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P~~ge10 • The Dally Sentinel
•
Monday, December 6, 1999 :,
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday
December 7, 1999
"¥leather
POMEROY - Honor rolls from
schools in the Meigs Local School
District for the first nine weeks
grading
period
have
been
announced.
Making a grade of "B" or above
in all their subjects to be listed on
the honor roll of their respecttve
schools were the following students:
.BRADBURY
Grade 4: Ashley Ebersbach,
Robert Foreman, Lacey Stoban,
Katie Patterson, Lesley Preece,
Casey Smith, Frankie Stewart, Patti
Vining. Alexa Venoy had All As.
Grade 5: Valerie Carpenter,
Caleb Cherry, Cody Davidso n,
Sarah Engle, Chalsie Manley, David
Poole, Amanda Schartiger, Alex Sisson, Whitney Smith, Greg Taylor,
Michelle Weaver and Cassie Whan.
Grade 3: Adrian Bolin, Willie
Barcus, Cody Cook, Beth Bremeans,
Chelsea Davis, ,A,mber Ebersbach,
Jennifer Fife. Nicole Haley, Chris
Kimes. Zach Schwab. Chassidy
Wills, Caleb Bevan. Chad Bonnett.
Tara Capehart, Hailey . Ebersbach,
Laura Gheer., Amber Hockman,
Lian Hoffman, Raven Johnson, Cara
Lawless, Nikki Lawson, Caitlin
Leslie, Courtney Mayes, Ashley
McHenry, Jared McKinney, Seth
Perry. Renac Richmond , Megan
Smith, Tess Thomas.
LDIDH: Mariah Hill , Shawn
Hudnall, Ashley Smith, Nate Swan,
Patricia Clark.
POMEROY
Kindergarten:
Cheyen ne
Beaver, Darienne Bel ~ing, Olivia
Cleek, Christina Colburn, David
HARRISONVILLE
Dillard. Andy Fairchild. Breanna
Kinder~~:arten :
Ashley King, Gheen. Ca1herine Grady. Jessica
Zachary Sayre, Torin Tindongan and Gran! , Morgan John son. Taylor
Brittany Wheeler. all As .
Jones. Summer Knight. Cody MatGrade 1: James Black. Markita lox , Je sse McConaha. Jeffrey
Bottitta. Austin Cl~rida, Danielle Roush, Zachary Sheets. Tori Wolfe.
Dalton, Morgan Howard and David David Wittig.
Riley, all As: Ashley Edwards.
Grade 1: Jordan Anderson ,
Jamie Jeffers, Zack Jeffers, Briaun- Zachary Barton, Brianna Buffing·
na King, Julia Lantz, Tiffany Lee ton, Hannah Cleek. BrCit Curtis.
and Chris Morman.
Meisha Deiwert, Sekena Dowell,
Grade 2:
lan Bullington. Nathaniel Gilkey, Savannah Gn1·
Christy Lewis and Hailey Williams. ham. Wade Harrison. Wes10n Hickall As: Da1"n Bissell. Justin Colter- man , Brandon King. Jancssa Laud ill , Becca Donohue. Alysha Ger- ermilt, Rusl y Laudermih. Billy
laugh, Dean Hively, Justin Savage,
Michael King and Summer King .
Grade 3: Elsa Gardner, Bethany
Lee, Mason Metts and Joanrtah Tin dongan, all As: Christopher Bishop,
Mandy Hannan, Travis Hicks,
Amber Mitchell , Kevin Payne, and
Joshua Price.
Grade 4: Talisha Beha, all As:
Justin Arnold, Travis Goode, Nicole
Hill, Chelsey Noel, Brittany Preast,
Daniel Runyon, Kaylene Slater and
Hannah Williams.
Grade 5: Daniel Bookman, all
As: Cory Dill, Sarah Lantz and Josh
Williams.
Special Class: Craig Capehart.
Joseph Foley, John Landaker and
Jacob Workman.
MIDDLEPORT
Kinderprten: Zach Fink, Shel. by Fitchpatrick, Troy Gantt, Raynee
Hennan, JR Jewell, Justin Hodge,
Catherine Gleason, Clint McHenry,
Dijaun Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb,
Anita Warth, Kristopher Wilson,
'Kaylee Terry, Cohen Bell, Marlee
Hoffman, Jaimee Little, Carty Carpenter, Travis mitchell, Nathan
Mohler, Charles Barrett, Christian
Hysell, Kayla Shane, Cassidy Tucker, Tiffany McKinney, Ben Reed,
Travis Tack~tt.
Grade 1: Valerie Conde, Tyler
Cundiff, Nikki Davis, Taylor
Dowler, Kyle Johnson, Jonathan
McCarthy, Shannon McLaughlin.
Misty Morrison , Ryan Payne,
Joseph Powell, Daniel Stewart, Jose
Whitlatch Brandon Bachner, Olivia
Bevan, Chadea Casto, Brandon Cremena, Britta Flowers, Colt Kerr,
Dustin Nash, Kyle Russell, Chandra
Stanley, Tanner Tackett,Lee Gleason.·
Grade 2: Christine Davis, Brit·
tany Frazier, Tyler Fry, Ananda
Goode, Michael Gomez, Tara Jewell, Patience Johnson, Trinity Kimes,
Cody Smith, Maranda Riggs, Tyler
Andrews, Olivia Carpenter, Megan
Dunfee, Jacob Dunn, Autumn
Ebersbach, Ashley Good, Mcgann
Halley, Justin Kimes, Jessica Miglit, ,
Jennifer Payne, Nicki Smith, Tricia
Smith, Cayla Taylor, Bubby Wills,
Andrew Blankensh~ .
High: 50s Low: 30s
SALISBURY
Kindergarten: Courtney Baker,
Emily Davis, Taylor Gilkey, Emal~e
Glass, Gregory McKnight, Kaitlin
Russell , K~trina Schockey, Haley
Tripp, Justin Young, •
•
Grade 1: Alaine Arnold, Stevie
Bunce Heath Dettwiller, Rachel
Eakins: Justin Ellis, \Villiam Folmej.
Miranda Grueser, Nicholas Ingels,
Samantha King. Victpria Lawson,·
Marissa McAngus, Kelsey Shuler.
Stephanie Smith, Connor Swartz.
Grade 2: Kelsey Burton, Darby
Gilmore, Breana Heml sey, Scott
Kennedy, Stephanie .Lewis, Amber
Ohlinger, Bryant Russell, Cassie
Smith, Megan Tripp.
Grade 3: Jamie Bailey, JT.
Evans, Amanda Gilkey, Morgan
Kennedy ~ Andrew O'Bryant, Jessamyn Reynolds. Caitlin Swartz.
Grade 4: Amy Barr, Kyle Boggs.
Ben Co ppi ck, Heather Graham.
Rebec ca Hanstinc. Kay lee Kennedy,
Kirk Legar. Aaron S10ry.
Grade 5: Clayton Bl ac kston ,
Shauna Clark. Faith Dye. Andrew
Fairchild, Andy Garnes, Brandon
Pearson. Brad Ramsburg, Dru Reed ,
Jennifer Smith, Caitlin Williamson,
and Bryon Stewart.
Christmas &le
RECLINER SALE
Huge inventory of quality
and Flexsteel Recliners.
Sizes~ Small to Extra Large
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTERS
Solid oak and veneers- casters-Some
comer units
Reg. $329 Holds 27" TV ................................. Sale 5269
$529 Holds 35" TV ......................................... Sale 5419
TV ................ ;......................... Sale 5509
$629
$969 Holds 31" TV ......................................... Sale 5769
$629 Holds 32"
$789 Holds 31" TV ......................................... Sale
Christmas &ale
CURIO
CABINET SALE
Reg.
SALE
Recliners
'379"'
Recliners
'419"
Recliners
'459"
Recliners
'529"
SJOC)OO
SJJC)OO
SJ6C)OO
$41900
FINE UPHOlSTERED FURNfTURE
Quality to last 11 Ufotime
$319
$399
Racine Chapter
$869
134, OES, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
installation of officers.
$259
$319
$349
$469
5
699
Meigs County's
Proposed "91 t" service Southern Ohio Coal Company.
highlights regular meeting holds annual Christmas party
to benefit Meigs County needy
topics for commission
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Ne- Staff
POMEROY - The Meigs County Commissioners
met with an expert in the field of emergency medical
dispatching to discuss the implementation of "911"
service in Meigs County during thCir regular meeting
on Monday afternoon.
The board met with Bill Stanton of Coshocton
about the possibility of establishing an enhanced
"911" system, before referring him to Bob Byer,
administrator of Meigs County's EMS office.
Stanton worked for a number of years with the
National Emergency Number
Association, and now consults with counties without
"911" service, working close·
ly with the Governor's Office
of Appalachia.
According to Stanton, six
counties in the state have no
''911" service, while six olh·
ers have plaiming committees
and are in the process of
establishing the service.
Janet Howard, board presi·
dent, told Stanton yesterday that the commissioners
have investigated the possibility of establishing the
service, and had discussed the possibility with Byer,
going so far as to appoint a c'ommillee to investigate
the proposal.
However, funding concerns and other obstacles
have prevented the county from further pursuit or' the
service, Howard said,
Stanton said yesterday that Joy Padgett, director of
tho Governor's Office for Appalachia, has pledged 50
·pereent funding for the $5,000 that he charges for consultation, and has also plcd&ed SO percent funding for
the purchue of equipment required for "911" imple·
mentation, if grant funds ire approved.
Stanton said that the county was ahead of the game
in some instances, and thai the cost for implementing
"911" service here would be less than In some counties, because a five-digit house numbering system,
which is required for the service, and a centralized
emergency dispatching system are both in place.
Assorted styles & fabrics
• Ufetime Wmanty
Sponsored by...
Christmas &ale
SMITH'S GMC
GUN CABINETS
6- Gun Cabinet
8 - Guri Cabinet
10- Gun Cabinet
$1419 12- Gun Cabinet
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustees. regular meeting Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the
township hall on Rocksprings
Road .
Store Hours
Mon- Sat
9:30 to 5:00
WILKESVILLE - Some 155 r---------,.,.,...underprivileged children, including
seven from Meigs County, had some
of their Christmas wishes come true
Monday, thanks to the employees of
American Electric Power's Southern
Ohio Coal Company (SOCCo).
The company held its annual
Christmas parties Monday morning'
and afternoon for children who are
clients of children's services agencies
in southeastern Ohio and part of West
Virginia. The parties were held at the
SOCCo general office located .on
Ohio Route 689 near Wilkesville.
Each year since 1985, SOCCo
employees, including ·members of the
United Mine Workers of America
locals 1857 and 1886, have raised
money through payroll deductions, a
golf outing and other activities lopurchase presents for the children. This
year, a SOCCo corporate donation
and employee contributions total
S19,046. SOCCo has raised $229,000
since the program began, providing
presents for more than 1,900 chit·
dren.
"We're thrilled to be able to host
the children at the two parties," said
Chris Hammett, secretary to the
superintendent-surface operations,
who coordinates the parties. "We,
have a lot of kids that receive gifts
they wouldn't have obtained any
other..way."
Children receive bicycles, CD
boom boxes, dolls, play kitchens and
other toys. Any money left over goes
SOCCo CHRISTMAS - EmployHa of the Southern Ohio
to the agencies to buy things for the
Coal
Company aprnd a little Christmas cheer Monday to about
children throughout the year.
155
area
children who moat likely would otherwlae face .a bleak
Max Whitlatch, a belt repairman at
holiday
seaaon.
Here, Santa Claua - SOCCo employee Max
the Meigs No. 31 mine, started the
Whitlatch
mHta
with one of the youngstera.
program and portrays Santa Oaus,
passing out gifts at the party.
Stanton said that "911" service was originally
developed as a service provided through the localtelephone company, but that equipment and support services are now provided through private vendors,
although telephone companies charge, per customer,
for line maintenance connected with the system.
The largest expense to the county in establishing
the system would be the purchase of a data base,
which would provide all house numbers and locations
in the county, which cost anywhere from $6,000 to
$106,000.
Some counties use levy funds and sales tax revenues to provide t~e service,
Commissioner Mick Davenport noted.
Stanton said that a majority
vote from residents would be
required, regardless of how
the -operation of the system
would be funded.
In other business, the com·
missioners met with Sharon
Williams· of the Business
Develc;>pment G:nter at Mari.·· ella College. Thli., center,
which serves Meigs County as a part of its territory,
provides a variety of services to businesses, including
referrals and assistance in marketing products and ser·
vices to the government, atid a contracting bid board
for local contractors.
According to Williams, contracting companies can
access the bid .board for information about local government contracts available for bid; and county agen·
cies -in particular, the county commissioners- can
use the service to promote bid solicitations for projects. ,
.
The commissioners also approved a number of
funds · transfers for the Juvenile Court, the Clerk of
Courts and the County Highway Department.
Engineer Robert Eason attended yesterday's meet·
ing to request those transfers.
The board approved the payment of bills in the
amount of$ 158,842.09.
Also present were Commissioner Jet'rrey Thornton
and Cl~rk Gloria Kloes.
,......,..,.,=
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan encour·
aged council members and village residents to attend two .
upcoming hearings on the Raven~wood Connector and U.S.
33 from Athens to Darwin.
Referring to the U.S. 33 project, Vaughan called it "a
very important issue that concerns our entire community."
The project would improve U.S. 33 from Darwin to Athens,
replacing the existing, twisty road with a new, wider and
straighter highway.
Vaughan encouraged people to attend an Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation hearing on the project slated for
Monday, 6:30p.m. at the Meigs High School cafeteria.
"We need to show that Meigs · County really wants
this ... that we are truly behind this thing," Vaughan said.
A hearing on the Ravenswood Connector project from
Five Points to the Ohio River bridge at Ravenswood, W.Va.
will be held Wednesday, 7 p.m. at Royal Oak Resort near
Pomeroy.
Vaughan also announced plans for area churches to ring
their bells at I p.m. on Dec. 14 to commemorate the 200th
anniversary of the death of George Washington.
Council narrowly approved ordinances granting 5 percent
pay raises to hourly and salaried village employees. Council approximately 80 percent completed. Workers will hall con·
President John Musser and councilmen Dave 8allard and struction on Dec. 15, he said.
Council also authorized Anderson to contract wilh
Larry Wehrung supported the measures which were opposed
by council members Geri Walton and Scott Dillon. Council· Burgess & Niple for $13,500 for engineering on a new wate.r
well.
man George Wright abstained on both votes.
Fire Chief Chris Shank presented estimates from five
· Council unanimously passed the third reading of an ordiilrea contractors, ranging from $9,754 to $11,975, for reno·
nance granting a seasonal wage increase to employees.
During open discussion·, Wright asked when work would vations to the fire &lation. Counci l approved the lowest esti·
begin on installing new storm drains throughout the village. male which was submitted by Can-Do Maintenance.
He also submitted the fire report for November showing
Clerk Kathy Hysell said the newly delivered drains do not
16 calls for assistance including five structure fires, five
fit right and will require some modification.
Wright also asked that the village street department mutual aid calls, three auto accidents, two automobile fires
attempt to salvage some of the wooden beams from the · and one brush fire.
In other business, council:
demolished Sugar Run School. He al5o suggested that vil-Approved the mayor's report of $8,665.
lage trucks be marked· with signs indicating that they are
.-Renewed membership in the Mayors' Partnership at
owned by the village.and bearing the village telephone num·
;.
ber. The drivers should also keep log books detailing the use cost of $25 .
- Authorized spending an additional $2,000 for pavina:
of village vehicles, he said.
Musser said the village was offered $140,000 in Issue 2 work on Pleasant Ridge Road. The work has been complet··
grant funding and an additional $80,000 in low-interest ed, Musser said.
-Mel in executive session at Anderson's request to disloans for its proposed waterline project from Plum Street to
cuss personnel matters.
Butternut Avenue.
Also present were Police Chief Jeff Miller, Mayor-elect,
"It's either that or nothing," said Village Administrator
John Anderson. Anderson said the sewer project was John Blaellnar and Councilman-elect Victor Young.
a
TRUCK CENTER, INC.
ODNR reports deer season
harvest up six percent over
·last year's total count
135 PINE ST.,/RTE. 160
. GALLIPOLIS, OH
(740) 446·2532
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees meeting, Monday,
7:30p.m. Syracuse Village Hall.
ANDERSON'S
FURNITURE -APPLIANCES - FLOOR COVERING
Single Copy . 35 Cent s
Spreading holiday cheer
Meigs· County commission notes
GLiDER ROCKERS
5 - Gun Cabinet
TUESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees regular meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Clerk Osie Follrod .
Hometown Newspaper
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
: Volume 50, Number 126
Christmas &le
Reg.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, Monday, 7 p.m. munici·
pal building.
In MNF matchup
-Page4·
Mayor urges residents to attend U.S. 33 hearings ·
Beautiful wood gun cabinets. Display your guns in one of these
quality cabinets.
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Board of Trustees ,
Monday, 7:30p.m. ·fire station.
Sues stop Vlklhgs
•
35 Curios in stock!
MONDAY
LETART - The Letart Township Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at
the office building.
POMEROY - Meigs (::ounty
Health Department, immunization clinic, Tuesday, I to 7 p.m. at
the Mei gs Multipurpose Center.
Children must be accompanied by
a parent/legal guardian . Take
child's immunization record .
·wednesday: Sunny
Free Delivery
Christmas 8ale
Community Ca1endar
RACINE -
McAdams, Johnathan Michael,
James McDonald, Melinda Miller,
Jeremiah Myers. Chelsea Patterson,
Ravenne Reed. Garrett Rifnc . Kasey
Roush. Macken~ie Sellers, Hayley
Spradling, Katelyn Stacy, Sarah
Thomas, Bethaney Ulbrich, Cody
.
Weaver, Tyler Will, Chri stian
Woods , Colton Wright, Vi clona
Zahran.
Grade 2: Chelscy Arms, Kayla
Bachtel, Ashley Barhcr. Caleb
Davis, Taylor Deem. · Autumn
DeMoss. Kristen Ehlin. Veronica
Grimm, Stephanie Hudson, Ryan
Jeffers, Ashley Laudermili. Adam
Lavender, Jessica McAdams, Kitly
Newell , Ariel Nitz, Shelby Ohlinger. RUTLAND
Kindergarten: Kay loni AntonErin Patlers.on. Jacoh Rifllc . Ryan
'
VanMalre. Meri VanMcler. Coiy santi . Brooke Buck ley, Chelsey
Kayla
Will.
Eads. Karl Gueliig, Cody Hysell,
Grade 3: Lacce Anm . Jamie Sleven Mahr, Holly McGraih, Tan- Rowley.
Ash. Dec Cundiff. Caitlin EdwarJs. ·isha McKinney: Jacob Nilz, Jacob
Emily Fields. Lunesliia Howard . Rickert. Dustin She lion. Jesse Wise- SALEM CENTER
Kindergarten: Austin King.
Sarah Hubbard. Jessica Jewell. Clin - man. all As: Brittany Denney. Bryan
Kassandra Mullins. all As: Russell
ton Kennedy. Aaron Oliphant. 'Alex Prickly. Chad Searles.
Grade I: Auslin Adkins, Shellie Sj:arbury, Kayla Siifner.
Patlerson. Erin Perkm s. Cake
Grade 1: Shannon Bare. SamanReeves , Randall Reeves. Kelsey Bailey. Tysnn Morris. Braden Prater.
Snuters, Jaime Simpson. D~van Auslin Sayre. all A\: Jenny Farley. tha Goble, Jessica Rowley. All A's:
Whilney Hicks, Lindsay Hysell. TJ Quillen. ian · Slee , Che lsea
Soulsby. Josi Van Meier.
Grade 4: JniHlihan Allbaugh. Josh Mill er. Juslin Nitz, Kayla Stiftler.
Grade 2: Joshua Glover, Gabriel
Michael Ball. Travis Eblin , Cor- Salser. Coli on Sicwan, Cameron
nelius English. Kelsey Fife. Che lsea Bolin. Adam Elliot!. Jessica Ellis. Hayes. Todd Johnson , Shane Rose.
Hicks. Brittany Jeffers. Alex John- Michelle Haley, Aaron Maxson. all As: Jonathan Baughman, Jordan
son. Bradley Jones. Lindsay McKin- Cartee Smilh . Josh SlOne, all A's: Duncan, David Grim, Annisha
ney. Jesse Mowery. Cassandra Pa!- Surctta Cadc. Gretchen Cleland. Kopec. Dustin McDaniel.
Grade 3: Chelsea Carpenter,
terson. Jerry Pu lh ns. Joseph Rosier. Daniel Jenkins , Amanda Meadows.
'Hearing' problems • Ann Landers- Page 6
Meigs defeats Southern • Page 4
Time out for tips • Page 10
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0 1999 Olilo Volky l'llbliilu .. Co.
COLLECTIONS - Chrlatmaa colt.ctlo!ll were featured In the decoration• of
the nine houaea on the wHkend holiday home tour In Meigs County. Here Paige
CIHk Ia pictured with a few of her Santaa which have b11n collected over many
yHra from around the world. More than 220 people took the tour planned by
Sarah Flaher of the Pomeroy Merchants AHoclatlon. The proceeda will be ulld
to buy nowera for downtown.planting area• In Pomeroy. .
.
POMEROY - · Hunters experienced
among the safest seasons ever and took in
84,178 deer during Ohio's statewide gun
season last week, preliminary totals from
the state Department of Natural Resources
Division of Wildlife show.
The total represents a 6 percent increase,
or 4,822 more deer than last year's prelimi·
nary gun season total of 79,356.
· Counties reporting the highest numbers
of deer brought to Ohio check stations
included Aihens, 4,126; Washington, 3,708;
Muskingum, 3,517; Gallia, 3,092; Meigs,
3,081; Guernsey, 2,971; Licking, 2,771;
Hocking, 2,768; Tuscarawas, 2,579; and
Coshocton, 2,552.
Jackson reported 2,503 kills last week;
Lawrence, 1,800; and Vinton ,1,682.
"Our agency is very pleased with this
year's safety. record in which only four
hunters were injured by others in a firearms·
related incident," said Michael J. Budzik,
chief of the wildlife division.
"Increased hunter safety awareness along .
with recent rule changes may have macle ,
this a safer year for those who partiti~te·d
in the deer gun season."
·
Five other hunters were injured last week
as a result of self-inflicted wounds involv- •
ing a firearm, bringing to nine the total
number of hunting incide~ts occurring· last .. ,
week.
·
Wildlife officers said they found m05t :.
hunters wcire in compliance with two new ·
rule changes during this year's deer gun ··
season .. Hunters were required to ~isibly '
wear a Jacket vest, coat or coveralls that are •:
either solid hu.nter orange or camouflage :
hunter orange m color. Deer hunters also .
were not allowed to use shotguns capal!le of,,
holding more than three deer slugs.
· ,
In previous years, there was no limit on "
the number of deer slugs that could be. u~ :·
in a shotgun, and hunters could wear aa lit· :.
lie as a hunier orange hat or cap before the ·~
rules were amended this year.
·
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Commentary
Daily Sentinel
'f.Jtabllsfitd '" 1948
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
CHARLES W. GOVEY
Publisher
:CHARLENE HOEFUCH
:9tne1111 Manqer
..!;
DIANE HILL
Controller
: • The Seatlatl we1come1 leHera to the editor from rtadera on 1 brOid renge or top.
•: let. Short lette,. (300 worda or ltaa) htvt tht btlt chtnct of being publlehecl.
.. '6 Typed ltUtrl are preferred end 111 may be tdltld
E1ch thould Include 1
.. • tlgnaturt, addreaa, end deytlmt phone number. Specify 1 date It thert't 1
rtflrtncoe to 1 prtvloue trtlclt or letter. Mill to: Ltttert to the Rltor, Tht
S.ntiMI, 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45780; or FAX to 740-11'2·2157.
Washington Yesterday:
Letters, diaries
recall a wartime
holiday memory
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Associated Press Writer
. ,WASHING'ION -Two mghts before Christmas 1941 , woth the aftersh~ k
o[ the Peazl Hazbor attack still raw and burntng, the pro me monoster of Brotaon
h~lped an Amerocart presodent hghtthe Whole House Chnstmas tree.
