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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

I

• ..fii.H

UT.H
1f111 . . .
•. 1-1

Don' BeAT ·rk
Buy ATruck And Save Your Dough
"At C &amp; 0

........

UT.H
Ifill . . .
•• 1-1

S-10

.

. I II

$
•

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDE·DCAB 414
Air, Tilt, .Cruise,.S:hrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearan~' Package and Mo-.e!

LOW

'

Partly cloudy tonight,
low• In the upper 30s.
Saturday, cloudy with 1
chance of rain. High• In
the mld40..

$

AS
\

2 SICUont, 12 Poges, 35 Clntl
A Gannett Co. Newlpllper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December
19, 1997
.

Minorities make gains
in mostly white Ohi9
By KATHERINE RIZZO

AS

AS

Sports on Page 4

\to!. 48, NO. 1n
01117, Ohio V8lley Publllhlng Comf*'\1

Restyled. Front
Grille, Instrument Panel,
I
Bumpers, and Increased Horse Power!!

LOW

Pick 3:
5-0-5
Pick 4:
2-7-7-9
Buckeye 5:
8-1 0-12-26-32

•

1998 CHEVY

As

Northern Ariz.
falls to UCLA
in college play

Low unemployment rate translates
into bad news for Census·Bureau

Associated Pre•• Writer .
WASHINGTON - Ohio politi·
cians lend to speak of home in the
same lerms, calling it a microcosm of
USA Today
America. with ali lhe variety of the
WASHINGTON - Low unemployment is uplifting news for the
nation within the state lines.
nation, but a big WOI'I)' for the U.S. Census Bureau as it prepares to recruit
But lhat diverse combination of
millions of temporary workers for Census.2000.
urban and rural, industrial and agriWilh the U.S. unemployment rate al4.6 percent- a 24-year low cultural has not translated into a state
Census officials are afraid that it will he tough to find people willing to
that looks like America. New Census
work pan-time for only six weeks as early as spring 1998.
Bureau figures released today show
The agency is trying to lure Census counlers by hiking salaries up to
that Ohio in the 1990s remained a
$14 an hour. And it's not going to rely on help-wanted ads. II is .Sking
predominately white stale with . a
major companies to let their employees know that they have a chance to
small but expanding minority popuearn extra money if they work nights and weekends. Census plans to recruit
lation.
college Sludents. And it's trying to snag people getting off welfare by work·
The bureau estimated that as of
ing with stale welfare agencie~.
July 1996 - the most recent projecCounting every one of I he estimated 275 million U.S. residents in 2000
tions available- Ohio was about 86
will require a lot of manpower.
percent white and I I percent black.
The first wave of hiring is about to begin in three pans of the country.
wilh Hispanics of both races and peoCensus is doing a "dress rehearsal" of the census in April 1998 in Sacraple of Asian anceslry making up mosl
mento, Calif., Columbia, S.C., and lhe Menominee Indian Reservation in
of the rest. ·
Wisconsin.
Asians were a liny pari of the populalion - I percent- bul their num·
Even with that large percentage
bers have been steadily growing in cent.
Compare thai to lhe state's white gain, however, lhe bureau estimated
Ohio lhroughoutlhe decade, accordpopulation, which expanded over the Ohio had fewer than 92,000 Asians
ing to I he bureau's estimates.
From 1990 lo 1996, the bureau same period by less than 2 percent, out of a tolai populalion of 11.17 milprojected. the stale's Asian popula- and the state ·s population as a whole, lion.
tion grew by a whopping 29.5 per- up a mere 3 .percent.

!Regional demographic change~
Estimates for the white, hlapanlc, and black populations of
regional Ohio counUea In 19911 and comparable figures from
the 1990 CIMUI, 11 raleaaecl Thursday by the Census

Bureau.
White population estimates
Coumv
.1Jlill
111111
55921
29738

56913
31 :t62

Lawrance

29936
60012

31869
62152

Melga
Scioto

22711
77090

23608
771154

VInton
Washington

11042
801159

11999
62323

Athena

Gallla
Jackson

lchangt
2
5
7
4
4
1
9

2

Hlspsnlc population estimates
County

.1JliQ

111111

%chauga

Athens

438

545

Gallla

158
89

197
118

24
26

Jacklon
~ce

Melga

Sl;:loto
Vinton
Washington

1~

59
261

33
225

1M
70

309
43
267

Bisek population estimates
CQynty
18811
Athens

Gallla
Jacklon

Lawrance
Melga
Scioto
Vinton

Washington

1890
874
219
1561
177
2470
4
775

1021
250
1798
196
2060
4
874

32

20
18
18

30
18

%chang a
9
16
14
15
10
·16
0

12

,.----Chris

1998 ASTRO VAN
ALL WHEEL DRIVE
Au.omatlc, V6, C.~rome Wheels, AM/FM Cass.,
Tilt, Cruise, Pwt· Windows &amp; Much More !I

AS
LOW

Board
ponders
•
Increase
•
•
1n pr1ces
for lunch
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Proposed increases irl the cost of
lunches were introduced al a special
meeting of the Meigs Local Buard of
Education Thursday evening, ··
Lunchroom supervisor Marilyn
Meier and Clerk Cindy Rhnnemus
prcscnlcd a delailcd report ahout the
financial condition of the school
. lunch program. which is self· funded.
That program. which pmvidcs
free breakfasts to all studeniS and free
and reduced-priced lunches 1o quali·
l'ying students and lunches al regular
price to other students. has tradilionally operated "in the black."
Total c •penditures in the program
have increased by II percent on an
average over lhe last four school
years, while revenue has increased hy
only 6 percent Lunch prices have n&lt;~
increa.&lt;ed in the district for atleaSI six
years, m:cording to Meier.
The district receives rcimhursc·
mcnt in rcderal funds for each meal
served. Currently,lhe district receives
$1.891f0. each free lunch, $1.49 f"r
each reduced-price lunch, and 17
oenls for each lunch paid in full by
the sludcnl. The dislrict charges
$1.15 for each clemenlary ' lun ch,
S1.25 for each middle school and
high school lunch and $1.85 for each
adult' lunch .
The state average is $1.85, and the
Sou them and Easlem districts char~c
$1.25 and $1 .30 for each elementary
lunch, respectively.
In effect, paid lunch participants
undcrwrilc the free and reduced·
priced lunches 'in the di stricl. Accord ing to Meier's and Rhoncmus' figures,
an increase to $1.25 and $1.35 for
clemenlary and middle schoollhigh
school lunches would generate an
additional $14,000 per year for the
Ji stricl. including an increase lo $2.
!Continued on Page 3)

AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 BWER
4 WHEEL·DRIVE
V6~

Automatic, Tilt, Cruise,
AM/~M Cass., &amp; Morel .

AS
LOW

AS
IODW'IS

•2.f% ........

OIIIPIOVID IMlC
CIIDII

AND

-~·fl. I-I

lll.H

MOTORS
ST. ALBANS

lflll~l

••. 1...

·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
Olli!N 8 A.M. TO 9 RM. DAiLY.:.SATURDAY 8 A.M. TO 8 RM. -lUNDAY 1 RM. TO I RM.

·,

••

•

I

SHOPPING - Jet"~~mY and Joshua Man Manley, 1o-year-old twins of Brent and Judy Manley
of Middleport, were doing some Christmas shopping at Johnson's Variety Store on Wadnes·
day- for each other. The aisles of the dime store and other local merchants are still filled with
potential gifts, and some merchants will have special promotions naxt week for laat-mlnuta
shoppers.

Legislative committee releases
electric deregulation proposal
COLUMBUS (AP) -A plan lhal
lets cuslomers choose their electric
company has safeguards lo prevenl
lhc common co nsumer ftom
increased prices.
Roben Tangren, Ohio's consumer
cqunsel. said the plan would allow
customers to join together into buy·
ing pools. •
"So even those customers who

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER
AU PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES.

.,

don't want to engage in choice will
have the opportunity in a group to
exercise market cloul," he said.
The Legislaiure 's Joint Sclec1
Committee on Electric lnduslry Reg·
ulalion released the outline of lhe
deregulation plan Thursday. It is
designed to bring competition to the
slate's $11-billion·a·year retail ele&lt;:·
tric industry slarling Jan. I. 2000.
Companies willlhcn he given five
years lo recover so-called "stranded

costs.·· Those costs come from big length of time to recover lhosc
invc.slmcnts. su~..:h as nudcar power costs."

plants: that utilities made when they
lhnught lheir monopoly over lhc
nlarkct would tontinuc.
·
Utilities currently pass those costs
on to consumers hy raising electric
ralcs. usually recovering the full
amount.
During the five-year lransilion.
utilities will he able to recover·only
a portion of their stranded cosls and
must gradually phase out the stranded-cost charge that is currently
worked inlo consumers' bills. That
should result in a lower electric bill
for cus10mers. lhe plan says.
"I don'l know ifthalcan be done
in five years," said Ralph DiNicola,
spokesman for FirstEnergy Corp.
"Typically il would take more than
five years. You need a reasonable

DELIGHTFUL FIRE - Standing by the bonfire is one of the
mora popular activities at Racine's Christmas in the Park. Here,
some participants warmed themselves by the fire while watching the entertainment on the nearby staga7

Racine residents gather
for holiday observance

FirstEnergy has hired former
Supreme Courl candidate Roberl
Bork as a legal adviser and may chal·
lenge the proposed changes. ,
Racine's annual ChriSimas in the Park observance wa.&lt; held Thursday night
The goal of the plan is not to pro·
vide full compensation for stranded at Star Mill Park.
Events this year centered on the stage area of the park ins1cad of the ball·
costs, many of which were made
·
through poor management-decisions , fields, where previous celebrations were held.
The
observance
began
with
a
candlelight
walk
at
6:30
p.m.
around
the
said Sen. Bruce Johnson, R-Wester·
park's half-mile track, followed by dancing by the Big Bend Cioggcrs of
ville, the committee's co-chair.
Companies will be able to m~ke P9meroy, and an appearance by Santa Claus.
Racine Area Communily Organization President Kathryn Hart announced
up costs by operating more efficient·
ly under deregulation and aggres- the winners in RACO's Holiday Home Decorating Contest
Winners were. in order: Jim and Sally Caldwell , Bashan Road; Bob and
sively 1argeting more consumers,
Hazel Dudding, Broadway Street; Jonathan and Missy Recs, Dudding Lane .
Johnson said.
The electric industry for years has Receiving honorable mention were:David Prindstaff, Stale Route 124 at Dorbeen a regulated n\onopoly. But 22 cas; Paul Wolfe, Apple Grove-Dorcas Road; Ken~y Shuler, Pickens Slrccl :
Slates have dereguhlled or arc COn· · Paul Cardone. Johns Road; Carroll Teaford, Mam Street; Roger Manuel ,
sidering it.
Bashan Road .
Hart commended participants and judges in this year's contest.

Commission boosts price for admission ·to state fair
COLUMBUS (AP) - Admission
lo the 1998 Ohio State Fair will cost
$1 more for youths and senior citi·
zens, but advance tickets will cost $1
less.
The Ohio Expositions Commis·
sion, which oversees the fair,

approved lhe new prices Thursday.
II also approved a $5,000 raise for
Richard Frenette, 1he fair's general
manager. He will make $85,000 next
year.
The price increase will mean lhal
fair patrons 60 and older and those 5

•

lo 12 years old will pay $5 admission
al tbe gate or $4 in advance. Those
same fairgoers Ibis year would have
Pfid $4 al the sale and $3 in advance.
Gate admission forthose 13 to 59
remains $6 for 1998, but advance
tickets have been reduced 10$4. Chil-

dren younger lhan 5 will continue to
gel in free.
The chanses mean all advance
tickets. which are sold through
Kroger store.&lt;, will he $4, Frenette
said.
· He said he believes the unifonn

rate and the savings for adulls who
buy tickets in advance will boost tick·
ct revenue.
"It creates less confusion with
consignment people, and il's easier to
se ll," he said.

L. Alan Goldsberry

Goldsberry
plans run
for appeals
court seat
L. Alan Goldsberry, currently
serving a lhird lcrm as Athens County Common Pleas judge, has
announced his candidacy for the
Fourlh District Cour1 of Appeals seat
now held by the retiring Judge Earl
E. Stephenson of Portsmouth.
Goldsbcl'l)' will be seeking the
Democratic nomination in the MayS
pritllary.
He was IO formall y announce his
candidacy today a1 press conferences
in Pomeroy, Gallipolis. Alhens,
Logan, Marietla and Chillicothe.
The Fourlh District Courl of
Appeals encompasses 14 soulhcm
'Ohio counties, in~ludin g Gallia and
(Continued on Page 3)

•

�I

:Commentarr
The Daily Sentinel
'Estaf,fisf.Ltf in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio·
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157 ·

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGElT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
• General Manager

Jbe se.tl•tl •lcomn ,,,.,.. 1a th• Mltor trom rNd•n cm , lm»d , . , . or lop/(».

Short,.,.,., (300 IJttJI'd• or l•u) tl.w fhe t.tt chanc• ol being publllhld. ~ Itt·
,.,.. .,. prtlwr«l and allm.~y N MfR. Each should lnclu&lt;» 1 ,,,.,.,., llddlwa,

J

and Urf'IIM phon• numbftf. SpKify • ar. 11th.,. •• a ,.,.,net' to • ~vlow •ttk:N
or t.n.r. lb/1 to: Lea.,.. to the Edltot, TM SentiMI, 111 Court St., pomtroy, Oltlo
46711; or, FAX to ll.f.-W-2157.

Clinton. and Congress are
entering contentious period
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
. WASHINGTON - Ptcstdcnt Clinton's rclauons with Congress arc
becoming so strained that, when he had to share htllmg with a top lawmaker al a banquet last v.cek. he shook hands hut made httle eye contact.
The tw.o sat at separate tables, exchangmg no pleasantries Chnton mostly looked down dunng the other's speech
And that was House Democratic leader Dick Gcphardt. lmagmc how difficult his dcahngs arc hccommg wnh Republicans
· Even belorc those relations took a nose dtve thts week w11h Clinton's end
run on a major ctvil rights appointment. he was headmg toward the stx-ycar
itch- a difficult pcnod for any sccond-tcrrr president and his p'lf'ly
The oppositiOn pany knows you're no longer a pohucalthreat Power and
leverage ebb away. Nommations and lcgislauon get delayed
Meanwhile, members of your own party know they're historically likely
to lose seats tn the mtdterrr congress tonal elections They're edgy and want
5omc distance.
Clmton at a news conference Tuesday shrugged off the notion that he was
approaching lame-duck status. "We had a good year because we're all working hard. And alii can tell you ts, m '98 11 wtll be a more vtgorous year. We
intend to have a very, very active time."
For Clinton, the dynamtc ts complicated by the fact that Gephardt, DMo ,the top Democrat in the House, IS JOCkeying for a 2000 presidential run.
Gephardt has had a series of htgh-profilc dtsagreements wtth the administration over the past two years. pan of a strategy to contrast himself with
e&lt;pected rival Vtce Prestdent AI Gore
In a speech earlier thts month. Gephardt groused about those "wh,o now
call themselves New Democrats but who set their compass only off the
direction of others" and who lack "core values."
AI Tuesday's 75-mmute news conference, Chnton made light of the dispute - but also said he wouldn't trivtahze tl. He satd he and Gephardt
agreed on most thmgs
Last month, Clinton fatlcd to wm hts own pany 's support in the House
for "fast track" trade negotiating authonty, m large pan because of
Gephardt's opposition. It was a humtliaung blow
While Clinton predicts eventual passage when lawmakers return ne~t
year, the fight is clearly an uphtll one- against labor umons, environmenlal groops and most Democrats m Congress.
Clinton could also find it dtfticult to move other items -campaignfinance reform, expanded chtld-care and education programs, expansion of
NATO and keeping U.S .. troops in Bosota past the June 1998 deadline.
. And the new mtemattonal agreement to i:urb\cmissions linked to global
warming - reached last week m Kyoto. Japan. and hat led by·Cimton faces wide btparusan opposnion in the Senate.
., "Clearly Congress IS less wtiiing to cooperate wtth h1m now than before
1996," said GOP pollster Frank Luntz.

.

.

"

•

Frldly, December 19, 1997

OHIO Weather
AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and

NTIS's years of work go down the drain
jewel of the
IRS's multibillion dollar
modernization
program.
Its
failure was
the last straw
for a number
of lawmak. Moller &amp; Anderson
ers, who were
tired of seeing the agency squander
taxpayer money while producing
few results.
Thus began a process that culminated this fall with the House passing legislation that atms to radically
restructure the tax collecting agency.
The president has signaled his suppon for the plan, and the Senate is
likely to p~ss similar legislation this
spring.
Meanwhtle, the NTIS. an agency
once esteemed in Washington as a
pioneer of the information superhighway IS now trying salvage its
reputation. Vice President AI Gore's
National Performance Review once
chose the NTIS as a candidate for
conversion to a performance-based
organization, which would have
given it more leeway m spending
decisions. But the haunting ghost of
CyberFile may sec 'to 11 that NTIS

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
For a beleaguered federal agency,
the ghost of "CyberFile" won't go
away.
As we've reponed in months
past, the Internal Revenue Service
contracted the National Techmcal
Information Service -- a Commerce
Department agency specializing in
computer technology -- to develop a
.revolutionary program that would
have enabled taxpayers to electronically file returns directly to the IRS.
But, io put it mildly, things didn't
tum out as hoped.
As a result, NTIS is still trying to
live down its bungling of the $20
million CyberFile project, which
was mothballed more than a year
ago when congressional mvestigators. discovered a host of "security
weaknesses·· '" the program. Confidential taxpayer Information would
have been vulnerable to the prying
eyes of hackers
Things were so bad that even the
door lock to the room where the program's computers were housed was
not properly mstalled. The failed
project was a huge blow to the IRS.
and a major embarrassment to NTIS
offictals.
CyhcrFile was to be the crown

doesn't become a PBO-- at least not
anytime soon.
When our associate Aaron KarP
visited NTIS headql!8"ers in January 1996, officials there could hardly contain their excitement as tbey
told 4S they had just reached an
interagency agreement with the IRS
to develop Cyberl'ile. The program
would soon be operational, they
assured us.
Little did they know that a year
later CyberFile would be dead, and ·
lhe NTIS would be mvolved 10 a bitter financial dispute with IRS officials over costs incurred on the project.
According to a recent repon from
Commerce's Office of the Inspector
General, the IRS refused to pay $1 .9
million that the NTIS claimed it was
owed. "Having so poorly managed
the project," the report reads,
"NTIS officials were in a dtfticult
position to convince IRS that it
should pay the funds owed.''
But if the NTIS couldn't get the
money, the agency was i0 serious
trouble. It was in danger of becoming "anti-deficient" -- b~reaucratcsc
for "spending more money than it
was allocated by Congress."
Citing "NTIS procurement lapses" with regard to CyberFile. IRS

REMEMBER WHEN
MOTilE~

NATURE
CONTRGI.LED TliE
WEATHER?

•

officials were adamanl about not
forking over the money.
After months of bickering, high
level Commerce and IRS officials
met behind closed doors in July to
resolve the dispute. When the Commerce officials produced an audit
showing that the IRS shared blame
in the Cyberflle fiasco, the tax-col lecting agency agreed to pay the
NTIS $1.75 million.
·
But the CyberFilc story doesn't
end there. Agency officials arc lobbying 10 be convened -to a PBO next
year. But Commerce Department
officials don't thmk the NTIS has
what it takes to be a PBO.
The PBO concept is designed to
provide select federal agencies
greater flexibility in procurement
and more , control over thetr own
finances and porsonnel. in exchange
for strtctcr performance accountabtlit~
.
The prerequiSites for becoming a
PBO arc having a "dearly dcf1ned
mission" and "the abtlity to generate sulfic1cnt revenues Ln suppnrl
business operations."
Writes the Commerce IG: "We
arc concerned about whether NTIS
currently meets either of these prcrcqutstics " The IG claims the
agency lost an estimated $3 mtlhon
this year, and cites CyhcrFi le as an
example of the NTIS lackmg "m, house technical and management
expertiSe."
Commerce's plan to conven the
NTIS to a PBO would allow the
agency to provtde "mformattonrclated services" to other federal
agencies. In other words, NTIS
would get mvolvcd m more CyhcrFile-type projects and depend on
tbem to generate revenue .
The IG doesn't think that's a
good idea, and recommends m us
most recent repon that Commerce
"shou~d not proceed" wnh its plans
"to conven NTIS to a PBO "
Other federal outposts can learn a
valuable lesson from NTIS's plight:
One badly mismanaged proJcct can
ruin a painstakingly built reputation
and haunt an agency for years.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

IToledol37" I
PA.

IMansfield !36• I•
IND.

union members who may not even
vote Democrat? You wtll
discover that
public enthusiasm for limning soft money
is
sensibly
linked to an
equal enthusiasm for limitmg

umon

expenditures -above all expenditures financed by
involuntary contributions. But that.
it turns out, " something the
Democrats m the Senate wtll fi libuster to death.
So the frenzied drive for "campaign finance reform," and espedally for limiting "soft money," turns
out to be. nothing but a sly unilateral
attack. on a means of fmancmg
essential to the Republican Party,
and -- since the Republicans control
Congress -- lltsn'l gomg anywhere

soon.
But the liberals who arc pushmg
campaign finance rcl\trrn have bigger tdcas than merely natling "soft
· money." What they really can't
stand is the Supreme Coun's 1973

decision in Buckle~, vs. Valeo, which on the left). To the extent that they
held that spending on political cam- shut us up, they will huve more
paigns ts a form of speech. and as power. That would be a disaster for
such is protected by the First America, but more part1cularly a
Amendment. The idea that a rich dasa.'itcr for conscrvuuvcs "
man ought to he able to spend
unlimited amounts of his own
McConnell is right on the mark
money on hts own candidacy or Why should the Sulzhcrgcr famtly.
somebody else's (provided he does- which owns the New York Tunes. or
n't "coordinate" his effons wtth the Graham family, which owns the
anybody else's) strikes liberals ._, Washington Post and New, week. he
bitterly unfair. That's why Cotorado · able to spend hundreds of mtlhons
governor Roy Roemer. the Democ- of dollars every year spreadtn~ theu
rats' national chairman, has gone so liberal v1cws around the cnuntry,
far as to call for a constitutional while equally wealthy cnnservati&gt;es
amendment if necessary. to reverse arc limited tn relative prnmcs'' l~.:an
the Court's decision.
sec why the Times an&lt;l the Post arc
Enter Sen. McConnell. As he so eager fnr "campatgn finance
pointed out recently, "A spendmg reform," hut why docs everybody
limit on speech would he like say- else kneel at the same altar'!
ing: You arc free to travel but you
can only spend $100 to do so. Just
Evcryl\ody, that ts. hut Mitch
how free to travel arc you under that McConnell As he warns: .. Make no
limitation'/''
mistake. when you hear the three
Then he asked -- and answered -- words 'campaagn linum:c rclonn.'
' a most interesting question: "Why some liberal is trying to shut you
do they want to shut us up'' Many up."
Amcncan institutions comment on
poltlics, and most of them are on the
William A- Rusher is a Distinleft -- the press (KO percent oa the guished Fellow of the Claremont
left), academia (95 percent on the Institute for the Study of Statesleft). and Hollywood (I 00 percent manship and Political Philosophy.

':

you're not in it for . therfong haul!"

~L-------------------------------------------------~

~Today· in history
~·

~ By The A81ociated Preas
~-

Today is Friday. Dec. 19, the 353rd day nl 1997 There arc 12 days left m
~ the year.
.
r Today's Highlight m Htstory ·
P On Dec. 19. 1843. Charles Dtckcns· classtc Yulcude talc. " A Chnstmas
Carol," was first published m England .
; On this date:
• In 1732, Benjat~in Franklm began puhhshtng "Poor Rtchard' s

...

~

~lmanac.

.,

.

-: In 1776, Thomas Paine published hts lirst "Amcnc.m Cnsts" essay. wntil!g: "1ltesc are the ttmes that try men's souls."
-. Jn 1777, Gen. George Washmgton led hts army of about 11.000 men to
"'lley Forge, Pa .. to camp for the winter
';.! In 1907. 239 workers d naco
me exploston in Jacobs Creek, Pa
Jl In 1932, the Bntish Broadcas n 'orp began transmtthng overseas wtth
~"Empire Service" to Austraha
'i i In 1957, the musical play " Thc ,Mustc Man." starrmg Robert Preston,
With book and songs by Mered11h Wtllson. opened on Broadway.
~ • In 1972, Apollo 17 splashed down m the Pacific, cndmg the Apollo proof manned lunar landings.
.; Jn 1974, Nelson A. Rockefeller w"' sworn mas the 41 st vtce president of
""United States.

liam

••
"t

By George R. Plagenz
A newspaper's religion editor is
often referred to as the religious editor. That can be a misnomer. Not all
who wnte ahout rclig1on arc rchgious themselves.
But "religious editor" fit Louis
Cassels. He was not only an awardwinmng writer whose columns on
religton for Umted Press International were eagerly read. but he was
also a hcl iever who helped others
believe . His Christmas column,
~·The Parable of the B~rds," has been
repnntcd many times since it was
first published in 1971. It last
appeared m thts space a year ago.
Cassels died less than a month
after Chnstmas 1973 He was 52.
Bcmg m the hospital is no fun at any
lime. Bctng in the hospttal dunng
the Chnstmas holidays can he one of
hfe's sadder moments .
·
But after hiS hospttal stay, Cassels was able to write a column that
began, "Serious tllncss can be a
!blessing. "
"I've been reading assurances to
that effect in the Btble for many
years." Cassels conllnued. "But on
paper they sounded pretty farfetched, and I guess I didn 't take
them very seriously. Now I know,
from recent personal experience ,
that it really IS so
" I'm nottrymg to suggest that a

hospnal is a
jolly place to
be. It ISn't. But
I never really
expected 11 to
he. What surprised me was
the discovery
thai there arc
certain aspects
of a heart
attack which
can invest the
whole experience with good
cheer. joyfulness,
even a kmd of zest.

•

....

Hazel Baxter, 73; Albany, died Thursday, Dec. 18, 1997 in O'Bieaess
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Born May 15, 1924 in Darwin, daughter of the late Denver and Hattie
Hill VanNe~t. she was a homemaker, and a member of the Blackburn 1-till
Church of Christ, Athens.
Surviving are her husband of 33 years, Clyde M. Baxter; a son and daughter-in-law, Neil and Linda Martin of Albany: a daughter arid son-in-law, Dianna and Dave Hale of Albany; six grandchildren and a great-granddaughter;
a stepson, Gary Baxter of Marion; a stepdaughter, Kay Mendenhall of Findlay; three brothers, Norman VanNest of Athens, and Leo and Kermit VanNest,
both of Albany; a sister, Nma Welch of Shade; and several meces and
nephews.
.
She was also preceded m death were her first husband, Carl E. Manin; a
brother, Roben VanNest; and two SISters, Carol McLead and Helen Sinclair
Servtees will be I p.m. Saturday in the Btgony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, wuh John King and Bill Mead officiatmg. Bunal will be in the Burson Cemetery, Shade. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 79 p.m. today.

