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I

I

Ohio Lottery

Bengals fall
44·42 at hands ·
of Eagles

I

Super Lotto:
9-10-12-17-19-35
Kicker:

3-7-7-9-2-9
Pick 3:

0-7-7

Sports on Page 4

Plck4:
3-3-1-9

I

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~.....

N0. 1st

CW151

50.

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·a1

. 2SectiOM,12P. . . 3$-

Pomeroy-Mid~leport, Ohio, Monday, December 1, 1997

~ltl'. Ohio Valley Pulllllhlng Company

Clearing tonlghf, lowe
In the upper 20e. Tuellday,
moetly eunny. High• neer

A o.nn.tt Co. Netnp.,_.

Diplomatic moves pay.ing off
in easing tensions ·with Iraqis
WASHINOTON (AP) - The
threat of conflict with Iraq is showing signs of easing as lop U.S. and
U.N. officials ·say they are seeking
diplomatic solutions and expanded
humanitarian aid for hungry Iraqis.
In separate comments Sunday,
the top official at the United Nations
and the Clinton administralion's U.N.
ambassador said the possibility of
military conflict with Iraq remains in
the background while diplomats play
the lead role.
"We will conlinue to use ... a pallern of strong, diplomacy within 1he
U.N. Security Cooncil (and) bilater,
al diplomacy backed by a robust·military presence in the Persian Gulf,"
Ambassador Bill Richardson said on
NBC's "Meet the Press."
Late(, on CNN's Late EditiQn,''
14

Richardson said the situation "has the same time we have to recognize pilots, one never knows what would
eased a little bit" because of Iraq's that the teams have been able to happen," Annan said of the American
decision to allow U.N. weapons accomplish a lot," Annan said on surveillance planes making flighiS
inspectors, including Americ;ans, ABC's "This Week."
over Iraq.
back in the country.
"It's their palaces and their deciEarlier Sunday, thousands of
Stilt Richardson called "unac- sion whom they invite, but that's no! Iraqis gathered in downtown Baghceplable" Iraqi leader Saddam Hus- what we are interesled in. We arc dad shouting "Down with America!"
sein's refusal to allow the interna- inlerested in the government giving and taking pan in a mass funeral for
tional inspeclors to examine some of access to the inspectors to go wher- dozens of children whose deaths
the dozens of palaces that U.N. offi- ever they suspect illegal material may Iraq blamed on U.N. sanctions.
cials suspect may contain evidence of be hidden," Annan said.
Annan is studying a report by
Iraqi puclear, chemical and biol.ogiHe. said three Security Council UNICEF lhat thousands of Iraqi chilcal weapons programs.
members- France, Russia and Chi- dren are dying each week in pan as
U.N. Secrelary General Kofi na- remain opposed to the use of a result of the internationally imposed
Annan struck a patient tone on access force against Iraq. Even the United sanctions on the Iraqi regime.
to Saddam's palaces, saying that States unilaterally slriking Iraq would · The U.N. chief said both the
negotiations later this week between require a sudden tum of events. he amount and quality of food going to
Iraqi officials and chief U.N. inspec- said.
Iraq must increase and that new
tor Richard Butler may settle the
"If there were to be a provocation, equipmem may be needed to purify
impasse.
for example, if the Iraqis were to drinking water to prevent dysentery.
"We have had difficulties, bUI at shoot at the U-2s threatening U.S.

Stepfather
faces trial
today in
girl's death
IRONTON (AP)- Jack Volgares
goes on trial today for the murder of
. his stepdaughter, Seleana Gamble,
whose body was found buried in the
. VISITS SANTA - Brittany Jeffer1, 8, of Pomeroy, wea one of
family's back yard.
..,
th~
Jlret. to ~!.Jit Santi ClaulttQIIf)wln!J the P - o , llilrchanll ·
.. He is c~f)O;cted lO testify in
As~tlon
1 Chrlsbnal 'Parade Sunday. A qu- of boy• and
Lawrence ·County Common ~;'leas
glrla
was
on
hand brllvlng steady rains to melle their •rty
Court !hat he killed lhe 7-year'old
raqueetl
to
tha
jolly alf.
accideiually.
Because the cause of death is
undetermined. the case win rely in .
pan on medical testimony. It will be
up to the jury to decide if Volgares, •
42,killedSeleanawithintent,anelement necessary to prove murder.
Volgarcs is charged with murder,
NEW YORK (AP)-;- Slores offering deep diseouniS and low prices fared
three counts of kidnapping, five best overthe Thanksgtvmg weekend as budget-conscious consumers looked
couniS of obstructing justice, tam- for bargains in the first days of the holiday shopping season.
pering with evidence and illegal cuiCrowds packed the nation's stores and malls, but many shoppers went
tivation of marijuana.
straight for. sale racks and bought only when the price was right, retailers
"Clearly, 1he whole community's srud Sunday.
·
.
been touched by this. My whole
"Christmas time is no different tban the rest of the year." said Kurt
office bas been touched by this," Barnard, a retail consultanl and president of Barnard's Retail Trend Repon.
County Prosecutor J.B . Collier Jr. "Shoppers wantlo get more for their money so they favor stores that otTer
said. "It's dearly a high-profile case the best prices."
that's received a lot of publicity.".
Despite mediocrc.salcs for much of this year, retailers are optimistic about
The lrial could have implications this Christmas season. But many are finding they must go to great lengths
for Mona Volgares' case. The 28- to en11ce shoppers.
·
year-old is accused of causing her
Many stores unlocked lheir doors before dawn Friday, while others stayed
daughter's death by not getting med- open 24 hours. Some offered extra discounts to early morning arrivals- as
ical help. She go.:s on trial Dec. 15 much as 50 perccnl.
.
for involuntary manslaughter. Her
Discounters and moderately priced depanment stores like Wal -Man Tarlawyer says without knowing .the get and.Sears drew in Oocks of consumers with special promotions, low Prices
cause of death, the .charge can't be and wide selections of merchandise.
proved.
"The ·big deals offered early Friday drove in shoppers," said Ken Yolk
Defense lawyer Mike Mearan says ·marketing director for mall developer Simon DeBartolo Group in the Ne..;
the pretrial publicity will prevent Vol- . York Cny area. "We had hundreds of people in line at many of our malls
garcs from gelling a fair trial. The before 7 a.m."
judge will decide his request to move
But, he added, malls "didn't sec 1ha1 same early rush on Saturday."
the trial based on how jury selection I Many slorcs reponed slower sales as the weekend progressed, with more
goes.
1people browsing lhan buying. Shoppers used to make most of their holiday
. Col,lier maintains th~t the public- , purchases over Thanksgiving weekend, but now more favor the days before
oly 1sn t a barner to gettmg an 1m par- €hnstmas, when stores slash pnces to clear inventories.
tial jury.
"The stores were crowded, but we didn '1 see people carrying two or three
Relatives found Sele.ana's body in shopping bags," said John Konarksi. vice president of research at the Inter-·
September while working on the national Council of ShoppingCenlers, a New York-based trade group. "Many
Volgareses' property. The couple had shoppers use this weekend to look for gifts and wait to buy until right before
left three weeks earlier, taking their Christmas."
·
three other children with them;
For many stores, the trend toward a later shopping season is worrisome
The Volgares later were am:sted in following disappointments the last lwo holiday seasons and a less-than-stel~
Muskogee, Okla., after a nationwide lar 1997 so far. Retailers co~nt on lhe holidays for about half their annual
hunt.
sales and

DISCOUnt
•
stores SCOre·

•
In seasona I s·hopplng

SANTA'S HELPERS - ThHe young ladles walks. Spectatora huddled under awnings to
repretented the Pomeroy Flower Shop In Sun· avoid Sunday's ralnl, but It didn't dampen
day's Chrlatmaa parada In Pomeroy, and dia· many Chrletmas 1plrlta.
trlbuted favore to
crowd lining the side-

*PRICES INCLUDES
.MAIUFAauRER'S
REBAR, TAXES, TAGS,
AID. FEES NOT INCLUDED.
** 60 MONTH FINANCING @ 19%
WRH GMAC WITH APPROVED CREDIT.
TAXES, TAGS, RES NOT INCLUDED

MARCHING
- The E11tern High
School Marching Band, under the dlrec:tlon of
Kl!l' Prosperi, mede a retum appearance In the

.

Study finds income decides test pas{lage

NODULERS
ALL PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES.

IPII
Mil.·fll. 1·9

SIJ.H
Ifill CIIICH
SUI. 1·1

AND

MOTORS
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA
&amp; LEXUS

RT. 60 MacCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
.
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 RM. DAILY-SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 AM • ..SUNDAY 1 AM. TO I AM.

IPII .,
lll.·fl.l·l
IIT.H

REI ~IIICI
727•2921 111.1·1

.

Pomeroy ·Chrl1bna1 parade after many yore.
The Malga High School marching band alao
entertained parade apectatora.
.

~

termine how a dislriei will do on lhc
tesiS. There were instances of dislricts
doing beuer lhan expec1ed given
their level of poverty while Olher dis"
tricts performed below what would
be expected.
. But big city school districls performed as would. be expected, near
the bottom in the slale.
Stale lawmakers are under an
Ohio Supreme Coun order to reform
the way the Slate funds publit:
schools. And they want higher performance from all schools.
Bul better performance will be difficult at lhe level the lawmakers want,
Those factors explained 70 per- said Donald Bemo, president of the
cent of the test resuhs, with children Ohio Public Expendilures Council.
"What are they going to do?
from families with higher incomes
performing beuer than children fr~m What's the solution," he said.
lower-income families.
' "Because in most of the studies,
The newspaper's analysis found achicvemenl and test scores are real .that .money does not always prede- ly related to the family 's income and
CINCINNATI (AP)- No matter
the teacher or the class 'size. the .
biggest fac1or in determining whether
children pass Ohio's proficiency tesiS
is how much money their family
makes, The Cincinnati Enquirer
reponed Sunday.
The newspaper analyzed the test
scores of each Ohio public school
dislrict on the fourth-, sixth-, ninlhand 12th-grade proficiency exam,
along with median family income
and the percentage of children on
welfare and receiving a free or
reduced-price lunch.

'

the parents' educ~rion le'v'et."
Bu1 · one educational consultant
said 100 oflen educators and polii:y
makers accept low achievement from
poor children as inevitable.
"What makes us crazy is educators who use poverty as an excuse for
what amounts to educational malpractice," said Amy Wilkins of Education Trust, a Washington-based
nonprofit group that works to raise
school achievement. "Poor kids can
achieve at the same levels as affluent
kids. Poveny just makes it harder."
Hundreds of millions of state and
federal dollars have been spent to
close the gap between rich and poor
children, money beyond that raised
locally aud the basic aid districts
receive from the state. The money is
used for such programs as Head Stan,
aU-day kinderganen programs and
teacher training.
I

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POPULAR ENTRY- Santa Claus.wae .-ywhereln Sunday's parade. Hare, ha rides In an

i unuaual entry eponiOI'ed by V.ughan'aiGA 11'1
: Middleport, along with aome loolll elvee.

•

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Monday, December 1,1997

Commentary·

Page2

·=T=h=e=D=ail=.=Y.=.s=en=t=in=e~l~~l::=a~p=es:=:re=v=e=a~lL~-B~J~
· in~a::l~l::=hi~s~g:;lo~r~y~a=:n~d~w::a:=:rt:::s:=

AccuWeathet• forecast for

Charles W. Carson
Charles W. Carson, 80, Pomeroy, died Sunday, Nov. 30, 1997 in the Kimes
Nursing Home in Athens.
He was born on Jan. 28, 1917 in Rutland Township, son of the late Burton and Clara V. Rife Carson.
He was a graduate of Rutland High School, a World War II U.S. Army
Air Corps veteran, and a member of the DAV. He was the owner/operator
of a service s.tation for over 20 years.
Surviving are his wife, Marie Browning Canon; son and daughter-mlaw, Charl~s E. and Patncia Carson of Pomeroy; a daughter and S&lt;m-m-law,
Deborah A. and Larry Salser of Chillicothe; a sister, Vtrginia Carson of Middleport; a brother-in-law, Raymond Browning ofConnecllcut; two grandsons;
and several meces and nephews.
)
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Robert Carso.C
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Middleport Chapel of the Fishtr Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Miles Cemetery, Rutland. Fnends may
call at the f)lneral home from 6-9 p.m. Thesday.

'Esta!Jfu/Utll.n 1948

When ·the publicity
fades, septuplets'
parents face reality

_,f...,.

\

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rr

Race preference

b~ckers

resort to

untruth~

they

IMansfield 142'·1·

a

•I Columbusl45' I

Mabel M. Bailey Esque
Ice

'!

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Pt.

Cloudy G'JoUd)'

By The Associated Prell
.
Clearing skies will allow temperatures to drop mto the 20s over most of
Ohto tomght, the National Weather Servtce said. .
.
.
Fair conditions are expected on Tuesday wtth htghs tn the 40s. A buildup
of clouds will precede rain on Wednesday.
The precipitation could rum to snow on Thursday as tempellllures get colder, forecasters said.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather statiOn was 67 degrees m 1970 while the record low was 7 in 1964. Sunset
tonight will be at 5:07p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:35a.m.
Weather folft851:
.Tonight. ..Ciearing. Lows in the upper 20s. Light northeast wind.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny. Highs near 50.
,
Tuesday night. .. Partly cloudy. Lows from the upper 20s to the lower 30s.
Extended foreeast:
Wednesday .. Partly cloudy, then showers likely from early afternoon on.
Htgbs in the mid 50s.
Thursday.. .Showers likely, becommg mixed wtth snow showers. Lows near
40 and highs an the lower 40s
·
Friday .. Partly cloudy. Lows tn the mtd 30§ and htghs an the upper 30s.

Mabel Mae Bailey Esque, 81, Mason, W.Va., dted Sunday, Nov. 30, 1997
in the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
Born Feb. 2. 1916 in Blackie, Va., daughter of the late Dottie and Ceha
Morgan Bailey, she was a homemaker, and a member of the Church of God
International Fellowship Group of Charleston, W.Va.
.
Surviving are her husband, Lloyd E. Esque; two daughters, Dotue Esque
of Gallipolis, and Nellie M Esque Young of Mason; a son, L. Richard Esque;
a grandchild; and a sister, Suste M. Bnnker of Mason.
Servtces wtll be I p.m. Tuesday m the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
wnh George Trent officiating. Burial wtll be in the Sunrise Memonal Gardens. Fnends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from II a.m unul
the lime of the semees.

Ethelyn H. Kreisel
Ethelyn H. Kreisel, 75, Galloway, dted Saturday, Nov. 29, 1997 at her residence.
Born in Metgs County, she was the daughter of the Iale W.C. "Carl" and
Helen Edwards. She was a member and Sunday School teacher at the Galloway Presbytenan Church, and a Gtrl Scout leader.
She is survtved by her husband, William E. Kreisel, a son, David (Kathy)
Kretsel of Washington; four daughters, Kathy Hackworth of Columbus, Claudia Calkins of Galloway, Regma Kretsel of Arizona, and Raynes (Dave) Wallace of Columbus; two brothers, Ellsworth (Nell) Edwards of Galloway, and
Emmett (Dorothy) Edwards of Columbus; three sisters, Elma Weese and
Emmogene (Charles) Hamilton, both of Syracuse, and Eloise (Roy) Seely
of Massachusetts, and seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by tlu-ee sisters, Esther
Bukey, Eleanor Wingett and Elizabeth Bright; a brother, Edgar, two brothers and a sister who died in infancy, and another i~fant who died at birth.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Schoedmger-Noms Chapel, 392d
Broadway, Grove City, with burialm the Galloway Cemetery Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

10 killed on Ohio highways Floyd M. Reitmire
By The Alaoclated Prne
Ohio recorded 10 traffic deaths
over the long Thanksgiving holiday
weekend, the State Htghway Patrol .
satd today. That was two more than
dunng the same 120,hour period last
year.
The patrol satd there were no traf·
fie deaths iA Ohio on Sunday, the
busiest travel day of the weekend.
The"pairol "ounted fatalities from
12:01 a.m. Wednesday through Sunday.
The dead:
SATURDAY
BRYAN - Gariett R. Lockhart,
16, of Bryan, dnver in a two-vehicle
acctdent on a Williams County Road.
Matthew
GREENVILLE Rosenbeck, 21, of St. Henry, dnver tn
a one-car acctdent on a Darke County Road
BEVERLY- David W. Ross, 47,
of Coal Run, driver tn a one-car crash
on a Washmgton County road.
FRIDAY
TOLEDO- Maxtne Htnes, 71,

and Janette Horner, 38, both of
Bucyrus. passengers 10 a two-vehicle
accident on U.S. 24m Lucas County.
THURSDAY
· WARREN - Phtllip J. Morgan
Ill, 45, of North Bloomfield, driver in
a three-vehicle crash on Ohto 305 10
Trumbull Coi!IJ.ty.
WJJ)NESDAY
'IIELLEF6NTAINE- Brenda S.
Yoakam, 37, of Russells Point, passenger in a two-car crash on Ohio 274
m Logan. County.
UPPER SANDUSKY - Robert
M. Arthur, 57, of Delaware, driver in
a three-car accident on U.S. 30 in ·
Wyandol County.
ASHLAND-LISa Marth, 17,of
Ashland, driver tn a two-vehicle
aectdent on Ohio 511 in Ashland
County.
CELINA - Earnest Houseberg,
82, of Coldwater, drtver in a twovehtcle acctdent on a Mercer County road.

Sales m Super Lotto totaled
$3,962,510. Kteker sales totaled
$627,462
There were 100 Super Lotto ttck•
ets wtth five of the numbers, and each
is worth S1,090. The 5,179 tickets
showing four of the numbers are each
worth $66
In Kicker, one player had the exact
six-digit number to clatm $100,000.
The w10nmg ticket was purchased at
Super Kmart Center No. 4 in the
Cleveland suburb of Brooklyn.
The etght Kicker ttckcts showtng
the first five digits are each worth
$5,000. The 56 wllh the first four
numbers arc each worth $1,000. ·

(USPS lll-HI)

Pabl1shtd everyo afternoon, Monday lhroup
Friday, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, O•io, by 1M
Oh•o V.lley Pubtlsh•nc Comp~nyJOanaeu Ca.,
Pomeroy, Obto 45169,,.. 992-2,156 Second
cia~~ pott•,e paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohto

'Today in history

I

sunry

Temperatures to dip back
into the 20s for overnight

Do .the Magnificent 7 really need our help?