"ThiS os a strange Chnstmas Eve," Wonston Churcholl saod, woth the war
"raging and roarong about us over all the lands and seas, creepong nearer to
o~r hearts and homes "
• But for JUSt one mght, he saod, the world could put war asode and resolve
to- "make the choldren happy on a world of storm "
"Let the ch1ldren have theor noght of fun and laughter," the pnme momster-saod
· lllumonatong a tree on the Whue House lawn, Churcholl and Prcsodcnt
F<ankhn D Roosevelt displayed a determonatoon that molhons of Amencans
embraced throughout World War II Chnstmas hghts and sporu would be kept
bnght, no matter what.
The Lobrary of Congress has drawn from ots shelves a treasury of wartime
doanes, oral hostones, heanfeltletters to and from the front, photographs and
cartoons and put them on a book, "I'll Be Home For Chnstmas." pubhshed
hy Delacorte Press
Famohar to all who loved through 11, the book offers a frankly sentomenta) •tory of men and women who needed the sustenance that sentoment otlered.
At home, for those wanome Chnstmases, people sent mao I by the ton One
na~al commander saod 200 pounds of morale-buoldong mao I dod more for the
war effort than all the experts Washongton could send hom
Officoal propagand.t and newspaper cartoomsts drafted the popular symbob of Chrostmas mto the cause of wonmng the war
One canoon shows a double lone of reondeer pulhng Santa's sleogh across
the sky on a "V for Voctory" formation
•;rhe doary of a 17-year-old hogh school gorl on Hawan records study halls.
alororoty election and attendong, on Dec 3, 194 1, a Technocolor movoe. "Dove
Bpmber. " starring Errol Flynn
•)'our days Iaoer the dove bombers were real She wrme "Sunday Dec 7.
iG41 BOMB ED' Pearl Harbor on flames "
:~om Wood a 16-year-old on Beckley, W Va , remembered the war bulletms
lllli.glmg wuh Chnstmas carols from lolldspeakers on Maon Street
•:"Listened unto! about9 o'clock , then separated and made our way home
b~ause tomorrow was another school day." he remembered "We dodn 't
•
kwtJw that December 7 had changed our world forever"
~·Across that world. Army medocs decorated would-be Chnstrnas trees wuh
hQi water bottles and rubber gloves In 1944, one young couple, at the Marone
~s base at Quantico, Va , collected tin cans from the mess hall, "more
uil:cans than Popeye on a good sponach day " and cut them mto stars and
s~wflakes.
·~Ieanor Roosevelt captured the mood at Chnstmas 1942. "How com-
p(Oely the chazacter of Chrostmas has changed thos yeaz," she wrote on her
nc..,spaper column. "I could no more say to you 'a Merry Chnstmas' wothoOi feehng a catch m my throat than I could fly to the moon! "
•:By 1944, the tide of waz was defonitely turmng and essayost E.B Whole
d:,C:overed hopeful gofts under the natoon 's Chnstmas tree, gifts that stalled
w)th the beachhead at Normandy and the alhed advance across France to the
RfWne.
-~ut of there were advances there were also costs They were measured on
rdfl's of whote crosses, most on trobute to qu1te ordonary Amencan boys.
:~ut there were famous names among them.
·:ournahst Walter Cronk1te descnbed the funeral on Christmas Eve 1945
o~flen. GeorgeS . Patton, killed on a traffic crash, not by enemy fire. He was
buried on Luxembourg wh1ch his troops had liberated
"Patton was buned the mornong of thos Chnstmas Eve on what he homsell once had called 'damned poor tank country and damned bad weather,"'
Cionkite wrote. 'But he was boned m a preciSion-like mohtary ceremony.
t<juched by pomp and tendered by groef "
• In Sepiember 1945. Navy choef radooman Walter G Germann wrote hos
son from a shop anchored on Tokyo Bay to tell h1m that the formal surrendh of Japan would soon be sogned
• ''When you ,get a lottie older you may thonk war to be a great adventure
__: take it from me u's the most homble thong ever done by man," he wrote
: "I' ll be home th1s Chn stmas and every Chnstmas from then on Home
(1!1;0-M-E) that's the place to stay Take good care of mam a toll I get there "
• In Washongton . on Dec 24, 1945, the Whue House tree was decorated
ogce more and a new presodent Ill ll , thiS lime on a world at peace
: ' Thos os the Chnstmas that a war-weary world has prayed lor through long
nod awful yeazs. ' Harry S Truman saod
: (lawrence L Knutson has reported on Congress, the White House
a~d Washington's history for more than 30 years.)
today in history
•
- :The 'Asaociatad Press
• '1oday is Tuesday, Dec 7, the 341 st day of 1999 There are 24 days left
m•!fle yeaz.
: ~oday's Highhghton Hostory .
•l:>n Dec 7, 1941. Japanese forces attacked Amencan and Britosh terntorie~ and possessoons m the Pacolic, mcluding the home base of the U.S. Pacofl~~leel at Pearl Harbor m Hawan .
• bn this date.
; ln 1787, Delaware became the first state to raufy the U S Consntuuon
: Jn 1796, electors chose John Adams to be the second pres1dent of the Umted States
:. ln 1836, Marton Van Buren was elected the eoghth presodent of the Umt~tates.
: Jn 1842, the New York Phliharmonoc gave ots first concen.
; In 1946, lire broke out at the Wonecoff Hotel on Atlanta; the blaze killed
114 people, oncludmg hotel founder W. Frank Wonecotl
: Jn 1972, Ameroca's last moon mossoon to date "'as launched as Apollo 17
blasted off from Cape Canaveral.
~ In 1982 convicted murderer Charlie Brooks Jumor became the forst U.S
pt1wner to' be executed by injectoon, at a pro son on Huntsv olle, Texas.
,: Jn 1985, retired Supreme Coun Justoce Potter Stewan doed on Hanover,
l'tH , at age 70.
•, In 1987, Sov1ct leader Mokha1l S. Gorbac'hev set foot on Amencan soo l
for'the firstt1me, arriving for a Washongton summot with Presodent Reagan .
e-
Page2 .
TuHdlly, oectmb'iir 7, 1999
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·~~?.!:!~..~.,pit~'"'~~~..,h-!~~~~"~!•.~"~~!.c~.~~.boost .
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
The Dally Sentinel • Page _
3.
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Texas Gov. George w. Bush 's bog
tax speech Wednesday drew a bold
lone between Republicans and
Democrats for the 2000 electoon and
ehmonated any possobohty of a longterm budget deal next year between
the Clinton admomstratlon and Congress
There was lottie chance of a grand
compromose on an elecuon year anyway - though Chnton professes 10
hope for one- but Bush's proposal
to devote pracucally the enure nonSocoal Securuy surplus to tax cuts
reduced 11 10 zero
When Presodent Clonton sogned
the fo scal 2000 budget holl thos week.
he coted a lo st of "challenges unmet"
that aodes saod would reappear on hos
last State of the Umon address on Jan- uary
The otems oncluded a hate-cnmes
boll , extensoon of the hfe ot the Socoal
Sec unty Trust Fund, patients' nghts,
Medocare reform and a prescnploondrug benefit, and a monomum-wage
hoke
But Bush's proposal guarantees
that tax cuts woll be the maon polocy
onlloau ve ot Republocans nc<l year
Clonton, Voce Presode nt AI Gore and
congre ss ional Democrats want
Mcd1care expansiOn as thc1r top 1tcm
Theoe ISnl enough money for both
Conceovabl). there equid be agreement on sccond-t1er 1ssues hkc the
mmtmum wage and patients' nghts •
There has to be a one-ycao budget
deal to keep the government runnong
But on Socoal Sccunty retoo m,
Medocarc and ta.es'' Fuggedaboudot
Those woll be - and properly sowhat the 2000 campaogn
be all
about
Bush proposed a $483 bolhon tax
cut over the fove years stanmg on foscal 2002. usong up all but $103 bolhon of an antocopated $586 bolllon
surplus The tax cut Republicans
passed thos year, whoch Clmton
vetoed and Democrats vollfied, would
have cost only $35 I 9 bolhon over
those same five years The Bush plan
unveiled m Iowa does look more
"compassoonate" than the congressoonal GOP plan because 11 skews rate
cuts toward the lower end of the
mcome spectrum and contams no
capotal-gams reductions.
Bush aodes saod that half the benefits on Bush's plan woll go to lowermcome famohes by reducmg theor tax
rates from 15 percent to I0 percent
and doublmg the chold tax credu
the moddle class and JUSt a soxth to
hogher-mcome taxpayers by reducmg
the top rate from 39 6 percent to 36
percent
Desp1te such progressiVIty,
Democrats surely woll attack the
Bush plan because ot woll gove mol honanes a much bogger break on dollar terms than a larger percentage cut
woll for moddle-class persons
The Bush campaogn antocopatc s an
even stronger Democratic blast over
what aodes JOkmgly refer to as
" EMAWKI" ~ shorthand for Cionton adviSer Jame s Carvolle 's charge
that the GOP wants to "ehmon ate
Mcd1carc as "c know ot "
Gore, for onstancc, says that keepmg the Mcdocarc system solvent and
govon g sen1 ors a prcsc npt1 on-drug
benefit woll cost around $200 bolhon
O\Cr love years - money that would" 't be avaol ablc woth the Bush tax
cuts
Gooe's Democratic nval. foomcr
New Jersey Sen Boll Bradley wants
to spend about $325 bolhon over fovc
ycars to fmancc health msurancc for
the umnsurcd - anotheo ompossobol oty under Bush's plan
Democrats surely w1ll also argue
C:fro\
posed tax cuts, defense mcreases and
educatoon omprovements wothout
overspendong the non-Socoal Secunty surplus and dipping onto Soc1al
Security revenues, who ch he and other Republicans have pledged not to
do.
The Congressoonal Budget Office
estomated eazher this yeazthat of Congress dod not hold to budget caps
established in 1997 and allowed federal programs 10 grow at the rate of
inflauon, there would be practically
no budget surplus whatsoever.
.
The budget Congress passed thos
year and Clinton JUSt sogned dod break
the caps, but the Bush budget is based
on the assumptoon that spendmg Will
be held on check m future years - a
nsky propos1toon.
"Rosky" IS the term that Democrats persostently apply to GOP tax
cuts Bush responded by declarong
that 1t's not "nsky to let taxpayers
keepmoreottheorownmoney. What
1s rosky os when pohtocoans are giVen
char~e ol a surplus There os a strong
temptatoon to spend ot. "
As Bush descnbed 11, on allocatong
the surplus, he chose "the creatoon ol
wealth over the care and feedong of
Marie A. Burgess
NEW HAVEN, W.Va - Marie A Burgess, 99, fonnerly of New Haven, doed
Sunday, Dec. 5, 1999 in the Overbrook Center. Moddleport.
Born Aug 31, 1900 on Moberl y, Mo, she was the daughter of the late
William and Mary Jane Rochardson Abney She was a retired secretary, and
a member of the Eastern Star Chapter 157
She was also preceded on death by her husband, Pholop F Burgess; and a
son, Phohp F Burgess Sr
She os survoved by two grandsons, Ph1hp F (Susan) Burgess III of Syracuse, and Wolham E Burgess of Lakeland , Fla., a daughter-on-law, Ohve
Burgess of Lakeland; and a great-grandson.
Gravesode servoces woll be II a.m Thursday on the Tromty Cemetery,
Saugenoes, N.Y. There woll be no vosotatoon Arrangements are under the dorection of the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W Va
Bush also anto copated the charge
that tax cuts spell a return.to Reaganera delicots and economoc on stabohty
To the contrary, he saod, the present
prosperoty de roves prec osely from
Reagan's 1981 tax cuts and the burst
ot mvestmentrl set loose
Pol long th os year does not suggest .
that the pubhc os particularly supponove ot tax cuts, prefemng a paydown of federal debt and on vestment
on educatoon and health c~re . Bush,
however, os a more attracto ve salesman of GOP programs than congres- :
soonal Repubhcans Moreover, h1s tax ·
plan otself os more populist than .
theors
Bush favors
market-based
Med1caze reforms, panoally provatiz- •
ong Socoal Securoty, and offenng
optoons tor the umnsured through the
states, not the federal governmentallodeas that top Democrats detest ·
All those, plus hos tax plan, will
gove the voters a bog set of chooces .
next November People who say the
patties are carbon cop1es of each other areJust wrong.
(Morton Kondracke is executive ·
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)
Daytime highs expected
to rebound Wednesday
By The Associated Press
Temperatures across Ohoo woll rebound onto the 50s and 60s, thanks to
southerly wonds pulled onto the area by a hogh pressure cell
But tomght, the mercury agaon woll dop into the 20s and 30s under clear
skies.
Skies woll be panly cloudy on Wednesday and Thursday wo th some ram
posso ble late Thursday, the National Weather Servoce saod
By Fnday, temperatures should be back on the 60s
The record-hogh ll:mperature for this date at the Columbus weather statiOn was 69 degrees m 1998 whole the record low was I below zero on I 882.
Sunset tonoght woll be at 5:06pm. and sunnse Wednesday at 7 40 am
Weather forecast:
Tomght. .Mostly clear. Lows 25 to 30 Calm wood.
Wednesday .. Mostly sunny. Hoghs 55 to 60.
Wednesday noght Mostly clear Lows on the mod and upper 30s.
Extended forecast:
Thursday Becomong cloudy A chance of ram dunng ohe noght Hoghs
around 60
Fnday . Ram hkely Lows on the lower 40s and ho ghs on the mod 50s
Saturday.. .Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers durong the day Lows on
the upper 30s and h1ghs on the mod 40s.
~19!19Hli<T ~ 'WIIl·'lBEG:,,..I'''YII'II\-•- -
HU~Mf'
Meigs announcements
"'II
Santa in the Park
'
Santa Claus will be at Star Mill,
Pazk on Racine on Dec. II at2 p.m
·He w1ll arrive on a fore truck before
meeting with children at the museum
'building and handong out treats .
Christmas Party
' The annual Chester Volunteer Fne
Depanment Christmas Pany w1ll be
held Sunday at the fire station wuh
dmner starting at 5 p m All fire fight ers, fund raiSers and fan helpers are
mvoted.
Politics getting in the way of food
By JOSEPH PERKINS
Hadn 't seen much of, or heard
much from, the folks at Greenpeace
and Fro ends of the Eanh over the past
two years, since the Umted Natoons'
global warmmg summot m Kyoto,
Japan.
But then they turned up on Seattle
last week for the yeazly conference of
the 135-natmn World Trade Orgamzatoon Goomng more than a hundred
fellow leftist groups that Journeyed to
the Pacolic Nonhwest with the apparent intent to not)
As ot turns out, Greenpeace and
Froends of the Eanh are no longer
workmg the global warmmg ISsue (ot
JUSt dodn't take off the way they'd
hoped) They're now crusadmg
agaonst genetically modo lied food s or,
as they scanly refer to them ,
uFrankenfoods.''
Tho s os all so much unscoentofic
nonsense The fact os that farmers
have been genetically modofyon g
plants for centunes through such
techn1ques as crossbreedong and
hybndozatoon
As the folk s at the Bo otcchnology
Indu stry Organozatoon poont out ,
'Many of our most common plants
- mcludong corn, potatoes, tomatoes
and strawbcrrocs - bear lotti e resemblance to thclf ancestor plants that
developed on natuo e, pnur to
omprovemcnt by human s.··
So all bootechnology does today os
speed up the proces. of ge ncto c
omproveme nt of plants and ammals
And rcsostance to usc of thos ne"
technology on the farm patch (mstcad
of the tunc-wnsummg. oneflocoent
technoquc s of crossbrcedmg and
hybndozatoon) makes as lottie se nse as
resiStance to use of modern-day tractors onstead of the old hand plows
Of course, the Luddotes on the
envoronmental left are unswayed by
thos argument. They insist that genetically modofied foods have no place
at the supper table.
GM foods "pose grave rosks to
both human and envoronmental
health, " msosts Froends of the Eanh.
"Genetically engmeered food is pooson," declares Greenpeace.
And the actiVIst groups have a
"scoentlfic" report to back up theor
claoms. It was authored by Professor
Arpad Puztai of the Rowell Institute
in Scotland.
The prof saod he fed g<:netocally
modofied potatoes to five rats. After
100 days or-so (the equovalent to 10
years m human terms), the rats suffered from slightly stunted growth
and damaged ommune systems, he
reported
Puztao's sensauonallindings made
mternatlonal news It prompted calls
by left-leanmg Bnush pohucoans for
a moratoroum on the sale of genetically modofied foods - much as 47
mostly left-leamng members of the
House of Representatives recently
sogned a letter to the Food and Drug
Admonostrauon urgong the agency to
requore that all geneticall y modofoed
food s carry labels
But here's a footnooe to the Puz tao story that dodo t make nearl y as
much mtcrnatwnal news H1s
research was a lraud That 's what got
hom ' uspendcd on August 1998 by the
Rowettlnstotute Admmostrators diScovered that he could not substanto -
ate hos claim s wllh the data he
obtamed from hos research.
" We have been mosled by a very
senoor scoentist atthos mstitute, ·• said
Puztao's chastened superoor.
But much as Greenpeace and
Frocnds of the Eanh were undetened
durong theu global warmong crusade
by evodence that cast doubt upon the1r
h~terical WaiJiings of cataclysmoc
chmate change, they haven 'tiel a lottie thmg hke scientific fraud slow
down their waz agrunst genetically.
modified foods.
Indeed, having achoeved a de facto ban on GM foods in England,
France and other European nations by dupong the masses into believing
that GM foods are unsafe. by coercmg grocery stores to remove GM
foods from their shelves, by terrorist
attacks on GM crops in the field, and
by persuading governments to require
labeling of GM foods - the environmental left os now brongmg ots crusade to th1s so de of the AtlantiC.
However, they face a more dauntmg challenge here on this country.
Because Amerocans routmely consume genetically modofied foods.
And of those who have any thoughts
on the matter one way or the other,
most voew GM foods favorably
Of course, all of thos can and w11l
change of the government allows
Itself to be drawn mto the waz on GM
Ioods And thatos precosely what the
FDA appears to be doong by holding
hearongs around the country at which
the pubhc os on voted to otTer us two
cents' worth as to whether the regulatory agency's pohcy on GM foods
"should be modified."
Thos play s nght onto the hands of
Grecnpeace and Fnends of the Earth ,
whose actovosts turned out in force at
the FDA's hrst two hearmgs, on
Chocago and Washongton , DC
Smce the cnvoronmental lefto es
know the FDA os not goong to ban
GM foods (what woth bwtech
account1ng for 50 percent of
processed foods m the nation 's supermarkets) they seek the next best thing
- mandatory labehng of all GM
foods.
While false-beaned advocates of
labeling say that it would somply
make consumers aware when they
buy genetically modified foods , the
real aim of label advocates, like
Greenpeace and Friends of the Eazth,
is to make American consumers :
wary.
'
Indeed, that's why agnculture ·
groups. food industry orgamzatlons :
and biotechnology companies almost :
unammously oppose labehng GM :
foods They argue, correctly, that ,
labeling would moslead consumers .
into behevong that biotech foods aze :
e1ther "dofferent" from conventiOnal ·
foods or present a nsk or potentoal
nsk.
The federal government ought ,
not allow otself to be used by groups
hke Greenpeace and Fnends of the
Eanh to funher theor nonscienlllie, ·
politically motivated gmils
Especially when 11 would come at ,
the expense of Amenca's farmers, ots
food makers and ots bootcch mdustry
with no tangible, commensurate ben<fit to the nation's consumers
(Joaeph Perkins Ia a CC?Iumnlat ,
for :The San Diego Union-Tribune.)
o
George W. leaves gay GOP members c;»ut 1n cold
nmg candodate would accept not just
the Log Cabon folks' money but also
theor endorsement, addong that he
couldn't " omagine " they'd want to
gove ot.
Would the well-schooled Bush
award such a kiss-off to any other
Republican group? Tell them he'd
take theor fonancial and political
backong but refuse so much as a photo op'
'
Bush's explanatoon for not meet- .
ohg w1 th the gay GOP organozatoon,
which he gave on "Meet the Press,"
onl y adds to the confusoon
·' Well. because II creates a huge
poluocal scene I mean, tho s os all, I
am someo ne who os a unoter, not a
dovoder I don't beheve on group
thought , pottong one group of people
agaon st another And all that does os
create kmd of a huge pohtocal, you
By CHRIS MATTHEWS
WASHINGTON - George W.
Bush os the odd man out m the famoly Hos father onvlled Log Cabm
Repubhcans m for boll sognings.
Brother Jeb, governor of Aorida, has
also found the guts and the time to
meet woth the country 's largest orgamzauon of gay GOPers.
Not G W Asked thos Sunday on
nauonallV of he'd meet woth the Log
Cahons, Bush was a match for Marie
Antomene when she was asked about
the great unwashed wanting bread
"Oh, probably not "
By Monday, Bush had hos heels
dug m " There's no need to debate
the ossue," he tol<t the Dallas Mornong News " I already made up my
mmd "
That same day, a Bush spokesman
assured the world that hos front-run-
know, noghtmare for people."
So let's get thiS straight.
The man now leadmg hos closest
competitor for the Repubhcan prestdential nommation by 4 to I thmks
it 's OK t<J blow kisses to Patnck J.
Buchanan on his way out the GOP
door, but wrong to show a moment of
civility and common purpose to a
group that has shazed hts free-trade,
fre~-enterpnse philosophy.
That u's OK to meet with groups
who don't necessazily share h1s party's economic beliefs but not with
those strongly committed to them'
That he'll meet with the NAACP,
contmue to meet Latino ,organozalions, the Chrosuan Coalition, church
conclaves of any kind, labor unoons,
Chaznbers of Commerce, march on
every kind of ethnic parade, but treat
gay Republicans as off-hm1ts?
Who says George Bush osn't a
man of principle? He' ll 1\lke.the Log
Cabin crowd's money, take theor
endorsement, but refuse to be seen
woth them on public. That makes a
walking, talking exemp!az of that perfect Clintonoan proncople: "Don't
ask, don 't tell "
(Chrt• Matthew•, chief of the
San Franclaco Examiner'• Wllh·
lngton Bu1111u, Ia holt· of "Hard·
ball" on CNBC and MSNBC cable
channela. The 1999 edlllon of
"H1rdball" h11 been recently published by Touchstone Boo)ca.)
I
Breakfast with Santa
A breakfast wnh Santa Claus woll
be held Saturday, 9 am at the Tuppers Plams Veterans ot Foreign Wars
sponsored by VFW Post9053 Ladies
Auxohary Costos $3 50 for adults and
$2 SO for choldren
Trustees to meet
The Salem Townshop Trustees
Meeting rescheduled
The regulaz meeting of Moddle- wdl meet Monday, 6 p.m at the
port Village Council has been Salem firehou se in spec oal sessoon to
changed from Dec. 13 to Dec 16 at discuss a cemetery levy The regular
7:30 p.m., so that members of coun- meetmg woll be held on Dec. 30 at 8
cd can auend the hoghway meetong on a.m at the firehouse.
Monday.
Shade Rinr Lodge
Decorating Contest
Shade River Lodge 453 will hold
The Racme Area Coll)mumty its regular meeting Thursday, 7.30
Organizatoon woll hold ots annual p m An open mstallatlon of officers
Chrostmas Decorating Contest tvlon- woll be held. Refreshments.
day, 6-9 p.m. Pr1zes for first, second
and thud places are $50, $30 and $20.
respectively.
Sonshine Circle
The Dorcas- Bethany Sonshmc
Circle woll meet Thursday. 7 p m at
the church. Area women ao e unued
Business After Hours
The Meogs County Chamber ul
Commerce IS holdmg a Busmcss
After Hours ohos evemng, 5 30-7
p m at the Carpenter Inn Coso os $6
at the door
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Stocks
AEP- 31·9/16
Akzo- 47-3/16
AmTech/SBC- 52·1/4
Ashland Oil- 32-9/16
AT&T- 57-7/16
Bank One- 33·1/4
Bob Evans -15·7116
BorgWarner- 39·13116
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City Holding - 15
Federal Mogul-19-9/16
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Gannett-75
K mart- g.1f2
Kroger - 15·3/4
Lands End- 58·13/16
Ltd. - 41-1/4
Oak Hill Financial - 17
OVB-35
One Valley- 33·11/16
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Premier - 1 0·3/8
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RD Shell- 57-5/16
Sears - 34-7116
Shoney's - 1-5/16
Wendy's- 21·3116
Worthington- 15-3/4
Dally stock reports are the
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.
