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281CIIona. 11 ............
AOM- Co. Noa p 1111 II

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 23, 1996

.Christmas season p.resents ow. n ~ set of hazards
. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

close watch on children when they are near the Christmas tree.
.
As for holiday plants, Torres said that mistletoe and holly arc "very poi·
i The holiday season brings with it some special hazards for children.
. sonous'' if swallowed, but that poinsettias, contrilry to what many think. are
; Nonna Thrres, R.N., ofthe Meigs County Health Depanment, advises that non-toxic, although they do present a choking hazard if any pan of the plant
~ parents nc¢ to be alert to the seasonal exposure to new sources of poison
is eaten. Things which are red and green are very attractive to toddlers, Tor! and more aware of toy safety.
·
res added.
• While many parents do not view the Christmas tree as a safety hazard in
Her advice, "Keep plants high and out of the reach of small children. Wrap
: the home, Torres cautioned parents to supervise small children around the mistletoe in netting or clear plastic before hanging it as a decoration.
; tree. Juniper, fir and pine trees all have sharp needles which can be danger·
Poisoninss do occur in many ways durins the holiday season, she noted .
.i ous and can result in scrapes and scratches to the skin and even damage eyes, Alcohol can cause serious illness and even death in children, so nearly emp·
ty glasses and punch bowls should be emptied as soon as guests leave to avoid ·
; said Torres.
poisoning a child.·
·
~ ·· She also cautioned parentS about glass ornaments,,which shatter into tiny
As for toy safety, the local health depanment joins the American Acadec pi~es whe~ they are broken. Lights. tinsel, artificial snow and tree preser.
: vatives may cause injury as well, she said, sugg.esting that parents keep a my of Pediatrics to offer tips on keeping children safe from toy related injuries

: Sentinel News St.ff

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WASJUNGTON (AP) - Thanks
to Congress, thousands of physical:
· ly · able men and women without
dependents, who expected to IOIC
their food stamps next year under .a
new federal welfare law, will continue to collect them.
·
Signed in August by President
Clinton, the l~w reduced eligibility
for the able-bodied to three months in
a three-year period, unless tbe' recipient works at least 20 hours a week,
looks for work or is enrolled in job

Easement certification
for TP's sewer project
completed by district

Ohio well-positioned to handle welfare reform .
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio is in
a.. good position to .. ~eather the
changes in the federal welfare system, officials say.
' The state already had a year 's
head stan when President Clinton
declared the "end of welfare as we
know it" last year, and started the
clock ticking on a five -year limit on ·
benefits.
"We've been doing it for years,"'
State Rep. Joan Lawrence, R-Oalena,
boasted in an interview last week.
Lawrence was one of the guiding
forces of a 1995 Ohio law ihatlimit·
ed families to 36 months of benefits
out of any five -year period and
strengthened a requirement that
recipients get a jPI! or improve their
education.
She said she plans to introd~
another bill in March to further mine
the system an~ ·sf!looth over the
remaining differences with the fed·
cfJ)

'

Food·stamp
benefits will
continue due
to lo_
ophole

_ LIMA, Peru (AP) - Leftist rebels fessor at Pacific Univenity. "You
:have released the ·largest group of . can' t imagine how many things can
·: hostages since their seige of the be done if you have nothing to do." ·
Their liberation was sudden. All
· Japanese ambassador's home began
:six days ago, a "Christmas gesture" day Sunday, rebels made no comment
that only slightly cased the pressure on Fujimori's position broadcast the
on the Peruvian government.
night before in a nationwide speech
· About 140 hostages - mainly that he would not free imprisoned
Peruvian officials and Japanese busi ~ · rebels as demanded.
. nessmen- remained inside today as
Fujimori 's said Saturday night
shields against 11:prisal and tools for that he wants the crisis settled peace·
trai~ing.
the Thpac Am'"' rebels to push' the fully, lind was willing to consider "a .
· · Tbe loophole is a provision in the
~ ~ -~l~r:ti)I).Oilt · ·tnto meetina their way o~t ·::. with .fu~l ·gwa~ees" ~-~~·..a..
- bill allf.Wirig. statcs· IQ see(~~ ·
' demands. -•· ,.,-. ,. ~,-~ •.... ·' •· ' · tilt l11i1nappers. FirS\, howe~ef,
pennission to exempt thousands jif ·
A U.S. Embassy official said sev- insisted they release all hostages peoplci from the ·requi..:lncnt, ail
en Americans- Embassy and U.S. includingPeruvianoninisters,judges,
Agriculture Department official said.
AID offocials- were among the 225 congressmen and high-level polic~
Sunday. Recipients must live in area
~ Sunday night. All of the Amerofficials, as well as foreign diplomats
where the uncmployrrll:lll rate ia
ican hostages were believed free . - ""' and lay down anns.
·
above I 0 percent or where there an:
In a statement Sunday, the rebels
At about 9 p.m. Sunday, buses
too few jobs for cvceyone.
reiterated their demand for freedom pulled up to the ambassa3or's resi"In this case, (the states) are juat
for jailed Tupac Amaru members. d~nce in exclusive San Isidro neighfollowing what Congress built inlcl
THE BIRTH OF THE CHRIST CHILD- A llghtld nativity ha been piiCed In e nelurel Htllng
They also proposed a dialogue to lind borhood. Fujimori 's designated trouon the hlllelde beside the Pomeroy United Methodllt Church for the Chrletm11 ....on. Prothe law," said Yvette ~ackson, deputy
common .ground to reach a just bleshooter Domingo Palenno arrived
vided by Sereh Flaher, the flguree were arranged In the cev•llke era by the Rev. Bob Robin~ministrator of USDA's Food and
peace, the statement said.
about the same time, as did police
soh, church pastor.
Consumer Service, which runs ti!C:
Hundreds of foreign and Peruvian SWAT teams.
federally funded fOOf stamp proofficials as well as businessmen were
.It was the first release since the
gram:
. '
~liken captive ~esday night by rebels rebels pledged Friday night to free
"Many states fully intend ... to
whostruckdunngagalarecephonat more of the captives "in the neKt
place as many people ,into jobs aa
the diplomatic residence. The rebels hours and days."
quickly as they possibly can," ~
demanded freedom for some 300 of
About 170 hostages, including all
added. "They just felt the waiven
· their imprisoned comrades.
ofthe women, were freed early in the
were necessary because of the diffi·
After the last bus left for the police crisis and 38 more were released Fri·
culty doing it in such a short time
hospital; Ri:d Cross director Michel day.
frame.' '
. •
Minnig confirmed the figures for
Earlier Sunday, thousands of PeruUnder the new law, stau:s could
those who were liberated and those vians walked slowly to the ambas·
lose funding if significant numben of
, left behind.
sador's residence in support of the
their food stamp recipients can 'I lind
ed because of changes in the fedc.ral
The hostag~s ended their captivi· hostages.
By TOM HUNTER
work. Recipients also a~ told tiJcy
requirements for project certification.
; ty by walkmg onto buses that took
Alejandro Toledo, a hostage who Sentinel New1 Staff
·will lose their beneliL• if they remain
;them throu~ cheer!•!! crowds to the was freed earlier, said he swke Sat· Construction on the $2 .6 million ' "Fonnerly, you were only required
unemployed.
nearby pollee hospital, where Pres1- urday with Japan's Foreign Mm1stcr Tuppers Plains Sewer District project to have 90 percent of the casements ,
To date, 13 states have asked·the
:dent Albeno Fujimori greeted them . Yukihiko Ikeda and with Palenno. All could begin by e!U'Iy spring with either acquired or have court cases ·
Agriculture
Department for waivers. ·
; Most went home· immediately.
. agre(a ~eful settlement was need- today's announcement that the' long· filed in an attempt to sec·ure the ease·
USDA has approved requests ffOIII
"I'm going to get a bath," Estu· ed, he, sa1d..._
delayed process of easement tertifi.' ments. The guidelines for approval
Louisiana,
Illinois, New Jersey•. Vir·
ardo Marrou, a business professor at
. Wl\ar'\he) Tupac Amaru group cation on the proj~t has been com- were bumped up to 100 percent '
ginia,
Washington,
Weil Virginia,
casement acqu irement just before
Lima's Pacific University, said short- rcall)i wants, Toledo said, is an pleted.
Alabama
and
Kentucky,
Ms. Jackson
,IY after his release. "We're going to amnesty that would allow its memSewer district officials initially we submitted our cenification docuCERTIFICATION SIGNED - . said .
;sleep all day."
bers 10 participate in public life, as submitted .documents for easement ments in August," said Tuppers Plains Tupjlers .Plein a Sewer District
Requests from South Carolina.
. Other hostages described condi· . ha&lt; happened in various Latin Amer· certification in August, after nearly Sewer District attorney John Lcntcs. Board attorney John Lentes Vcnnont, New York, Hawaii and
During the past four months, offi- signed certification documenta
'lions inside the house as cramped, ica countries including Guatemala, QO percent of the 210 right-of-way
. Ohio are pending. .
with 50 people in one 30-square-yard Al'!lcntina, Uruguay, Colombia and easemel\ts for the system had been cials have made attempts to settle the for the $2.6 m!lllon TP - r proWest ~irginia.: which had the
remaining easements and complete . ject, allowing the project to go to
room. People slept in rows while Venezuela.
acquired.
nation's highest uhcmployment ratA:
guerrillas slumped in a comer of the
An attempt 10 rescue hosiages by
The cenilication was sent on to the required 100 percent of right of bid.
of 6.5 percent in October, ha.&lt; waillel'll
room kept guard.
,
force would be "insane "Toledo told the Chicago regional offices of the way easements for Rural Develop·
covering· 41 of its SS counties. · "I
· "We tried to keep ourselves busy, The Associated Press. because rebels Ru'",l Development' Administration, ment Administration project certifi· week . in Meigs County Common don't think without creative stale subPleas Court against the remammg
o rganizing brigad~s for cleaning ·are "anned to the teeth." Rooms in formerly known as the Far~ers cation.
:
property owners who have not signed sidi7""tion we ~an make the (welfare.
.
The
sewer
district
ciied
"eminent
:bathrooms, floors," said Fernando the two-story building are mined, as · Home Ad~JmstratJOn,, for re~1cw
· to-wol'k) targets," said Bob ·Kiss.
(Continued on Page 3)
·Ponzalez· Vigil, an economics pro· is the roof.
.
and processmg, where II was rejeCt• domain" in seven lawsuits filed last

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during the holidays and throughout the year.
• Toys should be matched to a child's abilities, neither too advanced nor
too simple for a child, which might result in misuse and end with injury;
•Think "big:' when choosing toys . All toy parts should be larger than the
child's mouth to prevent choking;
• Before purchasing, read the instructions. Avoid toys that shoot small
objects into the air and look for sturdy construction;
• Watch for mislabeled or unlabeled toys and always provide proper super·
vision for younger children.
When buying presents for children, Torres susgested getting toys that stim·
uline natural curiosity, that involve activities of the parents with the child,
that promote skill development and cn;ativ!ty, ·and that encourage boobies
and scientific activities, all, of course, appropriate to the child's age.

program.

.

The U.S. government stancd to
replace its tangled web of welfare
programs on Oct. I. In essence, fed·
era! officials told the state they would
provide $728 million for the current
budget year and that it was up to
Ohioans to decide how to spend it.
But the state must follow certain
criteria, such as requiring all ablebodied adults to find work within two
years and making sure illegal aliens
don't get benefits.
"I like that we're getting more
responsibility," said Arnold Tompkins, director of the Ohio Depanment
of Human Services.
Tompkins promised to extend that
responsibility to the counties, which
will be able to tailor benefit programs
to meet local needs.
· "There 'sa real effort to look al tbc
root ciuses of why people are on welfare," Thmpkins said.
About SSO,OOO Ohioans receive
!Welf~R-I&gt;cntfrts . A family of three is
1:1

;;

eligible for $341 per month, plus food
stamps and medical care.
The good news from the state's
perspective is that tbe federal block
grant is $40 million more than state
officials planned to spend. That's
because the federal grant was based
on the number of people on welfare
in 19\14, a figure that has dropped by
about a thitd in Ohio since then due
to an improving economy and new
work requirements.
Amy Kuhn, of Nelsonville, is one
of those left on the dole.
.
The 32-year-old mother of two
works as a secretary at the Athens
County Human Services basic liter·
acy laboratory in exchange for ber
benefits.
Before she got into the state's
Community Work Experience Pro.
gmm six months ago, Mrs. Kuhn said
she spent much of the past 13 years
sitting around her home collecting
benefits.

''I have never held a .i9b other than
this one," she said. "I felt really bid
. about it, but ~round southeast Ohio
.there are no jobs to be found."
Or more accurately, no jobs that
pay .well ,enough to make up for the
·. loss of benefits.
. That's going to be a major hurdle
for welfare officials, predicted Jack
Frech, Athens Coonty's director of
human services.
. "We can get people into Jbbs,"
Frech said. " We cannot get them out
. of jx&gt;verty." ·
Frech said his agency finds work
tor about 500 people a yw, but 75
·percent of them eatn $6 an hour or
less: Few. of the jobs come with
health benefits, l!ld daye~re remains
a problem for working motllers.
Ms. Lawrence predicted 111 elllellsion of medical· coverage 111d
increased daycn fundi"' would be
~~ed in the comin1 .budael nep
U&amp;IIOOS.

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Commentary

Monday, Deeember23,1996
P11118 .2

..

Monday: December 23. 1M:

:s:

.,

OHIO Weather
Thesdly, Dec. 24
AccuWealher• forecut

The Daily Sentinel A peek into the psychic spies' network
'£st46lislid ml948
111 Ccut St., P~y. Ohio
814-812-2156 • Fax: 1112·2157

.!lr

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.Genenll ••. , . ,

MARGARET LlHEW
Controller

Letter to the editor
Our friend, the woodpecker
Dear Editor:
What in the world would we do without the woodpecker? Without them
our lives wouldn't be complete. The daily arrival of this beautiful bird is a
welcome sight.
.
Here's my Christmas card poem for·everyone and especially the beauti·
· ful woodpecker.
·

By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN MOLLER
WASHINGTON -They were a
top secret military Unit of Last
Resort: a band of al half dozen psychic spies woricing business hours for
. more than ·a decade in two leaky;
wooden World War ll-era buildings,
1"2561 and 1'2562, on the Fort Meade
military reservation in Maryland.
• When the U.S. military was on
a Scud hunt ·in Iraq, trying to find
deadly missiles that Saddam Hussein ·
was moving around during Operation
Desert Storm, they were called in.
• When Americans were missing
or taken hoslage in the Middle East,
their abilities were tapped.
• When the intelligence community was in turmoil, believing the
most infamous terrorist of modem
times. Carlos the Jackal, was going to
assassinate President Ronald Reagan,
their phone rang.
The group existed from 1978 to
1995 under four successive ultrasecret names: the Grill Flamers, the
Center Laners, the Sun Streakers and

Then one stormy wintry nigh~
. There was ice on Sanra's sleigh
. It was frozen solid to stop him,
On this Christmas day.

)

High winds to precede
decreasing·temperature~

' Nick's desperate cry,
Woody heard St.
And took. to the air on a leap and fly.
Down below he saw the stuck sleigh;
He would not let this be a tragic day:
(jlh .a ~w-w and a chip-chip-chip,

a mighty beak.

r birdl carne to see what was ~matter.
ut all they could do was flutter and cliatter.·
Oody worked and worked to remove the ice
thought of children who were extra nice.
ith a final chip and a final tug,
sleigh was loose, and took off ,
'k.e a flying rug.

II the birds gathered 'round Woody,
tfappy with his work that day.

They -whistled and joined him in bird-like play.
I .
~ever again would they make fun of anyone ·
~ecause

that's not nice.
$ecause someday you or I
May get stuck. - in the ice.

I

Roger Reeb
Recine

j · What Christmas means to me ·
!;)ear Editor:
,
~ To most people, Christmas is a time of hurry and flurry, but tome, Christt)laS .is a time: to_celebrate !eS!fs' birth. To me Christmas. is a time of seeing
relauves, eaung, and openmg presents. Jesus was horn on Bethlehem some
time in the fall. As you celebrate Christmas, I encourage you to invite Jesus
til your celebration, for He is the rc;ason for Christmas.
"
. Shelly D. JonH, 10

Pomeroy

Today in ·history
By Tlie Alaoclated PrHI
.
..
· Today is Monday, Dec. 23, the 3~8th day of 1996. There are eight days
left in the year.
·
, Today's Highlight'in History:
. On Dec. 23. 1823, the poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas" by Clement C.
Moore ("'Twas the night before Christmas... ") was published anonymously in the Troy (N.Y.) Sentinel.
On this date: ·
In 1783, George Washington resigned as-commander-in-chief of the Army
and retired to his home at Mount Vernon, Va.
In I788. Maryland voted to cede a I00-square-mile area for the seat of
the national government; about two-thirds of the area became the District of
Columbia.
In 1805, Joseph Smith Jr.. founder of the Mormon Church, was hom in
Slwon. Vt:
In 1893, the opera "Haensel und Gretel" was first performed, in Weimar,
Germany.
. In 1941, during World War U, American forces on Wake Island surrendered 1p the Japanese.
.
In 1948. former Japanese premierHideki Tojo and si~ other Japanese war
leadUs"Were executed in Tokyo.
In 1968, 82 crew memben of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo were
released by North Korea, II montlis after they had been captured.
In 197.5. Richard S. Welch, the Central Intelligence Agency station' chief
in Athens, Greece, was shot and killed outside his home.
In 1980, a state funeral was held in Mo~~~:ow for former Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin, who had died Dec. 18 at age 76.
• Ten years 110: The experimentallirplane Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutati .
and Jeana Yeager. completed the tint nonstop, round-the-world.flight without refueling as it llllded safely at Edwards Air Force ~ase in California.
Five years ago: ¥resident Georp Bush·spoke by 1clephone with Rupian
Presicl\mt Boris Yeltsin, after which a senior Bush administration official said .
the United $t.Mes would extend diplomatic recognition to the Russian republic,

Fund

"Look,'' said O'Connor, "about
900,000 individuals in New York
City live in substandard conditions,
including overcrowding, with all the

Nat Hentoff
auendant evils or that kind of life.
And bishops all over the country are
seeing more of this. I would be failing if all I did was to say Mass and
carry out the customary religious
duties of my office."
.
The first time I came to see him at
the archdiocese, a strike against city
hospilals, including Catholic hospitals, was underway, and it was suggested that the strikers be told they
would be permanently replaced if
they did not come back to work.
"Over my dead body," I heard
O'Connor shouting in the corridor,
,"will anybody be fired because he or
she belongs to a union and is exercising the right of collective bar·
. gaining."
Now, in time for Christmas wish·
ers and New Year's resolutions, the
nation's Catholic bishops, including
O'Connor, have presented a guide to
economic decision-making. It is
instructive to contrast their principles
with the president's signing of the
Republican welfare bill and other
illustrations of what passes for ceonomic justice in Congress.
"All people," say the bishops,

company~s
.

By DIAN VUJOVICH
There's more than one way to play
the mutual fund game. If you don't
know which mutual fund to invest in
but want to be a part of the financial
services industry, you could invest in
a fund company's stock.
.
_ W~ile there are thousands ·o f
mutual funds and hundreds of mutu·
al fund families to choose from, the
universe of publicly traded investrnent companies is actually quite
small .
Bruce Brewington .is an equity
analyst specializing in investm.ent
companies at the investment banking
firm of Putnam, Lovell &amp; Thornton.
He divides publicly traded invest·
ment companies into a variety of
groups based on where most of a giv·
en company's assets come from.
He says that there are only five
mutual fund management ~ompanies
that derive most of their assets from
retail fund inves,tors: Eaton Vance
(symbol EV), Franklin Resources
(BEN), T. Rowe Price (!'ROW), Pioneer (PIOO) and John Nuveen (JNC).
After that come the publicly trad·
ed investment companies whose
as11ets come primarily from the iillli·

"have a right to the basic necessities
of life - food, shelter, education,
medical care, economic security.
"All people have the right to economic initiative, to productive work,
to just wages, to decent working conditions as well as to organize and join
unions or other associations.
"The global economy has moral
dimensions and human consequences. Decisions on investment,
tradii'and development should protect
human life and promote human
rights."
In stark contrast to the bishop's
statement on human rights. the Clinton administration has welcomed
Chinese Defense Minister Gen. Chi
Haotian to Washington. The operational commander over the Tiananmen· Square massacre in 1989 was
greeted with full military honors -'flags flying and cannonades over the
Potomac. Meanwhile, the only publicly dissenting Democratic member
of Congress, Nancy Pelosi of California, noted that the president "will
not meet with any ofthe Chinese dissidents. The Ointon administration ·
has given great face for hardliners of
the Chinese regime." HUIIIIIn Ril!hls
Watch calls her "the conscience of
Congress on China and human
rights." Where are •Barney Frank.
John Lewis and the other liberal
Democrats?
Cardinal O'Connor's own con-

Cloudy with a chance of snow cen-

tral and &amp;outh.' Temperatures falling
into the lower 20s by late afternoon.
Extended forecast:
Christmas Day... Snow likely
extreme northeast. Aurries likely
elsewhere.
. ,

Meigs land transfers posted ·
. The following land transfers were
Right of way, Lind.a E. Jurac!o to
posted recently in the office of Meigs CSP, Orange;
County Recorder Emmogene Hamil·
Right ~f way, Clarice Allen to
ton:
·
CSP. Chester;
Deed, Bonnie Friend to Marvin L.
Right of way, Richard and Betty
Friend, Cheste•:
Gaul to CSP, Chester;
Deed, Richard A. and Dorothy
Right of way, Mason County E
Hagerty to Debra A. Walker, Salem, Corp. to CSP, Chester: ..•
5 acres;
Right of way, Shelly A. and
Deoo. Richard ·A. and Dorothy Robert D. Combs to CW· Chester;
Hage1 y IQ'~i~ej,V, Qevoj, Sai~Ql. ·
Rigl\1 . of way, Roger L. and
7 acres;
.
Jacqueline Starcher to CSI', Chester:
Deed, Julie Anne Perry to Michael
Right of way, Anthony W. and
Blaine Perry, Columbia;
Wendy R. Deem to CSJ;', Chester;
· Deed, Ferrell W. and Patricia K.
.Right of way, Jerry R. and Doni·
Day to Henry and Hester M. lilblin, taR. Hayman to CSP, Lebanon;
Rutland, .18 acre:
.,. · Deed, Lois Moore to A.' Wayne
Deed, Dion W. and Sherry L. Lyons. Racine lots;
Vance to Michael and Clarinda Hen·
Deed, Judith A. ana John T.
Williams, Anne M. and Paul L.
derson, Olive:
Deed, Kimberly Grueser and Gary Chapman to Roland E. Jr. and Joann
A. Phillips to Kenneth Sean and Kim- Wildman, Sutton parcels;
berly Dawn Grueser, Sutton , 1.08
Deed, Isaac Manning and Elizaacres;
beth A. Mohler to Donald S. and
Deed, Maria D. Knopp to Charles Deborah Mohler, Bedford parcel: .
P. Knopp, Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, James Roy Frecker,
Deed, John Cline and Melinda deceased, to Family Homes lncorpoJane Dailey Ia Nei)ie Zerkle, Mid- rated, Salisbury:
dleport lot;
Deed, Richard W. and Ruby
Right of way, Patsy A. and Many Vaughan to Eugene E. and Mary Lou
O'Bryant to Columbus Southern Hawkins, Middlepon;
Power, Chester;
Deed. Dixie Smith, Garnet Ervine,
Right of, way, Harold H, and Garnet Smith to Gary and Marilyn
Helen E. Blackston to CSP, Chester: Cooper, Lebanon parcels;
·
Right of way, Mark E. Proffitt, ·
Deed, Nora Mae Jordan to Nora
Nola Smith, Harold H. and Helen E. Mae Jordan and Vinas .Lee, MiddleBlackston to CSP, Chester;
port:
Deed, Scipio Townshi~ Senior
Right of way, Dwight and Elva
Corbin to CSP, Chester;
Citizens to Dean Jr. and E~elyn I.
Right of way, Doug and Brandi S. \Yiblin, Scipio.
·
Ledsome 10 CSP, Orange;
. Deed, Kenneth R. and Mary A.
. Right of way, John G. and Barbara Freckcr t0 Timothy D. and Paula Jean
J. Bailey to CSP, Chest~r:
Buckley, Orange;
'.
Right Of way, John W. and HenriDeed, John and Yvonne Dennis to
etta L. Bailey to CSP, Chester;
Rodney E. and Mona L. Frecker, SalRight of way, William M and isbury;
Margie Lawson DDS to CSP,
Deed, James M. Bentz to Almena
Chester;
Benlz, Middleport lots;
·
Deed, Rhonda Dunn and Dan
Goodwin to Dolphus D. Burke,
The Daily Sentinel Columbia parcels. ·

A Christmas, wish 'l'ist for those left beHind
By NAT HENT()FF
Gloria Steinem was once asked to
name the worst things albout New
York. She cited AIDS and John Cardinal O'Connor. Many other women
scorn him for his unyielding pro-life
stand, and some Catholics consider
him too rigidly orthodox in his doctrinal positions.
Overlooked by his critics is the
fact that the cardinal is more liberal
on certain social issues than most
members of Congress - as well as
the president. Dpring a homily at St.
Patrick's Cathedral around Christmas
time some years ago ~ he said:
"There's no point in simply talking
to people ahout filling their souls if
you don't fill their bellies."
Ten years ago, after the National
Conference of Catholic bishops
released a pastoral letter, "Economic Justice for All,'' O'Connor was
asked to attend a private dinner in
New York at which prominent conservatives. most of them Catholic,
grilled him ahout hfs suppon of that
document. It called for "the broader
· sharing of economic power" and
"making economic decisions more
accountable to the common good."
I was at the dinner and watched
O'Connor controlling his ·temper as
his interrogators scolded the bishops.
especially. him - the orthodox prince
of the church - for involving the
church in such matters as economic
justice for the poor.

