJII:nltopueuaut
·-fortho•t......... ....
..... of
- h '""" llttoo~.. tho
NOTICI Of
-lllllio IJUW-fl- to
The of ......
APPOINTMENT OP
p;waat tM pc uta.,....
Coulll'\iCOIIIIIIII**•""'
FIOUCIAIIY
., •• • '
'•tSJPn
.....lrteckltlonll
Dl · OnN-bofU,1111.
II IT, TNIIIIIOIII, Ill·
.........
witllthootll
•

iul ......... II at '&amp;lnt IMd Ml
....... _ . . 1'11111 oftlleep.

DINmESOS

tmiiOATOIS-$100 •P

IAJIGIS-8JI.[Jte.- SlZ5

•ANYTHING
ATAU

..... - ............ of
lela 371, Rulllnd. Ohio

-nd

DIYltts-$n IP

•FlU DIRT

Public Notice

- · MIMIIICIII.
41710,
111f:bllidOhio
AdI---:P::-u..,.bl"'ic-..,.N:-ot-ice,......-- min-oft - o f

Fulb, A n - 11 Low,
1111'• B-.
Ohio 41719 fot
!toe ,...,._ of tho Edno
Caap• rMWenoe. TM r•ilhnce conolou of 3 bed·
rocomo.-. ullhy,_,
Hllbatho.,do1cori-oge
wtth OMtNI .._. ,. . toned

UVING 10011 SimS
IIEDIOOM SIITES

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE

NOTICE Of
the right te Nfect My 01 ...
APPOINTMENT OF
bido 11141/0f · MY ,..,
fiDUCIAllY
-1.
On
No
Ill bof Z7, 1119.
Mooy Hotwtoot,.., Clorll
Ill tho Molgo County 1'1 oa llw '
Mlitl Coun~y ·
Commlllllol..,. Coull. C.. No. 2t411.Ka'l'heokor. . .M ll.lhr
(1211. 8. Z1c

_....,,30P.M.onoaid
dolo
.,d rMII aloud lot tho '
,- - - - - - - - tolowlnt -..... - · ·
PUBUC NOTICE
E8cll11141 to the condi·
Oflero willie r-od u""
............- . tl tho 11th cMy o f - tolowo:
bof. 1111. ot 10:00 A.M 11
Oftlco- to hou• tho tile ollloe of llernord V.

USED FURNITURE

a.nn, 01110

2

,...,_=1
..won • Z:OO
p.m.
.

~

R. L HOLLON
TIUCIING

41-SpiiCt far Rant
47-W.tnted ta Rent
8 - -Equipm~t for A tnt
1 ·-For Ll••

Public Notice

MOIIIIS EOU.,_In

"' ~

42--Mobile Hom• for Rent

Fatt

•Chain• •Chain Olla

H2-S335 "'915·3561
lcnn ,,.. Peot Offlco

.

992·527

H-Rullh'-1• W~nttd

REPAIR
•Saw SuppHes

USED APPUAIICES

ALLEN'S
HAULING

Ia Poiclln
DEADLINE: 2:00 p.tW.
lho ......... tho ..... to run.

....., ......... 2:00 p. ...

4-25·tln

·-

11 - f•rm Eflutprnent
12-Win'ltd to Buy

IIITEISTAR IAm•s
AuntOIIZED
f(HO-YAIDMAN DEAlEit
WE DO SAW

Alu Trll•l•••••
'PH. "'·5682
or 992-7121

HomolitL W-or. ·

~1:r \II 1: ,

InOI TIA(JOIS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

For Moot 2 ond 4·cyclo
ongln•
Stodt Porto for

51- FDI I-'• 111 Tr.-dl

•IN STOCK•

lt. 114, IIIRIIrtJV Olie

PARTS AND SERVICE

.'

Saturday 9 am-6 pm

Garage

... w.tv.leyl I r
.. Mllllop 11, Olt.

I I -luihint luppli•
11 - ,..ts lor Sel•

--~··-­

-

- I

OPEN '9 'AM·7 PM Mondey· Fridey

Roger Hysell

46-Fumishld Room•

R~tuftt

7:30-8:00

Mon. thru Fli.

liPAll

1

.......

