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Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Lynn Robinson. Racine ; Neale ·

George Kn ight. Middleport: John C.
Ingels. Pomeroy: Ruby V. Burnside .
.Pomeroy: Tamra Cheryl Pickens.
Long Bouom; Deborah Kay McAfee.
Reedsv ille:
.
Mary Kathleen Jordan , Albany:
Colin Lylo• Chevalier. Reedsville;
John S. Thomas. Middleport; Doris L
Muth. Pomeroy; Jesse G. Barnhart,
Albany; Tenri L Browning. Racine;
Roma Irene Warner, Middleport;
. Marjorie Price. Pomeroy; Richard
Lee Williams. Middleport ; Charles A.
Neumann , Syracuse; Clinton J. Bailey, Long Bottom; Thomas Alan
Smith. Albany: Ruth C. Chapman.
Syracuse:· Dolores G. Donohue,
Pomeroy;. James

W.

High: 40s; Low:20s

;

STOlE HOURS

MondiiJ thru

Sundar

By SUSAIN: M. SCHAFER

WE
THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER 19 1998

DR.
PEPPER, MUG

ROOT 'IEER,
ORANGE SLICE
2LTS.

Darrell Gene Jenkins Jr.,
Pomeroy; Ruth M. Bums, Ewington ;
Shell y A. Fortune, Syracuse: Sean A.

..

Eye exams
available to
low:.income .
residents
Low-income workers. and their
famili~s in Ohio can sign up in Jan uary to receive free eye care in March
through a program called VISION
USA.
Optometrists who are members of
the Ohio Optometric Association are·
among nearl y 8,000 opto·metrists

nationwide donating their services to
provide free comprehensive eye
exams in March.
To qual ify for the VISION USA
program. people must have a job or
li ve in a house hold in which at least
one.. men_1ber is working pan-time:
have no health insurance that covers ,
eye exams; meet certai n income criteria based on household size ..and not
have had an eye exam at a doclOr's
office within the last two years.
.
Application forms can be obtained
fmm VISION .USA, 243 N. Lindbergh Blvd,. St. Louis, Mo. 63141.
Completed forms must be postmarked by Jan. 22, 1999.
Applicants can also be screened
for eli gibility by phone, but only dur. ing the month of January. The number to call in· January is 1-X00-7664466. Phone lines wi ll be open weekdays froh1 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
"There is no doubt in my mind
that mt.my people in low -income
famili'es are being held down becaui;e
they can't see well enough tu do thei r
jobs or to learn in school," said Dr.
· Dennis Roark of Springtield. presidcnl,ofthc Qhio Optometric Associ!
ation. "Some also hh.ve eye heallh
cunditit)lts that t.:ould cause blindness
i r left untreated ...
Roark said more than I7.000 lowincome c- hildren and adults in Ohio
have rece ived free eye care in the first
&lt;ight years or the VISION USA pro- .
gram. Among those exam ined last
year. more than seve n"oul of every
100 had eye health conditions and
seven out of l ~ n needed a new eyeglass prescripti on.
The 1999 VISION USA program
is ·being supported by Vistakon. a
division of Johnson &amp; John son
Visiun Products Inc.

Man charged
after standoff
SIDNEY ' (AP) - A man who
police say threutened his girlfriend
with a pistol is being held in the Shdby County jail on $5,000 hnnd.
Lexie Winal s. 57. of Sidney. was
arraigned Tuesday in Common Pleas
Court oil •;me count of aggravated
mena,ing. a fir st~ degree misde:
mennor that carries a possible sixmonth jail sentence.
Winals is acc used of waking Nan cy Taylor, 54, by touching a handgun
to her head early Tuesday. Police
Chief Steve Wearly said Taylor barricaded herself in a bathroom and
called police.
While police ~ pt Winals on the
phohe, Taylor was spirited ou t a second-story window. Wearly said .
Winuls agreed to come out the
front door but fled through the bac k
·
door.

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•
Park Service says battlefield worth saving
MAUMEE, Ohio(AP)- Preservationists trying to save a oottleficld where
a I~ clash !ed. to Ohio stateh.ood celebrated a National Park Service rep:&gt;rt
that satd the stte was worth savmg.
.
. .
.
The
.~.leased We&lt;:~"esda~ call~ the Fallen Timbers sote m thts Tol~~ subllib nattonally stgmfi&lt;;ant Q~t. did•not guarantee any money to tum ot
tnto a park. . .
.
..
.
.
· Preservattorusts said the report goves legottmacy to theor quest for the mtl lio~ of dolllllli.needed '?,buY the 188-~e b.~ttl~field. .
.
,
We are thnlled that tl s come to frUibon, satd Manan.ne Duvendack, vtce
president of the F.illen Timbers Battlefield Preservation COmmission. "We
always knew that it was worthy of inclusion."
.
In the battle, fought on-Aug. 20,1794, tfie army of Gen. "Mad" Anthony
Wayne defeated a band of American' Indian tribes in a fight that lasted less than
two hours~ .
,, .
.
.
.
Wayne s voctory broke the spmt of Indian resostance. Withm a year, he
negotiatcd a treaty thai opened 11bout
two-thirds of southern Ohio to settiers.
Wheth~r the. park service report wiU
help r~ose the money, though, os
uncertam.
Today's
The city of Toledo bought the site in
2 Sections - 12 Pages
1~87, before archaeologosts deter·
mmed the battle -:vas fought on .that
7
Calendar
land,.and set ots pnee at $7.2 molhon.
8-10
Classineds
FI reworks plant
Comics
11
1 I fl d •
exp OS
I ngs
Editorials
2
By
The
Assoctated
Press
3
Local
A summary Of find!n~ rele:""'d
4&amp;5
Sports
Wednesday. by auth~nttes mvesugat·
Weather
3
mg Fnday s e~plosoon at lndepen·
dence Profess.tonal Foreworks CO.
Lotteries
near Osseo, Mo ch.:
- Se~en employees initially list~d
OHIO
as
mossmg were ~~Jared dead. Thor·
Pick 3: 5-5-8; Pick 4: 2-8-8-1
teen
others were InJUred.
Super Lotto: 1-13-15-27-38-44
-The
victims' remains have been
Kicker: 4-1-1-5-4-0
•
taken to t~e Lucas COunty Medical
w.yA.
E~ammer s Office m To!edo, and
Daily 3: 5-2-5; Daily 4: 2-8-8-6
Will_ .be .releas.e_d t.o re.lattves after
C ,998 Ohio Valley Publ!sbing Cu.
l.!:===;:::=======!..!pi&gt;s=':::":::ve:.::td:•:::nt:::tf:::tc:::a::to:on::..::os:...:'!';.::a:d:e:._._.:.J

"'J'e"

oz.