'

1989. Sunset tonight will be at 5: II
p.m. and sunrise Thesday at 7:51 a.m.
Weather forttast:·
Tonight. .. Showers and a chance of
thunderstorms. A chance of snow
west toward dayrbreak. Very, windy.
Lows from t~e upper 20s nonhwest
to around 40 extreme southeast.
Tuesday... Snow likely north.

By The Associated Press
· A wind watch has been posted f~r
Ohio tonight, with the National
Weather Service saying gusts or 60
mph are possible. Thunderstorms
also are possible ahead of an
approaching low pressure system,
forecasters said.
Temperatures will drop again fol·
low.ing passage of a cold front
Ol'emjght. Afternoon readings on
Tues4ay will be mQstly in the 20s.
Tjle record-high temperature for
this ·date at the Columbus weather
station was 62 degrees in 1933 while
the record low was 1'4 below zero in

which sparked i~tense interest in the
spy community. The cryptic log notation said: "Possible terrorist act.
Secret Service, FBI. DIA involved.
High visibility project."
·
But -just like the rest of the $30
billion-a-year intelligence community- the unit failed to locate Carlos.
According to the log, however, the
unit was able to provide "information
. ofvalue." In fact, one entry even conceded that the psychic unit may l!ave
kept Carlos in hiding. "Information
provided could have deterred the
movement of Carlos." the notation
reads.
We will reveal more ·from the
secret log and interviews with former
remote viewers in future columns.
(Jack Anderaon and Jan Moller
•ra columnl.tti for Unlt.cl F'Miura
SyndiCIIte.)

'

I

·Easement certification

MY

Rudolph pulled and pulled ·when
San Ia yelled "Mush,"
but the sleigh was frozen ·solid
In sheets of frozen slush.

viction that hu.;,an· rights ate indi- ·
visible is illustrated in a story he likes
to tell from the Midrash, a Jewish
biblical commentary: "God saw a
group of angels dancing in heaven.
He asked, 'Why are they celebrating?' The angels said. 'Because your
children, the Israelites, have just
safely crossed the Sea of Reeds.' God
said, 'Why are you dancing? My chil~ren, the Egyptians, are' drowning."'
Also indivisible, in this country
should be a prinCiple of the Catholic
bishops: "The moral measure of any
economy is how the poor and vulnerable are f~ing. ... People are
growing more discoura1ed and
despairing. CHildren are growing up
desperately polar in the richest nation
on earth. Forlmany left behind, the
questions at the end of the month are
whether tbey lean afford the rent or
groceries or hbtt. ''
After his niceting a decade ago .
with the prominent conservatives
who told him he w31 out line. Cardinal O'Connor, in q} radio interview,
said: "If the ,ch~reh is not living in i
the everyday world, then it might as
well not live at all."
The bishops' everyday world at
Christmas, or the rest of the year, is
not that of Congress or the president. '
(N.t H•ntoH Ia a natl-lly ,
renowned authority on the Firat :
Amendment lfld 1111 lftt of the Bill .
of Rlghtl.)

(Continued from Page 1)
easements, in an effort to exv.edite
system construction and compleie the
certification process.
Named as defendants in the suits,
according to documents filed in court,
are · Sidney A. and Kazue Grimes,
Guysville;
Marsha
Kimes,
Reedsville; Stephen W. and Angela
M. Watson, Reedsville; f!.oselyn Taylor. Tuppers Plains; Tommy G. and
Wendy A. Wilfong, Thppers Plains;
Inez Spurlock, Tuppers Plains; and
Wanda Wolfe, Helen Milhone, Ross
Mollohari, Glenna Saunders and Carol Vance, Tuppers Plains.
"The district . does not feel that
.these property owners are doing anything improper in not signing easements for the system. We understand
their concerns, but in the long run this
sewer system will improve the residents' health and safety and encour- .
age development in the Tuppers
Plains areas. We were hoping to
resolve these easements without
going to court. This is just a part of
the process we must go through to
e~pedite the bid process and construction," said Lentes.
It will take approximately one
month for the ·RDA to process the
certification paper--:ork. Assuming
that is the schedule, the sewer district
could .receiye an authorization to
begin the bid process around the middle pan of February.
Bids would be received one month

later, after which time review and
evaluations will occur and the bid
could be awarded by the' end of
March, according to Doug Uran of
URS Greiner Inc,. Columbus, engiileering consultant on the project.
Construction and completion of
the project within a short time frame
is vitally important to development in
the Tuppers Plains area, according to
Lentes.
"The board has had contact from
three individuals who are interested
in building major housing developments in the Tuppers Plains.area. We
have also had contact from some
commercial interests who are also
looking at developments in the Tuppers Plains area. Even though these
plans are only in the preliminary
stages, the sewer system will be able .
to handle 'a considerable amount of
the development in the area,.. Lentes
said.
. Once the easement cenification is
approved by RDA officials, further
items that must be met the district
before the bid process begins will be
stated in a letter of conditions.
"We anticipate quick movement
on. cenification, the bid process, and
actual construction of the project. We
hope to get the sewer system up run.ning soon, so we can solve the curtent problem of.raw sewage tlowing
through ditches in the Tuppers Plains
area," Lentes said.

EMS units answer 16 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 16
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
. 3:14 a.m . Saturday, PomerO)'
Police Department, Lori Frye, Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital;
·
II :57 a.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Peggy Anderson,
Holzer Medical Center;
4:18 p.m. Saturday, State Route
124, Ronnie Keys, treated at the
scene;
.
8:42 p.m. Saturday, Tackerville
Road, Harold Rainer, VMH;
3:27a.m. Sunday, SR 124, Racine,
Richard Ours, HMC:
8:37 a.m. · Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Marie Robinson, VMH;
2:03 p.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center. Clara ·Foster,
VMH;
3:43 p.m. Sunday, Nonh Fifth
Avenue, Middleport, Floyd Brown,
VMH.

MIDDLEPORT
· 2:13p.m. Sunday, Bradbury Road,
Rita Bell. VMH.
POMEROY
·12:34 , p.m. Saturday, Spring
Avenue, Einily Kinnan, HMC;
1):30 p.m. Saturday, Collins Road,
Kenneth Crossen. HMC.
REEDSVILLE
I :41 a.m . S"nday, SR I 24.
Thomas Boggs, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospilal;
12:41 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squad to Hudson
Hollow Road, motor vehicle acci dent, Walter Wise, St. Joseph's Hospital.
RUTLAND
I :32 p.m. Saturday, Higley Road.
Mary ·Smith, PVH;
4:42 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squad to New Lima
Road, automobile fire, Jim Snodgrass, owner.
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:45p.m. Saturday, Third Avenue,
Louise Posey, CCMH.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at ·selected
buying points Monday as provided
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: mostluy 1.00
lower; demand and supplies light to
moderate.

U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs.. country
points 51.50-53.00, a few at 51.00
and 53.50, plants 52.50-54.00, and a
few at 52.25.
u.s. 2·3, 230-i60 45.00-51.00.
Sows: weak.
.
U.S, 1·3 300.450 lbs. 40.00.45.50,
few to ·39.00; 450-550 lbs. 44.5046.00.

•

COLD CELEBRATION- While a1ew hardy IOU II braY«&lt; tam- 1
per•turn hovering around the teens Thuraday nl!lht Ill Racine's I
annual Chrlatmasln the·Park celebnltlon, the majority l"llt'Ntlc:l
to the Sblr Mill Park BulldiQg for refreahmenti •nd the arrlv•l of
Santi! Claus via horu-clrawn Wllgon. Hare, 101111 celebrente Wllnn
up around a large bonfire.
I

.

-Local News in Brief:--1
Three accidents blamed on weather

1
The Meigs Counry Sheriffs Depanment investigated three weather-relat- 1
ed accidents due to icy conditions Sunday morning on the county's highways, 1
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
. .
t
According to reports, Angela D. Mayer, 22. Rutland, was traveling east
on Unio~ Avenue around 6 a.m. when she lost control of her 1997 Che.vy·S- j .
10 truck on an ice-covered bridge. The truck then veered off the left stde.of 1
the road, where it went through a fence. Damage to the truck. was moder&amp;te.
Around 8:45 a.m., Oren L. Ellis, 43, Middleport, was traveling east on
Loop Road when he struck a deer that ran into the path of his 1992 ford FISO
truck. He then lost control of the truci,, crashing into a bridge guardrail. Dam·
age to the truck was heavy. The deer was not killed.
In the third accident, Remalee A. Franckowiak, 44, Middleport, was traveling east on Pomeroy Pike when she lost control of her 1991 Pontiac Bon·
neville on the icy roadway, striking a guardrail. Damage Ia the car was moderate.
No citations were issued in the separate accidents.

I

Driver in'ured in one-vehicle.crash

l
· ·
· The Galli a-Meigs
Post ofthe State Highway Patrol investigated an InJury
accident Sunday on Olive Township Road 273 (Hudson Hollow).
.
Driver Walter Wise, 81, 5501 Hudson Hollow Road, Reedsville, .was ll'ans•
,ported to St. Joscph'~' ijospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.. by the ~eigs EMS f~- :
lowing the I p.m. acctdent. Further mformauon from tho hosptral was unavall· ,
able this morning.
·
Details on the accident, which occurred two-tenths of a mile west of Slate
Route 681, were incomplete this morning.

""P-C
Dl'st•J"ct ll'fts bol'l o'•der
I
1

1 '

1 '

A boil order implemented Wednesday for Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District customers in East Letart, Letart' Falls, Rowe Road, Manuel Road.
Plants Road, Adams Road, Hill Road, Blind Hollow and Appte Grove-Dorcas Road, has been lifted.

Deputies investigate two accidents

1
No citalions were issued in separate accidents investigated Friday and Sat- 1
urday by the Meigs County Sheri ITs Department, according to Sheriff James,
M. Soulsby.
.
·
..
. .
1
Deputies investigated a repon of an accident Friday at I I :30 p.m. along&lt;
SR 124 in Rutland Township. According to reports, Kevin P. Musser, 23. Vic· •
toria, Texas, was·backing a 1991 Buick Century into a private driveway along
SR 124 to tum the vehicle around,
I
When Musser was pulling from the driveway, he sideswiped a utility pole. :
Moderate damage was recorded to the vehicle, which was owned by William I
Weaver, Middleport.
I
. Deputies investigated a deer/car accident Saturday around 7 p.m. on SR
124 near the intersection of SR 325. According to t'l:porfs, Timothy Warns-'
ley, 30, Middleport, was westbound when a deer ran into the palh of his 1994•
Chevy Blazer, striking him in the driver's side d_oor. ·
·.
I
Light damage was recorded to Wamsley's vch1tle. The deer was not killed.I

Jackpot to grow
CLEVELAND (AP) - The SupeF
Lotto jackpot wilt grow to $24 mil·
lion for Thursday night's drawing, the
Ohio Lottery said Sunday.
. No one came up with all six numbers picked Saturday ni ght with $20
million at stake in the Ohio Lottery
game.
.There were 134 Super Lotto tickets with five of the numbers, apd each
is worth $1,189. The 6,331 tickets
showing four of the numbers are each
worth $79.
·

Announcements
LCCD office closed
The Leading Creek Conservancy
District's office will be dosed Tuesday and Wednesday. In the event of
an emergency, call 742-2597.
Christmas hours
Meigs County government offices
will close Tuesday at noon!
Trustees to nieet
Letart Township Trustees will
.hold their year-end meeting Monday,
Dec. 30 at II a.m. in the township
oflicc in Letan Falls, followed by
their organizational meeting.

O'DELL LUMBER

I

stock offers advantages

.
tutional management of money rather
than from the assets of individual .
retail accounts. in that grouping
Brewington includes INVESCO (a

Dian VuJovlcb
London company that trades in the
• United States as an ADR with the
ticker symhol of IVC), Phoenix Duff
and Phelps (DUF) and Untied Asset
Management (primarily a holding
company, but it owns the Pilgrim
·Baxter funds; symhol UAM) .
Fund families that are limited
partnerships include Alliance Capilal
(AC), New England Investment
Companies (NEW) and PIMCO
Advisors (PA).
Then there are publicly traded
companies with mutual fund
alliances. The big one ·in that category being Kansas City Southern Industries (KSU), which owns the Berger
and Janus funda.
· A few of the better-known companics that currently derive less than
SO percent of their revenues from the
management of mutu~I-Cund money
include Liberty Financial (they own

.

.

(VSPS ZIJ-960]

. ''

Published eVCI')' nnernoon. Monday lhrouah
Friday, I I I Coun S1 .. Pomeroy. Obio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing ComponyKlanneu Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~9 . Ph. 992·2156. Second
clus postage pnid at Pomero~. Ohio.
· .

'
•''

ihe Stein Roc and Colonial funds, '
Bob Powell, editor and chief '{)f :
symbol L), Morgan Stanley (MS) and Mutual Fund Market News, a fund '
industry magazine, 'is a fan of fund :
Schwab (SCH).·
Now that,you"ve got an idea of the ' company stocks.
·
,
. :
publicly traded fund companies. keep
"If you're bullish on the money ;
in mind that buying a stock isn't the ~anagement business, buying a pub- :
""'""as investing in a fuod. For open- hcly traded money mana1er is as :
ers, you're only buying one stock and · good a bet - if not better - than' ~
not shares of a diversified portfolio of• buying a fund for a couple of rea- :
securities as you would be if you •sons," says Powell. "Qne is •
were investing into a mutual fund. growtlr will continue to rise. Thai's I
Once you've accepted that fact, 'the because we haven't even 111:ratched I
rest is all in the research.
t the surface of how aggressively ~ :
"Like any other stock you owrt,l pie will save and invest in the future :
you have to evaluate ~ based on its for their retirements. Secondly, the · ~
bala11ce sheet," says Julie Rus~~ell, a consolidation of the fund indlllll)' is
financial consultant at Smith Barney on&amp;oina, and the only way 10 benefit ;
in West Palm Beach, Fla . ."Keep in from thai cllnsolida&amp;ion is to buy a •
mind, this is not like owning a fu'ld mUIUI fu!ld comp111y."
:
and when your investment objective
On the other had, Powell sayi l
chanps you can exchange it for there are
to inWII!ng in ·
~nother Cuqc!. You have to ~ell the the1e stocks: "If the marbt Cl'llhel,
stock and buy somethin1 else."
,or there is a prolonpd bar mftet, :
Rtwell poinu out thai one of the :these cOIII(*IIes will walch their pr1- :
pluses of owning individuai stocks is 'may soun:e of revenue fiy out the •
that they offer JI'Caler risk and, thus, door. In whlclt ca. yt*'ll be left with :
·greater reward potential. On the a pea&amp;Jy dep~eCillinl - · "
I
downside, manascment compaay
Once apin, when It cornea to
revenues c• be cyclical. and there- investinc. Ibm are no guaraallllla or
by subject to chpJC dependinsiiJIOII financlal .rewllrd.
4
econornk: conditioM.

Mem..r: The Auodnted Prt~8. and the Ohio
·Newzpoper Association.

POSTMASTBR1 Send addreu coneclion~ to
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Cow't St .. Pomeroy.
Ohio4S769.

SIJBSCJIIPTtON IIATI!S
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oo 111bree, sill or 12 month b&amp;JIL Credit will be
Jlven carrier each week.

t

down._

i
'i

I.

•

•)columbus)36'

~----------~--------9 YoU

He called 911 to get some help,
But they didn't believe Santa.
And thought it was il prank.

ipped at the ice with

. . . ..

were six remote viewing sessions;

;•

Laura E. Elliott, 104, New Haven, W.Va., died Saturday, Dec. 21. 1996
in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
A former midwife with Dr. R.F. Byrant's office in New Have'n, she was
born~. 9, 1892 in ,Sunon Township, Meigs County, da~ghter of the late
Peter and Mary Fry Shaver Elliott.
'
She was a member of the Bachiel United Methodist Chureh in New Haven,
where she 18Uiht Sunday School for many years.
·
She is survived by a sister-in-law, Lena Anderson of Daytona, Fla., and
by several nieces and nephews.
·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Stephen A. Elliot~ in 1936.
Services will be I I a.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va., iNtth the Rev. Joanne Clevenger officiating. Burial will follow in the
Grabarn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.

..

IND.

By Jack Anderson
and ·
Jan Moller

All of the other birds Laughed and called him names.
They wouldn't let )lQOl' .Woody
Join in any birdy games.

Laura E.~lliott

IToledo!38" I

1978 to its end with the Defense 1989.
The log records at least 182 proIntelligence Agency last year - and
at a total cost of $20 million - psy- jects assigned by .2.5 different agenchic spies responded to hundreds of cies. The average project consisted of
requests, and conducted thousands of more than eigbt one-hour ,sessions.
uremote viewing" sessions in an The No. I task.maker. with at least 93
·
effon to find ·new information on projects, was the DIA.
The CIA has said that psychic
intelligence projects.
Remote viewing is a process spies never proved to be of any use.
aimed at viewing rem~ locations, but the log reveals that the CIA was
objects and people without actually the unit's second biggest employer,
being there. Generally. it consisted of asking for help on 33 different proto come up with psychic clues to. two people in a Toom, which was jects. These requests came after the
intelligence problems, usually when often darkened. The "psychic" would CIA had disbanded its own psychic
normal spy methods were not be told a number- but would riot be unit in 1978 in favor of the Army's
.
enough.
told what or wh~ he or. she was project.
We were the first to pull the cov- looking for, or wht"!' agency was
Other "lask.ers" to the unit include
er back on the unit, in the early 1980s, seeking the informatton. The psy- all of the military services, plus
when it was called " Project Grill chics would then relate what carne to intelligence agencies like the comFlanie." In 1995, when the CIA want· mind. Some viewers called it disci-' munications spies at the. Nation~)
ed IQ kill the program once and for plined daydreaming with a purpose. 'Security Agency, also located at Fort
all, they released a declassified study
In the last year, sporadic reports Meade. But the unit also worked on
that criticized the unit's work and have unveiled portions of the unit's behalf of the Customs Service, the
provided the justification to have it activities, but our associate Dale Van Drug Enforcement Administration:
terminated. Yet the CIA released no Atla is now able to provide a more the Federal Bureau of Investigation
details ahout the actual projects that complete picture after obtaining a and the Secret Service.
copy of a highly sensitive, 57-page
were undertaken.
It was the Secret Service thai
From its inception at the CIA in log of their activities from 1979 to begged the unit for help. iii thwaning
a perceived threat from the elusive
Carlos the Jackal, who was usually
CoiJ~P
employed by Libya or other hostile
1-ta'l@. ~HeD He
Middle Eastern countries.
3T
·According to the log, it was Project
No. '8124, and ran from DecemWe8$iT(!.
ber 1981 to February 1982. There

Woody the redheaded woodpecker
Had a very hard beak..
And if you ever saw it
You .would ev~ say it's neat.

conditions and

•

the Star Galc-~epe;... Over that
time, a total.of 40 military and civilian men and women in the unit's
sparse Fort Meade offices wen: asked ·

The Dally sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

\

No subscription b,. mail permitted In areu
where home carrier service I• avllllable.
Publilher mervn the ri&amp;ht to ~ju•t rlltCS dut·
ina the sub.eription period. Sublcription rate
,hanps 11'11)' be iqtltmented by chanJina the
dunllon of Oho oubo&lt;ripdoo.
MAILSVBSCRtPTIONS

M'tllo c-&lt;y
13 - ......................................
:.......... ,$21.30

26 - .................................................."3.8'1
, l - .............................................. Sto.l.!16

:16-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$29.!!·
--Molpc-y

13 ~................................................

~.

n -............................................... s

I

••

Stocks
Am Ele Power .........................41
Akzo ......................................67\
Aahland 011 ....... :......·............ .4~'/.
AT•T .....................................39'!.
Bank One ..............................45'4

Bob Evans ................~ .............13

Borg-Warner .........................37'1.
Champion .............................23'.-l

Charming Shops ....................4,,
City Holdlng ............:.............24'1.
Federal Mogul .......................21'o

Gannett .................·................75,.

GOOdyear ................................51
K-rnert ...................................1o\

THE CHRISTMAS
PRESEHT AHV DAD, SOli,
OR BROTHER WILL LOVE
HHIVES fOR .HUtmtiG NID FISHIHG
OR COUECntfG, SEE OUR LARGE
Sf&amp;.KTIOH TODA'Irrrttff

lOo/~

Lends End ...............................26.

n

w..

-·-·-

Stock report a are th• 10:30
•.m. quotas provided by Advtat
of O.Uipotls.
..

GEARING
UP FOR
CHRISTMAS

,,
'

-

I'

Th~ Christmas season is here, and we hope yours runs

Umlted ..................................18'4
Ohio V•llay B•nk ....................36
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AD-Shell ................-. .... ~........ 17flft
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cly'a .........- ....- ..~............ 20~
Worthlngton .........................1..,_

;.

smoothly from the front end to the back.
We'd like to wish everyone a great Christmas
with miles of smiles!

O'DELL
.LUM
' BER

~

••

.

'

ti

.

·JD &amp; MIKE
VINE STAT THIRD AVE
GALLIPOLIS 114441-1271
634 EMAINST
POMEROY 614 892-6500

JD AUTO SALES
NMIIOY1 0H.

