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'

Weather

· Sunday, December 20, 1998 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Monday
O..mt. 21, 11198

Eastern boys beat South Gallia, Page 5
Abused prostitutes, Page 6
Civility fades in Washington, Page 10

Today: Rainy
High: 80s; Low:30s
•

•
•

T:~:Snow
Hl~h: 308; Low:10s

•
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'

By SUE MacDONALD
Cincinnati Enquirer
CINCINNATI- For the 25 years
that Patty Russell has patronired 62·
year-old Mullaney's Pharmacy. the
neighborhood frieddliness hasn't
changed.

... I

.: ~.
.',.l.'

Second·generjltion pharmacist Jim

Mullaney knows her by name and
recognizes her raspy voice as evi·
dence of another sinus infecrion and

•

cold.
Indeed. many customers are on a
first-name ba.&lt;is with the folks behind
the counters.
But much has changed, too. from
the patient-friendly home video
library in the waiting area to a com·
puter terminal that links customers to
the University of Cincinnati's
NetWellness ~ealth Web site.
Thanks to various things -

man-

aged care. the way drugs are adver·
tised, an increase in prescription

drug use -

pharmacists are more
active participants in the doctorpatient relationship. offering information and guidance in ways and settings never before seen in U.S. health

BIG TURNIPS__: Lavada Barcus, Cheshire, yanked this big set

care.

of turnips from her garden on Dec. 10. At nine pounds each, the

It's a trend observers say will continue. Mullaney's is a.good example.
At the ehd of the drug counter is

root vegetables were just naturally big and received no special
anentlon.
·

a newly remod.elt=d patient counseling

Attitudes changing
toward job hopping
By LISA BENAVIDES
The Tennessean
Although still viewed with suspi·
cion by many employers, holding
multiple jobs in a short period of time
is no longer the death sentenc·e il used

to be for job candidates.
In fact. ~om~ companies find it
suspicious wfu:n an employee's
resume shows h ~ ur sht! remaitled

with one firms so long in a career.
"In today 's market, you have. to
wonder, 'Couldn't they have found
something better0 '" said Charles Farthing , se nior vice

president

at

Nashville-based Ecnnotech, which
prov.ides computer programmers and

systems analysts to clients requiring
temporary staffing.
.. Blame it on the tight-labor market
and changing attitudes toward work,
but job hopping. loosely defined as
holding a series

or jobs for Jess than

area (separated from the checkout
line). At least half the store is dedi· .
cated io medical equipment. home
health aids. monitors. braces, wheelchairs and medical

.
learning curve.
The Corporate Leadership Council estimated the cost of losing a hightech worker, !;Uch as a software engineer. at $123,000,
In a report this year. the Washingtoh think tank identified employ·
ee retention as the single most criti·
cal work-force management challenge of the future as labor markets
tighten and companies embark on
growth plans.
For some. tho~gh. job hopping

supplie~.

"I think everybody pretty much
sees that we're going to· be less and
less involved with dispensi.~no.-&gt;''w
ications and ·more and more involved

with disease-state management.''
says Tom Mullaney. Jim's son and
third-generation owner of the·srore ..

Dr. Daniel Acosta. dean of pharmacy at the University of Cincinnati.
agreed: "The new em of pharmacy is
called patient counseling and disease
management. Without naming
names, several major pharmacy
chains have said they wanl their phar-

macistS way up front, out there meeting customers."
Mullaney predicted a day when

means a soaring career path.

Joan Cato has had four jobs in the
seven years she's lived)n Nashville.
"It 's my basic personality to enjoy
change, so I thrive on new situations,
and I'm driven to look for new situ·

robotic devices dispense medicines at
the pharmacy, with technicians
checking prescriptions for accuracy,
and pharmacists serving as hands-on

1998. acconling 10 the National Asso- :

·we integrate herbal medicine into tr.l· dation of Chain· Drug Stores. That's
ditional disease management a.• a 2.8 billion prescriptioM- a year. an
first, mtional line of defense," he average of II for every man, woman
counselors for customers
said. " I see the pharmacist's role and child:
Some ·drugstores already offer becoming a key or central hub in the
• About one-third of school-age
heaiJh services, such as blood-sugar delivery of integro~tive . health care. children receive at least one pretests for diabetes, blood pressure How do we create a system that lim- scription or over-the-counter drug
screenings, cholesterol tests and pri- · its risk a.nd yet maximizes the bene· every 48 ho~"'· acconli ng 10 the U.S.
vate areas for self-education and tits?"
Phannacope1a.
pharmacist-customer counseling.
He foresees a "natural therapies
• Mistakes in prescribing drugs
Managed care . means doctors environment" in many drugstores and adverse drug reactions kill about
don't always have enough time in the where customers ·. and · patients can 100,000 hospital patients each y~ar in
oftice 10 explain-new drugs or drug research information about all types rhe United States, according 10 a
changes to patients - a role that's of drugs and treatments:
recent study i" Toronto.
Many factors fuel the ways people
slowly being a-slimed by pharma• Sales of herbal products are
cists.
purcha&lt;e and use drugs and other booming, estimated at about S15 bil" I go back to the days when you products for their health. Among lion dollars a year and recently boldidn't dare put the name of the drug related statistics:
stered by the introduction of herbon the bottle," said Jim Mullaney.
• Americans' use of prescription based supplement• by longtime vitaLess than two decades ago, In fact, drugs rose 6 percent from 1997 to min makers Centrum and One-a-Day.
pharmacists rarely came out from
behind their elevated, private counter
to talk to customers.
.
But today, phannacists are expected to provide plenty of information:
name of the drug. bow it works, how
it should be taken, whether it will
interact with other drugs or products.
possible side effects and the like.
Pharmacists also are answering
questions on a variety of new prodLarge Selection of: TOMMY HILFIGER, ALFRED
uct&lt;, from magnetic arm bands to vitDUNNER,UZ CLAIBORN, CLASSIC POOH
amin supplements 10 the booming
Beautiful selection of lingerie, gown's, &amp; robes &amp; ~&gt;.: ,,
herbal market.
1
Dr. James B. LaValle, president of
pajamas from Vanily Fair an.d Miss Elatne
Natural Health Resources, Inc .. said
pharmacists already field a host of
l11.
Jackets &amp; Coats
qu ons from customers on prodI
,
uc ·. such as St. John's wort, ginkgo . .
. • ~ fU. 4 ""'4Mt-let 114- M. f"N"
chinacea and natural menopause
remedies.

/$,•

~

"The challenge is that health-care
professionals need to l~arn about
(these products) today, because people are using them today," he said.
There's plenty of scientific and
.traditional evidence on the effectiveness of herbal products, LaValle said.
but such products are not always the.
cure-ails the public think,s they are.
All products- herbal. synthetic, vitainin or supplement - have ·an
effect inside the body that can't
always be predicted, and they must
be used safely and cautiously.

In some fields. such a.&lt; technology. job hopping has reached new
lengths. Last year. one of every four
employees at Silicon Valley •firms
switched jobs. a rate almost twice as
high as the national average and up
60 percent from 1989 when Radford
Associates. a division of Aon

Con~

suiting. tirst started surveying hightech companies.
Companies

u~eJ

to view job hop-

ping on a resume as predisposing a
candidate to future night or a potential problem employee.
With the expense of hiring and
training, they were relu~: t \mt . to take
the risk in hiring someont! with such
a track record.

Now. though. with demand for
certain skills outstripping available
employees and a cbangi_ng_ anitude

toward job loyalty. more companies
appear willing to consider candidates
with a patchy JOb hi story.

manager at l C. Bradfortl &amp; Co.
" We r\!all y ilpprecio.lte so meone
who is well -rounded and has a lot of
experience. and we see it as a great
opportunity for someone to leam."

The stigma rtttac hed to job hopping may be waning. but the di s;!dvantages to employers remain .
Be sides the actual cost of inter viewing employeeS: there are soft
costs. such as the drop in productiv-

ity when a ski lkd employee leaves
agd a new emp lOyee dimbs the

PLA results
Producers

Livestock

Market

report from Gallipolis lor ,ale&lt; conducteJ on Wednesday. Dec. 16.
Feed&lt;r Cattle.
200-300# St. $72-S7X. W . $65$72. 300-400# St. $66-$~ I. HI. $57$64: 500-650# St. $t\ t - ~76 HI. $51&gt;$62 650-KOO# St. $57-$61 Hf. $5 1$60.
Well Muscled/Fleshed.$}().$}!):
.Med ium/Average $26-$:\f:
Thin/Light $21 -$24: Bul l, $33 $41
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $3 I0-$575: Bred
Cows $240-$475: Baby Calves $10$150: Goats $15-$50.
. Next special gmded feeder sale:
Monday. Jan. 18, 7 p.m.
Nov. 16 results:
Steers averaged $69 t:wL

Heifers averageJ $59 cw t.
No sale on WeJnesday. Dec. 23.
There will be a sale on Dec. 30.
For free on·fann visits, please call

614-446-9696.

•
:
:
:

J.,lldoy Hour. 9•30 to 8:00 ...,ehdoy•
'~
. 12:00 to 5:00 Sunday

•
•

•

t

·I
·'

..

,,.

'

•··.t.

.·.

Cato said that in the marketing
field, changing jobs every two to

.
"..:
''

three years is common .

'

.

•

•• '

..'
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.,''

'

Extra Holiday Bonus..• ~ ~!

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Nokia 6120

" There is a cynicism ·in tHe work

force today. which initiated in the earlv '90s. when companies went

.

during the next decade, slowing . .-!ill!~'

.

'!' '1'4(

'

or

' .

'

or

MIDDLEPORT W~!S

with RaUioShack 's
bronl.l! s:11t.!" :.~ward fo r llJlJ7
RaJiuShad , a divi~ion of
Corporatinn, prc.,cnto,; thc
uwards irl Augu"l of l!ach y~:ar al
dc a l~r/frandl i "~: ~hnwc..1"C ntcet rn!.!,\ .
Thi" ycar'o,; ~ how,~o,;e w:..S hdJ "i
~ter ... ht:!y. Pa .
' award
The bronte ..,;tic,
~e ntl!d' to HaUtoSh ;~~.:k as so~.: i:lte
.
based upon their volutne ofpun.: ha~­

cs of RadioShack produds.

1

...

.. ....

·'

Driver charged with
felonious assault after
running over woma·n

d
al,en ar
Classilieds
Comics
' Editorials
L!cal

6

7&amp;.8
9
·2

=

3: 7-4·3; Pick 4: 8·1·4·4
~u1per

Lono: 2·5·19-20-32-39
pGcker:. 1·1-7·2·5·3

who either fell or jumped from a
car during an argument.
.Richard Esbcr ·of Medina was
charged with felonious· assault,
drunken driving and having a sus·
pcnded license. polite said. He
was held in the Strongsville jail to

in Berea
Joan Peters. 36. of Medina, was
a,dmitted to Southwest General
l'lcahh Center in Middleburg
Heights with a·brokcn leg. A nurs·
supervisor said no condition
.. podalic was available early today.
Police said Peters and Esber
struggled early Saturday In
F,l,.,', car. Peters either .was
llushed from the car or jumped out,

FAMILY. And during the week before Christmas, there may ba no family In the world as popular
as this one: The Claus family. Sam Robinson, M11ureen Burns, Zach Burns, and Asia Parker joined
~b===;;;;;;;;h;:; ,;:;v.;:;;;'';;ru;;b~'!•;;•;;;,g;;c;;•.;;;;;;;;l;~~s~a~id~.~=======!__':h:e~C:h:ri~Stlmas Parade In Rutland on Sunday In this pretty flo~! for the Rutland Department Store.
,a...u: . . 9 ; Daily , _1_2-0
4 8
98
11
0 199 8 0

·

AsSOc:ialed Press Wriler
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) - Fiye
years after this scenic Ohio River
village lost its biggest employer, the ·
town is finding rebirth in its abolitionist past.
Just about every family in Ripley
was affected when the U.S. Shoe
factory closed in 1993, eliminating
400 jobs.
." My mother and father worked
there, and all my fri~nds' mothers
and fathers worked there," said former Mayor Roddy Scott, 52. "li was
·the end of an era when that factory
closed."
·
But .the village of 1,800 . has
regrouped in part by showcasing its
legacy as a station on the Underground Railroad. the network of hid·
ing places and safehouses whti-t:
fugitive, slaves were shepherded 10
freedom in the North.
•
Author Harriet Beecher Stowe

heard from the fervent abolitionists
here. In her bOok "Uncle Tom 's
Cabin," the fleeing slave Eliza
walked across the frozen Ohio River
to freedom in Ripley.
Several brick houses from that
era remain, having endured the year·
ly Opoding that occurred until a
series of dams was built between
Pittsburgh and Cincinnati.
Some of those homes, with views
of the Kentucky hills, have hccn
restored as bed-and-breakfast inns
fgr people exploring Undergrounij
Railroad routes. The homes qf a!JQG!
tionist John Rankin and frcedma~
John Parker, an entrepreneur . a~d
inventor, arc both listed as National
Historic landmarks.
" Travel and tourism - that
seems to be where our future is lead·
ing," said Hilda Frebis, the clerk·
treasurer of Ripley.

'EJ:~~~~:::-:---:----;-..!!.---~---==:;;,~:;~

The trappings of everyday life at the former Meigs
County Home were auctioned off Saturday morning.
Bidding started at 10 a.m. in the basement of the
county home. with auctioneer Dan
selling fur·
nishings, including beds, wardrobes and other bedroom

Sn:4lr

furnishings, miscellaneous common room furniture and

'

500 minutes
Cellular: 450 minutes

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CELLULARONE

. By TERRY KINNEY

Auction dis-.... .,..es o County Home
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Di91'tal:

express
yourself

Historic Ohio River
village looks to
past for support

founCI inspiration in s'orics she

STRONGSVILLE, (AP) - A
Medina driver has been charged

j=:~====j~~] await
arraignment
Municipal
Court. today

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.. · ~- ---

280.minutes
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Ingels Elcc·

prescnt~d

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Di91'tal:

Ingels Electronics
nets sales. award
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opt:rutt:d by Jason amJ Diana lnge ·

•••

CINCINNATI (AP) ~A woman who was charged'with raping two
teen-agers in 1983 is Hamilton County's first female sexual predator.
Norma Lane, 50, was declared a sexual predator by Common Pleas
Judge Thomas Nurre in a hearing on Fri4~y, ,. ,., ......, ·M · .,.,,.... -- ~ ·+·~· ~"'"'~""""'--- · -• ~
"We do rioT Iiiiii: 'any female sexual predators and we have not had
any. She'll be the first," said Steve Barnett, spokesman for the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office .
Lane was indicted in 1983 on t\!'O counts of rape and two cou·nts of
sexual battery of a 10-year-old boy-and 1~-year-old girl and for helping her husband, Peter Lane, commit rape and sexual battery.
'She pleaded guilty Sept. 21, 1983, served almost seven years of a
six- ro 10-ycar sentence at the Ohio Reformatory for Women and was
paroled in January 1990.
· She violated parole for not getting sexual offender counseling and
was sent back to prison in 1993.
As a convicted sex offender, Norma Lan~ has to report her address
to local law enforcement agencies every 90 days .
The law was ·passed in 1997 after the 1994 slaying of Megan
Kanka, a New Jersey girl killed by a sex offender who had moved
into her neighborhood.

C

Rate
Plan

J

Democrats suggested gening together with ihe White
House aod Senate Republicans 10 search for a compromise that would .avoid a trial altogether.
Endorsing censure Sen. ChriSIOpher Dodd, D-Conn ~
said a trial would "tie up three branches of government
for the next four months."
' Chief Justice William H. RehnquiSI would preside
l)ver a Senate trial, with c~ pr~ed by membe., of
the House Judiciary Com?' itt~
:· In many ways, the. Senate s on trial here in 41 way,
too," Dodd said on NBC. "We're the·court of last resort.
of trying to restore some civility here." ·
Senate Republicans continued to insist on a trial or at
least the start of one.
" The Constitution says if you receive lhese ankles
ynu'll have a trial," Senate Majority Whip Don Nid&lt;les,
R-Okla., .said on "Fox News Sunday." " I think it can be
done very quickly. (Senate Majority Leader) Trent'Lf;Jtt
. has said originally maybe three days to three weeks. 1
think he has it about right. I think it could be done in three
weeks if the White House wanted to."
The White House began preparing a defense to be' led
by White House Counsel Charles Ruff, with political
guidance from people such as former Senate Majority
Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, who retired in 1994.
" We have been talking to a number of different senators, including Senator Mitchell, to get advice and counsel .on how to deal with the Senate," Greg Cra!g. coordi·
nat or oftheWhite House impeachmentleg;JI defense, told
Fox.
Podesta noted that another former majority leader•
Republican Bob Dole, recently wrote a guest column in
The New York limes proposing a joint resolu tion of Congress to censure Qinton.
·

with running doWn a companion.

Digital: 180 minutes
Cellular: 160 minutes

sympathy for workers forced to find
new job&lt;.

·-~~·

•

Judge names first female sex predator

"

Rate
Plan

•

have re -ev aluated their perception of

But tolerance for job hopping
doe..; have a limit. Farthing said he 's
rei:'.!ntly seen r~s umc s with eight to
!0 jobs uf u year\ Juration antl
··wouldn't even co nsider thctn."
·If you ' r~ ~wit..:hingjnb~ after only
a yt.!ar, don"t set yoursel f up 'to rc~at
.the pattern, Herman saiV.

•

s·tng 1e c opy.
li.e · ' """"" .,.,.. ·'
35 Cents· .

.

By GLEN JQHNSON
charges that he committed pt:Jjury and obslructed justice colleagues to determine if there is anywhere near the -67
Asaoclatad Press Wrher
.
in co~ering ~p his affair with Conner White House intern votes needed to oust Clinton from office.
.
WASHINGmN (AP)- Former Presodents Ford and Mon1ca Lewmsky.
.
If there. are only 55 votes "then t~ere has to be some
~rter tq&lt;~ay proJ!Osed to end the_Impeachment proceedThe . CBS-New ~ork Tomes · survey also showed cons1deratton to what do you do that os the beSt under the
mgs a~tnst P_resodent Ch_niOn woth a bopart1san censure Repubh_cans ":''th theor worst
corcumstances tQ resolve this
resolution staling that he hed under oath.
populanty ratmgs 10 .the 14
"'Make no mistake, the matte( and on the best imer·
The .linchpin would be la.ngua~e stating that ~in!On ~eall! the two news organ!zajudgtnetTt of history does ests of the country," Hatch
accepted the findongs m the resoluhon. Hos admosston that t1ons had asked the questton.
sa1d on NBC's "Meet the
he did not .tell the truth could not be used against him in a Only 36 percent expressed a
matter. It matters
Press."
future trial.
.
favorable view of the Repubfound/y. And Impeach- While that should include
"Somehow we must reach a conclusion that most lica.n Party, while 59 percent
nt by the full House the start of a trial, he said,
Americans can embrace and that posterity will approve," expressed an unfavorable
tner
.
·there are other options
Ford and Carter wrote in an op-ed column published in one.
has already brought~ "where everybody could vote
The New York limes.
The poll of 1,341 adults found disgrace to p, esldent Clin- on this and vote their con"Make no mistake, the judgment of history does mat· carried a 4 percentage-point
science and it would be fair."
ter. It matters profoundly. And impeachment by the full margin of error.
W'hatewr happens now will do He refused to offer details.
House has already brought profound disgrace to President
Members of both parties /lttJe to affect history'S judgtnent of Clinton's chief of staff, John
Clinton:Whatever happens now will do little to affect his- _say they want ·a swift Senate him.'!
Podesta, said the White
tory's judgment of him."
_ (esolution of the charges.
"House legal team would conBoth men said their suggestion rises out of the preceSen. Mitch McConnell, R- ,
-Former presidents
,
siderwhetlttrto9allenge the
dents they si:t while president. Ford, who assumed office Ky., noted today that the Sen- Jimmy Carter(D) and
constitutionality of a situation
after President Nixon resigned following the W~tergate ate could dismiss the cau at
in which the charges against
scandal, later pardoned Nixon. Carter, who beat Ford in any time with a simple major· ~erald Ford (R), from a
. Clinton were brought in the
the 1976 presidential race, later granted amnesty to those ity vote of 51 senators.
New York Times op-ed
outgoing 105th Congress but
who had avoided lhe Vietnam draft.
He said he favored a trial,
•
the president tried in the
· "While our acts of pardon or clemency are not direct- a concept supposedly favored pieCe.
· 106th . Congress convening
ly analogous to the decision pending in the Senate, how by the senior Democrat in the
Jan. 6.
that body resolves the issue can have similar benefits ~f chamber, Sen. Robert Byrd, 0-WVa. Byrd has wrilten an
"I think that our legal team will take a look at that in.
healing and finality," Ford and Carter wrote.
'
oft-quoted history of the Senate.
the days to came," Podesta said on CNN's "Late Edition .
A fresh poll shows most Americans agree.
"I think we need to follow the Constitution. I've said "Some of the constitutional experts who have reviewed
In interviews Saturday night and Sunday, 66 percent I'm going to take my cues from Senator Byrd; I think he's tha! matter believe that it is not consistent with the Con. ·said they would prefer that lhe Senate work out a com- the expert," McConnell told NBC's "Today" show.
stitution to have done this in a lame-duck Congress, espe..promise to instead censure or fine the president. Thirty
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R- dally in the partisan way that they did that. So, I think
:. percent said the Senate should go ahead with a trial on I.Jtah, suggested the first step should be a quick poll of his we'll have to take a look at that."

'

purchase

job hopping and conSider resumes
they might have rejected.
tion," Ecunutech\ Farthing said.
Indeed. the stigma of job hopping
has in some cuse~ been replaced by

-

sg9sraww,...;.
Audiovox 440

down around 2008 as demographics
increase the sc1pply of workers anJ .
slow job mobility. ·
.
For now. employers admit they

Middleport • Pomeroy• Oh1'o

Ford and Carter seek swift end to impeachment proceedings

monthly rental .·

through vicious downsizing. Sud-

"You have In take into consideration the downsi zi ng and consolida·

•

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$5 -l ""''"

Herman Group in Greensboro. N.C.

~,Volume
49,
Number 162
T•h•
,

Hometown Newspaper

••

alions, •· she said.

Herman, business futurist with The

Meigs County's

,._

ton.

. ' ~ ...

Corporate culture, not salary concerns. power her pogo stick. She continually looks for a company that is
"a good tit," with flexibility and
. autonomy.
"It doesn't bother me to be seen
a.s a job-hopper. It broadened my
background to work in different types
of divisions. nnd I think people see it
as me having more depth and
breadth, which enables me to adapt
.and help the company change."
A!though 20-somethi ngs are the
most mobile workers, job hopping is
not the dominion of the young.
"This is a societal trend that goes
beyond the Gen X folks." said Roger

a1

pro-

I I

;

denly all these folks lost that job
security and they decreed corporate
.. Rece ntly, things have changed loyalty dead. Now. they're loyal to
and going fro m job to job with short- themselves. "
er amounts of tenure is becoming
Herman predicted job hopping
more appropriate," said Kim Hoen - . will become increasingly common
!ihell.. corporale commun ic"ations

:
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IIi

~"""flier( ;J,~~Utf

two years each. is increasingly common 'among workers.

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Bengals
sneak by
Steelers 25-24
-Page4

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'"The crossover is going 10 be bow

Sports

small appliances.
The county home , located adjacent Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, has been a subject of controver·
sy since Sept. 29, 1995. wheo county commissioners
agreed to sell. the building, and later backed off in the
face of public crit idsm.
Commissioners later dedded to close the county
home after' a levy for operating it failed.
None of the cOntroversy was apparent Saturday as the
articles were auctioned to the highest bidders crowding
the county home basement.
The county home, commonly known as the "Infirmary," was originally located near Pomeroy off State
Route 143. A township right-of-way listed on the Meigs
County Highway Map still bears the name 'Infirmary
Hill Drive."
Auctioneer
Smith Is shown . Dur~ng those d~.ys, the county home was also known
. VILLAGE OFFICIALS - ' Mayor JoAnn Eada and members ol Rutland VII· L.o.CciUi~Yiftii~~~t-froN
lsge Council showed off their Christmas aplrlt by entering a float In the village here auctioning off Items from the Meigs . County Hoine In as the poorhouse - 11 was where people went when
Chrlatmss parade, which went off -smoothly on Sunday despite wet weattter. Pomeroy Saturday morning.
Continued on page A3

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Monday, December 21,1998

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
' '£sta6fishd in 1948

C~mmunlty

Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl.tler
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G-.1 ll..u.ger

OIAHE HIU.
Control!«

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Pvm«vy, Ohlt146711, or. FAX ID 740412·Ztf6.