Suspect's
motives
mystify
community
By RENEE RUBLE
Associated Presa Writer
FORT GIBSON, Okla - The
seventh-grader dodn 't say anythmg
when classmates greeted hom before
school. The sman and popular 13year-old JUSt went under a tree,
puVed out a handgun and began formg. fellow students say
He gave no warnongs, leavong
fnends and thos rural commumty baffled as to what could have mouvated
the churchgoer and hon or roll student
to shoot ho s schoolmates
" He was always noce to everybody He was real popular, )OU
would never have known hom to do
any thong hke tho s," saod Deanoa
Pruott an eogbth-grade cheerleader
Four students were shot Monday
mornmg when the teen opened fore
outsode Fort Gobson Moddle School
before classes slatted. One student
suttered bumps and bruoses. None of
the mJunes appeared to be htelhreatenmg
Pohcc and the te en's attorney
wouldn 't re lease hiS name due to hiS
age and because chao ges had not bee n
foled by prosecutors But sc,hoolmates, oncludong Ma. Chrosman and
Shad a BenJamm, both 13, odentofied
the boy as Seth Tnckey
Authontocs sao d the shooter
dropped the eonpt1 ed, 9 mm se moautomatlc hand gu n as he was
approached by sc oence teacher Ronnoe Holuby. lhe teacher grabbed the
teen's arms and ponned him agaonst a
brock ·wall.
Gary Sturm, the choef mvestlgator
for the d1stnct attorney's office, estimated as many as 14 spent canndges
httered the ground around the small,
slender youth with short, dazk haor.
Authorotoes sa1d they were not
aware of any prevoous trouble mvolving the teen and d1dn't know who
owned the gun. He did not leave any
notes, and hos parents have refused to
let hom talk woth pollee, authonues
saod. Offocers searched hos home and
several school lockers.
Prosecutors w1ll nut say whether
they wtlltry to charge the teen as an
adult They also would not comment
of any action would be taken agamst
the parents
Pollee Choef Rochard Sladen saod
the teen-ager dodn 't show any emotion durong the dnve from the school
to the co unty JUII tor a closed, 15monutc detentoon heanng.
" He d1dn't say anythong It was
Joke he was JUSt on a daze of what was
gomg on around hom," Sladen saod.
Counselors and state troopers
were asked to be on hand today when
classes resume at the 450-student
moddlc school All of the do stroct's
1,850 students were sent home Monday
Driver injured in
weekend crash
RACINE - The Galha-Meogs
Post of the State Hoghway Patrol coted Summer D. Groves, 20, 45340
County Road 25, Racine, for faolure
to control followmg a one-car accodenl near the intersection of Pone
Grove Road and State Route 124 m
Sutton Township Saturday at approxomately 2.18 p.m.
Accordmg to the report, Groves
was southbound on Pone Grove Road
when she drove off of the roadway.
Groves then came back onto the roadway, losing control and shdmg otT of
the nght sode of the roadway, stnkmg
a utohty pole
Groves was treated at the scene by
Meogs EMS and her veh1cle receoved
moderate damage
•
HOME DAMAGED IN BLAZE_ This home at
Bonnie Hershman residence, which sustained
heavy damage in lhe blaze, according to
Pomeroy Fire Chief Chris Shank. The fire orlg- _..•
inated In a back bedroom and was possibly ::
ele~t~calln ori!lln, Shank said.
227 Union Ave., Pomeroy, received heavy
damage in a fire late Monday afternoon. About
21 firefighters of the Pomeroy and Middleport
volunteer fire departments responded to the
GOP candidates quiz each other at debate ·~i
By GLEN JOHNSON
Associated Press Writer
PHOENIX- After selhn g themselves through commercoals and sparnng voa the medoa, the Republican
presodent1al candodates fmally got a
chance to quesuon one another
And George W Bush got a sharper answer to one question than he
ex pected
Mostly the cando dates ' questions
prompted each othor to launch onto
stump speech recotatlons dunng theor
debate Monday noght. But when the
Te)<as governor asked Sen Orron
Hatch of Utah a questoon , 11
boonleranged on hom .
Bush, partocopaung on a debate the
Anzona Republican Patty arranged
on ho s behalf after the governor
skoppcd an earher cando date meetmg,
coted ho s work to reach out to monoroty \ Oters and asked Hatch about hos
own efforts.
Hatch comphmented Bush, but
then offered hos vocw of the candodates' compao atove levels of expenencc .
" My only problem woth you governor os you've only had four. and
you're gomg onto your folth year of
govern orshtp on a constuuuonally
weak gove rnorship And. fmnkly, I
1eally beheve that you need more
experoencc he fore you hecome presodcnt of the Unoted States That's why
I m thmkmg ot you as a voce presodentlal candodate," the senator saod
· As the audoence of 1,300 at the
Orpheum Theater - once the stage
for vaudevolle acts - burst out on
laughter, Hatch poured II on
"Just thmk, Ronald Reagan
pocked your father because he had
loreogn pohcy experoence,' the sen-
ator saod, retcrnng to former PreSI dent Bush "Somebody suggested the
other day that yo u should pock me
because I have forcogn polocy cx pcrocnce They got 11 all wrong. I
should be presodent, you should have
eoght years woth me and boy, you'd
make a heck of a presodent after eoght
years
Bush laughed homself as the audoence agaon erupted.
The cando date questoons were one
of the few novelt1es on the group's
second debate 10 four days Another
was the partocopatoon of home state
Sen John McCa10, who appeared v1a
satellite 1V from Boston because of
a busy campaogn schedule .
The sessoon lasted about I 5 monutes more than ots allotted hour Durmg that tome , the candodates promised
safer schools, loweo taxes and a
more do scophned foreogn pohcy for
Amencans of they seoze the Whole
House from Democrats
" My plan says less power to
Wash10gton , not more." Bush saod
' Til keep 'em out of u," McCam
saod of Wash10g10n hureaucraiS
Conservative actlvoso Gary Bauer,
saod allow10g rehgoon onto the schools
would lead to hetter-behaved chol dren He spoke hours after a school
shootong on Fort Gibson, Okla , left
tour students IOJUred and underscored concerns about school VIOlence across the country. another contender,
" I don 'tthm k ot's a gun problem, '
Bauer saod "I thmk t111s os a problem
of the hcao t and soul "
Former ambassador Alan Keyes
saod poloucal actoon commlllecs
should not be allowed to contro bute
to campaogns ' It you cannot walk
..
onto a ballot box and cast a vote, yoll:!
cannot gove a dollar, lle saod
,
In a questoon dorected at Bush , ~
pubhsher Steve Forbes asked the •
governor, a tonner ool man, about
what he would do to keep fuel pnc~ s '
low dunng New Hampshore's cotd '
wmters
Bush saod he would ·e ncouraae ,
exploration and alternative fuels, and
saod "Governments don't control the ·
pnce of ool, at least not m America "
The m10ute the debate ended, .•
Forbes· surrogates phoned reporters
on Washongton and headed onto the ·.
medoa center at the theater to pan
Bush's response.
- ',
The cntlcosm h1ghhghted a difficulty fac10g Forbes: How to cntocire -·
the front-runner without drawmg
voter IIC for negatove campa1gmng. ·
R1ght after the debate, Bauer's
campaogn sent out a fax eroticizing
Forbes' comments about Social Secunty, cal long the pubhsher's plans "a too-goad-to-be- true get-nch scheme ·
that promoses younger Amencans
millions while Jeopardozmg current ·
benefits "
EMS units respond to six calls
POMEROY- Unots of the Meogs ment and squad to Second Street.
County Emergency Medic al Servtce aulOil\Obole fore , Laura Wells owner,
recorded sox calls for assistance Mon- no onJUnes reported.
4 56 p.m , VFD and squad to
day Umts respond10g mcluded·
Unoon Avenue, structure fore at BonCENTRAL DISPATCH
noe Hershman resodence, Louise
3.56 a.m, Holzer Meogs Cl1no c,
Gilmore treated at the scene, ModPomeroy, Ed1th Wolhams, Holzer
dleport squad assosted
Medocal Center;
RUTLAND
6.38 p.m., Walnut Street, Middle7 p m , Meogs Mones Charles
port, W1lloam Moore, Veterans
Brande, O'B leness Mcmoroal Hospo Memonal Hospotal,
I0 27 p m., Nonh Second Avenue, tal
Moddleport, Juanota Lane, VMH
POMEROY
II 34 a.m , volunteer fife depart-
READER
SURVEY
Name omitted
The name of Emoly Davos, a
founh-grader at Rutland Elementary
School , was unmtentlonally omotted
by the school from the All A's hon~r
roll 10 Monday mght' s paper Davos
dod make the All A's honor roll
~IGS
COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS URGE
YOUR SUPPORT!
IJIII-PIIIIllll- Nd01t411
!ScittaRtb)llnlil!a\ EwliGirp,lli*l'1111111
NOTE: Rnalllmt To See Stir Will
On Till Big Scrllln
IDOl' o/ Tile Tlclllt Prlo.'o- To
' Tile Sa/ration Anny
Til BACIIliiR ~·~
1:11
(litaaiC..,CIIiO!Jiinl,-....... ~
TIY I1IIY 2
iGI
t4l, 7:11, tiiD, 1:11
1mq
!Kidllflllllyli;Gmldy) - S~••ing 1•1 Ttttaltrs
voces dT~~n lllrls,Tm Aleo,
.in \\my
* flu'• ;zw 714 7t.w *
Mill: OF TIE IIART ~"~ 1:111.1:11
jD!alnl) t.lel)1 Stleep, A9a Basset, Gio<ia Eslelan
Til .aD lilT 1111111 ~~~~no, t4l
Rt. 124 'Hearing
Wed. Dec. 8th • 6:30 P.M.
Newa Departments
T1tr 110ln ouMber II 992-2155. 0.(1111•rat ex1ensien1 •rt:
G<1cnl Monllfltr. ...................... .Ext. 1101
New. ..........................................ExL 1101
or ExL 1106
Other Services
Thought for Today. "There are no warhke peoples- just warhke leaders " - Ralph Bunche, Nobel Peace laureate ( 1904-19'7 1)
at 7 p m at the Faoth Full Gospel
Church , Long Bottom Songors woll
be "Hogher Callong'' Steve Reed.
pastor, onvotes the pubhc to attend the
smg and stay for a fellowship hour.
•
Advrrtlslna. .................................Ext. 1104
ClmdodoR ................................. .ExL 1103
a-llied Ad& .............................ExL 1100
Royal Oak Park
Please Be There!!
\l)rlml) Susan Salillloo, Natalie Pmn, Hart Baclm
~
1:46
(Comldyollml) Kevil Spat:ey,lmelil ~ 1Im Billll
N.INCAN BEAm
ALL AGES 1 ALL TIMES $4.00
~-
l.
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-
~ ·
..._
~
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�December 7, 1999
Sports
The Daily Sentinel
· '
Southern's ncx.l po s~c~s inn
w tic
Page4
Third-quarter rally ·:·
helps Belpre girls
beat Eagles 47-36
the quarter's last score 16-6.
Five straight Souther~ turnovers
and ensuing Mei gs scores pushed the
score to 26-9 and Meigs was off to
the races. The Marauders led 42-18
at the half. then coasted on to the h1g
The Belpre Golden Eagles overtook the Eastern Eagles in a great
second half effort to claim a 47-36
Tri -Vally Conference inter-division
girls' basketball victory Monday
night at Eastern High School.
Eastern (0-2) led 20-18 at the half,
but Belpre (2-0) came on strong to
take a 31-30 lead alter three frames,
the completed a 29- 16 second half
blitz with a 16-6 fourth quarter to
squelch the Eagles 47-36.
Becky Davis led the Eagles w1th a
15-poi nt effort, Heather Mora added
nine, Amber Baker eight, Dan1clle
Spencer three and Jul1 Bailey one.
Michelle West led Belpre with 15.
Afton Thornhill and Michelle Brown
had 10 each.
Eastern hit 2-5 three-pointers, 11 34 two-pointers and 8- 15 at the line
with 32 rebounds (Bailey 8, Amber
Baker R, Heather Mora 8). Eastern
had eight steals (Davis 4) and 24
turnovers, five assists and I I fou ls.
Belpre hit 15-45 overall and had
30 rebounds. The Eastern reserves
won 36-30. Eastern was led by Sta~ie
Watson with 14 and Janet Calaway
l1ad 12. JesSica Arthurs led Belpre
with 14.
Eastern coach Paul Brannon said
after the game, "We played a lot better tonight. You can see the girls
irtl]>i;!>ving and that is what's important a) this point in the season."
In an earlier game, the season
1-\Jpene• last Thursday. Wellston
feated Eastern 54-42. Amhcr
Win,
Southern hit 11 -44 from the field
overall and was 16-24 at the line
with 31 rehounds (Cummins 14. Lee
7. Ihie 7). Southern had 17 turnovers,
K steals (Cununms 3). five assists
(!hie 3). and 23 fouls.
Meigs hit 24-5.1 from the field, Ill three -pointers. was 16-2 1 at the
line. and had 31 rebounds (Williams
9. Vining 5). Meigs had 15 turnovers.
seven steals (Wil li ams 2). 12 assists
(Price 4. Vming .1). six blocks. and
24 foul s.
Mei gs won the reserve ~ amt: 3524 led hy L1ndsay Bolin with eight
and Shannon S11u lshy with ~ighl.
Maria Dren ncr had seven. <llld
Mindy Chancey four Southern was
led hy Brt !..!l' ll c B:trrll's with I0. and
a scoreless deadlock. The first :-ii..'llrc.= fiVC cadl tiom Rachd Chapman and
did not come unt 1l Shannon Pri..:c Tara Picken s.
connected on a break -away lay -up to
South~..:rn was to pl.ty Miller
give t:oach Ron Logan 's Maraude r~ a Thursday. hut tlwt game has been
2-0 lead .
pos t pon~..:J tP <I l<llt: r date . Southern
Katie Cummins rountercd on next plays al Belpre• Monday.
the
game 2-2, then Ashley Thomas had a
follow up rebound , Price h11 a free
throw and Brooke Williains hit a follow-up jumper off the ~ la s-. 1\l give
Meigs a 7-2 lead .
Price hii a bucket. then Jenn1fcr
Shrimplin added two consecutive
scores for a 1.1 -4 advanta2c .
Southern got in fou l trouble as Kim
lhle picked up three foul s and several other Tornadoes already had two.
Talented guard Amber Vining
connected on a break-away lay-.i~
then drew the fo ul to complete the
three-point play. before Southern's
Tammy Fryar scored on a breakaway lay-in on a Cummins assists for
Quarter totals
Meigs .... .
...... 16- ~6- 7 - 16=65
Southern
.. ........ .6- 12-3- 17=38
. Southern: Kim Ihie 4-0- 213= I0.
Heather Dailey · 2-0-517=9. Sarah
Brauer 1-0-4/6=6. Stacy Lyon s 0-0112= I . Ka11 Cumnnn s 2-0- 112=5.
Tammy Fryar 1-0=2 . Amy Lee 1-0314=5. Totals 11·0,16/24=36
Meigs: Amhcr Vinmg 50= Ill = II. Sl1annon Pnce 2-0-0=4.
Jennifer Shri nrp lin 5-0-0/2= I
Brooke Will iams 4- 1-6/11 = 17,
Ashley Thomas 1-0-2/3 =4, Amy
Hysell 4-0-0=8. Stephan ie W1ga l 20-212=6. Tiffany Qualls 1-0-3/4=5.
Totals 24-1-16/21=65
e:
Baker led the Eagles with a game
high 20 points and a great ball han.
dling game. Becky Davis added 10 •.
po{nts, Heather Mora nine and;·
Danielle Spencer three.
• ·.
For Wellston , Crabtree andCremeans led with 14 each.
Eastern was 15-63, 3-3 on threepointers and 6-8 from the line with 30 rebounds (Mora 8, Spencer 6),. •·
nine assists (Bailey 4), II steals
(Baker 6) , 9 turnovers and ten fouls . .
Wellston hit 14-35 on two-point- ..
ers for 60 percent and was 8 for 20
on three-pointers for 55 percent on .
three -pointers.
Eastern won the reserve _game 2117 led by Holly Broderick with five.
Whitney Karr, Stac ie Watson and
Janet Calaway with four each.
Wellston was led by A. Doles with .
five .
Eastern goes to Federal Hocking
Thursday.
Quarter totals
Belpre ....... ............. 12-6-13- 16=47
Eastern .....
.... ..... 7- 13- 10-6=36
Eastern: Becky Davis 7-0- '
1/ 1=15. Heather Mora 3-0-3/6=9,
Amber Baker 2-0-2/4=8, Danielle
Spencer 1-0-112=3, Juli Bailey 0-0· ··
I/2= I. Totals 11-3·9/15=36
.
Belpre: Michelle West 4-2- :':
1/3=15. Afton Thonrhill3-1-1/2=10, -:~
Michelle
Brown
4-0-2/6= I0,: ·~
Michale Steven 3-0-0=6, Sherry .
Thomas 1-0- 112=3, Candy Malone
1-0-0=3. Totals 15=4-5/13-47.
t4rns down footbaU
WAITING for the basketball to come down are Southern's Stacy
Lyons and Meigs' Brooke Williams during Monday night's TVC inter·
divisional contest at Southern High School, where the visiting
Marauders won 65·38 to remain undefeated after three games.
(Photo by Scott Wolle)
post at Ollio
By FRED GOODALL
it. We were getting a win, no doubt
The Bucs arc 8-4, mostly on the
TAMPA , Fla. (AP) - Warren about it."'
strength of the NFL's second-ranked
Sapp wanted two touchdowns from
the Tampa Bay offense. Shaun King
delivered, and the Buccaneers
defense did the rest.
The Bucs stopped Minnesota 2417 Monday night, winning their fifth
straight game to regain a share of the
NFC Central lead with the Detroit
Lions.
"In a game like this, you can 't
make mistakes and win." Vikings
coach Dennis Green said after his
team turned the ball over four t1mes .
"I guess you could get lucky, but I
don't think I've ever been a guy that
counts on luck "
That certainly wouldn't work
against the Bucs defense, which
scored on the third play of the game
and spent the rest of the night making
things mi ~ rable for Jeff George.
The Vikings quarterback threw
.for 271 yards and a touchdown . however he was intcrcepted twice by
Donnie Ahraham and sacked three
"What we needed was a complete
performance. from everyone on the
team, and we got it," Sapp said . .'· [
think once we got 24 points. we
thought: 'OK , that's enough to win
i\dvance titkets are on sale at
Eastern High School for the Hoops
Invitational at Ohio University 's
Cobvocation Center.
The game will be played Saturday
with Eastern playing Eastern of
Be~ver.
1
Tickets arc $5 and can be purchased at the high school with a pqrtioO of the cost of advance tickets
goiftg to the hi gh school.
The school does not benefit from
ticltets purchased at 0 U. Tockets
may also be purchased from any basketball player or coac h.
' l
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Dl~ision
ll! L f<l.
Ium
Mtami ..
... 13
l'{ewYo•k .... ................ .... 10
Philadelphia
..... 10
Orlando ......................
..9
8os1on .. . ............. .............8
WashingTon...
... 5
4
9
10
9
.76.5
.526
.500
.SOO
8 .500
.263
.167
!ill
4
4'h
'
uc
4~
9
JO'h
.S88
I
.S88
I
I
1
9
.Sll
.471
2
3
. .......... 8 10
.. ....... I 14
.444
3'1!
.007
9
-·-
.!!: I. f<l.
Ponland ...
LA. Laiers ..
• Sac;ramento .
Sea~ I~ ..
Phoemx ..
L.A. Clippers .... .
Golden State .. .
•
J
4
4~
7
7
10
racine Division
........ D
4
.789
.778
..... 11
4 .7J3
...... D
5 .722
II
6 .647
2J!i
....... .4 n
....... 2 14 .Ill
........ 14
·~
l
4
1',
Monday's scores
Tonight's games
· ClEVELAND at Toronto. 7 p.m.
Golden State at New York. 7:JO p.m
San Antonio at Indiana. 8 p n1.
, Detroil at Milwaukee. 8 p.m
. Vaocuun:r i ll Dalla~. S:JO p.m.
· Orlando at Phoenix . 9 p.m
· Miami <It Portland. 10 p.m.
Washmgton at L.A lnken. 1 0 : ~0 p.m
Wednesday's games
Houston at Philadelphia. 7 p m.
Denver at Boston, 7 p.m.
Golden State at Charlotte. 7:30,_p.m.
Milwaukee 111 New Jersey, 7:JO p m..
. L.A . Clippers at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Chi cngo at CLEVELAND, 7· 30 p n1
L.A . lakers a1 Sacrame nto. 8 p.m.
Dallas at U1ah., 9 p.m
Minnesota at Seoule. 10 p.m.
NCAA Division I
men's scores
Tol Ottawa Hills 57, Swanton 34
Trotwood Madison 6S, ColoniaJ White 38
Warren Harding 67, Wamn Champion 46
Warren JFK 57, Cortland Maplewood 35
Washington C.H. 78, ChillicotM Huntington 65
Wauseon 57, Notre Dame 54
Wellston 46, Trimble 3S
Wellsville 66, Richmond Edison 47
Western Brown 74, New Richmond 43
Wintersville Indian Creek 49, Buckeye local 43
You. Chaney 40, Canton limkcn 36
Zanesville 61, New Concord John Glenn 4S
Southwest
Football
Far West
CS Nonhndge 72, Oral Robens 59
,
Montana Sl. 99, TC:Ir.lls A&M-Corpus Chrisli 88
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
NCAA Division I
women's scores
Ea~tern
Twn
lndmnapoh s 10 ..
Miami ..
Buffnlo.....
New England .. .
N.Y. Jets ...... .
East
Call for an appointment or to establish
Dr. Landry as your primary care physician.
New patienJs are also being accepted,
~.
NFL standings
Albright 61 , Drew 49
Allentown 55. Muhlenberg 46
Bluefield St 7.\, Concord 70
Buffalo 61 . Novy 46
Dm\iel Webslcr 74. Becker 15
Fi tchburg St. ~8 , Atlnnt ic Union 57
Geneva 76. Wes unm ~ ter. Pu. 10
Georg~town 82. Sncred H~o rt 5-'
Geuysburg 71 . Messiah 58
Owynedd Mercy 6 l,,St04;kton St. 45
Lebanon Valley 74, lljeumann .~6 · •
Lycomina 64. Willian' Smilh 54
Dhlslon
»: a. I eu. l'f
.. .2 0.8.\J .144 2.18
........ 8
. .. R
........ 7
.... 4
rA
.$ 0 667 1 ~l l-'0
.833
.417
250
.250
.167
400
282
190
196
194
168
283
281
345
304
Monday's score
Week 14 slate
Thursday
Oakland at Tennessee, 8:20p.m.
Sunday, Dec:. 11
Arizona at Washington, I p.m.
Balturore nt Piusburgh, I p.m.
Carolina at Green Bay, I p.m.
Northeast DlvisloD
Toronto ..
. .... . .1 6 9 4 2·
Ottawa ................ 14 II 2 I
Boston ..
..... 11 9 7 0
Buffalo .............. II 14 3 I
Montreal. .
. 9 17 1 1
38
31
29
26
20
8]
74
70
61
72
77
71
Southent Division
Florida ...
...... 14 9 2 2
Carolina ................ II 9 7 0
Washington ........ 9 II 5 1
Tampa Bay ............9 14 4 2
Atlanla ................ 7 16 2 2
32
29
24
24
18
66
-·-
75
60
57
67
71
86
92
Ctntnl Divllion
Ium
Sr. Louis ...
ll! I. I RI bl. !if liA
....... 17 8 2 0
Detroit ................. .16 8 3 I
Nashville .......... ......9 16 1 2
Oucago ..
....7 16 '4 2
36
36
21
20
84
59
90 64
65 . 81
75 88
Northwest Division
Colorado.. . ..... 13 12 3 I 30 79
vancouver ..
..... It II 6 I 29 76
Edmonton ............. 8 13 6 4 26 66
Calgar)' ... .. .......10 l l 2 I 23 61
Our special page( s)
I
"For Children Only"
(16 years of age or younger)
Will be published
Friday, December 24th
.
m
The Daily Sentinel
-ONLY-
$1 ooo
Per Picture
Prepaid
Please enclose
self-a~dressed,
stamped
envelope to return
your photo
$5.00 Per Additional
Child In Picture
Entry Form
•
..
-....=
~
·-=
·-c-o
;.....
Q
Tonight's games
Islanders at Washmgton, 7 p.m
Calgary at Montreal 7JO p.m
Pittsburgh at New Jersey. 1:JO p.nl
Carolina at St. Louis. 8 p.m.