H2-7322

·'
••'I'

,,
••

,.,.''
'• ·

'

•

I

�•

Page 4 • The O.lly Sentinel

•

I"'

Monday, December 23, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.,

1996
Cfiristmas

Morgan
Elizabeth
Hardy
Da1J8hter of:
Renee Hardy

•Grandchild of
Polly &amp;Jack
Bostick

Josh Collins
Son of
Paul &amp; Teresa
Collins

Victor &amp; Li
Painter

Grandparent•:

I»

•

.

Paint~
Daughter r

- ~

I

....,'

lr , ..

.

Charleo &amp; Ann CoiUna

.

.

1996
Cfirist:mas

.
:

..

I»

~

•

;.

Drew &amp; Dorothy

Com be-Go""

Austin Tyler
Fitzgerald
Son. Of
· April Reitmire and ·
Shawn Fitzgerald

Megan
Alexandria
Snodgrass
Daughter of
. James &amp; Rebecca :
Snodgrass

.

.

.· Raymond &amp; Me~!anj
Andrews

. · Sariah LeeAnn
.• Grandaughtel' of ·.
David &amp; Brenda
Jividen

Grandtonof
Kathy Armllrong

Grandparenl•:

Marsaret 4 Larry
Edward•

, Grandparent•:

Marsaret a Larry
Edward a

i

Meredith Rae
'
Gaul ·
Daughter of
David &amp; Bethany
Gaul

Tyler and

Dillan .

Marlee &amp; Lian Hoffman
· &amp; Nathan Rothgeb
Grandchildren of
Fred &amp; Pauline. Hoffman

Beatrice
Edwards
Daughter of
Mary &amp; Micheal
Edwards

Elizabeth
· •Grace Edwards ·.
DaQ8hter of ·
D~el &amp; An8ela
Edwards

~

. . ¥···
Elaine Gore
:·. Grandaughter of •.·

The Deily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

"' The Daily Se~~inel
.
presents
.=
.

The Daily Sentinel
.
presents
.

Monday, ~mber 23, 1998

Brinker
Daughter of
Amanda Brinker

. Grandaughter of .·
· Leslie &amp; Ruth Aim .·
Scarbrough
Great Grandmother
' Florence Wyen

Wade Collins
Son of
Ed &amp; Danyan
Collins

Sam Collins
Son of
Paul &amp; Teresa
Collins

Grandparents:

· Grandparente: Charlet &amp; ·.

· . Charleo &amp; Ann Colli in• :

Brandon Chase ·
Bostick Doyle
Grandson of
Polly &amp; Jack
Bostick

'

Austin Brent
Bissell
Son of
Brent &amp; Michele
BisseU

· Ryan Todd
VanMatre
Son of
Kevin &amp;Ann
VanMatre

Amand~ Fetty .

· Grandaughter of ::
Isabelle Couch

Brandon &amp;
Bridget
Browning&amp; ·
Jacob Swain
GrandchUdren of
&amp; Janel

&amp;
Bailey .
D~ughters of
. Rodney &amp; Sherrie
Bailey

Taylor ~tewart .. ·
Daughter of
Richard &amp; Amy
Stewart
Crandmother
Darline Siewarl

Ann Collin111 ·

Jes~ica Nicole .· •·
Magnotta·
Daughter of
Mike &amp; Linda
Magnotta

Korn
Daughter of
Bracy &amp; Shannon
Korn

Kelton Daniel
· McCloud .
Son of · ·
. Daniel McCloud &amp; ·
Marcia Robinson

Grandparents:

Brandon
Robert
Moodispaugh
Son of
Bobby
MoodispaQ8h &amp;
Lisa Tatterson .

· Taylor Joseph
McNickle
Son of
Terry &amp; Tricia
McNickle

Garrett Haptonstall
Brennan Haptorultall
•
Children, of
Debbie &amp; Bill Haptonstall

..Ron &amp; W'anda Willllam'• .

..... .

/:'

Courtney
Thomas
Daughter of
Dan&amp; W~ndy
Thomas

~·It

: Ga:andaughter of: .·
· . Vince &amp; Susan
Knight

Kaylee Lynn
. Marie Goff
Daughter of
Kevin &amp; Lucy Goff ·
Grandpuenta: F1orenee .
Goff &amp; ROf!er &amp;
Deloris Winebrenner ...

Anna Marie
Hartenbach
Daughter of
Cindy &amp; Bill
~CIJJM:hart &amp; Steve

.:riDI &amp; Krietl

Graham
: Grandchildren of
Charle• &amp; Evelyn .
Manuel

Tiffany Dawn
Reitmire
Daughter of
Gwen Folmer and
: Charles Reitmlre

Hill
Daughter of .
. Jarrod &amp; Leigh Hill~

Larissa
Cunningham
Grandchild of
Sharon Hudnall

Tanner &amp;
Taylor
Children of
David &amp; Penny
HyseU

Brett Casto
Grandson of
Ronnie &amp; Susie ·
Casto

McKenzie
Whobrey
Daughter of
Scott &amp; Autumn
Whobrey

·. Ryan Brothers
Son of
Amy Brothers
Grandparents:
Mark &amp; Candy
Tillis

.Mikayla Lyn ·
VanMatre
· Daughter of
Kevin &amp; Ann
VanMatre

·.· Olivia Rebecca ·•
Magnotta
Daughter of
Mike &amp; Linda
Magnotta
Grandparente:
Wanola&amp; .Ron Willlanoo.::'.'.

K~lton Daniel ·

,..
Jarret Lincoln ·
Durst
Son of

Katelyn Raelle .

Smart
· Son of
David and Penny
Smart

Katie Rose
Keller
Daughter of
Rodney &amp; Jenny
• Keller
Gnndparent1:
RUfer &amp; Rooemary
KeDer

Morgan &amp;
.. Wesley Jordan ·.
Rime
Twins ·of
·. Laren Wolfe-Rime •
Grandporentt: Larry .t ,. ·
Doloret Wolre

·· Jordan Taylor
Payne
Grandson of
Junior &amp; Irene
Blake

Annie Little
Daughter of
'f:im &amp; Debbie
Cundiff
·: Great-Grandporenlt: :
·· Mary Ann A Woody Call . :

Brett Daniel
Clark Ely
Son of
Brooke Coats

McCloud &amp;
Brandon
Robert .·
~oodi11paugh

· .. Great-Grandsons .
of Marcia Capelllar·t:l

Dustin S.
Johnson
· Son of
t..nart•es F. &amp; Diana ·.
L. Johnson

Jesse Dylan
Ritchie ·
Son of
Bob &amp; Bridget
(Bing) Ritchie
Grandparentel
Ernie

a Judy am,

· . Bob 4 Darlene Ritchie. . :

�..
•

$onday, December 23, 1998

.

' .

1996
Christmas

Latham Chase •·
Bissell
Son of
Jeff &amp; Ruth

Taylor Lytor
Branham
Daughter of
Mindy Branham
Great Grandparent's
llarold and Sue Rou1h

Quinton &amp;
Riley Nibert
••Grandchildren of · ·•
Paul &amp;JWie
Eichinger

Brittany
Parsons ·
•· Grandaughter of
Larry &amp; Sonia
Parsons

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

.

The Daily Sentinel
presents
•

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

The Daily\_Sentinel
••
presents

Dillon Hill
Son of
-; Heath &amp; Diane Hill ·

Samantha
Smart
Daughter of
Ed&amp; Pam
(McCarty) Smart

acob Allen
Hatfield
Grandson of
Kay &amp; Calvin
Pickens

~yle Hill

Son of

Zachery, Chelsey, Dalton &amp;
··. Dakota Imboden, Leah &amp; Sharron •
Spann
Grandchildren of
Charles &amp; Betty Spaun

Daughter of
· John &amp; Jill Burdelle

Jonathan
Barrett

Emily Jean
Stivers
Daughter of
Don&amp; Beth
Stivers

1996
Cfiristnias

Scott Barton

Harrison
Son of
John M &amp; Janel
Harrison

J

Heather Faye
Wells
Daughter of
Jason Scott and
Faith Jeanna WeDs

Trenton, Colby ·.
· &amp; Andrew
Roseberry
Son of
Tom&amp; Dena

Ashlyn .....,, ....,_
. Pickett
Da~hter of
·• Tracy Pickett and .
Brian Pagel

Travis &amp; Tanner Tackett
Sons of
Ray &amp; Janet Tackett

Be"u &amp; Darien Diddle
Children of
Christopher &amp; Gina Diddle

Tiffany
Elizabeth Lee
Daughter of
Kenny &amp; Sandy
Rife

Justin
Browning
Son of
Doug &amp; Terri
Browning

Taylor Keith
Rowe
Son of
. Lisa &amp; Ryan Rowe ·

Grandp.rent1:
Theodore 4 Becky .

Jacob Robert
Combs
Son of
Rob &amp; Shelly
Combs

.

Jessi Meado~s •·
Daughter of
Mitch &amp; Lisa
Meadows
Grandp~~renle:

.Charlet &amp; Ann Collino

fll1ln ' .

Jacob Zuspan
Son of
Todd &amp; Darla
Zuspan

. Alyssa Raeaun
Deemer
Grandchild of
Jay D. &amp; Cathy
Rowe

.Audrionna &amp;
Kirk Pullins
Children of '
Tom &amp; Stacie
Pullins

Chasidi Biggs
Daughter of
Dennr &amp; Maggie_•
.

Biggs

Colton Blaise

Ervin
Grandchild of
Carolyn Ohlinger

Magnotta
Daughter of
Mike &amp; Linda
Magnotta
Grandparent.:
Ron &amp; Wanda 'IVUiiamo

. I

•

•I

·,

I

•

Baylee Rian
. Hupp
Grandchild of
Darrell &amp; Jan
Norris
Jim &amp; Opl!l Hupp

Shanalle &amp;
Ashley Smith
'
•Grandchildren of
Larry &amp; Sonia
Parsons

Braden
Spencer
Sons of
Serena and Mark · :
Dihl

Son of
Dave &amp; Bert
· GrindstaOT

Taylor Lynn
Tucker
Daughter of
Heidi &amp; Chuck
Thcker

•'

Celestia
. Hendrix
Daughter of
Petie &amp; Christi
Hendrix

•
I

Son of
Marlin &amp; Debbie
Evans

I
I

••

''
•

••

•

;

••

Grondparento: ·
Pele &amp; PhyDi• Hendrht,
&amp; Roberto'
.

•"
••
II

· ·• Danielle Nicole •·
King
Daughter of
·. Stephannie &amp; Tony

·Andres &amp; · ·
Austin Robie
Children of
Kenneth &amp; Nichole ·
Robie

King

Joshua Daniel
Combs
Son of
Don &amp; Julia Combs

•· . Kelsey F ollrod ·
Daughter of
· Gina FoUrod

Grandparenl8
Jeremy &amp; Michelle
Combo

•· Wyatt Nicholas
Jarrell
Son of
Mark · &amp; Aimee
Jarrell

~

I

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'

l

1

•~·

•
. 4•

.

••
•••

.

) t.,....
)

Cassidy Ann
Tutker ·
Daughter of
Heidi &amp; Chuck
Thcker

Sarah Celesta
.Pickens
Daughter of
Kay &amp; Calvin
Pickens

Kimberly &amp;
Kay Ia
Hawthome
Daughter of
Jim &amp; Allee
Hawthorne

Daughter of .
Miller and
Bobby EUis

•
•l

,.

••

.

f. ~ .

Jessica Ellen
Sampson
Dall8hterof
Larry &amp; Tina .
Sam.-on

.'•

David Frank
Son of ·
:John &amp; Kila Fra11k .·

•'

•~•

'

••'

.. randon
Maidens
Son of
• Colin &amp; Kimberly
. Maidena

••"

•

-••..

,•.•.

Grudporeall
· Dole A Rohel"'a Molde110 .

~

•'•"
"
•

•

. Rebecca D. &amp; :.
Matthew A.
Roush
. Grandchildren of ·
Carrie E. Roush &amp; ·

Christopher
Allt;n Taylor
·. S~n of
· Christy Taylor
Grandparents
Bob &amp; Dottie
Hawkins.

GleDD &amp; Marie
Yo11118

.,

"

&amp; Megan ·
Brown
Grandson of
Harry &amp; Brenda
Cunnin8ham

Harrison
Grandaughters of
Roscoe &amp; Mary
Wiae

Rhodes
Soil of
David &amp; Norma
Rhodes
Grandparents:
Eddie &amp; Linda

'

�~

"'

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, o.cembar 23, 11116

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P • 1 • The Dally Santlnel

•

Monday, December 23, 18M

Rock Hill Redmen rally to edge Mei·g s Marauders 53-50
By DAVE HARRIS,
Seatlwtl Coi 1 upoucleat
Rock Hill outscored Meigs 20-11
in the fourth period to post a come
from behind 53-SO victory over the
M&amp;Illudcn in· non-conference basketball action Saturday evening at
Rock Hill.
The comeback ended the Marauders upset bid, the Redrnen are a vetcnin team coming off an&lt;l outstanding 1995·96 season. Rock Hill is now
S-1 on the season. The Marauders
drop to 3-5 overall.
Drew Fry, who wasn't expected to
play after he injured his shoulderlast
week carne off the bench and hit two

I

three pointers that helped spark the
Redmen's comeback. Pty was originally expected to !lliss 4-6 weeks
because of the injury.
Adding to the Redmen's cause was
a II point scoring advantage from the
. foul line. Rock Hill went to the line
18 times hitll of them. While on the
other side of the coin the Marauders
went to the line just four times, hitling one. Me1gs was wh1stled for 18
personal fouls, while Rock Hill was
called tor just eight.
.
The Redmen jumped out on t~p
early 16-IS after the first etght '!''"utes. JeffPraley paced the home team
with 10 points in the period.

held~

The Re&lt;bnen
27-241ead at tory. ·
the half, .as F111ley finished the first
Whitlatch had an outstanding
half with 14 points and Randy Ciank game for the Marauden pouring in a
made five of six from the line in the career high 23 points to take the game
period.
scoring honors. Meigs hit 23-49 ti:om
Brad.Whitlatch got the hot hand the noor including three from three
for Coach Jeff Skinner's Marauders in' 'point range for 47%. The Marauders
the third period pouring in nine cashed in one fot four from the line
points as Meigs outscoi'Cll the host for 25%. Meigs had 26 nbounds led
team. 15-.6 1ead .to' take a .39-33 lead by Williams wi.th 12 and turned the
headmg mto the final penod.
ball over nme Urnes.
But Fry .came off the bench and
"It was a tremendous defensive
nailed the two three pointers to spark effort," Marauder Coach Jeff Skinner
the fourth period comeback. Fraley said. '"I'm very happy with our effort,
added a pair of free throws to give and we are lookmg forward to the
Rock Hill a 53-48 win with seven new year."
seconds left.and ice the Redmen vicPraley had 18 points and nine

PPHS takes over top spot ~n
SEOAL after ·54-46
cage
win·
(
.

.

.

.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP St.tf Wrlt8r
·
.
In Saturday night's Southeas~em
Ohio Athletic League varsity boys'
basketball ·game at Point Pleasant
High School, the host Big Blacks got
double-diJit offense from three players en route to a 54-46 victory over

.

the River,Valley Raiders.
The Big Blacks (3-0 overall &amp; in
the SEOAL) saw River Valley forward/center Joey James sink a three·
· point shot to give his team a 3-2 lead
before the first two minutes had
expired. Then the hosts. sa~ senior
fotWard B.J. Buchanan nail a lead-

GRABS REBOUND - Point Plellunt'e Mike Stanley (21) plcke
off a rebound while Rlv. Valley's Richard Stephens (41) reaclt'
beU during s.tu~y 11lght'1 SEOAL contae1 on the Big
klllulldwaad. PPHS wan, 54-46, to lllke ovwr undisputed 11m:
In the confet ence with a perfect 3-0 record. .
:

=
.. Jor

changing three-pointer from the right
wing with 5:15 left in the opening
quarter to stan his club on a 10-Q-run.
River. Valley (2-6 &amp; 1-4}, /after
trailing by nine with about J'li'i2 min·
utes left in the first quaner, t htpped
away at Point Pleasant's lead with
James leading the way with six of his
club's last eight points in the frame.
When J!.iver Valley forward
Richard Stephens ·scored on a layup
with 6:57 left in the second quarter,
the Big Blacks put their three-point
attack to use to the tune of four treys
in seven tries in the frame. That and
senior guard Jeremy, Buskirk's II
points in the period helped them tal·ly a 15-pointlead at halftime.
River Valley's offensive aggtessiveness came into play in the third
quaner, when the Raiders' 6·for-14
showing from the field and James'
seven points in the frame helped them
trim the Big Blacks'lead to 12 by the
period's end.
Raiders challenae hosts
. River Valley went on a 15-2 run
that started in the third quarier's last
minute. James' II points in the rally
and a layup from Stephens (4:03 in
the fourth) set the stage for junior
guard Bryan DrummonJ's steal and
layup with 2:44 left to cut Point
Pleasant's lead to 46-44.
·
But Point .Pleasant got a threepoint play from senior forward/center Mark Oliver in lite form of a layup
and a free throw made necessary by
Drummond's second foul with I :37
left. The Big Blacks scoi'Cll five of the
last seven points that followed to
retain the.ir unbeaten status.
The shooters: Many of Oliver's
21 points came from 6-for-9 fieldgoal shooting that saw him hit three
out of four three-pointers. Buskirk
(17 points on 7-8 PGs) didn't miss·in
four tries inside the arc and made

three out of four from thtee-point
country. Michael Anderson, the Big
Blacks' 6-foot-6, 280-pound center,
got two-thirds of his 12 points on 4for-I 0 field-goal shooting.
James led all scorers with 27
points, most of which camefrom 11· for' 17 field-gool shooting. •
Reserve notes: The preceding
junior var.;ity affair saw Point Pleasant beat River Valley 67-46.
Jim!lly Hall 's 25-point show and
Doug Boyles' I 0-point effort paced
the· Little Blacks. The Raiders were
led by Brian Bradbury's 10 points.

rebou~ds
to pace ~ners. Crank
addeilll points and Jason Henderson

chipped in with 11 boards. Rock Hill
hit 19 of Slfrom the field including
three three pointen for 36%. The
Redmen connected on 12 of 18 from
the line for 67% and pulled down 34
rebounds and had II turnovers.
Rock Hill made it a clean sweep
win.ning the r.ese~e 'arne ~-46
behind B. J. McDome wtth 24 pomts.
Waylon McKinney led Meigs with 14
points.
Meigs will take the ne~t couple of
weeks off f~r the hohdays. The
Marauders w1ll host Rtver Valley on
Friday, January 3.

Meigs
15-9-JS-11=50
Rock Hill 1&amp;.11-6-20=53
MEIGS.Brad Davenport 0-1 ~3.
Robert Qualls 1-0- I =3, Brad Whll- ·
latch 10-1-0=23, Matt Williams 4-00-=8, Daniel Hannan 2-~. Ange-·
lo Rodriguez 0-0-0=0, Collin Roush
3-0-0=6, , Josh Witherell 0-J-0=3.
TOTALS 23-3-1-50
ROCK I_IILL-Eric Wilson 3-00=6, T. J. Dillow 0-1-1=4. Jeff Praley 7-0-4= 18, Randy Crank 2-07= II, Jason Henderson 3-0-0=6,
Drew Pry 1-2-0=8, Brent McCoy 00-0=0, Brad McFann 0-0-0=0.
TOTAL'S 19·3-12=53. ·

HURRY! ·HURY! .HURRY!

Bengals finish
y,ar at 8-8 after
31-24 victory

.CINCINNATI (AP) - The most
disappointed playoff team? Without
question it's the Indianapolis Colts.
The Colts blew a chance to clinch
home-field advantage fo( their firstround playoff game Sunday. A31-24
loss to the Cincinnati Btngals set the
Colts up to begin the playoffs where
they ended them last season: in Pittsburgh.
· "We're disappointed with the way
the season ended," quanerback Jim
Harbaugh said. "We would like to
have a home game. There were big
The future: The Raiders will be incentives for us to win today and we
idle until their Jan. 4 appointment at just couldn't pull' it off."
Rock Springs with the Meigs ,
The Colts (9-7) were all but
Marauders.
assured of a wild-card berth when .the
Ouartcrtmab
"
game started. They clinched it when
River Valley
. 11 -8-13-14=46
Buffalo beat Kansas ·City, although .
Point Pleasant
15-19-10-10=54
the players weren't sure what was
next when they walked off the field.
River Valley: James_S-3-212=27,
" "I came in here thinking we were '
Stephens 3-0-3/4=9, Drummond 2-0- out of it," saicf Aaron Bailey, who
0/0=4, Adams 1-0-010=2, Pitth 1-0- returned a kickoff 95 yards for a
0/0=2, Jakcson I,0-0/0=2. Totals: fourth-quarter touchdown. "When
16/Jii-31!1-S/6=46
coach told us we were in it, it
Total FG: 19-47 (40.4%)
brought a new life to everyone."
Rebounds: 21 (James 9)
Not much life. however. The Colts .
Assists: 5
were stiU lamenting t~e lost homeSteals: not kept
field advanJage as they undressed.
Thrnovers:" 4
"We kocw going in that there was
Fouls: 15
a very slinh:hancc we wouldn't be
in," receiver Marvin Harrison said.
.
. '
Point Pleasant: Oliver 3-3· "But we wanted to get home-field
6r7=2l , Buskirk 4-3-0/0=17, Ander- advantage. '
son 4-0-4/6;,12, Buchanan 0-1"Somehow, some way this team
0/0,3, Stanley 0-0-1/2= I. Totals: seems to get what we want, but not
11122-7/16-11/15=54
in the way we want it. We wanted to
Total FG: 18-38 (47.4%)
be in th' playoffs. We're in the playRebounds: 27 (Buskirk 8, Ander- offs."
son 6)
The Colts have not made back-toAssists: not kept
back playoff appearances since 1975Steals: not kept
77, when they were in Baltimore and
Thrnovers: I0
Art Modell's team was still in Cleve.Fouls: 6
land. Last year, they beat San Diego

-·-

-·-

"!.

FIRST • COM'E· FIRST ~ SERVED BASIS!

Sale Begins Dec. 26th at 9 a.m. Ends Dec. 31st, Sp.m.
LIVE REMOTE
10 I DEC. 26TH, 3 PM • 6 PM

f"\Gic.

and Kansas City on the road befo~
losing the. APC championship game
in Pittsburgh, where •Harbatlgh'~ last- ·
second desperation pass fell incompleje in the.end z0ne.
Their regular season.ended in a
similar way Sunday. Harbaugh's lastsecond desperation pass was intercepted at the 10-yard line, clinching
Cincinnati's best finish since 1990.
"Hopefully we can take this game
on into next seaspn," said Jeff Blake,
who won the game with a pair of
fourth-quarter touchdown passes.
"We'll come out next year firedup.n
The Bengals opened the season 16 under Dave Shula; but won seven
of their final nine under Bruce Coslet
to finish 8-8. Coslet has won a fouryear contract extension and revived a
city that went apathCtic during ShuIa's troubled tenure.
Asked how meaningful a break·
even record is, Coslet said, "Not
very, but under the ,circumstances
unbelievable." ·
'
The Bengals overcame .Jason
Belser,'s 21-yard interception return
for a touchdown and Bai.ley's 95-yard
kickoff return by staying onc .stcp
ahead of the Colts.
'
·
The teams traded identical scores
right uptotheclosing'minutes, when
the Colts had a . chance to match
Cincinnati's final touchdown. They
went for it on 4th-and-3 at · tlie
Cincinnati 19-yard line and came up ,
short. Harbaugh threw a pass to Hatrison, who caught the ball a yartl
short o( the first-down marker with
2:44to play.
.
. The Colts got the ball back at their
20-yard line with only 23 seconds left
and no timeouts. Harbaugh's last pass
was intercepted by Gerald Dixon.