~OMINO

U.S.D.,A.CHOICE BONELESS BEEF $

launclting the a11ac1cs an the day
bekre he. faCed an impeaduueut
vote in the House- a vote now

White House to talk with Ointon.
'Mthrut elatorating an details
of the next wave of Slrikfs, Berger ·
said. "This qJCI3lioo is oot oompleted" ·
"\\i:knowverymuchwhal we
want to arux npish, • he said "\\1:
· ·know what the targets are that we
seek to destroy or hit ard We will
systematically allack tha!e tat-

'I:. .··· • · ~· - · ·

ASST. VAR.
(INSTANT COFFEE

1· $5''
c
$ 99
1
1
2
Bacon ••••••••••• ~ .a;·•• 9 9 OR LT. BROWN
R1b Roasts ••••••••••• 3
Cubed

Single Copy . 35 Cents

WASHINGTON (AI')- A lir.;t wave of air&amp;riJ&lt;es ag;tinst
Iraq pocluced "seven:~ to nne' target;," Defense SecreJXI&lt;IIniCd.
,
tary 'Mlham OXIen said today: The Pentagon readied further
"There lu5 never been a political
a!taclts aimed at destroying Saddam H.-in 's abilily to aeate
decision ooriting out of this buildweapor5 of mass deslructioo.
ing from President Ointoo dealing
Pltsidad Clintoo was briefed this morning on Operalian
with our men ard women in uni· Dcs:rt FOx by National Security Adviser Sardy Berger. "The
fO'TII, • Cohen said oo Fox 1V
president was peased the lir.;t day of the operation was conductIraq. Ru!!;ia ard China called fa'
ed ~ly," spolusnan Joe Lockhart said
gets."
an immediate halt 1o the U.S. ard
Military officials spent the night studying phologr.lpM taken
· In Baghdad today, children
British allacl&lt;s, but a dividOO Unitby spy saJellites and U-2 aircraft in an·~ 1o"""""' the dam- heOOed 10 school and gmunment
ed Natioos S!x:urity Council took
age from W:dnesday night's attack. The House, which had been wakCIS went 10 otlices as Wfta1
no action,
sdtaluled to begin debating four articles of impeachment ag;Urnt after the nighdoog alladcs DownAmericans sbmgly SUJ1l&lt;11ed the
•· Oin!!XttodaY, insteadcoitvenedto\UlSideraresolutiooofsuwort town streets wen:~ with traffic.
military action, aa:ording to polls
for Amliric3n fmxs invol~ In the Iraqi operalion.
Saddam 's whereabouts were ·
EVE - .Air traffic controllars · by CBSardABC In the CBS poll.
· Outgoing House Speaker Newt Gingrich said he was giving unknown. but he appeared an te1e- on board the USS Enterprise assist In guld· about 8:) percent said they favored
Ointoo qualified siowort am told legislafii'S: "The United States visioo to &lt;mdemn the "wicked lng the strike .a ircraft In and out of Iraq while the strike. Aa:mling 10 the ABC
lu5 to lead. There is no alternative. There is no CAher country capa- people" who launched huhdleds of working In the Carrier Air Traffic Control SUM)!, 62 percent said attacking.
bleoforganiljngag;li!Nan Iraqi dictakrwho wants to get weoons missiles. · ·
Thursday In the Persian Gulf. Navy fighters II)!() was the right thing to do.
of mass destruction."
, Amid images of CNlllpled flying off the Enterprise hit Iraqi air defensa "Operation Des:n FOx," which
'Mthout r11&lt;11tiooing the impeachment poa:ediogs diredly, ' brick buildings in £laglxb:l. an radars with HAR~ mlaslles. ·
the administratioo said cOuld last
Gingrich said: "No matterwhalourdetlatesathoole, we are as a Iraqi dxtor said 30 people weoe'wounded ard two killed chuing up to four clays. was designed IOdiminishlraq's ability to produce
· natioo JrCIIIred 1o le.-d the world"
the initial attacks.
·
outlawed nuclear,·chemical and biologiCal W""fX'X'S, a wearyIn a series of TV and radio interviews from the Pentagon.
Military officials said a scoond night of attack called for Ll'ing looKing Ointoo told the nation in a televised adcltcl6 from the
Cohenwao;l&lt;ikedrepealedly ifthefirstday'saflackshadbeensuc· 15 Air Force S.52H bombers, rumed with loog-rangeAGM-86 Oval Office.
oessful. "I'm not llying to classify them as being taally SIXXX:S5· air-launched cruise missiles, based on the Indian Ocean island of
The JrCSident Sljid he ordered the strikes to pnxectAmerica's
ful at this p:&gt;in~" he told AP Radia.
Diego Garcia
"vital intere:;ts" aller&lt;Xl!'L&lt;IIIting tq&gt;advisers and reviewing a new
He said officials were still studying the intelligena:.but preIn Waslting10n's tel\.'ie Jlllitical ~ Republican lead- United Nations report detailing how Sadclam had once ag;lin
liminary reports had shown that falgets had been hiL He charac- ers fllSipOned the H"""' debale on the imJWunen! of Ointoo failed to uqeo ale with U.N. Weap;l!\S illSf"''''Drs.
terim;1 the damage as "severe" and "sui:gantial" and said he was after the attack began, even as some voiced swpiciom about the
"Sadclam H~n miN oot be allowed to threaten his neigh"imfX"8'1&lt;"1 with the accuracy" of the Slrikes.
JrCSident's timing. Around the capital, S&lt;nnity was tightened at bors or the wrrld with nuclear weaJXl1,'. p:&gt;ison gas or biological
Cohen, Seaetary of Stile Madeleine Albright and Gen. Hugh embassies ard other "aitical ihstallations."
weapons," Ointoo said "I have no doubt today that, left
Sheltoo, chainnan of the lQint Clliets of Staff, heOOed for the .
O&gt;hen n:peatedly denied any pllitical motive by Ointoo in unchecked. ·Sadclam H....,in wiD use th.,., terrible weap:ns