§
Wednesday's games
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
n:
I. I RI I:U. !if liA
1.1
8
..
1
9
.1
l
9 1-4
4
I
6.'
Uunwa at Bu(fnlo. 1 p m.
Edmomon a1 NY. Ranl!!trS 7..'0 Jl.lll .
Nashv ille at Detroit. 7 JO p.m.
Carohna at Dallas. 8:JO p nl.
Aorida at Phoen1x.. 9 p.m
Voncouver at Annheirn. IO:'O p.m.
Allanta ill lo!i Angdrs. 10 _,0 I'm
Colorado at San Jose. IO:JO p m
,..c:::
~
8
~
<l)
<l)
e
·--~
62
0..........
Q
77
~
<;:j
rJ)
·-~
·u--
To The Patients
Of A!J. Rush, MD
c...
It is with regret I must infonn you of my decision to relocate
December 8, 1999.
Dr. Landry received his doctorate in osteopathic medicine from
the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine (1996) and
recently completed his residency program at Youn~town OSteopath~c
Hospital in family practice. For the sake of convemence, you may wtsh
to establish Dr. Landry as your prit1181)' care physician.
The conteniS of your medical chart are confidential and can be
transferred to another doctor only with your pennission. Your records
will continue to be on'file in my former office. If you elect to be
treated by Dr. Landry, you should sign an authorization to release your
records to his files on the next visit to the office. Patient records will
not be reviewed or inspected by anyone without fonnal consent.
1have valued my relationship with you, my patients, mo~ than I
can express in words. I thank you for your years of loyalty and
friendship.
Sincerely·
YJ ~ ..
L
J'V!O
A.I. Rush, MD
187
22 5
1R6
.l.JQ
.'
...
...•
' .,
out-of·state with my husband, David Surdyka, MD, and our family.
However, Nicholas V. Landry, DO, will begin practice at my fonner
office location, 503 2nd Street, Gallipolis, Ohio, on Wednesday,
2-'.'
.
l
. --.
. l
De_
aoline: frioay, Dec. 17 at 3p.m.
Mail or bring the entry form:
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
•
' I
-:·
....~
'.1
77
86
74
87
Western Dh'hlon
' '
NAME)
Parents' or
Grandparents Name
N.Y
Hockey
J7 84
) I 10
B 6J
' ·.
~
Toronto 3, Buffalo 2-0T
N.Y. Rangers 3, Calgary 2-0T
Nashville 4. Atl:!.ma 3-0T
Chicago ~ . Edmonton 1
PhOc!nix 3, Dallas 2
Colorado 5, Vancouver 2
Tampa Bay J. San Jose J-ue
New England at Indianapolis, I p m.
New York Giants al Buffnlo, I p.m.
Philadelphia at Dallas, I p.m.
St Lou1s at New Orleans, 1 p.m .
Snn Diego at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.
Miam1at New York Jets. 4 05 p.m
Detron at Tampa Bay. 4:15p.m.
Ath:mta at San Fnmmw. 4.15 p m
Minnesota at KansruJ City. S:ZO p m.
OPEN: Chicago
Monda~, Dec. 13
Denver a1 Jacksonvi lle, 9 p.m.
8 0 .3H 20 1_, 228
Central Division
..... I 0.91B07 1;\1
... 9 J 0 . 7 .~ 0 25J
. ... 5 7 0 .-'17 208
57 0.-' 17237
B~ltin1ore
.. .J 10 0 13 1 232
CINC INN ATI ....
... 2 II 0 I ~.J 1-'7
CLEVELANIJ .
64
62
68
69
WESTERN CONFERENCE
4 0 .667 228 17.1
~ 0 583 NS 224
Ja,kson,·ille II
Tennessee .
Pittsburgh
56
Monday's scores
CLEVELAND a< CINCINNATI. I p.m.
.16
4
0
Padlle Division
Phoenix .............. 18 7 3 0 39 92 65
San Jose ........... 15 I) 4 2 36 93 8~
l..Ds Angeles ........ 14 7 6 1 35 86 68
Dallas .
13 12 3 I 30 62 6J
Anaheim ............... 13 12 3 I 30 71 66
Ove:rtirne losses cuunt as a luss and a regulation
tie.
Tampa Bay 24, Minnesota 17
Philadelphia
New Jeney..
NY Rangers.
J
J
74
71
. ........ 8 4 0 .667 198 158
Western Dl\'islon
x·St. Louis .....
....... 10 2 0
Carolma ................... ........!! 7 0
Atlanta
3 9 0
San Francisco
..... .3 9 0
New Orleans ................ 2 10 0
Jt.·clinched dimion tttle
. ..8 IJ
...... .. 614
23 75
15 47
0 .417 206 262
0 .333 23 1 242
G=" Bay ...................... 7 5 0 .583 247 23 1
Mmnesota .......................... ? S 0 .583 289 250
O.icago .
. ....... 5 8 0 .385 226 277
43
Louisiann·Lafayeue 74, Nonh TexilS 59
SW Texas 88, fexas-Dallu 6J
TCU I00. Texns.Snn Antonio 80
UTEP 97, Texas-Pan Amencan 56
Joshua Hayman
Reedsville
First Buck
Tampa Bay ..
Twn
Pmsburgh ...
............. 8 4 0 .667 272 231
Detroit ..
Mowrystown Whiteoak 6S, Latham Western 33
Navarre Fairless 52, Newcomerstown 49
Niles McKinley 69. LaBrea 38
Oak Hill 44, Lucasville Valley 39
Otsego 52, Delta 46
P1qua 57, Way De 54
Pom~roy Meigs 65 , Racine Southern 38
Rock Hill 72, South Gallia 28
South Poim 69, Greenup County Ky..43
South Rllllge 67, Columbiana 39
South Webster 95. Chesapeake 77
Spring. Nor.lhwestern 74, Sr.ring. Cath. 56
St Clairsville 58, Steubenville Big Red 48
S1eubenville Calh. Cent. 40, Toronto 37
Stewan Federal Hocking :n . Nelsonville· York
Midwest
[7401441-0757
I
..
They all had fun Sunday against a
49ers defense decimated by injuries at
cornerback. Blake completed 21-of30 for 334 yards, Pickens had seven
catches for I07 yards and Scott turned
a short slant into a 58-yard touchdown.
NY1slan~rs
Ctnlral Division
OT
Creighton 91, Grambling St S2 •
~Paul69, Monmouth, N.J. 62
Wichita St. 71, Alaska·Fwrbanlu 62
Wis.·MJiwaukee 86, Michigan Tech 52
5832llllnlll
IIIIIHII.I145131
Arizona ...... .
Dallas ...
N.Y. Giants ..
Philadelphia ...
Albany Alexander 89 Waterford 37
Austintown-Filch 41. You llbl!rty J4
Belpll' 47 . Reedsville Eastern 16
Be"erly Fort Frye 67, Caldwell.ll
Cm. Indian Hill 75 Fayette ville 44
Cin. N. Co lle~e Hill 62 . New M1ami 17
Cin. Se\·en H1lls 44. Summit Country Day .~8
Col Torah·Ac<'dem y 41J. Madison Chri ~ti<' n 9
Col. World Harvest -'5. Yellow Springs J9
Co lumbi .:~na Cres1view 70, lowellville .l l
Day. Jefferson 5~ . Doy Belnmm 40
DeGraff Rivemde 58. Temple Christi an .~6
Evangel Christian ~8 Village Acnden1y J I
Fehcity 6l Be1hel Tate 45
Franklin Furnace Green 75, Portsmouth Cia) 4J
Gallipoli s 72. Proctorville Fairland .W
Garaway 66 M1llersburg West Holmes 34
George1own 64, Williamsburg 27 Girard 64, Newton Falls 32
Greenfield McClain 63, Clinton M1US1c 28
Hamler Henry 72, Tol . ChriSiian 48
Hubbard 58, Cqmpbell Memoriall9
lebanon Monroe 58. Carlisle 49
Leetonia 66, Warren Lordstown 10
Louisville S1. Thomas Aqumas 52. Alham.:c
Marhngton B
Mar1on Cath . 61 Delaware Christlan 41
McArthur Vinton County 4J, Hemlock Miller 21
Milford Chnstian 40, St. Ritn 27
Minford 69, Wheelersburg 64
·
M~nroe:Cem . 57. New Matamoras Frontier 49
Monroeville 59, Maumee Vall. Country Day 51·
South
Rush:
Washington .. .
Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Alabama A&M 97, Monis Brown 67
Arkansas St. 79, Jackson St. 68
Coppin St. 76. N. Carolina A&T 73
ETSU 88, Belmont SO
Georgia 86, Furman 82-0T
Samford 71, Campbell J9
Stetson 77, Mercer 74
Tennessee Tech Ill , Georgia Southern 79
UNC-Greensboro 80, Norfolk St. 14
Vir~inia Tech 65, VMI46
;
Deceldtrt1UI
PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE ...
can.d
0 .583 272 2H
0 .500 270 247
ll! I. I Ell. I',E I'A
...... 7 5 0 .l83 347 320
..........6 6 0 .500 183 237
.............6 6 0 .500 26 1 195
............. 6 6 0 .lOO 2)5 2lO
...... J 10 0 .23 I 200 291
Ium
Arizona89, Colorado St. 75
California 60, San r:'ranmco 58
Kemucky 62, New Mex1co S2
UNLV 74. Denver 65
[[ ' ,
5
6
7
g
Easttm Dlvlsion
Far West
.1
10
• Denver 94. Philadelphia 77
· New Jersey 109. Sacmnlt'nto 95
Hou51on 102 , Vancouver 99
Utah 101 . Washing101196
. Mmm199. LA Cli ppers 91
will begin practice on
-·-
Augustana.S.D 86. Dakota Weslyn 65
Culver-Stockton 66, Marycrest International 37
DePaul 87, O.tcago St. 39
Hilhdale66,Rochesterl9
1.
Kansas Newman 70, Bethel, Kan . Ss
Marquelte 74, BYU 71
Minn.-Duluth 80, St. Scholasticn 37
Mount Mercy 78, Wi s.- Piaueville 68
Nebraska 89, Washington 86
Nonhem St., S.D. 6S, Nebraska-Omaha 47
Wis.-Stout 82, Mount Senano 44
Wi~-Whitewater67 , Marian, Wis. 57
Wright St. 69. Morehead St. 64
!ill
East
...........
32 yands after have 19 receptions for
331 yards in his previous two games.
"You'd like to get the big play
every time. Obviously, we're thinking big plays all the time, but it just
didn 't happen," said George, who
completed 26 of 45 passes.
"They came at us, and they stuck
it to us. But our heads are held high .
There 's four weeks left, and in our
minds we have to run the table."
Vikings running back Robert
Smith was already looking ahead.
"We don 't have enough time to
mope and groan about it. We lost the
game, and now we have to prepare
for a game we ha" e in a short week .
We have another tough road game .
We can 't dwell on this."
Notes: Carter and Moss both went
over the 1.000-yard receiving mark
for the season. Carter has 81 receptions for I,036, while Moss has 62
catches for I,007.
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Midwest
Georgetown 78. Howard J7
Lehigh 96. Drew 62
Lon_glsland U. 62. Col_gate 58
Maine 81 , Tm)' St. 80
Massachusetts 52. Villanova 51
Navy 72. Denver 57
Northeastern 78, New Hampshire 66
Towson 59, Lafayene 57 ·
Yale 48, Anny 42
Nicholas v. Landrv, DO
record last season.
"My dad has a saying that if
you're worrying, you ain't praying.
So I was doing a lot of praying, and I
wasn't doing any worrying. I felt like
the coaches did a really good job of
preparing me for the game."
The Bucs can take over sole possession of first place in the division
by beatmg Detroit here next Sunday.
The Vikings, who lost for the first
time since George replaced Randall
Cunnmgham at quarterback six
games ago, dropped a game behind
the co-leaders with Green Bay.
Cris Carter caught a touchdown
pass for the seventh straight game for
Minnesota, tying a team record set
last year by Randy Moss.
But Tampa Bay did a much better
job of containing the Vikings' receiving duo than it d1d during a 21- 14
loss on Oct. 3. Carter had six catches
for 42 yards, while Moss had two for
Kansas City ...................... 7
Oakland ...
....... 6
San Diego.. .
. .... 5
Denver . . . . . .............. ..4
Appalachian St. 77. N.C.-Asheville68
Belmont 86, Bellevue 77 '
Campbell 67, Stetso n 62
.
Coppin St. 70, N. Carolma A&T 64
Hampton 79, Norfolk St. 73-0T
Huntingdon 68, laGrange 56
Lincoln Memorial 89. Virginia-Wise 19
Lipscumb 65, Martin Methodi~t 44
loutsiana-Lafayette 85, Ntcbolls St. 6 I
Mercer ~8. Jacksonville S1. 56
Morgan St. 98, S. Carolina St. 66
N.C -Pembroke 93, Coker SS
Sam Houston St. 68, Centenary S I
Samford 82. Troy Sl. 69
Talladeg11 8l Judson SO
.647
San Antonio ... ................ 14 5 .737
Uroh ..
........... 10 7 .588
Denver ..... ..................\,..... 9 8 .519
MinoesCMa ......
. ........ ... 7 7 .500
Dallas.....
............ 7 12 .368
Houston ..
.......... 7 12 .368
Vancouver ........ ................. J 14 .176
Bragging Rights?
YOU BET!!
" I think of all the good times that
me and Pick (Carl Pickens) have had,
and Darnay (Scott) and Tony
(McGee). The memories just flash by
so fast. It's a shame that we couldn't
have accomplished a lot more together. That's the way it was and we can't
go back and fix that now. We'll just
continue to have fun now while we
Seanlt . ... ..... .. ................ .8 4 0 .667 260 210
South
4 ~l
.588
. ............8
........ 8
Ium
wiU be relocating out-ofstate witb berfamily...
at the former office of Dr.
Medgar Even 60, Brook1yn S7
New Haven 88, C.W. Post 59
. Ramapo 63, Hunter 54
Salem-Teikyo 72, Davis & Elkins 61
St Joseph's 77. Temple 37
St Mary 's. Md 104, Wilson 48
Staten lsland62, York, N.Y. 60
Vermor1t 86, Columbia 60
W Maryland 77, Villa Julie 40
W Virginia T~ch 79, Ohm Valley 70
Basketball
Midwest Division
r1ze
HOLDING ON to the football after catching Shaun King's touch·
d<?wn pass is Tampa Bay tight end Dave Moore (bottom) as
Mtnnesota defensive back Robert Griffith straddles him during
Monday night's NFC Central bout in Tampa, Fla., where the
Buccaneers won 24·17. (AP)
(Continued from Page 4)
lost Dilfer last week with a broken
right collarbone and faced the
Vikings without running back
Warrick Dunn.
"1 thought our guys did a great
job of rallying around Shaun ... We
overcame some adverse things out
there in a very big game. 1 really
thought the character of this team
came through before a national television audience."
As he promised, King was poised
and took advantage of most of the
opportumties he had to get the Bucs
into the end zone.
While he only threw for 93 yards,
completing II of 19 passes with one
interception , he conn ected with
Jacquez Green and Dave Moore to
put the game out of reach.
"I told you guys all week that I
wasn't nervous," said the 22-yearold rookie, a native of nearby St.
Petersburg who led Tulane to a 12-0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
(See BUCS on Page 5)
"It feels bad losing a guy who's
Pro Bowl caliber," offensive tackle
Willie Anderson said. "It feels bad
that he's .going to be leaving us and
he's putting up good numbers. It puts
a damper on things."
Blake, who usually keeps his feelings to himself, was in a reflective
mood Monday as he talked about an
upcoming game against Cleveland,
the final home game of the season.
"I've had a lot of great games
here. Sometimes it hits me," Blake
said. "This might be the last game 1
play at Cinergy Field as quarterback
of the Bengals. 1think about stuff like
that sometimes.
Scoreboard
Atlanta.. .
Detroit .. .
Chicago
defense. With King mak ing his first
start in place of injured quarterback
Trent Dilfer, Sapp was asked what it
would take to beat the .high-scoring
Vikings {7-5).
"If we can get 16 points every
week, I'll take it," the two-time Pro
Bowl defensive tackle said . "A cou-
under some adverse situations. You
,did pretty good for yourself.'"
Blake is doing extremely well for
himself as he prepares to become a ·
free agent after three more games.
He matched his career high by
throwing four touchdown passes
Sunday in a 44-30 victory over San
Francisco. He has led the Bengals (3 I0) to back-to-back wins for the first
time since 1997 and increased his
value as a free agent.
The Bengals are committed to
Akili Smith as their quarterback of
the future. Blake is determined to get
a starting job·somewhere else. A parting of the ways is inevitable.
beat Vikings ...
pie of touchdowns, and we'll be
fine."
The Vikings averaged 30 points in
the five-game winning streak the
Bucs snapped. They moved the ball
Monday night, but Tampa Bay kept
finding ways to keep them out of the
end zone.
Minnesota drove into Buc s territory on each of their first four possessions, but the drives ended with
an interception, fumble , missed field
goal and another interception.
King's fumble and a muff on a
punt return set up a pair of second·
quarter touchdowns that put the
Vikings ahead 14-10 at the half.
But all George could produce
after that was Gary Anderson's 34yard ·field goal that tnmmed a I0point deficit to 24-17 with 5:50 to go.
"It was a great win under a really
tough set of circumstances," said
Bucs coach Tony Dungy, whose team
CLEVELAND..
•
Mason Bowling
Lanes results
'
BUCS
Cmtral Divhlon
Toronto ..
.. II
6
Charlotte
..... . 10 7
Indiana ... ... ............ ..... 10 7
Milwaukee ....
. .... 10 7
Just brin,q or Mail us aphoto of you and
limes .
Local Eagles
tO, play Beaver
E~stern Saturday
ByJOE .KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - As free
agency fast approaches, Cincinnati
Bengals quarterback Jeff Blake is getting nostalgic.
.
Blake went into the media room at
the team's practice facility Monday
and started paging through some old
news clips. He quickly got caught up
in the past.
"I was just looking to see how
people used to cheer for me, boo for
me, how guys used to write good
about me, write bad about me," Blake
said. "And I look at my play and say,
'Hey, man, look at where you came
from and what you accomplished
14
Ntw Jersey ........................ 3 15
Defense helps Bucs beat Vikings .24-17
•
The Dally Sentinel • Page 5
Ohio
Desp.ite success, Blak~, Bengals to part ways
Atlantic
Tampa Bay wins five straight. regains share of NFC lead with Detroit
Early Wednesday Mixed
League (as of Dec. I)
Team
Record
Dairy Queen Brazier .... ........... 74-38
Meigs Co. Golf Course ... ....... 69-43
Tony's CarryoUI ..................... 67-45
The Dark Side ... .......... .. .... 62-50
FO.E. 2171 ...................... 56-56
... ....... 8-1 04
Meigs Industries .
Team high series: Tony's
Carry out ( 1868)
Team high game: Tony 's
·Carry out (667)
Men
High series: Sam Smith (530);
Chuck Burton (484)
High game: Smith ( 186); Russ
Carson ( 180)
Women
High series: Pat Carson (522);
Mm:garet Eynon (455)
High game: Carson (183 & 178)
•·,
Tuesda~December7, 1999
Marauders beat
Tornadoes 65-38
By SCOn WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders stormed
through the first half . then breezed
to a 65 -38 Tri-Valley Conference
girls' basketball victory Monday
ntght over the Southern Tornadoes in
Southern's Charles W. Hayman gym nastum.
Meigs (3-0) was led by Brooke
Williams who led the team with 17
points, ~3 of which came in the first
half. Amber Vining hit doub le fig ures wtth II , Jennifer Shrimplin.
Amy Hysell had eight. Stephanie
Wigal had six, and Ti ffan y Qc .. lls
had five , and Ashley Thomas and
Shannon Price four each.
For Southern (0-2). Kim !hie had
10, Heather Dailey nine. Sarah
Brauer six , Kati Cummins live, Amy
Lee five. Tammy Fryar two. and
Stacy Lyons one.
Southern played a tenacious
defense in the early grung as ne<thcr
team cou ld buy a bucket. resulting in
.
Pomeroy,
j
,,
�Pomeroy, Middleport, OJ'IIo
'I
By The Bend-
The Daily Sentinel
110
Page .~~
. 'i
_Tuesday, December 7, 1 ~
DANCERS WANTED. TOP $$.
(740)992·6387 .
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Seeks A Full/Part Time Madlcal
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•
Mother's lack of 'hearing' causing problems for son over car issue[
..
. .. .
.
:'::' · ..· ,......
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 42year-old man , married with two children . Things are just fi ne within my
immediate family . The problem is
my mother. She wants me to buy her
an automobile. Not just any automobile. She wants one exactly hke
mme .
Mother has a comfortab le
lifestyle, and can certainl y afford to
buy any car she wants on her ow n.
However, for some reason , she
thinks I should give her one . And, of
Course . she doesn't want anything as
moderately priced as the neighbor's
..
.. .. .
'· ·.: .· · ·
. . .
·
.. .
. ...
· >·::.;, ·:,'· .· ·
car. She feels entitled to a car just
like mine -- the e.penstve variety.
No other car will do.
Ann, I have worked hard for
eve rything I have, mcluding my car.
I paid my own way through college,
and am reasonably successful m
business. I do not fee l I should
deprive my children of the money
we are saving for their college educauon in order to satisfy my mother's expens ive taste m automobiles.
I have told her that money is tight at
the moment. hut this has n't stopped
her naggi ng.
My relationship with my mother
has never been terribly close, and
now, her pressunng me to buy a car
is straining it to the breaking point. I
don' t want to destroy the good will.
that I have slowly and carefully built
up over the years. I need some
advice. -- NO NAME, NO CITY
PLEASE
~ Does your
mother have a hearing problem> Tell
her, in a voice slightly louder than
normal , that vou cannot afford to
buy her a car, -and you would appreciate it if she would qmt asking Let
her know it pains you that you cannot give her everything her heart
desires, but that your children's cducation comes fi rst. Repeat as often
as necess ary.
Dear Ann Landers : My hushand
and I have a tri vial problem. but
have yet to ge t a definite answer.
even though we have asked family
and ,fri ends, and. even ,a hutcher.
Here s the questiOn . Does a clncken
have one breast or two?
My husband and I are on a caloric-counting diet, and we were tally ing up supper last night. We could
nut agree on how much to count for
the whole roasted chicken we had
eaten. I had the breast meat from one
Stde, and he had the portion from the
other side. I counted mine as a halfbreast, and he said it should be
counted as a whole breast, because .
chickens have two breasts, one on
each side. This sounds to me like a
"man" thing. All the guys we have
asked say chickens have two breasts.
All the women say they 11\vc just
one.
·
We have been married fur seven
years , and have never had a di sp_utc
that we could not resolve. so we
decided to ask Ann Landers. We
both read you~ column every morntng, and can t wan to see your
answer. -- MISS M. IN SHREVEPORT, L.A.
DEAR MISS M.: You need wait
no longe r. Chickens have one breast.
Breast meat is between 30-45 calories per ounce. Most dtets consider
"a breast" to be split b~east, which is
one-half of the whole breast. Bon
appetit'
Dear Ann Landers: I was nattcred to sec an excerpt from my
book_ "Really Important Stuff My
Kids Have Taught Me" (Workman
Publishing, 1994) quoted in a recent
column . I am glad so many people
have read and enjoyed the book.
Wouldn 't we all be a linlc wiser if
we spent more time li stentng to what
uur kids arc telling us'' Thanks, Ann .
--CYNTHI A COPELAND LEWI S.
KEENE, N.H.
:
DEAR ,
CYNTHIA ~
COPELAND LEWIS : I am happy ,
to give you credit for your delightful ;
list of lessons learned through a :
child's eyes. The one I liked best )
was" If you' re going to wnte on the ,
wall , ·do it behind the couch." It took l
me back to my childhood, because ~
my sister and I used to do a lot of :
that sort of thing.