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�Monday, December 23, 1996

•

Pqe10 • The Dally S1:lllnel

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

Southern jolts Panthers
58-56 for second cage win
The Southern Tomldoes pulled

I

•

MAYNARD SCORES • Sou1hem'e Jean Mllyr\,arcl (20) pute In
a leyup during .5aturday'a 58-56 non-lellq~o~e victory over Roll
Soutii4Hietem.

I

Farmers Bank will observe the
following hours on·
·Tuesday, December 24th
Pomeroy 8 am • 3 pm
Tuppers Plains 8 am - 3 pm
Galhpolis 8·am - 4 pm.
The Hours will be for the Drive-Thru

.

Don't forget our Jeanie located at our
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis locations Is open ·
. '7 days a week· 24 hours a day

flappy blr
9ioMays
'

Fa

(tnli(t/. ...
Farmen·Bank
8t SalllnQI Compo: IV

ROW
9:00·5:00

•

S.U.y"1 Collqe BuiLelball
Mojo&lt;S....,
8)' The APOCillltd Pnss

ATTENTION ALL
MEN!
You have now waited until the last day,
•
aga•n•
You shouldn't be this lucky! the perfect gift
for your Lady---and, everything is ori sale.
GUARANTEJ;D LOWEST PRICES
BEAUTIFUL DIAMONDS
/Jittlllllllll

115 Carat Round .•. Sale '279
11;! Carat Round ... Sale '599
1 Carat Round ... Sale. '1999

EAST
Dclaw.e 71, Widener !18
Fordham 70. HofSIJl63
Hwvard 69, Vennont 61
North Carvllna 69, Princeton60
Penn S1. 76. Bw:knell 59

Saturday's boys scores
Ohio High School Boy1 Basketball
By The As1odated Preu
.
Saturday's Results
Alexander 68, Hemlock Miller J1
Arnanda-Ciearcreek 67, Berne Union 62
Aullintown-filch 43, Campbell Memorial38
AVOII 7'5, Lutheran W. 70

, Siena 95, Marill62

Stanford 83, Seton Hall 81. OT
Syracu~e 78. Colslte 57
West VirJini• 76, Vi!Jinia Teth 65

SOUTH

O.ic too. Anny 38

.

Georae Muon 107, Cal Poly·SW 86

Louisiana Teth 73, New Orleans 63
Masuc::huacn•-47, N.C,-Wilmington 46
Tennessee 78. Miami 65

MIDWEST
Dayton 105, Morehead St 75 ·
Indiana St. 67, Loyola, Ul. 59
M.lq.,.He.86, Lo Sillell

' SOUTHWEST

i

Clclruon 76, Tellu A&amp;.M 64
North Tuas 64, Rice 62. OT

FAR WEST

NE lllioois 86, Arizona St. 19
Washington St 9S. San Jose St. 54
TOURNAMENTS
J Holiday Classic
.
Ch&amp;~~~iHonshlp
lowil St. 59. Tuu-El Puo 48
Third Place
Nevada 68. E. Tenncs&amp;« St. 49

NFL results .

'
Saturday'• Gamet

Ntw &amp;'!gland 23, New York Oianll 22
St. Louis 14, New Orleans 13
S•nd•J't Gamet
Philadelphia 29, Arizona 19
Jacbonville 19, Atlanta 17
Tampa Bay 34. Chicaao 19
Houston 24. Baltimore 21
Cindnnati 3l,lndianapolis 24
Buffalo 20. Kan'su City 9
Miami 3l .. NewYorkJeu: 28
Green Bay 38, Minnesota 10
Carolina 18. Pinlbur&amp;h 14
Washlngmn 37, Daile 10

AvOn Lake 63, A.mhem S8
Beachwood !59, Chagrin Falls !56
. Bellaire 46, St. Clainvi\le ,43
.
Bellaire St. John 's 49, Weirton (W.Va.) Mlldon·
na44
,
Bencdie1inc 102, Holy Name 41 ·
Belley 67, Ulica 46
Big Walnut69, Washina;loll C.H. 60
Buckeye Centril 56. Western Reset'\'C,43
Buckeye Tmil67, Cadiz .SO
Buckeye Vall. 73, Centerbura; !51
Canton Heritage 64, Southern Local 4.5
Canton McKinley 63. Cle. St Ianatiu1 43
~ape Coral (f1a .) Mariner 80, Cin. Woodward 69
Cardington 8S, Col. Academy !56
Cin. Anderson 70, Cin. McNicholu 69
Cin. Coun1ry Day 83. Aorida Naple1 Commvniry Seh~l. Aa. ll
Cin. Rog~ Bacon 74. Cin. Nonhwm 61
· Cin. Taft 70, Belpre 60
Claymon162. Tuscarawas Vall. !iS
Clayton Northmonl 88, Tecumseh 63
Cle. Heighu 92, Vot.ings." Rayen 55
Clearyiew 82. J,..orain Cah. 56
Clvde 79, Sr. Mlll')' 's·62

ALBRIGHT DRIVES - Eastern's Anthony Albright (24) drivel
toward the basket during Eestern's game with Waterford S.turday night. The Eegles won 74-59. ·

."OmO

A CLEAN GETAWAY"
'
.
6th GRADE POSTER CONTEST

DISTRICT WINNERS:

EASTERN-

MEIGSSOLITHERN-

EASTERN LOCAL
•CHESTER
Isl. Brandon Werry
. 2nd Stacy Wood
RIVERVIEW
1st Brittany Tolliver
2nd Krystal Baker
3rd Jennifer Chadwell
TUPPERS PLAINS
lsi Clayton Conklin
2nd Nichol Honaker
3rd
Roberts
SOUTHERN LOCAL
PORTLAND
1ST Tiffany Keys

,.;,,.,.;,~! .~

I

r.w ......

RUTL"ND
Ist Melissa Cremeans
2nd Allison Williamson
3rd Nicki Wines

HARRISONVILLE
Ist Jamie Hayes
. 2nd Wesley Call
3rd Ben Bookman

· SALEM CENTER
Ist Clenton Faulk
2nd Rachel Argabright
3rd Daniel Lal!lberl

2nd Jessica Burris

POMEROY (Davis)
1st Peler Jones
2nd Jassiline Carter
3rd Andrea Burdette

SALISBURY
1st Meghan Haynes
2nd Ashley Fields
3rd Timmy Hubbard

COlJNTY
Union An. &amp; SL Rt. 7 Pbone 9!12-6360

TONIGHT SHOP UNTIL MIDNIGHT
.

.

115 Carat T. W., ...... Sale '99
112 Carat T. W ...... Sale '299

Happy Holiday~!

II
J!
I

!

•

YE.! SAVE! SAVE!
AN ADDITIONAL
10% oH .-,. day low prices ·
from ·11 pm to MidniBht

•
t
•'

.

•

:fine Jewe(ry

:.SaH tM~~t30% •to 80% st-,~~~

MIDDLEPORT DE.PART E.NT STORE

YLcqUisitions · .
fiREE PARKING
FREE GIFT WRAPPING

11 IIIII·StrHt
Mlddllport, Oh.

On The "T•

992·3148

Middleport, Ohio

li:illiwM-.._.I*il*'tj*illitiltiiitt~aitt:t._,l._&amp;~u&amp;..-~•~•. .il••w¥Ada'8a~w~••&amp;a..-&amp;a«&amp;~•:d

en.aeo

'

POMEROY (Hubbard)
I sl Trenton Randolph
2nd Wi II Bush
3rd Straud Little

FRANTIC SANTA SHOPPING SPRE

•

.

Salem Center
Syracuse ·

J);,,,/111111 lllnirt•rMII'\' H1111tf~

1iiO Carat Round ... Sale '99
114 Carat Round .•• Sale '299
1/2. Carat Round •• ~Sale '599

'

I

Thppers Plains

BRADBURY (McCall)
lst Alicia Werry
2nd Nikki Phillips
3rd Natasha Tackett

1st Mindy Chancey
2nd Andy Mora
3rd
Larsen

I

P"""":w&gt;~r&amp;n~nJRS~!!lf"""",.~'*""""~'*'*4"~"""~"~~""~'W'~'i'~~-~ l

1110 Carat T.W...... Sale '69
1/4 Carat T. W...... Sale '1 79
112 Carat
Sale '499

I Jit~mo111l l't·tuf,,h

1151 SICond Ave.

Clayton ConklinCienton FaulkMill(ly Chancey-

BRADBURY (Dunn)
.1st Brandy Shea ·
2nd Brook Bryan
3rd Jessica Hooten

fQEE Holiday Gift Wrap

LOCATIONS:

Eastern plays Wahama Friday.
S~ore by quarten:
Waterford II 16 I 3 19=~9
Eastern
16 II 24 23=74
Box score:
Waterford ( 59)
Mike Wright 4- 1-3/4=14, Aaron
Powers 0-1-0=3, Tyson Gillis ).
212=4. Nate Long 9-S/10..23, Jeremy
Miller 7- 112= 15, Brian Miller 0-0-0.
Totals 21-2-(tl-18)=59.
· · Eastern (74)
Eric Dillard S-1-617=19, Josh Casto . 4-0-4/6= 12, Daniel Otto 6-0213= 14, Corey Yonker 2-0=4, Jeremy
Kehl 1-0..2. Steve Durst 8-2-1/1=23.
Non-scorers: Adam McDaniel. Rick
Hollon, Robert Harris, Andy Vance.
Totals 26-3-(13-17)=74.

Seattle 28, Oakland 21
San Diego 16, Denver 10
Monda)"s Game
Detroit M San Francisco. 9 p.m.
End Rt1vl1r Stasop

ing off si•. and si• assists, lwo by
Box scores:
Jeremy Wolfe.
.
HERJTAGE(45) ·Garber, 5-1-5In the championship game. Mcyr · 8-18; Jarrell, 1-0-0-0-2; King, 5-0-1was nine for 15 from the field as he 4-11; Garber, 2-0-1-4-5; Haynes, !scored a career-high 25 points for the 0-0-0-2; Carte. 0-1-4-6· 7. TOTALS
winners. Lanier added 24, Jeremy 14-2-11-22-45.
Wolfe II land Judd Newbold 10.
OVCS (79) · Staley, 3-0-0-0-6;
. Ray Robinson and Brad Dimit Wanders, 0-1-0-0-3; Nev.:bold, 3-0-2each had 23 for the losers,
2-8; Burnette. 2-0-0-0-4; Lanier. 2-1Parkersburg led 18-14 after one 1-1-S; Hall, 5-1-2"2-15; Sizemore.2period. OVCS rallied to take a ~9-33 4-0-0-16; Wolfe, 5-0-3-6-13; Meyr,
halftime lead. The Defenders led 58- 3-o:o-0-6. TOTALS 25-7-8-11-79.
51 going into the final stanza.
Championship game
The Defenders canned 2.1 of 52
PARKERSBURG CHRISTIAN
field goal attempts, and hit two of 15 (85) - Penn, 0-0-0-0-0; Bennett, 0-0·
lhree-pointers. The winners had 43 • 0-0-0; Workman, 2-0-0-0-4; Ttllman,
rebounds, 14 by Meyr and 11 by 1-0-2-4-4; Dtmtt, 3-3-8·11-23; Dou·
Wolfe. Ohio Valley dished out 16 glas,7-0-4-4-18; Rogers, 4·1-2-2-13;
assists. with Wolfe and Lanier each Robtnson, 5-4-1:4-23. TOTALS 22handing out five. The Gallians had 8·17·27-85.
.
.
nine steals, two each by Wolfe and
OVCS (88) - Staley. .l-0-2-2-4,
Lanier. and committed 23 turnovers. Newbold, 4-0-2-4-10; Lamer, 4-0-16. Ne~t OVCS cage contest is Fri- 20-24; Hall, 1-1-1-2-6; Stzemore, 1day, Jan. 3, at home againsl Grace 1-3-4-8; Wolfe, 1-0-9- 13-11; Meyr,
.
9-0-7-12-25
Ch . I.
ns tan.
TQTALS 21-2-40.57-~ . .

The Ohio·Valley Christian School
Defenders won a pair of hardwo!&gt;d
contests and a championship over the
weekend to improve their season
tecord to 4-2 on the season.
Friday, the Defenders rolled over
Herilage of Ravenswood 79-45. Sat. urday, the Oallians edged Parkersburg Christian, 88-85. to win the
OVCS Invitational.
, · In Friday's game, the Defenders
were · led by · Dan Sizemore's 16
markers. Micah Lanier added 15 and
Jeremy Wolfe i 3. Bo Pollard did n01
play, due 'lo an injury.
Gallipolis led 24-4, 41 -18 and 58"
31 at the quanennarks.
Grant Garber led lhe losers with
l-8. Jeremy King added II .
The Defenders hit 25 of 40 two
pointers and were seven for seven at
the three-point line . The winners had
i3 steals, eight by 6-3 sophomore forward Andy Meyr, 31 rebounds, with
.. Meyr' and Chris Burnette each pick-

racked up ten hard-fought points in
the final round lo lead Easlem to a
74-59 tally.
Eastern hit 26-46 two's, 3-11
three's, and was 13-17 at the line,
while grabbing 28 rebounds (Otto 9).
Eastern had eight steals, 15 tut;novers,
12 assists .(Dillard 9). and 13 fouls.
Waterford was 23-52 overall, 2- I 3
on three's, and was I 1-18 at the line
wilh 25 rebounds (Long 9, Miller 8).
Walerford had five assists. seven
steals (Long 6); two blocks, eight
turnovers; and 20 fouls .
Waterford won the reserve game
49-40 led by Casey Lang with 12 and
Luke Crock with II . For Easlern
Jeremy Casto and Joe Dillon each
had eight, Adam Sanders had seven,
and Eric Smith seven.

Scoreboard

OVCS captures /n.1fitational
crown with 88-85 court win

OPEN TUESDAY··,

448 2842

•

but Long also hit a pair of safeties as
well as grabbing a steal and racing
coast to coast for a 27-27 tie at the
intennission.
Eastern struggled to crack the
Waterford zone. but also had Durst on
the bench in foul trouble. The second half was a different story as Steve'
Durst lurned zone buster and led
Eastern to a 51-40 ad vantage as a
result of a 24-13 scoring offset.
Durst had ten points in the frame,
while Daniel Otto added si• more and
made a spectacular pass to .Corey
Yonker under the buckelto spark the
Eagles.
Durst was so hot in the second half
that it appeared his passes even sizzled the nets. The junior sharpshooter built his confidence and

•

OIIApolta, Ohio
l

· ·FOOTBALL
slalom in Crans Montana, Switzer. ST. LOUIS (AP} - Rich Brooks land.
was fired Sunday as coach of the st: BOXING
Louis Rams, a day after the team ral·
UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) lied to beat New Orleans.
South Africa's Philip Holiday
.Brooks, who had two years left pn retained his IBF lightweight title
a four-year contract that will pay him with a unanimous 12-round decision
approximately $600,000 a year, led over Ivan Robinson on · Saturday
the Rams to a 6-10 record this year night. Holiday improved to 30-0
after going 7-9 \fl his first season with with his fifth title defense.
the ll:am.
LAS
VEGAS
(AP)
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) ·Venezuela's Antonio Cenneno
- Dan Reeves' four-year tenure retained his WBA junior ..featherwith · the New ·York · Gianis was weight title Saturday nighl. out. ~&gt;•peeled to end t!)day ·after ~ meet- · pointing Japan's Yuichi Kasai iQ a 12. ing with management. · ·
round unanimous decision. C.:nneno
.
Reeves, who has a year.left on a improved to 26-l.
,.
five-year, $5 million cpntract, direct-. GOLF
ed the Giants to a 6·10 mark this seaLA QUINTA, Calif. (AP)- Hale ·
son and a 31 -33 overall record.
Irwin and actor Sean Connel')' shot a
l'iKIING
10-under-par 62 on Saturday for a
ALTA BADIA, Italy (AP) four-stroke victory in the Lexus Chal~IIchael Von Gruenigen led a 1-2 lenge.
Swiss finish in in the giant slalpm
Irwin, who earned $180,000, comSunqay for his first World Cup vic- bined with Connery for a tournamentlory of. the season.
record 21-under 123 total. Lee TreviVon Gruenigen, the defending . no,Kevin Costner, Chi Chi
World Cup giant slalom champion; Rodriguez-Roben Wuhl 'and John
beal teammate Steve Locher by 0.77 Brodie-Ken·Griffey Jr. tied for sec-,
secoqds. On-Saturday, Italy's Kiistian ond.
Ohedina won a downhill at Val Gar- SPEEDSKATING
dena.
MILWAUKEE (AP) ...:.. Kirstin
MORZINE. France (AP) Holum, a 16-year-old from WaukeWarm temperatures and poor snow sha. Wis .. won the 1,500- and 5,000conditions forced postponement of a meter races Sunday to take the
women's World Cup giant slalom women's U.S. Allround ChampiSundily, wiping out the fourth race in onship. She won the 3,0()() on Saturthe past ·1'0 days. On Saturday, New day.
Zealand's Claudia Riegler won a

UNTIL 10:00

T.,....

Nate Long led the Waterford
charge early in the game and Walerford blitzed to a 9-2 advantage.
Long had si&lt; points in·the shoot-out
and Aaron Powers hit a three as Eastem's Corey Yonker was the only one
thai could buy a bucket in the first
five minules of the game. Eastern
went I -13 early in the game to fight .
off a basket rim covered with glass.
Eastern recovered the last three
minutes. however, to lead 14-13 at
the end of the first quarter. Eastern
chalked up a 19-13 lead in the second
frame on free throws from Dillard
and Casto, but Long and Wright got
hot for the Wildcats and gave WHS
a 22-21 advantage. Dillard drained
a couple goals going down the stretch
and c .asto hit a pair of free throws,

Weekend sports briefs ·,

'

Mullen, Musser

'

. . Durst led the climb up the ladder
· wtth a stellar 23'point effon. After
having sat out all of the second quar,ter and much of the first with three
fouls, Durst had just three points at
the half, but went on a shooting spree

OPEN .TONIGHT

Downing, Childs,

'

'4.

•

Wishing You
Peace And Jov.
This Holidav Season
And Throughout
The l\ew Year.

',.•

Sparked by 20 points in the second half from Stevie Durs~ the Eastem Eagles climbed another rung up
the vtctory ladder Saturday nighl by
defeating non-league Waterford 71j..
59 in a basketball contest at Eastern.
A 47-poinl romp in the second half
opened up a 27-"1.7 tie at the half. The
Eagles are now 5-2 overall and 3-2 in
;the Tri'Yalley Conference Hocking
l)ivision, while Waterford drops to 1-

LATE SHOPPER'S SERVICE

Cage standings

in the second half that amassed 23
points overall. The sharp-shooting
junior hit I 0-13 from the field overall and was perfect at lhe line.
Eric Dillard again turned in another quality perfonnance and carried
Eastern through the first half offensive struggle with 12 first half points
and 19 overall. Dillard ran the Eastern offense to perfection in the second half and posted a nine-assiSI
effon. Daniel Otto also had a good
night with 14 points and a game-high
nine rebounds, while .Josh .Casto
fought off the flu for twelve points,
while Corey Yonker added four and
Jeremy Kehltwo.
·
Waterford was led by Nate Long
with 23 points, while Jeremy Miller
added IS and Mike Wright14.

Sentinel Correepondent

RUNNING
·ouT!!!

7, N rris 5); I turnovers, and 17
der had nine for Ross.
18-29 on two's and
In the last round Evans and Adam fouls. os
4-14
on
three's,
was
8-12 at the line
Roush dominated the offense, but
and
bad
20
rebounds
(DIUtcue 9). .
Barbie again picked up the hot-hand
Ross
had
seven
steals,
19 turnovers,
for the Panthers. Barbie canned eight
points in the last frame and Dancue' and 16 fouls.
Southern won the reserve game
going 4-6 at the line did the same,
48-45
led by Jason Allen wilh 22
however, Southern escaped with the
points,
whle Russell Reiber added
58-56 triumph.
·
nine
and
Tr'oy Hoback seven. Ross
· Soutliem hit20-51 overall, hilling
3-9 three's and was 8-13 at the line was led by Umphries with 15.
with 24 rebounds (Evans 6, Maynard · Score by quarters: ·
. Southern 14 ' to 17 17=58
6). Southern had 19 steals (Maynard
Ross
18 7 13 18=56'
Southem {58)
Adam Roush 5-0=10, Ryan Norris 2-3/4= II, Greg McKinney 0-0-0, .
Jamie Evans 6-3-0/1=22, Jesse May- .
nard 1-4/4=6, Michael Ash 0-0-0, Joe
1\thens 50 River Valley 45
1186-17AHgemee
Kirby
0-0/2=0, Tyson Buckley 2TMm
W LTP OP Point Pleasant 66 Warren Local 53
281
Logan
73
Jackson
58
1/2=5.
Totals 18-3-(8-13)=58.
Chesapeake .......... 6 0 401
243
Meigs
59
Wellston
49
Wheelersburg ........ 4 0 322
Ross Southeastern (56)
Point Plea&amp;ant.. .....3 0 173 153 Chesapeake n Vinton County 63
Scott Powell 0-0-0, Sieve Estep 2Wa'mln LOCill ... ,.....6 1 4;39 282 Ironton 56 Portsmouth 55
1-0=7, Tyler Barbie 8-2- 1/1=23, Josh
Eastem ...... :.........:.4 2 · ~ 378 tiunlinglon St. Joe 6.1 Fairland 51
Bill
0-1-0=3, Greg Schrander 3G~ld ..............4
3 377 339 Alexander 62 Southern 49 ·
362
MNier
66
Eastern
57
.
3/4=9,
J. Baker 0-0-0, John Dancue·
J~ ................. 4
3 445
336
South
Gama.
n
Hannan
49
.
5-417=14. Totals 18-4-(8-12)=56.
Alh- ................. ..4 3 348
SEOALreeerve acorat:
Pol18m0Uih ............3 3 382 386
L911M ....................3 3 375 2116 Gallipolis 63 Marietta 45
Marietta .................3 4 393 414 _ River Valley 53 Athens 45 •
Meigs .....................3 5 321 459 Warren Local 69 Point Pleasant 66
Fairland .................2 3 308 309 Jackson 52 Logan 51
Saturday's reauits:
South Gallla ...........2 4 342 332
Fairland 57 Gallipolis 53 · '
· Southem ................2 5 396 421
River Valley ........... 2 6 390 406 Rock Hill 53 Meigs 50
Gallipolls ................ 1 4 255 285 Point Pleasant 54 River VAlley 46
•
Jackson 74 Minford 55
SEOALVARSITY
TEAM
WLPOP Greenfield 64 Huntington 53
Point Pleaaaht .......3 · .0 173 153 Southern 58 Ross-SE 56
. Warren LOCill..,......3 1 ~ 208 Eastern 74 Waterford 58
SEOAL reHnte score:
Alhe,. ............... :... 3 1 188 183
Marietta .;.... _.........2 .2 238 228 Point Pleasant 67 River Valley 46
Frldlly'a games:
Logan .................... 2 · 2 229 248 .
Gallipolis ................ 1 2 188 179 ~alljpoljs at Greenfield
River Valey ........... 1 4 221 303 Southern at Chesapeake
Jackson .................0 3 129 153 Portsmouth vs. Huntington Ross In
Tocal•
15 151655 1655 L~n Elm Invitational
/
Your partnrrin prot«tlfm
Potnt Pleasant ln·Cabel Tournament
SEOAL RESERVES
Eastern
at
Wahama
TEAM
WLPOP
Jackson al Oak Hill
MarieHa .................3 1 217 201
Saturday's gamea:
wa~.........3 1 258 222
Point
1... .... 2 1 199 179 Gallipolis al Jackson
Galllpolls ................ 2 1 160 158 Logan at Athens
River Valey ...........2 3 232 280 Warren Local at Marietta
Jacks911 :................ 1 2 128 133 P1. Pleasant in Cabal Toumament
Logan .................... 1 3 207 215 Fairland at Wheelersburg
III E. Sec:ond St., Pomeroy
Alhens .. :................ 1 3 202 216 Greenfield at Adena
15 151803 1803 Portsmouth vs. Logan Elm-Miller .
992-3381
winner
Frldlly'• reeulta:
Gallipolis 66 Marietta 52