l

Peace activist to win
·honor from university

OHIO Weat11cr
Thettdtay, Dec. 2

Monday, December 1, 1997

By JACK ANDERSON
forceful. and had not yet been made
Johnson wasn't getting much Thomas,aDemocraticrepresenUIItve
and JAN MOLLER
bland by the dilution of the mass sleep. by his account, and it was cru- from Houston, tried to mollify him by
AUSTIN, Texas- ~stdent Lyn- medta
cial to pass hts first budget to prove downplaying the impaci of the
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
don Johnson was a big bear of a man ·
Any Amen can can now hear the that he could manage Capitol Hill. It amendment's notification clause.
614-992-2156 • Fu992-2157
who could mttmtdate by vtnue of hts Lyndon Johnson we knew - John- was hts first real test since be~oming "Don't be upset pver that language,"
stze alone He could be outrageous or son in the raw, so to speak - by preSident JUSt a month earlter by the Thomas suggested, but it was like a
wonderful.
making an appomtment at hts presi- assassin's bullet that killed John F red flag to a bull.
We know from frequent vtstts wtth den\tal library and putlmg on .a head- Kennedy.
President Johnson raged about
Johnson
when
he
was
m
the
Senate
set.
•
A
congressman
from
Johnson's
"thisdamnfool(Hubert)Humphrey"
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
and in the Oval Office He would
The National Archtves has declas- own party, Rep. Otto Passman of - who would later be hts •tee presloom over us, throwmg his great arms sified and cleared tapes for the first Louisiana, had thrown a wrench into tdent- for contnbuting to the probROBERT L WINGffi
around
the vtsltor he was trying to year of Johnson's prestdency, and the works by tacking an amendment lem by tossmg a difllcult paragraph
Publl1her
mnuence, huggmg them to hts partS of other years that had to do to a foreign aid bill. II required John- mto the fol)Otgn aid bill. Then the firebosom, or clamping those huge Texas with the Kennedy assass10atton son to notify Congress that tt was 10 works really flew. And he made one
hands
on their shoulders.
investigation.
"the nattonal10terest" every time he of hts earthy comparisons to Thomas
"
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
When he had a pomt to make, he
Our assoctate Dale VanAtta spent decided to finance a commodtttes about the notification clause.
Controller
Gener11 M11111ger
would come wath10 two mches of our hours ltsten10g td the some of the sale to the Soviet Union.
ear and whiSper consptratorially. He 9,500 tmvate Johnson conversations
In the 10:36 p m. call, Speaker of
JOHNSON: ''Why should I want
was a master mampulator, and a mas- · recorded by dictaphone. While we the House John McCormack, D- to report to everybody that I screwed
1 ter leaker. somehmes ostentauously
cannot condone presidents like John- Mass.. and then his deputy, Carl a girl? You strewed one last mght,
son. Kennedy and Nixon for tap10g Albert. D-Okla., carne on the line to but you don't want to report it."
1 stuffmg hiS pockets wtth classified
documents Just to tempt us
unknowing participants m con versa- report what had occurred.
THOMAS: "I wish I did."
And hke the old hgers of hiS poht- tions, the fact ts that the dtscusstons
One of the reasons he was frusJOHNSON· " You know' what I'm
acal peer group, he used the earthy ·are a nauonal treas4re.
trated, he later told Rep. Jack Brooks talking about That made tl come
language that IS mtsstng from today's
From the tapes emerges the John- of Texas m the 16-mmute conversa- home to you. dtdn'ttt?"
sound-bate prestdents When we farst son that we knew, 10 all hts glory and lion "You want to know hones\ly
THOMAS "Well, it ain't gonna
came to Washington, the capatal was wartS. One of the most telhng 1s the how I feel? I'm really humiliated. I'm happen."
run by people of Johnson's tlk. Today, conversauon he had with the leaders president I've got a friendly speakJOHNSON. "Well don't you
they would be branded as eccentnc. of Congress late one evemng five cr. And I've· got a fnendly maJort!y thtnk I'm a damn tdtot, now'"
but they were rugged, bnght and days before Chnstmas 1963.
leader. I've got a fnendly (Rep.)
THOMAS: "Now, now, now,
now, now, of course. not. But I don't
W01m111&gt;.11-1ELE6,1&amp;1&amp;..
-.,....-e,.,.o!\think it'~ (the notification) gotng to
1\ULMf;
hamstrmg you "
·
•
JOHNSON: "It docsn 't hamstring
me. It just publicizes that I'm proBy TONY SNOW
WASHINGTON -The cummassars of JOUmaltsuc punty have pounced
Russian right when Nixon's runnmg
t 11-liNK
on Newsweek magazme for retouchmg tts cover photograph ot Bobbt
agatnsl
me. That's all tt does ...
iAAT~
McCaughey. the mother of the Io"'a sept up lets The fiends at the ne";s mag
THOMAS: "Well, he ain't going
ALL WE
took he&lt; dark, crooked teelh, and made them look straight and whtte
to run-"
NE~no
Chances are. the young mother would gladly surrender that glammed-up
ARE ·YOU TELLIHG
KNOW
photo 1[ somebody would come to her house every day for the next decade
JOHNSON "Listen Alben. hstcn
ME Ct\1\..VRENS
and aidJrush away the debns For long after the last JOurno-vulture has fled
Albert
.... You JUSt don't ever agree
KAVE ACtES
Carhsle. Iowa. Bobba and Kenny McCaughey rematn behmd. charged wtth
that that's a good clause because you
iO 11-41$?
the care, nurture and reanng of a caght ktds born wathm a n-month penod.
know goddamn welltt ain't. Don't try
'
It's easy to launch mto revencs about the JOYS of parenthood. espectally
to (cxpleti ve) me because you know
for grandparents or folks whose k•ds arc on thcar own. But for the fore~ee­
better'"
ablc future. the McCaughey ~ wtll find themselves knee-deep m the gnsly
Thomas, flustered, said, "Here's
reahhes of early famtly hie
the Speaker.'' and handed over the
Wtth eaght kads m daapers. for an &lt;lance. they wtll be lucky tf thetr small
phone. It was a dressing-down that
house docsn ·, smell hkc a chackcn coop By one csttmale, they wtll have to
many of Johnson's friends and onechange more than 19.000 daapers m the next year- an average of JUSI under
Albert Thom·as. I've got a fnendly
53 a day
r WOULI&gt;H'T Jack Brooks. And Otto Passman ts
Dunng that tame the chances of geumg a good mght's sleep wtll be about
AI.~
ktng I think that's diSgraceful tn thi.s
as remote as the hkehhood of bcgeuang septuplels You know how babaes
IN M.V
country!"
are One wakes another. who wakes another, and pretty soon you hav~ the
HOU5E
At' one point in the conversation
tnfanttlc vcrsaon of the wave - scnal howhng, broken only by demands for
fellow Texan
foolishly feedmg and changmg A ptece of advacc for the McCaugheys· Take turns
mies knew went on trequently behind
·sleepmg tn the van
the scenes, despite his public show of
: Of course. the proverb assures us that God only gives us as much a~ we
courtliness.
:can handle, whach means the McCaugheys have been bless~d wnh more per(Jeck Anderton and Jan Moller
:severance than the average hospual matemuy ward After the ftrst few months.
are
columnlata for United Features
however, as babtcs transmogrify themselves from needy blobs into little peoSyndlcete.)
ple, the drudgery of caregiving will yield to fresh joys.
·
Our household cxpenenccd one of those Spectal Famtly Moments recently wh.:n my wtfe and I took our ktds out for a mght w11h the S~.same Street
gang. There on s~agc were all the tax-supported characters. from Btg Btrd
to some singers I vc never seen bet ore They danced and pranced. And they By WILLIAM A. RUSHER
panics. and now; a whole swarm of mg that Houston would not "dts- reach. remedtal cducatton, and Head
took a 15-minute tntcrmasSion so some guys could sell balloons at pnces one
It has been apparent for some It me othc". mcludmg even Pacafac cnminate agamsl.or grant preferen- Stan.
11onnally assoctatcs walh advanced weapons systems
that the supporters of race preferences a&lt; landers, have been added to the ltst. tial treatment to, any tndtvtdual or
Another point In this, as tn so
Parents-swanned the peddlers so
coujd procure a tinfoil, he hum-filled reahze that a sohd maJonty of the
"Afftrmattvc action" mcludcs group on the basis of race, sex, col- many political controversies, it pays
Elmo to quiet their begging, wailing ktds. But as orie approai;hcd the sales- Amencan people dtsagree with them. such umvcrsally approved efforts as or. ethmcuy or nattonal ongtn in the to follow the money trail. Was Housmen, one could hear new cnes ol hystcncal desperatton
·
and that accordangly, thetr only hope outacach (aggrcsstvcly hunting for operahon of pubhc employment and ton's Mayor Lamer, do you suppose,
"Ftve dollars ?I For two balloons 1"
qualifacd mmority appltcants). reme- P.Ubltc contract mg."
IS to he about what IS at ISsue.
chiefly woa:rted about expandtng
"No. One Nex.t! "
Polls mdacate that from 60 to 65 dial cducatton. and Head Start pro- • So stated. the proposition was a employment opportunities for
The parents looked at the balloons. They looked back at thear ktds. They percent of Amencans staunchly grams But bemg bland and vague, tt slam dunk. But the law allowed the . women and mmorities? Or was he
looked at thetr wallets. They ponied up
oppose prcferrtng one apphcant for a has also been adopted as the term of mayor (who favored preferences) to intent on doing a maJor favor for the
And the next act began.
government JOb. or a government chotec when what ts really gomg on rephrase the qucsuon, so tt was trans- five black-owned contracting comIt's Incredible to watch your young ones grasp baste concepts, such as col- contract, or adm1ssion to ·a govern~ IS rejecting while and Astan applt- formed tni!J a proposal to •·end the pames that reportedly get the hon 's
ors and numbers. Our ktds have tncredtble recall for song Iynes. so by mcnt school. over another, stmply cants tn favor ofless quahfied blacks usc of affarmattve actiOn for women share of Houston's preferenltal bustevenmg's end, our 5-year-old and 2-year-old were rockmg and smgmg hke because of the lucky appltcant's race and Haspantcs.
and mmorittes m the operation of ness?
cast members
Ctty
of Houston employment and
When asked whether they favor
or gender Whenever a ban on such
And in San Francisco, which
Unfortunately. so wa.&lt; I As all the happy creatures bounded down the run- preferences IS put before the voters, "affinnaltve acraon," many of the contractmg." The voters, or enough hands out $2 btllion worth of muntcway and through the crowd for the grand finale. our 9-month-old, who had at passes wtth a handsome majonty same voters who strongly oppose of them, were duly mtsled, and the tpaf contracts every year, as Mayor
been rockmg the whole evemng on my lap. performed one of those feats only -as tn Cahfornaa, the largest state, race or ~coder preferences wtll reply propostllon was de(eated
•
W•l.lie Brown dcfytng the victorious
babaes can pull off- a proJeCttlc formula barf that covered me ammedaate- m November 1996
The
stratcgtc
value
of
the
deadly
that they do - obviOusly meamng
Propostlton 209 because he wants to
ly wath a layer of warm, yogurt-hke ooze
At the same lime polls md1cate that they favor non-discrimmatory ambtgolly m the expression "affir- htre more minortttcs, or because he
As I began to dab away the stuff, the happy dancers froze tn horror and that most Amencans arc favorably help for vicllmlled minorities, and mative action" as now wtdely appre- wants the power to favor his "vicmade ~racks for other regtons of the audttonum Then the baby perfonned a dtsposcd ' toward "afftrmattve not that they favor preferrmg them caated among the political forces ltmized" fnends in the contracting
samalar ablutaon upon her mother, causmg folks tn nearby seats to spnnt pre- action ·· Thts IS an umbrella term that over others solely because of then that support race preferences, and business?
maturely for the ext Is
they can be depended on to take
has been used for more than 20 years race or gender.
As American governmental poliWhale teen-agers prey on your mmd because they mtght get tnvolvcd wath to dcscnbc the whole sencs of efforts
Seizmg on this ambiguity, the sup- advantage of tt whenever ctrcum- cy, race preferences arc doomed.
sex. drugs, cars, randy teachers and other sources of danger. babtes get you that have been made to tmprove the porters of preferences never usc that stanccs permit. Conversely. those Their supporters can run, but they
tn touch wtth brazen, unchecked body functions.
e&lt;:onom1c status of vanous allegedly word, but constantly tout "affirma- who oppose' race preferences must can't hide.
The moment you become accustomed to those explostons, they find new vlcllm•zcd mmont1es At fmn it was tive action " That was their strategy make it painstakmgly clear tijatthcy
(William A. Ruaher Ia 8 Dlsllntests of your patacnce- such as Barney
appltcd only 10 cllorts to help blacks tn Houston earlier this month A oppose only these, and that they arc gulahed Fellow of the Claremont
That's the magac As ktds grow and mature. so do parents We face rcla- Then women were mcluded, and Hts- prQposttton .wa.• on the ballot declar- all tn favor of such uncontroversial Institute for the Study of State•: ttvely small problems al first and confront psychologtcal horrors later But
forms ot afttrmattvc action as out- manshlp and Political Philosophy.)
each step along the way. ltfc reveals ttscll m surpnsang ways, and we develop for our chrldrcn the most ooundlcss and sclncss love posstble
Lots of morahsts have Jumped wpon the McCaughey case to sermonaze
about fcrtahty drugs. sclccttvc abortton. modem medtctne and dental hygtene,
need because they need it from us, crews wall be 'haunting them for
I know we're nuts on famtly val,but what we're talktng ahout here'' a m1racle - JUS! lake every other btrth. By IAN SHOALES
Let's see if I have this straight. In accordtng to our fascmalton, to them years. looktng ror random glimpses ues these days, whatever those emp• : Scptuplcts arc a huge challenge and an even greater blessmg. Wtth any the public's mmd. allegedly, that accordtug to thetr needs
of the wacky anucs of the seven lit- ty words mean, but does our yearn~ luck. four years from now the Famaly McCaughey. freed from the glare of
Aside
from
the
ongtn
of
financtal
tle preemtcs. And why arc we so tog for "tradttional" values come at
pubhcrty wall enJoy 1ts JUst reward - the challenge of attendtng a Btg Bard nanny ts (relattv'ely) mnocent of provenance. and thear umque stlua- tntcrestcd'llt'sJust a baby,umcs sev- the expense of those who may not bci
ktlhng
the
baby
in
Boston,
however
·show w1thou1 Jnl:lling a Janunnal crisiS: or a riot.
.
the baby's parents are guilty because uon. what as the daffcrence between en. Or rather, tt's a large famtly all at able to ltvc up to them?
· (Tony Snow is 8 columnist for Creator• Syndicate.)
them
and
a
welfare
family?
once.
It's
not
a
freak
show.
Or
as
at?
And
how
does
"constant
medaa
they 're selfish career-onentcd yupNever mind, 11 doesn't matter An
attention" fit mto the family values
ptes who left thetr child wuh a murI thmk back on the Dionne Quinderous nanny, mstead of staymg wllh · oddly grateful nation is showcnng tuplols, whose hvcs were turned mto envelope anyway?
the child constantly as Dr Laura rec- them wllh ~tfts and altenlton. Thas a cam aval stdcshow in the mtcrcsts of
You know, I like Dr. Laura. I enJoy
ommends. Is that nght? That can't be multtple birth ts treated like a freak science Or, spcakmg of mcdaa her radto program and hCr FUthlcss
By The Associated Press
act of nature, ltke a tornado, humnght
slams at the grateful self-mdulgeni
Sideshows, what about the Osmonds
; Today as Monday. Dec I. the 335th day of 1997 There are 30 days left
Bu1 tf it is, why are we so exctted cane, or earthquake, only bemgn. Our and the King Family? Or their fic- · who call her. But her catch phra.,c, "I
jit the year
am my ktd's mom," really bugs me:
about the btrth of seven simultaneous response IS certamly the same - we
' Today's Htghhghl m Hastory
-children m Iowa?
send them quilts and prayers, canned uonal cqutvalents, the Bradys and the OK, you had a ktd. OK, you're rais·
On Dec I, 1955, Rosa Parks, a black seamstress, defied the law by refusNow don ' t get me wrong !love food and well wishes Corporations, Partndges? The Von Trapps? The mg tt What do you want, a medal?
ing to gtve up her scat to a whnc man aboard a Montgomery, Ala , cuy bus. chaldrcn I wtSh these children well with their strange combinauon of Smothers Brothers' The Hansons' Multaply a chtld ltmes seven, and my
'Mr&lt;. Parks wa.&lt; arrested, sparkmg a year-long boycott of the buses by blacks. I'd send them all a card tf I could altrutsm and self-promouon, schd The Jacksons? The Beach Boys?
qucstaon is stall the same
Is putnng a famtly on dtsplay a
• On thts date
afford it
them VCRs, seven years worth of
(Ian Shoalea Is a columnl•t for
good thing? What tf certam members New1paper Enterprise Aasocll·
In 1824, the presadcntaal clccuon was turned over to the US House of
But obvto~sly the parents wall free cable servtce and televiSions
Representattvcs when a deadlock developed among John Qumcy Adams. need help As a matter of fact, they're The medaa, grateful for anything of the famaly can't handle tt?
don.)
Andrew Jackson, Wtlham H Crawford and Henry Clay. (Adams ended up actively courtang help. Dad ts any- fuzzy, wtll gtve them anythang they
the wanner)
way. (Dad seems to have mastered want, anythmg
One year ago The Arab League held an emergency meeting trrCatro, after
In 1913, the first dnvc-in automobtlc scrvtee stauon opened, tn Pittsburgh. the art of the sound bile just fule,
And the properly modest, yet
In 1942, nationwtde gasoline rattOnmg went mto effect m the Unned Stales. thank you Mom, of course, has been proud parents seem to expect 11 all as which tt warned Israel that peace efforts would be endangered if Israel tnststed on expandtng Jewash settlements
In 1958, the Rodgers and Hammerstem mustcal "Flower Drum Song" nat on her back for three months, and thetr due Why?
Today's Btrthdays Former CIA darector Stansfield Turner ts 74 Stnger
opened on Broadway.
fell apart when she finally got to her
Astde from paradtng the bizarre
In 1959, representatives of 12 countnes, mcluding the Unned States, signed feet in the presence of constant cov- side effects of ferttltty drugs for Billy Paul is 63. Actor-comedtan-director Woody Allen is 62. Singer Lou
Jllreaty an Washmgton settmg asade Antarctaca as a sctenttfie preserve, free erage.) They're gomg to need nan - Amenca, what exactly does thts mul- Rawls is 62. Golfer Lee Trevmo is 58. Singer Dtanne Lennon (The Lennon
from mihtllf}' activtty
ntes. relataves, doctors, a village, and tiple barth demonstrate? Sure, tt's a SISters) as 58. Comedian-actor Rtchard Pryor ts 57. Country mustcaan Casey
In 1965, an a1rhft of refugees from Cuba to the Uni1ed States began in the medaa JUst to ftnd the ume to put "blesstng from God," as the father VanBeek (The Tractors)as 55. Rock musictan John Densmore (The Doors)
which thousands of Cubans were allowed 10 leave thetr homeland.
food on the table
put 11. but frankly. tt's more of a bless- ts 53 Actress-singer Bette Mtdler ts 52. StngerGtlben O'Sulltvan is 51 Actor
In 1969, the U.S. government held tis first draft lottery smce World War
And they ' II get 11 all They'll get mg of modern medtcme Nter all, 11 Treat WIIItams tS 46 Country singer Ktm Rtchey IS 41. Actress Charlene
II.
our auenuon and money for nothmg, took dozens of "health professaon- Tilton is 39. Actress-model Carol Alt is 37. Gospel smger Sarah Masen 15
In 1973, David Ben-Gurion. lsrael 's first prime mantster, dted tn Tel Avav really - for bemg an cxpenmcnt, for als"to bnng these ktds to term.
• 22.
at age 87.
prov1dmg what the btologtcal tmperIn effect, thiS famtly wtll be
Thought for Today "An educated man should know everything 1about
In 1990, Bruish and French workers diggtng the Channel Tunnel between ativc supposedly demands, for betng · dependent on the whams of the mar- something, and somcthmg about everythmg."- Dame C.V. Wedgwood, Engthear countrtes finally met after knocktng out a passage tn a servace !Unnel a famaly They wall get what they ketplace u1 order to thnve Camera lish historian ( 191 0-1997)

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

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AT&amp;T .....................................5&amp;\
Bank One ..............................52%
Bob EYina ...............- ..........20}.
Borg-Warner ........................48'1..
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-·-·-

Stock report• 1r1 tha 10:30
1 e.m. quot• provided by Adw•t
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.-Meigs County court news

•'
•

Marrtace licenses
•
Marnage licenses have been issued in Meags County Probate Court to •
William Elton Tippie, 40, Syracuse, and Peggy Lucille Freeman, 35, Syracuse; and to Seth Adam Wehrung, 24, Pomeroy, and Carletta Lynn Buckley, ~
20, Mtddleport
·
;
1
Divorces, dissolutions
An ac!lon for dtssolution of marriage has been filed in Meags County Com-,
mon Pleas Court \Jy Patricia Welch Lehew, ~omeroy, and Wtlham Lehew .
.
Jr., Pomeroy.
Divorces have been granted to Rebecca Colhns from Jon Evan Collins,
and Bonme Sue Qutvey from Joseph Quivey, Jr
,
A diSsolution has been ISsued to June Martha Jones and Paul Joseph Jones, :
Trustees to meet
Ohve Township Trustees will meet on Wednesday at 6·30 p m. for thctr '
regular meellng

Meigs annou'1~~rr!~ll~~ There
Supper planned
A deer hunters' supper will be held
at the Long Bottom Community
Building beginnmg at 4 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Meeting changed

The Meigs Band Boosters have
changed their reguhu; meeung from
tonight to Dec. 8
Holiday dinner
The Dtsabled Ameracan Veterans
Chapter 53, located at 28051 ·state
Route 7, Cheshire, will have its
annual Chnstmas dmner aqd gtft

wall be no dances at the hall m,
December.

Christmas dinner
The Metgs County Htstorical
Socaety wtll have Its IOth annual·
Chnstmas dmner Fnday, 6 30 p.m at
the Metgs County Museum Cost for
the dmner tS $10 per person and
. reservations must be made by
Wednesday. 992-3810 Particapants
wall be gtven the opportunity to
enJOY a vanety of ~ppeuzers before
the main course is served As a finale
to the dmner, a table of lavish desserts
wtll be offered for sampling

Ohioan~ charged in man's death

Athens County
fire kills three

,Meigs EMS runs

Driver cited
in Pomeroy
auto crash

7

1

.I

Hospital news

The Coolvllle Community
under the direction of
Martha Sue Matheny

Oak Hill Fln1 .......................... 21 y,

Shoney•a .................................4\
Star Bank ..............................!&amp;~
Wendy'• ................................21 14
Worthington ............................18

.

Floyd Mike Reitmire

OVB .........................................35

Seera .....................................47~

"For me, Maurice McCrackin :'
represents Christian orthopraxis - 1
standing up .. for JUSUce, for the :
oppressed, for those who have no ·
power or votce. And, like all .
prophets, he has patd the priCe for hiS :
actions," Traub said.
•
McCrackin satd he ts honored by :
the Xavter award. The Presbytenan !
mimster satd he is pleased that he wall ;
recetve it from a Jesuit universtty. · :
"I feel close bes to so many in the ~
.Cathohc church," McCrackin said. ;
"This
. ts another stgn that fatths are ~
getung closer together to tackle the •
world's problems We have to do :
that."
•'
McCrackin satd he recalls havmg :
been arrested or Jatled at least 20 •
times .
:

Floyd Mike Reitmire, 55, Letart, W.Va., died Sunday, Nov. 30, 1997 10
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
Born Jan. 5, 1942 in Hartford, W.Va, son of the late Harry A arid Erma
Beatnce Cunningham Rettmire Sr., he was a retired carpenter. He was a member of Carpenters Union Local 1159, Point Pleasa~t, W.Va.
.
Surviving are three sons, Floyd Michael (Demse) _D. Rettnure of Syracuse, John W. Rettmtre of Hawati. and Edward A. Rettmne of Provtdence,
R I.; three stepsons, Kevin 1. (Roxanne) Divincenzo of New Haven, W.Va.,
and Anthony A. Divincenzo and Michael R. Dtvice~z~. both of Johnston,
R.I.; two &amp;!ll"dspns; a •pecijll fnend, Evelyn Y. Rettmtre of Letart; seven ,
brothers, JohnS. Reitmire of Mason, WVa., Harry A. Rettmtre Jr. and Walter R. Reitmire, both of Hartford, James C Retlmtre' and Jack A. Rettmire
Floyd Mike Reitmire. 55 , of Letart. West Vtrgtnta, died Sunday, NovemSr.. both of Letart, Richard A. Rettmire of New Haven, and Thomas C. Reit·
ber
30, 1997 tn Pleasant Valley Hospital.
mtre of Japan; and two sisters, Erma JoAnn Goulart and Deborah L. ReitBorn
January 5, 1942 tn Hartford, West Virginia, son of the late Harry A.
mare, both of Hartford.
He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Kenneth Reitmtre Sr, and Reitmire Sr., and Erma Beatnce Cunnmgham Reitmire, he was a rettred carpenter. He was a member of Carpenters Umon Local 1159, Point Pleasant,
George A. Rettmtre.
Services will be noon Wednesday in the Fog)esong Funeral Home, Mason, West Virgmia.
Sumvang are a son and daughter-in-law, Floyd Mtchael and Denise D.
with the Rev. Mtke Finmcum offictating. Burial wtll be in the Union CemeRettmire of Syracuse; two sons; John W. Reitmire of Hawau. and Edward
tery. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.
, A. Reitmire of Providence, Rhode Island; three stepsons, Kevan I . (Roxanne)
Dtvmcenzo of New Haven, West Vtrgtnta, and Anthony A. Dtv10cenzo and
Mtchael R Divtcenzo, both of Johnston, Rhode lslllnd, two grandsons, Austin
COLUMBUS (AP) - A man ving a minivan, ned on foot after Michael Reitmtre of Syracuse, and Joey D. Dtvtncenzo of New Haven. a speaccused of runmng over and killtng Gaskins was hit, Kuhl said.
ctal friend, Evelyn Y Reitmire of Letart; seven brothers, John S Reitmire
Greathouse, who also goes by the of Mason, West Vtrgtnia, Harry A. Renmire Jr. and Walter R. Renmtre, both
a man in West Vtrginia was arrested
tod~y after he was tnvolved m a traf- name Gllllehouse, was taken tnto cus- of Hartford, James C. Rettmtre and Jack A. Reitmire Sr, both of Letart,
tody after an accident about 3 30 a.m Rtchard A. Reitmire of New Haven, and Thomas C. Reitmtre of Japan: and
fic accident, pollee said.
Derrick Greathouse, 20, of today in Columbus, said Deputy two sasters. Erma JoAnn Goulan and Deborah L Reatmtre, both of Hartford
In additaon to has parents, he was preceded in dea\h by two brothers, KenColumbus, was jailed on a murder Chris Milburn of the Franklin Coun.
warrant, said Parkersburg, W.Va., ty Shenff's Department. No court neth Reitmtre Sr., and George A. Rettmtre.
date had been set
Servtces wtll be noon Wednesday, December 3, 1997 in the Foglesong
police Lt. Joe Kuhl.
Funeral
Home, Mason. with the Rev Mike Finnacum officaatmg. Bunal will
Greathouse IS accused of runmng
be in the Unton Cemetery Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday,
over Charles Gaskins, 35, of ParkDecember 2, 1997 from 6-9 p.m.
ersburg, in the parking lot pf the
Common Grounds bar on Fnday,
ATHENS (AP) - A faulty
Kuhl satd Greathouse, who was drikerosene heater started a fire that
ktlled three men, the Athens County
Sheriff's
Department satd.
Umts of Metgs County EmerThe
men
were idenufied as Aaron
gency Semces answered stx calls for 1
D.
Akers,
18,
of Shade, Davtd D.
~PRING VALlEY CINEMA
asSistance over the weekend
20,
of
Chauncey,
and
446·4524
. .
Barnhart,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Christopher
M.
Spooner,
19,
of
I A Syracuse woman was cued for
9:53 a.m. Saturday, Mtle Hill
fatlure to yield right of way after an
Road, with Ractne unit, Joshua Chauncey.
Their bodies were found in a accident tn Pomeroy on Sunday.
Lyons, transported by MedAtght to
Wilderness camper parked in a yard
Accordang to the Pomeroy Police
Cabell-Hunungton Hospital;
on
a
road
between
Athens
and
'NelDepartment,
Terry L. Patterson, 33,
11.27 a.m. Saturday, State Route
sonville
10
southeastern
OhiO.
The
was stopped at the stop sagn at the
124, Arlene Gtbson, Veterans Memosheriff's department was called to the intersection of Htghland Road and
rial Hospttal.
scene when the bodies were found Umon Avenue, pulled into Umon
SYRACUSE
Avenue to check oncommg traffic
4:30 p.m. Saturday, Country about 10:45 p.m on Saturday.
The-sheriff's
department
satd
the
and struck a car dnven by Kevin I
Mobile Home Park, Alice SwindersStale Fire Marshal determined a White, 26, of Racine.
ki, O'Bieness Memonal Hospital.
The police reported that a van was
8 36 a.m. Sunday. Syracuse to faulty kerosene heater caused the fire·.
sming
on the Side of Una on Avenue,
state routes 338 and 124 for a conblocking
Patterson's view. She was
trolled bum.
ctted for failure 10 yield ·
10:03 p.m. Sunday, Middleport to
Veter11111 Memorial
Moderate damage was reported to
Village Manor Aparlments, Helen
both vehtcles No tnjunes were
Savage to Holzer 'Medical-t:enter
Saturday admissions - none.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday discharges - none.
reported.
11: 16 p m. Sunday, Arbaugh
Sunday admissions - none
Addttton, Rose Peterman, St. Joseph 1 Sunday discharges
Garcia
~~~ ~ ~,,
Hospital.
Adams.
~
. ., ,,,,uf

Lends End...............................38
Limited .................................24~

One Valley.............................38'1.
People• .......,:. ..........................42
Pram Flnl .................................28
Rockwell .................................49
RDISIMI1 ................................
52\
•
1

CINCINNATI (AP)- He has lost
track of how many ttmes he has been
arre.sted or jailed for leading protests
agatnst oppression, war malcing and
racial segregation.
Age has slowed the Rev. Maunce
McCrackm, now 93 and living 10 a
Cincinnatt oursmg home.
But his work sttllts remembered.
Xavter University plans to honor
, McCrackin Dec. 7 with one of its lop
awards - the 1997 Francis Xavier
: Medal.
"Theologians today diStinguish
between orthodoxy and orthopraxis,
between saying the correct doctrine
and practicing it," said the Rev.
George Traub, a Xavter University
admmistrator who ts the nominating
sponsor for McCrackin's award

presents

·rrverlasting Lig fit
h ~ Carol for a Dark World

Sunday, December 7, 1997 7:00p.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Pomeroy, OH

i!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!l

(

AoguwHoura

Mon.-s.t. e:oo em-7:00pm
7:00 am-3:00

949-1009

�•

Sports

The Dally Sentin~!

...•

Monday, December 1, 1997

.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Slat! Writer
Saturday night's varsity girls' bask~tball opener between the Meigs
Marauders and the host River Valley
Raiders was one in which few leads
were safe for all but the last four minutes.
But when that time came. the
Raiders took the lead and kept it with
a greater volume of foul shooting that
helped them record a 73-64 victory.
"It was a typical first game." said
Raider boss David Moore , whQse ·
charges battled the more efficient·
shooting Marauders to lead by eight
points midway through the second
quarter.
The Raiders' quickness, smother·
ing defense and persistence on the .
offensive boards contributed heavill'
to Meigs' giving (hem 7S% more
chances al the foul line. While Meigs'
IO-for·24 showing from the field in
the first half included a 6-for-13 effo11
in the sec-urid qua11er, the Raiders
countered their 9-for-30 effol1 from
the field in thc t)rst half with a 12-for22 effort at the charity stripe that
helped them take a commanding
lead.
But Meigs wasn't ready to give in.
After Angie Kccton 's's basket put
River Vall~y ahead 28-20 with 3:52
left in the second quarter, the
Marauders played the brand of
defense that forced turnovers and
helped them ouL~ore River Valley
10·1 in the next 3:09.4.
Five different players - sophomore center Wendy Shrimp! in. freshman Amber Vining, junior Tracy

·

Boniol's 31-yard boot he~ps Eagles defeat Bengals 44-"2
By JOHN F. BONFATTI
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Growing up- in Ohio, Bobby Hoying
watched Boomer Esiason rally the
Cincinnati Bengals many times. He
learned well.
Hoying threw four touchdown
passes and led the Philadelphia
Eagles on a 61-yard drive in the final
minute to set up the winning field
goal in a 44-42 victory over the Bengals on Sunday. Chris Boniol kicked
a 31-yarder as lime expired.
Hoying's hometown St. Henry,
Ohio, is just 90 miles from Cincinnati, and the Bengals were the team
he went to see while growing up.
"We'd usually go a couple of
times a year," Hoying said. " I really remember their (AFC) cjlampi·
onship year in 1988."
·
Esiason led that Bengals team to
the Super Bowl. where they lost to

view after only a few questions.
capped a 64-yard drive with a nine·
Hoying, who finished 26-of-42 for yll(d touchdown pass to Tony McGee
313 yards, is undefeated in his first that trimmed Philadelphia's lead to
three pro st311s (2·0·1) ,after taking 34-28 with 9: 13 left.
over for ·ineffective veterans 'Jy DetRicky Watters ran over several
mer and Rodney Peete in a 24-12loss tacklers for a 16-yard touchdown run
to San Francisco on Nov: II.
that made it 41 -28 with S:29 remainPhiladelphia evened its record at ing.
6-6-1, while Cincinnati dropped to 4But Esiason's 13-yard touchdown
9.
pass to James Hundon - Hundon 's
"We're still in this." Hoying said second touchdown catch of the game
of the Eagles' playoff chances·, which -moved Cincinnati to within 41·35
got a boost when Washington lost 23· wlth 3:20 to play, then Milne scored
20 to St. Louis to drop to 6-6-1 . to put the Bengals ahead.
"Hopefully, we:re peaking at the . "At the end of the third quarter,
right lime ."
you could sense the direction the
Hoying's fourth touchdown pass, game was going," Eagles coach Ray
a 23-yarder to Kevin Turner with Rhodes said. "It was going to be a
I:44 left in the third quarter, came shootout, and the team that ends up
. after Esiason led the Bengilis on a 9(). with the ball last is going to win."
yard touchdown drive that cut the
The Eagles, the only team not to
Eagles' lead to 27-21.
have scored more than 24 points in a
Esioson wasn' t finished. He game this seas&lt;'n. led 24-14 at the

20-16 to San Francisco, but he's
returned to Cincinnati after stops with
New York Jets and Arizona.
The 36-year-old Esiascin complimented his 25-year-old counterpart.
"If the quarterback's on the money. and you have a good running
game and good pass blocking. you
·can make some big play.s," Esia.son

said. "Bobby had a propensity to do
it (at Ohio Stale) and he's done it the
last three games for the Eagle~ ."
Esiason nearly pulled it out for the
Bcngals. who went ahead 42-41 ll(ith
a mmutc to play on Brian Milne's

one-yard touchdown •un. He threw
1wo of his four touchdown passes in
the fou11h quallrr but the Bengals
defense, ranked 28t h. wilted in the
i!nd.
"We let rhcm score 44,

w~

lose,"

sai~

Bengals coach Bruce Coslct.

who

l'U1

short h1s post-gam!: inter-

half. The 44 points is the most for
Philadelphia since a 58-37 playotT
victory over Detroit on Dec. 30,
1995, and the most in a regular season game since a 47-32 victory over
the New ,York Giants on Nov. 22,
1992.
Boniol's second field goal, a 25yarder five minutes · into the third
quarter, put Philadelphia ahead 27. 14, but Ki-Jana Carter capped the
Bengals' 90-yard drive with a IW()yard touchdown run that moved
them to within si~.
Trailing 14-7, Philadelphia tied
the score when Hoying threw a two-

yard touchdown'pass to Chad Lewis,
then went ahead on a 14-yard touchdown catch by Jimmie Johnson.
Boniol's 33-yard field goal with
two seconds left in the half increaSed
the Eagles lead to I0.
Esiason, who finished 27-of-47
for 378 yards. lofted a 36-yard touchdown pass to Hundon that broke u 77 tie late in the first quarter.
Hoying threw a 23-yard touchdown pass to Mi~hael Tompson tn
open the game's scoring, while Esiason put Cincinnati on the hoard with
a I0-yard touchdown polis to Damay
Scott.

Ohio high school football finals end .

Delphos St. John, Cincinnati Moeller win
By RUSTY MILLER
. MASSILLON. Ohio (AP) -For
a change. being a No. I in the regular season equated to being No. I in
the postseason.
Four teams that wcr, regular-season Associated Press state poll champions backed that up by winning state
championships,.- including all three
winners Saturdav at the 26th state
finals at Paul Br~wn Tiger Stadium.
Coming into the weekend, only
nine of a possible 38 poll champions
also won titles on the field. Since the
playoffs began in 1972. only 29 poll
kings went on to win state champi·

on ships.
Canton McKinley won its first
big.school championship since 198l

with a .11- 16 victory over foul)h-

the players didn 't notice they were 28 in a row and became the tint Divimaking history.
sion IV team to evel win back~loDelphos St. John \ overcame a 14-0
"It went by pretty quick," ·said . back titles.
l
deficit to beat Norwalk St. Paul 42- Manchester linebacker J.W RobinPhillips' one-yard run and Kyle
2~ in Division VI. in addition 10 Gerson. "I was·standing out there for the · Neff's extra-point capped the fourmantown Valley View's Jl -24 Divi- fifth ove11ime and was thinking we ' d play drive.
SIOn IV victory over Akron Man- played four qua!lers and four over·
In the alternate possession overchester in five ovcrti mcs - the times and it went_ by like nothing.
time format, fou11h-ranked Manlonges t state playoff game ever.
Your adrenalin's pumping."
chester also took over at its· 20 and,
On Friday. top-ranked Defiance
The five ove!limes passed the pre- after a completion for no .gain, Rob
beat Uniontown Lake 36-10 for the vious mark of three. set a year ago in Adamson found Brian Burnett for a·
Division II championship, a field goal the Division VI title game.
12-yard gain. But an offsides call,
with nine seconds left gave ColumIn the end, it took Joel Phillips' two incomplctions and a 12-yard loss
bus DcSalc's a 17-14 victory over one-yard touchdown run and Bobby
on a satk by Justin Kozuszek left the
Youngstown Chaney in Division IlL Johnson's sack on the final play to
Panthers ( 12- 1) with a foul1h-andand Libc11y Center bombed Amanda- give Valley View ( 14-0) its second goal situation at the 23.
Clcarcrcck 49-8 i~ Division V
title in a row and third in the last four
Adamson rolled right and was just
Diyision IV
years.
about to release the ball when he was
The emotion was so high that even
They ran their winning streak to
(See FINALS on Page 5)
rankcd Cincinnnti Moeller and

Coffey, sophomore Tangy Laudermilt
and sophomore Brooke WHiiall!s
(her foul shots created the first lead
exchange of the period)- scored m
that thrust to put Meigs ahead 30-29
with 42.6 seconds left.
However, River Valley retook the
lead when senior center/forward Holly Hash, rebounding Jessica Griffith's
missed shot, got inside and shot the
layup with · 6.2 seconds left. The
Raiders took a 31-30 lead at halftime
as a result.

ter n~cessary) to drop. The threepoint play gave Meigs a 53·50 lead
with 4: I~ left.
Meigs never led after that.
Ten ·seconds after Meigs took its
last lead, River Valley guard/forward
Marie Denney sank a three-pointer
from the right corner. The shot tied
the game at 53.
Jennifer Cornelius ·is a six-foot
junior center/forward the Raiders
had in the game when Hash picked
up her foullh foul barely a minute
earlier. Cornelius cashed in on her
first 1wo offensive rebounds of the
qua11er and sank both point·blankrange baskets in a 27-second spah to
put River Valley ahead 57-53.
In the game's final three minutes,
Meigs never got closer than three
points, as foul trouble eventually &lt;en!
Coffey apd Williams to the bench and
helped ~iver Valley getl4 of its last
16 points at the· line.
Me.igs sank three ou1 of six fo~l
shots after laking its last lead. After
Denney's game-tying trey, River ValIcy put in. 14 'o ut of 18 free throws.
The shooters: Ward led all scorers with 27 points reaped in part from
6-for-19 field-goal shooting. In the
last qua11er, she sank eight out of nine
foul shots. Denney's ll·point effo11
was' mainly the result of 4-for-12
field-goal shooting. .
Shrimplih's team-high I 5 poihts
came mostly from a 6-for-8 effoll
from the field . Miller's II points
came mainly from a 4-for-6 effo11
from the licld. Davis (3-5 FGs) was
the Marauders' other double-figure

In the third qu311er, Meigs kept
shooting more efficiently from the
field (7-15, compared with River Valley's 6-for-18 showing in the frame) .
The Marauders' taking advantage of
the Raiders' aggressiveness on the
wings gave them the chances to
score in the paint that helped them
take a 46-43 lead at the period's end.
Laudermilt's three-pointer (2:23)
put Meigs ahead for the first time in
the quarter. After senior point guard
Sarah Ward 's stick"ack shot (I :47)
put the Raiders ahead 43-42, baskets
by Shrimplin and junior forward
Tanya Miller in the next 69 seconds
put the Marauders ahead by three.
Prime time: River Valley scored
the first five points- they came on
Megan Mulford's foul shot (6:43).
Ward 's game-tying layup (6 :22) and
Ward's frcc .throws (5:08)- of the
fourth quarter io lead 48' 46.
The next minute saw both teams
trade points before the Marauders'
Tricia Davis got her six-root in-the·
lane jumper and her bonus foul shot
(Mulford's fou11h foul made the lat- . scorer.
Reserve notes: River Val

Oull;!lu 62, N1at!aro.1 SK

Fairlieltl !U, Fordham 71
Fairleigh DiL'kin_•mn 70. ManhOJtf;IO 66
Harv:ud 65, Lebi&amp;h 64
lona 70, Rutr;.en 62
La Salle ~I, Mount St, Mary's. Mtl_57
Penn St. bl , N. Carolin."\ St, 51
Pitt,.l;Jvrgh 79, St. Ftanm, P;a. 55
Rider tc4, New Hamrt5hir.: fl7
Siena 112. Yale 70
St. Frmk.:is, NY 7Y,Culumbioa S~
Vermont 90. Mnine 64
Yllungstown Sl. 76, Duqt~o;ne 70

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

:r..
MiDmi .

.II' L 1'&lt;1.

...... , ... .10

~

.. ......... 10
.......... , .. , .,..,.,.'. 10

:t

.667
.667
.661

.......... 10

6

. b2~

New Y1Jrk ....

Nt."W

J~y

0.\lllll.kl

~

Bosutn ..
............. 7 IJ AJK
Phll:tek:lphi:l....
... " 9 .JO!o!
WoJshinj!IOn .....
..... ~ II .JI'
Ct&gt;nlra\ Dfiwl!lion
Allnmn ........................... 14 1 K7:"
Otartoue ........ , ........ , ........ .....'} ~ .b-n
CLEVUA.NO,
..... ., .....9 6 .600
Milwnuk~
............9 6 .btK)
lndillllll .. ,..... ,
....
.571
On~o ................................ 9
7 5fl~
Dcnuil ................................... 6 II .l'i I
Turolllo ........... , .. ,.. ,. ............... \ 1.~ .()()_,

s ()

-·-

YESI- Philadelphia kicker Chris Bonlol (left) celelxatn with holt!er Tom Hutton after klcklnglhegarna-wlnnlng 31-yard field goal in
Sund8y's NFL game against 1he viahing Cincinnati Bengals, who lost
44-42 •• 1 resuh. (AP) ·
.

.j
.j .
.j'

5

,..
5

11

w--..

Ut:1h .......... ....... , .......... ,.......... 9
San Antonio ......
.. ......... 9

Minn.:snhL .

6
7

1

l&gt;alla,~ .... .,

.600

.:'ir1.'
H Af,7

. ........ 7

V:1ncouwr ...... .

.til.'!

II

.:uw

.... ., ... 4 II :!fl7
.. ....... ,.. ! 12 .1177

D.!nver ..

l'

'7

Padi'IC Oi\lision
l.A . Luh-rs .......

St!ault ...
Phocni~. ..........

.. . .... I.\
.... ..... .. IJ

1

J

...')

,1

Purdomd 10 .......... ., ............. 5 .667
Sat:ran~nhl ...
.. 5 II
LA Clippers .. . ............ 2 14
Golden Stat~ .. .
. I 1.1

·'"' ,.
,,.,..·
.HIJ
750

11;\
071

Saturday's k-ores
New Yort 102, Phoc:nik !iO
All;ul!u 9tl , 0Jarlnth: MO

Chicago lUI. Wa.~hlnl!l&lt;lll M.l
Milwauk~ooe

91, Miam1H7
CLEVELAND 10.1. Bns1on 97

Minncwta 106. V:m~ouver K7
San Anlonitl 96, Dall;u: 117
Ut:1h 94, L.A. ClipflCrl 91

Hnu:uon 107, Goltkn State 100

Sunday'S scores
Indiana 101 . Ph•lalldrhia K9
1\tlanl:l IOK. San Anmnin%
v~•k:uuvcr rn. rA1mit9:'i
Sc:.ulc JOJ, Orlando lU
N&lt;.'W lc~y M7, Sa~:ramcntu 7.1
I. A I...UkL'I'' I{):'li, T1Wontu ~1
Tnni~t's games
New l!.:~y 011 Ut;~l , 4:1p.m

Tuesday's &amp;ames
Slk.:mmcntu :11 Ch:lrluuc. 7:30p.m.
St:..ulc at Washm~tnn. II p.m.
PIM~t:lllll ,,, Milwaukee. M·:vJ p m.
1\tlunw atiJ;1IIa~ , IUO p m.
llctiVl'r "' Huu~lllll , M:,lO p m.
NL-w Yurk at Sun Alllnmu, IUO ll.fll.
Orlantlu at Vtii'Tinl\i.l. 10 11.111

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Saturday's action
Jo:IOO
Army 711. Wulfutll 7h
Utll.:hdiiC7 . Ha\·crf(ltJ fl:!

1
' 1.1

II ·

Akron Elnu ~~. Akwn Garfreld J~
71. Fln:l;uad5 J9
Auslintown·Fitt:h ;'i2, You. E.1~1 4J
Avon High 42. St. Augusli~ Acol.l. 40
Avun L:tke J6. Gar-o.~wuy 29
Bcrbhire ~l Stl\,'&amp;!tshoru 22
klin Hilanll ~6. Sms.dtur~ J I
BfiM!k~idt: :'i~. Fuir.oicw 44
Ctll'l&lt;tl Wint:ht:lttcr 45. Sheridan .n
C:Anlon Centro) Cuth. 5l..SLL!em 46
Cnnron S. 6-l, Sllnlly Val, &lt;II
Curmlltun ~-t llid1mond Edi~nn -'1 i
Ch:mc:l ~-, Rrouklyn 26
~hire River
M\.-ip:~ M
&lt;11i llicmhc 70. Athens .'\6
Clc&lt;~rvicw 77, Elyria Op'-'11 Ouur 2
Cl&gt;lo.lwalcr I.~, 'Russi:l46
G1lumbus W;~ll~'fscm 6fl, M:1s~illon Pcrr)' 42
Cunuttun Viii. JlM.lit.'allsvilk- .1fl
Cnpky 5!1. Akrun Ccnr ,·Howcr !'I
Cu~huctun :til. l.klt.inl!- Val. 42
Cuy:Jik~i;a h1lls !10, 8ud11ci.W
Cuyahngn Val, (llristi:us Acatl ..~1. Kl'nnllirl"

HI• bland lnYitatillrull5rRlirilllilli
Butler 7:\. Pt~eilk 67 101'1
Sl~nrurll70 , V;~lp:uaiM) 6~

•

COilJ!Ot.tiUR brackl't

Mnnltli.Jii It:\, H;1w~ui · Hik1 Ui ,
Wisctlfllin 7~ . Oltlotmmu ~

'Y"'.,,_

Fayetlevlllr TipOrr Tuurnument·ch111mpi~ship
N C.·Wihnin!!tun 67. Canlphcll 4"
Thirtl plarr
W Carolin:t 71)_ Chark.~ li1!1 Snuth~rn M

.J\ l&lt;~b : una St 97. Troy St IJI tOT)

Gulden Panlhf'r Thunks~lviRJ: Toumamml
Fin~l ruund
·
Fl&lt;~. lntc rnafH)Il&lt;li 711. l .;d; i_y&lt;.'ll~' i1.l
Llllf: lk'ad1 St. 55. Bmwn .'i~

Bclnlll!lt ti4, SamfunJ 6 1
DavlJ.,on K9, Tulls ,6M
•
IA·I:1warc 67, A.n11:rk:m U. 56
Elt~t C:1mlma M~, "Ferrum 46
FhlfiJa 6::!. Coa~1:1l Caro hna44
K1:ntm:ky 76. Cll'm.o;lln 6 1
L~U n N!L'hnlh St .~2
Mt\RSHAU. 67. H.adfonl 41J
Mian1i 7-1, JadsHJlVilll' 70
Mltldil! Tcnn 75, N C1mlina 1\&amp;.T fH
Mt uh~i llpi St. K4. NW Louisi;ma 7 .~
OIU l&gt;om111ion 7-1, Tcx:lli TL'I.:h ~!'!
StlUih 1\lahanut 72, 1\korn St -'1
Southern Mcth , 62. FlunJnl\tl:llltic· -~-'
Snuthcrn Mi,;s. 44. Ja~.:ksutl Sr ~I
Stct.'itllt 7$. Furman 7.110T1
TcmtL':Ill&lt;!c St 97. Fbl: 5:?
rcunc~M.-c 'l'l'dt ~~- Ja-.:k.~urtvtiiL· :olt. 7-1
1\,lctkl 61J. Ct.'m Fhtr!d.J fW
'Tttl:llll,' 10-1. SE LtlUISillllll 71
W Kl'lllud.:y ~I. Mi ~.~ - Valky S1 71l
Wake f:orcst 71, RKhU'tlllul 67
Wrlli:un &amp; Mary M. UNC·GrL-cn~hnrn ~~ ·
Br:~Jicy 60.

N1111h

UCLA K1l,

Puc:rtu Rlnt Shuuloul-ch~tmpicm.~hip
Gl•nq:1;1 T~.'l..h 1,\, I-11Ui.w11k () 1J
Th'rd piLl«
~t. Joli n's Xl l11111ni s hb
firth plam·
H 1•f~ tm fi·t 1\tlll'rit::tn U. 1,.R. 59
St'U'nlh pi:Kc
,\ lat&gt;!!m;, r.o, W1dnt:J S1. ~~
Rlll't'r Cl~tl(~c-champiun~hip
Murray St I ll IJahn Sl f&gt;-4

St. M1. "l'l'll:~~·Arhnj!h•n 5l'C

·

W

Luyui:Llll '15, E, lllmm.~ :'i&lt;J

Far Wrst
An :Wn:i97. N.C ·1\slll:v!IIC (&gt;!.)

1\rl ;m,:~~

Ulti~

70. rru~no St fo9
St . li ,~ . W~tiJ,'f St. tM1

CS Northrtd~ )o( I, Pt·~nli!k' M
Cal Ptlly·SLO ICl. San Dil'EUIII
C.1l St.-Fullt.'fton lJii. L1ynl:! Marymnunt '14
C!llomdo Sr 6.\. Ncvatla NJ
Mnrunm1 St. M. ld:~hi.1 54
New Ml!xkut16, San Ju~ St :\7
Oru1-nn St IN. Sn~;r:uncntv St .~b
PortlmsU 1'10, UC Sant;.~ Barbar:1 79 lOTI
Porthmll St. 70. Cuncuttlr,t. Ore 47
·
Sant:t Clar~ 67, Ori!j!Ofl ~H

Columbus Junior Theatre presents:

MR. SCROOGE
Sponsored by: Rejoicing Ufe Christian School
December 4th, 1997 7:00pm

at: Rejoicing Ufe Church
Advanced tickets: $4.00
At the door: $5.00
Advance tickets available at Rejoicing Life Church ~~
or call 614-99a-6249

a great Jloliday Show.
'Fim for the 'Entire family!

Thlrdpl"tt
lllinu1 ~ IJO,

Huly Crus .~ M:l

Spur111n Coca•('uht

N Jllmui~ 7l Ou~·ap.n St. ~&lt;J
Nl : llli1mb 116. Wi~ I.Uth~'r.m M2
Nd&gt;ra~l.,., f1)o(, Tcii. :L~·Sun .\nl.,nw .~lJ
NnrtbWL'IiiCrll .IIi~. Mll .f:. Sll&lt;l!\' 4-0
OHIO .n Wn~ht S1, 56 lOTI
!\E M i.~Ml nri Iii}, O&lt;ikl;mJ Cny 27
S:~i111 Louis X:\. S IJh nm.' 7f,
V:rn~rh1lt tH , Ohio .'it ~
1
W M l~'bijl;m~{•W!~ ·Mih"',lllh.,, -17
W1~ ·Grcl·n flay til . Ml~.'hil/:,111 Tcd1 ~11

Hnmtnn 61, Tul sa _,7
1
Nt.'W Ml'XI~n St ~It T~IUIS· Ell':t~tl 57
Ol:l:1hnm::1 Sr 91(. Nnllh Tcx:~s fl(l
Oral Robcn.'l69. Crc•11h10n (lfl
sw TC~:\~ St. 70. Ct."niCII.!rYflM
Tl't:l' A&amp;M 97. Bl1hunc·Ct~tllman 5,1
Tl'l:!S Chnst10m 15,l , T~lll~·l':m A mcn~.:;u1 M7

i\ l.t - Uirllltll)!hum7~

Plop.i· \I a ri~l Clas~iN·hampion.~hip
Wagner X.\. l&gt;un11111111h .'iM
'flhird pluL~
Marbl K.~. Hnwaul 71

K:lll ~ ,,~ Sc. HY. Mc rt:L'f 1\0
K~ml&lt;J . Luynla. Mll 7!

Ar~:ms:t~ Sr M . Ml·Nl'l'SI.' S1 .~2
Uaylod~, E. Wudun)!l('ll .~ I

7.1, Punllll" (tY
ThinJ plll\'t
7.l S.:tou Hall fiU
t'iflh pla~:t

Sen•nlh pl111cr
SW J.\lUI~Ial\ :1 I!J I , 1\J:~,ka·/\ndJurai!L' Ktl

:'i()

Soulh"~l

(.';~ro lm&lt;t

M&lt;~~!iell:hu~tl s

l\-lidwu1

VIIJ;nmva 411
Ill -Ouc:t~o/CO Buwlin1- Grl'l..'ll
hkh ana ,~! 66. ball St 57
luw:~ 111 1. lnn~ hl;mJ U. (II}
lo1W,J

Grtll!l Aha~k11 ShootoUI·rhll1mpion.~hip .

&lt;.la~ir·r~an1piumhlp

f.hd uJ!an St 70. Gcmll•J!·' h!i
Third pi!ICC'
1\rk.-l.lu!c Hn~o:k 7-l, (\•m Mk hJg ltl l M
Thank~ll,ivlna

S11n Ju1.1n Shontuut~nlinnals
ll:!ytnn 7~ . Snuth Hnrnla fll
Wc~l Vitfl!lia 7K. R1.:l' fll
Cunsuh&amp;lion hrwd1t1
EviUJS\illl' I«J. 11UL'rlil Rku-Mayaj!l1!.'1 -lf1

Pl'ltn (,II.

W:,~hinFit•n

S\. 117

' Ohio U.S. girls' scores
Saturday's action

Vitii,'CIII W;tmtt17.lkllac lta
W:!d!lwonb 112. Mcllina .17
Wnlsh Jc~u it Hb, l&gt;uylcstuwn 77
W:tlkm~ Ml"monnl.l.l .. Wunhill~trin Otr. Jl
wc~11akl' 42. lkn.:a ~
Yuu, Mncl!IC)' r.2. Lnuisvillc l\1jUin115 47
YIMI. Raycn 47, GIL't!Yillc• -UI

An~rll

Saturday's tnurOaments

South
A.krnn R2. Geur,:l' Mason 5J
A.l&lt;~bouna A&amp;M 76. S. Camhna St 15

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MMtwn1 DiwiMn
WL ...- - · · -..
-Pc:t GH
Houst&lt;Jn .. ,.. .,., .................... Ji
.'!

Southern Cr!l76. San D1e~u Si . 72
St, Maty's. C:1l. ~, Calil\1r111&lt;~ 61
Utuh KJ. UC II'\' I I'll! 45
Uwh St. 72. BriF,ham Yvunl! 69
Wnshini!ltln 70, Jnmc.~ Madbnn hi
Wyumin11 75. S. U!ah ~7

,

Cam~us 71. St Bon:IY~niU~;C 64
Drcx~l57. Monmouth, NJ. 51

D:lf'lbury l.al.:l!side Ill . Momcrcy. T..:nn. 4K
Uanvillc 61. Mnmcn.:ry. Tl"nn 4K
Uuv~..- -19, Hoban 4.1
Eu..:hd ,~H. Lllkew1Mxl JJ
Frcfl'kmt Rns:. 6J, Hurms J.'i
(im111lvicw M. Juhn~h&gt;wu ~.l
Gr:tn~\' inc 42. lklll"y -'-'
H••ly N;m.: M. MaFnilko11 4X
Kcnl RtMJ~\'Cit M , Ynun~stuwn 1!. J~
Kltlnu, Ccnlr.tl C11r. M , M1~~sillun Tusl~w ~~
K1rr!:mt11.'~ Cuyahutt:a Hts , ~li
l.nkl.' l'mh .li7. Wiclhfl~ 42
l.wt-.:&lt;~~tcr 4(1. l.iJ!!.IIn 2K
ti.~hnn 62. C:unphcii-Mcmnrial fll (OTJ
l.ur:un ,'\uuth~icw -1 I. (}l'll.,.lin.l.\
M:ms lichl Sr. -Ill , W. Hult~,~ 1Y
Marh!ll:i fll. WnrlhiUf!lun KiltltlUITh! -1 .~
Ma.-,sil!tm Wotdltnj!tun 51, ('mJtnn GlcnOak ~I)
Md&gt;nnalll SO. liri•lctl Jft
M~'\lin: tl:illc kcyc 44. MHI[t:H'l 41
Mctlm;1 Hi~hhmtl +t Akmn E JH
M~nlur r,2. W (il.:au~a 4 I
Millt:r 49. MJIII.'rspul"l 4~
Mmcn·n fl7. Faulc~s .UI
MtnrurJ 70, &lt;iaUipnJis t.9
N. l':mttll\ Hnuv~'f MI. l.uuis~illl" l~
N. RtJ~~"" •Ik ,~7. Kcyslnfl\' 47
N H.uy,Jitun ~7, Uay 47
N. Umun 44 , Juhn.~luwn Nc~tthrilljii:C J~
NL·w l,.nlndclphia 7fl. ('k, I~ L\1. I()
Ncw01r~ -1\1. l'.unesviltJ: :\.~
Ncwt.:lllltl.'l'l'lnwn +I, Jcwl"n·Sdu 21J
N11nlnni;1 71, Alo:.rnn N 4 ,~
Nun II Olmstcc170. 1nlm M;\l"~lmll ,16
'1 1 :1i11t.' ~Villc H.ivcrsitlc hu. kcnslt111Sfl
1\'fTy .'\.&amp;, (.'han.lun IY
l'• ..~·lnn fiiJ. Jacksnu 1K
l'urNl'll•ulh 54. Rudo Hill 41
Nl·v.:rl' 44, {ln.'(kJ;villc ~7
MitlF--.:w'~tlll 4~ , l.nkcl;mli ..H
SIIHW 47. Tol S~.:•ltl 42
Suuth l11arlcs1un SE 7fl. Kc:ntun Ritll!lc 5J
St1uthc:n 1'12, Huhhuro.l 7"
Tu•..:;1raw:~~ C:tih. ,lH. Malv.rrn ·' "
UticH fll. H;snlcy 55
Vi IIll An)!.cla·S1. J,,~flh Kl( Madi!'.IJR -1~

_:
:

!
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*
:

:

*

NHII.·
~

.'

..
-.

Presenting Some of the Best Kept Secrets Around 'lbwnl

28001 State Route #7
Cheshire, Ohio 45620

Jon'&amp;: Carolyn Jacobs
Owners

IrJun

N~:w En~land ...

Mimn1 ..
N.Y. kl s.. ...... .
Huffnlu. .. ...... .
11Miiillliij1t1Jj ~ .. .

Ornlnd Divi!lion
.................. \1 -' I) J'l92
Jyck~unvillc ..... ,. ........... ,.. IJ .a U 692
Tcntll:~~t.'l.' ............ ,. ..... ,., .... 7 b 0 .SJH
Onl!linnl'l! ... ., ....... :... ,. ........4 IC I ,.146
CINC'INNATI
....... ·-' Y 0 ..10M
Pitll1bur~h

WNf'rn UI~Wan
y·Dcnv'-'f .........
.II 2 0
Klii\Si\S City
.. 10 .\ 0
S.::mlc ......................tJ 7 0
S:m l&gt;il'l!ll ...
. ·-' 9 0
(&gt;;.l;laml .......
...-' II 0

-·-

Ci~·ur~tiu

Ml .~ .~hsiJIP' 15, Mis~i~liipj&gt;i St 14

Suulllt.Tn .lO.·Gramhhn): St, 7
.04 Yl'l

1K-l 2-12
261) 2K6
2b7 .\.'iJ

.IWI JIJ'

21~

.462• 2KI ,lOI
..1011 2!i.l ,\..1.4
JOK 1W. .147

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
J&gt;:asl
WL .,........ _,," ... - ..., ....... TPct.I•J&gt;' PI\
N.Y Gt:mts...
...,7 ~ I . ~'17 226 227

.... b ~ I - ~(X)
.. .. b () I . ~110
l&gt;:1llas ., .....
.. .. b 7 0 .4b2
Aril.llll&gt;~ ..... , ..................... J 10 II .HI
Wu~hinttiUtl .

247 2K6
2.W IW
2NJ 240
216 2!1/C

Cf'nlrwiiJi~isioo

G"'" ""' ....................... • ·'
Tampa !lay
_q 4
Mitti""-SIIHI .................... K "
t&gt;.:tmit ......... .,., .. ,
.... .7 fJ
(1li~·, ,~" ,...... .,
., .. ::! II

o .750
0
0
0
0

,f

::!7. Ctc• Jri!ia Tl'l'h 24
G~'"rj!ia SnUIIM.•m ~1 . l·lnri1la J\&amp;M .l7
MrN~.,.."K. St IIJ. Mmm111a 14

.7fN 21)1 212

PhiluddJihia

-·

2-'. Hc.ll'lllr.J 14
· 't ViiMtnYa ...... l'ul,::nc lX

.\07 2-'b

.11r. 2:4
.M12 2fl2 2CXI
M7 27-1 2fo2
..UK :\22 2.'\0
15-1 2 1~ :m

Wrst,rn IMvisiun
............ II 1 n ~~ .14M IIJ.1
('arulimt ...................... 1'1 1 n .at.2 21-l 24jJ
AllantO\ , .......... .,., ........ , .., ... ~ ~ 0 JK~ 260 Jl~
x-Sunl .-r: md~u

N~w

IJrkllliL ,, ,, .. ,, .. ,,.,. \ H () .~H~ 17() 2.~K
""""'"" ,,. ...', .... .,. 10 u 2,\1 225 ,l()l