GaDipolle

IACINE, OliO

949-2168

43-flrmt for fltnl
44-AINirlrNnt fOf Rent

Oat
- .·-

,_,.,, Olale
.... 992-3561
Buying Houra;

DAVE'S
SMALL EIIGIIE

Mr r·.h.lntil' r

891-lAtltt

937-.,tt•o

742-Rut'-'d
687 - Caotville

.Oitdoy

,,4 ••mr:

~

llt( ..tfl",

II

lllllllaUoa.fonlolo._l_

ttoo. , _ ....

1111

&amp; VIcinity

GUNS· AMO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• $2.20 lox
GUITARS &amp; GUITAI STRINGS
_,

hcklfll'lnp .... .

117 L -•.:;

54-Misc. Merchandill

6-Heppy Ad•
1-Lolt .,.d Found
7-Yad Slle lpald in eWtnce)
1-Pulllic: Sale • Auctton
9-Wifttad to 8uy

22-Mo•.,

Ar" Code 304

Pom•ov

.80

u--...
o53-AntiQuts

M•on Co., WV

112-Mfddleport

441 - Gallipohs

t13.00

l

-J::l:

Cut

•'

POIIIIOT, DIID

49919 .ASE IOUOW D.

IM.

H2-5335 "'915·3561
.......
Office

51-Hou...,old Goodl

21-lutin•s Oppottynit¥

following telephone exchanf{PS ...
A,.e Code 114

.30
.42

TrMIIpnrloltnn

paf{PS cm·er 1 he

Mef91 County

••. 00

-·

4-Giv..wev

Capt - et•tified dis~.... lu1in•1 C.dMd leg.t not fen)

COPY DEADLINE -

.20

11 .30/doy

3-Annouclltn~tt

-*ertilmt.nt plaud in TheDailr Sentinel I• ·.

wil also IPP"' In the Pl. ~....,.. Aeglll•r and the o.Ni·
poW. O.ity TribUne. NadMng o..... 11.000 hom•.

.

••. 00

-

..

RACINE GUN SHOP

W.Va. Chlppl..,

1111'S APPUAIICE
SEIYICE

0,., 11 WOI'do

QOYIIIIMIIHT IEIZID ¥1hiDIII

I

ALL•Yortl Boleo -

COAIICUtirtl tunt. broktft U0di¥'1Witl bach•pd

out- Meiga, o.ll&amp;. or Maan cou,.. must bt P'•

in,.,...,.

.4.00

111

10

•lie.;,;..
discount for adl P.id in IHtJance
.,,..... - GMIW8V tnd Found . - unci• 15 words will lit
run 3 d•• at no ch•ge.
•Pfic. ol ad fot en c_.... l.attt1 is doublt Price of ed con
•7 point line type ontv u.d.
·s-tnll t1 not r81P0nliblt for trrora tft• firtt d• !Chftk
fof ttrors first dtr ad runt
c.t1 befOre 2:00p.m.
cl• aft• pullllic.&amp;...., t• mlkt correctMHt.

Rota

Cllvellwly

Z 417 Slcond AVIIItle, b 1213
- Gallipolis, Oltio 45631
or 11
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.Mulbeny Hps. Pomer0y, Ohio

CHIPWOOD
WAITED

FUIIIACE

::..:=~=
-.

·-old-.
.. ,
=..==a.........
4

:z: t614) 446-7619 II' (614) 992-2104

EVEIItGS

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

•...

,.,_,m-~

a:z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
i:i LicensecfClinical Audiologist

IILL SLACK
992-2269

FUIIIACE

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

.....

1• .._

· : ·l.lepelldablt Htlrinc Aid Slits &amp;Selvl'ctl
0 'H11rinc Evaluations For All Aau

•FIREWOOO

FUINACE

T-

or

~---

=~~~~=,
··
. "elevislon Listeninc Devices

•LIGHT HAULING.

llerth ..

,., -

.•.'.

:t

!"' llrllf"

ttJ.tsU

•SHRUB S. TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

•Mobile Home
Part1
.
•Mobile Home
Alntlll•
•Lot Aan1111

LAMPS
BOOKCASES •.
OLD KNIVES CUPBOARDS
CROCKS
BEDS
.·;l
DRESSERS PRIMITIVES
fO
DRY SINKS TABLES
POCKET WATCHES
-

"lh IIIII ltlt 11-

llofwo•.......... ~...

COUIITIY
MOBILE
HOME PAll

lt. ,

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

'illY IUS-I

a.