Roger S. Boswell
Roger Seth ·Boswell, 36, Goosecreek, S.C., formerly of P'oint Pleasant,
W.Va., died Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1997 tn Charleston, S.C.
A construction foreman, he was born Aug 8, 1961 in Point Pleasant, son
of Emma Louise Boswell of Point Pleasant. and the late William Howard
RUPE HONORED - Larry Rupe, right, was honored for his
Boswell Sr.
years of service on the Meigs Local Board of Education Thura-'
He was a U.S. Army veteran and a graduate ofPomt Pleasant High School
day. Rupe did not seek re-election in November, and was recogSurviving m addition to his' mother are a daughter, Kristina LynA-Boswell
nized with a plaque by Board President John Hood, left
of Burns Aat, Okla.; five brothers, William H. Boswell Jr., James L Boswell
and Rtehard B&lt;Jswell, all of West Columbia. W.Va., Ray P. Boswell of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., and Dale Boswell of Mason, W.Va.; and two sisters. Ruth
M. Dunham of Leon, W.Va .• and Jeanie Howell of Pomeroy. :11,·
(Continued from Page 1)
teachers as needed. Spencer's
He was. also .preceded in death by a daughter, Sarah Beth Boswell.
approvalts pendmg certification.
Friends may call Saturday from 7-9 p.m. at the Crow-Hussell Funeral for each adult lunch served .
By The Associated Prase •
·
The resignatiOn of Mick Childs as
The income generated by the proThe National Weather Service says a cold front moving into Oh10 from Home in Pomt Pleasant ·
the nonh will bring cloudy skies tonight. The front wdl slowly drift southPrivate graveside servtces will be held at a,later date
gram has also decreased due to a 5 a reserve football coach was acceptpercent reductmn annually 10 lunch ed, and the resignation of Pete Woods
ward and should be near the Ohio River by morning.
Light rain or snow will develop along the front and spread to the south.
sales. due to a combination ol an as reserve baseball coach was acceptHowever,
most pans of southern Ohio will remain dry .or will have very light
mcrease m participation 1n free and ed, wnh me(Tiber Scott Walton vO!mg
.
ram or snow.
Wilham 0. Whitlock, 66, Oak Alley. Syracuse, died Fnday, Dec . 19, 1997 reduced-pnced lunches and an against accepting.
Davtd Ramey was htrcd as a tutor
Behind the front, hght snow or Ourries can be e~pected. Southwest wmds at his residence
increase in students buymg "a Ia
for
a handicapped student, and Paul
carte"
lunch
1tems.
across the state wtll shift to the northwest or the west during the night.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racme.
McElroy
was hired as in intenm
School board members took no
Overnight lows wtll range from the low 30s in the nonhwestlo between 35
action on changing prices. but agreed mamtcnanec supervtsor at an addiand 40 elsewhere.
that olhcr cost-rcducmg measure~ tional rate of $1,000 per year.
Flurries or light snow will linger Saturday over all of Ohio but the southThe ·board met in executive sesshould he considered before the
west and south central regions. Precipitation will end over the rest of westDay Saints mLebanon Township wtll lunch 'pnccs wcrr mcrcascd.
Coat giveaway
sion
to discuss the hiring of personern and central Ohio by noon .
be held at 7 p.in Sunday.
The
Salvation
Army
is
holdmg
an
nel.
Prices should he rmscd as a "last
Snow showers will continue across the rest of the state, especially ,long
Outgoing board member Rupe
resort ," board member Randy
the Lake Erte shore. High temperatures wtll be between 40 and 45 in the south ongmng coat giveaway of wmter
jackets at tts store at I Townsend Program set
Humphreys smd "We also need to was honored with a receptton and gift
and between 35 and 40 elsewhere.
The Long Bottom United consider why the expenses have prior to the meeting.
A developing low to the southwest wtll push moisture toward the state Place in Athens across from the
Methodist Church will have its mcrea.,ed so dramatically
Athens
Mall.
Accordmg
to
SalvatiOn
Other business
Sunday. Precipitation will develop in the southwest by late in the day and
Chnstmas
program
Sunday,
7
p.m.
Army
Capt.
John
Foster
the
giveaway
The
board
also.
"We're already askmg 45 percent
spread across the state Monday.
.
wtll
last
until
the
coat
supply
is
• Approved a contract with JRC
to subsidize the program,"
A htgh, thm layer of clouds covered Ohio ovemtght. Winds remained from
Humphreys smd, m reference to the Consulting at a rate of 7 percent of
the south at 5 to 10 mph. In some shelter areas such as river valleys, winds exhausted. For more informatiOn, AA sets meeting
call (740) 593-7082.
AA meeting will "" held at 7 p.m 45 percent participation in the lunch project cost lor the completion of
had become qUite light and some patchy fog had developed.
Thursday
(Christmas night) at the program by students who pay for design work for repairs under the
Overnight temperatures were generally in the 30s to around 40, but were
Sacred Hean Catholic Church, Mul- lunch.
Christmas programs
. Ohm School Factiities Cnmmisslon:
no htgher than the upper 20s in some outlying areas.
berry
Ave.,
Pomeroy
The
Christmas
musical
"Christ• Set the hoard's organizational
Board member Larry Rupe
The record high temperature for thiS date at the Columbus weather stamas
Comes
to
Lone
Star
Gulch"
will
warned the board that an mcrcasc m and regular meeting for Jan. 5 at 7
tton was 61 degrees in 189:5. The record low temperature was 8 degrees below
prices mtght cause a reducuon in paid p m.. and appomtcd Prcstdent John
zero m 1884. Sunset wtll be at 5:09p.m. Sunset Saturday will be at7:49 a.m be presented Sunday, 7.30 p.m at Syracuse VFD
Santa
Claus
wtll
visit
the
Syracuse
Run
United
Methodist
Church
Forest
Hood a.&lt; president pro tempore;
pantc1pat1on m the program
Weather ro...,.,asl:
·
Ftre
Station
Sunday,
2:30
p.m.
All
All
welcome.
• Approved the renewal of the
Meter also noted that the school
Tomght .. Mostly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s. Southwest wmd 5 to 10
invited
The
Bradford
Church
of
Chnst
treasurer's
bond of $20,000 at a cost
lunchrooms in the dtstncl were in
mph.
.
adult
chotr
musical
will
be
held
Sunneed of basic supplies, such as tow- of $432 for a policy through 2002:
Saturday ..Cloudy wnh a chance of rain. Highs m the mid 40s. Chance of
day,
'IO
am.
wtlh
the
children's
Cantata
to
be
held
• Approved membership tn the
els
and cooking implements.
ram 30 percent. ·
"An
Old-Fashioned
Chmtmas,"
a
program
at
7
p.m.
ChnstChristmas
Ohio
School Board A&lt;Suctatlon at a
Saturday mght .. Panly cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s.
Personnel matters
will
be
presented
Christmas
cantata,
mas
Eve
services
wiH
be
Wednesday.
cost
of
$2.407.
Extended forecast:
· The board approved the htnng of
Eve
at
the
Middleport
Ftrst
Baptist
6
30
p
m.
All
welcome.
Present
were Superintendent Btll
Lawrence Haley as a substitute speSunday... P&lt;~nly cloudy. Highs mostcy i_n the 40s.
Church.
7
p.m
Monday ... Rain likely. Lows in the lower 31A and highs in the mid 40s.
etal education teacher"' M&lt;eMirnnrl Buckley. Clerk Cindy Rhocncmus,
Elementary School for the remainder Board members Rupe, Humphreys,
Tucsday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Lows m the County Home
The Me1gs County Home Com- Middleport Church of Christ
of the schpol year. Michelle Wine- Hood and Walton and Roger Abbott.
upper 20s and highs from the mid 40s to the lower 50s.
The children's choir of the M td· brenner, Gay Pcmn and Jared Also present was Wayne Davis,
mittee will meet with County Commissioners Monday afternoon at the dleport Church of Christ will present Spencer were approved as substitute mcommg board member
regular commtsston meeting whtch "Candy Cane Lane, A Recipe for
begms at I p m. iij the Meigs Coun- Life" on Sunday. 7 p.m. '" the Famty Courthouse The commtllcc wtll tly Ltfe Center at the corner of Fifth
address its findings and recommen- and Main streets. The ch01r consists
Umts of the Metgs County Emer- O'Bicncss Memonal Hospital;
Employee
Robbie
Jungbluth,
a
MILWAUKEE (AP)- A postal
dations concerning the county home of 37 children ages kindergarten
9:48 p.m .. O&gt;crbrook Nursing
gency
Medical Service recorded sevthrough Sixth grade and ts under the
employee who had been denied a former oflictal m the postal umon,
Center,
Middleport, Helen Amon,
dircctton of Rochelle lawless and en calls for asstslance Thursday.
promotton opened fite in the main satd supervisors had picked on the Program planned
VMH.
Units respondmg mcluded:
The Christmas program and can- · Marte Snyder. All welcome.
post office early today, killing a co- gunman. who had recently been
RACINE
DISPATCH
CENTRAL
worker and woundmg two others transferred against his will and passed tata wtll be presented at the Mount
18.
p.m
.
Filth and Mam streets,
3:
12:47
a.m..
Wtlliams
Road,
Hermon Unncd Brethren m Christ Open house
before he ' apparently shot htmself over for a new JOb.
.
Bnttany
Hill.
treated at the scene.
''It was just dtfficult for htm to Church Sunday at 7 p.m The church
An open house wtll be held at the Pomeroy, carbon monoxide alarm at
dead.
RUTLAND
Jeff Westonburgcr rcstdencc, Sctpto
Two bodies were taken from the adjust and management made it more is located m. Texas Community on home of Jerry and Phyllis Scott on
6
p
m
,
Mctgs
Mtnc 2, Jerry Rowe,
Township
Volunteer
Fire
Department
post office and loaded into hearses difficult," she said "Management Wtckham Road JUSt off Texas Road. S;uurday. 5-7 p.m. and Sunday, 1·4 assisted:
Holzer
Mcdtcal
Center.
Central Disp.m. at 214 Fifth St .. New Haven.
ahout 3:40 a.m .• nearly three hours pushes people, they harrass people
patch
squad
aS&gt;tsled
4
I
0
a.m
..
Rocksprings
RehabiliW.Va. Thetr decoratiOns consist of
after the shootings. Pollee refused to and intimidate them ... It was just a Christmas program
SYRACUSE
tation Center, Pomeroy, Jewell Curmatter
of
time."
over
150 Chnstmas trees.
The
annual
Chnstmas
program
of
tdcntify the dead.
12:58 a.m .. Park Rnad. Clarence
tis, Veterans Memonal Hospual;
Teitz said he did not know the the Reorganized Church of latter
The gunman opened fire in on allGnllith, rei used treatment.
12:08
p.m
,
RRC,
Edmund
Smith,
nt~ht mad-sorting room busy with assailant well but that he would
h~tday work. A wuncss told WTMJ- "never expect somethmg like this
from him."
TV she counted 12 shots.
Joan Chitwood, 55, was shot in
"I saw the guy holdmg hts gun in
The followmg actions to end mar- Dec 15
(Continued from P;~ge 1)
serve the penplc nf snuthcm Ohio,"
the
face but her IOJUncs did not riage were filed recently m the olftce
Divorces grained - Robert F
1hc mr. He seemed calm. Then I saw
Gold,hcrry s;ud
n lady crouclung down ncar me. Then appear life-threatening, said Mark of Meigs County &lt;;:Icrk of Couns Lar- Taggan from Gwyndolyn M. Taggan. Mctgs. The cnu11 rC'vicw~ dc&lt;c:l~ums
Goldshcrry was an aunmcy with
Dec 15; Brenda Lee Lemley from from the lowc1 courts. · anmmng,
I knew somcthmg was up," satd McLaughlin. a spokesman for ry Spencer.
reversing. moOtfytng or setting usu..lc Wtll1am A. Lavelle &amp; Assnciatcs in
Froedtcn Memorial Lutheran Hospiworker Dow1d Norcross.
Dissolutton asked - Richard A. Roger Dale Lemley. Dec. 15: Gatl E theu judgments
Athens lrom 1~69 unul 1986, and
"The ftrst thmg I dtd was duck tal.
Raley, Reedsville, and Amanda S. Datlcy and Donald L. Datley. Dec
sim:c 1987 has hccn a trial coun
"I
hclicvc
thts
1'\ln
lor
!he
Fnurth
15. Tammy Sue Moore lrom Btll
and make a beeline f"r the cxtt." said
Rodrick Patterson. 44, was treat- Raley, New Haven. W.Va .. Dec 15
JUd~e m Athens County. He IS a gradGene
Moore Ill. Dec. 15: Patricta L Dtstncl Court of Appeals wtll prnvi&lt;le
ed for a minor gunshot wound to the
worker Sktp Teit1.
'Dissolutions granted - Sarah
me wuh new c.:hallcngc'- m lhC law, uate ol Ohio Umvcrsny and the
foot and released.
Sams and Robert Steven Sams, Dec Rose and Joseph D Rose, Dec 15, while allowang me to continue to Duke Umvcrslly School nl Law.
IS; Christopher LeMaster and Can- Teresa Lynn Hams lrnm Mtchacl
The
Sentinel
dice LeMaster. Dec. 15; Gerald M Richafd Harns, Dec 15: Bnnme Sue
tUSPSII3·960)
Mohler and Gwendolcn S. Mohler. Qutvcy and Jnscph Qutvey lr . Dec
Dec. 15; Todd Dtll and Sarah K Dtll, 16.
Published eYer~ afternoon Monday lbrouGh
Am Ele Power ...................... 51~.
Fr 1day. Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
BUY • SILL • ftiADI

Light rainfall predicted
for region ori Saturday

Board ponders increase

William 0. Whitlock

Meigs announcements

J

Postal employee takes life
after killing two co-wo~kers

~·

EMS units log seven calls

Actions to end marriages filed

"It helps, for example, to learn
that most doctors and nurses. no
matter what n is currently fashion able to say about them, really do
care intensely and unselfishly about
healing the sick.
"It ,helps to find out, for sure.
what I already had good · reason to
suspect --that the 'heartless corporation' that employs you ts in fact run
by men and women with very big
and generous hearts.
"Finally, it IS ntcc to know that
the gtrl you married 28 years ago
Plagenz
meant all she said about 'in stckncss
and in health."'
No one would choose to S(Jend
''The
Christmas in the hospital. But louis
Cassels discovered that even there.
author of
"It
IS
the 23rd
good tn the Chnstmas star lights up the dark
and frightening places -- and even ·
Psalm
be
glimpsed
reminded there, the rustle of angel wmgs is
heard to let us know we arc not
the baste
how
alone
reason, I
much
And in the affccttons of tl10sc
thmk
sheer
who
lo&gt;e us -- and m the mtntstraWhen you
I ·goodness
walk
0 Wl
there IS tions of caregivers we may not even
know --we become more aware than
~~~gh is
~~~:~
ever before that God sends his love
called 'the
beings -- to all mankind on this day of days.
valley of
especialAnd always Wherever we arc.
George Plagenz is a syndicated
the shadly
at
ow
of
times
writer for Newspaper EnterpriSe
death,'
L----------------------------------' such as Association.
r
your natural fear can be quite now, when we arc all continually
remarkably allayed by a strong tempted mto cynictsm.

awareness that God IS wtth you.
"This feeling is a very wonderful
thing. "It docs not merely comfon
you. It gives you a new outlook, a
different perspccttve on all your
plans, problems. ambitions and worries. It liberates you -- from fear and
anxiety and petty ambitions.
.. There arc other rca.o.;cms, too,
why serious illness can be a blessing.
"It teaches you ~ow many really
good, kmd and loving people there
arc in the world-- people 'who will
go to great ends to help you, for no
other reason than thctr own warm
compassion.

Daily

Oh 1o Valley Pul'lhsh•ng Comp~ny/Oannc:n Co.,

Pomeroy, OhiO 4S7M, Ph 'J92-21!'i6 Second
cl~n post:.ge pa1d at Pomeroy, Oh1o
Mr ...btr: Tht! A55{1CIIl1Cd Press. and lhc Oh10
Ncwsp.1pcr t\li$0("t~lll'"

POSTMA!i'TER: ~nd lulUren ~.:om:CIIons to
The Da•!y Senl1nd, Ill Court St , Pomeroy,
Qh,n .&amp;57M
'

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrlrr or Molur Roulr
Onl' Week

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"It teaches you how
many rea lly good, kind
and loving people there
are in the world •• people
wh "ll go to great ends to
help you, for no other reason than their own warm
compassion.,

Daily

S:!.llll

..••... • · •·

··

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·

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Publisher UKIVeS the rlihl IO ldJUII, TA.ICI dur·
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MAIL SUBSCRtmONS
l•tide Mefal COIII'Ilf

13 ~ks .... . . . ..

.
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R•fu O•tsklc Mela• Count)'
1J Weeki . .. .... . .
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2t. Weeki ' ... ... .
52 Weeki ... ,
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26 Wttlu

...

..... . .

52 Weell.s. ... . .. ........ ...

'

.

, .... $56 68
...... .... SI09.7l

Akzo ......................................82\

AmrTech ...............................SO'I•
Ashland 011 ........................... 49Y,
AT&amp;T ....................................58"/o
Bank One............................. 53"1•
Bob EVII(IS ............................ 21,'/r
Borg-Wamer ........................ 481..
Broughton ............................. I&amp;,,
Champion ............................. 17\

Charm Shps ..........................4'Y.
City Holdlng ............................40
Fede111l Mogul.........................39
GanneH .................................S"'Goodyear ..............................~
Kmart ................................... 10,_
Kroger ................................... 331'.
Landa End ............................. 33Y,
Limited ................................. 23'1.

Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 22

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

One Valley ............................. 39~
People• ................................. 41 1'.
Prem Flnl ............................... 25'1r
Rockwell ..............................4i"t.
AD/Shell .............................. ,52'•
Searl ................:...................41''1..
Shoney'a ................................. 3~
Star Bank ................................ 56
Wendy'a ...............................22"1.
Worthington .........................15'•

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Adveal
of Galllpolla.

Goldsberry plans run

A Ia Z VARI£ t•t

Stocks

I

' I

• IColumbus!40' I

39"

Three cheers for Mitch McConnell
By WOllam A. Rushar
After watching the national
debate over campatgn finance
reform for lo these many months. I
have come to the conclusion that
Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is
e.actly nght. What's more, he occupies that exalted posnion m splendid
but lonely isolation
Ask the Amencan people if we
need "campatgn finance reform"
and about 97 percent of those polled
will answer "Yes." That's because
we thmk, as a general proposition.
that money is the root of most of the
evtls m polittcs and we 'd all he better off if the mess was cleaned up. If
you get more specific and ask
whether contributions of "soft
money '' should he sharply limited,
you Will SIIJI get a large alfirmati&gt;C
response bec:ausc the term ··sort
money'' sounds obnox1ous, and limIting 11 sounds agreeably bipantsan.
But what tf you po.int out that
businesses favor the Republicans
with contnhu1Hms of "soft money''
(meaning money not spent on specilic candtdatcs) whereas labor
unions favor the Dcmocrals With
millions of dollars wonh of TV ads
paid for by f'orccd cKacllons from

Hazel Baxter

MICH.

A shining light in dark times
"I wonder if it's scal)j when

.

Saturday, [)e(:, zo

Bari)''S
World

'•~

The Dally Sentinel ~ Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 19,1917

Page2

Today's livestock report

37.50-39.00. lew 39.50.
U.S 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 33.0037.00, 210-230 lbs 30.50-33.00.
Sows. steady to weak.
IJ.S 1-3 300-400 lbs 27 00-30.00,
few 26 00: 400-500 lbs. 29.00-32 .00:
500-600 lbs. 32 00-35 00, few over
600 lbs. 36 .00
Boafs: 26 00-28 00
For lf.e week . barrows and gtlts
2.50 to 3.00 lower; sows 1.00 to 2.00
lower
Estimated receipts : 37,000.
'
Prices from Producers LiveVeterans Memorial
stock
Association
Thursday admtsswns - none.
Hog market trend for Friday : n/a
Thursday discharges - Johnny
Summary
or Thursday's auction
Nelson, Alice Plantz.
at
Bucyrus:
Holzer Medical Center
Hogs· 2 50 lower
Discharges Dec. 18 - Shirley
Butcher hogs; 33 .25-39.85.
Daily, George Kalatta. Mary Hughes,
•
Marguerite Pope, Robert Gnffith,
Andrew Hill, Sadie Simpson, Arleda
Simpson, Elizabeth Bendell. Summer
PJIITiiiiii'Yiil
Bias, John Klein. Anhur Crabtree,
ANASTASIA 0
Heather Matto~. Otis Tucker, Arlene
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:311
Evans.
44H823
(Published with permission)

COLUMBUS (AP) - lndtanaOhio direct hog pnccs at selected
buying points Fnday as provtded by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Market News
Barrows and gtlts: steady to 50
cents lower, .demand light to moderate on a moderate movement.
U.S 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 37.00-38.00, few 38.50, plants

Hospital news

SANTA IS COMING TO OUR STORE
SATURDAY, DEC. 20TH FROM 1-4.
Come and get your picture taken for only $2.50.
Complete line of Ty Beanie Babies, Toys, Antiques,
Sports Cards, Jewelry, Coins.
Many items to choose from.
Free Coffae Everyday.

992-4087

Free Glvuways

�I

Sports

December 1 1997

•

No. 11 UCLA beats
Northern Arizona;
Kansas also wins

"] was very surpnsed when I

heard what I had. It JUst made me
thtnk what I'm capable of d01ng,"
satd Henderson. who had etght
rebounds and seven stea ls.

,,

"That was a test for me to sec 1f
I could play through pam and fattgue.
I dtd an OK JOb, I could have done
beller on my free throws (7-ot-14),"
he satd.
Henderson had 20 or more pomts
for the filth strmght game The BruIns (5-1) have won five straight
smcc a season-openmg 41-pom t loss
to North Carolina.
Toby Batley added 26 p01nts and
freshman Baron DaviS had 17 pomts
and eight steals for UCLA
" It's our ume to take over. and
that's 'what he's dum g." B,ulcy s.ud
of Henderson "We knew he could do
thts anyume. ThiS year. he s geumg
the chance wtth Jclan1 McCoy out."
Northern Arizona (4-4) had the
Brums out of sync early The Lum-

berjacks shot 50 percent lrom threepoml range and controlled the hoards,
20-15. to trml hy JUst four at halfllme
"They were penetratmg the gaps
preny well We weren't cxpectmg
those short guys to go all the way to
the basket and lay the ball up," Henderson satd " We kmd of got caught
ort-guard on defense."
Andrew MaviS had 16 pomls for

Alexander girls beat
Tornadoes 57-26

the Lumberjacks, the Big Sky Conference regular-season .champions
who got withm two pomts three times
late in the first half.
" We were happy wtth the lirst
half. We expect~d to be there wtth
them," Mavts said. "The difference
in the second half was turnovers. We
couldn 'I handle lhetr pressure. "
Nonhern Anzona ftniShed the
game wtth a 33.27 reboundmg edge.
but com mined 21 of us 32 turnovers
in the second hal f.
"We competed well, but we shot
so many less shots because of the
turnovers. They are what killed us...
LumberJacks coach Ben Howland
saul.
UCLA came out aggressively on
the boards at the begmntng olthc second half. takmg away the LumberJacks' second chances, whtlq scoring
the first seven pomts for a 47-361ead.
Henderson and Batley dommatcd
the opcnmg seven mmutcs, combm-

mg to score 17 of the Brums' r.rstl9
pomts and stretch UCLA's lead 10 5948 wtth 12:35 re111aming.
"It's our JOb to be steady and put
up l:Onslstcnt numbers, either in

pomls or in a steady elTon," Batley
said.

Elsewhere m the Top 25, 11 was
No 2 Kansas 96. Peppert\ine 83; No
13 Arkansas 61, Centenary 48, and
No. 25 Syracuse 82, Buffalo 70.
No. 2 Kansas 96
Pepperdine 83
,
Paul Ptercc scored 23 pomts and
Raef LaFrentz added 23 pomts and
12 rebounds as the Jayhawks (12-1)
won their 52nd straight at home .
Kansas butll a 53-35 halftime
lead , but the Waves - led by Gerald
Brown-made IOof 12 shots m the
first eight minutes of the second half

to close to 64-58. Brown scored 14
pomts in that span, whtle Ptercc
scored nine of Kansas' II points.
Brown fintshed with a seasonhigh 35 points on 14-ot-19 shootmg.
No. 13 Arkamas 61
Centenary 48
At Fayeueville, 1\lick Davts had 21
pomls and II rebounds as Arkansas
survtved its worst first half since
1989.
Davis· 10-footer from the baseline
wtth 6 27 left gave Arkan.sas (8-0) a
46-44 lead after Centenary ( 1-1 0) led
by seven with II 112 mtnutes to play

Arkansas mtsscd 22 of 30 shots in
the first half and tratlcd 23-19, ns
lowest production since sconng 18 in
the first half of a 1989 loss to TCU.
No. 25 Syracuse 82
Buffalo 70
Jason Hart scored 18 pomts and
added etght asststs to pace the
Orangemen (8-0).
Buffalo (5-4) stayed close m its
ftrst vtsit to the Carrier Dome with
some accurate long-range shooting in
the ftrst half. But Syracuse's hctght
advantage and stmgy 2-3 zone
defense wore down the Bulls.

