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Sights tlltd

Lyricist,

poet,

SOIIIIdsof
ehristmas

godmother
·of punk
·-CO·

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • December 6, 1998

Hundreds being .removed from
·welfare rolls in southern ·ohio
By BRIAN J. REED
nmn..Sentlnel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - The Ohio welfare system has
undergone ·major changes i~ · 1998, and the idea of
reform is taking on new meaning, as hundreds of cash
assistance recipients are removed from the welfare rolls
in Meigs County.
·
" Meanwhile, state welfare officials continue to place
emphasis on reducing fraud in the system, and ·a new
food stamp card may be part of the solution. ·
Last year, the Ohio welfare system was seriously
. overhauled, the result of action in the legislatur~ in
response to f~eral mandates. More resJ10nsibility was

Low: 50s
Detai!A,Qn
pegef42\.. .

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tmts

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Vol. 33, No. 43

ca-,·

· .st.t• R-

John
R-,...
•-,.
W.,~, aid ..,,., tiW
WHk
,..,..1,tMt
. • .,.,.,..
conl»mlrrlud
., iiNJ

to placing those in need in jobs: chll&lt;l
care, transponation and other services
are directly funded through the Dt{S
·m an attempt to break ·•·
.,,.. eyeIe of.
dependence on welfare.
_.
*f•»ww. Sr.t. •nd ' - '
The Meigs County Commission will
_ , . fnlud lnVMtlp
hold a public hearing Monday, durin&amp;
totW uncol!WWJ 11,1100
their regular afternoon meeting, ,~
of Food Stamp 111H1 Cllah aa.&amp;the county's partnership agreement
tiltH» frllud,llnd ooCtetld owr $II mil- with the Ohio DHS. That partnen!lip
given to county commissioners, who oversee the operaThe county's success lion In"!'«~ Stllmp ,II«Mfltl which '
agreement outlines the role, not OJI!X
tion of county departmenls of hun\ an services. The com· in reducing the welfare _.. O"'fMid to ~llao
of the DHS in providin&amp; assistanCe,
missioners, working closely with the department of rolls will allow the
but the role of other public asenc:ics
directors, now have more authority in the expenditure of county to benefit from
which provide services, such as the Gallia-Meigs Comwei fare funds.
cash incentives offered when rolls .are significantly munity Action Agency and child care providers. Thllie
Sjnce the reforms have been put into place statewide, decreased, according to County Commissioner Jeffrey agencies will be used, whenever possible, to avoi~:a
the Meigs County DHS has seen a decrease of over 50 Thornton. ·
duplicatiori,of services to clients in need.
:•
percent in clients receiving cash assistance. Over a year
Although the Meigs County DHS conti~ues to offer
The agreement will also be available for review aftet
ago, when the reforms were first instituted, there were cash assistance to qualifying applicants, the emphasis is ' the hearing by contacting the county commissioners.
·
856 welfare clienls who received direct cash assistance. now plated on removing welfare clienls from the cash
In addition, the county has entered into an agreement
That number is now down to at least 401, and maybe . assistance rolls and placing them in paying jobs.
with the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Comeven fewer, according to Barbara Chapman of the Meigs
Funds once reserved for cash assistance are. now munity College, to provide technical training to those
being
used on job training and expenses directly related
County DHS.
Continued on fM111e A2
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Cll-

Gallia rail line=~.:.... .
right-of-way ~l~
dispute gOes ~~j
back to court ~~~.

[~ews Watcf!l

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Page Twelve-The Dally Sentinel, 1998 Basketball Edition

Proposed purchase
would give CNHI
largest number of
newspapers in nation

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Best Wishes To
Our
Meigs County
Winter Sports Programs

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Ohio changing ·h ow misdemeanors are handled in court:

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soco.o workers help area's
underprivileg~d youngsters

Rely On Us For
Complete Coverage Of Your
Favorite Spor.f iand cTei11n
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THE DAILY SENTINEL
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landowners

Parade ushers In
holiday season

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From AP; T·S Sta,. Reporta
CHICAGO-· Hollinger International is selling 45 newspapers to
Community Newspaper Holdings
Inc. · for $475 million, opting to
focus on its larger pub Iicaiions
•••
including the Chicago Sun-Times.
GALLIPOLIS - An
The newspapers being sold
ongoing
dispute .over the
include 28 dailies and 17 weeklies,
ownership of former
Hollinger said Friday. They are scatCSX Railroad right-oftered among 14 states but are pri·
way in Springfield and
marily clustered in Al'abama, KenHuntlrigtoif 1owrtshljSs
tucky, Oklahoma and Texas, said
goes back to court this
Todd Vogt,.the Chicago-based comweek.
pany's executive vice president.
And, in a related matThe names of all the newspapers
ter, the · Ohio Farm
were not released. Mike Reed, chief
Bureau Federation has weighed in on the issue - makfinancial officer o( Birmingham,
ing a .financial commitment to defend its members in
Ala.-based,GQmmunity Newspaper,
whal
it calls an "important issue of property righls and
said some matters were still being
Between periods of light rain Satdue process." ·
negotiated.
urdey, the annual Gelllpolla ChristA retrial of a suit brought by several· area property
While li is selling dozens of
mae Parade rol!od through town
owners against the 0 .0. Mcintyre Park District over the
papers, "Hollinger also will acquire
for the official kick-off of the. hollright-of-way begins Tuesday in Gallia County Common ·
one ~ the Effingham Daily News of
. day aeaaon. Trading In their official
. Pleas Court. It marks the second time the suit has been
Illinois - as part of the deal.
uniform hata for e more festive
argued, after Judge Joseph L. Cain declined a mistrial
· Yogi said he felt Hollinger was
last July, when the jury was unable to reach a verdict.
look, member• of the Rlvar Valley
getting a good price, "but it's not
High School Marching Band,
The landowners claim that CSX deeded the right-hfwithout some mixed emotion."
aboveyp.layed favorite Christmas
way -which goes through their property -to the p~rk
"These newspapers are really
tunee fOi"the jltlople lined along
district in 1993 without honoring past agreemenls wuh
what made the foundplion of
city streeta. At right, Maggla
the railroad's predecessors awarding the land back to ihe
Hollinger in the U.S.,". Vogt said,
Bostic, ege 3, geta a blrd'a eye
landowners in case the line was abandoned.
:·
adding that the deal will enable the
view as ahe waits tor Santa'll
"In most easements, title remains with the landowper
company to focus on its larger U.S.
arrival o"' a Gallipolis fire trucl&lt;,
... reverting back once the railroad stops running traiils
ri~wspapers, including the Sunatop her father Brett's shoulders,
on that route," American Farm Bureau Federation Pr~i ­
Times.
while mom, T)flinl, looks on.
Conllnuecl on page A2
The purchase would make Community Newspaper tl]e nation 's
largest newspaper group in terms of
number owned, with 175. c;ommunity Newspaper will use cash borrowed
.- ly,, the repilrt proposes lifting an IS- dations: a second speeding ticket in pie, " sai~ Ohio Supreme Court woes into the .arms of local go!lejilBy AARON MARSHALL
from Alabama's state pension fund to nmea-Sentlnel
Columbus Bureau month cap on consecutive jail terms a year would be punishable only by Chief Justice Tom Moyer, the com- ment ,without sufficient state assismake the purchase, which is expected
tance," said Larry Long, executive
COLUMBUS - Ohioans con- for misdemeanors and stopping the fine and courts should have the abil- mission's chair. . to bC completed by early 1999. .
victed of misdemeanor crimes such practice of running m'isdemeanor ity to expand driving privileges durEarlier commission · work on director o( the County Commissil'nCommunity Newspaper publishas
drunken
driving,
disorderly
coning
some
suspensions
for
educationfelony
reform resulted in Senate Bill ers' Association of Ohio. He added
terms
automatically
concurrently
es The Daily Sentinel, Gallipolis
al
and
medical
purposes.
duel
and
passing
p
ad
checks
would
2.
a
so-called
"truth in sentencing" that the proposals are "not practical
with
felony
terms,
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Regisface
more
time
behind
bars,
under
a
bill
that
swelled
Ohio's local jail pop- and unfairly place additional ~- .
"The idea is you don't get free
The misdemeanor .recommendater and the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
dates on county government." . ·
proposal
unveiled
Thursday
by
the
ulation
by
nine
percent
last year.
crimes, if you're a big enough trou- tions from the 31-member Commis·
It purchased. the Ohio Valley l'ubCritics of the misdemeanor proCommission .member ~ .
lishing Co. publications from the Ohio Criminal Sentencing Commis- blemaker you should be isolated sian have been studied since 1993
sion.
.,..
posal
unveiled
Thursday
are
already
Robert
Latta, R-Bowling Green, has
longer,"
said
David
Diroll,
execuwhen
commission
proposals
for
Gannett Co. last July, along with the
saying
that
local
jail
overcrowding
already
agreed to sponsor a bill
In calling for a stiffening of cur- tive director of the Ohio Criminal adult felons were submitted to lawChillicothe Gazette.
will
only
get
worse
if
the
,plan
is
including the commission's recommakers. "These recommendations
The Gazette was later traded by rent ·sentencing laws for misde- Sentencing Commission.
enacted
by
lawmakers.
mendations. However, he was not
are
not
as
bold.
as
our
reform
of
·
For
troublemakers
who
flaunt
Community Newspaper to Thomson meanors, the commission report .also
"The
jail
proposals
...
pushes
more
available
for comment Thursday Qn
felony
sentences
but
they
will
have
Newspapers in e xc~ange for Thom- recommends cracking down on sen- Ohio's misdemeanor laws there is
an
impact
on
many,
many
more
peoof
the
state's
crime
and
punishment
the
proposed
changes to Ohio law.:
tencing guidelines. Most important· some gqod news in the recommenson's publication in Dalton, ()a.
Hollinger owns more than 100
daily publications around the world.
In addition to · the Sun-Times, the
company's major newspapers
include The Oaily Telegraph in London, the ·Ottawa Citizen in Canada
and The Jerusalem Post in Israel.
By JIM FREEMAN West·Virginia," she said.
Hollinger earlier this ~ear com- · nmea-Sentlnel Staff
Portraying Santa Oaus was Max Whitlatch
pleted a $310 million sale of 56
ALBANY - Underprivileged children in of Middleport, a beltman from Meigs Mine 31.
daily and 34 weekly newspapers, as five southeastern Ohio counties and one West He was accompanied by "Mrs. Santa Claus",
well as 77 free-circulation publica- Virginia county should have a brighter Christ- Donna McGuire of Rodney, widow of retired
tions to a Los Ang~ les pr ivate f11er- mas thanks to the efforts of local miners.
SOCCo employee Jim McGuire.
chant banking firm.
The Coal' Miners' Christmas Planning•
Hammett said the Christmas project was
Reed said the purchase will give Committee, consisting of employees from the Whitlatch's idea, coming to him after he
his cqmpany 96 daily newspapers, ·southern Ohio Coal Company and members adopted a child.
·
more th an any other group in' the of the l)nited Mine Workers Locals 1886 and
"He lias been a fantastic Santa," she said.
United States.
185 7, distributed gifts 140children during two "The kids really relate to him ."
Christmas parties at SOCCo offices in Albany,
To be eligible for the Christmas program,
Good Morning
Friday.
)
the children must be wards of the state, she
This year, miners raised $18,425 through a said. COunty agencies get a wish list from each
golf outing, raffles, payroll deductions and child and submit it to the committee which ·
Today'a ~imiii-Jfadi:nd .
other
contributions, said Chris Hammett, a then purchases the.gifls.
.
13 Sections • 142 Pages
SOCCo secretary, who helped organi ze the
The counties are generally those in which
C2&amp;4
Calend!!rs
event.
SOCCo employees reside.
Classified~
D3·Z
~: we just know the counties," she' said.
The committee was started in 1985, and has
Comics
Insert
raised a total of $210,117 in the last 14 years.
At. the parties, Santa and Mrs. Claus come
A4
Editorials
Over the years, miners have helped approxi- in and visit the children, passing out treats and,
Alan.: the River Cl
mately 1,740 kids, she said .
later, gifts,
VISIT WITH THE CLAUSES- 140 area children vlattld with Mr. and Mra. Santa Cl1u1
"This year we give to the following six
Children received a wide variety of gifts Friday allhe Southern Ohio Coat Company office In Albany. The ClaUHa, portrayecl:'w
Ql!i!!ll[i~~
A6
S(!!!QS
counties: Athens, Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and ranging from compact disc player "boom Middleport's Max Whitlatch and Rodney' a Donna McGuire, are ,ahown here with one of t!'t
BH
C 1998 Ohiu V&amp;llcy Puhlilihing C11.
Vinton counties in Ohio and Mason County in. boxes" to bicycles and other popular items.
younglllere.
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weighs in . .:::
oail4$ue. in
,suppot;t f!l

• Meigs Marauders
• .Eastern Eagles
• South8rn ·Tornadoes

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Farm bureau:

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Sunday, Dec. 6

AccuWeathe,. forecast for llaytime conditions, low/high temperatures

Toledo

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54°163'

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Clevehind 55"/68'"

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:... Youngst~ _,_53°#64°

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Mansfield 53"164"

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Dayton 56 166 ~

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Cincinnati 54., '/69" ·
"--

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,• .;_ -· ... -ss•no· -

W. VA.

Ponsmoulll

KY. '

Cl 1998 AccuWeather, Inc:

'
Sunny PI Cloudy

C~

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Showers

-.

Rain

T·slorms

Flurries

.

Warm temperatures will
end with coming of rain
By The Associated Press
Ohio's glinipse·or late April weather will continue for another day.
High temperatu~e s will again be in the 60s Sunday. but there is a bener
chance of rain across the state as a cold front approaches from the west.
Ohio 's brush with spring will come to an end Monday "-' the cold front
passes through and sends temperatures Calling from the 50s into the 40s. The
w.armesl air will be in southern and southea.'t Ohio where temperatures will
be slow to fall from the 50s until late in the day.
An extended look into next week shows that tempemlures will likely range
closer to normal from Tuesday through the remainder of the week.,
Sunrise Sunda.y at the Columbus weather station will be at 7:39. Sunset'
will beat 5:06: . /
Weather roreust:
Sunday... Fog until mid-morning, then panly sunny. Near-record warmth
with hi ghs from the upper 60s to the lower 70s. Southwest wind 10 to 15
mph.
· ··
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· Sunday night. .. Cfoudy. Ach....;,e of,showers from late evening on. Breezy.
Lows in the upper 5!,Js to low 60s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Monday...Cioudy with a chance of showers. Temperatures steady or slowly falling into"the upper 50s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Monday night...Moslly cloudy wi th a chance of showers. Lows in the lower 40s.
Extended rorecast:
Tuesday.. .A cljance of showers during the day, otherwise panly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 40s.
.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the "lower 30s and highs in the upper
40s.
Thurnlay ...Pan\y cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s and highs in the lower
50s.

Regional

Judiciary ·committee· prepares
for week of testimony, dra·ma .

woman ~alf hi&lt; age. i&lt; misconduct nf ha&lt;"k-room. back-channel negoti"'rious enough for removal from aliul],' going forward with a •ariety of
oftice. .
·
. people. mo.l of whom are trying to
When the i«ue come&lt; befure the be run,tructive anJ find ~n exit 'lralfull House. the public could "'e a egy:·
much different political dynamic.
For many Democrats and White
Lawmakers not on the committee House oflidals. that stm~egy might
··have to look at•the polk at the next be a censure that could include a
election" and face coQslituents who linancial penalty for Clinton. But a
inquiry enters its fin1,1l climactic a.o,;k. ' What are yqu lurke}S doingT.. cen\'1Jfe wouh.l have tn dear ..,con"iic.Jslages.
said retired Rep. William Clin£er. a erabl~ parliamentary hurdle!-. to even
Clinton "s lawyers. d~manding Republican who investigaled Clinton be con,i&lt;.lered in the full House the
three or four days to call panels of as chairman of the Government same day a.' impeachmenl.
witnesses. will anack the inquiry"s Reform and Oversi2h1 Cnmmiuee.
In their appearance this week.
faimess beginning Tuesday .in the
Nobody knows Lhe oulcome u~· an ,Ciinton"s legal1eam of private attorroom where three artides nf impeachment Vl)le in the full House. ney David Kendall and White Hou'"
. iR":',.~haarcdh nNJe·~oln,w.ereapprovedagainsl but a libera l Judiciary Commi llee lawyers Charles Ruff and G&lt;egory
,
•
member. Rep. Charles Schumer of Craig wi ll certai nly try to make Starr
Righi after ~ he Clinton team wi ll New York. said. ·· 1 am afraid il"s a the vill ain. Their · audience wont
come summations by two ve teran ·neck-and-nec k vole .... The simple really.be the 21 Republican c&lt;lnserv- .
lawyer-in vestigators. cenai n IO clash arithmetic is this wi ll be uecided by atives and 16 1iberal De mocr~ls in the
over pe ~u ry. obstruction of jus1it·e · one or 1wo votes. and that"s frighLen- commiltee room but mi'l liuns of
and abu se of power evidence sub- ing to me: ·
Americans watching on television.
mined by Independent Counsel KenRep. Lee Hami lton. D:lnd .. re tirIn this grave.r of conslitu tiu nall y
neth Starr.
ing afler 34 years iri Congress. said. mandated inquiries. there is noexpecDavid Schippers. a one-time pros- ··The poli1ician' on the Judiciary tali on that this po liticall y polarized
eculor who made his reputation tight- Comminee have very visible hard- cumminee. led by Rep. Henry Hyde.
ing organi zed crime in Chicago. is core backers. and contributors and R· ll l'.. wi ll suddt!nly become a roru m
speakin~ for the Republi can majori- a ctivi~t s in lh!!ir campaigns want for lofty constitutional debate.
ty. Ahbe Lmve ll. an ex' pmsec utor . them 10 support or oppose impeachTo the contrary, the sight of lawwho spel'inli7..es in government ethics. menl. Politic.:s is Jri vin!! then I ye ry makers constantly inh!rruptin g each
repres.:nts the Democra ts.
stro ngly as well ·as ~on v-ict ion . ··
other at .hearin!!s has left th e dh·
Cumminee Republi cans. who
Bulunce imJll'achment leaves the course ..at the g~•ller level. and both
have shun nt!d polls aml co11ls l"orcen- c.:ommith:e. Hamilton said. ''Every· parties are n:sponsiOie.·· ~ aiJ sen io r
sure. want a vote on impeachment holl y recngni·zeS th~ dyparn ics. The U.S. Circuit Jucl~ e C harl~s 'W i ~!!i n s.
. articles Frid"y or Saturday. They are pres ident will not be convic led in lh~ a Republican n1e~11her or the Judici• virtuall y ' ertain to recommend that' Se nate (whe n~ a two-thirds vole' is ry Co mnliH~e durin g the Nixh n
Clintnn 'seffo rts toconcl!al hi ssex u- needed) . It= ~ nm quite''·"' rigid a ~ il Watergate in ve~ ti ga tip n .
al affair in the \Vhite House with for· mi ght appear from just ~i ui n~ in on
Julian Epsrein . chief t:oun sel for
mer intern Monica Lewinsky. a committee hearin gs. Then: are a lot n munittee Democ rat s. lookl!d at the
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON ' - The Hou&lt;e
Judiciary Cnmminee. dominated by
Republicans .determined to punish
President Clinton. is racing toward a
likely recommendaiion to remove the
presid.!nl from oflice. as the natiun"s
third presidential impeachmem

"""'"~ momentou' week lh" way:

"The 'lak.- are h1gher. The adrenaline ~ill be llnwing. It's show lime."
. The Republican s1afLof lhe Judicmry Con_1m111ee has b&lt;=en dmllmg
amdes ot 1mpeachmem that wou ld
accuse Clinton of lying in his Jan. 17
deposition in' the Paula Jones ca.&lt;e.
ly1ng agam 1n h1~ Au~. 17 grand JUry
testimony. nh"'tructing juslice and
abu"'ing his power.
The staff also may consider
whelher Clinton lied again under oam
Ia." Friday when he submined wrirten answers to 81 queslions froffl·
commillee chairman Hyde.
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GALLIPOLIS- Creative anempts to vrovilk drug prevention activities
for the ynuth in the Gallia County Local Schnols ha.' taken a new direction.
Th~ Ohio Departmc:nl of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services provided
grant funding ·to devli!lop and irnplement progmms to encoumge studen1s to
choose drug and violent-free activities. The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Alcohol
. and Mental Health Services a.-.isted with the grant.
Students in grades 3-6 were given the opponunity to join a mon thly afterschool club. The '"On the Right Tmck" club uses the NASCA R theme to
divide the students into groups.
' The OTRT membership ha.• 375 stulknt• county-wide whic h panicipate
each month. The ,goals of the clubs are to improve decision-making ski lls
on drugs and violence. and to increa.&lt;e knowledge and appreciations forcul tuml differences.
· AMERICANISM TEST .;.. lhe American Legion and American
Communi ty groups are panicipating in all si• OTRT cl ubs. Monthly
· l.agton Auxiliary, VInton POll 161, gave~ Americanism and Govthemes direcn he students activities. Mary Bea McCalla fm m the French An
ernment teSt to students Ill River Valley 111gh School. The winColony prov ides fo r anistic ••pression and Marion CochmQ from the Dr.
ning juniors ware Krlstl Hyde and Ty Johnson, both of Bidwell.
Samuel L. Bossard Libmry involves students .in skits, storytell ing and oral
The test does not pit one atudant against another, but rather tests
reading,
·
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eech student on their knowledge ot currant government affairs.
Mark Danner, a recreational specialist from 0.0 . Mcintyre Park Distri ct.
· The test contains 50 qUMtlons covering federal, state, county and ··
blends
games Into the monthly meet ing and Melinda Norman. a drug pre·
local government, the U.S. flag and the Constitution. From lett are
. Beatrice Bush, ALA prnldant; Hyde; .,VHS guida..- counll&amp;lor
Ron ·Twyman; Johnson; and Beverlea Clark, Americanism chair·
parson.
,

Welf'a'' re·'•r·olls·
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90.D~Irrued from page A1
who q ualify, in an attempt to place
those clients in paying Private-sector
jobs. The $222.000 program will
prov ide training in . fi elds needing
trai ned workers, such as certifred
nursing assistanCF and truck driviog.
Stale Rep. John Carey, R'Wellston, said earlier thi s week that welfa re ftaud remains a concern at the
stale level. Stale and local welfare
fraud investi gators uncovered 5.500
cases of Food Star'np and cash ass1slance fraud, and co llected over $8
millio n in . Food Stamp benefi!l$
which were overpaid to clients. · . ,
The Direction Card, a new Food
Siamp benefits transfer programy is
now in pl ace in 12 Ohio counties,
and is des igned to slop street trafficking of food stamps.

Road closing begins on Mond~y .
CROWN CITY- Wells Run Road. between Garland Creek and Bidwell
Road. will be closed for \WO weeks beginning 'Monday at 7 a.m. for slip repair.
Gall ia Co01lty Engineer Glenn Smith announced.
Motorist• are a.'ked to use local roads a.• detours during this period.

Health department plans Immunizations
GALLIPOLIS- The Galli a County Health Department will pmvide free
immuniialions at the K man Pharmacy in Gallipolis on Monday from 6-7
p.m.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a parent or
: legal guardian, and bring a current immunization record with them.
Flu shots will be available at this clinic.
' MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Village Clerk Bryan Swann relea...,d
: account balances for November earlier this week. ,
· , Account balances are as follows:
General, $98,578.17; Street, $59,3!14.14; Mini Golf, 0; Law·Enforcement,
:$1,135.21; Fire Equipment, $9,315. 18: Fire Truck, $5;445.49; COPS FAST
:($255.98); Economic .Development, $27,825.72; Public Transponation. 0:
·Law Block Grant, $3,562.62; Refuse, $63,964.55; Disaster Relief Grant.
.$187 ; Water Debt Service, $104,941.17; Sewer Debt Service. $80.342.35:
:Water Tank. $20.027.38: Water System. $116.096.33: Sewer System.
·$73.964.30: Recreation ($5,612.52): Cemetery ($2.330.28): Meter Deposits,
$36.964.20: Cemetery Endowment, $81,062.77,

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GALLIPOLIS - ·Jeffery L. Finley was sworn in as Galli County"s
newest attorney at law on Nov. 9.
The ceremony was held al the
State Theater in t olumbus, with
Ch ief Justice Thomas J. Moyer and
.Veterans Service Commission to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Veiernns Service Commission will the other six justices of the Ohio
·meet at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the Veterans Service Office located in the court- , Supr!!me Court performing the ceremony. Finley pas&lt;ed the most recent·
,bouse,
.
Ohio bar examination. where his
results ranked ~im in the top 10 perGALLIPOLIS- Bjlly J, Jenkins, 32. Parkersburg. W.Va., was cited by cent of all those in the stale who took
the e.am.
~allipolis City P\)lice on Frida:Y for a safety bell violation and expired iegI
·
·
Finley graduated form Gallia
tslmtton.
Academy High School in 1987. He
went on to .the University of CincinGALLIPOLIS - Booked into the Gallia County Jail following arrests nati, where he majored in history and
by authorities were: '
was a member of the Golden Key
• Derrick D. Jackson, 30, Racine. Friday at 10:27 a.m. by the Gallia-Meigs National Hono&lt; Society. He graduatP{)st of the State Highway Patrol for driving under suspension.
ed with a bachelor of ans cum la~de
· • Sandra K. Cordell, 42, 122 Founh Ave., Gallipolis. Friday at )0:3&amp; p.m. in 1992.
by Gallipolis City Police for violation of a protection order.
In 1995, Finley was accepted for
admission to l~e University of Akr~n
School of Law. During his lime in
. Akron . he interned with the law tirm
of McCarty and Pry. Finley graduated from law school in May 1998.
Finley is the son of Richard and
GALLIPOLIS -Three accidents
Johnny D. Caldwell, 21, 204
resulted in injuries to five people Fri- Webb-Sheets Road. Crown City. was Eli zabeth Roach. and the late Gary
day and early Saturday, the Gallia- taken to HMC by the patrol follow - Finley of Gallipoli s. His maternal
Meigs Post of the State Highway ing a one-vehicle accident on Coun- grandparents are Mary Wray and the
ty Road 170 (Bladen) on "Saturday. late Thurman Wray. He is the paterPatrol reponed.
nal grand so n of Elwin " Link" ~md
. Two injuries stemmed from a the patrol said.
nne-car accident on State Route 554
Caldwell was later treated and Louise Finley. He resi des in Gallipo.• near Poner Friday, according to the - released, the hospital spokesperson lis with hi s wife . Roch elle Browning
· Finley, a teacher at River Valley Hi gh
said.
,
patrol.
Troopers said Caldwell was west- School.
. Drive r William F. McFarland, 18,
Finley announced that he wou ld
1342 Mqrgan Center Road , Bidwe(l, bound at I :09 a.m. when he failed to
be
working at the law oflices of
was transponed to Holzer Medical navigate a right-hand curve. slid off
Center by the Gallid County EMS the right side of the road, and struck William N. Eachus , 417 Second Ave.•
Qallipolis. where he will hegin the
following the II :30 a.m . accident, · a ditch and a tree.
The pickup truck he drove was practi"ce,of law. Finley has also ·been
trooper'Said. His passenger, Andrew
W. Schoolcraft. 25. 398 Morgan severely damaged. Caldwell was cit.' employed by the Gallipolis MuniciCenter ·Road, was not treated at the ed for dri ving under the influence. pal Coun to stan and run a medi ation
tleeing and eluding. unsate speed and program. as well as other alternative
scene.
· dispute resolution programs.
a
seatbell v_iolation.
McFarland was later treated and
released, a hospital spokesperson
said.
' .
Troopers said McFarland was
eastbound when he lost control of the
GALLIPOLIS C.o\REER COLLEGE
car he drove and went off the right
side of the road. The car then , .reWould like thank the following businesses for helping
entered the road, went off the right
·
us to fulfill our mission of
side again. strilck an embankment
"Training for Caree~ Close to Home"
'anlt ovenurned twice, according, to
the repon. . .
·
M1lon Cmly Circuit Clerk'• Offloe
Smlc Hill• N111ing Home
· The car w'as severely damaged.
Holzer Clinic
l'lunnt V1lley Ho•pilll
and McFarland was cited for fa ilure
Unihd Home Hulth Plu
Midget Preu
to control.
Drivers Judith A, Sanders. 54. 622
Rookwtll Automllio'n
Fruth'• Ph11muy
Per-kin s Road , Gallipolis, and
Wlllpow11 Tum~llng
Genml Relu1e Sorvioe
Michelle L. Fioids, 21, 13861 SR
~hili• County Chil4ren'• Home
Prutm Center ,
554. Bidwell, were 'injured in a IWCl ·
car accident later Friday on SR 554
Ohio V•lley Buk
Kslly Tempc11ry Servlm
in Springfield Township. troopers
Aru Agucy In Aging
Wick'• Hou ling
said.
h!'ily Dcll11
WBYG Radio
Sanders was" taken to HMC by the
Dtlll Melllllfthinting
Woodllnd Cenlell
EMS. while Fie lds was tran sported to
J
the hospital by private vehicl e,
Or. J..y Wilcoxen
o.~ Hill Medi01l Center
accordin g to the report. Sanders was
C•llipcli• City Tu Ollice
H &amp; H Retr11dln1
admiued, and Fields was treated and
Or. 'linay 'lerm1ni
Big Beor Superm~rhh
released• .the HM C spokespermn
said.
Dr. Breto~ Mor11n
Or. Young I. Choi
Troopers said Sanders was east·
lm•!• Photog11phy
Wti·MIIt
bound at 1 p.m. when she was unable_
to slow in time and struck the rearol
Sprin1 Vtllty Video
Foodl1nd Grocery Store
Fields' car, wh ich had slowed to
Super Ameriu
Middleton Elttlu
make a rieht turn into a private driMedlul Home H11lth
CVS Phormocy
. veway. The crash forced Fields' .car
Winter QUarter StaTts January 4
off the road and into a m1lepos1stgn ,
the report saiu.
. call b:Xlayll 740-446-436"/ or l-800-214-0452
Both cars were moderately damAl:x::r:edited M:!Tber A.C .I.C.S. Reg. #90- 05-1274B
aged. and Sanders was cited for
assured clear distance.

Separate accidents send
five travel·ers to hospital

Pul togerl;oer a

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~b lis~ed every.Su.nday. HZ.."i Thir..J Ave. , Gall ip •·
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Scoond class pmtagc paid at Ga ll ipolis, Ohio.
45631. Entered :as .second class ma iling manu at

·_·New attorney
joins practice
in Gallipolis .

Gallia authorities place two in jail

Check the

IUSPS .52!-800)
Communi1 y Nt wspaptr tlold lngs. INc.

Jaflery L Finley

City officers ticket Parkersburg man

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(1) make Ilie mlnmrr pdymenl reqUJred on vour PUichase each mon1h begmf! 119 wl!h the b~ mg ~l&lt;Jleffi~nt you receNe mJanuarv 1999 (ii) male all , uKed " . nts on. Ul ilHOLml wh
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Pt~~~a A3

Vl:ntion counselor from Family Addi~tiori and Communily Treatment Services (FACTS). pnesenls the pneventionlawaneness segment.
Also active in tth! monthly meetings are Robin Johnson. olher volunteers
from the Retired and Seniors Volunteer Program. and Deputy John Williams.
a DARE oflicer from the Gallia County Sheriff"s Depann'lenl. Each o;chool
club ha.• parent volunteers to a.&lt;Sist the communi ty leaders.
Two field trips are bei ng planned that will indude a holiday ballet: ··The
Nutcracker," and a trip in the spring thai wil! e&lt;plore ~onflict mana~ement
in the theatre sening. A po&lt;sible gath~ring of all the OTRT clubs in the 'pring
may take place at 0 .0 . Mcin tyre Park Di,tricl.
Advisors for the ··on the Right Track"' dubs include Jo,ie Bap&lt;l and Julie
Shon from Addavi lle: Ric Gills and Cindy Cisco from Ky~er Creek Middle
School: D-•rla Saunders. Jackie Gla."burn. and Kelly Carter from Bidwell··
Poner: Edie Bostic. Alicia Vandeborne and Am) Corbi n frum Hannan Tmce:,
Becky Woodyard, Lynda Dunlap and Paul W&lt;M&gt;dyard fmm Snulhwe,tern Ele· ,
mentary: and Eileen Hall. Kell i D-•vis and leigh Ann Hollingshead from Yin·
ton Elementary.
. ·
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., Gail Pohlman and Kim Skidmore are assistant directors for &lt;he program
and Jan Coen is the director.

Taft plans summit to pin down
ways of hnproving education

- Tri-County Briefs:-

:Middleport clel'k details fund balances

Continued from page A1
bus attorney representing the. park
dent Dean Kleckner wrote in a posi- . district, told the jury in his summalion that CSX continued paying
:li on piece on the issue.
, "Yet today, railroads are making . taxes on the propeny after service
' millions of dollars by leasing or sell- ended and was within its rights to
issue the right-of-way to. the park
:ing· rights o'\easemenls," he wrote.
district,
which looks to develop the
; . · "Taking something thai's not
yours is wrong. Selling another's line into a Rails-to-Trails project.
propeny without permission is just
In the first trial, the case went to
, as bad," Kleckner added. "Yet rail - the jury after two days of proceed; road companies safely do just that ings, and was deadlocked on a ver; with land they .hold easements on, dict within 5-1/2 hours. Cain's sub•but don 't own." .
sequrent declaration of a mistrial set
, In the suit to be tried this week in the stage for a second trial.
; Gallia County, the arguments are
The suit is the second amended
expected to focu s on whether or not
complaint th e landowners have
: CSX, ' based in Jacksonville, Fla., brought against the park district over
:had any fu ture use intended for the ownership, after they voluntary dis•line when it slopped using it in the missed one suit in .1995 and saw
:late 1980s, Th e railroad began tak- their first amended complaint dis; ing up rail and lies from lhe line in · mi ssed in 1997.
'
' 1991.
•,
Across the country, several class
James T. Boulger, Ihe Chillicothe
acti
on suits bave been filed against
, allorney represe nting the landown rail
compani es o n behalf of
: crs, said prior to lite tirst trial that
landpwners.
' th e question to be answered is if
:.csx ~ad a "co nli ~ uing interest" .in
In addition,,a suit is being pre: the line.
pared against th e federal govern"It is our position that the railroad ment for damages to landowners
no longer has the right to use, and where the government has given
' losr it when it pulled up the ties," railroad companies the license to
Boul ger said-in his d osing argumenl se ll previously used rail line land lo
at the fi rst trial.
groups creating h.jking and biking
Ch ristopher C. Russell, a Colum - trails. '
·

.J • , .-...,

'On th~ Right Track' explores
drug prevention with students .

·. Right-of~way dispute .

Reader Services

"

Sunday, December 6, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Po!nt Pleasant, WV

Ohio weather

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COLUMBUS (AP)•- Gov.-e lect
Bob Taft announced Friday that he
will have a summit helween educators and lawmakers to"discuss ways
to improve educat ion.
. But Taft insi st~ the summit .focus
on student performance and not the
linancial health of schools - an issue
thiu strained rel ations between the
two groups over the past two years of
school -funding debates.
The Dec 18 summit at Ohio State
University will include representa·
lives of education a.. sociations. the
Legislature and the Depanment of
Education .
""During my campaign for governor. I promised the people of Ohio
that I would work to bring educat.ion
stakeholders together - to move forward in"improving the quality of education in Ohio and to rebuild the lines
of communication that have been
frayed by the continuing school funding debate.""Ta ti said in a statement.
Taft said panicipanls will b.= asked
to suhmilthree ideas each for educa,
tion impmvemenl an,LI eliminating or

Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of Meigs
Emergency, Services-answered three
calls for assistance on Friday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:30 p.m .. Pomeroy Elementary
School. Joel Swann. treated:
4:51 p.m.. Overbrook Center. with
Middleport. James Smith, Veterans
Memorial Hospital .·
POMEROY
12:47 a.m.. with Middlepon.
Stale Route 554, structure lire, Rita
Tracewell residence ,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Friday ;ldmissions - none.
Friday· disc~arges -" Glada Davis,
· Get a favorite picture on a
mug , T-shirt, or mousepad for
that hard-lo-buy-for person .
"contact Joe or Betty al
French City Press · one half
block above the City Park.

Jlf rene~ (!Iittr . Jre~5
423 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
446-4383

easing state mandates to allow
administrators "more llex ibility.
M~rk Real. head of the Ch ildren"s
Defense Fund ol' Ohio. to ld The
(Cleveland) Plai n Dealer for a story .
Saturday that his group would focus
on guaranteeing that every child can
read by the end of the fourth g'rade.
State law requires that children not
be advanced to the fifth gmde unless
tbey can pa~s a reading proliciency
test.
" Today"s first-graders will be the
first to be subject. to the test."" Real
said. ··we ' re proposing a strategy that
begins in preschool."
Warren Russell , director of lellislative services for the Ohio School
Boards Association. said he will sug·

:&lt;.

·gesl that any law or rule that financially effects a school district be
..pa.•sed by a two-th irds majority of the
-Legislature and e. pire after five
years.

1

Se nate Preside nt Richard Finan.
R-Eve ndale, told The Ci ncinnati
Enquirer for .a story Saturday. that he
expec ts hot topics will include
expanding the number of "community sc hools" in Ohio
Community school s - also
known as charter schools -are stalled fmm scratch and all owed 19oper. ate free from most state mandates.
Taft said he hopes the meeti ng will
be " the first step in what I hope will
be a continuing di nIogue among all of
us who care about 1he future of ed ucation and the fwure of our children.··

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Commentary

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825 Third "Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
614-446-2342 • Fax: 446-3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

I.

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
•

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Larry Ewing
Managing Editor
TIN;_... ............. rwkrlfH•I.tt.,. to,,. «&lt;ftor from

rNdw. on a ~NoM/

,.,,. of topir:.. Shott ,.,.,.. (300 wotd• or ,..., Nw 1M M-t

ch~ of btl/ng
~,.,.,_and Ml miY,. ~«1- E.ch .tJoclkllncluc»
publlah«&lt;. Typ«t ~«t•,..
a •lgnatu,.., addr..., 1Htd a.yflme p/'lcln. numb«: Sp«&lt;fy • tUr. It ~·• • ,.,.,_
~ to • ,.-vtou• atfl~,. tJI' IMtM. Mall tt»: Utt.,. lo tiM ~-- I1Y ....... 1:15
11tll'd Av•., Gafllpolla, Ohio fU31; CIT, The D.aily Sentinel, 1111Court St, ,_,..D)',
· OIIHJ, 45111. Th• MRtor al.o JNicom.a lnt.m« mall from Our ,...,., ~
to g•ltrl~eUMt.com.

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Equal means·equal
.. -- well, not exactly

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. · Ohio Sen. Mike Shoemaker is to be commended for. his ardent- though
· futile- attempt to get the Ohio Legislature to, at least, consider the idea of
fairness m 1ts budgetary considerations.
' In the debate over the state's $1.7 billion construction bill, Shoemaker
asked that future capital budgets be divided into eight regions of equal pop• ulation; and, that each district be given the same share. He said too much
~ money was going to Ohio's biggest cities at the expense'or'rural areas. ·
·,
Shoemaker's contention is hardly a revelation; but, it is certainly a senti;. ment that should be heard in Columbus from time to time.
·~
The full Senate, of course, rejected the Bourneville legislator's amend: ~ ment; and, he stood as the sole opponent to the construction bill. '
•·
Again, a good effort. Unfortunately, Sen. Shoemaker apparently forgot
; · the guiding principle of state politics- a proposal is 'only fair if it benefits
~ nol'!hcrn Ohio. Equal treatment means the three Cs- Cleveland, Columbus
: ; and Cincinnati.,-- get more than the other areas of the .state.
Simply stated. ·i·t works out li~e this: northern and central Ohio get more,
~

southern Ohio gets less. ·

· , t'

.

Sunday, Doowlilber e, 18110

cans sti.ll were sifting through the rubble of the
IW8 elc!ctions. .But with the exception of han!, line Ointon haters,. many Republicans now seem
searching for a logical pivoi from scandal hear. ings on Capitoll-\ill jto the stirrings among their
presidential hopcf~ls
· .
They switched tactics again on the impeachment hearings. After signali~g after Thanksgiving
they wanted to .expand the probe in!O potentially
illegal 1996 campaign fund-raising by Ointon. ..
then: we're indications late in the week the GOP
majority in the House wanted instead to wrap up
the inquiry soon.
'
There have bein two CXIIIStants in the Lewinskys~:
.
,
•
- Since virtually Day One, Ointon bas had one
strategy: ~urviving a game of political attrition by
banking on his high job-approval ralings. He has
stuck with it, paying with a'diminished personal
approval rasing. .
'

By CHUCK RAASCH
GNS POlitical Wrlltr l

'Utab{i.sfwf in 1966

•

WASHINGTON - Suddenly, 2000 doesn't
seeJ1) that far 1o.ff.
·
.
This past week gave the first strong signs thai
the Lewinsky scandal is succumbing to the 2000
presidential campaign liug.
For a scandal-weary city and country, there
· may be palilical respite in the unlikeliest place: a
long, drawn-out campaign for the White House.
When we look back on it, the transformation
from the scandals of '98 to the campaigns of 2000
may have begun with . the major speech on
Wednesday by Vice President AI Gore to the
DemocraJic Leadership Council.
Good in places, flat in others, Gore's 40minute address unveiled the wonkish but fuzzy
phrase "practical idealism" as a potential comerstone of his 2000 message . .
Not exactly on the level of New Deal or Great
Society, the phrase still is sufficiently.
vague and benevolent-sounding IQ
encapsulate Gore's good-government.
good-environment,
good-economy
ideas. A safe mantra for co~tented
times.
•
But for Gore, the phrase might be
W~ITER~
double-edged - and sharp.
·
Two huge government programs the
next president will be asked t.o fix are
the products of past Democratic· ideal-,
ism: Social Security in the '30s, and
Medicare in the '60s. Both face perilous
economic futures, Medicare first.
. Given their financial .straits, were
these Democratic programs impractically idealistic? How far from the party
line wilt ·Gore go, as a candidate in
2000, to propose fixing them? How
willing will the practical idealist be in
taking on forces in his own party who,
for instance, oppose privatiZation of
Social Security because of the risks
inherent in private investments?
Before the inOuential DLC, the centrist group .that Gore helped found, the
speech essentially was a symbolic policy handoff from President Clinton .to
Gore. He got polite anention but no
' foot-stomping applauSe, an indication
of the old-friend status that Gore has
-Republicans have been defined by mass indeforged within the DLC.
cision. They have oscillated between strategies so
Three other Democratic candidates test-drove often they have had no strategy at all. One week,
2000 messages, or pieces of them, before the it's get it over with; the next, open new investigasame gathering of several hundred inOuential tions.
If they were a football team, they'd run two
party players. But Sens. iohn Kerry, D-Mass.;
Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.; and Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., plays over and over again: a quarterback kneelwere overshadowed by Gore's keynote, an indica- down and a Hail Mary pass.
tion of the vice president's imposing king-of-theThat may portend an earlier-than-normal start
hill status in the Democratic presidential hierar- .on the GOP presidential jockeying. The best way
chy right now.
·
' to shed ·the scandal-mongering image the party
Any road to the nomination for· any other has had plafCOd upon it may be to change the sub- ,
Democratic candidate in · 2000 runs smack ject- or the calendar.
through Gore territory.
The George W. Bush watch now is ·in full
As Democrats were thinking 2000, Republi- force, ~own to reports of snippets of conversa~

tions about his intentions thai he'd had at cocktail
parti&lt;s as 'the recent Republican Govei'IIOIS Associ alien gathering in New Orleans. A cautton,
however: The last media boom let in the . GOP
sweepstakes involved a man who never even ran:
Colin Powell. Bush looks like a fronl-runner now,
and polls in many states confirm iL ·u f~ing
frenzies and media boomlets elected prestdents,
however, Powell would be in the White House,
not Ointon.
·
Over the next three weeks. you arc likely to see
several candidates announcing for president,
starting with Nebraska,'s' Kem:y. lie isn't saying
what he'll do, btit is walking and talking like a
candidate.

The wounded Vietnam War veteran, who ran a
lackluster campaign ~~ Ointon . in the I 992
primaries, may announce hts mtenltons as early as
saturday, Dec. I 2.
·He is charismatic aitd quirky at , time~, and

==::::=i

BLOC-K!

This is a time-tested formula- one that has served politicians quite well
:, over the years. Those who define equality based upon an area's population
would be an interesting contrast to Gore's scM~· base find it. a useful tool in being elected and re-elected to s!ate office.
anointed wooden chic.
•
Even when the Ohio Supreme Court ordered the state to equalize Ohio's
Another Democrat making noise is former
:- school funding formula, the solution found by the governor and the legislaNew Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley, one-time New YQrk
• lure would have ensured that northern Ohio would come out ahead. The illKnicks ' basketball' player.
·
; fated state ballot issue floated by Gov. Voinovich and company to fund their,
Sen. John Ashcroft, R-Mo., fresh off a m;Uor
: particular brand of equality would have had all of us pay higher taxes so that
speech at the Detroit Economic Club, might be
:: northern Ohio schools could continue to get more money.
the first of many Republican candidate dominoes
~ ·:
Again, infinitely fair- given the state's working definition of the word.
to fall in the next two or three months. Ashcroft
•
Perhaps the best example of how the Ohio legislature deals with geomay announce before Christmas.
, graphic equal(ty occurred more than a decade ago. In the mid-1980s, our
. Others, from Minnesota Democratic Sen. Paul
• · friends in Columbus decided that the Gav in Power Plant is not really locatWell stone on the left to former GOP.Vice Pr~si- '
.; ed in Gallia CoUnty; but, rather, that il is some homeless, nt;!bulous entity
dent Dan Quayle on the right, lire running around
. · that exists everywhere its corl'?rate tentacles reach.
. the country like candidates lacking only the offi.
The result: the power plant's tax base was taken away from the county
cial announcement.
; · and spread among the 66 cou~ties through which its power lines run. Very
• fair- since it took a resource away from southern 'Ohio and distributed it
to northern Ohio.
Again, Sen. Shoemaker is to be applauded for his attempt to bring a truer·
sense of equity to state budget considerations. Unfortunately, on the state
level, any formula that calls for equality carries with it an additional set of By ROBERT W~EDY
thought to shout out "separation of. church · and latter, so let us look at what motivation should be
mathematics- votes; and, a subsequent bias toward northern Ohio.
Continuing to look at the big
state." The design works. and we' are much the empowered.
,.
better as a people because of it.
Today's Christian has the same motivation
picture to make sense of current
trends in philosophy and values,
Is there real reason to intolerant of the Christ- towards the culture as those of 20 centuries ago,
we see how the issue of intolerian paradigm? Most certainly, especially if an all- to be salt (preserving) and to be light (reclaimance is a favorite charge used to
inclusive, earth-centered religion is the desired ing).
,
change the prevailing worldview
goal. Jesus was dogmatic in proclaiming that the
All ,institutions, groups, families, courts,
in America. If. a charge of intolerKingdom of God was at hand. "I am the Way, the bureaucracies, and governments stand in need of
A significant date in the history of the American 20th century occurred on ance can be leveled successfully
Truth, and the Life, no one comes to the Father, · the cultural involvement in order to reign in the
Dec. 7, 1941 - the Japanese surprise attack on the U.S. Fleet at Pearl Har- today, the . receiving institution
buy by me." "There is a way that seems right to passions of men and the disinte_gration of society.
bor, which awakened the American public to the reality of war on two fronts. • will suffer in the mind of the public. My, how this man, but that is the way of death!' That is not too To,5eek to do less would be to attempt to put a
I pray Americans will remember this day and it&lt; historic meaning on changes how things have been viewed as the bat- hard to understand, but it is offensive to earth - Godly face on human ways or a corrupt system.
Monday. I do not seek to open old wounds, but to remember the sacrifice and . tie for the mind rages on'
centered religionists. We must agree, the Christ- ' The ethical fortitude of Christians is necess.ary to
heroism of the World War II generation. These men and women, like none
In the "good old days":
ian faith is intolerant on some vital matters. Either change the moral tenor of our nation.
before, came toget her against enormous odds to preserve freedom for
• Abraham Lincoln was intolerant of slavery:
Jesus is who He said He is, the son of God, or He
Will this mean that the United States will
Europe and Asia. Out of the despair and agony, the indomitable spirit of
• Winston Chulchill was intolerant of Adolph is a lunatic. There caQ be no ofhe,r conclusion.
become a theocracy Hke Israel in the Old TestaAmerica rose to new heights.
,
Hitler.
Is the intolerance we see because of the pre- ment days? That is what some would have . us
America survived that day of national disgrace. But the memory of that
• Susan B. 'Anthony was intolerant of women ' vailing dominance in the world of Jesus message, believe if Christians act out their God-given motiday must rem ain etched forever in the minds of succeeding generations as ,not having ihe vote.
.
and this is a backlash? This is hardly the case, for vation, and it is nothing but a scare tactic. With
the .symbol of th~ price extracted by a lack of alertness. We must remain free
• M'IJ'tin Luth~r King Jr. was intolerant of ma~y do not even have a clue of this message. A half of our young people admitting to lying, and
and strong enough to preserve America's freedoms, no matter what the unequal and separate treatment of blacks .
London·based sports . foundation . recently 'did a modeling from our first leader, we have a lo~g.
future holds.
• George Washington was intolerant of King survey of 7,000 people in six countries and they long way to just g~t back to simple truth-telling.
found the following:
However, we will have that kind of governmenl at
That ·is why ~c. 7 ~emands to be reme mbered' each year. I trust the pain George Ill's policies toward the colonies.
1 • God was intolerant of sin.
anct.sacrifice of the past will be recall ed for today's young citizens. For by
. • The Olympic Games symbol was recognized the Second Advent of Jesus when He comes bAck
understanding history, perhaps we won't be doomed to repeat it.
• Jesus was intolerant of religionists and, by 92 percent of those surveyed.
as King, but it will be instituted by God and not
Butch Miller • instead, offered man a relationship with Him~elf.
• McDonald's Arches and the Shell Oil logo ' by man.
,
Woodbrldg.e, Va.
As we 'can easily see, it is OK to be i'ntolerant. were recognized by 88 percent.
But now we celebrate the First Advent . of
(Editors note: Mr. Miller Is the national commander of The American It is very important to be intolerant of the right
• 54 percent recognized the lcross as a "reli- Jesus, His coming as a ·savior. When He is found
Legion. He/s 8 vetoran of the VIetnam War.)
thing. Much of what we enjoy 'tq,day is because of gious" symbol, but a lot fewer knew of the sign if- by us, or when He finds us, we will not be foithe triumph of intolerance.
.
.
' icance.
lowing philosophy or dogma or form; we will. be
·,Some may wonder why first the courts, then
WhileJhere are places on the globe where His related to Him as a brother, for He is the el~er
I would like to congratulate Renee Turley for doing such an outstanding Americans in general have become so intolera,nt message is being received by millions, Eastern brother. This relationship provides us with the
job for the Univers ity of Ri o Grande Rcdwomen's llasketball Team.
of the Christian standard of morality in govern- religions are the fastest growing in Che .United empowerment to be just what He wants us to be.
I still cannot believe that she was not chosen as the Fema.le Athlete of the ment and everything that government touches. States.
Thus we do not boast, for what we have is w)lal
Year in 1997 at Southern .
The place of God and Olesar in the world has
Is the intolerance of the Christian standard of we have been given.
Danny Evans been debated for centuries. When our. founders morality motivated by the desire of the Humanist
It is a precious gift, free to whosoever will
Racine i considered how gqvernment should work, the~ to live without God watching over, or of the Glob- receive it in the manner in which He has been
were concerned about how' the sinful natule of alist who must somehow provide some common .offered to us.
I
i.
man could be.controlled . Their design was to pro- "earth-centered religion" ? Gr is it 'because of a
.This is. good time for America to rethink het
.
vide the three branches of government, one to fear of the true motivation of Jesus' followers? · pathway, don'\ you think?
Today Js Su nday, Dec. 6, the 340th day of 1998. There are 25 days left in wat&amp;h over the other two. Thus a Biblical princi- Likely, all are true reasons to some degree. We '
Robart Weedy Is a correspondent for the
the year.
.
.
' pie was applied in a practical way. None ever probably understand the first two better than the . Sunday Tlmaa-Santlnal.
!
On Dec. 6, 1923, a pres1dent1al address was broadcast on radio for the '
firsttimeasPresidentCoolidgcspoketoajointscssionofCongress.
•
In 1790, Congress moved from New York to Philadelphia.
In 1884, Army engineers completed construction of the Washington · By DEBORAH MATHIS
· women's basketball. She has been Parsons, but her calm, dignified tes- bationary period rolls on until next
Monument. '
Tribuna Madia Services
outted as a lesbian. Her business has timony belies the indignities she has summer. She has been stripped ol
In 1889, Jefferson Davis, .the first and only president of the Confederate
It was not enough for Pam Par- been in the street.
had to suffer ever since her lover- her law license and her medica:
States of America, died in New Orleans.
sons and Dr. llarbara Battalino to
But Pam Parsons is good to go, traitor hit the '' play" button on his license. " Public notoriety also hill
In 1957, America's fiFst attempt at putting a sate ll ite into orbit blew up on have been caught in lies about their grateful even. "Thank God I can little tape. recorder and prosecutors been thrust upon me," s he lamented
the launch pad at Cape Canaveral.
sex ual histories, to have been prose- finally say I'm guilty," she said in heard for themselves the telltale
I suppose the women's appear·
In 1957, AFL·CIO members voted toexpd the International Brotherhood cuted and punished for perjury and her opening statement to the com- .sweet nothings of . an unmarried ance on Capitol Hill •may have beer
ofTeamster.s . (Thc'Teamstcrs were readmitted in 1987.)
to have lost their livel ihoods in the . mittee.
woman who had previously denied a cathartic for th em. Although the)
In 1973, I louse minority leader Gera ld R. Ford was ~worn in as vice pres- process.
Good grief. It 's as if Parsons has sexual encounter with an unmarri ed spoke up strongly and met the chal·
ident, succeeding Spiro T. Agnew.
Republicans on the House Ju'di - lost all self-worth, save for what man .
lenge head-on, Parlions and Battali·
ln 1982, I I soldiers and six civilians were killc~ when a bomb planted by ciary Committee had to bamboozle hand she can lend the hell-benf camEven as Battalino sat ·there, no must be pretty well beaten d~wr
the Irish National Liberation Army cxplode.Q in a pub in Ballykelly, North- the women into believing th ey were paign to demonize President Clinton impressing the room with her law to have submitted to such nake&lt;
ern Ireland.
·
·
performing some kind of public ser- for not coming clean about his cheap degree an~ medical degree, a little exploitation.
. In 1989, 14 women were shot to death at the University of Montreal's vice_: some act of patriotic duty affair with Monica Lewinsky.
electronic gizmo sat on her ankle,
The onIy real good they did w"'
school of enginee ring by a man who then took his own life.
by tell ing the Congress and the
Parsons says she believes leaders, sending signals back to some jail- to give faces and names to the clain
Ten years ago: Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachcv arrived for hi s sec- country why getting pistol-whipped especial ly, cannot be excused from house so that The Man can make that, yes, there have been prosecu
ond U.S. visit to address the United Nations and mee t wi th President Rea - by the justice system is a good. harsh consequences. Especially not sure she on ly goes where The Man tions for perjury in civil cases rerat
gan and President-elect ' Hush. The space &gt;huttle lltlantis landed in Ca li for- thing.
those with the awesome responsibil- says she may go . .
ed to consensual sex. But that clain
ni a. Rock-and-roll pioneer 1\oy Orbison died ncar Na.&lt;hvi llc, Tenn., at age
Parlions, particularly. kept be~t- ity and authority to run the world's
The little mon1itor, the enforcer of hasn't been in contention for a w.hih
52.
in g up on ln:rself for h~ving once most powerful nati on or one of Eiattalino's home detentit)n, has been now.
Five y,ears ago: A judge in New Bedford, Mass., 'entenced former priest denied that she had visited a gay bar South Carolina's ·best college bas- strapped on since fall dnd will be
So why the show, except to sen
James R. Porter, who'd adm itted molesting 28 chi iJrcn in th e 1960s, to 18 in Salt Lake City. .
removed in February, she says.
. ketball squads. . .
•
sati onali ze a situat ion that's alread•
to 20 years in prison for sexual assault.
She has given up , cpac hin g
Mea~while, ·or. Battalino's pro- an orgy of partisan grinding?
Battalino was not as colorful as
·

Intolerance not nec~ssari. ly bad

Letters to .the editor
History is the bes. t teacher

Congrafu/ateS athlete

T

~ Gl~-jlmtirul • Page AS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

PllgeA4

Early 2000 primaries? Bring .'em on

juttb~ ~imts· Je,~tttl

'••

Sunday, December&amp;, 1998

d

0 ay In Hi st'o ry

Bam
' bo.oz Ied Into
•
some k•In· d 0f pu b1•IC servl·ce

··Trial may expose officials' link with organ·ized Lcrime
llf ~ WF1 'H IIUOGIIII
tna ' ,..._.....,.

and a Puerto Rican holel and failed
to pay thous:utd.' of dol ian in income

1he city wa.sn"t so apparent.

It wa.o after 2 a.m. Gain' h:ld JU't
Then Black Monday slruCk, Sep1. fed his cats. Spooky and Sheba. in hi'
YOUNGSTOWN- Getting shot tax. pri&gt;S&lt;'CUtors say19, 1977, when Young.o;town Sheet Boardman Township house. He "a'
on Otristmas Eve 1996, Paul Gains
In March. Otark&gt; o· NNi. 70. of and Tube announced 4.100 layoffs. about to make a c-all on hi• C&lt;!ll phone
At lnhearing, you don't have to worry about service
says. wa.&lt; a good thing.
1Youngstown~ district director for
the lim of "'ver:al economic bombs when a gunman "!:liked in and &lt;hot
when the "Sale" ends. We are always here to provide
Five men with mafia links are Tr~ft.:ant, pleaded JlUilty to perjury . dropped by the ~I industry ovtr the him twice.
yoiJ with consistent prices, products, and service .
accused of trying to kill Gain.&lt;. the and r..~~:leteering conspir"''y chaq;es. next four years.
Gains wa.o;lefl ror de3d~ ~urviving.
.Mahoning County pro!ICCutor..:lect He ~in:d and is awaiting. sentencing.
Eventually..more than 23.(XXI steel he says. becau..e the gun jammed
NOW specializing in infant testing , dizziness assesswhen he wa.&lt; shol. lltey go to trial in · , Federal dol:umenl• 1\ave identifted jobs were lost. The city's population after the first two shots. He u&gt;&lt;d the
ment and rehabilitation
fcder.tl court early next year.
him a.&lt; the man who delivered a dropped from 170.000 to 95.000.
cell phone lying next to him to call
Leoine "Lenny"·Strollo and a.&lt;so- $10.000 bribe to the campllign of Phil
Light manufacturing L&lt; lllking roo1 for help.
Ca~~~w_!~2!!~.££!~~~!."I_O_D!-:!!
~--,
ciate5 of. .his Strollo Enterpri..e are Chance, who wa.• el«ted sberiff in in small indu.&lt;uial parks. but many
The case sputtered for week~­
accused of commining a wide range
storefronl&lt; remain boarded up. 11te during which time Gain..~ mi~identi­
1996.
of
mob-related
crimes
in
An aUomey for Chance. Leonard state ha&lt; control of the city schools. fied his shoot~r and the wrong man
I
For yourself, frientl or fa111ily me1111ter'
1
Youngstown. a former steel power- Yelsly, said his investigation found which owe about $40 million.
wa.s :trre&lt;led. Then the phone r.hg at
Each summer. a few dozen street 11 :30 p.m. on March 26. 1997, wakhouse limping towards economic that Otance ha.&lt; "no culpability." He
1
FREE COIISULTITIOII WITH CO~POII
· 1
.
&amp;p. 12/31198
.
acovery.
.
dejXIItmenl workers battle high gra.&lt;.&lt; . ing Gains from a deep sleep. For
wouldn't comment funher.
.
on
the
more
than
tJ.()(XI
emply
lots
. Gains and others say a tipster 's
, Charles Xenakis. the former
almost three hours. the female call&lt;r
phone call til= months after his Campbell police chief, pleaded guilty scauered throughout Young.stown.
whispered information about his
As the Maboning·Valley's econo- sllooting and tbe Biondillo hit.
·shooting provided cruciai det:Jils to charges that be took $500 monthabout Gains' case and the June 1996 ly payments from Strollo and $2.000 my imploded. the impact of mob
"If I had not survived the shoot. · slaying of Strollo's organized crime in 1995 for a Hawaiian vacation in inOuence on .the city ,.wa.' slowly ing, or had I changed my phone numP.O. Box 12p
rival Ernest A. Biondillo Jr.
exchange for ignoring illegal gam- •:. reveal&lt;d, . lile rotting shipwrecks ber. I don't think this young woman
435 Second Avenue
expo:&gt;s&lt;!tl by a low tide ..
It was a break that also illuminat- bling.
would have called the authorities."
"The payoff in tbe old system wa.s said Gains. 47. in an interview in his
Gallipolis, Ohio
ed long-denied · links between the
Michael Rich. once Campbell's
area's IIIQbsters. public o(licials and law director. pleaded guilty to taking jobs and st:tbility," said Mark Shqtes, . courthouse office. He wouldn 't iden446-7619
USA KOCH, M.S.,
-: inrw:r-city crime, said James Callen of payments of $2.000 in exchange for a Youngstown StaJe University tify the caller. '
•••' '' '""'
1-800-967-3277
c.c.cJA.
· ·~········
the Youngstown Area Citizens rigging civil service tesl&lt;. ProseCutors anthropologist.
"Now
people
are
seeing
the
loss
League. an anti-mob group.
say Rich let Strollo.control police hirOfficials who pleaded guilty to ing and promotions.
of young people from the wea. the
-b&gt;-w·.----~
mob-related crimes this year includ'i&gt;l
'i'l ..... "" ~J
William Fergus, tbe former coun- decline of the infra.&lt;tructure, the 114- ~~'4'~~~~~"4i'¥Q::;;:Q .......~...-""...... ~w.,.....,.~,....q(.,....-L
ed a senior aide to U.S. Rep. James ty engineer. pleaded guilty to taking inch of asphalt on the roads.,. he said.
Traficant. the fanner county ~ngineer · bribes of up $14,500 from Strollo for referring to shoddy paving work.
~
and the police chief, law director and paving work. O'Nesti, the congresIn early November in the ne&lt;~rby .
~ ~~J
•
two sergeants from·Campbell, a small sional aide, wa&lt; a go-between.
city bordering eastern Youngstown.
•.
1 "' l m r
People in Campbell, a city of
Rumors swirl through the city, smatl houses.persbed·on a hill above members were charged in a $600,000
£../1. :U U/t...l (
..l
dubbed one of America's I0 most the Mahoning ·· i\'alley's largely gambling operation.
..
f'tl'flt•ll,
corrupt by Geor~e magazine this defunct steel mills. "are ashamed and
When the federal mob indict- '
r(f
iTtJ (fr
,
'· ..
year. that mot:e fede~~l indictment• distressed and trying very hard to ments were announced a year ago, a
~llf.
~
will name judges, other officials and overcome the stigma that 's. been · Warren school boanl member said on
prominent lawyers.
attached to the being a resident of tal~~dio that they were an overre1 (l(nt\1'
"'We really have ·lived in a town Campbell," said Monsignor John
he himself
.L ..l\; - •
U
.L
where there have been people abo-le Ashton. 68. pastor of St. Lucy Roman
the law," said Callen. "What remains Catholic Church, an lt:Jiian-American ·
"It's almost impossible for people
• Enjoy the
to be seen is whether that 's still the parish.
in the valley to conceptualize these
area' 5 best
:U
ca.&lt;e. A couple of people have been
d
Mob influences go back decades kinds of activities as being fundaselection of
nailed - there's still more to be in the Youngstown area, where matia mentally wrong," Shutes said.
done."
fami,lies in Cleveland and Pittsburgh
Tralicant himself was accused of
Pulsar, Bulova,
• " Beginning in · D~cember 1997; , long fought for control.
taking a $163.000 mafia bribe a.&lt;
Seiko,
• ; federal prosecutors charged Strollo
A ·three-number lottery game Mahoning County sheri IT in 1983. He
Caravelle &amp;
called
"the bug" wa.• sa common that represented himself at trial an~ a fed:: 8nd 43 other people with murder, illepolice
officers
used
to
take
people's
eral jury acquitted him on bribe\ry and
Mickey Mouse
. ·. gal gambling, bribery, obstruction of
Watches·
· jusiice, fraud ~nd extcmion in viola· betting slips from · door to door. iax evasion charges. He wouldn't
·." tion of the 1962 Racketeer Influenced recalled Patrick ~ngaro. mayor of comment for this story.
Both Callen and Ungaru say they
• Backed by
Youngstown from 1984 through
and Corrupt Organizations Act. .
'
argued fruitlessly for years with peoex. pert full time
• " · Almost all have since pleaded 1997.
pie
who
said
street
crime
wa.&lt;
a
big"
My
gr.mdmother
used
to
play
the
• guilty and many are expected to tesger problem than organized crime.
watch repair
tify at the trial of.lhe remaining five bug." Gains said. ·
and
that
the
two
weren't
connected.
department.
Ungaro. 57, says he wa.&lt; offered a
· · defendants.
Federal evidence gathered in the
They are Strollo, 67. of Canfield; consider.ble amount of money from
• · his older. brother Dante "Danny:• a mob intermediary - in a church Strollo ca.&lt;e says otherwise. Members
• Free Gift Wrap
' · Strollo, 71, also of Canfield; Bernard basement - if he dumped Police of the Strollo Enterprise recruited
several
men
"to
a.«ist
in
gambling
.
Chief
Randall
Wellington
.
He
"Bell)ie the Jew" Altshuler, 68, of
• Free Ring Size
activities aimed at the black commu' Youngstown; Lavance Turnage. 26, refused. . ··· ·
In fear of retaliation. Ungaro nev- nity in general. and wealthy, inner•
·of Youngstown; and Jeffrey Riddle,
• Free Wat~h Band
rU
er let his children into his car before city drug dealer~ in particular."
' 38, of Youngstown.
·
Adjustment
~"e
acco[ding to a federal affidavit filed .
· · Lawrence "Jeep" Garono, 56, of starting it each morning.
by
Assist:tnt
U.S.
Attorney
Craig
Mob-relaied
bombings
weren't
Hubbard, identified in the ·indict·
. ments as a close associate of the uncommon. in ~ 'Youngstown . .Mary Morford.
The
,same
affidavit
links
Lenny
· Strollos, pleaded guilty in July to Cutherine Sanders recalls the night of
. JI.ICO violations and faces up to 20 her sister's wedding reception in Strollo and Altshuler with attempts tn
October 1962 at a house on stately .fix local cases. including a murder
years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Prosequtors say members of the Fifth Avenue. Three blocks away. a . charge. and armed robberies of drug
Strollo Enterprise plotted to murder powerful explosion ripped through a houses.
Morford declined to comment.
house.
Gains and Biondillo.
Messages
seeking comm~nt w~re.
"I don't remember my brolher-inThe enterprise extorted $100.000
.from the B./. Alan Co., a Youngstown law's reaction so much as my dad's ' left with attorneys for Strollo and Alt,
· fireworks business, and ran illegal dismay." sai~ Sanders, 65, u rei ired shuler.
The
FBI
had
been
investigating
city
secretary
.
.. gambling and, bookmaking operathe•
mafia
in
Youngstown
for almost
When Youngstown's economy
·•. tions with revenues of $2.000 a day,
years,
according
io
aftidavits
'
four
roared like the open hearth Steel fur. ~ccording to·prosecutors.
·: Lenny Strollo had illegal interests naces that once lighted the city's sky- seeking wiretaps. Then carne Christ·· · in an Indian-run casino in California )lne at night, the mob's influence on mas Eve 1996.