71 Autol for lale

Gaad1

"

FREE EITIMATES
, ... lito , . . . . of jllltltlot

•Tire Sal11
•Front End
Algnment
•Oil CMnge Lube
•Brllke Work

Houllhold

.,.,.. ~ HO 111r1amr'la IJI

ShoP.. -·
Wbt:re
Santa. Shopllt '

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

742-3001

torRinl

51

'

!!;;;;;;===;;;;;;~:'~

lllllliiiiXIUIOi
lolltal (luln•IIJ &amp;
Painting

42 MHIIIHomn

•

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials · ~
992·2228 IH&amp;.'It-lMD.
~

NO SUIIOA T CAllS '

8·20·tfft

LAFF·A·DAY

..·'-'

LOWEST PIKES
IIGHIST QUAliTY
Fill LOCAL DIUYOY
POMEIOY AND IMIDLII'OIT'S ONLY
LOCAUY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

IISSILL
SIDING CO.

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

IWN

STIEO .
PIZZA .

•VINYL IIDING
•ALUMifiiUM IIOINO
oiLOWN IN
INIULATION

L W.

992·7479

TO PUa AN AD CALl 992-2156

Ohio

•
•

I.

�•

. ~•

12-n. Dllv Sandnll

Frldey. Deolmblr a. 1888

Ponaov Mldapoe1. Ohio

Kin 's ... --=.:..:.:.:::.:..:..:..::.=::..:.::.:~-----Local news briefs...- - - Snow'· · · - - - - - - - - - 1J\"ITati,..
32.8
2
of
Contlnllld rrcm page 1

'

posted winter atonnwarDIDpfor
West Virllnla, Nordl Carollu,
Tenlll!l- and Kentucky, forecas tlni from 6 to 15 laches of
snow In various spots acrou the
refkm.
Snow stretched rrorn Missouri,
across llllools and Illdlafla and
. Into Ohio. The weather service
posted snow advisories for the
entire region and warned the
snow combined with ftee21ng
temperatures would make roads
sUck and hazardous.
Llgbt snow also fell over parts
of Nebraska and South Dakota.
Temperatures drOJiped to zero In
the norlhern Plains and Into the
teens across much of the rest of
the Midwest.

eontlnued rrcm pare 1
motorists," Lleulenant Woodford added.
"1988's 0-Day netted 487 arrests statewide for drtvlua under
the Influence of alcohol or drugs. We can only (IUess at bow
many of those would have caused serJous Injury or fatal traf!tc
crashes II a pollee officer hadn't sto~ them, " he concluded.

EMS has four calls Thurs&lt;Wy
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
were answered on Thursday 'by units In the cdunty.
At 8:59a.m. , Rutland was called to to Old Dexll!r Road for
Marton Michaels who was taken to Holzer Medical Cenler.
Middleport at 10:30 a.m. went to Soutil Second Ave. for Jane
Warl)er to Holzer Medical Center and at 9:38p.m. to Cote St. for
Charlea Walker Jr. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 9: 51 p.m., Racine was called to Route 124 for OtiS
· McClintock to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

--Area deaths-Mary M. Kelly

Glen Henslft"
Illterment $1!1'vices for Glen L.
Hensler, Middleport, will be neld
at 2 p.m. Sunday at tile Letart
Falls Cemetery. Tile Rev. Lloyd
Grimm will officiate.

