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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
defeat Ala.
State

Super Lotto:

3-8-1 G-18-28-41
Kicker:
4-8-5-1-5-9
Pick 3:
3-3-6
Pick 4:

Sports on Page 5

Cloudy tonlaht, lows In
the alngla dlglt1. Friday,
partly cloudy. Hlgha
around 20•

1-2-1-2

•
Vol./47, NO. 181

011118. Ohio v•-.y Pubt'-hlntl Company

2 SectloM, 11 P-utie, 35 cenl8
AGlnr.tt Co. tle•IP'I*'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 19, 1996

FEC reports Cremeans Holiday tradition continue
camp ~pent $1.7 mill.i on I JJi~ \
By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett Newa Service

.FREE*
PRODUa
DEMON~

STRATIONS
'

DAILY

I

'

Res

COMESE
.THE

DIFFERENCE!.

p~

in 1994. 1be center has no similar
data for the 1996 elections.
"Cremeans lost because he was a
poor campaigner and there· was a
weak pro-Democratic momentum in
the campaign," said Alfred Tuchfar- •
ber, director of the lnstitu~ for Poli· ·
cy Research at the University of
Cincinnati.
In the 18th Congressional District,
incumbent Republican Rep. Bob Ney
raised more than $860,000 during the
two-year election cycle that began in
January 1995 to defeat Robert Bureh,
a Democrat, whn raised $228;000.
Ney 's campaign is debt-free and
his treasury has $31 ,443. Burch's
post-election campaign finance
reports weren 't on file at the FEC.
In nearby West Virginia, Rep.
Alan Mollohan, who was unchal·
lenged, spent $204,000 on his reelection.

Lega·l aid hails jury award
as renters' rights victory

Ftxlory. .

SUPERIOR.
QUALITY AND
NOW LOWEST

I

WASHINGTON- Money doesn't always play a central role in deter·
mining the winner of a congression·
al campaign.
· In Ohio's 6th Congressional District, former Republican Rep. Frank
Cremeans ouispent Ted Strickland. a
Democrat, by more than $1 milli~n
. dollars, but Cremeans lost.
In his defeat, Cremeans becomes
an anomaly in American polit!cs.
A preliminary analysis of the
November elections by the Center for
Responsive Politics concludes that
only 10 percent of candidates who
spent more than their opponents lost
at the polls. Also, more than 90 percent of incumbents win re-election.
according to the center, a nonpartisan
group that studies the now of money
in 'elections and legislative actions.

Rep .-elect Strickland, who will be
swom in Jan. 7, is the fanner incumbent who was defeated by Cremeans
in the 1994 elections.
ln .the campaign just ended, Cre- ·
means spent nearly $1.7 million,
compared to Strickland's nearly
$675,000, according to post-election ·
repons filed at the Federal l!lection
Commission. '
As of Dec. 2. Cremeans had
$83,562 in his treasury and a debt of
$107,818 .
. Strickland had a war chest of
$14,020 and a debt of $2,878 as of
Dec. 5.
Cremeans spent three times more
than what the average House winner
spent in 1994, which was $516,126.
Cremeans also outspent the average
House incumbent - who spent
$945,608 - in 1994. On average,
defeated .candidate~ spent $238,715

••

1-10

Attorneys with Southeastern Ohio
Legal Services are hailing a recent
Meigs County Court case as a victo'
ry for renter$' rights.
On Dec. 3, a· Meigs County Court
jury returned a verdict awarding a
/t&amp;ll·nif'1f~SI50 In raVoi"of'Debora
' Henry and' against Ron and Shirley
Miller.
Hen~ was a tenant of the Millers'
in a trailer located at 1937 Front St.,_
· Racine.
1be lawsuit, filed April 10, by
SEOLS, sought. damages for lack of
adequate heat in the trailer during the
winter and for the Millers turning
water off to the trailer several times
to pressure Henry to move.
She received $780 in compensatorY damages and $780 in punitive
da~ages .
.
We are v~ry pleased wtth the

jury's verdict and we thank them for'
their hard work, attention and
patience," said Thomas R. McGuire,
the attorney who represented Henry
at the trial.
, "By a~arding punitive damages.
the jury sent a ·me,fagli 'to ~lt'area
landlords.that they should not use self
help means to pressure their tenants
to move," he added.
_ Ohio law prohibit• a landlord
from lloing anything to recover pos·
session of residential premises other
than filing an eviction lawsuit and
getting a court order granting them
possession of the premises .
A landlord cannot tenninate utilities, change locks or threaten tenants,
McGuire said.
The jury also rejected allegations
made by the Millers that Henry had
caused damage to the trailer.

These members of the Middleport Church of Christ will conti!Jue a long holiday tradition Sunday with the praaentl!tlon of the church:s annual Christmas cantata. The 1997 holiday mu1lcal
· J)llstntatlon, "Such A CelebraJion," will begin at7 p.m. at church, located on the corne.r of Fifth
Avenue and Meln Street, accprding to Pastor AI Hartson. The public is Invited to attend. (Sentinel photo by Tom Huntar)
·
·
·

FBI assesses damage after arresting
veteran agent on espionage charges

"We are pleased that the jury
rejected these claims," McGuire said.
"It is important for other landlords to
WASHINGTON (AP) - Aided
know that when they violate the ten· by a cooperating former Russian
ant's legal rights, they can not make official, the FBI is assessing the damup claims against their tenants•and .age now that one of its own veteran
· wjil tlfem, irr~oun. ; · ,.c
.
. - her-bec:on!e lhe·mmtl:I;S:&lt;&gt;IIl"
"the jury follilcl-that the Millers · ' cia! cl\arged in less than three years
failed to adequately repair the fumace · with selling secrets to the Russians.
and thus failed to provide the means
Earl E. Pitts. 43, an FBI supervi·
to have adequate heat," he continued. . sor and · fonner counterintelligence
"The Millers tried to blame the poor officer, was charged Wednesday with
heat on the tenant and asked the jury selling secrets to the Soviet Union
to award them over $2,800 for and Russia during 1987-1992 for
repairs, including a new furnace. The more than $224,000. He could face
jury rejected these claims and award· life in prison .
Pitts' arrest followed a 16-month
ed the Millers only $1 for a table they
loaned to the tenant and did not get · undercover investigation triggered
back."
·
by a former Russian official at the
·SEOLS, serving Athens, Gallia. United Nations who joined FBI
·Meigs and Vinton counties, provides agents in posing as phony Russian
legal representation to people who spies tryirig to get Pitts to do more
cannot afford private representation. spymg.

The undercover probe, whi ch cost
Nor arc a0 y death~ Dlamcd on formore than $1 million. hit a serious. mcrCIAstationchiefHarotd Nicholtcmporary snag on its third day son, who pleaded innocent last month
unwittingly caused by the . honesty to sell in~ the. identities of ,new CIA
·Dnd-J"ltriotiom of·Pim' cwife;-Mary, · qgenl~ ,lllcc."· 1~if."'m\e'1tusslans
who turned in her own husband.
allegedly. paid Nicbofson more than ·
Now "we arc conducting ... a $180,000.
· ·
dam_agc assessment," FBI Direc tor
At a court hearing Wednesday in
LoutS Frech told a news conference. Alexandria, Va., Pitts was charged
But so far, Frech added, "I certainly 'will! attempted espionage and conwould not compare h~~ with Aldrich spiracy to commit espionage. He also
Ames m any degree.
.
was charged with a lesser espionage
In 1994, Ames, a CIA officer, count and with conveying governpleaded guilty to spying that Has been mcnt property, each of which carries
blamed for the deaths of 10 Western a maximum 10-ycar penalty. A bail
agents . He was paid more than $2.7 hearing was set for Friday.
million by Moscow.
.
These recent cases have promptNo deaths arc blamed on Pitts ed Frech to observe that the demise ·
only the compromise of data about of the Soviet. Union in 1991 has not
FBI counterspy cl'forts against produced any decrease in Russian
Moscow.
spying here.

Uncooperative loca·l governments facing wrath of state .auditor

•
•

.

HAMILTON (AP) -1be state auditor says he 's tired of some local governments refusing to cooperate with auditors. And 'he says some public eitti·
ties are not keeping adequate financial records.
Auditor Jim Petro said his office will be more aggressive in dealing with
public bodies that cannot be audited because of poor record-keeping.
Serious financial troubles at Central State University, in Youngstown's city
government and in several other ca5es under state investigation have him worried.
"We believe government at every level needs to be accountable," Petro
told a meeting of government finance officers Tuesday.
·
"There is much more theft and fraud in the state than I ever thought there
0
. was.''

In one case, Petro's of~cc has recommended that the state attorney general try to remove an elected township clerk from office for refusing to organize records into audit form.
Kim Norris, a spokeswoman for Petro, said Wednesday she would not
identify the clerk, The attorney general has not r~sponded to the request, Ms.
Norris said.
.
\
State auditors uncovered ne"!IY $600,000 i~ !heft at another locality, Petro
said. He would not identify that case, which remains under investigation.
Last week, Petro placed the city of You~gstown under a fiscal watch, a
designation in a new law authorizing state financial oversight for local governments with morley problems. Youngst9wn ran a $6.9 million deficit about8 percent of its municipal budget - in 1995.

Despite death threat, Peruvian
hostage scene 'very tranquil'

OPEN
11011 RIM
W9-6
AFTER OIUROI
SUN 1·5

...•. BHIEVIIOl'l
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OLDSMOBilE• I.EilBS•TeYBia

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LIMA, Peru (AP) - A dozen released from captivity Wednesday
. ambassadors and hundreds of other afternoon, reentered the residence
YIPs were calm and seemed healthy with a Peruvian diplomat.
· "We transmitted to the governduring their second night ih captiviment
the message · of the Tupac
-ty, despite rebel threats to begin exe'
Amaru
Revolutionary Movement,"
cuting them. a doctor said today.
None of the guests taken hostage he said when he emerged. He said he
during a party at the Japanese ambas- . was not a negotiator and was merely
sador's house Tuesday night had passing messages between the govbeen killed, and "it's very tranquil" ernment of President Alberto Fujiinside, Red Cross doctor Marc Cor· mori and the rebels.
He said negotiations would
tal said.
He helped deliver water, medicine resurrie later today, but stressed that
and sandwiches Wednesday night to he couldn't.elaborate out of concern
' the residence. where the 23 rebels had for the hostages' safety.
divided the approximately 400
Fujimori has made no public state·
hostages into groups and guarded ment .on the standoff.
them in :separate rooms with guns and
. The rebels said Wednesday that.
• unless the government met their
! grenades.
.
•
"We spilke with people, collected demands, they' would begin executing
messages for their families," he said their hostages one by one - starting
early today at a police line ncar the with Peru's foreign minister, Fran1 two-story residence that is part of a
cisco Tudela.
spacious, walled-in compound.
"We 9an't wait any longer;" rebel
. ThC: government is negotiating commander Emilio Huertas told a
· with the rebels, members of the Lima television station.
· Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Move·
· But the deadline was just after
· mcnt who want 300 comrades noon Wednesday, and this morning
' released from jail, cban~s in gov- . there was no sign that anyone had
: emment policy, and ~ncy_ and safe been killed. The rebels released five
• puaaae to the Amazontan.Jungle.
more host~p~ Wedneaday·u a "gOOd
Early today, Canadian Ambas- faith gesture" ·and made no !flare
sador Anthony ,Vincent, whn was •. mention of the deadline .

The rebel s infiltrated,the partyan annual event honoring Japanese
Emperor Akihito's birthday dressed as waiters, carrying champagne and hors d'ocuvres. They set
off explosions and exchanged gunfire
with police for almost an hour. Two
hostages and a rebel were reported
wounded.
In the early hours of the standoff,
lherebels released aboiitl70 people,
mostly women, and claimed to be
holding 490 more.
The hostage-taking shook confidence in the Peruvian government,
and the stock market was forced to
close three hours early Wednesday
after domestic stocks plummeted.
Officials said it might not reopen
today.
The situation presents an excruciating choice for Fujimori, wl!o has
cracked down on guerrilla violence to
reduce the threat of terrorism and
attract foreign invcslmcnt, especially by the Japanese.
Allowing the impasse to continue
'
or cavmg tn to rebel demands, would.
ilndcnninc his anti-guerrilla polil:y. ·
But strong action against the occupiers would go diRctly against Japanese calls to put the safety of the
hostages first.
. ,

'

..

The Young stown and Cleveland school systems are in fiscal emergencies,
a more advanced crisis stage in which a state-appointed team takes over tcnlporary fiscal management.
,
Petro has said his office is unable to audit Central State this year because'
the school lacks adequate nscal records.
'
The publicly supported university faces debts of at least $11.6 million/
and trustees are considering a variety of deep spending and program cuts. ,
Petro said the Legislature will have to decide whether to grant Central ·
State special concessions or finance the school's deficit.
,
"I will demand absolute accountability for every dime spent," he said: ,
Petro said he barely missed fulfilling a campaign promise to dciiver all'
audits within six months, but expects to meet the pledge within the next year,

. - - - -- - - - - - - - - - · - - - --.. -

--- --·--------·------''~•

Hostages in Peru

•
r

10-FCX)T- HIGH ELEOTAtCAL
FENCE ATOP A. 15-R)OT.ftGH

The allndofl continua at the
Jape- •mbltlsador'•
compound, ••lelllal Peruvian
, •
rebela demend 300
·
. .'. '·
lmprl1oned
: . .· • " . ' ,,r.
comredta
..
"'" :"1

CONCRETE WALL

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Events:

4

"1;''t~:f"!J
Ill

·• About 8 p.ra. 'TIItsdJzy rebtl.r ilifiltrat•
~~!!"tt!P.o,.-· ~ pari)• dressed (4S waiters, seizing •he
,j~=~~~~~.. ~uesrs. They exchange gunjirr wilh polict.
I Rebels derTWml frudom for 300
~mp~ison ed ft~hlerJ .
• About 170 IWstuxes art IYI&lt;ased. mosl/y
women.
• W...,.sollzy mornllfl a R•d Cross
· ' reprt.H!IIlativt tnttrJ the compowu/ to
mtdialt negotiutionJ bttween rdtls llltd
authorititJ.

a At ...n the rtbtl• sa.1thty will start
killing hostages within 20 min11tes,
starting with Peru's fortig,. ntinilter;
Frtlllcitco Tude/a, O.adlin• pass&lt;~ with
no sign t!KJt llllY killin~t occurrrd.

. .

a A""Y s_!KJrpJhOOim"' nearby moftOfM
surrmmJ cotnpolllkl.

·

AP/TIICie Tso, Wm. J.

'·.

1

cu-

�•

·Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'E.ftil68sfut! in 1948
111 Coul1 St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

.!1

A Gannett Co. News!)lper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

.

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

.

Letters to the editor

Thuracllty, December 19, 1996

Page 2

Thursday, December 11t, 1996

•

AccuWCIIhef&amp; fOieeaSt for

had gone wrong wi lh what is loosely called "values." I concentrated on
those aspects of the situation in
which government played a role. The
central ones were: crime, welfare,
education and affirmative action.
Some new data are n'ow in; some

new political results have been
recorded.
Consider affinnative action. A
string of Supreme Coun decisions
have had the effect of substantially
shrinking aspects of practices that had
yielded preference and proponionality. The voters of California agreed to
the terms of Proposition 209, which
would take away preference in the
nation's most populous state. Other
states plan similar referenda. During
the 1996 election cycle, all the
Republicap candidates for the presidency. mnderate and consefvative,
took public stands against preference.
That was a first. There will be some
federal version of 209 brought up in
the Congress in the new session. The
next problem is not whether to do

away with preference, but what to
replace it with that could encourage
the underprivileged among us to
move ahead.
What has happened with welfare
is astonishing. Clinton ran in 1992
pledging " to end welfare as we
know it." Welfare scholars of every
stripe regarded .the words as the .
most radical heard in electoral politics for decades, something even
ll,onald Reagan could not and would
not have said. Four years later, after
much skinnishing, a new welfare law
has been enacted. It goes far beyond
anything Clinton ever dreamed of,
actually ending the 60-year-old fed-

cent. Was this just due to a relatively strong economy, or because Clin·

Dear Editor:
Who says communities don't ~are about people anymore! During our
RCeiltlrying times with our son Jay being missing, we found out that there
are a lot of caring peopl~ out there. We had outstanding suppon financially
and emotionally from my families and friends and churches 3!1d communi·
ties ..
The Thppers Plains community pitched in to finance our last trip out west
to find him. 1be Meigs County law enforcement officers were always helpful and ~aring. 1be people in the prosecutor's office were there for us any.·
time we needed them. Others whQ knew what we were going through were
always calling to let us know how much they cared and were there for us.
The Daily Sentinel gave us a lot of publicity to try and help us find him.
So we wish to say thanks to everyone for llelping us to have a great Christmas.
Grace and Junior Holsinger
Reedsville

attitudes about public education.

There has been a se'a change in

TOCLT MY
1\ANVS at

WQSARb
RbFOl~At

•

Giving hunters a bad name

I

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I

.Area weather forecast

Finolly, "standards" is assuming its
rightful place as the most important
word in the educational vocabulary.
A 1996 study by the Amencan Federation of Teachers, long an advocate
of educational standards with tests
and consequences, shows that by
March of 1996, !5 slates had already
adopted solid standards. (The ulti·
mate idea is elemental: If a kid doesn't do the work, he doesn't get promoted.) Many observers laughod at
the apparent trivial:ty of President

Weather forecast:
Tonight...Cioudy...Scattered flurries or snow showers west ...Snow showers and squalls northeast. Snow may he heavy in the extreme nonlleasl. Lows
5 to 10.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with flurries in the morning west...lben becoming partly cloudy, Snow and squalls northeast. Heavy snow is possible
extreme nonheast. Highs around 20.
·
Extended forecast:
, Saturday... Fair. Lows 10 to 15'. High in the mid 20s to the lower 30s.
Sunday...Chance of snow nonh ...And a chance of rain or snow south. Low
20 to 25. High in the mid 30s to the lower 40s.
Monday... A chance of rain or snow. Lows 30 to 35 with highs in the 30s
and lower 40s.
/

Clinton's endorsement of "lichool
uniforms.'' But it 's a good idea, and
one that no president - certainly not

'Lights on for Life' effort
slated by drivers Friday
In a symbolic nationwide observance to focus auention on the
impaired driving issue, Stale Highway Patrol troopers across Ohio are
joining local law enforcement, busi- ·
ness and government agencies, and
private citizens, in keeping their
vehicle headlights on as they drive
during the day Friday.
The observance is dubbed "Lights
On for Life" in remembrance of peopte killed and inju~ in alcohol-related crashes, and serves as a reminder
of law enforcement's watchful eye
for drunk drivers:
The event is part of the National
,Drunk and Drugged Driving (3D)
Prevention Month held in December,
and National Holiday Lifesaver
Weekend to be observed Dec. 20-22.
Thousan_ds of law enforcement ilfli- _
cers, ant1-DUI groups and local communities join together with one
common objective: to. identify and
apprehend tmpatred dnvers,
"Lights On for Life" is sponsored
by the National Highway Traffic
Safely Admmtstralton and a coahlton

pomful that may be.
.
'(Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow .
at the American Enterprise lnsti. lute, Is the author of "Values Matter ·Most" and Is the host of the
weekly public television program
''Think Tank.")

i

f

i

!Today in history

II BYToday
The Associated Preas
.
is Thursday, Dec. 19, the 354th day of 1996. There arc 12 days

to

fight about

over Medicare than just numbers.

They claim that when Republicans
argue for "choice" for seniors, they
actually favor onc-wuy cho1cc, from

fcc-for-service medicine mto HM Os ,
allowing no return if the beneficiary

is unhappy with his or her chotec.
The administration allio claims it

cannot go along with GOP proposals
to allow health care providers to add

negotiable.

j left in the year.
· Tnday's Highlight in History :

I

1

•

hooded.
He declared .that "we hav'e clearly created u new center - not the
lukewarm midpoint hctwccn overheated lihcrali sm anc.J chilly conservatism , hut instead a place where
throughout our history. pcbplc ol'

good will have tried to forge new

approaches to new L:hallcngc:-;."
Clinton was cspcc1ully eloquent in
V(}wing to "mukc welfare reform
work" hy creating joh opportunities
for the. several million poor people
who w1lllosc puhllc nssistancc in the
two panics can agree to adopt some next several ycrlrs and in promi sing
rc,ision in the cost-of~Jiving index to be un advocate for national eduUlied to make government ccononlic cation. sl:lndards that will elevate the
calculations. A bipartisan commission qualily of public schools while mainhas · reported · that the current CPI tai~in.g l&lt;x:al control ot' education.
overstates the cost-of-living by 1.1
The cost.' of promotmg education

After wobbling idcolo~ically in
his first term , Pres1dent Clinton

•

•

.
ing of sugarplums since. oh. about
never.
Take a peck at their vi.,ions and
you'll sec the latest, ovcr-pnccd,
"&gt;On-lo-be-obsolete video game; a
very expensive leather jacket (black
only. Mother, and belted, please): a
compact disc player; assoned striped.
stretchy, clingy, weird, looks-likethcy 've- becn-rccyclcd-or-ou•ht
-toc
be skins and vests: a drum set that is
supposedly a bargain for only one
arm and one leg.
These costly, sophistic.ttc:d durable
goods will be what's on the dreamscape should the lillie devils ever out
themselves to bed on Christmas Eve
and not stay up half the night, cracking jokes · and clowning for one
another.
And, all right. There may even be
some basic little things in there, like
a crossword puz~lc book or an audio-

The following land transfers were port;
recorded recently in the office of
Deed, Dolphus Jr. and Wanda C.
Meigs Counly Recorder Emmogene Burke to Dolphus Daniel Burke,
Hamilton:
Columbia;
, · Deed, Carolyn Salser to Mark A.
Salser, Sutton;

Deed, EEE Really Inc. to West
Virginina Bakery Acq, Salisbury parcel;
Am ElePower ....................... 39'o
Deed, David A. and Shelby J.
Akzo
......................................66'o
Davis to Michael and Jennifer Aahlend
011 ...................... ,, ... 43),
Bartrum, Rutland, 7.07'9 acres;
AT&amp;T .....................................39'o
Deed, Henry Lee and Mary Jane
Bank One ..............................43'.1
Hunter to· Iva Renee Richard, · Bob !!vane ..............................13
Borg-Warner ...........................38
Chester;
·
Champion ...............................23
Deed, Judith A. and John T.
Charming Shops ....................4~.
,Williams, Anne M. and Paul ChapCity Holdlng .......................... 2~.
man to Brenda K. Darst, Sutton/SyraFederal Mogul....................... 21 '.1
cuse parcels;
·
Gannett ................................. 71'o
· Deed, Davenpon and Tope Asso- Goodyear ...•.•.•.•.......•••....•..... 50~.
K-mart ....................................11
ciates to Thomas E. Tope, MiddleLanda End .............................26\
... ..

Stocks

(Morton Kondracke Is executive
editor of Roll Call, lhe newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)

as a Christma~ present

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the guy in the cap gclliog his gu'n. ;
Sec what I mean '~. Try gtvtng
· · your
And, Santa smoking in somektds a poem w.rittcn J·ust for them by one's house? Get with il, C.C .
·
the poet laureate of tbc United States
Plus, racing those rcindec[,
and sec what a silent night you ' ll whistling and shouting at them , and ·
have.
all that'' People for the Ethical Treat·
,A poem from a nohndy like you, menl bfAnimals would he on Santa's
· a mere loving parent? Forget it. ' lit!lc round rump more rapid than
Unless, of course, that's in addition eagles.
to the. video game, the ICathcrJ·ackct,
All of this is, I suppose. exactly
the compact disc player, etc .
why Moore 's work is so endearing
If cute and' clever W&lt;&gt;rd ~
•ss.·emhlt'c•·•.· and enduring. And why no one has
could do the trick, would so many · come up with a better Christmas halmamas and papas be shelling out lad than his.
·
hundreds of bucks for Tickle Me
You ca n'&lt;beat the simple idea of
Elmo'!
.
a kind old man stealing through the
i 'Tis a &lt;liffcrcnt day, Brother
n1ght sky to hnng joy to children
Moore. Lucky for you that you aren't everywhere. You sure ca.n't infuse it
around in the Nefarious '90s, when with mixlcrn realities and hope to win
even dear, soft Christmas· has calci- smiles.
fied into gimme, gimmc, gimmc,
For its tcnder'simplieity and old~
gimmc, get, get, get.
fashioned delights, ·I do so love the
Nowadays, when you write "And
then, in a twinkling , I heard on the old poem.
Even if it sounds nothing like my
tapeB. h t' bou
d
rooffl'hc prancing and pawt'ng of
life.
ut, l a sa las sweet an easy
as it gets,
·
each little hoof," in the next passage,
Even if I don 't know what the
You ain 't gonna sec no sug· you'd have lQ say something about down
of a thistle is.
arplums.
Th
ings have changed since .. Five years· ago: Tlle 'lailed Bank of Credit and Commcr~ International
Cl
Cl k M
d he agreed to'scllle federal racketeering charges by forfeiting all its U.S. assets.
emen~
ar e oore penne t
popular poetry in 1822. According to Patricia Bowman, who hadaccused William Kennedy Smith of raping her
· '.or h'ts ch'ld
told ABC's "Prime Time Live" she was shcx:ked by his acquiual. •
'
the Mol)', hc·wrote 11
1 ren

•

l

of. government, corjlorate and advocacy groups known as the National
3D Preventimi Month Coalition.
"Impaired drivers are always a
problem, especially during the h?li·
days when people are allendmg parties and celebrations, consuming
aleholic beverages and then attempting to drive home," said Lt. Wayne
McGlone, commander of the patrol's
Gallia-Meigs Post.
'This event will help focus auenlion on the impaired driving issue and
hopefully prevent people from getling behiqd the wheel after drinking,"
he added.
"This sends a positive message to
the commwnitv and reminds the publie ihat during the holidays, law
enforcement will be cracking down
gn those who choose to drink and drive an'll place innocent people's lives
in jeopardy," McGlone said.
In Decembe~ . 1995. 22 people
were killed and I ,682 injured in Ohio
due to alcohol-related traffic crashes.
Motorists can reportdrunkdriversby
calling 1-800-GRAB-DUI, or cellular *DUI.

Meigs land transfers posted

percent. vastly increasing the cost of standards will he tn&lt;idcst. hut DLC
entitlement programs.
experts ligurc it will cost at least $3.4
Liberal groups, including trade billion-a year to mount the education,
unions and retiree lobhict&gt;, arc health, and child-care suppo.rl efforts
opposed to a CPI change because necessary to av01d having welfare

.I t's a.d •. erent day, Cle.m ent Clark Moore

OnDec.
f
. f
; Carol."
was I9,1843,CharlesDickcns'classicYuletidetale,"AChristmas
first published in England .
• ·
~
On this date:
·
In 1732, Benjamin Franklin began publishing "Poor Richard's Almanac" By ·DEBORAH M•':rHIS
""
in
Philadelphia.
Trlbune
·Medla
Servt'cea
t In 1776, Thomas Paine published his first "American Crisis" essay, in
", which he wrote, " Thesc arc lhe Urnes
·
, sou 1s. "
WASHINGTON - Despite the
lhallry mens
,
In 1777, Gen. George Washington led his army of about 11 ,000 men 10 pressures of the season, or maybe
~ Valley Forge, Pa., 10 camp for the winter. ·
because of them, I am feeling hghtI
In 19!)7, 239 workers died in a coal mine explosion in Jacobs Creek, Pa. hearted today, vying for the holiday
1 In 1932, the ·British Broadcasting Corporation began transmitting over- spirit, beckoning good cheer and all
. ~j. seas with its "Empire Service" 10 Australia.
,.
that.
In 1946, 50 years ago. war broke out in Indochina as troops under Ho - To wit, Nat King Cole hos been
,l Chi Minh launchcd wt'dcspre.ad allac ks agamst
· thc Frene h.
crooning
inside my head all day Ch
1 In I'9SO. Gen. Dwtght D. Etscnhowcr was named commander of the mtl- " estnuts roasting on an open fire.
•
T
Jack Frost
· ·
1 itary forces of the Nonh Atlantic reaty 0 rgantzauon,.
d nipping at 'your nose."
! . In 1972, Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific, winding up the ApolAn • "A Visit from St. Nicholas"
.
as "The Night
• lo program or mann ed Iunar Ian d1ngs.
·
, better
,..h known
.
8
i In 1974, Nelson A. Rockefeller was sworn in as the 41st vice president . eoore r nstmas" - has popped
of the United States.
mto my mind's playback machine. At
1 In 1984, Brit,Un and China signed an accord returning Hong Kong to Chi· . some point every Christmastime, I
i nese sovereignty on July I, !997.
test myself to see how much of the
1 Ten years ago: The Sov.lct Union announc.ed i_t had freed dissident Andrei fa ous ballad I' can recite from
I SakharoV from internal extlc, and pardoned hts wtfe, Yelena Bonner. In Was
!-"emory. For reasons unknown and
. ington Lawrence E. Walsh was appointed independent co
·.,. ti- .oreyer 10 be so, tnday was that day.
h'
Co tr affair
, 1be opening stanza went fine. But,
'
' gate l e 1ran· n a
·
something smpped me when I got to
; One year ago: 11lc Federal Reserve ~uta key interest r e, turning ears
e second.
' toche~rsonWaiiStreetadayafterthebtggeston~-days kplungcmfour
"The children were nestled all
• :years. Yigal Amir, the confessed assassin of Israeli Pri e Min_ister Yi hak snu ,·n lhet'r beds,
· A
ned fi 1051d
h 1
the B
· Rabin, went on tna1· gu~man ?pe
tre
e as oe sore'"
r nx,
hile visions of ·sugar-plums
a boniu,lh of New York Cuy, kll!tng fiv~ pellf:'le.
,
.
. '-...-:idanced in their heads."
.
Today's Birthdays: Country smger Lillie J1mmy Dtckens IS 76. Actr~ss
Who are these eht'ldren, pray tell?
• · 63 Rh h and bl
M c Wh 1
C~ly Ty$'011 ts
· . yt m· • ues ~mger-mustctan au.~ e . 1 e And mig· ht their innocen•e and st'm.
)
SS
A
1
Ti
R
d
52
A
thr
1 t Ri hard
•
(£arth Wind and Ftre 15 • c or •m et 15 · n opo ogts
c
plicity 'be contagious? My children
B. Lakey is 52. Rock singer Alvin Lee (Ten Years After) is 52·
haven't spent Christmas Eve dre.ami

recently restated his dcdkution to
''N~w Dcmocmt" pnnciplcs in a
ringing spcpch to t~e Democratic
LeadershiP CoUncil ' he 'fo;mcrr'y

government · bcncfitli will suffer. reform turn ·into a Dickensian di:•mstheir own charges to Mcd1carc limits Some Rcpuhlican conservatives tcr.
for medical procedures - a propos- . argue that a lower CPI )VIII reduce
Clinton's task in the Stale of the
al called " balanced billing" that will depreciation al_lowances and repre - Union address should bc to define the
impose a burden on recipients.
se nt a lax hike. The two parties ought "vital center" as a place where the 1
Clinton's willingness to show faster
Beyond Medicare, Republicans to be ahlc to agree on some CPI
progress toward balance than the · and the Clinton administration have adjustment short of 1.1 percent, budget is balanced, but also where
back-loading contained in his prcvt· significantly .different i&lt;Jeas ahout thou~h . or perhaps a phase-in toward former welfare rec1picnts aren't left
tn fend for themselves . .
ous budgets, and how much he moves taxes. although these ought to bc that numhcr.