BE SURE

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Holiday special

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.•1O~year-old boy dies in hunting accident
-

MECHANICSTOWN (AP)- A
. 10-year-old boy wa.&lt; killed Friday in
. · a hunting accident, the Carroll Coun. ty sheri IT's oftice said.
.The boy was shot about 2:25p.m.
: . by another member of his .hunting
.. party, according to a press release. No
, foul play was suspected, and the vican orange hunting
" · timI was wearing
.
. . hat.
·' . · AJthorities would not release the
identities or hometowns of the victim
and suspected shooter late Friday
. night.
The shooting took pl ~ce in a
_· remote and wooded area of Fci'x ·
• .Townsliip, about 30 miles southeast
of Canton.

·Lottery results
By The Associated Press
The following I numbers were
selected in Friday's' Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
,,
OHIO
Pick 3: 5-7-1
Pick 4: 7-5 -8-8
Buckeye 5: 15- 19-26-27-30
. There were no tickets sold naming 1
• all live numbers selected in Friday
11ight's Buckeye 5 drawing. the Ohio
Lottery said.
. The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Lotto drawing was $24 million.
· , Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
. $363,037. Players will share
'$116.981. .
•
· , There were 137 Buckeye 5 tickets
.' with four of. the numbers, and each is
. worth $250. The~. 181 tickets show·ing three of the numbers arc each
worth $10, and the 40.921 tickets
showing twbofthe numberSareea'h

. wonh $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay our
$424.345.50 to Pick 3 winners. Sales
. iotaled $1.438.859.
In Pick 4. players wagered
$452.455 and will share $71,000.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 9-7-5
Daily 4: 5-S-5-7
Cash 25:6- 10-13- 17-18- 19

@~uff~iJ~t

The suspected shooter required the six-day fireanns deer sellSon that
treatment for shock, authorities said. . started Monday. Andrew Lehigh. 28,
No other detail• about the shooting of Midvale, was fatally shot with a
12-gauge shotgun Monday afternoon
were available late Friday night.
The de;tth wa' the second during while ~unting in Harrison County.

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_D_e_a_th_H_o_t;...;.__c_•---.JI ~~~!!io~.~~~~P...~~~~~~~-~~i~~ .~~~~. . .

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - While oil
U.S. student• are makin~ progress.
: RUTLAND - Bobbie Jo Butcher, 21 , Loveland, fonnerly of Har- white students are gaining fa.•ter
r)sonville. died Thur.&lt;day. Dec. 3." 1998 at her residence.
than black and Latino stu&lt;knt&lt;. says
' BomApril9.. 1977 in Athens. daughter of Randall L. and Robin L v.\:lolen an Education Trust repon relea.OO
Butcher of Pomeroy, she was a 1995 graduate of Meigs High School. and last week.
wa.• a veterinarian's a«istant for the Dr. Henahan Veterinarian Clinic in Mil·
" America's achievement gap is
fprd .
I
.
'
•
both unnecessary and da.ngerous."'
· Surviving in· addition to her parents are a twin sister. Billie Jo Butchi:r of sai~ Kali Haycock. ~ireclor of ,the
Pomeroy: iwo grandmothers. Alpha Butcher of)'omeroy, and Fay Wooten of, Trust. a think tank thai pushes for
Shade: her grandfather. Robert Wooten of Nelsonville; and a niece, seven educalion improvement~ for poor
uncles and five aunt, . three aunts and two uncles. and sever.U cousins.
children.
: She wa.' also precedoo in death by a grandfather, Charles L. Butcher: and
There are three rea.wns behind the
4n uncle, Roger Butcher.
widening gap. the repon .said.
: Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher
First. a campaign by busines.•
Funeral Hon\e. with the Rev. Joe Sayre officiating. Burial will be in the While lea~r.&lt; and education reformers to
·Oak Cemetery. Harrisonville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6- ramp up standards as quickly as pos9 p.m. Monday.
·
sible li:ft behind many minority and
: Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs High School.Ad\let- poor students - . student&lt; many edu-.
i: Boosters, in care of Meigs High School.
'
calm-s believe cannot tackle higher
: Arrangements are by the Birchfield Funeral Home. Rutland.
level work.
Second. educators failed to realize
'
that1the "back to the ba&lt;ics" strate-

,.

1

Bernice J. Glassburn

GALLIPOLIS - Bernice J. Glassburn, 60, Gallipolis, died Wednesday.
Dec. 2, 1998 at her residence.
· Born May 23. 1938 in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., ~ughter of Ruth Jones
Meek of Gallipolis Ferry. and the lat'e Samuel Meek, she wa.' a homemak~r. and a member of the Eastside Mission Church in Delaware. Ohio.
· She was also preceded in death by two brothers, Marlin Freeman Meek
~nd Richard Meek: and her father-in-law. Swnley Gla..sbum.
' Surviving in addition lo her mother are three daughters. Brenda Wallace
of Apple Grove. W.Va.. Debra Simms of Gallipolis, and Teresa Glassburn
of Rio Gmnde: six gmn&lt;lchildren: three brothers, Gay Meek and Gerdld Meek.
both of Gallipolis Ferry. and James Meel: of Gallipolis: and a sister, Marie
Henry of Gallipolis Ferry.
·
. Services were held at2 p.m. Saturday. Dec. 5, 1998 in the Wilco.eil Funer?1 Home. Point Pleasant. W.Va., II( it~ Minister Teddy Ray Glassburn and Min: ster Dor.&lt;ol Messick otficia!ing. Burial wa• in the Apple Grove Memorial

•

..

J?ardens. Visitation was held in the funeral home on Friday.
.

·Iva
J. Rucker
..: • PROCTORVILLEIva J. Rucker, 74, Portland, Tenn., formerly of Proc;torville, died Friday, Dec. 4, 1998 in the Tennessee Christian Medical Cen•ter, Portland.
• Arrangements will be anl)ounced by the Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville.

Ada .C athleen Ward
• CHESHIRE -Ada Cathleen Ward, 91, Cheshire, died Saturday, Dec. S,
.1998 i-n Holzer Medical Center.
'
. • · Born July 25, 1907 in Galli a County, daughter of the late Hollis and Ethel
Thomas Rife. she was a retired beautician.
·
She was a member of the Cheshire Baptist Church, a former member of
the Cheshire Chapter of the Eastern Star. a member of the Cheshire Garden
Club, and a former member of the Cheshire School Board. She also serve~
-as the first mayor of Cheshire.
: Surviving are a son, Wilbur J. (Joan) Ward of Wellston: and three siste,.,
Audrey Bradbury of Kyger. Evelyn Roush of Rockledge, Ra., and Erma!Cre:.means of Cheshire.
. ,
.• She was also preceded in ~ath by her husband, Wilber E. Ward.
• Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Harold Trace well olficiating. Burial will be in the Grav-.
· _el Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and (&gt;.8 p.m.
:Monday.
·
. ·

Oneida Ward
LANGSVILLE- Oneida Ward, 90, Langsville, died Friday. Dec. 4, 1998
ip the Rocks~rings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, following an extended
illness.
: Born Feb; 2, 1908 in Middleport, daughter of the late William and RebecCa Jane Taylor Taylor, she was a homemaker.
·
\
: Surviving are several nieces and nephews.
: She was1also preceded in death by her husband, Harold K. Ward, on Dec.
·14, 197-1; and by five 1isters, six brothers, three half-sisters, two half-broth·
. ers, a stepbrot~er and a stepsister.
Graveside services will be 10 a.m. Monday in the Miles Cemetery, Rutland. There will be no calling hours.
.
Arrangements are by the Middlepor1 Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home.

Pases filed, resolved
Common Pleas ·
.: .. • The following cases were recent' ly filed in the Galli a County Common
Pleas Coun:
'
• Qivorce granted - Leigh Ann ·
tJollingshead, Bidwell. from Paul E.
Hollingshead II, Vinton: and Charity
D. Dixon from John W. Dixon, no
addresses available.
·
. Divorce filed - Penny Vunoy,
881 State Route 7, Gallipolis. from
Thoma.' Vanoy, Greenlield:" Kevin D.
Hunt from Sha.,ta M. Hunt. both of
Vinton: Mary A. Daniels Smith.
trown City, from Karl E. Smith ,
Columbus; Tina L. Syrus, 2216 Eastem Ave., Gallipol i., , from Donald W.
Syrus, 509 Bula•ille Poke, Gallipolis.
Municipal

community service.

Myra Butler. 45, Point Pl.easant.
W.Va., charged with DUI, was tined
$700, 10 days jail. 1wo years proba' an d one year I"1cense
'
.
t10n
suspension.
William E. Armstrong, 37, 49 Pine
St .. Gallipolis, charged with DUI,
was fined $750, nine tlays jail, two
years probation and 180 days license
suspension.

standings of algebra and geometry."
In reading. the gop al age 17 is the

'"me-

'" More thon one third of these
(minority} high school senior.&lt; can
glean facts from simple paragraphs,
stories nr news articles... the report
said. "But lh"Y cannot make infercnces nr reach generalizations about
main i~eas or author's purposes in
relatively lengthy passages,"
The report singles oul some school

systems. including El Paso's, for
achieving results with low income,
minority i!hildren. ·
,
'
The report said solutions include:
• Making sure poor and minority
students ·take rigorous courses.
"Decisions about who gets
assigned lo which path through
school are hardly random." the repon
explained . .,, 1

Health officials note·rise
in incidence of .listeriosis

-Obituaries
.
"
(
,
...,.:ftplil

GALLIPOLIS - An increase in prooucts.
Dr. Gemld E. Vallee, Galli a Counlisteriosis- an infection caused by ·
OIIHueriM . . peJd HftOIIIIOII ........
·h ro.l ~ hom... eating
ty's
health commissioner. recomfoods contaminated with 'the
~ . . publlaiM • ,.qunlad to
doMIObacterium Iisee ria monocytogenes- mended the following pro&lt;-edures to
has been detected throughout the reduce the risk for listeriosis: .
• Cook thoroug.hly raw food from
stale, Ohio Department of Health
animal snurc~'i.
otlicials have advised.
'
. • Wash r;ow vegetables thoroughTwelve cases have been reported
GALLIPOLIS -William Henson '"Bill" Adkins. 74, formerly of Giollipolis. died Wednesday; Nov. 18, 1.998 in Columbus, following an extend- to the ODH since September. Mont- ly before eating. '
• Keep uncooked meats separate
gomery and Cuyahoga counties
ed illness..
..
·
from
vegetables and cooked fm&gt;ds.
reported
three
and
two
cases.
respecBorn June 22, 1924 in Alkol. West Virginia, son of Mabel Price Adkins
•
Avoid
raw (unpasteurized} milk
tively,
while
one
case
each
has
been
:
of Cheshire. and the late Elmer Adkins, he was an employee of the Evans
for
fO&lt;&gt;ds
made
from ·raw milk.
reported in Franklin. Hami lion,
Meat Packing Company and retired from the reduction plant in Rio Grande.
•
Wash
hands
. knives and cutting
He wa.&lt; a 1942 graduate of Cheshire High School, and a U.S. Army vet- Madison. Ma~oning. Portage. Ross
boards after handling uncooked
and Tuscarawa." counties.
eran of World War II. having served in Japan from 1945 until 1947.
foods .
Health
ollicials
said
the
disea•e
Surviving in addition to his mother are a brother. Glenn Harol~ (Shirley)
....
Government agencie:-, and the
primarily
affects
pregnant
women.
Adkins of Kanauga: a sister, Elnora Bostic of Gallipolis: his fir.&lt;! wife. Au~rey
food
induslry have taken steps to
newborns
and
adults
with
weakened
Harrison Rucker of Columbus: their daughter. Teresa Ann Adkins; grandreduce
conlaminalit1n of I&lt;Jod by the
daughters. Melissa an~ Benise: his second wife, l;nnil Queen Adkins: immune systems. Healthy adults or
stepchildren. Sue, Linda, Judy, Sharon, Lisa and liin; his third .wife, Janie children occasionally gel infected listeria bacrerium. When a processed
with listeria, but rarely become seri- lixxJ is found contaminated, foo~ and
Hattield: and stepchildren, Ronald and Eli .
ously
ill.
plant inspections are intensified, a~
In' addition to his father, he wa~ preceded in death by a brother. Hillard
if necessary; .the implicated food is
Lisleriosis
is
found
in
soil
and
·
Eugene Adki.ns..
'
,
..
Private s~rv.,ices were conducted Sunday. November 22, 1998 in the . water from whic~ vegetables can be recalled. Early detection and repor(,
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. with the Rev. Alfred Holley ofliciat- . contaminated. Aninlals can carry lhe ing of listeriosis to"local and stale
bacterium without appearing il.l. depanments can help identify sources
ing. Burial wa.• in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
'
which
can contaminate foods of ani-' of infection and prevent more cases
'
mal origin. such as meats arid da]ry of the disease.

•-llllllidlle ....

William Henson 'Bill' Adkins

Bobbie 'Jo Butcher

in Gallia County courts

two years probation and 40 hours

no an~ African Ameri&lt;-•n ,lu&lt;knls
score well below whites in federal
math a.•s.:ssment• at the en~ of eighth
grade.
"This means thAt while they can
add two-Jigil numbers. they still
have dilliculty with some subtraction
pmblems and any multiplication or
division beyor\d simple one-digit calculations;' the report said.
Even at the conclusion of high
school, minoiity students remain well ~
behind in the federal assessment,
called the. National Assess ment of
Educational Progress. the test the
report relies on to document the gap.
At age 17. the avemge black nr
Latino student ha~ math skills about .
on par with· t~e average white 13year-old, said the report, meaning
•minority studenL• are th~n comfort·
able with the four basic math operJ-

dents in the 1980s had '"maxed out'"
and a new strategy was oeeded.
Finally. chil~ advocates gove educolo"' too many e&lt;cuses when &lt;locumenting the links between poverty
and kaming;
''When child a~vocates beat the
drums about child poverty and say
'that unless we fix chil~ poverty
we' r&lt; nul going . t.o gel higher
achievement. that's adding legitimization to the t!XCUsts educators
already have," said Haycock. "The
message goes out that it's OK if you
don't gel g&lt;M&gt;d results. because after
all these kids are poor and we haven't
yet tixed poverty."
··But in fact. it is clear poor kids
can achieve al higher levels:· said
Haycock, a former vice president of
the Chil~ren's Defense Fund. one of..
the nation's largest child advocacy
organizations.
&lt; The report documents the gap in

RUTLAND - Bobbie Jo Butcher, 21, of Loveland, formerly of Harrisonville, wa&lt; murdered on Thursday. December 3, 1998 at her residence.
She was born on April9. 1977 in Athens, daughter of Randall L. Butcher and Robin L. Woolen Butcher, both of Pomeroy. She wa.' a 1995 graduate of Meigs High School, and was a veterinarian's assistant for the Dr.
Henahan Veterinarian Clinic in Milford.
Besi~s her parents, she is survived by her twin sister, Billie Jq Butcher
and her fiance, Mike Hare, both of Pomeroy; two graQdmothers, Alpha Butch. er of Pomeroy, and Fay Wooten of Shade; a grandfather, Robert WOoten of
Nelsonville; a niece. Breanna Butcher of Pomeroy: seven uncles and five
aunts, Charles M. Butcher of Zanesville, Pete and Bonnie Butcher of
McArthur. Rodney ·and Mindy Butcher. Ronald and Cheryl Butc~er, Robert
and Anita Burcher, and Rex and Tammy Butcher, all of Pomeroy, and Phil
Wooten of Columbus; three aunts and two uncles, Sandra Distelhorst of
Racine, Paula and Dave Smith of Albany, and Cheryl and Paul Powell of
Shade: and several cousins.
She was preceded in death by her grandfather, Charles L ·Butcher; a';.d
an uncle, Roger Butcher.
'
Services will be held on Tuesday. December I0, 1998·at II a.m. at the
Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home, with the Rev. Joe Sayre orficiating. Burial will follow in the White Oal: Cemetery in.Harrisonville.
Friends may call at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home on Monday, Dec~mber 9, 1998 from 6-9 p.m.
·
Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs High School Athletic Boosters. in care of Meigs High School.
Arrangements are under the direction o.f the Birchfield Funeral Home in
Rutland.
·
··

tion:was tined $100.
Loren Mullins, 1331 White Oak
Road, Gallipolis, charged with disorderly conduct, was fined $100.
The following bench warrants
were recently issued by the Gallipolis Mu~icipal Court per Judge ,
WilliamS. Medley:
Eddie Baitram. Anthony E:
Moore, Danny R. Matney, Charles E.
· Cochran Jr.. Autin C. Jefferies,
Michael A. Reed. Joey McGrey.
, Robert L. Rogers, Andrew T. Bauer.
Alonna J. Grimm ..M\ory Greathouse.
Mallhew A. Porter, James R.
Edwards. Charles F. Howell. Charles
E. Cochran Jr., Charles W. Miller,
Aspen B. Beachy, Joshua A. Culp.
Jerry L. Collins, Kevin L. Wood ,
Lonnie A. McCoy. Amy L. Gai!her.
Jason L. Wallace, WiUium M~'sser. 1
Craig Ourham. Tim Queen. Clifford
Johnson, Julian B. Wilkerson and
Nancy Saxton.

Waldo C. Nance Jr.. Scollown.
c.hargeJ with passi,ng bad checks. was
fined $100 and two years probation.
Jason P. Mullins. 21, 1331 While
Oak Road . Gallipolis, charged with
child endangerment. was lined $100.
three days jail and two years probation: ch:orged with DUI. he was fined
~ The following ..:ases were ret eni - $450. lhr;e days jail, two years pro!Y resolved in the Qallipolis Mu~ici · bation and 180 days license suspenpal Court:
sion.
: Tyrone E. l'auerson, Dayton.
Wilbur J. JohnsoQ, Gallipoli•.
charged with di sor.okrly conduct. was c~ar~ed with disor&lt;)erly by intoxicatined$ HXI and two years probation.
, Robert J. Pauerson. Dayton.
charged with di sorderly conduct. was
fined $100 and two years probation.
; Mark A. Howell . 20 , Crown Cioy,
~harged with. possession of drug
~ar•phernalia. wa&gt; lined $100 and
Ohio Valley Memo_ry Gardens will hold its Candle Lighting Service on
l't'O y~ars probati on~ charged with
Sun., Dec. 13th wolh a Ra1n date of Dec. 20th. Gallia Academy High
possess ion of marijuana. he wa s
School Choir will perform 5:00 to 6:00.
JUled $ HXI·: &lt;.:harged with resisting
iitre,l, he was fin ed $ 1CMJ. Iwo y ear~·
Please Come By Ohio Valley Memory Gardens or fill out the form below
and s.end illo us with your donation for the candle.
· · ·
·
l:lruhation and 40 'hours community
~rvice.
·
Make check• p.yabla to: Ohio
·: Roger 1;. Lambert . 21. Vinton,
Valley Memory Gtrdena
ChargeU with drivin g under the intlu ~ike. was finctl $~lXI . 'i x day' ja il.

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•

; TROY (AP) - The Friendly lc~
€ream Corp. will close its }llanufaciuring and distribution plant in this
western Ohio city on M:oy I. AbOut
180 jobs will be lost.
Plant administrator Stan Phillips
said that the. work will be moved to
a new distribution center in York . Pa ..
and to an existing center in Wj lbratlam, Muss.

Date of Dll~h
Donolod By

. they rocketed into orbit Friday. As of
mid~ay Saturday. they trailed the
giant cy lin~r by 7.000 miles.

Endeavour' s a stronaul s fact:d their

first hurdle Saturday in l&gt;uil~ing the

Astronaut Nancy Currie fle xed

Endeavour's 50-fool robot arm in

international space !'. tati u n: hni•aing:

prepara1ioh. for all the li(ling : rhe arm

the 25.000-pound Unity chamber
from the shunlecargohay. with onl y
an lnch of clearance on drher side.

has never wiel~ed such massive
objects before. She and her crew-

An even tQugher job awaits them

Sunday. when they pluck a much
larger Russ ian station com110nen1
from orbit and anach it to the U.S.
piece without a direct line of sight.
The six ~huule astronauts have
been chasing the component flame~
Zarya (Russian for Sunrise )., since

mates also &lt;:hecked 1he computerized
vi!'!.ion !'.Y!'.Iem !'.he' ll use tu line up the .~

two station conlp{,nents: they're so
big she won't be able to see where
they meet by looking out the window.
"It"s not so much~ case nf how
difficult it is.·· Currie e x plained
before the !light. "'just how careful
we have to be and huw time- ~on. suming it is,··

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Point.· Plelll!anl, WV

NQTICE TQ DQG OWNERS

c

UNITED NATIONS CAP) - Tensions have cooled at the Security
Councol. but Iraq is still feeling the
h~althree weeks after narrowly a""rting airstrikes by .P.romi sing to. cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors.
Chief weapons inspector Richard
Butler is in the prm:ess of te sting
Iraq's promise. and the council is
waiting for his repor1 in mid-December before deciding whether tu launch
a comprehensive review of Iraq's

have threatened military act ion if
Baghdad does not cooperate fully
with the inspectors an~ allow unfet·
1ered senrches for weapons of mass

compliance with U.N. resolutions.
' While council members are range of inspection activities, includalready quietly discu ss ing the formal . ing surprise inspections. ht:fore;:
of a comprehensive review. the thre'at reporting to the council. Those
o( a.i..Sirikes remains - and nobody impromptu inspections, which Iraq
knows it beller than the Iraqi s.
has resi sted in the pasl. could come.
: "lt"could well end up in a com- as early as next week.
·
p~ehensive revi ~w. which I think lra&lt;j
Fortner weapons inspector Scott ·
deserves. or it could end up in aneth- Riner. in an article for The New
er crisis." Iraqi U.N . Ambassador Republic magazine to be released
Nizar Hamdoon said Friday. '"Both Monday, said surprise inspection s
options are open. "
will not turn up evidence of weapons
•, Inspectors must certify that Iraq of mass destruction because Baghdad
~as eliminated its nuclear. biulogi,cal
has had time to shift documents and
'matena
. I s to new. secrel Io~atmns.
.
~nd chemical weapons and longrange missiles before the United
Iraq curtailed inspections Aug . 5.
Nations can lifl economic sanctions and it broke off all cooperation with
imposed after Baghdad invaded ohe U.N. Special Commission on Oct. ·
. f{uwait in 1990 and triggered the Per- 31. The commission, known as
sian Gulf War.
UNSCOM. is charged wit~ eliminating Iraq's weapons of mas s destruc~·. Iraq sees a comprehen sive review
'" the quickest route to ending the · tion. Baghdad agreed to resume
$andions. which have crippled an cooperation 'on Nov. 14.
e{:onomy once among the richest in
Ritter.. the former chief of
UNSCOM's Concealment Investii~e Arab world.
; The United Stales and Britain gations Unit. r~signed in August in

~utopsy ·reveals

escaped
death row inmate drowned

1

The autopsy estimated Gurule had beeij dead for seven days when his body
was found tloaling in a creek by a pair of prison employees fishing on their
day off.
.
Authorities ' P!'culate Gurule hid under a bridge over the rain-swollen
creek. but was forced into the swirt water when searchers neared. II was not
known if he could swim.
The autopsy said Gurule was probably weighed down by paper. cardboard
and other material he had fastened to his booy. apparently to protect himself
from (azor wire alop two I0-fool fences he had to scale 10 escape.

.

with elastic bandages and c:ordhoard wrapped around his torsp.
Gurule, 29, was condemned l"or a 1992 robbery in Corpus Christi in which
two people werj: killed. He was the first man to break out of Texas' death .
r.ow since 1934 ~,

1
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inspe~tion s.

Talks over suspected
weapons site yield no
results . with N. Korea

UNITED NATIONS (API - North Korea reported no prugres. Friday ·in talks·with the Unite~ States over a suspectoo nuclear weapons site
in the communi lit nation.

·

The talks ,were lo resume Saturday at the u:s. Mission to the Unite~
Nations and to move to Washington on Monday and Tuesday, but there
were no s l~ ns a breakthrough was imminent.
Tbe United States ha.' rejected Nonh Korea's deman~ for compen«alion - repone~l y $300 million - to inspect a site detected on satellite
photos in a mountainside al Keumjongri. 25 mile• nonhea.•t of the Yongbyon nuclear complex.
Notlh· Korea's Vice Foreign Minister Kim G ye Gwan reiterated lhat
the United States should pay.for access to the site if il suspects that it is
being used to develop nucldar weapon s.
Asked at the end of Friday's talks whether there had been any progress.
Kim replied: " Not yet.' '.
. .
'
U.S. Ambassa~or Charles Kartman , the chief American negotiator. hod • ·
no comment as he left the U.S. Mis&lt;ion .
··
News media in North Korea. meanwhile. have brim moo with statements
in the past three days claiming that the country was '"on full alert for war" '
in case the dispute over nuclear inspecrions intensifies.

More than I{}().(J(M} North Korean soldiers. workers and students
demonstratoo Friday in the heart of Pyongyang. the capital. vowing "all- .
out" war again st the United States. an official North Korean repon said.
The United States says 1he North ' s relUctance to allow outside inspec- 1 ·
tors violates a 1994 framework agreement with Washington to freeze its
nuclear program in ret~m for two modem nuclear reaclors wonh $4.6 bil- , , :'1,
IillO ,

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launl'h wheth~r the astrunam s would
pull eve ry thing uff.
'
"' \Vr:' ve rral"li ccd with rnbnts.

Goldin ~~1iJ . ··But .nnw wr're doing
protest over what he characteriu d as
the real thing with hardware lhal (nst
\Vashington ·s rt!fusal to allnw han.l - \
a
qu:orter of. a billion dollars . Will we
hitting. . ...pult!nli ally &lt;:o.nfro~nation al
pull iloff! rni going to worry every·

destruction. They have deliberateiy
not revealed what would trigger an
auack. in an effort to get Iraq to comply.
" I think there would have to he a
bit of blatant noncompliance on their
pan. and they're just not doing that."
said one Western diplomat.
Butler said he will conduct a full

······················~···············

'

day·, coupling with Zarya.
' The 41-foot. 44.1X}()-pound ~rya .
launched No•. 20 from Kazak ,lan ,
more modules arri ve u ver the next contains all the power and propulsion
few years. It's 36 feet long and 15 sy~ tems needed for the tled gl ing
feel iil diamt!ler. and is CO nliXN: d of ' pare station. Without Z:orya, Unity
50.000 mechanical pans. 216 tluid wool~ he a us.:b s. empty can in
and ga.&lt; lines. and 121 electri cal orbil.
cables containing a mind-boggling
"" I think Sunrise is very appropris ix miles of wiring_.
ate and I think Unity is very· :opproIt l&gt;arely fit in Endeavour 's cargo priate for the new station lxcause it 's
bay. widthwi se: there was onl y an a new beginning and we'reall bound
inch to spare on either side, making ~ tnge: ther." shullle comm.aridet Robert
Currie'sjob ~specially diflicull. The Cabana said from orbit.
IJ.stlhing she wanaed to do was.bump
Unity cost $JCXI million. Zarya
Unity against the shuule while lifling $2411 n\illion. The National Aero'
it from irs horizontal position and set- nautic s and Space Adoiiinistration
ting it uprighl in prepanuion for Sun - pai~ fur boih.
NASA Administrator Dani~l
Goldin W(mder~J altmd after Friday·s

Iraq still feels heat as U.N. staff
loolq; to test cooperation pledge

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2500 Jefferson Ave.

Endeavour crew face hurdles
in creation of space station

MICHAEL GRACZVK
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.
~ HUNTSVILLE. Texas - A preliminary autopsy' of Martin Gurule concludes the Texas death ruw inmate drowned shortly hfler he escaped.
~ Gurule suffered a gunshot wound to his back but the injury was consid~red .,uperlit:ial i.lnd not the cause of dealh, according to Friday' .'i report from
Harris County Medir.al Examiner Joy Carter.
· Gurule was among seven death row prisoner~ who trit':d. to escape Thanksgiving night. The other six were stopped by guards' guntiie before reaching

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Sports

Sunday, December 6, 1998

'

•

Activists brace for Social Security talks·
By AUCE ANN LOVE
Associated PreiS Writer
WASHINGTON - lnOuential
interest groups are bringing tough
demand&lt; to talk.&lt; with lawmakers and
Clinton administration offici.als this
week at a dolled-door While House
confen:nce on the future of Social

1
Security.
So far. President Clinton and
Republican leaders have left the
negoti ations wide open. Neith~r ha.•
ruled out options for fi•ing the
nation's retirement program.
But inte\"sl groups that lawmakers rely on fOf' financial and grass·
roots suppon are swiftly chQosing up
sides.
"It's clearly difficult when your
major supporters are saying ' This is
our line in the sand. and we don •t

budge from it."' said John Rother.
public policy director for the American Association of Retired Persons.
" If they. listen to those messages

100 long. we're rio! going to have legislation. We're going to have a stalemate."
Allies of congressional Republicans, business and conservalive
groups fl'\)111 the National AssociOIIion
of M'!flufaclurers to the Cenler fOf'
New Black Leadership, promi .. to '
demand changes thai would diven
Social Security tllxes into ·personal
accounts Americans could invest in
the stock market. Some government
beneliL&lt; would remain a.&lt; a safety net.
"We think !hal educating employees a.&lt; to the benefits of privatization
is going to be one of the centerpieces
of our campaign to see these reli&gt;rms
adopted." said NAM vi&lt;'&lt; p~idenl
Paul Huard.
On the other side, civ,il rights,
women's and labor groups traditionally friendly to Democrats- includ- '
ing Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH
' Coalition, the National Organization
for Women and the AFL-CIO -

• No Annual COIJb-.1111
• No Set-up or Acllv- F-11

}'fter two-decade wait,
:,alf-brothers executed
ByJESSEJ.HOLLAND
Associated Press Writer
.
. COLUMBIA, S.C.- Two killers who were half brothers were executed by injection Friday for killing a gas station owner during a robbery. ·
Larry Gilben. 43, and ·J.D. Gleaton, 53. were .put to death for the stab.. bing and shooting death of Ralph Stoudemire. Gilren died lir.t. The pair had
· •pent more than two dec ad"' on death row.
·
"I thought when this day came that I wouldn't be sad. that I would be
' happy, but I am," said Sloudemire's widow, Betty Slusher. "Let's face it,
we're taking two men's lives."
·
.It was the first time since the Supreme Court remstated the death penalty. m 1976 th~t two brothers were executed on the same day, said Richard
Dteter, e.ecuttve dtrector of the•Death Penalty Information Center.
Their 21 years, I month and 27 days on death row is among the longest
waits. An Arizona man. Jose Ceja, spent23 years and a month on death row
before he was e•ecuted, Dieter said.
Authorities said the pair. both high on..&lt;irugs, entered Stoudemire's gas
station July 12, 1977, to rob it. Gleaton stabbed the 44-year-old Stoudemire
five times. including once in th~ heart. Gilbert shot him. ·
· In 1·979. the state Supreme Court ordered a new sentencing trial because
of a prosecutor's remarks. They were resentenced lei death.
· In 1996, a federal judge said they deserved a new trial because of improper jury instruction~. but an appeals court overturned that ruling.'
"