Mary Margaret Kelly, 91, a
resident of New Haven, died
Wednesday In Pleuant Valley
Hospital.
She wu · born April 9, 1898 In
Glenroy, .Ohio, daughter of tile
late Jobn and Sarah Davis
Charles Dye
Rockwell
Sbe was preceded In death by
Cllarles Joseph "Rocky" Dye,
her llusband, WilHam Kelly In
64, died Nov. 2, Ill Las Vegas,
1975 and two Infant brothers,
Nev . following an extended
Oran and Oris Rockwell.
Illness.
She wu a retired Mason
Born Dec. 22, 1921, In Joppa, County school teacher.
Meigs County, he was the son
Mrs. Kelly was a member of
Thomas Ferrell Dye and Elma
Father's House Church, Hart·
·Etta Hetzer Dye.
ford and the Mason County
· An army veteran, he served
Association
of Retired School
·during the World Warn and was
employees.
employed by Goodyear for many
Survivors Include two daugll·
years before retirement. He was
ters,
Sarab Gibbs, Betty Kelly,
a member of the Army Navy
both
of
New Haven; two grand·
Club, Garrison 102.
children, two great grandchild·
He Is survived by his wife of 20
years, Lydia Mae Jones Dye; , ren and several nieces and
stepdaughters, Bonnie Sue Rod· nephews.
Funeral services will be 1: 30
. erick, Modesto, Calif., Rebecca
p.m. Sunday at Foglesong Fun·
·Turner, HaYward. Calif., and
' Selma Hansen, MediCal Lake, eral Home with Rev. Clyde
Wash.; four step-grandclllldren; Fields and Rev. Mike Finnicum
two sisters, Lucy Beers, Las officiating.
Burial wlll follow In tile Gra·
Vegas, Nev., and Amy Moreham
Cemetery.
bouse, Ft. Myers Beach, F1a.;
Friends
may call at tile funeral
: two brothers, Thurman and
home
on
Saturday
from 3-5 and
•James Dye, Akron; and many
7·9 p.m.
nieces and nephews.
Cremation has taken place and
the ashes will be placed between
Veterans Memorial
tile graves of his parents In tile
Thursday admissions -Eliza·
Hetzer Cemelery In Reedsville
beth Horak, Pomeroy; Otis
· on Friday.
. Donations may be made to tile McClintock, Racine.
Thursday discharges - Hazel
' American Cancer Society or a
Ro1ers,
Burton DeWeese, Nellle
cllarlty organization.
Rose, Keith Musser.

Cold, wintry weather crossed
Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arkansas, and parts of Texas, witll
snow accumulations up to 5
loclles In northweatern Okla·
homa on Thursday. Three Inches
of snow was reported on the
ground In Amarillo, Texas.
''We frequently get these artie
surges comlua down and witll
southwesterly Iowa moving
tbrough, when tlley move on top
of the colder air, snow develops,"
said Mark Brundrett, a NWS
forecaster Ill Fort Worth, Texas.
·"It's not lhat unusual."
Forecasters Issued snow advl·
sorles for parts of Arkanssa hit
by snow, sleet, and freezlq rain
Thursday ntaht. In southeastern
Louisiana, a flash fiood watch

Stocks
Dall,y 1loell prk•
(1\a of 11:80 LDL)
Bryce llld Mark Bmllll
of Blual, Ellla A Loewl
Am Electric Power .............32%
ATItT .. .............. .......... ....... f3'jf,
Ashland Oil ............... ........ .38%
Bob Evans ......... .......... ....... 14%
Charming Shoppes .... .. ........ ll%
City Holding Co................... 15
Federal Mogul.. .................. 20%
Goodyear TltR ........... ........47~
Heck's ......... .............. ... ....... 3'!1o
Key Centurion ....................14%
Lands' End .. ........ ............... 28~
Umlted Inc.........................34%
Multimedia Inc....... :...........90%
Rax Restaurants ........ .......... 2%
Robbins It Myers .. ..... ..... ..... 15
Shoney's Inc ......... , .... ... ..... .12%
Star Bank .................. ....... .. 20%
Wendy's Inti........... ......... .... 4'!1.
Worthington Ind............... .. .. 24

Hospital news

wu llaued as to 3 Inch~ raln
fell. A. •lliht warmtna trelld wu
expected to chase away tile
precipitation and melt the snow
throqhout tile reaton Friday.
Frllld temperatures prevailed
overnlfht acr011 Pl!lllllylvanla,
where Iowa ranied from tile low
20s to the slnJ)e digits. Snow was
expected to lilt early Friday In
Delaware and southern New
Jersey, wbere overnJaht lOWIJ
were In the tow 201.
A winter storm watch was In
effect fpr portions of ce~~tral and
southern Maryland for rain
mixed with snow. Lows ranied
rrom near 20 In tile far west to
near 30 In tile soutll.
A ridge of hlfh pressure
llovered over New England Frl·
day, bringing with It clear allies
and deep cold. Temperatures In
Portland, Malne,droppedtonear
zero, breaking the old record low
for the day of f degrees set back
In 1977.
.
Central New Hampshire reported lemperatures near 5 degreeS bellllf zero, while the
wind·chW factor In parts of
Vermont was as cold as 22 below.
Rain soaked moat of the South
Friday, prcmptlng fllsh fiood
watches for portions of Mtssls·
sippi and Alabama and tbe
Florida Panllandle. Tempera·
tures were ln the 40s but started
faillng In some areas. Snow was
expected In hlfher elevations.
In nortllwes t Tenneall!l!•.pollee
reported Ice on a number of
bridges, Including the bridge
over the Mlsslsalppi·River on the
Interstate·l55 spur from tbe
Mis!lllllrl bootlleel.
Rain moved Into the Pacific
Northwest Friday, wetting most
of Wasblnaton state and Oregon.
The weather service ai&amp;O forecast · rain along much of the
northern and central California
coast.