Philadelphia gets Ratliff, McKie &amp; future first-round draft pick

The high-rolling Alexander Spartans remamed undefeated with a big
57-26 Tri-Valley Conrerencc girls
basketball win over the Southern Tornadoes Thursday night in Charles W.
Hayman gymnasium in Racine.
Southern is now 1-4 overall and I·
3 m the league, wllile Alexander is
now 6-0. 5-0 m the league.
Southern shooting led to its
demise as the Lady Whirlwi • '' htt
JUst 12-42 overall for 29 pc~ cc nl,
including 0-10 from three p0101
range. Alexander hit 20-47 overall for
43·percent, including a 17-_1"
ht
from two point range for 46 1
11.
A balanced attack led b}
.oor
Angela J.ewell with 16 pomts lv.llkcd
the Spartans, who also saw sophomores Natalie Bobo and Kelly West
notch 13 and 12 points respecuvely.
Josi Carr had seven and several oth·
ers hid two points apiece.
Southern was led in scoring by
freshman Nicole Benson with eight
potnls, Kim Sayre stx and four each
from Cynthta Caldwell and Kim
!hie. Enca Atnou added three and
Pauy Lawrence one.
Southern played a tough first period, trathng 9-6. doing a great job
against the Spartan press, however,
costly turnovers and missed shots
gradually led to their decline. South~rn slipped to 27-14 to one of the
league's best leums ut the half27-14.
The third period was the dilfer-

ence in the game. Alexander came
out red-hot, while Southern couldn't
crack the ice off the11 already cool
shooting hands. Alex rolled to a 224 offset and 49-18 advantage. The
final stood 57-26.
Southern had 32 rebounds (Sayre
7, Jenny Fnend 7); hit 4-12 free
throws, had three steals, six assists
(Caldwell 6); 22 turnovers and 14
fouls. Alexander htl 10-16 free
throws, had 28 rebounds (Bobo 6);
ten steals, 12 turnovers and 17 fouls.
Alexander edged Southern in -the
reserve game 27•25 led by Morgan
Llewellyn with eight. Katie Cummins had 14 for the Tornadoes.
Southern goes to Ravenswood,
Tuesday, December 23.
Opafler l!lllb
Alexander
9-18-22-8=57
Southern
6-8-4-8=26
Alexander: Kelly West 0-1 9112=12, Natalie Bobo 5-1-0=13,
Mary B1air 0-0-0, Angela Jewell 80= 16, Mandy Thompson 2-0/2=4,
Josie Carr 2-1-0=7, Ltsa Lubachka
1-0:2, Kristy King 0-112= I, Jessica
Robinson 1-0=2. Totals 19·3·
10116=57 .
Southern: Cynthia Caldwell 1213=4, Jenny Friend 0-0/2=0, Erica
Arniltt 0-112=3, Kim Sayre 3-0=6,
Kim Ihie 2-0/1 =4, Patty Lawrence 00-0, Hecther Dmlcy 0-114= I, Ntcole
Benson 4-0:8. Totals 11-0-4/12-=26

" lthmk the tmponantthmg for us trade if l didn'tthink it would help
was we saw ol wasn't worktng out the club.'' Brown said. "I dtdn't worand went thiS way," SJXers coach Lor- ry so much about what we were gtvry Brown satd . "! don'tthtnk they ing up as long as what we got back
complemented one another."
wtll help us."
Stackhouse satd he wasn't fazed
Stackhouse was the 76ers' sccondafter a "tough road" with the losmg lcadmg scorer with a 16-point aver76ers.
age. He also had a career-high 452
- ·~1 haven 't let that hurt my sptnts percentage from the field In hts two
at all." he satd "I'm sttll anxious to previous seasons, he averaged 19.2
JUst go out and win anil have that and 20.7 potnts.
feeling of really playmg for someAbout the 76ers. Stackhouse sat d.
thmg. It's been a whole."
"~ thmk 11 was ltmc to shake up
The 26-year-old Montross. aver- things a ltttlc btl There's a lot of talaging 3.4 pomts, joins his fifth NBA ent on that team . sometimes it's not
team in four pro seasons.
the addtuon of a player. n's the sub·
''I'm lookmg for a team I can call traction. ''
home. Hopefully wtth Detrotl, the
Stackhouse left Nonh Carohna
opportunity is there," he satd "Item- after hts sophomore season, and the
per my thoughts wnh cauuous opu- 76crs felt he would be the cornermtsm."
stone in a rebutldmg effon that would
Rathff, 24, was a first-round draft put the team tn the playoffs for the
p1ck ( 1Rth overall) m 1995 McKte, firslltmc smcc 1991.
•
a 25-year-old Philadelphia nallve
Wtth hts leapin~ skilis and ability
who played at Temple. also was a to dnve to the basket. Stackhouse.
first-round ptck, m 1994 by the Port·
land Tratl Bla7crs
The 76crs and Ptstons talked about
the trade for several days. but Stack·

and take so me o l the prc~'urc oil ol

house d1dn ' t learn about 11 unt•l

Grunt Hill ·· Stackhouse sa td 'He
takcs a lot of I of me wtlh the ktnJ ol
thmgs he can do..
The 76crs huckwurt apparently
w;lSnt htg enough lor hoth Allen
lver,on and Stackhouse. a pamng the
team had hoped to hutld around

lllUrsday when Dctrmt finally &gt;Weetened the pol with a first-round ptck
Btlly Kmg. the 76crs' vtcc prest&lt;lent of haskcthall admtni,lratton,
wouldn't spcc 1fy when that ptck
wouiJ he
"We · wouldn't have made this

The Southern ·Tornado freshman Mutt Shutn seven.
team recently evened its record at 2.Bryan Mttchellled Fort Frye with
2 by defeatmg Alexander 49-36 la.'t 10 potnls
'
night.
Earlier, Southern dropped a 37-30
Southern was led by Matt Shmn's dcctsinn H&gt; Waterford. Mall Sham
22-pmnt etlan, followed by II potnts had 10, Caplinger nine. Hill five and
from Brandon Htll, Chad Hubbard Huhhard four. Jason Johnson led
six. Jesse Caplinger five and Josh Waterford with 15.
Larsen tour. Josh Dtstlehorst, Joey
in trade
In the season opener, Southern
Sand• and Chris Parker also con- claimed a 59-37 win over Miller.
tributed with good defenstve cffoo1s Mall Shain led ' the team with 20
and good passing games. Chad Huh- potnls and 10 rebounds, white Chad
bard had five assists and Caplinger Huobard tossed tn 10. Every Tornathree
in great pas.,ing games for do scored in a grcut cOon.
was seen as a dynamtc scorer who
Brandon Hill had nine, Caplmger
could help generate some excitement. Southern.
Ryan
Wtlhams
led
Alexander
with
seven,
Joey Sands seven and two
He was a first-team All-Rookie selcc16
pomts.
each from Josh Lur.&lt;en, Josh Distlclton tn 1995-96.
On Wcdncsduy,;Southern lost 57- horst and Chrts Parker.
Iverson said he and Stackhouse
Jeremy Compston led Miller wtth
were beginning to get a feel for each 41 to Fort Frye. Chad Hubbard had
an
18
potnl
effort.
Jesse
Caplinger
II
.
other. but atllnllled that a trade was
had eight, Brandon Hill eight and
probably for the best.
"Stack's a great basketball player, but the situauon he's tn is f)robaBoxing
u news conference for today Wtlh the
bly bcller for him now," Iverson satd.
LUSAKA,
Zambia
(APJLight
mayor of Hohoken amid reports the
"It's a beuer situation for us."
welterwctghl
Fchx
Bwalyu
of
Zamteam was plannmg to move from the
Montross came to the 76ers in a
bia
wa.&lt;
in
a
coma,
four
days
after
Meadowlands to a new arena. ·
blockbuster draft-day trade with New
wmnmg
the
Commonwealth
IItle
.
·
The Devils have a lease to play
Jersey that got the Nets rookie forfrom
Paul
Burke
of
Bruam
on
a
conhome
games at the Continental Airward Keith Van Horn The 76crs also
troversial
decision.
lines
Arena
at the Mcadowl~nds
ptcked up rooktc forward Tim
Bwalya.
who
was
knocked
down
through 2007
Thomas. and his development helped
three times in the linalthrec rounds
Volleyball
Phtladclphia make the trade.
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - Kern
"Ttm and I play the same type of and was on the canva.&lt; when the linal
basketball.'' Iverson said. "He brings bell sounded. was admtttcd In Lusn- Walsh had '22 ktlls and 12 digs as
a lot of energy offensively and he ka Teaching Hospttal on Tuesday defendmg champton Stanford heut
Long Beach State 9-15, 15-10. 15-4,
runs a lot, and SIIC (Thoma.' is 6-fool- alter complaining of headaches.
H01:key
17-15 in the semifimtls of the NCAA
9) will only be a plus at small forEAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) women's chmnpumsh1rs.
ward··
-The New Jersey Devils scheduled

hascball , Js on the agenda lll 1114.1Jor
league haschall's CX:CCUIIVC L:OUOt:ll
when team owners meet next month

tn Phoentx, Anz., the new&gt;papcr
reported
But a National League spokeswoman satd today that the agenda for
the meeting had not been completed
Katy Feeney. the league's scntor
voce pre'stdent, said baseball officials
are still revtewmg the tssue of Schou
and the dealerslup But, Feeney smd
she does not know whether the matter will he dtscused hy the owners tn
Phoentx.
Schou d1d not return a call to her
Cincmnati otlice this morntng.
Last year, GM alleged to the
·, Ohio Motor Vehtclc Dealers Board
that Schott faked the retml sales of 57
cars at the Chevrolet-GEO dealershtp
she owned in suburban Montgomery. .
The names of seven Reds employees were among those GM said
SchoU falsely claamed hough! cars.
GM has dropped the case and
Schou has sold the dealership. but

play mg." Utah coach Jerry Sloan frequently with male otlicials, and to lead 66-60. Howard Eisley'slhree·
· said. "You have to get some confi- Kantner did not appear to he offend- pointer gave Utah lhe lead foa: good,
dence somewhere. The last couple of ed .
and a layup and dunk by Greg
games our guys seem to he beller, a
"!think they (female referees) are Ostenag finished a 7-0 spurt to close
lillie more together."
doing a great job... In some jobs you the period.
Karl Malone scored 30 potnls, and can't give them a pat," Malone said.
The Magtc kept struggling in the
the Jazz broke open a close game " But you are going to treat them like founh quaner, going more than three
wtth a 13-0 second-half run.
guys. They know that."
mmutes without scoring before Dar"We're staning to gel back to
Rony Setkaly had 20 potnls and rell Armstrong broke the drought
where we want to be," the NBA's · I 0 rebounds io lead Orlando, which from the field with an 18-foot JUmper.
second-leadtng scorer satd. "It 's a shot 38 percent from the field and
"They only scored 19 pomts m the
tough road, but we just need to keep was held to 34 potnls tn the second fourth quarter. but we scored 13,"
working and see whar happens."
half - 13 in the founh quaner
Scikaly said. "'If we had knocked
Malone didn 't have a basket dur"We had a horrendous shooting dow_n some shots in the founh quarmg the seven-mmute stretch in whtch night, and I thought we looked flat for ter, 11 would have made things a litthe Jazz took control of the game. but the first time all year." Orlando tle different"'
delivered nine of his team's final II coach Chuck Daly satd. "'But we had
In other NBA games, Scallle
points down the stretch.
·
to play our three mside people defeated Denver 119-106, the Los
He also drew a mixed response (Scikaly, Horace Grnnt, Bo Outlaw) Angeles Clippers beat Golden State
from a small ponton of the Orlando for over 40 mmutcs. That 's too 82-7ft and Phocntx downed Dallas
Arena crowd of 17.258 who saw hnn much "
89-75.
flAl female official Dec Kantner on
After hemg held to 37 points and
Sonics 119, Nuggets 106
the rear end m the third quarter.
trailing hy two at the half, the Jazz
Vin Baker had 18 pomts and 10
The same kind of thtng happens put togeth~r a 29-pmnl thtrd quarter rebounds as Seattle won !Is fifth

Murray S1 I::!0. C:lnl(lhcii!YIIk 70
N l'.1rulma St 1'19 Sun1 H~.ll.l~ttln Sr 110
V:mJcrbih K' UNt" (irL'\!n~hom 6'\
w KL·••tu ~ky 7~ Mrs• v ••ucy St M

Basketball
NBA standings

. Midwest
lnJr,rn.l S1 99.

All~nhc Ol~l!don

n:

Iwn

I. f&lt;L
M!
16 9 MO
10
10 ~(1~

New York

New l ~rl&lt;!y
Roston
Washmgrun

II
II
6

l&lt;tl

Phrl.1d~:lphm

''16

Cmtl'lll Dho·l•ion

5

'
;•'

+Ill

271
7jJ2
M2

,,"'" •
"" 12•,, m
14
7

62~

Ch1~.1go

M•lw ,,ukce

II
II

[)cUOII

-·-

Tururm1

2 22

OH1

11

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwnl Dl,lsion
Iwn
n: I. 1'&lt;1. l&lt;tl
Houslnn

11

7

14
10

10

UCLA 90 N

M1nne~o1n

Vnncouvcr

11

Se:urlc
L 1\ Lakm

20

Albany Ga 66. V.dduJtu St b!i
Berry 72 Mohtle b-1
Cnmpbell 66 Appuladmm St !i9
G1.'tH~1.1 St 91 Bn.-wton Purkcr \~
lnthuna.Suutheil!ltM Ga!orgtcnwn. K)' n4
LSU n SE U.1msran,, !itl
Mcn;cr 70. Wmthrup ~7
Mord~:W St \10, Wofrord K7
NE lout5rana IJ2 L...w&gt;~r , I
Nr~:holls St 77 SW loolsllln:&amp; 74
Nonh Cnrohna K2 UCLA 78 COT&gt;
SO\Ith flomla SO, Clevcl.tnc.l St 7~

Phucm~

14

61b

PM land
S Jcr.mll!nlo

ll

.~lJ I

'6

'" ••
"5' 2016
17

MOO

I

llO

•,.
II '

111
2:!7

11 '

200

"

Thursday's St:ores
Ut.th

8~

Spnng HtiiiQI., Frted·H:.:dcm.m 76
T~nnesllt"l;! St 91 Norfolk St 70
T~ans-El Paso 80 Cttu FtonUa5h

Orlando 7J

Phoentx R9, Dallll\ 7~
Sealllc 119, Dcnv~:I"'I06
L A Clrppcr5 82. Golden Stute 7K

Midwest
Bmdley 7b. Lou•sv•ll-!67
Georgm 94 Cenl M•ch•g~tn D
Mrnn - Duluth 61, M!chlll:ln Tech 4j2
Samt Lou1s
Mumry S1 4j~

Tonight's games
Cl~o~rlom:

at W.L~hmgtun 7 p m

lktrmt atlnUr,m.t 7 r m
l A Utkcrs at Atlanta 7 10 p m
Nt!w VorkntGLEVELAND 1 ~pm
Mllw[lukel! at Tumnto "K J1 m
Ma,um al Phrladclphrn K p m
S.u.:r.unento ,11 Houuon. MlOp m
V,m~.:uuvcr .11 Pot11uml 10 p m

7'.

'

Southwest

Hou!IOII 4j4, Pr.une V.ew 4~
TeKtl' K9 NonhWesrern R6
Tuas·Arlington !«), TeM~I Wesleym1 J6

FarWesl

Saturday's games

------Sports briefs-......;_ __

.Cnl St·Hnywo~rt.l7"i S ColurllJo71
Soulhvrn C.li Cnll IO"i p,,ucn 44j

Ch1c.tpo.u New Jcr!&gt;l:y. I p m
W.IShltlf,IOII ,,, Toronhl 6 I' m
lmh.ma at OrbnJo, 7 lO 11 m
Arl.tnl.l ,11 M1.m11 1 m p m
l ,\ L.1k\!rs .11 Churlurrc 7 10 p m
111ul,,cfo!lllhr.l .11 lkrroll 7 :m p m
LA CbJllk!fS :u Mmncsutu H1' m
s.•~ r.UliCI\10 .II D.lll.r~. KJO \'Ill
Housrun .11 San Anromo 8 0 p nl

·.

Tournamenls
L'tps Holid•y Inn Cli&amp;.ulc...:hvmptvnshlp
Stq•hcn F 1\ustm 69, N~w Mt:JU~ II St 61
Third pia«
1\lolholrlli\ 7-1 EJun 41J

Northern L11hts lnvlllllionlll.firsl ruund

Ph.xnrx .11 IJcnwr 9 r m
New York at Malw.mb,•t", 9p .,l
Gt) lden Slllr1'tll ~t'attlc 10 p 111

Mrss~~~ll'lll

1'~.:1'1JCfl.iitk:

M

fcnrt~:,~tt 1JI',

Akron fll
Tcxu~ A&amp;.M IJ I. Ahrtk,t-Anchur•• g~· l'l(\
W1seun~lll H4 M.mh,lfl,m71

Sunday's games
U111h at CI.EVhLAND 6t' m
L 1\ Chpt)l'rs ,Lt Uosron, 7111ll
Pnrll.mJ ,If V.mcouvcr lJ 11m

6K

Ohio H.S. girls' scores ,

NCAA Division I
men's scores
East
J .,~~-~(lnVJ ik 'i2
CH.."\ll~et11wn ~'i lkr huoc-Coukmau41
l'tu sllu rj~ h M N.wy (11
Symlll~ K2 Outf.tlu 70

l'unlh:mr60

Snuth
LtlUISIIIII.IIIO

l'.unpbcll 1-' Wn•thrup ~K ·

MmlorJ bl S

Ad11 41 Umtr Perry 16
1\btm C~:m Huwt.'fM. 1\kfllll N

27

H1lltop 48, S1ryker J7
Hopcwell·l..uur.kln M7, Scrra:.1 E 1l
Humlng1un HIJ. Punsmuulh 1. n
lrrdmn Cn:ek ~I. C.~thz 4Ci
J,14;1i.sun ~2. Athi'IL~ 'II
J,~hnn c~nrcr 17 Am~or '1
l\.1hJa Y7 f.urYrCW ~2
K~nl•lfl R1J~c 70 Spnn!l Nnr!lll.'nSI~·rn
Kmp.s I'l l Nnrwuud .a~

~1

l:!Or.rl' ~1 Ymt l1t\:t1y ~~J
l ..1kcl.mJ ~7 I us~.:.rr•• w,,~ C.11h 11
l..echliii.L ~. UmrcJ 40
IA"II'~'~ ~ 1 H.1rtlm Nurthc111 ~'J
l.£llllglnu ~K lk'llcwi!C 46
l.1~r1y 111!1111111 11-1 A.rlm~l•\11 W
l.1hc11y Cenl~·r 711. Ddt.l1'

L1ht:rty UIIH11171 M11kr•p1111
lm~tl

B 11h

\(1

'i~

lehn.r 49
L1111.1 Slmwn~c hfl St M.U"ys l1t
1 .111~n111v1t:W til SJII.'IIl'l."f\ 1llc .JX

W~.:'b~tcr ,(1

M1n~II.'J

'i2 M•.non L...:al ')(
N Can11111. Hoovl!r 71' Nl'w l'lui.O.:Iplu.1 11
N Cem~.ll 47 E.Jun4fl
N.Lpult.~m

• ]0

l6 hou11 !landbr
1111161

hus contmucd lo mvcst1gatc.
C111ng sources 11 dad nm identify,

1~:~

the Enqutrcr satd that Schou docs not
h.1 vc to .Jtlcm.l the scs:-1on at the Jan

1:\-15 meetings But she h:ts heen
mv!lcd to meet With the council that
hd~ twJcc suspended her lrom run·
nrng the Reds for making mscnsJtlvc

wt ~out

Hl'mi11Ck Mtlll:r oiK

New 8ren1Cn li'J Fu11 R~lll\let)' 41J
NL"w Rtegd 70 Okl Furl .U
Orc~on Clay 6K. lindlny 65
OttaW".a·Gt.amJorf "i~. \larr Wen 47
Putrtdl Hllnry 711. Sw,lllll111lCi
Pur1smnulh NQtre Dun~e '\"i Gk'nwOt!oll :!9
R~!~trnu 5l Orange ('hr 46
Rlll~dull' 60. Buckey!." V;LI ~
S Cenm1l
AshlnnLI Cn=s!Yil'W ~-'

hclurc the coum:ll m June 1996, she
was suspended unul Nov I, 199M

76. B.:rhn

day operations since her suspensiOn,

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L•kt rOUI homt phoM. a month~ sti'YI(t lte,long11!stanct IHS. ind chargrs ftr au 11mr you~~~~ u~ Will be made- Allt~r fm VJry drptndir.g on the plan 'fOll ~tfk II you te1m1natt 5tt'IIC! brftn complth'Xl ol y'JUr
mrn~mum s.rv!Cf comwutmm. your Clfllfr m~y r~~~J~~m a.flaJ C)f P'"Mtd ttrm~nanon Itt tf you trrm.natr StrVl(t wrlhln 120 diJS of iKI!vaii')L'I, to Ml!d a '100 rha•l)l! bw RadloShiCt, 'f)u must rttum 1hr ctllrAa, ptlorlt
f 501 o" monthly amu on st!trt~ raft !Nni lor~ days. Ofr!r ~lt vaty and may n~t bt ayarlable rn aiiiO(aJront Ntw Oflf ~ar tklittcl Slatn Cellular S!IVICf a}'~tmtntrtQIIttd Ofl~r val1d o~y oo ctrtari ullrng pl.:m1
Roam1119 char!J'I. tax!\'"'' and roiWOfl !Uf&lt;ha&lt;9'1 ""apply 0Jhot """''"'' 1 ··~"'' •'I awlf Subjo&lt;· """'' """""' Not •11&lt;1 wnh ill't oth• oil• le• '"" t~ d"'''' Olio •nd• 11/Jtm

KansWI C11y I I'm
New YtLrk (,1,1111~ nii.Mias I I'm
llluladclrlu,a:u W.tshmp.rnn I p m
l'llhhurp.h .11 fciiii~'Siit"C I pIll
1\!l,,nl.• ,,, 1\nzuna 4tJ m
J.lt'L:'itm\llk' .11 O.JL:I,u•J .a Jllll

New YllrL: h'IS oiiiA.1mll 4 pIll
S.ut l&gt;11.·t:u ar IA•n\cr. -'1• m
S;u1! r.m~IM-11 lll Si.-.1111~· H11 111

Sunday's gwmes

Baseboll

Sandusky l\'rkllt5 ~.Milan E1.h•un .W
~brin11- 52 Columbiuna 12
&amp;ron :\2 Cin M~NkhnllL' l 1J
Sbullystda! rl·t Tomnm -17
SJKII1ll C.nholn.: 77.0..o(Jmll Rtv~'f'lllik J4
SJl(!nJt Nonhw.e~r~m Ml , h:~umliCh .W
SJ1nnat Shawnee ,7, lklk:fnn!.une Ci2
Sl Cl.un\'JIIc :'i-1 Buekl'~ La~~.:.l14~

t\mer•~an

Allltnllr 01.-l•lun

lr L I &amp;

Iwll

Gf f.iA

NY 15tandi."B • •
NY Rnng.:n
AnnoJa
T.1mp11 Bny

H 9~
ll 9-t
29 HI!
I'' t\0

14 l'i ,
10 I~ II
, 12 IK ~
721 'i

62
7~

IJ7
l-'19
101
1()6
101

S1 H~11ry 41.J P:ll'lc.w.ty l7

Su.tsburj! 5~

Jcw~:n · S~1111H

Suu!lll."r~ Sf,,

HuwlarH.i 41
1 ,Jlnw.mJa 'iK l....cmun Munn'IL" 4(1
Tc.1y~ \1,11 'ill l...n~un l:ln1 :!9
Til lin Cnlvl!n 67. l'ul &lt;.'hmtmn 'H
T111p C.:tly lkllwel 77 M~~~•~•m.rw.1 \1.11

m,

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fol I:Jn.lnul!l 1K Luna T~llll)k Chr :\b
Tol Whii11R.'flii7 1:n=m11111 Rn~~ ~I
Tn -Cuunty N ~1. lwm v,,l S oU1
I r1,id '\ 1, 1:.urnmrb 50
Tmwny 7U Bla~k R1vcr 4ft
Umon U...:.al72. Stl!uhtnYIIIi! l7
Umnnmwn l.:1kc ;'i(l 1\kmn Cu\t:ntry 42
UrN111.1 M Gn."'!nlln "iM
Ultu/17. Hclmm·Ll.lkcwutd 1~
V,Jik.'y V!I!W 41 l'rchk SII.IWik.'l.' 17
V.111 llun=n 70 V.mluc 1!1
\lrn~clll WaJTl'l1 4l'l l.na=.tmll
Vunun Cu fl2 Tnmllll' 41
W !Jhl:ny S.d~:m47 lndr.1n l..ake llJ
W.dnut K•J~~ M Cui t.htllm Nl
w. 11Mkun\!t.l "i6 K~·ntufl47
W.1m:n Ch.unrmn 61 Hubbard "i"i
W.1m:n H.utlmt:. 74, Yuu ht.u~ey .a6
W.IITCII Kcrtu~:dy l~ Yuu R.1ycn 11
W,1shrup.h•11 C H to7 l o~lllllllll ~.a
W 1111&gt;\.'&lt;111 70 lhy.•n 'i)
W ryn,,s, lllc '\2 Grl't'rk."\Lcw 44
WIK't'll!rshurj! t12. l.u~asv!llc Val M
W&lt;"ltlnmn: ~1. :'oltlflhwn,ld 4H
Vuu Bu,lfdllt.llllil Umls\'lllc At~umo~s4"i
Yuu Ur~uhnc Ci\1 Au~llllloWII.·I·itch42

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Central Dh·lllion

Iwll

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IJ 4 .'iO 116 7b
/!.1 9 7 ~'\ Ill

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n 14j
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S.:m Josef~
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Edmonton
V.m~·uuv~r
l.'l&amp;l~ary

Dtw1Uon
JK M10
1.1 I~ 6
I~ 4 :lO
12 16 t.
II 16 H
II 19
10 19 7

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27

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12
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.10 7K 101
10 K2 101
17 101 117
21 02 107

Thursday's scores

Lruaur

ANAHEIM ANGELS N.uncJ G!!ur~o:c Hen·
tlmk firs~ bnsc ctMch
BOSTON RED SOX Sc11t RHil Tnny Arnl&lt;t\
Jr tu the Mon1n: ,11 EJLpos 10 lUmJllctL" ,m Muv Ill

u.IOI.' lor RHP PL'\Jro Marrrnez
CLEVELAND INDIANS Si!J.nCd INI Jclf
Drnnsun LHP Jn~nn J.1cume .mJ RHP S1c" c
K,1r5:ry 10 l.itll.:-~,1r ~U nltiii:I S Alln:eU hi ll!t'nt\ w1th
LHP RhcaJ Curnncr on,, mr nor lcnfu(' conrucr
MINNI.SOl A fWINS Acqurrl!d I R Stc:Y~
H.~~.:kcr lrom lhc All.ml:l Bro~V\:s to uJmpktc a Sept
2 tr.1tlc tnr C Greg My..·u
NEW YORK YANKEES NamcJ RDb CJilUZ·
lol equipment 0\il.hUI!I:r and Ch.trhc w. , nstiWI~1
VHll.•u ~.:l.l\lftlin u tur
11 XAS RANGERS 1\gn.'\"tlm terms wuh SS
Oil llllll~o Cl!tk-11!.1 on,, onc-ycar L~llllr ,~~;1
.
National Ln.p;ur
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACK S A~r\!l·J tu
l&lt;!'rms w1th RHP S..:;uft Uruw RHP Grl!~ 1-l.msdl
RHP ltvry Man'¥11 .uu.J KHI' IJav~ l'1vl.rs 1111 1111
n\lf- IC:i~UI.' ~nnrr.:1~.:1~
•
MII.WAUKEI: BREWJ:RS A!!rl'~(l Ill tl rm•
wtrh LHP S..:oH Karl11n a lhn:c-y~.:•,Jr cunrr.1,1
NEW YORK MErS l rut.IL·c.l 0 1· rll'rdLl' l
8.11 1!~ .md LHP Sc:nll Cm111:r In lb.: 11nnd 1 M.1rhm
lur L.HI 1 J)cnms Cook
PHti.ADllLPHIA PHil LII:S N,111~J 1om,,,
HcrrL"r;l !&gt;\:nul fur Mi!JLI~ u
PITfSBURGH PIRATES Al!rc cd w 1cr m•
wnh RHI' T.m1 Alv.vcz RHP Jdl r,hCurry RHil
Make W1Jh.un~ I HP Terry Burrows. l Juhu Vm ,r•
.mtl OF(' Sr~~ lhe."'!r on IIIIIIOf-k.I~Lk ~onnlr.l\:h
SAN l R/\NCISC() GIAN ~ 1\I)!III.:J (' lln.m
Ja~hn~un 11.1 il Ullt" yc.u ~ unrr:11.1
S I LOUIS &lt;.ARUINALS N. ml~.:tl J11•' k•t!uh
lll)l'!hc,\S t S\.'liUIIII~ ~Upt:f\1 1 ~\\r J).m~ \V,iii,L"f 1111nh
wesl St!t'M.lllng ~UJll!f"l!illr .uH.i l&gt;ou~ Ci!lll.!nl~·r 1..1tm
Amcn~.:1111 scuuun~ ~U(ll:rWISIIr

Flontla 4. WashmJtfon 0

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Saturday's ~ames
Florida .11 Phlladclph l,t I r m
NY Ranl!crs m fllmpt&lt; Buy, I 1() f'l m
l...11~ A1~l'ln ,If C.d~rry 'pm
N Y hl.mtkr~ m Busl1m, 7 p m
w.•ilungto,lll ,,, Camlma 7 1' m
Ono~wa ,,, Mmure.11 7 '\[) p m
D.tll.r~ .11 f!A.Inmmon Kpm
Pm~hyrgh Ul S! U.IUIS K "0 r nL
l nwnrtl,rtPfloemJL IOlUpm.
{.lULaj,:O at \1,11\;;UUvt.,-, j(} m J' Ill

N~w Orlc.u1~ ,If

NcwJcncy ....• •.••••••• • •••••. 2' IJ 1 47 102
Phrladi.!lrrhlll ...
IV IJ 1 4"i w
WI!Shtnglun ,
l'i 11 7 l7 101

• Mulrt-Purpose Timer

Wingett Builders, Ltd.
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IJMTED ITA TEl

Sunday's gam••

EASTERN CONFERENCF.