'

.Editorial excerpts: Iraq
·and Clinton's impeachment
Blind partisanship
Anyone in doubl of !he depths to whJch debate in Washington has sunk
need only look at the response of some congressional Republican leaders to
the' air strikes againsllraq that President Clinton ordered Wednesday. Reacting with the maturity of a pouting 4-year-old whose birthday party has been
mterrupled by a thunderstorm, these statesmen whined bitterly that their
tmpeachrnent plans had been pushed off center stage by such a trifling issue
' "-' a murderous dictator intent on accumulating ·biological and chemical
weapons .... For the President to launch a military campaign for personal
political purposes, all of the following (and much more) would have to
t&gt;ecur The chiefs of staff and senoor commanders would have to accept
orders that would violate the conscience and honor of any officer. The Vice
President would have to gamble all hope of occupying the White' House. The
Secretary of Defense, a Republican, would have to be willing to tarnish a
sterling 30-year reputation. The Secretary of State would have to take a simtlar risk Brttish Pnme Mtntster Tony Blaor would have to be willing to risk
~is government. If all of this did happen, Mr. Clinton's dishonesty about his
phtlandering and the reckless Republican ompeachment are the least of our
pJoblems.
- The Louisville Courier-Journal, Dec. 18

Why now?
Saddam Hussein, laking advantage of Chnton's and Congress' preoccupation with the Lewinsky investigation, continually played games with U.N
· ~rms tnspectors... But SadCiani's shenantgans have been going on for
months, even years. Why order atrstnkes on Wednesday, barely 24 hours
l;cfore Congress was to start debating whether to impeach ainton? It is pos"ble that offtcoals dtscovered !hat Saddam and hos .terroristoc partners were
~apitalizing on our political turmoil to develop weapons of mass destruction
or to plan attacks against U.S. targeL•. But tt's also conceivable that Cltnton
seized a military opportunity to buold hos support at home - simolar to when
he ordered the poorly planned, indecisive airstrikes in August against targets
tn Somalia and Afghanistan .. The House tn good consctcnce cannot further
subvert Clinton's authonty by considermg impeachment whole he seeks to
cop tain Saddam by molitary means But it would be even more uncon' .sctOnable if a president killed or InJUred lraqts and put Amencan scrvtce personnel at risk in a desperate attempt to save "is JOb . .. . The problem is, Amer' . i ~ans can no longer believe Clinton .. Amid Clinton's lies about the l..ewml sky mauer, no one- from voters to world leaders- can trust what he says.
'
-Statesman Journal, Salam, Ore., Dec. 17

Now is no time for politics.
... It is the duty of every American to fully support those men and wonten
in the armed forces who may put themselves m harm 's way to keep the bells
of freedom nngtng That's not to say everyone must support the presodent.
But it does mean that- because U.S. soldters are fighting -that the co)ln·
try's focus should be on them, ~nd gettmg them home safely once theor mts·
soon is accomplished.
•
No talk of tmpeachment today. No talk of censure. No talk of a Senate
tnal. No talk of Oval Office romances .... Now that the battle plans are in
action, military leaders can do American taKpayers big service by hitting
)raq hard enough that the US doesn't have to send another earner group to
the regoon again in six months. Make the point well. This game of cat and
mouse ... has gone on long enough. It would have been better if President
Cltnton would have wattcd another week. Heck, it would have been better of
Iraq would have allowed inspections to begin with. But now that Amencan
!(pldoers are at nsk, tl is time for the nation to rally behind them Pohtics can
watt a \"eek.
'
-The (Monroe, La.) Newa-Star, Dec. 17

Hussein's premier apologist
To the irrir.ion or Bush lllld his Secreury of tionship with Iraq."
The epilode also earned him the enmity of . .
State, J..,_ A. Baker Ill, PrimokoY tried to come
highly
rcspec&lt;td then-Soviet Foreign Minillct
UDIIN FNturw
up with a urace-uv~ng" JOiution ~~~ . to
MOSCOW - There are
Saddam. He tried to link Iraqi withdrawal from Eduard Shevardnadu- H~ and Prirnakov, • fel·
few people likely in the
Kuwait with talks aimed ol resolving Israeli· low Soviet Oeorgoans, had previouly been
world to be more unhappy
' PaiCitinian issues, but the United States didn't friends. But Primakov't constant undercuuing ol
Shevardnadze's foreign policy stewanlshit: ~ac!
with the r=nt American
bite.
become more and more brazen.
bombing of Iraq than R\3" H~ played both •ides," a OA official familalief Soviet interpreter Pavel ralaut. '
sia '1 acting presiden~ Prime
ior with the negotillions told us. uH~ told Sadwith
whom we met recently, recalled that "i w-.
Minister Yevgeny Pri·
darn whll he wanted to bear, and probably didn 'I
makov.
warn him sufficiently about tbe Wtstem will to go amazing how quickly the personal relalio.lllhip
between the two deteriorated. As PrimakoV .
PrimokoY is Saddam Hussein's premier apolo- to war."
became
inc:reuingly close ID (Mikhail) Gar',
gist in the world.
,
While Baghdad wu being bombed, Primakov
II is iw small measure of the degr« of his sup- went in a third time and tried to find a way out for bachev, they barely talked. Their break wll?
pon f01 Saddam that Rus'sia. China
and France -- lhree of the live permanent members of tbF U.N. Security Councol ·-- cooi'llemned lhe
American strikes. Only Great
Britain stood with the United States.
Our associate Dale Van Alta has
investigated Primakov's three·
decade-long friendshop with Saddam -- and spoken at length with
Cl A officials and KGB officials.
The level of !hat relationship has
greatly impacted on global events
in~vffii'lraq.
·
'
Pnmakov first met Saddam Hussein in I 969, at a time when Saddam
was not yet president, but was the
man behtnd the throne.
The two got along famOUJiy. At
the time, the Sovoet Union was looking to expand its influence in the
Middle East, and to stymie Ameri·
can and Bntish invol~ement there.
Gamal Abdel Nasser's pan·Arabism
push from Egypt gave the Soviets
the edge -- because Arnenca sided
with Israel in the ongoing ArabIsraeli struggle.
So Primakov went in to befriend
a man who already had a lot of thuggery under his belt ··including several dozen assasstnations and secret
murders done as the Arab socialist
Baathist party was nsing to power
AI the time, Primakov was the .
chief correspondent for the Commu- L----------------------...,-----------------nist Party daily, Pravda, based in Cairo But he Saddam that the West could swallow, His journal painful to observe." (The ascent of hard-liner Priwas also a secret KGB agent, according to our of what he said to Saddam, which he later pub- makov was one of the reasons the pro-West She·
sources, operating under the codename, lished, has been disputed by Iraqi officials. They vardnadze resigned soon after.)
"Max1m."
"
say he didn 'I make the case for withdrawal but
Palazchenko said that Russian leaders bore a
The relatoonship flourished over the years, as hinted, as he had previously, that Russia would do "grudgo ng respect" for Saddam at the time, but
Primakov headed two different academic onsti- somethmg that would help Saddam against the added that Primakov's affection for the Iraqi
tules in Moscow between 1970 and 1989 as a spe- Americans.
leader still stood out. Primakov continued defendctalist in Arabist affatrs
Unquestionably, whatever he promised to do ing Saddam during stints as head of the KGB's
. The cultivation bore fruit when Saddam sent for Saddam, he didn't, because several non-Iraqi successor agency, foreign minister and now preshis troops into Kuwait tn August of 1990 Then intelligence sources tell us that the Iraqis clearly ident.
Pnmakov was-ready to step into hts role as medo- acted belligerently, thinking Russia would help
Several times in the last ~ear, it was Primakov
ator between his old friend and the outside world, them.
who helped strike deals that kept Iraq from being
with heavy partiality for the old friend.
The me1tdlesome mtssoons were an irritant lo bombed by the United· Staies.
Gorbachev sent Primakov as his special envoy the United States and United Nations. In his
Says one long-time KGB.c:olleague: "Saddam
to Saddam on at least three occasions. The ftrst memoirs, Baker wrote that Primakov was viewed has no truer friend in the 'big power' policy coun·
two were on lhe fall, )Vhen then-President George at the time as a "personal friend anti apologist for cils than Prlmakov -- if Saddam can be said td
Bush was pushing a lJ.N. resolution condemmng Saddam Husseon, (who) aimed less at getting Sad· have any friends."
Iraq and demandtng their withdrawal from dam out of Kuwait unconditionally than at sal- Wrltt Jack Andtraon and Jan Moller, Unlttd
Kuwait by the following mid-January.
vaging the U.S.S.R.'s tattered patron-client rei a· Feii!Urtl, 200 Park Avt., New York, NV 101M

Pay more attention to preventing domestic violenc~.
By JAMES HANNAH
several years ago began takini
detaoled evidence at a scene of
Associated Preas writer
Ohi•O per.speC tIV6
•
DAYTON, Ohoo (AP)- There •
domestic violence if someone has

are stgns that authorities are becoming more aggr~ssive in domestic
vtolence cases, in the hopes of stepptng tn before an argument leads to
bloodshed.
Vtctims' advocates say paying
more attention to prevention would
do even more to reduce the number
of domestic violence cases.
In the past six months, at leas! 10
people tn western Ohio have dted in
domestoc-related shootmgs
Nieho!as Sylvain, a Montgomery
County prosecutor, satd he has startcd to see more cases where police
collect detailed evidence at scenes of
. Stnce there was not enough time to be able to set up a meeting to study domestic violence even though it
what we in Metgs County can do to help our area be prepared for the year takes a lot of manpower. The idea is
2000, the mcettng that was to be held on Dec. 16 woll be held in January, to be able to proceed with a case even
1999, for those who are interested in attending to help our area be beucr pre· if a victim decides not to prosecute
"You can't do that for every
pared
,
domestoc
violence case," Sylvain
I invite all our local mayors, and all the village council members, also all
said.
"And
not every case is going
law enforcement officers, fire departments and EMS squads. All local docto
lend
otself
to prosecutoon without
tors and nurses should attend Anyone who depends upon medocatton should '
the victim's cooperation"
he there as well
But he said police "can do a lot"
llow well we get through this, no matter how bad or not, will depend
upon how much informatoon we are able to have and how well prepared with
suppltcs of we all work together as thts will effect all who live in our area.
Wrote to me, David Edwards, 100 Unton Ave., Pomeroy OH 45769.
. I invite everyone to attend the meettng. Once we have enough people, we
will set a date and tt will be liSted here in The Daily 'Sentinel I urge all who
rend this to be there. We cannot depend upon gettmg supphcs from outsode By Sara Eckel
our area, we Will have to be self-dependent. The better prepared we arc, the
My friend Sandy recently called
better ou~ chances for getttng through. All churches, schools, should be there to ask why none of our friends read
as thts wtll effect the chtldren here as well No one can escape the effects.
Ms magazme. It seemed strange,
, , I hope that the people who live here wtll nol brush thos off just because since the women on our social corcle
: ·~u do not have a computer, ctther at your work place or your home fill would appear to be the perfect Ms.
• .thmgs that run on electnctty wtll be effected to some degree. Please attend demographtc; for the opost part,
; ~Dis meettng
we're liberal feminists in our late
•••
David Edwards 20s and 30s. But neither one of us
•••
Pomeroy could come up with a stngle Ms.
.'
'
reader. Sandy let her subscription
lapse -- she says she can't really
;
After careful conSJdcratton on my bncf stay in Pomeroy, I had to respond remember when the tssues stopped
comtng. And I never quite got
~ to an nrttcle on rhe Datly Scnttnel. Ftrst, I would ltke to say that the people
around to subscnbing. I'd fltp
• of Pomeroy are the fn endhest people I have ever met dunng my travels.
: • Pomeroy ts such a bcauttf~llittlc town and you were so helpful to me dur· through 11 in Barnes and Noble, and
sometimes even buy a copy. But the
• lng my bnef vtstt here, a total stranger
~
During my brief stay, I bought a couple of issu~ of The Daoly Sentinel. times when I found an article on Ms.
mteresting and enlightening were
~ Qne arttcle really caught my attentton. "Pot Smoking Preachers."
too scarce for me to ever send in that
~ . Not only arc the people here fnendly, helpful and beauttful, 1 have never
seen such boldness for the Gospel I myself am a preacher, and we absolute- check.
It need this type of boldness for Chnst.
,
So when I heard that Gloria
: , I absolutely agree that these pot-smoktng preachers are a disgrace Peo- Steinem recently saved Ms magaple of Pomeroy, wherever I go, thos story wtll be told of the beauty and the zine by purchasing tt for $3 mtllton,
bbl~ness for the Gospel of the people tn Pomeroy We need thos beauty and
I was remonded of sonicthong an
boldness throughout the world.
essayost satd after Ms folded bnefly
. ~ My stay tn Pomeroy wtll always be tn my heart. Pomeroy is a place I on the 1980s: You don't want to read
"would most definitely constder raising up a famoly
'
tl, b~t you're glad to know it's there.
.
Pastor Ted Caldwell
You're glad to know tl 's there
Wilmington, NC because tt's good to know that there
.. .

a

Letters to the editor
Y2K task force meeting postponed

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....::.._._ _ __:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
in the right case.
that point to turn things around."
Kristle Wang, spokeswoman for.
Nancy Gngsby, executive directhe San Francisco-based Family tor of the Artemis Center for AlterViolence Prevention Fund, said she natives to Domestic Violence in
thinks there is a heightened aware· Dayton, said every homicide from
ness about the problem of domestic . domestic violence s~ould trigger a
violence.
review of policies.
According to a study sponsored
"OIIhe clients we've had killed,
by the National Institute of Justice all of them had prior contact with
and released last month, 52 percent courts," she said "We've got to ask
of the 8,000 women surveyed said ourselves were there missed opporthey had been the vi"ims of physo- !unities?"
cal assault some time in their lives,
Gngsby said she favors police
and 6 percent of them said they had collecting evidence at the scene of
been threatened with a gun.
domestic vtolence as if it were a
"What it shows is it's hit every . homicide, taking photographs of
community regardless of race or overturned furniture or phones
economoc status," she said.
ripped out of walls. That could allow
Wang said shelters and hotlines . for prosecution of the offender even
help the victims of domestoc vio- if the victim is too scared to press
lence, but more emphasis should be charges, she said.
placed on preventing 11.
"We've sort of had the viet om
· "What we've found is we're decide whether a prosecution would
coming in after the fact, after it's too go 'forward."
late," she satd "It's very dtfficult at
The Dayton police department

been injured or claims injuries, said
Carol Johnson, department spokeswoman.
The police take the cases seriously, she said.
Wang's group tells people how to
approach someone they think is
being abused and what lo say. It also
distributes cards with safety tips that
can be given to victims.
,
"What we've' found is that people are wilhng to get involved and
take action, but they don 'I know
what to do," she said.
The' group tries to get communi·
ties involved by encouraging homes
and businesses to become havens for
abuse victims in emergencies.
"Violence in the home often
spills over into violence in the work:
place," Wang said. "So they have an
interest tn helpong their employees.'!
She said domestoc violence is 4
community problem.
"If we keep .it a private mauer;
it's never going to· stop," she said.

Ms. needs to take a closer look

.
: Enjoyed Pomeroy

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Local briefs:

Death Notices

}

By JACK AHDERSON
And JAN MOUEA

111 Court St., Pom.,oy, Ohio
740-4MI2-215e • Fax: 1102-2157

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

is at least one women's magazine
that doesn't devote 7:'! percent of ots
copy to beauty, fashion and man·
catch mg.
And because sometimes Ms really is worth reading It has covered
international women's issues hke no
other magazine -· which is to say, it
has covered international worn en ..s
issues. And it has also run some
thought-provoking articles by wellknown authors ltke S~san Faludo
and Naomo Wolf
Unfortunately, these pieces are
more the exception than the rule.
The common wisdom about Ms.'
problem is that it is humorless. I
agree ,that Ms. os no laugh-fest, but I
don't thonk that's the worst charge
that can be lobbed at a political magazine -- when last I checked, the
National Review wasn't a yuck a
page, either

No, I thtnk the problem wtth Ms
is that it's considered THE voice of
the femtntst movement, rather than
one of many. Whenever Ms gets
into trouble, there is an tdea that
somcth1ng IS amiss With femm1sm in

general -- as if our attitudes about

women's rights
and Ms. magazine were one in
the same.
The editors no
doubt feel this
pressure. And this
ts possibly what
makes the magazine

as

pre-

dictable as a p,olitician's speech. If I
pick up a men's magazine like GQ
or &amp;quire, I can turn to a profile of
a Senator or businessman and no\
know 1what the author's take on his
subJect will be until I actually read
the piece. That never happens when
I'm readtng Ms I'm never surprised
to learn that the feminist in question
is a remarkable human being.
(Unless she's Camille Paglia or
Katte Rmphe, in which case she's
the Antichrist.)
It's understandable that Ms.
would do this. There does seem
something contradictory about a
feminist magazine reporting negative information about another femi nist --a contradtction that would not
be lost on the media were it to hap-

pen. With the possible exception o£
presidential su scandals and
celebrity double murders, there are
few things the media likes better'
!han a feminist calfight.
'
The problem is that the kind of.
up-with-women boosterism that Ms:
espouses is ultimately what makes it
so dull. And a bit insulting. Yes, it's
true that the fight for equality has
not yet been won. Yes, ot's true that
the odds are still stacked against
women. Yes, it's annoying that certain women have made careers of
providing !he media with anti-fcmi;
nist sound bytes.
·
And yes, we have to shck together I'm all for sisterhood. But I also
think it's time to take offthe training
wheels. Because until we arc confi:
dent enough to speak candidly abour
our weaknesses as well as our
strengths, and to express doubt and
ambivalence as well as certainty,.:
newsstand equality will continue to·:
elude us
·
Copyr)1Jhi18M NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIIE :
ASSN.

Send comments to tht author :
In care of thla newapaper or nod •
htr •·mall at earaeum1ol.com.
'

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Shooting of trailer Investigated

Henry C. Hartman

Oms Simms, Carpenter Hill Road, Dexter, reported to the Me1gs
County Sherofrs Department early Saturday that the windows of his
mobile home where shot out by a person or persons shooting from the
roadway.
Deputies found three spent 16-gauge shotgun shells on the road in
front of the residence, a shenfrs department report stared.

Henry C. Hartman, 64, CheSler, died Sunday, Dec. 20, 1998, at Camden-

Tunday, Dec. 22

Qarlt Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.

Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

forecast for

Iva Pearl Powell

I IIIUifttld 123"/W I •

W VA.

Man jailed on domestic charge

Iva Pearl Powell, 80, State Route 143, Pomeroy, died Sunday, Dec:.20,
1998 at her residence. She was a homemaker.
She was born May I, 1918 in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Earnest and
Fannie Hart Diehl .
She attended the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, and was associated with the
Laurel Cliff Heallh Oub, Women of Worth, Middleport Amateur Garden
Oub, Daughters of America, and the Drew Webster Umt 39 Auxiliary and 8
and 40, Unit 710.
Surviving are a son and daughter-on-law, lvan and Linda Powell of
Pomeroy; two daughters, Marjorie Fetty and Mary Braley, both of Pomeroy;
a brother, Howard Allen of New Knoxville; a sister, Faye Allen l..ewos,
Okeechobee, Fla.; nine grandchildren and six great grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Earnest 'Pill' Powell, a
daughter, Eameshne Powell Stump: and a grandson. ·
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, with Ihe
Rev. Victor Roush officiating. Burial will follow on the Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends may call at the Ewong Funeral Homne, Pomeroy, from 7-9
tomght.

. . Bruce Caldwell ~r. , 40269 Gobson Road, Pomeroy, was arrested and
Jaded Sunday momong on a mosdemeanor charge of domestic violence.
He is accused of stnking his wife, according to a Meigs County Sherofrs Department repon.

Herbert 'Pete' Shields

Minor injuries were reponed followtng a two-car wreck on U.S. J3
near Pomeroy Saturday around 1 p.m.
Jimmie W. Deem Jr., 27, Racine, was northbound and stopped to
make a left turn onto a pnvate drive when his 1990 Ford was struck in
the rear by a 1987 Plymouth driven by Mark J. Wmdle, 27, Galllpolts,
according to a Meigs County Shenfrs Department report.
Both cars sustained moderate damage.
'
Tanya and Jessica Deem, passengers in Deem's car, were transport¢d
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Meigs County EMS. Barbara Windle
and Rosalyn Tucker, passengers in Wtndle's car, were also transported
for lreatmenl of minor visoble injuries, the report said.
Windle was coted on charges of no operator's license and assured
clear distance.

Pomeroy wreck probed
No injuries were reported after a single-car aci:odent on East Street in
Pomeroy on Saturday, but a man was charged with two counts after he
re~rted the accident.
According to Pomeroy Pohce Chief Jeffrey Miller, Audrey L. Grindley, 60. Racine. backed out of a private dnveway off East Street and
drove into an embankment, causing her ear to roll.
Frederick Werry, ~I. Pomeroy, who Miller said reported the accodent,
was charged woth faolure to produce ID to a police officer and resisting
arrest by Officer Mark Proffitt, after. he allegedly disrupted the department's investigation of the accident.
The accodent took place on property adjoining Werry's, accordmg to
Miller.
•

Two-car wreck investigated

Memorial services for Herbert "Pete' Shields of·Racone, who died on
November at the EKtended Care Unot of of Veterans Memorial Hospital, will
be held on Sunday, Dec. 27, 1998 at 2 p.m. at the Racone United Methodist
Church.
.

Maggie Winebrenner

Chances for first snow
will increase Tuesday

Maggie Naomi Winebrenner, 95, Syracuse, d.ted Sunday, Dec. 20, 1998·
in the Locktng Memorial Hospital, Newark. She was the former owner and
operator of the Racine Planing Mill.
She was born Jan. 7, 1903 in Letart, W.Va., daughter of the late William
T. and Mary Alice Minks Merritt. She attended the Guoding.Star Church in
Letart.
Surviving are a daughter and son-tn-law, Mary and Harold Weaver of St. .
Louosvolle; a son and daughter-in-law, Wilham Gordon and Susan Wonebrenner of Syracuse; and six grandcholdren and 13 great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded on death by her husband, Roy Wonebrenner, a
granddaughter, Peggy Weaver Arnold; a brother, Barney Memtt; and four
sisters, Tillie Kinzel, Sylvia Kay, Elizabeth Merritt and Goldie Rollins.
Services will "'' 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Guoding Star Church, with the
Rev. Brian May and the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Burial will be in the
Evergreen Cemetery, Letart. friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, from 5-9 p.m. Tuesday, and at the church from noon-! p.m. on
Wednesday.
.

By The Asaoclated Prese
In almost perfect timing, frigid weather is coming to Ohio with the official arrival of winter tonight.
The rain will change over to sleet and snow as the Arctic air filters in
behind a cold front, the National Weather Service said.
Most IOC&lt;Otions will see snow accumulation of around an inch or less by
daybreak. Temperatures will quickly fall with readings near 20 in the west lo
around 30 in the east by dawn.
The cold air will continue to settle in on Tuesday. Temperatures will continue lo fall, reaching the teens across most of the state by late afternoon.
Tuesday night, the mercury could dip to as low as 10 degrees where skies
are clear.
Lake effect snow will develop in the northeast, where a snow watch is in
l·elff«H&lt;&gt;r1:Uesda.y. Elsewhere, scattered show showers and flumes wolloccur.
The
temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station
64 degrees on 1967 while the record low was 11 below zero in 1942. Suntonight woll be at 5:10p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:50a.m.

lo provldld In Die JCCOmplnylng Dollh Nollcee.

'

The J?aily Sentinel

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main c:oncera In 111 storks Is to bt
8ccuntc. Jt you know or In enor In •
1tory, call ••e •ewsroom at (740) 992-

2155. We

"Ill

check

your

lnronnodon

•nd make • corftttlaa U warnnled.

News Departments
The moln nu11ber Is 992·2155. O.J&gt;Irl·
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or ExL 1106

Other Services

1104
Cln:ultllon ................................. .Ext. 110J
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Adve~.................................ExL

Lottery results
CLEVELAND CAP) - There
were no tickets sold nammg all six
numbers selected tn Saturday ntght's
$40 million Super Lotto drawmg so
Wednesday ntghl's jackpot will be
$45 mtlllon. the Ohio Lottery sail!
The new Jackpot os the second
highest since Super Lotto began, surpa..sed only by a $50 million drawing on Oct. 10. 1990. The louery normally raises the Jackpot by $4 mtlloon
for the next drawing.
There were 271 Super Lotto tickets with five of the number.;, and each
is worth $1.303. The 14,649 tickets
showtng four of the numbers are each
worth $75.
In Kicker, two players had the
e~acl si~-digit number to claim
$100,000.

'

Tapes reveal JFK clashed with Ohio
Governor over presidential nomination

ne, !f.mes

Saturday,

26 Weeks...... .. ,.. . , , .$53 lt!
"\2 Wtcb ...................... .$I 0~ 56
Rala Oubftk Mri11• County
11 Wub ..
. ..... S29 2.~
26 \\leeks ............................$56 68
.52~cb .............. .$10972

,

Maggie Naomo Wonebrenner, 95, of Syracuse, doed on Sunday, December
20, 1998 in the Licking Memorial, Hospital in Newark. She was the former
owner and operator of the Racine 'Piantng Mill.
She was born on January 7, 1903 in Letart, West Virginia, daughter of the
late Willoam T, Merritt and Mary Allee Mtnks Merritt. She attended the
Guiding Star Church in Letart, West Virginia.
Surviving are her daughter and son-on-law, Mary and Harold Weaver
ofSt. Louisville; a son and daughter-in-law, William Gordon and Susan
Winebrenner of Syracuse; six grandchildren, Thomas Weaver of Syracuse,
Lmda Weaver French and Michael Weaver, both of St. Louisvollc, Mary
Winebrenner Lundell of Lancaster, Paula Winebrenner Daugherty of
Mason, West Virgonoa, and Rebecca Winebrenner of Syracuse; and 13 greatgrandchildren.
Besides her parenu;, she was preceded in death by her husband, Roy
Winebrenner, a granddaughter, Peggy Weaver Arnold; a brother, Barney
Merritt; and four sisters, Tollle Kinzel, Sylvia Kay, Elizabeth Merritt and
Goldie Rollins.
Funeral scrvoccs will be held on Wednesday, December 23, 1998 at 1 p.m.
in the Guiding Star Church on Letart, West Virginia, woth the Rev. Brian May
and the Rev. Mark Morrow officoahng. Buroal will follow in the Evergreen
Cemetery in Letart.
Friends may call at the Ewong Funeral Home m Pomeroy on Tuesday,
December 22, 1998 from 5 to 9 p.m , and at the church on Wednesday,
December 23, 1998 from noon lo I p.m.

risonville, Allen Durham, Holzer
Medical Center.
MIDDLEPORT
1:06 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center Franc's La
Pleasant Valley' Hospi:al, C~~~~:j
Dispatch squad assisted
11·06
'
· a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squad to North Second Avenue Barbara y0 g D
Yeauger tre~ted at the sc~n 'J· ana

H
Young, HMC, Central Dispatch
ar- squad assosted.
POMEROY
1:09 p.m Saturday. VFD and
squad to U.S. 33, motor vehicle
I
(USPS 213·~0)
C«t~~~munlt) Newapapcr Holdlnp.lnc.
accodent, Barb Wadie, Rosalyn
Tucker, Tanya Deem, Jessica Deem,
Published t\'try aflemoon, Manday through
Fnd~y. 111 Coo11 St , Pomeroy Ohto, by the
VMH, Jtmmy Deem, treated al the
Ohto Valley Pubhshtng C{lmpany Second das.s
scene, Syracuse squad asststcd;
pnsta~ pud at Pomeroy, Ohto
Mtmtxr: The AMoctatcd Press aftd the Otuo
12:26 a.m. Sunday, Laurel Cltff
Newspaper A»ortatton
Road,
Emma Fox, treated at the
Pollmallcr: Send addrt~3 rorrccttom 10 The
scene;
Oatly Sentmel Ill Court St, Pomeroy, Ohto
45769
3:56 a.m. Sunday, Second Street,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Samuel
Williams, VMH:
By Curter or Motor Roult
One Wft:lt • • •
• ••• • .S2 00
4:31 a.m. Sunday, State Route
One Month. .. . .
. ... ' . $8 70
143, Iva Powell, dead on arrival.
One Year .................................. S\04 00
SINGLE COPY PRICE•
RACINE
O.t~ ......... ......................... 3$ Cents
7:05
p.m.
Sunday, Long Run
Subscrtbers n01 deslllnJIO pay the earner may
Road,
Long
Bottom,
Faye Westfall,
remtt tn advance dtret1 to The Datly Senhncl on
athre1:. stllt or 12 month basts Credtt wtll l!e
Jackson General Hospital.
a•vcn earner uch week
RUTlAND
No suhscnpttoo by matl permirttd m areas
wh('re home earner servtce ts avatlahle
10:04 a.m. Saturday, Parker Run
Pubhsher reserves the nght 10 adJII!I ratn dur
Road, Viola Rumfocld, HMC.
ms the subscnpuon peruMI. Subscnpucln rate
changes may be unple~ntcd by chanytng the
TUPPERS PLAINS
duratton of the subicriptton
3:j2 p.m. Saturday, VFD and
squad to SR 7, motor vehicle acctMAIL SUBSCRIPTION
Inside MtlJI CI)Unly
dent, Hilary Shuster, treated at the
11 \Necks , •
..
. .. .S!7 ,0
scene.