X·WCIII tlivhinntitl.y-dmdk•J lllay11ff t11mh

St . 1.&amp;1111 .~.

Sund:•y's scores
Jac:burwillt: 21J, B:tllimurc 27
l,liliitkltMttll ""' l'l_t~(.'INNAT1 42
Nt.'w l~l!-l ;mtl 20. lntltan;iplli,, 17
New Orlcm1.~ Ih . C;~ruliltl 1.1
Uuffalu 20, New Yurk Jc1~ 10
St l~uis :!;\. Wa~hi nr,ma 20
K:ms:l.' City +t, S.Ul :l'ii.IICISL"t l 'I
1\tl:illli! 24, Scallk 17
Mi:11m .lol. (M;I;tntl ~fl

NEWSHOWROOMAT114W.2NDST.
"SERVING OHIO SINCE 1953"

WARNER
Insurance Agency
113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Office: 992·5479
1-800·7 42-3868

Specializing in Handmade and
Machinemade QuiltS
Fabric, Supplies &amp; Crafts
Machine Quilting
7911 State AI. 588
(Between Rio Grande &amp; Gallipolis)
Business
614-245-5582

TWIN. OAK

Rutland Bottle

PENNZOIL

Gas

614·992-4233
800·795·1110

1be best Deals on·
Gasoline in the areal

202 W. Second Street

992-5829

742-2211

Syracuse, OH
992·7287
Home of all your favorites- Pizza,
Subs, Salads, Hamburgers,
Tacoa, Lasagna &amp; Spaghetti
dinners, and much more.
Now featuring the areas largest
selection of fresh Amish Baked
Goods and Candies.
(Order early for Thanksgiving &amp;
Christmas Holidays)

F.IINI

l~luwarc

!I!

JEFF

100 lb Gas Cylinder
Cheapest In The
· Trl· Co. Area

D&amp;M Pizza &amp; Subs

Saturday's adion

.. X -~ 0 .hl.'i .\OK
....., .. X :'i 0 . bl~ 2t.M
........ H ~ 0 . fit~ 29,1
.. ,.... {I 7 0 .4/l2 217
........... I 12 u .on 222

Maynard's Guilts IIIII Fertcs

Syr:~~o:I!St.' Jl Mimni 13
Tt•mJC~St.'t.' 17. Vando.Ttlih

Ill
VIrginia J-1, Vir1-ini:1 Tech 20
W, Kcnludi)' -t2, I ~, Kl'llhJcky 14

a•,··
,
l-i:¢1 '

1\lidw.:st
M•~hi~u1 St, 49, J\om• St 14

''A"""~
... :.jlW'*
CONTAINING River V~lley center Holly Hash
(center) was the task ollhe night lor Melgalrontllners Melissa Werry (25, with only the .S visible
at lett) and Tonya Miller (right) during the first

W. lllinm• J I, J:~Cksu n Sl, 24
Ynunj!~tUWfl Sl. 2K. HiliiiJitnn 1.1

t'•r Wrsl:

E, W01slltn~tc~•• -1{), NW l.uui!lianu 10
Noire IJ:uno,: 2J. Hawaii 22

NUL standings
Wa~hin~tnn l.lk1.~111n I fli~')
CulormJu J, C01mli1J.1 2
N. V. bl;n'ltk.'f~ 4, St l..uuis 2
Philmlclphia .l . T;mapa l1:1y J (ti~')
Pinsburt:h 6, Montreal .1

.1. Onuwu 2

Sunday's'scores
Hurida I, N.Y. Ran~cr.~ I {lic J
Edntontun !l, San Ju~~· I

"

'

.

--··
;z
••

swanncd onco the licld in cclchration.
Division I
Thorn McDaniels was at :1 loss

scored on runs of 44, eight and one
yards.
.
·

yards.

!Jttst\111 m Cnmluu1, 7:.'&lt;1 Jl .ll!.
Mumreul , 7:.10 p.m.
Huffuk' i!lltj•ilmJclphia. 7:.\fl p.m.
l'ht.oc11i~ ;d l'lurid;a, 7:JO p m.
S:ut Jus.! at Cnlllary,IJ 11.111. t
IA.1r11it nt Vartcc~t~\'t.'t, 10 p.m,

passes of 59 and 51 yards from Ben
Mt·Daniels (Thom·s son) and DemarIo Rozier scored on an K8-yard run

Pill~hurJh at

•

" He's one of those people you
"l,thought we contained him for contain or they kill you," St. Paul
the most pall hut h~ had som~ nice running back/cornerback Mike Marruns in the second haiL He's a gr~al row said. "Evidently we didn 't do
foothall play~r and that's a nice line it. "
he's got.'' St. Paul cootch John Liven- · Dctphils St. Johns (14-0) captured
good said. "H~ck. he's the hack of 1\S first state title in its first champtthc year."
onship game. Norwalk St. P~ul (13.Grothous Jinished with four catch- I) was also appearing tn !IS hrstlltle
cs for 149
'in~~

CBuggg
&amp;lop in and see our
new Chrislmac~~ items
. Middleport, Oh

Tue.sdMy's .:ames
0Ul!wa;l1 N.Y. I§Ianck.'fs, 7:JOII .m.
Wa~ hin}!.hNlllt N.Y. 1-tanjl:t'fs. 7· ."\0 p.m.
St. l.11uis at New )~o,'fNO,;)', 7:,1() [1.111.
/\11\~IL'iflllil Tclt'nntu, 7:.1011.111.
F.l.ln~mtun Ill CnluruOu, 1J I' rn .

*

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GOOD DEfiLS SI"CE 19531 c~o DAYS :
~MaM:
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*
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*

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JIM YOUNG, OWNER :

*

************************************************

•
~

Bows
Visit our new location next
to Acquisitions.
PRE· CHRISTMAS SALE
Middleport

r

KENS APPLIANCE

..

"The Healthy" Alternative

"

Check out our New
Grilled Menu!

••

992-5829

SL Rt. 7

We service all
brands!
Family owned

since the 1950's
Ask about our extended
warranty

992·2844

..
Convenience Store
Legal Beverages
Leer Truck Caps
Delta (Ultima) Tool Boxes

17r'

. THE OHIO RIVER

Celebrate the
Holidays .with a
relaxing Lane Sofa
or Recliner.

~hop now for

BEAR COMPANY

Christmas &amp;vi115s.
Ask about our
Layaway Plan
Middleport, Oh
504 N 2nd Ave
992-4055

CJjour 9'retghhorhood
One Dozen Breaded
.8ender
·Shrimp with Chips and
Pomeroy, Ohio

Dominos Pizza

992-5335

The

Speelelf

Hush Puppies
$2.99 Only at

Arthur Treachers

Stop in for the Christmas
Layaway Sale. Fine
Jewlery, Guns, TV's,
CD's &amp; Much More

992·5829

992-PAWN

MEGA DEAL
2 Lg. Pepperoni Pizza's

$14.99

'

'

2 Medium Pepperoni Pizza's

The Daily Sentinel
Reminds fiOU.to support your local businesses!!
.'to Promote IJOU1 Business
9n crlte Small rJusiness Directory·
eall Dave Harris or Don Riffle at 992·2155
I

"

Fresh Christmas Trees
Drive Thru
Open 8-6
985-3700
SL Rt. 7
·· Chester

Ask about Christmas Layaway

Jim Young
Ownar

. '·
.•'

1

Quality
Furniture Plus

f

--

Arthur . •
Treachers

992-s1n

Francis
Florist
Our newline
ofBean Pals
are in stock!
Pomeroy

without one shoe as top-ranked Can-

Inn McKinley dominated the second
half.
Stewall Lytle meed 21 yards with
a fumble to cement the victory for
McKinley. which captured its first
state title since 1981 and second tn
the 26 years of the playoffs. McKinley. the regular-season Associated
Press poll champion. is also No. I in
USA Today's rankings.
.
"We were excited about bcmg a
slate champion."thc McKinley coach
said. "We tried not to think about 11
(hcing No. 1 in the nation) all season
long. W&lt;! thought that was the best
way to approach it. to not talk about
it orthir\k about it. But1f tl comes up
now. then we'll address it. "
To stay No. 1, the Bulldogs had to
upend foul1h-ranked Moeller ( 12-2),
which was seeking a record e1ghth
state playoff championship.
Moeller starting qua11crback Ryan
Cooper suffered an injured ankle and
wasn't available or was tneffecuvc
for most of the game.
Division VI
11 wasn 't hard to find ·the heroes
for the Blue Jays in their victory over
Norwalk St. Paul in the bailie
between No. I and No. 2.
Chad Schulte rushed for 177 yards
and three touchdowns and 6-foot-7
wide receiver Greg Grothaus snagged
three ·scoring passes as Delphos St.
TO THE HOOP- Southam'a Pate SJ110n (5) goes tO th1 balkat '
John's backed up its No. I rankmg by
knocking off the state ·s No. 2 team. ·as E11tern'a Matt BlsMII (12) trial to stop him during Friday nlgllt's
Schulte, a fir:st-team all · Ohioa~ boys' baaketballacrlmmaga at E11tern l:tlgh School, wharatha Tor·
and the offensive player of the year nadoea claimed a 35-19 victory In the two-quarter encounter.

Buttons &amp;

we deliver

·Cfhe C7JJicker

I

downs that covered 28. 50- and 60

James Gamhlc caughl touchdown

985-3561 or 992-5335,

er Valley High School.· Though the Marauders
were successful at holding Hash to five points,
they lost 73-64. (AP)

in the division. carried 22 times and

1'oni.:ht 's g~;~mes

•Side-By-Sidt Frigidaire Refrigerator with Ice
inaker and pure source filter, .............,....... $979.00
•Electric and Gas Ranges .......... Startlng at $300.00
•Frigidaire Washer and Dryer Seta..:............ $719.00
ASK ABOIJT FRIGIDAIRE'S f:ASD
REBATES GOING ON NOW!

quarter ol Saturday night's season opener at Riv-

hit by Johnson. Valley View players

after his greatest victory.
''I'm supposed to he urticulatc ...
the Canton McKinley conch said.
"I'm an English teacher. But I'm
Jhoughtless and wordless. And I'm
thrilled hcyond measure."

Y:ttk:CIUYt.'f 4, Turnmu 2
J&gt;alla.~ -~ - llh•JCni" 2
C'ni~III'Y ] , Analk.:llll 2 (UT)
IA&gt;N Angck.'t14, Nl"w Jcmy I

fliEEDtnverr·FREEs.tup
of!IEE Rtmovll of old untta

Stop 1n and ciHick us our«

State finaIS ••. ~&lt;,C;:::on::::tin:,:::ue::d..:,::fro::,::m::..:Pa.::!gt::.e::.!4)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:-___;.

Slrurday'.s scores

ON~.:~u

.

•••

Cil\-cnl\:1y ill Mln~~u la , IJ run

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

u.....,,'"....,
.
.II' .. :r &amp;

Call:

ToniJ:hl's ~eame

NCAA Division I scores

NFL standings

Open9am-5pm
Mon. thru Sat.

C&amp;fJ Cf'umifure

Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9

PimburFh :!b. 1\rb.ml..'! 2U ((YI'J
Tm1'4'a Bay 20. New Ynrlt. GiaiUM K
Lkn\1\'r JK. Sou1 Diej!.u 2/C

'.

...

Leo's Cruise &amp;

·~

River Valley (1..0): S. Ward 5-1- • •' '
14116=27. Denney 3-l-2n=II, Cor- · ~·
nelius 3-0-2/2=8, Martin 3-0-316=7, .-!
Shan 2-0-314=7, Hash 1-0-318=5, .::
Keeton 2-0- 114=5. Mulford 1-0112=3. Totals: 19/48-l/14-29/46=73 ·~
Total FG: 2J.62 (33.8%)
Rebounds: 34 (Denney &amp; Hash 8 ,
each)
Blocked shots: 3 (by Cornelius, ,
•
Hash &amp; Mulford)
.!
Assists: 14 (Mulford 5)
Steals: 16 (Denney 4; Martin &amp; S. ~
Ward 3 each)
, ,
Thmovers: 13
' .
Fouls: 2S

..

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'.
•..
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:
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CE SALES &amp;SERVICE : .
*·*
**

-·-

614-992-7508

.

.

claimed a 50-24 win over Meigs in 3/4=15, Miller 4-0-3/3=11, Davis 2the preceding junior varsity affair.
1-3/4=10, Vining 3-0-In=7, Coffey
Nikki Hollanbaugh paced the 3-0-0/0=6. Smith 3-0-0/0=6, LauderRaiders with an 11 -poinl effo11 that milt 1-1-010=5, Williams 0-0-415=4.
included a 7-for-8 showing at the foul · Totals: 21/48-l/7-lli/23:64
line . · Aricia Blackwell led the
Total FG: 23-55 (41.8%)
Marauders with I 0.
Rebounds: 28 (Shrimplin &amp;
Thefutun: The Raiders will host Williams 6 each)
Southern Tuesday. The Marauders
Blocked shots: I (by Shrimplin)
will be idle until they head to Racine
Assists: 13 (Smith &amp; Vining 4
to play the Tornadoes on Thursday. each)
Ouartcr tm11
Steals: 5
Meigs
13-17-16·18=64
1\Jrnovers: 20
River Valley
12-19·12-30=73
Fouls: 33
Fouled out:, Coffey &amp; Williams •
MeiJIS (0·1): Shrimplin 6-0-

Telephone

Scoreboard
Basketball

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

River Valiey girls rally to. beat Meigs 73-64 in season opener

Monday, December 1,1997

Hoying fires four TD passes for Philadelphia

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..
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�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 1, 1997

ARGUING THE POINT - U.S. Rep. Barney
Frank, D-Maaa., left, and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R·
Utah, argued during their appearance on NBC's
"Meet the Press" Sunday In Washington. Hatch

predicted "lots of problems" for Attorney Gen·
eral Janet Reno It she l:foean't call tor·an Independent counsel praiSe of Democratic campaign fund-raising. (AP)

Partisan sniping surrounds Reno
decision on independent counsel
By JIM ABRAMS
Aaeoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - As Attorney
General Janel Reno worked on her
final decision, Republicans said it
was certain she would reject their
demand that she seek an independent
counsel to investigate campaign
fund-raising activities by President
Clinton and Vice President AI Gore.
Reno met with lop aides and leaders of her campaign finance task
force for 2-112 hours Sunday. Asked
as she left the Justice Department
building whether she had made any
decision, she replied. " No comment"
She added, "I'd look at Tuesday.··
the deadline for her to decide whether
to inform a ~peeial court that aCtivities by Clinton and Gore may warrant
the appointment of an outside prosecutor 10 investigate J)ossiblc illegalities.
Aides indicated that. as is her
p,ractice at pre-&lt;lccision meetings.
Reno asked questions but didn't volunteer her thinking.
But Republicans used appearances on Sunday talk shows to predict that Reno would opt against an
independent counsel.
Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah. chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, contended on "Fox News
Sunday •· that she would do s;]
because- political apP,Ointccs in the
Justi.ce Department were "politically advising her not to do this rather
than advising her to live within the
law and do what's right. ..
Sen. Arlen Specter. R-Pa .. said he
also was rcsi~ncd to a negative decision by Reno. "I think she just has a
blind spot." he said on ABC's "This
Week."
Gore has acknowledged making
telephone calls from the White House

to solicit contributions for the I996
election campaign. Clinton has said
he may have made calls but docsn 't
recall having done so.
The Justice Department task force
has concluded that the 114-year-old
statute that bars solicitation of campaign contributions in federal offices
was aimed at protecting federal workers and was never intended to ban
phone calls to private citiZens from
officials seeking contributions.
Hatch said he agreed with Reno
that phone calls alone were not
enough 10 trigger the Independent
Counsel Act. "That's a false and
bogus issue," he said on NBC's
"Meet the Press."
But he said that by ·focusing on
that single issue, Reno was ignoring
larger reasons for appointing an independent counsel. He said those
include "the misuse of soft money,
the misuse of hard money. the collection of hard money in an improper way. the influence of foreigners in
our process."

Soft money refers to funds earmarked for general pulllOses by a
political party. while hard money is
intended for specific candidates.
, Rep. Barney Frank. D-Mass .,
'argued the Independent Counsel Act
is triggered only when there is specific evidence that a crime has been
· commiucd, and that exhaustive investigations by congrcssiooal commitIces have failed to tum up such evidence.
"That have come up with evidence of where we have abuses that
·require, I think. chan~cs in the _law.
which paradoxically. of course. most
of the Republicans arc against."
Frank said on NBC.
Justice Department spokesman
Bert Brandenburg said Reno spent

NASA abandons plans
CAPE CANAVERAL Aa. (AP)
- NASA has given up on a plan to
,.- set loose a science satellite that had
to be hauled back on board space
shuttle Columbia by spacewalking
astronauts.
Columbia simply docs not have
enough fuel to go after the Spartan
satellite a second time, NASA officials decided after a week of analysis. The S10 million craft will remain
aboard the shwtle and he returned to
Earth without a single solar observation.
The six shuttle astrona.uts learned
of NASA's decision after they woke
up Sunday night.
·
"Sure, we're always a little bit
disappointed if we don't get the full
mission accomplished ... commander
Kevin Kregel said in a TV interview.
"But we did retrieve the satellite ...
and so the important thing is we' rc
brin~ing Spartan back down to Earth.
It will get to lly another day."
Added a&lt;tronaut Winston· Scott:
"After all. the sun will he there and
we don ' t want to risk losing the !latcllitc alto11c1hcr."
The space ~gcncy had hoped to
rclca&lt;e Spru1an for I8 hnurs. less than
half the t imc it was supposed to lly
free of Columbia. to study the sun's
outer atmosphere. But missiun managers concluded it wasn't feasible to
give SP"n~n a second chance based
on the shunl~ · s fuel supply.
"If you were dcJ&gt;Ioying a brand
new. fresh spacecraft. you wouldn't
do it under those circumstances:·
explained mission operations director
Lee Briscoe.
"So here 's a case where we have
the Spartan in the bay. We have it. It's
a healthy spacecraft. We can bring it
back. If you were 10 deploy it under
these kinds of propellant margms,
you could stand a 40 or SO percenl
chance of not brin)linJI it b.ack" if
there was a problem, he said.
NASA has no firm plans yet to
send Spartan up on another shuttle

pan of Sunday studying the findings
of the task force. In mid-afternoon,
Deputy Attorney General Eric Holdcr. task force chief Charles LaBella
and several other lawyers arrived for
the meeting with Reno.
Brandenburg insisted that Reno's
decision would be made based on the
evidence. "The attorney general is
ready and willing 10 take any credible allegations forward as she has
done on the issue of the phone
calls." he said. " Where they are specific and credible, we will take them
forward , where not, we cannot."
Hatch also contended that "war
has already broken .out" between the
FBI and Justice Dcpanmcnt attorneys
because FBI Director Louis Frech
supports an independent counsel .
"When you have . a squabble
between ihe attorney general and the
head of the FBI, you know dam well
that there's a reason II'&gt; appoint an
independent caunsel and to get rid of
the conflict of interest," he said on
NBC.
Frech and Reno met last week.
Brandenburg said, and ''the FBI has
had every opportunity to make its
views known."
Along with the decision on the
Clinton-Gore investigation, Reno
also must decide by Tuesday whether
an independent counsel should investigate allegations that then-Energy
Secretary ,Hazel O'Leary solicited a
charitable contribution in re!Um for
meeting with a group of Chinese
businessmen.
She has a Feb. I I. 1998 deadline
on another investigation, into what
roic, if any, Clinton played in the
Interior Depanment's rejection of an
Indian · casino that was opposed hy
other tribes that had donated to 'thc
Democmtic Party.

By STEVEN K. PAULSON ·
A11oclmd Preu Writer
DENVER- Shredded by a bomb
and put through destructive tests by
FBI scientists, Q507 has been
through more than ~!most any other
piece of evidence in the Oklahoma
City bombing case.
QS07 is a piece of the Ryder rental
truck prosecutors say carried the
two-ton fertilizer bomb that
destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building on April I 9, 1995,
killing I68 people.
The fragment is tiny, but it is a
huge pan of the government's case
against Terry Nichols.
Prosecutors say the tiny fragment
contained the only trace of ammonium nitrate fertilizer left from the
bomb. They hope to link Nichols to
· th&lt;&gt; truck by association. since the
same type of fertilizer. racing fuel and
-other potential bomb components
were found in his Kansas home two
days after the blast.
The fragment was expected to be
the subject of more scientific testimony today ._, the trial entered its
lOth week.
Nichols. 42. could be sentenced to

By JIM SPECHT
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON ~ One of the
most aggressive hiring drives in the
nation will get stancd in 1998 as the
U.S. Census Bureau begins interviewing applicants for a work force
of more than half a million information gatherers.
The vast majority of the employees will work for just three months in
the year 2000. knocking 'on doors to
find people' who do not ·return a
mailed questionnaire.
But thousands of employees will
be needed beginning next year 10 help
update address lists and organize the
massive operation designed 10 reach
every household in the United States.
"As·soon a.&lt; we get our funding in
hand, we'll start hiring in a number
of area.&lt;." said Assistant Census
Director Robert Marx. "We're going
to be reaching out IQ groups from all
segments of soi:iety beginning -next
year."
The first group of hires will be
partnership specialists, whose job
will be to work with local governments, businesses and community
organizations to get the word out
about the importance of being counted - and the guarantee of absolute
confidentiality.
Census Bureau officials already
arc asking civic groups and local

agencies to advenisc for workers,
help find space to lcst'applicants, pro. vide assistance for day care and
arrange flexible hours to allow
employee.&lt; 10 work on the census.
.
Partnership specialists will distribute information on the census to
schools. churches and other or~anizations.
"
The bureau wllhry. 10 hire up to
4,000 welfare recipients in I998 and
· 1999. with additional hiring planned
for the peak period from April to June
2000, Marx said. But no prclcrcncc
can be given to wdfarc recipients, he
said. By Jaw, the only grgup that can

receive ·preference is veterans.
Pay will start at from $8 to $I 5 an
hour, depending on the area and the
skills needed for a particular job.
Information on census jobs is
available by calling the regional
office assigned to your stale.
• Residents of Alabama, Florida
and Georgia should call the Atlanta
regional office at (404) 730-3832.
• Residents of Arizona, Colorado,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,. New
Mexico, North and South Dakota,
Utah and Wyoming should call the
Denver regional office at (303) 9696750.
• Residents of Ai-kansas, Iowa,
Kansas, Minnesota. Missouri and
Oklahoma should call the Kansas
.
City office at (913) 55 I-6728. .

When y.ou're ·i_n love,.does age·matter? Not to these readers

expert made scientifically invalid
conclusions about the bomb's size
and components.
The FBI's credibility was partial·
ly at issue during a he~ng Friday out
of the presence of the jury.
·
FBI chemist Ronald Kelly and
agent Alton Wilson were on a team
that recovered the fragment in a parking
. .lot across from the Murrah build•
tng.
During McVeigh's trial. Kelly lcs,
1ilied that Wi Ison photographed the
fragment. But Wilson tc~tified last
week that he did not photograph it.
and Kelly testified Friday he could" 't recall who shot the picture- but
still thought Wilson had.
Instead of photographing some
evidence where it was found, Kelly
also acknowledged that agents put the
evidence in plastic bags and then took
pictures. He said some of pieces were
not documented on photo logs or on
hand-drawn maps of the bomb scene.
U.S . District Judge Richard
Maisch said Kelly should not have
discussed the evidence with Kelly
before testifying at trial. but ruled the
mistake wasn't serious enough to
exclude the evidence.

Ann
Lanqers
IW7. W. 1\n~Je, Tim ~J
Syndicate and CreatnrJ
Sylldlc•te

· Dear Readers: Last week, I
printe!! several letters about men
who had married older women and
vice versa. You may recall that some
of those marriages worked out well.
Others were disastrous. Well ,-folks,
the mail continue~ to be overwhelming. I had no idea the subject would
be of such intense interest. Keep
reading for more:
From Somewhere .in Oregon: I
am IS years older than my husband.
I resisted his advances because of,

we

• Residents of California (S&lt;Ktth ol'
Santa Cruz and Modesto) should coil
the Los Angeles oflicc ill ( KI8) 904639:\. From Santa Cruz and Modesto
north. call the Seattle oflice at (206)
728 - ~}00.

• Rcsid.:!nts of Connecticut. .
Maine. Massachusetts. New Hampshire. Rhode Island and Vermont
should call the Boston office at (6 I7)
424-0500.
.
• Rcsidents ·of Delaware. District
of Columbia. Maryland and Pennsylvuni·a should call the Philadelphia
ollicc at (215) 597-4920.
• Residents of Hawaii shnuld call
the Los Angeles office, (818) 9046393.
• Residents of Idaho. Oregon,
Washington and Alaska should call
the Seattle office. (206) 728-5:\00.
• Residents of Illinois. Indiana and
Wisconsin should call the Chicago
office, (708) 562-1350.

TOPS IN SllTCHERY • Eloise Drenner took first place In
craftera with her hand·atltched display at the 27th Annual Boll
Evans Farm Festlvlil. Hera she Is presented a rosette and check
by Dan Evans. Susan Dodson of Pomeroy, left, and Carla Wyant
at Rutland work for Drenner.
· ·

Eloise Drenner wins 27th annual
Bob Evans Farm Festival award
Eloise Drenner of Pomeroy was award~winning craflers with a rosette
selected from more than I 00 crafters and/or a cash prize. Each crafter was
to win a (irst place award at the 27th, judged on creativity, demonstrations,
annual Bob Evans Farm Festival in product quality and his or her overRio Grande . .
c'
all display.
The Bob Evans Farm Festival is
Drenner dempnstrated stitchery
and offered a variety of hand-stitchCll held annually. the second full weekend in October on the 1,1 00 acre Bob
items for sale.
Dan Evans, chairman of the board Evans Farm in celebration of the
and chief executive officer of Bob company's down-home heritage.
Evans Farms, presented the top ten

• Residents of Kentucky. North ·
and South Carolina; Tennessee · and
Virginia should call the Charlotte
office, (704) 344-6142.
• Residents &lt;if Louisiana. Mississippi and Tcxa&lt; should call the Dallas office. (214)640-4400.
• Residents of Michigan. Ohio and
West Virginia should call the Dcm&gt;it
office at (313) 259-J 158.
·

By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Office Manager In Athens
Social Security Commissioner
Kenneth S. Apfel has stated that
"there is no question that Social Security will be there" for future generations. "The only question is wha~
shape it will take."
This raises the question of what
kind of ·soc'ial' Security system we
want. Based on what people like
about the present system, we may be
able to determine what they expect of
Social Security in the future. Following are some of the most popular
characteristics·of Social Security:

ICommunity .calendar I
The Community Calendar Is
~ubllshed a8 a free servi~e ro non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting · and special eveJ!Is. The
calendar is not designed to pro1110le
sales or fund raisers or any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
MONDAY
SYRACUSE -- Regular meeting
of Sutton Township Trustees Monday, 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Municipal
building.

Tuesday, 6 p.m. Bring covered dish.
Meat will be provided. Meeting at
7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM regular meeting
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at the temple.
Installation of officers.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE -- Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164 F&amp;AM meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m . Installation of officers.
Refreshments.
MIDDLEPORT-- The Middleport
Literary Club will meet Wednesday,
2 p.m. at the home of Faye Wallace
in Middleport. Paulipc Horton will
review Stitches in Time by Barbara
·
Michaels.

must pay for the goods and services
they use reduces the value of their

52 WEEKS.
FOR ONLY ·

•aaAo

CARPENTER
Columbia
Township Board of Tr~stees regular
meeting Monday. 7 p.m. at the fire
Slation.
RACINE-- Racine Village Council meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.
LETART FALLS -, Letart Town- '

ship Board of Trustees regular me~l- ·
ing Monday, 6 p.m. at the office
building .
TUESDAY
POMEROY-- Immunization clinic, Tuesday, 5 to 7 p.m. at. the Meigs.
County Health Department. Walk-ins
welcome. Bring shot records and
medical cards if available .

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

crrv--------------------------------------------ZIP

I

POMEROY -- State Senator
Michael Shoemaker office hours
Tuesday, 10 to II a.m. at the Meigs
High School library.
ALFRED -- Orange Town ship
Board of Trustees meeting Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Clerk Osic
Follrod.

monthly payment, unless there is a
mechanism for enabling benefits to
keep up. The Advisory Council
strongly supported full, automatic
cost-of-living adjustments in benefits.
Low administrative costs-- Sos.;ial
Security spends less than one percent
of Social Security taxes on the
administration of the program, a fig'ure unmatched by jlrivate jndusu;y,
The cost of admini'stering any retirement plan must be considered ,
Protection guard against risk of
failure-- Social Security benefits are
guaranteed by the federal government. , Similar guarantees should
apply to any proposal to provide benefits for future generations.
Program prescribes specific levels
of benefits - People rely on Social
Security benefits for their retirement,

as well as for disability and survivors
protection, as a "defined benefit."
You need to know how much you can
count on under a new system.
Protection for disabled workers -Under tire current program, 80 percent of current workers would receive
benefits if they arc unable to work
because of a severe physical or menta) condition. More than 5.1 million
workers and their families currently
count on these benefits as their prinlary source of income.
Protection for family members if·
you die or become di sabled -- Work- ·
ers with families need to know that
they will receive an income if they
become disabled or die. Does the proposal provide for more than a retirement program?
Fair rate of return --The Adiliso-

Hoods visit Meigs ·County
port; spent an evening with Rosalie's
aunt and uncle, Ronald and Pauline
Davis of Dexter; went to Columbus
to visit Rosalie's mother, Jeanette
Davis, and her brothers, Roger and
Kaye Davis of Pickerington: and visited Rodney Davis and Nancy Harris
of Westerville, before returning to
California on Saturday.

appy Holidays From
The ·

libraries

......

An Outreach Program of Sharing ·&amp; Caring

story to the media.
.
Michael said he has explained his

90045

ry Council believes that the Social
Secunty system should meet a test of
providing a reasonable rate of return
on the contributions of younger and
future generations.

Low taxe s paid by your employer, and the self-employed. Currently
you pay 7.65 percent of your earnings
for Social Security retirement, survivors, disability and Medicare's hospital insurance'protection. and your
employer matches tills amount. If you
are self-employed, you pay both the
employees and employer's share.
15.30 percent.
These arc things that need to be
considered about any proposal
change Social Security. They reflect
to a large extent what we have come
to expect of our Social Security system based on our experience over the
'past 6 I years.

decision to Ms. Contos, but he's not
sharing the reasons with the public .

Our
customers·
are the
We invite you
to visit our Rutland office during

CustomerJt
·Appreciation Days
December 1, 2, 3

* * *

Door Prizes &amp; Refreshments
Blood Pressure Clinic

Proceeds wlll 'be donated to the Meigs County Cooperative Parish and other programs. We will be
having a Ham* Giveway before Christmas. Stop In
and register by checking out Five Books.
II 992-581
For

Blood Pressure Clinic courtesy Rutland EMS
llecember 3 only, 9 - 3

