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                  <text>GATOR BOWL TIC

2 GATOR BOWL TICKETS FREE WITH ANY
WHILE THEY LAST.
·2921
HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

I

•
TOYOTA SOLD

Ohio Lottery

Cowboys,
Stealers
advance

727·

Super Lotto:
5-19-34-35-40-45 .

Kicker:
5-9-3-2-3-4
Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
5-2-1-7

Sporta on Page 4

Vol. 47, NO. 117

.

Work underway on P·omeroy's
riverfront amphitheater project
. By JIM FREEMAN

Sentinel Newa Steff
Actual construction work began
last week on the Pomeroy Riverfront Amphitheater, with workers
preparing the existing Pomeroy
Levee for construction of the
$!78,000 structure.
Workers began demolition and
· site ·preparation work last week,
including the installation of two
five-foot-deep holes which mark
where lighting poles will be placed.
In October, Pomeroy Village
Council approved a $177,900 bid
submitted by Banks Construction .
of Pomeroy for construction of the
facility.
The 163-foot-long structure will
include seating, a walking/st~ge
area, removable railing and tiedowps big enough for large ·riverboats, according to the plans. It will
extend more than 17 feet out into
the river, supported on steel !-

beams:
Also included will be stage and
walkway lighting and electrical
hookups for boats.
Pomeroy grants administrator
and Village Council President John
WORK COMMENCES- Work began laat-'&lt; on tha Pomeroy Rlveitront Amphlthut.r. Mar·
Musser said he is glad to see 'conty Woodard, lett, and Arnold John11011, workers for Benita Conatructlon, prepered a hole that
. struction underway, but added that
will eventually hold a eoncrate support for llghtlng. In the background, at tight, other workera
mote substantial work, primarily
prepered 1 llmller hole.
the driving of the steel 1-beams,
'
~
"'
.
. .. -~ ....... will have to walt .until tl,le Ohio
1
·pick up a small percentage, approx·
nade;
',{
;.,alkway
along
the
inside
The
water
level
is
really
tbe
key,
River reaches a normal pool depth.
imately $5,000, mostly in in-kind
Musser
explained.
·
parking
lot
wall
featuring
1890s
As of Friday afternoon, the rivwork ~ including 'electrical
period
ligliting,
gazebos
and
"Some welding has be done, so
er was up about five feet above
wiring .
benches.
as a result the water has to be down
normal.
Musser foresees holding a certhe
project
is
being
Half
of
Plans to bring in a barge to drito normal pool," he said.
emony
d!ldicating the facility in
The amphitheater will comple- · funded by an as-yet-unnamed .,
. ve the steel beams have been
July
or
August,
at which time the
benefactor with the other half from
thwarted .several times by erratic • ment other upgrades in the levee
benefactor will be recognized.
an ODNR grant. The village will
area, including the grand promewater levels, he said,
'

'

West South Post largest U S growth rates

•.·:

.

'

•

•

•

·

WASHINGTON (AP)- States in · Population decreased in the year est net international immigration,
'he West and South continue to post ending July 1996 in only two 'places 'with 246,000 more people moving
· the fastest growth in the nation, ·- Rhode lslll!ld by 0.1 percent and · into the state from abroad; and high.. according . to . midyear estimates the District of Columbia by 2 percent. est patural population growth, with
: )'eleased today by the Census Bureau. · Much of D.C.'s loss was caused by 328,000 more births than deaths.
Nevada had the highest percent; As in recent years, Nevada was more peo~le leaving the capitol~ to go'
to
other
parts
of
the
United
States
age
of people arriving from another
, ihe fastest-growing state, increasing
than
moving
into
it.
state.
Arizona followed, with North
, by 4.5 percent, or 70,000 people,
In terms of numbers, California Carolina, Georgia and Oregon close
•.be!Ween .July 1995 and July 1996.
, Arizona grew by 2.9 percent and led the nation in domestic emigtation behind. D.C. had the highest rate of
~ :Utah by 2.2 percent, followed by Col- with 259,000 people- meaning that people leaving for elsewhere in the
. prado, Georgia and Idaho with 2 per- many more left it than arrived from United States, followed by New
other- states. But it also had the high- York, Hawaii and California.
, cent each .

..

~Peruvian

AND

STeALBANS

·LEXUS
TOYOTA
..

The South was the o01y region to
show population growth from net
domestic immigration, 382,000 peopie. The Northeast lost the most residents to other regions, 326,000 peopie.
'
Overall U.S. population growth
was 0.9 percent between July 1995
and July 1996, led by 1.4 percent
growth in the West and 1.2 percent in
the South. The Midwest registered
0.6 percent growth and the Northeast
just 0.1 percent.

GOP split over
Gingrich ethics
violation widens
WASHINGTON (AP)- A Republican congressman who previously supported Newt Gingrich said today he.should step aside as House speaker over
his admission that he violated ethics rules. .
Rep. Michael Forbes of New York, the first Republican to publicly oppose
. the speaker's re-election, said Gingrich should "exercise the ultimate in pro-.
files in courage in stepping aside and in not standing for re-election as speak- .
er."
"As we move i~to the new Congress we need a strong, dynamic, unencumbered speaker, " Forbes said o.n MSNBC. He said be has been a staunch
supporter of Gingrich and believes he has been unfairly attacked but added,
''I'm troubled by the speaker 's own admission that he took his eye off the
ball in preparing his own defense before the Ethics Committee."
Forbes was quoted in today's New York Times as saying he would not
vote to re-elect Gingrich as·speaker.
But House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, R-Texas, says Gingrich has no
intention of abandoning his post despite any reservations that rank,and-file
Republicans are expressing about him.
"Newt Gingrich is nqt going to step aside,-I'm absolutely confident of
tbat," DeLay said Sunday. "He will be eJected (speaker) on Jan. 7."
DeLay's remarks on NBC's "Meet The Press"'came after a week in which
Republicans began voicing unease about the House ethics committee's probe
of Gingrich. The speaker has admitted filing erroneous statements to the panel regarding a college course·he once taught at a small Georgi~ school.
Gingrich and other Republican leaders want the ethics committee to decide
what,.if any, penalty should be levied against the speaker ori or before Jan.
7, when the House convenes to elect leaders for the 105th Congress.
But the committee's senior Democrat, Rep. Jim McDermott of Washington, told The Washington Post it would be "almost impossible" for the panel to complete its work bY then. " ... I'd be surprised if we could make a
thoughtful, intelligent judgment in less than a week or two," he said .
If the panel - and the full House -take the unlikely step of voting for
censure, Gingrich would be stripped of his speakership. An official reprimand,
the most lenient penalty availubl~. would .not reqU,ire Gingrich to quit the leadership. '
.
; .
·Political costs 3$SOciated with a prolonged public airing of the committee's findings on Gingrich, however, could diminish the speaker's power. That
explains in part why Republicans are eager to put the two-year ethics investigation behind them, while Democrats wh.o earlier pushed to accelerate the
probe now want to proceed more slowly.
"Clearly, there should be a full discussion ofthis," Rep. Martin Prost, DTexas, said on NBC. "The speaker ... clearly should have the opportunity to
defend himself, to come in and present his case, and I would hope that that
would be public.
"Thechargesareserious-theRepublicanshaveadifficulttimeacknowledging the fact that the speaker actually provided false and misleading information to the committee," Prost adped.
Except for his ethics matter, re-election to the speaker's post would be a
foregone conclusion for the often-confrontational Gingrich, who campaigned
hard for Republican congressional candidates in the early 1.990s.Jiis worl!
paid off in 1994', when the GOP took over the House, and he was his party's overwhelming choice for speaker.
Just a week ago, Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, said he expected Gingrich to receive the vote of every House Republican this time.
At least eight Republicans have said they want time to study all tbe facts
in the Gingrich matter be~re
· oting on his re-election.
But Rep. Chiistopher ay of Connecticut, a key GOP moderate, offered
a staunch defense of the speak . "I think Republicans will support him unanimously, and I think soJ]l:..Ll ocrats will and should," Shays said Sunday
· on CBS' "Pace The Nation."

hostages get word from outside

:. LIMA, Peru (AP)- For nearly
'two weeks, diplomats and other V!Ps
theld hostage by leftist rebels have
.been cut off from the world, ~pped ·
in the Japanese ambassador s restdence with rare chances to contact
worried relatives or friends. . .
Today, however, all 83 rematnmg
hostages will receive their biggest gift
of this holiday season: a letter from
their loved ones.
• In a move sure to lift the hostages'
'ipirits, Red Cross officials said the
•guerrillas had agreed to let relatives
.send one letter to each captive. The
hostages will be allowed to reply the
.iame day, they said.
• "The emotional stress on the
~ostages and their families is tremendous," · said Luis K. Watanabe, a
Peruvian museum director released
'Ofter ~ve days in captivity. "~ir
·only bnk ~ l:le.~n mutual suffenng
·and uncertainty.
.
. : 'TheRedCrossalsoplanstodebv. ~ ?"esh ~lothes, shoes, c~dles, msecltctde, ctgarettes and dtsmfeetant so

MOTO

2 Sectlono, 12 PagH, 35 centa
AGonnett Co. Newopaptt

Pomeroy-Middlepo'rt, Ohio, Monday, December 30; 19~6

011116. Ohio Valley Publlthlng Company

Cloudy with • ch8noe of
ahowert tonight, Iowa
around 40. Tueedey,
cloudy, hlgha nMr 50.

the hostages may clean the resi- oftheircolnrades and stopped threatdence's bathrooms and floors.
• ening to execute hostages is encour1
On Sunday, rebels allowed the aging.
l.{ed Cross to deli~er 40 pounds of
"We think this is a sign that it is
tmported dog food for Japanese very probable that the problem will
AmbaSsad~. _Mo~hita Aoki 's two solve itself in tae next few days," said
Gennan sh~s. Aokt also IS a Eloy Avila, the acting Bolivian
hostage and re!'"rtedly has not been ambassador while the regular envoy
allowed near hts dogs.
is captive.
The gestu_r~s ~ppear t~ . show
In their most recent communique,
greater flextbtltty m .the posltlon of the rebels insisted only that the I!OVthe roughly 20 Tupac Amaru rebels emment improve the conditions of
who initiall&gt;' seized some 500 Peru's squalid prisons, where inmates
hostages durmg a gala bash at the reportedly catch and eat rats to avoid
compound on Dec. 1.7.
•
starving to death. ·
Until this weekend, the guerrill'!5
They said the 20 hostages were
had restricted -communications with freed as a sjgn of willingness to "contheir captives and insisted with tinue seeking a path to dialogue."
t~atS that the government _give in to
Another positive sign is that the
theu key demand - freetng some government has entered into ~irect
300 fellow rebels from prison.
talks with. the rebels. Fujimori sent .
. President Albert~ ~ujimori . has his education minister for face-tosatd he wtll ~~~free jatled guem)las face talks wtth the gue~illas Saturto end the cnsts.
day, a departure from hts stated pol,
Butthereleaseof20hostagesSat- .icy ?,f not negotiating with "terrorurday, and the fact J!lal the rebels tsts. .
.
have stopped demandmg the release
Unul Saturday, Red Cross officials

and Roman Catholic Archbishop
Juan Luis Cipriani, a close friend of
Fujimori, served as the main channels
of communication between the govemment and the rebels.
The guerrillas have been releasing
hostages in stages, but they continue
to hold the ambassadors from Japan,
Honduras and Bolivia, in addition to
Peruvian military chiefs, anti-terrorist experts and government cabinet
members.
Foreign diplomats and aid officials do not anticipate a quick end to
the standoff, but .some think more
hostage releases are in the works .
Sociologist Carlos Ivan Degrego·
rio said he believes the rebels need to
keep releasing hostages "to stay in
. the news and keep the initiative."
Peruvians weary of the standoff
have begun to spray paint the words
"Hostages Freedom" on walls and ,
buses around Lima. Vendors have
begun 'selling T-shirts on street corners with the same slogan.

SWORN IN - Incoming
.
Jeffrey L.
Thornton was sworn In during • .
ceremony et the Meigs
County Courthouse Friday afternoon. Common Pleae Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill, left, administered the oath of offlc• to Thornton, who
will take tha seat on the county's Board of Commlnloners commencing Jan. 2, 1997.

:Clinton OKs crackdown on states legalizing medicinal marijuana
' . WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton has approved a plan to com:~at state laws legalizing marijuana for m~ical use ~ugh a variety _of '!letiiiS
:that could include criminal charges agatnst phystctans who prescnbe tt.
, Retired Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey,th~ president's anti-narcotics chief,
Said those who violate federal laws, including provisions forbidding docton
·from prescribing illegal drugs, "lend themselves vulnerable to prosecution.''
; Interviewed Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation," McCaffrey said Clin·ion app-oved the plan last week, with details to be announced Monday. He
'llelded a multiagency effort over the past several weeks to draw it up.
: McCaffrey said the plan would make clear that while federal law has not
·:chanJed, 1ovemment medical authorities will continue to examine the·pur· poned benefita of any drug, including marijU31la.
•: But he said doctors who prescribe illegal drugs would be prosecuted or
·' removed from the federal registry that allows them to write prescnptlons.

..

.

•

'

He said the administration temoins confident American medicine offers better remedies_to deal with pain than prescr.ibing illegal dru~s.
.
"Clearly tf we had unscrupulous phystctans who were ustng herom _to treat
writer's block in Arizona, or if there were prescription mills in Cahfornia,
1\:derallaw will be upheld," McCaffrey said.
·
Voters In these two states last month approved meas~res that would relax
restrictions on the medical use of some illegal drugs, such as marijuana.
He said theadministrati_on is reminding anyone 'who receives government
money or operates under federal jurisdiction that they are banned from using
illegal drugs, whatever a doctor may recommend.
,:
"So if you're flying a Delta airliner, driving a school bus, operating a
nuclear power plant, if you are a National Guard serg~ant, you can't use
Schedule I drugs" ror medical purposes, McCaffrey said.
Marijuana and heroin are Schedule I substances, and federal law recog-

nizes no legitimate medical use for them. Under the new administration plan,
doctors who prescdbe marijuana could lose their Drug Enforcement Admin·
. tstrauon certtficatton, even where state laws permit such prescriptions.
McCaffrey said the resolutions California and Arizona voters approved
amount to quasilegalization of drugs.
'
·
"In essence we see them a.&lt; a violation of the scientific process that ha.•
brought America the safest and most effective medicines in the world,"
McCaffrey sllid . "And we' re cnonnously concerned because of the potential for increased drug abuse in these two states."
.
Asked if by its actions the federal government is thwarting the will of the
people, McCaffrey said many voters in California and Arizona "were asleep
at the switch" in approving "~oax referendums" that did not have any serious medical backing.

�•

(

\

Monday, December 30, 1996

Commentary

Page 2

Monday, December30, 19M

•

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Tuesday, Dee. 31

'EstiWfislid in 1!148
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156. ~ 992·2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Resolutions, like campaign
finance reform promises,
are very hard to keep

ly arrived on the nght desk. But It
d1dn 'I arnve until a day after DoZier
was released -- in Padua •• m early
1982.

By Jack Anderson

bureau. And while the log mdicates
that the unit had several psychic
"hits," the informatton never led to
the recovery of a smgle miSSing per-

son.

,

No problem ever took more of the
unit's time than the Iran hostage criSIS. The Joint Chiefs of Staff called
10 the psychics on Nov. 23. 1979. and
a total of 206 ~sSJons were held to
Some of these events are noted 1n try to detennme !he location and cona haghly sensliiVe secret log that dition of the hostages.
Dunng that time, the psych1cs
recorded the unn's act1v11ies from
revealed
some information that later
1979to 1989, whiCh was obtatned by
our associate Dale Van Atta In the turned out to he true •• such as a
Dozier case, Project No 8125, 11 " descnpt10n of the locat1on and umnoted that McMoneagle "prov1ded fonns of the guards, and the fact that
'Padua' e1ght days before (DoZier's) one of the hostages was in a poor
release." The log further brags that mental state and probably suffenng
"all other mfo was confinned durmg from mult1ple scleroSis Still, their
a debnefing conducted by project effons p)ayed no role in the release
of the hostages m 1981.
personnel.''
The second mosttime-consurn10g
What becomes dear from readmg
project,
conducted after 1he unit was
the log IS that the psych1c spy umt,
sh1fted
to
the Defense Intelligence
wh1ch cost $20 mtlhon to operate,
Agency,
was
a search for Amencan
worked mrunly as ~ m1ss10g person's •

and
Jan Moller

~

By WALTER A. MEARS
AP Special Correapondent
WASHINGTON- New Year's resolutions aren't bmding,lhey; re hard
to keep, and they often follow a binge - a pauem d\at fits !he promised
drive for campaign finance reform m 1997.
After a campaign that mult1phed old spendmg levels. to a total of well
over ~\..6 bllhon on the presidential and congress1onal elections, there are
plesJ~among the wmners to change !he system.
But even among the polnicians who agree that something ought to he
done, there's-no accord on exactly what. They'll be wnting rules for themselves, and nobody wants to yield the advantage or accept a hand1cap 10 the
next elections.

I

I

&gt;OCIA~

Berry•s World

I
I

I

I

•

"Take off your pants, get your wallet out, and ths
doctor will bs with you 1n a couple of minutes. •

18%

SECURtTY
,

SY~EM

MIRR~

LIES

22%

13%

!

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and columnist
for~ Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national politics for more than 30 yean.

I.
]'

HOT

AIR

That's made 11 an Intractable JSsue for two decades To deliver on the cur- :
rem talk of reform, Republ1cans and Democrals would have to find terms i
both sides would see as close to neutral m ihe 1mpac1 on theu candidates.
Rival reform proposals m the past always have mcluded prov1S1ons,o'le
s1de saw as the other's grasp for an edge. For example, Republicans in the
last Congress sought to bar the poliui:al use of labor dues, and probably Will
try again. Democrals tend to favor spendm.s hm11s, and have sought pubhc
financing of congreSSional elect1on camprugns
There's also the self-defense argument, basically tha( self-restraint would ,
amounlto surrender under the current system.
,
PreSident Clinton, who attended lo b1g-money DemocratiC donors at the
While House. now urges reforms that would end their role by prohibuing
unrestricted contributions to the political pan1es.
"What you see here IS too much money bemg rrused, rrusmg too many
questions and laking too much lime . " he said. "And we ought to stop 11
and have some campaign finance reform."
That goes to the question of legal, •f loopholed, donattons. not the abuses that have led the Democrats to return about $1.5 million hoked to foreign contributors, wh1ch already IS illegal. Republicans are readying House
and Senate 10vest•gat•ons. Democrats often counter by citing the case of a
Bob Dole financ1er convicted of laundenng Illicit corporate donatiOns.
The vehicle for the camprugn reform push will be a bill sponsored by Sen.
John McCa10, R-Ariz , and Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis , wh1ch seeks to
hmll spending on congresSional campaigns, and would ban the unhmlled
funds that now can go to the political pan1es. The latter was the loophole
thill drew a torrent of masSIVe donatJQIIs m 1996, wh1ch was legal but
nonetheless mv1ted the abuses Congress will be investigating
Clinton has endorsed the bill, urgmg an amendment to ban contributions
by anyone who IS not a U.S. c111zen. Legal ahens and then U.S. busmesses
can dOf\ale under the current law, but the president sa1d that ra1ses too many
quesuons and shouldn't be done any longer.
It•s the line the Democrats crossed 10 accepting improper donations from
forelgQers
,
.
d' .
.
The McCain-Femgold ball would seek to llm11 spen mg m congressiOnal eleCIIOn campaigns by offenng free and dJscounted televiSion 11me and
reducejl flailing rates to candidates who abide by the cellmgs. The lnmts
would have to be 1mposed through mcenuves because 11 can't be ~one by
law A Supreme Coull deciSion m 1976 ovenumed spendmg hm11s 1mposed
after Watergate, holdmg them m vmlatiQn of ~ree speech guaran~ees.
D•rect spendmg m preSidential campaigns IS limned for candidates who
accept federal financmg Clinton and Dole each got 574 m1lhon m 1996and lhe benefit of m1lhons more that passed through then pollt1cal. p~1es
In theory, thaLunhmned pany money 1s not supposed to be_use~ m d1rect
support of candadates, for preSident or for Congress In pracuce, IllS.
But the bill will only stan the debate Republicans sttll want to llm1tlabor
union spendmg Democrats have talked of proposmg a consututmnal amendment 10 perrmt d~rectlimtls on campa1gn spending Some Republicans say
the nght course IS Simply to requtre lull and timely diSclosure of campa1gn
finances. There have been proposals that a bipanisan commiSSIOn deal w1th
the w~ole problem
Chnton d1d not press campaign refonn dunng h1s first tcnn, bu1 he sa1d
m cndprsmg the bill that there arc no excuses for mactton now
He also pomted to the obstacles:
'
.
"We know from b1tter expenence ... thatth1s IS one of those thmgs that
everybody's for m general but few arc form pan1cular"

'

MICH

NatHentoff

hostages held in Lebanon in the late
1980s. Project No 8808 mvolved six
d1fferent psych1cs conduc110g 113
sessions in 1988 and 1989.
In the case of Manne Corps Col.
W111iam H1ggins. the psych1cs ctted
a specific bulldmg m a south
Lebanese village where he had been
held -- and another hostage later confirmed .that H•ggms had probably
been m the bUI!dmg at the 11me of the
.. remote viewmg'' sessions The psychics also accurately sa1d that Htg·
g10s had been killed at a ume when
other U.S mtelhgence mformallon
suggested he was still alive.
Some proJects recorded in the log
were abJect frulures. In two different
1981 sessiOns. for example. the unit
tried to locate Amencan sold1ers
missm'g from the Vietnam War. But
none of the Information could be confinned, and the log notes that thesessions were "not helpful thus far."
Other log entnes are mconcluSive,
$uch as an FBI request to help locate
miSsing children The log claims
several "hils" by the psychics,
10clud10g a specific bar m Denver,
but there IS no tnd1cat1on whether the
ch1ldren were recovered as a result
In one case, however, even critics
of the program shook then heads m
drs belief
The U S. Customs SefVIce was on
the .hunt for a dangerous fugitive,
Charles Jordan -- a former Customs
agent who had gone astray By the
ume the psych1cs were called in, Jordan had been on the run for two
years He was believed to be hiding
10 the Caribbean, or somewhere else
outSide the Unncd States Accord10g
to the log, 18 sesstons were held 10
1989 10 an auempt to find Jordan
One psych1c dcscnbed htm as h1d10g 10 northern Wyommg at a campground near an lnd1an burial site
Two months later, Jordan was found
10 P10edale, Wyo , not far from Yel. lowstone NatmnaLPark -- 10 a cam!l'
ground near an Indian burial site. The
work of the psychJc wa.~ "tnstrumental" 10 Jordan's capture, a former
Customs official confirmed.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

IManslleldl44°

Joseph Spear
tcncs, then stan a new season on
Labor Day In so domg, they perform
an enonnous pubhc scrvtce by fretling ahoutthmgs that Nonnal People
rarely take the ttme to th10k about.
Astcrmds, for example. For years,
SWs have been pacmg the Ooor at
night, robbed of their rest bv these
clumps of rock hunting through
space, narrowly missmg the Eanh a.~
they liP by. In' May, an astero1d the
width of 13 football fields m1ssed us
by 1.9 m1llion m1les, a cosm1c inch
by astronomical measure. The same
month, a smaller space object Vlnually grazed the earth as 11 sped by at
a diStance of 280,000 miles.
Over and over, SWs have warned
Normal People that a collision with
one of these rocks could result m
another ice age, but nobody seemed
to care -· unttl this spring, when
NASA turned on a new state-of-the·
an computenzed telescope and staned countmg. The Near-Eanh Asteroid
Trackmg System has confinned the
presence of 2.400 chunks of serious

stuff sw~rhng around us The hazard
IS now deemed so acute that NBC
w1ll au a thnllcr m1m-senes m February called "Asteroid "
What other tmponant mauers arc
Senous Womcrs gnndmg their teeth
about as Nonnal People tnp through
hfe, Ia de da, wuh on furrowed brow
and orderly mnards?
Well, !here's the problem of the
new toll-free exchange Busmcsses
wllh the 888 prefix say they are losmg customers who mmdlessly dial an
800 number, get the wrong pany and
assume the merchant they are seeking has folded. Then there's the doctor glut· The Umted States IS lratnmg
and retaining too many forc1gn physiCians. And the strawberry boycott
California piCkers say they are underpaid. And the federal government's
unfunded $1.7trilllon pension liabtlity. And the woeful fact that the
tablotds can't seem to get a photo of
Madonna's new baby.
And these troublesome problems:
-- Forty-two percent of the cooked

WVA

Ram
V1.t As~teet PIVSS CJraphlcsNet

Warm temperatures will
.persist for most of week
_By The Aaaoclated Preaa
A high pressure system will keep
the colder air blocked to the north and
prov1de Ohio with unseasonably
warm condmons for the next few
days, forecasters said.
, Highs through the rest of the
,week should he 45-55, the Nattonal
Weather Serv•ce said
Some prectpltallon IS possible tn
.the northeast on Tuesday mom mg.
Some sunshine IS likely on New
Year's Day
The record-htgh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
statiOn was 63 degrees 10 l964 while
the record low was mtnus-12 in
1880 Sunset tomght Will be at 5:16

p.m. and sunnse Tuesday at7 53 am
Weather forecast:
' Tonight .. Cloudy. A chance of
showers far south and a chance of
hght snow or freezmg drizzle nonheast late Lows from 30 north to
around 40 south
Tuesday Cloudy A chance of
hght snow or freezing dnzzle north·
east tn t~e mommg H1ghs from the
m1d 30s nonh to 45 to 50 south .
Extended forecast:
New Year's Day .. Fair. Lows 10
h d 50
the 30s. Highs 40 to 45 nort an
10 55 south
Thursday .. A chance of showers
Lows 35tq45. Haghs 45 to 55.
Fnday... Fa•r. Lows tn the 30s
H•ghs m the 40s nonh and 50s south

Arman N. Hart Sr.
Arman N. Han Sr., 80, Guysville. d1ed Sunday, Dec 29, 1996 at his resIdence.
Born m Clem, W.Va., he was the son of the late Alex and Dora Kerns Han
He was a retired millwright with 25 years of service w1th the Millwnght Local
1755, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was a former millwright at Union Carb1de and a former employee of
Beasley and Mauhews Ford, Athens.
He made sorghum molasses and was a lay mimster for the E. U B Church
charge. He was a member of Lillie Hocking Evangelical United Methodist
Church
He is survtved by three sons, Gaile Dobbms of UniOntown. and Myron
"Pete" Han and Heamon "Tib" Han. both of Guysville; one daughter, Carolyn Taylor of Torch; one Sister, Ohve Price of Canada; two brothers, Owen
Han of Mogadore, and Forrest Han of Ravenna, and 12 grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren
He was also preceded 10 death by h•s w1fe, Eva Han, one son, Arman
"Sam" Han Jr.; one daughter. Daytha Hess, and by four br01hers and three
SISters.
'
C I 'II
Semces w1ll he I p m. Thursday 1n the Wh1te Funeral Home, oo VI e,
w1th the Rev John Elsw1ck officiatmg. Bunal wtll follow in the Canhage
Cemetery, Guysv1lle. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 79 p m. Wednesday.
The fam•ly requests that memonal contributiOns be made to the
Leukem1a Society.