townrd Republican proposals for

PAGEVILLE PROJECT GRANT- A new Pagevllle recreation
· complex will be completed by next summer, thanks to grant
monias allocated through the Reebok Corp. by atate officials. The
$6,020 Reebok grant will cover construction coats or • new bssJohn R. Motley, 54, Gahanna. died Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1996 at Grant MedketbaiVvolleyball court, fitness track, and the installation of playical Center in Columbus, the result of an industrial accident.
ground equtpment near the Scipio Township Hall anti Scipio
Township Fire Department annex, according to Scipio Township
A foreman for Buckeye Steel Castings, he was born Oct 26, 1942 in MidTrustees President Bobby Arnold. Presenting Arnold a check ror
dlepon, son of the late John Henry and Wanda Benneu Motley. He was a
the project Is Holly Marvin of the Ohio Attorney General's office.
graduate of R'acine High School and a Navy veteran.
.
Also pictured are, frl!m lett, ~clplo Township Clerk Connie ChapHe is survived by his wife of 32 years, Dolly J. Bowhng Motley; four
man, Trustee Eugene Phillips, Trustee Randy Butcher, and Meigs
sons and two daughteis-in-law, John Jr. and Shilo Motley, Donald and PolCounty
.Commissioners Janet Howard and Fred Hoffman,
ly Motley, and Christopher and Anthony Motley; m11e grandch!ldren: a brother, William Motley; a sister, Gerry Lynn Haven Motley; father-m-law, Edward
Bowling; and nieces and nephews.
.
· . . ' .
..
Graveside services will be I p.m. Saturday 1n the Mtffim Townshtp Ceme·
tery, Gahanna,'with the Rev. Joe V. Hotchkiss officiating. Friends may call
(Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines Pomeroy, is seeking $4,752.02 plus
at the Schoedinger Funeral Home Gahanna Chapel, 335 W. Johnstown Road,
the
grievances of one party against · interest and costs [rom Christy D.
from 3-S and 7-9 p.m. Friday.
another. It does not establish guilt Dixon and Doris J. Haynes, both of
or innocence.)
Apple Grove, W.Va.
The following actions have been
Edward C. Johnson, Reedsville, is
filed in Meigs County Common seeking an undisclosed amount from
Angela D. . Welch and Wanda L.
1be 30 students are from Meigs and Pleas Coin:
Round/Square dance
Larry A. Graber, Athens, is seck- Welch, both of Coolville, for injuries
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post Mason counties. The public is inviting
a total of $2 million from Eleanor sustained in an automobile accident
ed
to
attend.
9053 will host a round and square
L.
Well
and Vernal H. Well, both of on Dec . 7. 1994.
dance Saturday, 8-11 p.m., at the post
Shade,
and William N. Lawless,
American Mortgage &amp; Invest·
home. The band "True Counlry" will Live nativity
Middlepon,
following
an
automobile
menl
Co., Oklahoma City, Okla ..
Area ch\lrches are having a live
perfonn. The public is invited to
accident
on
Dec.
16,.1994,
on
U.S.
33
seeks
$93,187.38 plus interest and
nativity scene at the Belleville Dam
auend.
in Bedford Township.
· costs from Daniel A. and Kellee J.
on Monday, 6 p.m.
Ri.
c
hard
D.
and
Pamela
K.
Helton,
Nease, Racine.
Middleport Cantata
·Langsville,
seck
$25,000
from
Roche
The Beneficial Mongage CompaThe Middleport Church of Christ· Christmas program
Lab•,
Columbus,
stemming
from·thc
ny
of Ohio, Pomeroy, filed several
The Faithful .Gospel Church's
will hold its annual Christmas cantata, "Such a Celebration," Sunday, 7 Christmas program will he held Fri- death of their dog. The couple hold suits against area people including:
p.m., at the church on Fifth and Main. day at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed Roche responsible for the loss of a Gary M. and Debbie R. Elkins. both
biopsy, allegedly resulting in the of Alba~x. $5,644.95 plus interest and
invites the public.
The public is invited to anend.
·animals death.
costs; William T. and Beatrice Fink,
Emily Faye Manley, Middleport, Middlepon, ,$4,516.86 plus interest
Program s.et
Recital scheduled
The · Long Bonom United is seeking at least $25,000 in dam- and costs; Ben and Barbara Harris,
A recital of the vocal and instruMethodist
Church Christmas pro- ages from James Robert Blackwell, Middleport, $5,616.80 plus interest
mental students of Sharqn Hawley
gram
wili
be
held at 7:30p.m Friday Pomeroy, and Chad Wise, Middle- and costs; John M. King and Brenda
will be presented at 7 p.m. Friday at
port, resulting from a Dec. 16, 1994, King, Reedsville, $12,298.14 plus
the Middlepon First Baptist Church. at the church.
incident in which she was allegedly interest and costs.
injured by the two who were engaging·in horseplay. She was a bus driver for the Meigs Local School Dis'
RUTLAND
Units of the Meigs County Emer9:08p.m., Pageville Road, Sharon lricl at the time.
gency Medical Service logged 13
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
.
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units Boggs, VMH.
SYRACUSE
responding included:
12:52 p.m., Third Street, June Lee,
MIDDLEPORT
VMH.
A Middlcpon youth was cited
iiJIIIIS
, 12:22 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Roger
TUPPERS
PLAINS
after a two-car accident on West Main
Jackson, Holze- • ·~dical Center;
4
3:01 p.m., Main Street, Herman Street Wednesday afternoon, accord- .
. ~\
M
9:36 p.m., l .and Road, Doris
Carson, Camden-Clark Memorial ing to Pomeroy village police chief
.~G,.:! ... .,.R••~..a.
Arnold, treated at the scene.
Hospital;
Gerald Rought.
.'
_.,.'"'"""
POMEROY
,
•
6:46 p.m., State Route 7, Amber
According to repons, Jennifer
12:35 p.m., West Main Stree~ JenCochran, 38, Pomeroy, was stopped
nifer Cochran, HMC, Matthew Dai- · Church, St. Joseph's Hospital.
in traffic ncar Subway when her 1991
ley, treated at the scene;
Olds was struck from behind by a
I :58 p.m., Main Street, Donald
1987 Chevy, driven by Matthew DaiSteinmetz; Veterans Memorial HosSTARTS
ley,
17, Middleport.
pital;
TOMOHHU W
Veterans Memorial
Cochran was treated by Pomeroy
2:59 p.m., Leading Creek Road,
Wednesday
admissions
Cliarles
Squad I of the Meigs County EmerDerrjl Bryan, VMH; ·.
gency Services and transponcd to
5:02 p.m.,' Lincoln · Heights, Starr. Clifton, W.Va.
Wednesday discharges- none .
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where :
Joseph Jacks, HMC;
Holzer
Medical
Center
she
was treated and released.
8:38p.m., East Main Street, KeiDischarges
Dec.
18
Joshua
Damage
was recorded as light to
th Day, treated at the scene;
Norvell,
Mrs.
Brent
Ervin
and
son,
both
vchiclcli.
Dailey was cited for no
9 p.m., Naylor's Run Road. Donald Pierce, Pleosant Valley Hospital. Carla Lively. Angela Thaxton, Myr- insurance.
tle Burnett.
RACINE
Birth - MF. and Mrs. Bart
2:59 p.m.; Manuel Road, Eugene .
COLONY THEATRE
Ankrom,
daughter, Hamden.
Davis, VMH.
TONIGHT
(Published with permission)
STAR TREK:
FIRST CONTACT PG
Four couples were issued marONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
riage licenses 'recently in the Meigs
STARTING FRIDAY
County Probate Coun or Judge
MICHAEL JORDAN
Robert Buck:
.
IN
Timothy Joe Nonon, 43,
SPACEJAM PO
Guysville, and TinaAnneue Lam ben,
OJo!E EVENING SHOW 7:30
40, Tuppers Plains; Boyd T. Spur446-0923
lock, 72, Hurricane, W.Va., and Inez
POMEROY
Spurlock, 72, Tuppers Plains; Kevin
Near Po........,·MIIIon Bridge
Andrew Klein, 22, and Mary Amelia
992-2588
Chaney, 20, both of Pomeroy;
VINTON
Gallla County
Ylrd
William .Cunis Dartey, 54, and Chris155 Main
tine Lillian Granger, 42, both of
Pomeroy.

John R. Motley

their liuccesscs. no 1m1tter how

say that there's more

I

Evelyn£. Bryan, 85,ofPowhatan Point. who died Monday, Dec. 16, 1996,
w.S the stepdaughter of the late Gladys Cuckler of Pomeroy. Her name was
unintentionally omitted fi'om material provided by the Bauknecht Funeral
Home, Powhatan Point.
Services will be II :30 a.m. Friday at the Powhatan United Methodist
Church. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight and at the
church from 10 a.m. until tlme of services. Burial will ,he in the Powhatan
Cemetery.

challenge. They mu., t acknowkdgc

Clinton administratiorl officials

I

Evelyn E. Bryan

Will Clinton and the GOP meet at the 'center'?

f ~ar Edito~hange requi~e~ str~ngth

e

"'I• "

have enunciated a decade ago.
Conservative!~ face a daunllng

Medicare savings.
Republicans still talk - though
In their final offers in the budget how seriously is not clear - about
wars of 1996, Republicans-proposed reviving Bob Dole 's 15 percent
to slow Medicare's growth by $158 across ~thc- hoard tax cut. FOr sure,
billion over the next six years they will open with a proposal to cut
down from their suicidal 1995 offer capital gains taxes, possibly in half.
of $270 billion - while Clinton proClinton will counter with targeted
posed $124 b:llion.
tax cul.o,; to i.:TCatc joh.'i for fonncr wel . The numbers arc so close togeth- fare recipients and to pay for poster that it now ~ccms ridiculous secondary education, plus elimination
Democrats made headway in the or Capital gains iaxcs on residences.
It's a wide philosophical gap. but
campaign with the claim the GOP
intended to "slash" Medicare. Today, it could he. bridged if Republicans
Republicans arc ' talking about give Clinton his targeted cuts and
demanding some apology from the Clinton agrees to some capital gains
White House for its "Mcdagoguery" cuts. perhaps indexing.
before sitting down at the ncgollating
The entire job of budget cutting
table.
·
will be made enormously easier if the

I

lr:-M:-an-s-::11-el-d,.l2_o_•

a mildly libcral Democrat - would

Dear Editor:
·
' This letter is concerning the tragic incident ,that happened this deer season on the Westmoreland Farm outside Rutland, where three head of cattle
were shot dead and left to lay.
· There is no excuse for this type of hunting behavior whatsoever.
It is no wonder why so much land is posted and no hunting allowed?'Can
you blame them? It is incidents like this that give the anti-hunting groups an
: edge over the people that hunt. It used io make me mad to see so much lard
· posted. I used to .think people were selfish and horded all the land for their
own use, but after an incident like this, I can't blame them and now see their
side of the story.
It is outlaw hunting like this that gives the rest of us honest, true spans. men huriters a bad name. I sincerely wish these types or so-called hunters
would quit jlunling and find another spon to get into, like skydiving withBy MORTON KONDRACKE
' out a parachute or bungee jumping lied loa piece or yarn.
Robert Hart · In word and deed, President ClinRutland ton has !;;&gt;L .his S&lt;li'Ond-term course
toward the solid center, though we.
won 't know until Feb. 3 whether he
and.. the Republican Congress will
11 • Due to the situation wuh the bar next door, I am closing my busihess "The both make it there to do business.
That, of course, is the day when
Victorian ·Parlor" on Dec. 21. I sincerely wa~ted to be an asset to the town
and the community and was l"eparing to open a tea room upstairs, which I Clinton's new budget will be
unveiled. And Clinton pledged once
had already had Vtctonan lad1es clubs from all over the state coming.
more
recently that his first priority for
Th the people who supponed me and. my dreams for Pomeroy, I thank
you, and to all the wonderful people I have met and through their purchas- his second term will be to balance the
es have made the business a success, I thank you and apologize for the sit- budget, although he did not specify
that he planned to make that happtJJ
uation I have no control over.
' In a recent council meeting the bar was represented by counsel and they by 2002, the Republican target date . .
l have offered to pay fora patrolman to police the outside area in front of the That lack of specificity suggests
I bar. I asked them why now, after two years of showing no concern for their Clinton has yet to decide whether he
; neighbors or the community and never once coming and talking 10 me about sides with his budget director,
; the problems. I tnvlled them to a day of fellowship last February after the Franklin Raines, who's arguing for
• nood and told them we would have it on Sunday so they could come. I called exact balance, or Treasury Secretary
~ and apologized if they felt I had done something to them. They made nocffon. Bob Rubin, who assens that ncar-bal~ It is my opinion that this is not the altitude of someone who wants to hetler .· ancc is close enough to satisfy the
financial markets.
f our downtown area and contribute to bringing rourists into the area so we
Republicans have adopted a stratcan survive.
•
,
egy
nf w.aiting for Clinton to make
l Trust me, it will be as quiet and orderly a~ can be unltl their liquor license
the
f1rst
move on the budget. If what
; has been renewed and in a very short time it. will be right back to where it
he
produces
is "credible," they will
· • was before.
·
To the mayor. council and police department who I thought were supposed probably declare the document
"unacceptable, but wonh negotiating ·
~ to protect us from thts type ollhtng, you need to lind the strength your posiabout."
If il docsn'l mccl 1ha1 lest,
~ tion requires and change things. Even God expects us to do a little for ourthey
will
pronounce it "dead on
selves,
arrival.··
Sarah Fisher
I
The difference seems to depend
Pomeroy
upon the balance-by-2002 issue,

Mabel Loretta Payton Ashley, 76, Wilkesville, died Monday, Dec. 16,1996
at her residence.
Born Sept. 22, 1920 in Xenia, dau&amp;hter or the late Harvey Lester and Clara
Welch Palmer, she attended the Ewington Church of Christ and Christian
Union.
Services will be 7:30 tonight in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Rev. David Marhqover officiating.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Friday. in tbe Fletcher Chapel Ceme·tery, Springfield, with Capt. James Gingrich officiating. Friends may call at
the funeral home one hour prior to the services.
·

..

ton allowed waivers to governors

prison cannot shoot your sister.

Mabel Payton ·A shley

•••

(mostly new Republicans) to gel
tougher in their state programs'/ No
one knows. but it is likely that the
changes in state law had something
to do with it. That augurs well for further declines in the years lO Come as
the new federal policy ph115es in.
Moreover, and quite possibly related
to the beginning of state welfare
refonn, calendar year 1995 was the
first time in 20 years that the illegil·
imacy rate went down - to a still
abysmal 32 percent.
Violent crime rates have been
eral "entitlement," While retaining
falling. In 1995 the rate dropped by
many safeguard features. Among 3 percent. Since 1991 the rate is down
other things,,the act ovenurns mushy by 6 percent. (Although, it is still 21
court interpretations that had allowed percent above the 1986 level.) A
legal immigrants to receive welfare recent FBI repon reveals •that the
benefits even though their sponsors juvenile arrest rate fell in 1995, the
·had pledged financial suppon in first decline since 1987. The da!O
order to get them into the country.
seems to demonstrate (at least to me )
From 1994 to 1996, the number of that the strategy of "incapacitation" .
recipients on welfare fell by 9 per· ·is paying off. Remember: A thug in

NCHJI WANT

conditions and

MICH.

Thanks for community support

i

OHIO Wc&lt;1ther
Friday, Dec. 20
'

'.

Conservative thought making greater strides
By BEN WATTENBERG
Conservatives argue a lot. often in
various shades of gloom. When they
do, nonconservati ves have a feast.
And so, the front cover of the reinvigorated New Republic magazine
blares "Neocon v. Theocon: The
Widening Schism on the Intellectual
Right." The article, by Jacob Heilbrunn, is mostly a crock- and quite
possibly an evil crock, which sets
conservative Jews against consena- .
live Christians. Hcilbrunn is on to one
thing, though: Many conservatives
still suffer from pernicious pessimism. notwithstanding the experience of sunny St. Ronald.
Reality check. The fact is conserva!ism has made remarkable substantive progress in recent years.
About five years ago I started
thinking about writing a book called
"Values.Matter Most." I agreed with
neocons, theocons, the Religious
Right, New Democrats, medium
Democrats, some liberal Democrats
and most Americans that something

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 11 :l-INt)

.

UmHed .................................. 18\

Ohio Valley Bank ....................36
Onll Valley ............................. 47'/o
Peopl...................................26'/.
Prem Flnl ............................... 13'o
Rockwall ...............................61\
RD·Shell .............................. 167\
Shoney's .................................7\

PvbliS'iled every tflemoon, Monctay through
Friday, I I I Clluri 81., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing ~nyiOanneu Co..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21 S6. Second
claas posllp paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

Star Bank ..............................90'1.

Civil ·actions filed in court

Meigs announcements·

EMS ·Units answer 13 calls

Citation issued

I

Hospital news

Marriage licenses

Wendy's ............ :................... 19'•

....;,;a&amp;ed Piau, ·,nd ll&amp;e ONO

M......,., 'The
Newspaper Assodadon.

-·-·-

Worthlngtoo ..........................19\

.

Stock raporta ere the 10:30
a.m. quot.a provided by Ailveet
or Gallipolis.

'
POSTMASTEib Seed adctrets eomttiont to
The Dail) SeaUnel, Ill ~rt :;1., Pomeroy.
Ohio 4.5'769.

~

~P110NIIATBS

NOW OPEN
BURGUNDY AND BUSS
FLOUU &amp; GIFTS

ly C.I'Tier or Motor Rolli•
One Week.................................................. $100

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c... &amp; lloicltkl

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Sublcri~ nol dr:lirins 10 poy lbe trll'riei may
rernll in ldvanc:t direct ro The Daily Sentinel
on a three, .p; or 12 mondt blda. Credit
be
pven Clfrier IICh week.
·

.....IIi······ .......

wtn

•

IUPRWCIIOII

No -~"~'"' by moil pennlnod In . - . bomc canier ICfYic:e l1 availlble.
Publi.... dto riah&lt; 10 lltljUII noio .iur.
Ina dto tabtcrlp&amp;loa period. Subtcrlpdon ro&amp;e

..y be~~-"" b y - ......

-

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MAIL II1JIIICIIIP110NI
-Mtlp~

13-........... :. ....................................m .JO
26 ................................................. $53.12
5 2 -.............................................. SIOSJ!i
--MtlpC..,
l l -........,,..'1"'"""'"'"''''''"""''''"'$29.2:1

26 -

n-

.............. - ..........................,.. ,,S56.611
...............................................$1119. n

Plwlk·•-•1•
. .....

II',, ~

I

r

HOIIYLAIID
lt.ll. 7
(Aala .... ._II

I al II

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1·100..776-0527
..........uu

J&amp; IUYII . . NI . .

3RD l PEARL ST.

~ROSE (7873}

RACINE
.

KAY PROFFITT l 'KIM DAVIS, Ownar/Operatora
-Balloo(l Bouquets
. oSIIk Arnngementa

ofl'llh Cuts
olJnlque Gift bma
Gift c.itttlllcalw
.

eSpecially Ballets
oCraftl
From Local Cteltera
.DEUVERY

GJIAND OPBNING
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21R
Uve Radio Remote with Magic 10110 AM·1 PM
Refreshments
Sign UP to Win A Silk Arr•ngement or Wreath •
A $30.00 Value
,,

•

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'

'

-

, ..,;«At "

�Thursday, December 11, 1918

·Sports
31

CambridF 49, Clayn'lOIII 3-t
Carrollmn 58.~ Fuhon NW .50 .
.Ccntc:rYille 58, Sprina. South 44
Oiag.rin Falk 81, Awora :lO
Cin, Lockland 47. 8alavla44 {OT)
Cin. Summit Country Day 49, CJer.
mont NE 23
Cle. t.i(theran W. 44, Independence

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AdMticDiw..,._

, ll! L fa.

liB
II
61

1 Jl96
12 ,478
II ...so

7

16 .J04
U .2SO
17

10\
II

.227

21

Clev&lt;lllld HIS, 82, l'llrmo Nonnandy

12

Chicaao..................21

3
Damlt .•.... :,............ l9 4
Cl.EV1!LANO ....... I5
8
Mllnlo ,.................. l4 8
Milwaukee ............. 13 10
Clwloo&lt; ................ 13 10
Indiana ................... 11 II

.875
.826

Coal Grove 56, Portsmouth Notre
Dome40
Col. Hanley 69, Col. DesaJes 59
Colwnbia 5"7.1kachwood 29
Conneaut 75, Painesville Harvey 67
Day. Colonel White SO, Day. Bel·

I~

.652

5\

.6l6
,S65

7~

6

.565

-·-

nmli ·

7\
9
1J

..500

Toronto .................... B 16 .333

Day. Pal:teriOD .59. Day. MCIIdowdale

36
Dover 76. Coshocton 34

E. Cleveland Shaw 6..,, Young. Rayen

~TERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Dfvllkln

' :tum

ll! L

Hotuton ................. 21
,3
Utah ........~-·····-· ··· ·18 .4Dallu ....................... S 14
Minllltl0ta ................ 8 16
Denver ............ ,........6 19

liB

.~64

2
12
IJ

.:n3

16~
15 ~

. 190

Padllc IH.-bMn
L.A. Laken ............ J9 8 .1b4
Sun~ . .
........... 18 ? .667
Pon!Md.................. 13 12 .S20
L.A.Ciippers ......... IO 14 .417
Qoldcm Stale ............9 17 .346
Phoenix ....................8 16 .333
Saclllnlento .............. 8 17 .320

I

7\

9\

910'

Wednosday's scores

L.A. l.akcn Ill, Milwauklle lOS
Dl:nver 95, Sxr.uncnlo 79
Phoenix 11-4. Waahinaton 1~7
Seank: 106. Ponland 102
Golden Slate 12..1, Mi11nesota 96

Tonil!ht's1ames

Milwaukee Bl Toronto. 7 p.m.
Utah at Miami, 7:30p.m.
OUc.:ago at Owtotte, 7:JO p.m.
Snn Anton•o ac Houston, 8:30p.m.
Dallas a1 VMCOUver. 10 p.m.
Washington at L..A. Clippen, 10 : ~0
p.m.
Minne.so101 at S111.:nunento. 10:30 p.m.

Friday's1ames
· New York at Philadc:lphia, 7:30p.m.
New Jeraey QC Atl.inla. 7:30p.m.
Toronto at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Detroit 011 lndiruut, 7:30p.m.
Utnh'm Orlando, 8 p.m.
Vancouver at Denver, 9 p.m.
l&gt;.l)las at Ponland. 10 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Seartle, 10 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Divllion

I. rd.

I .944
Richmond ., ............ 10 II .476
Atlnnta ................... 8 II .421
Nr.wEngland .. .... 6 IJ .JI6

COlUMBUS ......... 17

liB
8~
9~
II ~

Wntcm Dh·ltion
CoiO!':ldo .. ,............. l2 9 .S11
Seattle.. ... .......... 10
8 .556
SanJMe .. ................ \0
Pmland ....... ... .........4

10 .. .500

14

.222

- ·
~

1111
6~

Wednesday's scores

Hockey

New England 97,·San Jose: 69

Tonight's games

NHL standings
lam

NCAA Division I
men's sc:o~s
George1own 90, St. Leo 39
Ioili 71, Fordham 69
Niagara 68, Buffalo 59
Penn Sr. 61 , Bmdky 57
Pittiburgh 79, St. Francis, Pa. 42
Syracuse 78. UNLV 57 .

Midwost

n

97

94 91
112 lfl
I()Iii I 16
K7 Ill
74 92

.~

6
I
.l
4
0

41 92 7S
40 r 1)6 6)
~I
IJ4 Jog
J I K~ K7
~0 !12
98
26 96 · 116

117 76
110 105
96
K.'\ 93
K7 107
~7

N.Y.

blanlkr~

·

at Philadelphia, 7;.' 0

··

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Despite Ohio State's lopsided 81-40
beating of Alabama State Wednesday
. night, coach Randy Ayers knows not
to make too much of a meager home
winning strtak.

After heating up on five mediocre
t~ams by an average score of 84-65.
the Buckeyes must now play at
Southern Cal and San Diego State
before taking on defending national
champion Kentucky Dec, 28 and

opening Big Ten play at fourthranked Michigan Jan, 2.
"It's a tough situation," Ayers
said. "We'll see what we're made
1f.,,

In their first and only opportuni-

ty away from St, John Arena, South
Florida beat the Buckeyes 60-56 on
Nov, 23 in Tampa,
"I'm anxious to see how we handle a road situation," Ayers said.
"We didn't handle it down at South

Florida."
In the latest victory at St. John
Arena, Damon Stringer scored 19
points as the Buckeyes overcame a
listless start with a 19-0 run,
"We handled a team we were

•

ore

" ere an s
.Pomeroy .For Christmas

Last
Days·

OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 7 P.M.·,..
SUNDAY 1·5

SHOES

'

I ,

to Shop -

MAIN STREET IN POMEROY

HOURS roR YOUR SHOPPIIG

Specia{
Store
Jlours"Tiff
Christmas

,.f..-rWELL Hous
"

GIFf BASKETS &amp; -_ · ~
CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS

40o/o OFF
614-992-7696
Open 1o a.m,-5 p.m. Tuesday • Friday
Monday 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sunday 1·5

J

~...,~.,,!$4''WI"!$.,.!t44"1$41!!$"~~-~

LAST MINUTE CHRISTMAS SHOPPING?
On Dec.
20·21 we will have 40% OH
'
Everything In the Store. Gift Ideas from
CDs to microwaves, VCRs to video games.
Remember your loved one with' gifts of
dla•onds and gold.
Visit 11 at
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Stop In cind See Our $election of ·•·•·
·
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I •·•

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~ Price

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40%0FF

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. stPRICst
~t

Sale Begins
· 9:00 friday

ll~

ONLY

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: A,n:ed lu

With OF JeronK W&lt;~llon ilnd C ·
· t.Cnni Web11er on minor-lcaaue \:On·
lr&lt;M:IS.
'

ELECTRIC
UZORS

Ma.9:30tol

•

Tues., Sat,'

$179°

9:30to 5

0

oro O~~~tllfllcl Aflllllat'nta

Anderson's
DOWNTOWN

-

25%oFF

FREE
ChristiiGS

Pain Buster • I 11

Delivery
'

CLEVELAND INDIANS: AJ=I 10
with OF ChDd Cunis on a one-yeM
contnK:t. Oe•ianarcd RHP Domn Klrbeit

for auiJnment.

'*

TORONTO BLUE JAYS: AJ=I&lt;o
wrmt wirh RHP PIPI Quanrrill on 1 one-

BUTrON6 (fJ BOW&amp;·
100 E. Main St.
89U117
1-8110-484-ira62 • 5177

Pomeroy

-~-·e~fPIICa•ff0Jl

.l ~

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(~14) 992-2284

.,

~
.~
:_

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60%0ff

CHRISTMAS
GIFT BAGS
1/

/2 OFF

Porcelain Dolls
Umltetl Edltlo•
•••• $24.95

$15'5

SONY VCR
BLINK TAPES

Packa,.ou

539

CASSEnE TAPES

Special Crea•
RECEIIl IEUISES
for lrthrftla
·
Ill MUSIC
.
$799
.... $5.95 O'nlr $399 ,.... $9.99 OaiJ

tmn1

DEll!OIT TIGERS: As-J 1o .....
with RHP Oou1 Br01:1UI
4 OIM:•)'c•
contraL.1
MINNESOTA TWINS: AJreed to
ltrml with LHP Oriel Swhldell Gn 1 mi-

OaiJ $439
·.

40%oFF

··

Prieta Startl•1 at

r~rm •

Conlntef.

50% 0FF

TOYS&amp;
GAMES
•

AmeikaiiLM&amp;ut
ANAHEIM ANGELS : At~eed tn
terms with I B Eddie Murray and RHP
Grq: Gohr on UIX'·feoll' c:ontra~.11. '

Atroo - 6 2 . Hudooll $0

50% on

.... $5.75

Baseball

.

COMPUTE SlOCI

1 Pouad

Transactions

Jc-aijt~ft!;l.

JEWELRY

Men's &amp; Women'• ·

Stover
Assorted Chocolates

..

1o

Yo•r Cholet 25% OFF

55% Off Extra

Oalh~ nr HIWiford. 7 p.m.
l..os Angele5 at Buffalo. 7 :~ 0 p.m.
San Jose :11 Wa5hin~ton. 7:30p.m.
Horida at ChicllJ.o.- R:JO p.m.
,
· Torontu ill Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Nc!w 1crJCy 111 &amp;hnont1.m. 9:.l0 p.m.
Dtrrnil of Vancouver. IOp.'m.
Calsary at Anahdm. IO:JO p.m.

nor·Jcacuc comtlX't.
SEA TILE MARINERS: Atreed

Women's Colognes . Indians
&amp; Perfumes
sign Curtis

Exln 5plcitl. s..lly Ottly 30% Off

115 W. 2nd St.
.
Pomeroy, Qh.
"Where Shopping Is An Adventure!"

'•

supposed to handle," Stringer said,
"We took care of business!'
The 40 points was the fewest
allowed by the Buckeyes since 1960,
the last time Ohio State won the
national championship. Ohio State,
led by Jerry Lucas and John
Havlicek, beat Delaware 109-38that
year,
"You're not going to beat many
people soooting 29 percent," Alabama State coach Ro.b Spivery said.
"That's been our nemesis all season
long, We haven't shot 'well."
The 41-point difference was the
most lopsided Buckeye victory since
a 114-53 win over Howard five years
ago.
"People will look and say we
won by 40, but J"m still nor happy.""
Ayers said. "We had 19 turnovers ."
That won't win games,for you in the
Big Ten:•
Jennainc Tate added .fs points
, and Otis Winston had a ~areer-high .
14 on 7-of-8 shooting from the
field, Ohio State (5-1) shot 58 percent from the field,
Derrick Robinson, with II points,
was the only "player for Alabama
State ( 1-7) with more &lt;han eight
points.
Alabama Statewcnt scoreless for
a period of almost nine minutes in ·
the first hal f.
The Hornets actually led 13-12
aflcr a rebound follow by Tauhced
Epps with q:09)cft in the "~'!'nina
haiL At that point, they had only two
turnovers.
But over the nci.t 8:42, they
failed to pick' up a point on 18
. straight possessions - missing all
nine shots from the field and losing _
the ball on turnovers nine o&lt;her
times.
"That dry spell took us out of the
game," Spivery said,
. The Ohio State spurt - which
put the Buckeyes ahead 31-13 included seven players scoring, led
by Stringer's six points.
The Buckeyes hit eight of II
(See HOOPS on Page 6)

T'"RU I,IESIDAY, DECIEMBI5R 24

PRICES

YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD LENDER Pawnsfwp

BUTION~ (6 BOW~

missed a- three-pointer with four
seconds left.
Oregon State (3-3), which got28
points from freshman guard C~non
Cunningham, made only 31 of SS
free throws, in&lt;:luding 10 of26 in the
first half.
Freshman Ron Grady scored 15
points for Oregon State before fouling out.
·
No. 20 Alabama 72
North Texas SS
At Tuscaloosa, Anton Reese
scored 15 of his 21 points in the first
half as Alabama beat Nonh Texas.
The Crimson Tide (9-0) never
trailed, They took, their biggest lead,
70-41, with 5:52 left when Ricky
Poole hit a free throw to cap Ill 0-0
run.
Alabama! took a 40-19 halftime
(See toP 25 on Page 6)

.

Shop Historic

Frjday's games

TEXAS RANGERS: As-J 1o """'
witb OF WiUTen New$00 on • OM!•year

'

.