Accepts Credit Cards .·

L· use:

Hom~own Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

AP Mllay Wlltar

298 SECOND ST.

DOUB~EC~~

Pro Bowl
rosters
announced
-Page 4

Bombs fall on Iraq during. night attack

I IM-10 PM

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Meigs County's

Volume 49, Number 160

PEPSI &amp;
MT.DEW
PRODUCTS

P 0 WE ll S
'

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 40s; Low:20s

adle•,A~,-'oo_n_y_.

1

Kilchen.

Pomeroy: Robert Sammy Shain ,
Racine; William B. Harton. Racine ;
Ruth Juanita·Pullins, Rac.ine; Stephen
D. Browning, Reedsville; Mary
Katherine Rice. Pomeroy ; Mary P.
Shephard, Racine; Rill Lee Tackett,
Racine; Sara Katherine Rayburn,
Pomeroy ; Rohert Ralph Wood, Syra-

D•ars•l•.•M•i•dd•l•epo~n•;~P•eg~-

College basketball, Page 5
Ann looks at funny questions, Page 7
Space station pitfalls, Page 6

Today: Flurrtn

cu.'ie;
S
Thoma.&lt;. Middleport: Norman H. tom; Doris L. Henry, Middleport: gy Bowers Brickles. Middlepon:
abrina Dawn Smith. Pooperoy; Bahr, Pomeroy : Bobby Nitz. Joni Man'eJ "
M"ddl
R h Ed A Abbott P
Lu II V
Larry R. Mees, Portland; Jeffrey Lee
euers. t epon; ut
gar .
• omeroyl:d Ee Wal .
Sell
R . Ph' I' Vi
H
Pomeroy; Roben
H. Felly, McElroy, Pomeroy; Mary E. Wells, Dnggs. ~iddlepon: Amo
. .I eMrs.ddlacme: Gllp GICIOfirh ORVal- Langsville; Christina D. Young, Reed..ville; Ora P. Ba~s. Syracuse; son. SyrJCuse; Chad Lee Robert&lt;.
ter. 1 eport: .aryp nf ot ,A u1- Racine;
Connte
· L111'1·11 e c un d'IT
R · ld a Racme;
·
· Albany;
1 , actor;
"ohe a Jean Noms,
1and ; RubY A· Davos,
omeroy;
nna
Scott
D.
Hauber.
Reedsville·
,
Es•-JJ
Paugh.
Mt'ddle..J..n·
.
Sandra
K.
Gl
d
M
I
Dono
M Park T
PI ,
W. I
~
""
en a ar ene
van. Coo Ivo'II e:
·
er.
uppers
aon~:
a
tor
Jonathan
Allen
Dickens,
Pomeroy;
~enr. Dex•-r. Erma M. Smo'th,
Eci
J
T
1
R
tl
·
Will
' R hS
R . K
_,.
~
c an ay or, u aod : Maunce
1 oam ou&gt; · yracuse;
egma · Rachael Renee Hensler. Racine: Rae- Pomeroy,·
"'--ah Lo B
Elbe L
Lewis. Pomeroy: Carolyn S.' quel J. Smith, Middleport; VindaJean
""'" an. ng Oltom:
n ee
G"l
Lo
B
R' h d E
Roy F. Boggs, Middleport; Don- Williams Jr.. Vinton; Ann S. Cale,
1 more.
ng ottom: oc ar
. Erwin, Pomeroy ; Amy Sayward
R Rose p 1 od "
'fh ·
Jenes. pomeroy;· Mary Fmoce:; La· m- Smith, Pomeroy; Paul E. Lambert, L
na kh·
a ; •emon
L, ort B
E B. Pomeroy: Roger Eugene Leo ell.
ben. Rutland; Terry Lee Snider. Rutland; Lucan is Mark Brooks,
oc an.
ong ottom: . •mma Pomeroy ; Mildred L. Shumway,
p
p 1 M M El
J
Marie. Whittington, Albany; John F. Coolville;
omeroy: au
.
c roy r.. Albany; Luda Iva Anderson, Racine; M
p
G
D B
··
p
R ld W V
T
Gl
usser. . omeroy; eorge . otEric L. Diddle, Pomeroy; Evelyn
omeroy; ona
. anc&lt;. UPJl""
oria J. Ross. Portland· James
II M'ddl
s
d
PI . w ·J H d
G
.
S
J
·
•
l1C • ' eport; an ra L. Boling, D. Thomas, Pomeroy: Regina A.
ams; 1 rna en er&gt;&lt;.m, uysvo 11e:
paun r.. Racine; Mark David Gillo- Pomeroy ,· Susan Paulo' ne Brewer. , D'll d p
C · S
I
C nsty
. D. Ne Ison. M'ddl
y
·
I
I
.
' ar . omeroy: onnoe erne s1
epon; 10 a g y, Albany; Diana F. Cowdery, Mid- R ed 'II Ch 1· M F k
v·trgmta,
. . Long, Lung Rnttom; Chad dl epon: _ H. Victor Wolfe, Racine: 1 e d SVI
e;
ar a ' ac ler, Rut- berger. Reedsvi lle: Elizabeth 0.
K · · C Ze' 1 · p
A F 1
p
.,.,
h J
"
an : nstm . tg er, omeroy; Beaumont, Reedsville; Faye M.
...
..
..
. y.. ... . Loc
.. .il•e•c•v•an•g•e•lin•e•W
..
ilso
. .n•,Lo
. .n•g•B•OI•-. .•Je•ffi•re•y•R•
. a•y. .
. . .C..
______________-.