Harold H. Ramsburg

A faully motor mount was blamed for one-car accident on Bashan Road
at the JUnction or Nease Hollow Road near Racine early Saturday after·
noon.
h
Chnstine A. McDonald, 22, Yuma, Ariz., was nonhbound on Bas an
Road when a motor mount broke loose on her ·J989 Pontiac Lemans, causmg the vehicle to lose ~ontrol and crash mto·a bndge, accord10g to a Meigs
County Sheriffs Depanment repon.
McDonald rece1ved mmor injuries m Ihe acc1dent and the car sustamed
heavy and d1sabllng damage, accordmg to the repon

Car-deer accident reported in Pomeroy
No injunes were reported 10 a one car-deer acctdent Sunday on Umon
Avenue, accordmg to Pomeroy Police Chtef Gerald Rought
Accordmg to repons. Bracy Kom. 24, Pomeroy, was 1ravehng west on
Unton at 5 41 p m when a deer ran mto the path of has vehtcle, slnkmg
Korn's 1994 Toyota tn the driver's s1de fender
Damage to the car was hsted as hght

Accidents reported by deputies
The Me1gs County Shenfrs Depanment 10vestigated two car-deer accidents Sunday wuh no mJunes reponed in the seperatc tnc1dcnts, accordmg to Me•gs County Shenff James M. Soulsby
Accordmg to reports, Juha Paxson, 38, Mandeville, La , was travelmg south on Stale Route 124m Ohve 1'ownsh1p when a deer ran mto the
left Side of her 1994 Geo Pnsm. The acc1dcnt occurred around I 15 p m..
Damage to the veh1cle was moderate
Accordmg to reports, David G Swanson, 23, Albany, was traveling
south on New L1ma Road around 5.30 p m when a deer ran mto the path
of hts 1996 Geo Tracker, causmg h1m to h1t the ammal Heavy damage
was recorded to the fron1 of Swanson's veh1cle
No catauons were tssued

Opal Mae
Opal Mae B1ggs, 68. The Plams, Ohto, formerly of M1ddlepon, d1ed Sat·
urday. December 28, 1996 at her residence
Born February 18, 1928 tn Me1gs County. she was th~ daughter of the
late Eli Btrchfield and Dora Potts. She was a retJred employee of the Galhpohs Developmental Center.
p
She IS surv1ved by a daughter, Judtth Batley of The Plmns, two grandchildren. Charles (Lena) Batley Jr of Rcedsvtllc, and Sandy (Bill) C~y Jr
of The Plams, SIX great grandchildren; two Sisters, Vng1ma Sm1tlt of Chft~n,
West V~rgm1a, and Annabell Moore of Futdlay, one brother, Larry (Ann)
B~rchfield of Van Lou; a brothcr-m-law, Nathan (Bette) B1ggs of Pomeroy;
and several meces and nephews
.
She was preceded in death by her husband. Alfred (Bert) B1ggs, an by SIX
brothers and two SISters.
.
Serv1ces w111 be held I p m Tuesday, December 31. 1996 tn the Ewmg
Funeral Home, Pomeroy, w1th PasJor Paul Stlvus offic1atmg. Bunal w11l follow 10 the Meigs Memory Gardens Fnends may call at the funeral home
from 7-9 p.m. Monday, Dec~ mbcr 30, 1996
·