Lottery numbers

Continued rrcm page 1

12.1 percent from 11.8 percent.
Hlspanles Improved their rate
from 7.9 percent to 7.8 percent.
Meanwhile, tile rate for wlllte
men stayed steady at 4.0 percent
and for black men rose to 10.7
percent from 10.3 percent.
White women had a jobless
rate of 4.0 percent, the same as In
October, while black women saw
their rate climb to 10.4 percent
from 10.0 percent.
Black teenagers experienced a
drop In their jobless rate to 32.8

Shop early,
·shop locally

SEE US FOR THE FINEST
USED CARS IN THE AREA!
1913 UNCOLN TOWN CAl-;............ S4695
1987 YUGO ...................................... 11195
2 Dr. 4 IPeed. Good condition.

1916 FOlD CROWN YICTOIIA .......... S6495
.

1981 CHEVY CITATION:.................-..... S695

v-e. Runs good.

1914 FOlD F·150 ............................. 'S3495

.; · .....,

8 cyl .• long bed. Runs good.

:.;, ...

..

...('

·~

~-. -•• .

10

;

Marilyn Meier - 11lt JlobbyhorH
Sut McGuirt - laslctts Galore
Unda Ratliff - Slate/Wreaths by LiMa

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SNOW 8VBFER8 - Whea the IIIOW comes
dowa tile kllla lalle &amp;o tlie hlllll on 'l leda, or In this
CMe, oa sufen. A liDI oa Sprtnc Avenue
Pomeroy • • &amp;be perfect lite oii Friday for Wayne
Allea Jlaraluu1, 11e t, al left, and 1111 colllla and
nelplior,. R.D. Barnhart, 11, to , lry ou&amp; their

I

&lt;&gt;IIIli On \11,\ I'll &lt;, ,,,,,,
l

_~_"'

..... .

'

•

39001 IUHUIY IOAD............(Watch For Signs) ·
Hnn.; I ilh \d In

·.......

•

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HITJ:I·'-11'11-'1''-

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plutlc aleda called now surfen. Wayne lalbeaon
of Maralla Barilhart and R.D. II the son of Brenda
Barnliarl, all of Pomeroy. The two IDOW aurfln1
lloya are atudeala al Pomeroy Elementary whlcll
was closed oa Friday becaulll! of lhe sJtOW.
(Tlmes-Sen&amp;lael photo)

Fire destroys home in Syracuse
SYRACUSE - The mobile
borne residence of Rita Cllapman
and her daughter, Shelly Arnold,
of ,S yracuse, was destroyed by
fire Friday morning. The trailer,
owned bY Chapman, was ln the
VIsta Trailer Park· at the upper
end of the village.
Both Chapman and her daugh·
ter .,vere at home wllen tile fire
started. A spokesman for tile
Syracuse Fire De11,1rtment re-

ported that Chapman actually
witnessed the fire start when a
kerosene heater In one of the
rooms exploded.
Syracuse firemen were called
at 10: 28 p.m. followed by a call at
10: 32 p.m. for assls tance from
the Racine Fire .Department.
There was smoke but no names
showing from the .windows when
Syracuse firemen arrived on the _
scene. However, the trailer was

House Bfll 592 which was passed
by state legislators tn an effort to

place tile financial responsibility
for solid waste disposal at the
local level. HB 592 led to tile
establishment of solid wasle
districts throughouttlle state and
Meigs County Is part of the
six-county Athens, Hocking, Gal·
lla, Jackson, Melli$ and VInton
(AHGJMV) district. ·
And as the state places respon·
stblllty for solid waste disposal at
the local level, It Is also cu ttlng
back on funding to local litter

I
I
'I

I

SUNBIRD

...-·,... .......