•

AT

ltrmt with C John Man.o oe a one·reconcract and 2B Bfian R.tlrr on 11 minor·

. '

. .

all night, with 19 points, The Tigers,
averaging 20, I tumoven coming
into the game, had 18 against the Tar
Heels,
u11lat's something we need to
work on," LSU's Lester Earl said,
"It's kind suspect right now, We
can't he in such a rush! '
In other Top 25 games, No, 14
TeKas beat Oregon State 86-83, No,
20 Alabama defealed North TeKas
72-55, and No, 22 Stanford routed
Alaska-Anchorage 105-70,
No. 14 Tellllll 86
0ftgon St. 83
At Corvallis, Reggie Freeman
scored 28 points and Texas held off
a late rally by Oregon State,
The Longhorns (6·1 ), who led by
as many as 15 poinls in the second
half, didn't wrap up the win until
Or.egon State's Corey Benjamin

OSU downs Alabama State; OU beats Wright State&gt;74-59

"A 'Victorian
Christmas"

FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

.

LAST MINUTE SAVINGS

p;"""""'
Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Avon Uke $~. A~ Jl

In Ohio college basketball, .··

Pomeroy's

CHAPMAN
SHOES ·

' Pittsburgh 011 St. lwi.S: ti::\Op.m.

Tex;u; 86. Oregon S•. 8.1

lfo&lt;1&gt;w 42

Reserve notes: In the resewe
game Meigs outscored Point 14-1 in
the second period and went on to
post a 45-32 win.
Jennifer Shrimplin led Meigs
with 13, Brooke Williams. Amy
Hysell and Tiffany Halfill added
eight points each,
Missy Roese led Point with 10.
Quarter lmal1
Meigs
16-12;6-19=48
PointPieasant
14-10-17-14=48
Meigs: Ashley Roach 3-0-0=6,
Carissa Ash 3-1-0=9, Taryn Doidge
1-0-1=3, Cheryl Jewell 3-0-4=10,
Tonya Miller 2·0-0=4: Tricia Davis
2-2-1=11. Brandi Meadows 1-03=5, Totals: IS-3-9=48
Point Pleasant: Amy Doss 1·06=8, Tracie Drain 4-1-8=19, Amanda Barnett 0-0-1= I, Amber Oliver 60-6= 18, Vicky Grady 2-0-1=5,
Totals: 15·1-22=55

90 10~
71' IOJ

Jl.lll.

FarWest

-·
"· Morli0110114)
AJMehula
&amp;laewood
44, Ashtabula

AT

.

t:ii !iA

Aonda :n Onawa. 7:JO p.m.

49

N_.,.,.r.......,e pl1y

97

9~

Tonight's games

Southwest

Alaboma 89, Akroo 44
-Sf, 66,
~

K4
89
94

7~

Tanrn Bay at Bmton. 7JO p.m.

Baylor 76, Prairie Vi.:ow 6l
[Mmar 111: Mill)' Hardin· lbylor 42
Oklahoma St. 67. Coli. of Chark•ton

Ohio women's
college scores

.

COLORADO AVALANCHE : Re·
c.:alled RW tbriltian Mltte from Henhey
of the AHL.

12 assists, led by Ash's four, Davis
and Jewell added three each.

North C.Oiina coach De.n Smith the lead to five on two occasions
are goin&amp; to be touaJt."
There wasn't much offe~~~e from 'said.
with leas than nine minutes left
either team in Wednesday night's
Despite shootin&amp; 1-for-16 from
But each lime, Jamison respondgiiiiC.
threc-pPint t'lllge. the Tar Heels (7- ed with 1 layup, Ymce Carter then
The Till' Heels, playing without 1) won their seventh straight since a ldded a fast-break layup after a steal,
injured point guard Ed Cota. had seasqn-opening loss to Arizona, Jllld Jamison made a free throw as
their lowest shooting percentage defeating the road-weary Tigen (3· North Carolina went ahead 53-43
since 1994. And LSU wllll even 6) for the eighth consecutive time in with 6:49 left
worse, The Tigers shot only 24 per- the series,
Jamison capped North Carolina"s
"We had too many unforced · late 12-lrun with another layup. The
cent in the second half, going periO&lt;js of 6:03~ 4:25 and the final 4:05 turnovers and gave them way too Tar Heels led by 16 with 4:20
many offensive rebounds," LSU remaining, and maintained the lead
without baskets,
"It Willi honible," Shammond coach Dale Brown said. "You can't at the foul line in the closing minWilliams said of North Carolina's do that against a top 20 team on the utes,
offense without Cota, who was side· road and expect to win. It's just that
"I credit Serge Zwikker with
,
lined with a sore right arch, "A lot simple:·
screening and just getting me open,"
of things didn"t go right for us , Our
North Carolina took an 11-point Jamison said, "That's one thing
shooting was off again, but we are lead early in the ,second half as the that's in our playbook. I was just
1
going to put !his behind us!'
Tigers fumbled the ball away on four ' moving quickly and they were won•
"We need offensive tuning other straight possessions, But with North dering where I was at."
Duane
Sjlencer
led
LSU,
which
than just practice shooting and miss· Carolina's cold shooting touch, LSU
insnnd watchin~ Antawn rebound." climbed back into the game and cut batded turnover and foul problems

Wednesday's scores

Illinois St . 67, Notthwestem 47
Louisiana Tech
DePnul49
N. llliooil67 . Autlin Peny64
Ohio St. HI. Alab11~1 St. 40
Ohio U. 74, WriJht St. S9
SE Mi,~ouri 87. OaklancJ City 57
St. Loui' 61 . Murray St. 54
Tokdo ,'iS, Camsius 47
.
W. Mi~higt~n 'Kt. Chicago St. 119 (0TI

Non-cll!lference play

H6
121
HS
M5
H6

Buffolo S. Tampa Bay J
N.Y. Ranp:n 4. l...m An~clei 0
{),.Jia.'&gt; ~. Chic01go 2l0Tl
Detroit 3. Calgary 3 (li~l
Colorndo 4, Edmonton 4 (1 1 ~)
New Jersey 2. Vancouver I

Virginia 67. Uben)' 54 .

Bluffrun 96, Oli~ 84

.lll
37
JO
,28
2.'i

hcllk Division
Culuradn ... ......... l9 9 .~ 4.'
F.tl muJJ!tm ....,..... I.J 16 4 J2
V;uk:I'UWr ....... I~ I~ I .1 1
C:llgary .. , .. ,.. 12 17 ~ 29
LmA.nge1~~ ..... 12 17 4 2K
Anuhdm ............ ll 16 S 27
SanJLl~ ............. ll 16 4
26

Nicholl1; St. 99. SE Looisian:t 91 .
Nonh Carolina 67. LSU 4K
SW Louisiana 91 , South.!m 6S
Tenncnec 71 , Southern Cal 59
VMI 107. E. Mt!nnonlte 61

Oblo Conference

1W ·

Ctntral Di¥1....
}l I. I &amp;

DaiiM _
. _, _191 0
lktroit.. ............. 17 10
S1.l.o1.us .... ...... 1517
Oli~;:~go .... ......... 14 11
~nix ........ :... 13 I ~
Toronto ..... ....... 13 21)

65
Alabama 12, Not1h T~us 55
Aubum 60, Soulh Alabilma 51 '
Oauleslon Southern 7:\, S. Carolina
Sr. 62
James Modi10n 89, Hampton 58
Me~his 83, NE LDuisiana 61
Miami 74, Jacksonville 57
N.C. ChariDI!e 71, S. Illinois 62
New Or~ 61. va, Commonweallh ·

8Pidwin·Wallace 73. Mu1kin~um 67
Capitill72. Ohio Northem 67
Mount Union 67, Hcitklberfl: (.12
Ott(tbein 61. Hi1am ~ol. ~

b7

99

-·-

Tn .-Chat·

Ohio men's
college scores

96

40

WESTERN CONFERENCE

lam

Ml,lf\IO!M 87, W. Montana 61
N. AritOna 77. l.oyola MiltYmoun! ~
~vild:1 7l PortlaJILI ~4
StMford 105. Alub·And'lorap! 70

AHL

t:ii !iA

-43

NorthtUI Dhlsion
Hnnford ....... ,. IS 10 6 :\6
Buffalo ... ........... 16 14 2 :W
Pinsbur¥h .......... l4 15 :\ 31
Morureal.. .......... l2 16 S 29
Boston ................ ll I~ :'i 27
Ottawa ................. !! 14 1 23

East

.

ll! L I &amp;

Auridii ............... IH 6 7
Pflil'*lphia ....... l 9 12 2
N~w J~rsey ....... I ~ II 2
NY . RanglTL- .. 16 14 S
N, Y. Islanders .... ll 12 H
Wlll'ihingto-;~,........ 13 17 2
TamP,a Bay ........ 11 16 J

COLUMBUS at Richmond , I p.m.
New EftgiMCI 31 Portland, 10 p.m
Colorado at Seattle. 10 p.m.

46

Hockey

ORBENSBORO, N,C, (AI') Anlawn Jamison's tireless rebounding hu become con1agi0111 for No.
12 North Carolina.
Jainison had 26 points and IS
mbouDds to rescue the cold-shooting
Tu, Heels on Wednesday night
North Carolina shot only 37 percent
from the field and missed '15 of 16
three-point attempts in a 67-48 viclory overLSU, but the Tar Heels outrebounded the Tigers SS-28,
· "At first, it was just me, I guess
everybody started getting jealous,"
the 6-foot-9 Jamison said of North
CIU'olina's boiU'd work. which tops
the nation at SO rebounds per game.
"I think we have one of the tallest
and strongest" front lines in the
nation, and if we really capitalize on
that and start hitting our break, we .

.\tbintlc Divhktn

Saturday'spmes

r:moog&lt;~

FOOlball

EASTERN CONFERENCE

No games Friday

n.

F SICphen Howord.

CHAP

.

Columbus at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Portland at Sealtle, 10 p.m.

Ala.· Birmingham

Basketball
Nil............. "-c'et'on
CHICAGO BULLS: Welved C
Thorrw.HamiiiOD.
ORLANDO MAOIC; Placed G An·
reroee Hardaway on !he iojured lilt.
Si ned G .KeM Smith.
I SAN A;;&amp;NtO SPURS: Pl....t F
Charlea Smidr on die injured liat. SlJncd

NaUoul Hodey i.ea&amp;ue
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DtJCKS: Seat
RW Valeri Karpov to Baltimore of the

Colorado 85, Portland 60
.CQLUMBUS81,Adanta64 '

South

•&amp;er of Mobile o1rhc Southern Leque,
llld l&gt;oo Ale_.,aoder pit~n1 COKb ofMo-

Garmtsville 65, Crestwood 42
Genen 75, Ashlllbuln 65
. Gilmour 42. Brooklyn 28
Hamilton Badin 65, Kenering Aller

Sou t~ington Chnlker 6~ . Orwell ·
Gra!Wl Vall. '2
·
Steubenvi lle Cut h. 74, Weirton,
W.Va. 71
Strongsville S4, N. Royallon 40
Tol. Catholic 70, To/. Waite 3S
To!. Notre Dame 74, Bow1ber48
Tol. Rogm 53. Tol. Ubbey 36
Tol. Stan 60. Tol. Woodw:ll'd Sit
Trotwood 60, Piqua 26
Troy 56. Clayton Northmont 28
Vnndallil Butler 7S, W. Carrollton 32
W. Branch 64, Louisville 26 ·
W. GttiU~ 61, Oranf!e IS
W. Muskingum 62. Morg11n S4
Wellington 30, Keystone 26
Westlake 56. Roc.:ky River ~8
Wiclddfe 41,-Hawke• 44
Windham Sl, Woodridte 36
Zartesvllle Ro~rans 60, Col. Waner·
son 56

ABL standings
.ll

SAN DIEOO PADRES: Nomod S;d
Monge pirclUnJ COICh of Lu Vqu of the
Pacific Co• l..ela:ue; Mike R~n~~ey man-

National Foolbelll...eMIM
SAN FRANCISCO 49EifS ~ Sl&amp;n~d
WR Mike Caldwell.

Howland 59, Nilel39
. Huber Hts. Wayne 38, Fairborn 31
Jefferson 61, Paint~ville Riverside 43 ,
Kellering Fairmont 63, Xenia 24
l..akcwood 51, Shaker Hts. 38
Lcdgemorn53,1..llrdstown 43
Liberty Remon 79, Ada 30
Loro.in So11thview 52. N. Ridgeville
46
Madison 69, Cle. Lincoln-West38
Maznific.:llf 86, Lornin A.dm. King ~2
Mwlewood 57, Ashtabula St. John 3
Mayesville 69, John Glenn 45
McdiDa 65, Bnmswic.:lr. .54
Mentor 47, Wt~rTensville Hts. JB
Minerva 65, Cardon S. 3!i
Mr.gOOore 47. Mopdote Acid 46
N. Olmsted 51. Olmsted Fulls 33
New Lexington SJ. Tri Vall. )4
Newark Cath . .54, Col. Ready SJ OT
Newbury 44, Fairpo1137
Oberlin 64, Lomin BrookJMr 43
P111kmbwz Calh. 72, Fon Frye 48
Perry 61. Kirtland 35
Pickerington 66, Grove City 29
Point Pleasanl, W.Va. 55, Meig~~48
Poland 59, Girard 45
Pymntuning Vall. 69, Bristo\42
Rnvenna SE SS, Streetsboro I0
Richmond ~11. SO, Cuyahoga Hts. 48
Rivet View 48. Croobville 34
Root~towD46, Waterloo 44
Sberid:m 44, Philo 42
Sidney 45, Gteen'rille 44.
Solon·54, 'Twinsburg 4.~

~

Point came Stonning back in &lt;he
third
period to outscore Meigs 17-6
Sentinel Correepondent
and
take
a 41-34 lead heading into
Host Point Pleasant outscored
Meigs 22·9 from the foul line and ' the final period, Drain led the way .
went on to defeat Meigs SS-48 in with six points, Oliver and Amy
girls' l!asketball action Wednesday Grady added four points each,
In tbe fourth period, tlie Maraudevening at Point Pleasant, WVa,
ers,
behind the scoring of Tricia
It was a tough loss for the Lady
tried to stage a comeback,
Davis
Marauders (4-3), who played with·
out the services of two starters, Davis scored nine of her 11 total
Center Tracy Coffey has an ankle points in the period while the
sprain. Point guard Becky Smith Marauders defense held the Lady
·missed the game because of illness. Knights to only two field goals. But
Meigs jumped out on top 16-14 the Lady Knights went to the line 14
after one period, Carrisa Ash and. times, making 10 as they were able
Brandi Meadows paced Meigs in the to hold on for the win . .
Davis came off the ben&lt;:h to lead
period with five points each. Cheryl ·
Meigs
with .ll poinls. Jewell added
Jewell added four.. Tracie Drain
10,
The
Lady Marauders hitl8 of 62
added eight for the Lady Knights (3for
29%,
including three of eight
0),
The Marauders went into the from loog range, Meigs hil nine of
locker room with a 28-24 advantage, 12 from the line for 75%,
Meigs pulled down 37 rebounds,.
Ashley Roach and Tonya Miller led
with
Jewell grabbing eighl, Mead·
Meigs in !he second period w·ith four
ows
seven and Davis six. Meigs
points each, Amber Oliver added six
turned the ball over 14times and had
for the Lady Knights.

By DAVE HARRIS

ead LHP Brian Bohanon on a minor·
leaaue cOfJlncl.

Elyria S6, Vennilion 44 '
Elyria Midview 65, Avon )7'
Firelnnd$ 64, Lorain Clearvlew 47
Garf"teld Hts. 51. CJe. Soulh :\5
Garfield Ht&amp; ~ Trinity 85, PIIOTia Padua

2.1

Indiana 10~ Orlando 9S (2 01) ·
CLEVELAND99, New JerseyS I
De1roil 112, New York 78

Tum

ATLAN~A~ Anrio11nud
28 Mart Lemke "''"''""' hl"l llbl"'·
tion.
NEW YORK METS: A,n:ed 10"""'
with SS.Tim Bopr Mia fMIC.~ contract

38

15 ~

.240

Vancouver .............. S 20 .200
SanAnmnio ...........4 / 17

34

ra.

.87S
.818

AJ,I'OCCIIO lenni with INF

bi~ .

29

CtntniDJ.-.

By DAVID DROSCHAK

Point Pleasant girls notch
55-48 victory over Meigs

Juan S;wnut! 0111a miftOr·leqij~! CONI'Itl.

Berl&lt;shh• 43. Mid&lt;lolield Criool38
B'""kcye Trail 60, Ttncarawu Vall.

NBA standings

N&lt;wY&lt;rl ,.,,...,, .. ,.. l6
Wuld-" " '"""' II
Ori&amp;Ddo ...... :....M.~ ..... 9
PIUiodelphia ............ 7
New Jersey ·····-····... S
Bostoa.......... - .......... 5

)"W coatn~~;:L

Beavrrcn:ft. 111. Spria&amp;- Nortb 2.5
Bellaire Sc. Jobn 's ~ . Munoli. J.4
Berea 82. Lodi. Ooverla(ll

Milllli .................... IB , 6 .7SO

North Carolina beats LSU; Texas and Alabama also win

Thursday, December 11, 1918

Basketball

Iioa

.--~----~~----~--~------~~~==~~~----------~~~--~~
:In Top 26 college hoops,
.

The Daily Sent~~~

Scoreboard

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge 5

Pomerqy • Middleport, Ohio

to one-year
contract

•

. CLEVE~AND (AP) -,. Chad
, Cunis, an oulficldcr woo has averaged 32 stolen buses in five seasons,
signed an $850,000, one-year con- ,
tract with &lt;he Cleveland Indians,
Wilh incentives and a club option
for lhc 1998 sea•on, Curtis could
make as much as $3.45 million fllf
two years.

Curtis played 104 games for thC
Dctrnil Tigers last season before he
was traded lu the Los Angeles
Dodgers. Curtis hit .252 combined
with 18 stolen bases and refused a •
minor league assignmcnl at\cr the
season.
. "Chad will provide depth and
versatility," Indians general manager John Hart said Wednesday, "We .~
have liked ·Chad Curtis for a long
Lime."
'
. ·
The Indians need to replace
Albert Belle in left field after the
slugger signed a $55 million, fiveyear contract with the Chicago While ·
So&lt;. Curtis. a right-handed batter,
could platoon with left-handed Brian Giles,
The Indians earlier signed Kevin
Mitchell to a minor league cnntract
with an invitation to spring training,
. Curtis will be paid a base salary
of $750,000 in 1997 with $400,000
in perfonnancc bonuses, He will get
$50,000 each for starting 80, 100,
120 and 140 games and $50.00\)
each for 350,400,450 and 500 plate
appearances,
The club option would be worth
$1.5 million plus bonuses earned and
is guaranteed if Curtis plays 120
games in 1997, The Indians must pay
a $100,000 buyout if they do not
exercise it
·
If Curtis plays 140 games and
gets 500 plate appearances in :97: he
would earn $1.1 S million the first
year and $~.3 million in 1998,

�,

•

,Thursday, December 19, 1996

Thursday, l)ecember 19, 1996

---------~Community
Tile Commtmlty Caleadar is
publill11d M a free 11enic:e to - -

prallt ....... wilhiBa to 8DOOUDce
-ala&amp; and opeclal nmts. 1'lle
caletldar II not daiped .to promote 1a1eo or fuad ralsen ol any
't)'pe. Items ue printed • space
·permit~~ aad eUIIIOt be praoteed
to n111 a specific number or days.
THURSDAY
·POMEROY·- The Meigs County
Public -Library Board of Trustees
will ineet at l,p.m. Thufsday at the
library.

MIDDLEPORT -- Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, special meeting, installation of
officers, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple.

: . PERFECl' SEASON- Southern Junlor High School'• 1996 foot· Atkins, lan. Wlee, DaUy Hill and Robert Foraatat. In tha aacond row the third row are coach Pat O'Brien, Jona!han Evans, Jim AUay,
· &lt;bllll teMn flnlahad the 11110n with a 7·0 record. In front ara (L·R) ara Matt Nalglar, Mike Ball, Matt Warnar, Jason Laudarmllt, Tom Nick Bolin, Tyler Johnson, Matt Shain, Clay Enslen, Tyler Little,
·~oan Canter, .,.lck McLaughlin, Brandon Hill, Chris Yeauger, Joe Roberta, Josh Baker, Buster Penix, Matt Aah and John Hunnell. In · Brady Bowling and coach Mike Warner. ·

mas village, sponsored by Star Mill

Meigs and Vinton Joint Solid Waste
Management District wiU meet at
the district office on Thursday, 6
p.m.

Park Board. Free. All welcome.
POMEROY - Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Support
Group meeting Thursday, 1·2:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Multipurpose Senior Center in Pomeroy.
Plans for 1997 will be discussed.
CHESTER ·: Family roller-skat·
ing Christmas party Thursday, 7 to
9:30 p.m. at the Chester Skate·A·
Way: No admission charge or age
limits. Door prizes will be awarded
for the best Christmas colors worn,
and the best 'spirit of Christmas costume. The event is being sponsored
by the Meigs Area Holiness Association, the Meiss Ministerial Associ·
ation and the Middleport Ministerial
Association.

;On this year's NCAA 1-AA all-America team,
~Montana and ·Marshall
!YRICHARD
.nOSENBLAn

NEW YORK (AP) - Once
jlgain, Montana's quarterback made
:The Associated Press • l·AA All·
America team. This time, Brian Ah
· ;Yat was joined by four teammates.
; Ah Yat, a sophomore who took
pver at quarterback for Dave
Dickenson, completed 265 of 432
passes for 3,615 yards and 42 touch, downs and hils the Grizzlies within a
victory of.a second straight national
title.
.
, His favorite target, wide receiver
Joe Douglass, also made the team,
along with center David Ke.l!lpfert,
suard Mike Agee and Junoor
linebacker Jason Crebo.
, Douglass caught 82 passes for
1,469 yards and 19touchdowns. The
duo has been sensational in three
playoff games, with Ah Yat ·hitting
80 of 122 passes fo~ 1,062 yards and
hine touchdowns and Douglass
catching 28 for 380 yards a~d two
...~wns.
.
.
1
- .._..,......,.._

~ .........

If,.

ly.

!

Mike Richter is making the New
.York Rangers look exceptionally
,good these days, even though the
:goaltender says it's the other way
Jll'OU~d.

Richter recorded his second
'shutout of the season Wednesday
nighl, stopping 37 shots as . the
Ran11ers beat the Los Angeles Kmgs
4-0.
Richter is 8-0-1 in his last nine
gam~s. No surpnse, the Rangers are
9-1-1 during their best stretch of the
·season··t feel like I'm playing a little bit
sharper now, but the team i.~ playing
really well in front of me, Rrchter
.said.
W~yne Gretzky had three assists,

l'

a~o;

Appalachian State's Dexter·Coakley,
•

who made the team for the third

KANUAGA -- Silver Memorial
Freewill Baptist Church, Kanuaga,
Christmas program, 7 p.m . Saturday.

WELLSTON •• The Board of
Directors of the Gallia, Jackson,

SUNDAY
CHESHIRE - Silver Run Baptist
Church~ Cheshire, annual' Chrismias

4 door, air, AMIFM cass, tilt, cruise, power sun root,
alloy VJheels, security svsJ!l'"·

1

,TG\0 25 hoops... (Continued from Page4)
Brian Williams' three-point·
er wit~\ three seconds left in the hal f.
TheTtjle stretched that lead to 49-21
althe ftarl of the second half before
Nonh Texas (3·5) scored nine
strai·.:;,t. points.
_
~rid Miller led North Texas
with 19 points and I0 rebounds.
No.l2 SUIIIIord 105
..U.U-Aacllorace 70
At Stanford. Kris Weems made
seven tJwe-pointm for acareer·high

21 points, and the Cardinal sank a
school-record I4 from long range.
Tim Young had 18 points . and
nine rebounds for Stanford. Ry~
Mendez added IS pornts, a~d Bre~on
~night had 12 pomts aod mne assrsts
on 19 mohutes.
.
The Car~linal were 14 of 24 from
long range on beaung Anchorage for
the second time this season.
Jim Hajdukovich led the Seawolves (7·3) wnh 22 porn IS.

side air bag, 5 spd, lull bench seat, 1
payload, all season radials, 3 yr 36,000 bul)lper
bumper, plus 5 yr 60.000 power

D~ver's

'18,7~.85

11,668.85
·2,673.85 •'

_Speei1JI l:ala IPfl~

1enior. Kalispt"l~. rv_tont. . J~sh Be'yer. WilliAm~
Mary, 6-S. 295. Jumor. Co llingswood, N.J .~ Davad
Kempfer1.• Monuma. 6·5. 285. 5e"•or. Hcllgale.

•

•

Sei&lt;J fi&gt;rltea

•

Cooknwl.

McCombs.
The defensive backs

Linemen: B.J. Cohen. MARSHALL; Josh Hays.
ldohn S1a1e: James Rmell. East Tennessee State.
Linebackers : 01ha Evafl s. Jock son State ;
Br:~ndon Uule, Bucknell : Dedrick Manigo. Sam
HotJston State: Eugene McAleer, Ho£strn.
B~cks : :l.lck Bronson. McNeese S1:~ te ; Melvin
O,nningh:~m, MARSHALL: Lloyd Lee, Danmouth:
TyrccTalton. toiorthernlow:~ .
.
Punler: BenTalbou. Lehigh.

are

William

Hampton of Murray State , Darren
Sharper of William &amp; Mary, Robert
T (
fT
T h d S
ay Or 0
ennessee CC an
ean
Woodson of Jackson State. Sharper
had 10 interceptions, returning one

h'l T I

hd

r

All·pul'pose: Scou. Shklds: Weber Suuc. 6-4,
2 IO. ~homore, San Diego. Cahr
.
.
Kacker: Wayne Boyer. Southwest Musoun
Slate. ~-II. 170. senior. St. Louis, Mo

Firsl·telm defense
Linemen· Billy Lyon, MARSHALL. 6-S. 292,
sc:niot. Erhmi.c:r, Ky.: PraU Lyons. Troy State. 6-5,
282. senior. Fort Worth, Texas; Mike Miano.
Sou~hwesl Mis50uri Slalc. 6 - ~. 303, senior. Sl

h d t.o""· Mo.

l?r 8 . tOUC OWO, W I e
ay Of a ·
Linebnckcn : ~uer Coakley . Appalachin'n
mne and Wood~on seven.
Smte. ~- II ' 20~ .. seniOr. Mou.m ~leasnnt. S.C. : Jnson
The punter is Mark Gagliano of Crebo. Montnna. 6-4. 22S, JUn,IOr, ..,elena, Monl .:
, .
. . .
Dnnell Flylhe . Hampton Un1veu1ty. 6·.' · 240.
Southern llhn01s. }ie led the .diVISIOn senmr. Suffolk. Va.:Tony M.cc~mbs. Ens1ern
with a 45.04-yard average on . 54 Kenhlcky. 6 · 2·. 2 ~ 5 · sen•or. Hopkm~vllle. Ky.
Bock_s. W1~ham H:~mpton, Murr:~y State, 6- 1,
punts.
,
17.5.. sen1or . .(.aHie R~ck . Ar~. ; D:~rren Sharper:
The repeaters are Haskins, Ward, W•lham &amp; M.try. 6· 1. .oo. wmor. Glen Allen. ~a..
L
H
d C ki
Raben Taylor. Tennessee Tech. 6-0, 175, semor.
yon, ampton an . oa ey..
Annist~. Aln.: Sean ~oodson. Jackson SI31C, 6-2.
First-teamotl'ense ·
210. Sl!nmr. Jock~ln. ~~-~~ .
.
Quar1erback: Brian Ah Yll. Monuwa. 6-1. 185.
Punter: M:ll'k Gagh:.no. Soulhern llhnols. 6-4,
pho
H II H ..
208 semor. Collierville. Tenn
so more, ono u u, awan.
·
. RunninJ Bacll.s: . Archie ~merson : ~orthern
Second-team offense
. Anit:~na. S-9. 180, seNor, S~n Die.go. Cahf.. Thonw
Quan~rback . Enc Kres~r. MARSH~LL.
H;~.skins. YMI. 5-8. 172. ·SCmor. R1chtooAd . Va..
Runnmg backs : Rcg~te Greene. S1ena: Chad
. Recelvers: JoeDougl:as.Montana,S-ll.lflO. Levi n . C~mcll. ,
,
.
. .
scmor, Salem. Ore .. Randy Moss. MARSI:IALL. 6~cc~1vers: Bmn Ftnn.ernn . V 1l~nnovn : ~:lVId
S• .2 10. freshman. Rand, W.'(a. : Dedn!-' W~rd , Rommes . Cal State-Northndge: Regmald Swmton.
~onhern Iowa. 5-8. 180, 5Cnl0r. Cedar .Raptds , Mtnn.y Sta,tc
.
Iowa
Lmemcn : Tayan Cl(lss. Conncct1cut Jerome ·
, Linemen: Mike A1ee; Mnntann, 6-4 112. 28S. Ooniets. Northenstern : A'nron Fc~gus o n. MAR,

'

I

'

'

,

•

Andrei Kovalcnko scored

'twice

forthe host Oilers, giving him 15th is
season and 100 in his NHLcarccr.
Kovaicnko put Edmonton ahead
4-3 at 4:51 or the third period, but
.Sakic broke through the Oilers
defense and passed to Kamcnsky,
who scored his second goal ·of the
game.
Sabres 5, Lightning 3
Derek Plante scored twice and
Buffalo stopped Tampa Bay's five·
game unbeaten string.
Plante's

second

goal was his

team-leading 14th, and made il 4·2
early in the third period.
After the Lightning scored with

· Auto, air, all-power, cass, rear spoiler, alloy wheels,
Unbelievable Sele

Sec:ond-teamdefense

Thlrd·team oiTense

Quancrback: Ted W~ill!. How:~rd Univet'$lty ,
Running backs: Kenny Bynum. South Carolina
Sr_tlle; Claude M~this. Southwc~ l TetM.
Receivers: Juan Hall. Tennessee Stnle: Rohen
Wilson,l-loridaA&amp;M:RarncekWright.Maine.
Lint:men: ~rain B~cllc. Lehigh; Jim Butz~.
Easlc:rn Wadnni!ton: Shawn Clurk . Appal~hmn
Slale : Kerry Jenkins. Troy State: Brian tar~cn ,
DMtmouth
.
All-purpo!it: Joe Ro.wo. Duquesne:
Kicker: Rob Hllfl. MuiT:t.y Sl at ~
Third-team defe~
L'
. Jeff G k:
._._.. he UtAh· 0e¥hfn
memcn .
ay :~n, ~~ rn
. . ,
Geddes Montana Sl:~te · Marcellus Wiley
Columbi~ .
'
'
'
Linebackers: Mike Bouchce. Montana; Ronnie
Merrill . Murrny Sl:u:c: Rich:~rd M~s. Indiana State:
DerckStrcy, Ens!emWnshingiOn.
lhcks : Jeb Dougheny , Snn Oie1-o ; Kenrqo
Bail ey, Oclrtwo.re: .Ron Fauguc . Tenne~see,ChaUilnoo~a: B.J. G:~llu. Lafayette.
Punter· Brad Costello Dost(lnUnivcrsity
·
·
'
·

/

4:50 left, the host Sabres gut an cmr-;
ty-net goal with 55 seconds remaining when Matthew Bamahy scmtd"
after a pass by goaltender Dominik '
Hasek.
·
'
Flames 3, Red: Wings 3
Calgary dcfcnsman Todd Simp-'
son scored his firsi NHL goal, tying '
the game at K:25 or the third period,;
Thcorcn Fleury . drew three
Detroit players behind the net, tllcn'
Simpson got the loose puck and circled in front for a goal that made it '
3-all.
;
Jonas Hoglund and Robert;
Reichel also scored for host Calgary.,
Vyachcslav Kozlov, Brendan Shanahan and Yyachesiav Fetisov scored
for Detroit.