~~~---,[
Rutland Office

742-2888

POMEROY -- FOE Auxiliary
2171 will hold a potluck dinner

I
1

Send questions to Ann Landers, ereators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles, Calif.

to have an intrinsic right to sur vi val the Ahisma Foundation, and we want to be rehaboitated. The person or
or freedom from abusive treatment. to share our good fortune with the family must be committed to a long
Nonhuman creatures arc out of luck. animals of our country.
·
life with thi s cat or dog. The new
"Ahisma" on the other hand ,
The award was made to ARP, the owner must be willing to have the
endows men and women with Animal Resource Project, established animal spayed or neutered. if this has
respon~ibility rather than privilege in
by the Meigs County Humane ·Soci- not already been done , and we can
their relationships with the world and ety to help defray the costs of reha- help if it has not been done, and see
its nonhuman creatures. II is a rcspon~ bilitating and finding a home for that she or he has regular vi sits to the
sibility that involves rigorous efforts .abused and/or neglected dogs or cats. veterinarian for checkups and vacCito reduce the pain and destruction Already, some of these funds have nations .
inherent in the life processes to a min- gone to repair the broken leg of a
Remember that in the spirit of
imum.
Ahisma
we do not wish these saved
stray cat found in Pomeroy, who has
The Boston-based Ahisma Foun- now been adopted by the kind man animals to be further traumatized:
dation was created to aid deserving who found the cat.
these creatures should have only
institutions working to improve the
Because we have, as yet, no place happy memories from here on out.
lot of abused and threatened animals, to house any animals which are
If you would like to contact us or
including organizations that work for brought to use or which our members make a donation to this program,
animal protective legislation and lind, we ask that any atiimals that you please contact Rita Lewis, the treahumane societies. The Meigs Coun- wish to benefit from ARP already be surer of the Meigs County Humane
ty Humane Society is a grateful owned or that there is someone who Society, at 992-5834, an~ please join
recipient of a grant for $2,500 from .is willing to adopt the animal that is us in thanking the Ahisma Founda.tien.

NEW YORK (AP).- Aman who could go ahead with the wedding. but
stranded his would-be bride at the I asked for the wedding to be postaltar only to have her go public with poned," he said, "I should have been
the story says it wasn ' I exactly a' last- more force(ul. I felt things had to be
sorted out before the wedding."
minute decision.
Tasos Michael , 35, said he told · Ms. Contos was at the Manhattan
Nicole Contos, 27. about his concerns church Nov. 22 when Michael's best
a few months ago,· during the sum- man informed her the groom would
not sfiow. She held the reccptio~ anymer.
" Nicole was confident that we way with .the 250 guests and told her

.

ADDRESS------------~------------------------------

egg, I dumped my 22-year-old
steady and married Reggie. After a
year of heartache and regret, I
di vorced him and married my old
boyfriend , who was really my true
love. Six months later, Reginald
married my mother. Embarrassing?
Not at all. We often double-date and
get along beautifully.
Gem of the Day (Credit Adm.
Hyman Rickover): At any given
moment during a 24-hour day, onethird of the people are asleep. The
other two-thirds art awake and ereating problems.

No.;.show groom says his marriage· worries were known

Rosalie Hood, daughter of Jolene
and Leslie Hood and a friend, Jack,
visited family and friend s in Meigs
MIDDLEPORT-- Middleport Vil- THURSDAY
County recently.
lage Council meeting Monday, 7:30 .
POMEROY -- Big Bend Farm.
The Hoods reside in Orange,
p.m. at village hall.
Antiques Club. Christmas . potluck. Calif.
Thursday, 6:45 p.m .. Senior Citizens
While here they viSited Freda
RACINE -- Regular meeting of Center. Present and past members
Hood
and several friends in MiddleRacine Chapter I 34 Order of the and their families welcome.
Eastern Star Monday. 7JO p.m.
Installation of officers. Refreshments.

NAME----------------------------------------------

Twelve years ago, my sister, at age
50, staned to date my brother-inlaw, who was .67. I did not support
the relationship even though they
were introduced by hi s father. I just
didn'tthink they were right for each
other and said so. As we prepare to
ies.
celebrate their lOth wedding
Sun City, Ariz.: I was swept off anniversary, I am feeling ashamed of
my feet by a man who was 20 years myself and slightly "out of the
my senior. He was widowed, and I loop." They are extremely happy. I
was starry:eyed. Soon after we mar- should have heeded your admoni ried, he retired, and his income was lion to MYOB.
cut in half. He began 10 drunk too
Cincinnati: When I was I9 and a
much and stay out late with "the junior at Ohio State, I met " Regiboys." We've been married for 18 nald." He was 37. established in
years because I've worked so hard to business, attractive and attenti \'C .
keep us iogether. If I had it to do My mother said he was " very nice"
over again, would I? I'm not sure.
but too old for me. I wouldn'tlisten.
Monroe, N.C.: I hope that lady When Reginald gave me. a diamond
in Harrisburg, Pa., goes for ii. engagement ring the size of a hen's

What kind of Social Security do we -want?

Cost-of-living
increases
Increases in the price beneficiaries

MIDDLEPORT -- Friends of the
Meigs County Library meet Monday,
7 p.m. at the Middleport Library.

PL£A8E SI!ND A GifT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL FOR 1 YEAR F!)R ONLY
111.40 (Piyment InCluded).
SUBSCRIPTION Glf'l' FOR:

sure of family members and stopped
seeing me . Today, he is engaged to a
woman who is five years hi s junior.
I have two children older than his
fiancee. I was really crazy about him
and am .sure we coold have made it
if he hadn't listened to the busybod-

Ahisma .comes to Meigs County
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County
Humane Society
· "Ahisma" is a Sanskrit religion
which, very roughly translated,
. means "non-injury. " The term
evolved from the Asian Indian philosophy that views the earth and all
forms ·of life as important and interdependent. This may strike my readers as quite different from our Western theological tradition which is
farm too often homecentric, that is,
views humans as the mosl important
of all, "in the center."
In a solidly homecentric world
view, the earth and all its nonhuman
inhabitants are created so as to provide the raw materials for our human
needs, desires and convenience. In
this view, humans alone are believed

FOR THE PERSON WHO .HAS ·EVERYTHING
1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

STATE

"You're a ,fool. ,You don't know
what you're missing." He said,
"You could be right. How about din. ncr next week?" After that one date,
we decided we were right for each
other and got married. The only time
I feel th·e age gap is when he plays·
his kind of music. It 's so square.
Theson, Ariz.: I am 52. My husband is 35. When
married, I had
three teenagers. When I was 40 and
"Tom" was still in college, we had a
daughter who is now I2. Age never
mattered in my family. My grandmother is 96, and her husband is 77.
They've been married 50 wonderful
years.
BHiings, MonL: I was '50 (but
looked 40) when I met a tall, handsome man of 33. We had a terrific
romance, but he caved in to the pres-

CHECKTHEWANTADSFIRST!

Cases settled in county court
The following cases were settled L Chi&lt;;k. Bidwell. ~at he h. $25 plus
recently in the Meigs County Court cost&gt;: Milford Bowens Jr.. Pomeroy.
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
scat hclt: $25 plus costs: Sara B.
Fined were: Walter A. Ellis. Rut- Roush. Middleport. driving on closed
land, driving under suspension, $200 highway. $20 plus costs: Crystal L.
plus costs. fivcday.sjail suspended if Priddy. Rutland. failure to control,
valid operator's ' license presented $20 'plus costs: Derek L. Yonker.
within 60 days. one year probation: Pomeroy, speed. $30 plus cps Is; CanPhyllis 1. Johnson, Shade. e&lt;pircd dace L. Tillis. Rutland. speed, $30
OL. $I 00 suspended to $25 plus plus costs; Harold Brooks. Rutland,
costs. thrcc days jail suspended: Jere- falsifrcation, $200 plus costs, two
my D. Johnson, Middleport, speed, years probation. 30 days jail sus$25 plus costs; Jack Holcomb. pcnded, vehicle immobilized until
Columbus. hunting on-another's land proof of insurance and valid tags arc
without permission, $50 plus costs: provided; Brian K. Schroeder, Fort
Tho~as A. Pcmbe~on, Colu~bus, Jennings. speed, $30 plus costs;
huntmg . on anothcrs land wtthout
Brinn J. Robinson. Ada; speed,
permtssaon. $50 plu~ costs: Timoth.Y $30 plus costs; Jill L. ·Bowry. ParkE. Poc.Logan, hunung on another~ ersbtirg.W.Va.. speed, $30 plus costs:
land _wtthout perrniSston. $50 plus Susan, L. Knam. Alliance, speed,
costs. Steven E. Ta~lor. Plam Ctty, -$30 plus costs; Jessica L Tackett,
, huntmg . on another s land Without Piketon, speed, $30 plus costs; Emma
permiSSion. $50 P!us costs:
.
I . Wilson, Shade, failure to yield. $20
Thomas A. Elktns, Barboursville, plus costs; William R,. Coburn Jll;'
W.Va .. spccd..$20 plus ~osL•; exptred Steubenville, speed, $30 plus costs;
rcgtstr~tto~. costs only. Gregory A. Eric S. Gallion, New ,Philadelphia,
Tay!or. Middleport. reckless opera- speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25
tton. $50 plus costs. SSOO forfeiture; plus costs; John B. Walton, Wellston,
Dana R. Wtlhams Jr.. Pomeroy. theft, - speed, $30 plus costs; James M. Kel$100pluscosts.twoyenrsprobahon, ley, Reedsville, seat bell, $25 plus
30 day~ Jatl suspended to three da¥'• costs ; Wertley A. Ladeaux, Marieua.
restttutton ordered; Tony Hams, Mtd- speed. $30 plus costs: Brooke A. Ashdlcpon. theft $100 plus c~sls; two brook. Chillicothe, speed, $30 plus
years probation. 30 days J~ll ~us- costs; Richard D. Plymale, Gallipopendcd to three days. rcs~ttutwn; lis, seat hell, $25 plus costs: De'AnCharlcs Landers, Pomeroy. dtsorder- dre L Brown: Chillicothe, speed, $50
I)' conduct $50 plus costs; Ertc Dtd- plus costs; Jeffery A. Moss Sr., Gal- ·
die. Pomeroy. diSorderly conduct, Jipolis. speed, $30 plus costs ; Sara G.
$100plus costs. one y~ar probation : Levine, Trumbull, Conn .. speed, $50
K1mberly McKenZie, Pomeroy, plus costs ; David J. Moore, Athens,
n~ OL. $I SO plus costs, three days speed. $30 plu_s costs; Phillip J. Vest
Jail sus~ndcd to one day. $75 sus- Jr.. Fayetteville. W.Va., scat belt. $25
pendcd 1f vahd OL presented wtthtn plus costs.
90 days, one year probation ; Timothy ·
·

the age difference. He insisted it
meant nothing to him, but it still
bothered me a lot. I had two adult
children and was told I could never
have any more. My husband said it
didn 't mauer. Lo and behold, at S I
·years of age, I became pregnant. .
That child is now nearly 3, and he is
the light of our Jives. We are crazy in
love and couldn't be happier.
Williston, Vt.: When I returned
from ·put of stale two years ago. my
car was vandalized, and the investigating officer was very helpful. We
-started talking, an~ he invited me to
have a beer. Then, he asked me how
old I was. When I said, "Twentyfour," he said, " It. won't work. I'm
45." He called me several months
later to say "Merry Christmas."
After a ·long conversation. I said,

'

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312 GIFTS

Spartan . failed to receiVe a crucial
computer command before it was set
loose on Nov. 21 because of either a
snit ware problem or crew error.

Page7
Monday. December 1, 1997

..

Census preparation expected
to. create thousands of jobs

to launch satellite

mission •.Briscoc said .
Spartan turned out to be nothing
but trouble for the asironauts. quite
possibly through their own fault.
Unknown to anynnc at the time.

die if convicted of murder and conspiracy in the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in U.S. histofy. His former Army buddy, Timothy McVeigh.
29, was sentenced to death after being
convicted of identical charges in .
June.
The defense has argued that the
fragment may have been contaminated in FBI lab tests. and that it is
impossible to dctcriiiine who may
have handled it because of the way
the evidence was stored.
·
That the fragment survived at all
was remarkable, scientists. said. A
strong thunderstorm rolled through
Oklahoma City the night of the
bombing, but the piece of the Ryder
truck panel was covered by other
debris.
It was FBI scientist Sieve
Burmeister who said he found a trace
of the fertilizer embedded in the
wood. That evidence is now gone,
consumed by iests needed to verify
the results,
•
A Justice Department report earlier this year ctitici7.ed the FBI explosives lab because of the way evidence
in the case was handled. The report
concluded that a lop nplosi ves

The .Daily ·S entinel

By The Bend

Rental. truck 1r~gme·nt takes
center stage in Nichols trial

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • MiddlePort, Ohio

The Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games,
pool.
Weekly activities are Line
Dancing classes, with instructor
Paulette Harrison, on Mondays
from 1:00 to 2:00, cost $1.00;
Chorus Practice on Tuesday at
11 :30; Knitting Circle o~
Wednesday from 10 to 12, and
Physical Fitness, chair selling exercises, on Tuesdays and Thursdays
at 11 :15.
The "Over 55 Exercise Class"
is held on Mondays and
Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. through
December 15. The cost for the
class, which consists of bending
and stretching for muscle toning
and strengthening and walking and
low impact aerobics for cardiovascular conditioning, is 50~ for each .
session auended.
Transportation by Center vans
is available on Mondays and

Wednesdays to the Arthritis Water
Aerobic classes at Royal Oak Park,
leaving the Center at 9:00a.m. For
further information, call the Center
at 992-2161.
A representative from the
Athens Social Security Office will
be at the Center on Wednespay,
December 10, from 10 to 11 a.m.
Tuesday, December 2 - Alice
Wolfe will be the instructor for an
Abaca Angel class; the cost is $8.00
for material with the class beginning at 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday, December 3 and
Thursday, December 4 - Becky
Baer, Meigs County Family and
Consumer Science Agent, will conduct the annual HOLIDAY HAPPENING from I :00 to 3:00. Cost
for the program is $5.00, with food ·
sampling included. Please call the
Center, 992-2161, to make a reservation. This program is open to all
age groups ..
Thursday, December 4 - the
regular meeting of the PERl will be
held with dinner at noon and the

Tree of Lights ·
. The Senior Citizens Center proceeds from the "Tree of Lights"
will feature a "Tree of Lights" to will be used to assist the Home
honor friends, relatives, neighbors Delivered Meal Program. You may
and/or church members.' Donations make your donation ht the front
of $5.00 will place a gold star on desk at the Center or by mailing
the tree in memory of or to honor a your check to: Meigs Multipurpose
recipient. The purchaser will be Center, 112 East Memorial Drive,
given the ornament as a keepsake P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
following the holiday season. All

.

J

speaker at I :00.
t;Thursday, December 4 - the
regular Thursday evening 'dinner
will be held, with lighting of the
outside memorial Christmas Tree at
5:15 and music by The Classics at
'5:30 to begin the holiday season.
Public is invited to attend.
Friday, Dec. 5 - · trip to
Parkersburg, WV which includes
shopping at Grand Central Mall
and the Singing Christmas Tree
program at the North Parkersburg
Baptist Church with dinner at the
Old Country Buffet at your own
expense. Call the Center, 9922161, for.further information.
Wednesday, December 10 -the
Stroke Survivors Support Group
will meet from I :00 to 2:30, .with
Lia Tipton, Holzer Rehabilitation,
Coordinator.
Thursday, December 18 - the
monthly Blood Pressure Cli11ic will
be held from 9:30 to 11:00.
Thursday, December 18 - the
annual Christmas dinner will be
served at noon, with the Christ
Academy Bell Choir, Pt. Pleasant,
playing at II :00. Call the Center,
992-2161, for a meal reservation by
Tuesday, December 16.
Friday, December 19 - The
Arthritis Support Group meets
from 10:30 to noon. The holiday
dinner and discussion group will be
held.
The Senior Citizens Center
will be closed December 24 and
December 25 . for the Christmas
holiday, and January I for New
.Years Day.

Monday, Decemw 1,1997

.

Senior Center December Activities

:.!O~DAY

TUESDAY

1

Ietner
llluhed Pot.toee

WEDNESDAY

.

2

s

Bakejl Cbickoo

Soup Beau •

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

Cb1ckoa • loo41oo

5
lleat Loaf with·

Baa

laebed Potatoee
·Cole Slaw
witb Gravy
Cornbr.a.d
Glu.ed Car.rota
Cr ;&gt;o:my Fruit Sahd
Bread
Cou~tle
Pea.ra to Lime Jello

8

9

10

Bruaael Sprouta
Bread

.Hot Apple Slleeo
W1tb RailiDI

-d

G!o.. rbread
11

Steak
Sw&amp;et Potatoes
ltxed Veaetablea
Bread
Pruitas

Chili Con Carne
Cole Slaw
Cbeeae Slice
Cra.ckere
Gr&amp;pee
Brownie

Boor T1po 1o
8t..k
Gravy on Rice
'K&amp;abed Potatoea
Broccoli • Carrota
wub
• CaulUlower
Llaa Ieana
COrn
Jutce - Bread
Blacuit
~ea.cb Criap
Appleaauc•

1~

16

17
Beet Stew
Cole Slaw

PoJ'k

Liver l Onions
l&amp;ahed POtatoes
with Gra.vy
Buttered Corn
Bread
Frult Cocktail
22

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Cooked Cabbage
Bread
Peaellly Creamy
Pudding
29

Ba.ked Fish
Lyonnaise Potttoe
Buttered Corn
Bread
Peacb Sllees

.

Macaroni • Cbeea•
·Crea..d Toma.toea
Broccoli
Peacb Slices
Bread
3pa~rhet t1

18

Baited Baa Slice
8'tJMt Pot&amp;toea
OrHn Beane

Biacul't
Banana Slices in

Roll

Oel&amp;tiD

23

Tropical Pruit
Cbrtetmaa Cookie
25

~4

wt tb

Sauce
Tossed Salad
GarUe Bread
Fr.uit

Gr••t

Meat

30
Damb\Orcer
Crea.ed Potatoes
Baked Beaaa
Bun- Oranae ' Juic~
Rocky Road Puddina

Cbriatus Iva

Cbriatmaa

Ceoter Closed

Center Cloaed

Hawaiian
~·
Bam Loat
~· · '1't Potatoea
-.tel Veptablea
.. 1·.· ad
Pineapple Chuaka

'

•••uary

Mew Y•ara Day
Center Closed

Aan RuJie, an RSVP volunteer, lent a helping baud with the
Multiphasic Screening. Ann
directed clients scheduled for
their bloodwork to tbe lab at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Multiphasic Screening was s·
joint etrort or the Retlml and
Senior Volunteer Progl'llm, the
Melas · County
Health
Department, and Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00
Mond•y thru Fi'lday

OH.

r;Ji1

992-3785

CITIZENS DAY
Every

Wednesday Storewide

19

Ba.ked Steak
ll&amp;abed Potatoea
wttb. Gravr
t:':li-rota
~ I'«:! ad
Pineapple Chunks

Offer good
Nov. 20-Dec. 20

PUBUC NOTICE

The · following
appttcattone and/or vertfted
comptalnta wet'11 received
and tho tollowlng !!raft,
propooed, or final action•
Wlrl !Hued, by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (OEPA) 1111 WMIL,
"Acttone• Inc tude the
adoption, modlll.cetlon, or
1'11vocallon or ordet'11 (O!Mr
than emergency orrlere);
the

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
I I h-220()

1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

I oil I ,... ,.
1-1:00- I l."'i-:!:!01•

COMPUjTE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

'

. FREE DELIVERY ~ SET-UP

• HOSPITAL BEDS

WIIEEL CHAIRS MEDICAID
• LIFI' CHAIRS'
PRIVATE INSURANCE
• BATHROOM AIDS
• NEBULIZERS
"We 7reat You
• STAIR GLIDES
Like Family"
I,

\IIII'OII--

1 I (I ~ -~ ; :. :
701'1\l."-1.

I I II I I I : I I

I

::jiH

/ -,,·: ,,;:II

-M-E80

'.
.' '

oa1\S

,

'(tt

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••

360° Communications

.

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! '

'-._,

OH. \;

-

•

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.. ... ...

HUBBARD'S

•

No• Open for Chn.tm.t.

51.25-59.95

_ ___:P..:u::b::.:llc=N:::OI:::Ice=._. 1GALJVartoua-7/Varloua~o
RB
2.205/Varloul, s- Aouto 1
NOTICE '· BIDDE
and vartoue In tho Cltloe of
STATE OF OHIO
DEPIIIRTIIENT OF
Bat pre end Marietta,
' TRANSPORTAnON
VlllaQII of Clertngton and
Cotumbul, Ohio
Balle Valley, by Heblctdat
ontce of Co"'l"cta
Bpreytng.
IAGII Copy Number 87-880
Bidding on thle project to
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
roatrlcled to Minority
Melling Dlto1 1/21/97 , Buetn .. e Enterprlttl
Sealed propooale will be (MBEe) certified 11 MBEa tn
accepted rrom an pre- eccordance with Section
qu8lttled !rlddtrl at the 123.151 (B) (2) Oflhl OhiO
Olllce or Contracte, Room "-viMd Code by the State
118 ol tho Ohio Department Equal
Employment
T ranapotUtton, ,Opportunity Coordlnetor
01
Public Notice
Cotumbue, Ohio, unlit 1.0:00 and quetllted to bid wll~
ODOT
under
Cheptor
5525
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
a.m. W -y, Decem ber ollhl Ohio Rnlllll Coda.
STATE OF OHIO
~:,· 1887 lor tmprovemtnll
"The date 111 lor
OEPARTMENT OF
Gallla, Hocking, Matga, l'omplotton of thle work
TRANSPORTAnON
Monroe, Morgen, Noble, ehall be 11 111 forth In tho
Cotumbue, Ohio
VInton,
w aehtngton bidding propoul." Plane
Office of Contracta
countt .. , Ohio rcr end Spaclllcattone ero on Loge! Copy Numberl7-185
Improving
uctlona file In the Depertmenl of
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Tranoportatlon.
Melling Dllo 11/21/87
·
· Jerry Wray
Seeled pt:Opoealt Will be
Director of Tranaportatlon accopted
from all proDecember 1, 8, 11117 .
quelllted blddora at tho
Public Notice
· Ontce of Contracte, Room
-....!~:!!!:~=:!...- 118 o.l tho Ohio Department

~~lumbue, Jh';!~=~~.::;

DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbue, Ohio
Ofltco of Contncta
c opy Number INI8 1
PRICE CONTRACT
Melling Dlto11/21!87
Setrled .propoaate wilt bo
eooep t• d 1rom all prequalltted blddera at the
Ollie• of contracte, Room
1111 ollhl Ohio Department
o1
T renaportatlon,
Columbue, Ohio, until 1o:oo
a.m. Wirdnoedoy, December
17, 11117 lor lmprovamonta
In: Gelllo County, Ohio lor
. Improving -'len GAL-325-

a.m. Wednaedey, Decembtr
17, 1197 lor lmprovemenll
In: Meta• County, Ohio lor
Improving eocllon MEG124-38.822, Sull Route 124
In the Vlltenoo of Pomoroy
•
and Syracu11, by draining
and paving with aephall
concrlllo.
"Tho dlle eet lor
completion of 11111 work
aha II be ae 11t forth In Ihe
bidding propoael." Plane
And Spaclllcatlon lrt on file
In the Dopartmant of
Traneportatlon.
Director ot TranapoJerryr:~

005.

Furnaces '2800 a month

$6.95-512.95
• Uvnrllllhs· 510.95
• Cut TrHS •$10.95-$15.95

Hilt Pumps lnstalled''3800 a month
Free Estimates

Fot the loved ones
Grave blankets, sprays,
wreaths, &amp; vases.

(Paymonls basad 011 approved credn)

W&lt; honor Golden Buckeyt Cant.
o~n Dally 9-5

B£1118 I CDDLIII

Sunday 1·5

SeNing Southeastern OH &amp; WV

992-sn&amp;

814-446-9418

·

t 391 Safford School

t'800-1172-5967

Personals

ANXIOUS?
TO MEET SOMEONE?
nRED OF THAT O~D BAR
SCENE? THEN CALL THE
DATELINE
900.285-8111 EXT. 8740
Only $2.99 Per Minute
• Must Be 18 Years Old.
Ser\I·U 819-6.!Hk34.

- Easy Bank Financing -

• Palndl baskell-

.

1

ANNOUNCEMENTS

.INu!lrff&amp;ll M ,

&amp;81100

• l'oirlllllli,,all wlan

Public Notice
11 ;890, State Route 325 tn
tho Ctty or VInton, by
gredlng end paving with
aephoH concrato.
"The date eat lor
completion of thle wOrk
ehell bo aa Ml forth In tho
bidding propout." ·
Plene end Spacltlcallone
,aro on lite In tha
Oopartmonl
of
Traneportatlon.
JerryWrey
Director or Trenaportauon
(12) 1, 8, 2tc

Little things ·
are Worth Alot

MobUe Rome Furnaces
and Beat Pumps

GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh

I

OH

'

AnENTION
j
Has Your Marriage Or R&amp;latiol!'tship Got Up &amp; Went? Stop Fn
Princess Video &amp; Rant One Of
Our Adult Videot, 1380 Eastem
·Avenue, Gallipolis. Ohio Or Call
61-4-441 ·5167.