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Tue'oday and Wednesday.
The Republican leaders have
pledged to wod toward cllmprDr'nise
on aclion that could be taken to avert
1he Social Security ca.&lt;h shortage
looming a.&lt; lhe huge baby boom 'gen·
erollion ages.
But they are sending powerful
GOP committee chairmen. including
Rep. Clay Shaw. R-Fia.. who will
take the helm of the Hou-e subcnm·
mince overseeing Social Security
~~~ year. to demand that Clinion
make the first move by giving Congress a blueprint for Social Security
refOf'm.
"Because the presi&lt;lenl is ele&lt;1ed
by all the people, he alone is best
positioned to build a bipanisan consensus to get the job done, .. Shaw
said Saturday ,.

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The lcft-hander came close , moving UCLA to the Miami 29 with four
seconds left. McNown. who threw

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Temple's Pepe Sanchez (left) Is the task of the
moment for Indiana's A.J. Guyton In the l11t minute of Saturday's
game In Bloomington, Ind.,,where the Hoo1iera, with Guyton's leadchanging three·polnter In the final seconds, came from behind to
win 63-62. (AP)
.

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Indiana failed to take the lead on
its next possession, failing to get a
shot off before the 35-second buzzer
sounded with 46.7 seconds to go.
Temple called timeout with 36.8
seconds remaining and took the lead
on a tip-in by Barnes with 18. I seconds to go.
·
The Owls had two fouls to give
and used them in the next seven seconds to set the stage for Guyton's
score, which produced the ninth lead
change jwa game that was tied nine
times.
Temple used only six players.
Guard Lynn Greer did not make the
trip after being hit under his left eye
in Temple's previous game. Keaton
Sanders missed his second consccu·
tive .Jiih a sprained right ankle.
Recker topped Indiana with 15
points. The Hoosiers made just 9-of27 attempts from three-point range
with three of them coming in the
final 3:37.
Both teams were co ld in the first
half, especially from three -point
range . The Hoosiers led 30-29 at the
break. having hit 13-o f-30 shots and
only 3-of-12 ·from behind the arc.
Tcrrlple was 10-of-24 from the .field
and hit on just 3-of: II three-point
attempts.
Indiana's biggest .lead of game
was four points in the first half.

from' start to fini sh to shock LC's
Tigers 28-7 Saturday to win its fifth
state title this decade.
" l guess. we showed them who
was the better Tiger," lineman Ben
Mescher said.
Versailles ( 14-0) ran the table. but
ncl'er got higher than founh in 1hc
Associated Press poll despite a gl itlcring" tradition that included pl&amp;yoff
titles in 1990, '93, '94 and '95 and II
trips to the state semifinals.
Meanwhile, Liberty Center ( 12-1)
had come to be acknowledged as the
current Division V power in Ohio·,
pounding Amanda-Ciearcreek, 49-8
in last · year 's championship game
and then winning its first 12 games
. this season by an average score of
41· 7.
.
.
"In Versailles football, we never
get excited about the polls," coach AI
Hetrick said. "The end of the year is
where it really counts. After the first
two playoff games, somebody said
we beat No. 3 (West Jefferson) and
then No.2 (Marion Pleasant). I guess
next was No. 1."
How dominant was LC? During
the stretch including last year's state
semifinal and championship game
and its first dozen games this year. it
had outscored its opponents 404-0 in
the first half. It had not trailed since
'the 1997 regional title game and had
won its last'20 games. .
.
But that all &lt;hanged on a gloomy
Saturday at Paul Brown Tiger
Stadium.
In the first -half alone, Versailles
outgaincd LC 287 ·70 and o~tscored
the Tigers 21-0.
All but 16 of the 62 first-half
plays started in LC territory.
Versailles· mi•ed a, punishing
ground game with timely shon passes for big yardage to keep LC back
on its heels .
·
"We didn 't talk to our team ahout
it, " Hetrick said. referring to LC's
dominance in the lirst half of its
games. "What did we do. put up 14
before the half'! We had 217 Wow.
Th ill definitely tended to dispirit
them a littl e bit."

Jason Shardo completed 3-of-5
passes for 50 yards and Scan
Borchers added 31 yards on four carries to account for all of the yardage
in a 10-play drive that opened the
scoring early in the second quarter.
Shardo, who finished 9-for-20
,passing for 147 yards for two touc~.
downs with no interceptions, tossed&lt;!{
swing pass to .the left to T.J. Phlipo1:
who bounced off two potential tack'·
lers · and then tighuoped down the·
sideline to complete the 26-yar.d
scoring play.
After forcing LC to punt for the
third straight possession, Versailles
moved downfield until it faced a
fourth-and- II situalion at the L~ 25.
LC blitzed, with Shardo avoiifing
the onrushing defender by sidearming another swing pass to almoslthe
identical spot on the field as before,
where Borchers pulled it in with no
one within 19 yards of him. He trotted in for the score.
.
After yet another LC punt,
Borchers - who ended up with 135 yards on 24 carries - slanted off the
left side of the line for a 37-yard ron,
lhen scored on a 1-yard dive.
Such a dominating perfonnance
in the opening half made the secondhalf academic . On third and 8 at the
LC'9, Shardo fooled the defense with
a play-action f~kc and then lobbed a
TO pass to Joe Ratennan to make il :
28·0.
.
.
"They hit harder thim any other ·
team I ever went against," said LC
running back Seth Atkinson. "They·
came off the ball and played with
more intensity than anybody I've
ev.cr seen.,,
·
LC's only points came on Ryan
Zciter:s_ three-yard run midway
through the fourth quarter.
Versailles finished with 409 yards.
while holding LC to 158. Versailles
also had the ball for II minutes
longer.
The victory impro,ved Versailles
to 34-7 in postseason play. In addition to the five titles in the last nine
years, the Tigers also were runners..-""
up in 1988 and '96. .
:
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out the win.

after losing for the first time this season 73-70 at Pennsylvania in over·
tinlc.
.":;
Temple took its biggest lead of the
game at 52-43 on a free throw by
Lamont Barnes, who earlier had .
missed an open dunk when he tried
to showboat on a fast break and his
reverse dunk bounced off the rim.
Redshirt freshman Kirk }{aston,
who came off the bench to score 1'2
points, then started the comeback
with a layup and two free throws.
Indiana tied the game at 58 on cori·
secutive three -pointers by Luke
Recker and Guyton , who had missed
hi s first eight shuts from behind the
arc and then made his final two.
Barnes, who lcd·rhc Owls with 16
points, gave Temple a 60-58 lead
with 2:14 remaining by making two
free . throws . Indiana tied the game
for the last time on a turnaround basket by Lynn Washington with I :38
left.

~ta~ 80
or

KNOCKING AWAY the football from Army quar• academy teams Saturday In Philadelphia, where
·
terback Johnny Goff (9) Is Navy defender Bewanl Army won 34-30. (AP)
Nettles (95) during the 99th meeting of the Inter•
•
•
·

yards and thrCc touc hdowns , ~ave

ond ·consecutive one-point decision

Plan
'

f

"

the Hurricanes (S-3) the lead, Cade
McNown had one last chance to pull

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) A.J. Guyton, off target from threepoint range for most of the game,
connected with 5.5 seconds left
Saturday '!S No. 16 Indiana rallied to
beat lOth-ranked Temple 63-62 . Indiana (8 -1) overcame a ninepoint deficit in the final eight min·
utes as Temple (4-3) dropped its sec·

Near-collision probed by FAA

---·

t

'

out of miracles ,!n the Orange Bowl.
After James; who had a record·
setting, day wilJt 39 carries for 299

' '

BOSTON (AP)- FederJI investigators are looking into an apparent com· .
puter mishap that nearly caused a Northwest Airlines jet to collide with an.
Air Ontario tlight. The Boston Globe reported today.
· Tuesday's close call occurred at about22.500 feet, 30 miles southwest of
Albany, N.Y.. the Federal Aviation Administration said.
Only the intervention of an air traffic comroller in Na.•hua, N.H .. prevented
the Northwest Oight, bound from Detroit to Connecticut's Bradley International Airport. from hitting the Air Ontario commuter plane, which was !lying from Providence, R:l., to Tflronto, FAA officials told the newspaper.

'

Guyton's clutch trey
helps ·No. 16 IOdiana
beat·:-Temple !63-62

t 't"'" .._,,,/,,, 1-.1 I' II

•

Fou~d

•

By KEN BERGER
last seven years, and the six1h game fans to fall.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Army in the 1990s decided by fewer than
• The game was suspended for 31
vs. Navy is supposed to more than five points.
·
minotes as four . ambulances caned
"That's what ·you expect from · tfl:e injured off the field. Eighl were '
jusi a game, but not like this.
Army beat Navy 34-30 Saturday. Anny-Navy," said Army fullback expecled to be released. but one per·
bol the higheSI·scoring game in the Craig Stucker, who had '70 of his 106 son needed more tests, said U . Col.
99-year history of the rivalry was rushing yards on a touchdown run Bill Harkey, directOf' of public affairs
marred by an accident in which nine that cpt it 10 24-19 with 5:)7 lef1 in for the U.S. Military Academy.
people fell out of the stands and were· the second quarter. "It's always a big
The injured were four cadets from
injured.
game for the seniors. We know it's the U.S. Military Academy in West
The accident occurred after Ty our last game."
Poinl, N.Y., and five students from
. Arney's 70-yard touchdown ron gave I ' Army quarterback Joe Gerena aeademy· prep sc hool in Fort
Army a 31-30 lead. A railing in the was named · MVP, rushing fOf' 92 MOnmOUuo,
... N.1., Harkey Sal·d.
east end zone gave way, and Army yards and steadying the Cadets after
cadets and prep students fell about lienior Johnny Goff fumbled on the
Gerald Ravitz. father of Army coIS feet onto the field. The extent of first two possessions. ·
cap13in Neil Ravitz, was on the field
the injuries wasn't immediately . 'The Cadets' decisive touchdown and said he saw the first person to hit
known.
followed Navy's Man Harden fum· the ground.
. After a 31-minute delay, Eric bling at the goal line with 8:51 left.
" It could hlive been my kid in the
Olsen's 26-yard field goal provided Army 's Tony Coaxum atoned for slands," said Ravitz, in tears.
lhe final margin as Army (3-8) . gelling burned for an earlier touch·
Witnesses said the railings in the
avenged last year's 39-7 loss to Navy down with an Interception that temJlOrary stands, used only for foot(3-8) at Giants Stadium.
stopped Navy's desperation drive ball , were held together by duct tape .
. "Our thoughts and prayers go out with three seconds left.
The accident happened in the same
to them," Army coach Bob Sulton
But the sca,Y, accident cast a spot where Midshipmen had sneaked
said. "At Army, we &lt;try and operate sombertone overlhe p&lt;)Slgame cele· beneath the slarids to tear apart an
not just as a football team. We are the brat ion
•
Army banner earlier in the game.
corps, community and army all
" I think it affected both teams."
Arney rushed 13 times for 134
together as one."
:
Navy coach Charlie Weatherb.ie said. yards for Army, whose No. 1-rated
The 64 points broke tile previous " I have children of my own. 1 rushing offense amassed 401 yards.
record of 55, reached in 1959 and wouldn't want that h:&gt; happen to any·
Leading 30-25, Navy drove all the
1983.
'
body's children."
way · 10 the ·Army four midway
. · 'Anny came back from a 30-19
Tile unifonncd fans were cheer- through the fourth and might have
deficit at tile stan of the fourth quar- ing for television cameras after Army put the game away with a touch·
ter, preventing the Midshipmen from took a 31·30 lead on Amcy's 70-yard dow n. But Harden lost the ball as he
winning consecutive games in the touchdown run with 7:33 left in the suFged toward the goal line. and

MIAM'I (AP) - Edgerrin James
scored from one yard out with 50
seconds left on . Saturday, giving
Miami a wild 49-45 upset over the
' third-ranked Bruins and ending
UCLA:s bid for a national champi·
onship.
The Bruins (10-1), who staged
several comebacks this season to
keep their perfect seajon going, ran

wetc011" to
. .
BUCKEYE R.E.C. Country

'

Army defeats Navy 34-30

Versailles wh 1ps L1 berty Center
Miami downs No.3 UCLA 49-45 28-7, wins Division V state title:

or chick ua out online at www.aceinttr.nlt

We would like to wish you a·n d your!,
a very Happy Holiday Season!

B

·

f{i~: :~~~h~~::~i~~~ev~~~~~y :;~~~ ~~~~n~~~~;~~:~h~~;.'~~~~n°::~~ ~~;.~ l:~~:i~a~~~~ ;~~:~~~~:. rn

email us at sales@aceinlemet

-·-·-~

Collapse of railing injures nine

planned by the Ointon adminisu-.uion
(Of'

• Web TV Compatlblelll

T.U 1110 - . ! !
Wfi¥EEDa

PRESENT FOR THE EXECUTION - Betty Stoudemire Slusher was embraced b.y her son, t.'larlon Stoudemire, as the .executions q! her husband's killers were carried out Friday night In
Columbia, S.C. Surrounded by family, friends and death penalty
supporters, the executions ended two decades of the cru~de
•· Slusher fought to have her husband's dealh avenged. (A.P)

promilled to use their' gra-.-root, ,
power to fight privatization and
attempt&lt; to'raiile !he retirement age.
''Privatization is pro-nwtet but
anli-farnily," civil rights leader Jack""" said. "II lums a progr.un of
•hared secul'ily inlo one of individual
risks." ·
~me of lhe' competing advocates
are open to compromise. but others
say they 'd rollher see no changes to
Social Security noxt year than accept
ones they•don'tlike.
"We'd much rather see it n01 happen than have people work until age
70," said ARA:IO &lt;-hief of staff Gerry Shea.
Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La.. in
line to be the next House speaker. and
Senate Majority Leader Trent LOlL RMi•s.. have refused to participate personally in the Social Security talks

Section

jtmbat! 1lrimts- jeutintl

•

The weekend hc'gan Thursday with Philadelphia heal- ·(unexpected) al horne. to Washington. The loss of co·rncr- rest of the rcg uhtr season.

of the worst.oiTiciqted weekends in NFL history.
ing St. Lours 17-14.
The Pillsburgh Stcelcrs were victims.
.
. In other games today, Buffalo is at Cincinnati: Dallas
Today, the two 7-5 ieams meet in Pittsburgh . with 1he m New Orleans: Detroit at Jacksonville ; Indianapolis m
winner taking a major step toward a playoff berth and the Atlanta: San Diego at Washington ; San Francisco at
loser fulling into a deep hol e.
Carolina; Seattle at the New York Jets : the New York
It's notlling new lor the Patriots, who lwve won sur- , Giants at Anzoina: Kansas City at Dehver: Miami at
vi val games the past tw o weeks against . Miami and Oukland: Baltimore . at Tennessee: and Chicago m
Buffalo, both victories pulled off in the final seconds by Minnesota.
Drew Bledsoe, playing with a broken fing er. In the sec·
Green Bay is at Tampa Bay on Monday night .
ond. last week's 25-21 win over Buffalo. they got plenty
of help fro\llthe officials . ..
.
Seattle (6·6) ai New York Jets (8-4)
"They 're memorable games.'' coach Pete Carroll
Miami (8·4) at Oakland (7·5)
says. ·' But what we have to do in thi s last month is find
Buffalo (7'S) at Cincinnati (2·10)
away to improve, because we haven 't played great foot Three games that co uld clarify the AFC playoff piclure.
baiL"
The Steclers lost ground by losing 19- 16 in overtime
Or muddle it.
in Detroit l1n Thanksgiving, the gar)l e ¥1 which referee
"Cer(ain littlr things can become season-deciding
Phil Lu ckctlapparently heard Jeromc •Bettis say "Heads- events," says Bill Parcells. He could have been referring
tail s" on the coin !lip to start overtime and gave the bull to the two lust-minute calls that the Bills - from owner
to the Lions when the coin came up tails. Bellis said he Ralph Wil son on dow n - cont~nd cost them their game
said "tails.'' 'and audio replay seemed to co nfirm that.
with the Patriots lust week.
.
. 1
•
Nonetheless. Pittsburgh's defense was also to blame
The Scahawk• and Bills can'! afford to lose any more
_it didn't have to lett he Lions get in runge for Jason - well. ma~be once- if they want to make the playHanson's game-w.inning field goal. ·
offs. The Jets probably can't lose this one if they want to
Both teams probably have to win three of four to win tho AFC East lnd perhaps get a first-round bye.
make the playoffs. and then likely as a wild card: .Thc · They're being reminded all week that they .can't look
Stcclers, who beat the Pats 7-6 in Pittsburgh in the play· beyood thts to th e three closmg games: Mmm1, New
ol'fs last season, trail Jacksonville by two gaines. in the England and Buffalo.
AFC Central. The Patriots arc tied with Buffalo for sec·
The Dolphins have by far the toughest remaining
dnd in the AFC East, a game behind the Jets and sc hed ule of the AFC E:rst contenders. Next week the Jets
Dolphins.
come 10 luwn, followed by th e Broncos. Then they linish
"It worric~ you when you have to co unt on otl1cr at Atlanta.
teams to lose," says Pittsburgh safety Lee Flowers.
Jeff George has fmally coQccded his groin pull won't
"We're winning games we're su pposed to lose and los- heal without rest, so Donald Hallas will be the Oakland

;

"

'

quarterback for the rest of the season. The R~iders have hy just a gam¢. They're als9 banged up - Robert Smith
lost two straight -at Denver (expected) and last wee~ will miss at least the next two games and Jake Reed tile,

back Eric Allen has hurt the , defense badly. Oakland '
looks, like it could be headed for something similar to
1995. when they started 8-2 and finished 8·8.
Like most· bad' teams, &lt;::incinnali 's not sure what it 's
doing. This week, Neil O'Donnell is back at quarterhack
and Paul Justin. who started the last two games, drops all
the way to third string. .
Kansas City ·(5-7) al Denver (12-0)
, ,
When was th e las t time a team was favored hy almost
two touchdowns in this rivalry ? That's the position
Denver is in us it l1eads for 16-0, something about which
1Mike Shanahan 1s no longer shy.
, Shanahan, whose team (surprise!) will clinch home·
field advantage through the AFC pluyo(fs with a win,
wants to avoid what happened two seasons ago. They
clinched home ll eld u month early, let down and were
upset in the first round by Jacksonville . "We 're going to
pljiy each game, and we're not going to hold back,"
Shanahan says. "We're gomg out there und playing cue~
game to win, regardless if we win out and regardless if
we lose." .
.
The Chtcfs want to avo1d a repeat of three weeks ago
in Kansas City, when the Broncos won 30-7 and the team
got out of control, piling up five personal fouls on one
fourth-quarter Broncos possession. Surprise! Shannon
Sharpe. the B,ro~co~· tight end who likes to talk, admits
that he was the mst1gator.
Chicago (3·9) at Minnesota (11·1)
Green Bay (8-4) at Ta.mpa Bay (5-7)
(Monday mght)
Detroil (5-7) .at J~cksonville (9-3) .
The Vtkmgs chnch the NF·C Central wrth a wm or a
Green Bay loss, although they're more interested in
[tome field for the playoffs. for which they lend Atlanta
\.

' '

The Packers arc testy. Mike Holmgren yelled at a fah:
last week who accused him of thinking too lillie about:
the team ,a nd more about his future in Cleveland; '
Washington. San Francisco or Seattle. Then complained'
ahout loudspeakers 1n Minnesota. Green Bay also needs' ·
to gain a game on San Francisco if it wanta a wild-card·
game at home in the playoffs.
·
The Bucs and Lions still have a shot at a playoff spor
- they trail Arizona by just a game.
But Tampa Bay is without defensive leader Hardy ·
NickcrS&lt;m, who's out for the year with a hean ailment.
Detroit, which often closes well, has a tough sc hedule.·.
including thi s one against the Jags. who seem headed for
their fir st division title, a first-round bye and a home •
playoff game .
'
.-.
Indianapolis (2·10) at Atlanta (10·2)
San Francisco (9·3) al Carolina (2·10)
The 49ers arc trying to catch the Falcons for the NFC
West title. although they'll have tO do it without Bryant
Young. their dominating defensive tackle. who broke his
leg Monday night. It's a tough assignment - the ·
Falcons' remaining · schedule is all in domes, when:.
lhcy're most at home.
The big question for Atlanta this week. as it was lasi
week. is the health ofChris.Chandlcr. The Falcons bed!
St. Louis with Steve DeBctg replacing starter Tony
Graztant. Chandler hopes to play this week. but he 'll
probably hand off to J.amal Anderson a lot.
Marshall Faulk and an improved Peyton Manning
make the Colts a httle tougher now, but Marvin Harrison
is gone for the year and the defen se is soft.
'
Dallas (8-4) at New Orleans (5-7)
New Y~rk Giants (4-8) at.Arizona (6-6)
(See FORECAST on J.t-8)

.

�r

•

Sunday. Decembers. 1998

Sunday, December 6,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gatlipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Marshall beats Toledo 23-17, wins MAC
BjJOHNRABY
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. lAP) l.lan incllc Dcrricon broughl ou1 a
t&gt;o• of cereal aflcr M:1rshall won .11S
~c:o nd
slraighl
M1d~ Amc ric.a n
Confe rence championship.
;··I arc one howl of l ucky Charms
thir&lt; m om in~. I rhink rhat's wha1
helped:· said Dcrricoll. known as
·· l ucky .. lo his lcammales.
. Dcrricon 's 20-yard rerum of a
tuinble for a IIJIIChdown was pan of a
17-poinr bl iiZ in a 4:47 span of 1he
(&lt;JUrlh quarter as Marsha ll · beal
Toledo 23- 17 Friday nighl,
The He rd ( Il - l ) will play
L{Juisville (7 -4) in Ihe Motor C ily
Bow) on Dec. 23 m Ponriac. Mich.
luck is whal Marshall needed
afiCr !failing aflcr rhree quancrs for
JUSIIhc second rime 1his season.
h gol a courageous e ffort from a
wounded Chad Penninglon and a
. , wurm inM ddcnsi\·e effort when it

mallercd.
six interceptions. returned M1ke
.. 1 can't say enough aboul lhis Bilik's fumble for a score 2:23 larer
1eam.'' said Marshall coach Bob 10 increase the lead to 20-10.
On To ledo's ne ll possession.
Prucn. " It's exlrcmely iough lo
repeal as a c hampion. I'm luc ky and Carlos Sm11h inlercepled a Chris
proud to be a pan of it"
Wall ace pass at rhe Rockers 28.
Penninglon injured his groin on a resuhing in Billy Ma lashevich's 32run early in 1he second quaner and yard field goal. ·
came up limping badly afl&lt;r gelling
.. Toledo beat Toledo... Wallace
hil on· Marshall's firsl series of lhe said. " Three lumovcrs in lhe second
second half. He was replaced on 1he half are not going lo win a champineXI se ries by freshman Byro n onship game::
leflwich. who threw an int&lt;rceprion
Wallace. who fini shed 30 of 54
on his only pass.
for 337 yards. hit Bilik with a uneP~nn i ngton €ouldn' t srand lhe yard scoring pass wi!h I :03 left . bul
sighl o f someone else in his place Marshall recove red rhc ensuing
onsides kick a1 Ihe Toledo 44 and ran
wilh a championship dn Ihe line.
··1 was hurting more in my heart oullhe cloc k.
lhan I was in my leg," he said.
Toledo coach Gary Pinkel said his
" luckil y. I was able IO move around learn didnl have a killer instinct
afler I rook a series off."
~
.. Three· times in 1hc red zone and
PenningiOI) relurned "Qn 1he nex1 we only c ame away wirh lhrcc
series.and drove Marshall61 yards in poinls. You canl win big games like
lhree plays, hilling Nale Poole wilh a lhar:· he said .
19-yard scoring pass to give Ihe Herd
Penninglon wnncctcd on 23 of 3S
1he lead for good. 13- 10. wirh 13 :55 passes for 249 yards. Hi ' louch!Jown
lefl in lhe game.
pass gave him 63 in ju&gt;t rwu se a'"" '·
Toledo (7-5). which had held a 7- tying him wirh Bo wlin g Gree n s
'GA LLIPOLIS - The Gallia 6 lead since the first quarter. quickly ' .~ Brian McClure fo r the conlcrcnt:c
.
carcc_r mark. McClure ..,cl- the rct.:onl
Socce r Club h"" &gt;cheduled _lis neu fell apan .
Derricoll. who is lied wilh mne from 19821o 1985.
r(lee1ing for Tuesday al 7 ~- "1 · al
orhers f6r No. 3 in Di vision 1-A wilh
" PenningiOn gave us leader&gt;hip
Bilssard Memorial library.

GSG sets meeting
for Tuesday
.

...,

Holtday jnn· L' E~~:~ Oa!lisit·tinl ruu...
Nt"'W Me- " ~· o St 61. Mon1ar1a S1 :'i7 ·
W•$ -Grero ft R ~y 61l. Mc-rL"n ~R

~BA standings

l&lt;la lw b.&amp; _ N

EASTERN CONFERENCf:

' :

Mlanlir IJi.,iJinn

~'f"uMuus
l'llllb.Jo: lpl11:1

1~

6

Ch i~-·~!!!''.

~

~

_\7 ~

'lih '-n!!l.md
'111.5hv•Ur

l

6
'I

250

__;•-

I

100

''

.

.

f\75
.~71

2,'i0

Friday~s scores
,. 'COI.LIJ\IUUS 77. NashVille 7.&amp;
• N~" Engl;md 75, ChKagv 72.
'' S&gt;!;•Uk 70. l'nrl land 6 1

,"

,,...
,.

'

,,

They played Saturday

Today 1s games

'. COL. UMBUS•ot New England. I p m.
::- l'htl:tJdjllna at se~llle . 9 p m

..

NCAA Division I
men's scores

.·:

Friday's regular~season action

~

,
EaJI
• lonu HJ . Cnni sius 70
• Mam1 'J J. Sien:187
.: Nwgar:!
S1. Peter·! 60
•. lt1Jcr :'i 7. Manhattan ~ 2

n

'

,

South

: · l.lnn tl~. Mount ,\loys•us Ml
• ( il.•or~ la 6.\. Furman 47

.• M1l - l~a s t e rn Short 71, Hamp1on 63
Nnrlh (';,rohn&gt;~ 63, Old Donlmi on 61
: Suulh C:trolina :'i.'i. Coli of Char ieJtnn 44

,l

f 'ar Wut
-: · ~l1111u;u• l il 17. Fre~no ~~ 6.'i

• Ore(!un St . 74. Ark.- I'Hle Bluff 56
"' S• •ulhl'llt l.t1 79, UC S aot ~ lla1bara 73

,.

Tournaments

Amfrita~ Clllluk-nnt
, t t._' o l l ~ii iC fl7. 1JIIVI(h0n (rl

•1

~

ruund

; Nc~m~b 63. SW Tcxa ~ .'1 ~

.·,.' nl•u• &amp;: Golrl Coca·Colu. Clu!l'!lt'·nrtt round
-

., Marqucut: U!t Corncll .~l
Tuhlt 7 1. Vl•rmout 62 -t

i'

.:
. . Carritr Classk·nn t ruund
.., Ill ·CIHC a t~ o 57, Santi\ Clara 44
• , OIHO td S yrnc u ~c 5~
:.'
l.:yclont Cha lltnKt· fi n l round
.• lmvn St 72. Nnrlh Texa~ 4~
. • W 1 11111n1 ~ 72. 1 'nn ~ci,O n 7110TJ

'

~lr sl i\lerch:mt B11nk-C VC Clauit ·fi,n l round
•, B.rll S1 1Hl :-,1 "h,wph · ~. l mJ 57

•

C &lt;trohn :~

St til

:
ll a,.k rH ln•ltational•nrsl nmnd
~ lk iiUtl .t'J. (inu tn~ a ~ ~~
~ 1""":' M~ s,uth Al·:,hama ~ ~~

'"

Ntll'lh tH'~ trrn

:\lutual

rta~~ic-fir~ t

S, trl I·•:t''' 1,,.,1 5X. J l o ol~· C1" '~ .fl
\V1· I 1~· r St 12. R1 u· f16 2 (}'I I

ruund

l'htK•nh C i : •~~ic-dtumpiun~hllt

1:

, il . ll l ll•~&lt;l lN. Cent t n nnt·~· t• c u l St K2
,.·
Tltinl pl : t ~t'
' I ,,,,th:nn ~ ~ Y:1k -10

•
:
._

l'i'l ll Hutl'ht•Sirt.fint round
l .o•LII "I.ttl.t lclil ~1 ' 1 ~'\:11 l'u11 ,\ IIIC rt!.'llll KO

,. "w r&gt;- 11"''"" "it

•

77.

l.:~a'

S11utlwm .n

l'u11t•rllar ln1 illltinnul·fhlimplcltiN hitl

I o.; Nn!!hnd)!t' 7~ t'"Pt•lll ~ ~ ~9

Tum

Ruh~nun ( 'la~~~~·-nr~t ruum.l

l. "l"• n 1ilk~t

Kl.\\ bt{ ot•\lll.llil l'( l

'
~CAA Division I
romen 's scores
•

.•

.Frid ufs ngu lur-st;llson action
'

lhitfW\ Ill'

bi\l

(1~ . 1'111\htn l'h ~:1

n . Ml!ln,• it~ t ,t f1~

1

( )cpt)!l'h'"" "

"

S1 ln hn 1 'i-' . 1. H&gt;IIl' ld ~~

:
•
•
..
•

~ IUth
,\ uhul'll ~2. Ala lhrnllu)!hillll ~I
(t' tl! f l.,thll\ 7 I Ht~h ''""" h-'
M,·rnpln ' MO ( j ~"'!! ' •' ~n\ll h l•rn 7X
N (.' .Wthllll1)!1t&gt;n 7X l il'tlfJI.I.t St 7J
Vtr}!.tnttt f1~ . W. il..l• I t&gt;rt'\t -' ~

•

'~-

H.S. boys' scores

Akron Hoban 82. Rootswwn 28
Akron St . Vm.:ent ·SI. Mary 57. Cu yaho g ~

J2

01ristiun Community 61 . He~ n s fo r k~u ~ 21
Cin. Country Ooy 66, Fdicity 54
Cin. Elder 61. Si Henry J.'i
Cin. Hi! Is Olt. Acad . 54. -cin. [leer Park Jil
Cin. lnd1an ~Ill 62 . Cin. Se•·en Hill ~ ~ -'
Cin M ~ Nichnlas 60. An'll"li o 41
Cin. Mt. Heahhy 66. Cm N. (\&gt;I l e g~ Hill 60
Ci n. Uok Hill~ 59. f oirfldd J .~
Ci n. Rending 54. Cin. lockh1nd 42
Cin. St. B~rn a td 80. MilfNd Chr l7
l.:1n Sl . Xav1t'r 51. A1kcn ·t'\
Cm Summ11 Country IJny 911. Ct l\'lll~W t l l.dlln

.I

..
. •
•

•

•••

•
...

.

l n~a ft:!. KCnt -~~
K :tn ~as' St K7. Armv ~~~
Mi Huur' ~ '· ·t~·\:t~ ·s(luthctn "i~
l' ttrd uc K1 N lllmnis ~~ .
Stiiii!)IC!:u S1 71'1 . lklrPII 511
Xn\'tl' l IU . N C C!mrlnlll' !-&gt; '1
1\t \.. nn ~n .\ ~ ~~ h
~ ~ . 1\ r ~

M ttnr&lt;~ ~7.

~ J

Hamilto n fhfin 59. Ki hg~ 49
Hanmb.1 l River 7'i. C1ldwdl ~5

Hawken School .~5 . Maumee Vnlley C!•lt lllt )'
D~y :'i .l
l~&gt;."ath 54. Laktw1x&gt;d 5 1
H1ckm ll e 70. Montpelier 5:'i
High land 6-', Frederickwwn 50
Hilli ard Da~· id so n 561 Ill!! Wa lnut :'i1
Hill sboro 72. N Adams 61
Hilltop 52. Defianct lioora .~6
Indian Lake '59. St Paris Graham 5J
Ironton S1 Jastph 72. Rock Hill 5 ~
Ktnscon 85. Chagrin Fa ll ~ 69
Ken! Roose,·elt 53 , Tallm :ld~e 51
Kenton H. Ben Lo!!lli;l 60
L.a)a:land 55 , Buckt:)'e Trail J6
L:ako!a W. 55. M.:u on 44
Lexington 7 1. B~ llc vue 6 .~
Ltberly Union 56, Watkin s Mrmurial 49
Licki ng Hcighu 6~ . Col. Academy .W
Limn Scninr RJ . Linden 1.\
Unsly. W. Va . 64. Steubenvi llr Cmll . Cent .W
U sbtm Bcavc' Local 6!5 , Cn: st,· i ~ w 56
Lillie M1nmi 71. Wi!ynl"S\'ille .n
Logan 78. Nels onville· York 5S
London 53, Madi~;on Plains 52
Loudonville 44 . Creston Norwayne " .l
Louisville 60. N. Cam on HoO\·er 50
LuthcrJn W~s1 61. Fair,·icw 59
Madi ~on 65. 1\shtat·nll:. "~
Mansfield Sr. 6-t. ZatleSVI IIe 59
Maplewood 7 J, Kmsnmn Uadgcr 70
M[U'ion Elg1n -16. M a r y~ ~tllt 31
M[U'Jins reny 6B. We ll s~ i ll e 4~
Massillon J;u:ksoi169. Green 4ij
Mass •lion Perry 66 . Louu vill c A q uin~ s ~ 8
Mc(lain 70. Witmi ngwn 61
Mead~· ille . Pa. Chr 40. Mcn1u1 O n.' J7
M cc h a ni c s hur~ 61 , Cetlltr\•ille .'i 9
Metamora l~ ve'rgr cen 62. Piont"er Non h Cem ral
Middletown !19. l};1 v ll clmmu 72
Midpark 7.'. lora•n' Smllh view 61
Milrord 67, I.A:mon·Monroc ~0
Ml)h;twk 58 . Uu cy ru~ 52
Morral R1 dge dalr OR . New Wa ~ hi n jl.lnn But'kcyc
Cl·ntnt l Jfl
MnuntG1Icad .&amp;\ . East Kn o ~ .l b
Mount Vcrnnn J7. l"&gt;ub ll n Scto~o J6
New R1cpl'l 62. l'us \Urt il Sl Wt nddtn .~ 2
Nc.,..hury .'Itt Blomntklol ' I
Ncwl·ornc ntolv'n .H . MonrrlC Cl• tur:~ l 56
Nc- wpon -t6. Nt~rwnoll J 5 (C) 1'1
Nnnlon111 :'iS Maple 1 -11 ~ :'iJ
Nllnn:lmly 77. Rc' ~ n· -l l)
Ni•nh blll il Sttuth R:m:t' ~I. E a~l Pa l n~ l•n e 77
N nrti!O i m ~ ted ~ l . Nnr1 l1 Rldf!&lt;" \ tlk· ~~~

,( ln. Wmton W&lt;J tKi ~ (17. Lakl1111 E_-l"
Cin W11hruw li:'i. Ci n A n i.le l ~u n Sl
C1n Wo(ld warll C1~. l.o rn itk' 1\dnural Knl !! • '7
C'lc. Collinwood 79. Cl~ . Jolin Marslmll 5K
Clc F.ns 1 . T~d' TJ. Glenl'lll.: 75.:! OT
Cle John Bay M . Cle velan1l rm1 ~ ll
Ck . Vi llil Anpela S1. J u~~:ph 6 ~ . St bl w:ml-t~
Co i1111CI (ra\l.ford bO. N"r11H111H .l'J
Cn l Uecc hnott 62. Col lnd CJll' tld~ n~· c• ~ ~
Cui Hngtt' 7~ . U n ml\&gt; 5 ~
('nl W:. lll't''&lt;111 ~ .~ . Wt'S il'll llk Sou uh 21
(Il l Wcs l ~7 . Nc\\ark ~ ~
C.:onllll&gt;." ntnl -'X. l'auldl n)! ~ 7
f nplc y M . Marlin ~tll n f1~
Cm q·- RJ w~nn 62. Arl 1t1gtun S~
' cu~hnl'I0 \1 7_1 I. LL' ~ In!! Vnlle) J ~
l' rc~ l \ 1ew 6&lt;1. iklphu\ Jl'fl l'l"'lll "·I
l'nmb vllll' 6.1. M or~a n ~ ~
l)altnn 6 1.ludnw ~2
D:mhu r)' 71. G1hl l11~h ut ~ 71
I~&lt;~ Y hlll SII'I:Jhtm 7b. Et\nn li' l'l' rn&gt;!l ~ 'J
Dcfiam•e KI. Nal)( lll"ull 7 1
Dovl!r 67. Clc South 52
Dull lin Ctllfmnn J 7. 1'1 r h •nngl''" l ~
F. Ccnuu l ~.'1 . S l.&gt;cmhom 11
1: Uvcrp0111 79 , EI IIVll&lt;•tl c•• y l'a ."7
l·.ast C l111tnn 61!, Cl rdt•11 lk J;l .
Ea ~t i. h' ~qmu l 79. Eh~t~&lt;&gt; li Cit ) Pa ~7

61,1 , Utl t!'il 5 .i

N nrth~ lik

Chn s11 an ~ 7. LI!IUrl j U1n •11an
Nnnon 6.\. Cm·c,nrv :'i O
N"twall61 . l'o11 Ci111tun J7
Nmlso n WH.A 10. lk :'!l' hl\'tll•d ,ill
O;tk Harhm ,~6 . R o~s t onl 42

"

Scu11n N Pnh"~ ~t ~0 . l'on ~n ll,ut h We~• -1!\
Scut'l'·' I 7fo Mnm&lt;.c11 llc HI
Shal..,·r llt ' 107 c;ar h t•lilll t ~ 60
Slk'n&lt;mJuall 1 1. ~ t,•adtt\\ lmwk .'lfl
"iollllndk (~ . Ka!toHI l'l'lllr.ll Cht "i~
Sulun 'i'1 W•,·kh ll c -ln
Suwht'n~ l r,4, Wa1~1l o" 01
!-olll'tt&lt;'l'lll lk Ji1 l 1pf1l'f s._,,,,, V,tl .U
Sprm~ Nunli X~ Kl''lllun R ul~~ ~~
Sprm!! Sr1u1h 54. ·1~eutm:1h ~2
~ I W'III!Ihel d MJ . Sw.m1ur1 27
Strulhcr\ "i~_ 1.t h..-rn .p
S)t:an M&gt;te M oh:t\.l l ·'i~. lht ~} IU~ "!
l;jyh·ant &lt;t Nartln u~" Ml I o'lon n .10
S}hanm Sl!u th\ tC\\o 5~. ·l nl Wond \.l:uJ -~7
Te:1 \~ \'ail e\ 69 ~h :mn Trace .~8
Jt:.nipk llu.'t ~tJ ;t n J l . H.•n.hn No ~n lll.'fll 4 I
I hnm.t\ Wur1lnn g1un 11 1. l k l;,.,..·arl· :"0
Thu llfc\1 11 ~· Sheml;m 7~. John (ilt&gt;nn W
·1!II III l'1l lu11Jht:111 ~1. Cl}Jc -17
To ll S1 Fr;~nc J s 6~ - W:,pa knnew -l.'\
l'ol S1 John's 70. Ck S1 l ~ n " '' " " ~ ~l
Tol WlnlniCr 7 1, Tol· W;ntc 40
Tnronto ll.l. L •~ h urr h7
Tr..oc ol l olfc 14. thnv rll ~ !i4
Tr1· Viii It~) ::; 1) , Rn n 'V1c" " ~ ~
Trnu1y ft.l fl r:m1!t ~ X !On
TtiW.1) 71 . W:ty m·dak ~IJ.
Tmput 6!\. llc lhci-'l:tre -l7
l w 1 n~hu r)! 7-1 . Cb l'l. md C.C 7J
U1111tii i!IWn Lake 6~ . Akmn Nnrth h i
\'all ey Fnr!!C ·16; Holy N:m1e 42
'
\/an lluren 9-t N Baht muu: ~2
\fun lue ~ I . lla ~e o m Hope\l't•ll · l.ollldnn Jl't
Verm ilion 87. A reland s SO
w.. .J ~ w(ll'lh 5.l . Hudso n J6
Wa l~ h Jesu1t 68. Akron En ~ t 65
Warren Champion 51 : Nik: s .19 ·
Was hm,:1on C.H. 7~. Ross Southea~lern 6J fUT)
Wa verly 87. frnnkforll\dena HO
West S;t!L-m Nonbwestcrn 68. Sull iv;m Blnck
Rt n r OJ
Westfnll44. West Union 4 1
We~ tliike 67 . Kt: y5tonc 58 (OT)
Whll cn:~k 1!.1. Wllliitn\~bu rtl .'i7
Will ow Wond SymmeJ; V;1l 16. t-Jcw R o.~10n tlJ
Windlmm 70. Rill't!' ll ll:t 69 1.~ OTI
\ViuiCJH·tllc lnd ~:m &lt;.:reck 59. Raylatld Buet..eyc
Lncal !\ I
, Wooster ~7. New Philadtlphia 48
WunhmgiOII Kilbt'&gt;urne I fl . Col. St Chad~: s 74
Yuu UuulitlC' 7K. Cai\',1TY Chmtian ~0 '
Yuu. Woodrow Wilson 99. You. lllristinn 42
Zar~t'sv i llc Maysv•l1c}1, New Lexington 44

M.

C:1l g:tr ~

NHL standings

l'h i)Cm ~
IJ:r ll il~

EASTF.RN CONFERENCE
",\ltanlif.'

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l!: L I I'U. GE &lt;ill

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Ill (\ 7
l'tll ~h urf!h
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Frida,·'s scores

· \.\'a\hlfi ![IPJI 5. ~ Y i\ l;on,k:r• I
Pnubur~ h 1. Cnroltna ' !J1c f
Buf(al o .1. PlulaJel p1uil 0
M.mtrcal I. N~" Jt·rse y I tue)
Cnlorado 2_ S1 !.om ~ 0
Ta m p:~ Ba) 2. Ed momon I
Var~eo u \er

.a. Ua ll ~~

l&gt;t.· rrotl 2. San

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• They played Satu rday
61
61
67
· KK

WESTERN CON.-ERENCE

I&lt;aw'

l'a clfic IJhl!lion
1-1 J :!
IJ ~ '

7J

(JO

59

tW

l'u uh ur~ h

011 !lo$11111_7 p 111

Toronto nt Motitrcal. 7 p.m
NM-· Jer~cv ill N.Y. hl;mJrts. 1 p nL

N. Y 1{ ;:1ngCr~ 011 Uu nwn. 7:}0 p m
M-'n ~hm g1011 1 1 t Philadt'lphi ll. 7· _
1Q p m'
Ciuolin a :n Fl mtda . 7JO p m

Colorit dO ;II St Lo ut ~. X p m
B\lff;tln &lt;II N;t'i hl·ilk: ~ p m •
Ph ili! mlt rn Calp ry. 10 p m
Dcl! ull ill l.os An ~ cl ~·s . 10;.10 p m

Tonight 's games
Tampa O:t)' :11 Chkago. Rpm
lJ it lla ~ at t:d111&lt;mton. X p.m.
• Phucmll nl Vmtco u ~·er . 10 Jl m
1\nahcim t11 San Jose. ~O JO p 111

Great··· Gifts For' The·
Sportsman

,•

Rutl'alo at CIN CINNATI. I :01 p. m.
D :1ll n~

nl New Orle ans. l :01 p.m
Delmil iltJ:trksom·•llc.l:OI p.m.
lnd 1 ;111 ~po l i $ al A tl ~nla_ I :01 p.m
Nc'W Englond nt Pi tt5burgh . I :0 1 p.n1 .
Siin D1el!u ill Washington. I :01 p.111
S;m Fraol'i ~ •·o at Caroli nlt , I 01 p m
Scnulc 111 Nl'w York Jc1 ~. I .0 1 p.m.
Ne\\ Ylll'k Giant s at Ariwrm. 4 : 0 ~ p.m.
K : ut.~: I I Cit y nt Dctwcr. ~ · 1 5 p .m
J\lt :11m at Oakl:md. ~ · I ~ p m
U~l111 11ore at ' 1\:n llt' ~~ce. -l · IS p.m
C h1 ~~~n :tl Mm nl'wta. IUO p.m

I

Crt'ell l

; I~

ill

Tamp ~

H;1v.

~:ame
~ ~20

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. · u n·t)&gt; .
~-

41toote PORi, 0

''·

•

'•

••
•
•

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12 or 20 ga. ·combo
Vent Ribbed Barrel or Deer Barrel
Was $349°0
Now $319°0

GOING ON NOW AT GINI JOHNSON CHIVBOLIT •OWSMOBILI ,
''":&lt;.-

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BaumLnmber
St. Rt. 248

I' m

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Chester

99 CHEV. S·l 0 PICKUP

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·Starting At

Starting At

St~rtlng At $,11 ,3 71

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414 PICKUPS

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l 'crr~ .~0. J.w ~··l llll It'\\ 4 1J

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"l'lu lo .~ I W M us kr n pt~ n 4 ~
l'!ll'lo lll ~l't . J:r r ~•1111 I I
P11 limd ~l Sprin ~tk t.l , :,.~.· a l -i 'J
lb n ·laml. K ~·- 62. Su ulh (i; il li :r -t ,l
l'crry

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l 'c lt i~\lll l·

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151, NEW PDNTIAGB NOW IN ITOGKI

~ ~·y i111 ltl s hur~ 'i&lt;J . l\bnn 11 ~! arJ tn )! H
Rh ude .~ ~-1 .

l.inl'oln -We~ t 77
1(1 ~ 111 ,!! Sun -l.i , LliHl'IH,'t'!w r.\1 41
Rll\'1' ViJII~ y (i 1J M~· ~g ~ ~ 2
R oc k ~ RiH~ t· 74. il c r ks hi r~ 11 2
t&lt;. o~~ 6J, C111 Ti! )~ \ll ~ 6
S : u t drt.~ k y ~ 2 . Tol l.1 hhy ~~~
,Sand;• Val ICy .~ 1 . S u:t ~ l1u1 j! ,~I
Sand y Votlk y :'i~ S !l:t ~ hnl )! · l• ; ,lllhn JlJ

4 Dr.

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8

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• Loadedl

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Starting At

1998
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• Air Conditioning
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• 4 Whe~l Anti ·Loc~ Brakes
• AMIFM Cassette
• Aluminum Wheels ·
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Ct1uKnr ShtHJiotll·nNit round
l'ull&gt;r:11 lu 111') , i\mcm·:ul tJ 70
w,l'liln!l h ~n

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t-. 1

'
Uonday • Saturday 9 a.m. • B p.m. • Sun~ay 1 p.m. - 8 p.m.
'

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.\() ---~-...=·~~ ~Vl~=--•••R

' l.. u

r.111. Tt•

' •" .. ~ . Rtt.• rot:Wtd n ""~Rei 0( rot• ft"Cit l&gt;l!fll ..... ,. IW\OC.tOit

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ruund

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C urntil t lassk-nm ruund
':' ( ',1111'11 11~. n r.mt urd ~6
r N1•tllll'ii~ ll~ 1r1 51 , l.t1yol;t Md -14

99 CHEV. VENTURA VANS

414 EXT. CAB

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~ \yrautll' IOJ. Lal :t)l'lh' 9~ jl OT 1

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L •' I P~H; ~ l

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Starting At

l'hm11:m 5 1, 1\ l a ~ \lll u n l'hri ~ tl : m ·11
I )U aw a-Giilnllt&gt;rl ~ I . Br)l111 .l2
l'amt Val k·~ 60. l.athnm Wt·~h· rn ~~

ZOo-70· !.'i Ill,,.. kw nil

• W ~hr htf!ll ll 117 ,\•r I oru· fl'l
• W)tln\111~ 0'\ , t u)nl:1 Mm) nwum ~ '

.,_,deal
w.True~

•
•
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Remington 870 Express

Today 's games

Monday's

··we

•

NFL's Week 14 slate

General C4S 6s,ooo mile tire

t'ar Wtsl
;. Cn hl urm:1 5R. San l · m n,·l~ln 4!'1
lo .Stml nl' lar;r !C I. St:mlord f1:'i

V:~ncOtJ\' f:r

Hockey

1wo of the factors 1ha1 helped River
Valley tally a 69-52 victllf)' over
• Meigs in Friday nighrs boys' basketball sea.&lt;on commcncemenl for
holh teams.
The Marauders. who scored firsl
when senior forward Daniel Hannan
sank a lhree-point shol 29 seconds
afler tip-off. had a five-poim led
wilh barely 1wo minutes expired in
the first quarter. Bur the Raiders. on
1he slrenglh of senior fprward Ryan
Fowble's lrey (6:40) arid senior forward Joey James' layup (4:57), lied
the game al 7.
·
For aboul a minute. James
appeared to ha'e been knocked out
of the game after a collision with ooe
of lhe Meigs frontmen afl¢r his
game-lying ' layup. Bur he got up
amidsr cheers from rhe Raider faithful, and lhe game wenl on.
· In the ne~l I 112 minules. three
'
.
lead changes came as a rcsuh of
River
Valley
cenrer
Mike
Mollohan's layup, Meigs guard
Sieve Beha's lh&lt;ee-poinler and
Fowble's slickback jumper and
bonus foul shot. Fowble's rhreepoinl play slarted what became an 82 run for lhe. Raiders Ihal gave Ihem
a five-point lead at the quarter's end.
Meigs roared back i n10 contemion in the second quarter, using
irs first minute 10 gel junior
guard/forward Granl Abbolt's layup
(7:52) and Beha 's lhree-pofnter
(7:44) lo tie the game at 17.
!'1ollohan's foul shot (7:36) put
River Valley 18- 17. bu1 senior cenrer
J .T. Humphreys • layup put lhe
Marauders ahead 19- 18. Meigs
extended its lead to a four-point margin wiih Hannan's second trey of 1he
night (6:50). ·
·
The Marauders·. four-point lead
was 1umed into a two-poinl . deticil
when junior guard Aaron Sullivan
and Fowble gotlheir jumpers .to fall
34 seconds aparl. Bul Hannan's
poinl-blank ra nge jumper tied the
game at 26 with four minutes left.
After junior cemer Mike
Westbrook's jumper pul lhe Raiders
ahead 28-26, Humphreys gol his
layup to fall wilh 2:25 left. The game
was tied at 28.
In a thirst for points !hat was carried inlo the third '
River

Valley scored seven unanswered shooting lhal included a 3-for-7
poiniS and never kd by fewer than showing from behind the arc.
Jl&lt;serve notes: River Valley outfive poiniS for the rest of act three.
~we came our and played good lasled Meigs 45-42 in the preceding
baskCiball for most of 1he lhird quar- junior varsiry con1es1.
Keilh Stout led lhe Raiders with
ler," said River Valley mcnlor Carl
Wolfe. "Bur we had l no inrensity 13 .poiniS. 'file Marauders • Derek
after rhar.··
Johnson led all scorers with 14.
The Raiders, who ended the third Teammalc Adam Bulling1on had II .
The future: River Valley will be
quarter wilh a 15-point lead. found
Meigs balding until lhe Marauders idle until irs first road game of !he
had !rimmed !heir hosrs' lead to 10 . season Friday at logan. Meigs will
wilh 2:43 left in the ~me . Bul play at Soulhem Tuesday and host
Meigs, which wa• whislled for more Alexander Friday.
lhan a few traveling calls throughoul Ouartcr ll!ll!.b
!he nighl, was also buried by River Meigs ..... .................. l2-16-7-17=52
Valley's I I -for-19 foul shooting in Riv(r Valley ... ........ 17-15- I 8-19=69
the lasl quarter.
·
l"eigs (0-1): Hannan 4-2With 3 :35 left in lhe ~arne , 4/Hl=IS, Bella 3-J -0/0=15 , Abhou
]ames' . layup extended River 3-0-0/0=6. Humphreys 3-0-0/0=6.
Valley"s lead t~ ,59-44. Hamian's Smiddie · (-1-0/0=5. Bentley 1-0lhird foul on lhe play put James al 0(0=2. Tolals: 15/30-0/17-4/10=52 .
lhe charity slripe, frotn 'where he
PREPARES TO SHOOT Meigs guard where the Raiders controlled the boards at both;·.
AssistS: 11 (Abbot! 4)
sank lhe free throw that gave him his
Jeremiah
Bentley
(22)
prepares
to
shoot
as ~iver . ends en route to winning 69-52 in the teams· seaBlocked shots: 4 (Humphreys 2)
t.OOOih career poinl. James became
Valley
center
Mike
M'ollohan
(42)
defends
during son opener. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Field goals: 21 -47 (44.7'){ )
lhe first maJe player in River Valley
Osborne)
Friday
night's
game
at
River
Valley
'High
School,
Fouls: 23
history and lhe third player from .his
school - Amber Stalon (1992-96)
Fouled out: Benlley
Rebounds: t 7
and Sarah Ward (1994-98) preceded
Steals: stalislic n01 kepi
him - 10 reach that plaleau .
jusl jumped higher Ihan rhey
Turnovers: 24
did," said James, who combined
River Valley (1-0): James 7-3forced wilh Mollohan, senior forward Waylon McKinney- rhe for- 8111=31. Sullivan 2- 1-7111=14.
mer Marauder wao;. lrealed to a cho, Fowble 2- (: lli=S. Jackson 1-0rus of boos from lhe Marauder fans 3/6=5.
Mo llohan
2-0- 112=5.
Wesrbrook
2-0,0/0=4,
Mercer
I-Oduring the player imroductions and Westbrook 10 ou1rebound Meigs O/Q=2. Totals: 17135~5/12-20133=69
10-5 in the first half and 27- 12 after
Assisl.'j: LQ (Su lli van 3)
halftime. In addition. James and his
Field goals: 22-47 (46.8'k)
comrades on the fron1 line kep1
Meigs from gelling more lhan six
Fouls: 17
Rebounds : 37 (James 10.
shots per quarter in a six -fool radius
Su llivan &amp; Westbrook 6 each)
of lhe basket .
'
"Our inexperience at the guard
Steals: 5
Turnovers: 15
spol showed, " said Meigs head
coach Chris Slout, whose crew
opened its season with senior guard
Angelo Rodriguez on lhe disabled
list ,"They (the Marapd~rs).al least
..
'
)'Olaf
on a New
played hard, and lhat's what I expecl .
·Car
and we :wW try to
of them."
·
Shooter's gallery: James' 3 1meet or Beat Cite DeaL .
·).
FOR ..\ GOOD DEAL••
poini show was mainly the resulr of
See
Bob R-. Bob Stanley,
10-for- 16 field-goal shooting !hal
.
~.-J
Sheila Sddham ·
cradled a 3-for-6 effort from threepoint range. Half of Sullivan's 14'.V~
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN
poinl effort was built on 3-for-8
461 SOUTH THIRD
PHONE 992 -2196
MON.·FfU. 8-5; SAT. 8·12
field-goal shooting.
.
t...l
MuFFLER sHoP MoN.·FRt.a.s; SAT.a-12
Hannan led the Marauders with
'P
NEW HOl/RS IN SALES MON.·FRI. 8-8;
an 18-point effon built moslly on 6for-16 field-goal shooting. Beha's 15
poinls game from 6-for-13

Ot:UI ),:C

-~,o

$,jY.95

Sentinel Stllff .
CHESHIRE - Conlrol of lhe
boards and position shufning were .

Football

2:~5- 75- 1 5

Sou lh" r~l

M1 ~~ \/a lk; St 1)11
-Pme lllull .'\1
·
l' hn,n:m 74. 1~ W;l\hlllp tt •n ~~~

••

V:dk ~ llm~ll an t\~ .tdcm~

~SPENCER OSBORNE

IT'S OURS! '- Marshall's
Carlos Smith celebrates
with head coach Bobby
Pruett and their fans after
the Thundering Herd's 23-17
win over Toledo in the NIAC
title game Friday night in
Huntington, W.Va. The decision gave Marshall Its sec·
ond MAC championship and
.propelled it into the Motor
City
Bowl
opposite
Louisville on Wednesday,
Dec. 23. (AP)

All Tt·rrllin 560 Tn•utlwt•ur

~

•

hg tlau.-JJesdbul • Page 83

River Valley ta lies 69-52 ·Win
over Meigs in season opener

and inspirallon tonighl If you don' l
undersrand that. you don' 1 understand the game of foolball:· Prue'n
said .
Toledo·s Wa~~ean Tail scored o n a
one-yard run in rhe lim quaner. his
firs1 rouchdown si nce rhe 1995 las
Vegas Bowl. He sal out lhe 1996 and
1'191 ~a.'iiOn't ret:uperating from ~
knee injury.
.
Marshal l also heal Toledo in las1
year'&gt; MAC Iitie game. do in ~ so by a
34- 14 margan.

Kuhmo Power Guard

l.n11111r
rc ,H~

C'u)ahn)! :l

N uo t lnt d g~·.

· ~lld"t:~l ·

1o

_A nt \.l't!'fT' J6

Ft ~l d ~'! .

~M

Gr o ~cp on ~5 . We st l a nd~
F&gt;~ lls

Allen East 60. Ada 40
All1ance 55. Austintow n- Filch .U
Amherst-Steele 6-1. Wt"IJtngton -19
Ann.:r 54. M:~ri on Lo~:a l 4~
Anchany Wayllt' 56. Otsego 52
Archbold 72. Wau5eon 60
Ashland 7S. Lod1 Cloverleaf 46
Ash1abula Harbor 60. Howland 4J
Auica SC'nt"ca E. 76, Monroeville 60
Avon High 60. l..nrain Cathol ic S~
Barbenvn 9.1. Akron Springfield S6
Beallm lle 74 , Conocton Valley 65
Bea~er Eas1em 5J. Ponimouth E. 51
Bedford 93. Padua 56
,
Belmont Union Loca l 56. Sl. C1airJville 5.1 ,
Berlin HilAnd 64 , Wc5t Holmes :'i4
Berne Union 66, World Harvn.t 52
Breck5ville 77, lndcpclltknce J5 ·
Brooklyn 88, Beren 68
Brookside 6J. Buckeye ~2
Brunswick 4], Parmu Sr. 40
Dru sh 57 . Easilake North 46
BucUye Valley SJ. Olentangy 46
Bu~yru1 Wynford 66, Upper Sand usky 48
Cadiz 47. Bridgeport 20
Cn lvMy Chr. 9 1. Cin. Christian SO
Cambr1dge 55 , Culumbus South 4J
Campbe ll Memorial 44. LoweJI..,iiL" 42
(aMI Fulton NW 61 . E .Canton} .\
Canal Wif'!chester 69. WC'5I Jerrcnon SJ
Canfield 65 , Warren Hard1ng SS
Canton GlenOnk 64. CoL Whetstone 58
Canton Heritage Chri s1ian !i7 , Lakt Rid[lc
Academy 45
Cnnt un McKinley 6 .~ . Camon Timke n ~g (01')
Canton South 57, Canton C,C, 56
Carey 6B, Mt . Blanchard Ri\·erdale -14
Cnrroljton 75. Jewen-Scio 44
Ctott!rburg 79. Millerspmt ~
Chaney 66. Solem 6-' .
Chdhcmhe 56. Athens 48
Chll licotht Huntington 78. Pon$mouth Notre
Da n~

•

• , Ja d,\1111 \'llk flh ' S

Ohio

Friday's act.ion

•· Ctmagu at N:1shn lle, 8 p nt
1' l'lul:wld lllm• 31 [o/ orado . Q p rn
~ .l'1•nl11nJ a1 San Jose. 10 ·' OJI.m

.

Soulh•·rtt Airlinn Lobo Clauit-nnl ruu r.d
NE Loots Hlna 67. Troy St 47
.,
Nt w MC'~tt ro 66. Nonh Tell as 5,\

2

2

ti:!

Tn· V1lhl¥e ~ ~
R o'~ 6~. Hm• lt nJ!: Gr~T II ~l't
1-1 lt!'nntn ~~ 1-' M1 lkr f'1 ty ~
Gahanna 7J. Col Hank ~ -t6
Gatav.ay 71. IJUkm V01 l -K1
Geor t-CI&gt;JI\ n 62 . Wt:"~tc rn n r"" n ~h
Gmud tlfl Mac d!lnnld -'K,
Gorham I ·•)•1 te ~ 4 . Atllwcrp \6
Gos hen t-.7. New Rt ~·h mnnd .~I
Grand RI\ CI' 6~ . Clt!'\'d anti Her1t:t!l&lt;' l()
Grand\lcw 6~ . Ctll Wt•ll tnJhun ~I
C r:uutlk 6~. F;urfi eld Um t)ll ~0
'GrL"enficll,l McClai n 70. W11ming1nn Il l
Grr:en\'tew ~ 6 . Spring. Cadi Crm 5.~
Gn• ~C' C1ty t'M . Ma11ella -1 2
Grove City. Pa (J{), Aoardm.1n 12

Rua:t&lt;r L Whilr Tuurnamrnt·fint round
Non hwrslnn '1.&amp;. OHIU :'i9
W Kcnluct..y 7K. Mat lk' ~ 7

(J(JO

EI)'C:II C q

franklin
ITt:niOnl

Commuet !:lank Clu!H(·nrSI round
Outler 62. Oregun 5.\
K an~as 7.'i. Md . Eil~tern Slime " 7

6

fa lr \ 'IC"

hJfl H:e.·m n ) :'i1. K;ti1Ja .10
frank 1m rurn;l('(' Green 60. Cia ~ t12

Ja~ha•k

WESTERN CONFERENCE

\,1. ......... ···················---··· l'cl liH
SI{;U dl•
7
I
S i~t~' J n~
(, 4.
l'ehlanJ
:. .a .l
t:olfm1do
2 b

A ur or~a ~ 4

• ln!JiKhLcom U.tnrl-tinl round
Anzona 8 ~ . Sam Houston S1 12
Loo n1anJ T~: t: h 89. Iowa Sl 60

ll' ~2 ·Iff.

,.

Ed gcnon 70. SlteTY. CXJd

l:.dnn :'iK llamtllnn. lod ~~
El t m ~o: M m)~''Jic 11
Elyna S1. 1,1 . A\o() l ,.;1kl· .l(t
l·.u dt tl M . S 1 o~ -~~
1-:h'f~ l ~'\.'n b1 . Pllllk'Cf NPrth c.-nu :d

Idaho C la!l'~ic·li ~tl round

"

·"

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

-James scores 1,000th career

••

..

•.

•

Gallipolis' Ho.metown ·oealer
'

•

. I.

1616 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(740) 446-3672
CALL TOLL FREE ..

1~800·521-0084

·VISIT OUR WE BSITE AT www lo mpeden com
I

'

'I

99 CHEV. BLAZERS
~

· 2 Dr.' model, 4·wheel drive.
.

Starting At

$20,470

�Sunday, December 6, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipqlis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

f

Ohio shocks No. 12Syracuse 61-55
in Carrier Classic

~I

. SUnday, December 6, 1998

-

It's me to accept
franchl'se changes

SONY PUYSTATION
wl.. pwcHH ef Y..lcle
(Does no apply to priOf sales)

.l
'

I.
'
'

~ Defenders do~n Parkersbu~g Ch.ri$tian

NO MONEY DOWN
NO PAY.ENTS UNTIL MARCH 1999
W/APPROYED CREDIT
Credit Applications _
A re Now Being Accepted For Procea1fng

PRICES &amp; PAYMENTS CLEARLY MARKED ON WINDSHILEDS

.
CUI

..

AM/FM .................................... :;.~.......................................... $9,435
FORD CONTOUR #7605, 22,000 miles, A/f, A/C, tiH, cruise,
· windows &amp;locks .........................................:........;... $!1995

AM/FM cass .......................................................................$11,180

::Ohio Valley Chr.... .20-29-22- 14=85
::Parkersburg Chr... .... 2- 12- l 0-13=37
;: Ohio. Valley Christian (2-0):
:-Burnett 8-0-4/6=20, Bowman 6-0· .415=16, Sllemor~ 5c J-2/2=15 ,
~ • Abram s 4-0-0/2=8. Sande rs 2- 1~:o/0=7 . Turner 3-0-010=6. Holcomh
!2-0-010=4, Haley 0-1-010=3. Jenk ins
:• 1-0-010= 2, Moyn 1-0-0/0=2. A.
~:Willi a m s .1 -0-Q/0=2 Totals: 33/56- &lt;
. ;311 0-10115=85
:• Assists: 15 (Mey n &amp; Sit.cmorc 4

AQUATRED II

Our bH1 Wei Traction Tire

$67~1!~0R13

• :cacti ) ·
·
:~ Blocked shots: 3 (Burnell 2)

"·

Turnovers: 14

•

::

- fui Dtpt\J Trood ar-lioiYt! SuporiJ W~ ~
•'tiro S!M\Bolls Prov\c1o Smooth Rldt I LDng · ' - Shouldtr-. ~"'" c.t"' Sloorinv

• Exceptional on Road Performance

Parkersburg Chri,tilm (0-21 &lt;

• Quiet Highway Ride

R.._

'• Deep Circumferential Grooves Provide
Efficient Water Evacuation 6

..•, ••

$

Hydroplaning

205!75R15

•••

~~ovc girls

,3

Aealsts

97

155RI3

'

215mR15
235/75R15

1101.75
$108.25

235/85R16 $150.83
245/75RI6 $101.19

'2t5{8SR16

t141 .13

Other Sizes AvaUable

18S/65R14 $71.118

$4900
215~0R15 ,

205/75R14

205/65RI5

$73.811

VarkJul SldeWillo I

NO.IIS

s~

..

~ Tea mmate

Tessa Huggc ny ha\1 10.

::
Jenning Wcnnin £ led Ro'c l-l i ll
:-~ with 12 poinh.

·. :

In

the

ni ght ca p.

Delaw are

: • Chn sti an knocked o fl
X~..: nia
z:: ctui~tian 42- 31 . Ja\ mi nc Harmon

! ; led

Dc) awarc

with

10

point '-..

• -Amanda Bassc u lcc.J Xenia with nin e.
Aller Xenia and Ro., c Hill played

'! ;

: : in the con solatton gamt: Salurtlay
": aft~ rn oon . th e DciC' ndcr~ pl(tyc d

•• Delaware Chri , Li an in the. c humpi tmshir game .
..r •• Quarter totaI s
:,. 1

:;:·Rose Hill ................... ! 5- 10-2-7=34
'"' Ohi ll Valley ..
... 5 - 10- 1 2 - 17 ~44

-lat•

WRANGLER RADIAL
P205f7'5R15 OWL.. .......... 92.00
P215/75R15 OWL ............ 93.55
P225/75R15 OWL.. .......... 90.67
5 OWL.. .......... B6.95

••••••••••••
60 MONTH
•
•I EXIDE BATTERY

Warranty ........................................................,................... $13,990

4X4'1 IIPORT IITILITY VEBICLD

98 NISSAN FRONTIER 4X4 TRUCK #7648, 40,000 miles, Bal.

liner .... ...............................,................................................. $16,885
94 NISSAN K/C 4X4 #7639, V6 eng, AM/FM, CD, A/C, tlh,

: • . $39'~ . :: OIL, FILTER &amp; LUBE
:

1

1

Fits

Offer end s

Mo 1 tvtt~:;~ng~ : :

12- 12-~- N'? other dlsco\.1011 epp~.

Redeem a1 pantc+paliflQ Goodyear rRIIer.

• 1

I I

Include• up
10 5 qt1. 011
.

$16 95
,

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•I •I
0
I
I
0

I

o
I
I

•I •0
I I

WHEEL
BALANCING
BUY 3, GET 1

FREE

.,

I

-·-

l I!

Raceland (21,0 ): Salmons 9-05/5=23. Worthington 4-3'-4/6=2 1.
Byrd 3-0-010=6. Stamper 2-0-212=6.
Christian 0-0-212=2. Griue ll 1-0SECOND YEAR WITH VAR•
010=2. Miller 1-0-011 =2. Totals: SlTV -· Greg James , a 199&amp;
2tii41-3/9-IJ/1.6=62
· River ViJIIey · High Schoo' .
graduate, has begun his
junior year as a · member of
Marietta College' s varsit't
basketball team. The six-foot
guard , the son of 1970s Rio
Grande star G reg James.,
bega'n the vars ity phas. e
his career lor the 14-1 ~
Pioneers last year.
!o
•,

lucky to have her as a part of our
football family. She . is great .to our
kids. She is not only a terrific doclor,
but she is also a great person ."

of Fact. Warranty............................................! .................. $18,495
96 GEO tRACKER 4x4 #7482·
24,000 miles, AfT, sport,
.

·.

4 Dr, 4x4, #7564, AfT, A/C, lilt, cruise,
PW, Pwr seat, sport wheels, roof rack ............................ $17,428
96 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4, 4 Dr, N15n Green, A/f, A/C, tilt,
cruise, PW, PL, CD player, roof rack ..:........................... $19,525
96 FORD EXPLORER 4X4, 4 Dr, #?575, Green, AfT, AfT, till,
cruise PW, PL, sport wheels, roof rack ....... ,................... $18,645
97 FORD F-150 4x4; #7646, 12,000 miles, bal oflacl warranty,
sport wheels, A/C, cassette .............................................. $18,140

96 FORD

I

'·

:coaches, scribe past re$ults
r,f latest Rebel basketball game

97 FORD F-150 #7660, 18,000 miles, bal of fact ·
warranty ......:.................................... ........ ........................ $17,095
97 FORD F-150 #7665, 8' bed- 31,000 miles,
bal of fact
., . '

98

. 5-10 .SPORH7650, 9,000 miles, bal ollact

warranty, A/C, sport wheel, castette ...............................$13,110
97 FORD RANGER XLT SPLASH #7638 34,000 miles, bal of
fact warranty, A/f, A/C, V6, sport wheel, CD player ....... $13,29o
96 ~ORD RANGER XLT #7636, 33,000 miles, bal.of lacl

·

AfT, A/C 1tilt, cruise, PW, PL............................................ $15,420
98 FORD WINDSTAR GL #7645- Red, A(T, A/C, lilt, cru11e, PW,
PL, 3.8 V6 .................................................. ,........................ $16,900
96 FORD WINDSTAR GL #7520, 27,000 miles, bal. of fact.
warr., AfT, A/C; lilt, cruise, PW &amp; locks, ........................... :~14,.~~~
95 FORD WINDSTAR GL 17506 Red, V6, 7 pass, AfT, A/C, '
Pl ................................................................... $1

'

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CHESAPEAKE - Chesapeake's 3-14/22=61
Fouls: 14
varsity girls' basketball team tallied a
61 -27 win over visiting South Gallia
Thursday ~ighl , according to report s
from the Ret)~ls ' coaching staff and
Th e Ironton Tribune.
_ It was the first win for Lynn
Sheets. the former Gallia Academy
assistant coach who is in his first
:Y.,ar as the Panthers' head coach.
; Ashley Mayenchein led the
P.anthers(l - l)with 14points.
, '&lt; Rachel Waugh led the Rebel s (0;2,) with eight .
.
· . The future: Next week 's agenda
has the Rebel s taking o~ Rock Hill in
}heir home opener on Monday. Then
tbey will host Portsmouth Clay on
:Wednesday.
·
:Quarter 1!!lllb
.South Gallia
1-3-10-13=27
thesapeake
ll -22-l5-13=61
•: South Gallia: Waugh 4-0-012~8.
:White 3-0-0/0=6. 0' Dell 2-0-1/2=5,
:Johnson 1-0-1/2=3, Gibson 1-0'0/2=2 Harrison 1-0-012 =2. Haner 0:0-1/2~ 1. Totals: 12/40-0/4-3/13=27
Field goals: 12-44 (27 .3%)
Fouls: 15
Fouled out: Clary

CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.- :
UPOHTHf HIU

•Backhoe
•Dozer
Work ·

.,

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVER GRAVEL

MUSHROOM
COMPOST

Open Monilay thru Friday 7:30am til 4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon .
You Pick VJ' or We Deli VI' I: ·.

446·2114 or 245-5316

card .

I

-•-

47INSTOtK

~

Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Chuck Stowers
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
November.

...

Chesapeake: Mayenchein 4-20/0=14 Fuller 3-1-213=11 , Porter 3- ·
0-416=l0, Sutphin 3-0-2/3=8, Boggs _
1-0-2/2=4, Hall 1-0-1/2=3, Christian
1-0-0/0=2. Day i-O-On=2, Frye 1-0'010=2 Rice 0-0-2/2=2 , Stiltner 1-0;0/0=2: Elkins 0-0-1/2= 1. Totals: 19-

.,.

, ..

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNsoN
Qalllpollt' Hometown Dealer

•

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REsiDENTIAL • C::O.MMERC::IAL

· Faculty, !tall students and admin istrators will be admitted with their lD

.

'•

I

Notes: A Lyne Center member-

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ship Is required to use the se facilities . ..

.

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RODKEY, OHIO

Tmlay - 6-9 p.m.
Monday - 6-9 p.m.
Thesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday- 6-9 p.m.
· Saturday --:- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Dec.
13-6-9. p.m .
" .
Home athletic events
Thursday - Women's basketball vs. Wilberforce at 7 p.m:.
Saturday - Hi gh school girls'
ba sketball (Portsmouth Clay vs .
Mowrystown Whiteoak) at· I ,p.m.;
women's basketball \'S . Denison at 3
p.m.

Congratulations,
Chucl~ Stowers

II
'I

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HOLLEY BROS.

'

SPLIT ,DECISION WINNER - Daniel Craycraft of the . Cheshire .
Boxing Club (center), flanked by manager/trainer Sam Jones (left)
and trainer Larry Craycraft, claimed a split decision victory In his
professional debut against Salim ai·Quadlr of Akron during a Nov.
27 match In Akron.
1

I·

. :i

AIDING MEIGS ATHLETE$
- Holzer Clinic recently pr~:
sented a 56,000 check to hell?
provide sports medici n~ . cov~
erage at Meigs High School.
Dr. Kelly Roush (right), the
chiropractic and sports irijury
physician for Holzer Clil'\iC, is
presenting the check to
Meigs boys' ·athle tic director
Chris Stout (center) and
Meigs athletic trainer Eric
Bortmas.
··

tremendous job for .. us-. We are ·very ··

·-

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Eric Bortmas. who as si sts Dr. Kelly
Roush with the Marauders· injuries
during the school year. Roush is a
chiropractic and sports Injury physician at Holzer Clinic. 'She is in her
second season , ':'otunteering her services as the Marauders' team physician .
"Having a trainer has meant so
much to our football program ,"
Marauder football coach Mike
Chancey commented. "Holzer Clinic
runs a quality sports ·medicine program, and. any trainer ihat we have
had here has been a professional and
has done an excellent job."
Cllancey then had high praise for
Roush. "Dr. Kelly Roush has'done a

~

I

£lllll

cruise, rear slider, bedllner, sport wheels ...................... $12,995
97 SUBARU OUTBACK4X4, 4 DR #7629, green, AC, luggage
rack, sport wheels, pwr windows &amp; locks, 31,000 miles, Bal.

96 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER GRAND VAN S.E. #7637 Green,

OIL CHANGE

P.

of Fact. War. A/C, AM/FM,-CD, sun roof, sport wheels, bed

VIIS

••••••••
••
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~

1/2=12. Davis 5-0-010=10. Boothe 20- 212=6. Bess 3-0-0/0=6. Nieto 2-00/0=4, Fraley 0-1-0/0=3. Rush 1-00/0=2. Totals: 17/JJ.2n-3/6:43
Assists: 13 !Stanl ey 4, Davis &amp;
Nieto 3 eac h)
Field goals: 19-40 (47.5&lt;;1)
Rebounds: 22 (Bess 7. Boothe &amp;
Stanley 4 eac h)
Steals: I I (Be-. &amp; Boothe 3 3
eac h)
Tumoven: 14

Fitness center, gymasium
Wid racquetball courts
Today- 5-9 p.m.
Monday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Thesday - 6 a.m.- I0 p.m.
Wednesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Thursday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m .
Friday- 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p_.m .
Sunday, Dec. 13-5-9 p.'m.

warranty, A/T, AJC, PW, PL................................................$11,030

:- . GAL LIPOLI S l1i Friday
O:night \ Lad y ~ct'c· nd e 1 Tip -Oil

( K y.) Ro . . . _· Hill
; · chris tian in the fir.-.t ruund.
:
The Dei'cnJc r&gt;' i\hh) Mcy n kcl
! lhc all scorer~ vJith 17 pu in h.

Lyne Center slate

OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SL 17649, white, AfT, A/C, tiH,
cruise, pwr windows, sport wheels ...........r..................... $12,710
97 DODGE INTREPID 17655, A/f, A/C, green, tilt, cruise, pwr
windows, locks, pwr seats .....;.............................,........... $12,995
97 MERCURY SABLE 5/W #7662, 31,000 mllas, Bal. of Fact.

97 FORD F-150 #7609, 30,000 mlle,s bal offset warranty, A/C,
cassette, tilt, cruise~ PW, sport wheels .......................... $14,995
95 CHEVY 5-tO Extra Cab #7601 A/C, sport wheels, cassette,
bed llner ............................. t.................................................$9995
95 NISSAN TRUCK #7576 Blue, AM/FM cass, sport
wheels .................................................................. :........... ....$8495·
92 TOYOTA EXTRA CAB #7531, Rear seat, cass., bed liner,
rear slider ............................................................................. $5995
96 CHEV. S-10 L.S. #7559, Extra Cab, A/C, bed liner, cassette,
sport wheels .............. f.......................................................$10,495

'·
•.

· : cd its .'lca-.o n w ith a 44- 34 vu.: tory

$85.18

.195/7oR•• eeua 225/SOR1a

~~ beat Rose
:~ Hi II 44-34

;. over A'l hland

r'

'rRUCKS ·

:, A t ~m . . nn 2 - l - l /4 =~. M Workman .1-

:· Classic at th e Ft r. B:tp,ll "l ChurL· h·-.
:! acti v iti c~ Cl)n tc . Ohi o Val ley
:: Christian girL"'' h&lt;~ s k ~..:.t ha l\t ~o:• t t n ~t art ­

:an

AJC1 rear der........................-. .............................. $13,995

POWER .

Davis. one of the Rebel front men
reeling Salmons presence, finished
with 10.
· Reserve
note.:
-Racel and
whipped South Gallia 70-28 in the
preceding reserve game. .
BJ . Byrd led the Rams with 13
Jk)ints. Teammate Seth Pach 'had 12.
Kyle Mooney led the Rebels with
10 Jk)ints. Teammate Josh Duty had
eigh1.
.
The future: This week's' agenda
has the Rebels playing at
Chesapeake on Tuesday hefore fac ing South Webster in their home
opener on Friday.
Quartertidab
.
.South Galli a ............. 13-8-10-12=43
Raceland ................. ll -19-1 6=62
4-1 South Gallia (0-1):

Holzer Clinic donates $6 ' 000
to ·Marauder athlet"1c program

anN'rtAI' BONNEVILLE 17651, green, A{T, A/C, tilt, cruise,

. High Trle StHI
P155/80R13 ................... 34.115
185/70R14 885 .............. 42.30
t9517DR14 915 .............. 44.50
P215170R14 968 ............ 50.85
· P205170R15 858 ............ 49.25
P2t5170R15 975 ............ 52.05
Pt85175R14 .................. .43.85
P195/75R14................... 45.85
P205/75R15 ................... 49.50.
P235175R15 ......... .......... 55.35

~Moun lain View ,Friday,
· ·Quarter~

..

·

cassette, rear def .............................................................. $13,110

- , Bert Atkinson led Parkersburg
..
: -christian wilh eight points.
:·: Reserve notes:, OVC captured a
; l&lt;\3-26. win in the preceding junior
: :varsity contest.
::- No scoring leaders were reported.
• : The future: This week 's agenda
! :has the Defenders playing at
~;Symmes Valley Tuesday and hostin g

,•

~1~;~;~~~;k~~~:.~~:~.~.~~~~.'. ~:.~.~:.~~~.'. ~;.:s

PONITAC GRAND AM SE 17454, 21,000 miles, Bal. of Fact.
W:,~~:~'l;,l~red, A/T, A/C, tiH, cruise, sport wheels .......... $10,995
cl·
GRAND AM SE 17614, 30,000 miles, Bal. of Fact.
W~r~~~r;.~J
tilt, cruise, V&amp; eng, p.locks ............. $10,995
0;
. GRAND AM SE 17587; green, A/C, A/f,
tllt,c:ass1ette, rear del., dual mlrrort ................................. $1 0,995
PONTIAC SUNFIRE '#7613, 2 dr, red, A/f, A/~, cassette,
def. ............................ :............................... :................... $9,995
PONTIAC GRAND AM SE #7534, 40,000 miles, AfT, A/C,
power windows &amp; lpcks ...................................................... $9995
97 FORD CONTOUR #7661, green, A/T, A/C, sport whels,

~ stretch .

Field goals: .ln-66 (54.5'1&lt; 1
Fouls: 16
Rchounds: 39 (Burnett Il1j
Steals: I11 tMcy n -I t

PRICE
A/C, IIH, cruise, sport

95 FORD CROWN VICTORIA #7647, A/f, A/C, lilt, cruise, pwr.
windows, locks, pwr. seats, leather lnterlor................... $10,645
97 BUICK SKYLARK #7641, 32,000 miles, Bal. of Fact. War.,
A/T, A/C, t!H, crulee, pwr windows, sport wheels., ......... $11,285
OLDS ACHIEVA #7640, 31,000 miles, Bal. of fact. 'A!ar.,
A!T,A/C, till, cruise, pwr windows &amp;locks ......... $11,985
CHEV. LUMINA 17652, red, AfT, A/C, tilt, cruise, pwr
winclows &amp; locks, sport wheels ....................... ., .............. $11,652
FORD PROBE GT 17653, white, A/C, pwr windows, tilt,
~~u:::~~~~e1a~th~er seats,JI!Um.• whe.eis, ...... ,...:..,................,$10, 345
9i
SABLE'J7656, 31,000 miles, Bal. of Fact War.,
A/C,
cruln, 1lum wheels, pwr wlndoWI ........... $12,995
CHR~Slii'R SEBRING LX #7604, 25,000 miles, Bal. of Fact.

0-113= 7. Borden 3-0-012=6. Bennett Workman 2-0-0/0=4, Cunningham Totals: 14-1-6/17=37
PARKERSBURG , W.Va.
Fouls: 16
Powered by' double-figure offen se 1-0-2/4=4 . Nic hol son 1-0-2/4=4. A. 1-0-010=2, Morehead 1-0-0/0=2.
• from Chris Burnett, Brad Bowman
; and Daniel S1zemore, Ohio Valley
: Christian's varsity boys' basketball
: . team pumped its record lo 2-0 after
beating Parkersburg Christian 85-37
Friday night.
The first haif beionged to
Bowman; ·who got 12 of hi s 16
: points in that metch . and to
Sizemore, who had I0 of his 15
••• points
before halftime. Then Burnett
• took care of the second half, scoring
12 of his game-high 20 points in lhal

·;

'

PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM 17611, A/f,
whettla, Am/Fm •.•..•.••~...............................................~ .......... $7;126
DODGE INTREPID 17644, Red, A/f, tilt, cruise, sport
wht!ell ........~ ......................................................................... $6,700
FORD TAURUS LX-5/W 17599, A/f, A/C, tiH, retilse, power
windows, locks, seats..............................:......................... $8,400
FORD TAURUS GL 17584, white, A/f, AIC, tilt, cruise, powr
wlnd1ows, locks) cassette ................................................... $8,495
CHEV. LUMINA #7620,A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise, power windows,
seats, sport whnla ..................:........., ................... $9,585
FORD ESCORT SPORT #7654, sport, A/C, AfT, rear del,1
AM.IFM cassette, rear spoller ............................................. $9,995
FORD ESCORT 17585, 40,000 miles, red, A!T,' A/C,

0

RACELAND.
Ky. Worthington
Mike
Salmons
and" Shannon
combined to ~utscore South Gallia
44-43 to push the Raceland Rams to
a 62-43 win over visitng South Gallia
Friday nigh!.
"He pushed. us completely out of
bounds. but we didn't back away,"
said Rehel boss Mike Jenkins of the
6-foot-2, 240-pound-plus Salmons'
do~1nance of the pam!.
.
We play~d prerty well. but'" the
last six minutes, they put it away,"
said Jenkins of the Rams, who had to
rally in the second quaner 10~rase a
two-point deficit.
Salmons finished with 23 puints,
while Worthingtc.n finished with 21 .
Rufus Stanley paced the Rebels
with 12
Teammate Jerc:my

:: It was an interesting scene in Baltimore last
;Sunday. ~ans were attacking the Colis as lhey
made the1r return to Baltimore for the fim time in
.15 ~- Yes, fans arc still bitter about what hap·pened when their beloved Colts left in the middle
:C?f the night in the ·summer of 1984.
,
· There were still fan~ protesting the move and burning the late Colts'
owner Robert lrsay in effigy. 1 still didn't understand why they wanted to
·bum someone who's already dead!
. • 1 have never favored franchises moving to different cities. After AI Davis
;took the Raiders to Los Angeles, it opened thC _gate for a plethora of teams
to pursue better deals in qther cities. The Baltimore Colts were the ne~t fran·~hise to jump ship. Now we have the Rams in St. Louis and the Oilers, soon
:to be 1itans, in Tennessee. ·
...
:- In lrsay's defense, the last year the Colts played in Baltimore they aver:aged around 35,000 fans a game. There were nearly twice that many who
.showed up last Sunday to boo Indianapolis. Baltimore may want to sched:ule the Colts OQ·a yearly basis. After all, the Raven~ have had trouble filling
:seats Ihis season. Some games have as many as 15,000 no-shows.
. : What is of interest is the hypocrisy of'the' Baltimdre fans. They are still
;hiner at lrsay taking the Colts to Indianapolis, but justify their own theft of ·
·the Browns 'from Oeveland.
.
.
' Even former quarterback Johnny Unitas, wearing a Ravens' shirt, still
. refuses lo have anything to do with the team for which he once played. He
feels they abandoned their roots when they went to Indianapolis
:: Don't these fans and former players realize that their team will have to
play the new Browns on a yearly basis beginning next year? What kind of
reception do they think their Ravebs are going to, get when they enter the
new dog pound?
.
· 1 was amazed to hear fans tell reportm that "the Colts leaving Baltimore
'was not the same as the Browns coming to town." One reason suggested W\IS
that !here have been so many franchises which have moved in the past few
years that it doesn't matter anymore. Relocation is commonplace in today's
, ..
. $fl9rls world. ll's no longer an issue!
"
• lfthis is true, why are these fans still so bitter at lrsay and the Colts? They
· :point oulthat Oeveland got a new team in three years and .kept the Browns
·;name and colors. But the poor fans in Baltimore had to wait 13 years before
:they could steal another city's team.
.
1
. - 'During an interview, Jim Irsay, Robert's son and current owner of the
: ~am, said thai if~alti~ore ~ad ~iveda new franchise within_ five Y)arli
:of the Colts relol:atmg 10 lnd1anapohs, the Irsay's,would have senously con·sideredgivingt~eeolts'namebacktolhecity.
• • But the Colts have been in Indianapolis half as long as they were in Bal; timore. Young people under the age of 20 don't remember the Baltimore
:Colts; consequenlly, ils is silly lo give the name back to Baltimore. It's time By DAVE HARRIS . .
T-S Correspondent
• fo'r Baltimore to start a new tradition with the Ravens.
·._,
POMEROY - Holzer Clinic for
: - A recent television poll in'lndianapolls revealed lh~l many local fans didmany
years, have helped to provide
;n't know the Colts came from Baltimore. All these fans know are the lndisports medicine coverage for area
• anapolis Colts.
: ~ The Oeveland fans were more fortunate lhan their counterparts in Balti- high schools. The Clinic recently
)nore. They learned from all these franchise moves and demanded lhat the presented Meigs High School with a
:city ge( a new team and keep Ihe old team's name and colors. It's also impor- $6,000 check to help provide an ath4ant lo point out that the Browns, unlike the old Baltimore Colts, didn't have letic trainer from Ohio University for
the Marauder, athletic teams.
attendance problem. In·fact, there weren't enough tickets tO,f!O arouri,d in
Holzer Clinic provides four local
:Cleveland.
·
high schools including Gallia
- ~ New York surviv~d the loss of the Dodgers anq the Giants, so it's time for Academy, Jackson, River Valley and
:'Baltimore to get over the loss of the Colts. They have a team and it's called Meigs with the $6,000 stipends to
'the Ravens.
cover the cost of an athletic trainer.
Their problem next year will be absorbing the wrath of Cleveland fans.
This year the Marauder trainer is
,Unlike lrsay, Art Modell is still alive; howeyer, he_might want to stay out of
.Cleveland, because some ~anll may want to do more than bum .him in effigy.
Sam WJI~n. Ph.D- II •n
profaelot: .DI hll!ory at the Unlveralty of
.' ' .• ' ' . ..
Rio Gl8nda. An evlcl hln of 1111porta- lnd I nNr rnlniiCIIIollowar of btlaketRIO GRANDE ...:_ Here is this
'Iiiii- hele 1 nlllve afQory,lnd., 1nd • g,.duote of lndl1no Un... ralty- which week's schedule for events at the
:lhould tlllrudlrlaomethlng 1bout whiN hie hHd (lnd Hooaler hNrt) 11Univer.sity of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center.

I

Syracuse, which had 13 steal ~ and
forced the Bobcats in to 26 turn overs,
came back from an eight-point. secand-half deficit to make it close.
O ~ i o ' held · Syracuse 110 just four
bask~ t ~ in the fi rst 12:53 of the pcriod and buill its 29-27 halftime lead to
52-44 on a three-po inter by Adell
wnh .4:26 remain ing.
But the Orangemen ralli ed behind
.Danionc Brown, who scored a
career-hi gh 17 poi nts. Brown 's two
free thro~" moved Syracuse within
52-48 wit h 3:28 left. He then stole
.the b all and fed Rya n Blackwell for a
layup 23 'econds later and it was 5250.
But Corey Reed fed S10ncrook for
a layup ~ nd hit both ends of a oneand-one to buo,t 1hc Bohcats' lead to
57-52 with 42. ~ seco nds remaining.
Bl:kkwc ll 's three-pointer moved
S y rm.: u ~c hack \\ ithin three poims
pace th e Bohcats. wh o \v iii face wi th ::! ~ .:2 ~ceon d s le ft. but Du.stin
lllinois-C hicago (3-21 in tonight's Ford and Adell conve rted four of six
TR~ING to ~I through Syracuse defenders oamone Brown and
c"hampi onshLp. The Flames dcfcate_d free"tlirows lO sec ure the win .
.,_ j ~Y Ad e 11 .d urmg
- Frld ay n Ig ht's
Ryan Blackwe 1 (right) Is Oh I~ •s .,..n
Santa Clara 57-44 in the .ot her first " We're goin'g to know what it · first-round contest In the Carner ClaSSIC In Syracuse, N.Y., where the
round eame.
takes to win when we ge t down like Bobcats upset the 12th-ranked Orangemen 61-55. (AP)
,
" WC kne w we had to ~.:omc in and that ... Brown said. ··t jusl went out
make' a slatemenL .. Stonerock said. there and tried 10 make plays. I wish scored 26 points and grabhed 11 back the Monarchs bid for their first
'
:·Now people will pay a little more I could have done a liule hit more so reb~unds to lead poor-shooting 7-0 start since 1960-61.
I
attenti on to us. We c:.J.n' t come out that we .:ould h&lt;wc won.· ·
Illinois-Chicago.
Old Dominion·s Clifton Jones hit
and lose. tomorrow. If we do. 1hen
LaDrcll Whitehead add ed 13
In the only other game involving a three-pointer with 17 seconds left.
people will say we just got iucky. But points for the Bobcats· he fore fouling ranked teams. No. 3 North Carolina · tying it at 61 . Cota took I he inbounds
if we w'in . people will dcllnitcl y have out with 3:2S left.
edged Old Dominion 6.l-61 .
pass, dribbled upeourt and waited for
to respond to us.". ,
··Tell them Ohio U's back." said
No.3 North Carolina 63
the clock to wind down before he ·
The Bobcats wo·n by hol ding · Diantc Flenorl. who had six points
Old Dominion 61
drove the left side of the lane and
Syracu' c 10 3-' percent shpoting and seve n rehounds. "We're gonna
Ed Cota rescued sloppy North banked in the layup. .
. _gnJ y 2-of-14 from thrcc -pmnt range pulthcm bac k on the map."
Carolina wuh 20 points. including a
The Monarchs ' Reggie Bassette
: -and forcing 23 turnove rs.
Syracuse got a suh-par pcrfor- driving layup with 1.5 seconds lel't( had trouhle catching the inbounds
:
" We came a long way," sa id mancc from its three · juniors: to give the .third-ranked Tor Heels a pass near mideourt an~ couldn 't get
-: Adell. who had a game-hi gh 10 Blackwell had 13 points, Etan 63-61 victory over Old Dominion in off a shot before time expired.
·. rebounds and hit three free throws in · Thomas II and Jason Hart jusl six.
the Food Lion MVP Classic at
Cal Bowdlei had 22 points and II
· .: the final minute to secure the win.
" We have nol been a good team," Charlotte, N.C.
'
rebounds, and Mark Poag added 13
:· " We didn't aome in here saying. Syracuse coach Jim Bocheim said.
Cola added six assists and three points for Old Dominion.
; ·were an 18- or 19-point underd og.· " It finall y caught up with us.''
steals as North Carolina (8-0) turned
• We didn 't come here to lose.''
In the opener. Bryant Notree

-Raceland beats Rebels 62-43

:·

.l!ly SAM WILSON
.TIIILII S•sHIMI Corretlponcllnt

By JOHN KEKIS
SYRACU$E. N.Y. (AP) 11Coming off a _p~e-w m season. the
Bobcats of Oh1o Umvers1ty eagerlr
accepted an in vitation from host
Syracuse 10 play in the Carri er
·Ciassic. Good move.
The Bobcats '(3-0) beat No. 12
Syrac use at its own defensivc· minded game Friday riighl and shoc ked
the Orangemen 61-55.
·
In the first 22 years of its own
tournament. Syrac use (6- 1) had
never lost a fi rst-round game. Ohio
coach Larry Hunter wasn't the least
bit surpri sed by the outcome . .
" We' re sk,ii\ny. but we' re stronger
than we look... Hunler said. ··we just
hauled more lhan anythin g. They' ve
been play ing aw full y welL Maybe
they were ripe for the picking.:· ·
Sanj ay Adell and
Shaun
Ston~ rook eac h scored 16 poirus to

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

1616 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
446·3672

.

.

•

'•

'

�•

f

...
Pomeroy • Middleport •

OH • Point PleaNnt, WV

Sunday, December 6,

1998

Sunday, December

6, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,

OH •

_.Wibg t!a--~

WV

Point Pleasant,

• Page 87 •

~~==~~======~~~==~~~==========~======~======~·

South Carolina hires Holtz as head football coach

Orioles add DeShields, keep Surhoff; Blue Jays, Clemens to part ~

By PETE IACOBELU
COLUMBIA. S.C. (AP) - Lou
Holtz is on the case.
... cannot pronu~ you thac we
will win," Hohz told about 5.0011
cheering South Carolina fans at
Williams-Bncc Stadium. ··But there
is no reason in this world why we
can "t be as good as anybndy in the

By RONALD BLUM
AP
Wrltllf

around as soon as we can," the former Notre Dame coach said to one of
.H ovations he got from the crowd
Friday.
,
Holtz. who has been a football
analyst for CBS since leaving the
Fighting Irish in 1996, takes over a
Southeastern Conference program
that went 0-8 this year, 1-10 overall.
Coa.h Brad Scou was fired Nov. 23
and on Friday wall named .an assistant
at arehrival Clemson.
"When· I Jeft the University of
Notre Dame, I honestly felt I would
never coach :igain," Holtz said. "My
bean is now here at the University of
South Carolina. My effon and dedication is to you." .
Holtz said it was hi s familj who
convinced him he should return to
lead his sixth team.
~- A lot of people said, 'You can't
win at South Carolina .and you're
making a big mistake if you go

there,' and they're absolutely right, I
can't win ftere. But our team can and
we plan on doing it," Holtz said.
He promi~ the fans that ''I'm
here because I want to be here."
The deal to bring Holtz .to ~outh
Carolina was to have been
announced Thursday night, but negotiations with the 61-ytar-old fOOCh
dragged on longer than expected.
They went r until 3:30 a.m.' Friday,
broke off, ttien resumed at 7:30a.m.,
said, an athletic depal-tment source
who provided details only on condition of anonymity.
At 10 a.m .. Holtz wondered if he
would ever coach again. But45 minutes later, he had completed the fiveyear, $600,000-a-year deal.
. "I thought if! didn't take this job,
I was never going to look at another
one," 'he said.
Holtz, who flew into Columbia
from his Orlando, Fla., home, met

with thejlayers before speaking to
the crow .
"You could hear him coming
down the hall," quarterback Phil
Petty said. "We all sat up a little
more our chairs when he walked in."
Despile leaving Notre Dame after
tl. seasons. Holtz never lost the
desire to coach. With . wife, Beth,
improving from her battle with throat
cancer, Holtz said he felt ready to
stroll the sidelines again.
School trustee Mike Mungo _was a
neighbptcwhen H~ltz was an assistant
at South Carolina in 1966-67, and he
ran into Holtz again this October in
New York. "I came back here and
told -people that he would be a wonderful answer to our problems ...
Mungo said.
George Rogers, South Carolina's
Heisman Trophy -winning rusher,
couldn't contain his excitement.
"This is.exactly what this university

nc:eds to 8et us going," he said. "This
is even bigger for us than my
Heisman."
Holtz will be paid a $150,000
base salary, but broadcast re~enues,
endorsements and other payments
will boost that to about $600,000
annually, the school said.
"From .the very beginning of this
country. ••
search, Lou Holtz· was the coach we
Those arc the words Gamecocks
identified who would be able to lead
fans have been waiting for since footthe Carolina program to the next'
,ball hcgan het,~ in 1892. In the lasr
level," athletics director Mike
I06 years. South Carolina is known
McGee said.
for what liule it has accomplished-·
Holtz said any delays in th~ negoLOU 1-fOLTZ
only one 10-victory season. only one
tiations were the result of differences
Lou Holtz said there was no conbowl victory, barely any tradition.
in interpretations. "It's not easy to tractual agreement covering his son.
Hohz. a Svengali in pale-framed
put everything together," he said.
But Holtz isn' t planning to leave
glasses. hopes to change lhal. His
"There wasn't any problem or inde- anytime soon. He said that when he
tuu~.:h seems magical and immediate.
cjsion."
.
looked at South Carolina's two U.S.
At his previous five coaching stops in
ThP (Columbia) Stare, citing senators.
96-year-old
Strom
27 seasons. Holtz has gone to bowl
unidentilied sources. had said the . Thurmond and 76-year-old Ernest
games by year two.
snag was at least in pan over whether "Fritz" Hollings, he realized, "I've
" We want to turn this thing
Skip Holtz, the coach at Connecticut, got a long tenure ahead of me."
would eventually ~uccced his father
Holtz was '100-30-2 at Notre .
as head coach at South l;:arolina. The Dame. He also has coached William . ·
sour.cci ..who spoke with The &amp; Mary. Nonh :Carolina State,
Associated Press said Skip Holtz was Arkansas and Minnesota, where he
given no guarantees but would get also ·topk over.a 1-10 team after the
By ERIK BRADY
a founh down and nine yards 'to go call or Mt for marginal call.
NFL owners have come close to '.' fair consideration'" if his . father 1983 season. He spent one season
USA TODAY .
for a first down when quarterbac.k
These are not made public, gathering the votes for its reinstate- leaves. ·
with the NFL's New York Jets.
A pair of old-guard owners joined Drew Bledsoe threw a pass to rccciv- though Seeman sometimes isStJCS ment often but each year fall shon.
m the outcry against NFL ofliciating. er Shawn Jefferson on the side line.
apologies to teams for egregious That could change in light of the
say ing it ha.&lt; never been wo'rse than it
Replays appeared to show that . blown calls. That has happened at unhappiness with officials' perforwas over the holiday weekend . And Jefferson had failed to come down least twice this sea.&lt;on, in the cases of mance this season. The Bills' Wilson,
one of them owns a team that won .
with either loot in bounds,though by the · Oakland
Raiders
aitd a longtime opponent of instant
Wii1iam Clay Ford. 73. who owns rule he needed to land hoth of. them . Indianapolis Colts. It could happen rep!ay.J"'id he is wavering.
the Detroit Lions. thought the offici- He also appeared short of the lirst in the Bills' case ..too. But an admis8.JIIIinstant replay is no panacea.
ating in Thanksgiving's 19-16 wi n down . Either way, the Bills could sion elf a mistake never change~ Jhe In its earlier incarnation it was often
over the Pittsburgh Steclcrs, was the have run out the game's last six sec- outcome of NFL games.
. '-" .
blamed for delays in the ·game and .
worst he had seen. "I don't give a rmds.
.J
Making the grade
sometime~ for Jldding yet another
(hoot) if the. commissioner fines
But. given a first down , the
There is turnover . each year layer of mistakes. But proponents
me , .. he said. "It's just terrible ...
Patriots took one shot at the end zone among NFL officials. Some retire say improved technology means .'it
Ralph Wilson. 80. who owns the i~ a prayer of a pass known as the and some arc released for sub-par would work beller now.
Buffalo Bilfs .. was defiant after Harl Mary. It works something like performance. This year there are four
Cross believes in stant replay
Sunday's 25-21 loss to the New thrs: Everyone crowds into one cor- first-year officials and 12 second- would have reversed the outcome of
England Patriots . "That was the ncr of the end zone as the quaner- year officials. The NFL says it scouts the Bills-Patriots game. He said
worst officiating I have ever seen," back lofts a pass and hopes for the about ·200 college oflicials every Jefferson "was clearly out of bounds,
he. said. " It's embarrassing · to the hest. Usually the pass is incomplete. year and from that selects I 5 finalists which would have ended tbe winning
league."
Sometimes it is intercepted . On rare for NFL openings.
drive .. They've got to find a way to
Arguments over officials' call s arc occasions it is caught for a touchThe NFL requires each official have instant replay again. They· ve
as old as sports. Cries of "Kill the down.
take a melfical exam and Slr~SS test in got the technology. It 's wise to usc
Uinp'· began last century. But criti- ,
Almost never is the defense called March. At their July clinic, officials it."
ci$m of National Football League forpass interference. ·But that's what must pass a physical fitness test that
Disputed words .
officia ls has seldom been
vocifer- happened this time . The Patriots got includes a half-mile run. agility drills
Maybe even on coin IO!Ses. When
ou~ as it has been this season.
an automatic first down at the one- and the 40-yard &lt;lash.
the Lions-Steelers game went into
Can't anybody here officiate this yard line .and scored thc· gall)e-winNFL officials are responsible for overt1me on ThanksgiviQg Day·.
game? Or even flip a coin correctly?. ning touchdown with no time the big plays and the little details: It's Steclers fullback Jerome Bettis
V8, auto, tilt, cruise, low miles and locally ownedl
; . That, at least, was the shri II tone remaining. " To call interference on a also·' their job to make sure that game insisted that he called tails on the
'!( Ialli radio across the country play like . that is simp.ly absurd,'" balls arc properly inflated. ·for all coin nip that would determine which
IQOnday. Callers to New York '~ wrote Boston Globe columnist Will this they are paid from $1,431 to team would receive the kickoff:
~AN radio lambasted NFL. offi- McDonough, who said he'd never $4,330 a game, depending on senior- Referee Phil Luckett said he heard
ci)ls all day, though no Big Apple seen such a call in 38 years covering ity.
heads-tail! and took the first thing he
~ms had been pan of the controver- football. "No official' with any comNFL officials do not work full- heard . The Steelers lost the toss- and
.'M S.
·
•
mon sense would make that call."
time in football. Their ranks include the game.
:; "Officiating in the league has
The Bills expressed anger and high school principals; college proFord was incensed at earlier calls
tteched an all-time low," WFAN outrage. "This was between two fessors, salesmen, corporate execu- that went against his team, particu. ~t Mike Francesa said. "It was an teams out there dying for positioning tives, a podiatrist (umpire Ed larly an inierception that was called
iiitredibly poor weekend for them. " in thc .playoffs and the standings and Fiffick), a California highway patrol- back although replays showed clear~!The NFL's direCtor of officials, their careers," defensive end man (field judge AI Jury) and a golf ly thill the ball had never hit the
Jfli'y Seeman, deluged by calls from Marcellus Wiley said. "We can lake pro (referee Ron .Bium). ,Their coun- · ground, But it was the coin toss that
~s organizations, dei:'lined com- a. loss, but this is cheating. This is not terpans in Major League Baseball. was replayed for days afterward.
J11tnl through an NFL ·spokesman. us losing: this is us gelling the game the National Basketball Association
On Sunday, Jesse Tuggle of the
IlUt he told USA TODAY in 1995 taken away from us. "
and the National Hockey League are · Atlanta Falcons carried a sign forthe
t~t with an average of 154 plays per
Patriots offensive lineman Bruce full-timers. .
·
·. opening coin nip that said, "Heads."
gpjne on a field with 22 players in a Armstrong saw the apparent blowp
"The criticism of ·officiating will The NFL wasn't laughing. On
fqt, full-contact sport, it is unreason- calls differently. "/hat happens," he be justified until the NFL goes to Monday, . it changed its rule of 22
.ae to expect perfection.
said. "They can complain to the full-time officials," Fox TV analyst years thatleam captains c\illthe nip
~:"We always kid them ," Seeman commissioner. I'm sure his in-box is Cris Collinsworth says. "Everyone in the air. Now captains will call it
sijd. "We say they can be excellent real full right now." ,
in the NFL works seven days a week. before the Qip. In addition, th,ee offilJFause they arc. going to try to be
Actually.. it is Seeman's in-box 18 hours a day, except the officials." cials will oversee the ceremony
P.'ffect."
that' s full. Evety week, he . and a
Fox analyst John Madden agrees . instead of o·ne.
:!Lately. N~L officials have fallen cadre of other NFL experts grade the He suggests phasing·in full-time offiNow we know the answer to a
lli shon of excellence, let alone per- officials. The NFL has 16 crews, cials, one every year per .crew. But new spin ·on an old joke: How many
f?tti(/n.
wit~ seven in each crew, and they get CBS analyst Randy Cross throws NFL officialS does it take to nip a
:!The Patriots benefited from bal'k- weekly written reports from the cold water on that notion. "That has- coin?
·
tjl;back controversial calls at the league grading every call from the n't worked , I for Major League
NFL officials make most calls
~se of Sunday's gafne. Trailing 21- previous game. Each play is graded Baseliall," "e says in reference to correctly. They probably do better
I~ with l.l seconds .to play, they had CC for correct call, IC for incorrect complai.nts that umpires have work at their moonlighting jobs than
4.3 V6 engine, auto, air cond, two tone paint, tilt, crulee,
F
.i· •eng~
becqmesoautocratic that some make many of the fanswhoboothem do in
pwr windows, pwr locka, nics vehlclel
up their own strike zones.
their full-time careers. But all it takes

. As George Steinbrenner spoke Baltimore and Detroot tried to do Seroeschampions.
.
glowingly of Roger Clemens, some catchtng up w1th the World
The Onoles plugged an on field
·
hole by agreeing to a $12.5 million.
tl1fee-ycar contract with free agent
second baseman Deli no DeShields
and re-signed outfielder BJ. Surhoff
to a SI4 million. three-year deal .
The Tigers brought back Willie
Blair. acquiring the right-hander in a
trade that send infielder Joe Randa to
the N~w York Meu.
,
And in some . Jesser · deals,
Houston re-signed infielder Tim
Bogar _to a 1.1 miltion, lwo-year
eontraLi; Atlanta signed pitcher Mike
Remlinger to a S1.1 million, oneyear deal, and Toronto signed outfielder Geronimo Berroa to a minor
league contract that guarantees him
$500,000.
Overshad&lt;&gt;wing all that was the
Clemens chase.
The live -time Cy Yo ung Award
winn~r asked Toronto on Wednesday
for a trade to a contender or closer to
home . .and the Blue Jays said they
will comply within 7-to- 10 days.
The New York Yankees. Houston

...

·s

Owners~ players criticize :NFL officials

A~lm~

Hu r· r•"canes
S.. kat·e to .3-3 dead Ioc k
-·

~ DAVID DROSCHAK

.._GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP) ·_
~ a fourth line right wing for the
l'i.ltsburgh Penguins . Dan Kesa usua!b- spends more time on the hcnc h
watch in g Jarmnir Jagr than playing
'!C.h lum .
.
::so nn one was more surpnsed
~~~". Kc~a w. h ~ n Pithhur¥h c:oa.c h
I'OCVrn Constanto nJ kept parnng hnn .
~h Jagr dunng the team\ 3-3 tic.
ft~day nrgh t woth the Carolrna
~rncanes .
·:"He kept putting me_out tllcrc."
s~ Kc sa. a career m1nor leaguer
wao S'Orcd lhc· ¥~Hl~C-tyi~g goaJ With
IQ;35 left - hr s frr&gt;t ol the sc•JSon
a~ on ly t~1c tlmd of his career. " I
""'sn ' t qy1tc "'co to all tlllrt icc