Charlisa L. Slusher, 37, Athens, was coled for assured clear dtstancc
by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol followong a twocar accident Saturday on State Route 7 near Tuppers Plams.
Troopers satd Slusher was northbound at 3:20 p.m. when she was
unable to stop in time and struck the rear of a car dnvcn by Jos~ua M.
Broderock, 17,34412 SR 7, Pomeroy.
Broderick was stopped to make a right turn at the time of the crash,
according to the report.
Slusher's car was severely damaged, while moderate damage was
to the Broderick vehicle.

Maggie Winebrenner

. MS units log .12 calls

• 3·19, p m
·
· ·

Athens woman cited in two-car accident

OblluoriM ore pold onnou........,ta orrongld bV loclol luMf111 Oblluorteo
,,.. publlthld u requtatld to tecommodlle- dMirlng mo,.lnformlllon Dian

Wealber forecast:

ass1stcd·

No inJunes were reported in two one-vehicle wrecks onvestigated by
the Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
·
The first happened Sunday around 8:30p.m. on State Route 124 )n
Syracuse. Amanda L. Upton, 16, Reedsville, was eastbound when her
1984 Dodge went off the right side of the road, according to the report .
She was cited on a charge of failure to control.
'
The second wreck occurred this morning near the junction of SR 681
and Townsend Road on Scipio Township.
Charles J. Stearns, 46, Rulland, was westbound in heavy fog when
his 1987 Ford pickup truck went off the road in a curve, the report said.
He was cited for failure to control.

-Obituaries-

Tonight...Rain showers through 3 a.m., with a chance of thunderstorms,
snow showers late. Little if any snow accumulation Lows in the lower
and mid 30s. Southwest wond 10 to 20 mph and gusty, shifting to the northwest. Chance of precipitation near 100 percent.
Tuesday...Snow showers likely. Temperatures falling into Ihe 20s. Chance
of snow 60 percent.
Tuesday night ...Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Lows in
teens.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain or light snow from afternoon on. Highs in the mid 30s.
Thursday.. .Achance of light snow during the day, otherwise partly cloudy
Lows in the lower 20s and highs near 30". ·
Christmas Day...Partly cloudy. Lows near 20 and highs in the mi&lt;! 30s.

•· Units ofthe Meig~ County Emergcncy Medocal Servoce recorded 12
calls for a;;sistance ~atu~day and
Sunday. Unots respondong oncluded:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:48 a.m. Saturday, P~arl Street,
Racme •. Joseph. Edwards, Veterans
I'VIemoroal Hospttal:
· 10·51
S
k
·
a.m. aturday, Buc town
Road, Letart Falls, Cathenne Wolfe,
St. .Joseph's Hospital, Racine squad

One-vehicle wrecks reported

1

Anno..,ncements:
Crusade reservations
The Harvest Outreach Church on Chester will be chartering a bus for
the Bepny Hinn Crusade tn Ptttsburgh, Pa., a~ the Ptttsburgh Civic
Arena on Good Fnday, Apnl 2. Anyone interested in attending os askod
to call 740-985-4485 for more tnformation and scattng reservatoons.

Meeting time changed
The Leading Creek Conservancy Dtstrict Board has changed ots regular monthly meeting frorn Dec. 22 to Dec. 29, 5 p.m.

Christmas Eve services
Christmas Eve candlelight servtces will be held 7 p m at the Heath
Untted MethodiSt Church, Middleport, woth thcr Rev. Vernagayc-Sulflvan and organtsl Joann Robinson.

Web site offers live call from Santa
GIRARD, (AP) - When Vince
Ma"tno gets ready for work at thos
time of year, he shaves and then puts
on a beard, red coat and hat. But thts
Santa doesn 't head to the mall to meet
ch1ldrcn He stays home and makes
phone calls.
"The costume helps me keep tn
character and share the. Chnstmas
sporit better," Martini said.
For 25 years, Martino portrayed
Santa on department stores and personal appearances. But for the past
three years, he has played the jolly old
elf over the phone for chtldren wt'lf'
mtght not be able to tell Santa in person what they want for Chnstmas.
This Santa is hogh-tcch, with his
own Web sttc. Parents from anywhere
in the United States or Canada c&lt;on use
theor home
to order a ltve
call lor their

TOLEDO, (AP) - Two men gtvcn to the JFK library in Boston by
checked into their rooms in a motel the O'Donnell family.
near the Pittsburgh Airport on a cool
DiSal)c, a rising star in natoonal
autumn night 39 years ago, one named party politics who was in his first tenn
Mr. Brown, the other, Mr. Smith.
as governor, had been thinking about
But those were not their real names. startong a surprise bod for the White
The two men on those rooms were House at the Ohio Democratic convenJohn F. Kennedy and Mochael DtSalle, loon in 1960.
then governor of Ohio And this was
On the other side, JFK and hos
not a socoal mcctmg.
advoscrs were eager to won the party's
Both were about to run for prcs1- nomination on Ohio and didn't want
dent. and each was trying to scare the another Democrat in the way to split
other away.
the vote, the tapes say.
That secret meeting in 1959 Thus began a series of private meetfound m tape recordtngs released to the mgs between the DtSallc and the
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library - · Kennedy campaogn
was a cntical momentum buolder in the
The events came to define the
Democralic campaign for president, Kennedy style.
The Blade reported Sunday.
The Ohto governor meet woth John .
In the end, DiSalle, under heated Kennedy at a motel next to the old
pressure by the Kennedys, agreed to PtUsburgh auport m late 1959 so the
help t~e future president.
two potential candidates could discuss
But that dodn't happen unto I an theor campmgns.
angry Robert Kennedy flew to ColumKennedy told DoSallc he wanted
bus for another meetmg woth DiSallc, his support and 1f he won the election,
thi~ tome threatening to dera1l the govhe would stump for DoSalle in hos reemor 's polot!cal career
electoon for governor.
DiSalle's run-in wolh Amenca's
But DtSalle, known for hos stubmost famous polohcal famtly is one of born streak, would not budge. The rwo
the many stones recounted in the taped men parted woth a handshake.
memo1rs of the late Kenneth O'DonA few weeks later, an irate Robert
nell, chief of staff in ihe JFK Whole Kennedy flew to Columbus woth ConHouse, who doed'" 1977.
necticut Gov. John Bailey 10 meet woth
The tapes, in storage for years, were DiSalle, according to O'Donnell.

FRANTIC SANTA
SHOPPING SPREE

"Some ktds arc too afrlltd to walk
up to Santa," satd Ma"int "ThiS
takes away the large scary adult."
Martoni, 44, has some other advantages over the mall Santas, too He
uses information from an order form
filled out by the child's parent as a
guide for hts convcrsatoons.
So thiS Santa not only knows ,r
you've been naughty or nocc, he also
knows your pet's name and who yqur
leachcr

IS.

Martini said the average age of the
k1ds he calls ts 6

BOY (PGt3)
710,; 10 DAILY
MATINI!I!S WfOITHUAS/SATJ1UN 1 10 I :1 10

STAR rREK (PG)

7 20' 9.30 OAILY

AT
MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE
Check Wednesday's Paper for Details

Nock, proVIded they send a money
order for $7.95.
SOme of the ktds he talks to arc
handocapped phystcally or mentally
and can't wait' '" long lines to Sec
Santa at a mall.

OPEN DEC. 2411ATINEES ONLVI
OPEN DEC. 25 EVENING ONLYI

�Sports

The Daily Sent~~!
Monday, December 21,1998

~engals notch 25-24 win vs. Steelers
PITTSBURG H (AP) - Fresh
from hts coach's lecture about talcing
re,ponSJbJirty Prnsburgh Steelers
quarterback Kordell Stewan rcnerat
cd on Sunday that he's not totall y at
foull for the mept offe nse
Same old 1heory Same ol d
.-;suhs
•

from the 16-3 loss
Foll owmg Stewart s apology
Cowher swd that hJ s quarterback
needed to mature and pan of that
mvo lved bemg ' a stand up guy ' Yet
Stewart's post game approach drdn ' t
seem 10 reflect Cowher's message
II s not about what he thmks ll s
about what I understand and what I
thmk Stewart sa1d • I can 1 let any
one control me as far as how I speak
and how I react I'm my own man
It s not about what coach Cowher
wants me to say 1t's about how I feel
and how thmgs have unfolded for
myself
Stewart obliquely addressed the
ISsue of the Steeler; play calhng
Desprle hiS excepuonal mobtlny the
Stee lers under first year offenSIve
coordrnalor Ray Sherman have
asked Stewart to be a pocket passer
Why hasn t he run more '
That s a good quest1 on he sa1d
I don I kno" I m nol Drew
Bledsoe I m not Dan Manno I m
more 10 the style of Steve Young or
Mark Brunell I d lrke to be able to

now• Not even a hnle bll I'm highly frustrated nghl now"
Asked 1f he thought Sherman
should return, Stewart sa1d "That's
not my deCISion That's up to the
front office "
The Steelers have one game left,
Monday mght m Jacksonvtlle
Cowher hasn 1 sa1d wh1ch quarterback would stan Stewart wants to
SLart
I hke to learn on the football
field ' Stewart sa1d 'To s11 on the
Sideline and watch, that won l gel 11
done Not for me 11 won '1
I know we as a team are better
than the record may shgw and I know
that I m I0 limes a beuer player than
what I ve shown, Stewart sa1d
Dunn deal. One of the few
Steelcrs who had a good game was
cx-Bengals recerver Dav1d Dunn
whose k1ckoff returns conSISlent1y
gave PittSburgh good field pos1110n
Dunn averaged 44 yards per return
on five k1 ckoffs
Da\ld Dunn almost k1lled us on
spec1al teams Bengals quarterback
get around a nd make some thmgs Jeff Blake sard
happen You could say Kordell
Dunn was motrvated by hiS diS
should run some more but I have to hkc for Bengals coach Bruce Coslet
go wnh what IS called Am I happy and ge neral manager M1ke Brown

• Srcwart had a va ltd argumcnl m

the 'econd ha lf he was benched m
favor of Mr ke Tomczak a move that
drdn 1 help as the Stee lers were bear
in 25 24 b) the Cmcmnau Bengals
'IJ1d ellmmated from playoff con
.ten11on

• Stewart was yanked after com

1l!Cll ng JUSI frve of 13 passes for 30
r.ards rn the fi rst half Tomtzak _. ..,
'&gt;. for I I for 77 yards wrlh an rntcr
¢puon
Hr&gt; pe rformance was n01 accept
ah lc coac h Brll Cow her sard of
.Stewart
Sard Stewart
Th rs ts not all
ahout Korde ll Stc"art I drdn t play
In th e best of my ohrlr lles but 11 s the
enure offense
Stew an s rcac 11 on :,cc mcd at odds
WJth th&lt;.: m ~.:s!'Jagc that Cowher dchv
crcd la!~. l v. cck Stewart had a ftngcr
p01 ntmg urade on the o.,J dclmc ar

lamp.l Bay aher Cowhe r pulled h1m

'The Bengals teleased Dunn at the
stan of the season after he had a
shoutmg match wtth Coslel, who felt
Dunn was overweight
Down and out: The Steelers
pnde themselves on playmg rough
defense espec1ally at home, where
tbey were 7-1 m both I 997 and 1996
But Cmcmnall rolled up 483 total
yards agamst them and the Steelers
seemed uncharactertshcally flat on
defense
'There's no way I can figure that
out '' safety Lee Aowcrs sa1d • 1
have no tdea. If anybody knows let
me know"
Swd linebacker Levon Kirkland
" We JUSt didn't do 11 for some rea '
son Some guys d1d Not enough of
them
The Steelers have the1r first four
game losmg streak smce 1991,
Chuck Noll s last season They
haven't had a longer streak smce
they lost SIX stra1ght m 1988 Of the
four losses three were to losmg
record opponents DetrOit, Tampa
Bay and Cmcmnat1
The Steelers finiShed 5 3 at home
losmg 1he1r last two and three of the If
last five

plavoffs tivc arc com(lclrn g for the Zolak at quarterback lor the rnJured
Drew Bled,oe made 11 wnh a dra
Denver sllll look like proh1hli1VC malJC 24 2 1 ~w1n O\ocr San Franc1sco
lavorues to gel 10 the Supe1 Bowl
on Adam Vmatrcn s 35 yard freld
By The Assoctated Press
N~w
England Bull a lo and goal
, II wa..., n t so hard lO lt t!Uf~.: ou t lhc h ckson vrllc JOmed Denvc1 ( 13 I)
He d1d a great JOb Patnots
~FI playolh alter rll •
and the New York Jets (II 4) m the coach Pete Carroll sa1d of Zolak
Wuh 01 \\Cck to go 1n the NFL s AFC playoffs Sunday
who was makmg only h1s SIXth stan
·,.,,,, ,, , season 10 te am ' arc tn the
The Patnot s (9 6) wrth Scoll 1n e1ght seasons 'Just runnmg the

NFL roundup

Smnfllfd 71 Pac1fic 'iR
T=~ta s Arlington 87 A1r Force 78
UCLA 114 CS Northndge 97
U1ah IN Loyola Marymount ~S
Wns htnglon 73 New Mexico Sl ~n
Weber St 81 Utah S1 72

Basketball
ABL standings
EASl ERN

CON~

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Ph lode ph1J
Ch il'&lt;l,!!V
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Nc"" l ng l ~nd

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9
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~0 N a~ l \11 111 ~

( 01 UMUIJ S 'ib

S t;~ttle

Atk Lrulc: Rock 70 R1 chmond 62
Thrrd pillet'
Cen1cnarv 76 Ht gh POint 67

bl'
6«1

UNO Chnslmas CI'Wit first round

Orleans.., I Mrune 68
renncssee St 8 l Tro} St 72

N ew

'

Sunday's achon

76

E.a.'JI

5-'

\

Sunday's smrcs

~7

New Eng b ml

1 Na~hv 1lk

.n
29

Oklr~hn m a .St 60
lndtana 106 San Fr:~nm n ~4
S;unt Louu 6 ' N C C h arl ou ~ ~8

N ""England COl UMB US 7 p m
I hI o.k lph ~ ~ Ch J !o!CI li p m

L111le M am

K1nl!- M1ll~ 6 :\
Lo rrun (nih li! Clcatv1ew \I
l..u!hero~.n Ea~t 6"' Bloomfield 46
Mansl!e ld Mad son 'i1 Moun! Vern on -'-1
Mandit'IJ Tcmpk Chr S8 Elyna Open Door 44
Man on Lonll 47 Tt ppecanoe 46
Mar on Frankl 1 6'i W[lr\d H II"\C5t61
M~un"M.."t' V1l ~ II. 01• e S.l IQfJ
Mentor J l M~n1or Lake C~1hol c ~ l OTI
M Jdk WI 7H Tr oty;vlJJ Madm n 69
M ddh: ttJ H Chr ~X X..:n ~ Chr 4(1
M 11..:1 C } ~ -1 l.o.::lps•~ -16

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Saturday's games
\tnlf1~

Johnitown Monroe 7' Mtllersporl 6S (OTI
JoMihan Alder Tl Trtad 5H
I danr: County Chr 100 Btth Hr~ve n IW Va)

M1d"~s1

Fr1da) 's game

Ohio men's college scores

ttS:u rlr } pm

Saturday's actwn

NCAA D1v1ston I
men's scores

Oh10 Cunfer~ncr
7K Ulldwm V.n ll 1 ~ 7J
Mu ~ kfl ~ um 7l Moum Um n M
Hu11h.. r~

( 1fl11 71 J

0 111 N

Saturdav\; .tllmn

hn(~rr

1t1h~ r n

11 711

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II

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llmtol hi F:m\!llrt Hard mp 'i4

II Ul k1Vt (, n!ral 79 Mnnon (at hol t 'i~
C 111 Gle n O ~k Sri Mass llon W t~ h1n 111o n J"l.
( ~n M1K nl rv 6-1 ~u y ~ ft!! 1 F tll 1 ~

tunum C:~tl 66 Ck H :~y-l7
( :~ rdmprun 61 Fa1rb 1 n~s ~~

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N "' r..kx11 !0, &lt;., dh 111 S 71
Orq!un 7lt A I ~ t n S1 tl]'l
P ri b nd Y'i ( 11 S l t~ l krtt&gt;n ~1
S U1nh 10 Cn l H p11~1 7X
S m 111r!! l 'il Sm U..:f11 St 'il
s 111 Ju'&gt;t: Sr ¢ l I VI I 11:1 .n
~~ Ma v , (' 11 N Ul S~ 11 1 II t"11r 1 6~

C..: lltrhurg N7 IJu c l t'~t" Vnllt:\ !(~ 101 )
Ct lllolhc Huntmp_lon 69 Mr p~ W
( t 1 Coh:rat n 67 C. n Non hwn l -1~
(.
Homuoo64 O.t~l mdTo \ nwa ndl 0 1
C n lnd1 :1n H II "i4 C n Mt He. rhh y 41
Can McNachoiiS 67 C1n Andcr~o n "i 1
( n Moeller R7 Ctn A1ken 7 ~
C' n Oak t-1 ~~ ~ "i6 V. Chesk1 LakN 1-17
Ctn St 8t.:rnarJ ~ ll Cm l n 1 l m:ll" ~ C1r
ll l) mum 7 1 M n~r' ~ 71 01
Ct.- St Igna t 1 ' 1::1-l 'Wa. rc H 1rdmc b7

•

~HOLIDAY~

SALE~
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AMERICAN CONFERENCE

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IMPOR,.AN,. NO,.ICE ,.0 OUR IRA ACCOUN,. OWNERS

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Maumee ~5 Tol Slart ~0
Mayheld 51 Ravenna 49 (OTJ
Med na 8ucke~e 60 W Holmes 44
M am E 5l Troy 28
M ddlefield Card nal 5 1 Newbury ~I
M d\l&lt;:w 56 Firelands 45
M ltcrd 50 Ctn McAuley 44
Mtller Ctly "i9 Fa1n1ew ~5
M ftl! rva 4(1 Lou1sv111e Q
Mtn~ ter l6 f1 Lornm~ l 4
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New Lexmgton 17 MaysYIIIC 2R
Nl'wark Cath 60 Johnstown Monroe SS
Nonh Olms1ed 68 Rocky Rtvt.:r 42
Nonl Ruya.hon 49 Non.h Rtd!evt!lc 36
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Oakwoocl74 Btthtl4~
Olmsted Falls 84 F111rvtcw '9
Orcm U\ 61 EoJsliake Nonh 46
Prum~ Holy Name 85 Parma Padu0l40
P:unt:k Henry St) Hol!-ale :n
Philo 61 W Musk nt:um 4::!
Pleasant lill Col Ready 67
Pol~nd s~mmary .5!1 Gtrard 47
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Athens 71 Parkersburg WVa 61
Avon Lake 46 Amherst ~4
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8e!l(.hwood 4"\ Gates Mtlls (illmour 2l
Beaver Cretk 100 Spnns North 22
Belott W Branch 51 Marhng10n \6
Berea 4.5 Middleburg Hts M1dpark 28
Berhn Hdar'ld 72 Ridgwood .53
B1g Walm.n 49 Hetvon i...nkewood 41
Brecksvrlle 52 Medina 40
Brooklyn 41 R1cbmond His l8 (OT)
Cambridge 55 l;:;ltlymont 40
Can OlcnOak ~ Unulluown Lake ~n
Clln McKmley 68 Akr Cemral Hower 41
Cnn.al Fullen NorthweJI 40 Can South '2
Can10n Cath \6 Mautllon Jackson ~5
'-..Cardiagton 7'\ Manon Calhohc '1
Carlt5le 80 Jefferson 20
Carolltoo 51 Akr Spnngfield 48
Centerburg 66 Urrea 40
Cr n1ervrlle 95 Spnng South '2
Chagnn Falls .58 Orange tl
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Chognn Foils KrnSion 49 Bnrbenon 47
Chardon ND CL ~9 Bedford .52
Cm .Coleram 50 Cm Nonhwest ~7
Cm Hdh Chr Acad 62 Cm Lockland 20
Cm McNtcholas 50 Cin Glen Es1t '9
Cm Oak Htlb 47 Fmrfield 29
Ctn Seton "i8 Cm Sycamore 'i6
Cm S1 Bernard M C1n Chr 24
Ctn Ursulme 40 Cm Walnut H lis 2fl
Cle H~y SO I or3rn 1\dm ml Kmg 42
Clrnrv1ew 7~ Brooksrde 19
Cleveland Cath 6S Etyna Ctlth 58
Clt::vcl;md Hts 56 Lakewood "i4_ 1
Col DeS~Jes ~ Col West 40
Connc~ut 62 A!hlabula Edgewood l6
Conwoy Crcm~ew S6 Upper Sc: 1010 Val ~ R
Copley 67 Grccn 16
Cuy~hnga F lh 49 Ma~cdo ma Nordonm 111
Cuy ~ ho~ a I all~ Wah;h Je~ull 'iH Ttl N om:

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Defiarn:e 7 3 -., Bowhn~ Green S7
Delaware 71 Manon Hardmt: 47
Delphos St John 69 St Marys 56
De SaJe ~ 7~ London 54
E&lt;utmOOr 4.7 Ham1lton Badm l5
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Frurvu:w 55 Bryan 4' ~
F~l ' 'IY .5'\ C n H1lls O.r Acad SO
Ftndlay 85 Cle Kennedy 5 ~
Frankltn Furnace Green 76 M1ller 52
Fredencktown 75 Mansfield Chnsunn. 60
Gran&lt;hoJcw Sl Pleasant42
Granville '\9 L1ckin@ Valley ' 9
Greenev1ew 7'\ Mad ~n Pla1n s 48
Greenfield SR Alexander 5~
Grovepon 71 Reynoldsburg 47
Hanley 61 8c•lt:y 50
H1lhard 5l Lotan Elm 18
Holland Sprmgfudd 56 Ore11-on Clay 4(i
Johr stown Northndge 66 Columbus Ready 6l

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WESTERN CONFERENCE

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Clr VASJ lKI Umvemty School .51
Clydr 51 Foston,a 45
Col Eas1moor 47 Hamlhon Batkn l5
Colonel Crawfon,t 42 Clear Fork ~6
Crooksvtlle 56 F1 Frye 44

Saturday's tounwments

!ill

ball , In command handling the clock
at the end of the game He d1d 11 hke
a true pro
The B1lls (9 6) arc m dcspue
GETTING AWAY from Pittsburgh nose tackle Joel Steed (93) Is
Saturday s 17 I0 loss to the Jet&gt;
foremost'cl_nthe
mmd of Cmctnnall runnmg back Brandon Bennett
because Tennessee lost 30 22 at
(36)
m
the~.!..
hall
of Sunday s AFCCentral battle 10 Ptttsburgh,
Green Bay That second loss allowed
where the Bengals made their 25-24 wtn their th1rd of the season
(AP)
'

Farmers Bank

&amp; Savings Company

~

211 Wesl s.oond S1r&amp;et "2120 Stall ROUie 1
PO Oo ~~: 626
PO 8oJ: 339
Pome oy OH 45769
Tupptrl Ptarn1 OH -4!1783
1-'0/992 2 136
740/667 3161

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Gal lj)91i' OH 4563 1
740/446 2265
BANK

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~

Memt..r FDIC

LENOlR

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Eagles rally to beat South Gallia 68-58
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
A slrtng of I 2 unanswered pomts
1n the 1h1rd quarter of Satunday
mght's vars1ty boys' basketball game
at South Galha H1gh School between
11te Eastern Eagles and the host
Rebels put the Eagles on their way to
a OS-58 VJCIOI)'
: The Eagles scored the first two
pomts of the game on sophomore
forward Joe Brown's layup 21 seconds after lip orr but the &lt;est of the
:quaner had £our lead exchanges and
dlrce lies Wnh 14 seconds left m the
penod the Rebels broke a 15·15 ue
:wJ.len semor forward J R Boothe got
-ljrs 12 foot '" the lane Jumper to
:drop The basket gave the Rebels the
1wo poml lead they took mlo the sec
ilnd quarter
The Rebels who made half of
thelf 14 field goal attempts m the
first quarter, kept up that pace WJlh a
6-for 14 showmg m act two 10 retam
the lead throughout the penod The
Eagles 5 for I 5 field goal shootmg
J!artly a by product of the Rebels 1
o~crclsmg pressure defen se also
&lt;(1ded the hosts brd to lead 33 29 al
hal fume
• • They played wuh a lot more
mtenslly than they d1d m the first
half sard Eastern boss Howle
Caldwell ol h1s Eagles who held
South Galha to seven pomts m the
fissl :l 112 mmutcs of the third quar
G!r wh1le they ch1ppcd away al the
hosts lead Brown s three poml play