~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~· o~m•e•~ o.m~eroy•;•,~~·.n.ot

December 17, 1998

Weather

Prospective jurors chosen for new County c ·o urt term
The following wete selected as
Maxey, TupJl"" Plain•; Ella Norma
Wil'iOII, Pomero•: Charlo~ Richard
prospective JUrors for the January
'
1999 term of Meigs Coumy Court:
Stewart, Middleport; Amy Michelle
Carrie L. Deem, Racine; Ollie i\. Smith, Pomeroy: Robena Marlene
Mu"'hy. Reedsville·. Harry Leme.
Hill. Lang.ville; Deidrn Kay Oms.
·r
Pomeroy:
Nancy L. WatJIOn,
Reedsville; Dorollty Jean Stout, TupJl"r&lt; Plains; Brian Glendon Markin,
Reedsvi lle: Steven D. Pullins.
Albany; Donna L Parker. Reed.wille;
Pomeroy·. Mary Lo'llo'an Roush. S•ra'
Don G. Elkin,, Middleport; Nancy cuse; Richard M. Avis. Coolville:
nomeroy ·, Pho'l M.
M. Perry. Albany:.Glenn Allen Young Chad. Lero•, Say-.
.. r •
Jr .. Racine.; Bobbie Jaye White. Smith. Rutland·, Go'na Arnett
Coolvilk; Connie Kay Chevalier. · Pomeroy; Wayne Lyons. Racine:
Rebecca le'igh Ht'll. Pomeroy,· Bruce
Racine: Pamela Sue Miller, Tuppers
David Bumgardner, Mo'ddleporr·.
Plains; Carolee Silzanne Richards.
Racine: Leanna S. Beegle, Racine; Cheryl A. Laudermiil, Racine·, Judy
Steve Eddie Horner, Tuppers Plain&lt;:
Ann Jones. Tuppers Plao·ns... Catn'na
Marie Griffion, Albany·, Clayton Lee
Denver Russe ll Persiins, Pomeroy;
Luther Lee Osborne Jr., Pomeroy: Shain, Racine: Betty L. Ash, Syra·
Pamela S. Stenler, Reed.ville; Nikki
..
..
..

Thursday

Wednesday, December 16, 1998

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

I?" n

World

~eaction to

By KRISTIN GAZLA'V
.
,
Associated Press Wrlte.r
. .,
.
LONDON (AP)- Russta and Chtna angroly•·
denounced the U.S.-British attack on Iraq, while
allies such as Germany and Canada offered their
immediate support, placing all blame for the crisis on Saddam Hussein.
.
!raq_'s. nei~hbor, lrari, join.ed Rus sia ~nd
Chtna tn blasttng the use of force and warnmg
that it could shatter regional security.
Fearful of recriminations, the United States
today closed all but two o'f its African
embassies, and security was stepped up at many·
U.S. and British institutions worldwide, from
the Philippines to Gr.eece and Denmark.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin demanded an
immediate end to the military campaign, while
his foreign minister, Igor Ivanov, said the United States and Britain had acted without U.N..
authorization.
" Nobody has the right to act on their own in
the naine of the Uni.ted Nations and ev~n less to
pretend to be the judge of the entire world,"
Ivanov sai.cj in Madrid, Spain. .
China's U.N . Ambassador Qin Huasen was
visibly angry when he emerged from a Security
· Council session Wednesday evening, learning
of the attack only after the fact .
.
"There is absolutely no excuse or pretext to
use force against Iraq ," he said.
The German government noted, however,
that the Iraqi leadership "had been warne.d·" the
international community would have to act if it ·
failed to cooperate fully with U.N. weapons '
i nspectprs.
Suppqrt for the airstrikes also poured in from
Canada,. Australia, !&gt;lew Zeala~d, Norway,
South Korea the Netherlands Austria and
Spain.
'
'
"Sad dam Hussein has brought this crisis on
himself " Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrelien said.
France, ,which has close ties to Iraq; deplored '
" th e grave humaQ consequences" of the mili tary strikes, but added its regret that Iraqi leaders were unable to "show proof of the spirit of

again." .
Ointoo w.med that unintended Iraqi casualties were a:rtain.
The strike, whichSlal1edahout5 p.m. I'Sf,or 1 am. Baglldad
time,beg;mwith u.s.warshiJl'inthe Persian Gulf launching~
dnx!s of sau:mte-guided aui&lt;;e missiles. To clear the way, Navy
EA-6Bplanes fired anti-radar missiles at air defenseoo!JXNS. Up
to 300 cruise missiles were on tap for pa;gble use within the lir.;t
24 hour.;. military officials said
The Pentagon IIIIIIOUilCed it was 9erdng extra plaoo; ard
troop; 10 the area, including 10 F-117 Stralth fighters, Patriot
iontim5sile units ard troops including military police. communications specialists ard Special Fa= units.
COOert said the decisioo to use fora: hoo been loog in the making. "Iraq has exhausted all patience," he said
Berger said the~~ was warned by aides to attack "swifily, with the leasqx~ible warning and the grealesl degn:e of sur)rile for the gfea!esl degn:e of elfedi=" ,
, Albright said the attacks' were not dcsigi\ed to "get Saddam
H....sein ·But s11e said the United Stales wolikl stq&gt; up its contacts
with oppc;;idan grou~
···
Even bef&lt;re thqresident revealed the attac1o;, LoU, R-Mil6.,
aitici2ed the military action, which came 011 what wOuld have
. beentheeveofHouseimJX"lchmentJl'OCl'l'ding.sag;Urntainton.
"%ile I have been assured by adminislration officials that
there is oo conntdioo with the impc:achment poces; in the House
of Representatives, I ~support this military lidian 0, the Persian Gulf at this time," Lottsaid
Farner PR:sident Bush. whc fJ'CSided over the 1991 Gulf War
ag;lirnt Iraq, said he SUJlJX&gt;I1ed aintoo's action "as long as one
American military ainnan, seaman rr soldier is in harm's way."
J,.;t a month ago, Qinton hoo ordered an allack on Iraq but
called it off at the last minute when Sadclam promised.to cocjlerale with the U.N. Special C\ooun¥on in chaoge oflraqi disarrnament Since then. the Iraqi jresideiit lu5 kept up and even intensified his cb;truclian of the inspedllrs' wrrl&lt;, Ointoo said