I

By SCOTT WOLFE,

0

season.
Southern put six men in the scoring column and three in double figures, led by senior swing man Jamie
Evans who neaed 22 points ofverall
and had six rebounds. Evans was 56 from the field in the second half.
Ryan Norris added eleven, Adam
Rousb ten, Jesse Maynard six points
and six rebounds, Tyson Buckley
five, and Billy Sheppard four.
Ross was led by Tyler Barbie with
a game-high 23 points, Job Dancue·
with 14, Greg Schrander nine, Steve
Estep seven, and 'osh Bill three.
Like a typical Southern-Ross
ma~-up the game was close from
stan to finish. One noticeable difference along the sideline was the .
absence of veteran coach Larry Jordan, who this year moved on to
Waverly · after l~ing Ross to the
state on three different occasions.
Ross is now coached by Harry Snuttice. '
Ryan Norris and Steve Estep
exchanged buckets to stan the game,
· as Ross led 3-2to ignite a game-long
fire that ended with the visitors leading 18-14 after e the first period.
Evans had two of his three pointers
in the first frame." going 2-2 before
colling off to 2-S at the half.
·
The second cantp 'took a i:almer,
more \lelibefate pace as Southern
. took more conlrOI, butstilllrailed 2524 at the end of the first half. Ross's
D:mcue• picked up his third foul in
the second canto and had to set out
much of the l'nu!.e. Barbie had 15 at
the half for Ross, while Ev!lfls had
nine for Southern's balanced attack.
· Southern got some tireatlling room ·
in the third period by taking a 41-38
command. Evans had seven and Norris four in the attack, while Schran-

Eastern Eagles roll past Waterford for fifth cage victory

Jlcquisitions !fine Jewefry;
ooo oo
TIME .IS

off an ucitint 58-56 non-legue bas- ·
k~ball triumph over the RossSouiheatem Panthers Saturday night
in Charles W. Hayman gymnasium in
Racine. Southern is now 2-4 on the

The Dally $entlnel • Page 11

Pomeroy • ,Middleport. Ohio

••

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

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••

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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

~-nn

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 23, 1998

'

gets major complaints on her.major religions colu_mn

exposing the corruption that had
infected the church of his day. However, I do not follow Luther. I follow
Christ -- just like Catholics and
199, , Lol AlllfCiea
Protestants of all denominations. -TIIMt S)'Mitllt: lollld ~
liOr:IS~.
Christian First in Minnesola
Dear Christian: You are absolutely right. Many readers wrote to set
ANN LANDERS
me straight, and I wish to thank
Dear Ann Landers: Yout column them all. Here's more:
immajor religions was interesting,
From Sun City, Ariz. : Judaism,
but as a Christian, I'm troubled by Christianity, Islam. Hinduism and
lhe implication !hat Roman Catholi- Buddhism are religions. Roman
Cism was founded by Jesus Christ, Calholic, Eastern Orthodox, LutherlNhile all other Christian denomina- an, Anglican and all the others you
tions were founded by ordinary men. mentioned are denominations of the
. Jesus Christ founded Christianity, Christian religion. Jesus himself
hot Catholicism. As a Lutheran, I founded no specific church. He
feSJ&gt;ect Martin Luther's courage in established a faith.

Ann
Landers

Sarasota. Fla.: Anglicanism was
not founded by Henry VIU. The
Church of England simply broke
with the Church of Rome, and it had
more to do with the circumstances
of the lime than Henry VIII's desire
for an annulment.
Aurora, Neb.: You left out the
oldest and perhaps purist of all religions -- Wicca. The religion was
dedicated to tlie use of the healing
arts. Wicca is the religion of witches,
who were considered good people
who helped others.
· Greensboro. N.C .: I do not consider Hinduism a religion. It is a
term applied to those living on the
other side of the Sind River, relative
to the Muslims. A beller term to use

would be Vedantism.
Minneapolis: All God's messengers, including Mohammed, Jesus.
Moses and Abraham, preached
Islam, which means total submission
and devotion to God. What distinguishes Mohammed's mission is the
revelation of the holy Koran.
Weatherford. Tc.as: You didn't
mention our faith, Christadelphian.
We believe that the kingdom of God
will be re-es.tablished in Zion, with
Jesus as the ruler of the Earth.
Owensboro, Ky.: Why didn't you
mention the Christian Church, also
called the Disciples of Christ?
Edmonton, Alberta: You should
have added that Zoroasterianism
was founded in Persia centuries ago

St. Louis Park, Minn.: You forgot
and Jainism split from Hinc1uism
the
religions of native Americans,
about 500 B.C. in India. You also
didn't mention the Sikh religion or Africans, Australians and Asians,
Shintoism. And please don't forget not to mention followers of Norse
the Rastafarians.
'
gods and Celtic deities.
Hartford, Conn: If I'm not misOcala, Fla.: You didn 'I mention
taken,
all these religions and denom•
the Seventh Day Adventists. We 've
inations believ~ in the same God,
been around a long time.
Palatine, Ill.: I would have been which is fascinating when you coninterested to know when the Baha' i sider the unrest in Northern rreland,
faith was founded and by whom. Israel, Bosnia, et~ . Let us all pmy
that we can put aside our petty difYou skipped that one.
Cottonwood. Calif.: You neglect- ferences.
ed to 11dd the "peace" churches. If
Send questions to Ann, Landen,
you are Amish, your church began in
the 17th century and is an offshoot Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
of the Mennonites. The Mennonites tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
started in the Netherlands in 1520. Calif. 90045
And the Quakers began in 1650.

Christmas Day has an extra special significance for Oscar and
Zelda Weber, Long Bottom residents. Yes, they will he quietly
marking their 71st wedding
anniversary this Wednesday.
Oscar will be 92 on January 31.
fie is confined to bed, wheelchai(
•nd a special chair every day. He
l:omnients that he doubts if people
.;ea_uze just how old he is.
; Zelda is a young 88 and still
manages to keep the Weber home
going for them and provides needed
care for Oscar.
Oscar and Zelda, such well
·known residents, probably would
.appreciate your congratulatory message on their ann.iversary and 71
years is certainly a ·long time
accomplishment for the couple. The
address is Route 248, Long Bou,am, .
Ohio 45743.

l

The Meigs County 4-H Committee is sponsoring what it hopes will .
be the first annual Meigs County 4-·
H Snowball Dance for all4-H members 81\d their guests of all ages on
Saturday, Dec. I 8, in the cafeteria of
Meigs High School.
The action stllrts at 7 and goes to
10 p.m. with Roekin' Reggie serving as d.j. 'lpere will be door priies
and admission is one of the follow.irg: a two liter b,ottle of pop, a
~ozen cookies, or a·bag of snacks.
I

-·-----·

I'Mallie Klein Sprouse Ball will observe her 80th birthday on Dec.
:19. Friends and relatives are holding a card shower and hope you'll
narticipate. The address is 31737
l'liland Road, Pomeroy. You can call
Mallie at 992-3403.
Thanks to Fac Reibel Craig and
Marilyn ·Wolfe for coming up with
the lyrics to Irving Berlin's, "Oh.
How I Hate to Get Up in the Morn ing" for Joe Gloeckner, Pomeroy
music buff, who was seeking the
words to the World War I tune.
There's always someone out there to
help with these things.

j

News policy .

DR. GOTT

Is drug for eye disease linked to painful joints?

PETER

.

Company, Francis Florist, Pomeroy Flower
Shop, Adam Shank, Ryan Pratt, · Michael
Stacy, George Wright
Thank You--Wesley Thoene

In case I don't get back to you
before Wednesday, let me wish you .
the happiest Christmas ever. I ho~
it's fantastic for you. And it'll be .
even betrer if you keep smiling.
lf)t I#Jwlr_ ,

1

aAIIOD. '

GOTT,M.D·.

You probably have a herpes
infection. There arc several reasons
why the Zovirax may not have
helped you; perhaps you were given
too little too late, for example.
To begin with, you should have a
virus culture of one of tho bi'istcrs or
ulcers when it first appears. Your
physician can order the test. Then,
depending on the result of the culture, the doctor can prescribe appropriate therapy, such as Famvir,
another anti -viral drug. The medicine (in pill forni ) will usually abort

an attack of sores if it is taken early
enough (at the first sign of infection). Ask your family physician to
supervise and coordinate your therapy.
Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN. ·

NOTICE

'

fJfumk§ anti fiave a Merry Cliristm4s

'

tNewHomes
•Garages.
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Attorney William Safranek
(614)

592-5025

ESTIMATEE.S

.

985 4473
7/Wtln

CHRISTIW TREES

•s·••o
hrwla

..

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY

CHRISTMAS TREES •
BRADFORD'S

•

at

.

New Shipment
Justin time lor Chrislmas.
IWashers.............................. $297
Oryers ....................... ........... $267
Dishwashers ........................ $297
Ranges ................................ $297
RefrigeratorS ................. ,...... $4n

IVYDALE

ANGELS
,
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS. SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS. QUILT RACKS, PAINTED.
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
'
LIVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETIIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
2 Mille North of Sllvo.r Bridge on SR 7
1~ M.f; 1-5 Sunday
Phone 446-4530

Cut Your Own
Freah Cut/Uve
Any Scotch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
AI.· 33to Darwin, East on At. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm', Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
Nov. 29th thru Dec. 24th

from

.

.:· . Manley's Recycle.Center .•. .·.

· liA1~~--~·~•~•· :;rfilatli*llillil
\

UDIOCOmGL

Pick up cln 111&lt;t1
.....-.. blltllll'lae,
many 111111111 &amp;
motor bloctll.

C...Tndtl
(laiiiiMtriCi
llrplal••'"leab
lllllplln

.........................._.....,
'
GRUESER'S·
HOBBYLAND BodyGARAGE
• tnrCk
work, cer,
. SUPII SllECTIOII '
PIBtkiWelt
1'1'111...·1'rlllll•·wB

I

PractDrltlh, Olt
._.
... .....,,..

.. truck palrtlng,

Easlllltl......,wv
Oltle ........ 7 ....

1·100.776.0527

611 W11t 1/2 mile
992-6073

10 AMTO I PM HILl
SUNDl'IS I PM fO 6 PM

minor mechlnlcltf
repair.
Tune-upa, Oil Change,
wax, Butnna
: Long St., Rutland, Oh.
~ 742-2935, Ask fcir Kip ;

.

RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST 602
EVERY SUNDAY

RUTLAND, OHIO
614-742-2656
Briar Proof
Hunting Clothes

Coats

•••
Vests
Chaps

~PPLIANC;ES
Open Sundaya 1 to 5
until Christmas
412 SR.RT. 7 446·8051

Public NoUce
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Purchau of School Buolor
Eootern Local Board Of
Education
Saalod propooalo will be
roc•lvod by the Boord of
Educlllon of th• eott•rn
l.ocal School Dlitrlct of
RHdtvllle, Ohio, by 12:00
Noon.on JanuiiJ 3; and at
that time opened by the
Treoturer of oald Board ao
provided by low for (1) 71·
72 poooenger school but
occordlng to opeclftcatlono
oluld board of education.
Speclllcatlont and
lnatrucUons to blcldero may
be obtained at tho oftloe or
tho T,_unr, Eaatern High
School building.
A.certified check perobte
to the Treaourer o the
above Board · of Education
or a aatlalactory bid bond
executed by the bidder ond
the ourety company In an
omount equ•l to live per:
cent of the bid ohatt be
•ubmltled whh uch bid.

Riggs Christmas Trees

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

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

· Sl Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall.and Regular 8'thru 36'
_ 4" S&amp;D · pe~. ·solid pipe
·
4' &amp;6' Rex pipe
4" &amp;6". Sch 35 pipe
'/,' &amp; '/.' C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/,'thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
Public Notice
'/." &amp; 1" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
•1: U.l. approved Condu"
·
Said Board of Educlllon 8" Graveless Leach pipe
l'lllefYH the right to waive
Gas pipe 1" thru 2" ·fittings · Regulators- Rise!$
lnformalltleo to accept or Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp;Flex fittings &amp;Water fittings

r.lectand
any
all or parta of
any
alland
blda.
No bid• may be
withdrawn tor at Juat thirty
(30) days alter the
•chedulacl ctoalng time lor
,....lpt of blda.
Board of Education of
Eastern Local School
Dlotrlct
Eloloe Bo•ton
Treaourar of Ea-n Local
Schools
R-.vms, ~ru
(12) 2, 9, 16, 23 4 tc
· 'Public Notice
PUBUC NOnCE
Tho
Educ•tlon
Mon•a•m•nt lnformotton ·
Syotom (EMIS) Educltlon•l
Sorvlc• C•nt•r profile lor
llocol year 1191 for th• .
Molgo County EducoUon•l
Strvlco Cantor witt bo

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

~F~u:ll;ll~ne~o~I~,C~is~te~m~,~S~e~pt:ic:&amp;~W~at:e:r•:to:ra:g:e:t~an=ks===~
Christmas Trees '
We have an excellent
oelectlon of beautifully
aheared trees up to 14 ft.
Prlcea $10.$20. Cell lor
wholeaale prlcea.
Landscape Stock
(Plant alttr Chrlatmu)
Spruce and White Pine
$6 ft.

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sat.'a a Sun.'a till ChrioSt At. 325, Danville, Oh.
Ph. 742-3149 or 1182·72is
, ovalloblo to tho public eo of
Jonu•ry 7, 1197. Thlo profile
lncludu dot• on otud•nt
domogr•phlco, itoll
demogrophlct, financial
r•aource•,
and
oxpondlturu. Anyone m•y
obt•tn.• copy ollhlo protlle
by Inquiring ot th• Molgo

'BIN.· G'S
AUTO

,

'·

REPAIR, ..

1
\

1 31801 Amberger Rd.
;
Off Forest Run

949,057 .

MIKE BING

Dog Collin
leatiStnps
H-. Tags '
lltllllttg Ugllts

Ooors Open 4:30.
Geme slllrta 8:45.
Pllr out I• ..cording to
number of ploly.,., ·

Under new mlniiOIIMnL

..... . ltlts ,.,..,;

Public w.tco....

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
NOw Open For ·
Christmas Season.
6. 1/2' Poinsettias (6
colors) ................ $3-$5
Poinsettia
Baskets .. $7.95-$17.9(i
Chrislmas Cactus
.. ... ........ $1 .75 or 21$3
Cut Trees........ $8-$18
Small Holly Tr.e es ......
......................... $2.50
Wreaths ..$4.95-$9.95
Grave·
Blankets ..........$19.95
Cemetery Vases.$9.95
Monument Sprays .....
""'"'""'"'""'" $18.95
. OPEN DAILY
9 a.m.· 5 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m .• 5 p.m.
Free Coffee &amp; Cookies
O~ring Chrlstmaa
. Season

WICKS
HAULING
Llm~stone,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

SAVE

50%·75%
TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET
Juat off Bl'llllbury Rd.
(look for.._)
Middleport, OH
814-992-5379
Day 6 Evening Hre.

, mo. pet. ,

3813.

Corot• J . Gttuy, Trouurw
Melgo County Eduoettonaol
Sa"'lco Center
(12) 23, 30; 2TC

•---.:..____..__________,

CONNOLLY'S

'

Stop, look and listen ·closely to prevent
custody battles from spoiling the day
CHRISTMAs TREES

2'12 Miles
· South of
Tuppers
Plains on St.

Rt. 7
(614)667·3483
Open
Evenings and
Waekends

11122/Hpd
By RUBY L. BAILEY
revenge- others range from unpaid 38 p,ercent do not have visitation or
The .Detroit News
child support to jealousy over a new joint custody rights.
Even' as she cowered with her 3- and spouse.
or course, not all splits are biller:
5-year-old daughters in a cold
Thou~ands of parents file' for There are many parents w)lo divorce
garage, Elaine couldn't see that divorce e~ch year and those divorces amicably or who can at leasr put
.
Authorized AGA Distributor
she'd gone too far.
affect children -for those between \ aside their differences for the sake ol
For two hours, she watched her warring parents it's not the Grinch the children.
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
ex:husband peer into the house win- who ~s stealing . Christmas - it's
"Christmas should create happy ' Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
dows, yelling, "I know you're in Mom and Dad.
memories for children," says Bar• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dreving • Ornamental
there!" and "I' II get you for this!"
"I used to almost hate the holi- bara Barnes. a family therapist at
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio FumHure, Fireplace
Siill, Elaine believed it was OK to days," says 16-year-old Virginia Rochester Counseling Associates.
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuffll
hide the children in order to prevent Donaldson, whose parents divorced "It shouldn't be filled with memo"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
tljem from spending Christmas Eve when she was 6. The teen now ries of Mom and Dad fighting over
We will work wHhin your budget.
with 'their father.
chooses how much holiday time whose dinner they're going to eat."
FAX 773-5861
Ph. 773·9173
Ne•er mind that the custody . she'll spend with each parent.
· Mason,WV
108 Pomeroy Street
. When i's it OK not.to send a child
agreement dictated he spend th,e.hol- ·.
"They would scream about
iday with the girls. She remamed m whose house I would be at Chnst- with a parent for a court-ordered visthe garage until the coast was dear mas. morning of l~r Thanksgiving itation?
and told the children they were play- dmner. Dad wouldn tlct me take my
"If someone came intoxicated to
ing hide-and-seek with Daddy.
(Christmas) presen~s home. An~
· 20 l'ear1 E:;cperience •
pick up the children," says Iennie
"I just didn 't .wantto be alone on Mom would play 40 Quest1ons
Barkey, director of Genessee CounChristmas," says Elaine, an Oakland · about his house or his wife."
. Compounding the fri~tion is that ty (Mich.) Friend of the Coun and
County. Mich. woman whose last
Top, Trim,
name has been withheld to protect V1S1tat1on orders are nddled wnh president of the Friend of the Court
her children's privacy. "They we_re loo~holes .that parents often use to Association. "Or sometimes the
Removal &amp;
my children at that point - not !us. avo1d shanng the chtldren, attorneys other parent has not made a request
And I was mad as hell at him."
say. Such orders are worded vague- until the last minute and the eustodi· Stump Grinding
She adds she Is now over the bit- ly ; they require "reasonable visita- al plirenl has already made plans."
owner:
ter divorce and plans to stick by the tion" or visits "every other holiRonnie Jonte~,.o_,
That's why Barkey recommends
agreementthis year.
day."
.
,
, Accordmg to a 1990 Census
· Her actions sound extreme, but
pareqts mediate their disputes before '================::;~
attorneys and Friend of .the Court B.ureau report, 55 , pe~cent of the holiday. As with child-support r
officers say they're not · unusu_al. · d!v.orc.ed fathers nauonwtde have payments, the overburdened Friend ·
More visitation agreements are VIO· vtsnauon nghts. and JUSt 7 percent of the Court system can he slow to
lat~d at Thanksgiving and Christmas have · joint custody. The remaining enforce visitation ·rights.
Wreaths - Swags &amp;
tl!an at any other time of the year. · , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , , . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Grave Blankets
tl.e~::,;,, describe au sorts of ways Children of divorce have ·holiday righls, too ~~~
tlieir former spouses cheated them
By RUBY L. BAILEY
or the gifts given.
out of their holiday visitation The Detroit News
5. Be involved in their preftl&gt;m Elaine's game of hide-and·
The holidaY season can be par- arranged holiday activities no matse'ek to another parent who allegedly
· ticulnrly stressfu~ for children ter which parent they are with ..
lilld about winning an all-expenseswhose parents . are divorced.
6. Be with each of the parents
Rt. 1 ~4 Rutland, Ohlo 742·3051
Jlllid trip to Disney World so she
Her~· s a bill of children's rights to . to talk about their holiday activiOPEN NOV. 23-10 TO 9:00
·
·
·
· wouldn't have to give up her child.
. keep in mind as families celebrate. ties or gifts.
7. Telephone the other pluent l o
Children have the right to:
' '' I rim into them at the .mall the
ooy after they supposedly left," says
1. Receive, maintain in their talk about their holiday activities
.
·
Jbhn of Wayne County, Mich.; who
possession and enjoy gifts from or gifts.
8. Have each of the parents tol-·
four years ago agreed to forgo his
each parent.
· New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Christmas Day visit with his son so
2. Spend holiday time with erate the other parent's ,beliefs
r
t~e then 55-year-old could see Mickeach of the parents and their fami - about holidays.
Garages • Replacement Windows
9. Have assistance from each of
·~ Mouse. "H~re I was tryi~g to_do
lies.
Room Additions • Roofing
the bigger thmg, and she s lymg
3. Gave conflict-free arrange- the parents in making or buying
t~rough her teeth."
ments made about the time they cards or gifts for the other parent.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
, There are many reasons parents
will spend with each of the parents
10. Have each of the parents
FREE ESTIMAT-ES
not try to outdo the other parent
play hard-to-get with the kids during · duriqg the holidays.
,
tile holidays. In addition to the usual
4. Have each of the parents not with the ·s~ze. cost or number ·of
614·992-7643
...., fear of loneliness, a desire to
talk badly about the other parent gifts .
(No Sunday Calls) .
nllnipulate one's ex or just plain.

DAVIS
CONTRACTING
-Rooting
-Remodeling
-New Construction
oOecka
•VInyl Siding
oJnsured

'

I

12111111 mo.

.

County Educlllonal sMvti:e
Cent•r Loc•tod In th•
Munlclpel Building In
Pomeroy or by ceiling 1182·

1

(UmeSton•
·Low Ratee)

992-sn&amp;

lvoiJoa'W...... Ifoln

7/t!Wn

-·~==· ~BINGO .

RUTUNDMINE
SUPPLY CO.

ELLIOTI ·

'

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

INSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDOLUORT
' 1182-2772
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

:::;tllllll WU1ws

Gtnps
•St- Doa!1 &amp;

...........

FI'HEI~

!

WW.ws

992-6711

.

'

SUE'S .
GREENHOUSE
Momlng Slllr RdJ
CR 30, Racine, Ohio
•Roping •Wreaths
•Swags
oGrsve Blankets
•Artificial Poinsettia

•s.ooau,

CUSTOM IUII.DING &amp;
REMODEUNG

'

New Homes, Additions,
Roofing, Paintlng,Bams
Garages, Concrete
Free EsllmaiN
25 years experience .
We fa ir as if it , ... our
own home or bu.Sint.ss
Alkror
John(614)~3987

949-2115

1112Wit'1 mo.

or Dollaa (614) 941).3036

'

..

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING

Custom lkollclli1g 1 - i n l

•NawHomeo
•Addlllono
•Now Gorogte
•Romodettng
·Siding
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESnMATES
(814) i92-&amp;535
(614 992-2753 '

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel

Dirt• Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

CHRISTMAS TREES

j

$10 &amp; Up .

'f&amp;

'BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

BISSELL BUILD.ERS, INC.