t~t!~."

ESPN asked viewers Monday
how best to repair the breach in NFL
offici~ting, and almost six in 10
·
called for the reinstatement of instant
then ,him producing.
replay. Video replays were used by
"Every time we put them out the NFL from 1986 to. 1991 and
there they had a scormg chance," replay officials had the power to
Constantine sa id of the line of Jagr, · overr~lc orficials on _the field in cerIan Moran and Kesa. ::.It seemed like tatn s ttuatJOns. For tnstancc, on the
Kesa was kind ·o(involved in that Bills-Patriots .game, the· questio'n of
(scoring) stuff. so we JUSt thought, whether JeffersQn caught that side'Let 's try it." It was jusi a feel 1 had line pass inbo4nds could have 'been
fi"om the first and. second periods.''
subject to review, but -the intcrfer·
Kcsas goa l helped snap the cncc call on the subsequent play
Hurri canes season-high four-game would not have been.
winnrng streak . Carolina finished '
with u sc.ason q ow 14 shots on goal.

.

.

Dayton and Edward McGovern. Behind them are
Shane Scarberry, Steven Merry, Chrla McCarty,
Kenny Oyer, coach Scon Jones, Rex McKinnlss,
Dakota Cal8 and Brodie Gill. Not making the
photo session was Joseph Esmaellll.

The Yankees tried tn s ign
Clemens when he was a free agent

rafter the 1990 seaso n. Steinbrenner
••

$100,$200,

trip .
·' ' I did niy hcst to get him :·

$300,$400
and $500

even went to HouslOn on a r~crultmg

Steinbrenner sa id . " I Jon ' t knt)W
whether he think s he niade a misiake .
He certainly w(&gt;U!d have been on a

Correction
GALLIPOLIS

-

my 14 yellrs of. professional foot ball."

In Friday 's

reported · ihat Andre Geiger and
Donnie Johnson led the Gallia
Academy seventh-grade basketball
tca111 with nine-point efforts in the
lllue Devils' 4~ -30 win ovor Meigs
Thursday night.
· T~at was incorrect.
~ Cody Caldwell led the Blue Devils,
with 14 points.
The Trih11ne regrets the error.

1

IN FALL LEAGUE - Members of
Ohio Valley Christian School's Division I 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District Division I fall soccer team
ire (L-R In front) Jacob McDonald, Clinton Greene,
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like it all ."

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.•.

arc

The Penguins, 'who were tl-0

tcam. 't They ' rc not the ~mly . tca!TI in
....consta~pnc s~ud 11 was Just a mat- the league," said Carolina coach
l~ of gcttmg Kcsa some work, m'd Paul Maurice.
· .

is a weekend like this one to shine
the spotlight on them in the harshest
light possible.
"I think all the officials arc honest
people," said George Young, the
NFL's senior vice president for football operations. "Honest people can
make mistakes."
.
. . .
That IS absolutcly •truc. but IllS ol
S!1la ll consolation in Buffalo. Bills
dCiensive end Bruce Smith called the
game "without question 1he most

R~ngers

$4,166,667 in each of the final two Ci
years.
. .
. Surhoff receoves a S4 m!lhon •!
s1gnmg bonus. and wtll get sa!~es of
$2.5 mtlhon on 1999, S3 mllhon on
2000 and $3.5 million . in 2~1 . ;:
Balumore has a $4. ~ molhon op!ton :I
for 2002 with a Sl m1llton buyout,
and the_option wou.ld become guar- ..;
anteed ts he plays 1n 120 .sames or"
has 372 plate appearan;ces'" 2001.
DeShields. 29. had·a .37t on-rose. ; ,
·percentage and stole 26 bases wtt~ ,.,
Stl Louis in. 1998. Surhoff, 3~. htt ,:
.279 thiS season and establtshed . ,
career htghs wn~ 160 htts, 22 homers_ ,
and 92 RBls.
.
·'
" I feel very confident wtth '!'Y
health ahd I'm comfortable wnh ,
being abl~ to play at a high level for,~
(See TRADES on B-8)
·.•
·
·

thnught tu he the top contenders.

as

•ns,
1

and Tcxa.'

".orld championship.!"am. I just did·
n t get the JOb done.
Baltimore. tryong to bounce back
from its 79-83 record th1s year, continued its remake . The Orioles added
Alben Belle, Charles Johnson . and
DeSh•elds th15 week. re,tamed
Surhoff and lost R.1fael Palmetro.
"The ballclub is starting to take
shape," new ·general manager Frank
Wren said. "I feel great about what
we've done behind the plate in
Charles, we've added a big-time
offensive guy in Alben Belle, we've
added someone who.has done everything for thJS franch•se over the past
three . years, and we've added
Delino."
DeShields, who made $3 million
this year, gets a · $500,000 signing
bonus, $3,666,667 pe&lt;t sea~n and

-.
..

'.

..

(

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 6, 1998

Gallia. stations report 2,414 .deer chec.ked
By ODIE O'DONNELL
OVP Corrnpondent

hunter$ visiling their business to buy
food: snacks. and have deer checked
GALLI POLIS - Unless deer say "that its been too darn hOI thishunlcrs working !he Gallia County week for any kind or good bunling.~
fields and woQds step il up on
Mosl ~le like thi• unusually
SalUrday and Sunday, lhe 199M &lt;leer warm weather wilh temperatures in
harvest could fal l 1,000 kills behind the 60's and 70's, but veteran huntets
!he approximalely 4,000 animals would prefer the normal December
laken in 1997.
temps or 30's and 40's.
Through lhc first four days or lhe
One dcer-chCcking station owner
expanded six-day season in Soulhern remarked thai he had even hired
Ohio 1hc s\:ven deer checking sla- additional employus to handle ·the
li.ons in Gall ia County have checked e•pecled influx or hunter5 arriving al
. in only 2.414dccrthus far.
his store to check in their day's kill,
John and Sharon Sanders, who . stock up on food, and purchase gasoown lhe. Mercer-Ville Convienent line. He also blamed the record selStore in M¢n:erville, staled !hat mosl .ling ·high temperal ures for the

decline in hunting related business. '
Gallia County's checking swions
reponed only 154 deer ~;&gt;rough• in ~
Thursday and 178 on Fnday. The Rro
Mini Man in Rio Grande tops !he
groilp wilh a total or . 549 anim_als
checked, bUI261 carne ro on opeomg
da)'OtheMonday. 'fi . 1 1_,_, lh ,

also noled !hal many deer actually
killed in one counly are being tranJ:- \
potted to checking slations in neigi&gt;boring cOIInlies and also checked by
the officers themselves. This makes
it difficult lo . receive a tolally accurate figure on ·hQw many animals are
taken in each county on a daijy basi•.

include O'Dell Lumber in Gallipolis
with SOl, Merce.rville Conviene'nt
373, Brown's Hardware in P.orter
346, Little ~n·s Cilgo in Vin1on
324,· Brown's Markel &amp; Garden
Center 226, and BOdimer's Grocery
in Rodney 195.
Ohio Division of Wildlife officers

Sometime ne•l wul&lt; a composite
harvest repOrt on !he numbi:r of deer
kills will be ·releksed by !he Ohio
Division of Wildlife following data
submiued by !he checking stations in
Ohio's counties, .
'

r UR()IIICI3

UWJS

US 1M

you prepare for you:r winter outings,

wrole Michael Scgcll in an article in
the November issue of Sports Afield ,
it 's almost in~poss iblc to anl icipatc
changes in wcarhcr condilions - or
worse. accidCnts and injuries _: ·that

can make you vulnerable. Hi~ing .
snowshoeing or skiing lhrough the
· l&gt;ackcountry ge nerates ir lol of body
heat. hut a hroken' binding. fierce
snow squall. qui ck plunge into icy
GETS 14-POINT BUCK - ' Lorena Lieving of Meigs County's
Columbia Township killed this 14-point buck Monday, ·on the first
day of Ohio's deer gun . season, on her parent's farm. Lieving, a
sophomore at Ohio University, shot the big buck with a 20-gauge
shotgun. She was unable to load the 170-plus-pound trophy onto
the back of a tour-wheeler and had to use a truck due to the buck's
size. She is the daughter of Randy and Alice Lleving.

NFL forecast ...

(Conlinucd from B- IJ
The Cowboys seem sale in the .and the rest of the sc hedule is rclaNFC East. although their secondary tively soft - Philadelphia. New
is so banged up that they actually rc- Orleans and San Diego foll ow.
s i g~cd Larry Brown, Ihe MVP of ·
· San Dieg() (5· 7)
I heir las! Super Bowl viCloryi, bul a
at Washington (3-9) .
buS! in Oakland and Minnesota. The Baltimore (5-7) at Tennessee (6·6)
Sairus, who started 3-0, seem 10 have
About all 1hc Chargers, Redskin s
fallen to their proper leve l. · But and Ravens can do i~ pl ay hard
they' re stili in a pack wilh Detroit enough and well enough to save their
and Tampa .Bay behind the coaches' jol&gt;s. June Jones, lhe interCardinals. who lead the chase for the im with the Chargers, may nol want
last NFC wild card.
1he post p.irmancntly. but ,he's done
Arizona;s problem is defense. quile well, particularly si nce Craig
Without Eric Swann to anc hor lhe Whe lih a ~ replaced Ryan Leaf at
line, the Cards have given up 32 quarterback.
points a game in their las! siK. inciudJeff Fisher is probably safe : in
ing 34 to the punch less Gianls al lhc Tennessee ; he deserves 10 be. Bul the
Meadowlands. Bul Jake Plummer Oilers are at the bottom of a big pack
looks like he's ready
a star
for an AFC wild card.
_______
...;_10
_become
___
_ _contending
_ _ _;...._.-..______

Baseball trades ...
1hree years," Surhoff said.
Blair goes back 10 lhe cily where
. he had his greatesl success. He was

· 16-8 wilh a 4.17 ERA for De1roil in
· 1997, winning 12 of his final 16
1
starts.
Aflcr lhc season, he signed a
$12.5 million, lhrec-year conlracl
wilh lhe expansion Diamondbacks,
bul he was ~-I 5 with a 5.34 ERA
when Arizona traded him to lhc Mets
on July 31. Bla'&lt;r ·then wen! 1-1 wilh
a 3. 14 ERA for New York. ·
· " I never wanted to leave," Blaif

said. "Thai was probably the besl
time of my career. I was just comfonablc with the guys, the organization . I feel they're really on the verge
of ~onte nd l ng , and I want to be u·part
of that. ''
Part of the rea son behind the deal
' '-!

waters. nr even a minor hut di sabling

muscle pull ·can quickly sci you up
f or a pOlcntial fatal case of hypothermia, the No. I killer of ·ou1door
enthu siasts.

Hypolhcrmia is a co ndition in
whiCh lhe core hody ' tcmpcralure
drops below normal, for mosl people
around 98 de grees Fahrenheit. The
moment your body begins to lose
heat faster lhan il produces it, you
b~ g in to undergo exposure, which
can quickly lead to menial and p'lysical collapse. The co ndjlion is often
aggravated by wind, exhaustion and
wetness - most drowning vjclims.
in facl. first lose consciousness
because of hypothermia.
The firs! warning sign lhal your
body temperalure is ·in danger of
·dropping is. difficult to miss: You
shiver. Instinctively, most people, if
able, will increase !heir aclivity to
warm up. The involuntary· muscle
contractions, which indicale impending hypothermia, are the body 's
attempts to gcncralc heat. , ,
If the condilion progresses to mild
·hypothermia
- about
the core
·lemperature
ha.' dropped to
95 F
- shiver-

contriJI of their hands.
.
Moderate hypolhermla should be
If the patient has 1051 conscious"- .
lrralionality. irritabi lity, slurred uealed !he same as mild, wilh !he ness, handle him verj genlly. as his ·
speech and memory lapses, caused addition of mild beat applications to hean is now extremely sensitive.
by gradual cooling of lhe brain, char- !he head, neck, cheSI, armpits and Check for a pulse along the carotill
acterize moderate ·hypolhermia, in groin. As soon as possible, ' the artery for at least two minut~:s.- lf YOJI
which the core temperat,ure had patient should be seen ' by a physi- . don' l find one, check on lhe other
dropped to around 91 F. Shivering cran.
.
side or the neck. If there is still no
slows 01 slops, muscles beg'in lo
.Severe hyil.othcrmia requires pulse, adminisler CPR·.
.;
stiffen . and apathy sets in.
extreme caulion. If 1he victim is conIf ,lhe palient remains unnesponSevere hypothermia occurs when scioirs but can' t be removed immedi.· sive, do nol give ·up. Resusc'illltioll
1he body temperature .drops 10 'below . ately 10 a hospilal, get into a warmed effons should continue until the bod)"
86 F (30 C). By now the victim's sleeping bag with him and exhale is warmed 10 95 F: Many apparenlly
skin is cold and blui sh-gray, his eyes warm air near his mOulh and nose . dead hypothermia viclims have been
arc dilated, and he's unable 10 coor- Try to keep him rwakc.
resuscitated afler rewarming. As the
dinatc movement He may appear 10 · Do nol rewarm the person's medical literature says, "No one is
be drunk. will probably resist help. extr"'"ilies before raising lhe core dead until warm and dead•."
and will gradually lose con~ious- lemperalUre .. The .rapid dilation of
ness.
bloOd vessels can shunt cold blood
Allhough exlreme cold is an obvi- from the periphery to the hear:t and
ous cause of hypothermia, most cause ventricular fihrillalion .
'
•
cases occur in · wet weather condi- ·
'
·~
lions in which 1hc lcmpprature is
"
hclween 30 de grecs and 50 degrees
Fahrcnheil. If your planning a daylong trek, be sure to wear a hal at all
times, polypropylene underwear lo
wick waler away from the skin, and
appropriate oulerwcar for wet al!if
windy conditions - and, depending
. (Formerly Don Swisher
on your level of activity, don ' t
Ashland)
remove t.oo ·many laycrs even when
you've worked up a sweat. Carry a
345 State At. 160
lhcrmos filled with hot liquid; highGallipolis, OH · ·
calorie food·: and, if you're in a
wilderness area, fire-slarting materials and improvisabie shelter. Finally,
k~ow your limits: Exhaustion is a
. •
I
key precursor to hypOihermia.
The dif(erent slagcs or hypother·
mia require differenl lrealmenl .
Impending and mild hypothermia
can be halted by first gelling tbe victim out or the cold, serving warm liquids. insulaling the body with exira ·
clothes and blankels, ·and if exhaustion isn't 100 great, limiled exercise.

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TIME TOGETHER - Msrcls Elliott, right, snt;t hllr IWO
d11Ught8re, Ang8111 Amold 11nd Amle F/8/dll, Ull«&lt; .t118
Hom••pun Holldlly progr11ni of tiN M•lg• County Exffn-

111on S•rvtc• •• • w11y of •f»ndlng ttm• 'toget!Nr. H~~r•
thay mak• co/¢ul button trH ornam•nt• during tiN
crllft -••ton.

of !alent, lhings cr~ative and crafty, unusual but usable.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmls-Sentlnel Staff
POfi:IEROY - If staying In a festive mood during this
s~ntimentai season is presenling a challenge for you,. relax a
little and take nole of the . beautiful sights and sounds of Recipe• shared during 'Hom11pun Holiday' progr1m
Christmas in the Bend Area.
ORANGE SLICE CAKE
Holiday li.ghts are burn2cupa sugar
ing brightly, church bells
1 cup m1rgarlne ·
are playing carols, schools
4 agga
and churches are presenting
1 teaapoon aod.l ·.
' programs, and community
•I~
• 1/2 CJIP buttermilk
celebrations are taking
3 1/2 cups tlour
place.
. 1 1/2 tHJipOOnl 181t
For many · the days
.. 1 pound orange ellce1, chOppscl
1/2 pound dltll, choppscl
between .Thanksgiving and
1 cup coconut
Christmas mean non-slop
2 cup• chopped nute
everything.
·
Adding to the pressure
In • large mixing bowl, creana Iugar and margarine.
are the high expectations for
Add egga one at a ·time, beating well. In 1 ema)l bowl
the season and lhc tendency
combina 10d1 and buttermilk. Add to cre1med mixture.
to get caught up in an
Stir In flour and aalt. Add orange allc11, datil, coconut
exhausting quest for a pic·
and nuta. Pour In greased and floured 10 Inch tubs pan.
lure-perfect celei)ration.
. B1k1 1 1/2 hourelt 325 degr111.
·
·
Topping: a cup orange juice, 2 cupe powdered sugar.
When that happens it's
Comblnajulc• and sugar. Ppu·r over hot cake. Refrlg·
lime to take holiday activierata
overnight. ~amove from pen•.Rifrlgerate.
ties from a place or constant
SANTA GcWDv BA(;S o.. A
motion ltl one of personal nov•l wsy to iM/Iv11r • tr1111t
meaning -- to pause and II thll S11nt11 b11g, 1/lown hll/'8 MINUTE MACAROONS , ·
enjoy that enhanced sense during a holldlly workshop
1 pound packag4t 1hredded coconut
of family a,nd tradition lhat conducted by : Ext•nslon
1 15-ounc• can •wa,tened conde!'lsed milk ..
make the holidays special, Ag•nt B•t:)lY Bs~~r. Sh•
2 teaapoona vanilla
to carry out the rituals that ahsr.tl fh8 pattern for a felt
Preheat ov1n to 350 dagre11 Fahrenh1it. Blend
anchor families, and spend S/lnts whlcfl hill 11 pouch for
c11ndl...
'
coconut
into milk. Add vanilla and drop by te11poon
time reflecting on Christonto
well-greased
cookie 1haet. Bake 10 inlnutee or until
mases past.
cruety,
but
not
brown.
Cool two mlnut11 before l'lmov·
. That's what Becky Baer, Meigs County Extension agent,
lng
fro111
cookie
&amp;hilt
with a apatula. Chocolatl or
stressed in her recent "Homespun Holidays" program ,allhe almond-flavored aw11tened
condensed milk c•n bs aubSenior Citizens Center. It also included the sharing of holi· etlluted.
·
day foods and recipes and a craft session where ornaineqts
were made&gt;
·
"The holidays are sul?posed to be a time of joy and ccle· FRUITGLAZE
.
1/2 cup e1ch of dried apricot halvee, callinyma f'll•·
bration," said Boer, "but allloo often they become a lime of
extreme Slress and frustralion . There just never seems to be peech halvea
·
3/4 cup •ppleluice
enough lime, money or energy to get everything done . •,
1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom
. .Simplify, start early, take shorlcuts, and enlist .lhe help of
2 tea1poone cornetarch ·
family members are among Baer's suggestions for making
1 cup uch green and red grapsa
the holidays more enjoyable. EverY cookie does~'! have lo
be made from "scratch", said the extension agent, who-proIn 1/1/2 quart gllle ca,llrole, combine rprlcota, flge
posed letting the kids make goodies from prepared refri~er· and peachee. Add ,1/2 cup apple juice and cardamom.
ator dough and ~se their imagination in decQrating them.
Cover. Microwave on high 5-8 mlnutea or until fruits are
·
·
She stressed (he importance of leaving time for family plurt)pscl, stirring o'nce:
In
small
bowl,'
combine
cornltarch
and
remaining
1/:f
relaxation •· things like going caroling, participating in ·
cup
apple
Juice.
Stir
until
emooth.
Add
to
fruit
mixture.
"sharing" projects; visiting shu tins, · and delivering goodie
trays and fruit baskets to the .less fortunate. Acti,,ities Mix well. Microwave on high, uncovered 2 mlnut.,, or
until mixture Ia thickened and trensluc1nt, stirring once.
emphasizing family values are .of extreme importance, said Add
grapes. Stir gently ,to coat. Spoon · ae garnish
Baer: ·
.
around baked ham or port roaat.
Children seldom remember lhe toys -they regeived as a
child al Christmastime, but they almost always· remember
things done as a family. That's why it's important lo involve
children in every aspecl of holiday preparations and activi.ties, Baer added.
·
She cautioned parents to be realistic in !heir expeclations
from chil\lren, and advised them 10 remember that it ·is the
participation, not the perfection, that matters in the sche me
of things.
.
Ways 10 avoid the "money trap" were.,discussed by Baer
who cautioned thallhe worry and slrain over finances takes away from the happiness of the season .
'
As a rule of thumb, she said, families sho uld nol spe nd
more lhan five percenl of their annual gross income. on
Chrislmaso She proposed making use of a Christmas club ·:·
through a bank or a special savi ngs account and th en stayi ng ·
within that figure. .
.
Pinching pennies during November and Qccember, and
spending several months in the new year paying off holiday ·,
bills, takes away from the happiness of the season, slated
Baer, who stressed lhe importance of laking conlrol over
deCisions on expenditures, and not yielding to pressure for
things the family really can't afford.
.
"Leave hom e without them," was Bacr's advice aboulthe
CROSS.STITCH MATS- B•cky ·Bur, Melgll lldenuse of credit cards when Christmas shopping. She also dis- •lon agent, llhowld tiN n••rly 110 women •ttendlng th•
cussed Ihe danger of impulse buying, ,and of·"buy now, pay · 'Hom••pun. Holld11y workshop how to m11k11 colorful
croi8·SIIIch mara for tiN holiday ••,.on. ·T h• decoralater" offers which are so prevalcnl during the holidays.
As for how to cut down on !he cost of Christm as, Baer ttv• mara c•n bll uaad at thl door, In front of th• hnrth,
proposed gifl' of time, such as babysitting and cleaning, or or hun.g on the w•ll.
......

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.

. ing is inten·se and uncontrollable and
(Conlinucd lrom B-7l
usually accompanied b~ increased
is money. Detroit \}Ssumes the entire
hands
and feet
turns white,
·an
pulse
and rapid
breathing.
The skin
remainder of Blair's contract: which on
calls for salaries of $3.5 million next indicalion lhal the body is beginning
10 constrict blood vessels at the
year and $4.25 million in 2000.
Randa hit .254 lhis year with nine extremities and to shunt blood to' lhe
homers and 50 RBis. He became body core to protccl vital organs. At
expendable when Dctroil signed 1his stage, most victims also lose
Dean Palmer to a $36 million , fiveyear contract. The Mcts may send NFL fines Policy
him on 10 another team.
"Inside. I know I pitched hctter . CLEVELAND · (AP)
than my record or numbers go," he Cleveland Browns 'presid~nt Carmen
said. "I didn't throw as well as I did Policy was fined $10,000 by NFL
in Detroit, but a 101 of that has to do .
Paul Tagliabue for l-....----------,-..:....;:..,;;;.._..;;::...;:..,..:;..;;;...,..___-.,____~-.with a lack of run support. When you commissioner
vioiating the league 's tampering
gp out !here every inning and wilh rules.
97 DODGE
"91 OLDS CUTLASS
· 98 NEON DR 110s1
every pilch lhe game ts on the line ,
At a civic luncheon last week
All power, aut,o. NC, cruise,
il 's tough to make a perfect pitch the Pqlicy hinted the Browns would be
Hlghline, 16~ooo miles,
4 Dr, Red, VB, auto
whole game. That's the way I felt I inlcrcsted in Mike Holmgren if the
4 Dr
auto; air
had to pi1ch."
Green Bay Packertoi coach were avail ~
8
8
Only
able.
·

;,

Section

Sights and sounds
of Christmas
in the Bend Area
.

Hypot~ermia .i sn't just a su~zero phenomeno11
By SPOR1S AFIELD
A Hearst Magazine
Sponsmen ,J&gt;eware: Hypmhermia
docsn'l hil only al subzero 1empera-·
tures.
The cold is a killer. Plus. it's
sneaky. Regardless of how carefully

Along the River

.

..

THE DOLL TREE- Th8 .30 COIIIum«&lt; do/11 which will b8 IIUcllonld off S/llurdlly • I biMflt for 1118 Un/fld Fund of M•lgl County are dl•pt•yld on lh• dolllrH In tll8 Fllrmll'l Bank
lobby. ,J011nn• Wllllllme, chalrm11n, plcturld working with th• d/apllly, w111 lnatrum•ntlllln lltanlng the community project 111 y••re 11go.

. Dress-a-doll contest
~ring's tale~t, creativity".
and generosity together
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Seritlnel Staff
POME.R OY- Chrislmas is
a time for giving and what
could be more generous than
using one's talent and creativity
in a community project to ben·
.
efil others. ·
Many Bend area women
· have done just that. They have
costumed dolls for lhe annual
diess-a-doll contest sponsored
by lhe Farmers Bank for the
benefit of the United Fund of
Meigs Counly.
· The dolls will be on display
in . the lobby . of lhe Farmers
Bank ·until Dec. I 2 when Ihey
will be sold to the highest bid·
der at auction. All proceeds
will go to the Uniled Fund for
dlslr,bution to local service
organizations . Last year lhe
auction broug]ll in over $1,600.
For many years the Bank
has sponsored a dress· a·doll
pontcst as a way of contributing to the community. The
bank provides the dolls for
dressing in one of several categories · - bride, character, crocheted. pretliest, and 1904 doll,
the year the bank was founded.
This year's costuming is
outstanding. The·dolls, usually
arranged on shelving at one
side of .the bank, a~e displayed
in center lobby on a C~ristmas
lree designed by Laurie Reed
and conslruc(cd by Brian
Zirkle.· The tree, covered in
·gold .cloth and trimmed . with
greenery, has platforms tci
accommodale the doll stands.
The dolls were judged last
wee~ and Ida Marlin of Mid·
dlepor\ was awarded the grand
pcize for her doll dressed in a

red and green Victori an costume.
. She was preS&lt;;'nted
a $200 savings
· bond by Joanne
Williams,'w.ho ~as
chaired the projec"t
since its inception
15 years ago.
Other winners.
in the v.arious categorles are Bobbie
Reed 1
. .of
Reedsville,
the
prettiest, a Chrisl·
mas angel; Doris
Roberts of Mason,
character doll, Lit';
tie Red Riding
Hood, and 1 !he
1904 doll, a South·
ern Belle; Barbara
Curnutle of Gallipoiis, a bride
· doll; and .Ruth
· · Cuber of Toledo, a
doll in. crocheted · . GRANO PRIZE..._ lrl• M•rtln of Mlrtdl&lt;,.
costume. A $100 pon W8SIIw•rdld th•grllnd prlu ln 'lfl•
savings bond was Farni•r• &amp;Ink fllHI d,.....,odol/ contul
presented to the . with.II vtctorllln c011tumeln 1'8d •nd g,...,,
winner in each cal· Th• d••lgn flillured • red dre•• w1th 11n
egory. The judges ovsrco•t of holly b•rry print, •ccii,.Orlud
also awarded hon- with mlllchlng h•t ·rid lho•a, lind II Whit•
arable mentions 10 futher boll. Sh• wu pr..•ntld II $200
Sandra Laudermiil, · ••vlng• bond.
Deidra Cross and
minialure Ieddy bears or olher
Ma.rgie Grinstead. .
animals clutched in their hands
The dolls, s.ome in satin and ortucked under their arms.
lace, other in calico and couon,
All have hair and many have
flannel and norais, ranging it styled to complement · their .
from· summertime casual to outfits. One dressed in ouldoor,
elaborate P.riod costumfhg, are attire has a short straight cut,
cxceplionul by !heir design and while others in elaborate periqd
workmanship.
and bridal costuming have long
Many have elaborate hats, curls or upsweeps.
some carry handbags and bas·
When the dress-a-doll con,
kets, anolher is holding an lest first started more than a
umiJrella. A few even have · hundred were costumed but as
the yeMs have gone by; the
numbers volunteering to dress
a doll have declined. The con. leSt WaS evert disconlinucd for
a few years and then resumed
three years ago.
In the car.ly years lhe dolls
were given to youngsters at the
.Children's Borne in Gallipolis
and lo ladies at the Extended
Care Facility al Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The auctions became popu·
lar several years ago ~nd every
year Racine auclioneer Dan .
THE WINNERS - Flrlt place wlnnere In categort•• of lhe Smilh volunleers his SCf'liccs.
dt'8se.,odoll conriar .wre, l•ft to right, &amp;!rbllre Curnutt•, Gal·
He'll be at Farmers Bank
1/pplla, • bride doll;. Oorle Roberta, Mason, • characl~~r doll, . Saturday . at 1· p.m. to a~pl
•rid tht 1~ doll, 11nd Bobbl• RHd of R••dsvllle, lh• pr•ttl- bids on ·the more than 30 ccs·
turned dolls.

••t.

•·

....,

.'

�'
Sunday, December 6, 1998

Page C2 • ~ he·--~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy • Mid.dleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

sunday, December 6, 1998

How.does 'Moi' smell? Miss Piggy thinks it's irresistible.

Anniversary

Anniversaries

By JORDAN LITE
Prl'S'&gt; \VrUer

~f&lt;.lll\.'1.!\

SAN fRANCISCO IA I')
l.t~nk uut. Kcamil . M1 " P•g~~ h;l'
bundwd her uwn fr~•graJH:I.' lm~ .
'••ymg it h~h ··,, u:rtam JC 111: ••II'•
mm '" that maLL':!&lt;t her 1rr~·' ''''hk

Open
house . to be held
.
Mr. and Mrs. William Martin
.

Fiftieth anniversary enjoyed

,
COOLVILLE - Jim . and
June Nolan of Belpre 'will he cclc·
hrating their 50th wedding anniver·
sary with an .open house on Sunday.
Dec . 13. at the Coolville United
Methodist Church fellowship hall
from I to 4 p.m.
They were married Dec . 14, 1948
by the Rev. L.C. Rucker 1n Belpre.
Mrs. Nolan is the daughter of tlw,
late Erma Dunlap and Leon Morris.
Mr. Nolan is the son of the late Mar. garct and Jesse Nolan of Rockland .

SHADE . 'William and Joy Lea
The Martins arc the parents of.
Jones Manin of Shade. celchmted four sons and two daughters. Bill
their 50th anniversary on Sunday. and wife Kate. of Pickerington. John
Nov 22. 1998. at the Shade Unitcd and wife Judy of Yuma. Arizona,
Methodist Church. with the renewal Jerry and wife Kathy of Reynolds·
of their wedding vows. The couple . hurg , Tim and wi fc Patty Martin of
married on Nov. 14, 1948, in Charleston. West Virginia. Peggy
Pom~roy.
.
and husband Malcolm Gruser of
i
The renewal ceremony was pcr- Shade. Penny and hushand Paul of
fornJ~d hy their youngest son, the West Palm Beach, Florida and one
Rev. Tim Martin. The couple's chil· daughter deceased. They have 13
drcn acted as honor attendants. Paul . grandchildren and live great grand·.
Galloway. son' - in - law, sang and sons.
By COUNTRY LIVING
granddaughter Tamara Martin,
Martin retired trom the Athens A Hearst Magazine
played the piano.
For AP Sp«ial Features
Messenger after 38 years.
Period mantels arc one of the ,
pieces in highest demand in archi·
tcctural salvage shops across lhc

Period mantels in '
popular demand

Meigs Community Calendar

; The ·community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
!iroups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is mll
designed to promote sales or fui.d raisers of any type. Items arc printed as
space pem1i1s and canno! be guaranteed In run a specific nurnbcr of days.
SUNDAY

.

; NEW HAVEN - Sandra Long of New Haven. W.Va. will be singing at
t~e Poplar Ridge Church off State Route 554 Sunday, 7 p.m.
~ONDAY

: POMEROY - A public hearing about fees whtch land owners must pay
l'or utility pcnnits will be held at6 p.m. Monday in the Mei gs County Com·
roon Pleas Courtroom.
'

I

. RACINE - Southern Local Board of Education, spec ia l session. Mon·
d~y. 7:30p.m ., South~rn High School, Racine'. to di sc uss salc« ,f hnnd s to
finance distric1's school construction prqjc~.:t.
CHESTER - Cheste r To;.nship Trustees regular meeting . Monday. 7
p.m. town hall.

LETART huilding .

Lwort Township Trustees. Monday. 6 p 111. at the office

SYRACUSE - ·Sutton Townsh ip Trustees. Monday. 7:.10 p.m. ill Syra·
cuse Village Hall.
RACINE - Racine Chapter, OES . 1·egular sessi11n. Monda y. 7}0 p.111 .
Tllt:SDAY

,

POMEROY - Salishury Township Trustees. regular mee ting. Tuesday.
6 p.m. a1 the t&lt;Jwnship hall on R11ck Springs Road .
'
I

POMEROY - Catholic Women's Cluh Chnstmas gathering Tuc.sday.
church hall, 61i m. $5 gilt c.changc (lptiona l.
•

PbMEROY - lmmuniwtion clinic . Tuesday. 9 to I I a:m. and I 111 :1 p m.
Meigs Mullipurposc Center. Pomeroy. RCcorti~ to he provided . child to he
itCC&lt;1111panied hy parent/legal guartlian.

News Hotline News Hotline

.446-2343

Mr.· and Mrs. Nolan have two

daughter~ and sons-in-law. M~ry

and Don Taylor of Coolville . and
Ernw and. Spence Rutter of Belpre.
They have eight grandchildren. .

land .
Today. however. wrote Bruce E.
Johnson in an anidc in the Dece mber issue or Co untry Living,
renewed interest in th e restoration of
hi stor ic homes has spawned a new
industry dedicated to savi ng s uch
original treasures for usc in rcstoratl. on projects and new comaructio n.
Mantel." hav.c stood at the heart of
the American home f(lr .;.:c ntmics.
Before the davS of ce ntral hea tinl:! ,
L!m:h major rm;rn in a house dcpcntl cd on it s own fircplm:~: for heat.
Firchoxes were comm1m ly drcs~ed
\vit11 stone. bri.;.:k m tile. :('he addi . '
liun of wooden fram es. or ma.n ~els.
not only added t~ Jc~:mativc clement
to a room hut also provided u prm:lical place on whid1 tn display house -

Stop Th~t Wishful
Thinking •••

He i~ rl'fircd from Dupont Washington Wnrks·aftcr 30 years of ser-

vice and is currently employed hy
Krogcrs of Belpre. Mrs. Nolan is a
homemaker.
II is requested that gifts be omit-.
ted .

w~aring

' Mm ."

Open 9-7 Mon-Fri1 9-5
1-4Sun.

new restaurant.

and Robin Gibbs. will take place at
the Compston home,
South Sec·
ond Ave., Middleport, from 2 to 4
p.m.
They request that gifts be omit·
ted.
Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs were married
on Dec. 15, 1948 in Pomeroy.

ALL

~at.;

OVER 200 VARIETIES

HERBAL SAGE TEA CO.
LOCATED IN
RUTLAND DEPT STORE
41 MAIN STREET
RUTLAND·,OHIO
MON·S·T 8 AM-7PM 740.742.2100

..

We've Reduced

cxis.ts yet to show that any on!.! type

Paging Prices! '

Davis. " The only thing that matters

is thai you hrush yo ur teeth.

.

.

95

a month

or

News Hotline
"

.
.1.

Months

•

(

If you have any of the following conditions you may
qualify for the cardiac or pulmonary rehab program:

Holzer Clinic of Jackson
25 South Street .
Jackson. Ohio

The Bandstand
l'ramed ·Full Color l;t·inl.~ l'rom O~IGINi\1. Wal&lt;:t'Color
1'1\IN'I'INll. hy local at'LisL Ei\~1.10:. TOPK Thes!' arc
limited edition prlnl.~ numhcn;ti ·Hnrl slgncrl ,

.'

Fo
• • ..,

.._ ....._

• Chillicothe
Santa has a special
• Gallipolis
package·for these cities • Jackson
and surroundin·g·areas: ·. • Portsmouth
• Waverly

'
(11" x 14") ...............
·
$!)quu
In golcllrame
....... .. ...
.
qr unfrumcrl (B"x 11") ........ : .................... $15'"
Some fr ~hKhnn~ ~pply

211 Welt Second Street
P.O. Box828

42120 Stilt Route 7
P.O. Box338

Pom•roy, OH 4578V

Tuppers Pltlnt, OH 4578~
7401&amp;&amp;7-31 &amp;I

740M2·2t36

[740) 286-6417

FURNITURE
GALLERIES ·

1s.t Upper Rlvtr Rotd
Qolllpollo. OH 45831
7401......2285

BANK

:-Jecon!l Ave. ut Grupe • Gallipolis

lit

Member F.D.I.C

..

'

Paging Rates as low as

\

"

SPICES• HERBS

of toothhrush design is hcllcr at
rcmovmg pluque' than another.·· ~ays

.The Cardio/Pulmonary Rehab Program offers structured and
monitored exercise and educational sessions to help those with
cardiovascular and pulmonary impairr~leltts!

(7401 446-5280

TEA~

Mantel s cmm: to mirror the :m:hitL'Cturc styles-prevalent in thc United
State:-. . beginn in g: in L':1rly AmcriL·an
times when they oftL'Il rnimidcd the
gen tle ~.:urve-.
in\l.:rinr molding
und chair mil:-. Thi s t cndcn~.:y was
mrist dearly seen Junl1g tlw Vk tori afl era. with a steady success ion of
.~tylc rev ival ~- Got hic. RoL·oco and
R~..:naiss an~.:c. tn name a f(;w.

*Recent Heart Attack
*Shortness of Breath
*Asthma
*Asbestosis

•
'
•••

BUY ONE GET ONE FREE

•

Sycamore Cl1nlc
4th &amp; Sycamore St.
OaiUpolls. Ohio

~unbap m:intes- ~enttnel

hold ohjccts.

Car~io I Pulmonary Rehabilitation

Pluse call for more
Information on how
these programs
un help youll

'

HERB. SALE

Ellis, a consultant to Bellevue ,
· Wash.-bascd Optiva and a dental
hyg1cnist in Aspen, Colo. "The
quadpacer ensures that you ge t even
and thorough brushing in all areas."
Meanwhile, Teledyne· Water Pik
of Fort Collins. Colo .. makes the
ScnSonic Plaque Removal Jnstru-"
ment, which claims to deliver
30,000 brush strokes per minute.
stimulates tootf1paste into a buhbling-aclion foam and reduces cof·
fcc. tCa and tobacco stains.
·
II seems "sonic" has become the
buzzword in oral hygiene these days
• as if vibraling sound and super
speed arc synonymous with clean .
Well. arc they'!
Phillip Davis. a dentist a.nd puhlic
information officer fm the lowu
Academy of Generni.Dcntistry. has n
.mixed view.
"No body ~f sdcnt ilk evidence

·" Move over. Mr. Manual Toot~ '
brush. Your electric competitors are
here to stay.
.
:· Almost one in eight American
homes has at least one oral power
1091 according to U.S. News and
World Rcpon. Electric toothbrushes
account for $184 million in sales, or
abput one-fourth of !he total tooth·
brush market· and they 're still edg·
i~g upward.
· .So it's not surprising \hat the gad·
gc!s' ma~crs keep brushing up on
technology and adding one sassy
de,ign component after another.
:;For example. Opt iva Corp.'s
Soojcare so.nic toottlhrush comes
wiih 1he ''smartimer " automati~.:
s~tit-off feature that lets you know
when it's OK to stop cleaning.
Another feature. the "quadpace r,"
beeps every 30 seconds to remind
you to move to anolher section nf .
tiJe- mouth
'
• :." Right-handed people tend to
sp~nd n lot more time hiR&lt;hing the
l &lt;!f~ Side of their mouth,'' says Willi
,•
••

WE WANT 10 HELP YOUR WISHES
COME TRUE... I

992-2156

*Chest ·Pain !Anginal
*Cardiovascular Surgery.
*Emphvsema ICOPDI
*Black Lung

S11mc ;nt;l l}" h \'-ere !&lt;~ h·p liL"al .
" \Vhat J o you think of when
yo u ih1nl... of Mi!&gt;., P1~ gy !&gt;. lllCII "!
II '~ not t!OPd ... .., ,. jd L:lura Ric !&gt;..'
prc-. idc nt of R• e~ &amp; RI C"'. a markL' ling ~tra tc gy gnl up in Atl ~1nta .
" Sh ~·.., " Muppc t. \Vim want-. to

what's ·happening
,in .'}lour world ... Read the
Golden anniversary to be noted
~unhnu
&lt;(!times~etttineJ
55

. By SUSAN KREIMER
. Des Moines Register

211 L--'-'Ito 061o
740·992·3785
QUAUTY SINCE 1959

Open :Jri. &amp; Sat. S-10
Suniay 9·2

740·698·2450

Bh 1n 111111~d;tk'i'&gt;

l' r:h.';""~ ~·al e..

~now

The sonic boom in toothbrushing

'We art proui to offer you an
efegant lining e;o;peril.nce in our

Carpenter

.......

'

e

maf:.! t!U :perject p{ace for your
company or family fwfiiay piJJ'ty.
We can accomnwiate up to
140 guests .

39655 Carpenter·Dy~•vitle Rd.

~d ...

Pcrlumcr!'&gt; he hint! ·· Moi. "
whiL'h hit Bloomin!.!d:ak ':-. :-.hdvc !-.
1:1!-&gt;l mon tll for the l~oliJa} wa . . II!L .. mcll 111...1.' a Muppct .'"
!'&gt; ay il .... m..:lb ltkc ·· a hoUI.(Ul'l t'f
Mi:-. ~ Pil!g)' hc,p to d1fl'cr.
s cJliL'ti\'~.: flt,wa )'o wanncU with
" M tti :u11 a pi g - hut. moi am
"~.:ollie - r~ll hl' r . note... of w ':.nm . MORE th ;in a rig. " she , aid
hltlnlh.• WIHHJ S. :·
while on lill" ~tlipn for her ne -' 1
Bui won ., women he lUI"Ilt.''l! oil lilm . ·· Muppch From Space .· ·
hy a p0rfuml' a~ .. o~.· ial~c.l \\' llh 01
·· Moi ha\'c written hc-.1 · :-.cl lln ~
pig '!
hoo b ... Mni h ~l\ c ~•rpc ~m.:: d 111 h 11
·· onl' mi ght thin!.. th.1t. hu t' l llH! t ll lll ·pl l'l UfC ' a nd tdt.' \ i~lon
thinh 1h:1t M1s' Pi ggy ha .. ~lf '" ~~~ . . hm.,~ . Mo1 have ;appeared ,nnl hc
lo\ ahk tlwt :-.h.: hring s with it not L" l!\l'l td 1·\ :oplc . Ld c a nd TV
the lli11"!1J;d rcl'ling ah;lUI P•~ (iu llk . So . don.' t look dov.n on
SL'L'Ilb. ·· ... aid Nan t:y Lu~.·L'k . ;1 · m~ . hu-.h.:r loll !.. U P (o me . And
BI0 11111 i ngJ alc ·:'I ·' PI'kc :-. wollla n
11 ynu "rc 11111 L':lrc ful. look OUT
Topper s~.· hrocda . wlw ;.~ :-. for 111L'~ ..