YOUNG ROTARIAN - 4·months-old Kaeey Eblin, daughter of Ro,.rlan Krlsti and Harley l:blin, Wl!ll
one of the youngest people attending Monday nights Rotary Christmas dinner. Little Kaeey lelhown
"11ere .with her mother and Santa Claus, Curly Wiles of Pomeroy.

I

1996 NISSAN PATHFINDER XE
29,464.95
-4469.95

...

Santa Claus was the center of Young, John Anderson, Jennifer and
attraction at the Monday night meet· Jim Sheets, exchange students VIa·
·;ng of the Middleport-Pomeroy dymyr Stetanovych and Alma
Rotary Club, held at Heath !--oaizo, Jeff and Linda Wri(:ller and
Methodist Church in Middleport.
sons Jay and David, Randy and Joan
Following the meal, Christmas Hayes and dau~ters Amanda and
carols led by club President Hal Alison, Karl Kebler Ill, Gene and
Kneen, accompanied by Vice-presi· Judy Riggs with son Jay and grand·
dent John Anderson, ushered in - sons Dustin and Deven and motherSanta Claus portrayed by Curly in-law Kathryn Noble, Howard E.
Wiles of Pomeroy. Parents and Frank, Harold and Betty Newell,
grandparents provided the gifts for Robert and Jane Beegle, Lloyd and
children and grandchildren which Anna Blackwood.
were handed out by Santa Claus.
Also attending were Dick and
The youngest children present Ruby Vaughan and children and
were 2-months-old Alyson Del- grandchildren, Ashlee and Cassie
twiller, daughter of Rotarian Albert Vaughan, Richard and Jacob Well,
and Kim Dettwilier, and 4-months- Zandra, Joe and Alex Hindy and
old Kasey Eblin.• daughtc;r of Rotari ' plizabeth Well; Kristi and Harley
an Kristi and Harley Eblin.
'Eblin and children Cheyenne and
Spouses and chi'ldrcn were invit· Kasey; Roberta Shields, Dennis Saeed and the ladies of the church start· lens; Rev: Father Walter Heinz;
ed off the event with a turkey and -' David and Trish Snyder and jlaugh-_
ham dinner, served buffet style. The ters Stacy and Stephanie; Jim and
Rev. Father Walter Heinz gave a Carol Mourning and son Chad; .
Christmas invocation.
Chuck and Daisy Blakeslee; Jon
Attending were Joe and Rowena . Perrin a~ mother, Gay; Albert and

·.
CHRISTMAS EXPERIENCE -

Vladymyr
Stetanovych, · a
Ukrainian student attending tha
University of Rio Granda, got to
visit with Santa, Curly Wilaa of
Porrreroy, at Monday night's
Rotary Chrlatmas dinner. He Is
living with Rotary members Jim
and Jennifer Sheets.

Accessory Package Includes:
I Standa•d battery
/ Extended · Ide
balt!i'ry
,.I l · hO~I
rap•d (~a•ge •

Kim De.ttwiller and daughters Heath
and Alyson; Vernagaye Sullivan and
Hal Kneen.

./ Chargmg '&gt;land
wuh condt tto ner

Two initiated intp Hemlock Grange
the Child"; Sylvia Midkiff, "Grand·
children"; aoid Ziba Midkiff, "A
Christmas Wish."
·
Bernice Hawk and Ethel Hart .
were reported ill.
Rosalie Story, master, presided at
the meeting.

2999*

It was noted tha~ the January
meeting will be a potluck to welcome members of Rock Springs
Grange into the Hemlock unit.
A white elephant gift exchange
was enjoyed following the meeting.

tsAf~ole

HlfiVES RJR HUrmlfG AHD FISHIIfG
OR COUECnHG, SEE OUR I.ARGE
SELECnOH TODAVIIIItll

birth

lOo/o

nounced

I Rodney

and Patrcce Beegle of
-announce the birth of their
'
child, Russen Gene Beegle.
He ·was bom Nov. 26 at Women
ao(d Children's Hospital
in
C~arleston, W.Va., weighed six
pqunds, five ounces and was 19
inches ion8· He was welcomed
home by his brother, Ryan.
Maternal grandparents are Carl
Circle and Nancy Circle. Paternal
grandparepts are Ronald and Leanna
Beegle. . Great· grandparents arc
C~atles and Mattie Beegle, Mary K.
YI)St and Luia Circle.

•

.

I

J

634EMAINST
POMEROY 114 112-1100

(\329.99 wilhollt)

Nokia®model 101
cellular-a great 'gift!
Gi11e the extra con11enien ce and safety of.

a cellular phone. 48-number memory.
•
130 minutes talk time, 30 hours standby.

$300.01 Handheld Cellular
$50 Free Local Airtimet

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1.997 NISSAN SENTRA GXE

Rotarians hold
Christmas dinner

CHARLIE MANUEL'S
·WINTER BASEBALL CAMP

Learn fro• the All Star Coaching StaH
lncludl.. lndlan Players. Ages10.21.
Co•plete lastnctlons on Hitting,
Fleldl•li Catching anti Pitching.
Dece•lllr 27·31
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Local Info. Call·992·7959

17,114
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O'OELL LUHBER

AT CLEVELAND INDIANS' SPRING
TUIIIING FACILITY.
WINTER HAVEN, Fl.

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loaded. Unbelievable Sele Price.

,

Donald and Jane Frymyer were
initiated into Hemlock Grange 2049
during a recent meeting at the hail.
·The initiatory work took place
following a holiday potluck. Christ·
mas was the .program title with
poems being rcad .by Nancy Wells,
"December"; Sara Cullums. "Behold

Cupps then hit t'our straight free .
Ohio led by as many a• 16 points
throws to end the game.
before Wright State cut the lead to
Thompson led Ohio Northern
54-50 with 8:251eft on a three-pointwith 16 points. Marcus Dave had 15
er by Mike Richardson. But the Bobpoints, and Ben Russell added II .
. cats quickly pulled .away, outscoring
Brad Howe had 12 points for
tile Raiders 20-5 the rest of the game.
Capital. Tony Joseph had II.
Canisius' only lead was at 12:53
In nonconfercnce games Wcdncs'
in
the
first half when Keith Lampkin
day, Ohio handed Wright State its
hit
a
three-pointer
to put the Golden
fifth straight loss, 74·59 and Toledo
Griffons (2-5) up 11 -9.
heat Canisius 58-47.
But the Rockets quickly regained
Geno Ford scored 17 of his 21
the
lead on a three-pointer by Claypoints in the second half for the Bob.
ton
Burch.
Toledo never trailed after
cats (3·3). Cunis Simmons and Ed
that.
.
Sears each added 18.
Kizer
and
Matt Gladieux
Robert
John Sevesiod led Wright State
scored
12
points
for Toledo.
each
(1-5) with 17 points.

1996 NISSAN 4x

:10,46748
-4753.00

Kicker; Tim ~nl:mder. MARSHALL

Devils and Sabres also win
sky midway through the third peri~
od, as Colorado tied Edmonton.

1997 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE

SHALL: ~an Finn, Nor1hecn Arizona: Scott Kadlub, ·
AppalachaanState
All -purpose : Antwu11ne Wynu. Bethun~-

Ohio college hoops.. •....;(_Co_nt_inu_ed_fr_om_P...;;ag_e4_)- - - - - - - - - - - - - - shots from the field during the run.
Al,1bama State managed j~sl six
field 8Pals over a span of20mrnut~s.
strctctling to the 12-mrnute mark of
the •e,;;ond h~lf.
'11\f game marked the return of
Alaball"a State coach Rob Spovery.
Spive~ coached Ashland Umvcrsr ty to ' 14-12 record last year.
"I wish I could have brought a
better feam hqre to play," he said. "I
receivl~d the job jn August. You have
to pl~~l outt"- h•nd that was dealt to
you.
·.
In tpe Ohiq Cnpfcrence, BaidwrnWall"'le beal ft1uskingum 73-67,
Moun Union !Qppled Heidelberg
67-62 Otterbci~ ~pwned Hiram 61-.
S6 a Capital dofDated Ohro Northem? 7.
B ~win·\1(alt~u~ center · Kevin
B.raat1Jl score~ 34 kints, 22 of them
in the ' secon~ hal , Wrt~ 3:05 left,
Muskj~gum lj;d S .56 when Braaten ha~ six (loinll .in less than a
minut to put B4l~won· Wallace (5-3
overal , 2-2 dAC) ahea4 62-58 with
2:15 I ft.
· Ke in Tro~er led Muskin~um (4·
3, 2-2 with 21 PQipiS, lncludong scv·

1996 NISSAN 4x2

1996 NISSAN SENTRA GLE
-2,753.85

time Hampton's Darrell Flythe and Mont : Jomie Noil&lt;. Florid• A&amp;M . 6-7. m.j•nio&lt;.
E '
K
k •
T
Buley, Cia: Raleigh Roundnee, Sou1h Carolina
astern
entuc Y s
ony s 1 ote . 6-5.~05 . senior. Augu~m.. Ga.

Stars 3,' Blackhawk&amp; 2
iwice setting up goals by Luc wards," Kings coach Larry ~obinson
Mike Modano scored 27 seconds
Robitaille. In his last four games, said. "They're a very quick team."
Robitaille has four goals.
In other NHL games, Dallas into overtime as Dallas sent Chica"Luc is finally scoring those .defeated Chicago 3-2 in overtime. go to another nome loss.
The Stars, who trailed 2-0 midgoals we wanted him to Score, .. Buf(alo beat Tampa Bay 5-3, ColRangers coach Colin Campbell said. orado tied Edmonton 4-4, Calgary way through the first period, are
"Let's face it, Luc's nota defensive tied Detroit 3,3 and New Jersey unbeaten in their last five road
games (4-0-1). The Blackhawks fell
specialist, he's not a hitter. He's a downed Vancouver 2·1 ,
to 6-10·0 at the United Center goal-scorer, (and) he's doing it at the
· Devils 2, CanuckS 1
rig!&gt;t time for us, in the right point of
New Jersey limited Vancouver to Tampa Bay is the only NHL team
the game."
a team record of only eight shots on · with fewer home points.
Modano picked up the puck after
Mark Messier added a short· goal in· winning on the road.
handed goal for the Rangers. who
The Canucks took four shots in a misplay and tried to pass to Greg
beat Los Angeles for the seventh the first period and just two in each Adams. Chicago defenseman Chris
straight time at Madison Square of the final two periods. Vancouver's Chciios blocked the pass, but the
puck went right .back to Modano.
Garden.
previous low mark was 12.
The Kings were shut out for the
Denis Pederson scored the go· who sc 0red his team-high I 3th goal.
Oilen 4, Avalanche 4
sixth time this season, tying them .for ahead goal for the Devils on a powSakic had four assists, setting
Joe
the league lead with Buffalo.
er play at 8:42 of the third period.
up the tying goal by Valeri Kamen"Their defense handled our for-

en three-pointers.
Aaron Shipp scored 17 points to
lead four Mount Union players in
double figures. He also had 14
rebounds.
Tim Howman scored 12 poinl~ in
the game, and Neal Richards and
Scou Endsley added II points each
for Mount Union .
Josh Murphy scored 20 points for
·Heidelberg. Jeff Miller scored II.
and Kory Winkler added 10.
Ryan Roston scored tn the lane to
put Otterbein (2-6, 1-3). up 55-53
with I :34 to play. The Cardinals ncv-cr trailed after that, and Roston
scored six of Onerbcin's last eight
points.
·
· David Wise led Hiram (1·7, 0·4.)
wirh 14, while Scan Stephens had 13
and Ken Shudy I I.
Kevin Weakley and Dan
McCauley each scon;d 16 for Otterbein. Roston had'l4.
Ohio Northern (4·2, 2-2) led with
1;49icft when Jeremy Thompson hit
a jumper that made it 67-66.
Capital's-Russell Hall came right
back with a jumper that put the Cru. saders back on top 68-67, rind Brook

RUTLAND -· Home decorating

I

place 12.Pl.ayers amo·ng honorees · :

; ............................_~

·

' By The Aseoclatad Preas

•

SYRACUSE •• Mt. Herman
United Brethren in Christ Church,
annual Christmas program, 7:15

contest, judging 8 to 10 p.m. Sun·
day, sponsored by Rutland Friendly
Gardeners. Residents to light dis·
plays. Prizes in best overall and~~
doorway.

.

.
Montana (14-0), which placed ing to Marshall.
1
• 1
only Dickenson on the '95 team, · The all-purpose player IS Scott
sophoplays Marshaii.(I4-0) on Saturday Shields of Weber State' The
k' k
for the I- AA title .
more free safety-pqnter- IC er was
The running backs are Archie second in 1-AA with 10 inlercepgoals and led
Amerson of Northern Arizona and lions ' .hit 18 of 24 field
.
.
•
Thomas Haskins of VMI. one of five the B1g Sky Conference tn puntmg
with a 40.4-yard average.
repeaters from last year's team.
· · K
f
d A
JOIDtng.
Amerson had 2,079 yards and led
e~p ert a~
. gee On
I· AA in scoring with 26 touch- the offenSIVe hne are JUOlOf Josh
downs. He averaged 6.2 yards a Beyer of William &amp; Mary, junior
. Na1'IS. 0 f Fl Ofl'd a A&amp;M an d
carry for the Lumberjacks, the divi- J3~1117
RaleJ
gh Roundtree of South
sion's total offense ·leaders.
.
St t
'
C
I
· Haskins ran for 1,704 .yards and
3TQ ma , a e. ,
.
The k1c'k er t.s Wayne Boyer of
I 5 touchdowns and owns the 1-AA
career rushing record at 5,355 yards. Southwest Missouri State. Boyer hit
.
The other wide receivers are 25 of 30_field goals and all 28 of hiS
Marshall freshman Randy Moss and ex.tra-pomt attempts.
&lt;
I'
B'((
Northern Iowa's Dedric Ward.
On detcnse, the memen are I y
Moss, still troubled by legal prob- Lyon of Marshall, Pratt Lyons of
k M·
f
lems off the field, caught 55 passes T roy St at e -,an d M'
1 e . 1ano 0
·
S
for 1,073 yards and 19 touchdowns. SOUthwest MISSOUn ~te.
,
Cherbo was the Big Sky s top
HG, set 1-AA freshman records for
.
I
· th t
h· h
receptions and yards. Ward had 70 def enstve
p~yer ~1
3 earn- lg
catches for 1,556 yards and 17 104 tackles , tncludmg 19 for losses,
and two
touchdowns as Northern Iowa made four. fumble recoveries
, .
it to the 1-AA semifinals before los-· sacks. The Other hnebackers are

;Rangers shut out Kings

J

p.m. Sunday. Church located on
Wickham Road in' Texas communi·

• POMEROY·· Rock Springs Bet·
ter Health Club, Christmas potluck .
Thursday, noon, Rock Springs United Methodist Church. Take cookies ;
and candies for holiday trays.
I

The defensive unit recorded three shutouts. two of
Quilrterbacks Jonathan Evans and Nick Bolin con·
Running backs Jason Laudermilt and Tommie
The .SoUihem junior high football team recently
.completed a perfect season, winning all seven games. Roberts each averaged over nine yards per carry, nected with wing back Michael Warner and ends which came against Wahama and Eastern. The coach
::rhe offense combined a balance of running and pass- which compliments not only their running ability of Mait Ash and Bolin in racking up yardage through of the Little Tornadoes was Pat O'Brien. Assisting
him were Mike Warner and Sam Shain.
·
the air.
the linemen in opening holes ..
ing to outscore their opponents 158-42.

lead

program. 7:30p.m. Sunday.

MIDDLEPOIIT - The Middlepori Child Conservation League
annual Christmas party Thwrsday,
6:30 p.m. at the home of Helen
Blackston. Bring gifts for needy
family.

.Junior high Tornadoes notch perfect record on g.ridiron

In theNHL,

calendar------.-----

.

.

~

'

RACINE -" Christmas in the
Park, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park with bonrore, Christmas
carols, candlelight walk and Christ-

The Dally Sentinel• Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

RadioShack has all k'rnd ~ of cellular

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�•
•

Pete I

Pomeroy • Mldd'-Port, Ohio

• The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thurwclay, December 18, 1881

Time out for tips on holiday food borne illnesses ··
By IICKV liMA
lhlga County Eatonalon Afent
At this lime of the year, it's fun to

brations.
You should always wuh your
hands before and after handlins ·
food. Make sure-t_our kitchen, servins dishes, poll aiid pans, and utensils are clean. If you used a plate for
holdins raw meal and poullly. thoroughly ...,ash it before using it again.
If you don't, the bacteria that misht
be present could contaminate the
food.
A very important rule to follow in
preventing food poisoning is to keep
hot foods hot, and cold foods cold.
Do not leave foods that should be
served hot or cold at room temperature for more than two hours. Keep

attend
holiday
get-tosethers,
eachan1e Jifts, and s~mple all of the
different J*1Y foods.
We have to be careful while we
n enjoyins the holiday festivities,
!hough, because we don't want to
receive somethins other than presenu a1 the party, such as food poi-

lllllliJII.

We should follow some simple

IIJideliaa Jiven by the U.S. Department of Apiculture to help prevent
the spread of food borne illnesses
thai can clit short our holiday cele-

tnck of how long foods have been
sitting on the buffet table and throw
out any foods that have been out two
houn or more.

Foods should be cooked thoroughly to safe tempentures. Fresh
roast beef should reach at least 145
degrees F. internally for medium
rare and 160 degrees F. for mediwn
doneness. Whole poultry should be
roasted to 180 degrees F., while
breasts need to be 170 degrees F.
Ground turkey and poultry require a
165 degrees F. internal temperature.
Other mealS, fish, and ground red
meets should be cooked to 160
degrees F.

Pl.ce ooolced foods into 1111111
shallow coatainers for I!Oring in the
refriaentor or freezer. This proce·
dure will allow rapid and even cooling. When reheatin1, the food
should reach a rempenwre of 165
degrees F.
Si:rve the food on several small
platters instead of one large one.
Then keep
rest of the food hot in
an oven set between 200 and 2SO
degrees F. or in the refrigerator until
serving time.
Hot foods should be held ~t 140
degrees F. or warmer. On the buffet
table you can keep hot foods hot by
using chafing dishes, crock pots, or

me

WanniliJ tny1. Cold foods can be
kepi .a 40 degrees F. or colder by
piJicin1 the dishes in bowls of ice.
Or you can serve small amounts, but
:q~lace them frequently.

Woman tradeS valued friendship for diamond ring
'

reheated ·to 165 de,rees F.
You should replace emp1y pill·
ters rather than adding flub food to
a dish that already luld food in jL
Keep in mind that many people han
had their hands on the platter, m,:s
possibly spreading germs, as well f:s
the fact that the food has been left
out at room temperature for a period
.
'~
of ume.
,

After the party, discard any foods
that have been out for more than two
holirs. You may n:ofrigerate or freeze
any left over food in shallow containers. These leftovers can be eaten
within the next four days. If you
freeze the leftovers, they will be safe
for a very long time, however, they
will Jose some quality after three or
four months. Refrigerated or frozen
leftovers sho.uld be thoroughI y

cards and promised to pay me back
within 30 days. She swore on the
Ann
lives of her children that she would
Landers
keep her word.
19U, Los AnJelu
Against my better judgment, I
r-• Syndicue ._, c~
borrowed the money. Myrna now
&amp;101'1 s~~e.
owes me $2,300, and I have been
paying astronomical interest on that
By ANN LANDERS
loan. She.says she's sorry the investDear Ann Landers: For over 10 ment ~idn't pan out but she is barely
_years, l .have helped a friend through . scrapcng by every .month, living
,every kind of trauma you can imag- hand to mouth.
ine. I was always there for her. .
Last week was Myrna's birthday.
· Two years ago, "Myrna" asked I hought her a nice gift and attended
to borrow $3,000 for a sure-lire a luncheon that her co-workers gave
. investment to help her get back on for her. Ann, I nearly fainted when
t:er feet. I told her 1 didn •1 have that she got up and announced that she
·kind of _money. She begged me 10 had tre~ted herself to a $750 dia·
borrow 11 through one of my credit mond nng and had already put a

Don'tle! food po~soning be a pait
of your holiday season. If these simple recommendations are follow~.
your chances ()f contracting a fOOl!
borne illness are greatly reduced.

Child resource network ,...--Feeders given·-..., Chester gardeners hear ·
of Christmas traditions
names specialist·
A child care specialist has been
........, for tiH: Child Care Resource
Netwolt which serves II Southeastern Ohio Counties including Meigs
and Gallia. ·
She 1s Lisa Allen of Wheelersbuq, who ))as over eight years experience worlting with area youth. .
It is through a Jll'llll from the
Ohio Depanment of Education that
the school-age child care specialist
beeline a part of the Child Care
Resource Network which is a nonprofit child care resource and referraJ agency which serves parents and
care providers in the area. The grant
funds a initiative to · expand,
improve and inipate new school-age
child care programs.
The mission of school-age child
en progr~ms is to meet lhe needs
of families, schools, children and
communities to assure that children
in all communities have a safe and
'nurturing environment which provides developmentally appropriate
activities when. parents/families are
not available to them.
Anyone who is considering prov'iding school-age child care and
needs assistance in gelling started;
providers who need resource materi·
als or additional training; or anyone
who needs to talk about a problem
with some aspect of their program
are encouraged to call CCRN at
(800)577-2276.
.
As Allen explained Santa can't
deliver the·perfect child care selling,
· but ceRN can help.
, .S!_Jc said that parents are finding
tJiii :t is haroer and harder to lind
ocwctllcletaDI":e:e .,....,.. Uoeir
in lhe momic\g before school srllrts
ortil'tlle'~ when $Chool leu
out, and susgested that Child Care

Resource Network can help.
She said it is a free service that
assists pareniS in finding child care.
''By calling 1-800-577-2276, parents
have the comfort of letting the
agency do the initial leg work
through providing the names of
caregivers who have joined their
registry. It is then up to the parent to
detennini: whether the services meet
· their needs," said Allen.
As to how parents ·determine
quality, it is done by visiting the
caregivers and programs, by asking ·
a Jot of questions, by watchi~g and .
listening to the caregivers and tel!('h· en and the children in the programs,
and by involving the child in the
search.
The things to watch far are the
activities taking place and whether
they are interestins and fun for the
school-ager, whether the children
play together happily, whether there
are opportunities for them to do
homework or to be alone, and
whether theni is a variety of activities from which they can choose.
.
Also to be considered ·are
whether the sched-ule allows for
· changes in the child's interests and
abilities, and whether there is
encouragement from the caregiver.
She also suggested getting a copy
.of the menu, ask about snacks, and
stick around to see what kind they
are and whether there are enough to
go aroilnd.
·
· She also said questions should be
asked about the caregiver/teacher's
experience with children.
Child Care Resource Network'
alsll has • ss'MI!I~JIIIl •peci!llist on
staff who can provide parents with ·
infonMiion. OR•-quality bllfore and
after school care.

"*""1-..,.,

Six •can• bird fHdera made by member• of the Cheater Garden Club were preHntecl to Veteran• Memorial Hospital
Wedneeclly. Betty Dean, left, of the club, end Rhoncll Dilley,
RN,BSN, director of nuralng et the hoapltll are pictured placing
one of the flldlra near the extended care facUlty at the hoapl·
"'· A beg of bird Hid and 1 feecl acoop were elao pt'IHflted by
the Club 11'1 parr d ttMi pi6ject. Similar projec:tl - . Cll'l'lld
out at o-brook Clntlr In Middleport and at the Rock Springe
Rehlblln.tlon Center..
.
'

'

Pomeroy UMW -holds Christmas dinner
The Pomeroy United Methodist
Women held their annual Christmas
dinner at Crow's Family Restaurant
Among those attendi:i'g were :a
four generation family. Alice Struble. J~ Williamson, Darla and
Kay lee Kennedy. Others there were
'Polly Eichinger, her daughter, Bonnie Kelley. granddaughter, Darla
Staats, and daughter-in-law, June
Eichinger; Faye Wildermuth, her
sister, Helen Fisher, and Helen's
daughter, Alice Wamsley; · Dorothy
Downie and her daughter-in-Jaw,
Janel Downie, and Janet's mother.
Bernice Baker.
Also also attending were Leona

Cleland, Marge Reuter. Jackie slides of Mary and Joseph on their·
Hildebrand, Bernice Carpenter, way to ·Bethlehem. The sang "Away
Abbie Stratton, Virginia Hoyt, in a Manger" as the manger scene
Joanne Vaughan, Eunice Jones, · was shown, and "Wandering PilIsabelle Wolfe, Carol Lundsford, grim" as slides of the angel appearMyrtis Parker, Evelyn Clark, and ing to the shepherds was displayed.
Joann and Bob Robinson.
As Mrs. Robinson played "Silent
Pastor Robinson had grace before Night" on the piano, other slides
the dinner after which the women were shown.
·
returned to the church for a progr11n
Tables were decorated by Evelyn
by the ~obinsons. He read the Clark and Bernice Carpenter, and
Christmas story followed by group table· favors of tiny beaded angels
singing of carols. "There a Son&amp; In created by Jackie Hildebrand were
the Air" and ' "Joy to the World." given to those attending. Cookies
Mrs. Robinson sang "Con On, Ring and punch were served by Marge
Those Bells" and then as she sang Reuter, Myrtis Parker, Alice Warns"Midwinter, her husband showed ley and Evelyn Clark.

Come On Over To Bob's...
•

Fresh, Tree-Ripened
Florida Citrus

. Christmas traditions was the Church for Christmas.
theme of the program presented folThe program, prepared by Maurilowing the annual Chester Garden
ta
Miller,
was given by Betty Dean.
Club's holiday dinner held at the
It was noted that Dec . 25 is not' a
Oak Room in Athens.
specific date for ·the birth of Christ,
Kathryn Mora gave devotions that the first known use of the word
from The Sunday Digest, and for .Christmas dates from 1038, and was
roll call members had "show and coined by the English. Holly was
tell" on Christmas mementos ·and used long before Christ, she said and
their stories.
was considered sacred and used in
Among the things mentioned healing. It if supposedly unlucky If
were favorite ornaments, Teddy left up after New Year's Day:
Bear, Baby Buggy, Negro dolls, and
· Other things of Christmas P'ra China doll. Sunshine reports were . sented
were candles, representing
· given by Judy Bunger whO remem- the light of. the world and first
bers Tom Morrissey and Debbie appearing on the tree in the I 7th
Miller. B~tty Dean will do the sun- century; mistletoe which must be
shine for this month for Maurita suspended according to the ScandiMiller.
navians to serve as an instrument of
A gift exchange was conducted good. Christmas cards which began
by Lula Toban. The girts were in England in 1843 and has grown to
wrapped in paper from years gone over a billion sold in Brian and
by and included plant material. The United States; Christmas trees
prizes were judged b y Toban and which are German and originated in
Pauline Ridenour and the winners the 8th Century, were introduced
were Macel Barton, Twila Buckley, into America in German settlements,
and Betty Dean.
and Santa Cia'us, known by a variety
For the hint ·o f the month, it was of names. and the poinsettia. the
suggested that snow from ever- flower of the holy night which represents the Star of Bethlehem.
.greens be gently brushed off.
It was noted that Belly Dean and
Next meeting will be a flower
Twila Buckley will do the flowers arranging workshop at the home of
for Chester United Methodist Dorothy Karr, Jan. 8.

-----1News policy--In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of the
eYenl.
AI! club ~~lings and other news articles In lhe society section must be
submmed wuhin 30 days of occurrence. All birthdays must be submit(ecj
within 42 days of the occurrence.
· ·
All ·macerial submill~ for publication 'is subject to editing.

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,._ _~

*•
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Jtciluis
itions
jine
Jewe[w
ot)o 0 Oo
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Time Is

....

Running
OutI
1 Carat

Diamond Tennis Bracelets
1/10 Carat T.W ....... Sale '69
114 Carat T.W........ Sale '130
112 Carat T. W ...... ,Sale '499

Reg. $329

OILY 5

1$9

(Available Box and 1/2 Box)

HOURS

oranges
Fresh, Custom Made,

Fruit Baskets
Packed Full of
Bob'• ~reeh
Produce, ·Nub
and CBDily
A PERFECT

Poinsettias
Variety Colon
2 sizes

6II2a6.98
8iae&amp;l3. 98

* ~ * All Christmas Trees Now Reduced * **

'Bemelflher Bob~ GaUipoiU Garden
· Cenur for Honumuuk Holiday
Crdft•, Holiday Ribbon &amp; B01111,
Condie•, Specially Cotton Tlaroult
orul So Mru:h Morel

2400 E!llfei'D AYe, G.oipo&amp;, Ohio

446-1711
r

.9LCQ'lliSITIOg{S ·
'

ring is going co be repossessed by
shaken up, I went home and cried.
the jeweler -- unless she can hit up
If she had $100 extra lying some of her remaining friends.
around, shouldn't she have paid me
Dear Ann Landers: Our collegeback some of the money she has student daughter called early this
owed me for two years? I'm begin- morning. She needed to ask her
ning to think this "friendship" mother if orange juice tha! had been
should be ended. Do you agree? -- in the refrigerator for several weeks
Irate in Redondo Beach, Calif.
.y,:as still safe to drink. My wife told
Dear Redondo: What friendship? her to throw it out.
Myrna is a con artist, and I'm sorry
Mom isn't always available for
to say you are one of those suckers guidance every time something like
that Barnum said is born every this happens. It occurred to me that
minute. The following should be too many of us fail to teach our childedicated to you:
dren a very important rule ahout
I had some money -- and a friend. food. Put it in bold print so your
I loaned my money to my friend. readers don't miss it: IF IN DOUBT,
I lost my money, and my friend.
THROW IT OUT.
. ·I
I'll bet anything Myrna's $750
If it doesn't smell right, toss it. If

it doesn't look right, get rid 9f it. If
you think it may have spoiled or is
otherwise unsafe to consume, dump
it in the garbage. Whatever the cost
of the food , unless you're absolutely
cenain il's safe. throw it out.
No one knowingly would risk
getting sick, but a Jot of people think
It is wasteful if they don't use something they have already paid for.
Ann, please tell them, when it comes
to food, they should forget about the
" investment" and toss it. ~ -William
Allison, Beaverton, Ore.
· Dear William: No wiser words
ever have appeared in this space.
Anyone who has ever suffered
stomach distress from eating contaminaced food will tell you it's an

agony :hey wouldn't wish on their
worst enemy.
If there is the slightest question
about the safety of the leftovers in
the fridge, dump 'em. Your letcer is
going to prevent a Jot of bellyaches.
Thank you.

P.S.: How terrific that some proilucts now come with the message
" Not to be used after such-and-such
a date." But it certainly took a long
time before we got that smart.
. Send questions to ADD Landen,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceatury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

---.---Society scrapbook---

'.

TOPS MEETING
· The KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Safely) best loser at the Nov. 26
,meeting of TOPS chapter 570,
Pomeroy, was Mary Roush with
Bernice Durst as runner up. The
lOPS (Take Off Pounds Safely) best
loser was Nellie Grover with Tina
Geary as runner up.
It was noted there will be no
meetings Dec.' 24 or 3I. However,
the club will have weigh-in Dec. 3 I.
Jeannette McDonald read an arti. cle on poultry · followed by a quiz
and game about poultry. Jo Wilford
won the fruit basket and Minnie
Harris won the gadget gift.

Introduction
to computers
offered

The drawing for the Lose to Feed
Someone in Need contest w~ held
with a food basket going to a needy
family.
·
HARTUNG PROFILED
Edgar "Ed" Jedson Hartung, son
of Laura Nice of Chester and the late
Edgar Hartung, was profiled recentcy in Rio Spirit, a publication by the
University of Rio Grande's office of
alumni relalions/university '' rela~
tions.