Patriots, Bills, Jaguars make AFC playoffs
!mal lwo spoh and Mmncsota and

lfi:mday, December 21,1998

Oayup and foul shot made necessary
by Sam N1eto's third foul) w1th 6 II
left put Eastern ahead for the first
lime smce the first quarter
After the Rebels cut Eastern's
lead 10 one on sen10r center Robbie
Rush 's fmger roll layup (4 30),
Eastern went on a 12 0 run m wh1ch
Brown scored stx pomts Jumors Enc
Sm1lh Mall BISsell and sen1or
Jeremy Casto also scored m that
breakaway When Brown's 1h1rd
layup of the rally went m With l 52
left, Eastern went ahead 53-42
After the Eagles run , South
Galha scored five pomts'" the rest of
act three With the 6 foot 4 Rush
havmg fouled out, the Rebels, who
started the game with senwr forward
Jeremy DaviS on the diSabled hsl,
found themselves havmg to rotate
the 6 fool I Boothe and 6-foot-3
JUnior forward Man Bess at center
Though their quickness was helpful
m keepmg the Eagles from workmg
the ball ms1de and stagmg a rally
resembling the 12 0 run, Eastern
started capltahzmg on South Galha s
foul troubles
The Eagles fmJShcd the third
quarter havmg made 12 out of 15
field goal attempts mcludmg nme
out of 10 from pomt blank range
Only five shots were taken outs1de

the SIX loot rad1u s of the baske1, and
ol those the Eagles made two
The) (lhc Eagles) pressed us
and we wcrcn t an posallon to

defend," saJd Rebel chtef Mtk.e
Jenkins 1bey didn't do that m the
first half "
In the fourth quarter, Eastern,
fouled repeatedly made up for 1ts I
for-6 field-goal shooung by making
e~ght out of 12 foul shots That and
the Rebels' falhng off their near-50%
field-goal shooung pace (4-13 FGs
after en len ng the penod wtlh a 19
for-40 showmg through three quar
ters), put the Eagles m the dnver's
seat to gam the VIctory
Shooters' gallery: Jumor forward
Josh Will whose mne pomt effortm
the second quarter helped keep
Eastern m the hunt led all scorers
wnh a 23-poml performance buill
mosdy on 8-ror-13 field-goal shootmg Brown, who scored 17 of hiS 20
pomts m the third quarter and d1dn I
m1ss any of hiS foul shots m that
frame turned an 8-for- I 3 effort from
the field BISsell's 10-pmnt effort
was built partly on 2 for 5 field goal
shoolmg
Bess led the Rebels w1th a 19pmnl showmg bu1lt mamly on 7 for
14 field-goal shoollng Semor for
ward/guard Rufus Stanley sank 18
pomts on 7 for 16 field-goal shootmg Boothe's II pomls came mostly
from 5-for-8 f1eld goal sh0011hg
Stanley and Bess combmcd to
shoot 50% from three poml range (7
14)
Reserve notes· Eastern captured
a 50-35 wm over So~th Gallr a m the

precedmg re51=rve contest
Chad Nel.sol1 and Garren Karr led
the Eagles (2-3) wtth 13· and 12
pomt efforts, respecuvely Josh Duly
led the Rebels (I 4) w1th 13 potnts
The tuture: ThiS week's agenda
has the Rebels hoslmg Southern
Tuesday m thelf last 1998 contest
The Eagles wtll be tdle unul
Tuesday, Jan 5, when they host
Me1gs
Quarter l2tiil
Eastern
15 14 29 10=68
South Galha
17 16· 14-11=58
Eastern (2-3): W1ll 8 0-7111 =23,
Brown 8-0 415 =20, BISsell 2 0
6/10=10, Casto 2-0 2!2=6 Aldrtdge
2 0 I/2:5 Smnh 2 0-011 =4 Totals:
24/43-015-20/31~

Assuts: 1,5 (BISsell 8)
Field goals: 24 48 (50%)
Fouls· 13
Rebounds: 32 (Will 10 Brown 7)
Steals. 9 (BISsell 3)
Thrnovers: 15

-·-

South Gallia (0-5): Bess 4 3
2!2=19, Stanley 3 4 0/0=18 Boothe
50 Ill= II Rush 3 0 010=6, Fraley
1-0-010=2. N1eto 1-0-010=2 Totals

17/33-71220-313=58

SEEKS OPEN TEAMMATE - Eastern 's Matt Bissell (nght) seeks
an open teammate as South Galha s Rufus Stanley defe nds on the
play In the second quarter of Saturday mght s game at South Gallta
High School, where the VISitmg Eagles"rallred m the th1rd quarter to
win 68-58 (OVP photo by G Spencer Osborne)

Assists. 22 (Stanley 6)
Fteld goals· 24 53 (45 3'* )
Fouls: 27
Fouled out Rush Bess
Rebounds 22 (Boothe 8)
Steals: I0 (Bess 3)
Thmovers: l8

Huntington Ross downs Meigs 69-59
'

By DAVE HARRIS
Sent1nel Correspondent ,
Hunungton Ross outscored Mergs
I'I 6 m the final3 51 and went on to
defeat Mergs 69 59 m the Kroger
Hoops lnvnauonal held Saturday
at
Oh10
Umversny s
orght
€hnvoca110n Center
: • Both teams traded buckets from
oM, opcnmg 11p Dame I Hannan s
thi-ee pmntcr from the nghl corner
gave Me1gs their flfSt lead of the
nrght at I0 7 at the three mmute
mark
The Marauders (5· 3) held a four
poml lead (II 7) when Grant Abbon
1)11 one ol two from the hne With 2 26
left Hununglon Ross. pulled to w1lh
m one at the end of the penod ( 1312) when Kyle Hausw1rth ~11 one of
two from the )me With 13 seconds
left
The Huntsmen (5 I) took a 18 17
lead when ' Biake Vandemark came
up with a steal and lay up wnh 4 35
left m the first half Hauswirth gave
the Huntsmen a 20-17 lead at the
4 08 mark of the half

But Hannan and Bcha each hu
thrce-pmnlcrs wrapped around a
R1ck Schultz bucket for Hunlmgton
to g1vc Mc1gs a 23-22 lead
Huntmgton Ross retook the lead
when A J McCray na1led a three
pomter but Angelo Rodngucz pulled
the Marauders even when he hll a
pa1r from the Ime to 11e the game at
21 all wnh I 48 left
Buckets by Jake Kellough and
J B Edwards gave the Huntsmen a
11 27 lead headurg mto the locker
room at the half
Hunungton Ross bu1ll a 41-37
lead w11h I 49 left m the 1h1rd pen
od on a bucket by Schultz But
Rodngucz na1led a three pomter
from the left wmg and Me1gs pulled
10 Wllhlll 4( 40
But Hunungton pulled away to
take a 47 41 lead on a bucket by
Chns Adkms to start the founh penod But Metgs bauled back to pull to
w11hm 49 4 7 on a prur of Hannan
free throws w1th 5 52 left But that
was as close as the Marauders would
get The Huntsmen pulled away at

the foul Ime, they hll 12 of 16 from
the hne m the fourth pcnod to post
the I0 pomt wm
Hunungton used a balanced scor
mg anack Hauswirth led the way
w11h 15 pmnls he was JOmed m dou
ble hgures by Adkms With I 3
Huntington hll 24 of 64 from the
floor for 38%, mcludmg two of 16
from three poml range The
Huntsmen went to the hne 23 11mes
and hll I 5 for 65% Hunungton
pulled down 21 rebounds led by
McCray w11h seven, Vandemark
added s1x They turned the ball over
seven t1mes

blocked e1ghl shots five of those by
Abbott and Humphreys added three
Hannan was selected by the event
commtUee as the Marauders Most
Valuable Player, whrle Adkms won
the award for Hunungton Ross
The future: Me1gs will host
Wellston on Tuesday evenmg before
1ak1ng off for the Chnstmas
Holidays
Quarter IIWib
Huntmgton Ross 12 19 14-24=69
Me1gs
13 14-14-18=59
Huntington
Ross.
Kyle
Hauswirth
3-0-8=14
!!lake
Vandemark 2-0-0=4, Chns Adkms 5
0-3=13, Jake Kellough 2 I 0=7, Ph1l
Harnngton
2 0 0=4,
Adam
Harrmgton 1-0-4=6 A J McCray 31 0 9, R1ck Schultz 4 0 0=8, J B
Edwards 2 0 0=4 Totals· 24-215=69
Meigs: J T Humphreys 2-0-1 =5,
Damel Hannan 3-2-4=16, Angelo
Rodrtguez 3 I -2-11 Zach Meadows
2-1-2=9 Grant Abbon 3-0-5= II
Steve Beha 0 2 I= 1 Totals: 13·6-

Hannan led Me1gs w11h I 6,
Rodnguez and Abbou I I each Zach
Meadows mne, Steve Beha seven
and J T Humphreys five Me1gs h11
13 of ~I from the floor for a cool
29%, mcludmg SIX of 17 from three
pomt range Me1gs went to the hne
22 limes and hit 15 for 68%
Me1gs pulled down I 9 rebounds
led by Humphreys' mne Meadows
added SIX Metgs had 19 turnovers
and three steals The Marauders 15=59

Creighton shocks No. 18 ~ Oklahoma State
By TIM KORTE
OMAHA Ncb (AP) - h w.ts a
b1g weekend for Creighton wh~eh
honored former conch Eddre Sunon
nne nrghl and !hen took o~dv.mta gc of
hJS generoSity the foltowmg day
• Ryan Scars hrl a three pomtcr
wrlh 57 7 seconds lei I and , Doug
Swenson made '\-of 4 hom the !nul
lmc m the last m1nutc as Creighton
rallied to heal No 18 Oklahoma
State 66 60 Sunday
Sutton who coached C1c1ghton
1rom I\16Y 74 returned to Om.th.t
.mud lcsltVIIICS cclchraung the ht:"tto
ry olthc Bluqays prog1am Hew ts
letcd wnh other lo1'111cr coache' and
pl.1yers at a Saturday nrglll hanqucl
Yet whrle the Jays (7 2) were pal

NFL

trng Sunon on the back, they were
also targelmg h1m and the Cowboys
(6 ~)
It was the first game smcc 1974 at
the Omaha Civ1c Audllonum lor
Sunon the only coach to take lour
schools to the NCAA tournament He
went I rom Crcrghton to Arkansas to
Kentucky and then Oklahoma Stale
When Creighton approached
Sutton ahnut stag1ng at1 alumni
v.c~,;hnd amund h1s return he sud
lu.: wJsn t sure ~\bout scheduling tht.:
gltllll' h went agLu'nst all ot Sutton s
1nsttnt..:ts hut ulumntcly h1s heart
v. on out

In Saturday games the Jets beat
Buffalo 17 I0 and Washmgton beat
T~mpa Bay 20 16
In other Sunday games 11 "'as
Plllshurgh 24
Cmcmnall 25
C)ucago ;!4 Baltunore \ Carolina
29 St LouiS )3, Sea tile . 27
lnd1anapolls 23 Oakland 17 San
Djego I0 and Anzona 19 New
Orleans 17

non confcrcm:c

opponent

stncc

Suuon s BlueJays beat No 7
Houston m Fchru..ry 1971 The Jays
last wrn over a ranked team came
a~amst No II Nl!W Mcx1c0 State 1n
the ilfsl round ol the 1991 NCAA
tournament

pomter and hllthree free throws But
the BlueJays assembled a I0 3 run
over the next two mmutes capped by
a three pomter w11h 13 mmutcs left
by Scars who scored 14
Nenhcr team could establish con
trol unul Cre1gh1on made three
potnlcrs on three stra1ghl posses

s1ons The tirst came trom 6-fo&lt;n 9
Alan Huss wnh 2 50 left pullrng the
Jays to 58 57
Desmond
Mason s
12 fool
JUmper 10 the lane gave the Cowhoys
a 60 57 lead wnh 2 ~~ to pl.1y hul 11
would he their hnal pmnts
Bulord who '""'"d 20 pomts drd
n I stan hccausc he was late to prat.:
tJCc last week !Jed J.l on a three

Scars hrt the go ahead 1hrcc porntcr tc •m s No 2 Duke delcated North
on the rrphl ha selrn c du 111L 111 C.m&gt;hn1 \ &amp; 1 XX 51 rnd No 10
mbound s play
Thos~ were th ree h1!.! 1, t.l o~ n
the stretch ~atd Crca_; llltlll &lt;..ll IL h
Dana Altman Bulmd h ll ll th. ll u:-..,
had h1 s hut what rc til ) tu1ncd !Ill
pressure up w.Hi when R\ 111 h1t h1 .,

After that they (Cowho)' l wer e no1
ts smooth nn then next lew ro:-.st. : s

S tn F ranu ~ u ) I06 54
No 2 Duke MM
NcJrfh ( .trolma A&amp; r ~n
Elhm B "ltJ.,tnlcJ 2 1 pot nt :-. and
Du kl n n '~d p 1 ~ 1 tht: A~c! ' d l or 11s
2Hlh 't r u •hi hum c v tLit ty

lnd1HI I ht:

ll

The Blue Dcv rJ , (10 I) hl ocked ,,

s1ons as they had hccr'l
Peterson who led th1.: Cnwht-lys
w1th 20 pomls 1111ss~,;d 1 thli.:C pomt ~
try at the olhCJ end md Swt. : n:-.on !Led
thc ~ .1m~.: lor the Blucj.lys hy hllllnl.!
the thr-..:c lr-..:c thtows
Oklahom t Sti\C s l1 -.t L11 1n ~t.:s

season IHgh
I\ :-; hot s
Corey
M 11 l:'cllc su11cd 16 pmnts .tnd
11 IJ 111 I m.: : dun uJdcd 14
Dukt.: pl1} s No 1 K~.:ntu t: ky on
1 Ut.: sd ty 1n th-..: Jnnmy V Cl.lssll: Thi.:
team s mel l.1sl sc.t son 111 tin:: NCAA
South Rt.:!!ll )Otl !ln .tl wlll.: n lha.:
WJ idL tis \\. Oil X6 X4

pomtcr m the huzzcr

ht _ h c..,l

1

1 don 1 hke to play former a""
Oklahoma State led 41 ":l6 wJth
dncd up when Doug (, oulr ch who
No ltl lndmna 106
tant' ,md I don 1 like to play former , I~ '\4 to play ailcr Adnan Peterson
San Franc1sco ~4
sd1ools he said I thou~hl It wa&gt; was fouled wh1lc shooun~ a lhroe potnH:r with l~c~m :i mmg and had s1x turnovcts thr~.:w th ~..: h Il l ou t
ol hound ' wrth 15 4 '"conu s lclt md
Roh 1urnc1 h 1d IK P""" ' 1nd
Pctcr ... on mt sscd ,1 u . . ciL.: ss thrc.c A J Guvton h J&lt;.J 17 Ill lndt Ill 1 s

action ...

Jacksonville to clinch lis ilrst AFC
' Central tllle hofore they lost 50 I0 to
Mmncsola on Sunday mght
II Mramr (9 5) wms al home
tnamsl Denver or al Atlanta ncxl
:eek the Dolphms w11l be the SIXth
playoll team If they lose both and
Tennessee (8 7) heats Mmncsota at
home next Saturday the Oilers Will
make 11
In the NFC, Atlanta (I 3 2)
clinched the West w11h a 24 17 wm
Dctr01l wh1le Dallas (9 6) fmally
~hnchcd the NFC East by holdmg off
Ph1ladelph1a 13 9 Mmnesola (14 I)
bas home freld throughout w11h San
f'ranCISCO (II 4) and Green Bay ( 10
~) m as wild-cards They Will meet
each other m a first round game
' The last wrld-card spot writ he
dec1ded among Anzona (8 7) Tampa
tlay (7 8) and the New York G1an1s
1(7-8) If Anzona beals San D1cgo at
home or 11 the G1nn1s lose at
l?tuladelph1a the Cards arc m Tampa
~ay qualifies w11h a wm '"
G:mcmnau an Anzona loss and a
01an1s wm
New York wha;h started the sea
n
90 3 7 makes the playoffs wnh a
w1n and losses by Anzona and
Tampa Bay
1 hehevc m m1raclcs defenSive
~nd M1ke Strahan ol the G1an1s s.ud
after a 28· 7 wrn over Kansas Cuy
that represented thcJr third strarght
VIctory and fourth m f1ve games

somethmg I could do to help thetr
program I certamly d1dn l mean to
come back and get beat I m a great
g1vcr but not that much '
It marked the second upset ol the
year lor the BlueJays who also won
75 73 at Iowa on Nov 25
And 11 was Crerghton s f1rs1
homecourl 1 1ctory agamst a ranked

GETS MVP HONORS - Me1gs senior Damel Hannan was presented the Me1gs Most Valuable ~layer awards after the Marauders'
69·59 loss to Huntington Ross Saturday mght 1n the Kroger Hoops
lnvttattonal at Ohio Umvers1ty's Convocation Center. Presenting the
award to Hannan IS event cha~rman Kelly Rme

(Contrnucd lrom Page

4)

Dcn\cr Is at Mtaml tnmg:hl
Palnots 24, 49ers 21
At Fox h01 n Mus:\ Vmatlcn s
held goal w1th three seconds Jell
g•.vc Zolak the hrggest wm ol hrs
career Znlak mak'mg h1s llrst start m
three years had two touchdown passes and led two sconng dnves m the
lmal e~ght mmulcs after the Pats
traded 21 14
We d1dn 1 move the ball m the
second half We got 1010 a run run
pass paucrn On the road you have 10
extend the lead, sa1d Steve Young
who had two touchdown passes for
San Franc1sco mcludmg a 75-yarder
to Jerry R1cc
Packers 30, Oilers 22
Brcll Favre and Antomo Freeman
connected on three long touchdown
plays on a snowy day m Green Bay
h was the first lime m more than two
months that the Packers had won two
straight games
The Packers clinched thelf s~&gt;lh
str.ught playoff bcnh Saturday when
Washmglon beat Tampa Bay
Freeman caught touchdown pa."
es of 57 68 and 32 yards m the f1rst
hall and lm!Shed w1th seven catches
lor 186 yards
G1ants 28, Ch1efs 7
At East Rutherford N J , Kent
Graham thre" lor a touchdown and
ran lor another as New York conun
ucd ns late season turnaround
Percy Ellsworth returned one hiS
two 1ntcrccpllons 43 yards for a score
on the game s thlfd play from scnmmagc The Gmnts had four mlerceptiOns and four sacks and are 4 I smce
Graham replaced Danny Kanell at
quarterback
V1kmgs 50, Jaguars 10
Randall Cunnmgham threw three
touchdown passes and Randy Moss
ued an NFL record With hts lOth
touchdown ol al least 40 yards as

season wh1lc playm£ tn

~I

LoUJs

~.;an

Mmnesota clrnchcd home freld
advantage throughout the NFC play
oils
The wm gave the V1kmgs (14 I)
the1t flfst unbeaten record at home
smce 1989 and JUsltherr second smce
1976 the last lime they went to the
Super Bowl The 50 pomts agamst
Jacksonville ( 10 5) g1ves the Vrk1ngs
530 on the season II shon ol the
record set by the 1983 Redskms
Falcons 24, Ltons 17
Jamal Anderson rushed lor 147
yards and scored two touchdowns as
Atlanta clinched 1ts first NFC West
IItle m 18 years and a first-round bye
II was JUSt the second diVISIOn II lie
1n team hiStory for the Falcons ( 13
2) who set a club record for V!ctones

Sea hawks 27, Colts 23
Seallle ellmmatcd from playoff
contenlion earher rn the day rallied
at home m the lourlh quarter on
touchdowns from R1cky Waucrs and
Shawn Sprmgs
Waners, who set a career hrgh
w11h 178 yards on 32 cames scored
on a 33-yard run w1th 9 19 to go to
dose Seaulc 10 23 17 Then Phrllrp
Damels forc ed Marshall Faulk 10
tumble and Spnngs prckcd up the
bounc1ng ball and ran 14 yards to the

1n a season

end zone

Coach Dan Reeves, who was
released from an Allanta hospital
Fnday after quadruple heart bypass
surgery, miSsed the game m DetrOit
The Falcons w11h defenSive coord1
nalllr R1ch Brooks actmg--as coach
fought back £rom a I7 10 1h1rd-quar
ter def1cll wuh two touchdowns m
the fourth quarter agamsl the L1ons
(5-1 0)
Cowboys 13, Eagles 9
Holder Ertc BJornson scored a
touchdown on a fake fteld goal and
safety George Teagu~ made a savmg
fourth-down tackle late m the game
The Eagles (3-12) lost 34-0 to the
Cowboys m November, but they gave
Dallas heated compeullon unlll the
fmal mmule on the road Emmrll
Smuh rushed for 110 yards on 25 car
nes for Dallas
Cardmals 19, Samts 17
Jake Plummer led host Artzona on
another last-mmute desperatiOn
dnve, seumg up Ghm Jacke's 36
yard field goal on the fmal play
The Cardmals (8 7) who last
made the playoffs m the 1982 stnkc

Ben Walker added cdll

,md stllt. IS"ilsls lot C!a.: 12hh
clarm the I mal NFC wrld card berth
Maso n h1d 10 flOifll

I' """

n

tn I I()

w1th a home vrctory over San D1ego rebounds lor Oklahon1.1 Stil e
next Sunday
(n ntha games mvolvmg r~1nk c d
The Joss clrmmarcd lhe Samts (6

\c ot In !! g 1m ~ ol tht: sc.tson

I he ho't H"1"or' ( II

2)

Jorccd

P lurno\ch S 111 P1 tnc m.:o t: o .u.: h
l ltt ltp M tthc"' w:1s c]t:Licd with
1 4~

k l1 al ter hcrn g c Jilcd lor Jour

lc~;; hnt (.; a]

loui s

9)

Ra1ders 17, Chargers 10
AI San Drego, Wade Wil son mak
10g JUSI hiS thlfd start SIOCC 1996
threw touchdown passes to James
Jell and T1m Brown on consccutwc
possessiOns m the second quarter as
the Ra1ders (8-7) snapped a lour
game loS! ng streak
The Chargers (5 10) lost the1r
founh straight game and quarterback
Cra1g Whehhan threw two mlerccp
lions, giVIng h1m 13 10 three games
Panthers 20, Rams 13
Steve Beuerle10's 68 yard touch
down pass to backup light end Luther
Broughton With 2 44 left gave
Carolina (3 12) the victory Vrslllng
St LouiS (4 II) IS 0 7 agamSI NFC
West opponents thiS season
Bears 24, Ravens 3
AI Ch1cago thrrd-s tnng tailbac k
James Allen makmg hiS first NFL
start got 135 of hrs 163 yards 10 the
first half wnh bursts of 57 and 54
yards as the Bears (4- 11) ended a SIX
game losmg streak by bea11ng
Baltrmore ('i I0)

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL HIGH
SCHOOL BASKETBALL TEAMS
SOUTHERN
Boys
Girls

12/22-South Galha (A)
12/29- Rrrl ey (A)
12121 Oh10 Valle} Cbnst1.tn (II )
12/29- South Galha 1-1

MEIGS
Boys
Girls

12/22- Wcll ston (H)
12/29-Galhp,ohs (A)
12/29- At Logan Hohday ClassiC (Noon)
12/30-At Logan Hohday Classic

EASTERN
Boys
Girls

01 /5- Meigs (H)
12/21- Frontler (H)
01 /4-Tnmble (H)

Compl !ments of:
9~9

2210 (RACINE)
992-61 33 (SYRAC US E)

�•

Monday, December 21,1998

::

By The Bend

·:-·

:::

__

The, Daily Sentinel• Page 7

The Daily Sentin,!!
Monday, December21, 1988

-~---=+':"===-:'-:--~~-~~-------:-~~-~~--.:.;__-----

often victims of ·childhood violence ·and·sexual abuse

·Prostitutes ·are

things happened to ~mas children,
and that's why they lumed to prosti-

With treatment, these kidJ can be treatment program. To our great
helped . They do nO! have to become relief, she was extremely cooperatution .
prostitutes, alcoholics, drug abusers tive, and the program worked like
Landers ·
Hun'dreds of girls and boys in the or suicide victims. -D.C., Prolpcct. magic:. Myrtle has been sOber now
IW1 _1,.- Allfdc..!. T~~r~e~
for four yean. Sbe just turned so
United States are sexually molested Ky.
• S)JI!k~ Mid Creoown
Dear D.C.: Thank you for a leaer and is a joy to be around.
.
before they reach the age of 18.
S)'D'.I:0:_.
Please tell " Diminislled" to give
When thi s deol&lt;astation goes untreat- that edll¢3ted millions of readen
ed, the results can be· suicide, drug or today. I could nlll have said it better serious thought to helping his wife
Dear Ann Landers: A reader . alcohol abuse, and prostitution . myself
·
sober up. It makes me sad to think
, wrote to comment on a recent study lbese cliildrcn are almost always
Dear Ann Landen: The leaer how much happier t,iynle .and
· about prostitution. I'm sure the reod- sexually abused by relatives, friends from " Diminished in California," Horace would h:!ve beef! had we
,,-.er misinterpreted the \latiStics that and neighbors -- hardly ever by really struck a chord with me. That done something about her drinking
' read: Sixty-two. percent of prosti- strangers. And most of these chil- &lt;mup le sounds like my in-laws , problem years ago. - Silver Spring,
tutes had been raped . 73 percent had dren Do NOT tell. Instead . they live " Horace" and " Mynle.': He would Md.
~
been assaulted. 68 peicent had been with the horror.
·
try to tell a story, and she would
Dear SUver SpriDg: Checking
threatened with a weapon . and 70
Please help your readers under- interrupt him . He would gel angry, your mother-in-law into a treatment
percent had ,uffered fro!" post trau- stand the si'gns of childhood sexual and things would tum ugly. Mynle ·center was an act of kindness. I'm
matic s ire ~ di~o rdcr.
abuse -- belligerent , anusocial or a)so had a drinking problem, which sure your family did it with sensitivI don' t thmk the'\C thin!!" happen : se&lt;uall y e&lt;plicit behavior, night- didn ' t help.
·
ity and kindness. Anyone who is
1jJ prostitutes . bccau'c of their mares, isolation. depression. se lfHorace died four years ago, .and intenested .in helping an alcoholic
··career ch01cc.'' I hchcvc these mutilalio n and altcmpts at suicide.' the family checked Mynle into a friend or family member should
\
" .'
.

Ann

!Beat of the Bend ...
I

•

.

By Bob Hoeflich
So. not to worry .. Thi.~t is the first day of winter hut .. they"' arc now
predicting that we may vc r~ well ~ave a mild , but wet. winter. Just
think . wtth oil th,; good weather gmng on we might well hccomc a
second Fl orida. How's that for optimism'?
Christma' is justthrc~.&gt;doys away and believe it or not , we're just
about ready- well, as ready as we gel. There arc a lot 11f nicely
wrapped packages about thc ' housc 'but I haven 't spotted a one with
my name on it. or course, I ~now that I'm a difficult person- not
only when it comes to gifts but in other mailers as well- but !thought'
there mivht have hcen one little oacka~e somewhere in the muddle .
Alii asked for thi s year was a new Cadillac or a new aona-guess I
have about "" much chance as that proverbial -snowball in you know
where, of gelling either.
Mayb~ I j ust got _lucky in my television viewing this holiday season but it seems to be that .the TV has done a better job this year with
. more Christmas theme programs being presented. Some· of the programs are running more than once . I have seen at least twiCe the
Christmas program of the Cincinnati Pops on Ohio University's public television station . The guest artist as some of you know is Mel
Torme and let me say that I think Mel is a living example of that saying, ''I'm not gettiQg older, I'm getting beller". To me , Mel is singing
better than he ever did. and he was never one of my favorites . Tonne
wrote "The Christmas Song" which is now one of our holiday standards way back in 1945 .
Television has brought forth several versions of "A Christmas
· . Carol" this seaso n and that play alway's has a good me ssage the bot·
tom line of which is be good and generOus to the less fortun'atc 'cause
you can' t take it with you.
.Over the years of the "beat. heat. beat" I have gotten away from
being a radio person. However. I ~otcd with interest that WJEH AM. that 's 990 on the dial. will now be playin g the best songs of the
40's, 50's and 60's-starting today. And I like that. I'll probably be
doing. like t.hc song says. turning my radi o on.