MIDDLEPORT - ' Ralph "Jr."
and Dorothy Childs Gibbs will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary
Saturday, Dec. 12.
An open recep ti on, hosted by
their·daughter and son-in-law, Glo·
ria and Larry Compston, and their
son and daughter-in-law, R. Gregory .

eomeln
K di C]ewelers
14nd Sign Up ·O n.Our
.. Wish£ist
Jor 14 ehance 'l'o Win
' 14$500;00
Shopping Spree

:J'I cliarming country setting wout.

'I1ie Carpenter Inn
&amp; Conference

the El11ah~..:th

, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs

count ry.

A few decades ago. many old
houses would have simply been
reduced · to ashes and hulldozcd
underground - period mantels and
all - ·p;iving the way for new hous·
ing developments, wider r oad~.
shopping centers or tillable farm-·

I'

would not
II!! UrC!&gt;. for " Mm .''
hut l.ucd... d~11111t!J that 1.:'\C O at
$:!-l a hollk . 11 1' provw~ to he a .
hnt item at the ~.:o mpan y ' 2J
' tore-. around th e c.:o unlry:
·

..

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nolan

P•.1!!!)

lor o l th .ll wnriJ." hw: 'a aJ .
.. ·ftu .. .... nol )OUr orJtnar} r· ~· It

wri~t of the ~(l hilliun U.S.· fra frant·L· industry. But for thl'
fanh..'d ' ~iar e~f The Muppct Show.
it ':-. ~cri' ou o, hu,inc"'' - anJ nol
:-. l.rit.·tly for m:uaial ·rc ;J~on:-. .

l"iln· J l.. ccp hi s liulc flipp~.·r,.. off
'
mc .

OIDWELL · Harold and Ada ~Y~ · ~·
Pavne of Bidwell, will celebrate
Mrs. Payne was a cook at the;
their 73rd wedding anniversary on Bidwell High School . She is I~ ·
Dcccmhcr 12. Th.cy were married in daughter of the late William an~:
Ga,llipolis in 1925. at the Gallia Adalinc Stevens.
: ·;
Count~ Courthouse.
,
They arc hoth lifetime members•
Pay'ne retired from Gallipolis of Mt. Carmel Baptist Church :i~:
Development Center. He is the son ' Bidwell.
: ;:
of the late Rev. C.M. and Sam

,L,

"f\ ( 1

r~l \

l.:u..ltH he elegant. ht.' ltCr th &lt;m anythin g ~o:l-.c I ~.·om ltnd on the mar-

Kcrmll fint.ls nic mnrc atlral"II\C,
mon: allurinc th;an C\'Cr.'· Mi ,..s
Pi g~y said ·f hur,da y. " He ju't

Couple to note anniversary

"""'-'"' .li!f..:l·J

1u 1hc ,ingmg I'm~ .
Hl."r limill'd l'diuun rcri!Jnlt.: .
" Mu,: · may he ju .. t a ·datJ .,,n lhc

·· when I'm

Mr. and Mre. Harold Payne

ul Gl.'nJ~annc l ·ra·
o l \\'c ..,t iloll)" ood
h._·lpcU till· Muppl't dc\clop h.:c

JlrL'' JdL'nl

•1\s~ociated

express
yourself

l'&amp;'l.o•" .

,,

'

•

·:I

'·

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 6, 1998
. .

Sunday, December6,1998

EngagemeJ?tS

Civil War ·letters tell of day to day living in time of conflict
mnrh~r

the Inih•" mg an .. arut.:tmn . . :
1.•.~;1\ mg C.uup \\1allat'l' I
"'l'nt SI JOO to l·.mnland lvr thL!c.
ThJt 1~ ;til Y.l' ho.l\c dr;mcJ 'mn~ I
lclt (amp \\'a) nl!.. I mt~nd hl ..~nd
1110!1-l Jll Ill) money lo lhcc WtK-n
the~ \\fiiC~. 11!11 me how much thee
ha~ g'ot. T r) &amp; sell thee ~nrn '0 a!-1 w
r..:al11c !&lt;.OOJCthmg fur it. Whl·n the
potatoes arc du~. let Mr. Fndra h~''C
..;orne. he k1 me hil\'C th~ M,:..:d. Have
you got a note from the rnan ll\·mg
on the plal'c'! Y1)u o,ught w ha\'C a
note &amp; good seLurily. I \\uuiU he in
la\(1r ol kl'cping Jewel 1f you· 1.:an
keep her in gnod order. If how..:vcr
you ...:an .. ell her lor a gt,H )(.) pncc. lcJ .
h~:r go. Our time is 1a~cn ur drill in!'!
mo~l uf the time. We ~ct hi tic tnnl'
i'or :lnyth.ing cL.. c. The~ we:Hher ha:-.

By:

" B~h~h~

James
Sands

" I ta"l' my pen om.·c nwn.• to \-\'rliC
a fc" lin~..· ... I am L:"ool.. lod ~t~ &amp; haH~
just !!OI my dt~hc.; "a,hcd &amp; meal

• .Qoal ing for '"PI"''- I hualcd he an'.
.. fried mcm &amp; mJdc i..'n ffcL' for dmncc

- For ~upp..:r I am (OO~mg lrc .. h meal.
We haH· got our tcnh nO\\ &amp; arc
divided· into mc~:-.c .... from I R tt'l 20

iii J me"' · Eal:h lllL' '" do&lt;.'' it s own
.. '-''lokmg . And in th~.: course of c\t::nt~
. .
.
• Ills m) l&lt;lrlunc to Ulll" ttJda! ."
The- Jhnh' 1~ !rom a letter"· ritlcn

.

hy Cahm Dtg,g . . m th(' Llll ul IK6~
, while Dtgg .. ~~- a~ ~~ ~ltt o nL'd .tl GJI·
: lipoli :-. . He ~J.\L' ht~ addn: .. ~ &lt;h Cnnp
.;' M(EII I. G~llltpolh . Ohto. K-hh R..:c .
: Ind. Vol.. Co. A 111 em.: pf Ci1PI .
'• Bum:., . A :-.crw..... nl Dt1!~..,
... · ktli:r.., !..'an
• he fuu nJ on th1.· \\'oriU \\'1J~ \\'ch.

.

~

In

that !&lt;o&lt;H)h: IL·ttj..'r D1g:g~ fl"-' ' h 1~

t"l~r:n \t:l'}

1hc
it~

~mny .

fine ever 'IIU.:(' l litJllC ITJtO
\Vt.· had r.nn b .. t night &amp;

ra1ning no" ...

In (lthi!.r lett er... Di\!~' complained at'lout how !'o loV:' ~ Suppli..:~
were !!C111111! to the trnnp:-; at Gallipn11 ~ . II ''a~ &lt;tlmo!'ot Dcl·cm~r ;md the
tlll'O nf tltc X-tth' lnd1an.1 had ' till not
rcl'ciwJ tlh:ir ''lllh..' r hoot!'o. If they
neede d Lo Uia~c tl11.:y na!IJ ha\'c

talcn H fmrn General Mml_!an' . ,
men.
While the lndt~ma Rc~imcn1 wa!l.

ri\·cr. There arc "'i" &lt;rr.Cl"C"-h
pr:I!Ot&gt;ncrs tn guanJ. hc~ic.Jcs 'umc
al Gallap&lt;&gt;li&gt;. General Genr~e W. unruly Uninn huy~ . I e~m . . idcr
Ml•rgom c ... lahli sbell hi"" hcadqua;tcrs myself rununate in gelling at the
hen.:. Mtwgan ' s.trnops had just ct•mc prison, for I will nul hC CXfKJ'I.Ct.l tn
out of the Curnhcrland L:ampai,gn. In :he min and cold. The weather h.:re
faca ahey had 'marehcd all the way to ha.&lt; hcen damp and chilly fur Ihe laSI
Gallipoli, from the Curnherland few days. I do not know how lung
Gap.
we will remain here: pcrha(l"" not
h was noted of Morgan's forces: long. Our Col. is now at lnd ianap&lt;&gt;·
"Although the hoy&gt; Sti ll hore the lis. It is thought that he ha.~ gtmc for
marks of 1hcir severe marL:h . yet lhc the' purpose of gellin~ us inur anoth·
good order and &gt;Oidierl y hearing cr brigade. We have hccn in compathey manifested. indi~atcd the thor- ny wath the ~Oth Ohio regimcm and
ough di -ciplme ;md drill to which under the command of Col. Cranor,
they had heen syhjected hy the ir since coming to Gallipolis. lllc boys
officers. Gcncml Murgan is u !&gt;c hol- do not like Cranor. and the two re~­
ar. gentleman and a soldier."
. imcnts do nnt work we ll log-ether.
In the fall of I X62 Ihere was a lnl We wanttn he with lnJ ian;a huys and
of inuvcmcnt in and out o f Gallipo- under India na men . Cui_ Cranor
lis. O ther r~gimcnts that spcnl pari went up th~ river with hi s n.:,gimcnt
of tile winh~r of I M02-6~ in and the olhl!r day. Wi!. Jn not w:mt to!!"
;around Gallip&lt;&gt;lis were: 91st OVL up the "Big Sandy Ri•·er". and I tJo
34ah OVI(Znuaves), 401h OVL 2nd nut think we will. I hope we wi ll get
Virginia Cal vary. IJt'h Virginia Vnl- . transiCrrcd inlo some other division.
U':llccr!'o. and 1 Virg'inia Battery units. What nur Cnl. will do for us. tinn:
In late Nu•·emhcr nf IM62 Cah·in . wi ll rcvc':ll . Frnm the po-..uinn we
Digg!'o· unit w;L..; mon·J to C.1tk•11 ..;- occupy h..:re. we c.:an s~c thrc~ .. tal~s.
hurg .' K y.
We arc now in Virginia. n!!lll ar.:ro!&lt;.~

Di~t Group. tJ a.m. ~ 11
Ml·thodi~L Churl'h

Sunday, December b

•••

Un1 t~d

...

ADDISON · Preaching service at
Addison Freewill Bapaist Church.
7:30 p,m. Rick Barcus pre~c hin g.
***

: PORTER · Clark Chapel Church
i;crviccs. {l p.m. with Rev. Cal,vin
Minn is.

•••

. CENTENARY · Centenal)' United
C:hnsti an Church services with Head·
~d Home si nging: and Terry Call
preaching. 6 p.m.

~endcr

hef&lt;N'e the hanh.
.
11ac Gate"'' ha\C a 2 112-year-old dau~htcr. Jennifer Kath ••nnc _
•'
Gates. ~ha1rman of Mkm\Ofl Cfu'P·· i~ bchcvcd In he 1hc "urld-.. rjdt&amp;;t

pcr~m

•••

HENDERSON. W.VA. - Western
square dancing. 7:30. I0 p.m .. Hen·
dcrso n Rct.:rcaliun Building.

This phote was taken from the Gallipolis City Park during the
Civil War. Among the troops lhat spenl time here from 1861 to 1885
were the men of the 84th lndiania. Calvin Diggs, of that unit, wrote
some Interesting letters.
lhc " Bi g Sandy Ri \·cr" is Kcnlu\.:ky.
It wnulll •he interesting tn know
&lt;md across the Ohio Ri ver w~ 'an what hccamc of Di~gs after he left
sec the state of 'O hiu. I mn nuw in .
Gal lipolis and Catlellshurg .
Virgini:.J hul will !'oncm 0c in Co.11leus
Ourg . Kentucky~ watt.:hi ng dirt y.
ra!; gct.l !ttCn:sh . ·

• Increases Energy
• Lowers Cholesterol

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE...

4

1414 JACKSON PIKE

•••

POMEROY - Narcotics Anonymous Li ving In The Solution Group.
Sacred Heart Catholic Chureh. 7 p.m.

•••
•••

Card Shower
GALLIPOLIS · Lizzie Fanning

•'

Monday, December 7

•••

• GALLIPOLIS- Narcotics Anonymous Miracles In Recovery Group.
~t . Peters Episcopal Church. 7:30
p.m.

•••

. CHES HIRE· TOPS (Take Off
founds Sc nsihly) mccr.in g:, at
Cheshire United Method ist Church.
~0 - II a. m. Call Ann Mi tc hell.m 388
:''8004 fo r infonnation .

***

: GALLIPOLIS · Overeatcr's Annny·
: mous ?t ~e~v Lifc ..Luthcran Churt.:h. 7
• P rn . Fur anlomw11on call 446 · 4889
: or 367. 747:'&gt;.

***

,

GA LLIPI)LIS ·Community
~ Grie\ 1n g Parent' Support Group. 7 ·
; p.m. Nc\~ Life Lutheran Churdi. For
" inli1rlllal i1Hl \:&lt;!ll ~46- ~XXY
. 11r 4-t6 ~
.. 4066.

.
•

ENO · Enn Granec #20HO an nual
: Chri.. tllla!'o potluck J in n~r. 7:10 run .
: Mt':H furm shed. BrirH.! ~..:~mn~.:d fo od
~ ror Ser.:nit'- Hou!'oc ~
•
•

Thursday, December 10

•••

BIDWELL · Garden Of Mv Heart
Holy Tahcmaclc prayer serv1cc. 7
p.m.

***

POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
Anonymous mecling Tri - County
meeting. 61 1 Viand Street (use side
entrance). 7:30 p.ri1.

Our Babies Are
Getting Sick When
They Don '1 Have To.
Please Give Them ,
Their Shots.

•

***

.

Tucs~y, Dt•ccmhcr

'

•

I

(

"

We win now be serving you for all your catering needs.

Where every event is a special one.
Call now for your Holiday Bookings
Call for custom menu to fit your needs.

. ***
Friday, December 11

***

GALLIPOLIS - Akuholic&gt;
Anonymous llK'Ciing. ~ p . m . s't.
P~1crs Episcopal Church.

.

Gallia Cou.n ty
Health Department
Gallia County

446-4612 EXT. 292 .

***

Let us copy your old
family photos. Special 2Sx7's lor $14.95. Reg .
$19.95. SAVE $5.00. We
also do passport pholos,
ldenlllicatlon pholoa and
same day service on
,; . • pholo finishing. Walch
Baueries while you wall.

8"'

Friday Dec. 11, 9:30

.

' 1/2 ct

1/4 ct.

Dla. Earrings

Dia.-Baguette
Bracelet

Viarrwrufs N ~
u

~oUf

On the Corner of 6th &amp; Main, Pt. Pleasant, WV
Across from the Mason County Coorthouse
(304)675-7600 www.gallipolis.com/karat
FREE PARKING•FREE LAYAWAY· FREE GIFT WRAPPING

: NANTUCKET. Mass. (AP) ·- For
· 10 years, Thomas Johnson kcpl a
: deep secret - he li ved in a three·
i room home he buili 8 feet under. ground.
His sec ret came to light ab0ut a
· :_ month ago when a hunter found a
·: stovepipe sticking sli ghtl y ahove th e
:- earth.
.·
Police investigated. Heal th
·: inspec tor Richard . Ray. found L'Ollc
: "violations in the home and cvil.:tion
: &gt;procecJmgs he gan .
·
The 13 6~s quarc - foo t home -~i s
: underne ath " Boy Scout l·amp : ground. and Police Chi ef Randolph
, Norris sa id the st.:outs arc l- lclt in g
: Johnso n. 3H. ~wy th('f'C for now.

Weekdays:
9:3Dam·8:00pm

Saturday:
9:30am-5:00pm

Sunday:
1:00pm·5:00pm

• Go online to Rio's Website- www.urgrgcc.edu
•Calll-800-282-7201, ext. 7366
•

University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College

Join Storyteller
:Michael 'R . :Xasony-O':Malley
for an afiernooi! of
Christmas IJ'ales of tfie 'Early 19o,os ·
C(,risrmas ·-rates

of ,r,,
'Early 19oos

CUCKOO CLOCKS
'.

News policy

·' r ------------------..
With Any Purchase ol $299.
'art me~~

20% OFF
On All Cuckoo Cuckoo
: CIOOkl In Stock

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

Location: bossard Memorial Library
When: Sunday, .Dee. 6 at 3:00p.m.

Galli olla '

TISFACTION

''
'

~enttnel

''

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and up You Will Receive a FREE

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ahd Donna Andcr~on of
Phoenix. Arit.
The wedding will he held at 7
p.m. on Tue,Jay. Dec . 22. al the
Hills.ide Bapti st Church . Dr. James
R. A..:i-cc will perform the ceremony.
Allcndants ror the coup le will he
Shari Wright. maid of honor: Tricia
Davis and ' Jc ssi~.:a Grucser. hridc s· ''
maid•: A J . Vaughan. hest man. and
Scan o· Brien and Brad Davenport.
groomsmen .
Bill

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KilTS HILL - David and P'aula
Mount of Kills Hi ll. announce the
engage ment and approaching mt~r­
riagc of their daughter Amanda
Anne. to Brent Alan llnroc. son of
Richard and Deanna, Unroe of
Crown Ciay
The open wedding wil l' take place
Wednesday: December 23. 199~. at
7 p.m. at Guyan Valley Missionary
Baptist Church. A rec eption wi ll fol~
low at the dmn: h.
The bridc ·elec t is the grand!)aughter of Mr. anJ Mrs . Bill Coolev, and Vada Mount and the late
' Sy lvester ·Mount. She is also the
·great-grandda ughter of Chl oa Wad·
:dell. She is a member of Symmes

.'

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~

I

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~-MOUNT-UN ROE-.,-

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•,

537 Plymale Ad . ·Gallipolis, OH 45631

***

You're invited to tfie...

•

K &amp; L CATERING

Owner Pam Casto

424 SECOND AVE. GALLIPOLIS

•

Wilson's Catering Inc. has a new name &amp; owner

GALpPOLIS - Gallia County
Rct irell Ten&lt;.: hers Associat ion lunt.: hcon. nou n. Grat.:e United Methodist
Church.

GALLI POLIS - i\lcolmiJL'&gt;
· Anonvmou:-; mccti rH!. St. Pcll.:r·!'o Epis'~copa l .Church. X p.m' .
•
.•
***
• GA LLI POLIS- Ch0nsc· 'li &gt;Lo&gt;c

•

In the December 6, Kmart
weekly ad circular, on page
22 the Oneida Stainless flatware is shown as gold finish.
These patterns are only
available in silver finish . On
page 28 the 149.99 .RCA CD
Home Stereo is only avail able as a 3 CD Home Stereo
model AP9328.
We are sorry for any inconve·
nience this may have caused
our customer.

(740) 446-9319

.
•

ATTENTION
Kmart Shoppers

POMEROY - John and Belinda
anJ Ani ta Stan ley announ~:e
thl.' cngag:cmenl uf their dauglucr.
and Brent Unroe
Sarah Dean . "' Nathan Hallhill.
Th..: gmom -del'l i~ the . son of ·
Lawrence and S;mdy Hallh1ll. ;rnd
the gramh1 m nf Dorthy Hallhill and
••
Creek Mi~s ionary Bapti ~.,. Chu rt.:h. the l;u e, Swccy Kcnnith Hallhill of
She is a 199S graduate of Sym mes . Bidwell . and lhc late Mary and
Valley High SLhoo l and is allcnding H ow~1rlf Brown.
He " a graduate ·ol.' Mcig~ High
Ohio University.
. Unrue JS the g ranll~on of E,·dy n School and is ~:urrcmly serving i11
Williams and the late Dayton the U. S. Army stationed at Fort
·
Willi ams, and Erne st UnroL' and Huachuca. Ari1..
T
hC
hridc-c
lcct
1
s
a
se
n10r
at
Rub y Flowers Unroe . He is an
ordained mini ster and a mcmb1.'1' of Meigs Hi gh Scbool with plans for
Guyan Valley Mission ary Baptist auending' coll ege -after· graduat ion .
Church. He is a 19 ~9 graduate of She is the granddaughter of Jnhn
Hannan Trace High Sc hool. He anJ Virgi ni a Dean of Pomeroy. and
graduated from .Marsha-11 University
in 1994 and is working low.ard a
masters degree. He is employed with
the Cahcll County School Sysaem
In an effort to provide our readerand is a teacher at Miller Elemen- ship with current news, the Sunday
tary.
Tim \" ·Scntinel will not accept wed·
din gs after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings subm jued aftc·r the 60Johnson told The Boston Glohe
day
deadl ine will appear during the
he built his home on thi s island in
fi ve 1 wceks, hauling Bel gian stone week in Th e Daily Sentinel and the
for noors. cedar paneling and other Ga llipolis Daily Trihune. ·
All club meetings and othe r news
' mat erial hundn~ds of yards·thmugh
articles in the Sot.:ictY scctmn must
woods on his back.
·:Many people would he enviou' he submilled within 60 days of
of the. living conditions he has... Ray nccurrcm:c. All hirthdays must he
&gt;uhmilled within 60 Jays of the
said.Johnson's furni shin1! ~ . inl'lutk a £Kl'U1TC11 l'e.
All m~ll e riul suhmitted for publi quecn -silc bed. coud ;, hookshCif. .
stove, sink , portnbl e toile t ami caliun is s uh ie~t to cditine- .
makeshift shower.
To get a current weather
"The. woods lwvc always h~:c n
my pl ace of schoo lin g and of worreport, check the
ship. I 'figutcll that the only place I
~unbap
cou ld h ; safe is n pla~.:c where other
r..:opl c don 't feel sa fe ." .he ~a i d .
Dc~m

Revival

·'

446·2206

DEAN-HALFHILL:---'---

I'JI** ..

•••

GALLIPOLIS, OH

Sarah Dean and Nathan Halfhill

,her at' 101 Burnett Road. Gallipolis.
45o.11.

KANAUGA - Silver Memorial
FWB Church is holding a revival
unt il Dec.(). with Rev&gt;. Jack and
Dennis Parsons preaching, 7 p.m·.
nightl y.

.

THERMO·LIFJTM
THIIMOGENIC FAT BURNER.

i

GALLIPOLIS· Pina Ward wall
celehrate her IOOth birthday on
Dcccmher 19. Cards may he sent to

•••

KANUAGA - Hoedown at
AMVETS. 7:30 • 10:30 p.m., Coun·
try Gra\S.

,,f mtnc tha~ Sb(~ h1IIHm .

- !_

•••

***

GALLIPOLIS- Miracles in
·Recovery Group Narcotics Anony·
mous meeting. 9 p.m.. St. Peters Episcopal Church.

'A'ith c . . timatcd wealth

'·

BIDWELL· Harold and t\Jta
Payne-of Bidwell will celehratc their
7~rd wedding anniversary on Dcr.:Cr'n·
her 12. Cards may he &lt;ent to .them at
10 Market Road. Bidwell. 45614.

Saturday, Dtccm·
ber 12

4

Wednesday, December 9

'

***

•

Sf:AlTLE ( APJ - 81tl Gate' .Jnll h1\ "'ft: an.· \tot i!Ltng un \Cf~IOO 10
Melinda Gate"' t... prc!!n:,ml 't'Uh 1hc cuuplc'.., -.c~.·t~nd dnld. due rn June.
faint I) ~pokc'w. uman -Ru~ Berg ,.,.,J Thur...d.ty.
The GatcM.:-. arc .. \Cry cxcncd :· 001 plan to"'-~) hole cl ... ~: . prC'ft-rrtn~ t u
kccr fam1ly malic" private, Berg 'a1d. They dcHI ·I plant" land IJUtthc hah&gt; ••

•••

•••

' ***

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...

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EVERGREEN - SpringliciJ

Town~ou~c 'dlUn.:h s~r"i~..:. 7 p.m.

'. GALLIPOLIS - Gal)ia Co unty
D i ~ 1 ri ct Lihrary .Board o fTrust~·cs, 5
r .nL Dr. Samu~.: l L. Bnssard Ml!nlllri
al Lihrll)'.

***

•

Gr;.11,:c

· ***

: POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Nar].:otit.: . . Aflonymnus Tri - CtlU ilt )l
9roup mcctin,g: 6 11 Viand Street
7:_10 p.m.

·'

Microsoft's Bill Gates and wife
expecting second child in June

Gallia Community CalendaF----.- -

..
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I

"I am nn guard at the pri ... un

acm~s the

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

.

.

/ · ~·· .~

..

~:Y

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,,.

••
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purcha":s not il]cluded ~ Limit l Beanie Baby
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Limited Quantities on ·
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more, clruose three Free Betm.ie
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$1.0 Down $10 a Month 0% Interest for one.year*

-~ne speaks louder than a satisfied customer.
This is especially true in skilled nursing care.
Technical a.nd. medical expertise may be difficult to assess. But everyone knows
when they have been treated well. With dignity. With respect. Quality nursing
and rehabilitative care does not merely meet expectations, It exceeds them.
It does not merely please. It satisfies.
· ·
·The.Arbors at Gallipolis is committed to customer satisfaction.
We exist to help people...:... to make.their lives better. Fuller.
And more satisfying. For our patients. Our families .
·
Or anyone who steps inside our center.
You can see that satisfaction in the faces of
the Arbors at Gallipolis. Take a closer look.
Then decide. We invite you to come
see us. Face to face :

ARB 0 R

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nurs ing Cen ter
170 Pinecre:,t Driv~
Gnllipoli~, 0 11 .J563!

(614) 446-7112

�Sunday, December 6, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant. WV ·

Educational cuts include ·coffee and
doughnuts .for these school teachers

Beal of the Bend .•.

·· But there·!to a con.,.tant cro!'&gt;ion of
Teacher-. m Mnrri' Elcmcnlary what 1cachc~ han~ 'umc to cxpcL:l
S.:h...l ""Y the d1!oln&lt;:l . IS lrymg to up there:·
The d.sirK:I has pM·rdcd dou~h·
take away all ~he perk' of 1he11 J•"'
nat&gt;
and coffee for 27 yc=. While·
- ri~hl down I&lt;&gt; 1he coffee and
head ..aid. All schools 1&gt;u1 Mom&gt;
d&lt;MJghnuL•.
The teacher.. lilcd a grievance · had doughnuts &lt;m the in·&gt;&lt;:rvicc day.
wmplaining that the ,.;hool failed to the coll)plaint allc,cd:
provide refrc~ hmcnts dunng an
Ocloher in·&gt;en•ke day.
, ··on fiN light, il '-Cems preny
&gt;uperficial. ·· said Bnh Whitehead.
field representative for the Pcn..,.yl-

JIM THORPE. P•. IAPJ -

.

•

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By Bob Hoeflich

.

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The Ra ..·lnt: c'IIJ1111Un11~ "Ill h.J\c:' II&lt;&gt; Jnnual huhday ..\!a,

\On "ncaJI.:n:-nt al lh~ St.ar Mall J&gt;o~rl un Tln~n.Jay. D.: c 10.

The

C\Cnt , .. ~ron,nrcd

h) lh\.' S1ar M1ll Park Buard and

vania State Educminn

.: •. I" II~~~ Un&lt;kr"a) Jl (J ; 1.' pIll
Rc .. Jdt:nt' arc '"' i1cd h~ tht: par~ and thn'c going arc- 1o
taLc t:ant.Jk, ur fla,hla!!hh . Tlh: .. t: ac:n: .. ~uric ... arc U!'o\.'J ;t!'l the
i.'fO\\d .. troll, ..tn•un J lhc p.trk '\lll~mg cunl,. Rcfn:.,hmcnl..,

A!oosn~:ialion.

..

4 will
•

••

....
..
·:

..

-·-·•

h~o.· ... .:ned aQd San1a "til male a~ .1pp~;~ra n":c !i\',i flg

trcm~ lH

the

~uungcr

'ct.

·

D1d ~ou lnn'' th.::n Jumo~ \\' ht\C . Chc .. hnc ~· (ormcrl) ,,f
M ea g... C'oun~) .and fn: qucntl ~ Ill th l' ~.-·ounly . j, ha' IOf health
pruhk rn .. !
Junanr ,uff~..·r.: d a ~Hulc ' on No''· he ..and i!t- OH\\ in f(.' ll ahil·
ilalwn at SL ~ Mar~ -~ H \t, pll~d 10 HuntiU fllm : W. \';J Canh

Verne R. Rinehart

,,

MASONS PLAN DltfNER - An apP,.eciation dinner honoring
Verne R. Rinehart, Past District Deputy Grand High Priest of 12th
Capitular District of Roya,J Arch. Masons, will be held Friday at 6:30
~~,:,~,~he McArthur Masonic Temple, 107 North Market St.

and m c ;r; ~ag.: ... "•II rc;14:h hun a1 the h o~piiJI hkoHc d at 2lJOO , 1
A'~ -- ·and .th~ iir .:udc b. 25702 .
•• F1n.t
MJn\ o l \ ou Yo ill rr.;nicmh'"·r JunHtr tnr 111 , mu-.kal ;.1hilll\ .
A h:.......,' rta~·r.;r. Jun1or "a' t)'n&lt;.· " ~~ mcmh.:r of tlh.' mU!'&gt;il";ll
g rn up . Thc.CI.l"ll''· anJ IH;r; \\lf~o.·. f.(11 ~• - \\a' on tlh.'. ~c~hoan.l
\.\ 11h tl1~o.· ,g roup. Lat r: r Jun aor and Rn a o lt~o.·n aflp.:ar.:J af the
~k1 g' Scnwr Cllltt:n .. C\.'Oil' f 111 pl,llh.'n'~ ;tnd o th er ln\.·atltHh
, . , ~0 prl''~l'OI lliU'IL"~d prn-g ram -.

••

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Rineharfs district covered six chapters, LaGrange 68 in Ironton;
Trowel 70 in Jackson County; Pomeroy' 80 In Middleport; Gallipolis
7, Wellston 174 ; and McArthur 102.
The McArthur Chapter will provide meat and dessert. Area
Masons.. and their guests are asked to take a salad or vegetable
dish.
.,

- - - - --·

hnp 11-ac h. to Than f... !'&gt;~ I\ lll !! \\l·ch.cnJ .10J lhl' cmn .:
St . cntatai nl·d .
Prc-.cnt i"ur thu lw luJ ;t\'· fl' Unl o n \, ....,~· Auslln ;md Carnlvn
M onti.IR C/ nf .ArCI."Iho . P~ crlo Rl l'.". 'r]'mJd Mon-\ olll l.' / or s:ln
hpm . Puerto Ri ~·o; ~ar~lcc Mont ;.JO t' / an_d Wol fg:;mg S tcnJI t1 f
Fr;mkforl. ' Gcrn'1an y. .. and Shawn Mon(an ~J J. ~of Cincinnati .
Cawlyn MomaOct. t':1 111 C hcforc lh!.! {l th !.!r~ ;wd cnj0ycJ a
thrC!.! W!.!ck .st&lt;ty with Tom ~nd Jean .
p 1.111 ~ To m ••ntl Jean Ahk' . Val ~

t

,

Longev11y is with us the se days .
.
However. a resident who is re all y one of our re cord hold ers. is Lorena Washington Davis who wi ll be 103-y cp 1hat"s
•· a hundred and three - o n"Dec . 26. Mrs. Davis is excellent
menially and for the most pan . physically. She amazes
everyone with her interest and activilics . She is a re sident of
Overbrook· Center in Middicpon.
'
A niece is Mr s. Jack (Bihus) Hawley. Co le St. , Middle ·
port.

The 28 -fool Christmas tree in Pomeroy was donat ed 10 the
town by Mr. and Mrs. Fra nk Newsome. 11 was not onl y cui
but was delivered to the tow n hy th e Ncwsumcs.
The tree was prese nted th e vi ll a~c in memory qf the late
Rich ard Nea l Sloa ne who died in an :~uto accidt nt durin g
h11m ccom,ing ac. tiviti c~ a t Oh io Univer~ity in At he ns ,smn c
eight year ~ ago. ·
It m:~ y he hcg inni n,g to look ;I I lnt lik c Ch ri s tma~ hut it
ce rtainl y doesn ' t feel like C lni~1m~1~ - at lcas l. stt fur . I ha\'C
a hunch the wea the r will chill oul ·hc' fore the hig da y. Mean ·
ti.m c. do kc Cp s mi l~i " £· ·.

RESEARCH TR IANGLE PARK.
~ . C. (1\P) - A pan~ l that said i.t\
~ndear what dfc~: t diese l fu el fum ~:s
~~l\'C nn ' humans neve rthe less recu"m ~
mended they should. be added 10 the
~ovcrnmcnt 's liSt of suh~tancc~ that
'am.c c a n~:c r.
.
A s uh~\ )1\lllllth.:c of the Nation a l
lmul'nlogy P r~1g ra m "s Board. of Sci¢n t ifi~: Cou nsc.lor~ voted "l11u1·sday In
rcclllntm:ml dicsd fum es he added to
the li o.;t as "rcasonuhly umi cipatcd to
~c a humJn carci noge n."
Tile hoard voted Wednesday to
recomme nd that secondhand smoke
be labeled a can.:inogen, and ~iiSo
concluded that akohol ic beverage
~Otl sumpt i on can lead to cancer. It ·
noted 1hm hea vy drinkers and
drin kers who smoke arc mos t susceptible to cancers of the mouth. csopha·
gus. phary nx. and larynx. ·
Health and Hum~n Se rvi ces Secwary Donna Shalab h:~s the final ;ay
¢n the rccommcndatiom. which
~ou ld . he added to I he rerimli c
Report orl Carcinogen~ . The report's
'ninth editi on is to he rc!ea~rd in
1999,
The h(1ard ·.i" rct.:(H;l mcndatilms do
not propo'lc or re quire n:g ulatory·

'! .· tqual or ftlstr valut
1""~

,....,_

IIIU-,.

Off

.t

1 1 oz.

J· Pure Silver
DI;FER~SlvLES

~
•

~ Houn Mon. _thru Sat. 9 ' 30 ~

!!

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1

a.rn . to B:OO p.m.

Sur1. 12:00 to 5:00 p.rn.

20
Large sel~on of American
sliver &amp; gold colnil for nle.

Tawney Jewelers

l

422 SECOND AVE.

December 10, 1998
5:00-6:30 pm
Library Kids Youth/Storytime kids go Caroling
1
· · 1
Anyone we come to JOin.

it
it

00

December 19, 1998 . 12:0o.:-2:00 pm
Library Kids Youth ·Presents
''
,

i~

.

·

.

.

.

Cookies and Juice provi.ded.

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3 2 4

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CHAMP I 0 N SHIP

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18

C 0 U RSES

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SEVEN

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IN

ALABAMA

Getting here
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soolhe
your body.

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"BRANO HAlliE fUI"NinJ~!; AT OISCOUN..T """'•

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Each of our 18 courses is easy to reach by
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fime it takes to playnine holes. It will be
the easiest drive you'll have all day.
One. toll-free call' gets you championship
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golf and hotel. accommodations.

- Office Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building
Suite 214
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
- Appointments (304) 675-3400

1~800-949-4444

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www.rtjgolf.com

- Office Hours -

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New Patients

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252"0 Valley' Drive at J-oint Pleas•nt, wv · 675-4340

" Jaws II.change classic malcrial jusl for Ihe
"
The average Hollywood film sake of change .
today can cost upward of $50 mil,
The director wanls lo sec what
lion, so anything t.Jjal cushions the happens when ynu simply add t"lor
gamble is encouraged.
to Hitchcock's black and while con· The most famous hedge is lo pol cept. plug in different ac1ors. and
a· popular, bankable star in lhe lead. updaic the 1960dialoguc.
The ot~cr Irick is 10 convey lo the
People who know "' Psycho'" will
public lhe idea thallhey 're going lo recognize lhe same·molcl \ict, a very
see somelhing they already KNOW similar big housi:, lhe"samc 70 shuts
they like. Hence. a remake or sequel. in the famous 45-seeond shower
Serious filmmakers. though, arc scene. There"s even a repeal of the
less likely to embrace sequels. They Hilchcock cameo, fealuring a rolund
seem them, usually, as artistically look-alike.
bankrupt. They feel they' ve already
The eS..:nlial Bernard Herrmann
ma4e the movie ; why make it again? music soundtrack . with the lradc(Sleven Spielberg, for example. mark screeching strings . has hccn
declined to make " Jaws" sequels.)
re-orchestrated by Danny Elfman.
Somctimes, though, a filmmaker
And if you're wondering why
will feel a proprietary interest in . you"re not seeing opening-day film ·
mainlaining the inlegrily of his film. reviews, it's because Van Sanl is
(That's why Spielberg did do the also duplicating Hitchcock 's rcleas~.
" Indiana Jones'" and " Jurassic
The master of suspense refused to
Park" sequels.) Even more rarely, a lei anyone see "Psycho" before il
filmmaker .will discover intriguing opened ·lo the public on June 22,
-- ;., JI ways lo cXIend his story or his char- 1960. Accordingly, nobody is seeing
Vlnce Vaughn, right, stars as the eccentric Nor· Heche, left, will lake the most famous shower in
acters' lives. Thus, Francis Ford " Psycho" until Friday (Dec, 4).
man Bates, Instead of Tony Perkins. And Anne movie history, In place of Janet Leigh. ·
Coppola made " Godfather II,''
The new "' Psycho" has the bless·
pieces of film and th e pholography formance. They were aroused by lures, is a film lhal belongs to fi lm·
arguably the grealest sequel ever ing of several former Uitchcock
and Ihe sou ndtrack and all of the pure lilm,"" he added.
makers, 10 you and me."
made.
associates, includ ing his daughler,
technical ingredients thai make the
" I lake pride in the facl that ' Psy·
And now. "Psycho "' also belongs
But nobody before Van Sant has Palricia !-litchcock O'Co nnell, (who · audience scream .
c ho,' more than any of my other pic· . to Gus VanSant.
done a shol-for-shol remake of a played an office secretary in the
" It's tremendously satisfying lo
classic film .
original). and original scrccnwriler be able to usc lhe cinematic art to
"The biggesl rea.'iOn (to do it) is • Joseph Stefano.
achieve something o f a mass emO·
thai nobody 's ever done it," Van
Jn a 1968 inlerview with film·
lion. And wi th ' Psycho: we moSI
Sant told Newsweek. "Nobody maker Francois Truffaul, Hitchcock definitely achieved this.
Come.see
knows whal will happen ."
explained his pride in .".Psycho."
" It Wasn't a message that stirred
our large
In fact. the 45~year-old VanSant
" My main sati sfaction is thai the
the audiences, nor was it a. great perbelieves his "Psycho " is an anti· film had an effect on audiences,:·
display or
remake movie, specifically because Hilchcock said, " I don't care aboul
call today!
TH•E~TRE~~
he doesn"l change what made Ihe the subjecl mauer. I don 't care ahoul :~COLONY
FRITHRU
••
•
original great. He hat es remakes thai the acting. But I do care abo ul the
BRADD PITT IN
•• MEET JOE BLACK '"" •••
•
•
I

A-lfred Hitchcock "s . original
" Psycho""~h anged how some people bathe. And it changed how mosl
people go lo the movies.
. ,And that's jusl lhe start of lhe
innuence of th e 1 ~60 filrri that many
ilill consider the scariest mov ie eve r
tnade.
: The film's mosr famous S~:quence
was the elabotalely filmed shower
iicene in which Mother anacks and
J&lt;ills Janet Leigh ·with ·a butcher
knife. To this day, Leigh says she
fears showers, preferring to take a
bath.
But pity the poor · woman who
wrole Hilchcock and said her daughter had also seen " Diabolique." a
classic 1955 French thriller wilh a
bathlub murder.
" She refuses to shower or

'The film's most famous sequence was the

-

••

-· -----1

••

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

•
••

WED. BARGAIN NIGHT
ALL SEATS $2.00 446·0923

••
•

elaborately filmed shower scene in which

HOLZER ,HEALTH HOTLINE

Mother attacks and kills Janet Leigh with a

Sugar and Spiqe and everything nice/

'

'

butcher knife. To this day, Leigh says she
fears showers, preferring to·take a bath.
,.
recently issued · colleclor's edition
DVD version from Universal. where
it can be seen. in a pristine;

widesc reen print, and is accor,n p a~
nied by an insightful feature-length
making-of documentary.

That's what all children are made of. With the holidays fast
approaching, call the Holzer' Health Hotline for any questions you ~
might have about your little angels' health!

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Ask your physician about medication concerns

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'TIS THE SEASON
TO KEEP
IN TOUCH.
.

$17.95 getsyou
125 ·minutes a month.
"

.

.'

1'"

.·

It 's all the power of suggestion.
triggered by the slashes of Hitch·
cock "s ed iting and the terrifying
screeches or Bernard Hcrrm~nn 's
music.
" Psycho 's'" biggest chall enge to
the censors of 1960, though. had
nothing -to do with sex or violence .
Th e film offers Holl ywood's first
flushing of a toilet.
Hit chcock's $800,000 horror
quickie was flush with success. II
became the most popular of hi s
films and th e most influential. For
good or il l, il launched nearly fo ur
· decades worth of slasher nicks and
psychopath thr illers.

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Rirmingbam

try of books, including a " Psyc ho •
· Behind the Scenes of the Classic
Thriller," by Janel Leigh (Harmony
Books) land the defi nitive "A lfred
Hitchcock and the · Making of Psy·
cho," by Stephen Rebello ( ll arpcr
Perennial). ·
'And th e defini ti ve way to sec the
original " Psycho" today is in the

'

'

·'•

-OR
'

500 minutes for

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I'L l BE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS (PG)
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:00

sec it.

. ~ Board Certified Obstetrician &amp; Gynecologist ~ .

IL&amp;I Hospital

.
For ~ts . firs~.. proJect smce the
~!-wmmng Good Will Hunlmg, Gu~ Van ~ani has remade
&lt; J\lfred H11chcock s legendary sus·
pense classt.c " ' Psyc~."'
.
Bulth~s IS no ?rdmary adaptation
or updalmg. Hts film reportedly
matches the ongmal, almost shot for
shot, angle f~r angle. and runmng
lime for runmng hme.
. Vince V~ughn sta_rs as the eccentnc ~opnan Bales. mstead of Tony
Perk1ns. And Anne Heche _will take
t~e m~ famous -~hower 1~ mov•e
h•story. 1n !'lace of Jan~l. Le1gh.
. As moVIe •&lt;kas _go, 11 s enher stu• ·
p1d _and explmtallve or nsky and
brilhanl._ Certa.mly, lhe •dea of a
rem~ke IS nothmg new. We 've seen
mull1ple vers1ons of " The Mallese
Falcon,··" An Affair to Remember,"
'The Postman Always Rings
Twice,'" '"A Christmas Carol." " The
InvaSion of lhe Body-Snatchers,'' ,
"Cape ,Fear, " and many, many more.
Nor is new to remake Hitchcock
films . " Dial M for Murder" was
recenlly adapted - loosely · as " A
Perfect Murder:· and Christopher
Reeve slarred in a television' remake
of "Rear Window.'"
, . Hilchc~k him self made two ver·
.s1ons of·· rhe Man Who Knew Too
.Much,''
Hollywood bean -counters love
~emakes and sequels because they
nedg~ the expensive bets that every
film entails.
If millions nock to see " Jaws,''
many of them will probably go see

' lions
finders
outby the start
. As lea arned
result, to
filmgo
rilil·
time of a movi e, and plan their night .
accordingly. We ' ve been doing it
. that way ever sin ce.
The sex and violence of " Psy·
cho" also created a sensati on.
Janel ·Leigh has two ex tended
scenes wearing only a bra and half. slip - th e firsl time a star was fe,a·
lUred in such scanl garments for any .
length of screen tim e. (Note lh atth e
underwe ar is white before she
decides to become a thief, and black
afterward.)
People also thought they saw her
nude in the showe r scene, but Hitchcock's quick cuts only suggest nudi·
ty, nolhing forb idden is actually
shown . Tile sa me goes for th e via·
len ce . Mother 's knife never really
cut s skin, altl10u gh you swear ·you

~lieltael W. Cot•bin~ M.D.

fi1f'l.Pleasan!·Valley

By JACK GARNER

Gannett H - Service

th~

Thego~isnt

An·epting

Remake of 'Psycho' mirrors classic original

shall I do?"'
Hitch wrote back: "Send her out
to be dry cleaned."
More significant has been "Psycho's" effei::l on movie-going habils.
Before 1960 many people went to
the movies without concern for the
starting lime of the feature.
They simply walked into the lhe·
aler; if it was halfway through the
feature, th ey stayed through th e
intermission and then saw the first
half. Newspapers didn 't publish
show tim es and people didn 't seem
to care.'
.
Fo~ " Psycho," though , Hitch·
COCk demanded thai ih eaters not
a IIow patrons 10 en lee once I hc f ea,
lure started.

'•'

Monday · Friday
8 :30 a.m . to 5 p .m.

Dtocember II, 1 -

bathe," the woman wrote, "What

·action,. The li st in gs :~re often co lbid crcd 1tn he an ohjcctive scicntifi~. : ·
!.!ndorscmcnt ,jf a suhst;.mcc '·s dang.::r
to humans .
Seeo nd h:~ nd smoke was unani·
mous ly recommended follo wi ng
slUdi cs indicating that p~oph: with
prolo.ng:cJ ex pOsure In environmental
tohacco smoke have ahout a 20 per·
ccnt· highci· risk (lf developing lung
~.:a nccr than those who are n't.