stri:ke on Iraq sharply divided

complete cooperation" demanded by previous
agreem_ents with t.he United
. .
Iraman televtston quoted a foretgn mtntstry
spokesman as saying that "such unilateral
attacks against Iraq will lead to even more pain
and misery for the people of that country and
will bring about insecurity in the region."
.
Spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi urged the
'

U.N. Security COuncil to take immediate action
of the
tton, televosoon reported. Iran also called on
Baghdad to cooperate with the United Nations.
In a statement today, NATO Secretary-General Javi er Solana blamed Saddam for "the
grave situation" while Turkey, fearing an influx
of ~cfugees, closed its border with Iraq, the Anatoha news agency reported. Turkosh Foreogn
.Minister Ismail Cern expressed disappointment
in the attack, but also called on Iraq to comply.
In Pakistan, the Senate passed a resolution
unanimously condemning the airstrikes as "an
attack on h'umanity and the Islamic world."
Islamic Pakistan's right -wing religious group
cal.led the Uni.ted States "i nternational terror·
ists."
.
The st-rikeS' led news reports in -Lebanon,
where all newspaper, radio and television stations carried news agency reports without com- :
ment.
In . Indonesia, the )"Or Id's most populous
. . Islamic nation, leaders pleaded for restraint.
Japan's Chief Cabinet !iccretary Hiromu Nonbacked the United States and Britain, saying,
" We strongly demand that Iraq imm~diately and
unconditionally implel)lent the U.N. Securiiy ·.
COuncil's resolutions."
He was seconded by Misho Nozaki, a 47-yearold Tokyo reStaurant owner who called the bombingjustified,"because.lraq has cGntinued developing nuclear weapons in a way that goes against the
common sense of the rest of the world." '
Yukari Ohi, 38, an office worket mTokyo; said
she oppoSed the use of force .
·
PROTESTING THE ATTACK _ Pales'' I think the U.S. decision to attack Iraq was
apparently intended tp shift attention from the
llnlans burn an Amerli:an .f lag to protest impeachment issue to war, " Ohi said, noting 'that
U.S. air str.l kes against Iraq at the the airstrikes came as Fresident Clinton faced an
Dhelsheh refugee camp near the West impeachment vote.
Bank town of Bethlehem Thursday. Pales·
India condemned the attack, while Mexico
tlnlans across tha West B(!nk held demon- expressed disappointment:
stratlons to support the Iraqi people and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
express disappointment with President was noncommittal, saying, "Israel is outside the
Clinton, who they.cheered only days earll· · dispute, and · in any case will take care of
er durlrtg hi's VISitS tO that area
·
•
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·'•

�'Pomeroy • Mlddlepor"., Ohio

_Commentary
The Daily Sentinel American consumers spending practically everything:
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bualr!M8 Analyst

'Esta6fisfad in l!NB

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
7~m-215G • Fax: 992·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

.-

DIANEHIU
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gene"'l Manager
J1W ~ ntinel ~..... Jet~t,.. to~ «&lt;ltor

from,....,_

ott II bnMd ,..,._ ol lop

a . 'Shorl Mit.,.. (300 won:M or ,...) Mw tN W ~ or bWng p t nr '"«1.
Typ«/ IMifn.,.. pnrwr.t/ Mtd •U IN)" N - - EM:1J aJtould lntt:lut» II .,...ru,.,
Mid,..., •nddlylitM phDM nutniMr. Speclfy•at•lfthetw'•• ,.,.,.,. loa,.
viow MieN or,.,.,., •11 to: L..tt.n lo "'- editor, .,.,. Sentinel, 111 Court St,

PDIINf't))", Ohio U761; or, FAX to' 740-m-.2155.

•

Guest editorial

F.reedom from

religi~us persecution
' By Sixth District

u,s. Rep. Ted Strickland

"The essence of man is found in freedom" -- Martin Luther King Jr.
One could say we are a blessed nation - and we surely are. Bullhal does:, 't absolve us from our duty· to support freedom and democracy elsewHere.
The true value we place on our own freedom, I believe, is determined br our
efforts for those in the world who are not free - those who can't vote and
who can't worship God according to their dwn conscience.
•
. For some time l have been troubled by the cruel and arduous tactics dicoa torial governments use to suppress religious freedom. Just rece~tly, several examples of religious persecution were in
;
:ohe headlines:
_ I belteve a rea• In China, police have continued their
government-sancti~ned campaign to sonable and thore liminate Christian churches that