- ·'
Do you have questions about se~ .
but no one to talk to? Ann Landers ~
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager." i~
frank and to the point. Send a sel f~
addressed, long, business-SIZe enve"
lope and a check or money order f~i
$3.75 (thts includes postage anq .
handling) to Teens, c/o Ann Landers:
P.O. Box 11 562. To find ·out more
ahout Ann Landers and read her pas(
column s, visit the Creators Syndi·
catc web page at www.c reators.com:
ca
ley. Randy Hart. Aaron lhlc , Amanda Johnson, Ashliegh Kimes, Aman da King. Madison King. Matthew
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Grade 8: Jeremy Ban_ks, Ty ler
Barnes, David Boyd, Jaclyn Bradbury, Nathan Brickles, Kara Buffington, Nicole Burrnan, Alisia Burton,
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McDaniel, Christina Miller, Gary
Moore, Sheena Morris, Bobbi Napper, Erica Poole, Brittany Powers,
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Rupe, Jessica Smith, Miranda Stewart , Leann Stewart, Ryan Stobart,
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Will, Jordan Williams, Bryan Wil-
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Phone (740) 593-66
G&W Plastics and Supply
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Michae l Paul Lambert, Carrie Light- Melanic Blevin s, Stephen Bobb , Leach, Ntcholas Michael. Jennifer.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
foot , Bethany McMillin. Cecil Mid - Bethan y Boyles , Stacey Brewer, Nease, Laura Payne, Amber Perk in s,
Grade 9: Ma!!hew Bcha. Lind - ktff, Beatrice Morgan , Trina Noland. Beverly Burdette. Ashley Burton, C hristy Phalin, Ryan Prall- , Erin'
say Bolin, Brook Bolin. Jasstltne Christopher Pickens, Shannon Price. Amanda Coates, Keith Co llin s. Roush, Jennifer Shain , Jennifer
Carter, Melinda Chancey. Ashley Tiffany Oualls, Amber Roush, Jef- Bra nd y Cotteri ll , Joseph DaviS. Shnmplin , Kyle Smiddie, Ed Smith,
Colwell, Kayle Davts , Joshua Eag le, frey Adam Shank, Brandi Smith. Robert Day, Lccann Dill , Andy Jeremiah Smith, C hristopher SnoufAshley Eblin , Juicy Eblin , Hollie Brooke Smith , Michael Stacy, Apnl Duczi. Heather Fen-e ll , Sara File, fer, Joshua Sorden, Julie Spaun,.
Ferrell, Candice Fetty, Zachary Stitt, Ian Story, Kathy Taylor, Cassie Stacy Gilmore , Amber Giordano, James Stanley, Wesley Thoene:
Gilkey, Meghan Haynes, Katie Jef- Thorn , Robert Tobin, Patricia Walk- Adam Grim, Marjorie Halar, Tiffany Adam Thomas, Brandy Tobin;,
fers, Krista) Johnson, Ke lly John- er, Heather Whaley·, . Stephanie Halfhill, Ttffany Harder, Lori Harri s, Amanda Upton, Aaton Vanlnwage~ ;
ston, Amanda Langdon , Amanda. Wigal, Meli ssa Young.
Brawn Herman , Anita Holter, Amy Adam Walker, Brooke Williams \
Loshbough. Brad MorriSon. Jaso·n
Grade 12: Amanda Appel, Hyse ll . Sara lhle , Tanny Jones, Michael Williamson.
•
Murdock , Victoria Norman, Mathew Tiffany Barnes, Steve Beha, Lisa Michelle
Kennedy.
Stephanie
~
"
O'Brien, Jeremy Roush, Michele
;;-;:.•r / ~
Runyon, Emily Story. Jennifer r-----------------'-------------,-~::-:":'-:!:;::-...;;--_,;
Walker. Elizabeth Wilfong, Jennifer
Zielinski .
,
Public lllotlca
Grade 10: Carrie Abbott, Joeline
Allen, Andrew Baker, Jessica Cundrawn for the January 2000
NOTICE OF DRAWING
diff, Heather Fetty, Joshua Glaze,
Term of the Common Pleaa
JURORS
Jessica Gray, Nickolas McLaughlin,
Revised Code, Sec. 2313.20 Court of utd Counly.
Office of Commissioners to. McCoy
Mindy O' Dell , Kri sty Puckett ,
of
Jurors, Mslgs County, Janice Young
Misty Puc.kett, Melissa Rtchmond ,
Commla1tonara of Jurors .
Ohio, December 3, 1999.
Jessica Roush, Leslie Runyon , Mary
The drawing will be held
All Whom It May Concern:
Beth Schultz, Evan Shaw, Amber
On Tuesday, the 14th day of at the Meigs Counly Boaid'
December 1999, 10:30 of Elections located at H~
Snowden , Scott Taylor, Shauna
o'clock, A.M., at the office Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
White, Tara Wyatt.
of the Commissioner• of Ohlo45769
Grade 11: Cara Ash, Whitney
Jurors of Meigs County, (12) 7 lTC
Ashley, Nicole Blumenauer, Shandi
Ohio, Jurors will be publicly
7 Pizza Express
Bobb, Zachary Bolin, Derrick Bolin,
Thad Bumgardner, Kelly Canan,
18" 31tem $12.99 or Two
Andrew Davis, Chris Dodsl\n, Lisa
16" 2 items $19.99
Ebl.in, Jennifer Fife, Chasity Fowler,
Amy hecker, Sandra Gilkey, Hollie
992-9200
Griffith , Matthew Grubb, Ashley
Hannahs, Holly Hannan , Abby Harris. Michael Hawkins, Alison Hays,
Derek John son, Robert John so n,
St. Rt. 7
BANKRUPftY
JACKS ROOFING
& CONSTRUOION
New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
con relieve odeblor of flnondol obligollons and arrange olair d~k~ullan of
osse~·omong ued~ots. Aperwn going thrau~ •onkruptcy moy reloin certain
property, kniiWil os "exempl' ~roperty, lor his or her perwnal use. This may
indude ocor, ohouse, dolhes, and household goods. You sliould dired any
quesllons regarding bonkruplcy to on ollomey lttlore prD<eeding.
For information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek, Attorney
Joseph Jacks .
740-992-2068
111111 mo pet
NOW OPEN:
MEIGS COUNTY TRANSFER FACILITY
OPERATED BY SOUTHERN OHIO DISPOSAL
1-740·992-9330 OR 1·800·809·7721
Rutland, Ohio
American Legion
Post467
Breech Grove
Road
Gun Shoot
Slug and Shot
Matches
Every Sunday
1:00 p.m.
11!3Mpd.1
mo.
Now Renting
A·J
MINI-STORAGE
Unlcin Ave., Pomeroy, OH
10x12 units
ST. RT. 7
10:\10 $-Ul
10:\20$60
740·985·4180
'
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
At. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Ad., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm. Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
'
740-992-S2J2
11/26/99 1 mo. pd
BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
(Formerly Blue Tartan)
Call
740/992·3824/3200
740·992·7643
1/()fV ()PEl/
For Banquets, Famity
Gatherings, Business
Meetings and Partie•
FREE ESTIMATES
READER
SOllEY
DEPOY&
PARts
Oiler's
Makes Tractor &
Equipment Parts
Fact<>rv Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers. :
Deer Shop
, ,..,
"You Klll'em
we chlll'em"
...
. 1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723
31845SR325
Langsville, OH
742-2076
Open Now
· HILL'S
CHRISTMAS TREES
SELF STORAGE
Live Spruce, White
Pine with root ball $6/ft.
· Plant efter Chrlatmasl
Or choose a Cut Ptne
or Spruce $2.SO/ft.
Maple Wood Lake
Deer Processing
· Skinned
Cui & Wrapped
Jerkey Sliced
Sausage Made
Phone
949-2734
740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
Joseph Quiveys
web-site
to10' x30' ·
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM ·
My
http://www.excelir.com
/excelsmostwanted
take a look,,, then
tell all VOUR friends
thanks Joe,,
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room addhlons & A!lf11odtllng
•NewGereg11
•Eitc1rlell & Plumbing
•Roofing & Guttera
•VInyl Siding & Painting
•Pado & Porch Dedts
FIH &nrllllfll .
$$$NEED A LOAN??
Consolidate Debts! Same Day
Approval.
Cut Payments to 50%111
NO APPLICATION FEESII
1·800-868-9006 Ext. 854
Thinking
Caps
HUB BARDS
A&D' Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
GREENHOUSE
Now open for lhc
Chri!llmos &:a!JOn
Phone
Must have checking account
Toll Free: 888-853-4704
• PoinseHios in 6calais
• Poil1llllio Boslcm
• Hoi~ Shrubs • Uve Wieatbs
· Silk Monu1111nl Sprays,
Voses &Wreath~
Open Dally g.s
Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Eastem (Fee)
Sunday 1·5
HUIII.DS
GREENHDUSE
Gol an 18" Mini-dish? ·
Want 320 channels?
01e atradable fee. No moothly chargee!
Syracuse, Ohio
1
992-5778
We honor Gol4en Buckeye Cords
~ 11/23 1 mo.
: ( ENNIUM)
The answer, plus more
,brain teasers this Sundly in.,,
~ USA.
.
+'l' kf•nrl (Oill
--'·-
YOUR
CONCRETE
{740) 742-8888 1·888-521-()916
Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:
masonary/wood
· 25 yrs experience
Free Estimates
Quality Driveways,
1111SJII1 mo
MVERS TREE
SERVICE
Tree and Stump
Removal
KEITH MYERS
In sured Owner
llti.'l :\ppl·;
()lltl
(740) 985-3677
'·
Politoroy, Ohio
22 yr1. Local
CONNECTION
IJICIIIII Rill I',
WEEK END
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Mon-Frl 8:30 ·5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
!nrlq!J;: !t :-111'
U'ld'l'
·
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
. truck tarps, convertible & vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
'
HOWARD
EXCAVITIIIG CO.
IJ•
...
.....,
iMetr•
'I
Bulldooer & Baekhoe
Seroicea
Houae & Tmiler Siies
Land Clearing &
Grading
Sepllc Syetenu >&:
U1ili1U.o
(740) 992·3131
I
lAIR'S LANDSCAPE
,NURSERY
Hemlock Grove Rd.
Pomaroy,OH
Ph. 740-992-7285
(Sat., Sun. aves)
11 1
SuperStore
740·742-8015
an-3S3-7222 (toll free)
SLUG MATCH
.
. 1 pm
Nov. 7th thru Nov. 28
Racine Gun
a"'
Giveaway
Beau!llul Cats, free to good
homes . 8 weeks &up. Most
spayed, litter trained . (304)882·
3880.
G.E. Drop-In Electric Range. AI ·
mond Color. Whirlpool Built-In
oven. Both Wotk. (304)675·3718.
Puppies To GIVeaway: 1/2 Beagle
& 1/2 Border Collie, All Shots,
Wormed. 740-388- 87 59, 740388-9036.
lost: Bank Envelope Between
$450 -$480 At'Tho Gallipolis Parade, Please Ca\1740·388·8713.
Yard Sale
70
Gallipolis
& VIcinity
At.L Yenl Sileo Mull
Be Pe!d In Actvsnce.
QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day bttoro the od
Ia to run. Sunday
od!Uon - 2:00p.m.
Frtdly. Mondey od!Uon
• tO:OOa.m. Satunley.
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
29670 Beahan Road
CASH LOANS!
•Bad Credit OK
•Easy Qualifying
•Fast Service
•Low Payments
-confidential
New To You TIYift Shoppe 1
9 west Stimson, Athens
74Q-592-I 842
Ouai1ty clothing and hou se hold
items. $1.00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday
9:00-5:30.
'Ill
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
•Replacement Windows
•Room Additions
•Roofing
COMMEROAL aod RESIDI!fTIAL
Racine, Ohio
45771
Holiday Poinsettias Free Delivery. Green Acres Reg1onal Center. (304)762-2522.
60 Lost and Found
(No Sunday Calls) ·
Any Scotch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Diab etic Pati ents : Medicare Or
Priv(l te Insurance, You May Be
Entitled To Receive Your Diabetic
Supplies At No Cost To You . For
More lnlorma!lon t -888-6776561
High & Dry
·Self-Storage
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progreaelve top line.
Uc, II 00-50 11MMn
A Meeting Place
Call 992-6396 or
992-2272
30 Announcements
Now Renting
Garden Room
10x20 units
Available
Why w ~ l t? Start meeting Ohio
singles tonight. Catt toll !rae 1·
800-766-2623. extenSion 6t 76.
Seven cats to giveaway, 740·
992-9937.
992-1717
Free Estimates
STAAT DATING TON IG HT!
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Singles In Your Area. Ca ll For More
Information . 1·800-ROMANCE ,
Ext. 9735.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
& VIcinity
All Yenl Seteo MUll Be Paid In
Advance. Dudtlne: 1:00pm the
day before lhe ad Ia to run,
Sundly & Mondo~ edition·
I :OOpm Frtdey.
Auction
and Flea Market
80
Bill Moodispaugh AtJclloneeringcomp lete auction service . Buy
and sell estates. Ohio License
17693,
1338, 74Q-989·2623.
wv
Wedemeyer' s Auction Service,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720.
Wanted to Buy
90
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone & Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
740·742·2138
3/1 1/99 TFN
Th••ift Store
503 Mill Street
Mlddlepon, Ohio
Cgmaand
Check Ua Out.
Hours:
Mon & Tue 9 to 3
Closed Wednesdays
Thurs & Fri 9to.3
10 I<> 2
Help Wanta.d
110
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
eroc nuresl Sallsfactlon Guaranteed! Postage & Supplies Provided I Rush Selt-Addrf!Ssed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Box 1438 ,' ANTIOCH . TN .
37011 -1438. Stan tm,..,diate~.
$800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERNMENT REFUNDS. NO E~PERI
ENCE NECESSARY (2• Hr.
Re corded Message) 1·800-8546409 Ext 5046.
$800 WEEKLY POTFNTIAL
Complil te Simple Government
Forms At Home. No Experlen.ce
Necessary. CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-966·3599 Ext 2601 . $34.00
Refundable Fee.
ADVERTISING
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
For well EstaD!IShed Local co.
SERVING TRI.COUNTY AREA
'Must have good Communication
skills
"Must have good driving record
&Provtoe ownTransponat!on
'Must have ability to be a TEAM
·
play8r
Serd Rosu"" to:
Gellipolls Dally 111Dune,
RE: Attvert~ing Seles Rep
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
ASSEMBLY AT HOllEtt Crolla,
Toys, Jewelry, Wood , Sewing,
Typing... Groat Pay! CALL 1-800·
79!>0380 EIC!. 1201 (24 Hrs).
Sawing Machine & .
Vaccuum Cleaner
Repairs
We make house calls
740.742..()419
1
DENTAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hl
Dental Billing Software Company
Needs People To Process Medical Cla1ms From Home. Training
Provided. Must Own Compl!lter. 1:
800-223-1149 Ext 480. ·
DOCTORS NEED BILLERS. FTA
PT MediCal Bill1ng. No Experience
Necessary. Work At Home. Mak~
Yo ur IBM Co mpatible PC Earn
$$$ . Cal l 1-800 -69 7- 7670 ,
www.med1crew.com
Drl· ;: 2 Week Paid COL Train ..
lng. J Exp. Needed. No Monew
No Credit? No Problem! Earn UP,
To $32,000 /1st Yr. W /Full Benefits. Apply On -Line At· www.otr..
drlvers.com Or Call 1-877·230·
6002 P.A.M. Transport
EMERGING COMPA NY NEEDS
Medical Insurance Billing Assistance Immediately. If You Have A
PC You Can Earn $25 ,000 To
$50,000 Annua lly. Call t -800.291 ·4683Dept.#109.
~
FULLER BRUSH COMPANY,
Start The MillmntUm Del)! Freel
Earn Extra Money Wilh Direct
Sales. Call t -800·882-7270.
Immediate Opemngs For Reg!~
tered Nurses. Experience Pre-ferred, Not Necessary. Competl~
tlve wage . Contact Medi-Homtt
Health. 740-441-1779.
MANUFACTURING
SUPERVISOR
Second Shift
Gallpoll~ OH
1 mo
'
In This Position, Your Primary Aa•
sponsibilities Will lnvo'lve Supert
v1sing 2nd Shift Employees Ancf
Ensuring The Manufacturing..
Quality Within, And On ·Time D&'o
livery Of Pro<lucts To Meet Cuitamer Requirements. In AddlliorJ_,
You Will Encourage Employee In·
volvement And Adhere To Safety
And Environmental Programs I
Gul0811nes.
-
-
The Motivated Self -Starter We
Seek Will Posses s An AssoCiate's Degree In A Technlca1
Area , Excellent Verbal And Writ-.
ten Commu nication Skills, And
Prollclencv In Tho Usa Of Microsoft Programs. The Abil ity TO
Lead Others And Prioritize A.n~
Handle Multiple Assignments , As
Well As Ex c~ ptional A.nalylical
And Problem Solving Skills Are
Required. Previous Supervlsorx
Experience, As Wall As DC Mo!
tor And Machine Shop E~eperl
ence Would Be A Plus.
'
To Ensure Consl<leratlon For
This Position. You Mu st Indicate
This Corresponding Code GT99o0000956, On The Top 01 Your
Resume. Please Forward Your
Resume To: Rockwell Automation
- Dept. 774 S, P.O. Box 20861
Milwaukee. WI 53201-2086 . E'
fiAall (No Attachments, Text For-·
ma t
Only
Ple ase):
resymosttu ro ro~kwell com An
Equal Opportunity Employer Supporting Diversity In The Workplace.
ROCKWELL
AUTOMATION
MEDICAL BILLING. Earri Excel~
tent Income Fun Training. Com·
puler Required. Call Medl Work&
Toii· Free 800·540-6333 Ext.
2301.
MEDICAL BILLING. Earn Exceh
lent $ $ $ I Processing Claims
From Home. Full Training Provld:
ed . Computer Required . Call
Modi-Pros Toll Free. 1>888-3136049 Ext. 31 25.
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
Now h!rtng ufe drtve11
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings. Pre-1930 U.S. Currency, Domino's Pizza in Pt: Pleasant
Sterl1ng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry flexable hours app'Y In person,
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second 304-675-5858.
Avenue, Gallipolis, 74Q-448-2842.
OWN A COMPUTER ?
PUT ITTO WORKII
$25-$75/HR. PT/FT
EMPLOYMENT
1-888·220.2013
www.lnternet·success.net
SERVICES
$45,000 /Year /Potenllall Doctors
Need Peoplel Process Medical
Claims From Home. We Train .
MUST Own Computer. 888-3325015 Ext il:700 /Dally.
SAYRE
:iot:ur<loy•
Dental Ass1stant Nee ded Part
Time, Full Time. Send Resume to:
CLA 486 o/o Gallipolis Daily Trlb,
uno, 825 Third Avo., Gallipolis I
Oh.45631
'
Adorable Part lab Puppies.
11\HT\\EIJ,
SH •HA<; E
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
massage. After 6 pm
& Service! Rel ationship,
Finance, Daily Crisis? Mystical
Connect•ons 24 Hrs /18.,. J$2.99
Min. Credit Card: 1·877·478·4410.
cy
Daycaro Worker , Must Be 18 Bo:
H1gh School Graduate. Call 740 ..
446·2607.
•
Go. (304)675-5167.
Mon.- Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00
. 'Thke the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
PERSONAL 2000 PREDICTIONS
Reveal Yo ur De stiny .. live &
Confidential Rated lt1 In Accura·
2 young started Squirrel Dogs. 1
young small play dog for kids .
(304)675-6132.
B" Grovelless Leech
I00' -I000' Rolh I" &3/4" 2011# Woler Un8
FuU line of Gas Pipe & RegulototS Water Slorog8 Tonks
INC.
Looking tor S.W.F. (304)675 5354.
40
Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
Linda's Painting
CALL:
CLASSIFIEDS!
740-985-3813
ADVANCED
Located at 34878 Rocksprings Rd.
(passed fairgrounds)
$32 per ton,refuse,$25.per ton, Demo
$20 minimum
Now accepting resumes for COL drivers,
up to $8 pr:)r hour and labor positions, up
to $6 per hour. Send resumes to:
P.O. Box 152 Pomeroy, OH 45769
JONES'
Tuppers Plains, OH
592-5025 Athens
• Painting • Plumbing
Free Estimates
SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE
Women's Fellowship enjoys holiGolden sheaf presented to long- Patty Dyer, master. Ray Midkiff and
day program
time Grange member
Thomas Bartley reported on the ·
POMEROY - A Thanksg iving
A golden sheaf certificate for 50 State Session which they a!!ended
program highlighted a recent meetyears of contmuous membership in recently They noted that Whitney
ing of the Meigs County Churches
the
Grange was presented to Ro~ald Ashley. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
of Christ Women's Fellowship held
Nicholson at the recent meeting of Keith Ashl ey of Pomeroy, was
recentl y at the Pomeroy Church of
Star Grange 778.
named a 1999-2000 youth ambasChrist.
Winners
in
the
annual
baking
sador.
The two reported on resolu.. The group sang "Come Yc
contest for granges were announced ti ons di scussed during the session of
Thankful People Come" and "Count
at the recent meeting of Star Grange 146 voting delegates. ,
Your Blessings" with the opening 778.
Lecturer Vicki Smith presented
prayer being given by Leona Hysell
They were Opal Dyer, first, Janet the program on Dece mber with
of Zion Church. Devouons were Morris, second, and Avanel Holli readings including "The Meaning of
given by Linda Bates of the Middleday, third , in straw berry filled Christmas" by Bonnie Rife; "Room
port Church of Christ. Her emphasis
muffins; and in the youth division, in Bethlehem" by Tom Bartley;
was on the importance of music as a
Eric Montgomery, first, Chelsea "December" by Ida Kierm: ''Let's
teaching source about God.
Montgomery. second , and Michael Have a Lillie Fun'' by Avaoe l Holli Pat Thoma and Charldene Alkire
Macomber, third, in chocolate chip day;
"Chnstm as"
by
Jani s
of the Pomeroy church presented a brownies.
and
"ANew
Way
tu
Say
Macomber;
skit ''The Lord's Prayer" and Robin
During the meeting conducted by It" by Smith.
Bias gave a reading, "If Noah Lived
in the United States Today". Id~
Murphy had a reading , "Giving
Thanks".
Paula Pickens displayed a quilt
which she had purchased from the
Fellowship. Members of the churches were asked · to help with the
upcoming women's retreat in 2000,
and a motion was made to send $50
to the Ohio Christian Children's
Home. Cards were sent to Kay Proffitt and Joan Connan!.
Next meeting will be held at the
Rutland Church of Christ with the
program t.o feature the installation of
officers. A New Year's fun night was
noted. Kathryn Johnson had the
closing prayer and refreshments
were s~rved by the host church.
.To solve this word game,
think literally. The answer is
~a famous saying, person,
.:pla(e or thing. (For example,
·RAEG is •Reverse gear.")
Tim Deem's
~LI.tEI.
·Honor roll announced for Meigs Middle and Meigs High-Schoool:
MEIGS MIDDLE SCHOOL
· Grade 6: Wesley Ault . Miranda
Beha, Joshua Bolin, Travis Butcher,
Samantha Cole, Ashley Cook, Bryce
Dav is, Valerie Diddle. Michael .
Durst, Ashley Eng le, Sarah Eskew,
Weston Fife, Jarnes Fife. Cari ta
Gardner, Rachael Gardner. Robert
Game s, Anna Hartenbach, Adam
Humphreys, Cody Hyse ll, Brittney
Jacks. Nathan Jeffers. Amanda Jeffe rs, Kimberl y John son, Jacob
Kennedy, Jo shua Kennedy, Tara
Lee, Taryn Lentes, Meghan Leslie,
Kayla McCarthy, Krysta McDaniel ,
Autumn McLaughlin , Matthew
Meadows, Kelly Napper, Brooke,
O'Bryant, Adam Pellegrino, RebecRader, Margaret Rupe, Jordan
Shank, Cory Shea, Abby Stewart,
Robert Stone, Joel Swann, Whitney
Thoene, Scott Tobin, Leonard Vanmeter, Christopher VanReeth, Jacob
Yenoy, Joshua Venoy, Melia Whan ,
Morgan Wilson. Ali son Woods,
Miranda Young.