Harold H. Ramsburg, 68, Middleport, formerly of Charleston, W.Va, d1ed
Sunday, Dec. 29, 1996 at his residence.
Born 10 Clarksburg, W.Va., son of the late Earl and Irene Ramsburg, he
was a ret1red coal mmer, a member and deacon of the Rutland Freew1ll Bap·
liSt Church, and aU S. Navy vele"':" of World War II.
He ts su!VIved by hiS w1fe, Dons Mace Ramsburg; four sons and three
1
daughters-m-law, Edward Ramsburg of Pomeroy, Earl and Mabel Ramsburg
of Middleport Roben and ChriSty Ramsburg of Pomeroy and R1ck and Carol Ramsburg ~f Middlepon; a daughter and son-in-law, Elame and Roger
St~wan of Middlepon; 12 grandchildren and a great-grandchild , three brothers, Glenn Ramsburg of Nonh Carolina, and Ray and Charles Ram.sburg, both
Four people were mjured, w1th
Hendncks was later transferred to of Ravenswood, w Va.; and two sisters, Lavaughn Stover of FraZier Bouom.
·
· two of them transferred to out-of- O'Bleness Memonal Hospital, W Va and Lenora Sneed of Cabm Creek, W.Va
· Se;:_,tces w111 be 1 p.m Thursday m !he Rutland Freewill B~plls~ Church,
county hospitals, followmg a one-car Athens, where he was admtlted. He
wnh the Revs. Paul Taylor and Bub Herdman officiating. Bunal w1ll follow
accident Saturday on State Route 124 was tn the intensiVe care unit and was
near Racme, the Gallia-Meigs Post of undergomg treatment thiS mormng. in the M•les Cemetery, Rutland. Fnends may call at F1sher Funeral Home,
M.1ddleport, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday, and on Thursday at the church
COLUMBUS (AP) - The city because n was scandalous and would
the State Highway Patrol reponed.
an O'Bieness spokesperson sa1d
Civil Service CommisSion today sus- subJeCI the c1ty to habthty.
Passenger Stephame Burto.1, 16,
Blackwell was 1reated and .one hour pnor to the sefVIce.
pended Police Ch•ef James Jackson
The commiSSion sa1d II found on
M•d~lepon. was transponed by the released, a VMH spokesperson sa1d.
for
dcstroy10g
records
and
tnapproev1dencc
to substantiate three other
MedFiight air ambulance to Grant
PatnckJ Mullen, 18, 509 S Secd1Sc1phnary
actton
admmiStratiVe
charges that alleged he
pnately
handhng
Medical Center, Columbus, from the ond St , M1ddlepon, another passenagainst a h1gh-ranktng officer.
. mismanaged vtce unit operattons,
scene of the 10 p m. crash, the patrol gcr, was not treated at the scene,
Unns of 1he Meigs County Emer- Harold Will, VMH,
· d
•
accordmg to the repon.
Without
used h1s office to benefit hiS fam1ly
The
five-day
suspenston,
9
08
p
m
Saturday,
volunteer
fire
gency Med1cal Service recorded 21
~~~~She was reponed 10 good cond•- - • Troopers sa1d Hendric,ks was east- calls for asSistance Saturday and depanment to OBNC, investigate pay. already has been served, com- and friends, and failed to protect the
misSion Cha•nnan Fredenck Ranster depanmenl's mtegnty.
smoke odor;
lton this mornmg by a hospital bound m Sulton Township wflen he Sunday. Umts respondmg mcluded
·
lost control, went off the left Side of
Jll satd Jackson was reassigned to
RanSier sa1d the panel based 1ts
2:17
p
m
Sunday,
Chestnut
Street,
DISPATCH
CENTRAL
k
_spo esperson
d
d
k
od
1
Dnver w111iam T. Hendncks, 19, the roa , an struc a wo en pos
work at h1s home 10 October and was deciSion on testimony gtvcn by 20
3:32 am. Saturday, Chestnut Ruth Arnold , VMH ,
'33666 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy, and a u!tltty pole, troopers sa1d.
2 58 p m Sunday,' Vme Street, suspended Nov 29
•.;~tnesses m c1ght days of tesumony,
Street, M1ddlepon, Ruth Arnold, VetThe three-member panel had the !he ch1ef's long career and the nature
Ann Ba1ley, HMC
'and passenger Amber E Blackwell,
The car was severely damaged erans Memonal Hospital;
op11ons of exonerating, finng, demot· /or the charges
'19 113 Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy, and the acc1den1 rema10ed under
RACINE
7:58 a.m. Saturday, State Route
'w;re taken to Veterans Memonal mvesugallon today, accordmg to the 338, Demse Sm1th, Pleasant Valley
10 04 p m. Saturday, volunteer fire mg or suspendmg the 38-year ol'fice(" - He satd that although the chief has
depanment and squad to SR 124, who became the City's first black some dascrcuon tn the dectstons he
' 'Hospital by the Metgs EMS.
patrol.
Hospital,
12:36 p.m. Saturday, Sharon Hol- motor vehicle accident, Travts Hen- pollee ch1ef 10 1990 The vote to sus- makes, he is "not Without some hm1tatton," and "must be prepared to
low Road, Portland, Charles Heck, dricks and Amber Blackwell, VMH. pend Jackson was unan1mous.
Jackson, who was not prese.nt explain and defend" his acttons.
Stephame Bunon, Grant Med1cal
PVH,
Jackson's tcsumony did not con8.26 p m Saturday, Overbrook Center v1a McdFllght III helicopter when the commiSSIOn announced 11s
deciSion, planned to make a statement vmce the commiSSion he was JUSIINursmg Center, M1ddlepon, Chester ambulance.
Iater in the day.
fied tn makmg those dcc1s10ns, RanREEDSVILLE
Four other states - Montana, Hutton. VMH.
AUSTIN. Texas (AP) - In an
AsSistant
C1ty
Attorney
Glenn
sicr
sa1d.
II :37 p m Saturday, volunteer fire
II 28 p.m Saturday, SR 124,
allempt to weed out those who spend Nonh Carolina, Flonda and Utah Red1ck
satd
he
Will
ab1de
by
the
comJackson
has smd that he believed
Racme, Charlie Curfman, VMH;
depanment and squad to Bellev1lle
years as underororluatcs at pub he col- already charge htgher tu tllon for stuthe allegations were unwarranted, and
I 09 a.m. Sunday, OBNC, Locks and Dam, brush f~re, no miSsion's deciSion.
•leges, a state offic1al wants to charge dents wnh more-than-average cred1t Genrude Johns, PVH.
City
Safety
Director
Thomas
Rtce
1hat
Burns deserved only a wnttcn
lDJUrles;
"career · students" as much as four hours. Montana now charges some of
had
suspended
the
63-ycar-old
ch1ef
repnmand
tori&amp;holdtng mforma8·33 am. Sunday, Maples Apan2.07 a.m. Sunday, SR681, LouiSe
~hose students out-of-state tuition
times the current tuition
and
flied
five
admmiStratJvc
charges
tmn
from
h
1s perv1sor
ments, Pomeroy, Gw1nnte White, Posey, CCMH.
· The h•gher fees would apply to rates
agamst
h1m
followmg
an
mvesttgaR1ce
had
s an mvcstJgatmn by
.
II 12 p.m Sunday, SR 248,
Evereu Lee, a Umvcrs1ty of Texas Holzer Med1cal Center;
students with at least 170 hours of
uon
of
alleged
mtcrfcrencc
tn
gamMayor
Greg
Lashutka's office found
I 0:06 a.m Sunday, SR 681, Chester Wells, VMH
credll- about 18 percent of students student who 1s pursumg two degrees, Reedsville, Vera Kre1mer, Camdenbhng and proslttutton cases
that Jackson "disregarded facts , tesRUTLAND
1n Texas' state-run universities, sa1d he wouldn 't be able to afford Clark Memorial Hospital,
commiSSIOn
sustamcd
two
or
II lOOny and evidence" m changing
Thc
7 03 p.m Sunday, Mam Street,
another year of study under Sharp's
Comptroller John Sharp said
the
charges
One
alleged
he
fa1lcd
to
recommended d1sc•plmary actaon
2:58 p m. Sunday, Brownell Mark Tillis, PVH
· If state lawmakers approve the plan.
render
tmparual
dasc1pl10c
when
he
agatnst
Bums during the prostttuhonAvenue, M1ddlepon, Atnca RanTUPPERS PLAINS
"The fact IS, most people affectproposal after they convene next
clcarcd
Cmdr
Walter
Burns
of
all
but
rmg
mvesugatton,
whtch took place
dolph, HMC;
5:52 p.m. Saturday, SR 7, John
one
allegat1on
agamst
h1m
1n
condunng
1992-93
'tnonth, Texas could save $4 5 millton ed by these recommendations aren't
8 37 p.m. Sunday, Calaway R1dge Rankm, CCMH.
byearhegmnmg tn 1999, Sharpsatd slackers, they ' re people who arc try- Road. Gay F1elds. VMH
Deputy Ch1ef Robert Kern had
I0 06 am Sunday. Arbaugh Addt· ncctton wnh a prosutuuon case. The
lfhe change would raise tuition and ing to double-maJor or do more wuh
second
contended
he
Improperly
recommended
m June that Bums be
MIDDLEPORT
two, Lisa Victory, CCMH.
fees from $2,150 to $7,910 per year 1hemsel ves." Lee smd
destroyed
an
mvcst1gator's
report
found
gu1lty
of
seven depanmcntal
8 50 p m Saturday, Hill Street,
for some students
wntten m connectiOn w1th the dealh charges for allegedly miShandling the
of a prommentlawyer
investigation Jackson 10stcad cleared
Jackson defended hiS deCISIOn to Bums of 12 charges and gave h1m a
des1roy the repott- whach all stdes wrllten rcpnmand for w1thholdu;g
The Daily Sentinel
and the dance IS open to the pubhc
Dance set
mvolved tn the case have agreed con- mfonnauon from a supcrvJsor.
Am Ele Power ....................... 41'/o
(USPS 21J-%0)
A New Year's dance Will he held The dance is be10g sponsored by tamed unsubstanuated allegationsAkzo ......................................67 1h
R1ce also sa1d Jackson ordered the
at the Amencan Legton annex m Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Ashland 011 .............................44
Pubh~hed ewry afternoon Mondoy lhrough 1
destruction
of records tn the Burns
.ATilT .....................................44'.1
Fndoy. Ill Coun Sl • Pomeroy. Ohto, by the
M1ddlepon from 8 p.m. to I a.m Leg1on .
investigation.
Ohio Valley Pubhshlng Compuhytd;:tnnctl Co.
Bank One ..............................44'.1
There w1ll be snack table and music Services canceled
Pomeroy, OhiCt 4!1769. Ph 992·21 ~6 Second
Bob Evana ............................13'/o
wtll he provtded by the Classics from
cl~~ posroge pmd at Pomeroy. Ohm
Special !'lew Year's ·Eve services
Borg-Warner ...........................39
9
p m. to I a.m There 1s no charge scheduled for Tuesday mght at 1he
Champion
.............................
24%
Mftr!ber: The A~IOCtmed ~ss , and the Oh10
Charming Shope ...................5l.
Ntwapaptr A~~mlon
Mount Umon Baptist .':~~~r&lt;::,:;~~
City Holdlng .......................... 26%
penrer, have been canceled,
POSTMASTER: Send nddrtl.t correcnon~ 10
Federal Mogul ....................... 21l.
n,e Dally Senunel. Ill Coon S1. Pomeroy.
Veterans Memorial
mg to pastor Joe Sayre.
Gannett.................................76i%
M
Olio 437ti9,
TODAY lhl'u .Jun.tf.aV 1ST
- Saturday admissions"'- Christina
Goodyear .............................. 52~
1 :00 l110,7:00,9l10 lPG)
K·mart ...................................10'1.
SUBSCRIPTION R•TES
Tackeu, Pomeroy
LCCD offices closed
ly C•rritr or Moler Roule
""' II
Lands End .............................26\
IUfl•IUII
The Leadmg Creek Conservancy
Saturday
discharges
-none.
One Week
S2 00
.....
..,
..,
Limited ..................................1a\
'IODAV tllru .JIUIUAaT 111'J'
Distrtcl will close at noon on TuesSunday admiSsions - none.
One Month
SB 70
Ohio
Valley
Benk
....................
36
Guara..teed Safety &amp;
1:20,l:
t;10
IPG
·!31- 1'
.0.. Year ..
' • SI ().t 00
Sunday discharges - Christina day for end of the year repons In the
One Valley ............................. 37~
event of an emergency, call 742High l ..terest Yields
Tackell, Pomeroy
Peoples ................................. 26~
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dotly . ..... ..
:3.5 Ctnt~
Prem Flnl ................................. 14
Holzer Medical Center
2597.
Available
· Rockwell ...............................&amp;1 ~
Discharges Dec. 17 - Louella
SuiMcrtbenJ not dc ~~nna to pay !he cnmer mny
• No Loads or Fees
RD·Shell ..............................173'11
remil m advance direct lo The Dnily Stnt1nel
Kmg, Belly Pallon, Frances Hudson,
Shoney'a .................................7~
• Accumulate or Monthly
•on 111hrft 1nx or 12 month baA!~. Credn will be
Thelma Neal, Woodrow Mollohan.
.~tar Bank .............................. 92~
&amp;tven enmer each week
Income:
1 Wendy'• .................................. ,,t,l,
Discharges Dec. 28- Mrs. Carl
• High Safety!
~o aubacripiiOn by moil permmed m DR!u~
McCorkle and daughter.
The following ac11ons to end marWorthlngton ............................18
~whefe home clltT'ier ~rv1ce I~ avrulnble
• Wide Choice of AnnUities of
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Michael riage were filed recently in the office
Stoek
report•
1re
the
10:30
All Kinds
Paabhahtr rncrvc~ lhe nJhiiO DdjUSI r11u durCorbm, son, Galbpolls; Mr. and Mrs. of Meigs County Clerk ofCouns LarlnJ lhe Mlbtcnp!lon period Sub•cnptlon nne
a.m. quot" provided by Advell
Call for Jnformauon
Ronnie Gnffith, son, Gallipolis; Mr. ry Spencer.
ch8ftan may be implcmeneed by chanJ108 the
ot Galllpolla.
Mrs:
John
Nicmsky,
son,
and
DISsolution asked - Gregory
~of lhe wblcnptlon
SCOTI INSURANCE
Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Alan BustA.and Carol Demse Bush,
614·698·4011 (collect)
tl..tL SUIISCRIPTIONS
both of Long Bottom, Dec. 20
Trustees to meet
. Vanahan, son, Rutland.
3ZZZ Swart Rd.
13 Weeko..
127 JO
Dlschargt!l Dec. 19 - Mrs. John
Dissolutions granted - Mary l
The Sulton Townsh1p Board of
26 Weeki.. . ..,.. .. .. .
Ill 82
Albany, Ohio 45710
Hawk and William W Hawk Sr.,
Trustees' end-of-year meeting will be N1c10sky and son
llWeekl. .......... .......
Sl0ll6
Blrtb - Mr and Mrs. James Dec. 16.
Rain O.tolde Mtlp c:-ty
* AnnUities are
1ssued by l'~~s~~~~i~~;
tonight, 7:30 at the ~yracuse Munic·
and have S.l
13 Weeki .. .. ....... .. .... . . ll9.2l
Williams, son, Wellston,
ipal
Budding.
Orga~1zattonal
mcellnp
Divorce
granted
-Irma
J
Boothe
211Weob .
Sl6.68
for early withdrawals.
· (Publilhed with permission)
from Dennl&amp; Boothe, Dec. 24.
.!2\lloeb
.. 1111'172
will follow.

One-car accident on 124
-near Racine injures four

Civil Service Commission
upholds chief's suspension

EMS units answer 21 calls

Amencan Medical AssocJatwn and
45 other medical groups. It would be
"partJCularly 1rM1c" tf the first
"treatment" to wh1ch patients had ,a
constuuttonal nght "was physiCianassasted su1c1de."
In the New York Ttmes, bioeth1cis1
Anhur Caplan adds I!J the 1rony. "To
have the right to d1e before you have
the nghtto treatment seems a llule bit
backward. We may end up saymg:
'We've got asSisted sutc1de -- we
don 'l have to worry about fixmg ep
the pathetic nufSing-home system for
the frat! , old and d1sabled. They can
kill themselves 1f they don 'I like II."'
Also relevant to this gr1m diScusSion IS that by the year 2000, the
number of Amencans who are 85 or
over will have tncreased to 4.3 million Depending on how the Su'prem~
Coun decides, there could then be
many doctors-- less rough-hewn than
Dr Jack Kevork~an -- wanmg to proVIde them with a grac1ous fmal eXIt
On thiS fundamental due -process
ISsue of asSISted su1cide and euthana.
s1a for the vulnerable. the ACLU ha1
transferred 11s past concern for the
powerless to the beneficent state. The
ACLU lavors assiSted SUICide and has
so told the Supreme Coun
,
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the BW
of Rights.

:Proposal lowers tuition
boom on career students

Stocks

vegetables• in htgh-school cafetena~
are gomg uneaten and being throw~
away
•
-- More than a m1lhon graduate
and professiOnal students are bor;
rowmg heaVIly and stanmg their
careers in debt
:
.. Two years after Time maga;
zme's defim11vc cover p1ecc on th&lt;
male spec1es ("Arc men really that
bad?"), men are still bemg depicted :
m the popular press as v1llams and.
venmn
..,.
--The Unned Sillies is suffocattng:_
under a blanket of 850 million dts-·
carded automobile tires.
·
·• R1chard N1xon was talking pri-:
•atcly of resigmng m May 1973,;
which would have left Spiro Agnew•
tn charge of Amenca
:
And some di~tressfl\1 news for ;
Senous Warners: Excessive use of •
antactd med1cmes can lead to mag- :
nesium poisoning.
:
Joseph Spar ill a ayndlcated :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise •
Association.
!

•

Five years ago: Leaders of the Commonweal!~ of Independent States' :
agreed to establish unified command over nuclear weapons, while allow- :
ing member states to fonn !heir own arrniek. The remams of two American· :
hostage~ slain in Lebanon, William Buckley and Marine Col. William R.. •
Higgins, arrived home for bunal.
'

'

I•

• IColumbus l4s• I

•

ond half of the off1ctal worrymg season Senous Warners fret from now
t1ll Memonal Day, supposedly take
the summer off to recharge their bat·

Born Feb. 18, 1928 in Meigs County, she was the daughter of the late Elt
Birchfield and Dora Polls. She was a reured employee of the Galltpobs
Developmental Center.
She is surv1ved by a daughter, Judith Bailey of The Plain~ ; two ~and·
children and six great-grandchildren; two sisters, Virgm1a Sm1th of_Clifton,
W.Va., and Annabel! Moore of Findlay; one brother, Larry (Ann) Birchfield
of Van Lou: a brother-in-law, Nathan (Bette) B••gs of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preCeded m death by her husband, Alfred (Ben) Biggs: and
by six brolhers and two sisters.
Services Will be I p.m. Tuesday 10 the Ewtng Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
w1th Pastor Paul Sllvus officiating Burial will follow in the Meigs Memory Gardens Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.

INO

Season begins for serious worriers •

It's about t1me sc1cncc gave worrywans an ahb1.
Every other class of people seems
to have an excuse these days. If II
ISn't parental abuse, 1t's add1ct•on. If
1fs not urDan surv1val neuros1s, 1t's
attentiOn defictt diSorder. If every other pretext fails, then the Prozac d1d 11
Now, finally. we have the Shon
Gene Syndrome.
Perhaps you were engrossed 1n a
Clin!on scandal or a celebfl(y trial or
Similar entertamment when the news
broke. I w1ll gtve you a condensed
vers1on: A learn of sc•enlists writing,
appropriately, for Sc1ence magazjne,
diSclosed 10 November that anXIetyridden people may have mhented the
"shon" form of a gene that prediSposes one to, worry. People wuh the
"long" vers1on appear to be more
mchned to optimism and good cheer.
Now, finally, the Serious Worriers
of this world can begm to budd a case
for a spec1al research diVISIOn at the
N'lltional lnsltiUies of Health and
perhaps some son of public assistance. We are not greedy folk. Couple of hundred a month would do it
.. enough for 'aspmn. Turns and
"Born to Brood" bumper st•ckers.
The matter seems approprtate at
this point because a new calendar
year mar:ks the beginning of the sec-

Opal Mae Biggs
Opal Mae B•us. 68, The Plllins, formerly of Middleport, died Saturday,
Dec 28, 1996 at her residence.
.

Euthanasia confronts the.Supreme Court
C1an-ass1sted suic1de, '',a huge numOn Jan. 8, the Supreme Coun will
Contrary to the claims of some
hear arguments on the most ominous ber of paucnts" w1ll be at nsk
advocates of assiSted su1c1de, a
Among them are "patients who maJoruy of those favoring that solucase in American legal hiStory. AI
rssue IS whether there rs a rtght to have less access to good pam treat- tion are not people 10 fear of being
physic•an-assisted su1cide. The Ninth
pennanently hooked to mach10es 10
and Second Circuit Coons of Appeals
the last stages of then hves
have dec1ded that such a nght exiSts.
Accordmg to the Oc! 28 ISSue of
But they have also opened the door • mem and path au ve care. .. The the Archives ol Internal Medicm"'
w1de to a nght of phys1ctans to com- groups at h1ghest nsk are the elder- researchers at Duke Umversny surly. the poor, the less-educated and veyed hundreds of fra1l elderly
fill euthanasia
Under cenam circumstances, they women"
pa!1cnts and thetr fam1lir.s Only 34
Dr D1ckey, moreover, Ioiii Amer- percent of the patients were in favor
say, a doctor may d~rectly admiOJSter
a lethal 10~lton to pallents mcapable ican Med1cal News that singling out of legallzmg asSisted SUICide, but 56
-- by-th'Onfselves -- of takmg deadly a group as havmg ltves "notowonh percent of their younge1, healthy reldrugs g1vcn to them by physicians to liviOg" can lead tomonow to no ahves wanted asSisted suteide legalcommit su1c1de . ThiS IS ktlhng
longer protecung patients who are not ized.
But, satd the couns below, either tenn10ally •II "Just chiOJtl('ally 111
Says Dr. Harold Koen1g, the lead
solutiOn IS a humane nght for lenni· Maybe JUSt expenSively chromcally mvesugator, "Pauenls who oppose
nally 111 pat1ents who want to end Ill."
phySICian-aSSISted SUICide present a
their suffenng However, as Act10g
Also at nsk, 10 ume, w1ll be the particularly vulnerable element of
Soltcnor General Walter D~lllnger severely diSabled because there are society (elderly persons, women,
pomts out in an amicus bnef to the no absolute hmlls once the state , black IOdiVIduals, and poor, uneduhigh coun. " PredlCIIOg a pauent's hfe dec•des who shall d1e for then own cated persons) "
expectancy 1s d1ff1cult and uncena1n good. And a new cadre of spectallsts
The greater approval by then
.. 'a surpnsmg number of people w1ll be tra10ed to admmtster euthana- families of assJsted su1ctde "IS relehave had the expenence ofbemg mJS· Sia (o what the Thtrd Re11 h used to vant," Dr Koemg emphaSizes,
mfonned that they had a tenn10al•ll· call "useless eaters"
"because family members arc often
ness
A number of people wllh dJSabJI· asked to be proXIes when pattents
More pervasively dangerous -- 1Ues, some of them s~vere, have become mentally mcompetent "And
and the Supreme Coun dects1on can fonned a group, Not Dead Yet, to the expenSively sick. often, when
potentially affect everyone over t1me combat the surge Inward lcgahzmg compelent, feel they are a burden to
.. IS the range of thts approach to asSistcd suac1dc and eutha~~a&lt;Ja . "We then famll1es.
med1cal "care " Dr Nancy Dickey · hear the death tram conung We will
If the Supreme Court makes
. a famtly phySician 10 Richardson, not board that tram w1lllngly " Not assisted SUICide and euthanasia a
Texas, and Board Chaar of the Amer- Dead Yet has also filed an am1cus constituttonal nght, 11 wall have
ican Med1cal AssociBtwn -- pomts bnef With !he Supreme Court ·on Ignored, among other thmgs, a telhng
out that af the coun rules for physt· these cases
•
statement tn an am1cus bnef by the

Accident blamed on motor mount

AccuWeathe,.e forecast for daytJme condutons and

.Psychic
spies
and
their
parade
of
'hits'
The Daily Sentinel
WASHINGTON .. An 1mponant
U.S. Army general was kidnapped 10
Italy by the Red Brigades terrorisls.
The US. government pulled out all
!he stops, shook up every intelligence
source, scanned every photo, but had
no luck locatmg the general
The government turned to the
ghost-finders -- an ultra-secret psychic unn run by the Army under the
code name "Project Gnll Flame."
Three different psych1cs turned the1r
"remote VIewing" VISIOn to find
Brig Gen. James Dozier before he
was killed by the brutallerronsts 10
late 1981.
One remote viewer, Joe
McMoneagle, was pan1cularly successful. He 1.eroed in on the room
1where Dozaer was held, chained to a
wall heater He descrtbed 11, but
couldn't get the house number. Yet ~e
Idid get the location · the Italian ctty
of Padua.
The mformatmn was slowly sent
up the chain of command, and final -

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

..

- -·· ..

Actions to end
marriages filed

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t.-M,...c'"'"''

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�•

The Daily Senti¥~1

Sports

Monday, December 30,1996

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Iowa blanks

Monday, December 30, 1916

Texas Tech 27-0

Steelers oust
Colts 42-14 in
NFL playoffs

in Alamo Bowl

PnTSBURGH (AP)- The Pitts- in the Steelers' 20-16 win intheAFC
burgh Stcelers are hopping aboard the Championship in January, then preBus for the playoffs. Here's the vided a second-half changeup Sunday
switch - it has two drivers.·
by relieving Tomczak to run for two
Jerome Bctiis, nicknamed the Bus • touchdowns.
for his ability to single-handedly
Coach Bill Cowher, trying to
carry a team, ran for 102 yards and shake Tomczak out of his slump,
two touchdowns, and the Steelers debuted the quarterback platoon in a
experimented with a two-quaner- 18-14loss to Carolina on Dec. 42. He
back sysiem in beating Indianapolis took it even funher Sunday, occa42-14 Sunda¥. ,
·
, sionally alternating the two before
The next stop: a divisional playoff letting Stewan, who rushed for 48
game Sunday in New England, wbere yards, play the fourth quarter.
"They're both going to play in the
the Steelers haven't played since
1979, their last Super Bowl season. upcoming weeks," Cowher said.
A coincidence? Maybe not.
"How much, I can't answer."
"The next logical step is to win
Tomczak might not have left the
the Super Bowl," linebacker Chad field had he kept playing the way he
Brown said, recalling the Steelers , did at the stan. His throws to Charles
have lost in every possible round of Johnson, who made five catches for
the playoffs since 1992. "I don't want I09 yards, led the Steelers to scores ·
by Pittsburgh's Darren Perry (39) aurtng :::.unday's AFC playoff
FAULK TACKLED ·Indianapolis' Marshall Faulk Is hauled doWn
us to get ahead of ourselves, because on their first three possessions and a
.
game In Pittsburgh. The Steelera won, 42-14. (AP)
we have New England next. But I 13-0 lead.
'
'
.'
Then, the erratic-as-ever Tomlike our chances."
Still, the Steeiers didn't seem to czak (13-of-21 , 176 yards) gave the
. havemuchchanceofretumingtothe lead right back on a 59-yard interSuper Bowl they lost to Dallas last cepti\)n return score by cornerback
season, not after quanerback Mike Eugene Daniel and a Ray McElroy
things are going. They're both going
Pittsburgh, the defending AFC New England.
.FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - New
Tomczak slumped badly as they end- pickoff that set up Jim Harbaugh's 9''I think they will start Tomczak, to play in the upcoming weeks, but
England Patriots coach Bill Parcells champion. beat Indianapolis 42-14 on
ed the regular season by losing four yard TD pass to Aaron Bailey.
is concerned about Pittsburgh's Sunday to advance to its first game but you've got to be ready to adjust how much, I can't say."
of seven.
The Colts, dominated throughout
Cowher is well aware of New
potent pass rush as he begins prepa- at Foxboro since 1979. The last nine to Stewart if he conics in," Parcells
But, just like the Cowboys, maybe a first half that saw their offense cross
England quarterback Drew Bledsoe
rations for Sunday 's AFC playoff games between the teams have been said last week.
it •ook the playoffs to bring out the the 50 only once, suddenly found
in Pittsburgh.
Stewart is one of the few NFL and the Patriots' offensive ability.
game against the Steelers,
best in the Steelers. Dallas, which themselves ahead 14-13 at the half.
"I've
never
played
there,"
Pitts·
quanerbacks
adept at running the
"New England's a tean1 that's
The teams have not played each
also weni through the motions at But it was too good to .last in a city
other since the next-to-last game of burgh cornerback Rod Woodson told option. and also effectively operates very talented," Cowher said.
tiines during the regul!lf season, beat where the Colts are~ I 0 since 1968, the 1995 season, a game Pittsburgh The Boston Globe, "I don't know if the Steelers' goal-line and third-and- "Remember what happened when
Minnesota 40-15 Saturday, giving when they played in Balti.more and
won 41-27 with two . late touch- anyone on this team has ever,played short offenses . He has failed to pro; they played us.down here last year'!
second thoughts to those ready to the S(eelers played in Pitt Stadium.
there·. All I know is that the Patriots Iduce a first down on third-and- I ar They had over 400 yards of offense
downs.
hand the NFC championship trophy
~ellis led a pair of scoring drives .
are
a very good team with a very tal- ' ," lhird-and-2 only once all season. ' · against us, and they're going to feel
"We moved the ball very well in
to Green Bay.
.
that consumed all but I 112 minutes · that game, but they've changed some ented quarterback/ '
·
"We ~ re going to continue to use they can move the ball against us. So
Now, the.road to the AFC cham- of the third quarter. He ran for 102
Pittsburgh's use of two quaner- him," Pittsburgh coach Bill Cowher we have a challenge ahead of us. But
things," Parcells said. "They are
pionship might not necessarily run yards, his lith 100-yardgameofthe
doing a tremendous amount of blitz backs- Mike Tomczak and Kardell said . "It's more of a 'feel' thing, this is a new year, and we know
through Denver, at least as long as season, as Pittsburgh outrushed the zone, so you've got to gel ready for Stewart - could be a problem for based on where you're at and how what's at stake." ·
Bettis is behind the wheel.
· Colts 23 i -41.
that. "
''l}le NFL always is, 'What have
Harbaugh, worn down by relentyou done lately?' and a lot of people less pass iush, was sacked four times
were counting us out, jumping off the hefore leaving with a chipped tooth
bandwagon," defensive end Brentson and cui in his mouth that needed 15Buck~r said. "But the last time I 20 stitches to close. He finished 12looke&lt;;t, we're still the defending of-32 for 134 yards as the.Colts proAFC ~harnpions, and now let's see duced fewer yards (22) in the second
coach Tom Coughlin. "May he it's the anapolis \his time. Pittsburgh won 42- Rice made a sensational one-handed
· what 'fe can do."
half than the Steelers did points (29). By BARRY WILNER ,
'
Th~ Colts probably don't want to
"It got fo be&gt; a matter of-survival AP Football Writer
bcginriing of one for us."
14, not all()wing'the Colts a shot ill ,a catch.
see Kordell Stewart any time.sbon, at out there, and my mouth didn't,"
The Cow~oys era isn't over and repeal desperation pass to win,' as
"Sometimes you throw your
There they 'are, just as everyone
leasliiOl in the post-season.
Harbaugh said. "I've got some den- figured , advancing to the second thev head to Carolina next Sunday, they got in last year· s AFC Champi- hands up in the air and the ball is
Stewan made a disputed TD catch tal work to be done."
there." Rice said. "We did enough to
round of the NFL playoffs. The 49ers fresh off a 40-15 rout of Minnesota. onship game.
win' it."
and Cowboys in the NFC, the Steel- A chance for several Super Bowl
records,
incJuding
six
overall
wins
"I
know
what
people
were
saying,
49ers
14, Eagles 0
ers and Jaguars in the AFC.
and four in five years, is alive, even 'Oh, it's going to be another dramatSan Francisco handed PhiladelThe Jaguars?
Yes, sir, second-year expansion though the Cowboys had a difficult ic fini sh, the Colts are going to hang phia its first shutoUt in five years and
Jacksonville has joined those elite offseason .
on," said Charles Johnson, who made knocked quarterback Ty o'btmer out
" I hoped it was the case that the five &lt;alches for 109 yards. "Uhh, of the game with a hamstring injury,
teams in th~ divisional playoffs. The
Jaguars stunned Buffalo 30-27 on team was ,bored in the regular- sea- nope. Look somewhere else. We Detmer was intercepted twice ncar
Saturday, perhaps ending an era in the son," Troy Aikman said. "We realize wercn 't going to let that happen the San Francis~o goal line.
Former 49ers running back Ricky
conference and earning themselves a the regular season doesn't really again." ,
matter and we're judged on how we
trip to Denver next weekend.
San Franci"sco.like Dallas seeking Watters wa' held to 57 yards rushing ,
"I guess.we 're too young to know do in the playoffs. I don't think it's a sixth Super Bowl title, blanked 10 fewer than Young managed.
"We played very effective mud
We're supposed to lose in Orchard right, but we do have some players · Philadelphia I 4-0 with three
football
today," Young said , "I don't
Park," said recci'ver · Keenan that do get bored with the regular sea- tl~rhovers and a run-stuffing defense ,
McCardell after the Jaguars ended the son ."
in pelting rain and gusts up to 62 care about what the slats say, we
played an effective hallgame. The
The Steelers, who lost to Dallas in mph. ·
Bills' perfect playoff record at Rich
Stadium at nine games,
last January's Super Bowl , didn't
Steve Young, playing with bruised defense comes u·p with some big
" End of an era?" added Jaguars need to go to the wire to handle Jndi- ribs, ran for a 9-yard score and hit plays and we go home with ·a 14-0
Jerry Rice with a 3-yarder just after win."

..

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Sedrick
Shaw rushed for 1'13 yards and
upstaged Texas Tech's Byron
Hans pard as No. 21 Iowa shut outthe
Red Raiders 27-0 Sunday night in the
Alamo Bowl.
Shaw, Iowa's career rushing
leader, carried 20 times in surpassing
his season average of 91 yards per
game. Hanspard, a 2,000-yard rusher, carried 18 times for 64 yards,
falling far short of his 190-yard season average,. .

-

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Parcells worried about Steelers' blitz-

49ers join ~owboys, Jaguars and Steelers in
second round of NFL post-season P:l ayoffs

Buckeye ace wants to raise OSU standards
I

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f

I

He cited travel , the weather, style
COSTA ,MESA, Calif. (AP) of
play.
the head coaches, distrnctions
Andy Katzenmoyer wants to raise t~e
bar for Ohio State tn the years to and homesickness.
· The Pac~ 10 leads the Big Ten in
come.
tl;le Rose Bowl, 26:24, since the
1 The freshman middle linebacker
series
began in 1947. The Big Ten
said during Ohio State's bowl preparepresentative
has won three of the
rations that ·he hopes that a new stanlast
four
meetings,
but the Pac-10
dard is being set for the program The
Buckeyes have not played in the Rose won 15 of 18 before that.
Bowl for 1'2 years, but Katzenmoyer
Ohio State's roster includes four
said there's no reason why the trip to
players
from California, The only one
Pasadena each year couldn't become
certain
to see action is freshman
routine.
"With this freshman class coming Michael Wiley. The Buckeyes also
in, being so highly touted and sup- have three players from Arizona,
posedly· the best class in the nation, including quarterback Joe Germaine.
it's our goal to only go to the Rose
Bowl and he national contenders
UPENDED - Philadelphia's Jamea Willis Is upended by San
every year," he said. "We won "t be
Fral~el.co's William Floyd •• 49erl' Stave Young drops to pass
satisfied otherWise."
·
BASKETBALL
during Sunday's NFC playoff game In San Francisco, The 49era ·
Thirteen members of this year's
VANCOUVER, British Columbia
WOII;' 14-0. (AP)
freshman class saw action during the (AP) - Jason Kidd", making his
1996 season . Although Ohio State Phoenix Suns debu( Saturday night,
could lose as many as six starters on
aggravated his neck and shoulderoffep$e and eight on defense, it's not sprain on the final play of the first
ALL
Camp Football Foundation's Coach as though the cupboara-ls bare.
half of a 103-98 victory over VanThe two-deep lineup for the game couver.
mwi\Nl 'A (AP) - Kevin Faulk of the Year.
New Year 's Day against Arizona
on a 3-yard run, Wade Richey
, Kidd joined the Suns on Thursday
.
State
lists nine true or redshin freshkick
a 22-yard field goal and SKIING
ntght
m a stx-player trade with DalBORMJO, Italy (AP)- Luc Alp· men and 10 sophomores.