His

h om~ addn.::~ . . l .'i ~lJ4 K:'r

Sumner Roud. Poinc:my. in case you'd like
w Orpr &lt;t line or L:ard he fore he gnc" into the next stag'c '!r }1i~ trcat=nt .
··
·
.
This wi ll prohuhly he out last talk hcforc Christmas so I do want to
say that I hope the holid:.ty seaso n. thus l'ar. has hccn wonderful and

m;ly your C hri s tm~I S he ju:-.1 ranta s ti ~.:. With so many things goi ng for
you. you .J USI gotw keep smi lmg.

M&amp;J .

contact Alcoholics Anonymous for parents and damaging the friend·
ship? J' doubt they would be very
guidance.
Dar Ann I aw!en: My children receplive to the re&lt;Jucsl that they not
have a young neighborll&lt;iod play- smoke in fr6nt of my kids. Is there a
mate who is very nice and well- diplomatic way to broach the submannered. His parents arc: also love- ject, Ann? I could usc some advice. - ·
ly people. Here's the problem. . Between a Rock and a Hard Place ·
Dear Rod: There is no dipk&gt;" Jason 's" parents are heavy smokets. ~never my kids play at .his . marie way to tell people not to
home . they come back reeking of smoke. when your children arc ·in
tobacco. I am terribly concerned their house. Can the kids play out·
side' Can you take them to a park or
about their health.
I . have discussed this with my the r.oo? Ask your pediatrician if he
children and encouraged them to or she has any ,suggestions.
invite Jason to &lt;&gt;ur house rather than
go to his. Unfonunately, Jason 's ~nd qu'e stions lo Ann Landers,
house is a lot more. appealing, espe- Crrators Syndkate, $m W. Ctn·
cially when one of my kids wants to tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
get away from his siblings.
Calif. 90045
. Is there a way I can protect my
children without · offending Jason's

"Build Your Dream"

:CHRISTMAS TREES
Uve Spruce, White.
Pine With root ball $6/lt.
Plant after Christmas!
Or choOse a Cut Pine
or Spruce $2.50/fl

llll'$ LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeroy, OH
Ph. 740-992-7285
(Sat , Sun. eves.)
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game ·
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00-~1

. ,.

.

.

___

.....

'.

MONDAY

Skin, Cut,
Wrapped

' ·'

&amp;

740-742-2076
You Kill 'em

Public Notice

Public Notice '

The VIllage ol Middleport
will be ecceptlng bid" an .
pull-81ong, eetf-colllalned

Of Natural Roaourcoa,
lllvl.alon of Mln11 and
Raclemetlon, Columbuo,
Ohio. Bldo will be opened
In the Third Floor
Conferonea Room of 1855
(Building H-3) of The
Fountain Square Ofllcoo of
Tho Ohio Department of
Nalurel Reoourceo. Tho
United etolao Office of
ourfece Mining Reclamation
and Enforcement Ia
oupplylng 100% of the
lunda for thlo project, Tho
oollmoto for thlo pro1ec1 11
determined by the Dlvlolon
of Mlnoo and Reclamation

1nd

be

In

force

Call Me For Details!
Investment and tax Consultant
740-992-7270
Securities offered through H..O. Vest
Invc$tmcnl Securities Inc. Advisory
Services offered through H.D. Vest
Advisory Service;.. Inc. 6333 North State
Highway 161, Fourth Aoor,lrviri&amp; TX
75038·(972)870-6000

1

2310

I

•Maintenance

Degree Certified Landscape Specialist
from OSU-ATI
Jeremy L Roush

Rl124, RuUand, Ohio
742·3051
OPEN NOV. 27th, 11 TO 9 :00

741-949-1701

~
~

.

Phone

.

CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions .

Call 740·843·5426

12/BI9EI 1 mo.

&lt;

C

PIB CONTRACTORS, INC. ·
• CONCRETE • BACKHOE SERVICES

A

N

• MASONRY

S

R
E

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
•

T

N
.
·
R
FREE ESTIMATES......... FlJLLY INSURED
y

ESTIMATEES ·

E

Brian Monuon / .Raeln•, Ohio (140) 985-8948

c

• BOBCAT SERVICES

Kana'• Caatrol

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Bivorced

Quick Lube

WORRYING'!!!

0

Specwla on oil
changes, tires,
brakea, 1hoclu.
740-992-9909

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

RE.SIDENTIAVII////1//COMMERCIAL .

985"4473

Cheek us out at www.p·IJ!·deslen.com

Or phone (740) 99!·6977

New construction &amp; Remodeling

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

-Complete Auto Senice-

Racine, Ohio &amp;
50 West, Albany Rd., Athens, Ohio

·---·-·

"""" ••· pd .

"Emy Oa•cr the Plwrte Dnrtk

l"iiPIIIIIIt'tirtli~"l

, . , *f7ree

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roots • Decks • Garages
Insured
·
Free Estimates

740·742·3411

Thermos~at

.".
·.

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE
Now open for lhe

.'

Chrislmas &amp;aron

"

·

BENNETT'S :HEATING &amp; COOLING

..

Open Daily 9-5
Sunday 1-5

I:

Painting &amp; Coating
Residential &amp;
Commercial

•Poinsettias

741J.1149-2115.
11

"1/2411

ma pd

"No Job too blc or
toolmllll"

debtor of

Free Estimates
(740) 367-0412
(7 40) 992-4232
12/1/98

;-~
··· ~~~.!!!!~!!!!!~ .-----,
GRAND OPENING
KARNS CASTR.OL
. QUICKLUBE
992-9909

£ARPET

·HOWARD
t}

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

WE HAVE GIFT CERTIFICATES

Floor InstallatiOn
FREE ESTIMATES

SPECIALS ON
~· • 43370SR. 124
TIRES
~:..,'
RACINE, OH 45771
BRAKES
&amp;
(M INERSVILLE)
SHOCKS
12/17198 1 mo. pd.

PLUS
Professional

740-698-9114
or

740-698-7231
8,111/98trn

1
Shop (behind Bob
Evans) will close Dec. 24thOpen Jan . 5th. New Hours Tues.
Wed, Thurs 10-5:00
Happy 'Holidays Shirley &amp; Howard Meadows

'

.r

teachers, and staff
that donated ilems
or helped in any
way to p.ake oar ran
. festival such a
huge success.
:lou'// bo floating on a cloud with
Thank You,
,; the bt¥ yi&gt;u'll find ill the
Rutland
PTO
.i
c/llssi(Jeds. ·

.. ,

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2217

5'x10'
to 10'x30'

Sizes

Hours
7:00AM·8 PM
1111~198 1 mo. pd.

Limestone Hauling:
Hous&amp; &amp; Trailer Sites
J:.and Clearing &amp;
Grading .
Septic System &amp;
· . Utilities
Estimates
t2118/lln

CONNOLLY'S
CHRISTMAs ·
TREES ,
2Y. Miles South of
Tuppers Plains on
St. Rt. 7
(740) 667-3483 or
(740) 667-3073
Open Evenings and
Weekends

~t&lt;Md{);Mtirj

•Room Additions
•New Garagea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) .
\'.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Moonlite

11/2311

DEER
PROCESSING
Skinned • Cut
Wrapped

992-0038

PARTS

Charter Available

"Huge lnnntory"

11 113 ·1

mo. pd.

Maplewood Lake
Racine, Ohio

949-2734
11!2011 mo.

·' G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

~ St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
'
7 40-985·3813
' 4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
·

mo.

MOBILE HOME

Serviug Pomeroy, Middlepori &amp; Ma ao11

.Card of Thanks

The Rutland PTO
would like to thank
all local businesses,
~s, friends,

EXCAVATING CO.

(614) 992-3838

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS
Computer Graphics
Deslg'ls
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422
412/Nftlll

Weekly Sales and Drawings
thru Christmas
z40-992-4559

We honor Golden 8U&lt;keye Cards

Lawrence R . Powell &amp;
Naranelle Powell
announce the 4irlh
of a daughler,

Trees

.'

Syracuse, Ohio
. 992-5'7 76

•

lmprovemenl ond

Tues.-Fri. I 0 to 6
•Sat.l0to4

'·

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

.·

Cousin's Home

Cut

THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
AND MORE

~

...

$5 to $25

&amp;

For lnformatio!'l Regarding Bankruptcy contact ;

"Wf1ere Qnnlity Docm 't Cost More"
• 1-800-872-5967

Poinseftios in 6 [olors
Poinseffio Baskets
'
Holly Treel
,. .
,,
Cui Chrislmos Trees
• · • Grove Blonkets -Wreolhs

•Live

financial obligatioris and arrange a fair
distributiun of assets. De Ltur~ in Lankrupt cy rna)'
keep "exempt" property for hi s ot· her per sonal
use. This may inclwh~ u t:ar, u hou se, clothr·:-; , und
hou•ehold goods.
·

5 Parts WarrantY,

. *Free Digital

•Swags

BANKRUPTCY can relim

•28 • mgnth
Heat. Pumps As Low AI 139 a mpnth

Air Conditioners As Low As

'

•Roping

.•

'

TRPPRn

•Wreaths
•Grave Blankets

*Free Estimates

,.

740-992-2068

SUISE,. HOME
COIS,.RDC,.IOI ·

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

Quality Affordable Web Paee Dealen
for Small Buslneuln Mel.gs. Athens, and
Gallla Co. Ohio and Mason Co. WV.
"Let us put your buslneu on the Internet"

'

Joseph Jacks·

. 7/22/lfn

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Air Conditione1·s &amp; Heat Pumps

.

Free Estimates

1 month pd.

C:mdlcli~ht

•

New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding, :
Drywall, Palritlng, :
Plumbing
·

Minersville, Ohio

20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Eolabllohod In Accordailee
With oectlon 1513.18 And
1513.37 Of The Revlaod
Code Are Aloo Applicable
ToThlt Bid.
Bids oro aoaled •nd
addraoud to: Department
of Natural AesourCIIa, .
Division of · Mineo. ind
Reclamation, 1855 Fountain
Square, Building • H,
Columbus, Ohtq.'43,224 .. No
blddera may wl\h'draw hio
bid within sixty (60) ·days
after the actual date ot the
opening thereof.
.
265-111133).
.
The Director of Natural
Each bid muat be Resources reserves , the
accompanied by a Bid right to relect any or all
.Guoranty, mooting tho blda, .o r to aecapt the bid
requirements ol section which embraces Jtuch
.153.54 of tho Ohio Revised combination allerf)ate
Code.
proposals as may promote
Conlractora Are Advised the best Interest or the
That, In Accordance With State.
·
The Provtalono Of The Recommended: Lisa . J .
January 27, 1972, Exeeutlvo Morris, Chief, Dlvlolon ol
Order By Tho Governor 01 Mineo and Reclamation
Ohio, And
Amended 12/1/98
'
Executive Order 84·9, Approved :
Donald C.
February 15, t984, Equol Ander1on,
Dlre'Cior
Employment Opportunity Department · of · Naturai
Condll!ona Are Applicable Reaourcee, t2/3!118
To Thla 'Std. · Wage Rotoo (12)t4,21 2TC

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction.

43370 St. Rt. 124

Phone: 740-843-5572

Public Notice

Calls)

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut
Any 'Scotch or White Pine - $15.00
Wagon R,ldes on Weekends •
At. 33 to Darwin , East on Rt. 681 , 4 miles to Cherry .
Ridge Rd., 1'h miles to tree farm . Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
N •. 28 thru Dec. 21
11/2319JJ I mo

Grand Opening

M

0

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

CHRISTMAS TREES
BRADFORD'S

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Slug &amp; Shol
Matches

Room Additions • Roofing

(No Sunday

"

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings

740-992-3987

Garages • Replacement Windows

614-992-7643

.COtiSTRUaiOtl

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
. Licensed &amp; Insured

· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

FREE ESTIMATES

Lona·s

t~f.={ ~~~ifr.t~if.t.f.t~~
~ JD COISUUCftOI ~
~·

•

•Lawn Care
·Mulching .
•Retaining Wall &amp;
Brick Patio Construction

~Planting
•Design ,
•Lawn Care

BOB SNOWDEN'S Lft

..lin.

nt211mo

ROUSH LANDSCAPING BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.:

$10&amp;Up

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

wv

Road

Racine, Ohio

Public Notice

GrandJa"IJhler of
Delberl &amp; Lnrellu
814/te of Middhporl .
and Hallie &amp; Gerold.
Sell..n of Pomeroy.

A .

*fills
*99.2-1696

Aft., 5 pm

. 52954 State Rt. 124

,,..

Hober Ho!lpil.al on
Sepl. 22, 1998.
71b•. 1 o:., 20 112
incite• lorag.

~57t;-;2255

- If

Wreaths- Swags
Roping &amp;
Grave Blankets

scrvil!c. 7 p:m. Christmas Eve .
RccJ..,villc
United
Methodi st

Public Notice
payable lo tho Department
of Natural Rooourcoo. The
Dlvlolon cannot aecept
cuh.
Plana and
epeclflcallona become the
property of the proapecttvo
bidder• and no re1undl will
be made.
Addlllor\al
Information may · be
obtaln•d from the Dlvlalon
of Mineo ond Reclamation,
Department of Natural
Reaourceo, 1855. Fountain
Square, Building H-3,
Co\umbua, Ohio 43224
(Teleph(1ne Number: (614)

*U.P.S.

Former-"l'elvet Harn.mer"

'

pborn
"""'"·
at

-

ADD UGIG Ill tt•
ADD,...

CHRISTMAS TREES

-

RUTUND, OH.
AMERICAN
-LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00PM

CJitl

THURSDAY
REEDS VILLE -

Wood Heating

Dave's Garage

on

' I

,.

.A

SERVICE
Agrir;ultural Ume,
Umestone·• Gravel.
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

11111/IB 1 mo. pd

Brandee )utteen

Karl Kehler III, CPA

ADD
ADDMatl

DUMP TRUCK

We Cltill 'em

December 1998.
POM EROY - "The Binh", a ATTEST; Dtcambor 14, 1998
li ve dram a on the birth of Christ. Kathy
Hye.all,
Cltrk/Treoaur8r
John Muller, Prootdent o1
IUU lJUil ' l !',t:t:U IU
Council
David Ballord, ScoU Dillon,
Gerl
Walton , Larry
Wthrung, Goorgo Wright
(12) 17,21
~t

Be Rich To Start
Investing,
You
Need To Start
Investing For A
Chance To Be-Rich.

Freeze

11\ -

Church.

RACINE - Rae in~ First Baptist
Church will have a live nativity on leaf vacuum. Spaclflcallono
Monday. 7 w 10 p.m . at the barn of can be picked up Ill Vllloga
Hall. Blda will bo -pled
Ronnie rmd Cookie Sal~cr on State until December 28 el4:00
Route 124 ncar Bashan Road .
p.m.
(12) 18, 20,21 3TC
LETART - Letart Township
Public Notice
Trustees. Monday. 6 p.m·. at office
building.
RECORD OF ORDINANCES
ORDINANCE 858
'
An
Ordinance to Pf'OVIdo
RACINE
Ra&lt;:inc Village addHianal
compenoatlon for
Coum:il. rccc!-iscd session, Monday. Vlllag.- employ,.elor 11tH.
7 p.m. at the Municipal huilding .
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
Council of lhe Village of •• $38,437.30.
A pr•bld meeting will be
RACINE -,- Southern L·ocal Pomeroy, two-thlrda of all
on
Wldnaoday,
member•
cancurrh•g hold
Boord of Education regular meeting thereto:
January 8, 1999 at 11 . A.M.
Monday. 7:30 p.m. at Southern
SECTION 1: That lor lht al tho Falrlono Drive Silo.
year 1898, lht Village Shell NO · plano or Spoelflcatlona
Local High S&lt;:hool.
pay each emptoyH In octlve will bt told at tho pre-bid
·employment 11 of Oolobar mHIIng.
TUESDAY ·
I
Coplto of tho plano,
1, 1988, tach full·tlmt
- Immuni zation clinic. Tuesday. 9 employee and ealary opeclflcallona,
and
to II a.m . and I to 3 p.m. at the employoe the aum of One propoool forma will bt
Mejgs' Multipurpose Center. Meigs Hundred dollare, . each forwarded from tho Division
omplopa In active part-time of Mineo and Reclamation,
County Health Department. Child employment
the aum of Doparlmenl of Notural
must have shot record and he Fifty dollaro.
Reaourctl, upon receipt of
accompanied by parent/guardian .
Thla a check or money order In
· ~ECTION ·11: ·
Ordinance oholl .. ke effect the amount of $13.00 made

WEDNESDAY

99242n

.&lt;/ IS"-

®=...•

740-992-IIJHur • Pritt Qooacr!
Ailotr-tCJitl ADDUGIGIIJ IS.·'It·

R.l. HOLLON
TRUCKING

_...

DEER SHOP

Community Calendar'--'------Christmas
REEDSVILLE program .
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church. 7 p.m .. Wednesday.

(614)

------,
.------,
ROBERT BISSELL.
OILER'S

I, •'

a

Hillside Baptist Chun;h, Route 143 .
Pomeroy, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Dr.
James R. Acree. pastor, invites ttic
public.

:)oe Wilson

.1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

,,,.,

·5'.-..=.::: ·

UJIIndrlllal ... t 1 ·rrr.-...:1/2tllrrmt.r..-!
Wrqma f)IW!I&amp;«&lt;11!1ikl..

l#llrfwell

Vickers

"Your Compute~'§b~p"
WiD 91 CGior Prial«! SIMM •

· · BY ED PETERSON
ered expenses for the first 20 days. to rctircJo determine the best time of old card.
Social
Security
Manager, The beneficiary is responsible for the year for them to retire . SomeQ. I had a child hurn this year. ''
Athens Offlct~
·
S96.00 per day (an increase of .50) times you can receive retirement it true that he will need a Social
The 1999 increases in the hospi- for the 21st through the IOOth day.
benefits while you arc still receiving Security number when I file my
tal cosl&lt; payable hy Medicare beneLow inco111c beneficiaries may a paycheck..
income tax return.
ficiarics-thc Pan A hospital .insur- get help in paying Medicare prcmiA. The law ro4uires you to list the
ancc deductible anfl the Pan B med- urns . . dcductibles and co-insurance
Q. I was 7(} in Dcccmher. I under- Social Sec urity numhcr. on your ta.
ical insurance premium-were through their State · Medicaid pro- stand thi s mean- I no longer have to return for each dependent claimed
announced in November.
grams. Contact your slate Med icaid worry about the retirement lest. on your 199M ·tax return . The lniC'r. The deductiblc .and the premium office or Human Services office for right'' A. Right-for next year. ·
nal Revenue Service (IRS) will nnt
arc .rccalcu1alcd each year to reflect · more infonnalion.
A. This year si nce you wt rc not proc~ss a return without the correct
changes in the oosts of healtli'care or
age 70 for the entire year. y.ou arc Social Security numbers.
c hanges in Medicare 'law.
· End or Year Social Security ques- subject to the earnings limits. How Q . I moved this year and I noli The Pan A deductible for benefi- . tions
ever. in the year you turn age 70. we
ciaries admilled to hospitals in 1999
Around this time of year, Social only .nun I your earnings for months . ficd the post office S&lt;&gt; .that my mhil
will be· $768, up from this year 's ·security generally gets a number of ·· before you turn age 70. Therefore. will he forwarded . My check is sent
· $764. The monthly Pan B premium questions related to the end of the for purposes of the Social Security ditccll y to my pank, so I don't need
will increase to $45.50 a month, up year. I will share some of them with earnings test, you would only count to notify Social Sc&lt;:urity of my new
from $43.80. The small increase you today and they may answer your earnings through the end of address, right '?
.
largely reflects savings from recluc- Yeill'-end questions you may have.
November.
A. Wrong' You must notify the
tions in Medicare hospital payments
Q. I understand that ·S2,800 in
post office and Social Security
a nd other program changes signed earnings will result in 'four Sociid
Q . How can I find out how much immediately if you change your
into law in the balanced budget Security credits a year. What if I I received in Social Security benefits mailing address , even if you have
agreement to help protect and pre- earn more S2,800. Do I get more this year'~
direct deposit. We send you imP,Or- .
serve the Medicare hospital [nsur- credit for the year'?'
A. In January, you will receive a tant information about changes· i~
ance Trust Fund.
A. No. Four is the maximum benefit sllllcmonl frQm SociaL Secu- the law or otbcr developments thai
The Pan A deductible is a benefi- number of credits for year of work. rity to uSc in determining whether may affect yollr benefits. And if yo u
ciary's only cost for up to 60 days of You need these . credits for us to you have to pay taxes on your bene- or a family member also receive
covered inpatient hospital services. determine if you. have worked long fits .
Supplemental Security Income
(SSI), you must report a change of
For hospital stays longer than 60 enough to be eligible for benefits.
days, a beneficiary will be responsi- However, the higher your average
Q. I go married this year and I · address to Sociai Security right
ble for $192 per day (an increase of annual earnings, the higher your understand I. should change my away hccausc thi s change may a(ftct
$1) for the 61 st through 90th days be~efits.
name with Social Security. How do I your benefits.
·.
and $384 per day. (an· increase of
do that''.
Also note, ·if you're receiving
$2)for the 91st through I 50th days.
· ·Q. I understand it's better to retire
A. To change your name With benefits and worked this year, Y.ou
When a beneficiary needs thera- at the end of the year. Is this true ?
.Social Security, you need evidence don't havC ln. file an earnings rcpt)rt.
peutic care in a skilled nursing facil - A. Not necessarily. It depends on a of your identity and documentation We now usc the earnings infoimaity after at least three consecutive number of factors . Generally we that shows your old name and your tion from your W-2 and , if yo~ Urc
days •of inpatient hospital care, encourage people to come in before . new name. Your replacement &lt;:ard self employed, the report you [ilc
Medicare pays I 00 percent of cov- the· beginning of the year they plan will have the same' 'numhcr as yo'ur with the Internal Rc'-~cnuc Servic~ .

The &lt;:;ommunity Calendar is publi shed as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special event s. The calendar is not designed to prom.otc sales
or fund rai sers of any type . Items arc
printed as :-;pace permits and cannot
be £Uaramc~d tn run a specific numhcr of days .
·

Best Prices of
the Season"

Clo...,_ Sperio1266-CPU 32 ..- l.r"- S6K V.911.S

Social Security: Medicare costs increases in 1999

.

Talented Gin a Tillis who seem"; to be able to do about anything has
.wriucn a most plcasnnr Christmas story ahout her four ycnr." old son,
Ben. and the cr~ation of a stahl c.scttin g for the Tilli!-.' Nativity figure s.
Friends and rtcigh hors arc ccrwin ly enjoying her story writing effort
Ivor (Jm.: k) Farrar wa" .'ic hcdulcd tn he returned today to hi s home
on the fro m the Western Hills Rehabilitation Center in Parkersburg ,
W.Va. Wilh. more tltJn his share of hcali h problems. Jack will begin
chemotherapy on D~ l·. 2X nt C :ull(.icn ~Ciark H o:-; pit~!l in Parkersburg ..

Custom Homes

I

Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
·
1

Sewer Plpe:· 3" thr.u 8 ", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
·
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12 :00 Saturday
~/ii' l/96 Un

•Rbol Coatings
•vinyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•ooor/Windows
•Eiectrlc/Piumblhg
Supplies
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Sle!IS

Discount Prices

Benne•t Supply
740-446-9416
1391 Salford
· School Rd.
Ga.IUpOIIs, OH

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club :
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every,Sunday
12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.131 back bore
(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470
ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Persona Is

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CALL AMERICA 'S 01 PSYCHICS 1·900·7~0· 6500 Ekt
3596,
w ~w. theholoages2 comlnslpsy·,
ChiCI250291 htm $~ . 99 !Min_ 1B+
Serv-U 619·645-8434.
I'Ll Tell your Future,
NOW! II

1·9Q0..42o.:jo12
3.99 per m•n Must be 18 yl!i.
SerJ· U[619)·645·8434 Ekt . 2665'

Single ? Not fm long iii2·900-·7'37·
?888 ElCt. 7394 $ 2.99 per. mirt
must be 18 yrs Serv- U 629·645 ~
8434.1

Sta n Oat~ng Tonight! Have lua
playing the Oh1t1 Dal!ng Garne
800-ROMANCF, e)(ter.s•on 9015.