AS L8W AS
,,

Smith-Nelson
JotUSI'IP

•,

992·2174

Inc.
•

By United Preaa International
A wintry storm that walloped
the eastern United States moved
out to wa early Saturday, leav·
lng behind nearly a foot of
powdery snow alona the mid·
Atlantic Cout and a coat of Ice
that was blamed In a rash of
deadlY traffic accidents.
In all, 15 deaths were blamed
on tile weather.
Tile second major storm or Its
kind . tills au twnn In the mid·
Atlantic reJion grew from a 'low
· pressure system out oftbeGulf of
Mexico tllat mixed with cold air
from Canada, ushering In snow,
freezing rain and Icy winds.
Tbe foul weather system
moved ln)o the Atlantic Ocean
Saturday, but the National
Weather Service Issued a statement laylnJatUI another storm
could hit the East Coast Monday
and dump more snow.
The wintry onslauJht Frtday
left up to 91nches of anow In parts
of Dellware, Marylalld, Wa·
ahilqtoli, D.C., aortllem Vlrlillla
and West Vlrll.nla. Smaller
amounts fell over most of Pen·
naylvanla, New Jersey and tile
mountains of Tennes-.
The Icy blast alao atruck parts
of tile Mldwel t and Mlslilsllppl
Valley, dumpiDi varylna
amounts of snow. Freezing rain

fell from southeast Arkansas Into
southwest Mississippi.
A dangerous slleet of Ice
formed over many areas hit by
the storm, Including roads In
most of North Carolina, where
two people died In an early
Saturday car crash In Cumber·
land County, hlfllway patrol Sgt.
D.W.,Taylor said.
"We've been Inundated with
accidents," he said.
Three motorists were killed In
two acCidents on slick hl1hways
In North CaroUna Friday, pollee
said.
A driver of a small truck was
killed In a wreck near Memphis,
Tenn., and a fatal accident was
reported In Missouri Friday,
authorities said. Eliht people
were reported killed In accldenll
on 1llppery ~dl In Arkanaaa
and Missouri on Thursday, When
the bli chiU began forming.
Roads were aUck In northern
Georala's mountains Saturday,
with sleet, SJJOW and tempera·
tures In the low 30s.
Philadelphia road crews
worked through the nlfllt trying
to plow and salt maJor roadways
free rrom tile 3 %·Inch coatina of
IIIOW, wlllch started falling Frl·
day morning and stopped about
9:30p.m.
Roadw1ys were unlllcely to

,31ectlona. ,02 P8tl•

-

---

----

control programs.
For example, reports Wlnlns,
five litter control programs In
District f, which Includes Meigs
and Gal Ua Counties, lost tllelr
funding for next year. Those five
are Pike, Scioto, Hlihland,
Fayetle and Jackson Counties.
Gallla County's program was
refunded for 1990 and Gallla
County also received a recycling
grant totalling about $70,000,
Wiggins reports.
And althougll Melfa County
was refunded for 1990 at $59,475,

already burning Inside and
flames began appearing . soon
alter tllelr arrival. In a matter of
minutes the home and all Its
contents were lost
Chapman, who escaped with
only a nlfhlgown and robe, was
transported by EMS to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where slle
was treated and released. Her
daugllter escaped with tile
clothes she was wearing.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Drinking drivers and drug ahus·
ers and peddlers will be the
target of state lawmakers this
week at an end·Of·the•year ses·
slon of the Ohio House of
Representatives.
Th!! House will meet Friday, In·
what Is expected to be the final
seuton of 1989, to vote on
Senate-passed drunken driving
leaJslation and the House's own
!KJIUtion to the drug problem.
'Senate Blll131, rewritten slg,
nlfleantly In a House subcommlt·-'
tee under the dtrectlon of Rep.
Marc Gulbrle, · ' D-N~arlt, In·
creases·fines ' and driver license
suspensions for driving while
Intoxicated.
It also provides alternatives
for long fall sentences, lncludlq
house arrest, electronic Ignition
locks and ImmobilizatiOn of
offenders' automobiles.
The drug bill, au !bored by·
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·
Wheelersburg, has been rewrlt·
ten In a committee directed by
Rep. John Shivers, D-Salem. It
upgrades penalties for drug
abusers and traffickers and calls
for the state to devise a coordl·
nated drug-fighting plan lnvc;&gt;IV·