· Hartung graduated from Rio
Grande College in 1964· and joined

D of A hold
holiday party

Some .of Hartung's exploics have
been described in publications
including "Terror on Highway S9,"
which was produced as a made-fortelevision docu-drama relating to the
investigation of the San Jacinto
County, Texas, Sheriffs Office
which had been in~(llved .in conspiring over a six-year pecjod during the
late 1970s and early 1980s of abusing motorists and collecting kickbacks from bondsmen.

Santa . .
Suggests ...
...s,~flftlft9 .
~(tWU/tli

'

O~{@r~tmas
tree
,
..

Scarr-liU

. foliage.

Friday 9:30am -9:30pm
Saturday 9am - I Opm
Sunday ioam- 9pm
Monday 9am - lOpm
Tuesday 9am - 6pm
• Anchor stores may vary

..
n.\ traditiOn of !he ChristmaS tree dates back
tothe'~~a!ld~llf1inlhe.UMed
Sllittltlin ihe tliliOa. Tadii.y approximately
15,00Q U.S. growers tend 1million acres of
CM. ~ fat!!JI$nd. P.Jic!ts this year wll
remat~!!!I!!!!IY'III $:l. 19 to.f5:65 per foot.
Alook'ilthoii!!IIY. &amp;Ve.greens: .
.
~

''=='

Canaan fir
Concolor fir
Do~giaa

Fraaar fir"
Grand fir
Leyland cypress

lin!~

Douaa.As
FIR

Noble flr

Noiway spruce

100~

Scoteh'p!ne•

fir'

Easlem redcedar
Vlrglnll plnl'
Ealltam whRe pine' White sprtJce

VISIT
SANTA

-=--Ill_·_

t' ,~
Pppulsr trees
"rlzona cypress
Balaam fir'
Blue sprtJce .

1/tattl

Great gift ideas for everyone on
your list... From fine jewelry, the
latest in fashions and toys and
games for the small ·ones .. as
well as Big Boy toys.
What a selection!

•
.

The Rio Grande Community College through the office.of Adult and
Continuing Education will be offering a class for persons needing an
introduction to MS-DOS based
computers.
.
Introduction to Computers is a
beginning class to provide basic
information on today's computer
technology. This is an excellent
class for persons who are interested
in taking instructional classes in
computer applications or who may
be considering the purchase of a
new person~) computer. ."
.
Both an afternoon and evening
session will be offered. The afternoon session is Jan. 8, from I to 4
p.m.; the evening course is Jan. 9,
from 6to 9 p.m ..Cost for either class
is $35. Participants need to preregister before Jan. 3. Classes will be
held in Evans College of Business
Computer Lab on the campus in Rio ·
9nlnde:
For more information residents
may call 614-245-7325 or toll free
in Ohio, 1-800-282-7201, Ext. 7325 .

the FBI after a tour of duty in Vietnam with the U.S. Air Force. He is
currently the supervisory special
agent in the Clevelaod field office.

Friday 6 to 8pm
Saturday - Noon to 6pm
Sunday- Noon to 8pm
Monday - Noon to 8pm

E. State St. A~hens, Ohio

;ru~,sdaYJ"Obi'i' to ·!Sprq · ' ·

Sri/ ntt-tiltl,
usUally sharpPointed

'Topoot.....

A fresh 1Gtnrl)' grasp a bmnch bttwttn
)'OIIT thumb and forrflngtr and P••ll.
tree
ShflU tht trtt. Vtr)•ftw n«dlts

BLUE
SI'RUCE

shorrld comt off if tht[rtt i!/rtSh.

,!

2Whtn rht rru is brought h~. cUI
an inch off tht rnmk ro aid irt M'llttr
absorptio11. Gtr tht rut end into plain

water imnwdiately. Ston in a
proltctld. shady, rmhtattd arta.

&lt;r·

o·::~

1

3Saw another quarttr·inch off tht
tnmk lwforr Sttting up (ht trq. Usr
a s11urly stand with a largt wattr
reJtn:Oir.. A frtsh tnt can use one
' qr1art or mort of wattr a ddy, so
M.'llttr daily.
'"''
the trrt oway , !_ heat
SOIIfftS such as firr~;, 7Vs,
radiators and air ductt Nt\'t.' hm't
flamts fJfl ur near 11 trre.

4 ~ttp

.;

'

i
'

• Pmjerted

'

sou;:ces:'Nati008i'ChfiStmas T;:ee"A~110n' :. The EVBrythfng ChristtMS Booii. ··-··-· "'APifn.cie·ra;c;
Annual Christmas dinner of the
Deputies and Past Councilors Club, ·
District I3, Daughters of America,'
was held at the Olde Dutch Restaurant, Logan, recently.

The Tme &amp; Shrub EKPBrl, Trees of NontJ Amerlce

·

.,
.

Betty Spencer had the blessing
and Mary C. Moose presided at the
meeting. She gave out candy canes
and Naomi Gundy read the story of
the candy maker.

·

.

.

NAPA TOY RACE TRUCK HAULER

~ IIIIIOlllltlidin Molt olht!M

1361-N

~vo~,
~

:

Members enjoyed a gift
exchange. Attending besides those
named were Faye Trowbridge, Edna
Edgar, Charlotte Blake, John Qundy,
Betty Wolfe, Margaret Cotterill,
Robet( Ritchie, · MarCia Keller,
Everett Grant and Mary K.. Holter.

U.fiC. SCIEWDBMR SET
wMEE 16' TAP£ MEASURE
il99·1!92

119{'£:tE/WEillfY

TWO LOCATIONs:
'1518i!CONDAVI.
.
, QAtiiPOIJI

AND t1 MILL 8T.,III)I)UPORT

il

FREE PARKING • FREE GIFT
1/4 MJie North Q( POJHrey MMoa

Bridp Ia MMoa

SI 00 down paymenc on it. I was so

Favors were vases of poinsettias.
The program included "Can This Be
Christmas" by Erma Cleland;
"Homeward Boun~" by Charlotte
. Grant; · "ChrisiCllas Blessings" by
Opal Hollon; "I Have a List of
Names" by Jo Ann Baum; "It's
Something ·during Christmas" by
Ethel Orr; "The Greatest Gift" by
Doris Grueser; "The Little Drummer
Boy" by Janice Zwilling; "The Joy
pf Giving" by Betty Spencer; "The
Christmas · Candle" by Sylvia
Bownes; and "Tomorrow Will be
· Christmas Day" by Bette Biggs.

1/5 Carat 'J'.W ........ ;Sale '99
1/2 Carat T.W ........ Sale '299

julc1
~a11 al

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

773-5721

------~----------------.-----------------· -------------------~,-------~----------~----------------------~--------------~----~·

' Offers gOod at tl,ose porticipating'N.O.PA AUTO PARTS shmos:

INGELS FURNTIURE
&amp; JIWELRY

108 N. 2ND AVE.

Mon.-Fri.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-4
·

The Motor P~rts Company
Middleport, 157 Walnut St.., 992-2131
GaiUpolls, 162 Thlrtl Ave., 446-2962

�'
1P81\ 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport,

c

LI

- · a Orange Sllc. C.kt
with a fork until crumbly. In a small pan. Use heavy brown paper on
3 1/2 c flour 1811-nalng
Coffee Froallng
bowl, beat together w~h a fork , the bollom of pan Soak on brandy or
1 c. buller
1 tsp onslanl collee
egg, waler and vinegar Combine grape juoce
2 c. eugar
1 tsp milk
!he IWO mixtures, storrong unlll I he
Maxone Nobert
4 whole eggs
1 cup sifted powdered sugar
ongredlenls are moostened Dovode
1/2 c. bu11ermolk
2 lbsp Chiffon Margarine
dough onlo 5 or 6 portoons W1lh
Mix togelher on low with mixer t~
Dossolve collee on milk Blend In hands, shape onlo a flat round patty Dream•'• Mexican Fruitcake
add
powdered sugar and Chiffon until
ready for rBilong Wrap each on wax 20 oz crushed poneapple (do not
Makes
1 lb~ orange slice candy . cUI up on smooth and creamy
paper ChoU alleasl1/2 hour before draon)
slices
enough frosting to spreac.l on top of usong or freeze lor laler use I also 2 cups flour - plaon
Apple 'N Spice Cake.
1 8 oz. pkg copped dates
freeze dough on freezer begs alter 2 cups sugar
2 c. Chopped nuts your choice
Beulah Dereberger nanenong onto a patty Lei thaw lo 1 cup nUIS -~oken
2 tsp: soda
1 3 1/4 oz can of coconUI
-····················-·······--········-··· use
Candy cherries ~ you want them lor ..
Mrs. David Smtth (Mane) 2eggs
color.
Holiday FruH BaUa
Mox logelher PUI on greased long
Mix candy &amp; flour mix logelher 1/4 cup marganne
sheel pan
Bake 350 lor 45
and place onto one bunt or 10" tube 1/2 lb moniature marshmallows
Fresh Apple Cake
monUies
pan or 2 loaf bread pans. You also 1/2 cup evaporaled molk
1/2 cup Crosco
Ieong:
may add 1 c QUICk Oats to mox 10 1/21b graham cracker crumbs
2 cups sugar
Mix 8 oz Pholadelphoa cream
make a break1asl loaf Bake lor 1 1/2 lb candied poneapple. cllopped_
21argeeggs
cheese, 1 stock of margarone 2
hr. 45 min on 300 degrees F or 1/2lb candied cherries, chopped
2 cups reg. flour
cups conlectooners sugar, 1 lsp
1 tsp each of cinnamon and vanolla PUI on cake wole warm Let
until cake os done
112 lb. log hi raJSons
nUimeg
Wlille cake or loaves are hoi on 1 1/2 lb chopped nuts
coollogelher
lhe plln8 add 2 c powdered sugar 1 cup flaked coconUI
1/2tsp salt
Dreama Powell
to1 c.orangejulce pouroverhol
Combine
margarine.
1tsp soda
Cllkes and pUIInlo ret. overnoghllo marshmallows &amp; molk on a 4 cups sliced lhon apples {I use
glaze. NeXI day remove cake from saucepan Cook over low heat until Golden DeliciOUs Apples)
Peanut Butter No Bakee
Cream Crosco, sugar, eggs 1/2 cup margarone
1*1 and enJOy.
melted, storring constantly
Soft dry lngredoanls 1/2 cup molk
Janet Randolph Combone cracker crumb&amp;, fruits and together,
____________ ..................... monls on a large moxong bowl Add
logethel' Gradually edd to creamed 2 cups sugar
molk mixture. stirrong untol well moxture, fold on apples Spoon 2/3 cup chunky peanut butter
moxed Form onto 1 1/2 Inch bells baUer onto a 13x9x2 onch pan Bake 2 cups Quock Oals
Cualllnl Pit
and roll on coconul
Keep al 350 lor 40 mon~les. Serve with Mix margarone, milk and sugar on 2
Cruet
Cool Whip or spronkla wilh quart pan
4cupe ftour
relrigeraled • Yield 5 dozen
Bool 3 mmules
Calhenne Yauger powdered sugar Whole sloll warm I Remove, cool 5 monules
2cupe Cnseo
Add
like ot wolh a scoop of vanilla oce peanul butter Mox Slor on Quock
1tsp.salt
cream
It can be frozen alter Oals Drop on wax paper Eal up
1 egg
baked
Bren Powell
1 The. vlneg•
Ban•n• SpiH Pia
Mrs Davod Smtth (Maroa)
2 slickS butter or margarine
1/2cup-er
Work Crisco inlo lhe flour well, 1 box powder sugar
............... ........ ~- ·-············ ············ Super Easy Snlckerdoodlaa
My Grandmother'• Ralaln Cake
1 box yellow cake mox
edd s,M, beat egg well wnh 1 Tbs 2eggs
1 1/2 cup raosons (dark)
2 eggs
vinegar and 1/2 cup water Mix with 1 tsp vanolla
1/4 cup 011
flour and Crisco. May need more graham cracker crust
2 1/2 cups waler
Mox logelher on separale bowl
~r to make dough ready to roll
1/2 cup Crosco
Beal for 15 m1nutes, spread on
1/2 cup sugar
our. Roll our and pour In pie pan crus! &amp; choll
2 cups sugar
1 lbsp connamon
Makes 4 shells
4 cups reg flour
5 or 6 large bananas, cui on
Heal oven to 350 degrees Mox lhe
Filling
quarters. put over cream lollong
1~ ~~ ~~':;on
1sllhree ongredoents and shape onto
Drain 2 large crushed poneapple
4eggs. beat wen
balls, roll on lhe sugar m1x1ure
1,2 cup sugar
and spread over bananas
2 1/2 ISp clov~
Bake lor 6 Ia 8 monutes Besl of
envelopes Dream Whop or Cool
2cups milk
1/2 lsp salt /.
!hey are sloll shghlly doughy when
21sp bk soaa
Whop spread over poneapple
ponch of salt
Mox together Pour corolents onlo Spnnkle pecans. decorate wolh
Pul raosons and waler on pan laken from !he oven
Amber Barton
pe crus! Spronkle NUimeg on lop maraschino chernes. Relrogerale Brong lo a boot. !hen sommer 15
' mons Cool MeH Crosco on raoson
ilatce at 40 for 10 min. Then lower for aboUI4 hours or over noght.
Elozabelh Garren waler whole sloll hoi In large bowl Old Fashioned Sour Cream
heat to 350 until firm
Nora Slaats
mox res! of ongredlenls Add raosons Cookies
,
lo
dry moldure mox well Preheal 1/2 cup soh shortenong
-~--------------- ---- -----------·--oven
lo 350 Can be baked on a t t/2 cups sugar
Peanut Butter Pia
greased and floured lube pan or a 2 eggs
· 1/2 peanut butter
Pudding C•ke
13 x 9 on pan Bake lor 45 mons Cream togelher Add
1 Stick marganne
6 oz cream cheese
Check on 30 mon wolh cake lesler 1/2 cup sour cream
21bsp sugar
1 c confectooners sugar
You can add aboul 1/2 lb candoed 1 lsp vanolla
1 cupflo!K
8 oz Cool Whop
I
lrutt and 1/2 cup nUis for a lruolcake Slor1t
1 cup walnUis
Graham cracker crus! •
Mox all together and press on 9x 13
Mix peanut buller, cream cheese
Mrs Davod Smtth (Maroe) S1ft together
pan Bake 15 moh 81350
Wllh eleclroc moxar Add sugar &amp;
2 3/4 cups flour
Cool Whop Mox well Pour onlo
Beat Ever Sugar Cookies
1 8 oz cream cheese
1/21sp soda
1 cup whopped loppong, use haH
graham cracker crust Lei sel on 2 cups sugar
· 1/21sp bakong powder
1 cup Crosco. softened
1 cup powdered sugar
refrigeralor or freezer
1/21sp sail
Mix and spread on top of lhe torsi
Elizabeth Garrell 3 eggs. bealen
Slor on dry ongredoenls Choll
1 Tbs Anose flavorong If usong Drop by lsp 2' apart on greased
layer
1 small pkg vanilla pudd1ng
Anise ool, use only 1/2 of small cookoe sheel Bake al 400 lor 8·1 0
bollia
1 sman pkg choc puddong
Chocol11e Fudge Cake
mon
Don'! over bake as tops
3 cups milk
112 cup butler or margarone. 1 cup sour molk
remaon whne and bottoms brown
Mox logelher spread on lop of 2nd softened
1 Tbs whote vonegar
Cathenne Wolllams
layer ~pread res! of whopped ~ 1/2 cup shortenong
1 lsp bakong soda
6 cups reg flour
loppong
2 cups sugar
Ginger Bread Man Cookies
Bonnoe Smnhson 2 eggs
Make molk sour torsi by addong lhe 1/2 cup shorten1ng
----··-----------................... 1 I vanolla
vonegar and soda lo ol Mox res! of 1/2 cup molasses
1/2 c Hershey's Cocoa
ongredoenls axcepl flour Then add 1/2 cup sugar
molk, I hen flour 1 cup al a tome Roll 1/2 tsp nUimeg
2 1/4 cups unsohed all-purpose flour
Chtrry Otaetrt
small amounl of dough at a lome on 1/2 lsp connamon
1 1/4 I bekong soda
Beat until I stiff
lightly floured surface Rolllhon, as 1/2 tsp gonger
6 8gg whiles
1/21 sail
1 t/3 c waler
you would a poe crust The dough 1 bealen egg
3/4 tsp cream ol tarter
C ream buller, shortenong and woll raose !hock Cui wolh floured t/2 cup chopped nuts, opl
Add
cookoe cutters Place on lightly 2 t /2 cups lour
2 cups ol sugar and beat
sugar on large moxer bowl Add
greased cookoe pans Bake at 350 1/21sp bakong powder
eggs and vanolla. blend well
Crush.
for 10 mon Cool on rackS Keep 213 tsp sail
Combone' dry ongredoents; add
50 RitZ cracketS
res! of dough on relrogeralor toll Cream logelher forst sox ongredoenls
1 cup chopped nUIS (opt )
allernalefy wnh waler Ia creamed
moldure (Pour inlo IWo greased and needed
Stir al together
Mox well and bnng , slowly lo a
Spread onlo a 9x13 onch pan and floured \)onch round layer pans or
Mrs Davod Smoth (Mane) boohng poonl
Cool
Add eggs
bake at 350 degrees for 25 10 30 IWo 8 onch square pans Bake al
nuls optoonal combonong well Sift
monUies Lat cool Cover with Cool 350 lor !)5 to 40 monules lor 9 onch
flour, bakong powder, saH logelher
Mre. Bauerle's Favorite Cookies
Whop
Then spread 2 cans of layers, 40 Ia 45 monUies lor B onch
Add to lorsl moxture M1x lhoroughly
cherry poe fillong, or any olher kind, layers Of unlol cake lesler comes oUI 1 1/2 cup reg flour
Roll our ftal on was paper cui woth
1 lsp bek1ng soda
clean 1CooJ t 0 monutes, remove
on lip.
cookoe cuner Bake on moderate hoi
Carolyn S Roush from pans cool complelely, frost
1/2 cup Crosco, softened
oven 375 lor 12 monutes Yields 36
1/2 cup oleo, softened
men
'
Rose Baker
3/4 cup brown sugar
Kaloe Aalhff
Pumpkin Snack 11111'1
3/4 cup whne sugar
Apple 'N Splct C.ke
Cake
1
2 eggs, bealen
---------................ . .................
1 cup raosons
1 pkg (2 layei' soze) spice cake mix
lbs
hot
waler
No
Crual Pumpkin Pie
1
1 cup water
1 cah (16 oz') pumpkin
2 cups unsifted an-purpose flour
oz
pkg
butterscotch
bois
1
1/2
cups pumpkon
1
6
3/4 cup Moracle WhiJ' or Moracle
2
cups
monule
oals
2
eggs
1 cup sugar
Whop Ugh! Dressong
1 lsp vanolla
1 1/2 lsp pumpkon spoce
1 ISp bekong powder
3eggs
1/2
cup
chopped
walnuls
(opl)
1/21sp connarnon
11Sp soda
Frosbng
Cream logelher sugar and Crisco 1/2 tsp sail
1 tsp cloves
3 112 cups powdered sugar
Add eggs and hoi waler Add flour 3/4 cups sugar
tlsp nutmeg
1/2 cup (1 ,jlock) Parkey Spread
and soda Add oals and nuls
112 cups Bosquock
11Sp sd
Slocks, softened
Then
add
vanolla
&gt;~nd
butterscolch
1
large can Carnaloon molk
1 cup Chiffon Marganne
2 Tbsp molk
bots
Drop
by
lsp
on
a
greased
Blend
and pur onto greased and
1/2 finely chopped apple
1 tsp vanilla
~ook1e sheet
Bake al 375 lor 9 floured pan Bake al 350 lor 45
Sommer raosons on waler lor 5 Cake Heal oven lo 350 degrees F
monules.
Remove from heal
mon Cool on racks
monules
Blend cake mox, pumpkon, dressong
Measure and add enough waler to and eggs wolh alectroc moxer on
Mrs Davod Smtth (Mane)
Patty Russell Williams
-............................................. Paanut Butter Pie
make 1 cup Cool Place flour, medoum speed unlol well blended
--Fruit Cake
8 oz cream cheese, softened
sugar. bakong powder, soda, cloves, Pour onlo greased 15 x 10 x 1 onch
2
cups
sugar
t cup powdered sugar
nulmeg and sail on moxong bowl
bakong pan. Bake 18 lo 20 monules
8 eggs
1/4 oup peanUI butter
Mox well CUI on Chiffon Wllh paslry or unlll loolhpock onsarted on center
blender or fork unlol moxlure looks comes out clean Cool complelely
1/2 It currents
8 oz Cool Whop
hke coarse meal Add apple and on wore rack
1/21# f1gs
9" graham cnacker or chocolale poe
1 box dales
crus!
cool raoson moldure lo dry ongrado· Froslong Blend all ongredoenls wolh
ants Stor until thoroughly blended
Blend cream cheese, sugar and
1 # shelled English walnu!S
aleclroc moxer on low speed unlll
1 cup sour molk
peanul butter Fold In Cool Whop
Pour inlo greased 9x5x3 3/4 Inch mooslaned Baal on hogh speed
loaf pan Bake at 325 degrees unlol hghl and fluffy Spread over
1 cup grape1uoce
Fold lnlo poe crus! Choll
aboul t hour or unlol cake sprongs cake CUI onlo bars Makes aboul
21sp cloves
If you wanllo lop lha poe
beck when hghdy louchad on cenler 3dozen
21sp connamon
Toppong
6 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup chocolale sops
When cooled. spread top of cake .................. . ......................................' .
wol Caramel of Coffee lroslong, of
2 cups buner
3 tbs sugar
1 # raosons
1 tbs marganne
desored Makes 1210 14 seMngs
Squa•h Pudding
Beulah Derenberger 1 large yellow squash. cooked and
1/4 # colron
31bs molk
14 # candoed orange peel
Mox all and mon Dnzzle over top of
mashed
1/4
#
lemon
peel
poe
belore you choll
1/2 cup sugar
1/4
#
poneapple
Frances ldnss
Ceramel Froatlng
2 tbsp corn slarch
1/4 # cherroes
............................... ............. ..
2 lablespoons Chilton Marganne
Juice and graled rond ol one lemon
1 lsp soda
Pumpkin Pie Bara
1/4 cup firmly paclced brown sugar
1 cup crushed poneapple
2
lsp
nlllmeg
1 18 1/2 oz box yellow cake mox
11bsp molk
Combine all ongredoents Place on a
2 lsp bakong powder
•
1/4 cup margarone, melled
1/211p. vanoPa
wall bultered bakong dilh Bake 20
Cream butter. add sugar Add 4 eggs
3/4 cup silted pooildeoDOiildenedld sugar
10 30 min at 350 degrees
bealen egg yolks PUI sbda on •our 1 30 oz can solid pack pumpkon, 3
Mox Chiffon and brown sugar
molk and add to !he mlxlure. Add cups
Brong moxlure 10 all-over boot.
one-half of the flour and bakong 2 cup sugar, dovoded
Remove from heal Cool_sllghlly Perfect Pia Crual
powder and spoces soiled wolh ot 1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar,
Stor on milk and varollla Gradually 4 cups unsifted reg ftour
Nexl add grape juoce
Then hghl
•
beal In powdered sugar unhl 1 Tbsp sugar • 2 tsp salt
remainder ol flour 10 which chopped 213 cup evaporaled molk
!rotting os smoolh and cnsemy II 1 3/4 cups Cnsco {alwaye uiMI thos)
nuts and lruols are added Fold In 1 1/21Sp chopped walnUis
trotting 18 to stiff. add a lillie mora 1 Tbsp whKe vonegar
beaten egg wh~es (stiffly bealen) ...-f1lfcup margar1ne, softened
milk for proper consistency Makes 1/2 cup cold water
Bake in oven 250 degrees lor over Preheal oven to 350 Grease a
enough frosting to spread on lop 11arge egg
lhree hours This makes a 10·12 13x9 bek1ng pan Remove 1 cup of
Apple N' Spice Cllke
PUI flrat 3 ingredienll In large
lb cake dough could be diVIded the cake mox, reserve
In smal
Beulah Derenberger bowl, mix well. Add CriSCo and mix
onto
smatter
pan&amp;
Grease
and
flour
·---·---~--------·-···-·····-···-··

-

"'

-- --

l

• Thul'lday, December 19, 1996

Thursday, December 19, 1996

O~lo

ES

---.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Chocoa.ta Walnut Crumb Ban
1 cup butter softened
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 cup granulated sugar
t/41SP san
2 cups (12 oz pkg NeaUe toll house)
semi-sweet chocolate morsels
{diVIded)
1 1/4 cups (14 oz) carnation
sweetened condeneed molk
1 ISp vanolla eXIract
1 cup chopped walnUis
Bea~- buller In large moxer bowl
unlol creamy Baal In flour, sugar
and saH unlol crumbly Wrth floured
fingers, press 2 cups crumb mixture
onto bollom of greased (I use lhe
spray) 13x9 baking pan, reserve
remaonong moxlure Bake on
preheated 350' oven lor 10 to 12
monutes ro until edges are golden
brown.
•
Warm: 1 1/2 cups chocolale
morsels and sweetened condensed
molk on a small, heavy saucepan
over low heat, slurlng until smoolh
Stor on lhe vanilla Spread over hoi
crust
Slor· walnuts and remainong
chocolale morsels onto the reserved
crumb moldure you had left over and
sprinkle thos over the chocolale
fillong Bake on 350' oven for 25 lo
30 monules or unlll cenler os set
Cool on lhe pan then cut onlo
squares
linda Rodgers
Granny Goose Ctke
1· 2 layer package yellow cake mix
1/4 cup buller, softened
1 egg
1 ISp vanolla
8 oz cream cheese, softened
2aggs
1·11b package confeclioner sugar
C.;;mbine- cake mox, buller, 1 egg
and vanilla in bowl, beatong unlol
smoolh
Pour· onlo greased 9x13 on cake
pan
Beat· cream cheese, eggs and
conleciiOner sugar In mixer unlil
hghl and fluffy
Spoon- over bettsr
Bake- al 350' lor 35 monutes
Carla King

•

Apple Brown Betty
1 1/2 c soh bread crumbs
61bsp buller
3 cup sliced golden apples
1/41Sp connamon
1/4 cup sugar
1 1/4 cup packed brown sugar
213 cup corn syrup
3/4 cup sweelened condensed molk
Slor· bread crumbs inlo 1/4 cup
maned buller on saucepan
Layer- apples and crumb mixture
allernalely on bullered 8" square
bekong pan
Spronkle· woth mlldure ol connamon and sugar
Pour- 114 cup cold waler over lop
Bake· at 350' for 1 hour
Combine- Brown sugar, com syrup,
condensed molk and 2 lbsp butter on
saucepan
Cook- 10 sol! ball slage or 240' on
candy thermomeler
Storrong
lrequenlly
Serve- over Brown Belly
Cha~olle Keeler

I

Chief Jim Gaaklns Favorite
Never-Fell Cu.tard Pie
4 eggs, sloghlly bealen
2 cups molk
112 cup sweelened condensed molk
1/2 cup sugar
1/41sp salt
112 lsp vanolla eldracl
1 unbaked 9" poe shell
1 lsp nUimeg
.
Combine- forsl6 ongredoeniS on bowl,
moxong 'flell
Pour . onlo poe shell
Spnnkle woth nUimeg
Bake· al 425' for 10 min
Reduce· temp to 325'
Bake- lor 30 mon longer or unlil pie
lesls done
Charlotte Keefer

:
:

1
1

!•
I
I

•
:
1

I

.