1-

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•
•

------------------------~--------------------------~:

PHILLIP
ALDER
New To 'lbu Tmi!Shol&gt;pe

9 Weil SIITISOfl Athens
7~592

11142
Ouahty clothmg and household
1tems S 1 00 bag sa le every
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday

atlle start by Bt ol year, 740·
9927363

Computer Users Needed, Work
Own Hrs,. $20K $75f&lt;. Nr 1-8003-'8 7186 E~~:t 1173 www amp

900.5 30

40

CD Onver NeecjecJ. for Electrona &amp; tngh puorily deaJ1 hc~se.
wtn Mlp 10 cerbfy .aoes negoh-

Giveaway

one com

1 Parr Beagle/ Part 1 6 Weeks
Ota
Pupp •es
Have
Been
Worl'!"'ed 74(}.388-8962

Overbrook Center 333 Page
Street MIC)(!IepOrt has AN &amp; LPN
postttons available Please con·
tact Ang•e HalleV f!)r tTI(Ite ~nlor­

Free Puppaes After 3 00 740
4o11-0ol17

mabOI'I 740-992-6472 EO£

MnteG Breed Put:~pies 1 Weeks

010 Some W11h Btue Eyes WtU
Grow Mech um To Large RIO
GraMe Area 740-245-5104

To Gooo Lov1ng Home 2 Male
Ktnens Must Go Together 1
Long Ha•red Tlger, 1 Grey 740
256-6413

60

Lost and Found

Found two Beagles 681 near
Oarw1n please call to 10, 740·

992-6282
Lost smaR black dog wtlh purple
collar Vaughan sf Middleport v1
c•naty hat'ldiCapped guts pet, call
304-n3-~

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST Full
T tme Postt1on Heahh Insurance
And Rewemant Benel1ts Avatl
able Apply In Person Or Send
Resume To Bowmans Home
care 70 P1ri'e St Galhpohs Oh
4.5631 Attn l8W18
Someone To Care For An Elderty
Couple In The1r Home Full /Part ~
TtOle 740 446 31 t7 740 of46

4051
Someone To Care FOr .An Elderly
Couple In The1r Home Full /Part·
Ttme 740 446 3117 740·of46

4051

140

ALL Yard Sales Mutt

Wtnter Ollarter Starts January

4 1999 CaliTortayt 740 4464367 1 BOO 214 0452 Reg 19005 12748

ls to run Sunday
edtdon • 2.00 p m

Friday Monday eciHion
• 10 00 • m. Slturday

180 Wanted To Do

Pomeroy,
Mtddleport
&amp; Vicinity

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company
lull t1me auctioneer complete
auct•on
se rvtce
Ltcensed
t66.0hlo &amp; West v rgtma 304

773-5785 Or 304 773-5447
Wedemeyer s Auction Service
GaMipOI•s Ohto 740 379-2720

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top OoUar All U S Sti
ver And Gold Coms Proolsets
Diamonds Anttque,Jewalry Gold
Rings Pre 1930 US Currencv
Sterling Etc Acqutsttlons Jewelry
M T S Com Shop 15t Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740..446 2842
Antiques top pnces pa1d R1ver·
lne AntiQues Pomeroy OhiO
Russ Moore owner 740 9922526
Anltques &amp; clean used furniture
w1ll buy one ptece or complete
house hold Osbv Mar ttn

740

992 6576
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Sm1th Butck Ponttac 1900 Eas1
ern AVenue Gallipolis
J &amp; D Aulo Parts Buv tng
wrecke d or salvaged veh cles

-"

Modern 3 bedroom house, 2
country kiiCMn large 2 ear
~arage on 112 acre lot Tuppers
Platns Oh sewer already hOOted
up $75 ooo 740 985 3511 or

740-667 3.'104
Restored Vlctoflan home s•tuated
on 12 acres Village Mlddlepon
secluded and prtvate appoint
Two bedroom
house
on
80ftx162ft tot Corner ol Pomeroy
&amp; Ra tl Road Street Mason Wv
Wall cared for ranch style bed
roo[l1 home new roof and carpet
Lots ol extras priced at $34 000
.304-675 7693 call alter 5 pm or
leave a message

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

74(}2.5-5151
Proless1onal Tree Serv1ce Stump
Removal Free Esltmatesl lnsurartee B•dwell OhtO 740·358·

9648 740 367 7010
Repatrman 20 Years Expenence
A.pphances Plumb1og Electncal
Healing An~thtngt No Charge To
Look 740.256-92 12
W1ll Haul Anythmg or Clean Up
aoy Thlng t Wlll work lor $4 00

(740} 367 0140

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends that you do bus!
ne ss w1th people you know and
NOT !Cl_se nd money thro ugh the
mall unt1l you have Investigated
the otlemlg
21st Century MLM No Meetings
No Supplies No Tra1nang Polen
hal To Turn $130 Into 87K·t16K
Des1gned To Work An d Wo rk
Quick Ca ll 740·446 0647 And
l:.eave Phone Number

230

Perma nent Part T1me Nanny 4
Children light housekeepmg send
resume to CLA 460 825 Third
Ave Galltpoils Oh 45631
'

Professional
Services

livingston's Basement Water·
Proollng, all basement repairs
done tree est imates llletlme
guarant ee t2yrs on job experl
ence 304·895-3887

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We W.nt

1 888 582 3345

Help Wanted

AVON l All Areas t Shuley
Spears 304-675 1 429

$49iOOWN
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
FREE DELIVERY
a SET-UP
ONLY AT
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV
304·755-5885
Llmtted Offef

$500 Down ott any 14x70 tn
stock hm•ted number tree deil\1
ery Call 1 800 69H3777
$999 Down on anv 98 model
Dm.lblewide tn stock Free Deh\1
ery Call 1 800·691-6777
A.b andoned Home Take Over
Payments Or Make Oller HIOO·

383-6002
1973 Hi llcres t two bedroom mo
b1le nome 740-992 5039
1979 Fatrmont 14Ft X 60Ft Can
Be Seen At K&amp;K Pt Pleasant
Ca ll740 446 4310
1980 Fairmont t41C70 3 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths All Elecmc
Very Solid Well Kept Many Up
dates Needs Moved 740 682

3446
1988 14x70 Manorwooel 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths 740 245 5332
1992 Noms t6Ft X 70FT Vlnvl
W1th Shingles 2 Sdrms 2 Baths
All Electric Appliances Porches
Carport 740-256 6336
1994 Commander LTD please
contact Kim 740 992·2481
199fi Clayton 16x80 3 Bedrooms
Sktrltng Central A1r Nice 304

er
Local Trucktng Company See~tng
Quaid ed Truck Dr1vers Good
Pay And Beneftts Send Resume
To PO Box t09 Jackson Ohto
45640 Or Call 1 740 286 1463
To Schedule An lntervtew
Needed Expenenced Tree Climb
ers And Bucket Operator In The
Mercerville Area For lolormat on

Call 740 592-4585
Nurse Atde Trammg Program
Rodespr1ngs Aehablltta liOn Center
w l~ be offertng trarnlng classes •n
the mon th of Ja nuary Appllca·
11ons are now be1ng accepted at
367S9 Rodlspnngs Road Pomer·
~ OhiO 45769 Class stze ts limIted Three reference papers are
required with application Apply In
person between 10am and 3pm
M· F Students that successfully
complete the TCE class will be.
tl!o't&gt;Je 01 employment .Absolutelv

NO PHONE CALLS EDE

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
3 bedroom co untry kl1che0\ ltv
Jngllam ly 2 tlalhs detached ga
1age on 1 112 acres country set
tmg Chester area $46 000 740
985 35 t1
3 Bedrooms L1v1ng Room Orntng
Room KttcMn Bath Parhal Ftn
tshed Famtly Room Call 740 441

3253
6yr 2 3 bedrooms tort tong ue/
groove pellet stove HP/C A ap
pltances garage spa acre 8ula
vrlle ~Ilea 140 367 0286
8y owner 725 Page Street Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate will sell house wtlh
out lots lor $89 000 740 992
2704 740 992 5696
By owner three bedroom lanced
yard pool double lot , In Galhpo
hs Ferry call 304 E7S 1t OS after

epm

FIXER UPPER
Older 2 Story Coun try Home 2 ·3
Bedrooms 1 Ba th With 5 .Acres
Barns Greenhouse Giving Away

At $30 000 740.286.()08 I

Call For Free Maps + Owner Fl
nanctng Info Take 10%
Usted
PrtC85 On Cash Pwchasest

on

COUNTRY LOTS
5 To 20 Acre Tracts, .Meadows
Pond. Barns Woods Off SA 141,
&amp; SA 233 Near Gallla Large
HUnting Tracts Touchrng Wayne
Nat•onal Forest Rough 25 Acra
Tract · $19,000 5 Acre Aes1den
ttal $11,500 Land Contract Available Wtth As Ltttle As S% Oown
Walh Approved Credit 1· 800·
213-8365

Real Estate
Wanted

360

We Buy !..and 30 -500 Acres
We Pay Cash- 1·800-2 t 3 8365
AnthOny Laoel Co

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

2 or 3 bedroom house tn Pomer
&lt;&gt;f no pets, 740-992·5858

Double W1de New $999 Down
$237 per mo Free delivery &amp; set
up 1 800 6a1 67n

OOWN PAYMENT BLUES?
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV
WILL MATCHVOUR
DOWN PAYMENT
CALL FOR DETAILS
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304·755-5885

New 14)(70 $500 Down $199 per
mo Free ettr sklrt 1-1300 69 t

New 1999 14•70 three bedroom
mctudes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer sktrllog
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month wllh $1 150
down Can 1 800.837 323S

PRIVATE SETIING
3 Bedlooms 2 Ba ths soo 38a
6862
SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
NEW &amp; USEO REPO'S
CREDIT HOTLINE
304·755·7191
We Fmance land &amp; Home With
As Lillie As $500 Down 1 606
928 3426
3 Bedrooms 2 Balhs With A/C
Skirt $229/Mo 1 800 m-6962

340

Business and
Buildings

Commerc al Othce or Retail 87
M II 51 Mtdd lepor t 1 450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Building 740
992 6250 Acqu1sltlo ns (nell!
door)
Downtown F rst Floor Olftce
Space Second Avenue Profes
stonal Or Retail 740 446 0 139 Or

188 acres of eJo:cellent develop
able tand wtth a panoramiC vtew
of the Ctly ot Po tnl Pleasant the
Oh!o Rt1o1er and the valleys and
htlls on both s1des ol the nver
The pr operty Includes several
se cluded wooded site A new
etgn Inch water line has been run
through the properly Owners
would like to se ll the enttre tact
Can (304 ) 675 1612 and ask for
Bob Messick or Call John Wtse

man a1 (304} 675 5485

Now Taking Appht:atlons- 35
Weat 2 Bedroom Townhouse

Furbya 5 In Boxes, New, $150

Apanmints, Includes Water
Sew!JQe, Trash, $295/Mo , 740·
441 1618, 740· 446·0957, 740·

Grubb 1 Plano- tuning I repa.rs

-·5

One bedroom apartment for rent
qu1et ,dep &amp; rei required
$300 00, 304-675-1550

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom house m Pomeroy no pets, 740·992 5858
N1ce two bedroom house 1n Po·
merov, $350 per month plus dePOSit no pets will constder land
conuac1 after one vear, 740·698

7244
Tak~ng applications for 3 room &amp;
Dat rr plus atllc hO use you pay
ut1llttes available Jan 10th, 740

&amp; three bedrooms equtpped
k1tchans, references anct deposit
rBq.Jired, 740-985-4373 "'"" 6pm

Rio Grande Apartment, Close To
College One Bdrm All Utlllltet
Pa1d 1290 00 Month 888·840·

6pm

petad, Patio, No 1'010 Lease P1us
Secunty Deposit Requared 740.

~·
Twm RIWtfS Tower now accepting

Hud Approved• Oepos1t required

6512
Brand New Mobile Home, 3 Bed rooms Furnished Except Bed ·
room Furnnure No Pets References Required, 740.446 9et6
Beauulul R1ver View 198 River
Street Kanagua Deposit, Refer·
ences No Pets 740 44t Q18f
Foster Trailer Park
Two bedroom mobtle nome utlh
ltes parttally patd call 304-675·
6612 alter 7pm
Two {21 Bedroom Mobile Home
Route 218 Deposit + Rel&amp;renc es
Requtr&amp;d 740 963 4607
Two bedroom mobile nome m
Mtddleport no pets 740 992·

Rooms
Circle (Motel Lowest Rate&amp; In
Town, Newly Remodeled HBO.
C1nemax Snowllme ' Disney
Wee~ty Rates Or Monttlly Rates,
Construction Workers Welcome
740-441 5698 7ol0-441·5167

460 Space for Rent

2 br !urn or unt urn a pi dep &amp;
ref reqwed 304 88 2 2566
2bdrm epts tota l electric ap·
pllances furniShed laundry room
laclltt tes close to schOol tn town
Appll ca tmn s a\'allable at Village
Green Apts 149 or ca ll 740 992-

MERCHANDI SE

Household
Goods

Bunk Beds New Never Used Mat
tr ess, 2 Beds 2 Inner Spring
Maltresses Included 5295 Proc
rorville 740 886 6373

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers refrigerators
rang&amp;s Skaggs Appliances 76
VIne Street, Call 740·446·7398
1 888 818-0128

New Box Springs &amp; Mattress Not
Used 10 Year Warranty Stili In
P'lastlc $195 00 Proctorvllle, 740·

886-6373
Oak Roll Top Desk like New

$450 00 740-448 6365
Used Furniture Store Below Holiday Inn Kanauga Day Beds
Bunk Beds, Beds Computer
Desk Entertatnmenl Center
Dressers Couches 0 /ne lles
Wh1ie Wh irlpoo l Ae fn gerator
$125 00 Almond Ma~tag Dryer
Almo nd Whirlpoo l
$100 00
Washer S125 00 Recond1ttoned
30 Day Warranty Calf After 5 DO

Coun try Stde Apartment Large 2
Bedrooms 2 Baths WID Hoole
Up CIA $435/Mo Including Wa
ter Sewage Garbage Call Toll
Free 888 840.0521
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
740-446 0390

Mo ssQerg 410 {&gt;ump Shotgun
VA Barrell Full Choke New In

Antiques

Buy or sell R1venne Antiques
1124 E Mam Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hou rs M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sundey100to
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

740 446-6306 1·800 291 0098
1 Sola Bed $275 00 1 Zenith TV
27"Screen $275 00. 2 Adven t
Spe akers $50 00 740·446 8580
Lea\'&amp; Message II Before 5 00

Pm
1940 &amp; Walerfall Bedroom Group
Full Size Bed Chest Vanity &amp;
Stool Call Aller 6 00 304· 675 ·

Grac1ous h\'lng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rlvers1de Apartments In Middle·
port From $249 $373 Call 740·
992 !5064 Equal Hous tnQ Oppor·
tumttes

800·n9 6 1!14
Side by side ralrtgerator freezer
$100 two studded IS" snow 11res
ltke new S2S each 6" Craftsman
planer/Joloer $200 all pnced to
seu. 740-992·2805
Solid Oak 12 Gun Cabinet w!P1s
101 display Exc condition $250 00

SKS Rife $150 00 (740} 367·75n
Starting Line ups football, bas
ketball baseball hocke~ &amp; Nas·
car there IS JUS! a few. Emmett
Smith M Jordan, K Gnfley K
Earnhart, J Gordon W OreZ1ey
M Johnson, 0 Rodman M Me·
Guire We save you time &amp; moo·
ev call740.742·2!511, 1-800·837·
8217 Rutland BoUle Gas ask for
David
Thompson 50 Caliber Statnless
Steal inllne Black Diamond Modal 7-40·448 34 13
Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 DO Per 100 All Brass CompressiOn Ftttlngs In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1-800 537 9528

Hogg S1 or (3041675 5739
740 992 5949

550

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewer pipes wtnd
ows lmtels etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande OH Call 740 245
5 121
Steel Bulli:hngs New Must Sell
30x 40x 1 2 was $10 200 Now
S6 990 40~t60x12 Was 116 400
Now $9 990 SOx100x16 Was
$27590 Now $19 990, 60x200•16
Was $56 760 Now $39 990 1·

BOO

406-512fi

560

Pets lor Sale

1 Year Old Male Registered Engli sh Seller All Ready Trained
AlSo 10 Week Old AKC Registered Male Black lab All Shots
Will Hold Till Christmas! 740
44~080

A Groom Shop Pet Groommg
Fea tu nng Hydro Balh Do n
Shee ts 373 Georges Creek Rd

740 446 0231
AKC Collie pupp1es sable &amp;
white eyes cer t1h ed $200 S350
740 696 1085
AKC Engllah Springer Spaniels
1 male black &amp; wtute 1 Female
Black &amp; While Appx 2~rs old

BOTTLED WILL POWER!
LOSE up·to 30 lbs
THIRTY OAY MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE!
NatiJ'&amp;I Or Recommenlled
(740} 441·1~82

Child Crall Honey Oak Bjlby Bed
A.nd Match mg Changtng Ta ble
And Dresser $250 00 740 379
2615
Church pews lor sale 12 twelve
loot 4 ten foo1 $200 each 740

949 22 17
Diamond cluster rmg appro~~: 1/3
carat 14K $300 te lesco pe In

nne shape $150 740-!149-2202
Dog house tor sale $40 00 304
Elect nc Scoo ter s WheelcMa lrs
New And Used Stairway Eleva
to rs Wheelchau And Scooter
L1fl s. BoWman s Homecare 740

current shot and 3 gen ped1gree
Great fam1IV pets very ou1 gotng
Personality $150 00 eecb Wtl l
groom and hold lor Christmas

(304)675-707 1
AKC Golden Retrtevers 1 Weeks
Old 1st Shots &amp; Wormed 5225
W•ll Hold For C h r~stmas W1th A
Oepostl 740·256-1686
AKC Pomeranian pupp1es bla ck
also cream/sable vet checked
peci!Qree 740 696-1085

1922
Firewood Seasoned Split, Oellv·
eredt Jared , 740· 446·6566, Or

Chad 740-446·1271

$350fea, 740·698-6176 or 74Q-

698-3001
4KC

Yorkle

puppies

mate

$300 ,lemale $350 00 304-895·

3926

-~~Cotllt
Pupo

Full BlOOded,

ormecl, 175 Each

Arst

740-2
Chmese Puga. 6 Weeks Regts
tared Ped1grees $350 Females
$400 Male Make Great ~Chrlst
mas Gilts! Evenings 740 441
1116 Days 740 446 3977 Ask
For CLara
Full blooded Australian shepherd
puppies 8 weeks otd $65, 740

••

1 lot
7 -plan!
12 a.ldng lin

Jack Russell terrier pupp tes one
male one female $250 &amp;ach de
posit will hold for Christmas 740..

742·2050
Paar of cockatiels born In June
Wlfti cage $100 pair born second
week ol October no cBge 175
7~ 992·9111

Poodle $100 00 8 months old

WMel (3041675-1671
Reg1 ste red English Seller Pups
Excellent Hunl!ng Blocdltnes 2
Females 3 Males 13 Weeks okl
$30000&amp; Up 74().256·1871

For Sale
or Trade

New Manco Go teart 9hp B&amp;S
electnc start lights will seli or
trade, 740· 742 2455 740 742

2580

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Spanle1 $25 740 446-3:'81
AKC Registere d Sllih-tzu pups
$250 each CFA Registered Himalayan kltt&amp;ns, $1 SO each full
blooded Siamese )ottens, S100
each A.KC AeQlS tered Pekingese
pup $250 aU shots and wormed

740.667 3090

•

~

1993 Grand AM, GT Load' 198f

I

\1[;,__.

Sou..

ANSWER ME--

mJJei..

WHO??

$8 995 00 B&amp;O Auto (740) (41-

--·

720 Trucks for Sale •

•
$11 00, many j,.,:;;
~ ~

61 0 Farm Equipment
9 In Fo rd tr actor brush hog &amp;

grader blade $2 5QO 00 304--576·
3033
New 5010 6010 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7715% Fixed
Aate John Deere Credit Flnanc1ng
Available New 4000 Series Com·
pacts In Stock New John Deere
McCos And Round Balers 0% •
12 Mo s 1 75% 24 Mos 3 5% •

36 MO&amp; 4 5% 48 Moa, 5 5% ·60

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

. '

730 Vans &amp;
4-WDs
I

1978 Ford F 250 -400 Auto , i4
Wheel Drive, Aluminum Whetls

•

1986 Blazer 4 WD No Au&amp;l ALitls
Van 351 , Runs Good 1982 Toy•
Ia Pick Up Ooese1 740-379 2313 •

toqo

1993 Chevy 4 WD Z500 $1
740-379·2451
• •

:THE BORN LOSER

,.M I SN'\PU

•

,.

~G fA.'(

.-

DOI"'T OOi f\EJ:. -

Of\, YOU FOU::DI \f\Ef\l'o.W ~I

. f-IOfo\E 1'\1\0C
. - ry:l)l \al&lt;.e,, fJ\ 7

t\'S fV$.0 U\OllGf\
! \o-llH\0\JT \ T I

I'LL.

GO IT FO\i:. YOU 1

I!

Mos Carmlchaers Farm'&amp; Lawn,
Mtdway Between GaiU,:~olls And
Rlo Grande On Jackson Pike
740 446 2412 Or 1 800·594·
1111
Ford new Holland Oect~tnber ape·
clals model 5030 rental tractor
62 PTO HP 4 wd 2 pump hyd
8x8 shuttle trans, 129 hra
24 000 00
5030 same specs 303 hrs

22 500 00 4630 55 pta hp 2wl)
same specs 57hrs$17.90000
4630 4wd 16x4 dual power tran

24 00000
256 rakes In erate 3 050 00
451 7" mowers 3 250 00

472 7' hayblnc 8 395 00
634 R balers 650 »10 500 00
644 R balers 1000» strlng lie
auto wrap wide pickup 13 900 00
654 R Dater 150011 same specs
1590000
.585 square baler wagon hitch

9 700 00
Keefers Service Center
ST RT 87 PT Pleasant &amp; R1p

leV RO 304-895-3874
J D 300 2 Row Picker Also
81nch Grain Auger. And A
Graln Auger 5· 7 Shank Chisel

'97 XR 1 00 Honda d~rt bike ex
cellent condtllon $1200 3j)4

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tracto rs In Stock Ftnanctog As
Low As 6 5% Fixed Rate On
Oualtfylng Tractors With John
Deere Cred it Approval Car·
m1chael s Farm &amp; Lawn, M10wav
Between Gall!pohs And R1o
Grande On Jackson Pike 740
4462412011-800 594 1111

630

Livestock

2 PQ_ny Colts 8 MonthS Liver
Chest nut Wllh Bald Face &amp; Blue
Eves Black Bay Pmto Wtth Ex
celtem Marktng s 740-386-0321

94 Honda dirt bike pro acflon
suspens ion $2 000 OBO 304·

Ave , Gallipolis OH The .Abbve
"As Is- Where Is" Without~•
pressed Or Implied Warranty
And May Se Seen By Calling
Keith Johnson A.t 740· 441 · 1038
OVB Reserves The Right To Ac·
capt Or Reject An~ And All BIOs.
And Withdraw Property .from

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay tor sale· one m11e north on
AI 2 Square Bales $1 00
Hay lor sale ltrst &amp; second cut
ting s[Juare bales, ca ll 740 992

5533

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos for Sale
1950 Pont iac Silver Streak 4
Door Coupe, Runs Good Needs
Restored $2 000 OBO 304 895
3971

1983 Clllvv Cel!lOITo z- 2e v a
(305), $700 00 740-379-2639
1986 Pontiac Parlslenna high
miles &lt;4 door new engine looks
and runs great AC $1250 740

!149-2045

.

3•
4 ..

All pass

Wtth

50 WHAT I NEED IS
A LEASH, AND A
COLLAR, AND A
SUPPER 01514 .

---

Gardner
34 Noll"" of Tel
Aviv
35 Equllllbly

39 Garden no43 1991and
1999
45 GIVII oft
(helll
47 1181, e.g
48 JFK Info

49 SIHI,

okl-olyle

50Suaan
Hayward

mo't'•

52 Ending lor
Japan

an honor We

53 Sun. apoech
54 They're worth
-.1-..L....t...,.l-.1....... l
6 pb1.
1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cetebrity Cipher cf't'PiogratTW are CtUitd rrom ~lions Dy lamot» peopkl PBIIand prnenl
Each lettef rr thll cpher alandlllor another TOdly'l au. H equalS Y

LPAQDW
XDTOG

' A C

G F P A S 0

GFD

WV ,NHTWN

T::~:~:~'

_...--...._~-,

0

R&amp;arrange letrers of th&amp;
four scrambled words be·
low to form four Simple words

THKING

MA D E F

I

~..N7'

P R I VE

I I I 1
4

A N L I My

l

When I asked a fnend what
happened to her foot she
laughed A loot1s a f1n e 1mple~7n1 to find furnitUre- - the -·

I

I--,1"'5_:.;.1-=..,,,.;6'--'TI...;....,,,-1
L___L.__l.--..J.L....l.--..J.L..J

e

Complele the cl't uckle quoted
by Ml1ng tn the m1sstng words
you develop from st~ No 3 below

I

St. .AM.t.ETS ANSWERS
usurer- Ex 1st - Dolly - Grubby~ BUSY he IS
There's a fellow 1n my off1ce who •s always runnmg
around but he IS never too busy to stop and tell you
how BUSY he IS

DECEMBER 21

' Home
Improvements :

C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence Patnhng vinyl stdlng
carpentry doors windows bat hS
mobtle home repau and more For
lree esltmate call Chat 740 992

6323
Profess1onat 20yrs expertence
with all masonery brick block &amp;
stone Also room addlllons ga
rages etc Free estimates 304

773 9550

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Restdenttal or commercial wiring
new service or repairs 1 Master Ll·
eense d electrician Ride no ur

Electrical WV000306 304·675
1786

.' -

ASTRO·GRAPH

Tut"sd,t y Dec 22 191J:-I
It , OK lo teLtlllliP wuh lntllhcr m
th~.: ) l tr .!head hut yuo \\t il I m.!
mu ~h llt'lld 1f you dunm let people
s~l y~mr U!:Jenl.ia E~ tat'Jh ,h ) 11ur own
!J.IILtl ~ cnnLemmg the Jill Ill entle .1 vur
ami ~ltd to tt1em
CAPR ICORN Wet: ::!1 J,m IIJ)
&lt;.:t1um:e or luck won I l1c: th e f tllnr~
th.u fatten your h 1nk UC\:UUilt toJ,Iy
Y(lUr tenau ty 1s wh.11 lmtcrs }Our
~ .lggresMvene~s to wnrk fnr wh.\1 you
WLtnt Trymg W p.111.:h up 1 brnken
nm1&lt;mce' The As tm Gr.1ph Match m 1ker c.1n help you under~t ,md what
to do to mnke the relall onshtp work
Mutl $2 75 to Malchrnakcr c/o thts
new~p.1per P:O Bux 17"8. Murray
H 111 Stat tun N~w York NY 101~6

AQUARIUS (J,on 20 Feb

WORD
GAMI

ldl1od br CIA Y 1 ,OLLAN

SERVICES

7795

RWDDA

S© \\.l!lA- "'£irS"

1983 Motor Home
Good Col'dt
tlon, 2 gasl tanks atr &amp; Furnace
740 367 7070 or 740 367 7093

.Appltance Parts And Serv tce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•
per1ence Alt Work Guaranteed
French Cltv Maylag 740 446

PO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'II I'm tho Marlon Brando of danang Fred AsUllre IS
Cary Granl • - Gena Kelly

1982 Terry Tarus 28 A1r AWrUng
2 Doors, Full Bed 1699 Boh' ~c
Cormick Road Gallipolis Ptllo
740 446-15,
-

•

L P A G 0 W

SPKIPAR

IMONDAY

b

.C 8

RWTOO ,

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes ·

llncond•honal ltle11me guarantee
toea! re ferences lur nlshed_Es
labllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (7401
446·0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

TAN

L CUT A

OFTSDOKDTWD

C A D

LFDA

.

UTA,

QTUDD

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ,ANSWER
.

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

~ '::J

27
NNE
32 Actreaa

Pass

AND '1'00 CAN
JUST Pl)T IT
ON M'{ TA6.

New gas tanks &amp; body parts d &amp;
R Auto Rlptev WV 304, 3t:i
3933 or I 800 273 9329

81Q

comr.::.i"1

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Summers not over! Kawa saki
STS Jet ski sltll under warranty
three &amp;eater, 83 h ors epbw~r ....
bought new Jul~ of 97 tlfrte
matchmg Kawasaki ski vestSJl"d
tratter all go w1th It Priced to 51!111
$4200 740 949·2203 or 74Q ~
2045 will eonstder trade for, a
1900d pontoon boat

790

Pass
Pass

PEANUT~

for Sale

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Eul
Pass

wuhout loss However, tf Easl plays
'1he spade three under dummy\ Jack
wuhout any heSitation, declarer wtll
wm w•lh lhe ace and go one down
It declarer leads an honor !rom
dummy or hts hand and you have the
honors dtrectly above and below
that honor, don 'I cover

Will Be Sold To Highest Bt!laer

760

22 ....... mogul
MurdoCh
23 Gocldeot of
the moon

spade to h1s mne and draws trumps

JENNY'
MISTLETOE 1

AI The OVB Anne~~: , 143 Third

7186

Rldtng Horses For Sale Otllerent
Prlcesi740.4.W.411 0

HE Y , L..OOI'-

1996 Honda CBR600F3 MICvtte
1505817 On 119199 AI 10 00 AM

Pds Fat Clean Hetlars 740 367-

Broke $600 OBO 740.379 2701

NATR

'•'

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer Por
Sale By Public Aucllon A 1993
Yamaha FZR600 121614~ &amp;. A

3 Hatters We1ghs Appro• 600

Chr1stmas Pony Smail Bleck
Beauty 10 Year Old Geld1ng Well

I

750 Boats &amp; Motors·

Norlb
1 ..