refuse to obey government dictates. ough examination
Over the last several months, police
have closed churches, fined congrega- of the facts clearly
tion members and imprisoned at least
seventy leaders of small "fiouse;· shows·that relichurchcs that operate without govern.men.t consent "In China, Caesar is gious persecution
always above God," said human rights
activist Deng Zhaoming, according to " particularly
the Washington Post.
• In India last week, after a year of against Chris.tians
increasingly systematic attacks. by
.Hindu nationalists, lhousands of • is on the rise.
Chr'istians conducted a peaceful
protest oul•ide lhe country's national. Parliament building to demand
the government pay attenoion to their plight.
• .And .in Egypt, local Christian leaders say that mQre than 1000 Christians were recently tortured by police in a village .south of Cairo.
'
· I believe a reasonable and thorough examination of the facts clearly
. -.hows that religi'ous Persecution · particularly against Christians- is on the

rise. That's why, last year, I joined with my Republican colleague Rep.
Frank Wolf in supporting his "Freedom From Religious Persecution Act."
i\llhough it was not immediately embraced by all members of my party, I
advocated strongly for its passage. In fact, I was Jhe only Democratic member of Congress to testify on its behalf when it was introduced lo the House
International Relations Committee.
The "Freedom From Religious Persecution Act" was passed by the
House this year, and after some changes it was approved by the Senate this
fall . (It was also renamed the "International Religious Freedom Act"). Only
a few weeks ago the president signed it into law, despite his earlier reluctance to approve it.
· Although cha~ges were made in the Senate, il is a strong Jaw which has

the pi&gt;ssibility of stemming religious persecution world-wide.
First, it creates a 9-member C9mmission on International Religious Libcroy. with members appointed by the president and leaders in Congress, that
will report every year on international religious persecution and recommend
· a course of action for the president. Second, it creates an Ambassador-atLarge for Religious Liberty in lhe State Department; someone whose sole
purpose will be to study religious persecution and provide direction to
i\mcriean foreign policy on the matter.
.
·
_
. Perhaps most important, the new l!iw gives the president the ability to
1rnpose sanctions and other prohibitive measures against countries that partic ipate in religious persecution. Obviously, we hope· that such actions will
not be necessary, but we should make clear to oppressive nations thatlhey
st.ond to lose if they torture and imprison people because of their religious
convictions.

'

Our hation is rooted in religious liberty. We are so fortunate, it is sometimes quite easy to: forgetohat there are many countries which don 't share
our respect ror indiV idual beliefs and religious conviction. Even so, we must
continue to stand up for those around the world who can't do the same for
themsel;;es. I think the passage of the l.ntero\ational Religious Freedom act is
a powerful 'first step in making sure their voices will be heard. And I will
continue to make this issue one of my top priorities as the next Congre.ss
moves forw ard.

NEWYORK(AP)-Astheyear
ends, American consumers are
spending practically everything
lh~t's left over after the government
takes its cut of their paychecks.
B'!S&lt;d on the latesl officoal figUROS, that would mean 99.9 _percent
of take-home pay, a spendong rate
never before witnessed .for any
length of time. And who knows,
easy credit might push !• over 100
percent
It poses questions: Why do retailers feel they aren't getting their share
of lhe spending, and how long can
this fevered behavior last until
spenders declare they 've had enough
fun and stuff and need a resl'
But most curious of all, wjth government talking about culling and
saving and businesses downsizing,
why are consumers exhibiting such
behavior. so contrary and out of slep
with the rest of the world?
That question becomes even
more pertinent when the~e exists
today a plethora of books and charts
describing how any young person
can become a millionaire jusl by
saving a small fraction of what they
spend.
A million dollars is, when you
think of it, a bundle of purchasing
power that you can do something
with, unlike the relatively small dol lars that come in the p~ycheck. Generally, Americans like to think big.
But nol, apparently, in this
instance. Consumer confidence is
sky high and spending is as "in" as
any popular fad ever has been, defying the warning flags lhat have driven industry to watch its pennies. ·
Americans spend big on books
such as "The Millionaire Nexl
Door," and they 'd certainly be buying "Getting ·Rich In America," a

tome by two professors who have
done iL But they don' t practice what
they read.
Investment clubs have never been
moRO popular than now. but past
experience suggests many young
members of lhe National Associ alion of Investment Oubs just won't
· foUOII( its agenda for making a mil-

investor ch~ a tu--deferred
from a dispenser machine. The aver- method of ama.&gt;SIMI a fonune, but
age teenager consumer nearly two that can be "':""""'~i5hed. . ~_so
such cans a day. That's $30 a month. easily a.;oomplosltcd "'the di!CipiiiiC
You may question that example, R&gt;quired to persist wilh ~uch a plan.
which the NAIC uses; maybe your ·
A good rate of mum "' necessary
teen-ager doesn't drink soda pop at - the NAIC example uses 9 JIC'CC!''
all, but then: 's a good chance lhat a year, but you can cut ~at.n:tum m
something equivalent, perhaps not hair to what you may thonk os a moR&gt;
soda pop at perhapi 75 cc_nts a can

•

one 's b.e en · proposed,

bu.l do'n 'I bet on its
adoption before the
2000 elections.
The plan. tagged
" premium su.pport," would give the nation 's
seniors the same k.;nd of choice among private health insurance plans that federal
employees c~rrenoly enjoy and a subsidy to
pay all or part of the premium.
Prem ium support would replace the current Medicare system -- due to go broke in
2008 -- under wh ich a government agency
determines which medical services will be
. covered and how much the government will
pay for them.
Conceptually, premium support has the
backing of al least 10 of the 17 members of
the bipartisan national Medicare commission, which is charged with recommending
hO'f ,to keep the system solveol in the 21st
cenlury.
These include the panel 's eight Republica ns, led by Rep. Bill Thomas (Calif.), cochairman of the commission, and two " New
Democrats" -- Sens. John Breaux (La.),