-......
¥

•

FREE

with low

Allomey At Law

j

Manley's Trash Service of Middleport, has ;
sold it's trash collection business, effective :
12/31/96 and would like to thank aU ;
customers for your past patronage.
We are still operating Manley's Recycle .· •·
Center and Manley's Recycling Services ·
located at 503 Mill Street, Middleport.
w~ can help you with your recycling needs• ..
You can reach us at 992-3894.
·

.

ROIIIf IISSILL
CONSIRUCTIOII

JONES' TREE SERVICE

M~~~"~"~~-..!$,;!:ij.~
...-

.tp . •..

can relieve a debtor ol
financial obligations and arrange a lair
distribution ol 11888ts. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for their personal use.
This may include .a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
·
For lnformatlon:Regarding Bankruptcy contact;

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and spec:ial events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specifiC number of days.
MONDAY
, REEDSVILLE -- Area church to
have live nativity scene, Belleville
Dan. 6 p.m .. Monday.

By JED ANTHONY
AP National Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - On
screen, he is .a brooding, handsome
dreamer a haunted desert
explorer who pursues the woman
he loves obsessively and collaborates with Nazis in a last auempt to
save her life.
But the Count Laszlo de Almasy
depicted by Ralph Fiennes in thll
new film · "The English Patient"
seems unsettlingly benign to ElizaRACINE -- Racine Village Counbeth Pathy Salett, whose father was
cil meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at Star
a Hungarian diplomat in wartime
Mill Park.
Egypt He remembered the real
Hungarian count as an =oral man
who collaborated willingly with
TUESDAY
Axis powers in North Africa.
REEDSVILLE -· Reedsville
Therein lies the dilemma that'
United
Methodist Church, candlehas dogged cinema from the silentlight Christmas Eve service, Tues~
era "Birth of a Nation'.' straight
,day, 7 p.m.
through to "JFK" : Are filmmakers
•
beholden to historical accuracy?
And is "artistic license" simply
POMEROY ·- Pomeroy United
another tenn for revisionism? ,
Methodist Church, 7 p.(O., annual
"Movies like 'this should be
Christmas
Eve worship service. Spemore faithful to what actually hapcial
music
by Courtney Haley, saxope_ned. You can·~ just say it's a ficphone,
and
Joann Robinson, organtional portrayal, because it influist;
specials
by choir. ,
ences millions of people," said Ms.
Saleu, who wrote an essay WednesHISTORICAL FILMING - Actor Ralph 'Fiennes, left and actress Kristin Scott Thomas, center, durday in The Washington Post
POMEROY ·- Candlelight serdescribing the film as "amoral and Ing filming of "The Patient," which Ia based on Michael Ondaatjea'1992 prize winning novel. "While
vices will be held Tuesday evening
aome of the characters who appear .In this book.are based on historical flgures ... it is Important to
ahistorical. n
at St. John Lutheran Church, 8 p.m.
stress
that this story Is fiction," Ondaatje wrote. A similar statement appeared in the film.
In her essay, the Hungarian-born
and St. Paul Lutheran Church, II
Ms. Salell - :who runs a nonprofit
p'.m.
one
knows
what
ihe
truth
is
there."
might replace historical canl)n ;. poetic ,ljcensc, but it needs to be
organization in Washington, D.C.
· The question, though, is, relevant Newsweek called it "propaganda. :· ei~her more historiCal or more
- recounts how, while watching
But while "JFK" was about his· clearly fictional." .
"The English Patient," the Almasy given· the pop-culture juggernaut 's
POMEROY ·- Grace Episcopal
increasing
dominance
of
the
collectory,
"The English Patient" uses
Ondaatjc has said he knew Iittlc
Church will have Christmas Eve sercharacter kept striking her as famil-· tive consciousness·.
history only as a backdrop.
about the real Almasy or what ultiiar.
vices at 7 p.m Tuesday at"thc church.
In
a
market
where
nostalgia
is
The real Alma•Y· according to mately happened to him. And he
Child care will be provided.
"1 was increasingly stunned to
simply another commodity, history Ms: Salett's father's papers, wanted was car~ful to include a disclaimer.
see unfolding before mo the depic"While. some of the characters
tion of (a) passionate hero who becomes what sells best. And for to use a desert· museum as a front ·
this film, what sells best is a story for Nazi espionage. Its goal: the wt.o appear in this book arc based
bore lillie resemblance to the man
of sacrifice and love.
occupation of Egypt.
on historical figures ... it is impor~
my father had described to me,"
"People
say,
'How
come
HollyWhen
the
project
was
scotched,
tant to stress that this swry is a fic she .wrote.
'
. In an cffort.to provide our reader·
wood
can't
get
it
right?'
"
said
Ms.
Salett
said,
Almasy
blamed
her
tion," Ondaatjc wrmc. A similar · ship with current news, the GallipoTrue, perhaps, but beside the
point, say the filmmakers who Steven Alford, a liberal arts profes- father and ·put his name on a short statement appeared in the lilm _
lis Daily 1:rihune will not accept
sor and film expert ·at Nova South· list of arr.csts to be made when Nazi
That, say many scholars, should
· weddings after 60 days from the
~daptcd author Michael Ondaatje 's
eastern University in Florida. " I Field Marshal Erwin Rommel be suflicicnt.
·
date of the event.
novel. After all, kaid director-writer
don't
think
it's
sonic
craven
occupied
the
country.
Her
family,
argument
seems
to
he
that
"Her
Anthony .Minghella, "This is ficAll club meetings and other news
attempt \O misrepresent' history. But she said. escaped' in .a car along a a historical . disclaimer is not
tiori based on) fi'ction,'' a movie
arliclcs in the socicly section must
sometimes the stories film can tell darkened road near the Nile River enough," said Jim Welsh, editor of
based on a no\iel. .
be submillcd within 30 days of
don't mesh with the conventions of -"one of my earliest memories." Literature/Film Quanerly. " But if
"We did our research on tt\e .narrative
occurrence.
All birthdays must be
his tory."
"The film makes it look like he you ' re dealing with a work of the
time, place, what was happening in
submitted
within
42 days of the
That happened with Oliver just gave a few maps to the Ger· imagination, the fact that it may
that era, what\he truth was. And we
occurrence.
Stone's 1991 movie "JFK," which mans to save the woman he loved. have sprun~ from some sort of histried to reproduce that truth," proAll material submitted for publi·
ducer Saul \ Zaentz said. "But focused on assassination conspira- And· it makes it seem OK," she torical context is simply beside the
cation
is subject to editing.
. cy theories. Historians worried it said. "That's not to say there isn 't point. "
human ~motid~s. I don'tthink any-

By the way, Terry and Bonnie
Gedde• of the Harrisonville area.
also would like to know more about
a jig saw puzzle they have acquired.
It was distributed by the Whit. /
man C0 ., out of .Racine, Wise., and
By
PETER
H.
GOTT, M.D.
.should be able to sort things out or few years, the sores arc on the inside
is one of a series of scenes from varDEAR DR. GOTT: About · five refer you to a rheumatologist for fur-· of my mouth. They get so p,ainful
ious p.arts of the country--prelly
years ago I was given prednisone for ther assistance.
that it 'is difficult to cat and talk. 1
well known places at that. The puzan
incurable
eye
disease
called
Prednisone
is
a
wonderful
drug.
have brought this to the attention of
zle Mr. and Mrs. Geddes has is a
uveitis that caused almost total loss It probably saved your vision. How- my family doctor and dentist. My
Meigs County scene consisting of
of
sight. Over the years, the dosage ever, it causes troublesome side doctor prescribed Zovirax . I have
over 300 pieces. When put together .
has been reduced, and my doctor effects, such as diabetes,. hypcrten- gotten ·no relief from it, and it doesit shows .a barn reflected in a pond
decided the disease was in remis- sion, cataracts and osteoporosis. .n't seem to quicken the healing
and in the background is a yello:ov
sion. I· began a slow withdrawal Therefore, you don 't want to use 'it process. Someone suggested I take
house with red trim. Anyone know
from the drug. Since then, I've expc· unless y&lt;&gt;u really need it. At .this lysine, Would that help?
anything about such a puzzle?
rienced horrible joint pain, and noth- point, you should focus on the cause
DEAR READER: Recurring
Mr. and Mrs, Geddes acquired ing I take relieves the symptoms. of your arthritis.
ulcerations in the mouth and on the
the puzzle through a friend in Mari- Blood · tests show no evidence of
To give· you more information, 'I lips are usually caused by the herpes
etta who collected jig saw puzzles arthritis in my system.
am sending you a copy of my Health virus, which can successfully be
and penrtitted them to select from
DEAR READER: tenain fonns Report "Understanding Osteoarthri- treated with prescription anti-viral
her collection the puzzles they of chronic arthritis can also affect ti,s." Other' readers who would like a drugs, such as Zovirax. However, in
~ould like.
the eyc;s. If, for example, the uveitis copy should send $2 plus a long, some cases, the cause is unknown.
Terry and Bonnie have moved to is treated · with prednisone (a ·self-addressed, stamped envelope to • A few years ago, there was a Ourthe Harrisonville area from Vinton . steroid), the joints may remain pain· P.O. Box ~017 , Murray Hill Station, ry of interest in using lysine pills, an
County and both are employed at less because inflammation all over New York, NY 10156. Be sure to amino acid necessary for protein
Ohio University in Athens.
the body is suppressed by the drug. mention the title.
metabolism, to cure cold sores.
.Once a person reduces the dose of - DEAR DR. GOTT: 1.t!ave always Because it really wasn't effective,
MJlny of us have come to know prednisone (or discontinues the suffered from cold sores, but the last this fad has been largely abandoned.
and enjoy Dave Thomas, the medicine), the joint pain .may reapfounder of Wendy 's through his pear in spades.
I would like to thank the following businesses
Despite your normal blood tests,
entertaining television commer1')1
bel
that
you
have
some
type
of
cials. He handles them well and the
and individuals for their contributions to my
chain of food establishments have . underlying arthritis, such as lupus or
Eagle Project:
grown like crazy. In fact,ther~'s orie . rheumatoid anhritis. Raise this issue
with
your
fa~ily
physician,
wh'!
·under construction in P~meroy at
Pomeroy Merchants . Asso.ciation, PDK
the pre~enttime,
Construction, Banks Construction, Valley
Dave has undergone quadruple
heart by-pass surgery. The hospital
Lumber and Supply, King's Servlstar
where fte had the surgery remains
undiscloSed. We hope that all goes
Hardware, O'Dell Lumber, Fore~t Run Block
well, dpn't we?

BANKRUPTCY

Community
calendar

Film vs. histo(Y; .Are makers qf
movies·obligated to accuracy?

I

The Deily S11dlnel• P8Qe13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

,_

~

'

"

.

'l

!lOS

Deer Cut

Personals

Forgel thll dale? No gift ld•aa?
Ltl ·ur.tlma Reminder S.rvlct•
holpl Colltodayl Kothiun {330)
ttll7-7200.
.

at
Maplewood
Lake

30 Announcements

Skia·Cut·Wrap

· :.co::~"-::u :~.~

949-2734
~ m0.

.

1

1

pc1

~:::.::'·llopl.
iotky,cloon,
'"'"'""'
.....
oo.
lllitiiY.
Hunt·
'lno oupplln, ttcenoo 1 oomo

I -wv.

.

chick. tatlon. cwm•r• Hen·

•

�•
)

P~~ge 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 23, 1996

December23,1998

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, .Ohio

••

NEA Crossword Puzzle

•

PHILLIP

ALDER

:bO,.,.,...Iy Soel&lt;lng New Own·
.,Mil Adorable 5 Wonderful Pup• pi... 10 Weeks Olcl, 6U··H1-

:.I lll7.

.

Black l&lt;iuent Fluff, 2 Aduh Catt,
IU t18 181111.

.I

~~ Christma Klnens, eu-258· 1911.

:711:;a~le:._pu_ppo-:.-e,-,-.-...
--ko-ol-d.-p-a-rl
German Shephard, Region Elk
hound &amp; Collie, beautifuL 304 ·

875-5&lt;114.

Puppiaa, Part Beagle, 7 Weeks
Od, 814-4-te-3193.

Puppy For Christmas, 814-448&amp;oo2.

60

Lost and Found

Found-small dog WIOrange collar,

Eagle Rdg. Ad.!Mtmorial Garden
atea; al10 Young puppy in

ow-. 114-949·2211.

f.OUND: Black dog w/brown
marking•, vicinity

ot

Mason

Blvd, very triendly. 30-C -675 ·
2715.

Loot 5 month old - l o Ronwoll·
er, Middleport 'licinlry, answet"a to

:n-·.-rd. 614-992·3137.
70

Yard Sale

Auto bocly man wanted · must
hav• experience In Mig weldmg,
labricattng metal, body &amp; paint,
Hill'I cm.nic Cars, 7am· 7pm 614·
949-2217.

9 Bedroom, Nice 'llrd 1 Gordon,
HARTS MASONARY · Block, Waw Furnt1hld, No PtiS, Alco- Twin Rivo&lt;t Tower. - accoptlng
brick &amp; stone work, 30 yeart er- hol Drugs Or Snnking Referenc· appilcatlono 1o&lt; , br. HUD oublfl6.
perlence, reasonable rates. 304· •s Required, Dapoait, 6114-245- lzed 1pt. for elderly and hendl·
capped. EOH 30o&lt;.e7S.IIe?ll.
895·3591 aher 8:00pm, ""job 10 5014 .
sinoJIor to BIG. IWC.2120CI
Christian School m Athens hlnng
1Wo tplrtnents br rent. one effl.
JET
rea ch•r for January l;; lasseslvp·
dency and one 2 bedroom, 514420
Mobile Homes
AERATION M010R5
per elementarr graclts . aomt
11112-28811.
Raparod, &amp; Rlbollt In Slocl&lt;.
for Rent
muti-I&amp;Yet and or L.O. eJperience
Very nice ground floor apartment Cal Rcn ~ 1·1£10.537-8528.
helpful. Call 8 14-594-5433 days
1987 Schultz trailer. 2 bedroom, In quiet 1urroundinga locat.ct
or 8tHS98-2722 evenings.
2 bath, rent S280imo • utHIIIII. rtwee milel from the Ravenawooa
KlrtJv ...,_r for Gttr.otion 3
-773-5351 .
Church organi st·Choir directo r,
AI-Bridjle In Ohio. CornploiOiy or 4. 1100. :JOCM.a"IS-2776
pa n-time beginning Febo.1arr
fllmlshod with ...- . otyw, dill&gt;
2 Bedroom trailer, you pay utlll· wuhor
1997, for fur ther Info please send
and larae kltohtn with all
ties, $100 depotlt, referencu, appliance•. Nice bath with I&amp;'GI Llh Cholra, Electrk: WhMicllolr1,
cover letter wlresume to: Music
Stair Uftt, Van LUll, Scooters,
AU
real
astale
advertiUlg
In
no ptll. 304-875-2535.
Search Commillee, Christ Epl9·
•how•, la,ae muter bedroom New lUnd, Bowman'o ,....,_.,
this
newspaper
is
IWject
10
capal Church 804 Main St Pt.
.
2 bedroom, 1200 I* month, $100 with • worklno fireplace . Uttlna 814·446-7283.
the Federal Fair Hou&amp;Jng Act
Pleasant. WV 25550.
area haa loti of room. AI t410
doPa~\ 814·992-2394.
ol , 988 whl&lt;:ll maktl nlfegal
por monlh wilh u~lholnd-. A NEW 411 COMPUTER with
CIRCLE MEl
10 adver11Se 'any preference,
2 bedroom, etettrlc Mat, 2 m11e1 deposit of $&lt;400 ia requirltd. For Monltorl Loaded . Full Factory
Get A Head Stan On The New
limitation or discrimination
ou1 of Ru11and on New Lima Rd.. more lnrormallon cal 11•-843· Warranty. QREAT CHRISTMAS
Vear. Apply Today 1 Sta rt Tomor ,
53-43 and 1811¥8 fJ8BIIge.
814·742·2803 or 61-4· 742-2421.
baH&lt;! on race, color, roflgiOn.
OIFTI $850. 304-71N142.
row. $240 -$325 Weeklr. Call Lisa
sex
familial
status
or
national
Toll Free A.l888-432· 7378.
3 Bedroom TraUM Country s8t- 450 . Furnished
Now Super Nlmendo 64 Ptuo Su·
origin , or any Intention to
ting, 1275/Mo., Plus Deposit, 81 ..
per
Mario &amp;1, Boll Otltr. 614-446Rooms
Drlvert;: Want A Stat. ·Of •Tha •
make any such preference.
258-MOO.
3040.
Arl Convtntlo,nal For Christ·
Krritatlon Or dlscrlmioatlon.•
Rooms lor rent • week or monrh.
m11? Poor Credit No 'Problem!
New Tickle Me Elmo Accepting
4 Bedrooma Mobile Home On- Starting at s12fJJmO. Gallia Holel.
Home Weekond1. Clau "A"'
Cora Mill Road 011 325 No Poll, 8, 4....,.11580.
Ollero Thru Dacomber 23, 1996,
This newspaper will not
CDL. Min 1 Yr. OTR. Call 1-800.
References &amp; Deposit Required,
Boot Offer Will a. Notified On , 'll
knowlingly aa::ept
377-3101 Today!
CIOae To Rio Grande, Read~ 11t St8epin~ rooms with cookinG . ZWII. 81H46-3805, After 5 P.M.
advertisements for nta1 estate
Of January, 514-2•5-5822.
Also tratler apace on river. All
which Is in violation of the law.
Experienced 18Cretary, full time.
hook-upa.
Call after 2:00 p.m., POLLEN •ooz With Propolis
Busy general olfice, multi-task,
Our readers are hereby
For Rent Mobile Home 3 Bed- al4-773-5e51, Ma10nwv.
And Royal Jelly. Natural EnergY
front office teaponslblilies. Excellnlonned that ell ~lnga
rooms, In Centneary, e 14-4.C8Boouer, 150 Tablell S20, 614lent time management and com~dvertlseQ in this newspaper
92S2.
460
Space for Rent
448-6306, HI00·291 -ootl8.
munication skills necessary. Ex·
are available on an equal
Far Rani Or Sale: 1987 14•60 2
ttnsive typing/computer tkillt r•
Refrigerators, StOves, Waahera
opponunlly l&gt;l~s.
Bedrooms, No Pets, Very Clean,
qulred, Occasional evening/weeAnd Dryers, All Reconditioned

j,,_,..,....,:.-..,--....,.....,..,..,..

kend work. Stnd ltner of lntet"eat,
reaume and· three em~oyer ref•·
encea by January 3, 1997 to
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio, 398 Richland Avenue,

ANn' Ohio 45701. EOEIESP
Furnilure, Salea, Retail Sates
Helpful Immediate Openings, Apply: Lllealyle Furniture, 858 Ttlird
Avenue, Gallipolis, No Phone
C.lsPieaael

HOME COMPUTER. USERS
NEEDED. $45, 000 income potential. 1·800·513·4343 Ext. B9368 Call For Details.
lena's Taxi Service e 14-4467088, Fax 814·446-.. 493, Would
You like To Be Able To Save
Money, So You Can Chrisrmas
Shop? Ca!l llna's Taxi 12119196,
1111g7 Call For Pncts? You Wilt

814-256-6080.

REAL ESTATE

31 0

Homes for Sate

3 Bedroom, finished baument, Moble Home 2 Bedrooms, Srove, 1911'2' 2187 ·
carport, will consider trade. 304 _ Refrigerator, Very Small , 920

FourtJ:! Avenue, Gallipolis, S250J
Mo., Water,.Trash Paid, 814-4483·4 bedroom house. hut pump, 3844 Aflet'&amp; P.M.
kitchen appliances, breezeway, 1 u-.. ~lo Homo For n--t. Or Mo""car garage, full basen*nt, nice IIIUUI
""''
uuv
lot, close to hospital and school, Homelot,614-441279.
in Pomeroy,· 814-992-3 119 0 ' Nice 2 Bedrooms, 1225/Mo., 8
814-992-6451.
Miles Oo.wn 218, Nice, ReferencHill1op Home 3 Bedroom&amp;, 2 es, Deposit Requ ired. e14·448·

s.

8172, 814·258-6251.

eluded, New t&lt;irchen. Serious In-

quire&amp;, 814-4&lt;18-.4999.
three DeclrOom mobile home
.:::::=:.:.:..:...;..:.:..:.:.::;,_
____ , ·Nice
1n Mtddleport, no pets. 81 .. ·992·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale .
12x80 l&lt;hkwood 2
Bath, E•cetlent Condition,

304·738·7295.

12X64 Parkview 2 Btdtooms, t

Both, Newly Remodled, 15,500,
304· 736·7215.
14x?O Homene, totally remodeled, gaa cook/furnace, ac,
electric block atepa, new doors.
REOUCE0130 .. 6756397.
1982 14x70 Mobile Home On 1.8
Acres, Porches, $15,900,,
514·2539.
New-19 97 14 Wide-1 bath, SB~/
down , s139/mo, wilh approved
credit Call1·800-691.fJ7n.

5858.

Small 1 Bedroom Recently Paint·
ed Utlltlea.Furntshed, Localtd In

Kanauga S~801Mo .• e14·4•1~
74lll!. .

$1 ,325/down, $218/mo, tree air,
ap~roved credit. 1-800-891·
;:.•:.;n~7:.;.
2 Bedfooms, Underpinning, Fuel
Oil Tank, New Water Heater,
S2.000, 61 ..._446-8693.
with

Wanted To Buy : Liltle Tyket

Kitchen Set. Warkshop, Play-

house, Po111ble Any Other Uttle
Tyke Toys, Pleue Call 614-2455817.
Wanted To Buy: We Buy Auto's
Arr, Condition, 614·388-9062, Or
614-448-~. ·

Help Wanted ·

(OALLI,l CO RESIDENCE)
Need For Unique Opinion Focus

Group, Eaty !Fun, S8.CJO Arl Hour
1·80!).1186·271l5
•ATTN : Pt . Pleasant• Postal positions. Clerks and sorters, No
expari•nce requ ired . Benetlrs.
For exam. salary, and testing 1n·
formation call 1·{630) 906 ·5570
.... 3670 8am·8pm.
AVON l Ail Areas I Shirley
~...304-675-1429.

Able

Avon Representatives
neecltd. Earn money lor Christ·
mal bi"s at hOmeJ81 work. 1·800·
192·6358 or 304·882· 2645, Ind.
Rep.

Experienced and dedicated personnel lo work at Twin Oaks Convenience Store, Carryout and
Arthur Treeche;s Fish &amp; Chips.
posiTIONS NEEDED

Cashlet"a &amp; Cooks· approx. 20

~loping

~9u5~ J~~~' ~~~~ . ~:xp~~ ~~~~:

home, rTJJSt be ertremely depend-'

able in All weather, approx 8 Jull
days and 8 half days per month.
call 614-949-2940 alter Bpm.

180 Wanted To Do
An'/ Odd jobs, pa m1ing , guners
cleaned . 614·245·5879 or 304 ·
675-7112:

General Housecleaning, 614 ·3889645.