South won the dtamond return tn
the dummy and called for the srade
Jack
An mexrenenced Easl wtll thtnk
that, because he has the Jack surrounded by hts queen and 10, 11 can·
not cost to t:over wtth the queen How
wrong he would be' II Easl covers
With the queen declarer wtns w1th lhe
ace and sees Wesl dtscard Into dummy With a club. de~l arer leads a low

1985 Polans Tratl Boss 4 Wheel·
" 250 Sl 500 00 Cell (3041 875

Sale Prior To Sale Tarms Of Salt
CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK.

20Swlsooonp

enlhuololllc

chance?

'I

675·3736

Plow 740·256&lt;3011
John Deere 2240 Diesel In Ex
cellent Condlllon $13 500 00
F1rm 740 256-6786

Motorcycles

675·2864

11 Pottery clay

25

found thai lhe answer " not often
There ts one other posttton where.
agamsl a competent player, the nght
tJiay 1S clear CUI
Soulh started w•tn a strong JUmp
sh1f1 Contrary to tJOpular beltef, thiS
b1d doesn '1 guarantee 19 tJOtnts If
you have a good stx-card sutt (or a
decent five wtth al least four-card
suptJOrt for partner's sutt}, 14 or 15
1s qmte suffic1ent On the second
round, Soulh cue-b1d hi5 d1amond
ace
The defenders look the firsl three
lncks m hearts. Jhen Easl cast adnf1
w1th a dtamond
Everythmg looks easy Why not
JUSI bash out lhe IOtJ StJades and
clatm' Accordmg lo thY' rnon odds
lhe m1Ssmg srade• wtll dtv1de 2-1
e.actly 72 percent of the 11me Fme,
yel why not g1ve yourself one extra

$45 000 304-675·3954 evonongs •

5612 AFTER 5 00

11 Conoumed

24 More

WHI

cover an honor

93 Chevy S·10, 2 wh " dl
truck,2 8 V·6, s sp, ale 78,00):)
mlles,new hres very good c'Ond.

740

Greeltl37Sesltmeplant
38 ACireU Gilbert 7 Longed (Iori

13Jerry'olrlend

18 Cloud 1 - •

By Phillip Alder
Last week, we looked at when to

1995 GMC Sonoma SLS E•t
Cab Pick· uP 80 ooo mile~
$5,995 00 B&amp;D Auto (740} 448·
Gt89
~

1996 Chevy Silverado 4X4 Z 71
Extended Cab 3 RD Door • 350
Vqrtec Engme Autom , Loaded ,
Bedhner Toneau Cover 39 000

8 Sblelon part
9 Nos. e•pert
10 Folding bed

Dot the eye,
cross the tea

tlition $3,100 7oiQ.37H398

1995 Plymouth Grand Voyager
with Rally package tully loat:ied
56,000 miles askmg $12 000

-

36 -, vidi, viet

Opening lead· • Q

86 Camaro Z 28 350 V 8 aut~
ps pb tilt &amp; cru1se excellent CQ4t--

$1800, 740.256-6&lt;130

~

•ulll•

4 'IWirl
5S16 Jimmy (The

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: North

RI.I1S Goott $1 500 00 Call (7 00}
882 132.

'

• 9 7 4
.. Q 10 9 5

2 Roman dozen
3 CornparlttiYt

.. 4

•

1994 GMC Jtmmy auto loaded .
excellent condittan 4 3 new tires
4 door $10 500 090 740 f.4!:·

-

• A 9 6 ,

DOWN
1 Alr-quallty' org

velvet
30 Aahlng poiH
31 Cycled
33 Female bor

10 3

• AK9B62
• 8 54
t A_K J

"

Clllvv Caprice runs fPIIBtl
$900 00 11187
Fotr.

Molas 740.256 8160

$2 00 304·675·4869

AKC Reg1stered Tn· Colore d
Cocker Spanie l $100, Puppy
Miked Looks Just Ltke Cocker

Q J 10 2
10 8 6 5 3
J 8 7 2
Sou..

Fum 740 «6 9935 After 2~0
PM
•,

304-675 3738

AKC
re g stared
mml
Oaci'IShunds mini Shelties and
Maltese puppies 304 675 5460

3090

• Q

1991 Qoctgo Monaco Sf',aGO

1982 FIOO
parts 740-742 828.2

26Norsepoem
29 Ending lor

' Eut

1991 Chevy Lumina Euro .~~fy
good conclltlOn, I&gt;JC, PW, loaljd
asdig S5100 31)4.675-3738 ~!I&gt;"'

6189

....lco

26-ol-

• Q 2
• A K 6 3

'P

1996 Mustang, 21,000

23 Type of lift

9 K 7 3

161 C1d1/18C seville 4 dOO«dan, loaded with accessor.,_
great gas mileage car phone
::l).t..-675-2722
"~ '

7200 or 740-742 2675

21 c.rwy·a kin

.. J 7 54

•

Good $3 500 Or OBO 1982 Fo,O

640

AKC Registered Shih· tzu pups
$250 each CFA Regtstered H1m·
a layan kittens, $150 each full
bloOded Si amese kittens $100
each AKC Pekingese pup $250.
all shots and worme" 740 667-