: Grade 7: Grant Arnold, Emily
Ashley, Renee Bailey, Jeffrey
Baughman, Ashley Baylor, Jeremy
Blackston, Eric Burnem, Zachary
Bush; Anna Butcher. Bmadon Carpenter, Justin Coleman, April Coppick, Jason DeMoss, Justin DeMoss,
Trevor Depoy. Rosanna Dtllard, Jodi
Donohue, Patrick Dowell, Justine
Dowler, Peggy Duff, James Duncan,
Eddie Fife, William Frazier, Megan
Games, Lisa Gheen, Ashley Graham , Brandon Grover, Amber Hand-
Help Wanted
PART·TIME
RECEPTION!Sl'
Monday - Thursday Non Pav,
Week 9:00A .M. · 1·00 P.M.: Mon.
day - Friday Pay Week 9:00 A.M:
• 1 :00 P.M. Duties Include Dall1
Depo sit, Open And Ol stribut'
Mall, Fil1ng And Other Miscellaneous Clerical Dut1es As Assigned . P,art-Time Benefl1s Include Sick leave And PERS\
Send Asume To Human Aesourc·
es, SEOEMS DIStnct, P.O. Bo~
527, Kerr, OH45643By 12/13/99.
Postal Jobs $46,323.00 Yr. Now
Hiring -No Experience . ·Palel
Training ·Great Benefits, Call 'f.
Doys 000-429-3660 Ext. J-365 · l
POSTAL JOBS To $16.35 /HR !
IN C. BENEFITS , NO EXPERIENCE. FOR APP. AND EXA14.
INFO. CALL 1-800·813· 358 5';'
EXT 14210. 8 A.M. -9 P.M., 71
DAYS fds . Inc.
POSTAL JOBS Up To $17 .a1 IHr~
Guaranteed Hire. For Appllcetlon1
And Exam lnlorma!lon Call 8 A_!,(
- 9 P.M. M·F 1-888-898-5627 Elct'
24·1007.
'
Recreation Di rector. Fuii·Timt-:
High school degree or oqutva"
ent. Associate degree prtftrre'd!'
Certification in accotdanca .W\~
regulatory agencies gcivitr,~!. n
center. Comprehensive bentttt
package which Includes 401(~
Point Ple&s'ant Center/Genesla \
EldercEue, State Routt 62, Route 1
1, Box 326, Point Pleaeant, WV 1
25550. EOE.
'
1
----'----;......~ !
Service Technichlan, Bicycle I !
Lawnmower Asoembly. GJMJ Payi
And B ~netl!s . Apply Todey,And i
Start Tomorrow. Call 1-800-852-i
2453.
·,Ji
I
ta
Southside Fatma
someone to work In
to.~lng for!
the
horae i
business. Must have eXPerience '
with horses. ' Monday thru Frlday.• contact Cam Lltal!e 1 ,
(304)675-1993.
i.•
I
1'
.
ATTN : POME.ROY· Postal post·
·
lions. clarks/carriers/sorters. No The VIllage ol Mlddi•,,rlla ac- , ·
experience required . Beneflls. For ceptlng applications for a BuHd~
exam, salary testing Information Inspector. Thlala a 10 1tO 25
call 1-(630)-836·9243 ext. 7151 · • week. position paytng·M,oo par .
aam:apm 7 days.
.
·hout Applications can bl plilleeil 1
. .
IJP at Ylllaga Hall l ·2~7 Ri '
AVON I All Areas I To Buy 'br Sell. '. Stra'-t , • M!ddttP.or ,' ~IIO!et
Shirley Spoara;·~7S.U29. .
8:00.11! & 4:0opm, ;' .,
a
.
hoiur lr "
"
.
'
,\.
,..
-
�• >
..
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
'
December 7, 1999
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
..
The Dally Sentinel • Page G
NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
PHILLIP
ALDER
540
Wanted lead guitar player call
T<ro-992 9349 or T<ro-992 9083
We Are Accepting Applications
For CNA Classes At Scemc Hills
Nursing Center 311 Buckndge
Rdad Bidwell Oh10 App~ In Per
son EOE
FREE MONEY! Its True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50 000 For Debt Consohdat on
1998 Clay ton 3 Bedroom
Personal Needs Med• cal B1ll s
Education & Busmess Call To ll
Free 1 81J0.72H047124 Hrsl
140
Business
Training
Office Vls1t Necessary Up To
SSOO Instantly Toll Free t 817
EARLYPAY I ~loc70036
FREE MONEY• Its True Never
Repay Gua ranteed $500
SSO 000 Debt Consolidation
Personal Needs Busmess t
BOO 511 2ti40
230
c.,..,
Galllpoill
College
(Careers Ckloe To Homo)
Call Toctayl 74D-446 4367
1 800-214 0452
Reg l9o-051274B
150
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1 88ll 582 3345
Only One Loll 28x60 4BR 2BA
only $39 999 Free Del very/Free
Sot Up 1 81J0.691 6777
Wanted To
Do
Georges Portable Sawm•tl don 1
haul your logs to !he mill JUSt Call
304-675 1957
Housocleonlng 1 Story $30 00 2
Story $60 00 Bas•c Ctean.ng
Have References ! (740) 388
9065
Jims Drywall & Construction
New Construction & Remodel/
Drywall Siding Roots AOdl
lions Painting etc (304)674
4623 or (304)674.0t55
Sarvtees offered dependable &lll
perlenced female seeking office
job excellent references 740
992 9000
W1il
Do
Shopping For A Home But Wor
ried About Holl1day Expenses?
Only The Home Show Barboursv• le Will Pa~ ...-our First 3 Pa~
monts 1 888 73&3332
S•ngl e Wtde Clearance $9 99
Fued Rate Save Thousands
Hurry -Wont Lastl Only 0 Oak
WOO<! Gall~lls 740-446 3093
Factory Direct Sa le Oakwood
Home s Barboursville 800 383
6862
Th1s newspaper W111 not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In v•olatton ot the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that an dwellings
aCYert1sed 1n thts newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basiS
330
Homes1te No AestrlctiOns Land
Contract Available $2 300 Down
Depending On Credit Anthony
land Co lid 1 800 213 8365
www counfrv'Yme com
Froo Esbmatel74o-388 9933
REAL ESTATE
350
FINANCIAL
310
210
Opportunity
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money lhrougn the
mall until you have mvesllgated
lho oflerlng
ABSOLUTELY NO SELLING!
High Income P'otentlal Restocking
Local Displays Products Guar
anteed To SaUl " 995 00 Invest
ment Inc ludes Merchandise Dis
plays Train ng Terntory And Ten
Retail LOCOIIonSi 1 800 373-5470
ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
Sf QOO A Day No Sol long Not
MlM For Free Information Pack
& Acreage
100% FINANCING
NO MONEY DOWN
Extremely N1ce 3 Bedrooms 2
Bath Ranch Home 2 Car De
!ached Garage Storage Building
5 Mmutes From Galltpohs Call
740 441 1816
Buy or sell Riverine AnliQuas
spht dnveway needs work as 1s
Two bedroom mobile home no
Tappan HI Efflc1ency 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump & Air Conditioning
48" Round Pedestal Table One
12' Leal $125 Cai74Q-448 9597
2 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths Full
Basement New Septic System
Excellent Condition Brick & Vinyl
Bl Level Has Barn & Several
Outbuildings County Waler Near
S 1tes Ga llla Academy Water
Friendly Ridge Ad Hunters 15
Acres $11 700 Cash Water New
Lots Soon To Open In Kyger Call
Early To Get Mapsl
Thurman Ofl SR 35 & SR 279
AullanCI Whites Hill
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Onve
Ra Nice 9 Acres $12 ooo Or 11
ChriSiy s Family living apart
$14 000 County Water
ments home & trailer rentals
740 992 4514 apartments avail
able furnished & unfurnished
AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
I o 20 Locailons $3K $8K Ex
New S1dmg Roj; Gas Furnace
Ad On Heat
ump Carpet
Though ou t Co ner Lot Well
Landscaped 1 Car Garage With
Opener Outside Build ng Wlth
Covered Pat10 Call 740 367
Many Nice Lots To Choose From
For Home Sites And Hunting Ca I
Now For FREE Maps And Fi
nancmg Info 10% OFF Cash
0335
Buyst
cellent In come
All CASH!
100% F nance Available 1 800
FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
River lot for sale RoSlG&nllai/Ao
For Lease One Bedroom AC
Apt Second Floor Corner Of
Down! Govn I And Bank Aepo s
8e10g Sold Nowl Financing Avail
creallonal 84 Lumber Area Gal
Hpohs Ferry area Leave Mas
able Call Nowl 1 600 355 0024
Eld 8040
sogo (304)675-2067
Second And Pine $240/Mo Plus
Utllllles Security And Kay Dopos
MlM No Se ll ing Work From
Home PfT Free Into Pkg 1 888
4% Down For L stmgs/ P'ayment
FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1 000+
WEE~LV
POTENTIAL
ALL
CASH BUSINESS PRIME lO
CAL SITES SMALL INVEST
MENT/ EXCELLENT PROFITS 1
801H31 7233 EXT 4803
Detals r
MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
MediCal Billing Sollwara Company
Needs People To Process Medl
cal Claims From Home Tram1ng
Provided Must Own Computer t
IIO()o4;34.5518 Eld 667
MEDICAL BILLING Unl mlted In
coma Potential No Experience
Necetpary Free lnformat1on &
CD·AOM 1nvo11men1 $4 995
$8 99S Financing Available Is
tand AUtomated Medical Servlc
es Inc BOO 322 1139 Ext 050
VOld In K~ IN CT
Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli
dallon $5 ooo $200 ooo Bad
Credit 0 K Foe 1 800 770 0092
Ext 215
Star l Vour Internet Bus1ness To
day! Free Special O!ferll Mer
chant Accounts Web Sites
Desktops PC sl New Busmess?
Water Sweragos and Hookup
$50 oo Month (740) 387 7802
aoo 719-3001 •1185
360
Real Estate
SeoklnD 40 150 Acras ol la01d w/
pasture &forest for home &beef
farm In or near Gallipol is or Pt
Pleasant within 15 20 m n of PI
992 2292
Pleasant (304)882 2939/or pager
(304)361 6623
STOP RENTINGill OWN For
LESSt NO MONEY DOWN! Crodll
WtPoyWJj
For LANDt
Needed! Guaranteed Approval!
Even lilts Listed
CALL NOW I 1 900 355 0029 Ext
8117
Three bedroom house In Middle
port corner lot CIA call 740-992
3194
2 Bedrooms Wallr & Trash Paid
No Pels Ooposli & Reference Ro
FREE Delivery & stl 1 800 948•
5878
qu~red Butavl/le P ke 740
1100
1·b70 mob1le home two bedroom
1 112 bath some remodeling new
388-
2 br house for rent you pay utU
oy no pels 740 992 5858
220
move $3500 740 843 5310 days
or 74Q-843-5147 ovonlngs
01( Consumers Flnanc1al 1 800
247 5125 E•t 1134 VOkl OH KS
$FREE
CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Families Unloading Mil
lions Of Dollars To Help M nlmlze
Their Tallies Write Immediately
1999 MODELS CLOSE OUT
SAUE SAVE BIG ~
2 3 4 Bedroom Homes 1 800
948-5878
Windfalls 847 A SECOND AVE .1988 Redman Danville 14x70
SUITE 1350 NEW YORK NEW Also Has Elllpando Very Nice
YORK 10017
New Heat Pump $t4 000 7 40
1l88-8335
CREDIT CARD UP TO $3 000
Unsecured VISA /MC Bad Credit
Or No Crodl 1-60Q-256-8818 Ell
4000
CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HEREII WE CAN HELPtt LOANS
AVAILABLE $3 000 AND UP
CALL TOLL FREE 1 886 748
8ll10 Ext 883
CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI Etaso Bad Credit legally
Froolnto 888 659 2580
FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Application W /Service Reduce
Paymonls To 65r, IICASH IN
CENTIVE OFFER II 'tall 1 800
329 8510 Ext 29
QET MONEY NOWI FUNDS AD
VANCED ON YOUR PENDING
LAWSUIT CALL NOW TOLL
FREE f Sn-856 2274
New Bank Repo On Lo1 1 800
383-88ll2
2 or 3 bedroom house In Pomer
3 Bedrooms 1 bath $400 oo Do
POSII $400 00 Month Plus Utili
t1es References Required (740)
256 6t02
Buy Foreclosed Homes
From $19911.4o
4% Down For Listings /Payment
Details Call aoo 319 3323 Ext
1709
For lease Or Sale 2 000 Sq Ft
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Super En
ergy EffiCtent Home Near Cllffs}Cie
Goll Club $885/Mo
74Q.448.2957
.,
~
..
N1ce 1BA Apt
in Pt Pleasant
Very
(304)675 4975
Clean
Leave Message
No Pats
qiOrod (304)675-3469 after 5PM
Firat Time Buyers Easy Finane
lng 2 and 3 Bedroom around
1520 112 Ohio Stroot PI PI
$200per month (304)578-2247
Ttlree bedroom In Pomeroy $300
per month $300 deposit no pols
740 992 2879
$200 per month Call t 800 948
587B
Three &edroom ranch type home
with attached single car garage
Tuppers Plains area 5425/mo
HELP SAVE MY CREDIT! 2BR
2BA lUI DOWN, ASSUME
PAYMENTS, WILL PAY TO RE·
LOCATE HOME (304)765-&SH
plus $425 depcsli 304<424 5283
INVENTORY REDUCED BALE
All 1999 Models MuSI Go Re
d~ prldng and rates as low
as 99 9o/o fixed APR
On All Singfe.Wido Lot MOdels
OAKWOOD HOMES
(304)755-5115
Three bedroom two baths Harrl
sonv111e area Available Decem
bar $400 plus ullllllts. deposit no
smoking no polS 740 742 3033
Two bedroom house In Pomeroy
would like to sell on land contract
or will rent $350 per month plus
depoe•t and utilities no pets 74()..
698 7244
EditiOn Furblu Rutland Bottle
Gas 1 800 837 8217 or 74D-742
2511
system brand new $149 lnslalled
lroe 740 992 f 182 or 304 773
5305 after 8pm
COMPUTERS
$0 Down low
Monthly Payments The Perfect
Holiday Gift Almost Everyone
Entertainment Center & Sor'IY.
Stereo Sysllm 1986 Lonoen;
berger Limited Edition Hampe r.
bago Paid $365/Mo Deposit Re
qu1rod 513-574 2539
Twin Towers now accepting ap
pllcatlona for 1 BA HUO aub&ld
lied apr for elderly and handl
capped EOii (304)675-8679
Upstairs Furnished 3 Rooms
Bath Also 2 Rooms & Bath
Downstairs NICely Furnished
Bo1h Clean No Petal References
Ooposn Required 74D-44S.15t9
460
Space for Rent
MOOIIe Home Space Cenlanary
Area $t25/Mo Some Rtstrlc
t1ons 740.44&--1053•
MERCHANDI SE
510
Household
Goods
For Sale Reconditioned wasn
ers dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jaclcson A-uo (304)875-7388
GOOD
UIED
APPLIANCES
Waahara dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78
Vine Stroot Call 740 448 739a
1 888 818 0128
New And Uatd Furniture Store
Below Holtda~ Inn l<anauga Day
Beds Bunk Beds Beds Dress
ers Couchea Dinette& Stop And
WHITES METAL DETECTORS
Largest Seieclionr Lowest PriCes!
Tropical • Scenic • International
Oestmatlon s! You Haven 1 Lived
Unlll You ve CrutseOI Call f.or
CRUIIEI,
INC f-804).745-7281
F nat sale work jackets $3 00
now Irregular kids Jeans $2 00 1
shirts afghans table cloths new
Christmas decorations S1 00
each TV s electric edger alec
trlc massager Free coffee & do
nuts 9 00 1 00 all week 132 But
lernut Poll'l&r'Oy
Firewood For Sale Mostly Oak
Hickory Locust Cut Last Year!
Building
Supplies
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5121
560
Pets for Sale
*Chrlttmu Pt~Mnt•
Mini Schnauzer AKC three
males one female salt/pepper
and black/silver S300 must make
a deposH Will. hold till after
Christmas buf must be PI~ 740
992 6700 leave message If not
FLORIDA MARCO ISLAND
LUXURIOUS
VACATION
RENTALS IN S W FLORIDA
AVAILABLE WEEKLY /MONTH
LY HOMES iCONOOS AVAIL
ABLE CALL FOR SALES
RENTALS CENTURY 21 1 BOO
255 9487 EXT 1Of
$125 3 pair of lli1j mouvo 9010red
curtains like new 74Q-896-1233
FREE
SAMPLE
Registered
thing Plus Have Lois Of Enorgyl
800-793-9384
Gunsll Guns!! Sale on all guna In
stock
shiJtguns
rltras
&
hanctguns Aon 1 Gun Shop just
outside of Rutland on laal1er Fld
Sale last thru Deeember call 740
742 8412
AKC Golden Retnever puppie s
$300 parents on premises sire Is
dark dam Is medium pupple' are
beautlfuil Shots & wormed (&ady
to go or will hold lor Christmas
740 992 2708
AKC Golden Ratrlever Puppies
Males $250 Fomaloo $275 No
Sunday Calls Pioasol 740 245
5358
AKC registered Ch1nese Shar Pel
puppies lots of wrinkles $300
Darth Maul (non talking) Rullend
Bolllo Gas 1 800 837 8217 or
T<ro-742 2511
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired Now & Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 81J0.537 9528
lion $150 740 892 3138 alter
8pm
Will Finance With ·o • Down Past
Credll Problomo No Problem Clll
Ton Freo 1 888 875 8212
949-2128 evenings
Fish Blrdo Pond Supplies
Sun 1·4PM Mon Sat t 1AM
8PM Fish Tank/Pot Shog.2413
Chocolate Toy Poodle Male 5
months old (304)875-1449
Christmas Puppies AKC Black
Lab Males & Femalea Will Hod
Till Chrtslmas 740-44&0080
Groat Chrlslmaa Glft1 AKC Regis
lered Siberian Husky Puppies
Wormed & snots Already Given
Reedy To Qoi74Q-388-8951
er Pups $250 (304)695-3070
Rat te"lor puppies very smell In
telllgent and paper trained born
now wtll hold until Chrlstmaa eve
alao needed immediately one
mate Boxer tor stud service pa
pars not Important c.all Jeans at
140 992 4581
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
R&D a Used Furniture Great Se
lecllon Priced To Selll · comt
And Brow•• • Corner Of Route 7
ows Anchors Water Heaters
Plumbing & Electrical Parts Fur
nace_a & Heat Pumps Bennena
Mobile Home Supply 7f0
9418
••a
1992. Dodge D 250 4114 5 spood.
d"sol S89QO T<ro-119211072
~
ITIOYOU
EJ•\PLOYU:5 60,YOU
t.QUI>J...
P"f\:) fA.'(
w£
I"'
LO\~ Of ~UPERl~ :itJ({f.
~0 EQUI'\L 1
em""'
1
1993 C~evrolel 4x4 5 Spud, ,
Green & Silver Excaller\t Condr- 1
~I 740 256 6574
l
1994 GMC Jimmy SLS LOAD I
ED 4DR Excollonl Conditio'\.
New Trano High Miles f8 200 w
Calt befota 9PM (304)e7!H9ot6
1
J
Runs Good $1 900 OBO 740
378 2995
740 Motqrcycles
7,:::99:::2:--:Y:::a~m::a:::h~a~T:Oim:.:b::e~rw-o:-:l;..l-4~· ~
1990 Chevy Beretta Red Great
Condlilon (304)882 2787 Leave
_M_,asr:N"iig~
e, ;:u:~'-;,:J-..,'7'--· .I
1990'Foril 1'!iurus <i~ 59
miles copper w1111 blue Interior
pw ale am/fm cassette ( Interior
In exconent COndition) 4 dr pas
damaged runs &
$1500 OBO 740
740 949 2844
Male t 112 yoara old $100 Two
Rat Terrier Females (304)875
7946 before 9PM
BlueI Hooter Pups 74o-258 1335
Pass
2•
Pass
7.
Pass
& Motore
9 Mythical bird
Cometh"
20 Take a tiny
bite
22 Ho1ehot. e g
23 Friendlier
24 Conceive
Obi
By Phillip Alder
Desptte what you mtght feel all
bndgc experts make mistakes And
now Davtd Btrd has catalogued the
btggest m 'Famous Bndge Dtsas
ters (Gollancz) In the tntroductton
he says h1s mtenuon ts
noL to
laugh at thetr dtscomfiture (except
where tt' s unavotdable), more Lo
draw mslructton from the deals and
tmprove our own standard of play
Btrd gtve s some Blackwood and
Roman Key Card Blackwood dtsas
ters mcludmg one deal tn whtch sev
en mternauonal patrs reach seven dta
moods Wtlh the trump ace unluckily
offstde And thts example features
Btrd htmself playmg m an mter
county champtonshtp m 1988
Two dtamonds was Lhe Multt
showmg etther a weak Lwo btd m a
m aJor or some slrong hand It enJoys
great populanty tn Bnlam Four dta
m oods was natural
but also
expressed a wtlltngness to compete to
four of North s maJor Four no trump
was regu lar Blackwood But atthts
potnt Btrd sttling East, got cold feet
aboul hts JUmp to tour clubs So he
dectded not to adm tt to an ace How
cvct there was a snag ftve clubs
showed zero or three aces Natural
ly West ass umed the Iauer and htd
seven New Norlh asked about Lhe
auclton Then tru stmg ht s oppo
nents he sacnftced m seven dta
monds 1 After Btrd doubled more m
rchef than anythmg else, South Lned
to sLay calm but barked
Pass me
my c tgaretle s John 1
West led the heart kmg and ihe
contract went two down
The book ts $17 95 postpmd from
Baron Barclay Bndge Supplies Call
(800) 274 2221 to order
25 Spoiled
'D Pigeon pea
32 Hearing
organ
34 Nantucket
and Martha a
VIneyard
35 Sound•
~
39 Being fond of ,
43 River In
•
Afrlce
45 Skln
opening
•
47 Chaste
48 UK broad',
caatera
•s Thou
so Chatter
52 -Marla
53 Openwork
fabric
54 They re often
periiCII'Ial
,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotal•ons by lamous people past and
present Each letter m the Cipher stands for another
Today s clue R equals C
F MV
SJOOWV
FMV
AF
OUUBHDFDCH
ZCJXP,
S V 0 J A
IVZVHIDHX
NMDAV
u
MCNVAA
ACUUOHIVJ
s 0 ww
0 HI
AC J I
,~~;t:~' S@\\Jt\lA-~t.~s·
WOlD
GAM I
141Jetl loy ClAY I 'OIIAN
lellors of
0 Reorronge
lour ~<:rambled word1
the
bt·
low 1o form lour olmple wordo
ANWOPE
III
rI
l I DY 0
1
I I 1 I
~
--.~R_HT"""O"'T'"E-,;Nrl,:::,....
~ I I Is
I
I
•
•
•
•
KLENUI
I
1---r--r.:..,.,7-,-,-,-1-j
16
Just remember granny
told me an tmportant talent
to have ts never to use two
words when · · · • • • do
A
V
Complero Jho chuckle quored
~Y
flll1ng •n the m1u1ng words
1
L--lL......L-J........IL-...1.-J
you develop from step No 3 below
I
,
A 600D WATCHD06 60ES
oft PRINl NUMBERED tETTE~S J1
~ IN THESF ~QUARES
l
Boats
to
8 Silkworm
....s ...
PEANUTS
Whooler 250 Excellent Condition., I
$1 700 740 367 0219 1~0 367·
7272
8
r
1
t
UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER
1
1 Mafl BasS: Boat Trailer a Troll
lng Motor & Ball $375 740 379
2706
Now 11 the t1rno for g r r r~ol
buys nthe clossl(l<ds
I' I"
ANSWE~S
Magnet - Robot · Irony· Walnut · BE WRONG
The not so smart fellow lo hts pal The greatest gtft
tn the world IS the nght Ia BE WRONG I
DECEMBER 71
!TUESDAY
1993 Ptymouth Ouster 6 cylinder
OHC standard excellent condl
tion looks great beaulifut Interior
I
I I II I I I I
SCRAM-lETS
for Sale
v
nice wheels $3500 740 949
2045 evenings
19g~ Cavalier 2 door 4 cy l 5
spoe'q ~, D, ~layer A/C $3500
OBO (304)175-6683
ll_,d Clr S.llo
T-!0-1421400
790
•
1996 Pontiac Grand Am SE 4
doer very nice car $5995
'
1991 Tracker 4lll4 automatic CO
'
t983 Class C 23 f1 MotorHome
also has
Generator (304)875-6734
Sf:RVlCES
-·"-~----J
Home
Improvement•
74D-742 3311 or 8liS.816 9609
Visa & Master Card accepted
Wheats AIC Tilt Cruise Pwr
lodes Pwr Wlndo.ws Pwr Seats
$8 200 oo (2 000 Under Book
Vsluo)l 74Q-882 7512
1995 Chevrolet C~maro 228 LT1
350 whit& with gray interior all
options left side demilge asking
$3800 OBO 740 992 1506 days
740 949 2644 evenings & woo
konds
f 998 QJand Am Q"' l! Doors Ex
cellont ConOIIIon 50 000 ~lias
Will Take Pey o~ 749-388 6039
1998 H~undal Accent 2 Doors 5
Speed 38 000 Milos Green Ask
lng $5 000 l40.992 9015
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfeti!Tle guaranlle
l.ooal references furnished Ea
18b11Shod 1975 Call 24 Hrs (7.0)
446 0970 1 800 287 0576 Rog·
era Waterproofing
Appliance Paris And Sorvtco All
Name Brands Over 25 Yeara Ex
parlance All WOrk Guarahteed
French City Mayteg 740·U8
7795
C&C General Home M81n
tentnce Painting vinyl aiding
carpentry dOO<s wl01dowa i1atho.
mobile nome rapatr 8nd more FOr
" " estimate caw Chol 7•C).g92
8323.