:

•

t

Free Pagers Aclivation Aequtred

1-888-936-9774.

RUPP LANDSCAPING

Wreaths • Swage •
Roping
Grave Blankets
$5.00&amp; Up

11/21/97 t mo pd

.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

S2.99 Per Min 118 + Serv-U 6HI•

LOVE
AWAITSVOU
1-900·285-9077, E;ct. 8382, 12.9D
Per Min. Must Be 10 Yrs. Serv-U.

For Details Call
Ed Hupp (614) 843-5235
Jon Sargent (614) 992-7312
Delivery Available

949-2115

•

819-645·8434.

•Room AdciiUone

V.C. YOUNG Ill
982..215

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BACK HOE"
SERVICE

'
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Landscaping
Septic Tanks
Water Lines

992-6305

614·992-3220

.

1113/971

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l,. \

3D Announcements

DEER
'
PROCESSING
RACINE,OH.

Cut &amp; Wrapped

614-949-3060
John Wllllama,
Owner
Ucenaod
Electrician
Ftw E•flnMttl
24 hr. am~r~~ency

$35.00
$5extra for
skinning

MAPLEWOOD WE
949-2734

Country Srore Craft Sate Bentli!a
•
Greenfield V.F.D. &amp; Cnme Watch
~
December 511'1 . 611'1. 7th, thro Call .....
614·379·2449.'

Craft

•

'

..... .

son.

Hauling, Excav1ttng
&amp; Trenching .
Umeatone &amp;.Gr•vel
Septic Syllema
Trailer &amp; House Silas
Rftlonlbhr R1tt1
Joe- N. 'S ayre

614-742-2138
·... .. . -

ollt1'0.· .

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N_o nunbng or trespaasing day or ,
n1ght on Chartea Yost or Robert
Smith larmaln)'One caught will be

proaacullld.

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, ,,

4D

Giveaway
, ,.
7
~BI~ac k_m_a~le~P~u~pp~y~(6~.1-4)_4_4_6- '

-··

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Show· ono mila south Rav·

enswood, WV. atmtersect10n ol
~emtock Ad . and At. 2, U.P.C.
church lellowsh1p hall . No'l'ember
1Slh, 9:008m-S:OOpm. AU cri.lters
1ntere11ed call 304 · 273\ :,e t 3 : "'
Featured crat1er : Michel• Garret-

10/2S/961tfn

r

, "' ~

Ext 3278.

mo pd

SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
9115-4422
Cheater, Ohio

,.·

0

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Sports • Ena.rtalnmenl
' ~· ~
M&lt;wles. Horoscope~, FinanCial ' .,. :
CaJI 1·900·285-9&lt;J13
, 18 • 12.99 Uin.
.., '

DUMP TRUCK

7/22/lln

L .

sz.oti

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

985-4473

I

CALLNOWI
'• '
1·900-289· 1077 Ext.1386,
~
Per M1nute, Must Be 18 Yra;., "\. ~
Serv·U 519-645-8434
- • ;

. -·

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

•

••

proach To Fmding That Spacial •
Someone ! The Power Is AU ·, ~
Yours ... At Your Discretion , -'t-.. . •
Your Convenience. At Your F1~ , ·•
gortipsl
;•

DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

Gravel·
LimestoneSand- Dirt

.. . .

(12) t, 8, 2 tc

I

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Try An Exciting Diflerant AJ»·

TRUCKING

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

'

•

THE ART
Ma~be Uncomfortable Is Asking

S&amp;L

No job 1b SmaU

'

.

9am-4pm

ROIUNCE • STATE OF

Someone For A Date? Then Get .

Pomeroy, Ohio
. . ....

GARAGE SALE
Dec. 3 &amp; 4th, 1997

:
•

•

Wnh The Program I ·

•NewGar~gea

•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooftng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Atao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

•

Feel A LiUie Awllward, Sn~. Or

'

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'•

•

• 645-8434.

Order Now for the Holidays
Custom Made for Your Loved One

(C-30) Morning Star Rd.
Racine

•

Ext. 9442

.

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE

'

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LOOKWG FOR A DATE?
SO AMI
1-900·285-9.!19 '

GUVE BLANKETS

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Cr&lt;l.....

OPEN EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS

"Don't look at mo like that. Ho chON ttl"

\I \I\

. Fax: 304-n3-5861.

&lt;

~

EWING RESIDENCE
300 4th St. Pomeroy, Ohio

I \I (,"-II\
I:: t I ; I ; : I

Cut Your Own
•
Fresh Cut
Any Scotch or White Pin_e- $15.00
Wagon Rides .:&gt;n Weekends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm, Follow signs .
Daily 10 am tit Dark
Nov. 28 thru Dec. 2t 11/24/971 mo."" .•.

of 1'uppors

\

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A

t CHRI~TMAS . TREES t JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
t '2 1/2O.St.lt.
Milo• Sou,.
Plel111 ~
113 W. 2ND St
POMEROY,
71614)667-34S3 .
t
614-992-5479
.....,,.,

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DIEIGEIICY
SEIVJCE

BUDFORD.'S

,..-----------------··
t CONNOLLY'S t CELLULAR PHONES ,..
. PhOne: 614: 992-2406

(740) 992-5500

OXYGEN
24-HOUR

~~ •.~I

614-992-3470

CHRI'STMAS TREES

•

250 Condor Sireet
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Dlv181on on·Nlc~Ois Metal, INc.

0
D.

·A

.Big Band .fabrication,
Machine.&amp; Welding Shop

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

POMEROY

r----

MEDICARE

HAULING

FEATURES DELTA
KITCHEN AND BATH
FAUCETS
634 MAIN ST.

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS
'

WICKS

UPS
Shipping
Available

O'DELL
LUMBER

-_,

0;11'0111

Complete M~~ebiae Sbop Service Fabrlcatioll
Steel Sales, Weldln11 Supplies, Industrial Gas
IUdlator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday- 8:00 a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Satunday - 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

tt

TUESDAY NIGHT
"FAMILY NIGHr

''Serving SOuthern Ohio lor over 20 years"

...... OIIAIIII

(LimeStoneLow Rain)

KIT 'N' CARL VLE ®by Larry Wright

one, get one .FREE
Ponnercty Location Only

MftiiiT Lln'l

Hartwell House
I00 Eosl Main, Pomeroy

Holiday Hrs.
Mon-Sat.1 0-4:30
1-5 Sunday

OOMNO'S PIZZA

Joe Wlleon · , ·,
(614) 992-4277

~~--~~------~

Public Notice

.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

20 Yra. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronple Jones

614·992-4025 ....

Merdlandlle
Not Included

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Everything
· for the
Patient
at
Home

na

Pick up diiCirded
appl11ncee, batl1rle1,
many ,netata &amp;
motor blockl.

Sale

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;
Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
Dressings

St. Rt. 325, Danville, Oh

NO.m~g:'~~RS

'

Lift Chairs
, Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids .
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding Pumps

Sat.'s 4 Sun's til Christmas

vartancH, or certlllcatea;

,

·

"Buflll Tour Dream"

end the approve! or
dlaapproval of plane and
epeclllcallona. "Drelt
Acttona" are wrlllan
atatomenta of the Director
or
Envtronmenut
Protocllon'e (Director'a)
Intent with reepoct tot he
tuuance, dontel, eac. of 1
pannlt, tlcenae, order, otc.
lnleroeted pereone may
oubmlt wrtlten cornmentl or
requ11t a public mellllng
regerdtng dren acllone.
Comment• or public
moettng requeeto muel be
eumbl1tod wlllltn :10 daya of
notice of the drelt action.

'

Remodeling ·:

...

111uance, danlal,

Save 15% off everything in our store.

~, .

•

modlftcallon or revocation
ollt-t, pormlll, IH-,

wrtnon etotomonte or the
dlr-·e Intent with
roapect to the 111uanco,
dontal, modification,
revocaalon, or renewal of a
parnilt, tlconae, or vartanoo.
Wrtnen commenta and
reqlleala lor a public
meettng regarding· a .
propoaed aotten may be
·oubmlned wllllln :10 daV8 of
nolle• of tho propoeed
action. An adludtoatton
hearing may be hald on a
propoaed action Ha Maring
roquoat or objection ole
recatvecl bv !he OIPIII Within
30 daya ol IRIIIIRt of the
propoaed action. WrltiM
commenll, requ1111 lor
public meellnge, and
adjudication hearing
roquelll mull be HRI to:
Hearing Clerk, Ohio
Envtronmantal Protection
Agency, P.O. Box 1041,
Columbua, Ohio 4321.1049
(Totephone: 814-144-21291.
"Final Actlone: are ecttone
of tho director whlcll are
ellectlve upon IIIUIIICI or a
atattd ollocttvo deto.
Purouent to Ohio Reviled
Code Section 3745.04, a ·
llul ectlon may bo
appoelod . to
the
Environmental Board of
RtvlltW (EBR) by 1 paraon
who wu 1 perty to a

________

M&amp;J

Public Notice

Cblckeo Patty
Broccoli - RDM
Mashed Potatoea•KDI
Broccoli Soup-Site
Toaato Juice-Site
Bread ~ Cracker•

Savings

'

Custom Homes

11/1!W71- mo. pd.

..
..

The Home Energy Assistance
Program (HEAP) is a federally
funded program administered by
the
Ohio
Department
of
Development,
Office
of
Community Service (OCS). It is
designed to help low-income
Ohioans meet the high costs of
home heating. HEAP pays a onetime payment for most PUCO reaulated utility customeB reflecting
their usage for th\ winter heating
season. \buchers are isaued to
non-regulated utility customers,
muter-metered and other appliCIIIts who do not have a utility bill
irt !heir name.
Applications for the Regular
HEAP program will be accepted
September through March 31,
1998.
If you have any queations or
would like an application, call
Darla Hawley at the Multipurpose
Senior Center at 992-2161.

'

614-992-oo77

28

'

Sunday Calls) .

Mln.2 Rooma

Beef &amp;Dd Noodle•
Cauliflower
Green Beane
Bread
Apricots

.

'

614-992-7643

, At. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051
OPEN NOV. 23- 11 to 9:00

CHEVAUER'S
CARPET CLEANING
$19.95,., rH•

~l ~kta111a

15o/o off

HEAP applications

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

COMMERCIAL and R~SIDENTIAL
F8EE ESTIMATES

From

Wednesdays
Senior Cituens Day
Storewide

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDs

•

$10 &amp; Up
BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

Happy'Holidaya

Pictured is Ma!Je Gibbs, ~rd llflde teacher at S.lllbury
Elementary, with some of her lltlldents oa their tour of the Cbester
Courthouse, the Academy, the Melp Couaty Courthouse and the
Melp County J1IL The lolln were funded by a ll'llnt received by
the Retlml and Senior Voluteer Paog~am (RSVP) which pi•~
RSVP volunteers In the dlaroom weekly. . Other third l!l'lldet
atteadiDII were: Syl'llcuse Elemeatary, P1tty Struebel, teacher; aad
Thppers Plains Elemeatary, Saady Needs, teacher.

'

Garages • -Replacement Windows
Room Addltrorui • Roofing

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

"Prop011d action•" are

WE HONOR

4

_New Homes • VInyl Siding New

.l~

Oven Pried CbickeD
llauhed Potatoea
wttb Gravy
OrMD hue
Bread
'

The Meigs Senior Center is
"Share the Holidays" funds named as a $100 grant recipient
pleased to announ.ce ·that the will be awarded to local Meals on from tbe "Share the Holidays"
National Meals on Wheels
Wheels programs in two categories grant fund. The money will be
Foundation and Kraft Foods, the
- grants for $100, and grants for used to support our ongoing work
nation's largest food company,
Meals on Wheels delivery vehicles of providing over 56,000 Home
have formed a pannership to bene- the Hot Shot by Delivery Delivered Meals yearly to eligible
fit our nation's at-risk elderly this
Concepts. Six h.undred $100 grants seniot5 residing in Meigs County.
season. Kraft is donating $SOO,iloo
have . already been designated to
You, your friends and neighto help Meals on Wheels deliver
launch the partnerShip; seventeen bors, and your family members are
Holiday meals to the homebound. . delivery vehicles will be awarded · urged to join in "Share the
by year-end.
·
The goa! of "Share the Holidays"
Holidays" through tbe purchase of
grant fund has been created and can
The Meigs County Council on · participating Kraft products this
· be supported through consumer
Agio~, Inc. is proud to participate
holiday season.
in that
and has
been
redemption of "Share the
Holidays" coupons.

~&amp;OU"
'QfJ~el
212EAS~N ST.

Oxy - Accitl Regulator Repair
• . · Stat, Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Augrattn Potatoe• .
Cre.-d Pe&amp;l
Bread
Boner Bee Ambroata

Evening
meals

.
The October birthday
Party and Halloween party
fealuml entertainment with
Prol'essor Myroni (Myron
Dumeld) playing a variety or
musical Instruments and
Bruce Stone, who Jives In
Florida. Bruce played old
time favorites and gospel
music. Earlier In the morning,
nrty three students from
Pomeroy .Elementary School
pal'llded throop the ~enter
dresnd in their Halloween
costumes. The class performed sevel'lll sonp under
the direc:tlon of Kathy Haley,
third gl'llde teacher.

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Wreat~s-

Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

Page 9 ,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CHRISTMAS TREES

•

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators

Touto Sauce

Grant received for Meals on Wheels

The evening meals will be held
cin Tuesday evenings and a special
event on Thursday, December 4,
due to the holiday season. A nutritious meal is served from 4:45 to
5:30 at a suggested donation of
$4.00 per meal. The public is invited to attend. The weekly Tuesday
and Thursday evening meals will
resume the first week in January,
1998.
The main dish for the Tuesday
meals will be: December 2 - Soup
Beans &amp; Ham, December 9 - Beef
Tips in Gravy over Rice, December
16 - Beef Stew, December 23 Spaghetti with Meat Sauce,
December 30 - Ham Loaf.
The Thursday, December 4
evening menu is Meat Loaf,
Augratin ·Potatoes, Creamed Peas,
Roll and Cheesecake. The outside
Memorial Christmas Tree will be
lighted at 5:15, and Junior anti Rita
White will be playing holiday
music from 5:30 to 6:30.

BADLU'OR REPAIR

v

STATE ROUTE 124
Approxlmettly 1.4.mll" eut of Route 32;
WELLSTON, 'JHIO
. 614-384 6212

~aDUlrJ ~

l

The Dally Sentinel •

••••••

DECEMBER MENUS

4

Sa.uerkra.ut
Breaad
Tropical Mixed
Fr.uu

Monday, December 1, 1997

0517

'

,.

Doberman M1.x Black, Female Ap - ·
proxim,atety One Year Old (614t
3?9-9250

'

Good carpets, 614-446-0HS.
Grey

Kinen lang

•'

4

Ha1red One

Yellow Kinen. 614--446-3732.

'•

••

60 Lost and Found
I

.
'
'

Found: November 26th, Adorable, t
Puppy, Vicinity : Ska1etvil'-. 61&lt;4- '"
446-af!D7.

Laat: Female Cal, Color Cream
Lost In The Vance. Road, Potier:

I

.,

brook Area, 614·445 -6253.

•

�P~~ge

10 • The Dally 8entinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Mondlly, December 1, 1987· .

Monday, December 1,1997

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11 •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

~YOOP

NEA Cro11Word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

lOS~ : Male cat, Stripped l~bby

y, rd Sal

hiring lowbOat captains &amp; pi70====a===·===llots, good pay, health Insurance
and401K, call412·768·8851 .
=
GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
TEXAS Oil Company Urgonlly
Now

Merchlndill

Nief elean, newl., painted two

Looking For A Chflstlan Woman
wrwhlt! ~he~t: ~ntwers to Me· To Care For Our 3 Children In
Guile~ m vtctmly of Jtlferaon/ Our Home U-F Oayshift. C•l 61~·
Muon Blvd. Reward ! 304-675· . 6 610 Ah 5 PM
esoe.
44 -1
er ..

$4HOOWH
on a• single sections

PIIDOWN
on an multi sectiOns.
I.Jmled Time Oolyl

bedraom house in ~meroy. new
..._, $350 Ptt monlh plus c»poail, oplion to buy wilh ref8rlnC·
es on conrru1 \llilhln a year, no
pGIS,II1 .. 888-724.4.

Sleeping roDml With COOki ng .
Alao trailer apace on rifer. AU
hook-upt . Call alter 2:00 p.m.,
!l'4-773-5851, ,...., W'l

FREEOOM HOliES ol N""'· WY.
304-755-3842.

Bnlbb'o PJono. tuning &amp; r-lto.
Problemt? Need Turwcf? CaN lht
plano Dr... 4 4.a 4525

710 Autoa for Sill

a

AgGo-AIIIt Tractors
Hay Tool
Sale: Agco·AUII .4180 2wd 52
PTO HP radial Urea, 1 remote
valve, 12 •peed t)'ncho 1111n1,
ropa. 4yr. or 4,000 hr. drive tnlln
warranty, world famoua 1lr coofed

Holiday Barbio'o· 1ggo, 1991,
1112, 1115, t175 ••en, 1il3 dl ..el. 115,500. ·4 Wnool drlvo

1175 Impala $1,500 080

8.14~

aAQ

24&amp;-11011.

• 9 8
• QJ 8

Nttd A Cor, No Crtdll? Bad
Credit? Bankruptcy? We Can
Helpl Reeatabllah Credit, Muar