$3.200 304-675-5792 alter 5l&gt;iil

15 Woolly
1e Actor Beotty
17 Coolch
P111Mghlan
11 511.- of blue

---

~~~

LE maroon; .tdr
new t•res &amp; brakes good cOed

1988

742 3304

AKC Registered Ch1n ese Sharpe•
pups excellent bloodltne $300
740 949·2126

446 7283
Firewood for Salel Call 740 256·

AKC She/lit pups (mlnlalu&lt;t colIlea), two males. of months old ,
$200 tacl1 shell,.......
fuel blOOded, no pepera. $100, can
be CFA regllttred will charge
$200,740-992-5073

590

d1 sh total purchase pnce $99
Ask about lree programming, 1

4 P1e ce Bed room Su11e S225
Good Condllton 304·675·1865
After 5 00

eoo

AKC Shellle puppies 1able &amp;
whit' also Blue Mer1e~. champion bloodlines. vel checked
$350, 7~96-1085

Satellite Sy11ema 18" DarectTV

4617

Beanae 8ab1es Halo Santa Zero
and others Reg star for Fre e

!14~2709

ten call 740-992 2607

Box $200 740-446-2905

530

pollt W•ll Hold One Chnstmas
740-2.5-51123 AIIAtr 5PM

S 10 Pick Up Caps Small camp
er Phone (740) 256 1638

Zenllh 25' conso le TV $100

Sporting
Goods

1987 \1·8 Okts CutlaA Supre~
I~K. """ good. $1 500 1988 V
8 Olds Cus1om Cruiser SW
112K, runs QOOd $2 000 740

Reg1stered male Sh1h tzu pup lema Ia Sheltle female Siamese kit

520

675·6 132
Furnished 4 Rooms &amp; Ba th Com
pletely Redecorated Clean New
Carpet No Pets Or Smoking Ref
erence &amp; Oepostt Aequrred Also
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp;. Bath Up
stairs. 74D-446-1519

lorCMsly

PM 740446·9066

Bean1 e Babv s $10 &amp; up 740
742-2511 1
83 7·8217 Au
!land Some Gas ask tor David

Living
Apairtmenta
Mleldleport/Porneroy
Can 740 992 451 4
Monday Saturday 9 9
Has openings apartments avail·
1able now Hud accepted
Ask for Chnsry

Restaurant pizza oven Hobart
electric $650 740 992 4087 ask
tor Wayne or 740 992 4514 ask

Whi rlpool washer/dryer $100 00
each Large entertainment Center dark wo od seen at 1302

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Chrlaty~..f:emlly

Prlmlltar 149 Installation On&amp;
ca111ng 800-263-2640

Loo sy (3041 675 7223

52 Westwood Drtlle
from $279 to $358 Wal k to shop
&amp; movtes Call 740 446 2568
EQual Houstng OpportuOIIy

Maytag standard washer 1100

7oiQ.385-4367

3711 EOH

E~ TATE S

422 Secood A,_. (740} 446-1615

month free free holida., gift just tor

440

1 Bedroom Inc l uding Utilities
$350/Mo 2 Bedrooms Including
Ut1htles $450/Mo DepOSit Re qutred 740 446-2477

large Selection of Handmade lm
poned Cigars From Cuba Seed!

Mobrle horhe sUe avatlabte bet·
ween ~thens and Pomeroy call

MWABM UP!·

992 2218

Antique Wall Regulator Clock·

Nasear· new arnvals Dale Earnhart &amp; Eamhart Jr Coca Cola
cars, whtle quanlthes last Nascar
Barbie large setecllon of Gold
Cars 1164 &amp; 1125 scale JeM Gordon Selection of ltmtted edlllon
Items &amp; more wcw D1e Cast,
Goldbe(g regular &amp; gold cars
avatlable W&amp; try to have the best
of the best hard to fi nd Items,
save lime &amp; mona ~ 740-7422511 1 800 837 8217 Rutla nd
Bortle Gas ask lor Oavld

Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; Air Con
dltlonlng Free Esllmatest II You
Don 1 Call Us we Bot h Lose!

1 and 2 bedroom apartment s fur
ntshed and unfurnished securtty
deposit requued no pets 740

Johnson's UHd Furrufure Beds
new and uaect mattresus. Kitchen appllenc••· Ol.neHes Wash
ers, Dryers, Frtezers, etc! (740)
ue ·o39 {740) 448-1()04.

C8llPOd EOH 304-675-6679

450 • Furnished

AKC Ron W- Pupple5, Chompionlhip 8-ino Par.,l&amp; Glaot
Wtth Children Ready For Wee
kerld Of January 9th, $350, Oe

AKC St Btrnanl pups, ready 121
14, deposit will hokl unt11 12124

740-!149-2297

5039

Apartments
lor Rent

A4plirod , _ I RelxJilt In Sloc:k
Cel Ron Evins, HI00.53HI528

applications for tbr HUD sutlAICIIZed apt lor elderly and handl·

740.448 4782

2 Bedroom tra1ler mason area

AER.ImON MOTORS

$375 00 DaJc Ory Sink With Pitch.,. $50.00 7oiQ.256-68911

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bedroom trailer turn tshe d tn
Middleport 740·378 6353 alter

JET

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Vary Spactous, 2 Bedrooms 2
Floon CA. 1 112 Batn Fully Car·

Proctrovllle Ohio

'

Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
planO Dr 740 44tl 4525

Large Oak Desk· $75 oo Large

Uvlng Room Sutte 2 P18C8, Never
Used $275 Call 740·886-6373

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobtle homes a11
cond1honed $260 S300 sewer
wate r and trash mcluded 740
992·2167

304-7~

0521

992 379Q

14k70 two bedroom uauer total
erectnc $250 month $150 de
pos1t no pets 740-742-2714

Each. CUll Orly,

Pomeroy &amp; Madc:lleport- nice two

Apphaoces
Recondlt to ned
washers Dryers Ranges Rein
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446
7795

740 446 4383

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

FURBY white, 1100. 304 773·
5450

Extra N1ce 2 be droom garage
apartment Centrally located central heat air S325 month De·
posltl {740) 446 2300

6777
New 16)180 $500 Down $245 per
mo Free a~r skirt 1 80 0 691
6777

NICe 2 bedroom apartment in Pomeroy en utilities pa1d, no pets
740-9!)2.51J1i8

510

2 2 bedroom mobile homes 1
furn iShed 1 unturmshed 304-675-

736 3409

Oeposil.&amp;
-.~2566

...

~

•

(2-1
13
lnp
,. """'
Ughlly
F11her Price Toys Lttlle Tyke
Toys. Play ,.n Baby Bed Bas·
Slnlt High Chao&lt; 304-675-1~

Four bedroom house In Middle
port $325 month S200 depos1t
referen ces requued no pets,
74()..992·3457

Oakwood Homes Barboursvtlle
WV $500 Down Low Rates 304

385 9621

This ne wspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which Is In vlolebon of the
law Our readers ale hereby
Informed that all dweKings
ad11erhsed In thiS Mwspaper
are avetlatlle on an equal
opportunlly ttasls

Aa••

(3041675-7763

to 12 30 pm (3041675 5089

Gall1a Me tgs Community Act ton
I&amp; Seekmg A WeatnertzaMn La
borer To Work w th Our
WeathertZSI!On Program On A
Temporary Basts Wtlt1 The Pos
Sttlil11y 01 Fullt1me In The FuMe
Excellent Physical Condmon Or
gamzattonal Sktlls And Ab1l ty To
Deal W1th PerSons Ot Venous
Socto Econom1c Ba ckgrounds
Mu st Be Able To Wo rk Ouls1de
In All Types Of Weather On lad
ders And A. t T1mes In H gn
Pla ces Drtvers Ltcense H1gh
School Graduate Or Equtvalenl
And Tra n ng In Constru ction
Trades WeathemaliOn Or A Re
lated Field Helpful Send Resume
With Thr ee (3) Aeleren ces To
Ms Wt!l C S DtVISIOn D1rector
GMCAA Box 272 Cheshire
Oh10 45620 By 12/31f98 GMCAA
Is An Equal Opp01tunlty Employ

pars Plalos Keebaugh Rd • 5
Acres Lots $14,000 Ea Near
Carpenter Very Remote 11 +
Acres $tO 500 Rutlancl, Whiles
H1ll Ad • Jus.t Ofl New L1ma l 111
Acres $14 ,000 Or 9 Acres
$12 000, Public Water Danv111e
&amp;iar Ridge + Gon Ads • - 1
W1th Mce Pond $12 000 Or 8
Acres $ 13 QOO Or On SA 325
NICe Wooded 17 Acres $18,000

675 8165

Good selecHon ol used homes
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms Sta rting al
$3995 Quick dell11e r~ Call 740

Carpenter needed tor re patrs In
exchange lor 6 mon th tree rent
892 South Second Street Middle
port 7 40 9'92 9053

.
Juat South Of Tup·

7

L1 m1ted Ollar

All real estate advertiSing WI
th is newspaper Is subtect lo
the Federal Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 whlcl') makes It illegal
to adver1•se ·any preference.
hm1ta110n or d/scr mmat•on
based on race colOr religion
se• lam lllal status or national
ongtn or any Intention to
make anv such preference.
timltat1on or dlscrlmmatlon •

oog Public wa•. 01y SCboolsl

1

800.251 -5070

Baby S1tter needed for Monday
thur •WMnesday Maybe some
Saturdays ancl Sunday 3 Jopm
BabySI!ter In our Ractne hOme 2
or 3 morntng s a week drtvers h
cense &amp; dependable rran sporta
liOn a must •740 949-2940

Fuendly Ridge Rd 15 Acres
$14,500 Great Homeslle &amp; Hunt·

$1 ,000 00 Gill Ctrtll tcate Or Lot
Rent Paid For 6 Months When
You Buy An~ Home From Us Bet
ween 12/12198 and 12/31198 I·

304 675-1957
lntenor Pa1nhng Plumbmg &amp; Re
modehng Any And All Odd Jobs

O.lllai CO Ju&amp;l Soulh Of Town.

Ci1yWa18r

batns

-Of-

New Haven 2 Bedrooms Fur-

Malo• Co

Hou1e On Stat&amp; Route 7 South
Leu Than 10 Mtnutes From
Downtown GalipOiiS, Private 2 1f2
Acre Lot W1tll Breathtaktng RIV'Ir
V- A!&gt;1Jrox 2 000 SQ FL 3 BiKf.
rooms, 2 1f2 BathS Family Room,
2 Fireplaces, HardWOOd Flooft 2
Car Garage, Lots Of E•tra&amp;l
$95,000 Ready For Immediate
Occupancy-~ 740 446 3248 740·

Georges Portable Sawm•ll don t
haul your logs to the mtlljust call

304 773 5033

110

can 1-300 H B 6909

VICt

Furntture repatr refm1s h and res
IOI'atton also custom orders Oh10
Valley Refm1Shtng Shop Larry
Plltlhps 740 992-6576

All Verd Sales Muat Be Peld tn
Adv•nce Deadline 1 OOpm the
dey before the ad Is to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1 OOpm Friday

90

'Business
Training

Gallipolis Career CoUege

QFAQLIN£· 2 00 p m
the dlly before the od

80

Insurance

surance I 800-291-6319

Be Paid In Advance

HouSe And Lot For Sale 4 Bedrooms 2 Balhs. 51 .000 Down
WAC Easy Teans Contact Oa·

$2fj 000 00 (3041882 3604

Crop Insurance Burfey ·To
ma toes Corn Ken Bass In·

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

bedrooms.

2 baths S1 000 down WAC
easy lotm$ Jocalod noor Rulland
contact David 1·800 448 6909

ment call740-992 5696

130

Yard Sale

70

Person 10 work 5pm to 9am a
adu lt care hOme call 7otO 992
5039 ask t&gt;r Katny

. _ 1 lot tor - · •

•

ACROSS

19)

Yuu II kte p evef)thlllg m pcrspedtve -t
today when 11 co me" to whom yOu
show y tlUr al fe~: ttons For tho~e
whnse )ouppon you shnu ld be Lulll
vattng \1.111 be ones In get your altenunn .and !J.enenNIY
PISCES I Fdl 10 M,~rch 20) Gtve
credit ~~oh~,;re cret.IH IS tlue 1f an asso

c~~u

LEO fJuly 21 Aug 22) Where a
LUtlllll t'rc lal ObJCliiVC IS t:ont:l!rm:J
hxlay a cnmpd llor mtght try 10
upstoge you 1n so me way Dun I
respoml m kmd ll:mdlt! th e ~ ll u tlton
wnh d.1-.s m~te.uJ .uuJ yuu II pll.' \ 1ti
VIRGO 1Aug 23 Sept 22) IJun t
feel that you h ave tu sl1.1re a ~•Ue pro·
JC:C l th ai t'i genera11ng an mcome for
you w11 h another t f 11 has nnlhtng to
do wnh th.11 person
LIBRA (S~.:pt 21 0~.:1 2l l Be
fne nJiy to everybody hut Jon lt,th
them 111 at 1,1cc v.1lue StanJ b.u;k a
btl to better obser\'e new a~.;quum
tant:e " helnre you ~:~ct too c losely
IIHOI \ eJ

your ltr~t thuughb prl.'\1 111
C'ANlERtJ\tue2 1 Jul y22t(l)tn·
p uunn ~ m a......n~.:m t cs ~.:nu hJ ' lo w
)'11 11 down [I I(! I)' SLI lr) In npt.:r.IIC '"
tnJepemkntl y u~ pm, thll.' f1o1et1
when ~~onrk1n g nn 1 ~.:o ll ectl\e
endeavor try tu (tnd spu~.:c fm your

Wha1 goes on between you and your
mate tn your own household • ~ beo;t
kepi confiden u ol today If ou1~1 ders
get uun the act tl mtghl compile 11e
matters Jn"ite.ld ol help
SAGITIAR IUS CNn\' 23 Dec
2 1) Try to select penple who ha\'e
somethmg wonhy to contnbute "'hen
tat:klmg an unp11fl lnl pmJect I!K.Ia~
Ass1g mn g th e wrong "'urker IJ) the
\HOng !.ask coultl 'hut Ll nw•t yuUI

self

produ~.:11on

nates ~ u gg~:o.t ton~ were msln.nnt:ntal
10 helpmg )OU .tU\'am;~ a ~c it - Inter
eo.;t If you ha\ll!ln 1 eameJ all ot lhe
P·••~ on the hack say ~o•
ARIES IM.m:h 2 1 Ap rt l IIJl If
ynu lind ~nu v~ t'l~en getttng .t b1t
c:..tra v. 1 ~.Lnt an yo ur spemlmg .tt t h1~
tJme t•~•'Y mtght be: the d I)' tom tkc
thll\C buJL!CI ,uJjU~IIlll!llb bCILJrC
thml!s g.l.'t totally out u t Lnnlml
f&lt;\URUS 1Apr tl 20 M If }[))
EH:n th1111eh )\Ill m1 gh1 ~I 111 nut the
day wuh tlun g.-. hmUcrtn g your lor
w.trd prugre~~ ~.:nm.h lwn -. m ge ner.1l
lod• prell) tu vnr.1ble lor you to suL
OF.M INI IMay 2 1 June ~Ol Tno
nllh.:h C\ 1111,11111n I;UU(d \~Coll.t:ll ll
gnmJ ILic.IIIM..Iay su don I tlveranal) zc
thn1gs to Ihi.' Jcgree wh~rt! 11 m1pcdc'
your ment1l mnb1~1y_ L! ~ ~nme nf

SCORPIO iOd 24 Nov 221

!111e

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KogUve (CC)

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Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel ·

Monday, December 21, 1998

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday

After killing deaf woman, Amtrak train derails, injuri_ng 15
By C. BRYSON HUU

"It's genenliud mosdy a.; neck and back Pain," English said. "Nothing
life !lm:uening. it appears. at this time. So we're really thankful it wasn't
Auoclated Press Wtllllr
ARLINGTON, Texas -An Amtrak passenger train carrying 199people worse."
derailed and injured 15 pa&lt;sengers only four hours after the same train struck
Eight passenger can and one baggage car of the westboul!d min left the
uacks.
Arlington fire U Pat English said.
and killed a deaf woman walking on the tracks.
The train. hound from Chicago to Los Angeles, k.illed Nancy Martinez,
Jolin Wolf. an Amtrak spokesman in Washinglon, would not say how fiiSI
33, as she walked on the track.&lt; southea..t of Dallas around 4 p.m. EST Sun- tile liain was traveling. oordid tlley have any e•planation for lhe derailmenl
Thr posted speed limit in the area is 60 mph. but the train was ~ly
day and then derailed as it left Pallas through Arlington.
The woman lived in the area. but it was·unclear why she was walking on traveling much slower at tile time it left tile tracks, English said. Several pasthe tracks in her southea&lt;l Dallas neighborhood. said Dallas police Ll BJ. sengen estimated the train wa\ going no faster than 40 mph.
"Alltbe damage is just crinkling on the cars." he said.
Watkins.
Thr Federal Railroad Administration and National Tnmsponation SafePassengers said .they were not told why the train was stopped.
"II ju't stopped and they didn't say anything to us except to say that some- ty Board are investig:uing.
Thr derailment occurred in an industrial area just sowh of the Si• Aags
thing happened." p&lt;L&lt;-senger Wayne Newell of Deer Park. Ill.. said. ·
After a three-hour wait while police investigated the accident. the train . over Texas amusement park and Thr Ballpark in Arlington. Derailed cars were ·
continued on its scheduled f\)Ute through Dallas before it derailed shortly after confined to a dilch that sefl'll"lle&lt; busy Division Stree« from the railroad tracks.
Union Pacific Railroad crews also were dispalched to help clear tile tracks
8 p.m. ESt.
•
with
heavy equipmenl That could t:ll&lt;e as long as two days. English. said.
At least 15 of the 199 passengers aboard tile double-decker superliner.
Then: arc several retail businesses along the. two-block stretch of the road.
Amtrak's Te&lt;as Eagle. were treated for minor injuries. officials said.

who could be business as 1 ~eSUII of tile c~ini.
·
More dwt rwo dozen emergency vehicles were at lhe dernilmcnt site,
includinJ ambuiiiiCCS and fue ttucb.
·
Uninjured passengers were !liken 10 a nearliy recre:uion center, where tlley
huddled in a gymnasium to await a bus lhal would take diem to a Fort Wonh
holel.
·
Many, anxious to lei relative&lt; know tlley were not hurt: clamored for one
avaiJable telqlllone at the center. and a few icc'd down bruised shins.
Passen2ers said there was no warning before the .tram deraded.
wwedecided to gel si• o'clock dinner and we were just eating and it was
really bumpy at lint," said 13-year-old leashia McKenzie. "Thr nell thing
I know we were falling into the grass."
.
·
The Chicago teen said she and her 4-year.md sister. accompanied by their
grandmother, were bound for San Antonio {O visit their mother for Christmas.
" It's amazing in that dining car tllal more people weren 't injured becau.se
there was so much gla"-&lt; and tile floor was extremely slippery becau.o;c the
salad dressing and things like th:u were spilled." said pa,senger Clyda Cole
of Longview, Tc•a&lt;.

orange. and that was it, " says Bogie,
'a local planning cominissioner who

for a few grim weeks in 1988 ran this
tow ns makeshift monuary. "There
are cenain sounds I heartoday that
make me shiver. And I'm not going
to say more.

Like many hen:. Bogie is battling
to forget the unforge ttable . .A;nd he is
losing.

Ten years ago Monday. 1Pan Am
Flight 1!)3 exploded · in the dark.
frigid skies over Lockorbie. When the
747 jet crashed to the ground. it killed
II loclls arid 259 people on the jet,
ages 2 months to 82 years. Most of
those on board were Americans.

The catastrophic event on Dec. 21 ,
1988. literally transformed this village of 3.000 near the English border,
reshaping both it&lt; psychological and
·physical foundations.
More than half the town volunteered to help with relief effons on
that bleak night. Now few are able to
set aside memories of the tlames.the
bodies and other visions of hell on
eanh.
A number of blocks were nauened
hy falling debris, none more completely than Sherwood Crescent.
To&lt;.lay, a park has sprouted where a
burning fusclage ·once lay.
Bur lhere is a tremendous desire
here ro move on.

Most Lockerbie veterans shun the
·media and ·its obsession with the past.

Many who live here today were not

· present 10 years ago. Some who wen:
have moved away.
This progressive spirit caused
townspeople to initially oppose all
plans to mark the lOth anniversary of
what is known here as the Loclcerbie
Air Disaster.
"To a man. they said. 'Let's put it
behind us.' "says Marjory McQueen.
52. a town council member. "But
then we decided we couldn't do that.
We · share this with too many othef
people."
And so at 3 p.m. Monday there
will be a wreath-laying ceremony at
Dryfesdale Cemetery. where a gmn·
· ite wall bears the chiseled names of
all 270 victims.
At 7 p.m., a special Ma" will
begin at the town's parish church.
There will be a moment of silence at
7:03. the time of the crash.
Had Flight 103 not been 20 min·
utes behind schedule, the timed
explosive aboard the jet might have
shattered the plane over the Atlantic.
Fate's.,fickle nature claws at many
here stilL
"The wings landed a half a mile
away: Falling from six miles "Up.
that's only a matter of a little breeze
and it would have been this' house."
says Davie Wilson, 55, a high school
teacher who took three months off to
help P.,lice investigate.
"We all had narrow escapes." he
says softly. "Very few days go by
without• me wishing this, never happened. At the time, we all were functiona I right away because we helpe&lt;.l

"fat:llistic •· approach of the S ~ol&lt;.
Taking pains to ensure that the comment is not taken disrespectfully;
some even profes.&lt; dismay at the open
emOiionalism displayed by visiting
families.
"It's stiff, upper-lip stuff.'' Wilson
says. "No tears."
Marjory McQueen's husband,
Kenneth, spent 48 hours helping
police search for bodies in the surrounding fields.
He came home every few houn
with a few officers. and she filled
them with brandy "to numb them
from what they were seeing." Mar·
· jory McQueen says.
Kenneth McQueeh ~ no need to
review the events of I0 years ago.
But his wife jokes that he's "fine: he
wa&lt; crabby before (the occident). and
he's still crabby now. We just didn 't
have time to develop psychological
illnesses."
Donald Bogie says as much. "We
all just did what we had to do." he
·. says. "For example. we decided to
launder all the victims' personal
· effects. about 11.000 items in aiL
Something for the families."
For a month, 32 Lockerbie women
· worked · nonstop on one victim's
belongings at a time. Sometimes th~l
meant a luggage full of things. Other times just aT-shirt.
"They· were ironing pages of
Bibles, cleaning shoes .and washing
baby socks. But it just had to _be
done." Bogie says.
The people of Lockerbie each car-

Tomorrow: light snow
High: 20s; Low:20s

out. But at the same time. il'sclearwe

ries his or' her own scars and life

were burying our feelings."
· · lessons from those weeks.
Some locals a\cribe their closed
Bogie is haunted by his noises,
nature to what many describe as the sounds that cause the past to in'vade

Civil-ity fades as 'mean season'
pervades Washington politics
By JILL LAWRENCE
USA Today
WASHINGTON - It has been a
mean season. an open sea:-ion- anything but a holiday season in the
nation's capital. A season of "repel·
lent excitement." in the words of
Columbia University historian Alan
Brinkley.
The political wreckage is already
stunning, and the casualties [llay
well mount.
The private lives of politicians are
under scrutiny by investigators.ranging from Independent Counsel Ken
Starr to pornographer Larry Flynt.
and "The Scarlet Letter" suddenly
se~ms

more like a semcncing guide

than a cautionary tale.
The predictable culmination was
the historic impeachment of President
Clinton over matters rooled in extramarital se•. The shocking denouement was Rep. Bob Livingston's

wholly due to the fac) that he has lied
to them repeatedly.··
Brinkley. surveying the scene
from London, where he is teaching
this year. said Sunday he could-think
of "no historic parallel for the morass
of pa"ion and ferul hatred that Wash·
ington has become." He called it "a
meltdown of the political system, and
I """ it wi II take a genemtion or more
for the nation to reco\ler from it."

Other observers. though distressed
by the climate. offered less apocalyptic views. Politi~al scientist Larry
Sahato, author of "Feeding Frenzy:·
a history of political scandals, said it
was important to remember the
eXcesses of McCarthyism in its original incarnation.
'To be called a communist in the

1950s had a lot more sorious conse4Ut:nccs on your 1 career than to be
called an adulterer in the 1990s," he
.
announcement amid Saturday 's said.
David Gergen, a Republican vetimpeachment debate. two days after
confessing to adulterous affairs, lhat eran of both the Reagan and Clinton
he would not be the new House White Houses. said Sunday on CNN
Speaker and would in fact quit the that he had " rarely seen it uglier" in
HoUse.
• Washington. But. he added that "I
It Was an_explosive btit som.ehow dont think this shakes the foundafining end to a year in which caret:rs tions of the Republic" the way Water·
were broken, r~putation s were tar- gate did .
.
nished and traditional notions of priThough cynkism ·about govern~acy and ~.: ivility in politi cs vomished.
ment has heen on the rise since Viet·
'"There's no incentive for good mu-i1 and Watergate, the line between
~opk to want to get into g.ove mprivate and public character began
. men!. and that. I think. is perhaps the eroding later. Some date it to the Gary
most dangerous thing that"s happen· Hart debacle of May 1987.-Two years
ing from all of this ... Leon Panetta. a later. former Sen. John Tower crashed
former Clinton ('hi~f of ~ laff, solid up against the new standard when
Sunday on CNN .
'
allegation.o; of womanizing and drinkDernocrms have taken to lament- ing killed his dream of becoming
ing "' the politics of personal destruc- Defense secretary.
tion." attributing both the Clinton and
President Kennedy never paid a
Livingston debac! ~s tolhe poisonous price for the egregious womanizing it
atmosphere. ··Moral McCarthyism is now clear he practiced while in the
has got to stop in this town. We're White House. Was he treated too
absolutely shredding these institu· li ghtly or is the new approach too
tions and people who are good peo- tough' And should a single standard
ple, solid people." Sen. Chri,topher apply 0
Dodd. D-Conn.. said Sunday on
" Your private life can become so
messy that it begins to affect. your
NBC.
Republicans have been talking of public life," Sabato said. "Suppose
constitutional responSiblht~&lt;s and the so"lcone i~ a compulsive se xual
rule of law. Some blame the current predator. That takes a lot or time and
climate on Clinton, whom they energy. It's dangerous and reckless. It
regard as n liar who would bomb Iraq can result in extonion. Should that
to avert or delay an impeachment kind of person be i~ high office'? I
I
dont think so."
vote.
,
Yet Sabato and others say it"s also
''Bill Clinton is reaping a harvest risky to set the bar unrealistically
of ill will that he is solely responsi· high. If the wave of sexual outings
ble for." formerGOPpanychairman continues, said Rep. Bob Ney, RRich Bond said. "That congression- Ohio. " we're going to have to bring
al Republicans don 't trust him is the pope over hen: to be speaker. And

a

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Meigs County's
.

Fea

'

rna;._A few plaques hang on the wall.

and three book.~ rest on a freshly lacquered desk.
One book features 270 whiie
pages, each bearing one victim's
name in calligrolphy. Another features
photos and detailed biographies of
members of the group.
The la•t is a guest bouk. Visitors
have come from all over the wOrld.
Most ju.&lt;t sign their names. But others feel compelled to do more.

A mother and father write to their
late daughter: "We are once again
here to visit you and the peaceful .
countryside of Lockerbie: You now
have a little niece named after you.
How we wish you could be here."

needs to know.

. ,.- ~

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Rio Grande Community College and . Fred Hoffman and Jeffrey Thornton and which will be mark_e,t surveyed during
·
winter quarter.
the Meigs County Department of Human other Meigs County leaders.
Services will work together to provide
Dorsey and Swisher said in a joint
" All classes will be held in the, Meigs
educational resources to Meigs Coutity statement: "We are proud to walk down County Center," said URG 'Provost Greg
welfare recipients through the URG ·Meigs · this new road together."
Sojka. "We are now getting the Center 's
Center in Middleport .
The agreement will allow -the 100 wei · second floor ready for a big influx of stuThrough its agreement with Meigs fare recipients to receive six months of dents to use the new computer lab ." Gina
County DHS, URG will educate up 100 training "to rapidly prepare individuals Pines, the center's director, will be avail·
wei fare recipients for up to six 'months of for the ·world of work," according to the able to students as they progress through
contract.
the program to work opportunities.
training in one of three subject areas.
The welfare to work educational trainThe Meigs Center was established in
The program is funded by a $225,000
grant.
ing includes winter quarter orientation March to provide educational opportuni·
"Who • would bave thought thai five classes: wellness, career , development, ties to Meigs County residents.
The Microcomputer Applications in
years ago that' we (human -services) would reading . and learning preparation and
enter into a contract witfi" Rio .Grande to employment readiness.
Business (MAB) program is the first pro·
Classe~ begin Jan . 5 at the Meigs Cen· gram offered i~rough the center.
help welfare recipients toward work
Other programs will follow as the maropportunities," said Mike Swisher, direc- ter.
tor of the Meigs County DHS.
Students may choose from one of three kel needs and student interests are identiSIGN CONTRACfl' _ Meigs County Depilrtm.ent of Huinan Services
"We have great confidence in Rio educational tracks during .the spring quar- fied.
Dlr,ctor Mlk&amp;Swlisher, seated at left, and University of Rio Grande Prasl•
Grande in providing specialize4 educa- ter: office technology, childhood develop·
"This is a very innovative approach," dent Barry M. Dorsey signed a contract for the unlvaralty to provide _edutional packages leading to jobs for Meigs ment/day care provider. or training from a said Swisher, who called !he agreeme'nl_ catlonal services to Meigs County welfare recipients. Also present were,
residents," he added during a cootrac( · third group of areas such as state-tested the first partnership of its kind in this standing from left: former Meigs county Economic Development Director
signing ceremony Monday between him- nurses aide or truck driver training.
area.
Ron McDade; Carl Dahlberg, chairman of the Rio Granda Community Col·
self. UR!} President Barry M. Dorsey,
The third track of selections will
The goal of the program is to create lege Board; Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes; and
County Commissioners Janet Howard,
depend on the area's job rm=-=ar=.k::::-e=t-::.n=~e.:_d_s..:,=g-=o=o=d=e=m=p=.lo_y_e_e_s._h_e-.,..sa-id_._ _-::-:::--::---Co-u_n_ty..:_C_o_m_m_l_s_sl_o.,ners Fred Hoffman, Janet fioward and Jeff f!!ornto_n~ .

s,~:a:n~h:~~~~~~':c~~~c:s:~~~~r~~:~;=a~-h~u~~~

lime's announcement came as

Clinton became the second president
impeache&lt;! by the House aild onlered
to stand trial in the Senate.
"The news reinforced our deci·
sion, which we had been wrestling
with until the final days." Isaacson
wroce in the double-issue that appew-s
on newsstands Monday_
He said of Clinton and Starr that
their "shared obstinacy but radically
diiTerent personalities and values
caused them to be•-qme entwined in
a sullied embrace and paired for his·
tory." , ...

'

Syracuse
OKs
permissive au'to license tax
Syracuse Village Council approved an ordinance to put a $5 permissive tax
on automobile licenses for residents of the village.
The action, taken during council's regular December meeting, will take
effect next year, it was noted.
In addition, Robert Wingett, grants administrator, informed council that the
village will not get the grant it has requested for street paving.
He recommended that council appropriate $1,000 next year to be used as
malching funds for Issue 2 money.
.
.
Council also discussed applying for a 2 percent loan for the paving project,
since the grant funding was rejected. Council is also seeking a grant to refinish the tennis courts.
' Council members Larry Lavender and Donna Pet...On were appointed as
repi-e'sentatives·to'ihe fire depai1rntht dependency board.
· ·
• ·
They will work with Ralph Lavender and Eber Pickens Sr., who were
appointed by the fire department. Gene Imboden was appointed to repi!'C" the
late Troy Zwilling on the board.
In addition, council decided to see the Carleton School about SUipping and
refinishing the floors at village hall and the fire department.
Treasurer Janice Zwilling present. ed the following financial report for
November:
general
fund,
$33,863.91; street construction,
$10,823.65; highway, $11,13.35;
Today's
fire, $4,552.71; water, $3,351.07;
1 Sections • 10 Pages
pool, (-$3,407.58): guaranty meter,
$3,354.37; cemetery, $95.65; total,
$57,747.13.
Also present were Mayor George
Connolly, and council members
Kathryn Crow, Bill Roush, Mony
Wood and Eber Pickens Jr.

'

and Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Strickland swore in Davenpon and Shoemaker and was then sworn in himself by outgoing Appeals Court Judge Alan Goldsberry.
Afterwanls, all tbe candidates paused for a
groupsession.
"lam proud to say I have never lost an elec·
tion in Meigs County," said Strickland, who
added, "This county represents so much of why
I want to be in Congress. The people in this
county are good people... of both parties."
Strickland spoke briefly about the past week
in Washington, which saw the impeachment of
President Bill Clinton in the House of Repn:sentatives. Strickland voted against impeachment.
,,.

During the upcoming year, Democrat coun·
ty officeholders will _include all three county
oommissioners, Davenport, Janet Howard and

will be hard for Congress to oome together ...

.

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Continued on paga A3

the sale. ·
In other business, the commissioners met with Susan Oliv- '

er, ~xecutive director of the Meigs County Council on Aging,
who presented bid specifications and a request for bids which
will be advenised for a new "Hot-Shot" vehicle ·to be used by the Senior Center for the home-delivered meals service. .
The .commissioners have pledged funding from the Community Development Block Grant formula program to pay for
the vehicle, which will replace a similar vehicle which is
already in use.
The board awarded a bid to Foreman &amp; Abbott Heating and
Cooling of Middleport to supply a new heating and air conditioning unit at the Racine Volunteer Fire Department at a co~l
of $6,640. Bids fur the system were opened last week and the
commissioners deemed the bid from Foreman and Abbott as
the lowest bid.

S

Pick 3: 3-8-5; Pick 4: 4-0·7·5
Buckeye 5: 7-14-19·20-33

''

W.VA

DaUy 3: 9-2-4; Daily 4: 2·5·3·2
C 1998 Oh,io Valley Publishing Co.

Ho...: do,you

ge~

the great outdoors in that one

holi~ay

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - President Clinton's
lawyers, who may challenge whether it is con- .
stitutional for a lame-duck Congress to impeach
a president, won't find much to bolster their
case from the Senate's widely acknowledged
eminence grise, Sen. Robert. Byrd, D-W.V.
Byrd, who has written a four-volume histoT'f of the Senate and is considered to be that
body's most knowledgeable parliamentary
scholar, will not speak directly about President
Clinton's legal strategy.
But in his acclaimed history, Byrd wrote
that there ts precedent . for an impeachment
proceeding to carry over from one Congress to
the ne~t. as was the case with former U,S. District Judge Alcee Hastings of Florida. The
House vot~d to impeach Hastings in 1988, but
the Senate didn't convict him until 1989.
The White House is toying with the idea of
moving to dismissal least one of the articles
of impeachment voted Saturday against Clinton on the grounds that one Congress cannot
take up an impeachment voted by another.
ln the Clinton ca1e, it will be a new Senate
sworn in on Jan. 6 that will review the .
impeachment articles _approved by a House
that is being replaced in January.
One thing Byrd is adamant about is he
.
doe sn'l think the_Senate should get involved
in any plea bargain agreement with the White
House for censure or any other solution.
"For the good of our nation, there must be
no deal involving the White House or any

Jones Golf Trail. It '"perfect stocking stufl'er for the one on
your list who can't get ~nough ch":mpionship golf: With a golf
and hotel package starting at

f169; you ca-n give that special
'

golfer 3 days of unlimited golf playing what Th,• Nrw Yt&gt;rk Timt.•
called "some of' the be~t public golf on Eanh':. Buy before
•

December 25, 1998. Valid until August, 1999, Call today a,;-d give
'

him or her a package as big as all outdoors.
0C...rt nol

The commissioners also:

SWORN IN -Democratic politicians at the federal, state and county level
came together for a swearlng-ln ceremony at the Meigs County Courthouse
Monday night. Sworn In were U.S. R11p. Ted Strickland of Lucasville, State
Sen. Michael Shoemaker of Bourneville and County Commlssloner·altict
Mlck Dav n
of Middleport. From left are County Commissioners Jeff
Thornton and J net Howard, Davenport, Strickland, Shoemaker, Sheriff
James M. Soul
and county Democratic Party Chairwoman Sue Malson.

• Approved the reappointment of Father. Walter Heinz to a
four-year term on the MR/DD board;
• Approved the appointment of Laurie Reed to the Meigs ·
County District Public Library Board, to replace Mary K.
Yost, who resigned;
. • Passed a resolution closing the courthouse at noon on
Thursday for the Christll)as holiday.
Present were Commissioners Fred Hoffman, Janet Howard
and Jeffrey Thornton.

~~record ~!~~-~~.!.mpeachment ~!.?,~,~~~ Chrh; tmas

stocking'! Give him or her a trip to Alabama ·s Robert Trent

.•

The County Extension. office, which has been located in the
building for many years. will also use more space now that the ·
home has been closed.
Appliances, beds and bedroom furnishings, sofas and
chairs and bedding, draperies and Other items were included in

' -'

SANDUSKY, (AP) -A basketball referee has been charged with
running a prostitution ring thai
worked bachelor panics.
Stephen C. :Parker, 32, of Oberlin, was arrested Friday on five
counts each of ·promoting proslitu·
lion and procuring women for prOstitution. He denied the charges and
was released after posting a bond
of$37,500. -

County Home auction

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
,'
The sale of furnishings from the Meigs cOunty Home on
Saturday generated just over $3,000, according to Auctioneer
Dan Smith, who reported .on the sale at the regular weekly
meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners on Monday
afternoon.
·
The board hired Smith to conduct the auction so that the
building, which has been closed to indigentresidents since last
·summer, could be emptied in preparation for renovations. The
commissioners voted to close the building due to fi nanci·al
concerns, and after the failure of a proposed levy for operating
expenses.
.
.
The building will be converted to au•iliary office space for
county departments, including the Veterans Servi~e Office, the
oft)ce of Recycling and utter Control, and the Fair Housing
w~:·:-r.-~~~~'~r.~~~ ~::.Grants Office, which alrea(jy ~pies space irl' the build-

Basketball ref charged In
alleged pJostitution ring

caught in a trap set by Hustler magazine publisher Flynt.
In a Washington Post ad in Octo·
. ber. Flynt offered $1 million for evi·
de nee or illicit affairs with top politi·

or

Board of County Commissioners for the first
time ever at the beginning of the year.
This was pointed out during a swearing-in ·
ceremony held Monday night at the Meigs
County Courthouse for newly elox:ted andre·
ele&lt;:tedDemocraticofficeholders.
Sworn in were U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland of
Lllcasville, State Sen. Michael Shoemaker of
Bourneville and County Commissioner-eled
Mick Davenport ofMiddlepQrt.
''We have elected for the first time in the history of Meigs County a Democrntic board (of
county oommissioners)." dlmmented county
Democratic Party Chairwoman Sue Maison.
Noting the packed courtroom, she recalled a
. time about 2(i years ago when those attending a
· ~f!"'!1l'.~Bl'Jm'ly filled a -.u.

~dood'Atternoon ;

all. Livingston. the latest, was

atlain; with Livingston, and they
were corroborated. Flynt said at a
' news conference Friday in Los Angeles and over the weekend on CNN's
Reliable Sources.
Flynt said he'll publish details on
sever~l top Republicans in his mag·
azine and on his Web site shonly after
Jan. I. "I assure you there are many
-others to come ... he_said on CNN.
And why is he doing this'! "It's the
hypocrisy that bother.&lt; me," Flynt
said ... If these people on the Hill.are
going to sit in judgment on the president, they shouldn't have any skeletons in their own closet."
Gergen, on CNN, said the White
Hou...e should ask Flynt to "cea&lt;e a~d
desist" and call off other overly
aggressive allies as well: "The White
House can't have it both ways. They
can't conduct a high-toned. presi·
, dential set of statements and at the
same time have this lower level gut·
ting of the opposition."
Sen. Joseph Biden. D-Del .. said he
considered sending a letter to every
member of Congress after watching
Livingston's bombshell on the House .
tloor. He would write, "We should oil
take a _pledge. We should take i
pledge to stop this stuff."

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Meigs-County,- University of Rio Grande _sign educational contract

·

dans. Four women made claims

Middleport ~ Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume'49, Number 163

l"

But this type of delicate calibra- ·
tion is nowhere apparent at the
moll)ent. Democrats see Starr and the
Republicans who put his work on the
Internet as the ultimate panisan peeping Toms. Republicans. meanwhile.
have contempt for the media. ranging'
from Hustler to Salon to local newspapers, that have dug into politicians'
sex lives to e.pose alleged hypoctisy.
Four House Republicans admitted
to sexual misconduct this year just
before media outlets had planned to
rev~a-1

'

Hometown Newspaper

Democrats sworn-in at Meigs ceremony Commissioners discuss:

named in the pa•t.

president."
· Flaws are a pan of the human con·
ditiop. and "it's ludicrous to demand
purity of everybody." said Jean Elshtain. an ethics professo• at the University of Chicago divinity schooL
When it comes to ex.tramarital
a(fairs. she drew a distinction
between a sin and.a crime: ··were the
laws of the land broken? Did it take
place in a place of work' Is it a public concern'!" If it :s a simple cas~ of
adultery. she sai&lt;.l. nobody wants or

-Page4

•

Clinton, Starr will share Time
cover as ·its men of. the year
By DIEGO IBARGUEN
"But · at deeijion time it came
Associated Presa Writer
down to who, in '*end, had the most
NEW YORK - In the midst of impact on thew~ the news actually
their struggle in Wa,hington, Presi- unfolded throughbut the year." Isaacdent Clinton and independent coun- son wrote.
.
sel Kenneth Starr are sharing the covAlthough the decision is often
er of Time as the magazine's Men of ., made months in ·lll!vance, this year
the Year.
the choice wa~ 'i9.t fin~lized until
Other candidates for what is usu- Thursday. said magazine spokes~lly the Man of the Year were
woman Debra Richman.
Chairman Alan Greenspan. Sen. Jolin
Isaacson definell the Man of the
Glenn. ba&lt;eball slugger Marie MeG- Yenr as "the perso(l or persons who
wire and the peacemakers in Ireland. most affected the news of our lives.
Hillary Rodham Clinton also wa' a for good or for Ill, and embodied
'leading contender for the magazine's wh:U wa.• imponant abOut the year,
annual nod to the year's top news- for better or for worse."
maker, said Walter Isaacson. Time's
,Adoff Hitler. Josef Stalin and the ·
managing editor.
Ayatollah Khomeini are among those

Miami hands
Denver second
consecutive loss

•

.

the preo;cnt. " And I can still picture
Stroll Sherwood Crescen~ and a
those wee coffin,&lt;." he says. "Can beautifully landscilped park inlerrupl&lt;
you imagine?;.
a row of two-story brick homes. But
McQueen is upbeat and says she sit at its lone bench and you spy a
is no longer' attached to material JIO"· plaque embedded in a boulder. commemor:uing the seven lives lost. on
sessions.
But with little promp{ing, she ' that very spot.
vividly recalls a neighbor's son who
Visit picturesque Thunderganh
camelo her house after the falling jet Parish Church. about three winding
killed most of his family: " 'This is miles from town. and you catch the
alii can find of my family.' he said. scent of soil on a strong breeze and
and then he held up a tiny. pla,tic, the sight of white sheep doning
emerald fiekk But it wa&lt; there that
bright green watering can."
'
The town of Locl::erbie also carries the nose cone and fint-cla&lt;.&lt; section
iL' wounds. Never mind the new of Aight 103 came to rest.
In what once rWa.'i a stohc underhousing developments, or the Christtaker's
shed is one of two official
mas lights strung across its main·
memorials
to cra.&lt;h victims. the othstreet for the first time in 10 years.
Step inside town hall and you'll er being the lan;e wall at Dryfesdule
,
see a new auditorium with gleaming Cemetery. ~
Where
the,
cemetery
setting is
•White walls. Before its face lift. this
open
to
the
skj.
this
memorial
is intisame hall held dozens of coffins.
.

ports

.

College basketball roundup, Page 5
Ovarian cancer, Page 6
·Meigs woman injured in electrical fire, Page 3

Today: Snow showers
High: 30s; Low:10s

PanAm crash's memories won't fade soon in Lockerbie
By MARCO R. DEUA CAVA
USA Today
LOCKERBIE. S~otland - The
horror descende.j on Donald Bogies
life with apocalyptic impact.
"The hpuse shook. the sky went

Dec:emiMr 22, 1998

eat er

1·100-257·3465.

indudc(l

www.rtjgotr.com

•

membership of the U.S.
·
third term as a member of the
Senate,"· he said Monday.
U.S. House.
"Whether there is a trial or
" During Hasting's impeachwhether there is some other
men!, Byrd quotes the late
solu'tion, that decision rnu~t
Re~. Mi~." Synar~ D-Okla., as
be made by senalors and 11
saytng,_ 1here IS no statute
must be bipartisan or it )"ill
of hm1tat1ons . applicable to
have absolutely no credithe a(tlcles of Impeachment:-bility -with the public ." _ .
the enforcement of publtc
In addttton to settltng
nghts and the protectiOn of
the question over whether
the ~ubltc mterest cannot be
an impeachment proceedterm1nated by the pas~age of
ing begun in one Congress
time....
. ,
can be settled in another,
Byrd also ~role that htstory
Byrd wrote in his history
says that c1vtl and cnmmal
that the Hastings' c~se also
~landa~ds ?f proof don't apply
settled . the question of
m Senate tmpeachment tnals.
whether impeachment artiSen. Robert Byrd, D-W.V.
'-'A senator may apply any
cles have statute of limita·
.
standard of proof he or she
tions.
demes, or may choose to apply no set standard
· The Senate overwhelmingly rejected a whatever," Byrd wrote.
.
motion to dismiss Hastings' case after his
"Because the. sole _penalttes. are ~~mo~al
lawyer argued that .Hastings had been acquit· from offic_e. and, occasiOnally, dtsquallftcatton
ted of the charges by 'a jury:·
f;om hold~ng further Off1ce,th; essenttal q~esThe House voted 413-3 to impeach Hast· tton remams: I~ thl~. person f11 for a contmu·
ings of Florida for an alleged bribery scheme, ance m th1s off1ce? Byrd asked.
Byrd satd _senat?rs should ponder wheth~r
alleged lying under oath and an alleged leak
of a wire tap.
c?ntl.~ua_nce m off1ce for an tmpeached offt·
In 1989, th e Senate convicted Hastings on ctal bnngs the . poht1cal o_r JUdiCi al sysle';'
eight of 11 articles and ordered him rcmovJ;d lij!O dtsrepute and undermmes the people s
· gove~nmen t ."
from office. Hastin~s is I he first federal o ff.1- tru~~ a~ d con f'd
t ~nee 10
ci~l to be convicted by the Senate after a JUry
_ It ts a questiOn that requtr~s sober reflec acquitted him at his criminal trial on related lion and · ludes standards of proof," Byrd
charges.
added.

'

·

is

•••

-r.a,...,.

DREAMING - Wish books, store windows, aisles of toys and
other temptations make dreaming easy itor kids of all ages at
Christmas. Samuel McCall, 7, found lots to look at on Tuesday at
Ashley's Crafts and Things In Pomeroy. He Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Greg McCall ol Darwin.

•·

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