Jam Cake
1/2 cup Crosco shortenong
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup tam {slrawberry)
2eggs
2 1/2 cups flour
1 lsp bakong soda
1/2 lsp connamon
1/21Sp allspoce
1 cup cold coffee
1/2 cup nuts or raosons
Cream shortenings. sugar and
Jam Add eggs and mox well Soft dry
ongredlenls togelher adding
aflemately with coffee Pour onto 9"
pans Bake on a moderately oven
350' 35 to 40 monutes or unlol
sprongs back when louched Use a
cararnelocong
Carol McFarland
Dump Cake
1 can (21 oz) cherry poe fining
1 can (8 o) crushed pineapple
packed on 1ulce
1 box (18 oz) yellow cake mox
1 cup pecans. chopped (Opt) or 1
lsp nUIIIavorlng
1 sliCk (4 oz) buller, cut in pieces
Grease a 9x13 Inch pan Dump
on on order, the cherries, undreined
pl~eapple , dry cake mix 8i nuls,
smooth after each layer
Do Not Mix Place lhe butter
Jl!&amp;Ces on the top Bake for 1 hour
111350". Serve wolh oce cream.
Options: Try different fruit fillings,
wh~e t:Ue mix, different types of
nUIS or nUl tavorlng
Joan L Varian
-~-------------·-···-------·--·~--·---------

I

Butter Ball Cookltl
1 cup butter
2 cups sifted ftour
1/2 cup powdered sugar
1/211p almond extrllcl
1 cup chopped nUis
Mix butter &amp; sugar unlll creamy.
Add flavoring and nuts and mix
well. Add silted flour ChoU dough
untol easy lo handle Shape onto 1"
balls Place on ungreased cookie
sheet. Bake unlll hghl brown 350'
12 mlnUies Roll in powdered sugar
Patty Roush
Coconut 1.8yer CrMm Cake
1 box whole cake mox
1 can low fat Eagle brand
condensed milk
Cram of coconUI
Prepare cake mox as dorecled on
package. Pour baUer onto round
cake pans (8" or 9"). Bake as
dorecled, cool complelely Place
cake layers lop sodas up on clean
pans Punch holes In layers wolh
large fork Mix coconut cream &amp;
Eagle brand milk together and pour
1n1o fork holes. place on refngeralor
lor 3 or 4 hours or unlol ~ sets up
Frosl wolh whopped cream and
cocornUI Slore on relrogeralor
Pal Allbnghl

2 etlclra margarine
1 beg chocolate chops ·
Mall &amp; remCMtlrorn burner
Add 1 cup peanu1 butter
Stir on 1 box ol crlapix cereal
Then In large zlplock bagseparately shake In confectioners
sugar.
•
Erin Simms
LMII'e C.rrot C.ke
2cupsftour
2cupssugar
2 tsp bekong powder
1 1/2 tsp bakong soda
2 tsp connamon
1 1/2 cup oil
4eggs
3 cups freshly grated carrots
1 cup pecans or walnUis
Ieong 1 slock margarone
a oz cream cheese
1 lb powdered sugar
1 liP vanilla
Combone eggs &amp; oil Beat well
Soh together dry lngnadlents &amp; add
lo mixture Add res! of ongredoents &amp;
beal well Bake on greased 9x13
pan @ 375' for 25 min or unlol
loolhplck comes OUI clean
Ieong Mox all ongredoenls unlol
smooth &amp; spread on cooled cake
Lesa McGralh

p

c
1-8 oz pk cream cheese
1 111ck oleo
1 tap vanilla
Cream together cheese and aleo
add sugar lll1d vanilla PUI on cake
that has cooled 5 minUies

7 Llytr Cooklee
Matt 1 stick oleo In a 9x13 pan
Spread on lOp of olea, 1 cup
crushed graham crackers
1/2 cup coconul
1 small pkg (6 oz) of chocolale b~s
and 6 oz. bulterscotch bois
Drizzle over lhe above moXIure 1
can eagle brand sweetened molk.
Spnnkle nuls on lop
Bake 30 mon 350" cool and cUI on
squares.
Mrs J Robert Roach
Golden Banana Cake
Mix:
1 box Duncan Hones white cake mox
1 box onslanl vanilla puddong mox
t/2 cup ool
3/4 cup water
4eggs
1 cup mashed bananas
Pour onto a greased and floured
1OX41ube pan or 13x9x2 pan Bake
50 mon 350' Coolon pan
Banana glaze
Mash
1/2 banana
1 tsp lemon 1uoce
Gradu!IIIY add 2 cups softed
powdered sugar Beal well Woll be
runny
Ulham Chapman

Salted Peanut Crll;;'•
(If usong seH rose flour om~ san and
soda)
t cup of shortening (pari butter or
oleo)
1 1/2 cups brown sugar (packed)
2 tsp vanolla
2eggs
3 cups flour
• Pecan Cake Roll
1/21sp soda
4 eggs, separaled
1 tsp salt
1 cup conlectooners sugar
2 cups saned peanUIS
2 cups ground pecans
Frosted Nuta
Heal oven 375'
1 cup whoppong cream
In Jelly roll pan meH 1 slock oleo
Mox shortenong, eggs. sugar and
31bsp sugar
Baal 2 egg whotes fUSI !ill foamy. vanolla Slor on flour. soda and salt
21sp bakong cocoa
Add 1/4 lsp salt &amp; 1 cup sugar beal Mox on peanuls Drop rounded lsp
1/2 lsp vanolla eldracl
well Mox on al leas! 1 lb pecan
lull ;! onches apart on greased
Chocolale shavongs and addoloonal
Spread on the 1elly roll pan you bakong sheel Flallen w~h bollorn of
confeelooner's sugar opl
mailed the oleo In Bake 325" greased glass dopped on sugar
In moxong bowl, beal egg yolks
IUrnong every 110 mon IUS! loll light Bake 8-10 monulas or unlol golden
and conleclooners sugar untlllhock,
brown 20-30 mon Turn oul to cool brown Makes 6 dox 2" cookies
aboul 5 monules In another bowl,
on waxed paper These are
Juha M Kelly
beal whiles unlol soft peaks form.
fabulous for partoes &amp; Chroslmas.
onto yolk moxlure Fold on
fold
Dorolhy James
pecans untol well blended {baller woll
Pecan Pie
be thin) Grease a 15 on x 10 on x
3 eggs
1 on bakong pan, lone wolh waxed
Upside Down German Chocolala 1/4 cup brown sugar
paper and grease and flour paper
1/2 cup granulaled sugar
Cake
Spread batter inlo pan Bake al
In a 9x 13 pan pUI on 1 cup chopped 1 cup hghl corn syrup
375 lor 10-15 monules or untol cake
pecans &amp; 1 cup coconut mox well &amp; 1/41sp salt
sprongs back when hghlly louched
spread on bollom of pan Prepare a 1 lsp vanilla
Turn onto a hnen lowel dusled with
German chocolale cake accordong 2 lbs butter (melled)
conleclooners sugar Peel off paper
lo lhe package Pour over nut· 1 cup pecans
and roll cake up In towel, starting
coconul moxlure. Melt 8 oz pkg
Combone eggs, sugar, syrup, saH
wtth short end Cool on wore rack 1
cream cheese, 1 lsp of oleo, add 1 and melted buller. Mox well Add
hour Meaowhole, beal lhe cream,
lb powdered sugar mox well spoon .vanolla and pecans Bake on
sugar, cocoa and vanolla on a moxoog
on over top of cake mox Bake 350" unbaked paslry shell on slow oven
bowl untol soli peaks form
45 ' mo~ or lh 60 ~on Ill done. 325' Bake unlol moddle of filling os
Carefully unroll cake spread filling
especoa 1y on e cen er
sel (Usually 45·60 monules)
over cake,
roll up agaon
•
•
Dorolhy James Molhe Yauger
Relrogerale II desored, garnosh wolh
................................................
chocolale
shavongs
and
·Applesauce Ctke baked In a jar
confeclooner's sugar Yield 10·12
Professional Decorl1or Icing
Cream
servongs Nole Thos cake does nol
3/4 CUp CriSCO
2/3 cups shortenong
conlaon flour
1 lb powder sugar
2 213 cup sugar
Calherone Newberry
Beal well Add 1/4 tsp butter Bealon
ftavonng
2 ISp vanolla
Quick &amp; Easy Peanut Butter
1 lsp ~;~lmond extracl
4eggs
Fudge
1 ISp vanolla extrael
2 cups applesauce
1 c powdered sugar
1/4 cup waler Mox all togelher beat 2/3 cups sugar
1 c peanUI butler
well
3 1/3 cup flour
1 c chocolate chops
Dorolhy James 1 lsp baking soda
1 slock 1/4 c margarone
1 1/2 tsp san
In a large sauce pan men slowly •
1/2 cup raoson, 1 lsp connamon
do not boot • margarone, peanul
The Beat Ever Brownlee
2/3 cups nuts, 1 lsp cloves
buller and choc chops, slor
Cream 1 slock oleo wolh 1 cup
Blend flour moldure Add creamed conslanlly Remove from heal, add
sugar well Add a 1 lb can of moxlure Pour onlo well greased powdered sugar, slor unlol smoolh
Hershey syrup and 4 eggs beat wode moulh ponl Jar lolling 1/2 lull
Pour onlo llghlly greased bakong
well Add 1 cup flour mox 3/4 cup Bake al 325' for 45 monules
dosh &amp;cool
chopped nul Pour onto a 9x13 Remove one jar al a lome from
Rose Barnhouse
greased pan Bake 350' 30 to 40 oven Wope sealong edge clean Pul
monules Ieong- 1 slock oleo, 1 1/2 on lid &amp; song screw llghl Jar woll 4 Minute Microwave Fudge
cup sugar &amp; 1/3 cup canned molk seal as cools
1 lb coni sugar
bnng 10 bool and bool 1 mon only Donna Roush
1 slock oleo
Slorrong several tomes durong boolong
1/4 c cocoa or 2/3 c peanUI butter
Add 1/3 cup chocolate chops
Splcad Pumpkin Pie
or bolh
Slorrong loll all chops mall Cool Paslry poe lor 9 on poe
1 tsp vanolla
sllghlly Pour over brownoes Lei 1 (t~ o;) can pumpkon
1/2 c nuts, opl
ocong set a hllle Cake should be 1 (1;-&lt;'Z) evaporaled molk
t/4 c evaporaled molk
complelely cOl
-,;;:~~.3-eQgs
Place sugar, buller &amp; molk on lg
Dorolhy James ' 5 1121sp (18 packels) equal
mocrowaveable moxong bowl Do
1/41sp san
Nol Mox Mocrowave on hogh for 4
1 lsp connamon
mon Mox well Add vanolla &amp; nuls
PeanUI Buttar Fudge
1/21sp gonger
Use electroc moxer Sels up last
5 cups whole sugar
1/41sp nulmeg
Pour onlo hghlly buttered ax8 poe
2 slocks oleo
1/81sp cloves
plale or larger planer Cool 5 mon
Can of evaporaled milk
Beal pumpkon molk, and eggs on
Culonlo poeces
Brong lo a bool • Cook to sol! ball medoum bowl, bealon remaonong
Bess Oars!
add a ponch of sail before boohng
ongredoents Pour onto shell Bake 15
Take off· add med 1ar of peanut mon reduce heallo 350' and bake
• WhHe Texas Sheet Ceke
butter· a oz jar marshmallow cream unlol knole onserled comes oul clean
1 c butter or margarone
1 1/21sp vanolla
abolll 40 mon
2 c flour
Beal good Buner a 9x13 pan Pour
Tracy L Roush 2 eggs bealen
and lei cool
1 lsp almond extrai:l
Lene Mae Cox
1 lsp bakong soda
Honey Frosting
1 c waler
Date Pudding
1/4 slock buner
2 c granulaled sugar
1 cup torown sugar
21 honey
1/2 c sour cream
1/2 cup dales cut fine
2 1/3 cup confectioners sugar
11sp-sall
1 cup flour
111nch of sail
Froslong
1 lsp bekong powder
2 1/2 lsp powdered egg wMes
112 c buller or margarone
1/2 cup molk
21watar
4 1/2 c conleclooners' sugar
11sp butter
Cream butter and honey logelher,
1 c chopped nuls
Mox logalher and pour onlo !hen add 1/3 cup sugar and sail
1/4 c molk
ungreased pan
Cream agaon
1/21sp ~;~lmond eXIracl
1 lsp buttsr
Blend powdered egg whiles and
Cake on large saucepan, brong
1 cup brown sugar
waler Add egg white moxlue
buller and waler lo a bool Remove
1tspvanola
alternately to creamed moldure with from heal and slor on flour, sugar.
1 1/2 cup hot water
balance of sugar, bealong as you
eggs, sour cream, almond ext., salt
1/2 cup nuts chopped
need Wben moldure Is smOOih n os
and soda unlol smoolh Pour onto a
Mix and pour over forsl part Bake ready lo spread
greased 1x10x1 onch bakong pan
400' for 30 mon
Tracy L Roush
Bake al 375 lor 20·22 mon, or untol
Lemon Sauce lor pudding
cake os golden brown and lesls
Juice of 1 memon and a hUla graled
done Cool 20 mon
rond
Mexican FruH Ceke
Meanwhole. lor lroslong, combone
1/2 cup butler
2 cups sugar
butter and milk In a saucepan
121bsp water
2 cups flour
Bnng lo 11 boll Remove from heal
2 cup sugar
21Spsoda
and add sugar and almond &amp;XI Mox
2 eggs belllan
2 f!QIIS
well Slor In walnuls and spread
1 IDIIP conomucn
1 can crushed poneapple
over warm cake Makes 16 lo 20
Sllr consltntly and cook until thick
Mix all Ingredients together Bake servongs
Ann Blake al 325' lor 30·40 minutes.
·
Bess Oars!
Topping
2 cups powdered sugar
Ertn'a Puppy Chow

Buttermilk pta crual
3 cups flour
1 1/3 cup cnsco
1 lsp salt
3/4 cup buttarmolk
Mox as usual lor poe crus! Choll lor
an hour
Thos os a very tender poe dough
Dorolhy James

•

•

OLID

lbowl, hghlly beal 1 egg In large dopper Bake 10 mon al 350 unlit
bowl, sfir IOgelher remaonong cake color of loghlloasl
mox, mefled marganne and the Ieong
beaten egg Press Into prepared 3/4 slock oleo
• 2T molk
pan
In lage bowl, loghlly beat remaonong 1 ISp vanolla
3 eggs Sllr on pumpkon, 1/2 cup Enough powdered sugar to thocken.
sugar. brown sugar, evaporaled Ice cookoes when cool
Anna McFarland
molk and connamon
POur over
cake moXIure on pan To !he 1 cup
of cake mix add !he remaimng 1/2 Strawberry Pie
cup sugar, walnUIS and softened 1 ql slrawberroes
t cup sugar
margarone, mox unlll crumbly
4 tsp eornslarch
Spronkle over lhe pumpkon moxlure
Bake 50-60 monUies SErve warm 1 cup waler
31 hght conn syrup
or cold
3
T dry slrawberry Jello
Frances ldnss
Cook sugar, cornslarch, waler and
corn syrup logelher unlol lhock and
Striped Delight
clear Add 3 tbsp dry slrawberry
1 1/2 c grahlllll cracker crumbS
Jello Place berroes 1n baked poe
1/4 c sugar
shell
Pour sauce over and
1/3 c mefled buller
relrogerale
1 8 oz pkg cream cheese, softened
Anna McFarland
1/4 c sugar
21bsp molk
1 8 oz Cool Whop thawed
2 (4 servong soze) pkg chocolate Flossie's Sugar Cookies
2 slocks oleo
onslanl pudding
1 cup powdered sugar
3 1/2 c cold molk
Note
Try Stroped Dehghl on 1 cup whole sugar
2 eggs
poslachoo, lemon and butterscolch
4 3/4 cup flour
Combone graham cracker crumbs
1 tsp cream of larter
1/4 cup sugar and melled buller
Press lormly on bonom of 13x9 1nch 1 cup.ool
psn Beal cream cheese woth 1/4 1 lsp soda
cup sugar and 2 lbsp mlk unlol sa~
smoolh Fold on 1/2 of lhe whopped Mox alllogether and bake t2 mon on
toppong spread over crus! Usong 375 Drop from cookoe dopper or
cld molk, prep11re puddong as spoon may roll on sugar before
dorected on package
Pour over bakong
Anna McFarland
cream cheese layer Choll serveral
hours or overnoghl
Spread
remaonong whopped loppong over Pecan Pie
puddong
Garnosh wnh graled 2eggs
1/2 cup sugar
chocolate or chopped nuls
Dreama M Parrosh 1/21sp sail
114 cup oleo
3/4 cup dark corn syrup
3/4 cup pecans (whole or chopped
Punch Bowl Cake
vanolla
1 box yellow cake mox
Mox allogelher (w11h moxer) and pour
1 lg box vanolla pudding (onslanl)
on 9 on unbaked poe shell Bake 30
1 can cherry poe lolling
mon at350
1 lg can crushed Pineapple, Anna McFarland
draoned
1 lg con!aoner Cool Whop
-Eve's Apple Pie
nuls, red and green chernes. 3 4 large apples
coconUI (opt lor gamosh)
1 unbaked poe crus!
Bake cake as directed on 1/2 cup sugar
Prepare 21bsp flour
package on 13x9 pan
puddong as dorecled on package
1/21sp connamon
Alter cake has cooled, cui on half 1/2 tsp nulmeg
and break onto chunks Place one- lemon 1uoce
half of cake on punch bowl . layer Peel and cube apples and toss 10
hall of poneapple poe foiling puddong coal on sugar, flour, connamon and
and Cool Whop over cake Then nulmeg moldure Place moxture on
repeal, endong wolh Cool Whop If unbaked p1e shell and dnzzle w1lh
desored decorale w~h nuls. chernes lemon JUICe
or coconul
Toppong for poe
Maxone Nobert 1/2 cup sugar
1
'i r
1/2 cup flour '
Cream Cheese Pound Cake
1/2 cup mao:garone
1 cup softened margarone
Gambone sugar and flour Then
1/2 cup softened butter
cui slock of margarone and mox (mox
8 oz softened cream cheese
hke · meal consoslency' ), and
3 cups sugar
spronkle over apples
6 eggs
Bake 55 monules al 400 degrees
3 cups sohed cake flour
Eva Armanlrout
2 lsp vanolla extracl
Combme forst 3 mgredoenls
creamong well)
Gradually add Lemonade Cake
sugar, bealong unlol hghl and fluffy
1 pkg whole cake mox
Add eggs, one al a lome bealong pour 3/4 c boohng waler over 1 pkg
well alter each addoloon Add flour of lemon Jello Let cool Mox 1 pkg
lo creamed moxlure slorrong unlol whole cake ox, 4 eggs, and 3/4 c
comboned Stor on vanolla Pour salad ool togelher !hen add coled
baner onto a well greased 10" tube bul nol sel Jello Mur well Pour
pan Bake al 325 degrees lor 1 onlo greased 10 onch tube pan and
hour and 45 mon or unlol cake lesls bake al325 for t hour
done
Cool pan 10 monules
Toppong
Remove from pan and cool M1x 3/4 c sugar and 1 can
complelely Yield one 10" cake
lemonade Mox do nol dolllle Mox
Goldoe Powell well As soon as cake comes from
oven spoon lemonade mnc over
Caramel Layer Brownies
cake sowly Use al of the mox Cool
1 (14 oz) pkg hghl caramels
1n pan 1 hr
1/2 cup evaporated milk
Gertrude Hall
Me~ over low heat
............... ................. . ... ·-------·
1 box German Chocolale Cake Mox
1/2 cup melted margarone or buller
Mounds Cake
1/3 cup evaporaled molk
1 box devol Foods Cake Mox
1 (6 oz) pkg chocolale chops
1 pkg chocolale puddong m1x, dry
Grease 9x13" pan Mox cake mox, 1 cup molk
melled butter and molk by hand
1 cup sugar
Pal 1/2 batter on greased pan
30 large marshmallows
Bake at 350 degrees lor 6 mon
14 oz bag coconul
Remove from oven
Spronkle I tsp van1lla
chocolale hips over baked layer
12 oz bag chocolate morsels
Then pour caramel moxture over all
1 Stick butter or marganne
Then crumble remaonong dough
Bake cake mox (addong chocolale
over lop and bake aga1n 15 Ia 18 puddong) as dorecld on package, on
m1nutes
a 9x 13 pan Mel! marshmallows,
NOTE
One small can of molk and sugar togelher on a large
evaporaled molk almosl makes lhos sauce pan or double booler, bool one
recope so I JUS! lonosh w~h milk
monute Add coconul and vanilla
Sharon Norvell POur over warm cake whole
coconul moxlure IS hoi
Mel!
Romick's Swedish Nut Cake
chocolale morsels dn butler
2 c flour
togelher and pour over coconul
2 c sugar
moxlure Relrogerate 20 monutes
1 1/2 lsp bakong sOda
before cullong
1 20 oz can crushed poneapple
Mercedes Sayre
woth juoce
1 c chopped nuts (prater walnuls)
Mox logelher Pal onlo a greased Layered Banana &amp; Pineapple
and floured 9x13" pen Bake al350 Dessert
·
•
oven lor 30·50 monules
1 112 c graham cracker crumbs
Toppong
1/4 c sugar or 6 pkls Eq ual
1 slock margarone
artdocoal sweetner
1 8 oz cream cheese
1/3 c oleo, melled · 'Promose Ugh!"
1 c chopped nuts
1 can (20 oz) crushed poneapple,
1 c powdered sugar
draoned
I tsp vanolla
3 bananas. sliced
Cream margarone &amp; cream 1 pkg (8 ~z) cream cheese,
cheese, add sugar and . vanolla 1 softened
spread over cooled cake ana 3 1/2 c cld skom molk
sprinkle woth nuls
•1 (8 oz) lub Cool Whop L:oghl
Marcoa Croy 2 pkg (1 oz) vanolla onslant puddong
Honey Cooklel
m1x
..
2 sticks oleo
6
packets
Equal
1 cup sugar
Mox
graham
cracker crumbs, sugar
3eggs
and
oleo
on
13x9
onch dosh Press
1 cup honey
evenly
onto
bonom
of pan Arrange
1 lsp vanolla
banana
sloces
of
top
of crus! Beal
2 lap connlll!lon
cream
cheese
on
large
bowl intll
1 lsp gonger
smooth
Gradually
beal
In milk
21Sp soda
Add
pudding
moxes
Beal
toll well
4aups flour
blended.
Spread
evenly
over
Mox altogelher and drop from cookoe
Spoon crua~'9d
bananas

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

•

s
•

MoundeCake
aboul24 slandard size mullins
1 box devol Foods Cake Mox
Annena Knlghl
'I pkg chocolale puddong mox, dry
1 cup molk
Honey Cooklta
1 cup sugar
2
slicks oleo
30 large marshmallows
1 cup sugar
14 oz bag coconul
3eggs
1 ISp vanilla
1 cup honey
12 oz bag chocolale morsels
1 lsp vanilla
1 slick butter or margarone
Bake cake mix (addong chooolale 2 lsp connamon
puddong) as dorecld on package, on t lsp gonger
a 9x13 pan Mel! marshmallows 21sp soda
molk and sugar logelher on a large 4 sups flour
sauce pan or double booler, boot one Mox altogether and drop from cookoe
monule Add coconut and vanolla d1pper Bake 10 min at 350 until
POur over warm cake whole color of hghtloasl
coconut moxlure os hot. Mall Ieong
chocolate morsela dn buller 3/4 stock oleo
logelher and pour over coconul 2Tmolk
moldure Relrogerate 20 mmules 1 lsp vanolla
before cuttong
Enough powdered sugar Ia !hooken
Mercedes Sayre Ice ~ookoes when cool
Anna McFarland
Layered Banana &amp; Pineapple
Dessert
Cauliflower Salad
1 1/2 c graham cracker crumbs
1 head cauliflower, cui lnlo small
1/4 c sugar or 6 pkls Eq ual
flowerelles
artoficoal sweetner
1/3 c oleo. melted • ' Promose Ugh!" 1/2 head lettuce, shredded or cui
1 can (20 oz) crushed p1neapple, up
1 small onoon, cui onto bots
draoned
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 bananas sliced
1/2 pound bacon , !ned crosp,
1 pkg (8 oz) cream cheese
draoned
and broken up
softened
Dressong
3 1/2 c cld skom molk
1 cup Hellmann s Mayonnaose
1 (a oz) lub Cool Whop Loghl
2 pkg (1 oz) vanolla onstant puddong 113 cup Parmesan cheese
1/4 cup sugar
mox
Mox Cauliflower lettuce, onoon, sail
6 packels Equal
and
bacon logelher on large bowl
Mox graham cracker crumbs, sugar
Mox
logelher mayonnaose,
and oleo on 13x9 onch dosh Press
Parmesan
cheese and sugar lor
evenly onlo bollom of pan Arrange
dressong
and
pour over salad on
banana slices of lop of crus! Beat
bowl
cream ch eese on large bowl onbl
Serves 8-10
smoolh Gradually beat on molk
Jeanne Tallerson
Add puddong moxes Beat toll ~II
blended
Spread evenly over
bananas
Spoon crushed Hanny Penny Salad
poneappla evenly over puddong 2 c cooked doced chocken breasts
moxlure Relrogerale 3 hre 15 2 c doced celery
1/21 salt
srevongs
1/21 accent
Naomo Muncy
2 I grated onoon
---- - t/2 sl1vered almonds
Strawberry Poe
1 c mayonna1se
~~
1 ql strawbernes
Combone
all
above
ongredoenls
1 cup sugar
and place on shallow Qosh Cover
4 lsp cornslarch
woth 1/2 c grated Amencan cheese
1 cup waler
and 1 c crushed potalo chops
3 lhghl corn syrup
Bake at 456° lor 20 mon
3 T dry slrawberry Jello
Betty Call
Cook sugar cornslarch waler and
corn syrup logelher unlol !hock and Spinach Salad
clear Add 3 lbsp dry strawberry Dressong
Jallo Place berroes on baked poe
3 lablesPeans lemon JUICe
shell
Pour sauce over and 1 leaspoon DoJOn Mustard
relrogerale
1/2 leaspoon Worceslershore sauce
Anna McFarland
t/4 leaspoon each sail and pepper
1/3 cup olove ool
Eve's Apple Pie
Salad
3-4 large apples
1 1/2 pounds fresh sponach
1 unbaked poe crust
6 slnps bacon, cooked &amp; crumbled
1/2 cup sugar
1 cup garlic croutons
21bsp flour
1/4 cups chopped green onoons
1/2 lsp connamon
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1/2 tsp nulmeg
Blend dressong ongredoents, loss
lemontuoce
woth sponach, bacon, croulons,
Peel and cube apples and toss 10 onoons and cheese
coal on sugar flour, cinnamon and
Nadone W Pholhps
nulmeg moldure Place m1xture on Spinach Salad
unbaked poe shell and drozzle wolh 2/3 cup vegelable ool
lemon 1uoce
1/4 cup red wone vonegar
Toppong lor poe
2 leaspoons lemon JUICe
112 cup sugar
2 leaspoons soy sauce
1/2 cup flour
1 leaspoon sugar
1/2 cup margarone
1 laaspoon dry mustard
Combone sugar and flour Then 1/2 teaspoon curry powder
cut slock of margarone and mox (mox 1/2 teaspoon sail
loke 'meal consostency '), and 112 leaspoon seasoned pepper
spnnkle over apples
1/41easpoon garhc powder
Bake 55 m1nules at400 degrees
1 package ( 10 oz) lresh sponach.
Eva Armanlroul torn 1nto blle-s1ze p1eces
5 bacon strops. cooked and
Lemonade Cake
crumbled
1
1 pkg whole cake mox
2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
pour 3/4 c boohng waler over 1 pkg
Comb1ne f1st 10 ongredoenls on a
of lemon Jello Let cool Mox t pkg
Jar cover toghtly and shake unlol
whole cake 1x 4 eggs and 3/4 c
well moxed, sel as1de
Place
salad ool together then add coled sp1nach '" a large salad " "wl Jus!
but nol sel Jeilo Mox well Pour before servong, pour dress1ng over
onto greased 10 onch lube pan and sponach and loss gently Garnosh
bake al 325 lor 1 hour
w1lh crumbled bacon and egg
Toppong
sl1ces
Mox 3/4 c sugar and 1 can Yoeld 6-8 servongs
lemonade Mox, do nol dillile Mox
Agnes Fabe
well As soon as cake comes from .. '
. -------- ·-· ... -- ...
-------- •
oven spoon lemonade m1x over Aulumn Apple Salad
cake sowly Use al ol the noox Cool 1 can crushed p1neappke (20 oz)
on pan 1 hr
undra1ned
Gertrude Hall 2/3 cup sugar
1 pkg (3 oz) lemon Jello
Lemon Loaf
1 pkg (8 oz) cream cheese,
1 can Eagle Brand milk
softened
1 8 oz carton whopped loppong
t cup doced. unpeeled apples
1/4 cup lemon JUICe
1/2 to 1 cup chopped nuts
Lone the bottom and sodes of a loaf 1 cup chopped celery
pan wolh loll Then arrange a layer 1 cup wopped toppong
of vanilla wafers on lhe boltom ol lettuce leaves
!he pan Mox molk and lemon JUICe
In saucepan combone poneapple
logalher, !hen fold on whopped and sugar Bnng to a bool lor 3
loppong Pour moxture on pan over monutes Add Jello and slor unlo
wafers and freeze lor about 4 ldossolved. Add cream cheese and
hours Remove from pan and shce stor unto lmoxture os thoroughly
Mochael Bailey comboned Cool fold on apples,
nuls, celery and whopped loppmg
Pumpkin Chip Muffins
Pour lnlo a 9 onch square pan Choll
2cups sugar
unlol form Cut on squares and serve
4eggs
on lenuce elaves 9-12 servongs
1 can (16 oz) pumpkon
Retha Day
1 1/2 cups vegetable ool
3 cups all purpose flow
21sp bakong soda
21sp bakong powder
1 lsp ground connamon •
1 tsp sail
• ,
2 cups semosweet chocolate chops
(12 oz)
In large moxong bowl beal eggs,
sugar, pumpkon and ool untol smooth
Combone flour. bakong sOda, bakong
powder, 1 lsp connamon and sa~.
add 10 pumpkon moxlure and mox
woll Fold on chocolate semosweel
chops Foil greas~ ol paper-hned
mullin cups Bake at 400 lor 16-20
monules or unlol muffons lesl done
cool on pan 10 monules belore
ramovong lo a wire rack Yoeld

··------------·--------------------------

----

-----

fl

.'•

.,
•

j

�•
•

Page 12 • The Dally SenUnel

••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

Thursday, Decemw11, 1118

Football '96
Catch All The
Excitement!

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!
PARADISE

~

THE HARMON FORECAST.

Z49 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
6i4-99l·7986
614·992-675'.

The Top 1WIIy MIIOr-Cofllge Tuma
il. ~
11. Vlflllnll loch

1. AriZGMSia1t
2. Florida
. 3. Florida Sllla
4. Ohio Sllla

EWING FUNERAL HOME

13.-Domo

a. ~'lUling

14. Nor1h Comllna
15. Mlcl1lgln

10.r...

Tiuaday, Doc. 111
LAS 1/EGAS BOWL

992·2121
ESTABLISHED IN 1913

t2. 'Nul.;giOit

7. Penn State
8.T . . . _

5.-

108 MulberrY Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio

. -

.. . ............. ... .. 24

--.v,"Doc. 25

Dignity and.Serviee

AlOHA BOWl
Fridoy, Doc. 27
LIBEI!'TY BOWl
CARQUEST BOWL
COPPER BOWL

Always
OFFER.ING PRE-NEED
COUNSEUNG AND
ARRANGEMENTS

'

• DireCtor

VALLEY
LUMBER

I·

Navy .............. : • ...... 23

c - .... .............. 18

SyrocuM ........ . , .. ....... 28

HDU510n .................. . 13

Virginia •. : .. .. ' ...... . ...., • 27

Miami ... . ........ , ....... 23

Wlaconlln ......... : .. . , ..... 28

Ua.h .· ... . ... . ..... ,: . ..... 20

Iowa ...• ... • •• .. ...• , ..• • ~ 18

FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
·Quality to Lo5t a Lifetime

Colofodo .......... ... ...... 25
Howard ................ .. .. 21
Michigan Slaht .... .. .. .... . .. 29
Aubom ..................... 24
Nabrul&lt;a .................. . 30

....

Michigan ........ ........... 23 .
Nont1 C81011ila ........ . , ..... 29
Brigham Young ........ : , ..... 24
TenneltH ....... ... .. .... . .. 27
Arizona Slo1e .. .. ..... , ...... 24
Farm Shtla .................. 21

ROSE BOWl
FIESTA BOWL

Florida ....... .. ............ 28

.... . . . .. .-. . ... 17

Kansas S1aht .. ·...... . .... .. 23

r.... ......... .. .

.. 20 ,

Florida Slate .... ..

.. 27

St. Rt. 7 Chester. Ohio

(

•

94.4

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

6. Big Eaot , ..... .. .. .. .. . , ... .........88.2
7. Conference USA . . .. . ... , , , ..........88.1
&amp;. Wfttorn Athletic ........... ......... ... 79.8
9. Mlci-Amertcon . .. ..... .. ...... .. .... .. 71 .8
10. Big Sky ........... i .. . . ............70.5

99 2·3322

.

1

.... .

Ell

•nHL .. .. ·

SALES : SERVICE - PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

.

Weathertron®
· Heat Pump XL 1200
Super Efficiency
Chester, OWo 915-4222

I

I

110

w.. ... ............. ... .... .....

11 . Big
89.9
12. Ga1- Alhle11c .. ... .... ... ...... .. ..811.3
13. ... . ............ .. ...........88.9
, 14. Sou1hland .. ' .. .. ......... .. ...... ...84.9
15. Soo1hom ....... . . ...........•........84.8

18. Nor1!l Cen11111 ..... .. .... . ........... .58.7
17. Ohio Valley . .................. . . .... .55.1

Fisher .Funeral Home
.
Bruce Fisher · Director
MIDDLEPORT

18. 1vy ' . • ' . ' .•.• ' ' : . . . . ;. •. . t • ••••..•..• 50.8
19. Gun8oU1h ......... .. ... ..... .......49.8
20. lone Star ; . . . ; •. . .... 1 ••.•• , . . • • : • .. 49.4

James A. Acree Jr. Director
992·5141 .

hrwla
611 Wasl 1/2 IIIIa
In Memory _

.

(row's Fam y
·Restaurant

.

'I'HE IIABMON NFL FORE£AST
Saturday; S1111day and Monday, Dee. 21·23
NEW ENGLAND ..24
••N.Y. GIANTS .... is .