for added comJort

.

~~~i~ya~~::~~~~~~d~~~kh·~~~'r'rJlCs~l~~ ~ . For more mfonnalWII c:~~~~;;::~:~;~:~~
·~.;;.~
the rul,ing forcing hcrto pay lhcfces . ~~·d~;/i~«b'~U~OIII¥a . . ·
.. · . . . .... ·.
·. ~
I

Entertainment

c ••b•-·J-'hlll't.ll

By JACK GARNER
Gannett News Service

December 14, 1998
6:0o.:-7:00 pm
Special Christmas Craft.Nighf

"A Visit Fron-t Santa"

1

! ..

'Psycho' changed how we look at showers

December 12,1998
12:00-2: pm
Cookie Baking Program (18 and older)

'

t

defend itself.
The guard, whi le liflin g the can·

·.

.HBbl&amp;AT E~ENTS

f&gt;anel says add diesel fuel fumes to carcinogen list
;I

f Dec. 5th &amp; 6th, 1998
. 'lluy Om· 'Pair get Srro11d 'Pair of

1

Meip County District .._..,,1,1~ ~i.,rary

PROVIDENCE. R.I. ti\PJ·- A 1
pnson guard who 1oM her Ji s~ rimi ­
noltiHn lt.IW!&lt;.Uit ago:1insf Rhode bland
Wi\S ordered to pity the "lai c S26JKK)
a!'&gt; rcimhur~cmcnt fi1r it ~ au~u·n!.!y·s ~
fcc&gt;.
She did- in quahcrs.
~
Sheree Cartcr-Paulino of Paw ·
tuckcl delivered 26 sacks of co ins 10 ~
the auorney general"' office on it
Wedne sday. a task that wok her 45 ... ~
'l'inutcs with a hand truck and two i
friend s.
..
~
Carter-Pauli no. ·39, alleged that
she ~as. passed over i'or pr~mot i ons
and gtven undesirable assignments
hccausc she is black and a woman . A ~
fed eral judge last year dismissed her
·
Jaw~uit as frivolous and she was
·
ordered lo pay the slates cost •,to

.... --------

How many of you remember lake Ament and hi s re stau rant on E. Main St. , in Pomeroy ·•
·
· If you reca ll the establi shm e nt then you will probab ly also
rem ember the delicious re lish th at Jake se rv ed on hi s sa nd ·
wic hcs . The condi ment was later used by Jake's nephew. the
late Elwood Bowers. and his wife, Eileen. who ·co ntinued in
th e res taurant hu si nc ss on East Main S1.
At any rate, Bob Bunon of Pomeroy." repo rts that Helen
Bacr o f Bacr·s Market in Syracuse : is making a reli sh that is
ve ry similar to th at used·by Ament and the Bowers and it is
bei"ng so ld at the market. You might wa nt lo try it-s hould
even hring back a mcni o ry or two.

~

Paying court costs
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GALUPOUS
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a quarter at a time p•~·~""~·~""'W#''Il'f""~~~-~-~~~M""~·~Ift-W''lt~

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 6, 1998

Patti Smith - lyricist, Poet, godmOther of punk

By KELLY.JAHE COTTER
AM&gt;ury Park Press
Pani Smith drenches herself in
words.

She is a Iyricist and a poet. and
there are words in her pores and
veins. ·pouring out of her in waves.
Since !975, when her debut
album "Horses" was released. she's
worn her crown at a jaunty angle.
Queen of the U~derground. God·
nlocher of Punk. Royalty among the
rats of late '70s New York and the
music scene at CBGB. merging hippie righteousness with punk fervor
and the disarming wit of Beat poetry.
· Born in Chicago, she lived in

Philadelphia before moving across
the state line to WOOdbury. NJ .. at the
age of nine. She dropped out of Glassboro State College. then a school for
teachers, to seek her fortune.
" I broke from ,the confines of a
rura~

existence,'' she wriles in '"Patti

Smith Complete" Doubledl!y, $35) a

n•w book of lyrics. poctry. musings some mainstream success. "Because
and photographs. ''Farewell the fac'IO- The Night," co-written wil)! Bruce
ry. square dance hall. the withering Springsteen. was a Top 20 .hit in
orchards. I headed for New York City. 1978. But her true role has been as
" I had in mind to become a matriarch to lhc underground.
painter and through that pursuit I
At 51. Smith has rock-solid dig·
found my beat and the root of my nity and seems completely selfvoice. Standing before large sheds as:&gt;ured on stage. Longtime collaboof paper tacked to a wall. frustrated _rator U:nny Kaye still plays guitar in
with the image, I'd draw wurds her band. as does Tony Shanahan. a
instead. rhythms that ran off the bassist and pianist who has shown
page onto the plaster.
his versatility in The Health and
"Writing lyrics evolved from the Happiness Show as well as in Slaves
physical act of drawing words. of New Brunswick and The
Later, refining this process led to Boogies. The Patti Smith Group also
performance."
,
incjudes Jay Dee Daugherty on
Smilh"s

pcrformanc~;s

arc not

staid affairs. Her angular body bends
like a willow under the weight of her

drums and Oliver Ray on guitar.

On her most recent album.
"Peate and Noise," Smith shakes

words; she raises ,her arms and

off.the heaviness of moui"ning to ere·

wails. It is a Jcstament to her talent
that she so often comes acroSs as a
fiery prophet, rather than a melodramatic coffeehouse diva.
. .,
Over the years, she has enjoyed

ate music that deals with death in a
defiant, electric lone.

·· Peace and Noise," released last
year on Aiista, followed the 1996
album, "Gone Again," which was

stained with grief. Smith lost her Underground," is one of the disc's cover of 'Horses.' I dressed hastily
husband, Fred "Sonic" Smith, and bcsl songs. "1959" is an aggressive in the clothes I wore, like a uniform,
her brother, Todd. to heart attacks in pop song with unlikely themes· the on the stage and in the street. Robert
consecutive months in 1994.
conquesl of Tibet by China and the worked swiftly, wordlessly. He had a
She's still writing about ghosts Beat poetry . scene. In addition to nervous, confident manner. He had
and the spirit realm, but her own essays and lyrics, '"Patti Smith oo assistant. There was a triangle of
spirit does oot sound broken. She Compkte" mcludes band photos. shadow he wanted. The ligbt was
wears her scars like accessories, .family photos and gorgeous, confi. changing. The triangle fading. He
finding in them meaning and some- dent portraits· of Smith with her asked me to remove my jacket
times beauty. Even on a mournful dark, tangled hair, spartan white because he liked the white of my
track such as "Last Call," a song shirts·and her pensive eyes. Among shirt. I tossed tli~ . jacket over my
about the Heaven's Gate suicides, the most famous is a photo by shoulder, Sinatra-style, hopefully
Smith does not sound defeated.
Robert Mapplethorpe, used for the capturing some of his casual defi·• Accepi no false teachers/false cover of "Horses...
ance. That was the shot Robert
preachers, good deedel'!/ With their
"I overslept the day we shot the chose.
hands outstretched/to be filled with
your money/your mind, your heart, Jr•W~tl¥~41'~41l~'W'f&amp;l41'~41'~Atj
your imagination/Sympathy, empathy/Acknowledge all man as fellow
creation/But don't follow him/Don't
be led away."
REM's Michael Stipe co~l,ributes
background vocals on that song,
murmuring like a ghost himself.
The opening track, "Wa iting

t

:J!I":EE.IENDS
FOR. "T"H:E ·

~

t

OPEN ,.0

.

Present

i rthe:.~~~~t.~:~roup ~
I

SUNDAY

and StoryteUer

1·4

Michael R. Kasony-O'M.aDey

MIDDLEPORT· GALLIPOLIS
Avoid thcr last minuter rush

Yl.cquisitions :rine Jewe fry

Join Bossard Library and the Friends in
celebrating the coming holidays.

• Gallipolis Corner of 2nd at Grape ·
• Middleport 91 Mill St.
• Shop Acquisitions before you bUy Fine Jewelry anywhere
Patti Smith

I've ~ade ,my list, I checked it twice, ·and
Masod Furniture really has the right price!
.Santa lias arri'fJea anti liue are,jy.st' ~ft:w of o~
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SUnay, December I, 1. .

'Tis the season to learn live Christmas tree use,
ByHALKNEEN
can warer the tree both bc:fore. Jurin!! anJ Jflc-r lkcurating 1L
POMEROY - 'Tis the s.:aJ;on to chcx""' betw«n a liv~ Chri,tma.' lrO!
Alluw the tree to readju .. t In the u~ttlunr. hy gradually ac~.:limatiLin,g lh~
: and an anificialtr&lt;e.
rreedle'i ami root ~y~tem lo rhe ouh.JnoN. Plat:e 111.: 1ree ouh.ltXlN in a pro~
• Some diplomatic f3mili~s seule lhl! ongoing c.L:bate hy seuing up o~ uf ., h!t:l~ area away from sun and wind for.tw'' tlr three: Jay!'~ . Pre-Jig ynur huk
each. Whichev~rtype you choos.:. r&lt;nl&lt;mber to share the joy of decnmting in lhe yard sn when the trt!t! jo,; renttwt!«.. fm111 t~ hnme. its flc!W 'itt! jo,; rt&gt;ady.
with loved ones. Start a family holiday u'Jdition by selecting. decomting and Often. winter rains and snow~ hinckr a tin'k!ly planting. Water in the! R!i!W tree ,
· u.,ing yourC~ristma.&lt; tree. Be s.1fe. alway&lt; unplug 1ree lights b&lt;fore bcJtime to s.:ttle the soil around the soi I hall nf rout, .
and just before leaving the hume.
·
Apply a two-three inch layer ur mulch around the IT&lt;'&lt;! 10 hol&lt;lln the 'oil
Live trees: wh~ther cut or ball~d and burlapped. ar&lt; a renewabl~ resource. remp!raturc so r&lt;N.)Js can de,•elnp and ab ..urb wah~r nt:~!i!!'l!'lary for ttre tree's
A si'\- to ~ven-fuot tret! j, grown for ~v~n tu IU yc!ar'i in tr&amp;:e plantalilMl~ ~urvival . Support the: tree u... in~ .. rake!\ tn prt:\'ent wind hlnwing nver the tr«".
· from tWo-year seedlings. During this growing interval. the grove= of tr~li pro- remember the tree'..; ant:hnr'mols ha\'e been ~;.· ut niT. The trt!'t!' will nlo!'eJ lube:
vides shelter for bird&lt; and animals. erosion &lt;:ontrol for sloping lund. trans- watered during any droughl perind!. in the lir .. r t:ouple uf y~:ar' unrilthe ruut
fonnation of carbon dioxide into oxygen which we bre... the. and scenic beau- ~ySiem is well t:'ilablished.
ty for us to enjoy.
·
If you purcha.~ a t:utli\~ tree. !'oc!lectl~e~ wht~c nceJfe, are tlek.ible. A
If purchasing a hailed and burlapped Christma.&lt; tree for tr•nsplanting into goud te!\l is to detach a n~tlle from tht: lr~c and pla1..·J: l~n~thwi~ ht:tw.:~n
the yard after the holidays. remember these few pointers.-,The tree is alive your th~mb and fC)rdinger.thc:n hring) nur digil..; lU£C'thJ:r. The! n~eJk ~h.)uiJ
and needs to be treated carefully. Store the tree befor~ &lt;l~or•ting in a shel- bend. not snap in two. T~es whn~ 1 neeUieS are dry anJ hr~aL: will m~t h,,IJ
tered area outside awa-y from wind and aftc:rnoon sun.
lheir needles long in the hume . . ·
Mulch the soil ball to prevent the soil from freezing. Don"t plan on k~~p·
Ro·c'lttthe tre&lt; trunk bas.: atloasl 1-2 inches an&lt;l imm&lt;lliatdy "'' intn warm
ing the tree inside. the home for more than seven days. Our wam1. dry home' wat~r in the garage or hal\t"menl. You will ht- 'urpri-.cd hnw many gallon..; of
cause the tree to lose moisture and begin to break its dormancy period. A wat&lt;r will b.: ahsmb&lt;d by the tr~e . Cut niT another inch ur '" ju't b&lt;fore yuu
cool (60-65 degrees) room is preferred. Place the soil ball into a tub so you ~el up the l~e in the tree stand. Rememher In immediately (mt water into

Veg.etable gro\Ver~! Ther.: j, 'till lime lo make re~rvation~ to auend the
IWN MeiJ!~-Wa,hin!!ton Cnuntie' Wint~r Ve!!etahte SL.'honl ht!in!! held Ike.
10. The p~&gt;gr.Jm ~tan~ at 9 :]0 a.m. and c:ontinue~ to 3:30p.m. ai the Meigs
Cnunty Extension Oflic&lt;. Mulherry Hei)!hls. Pomeroy I behind Holzer Clinic). The progrJm is open In all intl!fC!.Ied veger.~blc growe~. Two hours of
pesticide recertification rime will be givt!n.
Plea...: call the Meigs County Exten,ion office at 7-10-992-6696 for a reservation or f~r:ther information. Tht! S6 registration can be paid allhe door.
(Hal Kneen Is the Meigs County agriculture and natural resources
agent, Ohio State University Extension.)

Group: Ohio
too soft on
factory farms

Managed account popularity rises
Step ,two invnlves ~arching out
lhe righl manager. With thousands of
pmfessilmals to d1oose from. it takes
a lot of lin~ tuninu to mak~ iln iJeal
matt:h. When m~i~:hing adient to J
manager. often the following cri t..:ria
art! used to evaluate managers: performance record. managemenl style.
linancial st re ngth. commitment tq
client service and ski ll in volatile
markets.
rn, step three. the manig.er's performance is moniwred and evalua1ed
to see that it tracks with the client's
stated goals. Usually a written report
is prepared on a I.JUarterly basis and
is delivered to th e dient.
One fee
Typically. managed accounts don't
c harge per trUnsact i' ~)n. In stead. they
use a fee percentage. based on the·
size of the accuunl. whit.·h covers a ll
expenses and co111missions includihg
reporting and ongoing monitoring o f
the managed portfolio. The ke is
charged quarterly. The larger the
assets. the sma ller rhe fee perce ntage.
Ideal for
investors. ' .
t
Snme people ·hke to adm1m.., ter &lt;J
portion nf the ir pontC1\io. hut don 't
have the time . r~soun.:es m expert i!'oe
to ttlke care or it enfirdy. Oth.:r..: like
the id ~ a ot'""having th~ir brokt:r ,)ver·
see t~e result..; tp assure that t4leir SJ&gt;'!·
dl.ic needs are being meL Still olh ~ rs .
like the inJ,vidualiud inves tmenl
atlention they. receive ·rather th an having their fund s pooled as in mutual
fund.
Generally, th ese programs require
a mi nitlulm jnve . . tmrnl whi ch Gill
vary fro m $~0.1Xl0 ' to &amp;500.000
depending on 'the program.
For more intorrnation on mam1ged
m..:cuunls ami to lind ou t whether they
could be a good i&lt;lea for you. contact
you financial adviser.
(Bryce L. Smith is branch man·
ager of .the Ad vest Inc., office in
Galllpoll~.)

care~:

the tree ..tamJ ..o the tnx ran athurb wall!r.
1
Different tr« \'arietil!, may li.J-.1 lun~cr than other.... Bal ..am and fir lr~s
h!nd ·to hnld their needle.., ttl( longe'l antJ are normally pricet.l higher. Scotch ·
pine i' rhe mu~ ~..·ommnn Chri~tma.' tree grown and sold in .Ohio and hold"
ib n«dlcs well. White pine. Culnmdn spruce and Nurw&amp;~y 'pruce are other
'p«ie' of evergreen cnmmonly u~ed a~ Chri:-.rma.' ln!t!~Keep an e)'e nut r,,r a pew lir tree lhal can be grown well in our stale. lhe
Canaan fir. They discuveredthi• fir in the C01naan Valley of West Virginia.
It is the besttir available for Ohio Christma.• tree growers to grow due to it•
adaptability to gmw in ~r drier ami warmer climate.

Investment Viewpoint:
By BRYCE L. SMITH
Managed
GALLIPOLIS
accounts art! increasing in popularity . as mort: and mort! pt:uple are
ex pressing interest in 'having a ft.!ebased money' mari'ager uver~eing
· their funds . Peop le, today, are
increasingly busy in bnth thei r profe ssional and personal lives. lea'w·ing
them less time to devote to m~maging
their tinandal invt:stments.
In addition. the increased com·
plexity and volatility of today\ finan cial markets have challenged many
traditionaJ investment str&lt;.~leg ies. As
a result, individual and institutional
investors are asking difficult ques·
lions:
f
• Is it possible to achieve cons i s~
teot performance within estab lished
guide! ines!
1 • What is a reali stic time ·frame for
acHieving inve stment obj~ctive s'?
• Wi II investment costs outstrip the
bene tits ur ·services provided?
• What is the ~est way to obtain
investment assistance tailored to s~·
citic financial objecti ves?
For more and more-investors. the
a~wers to these questions can be
found through a managed account.
Such ac~ounts are offered by some
brokeragi! tlrm s und. ulthou~h the
detail s nucy vary. the basic services
offered arc usually similar.
·
Focus on process
With mana!.!l.!'d o.H.:c:ount s. the
emphasis shifts t·rom' ''trans;.'u.:tional"
to ··prot:..:ss·· busin..:ss. The process
usually has three steps. Fi"t. th e
Investment Executive iJentilies th e
client's attiludes about critical factors •
such a.. ; ratt:-of-return expectation.
asset &lt;.i lloc~Jtion. liquidity req uirement s, current e(,.'onomic conditions
and degree of i!Cceptable risk. Once
these have been dol ermined. (he
Investment Executive then develnps
an inve stment strategy based on the
client's stated objectives.

D

Section

TOLEDO I AP) - A national
l!nvironmtnral group has critidzed
Ohio and other states for regulating
e normous factory fanms with the
same hands-off auitutle they ·use for
small family fanms.
As a result. the environment suf·
fers. the Natuml Resources Defense
Council said in a report issued in
Columbus on Thursday. The Blade
reponed today.
The council said manure from the
fanms pollutes the ai r and nearby
water.
"'Factory farms have polluted our
s ~rface waters, our groundwater and
our air."the report said.
'
Under Ohio law. a factory fanm is
one with more than 750 d·airy cows,
1.000 beef cattle. 2.400 hogs or
100.000 poultry. Ten years ago, fewer than a dozen of these industrialTOP TOWING SERVICE - Lucky J Towing,
tow truck driver Greg Johnson, Ray and Leigh
sized farms existed in Ohio. About
Syracuse, was recognized on Nov. 'I by AAA o!
Canter, owners, and their son, Danny. The com·
II 0 are in operation today.
West Pennsylvania, West VIrginia and South
pany serves both Meigs and Gallla counties
The group 's findings mirror comCentral Ohio as 1998's top towing service In lhe
with telephone numbers In both counties, 949plaints of Ohioans who live near sevOhio Suburban Qlvlslon. Shown are, from left,. 3117 and 446-3118.
eral operations of Buckeye Egg
Fanh. a giant egg proJucer thai hus
. been critici zed often about environ·
mental mauers.
Neighbors have ~omplai ned about
the odor t au sed by the large amounts
nf manure generated by millions of
chickens. They say that the n1anure
Some ·things you may want ro ·on that r,rst dry day in the 'spring.
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
• R~meniber ynur budgets. Dedde allracts sw~mns of 11 ies lhal stretch
· GALLIPOLIS- The tempemturc include on your list are:
does not indi•ate it yet. but winter is
• Make sure that the livestock are now which farming e nterpriseS th~11 for miles. that their homes have been
approaching anll it 's a good timt: to conllned and se..:ure . Fence ·ma.inte- you will Jnke on in the spi"ing. Are attacked by beetles. and that the
,
complete jqbs that have been put off nan ~:e is important in a changing ynu going to g,row pt!pp.;!rs again in manurl! ~a s polluteU their water.
But
an
Ohio
Environmental
Pro·
llJlJlJ'? Are you going to exp;md your
all year.
community. Winter is a good time to
Tobacco produ•ers hav e a hard walk your fence lines. make repairs, cattle opemtion'! Once you have tection Agency official told The
Bladt: the report's criticisms are •
made your dedsion s and Ut!si g n~d a
·
time taking advantage of the off-sea- and secu.re questionable a rl!as.
overblown and biased.
• General maintenance and win- strategy. put a penciltt• your plan.
sun. because tobacco stripping and
"'I believe the authors of the
• Where d·o yo u sltlnd on you r
marketing is the priority. However. · terization on the farm. Check or
report have an agenda to put forward.
since the .ge nerul harvesl season is c~ange tluitls· in equipment. order rel'ord keeping. induding re, tricteJand
they used information that would
complete in mosl case~. take lhe parts and r~pair tract ors and other ust! pes ticide recon.ls? Catch up on help them do just l~at ," .said Johu
machinery. Get your e4uipment tieJJ. the hooks while yo u have a moml!nt·
opportunity to get caught up and
Sadzewicz. deputy &lt;lirector of t~e
ready for spring and survey the over- ready now and bilck it into the-shed in the evt:ning. The nt:w thrm O.l\.'cmmt
EPA's wuter programs.
~•
(Continued on 03)
all management practices or the fanm. or bam. so that there will he no delays
•

Winter ·m onths ·ideal to tacl(le
maintenance jobs on the farm

Don't get 'burned' by fresh pineapple

Oak &amp; Cherry finishes ·~. Vari-Broll'"' - 881ect from 2 broil temperatures
• Super
removable storage
Locking drawers
'

J
J

Farm/Business

on ~~~~

ttemsthru

December 24th

By REBECCA COLLINS
GALLIPOLIS - Have you ever
noti ced that when you ear raw or
fresh pineapple. your lips starl to
burn? Yet. thi s doesn't se~m to happen when yo u eat canned pineappl e.
It's not your imagination - there's &lt;1
perfeclly logical explanation for that
lip -burnin g pheno!nenon .

· Pineapple contains an enzy me
that 's partially res ponsible . It \ a type
of protease, or protein -digl!sting
enzyme - call ed bromelain. Since
thi.~ enzy me's job is to tl igt:s t protein .
it goes .to work as soon as il finds
so me P.rotein - uncJ.it finds pl enty of
it in your mouth. It cerlainl y doesn't
help that pineapple already h:cs a relatively low pH . maki n~ il more of ;:m

acid than anythin£ else . That combi nation packs a wallop on tht: sensi ti ve
tissue on you lips .and in your mouth.
Canned pint:i.tpple also contains
bn)melain, of course. but the eannin g
process is a pretty inten-.,e on'e. The_
heat ca n ac:l~ally change th t: shape ol
the en Lyme. and altering it even inae'tivates bromelain compl etely. Sn. it 's
nor sJJrprising that you don't get the
· sa me sensation from ranned pi neap· .
pie as you do fresh.
.
. By th e way. fresh pineapple can
burn th t! hands and arms a' wdl.
Skill ed pineapple carvers il 'm su re
th rs i:.. n't t h~ i r technicHI name I even
wear glo ves \\.'hen r..· utting up the fru it
for proct:~~ing.
Bromdain is the sa me e n1yme

th at prevt:nts geh1tin fnllll ·Sl'tting. so
uvuiU usin g fresh pin eapple in your
favoTite gelat in sa lad. Cannt!d pin ~ap·
pie shouldn't give you that problem.
But brom~litin isn't all hntl . Its protein-debilitat,in g prnpcrtko; arc L&gt;n~
reason why pineappl e juice makt;s a
good marinad e: "B rl!aking down
rmlscle tlh~rs" is ~ tkin to tl!nderizing

ability to attach to the walls of the
small intestine. ,
ln•identall y. bro melain i&gt; also
used to help remove "chill haze"" in
l·ommen:ial beer. Chill haze is ~~
cloudiness cau .~ed by the interaclioQ
of natumlly occurring proteins and
other compounds in beer. ~You can
th:cnk bromelain. and the fac t that
meat
l·o mmercial beer is nftl.!n tittered. for
In one recent study. it prevented • heer\ nice. clt!un. crisp look.
Bes ides pineapple, bromelain is
th e type of diarrhea that comes from
also
found in the papaya, fig and
drinking the wuter when traveling . In
about ha lf of 90 piglets infected with manuo.
(Rebecca Collins Is Gallla Coun·
E. co li .. the enzy me re spon s ibl~ for
travekr"s diarrhea. it preve nted the ty's exte·nsion agent for family and
dmrrhea completely. R~sean..:hers consumer sciences, O"lo State
think that th t: ent.yme was soml!tim!js University.)
able! to int erfere! with the E. coli's

Light trucks, vans top car sales for first time
By BRIAN S. AKRE
AP Auto Writer
DETROIT - U.S. sa les of new
pic'kup s. sport utility vehicles and
vans lopped c:ar sa les in Nnvt:mbef
for the firsltime as Americans· love
affair with bigger. room ier trucks
continued to grow stronger.
So-culled li ght trucks captured
50.9 percent of the new vehicle market , compiired 'with 49. 1 percent ror
cars. b;1sed on sales figure., re lea~l!d
last week . For the ye.ar throug h
)\iov~mbe r;cars still lead trucks 52.3
percent to 4 7. 7 percent.
A robust economy. low gasolinc
' prices and Aml!rica_ns" growing
demand fur the roominess and
increasingly carlike luxury of big
SUVs and pickups have driven the
1rcnd . One 'study shows fuel econo my today r;cnks 35th on the Ji,l-of
attributes impnrHint to t ru~.:k buyt&gt;r....
lndusrry cun~uhant George Peh!r·
son i)fAu toPa~ i llt: Inc. in Sant!l Ana.
Calif.. Urives a bulking ForU Ek.petlition SUV. He s;,lid Ameril.:mH;' attraction to trud-.s i.s no infatu ation: SUV..;,
pkkup~ and miniv'ans simply do 11
bt!'lter job Of fitting nw... t American:-;·
lifestyle than dn car&gt;.

"'They are big. they are perceived . ·A h•ck of up-to-date truck models taling strik~s last Slllllmt!r. GM's ,
to be safe. they have u very contcm- is hurting Gene ral Motors Corp .. the share in November was j ust under 19
porary. with-i t im;1gc. they providt! . largest aut01m1ker. which report~d a perce nt. GM muy huve to close
better vi~ib ilit y. bt!'tter Sl.!&lt;tting posi· 6 percent decl ine in its U.S. ~a les for plants· if its share remain s.below JO
tion. b~ tter roomines:-.. more func- ' November. Its light lrw.:k sales fe ll 8 percent.
No. 2 Ford Motor Co. reponed a
ti ona lit y and mnre uti Iit y... Petef"nn percen t and car sales were off 4 pl!r2
percent
incre;.tse in November sotks.
.;aitl. ;·The-v an: more u~cahlt: in th e cent comparell with Nnvl!mber 1997.
lecJ
hy
a
Y
pcr~.:ent ri se 111 light tnu.:b
modern Alil!.!rkan life~tyle than anyGM oflidals blamed a .,Jim invenits
se
\·l!n
th conseru tive month of
nne. really l111agineJ the~ wou ld be." tury of their rede signed full -~i.Le
The trend has expanded in r&lt;cent pickup. sold :cs the '91) Chevrolet Sit- ret:nrJ iruck sal~s. Car sa l ~s !"e ll 9
years with a pmfu..,inn of eXpen..;i\·e verado and GMC Sit:rra. GM's pre - pcrL·c:nt.
"'lllnoks like 199H may be Forti',
lu xury suv~. Muny h:lh y bmll llCI'S in vious big pirk up 'was it s top-..;ell er
he..;t
sale..; yem sint.:e 1lJ7X. anU the
th"eir prime earning y~ar., nrc opting and one of its most profit&lt;~blt: mod itH.Iu
.. lrv\ tles1vcar_sincc llJXo:·
U.S.
for . Li ncoln Navi!!alor"' and Mer· cis. T he aulomakt!r ~aiJ demand for
sa
ill
B'nh
R·~wey. ~i~.:e "pr~s ide nt of
~..:c~ol~s·Bcnt. M -c:li.~Ss SUV.s rather the ;ne w moJel was ~1rong. but that
than lh e Cadi ll ac DeVil!.: ~ a nd Lin- the inv~ntory will not he at ail id eal mark~ttin!! anti sales.
F1lrd s~1itl it woukl boost its Nnrth
col n Comint:ntals th ~'u their .p;trents levcl tlnlil Fchruary il'\ ructorie~ i.'Oil·
AmL!rirmi proJurtiDn for tht.! fourth
bought:
tinue to ramp up protlu~t ion.
.:-The l.~o..;hion hus ~,.·hangec.l." Peter~
Bul sa les of GM·~ midsize SUV.... ·4uartor l&gt;y 15.1HKl trucks and was
inneasing its tir~t · 4u arter pmtludion
son saiLI. :·People impress their al sow~ re do~· n ... harply la~t momh nei1!hbors with four·w heel drive 2J pt'r,ent lor the Ch~\roh:!t Blat.cr ~..: h~du le for l tJ'N hy 12 pcn:cnt ov~r
toJ;y. nnt with t;lil fin, ~:·
and l.:'i _pl!n:ent fur thl!.G(\. 1 ~ Ji1 ~ Hny the samt' pt:rioJ of IYYK. ~1 bo ret1ectThe v~trit:ly of pickup~ ;.il'o ha" - agalll'l_w~1gh i.' nlllj)~l ltlnn lro111 ing hi gher ·trU,l'k proJt1c ti on .
Overall vehide ~~~~ ~s were up 1
grow n. with tw:o-. thrt:t!- and four- newer cntnc.., 111 the "'-'gment. stKh a . .
percent
l~1st
month . Eumpean
door nlllJel' in variuu.... ite~ . They the Dod ~l..' Dur~mgo Hilt.! the
a
ut
oma~ers.
wh
ich
~11.'\.'0Utll fm llrl l )'
feature a ~mnnth.:r ri~t: and intaior ret.k~igneJ h:!!p Cir~tnJ Ch~rokt!~.
5 percent of the U.S. mar~et. ag!1in
feature.., that ri,·;.ll tlllhe of ~:ars. GM\ miniV&lt;III s;dl"' ;d,o,dct.:lined .
Au t 01 n~ 1 t..cr.. abo arl..' t.'x pandin~ the
GM\ l :u: t..l~htcr _N.'wcm hl.!r .. ak.; flO s t ~ d the hi gg_e . . t p~rl'C illil ge ~:.tin at
J:"' pc:n:enL Asbn Ulll\Hll~tkcr . . wen:
SUV market wi th ~lll:llkr. c;.\r~bast!d c:1:-.t douht on 11 ~ ab 1 l~l .)' to re ga111 at
up
6 ilercent la~t mnnth . Gl\1. FDrd
rnotlels lit..c tl1e L~xu,· RX'JOO ;.md tht: ll!a'it 3Jl percent of the lJ.S. pl\lrkt! t
~n-.1
DnimlJ:rChrys lcr hlt!C't h~r wercthi~ )c-ar in the w;tkt: l1f twn de\' a~Honda CR. \'.
.t1own le~.., than I pt&gt;rct'nt.

COMPETING FOR TITLE - Lisa Jo Vollborn of Bidwell, right,
1999 Ohio Beef Queen contestant, Is seen wllh 1998 Ohio Beef
Queen Canie.Jimnlngs.

Gallia County Beef Queen
will compete .f or state title
BIDWELL - Lisa Jo Vollborn or BiJwell will travel to the OCA Con·
w nt ion on J;.m. K. wllert: sht: will~..:ompt: te ag~1 in sr 25 Ot her county hed qut:ens
for the title of 19')9 Ohi Cl Bt:ef Queen. Sht' i" u1r:re rul y _the· Galliu County
hcef qtteen. ·
Yl1llhtlrn i" a fi'e:-.hrm1n at tht: Uniwr,.. ity nfRioGri •.1Je. w hen~ ~he is acti w- .
ly involv!!d in ..J.-H . the Ohh~ Junior Churoli!i~ Assoc1Hion ani..! t h~ reigning :
Miss Ga lli a C\1\llll y.
.
The contcstan l'\ wi ll b~ inter\'il!wed by 0.1 panel ofjud ::- ~-Each queen will ~
be judg:t.&gt;tl nn per~Pna l ity :.md poi .. e. tht: ..:omen ts of 0.111 l.!.,.:ay. tht! ability to :
«P«-" hersel f vcrhally. and 'chnnl. ~ - H . FFA . FHA/HERO. church and nth·
er activities. her l...no~lel..lge of retai l ~;.· u ts of het:f and beef coo~ing pmce·
durt:s. &lt;IIlli her t..now leJg:e or tht! h...-.:r intlthtry.
E:.Kh contc~t am wi ll nl . .o he requin:d to gi\'e a tW O· to t hrc~ · minute ex..h! ni· :
pnranem1..., to a qu_e ·~ tion pertaining to the b(ef inUustry.
:
The Ohio hcer quct: n wi ll scrvt." a..; a ..,pukt.&gt;!Oopason for lhe heef industry.:
This wi ll induJc ' peaking lo ~roups. giving bel!f dl.!monstrations and ,repn:s.:ntin~ the inUustl)' al St:\c ral function~ thmughou t the yt&gt;ar. For rnore inl~)r:
1natilHl ~b&lt;)u l the O hill B-:t:r Quet:n Contest. contat..:t the Ohio Beef Council
ut61 ~ -SB -67.1~.

.

'

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�Page 02 • ..aubag G--Jl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galhpohs, OH • Pomt Pleasant, WV

Sunday, December 6, 1998

Sunday,December6,1998

J)unbav 1J:..,,.. J)entnttl • Page 03

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gall1pohs, OH • Pomt Pleasant, WV

---------

--The House of the Week----- - - - - - - - -

Easy Living

By POPULAR MECHANICS

nor olthe hou-ie movmg oul through

For AP Spec:1al Features
Q Our 16-year-old patnled red

1he "'me unn
nw~ b

bn ht ..,um.hme The m'lde nt lhe

not only a M.Joluliun for
ext:e'' m1enor mmsture but an
an,wer tn sup:rt1eht hon'k!' th,ll ,uf
fer a lack of lre.,.h brealhtn~ au

seem' lo 'wc:al and the lf\"iU.le
surlaces ol the wmdow trame' are

Q Our hou'&lt;' was hulll about

hou~ ha.~

a lemble m1ldew
pmblem even dunng penods uf

wood

hou~

obv1ous SCHuce:or. of mmslure such a.\

1925 w11h a cypres- sh1ngle roof
mstalled &lt;)n I tnch by-4 mch wood
sln~X 8 U1C~' on t:enrer The aluc
ha.... no venllla11un or m!'&lt;.ulalaon I
would hke lo tnstall a patnted sheel
metal roof over the wood slnps My

a Jack of kuchen and bath fans or

t:nncem 1s condensalton on the bdt

poor exlermr landscapmg. that may
allow rnmwah!r to run mto your ba~
ment and l: rawl space Moasture ns
mg from these areas ts a common

lorn of the sheel metal What IS the
best way lo do lhts'
A Pmvtdmg venulallon and a
v 1por barr1er m the att1c wtiiL-ontrol
the moiSIUre buildup and resulung

have alummum stdiRJ bul fin..l we

musl solve the mildew problem
What do yuu !t.Ug.eest '

A You have probably checked the

B) BRLCE A NA fHAN

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AMAR ILLO Texas - IlluSi ve
MR a gray geld mg owned by Dan
1 Beam ul I693 Netghborhood
Road Gall1po l1 s was a lop 10 ltnal
~&gt; 1111 2 year old geldtngsal the 1998
Amencan Quarter Horse Assoc tat ton
World &lt;Champ10nsh1p show held
Nov 8 1 I m Oklahoma Cny Okla
Th1s 1s lhe mo'l presllgmus ol til

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" ml tlu:

lh~: klllhtn 1s lUO\t!

nil'ntly placed ht-hHcn fht= hreukra~f room and tht= dmm~ room I ht ltll :m it nf
thr home cuntams all lhrte hedruums and lht lnu full baths \ ullhh roum
ncar the bt!drooms lud~ out to lhf.' p:araJ.:l'

I

'

'
II '
I

!
I I

Sawhorses are valuable addition
to any homeowner's workshop
By READER S DIGEST BOOKS
For AP Special Features
As twhurse 1s a valuable add1tton
10 any workshop because 11 makes
many proJects easter espectally ones

that mvolve sawmg Havtng two

gel he IVY duly plust1 c s 1whorse
brackets lh 11 Will hold 2 by 4 p~eces
rogd hC"r And you can t tke tht:

'Sawhorses ap trl by s1mpl y Joosemn e
a couple ot bolt"'

Here

1re so me o1her handy

sawhorses 110, even better
You c.: an u :-~e two sawhorses to sup

sawhorse taps

port a I 1rg~ workplace Or you can
lay a sheet or plywood or a Jlush door

betv.t:en the le .... s 'I 1 reet l1r non

across them to make a temporary

workbench
Sawhorses come ready made or

you can make them wllh 2 by 4s and
bracket klls av ulable .11 hard" are
stores or home centers Hook on
hardware bms and tool hangers are
also available
Here s a way to qu•ckly set up and
take apart sawhorses made wllh stan
dard met 11sawhorse brackets and 2
by 4s Screw the brackets to the legs
but not to the top rail On each pa1r
or legs hm ge a brace on one leg and
cula slot for 11 on lhe other leg When
you force the brace-between I he legs

the bracket biles mlo the lop ra1l and
forms

1

sturdy saw horse When you

release the broce the top ra1ll1fts out
and the legs told for compact storage
Besides metal brackets you c m

• Y1 u can add your own toollr 1y
fold ng sawhorse M 1ke a sh 11low
box - 1 I by 4 lr1me w11h 1 ply
wood bottom- and alt a~o: h tto ,ross
br \ces runnmg bel ween euch pur nt
lt!e-s Mount a tray on Just o ne
sawhorse so a paar will stack
• The sc r 1ggy saw t:hewt:d top
rall s of most sawhorses can su \Lth
hmshed wood or turnnure To pro
vu..le a non marnng 1\urbce cover a
Inot or two 1t one end o( thc: top ralls
w ith s&lt;.:rap carpetme
• E\en better make ,1 (.; lp lore tch

sawhorse ustng two I hy '' lor lhe
Sides .md a I by 4 lor the top Use

the111 to protect wurkp1eces
To s1111phfy takm u measurements
nad suew or glue 1n o ld steel tape

measure blade lo the s1de of your
sawhorse s top rail You II fimJ 11
mvaluable tor lhc e ISe of me ISurmg
every I me you need to mak e 1 ~.:ut
Don t use a wooden y mJ suck
because most yardsticks tren 1accu
rate enough

To hold you r work m place on
sawhorses dn ll a st:raes ol hole!&lt;.
along e tch top r 1 I Pt In ub 1 r wood
en pe~s tn lhc holt:s Measunng
lro 11 a hole near the r ul s ~.:e nle r

make the d1s1 mce t &gt;each hole cor
respond to Ktua) .,.o; lze ltmber lhmen
SIOI1 I In 1 112 1 In 4 112 5 112
7 114 ~ 114 md I I II-+ 11e he, IL ' h
ber Is sold by nom n 11 stlc: - tht: s11e

11 Is when ll s cui 1t the 11 II Aller
pi mm ... md shnnk l,..e the HI.. Ill d sl7e
s t go &gt;J bat sm ill er A 10 1111al ze
2 by 4 ts an ex u tplt: h ls n uuual

na1ls or screws to fas ten the top to the
s1des Cu t noh.:hes tn the stdes to In
over the sawhorse legs Cover the top
p1ece w th carpet1ng and t 1ck the ~.:ar

SIZe ol I 112 hy 1 1/2 1nch"' l
Be~.: u "'e s t w hors~:;o;; trt: most often

peung lo the Sides (nollhe lop) You

lumber

now ha ve caps that you

~..: 111

' liP on

the saw horses whenever you need

more ellet:t1ve

S1nce there w•ll be a vapor barn

msulate the au•c Even lhough your
hou:or.e 1s located m a wann rhmate
ansula110n as (.;Ost efh:cuve and will
help make the hou'ie! more comfort

openm~s

can be. less than 11 would be

wtlhoul a vapor barner Remember
the vent s etlec.:uve area 1s lel\s thu:n
1ts actual opemng S~.:reen!\ or louvers

can r&lt;duce a1rllow throu,1h a '"nl by
as much a.s 50 percent The etfecliVL
area shou ld be at least I/31Xlth of tile
at11c floor area

Amen~.:an

Quarter Horse shows

'ud B1ll Brewer AQHA e.ecu11ve
\ ICC pteSidenl Eam m Ihe tllle ol
lop I0 lmahsliS an ach1evemenl that
stand out on the perfom1ance
record or IlluSive MR
The AQHA World Ch 1mp1onsh1p
show IS the largest champ1onsh1p
hor:-.e show m existence wHh $ 1 6

properly dec1de how much lime you

Pa1ntang wtndows requ1res spec1al
prep tr tt10n tnd te~.:hn 1que s be&lt;:ausC"
or their glass md op.;n and close
operatiOn To prole~.: I the g. l \ss you
can use mask me t tpc: or t wtpe on
protet:t1ve him that :-. dt!-.pensed much

will cr 1ck the exiSt ing pa nl 1! you

hke deodorant Annther opuon 1s to
sk1p IhiS slep md scr 1pe oil any p 1 nt
from the g l tss wath a razor It sa case
ot spendmg your t1me m t•.k mg or

scr.pmg
Apply the lape or ~1m only after
thoroughly dusung the corners ot
each wmdow pane The crev &lt;:e tool

of a vacuum works we ll to do thi s
It you pa1nl the wmdows w•lhou t
tape or Jilm you c 1n use 1tnm guard ,
to protecllhe glass area These come
en her as a lrlangu Jar shaped p1ece of
metal or a melal stnp With a pla sl c
handle On bare wood wtnduws
ullow some pmnl to seal agamst the
glass
When 11 comes lo removtng hard
ware punsls Will tell you to remove
II before pamtmg But thiS IS not
ulways pmcl1cal
If a w1ndow Jock " covered by
several layers of paml but works

want to spend nn the wmdow You
J~move the lock and th1 s a lso leaves
1 dcnl 111 lhc paml lhe sh 1pe ol the
1m:k U 1less you rep I K:C lt wlth I he

used an patrs 1t you re eOille to build
yot'I r own ... uwhorses eane up the
The~

"'II

87 Genu1ne

88 Weary
89 Marked Wllh small
specks
90 C1rcus performer

92 St pped and tloppy
93 Cuckoo
94 Holy ane
96 Evergreen tree

21 Ttmber wolf

97 Call

22 In progress
24 Sofllabr c

99 Head covenng
102 Composer

25 Boxers place

Strav nsky
104 H1ther and -

26
27
29
30
32

Bulls
Very hoi

Due l ng sword
Th e Buckeye Slate
S &gt;th sense abbr

34 Mr Arnaz

36 Serl
37 Thoroughfares
abbr
38 Ed•nburgh nat ve
39 Steal
4 t Poe I Teasdale
43 S1ght organ
44 For Pete s
45 D•sl•ngu shed
47 Role 1n La

Boheme
49 In fact

52 Pad athletes
53 Gloomy
55 Slruggle aga nsl
59 Apport on
60 Cuts
62 Blue ca lor
64 D1gg ng mplement

65 App a se
66 Jol l
67 Explos ve stuff

69 Aclo Sle ge r
71 Layover
72 Opp of WSW
73 Horn sounds

74 Goll bal stand
75 Av d
77 Three pre fix

78 - o reason

BO Fabr cate
B2 Traveled by boal
84 Brown sh gray
B5 - d elal

105
106
107
108

Astern
Wel
Heap
Hms1 as a flag
2 wds
110Tdngs
1t 2 Throws oul
t t4 Speedy
11 5 Boss s toady
t 17 Window part
119 Chimpanzees
120 Brand new lh ngs
!21 Brdge support
t 23 Prepared
125 Clue
t 26 Curved lette r
129 Twofold
131 Folklore creatu re

132 Eye or pggy 133 0( each hundred
abbr
136 Succ ulent plan!
138 Look at ke s1btlng
t 40 L ncotn s Sl
141 O re depos1t
142 lnd an garment
143 Steenn g dev ce

145 Cipher
147 Pers a nowadays
149 Bellowed
151 Macaron

t 52 Eye part
153 L1bert ne
154 New York player
155 F lm spool
156 Lghts out s•gnal
157 T nls
158 Peruses

DOWN
t Changes pas I on
2 Sk•lltul
3 Floonng p eces
4 Small bay
5 Color
6 Be worthy of
7 Exchange prem1um
8 Get brown 1n the
sun
9 S deways
10 Went over Ike a
lead balloon
1 t Smoked salmon
12 Under the covers
13 Mustcal sou nd s

14 L1ke a lampoon
15 Fly ng saucer
16 Heart
17 Thoroughbred
19Th ck 1n bu ld
23 Wee
28 B fly - W II ams
31 Garden too l
33 Tran sgress1on
35 Fam har uncle

s ~&lt;h P unllhe I mer hill ol the nu t
er s 1sh f ar!'&lt;.l then p 11t the 11s1Lie

' ISh Btll uon t uo the ll&gt;p euee where
the I &gt;ck 1 S 1ve !hal ullt d I lSI

'"~ markets fund and 11 went dol' n 40
percent this yeur Lyon sa1d
II you sllll want to be 111 an
emergmg market lund you Lan &gt;ell

he emerg111g market&gt; lund Even 11
they have nearly 1denllc 11 purtloltos
you can sull repon the loss and use
lhallo shelter gams
ThiS process ollen 1s used 111
mume~pal bonds and bond funds but
11 tlso works well w11h stock' and
stock funds Lyon sa 1d
There are hundreds of deductiOns

.

the one on the lnl ern tl Re\enue Ser
Vlt:e Web sue or m bnok~ hke Lyon :-.

hnd which deductions Ill your
hlestyle
Fur example the IR S tll uws I IX
payers to tledul:l ex pt!n :-.es lLt:umu

10

laled m Amencan lnUtan munal sat:
r1hce ntual ts med~~.;al expC"nses
al:cnrdmg to the da c11 unaf) ol tlcduc

lH&gt;ns 1n 1he back nl The 60 M•nule
Tax Planner
To meet your threshold thiS ynr
Lyon recomml":nds you pr:ep ay
expenses you have planned lor nexl
year
• Med•cal ex penses 11 you have
procedures planned for next) e.1r pre
pay them thiS year lo meet the 7 5
percent Of your mOdified idjUSlcd

38 Season

113 Pnsoner

gross mcome detluct1on threshold
• Home monga~e mterest
• Property taxes

39 Protect ve garment

114 Skat ng venue
1 16 Gearshift pas t on

a aed1t card allowme you

t 11 Armed confl cl

40
42
44
45

Make nto law
OT book
Blackthorn
Clapton and
Sevare d
46 Attempt

60 Brake part

118
120
122
124
125
126
127
128
130
132
133
134
135
137
139
141
142

61 Bnhsh gun

144 Summer 1n Par1s

63 Hohday dnnk

146 Short sw m
148 Sunbeam
150 Scull

48 MISChieVOUS

ch ildren
49 Uncommon

50 Ardor
51 Ta lor s spec ally
52 Consp~Ce
54 Japanese f ght ng
method
56 War vessels
57 Loved
58 Lukewarm

66 Sooner or ate r
68 Dehc1ous dnnk

•

70 Fate
73 Does an all ce JOb

Yoke
Fancy duds
Uncooked
Deer
Possessed
Break a last
Error
Of the sun
Lawful
R bs
Hooded garment
Doctnne
Neap and ebb
If nol
Ibsen character
Body of water
RallOnal

Many expenses can be charged to
to eel the

deducuon 1h1s ye 1r but not pay unul
ne,.l year

Other lax law chane&lt;&gt; lh 11 creal
ed new sav mes potent 1l th1 s year

tnclade

• I\ ch1ld tax cred1t

te

unst a f 1111

II) s I IX b1ll ol $400 I child

11 1~9H

mu $ 11~la c hildm ~~~~ an dbeyo tu

Taxpaym , couples mnd1iled adjust
eU gross tncome mu st he le ss tha n
$I 10 000 t ye" to pet the tull cre d
II

Informational, meeting scheduled
Dec. 15 on leasing of property
WILLOW WOOD - An mtor
mal1onal meeung tor all Lawrence

ny for m 011/_a!&lt;. Ime pr lJeU

County Far n Bureau 111embers and
gue sts to present an lormauun on th e
leastng of propecty lm 011 as hn e
t:onslntdiOn has been scl tor Tuesday

t:ooperatlve e!fort betwee 1 th e
Law re n~ e Cou nty Farm Bl r\: tu and
the Oh10 Fum Bure tu Federa110 1

Dec I5 11 6 10 p m tn Ihe Symmes
Valley H•-h S&lt;hool c 1fclenu
The pre-;ent 1tm1 w II speuttcully

address the Mar nhon/Ashl and Oil

Co wht ch as

an the pmcess ot lt!as
1n property tor the~.:' nstntt:tlon of a

pipeline lro n C •llellsburc Ky to
Co lumbcu; The meet1ng will discuss

cnmplelely Then p unl the top ol the
outer sas h and the lop ed e ul the
tn ner s 1sh
Swttch to a 2 112 mch w1de hn sh

what property owners neeJ to con
s der when leastng land 10 1 compa

The mceung " bemg held m 1

For more mlormauon comacl 1111
Smllh 11 740 286 4598 or loll tree
I 800 777 9226

PLA results
Producers L vestock Markel
report from Galhpol1s for sales con
dueled on Wedne&gt;d 1y Dec 2
Feeder C mle
200 100# St $72 $80 HI $65
$75 10() 41Xl# St $1\6 $82 Hf $57
$67 500 oSO# Sl $6 I $67 HI $S6
$64 650 800# St $57 $64 HI $5 1
$60
Wei I Muscled/Fleshed $1 I $18
Med11 m/Avenee $16 $1°
Th• n/L•Jht $2 I $24 Bulls $1j
$4 1
B 1ck To The F \Till
Cow/Cull P 1 rs $160 $SIX) Bred
Cows $300$475 Baby Calve; $ 10
$J(X) Clioals$ 15 $1S
Next specml gr 1ded f~eder s 1lc
Mund ay Jan 18 7 p m
Nov I 6 results

Then pam1 the Sill anu the apwn
v. h Lh 1s the tnm hem: nh the s1ll
When the paml IS dry scr 1pe 11 ol! the
gla:-is w th a r tzur su 1per Run the

p um Ihe upper sash Jrom the '"' de
1 Ll th en open the lower 11a h uH.I

Buy, Sell or Trade

Steer" avem_ed $69 ~w t

In the
Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-6

lleliers avom=ed 559 &lt;WI
Fur free on t 1rm vasals pi&lt;: lsc.:

6 14 446 9696

~.:

lil

By ELUOT BLAIR SMITH
USA Today
A' the 1 0th nmury \:Onlt:\ IU t
d,~t! 1h~ .... 1antm(r t!r . . rt!"hapm the
luul 1re nut 1bnu1 t.:unque'l bul 'ur
VI\UIIn the global a..!~
Tud1y' munupnly powt'r ''
lrnnorrow !'&lt;. nu:he player Ye . . ten.Ja) . .,
te~.:hnnln y 11 1t suniVC"' l'i a co..,t
squt:t:Led ~.:ommodtty that requ1rt!'i
mcreasm eu&gt;nonHt"!'&lt;. ol st.:ale
lhe $7~ 7 b1llum propo:-.t!U t:urn
banat10n of E:ttx.on and Mob1l - ~.:rc
utm_ the world 4\ lareestl:Orpor tllon
- r(ktnUk~ kars ol the ~.:ra )
ln:l!'d whue haucc.i John D RtM.:kt:
klkr th e t(rnble Zt!u~ of..: lpllall!'&lt;.lll
who liKed pnt:e'O buffaloed re_u la
tors and bloodaed t:ompetnors
But the reunlfi~.:atmn of the lwn
b1g ...est p1eces ot Rockefeller s Stan
dard 011 represents less than tht:'! !'&lt;.UIIl
ot us parts It s an effort by two utan '
tomtkelht:'!bestotthelrdlmlm . . h nc
ro les tn the US and \\Orld
el:onnm1es
That thread IS woven promment
ly tnlo other recent mulubllhon Jo l
lar deab mvolvan,g the Onaon Paul
IL ami Southtm Pa..:1t1~.: r ulm;.ads a H.J
sevt:rll ol Ma Bells loca l t~kphone
~rvt..:e compame~ whl(h I he nv
ernmt:nt ordered AT&amp;T to dJVt!'t 111

Janu1ry 1 ~84
II you h 1ve 1 ma1ure '-'"1ndustry there Will he market p" &lt;r
wuhout myone cann • be\: IUse H s I
m 1rkc:t trena ol \\ tntn power
()
s 1) ' Ph lt!ntX tnlltfll'Ot I l\\yer wen

(Continued from 01)
books tre av ul1ble at the Extensmn
oi l ce so got your records se t up tor
I999 bet ore the new ye " st 1rts
• Ehman lte some ~.:h lO:-i c.Junn_
ttme Dt!pendan c on wht! n
your "'pn ne- (.;alvm st 1rts tl111k ahmat
obtamtn e suppll t:s su~.:h lh ltes
~.:o lostrum and nedllaU ln 'i 1nd 1!
ne,essary pte part the b 1rn l&lt;lr ~.: lv

mg lrl llic
• Survey your tort:sl l1 1d I-IJ\.1!
you t:ons dered a lon ... term pi t11 lor
your wooded prope I ) 1 It 1s l tder

standable lh 11 most busy produce rs
haw not How ever tor now ulns 1J
er the t lt.'l thUI y HI Ill IV h IVt..: I V ilu
1ble resource th tl :-.worth m 1 1 1 n
m and 1 npr )Vtll lor lha.: lull r~.:
When you art: n: td) lo d~::J l: Ill'
q nne tune to tambe r tand ampn \t.:
ment lhere 1s mlotmttu n 1v ulth lt:
11 the nlllce to help y( u tksa n 1 p,l m
II r yt ur forest nd eel mo:-.l I rom 1
hnanu tlly
• Wh II ts th~,; st tiU!&lt;. ol )I lll . ., l I
lc:rtllat y alle1 1 .... u nner t II uh Ill 1d
n mll dnll ht' /It . . h ml to td1
Ex~.:es-; v.. 1kr al the n ht 11 ne HI)
h t v~:: ~.: u. . eu Lon dc: thk k ~.: h n
lnc.l/or ru 1 It hut the dr lU ht 111d
reduced plmt _rm\ th 11t\. I '\: 1, \:

Automol&gt;1k h.1J

1 '

1kh&gt; ,Ju

No r 11d tou r m h

hlll h IJ \\J' out nl hu,ma.:" h)
llJJ 1
Oth\:r m trl..t.:t k u.Ja, lh 11 pm'
pcreJ \\ht:n their tu.: hnolo_IL:' \\t:re
111.:w and ~rhht.:J l1tcr Hu.:luJe
Bah.(llh.: \\h1~.h prnt.lu~,t:d t pn.:c.h.:
~.:c ........or to plhll~.: mt.l raJ10 ma~er...
Ph )ol wU S) h \flit
More rr:~.:etlll) IR~I the h.1n nl
munlr till\: r.:ompt ld'- hl..: lith~ U1
1!""' r 111 \\ 1th lh( de\ di1J111lt:nl ol the
PC l\11\:n,..olt t:r0\\11 prutu Ullh..:-.1..
top -.ull\\ C" lll:L: ' pl:rh 1p.., ah
.. upr...:mr ~.:hallut_c '' 'th tha.: ad\cnt ol
lht: Internet
In ROi.:kddler !'. Ulllt' mr.-....,....~.:ullm ~u t: tnhnolo \ St md trd
hm"l:llc l dt!'&lt;.ltlllk ul cmJc.: II ht
~d llJth Lt!ntury ,tm c.:~ lunp.... md
lmh.::m .. lmJ llrt"d Amt'rH.: I ... llt:to
ne ... St tndard Jwmn th.:U 1h m 1rkd
the \\a) IBM anU Mlt:rtNtll dtml
n tt~d thetr"' pmmpltn ... 11 :-r. h&gt;rcl!t.l
hrcakup hy ll\:ernmt!nt tru,tbustcr"'
111 1911
But JU st ts Mtao ... olt !'.Btl! G 11e'
1dl s emrmml"nt mt1trus1 ltwver....
th 11 h..... ..:omp my~.; per~.:h ..., ~.:e t!-.t'
ks!&lt;.ly thrcate-nt'd by mnu,allun the
de~.:tn~.:al en nee nnd of Thorn ls
Ed 1 ~u n \\h lch pro\lda.:d a nev.

60

005

QUESTIONS
GET ANSWERS

ASK

chic1250291htmS399 Mn 18•

d 1rd s 84 percent sh tre ol all relmed
01 1 products 111 I89'1 Moreover
today s market pnce for 011 IS the

FEREDI

70

A1J. Yard Sales Mual
BePaldlnAdvance

1 900-420.3012
399 permn Mustbe, 8 yrs
Serv U(619 645 8434

DEADLINE 2 00 P m
the day before lhe ad

KNOW YOUR FUTURE NOWI!l

Is to run Sunday
edition 200pm
Friday Monday edition
10 00 a m Saturday

900 868 4900 exl 4169 18yrs
or olde $3 99 pe mn SEAV U

, 51 9 845 54 34

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

lowest "' tn ce 19K6 and 1s ..:he 1per m

•nlluuon ldjusled terms than belore
the c lobal o I shu~.:ks LJI tri er ~.:e n
tury '="
Anlnn -;t ! twyer P tepkt': !'&lt;. 1ys th e
Exxon Mobtlmarn 1 e 1s a con sol
1d 1110n borneol weakness nnl horne
o f strcneth Rocka.:kller \.\.as c.Jealm~
from a p0~ 1ll on of siren th ln~ ht:

consul d li ed to m ,_ml y th It power
Th1s as a consolld IliOn ot we 1kness
md nece.,.su; You ve seen lht! "a rne

1h11 1n r ulro 1ds wh ch have been

m th~ c..lelensave tor 40 year... be twet:n
urpl me s uuJ l: rs 011 P tepke con t !lUes h u ted1
nolo y th 11 as 111 rd tllve m&lt;.l pn h 1

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Serv

lime

Lost and Found

740 441 0777 REWARD OF

u 619 645 8434
1LL Tell your Future
NOWIII

Penn,ylv 1n a s Wh Irion Sc hool
II s not clear th 11 you end I p
w11h a m&lt;&gt;nopolv tl you _iue the paris
hu.:k loeether ovet the p t,sa e t I

SIYS

Exxon Mobil would ~.:on trol JU' t
14 percentolthe rel lll e1so la nc;:mar
ket tn thl: US com p 1retl wu h St 10

~

wou d The Parly In The Gray
Primed van That P eked Up A
Losl Bla&lt;* And While Sh h tzu At
The Co ne 01 Routes 7 &amp; 35 On
Thanksg v ng Day Please Call

Personals

mana_cmt:nl

the: Unl\ er&lt;.: lly o l

1n1 rllm.- It S1 mcJ ull &amp; Pnor .., R\
tu h.mx:l otl StantlmJ ht-lorc m
l:umpan"'" l:Omputer ,nflware m..tl
er' ..:un . . l,lcnll) pt•'t prul1r.... ol ahmt
crnm-.:m IJ\I. )er' 1ntt!ncn..:d
StanJ..trd 011 ~ ....., tn tn1ublt: ' :!5 pt:!ru:nt o l -.;al..: . . Bn IU..,c ht_h\;r
pmllh ITt." e\pre ........ctlll h1 e- h~r . . tot~
"hen m~.:anc.J~o:,t.:cnl h hun unp~c.J
up but lu~.~ll\ lh&lt;: n~ ol aut9nltJ
\ lluauon" oil c\c:UitiV-.:' k tr
ln\e.,tur
. . w111 lloc\... tu more pn.nm
h1k' ... a\ ell tht:m
,a, ., \\hanon'
R ttl
1n... pro ... rx: h
Thr ... unl\alnl llll:ulllptnlt:' i.Jnt.l
Olher . . \\ 1lh rt! "' n In tret mduJ ~
111 mdu ... ma.: ' c.lepcnc.l ... nn m..... tenn
ratlr, 1J t.:omp 1111c:' \\ hu c pt'- IH
al I,; bl nn,; nt t\\U recurnne dt:\od
ntre-111"' m: 1hout X JXfl:Cnl I )l: I
phone t1lllt c.., \\ ho-.e n r.:;;m \Tc
opmt:nt.., nr:w h:~.:hnnlue 1e' and OC\\
ahoul II p~.:rl:cnt IIlLI h 1nt.. \-\ ho t'
rnarkt'h
TuJ t) :or. Exxon Mob1l1.,n t hetlln
'lll:l:C:......., 1' ne ''UI~.:li 1 return 'n
on ne.-:.1 )car!'. automobale but on th,;
t'\"'d' m \\ ht~o.h I pal.:t:lll ... 1 h trc
ue, rahk
n'm t1dt: ol lob 'lmar~eh m "h11.h
lJnum P lttlll.: th~ natum..., h1 e-.1
only a lew c.:nt:rey comp mil!'!-. Wtll
r dro td \\ . , diarter~J hy Cu 1 rt"..,,
...,llinr\IVC
111 IX62 l 1 Imi.. Amc:nca' Ea .. ttn tlk
Glot'laltl Hum hao, ~.:h m eJ the
'lrullurt: ol mJu""ttrae... tl:TO" th!!
Wt::!'&gt;t Cu '' But1t \\J' 111 prepi.Jrt:J t 1
~.:ompett: ;,aga11N tTU\:~
Uruon Pac t
hn trd No I m... t..:r t: n compam\:'
h.. re . . pnnJt:J b)
H.; ~uwn
... e,er I
tdllt:\e m lllllllll11 t'IIILI(n~o:lt: ... ol
'Ill 1llt:r lll111pt:tllor' L 1pped hv the
'l: 1k JU!&lt;.L h) lv 1k10... u n ttu n 11
$4 I b1 lhon lu~u -.11on )I Sou tht:: r ~
fltr~l"l.., ' 1' ' H1 n. nlhu . . m~"pru
Pac.:1l1c 11 I )l)(l L msol Ulim m r
k"t r Chn ... t ,phd Hartktt M m:
I rt Jdl) o I Ct) np m t::!'. don t t:OillJXlt!
I..~.: t' tnf.l c h L 1 t h tr 11 IClJU rl t
n hto.; to 1 n J tr r u l trtt:ry 1 Mc'&lt;l
wuh o 11!' moth~:r tor tnvt' ... tort: tp ttl
~.:o 10 JOn th~.: I )h htllll n tr\:nJ
hut\\ Hh tllmdu ... ln e' ~~.:w . . s all bor
M 1 Bell .., ~Jtl...,pr 1 t t: e 1 1 ed n
dcr . . In thas Y.ay tht: E"'nn Moh I
a reu num tlkr rt' t n 11n th ll th\:
..:nmh n tt1o 1 ~-:omc:-.; tnto l~i.:us
US go\.t'rnmt:nl c rJercd dl\e!&lt;.I IIU l"
Sm~.:t.: llJh.., the nt.lu . . try s proll
of
AT&amp;T 11 J nu f) 19X..J mto 't'\
m1rems have: \hppeJ trom about, I
en
regton al td eph( lt: cnmpan e ...
per~.:en t to le !-..., th 111 IS ~r~.:ent

r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;lr.==================-r-~================-r.================~

CALLAMERIC4SU PSY
CHICS I 900 740..6500 E111
3596
wwwlheholpages2 om'n•psy

U

'nurLe ot ll.hl .~nd h&lt; 11 - threatend

Ill

no h1ll too

Paepke author ot The [v &gt;)Ul on ol
Pro ress
Dan1e JR 111 1Ss&lt;&gt;c111e prolessor &gt;I

Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance Oead tl ne 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Is to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
1 OOpm Friday
All

New Fa mers Tobacco CO INC
Oh o s sell ng tobacco -4
days a week c.:m or app Orv I e
Wha en 1 888 844 4365 or Ed
son Mayes 304 675 858
New To YouTh ft Shoppe
9 Wesl S mson Athens
740 592 842
Qua y cloth ng and househo d
ems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thursday Monday th u Sa u day
900530

80

A play

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Aucl on Company
lu me aucl oneer camp ete
auc on se v ce
l censed
1166 Oh o &amp; Wes1 Vrg nia 304
773-5785 Or 304 773 5447

Th tl "' what \\t: sn: n t h~ lltt:rnd
\\ ( riJ
In tha s vrcw Rl4..keklh.:r s suc
cessm I!&lt;. not Exx.on M 1bal Chat r nan
Lee R tj mon d \.\oh he ~.:o mh rwd
~.omp ny s nttrht l 1p t II tpp ro tt.:h
~s $"'...!.()hill Ul llll t: lh 111 I Ct'lltuty
Iter ats crt: 11 on hut rerh p-, J~rry
Yanu: md Duv1d F It' j..:O It undt:rs ol
Internet p 1werhous~ Y 1hoo Y lh oo s
11 trkd r.: 1p ho\,;rs tt $20 ball ton less thanln e ye 1rs ll cr tht: p 1rtners

droppe&lt;i

&gt;1

90

Wanted to Buy

ad 1p1 'r I e s ') s R 1mlolph Wesl
crl elu dean ol 1l1c Mal h 111 Sc hu &gt;I
ot BL sme' t tl1e Unner-;•ty c I
Smlhern C Jllorn 1u A 11011 the I 1
comp m e' Lhi.J I llllst lutt:J the ong
10 tl Dow Junes llldU sll 1! ve r ee
one "' ur\ 1vcs Gent: r ll Electm:: m
am tl _ nn ttaOn o l sm lller comp nte!'.
Who rt:'!llt:lllbt!l s Smith Au toano
btk ol K th 1s The.: ll rn ul tht! ct:n
turv p oJu~.:er ol the Gre tt Sm ath

1" ''

• F n illy 11 h lid IY sh1 pp111! 1
nut n y 11 pi 1 ..:h~.:lk )t t r ht lt:)
pia.: IS\: d l llsl uH.I pend s 1111e II Ilk
w nk r 1111 the h m~.: E\l:r)' I tn 1 h 1
dIll.:~.: ll '1-\ llllt.: Jnh
I c: l..h.: tlk
p 1 lilt t:s on )t ur 1 !-.l th l \\IIIII 1..\:
I It! t.: er I r yo1 1 1 th~:: I 1 1u 1
lt r lllOI I.: I l )ltnlt llll n 1\ 1!
tht: akms II It'd m.th .., ut dt: 1 It: e

L II lh&lt; OSU E xlcn &gt;1 It
11 7~0
4~6 711117 ul h IV&lt; '1lc 1 I I 1J py
\:

I ~Oil

(Jen nifer L Byrnes IS Gatl1a
County s extension agent for agr1
culture and natur al resources
Oli1o State UnlversllV )

4 Pupp es To Good Home 740
388 9147

'

Job Posttngs
SEPTA Com!CIIonal Facility
Nelsonville Onlo

App cat ons may be qbtamec
!rom and returned to the A!l1ent
011 ce ot the OhiO Bu eau of Em
ployment Serv c&amp;s Complete JOt
descnpt ons a e ava abe for e
v ew at the OBES otf ce ThE
deadline lo app cal on lor th
postmg s Fr day December 1
1998

Counselor prov Cles n1ens ve
shorl term goa dl ecled coun
sellng to offenders on a one 10
on'e bass and group basts
Salary $18 012 80 0 yur

Schedule Sunday through
Thunday 2 00 pm 10 00 pm
except Wedneaday 10 00 am
600pm
M nlmum

qua I cat ons BA.IBS or
Masters Degree in Soc a Work
Soc o ogy Psycho ogy c mnat
Just ce o related led Three (3)
years e11per ence n correct ons
COUnsevng SOC a WOk Or e ated
area pre e red Val d Oh o Ouv
er's L cense requ red
Maintenance Mechanic Full
time Performs ma n1enance and
re pai rs to laclllty eteculcal
plumb ng and HVAC ~yste ms
Schedule Warks 8 00 am to
4 00 pm Monday through Frl
day aubject to emergency call
book

Mm mum qua I cat ons AI east
one years successlu experience
w lh n the past lve yea s n a e
!a led trade H gh schoo d ploma
or equ valent Must I) ave a va d
dr ver s l cense and g&lt;:10d driV1ng
record
1

Transportation Monitor On

Call Operates a f lleen passeng

er van to 1ransport es denls 10
and I om work slles lor job app I
cat ons nlerv ews and work re
lease Transpo ts es de nts and
staff on oil cat lac 1ty bus ness
Schedule Worka needed
Hourly rale S6 57 M1n1mum
qual f cat ons Hgh School 0 plo
rna or eqUivalent Val d Oh o Dr v
er's l cense good d 11 ng eco d

740 446 7696
Hens 8 Weeks Long Ha
ack Ye ow M xed 740 44 6
086 5
K
8

&amp; D Aula PariS Buying
w ecked or salvaged veh c es
304 773 5033

LOI of 1 2 To 2 Ac e!:l Fa y Nea
Ga po s 011 Paved Road Alrea
dy Equ pped Fo a S ng e 0 Dou
be Wde Mobte Home No Food
0 S p Area 740 446 2725 Ask
For Tom! DoMa
WANTED 150 200 acres su 1
abe fo ca 1e am wnh or wlhou
bu ld ngs ca Ke lh Sh nn
Sa es Assoc ate ERA Town And
County Real Eslale B oke 304
675 5548

Wh e Cats Outs de To Good
Home 740 441 1269

60

Lost and Found

Found On 588 Cord ess Phone
740 446 1352

Compu ter Use s Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K $75K Yr I BOO
348 7186 Ex 1t73 wwwamp
nccom
ORIVER MORE PAY

AT ROEHL

Public Notice
Pursuant

to

Section

121 22 of the Ohlo Revised
Code

notice Is h.ereby

given that the Meigs County

Roeh s 8 9&amp; Pay Inc ease W I
ncrease Ave age 98 Wage s To
$45 000 You Can Gel Home E11e
ry 6 8 Days I You Run East 0
The Rock es Oul 7 Days Home
2 Ou110 Home 3 OJTTanng
Owner /Operator $0 8 82 A
M les Exce en! Ins Solo 0
Team 95°o No Touch 48 53
Van 0 F atbed Ta ~ To Ou
D vers Ca 1Mke A Ou Oaylon
Yad

Budget Commission will be

In Memory
In Memo ry of
Dave (Kobo) Koblentz
and
In Honor of all h1s
Deer Hunllng Budd1es

Deer
M) lumrr 1

Ul

flu

l11gillrw ds
my luwrt u uot here,
M} !teart • m tiH•
llrghlorrds,
n rfwsmg tlw rlt er
I dwlfmg llw 1Uld dt t r
nml follo•vmg ll1e roe
My h etart s m tlu~

the

In Memory
In Lov1ng Memory

Charles L Bissell
on hts Birthday
Dec 6

(121 6 lTC

The wife and
daughters of
Walter Burke
extend a warm and
heartfelt thank you to
everyone for the1r
kmdness and gra
c1ous support dunng
the loss of ou r
Husband and Dad
Thank you for your
prayers pho ne ca lls
cards and food dona
t1ons
Spec1al thanks to
Dr Chhabna and
Staff Jay Cremeens
and Ke1th Rader
S ncerely
V1rg1n a Burke
Rhonda Gibson
Renee Mernll
Card of Thanks

Tlw fmmly of
JEFFREY A
WOLFE
rus/u s lH tlwu/-; fimulv
fru tid~ nmlw •KI•bors
ulw 'XfJrt&gt;~~t&gt;d th t?rr
S) UlfHil/1, U ttl!
luml u ords joorl
j7o1Vf

t

rs ,

f nl/~

1 m ts

nrth oruiJ'nnr rs

t ~f'l fl,fll t/wuJ. )O U
l IH tlu Jlmm r• ) ~IUS
1 1u Nlflj[oj ltttrutu

Gn ll1poh ~ \u ... nr('llf

Meigs COunty
County

Card of Thanks

Mr uwrutl /lo~p1tnl
Cuuu u1 ~ luru rnl
lit Iff (,,[,I« ,
St ltm I Urn ljonl
C/mn /1 uj C ltrt NI ,
S, rurrt~t ~aztu·, J/1 &amp;

1-800-725.0550
WWW ROEHL NET

Auditors Office Meigs
County Courthouse

Meigs

every one who sent
me a B.rthday (ard
on my 96th B1rthday
I got one hundred
and seven cards I
really enJoyed them
"Thanlts again"
Shirley E Boster

By Robert Burns

The

Budgol

Commission Nancy Parker
Campbell Secretary

I WISh to thank

ulwrea er I go

me ell ng will be conducted

Jn

Card of Thanks

ll•gillnnds

meeting on December 7

1998 al 9 00 A M

11 0 Help Wanted
POSITION CLINICAL SUPER
VISOR For The Ga a Jackson
Me gs T eatmem Alterna ves To
51 eel C 1me (TASC) Prog am
Full Ttme Pos 1 on W lh Coumy
Employee Bene! s Package L
censed lndependen Socia
Worker (USW) 0 L ensed Pro
less ona C n cal Counseto
(LPCC) Requ ed Mn mum Oi
Two Yea s Expe ence Wo k ng
In A Substan ce Abus e And 10
Cnm1nat Jus ce Sell ng P e erred
Out es Inc ude Bul A e Not L m 1
ed To Per1o mng Comp ehensiVe
Assessments And Rete ra s
Mon to ring Aelat onsh ps W lh
AOO T eatmenl Prov ders And
The Couns Quality Assurance
Reporting And Review ng The
Acl v 1es Of The Case Manage
men I And Ur nalys•s Componen1s
Add 1 ona Requ1remems Va d
Oh10 Or vers L•cense To Fu t
Travel Requ ement Saia y
$24 790 $35 000 Negol ated Ac
co d ng To Experience L censu e
And Educa on Appl callons
Ava lab e By Fax Or P ckup A
414 Second Avenue Su te 202
Ga pols Oh o Phone 740 446
6471 Fa)( 740 446 7894 Appt
cat ons Must Be Aece1ved By De
cemt:ler 14 1998 Gall a Jackson
Me gs TASC s An Equa Op
porlunlly Emp oyer Funded By
The Oh o Department Of Acoho
And Drug Add Cl iO!'! Se v ces
Through The Ga l a Jackso n
Me gs Boa d Of A coho Dru g
Addiction And Mental Hea lh
Serv ces

SEPTA Correctional Facility Is
an Equal Opporlunlty Employ

J

HOLIDAY WEEKEND CASH

S mp y Reg sle Cus om&amp; ~
Fo A Sav ngs On The r Gas B
CALL NOW! 614 834 52 15 0
800

919 445

-..,----~-

•

Help Wanted

er

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

served !he nutr ents lh ll we n:: It::! I
DC" pend n... on tht: pi tnt ln ... :.111d tt::r
1 It l l ll rl: 111 st len ol I l:-r.l !-.t' 1" n
the1e m y bo..: \ tsl d tkrt:n..:t:.., t &lt;Ill
! 1\:ld t
t:! I S II mpl n n
II
dl1 v) llt lt tn y klltll/t!'f I oil t: I
,~ n p1 t'!'&lt;.
1nJ 1\ 1tl the ~ r lie
s nnpll1 n h 1h 11 mty deity r.esull '
HI I dd \V IJ..
• R~.: L tdl ) ll It hILl: ; ' lr
et1c.: ( n dcr thc::J I\:1d 1KHIOn h1 s
hH) 'I M 11 h Hlle d e !!\~.:
H.l
n tun
t ne wh~;;n m lk n ~ 1 ur
dt.:~..: !-.I m
1111 till Ill n IH uld I e
v 1I 1hk n TN97 11 c 1 11 J 1Hill 1

~

Absolute Top Dollar All US S I
ve And Go ld Cons Proclse s
Damonds An que Jewel y God
A ngs P e 19 30 US Cur ency
S e ng E c Acqu s Ions Jewelry
M TS Co n Shop 5 Second
Avenue Gall po s 740-446 2642

Ani ques &amp; clean used lu n lu e
w buy one p ece or complete
househO d Osby Ma 1 n 740
992 6576

11 l th e Ph D pn r 1111 I

St 111 lf I Uruvers ty tt It n tht:rr lnl~r
net port1l hu sln t..:s!'. h II t1 ne
P lt\11.:1 lte qt iC"
e r.:o n
pn:sslll m thl!&lt;. 1 t..: of tedmol , y It s

h lid

Stolen
you won gllns or pu chased at
yard sale n Me gs or Mason
Coun y area please check ser at
numbe s
200 W nchester
IIL698689 or 1300 W nches er
ft l 2976137 These a e so en
guns Ple ase cOnlac t Becky at
740 742 4012
f

110

Hourly Rate $7 35 0 hour

bl) 1bs &gt;ille decl k When techn &gt;I
' y Is I e~h a 1U Y' un 11 pr ll lei tt~s

Winter months ideal
c.:a l v tn ~

and p 1 nt the wmdnw lr um:: trom the
m sn.lt: ( ut mov ml! lhe sash ~.:ord II
there Is m e out ol tl e w •Y to av~ud
c-e ll m e- p l nt on 11 N~tx.t pu nt the
wuuJow c 1s1ne- Cu t n a lite de 1n
line where the l'as m2 rntets the wall

CLASSIFIEDS!

and 11 as best to sean..:h a hst su~.:h as

109 Remunerated

II y&lt; u are pa n1111g 1u01 ble hunu p IIlli tt Lea\ e tt sl !hi I) • pe 1 so Ihe
\\ 1ndow ,md the upper :-. tsh as mo.,. p' n1 Wil l nol gel d1r1y lithe bouom
1ble reverse the pos1t10n of the 1nnC"r ol the s l&gt;h
or lowt!r sash and the outer or upper

losses
Let s say you were man emerg

74 Br ng to an end
2 wds
75 Oldcon
76 Elevate
79 Crude dwethng
80 Mongrel
81 Table scrap
83 Annoy
84 Language
85 Film tesl•val c•ly
86 Fall mo
89 K1nd ot cattle
91 Mouthful
92 Ameche and
Adams
95 Charged part1cte
97 Walked back and
forth
98 Str kes
I 00 Dismounted
I 01 Spreads to dry
I 03 K nd of roast
105 Someth ng valuable
106 Repulse
107 P ece

Return the s 1shes to the1r normal
posrttons but don t close the wmdow

p unt work an i! t&lt; w m.lthe s 1sh
01 u1urse 1t the upper s 1sh '
p mteU shut )OU L'an t move t so

~.:ause

menls and take advantage of paper

.

work

Window gn lle l tke 11 out lor 1much
CISler JOb Use a I I12 mch w1de sash
brush and don t dr.1g your brush back
the edge because thas Wi ll
a run 10 th~ p 1 ttl

In vestors can lake advantage of
any lo!'.ses m~.:urred thts year to oil
!-iet gams
As1de from bas iC loss reportm g
they can choose to swap ~orne mvesl

BelJmm Australia Austna Japan
and the Netherlands Horses must