LIVIflglton S Basement Water
PrOofing Ill! basement repa lre
done tree estimates lifetime
guarantee t2yrs on j?b experi
Electrlciland
Re!rlgeratlon
Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repairs Master U
censed e/ee,trlcian Ridenour
Electrical WV000308 304 875
1786
-.
-1
...
810
player good car $3599
1985 Buick Lesabra Custom 4
Doors
Loaded
aluminum
Campere &
Motor Homes
Excellent Condition
840
UkC Aeglat•red Rat Terrier
7.
4 N:J'
7 Supply wa1er
East
Btrd fimshes by saymg thai tltook
htm over a decade to nole that the
openmg lead was aut of turn'
1997 Fortt Expottlllon 40 000 1
Miles Mint Condlllon $24 500 1
7<ro-387-0219 74D-387 7272
on"" (304)895-38&7
Huge lnventoryr Discount Prices
On Vinyl Skirting, OOors Wind
1
I
1996 Bw~k~Cenlury Special 6 6Y
nnoar ntca car S4495
••
10/ff/99 $100 or $50 deposit
WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Tochnology
~mt£, I Vt: fdJ\ \0 ~o""
1576
On
Australian shepherd pups 10
weeks one ma le/ female NSOR
current heajth record $75 740
Minimture AKC Doberman Pinch
King size soltside watarbed &
oak headboard very good condl
~8K
1994 Ch~vy Lumina 89 000
miles f5 ~br?.Jr nice car 54295
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant
served plus Startmg Lineup (all
sports) plus 12· poseable fig
ures just a few 12• Star Wars
THE BORN LOSER
1966 Blazer 4x4 Runs Good
Looks Good S3 400 740 387·
AebuiU Transmlaalon
drlvas
7
85 Ford I >nger Pick Up 2 Whool
4 Ciy 5 Sp Runs Good Now
Tlrea No AUSII Good Body
Cloanl Roady To Go Nowl $1 tOO
OB07<ro-44525BO
asking
740 949 2128
(304)675 2053
H1rtey Davldton Barbl••· Bar
ble & Ken Is hera first come first
Engine
'- /)I$C.
B~A~iS!
AKC Fomole Mlnlaiuro Giltlle Pup
$150 UKC Toy Rail Terrier 10
,Monl~s $100 Both Hou011ra ned
~40-256 6182
•
Grubbs Plano tuning & repalra
Problems? Need 1\Jnod? Cill tho
plano Or 74Q-448-4525
1900 Chevior.t lumlne
sanger
Male Rat Terr er pup real cute
~
,
•
;
1997 KW W900 550 CAT 18
Speed 355 Gaars Loaded
$70000 740 256-1021
1986 Tran, Am 350 Automatic
Goo~ Condlilon $2 200 740
446-0390
Block brick sewer pipet; wind
lintels_ etc Claude Winters
vlfVi At~leVfl> A MAJO, J~A~TtlltOU6~
~ /
SLOv/1('16 Tt4e AGING
~-\r"\
of nte
SPINf ..
kends
$2500 7<ro-985 38 f 0
ows
nome
Nuree t:.oaea Over 90 lba No
Dieting No Exercise Eat Any
ctear., IAIIQe and out
FRANK & EARNEST
7410
1sst Oldsmobile Cllua,s
106 000 well maln\ljlnott ltlli•s
$40 A Truck Load 740 245
9337
For sale
eoo 772
WA~T A COMPUER?? SUT NO
CASH?? MM~ Technology Will
550
''
~~s 5~~g;4o ~~: , ~~~sd:;:; •
CARS $100 $500 & UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda s Toyolos
Chevys 1 Jeeps And Sport UUU
Call Now!
t2·7
740 949 2844 evenings & woo
740 669.()904
Bklwell OhiO 740 446-4336
·o·
a•
aluminum wtleels .air ltft fron
1
4
4
4t
North
1o TYpe of bran
11 Orth ...
dontlat'a deg
13 Porter
18 Hard-handed
defense
19 'The-
6 Unlocked
Learn from
their errors
--- .
E~cononl CondiHon Inside And ,
Oull Daya 740 448 8880 Or •
'
Nlghlt 740-448 0011
97 Ca maro automatic loadRd
42 000 miles dark lorest green
Ilea
,·
.,,,..
tomalic Trans AJC Power Ace :
T11pe Dec Sedllntr Metal Cover •
Autoi for $ale
E>a 7832
AUNT LOWEEZY
Te•ms Of Sale CASH OR CElli •
TlfiED CHECK
'•
Trucks for Sale
West
Ani- to Prevt0111 PuZZle
Opemng lead • Kr
I'M OFF TO TH' PARTY,
1811 Fbnl Ranger XLI V 6 IUIO. :
blue am/fm cassetf0 1 bodllnor!
1986 Mircury Cougar V 6 Runs
Good $1 500 OBO, 740 2581905
.,
Ron Allison 588 Watson Road
Call Toll Froo 1 668 666 21>79
Lock 74o-«8 4782
& Addison Pike 'We Buy Furnl
lure• 740 387 0260
waterline Special 314S2bo PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1' ).ljo PSI
$37 00 Pe~ 100 All !Wialf)om
prooslon Filings In StoCk~
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaclcson Ohio 1 81J0.537 9528
EXTRAORDINARY CRUISES!
good fair condition $900 $975
Pine Hills Golf Course 740 992
6312 or 740 992 2381
State ~o tJte 588 Countryside
Apartments 2 Bedrooms CIA WI
0 Hook Up Water Sewage Gar
Tama Dru"1 Supper So142 000 2
Cerrvln Vega S~eake!la.blnot
$400 Carver PM 900 A
$200
Peavoy Eq /97 $150
Micro
phones 7<ro-256-1247 -~
F1nance With
Down Pasl
Credit Problems No Problems
Spring Valley Green One Bed
room Apartments Appliances
Ft.rnlshed Call740 446-1599
Of A 1999 F 350 SuperDuly Ex
collonl Co01dltlonl $150 Qall 740
448 4548 74D-44S.7375 '
BARNEY
•
$ NO OOWNI HOMES NO CAED
IT NEEDED! GOV T FORE
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
PROVALI 1 800 360 4620 EXT
8509
Fits 1998 And Newer
FOf(ff!":Serles Pickups Came Oft
Gas Firoplaco (304)895-3129
No pots Pllona(304)875-1388
For Rent One Bedroom House
AWESOME NEW 2 OR 3 BR
ONLY MAKE 2 PAYMENTS TO
MOVE IN AND NO PAYMENTS
AFTER 5 YEARS (3CM)755-71t1
Iai.J..aa1a
Golf carts Yamaha & Club Car
gas powered aome wltops all run
Newly Remodeled 2BR Unfur
nls..hed House lor Aent New Ha
van area Deposit/Reference Re
'•
.. ..
caiiT<ro-992 9191
One Bedroom furn is hed Apart
ment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
... LOOK! ••
5 bedrooms 2 baths over 2 000
SQ rt for les s thart S400mo
1993 Clayton 1611 x 80ft Heat
Pump Dryer Stove RelrlgeiBtor
$20 000 OBO Lovely Condition!
(740)-258 8382
One bedroom furn1shed apart
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
446-0008
1974 12lll85 all electnc washer
dryer relngerator oven curtains
couch and chair two w1ndow air
condll1oners In Portland ready to
$$ Auto Loans Personal Loans
Aree $250 month + Ooposli
{304)675 1371/675-3230
RENTALS
DOWN!!! Most Everyone Ap
proved Low Monthly Payments
1 888 671 4300
Debl ConsoiiOallon Morlgagas
And Refinancing Credit Problems
Elllcept Electric Gallipolis Ferry
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townh ouse
Apartments
Include s Water
clop & rot required 304-675 2535
Money to Loan
Modern 1BR All Utlllllos Pold
20 500 Acres
Call Ryon
8011/213-8365
Antnony Land Company LTD
www countrytyme oom
Mobile Homes
for Sale
ant Furblos & 5 d•fterant llmllod
71 0
,jl.
South
Pass
Pass
serves The Right To Accept /Re;. ~
joel A~) & All BIOs & Wllhdra.,;
Items From Sale Prior To Salr...
1996 FQI1l Ranger By Owner Au •
ttandard ~lze S'lai8 Top Po--;1
Nice Christmas Glftl With Extrasl
7<ro-387 7070 74Q-387 7093
~ •
Soon By Callong Tho Colloctlon
Dept At 740 441 1038 OVB Re, 1
640.
TRANSPORTATION
Table Excellent Condition Make
Vulnerable East West
Dealer North
A M On 12/11188 AI Tno OVB '
Annax 143 Third Avo Gallipolis
OH Sold To Highest Bidder 'AI
74Q-592 2322 740<699 :j63f
Straw For Sale $3 00 Per Bale
740 256 6456 Days 740 258
1530 Evenings
Solo Flex tor s< $30o cal 740
99211053,
'
... 6
Ohio Valley Bank Wll( Oiler For
So le By Public Auction A 199e
Ford Ranger 1073535 A 1984
Ponliac Fiero 1307771 & A 1987 •
1979 Chevy Short Whool Baso
Pick Up P & Pi! Automatic
Good Cond1tion $1500 (304)6753824
Hay, • Grain
z
K 9 54
• A6
tAJ10862
1973 Chevy 18 box truck wlllft
taltgolt ~o 4 'sp;iJd runal oak~
good , $2800 OBO 1883 Ford
Aanger 4 cylinder 4 apeed 4x4 ~
runs good no rust great gas ,
milts $1500 080 74D-992-0205 j
304-882 2379
•
ments Welcome Hauling Avail
able 4thens Uvestoq_k Sala$
Services Inc toU -Frte t 888
Bt8nlea & Furbl11
older
Beanies $4 each over 20 dlfltr
Current Brochure
Gracious IMna 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
A verslde Apartments In Middle
mo~t
carpel $10 500 OBO 740 992
588ll
Poor Credit? 01<111 NO MONEy
Pets
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
lunllios
Wanted
Lovely ten acres In a country set
t ng lour bedrooms two and nan
batns lormal living room and family room two fireplaces two apart
menls four car garage and two
storage build1ng Please ca I 740
320
11 7<ro-388 9770 7<ro-388 8011
740-448-4425
HOMES FROM S1D930 /No. 1
3 BA Aapos /Foreclosures Fee
831 2385 24 Hrs XI 83
Clean like New 1 Bedroom
Apartment All Utilities Paid
Stove & Refrigerator Furnished
Must Have References & Oepos
It Raterences Required No
R1ver1ront Campsite with Electric
through Lose Weight While En
JOying The Foods You love Our
lng This Holiday season Frio
Sample~ 740-441-1982
COMPUTERS FOR CHRISTMAS
3 Day OeHvery Tima Easy
Finance For Everyone Wlih $99
Down And Chacklng Or Savings
Account I 8118-855 5392
800-213 8365
AT&T MCI SPRINT What s
Tho Big Secret? Work 5 Hrs /Wk
Make $52K $125K/ Yr Easy! I
FREE lnfol 1 600 997 9888 (24
Hrs) Ext 1155
I DO Not
Break
2 QO<i<f B~l<& Sale Trail Horses
$1 000 liach 740 388-8504
lor 4 PM On Friday All Consign
836-4062
Meta~ollsm
Approved Cell FIROCOM Ad
vancoo Tecllnol!lgl,_ 1 800 617
3476 Ext 220
:-:::--:------=---· 1 Acres
EARN $1 000 A DAY
Amazing
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
& movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housing OpportuMity
age Call 1 800 786 8849 24 Hrs
XT27
380 2615 (24 Hrs)
Sun Comes With Heat
Complato OISH Natwork salolllta
Melg• Co
Danville SR 325 5 Ac res
$16 ooo water On Briar Ridge
Rd Prrvate 7 Acres $13 000
SOCIAL SECURITY'll!ISABILITV
Claim De~l~d? W6 Specialize In
Appeals And Hea~ngs FREE
CONSULTATION !lonofli Toom
Blower CaiiT-ro-441 16n
992<()357
Saturday December 11 1999
PM Catue May Be Brought In Af
Your Croddlll 800-659-0359
Kero
16 month gelded bay $<150 2 1/,f
Special Fall Feeoor Call
Cooling 1 81J0.872j961
GY We F.nance •o• Downt Past
Credit Problems OK!I Even iJ
Turned Down Beforert ReeatabMah
9 400 BTU Heaters $60 (Each)
Livestock
Sys11ms Free 6,V,..r Parts & La
Six panol Qgor 24" lll 79 3/4
$15 Call 740 446 4548 74D-446
7375
posit References Required No
$87 200 Call For Appointment 1
CHESHIRE VILLAGE Beautiful
Colonal3 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths
WANT A COMPUTEA1717 BUT
NO CASH7? MMX TECHNOLO
Aliadln 19 500 And A l<ero- Sun
pets 74Q-992 5858
las Lawn Tractors Check Out
Our Winter Service Tune Up
Specials On Lawn Tractors.,~. Ga
tors And Compact TractOrs Car
• J 9 4
• 3
"'KQJ 10 9 n
South
HGNDA S FROM $200 Pollee,
lmpouhps ~~~ Makes And Mod
eiS CAlL NQWII 1 800 772
7470 EXT 6338
720
bar Warranry Bennetts Heaung &
1 Bedroom Apartment AC Fur
nlshod Kllchon Ullhtlos Paid [)a.
Apartment for rent n Pomeroy no
WINTER SPECIALS
John
Deere Lawn Tractors JUNE 1
SAME AS CASH Also $300
And $550 Oil Our Already Low
Pr ces On The 300 And 400 Ser
1
a A
• K Q 10 7 5
• Q 7
"'A 8 4 3
Rally Worlds Most P,omp lete In
Prlmlltar/ DlncTY "Christmas
Giveaway" Limited eupply 800
263-21>40
East
• J 3
ventory 01 OEM Wheels Ship
Nationwide 1 600 9WHEELS
Sl1lck Wheats (And Hub Caps)
Only Buy Soli 1 800 99• 3357 '
www ackerwheel com
Credit Corp 1 800 471 5119 E•l
1180
' WATERLESS COOKWARE"
...
EEK&MEEK
a
year registered g~lding qu1et
gent le broke well $1~00 740
RESIDENTIAL fliOill 0WN£RS
3711 EOH
FACTORY WHEELS Alloy Sloe[
Prem1um Firewood Oak & Ash
S$0 Load Full Size Pick Up Do
llvorod 74D-992 4568
NOT Korean Normally $1 500
Soling $695 HIJ0.421 7267
992 2218
nanclng Available 50t0 45 1'0
95 HP SERIES TRACTORS F1
nanclng As low As 6 5% USED
TRACtOR Fonanclng As low As
6 9% Carmichaels Farm & lawn
Gallipolis Oh1o 1 800 594 1111
Or 740 446 2412
Mortgages Refinancing And
Auto Loans Available Merldlar1
446--6189
n1shed and unfurnisHed security
deposit required no pets 740
800-319 3323X2156
Is Where ta• Without Expresae4
Or Implied Warranty & M&y Be;
Home Demonstration l<ind High
est Quality
American Made
1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
Carmichae l s Farm & Lawn Galli
polls Oh10 7 5% Flllled Aate F1
630
Loans To $5 000 Debt Conso li
Apartments
for Rent
lice Impounds /Repoa Fee For
Listings /Payment Detail Call 1
8 3 2
t K9 54
CARS FROM 120/MO Buy Po
Try Out A Now 200 SERIES
JOHN DEERE SKID STEER At
by 32' to 53' Long Ca ll (740)
245 5872
Mlsoellaneous
Merchandise
dation To $200 000 Crodll Cords
3 Bedrooms AU Electric 14x70
Clean Highway Route 160 $3251
Mo ... Depos1t References 740
1992 Modal John Deere Backhoe
3100 Extended Hoe 740 -446
Old House FQundatlon Stones
Average S12e 12 to 15" Square
$$BAD CREDIT? Gel Cash
$.125 per month (304)882 2420
Farm Equipment
michaels Farm & Lawn Gallipolis,
Ohio I BOO 594 1111 Or 740
446 2412
Mobile Home For Rent 740 446
New on private tot 14lll70 3BA
References & Deposit No pets
Johnson s Used Furniture Nice
used Furn1ture and Appliances
Johnson a Uud Furniture (740)
610
•
1997 Goo Tracker black 53 648
miles 5 sp no Sloreo loft londor/
front bum~er damage runs &
drives $3800 OBO 740 992-.
1506 days 740 949 2644 oven
lngs & weekends
Buick Electra 1422894 At 10 00
540
1279
ner Dlfte•t Tony Stewart
D a & Dale Jr Jell Gordon &
ot rs by AcJion Revell & Win
nl
Circle & ..Aeclng Champions
Ru and.~U. Gaa 1 800 837
8217or7407e~,, , ••
446 1004 (740) 446 4039 any
time
Galhpoho 740 446-2003 740
446-1409
2bdrm apts total electnc ap
pllances furnished laundry room
laclllties close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992
5YEARS OLD
Moore owner http //Its-your bust
ness comlrlverlne/
(304)675 2359 aftor 6P!I
LocaiiOn $279/Mo + UIMIIIos No
Pels 7<ro-448 2957
Galllo Co All Now! Marabel Rd
33 Acres $35 000 Or 17 Acres
$22 000 Groat Hunting + Home
Antiques
1124 East Main Stroot on SR 124
E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 Russ
2BR Moblle Home for rent just
Inside city limits SandHill Road
t Bedroom Near Arbor's Nursing
Home EconomJcal UtiNtles Quiet
BRUNER LAND
74().4411492
$67 500 36047 Texas Rd 740
985-3444 or 1 888 591 9905
$200 Ooposll (304)882 2219
Township Gallla Coumy Flat
1 1 room house wllh basement
Jonas Odyssey Ping (304)675
6135
530
SCenic Close To Gallipolis Some
RoSirictlons 74Q-24S.5776
$950 Oown FREE Maps 1 800
213-8385
Dryer Frigidaire 74Q-256-8989
2Bedroom Mobile Home for rent
Herdmans Trailer Park New Ha
ven across from New Haven
Grade School $300 month +
Q 10 8 7 6 2
8044
Aller
Moving 1 Year Old ~atch1ng
Heavy Duty Automatic Washer &
Sporting
Goods
Bertha s Taylor Made Burner
Bubble 2 s New and used put
tars Carblte Callaway Bobby
Please Caii74D-245-5100
t Bedroom In Gallipolis $3751
$9 500+ land Contract Available
(304)675 7730
drivers Callaway Biggest Big
2 Bedrooms N1ce Condit ion In
Alo Granoe very Reasonable
Mo All Ulllltloo Included 740
44t 0720
5T017 ACRES
In Meigs County Off SA 124
Etc Jelf Gordon
Golf balls excellent condi tion
$3 00 to $6 00 per doien New
W1th DepoSit 740 367 0611
Pets 7-ro-448 1370
2 44 Acres Homesite Green
Homes for Sale
Business
Lots
System Fee Estlmaitl If 1C1J aon 1
Call Us Wo Both Lose 1(740)
446 6308 1(800) 291 0098
Stocking Stutters tot Goltersl
3 Bedroom All Eter:trlc $350/Mo
440
20ACRES
Ofl SA 7 South Of Gallipolis SA
21B & Ne1ghbor~ood Road Area
Roug & Wooded Road Cut In
NEEDS TLC Would Be A Great
General House Cleanmg
2 Bedroom All Electnc $300/Mo
polS 74Q-992 5858
Farms ft)r Sale
FURNACE HEAT PUMPS' Eiec
Jacket
5PM
520
12 07 99
FARM SUPPLIES
& LIVESTOCK
trlc Gas Oil Rtplaeement Total
Golf Clubs
70x14 2 Bedrooms Very N ce In
888 928 9896
All real estate advertising In
thiS newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Fa1r Hous1ng Act
of 1968 wt11cn makes 1t1Uegal
to advertise any preference
t m1tatlon or d1SCrlfll1naUon
based on race color rehg1on
sex tamlt1al status or national
or1gm or any rn1ent1on to
make any suctl preference
1mnat1on or d•scnmlnatlon
Mobile Homes
for Rent
$21>Q-$300 74().992 2167
New t4 Wide low down pay
ment S175 permo Free Au Free
Aepos Single & OoubleWide t
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 8316
7795
Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
& 3 bed room mbblle homes
RENT BUSTER NEW 3BR $581
DOWN 6 $319 MONTH ONLY AT
OAKWOOD HOliES NITRO WV
(304)755-5885
Masters Doctorate By Corre
spondence Based Upon Pr10r Ed
ucauon And Short Study Course
For FREE Information Booklet
420
Dou b eW de 3BA/ 2BA
on ly
$287 per mo w/Low down pay
ment Free A r 1 80Q..691.Sn7
691 6777
EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GAEE QUICKLY Bachelors
gra1ors 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446
electric 74Q-843-5546
Double W1de Set Up In The
Country No Payments For 90
Days Only C Oakwood Galllpo
lis 740 446 3093
New 16 Wide 4BR /2 BA low
down payment only $245 per
mo Free A1r Free Sk~rt 1 800
Schools
Instruction
180
Two bedroom house In Portland
wood heat $300 per month plus
Skort 1 81J0.691-6777
Professtonal
Services
Appliances
Reconditioned
Wasners Dryers Ranges Rerrt
2
Baths 1 800 948 5678
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY? No
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECUR ITY
MAIN
TI;NANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL t 800 813
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS fOs Inc
P1lot Program Renters Needed
304 738 7295
AEPO
Mlp,ceUaneous
Merchendlao
37 Pelm fiber
38 Dlrty
I Paklttan't
40 Nerve network
Benazlr41 Compuept
7 Biblical king
42 --walt (M1
12 Mller·ehaped
an amlluah)
cheeaplace
44 Oenger color
13 Secondary
45 Oenceetep
lane
46 Gymnast 1 feat
14 Oelaware
48 Of yore
Indian
51 Big lizard
15 Proelama11ona 55 Planks
16 Writer Flaming 56 Gave strength
17 Coach
to
Paraeghlan
57 Boullion 18 Relatives
(eourcea of
21 Striped animal
broth)
23 Me Basinger
58 Halla
26 Amlno28 Eat to lose
DOWN
weight
1 Lge container
29 Mountain on
2 Hasten
Cre1a
3 Navalabbr
30 Singer
4 Bangkok
McEntire
native
31 More naive?
5 November
33 Sauntering
birthstone
36 Habrew month
.
•
ASTRO·ORAPB
Wednesday, Dec 8, 1999
Your amb1ttous ob.JOcttves have
good chances for betng fulfilled tn
the year ahead, so don't heSitate to
take an occasiOnal well-calculated
mk when a sttuauon calls for tl
SAGmARIUS (Nov 23-Dee
21) Don t watt for thmgs to come to
you today Instead, create develop.
ments that wtll favor you and sun
your needs, even tf you have to set a
btt mOte asserttve Trymg to patch up
a broken romance' ~Astro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you underslllnd
what to do to make the relattonshtp
work Mul $2 15 10 Matchmaker, clo,
thts news.,..,er, P.o Box 1758, Mur
ray Htll Statton, New York, NY
10156
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan I 9) If
something tsn ~ broken, don t try to
fix It A ~t performance of suc·
cessful put handhnss ahould be
duplicated athi1 tnne, aotarnended
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Netther bla
nor bta dell• should
be allowed tllintinllclate yol.
With !he 11feWter ll)litd 11t1. lnvche- ,
w•fo!