LSU's defense barely made it hold up
las , The point guard, who missed
, for a~0-7 'victory· over Clemson in hand won a grueling World Cup
Former Ohio State and NFL all - three games before the deal because
downhill Sunday on the icy and
the P ' h Bowl on Saturday night.
pro
offensive rackle Jim Lac hey was . of a shoulder, and neck sprain, is
Cl son (7·5) drove to the LSU treacherous Stelvio course ' for the a member· of the Buckeye team that · expected to be sidelined for at least
(10-2),30 with 1:26 to go, but Matt frenchman's second victory of the
lost to Southern Cal 20-17 in the a week,
season's four speed races.
·
Pldse~.t's 52-yard field goal try was
TENNIS
Alphand, 31, the defending World 1985 Rose Bowl.
block~ by AnthOny McFarland.
Excuses
have
been
thrown
aroun!l
PERTH, Australia (AP) - Marc
Cup
downhill
champion,
edged
LAVt'RENCE, Kan. (AP) - Terwhy
Big
Ten
teams
don't
do
better
Rosset,
struggling to overcome a
Switzerland's
William
Besse
by
0.21
ry Allllfl. 12-2 this season and 75-26
when
they
play
in
the
Rose
Bowl.
back
injury,
teamed with Martina
in ei1~t seasons at Nonhem Iowa, seconds and ·Italy's Kristian Ghedina
Lachey,
who
spent
pan
of
his
pro
Hingis
to
lift
second-seeded
Switzerwas hqied as head coach at Kansas on by 0.67 seconds. Alphand completed
the 3,270-meter course in 2 minutes career with the Raiders, has looked at land to a 2-1 victory today over
Sat~y. Allen, 39, succeeds Glen
Romania in the Hopman Cup.
·
OO.S
I seconds, reaching speeds of up the question·from both sides.
Masonf. who left this month to coach
on
the
West
Coast,
you
Rosset
d
Hingis
beat
Adrian
"Living,
to
78
mph.
Minne50ta.
try to relate the sljfJle thinJJ to teams Voinea an In a Spirlea·3·6, 7-'· 6S~MERING, Austri~ (AP) NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) Bruce Snyder, who has led No. 2 Ari- Italy s Deborah Compagnoni won her that came in to play yo.u ," he said. 3 in doubl after Rosset skipped the
zona State to an 11-0 record and a first World Cup slalom title Sunday, . "Why don't they have success? It's Group B en's singles match against
Rote Bowl berth against Ohio State, beatinj! France's Patricia Chauvct by like a cyclical thing. Maybe il'~ a Voinea. ingis beat Spirlea 7-S. 6-2
in the
n!•g match.
combination of things."
wu honored Satw-day as the Walter I :05 seconds.

Gem1ainc was recruited by Ari- dios on Saturday after practice. Tailzona State. The campus is I0 minutes back Pepe Pe~rson, backed by severfrom his Mesa home ,
al teammates - calli~g themselves
'.'They recruited me out of high Pcpe and the Pearsons - .sang, "If I
school and things just didn't work out Ever Fall In Love" to take first place.
there," fie said.
An Ohto State spokesman said backArizona State recruited him as a up light end John Lumpkin's imperdefensive back and he only wanted to ' sonation of John Cooper was "out of
play quarterback. ~
the money." ... Oliio State's defense
Germaine said he doesn't miss gave up I 0.4 points per game this
.playing defense:
· season, the fewest surrendered by the ·
"The guys are too big now," he Buckeyes since ,1975 . ... Cooper, who
said with a laugh.
also coached Arizona State to a win
over Michigan in the · 1987 Rose
THORNS &amp; ROSES: Ohio State Bowl, becomes only the second
won a talent show at Universal Stu- coach to lead teams from the Big Ten
and the Pac-IOto the Rose Bowl. The ~
other was Pete Elliott (California in
1959 arid Illinois in 1964).

Sports briefs--

.

--Sports briefs-

,,

In Group A matches Sunday, the
United States beat fourth-seeded
France 2-1, and defending chainpi()n
Croatia beat Australia 2-1.
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) Second-seeded Mark Woodforde beat
Australian · countryman Richard
Fromberg 6-3, 6-3 tQday to a!)v~nce
to the second round of the Australian
Hardcourt championships.
No. 5 Al.ex O'Brien ofthe United
States also advanced in the Australian
Open tuneup event, beating Germany's Marc Goellner 6-7 (5· 7), 6·
4, 7·6 (11 -9). French Open winner
Yevgeny Kafelnikov of Russia, seeking his third title in the tournament,
faced Sweden's Mikael Till strom in
a late match.
BASEBALL
LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) Cleveland Indians reliever Jose Mesa
and another man were arrested Saturday on felony charges of gross sexual imposition and carrying a concealed weapon;

'

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play In' the final period of the Alamo Bowl S.u nday at San Ant(~.
nlo. Iowa won, 27-G. (AP) ·

MCKENZIE BROUGHT DOWN- Texas Tach's Malcolm McKen·
zle (17) Is brougm down by Iowa's Vernon Rollins (56) att.r • pa..

Wildcats thump
Buckeyes 81-65
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ohio
State has a ways to go before its
games against Kentucky can be considered a rivalry again.
·
The third-ranked Wildcats beat the '
· Buckeyes 81-65 on Saturday in the
Rock 'n' Roll Shootout.lt figures that
it wouldn't be an ordinary game, considering the teams can't even agree
on how many times they' ve played.
The Wildcats (10- 1) heat Ohio
State (5-4) for the IOtb tiine·in 18
games, Or did they? The Ohio.State
media guide says this was the 19th
game between the teams, counting a
. Buckeyes victory in 1908. The Wild·
cats guide.says the first game of the
· ·
series was played in 1933.
The Columbus Dispatch did some
research and found that the 1908
gtime involved a team from Kentucky, but not the one that would
eventually be called the Wildcats.
Kentucky was then known as the
State College Cadets, who beat
Louisville that day.
On this day, former Buckeye
Derek Anderson torched his ex-team
for 22 poinL&lt;. Ohio State, with five
sophomores startipg in another
rebuilding season. was in no shape to
keep up with the Wildcats.

.

'

BLOCKS SHOT - Kentucky's Nazr Mohammed (13) blocks a
shot attempt by Ohio State's Jermalne Tate during first half action
of Saturday's game In Cleveland. fh!l Wildcats won, 81-65. (AP)

----Cage standings---18 181919 1919
Totals
1995:97 All games
Team
W L TP OP
Friday's results:
Chesapeake ...... , .. 7 0 491 320
. Wheelersburg .... , .. 5 0 . 406 322 Gallipolis 61 Greenfield 54
Yfarren Locaf... .. .... 6 1 496 322 Chesapeake 90 Southern 39
: Point Pleasant ....... 4 1 291 268 Portsmouth 95, Huntington Ross 75
Eastern ........... .... ..5 2 430 '436 . Point Pleasant 70 Weir 50
Portsmouth ,, .... , .. .5 3 547 523 Eastern 66 Waham 60
· Lpgan ...... ... ,.: ,... ..4' 3 437 342 Oak Hill 67 Jackson 63
~reenfield .. ., .. ....... 5
4 498 459 Waterford 79 South Gallia 24
Saturday's resulls:
· Athens .. .... ..........., 4 4 387 406
Ga[lipolis
57 Jackson 44
. Jjl(:kson ......... ... :.... 4 5 552 486
Qallipolis ............... :S 4 373 383 Logan 62 Athens 46
· Marietta ... , ............3 5 433 471 Warren Local 57 Maroena 40
· M~igs .............. ...... :3 s. 321 459 Midland 65 Pt. Pleasant 48
Fairland ... .............. 2 4 387 '393 Wheelersburg 84 Fairland 79
· South Gallia ........... 2 5 371 406 Greenfield 67 Adena 59
· River Valley ........... 2 6 436 511 Portsmouth 60 Logan Elm 52
SEOAL resrve acorea
: SouthemsiioAi" ·viR~ge 421 Marietta 50 Warren Local 44
' TEAM
W L
P OP · Gallipolis 54 Jackson 50
· Point PleasanL.-....3 0 173 153 Logan 62 Athens 56
Monday's game:
' Warren LocaJ. ..,.....4 1 366 248
·Athens ., .............. :.3 2 234 245 Logan ai Chillicothe
. Friday's games:
Lpgan ....................3 2 · 291 294
Qallipolis ., .............2 2 225 223 Portsmouth at Gallipolis
Whe~lersburg ~t Valley
~ariatta ..........., .... 2 3 278 285
River Valley ..... , .... 1 4 221 303 Rock Hill at Fatrland
Jackson ........... , ....o 4 173 210 Waterford at Warren Local
TPtals
. 18 1a 1961 1961 River Valley at Meigs
South Gallia at Cattletsburg
SEOAL RESERVES
T.. AM
WLPOP Christian
Saturday's games:
Marialln ........... , ... .4 1 267 245
Gallipolis
at Athens
Gallipolis ................3 1 214 208 .
Point Pleasant., .... 2 1 199 179 Buffa!() at Chesapeake
Wamtn Local. .. , ....3 2 302 272 Wave~y at Greenfield
acks011 ..... ........ , ....2 2 181 164 Point Pleasant at Marietta
River Valley ...... .. , .2 3 232 280 Jackson at Warren Local
l..ogiln ...... .............. 2 3 269 271 Logan at River Valley
· Athens ..... :..... ........0 5 255 260

......_-Sports briefs-'Downing, Childs,

Mullen, Musser
l1l E. Second St., Pomeroy

992-3381

HOCKEY
GENEVA (AP) - Chris Hajt's
· p i with 3:59 remaining gave the
United States a 2-1 victory Sunday
over the Czech Republic, moving the
Americans into first place in Group
.A in the world junior championships.
The United States (2-0-1) completes round-robin play Tuesday
against Germany. Canada. which rallied to tie the United States 4-4 on
Saturday, took a 1-0-1 record into
today's game against Switzerland. In

'

Group B play, Russia routed Poland
12-0 at Morges to improve to 3-0-0.
SPEEDSKATING
MILWAUKEE (A~)- Rebec~a
Sundstrom, capttahztng on Chns
Witty 's ab~c~, won_tbe U.S. Spnnt
SP!l_edskaung Champtonshlp on Sun·
day.
Sundstrom of Glen Ellyn, Ill., won
the 500 meters in 4 I .01 seconds and
the I,()()() in 1:2J.2S. CaseyFit:tRandolph of West Allis won three races '
for his third consecutive men's title.

'(

Marshall
heads to
No.6
Clemson ,

.If the series ever gets competitive
again, there is plenty of history to
build on .
·
Ohio State's program will feel the
effect of Anderson's 1994 transfer to
Lexington for years. For Kentucky 's
part, the Wildcats have five NCAA
tournament losses to the Buckeyes to
be angry about.
'
There was plenty of intensity
back in 1908, when a game story in
the Columbus Dispatch carri.ed the
headline, " Kentuckians Were Unable
io Displliy Any Skill."
Even displaying far less than usual on Saturday, they beat the Buckeyes anyway.
"I think our defense stinks,"
coach Rick Pitino said. "I don't care
v.hat others think , I've been saying it
all year. It stinks."
The Wildcats missed"easy shots,
never got any rhythm in their press
and were a&lt; out of sync as the referees and courL&lt;idc officials,

The Haw keyes have faced eight of
the nation' s top 20 rushers this season, and only Northwestern's Darnell
Autry managed to reach his season
average.
Publicity surroundin g Hanspard
all wee~ had overshadowed Shaw,
who hail s from Austin's LBJ High
School. Hanspard plans to announce
Monday whether he will forego his
final year of eligibility and tum pro.
The Hawkeyes (9 -3) finished their
thrashing of the Red Raiders (7-5) .
with a 14-yard touchdown run by
Rodney Filer with 2:09 left, capping
·a 99-yard drive.
,
It was the first shutout of Texas
Tech since a 31-0 loss to Arkansas in
1987.
Iowa got on the scoreboard in the
first quarter after Plez Atkins inter·
cepted a pass by Texas Tech quarter-

I

.I.

back Zebbie Lethridge at the Red
Raiders 47 and ran it to the 39.
A 13-yard pass from Matt Sherman to Tim Dwight and two runs by
Shaw moved Iowa to the I. Sherman
ran it in for the touchdown with II :21
remaining in the period, putting the
Hawkeyes on top 6-0.
Iowa made it 14-0 on a 20-yard
touchdown run by Shaw with S:30
left in the sec()nd quarter after an SOyard drjve . Sherman passed to Chris
Knipper for the 2' point conversion.
As time expired before halftime,
the Hawkeyes boosted their advantage to 17-0 on a 36-yard field goal
by Zach Bromert . fl e had just missed
a 41 -yard attempt, but got a chance
to kick it from five yards closer after
an offsides call against Texas Tech.
The Red Raiders' only scoring
threat of the half ended when Jaret
Greaser 's 42-yard field goal attempt
sailed wide right.
Withl0;36 remainin g m the game ,
Bromert kicked a 26-yard field goal
to give the Hawkeycs a 20-0 advantage.
Shaw was named the game's best
offensive player, , and Iowa's Jared
DeVries was named best defensive
player. DeVries hal) five tackles,
including two sacks, and was credited with one pass ·defiecti on.

I

South Gallia girls
defeat host.Wahama
· South Gallia's Rebel girls' bas,
ketball team traveled to Mason,
W.Va. Saturday and came.away with
a pair of victories over the White Falcon girls. The Rebel varsity posted a
44-38 win following a 28-13 triumph
by the reserve team.
In the varsity tilt Wahama grabbed
a I4-8 first period lead and still
owned a 20-14 halftime lead before
the Rebels outscored them 14-7 in the
third period to emerge atop a 28-27
lead.
Yanessa Short led the winners
with· 15 points, Rachel Waugh
claimed 12 of her team's 24
rebounds, Laura Queen dished out six
assists, and Kari Clark blocked three
shots.
Lori "Bumgarner was just about
everything for the Falcons as she
scored 21 points a~er team on
the boards with ~ebounds.
In the reserve contest Kari Clark

took gllme scoring_honors with 12
points, Jessica Clary, Niki Mills. and
Toni Osborne all added four points
each. South Gallia led by qua!(er •
scores of 6-0, I0-2, and 22-6 as
Osborne and Angie Johnson each
grabbed 10 rebopnds.
The box score; . ,
SOUm GALLIA (44)- Laura
Queen 1-1-3; Rachel Waugh 3-1-7;
Vanessa Short 7-1-15; Toni Osborne
· 1-0-2; Marisa Snodgrass 4-0-8.
TOTALS 20-4-44.
WAHAMA (38 )· Lori Bumgarner
8-5-21;
Tamara Grate 1-0-2; Maura
·
Clark 1-0-2; Stacy Gillispi~ 2-1-5;
Stac;y Weavcr4-0-8. TOTALS 16-638.
Score by quarters: ,
South Gallia 8 6 14 I~- 44
Wahama
14 6 7 II· 38
. Reserve score:South Gallia 28,
Wahama 13

I

•

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) .Marshall th()ught it .got a breather
when defending national champion
Kentucky opted out of its 1996-97
game with the Thundering Herd.
fn stead, Marshall travels to Clem·
son, S.C., today to play the sixthtanked Clemson Tigers of the
Atlantic Coast Conference.
'The game was originally sched· ·
uled for Saturday, but Clemson's athletic department requested the game
be moved because its football team
played Saturday in the Peach Bowl in
Atlanta.
Marshall (7-J ), w~i9h has the top
··two scorers in tile Southern Conference in John Brannen and Keith
Veney, will need maximum production from its offense.
Marshall leads the Southern Conference in scoring at 90.6 points per
game, more than five points better
than its nearest conference opponent.
However. its 76.8 points allowed per
ganic also is the mosr mthe league.
Marshall last played Dec. 23 when
it beat Tennessee-Chattanooga 90-83
in Huntington :
Clemson ( 10-1 ), whose No. 6
ranking is (ts highest ever, figure s to
. ·fight Wake Fore~t' and North Carolina for the Atlantic Coast Conference
title.
Clemson is coming off a 76·64
win at TexasA&amp;M on Dec. 22. It led
by 17 points at halftime but allowed
A&amp;M to go on a 22-9 run midway
through the second half. But Clemson
turned up the pressure on delense to
pull away.
Marshall will be without center
John Brown, '!'ho last week was
declared academically ineligible to
play for the rest of the season. He was
the team's third-leading scorer (12.5)
and second-leading rcbounder (S .7),
Game ti':"e is 7 p.m.

IJ

-••
••
••
••
TV TIMES;: ••ADVERTISING IN THE

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURES- ·
EVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

CAI.LNOW •••
GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

•

I'

I

�••
Prge t • The Dtllly Sentinel

Monday, December 30, 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

---Ohio high school scores-ow. ..... SdiMI..,. ... tW'

Cle. VA-S! 75. Pleasant S6
Cool Grove 88. Portsmouth
Dame46
Col. Brigs 76, Whitehall 48

.,TMA
lt•rn.
S I ..... ,
'Ia

· AI lnl IC111163, Sculhriew 49
Am. 0111.-Howa- 89, Cle. Kennedy
19
~ 31, Midview 44
AliDa 10. Rivenide 55
A&amp;llllad 51, Do..... 42
AsM±Ih 77, Gand Vall. 71
...,.• ._ ... Fitch 56, Youngstown E.
40
A- Lob 79, Cn:stwood 77
lleodlwood 57. Canlinal 56
Bellisville 74, Hundred CI/.Va.) 54
Bedford Cbanel 75, Col. Hartley 62
BisbopDonohue (W.Va.) 81, Bellaire
SL John's 73, 0T
.
. . Block River 74, Kidron Central Cath.
61
Blulfton 41. Liberty Benton 35
Brookville 72, Day. Oakwood 56
Cambridp 62, Meadowbrooke 52
Canal Winchester 64, MilleBport S8
Canton GlenOak 76, Akron Spring. S8
Carey 103, Vanlue S6
Celllerville 63, Huber Hts. Wayne SO
Chanel75, Col. Hartley 62
Cin. .Andonon 72, LovelAnd 61
Cin. ML Healthy 70, Amelia 65
Cin. ROF' Bacon 74, Wilmington
(Del.) 3.1
Cle. Benedictine 75, Thl. Catholic 64

58

~Oire

so

Col. Mifflin 71, Louisville Aquinas 44
Col. South 86. Lakewood 77
Copley 56, Hoban 55
Corey-Rawson 62, Arlington 47
Coshocton 76. St. Clainville 63
Covenlly 88. Rittman 51
CovingtOn (Ky.) Cath. 78, Cnl. Linden

Helpus 90. Ontario 66 ·
Cle. SL Janadua 56, Rocky River 47

Cle.

J~onUy, Dicember 30,1996

Redmen lose to Wooster
in boliday tourney final

Answers to commonly asked ·social Security questions

Graham 73, W. Liberty Salem 24
Greenfield McClain 67. Adena 59
Harding 54, Olaney 35
Hemlock Miller 61, Huntinaton Ross

Hillsboro 68, Eastern Brown 52
Holgate 43, Liberty Center 35
Hudson 57. Cuyahoga Falls 52
Independence 64, Peakstill (N.Y) 58
The University of Rio Grande
lndl111 Like 5I, Kenton 48
Redmen fell five points short of capJockson 60, Massillon 46
turing the E.M. Mose Hole Kiwanis
Kettering Alter 58. Harlan (Ky.) 31
Invitational on Satunday night. The
48raeS7. Windham 53
.
Redmen lost to the College ofWoost·
Like 72. Barberton 54
er
72-67 in the championship game
Lancaster 78, Walkins Memorial 30
of
the Scots' holiday tourney.
!.edgemont 65, Orange Chr. 55
Rio Grande (8-5) dug a deep hole
Lexington 66. Bellevue SO
for
themselves in the first half, trail·
Ucking Vall. 65,1!. Knox 56
Uma Bath 52, Maumee 47
ing 43-31 at the break. The ScoiS (9·
Uma Cath. 67, Fort Recovery 46
I) opened the game with an 18·8 to
Lima Shawnee 56, Findlay 34
run that the Redmen couldn't tight
Uma Temple Chr. 73. Perry 65
back from before the halftime buzzer
Uttle Miami 65, Clinton Massie 45
sounded. Wooster shot a scorching 60
Logan 62, Athens 46
percent from the field and S6. 7 per·
Lorain Calh. 80, Elyria Cath. 51
cent
from 3-point range.
Madison Plains 55. Circleville 51 ·
The Redmen had a good shooting
Mansfield St. Peter's 54, Oregon
half, hitting 52 percent from the f~eld.
Stritch 36
However, Rio Grande turned the ball
Marion LOcal 67, Tipp City 62
Marion Pleasant 75. Cle. VA·SJ S6 · over 12 times in the opeQing half.
Marysville 74, Jonathan Alder 54
In the second half, the Redmon
Mason 68, Reading 55 .
returned the favor, putting together a
Miami 1!. 81, Bethel 38
21-8 spun that gave them a 52-51
Middletown 77, Li:mon-Monroe 54
lead with 10:34 to play, Rio Grande
Miller City 70, Ottoville 62
couldn't capitalize on their momen·

Crestline 58, Bucyrus 52
· C!t'stview 66, Fon Jennings 60
Danbury Lakeside 67, Monroeville 5I
Day. Christian 88. National Trail 39
Day. Patterson 63, Celina S7
Day. Stebbins 65, St. Mary's 57
Dublin Scioto 81. Delaware ~l
1!. Clinton 70, Wilminaton 54
1!. Livcrpool69. Cle. Collinwood 49
l!dgewood 78, Pymatuning Vall. 70
l!lida 69, Col~water 54
Fairbanks 55, N. Union SO
Fostoria 81, Kansas Lakota 55
Fostoria St. Wendelin 68, Sandusky
St. Mary's 61
Frantlin Furnace Green 83, Lucasville
Vall. 67
, .
Fremont St. Joseph 101, Marion Calh.
66

Barnes, Wilkerson on all·tourney team

Frontier 83, Valley:Wetzel CI/.Va.) 64
Galion 60, Colonel Crawford 49
GalliPolis 57. lacl&lt;son 44
Girard (Pa.) 58, Berea 42 ·

tum, though, as the ScoiS outscOred qailllt Shawnee Slale on Satwday .
the Redmen 12-7 over the tinal6:37 nightat7:30 p.m. That game follows
to grab their 18th title in the 341 year ". S p.m. •contest between the Rt;cl- .
history of the tournament.
women and Walsh It the Newt OlivSherron Wilkerson was the only er Arena.
Redman in double figures with a
Saturday is Meigs County Nip at
game high 34 poln!S on 12-of-22 RioOrande.HomeNationaJBilllcof
shooting from the field. He also had . Racine is sponsoring the game.
seven reb3unds. 1 Wilkerson was
1be box score;
named the tournament's MVP.
RIO GRANDE (61) -- Iason
Chris DeBow added nine points. Cruse 3-0- 1-7; Olad Barnes ~~~;
He was 4-for-6 from the field. · Sherron Wilkerson 9·3·7-34; Chris
DeBow had six rebounds.
DeBow4-0-I-9; DesroyGrant2-0-l·
Jason Cruse and Craig Kerns each 5; Brad Keating 0-0-0-0; Craig Kerns
scored seven poiniS.
2-0-3· 7; Eric Seitz ·1-0-1,3; Tobey
Schreck 0-0-0-0. TOTALS 22-3:14Wooster .;,as led by Greg Morris'' 67.
WOOS'rnR (7l) ·- Rowell Fer·
17 pqints. Ryan Gorman added 12
points and a game high 12 rebounds. nandet 2-3.0-l3;Bri.an Watkins 4-q.
Rowell Fernandez had 13 points and · 1-9; Matt Sprang 0-0:-1·1; Greg Mor·
a game high four assists;
ris 7·0-3·17; Ryan Gorman 1-0-10Rio Grande's Chad Barnes was 12; Brad Vance I·I-2-7;Chris0ard·
voted to the all-tournament team ner 2-0-1-5; John Wilson 2·0-4-8.
along with Wilkerson. · ·
TOTALS 18-S·:U-72.
1be Redmen take to.the conn next

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stereo, tiH, cruise..

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1996 Iuick Regal
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I

OPEN
All pre-owned care told with llmlttd wel'l'lrlty.

It's been called the world's

busiest toll-free customer service
number. Not because it's always
busy... but because it receives 60
million calls a year. That's Social
Security's 800 number. a good num·
ber for you to use too. You can find
out how much you've paid into
Social Security over the years and
how much you'll get back when you
retire. You can also set up an
appointment to apply for Social
Security benefiiS at your local Social
Security office ... or report a change
in your earnings or benefit status.
And when you call, you'll always get
prompt, courteous service. That
number to call ... to take care of
most of your business with· Social
Security ... is f-800-772-1213. Auto•
mated service is available 24 hours a
day. To speak with a representative
call between 1 am and 7 pm.

ext cl

e- fourth cup honey
I lespoon baking soda
2 who ~ggs
one-hal
coconut
In blender. ix all ingredients on medium· ow speed for
30 seconds. Add to bath while
water. is running. ·Remain in
bath at least 30 minutes.
Cover and refrigerate; discard after 2 days.
'

~ews

policy

•·Jn an effort to provide our reader·
ship with current news, the Daily
sentinel will not acoepl weddings
af'ter 60 days from the date of the
event.
· ~All club meetins. and other news
'.rt~cles in the society section must
~ submitted within 30 days of
qccurrence. All birthdaya must be
siambltted wilhin 42 days of the
oa:urrence.
:·All materlalsubmillcd for publication II subject to edillnJ.

.• +

'

'

Apricot and Wheat Germ
Facial Moisturizllla Mask
For normal to dry skin; softens
and smooths dry areas of skin ·
Yield: 2 cups ·
2. avocados, pitted and
peeled
one-half apricot, pitted
one-fourth cup coconut
milk
one-half cup wheat germ
I teaspoon coconut oil
I teaspoon honey
I teaspoon almond extract
I teaspO?n banana extract
Continued an page 8

BOTANICAL BEAUTY • 'Blended Beauty ·- Botanical Secrets for Body and Soul," (Ten Speed
Press, $19.95) features 100 recipes- using foods, herbs and other natural products- for beauty aids that range from moisturizers and facial treatments to shampoos and body lotions. The
recipes also take Into account all skin types: .mature, normal, dry and oily.
•

body care line came next.
In his products, Philip B. relies
heavily on plant oils, believing they
offer beneficial neurological
effects. His earliest hair and scalp
treatments used ylang ylang, Iaven-.
der, geranium and gardenia, combined with such carrier oils as olive
and almond, to heal, restore life and ·
add luster to hair. .
.
.... Not only did my treatments

, : 'christmas gifts and food for a
~y family were collected.

' : Former members of the MCCL
were guests: Peggy Houdashell,
.Corky Kitchen, Janet Duffy and Ann
Solbq_~- _
. . .. _ _

.

Honey llanana MUk Bath
For all skin types; cleanses,
softens and soothes the entir~
body Yield: 2 cups, enough for
I or more baths
I cup milk
I
e b•a~ (~ed)
. OR . I tablespoo.n c.
ana

Nancy Morris gave the blessing
before the meal. She also .presented
devotions taken from Luke and read
a'short story entitled "The ChristmaS
Spirit".

.

'

The Des Molnea Reglater
Always do a patch test on
yourself before using any of
lhese recipes. and do a patch
test each time you make a
recipe. To do a patch test,
apply a small amount of the
recipe to the skin on the inside
of your arm and wait 24 hours.
If there is no reaction, it is
probably safe to proceed with
the treatment. Consult a doctor
if there 's a question.
In recipes that call for produce, the fresh form is best. If
you can't use fresh, use frozen
rather than canned. If using
·e~~s. make sure they're fresh.
USe fresh herbs if they're
available. Remember that
herbs vary in intensity and
strength, depending on where
they're grown, So reduce the
amount if you notice an irrita- .
lion or too potent an effect. .
Wash any fresh produce
thoroughly to remove pesticides.
Equipment you'll .need
includes: blender, eyedropper,
mortar and pestle, cheesecloth,
string, small whisk, assorted
sizes of bowls, small saucepan,
fine-mesh strainer, plastic cosmetic bottles, plastic spray bottles, papei towers or coffee fll;
ters, cotton balls, measurini
cups and spoons, resealable ·
plastic containers.
From "Blended Beauty Botanical SecreiS for Body and
Soul," by Philip B. (Ten Speed
Press. $19.95).

A pot luck dinner was held. '
Nancy Morris presented everyone a
holiday candle and a Christmas
magnet. Kitty Darst pre~nted each
one attending with a . Christmas
ornament.

$

Was $10,995

the month.- so it's best to call at other
times." s31d Peterson.

The Middleport Child Conservation· League held its annual Christmas party at the home of Helen
Blackston. 1be home was decorated
in holiday fashion.

·•· Gifts were judged; most unusual,
Peggy Harris; prettiest, Helen
Blackston; most original, Linda
Qroderick. Prizes were presented to
lhe winners and an exchange' of the
Secret Sister gifts tpak place. New
liames were drawn· for 1997 •

more.

If you're 65 or over and don't
have Part · B Medicare coverage,
you'll have a chance to sign up for
the Part B medical insurance coverage during the 1997 annual enroll·
ment period, accoring to Ed Peter·
son, Social Security manager in
Athens.
"Every year. the government
offers a three-month open enrollment period from January I to
March 31. This period is to give you
a second chance if you didn't enroll
when you were first eligible or you
dropped your coverage in the interim," said Mr. Peterson. If you enrol)

during the current sign-up period,
your coverage will begin July I,
1997. For 1997, the cost for Pan B
coverage is $43.80 per ~onth. Most
delayed enrollees pay a 10 percent
surcharge for each year they could
have been enrolled ~ut weren't.
There are special rules concerning
this surch~rge for individuals who
had health insurance coverage from·
an employer.
Part B coverage. also called
"medical insurance," helps pay for
doctors' care, outpatient hospital visits, and other medical services. Peapie are offered the option of signing
up for Part B at the same time they
are automaticall~ enrolled in
Medicare's Part A .~rogram .. Pan A
helps pay for mpattent hospital care
and certain other services . .
. People 1n Athen~ or Me1gs Coun·
ues who want to sogn ~P for Part B
Med1care coverage should call the
Athens Soc1al Securuy office or call
Soc1al Secunty's t~ll-free number I·
800-772-1213 . The hoes a~e
buSiest early m the week and early m

Conservation
League holds
Christmas
dinner

, : The door prize was won by
Nancy Morris.

AUto., air, stereo,

I

wages and pnying Social Security
taxes?
A. You can call Social Security's
toll-free number, 1·800-712·1213.
and ask for the f&amp;etsheet "Household
Workers." Yot"'can also call the
Internal Revenue Service, 1-800829-1040, for more information on
the payment of Social Security
taxes.

The members of the Middlep6rt
titerary Club held their Christmas
celebration at the home of Mrs.
Eldred Parsons.
' · President Martha Hoover opened
lbe meeting with the club collect,
made announcements concerning
:activities in the new year and welcOmed Olila Heighton as a guest.
.
.;· Program chairwoman Mrs. David
'Bowen then introduced a series of
jeadings interspersed with appropriilte carols, accornpani~d by Mrs •.
'Clarice Erwin. After this, two special guesiS were introduced: Deity
·Parsons' daughter, Janet Kohl, and
her friend, Bonnie Honll, from
!lucyrus. lbey presenled an unusual
concert of Christmas melodies
piayed on recorders. Miss Horst also
summarized the history .of the
rtconder and its development over
·the centuries.
. This was followed by JoAnn
Wildman's presentation of sli~f""
·!'Great , Paintings Depicting the
Nativity." from lhe Metropolitan
Mllseunl of Art. These were accompartied by the reading of short Scriptural passages.
Christmas mementos were dis·
tributed. The afternoon ended with
the group singing favorite Christmas
songs accompanied by Mrs. George
Hackett, followed by refreshments
served in a formal buffet setting.

VB, tilt, cruise, auto., power steering,
power brakes, air, more ..

.

ty--What Every Woman Should
Know" for more information.
Q. Will my monthly Social Secu·
rity benefit increase in January
1997? If so, how much?
A. Yes, Social Security and Supplemenlal Security Income (SSI)
benefits will increase 2.9 percent,
beginning with the payments that
Social Security beneficiaries receive
January 3, and SSI recipieniS receive
on December 31.
Q. What are the Medicare premi·
urns and deductibles for January
1997?
.
A. F9r 1997, the basic Medicare
Part B premium is $431.80 starting
January 1. The Part A deductibles·the amount you pay hefore Medicare
starts paying, have increased. In
1997, the deductible is $760 for the
first 60 days of a hospital stay and
$190 per day for the next 30 days,
and $380 a day for the next ~days.
The Part B deductible d1d not
change. It is still $100 ~r year. .
Q. Where can I get mformat1on
about reporting hol!Sehold worker's

l-iterary club
examines
Nativity ·
paintings

1995 Cltevy Caprice Oassk
Was $16,999

Was $11,995

By ED PETERSON
ble for any Social Security henefiiS
8oclel Security man.ger In on my ex-husband's record?
Athen8
A. If you are divorced, you can
• Q. I have a seven-year-old son receive benefits when your ex-hus·
with a disabHity. My husband and I band starts collecting retirement or
tnake avense earnings. Could my disability payments if you are
son qualify for Supplemental Secu- unmarried, are 62 or older, and were
ply Income?
married to your ex-husband at least
: • A,. It's unlikely that your child 10 years. Even if your ex-~usband is
~uld be eligible for Supplemental not actually receivin·g benefits, you
Security Income (SSI) benetiiS since can get benefits at age 62 provided
your family has average earnings. your ex-husband is eligible for ben·
SSI payments are made to people etits and you have been divorced for
)Vith limited income and resources at least two years.
'
and eligibility is determined by the
You may also get payments if
parent's income and resources. If your ex-husband dies, provided you
you'd like more information, call are unmarried, are 60 or older (50, if
Social Security's toll-free number, 1- you're disabled), and you were mar~00-772·1213, and ask for the book- ried to your ex-husband 10 years or
let, "Social Security--Benefits For more, You may receive benefits if
you have children under age 16 who
Children With Disabilities."
Q. I'm a divorced 58-year-old are receiving benefits on the work·
woman who receives Supplemental er's record. The 10-year marrilllle
~ecurity Income benefits. I was mar·
requirement doesn:t apply to, this
ried to my ex-husband for 20 years. benefit.
Although I did not work eqough to
Call Social Security's toll-free
earn benefits on my owfr Social number,
1-800-772-1213, and
Sl:curity record, will I ever be eligi- request the booklet, "Social Securi·

· : A game, "Jingle Jingle", created
\1¥ former member Eloise White in
1967 was played. There was an
· ~)&lt;change of Christmas ornameniS.

-

•

$

1996 Chevy Corsica

1
1
L-~·~NO=W~~~~--~
-N~OW~~9~8~9~---

•

$

Was $12,995

Was $9,995

1995 Chevy Lumina

V6, ab$olutely loaded.
2 TO CHOOSE FfiOM.

1994 Cltevy Lunina V•

low miles.

15

1996 Pontiac Grand Am

Was $15,999

I

I .

VS, auto., PS, PB. PW,
stereo, tilt, cruise.

1995 Olils Oera

1996

199$
· vs. auto., PS, PB, air, PW, stereo,

V6, leather, PS, PB, air, auto., stereo,

NOW

NOW

$
~

1995 Buick Century

NOW

$

V6, 4x4, auto., air, PB, PS, stereo,
' leather, cruise, tilt, low miles.

Was $20,999

1996 Chevy Ccnaro

NOW Was $16,995

$12,999

1994 Chevy S-1 0 Blazer

+·3.9%

Was $13,9'95

1994 Okls Achleva

VI, lall:her, al pow«, till, cruise, etereo,
CUI IIi( bags, Graphic Equalizer.

$9

LT, all wheel drive, loaded. ·

Was $15,999

Was$6,899

1994 CaAK s••• Devle

$11,995 ,

\\f:

Pkg.

Was $16,565

~ 1997 Chevy Astro Van

'

Super Clean.
Was $11,999

\\\~.cab. auto .• air, .LS

I

tilt, cruise . .

1993 Astro V•
Now$9

$

1995 Chevy S·10 PU

.
21

+ 3.9%

tilt, cruise.

$

liOW

....__ $21 ,999

$

NOW

VB, !MO., 4X4, PS, PB, PW,
power seat, tilt, cruise.

Was $22,99'5

995 Chevy Lumina Van

. VS, a1.11o., air, stereo,

.
J
,4
For eo llonlhl

1996 GMC Sonoma

·-MOW $.1

-·

Was $28,573

NOW $21

loaded.

19 99

ALL NEW FOR 97

Was $22,844

·$

1995 Cllny 5-1.0 •zer LS
va, 4x4, stereo, auto., air, .
$22,=~ $

·

· NoW .

99

5

"'.\._1997 Cllevy Ven..,re Van
,.

Silverado, loadild.

1996 Chevy Astro Van

Was

Now$15

+

Was $28,039

Was $12,063

Was$16,828

NOW$17

air, loaded.

t\'4l 1997 Chevy 5·1 0 Pickup

. 5 speed, air, cass .• alum. wheels.

Was $18,456

·

t\'4l 1997 GEO Tracker 4X4

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The results are such recipes as
work, but they smelled incredible
- stimulating, soothing and relax· Apple-l;'ear Nighttime Wrinkle
Lotion, Tropical Facial Frappe and
ing the senses," he writes.
Chocolate-Pumpkin
Cgnditioning
After a · food tour of Italy, he
began consulting with a chef about Hair Milk.
using foods in his products. "I
wanted to take the sensory experi"I never dreamed in all my years
ence to new levels by utilizing . of research tha~ fo?d' bases, archesingredients never used before,l)lOd· trated correc\ly wlt~ other compoernizing the entire approach."
nents, could result in poetry for the
body," says the beauty consultant.

ASK ANNE • NAN

Whe.re to.find ·socks, hats, clocks and tins
By ANNE B. ADAMS end
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
TO OUR READERS :' We're
going tb use this column to catch up
on some of our "where can I find?"
requests. Shipping and handling
charges must be added to all items
mentioned below.
ELECTRIC
TYPEWRITER
AND SOCKS WITHOUT TOE
SEAMS: Violet Peressini of Corvalr
lis, Mont., is looking for these. We'll
bet that she would have little or no
trouble finding a second-hand elec·
tric typewriter for a very reasonable