Advanced Video Imaging Color TV

This holiday season, RadioShadc and United States Cellular are
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Mtmlr.-.LI.II Duf1 .1 ln, 7 1U p m
New Jersey Ill lklrUII 1 m I' Ill
Ptll~llur~h .u Cohmi'.hl I.J p m
J'lu~~; nr~ all\n,LIJCIIII. 10 :\0 p m

B,lltunun: .rt CINCINNA fl I Jl m
t'h1~.:a~o all .urll'*~ lt:ty. I Jl m
lndlollloi(IIIIU; .~ Muu..:,;ula I 11 Ill

S Chnrh:sron SE 6K. BtnndJCint"l' 29
Rnn~..:

Toni~hl'.s ~tames

at Grttn Bay. t 2 \0 11 m
S! I...1'1Uis ar Co~rnhna 4Jl m

NHL standings

25" Sentry 2 Color TV

Thoughtfui _
Gift

Smart Call.

Reds managmg cxccuuve John
Allen, tn charge of the Reds duy-lo-

Saturday's games
Ruff:~lu

Transactions

n.

S

Olluwa 1, C;wulm~ 2
Bostun 2. Ptulat.ldplna 2 {lie)
Nl!w Jcr~y 4, S1 Lotus 4 (Ill.')
l&gt;nllas 2 Calgary I
Vm~~.:ouver {• San Jo"'! 0 (lid
Lt15 1\n~cl~'!i ~. Toromn 2

Football
NFL regular-season finales

Hockey

• Tnhngual On-Screen Oi5plays

'

remarks The week atier shC :~ppcured

Barry finished wtth 23 pm ms and
Murray had 19. Joe Smuh scored 19
for Golden State

Butlulu .11 N V R :mgcr~ 7 p '"
S;m JtiSI! ~• 1\n.ll~eml. Mp m

Security
)

McDyess scored 10 of hts 14
points as the visiung Suns, ajJead 4845 midway through the thtrd period,
reeled off a 22-8 burst to close the

Prinls and Enlorgemenls in 5 Minules

Convenience

act1vahon IJOO 0t

Los Angeles , whtch ended a fourgame lostng streak. led 33-13 after
the first quarter. The Warriors closed
to 69-68 wuh 5 54 remammg. but
never caught up.

~!

Alomu ~llllll'rc -l:'i Akruu Uu~htd -'.2
Akmn Mtm~heslt.-r7'i fUK!.:oii":IW ol~ v•• l 17
Alc~.ukkr !i7. N.w:ult' St1utlll!nl 21l
Amamla·Cic:mr~.-.:k 7! H mnltnn Twr ~ 4
An~mi.L .12. 1 n- \11llagi! W
Ar~.:.K.ha 4'i P..amlnm·G1ItMM lll
1\rchtMJid -t6 I!Ya~n.'l:n·tl
Banlt'~VIllc (')'\, C.1lt.lwdl !'i!
Hdl.urc ('):'i, R1dnnouJ bh~u• S4
lkllllrt~nl: 67 Oix•~ ..,,
lklpry "iK W.rt~rfunJ4j.2
Rerhn H1l&lt;mJ f17. Rnl~cwuo1 l .JI
HL'•k')' 4M, l.tcklll~ V11l IK
Hlulflun 7"i, Ut'l...._,. S~111tn V11l \4
Hmoklielll olCi N~.:'Winn I .tlls \2
Jlhll&gt;kYIIk '1:1 ('nrh~l~· \I
C.1t1o1l Wnk hL'stl.'r 17, llluum·(':mtllt '\I
C'ur.lrn~lilll ~ 1 N Unum 4!'i

Free Advice

• (alt trmtt
• ] hour\ ta!J: lrmt

Suns 89, Manricks 75
Phoemx sent Dallas tons seventh
straight defeat, breaking open a close
game when Antonto McDyess led a
third-quaner surge.

Clippers 82, Warrio.-. 78
Brent Barry scored 17 pomts on 7for-7 shooung in the first quaner. and
Lamond Murray hll four free throws
tn the final 17 seconds as the Cltppers
beat Golden State at Anahctm, Cahf.

-1~

Akron Ellct 7.'i. A~wn I~ ·H
Akron Frn:sllln&lt;.: 47, Akrun G.lrtt~·ld

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numbtr mtmOIY

quaner.
Phoenix stopped a three -ga)ne
lostng streak, downmg Dallas for the
20th time tn 22 meetings Roben
Pack scored 23 potnts for the M•vericks.

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straight game overall and lith m a
row at home. The Sontcs lead the
NBA with a 20·5 record.
Denver dropped us stxlh consecutive game. The Nuggets remained
the only wmless road team in the
league at 0-13
Dedef Schrempf and Gary Payton
each scored 16 points as the Sanies
matched their htghest-seormg game
of the season. Enc Washmgton had
18 for the Nuggets. who lost despite
their top-scoring game of the season.

Monday's ~~me

64. Tmur~ ,H

Nci~Lnv•lk·Ytlfk ~:l

60 JnhmHnwn ~0

E Chnwn 41. Ccllnrvrlll' 40
Eullfern P•ke 62. Pi)n~nltltllll Cln)l46
E.L.Siwootl6-l Elmwood 44 ,
Eutun ~S . MuJtlk:tuwn MuJuun n
Ebt.l:r 60, O.:han~.:e 4M
Elynu Fiul D&lt;lpl :'1:'1, Lulhemn [. 11
Frur1Md Umt)ll 4j2 Crrdcvllll! lK
F'turl~s ~ l.: S11ndy V,,J 14j
Fllhc1ty 49, Bm.1v1:1 -t6
Fon l.oram1e 55. BI.Hkms 51
Fon R1.-..:owry :'iY, New I:Jrcnll."n .J9
f,)~ron ,\6 1 Sam.lusky W
Fmownu S1 Wcmklm 74 lkl!~"lllo: 4()
Fro~nkm Fuma~.~ Gnx11 "i2 Synmk.·s V.tl ~0
Fr.mkm-Monroe ~6 N:mun:rl fr.ui2M
Frnnklm 62 T~ntun Et.ij1.t:WIKH.i -19
Frunklin Munrt~~: 4jfl, N.1trumlll nul 1tc
Fmnuer b6 Bcallmlll" 40
Gahanna74 L.mc .ts tcr-11
Q;rlhpohs 64. Pornt (W V.t l Plt.l~tUll ~4
Garuway JK, Malvern 16
Genoa 'I~ Tnl W,utt: 10
Geotzelown 6tl lktOOI-T,ItC :'iol
, Grnndvll!w 70 Mmh~~tln PhunK .U
Grunv1llt: 34 l.i~,;klng HI~ 22
Hamilton Rou ~H . Oo~~n 49
~nth '\7 , Blll'llt" Un11.m 19
.
Hllhattl DaVJdson 44. Wu,rthmt!lon K1lhourne

South

10'
121

Llnsly W Va. "i9 Bnll~t'IOn 49
Lisbon 61, Satenv1Ue SC'othem 41
Unle Mu11n1 6.1, Srnn&amp;bclfu 5"i
l..uudrnmlle 68 W. Hulll"les-10
M011JIIIIha, W Vu 6t Monroe Centr.:~l 49
M:uxhestl'l' ~o; We&amp;tl'l'n Wham"'
Mnn~ftelt.l Madt!~nn 'i~. Manoo H:u-dtng SO
Mnpler:on 6.'i Plymouth !7
Mar.m:r.tha O&amp;r ~ 1 Col (l!nll'nnral41!
M:u-ttllll MO. Cl~5hlre Raver Val 61-'1
M:rrmn Elv.m B Mr Grk:aU 14
Mnr10n Franklin 67, Cnl l.r•Nt:I•·M~&lt;Kinlcy 12
M ~t'!On /J 7, l...ebanun 31
Mu10.~11lon Jackson ~0 M.~nllon Pl.'fry l2
M~Ciurn 4j7. Lynchhurp. Chi)' 26
M~,;Cumb 6.~ Cury-R:r.wsun lK
Md&gt;onuiJ ~4 Vtennu Mulhl'w5 14
Me~hanruburg 44 Wayne$ftcld 17
Med•na F1rst O.!Jll "i\.1. 1 allnmdgc Chr 24
Mu1.nusburg 64 o.,y Srebbms 2fl
Mrdtlte1own Spnn1,. ,9 J:adt ~un-M 1Irnn 21
Mu~ml Rrdg.~: 47 Lnwcllvrllc 41 &lt;OTJ

D01y Carmll4tJ. "htldll!rown Fenwr,.k 44
l&gt;.1y O;tkwui.H.i 65. D.1y Nor!hndj!.l' JO
Ddpho5 Jdlmon 40. AIIL"n E 11(
E Canton 60, Tuslaw ~2
E Cenrral ~2. S lkarbnrn 42

Eaot

Padfic DIYis6on

GohJcn Sum:
L 1\ Clrpptm;

D:u~vrl~

I

16
5 19 20M
2 21 OH6

Dcll'o'l;!l

OH

NCAA Division I
women's scores

6l0
62!i

9

Dullu~

..

AllUHl&lt;l

" • m"' ,.,.
160

Ut.•h
Sa n Antonto

'

F•rW•st
C.llrlbrm.•7-' Plmlulld S1 M
()rc~lln Kit St~Jl~n F Aus1111 b-1
S,m Joru:- St 71. St Mary"1 (',,[ 67
UC lrvu~ 67, P11nl11nd 61

'

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Southwesl
fat Ccn1cn.1ry .JH

67

1'

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h.~

l'c.\as Arlln~run MIJ r,·~ll~ Wl'llkyau7h
fclroas·EI P.L~n fr'i Ark -Pilk' 81u(l ~I
l l.!x.as -S.ill Amonm % , 1\:o~ll~ · .,,m Amcrr~an

,.

6:'12

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1\rL:,m~•s

1
1'

6~2

St 67

Sl: M1~M 1u n 79. Trum;m S1

~

11

l'l·nrii.'~Sc.'\'

Kansa~% P&amp;.1'1tl..'l'dn~ Ill

" •
,.
"'
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M1a111r
Orlnndu

C1rl!y 74 l·rL"nkun S1 Jur.ct"• :w
(.\•n!L"riourt: 70, I ~ Km1~ ~4
Cm Amda.•7 J . l 1n W~'!ii~TJI Hrll ~ 16
('m Gkn l &gt;te 42 {'m lurptn 27
Cm Hu)!lk:s 71l Cm W1thmw 1K
(.'m lnd~o~n H11171 . On ML".Illrnit bl
Cm Kmg~ (J I. Ctn NnrwntH.i 41
Cm l..t~ ll,urJ ~6. New M1.1m121
l'rn M,itklf.l 6:! Cm UL&lt;t:r Part 26
('m 0 ,1k H11Js -12 Cm AnJcn;on26
On Mn~tcr ll&lt;~~.:m1 17 l'm !'i! Ur-ui.L lfl
(.'m 't,1f1 till On A1ke11 "~
('m 'l.1yh•r W. tm linr..:ytuwn 4H
Crn Unmln1c 55. Cm McAull!y ~I
Cm w.,IIIUI H!IL~ 7;\, Cm WnuJwanl 'M
l'm Wyonun11 10, Cur M,rrtCIIll.lllt4~
CIL" E:L'd re~b IJ"i Clc !:..1~1 H
CIL"ar rurk 41 Ml'JIII,I Du~.:k~)'l! 27
Cl~'fllll.lnl Nurrhcusr~rn 4•1 New Rrdunnntl 4b
Clytie :l~. M.Lrl\·U"CIIil ~4
('ul A~a.kmy 'i-1, WnriJ H .rnc~ l4~
C11l N&lt;'!'1h mor ~"i. M.rnun Rtv~:r Ynl "i7
Cui WI~CUtorll." ~7 Cui Onlt)!~ IH
Cult.lw.llt'r 60 Nl'w KntlUIIk 1l'l
Cullms W-=:st~rn R.t.-,;c:I"'C ~~~- MtKtn!l!!vdlc JO
Cummt:rlt.ll ~7, Anlwt:rp ~I
Convoy Cn:~tvrcw 'H. PauiJm~ l ~
(Qvlhglnn 4'i, Ar~.:.utum l~
Cuyaht1~1 Vul, Chr 'i6. Hu~huw.1y Bmwn J7

11.ryttm 8\ NE Lom~mn.1 7 ~

EASTERN CONFEREN&lt;;E

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had no comment.
There was no answer at Schou's
home early th1s motning.
Allen JS on the liSt G_M comptled,
along wtth 1wo former employees
and the wtle of Reds General Manager Jtm Bowden
Another two-year suspension
would prevent Schou from eVl&gt;r
rcgammg control of the Reds. The
hmtted partnershtp that owns the
team cxptres Dec 31. 2000, when
legal experts say the Reds have to
organize mto another corporate struc·
lure.
Baseball insiders have speculotcd
that major league baseball has held
off acting on the case so tl could he
used as leverage in an effon to get
Schou to sell ihe club.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Scoreboard

Alwm !oil 91 SL

Baseball heads to review
Schott's dealing with GM
CINCINNATI (AP)- Ctnctnnalt
Reds owner Marge Schon\ dealmg
with General Motors Corp. wtll he
rcvtewed next month by maJOr lc.tguc
baseball , Tlu! Cmcu111u1r EmfWJt!l
reported today.
Schon. who ts suspended It om

By FRED GOODALL
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- ~ iwogame stopover m Florida was just
what the Utah Jazz needed to work
outthetr problems on the road.
The defending Western Conference champions heat the Miami Heat
to stop a three-g~me road skid, then
defeated the Orlando Magtc 85-73
Thursday night to improve to 2- ~on
an East Coast swing that conllnues
· Sunday at Cleveland.
Overall. the Jazz are 5-7 away
from home, whtle they've comptlcd
a I0-2 record at the Delta Center.
"These are all btg wins when
you're out on the road ~nd you have
been playmg the way we have been

Southern freshmen defeat
Alexander, fall to Fort Frye

Pistons acquire Stackhouse, Montross
By SETH HETTENA
DETROIT (AP) - Shanng the
sconng burden with the Detrotl Ptstons' Grant Hill suits Jerry Stackhouse just fine.
" I got an early Chnstmas present.'' Stackhouse satd "For me to
fulfill my potentoal , it 's good to get
wtth a team where the ball is bemgshared a lot lthmk Detron was deftmtely on my wtsh IJSt tf a trade had
to happen "
The Ptstons acqutrcd Stackhouse.
23, on Thursday along wtth center
Enc Montross forcenterTheo Ratliff.
guardAaronMcKte and a future first round draft chotec.
"Everyone knows Jerry Stackhou&gt;e is a talented young player that
Will help us olfcnstvely," Ptstons
coach Doug Collins satd "We need
to score more points. and he wtll certainly do that Heal«&gt;gtve&lt; us more
presence on the pen meter. whtch wt,ll
he hencficml to Grant Hill
Stackhouse satd Colltns told htm
hts tole would he to provtdc depth to
the Ptstnm hackwurt
·He told me to come'" and score

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sen~~!

.

By BETH HARRIS
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two
years ago, J.R. Henderson would
have gtven up tf he had to play m
pam
But m a Sign he has matured tn hts
semor season, Henderson tgnored hts
aching back and sore left knee to
match a career-htgh wtth 29 points as
No. II UCLA defeated Northern Anzona 90-68 Thursday mght

Friday, December 19, 1997

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I
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 19, 1997

By The Bend

Judge hits Executive Branch
with order to pay sanctions
By JAMES ROWLEY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Holding that
the Clinton administration deliberately misled the court about Hillary
Rodham Clinton's health-care task
force, a federal judge is ordering the
government to pay $285,864 in sanctions.
U.S. District Judge Royce C.
Lamberth held Thursday that government lawyers directed by high
government officials misrepresented
the composition of a working group
to shield .its records from public
scruti ny.
"The Executive Branch of the
government. wo~king in tandem, wa'i
dishonest with thiS court, and the
governme~;n mus1 now face the con·
sequences of its misconduct." Lam·
berth said Thursday in a scathing
opinion.
He ordered the money paid to the
AssociatiOn of Americ::m Physicians
and Sun!rons, lnc .. which sued the

Clintnn 'admmlstration to get access
tn the task force's deliberations.
Courts rel ied on the Clinton
administration's ''dishonest explanation'' of the working group, Lam·
berth said . But what h\' found "most
outral!cous" was the government's
fa1lur~ to correct the statement when
1t became clear it was erroneous.
" h seems thal some government
oHicial s never learn that the covcr up
4

can be worse than the underlying
A federal appeals coun ruled that
"It is clear that the deci•ions here
conduct," Lamberth said . .
because Mrs. Clinton was a de facto were made at lhe highest levels of
The White House declined com- full-time government·.,mployee the government," the judge said. "lbcre
ment.
task force was not an advisory com- were no rogue lawyers here misleadBut
Justice
Department . mission and its records were not open ., ing this court."
. ·
spokesman Bert Brandenburg said, to public scrutiny.
A 1995 criminal investigation ini"The government has consistently
But the panel sent the case back to tiated at Lamhenh 's request , con·
maintained that sanctions are not Lambenh to determine whether the eluded Magaziner could not he pros'
appropriate. We disagrec ,with Judge working group Magaziner headed ecuted for perjury. But the judge con·
Lamberth's conclusion but we take also was exempt from the Federal eluded that "such dishonesty is sanchis opinion seriously. We are review- Advisory Commission Act.
tionable and was not.good faith dealing the decision and considering
"That is when we got in to the ing with the coun or plaintiffs' counwhat action is appropriate."
trenches firing at each other," recalls seL"
The judge found that the erro- 11lomas R. Spencer, a Miami lawyer
· "But the most outrageous conduct
neous statement, sworn to by White who represented the doctors' group. · by tbe government in this case is
House aide Ira Magaziner, was draft- "They knew if we saw those docu- what happened when it never cored by high government officials to ments and they complied with dis· rected or updated the Magaziner
mi slead the court into believing that covery we would fi,nd out they lied." declaration," Lamberth said. "That
the working group was exempt from
Lamberth also held that the Clin- was a determination not made indi·
public disclosure of its records,
ton administration during that phase viduaUy by Mr. Magaziner, but by the
Magaziner, who led the lllsk force of the case had ''improperly thwart- government through its counsel."
that drafted President Clinton's failed ed ... legitimate discovery requests."
"Most shocking to this coutt, and
health-insurance initiative, swore that
The government "thereafter pro- deeply disappointing, is that the
"only federal government employees duced a great deal of information, but !Jepartment of Justice would panicserve as members of the interdepart- they still took no steps to correct Mr. •pate 111 such conduct," said Lammental working group" even though Magaziner's sworn deposition," benh, a career Justice pepartment
many members were nol federal Lamberth said.
lawyer before President Reagan
employees.
The false affidavit, Lambenh not- appointed him to the federal bench in
"This court is convinced that Mr. cd, was drafted by While House 1987.
Magaziner, and the drafters of his lawyers, including tfie late' Vincent
"We've been saying there is a
declaration, in an effort to avoid dis- Foster, deputy White House.counsel. cover-up for three years," said
covcry and block live testimony,. · It wa&lt; also reviewed by then-Asso· Kathryn Serkes, spokeswoman for
improperly represented as a fact that ciate Attorney General Weboter the physicians' group. "This is a vinall ' members' of the working group Hubbell, who later went to prison for dication ."
were federal employees." the judge defrauding his former Arkansas law
"What is unfortunate is that the
wrote.
·
finn and some of its clients.
government's misconduct means it
costs the taxpayers money."

Cases concluded in Meigs County
The following ca&lt;es were resolved Neapolis, shooting at a deer from a
recently in the Meigs County Court highway, $50 plus costs; hunting after
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien .
legal shooting hours, $50 plus costs;
Fined were: Ricky W. Schaefer, Christopher D. Ogg, Nelsonville,
Syracuse, fictitious tags, $10 plus speed, $30 plus costs; Michael J.
costs; seat belt. $25 plus costs; sev- Brown, Racine, axle overload, $130
en counts passing bad checks, $25 plus costs; Cecil H. McKown, Vimplus costs on each, restitution on bolton, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Edna
each; Travis J. KoSlow, Galena, dri- I. Miller, Millerspon, speed, $30plus
ving under the innucnce after under- costs; Joseph W. Davis Jr., Middleage consumption, $250 plus costs, port, seat bell, $25 plus costs; Darvan
60-day operator's license suspension, B. Young, Belpre, speed, $30 plus
three days jail and $250 of fine sus- costs; Valerie D. Connolly, Syracuse,
pended upon completion of residen- speed, $30 plus costs; Brian D.
tial treatment program; I. Tucker Flanagan, Mason, W.Va., failure to
Williams, Syracuse, speed, $30 plus yield, $10 plus costs; Jimmy Lee,
oosts ; Joshua A. Starcher, Pomeroy, Pomeroy, domestic violence, IOdays
scat bell, $25 plus costs; Nancy C. jail suspended to two days, $100 plus
Sellers, Shawnee, speed, $30 plus costs, two years probation, restrain:osts; Jerry L. Dehinkc, Napoleon, ing order issued;
Rebecca S. Bctz, Long Bottom,
speed. $30 plus costs; William P.
Kautz, Racine. stop~sign, $20 plus speed, $30 plus costs: Carolyn M.
costs; scat bell, $25 plus costs; Ralph Casto, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
Wells, Pomeroy, seal bell, $25 plus costs; seal belt, $25 plus costs: Johncosts; Charles E. Peck, Bidwell, ny C. Sheets, Reedsville, driving
speed, $30 plus costs: Robert E. Da)!. _under suspension, costs, three &lt;lays
Pomeroy, scat belt, $25 plus costs;
jail -suspended, one year probalion ;
Larry M. Hendershot. Marietta, resisting arrest, costs, three days jail
speed. $30 plus costS: Lisa R. Ash- concurrent, one year probation; Kei bum, Wilkesville, scat belt, $25 plus lh D. Peters, Hamden, speed, $30
wsls; Samuel J. Rush, Racine, speed, plus costs; Harry M. Wilks Ill,
$30 plus costs: scat belt $25 plus Nicholasville. Ky., overload, $50
costs; John E. Brumtield , Lesage. plus costs; Martin J. Russo, CleveIW.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; seal land, scat belt, $15 plus costs; Jeffrey
belt, $25 plus costs; Robert 0 . Bai· Francis Blair, Dunbar. W.Va., speed,
Icy, Rome, speed, $30 plus costs; $30 plus costs:
Wilham E. Franks, Reedsville, speed.
Jack L. Hager, Gallipolis, speed,
$30 plus costs; Todd Goode, Racine, $30 plus c~ts; Christopher C. Colfailure to tag deer before transporting, lora, Lexington, Ky., speed, $30 plus
$50 plus costs; hunting without per- costs; lamesT. Redden, Grove City,
mission of landowner, $30 plus costs; left of center, $25 plus costs; conEarl A. Good, failure to tag deer, $50 sumption in a motor-vehicle, $25 plus
plus costs; hunting without permis- costs; resisting arrest, 30 days jail
sion of landowner, $30 plus costs; suspended, $200 plus costs, one year
Alben L. Curti•. Pomeroy, failure to probation, three days residential treat·
yield, $20 plus costs; Arthur'H . Bee- men! program ordered, $500 forfeiglc, Racine , scat belt. $25 plus costs: lure; Darin L. Roush, Coolville,
Anthony J. Heaton, Pomeroy. seat speed, $30 plus costs; Shannon L.
belt, $25 plus costs;
Gerlach. Pomeroy, furnishing alcohol
Ronald I. Saunders Jr., Beulah, to a minor, $100 plus costs, one year
Mich .. loaded firearm in a vehicle, 'probation; Carrie . R. Morarity,
S100 plus costs: James A. Reecer, Racine, furnishing alcoholto a mi~or,

$100 plus costs: one year probation;
Angel K. Snowden, Rutland, furnishing alcohol to a minor, SI00 plus
costs, one year probation; Vicki L.
·Hysell, Pomeroy, furnishing alcohol
to a minor, $100 plus costs, one year
probation;
Ronald E. Goodwin, Long Bottom, speed, $30 plus costs; Jeanine P.
Smallwood, Middleport, domestic
violence, costs, five days jail suspended, one year probation, rcstrai ning order issued; Archibald B. Wilson, Racine, ·expired operator's
license, $100 plus costs, three days
jail and $50 suspended if valid OL
presented within 30 days; Kevin E.
Heaton, Chester, passing bad checks,
$25 plus costs; Kelly D. Winter,
Pomeroy, driving und~r financial
responsibility action suspension,
$150 plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to five days, $75 and five
days jail suspended if valid OL presented within 90 days, two years probation; failureJo drive within marked
Janes, $15 plus costs;
Melissa Smith, Cheshire, passing
bad checks, $25 plus costs, restitution ; Rae L. Clampitt, Coolville,
expired OL, $50 plus costs; speed,
$46 plus costs; W. Michael Newell, .
'Long Bottom, expired registration,

Affairs in the
Ann
Landers

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Dear Ann Landers: I am a 19year-old university student. Yester-,
day, in my Organizational Behavior
class, we were asked to read a case
study that dealt with ethical dilemmas in employment. The case was
about two employees, one married,
the other single. They were having
an affair. The question : "What disciplinary action would you impose if
you were the human resources man-

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Our Undeecrlbable Gift
By Bonnie Shlvaley
Merry Christmas to you! May
your holiday season be bright and
cheery. My prayer is that your home
will be tilled with joy and a deep
sense of thanksgiving for your most
Precl.ous G•'ft • Jesus Chrt'st ·
1 cannot forget my heartbroken
friends. 1 see loneliness etched in
their faces since their beloved ones
have passed from this life into heaven. Perhaps they even dread Christmas Day. If so, can we focus for a
few minutes on the reason for
Christmas joy?
We love to give each other gifts,
don't we? The Bible says thai every
good and perfect gift comes from
God. Long ago, he gave us an "indescribable Gift." From the .glories of
heaven, Christ Jesus came down to
earth.
God spoke of this amazing Gift
through his prophet, Isaiah, "Behold
11 virgin will be with child and bear a
son and she will call His name
Immanuel." Also Isaiah said that He
would be called, "Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father,
Prince of Peace."
Hundreds of years later, the
angel. Gabriel, startled a young girl
when he announced , "Mary ... you
will conceive in your womb, and
bear a son, and you shall name Him
Jesus. He will be great, and will be

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was no sign of foul play. An autopsy
was planned for today. ·
Farley's brother John found the
hody in the 60th-floor apartment of
the John Hancock Building along the
stretch of Michigan Avenue called the
Magnificent Mile.