have earned a predelermmed number
of po1nts between Aug I 1997 and
July31 1998 toquahfyforthemv•
lauonal compet111on

you c tn dupl1c ue p Iris

scr 1per down lhe JOlllt between the
elass and tr tme then st:mpe IW I)' the

lt:ro~"'

Tips offered to lessen
burden of doing taxes

provinces Eng land Germany Italy

nf two horses In 1 su g le pass 1"' you

type you Wi ll h IVt' to s tnt!
aw •Y the p 11nt blllld1 p n th iS 11e 1 It
the h 1rtlw ITt' I"' nol pI 1teJ lllllty be
e tster 10 remove It r 11her th m pamt
ITOlllti I(
P utll wmdows. from \tie nsu.lt:
uut Bee n p 1 ntmg I he thm \Crt~.: I
u1d hor lOn tal dtvttlers betwet: n the
p mes m Joublt! hl 1£ wmJows The
~a mc h lids true 11 r ~.:asement wm
dows
It your W1m1ow h 1s 1 removable

S HllC

I

PROMOTION WINNER - Brian Ours, left, was the wtnner of
the R1o ~rande Elementary PTO raffle tickets for the Oh1o StateMichigan game He accepted the tickets from Tracy Tackett, left,
a PTO Board membe~ The PTO expressed Its thanks to all who
help support the program

m1lhon awarded lo J 596 enlnes
lrum 47 states f1ve Canad~an

Painting windows requires special technique
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features

venh A \:Ombmallon of

j;able 1nd snfl11 venls would be even

· L_~====~=============·=· ·===========~J

o

open In the

to u~ }:'!able

SUNDAY PUZZLER

I 36

THE FOYF.R

Ihe sheet metal roof may be d•ITicull
so your besl bel would probably be

your tund. and move mto another pub

1 Tenn•s competition

----

vent openmgs 10 allow for a1r move
ment ln stalhnn walert lc!ht vents m

Local horse chosen top 10 finalist

6 Spouse

-

baus w11h an auached vapor bamer
mtherlh m use a separ•~ vapor bar
ner Place the batb on the alii&lt; lloor
between the JOISts w1th lhe vapor bar
ner facmg toward the rooms below
You should also use al Jea.sl two

er an the allJt: lhe siZe of lhe vent

Dunng the summer 11 s possible

fresh a1r 1n over or through ducts that
are healed by heated a1r Irom the 1111e

ACROSS

o~ ·\

Check w11h your local ut1hly com
pany lo determtne Ihe r..:omme~
amount of tnsulauon for your aluc It

You "'hould alsu

a111c

I

,

20

cond1110nm6 crn.ts

.

BEDRM 3 ''o 0 xlO 0

GARAGE

~.:omlensa110n

If you do not know the source of
excess1ve mo1s1ure m rhe hous~ you
should tnlroduce some dry a1r from
the outside There are a number of atr
exchangers on the market that are

1·36 STATISTICS

10 0 •10 0

heal load on the ce1hngs of !hi;
rooms belo" It al..o helps redlK.-c alt

'' more prJcUcal to mstall msulauon

peelm,1 We would eveniUally hke to

A \'\10()0 R \II JNf. a nti d«nl"ahH fnt"ur-k a(:u·nt lhco columnt."ll
look and fn-1

For big business, mergers
mean· survival. not conquest

Homes Q&amp;A: some solutions
for problems with moisture

We love you
Daddy
a nd m1ss you very
much
Your Jov1nq w fe
and lam ly

\Jt fiJJprr t HI If n il tlwt
u fl~ drnu '" r om}• rl liS
111 our lmu oj so rrou

Suu ('rei}

I urrr trnruuln
Lrwlsn) "-'\: Jmwtlwu

'

�•
\

G II.

110

320

Help Wanted

--.................

~110

....._...... .......

RUNNERS
WAN1ED
w Home 3 0u1 Of 4 w~
• RegiOnal Or Long Haul
• Ful Benelrls Package
• Exp&amp;neoce Pays SSS
CDlA&amp;1'r'rOTRR~

CatiB00-711-5919
: Local Bus1ness in Ga ll•polis Ha s
• Op• n•ngs Secr eta n al &amp; Office
Manager W1th Expenence In
• Computers, RecOrd Management,
• Teleph one Commumca11ons &amp;
• Meets Puo11c Well Send Resume
• To P 0 Bo1 84 Ga111pohs , OH

: ~1

: local Truekrng Company Saekrng
• Ouahl1ed Tr ucK Onvers Good
~ · Pay And Beneltts Send Resume
To PO Bol 109 Jackson Oh 1o
456&lt;f, O Or Call 1-740·286·1463
To Schedule An IntervieW
: Need Babysmer In My Home. For
• 7 Month &amp; 2 112 Yea r Old Begin: lng In January 74().245--5823
: startrng Par1 -T1me ! FuH -T•me .
Secretary Or Off•c e Assu:~alanl
· For An Ac countrng F1rm Company &amp; Proless1onal E•penence
. Helplul , Mmimum Wage &amp; Send
• Resume To P 0 Box 180 San·
• dyv1lle 'MI 25275

.-------:-:::--

The Galha Coun ty BoarO ot MR I
DO Is Currently Acceptrng ,Apphcation s For The Followmg Pos1
liOns In TMe Gal le o WorkshOp
Regrstered Service. Adult Serv1ce
Worker

Dut1es ln9~~1st1ng Phys1·
cally A 6 Mentally hallenged
' lnd1
uals 32 5 Hours Pe r
: W
$8 66 h-iour
lrcat rons Can Be Obta1ned At
' The Galha County Board Of MR!
: DO Located At 8323 North Stare
Route 7 Cheshire Ohio 45620

'

Oeadllne For Applymg December
~ 18, 1998
: The Gallla County Board Of MRf
• DO Is An Equal OpportuMy Em : player

Help Wanted

110

THERAPISTSIREijAeTECH
Your Oed1e:won .t.no Tale nts
Count As Progressive Stefl Re
hab A. Vnal Subsldtary Of Exten
Cltcare Hea lth Servtces. Inc We
Prov1de Patrents W•lh The Most
Ad vanced Therapy Serv •ces
Avatlable Whtle Supporlmg You
W•th The Tool s Vou Need To Be
Your Best We Curren tly Have
The Followmg Pos11ons Av811able
In The Pomeroy /GaUtpalrs Areas

'PT OT &amp; SLP - P~N

ay, Ohio •S769 betore December
10, 1998
Plumber W1th AI Least 3 Years
E'-'eryelay Experrence CAll 740·
446-3888 Betwun 10 00 I 5 00

For Appoonhnent

Business
Training

Wtnler Quarter Starts January
4,1999 CaiiTodayl 740-4464367, 1·800-214-o452, Reg t90-

d5-12748

180

Wanted To

230

Opportunity

Oo

"Pat Spencer· Is Bacll To Wall
paper And Pain t rng Full T 1me
Agam 740·441 - 1033. 740 -367 0514, Leave Message
E l eclr~ c mai ntenance serv1ce
W1n ng , breaker boxas, llghlllx·
tu re, heatmg systems, and Ae ·
modelrng 304-674.01 26

PROGRESSIVE STEP
REHABILITATION SERVICES

FurM ure reparr, relrnrsh anel restoratiOn. also custom orders Ohio
Valley Refrnr s hlng ShOp, Larrv
Phillips, 740-992.&amp;576 ,
Georges Portable Sawmill, don t
haul your logs to the mill JUSt call
304-675-1957
Ha~te

Theraprstsl Rehab Tech
Your ded1cat•o n and talents
count at Progress 1ve Step Ae
hab, a v11a1 substdrary of Exten
d1care Health Serv1ces , INC We
p rovide pat1ents With the most
advan ced therapy sen11ces
available wh1le supporting you
wrth the to ols you neetl to De
your best We currently have the
lollowmg pos1t1ons avatlable rn
the Pomeroy!Galhpolrs areas

1 Openrng For 2"' Hour lf'l
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handr·
capped , 740-441-1536
lntenor Palntmg, Plumbing 6 Re ·
modeling, Any And All Odd Jobs,
740 245--5 151
J&amp;L Cleaning Let Us Do Vour
Holiday Cleaning For Commercial
&amp; Res•dental By The Hour Or By
The Job. 740-441-1357. Jackson ·

740-2116·6510

FINANCIAL

·Rehab Tech -lull trme
'PI OT&amp;SLP·PAN

OH)() VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bUSI ness wrth people you know, and
HOT to send money through the
mall untrl you have •nvestlgaled

Prooflng, all tlasement repatrs
done . fret esumates. ldeume
guarantee t2yrs on JOb expenIII'ICe 301 . . 3111.

lheollorong
COKE /PEPSI

Please call or fax your resume lo
,Beth Battmger Reg1ona1 staffing
coord 1nator 1 800-929-2 167 Fax
1'27-539 8059 An equal oppor·
tunlty employer
Progressrve Step Ae hab1l11atron
Serv1ces

aualness
Opportunity

VE~DING : Lazy Persons Dream

Few Hours = Good S Pr ice To
Sell Free BrOc hu re 800 -820·

4353

.&gt;

101'011965, 140-742·2951

Free Nursmg Ass is tant Tratnrng
Class Flavenswooo Center can
help prepare you ror thle ruturel
Acceptmg applications for CNA
class will start soon 60 hours
el1n1c a1 1nstruct1ons Thl1s class
w111 be held hom 8 00 am to "' 30
pm ana features lecturel. prac·
lice labs and cllmcal rotatiOns as
r equ~red under OBRA Mull have
a hrgh &amp;etiool diploma or GEO 10
attend Successful candidates
w•ll be constdered lor emp loy ment Please can (3041·273-9385
or apply by December 9, 1998 to
Ravenswood Center, 200 South
R1tCh1e Avenue . Ravenswood
WV 26164 A Glenmark- Gensts

CHIMNEY SWEEP

$39.00

446-3745
BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg $149 00
Sale Prrce $59.00
Large Stock
Engrneer .. .
$49.00
Wellrngton .
$49 00
Loggers
$50-55
Harness
$59 00
Carollna-Georgra. H&amp;H
Insulated Safety, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE
62 Olrve St.
MEDICARI;,SUPPLEMENT
Rorfriie Lynch
THE LYNCH AGENCY
336 Second Ave
Gallipolis, OH
446·8235

,,
•

CHRISTMAS TREES
Scotch Prne 3'--£ ' cut your own or
we wrll cut for you!
Blue Spruce 3'- 7' cut or dug
Forever Green Tree Farm
Owners· Rrck and Lena McFann
and Grrls
Grover Road, Cheshire
367·0394
GNC-Sale
Christmas Grft rtems : Coffee
Scented Candles, Aromatherapy
Candles, Aromatherapy Beanre
Pals, Glycenn Toy Soap,
lnlratech Flex Body Massager.
Sound Spa.
Massagers- Foot, back &amp; neck
Men's, Woman's &amp; Kids
Vrtamrns
13 Ohro Rrver Plaza Gallipolis

GRAHAM'S
UPHOLSTERY

800 ·693· 7128 .
Or
www.out1nlrontcom

LPN 's&amp; CNA' s· Ravenswood
Center rs now acceptrng appllcatrons lor full aM part 11me posi·
lions Excellent benet1t package
If Interested. please apply m person Monday through Friday, 9am·
"' pm , or wr1te . attention Tom
Fl eynolds Adminrstrator, 200
South R1! Ch1e Avenue , Ravenswood WV.26164 phone (304 -)
273 · 9385 EOE A GlenmarkGenSis Facmtv

Professional
Service•

Llvlngtlon't Ba~ement W•lerProoflng , all basement repairs
done tree est1mates. ldetlme
guarantee 12yrs on JOb expen·
ence 304-895-3887.

SUNDAY BUFFET
11 am till2 pm

$~1 . 95 Adults $6.00

Chicken, Vegetables,
Salad Bar, etc.
Breakfast 1
Eggs, Ham, Bacon,
, sausage
Kids $4.50
Children under 5 eat free
THE STOWAWAY
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis
Serenity Hou~e
serves vrct1ms of domestic
violence
call 446·6752 or
1-800·942·9577

when we can make your

HOUSE

furniture as good a~ new.

Monday, Dec.

We offer a large selection

1 :00-8:00 p.m.

7

craftmanship. Call 446·

Cure ProC::Jcts

3438 for a free estimate.

Door Prize drawing,

FOR SALE:

2205 Graham School Rd .

free gifts w/2 purchases.

Lrke new, double bed

Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .

Refreshments

&amp; gift

Now accepting Visa &amp;
certificates available.
d
l::===M:::a:::s::::t=e=rc=a=r==.==::;'I Headquarters by Juanita
•
313 3rd Ave
IP=====::::::==::=~
Lookrng for a gift?
•
INDIAN CREEK GOLF
Check at '
Gallipolis, OH 45631
mattress set $150'
Warm Mornrng CO?I/wood stove
w1th blower $250
Call 446·43t 4

G1ft Cert1f1cates Available
740-245-5747

from

26 ,000 miles
7 40-446· 1443

011 SR 233 Lrsted 0 $30,000

lmmed•ate occupantancy. 5
mrles sou1h PT. Pleasant RR 2
30 min . ror to Toyo1a plant 3br
bnck ranch , 2 lull baths, lg. k•l.
wf applian ces All alec 2 car
heat&amp;d garage For app 30&lt;4-675-

740-286-0081.
Three bedroom ranch, kitchen wf
appliances . ball'! , LA rur{lllure,
curtains 18x20' badt deck, Out·
bulldrngs , crty water, blacktop
Rd. Waterloo Ad , leon WV,

1226 for sale or rent

$39,900. 1.aoo-486-8555

&amp;yr. 2-3 bedrooms, loft, longue /
groove. pellet stove,,HP/CA, appliances. garage, spa , acre. Bula vlla Pike, 7.a-367.0286
.

BAICK

AANCH

Slyle

House EJ:cellent Cond1hon, Par·
11ally F1nrshed Basement, 2 Car
Garage , Senous lnQu•nes Onty'l
740-446-3385
Restored Vldorran homa Situated
on 12 acres Village Mrddleport
secluded and prrvate, appo1nt·
ment. call740.992·5696

150

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
$09tDOWN
3 BEDROOIIS, 2 BATHS
FREE DEUVEAY
&amp; SET.UP
ONLVAT
OAKWOOD HOliES
NITAO,WV
304-155-6885
Um1led Otter
$50() Down on any 14x70 in
stOCk, hm1teel number, free dehv·
ery Cal! Ht00-691-6777
$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublew1de In stock Free Oehv·
ery Cal11-800-691 6777

Schools
Instruction

-

1991 14Ft X 70Ft, 2 Bdrms. 2
Baths, VInyl Sldtng. Great Cond1·
liOn. $17.0001JO 740-446-8113

7&lt;10--&lt;46-2668
1973 12x60 Hillcrest 2 bedroom
mcl&gt;ilellomo. 7~992-~

1992 Noms, 16Ft )( 70FT, VJnvt
With Sh•ngtes 2 Bdrms • 2 Baths,
All Electtic ApphanC$S. Porc~es .

OSMOSE. INC.
FORESTRY TRAINEES
Natrona! Co. seeks Self·
motivaied individuals to
manage a utility pole
onspectron team
Must enJOY outdoor wort&lt;
and be wotlong to travel to
temporary ass~gnments on
several stales.
Osmose offers.
-company Traorung
$25,000• '
•Excellent BenelriS

1996 Sun51'11ne 14x76 3· Bed·
rooms, 2 Ba ths CA 740 -388-

8567
1996 Sunsl'lme 14x76. 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths , CA . 740·388-

8567
5 112 acres . 2 mob1 le homes.in
Mason County 4 bu1ldmgs.
• $20 .000 contact Lee 304·532-

• 0846

·:-:-~~:---­

Double W1de New $999· 0own
$237-par mo Free delivery &amp; set·

. up 1-800-69r.em

package

DOWN PAYMENT 8LUES1
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV
WILL MATCH YOUR
DOWN PAYIIEN1
CALL FOR DETAILS
SPEC... L FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304-15s.5185

•Profit·sttaring bOnuses
•Advancement OpportunitieS

Send resume to

09111ose, P.O Box 2527
Mansfield, Ohro 44906
EOE M!FIDN

Umited Offer

Position Announcement
.

Good selectiOn of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starl1ng at
$3995 Ou1c,lc delivery Call 740-

Posting Date: December 2, 1998

PART-TIME FACULTY MEMBERS

Mid-Ohio Valley Truck Driver Training
Wttkday dams I to 5 M·f. Also evtnlngs &amp; w"ktnds.

• ClasHtl«looril doss Aand Blktnst
• flnaadng 111111 lundllg avallaltltiMised 011 tliglllllty
'91% pla&lt;oNnt 011 Ooss A trallillfl' ·
Ucnsod ~y the Ololo 'Dtpart.,..t of Highway Safety
M11'itt11, Ohio 45750
Cellact E4 Atl.s 1·100-648-3695 or (740) 373·6283 Ext. 331

Veterans Memorial Hospiial is
looking for an EXPERIENCED
Medical Transcriptionist. Day shift,
hours flexible. If intere~ted, contact
Humon Resources Department at
740-992-2104.

rMi'\

--\:5/

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING
An rnlormatronal meetrng lor area resrdents who are
rnterastad in attendrng truck drrver trarnrng wrll be held
at the GMCAA Olfrce at 33105 Hrland Road, i r o y
on Wednesday, December 9. The meeting wrl
ure
Ed Adams, Coordrnator of the Mrd-Ohio VIII
uck
Drrver Tralnrng School at the Washington County
Career Center in -ManeHa
Mr. Adams wrll drscuss careers in the truckrng
rndustry and what rt takes to succeed In this field He
will also explain requirements to enter truck drrver
trainrng
Mrd-Ohio Val ley offers several training programs
mcludrng a 5-week/200 hour prog ra m lor
approxrmately $2000 wrth classes begrnnrng every few
weeks.
The meetrng rs open to any Gallia or Mergs resrdent
rnterested rn truck drrver trarnrng Representatives of
Gallia-Mergs CAA wrll be at the meetrng to drscuss
JTPA lun(jing whrch may be available for elrgrble
Individuals. JTPA can rn many cases pay the full turtron
lor those attendrng truck driver trarmng GMCAA
currently has ava1lable traroing and ret,rainrng funds for
unemployed and underemployed elrgrble resrdents of
Gallia and Mergs Count1es
II you would lrke to attend the meeting please call
740·446-1018 exi. 88 or 740·992·2222 ext 88 to
reserve space The re is no charge to attend the
meetmg or for JTPA servrces
II you cannot aHend the meeting you can obtarn a
JTPA Preapplrcatron by callrng 740·446· 1018 ext 99 or
740·992·2222 ext. 99 or at the fol lowrng GMCAA
facilities.
Gallra-Mergs Communrty Act1on Agency
Central Office
Gallla Ollr10
Mergs Ollice

8010 North Slate Route 7

859Thlrd Avenue

33105 Hiland Road

Chashire, Ohio 45620-0271
Gallrpolis, O~ra 45631 Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
740·367·7342140·992·6629 740-446·1018
740·992·2222
Fax: 740-367 7510
www.gmcaa.com

' Equal Opportunity Employer

The Unrversity of Rro Grande announces openrngs lor part·trme faculty members rn the areas of
readrng, learnrng strategres, wellness. career development, JOb readrness, busrness and computer classes
lor the Unrversrty's Meigs County Center.
A Master's Degree In the d1scrp11ne IS requrred with
a doctorate degree preferred
Previous teaching
expbnence preferred.
I Interested applicants should send a leHer of Interest and resume wrth the names of three references
before the deadlrne of December 16, 1998 to
Ms. Phyllrs Mason, PHR
Drrector of Human Resources
Unrversrty of Rro Grande
Campus Post Office Box F27
Rro Grande, Ohro 45674
Fax 740·245·4909 and e·marl. pmason@urgrgcc.edu
The Umversity of R1o Grande IS an Equal
Opportumty!AfflfmatJVe Act1on Employer

TRAINING ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE '
Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency
currently has available training and retrainins
l'unds for UJl'!mplo}'M and underemplo}'M eligible
resident.o of Gallia and Meigo Counlieo.
If you are &lt;Urr'enlly attending school or plannlnR
to attend in lhe near fuho'e you may qualify for
financial assistance.
You can obtain a,Preapplication by calling 740446-1018 ext. 99 or 740-992-2222 ext. 99. or
you can meet with GMCAA stafr at tM following
tbnes ~ locatioll!l.
November 30, 8:30 Al\f-12, PM OBES Center,
Rio Grande
December 2, 11 AM, Hocking College, Room
JL348,Nelsonville
December 3, 10 AM, University of Rio GrandeCrossroads Office, Rio Grande •
December 4., 10 AM, GMCA~ Office, 33105
Hiland Road, Pomeroy
December 4, l PM, GMCAA Office, 859 Thin!
Avenue, Gallipolis
December 7, 8:30 AM-12 PM, 'OBES center, Rio
Grande
December 9, GMCAA Office, 33105 Hiland Road,
Pome roy (tnack driver training applicants onlJl
call for appointment)
December 14., 8:30 AM- 12 PM, OBES Center,
Rio Grande
December 16, 10 AM, GMCAA GaUia Office, 859
Third Avenue, Gallipolis
December 16, l PM, GMCAA Meii!Jl Office,
33105 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
December 21, 8:30 AM-12 PM, OBES Center,
Rio Grande
,
December 28, 8:30 AM-12 PM, OBES Cebter,
Rio ,C.rande
You can pickup a Preapplication at thete
GMCAA facilitieo.
GaDia-Meigo; Communily Action Agency
'
c.,nt... l omn.
Gatu.om ..r.
Mrip um ~.
BOLO North Slat" Roulf 1
059 Third A '"""r.
3JI051tilanrlllo..l
Che.hlno, Ohio 45620-09272
43769

c .lllpull., Olalo .15631

Ponwn11, Ohio

7'0-l67 . 7:Jo12 710.992-66 29
Faxt 7&lt;10. 367 · 7510

-.gmcaa.com
F.qual Oppor1unity Emplo,.~r
(22 &gt;\DI)

.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point f»leasant, WV

350 Loll &amp; Acreage

420 Mobile Homea

27 Acres In Walnut Twp . w•th
I'Ufal •a·
tar,
woods . and
pasiUre

GM;Ser mobtle home, wttt1
1740)379-2978

46 64 Acres m Galhpolli and
Me•gs Approx 4 clear rest 1n
WOOds Morgan ln off IJan Zant

Cal (140j 36&amp;-9105

G111i1 Co_: Just South Ot Town,
FrrendiY R1dge Rd . 15 Acres
$14 ,500 Great Homesite &amp; HuntIng, Pooe;c Walef Crty ~sl
Meigs Co.: We've Got The
County Covered! Just OU SFI 7
Below New H1gh Sctlool , l&lt;ee·
baugh Rd. 5 .tees $1-',000 Near
Carpenter. Oyesv11te, Very Rem·
ole t 1 Acres $10,500 Rutland,
Htll Rd . Just Off New
L1ma. 11 Acres $14 ,000 Or 9
Acres $12 000, Pubhc Water
Danvtlle, Bnar Ridge • Goff Flds 7 Acres W1lh Nice Pond S12.000
Or 8 Acres 113,000 Or On SR
325, N 1ce Wooded 17 Acres
$18,CJIX), CttyWater
Call For Free Maps + Owner F1·
nancrng lnlo Take 10'% Otl Usted
PriCes On Cash Pll'chasesl
N1ce 1 Acre Wooded Lot 4 Mrles
From P Drn t Pleasant, RoUie 2

Norlh. S 12.000. 304-675·5578

360

Real Estate
Wanted

3409
New 14x70 $500-0own $199-pei'
mo Free a1r, s~1rt 1-80069 16777
New 16X80 $500-0own S245 -per
mo Free air, Skirt 1-800-691-

67n
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom.
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer. sklrt1ng,
• deluxe steps and setup Only
$200. 74 per month w 1th $1150
dOwn 'Call 1·800..837-3238

PRIVATE SETTING
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 800· 38 3·

6862
SINGLE PAREN1 PROGRAM
SPECIAL FINANCING

AVAILABLE
NEW &amp; USED AEPO'S
CREDIT HOTLINE
304-755-7191 .
::--:::------:--~~'7.'::":"
• We Fmance Land &amp; Home With

.

• Aa L1tt1e As $500 Down 1·606·
: 928·3426
: 4.Bedrooms, 2 Beths, $229/Mo ,

Anthony Land Co

RENTALS
41 0 Houses for Rent
2 br $350 1- dep and you pay
utd 304-675-2S35
2 or 3 bedroom house in Pomer·
oy no pets, 740-992-5858
3 Bedrooms . 2 BathS, Full Basement Camp Conley Area . $300/
Mor. Plus Oeposrt 304-675-3230
Four bedroom house m Middle port, S325 month. S200 deposit.
references requrred, no pel6,
740·992·3457
4 Room House, Clean, FURNISHED. Near Downtown. No
Smoking No Pets, 740-446-1956
Nice 2 bedroom house, central
heal, ai r , 6"'8 Third $350 per
month Depos11t (740)44:6-2300
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom house rn
meroy. llO pets, 740-992·5858

Po-

Nrce two bedroom house rn Po·
meroy $350 per month plus de·
pos11, no pets, w111 cons1der land
contract after one year. 740·698·

: 330 Farms for Sale

992·3000

, 388·8504

. ----=:::-:::=:=-NEW ON MARKET

Ta~e A Cruise To Crews Valley
Our New land In The Country
Near Gallla 5 To 10 Acre Ae strlcted Res1denUal Tra cts, Start·
lng C $11,500, 20 Acre Hu nting
Tracts Touch Wayne National
' Forest, Less Than $20,000. Land
' Contract Available

,
1
'
•
;

:

ANTHONY LAND CO. LTD •
HIIJ0.213·8365

340

Business and
Buildings

Commerclai·OIIIce or Retail, 87
Mill St Middleport 1,450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Bu ilding •7&lt;f,Q.
992-6250 Acquisitions (nex t
• door)
•
'
:
.

.

Downtown , First FIOOf Oll lc e
Sp~ce Second Avenue Prole sslooal Or Retail 740-446-0 139 Or
740·446 -4383

~:::..:::.;.::"'::-:--­

: 350 Lots &amp; Acreage

: B~auttlul 2 Acres, Centenary Rd ,
, Level Lot Must Build House ,

• $12,500, Call740·446-2927

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 MOb ile Home And 2 Apartments No Pel51740-388·1 100

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.

6:30P.M.
RUTLAND

POST 467
$1,200.00
$50.00 OR MORE

'

2 &amp; 3 be&lt;koom mobile homes atr

1 Beomom AQaf"'menn. Partly Furn,sneo. Downlown Marn Street
Point Pleasant. 7.&amp;thW t-cm

con&lt;art1oned , $260·$300. sewer.
water and lrastt 1ncluded , 74099:2 2]67
Road. 4 Miles From Rro Grande.
~&amp;it. References. ReqUJred No

PelS

1 Baaroom Apartment.

Prrvate

2 beelroom mobile home In Middleport, $275 per month plus depo$ft. 7~992 · 3194

2 Bedroom Mob1le Home Spnng
vau,y Reference &amp; Deposit Re·
q1.1ret1, 74Q...441-0n2
2 Bedrooms In Kerr. 740·446-

9669

..-.

Mnon Trader 2 Bedroom5 S2951

Heal WID Hooi Up Near ~""..ltwna
$279/Mo . Plus Utihlles, Deposit &amp;
Lease Aeq...-ed. 740-446-2957,

Mo . + Depost, 31J4.075-na3
New Haven 2 Bedrooms, Fur ·
nls.hed Or Unfumtltled. Oeposil &amp;

2 Bedrooms. $325/Mo... Plus Unities &amp; Deposi t No Pels. Plus 2
bedroom house 740 446 4313.
14Q.44S.()619
2 Dr trailer, Tuppers Plarns area.
$250 per month , $1QO deposrt.
740-667-3083 alter 5pm

Now Takmg Apphcal•ons- 35
Wnl 2 Bedroom Townnouse
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage , Trash, $2951Mo' . 740441-1616 , 740-446-0957,

'

3 Flooms and bath , furnished eft•·
c1ency all uttllty pa1d1 Down stairs
919 Second Ave $275 Mon th
(740) 446-3945

Furn 1shed Upstarrs Apartment
Crose To Gorcery &amp; Downtown
Galhpolrs Aelrences And Otpos·

401HI515

it 7 40-446-1 ' 58

lt--Ex:lerior Wood Sodong-Gray Embossed Wood Grarn 8" by
39 95 Sq. Now $19 95 sq .
Pair Exterior vmyl SllUrtcrs
to 36" $995 prJ, (37"ro 60" $12.95 prJ, (6 1" 10 80"
20 pr and up 20% more rhscounl
~:~!~~~pc's P.d.nelmg and T1le Board All reduced pnces
Wildflower, Country Oak. Moonhghl. Whole
Gray Ceear. All i /4" by 4' by 8' Mondy board
Now $5.95 Z5 pes. up.
all Oak Brookside and Maple Reg. $24 95 Now
25 pes. and up.
IS···Ov,er 100 whirlpools in stock
Reduced Pnces
1\L.nurcnllorJ 60"
42" by 21' Reg $1395 00 Nol $595 00
two for
16-··No. 2 Pone Boards. Reduced pnces 3/4" by 8" by 14'"" ·~'- 3/4" by 12'-$5 59. 3/4" by 6" by 12'- $4.95.
Bluemist Commodes Reg. $249 95 Now. $99 95

l
[n,. •h&lt;-htdt

9~6

Furi"'Shed 4 Rooms &amp; Bath Completely Redecorated , Clean. New
Carpet No Pets Or Smoking Rei
erence &amp; Oepos1t Re;.qurred Also,
Furn1shed 2 Rooms. &amp; Bath Upfitarrs, 7.o40-446-1519

WELLSTON, OHIO
740-384-3645
YEAR END CLEAN·UP SALE
CASH AND CARRY ONLY

Two bedroom mob•le home In
Mieldleport no pets, 740-992-

1 Bedroom $235 /Mo Plus Uhll
ltes. 317 E College Street Am
Grande. Jack Neal 740-388 -

furrnshed 2 Bedroom Apartment
No Pels, 955 t J2 Second AVenue. Galhpohs. $300/Mo , Deposrt,
Ut1111es Not Included , 740·446·
1171 9-5 PM

PENN'S WAREHOUSE

TheMoment

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
n1shed and unfurnrshed, secunty
deposit requrred , no pets. 740·
992 22 t8

Mea 888-840-8521

5162

Tara Townhouse Apartments.
Very Spac 1ous 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors. CA. 1 1/2 Battr Fully Car·
peted, Patio. No Pets. Lease Plus
Secur•ty De~os 1t Requ1red . 740·
44&amp;-3481

Trailer For Rent. $250 Rent. $250
Depos ~. 740-446-4110.

Apartments
lor Rent

tar . Sewage, Garbage. Calf Toll-

Nice Clean 2 bedroom referencWasher fOyer HooK.-Upl 304-675-

&amp; """· Spring lwe ..

Brand New Mobile Home , 3 Bedro oms, Furn1shed Err;cept Bedroom Furn 1ture . No Pets . Reier·
ences ReqUired 74()-446-9616

440

Countcy Side Apartment large 2
Bedrooms. 2 Balhs , W/ 0 Hook Up, CIA $435/MO . tnctucllng Wa·

meroy, 111 utd1t1es paid. no pelS,

For Sate Or Rent 14x70 3 Bedrooms . 2 Baths , In Brdwe ll Call
For lnlormalion 740--682-7849

Two bedroom tra11e r. furnished, 1n
Mlddlepon , cau 740 378-6353 al·
ter6pm

ESTATES. 52 Wes1wood Onve
trom $279 10 $358 Walk to shop
1 mov•es Call 740-446·2568
Equal Hous&gt;ng iJr&gt;pQr1unily

140-992·5858

3 Bedrms, In Crown C1ty, $285 00
Monthly Plus Securrty Water And
Trash Paid 740-256-1426

5039

BEAUTIFUL APA~TMENTS Al

Nrce 2 bedroom apatlmtnt 1n Po-

Pomeroy $260 per month, $100
deposil, 740-667-XWll after 5pm.

Apartments
for Rent

BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON

~·- 304-882·2566

2tldrm apts , 101~1 elec:lrrc, ap·
ptiances lurntshea lauMry room
tactlllieS dOSe m scnoot 1n 1own
ApplicatiOns avarlaole at Village
Green Apt$ t49 or call 74G-992·
3111 EOH

3 "' apt • -

440

apartments at V1ti&amp;Qe Manor and
Rwers•c:le Apartments 1n Ulddlepon From $2"9 $373 Call 740992-5064 Equal Housmg Oppor-

2 br turn or unfurn apt dep &amp;
rer reQUifed JO.I-882-2566

740·245-5622

Apartmenta
for Rent

Graaous IN.ng. 1 and 2 bedroom

1 Betrroom . Econom•cal Gas

-·

behind )llU. P:odc up · ~-"~&gt;
rhe &amp;molt and&amp;"'
aWJy co your vay .: ..-~,.::t":'
ownlagoabin Or ::;:· ::-;;'

liVt m :a luxury ~ ·.:~ =-~~
home ,..r-rooncl
C.U ro. 0111 frtt brocnurc or 1114pagd 10 rolor aulag "''h floor
plaru for a&gt;&lt;r 60 mod&lt;l homes.

l-800-458-9990
hnrJJwwappioc.com

i l ~m•bpp~ ner

~~AM~~
PO 11m 614

~pkv, IW

l~:~:ie~;~~:j~lu~:~
· ~~; Wtndows-Rcduced Prices.
China Vanoty Bowls-Reg $69 95 Now. $19 95

I•

$29 95 Whote and Colors
Bat h iub:; Steel and Ftberglass and Acryhc ,
by 60" lo 48" by 72" From $89 95 to S199 95
1-15 lb. wl. Felt Paper. Reg $1295 Now $795 or 2 for
2·Large buyout on wood slams, Jel'd and Liquid. Brg
now have open. Penn's ' Country Corner. Crarts,
Floral, Yard Goods, Wallpaper, Prcrurcs and Oak Frames
much more at great prices.
0

lll71

PRICES GOOQ THROUGH DECEMBER 23, 1998
Public Sele and Auction

Estate

PUBLIC AUCTION

WOOD JIE.tlLTY, INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood, Broker· 446·4523
Ken Morgan. Broker - 446·0971
Jeanette Moore. · 256-1745
Patrrcra Ross
740-446·1066 or 1·800·894-1066

Sunday Dec. 13, 1998, al 12:30 p.m.
!he ·Howery A'Uclion House localed 6
West of A1he110, Oh, 011 Rt. 50-32.

_tar

bedroom home 2 baths,
With wood floors , oak cabmets rn
Schools Call about th1s one today.

#161-LOG HOME-3 to 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, lull
basement, 2 kitchens, Oak cabtnets and tnm , large stone
WB frreplace, and locate d on 5 acres M or L IUS! 10
m1nutes from Holzer Chn1c Call today.

in Gallipolis- Two
, t bath living room.
#50ttH;omme rcral property located in Vrnton- Two one
famtly dwe 111ngs and one two fam ily dwelling

Good

investment orcooe11V

BEECH GROVE
ROAD
~159-Home

ANTIQUES: Furniture: Stoneware &amp; colectrbles :
Guns and you pan a~solutely expect anyth1ng from
boxes etc.
,
Oak washstand ; oak parlor stands; Vrctorran
stand: Marble rnsert dresser , Oak serpentrne
Highboy; oak decorated bed / Iron beds, oak
flatwalls;· church pew; lg. oak chest of drawers; old
Prrmitrve cupboards ; sq oak table; wooden
wheelbarrow . library table w /drawer; corner
cupboard, national brass cash register , walnut
tredle sewrng machine &amp; more
MISC : Curly maple long tom gun w/powder horn &amp;
bag, 7.62 Hr-power rrfle, 20 ga pump lrke new;
stone churns &amp; jars some with writing ; wagon;
books; chrken crates; water pumps; wooden
bucket, marbles, lots of old m1lk &amp; pop bottles;
Dazey churn, glassware rncludrng Hersey;
Depressron: Fenton, Cranberry &amp; other. orl lamps;
old quilts; knives: Prctures &amp; frames. old records
(Elvis &amp; more 45's); boxes &amp; boxes of almost
anything. Some wrll be sold outsrde.
Come early &amp; search
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/I.D.
NO CREDIT CARDSJ

located on State Route 2t 8 has 3 bedlrooms,

2 baths and 5 9 acres M or L Just lrsted, call about

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY

1

1-740-698· 7231

one
Dear Valued Customers of the Gallipolis Area,
My nama Is Jacob Hively and I am the new
BP marketer serving the Gallipolis area. from
the BP Bulk Plant at 143 Pine· Street. The
plan1 Is open weekdays 7 am to 5 prh. The
phone number Is 446·1157 or 1·800·598·5654.
1 have worked as a driver and marketer with
Sohlo and BP since 1978. My employees and
myself have many years of experience
fulfilling our customers petroleum needs.
we deal exclusively with quality BP Fuels,
and we also offer a full line of motor oils,
greases, solvents and Industrial lubricants.
Please stop In or call with any questions,
comments, or to schedule a delivery.
,,
1 look forward to meeting you and servll'lg
your petroleum needs.
"
Thank you,
Jacob Hively

~158-VERY NICE-3..,1J edr~ 1/2 bath, family roo m,
deck, 2 car gltiHit!IIIIN~o iwp MUST.SEE THIS

ONE'! Extra

1dl'STclf sale tf desired

#4005-A 14x70 Mobrle hom e With 2 bedrooms, 1 bath ,
has 4 6 acres M or L located on Raccoon Road Won't

last long, call today

1155-3 bedrooms. 1 bath, 1n crty school drstrict, located
on 1 acre M ,or L Ci;tll for more 1nformatton
#154-Home tn ~V school D1stnct, 3 bed rooms, 1 bath,
located on 2 5 acres Pnced to sell Call Soon

REDUCED !
15006· PRICED REDUCED · great lnvaolmtnt
opportunity- 3 one bedroom apts- a 2 bedroom mobile
home· easy Ia rent. OWNER MAY FINANCE.
$15,000.00 DOWN, 9W. INTEREST, FINANCED FOR
YEARS.
#5008-Commerclal Property- In Town Location , Comm·

Bldg, Api-Bidg. 2 houses Get ali Jour for one procei Cali
tor more 1nformatton
12010·70 acres , more or less approx 30 acres wooded ,
uttl available, m1neral nghts

12014· Res1dentral Lot(s)

m Galhpohs

lf2015- Vacant land 2 75 acres more or less located

, state Route 218
IA~1CINE Comlortable home located on 4th St Close to school, bank,
off1ce Th1s 2 story home offers 3 8R, bath LA, Dr, k1t w/stove &amp;
vmyl S1d1ng Porches Some grapes &amp; stra.wbemes Very nrce yarel
good ne1ghbort1ood Well rnsulated

Tuellllay, Dec. 8, 1998,
6•30PM

LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
Gallipolis, Ohio

#146- Spac1ous home overlooktng beaut iful Ohio River,
s1tuate d on approx 5 .C acres Call about thiS one PR ICE

We offer a competitive salary, benefits and commission
package designed to reward outsta~ding achievement.
Please apply in person at CELLULARONE, 1100 East State
Street, Athens, Ohio.
.

;""" ~
ANTIQUES &amp;
00-coLLECTIBLES
,.,.."

Is a partial listing of Items from an estate!
Oak claw foot dining table (nice) , fancy
Victonan pump organ (plays). Early
ninht,.,ta
unusual 1930's dressing stand.
3 drawer file cabinet, nice mus ·
net, ·arts &amp; crafts rocker, glass door
1catbir1et chrome hat rack, "Arbuckle" adv.
8 pes . "Aunt Jemima and Uncle
Mose" (0&amp;0) , Ruby glass , exc. butter
mold, B/W st,one cooler, variety · of
Hull bowl. Coca-Cola cooler,
noclder, 1963 Effanbee doll , sev. n1ce
(shadow box, oval silhouette,
kitchen 1tems, 6 quills , quilt tops ,
hThl•

N156-Home rn \3alhpohs Coty
t 1/2 baths, attached garage Cali for appointment.

12016-Vacant la nd m Morgan Twp 8 40 acres, M or
approJoC 7 4 acres are woodland Call for 1nformat1on

FOR RENT-TWO BEDil.OOM APARTMENT-CITY
SCHOOL-NEAR HOSPITAL

11~~~~:~P.~v,~1ntage
lr

clothing, Granite, 011 lamps ,
items, Christmas Items, buttons
notions, old radio , Chenille spreads,
sacks, collection of older . jewelry
rn~:tucrtt" Cameos,. Bake'lite, mesh purse
18 Kt. &amp; Sterling rings). fancy
much. much more .... too ma_ny

r·~~u~:~~:6t•~o ust!!!!l

ANTIQUE&amp; •
CDLLEC718LES AUCftON
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11 , 1998; 6:30 PM

LEIILEY•s IUc-rJON BARN
8580 ST. RT. 588 (OLD RT. 35), GALUPOUS, OHIO
Chrmney cupboard , srngle door krtchen
cabinet (1930) , hand-made coHee table. ,
bassrnet, magazrne rack , double mrrror, art deco
smokrng stand (1930). pocket watch sta']d . ~
wicker hamper, Seth Thomas mantle ctock. ·
Ingraham mantle clock, Westclox Bulls Eye
pocket watch . large shadowbox w/mrrror, art '
glass candy drshes, cast iron ornate bowl
(Spain 1950), sterling base salad bowl (1950),
cast iron #8 gnddle, Gnswold #4 meat chopper,
#6 Griswold skrllet (large mark) , #8 Gnswold
chrome plate (large mark), 1941 Chesterfreld .
cigarette adv., 1940 Karo "D ione Qurntuplets"
adv., cardboard adv "Florence Kerosene cookstoves" &amp; "Glen Cunmngham " (1920 's). metal.
car adv. bank (1988), erector set (old) , H~rrtage
dolls. cub-rotor pnntrng press (child 's). "Airce's .
adventures in Wonderland" books (1 946) . 10".
boy &amp; grrl Okrnawa wooden nodders, "Brrngrng:
Up Father" paperback, cast iron clown ash tray.
ceramic clown (nose hghts up), Murray pedal ~
tractor w/wagon, Barbre dolls, Beanre Sabres.·
Fringe souvenrr banners, old games , old
Victorran books. game brrd pnnt. oak bucket
(large), small oak bucket wmd . table, rug beater.·
slaw cutter, Coke bottle opener, wooden dove
tarl boxes, old adv. tin , Buggy Jack , graniteware,.
Crooksville bowl, prnt stoneware sorghum Jug·
(green, 1940). green depressran Florentine #2
shaker hazel atlas, green depression Florentme
# 1 creamer hazel atlas , old krtchen rtems to
rnclude : red handled tlems , meal gnnder. old
glasses, rag rugs, doilies &amp; needlework pieces,
qurlt tops, old tools , stone Jugs. Home lntenor
Master Piece Collection (squirrel, rabbit , horse,
deer); much more ....
• Longaberger baskets to include: Collector
Club Charter Member, 1993 &amp; 1997 Inaugural
baskets, 1988 Chnstmas Pornsettra , 1992
Shades of Autumn Combo, 1994 Shades of
Autumn Recrpe Combo, Holrday Hostess
Combo , 1996 Mather's Day Comb o , 1993 &gt;
Bayberry Combo, 1991 2 Quart All Amencan
Basket, 1995 Easter Basket, Plus others ...
Gallipolrs rtems to rnclud e Henkrng Bovre Co
Cigar Box (1870), 3 Spnng Hill Da1ry Qt. Mrlk
Bottles (2 red, 1 grn) , Early 1800's Gallr polis and
Gallia Co . paper preces, also early Pt. ,Pi easant
pes . Many, many good quality paper items at
this sale!! !!
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This safe has very

good quality coflect•bles and many rare 1tems•
Don't miss this one or you'll be sorry'!!!

AUCTIONEER: LESliE A. LEMLEY
740..388..0823 (Residence) or
740..245·9866 (Barn)
Food
Cash/Approved Check Only
" Not responsible lor accidents or tost property"
Licensed &amp; Bonded In State of Ohio

Going Out of Business Auction
SATURDAY., DEC. 12, 1988
10:00 A.M.
Located at Hawk '• Feed &amp; S 11pply Store .011 St.
Rt. 7 in Tuppe r• Plain•, Ollio. llmtJiu rrre dosing
their •lore and dowu •i:i,ag tlaeir /rtrming ofJemlwn.
They 1tarted tlae ttlalion bu~iu ess m 1955 so tlu!re
w.Jll be tome old advertising items nml farm
e quiprnellt .
·

· "STORE ITEMS"
Master Built products glas s door walk rn cooler
7'X~'X17'6" Single phase W/Safety deVICe, 115 xolt 1

HP 220 compressor and new ta n motors .
Kelvrnator Ice cream freezer, refrigerator. M.W 23
cu. It deep freeze, 5 hp 220 air compressor w/100
gal tank, Gillette generator 3000 watt , Hyster lork
lrlt propane. gas pumps, pump heads, three 40 '
storage vans, 8'x36' loading dock , cash regrster,
wood shelves, wire racks, wood mrcrowave and
coffee canter, mini m icrowave, lighted flashing
arrow sign and letters, kerosene pump, two 500
gal tanks and etc

"STORE SUPPLIES"

. 8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35),

car port 1mmed1ate possesston Call for an app01rtment
to see

I

Public

1157- Br•ci&lt; home wtth 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
car garage, and 9 acres M or L, loc ated m
Gre en/ Gal l1 pol1s School dt stnct. ~ Call for more
InformatiOn
'

#t 53-IN GALLtPOLIS·3 bedroom t bath, full basement,

a proven leader in the cellular industry, is
seeking an Account Service Representative, whose primary
function ·will be telemarketing support for account executives
via pro&lt;U'ement of appOintments· with current customers and
developing ~w sales leads with prospective customen;.

We Need Lr strngs'
Property rs sellrng. Call us today!

•

0uoe1. Very Nee. ~75-1550

PER GAME

CELLU~RONE.

Applications will be accepted through December 11h, 1998
CELLULARONE is a EOE/M/F/D/F Company.

14•x7o· 2 Bedrooms $300/l.to .
Plus Deposrt &amp; Ut1h11es In Ka
nauga 7&lt;fo0.446-4107

STAR BURST

The successful candidates will possess excellent interpersonal
skills, be self-motivated, customer-oriented and have prc:ven
telemar1&lt;eting experience.

·For More Information
446·2342 or 992·2156

440

7244
Three bedroom, two bath , double
garage, on Willow Creek Ad. 740-

: 30 Acres , 3 Bedroom Hou se .
• Horse Bam, Fenced, Tillable, 740-

Apartments
for Rent

Beaut1l ul R iv er V1ew 198 Arver
Street, Kanagua Oepos1t, References , No Pets. 740-441 -0181
Foster Tra1ler Park

• ) &lt;800-38J.6862

· ~~~~~~~~--­

440

Rent

3 br on :::rab creek rd $200 +
ulll no pets 304-675-1206

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres .
We Pay Cash 1-800 213-8365.

385-9621
Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
WV. Model Cfose·Out, 394-736-

for

2 And 3 Bedrooms On Cora ¥1ll

Ci'PO!L . 74Q.256-E336

•F1rst Year Eamrngs Potential

Pt. Pleasant 675· 7600
Extended Holiday Hours

9-8
9-5

1980 fairmont 141170 3 Bed·
rooms 1 1/2 Baths All Electnc.
Very SOIKI, Well Kept. Many Up
dates, Needs Moved , 740-682

(7401

Stove,
$3,500 F ~rm Must Be Movtdt

(Across tram the Mason Co Courthouse)

M-F

Mobile Home

r9n ercona 2 8edroomo. 1 Ballo.

THE KARAT PATCH
Dlamon(ls-N-Gold

Sun. 1- 5

G T Mrnt Condrtron,
Orcha rd , Whrte Top,

2580

RED

Cal7~310

311:J.Q62

1910 Buddy
406-7525

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1979 Fa1rmont 14ft X 60Ft Can
Be Setn At K&amp;K Pt Pleasant

Abandoned Horne Talle Over
Payments. Or MaU ort.r. 1-I00-

New Water Heater I

SA1.E BY OWNER

per In Gallta County, Near Galha

Mod8rn 3 bedroom house , 2
baths. country ki1Chen, large 2 car
garage , Dn 112 acre lOt, T~rs
Pla1ns, Oh , sewer already hOoiU!CI
up . $75 ,000 740 -985· 3511 or
740-667-3304

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Happy Holidays

Sat.

1995 LeBaron Convertible

55 8urdeUa Add ltton 2 br ful l
basemenl,• double lot with ga·

whiCh are completely furntsned,
please cal 740-992·2292

Opened Hunting Land, 74D-.t46·

oa·

3 br 1 ba new heat pump , new
roof ,with corner lot. close to
scnool &amp; stores at ·621 "''h ST
New lia'o'an W'l/. 304-882-3845

"'"''"'I

Older Home In The Country, W f
Greenhouse. Several Barns. On 5
Beautrful A.cres . Great Fucer Up·

Prime Rib, Fried

Merle Norman, Hair

by Appointm en t

3 bedroom, country kitchen, llv·
lng/family 2 baths, detached
rage on 1 t/2 acres. country sett•ng. ChtSitf area, $46,000, 740985-3511

LMgo llmoly- lot sale on ron
10'.-aly acres, four bedrooms, lwo
and one hatf hafts two firep6ac:e5,
forma l
room and lamtl't
room . lour car garage and two

House For Sale. Mer(:ervclle
Road. Close To 11,000 Aeres Of

..

Children

foam and quality

Open 7 Days

310 Home• for Sale

yard , ~ double- lot. in Galhpo·
hs Ferry, call 30-4-67S.1 105 after
6prn

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST

15% Off everything

Sun., Dec . 13

RfAL ESTATE

310 Homes lor Sale

storage budchngs. two apartments
By owner - rhree bedroom fenced

110 . Help Wanted

CHRISTMAS OPEN

We have baskets, candles,
Blushrng Bunnies, Boyd's
Bears, Russ E!erne Plush,
Beanie Babies. Men's Gifts,
Bugs Life, Rugrats, Pooh,
Looney Toons
sa stop by at
62 State St., Galltpalis

,

VIsit

Why buy new furniture

Collectible Treasures

SOCIAL SECURITY 15511
No Fee UnltSS We Win!
1-688-582·3345

owner.

TRAINING PROVIDED. Call 1·

. of sample fabrics , new

in venlory R e duct1on Sale

TUIINED DOWN ON

rage. $51,500 00 304-428·5887
International Company Expanding
Into OhiO Pubhclv Held, Traded
On
NASDAQ
Earn
PIT
$1,00000· $3,00000/Mo nttr , FfT
$2,000 00- $6 000 00/Mo nttr Bonuses &amp; Pd Vacatmns! ALL

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems with
your dnvrng record, DUI's
speedrng tr1=kets . etc.
Same Day SR·22 's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency
446-1960

Prano 1untng, reparr &amp; adiustmenl
Lane Oamels. OuahiJ Serv•ee

Best ProgrAm In U.S.A Excellent
loc't, $1 ,200 + WMiy Pot'l. Mm
lnv $4K 1·800-617·6430 Ext.

125 Page Slletl. lfi&lt;l·
dlepoft. house &amp; 3 lOtS, IT'lJSt see
10 appreaate, Wit! sell hOuse Wdh·
out IQ !S tor S89 .000 , 740·992·
2704, 7.&amp;0-992-5696

By

Llvlngelon't BaMmt:nl Wtter-

230
210

310 Homes for Sale

., __ .. _

!NOTICE!

Faciily EOE
Please Call Or Fax Your Resume
To Beth Ballmger Reg1onal StallIng Coordmator , 1·800·929-2167
Fax 727-539-8059 ~n Equal Opportunlry Employer

Proleulonal
...., • ....,.

732

Golllpalla c....r College
Nurs 1ng Chn•cal lnslructors
Seek mg Part And full ·l•me Ap
plrcants For Pool SuperviSion Of
Nursmg Students In Area Facllrtles M1n1mum POS1t1on Requtre·
ments AN LICensure In The State
01 Ohm Pra cttcal Expeqence In
The f 1eld 01 NUJsmg BSN Requued MSN Preferred Send Re sume To Hock1ng College Personnel Department 330 I Hodung
Parkway, Nelsonvrlle OH 45764
Deadline To Apply Is Decembe r
15. 1998 AN EQUAL OP POR TUNrTY EMPLOYER

Buslnen

210

Pan -lime Abstinence Educator,
14 hr/ wll 0 $10/ l'lr Degree In
l'leallh u!lachrng socral work or
nursrng Some evenrngJwealland
work E E 0 C emp loyerr Send
resumes 10 PO Boa: 631. Pomer·

140

· Rehab Ttteh -Full-Tame

Help Wanted

BULLETIN BOARD

0'

· Sunday, December 6, 1998

Sunday, December6,1998

Df!YefS -OTR

•

t WV

Page04•ji~~~umu~•-~~~e~nnm~·~l=:s===~~~~~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~·~M~i~d~d~le~po~rt~·~~a~t~p~o~t~s~,~~·~o~tn~~e~a~sa~n~,~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;
Drrver Co Pa1d Onver Tra rn1ng
• Prog WI Oppty To Earn Avg Up
: To $32.250 1st Yr• Ea.cel. Benehts
• &amp; Gooel Home Trm e Excel Pay
• Pkg For E•p DrJV&amp;rs &amp; OtO Har • old lves TnD!ng 800-842-{)853

•
:
•
·
•

1· OH P · t PI

LESLIE A. LEMLEY

74o-388..0823 Residence
740·245·9866 Barn
"Licensed &amp; Bonded In State of Ohio"
Cash/Approved check only!
Food
"Come out and find that " perfect" gift for
your collector or treat yourself to
something special! "
"Not Responsible For Accidents
or Lost Property! "

Cases of Rotella!, Quaker State Valvolrn e and
Wolfhead oil, 5 gal buckets of hyd orl cases of
wrndshleld fluid , 5 ga 30 &amp; 40 wt. nondetergent or I.
cases of brake cleaner, octane booster, degreaser,
Frxaflat, WD 40, dresel fue l treatment, antrlreeze,.
milk replacer, odd &amp; ends ollertrlrzer, steeples . salt
blocks-. 20# bags cat food , approx 100 Brg K twine
9, 10, &amp; 16000, 25 &amp; 50# bags dercrng salt . rabbrt
pe ll ets, chicken ; goat, sheep, horse &amp; beef leeds.
mixing salt , pig grower &amp; starter, alfalfa pellets.
shelled corn, dog feed , steel fen ce po sts, farm
gates 6, 10, 12, 14, &amp; 16 It , electnc fence chargers,
cedar bedding, lots of tobacco, shells, grease guns,
gas cans, candy, pop, prctures, auto belts &amp; hoses,
paper supplies, grocery 1tems and many, many
thrngs f rom the store.

"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Delaval Jr cream separator. stewan sheep &amp; goat
shearrng machrne hand crank , sets of basebal l
cards, Camel clock , Camel &amp; Megan ash tnws. srlk
advertrsrng banners . Wrnston, Cappen Hagen glass
s1gns. Pepsr wrre racks, wooden Coke crate w/full
small bottles of coke, R C collectrbles. Pepsr &amp; 2
Coke round pop coolers. milk and cream cans. pop
bott les, old Gold rack, B.F. Goodrrch trre rack ,
Home Comfort cooking stove

"TRACTOR &amp; FARM EQUIPMENT"
M F. 135 Gas tractor (very good) , 3 pt 6 way 1blade,
3 pt. Dearborn 2xt2 plow, 3 pt potato plow, 3 pt
dis c, 3• pt. carry all . IH flO pull type coml}rne, N I
323 one row corn prcker, 501 Ford mower, IH 350
Forage harvester w/ 1 row c. 'rn head, N H 25 Whrrl
a Feed blower, 40 ' prpe for s lq, M F loader w/3 pt
bale spike , 2 raw pull type
ver corn planter, 16
belt grarn elevator and 580 ~·oard feet cherry
lumber
OWNER : ROGER H.t.WK

o.

AUCTIONEER: DAN SMITH
RACINE , OHIO
CASH
POSITIVE 10
REFRESHMENTS BY PIGGY BUGGY
Licensed and bonded in favor of
States of Ohio and W. VA .
Ohio #1344
W.VA. #515
NOTE: Tltis is nff ('llfrf'lll ~Wf~, f'f)t'fluud ~WfJf1lif•$
wrll ilL• .•ol•l til norm. tmrlor awlj'arrn •' fllllpwf'ul
•
t'
1 •
rril/ ~··II nl l :00 I'·"' · lf tll si11l mw I f ern m u I'W4f',.
Come one, come all!!l!

'

�•

'
Page 06 • JJ~ ar- Jittttnul
440

Apartments
for Rent

540

twm HJvers rower now accepung
apphCaltOns lof lb HUO substd
zed apr fer elderly and hand
capped. EOH ~-675o-6679
Two 2 bed oom 1 batn aparl
ment5 Ill Mtddleporl new carpet

tmmed ale occupancy call 7 •o

992 1350 t:w more tntorma~

450

Furnished
Rooms

C rcle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
C nema• Show11me &amp;. 0 sney
Weekty Rates Or Monthty Rates
Construchon Worke s Welcome
74()..4.41 5698 7"0-441 5167

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pomt Pleasant,

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

8 Ft F berglass Tuck TopDer
74().446.4410
Beanie CollecltOn 54 Ollterenl
Ret ed 130 Tot a Plus 1 Sel
1998 McDonalds Sl 995 Cash
Onlyl Cal740-«6-{)233

Fo sale solid oa• gun cab1R8IS
call 30• 675 3423 or 304 675
0831

8klnde 11'11~ stole ltke new S9SO
"Value SISO handmade crochet
table.:: orn large neve used
$125 heavy ant Que brass can
die stiCks I cande abra reason
able Lomoges chma sef\IICe tor
8 ext a p eces $150 740 992

....

,..,......525

Healthdyne ax 5000 oxygen gen-

BOTTLED WILL POWER!

erator comQie18ty ref~~ all
new paru $700 140-992 5208

OUAAANTEE

JET

Nati..Wal Dr Recommended
(740}4411 1982

$10

large buck stove
new 304-675-3601

Band Saw W tn
Stand 74o-446-1 0 I 0
Craftsmen 12

Household
Goods

Appl ances

AEIUTION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoc::tc;
cat! Ron Evans 1-800-~37-9528

Church pews for safe 12 twelve
loot 4 ten foot $200 each 740
949-2211

Recond r oned

Washers 0 ye s Ranges Relr
grators 90 Day Guarantee
French C1ty May ag 740 446

p actrcally

Double oven tappen gas range
$125 00 304-675-3249

'l--a88-818-D128

'mu ..... Cai740-2S&amp;o6016

-Od 304-67$-3508

Set ol bean e bears pr ncn5

5Upef Nlfendo (7 Games) Super
3ameOO, (2 Games) Sega Gen
,1s (11 Games• 740 446 8945

N•-

Three p~eee PUgelt hv10g room
su11e navy blue be1ge wrtl'l bu'
gandy and green stnpes wood
tnm brand new rondition Slil hilS
tags on couch
retails for
$289995 sell for $1100 740
Used compulers $100 $300 w 11
build to your needs \Cal 740-992
6700 leiiWt message it not hOme

Water! ne Specral 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per tOO All Brass Com
press100 Fitting:; In Stoc:k
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jac:i.son Ohio I 80().537 9528

WHITES IIETAL DETECTORS
Ron AI son 1210 Second Ave
nue Galltpol s Ohto 740 446
4336

Electr c Scaoters Wheelchairs
New And Used Stanway Eleva
to s Whee cha r And Scooter
l fts Bowman s Homecare 740
446-7283

550

Pw load

Sporting
Goods

Austrelllft •t.e.pherd pup•
NSOR three blac-.: males $65
current healrh reeon:t 7.t0 s•g

Now Oooo Sundays 1-4 Mon-Sat
11 6 Ftsh T11nk &amp; Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave Pont Pleas

an. 3114-675-2063

44126 Building 1 Sliding Doo&lt; I
Man Doo&lt; 4 Inch COnaete FlOOr
$36000 7~2971
•8x.~8

rnstallated Budding 1&amp; FL

reihng Hetghl 2 Slidng Doori 4
Inch Con~r 1 Footers
$45.000 1
11

Real

•

"WARM UP!

dltlonrng Free Est mates' If You
Qon t Ca Us We Both Lose!
7.40..446-6306 1 800 29 HJ098
1 Crypt &amp; P ate $3 500 00 Mem
ory Gardens Sub1ect To Ofle
740.367 7864

f!i'l p1eces 40 s Festa wa e
pl ced on nspec on must buy
aU Longa ber ge Ba n 9asket
$250 00 304 675-4082

Ofd bluet seal S2 so 300 30"
57ft.3164

Full Blooded Austral an Blue

Estate General

Healer Pups 6 Weeks Old 2
Males 1 Female Just In Ttme
For Chr slmasl $75 Each 740
245-5815

Fr-. Coy Pet Gooomong by Appmntment ·ultra. Wash Sa thing
System• 650 Sec:ond Ave Gallt-

pois 740-«6-1528

560

Pets for

Pomeramean pupp1es AKC reg
stered 3 male 1250 00 each 1

-

Sale

$300 00 :!04-173-5052

Poodle pupp1es 1111e toys AKC
ShOIS &amp; wormed 7~7 3404

yr ~ regt6tered coder span
el nas shot5&amp;rs housebroken
good wIll ~Jds $125 00 304 88}
3418
1

2C

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

AKC German Shott Haared Point
er 4 Months Old Whtte &amp; LMN
$175 740 388 9126 740 388

&amp;tO Farm Equipment

8856
AKC Reg1srerea ro11Wtll8r pup&amp;
Parents on pram ses gentle
$200 00 each 1 male/ 3 females
had shots I wormed 304 675
1025
AKC Shaltlas mates $200 le
male S250 two Pe{s ana one
biJJ8 cream one lorto•se shall
$150 &amp; up female ferret StOO
firm 7~5073

Ford new Holland December spe
c.als model 5030 renta lractor
62 PTO HP 4 wd 2 pump hyd
8x8 shu~tle t ans
129 h s
2400000
5030 same specs 303 h s
2~ 500 00 4630 55 pto hp 2wd
same sl)eCS 57 hrs $17 900 oo
4630 4wd 16x4 dual power 1 an
24 00000
256 rakes tn erate 3 050 00
-451 7 mowers 3 250 oo
"'72 7 hayb nc 8 395 oo

The Choices Are Yours! •••
'

Choose any new Un1bllt Home you d hke
from our standard models or take
advantage of our

Customtzer Destgn

servtce 10 create a cus1om plan JUSI for you
Choose the opuons you want from our
huge selecuon and recetve them
absolutely free'

a fireplace or a beauttful

HC B9 1 St. Rt. 315
[304] 675·4424
1000 Marton St.

.Jackson, Ohio
[740] 2SB·2"10"1

you dec tde

Reg stered pomera~nean IOJ stud

Then have your new Untbtlt Home set
March 31

Eltate

Llnlhilt"Ruildl!!r

- r...

oo reo-

1980 Dodge Omn. GOOd Work
Car 89 000 Mies 1400 74()..441

1083
1986 Mewcry Lyn1 Runs GOOd

oao

maroon &lt;tdr

1988 Plymouth Caravelte runs

New Pans lnsralled CaH 740 4464585 For Pra

85 ford escort wagon auto
55 000 mrles front wh (I runs

1989 Geo Metro i&lt;loks and runs
good $900 1984 Oldsmob te
Cutlass very good cond1t1on
7-40-992 1493

654 R baler 15001 same specs

Salurdey onf't 304-675-4869

Blue AIC Automahc Ant' lock
Btake$ Trlt Wheel CrutSa C 0
.u&amp;t'FM Sunroof Theft Deterrent
25 000 Miles E xcetlent CondibOn
$845000 740'2:569161

44&amp;-7375

nanc ng On New And Used
Equ pmenl Ca m1cMel s Farm &amp;
Lawn Galhpo11s OH 740 "'46
24121 800 594 1111

1989 olds cutlass supreme
S2150 00 304 458 1077 or du mg
the ~ JO.Hl75-2180
1989 Pont ac Grand Am 4 cy n
der 5 speed two door $1500
740-742 2357

5ale one mile north on
At 2 Square Bales S1 00 $2 oo

1997 Chevy "Caval er 2 Door

11188 Plymouth Sondance • Cylinder Runs Grear 148 000 Lots 01

1989 Chrysler LeBaron Coupe .f
Cylinder Aulomattc A1r 90 000

Hay &amp; Grain

ss

1998 Pont ac Tans Am Fully
Loaded 74()..446-4548 H No An
s•er Leave Message 0 7 40

- • Sl.200090740-256-1233

640

1995 Cor51ca V 6 Auto AJC
loaded hcellenl Condit on
93 000 M les
Book Value
800 $5 100 304-675-5578

la'Sp:n

good S700 coli 740-992 7271 a1

Young Boars Hampsh re And
Hampsh re Yorksh re M1x 740
256 6016

For saFe t996 Cl'trysler Con
COfde IOadPd S11 000 or 080
call 7.40 992 2136 and ask lo

1894 Chevy l""""" E u r - 2
door bnted Wlf'dows bladl. runs
greal &amp; looks good 740 992
6051

Sheia

720 Trucks for Sale
1986 Mazela 2000 4 Cylmder

?d: Up Runs Smooth Extra En
gme &amp; Trans SHOO For All Call
1987 Red Four Door N~.SSan RI.WlS

$3 200 304-675-5792- 5p:n

Livestock

882 3541

12.20001!0 7.00.-1233

$19.500 740-44 I 1269

Deere Skid Steer loaclers Check
Wr1h Us Ab out F nanc ng On
Lawn Tractors And low Rate F

630

99 while Chewy camaro 3 8 v-6 t

-----304

1987 ford Escorl loaks /Runs
Good 1500
740-..&lt;736

1988 Bonnevifle LE

Your Area John Deere Deater
For Restdent1al And Commerctal
lawr~ EQull)meRI Comoact Utility
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP All
S1zes Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors Hay Equrpment John

·-~-·Cylr&gt;

oar AutomatiC Air 93 000 Miles

740-446-4585

new tues &amp; brakes gOOd cond

740-596-1809

710 Autos for Sale

1995 Grand Cherokee L m ted
Loaded 42 000 t.lltes Ask ng

r...

POLE BUILDINGS
by La- any Slyle ""' '""'

71 o Autos for Sale

S6SO 740-256-1352.

dr white al
c. 12.200 740-9921102
91 Chevy Cavale 2

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1996 Chevy 314 Ton 4J..tl low
M 1es E•ceuent cona t on t
Owner
Automat c
loaded
$16 000 740-446 2927

750

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Improvements

Surnme s not ove'' Kawasaki
STS Jet sk sr n ~ wa ,anty
three sealer 83 norsepower
Dought new July or 97 lh ee
match ng Kawasak sk1 vests and
lrader al go Mth If P ICed to sell
$4200 7•0 949 2203 01 740-949
2045 wtll cons der trade for a

1996 Ford F !50 Supercab .tlx4
XLT Package Automat c: V IS
740-367~57
1997 CMe"VrO et K 1500 4 3 s
Spd Aw Cassette Ratty Wheels pv::·::·~'pon~"""':::;;;boa=:;.L_____
Pos! uato B ue 1 ' 8 500 00 7 ""' 760
Auto Parts &amp;

446-7646

Good

304~75-1961

1991 GMC SOnoma 4 cyl ndet 5
speed good ccnotbOn runs good
askrng S3COO 740-742 4000

88 Range XLT w/ topper

1991 S-10 5 Speed 82000 Miles
E•cel Cond $2 795 00 1986 C
tO P ckup 60 000 M les II 8 4
Speed $1 195 00 Cool! Motors
740-446-0103

740

XlT extended
cab SIt 500 w thou! toppe
and $12 100 w lh roppe 304
882 3336

Honda 3 wheeler 350X good
cond lion -et:tra paus $800 740
247 2961

98 Ford Rangel

great $1 500 00 304 895 3691 or
30H75-J§gg
Ohro Valley Bank Wilt Oller For
Sale By Publ1c Auct on A 1986
ford Ranger IC22171 &amp; A 1992
Plymouth Acclaim 1225909 Oil'
12/12/98 At 10 00 AM At The
OVB Anne• lol3 Til rd Ave Gal
I polls OH The Abo ... e W 11 Be
Sold To H1ghest 8 dder As Is
Where Is W thout Expressed Or
lmpl ed Warranty And May Be
Seen By Call•ng Keith Johnson At
740 441 1038 OVB Reserves
The R1gl'll To Accept Or ReJect
Any And All B ds And W thdraw
Property From Sale Pnor To Sale
Terlt'!s 01 Sale CASH OR CER
TIFIEO CHECK.

730

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1977 Cttevy custam van runs
good 111 good shape Sl 000
OBO 740 992 4163 I no answer

k!ave message

V6

5 sp hgh

good
2030

Motorcycles

1991 Yamaha War •or Good
Shape $2 400 00 740 379 2909
After 600 PM

lor Sale
24 Ft Ponllon Boat 1 15 Horse
Johnson Moto fu y Equ pped
$13500 740-44&amp;2971

1984 Chevy Blaze 4 Wheel
Drive 350 Eng ne New Pa nt

pe enc:e All WOr~ Guaranteed
French C ly Maytaq 7.40 446
1795
C&amp;C

General

Horne

Man_

tenence Pamnng v ny s d not
catpenlry doors wtmdows batfls
moiJde hcwne epa,- and more For
lree est mate call cnet 740 992

r

small Free es11mates 740 367
0412 7.a-.992-4232
Chevy &amp; Ford t uc.k beds Chevy
Gabs &amp; Front End 304 57&amp;2635

New gas tankS &amp; booy pa rs 0 &amp;
R Auto R1pley wv 304 372
3933or 1-800-273-9329
Runnmg boards tor Ford Elq)IOrtr
$1

750 Boats &amp; Motors

An

Name Brands Over 25 Years E•

Co us n s Home lmpro'Jement
Pa nt ng &amp; Coal ng restdent al tT
COfmlefoal "No pb 10o btg or too

.t1 wh c:k"

m es

COf'(l $290000~882

Appliance Parrs And Servce

6323

Accessories

82 K5 b azer 350 motor auto
w ndows&amp;
locks
s t ooa oo 304 882 J.tl18/ HD
7.tl2 2443

Home

810

powe

so

eaH 740 992 3802

810

Home
lmprovemenls

Professional 20yrs erpe ence
With al masonery br ck blodl &amp;
stone Also room add 1 ons ga "'
ages etc F ee est•mates 304

773-9550

Square H Ca pentry Vour Smalf"'4
Jol;l Spec a sts Ga y f-foltman..,.
304 67S.1168

840

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond 1onat tiel me guaranlee
Local eferences I urn shed Es
tablshed 1975 Cal 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
Ett'S Waterproofloo

...

Electncal and
Refngerat1on

•

Aesrdent a o comme•clal w nng ~
new serv1ce or repairs Master ll
censed e eel can R denou
Electt cal WV000306 304 675

1186

Real Estate General

New Tires SJ 200 00 OBO 740
388-9931
1986 Jeep Che okee 4 Wheel

0• ve $2 BOO 00 740 379 2909
Mer 6 00 PM
1991 c~ Lurn na APV 7 Pas

senger loaded $4 000 00 OBO
Roos Good 740-446-6962

Square bales of good m xed hay
$1 so each 740 985-3510

Real Estate General

Would l ke To Buy Round Bales
01 Hay 740 256 1124

e-mail us for information on our listings
blgbend@eurekanet com

1999 and SAVE'

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

All Umb If Home~ o1e Ohto Butldmg Code Approved

No MaUer Whal
Realtor 1 Sign Ia In The
Yard We can Show HI
Remember A Sold Sign
In Your Yard Ia Just A
Phone Call Away!
740/2116-1370
Serrms t'ou Suu·e''1 96 7

Astong 12.200

1979 Trans Am Good BOdy T
TOllS Runs Very Soong c03 E,.
- - "'*&gt;. S600 74o-441 10113

Masser 210 Diesel FlflfSt'l Mower
&amp; Blade S4 700 300 GilDon Port
able Water 'Tan11. $60 740 245
5747

Hay lor

970000
Keelers ServiCe Center
ST RT 87 PT Pleasant &amp; A p
ley AD 3&gt;0 895-3814

They re absolutely free up lo lhe amount
of the dtscount

M Mlfi Loaded EJocellent Cond

DeeZee In Bed Fuel Tank 0 a
rnond Ptate Alummum L Shaped
105 Gallon Wtlh Electr c Auto
Shut 011 P""1J $900 New As1tW1g
$750 7.00.~

634 R baJefs 650 t 1osoo oo
644 A baters IOOOit strtng lie
auto wrap wide pickup 13 900 00

1590000
565 square ba er wagon 11 tch

_,

1sn L.n::dn ConllnenlaJ 111.000

IN

InS-

preoents 304 895 3926

1~1

TRACTORS

71 o Autos for Sale

fiMt\Ctng As low As 6 9~. W lh
John Deere Credrl ~proval On
U5ed Tractors Carm1chae1 s
Farm &amp; lawn Gallapol s Oh o
74.0-446-2.. 12 Or 1 800-594-1111
~ISO See Tho New' 4000 Sones
Compact Uhllty Tr~rs Several

would make good chr slmas

A Groom Shop P~t Groom ng
Feah.lnng Hydro Balh Don
Sheets 373 George5 Creek Rd

USEO

STOCK

t S400 oo.acn ""' 1350 OOead1

'

JJ~ at""" Jittttuvl • Page 01:

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Po10t Pleasant, WV

610 Farm Equipment

Small AKC York e pupp1es 2

on the foundauon between January 4 &amp;

liurnace Heat Pumps &amp; A Con

CFA Hunarayan krHtns 6 wks

Block b1id. sewer p pes wtnd
Wuners
R1o Grande OH Call 7"f0 245
5121

F rewood seasoned oak cui

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Pets for Sale

OW$ lintels etc ClaUde

sennce $150 00 740-742 7Q04

540

560

CFA ......., KAieM 8luo &amp; Seal
Potnt Vety forty &amp; loveable Wtl
Hold For cnnstmas• 740 2459239

up to $4000 on vour nevJ.hom1e.

leaded glass front door

Buy or self R ver ne Ant1ques
t124 E Man Sl eel on Rl 124
f:!omaroy Hours M T W 10 00
~m to600pm Sunday100 1o
lt.OO p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owne

Pets for Sale

Winter Sell·a·bratian .•.

htckory cabtnetS

Real

Sunday,December6,1998

Supplies

Choose an opttonal kitchen destgn

spit and del vered $30 740 992
5740 or 591 3908

560

Pet• for Sale

560

2128....-..gs

Used Furn tu e S ore Below HOII
day Inn In Kanauga Sunk beds
beds mauresses dressers
~sts couches tab es d nenes
$sks what nots 74Q...446-4782

420

Pels fM Sale

Building

Seasoned oak tvewood ~ and

We buy anltQues and partial or
complete estates baby terns and
old Aestaware Jeans Furmture
&amp; Antiques Tueselay tnrough Fn
day 11am 4pm 145 North Sec
ond Middlepon_

ngs

GOOO US~O APPLIANCES
Washers drye ti refnge arors
t)nges Skaggs Appl ances 76
~ine Street Ca I 740 446 7398

dtsh lola I purchase pr ce 599

742 3B02

Lute tykes couag&amp; bed JeQny
nn baby bed/ mattress blue tod
dler bed 304-675-3765

0 A C K T Sh rts Onl~ 600 Lefl
Has P cture 01 Team Only S20
7-40-245-94.cj6

Wood Few S.lel $25 00

Asi. about 1ree pt'ogramm ng 1
800-7N-8194

560

Sunday, December&amp;, 1998

Merdl•ndise

SabriI he Sya...... 18 OII&amp;C1TV

peace "Val~nttne curly kH rune
glory.r200 00 3)0~75-5253

Grubb s Prano- tumog &amp; repa rs
PrObktms? Need Tuned? Call the

2961

540 Miscellaneous

--

~nn

Furby For Sale $100 740.446

,..,.. Dr

Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Floral Sofa /Chau 2 Pc Ltvtng
Room Su re Huntet Green Bur
gum:ly Mauve &amp; C eam Ltke
New $500 74() 245 9546 388
9809

LOSE ~10 :ll Lbs
THIRTY DAY MONEY BACK

MERCHANDISE

540

wv

m

12937 BIG
REDUCTION
EXTRAORDINARY localed n
Green Twp 2 story w many
amen hes tns!anlly appeal ng fo
a grow ng fam ly 2 1/2 baths
forma DR LA firep ace n LA full
d v ded &amp; tm shed basement
vacant P ced to se I Cat VLS
388 8828 $10800000

1-800-585-7101 or 4406-7101

••
RUSSELL 0 WOOD BROKER
446 4618

Martha Smtih ................ .
Cheryl Lemley

DanaAtha

IN TOWN LOCATION

JAN GETTLES, BROKER

Henkle Ave Attracttve Bnck

I

DEER HUNTERS WELCOME

3

ltvtng room w/fireplace
oi&lt;&gt;Sells, full basemen! $92 000

Bf:l

s

DR

Kenneth Amsbary

1 1/2 baths
kll

cedar

Call

87 Acre• ,JI gractou.Ly wooded, perfect lude-a

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
$127 900 DOl Lois ol house
here for the money Try th1s
cedar ranch an for s ze
Large k tchen w1th formal
dm1ng area custom made
cab nels lully equ pped
skyl ghts French doors thai
lead to deck hvtng room
den fam ly room 4 baths
f1nrshed basement ncludes
2nd kitchen rec room and
morel Call to v ew th1s one'

way for tl1e ltuntef or outdoornnau paved road
ac ce•s rmd c ormty tvtlter avmlable Located
near SR 35 tlus lmnt.er • paradue u tile perfect
place to ESCAPE lhe rush of tlte ctty pnced ol
$65,000 do11 IIIIUS your shot at thu oue