• Q4 2
Easl

· EEK&amp;MEEK

::
:::-::M:-ob:-:1::420
Qold•n .Winter •nd Cinderella equippad aamt way uo,aoo. Maltt .150 WMk, Take Homt 10 •
18-:-Ho:-me-s--1460 Space tor Rant
tor Rent
Bulldl~g For Rtnl Or Leou ; Sparkle Er.. Barblt'l, 1100 Heurar:t 53Q·800t round baltf . To 20% Down 12 Uonths &amp;. '
t2.dl0 Mobile Home, Pnco 6·400
17,g95. Htlllon 540·10001 12,000 Milo~ W.rranl)' Avallllblt, · ;
Set-Up On State Roulo 14t On ~~;::::;::=;.:::::-;:-::-:--1 40x65 1\vo 18 Fl. Roll Up Dooro -n. ··-2--171.
round boltr l10,i00. HouiDfl T TNI lo Bank Financing. 814-448-: ·
2
&amp;
3
bedroom
mobile
homes
112
Acre,
Commercial
BuildinG,
Renlt!d Lol614-384·3336.
--=.,--:-:-:-~-:---1 Netdl Dependable Person Now
JET
harbint 17,900, Round bole Sl· 8172, Or814 384 0042.
S260·S300, sewer. water and Good For Wirehouse Or Retail
.ALL Yard Sales Must
tn GALLIPOLIS Area, Regard·
AERATION IIOI'ORS
logo wrap,., IUOO. IT V pull
trash~. 6t 4.vg2.2167.
Butlnen located Alute 7 South,
Be Paid In Advance.
less Of Training, Write K. C. Hop814·258--.
Rapolrod, &amp; Rtbulll In S1ock. rake 14,200. Tye pasture p ....., Up10n Und Cars Rt. 82·3 UUn
pfAQLJNE: 2:00p.m.
kins, Dept. S·-45631, Bo• 711, Ft. 14x70 3 Bedrooms, large Yard,
CoN
Ron
e
.....
1·800-537·1528.
I 2 noo na-UII drill 18,1100. Kool- South of ll&lt;ln, WV. Financing
2 Oedroom Mobile Home Nice
lht doy l&gt;tlo"' the ad
Worlh. TX 76101·0711 .
Outside Bu tlding, No Inside Pets,
OIQ
'f'lard. NGw Furnace, s100 0. lot available for HldO WIIP·
tr't Service Center St. At 87 A-bit. 304-458-1!181.
Ia tD run. Sunday
8 Miles From Gallipolis, Roulo pa~l. 1250/Mo., 6l4-•48-951ii.
Pnono300~74.
proved
application.
K
&amp; K Mobile
WANTED IMIEDIATELYo
218. $250/Mo., Plus Deposit. 614·
720 lhlcks for Salt
Large Fuel Oil Stove, .workt
Ho""'s 304-875-3000. 8om-5prn.
edition· 2;00 p.m.
Certified nursing assislants lor
3811-9946.
Good,
Great
For
·Heating
A
Hydraulic
oii-IOWIII
price
in
2
Bedroom
!Jailer
S2751dapoait,
Frld1Y.IIonday edition
136 bed intermedtate care facili·
1178 GMC 1 Ton Duly Good
·10:00 &amp;.m. Saturday.
ty. Conlact Sandra Re!1m1re, RN, 1979 Model 3 8odroom~&gt;, I llnth, $275/mo: Reterencts required, Mobile home site available bet· Houu Or Garage. For Mora In- town. 'ltnl tree gas heater&amp;. pro· Shlpo, Ntw: l'wrll, Tiru. Bodin- :
no pell. 304-875-4678.
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call =-==11on,:;:-:.=Co~I:;8::14,;.-::;258-=..:'.:07:;1,;..--I pane &amp; nalutal filii. on oala - ·
Po
DON, lakm Hospttal, lakm , WV. Good Condition, Mu ll S~lt l 304·
er, Filth Wheel Ball, Plu I RHH ,
614·385-&lt;1367.
meroy,
304-675·0860 EXT 124 Mon-Fri. 736-3409.
Large Igloo Dog Ho,..tl15: In· Sidor'sE,.,~I304-875-742I .
Hildl. $4,150, 814-446·3100.
2
Bedroom
trailal
for
renr
in
MidMiddleport
6:00am-4:00pm. Deadlme lor apd.loport. OH. 304-882.3267 .
Mobile Home Space For Renr. vlslbte Dog Fence 175 Or $125 Jim's Farm Equipment
1978 GMC Pick· Up · Robulll •
614-448-3817.
&amp; VIcinity
plying '• December 5, 1997. La·
For Bolh, Queen Silt Soft Side 2t50EIIta"nM.
Tl'ltns., New Brakes, Tire•. Body 1 '
kin is an EOE employer
Somma
Waterbad
With
Wa·
Glllipolit.
Otlio
45831
1994 Sulmn Dclu•c 1'h7? 7.'B4JO· 2 bodroom trail8l' lor retir in Tup Bed Fair Condition. 350 Engine. :
t.tobHe Home Spac11 For Rent ln. terbed Ft1me 1100, Platform 814-446·9777
AU Yard Saln1Must B• Paid In
rooms , 2 lla!hs , Rl'fligorator, J)crs Platns, del)osit required, 2C'a
Runs Good, $700, Call 614·446·
Park,
Camp
Conley,
814·
Advonct. OHdllno: 1:oopm lht 180 Wanted To Do
Roclltr,
115,
Col614-446-1810.
614
·985-3813
da)'S
or
814·985Range, EleCHtC ~lca t Pump, And
4514, 814-4-46-3703.
'
448-6221
.
day btlore Ute 1d Ia to run,
3837
OYOnings.
-CIAI.
Deck, $18,900, Call Alter 5 f~M .
Child
Care
In
My
Home
Mondav
Monument
Sale:
Quilting
Bull·
Sunday &amp; Monday tdlllon· Through Saturday, Flextble Hours, 614-446-3653.
1983 Chevrolet Silverado 350 '
2 bedroom, quiet neighborhood, Trailer lot ror rent. referencH r.. neul John'• Monuments •113 Off H
1oOOpm Friday.
Engine,
PW, Pl, loaded, 85,000 :
Until
Stock
It
Sold.
Bullville
IY
Hoops
And
Bale
lihera
Fall
References .Available , 614-446·
"'ired.
304-875-10711.
130
,997 Oakwood Upgraded 14x70 $200 per month, partially fur·
lilies, Aoklng $11,500, 814·388-,
Pikt, Gallpo~~ Ohio.
Clootanc:o On Shenniu TraciOrL
Three lamtl~ 1ndoor yard sale, 0.. 3138.
ntsl'led,
utilities
not
included,
814·
2 Badrooms. 2 Baths, Washer &amp;
8047.
.
cember 1-2, 9am-? Three miles
Dryer, Heat Pump, furnishccl. 992-2979.
N
John DMrt Fabt'ic for cu•hlons,
FurMure
repatr,
refinish
and
res
MERCHAND
ISE:
north of Reedsville, Oh1o on SR
ever Worn 11.12 kt. Amythest curtains, thltts, etc. Ru1h'1 Fabric 199~ Ford F-150 4x4 black/gold, •
IOration, also cuslom orders Ohio Very Ntce , 614·379·2291, 614· 2 Bec:lrooms, Vinton Ar... Stove,
Rire
l'lld $450, w For
.33
124, Keebaugh residence.
Eddie Bauer wlcamper top, exo ;
Va lier Refinishing Shop. larr~ 379-2658. leave Message.
Diamond
SGIIIOiro 14 kt Gold, Shop 705-~ St :J0.4-e75-11454.
Refrigerator, Water &amp; Trash Paid
concl
·, •
Philip, 614·992·6576
New
Carpet,
Very
Neat
&amp;
Clean:
510
Sell
Now
Holland
Spacial
Dtols:
Goqd
Clalrtr,
Peld
$800,
80
Auction
Household
1998 Ooubltwlde Repo
59,000
miles, has transferabli •
$2501Mo., Plus Oeposi\ 814·388$205, 814·448-1000, Loove 3430 Ford 40 PTO HP, 1 valve Ford ESP eJ~tended service po+l·
Never liVed in, owner linancn'tg
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
and Flea Market
GOOds
9666.
available. 304· 755·5566.
MM!w~o~age~.-:-=--:-::::-:-:---:-=1 ropt a canopy. 4wd, 111,500. c:y, total c_overage wiSO deduct·
haul your logli to the milt JUSt call
Rick Pearson Auction Company, :kl4-675-1957.
Nordic Tf11cl1 605 S4QII New S300 472 r harbin• $7,100. 411 g· i~e. $15,000. 304-862·21121 .
'
2bedroom
12J~65, remodeled,
fu ll time auc1ioneer, .colnplete
Appliances::
Reconditioned Firm; Bollinger Trim Rider $69.00 haybine 11.!500. 834 round baler
with
or without utililies, furrlshed Wunera,
Drroro, Rangoa, Rt~l- New $35 Firm, 114 448 85119 _
860t IIKI tie 11.800. 844 round 1995 Ford Dakota Stereo Sysrem,
au.~;uon
service. Licensed Wilt Do Elderly Personal Care In
or unfurnished. One month free gratort, 80 Day Guarantee I
blllr 1000. aumlie $13,500.451 Bed CoYer, A·1 Condition. 5
f68,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304· The Home 20 Years Expenence. Discount Mobile Home Pans &amp;
r.ent lor qualified applicant De· F!;!n.cn CUr Mojtag, 814 446- Pln.Ball Maohino, $300 To S500 T llckle moworal3,050. 130 142 · Speed, 614-448-6754 After 4o :
773-5785 o. :J0.4-n3·5447.
Several. References, Very Canng Acc,ssories, Vinyl Sklning pos1t
0
requ1red.
No
pets.
304-882·
7 5
,
&amp; Responsible $7.00 Hour ~ $299.95, Anchors $5.00, Awn-',-,"-:---------I
Slol Machine $350, Spe•d Ball 84 manure apreader $.4,300. 145 P.M.
. Olfer good only thru Dt· =
.
90 Wanted, to Buy
Gan-e
1100,
614
..
48-322
177
B4
manure
opraodlr
$4,300.
lied Nurses Aide 614 ·367·7728 ings, Doc;us. Windows, Plumbing 3926
7
cember.
Black Coucll, 2111odt &amp; Gold End ::--~~~_:c.:.:;::.;..___,-.1 155 217 a• manure aproader 45' Semi boJ~ trailer, good shape ·
Day!lme; Evenings : 614-446-0494 Supplies. Water Heaters, FurnacAbsolute Top Collar: All U.S. Sil· Ask For Diane.
Table•, 1 Coffee T1ble, 4 Years Porrntroy Thrift Shop now buYing' $ ... 100. 2-New Smldle,- 11eer for storage cr chips, S1500, 614· ·
es, libergtasa Steps, Call 614· One Bedroom trailer With Utili!)'
ver And Gold Coms, Prootsets.
Old, 1200, 080 814-441....(8).4.
levi jeans, 10y1, chUdren's cloth- Slulfett 100 BU $750. 2 used 742.()()()2.
446-94t6 Bennett's Supply. 1391
Diamonds, Anttque Jewelry, Gold Will haul junk or trash away. $35/ Sallord School Rd. Gallipolt&amp;, Room, 5 Mtnutes From Town Used e18(trlc rangf a troll free ing, mual ~ in "''liens condi· $500 each. 8. 75% Financing
$250 Month. $200 llepaoi~ 2 Rei·
85 El Camno, V·8, IUIO, SS trim,
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currenc~. ~dtup load. 304-675-5035.
Ohio.
refrigeraiOr, excellent c:ondldan. lion, Tuesday through Frida~. available. KMier'a Service Cen·
erefiCet Required (61-t)446-8342
runs good, body lair. $2.000, 814·
Sterling, Etc. AcquisWons Jewelr~
$175... or $300 for bath. 30 4. 614-11112-3725.
ler St AI 87 Pnono 304·815· 742·0002.
DOUBLE WIDE DISPLAY SALE
. M.T.S. Com Shop, 151 Second
FINANCIAL
$
OOWN
Three
bedroom
mobile
home,
no
675-1616.
A• 8 Fumhu"'
3874.
999
A~ue. Gallipolis, 6 t4-441H842.
SAVE $IOOO
pets, 614-992-5858
.
Chevy 4 whael drive truck parts,
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- · WV
Pladorm acaltl -ighll up 10 4 apeed «~ wheel drive ttanlmii·
Anuques, top prices paid. River·
Free
Delivery &amp; Setup
Trailer
For
Rent, ReferehCea No
Washers, dryera, refrlgeralors,
Buy, Sell, Trade
3,000 lba. 304·57G·Z131 Call af· Sion plus translef case, new
Business
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio, 210
OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
PelS. 614-441 ·1544.
ranges. Skagg 1 Appliancea, 78
Used &amp; Antiques
18r Bpm evening a, anytime wee- clutch prtsture plate, $350 OBO
Russ Moore owner, 614·992·
:JO.I· 755·5685.
Opponunlty
Vine Street, Call 8U·448-73D8,
Fwniture.
~ktl~NIL"--:-~------ 614·992-7861 after 3pm.
2521!.
Trailer. tor rent, trailer tor sale, on
I.fl00.489-34ll9.
:J0.4-773-S34• .
630
Uvestock
FIRST TIME BUYERS
New Lima Rd., 614-742·2603.
1$ OWN PAYPHONES IS
MOPAR 1969 Dodge 314 Ton
Antiques- no item roo large or too S150K Yearly Pol'!. Great S1tes
E·Z Financing
Moving Salel Used Furniture Remington 870 Wingmaater,
Fresh 383. 727 Transmi11ion,
small. Also estates, appraisals, Avail. Call Now ! 1-800-800·3470
Hay,
&amp;fed
C:OWI,
hereford,
hart·
Slore, 130 BullVIlle Pikt, Ga~po- $300, 814·1192-2083.
·
Aro~.: : = : n t h
ler For ~ent: ~ Bedrooms,
refinishing, custom orders, 614· 24 Hrs.
ford Angus eros~. call John or New Tires, Pai(ll, Uint Condi~on,
0
tis, Ohio 50'% Off Gilt Shop ·And Sam Somerville's Arm)' Camou- Harley Ric:e, 614-667-3267 or $3,000 080, 614-446-7581.
992..S76.
1·000·251 ·5070
One b&amp;droom apartment in Mid'· Molt Furnit\.lre. Mon ·fri, Hrs. 10· flage by Sandyville Poll Office. 614-887·3369.
!NOTICE!
Clean Late Uodel Cars Or OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
730 vans &amp; 4·WDs
First Time Buyers E-Z Financing dleport, 614-992-2178.
4.
Noon-Spm., Fri-Sun. Small indi·
Trucks, 1990 Uodels Or Newer, recommends that you do bust · 2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Around $200/
640
vidual equipment :JO.I-273-5855.
Hay
&amp; Grain
•m GMC Solan CuaiOm, $4,1150.
PoiiJ'• - • UHCI Fumllu,.
Smith Buick Pomiae, 1900 East- ness with people vou know. and Uo., ~-800-251-5070.
Two bedroom trailer for rent In
We now have Arrrfl Surpluslll
em Avenue, Gallipolis.
RaciM, 614·992-5039.
WARM UP: Hlgll Efficiency Natu· 1500 lb. nor Dilts, $20 a bale, 614-446·4222
NOT to send money through the
2101 Jefferton .M.
Free air, free skirt, 14x70 3 bed·
---------ral And LP Gas Furnaces, life· 814-742·30114 Ql' 814-742-301111.
Open 9:30. 5:00 lion-Sot •
1890 Chevrolet Silverado 4X4,
J 1i D's Auto Parts. Bu.,lng sa l- mail until you have mvestigated room, $1,05Srdown, S196fmo. Two bedroom tra.Uer, 141170, S250:
time Warranty On Heat E•chang.
the
oflering.
350 Auromatic, K-1500, Excetlent
304-675-SOFA (7832)
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304 ·
Can 1-lll0-691·8777.
three bedroom uailer, $300 per
er. "It 'Yau Can't Call Ua We Both Alpha &amp; Orchard Gran Miiad, Condition,
614-256-6347.
773·5033.
month; 614-742-2714.
614-44111-1104, 81,.·-441·
loaal" Free Ellimatesl Add-On Phone:
230
Professional
Free air, free tkirt, 16J~80 3 or 4 1:::--:-:--=:-:::-'"-:=.:;..:..~:--0450.
l91J3 GMC Safari XT conversion
Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber
Used Furniture Store, 130 Bula- Heat Pumps Only Slignl)' Higher.
bedroom S1,350/down, $299tmo .
Mobile Home11: 2 Bedrooms
Services
ville Pille, Gallipolis, Ohto Com- Call Us Today. 19g7 Is Tno Ground ear ·corn, your sacka. van, tullr loaded, on!)' ea,ooo
Bigs Dollars $161 .. 388-9906.
Call1 ·800..91 .. n7.
5 Miles Soulh RoUie 216, Gallipa:
Twen1y Seventh Ytar In The
mitea, priced reduced! $9,500
l1s Water Included, 614·258- plate Twin Beds $115 Full Size Heeling 1 CooUne Buainen! 814- 3114-875-2443- 4pm
Wanted To Bur : Timber And HARTS MASONARY · Black, Large selection or used homes. 2 6769, 814·258-1337.
080. 304-e75-7C39.
Complllle· $135. 0tJeer1 Size Com446 8308, HI00-2111·0098.
Land With Standing Timber, 614· brick &amp; atone work, 30 years eJ~· or 3 bedrooma.· St8f1ing at S2i95.
Har·Mixed square bales, easy
ptele $150, lion .fri. Hrs. 10 -&lt;..
perience, reasonable rates. 30.4· Quick delivery. Call 614·385·
682-7318.
acceaa. $1 .25 per bale. 304·895- 199.4 Ford E.xperer Eddie Bauer
Sponlng
Slep
2
play
tower
with
swing,
895-3591 alter 6:00pm, nc Job to 11621 .
3590.
.
loaded, PW, PS, Ltalhtr Seats,
520
440
Apanments
Goods
$2!15; Sherp VHS Camcorder,
We Buy Junk AulD's In Any Con- smallono BIG. W\1.021206
4K4, Stereo System, Eacellent
tor Rant
wilhcast.S225;814-992·8218.
dition, CoU 814-388-110112, Or 614Mixed Round &amp;alet Of Har For Condition; 814-445-t754 Aller 4.
LIIIITED TillE ONLY! 48R, 2
Uvln~aton·s basement waterU8PART.
BATH 11,441 DOWN $241 71':ono~2~bo&lt;l=room=:-,::l*::::::lmen=~ll.~1u~r··l ---:QOI.=::'Fc"'L"'u"BS::-,---I STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon Soft $11.00, SIOrod Inside, 614· P.M.,
proofing, 111 basement repairs
F1eo air &amp; lklnlre. Only nilhed and unfurnlahtd, HCurlty Taylor Made Tommy Armour Etc. Upright, Ron EYin&amp; Enterprises, 24W&amp;Oe e P.M.
cton•. Ire• estimates, lifetime MONTH.
1904 Jeep Cherok·ee cauntry,11
OakNoNitro,
WV
f_ t,, PL ..... "~.~.[~ 11
depoalt requirH, no ,...., 11 ... Or Cut1om Built Cluba, lndi1n "**-'·Ohio, 1-I00-137-g528.
.-raflt... 10Yrt on tob eJipeJI·
$QIIIIft Bate Of Cle1n Wf1ea1 auto, 414, 4dr, •II power, hitch.
C
.
ttol&lt;
GoW,
81
..
245-5747.
ortt. :JO.I-675-2145.
992•2218 ·
$13,200. 004-~5-5428.
SERVICES
Tandy 1000 TX Computer With s - SZ75 (!ole, 81~·448-0103.
N'O'T'I'C"E
America's largest tactDry outlet 1 Bedroom, 2 Blocks From Unl- Remington 11·87 sporting clays Monitor Keyboard Printer, $19g, Square bales 11.50 10 t2.25 1 1994 Jimmy ·.,4 35,000 kMIIes,
RiHI'Iington 11-87 Spec:tal 614-446-4584 .
milo N. Rt 2. 304-e75-3960.
. 4.3 v-a. One Owner,, S13,915; '
hu purchased local mobile vorsity 01 Ric, Available Decem· S500.
purpoae 2 barrel 1650. Reming$
home dealership. All inventory ber 5th, 2251Mo., Plus Deposit, ton 870 Wing master 30" full Waterline Special : 31.4 200 p·sl Square boles of illy lot oale, 814· 614-448·2532.
110 ttelp Wanted
must be sold wllhin 30 days . 614 ·3811-9946.
choke $250. H &amp; R 20 gauge, H $21.95 Per 100: I' 200 PSI
tgD4 S-10 Blazer 4dr. Tahoe,
•Aunlion·
Save thouaandt. Call now lor 2 bedroom apartment in Pomet"nu, &amp; R 12 gauge $80ea. 30._882· S37.00 Per 100; All Brass Com- 985-3!102,
54,000
milo' 4.3 Vor,.,, pw, pc11
tiOPENINGS
inb. FREEDOM HOMES of Nitro,
.,.
-,. 2621 .
preslian Fittings In SIOck
$16,000 neg. !l'4-882-3325.
Due To Expention Local Compa.
TRAN SPOR TATION
wv :JO.I-755-3842.
uu otoas paid, no pels, 614 ·992· :::::---:-:-:------1 RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
51156 ·
"' Has Vltkxll Positions, No E11·
530
Antiques
Jacloon, 9fio, I·B00-537·g528
1995· Jeep Wrangler 4a4 5
New 1998 141170 three bedroom,
perienct Ntcesury. $1,200
·2bc:lrm.
apts.,
total
electric,
ap·
Sptod,
Soli Jop 45,000 Aaking
includes
6
monthl
FREE
tor
rent
Monlh lei Slar~ Call Monday 614·
• All real estate advertising in
~B::uy-:or:-:-10:::11::.o;:R::iv::e,=:-in::o~.':'An-.1:-:lq_u_oa-,1 Woodburnlng Kindlewood Stave, 710 Autos tor Sale
$11,110Q, 814-258-10i4.
Includes skirting, d81ulce steps pliances furnished, laundr~ room 1124 E. Main Street, on Rl. 124, Fireplace Insert With Fan; 36"
4-46-7441 .
this newspaper Is subject to
and setup. Only $187 .08 per facilities. close to school in town. Pomeroy. Houn: M.T.W. 10:00 Storm Door, Yellow Converr.ble 1g74 Volktwagon Super Beetle
the Federal Fair Housing Act
AVON I. All Ar.eas I Shirler
month with $1075 down. Call 1· Applications available at: Village a.m . to 6:00 p.m., Sundar 1:00 ID u~es, Excellent Condition, Show With Sunroor, New Tires, Teo t99e Jeep Cherokee, Sport,
of 1868 which makes it illegal
Spo.o, 3114-875-1429.
Green Apts. 14g or calt 814-992Many New Pttrrs To llslt Mutt t7,000Miles814-«6·1110.
1100-837-3238.
6:00p.m. 614·992-2526, Ru11 Ouall1)',614-448-«1137.
to advertise ·any preference,
3711.Eot-l.
See This One To Apprec:lattl 89 Ford Bronco 11, .4x4, Eddie
Moore own&amp;r.
Avon $8 -$18 /Hr, No Door -To.
\imitation or discriminalion
New 28x80 3 or 4 bedroom .
14
Door, Ou~k Cash, Fun &amp; Rtllll·
~":-:'aoo:-:-:-:Nog.:7''=8_
-:-"-8,.3-:1 _oo,_.- - I llluor, e•clllltnt clindldOfl, •
based on race, cotor, religion,
$3G,9GS. Free deliver~. 1·800· 456 112 Second Avenue, Gallipo·
550
Building
540
Miscellaneous
ire. HI00-73&amp;0168.
1981
AMC
Eagle
4
WD
SparL
2
$4800,814-1192-2782.
6G1-6777.
se11 familial status or national
lis, 2 Bedrooms. AC, Appliances,
Suppll. .
Merchandise
Doo11, ssoo: 1975 Oldo Cudau
4
Motorcycles .
origin. or any Intention to
$.42:5/Mo., 1225 Deposit, Utilitie1
AVON · $8 -$20 IHr. No Door To
NEW
BANK
REPO'S
Only
3
leltl
35o Rockel Au10m111c $300, 304· 7 0
Pa~.
614-44e-2129.
make any such preference,
'
:
'
1
"':E':'Iec--:-lt,.ic~F=-u-rn_a_ca-=$3~g=::
:-,
"'t""Ga:-,1
Bloclt,
brick,
sewer
pipes,
wlndDoor. Quick Cash I •Bonuses' 1.
304-755-7191 .
5
limitation or discrimination."
F
linltll, etc. Cflude Winter' ~87::~:::-114-:-1_.--:-~:--:--:--I 11D7 Honda 4x4 red, appro•
800·2i8-0139.
100 ·OOQ BTU S690• 61 4- OWl,
Apartment&amp; For Rent On First
urnace
Rio Grinde, OH Call 814·245" 1982 Camaro ~ 0 Rust $1.500. 60hu, few extras. $3,800. 304·
Oakwood 28x56 3 bedroofn . 2 Awertle, 614-448-822'1 .
Compuler Users. Needed. Work
,..•~--,-~:--~··-~--·..,29~1-~-=a-----1 ~51~2~'·---------------- 614-245-5183.
882·332S.
bath. starting a1 S199 per mo.
l'his newspaper will nol
own hours . $20k to S50kJ~r 1·
Ci.lt 1-800-681·6777.
""IS
for Sale
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 21" Oak console TV, llttol&gt; cob!· 560
knowingly accepl
--:--:---::---'----1 64 Honda Big Red 200 3 wheeler '
800-348·7186 )11508.
nr
4
4 4
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ne1, n9&gt;1 ol&amp;nd. 304 .. 75-7988.
advertisements for real estate
,.1 g~e~2!;CI1~.,..,~3t~
~'~·!_P_,I,_.p_b_, rac:kt reverse 1h1ft drive, neW
ONLY $499 DOWN
4~To!!n:
8
8
ESTATES,
52
Westwood
Drive
which
Is
In
violation
of
the
~
$3800
1
'
1"
tires I battery, $800; aloo 96 Yl· .
' 034
Easy Work! E11cellent Pari As·
70 18 Everlast Punching New 2 Yeat Old Fult-Biooded Female
ON SELECTIVE SINGLE WIDES
from S2eo to $334. Walk to shop Condition,
aemble Productt At Home. Call
1914 Nluan MaxirN. S.W. Runs maha Timber wolf 250 4 wheeler, ·
taw. Our readers are hereby
814-379-9442.
Blue
Ausuallon
Snopllerd
2
Full
Free Delivery &amp; Setup
&amp; movies. Call 61.4·446-2588 .
Toll Fret 1·800·487-5566 Ext.
-:--:-:7~~-:--:--:---::-1 Blooded LlbradOr RetriiY... I, 1 Good, Good Tires, ln•ior RO!Jgh rack rwerse shaft drive, 13000, .
informed that alt dwellings
OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
Equal
Housing Opponuni~.
8•12 6Ft Bltn Like Building 8Ft Bla.ck Female, &amp; 1 Chocolate Aal&lt;ing $500, 814·446-9853.
614-742.()002.
12170.
304· 7S5-568S.
advertised in this newspaper
Cownstalrs Apartment, 4 Rooms, Wallo &amp; 4 F1 Loh Doublo Ooors, Male, 814-448-3413.
are
available on an equal
-19;..8::5.:.:.M::o.;:rc:.;u'
"
ry....;.C::o..;ug,;.a;,:r;_,
_G_o_a_d
I
88
Suzuki Ouad Racer, new en- :
50 lnchet Wldtd, Brand New,
WESTWOOD HOME SHOW
PHYSICAL
Wa10t Paid, NO PETS, 91 Cldar 614·4«1-9377.
opportunity basis.
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming. Condition, Alki~g $1,300, 514· gine, new chain sprockets, new ·,
Used &amp; Rapo Sale
lHEAAPV
Srtet, 614-388-1100.
Featurlna Hydro Battt. Don 446.0531 .
bra'"· $1400 080, good Cht111- '
AS918TAHT
Aa little AI $500 Down
n-..apy PRN c......ge
And $150 Per Month
Eflici.ency On Eastern' Avenue, a X PHEN • FEN I Rudu• Clienll Sheets. 373 George&amp; Creek Rd. -:-:::-:-::----:--=---1 ~gil\ 814-992...58.
1986 Mercury lynx, $500 1 614·
Try Our 100% Safe Natural 814-448-0231.
Free Del,Ivery ,
REAL ESTATE
Waaf1er &amp; Dr)'er, Utilities Paid,
992-6218.
Fiber GT250 8 HP, Road Bass
Weight loss Herbal Tabltl, Oil·
Progreaaive Step Rehabilitaticn
1-100·251-5070
$400,814-446-2515.
tributor• Needed Now, Call814· AKC Chihuahua pupplll, ready -:-:-:-:-::---::----:---.-::c-1 New Battery, like New. Cosi
Services Is Current!)' Seekmg .A
December ·15th, two males, one 1986 Mome Cor~. $1,400 O.B.o.. $1,600 Asking $900, 614 -446·
Westwood Home Show Used &amp; Furnished Efficiency, All Ulilitie• 441·1982.
· Ph)' Sica I Therapy Assistant And
·
female, 12..0 each, 114-887-3401 New Tiret, Runt Greal, VB 4.3 .8114.
Repo Sale As Little 'As $500 .00 Paid, Share Bolh, $115/Mo., 919
PAN Coverage (OT, PT, SLP, 310 Homes tor Sale
Fuellnjoc:lion.
(6141448-C637
Bab)t
bed,
stroller,
high
c:hait,
c:ar
or814-117-:.1130.
Down
And
$.150/Mc.,
Free
Celiv
PTA, COTA) For In -House Poai·
Second Avenue, Phone: 814-448750 Boats &amp; Motors
seat, swing &amp;. rocller. 30,.·875·
ery, 1-800-251-5070.
3e4S.
.
tiona in Pomeroy, OH. Our 3500
~S.8.
AKC Cocker Spaniel pups, 4mot 1988 Dodge snack!w·s•.aoo. 814·
• tor Sale
Sq. Ft. Rehabilitation Addition
old, 2blacklwhile, 1buff, vet 448-18CIO.
350
Lots
&amp;
Acreage
Gracious
living.
1
and
2
bedroom
Provides A Stimulating. Environ·
apartmenlt at Village Manor and BEANIE BABIES- 8oth Retired records up to da11, make good 1989 OodQO Omno 101,000 Milos 1e97 Landua Pro 17 40 HP Force
mane For Our Rehab Team To
BRUNER LAND
Riverside Apartment• in Middl• And New, Bell Ofllf,. Call Any· Chriltmlt pretanlt. $150 ea. Clun, Runs Greatll1,400, 614· Fullr loaded, Uust Sell! 814·
Provide Comprehensive Rehabili· 3 Bedroom houae on Viand St in
387-7117,
114·77M173
port From $238·$304 . Call 814- time, 814·448-9787 Or leave 304·D37·2733.
tltlon For Our Outpatients And P1. Pleasant, asking $25,000. 1·
379-2723.
992-5064. Equal Housirig Oppor- Meosage.
Lang·T•m Care Patiem.
800-:nti-6331 or 304·675-3024.
AKC m;,; Pinloht&lt;l, 5 old,
Mtige Co.: Danville, Nice 17 .tiJnitiea.
Beanie Bablet, hard to get tpOrt gr•t Ctwiltmal gifts, 10 _ . . 11. tODt Euro lumina N•w Ttres. 760 Auto Pans &amp;
Acrea
St8,000
Or
5
Acres
BUY
HOMES
AS
LOW
AS
Progrtllive Step Rehabilila!lon
card instrl' rare comics. hard to Chri1&amp;mas, 1300, accepting p8t· .New Brakes, PW, PS, P. Seats.
Accessories
ServkM Otf«t Top Salaritt For 14,~ 1 ·5 Bdrm., local Gav'l. &amp; Ste,ooo, Countr Water, NW In N~ Haven 1br furnished apt, find action tiguret~ Priced below ments and deposits, 814·049· Run• E•c.eUent, $-4,800, 814-446·
Meigs
Co.
5
Acres
S7
,000
.
deposn
&amp;
references.
304-882Out Clinicians. Our Beneftts Bank Repo'a Call 1-800-522·
c:utrenl marxet value. Just in time 30~.
· 2~ ~~w8i: · 4Roarl.46·3407 Can Be BUDOET PRICE TAANSIIIS· ·
$1,000 Down $128/Mo., Paid Ins 2568.
10
liONS, Uoe&lt;IIAebuiiL All Types .
Package Includes 3 WMks Paid 2730, X1709.
lor
Christmaa.
Can
for
lalasl
price
_...., 3
Yean. Near 0\tll.... Best 5 Acre
Acctn Over 10,000 Tran-mia: :
Vacation, Paid Licensure And
quotes
and
details,
614·049-3091
AKC
PDmtrantana
2
While
Fe·
d
COtJNTRY HOME
Home Sites. Keebaugh -Fottrod Modern l Bedroom Aparlment, leave message before 5:00pm. or malt $260 e Wettca. 1 Brown Fe- 19~1 GE Storm G,S.I. atr, pa, lions, a Clur::has 814·Z..S.58n
•
Professional Membership Dues,
614-446-0390.
ONUCRES,
$1
Ea.; !ogelher Cash
call ·bltween5:30·D:OOpm.
male 18 Months 1275, 614·388· pb, auto, e1.c cond. Ss.ooo. 304·
ContinUinG Educa~an, And More.
OHIO.
auiOn;tatic transmission, C·6 •
eom. Join Tht Fatteat Growing 9 MilesSCOTTOWN,
Nice clean 2bedroom, w1d hook- ,._~~~~~~---I_M:-:42~·~--~~---,.-- _~_s-_s._oo_.____________ Ford
From Proclovitte, 3,400
w•tf1 ttanslet' caae, 614-843-5350. :
Rthob Ttam In The Ohio I
Beaulilul
'
Buck
Stove
Instant
Un·
.
~
up.
References.
Depotlt.
No
Sq. Ft. Living Area, 2 Story, 3 Qallla Ca.: Gallipolis, Neighborvented Gas· Fireplaces. Several AKC Aea'tttred Chocoklte Pup- liiJ1 Otds Cullan Calaia New
peta. XM-875-5162.
Bedrooms. 2 112 Baths, Finithed
Modela to choose from. PAINT pltl Wllh Papert $101l Or. Trade Tires, New Exhausl. New Va!Ye New . gas tanka, 1 ton truck :
For Yore lnformalktn. Please Call Basment, Fireplace, like N8VII, 4 hood Rd., 10 Acres loll Of levet
814·2,.5-0IS13, 814-~5-5037.
Cover Gaskel Runt Excellent, wheels I radl110ra. D &amp; R Auto
Mikt Wol'tey Toll Free .At 800· Yeara Old $175.000, e14·843~ $19,000, .Or 22 Acree NOW Nlc:e One Bedroom Unlurnishe·d PLUS304.a75-4084.
$24.000. Friendly Ridge 6 Acr11 Aparunent Range &amp; RegrigeftiiOt ::--...,-_;..~=.:.----1 :--'--::'--'--'-_:.::...;::.:;;.__1 $2,700, 814·448·051g, Or 814 · Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1~
207-170111, Fax Your Resume To 2924, 0. 614-843-2522.
$10,000, 8.5 Acres $7,500 Or 1g Provided. water &amp; Gi.rbage Paid Boo 11 By Redwing, Cl'llppewa. Beagle Pupplet, 120 Each, Ale:· 448-3407 Can Be Seen ;114 800-273-9329.
81,..594·5207, Or E·Mail To: up·
White Aau.d.
·
crel'llb@frognetnet Equal Opper· Houlie and property, appro•. 4a- Acres $18,000. Count~ Water, Deposit Required, Call 814·448~ Rocky, Wolverine, Sorel Tony eoon Road. 614·441~1 7.
Teens
Run, Latt One! 10 Ac res &lt;1345 Allor 6 ~M.
SERVICES
11Jf1i1)' Emplor;af.
cres. Ideal starter home. Be8ch $10,000.
lama. Guar1n11Hd lowett PrieM Bla~:k Cocker pups, AKC, l)an 1891 Plymouth Sundance 40,190
Sl, Porreroy OH. 30...82·2!ln.
_Shot_::C::•,.to.':Ga':::-~:Cpo':-~:OL:-:----I
paren11,
females,
$125;
mates,
Actual
Miltl,
Exclllenl
Condilton,
Norlt'l 3rd Ave In Middleport, 1bf
PIICJQAESSIVE STEP
BUY CARS FOR 1100111
,_$1::00.;:·:.;8..14_·;_511;:2..;-3,;.568::.:..- - - - I NAOA 14,275, Our Price $2,750 810
Home
REHABLITATION SERVICES
Near Vtterana Memorial Hospl· Call Fo, Fru Mapa • -Gwner Fi- apt, furnl th~d_or unfurnished . S.lztd
And Sold Loc:allv Thll We Don't Sell Repaired, Wrecks ,
304o882-25Se.
nancing
lnb.
Taka
tOtJC.
Orf
listed
tal, all electric, recently ramo ·
Improvements
Wonth. Trucks, 4x4's, Etc.'Bting CFA Regiatertd Staled Point Flood, Or Rtpo Vehlclea. Cook
Solos Englf!Hf: So. Ohio HVAC deled, new roof, new windows. new Pricea On Cash Purdausl
Slam••• Kittens, 111 Shols, Matera, e 14 -441-0 103.
. ld d 1 Yo
How ·Taking Applications- 35 L1qu
Company Hal An Opening For A siding, full basement with stove
ate n ur Area Now. All .Wot'med, Boyt New 12 8pHd 28•
BASEMENT
Wttt
2
Bedroom
Townhoute
Emptr
lot
on
Spring
Avenut
in
Residential &amp; Commercial HVAC fireplac•, deck, carport, 614·D92·
Maket &amp; Modtts Available. Call Hu...........
le F' ·---• 81 • - 7
WATERPROOfiNQ
Apartments
$2851Mo.,
514·4-te·
ToMFree800·522-2730x4420.
..
,
_,
..
•
lr~,
...-..-;~
10g2
Oodga
Spirit
exc:.
cond.
Pomoror. 13500, 614-11112·258i.
Salol EngiN«. Condidale NHQI 52l!7.
0001.
•
7705.
good oa• mileage. $3,000. 304· Unc:ondilional lifetime guarantee
To HIVI A BA Degree In Me·
local rererences furnithed. Es:.
Wanted To Buy; 10 Or More AcrcMnic:fll Engineer Or A Minimum NEW CONSTRUCTION ... Beau· es In Gallia County, Prelerably Small One 9edroam In Countr~ Camouflage: Many Young Adull &amp; . Four Jack .Ru11M1110trltr puppiet., 7.73-:.::..;51125::::;::·- - - - - - - llblllhtd 1975. Call (8141 448·
Teen Sizes, Jacket&amp; And Panle, $250 Hcu:
• 11V8
• Ml n1aturt CoII'te -1995 cavalier Loacltd, 22,000
01 5 Yurs hperi•ne. In HVAC Ulul Two Story Colonial &lt;41.4 Third Gtllflfl Townsli~. 8 14-379-~2.
Area. Waonor JD~•. SIDve, Ftlg., Soflire Clu1. S:l-5. 814-446-1012.
0870 Or 1·800-287-p578. Rogers
Slle!IH. $125 Hdl; wlllllold until - . . 81.....,-0381.
Solos And Duct Dtligll. We Off11 Avenue, Galijpolis. 3 Bedrooms, 2
Walttproafing.
Verr Clean, Wt Pa~ Water !Gar~
E.. cellent Pay, Health Insurance. 112 Balhs, lR I FA Forfl'BI Dirlng
Chrlstmaa TrHt. Thomaa ·Tree Chriatntll Wlth ,deposlt, 114·742·
btge.
Tennant
Payl
Elecrrlc,
RENTALS
Paid Vac:ltlon, 401K Plus Frmg· Room. Oak Trim, Fireplace, Mucf1
1905 Saturn SC2, Atnomatlc. Air,
1300 beposit, $350/Mo., 614 · Farm, Flatrock. Cultr• S18 ball 2050.
11. II You Are looking For An More. Home Eligible For Tu
446·2205, 614·446-gsa5, No ,&amp; burlap. Horwa( blue sprue:• Two fuU .'blooded lemale Bassett Cruise, AMJfM Ca11aut, Trunk Appliance Par1a And Service: All
Exciting Challenge Wilh A Secure Abaremefll. $t7D,500 304·273·
·
and wnlll plno 30. 304·875·
-~
Ro!Hot. 112.000 COli Aftat 5 ~M. Name Branda Over 25 Years Er·
410 Housel tor Rent · StrGker• No l'w11.
hound,, ~Mil and
$75 (S.rlouo Inquiries Only II 114· perlence All Work Guaranteed
Future, Send Resume To : Sales 21140.
- · 114.fi2-71148.
'441·«115. . .
Twin Rivers Tower, 110\11 accepting 404 I.
Engineer P 0 BoJ~ 806 Jackson,
French City Maytag, 614·448:
Priced reduced in Meadowbrook, 2 Bedroom Khchon, LA, 238 RooW appticationalor 1br. HUO IUb'sid- Cancr.tt &amp; Plaollc Sepllc Tanks,
-::-:-:-:--:-~:-:----,- 7785.
01145640.
large living room, 3br, lull fin- Fir11 Avtnut, QaJIIpollo, No Pots. izad apt. for elderly and handl· 300 Thru 2,000 G1flona Ron
1H7 Monte Carlo Z Sport, Red,
ished basement, carpet. Call $325/llo., ~UI OoposJI &amp; Ulllllol,
Evan• EnterpriMI, Jackton, OH
3.1 V-a, Automatic, Ground Ef- C&amp;C General Home Main· ,
EOH
304
..
75-8879.
Somerville Realty 304·575-3030 81 4 ue rea
1~537.-.
' leell, Powor Sunroof, AC, Till, lenence- Painting, vinyl aiding,
Upstairs 2br apt for rent 304-075Crullt, PW, 25,000 Mlltl, G14· carpentry, door., windows, ba.lht.
or 304·«575-34 31.
2114 Monroe Ave 4bt, lull ba . . 2532.
moble ~ repair and rmre. For
Firewood
For
Salo
$35
A
Load
--...--------1251H1270.
Three acr" wtU'I three bedroom mont, large yard. centtlll air/heat
frH estimel8 t4tll Chet, 814-102·
81
509
Wll
~.
..
__
'
·
610
f!'arm
Equipment
=~--N0=-1-IIIIO.....,c.r.""""Fot~,-1oo-,-,Ihcu&amp;e, two car garage and npa· l400fmo. + dtpoalt. 304·175- 450
11323.
Furnished
rate 3 car garage, pool, greal 3230.
FI.-tor lalo, 814-1192-2783.
Stlacl And Sold
15 HP. 4 wheel drive Uit1ublthl
'L.Dcdy Th11 Monf\
840 Electrical and
place
ler
children,
·call
61.4.-843I~;~~~;;~~~
5350.
Deposit. Circle Mottl Lowest Rates In Firewood Split • O.Nvttld, $45 ''""" wito 4' , _ . and 5' - ·
Trudll, ..~l EIC.
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Retrlgwtlon
1-1100-622·2730, x 3901.
Town, NewiV Remodolld, HBO, Ptr Truck Load, $125 Pwr 18 Fl. 81.-843-5350.
Streer, Middleport, Oh~ t111 part
Three bedroom hOuse 1" Srra- 3 Bedrooms. 2 Batf1 Hou1e On Clntmax , Showtime &amp; Oi1ne)'. Tralet ~ 814-388-8890.
lime positions for STNA's, all c:use , basemen!, garage, new Farm In Gallla Co., Washtf, Or11er
8200 l&lt;aboiO 15 Horoo llifltl En- Crldll Prablamo?. Wt Can Htlp. Reald&amp;ntill or commercial wiring
Weekly Ra1Bs, Or Monthly Raitt Flrawood, e30 A Truck Lold 0. gino, Flnlah Mower, King Kuner Euy Bank Financing For Uold new lfi'VIce or rtpairt, "'••tef u:
shifts. Pleaae IWP in and fill out wtndoWI, deck and all remodeled
'
an application or call b' mo11 In· inside, e14·742·t345, 8U-992· Hook-Up, Oithwasher, 814·378- Conttruction Workers Welcom~ Nverld Clll 814-448-4382 No An- Bruan ~_!:lg, Disk, Pfcw, Blade, VthlCIII, No Turn Downa, Call cenle.d tledrieiln . Rldtnour
614-&lt;41·5698, 614-&lt;441·5167.
EltCUICII, WV000306, 304-175.
2839·
lotmodoo, 814·1192... 72. EOE
-~~~$6,500080, 814-379-1978.
Vlol1lt,814--7.
8118.
.
1780.
.