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the first at 7 p.m., the second at 8
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"reminded." Any advice?-- Appre- cost?"
1l1e· graduate with a liberal arts
hensive· in Calif.
degree
asks , "Do you want fries
Dear Calir.: II sounds as if you
have a good grasp .of the situation. If with that?" -- Illinois Reader
Dear Reader: A college educaMary didn 't gel the message and
brings up the subject again, simply tion today is mighty important if you
say, "Everything is taken care of, want 10 make it in the Big Time,
and there is nothing more to talk regardless of what subject your.
degree is in. h doesn't guarantee
about." Period.
Dear Ann Landers: I thought success, but n sure helps.
Gem of the Day: Everyone has a
that this was pretty funny and that
you might want to share it with your photographic memory, but some
people don't have enough tilm.
readers:
The graduate with a Ph.D. in phi losophy asks, "Why does il work?" Send question&gt; to Ann Landers, CreThe gradujlte with an engineering ators Syndicate , 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
degree asks, "How does it work?"
The graduate with an accounting 90045
degree asks, "How much will It

Driedel, dreidel, ·dreidel still a top toy·

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(we are not wealthy but comfortable) .and hope to live for several
years more, God willing. We have
told Mary that everything we have
will be evenly divided betwetn her
and her brother.
Her · brother never talks about
what life will be like when we are
gone, but Mary has brought the subject up several times. It is beginning
to get on my nerves. Yeste.)day, she
called, crying on the pho'ir('a~oul
how miserable she will be when '"it
happens." I was annoyed and told
her, "Get a hold of yourself." She
became angry and hung up on me.
I'm starting to feel that what she
really wants is to make sure she will
l)e well taken care of. I resent being

By HOLLIS L. ENGLEY
There are Delft and Limoges
Gannett News Service
porcelain dreidel s, Winnie the Pooh
The Hanukkah dreidel is wob- and Mickey Mouse dreidels.
bling as a game, but spinning fast as
The Artistic Judaic Promotions
a collectible.
website (www.ajp.com), for examLong ago a centerpiece of Jewish ple, carries glazed ceramic dreidels
childhood celebrations, the little top by Leslie Gattman and Eugene ·
with a Hebrew letter on each of four Frank of Forestville, Calif., for $46
sides is being grabbed by collectors, and dreidels in brass, copper and
but, some Jewish parentS say, is less glass by the Rosenthal Collection of
and less popular among children. ·
Kensington, Md., that sell for from
The dreidel game has been losing $65to $150.
ground for decades to 20th century
And where even four years ago
amusements and to the elaborate most dreidels aftd other judaica gifts of Hanukkah, which have such as mezuzahs and Hanukkah
increasingly taken on the commer- menorahs - were sold out of synacial aspects of Christmas.
gogue gift shops, Gary Rosenthal
Even in Israel.
says they 're now in art galleries.
"What happens now in modern"The galleries are what's hap·
day Israel is that the traditional way pening," he says,
And the dreidel, small and usualof playing dreidel, except in some of
the more orthodox circles, is very ly affordable, is the top item.
rarely done," says Robin Treistman,
"The dreidel has become quite a ·
who grew up in Miami Beach but collectible, just over the last two or
has lived in Israel for 11 years. She three years," says Arthur Feldman
is now a mother of three, an lsraeli of the Arthur Feldman Gallery in
citizen and lives in Jerusalem.
Chicago.
"Parents might show kids how 10
"Because of their size it is possido it. But it's not like, 'Wow, it's .ble to collect I00 and not take up a
Hanukkah! Let's play dreidel.'"
tremendous amount of space."
The dreidel (the word is Yiddish
Feldman is the former director of
for "top"; in Hebrew it's the Spertus Institute of Jewish Stud"s'vivon") was a child's gambling ies in Chicago. His gallery sells
game for simpler times. The Hebrew mainstream antiques and contempoletters on the dreidel, in Yiddish pro- rary judai&lt;;,a.
nunciation, are nun, gimmel, heh
"As in any collectible, there are
and shin (or, in Israel, peh).
variations and specializations," he
Outside Israel the letters rriean says.
"A great miracle happened there;"
"Some people only want silver.
inside the country it is written "A Some only want metal. But most
great miracle happened here."
people want any medium as long as
·The Hanukkah miracle refers 10 it'~ an interesting piece. That goes
the re-taking of the temple in even forthe simple olive wood dreiJerusalem in l65 B.C. by Judah dels from Israel. I JUSt sold one .that
Maccabee and his followers and a was like the little Russian dolls, one
one-day supply of temple oil that inside the other. Four dreidels withburned for eight days.
in each other."
The dreidel 's origins are.obscure.
The nesting dreidels, the largest
Some say the game was played in of which is about four inches tall,
Roman times , others think it origi- are made in Israel of sterling silver
sell for about $400.
~~e~g~ the Middle Ages a millenni- and
. "l joke that when I get informaTo play the game, children tion on the new dreidels for the new
CHESTER Shade River and, often, their parents - put year, I call my dreidel collectors.
Lodge work detail Saturday, 9 a.m. candy, nuts or coins into a common Cenainly, it's out of season, but' I
feel like I'm in the garment district·;
weather permitting. All members pot and spin the dreidel . .
asked to attend.
If it stops and falls on the letter colllectors will come in August to
,
nun, nothing is added or taken away sec something new." ·
SUNDAY
from the pot; on gimmelthe spinner
Feldman says he has 50 clients
who
are dreidel collectors.
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist gets the whole pot; on heh the spin''I'd say at least a half dozen of
Church, Rt . 143 off Rt . 7, Christmas ner gets half t~e pot; on shin (or, in
program , Sunday, 10 a.m. by Sun- Israel, pch) the spinner adds to the them have 50 or more dreidels, serious dreidels ... not the $15 plastic
day School classes. At II a.m . and 6 pot.
ones,
but $100 or better."
p.m. young adult class to present
Pretty simple.
In
Denver, Terry Heller has
"Christmas Comes to Bethlehem." ~ Which is part of the reason it's
more popular as a short-term custom watched the dreidel business take off
REEDSVILLE Reedsville linking the generations than as an at the synagogue gift shop she manages for Temple Emanuel.
United Methodist Church, Christ- absorbing pastime.
"We started out with a couple of
But the dreidel is booming as a
mas potluck, Sunday, 5 p.m. follittle
dreidels .in the store," she says.
collectible, with artists making them
lowed by program, 7:30p.m.
in glass, wood, clay, silver, brass and "Now we have probably 60 different kinds of dreidels ather than the
MINERSVILLE - "Christmas other media.
Comes to Lone Star Gulch" will be
performed Sunday, 7:30p.m. at Forest Run United Methodist Church.
All welcome.

•

• Auwlc

1 pray that we have not slipped down
to 'that level, -- Morally Correct in
Calgary, Alberta
Dear Cai&amp;'ll1'' Sorry, I disagree .
A company has no right to become
involved in the personal lives of its
employees unless their behavior is
affecting the quality of their work or
causing favoritism. "Big Brother "
does not belong in the workplace.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
is 79. I am 75. We have been ~appi­
ly married for 51 years, The problem
I am writing about concerns our 50year-old daughter, "Mary."
Both my husband and I have been
blessed with good health. We are
energetic and have a variety of interests. He has done well financially

'DI 48

2.1°/a APR

,450*
Br•••
nny

Christmas, 6-1 p.m.
• Recitals Of The Littlest Angel,
7:30p.m.

ok with Ann - as long as they don't affect job

called !he Son of the Most
High ...and His kingdom will have
no end."
.
In His wisdom, God had chosen
Joseph to · be the foster· father of
Jesus. When it was almost time for
Him to be born, Joseph and Mary
traveled to Bethlehem to register for
a census. Glorio·us God - . perfect
baby rested in His mother's womb
as they jostled along with hundreds
of fellow-countrymen looking for a
place to stay. Finally, they found a
crude stable.
Simply, the Bible states:' "She
gave birth to her first-born son; and
she wrapped him in cloths and laid
Him in a manger, because there was
no room for them in the inn." No
room for the King of glory?
How about us? Is there room in
our hearts today for Jesus? He came
to save anyone who would believe
in Him and assure us that eternally,
we will reside with him in heaven.
He channels our thoughts in the
right direction, has the power ·to
keep us from evil and give us
blessed peace of mind.
The Lord of love is like an af'\esian well that springs forth forever
and ever. What an unspeakable Gift!
Words are never adequate to express
His splendor.
Father, thank You for giving us
Your belov~d son. Thank you for the
divi'ne peace of Christmas, Help us
realize who He is -Almighty God.
In His presence, our departed loved
ones are robed in Christmas white,
singing hallelujahs in endless measureless delight.
Thank You, Eternal Father, for
knowing they are happy, and one
sweet day we'll be with You and
them. Amen.
Scriptures : II Corinthians 9: 15;
Isaiah 7:14 and 9:6; Luke 2:7
(NASB)

FRIDAY
,
COOLVILLE - Live nativity on
the front lawn of th~ Coolville United Methodist Church Friday and
Saturday, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each
evening. On Saturday, the Waterford
High School Brass Choir under the
direction of Andrew Sigman will
perform. ·

Overbrook Presents Their

LIVE C

·
Page7
Friday, December 19, 1997

.c0 mmu,nity caIend ar

Comic Farley's life
Mason
mimicked Belushi's Furniture

CHICAGO (AP) - Growing up
in Wisconsin, Chris Farley idolized
comic John Bclushi.
Farley even managed to trace
nearly the same career footsteps , joining Chicago's Second City improvisational troupe, then the cast of
NBC's "Saturday Night Live"
Farley was found dead on the tloor
. of his aparlmcnl, Thursday, clad in
pajama bottoms., He was 33.
The cau~c of death was not
known, although police said there

ager?"
• I raised my hand and responded,
"Fire them both'" To my dismay, in
a class of over 50 students, not a single person agreed with me. Not even
my professor.
The rationale was that they were
both consenting adults and free to do
whatever they wanted. I was outraged and a.'ke4 the class to walk in
th([ shoes of the wronged party.
What if it was your wife or husband
fooling around? What if there were
children involved?
This made me wonder, are we
becoming so hard-edged and jaded
that we now accept adultery as the
norm? Are these the kind of morals
we want to pass on to our 'children?

-~sermonette-

SMITH HONORED- Jim Smith, right, wae honored as an OUJ·
going member of the Eaetam Local Board of Education during
Wedneeday'e board ~Meting. Ha was first elected In 1986. Preaentlng Smith with a plaque Is Board Prellclant John Rice.

~ourt

$20 plus costs; Jason A. Phalen,
Pomeroy, underage consumption,
$200 plus costs, I0 days jail suspended, one year probation; W.S.
Hicks, Pomeroy, passing bad checks,
$25 plus costs; Phoebe R. Loomis,
Long Bottom, driving under suspension, $50 plus costs; speed, $75 plus
costs; unsafe vehicle, costs only; Larry E. Willis, Racine, failure to con·
trol, $30 plus costs; hit/skip, $50 plus
costs; Cynthia A. Bailey, Middleport,
passing bad checks, $25 plus costs;
Melissa Roush, Middlepon, four
counts of passing bad checks, $25
plus costs on each, restitution; Gayle
A. Morris, Middleport, seat belt, $15
plus costs; linering, $50 plus costs,
three days jail suspended upon picking up of litter; Robert Ray,
Wilkesville, Dlll, $850 plus costs,
90-day OL suspension, I0 dsya jail
suspended to three days, one year
probation, jail and $550 suspended
upon completion of residential treatment program within 90days; left of
center, costs only; Scott Ogdin,
Pomeroy, driving under suspension,
$100 plus costs, one year probation,
30 days jail suspended to five days,
five days jail and $50 suspended if
valid OL presented within 90 days. I

workplac~

The Daily Sentinel

• Mason 773-5514 • New Haven 882-2135 • Point Pleuant 674-1000
• Or ~II Becky On The Peoples National Lcml HoUine 675-ASAP

t.au...,...., ......

-lll4--

OllaMIWIIofow ......... , , . .. SS,DDOandfar_,,.ID:M...,IhL
~ t.I0-•&lt;111115117 ...
" " " " ' ' " - · A$25 pnooldllnanoo _
... _
lheiOIIUll paunllll Ill&amp;. A.I'.R. -~~-,..,z._.,..lh lotnGISS,GOIIwllh IN
A5clllriL Iucht lotn-hlw:M ""'"lllly-~GIIZ3t.U.Ioltlllnlll:o ......... - . . . ... laltl,_,I!I,MUO. Tho . . . .
l 1n11,.. roll b fllod tow IN..,.., IN loon. C.mnt ....."' Ntliooll-., not oflalblo far IIIII "'"· ~

inexpensive ones you play with."
Why '&gt;
"There art;: more movements now
that talk about spirituality and
pulling Jewish thi~gs around the
home," she says. " I think that people want to feel their Jewishness. It's
become such a beautiful t?xpression
of art."
The Rosenthal Collection can be
reached al (301) 493-5577; Leslie
Gattman and Eugene Frank of

Ceramic Juda1ca are at (800) 2320912.
Never played the dreidel game?
Even if you don 't own the loy, you
can play virtual dreidel on the Internet. Log on to the Jewish Communication Network's website at
www.jcn 18.com(Siash)holiday(slas
h)hanukkah and click on the dreidel
game icon. Come on, gimmel~

Open Tonight
~CIJ.U.isitio1J.tS",f:ineJe:cpefrj
·

+,

QallpQIJa•'llcldlePort

Frlaq v;'oo 1:00 ···

Saturday 9:00:8:00

'

·~

'

.

Sunday
1lOOia:OO
s
,,
.

Tope's Furniture Galleries ·
, Lifestyle Furniture
I

·~

'

. . ·• .' . .F~t;3QI:OO ' · ·

·,

.

.

~v:o:F-1~ ·~. ~ 1:oil"4;"

1. "23" T/altered Fonner Dave Camp Car, Proven
Winner Complete Minus Mit, Light, Go Fast, Built For
Small Driver •••. ~.................:................................... $4500

2; Splitzer Red· 257" Long, Complete Minum M/t Was
BBC &amp; Pg, Ran 5.30 At 130 MPH With Mild Bbc.
When New Was Thd, Built For Small Pilot......... $7900
3. 1989 Pro Street Cavalier Z-24, Won Several Times In
97At KVDP, Complete Minus M/t, Tube Chassis, 12
Bolt, M/t, Fuel Cell, 4-link.................................... $9500
4. 1969 Camaro Blue/white Stripes. Complete Minus
Mit, New 5.13 In Dana 60. New Gm Front And Doors, .
Weld, Dedenbear, Hurst, Noid .................. ,.......... $7500

5. 28Ft. Pace Trailer, Hall 2-3 Jr. Dr11gsters Or l Long
Dragster, Or Altered, Red, Lay Down Rear Door, Side
Door, Red ............................................................... $2995
6. 32 Foot Goose Neck With 24 Foot Floor Good
Dragster Trailer, Lay Down Door/side Door ...... $1900
7. 1986 Suburban Great Tow Vehcile, Front &amp; Rear Ac.
And Heat 2 Wheel Drive 70kAct Miles .............. $6995
8. 1987 Gmc, With Lounge, New Brakes, Roters, 8.2
Turbo, 5+2 All New Rubber, With 93 Interstate 44 Ft.
Will Haul2 Cars, 6.5 9nan ................................ $29995

.9. 477CI, BBC ........................................................ $5000
10. 355Cl, SBC, Ran 5.96, in 3100Lb Car .......... $2500
REDUCED PRICES FOR PACKAGE DEALS
KEY MOTORS AREA'S

�•
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport,

Ohio

Friday, December

DeCember

19, 1997

Th8 Dally Sentinel• Page 9,

19, 1997

Using lht Classifials
1SllS Ettsv as •..

I

Church of Chnst

Episcopal

PomoroyCb~hofChriH

Grace Episcopal Chun:h

Coffee hour following

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Westside Church or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School - !I a.m.
Worship. iOa.m., 6 p.m.

Hoi mess

Middleport Chun:b of Christ

Pas1or: Neil Tennant
Sunday services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p m

Thursday Prayer Meeting - 7 p.m.

Flatwoods

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School9:30 a.m.

Worship- 11 a.m.

Worship - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

FomtRun

Middleport

Sunday school -9: 30 a.m.

llearwallow Rldge Church ol Chris I

Worship- II a.m . and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor:Terry Stewart

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Free Will Baptist Church

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Pine Gro.. Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off Rt.32S
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Servict-7:00 p.m.

Zion Church of Chrlsl
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Rutland First S.,tist Church

Wednesday Se~ices - 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a .m.
Wo~hip · 10:45 a.m.

Tuppers Plain Church or Chris!

Ash Street. Middleport
Pastor : Les Hayman
Sunday Service · 7:00p.m.
Sunday School - \0 a.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.

Instrumental
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - JO a.m.
Sunday School - 1~1:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Dible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Pomeroy Finl Baptist
East Main St
Sunday School - 9:30a .m.

Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southern S.ptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

First Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School- 9:15 a. m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:()() p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Racine First Baptist

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Mt. Uaion Baptist
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem BapliSI Churth
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor: Daniel Berdine
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-6:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Ub&lt;ny Chrislian Churth

Christ or Latter-Day Saints
Sl. Rt. i60, 446-6247 or 446-7486

·-

Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- JO a.m.
Wedne5day Services -7 p.m.

Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

SL Paul Lutheran Chun:h

Chnstian Un1on

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick

Hartford Church or Ckrlslin
Christian Union

Victory Baptist lndependant
52S N. 2nd Sl. Middlepcn

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - 11 a.m.

Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship -lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Chureh
Railroad Sl., Milson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Church of God

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Rutland Chur&lt;h o!God

ML Moriah Bapll!l
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.~ .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Antiquity Baplisl

Syracuse Fint Church of God
Apple: and Secontl Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Ev~ning Services- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.

Rutland F'" Will Baptist

Salem St.
Pastor: Rc:v. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

'

Pastor: Helen KJine

Melp Cooperative Parish

Worship - J 1 a.m. '
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

949-2804

Sentinel
Claeaifieda

992-2156

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD!

..

Hlrrison,t"Jile .Presbyl~rian Churrh
Worship • 9 a.m.

Pastor: Edsel Han

Worship· i0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:45 ,.m.

Dyesvtlle Com•unky Chun:h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Middleport Presbyterian

Mono Chapel Church
Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Thursday Services -7 p.m.

Middleport Chun:h of the N~Jarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Evening • ·1 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

Joppa

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

· United Foith Cllun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pus

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Full Goopel U)lbthouoe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

First Sunday .of Month -7:30p.m. service

Worship ·i0:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
WCdnesday Services- 7 p.m.

114-H2-5t41
Bruce R. Flther • Director
510 EMt M1ln Strnt
OH 4570

St. Rt.

248, Chester, Oh.
985-3308

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE

SERVICES~

214E.Main
~
992·5130 Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955

Pomeroy

in a huJTY... TRY

D,_..
LIKE

1215/1 mo. pd.

Owner Operitor

t2111/1fn

Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
·

Tuesday &amp; Thursday ·7:30p.m.

BRADFORD'S

•

landsmpe Slodt '
!Plant aher Clwislmasl
Spm and Whit Plni-

S6/It
BAFIR"S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
S:ll. 'sa Sun's til Christmas
St. At. 325, Danville, Oh

992-5432
{ij;\

Veterans ·

~

Memorial

---

-

Public Notice

be floating 0, a cloud
ihe buys y(,u'H find In 1/tt
clanlfitds.

FLORIST
MeitJ• County~ OldeBI Flnriot

EAST MAIM POMEROY, OHIO 45769

614/992-2644

Established 1913

·992·2121

Sport• .. Entartalnment

Movlta, Horoaeopet, Flnaneilll
C~l1·900 -285-0013

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992·70.75
172 North Second Ave.

.
1998 Martin Street

Ert3278.

Joe Wilson

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Start dating tDnlghtl Haye fun,
play Ot'lio's datin~ g1m., 1·800ROIIANCE, oxron..... 7....

PUBUC NOTICE
Nollco Ia haroby glvon
lhot on tho 21th day of
Janu.-y, 1898, ot 1 :00 p.m.
In tho olllco 0! tiHI Boord ol
Commlu!onora of Molgo
County, Ohio, 1 h..rng will
be hold on the propoucl
vocetlng of Townahlll Rood
203, Smith Hill, (Rockhouoe
Road on ,.ownoiiJp mop).
Sollobury Townahlp, Molgo
County, Ohio.
.
Tho propoood vocoUona
deocrlbocl .. loll-:
Beginning ol Stote Roul•
7 and d•dondlng on Plrcol
10t3.

Tho
Boord
or
Commloalon•ro ol Molgo
County, Ohio. will vlow lito
olio of tho . propoud'
vacotlng on tiHI 28th day ol
Jlnuary, 1898. al11:30a.m.
Tho plat d..crlblng tho
location of tho rood
propoaed to ba vacllod
may bo viewed altho office
of tho board of County
Commloolqnora of Molga

UPS

llc:COI'a Curiooitr _ ,
221 Main St. Op41n Mond•y thtu
Saturda~ 12-epm. Bookt, erafts
&amp; aupphas. Candles 20% off .
Several In lhop spec1111. Craft
items lOla on con~-"

Giveaway

.,..,...., ~75-5058.

3 Baaurltul Cllrlotmao PuppJ.s, 2
- . , , 1Uolt,81ol-441-1304.

e WHkt

Ml•ed Beagle Pupplea,

Wormed, 814-371-1455, 81•..7300.

MAPLEWO.OD lAKE
949·2734

llale PuPPJ 112 FuR BIDOdt&lt;l """

18, 61ot-367·7320.

Shipping
Available

Ono Mother Dog Pan lab &amp;
Chow Two Adorable Puppies,

Holiday Hrs.
Mon-Sat.10-4:30
1·S Sunday

Pupplea To Giveaway e14·••1·
oS20Atto&lt;aP.M.
Santa's Elvea Has Jull Dropped
on 5 lleouti,ul Puppln, • ladles

skinning

Black Part lab &amp; Chow, 81•oMe98t8,

~========~
Gen--.,
81,....1-1707.
i
[IL;:::=::;:;;;~~~~ &amp;
To1A
Good Home:
3 F..,.le Port
YO.UNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

·Room Addltlona
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumblnt
•Roofing
•Interior • Exterior
Palntln;
Aloo concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
IIV2-621S
Pomeroy Ohi"o

BINGO
RUTLAND .
AMERICAN
LEGION
Beech·Grove

Announcements

Hartwell House 'rea~t~" oo. 81-s-. 1...
Cute medium. alzt black, long
100 Eost Moin, Pomeroy =.sod""~,':f4-~~~·

&amp; Wrapped
$35.00
$5 extra for

Raod

Ran Wallet &amp; 8ilc:l&lt; ub Uir. 61+

TRU(KING

50

' · Ume1tone &amp;. Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

R1111aonab/e Rarea
Joe

N. Sayre

614·742·21

Happy Ads
LONlEY?

CAU
lONIGHT1

1-1100-285-11077
EICl 11181
:;:'.!":;;'~

Serv-u (8191 a.s-ua.
60 Lost and Found
Found· male, 1 ~r. qld, reddith
brown I bloc:1!, Beagtomlr, Pomi·

..-;.~~~·;·;
. ~· -;· ~. ~~·-\.=
- ==:. r
·~:====~==~ davicinlty,
61 ..~9-2884.
·1
Found· Red bone female hound,

Mon. Dec:. 22
570.00 per 9ame

IUmeStoneLow Rates)

Star Burst
5800.00

Pat's Herb Corner
LOCIIted at Dan'a
290. N 2nd A

WICKS
·HAULING

•

Pat Arnold

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Ohio, Coun HouM,
Ohio.
JIMILHoward,
Prealdont
M..goCounly
Commlulonora
(12) tB. 211, 2tc

614-992·3470

ut Olivo, long Bo,.,m arao. 8••·
7

tl8!&gt;33o\ .
Lost: Dog, Cairn Terrier, Cream
Colored, Male, Vicintir Adams ville Road Area, &amp;1•·245-52...

Lost: . F~ale 5 Yea'ra Old Auatra ·

Shepherd, Mlr, Gray With Big
tn d.ependent · lion
Black Spots, Rod Collat, 1808
Distributor
County Tag Numbet 25, Name:
Paf'ICtV, lost Off Of Burkhart lane

VItamins, Herbai
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss

Gravel, Sand,
Public Notice

VI.,

Middleport, OH

Limestone,

Notlooto Blddora
Bid lor Trucko
LogoiAd
Th• Tuppera Plalno·
Choator Wllor Dlotrlct lo
Inviting bld1 for o 1987 or
1118 Cab ond Chooalo, ond
o bid lor 1 1987 or 1998
1m111
truck,
All
apoclrtcatlona lor tho IWo
truck bldo t:On be picked up
11 tho Tupporo Plaine- ·
Ch..tor Wallr Dlolrict'a
moln olftce located on SR 7
3 mlloa eouth or Tuppora
Plalna. Tho mailing atldrooo

:38H6I3.