"
liltlay
ment; you have wtth others should
work out completely to your sa115r
fact ton
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Today 15 olfenng a bnef but lucky
trend on wh1ch you could capltahze
Take pos 1t1ve measures now to
enhance yourcammg potcnttal, even
If you re already comfortable
ARIE~ (March 21 Aprtl 19)
Foc:us nil your attentton today '!"
matters that arc of personal tmpor
t.mce to you because you could be
far more fortunate than usual tn fur·
lhermg your
amh1Uou~
a1ms
TAURUS (Aprtl 20 May 20)
Should someone attempt to put some
thmg advantageous together for you
today, let your benefactor have hiS or
her way Don t be too proud nor too
stubborn to accept the olfer
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) By
treating bustncss assoc:tates today
more hke pal• than merely commer
ct~l tJCquamtances tt II create a con·
vtvtll llmosphete that wrll produce
muiUal,ljtnefiu,
1
'CANCER (June 21 July 22) Even
1f you have to go up agatnSI tndtvtd
uals m a compeuuve career sttuanon
today whose track
records
lsGanng
are
tmpresstve Lady Luck won I let you
be ovennatched She's 1n your comer
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) The key
tngredtents f01 nssunng success today
and actltke a wm
ncr When you do so, you brmg mto
play condtltons that f•vor you
VIRGO (Aug 2J.Sept 22) Don t
lake thtngs at face value today
because somethtng tn whtch you re
already tnvolved has far greater
promtse than what appears on the sur·
face Start ;seqh:htn& for those plus
es
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Strive
to be unselfish tn all of your dealtngs
wtth others today and thiS could tum
out to he a very rewardmg day for
you You II end up gclltng back more
are to thtnk, feel
1n
return
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) The
key to tappmg that coveted green
stu IT today lsto keep foremosun your
mmd that whlll you have to offer ts
valuable be 11 a scrvtcc or product
.
'
0
·1
'. _,
0
~
�'
'""·.__,.,.,..:-.~ - ~~ •.:.:: ... :;4-,L-;:_.z:..:~"';;r.lf.:;>;,,.::::..,::
....:::
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Pomeroy,
~lddleport, Ohl.o
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Tuea~ay, Dec~~be~ 7,
, , ;..
RACINE - Holiday preparations are moving right along in
Racine with the Christmas banners
now in place, a holiday decorating
contest being planned, and arrangements being made for the annual
"Christmas in the Park" observance.
Meeting recently at the American
Legion hall the Racine Area Community Organization (RACO)
enjoyed a Thanksgiving dinner
before the business meeting where
holiday activities were planned.
Kathryn Hart conducted the meeting with Lillian Weese and Ann
Zirkle giving the secretary and trea-
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family
and
Consumer
Sclencei/Communlty
Development
. We've all heard that we belong to the rat race. There are so many
thmgs that "need" to be done in a day - work, family, household
tasks. exercise, social activities, volunteer positi ons, leisure.
Leisure? Do you feel like that is the area of your life that never gets
any attentoon' What can you do to find more leisure time on your
busy life'
There are three personal resources that go hand- in-hand - time,
energy and money. If you want to save time and energy, you will
prpbably have w give up some money. You have to decide which is
more Important. If you answered, 'Time," then why not hire someone to clean. cook. haby ~i t , do yard and household work, shop, run
errands, etc.' The money may be well spent if it gives you the needed time to sit and relax or to do something for yourself
. Another way to give yourself more tome is to get everyone m the
household involved in daily responsibilities. Assign all family members tasks that are appropriate for their age, talents and interests.
Realite that it may not be done the same way that you would do rt.
but it will get done.
Lu-.cr your expcctatoons. Since housework is a nevcr-endingjob,
give yourse lf a break - don't expect it to be perfect at all times .
. Set aside time for actrvities that are interesting and relaxing . Provode at least thirty minutes a day to do what you want to do. Some
people choose the tran sitional tome between work and coming home
for the evening to concentrate on themselves.
Decrease the time that you spend on personal grooming. To allow
time for yourse lf and to get everything done, you may want to get
out of bed before other famil y members, or stay up after the rest of
the fa mil y has retired . Some additional time-saving tips include having an easy -to-take-care- of hair cut, buying only clothes that are
wrinkle resistant so ironing is eliminated and purchasing take-out or
surer's report.
.
annual holiday home decorating
. It was noted that the Chrtsll)\as · · co~tesl.( lludges will sele~t three
v1llage, a m1mature desrgn of butld- winners with prizes of $50, $30 and
ings in the comm~nity ~ill be..set up \ $20..to be awarded. Judging .will be
near the Cross M1II/Racme Mu~u!lll'~ : done,: in Racine and within: a·two:butldmg on Dec. II. It as noted that mile·radius of the village ·corporaSanta Will be at the museum build- tion signs. Poinsettias will be preing .at 2 p.m to talk to the ~hildren ' serited 'ta· the out-of-town judges.
and dost~rbute candy .a. pdf[lltl.lr.~~J?~~~.!l <<llifne of judging ~nd the winThe. Umted Methodts! Wom~~-~ :lf!Wi~e'I'Mittie announced rn The Da1ly
Racme Amen can Legron Auxllrar~, • Sentinel,
the Star Mill Park Board, .':aq~(.:.;., :;..,RACO.commended the commuRACO have donated money to:pu ..,:,,;,ni!Y: tofiis generosity with canned
chase the treats and fruit baskets , goods .lind money. A total of 700
will be taken to senior citizt;ns.,''-; ~' $\l!lll¥;;~~od itel'ils were collected
. RACO will sponsor the· seventq:j;'~'!t;·Wjth $459 to go ·to the Meigs
WILKESVIL,LE - American
Elcctnc Power s Southern Ohto
Coal . Company recentl~ prc~cnted
none. teachers at. area schools wuh
mono -grants totalong $,3545. Teach-
crs ~i l l use the grants to support
POMEROY -
Preceptor Beta
News Hotline
News Hotline
992-2156
Cooperative Parish Food Pantry. '; '
A thank you note was rec.eivc!d
from Jay Rees, Southern b.ask•etb•lll
.coach, stating the recent donation
· $350 from RACO had been used
purchase floor mats for the M,utv lli
refinished gym floor.
The nominating committee's
ommendations given by
Hunter to retain the same officeirs,
for 2000 was accepted.
David Zirkle led the pledge
allegiance to close the meeting.
.There will be no meeting in December.
A letter was read from Viola
Young, state councilor,. and Zelda
Weber was reported ill. Ella
Osborne had a reading and refreshments were served. Door prizes
went to Charlotte Grant and Mary Jo
Barringer.
.
I
PHOTOS
·*
+
Welcome th~·lfolidays with new furniture
and~ gifts for the home!
Plain & Rope twiSt ·.
CURIOS .
Startingat$2·;~t ',
"
Double Bay Curio .
$4
.•
Unfinished
.
.
Pie Safe &
Jelly
Cupboard
'
Sale
'
'•
f
----~~------·
--
Entertainment '
Centers
insurance from Auto-Owrrets
Insurance Oxnpmy. Call us fOr m>re
Several to
choosefrom ·
details and a competitive poc.posal. ·
··• ,,, ¢ S,e Store for D!tadt
Dehxery Avai)ahle
Qualitt' :F urniture Plus
''\I
· Phone: 740-667"73~8 • l..S00-200-4005
42123 St. Rt. 7
214 Ea.tt Mom
Pomsror
992.(j687
_,
'"of!~~ sneak a~ta~ki; i~ whi~h
BY
BRIAN
J. REED
assume some of the job duties which
have been performed by Rosemary
Snowden-Eskew, the village clerk..
Eskew also chose not to seek reelection. Her term expires in April:
By BRIAN J. REED
Eads said Thomas will assume
Sentinel Newa Staff
many of her general office duti~,
RUTLAND - Mayor Jo Ann although a village clerk will be
Eads was honored upon her retirenamed next year to continue to over-ment as mayor of Rutland, and Jay see the financial affairs of the vilDewhurst, member of council, was lage.
appointed Tuesday as president of
In other business:
the board during council's regular
•
Council voted to offer health
meeting.
insurance to village employees .ana
Eads, who chose not to seek reelection, resigned as mayor, effec- to assume the cost of that insuranc~ .·
tive Dec. 31. Since no candidate Last month, council discussed offerfiled for the mayor's office in the ing insurance in lieu of a Gash beneNovember
general
election, fit which has been paid to employ ~ .
Dewhurst likely will assume the ees until now, theoretically for the
office at council's January meeting, cost of health insurance.
• Rutland resident Maureen
in accordance with provisions in the
Burns
attended inquired about the
Ohio Revised Code.
removal
of recycling bins in the vilEads was appointed tq the
mayor's seat in March 1994 upon the lage. Council .voted last month to.
death of Mayor Ed Martin. She pre- remove the bins due to problems
viously served as a member and as with mattresses and other non-recy clable refuse being placed at the
council president.
Dewhurst was appointed presi- recycling site.
The bins were placed in the vildent Tuesday night, upon the resiglage
by the Meigs County Litter
nation of Martin Andrew. Andrew
will continue to serve tiS a couneii .Controf and Recycling-Qffi£e,: ·
• Council voted to pay for half
member.
of
the eleciricity costs associated
Council member Verna Martin
also resigned Tuesday. She, too, with new lights at the ball fields.
chose not to seek re-election in The lights were installed using funds
November. She has served for four · from the state Department of Natural Resources Nature Works program.
years.
The cost will be shared with the
Refreshments were served in
Rutland Youth League.
Eads' honor following the meeting.
Present, in addition to Eads and
During the business session,
council hired Deborah Thomas of council members Andrew, Martin
Gallia County to serve as an officer and Dewhurst, were council mem -.
manager. Council voted earlier this bers 'Tammy · Searles, Richard Fetty
year to hire an office manager to and Judy Denny.
Middeport Community Association plans Christmas decorating contest
rt---=---------.
·CABINET
IM~R.Icloo~"""•
l 'w~ a les'so~ in ffeed6m, ~triotism ..dci~r~spcinsl
3,500 pooplfwefe kilfea"..
bility Tuesday as Feeney-Bennett Ameriean Legion onnJured; .while Legionnaire Myron Duffield, above,
Post 148 presented members a program to students entertained the students with a series of bugle calls.
at Meigs Middle School- the 58th annive~ of the This is the seventh year the faculty of the school and
members of the Legion have joined together to present
Japanese iqvasion of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Ron Eastman, right, a veteran of the Vietnam Conflict and mem- the Pearl Harbor Day program to the sixth-, seventhber of the Legion post, presented a historical overview and eighth-graders at the Middle SchooL
10- or 20-year level tenn life
-
LEST WE NOT FORGET
Rutland
mayor Eads.
steps down
Council president
also resigns post
a b..osiness partner with low,ro;t
-· ---
Dec. 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor Day
REIDER
SURVEY
7 Gun·:~un
Life ·Home Car Business
-Page4
Single Copy - 35 Cents
nigN .
vlultJ-OwlrM:t ~
Marauders in nail-biter
Hometown Newspaper
read "Our Prayer of ~nks", the·
purpose was given in unison, and
reports were presented by Ord and
Pandora Collins, treasurer and secre- •
tary.
For roll call members answered
with things for which they ·~re ·
thankful. A letter was read from the
Ruths, a missionary family, for contributionsmade to them. Susie Mash
of the Cheshire charge attended ;to
discuss a luncheon to be served at
the Ministers Conference in March.
The annual Christmas dirrner ,will
be held at the Holiday Inn. Lenora. ·
Leifheit closed the meeting with:·
prayer.
Sale
Tornadoes down ·
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Volume 50. Number 127
now have the qJtioo d protecting your family members .
----·
Meigs County's
Sarah Jessica Parker
just a prude at heart
Protect. the imggrtant
people m your life.
.{S[
IJ
DAY - A11at1n Travis Hen·
Clrlcks, eon of Travis Hendrlckl
and Amber Blackwell, celebrllt·
ed his second birthday on Nov.
21 .
Barney was the party theme
with the cake being make by his
11unt, Sharon Stewart. Attending
be1ldes hla parents were Steve,
Shari; Arlca, Aja, and Deatlnee
Blackwell, ~Sarbara Colmer,
Mamie Stephenson, Leah Whit~
r.klng, Ruth Koenig, Pete and
!?lane Hendricks, John, Sheila
and Tanlaha McKinney, Brad,
Claudette and Larissa Hagg.
Sending gilts were Jason and
Brandl Stewart, Mike and Angle
Kelly and
Mayer, Steve,
Stephanie Stewart,
David,
1'ammy, J. D. Scott, Kim and
Magan Johnson, Rory and Darlilne Bartrum, Chad Ashley and
And;ea.
.
Thursday: Cloudy ·
High: 50s; Low: 40s
UMW makes holiday contributions:;·
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Sarah
Jessica Parker says she's .still pretty
much of a prude at heart, despite the
racy reputation of her television
show.
"I have never been nude on show
and I never will be," she said of her
breakthrough HBO hit comedy
·"Sex and the City."
,
Parker said she's not always comfortable with. the show's language,
either.
"If something is really vulgar, I
have conversations with the writers
where I say I'm not comfortable
with that, ;, she said Monday. "It
doesn't mean they'll make the
change, but we do discuss it."
Parker was in Richmond to help
promote the Legal Information Network for Cancer, a local community
agency that helps cancer patients.
Sports
Belpre boys topple Eastern, Page 4
Carleton presents Nativity scene, Page 8
-St. Lo~is Catholic site of pilgrimage, Page 12
Wednesday: Sunny
High: 50s; Low: 30s
mentary, "Listening to Learn"; ,, . • ·'
DofA plans holiday party tomorrow
SATURDAY
POMEROY
Christmas
potluck, Modern Woodmen of
America, Burlingham Camp, at the
hall in Burlingham, Saturday, 4
p.m . Between 2 and 3 p.m. meals
will be prepared and delivered to
the sick and shutins of the community.
December 8, 1999
Wl·ather
School, McArthur, "Investigatf~~
''We appreciate ihe efforts of ing world," said 'Bob Klatt, human
the Past to Understand the Preseql : ::~lassroom teachers everywhere who ,· resources manager. "We are glad .to
Rhonda J. ~eeks, Alexander M1d- :.JI~~-e !he responsibility of preparing help fund irnovative classroom prodie School, Enrochment at Alexan- our young people for an ever-chang- jects for teachers in our region"
der": Kristeen Rose, Hamden Ele- , .. ,
·
specoal onstructiona l projects in their Susan Payne, Zaleski Middle
School, New Marshfie ld, "Our
classrooms.
The. average mini-grant totals Weather. Our Lives, Our Earth";
approxomatcly $400. Those rece iv- Carol Adams, Alexander Middle , .
ing funds include:
School, "Ecology for You and Me";
Darla L. Kennedy, Salisbury Ele- Teresa Snider-Boring, R~dcliff
mcntary Schoo,I Pomcroy, "Book "Math for t~e Real World. " ' ,. ', '
The company has awarded. rhot~ .
Project": Ron Hill , Meigs Middle
School, M oddleport, . "Tac tually than $51.500 ·to support 129 proEnhanced Crcatovc Wroting"; Bette jects since the program began in
Foster, Allensville Elementary 1986.
POMEROY - Several contributions
were made when the Rock
Take a good look at the hours that you spend on activities outside
Springs
United Methodist Women
of work and home . If time spent volunteering adds more stre.ss than
met
at
the
church recently for a
sati sfac tion. it may be wise to cut back on outside commitments. If
Thanksgiving
dinner.
your mental and phys ical health are starting to show signs of wear
The
group
voted
to continue supand tear because of lack Of leisure time, it may be beneficial to even
port
God's
NET
and
to serve food
decrease work hours.
the
first
of
each
month.
ContribuWe know that all work and no play brings on exhaustion and irri- ·
tions
were
also
made
to
'!he Worlability. If you don '1 schedule leisure time, your work, your personthington
Children's
Home,
the
al relationships and your inner well-being will suffer. You have to
Senior
Citizens
Center,
and
the
make the choices.
Meigs Cooperative Parish.
· A report was given on the Festival of Sharing at The Plains Church
attended by Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Radford, Mr. and Mrs .. Edward Ball
and the Rev. Keith Rader.
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma . Phi
To open the meeting Leah Ord
TUESDAY
Sorority, Christmas party, ThursALFRED - Orange Township day, 6:30p.m at the home of CharTrustees regular meeting Tuesday, lotte Elberfeld. Members to take
7:30 p.m. at the home of Clerk gifts for Serenity House.
Osie Follrod.
CHESTER- The annual. Christmas
dinner of Chester Council 323,
FRIDAY
Daughters
of America, will be held
POMEROY- Salisbury TownCARPENTER - Meigs Soil
Wednesday
night at Trinity church
ship Trustees regular meeting and Water Conservation District
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at the township Board of Supervisors, special ses- with a $3 gift exchange.
hall on Rocksprings Road.
Also discussed at a recent meetsion, Friday, 7 p.m. at the Carpening
was the district Christmas dinner
ter Inn.
· .
held Saturday at the Amish restauPOMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department, immunization
WEST COLUMBIA- Revival rant in Logan. Laura Nice presided
clinic, Tuesday, I to 7 p.m. at the services at the Salem Community . at the meeting with the pledge to the
Meigs Multipurpose Center. Chil- Church in West Columbia, W. Va. flag, the Lond's Prayer, and the
dren must be accompanied by a on Leiving Road , 7 p.m. Friday ~ational anthem being presented.
parent/legal guardian. Take child's and Saturday, at 6 p.m. Sunday.
immunization record.
Rev. Bob Thompson, speaker.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter DAR, Saturday, 2
p.m . at the Racine Library. Members to take two Christmas ornaments to decorate for Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
I
Southern Ohio Coal. aw9rds teacher mini-grants
{'Onvenience foods.
RAdNE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters Thursday,
7 p.m. .at Southern High School.
I.
Wednesday
,
Racine, looking .a.: 1ol·like ·christmas
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
J:30 p.m. Dinner preceding at 6:30
p.m.
----------..,.---------------.------------~~~~
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I
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel
WEDNESDAY
Final publtc
POMEROY hearing on Ravenswood Connector
projec t Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the
,Royal Oak Resort.
=-=-::. ::·=:.~~-:-.:ir". "-...........:-..-.
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Nawa Staff
POMEROY - A Christmas decorating
contest is the next even! planned for the holi·
day season in Middleport.
Plans were finalized when the Middleport
Community Association held its regular meet·
ing Tuesday morning. The meeting was at
Peoples Banking and Trust Co.
Mary Wise will oversee the contest, to be
judged Dec. 18..Cash prizes of $50 for first
place and $25 for second and third places will
be awarded to homes with the most outstanding exterior displays. Out-of-town judges will
evaluate the enuies.
Giveaways by Middleport mer~hants will
continue each Wednesday through the Christmas shopping season, said Association Presi-
dent Myron Duffield, who also reported on
the success of the Nov. 21 Christmas Parade
and Saturday's Christmas Candlelight service.
Duffield complimented downtown business owners on their attractive Ouistmas displays, and said all of the village's new Christmas lights and banners were in place.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli reported the village has received a grant from the state
Department of Natur•l Resources' NatureWorks program, which will be used to make
improvements to playground equipment, ten·
nis courts and ball fields at General Hartinger
Park.
She also said the village street department
has completed leaf pickup for the season.
Duffield and lann~lli updated the Asso-
Daily Sentinel names
new managing editor
publisher.
FROM STAFF ~EPORTS
GALLIPOLIS- R. Shawn Lewis
Lewis will be in charge of editori·
has joined Ohio Valley Publishing al content for Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. as managing editor of the compa- Co.
ny's three daily newspapers; the Gal"I'm excited to be here," ' Lewis
lipolis Daily Tribune, The Daily Sen- said. ''The Ohio Valley is a beautiful
tinel of Pomeroy place,.and the region has much to be
and the. Point proud of.
Pleasant (W.Va.)
"I look forward to working with
Register.
local leaders and getting to know the
Lewis,
31, community."
comes to GalLewis is married to the former
lipolis from The Pamala Dawn Jestes of North WilkesRegister-Herald
boro, N.C. The couple have two chi I-.
of
lkckley, dren: Breeanna, 4, and Zachary, 9
W.Va., where he months.
·
~::,_;:__ _...J was
associate
Lewis Is a 1990 graduate of GardLewla
editor. He also ner-Webb University, and prior to that
has · worked for studied at Richland Northeast High
the Rocky Mount (N.C.) Telegram; School in Columbia, S.C., and the
Florence (S.C.) Morning News, South Carolina Govunor 's School
· ·Hickory (N.C) Daily Record and for the Arts, majoring in theater arts.
He is the son of retired Sgt I st
Shelby (N.C) Star.
·
"Lewis brinp a wealth of experi- ·Class Robert W. Lewis and Katherine
ence and ability that will enl!anee'the S. Lewis of Columbia, S.C.
To contact Lewis, call 446-2342,
mmunity-ori~nted nature of our
newspapers," said O!arles W. Govey, extension 18.
ciation on recent meetings of the Middlepgrt
Community Development Authority, a committee appointed by lannarelli to address
downtown beautification and revitalization
and other community-related issues.
[)uffield said the committee will review
village ordinanceS relating to 10 issues of
concern, including downtown signage, trash
on .sidewalks, regulation of downtown residences and other issues, and present findings
to Village Council.
Duffield updated members on the progress
of several new businesses, including the
antique store in the Downing House, which is
now open on weekends, and a restaurant on
the comer of S. Second Avenue and Cole
Street, which opens soon.
Steve Dunfee expressed concern over the
Today's
Sentinel
2 Sectlom • 12 Pages
~l!!ssll!ms
1
8·111
Comics
11
td!lloda(s
Local
~
~
sl!!!m
Hi
Wglbt[
Revue '99," which was held over Thanksgiving weekend at the Middle School. Proceeds
from the event will benefit the United Fund
for Meigs County and the Riverbend Arts
Council.
Duffield encouraged attendance at a Dec.
13 public meeting.at Meigs High School, to
encourage completion of the Athens to Darwin section of U.S. 33.
Duffield recognized a $200 contribution to
the Association by the Riverbend Arts Council, and the membership agreed to contribute
$100 to the All -Wars Memorial restoration
project after dues are collected in early 2000.
It was also agreed the January meeting
should be spent reviewing 1999 activities and
evaluating the organization's goals ~d mission.
jl
Sheriff announces
2000 primary bid
Good
Afternoon!
~alen!!!l[
future of the Meigs Middle School building,
which will be closed due to the construction
of new school buildings in the Meigs Local
School District. Dunfee said even though the
closing will not take place for two years, the
community should begin considering uses for
the building, so it is not razed or left abandoned.
The Association discussed use of the
building as a municipal building, with use of
the auditorium and cafeteria areas for community events, as well as a possible location
for an expanded facility for the University of
Rio Grande's Meigs Center.
Association members discussed contacting
university president Dr. Barry Dorsey to propose use of the building by the university.
Wise reported on the success of "Talent
~
Lot/erie.\·
QW2
Pick 3: 5-6-4; Pk:k 4: 2-2-6-0
Buckeye 5: 3-5-8-12·32
}UA.
Duly J: 1·8-1; Dally 4: 2-3-3-7
C r999 Oh~ Valtty Publishins Co.
POMEROY- James M. Soulsby
announced today that he will seek
another term as sheriff of Meigs
County.
He filed his petition last week with
the Meigs County Board of Elections
for nomination on the Democrat bal lot in the March primary. He has
served three four-year terms as sher- ·
iff.
His current term expires o.n Dec.
31, 21XXl.
The former Pomeroy postmaster
worked as a special deputy under two
former sheriffs, Bob Hartenbach and
James Proffit~ and also for the
Pomeroy Police Department before
· being elected sheriff.
Soulsby is active in community
and civic activities, including the
Meip Athletic Boosters, Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164, and
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star.
He belongs to the Rock SJ1rin1!11
United Methodist O!urch.
'
!,
.~ . !'
James M. Soulaby
He and his wife, Susie, reside on
Union Avenue in Pomeroy. They have
four children and II grandchildren,
all of whom live in Meigs County.
In announcing his candidacy,
Soulsby promised to continue
addressing the needs and concerns of
the county's residents.
"My department can't solve everything, or do everything, but we do our
best," Soulsby said.
.. .
·
.
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I
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461 s. nw Avi. MJddl•pert
.... 740.992·2196 .·.
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12. December
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December 7, 1999
abney
burgess