(Saturday)
228. WI:ST MAIJII
All the Patriots will need to beat the Giants is their potent passing game. The last time Bill Parcells coached in a
POMEROY
N.E.-N.Y. game, 1990, he was leading the Giants toward a Super Bowl victory.
·
•• ST. LOUIS ........... 20
NEW ORLEANS ....&amp;
Three weeks ago, in front of the smallest crowd ,in.New Orleans franchise history, the Rams looked almost goodlt";li;jiil
~against the hapless Saints, w~ming 26,10. The Rams haven't swept N.O. in 12 years.
(Sunday)
.
' 'BUFFAL0............. 27
KANSAN CITY .... l3
Here's a possible AFC championship game matchup if the Broncos and Steelers falter. The Bills, ,;,ho should
· stifle 1he Chiefs' run-heavy offense, routed K.C. 44-10 the last time they met, in '94.
CHICAGO ................ l6
"*TAMPA BAY ..... l3
The Bears' inspired defense held .the Buccaneers in check seven weeks ago as Chicago beat T.B. for the 16th
time in 18 games at Soldier Field, 13· 10. Don't expect much scoring this time, either.
DALlAS ................... 22 .
•• WASHINGTON 17
Emmitt Smith ran for 155 yards and all three Dallas TO's on Thanksgiving to lead the Cowboys past the
Redskins 21 -10. Washington's only hope against the Dallas Dis to keep the ball on the ground.
DENVER.................. .30 · ••SAN DIEG0 ......20
IN Week Six the Chargers took a 17-0 lead over the Broncos but Denver did all the scoring after that, winning
28-17 on JohnEiway's 32-of-41 passing. S.D. won' t upset the league's hottest team.
N2nd-AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
"*GREEN BAY ........ 29
MINNESOTA........ 13 .
Sacking Brett Favre seven times and rallying for 13 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, the Vikings
992-5627
surprised the Packers 30·21 in September. G.B. looks ready to bust loose in the rematch.
·
HousroN ................ll
••oALnMoRE ... t6
The
\AJimt~s
The Oilers beat the Saints to the dubious achievement of attracting the smallest home crowd ever three months
·US
ago when they whipped the Ravens 29-13. Baltimore's ·passing will keep this one closer.
It
INDIANAPOus ...... 26
••ciNCINNATI.... ts
After battles with the Patriots, Bills, Eagles and Chiefs, the Colts may let down against the Bengals- but if
do, they 'lllose. In '95 Cincy opened the season by shocking Indy 24-21 in OT.
.
· 0 *JACKSONVILLE28
ATLANTA .....-........ 14
With receivers who can run the Falcons secondary ragged and a defense that can keep Atlanta from scoring,
Jaguars should end the season wi1h a flourish . The Falcons will end it with a thud.
MJAMJ ..•••..•••••.•••••••••l9
••N.Y.JE'J'S .......... l7
Spotting the Jets a 14-0 lead, then scoring five straight TD's, then fighting off a late N.Y. rally, the Dolphi 1nsl
255 Mill St•. Middleport
survived the jets in Week Three, 36·27. Believe it or not, they're about even.
·
992·3345
•• OAKLAND.~ ........32
SEA'rJLE .....~ •••.•••• 15
rniorel'"-:~---:...,;;;.;;,;~,;;;;,;._ _ _ _ _
Just like last month, when the Raide.rs beat the Seahawks 27·21, Oakland and Seattle are fighting for little
than their pride. The Raiders can sweep the 'Hawks for the first time since ' 93. ,
0 *PHILADELPHIA24
. ARJZONA ............. t9
Led by the reborn Boomer, Esiason's three founb-quaner TD passes, the Cardinals came back to surprise
Eagles iri a wild November shootout, 36-30. The Cards haven't swept Philly in 12 years.
PITrSBURGH ........ 21
••CAROLINA .......zo
The Steelers may have one of the NFL's beat rushing games, but they' ll have thei1 han&lt;k full with the Panthers'
defensive line. Pittsburgh will win ..barcly--b)' shutting down Carolina's offen$C.
(Monday)
.. SAN FRANCISCO 31
DETROIT ............ l4
The 49ers can run and throw the ball at will against the Lions, and without it they can keep Detroit from going
far. On a Monday night at the Silvetdome last year, the Lions stunned S.F. 27-24.

992~5432

•

In loving
memory of my

......

~relater,

BRADFORD'S

RHEA DEEM,

.cut Your Own

Any Scotch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Aides on Weekends ·
At. 33to Darwin, East on At. 681 , 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Ad., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm , Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
Nov. 29th thru Dec. 24th

Three yaara have
paiiHCI ah1ca God
can,d you home, I
know you're In a
better place, why do
I feel so alone.
·
Aa the yaara go by
It aeems as though
It waa yeatarday.
The pain for me atlll
remain a.
If only I had a
minute · to touch
your face, to hold
your hand, to tall
you I love you one
more time.
I mlaa you ao, but I
know you are free
from pain. ~.
I know that one
day
we'll
be
together, but until
then, I know you
are watching over
me. After ell, God
plcka OfiiY the beat.
I love you.
YourSie,
Clarinda "Buzzla"
Thalli

I--

Time
See For·vour·1997 ·
Graduation Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP

-1

RIDEN.OUR'S

TV '&amp; APPLIANCE GAS SERVICE
CIUDI

G&amp;W PUSTICS AND SUPPLY
SL At. 7

Tuppen Plalna, Ohio
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert - Dual wall and Regular 11' thru 36'
4' S&amp;D - perf.- solid pipe
4' &amp; a· Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6' Sch 35 pipe
'I." &amp; 'I•" C.P.V.C. pipe
1'l." thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'I•' &amp; 1" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' rolls lhru 1,000' rolls)
•t,• U.L. approved Conduit
8' Gravetess Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" thru 2"- fittings· Regulators· Allers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp;Water linings
Full line of Cistem, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks
Christmas Trees

We hltvo lin excellent
Hlecllon ol beaulllully
allured treea up lo 1411.

Prtcea S1G-$20. Call lor
wholesale prices.

Lanclocape Stock ·

(PIIntllter Ch,._)
Spruce and While Pine

$611.

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
.
811.'1 ASun.'s till CMIImll
St. .Rt. 325, Denville, Oh.
Ph. 742-3149 or 892-nas

(UmaSton•
Low Ratft)

WICKS
HAULING
Llm,stone,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614~992-3470

4

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

' I

i

AIJ'T;LAND, OH
Homegrown· Carellolly
Sheared Srokh &amp; White
Pine 4' &amp; Up with a great

-or lal'fler trees.
--- selection
,CSI1742-2143 or
742-2979
------ On Bille
Nav 28th
---BINGo .
---RACINE, OHIO
-LEGION
-:::::: AMERICAN
POST602
--- EVERY SUNDAY

Doora Open 4:30.
Gllma atartll 6:45.
Per oUIIa according to
number of pltlyero.
Under now management
Public Watcome

.• truck palnllng,
minor machlnlclll
· repair.

IIMIOIM.IILY
SUIIDIYS 1 M Tl6 ••

Tunt-Upa, 011 Chlnga,

Wax, Bufftng
Long SL, 'RuUancl, Oh.
742-2135, Allk for KJp

I

. ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREAtHS, SWAGS, ·
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
UVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETIIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23

RUTLAND, OHIO
814-742-2656

Briar Proof
Hunting Clothea

Coats . Dtg Calan
a•s Llad Stnps
Vests Nc.t Tags

o1 su- Bridge an SR 7
Phone 446-4530

1o.t

lhialitg lJalds

Chaps
B..s

Belts

1:w1:w1

ANNOUN CE MENTS

Ptrsonals

005

Forget that Mile? No gilt ldn.l?
Lit •utertme Reminder Ser~k:e•

llolpl Cal1 today! Kathleen (330)

8117·7200.

-.:ooafotrldJutwlthQo.

- l - I n d E·Yap Olu,._
1la. Avallablt Fruth Pmrmlcy,
M' t:tdhporL

30 Announcements
We proceu deer, make hickory
llmOkOd hams, trail .boloQna. pop.

I

Riggs Christmas Trees
Choose and cut you~ tree. We will
mechanically clean your tree for you so
no more needles in the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like .

RIGGS TREE FARM
39507 Rocksprings Road (at comer of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702
.Carol and David Riggs

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR .
MIKE BING

- .....
DAVIS

mo. pd.•

'

CONNOLLY'S

2Y. Miles
sOuth

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

(614) 667·3483
Open
Evenings and

cHRISTMAs TREES • Wee~~l2:s

pd

25 years experience
own home or busintsS

Ask for
John(614)992.3987
or n.n.. (614) 949-3036

J&amp;L SIDING.
INSULATION .
5371RYAN PLACE
MIDDI..UORT

. 892-2772
i:oo o.m.-3:30 p.m.

•Retllce•lf Wlatlows
.....Gtl'llll

•St.. Doors &amp;
WWows

.... Wtloas

~t. clean, ,unitary ..Hunting auppllea, llc:enat I game ·

chedc stalion. CBAWFOBQ'I Hen. dersonWV.

Glvaawa~

40

1 112 Year old, female, Dalma-

liln. ~~2588.
8 112 Fl Christmas Tree, Good
Condition With Tank Working Or-

der, 614-406.JI780.
Desperate!~ Seeking New Ownera! Ado,able 5 Wonderful Puppies. 10 Weeks Old, 614·441 1107.
.

8 Puppies, mixed D,eed, 5 fe -

maiea, various colora, 3 males, 8

weeka old. 30-.67~12.1 7.

7 Pupplll~ ,eall~ preu~. part
Beagle mix, 4 months old. 304·
875-1975 or 304·8 75-3029 leave
message.

·

Ch fekena to give away. 304·875·

1287.
Female Chow Full Blooded Approx 5 Yean Old , Black, Uale
f;'an Chow, Part Husky, Approx. 1

Year Old, Both Gentle With t&lt;idsi
614·448-6758.

Female Doberman oup, 10 wks.
old,814·742-2t87. ·

Full

Grown Male CN&gt;w,

8!!00.

~14-3§&amp;..

GE Washer, needs IIQitator. ·304·

675-3422.

Ge,min Shepherd puppies,.. 8
weeks old, ready lor Chrlstmf.s.
3().4-882-2178.
(
.

oRooflng
-Remodeling
oNew Construction

weu:l\doo. 61H92·3180.

-Decks

away, 814-992-3923.

•VInyl Siding
olnaured

One Very Fr inedlr Male Ferret
With Cage, Call 61&lt;-245·9759 If
No Answer Loove A Messag&amp;. ;

FreeEatfm4181J ·

992-6711

Male Be1111le,

likely

to hum, good

Mixed breed puppies 10 g"'e

;

60 Lost and Found :

'

Found: Kroger vicinity, adorabfe
tiger striped bobtail &lt;:at. caw ti:M-

992·11118between 10.&amp;

CUSTOM BUILDING &amp; .
REMODRING

Ill! frx ir as if it wtrt our

.....

CONTRAaiNG

of

Tuppers
Plains on St.
Rt. 7

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Free Estimates

6 1/2' Poinsettias (6
colors) ................ $3-$5
Poinsettia
Baskets .. $7.95·$17.95
Christmas Cactus
............. $1.75or~
Cut Trees ........ $8·$1 8
Small Holly Trees ......
.....,................... $2.50
Wreaths .. $4.95·$9.95
Grave
Blankets .......... $1 9.95
Cemetery Vases . ~. 95
Monument Sprays .....
....................... $18.95 ..

992-5n6 .

Ev... &amp;~· , .......

New Homes, Additions,
Roofing, Paintlng,Bams
Garages, Concrete

Christmas· Season

Sunday 1 p.m. • 5 p.m.
Free Coffee &amp;Cookies
During Christmas
Season
,

949"057 .

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

· Now Open For

OPEN DAILY
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.

31801 Ambergi~r Rd.
Off Forest Run

Ro Lo HOLLON.
TRUCKING .

HUBBARDS.
GREEN HOUSE

Cooler

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE
Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dreving • Ornamental
Steps • Stailll, AaiHngs, Patio Fumiture, Fireplace
Items, Planler Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuffll

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We will work wilhin your budget.
Pli. 773-9173
FAX 773-5~1
108 Pomeroy Str:eet
Mason, WV

. JONES' TREE SERVICE
20 Yean

E:~~perience

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

0

'

Found : Young Preny Puppy"''

~~Mcln~re Parle, Call 610·3'!·

Mornlng,Star RdJ
·, CR 30, Racine, Ohio

Los t· small shorl haired lem&amp;(a
Terrier, missing smc e 12/15191,

•Roping •Wreaths

698·21&gt;06.

•Swags

-Grave Blankets
•Artificial Poinsettia
&amp; Up

$5.00

Snowvillu/Pagovillo v icini!~,

ef•,

Los t: 5 monlh otd German
Shepherd, Eden Ridge • iC&lt;nity,
1
ch;ld' s
•

=~.·~~~~~8'i2~:

Pf

LOST: BlaCk purao, behind Now
Haven awimming pool area . RE -

L--94=9-,r:~~~:ttiW~ARDI

304-773-5115
Haven
Poltce Deptor turn

in~.,

Siamese Cal In Mud So~k
r--.U.iUi'H;;::;;;,.,J..ll~st:
SMITH'S
A ·~~~While Hollow Ro~d
CONSTRUCTION 70
Sale

c..- Bulking&amp; -Inti
•NewHomu
•Addltlona
•New Garage•
•RimocleUng
•Siding
•Roofing ,
•Painting .
FREE ESnMATES

'
ALL Yard Sales Must Ba Paid .In

Ad•ance. DEADLINE : 2:00 M1.
1he day before· th&amp; ad 11 to run.
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Mondly edition · 10:00 a.m. Sai·
urday.
•

•

Pomeroy,

(6141192-5535
(8141992·2753

Middleport
&amp;. VlclnHy
'

All Yard Sales Mus~ Be Paid In
Advan~e . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad is to run, Swa.. ·
d~y &amp; Monday e.dilion. 1:OOpm

••

Friday.

80

'

)

.,
'
'

. 915•1107 ,,.
•
'
•I

I

~

Body work, cer, truck

peronl, jerky, tummer tlut.a ge.

Help Wanted ·

SKATE-A-WAY
CHRISTMAS PARTY
DEC. 21, 7:30-10:00
New Year's Eve Party
Dec.
7:30-12:30

at IVYDALE

F~WahCut{Uve

who left this
world three
years ago today,
12·19-96.

BULLETitl BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

1400.776.0527

tens a -a

GRUESER'S
· GARAGE

lntleallltlte-.W¥

ow. Stm lt. 7 .....

RUTLAND MINE
SUPPLY CO•

CHRISTMAS in the (:OUNTRY

CHRISTMAS TREES

:J
llllllliltlllllllltllllll11
II llllllltllllllllllllllllltllllll L:
··----················-···-···········-·······-·····---·····-

----------------::;
-:::
---

motor bloctta.
S14 &amp;82

~'----~~.

CALL 992·2196.
ASK FOR BOB HAYES

••
•
•

Plcllup ...... Jtd
eppllaneaa, batWIH,
nwnyn•taiJa

711Min

HELP WANTED
LUBE &amp;
MUFFLER WORK

•••
.'
•••
••'
•

.,.. ..............
Proctanllle, . .

15· 110

.

RAWliiGHOATS

. Chester, Ohio

985-3308

lti""""S..•...,.

... --·-..,""I

1-----------------1
Member FDIC

.....

985-4222

1ho-

a

0

On bahelt of the
Rodney Grueser fam- .
lly we wish to thank
every peraon or bualneaa
who
has
donated money, furnlahlnga, toys, clothIng, etc. We eepacJally want to thank the
landlord who donated
3 months free rent on
in apartment In
l Racine. Thla person
: wlehea to remain
' anonymoue...:$paclal
• thanks go td South: ern High SChool at.fl'
: &amp; atudanta for their
help.

Heating and Coollnt;, Inc.

Northweltem . : . •... ... . ..... 18
Ollio Slll10 • .. .. • .. .. • .. : .. . 23

ol--

4. SCutnoaa1om ... ........ . .... . .. ... ..92.4
5. A1iln1lc Coaat ....... . .. .. . ...........811.5

Mason • Point Pleasant • New Haven

WARNER

Wfli .VI~I

"""bora.,.

an

3. Paciflc-10 . • . .. . .. ••

It's not just our name,
it's our philosophy.

Alabama ..... : .. .......... 18

Saminolao wllicll """"'"
undilputod no1iono1 c:hllnpionahlp for Arizona Stott. OUr
10 - . on 1hoM
two ma1Chupalho11hoy could - l y go lho - -: an Ohio S-win, a Florida s- win and a1111e for 1he - ·
11 bo1h undoloahtd 1eamt win, lho cron~ -1e wll begirt The good nowt 111hlt we'"' only one mor11 ....
. ton of ftt'IIOI'I~ pDetllliDn ·~ ..._ fn:xn 1~. when the Role Bowl jt;Nnl thl tBowt Alliance.
,
In IIIIo ago . , _ more commercial ..,.. fo&lt;Mball. we continuo 10 chllrlllte pofCIIItlgO
f01UmH110
gauge whether bowt money and national il "" nzm TV expoaure l8rv8 'o perpatullte tt.lop p:lQws•. Thir ,_.that
peroenblge islho hlghost Wo been Iince 1992-25 o111te 38 1011111 1he1 played In 1 bowl lUI yur 11111 bac:1&lt;. M UIUII.
1he Oilier mljor 111111tic we chon IIIIYBI\ higher. Thls ooaaon""' pld&lt;ed alotiol of 1, 8 3 7 - right and 1134 wrong (and,
1hank!l 10 1he iontt&lt;Mirdue- ol OYOr1lma. no 11111). a1oroeu1111Q- Ill .743.
Flnalfy, hire's our O&gt;U:!uliw annua111s1 o1111e top 20 college con,._, bued on
of our p&lt;MOr ~
1or ll1e taarns In .my .......nee. Wrth big nu-..1rom Michigan. Ohio Stohl and Ponn Sto,.,1he Big Ton gr1bCOd lho
top ranking lor 1he 1hlrd in row.

1. Big Ten ....... .. ....................ae.o
2. Big 12 ...... .. .. .. . .. .. .. ..........115.8

'

992·3671

Virginia Tech ....... . .. .. .. . 10

Huge la1t·HIIOO ale SUppol8d 10 darify tho nallonaJ.&lt;Iwnplsllip pictuiW, bo1 Miclligan'a ~
CMtr Ohio Sht1o norT....) stunning win over Ntl&gt;rall&lt;aln tho fttll Big 1~ 1ltle game .....,.10 haw holpod muclt Thont
a111·moy be no ctear-cu1 No. 1 101m on 1ho morning of Jon. 3. The 'd1 we 100 n. nArizon1S1aht bolla Ollio 511111 1n hi
Roaa Bowland F1orido Slate bolbl Florldo In tho S4lgar Bowl, bo1ll haw fe911mate claims to lho dlo.
ThOle results oron, 1ho 'df we aoo n. 1hough, ond 1ho Bowl Alilnco will breathe a algll of rolilf Nwe're rtghl. WO're
piddng the Sun Oavila""" 1ho Buckel•• by onollim palm, bo1 tho F1arida Gators will win just aa-. a game..., tho

742-25J.l . · "FAIIII.l' OWIIED" 797-40t2
1-100-137-1217
310-2131 - 1·100-312·5657
Seven Locatiilm To Serve You Better!

Peoples
Bank

A""'! ............ .. ...... ."19

HIGHUGHTS

40 Gal Propane
•
Water Heater
Call Rutland
Funiiture for details.l
RI!TIAND FlJIIMTlJRE &amp;
BO'ITLE .-As

or985-3330

ANDERSON'S

Sou111om-B.R.. .. . ..... , ... .. 10
Stanford . . . . . . . . . . •. ••. .. .. 17

HOI BYLAND

CHRISTMAS TREES

Washington ................ 22

•

lllt•••SUHI SIUCIIOII
...lk.llllll
rr.l...ft I r·l'rllu

985-4473

Public Notice
NOTICE Ia haraby glvan
thel on Seturder, o.c.miMr
21, 1... , at 10:00 a.m., a
. public nle wlU 1M held at
• 211 Weat Second Strea),
· · Pomeroy, Ohio, to ..n tor
: ceah the following
. . oollttlwll:
' 1112 Nlaun 24DSX
• JN1MS31P4NW11781
' The Permera hnk ond
· lhvlnf•
Comp•nr,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reaervaa
: 11M right to bid .. lhle nle,
. ond to wHhdrow tha obovt
· colleter11 prior to 11la.
Further, The F1rmera Benk
· ond Savlnga Compeny
. ,...IYH the right to ralecl
IIIJ' .or Ill bld1 aubmllled.
Fllrlhw, the obova
: .cotllllrot. wttiiM aoltl In tha
~ condition 11 .11 In, wtth no
.. uprua ot Implied
warronllaa gtvan,
For lunhar lntorm1tlon, .
conltiCI DHiree 11 114-892·
2131.
.
412) 18, 11, 20; 3TC

1617 Murdoch Ave.
485-8541 or 1-800-433-7964

r .... rech ............ , . . ... 20

COTTON BOWL
CITRUS BOWL

FREE!

Bel Slate .. : ............... 14

.(eel &amp; llectrkl
Altplll•••·laets

1

(614) 592·5025 '

$11,995

FLEX STEEL

SUGAR BOWl

(lliESTER, OHIO

~- •

Attorney At Law

5 sp, air, cass.

Sunday, Doc. ~ .
ALAMO BOWl

Thursday, Jon. 2

WheelHorse
TRACTORS and
RIDING MOWERS

-IDIATI u.TAU.ATIOHll-..

Attorney William Safranek

SENTRA )(.:.~.

•

Clemson ...... .. .... , . , . .. 19

w-.y.Jon.1
OUTBACK BOWL
G.UORBOWl

, 992-6611

18. Syrocuw
17.T-Toch
18. - S 111. LDuiUno S1a1o
20. -

Louillana S1alt .. .. ............ 21

Tuoadoy, Doc. 31
HERITAGE BOWL
SUN BOWl
INDEPENDENCE BOWL
ORANGE BOWl

NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

new eq• •• IMI!to

liiiYDa
tt.ARGE INVINTORY FOR

Public Notice

Saturday, Dec. 28
PEACH BOWl

Monday. ~- 30
HOUOAYBOWL

555 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

r~

on

c-frlldll

•NewHomee
•Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop I Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

-aNTMIUOTPINUIC. .
1¥1" hfltD~

CV·

Parkersburg .

UIIO COIIIOL

ROIIIIIISSill
COistlUmOII

keep •exempt" property for their personal uae.
This may include a
a house, clothes, and
household goods.
For lnformat19n Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

221 W. Second, Pomeroy, Olo;.-.
992-2136

Ben H.

.

FARMERS

-ll. I
..

can relieve a debtor o1
financial obligations and arrange a fair
di8trbJtion of enata. Debtors In bankruptcy may

BANK

. II '

The Datlly Sentinel• Pep 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

BANKRUPTCY

24Hour
.Banking
Seven Days A
·Week

BOW HUNTERS
.,

Thur8dlly, December 19, 1918

'

•r

PubliC Sala
and Auction

�)'hureclay,
December 19, 1996
w

'Page14 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel• Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

NBA Oro•liword Puzzle
,

PlDLLJP
ALDER

"A~

41 r.mor
enc' 217011'11

i 1 AclorKrlal llceaon
I FNight lnlllr
• Allo
12 S.•word

t3TVKen-

14Mrs. Pwon
StraW br sale 304-675-1807.

TRANSPORTATION

15

t 982 Ford 4'4 314 Ton 4 Spaedi'
302, Loto 01 New P,ans, Run~
Gr.. tl $2,900, 814-367·0323.

710 Autos for Sale
'87 Ford Taurus, 3 litre, V·6 BUt
10fTIS~C. PS, PW, air, loaded, lookl
and runs good, 11200, 614-2-47·
4292.

1985 Ford Rang•r 4Jt4 V-e , R.bu itr Tranam1nion And Top 112
Of Uotor, Recent Palnl Job And

,r---"-'--N;:;orlb::::;;r---:,:::-2.':':1f.:-;tl6:--,'' :17 ~nn~2 wda.)
• A
18 LAadln
59 Mlio - -tung
• 4
1t Gripping
10 Author Zane -et~movle
• Q7s
lnaiMnint
lltelitar (11.)..
• A K Q J 1o 9 t3
21'11horelllrd
23UIIdoWeot
laat
24 Shoe part
' DOWN

1H~WT

I~.

1 t::IJ)IIJ

IAJHAT 1£

Body Work, $3,500 080, 814·

SAID ,

256·6800.

oQJ7GI
• 10 6 3

• 4 3 .2
• A K 5

I AKJ

• ~ 8 4 2
• 8 72

• 6 5

Ford Bronco, full size, 4
I drive, auto tl'ln&amp;, comple•
rebuild, front I rnr lUI•
pension rebuild, new paint, new
wt1eels &amp; !Ires, axe: condltlan.

lloiRII
• K 10 9

•..

S5,600. 304-895-3874.
1987 5· 10 Bleier ex•. high
Chewlte. 304·895-3659.
AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
miles, new motor, new paint and
Pupo. Colors; Black, Blonde, Boff tD78 Dodo• 400 CID Engine with parlS $4,200 30..87!&gt;1645.

1963 Olds

Clmega

Will Clean Housel In Galli•
County, 814-44&amp;-2781.

f r,'f'LOYMENT

110

WOW I
-Caohlacl&lt;

21 o

IWipWanted

--

~APRinYMNDnly

Opportunity

-73W401.
350

992-3454 alter 8pm.

1984 Dodge Diplomat 814 -446·
3887.

1985 Cat Fleetwood Brougham,
looks &amp; Runs Great, $1,500
OBO. W1ll Constder Trade, 614·
44 1-1 975.

AIO.-Homoo

Business

• ATIN: Pl. Pleasant• Po sial po·

5291

No Pwtn•ota TMIIIoR:h

FINANCIAL

3E RVICES

plea, ready tor Christmas, shots,
vet checked . S17Sea . 304-773-

Lots &amp;

11tions. Clerks and sorters. No

Avon'

NOT to Mnd money throuGh lhe
man until
have lrweatfgated

01

Alp.

Btgfool Mart In New Haven Will
Be Taking Apphcaliona For Register And OeU Clerks On Fnday's
Dec 13th And 20ih Between
10:00 A.M. Ancl4:00 P:U
Ctvlltian School 1n Alhena hiring

teacher tor January ciiiiHIUP·

per elementary graclea, some
muti-level and or L.D. experience
helpful. Call 514-594·5433 days

or814-&lt;IIJ8.2722.,enlnga

Professional

'.

·

~&gt;o~s r~Ar MAJCe
Uf A '
C:.O\JPL.t ~
- ~~

1

, Services

---------------------·
1993 Chev. Van Conversion, :

HARTS MASONARY • Block,
brick &amp; stone work, 30 years ax-

--------~----------·
1994 Ford van club wagon. 15 '

'

loaded, $12,950,614-446-2706.

reasonable
304aher
O:OOpm,rates.
no job
ro
l,;~~~~e;
ono BIG. wv.G2t206

1987 Thunderblrd ·Mint Cond1t1on.

Book Price $4,000 , For Sale
$2,600 080, Very Clean, 614 ·

446-9290.

'

1988 OICsmob!li Delta 88 Royale,
614·992-2759 or 6t4 -992·6000.
1989 Berella GT Rod Sunrool, 2
Doors, Engine &amp; Transmission,

ct..a

"A ..
COl. llln t y,, OTR. CoU t-800.

OF
'' N~TviiT$"
1
•

,

_____

panenger, exc cond, good :
church or group vehicle. 304-675- 1
...;.;.;
,I
6753.

1994 Toyola Plckaup four :
Wheel Dove 29,000 Miles e14· '
441 -0247

1996 Chevy ex1 cab, 4wd, 350"'
~-.

3,200

Earn $1,000 Weekly Stvffu\g En Y81Gpel AI Home. Start Now. No

Speed, 4 Cylinder, A1r Cruise, 28

Expanence. Free Supphts, Info.
No Obligation. Send LSASE To;

mpg. St .600 8t+379·2645.

All ON! estate adVtltillng In
lhll MWIIpaper Is sWjed to
lhl Fedenll Fa~ HoiJIIng A&lt;!
or t IIB8 whiCh makel Millegal
to adveotlle 'any pnlferonce,
-lion or dilellmtnallon
baled on race, color, roflglon,
aex famiUalllatus or nattonat

ACE, Dept: t35t, Boa 5137, Doe·
mond Bar, CA 91765.
Furniture, Sales, Retail Sales
Helptul Immediate Opening~ Ap·
~y:

Llfntylt Furniture, 856 Third
Avenue, Galllpolil, No Phone

1989 Pontiac Firebird, 305, 5

Speed, S3,500, 614·446·t575.

1990 OJds Toronado, loaded,
power everYthmg, sharp, 96,000
miles. $5,500 304·882-3625 after
6pm or leave message

miles,

THE BORN LOSER
I 05ED 10 1}{1!-IK. '(00-..

304-875-5332.

91 Aero Star extend cuslomized ~

UK£0 to'£.&amp;:.'~"~'&amp;
TI\N--1 N&gt;IY CF TilE

While 1994 Ctll'ly Astra LT. Ext :
Package, AC, PB, PS. Tilt, Cruise, 1
AMifM Cuseue, 24 ,000 Miles,:
Excellent Condition $13,200, 814- ,

OTI\~

HOllE COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. $45,000 Income po·
ttnllal. 1-1100·513·4343 Eao. B·

-llonordiCIImlnation.•

1987 I&lt;X-80 Kawasaki, exc cond,' •

Thill newapaper will not
~accepl

1992 Chev Camero RS V-6, 5
Speed, 25th Anniversary Model
65,000 Miles, $5,500, 614 -446 -

advertlalmenta fotr&amp;aleBtata
whk:h Is In vk)lation of lhe law.

lmmoldate Full· Tima Plltillon For
A Custodian /Housekeeper. ReIUIMI To Phillip Armstrong, Human Reaaurcea, Ohio Valley

·8050

OUr _,.are hef1bV
Informed lhat all dla:ellnga
a&lt;Jvertt&amp;ed kl tnt&amp; newspaper
are available on an equat
opportu.oty baaia.

Bonk. 420 Third Avenue, Gallpt-

ia, Ohio 45831 . Equal (lppo&lt;llnlty
Erqqtr.

1992 Honda Accord E)l 5 Speed.
H1gh Miles, Excellenl Condi11on,
$9,000 814 ·446 · 7417 If No An ~r Please Leave Message.

lena's Taxi Service 114-448· ~111!111!111!111!111!111!1•11!111!1~
7088, Fax 614-448-4493, Would
You like To Be Able To Save
Mont)!. So You Can Ohriatmu

REAL ESTATE

Shop? Calllere's Taxi 12/10108,

111/iT Call For Prices? You Will
It Glaa You Dfd?? Pteoae Don't
Drink And Drive Ita The Law??
MtlryC~trreal

LIBRARY
IBOO~IIOBILE
CLERK - Soaaerd Library Ia At·

apting Appfic11ion1 For Substlklte Bookmobile Clerk ·Dri...,er.
Applicanl Mutt Be 25. Have A
Clnn Driving Record, And Be

-•111o ""' A 1·i Shin 11-F. sa1
t-5. And

Sunde~

1-8. Two Year•

01 Colleat Or ComPIIrobltt Work

31!) Homes for Sl!le
3-4 bedroom house, heat pump,
kitcl'len appliances, bmaz&amp;Way, 1
car garage, lull basement, nice
101, clOse to hospital and school,
'" Pomero~. , 614-992-3119 or

ties, $100 deposit, references,

no pelt. 304-675-2535.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12)160 Kirkwood 2 BeCrooms, 1
Bath, Excatlent C9nditton, $6,500

304·736·72115.
12)1e4 Parkview 2 Bedrooms, 1
Q.ath, Newly Ramodhtd, $5, 500,

304-736·7295
1•h:70 Homette, lotally ramo ·
deled, gat cook/furnace, ac,
electric block 1teps, new doors.

REDUCED! 304-875-83117.

14)170 Nas,ua, 3 bedroom , cia,
satetlite dish. on 1.25 acres, on
51. Rt. 143, Pomeroy, excellent
condition, .large back deck. front
porch, Leadlng Creek water,

$28,000, 614·992·275.9 or 614·
992·6660.