Hauling, qcav~tlng
&amp; Trenching,

'

-dl81ot-ol46-97oo
70
Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
.W, Yan:l ,_111111

Wreaths - Swags •
Roping
Grave Blanketa
$5.00 &amp; Up
Flood Plain ' Variance
Board Hearing on Doc. 23 at
2:00 p.m. In tho Melgo
County Commloolanero
Office.
EdwardW.rry
Flooclploln Monag.r
(12} 19, 22, 2tc
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Notlc,o lo horoby glv•n
that on· tha 28th day of
Janu1ry, 1998, ot 1:30 p.m.
In t)lo ortlca or tho Boord of

•

loPoidlnAdVII1CO.
QfAC!!J!f; 2:00 JUft.

1111daylloloNIIoad
il,to run. Sundar

adltlon • 2:00 P·"'

SUE'S I .
GREENHOUSE

fddar. Mondor ac1~1on
• 10:00 a.m. Sltunllf.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

(C-30) Morning Star Rd.
Racine

949·2115
In Memory

..-------..

In Iovins merrwry of
my only sitter.

R. L. HOLLON

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUCTION

TRUCKING

•New Homes
Rhea Deem,
DUMP TRUCK
•Garages
who left th~ life, .
SERVICE
•Complata
four years "'fO today,
Agricultural Lime,
Remodeling
121191'97
Limestone
•
Gravel
StQp
&amp; Compare
The yearo go by 10
Dirt • Send
FREE
slowly, but then,: S not a
985-4422
• ESTIMATEES
day goes by that I don~
Cheater,
Ohio
985-4473
think abom you. You "re
laushter; you're arnile;
you're compouiora; ,_.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

80

Auction

and Flea uart~at

Rick Paarson Au,tion Compan,,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction serylca. licanaed
t88,0hio &amp; Welt Virginia, 304773-5185 Or :ICM-773-5447,

90

Wanted to

you •re love, and finaUy
you "re death. That day

I

TRUE VALUE POLY TOOL

i• bured in my mind
forever. Lillie did I
know how painful it
would be to live life
without you. But I
know you are in
heaven. fru of pain,
and · that you are
watchins over u• and
•milins, o. 11nile 1 will
alway• re,..mb.r.

BOXES STARTING AT $8.99

I Lo've You Dear Suter,

l-Ift'

. rf.

WAYNE'S PLACE
. presents
BLITZKRIEG LIVE
Sat. D~ ..2oth 10 pm · 2 am

O'DELL LUMBER
VINE ST., GALLIPOLIS

ST. POME:ROY

Clorinda "BuuUtu
Thoiu
Children and familie•

MoiiDe Rome Faraaca

and leal
.INtflfla.

Rings, Pre-Hl30 U.S. Cunancy,

Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions J...try
- M.T.S. Coin· Shop, 1St Second

A,.,.,., Gd~Uo_ 610.-2&amp;&lt;2.

Antiques, top prices Plid. Rlwr-

Pomoroy, Ohio,

Moore owner, 8,4-112-

*

Antiques- na i~Mt too llll'ge Dl'
&amp;mall. Also e&amp;tal••. IPPt'lillll

refinishing, cuItom o,~rl, e, 4:
9112..S71.

- Easy Bank Financing Furnaces

'2800 a month

•

Heat Pumps lnstaned"3800 a month
F'" Estimates ··
1231.

IIAIII 8 CDOLIII
Serving Southeaslem OH &amp; VW

1"100-872.5967

1391 Salford School

I.

•

Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sliver And Gold Coins, Proolaets,
Oitmonds, Antique Jewelr.,, Gold

..,._..;.;;...J~.~.;Antlqutl,

Oh

(

18 + S2.atlllln.

"Build Your Dream"

Cut

614/992-62~8
With

1LONELY? Call Tonight! 1•100·
~,t~.~'i1 :S:~. sue'
6t9-84s.&amp;43ol,

· DEER
PROCESSING

19, 7 P.M.

HERMAN® by ,Jim Unger

Blli

Dally Tribune, 1125 Thlnl Av.nue,

Gllllipal' OH •!583t .

Blad! Lib mired ~ -noel

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

115 E. Memorial Or. ~omeroy
992-2104

"Dignity and Service Always"

•

OPEN EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS

"MISSED!"

Clean out your basement or
attic with the help of the

plies To : CLA 331; cia GalUpollt

LCWE

2 1/2 Mil•• Soullt of 1\lppers Plal11
0• St. Rt. 716141667-3483

FRIDAY, DEC.

Public Notice

~rf'f~Ei
~ifll'lf,

From Nlc:e Fomole For Talkl,

Walkt l Fr iendahlp. Bend Re-

AWA11'11 V0U
t-000-285-11077, E&gt;t 8382, U.atl
Per Win. Mu1t a. 18 Yrs. S«v.U,

CHRISTMAS TREES

CLUB GUN
SHOOT

,...., 1\

ship

1.,r, old lemale Chihuahu1 dog,
forgien colOred, hll raga, Men

~ SPORTSMAN

Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:.30 p.m.

CLEANING?

t-t136-11774,

40

FORKED RUN

-------

Sunday Wcirship · iO:OO a.m. &amp;·7:00p.m.

TIME FOR SPRING

Remodeling

CONNOLLY'S

30 Arinouncements

Eden U1lttd Bnthrrn In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsvllle
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School- ·11 a.m.

Hospital

EWING FUNERAL HOME

tl

992·5042

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

PU8UC NOTICE
Notice lo horoby given
Ihot on tho 1lith day of
January, 1898, at 1:00 p.m .•
In tha olftce o1 tiHI Boord of
Commloolonorl ol Molga
County. 1 h.. rtng will be
hold on tho propoaod
-lcollon ol Phllllpo Rood,
Scipio· Townahlp, Moiga
Counly. Ohio.
Tho propoucl -loatlon
.. ._.bed •lolloft: '
Beglnnlnt II 81111 Route
1112 ond d••d·ondlng ot
· Pogovlllo Comotory, bolng
.17 of a milo with o »toot
right-of-way.
Tho
Boord
of
Commlaolontra or Molga
County, Ohio, will view tho
olio on tho 19th doy ol
Jlnilory, 1IIIII, at 11:00 a.m.
Tho plot d..crlblng tho
locotlon or lho rood
propoaad to bo dadlcalod
may bo vlowed et tho omce
of tho
Boord. or
Commlaalonora of Molga
County, Ohio, Court HOUH&gt;
Pomeroy, Ohio.
J ..etLHOWird,
Pr..ldont
Molgo county
cornmloalonoro
(12119, 26, 2 tc

Ma.J

Custom Homes

209 South 4th Street,
Middleport
P~lvate Cara for
Elderly &amp;
Handicapped
Dally or Contract

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Silver Ridae
Pi!.tor: Robert Barber

Free PIQera Activltidn Required

r--------------------..

Cut Your OWn
•
.
Fresh Cut
Any Scotch or WhHe Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends ·
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
Dally 10 am til Dark
Nov. 28 thru Dec. 21 1112&lt;1/97 1 mo. pd

South llelltel Now TH .. ment

Crow's Family Restaurant
"F1111tJJring Kenrucky Fried Chicken"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

ELIM HOME

Prk11 1I0-'20

---

8434.

Gentleman SHktng Compan6on·

Under New
Uanage•ent

w. hm att••• ... of
Ibeailllful,, shoand ""' "' ~v 14

~--

'- .

30

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· iO::j() a.m., 7:30p.m.

these area merchants
RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

••J••
"' •••u.
882-3921

Roger Coates .

(614) 992·3838

Ylnylllding,
Rep!Mement Wlndowa,
Decks, Porchea,
Kitchena • Blltha
SorneConereta
Roollng, Plumbing
lift ~~- I 111f,

CHRISTMAS TR~ES

=

Can't Shop 1 Watch777
Upclateo Nowiiii1-II00-21S.
,
El&lt;l 33t0, SUO l'lor Win. lluat 8o
18 Yra. Old Serv-U (800} US·

360.° Communications

Public Notice

Pastor: Roy Hunter

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Free Estimates

Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders

Loo1 Bottom
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

llldcllopon, OH 45710

Seventlt·DI)' Ad-ventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath Sdt.oo1- 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.

Evening 7:30p.m.

32337 Bailey Run fld
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(814) 1102-71148

Te~tas

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Syracwe Cburth oftl.e Nuarene
Pastor, Roben J. Coen

.

ML Hemori Unlled Brethren
In Christ Cbuich

Pastor: Mark A. Dupler

Sunday Scltool- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Umeatone Hauling "'
House &amp; Trailer Sit• ,
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Eetlmat"

Un1ted Brethren

Reedsville Fellowship
ChurthotiMNuarne

2IC South Steond .........

Seventh-Day Adventist

Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Sunday School · i0:30 a.m.

l~il•~n ~uneral ,.o~ ;Inc.

Sunday 5Ghool- 9.a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Faith Gospel Ckun:h
LongBottom

·

SandbiiDtlng
Antlrple Tractors, C..
&amp; Etc.

'

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Worship - 9:30a.m.

CLINIC
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Maeter Service Technician
~OSIENE HEATER REP1AIR I

Warship- 11 a.m.

ML OHve Commonlly Chun:h

Reedsville

RACINE MOWER

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Nazarene

J1rne1

Inc.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Chener

Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy

992-3978

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

992-3785

Syncust Fint United Presbyterian · ·
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson · ·

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship -9:30a.m.

Pomeroy

Syi'I&lt;Uie Mlsalon
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse

Co. Rd. 63

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

212 E. Main Street

Presbyterian

Worship · ·11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Trinity Chun:h

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 1 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Congregational

Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
.Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
·
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.·

Fahh Valley Tabtmade Charch

Ton:h Churth

Church annormcements
RACINE PLANING MILL

Middleport PeniKOSial

Wednesday Servia· 7:30p.m.

Grand Street

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.

Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
-· Sunday School10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School · IQ a.m.

Middleport Com10uol!)' Churdo
575 Pwl St., Middleport

Hodd-rt C~un:h

Sunday School-9:30a.m. .

PaStor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sundny school and worship 10:25

Pastor: Robert Vance

Worship.- 9 a.m. ·
Tuesday Servi~s • 7 p.m.

Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Pentuosl•l Assembly •
St. Rl. 124, Racine
Pastor: William HobaJ:k

Sunday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday service· 6:30p.m.

Hazel Conunualty Ch•rcll
Off Rt. 124

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Pentecostal

Endtlme HouH of Prayer

Coolville Chun:h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
. Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services -10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday~ 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m.

Church

(at Burlingham church off Route 33)

Bothe! Ckurth
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Pastor; PJ . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednc.sday Services- 7 p.m.

161 Mulbcny Ave .• Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4S -5 : 15~. m .; ~ass-5 : 30p .m .
Sun. Con . -8 :45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass-9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 1:1:30 a.m.

Worship- 11 a.m.

Allred

OJ. White Rd. oil St. Rt. t60

Socftd Heart Catholk Churtb

Coor.llle United Molhodlsl Porilh

Northea!lt Cluster .

Church or God or Prophecy

Catholic

Sunday School -9:45a.m.

TIM DEEM'S
t:IUIPENTR'l'

New Ufe Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipclis, OH

Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.'
Worship • 11 a.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Clifton, W.Va.
Sunda)' School- 10 a.m.
Worship -1 p.m.
·
Wedncsda)' Service -7 p.m.

Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Wednesday - 7 p.m.

MI. Olive Unlttd Methodlll

·Clifton Tobernade Church

Pastor: Theron Durham

Worship :. 9 a.m.

Graham United Methodist
Worship- 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun}
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Church of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m .

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Worship · 9:30a.m., 7::!0 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Servic:es: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

EaiiLelltrt
Pastor: Brian Harkness

· Our Sa~ lour Lulhenn Cflurdl
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Friday-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson

Pastor: Dewayne Stutkr
Sunday_Scltool· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10'45 a.m. (1st &amp; Jrd Sun}

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m.

The Belloven' Fellowahlp Mi...lr)'
New Lime Rd., Rutland

Sutton

SL John Lulheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick
Worship - 9:00 a.Th.

Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Churth of Jesus Chris~
Apostolic Faith

'

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4S a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun}
Mornin1 Star

Lutheran

Reedsville Church o! Chris!

Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday · fellowship service 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stuller

Reliel Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon

7 p.m.

, Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

HarriiO~•IIIe Community

n.e.

Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m .

Worship-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9: IS a,m.
Worship. 10:15 a.m.
Snowvllle

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wed!~&lt;sday Scrvic:es -10 a.m.
Cannel

Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.

Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.

. Long Bottom
Pastor: Sieve Reed

Pastor: Dewayne S1u1ler

ca_....

School9:30 a.m.

114 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd .
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.

j

005 . .,.,_.11

614-992·7643
Jon Sargent (614) 992-7312
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
b_..._...,;&lt;~N,;,.o,;;.Su;;..n.;;,.da~y,.;C;.;;;a;;,;lls~)-...:"':.;;-~-~! .,_-~~D~e~llv;;.;:e;;Jry:..;A;;.;.v.;;al;,;;la;.;.bl;.:,e_ _- J ;L-_ _ _6!'"'1_4_·9_9.,..2·_5_47_9_ _~~

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

Faith Full C..pel Cltu'n:h

· Bethany

Gravel, Umeatone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

SOD N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman

Wednesday service, 7:00 p.m.

Salem Ceator

For Details Call
Ed Hupp (614) 843-5235

Rejoicing Ufe Church

H-. Chrlstlao Fellowablp Chun:h
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce

COMMERCIAL and RESI ENTIAL
~EE ESTIMATES
.. I

Evening - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

The Church or Jesw

S~nday

Worship -ll:l5 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedneUy Service- 7 p.m.

10 a.m.

992·7074

Pastor: David Dailey

Pastor: Robert E. Musser

Youth Fellowshtp, Sunday. 6 p.m.
Rullaod
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.

Hemlock Grove Church
P8stor: ·aene Zopp

Evening-7:30p.m.

Worshi~-

Room Additions • Roboang

Order Now for the Holidays
Custom Made for Your Loved One

Stlvenville Word or Faith

Felowsldp Center
Salem St., Rutland

Pastor: Ketth Rader

Garages • Replacement Windows

Wednesday Service- 7:30 p·.m.

C~rlstlan

Sunday School· 9:13 a,m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study T-uesday · 10 a.m.

Portland-R8cine Rd.
Brat;~ch President- Michael Duhl

Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship - 9 : 30a.m ~ ,

Pomeroy
Putor: Robert E. Robinson

WILL·UUL·
IUI'I' CALL.

Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday service, 1 p.m.

Worship· 10 a.m.

Reorpnlzed Churcb of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Hillside Baptist Churth

Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Langsville Christlaa Church

Old Bothel Free Will Baptist Chureh
28601 Sl. Rl. 7, Middlepcn
Thursday Services- 7:30

75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Children's service- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday s.ervice- 7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9:15a.m.

Cal,-ary Bible Church
Pomeroy J?ike, Co. Rd.
Pastor; Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

773-5017

Faith Cllapel Opn Bible Churdo
923 s. 'third St., Middlepcn

Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.

Service 7:30p.m.

Pastors John &amp;. Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

PeariCbapel

Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger

Wednesd~y

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, ?-p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holloess Church

Wednesday Services~.? p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Faith FeUowshlp Crusade lor Christ

"full-Gospel Church"

Mlnen•ille

Laurel Clllr Free Methodist Churth

Wednesday Bible Study . 7:00p.m.

Aglpo Ulo Ctnlor

Pastor: Clad Emrick

RockSfrlnp

Pastor: John Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-7:00p.m.

Wednesday Scrvic:es - 7 p.m. ,

Service time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

Bradlord Chun:h oiChrlsl
Comer of St. Rt 124 &amp; Bt.adbut.y Rd.

Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service- 6:30p.m.

Folnolow Bible Church
Letan, W.Va. Rt. i

Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: ~ev. Roy McCarty

Dexter

Other Church es

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Pastor: Woody Call

Wednesdiy Services- 7 p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servict - 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Rutland Communily Chun:h

Hickory Hills Church of Christ

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Rutland Chun:!h of Christ
Sunday Schooi • 9:30a.m.
Wor.)hip · 10;30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Worship- 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SerVices • 7:00p.m.

Pastor . Joe N. Sayre

Heath (Middleport}

Thursday Service- 7:30p.m.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Rid~nour

Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.

Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan

.'

White's Clutpel Wesleyan

Hantll Oulftoeh Mlnlstria
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester

Worship· 9 a.m.
Thursday Services-6:30p.m.

Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Billlinle
Suminy School · lOa.m,
Worship- lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servites- 7:30p.m.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Chun:h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.; ? p.m.

Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant

Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W~dnesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Chad Emrick

Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

Worship- 7 p.m.

Worship -10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday pr~ycr meeting· 7 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Million
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:lQ a.m.

PertiUII Flnt Chordo oflh Nuareoe
Pl!dor: Mark Mataon

Pastor: Keith Rader

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
I st and 3rd Sunday

Pastor: Richard Qli ... er
St. ~

Calvary PU1rim Chapel

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Hope Baptkl Church {Soulhern)
570 Grant

Worship- 9 a.m.

Keno Church ofCbrist
Worship - 9:30a.m.

Baptist

Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Wednesday prayer service· 1 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worshtp Service iO::IO a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Wonhip ·lla.m., 6 p.m.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Pastor: Jeff Smith

AtHJOUrJCri.H tJT'

BDPP.LAIDSCAPIIG CELLULAR PHONES
GRAVE BLANKETS

·aiSSELL BUILDERS, INC.

C.rlelon ln.......,loalioDII Cbun:h
· Kingsbury Road

Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Rutland Chordl oltlte Nuanu
Pastor: Samuel Basye ,
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worahlp • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: K.etth Rader

5th and Main
Pastor: AJ Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School- 9:30a.m~

Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Putor: Rev. llerben Ortte
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Ente"''riH

Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Worship- JO a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Cheoter Clturdo ., ... N -

Wednesday Services ~ 7:30p.m.

Dan•llle Hollaeu Cburth
310S7 Stale Route 32S, langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Uberty
~·~~~i~~~
P.O.
Box 467,
· Lane
Mason, W.Va.

CentraiCI.....Asbury (Syracuoe}
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Wo11hlp · 11 a.m.

Sun&lt;lay School • 9 a.m.

Nuanttt

Putor: Rev. L~•)'d D. Grimm,lr.
Sunda~ School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serii&lt;es • 7 p.m.

Worship- JO a.m.
Tuesday Scovioes ·7:30p.m.

SundAy Schooli0:30 a.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

PaltiiOJ Cltardl tltlle

Sunday School • 9 a.m.

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Eucharist and

212 W. Main St

Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Apostolic

'l'llppen Plalll S&amp;. .....
Pasror: Sharon IU111ntan

1114-446-1411
OH

Wanlod To Buy : Standing Tin- :

Blq S Oollttroll 814 311 IIIII.
1'
•
We Bur Junk Auta'• tn My Con- •
dillon, Call e1•--~. Or tt4- :
. .fliRT.
I

•

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Friday, December 19, 1997

Friday, December 19, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

~ALLEYOOP
..

NEA Crossword Puzzle
•

31 Dwfamed
41-JonH
1 S l - radical, 44

PHILLIP
ALDER

7

13

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
INOTICE I

110

Help Wanted

$DRIVERS S
For O~dlcated Tnm Run, Home

Weekly, No Touch Rate, COl R•
quinld HI00-716·2573

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bual·
ness with peopl' you know, and
NOT 10 send money through the
mall until you have investigated
1he

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spear~ 304-fil'S-1429.

New Vear With New CarHt, Grnd.
Fl. Opp. 7 Fer P.T. For lnbrmatlon

Accepting Appl ications, Friday
December 19, 1997 From 9 A.M .

Call (614)379-2136 Or Join Us
Friday December 19, At 7PM
Holiday Inn, Ga!lipolls

To 7 P.M. At The Super 8 Motel

Lerge 2bedroom trailer In leon:

And Part-T1me WeeKend M id-

night Desk Clerk Position Open.
E•perienee Preferred. No Phone

CillsPieaw.
Avon SB -$18 IHr, Na Door -To •
Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Relax il'!l, 1·.B00·361·041l6.
AVON $8·$ 15/hr. No Min. Order,
No Door-To-Door. No Inventory. 1·
1100-285-0045. indl~slrep.

AVON - $8 -$20 /Hr. No Door To
Door. Q~ick Cash! •eonu,es· 1·
800-296·0139,

220

2~Z,F=~
Aroonc1$200PerMon1h
F' " a1r, fre ~~~t, 1-'l 10 3 bed •

room, $1,05
own, $196/mo.
Clll1·1»69l· 8n 7.

Fr&amp;e air, free skirt, 16x80 3 or c
b d
$ 350 d
$2
e room 1,
I own,
991mo.
Call1-«l0-691·6n7.

____Se
__rv_J_ce_s_ __
1

Good Used Recondi1ion Like N&lt;M,
Mobile Homee For Sale, Call 614'
4*-0175, 304-fl7S-S96S.

HARTS MASONARY · Block,
bric~ &amp; stone work, 30 years ex perience, reasanaQie rates. 30-'·
895-3591 aher 8:00pm, no job to
small or to BIG. WV·021206

1025

ance. 304-675-21-45.

Large selection of used homes, 2
or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $2995.
Quick- delivery. Ci.tl 614·385·
9621 .
LIMITED TIME ONLYI 4BR, 2
BATH $1,441 DOWN $241
MONTH. Free air &amp; lklrllng, Only
tl Oakwood Home• Nitro, WV

304-751-111115.

REWARD For Your Good Credit
lntereat Ratea As Low ~~ 8.75%
Qnly Oakwood Homes Barbours-

ville 304-738-3409.

N'O"T'i'C"E

COsmetologist Needed, Gauranteed Wages, Pai d Vacation,
Fme CEU Hour, Full &amp; Part Want448-7267.

Orlvera: Olwt Yourself A Gift
That Keep• On Qivlng, Your

,

OWn Late Model Convenllonall
We Ofltlr Job Placemat, A Late
Model Vehicle And Sound
Bualn•• Advice. No Money
Down, Bad Credit No Problem!
Cl..a "A .. , 1 Vr. OTR &amp; HarMat
Required. Call Truck Tech At 1·
-3n.3101.

Earn S5D to $200 in one day. Invite your frlenda OYer to your home
ror a professional glamour portrait
party. Call 800-487-5787 or 800426-8363.
Expet"ienced Timber Cutter (81-t)

682-6402

Amerlca·s largest fac'tory cutler

has purchased local mobile
home dealership. All inventory
must be sold wifhin 30 days.
Save thousands . Call now lor
info. FREEDOM HOMES ol Nitro,
WI/'JlJH22·7127.
New 19518 14x70 three bedroom,
includes 6 months FREE lot rant.
Includes skirting , delu.11e steps
and setup. Only $187, 08 per
month with $1075 down. Call 1·
800-837-3236.

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subject lo
tne Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitat~n or disCrimination
based on race, color, religion,
se.l( familial status or national
origin, or any intenlion to
make any suc:n preference,
Hmitatkm or discriminatiOn:

New 28x80 3 or 4 bedroom.

S39 · 995. Free delivery. 1-800·
891 · 6777 ·
NEW BANK AEPO'S Only 3 left!

This newspaper will not
knowlngty acc'ept
advertisements for real estate
which is In violation of the
law. Our·readers are hereby
info-·•
,,n;n..o lha1 aU dwellinns
"~
advertised In this' newspaper
are available on an equal

Halrstyiista or nail 1ech needed.

304-755-7191.
New doublewide· l nurchased,
,..
mv lot, must sell, will
... ,
deliver &amp; aeHip 11 no cha;ge.
71 46
::;304-:.:.:722
::..-:..::
::·_ _ _ _ _ _

won! fit on

opportunity basis.

Rent a booth &amp; choose your own 'J-11!'-1!!!'----~~~· Oakwood 28x56 3 bedroom, 2
tmurs.304-675--'873.
II
bath, starting 81 $ 199 per mo.
Help wanted· Janitorial service
now hiring in Pomeroy area. Part
time. nexible hOurs. good starting
par. Send resume 10: B.W. Janitorial Service, 145 liming Farm Rd.,

I

ML Drab. Ohio .t51S4.
OR &amp; ICU Expat"ienced RN's
wanted For Newly OeYelopjng
Nursing Regis'wy. Self Scheduling
And Compeititw Compensation.
PieaseResponciTo:

P.O.Bo~t826,

Mariana. OH 45750.
SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Fast Growinp So. Ohio HVAC
Company Has An Opdning For A
Resldenti~ 6 CO&lt;rrne!tial Serv~e
Tech. Candidate Must Have A
Minimum Of 5 Years Service
Background, Have A Clean Drivers license &amp; Be Detailed On
Paper Work. We Offer Excellent
Pay, Insurance, Paid Vacation,
40tK Plut Fringes. If You Want
A Challenging Career With Room
To GrOw, Send Resume To:
SERVICE TECH.
~0.

Box 80tJ

Jacl&lt;son, OH 45640

•

Somaane For Odd Jobs, Experi enced In Fence Building, 614·
446-1683, 614-4-'6·3325.
Unique Job Opporrunity In Long
Term Carat Looking For AN's
Who Will Care For No More
Than 6 Residents Per Shih On

The Sidled Unit AN Dulles To Inelude Primary Care SHIFT DIF·
FEAENTIAL. All Shifts Currently
Available. Please Apply At
Scenic Hills Nursing Center, 3t1
Buckridge Rd .. Bidwell, OH. E•·
perience The Oillerence Scenic

Hills Makes.

·

wanted To

Do

Furniture repair, refinish and rea·
101ation, al10 custom orders. Ohio
Valley R'• finishing Shop, Larry

P1111ipo, 614-992-8576.
Georges Portable Sawm•ll, don't
haul your logs to the mil! just call
304-&amp;l'S-1957.
McCoy's Construction, Commer cial &amp; Residential, Free Esti·
mates, 6,4·446-1923, 614· 245 ·
58G4,

Need your houtt cleaned for the
Ho1idayt7 We don't waste rime,
I'IKIIIONltMt prices, 814-992-Ql 15.

Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! lnauran", Bidwell, Ohio. €11-'·388·
111141, e14-3eH010.
Reaponsible Adult, Wanting Ta
Babysit in My Home, References
Opon Requtsl. 10 Years Experlonce (1114)245-9025
Will Do Cleaning Week l y, Bi Weekly Or Monthly Reasonable
Re1&amp;1, 614-387-0\i()7.

Will do elderly care, hiiW nur...
aid ttaining and many yurt ax·
perlonct, roftrences, $5 hr., call
Paalla Giltridt, 614-94Q-2329.
u.. Own~,WI.• Do Ironing
...,_ In ...,
,...,,ror;
148
1
v ---~ _ . .

FINMJCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

Long

Est

HomeS fOr 5aJe

Card And Gilt Sho~.

Send Rotponee To: CLA 503, clo

Galipollo Deily Tribune, 825 T~rd
A'"""•· Galpoi~ OH •5631 .