~~~;;."~~~~

hom~

ol a 1696
conven en locat on n h sto ca
downtown Gall po s Close to
schools sh pp ng
vertront &amp;
park Th s 3 story home features
4 bed ms 2 full baths gas FP
o g &amp; foye EnJOY pr vacy ol a
lg fenced
w pool spac ous
sc eened
&amp; owe ga den

PRICE
DROPPE
$89 900 00 IS THE NEW
ASKING PRICE ol thts cute
ran ch style home
3
bedrooms 2 lull baths llv ng
room ntce k tchen wth oak
cabrnets 1 car atlached
garage 1 6 acre m/1 lot
St1ll like new' Must see th1s

111122
Henry E Cleland

205 North Second Ave.
OH

Jr 992·
•

2259
Sherrl L Hart

~ .-J:Se,autttull

HOME Stlttng on 2 44 acres n Green Twp
home features a formal entry hv ng &amp; dtn ng
The matn bath 14 9x14 has a whirlpool tub All 4
bedrooms have walk m closets
Full equipped
kttchen
Thts home has lots of closet space &amp;
storage Oak Trtm &amp; SIX panel doors Full basement
w/poured walls
Lg garage w/a workshop space
28x34 Back patto Th1s home s qual ty throughout

742-2357

Kathleen M Cleland 99:2-6'19111'

Gl:

--

. LENDER

'

Office,·....................... 992·2259

OFFICE 992-2259

RUSTIC STYLE PRIVATE
SETTING $26 600 00 ts the
askmg pr co lor thts 3
bedroom mobtfe home and
lot Complele wth detached
garages extra storage
bU!Idtng LOIS of mce shade
trees set on your front porch
and enJOY the pr vacy #1046

LOOKING FOR A MOBILE HOME? Heres a 1984 Manston
that s 14x70 and has 2 bedrooms w th lots of space Comes
equ pped with a stove and refrigerator Also has a heat ou1mo t
with cenlraf atr $9,50CII.OO

4 Bedroom vu•Lu

"

IFFiEsiH

a

MIDDLEPORT-Beaut lui and well
t
2 Story Frame Home
3 4 bedrooms
enclosed front porch fam ly room k tchen 1
1/2 balhs full basemen! 2 car garage wth an
upstairs workshop carport gazebo Chan 1nk
fen ced yard
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONfl
Move r ght nlo cond ton
FA N G heat
ce ntra a r
GREAT HOME
GREAT
ASKING 5711,900

I

BRISTER ROAD-Jusl ns de Athens Co Is approx 7 acres
pf secluded land N ce bu ld ng stte Some woods and some
cleared Efectr c and waler ava1lable $12 000 00

TARA ESTATES-A PLACE TO RAISE THE FAMILY

IA.CFIE~IGI:J Over 113 acres

11\,Nl' CALL HOME Fam1ly room JUSt from the kttchen

Stone W B F rep lace Formal entry LA and Dtntng
Bedrooms &amp; 2 Baths Pool &amp; Play ground prillileriles
I be surpr sed how ntce th s home s
ltodav

I
New L sling Close To
He e s a very nice home for he
neat and t dy 3 4 bed ooms allow
plan y of oom p us lui basement
for even more space L v ng oom
eat n k tchen d n ng area 2
baths Wa k out basement eads to

St Rt 141 Wooded 7 1/2 Acres surveyed Wtth n the
C ty Urn ts C1ty wate~ and sewage avatfabfe

POMEROY-Th s Home Has
POMEROY-Mulberry Ave Just m nutes from
rooms 4 bed oams 2 2 baths
own and local grade school Th1s Home 1s
yvood bun ng f e paces fam ly oom d n
eady for you One Floor Frame w th v nyl
room mode n bu I n k !chen basement
s d ng Newer roof new carpet ng panel ng
Of storage In g ound 45 L shaped Pool w th drywall new utiiHy room All new kttchen that
Pew hner f ter and pump Two cp aaraOE! I nciudes range refr gerator d shwasher
pus a small barn and pond Sun
d sposal 1 3/4 baths 2 bedrooms hvtng &amp;
fJ Jacuzz n It e Mas er Bath Other dmrng room Newer electnc wtr ng box ear
fealuf es Th s Top Of The l ne Hume has
large front porch a1t1c area part
epprox 12 89 Acres ol g ound Au ai Sen ng
1 car garage large lot w1th storage
yet close o low ASKING $159 000
bu ld ng Ve\li N ce Home ASKING $55 000

NEW LISTING-40 Acres More or Less Good hbme
s1te Natural spr ng on the property wooded Pass ble
land contract

n ce ya d Loca ed on St At 58 8
1ust outs de the c y m Is P ced
at $72 500 1215
1 !:~~!!,.!:~~-----L

t

BUILDING LOT Jackson P ke Area
Naluraf gas ts avatlabfe $14 500 00

Green Twp

I AMBY LANE-Ra nch home

l

Features an open LA &amp;
kttchen area w/Smtth cab nets and sland Beaultfuf
FA
ce tlt ngs BR su tle/fren ch doors and
closets 2 addtl anal BAs Home s very well
2
baths f ntshed 2 112 car garage
workshop 1 t 37 acres more or
~!:!~~l~a~~n~~d:~s~c aped w th lots of plants &amp; trees Make a
Offer

Only 2 112 Acres Remain-Acreage-by survey New
HomeS tes Green Twp Black Top Ad Mostly Flat

__________;j

Owner Wal\le it SOLD!! Beaut lui
Vlcto an two so y on Th d
Avenue Room for any s ze 1am y
Ha s been wet ca r ed 1o
th oughout the years Beaut fu
woodwo k a ge oon s lots of
characte 6 bed ooms 3 u 1and 2
ha 1 baths a ge lam y oom huge
maste su te lnground poo WAS
$:.!45 000 now $195 000 G ve us
e Ca Dente ths bagan s p

•FAIRVIEW ROAD-Spr ngf eld Twp
2 714 acres
more or less aeaut1ful flat homes te Close to new
lndustrtal Park REDUCED ONLY $19 000 00

•

ATTENTION HUNTERS I Th s Is II
Here IS
the One' Don I M ss Ill Approx 10 392 Acres
w th a 1975 Camper w/add ton
All the
comfons of Horne nc ud ng a bed TV stove
efr gerator and bath Remote yet Homel ke
Don I Hu t??
Want a Beaut lu Pr vate
Hon P.S e?? Here It s Wont last Long Call
Fo Appo ntment ASKING $17 500

stately
V~1\~r~a~:~~~,;,.;Has
an
atttc basement 10 ftn shed rooms 1
1 t/2
baths drn ng roQm large foyer and a front and rear stairway
6eaut ful wo odwo rk pock et doo rs wraparound porch
wtdows wa k bay w ndows and much more Th s s a must
see home $100 000 00

On The Banks of the Ohio River! Breathtakmg
v1ew1 Formal foyar tiled L brary/parlor w/recessed
ce I ngs
Formal DR w /oak floors bedroom sutle
shows a recessed o ctagonal ce I ng w/fan
Pnvate
deck Tiled rna n bath
Walk n closet
FA has
French doors to the back pat o w/fots of wtndows
Modern KIT w/lsland connect ng the Bfas'R to KIT 2
skyl ghts Oak sta1rway to upper level 3 large BR s
w/wafk tn closets Tiled BA w/skyltghts &amp; exerclsR
Basement w/garage &amp; FP 2 car garage all matn
level 2 gas furnaces Secunty system A nver deck
along the r ver Beauttful shaded front fawn w/lots
plants shade trees &amp; p nes
I
rI
constderedl

MINERSVILLE- Two Slory F arne Home w lh
k tchen v ng com d mng room 3 bedrooms
balh Walls are panel/plaster drywall Old
Post Off ce bu ld ng goes w th the home whtch
would make a good wood work shop Ask for
Deta Is ASKING $39 000

6TA R C 11 E R
BliND HOLLOW RO -Approx mately 2 "cres 1
Jl,c es vaca
g ound gas and elect c Vii~canVWooded GrOI.tnd electr c and
eva lab e Spr ng fo r deve opment
Wa er ava lable ASKING $5 250
fOR DETAILS ASKING $59 000

s this

byl 1201

Now
Owne s
re ocate and eave
th s go geous custom bu It home
Over 5500 sq ft of very nice
v ng space pus over 6 acres and
a pond tor outs de enJOyment 6
bedrooms 4 fui and 2 half baths
2 fully equ pped very n ce k tchens
and much much more Qual ty
cons! uctron Country atmosphere
'&gt;n y 5 m nutes f om the hasp ta
t. '1d shopp ng 3 car garage
ng ~.:und poo
Many more
amc1 t es
Call for moe
nfo rr "!. on 1227

Call
for
appointment

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446-3644
E M a 1f Address

wtseman@zoomnet net

·--

Sonny Garnes

446 2707

LANE=i'n

Iown but 1ke the coun lry ts th s approx 9
&lt;acre parcel w th a f esh dozed area that lays ntce Also has
an olde ane sto y home w lh 3 bedrooms $20 000 00
AACINE-A very n ce mob le home w th a heat pump 2
bed ooms one bath larg e anached sto age bu1ld ng and

a

arge lot

OPPOATUN TY

DOTTIE TURNER Broker
JERRY SPRADLING
CHARMELE SPRADLING
BETTY JO COLLINS
BRENclA JEFFERS
OFFICE

DAVID WlSEMAN, BROKER ,GRl- 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch 441 1007

+

hunqred feel of the Wayne
National Forest 20 acres m/
Situated at McCombs &amp;
AI son Ad Walnut Townsh p
Water &amp; electnc close by
Deer turkey &amp; Wild I fe
plenttfu l If nterested cal
now 11055

'

446 6806

LOOK HERE AT THIS ONE!
Ask ng pr ce IS can you
bef1eve $36 900 001 Ranch
slyle home wtth auached
garage fam ly room larpe
k tchen and J1vmg rbom
basement
Excel ent
location next to town Let us
show t lo you W1037
50
NEIGHBORHOOD
ROAD YeS $19 900 00 s
the ask ng pr1ce for thiS
affordable home V1nyl s1de&lt;l
2 bedroom home
hvtng
room k tchen front porch
Call to see th s one Would
make a great ental #1 038
14 PLUS ACRES that would
make a great weekend
etreat for camptng or n ce
place to bu ld a new home 01
pla ce a mob1le home
County water and ele " trrc
already n tacl 11004
NATURAL
WOODED
SETTING Scads ol features
n lh s 4 bedrm 3 bath home
nc ud ng Ia ge master
bed room I v ng room arge
country k tchen
fu ly
equ1pped w th French doors
that lead to wrap around
Full wa k ou t
decktng
basement w•th huge fam ly
rec oom area w1th 2nd
k tchen area comple te w th
appl ances
Lots of extra
storage space Come and
enJOY
thts
well
constructed/rna nta ned
rusttc style home See t and
falltn love #1 006

992 5692

949 2131
949 2131
949 2049
992 1444

992 2886

RIVERVIEW
DRIVE
POMEROY Th s home has
1t all But the most exc t ng
feature s th e v ew of the
01'1 o R1ver
Owner has
ut 1 zed this view to the
Ju lest extent Full lmtshed
bsmt wttl1 ktt lovely stone
f irep la ce
nf ormal LA
handcraHed k tchen cab nels
&amp; oak tr m
Too many
amen1t es to ment1on Must
ca I for your own prtvate
vewng #887

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
YOUR
OFFER
MIGHT
JUST BUY THIS ONE! All
Amer can Home situated on
approx 2 acres
Lots of
ltv ng space for you r famtly
34
bedrooms
d n ng
area)fam ly
room
combtnatton
Equipped
k tchen
must
ses
10
apprec ate You w II be sold'

5 Ac m

LET THE WORLD GO BYI Just
newly remod e ed 3 bed m 3
baths hu ge LA w/cathedra
ce ngs nee cape new loo
cove ng roo! &amp; down spouts
s d ng etc Pus 4 1 2 Ac n
Green Twp Pr ced o se VLS

2 1 2 baths g LA
and d n ng m

Owner
mov ng &amp; needs to se
fast N ce prrvate woo ded
setttng comes w1th th s
ranch home 3 batt1s large
hv ng roam w th forma
d n ng area large eat m
k1tchen walk out basement
large covered front porch
attached 2 car garage pus
detached 24 x32 metal
garage #1028

IS

J HE PRICE WON T STOP
YOU ON THIS LOT &amp;
MOBILE HOME $21 900 s
the ask ng pr ce on th s
14 x70 Schut mob le home
w th 3 bedroom s bath &amp;
more
All set up on lot
Storage bu ldmg lmmed ate
possess on #1053
OWNER REDUCED PRICE
on th s 5 1 acrt;! m/1 tract of
land to $55 000 00
2
county wate r taps Qu et
country sett ng Lots of oad
fron tage #1 ODD
ACREAGE LISTING! 71
Acres m/1 road f ontage
along 2 roads County water
ava able Ma1nly all llllable
and pasture land fane ng
#1057

MEIGS COUNTY
garage Pe feet for that bu s ness at 11ome Has
and s very near boat ramp $20 000 00

~

of road fron tage
combrned wtth
t liable &amp; pasture
water ava Iable

LOADS OF POTENTIAL, 6 acres that has lots ol
frontage
Two large
lb1J i1 dinos (1) 44x195 metal
POMEROV-We he Terrace 2 corner Jots and a two story
w11h loadmg dock
home w th 4 rooms and 1 2 bath down &amp; 3 bedrooms and a
cu rrently used as a
fu bat h up Has a newly remodeled k tcpen and man bath
ca I opera! on (2)
and a newer roof Beautiful f replace wraparound po ch and
50x180 mela pole bu ldmg
French doors $40 000 00
use d as storage fa r
mach nary etc Plus t 1/:2.
RACINE- Bashan Ad A newer manufactured home that has
story dwell ng equ pped
7 rooms The e are 3 bedroom 2 baths tam ly room w th
kllchen bath LA #1 029
firer&gt;ll••ce 1 v ng room d n ng roam and an equ pped kitChen
Has ca thedral ce I ngs a full basement 2 car garage and an
HUNTERS! WE HAVE tTl Do
above ground pool The two acres has some n1ce flower
you want to own a parad se of
beds and landscap ng $75 000 DO
your own? Wtth n a few
POMEROY Spr ng Ave A beaullful 3 bed oom 2 story home
backyard Just wa1t ng for a tam iy to move n

lak e

'•

,

DREAM A L~~~~~~
DREAM OF ME Th s _g
home s nvll ng you n
evel 2 1 2 baths LA
k 1 FR w wbfp nse t
attached ga age &amp;
Fenced a ea &amp;

12887

13004 LIVE ON A HILL

t;;~~T -~

act·es--Woo&lt;jed lot and an older mob le
ON THE MARKET!
w1th add tlon Has had some remodeling done Also
acttve
landscaping
~as place for 2 other mob Je homes sh&lt;luld you wanl to rent
le~oha.nc&lt;ls lhe fawn that lhts 3
)hem out for the tncome $45 000 DO
I tv•rlm"m
bath home rests
Famtly
room k tchen
STORYS RUN AD -Approx one acre of yard wth a 14x70
I
dinirta
area
2 Car garage
Nashua mob Ia home Has 3 bedrooms 1 1/2 balhs n ce
al~aclied by breezeway Leis
6tze kitchen hvtng room &amp; ut I ty room Also has a 2 car
look 11056
garage $12 000 00

ESTATE5-PJCTURE PERFECT 2 Story Just
one look and YOU LL JUST HAVE TO HAVE IT!
Bedrooms-walk tn closets 3 Baths Skyl ghts and
wh1irl~1ooltub Formal Entry LA &amp; Dtntng Complete
Lg Fam ly Room wtth a butlt tn
Enterta nmenl Center Wet bar Lg W ndow over
look ng the grounds Back Decks 2 Fm shed garages
lawn &amp; Gardens
Pool &amp; Playground
prtvtleQeS Don I pass th s one by

RIO GRA,NDE
Huge 2 sto y home w 4
'Oed ooms 2 1/2 baths extra g
k t Fo rn a d n ng room &amp; LA
Fam Am Also Aec Am Iota 10
ms Pat o &amp; 2 1/2 Ac m I 0 ai
446 6606 R ght Now the moSt
lm~!ort,anl, ca you 1 make th1s

I
REASONABLE PRICED AT
$53 500 00
Large L
shaped I v ng room w th
din ng area k tchen 3
bedrooms 2 baths newer
carpellng &amp; lreshly pa nted
lots of closet space
30 x40 detached ga age
lmmed ate possession!

CHESTER
VILLAGE Large well kept
2 Story home wtth 1 5
baths 3 or 4 bedrooms
basement and n ce sized
lot You II want to v ew th s
home I s eady to move
nto
Call now so your
!amity can spend the
Hoi days n this lovely home
Sells for $69 900 00 11061

1940

WANTED: NEW LISTINGS!

l

w eat

n

Sunken fam y
new ca pet
area 2 ca

~~::~:;;d nga hage
Only he best s
s attract ve hOme

many ext ras w I s
the
Th s s you r chance to own
ove y mmac u at e home
V gna4466806
#3015 CITY LOCATION-73
Sp uce A home o me &amp; my ga
2 Bed m
bath washe d yer
ange ef new cab ne s neat &amp;
c ean
Fenced yard New on
m!lri&lt;e Ca V 5 446 6806
13013 SET YOUR SIGHTS
HERE 1!11 P ced to se
15 9
acres m wate and e eel c

16 x16

ber:trms
basemen
car
ga age attached New ca pe g
closets range ef showe n
bsmt F on &amp; ba&lt;;k po ches Gas
FA 1u nace Good ofl he st eel
pa k ng 3 lots Great Reduced
Price $54 000 VLS 446 6806
WI095 BUILDING LOTS FOR
SALE The best th ngs n I e s
v ng n a ovely suburban a ea
nea s o es and Ho ze M~ ca
Ctr Loca ed on Cha o as lake
D ve on Lakevew Ct 2 3 Ac m I
19 900 00
BUILDERS
A eo

5

Ae

446 6606

ava lab e $19 000 00 ca Ca a

N2004 VERY NICE 1 AC LOT
w 2 ro ad frontages Access o
boat ramp Very n ce lot to bu d
or to set yq u mob e home on
Cose o town Pare aM Hays
446 3684
13015 NEW L STING ON
KINEON DRIVE Wha a del ghllu
su p ie h s s Th s home has 2
lg BAs wpeny ol cose space
Lg LR DR Ready to move nto
cond on Gas heat fu nace s 3
yea s old Roof s b and new C A
ca an ga w}opena g Ut rty
m w washe &amp; d ye New ho
wale tank You can I go wong on
th s onel Hu y be o e the nte es
rates start gong back I.IP Ca
Pal c a Hays o ake a ook 446
3664
13005 NEW LISTING 2 S o y
home w 2 3 bed ooms n c ty
New oof V ny s d ng I on
po ch Re-ady to rnove n o
cond ton lmmed a e possess on
Th s s a n ce house and has a
price lag S32 000 Ca

#2960 TURN OF THE CENTURY
HOME G ea Jam y home or
bus ness oca on on 3 d Ave 3
bedrooms 1 1 2 ba ths P
Basement
hand ca p amp
V g n a L Sm th 446 6806
Reduced S75 000 00

N2991 L STEN TO THE BIROS
SING II Wh e you en oy you
back pa o dea lam y home w th
3 bed ooms 2 ba n am y m
w I ep ace d n ng m fu
baseme t 2 ca ga age S tuated
on 4 5 ac es m
LOADED
1110 ooo
a

oo ca ca

WI099 COMMERCIAL BLilG-~21
ve St Co ne oca on
sq ft good oof Owner w
nvento y o bu ld ng sepa ate
toge~her $60 000 TERMS

0

�•

,

f

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV '

Monday

Sunday, December 6, 1998

Weather

Job cuts abound, but economy still points up
By DONNA MURPHY WESTON
AP Business Writer
It wa.... a "c;:(k uf JOh

t.:Ub.

a' a

·

1

of bu!'.mt:'..e' from am:rall

'Jl.alt!

hmught
paign.

ma11u ~

111

hu ... me ... -.

thi~

pasl weli!k:

layoffs abound
Trymg_ tu remam \'iable anmJ unrenamty m the global t:(unomy. Bot: HI~
annnunct&gt;d II Will CUI ::!OJ)(K) mmt' JOh ... tnr a total nl 4X,OOO t ' Uh by the t:nJ
of 2000. Seank-baseJ Bnemg 4.:1l~d dedtnin£ airplane: orJa,, largd) du\! w

.. c ut a..;o a re~ull of corporate mergers. the b1gge~t chunk commg from the marnage nt ml gaants E)("&lt;On and Mub1l
,
Mer£ers lhat would create the wnrld"s largesl oal compan\ and world's
largest tinan~:aal anslllUUon caughl lhe allenuon of anlltru~l "-;&lt;llrhUogo.;. but

Wall St. ponders
desl're for U.S.
stocks overseas
Whal 1f every thing turned ng.ht1n
the world'' And m Ihe world ecqnomy'!
Demand fOr Amencan exports
would surely rt:-bounJ, so thar \ good.
Bur a better outlook lor orh~r
econom1es. Lind 10 Wm the1r mve ,tments. would likel y reduce dcmand
for U.S stocks and bonds the most
P?pular A111encan t:xpon among tore1gn mvestors.
Of course. 11 would be wrong to

pnse move was &lt;.kfens1ve in n.uure.
.10 effort .It counterin'!.! the 'e~.:onomac "
dr&lt;~g.lrom otherrt:-gw~ s ButjuUgm'g
trom the huge rJIIy on Euro~an markeb . Thursday's ralt&gt; l'Uis c.:an u_bo he
sct!n .1" a ~H!O ol bettc:r tlmt:s .lhc:.u.J
··The Eu~opeoms .m:&gt; nutmg nlll' r·
est ratt:s prt!tty Ur.tlll.IIK'ally. ~tncl
evcntu.tlly that\ gn1ng to stnnulate
anti restan their t.!cononues tO&lt;l.'' s.ud
Su-eed "'The b1ggest 1ssue 1" that wuh

suggest that Wall Street\ lalesl and

.1ll1h" (cap11al m US

greatest escape:: from 1um was s1mply
a function ol strong demand from
overseas mvestors . Yd. With all that
money lleemg ~;orld markets 1n late

n eventually be: ch.ulneled b.u.:l.; 11110
Ihe real world ! W1ll A~1a get 1ts ad
together .mrJ start to reabsorb th1s
capital?"

equl[~esl.

summer and early fall. Ihere was a lol

Fortunately. hecause the U S.

plt\(;e to go
And somewhere m the m1d!'»t ol a ll

economy remmns sound. there won't
be a .. g1am suckmg !'ioun,.r ol mvestment ~.: aptt,tl le.n' rng the Umted

Ihe chaos. wuh a IIIII&lt; help rrom Ihe
F!!d~r.ll Re sen·e. IRH~tors nl .111

Slates. said Streed .mu other analysis
"Wt:'ve bec:n a~ hulllsh .,~. . 1we've

~tnpe:~

been Without us1ng the word llqUidlty. " sa1d Jeffrt:} Applegate d11 ef
lllVestment "tralt:'!.!lst .at Lehman
Brothers.
...
··Drd the . . rock m.1rket pe.tk ... uddeply on July 17 .Lnt.l stall nmnn
0

wh1ch

expla1ns

the speed

of

None

of lhts

Will

happen

lhe ,Dow "hold1ng a

I~

The technolog:y-c..lommated N~1s­

, II was the failure of .1 key reform
me:tsure 10 Br.IZIIIhal r.1p11!red Wall
Street's all enli on on Thursday. when

Jaq compvsne mJex ro"e 4X K3. nr
2~.5. percent. to 2.00.716 on FmJ.1y.
lmtsh1ng the week 11 .28 lower and
about \3 point helow 1ts rt:u!l;ll h1gh
The Standard &amp; Poor"s 51Kl rose
26 60 on Fnday lo ~ I , 176 74. dnwn
IS 59 lm the week and abnul 12

the Dow 1ndustnals tumbled nearly

pomts away Irom record tcrr.un .

week 1ha11he world's ftn.IOCial woes
won't_be a

l.JUI~.:k !1x

h1m Wllh some sporls t1cke1s The
company reluclamly eomplteu
' But Quaker Oats had an interest tn

corruptiOn (.:harges 1s yet anot her
n:buke or the independent counsel

wh1ch m. mdates a pnson term tor .my

.t

chah

proc~ss tng

It dramatized the ,tlm..,er.. pe1pe·
trateJ by an ambitioUs and ovcrze.tl ous prost:cu tor With too nl uch pnwer,.ton m..~n y re,ources. and no over-

the law. He esc . tped even thou~h 1has
l.tw does n't re4mre proof th~11 the
renprent d1tl a favor lor the ...:omp . l-

sig~t.

Tyson, lhe Arkansas-bused poultry
processing giant. had pleaded guilty

Espy\ char.IL.:IentmiiOn ol Smaltz

ny

Departmt: nl W.J\ wrong - .md he
deservt:"J tn ht:' Jnv~n Irom olfice.

He was. v.1fhou1 ,my help Jrorn
special

pro..,t:~.:·utor

Don.!ld Smaltt

·Espy. who lohh1 ed Prestdenl Cl tn ·
ton for tht' JOb. rt:.., lgncU m11t:~.:~: mber
, 1994. Je..,.., th,lll two y~.ll . ., ~ller he
bec~une the f1r..,t agrh.:ulture ~ec n: t.try
from Ihe Deep South d11U th~ I1rst
Afncan-Arnl!ru.:an 1n the pnst
Hr: was ou..,tl!d by au:urale .md
legi wnatl! revel:.1t 1o n" of hh !.! thJ~.: a l
tran..,g:n:,~um . . by the pn:: '"'
Sm.tllt then pur. . ued lmn lor lour
years anJ spenl -.ome ) 17 nullum

Ye1. he t.nkd lo p11 tve lh.1l Espy.

10

return for M)lllt: $3~.000 ol 'POl h
w.: ket ~. g1lh and t raH~I. h.td ~ lone
luvors ft.)r lht: &lt;.:omr~tnre.., 111'-'0I\cd.
wh1ch mcluded Ty-.1111 FooJ-.. ln l .
Qu.tker O.th Co ;wJ Sun -IJ1.unoml
Growers
Hl . . clo,est hru"'h With prt\Oil w.t~
hi "' n:quc -. tlh.tt Qu~tker Oah prov1de

del.ty 111 ll191 anU 1994 111 hnn!.!lf\ !.!
the poultry com p.l!llt: s unJer ... th~
~.tme ruks applleU to the heel .mU
pork l ndu ... tncs

Espy. who had saved three lcnm
m Congrcs~ from .t M"'"\~'"PPI tilstn ~ t. ~:ou ld

not make the tran:-il llon
frnm the fa!e·whee hng eth1cs pr11u:1·

pies ol C.tptlol Hill 10 1he more
n: . . tn ct Jve tode lh.tt gove rns executi ve branch offK'I.tb
Furlhl'r IlL' w.r.., ~ li i!Oum l~d h\ .1
~ . :.ulul .111d prnk'~o.ll' ~,: ... l.tlt ti1.il
l t. lltlll'd the t.::t h1 ~o.' .td\r~.:c \d \l'h:r.u l
-. t.llkr . , rnthe "-'Ut'l .ll \ 'o ttiu:
Lei·, he dc.tr the ( JSDA W..l" no
p.tr.tgun o l VIrtue belorc E... py
.111'1\l'd
In the c.H I) l l)7().., 11 :d l ow~..'d I kn ry K1ssmge1 to lc~h.c over 11-. ~tlod Itil
P e d ll' pmgr.1 tnlt J p1ov1d..:: h1dd~Jn .rrd
to certa in Cnld W.rr .1llll'!'l I ht.:
llep.utmt'nt hl'lpcd h1 g wlcrn aurm.tl
~;r.tm ~.:omp.m, c . . IHIY _t.!l.l lll chc.1r

State to randomly·
check motorists :·•
for insurance
coverage

Investigation COl rtlnues in hunting accident
MEOiANICSTOWN, Oh1o (AP)- Authorities are investigating the fatal
shooting of a 10-year-old boy who was hunting in Carroll County.
Sheriff's deputies said Jarod Nign of Carrollton ww accidentally killed Friday by another member of his hunting party. Authorities would not release the
suspeaed shooter's name Sunday. The hunler was treated for shock after the
shooting. ·
Nign, who was wearing an orange ha~ wa-; shot after he wandered away
from his hunting party and squatted down. The shooting look place in a remote
and wooded area of Fox Township, about30 miles southeast of Canton.
The death was the second during the firearms deer season that ended Saturday for much of the state. Andrew Lehigh, 28, of MidVale, was fatally shol wilh
a 12·gauge shotg{tn Monday afternoon while hunting in Harrison County.

By CHARLEY Gllil:SPIE

Father charged In son's death

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$t~,'lfgs

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- A father was charged Sunday m connec·
lion with the weekend hunting-related death of his son, officials said.
'
' ' John Buffington, 19, of lower Salem, Ohio, was killed late Saturday night
when a IS-year-old's rifle accidentally discharged, striking Buffington
Buffington, the teen and Buffington's father, John Miller, of Lower Salem,
were spotlighting illegally in Jackson County and hunlmg while intoxicated,
said Hoy Murphy, spokesman for the slate Division of Natural Resources.
"They had spotlighted a deer last
night and killed the deer and loaded iJ
up into their vehicle. Whtle Jhe three
were gelling into the vehicle, one of
the shooters' rifle discharged accidentally and hil Buffington and killed
him," Murphy said Sunday.
1 Sections - 10 Pages
The name or lower Salem teen Wa';
not b&lt;ing released because he is a
10
Calendar
Juvenile, Murphy said.
6-8
Classifteds
The teen was charged in juvenile
court with negligent shooting, carry9
Comics
ing a loaded gun in a vehicle and
Editorials
2
unlawful possession of deer, Murphy
3
Lot;al
said.
Sports
4&amp;5
Miller was charged with illegal spotlighting. carrying a loaded fireann in
3
Weather
a vehicle and illegal possession of
deer He remained held Sunday in
Lotteries
Jackson County Jail. Murphy srud.
QHW
· After the shooting, the men dumped
Pick 3: 3·9·0; Pick 4: 6-9-8·5
the deer along the side of the mad and
Super lotto: 12-25-26-36-39-45
drove Buffington to Jackson County
Kicker: 8-3·3-6-4·9
Hosp11al, where he wa-; pronounced
W,YA.
dead upon arrival, Murphy said.
Daily 3: 2·3-4; Dally 4: 2·0·0.6
An investigation would conC 1998 Ohio \'alley l~•llli:&lt;~hmg Cu
tinue, Murphy sa1d.

Good Afternoon

1

as a· schoolyard bully"" .1ppl1cs also c.tril~r to g1ving h1111 gratUitlt!s
to ot her spec1.ll pro ..,ectnors operat1ng '
Poultry companle&gt; d1d henefil
under a law that, exp1res in Junt: .•tnd from USDA fool-dragging on apply · \
should he all owetl bv Connre-.s
to do mg to them 1ts policy ol zc ro-to l ~
0
jusl lhal.
•
an&lt;.:t!' for fecal comammatwn of mi! at
Whm Espy d1d 1n nul only aLC&lt;pl· proUuL'Is
in g. but sni iCILtng. g1!t..., from compaBut 11 was Willie Hou se ot fic1al s.
mes regu l.tl r:d by tht! A~.;ncu lture nol Espy. who ca used lhe USDA"s

frame of~ nearby two-story building across from n~
Moiliih Fteld stayed thai way until after Jhe war encbfip
1245. "The unfinished house," as we referred Jo it, m~
for a neal hangout
Scripts were required for cenain goods.
.
All windows had to be painte&lt;l over so no light wolil!l
show outside.
Paper money had "Hawaii" stamped on one side. II
wasn't unlll about 25 years ago thai they were finally
taken out of circulation.
•
The war years also meant backyard bomb shelterS.
Every family had one- nothmg fancy, but well-stocked
with water and canned goods. We'd have 10 clean out Jhe
underground shelter from lime 10 lime and it was an
unpleasant task, what with spiders, lizards and othr:r
yucky insects.
:
Everyone was required to carry gas masks at all time..
To test lhetr effecllveness, there would be random drillS
where everyone would wear their masks and rae~
through a tear gas-tilled room.
,
At school, we had surprise air raid drills where we·
marched out in orderly fashion and positioned ourselves:
tn either shl trenches or shelters. As kids, we liked to"
sneak up on s1des of the shelters, causing the gravel 10
slide off and expose the wooden structure. If we got
caught, it was off to the principal's office.
_
To wile away idle time, we made a hobby of identi(r-:
ing planes z1pping through the skies. Moslly P-40s and.•
once in a 'While, the P-47 Thunderbolt or nifty doubT(~
fuselaged P-38 Lightning. Rarely did we see bombelt;
the B-17 Flymg ,Fortress or the B-25 Mitchell Bomber,!:
With thousands of militarx stalil'ned in the islanc!S;
we'd snap orr a salute or give them the "V for Victorf!:
•
•• .
s1gn.
More often Ihan not, they'd wave back.
'•

be no school for stuwere second'-generation
dents at lunalilo Ele"'
Japanese-American, or
Nisei.
HONOLULU (AP) _:. The scailered mentary. There was
good
reason:
a
shell
had
'
tl
In no lime, we kids
patches of brown-black puffs against
"r
of Japanese ancestry
the sparkling blue morning sky should landed on the main twowere out playing with
have been an indication that some- story building and
our Otinese and Por·
thing was wrong that Sunday morn· burned down the second
level
tuguese neighbors and
ing.
We
stayed
home
for
parking ourselves in
But, as a 6-year-old, I was more
two
weeks.
their
homes.
eager to get in a full day of " pee-wee"
Everyone was conBut neither my 7·
- a game using different lengths of
cerned
about
additional
·
year-old
sister, Edith,
an old broomstick- nol knowing the enonnity of events
attacks
On
occasion,
an
nor
I
strayed
too many
taking place 8 miles away.
air-raid
siren
went
off,
doors
'
away,
always
The laughter and cajoling, however, came to an abrupt
~ .~ .
leaving word w1th my
end when all , l~e · kids' parents came oul and literally sending us scurrying Jo
a sheller.
',
mother where we
marched us home.
ll was rather ironic.
would be.
That nigh~ I remember my father telling the fam1ly
Hawaii, then a terri·
not to tum on any house lights. The winter season was On the way l~ school
prior
to
the
auack,
my
nlng
Amerlca'alnvolvement
In
World
War
II.
tory
of the United
here so darkness fell early. II was eerie, the entire neighpals
and
I
would
admire
a
slore
display
depicting
two
Stales,
had
the
largest
Japanese
population
outside of
borhood was pitch black. •
opposjng
annies
maneuvering
against
each
other.
The
Japan,
and
many
of
them
were
Issei,
first-generation
As we went to bed, my father pi aced the radio under
Japanese.
a table draped with a sheet so there would be no visible flag of the army with the advantage was that of Japan.
We thought it would b&lt; a neat g1fl to get for ChristWhile the possibility of Japanese sympathizers probalight outside.
1
bly concerned the governing military, Hawaii's isolation
Thai's when il struck me that something was serious- mas.
Then, like my school, the store and the entire block created what could be considered a "captive audience "
ly wrong.
were
demolished by a shell, killing lwo people. James
But some considered "too friendl~ :· to Japan:s cause
Thai's the most vivid memory I have of Dec. 7, 1941
Jones included the mcident in his novel "From Here to were senJIO a camp nol far from Pearl Harbor.
-4- "a dale which will live in infamy," as President
Eternity."
Still, ,the war years were different for those isolated in
Frankl in D. Roosevelt would say.
Those
of
Japanese
ancestry
living
on
Jhe
U.S.
mainthe
middle of the Pacific.
That morning, al Pearl Harbor and olher military facti-.
land
were
subjected
to
racial
halrtd
and
suspicion,
then
Martial
law was in effect with a strictly enforced 8
ities on Oahu, the Japanese launched a surprise allack
uprooted
and
caned
off
to
whal
was
genlly
referred
Jo
as
p.m.
curfew.
that plunged the United Stales into World War II.
"internmenl camps" with lillie advance warning.
There was rationing of food, "especially fresh meai War was not in my vocabulary then.
Bullhose in Hawaii fared beller.
probably ,the reason Hawaii remains the biggest conI learned quickly, however, that 11 disrupted what we·
living in the islands, with their melting pol of ethnic sumer of Spam :... and gasoline.
normally took for granted.
,
groups,
eased the fears of retaliation for my parents, who
lumber was in such shon supply thai the skeletal
The nexl day being Monday, we·were told there would

ff(iig{Onar·~riefs

company. hrmuln"

federal empl(1ye who .lcc&lt;pls .1'ny·
thmg of value trom a fmnl'o ve reJ hy

Single Copy- 35 Cents

~----~--------~-----------.

il under1he 1906 meat tnspecllon-.ICl

setup

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

By GORDON SAKAMOTO
AModatod Press Writer

--

Espy exonerati·o n· shows
up special counsel abuses
By GEORGE ANTHAN
Des Moines Register
WASHINGTON - The exoneration b) a fedcr.ll court-:tury ollnnner
Agnculture Secretary M1kc Espy on

Hometown Newspaper

A schoolboy's ~orld altered by Pearl Harbqr attack

percent ga 111

9.374.27.

Meigs County's

Volume 49, Number 152

changt!d contllt10ns changed around(
the world and p~ople got nl!rvou s."
Applegate" sa1d. "For me . thtn~ s
always start out w1 th 1unJamentals..."
On finday. tht: Dow Jone:-i 1ndu!'1·
tnal average ro!'ie 136.46 to 9.016 14.
clo ... mg out a rough week ot prot 1t taking: wuh a loss of 316 94
With lhree weeks tu go m 19Y8.

ery efforts and -ann1he.r J1re torecasl
from Llpan, not to menuon lhe latest
proF1t warmng trom Boe1ng there
were enough re:nunders this past

• 1

1

tor the year. Jown t rom ~1 gam ul 1X5
percent at the Nov. 23 pe ~t k of

of course
1 hnnl.:sto a ~n ag m Br.llll's recov-

-Page4

·.

down because liqLuJ1ty Jncu up ' Nt:
It went do\\n because- perc eptlons

0\ ermght.

Sundy's NFL
results

~

w1ll

of homdess ca!'l h lookmg fur some-

advance.'' sa1d Robert Streed, ..,enror
mvestment advt se r at Nunhc:rn Tru ~ t
Ill Ch1~.: . 1go
But a lew month s later. ewn lithe
world rcm.uns qu1te UIH:Ii!rtal n. there
•Lr.e ' '£"" oll1gh1. or a! least honk mg.
.u tht: r:nJ of the 'eumonm: tunnel, anJ
11 nMy beg1n 10 U1st r. H.:t ~o me allention - ,md 1 money - away from
Wall Street

High: 50s; Low:40s

1

IK5 JXllnls Brushed a&gt;~ue hy the seiiing was news of coordmalcu reduc11nn m 1n1aes1 rat&lt; ruts by moslof
the lr:adm,g central banks ol Europe
Much Ilk&lt; the recent senes of rale
cut !'I hy the Federal Reserve. the sur-

By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Business Writer
. NEWYORK-Aneas} 4U&lt;sllon
tor most people a11d a lyph.:al
quandary lor Wall S1n!e1:
'

appurt"ntly l,it:!CILle:d th.lt even
a we.11\er U.S. c~.:onomy v.a~ a prdty
sohd bet 111 su~.:h .m uncertam woriU
') "There Is JUst 'o mu~:h money m
rhe tinancral system. and 11 \ headmg
towanJ the ( U S J ~lock mml.:et

Toniorrow: Rain

w1th Jb ··The Softer Su.le ul Sear',. ad cun-

Ti&lt;ker ,
.
~n1ver~al Pictures rhairman Ca.\t!y Silver wao; ttm.:ed to ·res1,gn after the
·hohday ~~~kerKfs f.l isappuinling open1ng nfthe expensive sequel '' Babe· Pig
1n Ibe C1ty capped a diSmal year ... A bankruptcy judge threw Canat.han theater com!"'ny livent Inc. a lire jacket. approvmg $25 million Jinancmg deal
to allow II to contmue opemlmg through June ... Philip Morris. the nauon·s
b1ggesllubacco company. plans to spendS I()() million on a campaign to urge
k1us not to smoke ...
US A1rways agr~d ~o pay_S390.000 in back pay and salary adjustments
to women managers m hghl ol a labor Def1Unmenl audit found they receive&lt;!
less than lhetr male counlerpans .. In the M1crosofl antitrust trial. company cha1nnan B1ll Gates acknowledged he believed the rival computer language Java cou1d threaten hiS lucrJIIve Window' f"ranchtse. But he denied
h1s company ever tried to discoup.lge software c.Jevelopers from r._iloring lheir
products louse Java rJlher than Wmdows ... Prestdenl Clinton announced
~lans lo promote buymg and selling on the Internet. saymg il " an engine
tor glob~l econom1c _growth ... Medical device maker Medtmnic Inc. bough I
tbe leadmg maker ot stems - ltny mesh lubes Ihal prop open clogged comnary artenes - tn a $3 7 btllton stock deal wuh Anenal Vascular Engineenng
ot Santa Rosa. Calif.
.

the A:o.wn econonuc .. tuwdnwn Meanwhile nval Alrhu' lmJu ... tne .... uJ 11 ha'

I •

'lun~

pen:ent fnr cars.

a long baeklog of orders and plans to 1ncr&lt;a..., ou1pu1 by JO perc&lt;nl n~\1 )ear
Elsewhere. health Lare f1ruduch g1ant Johnson &amp; Johnson and aboul a
dozen o1her cumpante .. announced cut~ lotahng more than O.tXMJ m n:,trucJunngs aimed al becom1ng more compe1iti ve. Anothc=r9.5(X) Job' were be1ng

1

!lack luI he

Southern boys lose opener, Page 5
Alcoholics: master manipulators?, Page 10
A flying billboard?, Page 6

Today: Rain
High: 50s; Low:40s

~llhough re1a1lers seemed to b&lt; m trouble. truck dealers were counting,
lhetr ca.'h a.s sales of new pickups. spon uuluy vehicles and vans surpassed
cars la.'l month lor the Jirsl t1me evor. with the so-called li~hl trucks caplunng 50.9 percent of the new veh1cle market in November. compared 10 49.1 '

fal:lu~er-. IH I~ makt'r ul Band-A u.J, &lt;~nnuurlct!d plan~ h) dnnmate mnr~ Ihan

J5.(XMI lhuu,and J&lt;tbs.
A look otl "hat happcneU

wun~n

DKember 7, 1*

V8, LEATHER INT, LOADED

$10,995
96 WINDSTAR YAN
LOW MILES POWER
EQUIPMENT
3 1N STOCK

$16,995
93 OLDS 81 ROYALE
4DR
V6 AC, POL, P SEAT
CRUISE, TILT

$8 995
91 OlDS 1UTIJS4 DR
VB, A/C, POL, PW AMIFM
CASS

$5995
95 PONT, GRAND PRIX
4 DR, VB A/C, POL, F'N
AM/FMCASS

$9,995

AUTO M;, TILT CRUISE
CASS

$11,995
97 DODGE RAM 1SOO
EXT CAB4X4
VB, AUTO A/C POt. F¥1,
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96 CHM 1·10
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94 PONT GRAND AM
4 DR, V6, PS PB, AC
POL, PW

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VB, A/C. I'W. POL PS,
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97 PlY VOYAGER
MINI VAN

V6 AJC 1TILT, CR~ I$E,
AMIFMCASS

4 DR, V6 A/C. POL PW
CRUISE, TILT CASS

$4,995
96 LINCOLN MARK VHl
BLACK EXT BLACK
LEATHER INT, lOADED
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9610l!D ixPLOl!ER

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EDDIE DAUER V6, ALL
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$23,995

7 '~ . '

-

J
/

/

Today's Sentinel

l

CHRISTMAS CREATIONS - Six colorful wooden nutcrackers, designed and created by
Wesley Thoane, have been placed In Pomeroy's mini-park next to The Dally Sentinel building.
The talentad Melgs High School student put them In place ltiat week. Ufeslze Vlctorll!n flguraa
made by Thoene two years ago for an Eagle Scout projact are featured In the larger Court
Street mlnl-park, and he Is now working on e nativity which will go on the hillside near the
Pomeroy Unlted Methodist Church.

Assodated Prm1 Writer
COLUMBUS, , Ohio (AP)
OltiOIIllS who "drive wilhoul auto insurance may b&lt; getting an unwelccme surprise in the mail.
Starting today, the Ohio Bureau of
Motor \.l:hicles will begin sending
nolias to about one in every 20 registered drivers, selecled at random
statewide, 10 demand thai they prove
they have hability insurance to c:o;er
damilge for accidents they may cause.'
"Just reabzing Utat we may b&lt; sending them a notice may b&lt; enoogh or an
incentive for some people to go out apd
get insurance," said Ohio Departmenl·of.
Public Safety spokesman Leo Skinner.
Driver.; who can 'I prove they have
insulance could lese their licetR for as
long as three months.
ln the pa-;1. authorities checked for
insurance only when plolorists were
stopped for "'olations. About 1.7 million
molorists are checked each year and
more thllll JOO,OC() licenses have been
suspended since the law requiring insurance look effect in 1995.
Skinner said about 2ll&gt;,OC() drivas
· will be selecled from the state's 5.6 milbon registered motorists.
Those seleCted·will receive a fOnn 1o
fill out puving they have the appropriaJe
c:o;erage. Those who fail to n:spor¥1
within a month with proof they had
insurance at lite time of the request &lt;:00
have their drivers' licenses SLL'I~
immediaJely for 90 days.
•
The state will monitor those driv~
for five years to make sure they ~
insured as long "' they carry Ohio li~
es.
Besides providing copies of an insurance policy or insw-ance identificatm
card, driver.; can send in a copy of a bond
or other legal form or covernge of fi"''!!cial responsibility for accident liability..

Family Fun Fest will ~ ~potlight hea·lth, survival ·issues next ~pri_,
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senttnel News Staff
Meigs County's first "Family Fun Fest," a oneday seminar focusing on posittve life sktlls,
heahh and survival issues, will be held at Eastern
High School on April 24.
Planning for the event was held Thursday
when representatives from area hospitals, heahh
agencies, law , enforcement~ service and civ1c

otganizations mel al Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The event will be held from 10 a.m to 4 p m.
There w1ll be no charge to allend or participate in
an'y of the programs or serv1ces offered.
Notma Torres, R.N, director of nursing at the
Meigs County Heahh Department, sa1d about 50
agencies will be 1nvolved in the "Family Fun
Fest" which will be held inside the school in the
auditorium and cafeloriu(ll, as well outside the
·
' build1ng.
As explained ,by Torres, the plan is to combine
everything into one big event which will be
muhi -generational and centered on a celebration
of the ramily.
She said that immun1zat1ons will be orfered,

•

cholesterol, blood sugar, and lead screening will
lake pl ace, dental, vision, and hearing tests will
be g1ven, mammograms will be offered, children
can be fingerprinted, safely issues will be dis cussed, information on colleges will be available, ·
mental heahh issues will be addressed, recycling
will be d1scussed, nutritious snacks will be
served, and contests for all ages w1ll be held.
Torres, Margie Skidmore, instructor at t~e
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Rebecca Nelson, director of the Holzer
Home Health, are co-chairs of the "Family Fun
Fest.'~

April was selected as the. month for the event
to take place because of the many national observances relating to health issues which are annually celebrated in that month.
Observances which will be folded into the fest
will include "Immunization Week" by the health
department; "Victim's Righls Week" by the Prosecuting Attorney's office Victims Assislance Program, "None Under 21" by Ihe Health Recovery
Services; "Child Abuse Prev ention" by the Meigs
County Department of Human Services; and the

"Week of the Young Child" by Gin·
gerbread/Head Start
,
Among the other agencies parlici·
paling will be Woodland Centers,
Meigs County Council on Aging,
ACCESS,
Menial
Retardation,
Scouts, Meigs County Extension
Service, Liller Control, llumane
Society, the American Heart Associ ·
ation, and the American Cancer
Society.
Numerous other community -based
service agencies and businesses have
also commilled to being a part of the
program, Torres said
Entertainment w1ll also be fea·
FEST PLANNING - Rebecca Nelson of Holzer Home
lured with Rockin' Reggie and Mick
Childs doing hula hoop and bubble Health, Margie Skidmore, lnatruct~r at the Ohlo Unlvaralty
blowing contests, ACCESS offering College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Norma Torr11, R.N.,
face paintin~, and games being con- dlractor of nursing at the Mlega County Heelth Departmen~,
dueled by several other agencies .
are co-chairs for Family Fun Fest. About 30 organlzatlona
"The goal of the Family Fun were represented at last week's plannlng aeaal~n.
•
Fest," said Torres "is to reach out to families and 1n a se t11ng where the total emphasis focuses on
provide a day of' comprehensive health services the family"
I
I

"

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