•

as expensive, can be sacrificed.
Whatever, the NAIC 'formula
rises in small increments to ' $30 a
month at age I 5 years, to $83 a
month in the late leen-age years, and
then to $166 by age 23 and every
year thereafter to millionain:hood at
age 65.
.
This assumes that the saver or

tion is supposed to be the flip side of punishment.
We send people lo prison to make them Ji!'Y for
their wrongdoing. And we hope they somehow
will manage to come out a better person !hal)
when they went in.
·
Many don't. But some, like Harnm, do.
.
So impressive has been the change he's undergone thai even the judge who originally sentenced
Hamm to life in prison now backs his request to
be released from parole so he can practice law.
"The timing is ripe for him to be discharged
· from parole and perm illed to pursue the formal
requirements of entering the legal profession,"
Judge Robert Buchanan wrote the state Qoard of
Executive Clemency earlier this year.
Buchanan recognizes whalloo many people in
Arizona don't: that those who go to prison and
make a genuine efforl Jo rehabilitate themselves
deserve a chance to lead a normal life when they
get out.
.,
Sure, people ought to be punished · for their
crimes. Stales have a responsibility - · in fact, a
duty- to exact a severe penalty from those who
commit serious offenses. That's justice.
But when a person whose good behavior and
d~eds have earned him an early ;release from
prison is denied a job because of a crime for
which he has already paid the price a court of law
imposed on him, that's an injustice.
ll's one thing to make convicted sex offenders
register wilh police upon their release from
prison. Such a requirement is a rational effort on
the part of states to prevent sexual predators from
striking again. But what ASU did to Hamm is far
from rational.
·
·
By all indication, Hamm is a man on the mend.
He has admitted his guilt. He's served his time! .
While in prison he was a model prisoner )llho
worked hard lo better himself. Since his release
he has avoided the kind of trouble thai makes the
prison gate a revolving door for far too many excons.
By giving in to ~he protesters, Arizona State
University disregarded all of this. · h treated
Hamm wilh the disdain society ought to reserve
for the unrepentant - unrehabilitaled - lawbreaker.

budget will contain important short-term
Medicaie fixes -- a fraud-control program
. ·and "carrot and slick" ideas· for preventing
private HMOs from abandoning. Medicare-but not long-term ones.
.
. As with Social Security, Clinion is cross'
pressured both ideologically and politically.
The New Democrats -- a group Clinton
. &gt;flaims to be part of .. favor giving seniors
illsurance choices in Medicare .and the
opportunity to invest some of their Social
Security money in private markets.
Liberals wanl to save both Social Securi·
ty and Medicare by raising taxes, and they
contend that government control of both
pr?gr~s. is safer and more equitable than
pnvatizltoon. _
Politically, Oinlon has to decide which is
more likely to help Vice President AI Gore
become President -- a record of having
helped secure the big retirement programs or
one last use of them as a club to beat Republicans.
In 11\e 'case of Medicare, a Senate aide
close to Kerrey predicted that Clinton and
Gore would wo·rk to block 11 votes for
going with premium supporl in order to use
Medicare as a 2000 campaign issue.
The aide envisioned ads saying, "Republicans won't let Grandma see her favorite
doctor." Other ads could say, "Republicans.
. want to throw )'Our Mom to the HMOs."

I

I •

p;r.- I

Clouli

Clcluly

.....;.....

T...,.

"'*'

·A.;,. '· h,;,.. •,;;

Clouds, chance of flurries
forecast for area tonight

By DtWAVNE WICKHAM .
Gannett'Newa Servlcit
PHOENIX- When ddes
Jhe demand for justice
become an injustice?
Last month, Arizona State
University offered James
Hamm a job. As teaching
positions go it wasn't ·much,
an adjunct profes"?rship nexl
semester in its law school,
for which ·he was to be paid
.
' $6,000.
But when the word got out that ,Hamm, a con.victed murderer ·who served 17 years in an Arizona prison before being paroled in 1992, would
be teaching in Jhe School of Justice Studies, university officials were inundated with complaints.
To let Hamm teach in the law school would mock
the legal system that brought him to justice, people complained.
After weathering a couple days of protests, the
university ran up' the white flag. Hamm was told
lhe leaching offer was being withdrawn. The
school would honor its contract'with ·him in some
other way. Maybe by Jelling Hamm work as a
researcher, or guest lecturer.
.
- What's certain is that Hamm, who earned a law
degree al ASU last year, will not get to teach at his
alma mater. Less clear is whether the school's
capitulation was case of justice delayed, or justice denied. · · '
"There a growing sense among people that we
have to punish, and punish and punish forever,"
says Malcolm Young, executive director of The
Sentencing Project, a Washington-based organization th~t conducts research on criminal justice
issues. "The simplistic, overly punitive response
to crime has become a troubling part of our culture."
Troubling, indeed.
Hamm paid his debt to society.' He didn't
escape ..from prison, he was released by· correc-.
lions officials who pointed to his good behavior
- and the undergraduate degree he earned while
behind bars- as the reason why he was let go. In
the American criminal justice syslem, rehabilita-

commission chairman, and Bob Kerrey
(Neb.).
Adamanlly opposed are two liberal
Democrats ·' Rep. Jim McDermott (Wash.)
and Sen. Jay Rockefeller (W.Va.) •• and
Bruce Vladek, President Clinton's first head
of the Health Care Finance Administrat_ion,
the agency thai runs Medicare.
Commission rules require ,II votes to
make a majority recommendation when the
panel reports in March, and the balance of
power lies with four Dem~crats: Rep. John
Dingell (Mich.) and three commissioners
appointed by Clinton. Dingell leans against
premium support.
While House aides say that Clinton will
decide what his position on Medicare reform
is based partly on what the commission recommends.
At the same time, though, Clinton has the
power to influence that decision through his
appointees, former White· House economic
policy chief Laura Tyson, Brandeis University professor Stuart Allman and Anthony
Watson, CEO of HIP Healthcare in New
York.
Clinton is in the same position on
Medicare as on Social Security : He's
· pledged to make the system survive pasllhe
reliremenl of the Baby Boom generation, yet
he has no plan of his own for doing so.
White House aides S'l)' Clinton's next

· ICcto

{).~~-- ~~~~~

realistic level and still make a decent
fortune.
Th,e key is persistence, and not
many people now have it to the
degree needed. The fortune route
today- is seen as mutu~l funds and
high-tech stocks, and Jhe allotted .
time for making it big is the d~y
after tomorrow.