520

440

for Rent

;:.:.:;,::::.::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
1 Bedroom Unitt Neweal &amp;
~·In T"· •
Near Hoz.
I
~a.nest
er t26DII.to., Plus Utilities &amp; Se·
~rltr O.pool1 Required, No Pt11,

f.., ,.,..

o14~2057.

j

Nlbo, WV

-"-=-'*~
· -,77$-_:,.:M:.:B:.:'_ __
WESTWOOD HOME SHOW
Used &amp; RepoSa~

Sq. Ft. Living Area, 2 Story, 3 .
Bedrooms, 2 112 Baths, Finished
Basment, Fireplace, Like New, • .
Years Old $175,000, 61•-6•3·
2924, Or614-&amp;13-2522.

2 Bedroom Aponmon~ Wl1h CAC,
Firat Avenue, Gallipolis, $30DI

NEW ON MARKET
6llllnEoto.kHm
410 Houses for Rent
Jackson /Gallia Line Mini Farm Newer 3 BR, 3 Bath House, FP, 2 Bedroom Home For Renlln KaVlnyl Sided, lnaround Pool, Ga· , nauga.l14-4&lt;t&amp;-4107.
rage With 30 Acres $125,000 1 I
Great Deal -Cash EXTRA •. 16 2 Bedroom House For Re.nl On
Acres With Barna $100,000 Also Graham School Road, No Pelt,
5 Acre Country Building lots S3001MO. , $150 Oepotil, 614Stick Bullt &amp; Manufactured 441-83ZJor814448-0050
Homes 9.9 Acres Touching 2 Bedroom Kitchen, LR, 238 Rear
wayne National -Hunters Dream. Firll Aft11.1e, Gallipolis, No Petl,
Also land All Over Jatk'Dn Pike, $325/Uo., Plus Deposit &amp; Utllititl,
Ron, Scioto, Meigs, Athens S1"-"S·G2e.
Counties FREE Maps land Con- :.;.:..:.::..;;:::~----­
tracts. 10% Down ·Anthony land 1 3 Btdr~. 1 Bath, New Carpet In
Co.,
ltd .
1-800-213·8365 ; CUy, V.ry Nice Phone 514-448WW'IN.coun!Jytyme.com
2003 or 614-+18-1409 3-D Pt.t
3 Badroomt, Fenced Yard Le.
Grande Blvd., tSOO Ltonlh Referencea And Depcail Required,

apartment In CUfton, references

Bur or sell. Riverine Antiques,
112-4 E. Main Slreet, on At. 12•.
Pomtroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. , Sunday 1:00 10
6:00 ~. m. 614· 992·2526, RUII

roqulrecl304-173-5040.

Moore owner.

Mo.,+Dopolil,61~1079.

2 bedroom, furnished, garage

2bdrm. apta., total electric, appllancu furnished. laundry room
facllitlel, ciote to tchool In town.
Applications available •t: Village
G:r. .n Ap1a. ,.9 or call 614-9g2.
371 1, EOH.
5 Room .........IITitnt• ....,SIMo., Uti'l·
....."""
ltlel Paid, $100 Depolit, No Pets,
614-.«6-3437.
BEAUTIF.Ul .APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT J#.CKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wntwood Drive
from $280 ta $334. Walk 10 thop
&amp; movies. Call 814-·446-2568,
Equal Housing Clppottunity.
Downstairs Apartment. 4 Rooms,
Paid. NO PITI, 81 Cedar
Stell, 114-388-1100.

water

Efficiency Apartment Rio Grande
$240/Mo., All Utilltitl Included,
Depo111 Requlr•d. 1·888·840·

0621 ·
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments al Village Manor and
Rht-lldo
•·-r1men1a In lllddl•••
~
..port From •238-$304 . Call 814912·508•. Equal Housing Oppor-

IUnitiet.

mo. .lad&lt; Lee 304&lt;175-22•5.

Smoil 1br houoe, 1•10-l.owii.St.,
$300/mo, .. $100/depoait. 814 446-1930 an"' 5pm

420

Mobile

Homes

for Rent

....:==:.c.=.:.:::.::...___ I 2
1HI D o u - RoRO

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$280-1300 , aawor, water and

avallatM. 304- 7S5-S566.

tra.-Jir""'U

... ·-...t dod •• - 2 • • 7
,u1-•• ~1v ..

2 Bedroom Tralltr Addison Plkt,
OFFER Froo 27" T.V. 1 $2201Mo., lncludaa Wltlr $100
Home S.Curil)' System n-....
Starting S219 A Month , 304· 736- ....,..viii.. No Pt&gt;ta, 814-448-3437.
3409.
2 Beclroom tralltr Fof rem In utd·
d..._• OH. 30+8112 ·~.
Oiacaunt Mabile Home Parrs ·&amp;
....,.....,
"oHM,
Accauorlet, Vinyl Skirting 2 b d
1 1
1
•2g• 95 A h
S5 0
I room , total • ectr c, rt ·
• • · • nc ora , 0, Awn - means ~d . Rutland , 814·742·
ings, Ooon, Windows, Plumbing 2803
SUpplies. Wat81' Heaters, Furnac·
11, fiberglas• Stapa, Call 614· Clearance On UHd 12 And 14
-'*-g4115 Bennen'a Suppl~ 13i1 Wide Mobile Homea, Kanauga
Salford School Rd, Galhpolie
Mobile Homes, GallipoUt , Ohio
Ohio.
' 114-4-2.

c

S. ~

SAVE tHXIO

Fr• DliiYory &amp; Sa1up
OAKWOOO HOr.tES, NITRO

304-755-$885,

CliO

1 o11&gt;

-.wv

RISFumlfon

Buy, Sol, Trade
Uled 6 An11quM

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Fumia.we.
304-773-5341.
Rool Talking Bubba $80,

«1-15110.

Merchandise
1 Electric Furnace $395; 1 Gas
Furnace 100,000 BnJ $890, 614•48·1306, 1-600-291-11098.

610

Fann

Equipment

135 Maney Ferguson 4 Cylinder, Gasoline, 4 New Tires &amp;
Tu~es, Spin Out Wheel I, 5 Ft.
Brush Hog, Good Condl~on,
$5,500, 30H75·5667 AFTER 7
P.M.

1 Pair Brand New 10 Inch MTX
Trutk Speekera, Paid $300, Asking $225, 814-....1455.

,.

1888 ChwroJet Of'lli ton lruck. with
!'lin bed, nona good , looil1 good,
$2195, 304-173-5305.

2 Elvie quilts and other itema.
304-8112-3-&lt;n.

I WONDER WHY

1987 -48' Bucket truck: t98t Ford

JUGHAID'S NOT
HOME FROM

good, $700, 814-992·5529.
~-;814-378-8279.

Runs Good, 6t4-9-49-3136, 81-'·

.

1988 Ford Rang'er $1,200. 304·
874-4602 or 814-5192·7859 or 304·
875-1072.

151151 Eddie Biutt Bronco full·
size, new engine, loti of new
PIUS, have all receipt•, very
good cond inside &amp; out. Atklng
$5,500. Call alter 6pm or leave
. . . . . 304-lll'S-1907.

71 o Autos for Sell

Twin Rivers Tower, noW accepting
applications tor 1bf. HUO aubaid·
ized apt. for elderly and handlcaPI&gt;Od. EOH 304-675-6ft79.

Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Clnemaa, Showtime &amp; Ditfley.
Weftly Rates, Or Monthly Rates,
Construclion Workers Welcome
814-441·5696, 614-441·5167.
Sleeping rooms with cocking.
Also trailer a·pace on river. All
hook-upe. Call alter 2:00 p.m.,
304-713-5651, MaoonWI/.
.

46!1

Space lor Rent

lot available lor 14x70 mobile
home, no oldar than 5yra wlapproved applicaticrt Inquire at K &amp;
K 300-675-:l:lOO between 8-Spm.
Mobile home site avallabla bet·
ween Athans and Pomeroy call
614-385-43e7.
'

MERCHANDISE

510

Household

GoOds

For Sale: 12•GS romodolod mobile home, . 2br, land contract
•••ll•ble if qualified wilh 1500
down payment. $215/mo. lncluding lol rant &amp; lratt1. 304;882·
3828.

3 Piece Sec:tlon•l, Good CJndi·
tlon $300: O.k With Gflaa Cock·
1111 Table S7~ 814-3117«33.

Appliance•:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryera, Rangel, Allfrlgratora, iO Day Guarantee!
French City Marta"' 151•·448 77115.
••

Black Couch, 2 Bloc!&lt; &amp; Gold End
Tablta, 1 Coffee Table, 4 Ytart
Old, S200, 080 614-44HII04.

Couch, Chairs, End T1b111, 2
~ SUite~ Hu~h. T.V., 814-

Chickering plano with bench,
cherry - · lllca new, $1500, call
814-11115-3531.

550

Canc::rett &amp; Plastic Septic Tanka,
300 Thru ·2.000 Gallons. Ron
Even&amp; Enterprises, Jackson. OH
1-600-537·9526.

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
aws, linrels, etc, Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 61,.·245·

Excellent Condlllon Console T.V.
25• Color RCA $100, 6.14·4-'6·
2100.

560

Flrowood $35 Big Plck·U~ Load,
614-25&amp;-1440, 614-256-11172.
Firewood Jor aale, 81-'·992·3031
or 114-11112-2783.
Firewood, $40 A Truck load 0•
11\wed Call 11 ... 4.-&amp;-~2 No AnMWl88Wt Meuage.
Franklin Fireplace. Screen, •
H11t Slllalf, All AtuiOriOI, Llko
- . t250, '814-441h'l437,

GE 30" electric range with OWtn,
new &amp; never used, white, $200,
114-11112-ss:&gt;ll.
Go kart, 5 hp. modified engine,
rebuil~ $350: IWO truck toppen for long btd small truck,
1100 I $150; collection of'World
Cycl• magazines. over savemy,
1950'1, 60's &amp; 70's, excellent
condition, 1500 lor ell; 614·2-'7·
0201 .

newly

USED

APPLIANCES

Walhert, clryer1, refrlge.ratOrl,
rt.ngtt. Skaggs Appliance• 71
Vine Slrttl. Ca" 114-440· 7;88,

.1 --.--. .

l'loffr'• - . Uold ,..,.....
Wo- , _ Mrf( SUrpOiolll
2101-()pon 11:30 • 5:00 lion-Sot
304-875-SOFA 17832)

Building
Supplies

Good Heavy Duty G.E. Washer,
$100, Goad Hotpoint Eltctflc
Cook S10¥1, $85: Che11 Drawero
115 Ea~ch
Dreuer S75; Drrtr
Sl6i All
d Working Condi·
llonll1
720, Aft• I P.M.
Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repairs.
Problema? N..,d Tuned? Call 111o
plano Dt. 814-4o16-4525
Hew'-tt Packard DetkJII COOL
lnk,ltol Printer lor IBM Computer.
NeYer Uttd. 1 Year Manufacturora Worrantr: S1•0 1614) 2•7·
2032 (evtnlnga) or leave mes-

-

Komatsu Ulni 'Excavalor (Track
Hoe) Low Hours Good Condition:
Koma1au Fork Uh,
Pound
, 5 Ft. Reach Caii 'Hunlington,
30H3fl·•aoo ·Or 304· 525-5359

•.ooo

Ake ~M . . .

1987 Plymouth llc!lvedero II 4.W
Magnum Elderbrok lnl $750 O.P.
Holley MSD lgn Rebuilt Trans.
Wi1tl T.C.I. Valve Body 85Y. Per·
feet In &amp; Out, $3,800 Firm, .814·
379-2B12IL-. Medage).

·'

1911 Bulci&lt; Cemurr Ask"' $500,

Fair Condition, 814·256-107.-,
1981 Mercurr Cougar 4 Doors,
69,000 Actua Mllea, All Original
Garage Ktpt, Mint Condilion,

304·576·2383.
1988 Dodge Sha- $1,600, 114-

448-3945.

1·6Wk. old male, Siberian Husky

·48·1800.

pui)A'. :m.i-8715-4941.
3 Regftltrld 9ob Tall Ratt Terrier
Puppiee, 10 Weeks Old, 2 Males,
1 Female, Had Sho1ll, $125 Eacll,
81•·2&lt;15-5597, Or614·24S-5711.

$2,000 tlrm. 304·

2981·

.-.-&amp;.

15193 White Cadillac DeVille, Well
Mainlalned Always Serviced,
$12,800, 614--..e321.

1894 Mercury Cougar XR7.
Adult-Driven, Beautiful, Pampered
Car. loaded With Extraa, leathet
Interior, Well-t.talnralned, low
Mileage $12,000. Call (614)4467527, Af1er6:00 PM

North

East

Ia

2NT

Pass
All pass

3 NT .

We have many contradiccory sayings. For example, John Adams, in
defense of the British soldiers in the
Boston Massacre Trials of Dec. 1770,
said, "Faces are stubborn things; and
whalever may be our wishes, our
inclinations.• or the dictaces of our
passions, they cannot alcer the stale of
facts and evidence." On che olher ocher hand, in "The Old Judge," Thomas
Chandler Haliburton wrote, "Cir·
cum stances alter cases." ·
·
In today's deal, how would you
play the spade suit, if caken in isolation, for three tricks? Then, how do
you plan che play in six no-trump
after Weslleads a club?
You have 11 top tricks: cwo
spades. one hearl, four diamonds and
four clubs. There are two chances for
number 12: a third spade trick or a
winning heart finesse.
·
In isclacion, the hest play for three
spade tricks is to cash lhe ace, then
to lead low coward dummy's jack.. If
ic loses to East's queen and lhe 10 still
hasn't appeared and West hasn't dis·
carded, you cash the king on the third
round.
'
That seems perfect, because if you
don't get che third spade Irick Ihal
you're afler, apparencly you can fall
back on the heart finesse . However,
in these circumstances an astute Ea.".
on winning wich the spade queen,
will switch to a heart Now you mu&lt;t
commii yourself before knowing the.
lie of lhe spades. · .
so; here ic is better to cash che
spade ace, enter dummy in a minor,
and play a spade, intending to finesse
your nine. If it loses to the I0, you
can check the spade distribution
before, if necessary, falling back on
lhe heart finesse. And with this lay·
out, when che spade queen
·on

- Miserable•
Binge•
Uoe coupons
Resist
Anchored

25 Jest

26 Egg-ohaped
27 C~fid'o toy
29 No man-island
. 30 Oiapatched
31 Energy units
37 Norma38 Before this

time

40 Actress
Burslyn
,
41 Phonograph
record
42 Safety agcy.
43 Architect
Chrietopher
45 Doneld46 Heraldic

bordOf
Water

47

plant

49 Drivers' org.·
50

ZsaZsa's
alater

52

Jackie's 2nd

53

Tic· - -loe

husband

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis

Campos

Celebri!y Cipher cryp1ogram1 are r:reated lrom QUOiilhoos by famous p!tOple pasl and prewnl
Eactllener 111 lhe c~ atand51or anolher. TOday's ct~.HJ A equa~ c

'T

J L

PYCWMU'G

J

GV

L

p y y 0 u

0

YOSSITUR

Yl

AOCRFG

P T K L.'

VWM

MLOM
LUVCRF

G V UI

ACSGTE.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Virtue is nol pho1ogenic and bad guys a re mor e
inleresling 10 play ." - Kirk Douolas.

_'.;.=:.:~.:.::::.::~':_:S:..@.::!~c~\-» tfS• .,.,

WOlD

O four
Rearrange ' letten of
ocromblod -do
low to

form four

the

besimple WOf'ds,

L UD P H E
0 GH U R

I' I I I· ..

.- 1---.1 ~'
S Hy KU

.

5

I I

.

I I

.=.

L--'--1.-1-..J......J ~

My husband had lost his
temper again. I told him that
ypu neYer solve anythong wtth
a cold-heart and - - . - - . .

•

•

•

•

•

•

Complete ohe chuckle quooed
by filling in the m1urn g words
vou develop from step No. 3 below.

REAL SANTA.

W11ERE ARE
'(OUR
•

SCRAM-t.m ANSWERS
Erotic • Merge • Imply· Notary· MIRROR

I like to recall an adage told to me when I was in col·
lege. It went, "To aYoid seeing a fool first break your
MIRROR"

I FRIDAY

Auto Parts &amp;

BUOOIT PRICE TRANSMIS·
SfONS, Uacid IAebloH~ All Types,
Accen Over 10,000 Tranamia 11- &amp; Clu1chos &amp;14-245-5877
Fibergla11 Truck Topper For Full
Size Short Bed, Good Condition
$175, 61•·245·9322leave Mea:

IIIQO·
New gaa lanki, , ton truck
WhHIS I radi•lort, D &amp; A Auto.
Rlplay, WV. 304-372-3g33 or 1·
-273-9329.

SERVICES

810

10 Stringed toy

19
21
22
23
24

IF '(OU'RE THE

Accessories

1989 Pontiac Sunblrd •dr, auro.

;3;7g~ne.

1990 Corllco, PIW, Tilt, Crulat,
· NAOA, $3,250 .00; our Price
12,350. Cook Motors. 1614)
A Groom Shop -Pa1 Grooming. 0103
Faalurlng Hydro Ba1h. Don
Shnlt. 373 Georges CrMk Rd. 1991 Chevrolet Caprice large
814-448-0231.
Wsgon 85,000 lilies, $6,300,
614-446.()924.
AKC CoN!. Puppiu, Beautiful
bles With Champion Bloodlines . 1992 Buick Rtaal V·S, Automatic,
Only $200 Will Hold For Christ- Alr, Cruise, At.t1FU Cauene,
mas With A Oepash, Call 6H · 102K Very Goad Condition,
441-1083.
S&amp;.500: &amp;1&lt;~-446-4225.

AKC Golden Retri•ver Puppies,
Roodv To Go 8~ Christmas. $250
F; Shars, Wormed, 614-379-

760

11 Englloh school
12 ::¥1o-Saxon

org.

9

West

~!ELPERS?

11115 300 TRX 4 Wheofer, Gr2 WO. Alking $2,800, 814·256~
8250, 114-3311-2190.

614·388·9323.

8 Exlll

L...l-..1..-L-..J.:~.L.....J

'{OU'RE Tf1E "'c"''-'

Motorcycles

111H Honda 300 EX. llanr EX·
ttlll EKc:eHtnt ConditiOn 614·

g Cegera'

Whlrlpooll
Like oxen

r·. .;. ., !,I~:,_:;Jif-.!.Y.,I~U-A,I.7-T!.,.l--11 G)

1 DON'T TI-!INK

$18,500. 304&lt;175-5332.

1987 Ford Tempo, 5apcf, high
mHeagt. good cond., $1,500.

1 Male Yorkshire Terrier AKC
Regittered, 7 Monttls Old, $250,

37 FMII

7

Indignation II

Pass
Pass

.PF.ANTTTS

1890 Chevy Cwd V-8, air, cruitt,
am·fm C:aa~eue, 3,800 mil11,

61.-446-2300.

Pets for 5ale

5 Mlde of (eulf.)

8

•

1IID2 Chevy Silvclrlldo, 4x4, 350 5
Speed. Excellent . Condition,
$12.000, 614-448-37&amp;4.

740

from

33 Puzzle
34 Actor Jolin 35 Borneo ope

35 Oration

South

1~D1 Geo Tracker 4x4, 97,006
moles, $•.200 OBO and 1818
Chevy Blazer 4•~. $2,500 OBO,
814-742·2574.

1886 300 EX Rodo Very Few
T,_, Only 6 Monlha Old, Phof'e:
614-448-2316.
.

5121,

AKC Pomeranian• puppies. 1
OOLFCLUBS:
UNd Sa11 $tiS U~; T/A 855 $400 11'1111 biKk. 1 f&amp;mal• black, &amp;hOts,
Aim lront 3·PW 1200; Tl Drivers 'Itt ch.Ciced, wllh pedigr. ., $350
1100 Up; Taylor Made, Bernart . _,, 614-e88-1085.
-$!0 Up, 114·2AS-5747.

....,_1542.
GOOO

BIG NATE

1888 GIIC Solari Cusmm. $4,950
614-448-4222

TRANSPORTATION

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In

NOI

I J:1£~00lJI...'( ta!

10851 Ford F-150 Slpd, 4a:4, tool

1806.

Rooms

NO! NO!

AMCXJ.Jia'l',

'"'"'""'·

.,

bo•. 8/C. $4,000. 304-713-~ .

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
cileporr, all utilities pakt, S270 per
month, $100 deposit, 614-QGI2-

Furnished

EN-01-1!

~-~~yl N£6lii'O(t'(!

To,a~a. Celica GTS \Csrr Good
Condidor1, $2,19~ 6U ..6 11961 ,

Opporrun11y.

450

•

lJII.t.I-IJI\M! NOPE ! ,

15181 Chevy Van 112 Ton, Looks

OLD ASH VILLAGE APART·
MENTS acctpllng applications.
HUD accepttcl. 2br. lnc;ome lim·
~~do opf'ly. Sower, Wl18f &amp; 1rllh
inclucted In rent. Man·Frl 10-2.
304·112·3716. Sixth &amp; GeOrge
51., New Haven. Equal Hou1lng

'

ISNF~j

\

. ..

Good, Runa Good, $1, 1gS; 1968

Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments S29!1~o. , 814·4•8·
00011.

882-3598.

•

100 lliea, Good
Bolt Main, $2,500, .
Muo1 Soli
Do To !lineal, l3,goo lnvoated,
814-388-8031.

located In Eureka On Stare Ro·
UIO 7, 1Wo Btclrooma, Ga1 Hea1,
Rent S325 per Monttl Deposit

mshed. $2501mo. • deposit. 30-4·

·THt EN()

.THE BORN LOSER

•555.

&gt;

By Phillip Alder

1987 White Chevy S· 10 With
Bedllner, -' Cylinder, 4 Speed,

•

Almond G.E. Waaher &amp; Drrer
Good Condllion $150 080; Almond Konmoro Gao Cook10~ And
Range Hood Good Condition
$125 OBO; Olivo Eltc1rlc Built-In
OVen Good Condition $75, OBO,
36" Range Hood $50, 814·•41·

A 7 6

The same
and different

SCHOOL?

1987 Ford Ranger, 4 clr.. 5 sp.,
$650,614-992-3509.

..1-1238.

tJI0765

3'Project
4 Clooe lrlend

Opening lead: • Q

up, runs

pi~

SO bulb Wolf 1Bnning bed, $2.000,
614-992-$53.

2588.

Upstairs apt on VIand St In Pl.
P,leasant. 2br, 1bath, unlur·

BARNEY

1D94 Ford F-150 411-' blackigold,
Eddie Bauer w/camper top, exc
oond
58,000 milll, has transferable
Ford ESP exlendad aarvice poli·
cy, total coverage wiSO daductible.l15,000. 304-882-2821.

10x12 H&amp;Ovy Built Wooden Build·
lng, 112 Caro1 Oiamoftd Ring Gold
Bond, 15 Bagge11 Oiamondo, Clll
Alia' 8:30 814 448 1854.

a

DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

:811 Nil.... 614-IIQl!-71188.

10n Dodge 31~1 ton

lnhlrenl •

underallndlng

conlldence

• 8 3 2
• AK
t A Q8

1888 Ford Ranger XLT Extended
Cab, 6 Cylinder, PS. PB, PW, Air,
AMIFM Cataette, $3,500, Excer.
lent Concllion. Na Rust, 614·-'411Sr
1619.

In New Hlven 1br furnished apr.
depo1il &amp; refere,cea. 304·682·

Vlllage of Middleport; also two

l.wel to11 for sale: $55,000 OBO, House on Redmond Ridge $300/

DOUBLE WIDE DfSPlAY SALE

540 . Miscellaneous

lnllrurnents

•

(614~55SEvenings

:;--=:-:-:-:------1
6 roOm house. 304·675-3030 or
Two 3 beclfOOm homes for sale in 304-875-3431 ."

1-~===::.::.::::.::::::__

Antiques

paid, $345 ~., month, 814·992·
2178.

RENTALS

Never liYed in, owner financing

530

Musical

or ex1raa Included, $150, 814·
992-55211.

utitltiea paid, no pets, 814·002·

5858.

570

Dixon guitar, Hko ,_

One lingle bedroom aparrmeRt
hcusi in upper Gallipolis, utilities

Aslinle AI $500 Down
And $150 Por Month
FroeOeivtrr
1·800·251 -5070

Kitchen. dining room, 2 bedroom,
Westwood Home Show Used &amp;
bath, INi~ K!41m. franl &amp; back fuRRepo
Sala As Little As $500.00
length porches, gas 1urnace, city
water , outbuilding, garage, 1/2 Down And $1 SO/Mo., Free Delivmile' East of Racine, 61-4-949· ery, 1-800-251·5070.
21 t8.
1:;~-------- 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
NEW CONSTRUCTION ... Beau- 5 Acre Tract $7,500 &amp; 15 Acrea
tHul Two Stor)' Colonial 414 Third Wirtl Water &amp; Septic $22,500.
Avenue, Gallipolis. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Owner Financing Available. lo112 Baths, LA &amp; FA Format Diring cated On Teens ~un Rd . 614·
Room. Oak Trim, Fireplace. Much 596-571)7,
More. Harne Elig ible For Tax
Abatement. $179,500 304· 273·

14X80 2 Bedroom. 2 Baths
MUST SELL Owner FinancinQ
Avdable304-7311S-7295.

V.,t

no an....

K4
4

a K Q J to

country

51

1 Cry of pain
2 Worda of

32 Keepaway

South

720 ll'ucks for Sale

needs some work, runt good,
$8110, 304-773-5305.

9 Miles From Proctoville, 3,400 1

Sale

Pomertll',

Remlng10n 1100 Spec'·!
.. Fl·"
.,.,. 12
Gauge Sami·Auto, 21•
Rib
Barrel, Ex&lt;OIIont Condl1ionl $400,
Caii61H56-8851 Afllr 7:00P.M.
In Nat At Home. Leave A Measage.

Oxygen and acenolene
gauges,· holt and Iorch,
614.Q48·2560, leave meu•ae

Now Taking ApplicatiO(lt- 35

Only • ~ H -

,

bedroom- in

Nordic Track 505 S&lt;488 New
$300; Bollinger Trim Rldor N9.00
New$35, 61+44H599.

ThrH Jack Russell terrier puppita, $250 each; two me~ miniature Cottle (Shtllitt) pupplet,
$125ooch; 814-742-2050.

722-7148or· ~·722·71.0.
SINGLE paRENT PROGRAM
101
Special Financing Availoblo, ~-

uxeo

SCOTTOWN, OHIO.

11112·21122.

a K
• 9 4 3 2

Upton UMd Cars At . 82-3 Milts
South of leon. WV. Flnancll'lg
a..eaHc..30o4--458-1oeG.

1U8 For~ Aero•tar Cargo vin,
loti ol rutt, • cylinder 5 IPHd,

- &amp; 8
1 C
-736-7295.
ooms
a1h. n rown City,
New Carpet, New Furence,
The Entll'tllnerH• Arrived!
$22,000, 614·256-1270.
3br, 2 bail, correa'with
27"TV, hisih live VCR, IUrround
BUY HOMES AS LOW AS
$4,000 1 ·5 Bdrm., Local Gov't. &amp; •
sound speakers.
Bank ~epo's Call 1·800: 522·
lt48&amp;'Down
2730. X 1709.
0noe In ~t=-. Oeailll
COUNTRY HOME
ON IACRES,

'

c-.