-

Mult-o
- - -A- - -inc.
----

the county Itself Is putting an
additional $12,000 In next year's
progral)'l "In order to keep tile
program operating at the present
level," says Meigs Commls·
slolll!r Richard Jones. A proposed recycling grant of about
$60,000 for Meigs Industries was
denied by the state, which is a
disappointment, agree Jones and
Wiggins.
Lltll!r program money Is dtmlnlslltng in Meigs County while
dumplog costs are on the rise
(See DUMPING, A7)

tng schools, communities other and requires law enforcement
state offices.
agencies to develop a system -of
The Rlffe-Shtvers bill also accounting for confiscated
requires youtllful drug offenders drugs.
One of the main points · of
to participate In counsellni pro' ·
grams, Imposes stricter penal· contention In tile llrug legislation
ties for corrupting children with Is who should retain the profits of
drugs and makes parents ac· seizures of drug equipment. Riffe
ci&gt;untable for tile abilse of drugs orlglaally called lor those proceeds to go for education, butlaw
by tllelr children.
Shivers' committee Is meeting enforceQJent agents have re·
Tuesday afternoon to put the · talned 75 percent of them In the
finishing touclles on the biU, but It latest version of the bill.
Stlll to )le worked out Is, the
Is expected · to be read)' by
quesdon of whether stiff sen ten·
Friday.
The House virtually lfnored a ces, Including mandatory min·
pair Qf Senate drug bills sent over IIJI.umjall.tennll, will completely
·
earlier. A final version will have s\nmp Olilo'a ~n system .
Shivers said attention willllave
to be negotiated by RJffe and
Senate President Stanley Aro- to be gt.ven to esdmates tllat It
noff, R·Cinclnnatl, early next · would coat $l.45 b!Won to conyear .
•truet prisons to house Inmates
House and Senate collferHtJ taken In under the provisions of
also will be put to work on tbe tile bill.
Tile Ohio Department of High·
terms of tile drunken drlvi•l
legislation, orlflnally aponaorecl way Safety Is disappointed witll.
Gutbrle's version of the drunken
by Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R· Bucyrus.
The Houlll! Is expected to agree drMn1 bill. Because or lnsuffl.
with the Senate verllon and send ctently harsh penalties, Ohio
to Gov. Richard Celeste a llltnor stands to lose$2 mUIIOnlnfederal
drug bill cleared l)y tbe Senate highway safety funds for the next
five years.
last montll. Tbat blll IJJCreaaes
Still, Guthrie said the bill is one
· the . penalty for selling druaa
of the most Innovative of lts kind.
within 1,000 feet of a school yard

Help sought in jail overcrowding
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI) Sen. John Glenn, D·Ohlo, said
counties should have a way to
house prisoners In scllools and
other buildings converted Into
minimum-security jails without
running the risk of a lawsuit.
Glenn met F.rl~ay state and
local officials during a field
hearing In Columbus of hll
Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee, which he chairs. He

heard local officials say that Congress to come back and say ,
Ohio's minimum jail standards · 'Look, we never lnll!nded this to
are too restrictive.
get Into jatlctype Issues,' and to
They mandate everything legislatively curtail the appllca·
from tile number of toilets and
tton of the act, " said Ohio Senate
drinking fountains per prisoner Judiciary Commltll! Chairman
to tile type of light bulbs that
Paul Pfeifer, R·Bucyrus.
must be used.
Said Columbus Ct tyCouncllwoIf the re(IUiatiOns are violated,
man Cyntllla Cecil Lazurus, ''We
counties can be sued under the
race standards that are
federal Civil Rla!lts Act.
(See HELP, A7)
· "What we need is for the

Wintry·storm in East moves to sea
Monday, Dec. 11 from 6:30 ''till:30
Saturday, Dec. 16 from 6 'till
SUIHiay, Dec. 17 frOm 5 'til 7
Wednesday, Dec. 20 from 6;30 'tll:30.
Co11)1 in and have your picture
taken with Santa for only Sl.SO or
bring your own can••·

Cloudy. Hlp aroUDd (8.
. ChiiDCe of rala 041 percent.

SpGr&amp;il ...................... C·1·8

Ohio House will reconvene
to vote on . drug le~lation

·.

.;

!' .-.~ · ~--:

Handmade Items For Gift Giving By:
s........ - Ohio liflf . . . c.....,

·

dumping.
'
,
Ken Wlfglns, director of Meigs
County's Litter Control Program, believes residents will
start dumping on hillsides along
Meigs County's back roads much
as tlley did In years prior to an
organized lltler control program.
Wiggins reports that In 1988, he
received 36 complaints of Illegal
dumps sites In Metas County.
This year he has received 161
complaints.
Today's higher costs for land·
fill' dumping are the result' of

,.