Phont:CS14-446-3547.
Uaed Home Clearance make an
offer, Kanauga Mobile HDrre Sale.
614-446-9662

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

liona.l ro conducr comm.mity edu-

lhrougt1 1pea.king engag•

mentJ, workshops 1nd developing
cotlsbOrarive effons thrcughour

eight countie1. Travel required.
Ev~ing end wttkend hours rt·
· quir.cf. Send letter of interest, r•
aume ancl thrH employer refer.
tnctt by January 3. tQS17 ta 1
1
Planned Peranlhood ol Southeaal
Ohio, 396 RlcNand Avenue,,
Alhont. Olio 45701 . EOE-1iSP

I

French Townhouse Apartments,

Gatha. Manor Apa1 tment Senior'
CiuzenS, Handicapped, Applianc·

es Furnished, EOE , 614 ·446 ·
Corner lot with commercial build· 4639.
ing In Rutland, call 81 .. ·446·4011
leave massage.
1 and 2 bedroom
'II
Manor and

Household
GOOds

1990 IBM PSI Computer, 388, 1
Meg Ram, 30 Mega Hard Drive,
Kayboard, Mouse, &amp; Printer In·
cludecl, Great S1arter Computer
For Novice. $350 Also, G.E.
Washer &amp; Dryet 8 Years Old, Ex·
cellent Condition, $150; Antique
lror"l Bed With BOIC Spring And

Manroos S100, Call Boloro 3 P.M.
6t4·256-1170.

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Wash••. Dryera, Ranges, Relrl·
gratora, 90 Day Guaranleei
French City Uaytag, 614·448-

gan, Gifts. 614-446-4782. Hours
10·4

520

Sporting
Goods

Bear compound bow with sights
and quiver, ptus several arrows,
f1nger glove and arm guarcl, 1200.

phone 61 4-992·2928.

530

Antiques

Buy or nil . Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on At. 124,

Pomeroy. Ho.un: M.T.w: 10 :00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 lO
6:00 p.m. 6 14·992·2526. Russ

Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
Lawn Tractor with Snow Blade;
Club CadetiH 1,000; Elccerclsing
Rowing Mach1ne. Alter 6 P.M.
614·441 -1912

1995 &amp; 1996 Holiday Barb1es
614·448-0423.

1996 Hotiday Bafbie $75 Cao Be
Picked Up In Gallipolis Of' Pomer·
614 247 2032 E
&amp;

~~~·~--~·~~·.:..·~·-"'_n~g~s..;.1
.;.

Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,

Rocky, Tony lama. Guatante~
Lowest Prices At Shoe Cafe Gal·
HpoH~
'

Concrete &amp; Plastic S.plic Tanka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ron
Evans EnterpriHI, Jackson, OH
, .fl00.537·9528.

·

Strockermatlc, Combuster Near

Good Shape, 1500, 514-388·
U005.

.570

VIta-Jet 2, naedl••• ln"sulin lnjecl1&gt;r.$400.3fl4.773-6t69. , '
Wood Hutch. Table, 6 Chairs.
AJr COnclltiOntf', $100, 814-

saoo.

367-0548.

550

Building
Supplies

Block, -brick. s.,wer pipes, wind·

.awa. ilnr.la. etc;. Claude W!nters,
Rio Grande, OH CaU 814·245-

5121.

.

SttlngltJ All Naw SIS: Paint $5
Gallon, True11 22' Call A118t 6:00

K'tamer electric guitar &amp; Kramer
t&lt;A-22R amp. plus rwo pedals. 1
yr. old, same as new condilion.

1359 080, 01 4-742·2373.

Fire wood tor 1110. 304.. 75-7i37

Of 30.&lt;·175-5053.

INOI'ICEI
OHIO VALL£Y PUBLISHING CO.
racommendl lhtl JOU do butineu with people you know, and
HOT to und monay through the
mall undl you have lnv.s1fgated
!he ollotlng.

135 Pick·Up Truck
&amp; Oellvorod 11H4t-

1979. Dodge Power Wagon 4K4
0684,

1979 Ford BrOnco. 4_.4 , 400 V·8,

610 Farm Equipment

2wd, 52 PTO hp, radial tires, 1
remote ._a lve, 12 spHd Synchouans, 4Vr or 4000 hour dnve train
warrant~ . World lamous air
coolecl dtesel $15,900 . 4 wd
eqwpped same war·$19,900. 01d
you know that a waltr cooled
diesel engine Is (#a&amp;tgned for
8,000 hours of service whereas a
air cooled Is designed lor 12,000
tloura. Keeter's Service Center
St. Rr. 87 leon,WV. 304-895-

3674.

LivestoCk

Complete Cattle Handling Facility,
Scales. Heavy Duty Squeeze
Chure With Stir ·Catch Head
Gate, 614·250·1959, 304·525·
7482.
Umousin cattle, all ages, registered &amp; non-registered. quality
ca!tlt at reasonable prices, 61 4·

698-2765.

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

t500 lb. round ba les of hay, $20/
bale, 614· 742· 3054 or 614-742-

TRANSPORTATION

367-7920.

'

great condition, sharp, high
miles, need to sell, reduced

EARNEST

-

;THE BORN LOSER
.

'

'"f\E.Y, FQP, \.illY l:lClB YOO~ ·
I 61FT TO MOM :iP-.Y~ ~

"DO NOTOPEN~llL
Cl\g_I~T~·

Tf\11-.!G EWI 't'e:Ni: '!'

7 Week Old Dalmaltion 148
Chamberlam Roac:l, S100•• Shots.

a, 4·388-8922.

.

1978 Dodge 400 CID Engine with
Matching automatic Transmission

$300080

Fearurlng Hydro Bath. Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Cr&amp;ek Rd.
814-440..0231.

t982 Mustang Gl S1 ,200 ,
367·7296.

AKC English Springer Spaniel
puppies, vet checked &amp; podlgree, 2 blw males, will hold lor
Christmas to app homes. 304875-7071 .

AKC English Spnnger Spaniel

Black tWhite, a. Weeks. E11cellent
Hunttr Pet&amp;, 1250, 614-387-0659.

AKC reglslared Dalmatian pups,
bred fat temperamunt, Champion
lif'e , reuonable prices, stud
service available, 614-749·3342.
AKC Reg1s1ered York1e, 1st Shols
&amp; Wormed, Singing CockatDo &amp;

large Cage, 814-387-7705. ,
AKC Sheltie For Salt, 6 Weeks
Old, Vet Checked, $300 OBO,
614·367·7800.

CFA Regittered Himataran kit·
tent. ready for Christmas, two
mattl , two lemalea . two blues,
one torty, one seal, call 814·992·
3128.
Chriotr'o Polo

'271 N. Second A\llnUI

Wddlopart, Oh.
114-112·4114
'"MERRY CHRISTMAS'"
Open 12·12 Oocontbtr 22. 23,24
25...
Cln!oming
. lfltciellond
.. leL Bath &amp;
condlon, 110.00 polL
nw. you, Clvloty.

off-:.::·

Cock-a-poo pupa, 5 wee~• old,
ont male and ona female, lather
AI&lt;C black Tor Poodl•, mother
AKC blacll Codl.tr Spanill, ready

·. lobbr.)
38lreland

•BIG NATE

South

West

2NT

Pass

..,.

t•

North
2•
3 NT

East
Pass
All pass

IInate

44 Work on
manuiCI'Ipll
·45 Corn
leftover•
47 Shoo part
· 45 Run
SO NeiGhbor

Who said the following, and on what
occasion? "I think this is the most ex·
traorclinary collection of talent, of hu·
man knowledge, tliat has ever been •L......L-1-..L.....J'-· oi!Jox.
gathered togetlier al the While House,
·52 Cozy room
with the possible exception of when
Thomas Jefferson dined alone."
In this deal, how should the play go
by Luis Campos
in three no-trump after West has led
Celebrity~'~ •1111 Cnleled lrom quotations by famous people. pu1 and prasen~
Etcn llitteflrllhe cipher ltanda tot~ TOdlty'l: cg; A equals P
the spade two? ·
. ·
North's'two·heart cue-bid showed at
'YDMOM
OXL
UMTM!)
JMMU
X
· least a limit raise in clubs. A jump to
. three clubs would have been pre-empHOMXY
XYDSMYM
CDG
VWMII
UGY
tive.
When South called for dummy's
•
CD X Y , · A' X W U
EUGCWUH
W L.'
· spade Ring, East play.e d the jack;
· which told West that South held the
J ws s
JOXV .f$MK.
queen. (You play the top of a run of
• honors in I his type of situation.)
)
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm nuts', I'm welld but I'm groat•- AI Pacino.
Declarer continued with the ace and
"I'd rather go mad than see a psychiatrist.· - Michael caine,
: another club. On the second of these
tricks, East di110arded the heart two.
West promptly switched to a diamond,
giving declarer his contract .with 'one
spade, one heart, two diamonda ·and
·.
five clubs. Who was at fault?
West should have cashed the spade
ace at trick four. If East had the dia·
_;,:.::.:.;,:.;;_...::;,::: l~hod ~y CLAY I. POllAN
mond ace as an enl!;l, 1\e would have
discarded a high, encouraging dla·
Rearrange lett~&amp; Of the
mood, not the·discouraging heart two.
four Krombltd wordt be·
And if South had .the diamond ace, he
low to for,., four Jimple words.
was 1'1\ady to run for home.
'
However, East could have helped
VIRQEU
his partner . If west h1,d led from a
tht ee ·card spade suit, tHe contract
was probably impregnable. So, East
should have discarded the diamond
king: an eye·opening play asking 'for
somethilig extraordinary.
·
3
That sentence was part of a speech
1
by John Kennedy in April 1962 at a
'White House dinner honoring Nobel
. :~
One moihtir to another talk! Prize winners.
ing about her young son : "It
1
.
•
•
.
took me a long time to teach
.....,.---...,---......., him to talk, now I have to teach
.,
A X R I MT
him to-- ..~ --- -:" ·

V'

.

ffC.NJ:£ [ I6'€R.Kl&amp;llf

WE.CAA ~10 l(f£p IT
UNIIL I &lt;£T lo\'&lt; CAAIST~
W:ll'61

T::!:~~, S©~cillA-lt~ttts·

~,• :::oo=N
=uB=:'~=.: ,
1$ 1 1

Motorcycles

I
I ,--..,.,16:-'T,--,r:?:-'TI--l

•

0 ~~;~:~:: i~h~h:h~~~~g q~~:~~

'1--..

you develop from step No. 3 below.

....

SCRAM.UTS ANSWal

Flunky- Scour- ~- Paddle- SHOULQER
A friend of ours see~ to by mad at the world . His
wife told him that the heaviest load one can carry is a
chip on his SHOULDER.

Use The

I MONPAY

SERVICES

.,

1981l Ford Tempo GL • Door; 5

1989 Pontiac Flreblrd, 305,
Speed, $3,500, 614·448·157~

1990 Oldl Toronado, loaded
power tverylh~ng. sharp, 96,000
miles. 15,500. 304·882·3625 aher
6pm or leave message.

1992 Hondo Acc6rd Ex 5 Speed
High Mites. Excellent Condition:
$9,000 etl4·-4,.6·7417 II No An·
IWif' P1easelellYfll Message.
1093 Ford Eacorr LX, 4 door
47,000 milea. tan
tan cloth In:
terlor, &amp;It, aml!m ca,aene, auto,

wi.,

14485, 814·949·2311 dayo, 614·
9-49•2644 eve.
1993 Geo Sror •.• GSI, 32,000
miles, loaded, ex.c cond. 18,000.
304-e75&amp;o03.

1993 lincoln Continental Signa -

ture Seriet, 1 Own4tr, 814 ·44t·
0400.

11193 Red RS Chevroter Cavalier'
• Cylinder, Automadc, AM-, 3S,ooci

M;loa, M,OOO, T,.do On Now Mo·
IIIIo Homo, 11 ...48·7127.

'•
"

._,.1,

'.
ASTRO-GRAPH
·.

'
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. others 10 cooperate wilh you today, you
Bo• 1758, Murray HiH Station, Now YOII&lt;, Jl'lUSI be willing to share ~~you hope to
NY !0158.
acquire. You must provide an Incentive.
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
20-Fob.
11)
Stnve
·to
LEO (Ju!y 23·Aug, 22) If you pertorm
BERNICE
accomplloh your taaka, responsibilities assignments carelessly today, your
B~DEOSOL
and aaalgnments today. Hyou fall behind, eltorts could be counterproductive. Take
you might not cotch up later.
.
pride in what you do, evan your moat
PISCES (1'111. 20-Morch 201 Todoy, you menial Iasko.
.
should tAist y(&gt;ur ability, but you will 81!10 VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;epl. 22) Bofora getltng
have good luck. Thera Is nothing you Involved In a new, unfamiliar endeavor
t accomplllh ff you set your mind to . today, try to weigh all o1 the pros and
~nno
.
•
·
oona. oo not skid around comers and run
ARIES (Mardi 21·,t.pril It) If an lmpor· · IntO wall&amp;.
tant family maner haa to be Ironed out UBRA (lllpl. 23-0ct. 23) You llhould not
. todo K will be beat to bllr the door to rei· Ignore a domestic dispute today. If you
Tuetday. Oec. 24, 1986
ln-lflwl and nelghborl . Rooolye h do, the problem will persllt and may gat
1n 1he yeer ahead, you.are likely to fa~ wttl1otA ltlelr lt1pul.
woroe 0'18r time. Take at:1ion as soon as
biller In jolnt ondeiVOfl Kyou maintain TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Today you . poseible.
aontr04 ollltUallont Instead of abdlca~ng .......,1 have 10 dell with 1 v'ocKerous lndl- SCORPIO (OCt. 24-No•. 22) If you are
too muoh power. Try to be firm bUt lair.
~~~ who Ia a legend In his own mind. nol ha•lng any tun today, ltop ev.rythlng
CAPFIICOIIN (Dec. 22..1an. 11) Aa.c· . Bite your tongue lnatead of crossing and examine your attitude. Negative
clatoa will exert a strong lnnuence on ~ with thla toudrnOulh.
lholqltS will ~te negative lllet:lo.
10
your diCiaiOrtl today. Mal&lt;e oure (Ill d QIMIHI (May li1..June 20) You ohould .IAOmAIIIUS 1-· 23-Dic. 21) C.uthe facts. and try to romaln objectl¥o• . not
your lac;k Olmatarilll WMith mokl ·· tlon and prudence In your commercial
111
T,Ytng to patch up a broken romance? . , ou unhappy today. Makl au~ to lake . af!alro w111 1111 MMnllal today Wyou
The Altro·Grapll Matchmaker can hllp ~time to counl your blelllnU8·
· oatlalactory raaulta . Tty to ••old mlo·
you undll'lland what to do to l!lllke the
22) H
1 lakll
· rolathfnlhlp work . Mall $2.75 to CANCI!R (June 2 1.July
you'!'"
·
-·t

.

DRYWALL
finish, ropolr.

Ceiling• te~erured. plaater repair.
Cali ~om 304·875-4115. 20 yaars

experience.

Mowery's UpholStery, serving
aree far 31 yeart, for free ea- ·
~~'(tate, caU :l)4.fJ75-41 54.

840

•

'

C&amp;C General Home Ma lntenence · Painting: vinyl sid ing,
carpentry, doors, windows, blthl,
mobile home
and mare. For
free estimate call Chtt, 8t•·902·
6323. '
Ha~.

l

Home
Improvements

Appliance Parts And Setvlce: All
Name Branda Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guarant,eed,
French City Maylag, 814·446·

7795.

-•••
..

DECEMBER 231

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFNG
Uncondlttonal lifetime guarantee.
local references furntshed. e•.
1989 Beretta GT Red Sunroof, 2 tablished 1975. Call (6H) 446Doors, Engi ne &amp; Transmtu ion, 0870 Or 1-800·287-0578. Roger•
, 5I( $4,900 51 3-574·25311.
Waterproofing.

Speed, 4 Cylinder, Air Cruise, 28
f!W. $1,800 81 ..371l·2S45.

'•
•

•

1967 Ford Tempo, 4 door, needs
~utch . sroo. 304-e75n4o.

1989 Cudass Calais New 4 Quad
Engine Excellent Condition, Minor
Body Damage, $1,900, 614·4461859.
. .

,,

...

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

810

au::••

Open_ing lead: 1 2

Mercury Grande Marqulse
Rebuilt, 302 V·8, Approx. 20,000
Miles Full Power, Sharp $2,500;
1985 Dodge Airlea Station Wagon, 2.2. 4 Cylinder, Auto, Runs 800·482-8260.
Grtal, Good Work, Car St,800: New gas tanks, 1 ton lruck
1975 Chevy 1/2 Ton Pick-Up, 3 wheela &amp; radiators. D &amp; R Auto,
SI&gt;Oed. 350 V·8 4 Borrof Fu" Size, Riple'y, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1Work A Haul 1800, 814-448- 800·273-9329.
7215.
. .

~ter

keybO.Itd

12 Actor-

Rbchord
13 Folts
18Mallcabbr.
20FMlo
21
22
23 Of aircraft
24 -National
Park
27 Coamonout •
Gagartn
,
.28 Raoln.Pro·duclng2t BackOittw
neck
,
35Bur- ·
38 Sibling of lit
371YPeOimal
40 &amp;gle'l
claw
'
41 Boredom.
42 Singer Ed '43 Muolcol

II

1987 KX·BO Kawasaki. exc·cand,

gine 165,000 mlles • Door. Work
car $950 814-446-0948

Stelnbwg
10\1111

e;'orry

Late Model New &amp; low Mileage
Used Auto &amp; Truck Part Motors,
Transmissions, Body &amp; Suspension Parts, Domestic I Fo(eign.
Wide SelectiQJ"l Towerllne Auto
Sytlems, 614-532·0139, Or 1·

19115 Olda U8 Rlilency PW, POL.
PS, 80K Actual Mlleo, $2,500,
814·245-5887.

6 Compooo

II

While 1994 Chevy Aatro LT. Ext

614·

1985

19117 Chevy Celebrity 2.8

71::'7;lot.)
8 Thought
I Antol-

mDes, minor damage, $2150: 614949-2311 day a, 81 4-949-284&lt;1

710 Autos for Sale

A Groom Shop -Pel Grooming.

35ScaleunKo

34=~nd

5 e;:nlng dlvlco

0

Paclulae. M;, PB. PS. Tl~ Cruise,
AMIFM Cauette, 24,000 Mllaa,
E11ce!lent Condition $13,200, 814·
448·6423, 814-448.()852.

740

4 OppooMool

,,

,,

1904 Ford Van cluD wagon, 15
pa11•noer. exc cond, good
ctlurct) or group vehicle. 304-8756753.

nu Torota Pick-up Four
Wheel Drive 29,000 Milas 814441·02•7

31 D11ti11CIIW air
32Cupld
33c-(a

CELEBRITY CIPHER

TONI6tiT'S
TOPICt

pr&lt;o.S&amp;,IIOO. 814... 1.0135.

1991 JMp Cherokee laredo 4x4,
Bilek· Cherry Peart Coat, loaded.
4 door. V·6, tow package, clean,
one owner, high mllea, can Bill,
614-W2.aen ot 814·992·!7511.

en

2
growth
3 --bi!Sy

atlaehnwnt

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

"1994 Honda Shadow V 1100, 3200

Cute I Cuddly Chrl11m11 Pr.,.
enrs, Pomeranian Puppy's, &amp;14· 41 Chev, 2 dr. Sedon, good
-8253.
ohopo, $2,400: 80 Grand Prix, 2
dr., IUIO, "let, 13,050, 2 Iorge
Farrel For Sale, 2 Cagn .It 50, lt'IOW Clles, good ~t, S14•
114-+11-0271 Ewnlngl.
IWI-21M5 or 614..

•

614-742·257ol.
t991 Ocidgo Caravan LE, loaclod,

1994 Honda 300 EX E)lcellent
Cqndltion•. Fout Wheeler, $3,000
6t4·-446-1736,

6 Weeks Old AI(C o,chsliund.
Will Hold For Christmas, 614 ·

g4Q.2483,

W.A-N-T-E·D

$~000.

muat sell. 304-578·111107.

lor Chrl11m11, $125 090, 814-

Are You Interested In A REAL
Horne ·laeed Buslne11? ThJa Ia
Th• One You'Yt Botn Looking
For. For FrH BoO!&lt; Call 418..702750.

1990 GMC 4x4 Jimmy, full size,
air, till, cruise, auro. asking

1992 Chevy full size converalon
van, very clean, low milel, call
Torn Anderton, 8 14-1192-33411.

630

FRANK &amp;

1982 Ford 4x4 314 Ton 4 Speed,
302, lois Of New Parts, Runs

1978 Model Canle Trailer Coose- Groad $2.900, 614-367·0323.
22 ' ~e8' Tri-Star 814-3711-

--

30Hoo..-

iBy Phillip Alder

383 Runs Good, $1,200, et4·441·

sUiw fot sate. 304·675·1807.

Peta for Sale ·

31110.

448·11308, , ·800-291-(1088.

1978 Chevy Bllizer 4X4, ~ motor, new lransmlssion, asking

560

Electric DP Treadmill. $75. 304-

Furnace, Duct Work; Etc. S Year
Warranty All Pwta. Uletlnw Wlrranty On Heat E•changtr 81• -

742·2327.

3069.

CFA Himalayan Kinens, 8 Week:!
Old, Call After 5 P.M. 8U·446

110,000 BTU ·4785: 110.000 BTU •
S885: 100,000 BTU ·U85. The
Above Prices Att fof furnaca
Only. Fr11 E\tlmate To lnttilll

'94 Blazer, Jour door, loaded, 614-

$2,500. 614·742·2574.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

42 High_,.
1 - ( - ) 46EmbeU'-h
llllddleoltM llflowahrl.
•
.. UnKol
11 ~"".: ... , ....
furniture, o.g.
13 Part of TGIF
51 NollllrMco
14 Scwsow
1131nwntor
Thomn151611eno.y .
154 C-.clo city
17 Ava lungua
55 Tho O.vll
19 Glna-r55 Mosaic ploco
20 Usad ..loiOI'o
. 22DIICOIICII'I
DOWN
25 -Ango!M
1 Unlmpreoalve
· 28 8anbllllor

·Wipe the sleep
·from his eyes

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

P.M. 61 .. 4411-3228.

814-4o48-7410.

P.M.

Musical
Instruments

Husqvarna mod'er 51 cnain saw
_safe $339 this month only.
Twift MlllrMI 6 BOll Springs, Ex· on
tree cau &amp; free chain &amp; tree
cellent Condition. 175; Aluminum gloves . S1clers Equipment 304· 1982 Ocidgo Pick-Up 37,000
Miles, 614·388 -8272 Alter 5:00
Diamond Pille TocH Boll Sira Full 8757421.
P.M.
.
Size Pick-Up, $200, Alvares
Acottlc Guitar Case Tuner &amp; Hydraulic Oil $12.50-Sgal pail.
Training Video 1325, 114'245· Siders Equipment , Henderson, 1994 Ford F-150 Supercab 4X4
4.9L, 5 Speed, Blue 31x10.50
5428.
wv. 304·675·7421 .
Tires, Overhead Console, Bed
Ventleas 011 heaters 11art1ng at New Agco HydrauliC Front End Uat, AC, 52K Miles, 95'JI. High·
$129,gs &amp; up. Sldero Equipmonl Loader W1th 68 Inch Combination way Mi., Asking $15,1199 Coli 61 ..
446·0012.
~·875-7421.
Bucket, 13,200, 814-379-9381 .

•35 : Call614·448'l. 172Sf After e

12% High Efficiency Furnace,

Business
Opportunity

BEFORE MISTeR RAIN
TAKES OVER YORE JOB It

Ageo -AIIis tractor speclaJs-4660

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Ente'rprlsas,
-·Ohio, 1·8110·537-9528.

..

•

2798.

Fuel Oil Stove, Rod lro~ Porch
FurMure, 81•·379-2720 AFTER
6 P.M.

•K

(0

lloulb
•. Q 6
• A Q~ 6
e A95
• 9 54 2

Seasonal ftrewood, 8U-255-

Sofa And Couch like New, tcitchen Table &amp; Chaitt, 3 Pc. Bedtoam
Suite, Sigler Woodburner, Sigler

Q

I ..