price (put a note on a local bulletin
board or asmall ad in the newsp~per
or drop by the local small office·
supply store).
.
However, Smith-Corona still
makes one. It is the Smith Corona
Memory Correct 4()00. and costs
$84.84.1! is catalog 400CM and c11,11

he ondered tl:rough the Service MerDISPLAY CLOCK: Betty Coop·
chandise catalog by calling 1-800· · er of Ocala. A a.. wonders where she
251·1212.
can purchase a clock that displays
. Seamless socks are available in the time on the ceiling. We found her
an assortment of colors in the Lands one in the Hamrilacher Schlemmer
End catalog, I Lands End Lane, catalog. It is called The Ceiling ProDodgeville, WI 53595 ( 1-800-356- · jector Clock. It projects 3-mch
4444). ·
numerals from a d!stance of 6 feet. ·
COTfON HAT: James Manuel of The order number is 45739 H; and
Morgan City, La., writes: "Would the cost is $54.?5. Write or call
you know of a company that makes Hammac her Schlemmer at O~ra­
cotton knit caps or distribut&lt;)s same? . tions Center, 9180 Le Saint Dnve,
Wool and manmade materials irri- Fairfield, OH 45014-5475 (1-800tate me very much.''·
543-3366).
The Vermont Country Store, P.O.
By the way, we love this catalog!
BoK 3000, Manchester Center, VT It has all kinds of strange and hard·
., 05255·3000 (1-802-362-2400) car· . to-find items in it, many of which
ries a knit cotton-jersey nightcap you never knew you wanted. H\&gt;W
that is also good for jogging, walk· about a correct-posture dog feeder
ing Or as a liner for a wool hat. It or a programmable hand-assembled
comes in while only, but can be dyed robot?
any color. It's catalog 16080; the . MUFFIN J'INS: . Mrs,. Martin
nightcap costs $6.95.
Flowers of West Covina, Calif.,

.

,

}.

wonders where she can buy extralarge muffin tins that will bake
muffins as large as the ones you find
in a bakery. They are available from
Sweet Celebrations, Inc., 7009
Washington Avenue S., Edina, MN
55439 (l-800:328-6722).lt is called
an "Extra-Jumbo Muffin Pan." It's
item 21989 and costs $17.45; white- ·
paper liners · are also available
(534544; $1.69 for a package of%). .
IIORCH LIGHT: Beulah Follmer
of Kenhorst, Pa., has been looking
for a motion-activated light to put on
the ceiling of her front porch. The
Improvements catalog offers a
motion-sensing light adapter (i tem
146175, $24:99), ·which will d~tect
motion witKin 50 feet in a I0-foot
arc. It will mount on the wall or ceil·
ing ne.xt to an existing fixture. To
order, write or call Improvements.
Hanover, PA ' 17333-0084 ( 1-800-

,

642-2112).
· The Brookstone catalog offers un
qverhead light-socket adapter !hat
automatically turns the light on
when it senses movement within a
15-foot radius. It sh~ts off after four
minutes to s.ve energy. The Auto
Light Socket is item 143594 and
costs $35. Write or call Brookstone
at 17 Riverside St., Nashua, NH
03062 (1-800-926-7000).
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan'' at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replie•
cannot be provided.
·

•

'

'.

.,

�I

•

Moncl.y, December 30, 1996
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 30, 1. .

Cronkite's book is sure to cure those post-holiday blues
Ann
Landers
1995, Lot AIIJtiel
Ti111t1 S)'ldic&amp;&amp;t 1N1 CN!IIOn Syndil;_..

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Readers: You deserve pampering after surviving the rush and
~ustle of the nerve-shredding, tension-producing holidays. Run, don't
walk to the neanost bookstore and
treat yourself to the most heartwarming, nostalgia-producing book
you will have read in many a year.
After 10 minutes, I became totally hooked. This biography of the

world's most trusted man, Walter our official language is a myth that
Cronldte, of course, is a hi"ory les- refuses to die. There NEVER was a
son in itself. It also is a testimonial possibility that German would be
to a solid marriage and a victory for the official language of the United
decency in his hallowed profession States, nor was there a vole on such
of journalism.
a measure.
Cronkite knew every president
The Library of Congress first
since Eisenhower and recouniS some began to receive queries about this
fascinating and hilarious stories that during...the late 1930s, when Nazi
will knock your socks off.
propagandists were hard at work tryThe name of the book: "A ing to convince the world that AmerReporter's Life." The publisher is ica bad almost been a GermanKnopf. The price is $26.95 (in Cana- speaking country. That story gained
da, it's $35.) If you 're married, such momentum over the years that
you'd better buy two to avoid an the Congressional Research Service
ongoing fight. Trust me.
looked into il in 1982. Here's what
Dear Ann Landers: I'm no histo- happened:
In 1794, some German settlers in
· rian, but that essay in your column
about one vote preserving English as Virginia petitioned the U.S. Coh-

gross to have certain federal statutes
translated into German and printed
in both languages. This petition was
referred loa committee, which voted
the idea down -- by a margin of one
v.ote.

Please stomp out that piece offiction whenever you encounter it.
Support your local responsible historian. · -Lewiston, Maine
Dear Lewiston: Thank you for
helping to set the record straight.
Methinks when early American history was taught in school, I was out
to lunch. Read on for .some other
interesting tidbits:
Dear Ann: You printed thai "in
1868, one vote saved President
Andrew Johnson from impeach-

ment." Actually, "impeachment"
mea'!s a public offiCial has been
charged with a crime. Andrew Johnson was not saved from that. However, he was not convicted because
the Senate was one vote shy of tbe
two;thirds necessary. Thought you' d
want to know. -- Gail in Bartow, Fla.
Dear Ann: Oliver Cromwell did
not gain control of England by one
vole. Parliament dissolved itself
without even taldng a vole. That
wasn't the only error in your column
about the importance of one vote.
On the. day King Charles I of England was sentenced to death, no vole
was taken, but 59 commissioners
eventually signed his death warrant.
Texas was brought into the Union by

•

.•• ,
.
a Senate vole of 27 to 25 and a

Deer Cut
at

House voll: of 132 lo 75. And finally, Adolf Hitler became dictator of
the Nazi Pany in 192.1, not 192~.
And the voll: was 553 lo I. --Madison, Wis.
•·
•
Dear Madison: I want to thank all
who wrote about the importance of
one vote. Did you know thai in the
last presidential election, fewer !hajJ•
half the people eligible to vot~ ·
turned out? This is a sad commentary when one considers bow many
people have fought and died for th~
privilege.
Sead questions to Ann Landen;
Creators Syadicate, 5777 W. Cm·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, LGs Angeles,
Calif. 90045

'

I

CHRIS BALL

To prolong the lifc,of a plant, she
said, avoid drafts, place near a sunny
window, keep temperatures belwee'n
65 and 70 degrees and keep soil
moist qnly. A well-balance4, all-purpose household fenilizer for plonts
will help maintain the green foliage
longer and promote new growth.
In.early spring, cut the plant back
to cigbt inches, rounding the shape.
Around June I, plant it outside after
temperatures reach 50 degrees or
above. Bring· the plant back inside
after Oct. I, keep it in bright sunlight
at temperatures between 65 and 70
degrees, and then keep il in total

:~~~epted Botanicals .. ___--.---______:_____
Christopher Ball, Syracuse, has
been rlotified of his acceptance to
the University of Rio Grande starting in the fall of 1997.
A senior at Southern High
School, Ball is active in the school's
golf and baseball programs. He
attend~ the Forest Run United
Metha&lt;Jist Church.
·
His pmnts are Toin and Debbie
Ball of Syracuse and the late Anita
Buckle,y Ball. He has one sister,
Sarah.
.
He plans a career in computer
science ..

Continued from page 7
I stalk celery
I egg white
Mix all ingredieniS in a blender
on medium speed for I minute, or
until smooth. Cleanse face, then
apply mask evenly on face and leave
on for 1.5 minutes. Rinse off with
warm water. Use 2 or 3 limes a we~k
for dry skin. once a week for normal
skin.
Cover and refrigerate; discard
after 3 days.

Vegetarian Refried Bean Hair
Mask
For normal to dry hair; softens and
adds shine and volume. Yield: 2
cups
one-half cup refried beans (vegetarian, no animal fat)
one-half avocado (peeled, pined)
8 ~ooked brussels sprouts (fresh,
or frozen)
·
one-founh cup coconut milk .
2 tablespoons chopped cooked
sweet potatoes (fresh or frozen) ·
2 tablespoons macadamia nul oil
2 tablespoons olive oil
·

2 tablespoons canola oil
In blender, mix all ingredients on
medium-low speed for 45 seconds.
When formula is smooth, apply by
massaging through hair. Then cover
with · plast.ic cap or plastic wrap.
Leave on hair for 10 to 20 minutes.
Rinse th,oroughly with warm water
unti I hair mask is complet.ely gone.
Removal may take scrubbing action
during rinse. Follow with light hair
conditioner for minute or two.
Cover and refrigerate; discard
after 2 days.

--Community calendar-n..

Community. Calendar Ill
publyted as a free servito to non·
Prom,1~P" wishing to announce
a\ediJiil and special events. The
calen6r II not daip.., to promoter;
· lei or fund ralsen or anY,
type.
are printed u space
perm IUICI eaDDOI be guaranteed
to run a spccllk number or days.

121'21118 ,

MON~AY

.

r

ALFRED -- Orange Township
Trust~s end-of-year meeting Monday, 7:30p.m. at the home of Clerk
~ie follrod.

o\R.WJN -- Bedford

Township
trustees end,-of-year meeting Monday. 7 p.m. at the township hall.
CHESTER -- Chester Township

TUESDAY
PORTLAND -- Lebanon Township Trustees regular meeting Tuesday, 5 p.m., at the township building. Organizational meeting to follow.

TIIURSDAY
POMEROY

Organizational
t

-

.

GRAVES PI~NED - Ralph Qravn of Pomeroj, -"• a member of
the Pllll*oy/Reclne MleoniC Lodge 184, NCalved hla 50-year pin
laal m911th. PrHenllng Gravn wllh the pin - e . from left, Mleonl
David Fox, Larry Llvendtr, Brent Zirkle, .Frank Slaeon and Rhlll Milo

hoan.

,

.-..'
' !
A.

240 E. Main

::~

•• •I

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

Pomeroy

Slnth Flitter OWner

;.:j

. 992-8914
I

-·

••s

ltatiStntps

Vesls

N.alags
Hlllllilg Ughts
lilts ·,..,,., mo

~

. 949.,057

MIKE aiiiG
. !v111iot&amp;W.._.He..
I

mo. pd.;

Christmas Trees
We have an excellent
oalectlon of beautifully
ohoered treoo up to 14 fL
Prices 510-$20, Call for
wholeaale prtcoe.
Landacape Stock
(Plant alter Chrlalm")
Spruce and WhHe Pine

DAVIS
CONTRAaiNG

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
UVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETIIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
2 Milia North oiSIIvar Bridge on SR 7
1H 11-F; 1-5 Sunday
Phona 446 4530

•Roofing
•Remodeling
· •New Construction

•Decks

$611.

•VInyl Siding
oJnsured

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sat.'o &amp; Sun.'o till Chriltmll
St. Rt. 325, Oanvllle, Oh.
Ph. 742-3149 or 11112·7285

Frt18 Eal/11111181

992·6711

SUE'S •
GREENHOUSE

BANKRUPTCY

can relieve a debtor ol
financial obligations and arrange a lair
distribution of assets. Deblors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt• property lor their personal use.
This may indt.ide a car, a house, clothes, and
.household goods.
For lnlormation ·Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

i
Morning Star RdJ
CR 30, Racine, flhlo
'•Roping •Wreaths .
•Swags
-Grave Blankets
'
•Artificial Poinsettia

.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limeslone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

•s.oo, u,

Attorney William Safranek
Attorney At Law

(614) 592-5025

'

•

• 31801 Amberger Rd.
f
Off Forest Run

Dog c.llan

lulls

!'

:

Coats

&lt;haps

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY
at IVYDALE

949-2115

Athens, Ohio

11r.lMNII1

121'171111 mo. Dill

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

mo.

11Y2Miie TFN

CUSTOM BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

30 Amouncements

New H0111es, Additions,
Roofing, Painting,Barns
Garages, Concrete
Free Eslimates
2:;.years experience
1
We fix it as if it were our
·own home or bu.sineJ.s
- Ask ror
. John (614) 991·3987
or Dallas (614) 949-3036

Forked Run
Sportsman
Club
·Gun Shoot
Friday,
Dec. 27th
6:00pm

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
Public Notice

To meet the challenge, the busiest
two miles of the Strip ·will be closed
to tratfic for eight hours, starting
Tuesday at 6 p.m., and some 700 law
enforcement officers from all over
_ Nevada will be on hand.
- The star of the evening will be the ·
Hac1en
· da, an agmg
· 900 - r~om hoteI
on the south end of the Strip that will
be.brought down at9 p.m. PST, midnight EST. The spectacle will be tele. dl rve
' on Fox TV·
vtse
The Hacienda is being leveled to
. .·s newest
f
he c1ty
k
. rna
· e way or 4t 000
mega-resort, a , -room 1uxury
hotel-casino by gaming giant Circus ·
Circus Enterprises Inc.
.
The blast is "really going to be
something, far more complex than
an~.thi~dgMv;e'kveL ~ver been indvolvedf
m. sa1
ar OIZeaux, prcSt ent o
]' · 1 b d ·
Conlrolled.Demo 11ton nc., ase tn
Phoenix, Md. .
Controlled Demolition has demo!ished more .than 7,000 bui'ldings,
bridges, towers and other structures
around the world, including Las
Vegas' venerable Sands Hotel last
month.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New •
Garages • Replacement Windows ·
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

I

/U

/t

SAVE

50%·75%

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

JONES' TREE SERVICE ·

WICKS
HAULING

·Top,

Environmental Protection

..
.
.......·
.·-·..·'..

RUTLAND, OHIO
614-742·2158
Britll' Proof
Hunting Clothes

'

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR'

537 BRYAN PLA.CE
But the Hacienda will be the
PUBUC NOnCE
MIDDLEPORT
toughest building the company ·has
Th •
Ed u c 1 t Ion
• 11112-2n2
brough.t down because two of the Syotom
Monogomont
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
(EMIS) lnlormotlon
EdueaUonol
three wings were ·built to withstand S.rvlco Center profile for
•keplacetilelll Windows
earthquakes, Loizeaux said.
llocol yoar !ttl lor tho .
olviW Garages
Although it takes only a few sec- Molgo County Educational
•5101'11 Doors &amp;
onds tu drop a building, Circus Cir- Service Center Will bo
614-992·7643
cus and CDI plan a 7-ml' nute show Jonuory
ovoltobll7,10111117.
lho public
ao
of
WWows
Thla profile
that starts with four minutes of fire- lnelud.. dolo on otudonl·
(No Sunday Calls)
21,.......,
•ROCID Additions
works by Grucci outside the building domogrophlco, otalf L----...:.----~.;.._.:,.__...::;:::~
before the hotel will be brought domographlco, llnonclol ,, . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·- dow' n.
.
reaourcea,Anyone•nd
oxpondllurtto.
moy
' I./t~ ;.
d
..
. be obtain a copy of thlo =rolllo
. ICIWI
til((
The act.ual emo1mon w1 11
by
tnqulrln•
at
tho
ol•o
·
·
•
•
.
AuthorizedAGA Distributor
dragged out over a mmute,
and wi II · · County Edueatlonol
Son~lea
feature A,OOO pyrotechnic charges cantor. Located In tho , • Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
and 2,000 demolition charges both Municipal Building tn Services · Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding '
inside and outside the building, which Pomeroy or by calllngllll2·
• Aluminum/Stainless • Too.l Dre"ing • Ornamental
is twice the length of a football field. ~'rote J. Gilkey, Tmourttr · Steps • Stairs, 13allings, Palio Furniture, Fireplace
Just off Bradbury Rd.
"It will be the mother of all ·
llolgo County Edueallonal Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of olher stuffll
(look tor algna)
i!nplosions," Loizeaux promised.
( 23
. , 30', 2TSorvC tea Cantor
"No Job Too Larne or Too Small"
Middleport, OH
121
"
. We will work within your budget.
614-992-53711
Glenn Schaeffer,.president ofCirDay &amp; Evening Hn.
cus Circus, said since the Hacienda
Public Notice
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
1211111 t mo.
had to be removed anyway to make
108
Street
WV
- ..
way for the company's newest reson, ellecllve upon loauance or a
"it seemed fitting to do it on New ;~~~~~ntet~~~~~~~· Ro~~.':,j
(UmeSioneYear's Eve, and give a national tele- Code Soctlon 3745.04, a
'
Low Rates)
vision audience a . spectacular Las final octlon may · bo
20 Years Experience •
Vegas-style entertainment event."
appeoled
to
tho
Review (EBR) byBoard
a peroon
-~---------....,.--------r:=========-r===::=~=====::j who
Environmental
of
'
waa
'
a
party
to
a'
Trim,
P
bile
N
Public Notice
U
otice
prooee.dlng before the
'
'
PUBUC NOTICE
oumblniod within 30 doya
director by filing an appeal
Removal &amp;
Lim~stone,
Th e
1o II ow I n g riotlca of the draft acllon. within 30 doyo of notice of
I
'
application• and/or verified "Propooed actlono" are the final octlon. Purouantto
Stump Grinding
Gravel, Sand,
complaints were rttcelvod wriHen eltttementt of the Ohio Revlood Colle Section
Owner:
and the following draft, dlractor'l Intent with 3746.07, • final action
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
propoeed, or final action• reapect to the leeuance, ls•ulng,
denying,
Ronnie Jo1ne1,.,
-r• taaued, by the Ohio . dental, m·o dlllcatlon, modifying, revoking, or
614~992-3470

LAS VEGAS (AP) - 1996 will
go .outwith a gigantic bang as huncjreds of thousa"ds of revelers converge for one loud lang syne, exceeding even this .city's lofty legacy of
glitz and pizzazz.
. The bash will leave at least one
·
bUl'ld.mg ·m rums.
· That's because the implosion of
the 11-story Hacienda Hotel dragged out so viewers can enjoy
. ks off a
every blast and boom - kIC
celebration that then slides down the
StriptothefronteofTheMirage,Treas,ure Island and Caesars Palace casinos.
.
. "Las Vegas has become like New
York City's Times· Square," state
Highway Patrol spokesman Steve
Harney said. '.'People beare comin g
here m mcrcasmg num rs to ce 1e"
brate New Year's Eve.
The Las Ve••• Convention and
Visitors Authority is forecasting a
record 201,000 visitors, while police
are predicting that 100,000 to
300,000 locals win join them for a
not-so-intimate pany that will stretch
for four miles along the Strip.

a'.

VICTORIAN PARLOR

windsurfing will also lose their
appeal.
Look for a boom in ocean cruises
and new interest in "wellness' 1 vacations that emphasize weight loss and
healthful relaxation, the Forecaster
said. ·
, Cuba will become a popular vacation destination as travel restrictions
are n;laxed and the communist country continues modernizing its hotels.
And there 'appears to he no end in'
sight'to Las Vegas' luster, the Forecaster said.
Also on the hot list for 1997:
preautographed books, poetry, parking meters that accept credit cards,
watches that transfer data to compulers, snowshoeing, backyard golf
and professional miniature golf.
. Long said he was proudest of his
1996 predictions about the decline of
CD-ROM publisliing and a trend
among noll· traditional professions to
adopt certification standards.
But he fared about as well as economists in predicting the Dow Jones
average- he was too low. His solution for 1997 was not to guess about
the stock market. "No one can do it,"
he said.

SUPPLY CO.

St. Rt. 7
TUppere Ptalna, Ohio
814-985-3813 or 814-887-64114
Plastic Culvert • Dual waH and Regular 8" thru 36"
4• S&amp;D • part. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4' &amp;6' Sch 35 pipe
'I•' &amp; •t,• C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/." lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'/," &amp; 1' 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'lo" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1' thru 2:' • fittings - Regulators • Risers
Full assortment of P. V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Clstem, Sepllc &amp; Water storage tanks

Vegas plans to end .'96 ·with a bang

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Maybe the baker was religiously inspired. :
Or perhaps it's a miracle, Nashville-style.
::
One thing's for sure, the cinnamon b,un bears an uncanny likeness to :
Mother Teresa.
.~
Ann Loree, manager of the Bongo Java coffeehouse neat Belmont Uni~ ~
versity, said a customer bought the bun in October.
· ·
:
"He was aboullo take a bite out of his bun, and then he saw the image " ·
she said Friday.
.
' :
Customer after customer recognized the revered .nun 'in the folds of fl~ky :
pastry.
,
·
,~
So out of a. sense of awe- ot perhaps' marketing potential - ·coffee;:
house workers shellacked it and enshrined the cinnamoh nun bun in
counter display, where it remains.
·
;;
The management has printed up "Miracle Bun" T-shirts and prayer cards · ;
and a video of the bun is being pitched lo late-night TV shows.
;:
"It may not be li ":'iracle, but it's cloSe: enough for Nashville," said 100: :
Rev. Sand Sheff, a mall-order ordained minister, landscaper and coffeehouse-:
philosopher.
'
'

SATURDAY,JA~UARY4TH

Acnntllem. ....
lest lwlitltloa, W¥
Oltlo ........ 7 ..,..
1·100.776.05~7
IOIMIOININilY
iUIIIYS 1 PM 10 6 Pll

Cake will be downsized by bakers
to appeal to singles and consumers
;Associated Press Writer
DENVER- In 1997, the "in" looking for smaller ponions and barcrowd will sociali1.e al cocktail par- gams.
The U.S. Postal Service will intro:ties, spend vacations on cruises or at
duce cenified e-mail in 1997, with a
~pas, dress with a retro-'50s look and
time and dale stamp to verify deliv~end cenified e-mail messages to
ery.
Initial cost : 22 cents per message.
·\eep in touch.
Country
and rap music will lose
~ Only those llehind the· time.&lt; will
listen to country music or rap, camp . ground, with rap sales tontinuing the
slide that started in 1996, according '
·out or go mountain biking.
· Thai's according to "The Ameri- lo the Forecaster.
In fashion, "Granny Glamour"
can Forecaster Almanac 1997," Denwill
gain a firmer foothold as rpiddle:ver author Kim Long's 14th annual
compendium of trend predictions. age women begin showing off their
)..ong's predictions are based on his figures more. Also, a return to femiperusal of newspapers, magazines, ninity will take hold, as laces, ruffles
uade journals, online databases, sla- and bows become more ooPular.
listical data and public surveys. '
The Forecaster says lh~ nerd look
; Men will slick back their hair and has become accepted fashion . -gro~ Sideburns, and goatees - a from the goofy glasses down to the
badge of grunge music devotees - · shapeless shoes, but without' the
:Will go mainstream. Two trends in · pocket protector. Other' nerd acceswomen 's hairstyles will be big hair · sories that are catching on: shirts butand shon pours, he says. '
toned to the neck, mismatched , lou~
: Generation Xers, who tediscov- patterns and skin-tight pants and
tred the manini in recent years, are shirts.
ieading the revival of the cocktail parFewer people will camp out in
iy, the social centerpiece of the 1950s ' 1997, a result·of Baby Boomers' wan~nd 1960s, the Forecaster says .
ing enthusiasm for roughing it.
Mountain biking , inline skating and

Mother Teresa in a breakfast pastry?

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3RD &amp;

Proct...W. . Oit

1'1'10. pd

By JOE WHEELAN

over sin; rosemary is honored b~ ·
darkness for I'\ hours a night.
You . should have a 'beautiful . God and a cherry branch represent~'·
·
,
biooming poinsettia in November or good fortune.
December, and a beautiful plant the
It was noted that members could
year around, she said:
have their grandchildren make' ,
Ann Webster read a Christmas pinecones filled with peanut buller: ·
story and Betty Lowery discussed seeds, raisins and nuts for the bird'\,'
thanksgiving and Christmas cacti .
.and squirrels, and hang them in tree.
Pauline Adkins discussed Christ- and bushes.
mas plants and their meanings; cvCr·
Group singing was led by Sarali
green -· usually the only tree avail- · Dawn Jenkins and Ann Weber
able in winter-- is a symbol of love; · clo,, .d the meeting.
'
mistletoe is a symbol of goodwill,
The next meeting will be held
love and peace;, holly is a symbol of Jan. 27, 1997, at I p.m. at the home',
joy and sharing God's Ilive; laurel is · of Belly Lowery in Harrisonville. ·
a symbol of triumph and victory

SALE

HOIIYLAND

RUTLAND MINE

&amp;&amp;W PWI1CS AID SUPPLY

1997 predictions ·forecast return
~o
cocktail
parties,
1950s
look·
.

Goi.n g Out of Business

CARPENTER
Columbia
Township Board of Trustees end-ofyear meeting Monday, 7 p.m. altbe
Columbia Township Fire Stat~on.
Organizational meeting for 1997
will follow.

lel11plen
SIPIII UUC11011
PllstlcMo.sls
Trttlu-TNIII..I'rellll

CHECK mE CWSmEDS FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS!

..

trustees end-of-year meeting Monday, 7 p,m. at the home of Clerk
Janet Life.
·

~

.949-2734

Rutland Garden Club discusses Christmas flower, poinsettia·
Pauline Adkins, was won by. Marcia·
Dennison. Clarine Blackwood is 10
furnish the January traveling prize.
The program, "It's Christrpas
Year Around with a Poinsettia", was
given by Weber.
There was a time when the poinsettias were only seasonal, but today
home gardeners can have them grow
and bloom for years with the proper
care, she explained.
The true beauty is not the tiny
flowers as much as the bracts, large
leaves at the base of the tiny flowers,
l"hich turn from green 10 vibranl
c'olors.

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

Skin·Cut·Wrap

By KARL LEIF .BATES
times requires a lillie tweaking, . temperature, pressure and humidity
conditions that could lead to precipThe Detroit News
Wolfe said.
A cold wind blows across Lake
There are times when the humans itation.
Michigan, protesting French farmers running the machine know someFurther complicating the problem
block an oil shipment, and a plague thing about the economy that the - at least for Michigan and neigh- ·
of locusiS marches across Nebraska. variables didn't measure, like a boring states ·- is tbe presence of
' It's enough lo give a forecaster a wildcat strike sweeping through an the Oreal Lakes, a huge reservoir of
headache.
·
automaker's plants, or a hurricane heal and moisture at this time of year
For all the careful measurement, clobbering the citrus crop in Florida. thai can create its own weather,
high-powered computer crunching TheY'll adjust things slightly to mostly snow. ·
"I'm trying lo emphasize to my
and knowledgeable gLless)"ork that compensate for.those factors. ·
goes into a good forecast- whether
''You might thin]&gt; of the model as . students thallhe'y just shouldn't trust
it's an economic look ahead or an additional colleague, one that the models." said Peler Sousounis,
tomorrow's weather .._ it only takes brings its own set or ~kills," Wolfe an assistant professor of alnlOspherone variable to throw the whole said. ."We can't predict wild cards ic science at the University of
·thing into a tailspin.
like weather. But you can't worry Michigan working on a .weather
"We made a very big mistake," , about whether you're right or model.that zetos in on the Great
predicting a 1.1 percent economic wrong, you just have to make the Lakes area.
growth in 1982, a year when the best forecast you can."
One time the federal model ·starteconomy instead shrank 2.3 percent,
Faced with a complex and fast- ed with the wrong initial conditions,
University of Michigan forecasting changing set of factors thai isn't "and was just totally out 10 lunch,"
guru Saul Hymans said recently. ·:11 even completely understood, weath- Sousounis said.
was a very big mistake all traceable er forecasters are happy when they
Weather forecasting can save
to one (variable)."
.
can reliably see only a few days lives, or at least weekends, but PurWhat they had predictesl was a ahead.
'
due University' agricultural econo"Sometimes. ir can sound very mist Bill Uhrig hopes to save the
change in behavior by the Federal
Reserve - which in reality did not cenain, but that's just the way we 'farm.
.
change its behavior'at all.
· write it," confessed Dick WagenTwiCe named the most accurate
The University of Michigan maker, ·science and operations offi- predictor of production, monthly
model of the economy looks at hun- cer for the National Weather Ser- prices, exports and inventories for
dreds of variables- like consumer vice's new forecasting center west soybeans, com and wheat in the past
spending•. int~rest rates and foreign of Pontiac, Mich. "The atmosphere six years, when Uhrig talks, farmers
car output - and crunches them can be pretty chaotic at limes."
listen.
FOCUSED F.ORECASTING • For all the measurement, high-powered computer crunching and knowlSurrounded by colorful screens
He tracks 25 to 30 variables,
througli- 118 equations that describe
how tl)e variables relate to each of satellite photos, supercomputer chats up his colleagues in surround- edgeable guesswork that goea Into a good forecast it only takes one variable to throw the whole thing
other.
models and real-lime weather radar, ing stales and uses a keen sense of Into a tailspin.
For ~xample, higher interest rates Wagenmaker freely admits that al . what individual fanners are likely to
mean fewer housing starts or new some point in forecasting, sci~nce do In a given situation to figure out
•
their grain to market toget the best peak of any buU market, he noted .
car purchases. Around and around it ends and the seal of the pants begins. lhe grain prices. :
The variables are all interdepe 0- price that y~r has to offer.. "It's
goes before reachiq~ some answers, '
Forecasts for southeast Michigan,
"There's a lot of psychologyBut the;.,·, no big compulel or ' · dent and interrelated, Uhrig said. more 'than an educated guess; it's an '
becau~ a change in one 'equation for example, start with a federal
involve~. I know how farmers think,
may ·trigger a cascade of other model of the day's weather that is fancy software involved. His model Wildcards ·include foreign grain e~ucated judgment."
lhat's important some years," he·
cl)ange$.
generated by a supercomputer in the is common sense and 35 years of markets, weather and the hig comThe
worst
he
has
done
was
misssaid.
"You don't have to be accu-·
experience.
He
also
stans
with
a
modity
investment
funds,
which
"Th~t's all done by a computer Washington D.C. suburbs. But the
ing
a
big
bull
market
in
soybeans
a
rate;
just
closer than the other guys ..
federai
forecast,
but
"I
have
the
power
to
change
the
market
coarse
amazin¥.1Y fast," explained research mtodel is only a rough guideline to ·
lew years back. Uhrig told farmers Nobody knows exactly what prices
always have to ask, 'What are we 20 cents in ada~. Uhrig said.
e&lt;:l'norrtist Janet C. Wolfe. "In about · what may happen tliat day.
to sell at $6 a bushel, then the price are going to do, but they have to
a minuie."
~ - The federal. model doesn '1 even
missing?' I look al all the fundamenUhrig puts all that together and rocketed to $13 for a few weeks. make decisions and take risks every
Even with its impressive sophis- say whether it's going lorain or not. tal and technical things and decide
advises
fanners on wben to bring After that, $13 was the expected day."
lication, the Michigan model some- It merely attempts to predict the where things should change."

The Rutland Garden Club met
Dec. 16 at the home of Margaret
Bell Weber for its annual Christmas
dinner and meeting.
The meeting was opened by
Pauline Adkins who gave Christmas
welcome, followed by ·sarah Dawn
Jenkins who read ''The Christmas
Story" from Luke.
Bell gave a Christmas prayer,
"Thank God for Little Things".
Plans for the planting ·of bulbs in
mini parks were discussed and it
was report~ that the publicity book
has been sent to Columbus,
The traveling prize, furnished by

Can-. . . .
lleallllchlcl

Maplewood
Lake

High-pow.ered computers can't t~ke chance ·out of forecasting

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SPORTS BAR
New Years Eve Party
Music by Joe Roush of
Round Mound Sounds
Music starts at 9:30- Until 1997
Champagne, Food, Hats &amp;
Hors d'oeuvre
$10.00 per person-

Agency (OEPA) loot wHk.
"Actlone" lncl~de tha
adoption, modification, or
rttvocatlon of or&amp;lera (other
tho~ emergency ordero);
the toouence, dental,
modlflcotlon ·or revocation
ofllaenooo, permRo, teaoeo,
9arlancta, or certlflcatoo;
and the epproval . or
dloapproval of plano and
opoclflcetlono. "Draft
Acllono" ere wrlllon
otatomonto of the Director
of
Envlronmonut
Protoclfon'o (Dlrector'o)
Intent with roopact tot ho
laouanco, dental, etc. of a
permit, llcenoo, order, ate.
tntorooted peroona may
oubmh wrtnen cornmenta or
roqu..t a public mooting
regarding draft actlono.
Commenu or public
mooting roqueato mual be

New Years Eve Party
Tues. Dec. 31st

perm!~

llaenoa, or varlanae. or vorlonco which Ia not
Written comment• and praceded by 'o ptopooed
requooto for • public action, may be appealed to
mooting regarding a the EBR by filing on oppaal
propooed action may be within 30 doya olluuance
oubmltted within 30 doyo of of tho final acllon. EBR
notice of 'tho propoaad oppaala muot be filed with :
action. An adjudication Environmental Board of
hearing may be hold on a Review, 235 Eaol Town
propaeed action If 1 hoorlng Stroot, Room 300,
requoat or objection olo Columbuo, Ohio 43215. A
recolved by theOEFA within copy of the oppaol mull be
30 daya of laouanca of. the orevad on tho Director
propooed action. Written I within 3 ctayo otter tiling the
commento, roqueato lor a-lwlththeEBR.
public moollnga, end
Dlrttctor'o Anal Dlamloool
adjudication hearing ofVarllled Complllnt
requaoto muot be Hnt to:
William a Thomoa
Hearing Clork, Ohio
Kennedy
Envlronmentitl Pro~ttatlon
40113 Hornor Ifill Road
Agency, P.O . .Box 1041,
Porn«oy, Ohio
Columbua, Ohio 43218-1041
(Talophone: 1114-144-2121);
FaCility Deocrlpllon:
"Final Actlona; artt· octlono .H-rdoua
of the dlrootor whloh are
Tho Director l.. ued •
· dlomlaaol of a vorlflod
complaint tC! the July 21,
11113 oubmltUtl by William
ond Thomoo Kennedy. Tho
complaint ollogod that
violation of thto atata'o
haurdouo
walla

-te

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

·Addition•
•NI~

985 4473
7/U/IIR

·

Public Welcome

5-yoot pollt
now oqut,..._

FRU
Pli:k up dlacarded
appliances, bellerleo,
many metala &amp;
motor blocka.
814-892-4025 8 am-8 pm
..

Adcl-ol Heat P~~~~ps.

"ON THE 8POT FINANCING

ovolloblo to QUALIFIED
BUYERS
'LAROE INVINTORY FOR

IMMEDIATE IIITALLATION8.

.
;
!

GRUESER'S
GARAGE
•

' Body work, car, truck
It truck palnUng,
minor mechanical
repair.
Tl!ne-ups, 011 Change,
WIX, Buffing
I
Long St., Rutland, Oh •
' 742~2835, Alk tor Kip •'
'
I

L.:lr;;;,;I;;.H;;.;;n;.;,t_C~Iu,_..sl...fl..,td;,;s~--'"'"""""!""-tM__,t 1 :i,
~~~· •- dated
(12)30 I to ..
I