.-

12:00 Noon • 5:00 P. •·

POOH 1'1{111-"

wall- of garbage. Tills garbage
dumping .dilemma has county
officials more than a little
concerned - and rightly so.
As landfill costa Increase, the
fees whlcll trasllllaulers charge
their customers also Increase.
And In a county such as Meigs
where many residents live on
fixed Incomes and may not be
able to afford higher lees to have
trash llauled away or to haul II
away tllemselves, the problem of
Illegal dumps will likely Increase
right alona with fees for legal

'

J ,

.

Deii&amp;M ........................ A.-4

tS

,.

660.·

.

Com lea- .••••• •••••••••. ••• lalert
Cl ....fledl ................. m-1

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point PJam 1t, December 10. 1989
- - - - - - - -- --- ---- -------------------------

,

:..t

SA1UIDAY &amp;

-

By NANCY YOACHAM
'nmes-Seattael Stsff
POMEROY - Just trash It!
Tllose are pretty common words
In today's !brow-away minded
society - or at least they were
pretty common words.
·
In Olllo, stringent Environ·
mental Proll!ctlon Agency requirements regarding solid
waste disposal and the hlgll costs
of meeting those 11 trlngen t re·
· q ulremen ta have left small,
relatively poor counties like
Melfa up against the proverbial

4 Dr., white, fully equipped. good condl.t lon.

IGGS

Alo111 -&amp;he River ......... BI-1

..............................n·t

N--·
Dumping dllemma concerns Meigs officials

No. 44
COP\1...,_.1 . .
- -----

'l(ot. 24

"" ....

HOLIDAY
lATHER
SINDAY, DECEMIEI9 _..

happy is sood adviee.~.B-8-

•
t

A chance of snow each day,
Soalb Cealral Olllo
will be. In tile 30s Sunday
Highs
Becoming partly cloudy Frl·
and
·
In
the , 20a Monday and
day night, with a low between 15
,
Tuesday
.
Overnight lows will be
(lad 20. Partly cloudy Saturdlly,
In
the
20s
early
Sunday and In the
with lllfhs In tile mid 305.
teena
Monday
and Tuesday
Exteaded Forecast
mornings.
·
8unda.,y thrOUih Tueeday

4 Dr.

l118ide

In our town:
Let'e not pul anything
around World War I Doughboy...Page 8-6

CLEVELAND &lt;UPI) -Tilurs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PJCK-3
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,326,657, wltll a payoff due of
$453,519.
PICK-4

Beat of the Bend;
Don't worry, be

-----Weather-----

PB. PB, Air. Whit•.

C-1

College basketball results

perceat !rom
percent while
the the rate for white teens rose
to 1"-7 percent from 13.9 percent.
Alllona llldllstrlea, the iood•·
producing sector had an unem·
ployment rate of 6.3 percent, up
tram 6.2 percent In October, ·
while the service Industries saw
joblsaness rise to :&gt;.1 percent
from 4.9 percent.
Tile conslrUCtlon Industry had
a particularly touglr month witll
Ita rate climbing to 9.8 percent
from 9.0 percent.

thaw Saturday as winds up to 15
mph were expected to keep
temperatures effectively between zero and 10 degrees, NWS
forecaster Harry Afos said.
Reports of fender-benders,
whlcll mounted durlnl a trustrat·
lngly slow rush hour Friday
flowed In Saturday, but no major
accidents bad been reported ,
state pollee said.
The storm left only a dusting of
snow In Pittsburgh.
. Ill Maryland, residents got out
their snow shovels and dug
tllemsetves out of tllelr second
major snowstorm since Thanks·
giving. Two to 12 Inches hlan·
lleted the slate.
As much as 5 Inches fell In
aouthern New Jersey and
Delaware.
In the natiOn's capital, the
federal OffiCe of Personnel Man·
apment released aovernment
wotken on a staaerecl basis
Friday afternoon, a new tactiC
deslfned to prevent the traftlc
lll'kllock.
Tennessee's first winter storm
of the seasoo procluced several
Inches of snow and rreeztna
temperature• that cut power to
as many as 40,000 llomes In
.Nashville.
Snow also fell Friday In Indl·
ana, Olllo, and Illinois.

''N¥1, 'I'OY8, '1'0!1 -

'AI a II 6 ..

OW.Iirnll C111a Ia , , . I I IF&amp;..._-.--an ' 1 ..,. 1e Jlw 1e ... laic
Pldaecl wiOJ ~ llomai rte ean, ....,...,
II

•

,;;;;.

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