6033.

lntant Brittan,. Sp1nlet Puppies, 6
Swing 115: Bot¥ lfUdtiiNI Walker .Waeks Old, Christmas Day $50,

FAI.L IIP£CIAL

21 o

~~

neck

Crib $40 ; lnfan1 Tub t10:

Empire 50,000 BTU visual 111m.
LP. htottr for 101o. 12$0 lnctuclot
.... plpt~ 014-1192·3045.

~INANCIAL

AFRAID

$3000. 614·992.. 2t2.

Bull Floo~ 814-441-8568.

• QJ 4
• A.J 8 7 6 s·
East
w~"'
• J 10 9 7 3
• A R5 2
•K8754
• I 2
• 83
t K 10 7 &amp; 2

w...S4-E's

wiiii8P"118. 614...... 1-0135.

Seart Band Saw Floor Model; 8
114• Radial Saw; 38• Concrete

t2·2S·96

K 4

• tO 3

',EEK &amp; MEEK

Saratllte system, d!ah &amp; Toshiba
120 recei\lar, complete $325 or

2 Rtcllnoro Rocldng Chair, Wk:k· AKC Garman Shephard Puppies.
er Furnllure, Alpine CD Player, S1SOoa 304-&amp;JS.nn
. .
T.V. 61 .. ~737.
AKC ·Malo l'orklo puppy, $300
ANTIOXIDANT A Suptr High makes nice Christmas present.
Potency, Natural, Free Radical 3Q.&lt;.8QS.3Q2S.
p,otectlon s .. stem 30 Caplela
120, 61 ... 46·8301, 1·800·2D1 · AKC' Minl Dachshund Puppy
0098.
1200 Black llan Female, 814388-81114.

175-4871.

Educator- full lime Educator for
mulrl·county pr i ~ate non-profit
based In Athens. Ol)io. B.S. or
M.S. In Commun11y Hea lth ,
emphasiS on human sexuality.

ct~ lion

Moderen 1 Badroom DowntownCarpeted, Complete Kitchen, All
Ektclric, 614-446-0139.
Eflk:iency Uti ll ties Paid, 1205/Mo.,
2 Bedrooms, Water Paicl. $2.. 01
Mo., In Gallipolis, 614-388-1708.

Furnished· 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, No
Pets, Reference And Oeposil Re ·
qutred, 814·446- t519

fom Throughout Eight Counties.

Advocate tor reproducrive health
ltluea. Growth onented prole&amp;·

_~6~·9~58..:...5 ·-·------­
44

r Citizens , Handicapped,

Wil l Cllln Houses In GaHta
Collaborat1ve Ef· County, 614·4411·2761,

leiter Of Interest, Resume And
Three Employer Relerences Bv
January 3, 1997 To Planned Parenthood Of Southeast Ohio, 396
Richland Avenue. AthtAI. Ohio
45701. EOE .1iSP.
.

Don't Lei This Ono Slip Byll Smtll

One Bedroom With lola Of h·
tras. Washer, Dryer, Stove, Frig
Included. We Pay Water And
Garbage. Very Cl'\an. No
Smokers, No Pets. $300 Deposil,
$350/MO., 614-448 ·2205, 614-

Very nice
14x70
with
baths.
Lari1Jt1985
Island
kitchen
with2~~~~~F~u:rn:;~she:d~E~O:E~,~6~1~4·
patio door. Call 614·385-9e21 alk
lor Mike.
Furnished 2 Bedtoom Apartment,
Actois From Park, AC, No Pets,
References, Deposit, S3S01Mo.,
514..t46-8235, 614-446·.0577.

Wan ting To Do Housekeeping
Call Any~ma. 814-441-1047.

Travel Required. Evening And
WHktnd Hours Req ui rad. 'Send

JACKSON
Y'/EISI\•otid Drive
to S3t5. Walk to shop

room. inc\udet 6 monlhl FREE lot ' &amp; movies. Call 614-418 -2568.
renl. Only $165.57 I* month wi~ Equal Housing Opportunity.
S995 down. CaR 1·800-837-3238.

'

2926 . .

:2::,:200:;,,- - - - - - - - BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

Must sell- 1997 141C70 three bed·

Georges Portf.b!e Sawmill, don't
haul you{ tOgs'\!to the mill just can
.Trees trimmed, 10pped, rem011ad
and trump removal, experle;nced
and insured. reasonable ra tes.
For free -estimate, ca ll 6t4-992·

facilities, close to school. in town.
Applications availa~e at : Village
Green Apts. 149 or call 61 4·992·
3711 . EOH.
Furnished Apanmant ~ Bedroom

includes skirting &amp; steps, will help
With delivery, can 814-385-4367
~~~~:t,EETs:~kc~;.

New sectional home, 3 bedroom,2
use computerized cash registers balt1, $1550 down, $229.75 per
and computer equipmom, bo able · monltl. Includes delivery &amp; set up,
10 project a s1ncere and enthu- Hurry! this homo wilt se~ lasl, call
Siastic attitude at all limes, ability 614 -385-4367.
10 work shift WOfk,
Schutt 12x65, fair cond., 2br, re AU applications mLlSt be submit- fri~erator. stove &amp; 2 window ac,
red thru O.B.E.S. In Athens, Ohio S~,SOO firm. 304-675·3000.
by O&amp;cember 2•. 1998. For more Sectional Home eox2 4 3 BR 2
infofmation can 814-593-7..44.
Bath; 2 LR'I, On Rented lor,

wanted- babysitter in our Racine

and Sl. 1250/mo • dep ... utiL
Call304-875-5054.

For Sale Or Trade· 14x65 Mobile
Home Wllh New Gas Heat Pump,
4 Fl. x 28Ft. Pool With Many ·Ac· $30011o!o.. Utillnes Paid, 607 Sso·
cessories &amp; Deck &amp; Privacy ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·440·
Fence ; 10r12 Outbuilding $7,500 3844Aher6P.M.
Must Be Moved Il l Call 614· 446 - ::..:...:..::::..::.:.:::::...:._ _ _ __
811250r614·441 · 1423.
Apt tor re:nt in Pt. Pleasant, l'lico
2 bedroom . $250/mo. 614 ·44tl ·

BASIC B§:OUIBEMENIS·

304-875-1951.

Educator • Full T1me €duca1or
For Multi·Counly Priva te NonPf'Dfit Based In Athens.
·
Or M.S In Communi ty
EmphaSIS On Human Sexual ity.
Advocate For Aep roducrive
Health l&amp;&amp;ues. Growlh Orier'lled
Prcfeuional fo Conducl Com muniry Education Through Speak·
Ina Engagements, Workshops

And

WANTED

1 balh, upstairs apt,

---------I 2bdrm.
apts., total electric, appllances furnished, laundry roam

AU positions require the ability to

EMPLOYMENT
SE RVICES

110

Tax J)(eparer needed at local lirm
Send resume CloThe Dailv Senti·
nel , P.O. Box 729 -37, Pomeroy,
Otlo45769.

51 o

Trailer lor Rent In Country. Rellrences Required. $250 Monlh and 7?115:
1250 Dopos&lt; 614·31lH!552
Country Furniture. 304-875-6820.
Rt 2 N, amuea, Pt Ptea~ant. WV.
TRAILER FOR RENT
TUH-SOt 9-8, Sun 11-5.
In Gallipolis, 2 Bedrooms (Small)
4 Rooms Total, Unfurnished E•· GOOD U~EO APPLIANCES
capt Far A Gas Range &amp; RefriQ· Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
8t8tor. Nice &amp; Clean. IDEAL FOil ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 78
ELDERLY PERSON Phone 814· Vine Stteet. Call 614-446-7398,
~6·7599 Dere•• 814·448·95311
1-800-499·3499.
Evening•
large Select1on Of Carpet Rem In
440 Apartments
Stock Carpet &amp; V1nyl Se.oo Yd &amp;
Up Mollohan Carpets, 614·448·
for Rent
7444. .
1 and 2 bedroom aparlments, fur·
nished and unfurnished, security · Used ~urniture ~30 Bulav1lle Pike
Couches, Cha~rs, Beds, Matdeposit required, no pell, 814·
tress~~ts,
Lamps, Mlctowave
992"2218·
Srands or Bookcases, Lowrey Or-

::::::::::::::::.:..=.:.:..:..::.:.:.:.:.....
__ 1 2. s 'edroom,
1997 18x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath, VI

Top dollar- antiques, furniture,
glass. china, clocks, gold, ailver,
coins, watches, estates, old stone
jarl. old blue &amp; 'white diahea, old
wood bo~ees, milk bottles, Meigs
Countr Advertisemenl, Osby
Marin, 814-91a2·7-44t.

MERCHANDISE

87S-Xl30 or 304-875-3431 .

Baths, Garoae. SCenic View,

I

ROYAL JELLY With Siberian
Ginseng 60 Capsules, $20. Call
8tH46-830fl, 1-800·29Hl0911.

Two 1 bedroom apanmentl for
Be Glu You Old?? Please Ocin't sale with storilge building. Will
Drink And ' Drive Its The law??. sell on land contract, 81•·992·
5858.
Merry ChriStmas!

I

And Gauranleedl $100 And Up,

WiU Deliver. 8 14-689-&amp;441.

North

3tRace~

ACROSS

Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTifiED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPIUSES
Heat Pump1, Air Condllloning, 11
You Ocin'l Call Uo Wt Bolh Lo101
Estimates, 1-800·211-001il8,
814·.....-83011. wv 002845.

F'"

Relidtntial or commercial wiring
new Mt'Yice or repairs. Masttr Ll:
cen1ed electrician. Ridenour

Electrical, WV000306, 304-176·
t7Bfl.

Rtoldtntlal Or Cammorclal Wlr·
lng, Now Sor'llce Or Rtpalrll. Ll·

cenlld Eleob'lcian. Weith El1c~

g::.,6U·448·g850, Galllpollo,

\

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�The best prices in
in.St.
•

can be·found
"·"·

SAVE YOUR··DOUGH AT C&amp; 0!

727-2921

LOVE

LOVE TOYOTA

LEXUS

Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls
.defeat
:Eastern

Pick 3:
6-9-4
Pick 4:
3-2-5-5

Buckeye 5:
: Sports on Page 7

15-24-28-30-32

Cloudy tonight with
scaHered flurrl. ., Iowa In
the teens. Chrlst.mas Day,
chance of snow Highs
around 20•

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NEW 97 S-1 0 EXT 'CAlf 414
,, .. ,,

AUTO., AIR, Y-:6, AWM. WHEELS, LS PKG.

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AS LOW AS

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~'~ t •
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P/STEERING, 4 WHEEL,

V6, AIR; AM/F

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ANTI·~~K~S

VoL 47, NO. 184

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""'-

·• Price lnct'udes All ~ebates to Dealer

$
I •

hristmas

{'Commissioners c:.all f.9 r unity
~~in economic developm~nt. effort

AS LOW IS

. *PRICE INCLUDES ALL REBATES TO DEALER

3 Sectlono, 28 Pogn, 35 -Ia
A Gannett Co.ll!ew lptpor

Pomeroy-Middleport! Ohio, Tuesday, December 24, 1996

· •• 01996, Olllo va11ey Pl!lllloillng Compllnv

•

IS••• _;,
. ...,

.~

• By JIM FREEMAN
office, has provided more financial
.:. Sentinel News Staff
suppon for economic developmenl
Economic development, and how activities than al any time in the past,
~ - . much county 1axpayers should pay to
"In 1996, approximalely $50,000
::.:.:;. promote it, was the focus of Monday was funded by the commissioners for
;::; )lflerrloon's meeling 'of the Meigs the economic development office.
!.,";County Board of Commissioners.
· Apparently: this was not salisfactory
::: ; Thirty-two local business and to some as we were informed by our
community leaders auended the fom\er economic develop,nenl direc. ::;..·· meeting, held in the Meigs County tor's written resignation thaJ we 'were
- Corrimon Pleas counroom. to per- not interested in economic develop::::suade commissionersto continue lheir menl.' To lhe best of our knowledge,
·- ,suppon of economic developmenl we had given her everylhing which
·.-programs.
.
she had asked for.
Commission President Fred Hoff.
"She had never indicated to us lhat
=: man called the meeting to order and she was dissatisfied or was planning
. i;=;,;read the following prepared slale- on leaving. (I) was informed by
- ment:
Horace Karr that she would be leav·
..::.: "During I he past three years, yo~r ing.if she djd oot receive a raise from .

"(I) infonned Mr. Karr lhat he personally would not be inlerested in
even ttying to give lhis amount of
·raise to anyone in order that lhey
rnighl stay. Mr. Karr did not present
lhis proposal to the ·run board of com'missioners.
·
·
"We, as county commissioners,
are very much inleresled in lhe industrial and economic development of
Meigs County. We have all raised or
are raising our families here and cer·
lainly appreciate lhe jobs which they
have and lhe jobs which they may
have in the fulure.
"We do plan to appropriate funds
for economic development aclivilies
in 1997, but at present we aree&lt;ploring possibilities on how we can get

~!L~ · ;f'?.~~~~~~ ~~is . $Z2,~to ~~-I!'I(. X\'I!f.....~t...; A~.t\~,!!l!!!.f.ll!.~;~
(

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AIR, TILT, CRUISE, AM/FM ~S.,

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M

AS LOW AS

$

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: :" COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. meni officials are wonied aboUIIos:
· ..,.. George Voinovich would . like to ing jobs lo neighboring stales if lhey
:::,.s;.'Wean Ohio companies from a grow- don't offer lucrative incentive pack• · -ing reliance on targeted tax· breaks .ages. And at lhe same .lime. some
and other special deals 10 lure invest- governors are concerned that coinpanics pit slate against slale lo
.._ment. .
~~ . The problem is lhe cosl of thoi besl increase lhe size of the deals,
:t:,altemalive - a widescale reduclion Voinovich said.
Voinovich's remarks came during
::;':&lt;!f business taxes lhat would benefil
a year-end interview thai also .touched
·:;r.:all Ohio companies.
: ~ · "The real issue here is how do you on lhe upcoming budgel negotiations,
an expected financial bailoul of Cen~lh change some of the lhings you •d
· - -like to change and at the same time tral State Universily and a proposal
:::~.maintain the dollars needed lo sup- to increase spending on Ohio's ·urban
:~rt the various services provided lo school districts.
Voinovich said he raised the eco:.!;:J~e citizens?" Voinovich said Monnomic
development issue with Penn:~-;:Pay.
.. ~ ' Plus, many economic develop- sylvania Gov. Tom Ridge -the new

•'·
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*PRICE INCLUDES ALL REBATES TO DEALER

•

. chairman of the Council of Great
Lakes Governors - and expects the
group lo look for ways slali:s can con.tinue 10 promote themselves wilhout
resoning 10 expensive onc-upman·
ship with tax abatements, !raining
grants and other economic development 1ools.
·
1be council also includes the gov·
emors of Wisconsin, Michigan, New
York, Indiana, Minnesota and Illinois.
"You have to be aware lhat to centinue to allow incentives to go unfettered, uhimately the region is hun,"
Voinovich added. "We all are competilors, bullhere's going to be some
dialogue among lhe states aboul
whal's fair and what's not in lhe besl

public policy inleresl of the region
overall."
·Samuel Staley, vice president for
research at The Buckeye Institute for
Public Policy Solutions, has been
arguing for years for a cease-fire in
the economic war among the stales.
The Dayton-based nonprofii, nonA HEAVENLY HOUDAY- Angels are a vary lnldltlonal part ot
panisan research group released a
the celebrtltlon of. Chrls11118s. These heavenly me111111gers _ .
resolution in September 1995 that
the first to dallver.the news of the birth of!Jesus Chrlat to sheprecommended the elimination of
herda tanding their sheep In the fields surrounding Bethlehem.
direcl grants and largeted tax abateChrlatmll 11 observed on Dec. 25, 11 the annlvarury of Chrllt'l
menls.
The100
resolution
- from
signed
by · L~~--------------------..;.J
more than
economisls
Ohio
and eight other stales- was given 10
lawmakers in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois and Nebraska.

'

~~flacine Council appoints Scott Hill as mayor

'-

FULL CONVERSION ·
.4 CAPTAIN CHAIRS, SOFA\BED,

P"'!l!~.~~~~~~s; AM/Ff.! CASS.

. :;:::: • Racine Councilman Scott Hill accepted the job of mayoral Monday nighl's
Hill, 24, is il five-year member of council, currcnlly serving his second .
:t'::meeling of Racine Village Council.
.
·
tenn. He was first elected to council at the age Of' 19.
. ... : Council spenllwo hours discussing who would be lhe new mayor.before
He said he e~pects council members to play·a more active role in com• · 'Hill, who is also council presidenl, accepted the posilion on a temporary basis. . munity projecls and in the administration of village government.
Council in turn pledged its cooperalion to help get things done in the vilThe appointmcnl follows the reshufAing of village govemmenl afler MayJeff Thornton announced his resignation, effective Dec. 31 following his lage.
In other business, council noted that Marshal Matt Richards gave Deputy
.~~ehocti&lt;ln to the Meigs Counly Board of Commissioners.
Councilman Larry Wolfe resigntd as council presidenl on Dec. ·6 and in Marshal Brent Rose a 30-day administralive suspension wilhout pay, but did
nol elaborate on lhe reason for the suspension.
~~~n.uary, council will have 10 appoint a new member lo replace Hill.
Council willlieXI meet Monday, Jan. 6 at ·7 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
11 is anticipated lhat Hill will assume the mayor's poshion al first on a temPresent were Hill and councilmen Raben Beegle, Dale Han, Henry Lyons
norarv basis due 10 work and other inlerests.
and Larry Wolfe, Clerk Karen Lypns an.d Stre~t Commissioner Glenn RizA produce fanner. Hill is a bus driver fonhe Soulhem Local ~chool Dis
and also works al Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. He is a captain er. ,Hill presided in Thornton's absence.
!:;~:_•:::he:_::Ra~cine Volunleer Fire Depanment.

·.

UST PRICE ..................... ~ ...........................
~
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128.5-49.·
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FACTORY REBATE ....................................................................................................~
. $28,141
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C&amp;O ·sPECIAL DISCOUNT.......................................~. :...••~ ••• ~·••••.•• :•.•:.............. t··· ... :... -4150 ·

·woman critical
after SR 7 crash

·ALL WHEEL
CHAIRS, DUTCH
AM/FMCASS,

u •••••-:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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LIST PRICE ................ $27,873.50
C&amp;O DISCdUNT. .......... ~2,87~

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REBA'!£ TO DEALER

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727-2921

Prices ~ nat Include doc. te., taxea or llcenu !He.

OTORS TOJOTA .....
ST. ALBANS . &amp; LEIUS
727-2921 ••..s
SltN
AF1II

RT. 80 MacCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S ' .
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEAlER SEWNG CHEVROLEr AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS

OPD I A.ll. TO e Rll. DAILY-MTURDAY I A.M. TO I Rll. IUIIDAY 1 Rll. TO I IIIII.

,.__ _ _.J ,

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thl Chriii!IW holldly. Ga'llll'lliMIII ofiiDIIMCI
nu~ buslne1111 wHI bacia lid Wadlies
day, but .,. to reopen Thursday.
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§3Business
tax
breaks·
concern
Voiriovich
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dollar which is used for this purpose .
These funds will be appropriated
through the office of the county
commissioners lo provide what we
feel is lhe best means of promoling ·
Meigs County's industrial and economic development
"We would also like to state thai
we are very appreciative of the activities of lhe Meigs County (Community Improvement Corporalion) and
feel thai it has been the most important part of ipdustrial development
activilies lhal has occurred in Meigs
County during the pasl year.
"We are especially appreciative of
lhe three gentlemen (Horace Karr,
Roscoe Mills and Eugene Facemyer)
who committed their own money to

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A Rutland area woman was in critical condition lhis morning in
Charleston Area Medical Cenler with
injuries suffered in a three-vehide
accident Monday on Stale Route 7 at
the intersection wilh Counly Road 5
(Bradbury),lhe Gallia-Meigs Posl of
the Slale Highway Patrol repon~d .
Driver Connie B. Black, 60,
34711 New Lima Road, was transported from lhe scene by the HealthNet air ambulance and underwent
surgery upon orri val, troopers said.
1be drivers of the other two vehi·
cles- Daniel W. Lalilz, 32, 40216
SR 684, Pomeroy, and Paul H. Baer,
72, 3SI6S Baer Road, Racine, were
also injured in lhe crash and were laic·
en to Veterans Memorial Hospilal by
lhe Meigs EMS.
They were later treated and
releucd; a hospilal 'spokesperson
.alid.
· Troo~n slid Baer was eastbound
on Bl'illbury at 5:40 p.m. when he
tliled to yield to Lantz's pickup
(Conti
. nued on Page 3)

GRS gets Middleport
trash pickup contract :
By TO.. HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
General Refuse Service was
awarded a ·one-year &lt;;untract for
waste and refuse service in Middlepan after Middlcpon Village Coon·
cil formally approved the awarding of
1hc contract at Monday's regular
coundl meeting.
· The Milton, W.Va., firm submiued
a scaled bid wilh a proposed .'!'onthly ralc uf $6.69 per customer for all
residents of the village, with a $6 per
month rule for senior citizens.
Middlcpori Council President .
Beth Slivers said that council, after
,reviewing and discussing all the hids,
decided tp select the General Refuse
bid over the overall low bid by Barr
Garbage Service, Bidwell, because
the Gr.neral Re.fuse bid for regular
customers was I &lt;;CRt cheaper.
"A majority of the customers in
the village are regular clislomers, so
we felt it would lx:.of benefitlo go
with the cheaper bid. We also took
into account General Refuse Service's
availahility to the village and its
refuse cusiOmers, by fax, voice mail,
and a loll-free number, when making
our decision," said Stivers.
· Councilman John Neville seconded Slivcni' molion lo accept the General Refuse bid, with council approv·
ing too contract award by a S-0 vote .
Other .firms competing for lhe
1997 village refuse contract and lhcir
bids were as follows:
• Barr Garbage Service, Bidwell,
bid a proposed monlhly ra1e of $6.70
per customer for all residents of the
village, with a $5.70 per moillh rale
for senior citizens.
• Rumpkc Commercial Services,
Jackson and Cincinnati, bid a proposed monthly rate of $7,25 per cuslomer .for all residents
of the village,
.

with a$6.25 per monlh rate for senior
cilizcn.'i.

• Modern Sanitation, Pomeroy, hid

a proposed monlhly rate of $7.50 per
customer for all residenls of the village.
Policy questions
Owners of rental propcny in the
village addrcssedmuncil concerning
a policy change by ·the village's
Board of Public· Affairs in the. manncr which propeny owners arc held
responsible for water bills in the vil'lagc.
The change in policy, effective
Jan. I, climinales deposjls for water
service as they are currenlly known.·
Property owners and .residents will .
now both be required 10 sign a contract with the village for stanup of
water service at a residence, wilh no
deposit fcc due.
Several rental property owners
attending the meeting ciaim lhe drawback and majnr complaint with the
policy change comes when a renter
leaves a past duc·bill at a rental property after vacaling it In essence, land·
lords will now be footing lhe bill for
those past due water bills.
"This is going to be disa.•trous for
us landlords,. We have a toughtime
even recovering what we have invesl·
ed in these propcnies already, with·
(Continued on Page 3)

No Sentinel
Wednesday.
The Daily Senlinel will not be
published Wednesday so that its
· employees may observe lhe Ou:ill·
mas holiday.
Regular publicalion and busi.ness hours resume Thursday.

•

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                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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