number of player•.
Under new management

•'

-

I

Doors Open 4:30.
Game slllrta 6:45.
Pay out lo according to

DEia&amp;f.
Mo•l• H- F.._s,
•• .., fff mmn . Air Collllilionen and
r • •' • •

thll no IUCh IIWI ware
violated and hla dlomtaaed
tht oomplalnt u outllnacl In

To ..... 11114, Clll.

'

(614)892-5535
892-2753

Townaltlp.Tite d~ flrlda

JW fh ..., ..,. fl fh

G1r1ge1

•Remo&amp;lellng
•Siding
'•Roofing
•Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES

ootid waoto lawo at 'the
fanner Melgo Non.farroua
lnduafrfat olto In Sclpplo

985·392~

RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
'
POST 602
EVERY SUNDAY

•NewHomea

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Campara
FREE
ESTIMATEES

mane ..ment

• Horns • Noi.s emakers
Adm. $5.00 Skates $2.00
. Rollerblades $5.00

BINGO

C•tom Building &amp; Rlmodtllng

.•Ne~ Homes

1-•, wat1r
pollution control lawo and

7:30- 12:30

985-9996

..

revOC8tlon, or renewal of a renewll')g I permit, llcenae,

·.
II

.. .

7/IM!n

�.
Page 10. The Dally Sentinel

Monday, Dec:ember 30, 1988

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

.;: Monday, December 30, 1996

The Dally Sentlnet • P~~ge 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NBA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright
"CHRISTMAS SPECIAL" New In

Giveaway

40

stock , doublewidea, move in
now, no paymenrs lor 90 days.
Only at Oakwood HOmes, Nitro,

1112 y11r old malt cal, neutered.
declawed. very lriendly. .Liner

1 and 2 bedfoom aparrmenta,

24~51110

2 Puppiea, Morher is part beagle
and ~nlel. One black and one

- . . l 6 1 4 l·361·7753
4 Part Pic-A-Poo Puppes 6
weeki old. One 9112 month. PicA·Poo. 1 Mate lrlendley Sheep
dOg, 4 ytarl old. SH-388-8226
L_,. Mtuage.

·eoso.

nished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 131-4·

WV, 304· 755-5665.

trllned. Free 10 good home. tl1•·

1992 Chev Camero RS 11·1, 5
Speed , 251h Anmveraary Model
65,000 M1les. $-4,990, 114·-4 48·
1992 Honda· Accord Ex 5 Sp8ed,
High ·MIIea , ExceUent Condillon,
$9,000 614·.t!46·1417 n No An swer Please ueve Mesaaoe.

Two t bedroom apartments lor
sale w1 th stota{le bu1lding . W1 1J
sell o n lond contract, 614 -992 -

~993 Red RS Chevrolet Cavalier,
4 Cvllnder, Au1omatic, Air, 35,000
Miles, $7,500 Firm, &amp;14--448--7127.

2·3 bedroom
meroy; 1 bedroom
Tuppers Plain s area; 2
!railer in Tuppers Plains
6 14-66 7-3083.

5656.

320 Mo.btle Homes

for Sale

ESTATES, 52 WestwQod Drive
from 1244 Ia $315. Walk to snop
&amp; movies. Call 814 -446 -2568 .
Equal ~ouslng Opportmity,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Needed : Hou.secleamng two da~s

per week. e-celteru

pa~

Send

Name Address and Three Refer ·

110

Help Wanted

ences' to . 1234 Kerr Road . B1d·

Mkldleport

&amp;'VIcinity

Able Avon Reptesentat•ves
needed . Earn money lor Christ-

mas bills at homarat work. 1-800....,.,.,........,...,......,,....-=;...,..,....,....1992·6356 o• 304-862·~645. Ind .

All Yard Sale&amp; Musl Be Paid In Rep.
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the

day blfote the ad Is lO run. Sunday I Monday edition - 1:OOpm

Friday.

Public sate
and Auction

80

Rick Pe.rson Auclion Company,
full Ume aucttoneer, complete
auction
serv1ce .
L1censed
ftG,Ohio I , W&amp;sl Virgm1a , '30-t! ·

!773-!!;5;::7::6::_5,:;:0.:_::30:;4:::
·7:,:7;::3-:;:544=.;7.;,.--·I

90

wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U."S. Sil ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Oilmondl, Antiqu• Jewelry, Gold
Ringa, Pre• 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• U.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
~ •• Gal6polis, 614-446-28.t!2.
Clean late Model Cars Or
Truck•, 1090 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East em Av«~ue, Gallipolis.

J &amp; O't Auto Parts. Buying sal va~ vehicles. S&amp;llirlQ parts. 304 -

713-5033.
Top dollar- anltques . lurnnu re.
91111, China, Clocks, gold. Srlver.
coins, Mtches, esta1es, old srone
IBrl, old blue &amp; -white dishes, Old
WOOd ·bolC8S, milk 'bOUle&amp;. Me1gs
Counly Adverlisemenl , Osby
Marlin. fH4·992·7441 .
Wanled To Buy : LiltJa- Tykes
Kitchen Set, Workshop, Play hOuse, Possible Any Other Lillie
Tyke Toya, Please Call 61.t!·2.t! 5·

Auto body nian wanted· musr
nave &amp;lCperience in Mig welding ,
labricali'n g meta!, body &amp; painl.
Hill's Classic Cars, 7arp-7pm 81-4·

949-2217.

Christian School in Athens h1ring
teacher for Januaiy classeslupper elementary grades, some
muh·lt'(el and or L.D. expenence
helplu!. Call 614 -594 -5433 days
or 614 -898-2722 evenings.

CIRClE MEl
Gel A Head S(a rt On The New
Year. Apply Today, Start Tomo r·
row. $240 -$325 Weekly. Call Lisa
Toll Free At 888-4,32· 7378.
Furniture. Sales. Reta il Sales
Helpful Immediate Openings, AP·
ply: Lifestyle Furnllure, 856 Th ird
Avenue. Galllpolts, No Phone
Calls Please!