1982 14170 Mobile Home On 1.6
Acres, Porches, $15,900 , 513-'

574 . 2539 .
~:-::-:-:--:-~:-::-:--::-:--::--:. I
1992 Lim1ted Edition Schult,
bedrooms, 2 bath, vinyl llding,
shingle roof, tolalelectrtc, R1t·11·
25 insulation, 18 cubic loot frost
free refr5geraror, tw.l pump (2 t/2
tOr'!), OUtbuilding &amp; porch, 81··
992·:MS8oretc~-32G 7

w•lh approved credll. t-800·6, 1.

Eoperlanced and dtdocattd pe&lt;·
tann11 10 wort at Twin Oaks Con-

venience Start. Carryout and.

Attu Trttdlor'a Flth I Chlpo.

p&lt;WDQHI"iEQED
Celhiorl a~ -oL 20

All

~~....

uaa ....,.,..,
computerized
o:alh "'"''"""
artd
oqul,_,
able

10 projK1 a t ine.,• .and enth~ · 1
w..OC aai.,... at all llmel, ablftty

6777.
2 Bedrooms, Undef'plMing, Fuel

Oil Tank, New Water Heater,

S2,000, 81 .. 448-88e3.

Buy In Dtttmbor No Payment

U,.il March ol 1997 E·Z Finane:lng call the Finance lintt 1•800 .
25 1.5070 All Homel on Sale Frve

....._ artd Stt Up.

· Goods
1g9o IBM PSI Computer, 386, 1

Meg Ram, 30 Mega Hard Drive,
Keyboarct Mouse. &amp; Pr~nter In·

Nordic: Track 4000 treadmill, 1

yeer old. $380. 304-675-1,431 .

Boo1ter, 150 Table11 $20, 814·
• t8 8308, 1-800-291

614·742·2803 or 814-742-2421.

etHS&amp;-1170.

\ Reconditioned
For Rent Or Sala: 1987 14x60 2 Appliances:
Bedroomt, No Pets, Ver~ Clean, Washen, Dryers, Ranges, Refrigralort, 90 Day Gvaranleel
61 ..256·8089
French C1ty Ma~lag , ~14·446·
Mobile Home 2 Bedrooms, Stove, 7795.
Refrigerator, Very Small, 920
Fourth Avenue, GaHipolis, 12501 Counuy Furn1ture. 304 -675-6820.
Mo., Watat, Trash Pa1d, 614· 446- Rl 2 N, 6m1les, Pt Pleasant, WV.
Tuas·Sat 9-6, Sun 11·5.
3844 Altere P. M,
Mobile Home For Rent, Or Mobllt
Home lol, 614--446-1279.

N1ct 2 Bedrooms, S225tMo ., 8
M1les Down 218, Nice, Rererences, Depos11 Required, 614· 446·

St 72, 814·258-11251

Nice three bedroom mobile heme
1n Middleport, no pets, 814·g92·

5656.
Two Bedroom Furnlthed, On
Raccoon Creek No Pets, Deposit,

$250/Mo., 614·379·292" . .

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur.

niahed and unfurnished, secUrity
cjepos1t required, no ~Ill, 614;92-2218.
2bdrm. apt&amp;., total electnc. ap .
pl1ances lurt'Hthed, laundry room
lacilitin, close to school in town
A

·1 bl

"'' 1
pp11ca110nS lVII a 8 81 . vii .!lga
Green Apta. t41l or eau 614-Q92·

3711. EOH.

AU I UL ArA MENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES, 52 Weltwood Onve
from 1244 to $315 Walk ro shop
mov1e1. Call 6 u -446 ·2 568

Housing OP!)O(tunily.

I.Ait Tho On9 Sl&gt;p

S..ll

Bedroom W1th Lot1 Of Ex-

tras. Washer, Dryer, Stovt, Fng
Included. We P•v Wiler And

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Wuhers, dr)'&amp;r&amp; , reft~geratora,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Street, Call 814-448· 7398,

t·800·499·3499.

Laroe Selection Of Carpet Rern In
Stock Carpet &amp; Vinyl $6.00 Vd &amp;
Up Mollohan Carpets. 614·448·
7444.
Used Furniture 130 Bulaville Ptke
Couches , Ctla1rs, Beds, Mat·
tresses, lamps', Microwave
Stands or Bookcases, Lowrey Of·
gan, G1ll1. 614 -446· 4782 Hours
10"4
Used 'Furniture .;30 BulaYIIIt
Pike • Stop By and ste our Large
5ecle&lt;:Uon ol good Used Furniture. HRS.-41. 814-448-4712.

530

Antiques

Bu~

or tell. Aiverin• Antlquet,
1124 E. Main StrMI, on At. 124,
Pomeroy. Houra:...M.T.W. 10:00
am. 10 8 .00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6 :00 p.m. 614 -992-2528, Run
Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
'1 996 Hohday Batrb1e." 304 · 773·

5641.
1 Club Cadelle IH $1,000 Traetor

With Blade; t 25' Cqnaole T.V.

Carpeted, Complelt l&lt;ltchen, All

And Royal Jelly. Natural Energy

-oooa.

Relrlgeralart, StovH; W•thert
And Oryert, All Reconditioned
And Gauranleedll100 And Up,
Wil oewer. 614-889-&amp;441.

ROYAL JELLY With Soborlan

1114-448.fi308:. 1·800-291 .()098.

Sateltile 1ysttm. dilh &amp; Toshiba
120 receiver, comptete 1325 or
Will saparate. 614-441.0135.

--'--------~I
Seasonal Ftrewood, 614·256·
..,8033c:.:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I
Sola And Couch Ltke New, Klldlan Table &amp; Cl1oi1S, 3 Pc. Bedroom
Suite, Sigler Woodburner, Slgter
Fuel 011 Stove, Rod Iron Porch
Furniture, 814·379-2720 AFTER

I P.M.

RottWa1ler Pupp1es, AKC Regis tered, OSA Cerllf•ed S1re, Both
Parents Excellent W•th Children,
Deposll. Will Hold Ttll Chnstmas,
$350, 614·245·0433.

570

Musical
Instruments

l&lt;ramer elo~tnc guilar &amp; Kramer
KA-22F,l amp plus rwo pedals, 1
yr. old, same as new condition,

$350 080, 614·742-2373.

Marlin Gtbson Harmon~ Yamaha,
Grammer, Guitars, Ban1o, Mandollns, Fiddles, Electric &amp; Up Righi

Base, 814.-'46·1 158.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'1995 Monte Carlo LS. Sherwood

Green, Rear Spoiler, loaded, AU/
FU Cassette, Ctottl Seata, 3C,OOO
Miles $15,8(10, 614·4C1·0753,
614·245-5624.

must sell. 304-576·9907.

Strockermatic, Combuster
Good Snape, $600, 614
g335,

::--:--:--:--:--:--:--:..,...'-1
Surplus Army Camoullage Clolh·
lnQ, (Insulated coverat,s. Drown

duck bib1 $35). Sam Somerville'l by Sand~ville Post Ollict.
Frlday·Sundaj' Noon-5:00pm .
Other days call 304-273-5855.
(Jutior Size~} .
Twin MattrHI &amp; Box Springs. E)l·
ceUant Conclilion, S75; Aluminum
Diamond Platt Toot Box Sits full
Siz:• Plcti·Up, S200, Alvaret
Acostlc Guitar Case Tuher 1
Training Video S32S, 614-2455428.
·

Ventle&amp;&amp; g&amp;l healers itarung II
S12D.95' &amp; up. Siders Equ1pment

304-875-7421

'

Vna-Jet 2, needleu insulin In·

JfCIOr. S400. 30H7Ut09.

WDIHTannlng a.l•
TAN AT liOME
bUy DIRECT and SAVEl

~mourllllrom

u.~P."""'"'
fREE calar ottalog.

Col TODAY

550

HI00·842·1305.

Building

'I.J·~· _YOJ .mr Mit
1d.L Of 1.:6!"
·.

OIQJ~:£.1

•

BIG NATE

1996 Polaris Explorer 400, 4;~~4 ,.

exc cond, w/rack e)ltenslonl,'
same 11 new, 1,100 mile1 .:

TODD!

ISTLETOE 1

Honda Z-50 2 Wheeler $400, !
Honda TRX125 4 Wheeler,

.

I

$t,4(](], 61 ..446·t349.

760

-fHe: CRUEL IRON'(
IS THAT IT WA':&gt;
AC:TUALL'( JUST
A PIEC.E OF
LETTUC.E.

LOoclOoiC. ;

$4,200. 304-675-8329.

North

Pll!ls
Pass
Pass

2.

••

a•

3NT

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

East, a successful businessman,

...-+--+-"1

ROBOTMAN

3 112 yHr old Black Angus herd
bull; Springer cowl, due Jan. 1

Fob.; 8144112-7458.

'

'

Home
Improvements

ElectriCal and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Heat Pumps, Atr ConditiOnl(lg, II
You Oon't Call Us W. Both loHI
Frt• Estimatel, 1·100·211 -00H, ~

"

Residential or cammercial wlriiJg, ~
new serv1ce or rel*ra. Masttr
centtd electtician. Rldenou, ·:
Eleclrical. WV00030e, 3041 -171- ~

u. . ,.

l'lll7.

1788.

E-ic. 814..46.013e .
.. 0'011&lt; """ - "
Mull Htl· 1181 14x70 home. Furnished 2 Stdroom Aparrment,
All appliclltions mutt be tubmit- SIIIO _.,, S111 .2e...,. month, Acron From Park, AC, No Pall,
1td i1tru O.B.E.S. In o\thtno. Ohio .
I · - wll help Releroncoa, Depoall, $350/Mo:,
!&gt;Y Dtctmbt&lt; 24, 1He. For mort -.......,
·ilt~,cali81..38~7.
81 ..448·823~ 61 .. 44e.0577.
inlormallon cal81&lt;1-5Q3.7~. .

Rttldentlal Or Commercial 'Mf· ~

1... Naw Strvltt Or Repair .. Ll- "
censed Electrician. W..th ElK·

h

trlc &amp;14 ·44&amp;-e,so. Galllpollo, .•

Ohio.

I

I

•

\

In

,..

·
,1:
J"

lnetrument ,, i

55 Nogallve

anewer

''

CELEBRITY CIPHER
byLulsCem~

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J ·N N W

CDUN

IR

S IG P
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R P'N

X

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HI R N U

.,

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. ·~

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IKCDo\R

EDDW

· IJW

-·

G ·1 A I K A .

0 IS K D

,,•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ":You are Where you eai.'-).Pamela Flori.
"The waist Ia a terrible lhing to mind.' - Zlggy.(Tofn Wlls~

....
' ;

'::~:~' S@~~lA
-l£ ttfSe UMI ....
- - - - - - 14!tool
ClAY I. POlLAN-----WOlD

...,...

~

leo•range lottora of tho
fwr acramblod wo•d• be-

•

""';

low to form four sttnp&amp;e WOJck.

I

I

RITCO·V

,....
'.l

' l.,_,....s....,A,....G-r:-R. . ,sr:--11

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3

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· DJY
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.

•

•

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·.t

by ldlmg in the missing w9rds

•

·~·

~

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS

FORI '

,f:J.;

I

I

II II

I I

I ....••

Good motto to .!ive by: "Giving advice is like cooking
you should try it before givinQ it to ANOTHER."

crulu, 38,000 rnlles, 1141,000 j----,~-~-----

Supplies

47 QM.Ipola

mualcal

,

34,000 MiiM, $12,500 OBO; 8t4·
256-1233.
'
8t4 .. 4H308, WY 002tl45.

"

~1-1

...

-~

I:0:::-"":::-:--:-.:-:----

1804 Full Size Dodge Truck, 2
WnMI Drive, 318, Auto, Loaded,

Llyestock

45
lti8W .
48 SpiH

Engage· Bring· Chive· Action · ANOTHER

oeo.

630

'

-out
=~by) ·

valley
51C-aa
52 Ancient

'(ES, MA'AM .. I'D LIKE TO
BU'( A PEARL NECKLACE
FORTHIS 61RL I KNOW ..

•

I HAVEi=IFT'f CENTS.. ·

I GAVE HER PAPER
LAST .'&lt;EAR ..

.

060. :!04-1175-4383.

..

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

6141·7•2..(500,

Buctot( $3,200, 8t4·379-936t .

(2-.)

40 Sat lire to '

wino

... UNSCRAMBLE
'U ANSWER

800-273·9329.

2436.
840
tiiiU S·10 LS 4a4, 5 apetd. air,

31~1U~

.... Belle.. -- - .,
nOt
•
50 CaiHornla · 'i

·=

Ntw Agco HydrauliC Front End
M010r W1fl'l 66 Inch Combination

.•

Cellldy CipMf ~ •r• created from quatMiol'll by fwnola l*lf)le, J1U1: and ~
e.c:tllltilttf-11'1 N olpMr lttndllof 8fiOIIher Todly't eM: 0 ~ ~

A

'
4· wheelers, motor homes. furnl·
~
lure, eleclrOniCS, compulers etc.
b)' FBI. IRS, DEA. Available ~our 1
BASEMENT
Farm Equipment
area now. Call 1·800· 513-4343 1
WATERPROOFING
•
Ageo-Aihs tractor spocials -4660 ExL S-9368
Uncond111onal lifetime guaran!ea. :
2wd, 52 PTO hp, rad1al tires, 1
. Local references lurn!Shtd . Es- 1
remote valve, 12 speed Syncho· Upron Used Cars At. 82·3 M1les 1alllished 1975. Call (8 141 •• 6 · ~
trans, 4yr or 4000 hour dr1ve 1ra1n South ol Leofl, WV .. Financ~ng j 0870 Or 1·800·287-0578 Ro 811 u
!Waltrproofing
II
"
wattant~. World famous atr Available. 304-458-1069.
cooled dleael $15,900 . 4 wd
I
.
e~upped &amp;arne wa~ $19,900 Did 720 ll'ucks for Sale
:-::---:::---'-----~ou know that a water cooled
Appllance Pans And Serv1ca · Al1 ~
dleael angina IS des1gned !or t985 Dodge 314 Ton 318, Au· Na.me ~)rands Over 25 Years Ex· •
8,000 hours of service whereas a tomatlc Topper GDod Condilion, perience All Work Guaran1eect
air cooled is des.gned tor 12.000 $2.500, 61 .. 3'19-2t 5:t
~~.CI'I City Ma~1ag, 614 •446:
hours . l&lt;eeler's Serv1ce Center
1987 'Oodgi 112 Ton 4 WO, 360
St. At. 87 Leo n. WV. 304 · 895- Auto, Short Wheel Bile, No RusL
3874
C&amp;C General Homa Ma in$3,300, 614-3118-9634 Evenings.
tenence . Pa1n1ing, vinyl siding,
FOfd sooo With New A.gco Loael· 1990 Ford XLT Lsrlet Package, carpentr)', doors, windows, balhl.
er$12,000614·379·9381 .
84 ,000 Mile1 s~ . 000.,614 • 446 · mobile home repair and more For
7730.
•
·
~~~ali mate call Chat, 61 4·8&amp;2·
Husqvarna model '51 chain sSw
on sale $339 this mon th only. 1991 Ford Rangtt Stll'1d&amp;rd 2 ~~---;:;:::::::-:---lree cate &amp; free cha 1n &amp; tree WI'Ieel Onve, 88,000 Miles,
DRYWALL
gloves. Siders Ecrutt:)ment 304· $3.000
eu-446·0t59,
614·
Hang.
finial\
repair.
.
675·7421 .
256·1233.
Ceilings textured, plllttr repair.
Call Tom ~-875-418&amp;. 20 years
H~draulic 011 St 2.50 - Sgal pail,
1991 S-10 Tahoe V-8, 5 Speed, axper1enoe.
Siders Equipment , Henderson, 93,000 Milos, $4,900, 304·578·
WV. :!(14:875· 7~21

of

28 Chicago
airport
.30 Currency
oxchonge

43

Auto Loans: Aulo Dealer Will Ar·
Campers &amp;
range financing Even II ~u 790
Have Been Turnecj Down Before.
Motor Homes
loans Available For No Credit,
bad Credit And Ba.nkfupiCy Buy· :199;;;:;2-;2;;7;:1l-;F;:Ioe=:twoo=:'::do-:;~;:-er-ry..:,R-oso-rt ;
pull. bthind camper, like new,
ers, Call Diane 614-448-Bt 72.

CARS FOR StOOl T111cks, boata, 810

s.m 11 tho ·,

...'"
:.
I
I
18
19
C)
Complole lhe chuckle quoled
lL-...1.-..t---''---'--.&amp;..-'
..
I
you develop f•om Slep No, 3 below.
•II
11
·,.",.'
W

814·992-7375.

SERVICES

·26

35~prtc#i

.

Jeep Wranqlor sliding· glass
windows, r.eplaces zippera, $500
new, asking $225, call Oav1d at

wheels &amp; T·tDpl, $1,500 OBO or
1rade Jar 4 wheeler of equal Vlllue,

4

.33Malca

I

245-5677

s1o.ocn 304-773-11554.

..:

25 Portent

"Doesn't it seem. sirange." a
friend mused, ' that we loudly
declare that we want justice,
r~s=-=E:-.-=J~E::-:R:-=T.,..-,1 but it's usually just for·· · · ·····.'

late Mode~ New &amp; Low •.weage
Used Auto &amp; Truck Part Motors
Transmissions, Body &amp; Suspen~
2 Rebuildable Serena's 1990 GTZ sian Parts, DomestiC &amp; Foreign
1992$1 ,800 For Both; 614 -256· W1de Selection Towertine Auto
t233.
Systems, 614 ·532·0139, Or 1·
48 Chev~ 2 dr. Sedan, good 80Q.46Ni260.
shape, $2,400; 89 Orand Prbi, 2
New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
dr., auto, nice, .$3,950, 2 large wheels &amp; radiators. D I R Auto,
show cases, good ahape, 814·
Riple~. WV. 30•·372·3933 or 1·
949-2045 or 614·949·2836.

Black 81 Trani Am with alurRnum

aculpturecl

ttgure

idealexample1

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

thinking declarer bad nine easy tricks
when he got in, tried a dfceptive defense. After winning trick two with the
heart ace, East returned the heart
five, hoping his partner had the jack
and South would miagues8. With this
layout, though, dedarer immediately
claimed an overtrick.
However, what happens if East wins
with the heart king and cashes the
heart ace? Analyze it for a moment.
. Right - what is discarded from the
:dummy? If a diamond, West has two
.more diamond tricks. If the spade ace
or a club, East exits with the club
,eight. West gels the last two tricks
y.oitb his ace-jack of diamonds to dejfeat the contract.

Budge! Price TransmiUIOntli,
Used J~eDuilt, AU Types, Over
1Q,OOO Transmi.sstons, Clutches
Fl~wheels, Overhual Kits . 614-

~~~~~~~~~610
~

chine, Aflere P.M. 814_...1-1,12.

50 LP r-da, S40:- Receiver (tlereo). McDonald turn
table, 2 Uoah .......... tt21; 1i'
color TV, S75; t3" IIWTV, St5;
aet wttaon X 3t aolldubo 1-~5
metal wooda. 3-l I PW. t100:

Registered German shorthalr
pointer pups, great ·gift lor hunters
and excellent pel for all, $175,
614·742·3177.

Ginaeng eo Capsules, $20. Call

W1th R•mott, 1 Exctteillng Ma·

Garbage. Very Clean. No
--'
Smokert, No Pata. S300 Otpoalt,
IUY IN OECEIIIER. No pay· $350/Mo., 114·448·2205, 114· pul t1r1 $25; pult CM. SS; Jt. llze
4484585
golf boa. S10; bllold I -.
rMN ~I March tie7. E·Z !inane·
i,.. Call 1M flnlnce lint 1·100. Modertn 1 Btdroom Downtown· ..,., :t oponi.., All, 114·H2·

211 -15070. All h0"'-1 on tala.
F1W~I-

23/IMI. 614-446-3805, Alter 5 P.M.

Washer &amp; Dryer 8 Veen Old, Ex·
cellent Condition, $150; Antique
2 bedroom, eleetnc neat. 2 mites Iron Bed With Box Spring And
out ot Rurland on New Lima Rd., Manress $100. Call Before 3 P.M.

814·992·2394.

1993 Red RS Che11rolei Cavalier,
4 Cylinder, AutomatiC, A.tr, 35,000
M1les, $8,000 F1rm, Trade On New
Mobile Home, 614·446-7127.

51 0 · Household

POLLEN 400Z Wilh Propolis

Round Work Wilh A Growmg
Young Company. Send Resume Naw-19g7 14 Wtd•1 bath. $880/ Furi"'IShed Apaflment 1 Bedroom
InCluding Present Salary And Job cjown, l139tmo, with approv•d 1300/'Uo., UtllliJea Paid, 807 Sac·
• Hittor~ To: CLA 398 CIO Gall1palis ' etediLCall 1·800-e9 1-8777.
and AVenue, Gallipolis, 814,.46Da ti, Tribune, 825 Th1rd A"enue, t9g7 16)180 3 bedroom. 2 balh, 38A-4Ahar8P.M.
Gallipolis, OH 45631 A!t lnqu1n81
11 ,325/down. 1210/mo, frH air," BE T F
n RT
WiM ae Hald 1n eonrldence

WANTED

0400.

eluded, Great Starler Computer
For Novice, $350 AlsD, G. E.

Hilltop Home 3 Bedrooms, 2
Bathl, Garage. Scenic View, Se·
dudltd, New l&lt;itchen, Seriout Inquires, 614-448..4999.

Clinic, A Very PtogretliYe Multi •
SpiCI&amp;ity Group Practice With
Over 100 Pnwidefl Eiperie,.;lng
Over 250,000 Patient Visits An nually. Seek~ And Enrhusiasric
Physic:.al Therapii&amp;l for CWtpat1en1
Servicea. Ohio License Reqwed.
- G&gt;tldualel With Eligil&gt;i•IY For
Ltcense In January 1997 Ara
Welcome. Comparllive Salary
Slructure, Eacoltln Frjnge Benefit
And Great Relir.,.nt Plans. CeH
Brenda Garratt At 814·286·8792,
Fax, 814 -448 · 5284, Mail (90
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH
•5831), E· Uail (HolzerOzoom·
tVtnal) Of V1sit Us On The Internet At www.Holzercl1 nic.cam
E&lt;rJal Opoor.,nity En-;olover

Tlt&lt;M Lengtha AI Ono Time. Year

2 Bedroom trailer, you pay utili-

2 bedroom, 1200 per month, StOO

5858.\

Wanted licensed Towboat Opera1ort To Join Our Company.
Wo Ply Up To $205 Par Da1 l)e.
periding On Experience. We Offer
A 4011&lt; Program AI Well As A
Cafeteria Style Benefit Package.
Tows Are Seldom More Ttlan

2 Bedroom trailer for rent, Galli·
polis Ferry area. 304.S7S. 7552.

deposi(

PHYSICAL TIIERAPIST • flolzer

'Towboat Pilots

2 bath, rent $260Jmo .,. utJhtlea.

614·$92~51 .

Two 1 bedroam apartments for
1ale with 11orage Dulldmg. Wilt
sell on land conttacr, 81-4-992 -

MERCHANDISE

bedroom,

304· 773-5351 '

Experience Requ1red . Starting
Salary SU4 HOII~y. No Benallta.
No GuaroniOOd Hours. E.O.E.

2101.

1

1993 lincoln Conunental Signature SeNes, 1 Owner, 614-441·

'I'E:&gt;, em 1 ~ "'~
YOO 11\E &amp;.!IT,

IT~

er $1,150 080, 1987 Honda :

1991 Z·24 NADA $7,250 , Sell XR&amp;OR $675, OBO Both Exc,l· ,I
Pnce $4 .395 : 1989 Cavalier Ltke lent! 1114 448 8(151.

11308 Col For O.IO!It.

NOW

::,9;;;8;;7~H:;:o::n::d'::a-:;T:;;R:;:X-:;70~F'::ou~r:':W:::::hee:::-l· :

octgln,O&lt;tlf¥-10
make any such p&lt;eferenco,

69K $1 ,595; Alt Trades Accept ·
ed, Cook Motors, 61-4·446·0103

Weal

Mano '-

22 Antalope
24 Small

;,r.:;e.:.n_

'I' Longaklrt

ahrub

20 Polltlcllln

l"""m!""nrT"1 .

Take this deal from a high·stake
rubber-bridge .aame hi London .
·Defending against thr.ee no-trump,
· West cashed the diamond king before
switching to the 1teart six. Hbw should
East defend?
North had ali impossible hand to de·
scribe accurately. Trying to extnct in·
formation from partner, he reversed
and bid a fourth-suit-forcing two.
spades. Finally, be settled for three
no-trump . •

Motorcycles

COIIII'IIotel

New Cond1t1on, $2,895. 1988 VW

-~~~~
pertlclfMlnt

Karl Pearson, the British scientist,
,wrote, "Modern science, as training
• the mirid to an exact and Impartial
analysis of facts, is an education spe·
cially fitted to promote sound cilb:en· .
ship." ·
i6r+--IAt the bridge table, of coune, exact
analysis will promote a sound player.
Yet many people who snalyze market
lorces with exactitude and make great
financial profita, suddenly, atop think·
ing when they sit at tbe bridge table.

446-8423,614-446.:0852.

740

-"'

loll

10 ·~'"'
Abo..
11 Cereol

I Secltt·

..38Tu11M

Why?

•

t5K $4,900 513-574-2539.
mm1 van, V-8, auto, rebulll molar, 1
$8..000 080, 614-247 .... 231 .
:
1989 Ford Tempo "at 4 Door, 5

3n-lt01 Todoyt

u

. '

aurotoverdri~Je,

5~1

By Pbllllp Alder

1

Tom Anderson, 614·992-3348.

'OrfMra: Went A Statt .Of ·The •
Art Convtntlontl For Chrl•t·
mao? Poor Credit No Problem!
Home Wttktndt.

1989 Ford 4x4 V-8, 302, AIJto, AI,.
CondiUoning, High Uilaaga:

van, very clean, low m1lts, call .

RENTALS

tra111111

4 Uae•r-

37=.;
vlllon

· 38 Toward the
.,

8

Analytical
improvements

'

2750.

I

•--out
Pit ·· :

June?
' 3 VIrginia WilloW

Opening lead: • K

---------------------·
1992 Chev~ lull 11ze corwer1ion:

230

2NT

•oas DOWN II

1991 Jeep Cherokee laredo 4x4;
Black Cherr~ Pearl Coat, loaded.
4 door, V-6, tow package, clean 1
one owner, higtl miles, call 8111,.
614-992-66n or 614-992-7756.
•

Repreuntallvea

304·882·2845, Ind.

AMEN II

'

nHded. Earn money for Chrislmaa bills al home/al work. 1-800-

ii2·6358

TH' SUN

0645, See At 1410 George(
C.eol&lt; Road, Gallipolis.
,

poco. $6,900. 614·«Hl135.

'AVON I All Areaa I Shirley
~ 300-4!15-1429.
Able

IT SHORE IS PIACIAILI
IN THESE OL' HILLS WHEN

t•
,, z•

1991 Dodge Caravan LE, loaded~
grea1 condition, sharp, hig
miles, need to sell, reduce

experience requlftd. Benefita. OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
FOf ..am, salary, and testmg ln- I rt•coo~mtncla that you do bull·
people you know. and
formalion c:all 1- ~830} DOe-5570 neu
.... 3810 llonHipm.

South

,BARNEY

1989 Oodge Caravan SE V·8,
Auto, Good Tires, New Br1.ke1,.
Shockea &amp; Struts, Slide Door_)
Top Rails, seats 7, Clean, Gooq
Shape, Gltage Kepi, 61'·•41 ,

$5,500;6t4-&lt;!82.ft267. .

!NOTICE I

mayor
2 Llkll 1 dlly In

Dealer: North

19B9 4WD B•onco II XLT..
1200 llrm, . - 15,600, 6t4·643·5t5t.

AKC registered Dalmalian pup - tires, luel pump. water pump, 61 4·

1 Fon'ner NYC

Vulnerable: Neither

Matching automalic Transmission

$300060 '

a

~=:r-

" 32 Antal ape
34 Pay-to
(rwpaot)
' 36 o\ctOr

•QJ9B72
• 10 8 5

1968 Cadillac &amp; 1966 Chevy

, &amp; Wh1te, Ualas &amp; Females, ShOts
&amp; Wormed, Alao AKC Reg1stered
'Chihuahua, 614-446-9742

Ivan-53 HeN(Fr.l
54 Route
IITaa-hel
57-bene
58 On--with
.(equal)

I

1984 Subaru 41 WD Run1 Good,

St,OOO 080 81 .. 256· 1233.

;zc.otaoll

~=:::e

41BMingdlah
4t Tennla pllyw

'

ASTRO-GRAPH

Astro·Graph, cio lhla newspaper, P.O. · you arrange your sChedule suclllhat you
Box 1758, Murray HUI Siatlon, New York, are 1ree of outside inlluences. Avoid bind·
NY 10156. Make·aure lo state your zodi· illg restrictions.
. _ ·,
·
ac
sign.
CANCER
l-¥te
21-July
:12)
Try
to
utilize
'
CAPRICORN 111ec. :12-.llln. 11) ~nl·, · yout lree time productively loday.
BERNICE
end managemenl will be IWo ol , Participate in an activity you anjoy , but
BEDEOSOL zation
your strongeol skills loday. If you're choose one which will enable you to
Involved In a ven1uns that Ia otruggtlng, accomplish something.
take action immediately.
, .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today , you will
AQUARIUS (olen. 20-Feb. It) You can have what it takas lo achieve success In
drew yilyr atrangth lro(ll a 181118 t'H8rvolr · an important arrangement that haa bean
·~;
'1buJ'~
today. However, to be aa arrectlva as : too iough lor others 10 handle. Do not
poealb!a, you must pace youraeW wlteiY.
waste this golden opportunity.
PISCES (Fib. 20 Marolt 20) Tha alrong ··VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Uae com·
·take from lha - k and the smart taka mon senu w~en handling challenging
Friday, Doc. 20. 1998
' from the Ollrong. I n - deal&amp; loday, developments today . II you approach
You wiH have to be placllcal In the year . bulllatl _,,be a mell:hlor your wtta.
,eveoythlng procticalty, tho resuns will be
ahead il you want lo bring a plan to ARIES (March 21·Aprll It) Positive . gralilying.
·
lruilloo'l A reollatie mlrtd-181 will genarale 1111Ui11W- be lllcan today 10 reotruc- ILIBRA (llept. 23-0et. 21) You will do
poeillv~ ..-!Ia.
wns a situation that hu become ehaky. ' somelhlng ldnd lor ..,_,. today withSAGITTARIUS (Nov.
21) II · Do no1 wart lor coNaago111 t~ make cor- · · out realizing the ramlllcallons ol your
you've conlamplated embarking on a . IWCtiot•.
. gesture. However, the reclpiatdwtl koow,
aaM.;mprovemenl prt&gt;Qr.m. begin ~ now.• TAURIISIAprll 20-llar 20) In order to 11nd
torvot.
·
1
You will lllalt to reap 1118 beneflt8irrvnedl- edVatiCe VWl pnonel goailladay, you•n 1 SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Cooper·
11e1y Gel a jump on IKe by uncle,wdng ' have to be bold and ._ltlvo, bul you 1 illlon wiA be 1118 nama ol lha gameladay.
ttoe ~ thatiJO'o""' you In tha year IJIIIII nol oflend ollllro In lh8 PIC Clit.
I 1Olh8ra will go OUI ol thalr W10P to help you '
. _ Send for your Allro-Groph pnsdlc- GEMttolt!May 21·,June tO) You can · , • they perceive you are wt111ng 1o do the
Ilona ioc~av b)• mailing $2 and SASE lo . occompllahaouoelhlug IUballnllel today K1 J eeme lorlh8m.
..

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