Modern 1 Bedroom Aparrment.
81 ..~0390.
'

moving-Make 2 paymema.
move in assume lo•n no pay·
mtnt till' February 1998. 1-304-

5R

for

CVA black powder gun, so call·
ber, good condition, $125, 614·

1 ...011&lt;1
2 bodloom -1mln11. fur·
nl
k ...... a•• unfumiahod, aocuri~
•u'"' '"'
••
deposit requlred, -no pets, 814·
.

Ron Wlilor Pupa For Chria1maa,
Shots, Wormed, Talis DoCked,
Dew Claws Removed, Vat
$100, 114-2.5-5823.

304-675-1585 •hw 5pm.

OwtMf

304-755-5885.

304-67 5- 5010 a""
1 5pm. ·

Homes

Colt AR15 compe11Uon H· Oor,
plus 1,000 rounds of ammo, eX1ra
clipt, aho1 very llttJe, SBOO firm.

Q J 10 8 6

9 7 6 5

Hant..-, e.g.

21 Liberty
25 Unhltppy
28 Self·

East

'
4

41-ophU'I

......,.

11- de Franco
20 Chemical aulflx

• 8 53 2

Need A C1r, No Credit? Bad
Credll? S.nkruptcy? We Can
Hlipl Rau1abllah Crodlt, Muat
Illite $150 Week, Takll Home 10
To 20Y. DDwn 12 Mon1hl &amp;
12.000 Miloa, W.rrrntr AvaHiblo,
Thla Ia Bank Flnonci"'l, 61 4-446·
8172, Or614·3114-6042.

$150 Call 814·25fH972 Evening

OAKWOOD HOMES. NJTRO

S2S,OOO. 1-800-336 •6331 or aQ.4.
675-3)24 ·
:
3br nome, 1 acre lot, located in '
Gallipolis Ferry acrou hom a•
Lumber. Price reduced , ·nice.

Mobile

Goods

Apartments

992-2218.

e7~., 304&lt;17~7870.

Sporting

Or 614-446-8fln Oeya

3 Bedroom house on Jelfaraon
Ave. in Pt. Pleasant, asking

Three bedroom haute tn Syra cuae, basement, garage, new
windows, deck and all remodeled
Inside, 614·7-'2·1345, 8t4· 992·
6116.

814-llll2-5038.

Hu1ky pupt, 7wks old, 4-blue
•rod, t·dork oyod. $50u. 304·

1985 Dodge Wf 50 • WD,
Shonbad, 318, 4 Speed, Goad
Tlr••· Oepandabltt, $3,800, 814-•172. 114-256-1618.•

Free Delivery &amp; Sewp

2940.

Wheelchair Rehab Fiuing Specialist Wittl Atleaat 1 Year Exper~ ­
enca. Salary Plus Commission.
Retirement Plan &amp; Health In·
surance Benefits. All Repl iea
Stricdy Canlldenlial. Send Information To: Bowman"s Homecare,
70 Pine Street, Galltpolis, OH
45631 . Ann : lewie.

180

Callt-to0-691-6n7.
ONLY $488 DOWN
ON SELECTIVE SINGLE WIDES

310

ofoc•~ · - 304-173-64 711.

2

Babysitrer Needed In Our Home, , . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Beginning In Early January, 4
Days Per Week. From B ·3, For 2
Small Children, References Re·
quired, Non-Smoker Requ ired ,
614-441-'1269.

ed Other Benefits Included, 614-

1Wo bedroom tralor In Middlepon,

Mo., 1·800-2St·507'0,

Professional

Livingston's basement water·
proofi ng, all basement repairs
dona, free estimates, life rime
guarantee. 10y·r s on job experi·

Scf• &amp; chair. Plano, needa
runtd, bfondl color. Double oven

_ _ _....:.;__:;_;;:::.;._;;_ _ .1 1 &amp; 2bedroom furnished apart·
Firat Time Buyera E-Z Fln~~ncN\g mentt, Mason area. Ptrfttt for
2 Of 3 Bedrooms, Around S200I rtll- 304-773-51811.

Money to Loan

Bab)'SIII&amp;r Needed For 2 Children
Fnday Evening Monday Uornmg
In Hannan Trat:e School Area,
Rofarences A Mustl 614· 256·

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dlli&gt;orL 814-8112-2178.

1-1100·251·5070

NE~D A LOAN? Mongage
-Consolidation Applr The
Way -By Phone. Friendly
614·388-9635.

230

flofrlgere1Dr, - · ()&lt;ytr, Color
T.V., VCR 150 Each e 1•·258·
1238.
'

FIRST nME BUYERS

On State ROute 7, Next To Bob
Evans Restaurant, (Gallipolis).

Part-Time Housekeeping Position

I200Jmo. + uijliMo. $50/depoalt
81._..1113Chhlr Spm.

-E.-

46 Buzzing lnMCt

ll8naiiY
-l:iigland

14 Planetl' pallia
characlar
1511ang
54 P u =
16 Actras
,. 55 Pr
011111 56 Bib !col nd
17 Poetic lime
57 Evil

a A Q ~ tO
. • 7 5
• 9 3 2

A NH&lt;f A Car? No C rodl1, Bad
Crodl1 Bankru~1Cy, WI Can Hot~
RaEstlbllsh, Credit, Mull u ·akl
$150 Weekly Tokl Homo, Down
Payments At Low Aa 108, To
Quallly For TN a Bank Financing,
814-441-11807.

ACROSS

. ASTRO·GRAPH

Home
Improvements

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

BASEMENT
. WATERPROOFING
Uncondilional Utelfme guarantee.
local references furnished El·
tablished 1975. Call (614) 46 _
0870 Or 1·800·287-0578. Rogen
Waoorprooling,

4

I

; Sacurday. Dec. 20, 1997
·Your probabilities for success in
your career look promisin~ for che
year ahead.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2J) This can be a successful day (or
you i(you don 't do things in a piecemeal fashion. Organize your effort•
so 1hut your forces arcn·t spread too
thin. Get a jump on life by under·
&lt;tanding the innucnces thai will govorn you in lhc year ahead. Send for
your Aslro-Graph predictions by
mailing $2 co Astro·Graph, c/o this
.1cwspapcr. P.O. Box 175ij, Murray
Hill Slation. Now York, NY 10156.
Be sure to slate your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan . 19)

Do not s:1y anything ahoul a friend . don 't bring your troubles home and
wdny you wouldn't say lo his or her ·lake them out on innocent family
rae!.' . Any unkind comments malic ITICIJlbCrs.
wi 11 he rcpcmcd to Ihe 1arge1 of your
CANGER (June 21-July 22)
remarks.
Using douhle scaridards could cO&gt;st
AQUARlliS (Jan. 20-Feh. I~~ you respecc of associaces today. Do
Think twice 10day before giving no.tlorhid someone to dt! romething
friends certain · cips you feel could and then do it yourself!
,make or save them money. Your
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today, if
in formation may he faulty.
you ' rc with a companion who is nevPISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) The er the lim one to grab for the check.
opinions of others have signilicancc, do no1 feel compelled to do so your·
but so do your own views as well. Do self. 11 is your turn to be trcaled .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) As
not sacrifice your bener judgment Ia
hard as companions will try today.
please companions. .
ARIES (March I 1-April 19) Co- you mighc be a very diflicuh person
workers mighc avoid you Coday if you t9 please. If your friends lose pa1icnce
arc unduly critical of them. Guard wilh you, IIley might give up.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your
against making comments 1ha1 make
salesmanship might be a bit overthem feel inferior or unapprccialed.
J'AURUS (April 20-May 20) whelming today if you're inclincclto
Where major upenditures m con· belabor your pitch. Make your pre·
cerned today, you'll have a prelly sentac~n simple and concise.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . . 22)'
good grip on things; it's lhe small
stuff thai could wreak hav()( on your !fc:hedule your activities lhoughcfully today, or lhey mighltum out to be
budget.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You time and money·wasted. Try to estabmight have to deal wilh a series of lish priorities chat give you value
'
fruscrations at the office today. Just received.

DECEMBER19I

.

'

�..
•

'

OPEl
MOI.·FIL9·

SAtN
AF111CIIU
SUI. 1·5

.
Along the River

REBATES UP TO $2500*
FINANCING AS LOW AS 2.9% APR*

ON NEW.CHEVY

Inside

Cegacgof
f!hristmas

SULI·S

THE 4TH LARGEST USED
CAR LOT IN THE U.S.A.

A FEW GOOD
NEW CAR PEOPLE

B est I nventory
Best Hours (5 day work week, 1 week olf every 2 months)

will be hired...
.
. . .
West Vtrgtma's Largest Chevrolet and Oldsmobile

Best Advertisement
Best Commissions (Average $40,000 per year)
Best Complete Benefit Package
We need 8 of the BEST car Salespeople who are willing to
work and be handsomely rewarded and still have time olf to
spend as they please.
ASK FOR
KENNY WALKER or WES BEALS

Dealer will be hiring a few professional sales
people. Any previous sales experience will be
helpful but will not be essential to .obtain a position.
C&amp;O Motors. New Car Showroom
ASK FOR STEVE NICHOLS .

NEW 98 510 EXTENDED CAB
LS PACKAGE. AIR, ALUM.
WHEELS &amp; MORE

~

..,1'.,11
.. .,.5

~-~AIR. . 97 S-11 4x4
~.-.

$13,399

Pl'lce~nctudesAit~rtrr to 0eo1er . ' : '

SlEERIIIG &amp; IIOAEII

•

i

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

• Price Includes Reblde to !Ieider

I

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gennett llewa Service
.
WASHINGTON - Republican candidates Tom
Sharpe and Mike Azinger don't mind being called
underdogs in their bids to win the GOP nomination. in
Ohio's 6th Congressional District.
The candidates say their unknown status means they
must run barder and smarter campaigns to oompete wilh
former R~p. Frank Cremeans and Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister in the May 5 primary. The GOP nominee will face
Democratic incumbent Rep, Ted Strickland in November.
"I'm running against a host of career politicians and
millionaires, and some may say that makes me an underdog," Sharpe said in a recent radio ad designed to boosl

$9999

..

AHI,U.\'L~l, GEO TRACKER 4X4

AIR, IJ.&amp;, AM!f'M RADIO,
CHROME GRILLE AND
MOREll

STIERING ANIIIIOAEI
t.;.

.

.

&lt;

.. SJ

..
LOW

·News Watch
Gallipolis Ferry man
·shot to death In bar

.

. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.-

USED tRUCKS •

USED TRUCKS

:A: Gallipolis Ferry, man was shol

•

to· death in an Apple .Grove bar
early Saturday morning, accord'ing to Mason County Sheriff Troy
. "Shorty" Huffman.
· Ronald Dale Plumley, 25, was
'pronounced dead on arrival al
'Pleasant Valley Hospital follow•
ing the 12:55 a.m. shoaling.
Plumley was shot one lime .in the
chest with a large caliber handgun
J11he Dallas Bar, Apple Grove.
· · Warrants were obtained Saturday morning for Allen Dwaine
Waugh of Old ~iver Road, Glenwood; incoiineclfciil- wlil;-the
shooting, Huffman said.

Waste dlatrlct awards
bid for construction.

'

I
95 CIIIY. 414 SILVIUDO

~=AlA, 'H ENG., P/WINOOWS,

WASUO:~Ailf!Dm

.. -'11,577

BY VIIIT
NEW SPORT UTiliTY lOT

MS..UlQW
2 DOOR, 5 SPEED, AIR, PtWtNDOWS PILOCKS

I'

REAL St-IARP

WAS S13,500 .. ........................-

'

11,444

'.- j

t~-...95011VYTMIII

4PX&gt;IIWI, N2D0000R, AUTO, AIR, 350 ES~

WS,l.OADED EXTRA

WAS 12?,100............... - .... -

5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS '
2 ,SUBURBANS 16 S-1 0 BLAZERS
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1 BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO

M IRZU IIORO 414

5 SPEED, AIR, P/WINDOWS,

~~;.:'~ "":'··~ -*14,990

P.

*25;330

I

o

WEU.STON- McCarty Construction of ·Jackson has been
awarded lhe bid to erect a recycling
center owned and operated by the
Gallia·Jackson·Meigs-Vinton Solid
Waste Management District.
• "We would like to begin conStruction as soon as possible, perhaps by early- to mid-January,
and be operational by June," said
Scott Copley, the district's public
relations coordinator.
· • The district has been preparing
~t-up designs for equipment and
material flow ''for lhe most efficient
operation possible," Copley said.
Discussions surrounding a
recycling center to operated by
the district began more than a
year ago when heavy nuctuation
in lhe markets for recyclable
material made it difficult for privately-owned recycling open·
tions lo remain stable.
·
In 1995, the demand for many
recyclable materials, especially
paper, hit . record highs, Copley
explained. Bul by 1996, the markets took a turn, reaching severo
lows. The markets have slowly
reached a moderate level throughout this year, he added.
In addition to district funding
for the operation, the recycling
center will also receive money
from the "Recycle, Ohio!" 1998
grant package.

Good Morning
Glbue•·JI.adhw

Today'•
18 Sections • lll Pages

.a OUIS suourm

7 PI\SIENGER, AUTO., DUAL AIR LEATHER

PISEAT, PIWINOOWS, P/LOCKS Lo"""'D o'N,.
'
L.
WAII12,100........ ...
-

83,000 MILES

s ........ '

10,188

95 CIR TIIGI 414

4 DOOR, AUTO., AIR , V·tl ENG ., P/SE"t
P/WINDOWS, PI'LOCKS, ALUM. WHEELS,
I

~~ ...................-*24,660

Calendars

C3&amp;5

Cla11lfteds

OJ.7

Comics
Editorials
Alon• lbe River
Obituaries

Insert
A4
Cl
A6

Soorts

B1·8

0 1997 Ohio V1llcy Publishing Co.

OPEl
MOIL-FRI.
SAT. 9-6

results

new film
~

..

Entet1alnm.nt

I

Details on
pageA2

Sunny Sunday

onPqeCI•

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ttdittt

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • December 21, 1997

his name recognition. "Well, thai's fine with me.
"You see, if you're an unemployed worker, an overtaxed family or an unborn child, you are lhe underdog in
Washington, D.C.," said the Washington Slate Commu·
nity College English professor.
Azinger, whose father, Tom Azinger, is a Republican
state legislator from Wood County in West Virginia, said
he plans to overcome his underdog status with an energetic door-lo-door campaign.
"I'm going directly to the people, door·to-door, with
hand-written letters penned by volunteers," said
Azinger, a Marietta insurance agent. "We're aggressive,
we're out there. We're lbe dark horse. That's the way we
like it."
Sharpe believes GOP voters will see that his conser·

Cremeans was attacked by both Sharpe, who

r:~:.:~m£2E~:~i=~~~::.':~~~

A member of the oonservative Class of 1994
vative values will give him the best chance to
thai helped the GOP take over the House of
Representatives, Cremeans predicted he will
beat Strickland.
"I'm running on a platform of low taxes,
win again, and has lined up a high-powered
respect for the unborn, a citizen's righllo bear
campaign director in Ralph Reed, the former
arms, and against job-killing. trade agreehead of the Christian Coalition.
ments," said Sharpe. "I think 1 speak the ian·
All of the Republicans predicted they can
guage of the people in southern Ohio."
beal Strickland, calling him too liberal for
Going after one of the campaign front·runMike Azlnger
the voters.
ners, Sharpe said Hollister is just another career politiStrickland said his record will show he is a fighter for
cian who is too liberal for southern Ohio. Hollister, the his district's interests.
former mayor of Marietla, is the only pro-choice Repub·
''When the rubber hits the road, I wanllo see thai the
lican in the race.
people of southern Ohio get their fair share of the (fedHollister's campaign manager, Chris Baldwin, said eral) pie in areas like transportation, health care, and
the little·known Sharpe isn't having much impact on the infrastructure," Strickland said. "I don't care what the
campaign at this point. Baldwin said Hollister is a com· rhetoric is, that's whall stand for."

Back to voters?
Rio Grande may again seek income tax
increase for purchase of fire equip~ent

'97 sees advances
.
in Meigs highway,
bridge projects
.

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmea·Sentlnel Staff
MARIETTA- As 1997 comes to a close, the Ohio
By KEVIN KELLY
Department of Transportation is keeping tabs on several
Tlmii·Sentlnel Staff
highway projects affecting Meigs County: the Pomeroy-,
RIO GRANDE - Defeated by
Mason Bridge replacement project, the Ravenswood·
35 votes last month, a proposed
Connecto.r and the Alhens·to-Darwin highway.
·
increase in Rio Grande's inoome
No decision has been been made concerning lhe localax to pay for fire equipment may
tion of a proposed replacement· for the aging Pomeroy·
go back to the voters in lhe May 5
Mason Bridge.
primary.
"To this point, Ihere is overwhelming suppon for the
· Mayor Donald Wothe made the
existing location, although the consulting firm, Sverdrup.
suggestion to village council at
Associa(es Inc., Columbus, is also studying a oorridor in
this month's meeting to consider
lhe Kerrs Run area where U.S. 33 meels the Ohio River,"
p11tting the ,.issue . on...t~ ~QI
said Nancy Pedigo, OOOT District 10 spokeswoman.
aaain, possibly with some modifi·
Because of the supporl for the existing location, Svercations, such as a reduced duration
drup has begun to analyze the structural capacity of the
of the increase.
existing river piers in order to save substantial oosl, lime
"I wasn't really discouraged
and impact to the river, she said.
about the outcome," Wothe said of
In addition, they and District 10 will be investigating
the issue's 84·49 loss on Nov. 4. ·
. the use of a ferry service as an alternative for crossing
"Maybe we need another open
the river during construction. The Illinois Department of
house to explain the need, or perTransportation is supplying Sverdrup with information
haps we should downsize the
on a ferry service which they established for a similar
length of the increase. I threw it
project
out lo council for them lo start
!. Jhe $25 million replacement for the existing bridge,
thinking aboul it," he said.
bililt in 1928, is expected lobe completed in 2004.
The issue called for a one-third
A November, 1996, inspection report on lhe bridge
of I percent increase in the existing
giv~s il a general appraisal rating of poor. Although
1 percent inoome lax, to lasl for five
ODOT says the bridge is still safe for travel, the deck,
years. If passed, the increase would
superstructure and su~structure are beginning lo deteriohave financed fire equipment,
rate. The bridge also fails to meet current standards for
apparatus and supplies - specifiwidth. II is only 20.feel wide and carries two lanes of
cally, a new pumper truck for the
AS RIO GRANDE OFFICIALS consider placing an lncresee In the village Income tax
traffic with \ no shoulders. Curren I standards specify a
Rio Grande Volunteer Fire Depart· beck on the ballot next year, the village voluntHr lira department continues looking at
minimum roadway of 12 feet per lane with shoulder
ment, which hopes to gradually rapleclng aging vehicles In Ita fleet. Finley Fire Equipment Co. demonat(ated a new
widths
from two to 12 feel.
replace aging vehicles in its fleet. pumper truck lor Rio Grande and' VInton firelighter• 1111 Wftk to learn atlout what new
Ravenswood Connector
The village opted for the vehlclla offer, above. Faeturae of the pumper's Interior are examined In Inset by VInton·
.
ODOT
is
currently awaiting Federal Highway
increase because purchasing a new VFD Aealatant Chief Mark lo!,ohr, lett, and Rio Grande llrallghler Delbert Russ.
Administration comments on its draft environmental
pumper with loans would have
the RGVFD, a 1990 Ford,;was paid off by1he village last year.
document concerning the Ravenswood Connector propushed Rio Grande farther inlo debt lhan il is allowed by law.
In the interim, Rio Grande, like other area departments, is
ject which will connect U.S. 33 to the William Ritchie
Wolhe explained.
looking to buy newer vehicles and is searching for funding
.Bridge al Ravenswood, W.Va., and 1-77.
Prior to Ihe election, the department hosled an open house to options. Last week, a new pumper was demonstrated for both Rio
ODOT will address those comments, the last step
allow the public to inspecl the vehicles, many of them 1960s Grande and Vinton volunteers by an area fire equipment firm.
before lhe final version of the environmental document
models, and learn about other needs Ihat would enhance the
"A lol of departments have trucks that arc 10 lo 15 years'old, but
is sen I back lo federal highway officials for review, prior
department's firefighting ability.
they're passing levies and replacing those vehicles," Wothc said.
to a public hearing on the proposed project, said Pedigo.
The RGVFD serves the village, most of Raccoon Township
Wothe believes the village may have to push its case in other
As of yel, no date has been set for the public hearing, she
and all of Perry Township, and answers calls to a section of ways 10 convince voters that paying for fire equipment upgrades
added.
Springfield Township. Wilhin the village, the department is also. is necessary, perhaps by showing how current revenue gene rat·
"We had anticipated that Federal Highways would
responsible for protection of buildings on the University of Rio ed by the income tax is spent.
respond by Thanksgiving," said Pedigo. "The reason
Grande campus.
"We don 'I gel anything off property taxes, jusl the income
they have been slow is because Ihey had to review sevThe department previously cited difficulties in maintaining its tax," the mayor explained. "I would like for people to'sec what
eral other DislrictlO plans for projects that are to be sold
fleel- mostly in locating replacement paris- although Wothe we do with that I percent. They'd be shocked.
righl away .... a widening project on state Route 821 in
feels Chief Bob Brandeberry and the volunteers have done a good
".We're just looking at options again," Wo!he added. "We
Washington County and several emergency slip repair
job in keeping the neet 6n the road. The most recent addition to may need a town meeting to get some input from people."
projects around the district.•
"Remember that the issue ofwhelher or not we should
be required to oomplele an environmental assess,ment, or
a more cumbersome environmental impact statement, is
.
the
height
of
.the
Allied
air
assault
on
Ger·
still
on the table," she said.
Viar
describes
his
memories
as
.
'fain!
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
many.
The
Ravenswood Connector project has been
and far, yel very dear" ... and perfeclly
Tlme•Senllnel Staff
Bahr
said
he
and
his
crew
walked
away
approved
for funding through the study and design phas·
LONG BOTTOM - Christmas is a clear about a Meigs County .man of
from
the
plane
wreckage
both
limes,
es
with
construction
depending on additional funds
·
'
time for renecling and this holiday season "uncommon courage."
1
A few weeks ago Viar made contact bruised and shaken, bul without serious becoming available.
1he thoughts of one Tennessee man has
.
Athens-Darwin
with
Bahr who is now considering a trip lo injury.
been on World War II when he was a gunHe
said
that
!he
first
crash
landing
came
Work
has
begun
in Athens County for !he beginning
ner on a B-24 Liberator bomber piloted by Tennessee for a reunion, ccme spring.
during
the
crew's
first
radar
controlled
of
design
work
to
relocate
U.S. 33 between Athens and
It was 53 years ago !his month that Bahr
a Meigs County man. .
"lone
wolf'
bombing
mission
in
heavy
Darwin in Meigs County.
II has been more than a half·century and his crew crash-landed and totaled two
Soil boring by ODOT and ils consultant, Sverdrup
since S. W. Viar of Dyersburg, Tenn. and B-24s while nying on bombing missions cloud cover. Sixty planes were coming in
from
different
directions
and
scheduled
10
Associates
Inc., Columbus, is starling at the Athens end
with
the
15th
Air
Force
based
in
llaly.
Victor Bahr of Long Boltom were together
merge
over
lhe
target.
but
were
instructed
of
the
project,
acoording 10 Doug Briggs, a District 10
Both
incidents
occurred
in
December,
on bombing missions over Germany.
to
"lurn
back
if
the
cloud
cover
lifted,"
projects
engineer
in charge of the job. Field work will
But both Viar and Bahr remember them 1944 - the first in early December, the
Continued
on paga A2
second the day after Christmas - during
Continued on page AB
well.

WW li veteran recalls act of 'uncommon courage'

By JENNIFER aiCHTER
Tlme•Senllnel Staff ·
.
· ·GALLIPOLIS- Washington Elementary students tn
grades fourlh, fifth and sixth understand the true mean·
ing of Christmas - giving m those less fortunate than
themselves. To finish up thm ~elebratlon of lhe hohday
seasonal school, the students m these grades rose $806
to give to the Gallia County Children's Home,
·Each year the students in lhe school have a small gift
exchange between another student bul this year, lhese
students opted to give their money away to lhe 14 st\1·
·dents living in the Children's Home. A smilll presentation look place following a caroling assembly on Friday.

I

.

~;:~'::~~~t~~~~~::~~~tr~~.p~~~·s~~:~

.

Washington Eiementary students celebrate t~e gift of giving

•

....

~~.·

Vol. 32, No.
,_ 45

Underdo_gs.· pre.d.ict they· can w·in
in 6th District congressional race

1998CHm 5·10~
u
LOW

'Titanic'

oo

HI!' 40s
Low: 20s

.,

ASK FOR DAVE CARNELL OR DAVID SETSER

~PANEl,
aliJriiu'el•w:a.,
.....,lfCAI.•pm
HOAS!·POW!fltlt

college B·ball

tmts

WaiT VlfiQINIA'I LAIIQaiT
W
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TOYOTA DOUIIIHIPIII
HI VIrginia a #1 ToyOfli Dealership. We are seeking 10 hire
..._ reprasentativea willing to leam the Import' eutomot1ve
business, but all perwona Interested will be conaklered. A nrat
year aales person has the opportunity to make $50 ooo ....... per
yea~
.
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IIISTYI.B) FRONT GIUU.&amp;

Cameron's

• Pege 81 •
'

LOVE
TOYOTA

·"

Saturday's

•

• Featur.d an page C1

3.9%, 60 Month Financing on all New Chevrolet Can with approved .credit.

$1

Deanna Cook, executive director of the Child~en's
Home, accepted the check from student rcpresentahves.
Cook said, "This is very overwhelming for me. This will
go a long way to make Christmas great for these chil·
dren."

The holiday assembly entertained nol only guests but
students. Fourlh graders sang several songs including
Sanla Claus i• Coming to Town, Up On the Housetop, A
Holly Jolly Christmas, Frosty the Snowman, Must Be
Santa, and many more- The students also encouraged
those visiting Ihe school to sing along to Jingle Bells. To
end ihe program, the students sang We Wish You A

'

"

Merry Chnslmas. I
The child ren were also entertained by a reading of
Twas' The Night Defore Christmas by Roger Jerome, a
newly announced artist visiting the school.
Jerome will slarl a four week theatre residency when
E:onllnued on page AS
4
DEANNA COOK from the Gallla Cmmty Chlldrl'n·s Homf' 1s prC'Sf'I'IC'd a ctwck tor $806 hom
studenl rf'pn~.;,pnt.JIIvt•s Joann11 lnckl1;1rf. Hnlw!l
Doc.s. ;-.nd Cl111~ [v~J!lS Pnrlf:lp&lt;11 J1m Popr .1bo

p;ut1upated m the check prescnt.1tion.

•

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