HOME

COMPUTER

Lena's TalCi Service 614 - 446·
7088, Fax 614 -446-4493, Would
You Like To Be Abte To Save.
Money, So You Can Chris1mas
Shop? Call lena's Ta•i 12lt9198,
t tH97 CaTrFor Pt1e,es? You Will

Glas You O&lt;d?? Please Don·•

Part i1me pcistt10n available lor
someone wno 1S honest. tnendly,
outgo1ng, oependr~ble and can
deal w1th the oubl 1c as we ll as
other busme·sses . Send resume
along Wltn cover lener 10: Ot!1ce
Serv1ce and Su pply, 1 12 Wes t
Mai11 Street. Pomeroy, OH 45769.

Any odd JObs, pa1n11ng , gutters
cleaned . 61-tl -245 ·5879 or 304·
675·7112.
·
Genera! 1-!ouse~lean•ng, 6t4-388·
9645.
Georges Ponable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill JUSt cal!
304 -675-3 957

Ltve In fo Caro Fo1 Elde11y lady
In GalltpOIIS. Sa lary, Days 0!1.
614-643· 2287.

Wil l Cl9'ar'1 Houses In Gallia
Counly, 61-tl -446 -2761

FINANCIAl.

210

Business
Opportunity

New 14lC80 Gr'1 1y make 2 pay ments &amp; move-in, no payment after 4 )'ears, free set-up &amp; delivefy. 304 -755-5885.
NEW! Bank R•po's, Owner financing avaiabfe ! $179fmo. Free
delivery &amp;set-up. 304-755--7191 .

446·0264
Galiia Uanor Apartment Sen1or
Citizens, Handicapped, Appl1anc ·
es Furnished. EOE . 614 · 446 4639.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apBrtmeniS at Village Ma nor and
Riverside Apartments in Middleport Fr_offi $232-$355 Call 614·
992·5064. Equal HOusing Opportunilih.

Schull 12x65, fair cond., 2br, rel~,~~,i"u 0;, stove &amp; 2 win"ow ac.

~~"':":~:':·.:30~4:'.:-6~7~5~·3000~:_·_ _.,.

N. 3rd. Ave Midd leport, OH . 2
Bedroom, furnished apr. Deposit
&amp; references required . 304-882-

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

2586.

Lots For Sale, Call Between 6 &amp; 8
P.M. 614-245-5788.

thAI you do business wi th people you know. &lt;1nd
NOT 10 send money through The
mA ol unt•l yo.• t\AV!· •ll V/o'Sl iQ:lted
the Oll9r1119

RENTALS

Nlc~ 2BR apt 4112 miles from Gallipolis; Centenary. Refr igera tor.
Stove end Wate1 F ur n1shed .
·$265 .00 month . No Pets I 614 256·164 or 614 -886-&amp;236 ·

1 Bedroom Housa .Within Walking
Distance Of University Of Rio
Grande Clean, New Carpet, Water. Trash Paid, Good Parking
Area. 614·388-9946
·

rwo bedroom apanment 1n
Pomerov. no pets, 614·992-5858.,

Nice

One beCroom apartment in Middleport, all utilities paid, $270tmo.,
$100 deposit, ca:! 614·992-7806
One bedroom apanmont :.,
Pleasant, 614 -992-5658.

2 Bedroams,

furnished, locautd
in Middfeporl. References re·
quired, deposit $100. $275
Momh, no inside pets. 304· 773·
5165.

Small do~nsta1rs apt, 1 beoroo m,
i deal for 1 pe rson. $295/ mo -t
ele-ctric, :400 2t st St. no pets, no
smok'ers , deposll &amp; reterences.

420 Mobile Homes

for Rent

304-675 - ~51 .

2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Tra~er
Park, Deposit &amp; References ReQuired, Phone 614·446·1104.

Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting
applications lor lbr. HUO subSidized apt . for. elderly and J:Jandicapped. EOH 304-675·6679.

450

2 Bedrooms. Green Schools, Garage, Private Lot, $325/Mo., De ~sit References, 614·446-4314.

Rooms lor tent - week or month .
St~rting at $t20tmo. Ga tlla Hotel.
614·446-9580

2 BAs. 5 Miles South 218, Galli·
polis . 5250 . montn . + Deposit.
Water included. 614 ·256·6776,
614 -256· 1337
3 Bed fo om Mobile Home , 5
M inutes From Gall ipol i.s, $2751
Mo., 6 t 4-446-6958. ,

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 Bedroom,
1 1r2 Bath, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
All In Porrer Area . You Pay De·
pos1t &amp; All Uhhhe s, Rslerence
Aequu•ed No Pets. 614 -388-9162.

knOwlngt~

P~ .

Classified

$40,000. 304·875·5630.

&amp;taff

a

Newty built home on approximl.ttJy 3 114 acrtt, 3 bedrooms, 2
balrt, apaciou1 llvrng room, ltrge
kitchtn , 3 mlrlUies off of SR 33.
165,000, 814 -i92·4254 cslJ afltr

7:30pm o• 614·992-2850.

I

c

Baseball Card Collection $550
AQuar uim $10 .00 . 12"S peake r
Box $25 .00 . Sew1n\:l M nchme
$25.00. 61 &lt;\-245·51 00
Boots By R~Jdwing. Ch1ppewa.
Rock.~. lo ny i am ~4 Guaranteed
1 om!s t P1 1Ch A~ Sltot• Cn!t&gt; Cia!
:1po11s
Concrete &amp; p~'astlt Sept1 c 1:4nks.
300 Th r u 2,000 Cui!Ons non
Evans Enter p11ses. Jnck son , OH
1-800·537-95?8

FALL SPECIAL'
92% +lign El!1clency Furnace.
60,000 BTU -$785: 80 ,000 RTU ·
$885 : TOo.ooo sru -$995 T.he
Above Prices Are For Furnace
On l. y, Free Est1 mate To .Install
F urnace. Duct Wor~ , Etc .. 5 Yea r
Warr.anty All Pans. Lde11me War ranty On H~at Exchanger 614 446-6308. t -800·291 ·0098
.

Household
Goods

USED

APPLIANCES

Used FurniTure 130 Bulaville P1ke,
Cpuches. Cha11s, Beds 1 Dinenes,
JJattressas . lanips. Aookcusesr
M1crowavo CC'lm. G.lts Hrs. t0 -4
614 · 446 · 4782 We Ovy Used
Fu101ture.

ELDERLY PERSON Phone 81•·
446-7899 0•11· • 614·448·9539
Evenrngs.

Sporting :

520

2bdrm . ap11., lotal electric , ap-pliancea turnlthed, ltunclt)' room
faeiljttes. ctott to school in rown.
Applications availablt •t: Ylllag•

530

G'ltn

Bu~ or sell

Apt~

3111 .EOH.

3 Room

IP~

t•D

or call 814-992·

IIO¥t, rtfrigtr11Cif &amp;

table lulnished, nice lor seniort,

o.m 614·99~·~526.

gr&lt;&gt;&lt;Jrld floor. 304·6~1090.

l

Steel Buil dings , New, Spring· Delivery O.K. .!IOX60X12 Was
$15,500 Now $8 ,990 50xt00x16
Was $26 ,200 Now $17,990
60x200x16 Was $62 .500 Now
$39,900 1-800 -406-5126.

560

Pets lor Sale

:1 n og1•.He (ed te n1a1e Borers. 1
4)rS Old. I! 3 fl10r1ll lS.Oid, $2QOea

Soulll

CFA H1matayan K1tteils . 6 Weeks
Old. Call Alter 6 P.M. 6 1.t! -.t!46·
3188.
'
Golden Retnever Pups. Fu ll·
OloodeC , born No~ . 26. $75 .00
Paren1s on Pre m1ses. 614-949 7100 l eave Mes sage
t1eo9enog $110 .00 Includes
cage and Yea' supply ol bedding .
6t4 -24S.5t00

Jack Russell Tertier puppjes, first
shots, wormed &amp; tails bobbed,
read)' Jan. 1, $250 ·each, deposit
will hold 2 weeks, 614-698-7055.
,
PetS Plus, Silver Br idge Plaza.
814 -441 -0770.
Puppy Patac~ Kennels, Boarding,
Stud Service Puppies, Grooming,
Buy. Sell &amp; Trade , All Breeds.
Payments Welcome, 614 -3880429 .

Musical
Instruments

570

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

F1 rewood . 304 -458- t98t .
For Sale: Corner Hutch And A
Recline r Ve f'y Good Shape, 614 ·
446·8189.

ox,

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron E~ns, 1-800·537-9528.

Agco -Allis Tractor specials-4~60
2wd . 52 PTO hp, radial tires, 1
remote valve, 12 speed SynchO·
Trans. 4. year or 4,000hr, dr ive
train warranty, world famous air
cooled diesel. $15,900 4Wd
eQuippe43 same way 519 ,900.
Why dCI you ttlink Agco would
warranty there drive train lor 4
years when other companies
only have 1 or 2 year warranty?
Keefer's Service Center St. ~t 87
leon, WV. 304-e9S-3e74.

lilt Cha1ts. ElectrJC Wheelcha irs,
Starr L1fts. Van lilts. Sc ooters.
No-w /Usod. Bowman's Home-care.
614 ·tltl 0- 7283

Hydraul iC Oil $12 .50 -5gal paiL
Si ders Equipment; Henderson,
WV, 30-t!-675-7421 .

NEW COMPUTERS with

620 Wanted to Buy

monllors! 488 , 586 ,
Pentiums. Starting 11

686 •

saso. (304)

Booster, lSD Tablets $20 , 614 446-6306 , 1-800-291 -0098.
Portable Kenmore Washer /Dry er , Good OoJ1dmon , $150 . 614·
24 ~- 5016
.
Reh1gerators , Stoves. Washers
And Dr yers , All A'econdltroned
And Gauranteeell $tOO And Up,
W.tl Doltver. 614-669·6441 .
·

Seasoned harclwood, delivered
and suacked. $50 truckload. 614·

11115·3540,

Wanted : 50· 75 Bales ol Hay.
Will Pll:r Jor Delivery. (6U)
2581399

630 . Livestock
limousm cattle, all aoea , regis terM &amp; non-registered, quality
catt le at reasonable pr ices, 614 698-2765.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

1500 Itt. fOUnd bales OJ Mr, $201
Date, 614-742·3064 ot 614· 7.t!2·

3089.
Mlx•d nay for 1ale, S1.25, 614-

992·3109.
Square bales of hay, sec:on43 CUI ·
ting,laroe biles. 614·892·8981 .

TRANSPORTATION

Sound Des ign srereo system

$100 , Sanyo CO Player S55.
Sega Game Gear wt2 games 185,

71 0 Autos for sate

exc corld. 30•·675·1272.

1968 Cadillac St ,200 &amp; 198e
Chevy Chevette 1800. 304-805 -

Som

Poll

3658.

:

1985 Olds 86 Regency PW, POL,
PS, 90K Actual Miles. 614·245·

5867.
1987 Ford

Tempo, "

dCior, ntedt

&lt;lu&lt;ch. $100. 304-675-7740.
1989

llorono GT·Rtd S..nroof. 2

Doort, Engint I Transmfasion,
151( $4,1100 ~13-57+25311.
1900 Ofds Toronado, loaded,
power everything, 1hltrp. te,OOO

moles. $5,500. 304-662·31125 after
&amp;om or leave mes~~~ga.

gp.

50

Flrol-rlta
(2 wdo.)
53 Chlld'o marble
54 Wallo!Ch and
WhKney
55 Baro
55 Airline Info

52

· 22 TV IIIWI
oource
23 Sllolnlah hero
El24 T....ty cogent
27 81· Frank.31

11.-ny clo1h

o--·- 1

57 A - l l
58 Walked

vit&amp;mlne ·

32 Cllrolld
::,mlyftoh

5 Orgonlmd

·10 Tennlol pro

B English ochool

11Bor-

prottll

DOWN

7 Skin problem
8 Acllng like a

I Hogo

2 JoCob'otwln
3 Tel. owv1c11

36 GratH Venetian-blind

9 SmaM ruga

4 Rough

ohrew

Nu-

19 One or more

21 Suun
Hayward

mov•

23 Movlol
24 Cheaa plec.
25

Nortb

-fixe

:ze Aclor

Eul

.I •

2NT
41
Pasa

Jocq...--

Pass
Pass

27 Plalnlltl

Pass
Pasa

30

28 "AII.IIe

29 Genuine

I_]/

·'-' .. If YOU

A~t

yllt..t..lrolfi TO

PlJNGtt FlffetN rUTTON$
IN O,l&gt;tfl. TO fi.MG.~
A PUS"ON INSTeAD

A Mt1Gtt1Nf,

Of

PUS~

ONt NOyl ..... •, •
THE BORN LOSER

,.

304. m -5226.

,.~~ TE.C.flt'&lt;IQUE,!&gt; OF BU~k

~

0\IEF, 001.1t-&lt;UN.L~( DEl':\ DIN&amp;
ME MD ~Y. It:€/'.5 ,_.
. ~~ C.OOI'm:im-

199-tl Ford Fd50 S1upercab 4"ll4
4.9l, 5 Speed, Blue 31x10 ..50
Tires . 0\/erhead Console, Bed
Mat . AC, 521&lt; Mil es, 95% Highway Mi., Asking 5'15.999 Catl614 446-0562.

.::::-z=:f:..-

~ PS'(Cf\CX1)(;,Y

C.O~IOo.'llOO

BIER'&lt;OO~ I

1994

To)'ola Pick-up Fou1
Wheel Drive 29,000 Miles 614 ·
441-0247

, Ltf'.IE:S OPe.K »&gt;D

":'

T~~' IF l

({)IJ(J:;NT

C.QII\Pl.Nf-1 ~T
'100, I'D iJ.f&gt;,VE .
f'.IOTI-\IN6 TO 9--.Y
TO YOU I'.T N..1)

c.N.L. FO~ Kff:Pit'&lt;&amp;

ooc.rlve: ftltz .

~

.,.

358-

lnatrumont

H .WineberNI
38Aomon102
41 Elegance

.

1996 Chevy im cab, 4wd, 350
autoloverdtive, 3,200 miles.
loaded, 304-675-5332.
Must sell: 1987 lull s11e Ford
Bronco. good condit1on, 80 ,000
m lles.-614 -992-6970.

BIG NATE

Must ,sell : 1994 lull SIZe conversion Che\ly Van , 32,000 m1les.
many exuas, 614-992 -6970

tiEE HEE 1 I KNOW.
15N'T IT HILARIOU5?
HI!'~ PATHETIC. 1... SO
'I"OU' ~E C.Ot11N&lt;:. OVER,
RI(;HT? IT'S. . 'l'OUR
CHANCE TO \o/ITNE5S
HISfOR'( I

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

2,2 Auto Trans For A Chrysler

42A43 Futull LL.Bo.' · .

a

0

Choir voice

32 Cllot forth

36 NIYigotor'l

As I type this column, it is the day
after the day after the night before:
the night when the Yankees won the
'World Series. It waa quite an occasion
In the New York area. My MVP for the
'series wasn't John Wetteland, though.
It was Cecil Fielder. Whenever he
went up to )Ia~ he tried to do exactly
what.the situation required. Also, his
defense al first base was super. For
me, he was the unsung hero.
In bridge, sometimes one makes a
play that goeo unnoticed unleas it
proves neeesaary to rescue the co'n·
tract. This deal is an elWIIple. What is
your plan in six spades after West
leads the heart king?
.
· South's jump to four clubs was
Geroer, asking for aces.
After winning with dummy's heart ·
· ace, declarer ruffed a hl!lrt in hand . .
He continued with two top spades, but
·weal's discard meant that Soujh
· hadn't reacbed the end Q! the ninth inning.
·
.
Declarer drove ounhe club ace,
East returning a club.I!Jrer diamond
to dummy's king nd another heart
ruff, South guessed well, casjling his
remaining club winner. (If East had
three diamonds and two clubs, South
must play on diamonds.) Declarer led
a diamond to the dummy and called
for the club eight. If East bad ruffed, .
South would have overruffed, drawn
the last trump and cashed the diamond queen. Yet whep East discarded
his last heart, South threw his diamond queen. It was Irick t2 and the
lead was in the dummy. South asked
for a diamond and wailed for East to
commit himself: a perfect trump coup.
Note that if South doesn't rilff a
heart at Irick two, he goes down.

,FRANK ~ EARNEST

1992 NisSan Truck, 5 Speed.
AMJFM $3,600, 614 -446·4782

eum .

44 Deo Uolnea

alate ·

45 Aotlo-

4&amp;C:'!.In.47 Oppa.U.of

octo

48 W-phlnt

51 Plol--

modl

'
,

··

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis CamPo-

~Cipher t::rypiOQIImt aNI craaled !rom quo!alio111 by famous people. past and
,
E~ ~t r In the ciptlar st8ndt lor .nother. TOdfty's Cluf: Z equa~, J

.

~ K E • ~

'R ME U

W .K K

Present
1

E K W K P V J U

GJLLV. J

GKKSU

'I!KWKPH

TVBS

A K. G

LKBVMSF.

X F M A W J G 8 M .V E

PREVIOUS souiTlON: ·1 never reany ·like·ihe characters I play. l only come lo
love lhem aftetwards." - Gerard Oepardleu .

WOlD

I AMI

0 lou•

Rearrange

loW

llttara of the

te'(lmbltd WOtds be·

to form four simple words.

-rBT-;;:-:.,.OL;;...
NOT-G.:.,...-..il. ti.

.~ I' I 1 I I . r
2

\..(

68, 89, 90, $100, 1988 Chevy Mo tor 2 .4 Cy linder $200 , 614 -256·
1233,
&amp;udget Price ' Transmission!,
Starling at $99.00 and Up, Used 1
Rebuilt, All Types, Over 10.000
Transmissions, Clutches Fly wheats, Overhual Kits, 614-2.t!5 -

5677
Late Model New &amp; low M1teage
Used Auto &amp; Truck Part Motors.
Transmissions. Body &amp; Suspan sion Parts, Oomest•c &amp; Fore1gn .
Wide Selection Tower/ine Au1o
Systems, 614 -532 -0139 , Or 1·

..

,

600·482·6260
New gas tanks , 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; rad1ators. 0 &amp; R Auto .
Ripley, WV. :104 -372·3933 -or 1•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Loafer. Whack. Aorta.• Father- TEETH
·
I've spent a fortune on my kids' education and dental
work. The big difference is that they use the1r TEETH.

600·273·9329.

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

IMONDAY

8 Man Pop-Up Camper. 5800 .00
61 ..·388.0413

Hus~varna model 51 chain saw

on sale $339 th is mpnth anly,
free case &amp; free chain &amp; free
gloves . S1ders Equ1pment 30-tl675·7421 .

onlkt

41 Entortalnment

By Phillip Alder

1991 Ford Ranget , Standard ,
84 ,000 M ile s, 2 Wt1eel Ome ,
$3.700,000,614 -256- 1233 .

760

45 Move like a

A quiet winner

1979 GMC 4x4 4• Lilt, 35• Tires,
New Rebuilt Motor, Au to, Asking
$2,800 Or Best Oller 614-379 2174, Leave Message.
·

1993 Grand Cherokee Laredo,
great cond. must sell, $t5 ,000 .

-··
41A~1~
42 Actor
EaiiWOOd

Opening lead: " K

720 ll'ucks for Sale

AKC Yellow Lab Pups; 5300 614·
256-6336 Ahet- 6 PM.

Pass
Pass

Upton Used Cars Rt. 62-3 M iles
South of Leon , WV. Financ1ng
Available. 304·458-1 069.

1988 Chevy Full Size Conversion
Van, Wh i te and Na-v:y ElCcellent
Condition, low Milea{le, Price Fle'
duced, 814·446 -7928.

West
Pass

ExtS·9~

A Groom S_h_op -Pet Grooming .
Featw1ng Hydro Bath. Oon
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
614 -446-0231

12 ~n
Author
13 Vlrtllnlol willow
14 Totel
15 ~opening
11 Chiooclety
17 Aacol,o.g.
11 Keep going
20 " -

(obiHIIon)

CARS FOR $100! Tiucks. boats,
•-wheelers, motor homes. tuml ·
ture , electronics, computers eTc.
by FBI, IRS , DEA. Available your
area now. Call 1· 800 -513 ·.t!343

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

FINTOW 40C..
ltttmbllrl'

Vulnerable: Both

Auto loans: Auto Dealer Will Ar·
range F inancing Even 111 You
Have Been Turned Down Before.
loans Available For No Credit.
Bad Cred it And Bankruptcy Buyers, Call Diane 614-4-tltl -8172.

304 -675-2074 .

104· 773-5829.

Antiques

Orverrne Anuquu ,
112" E Ma1n Street, on At. 1
Pomeroy. Hours . M T. W
a .m, to 6 .00 p.m , SundAy

Building .
Supplies

Block , briCk, sewer p•pes, wind ows, lintels, etc . Claude Winters,
RiO Grande. OH Call 6H·245·
5t21 '
...

F1rewood lor sale. locust fence
post, 8ft. long-s~ on small end.

Star Mega Star 45 ACP, 13 round
mao. {like new m bOll). S350; Rug ·
tr P8i tta•nless 9mrn , ped•ct,
StrOCkermattc, Combusrer Nea r
w ith two 15 round rnagt, $325:
Cood Shape, $600. 614 ·388 ·
Browning BLR 308 CIL Wilh Rtcl ·
11335.
fitld scope, n1ce, $550 ; call arret
6pm, ~~~· - 742-21 11.
Surplut Arm)' CamouUaoe Clot!!·
ing, (Major 1t1m1 $5 dltc.o unt
Malon Co. Re1iden11 until Jan

Apanments
for Rent

550

$350 080, 614-742-2373.

Goods

44.0

Ventless gas heatefS startmg a1
$129.95 &amp; up. S1ders Equ1pment
304 ·675-7421

Kremer efecrric guitar &amp; Kramer
t&lt;A·.· 22R amp, pius two pedals, 1
F1 re wood !01 sale 304 ·675 7937 ·
yr. old, same as new condition,
or 304 -675-5053

laroe SelectiOn Of Carpet Rem In
Stock Carpet &amp; Vinyl $6.00 Yd &amp; ROYAL JELLY With Siberian
Up Mollohan Carpets . 614-•413 · G1nseng 80 Capsules, S20. Call
7-4-44 .
814-446·6306. 1·«&gt;0·291 -0098.

LIMITED OFFER! New nomoo as
low as $dU down, no paymeori
till Mlrcn 1Ui7. Fre• deli'lfllry
lei-up, Only at Oakwood Home1,
NIUO, W\1. 1-30•· 755·5185.

0098.
Baby oeo , d1·essing table, stroll er. sw1ng .. wal~cr , high chaJr. 6
draWer dresset, While Basselt 5
drawer w/night sta nd 304- 675 454e .

Nice three bedroom mobile home
in t.tJ43dleport. no p81s. 814·D92-

18 14l 379·9236
H~uu fn town. Priced to 1•11 .
4br. 1 lull bath. 2 hall bathl. fu ll
basemen! , garage, toll more.

ANTIOXIDANT A Supe 1 tllgrPoTency, N&lt;!TUt &lt;JI, · Fi l!O fhd1cal
ProtectiOn S~stem 30 Ca ple1s
$~0. 614 -.-1.-10 ·6'30li, 1-800 · 291.-

Washers . dr yers , refr~gerators ,
ran~es. Skaogs Appliances , 76
Vine Street, Ca l) 814-446 -7398,
1·800-499-3499.

In Galllpolla, 2 Bedrooms (Small)
4 Roomt Toll!, Unfurnlthed b·
capt for A Gal Range &amp; R•lrlg8fator. Nice &amp; Clun .. IDEAL FOR

For salt Of Rent, 11 Acres MIL 3
Bedroom. 2 Baths. City Schools.

SO Cal . Muzz j e loader wrth
Scope, Never been snot. 1986 S10, 2.8 VB Moler. Kerosene Hea ter With Fan _6t4 -2 56· Hl95

leiusure Bay hot tub , like new,
$1,000,614-992-3802.

GOOD

TRALER FOR RENT

31 0 Homes for sate

.t! ,OOO PSI HoT and Cold Water
PresSur&amp; washer wllh 18 HP.
Honda Eng 1ne . Extra accesso ·
ries. call for demtls. 6t4 ·3S8-0.t!13

N1ctt 2 Bedrooms, $225/Mo., 8
M iles Down 218, Nice, Referenc·
es , Oepoai! Required , 814· 448·
8172, 614-256-825+.
"
'

5656.