'

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31Ac1or-40-de-

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13 Port olo bltd'o
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45 c
15 11111 mo.
40 Sonlld
16 LMgo trucka
50 Koppel or
17 Celf- - day
KenMdy
18 Come togo- 51 - Aviv
20 EntiN
52 Ano- nome
22 foriUMtll... 53 Put 2 ond 2
23 Zll Zll'o
togoaliter
54 Enzyme: out! .
21 Stray
55 card lor
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28 · Eltclrlcal unit
31 Doc1rlne .
33 Fill-bottomed

Opening lead: • 5

......

•

By P!lllllp Alder

Vll&gt;~O.

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l&gt;ATING
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PEANUTS

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35 Fruit drink
37 Ohio city

38 Conlwfence

"

41 Donkoy

•

the, 11145

. .

After sWing he
too old to run '
'a whole ~ries of le~ons, the Senior
Life Master qRed to g!ve one class
. every· month.
·
· "We all . know the old riddle:
When is a door not a door?" began
the SLM. "WJ!en it's ajar. Well, in
bridge we have somedting similar.
When is a guess nOt a guess? The
answer is in this deal."
The SLM refetTed everyone to the
North-South hands on the first sheet
he had distributed.
"Against three no-trump," he continued, "West leads lhe spade four. ·
East wins with the ace and returns the
two, Westt~king your queen wi1h the
king. Things look grim, but when
~
.
~
West continues with' a low spade,
Wf-\'1 C.OJLD\'ol'T 11-l.Cf.£ PIL011li'\'J East wins with the jack · and stans
1-\1\ve: (.(Xli(EO UP I\ PIZZ(&gt;., FO(l. thinking. Eventually, he switches to
the club seven. Wha1 do you do
T~ti&lt;:Ft~T
now?"
'lHi'l'\~VINU
After a minute or two. the SLM
DIKN~IZ.?
!asked· his st~dents to look at the full
-deal on the second sheet
East has defended well. If he had
returned the spade jack at trick two.
dummy's TO would have become
your ninth trick. Alsa, if spades were
4·4, presumably the defenders would
have c~shed four spades and the club
ace. So, West musl have stancd with
five spades, and if he wins !his club
trick, you'll be down. You have no
~-"! · guess; you must put up the king. If it
loses, presumably you will have
turned two down . into three down.
But if you play the jack here, you tum
conlract made into three down."
Suddenly someone raised his
hand. "Sir, I know when a Guess is
· not a Guess. When it's a Levi.··
blurb:lf you are a new reader of
this column, you might like to buy
Phillip's book, "Get Smarter al
Bridge," wbich was published in
1994 and reprinted 1his y~ar. To
order (autographed on request), send
a check for $14.95 payable to·Phillip
Alder to P.O. Bo~ I ~9. Roslyn
Heights, NY II577-0i69.

43 Futur1 LL.Bo.: •

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44 Sac
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47 Guido'• high • '-

note

48 AtmoapiMirl
411 Chllrman -

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lwla C•mpos
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I was an ugly liUie kid with a big mou1h. an obnoxious
snow-oft. Nobody liked me.·- Meryl Slroep

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17 . I I I I'• Q
you dewilop from step No. 3 below.

Devout- Welsh • Upper· Unwise -PREVIEWS
had left the theater very disappointed. My date
mumbled. "Why aren't movies as good as lhey appear
in the PREVIEWS?"

DECEMBER 11

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Be sure to state lhc .zodiac
· you des ire .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)
You will not he c!lcotive at flexing
your mu'l·b iit order lo get whal you
want loday. hut coopcralion anti
.:ompassion will work wonders.
AQU!'iRIUS (Jan . 20-Fcb. 19) Do
nul pass on goSsip nhout someone
thai is hased on panial fac1s. You will
, feel
. guilty later if your misinfom1a-

tum hurts someone:

PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) An
unusual
dc\'clopmcnt might transpire
Tuesday. Dec. 2. 1997
·
today
when
a friend docs something
. In the year ahpad you might be
that
puis
you
in an awkward position .
. more fortuDlile in joint endeavors
than you will be working on your Stay alcn to prcvcnl this from ~ap­
own. You are likely to have a knack penirlg:
ARIES (Marcb 2T-Aprill9) ln
for making proper choices. Trust your
order to cushion your ego 1oday, you
)qdgmenl.
.
might take a position that is unpopu SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
lar with your peers . When defending
21) In order to gratify c.uavagant
your stance, do no1 let vanity interurges, you might spend more _than
fere.
you can afford. La1er you are hkely
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
to resrct anything foolish you do
Avoid becoming foolishly adventurtoday. Aslro-Oraph ·ycar· ahead prcous
today. Your usual abilities for
&lt;ll~liQns make grca1 Christmas stock· .
judging
the odds and assessing oppoina stuffcrs for ull signs of the zodifiC, Mall $2 for each to Aslro-Graph, sition might not be up to par..
GEMINI (May. 21·June 20) Your
c/o 1~11 newspaper. P.O. Box 1758,
intuitive
evaluations. which arc usuMu,-ay Hill Station, New York, NY

-mod.

ca-..

Room a

I

I

OUt tO
'·toclav when needed the most. Take.
care not to be Ioken in by a manipulator.
CANCER (June 2l-July 22) In
order to have successful day you
may have to depend more upon
yoyrs 01f and less upon ol~rs: Companions could be a hindrance rather
than a help.
LEb (July 23-Aug. 22) Guard
against impulses loday to poslpone
doing things that should receive
immediate auention. Do not lei
rcsponsibtlities pile up.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Coun1ing on lhings thai are not yet
aclualities could cause serious miscalculations. Do not take gambles in

a

dubious areas.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Keep
promises today, even .if it's inconvenient for you to do so. People you disappoinl won't forget your broken
pledges so readily ..
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Coworkefli mighl have to be handled
with kid gloves 1oday. so be careful
of what you say and how' you say it
Try not to be drawn into something
pclly.

'

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ROBOTMAN

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Celebrily CipNr ~.,. c...\ed from quotatiOns by famcu; poiOplt. pUt..., pt..ant
Each rett.i 11 tht ~ stlindllof another. Toct.y's cW: l «/UM P

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

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a door?

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Dealer: South

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�Ohio Lottery

reen Bay

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grid title

Pick 3:
444
Pick 4:
3743
BuckeyeS:
2·3-16-31-32

I
CW151

\1111, ... NO. 110

2 Sectlono, 12 Pagn, 35 cen1a
AO...nett Co. N-apoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, December 2, 1997

C!WT, Ohio Vllloy Publlolllng Com~

Cloudy tonight, low in
the mid 301. Wedneeday,
rein, high near 50.

In neighboring Jackson County,

Union County hunter dies from gunsl)ot wound
By The Associated Prell
.
Tile number of hunlcrs expected in Ohio's woods this week for deergun hunting season is good for the state's economy, but not so good for
the deer.
.
About500,000 hunters are expected to take_pan in the season before
it ends at sunset Saturday. That's about one hunter for every deer in the
state.
One hunter was killed about 8 a.m. Monday in southern Ohio.
Alvin Barrett, 34, of Union County. was shot in th~ leg and apparently bled to death in the Cooper Hollow Wildlife Area in Jackson County, state a,nd county officials said. Barren's hometown was nol tmmedtately avatlable.
.Sheriff Gary Kiefer said the shooting was an accident.
He said another hunter, whom he would not identify, admitted firing
·a 12-gauge shotgun in the direction of the victim but said he did not realize anyone had been hit.
·
Hunters will spend an estimated $200 million on equipment and sup-

plies, lodging. food, and transponation this season.
.
The hunters are a diverse group. About 18,000 women hunt deer each'
year in Ohio. And a recent U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Census Bureau survey showed that about58,000 children age 16 and under
hunt arid fish in Ohio.
Some of them even get out of school to do it.
The season is so popular that Monday was a holiday for all schools
in Athens, Carroll. Gallia, Guernsey, Meigs, Monroe, Muskingum, Noble,
and Vinton counties. Selected districts in nine other counties also closed
for .~he day.
.
.
.
Opemng day of the deer gun season, for some, IS as bt~ a hohday
as any oft~ othc~~radtttonal hotidays hke Thanks~IVIng, Chns_lll_l~· and
New Years Day, satd Ste~e Gray, asststant chtef of the Dtvtston of
Wildlife.
Hunters who bag o deer must take it to a dcer-ch~k station. Since
I%2, Ohio law has reqmr~d all hunters to have thetr deer officiBlly
checked and tagged.

Opening
statements
are heard in
·Volga res trial

this, too."

AND FEES NOT INCLUDED.
· ** 60 MONTH FINANCING@ 3.9%
WITH GMAC WITH APPROVED CREDIT.
TAXES, TAGS, FEES NOT INCLUDED
IODUIEIS
ALL PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES 00 NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES.

IPII .
-..fll.l-1

IIT.H

am1a111:1
1......... 727-2921
..............

AND

MOTORS
. ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA IPEl
&amp; LEXUS' ····fll. ...

Rt 60 MacCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
OPEN 9 A.M. TO 9 RM. DAILY-SATURDAY 9 A.M.
8 RM. -sUNDAY t RM. TO S RM. ·

IIT~H

727•2921

AHfll:.l:l

Ill, 1·1

i+4----~*

.

The Meigs County Commissioners approved several transfers of funds
within county departments when they met in regular session on Monday
afternoon.
·
The following transfers were submitted to the board and approved:
$200, Probate Coun; $341 .69, board of elections; $800, veterans service
commission .
In preparation for the end of the year, the commissioners announced
that the deadline for county departments to submit payment vouchers f"r
accounts payable is Dec. 9. The &lt;Jeadline for those dcpanmcnts to sub·
mit requests to encumber funds is Dec. 16, and the dcadhnc for submttting the· final county payroll is Dec. 12.
.
The board approved the renewal of a service contract for a computer
system at the Depanmeilt of Human Services. The contract is with David
Mic~I.Criffith in the amount of $1 ,300. The; price docs not rc.llcct an
increase in las~ year'~ contract
Kenny Wiggins. director of the county litter control and recycling pro·
gram, submitted a request for the advance or the linal 20 percent of the
annual budget for that department. The commissioners approved the
advance, in the amount of $8,490.
The board approved the payment of hills for the week in the amount
of $152, 152.18, with 209 entries.
Present were commissioners Janet Howard and Fred Hoffman. and
Clerk Oloria Klocs. Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton was absent. due to
a county commissioners' Seminar in Colum_hus.

Volgarcs' trial began Monday with
jury selection . Opening statements
are scheduled for today.
.t hrouih .U.1:!9IIday.,~ puttjng_the hou•
reec~er•
.:Volgaics, 44,is charged with mur- · ··
have con: lit In • tii'*Piu ca• aralarlh.Oirfle, Channing
der in the &lt;!cath.bf 7-year-old Seleana
~~~
&lt; AIIilil'liartenbach and An(llr McKowen.
dlepllly ~ -~
The ~
her. eupervlalng the \J*o)ed were
Gamble. He also is charged with kidMelga County
In Pomeroy. The
f111u~ . hltt ~nd Debbie Sebert.
'project helped
1 reeding unit about
napping, Obstructing justice, illegal
cultivation of marijuana and tamper- _ fantaay etorkla, and will remain on dleplay
ing with evidence by . hiding the
body.
.
He is accused of killing Sclcana,
putting her in a trash can and bury·
ing her in the back yard.
Relalivcs found her body in September while working·on the Volgarsaid this gives Council money to pay of Southeast Ohio Legal Servtces.
cscs · property. The couple had· left BY CHARLENE HQEFLICH
its hills without having to borrow
Darst said that Law Director
three weeks earlier, taking their three Sentinel News Staff
money
before
.Year's
end·
.
Warner
gave the village four options
·
Christmas
bonuses
for
village
other children with them. They were
Options
for
handling
water
meter
to
consider,
any one of which would
employees
were
approved
by
Midarrested in Muskogee, Okla., after a
were
presented
and
Council
deposits
meet
the
requirements
of Legal Serdleport Village Council at Monday
nationwide hunt.
gave a first reading to an ordinance vices.
Volgarcs on Monday afternoon night's meeting.
which would dctennine the amount
The other options arc having the
Council
members
gave
unanipleaded guilty to the tampering
nf
the
maximum
deposit
by
averagland
owner ·co-sign for payment of
charge, which is punishable by up to mous approval to giving a $ II 0
ing
water
hills
on
the
property
over
bills. making property owners
water
five years in prison. No reason was bonus to each of the 22 full-time
tcsponsiblc
for payment of water
given for the plea. Tiial on the other employees and a $60 bonus to each the past 12 months and then adding
used hy renters. or discontinue taking
30 percent.
of the six part-time employees.
charges will proceed.
deposits
altogether.
·
The
lirst.
reading
passed
with
Looking
toward
1998,
Beth
If convicted on the murder charge,
John
E.
Blake
met
with
Council
to
members
Steve
Houchins,
Council
he would face a maximum penalty of Stivers was reelected Council presistate
his
opposition
to
making
prOp·
·
dent. and Linda Warner was rehired John Neville, Stivers, and Eric Chamlife in prison.
cny
owners
responsible
for
renters•
Mrs. Volgares. 28. is accused of as law director for another year. bers voting in favor, and Sandi
causing her daughter's death by not Council also approved hiring Ryan lannarelli, against. Stivers stated that water bills.
Before monthly bills were
getting medical help. She goes on tri- Bearhs as a pan-time police officer. while she was volin~ in favor of the
approved
for payment, Council had a
An amendment to an ordinance first reading, s~e felt there needed to
al Dec. 15 on charges of involuntary
long
discussion
on the purc.hase of
manslaughter and of kidnapping for dc~ling with how financ·c~ arc han- be a cap on tqc maKimum amo.unt
two heaters, their cost, and whether
taking her other children with her dled by the Clerk-Treasurer Bryan any renter would be required .to too much money had been spent on
Swan
was
approved
by
emergency
deposit.
whe~ she left Ohio.
The ordinance will require two them. Chambers questioned whether
measure
and
adopted.
by
Council.
·The couple previously pleaded
The change allows Council to put rnorc readings before it can be adopt- cost comparison had been mll4e,
guilty to other charges in the case.
said he felt the price was ··excessive··
If prosecutors do not call Mrs. the $235.000 collected in income tax- ed. Bill Browning. village adminis- and voted against paying the monthVolgares as a witness in her hus- es into the general fund. rather than trator. and Kitty Darst of the water
ly bills.
band's trial, they eann()t introduce as distribute it among various funds. and department. c•plaincd that a change
NEW MANAGER · Brett Jones of Racin11, left, has been named
Chambers distributed job descripevidence a celevision interview she then to usc it for general operational in meter deposit collections is
transportation
administrator for the Meigs County Ohio DepartContinued on page 3
gave or a note she sent to her other expenses of the village. S w a n required to com_ply with regulations
mllnt of Transportation garage. Pictured with him is Wes
three children from jail.
Arbaugh of Tuppera Plains who is the new transportation 11111n•
In the interview. Mrs. Vulgares
agar.
said her husband accidentally hurt
Seleana by throwing her after she By BRIAN J .. REED
tern in the area ncar the MiddlcJ)on replace one on the books from 1991,
talked back to him. She said she Sentinel Newa Staff
•corporation limit. The firs! phase will sets membership requirements for the
helped him bury the body.
Pan of the funding for a ,$780,000 cost an additional half-million dol- department and its association, which
In the note, Mrs. Volgarcs apolo- sewer extension in Pome·roy has lars, Musser said.
serves as a social arm of the depangized to her children for not notify- been approved . That project was disAdditionally, the village will apply ment. The ordinance also sets rank
ing aulhbrities ahout the death and for cussed when Pomeroy Village Coun- for funds thmugh the. Community and rank requirements for officers in
leaving the state.
.
cil met in regular session on Monday Development Block Grant program the department.
to linancc the completion N the first
Councilman Bill Young said that
Brett Jones of the Racine area was tion from mostly highway maintephase.
he had discussed the ordinance with recently named transportation admin- · nance to include highway planning,
According to John Musser, presiCompletion of the sewer system Chief Danny Zirkle and Lieutenant istrator, commonly referred to as a budgeting and construction.
of the council. the executive
omrnitt&lt;'c of Buckeye Hills/Hocking extension is vital, because the, Envi- · Todd Smith prior to the meeting. Fol- county manager, of the Meigs CounThe new job classification reflect&lt;
Regional Development Dis- ronmental Pro1ection Agency has lowing the meeting, Smith said that ty Ohio Department ofTransportation the new functions of the county
Issue Two program last week promised sanctions against the vil- while he had read the proposed ordi- garage located on State Route 7 near garages. noted Pedigo, who said that
pprov,,d the village's application lage if the system is not in place late nance, he did not approve of its con- Chester.
Jones will be responsible for coorditent. Bryan Swann, president of the
lr $35(),()()() in Issue Two funds. Half next year.
Jones will be responsible for coor- nating all activities of the county unit.
Following an executive session in firemen's association. and member dinating all activities of the county
those funds will be awarded as a
Jones has IS years of service with
and the other half as a loan at excess of one hour called for the dis- Howard Mullen were also present at unit, said Nancy Pedigo, public infor- ODOT, primarily as a construction
cussion of personnel, council the meeting.
percent interest.
mation officer for District I 0, ODOT, project inspector but most recently as
Following a discussion with Marietta, in making the announce- acting Meigs County superintendent,
Tile village has pledged to borrow approved Christmas bonuses for fullbefore the change to county manag~~~~l2~~·~?9. for the project through a time and pan-time employees in the Roger Lemley, a volunteer for the ment.
lendei, and Musser said last amount of $100 and $50 respective- police department, and after their
Pedigo said that ODOT recently er.
that the village will seek funher ly. New employees will also receive execu1ive ses~ion. council voted redefined the roles of its county
"Jones' work experience will
through the Appalachian $50 bonuses. The council's executive against the organization of a police maintenance garages, including prove invaluable as he carries out his
J..;;;!~~~~~n~. Commission for the balance session for discussion of personnel department auxiliary, which would Meigs. Meigs is one of nine garages new and expanded role of county
matters was approximately an hour in provide the opponunity for trained in ODOT District I0 which also manager," commented the public
project cost.
volunteers to accompany patrolmen includes Athens, Gallia, Hocking, infonnation officer.
The proJect has been divided into length.
The body held its first reading of on their shifts. Council discussed lia- Monroe, Morgan, Noble. Vinton and
phases. The first phase will proShe said that he wi II be assisted in
new
ordinance which would govern bility issues as a concern if such an ·Washington counties.
a
his role of county manager by Wes
sewerage service to the Monkey
area (near McDonald's) and the the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart- organization were formed.
She said that the county facilities Arbaugh of Tuppers Plains, a seven
ment.
The
ordinance,
which
would
:are expanding their fields of operaContinued on pqe 3
L~:.:~~~~~~~~_jecortd phase will complete the sysContinued on page 3

Middleport Council approves
Christmas bonuses for workers

REBAR~ TAXES;.TAGS,

Commissioners
approve year-end
budget requests
.

IRONTON(AP) -Tile Lawrence
County prosecutor says he probably
won't take Mona Volgares up on her
offer to testify against her husband at
his trial for killing her daughter.
Prosecutor J.B. Collier said he can
prove the case against Jack Volgares
without Mrs. Volgares.
"She brings so much baggage,"
Collier said. "She was involved in all

*PRICES INCLUDES

"We have mandatory deer registration to accurately monitor the annu·
al deer harvest and to assure successful management ?f Ohio's deer herd,"
said Patrick Ruble, executive administrator of wildlife management and
research in the division .
A rule change this season allows hunters with the proper permits to
take two deer in one day. They must attach their temporary deer tag to
the first deer killed before hunting a second deer that •arne day.
The state was urging hunters to take care during the season. Last year,
16 people were involved in huntin~ accidents. Eleven of those sustained
self-inflicted .wounds.
.
.
"Deer hunters have to~ aware of the prectse locatmns of other hunters
in the woods," said Phd King, a state hunter edu;;al,lo~ ~rogram ~ctahst.
After the deer-guo season ends, hunters can paructpate '"a hrcarms
season for antlerless deer Dec. 12-13 in 58 counties. A firearms season
for antlerless deer will be open Dec. 19-20 in five urban ~cer zones.

Sewer project funding outlined

t

days•stmas
Untll
clirl

.\

Change comes
to Meigs OOOT

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