REAL ESTATE

Conso l e TV
Needs Repa irs . $25.00. Call Alter
5 :ooP.M. 1-304 -675-1433

IBM 4 86
33 MHZ , Super
VGA Mon itor, So undboard w1

Free;zer , Wast'ler, 01ye1, VCR .
Color T.V., M,crowave, Aelngera tors, 614 ·256-1238

Mob ile Home or Rent. 2 Bedroom&amp; , 1 Bath . AC . In Cheshire.
(614) 367-7560

opportunily balil.

Magmtvo~

Coumry furf'1d1Jre. 30 tl ;675 -6820, 773-5182.
At 2 N. 6m11~s . PI Pleasan t, WV POL.t.EN 400Z Wllh Propol i s
Tue~- S.:1 1 Q.f). Sun 11 5
And, Royal Jelly. "Natural Energy

Mobile Home For Rent, ' Or Mobile
Home lot, 814-'446· 1279.

accept

25~

hook -ups. Call alter 2 00 P m.
304 -773-565t, ~a sonWV

App l1 ances ;
Recol1dtll0ned
Washen , Dryers, Ranges, Relrigr~rors , 90 Day GuarM tee!
Frencn Cll~ May tag . 614-4&lt;\tl 7795.

Mob1le Home 2 Bedtooms, Stove,
Aefrioerator, Very ' Small, 920
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, $2501
Mo., Water, Ttash Paid, 614-448·

aelvertlsements tor real estate
which is in violation of lhe
Jaw. Our readers are hereby
Informed tnat all ctwefMQI .
aovertised In this newspaper
are available on ar~ aqual

1976 Cl ruk 7?0 Ho rH:n~ 54 :·
Ducket, 1 ::OOO iu t:ajJi\c.t·, good
snatJf!o. $5,500 3:14-89~ :JUS.S

Sleeping rooms w1tt'l coolung
Also uailer spac~ on n ve 1 Al l

51Q

Qutre . 61.t! ·256· ~2

This newspaper will not

(4t- Honda 4-Wheeler Tires 1
Rims 2·23X8·11. 2· 24X9-11,
$100 .00 . Car Aamps -$10 .00.
Complete Set Ree se Staperli:l;&amp;r
Bars/ Rice iver- $150.00 . Trampo ·
line ·n,ed sewed. $50.00. 110 Volt
Air COI'Idi!Oner-550.00 2-New Tri~
angle VenTs Alunun iu m-5 15 .00
0111ce Deck -$25 .00 su- 4467556 t.:env(1W Mt•ssng(:'

MERCHANDISE

looltmg tor a Vocalist for a Gos·
Pel Group. On l y serious and
Dedic ate Person needs to ln -

38-44 Afterfl

Merchandise

Grubb's P1ano- 1unm9 &amp; repairs .
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
p.ano Or. 614-4-46·4525

Mobile home spaces for rent, up
to 16x80's, $85 per month, wa1er,
sewer and trash included. 614 992-2167.
'

pets, call614·992·2272.

this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1988 which makes it illegal
to advertise •anv preference.
limitation or discrimination
based on race , color, religion,
se~~: familial status or national
origin, o.r any tmenlion to
make any such preference,
limdation or discrimination."

540 · Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous

460 s. pace for Rent
Speak•"· Sol&lt;w"• &amp; games &lt;n·
.;.:.;.....:.:::.:.:..:...:.:.:...,.:.:::.:.:.__1·''""""·
$400.00. 614·245:9036

3 ·bedroom, total electric trailer,
deposit &amp; reference s required, no

AM real estate actvertisirtg in

Furnished
Rooms

• J 8 53
.. 10. 7 4
•• 4
a A 10 3

1

Dealer: North ·

9-4 Dodg e Entrep i t ES. loa'd edt
37,400 miles. $10,200. OBO. 6H·
256·6340 or 614-256-6467

P1.

One bedroom furnished apart ment in Middleport. call614 ·446 ·
30~1, 614·992·2178 or 61-tl -992·
530-t! or (114 -992-5231 ·

2 bedmom, $200 per month, $100
deposit, 614 -992-2394.

brick &amp; stone work . 30
perience, reasonable
.
895-359 1 af!er 6 :00pm, no job
small or to BIG. WV·021206

.

Newlr remoleled 2 bedroom Apt.
City. Deposit and Reference . No
Fet9l (614)-245-5893

Two bedroom house, carpeted
and clean, no 1nside pets, deposil
required, 614·992-3090.

Happy

Your

Furnished and Unfurnished Apts .
2 8 A"s Private Entrance. Reler enc~ and Deposit ReQu ired. 61-tl·

Sacrfflce ,
Must sell 5 display model Oou blew1des. 555SAVE5S5 Free set up &amp; delivery, tree central ai r.
Oakwood Homes Nttro, WV. 304755-5885.

reco~meMs

Year
from
All

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Balh, No
Pels, Reference And Deposit Required, 614·446·151 9.

Fer Monlh 814·448-3548

!NOTICE 1

New

FrenCh Townhouse Apanments ,
Senior Citizens. Handtc.a pped,
Appliances Furnished EOE, ·614446 -4639.

2 BR Home. $275 monll!. $l!OO.OO

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

'.

3055.

2928.

For Un1que ()p1n1on
Foc us Group
Easy tFun
$8.00 An Hour
1-800-886-2.795

·

for Rant, Cress Poin!e Village,
lormally S10newoods Apartments,
now taking applicat ions. E~ual
Housing, Handicapped. 614-992-

Must s~ll· 1997 14~70 tnree Oe&lt;l·
room. 1nclu&lt;1es 6 months FREE tot
rent. Only St~per month with
S995 down . Call 1-800·837-3238.

Trees tr1mmed. topped, removed
and stump removal , e-perienced
and msured, reasonable rates.
For lree est1mate, call 614 -992-

PROFESSIONALS)

Wanted To -Buy . We Buy AutO's
A.ny Condition, 614 -388 -9062. Or

Limiled Otre r'! 1997 doublewide,
3tlr , 2bath. $1799 down , $279r
month . Free de li very &amp; setup.
Oniy at Oakw,ood Homes. N1fro
wv. 304·755·5685.

Ver~ nice 1985 1400 WJI!t 2
Interior nM ·Ex1erlor hnlshes ·car- baths. Large island kitchen With
pen1ry. t1reph1Ce ret1n1StMg, ad- ; pat io door. Call 614 -385-9621 ask
di t1 0n s. oorc nes . c:le ck.s . nave for Mike.
rl:!fe1ence s. 304 ·675 101 3

Dt~nl\ And Dnve liS The law?? 1--,---,.,.,-~..,.,====ChrJStmns l
(GALLI A CO. MANAGEMENT

5867.

814-448-PAm

USERS

NEEDED. $45,000 mcome po tential, 1· 800 - 513· 4343 Ext . B ·
9368 Call For DB'tails.

Be

Pan ti me,or lull _
t1me LPN. 2 or
more Years e.-perrence In long
term care preferred. II mterested
come and till our appltcation or
cciU An(! rea ar.O 14-992·64 72

180

Babysiller Wanted 5 days a week
In my home, Mon .-Frlday. 614 367.0241

Moderen 1 Bedroom Downtown·
Carpeted, ,C omplete 1-\ilchen, All
Electric, 814·.C46-0t39.

welt, Oh 45611l

Pan t1me baby s:ner. urQu~te at
614-992-5995.

Pomeroy,

1997-14x80 wtG iamour Oath .
S179/mo. Free delivery &amp; set -up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, Ni tro
WV. 304-755-5685.

Eut

• 6

89 Cavalier Wrecked! Good Mo tor, Good Transm1SS10n Low
Miles. 61 4- 388-86·19
-

Ooi,·r Let This One Sl1p Byu Small
One Bedroom With lots Of Ex tras. Washer, Dryer, S1ove. Frlg
Included. We Pay Water And
Garbage. Very
Clean . No
Smok•a. No Pets. S300 Deposit,
13~0/Mo .• 814 -446- 2205, 614 ·
446 -9585,

Well

•KQJ93
• 10 9 8 5
• 96 5
Soulll
aAKQ 10 9 7
.. 2
• Q 72
a K QJ

85 Ni ssan 200sx. 96 .000 miles.
Sunroof, SSp. Good body. Grea1
lirsl or work cat, $1 .500. OBO
614-245-9036

BEAUTIF~L APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Yard' sale

• 87 42

Chevy 2 dr. Sedan, good
shape, $2 ,-t!OO ; 89 Grand Prix, 2
dr .. auto. nice, $3,950, 2 large,
show cases, good shape, 61 4· .
949-2045 or 6, 4·949-2838.

3844 Aller 6 P.M.

ll-JO.tll
'

Nortla
• 4 2
• ·A 8 5
+A K J 3

•a

Futnithed Apartfnent 1 Bedroom
S3001Mc. 1 Utilities Paid, 607 s&amp;c·
and Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-446 -

70

'

·

3 Bedroom , finished buemen(
carport. w111 consider trade. 304·
575-3030 or 304-675-343t .

992·2216,

,,

S'7 llor'l pll11-

31 l'lllllo Cuell'
I l'ululedwt1h
1 CluohI -A b

ANNOUNCEMENTS

..

.,_..,, ,..........

1*1

SERVICES

810

· Home
Improvements

1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

_

·r USED TO HAI/E A

1D LIKE A 6ASE6ALL ,
WITII JOE SIU.ABOTNIKS
AIIT06RAPII .. WIIO IS liE?
~Ers. M'{ IIERO!

Unconditional l1letime guarant({e.
Local references lurnisf'led . Eis tablishe43 1975. Call (814) ' 4-t~'e0670 Or 1 · 000·~67- 0576. Rog ~rs

LASSIE D06 DISH,
BUT SIIE NEVER
516NS:D IT ..

I

Walerprool;ng.

ApPiiflnce Prm ~ Ano Sarvu;(!; /til·
Name Bra nos Ov~;r ?.5 Yoars EJ
pcr 1on ce hll Wo r k. Gunrantco
rrencrt C11 1 M ;1 ~t :1g fiu 44

7/95

.

C~nural
Hom e Ma1 .
tonence· fl£11nt1ng , vmyt SJding,
carpentry, doors, W•rldows,,b!llhs.
mobile hOnto- rltpmr ond more. For
!reo oshmnte call Cllet. 614-992 -

C&amp;C

. ASTRO-ORAPH

6323.
ORVWAI.L
Hang, l1ntsh. repnJt.
Ceilings tewturc-d . plaster rapair.
Call Tom' 30·1-G /5 1\ 18G. :&gt;o years
expc~I(HIC!:l
'

'

BERNICE
BEDE OSQL

M o w ~ry' s UprroiSI4Jry, strrv1ng
area tor :11 l(ti:OS lor frett t:S ·
llm(JlO, cnll 30 -ll /!i -4154 ,

840 Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon
RSES CERTIFIED DEAtER
I,AWRENCE ENTERI'RISES
Heet Pump'l, Arr Co•ld i!I Orllng, If
You Don't Call Us We Ootr, Lcsa l
Freo Ettlmates, 1·800· 291 ·009ft
61-4·446-6308, wv 00291'15.
"'
Resident1at or comrnerc Jal wmnq.,
new seh•1ce or repa1ra. Master l~ol
censed electtlc•an . . R J cteno ~o~.c~
Etectr~cal, WV000306 , 304 -Ur,

1786.

•:

Residential Or Comnterc1~l W1r ,
mg, New SerVICe Or Repl.tfS. u/
cented E1octn'c1nn Welsh Elo(:$
lrtc 814 · 4116 -995!), Gllhpolls. '
Ohio
:

.·

.

.
.,.,

f.ii.ICIIy, Dec. 31, 1998
Do not heellate lo -opt the material
fllvort that wtH ba olfaracl to you In the
year · You w!fl have an opportunity
to 1.airrocate Ioiiar.
•
·
CAPIIICOIIN {Dec; 22-Jen. 11) Left lo
)'OUr ~ devtcn today, you can fllalher
your awn.-; but Wyou tmg -Into
the acl, no one will praepar. Trying 10
Pilch up a two1&lt;1n romance? The Altro()qph Malchri1a!&lt;er can help you undor·
lllnd What 10 dO to make the~
WOI!I. Mall
$2.75 to Matohmakar. clo IIIII ·
'

.

newspaper, P.O. Box 1755, Murray Hill iach person siMs lo pult In a different
direction, nothing wiH be occompllshad.
Slation, New Vork, NY 10155.
,
AQUARIUS (~an. ZO:feb. 11) Olieclives LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) "At a social gath- ·
lmpoiled on you by othe'l today mlghl erlng today, lake care nol to be too anen·
not aerve your btlt lntaroata. You will tive to a member of tile opposite sex
have lo prolect yourseW.
especially n your mate not Jika lhis
PISCES (Feb. 20-MMah 201 Try to be person.
seloclive regardlng your companlons VIRGO (Aug. 23-s.pt. 221 Usually you
today. " you ... not. you might get otucl&lt; can rely on luck lo ball you OIJI .of a light
slluallon, bul today you wlll have to
with people you do not roepect.
'
,
ARIES (March 21·Aprll111 This wiH not deflend on your skill.
UIRA
(llapt.
23-0at.
23)
Just
to be on
be lhe riQhl day to promote a 1Jnanclal
venture In a social olluatiOn. This could the ufll aide, keep your houle In good
p"'voka controversy lnotead of compll· order today. You might ba vtlitad by a
poraon who alwaya givea,your place 1
ance.
. ''
TAURUS (April IO·May 201 Your white-glove lnapectlon.
moilvu will be open and
todly, ICORPIO (Oct. 2t NDu. 221 Today your
but oomeona who Hkn to mllke WIYn diJmo ... likely to be Clle~ by your
1111161. Make aurolhlll you can beCk up
may try to tw1o1t your words. Uee oaution.
·
QIMINI (May 21..June 20111 you Wlnl l'lllrythiug you~ with f!K*.
fllendl to lrMI you gao• c lily IOday, you IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. la·Dac. 11)
w6ll hive JO demolllllall ~ 11tlii9JIII Continue to ba dlaclpllnad and prudllnt
managing your reoourceil. Thare
to lhant
you have with tlltm.
CANCER (JW18 21.July 221 Collective WIU ba
batgalna In the luture.
andaa¥orw might not _,. '"" today. If

-1

-t

-n -r

r

DECEMBER 30 ·I

�•

•

-

.....
••

- -- - -·

-

-

--

-

Pick 3:

4-6-6
Pick 4: .
6-4-3-o
Buckeye 5:

•

.1-10

- -

Ohio Lottery

Colorado
defeats
Huskies

1-10

-

Mostly cloudy tonight
and dry, lowe in the 30e .
New Year'• Day, moatly
hi••h• near 50.

4-11·17-24-29

Sports on Page 4

........
.........,.
.t,;
....
......

•

:;:} '

---

-·
....

:,Vol. 47, NO. 188
;l:e1896, Ohio Volloy Publlohlng Company

.....

2 Sectlono, 16 Pogo, 311 cento
AGannett Co. Newopopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 31, 1996

'

~Friends
and co-workers
..
ot

.

'

.

;~honor

•

Bob Hartenbach

, •By JIM FREEMAN
• ' Sentinel News Staff
" . Monday was Robert C. Harten:;()ach Appreciation Day. in the Meigs
;~county Courthouse, with more than
!:;100
packing the COI'!ffi&lt;O'
•
"""'

rike isn't.
pected
result in
hortages

Pleas courtroom at 3 p.m. for a sur- Sheriff Charles Russell, as sheriff
prise party honoring the veteran from 19S7to 1977, and as a member
· Republican statesman.
of the Meigs County Board of ComHartenbach was recognized for his missioners from 1993 to Jan. I,
years of service to the county, begin- 1997.
ning in ·1949 as a deputy sheriff under
Monday marked Hartenbach's
final meeting as -a county commissioner.
Common Pleas Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill organized the surprise party, while Hartenbach's long-time
friend Bernard Fultz emceed the
event
· Commission President Fred Hoff'
man and Vice President Janel
Howard played a role in the surprise
party by telling Hartenbach that a
large crowd in the courtroom wanted to address lbe board.
. Anomey L. Scou Powell signaled
. th~ crowd when the commis~iPmtl
estarte«!' loward 'the courtroom from'
the commissioners' office.
When Hartenbach entered the
courtroom, Pomeroy allomey Jennifer Sheets played "For He's a Jolly
Good Fellow" followed by "America the Beautiful," which was sung by
Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Pomeroy
Mayor Frank Vaughan led the Pledge
of Allegiance.
Afterwards, Crow introduced
some of Hartenbach's family: his

•

OPEN
MOtl FRI9-9

OPEN
MON-FRI9-9

AfiiROUOI

SATH
AFTEII CJUKH

SATH

SUNH

SUN 1·5

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)Cross officials expect no imme..... · shortages of blood during a
by workers wlio collect blood
. of West Virginia, Kentucky
Ohio.
The· strike by 68 members of the
·
Service Employees
Union Local 1199 haltblood drives in 32 counties, said
Cross spokeswoman Tammy
.Vanch1isn.
Red Cross was shipping blood
01her areas to meet demand, but
did not know if a prolonged strike
.o.,,,uld create a shortage.
:1 She noted that blood donations lag
...,ationwide during the holidays.
·~
..- "The holidays are critical. It's
ugh across the country right abOut
· ow. A strike certainly doesn 't help,"
s. Wanchisn said. ·
.
Charleston Area Medical Center
not expect any interruption in
~~ic;sjupplies, said Dr. Mary Taylor,
91
director of transfusion serHowever, anyone who wants to
blood before their own operation
~~ dona1te blood for a specific patient
have tp go out of the area to have
blood drawn because the striking

·:~~t:wlt~h·a:!==~=

Meigs County Courlhouu Monidly.
• commended for hie· urvlce ·
deputy eherlff, eheriH and commiiSioner.
Shown aro Melge County Common Pleas

bach'.s qualities as a person, recalling
the days when he served as prosecuting attorney while Hartenbach
was sheriff.
"He had a way with people,"
Fultz noted.

wife, Viola; daughter Debbie
Grueser, her husband Gary, and children Jessica and Andrea; son Steve
Hartenbach, his wife Pam, and child,
Anna Marie Hanenbach.
Fultz then spoke about Hanen-

·+

By TOM HUNTER
, Sentinel Newa Staff

More public participation has led
to continuing increases in efforts by
Meigs countians to recycle, as indicated by year-end statistics re,leased
Monday by the Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention office .
As of Dec. 26; 379,560 pounds of
household materials had been recycled in Meigs.County. during 1996,
.
IN
•'
up more than 65 percent from the
1995 total of 249,536 pounds recycled.
The 1996 figure is more than five
times the amount of material recycled
in the county two years ago, 67,772
pounds.
The increases can be auributed to
the implementation of curbside recycling services in the villages of Syracuse and Racine, and more people
recycling in the county, accrn:ding to
Kenny Wiggins, Meigs County Litter
Control and Recycling director.
".There have bee.n great increases
in the amount of people whb are recycling all across the county. Even with
rnernber of the Service Employen lntemlltlolllil
the curbside scivice in both of the vii'
ON STRIKE - Keystone Chapter Center
Union
11911,
which
went
on
etdke
againet
Reef
employus and aupportera Ht up a picket line
.Jages, the .drop-off sites haven't
Oroas oftlcee In Parkersburg, Charlelton and
Monday In front of the American Reef Croae
slowed down at all. The voluntary
Huntington. (AP)
offlcee In Pa.rkereburg, W.Va. The group Is 11 a
curbside recycling pick-up in Sutton
Township has been a great success,"
said
Litter Control and Recycling
So far. there have been no requests
workers handle those donations, she spokesman Jeffrey M: Barnes said.
Melanie Koch, a spokeswoman for assistance. Any blood shipped to director Kenny Wiggins. .
said.
·StMary's Hospital in Huntington for ,the Red Cross in Louisville, Ky .• Huntington would come from a
will continue to provide blood and said, "We will support the chapter in regional blood bank in St. Louis, Ms.
(Continued on Page 3)
blood products during the strike. Huntington if they need blood."

.HONit

StJPPORf

I

I

CHEVRDLE·i
• DLDSMDBILE •
.

'

l

•IDYOia

'•

Deadline for providinj! tha! information to the newspaper is noon on
Friday, Jan. 10. In the event there are
no births to Meigs County parents
prior to that time, then the date will
be extended day by day until there is
a winner.
In case of a tie, awards will be dis·
tributed at the discretion of the contest committee.
Announcement of the winner will
be made in The Daily Sentine"t.
Gifts include a $5 gift certificate

..

from the·Fabric Shop, Pomeroy; an Supermarket, 'Middlepon; a three
ice cream cake from the · Dairy piece feeder set from K &amp; C JewelQueen, Middleport; a Sio' gift cer- ers, Pomeroy ; a case of Gerber baby
tificate from Powell's Super Vatu food from Foodland, Pomeroy; a $15
Pomeroy; a free dinner to the parents gift cenificate from The Shoe Place,
of the baby at Crow's Family Restau- · Middlepon; a $20 gift certificate
from Fruth Phartnacy.
rant, Pomeroy;
A stainless steel trainer cup from
A $10 savings account from the
Racine Home Bank, Syracuse; a $10 Acquisitions, Middleport; $25 worth
gift certificate from Swisher-Lohse ·of baby formula from Krager's,
PharmKy, Pomeroy; a $SO sa'vings , Pomeroy; a first bear from the Ohio
bond from Fanners Bank, Pomeroy; River Bear Co.. Middleporti and a
A$~ &amp;ifl cenificate frotl! Vaughan's · $10 gift certificate from the Middle- .
.port Dcp~nt Store, Middleport.

.

•

"

Fultz recalled a time, when as
sheriff, Hartenbach confronted ·a
"killer who had situated himself in a
house. After he said he wanted to talk
to Hartcnbach, the two simply
(Continued on Page 3)

Recycling efforts 'result ·
in increased '96 activity

nts, Sentinel slate first ·b aby .contest
:A first baby of tbe.year contest is
this year being sponsored b~
2l~ddlle~10rt and Pomeroy merchants
The
Sentinel, with nunner, prizes to go to the winner.
·To qualify to enter the "First Baby
1997" competition. the parents
be legal residents of Meigs
:Co:lllnll~ and must present to The Dair.Sentin,el a written statement from
doctor speclifylng the exact lime
where the.child was born, the
of thC infant, the parents and
address.

_Judge· Fred '!'· ~r(\W
who
itvent; Pomeroy attorney
bach; Commllellln VIce
Janet
Howard; and Pr91~t Fred
bach, an avid hunter, waa prennted
eral plaques and the double-barrelled ahcltgtJn
shown here.

I

.,

· Nearly 60,000 pounds of recyclable materials have been collected
in Syracuse since pick-up began in
the village May 16, while 7.424
pounds have been collected in Racine
since pick-up started just three W&lt;\Cks
ago .
The program was funded in 1996
through a Recycle Ohio! grant"by the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Recycling and
Litter Prevention, funding from ·the
0 -J-M-V Solid Waste Management
District and the county.
All the equipmen\ and npenses of
the two curbside programs were paid
for through a special project grant
allocated by the Sutton lrustees,
The county program, now in its
14th year, has been resp&lt;lllsible for
cleaning over 400 illegal dump sites,
8,000 miles of highways, and picking
up over 45,000 bags of trash through oul"lhe county since it began, accord- ·
ing tQ Wiggins. .
Among the program goals Wig."
gi"ns outlined for 1997: collect at least
a half-million pounds in (Ccyclablc
materials; continue of efforts to cstab·
!ish recycling drop off box sites in
each of the county's 12 town ships;
and contmuat1on of educational programs and workshops for students
and teachers in county schools.

Athens drug raid .yields
several felony arrests ·

ATHENS - A raid on a suspect- ty Pmsect,ning Attorney William Bided crack cocaine house in Athens' dlestone.
west side Monday by the Southeast
The search warran~also resulted in
Counties of Ohio Narcotics Task
(Continued on Page 3)
Force and other law. enforcement
agencies resulted in several felony
arrests.
Arrested were Steve Kempton, 31 ,
of Athens, for possession of crack
The Daily Sentinel will not be
cocaine and· possession of a crack
published
Wednesday so that its
pipe, and Randy McNabb, 37, of
employees
may "Observe the New
Chauncey, for possession of a crack
Year's
holiday.
pipe.
Regular publication and busi·
Other felony drug arrests are
ness
hours resume Thursday.
pending, according to Athens Coun-

No Sentinel
Wednesday

'

'

.

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