By reneging on its job offer, ·the school not
only legitimized Jhe life-long penalty some now
seek to impose upon Hamm, it dealt a crippling
blow to those who are nard at work trying to tum
around Jhe lives of other convicted felons.

Today In History :
By Tht AstiOCiated Pr-

Today is Thursday, Dec. 17, the 351st day of
1998. There are 14 days left in the year. .
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 17, 1903, Orville and Wilbur Wrighi
went on the first successful manned powered-airplane flights, near Kilty Hawk, N.C.
On this date:
In 1777, France recognized American independence.
·
.
In 1830, South American patriot Simon Bolivar died in Colombia.
In 1925, Col. William "Billy" Mitchell was
convicted al hi~ court-martial of. insubordination.
In 1939, the German pocket battleship Graf
Spee was scuuled by_its crew, ending the World
War II' Battle of lhe River Plate off Uruguay.
In 1944, the U.S. Army announced it was ending its policy of excluding Japanese-Americans
from the West Coast.
In 1957, the United States successfully testfired lhe Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile
for the first time.
In 1969, the U.S. Air Force closed its Project
"Blue Book" by concluding there was no evi- dence of exlraterrestrial spaceships behind thousands of UFO sightings.
In 1975, Lynette Fromme was sentenced in
federal court in Sacramento, California, to life in
prison for her attempt on the life of President
Ford.
In 1986, Eugene Hasenfus, the American con- ·
victed by Nicaragua for his part in running guns :
to the Contras, was pardoned, then released. . :
In 1996, Peruvian gueo:tillas took hundreds of :
people hostage at the Japanese embassy in Lima. ·
(All but 72 of ihe hostages were later. released by :
the rebels; commandos stormfd lhe embassy the :
·
following April to end the siege.)

•

Don't let politi.c s kill Medicare reform·
Just maybe, Presi dent Clinton a11d the
Republican Congress
could .agree on a plan to
save Medicare. A good

·1 u. , .. lu·.- 1·

Sunny Pl

If Kerrey runs, lhe ads could also be
directed tigainsl him in Democratic primaries, though Kerrey favors · protections
within a premium support program to protect the poor and residents of rural areas
unlikely lobe served l)y managed care.
Even supporters of the current Medicare
system acknowledge that it needs modernizing,-making it more possible for seniors to
opt for HMOs and other managed care
plans.
Current Medicare is based on traditional
(and expensive) fee-for-service medicine
familiar to most current retirees. The
Medicare commission's staff estimates that
various reforms suggested for the c"urrent
system-- including raising the Medicare eligibility age to 67 -- would barely reduce the
system's shortlall of about $1 trillion ove(·
the next 30 years.
Premium supporo would cut the deficit
approximately in half. In an estimate disputed by liberals, having . all seniors opt for
HMOs might lower the deficit to $30 billion.'
Chances are that politics, including Clinton's deteriorated moral authority, will prevent lhe government from solving the
Medicare crisis in 1999. That means that how
to save il will be up to the voters in 2000.
Corractlon
·.
Aides to House Majority Whip Tom
DeLay (R-Texas) adamantly deny my charge -

Be~ry's World

•

f

By The Associated Press
. The National Weather Service .ays skies will be rna;tly cloudy .in Ohio
ti:might, with snow showers ending in the northeast and fturries still possible
across the north. lows will _be from the mid 20s to the 1o\v 30s.
A lake effect snow warning is in effect for extreme northeast Ohio through
tqnight.
.
.
. There is a chance of rain or snow over the northem half of the state tonight
as .another cold front drop5 down from the upper Great Lakes. Highs will be in
th~ mid 30s to the low 40s in the IIOith and will reach the upper 40s along the
Ohio River.
.
·
Much of Ohio experienced light anow overnight, with temperatures jllst
aliove freezing. The amnion area sot about an inch of snow on grassy 8mts,
boil there was.little accumulation elsewhere.
·
Under cloudy skies, with scattered fturriea and snow showers over the cen•
t_ral and northern sections, temperatures at S a.m. ranged from 30 at Toledo to
35 at Cincinnati Lllnken Airport.
·
The ROCOrd high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station
is 67 degrees, set in 1984. The rec:onl low temperaiUre is 12 degrees below
zero, set in 1989. Sunset will be at 5:08p.m. Sunrise Friday will be at 7:48a.m.
Watber ftlncut:
Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow fturries. Lows in the upper
20s. West windS to 10 mph.
Friday.. :Partly cloudy. Highs in the lawer ~
- Friday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.

EMS units record 7 calls
·Units pf the Meig&lt;~ County Erneigaocy MediaiJ SeMce recorded seven aolls for
assislante Wednesday. Units rapondins included:

CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:45 a.m. Happy Hollow Road, Middlcport, Carol Smith, Hober Medk'al Center,
Rutland squad assisted;
_
- 6:46p.m. Riverfront Strm, Letart Falls, Shirley Abels, \t:terans Memorial !bpital, Racine and Syracuse sqo.oack amislcd;
8:58p.m.. Y,ne Street, Middlqx&gt;rl, Mark DaW!, refused Jrealmenl, MKklleport squad
-a&lt;sisted
MIDDI.EI'Oiq'
· 9:41 a.m. Laurel Street, Anna PartloW,
~-

~~~~~~~~

nm
and

a.m .. volunteer fire department'.
squad 10 Oostard Stn:et, gas odor at
Manley Christy rl:sidencc, no injuries
rep:uted,
RUI'lAND
8:25 a.m., VFD and squad 10 White Hill
Road, automobile fire. no injuries reported
SYRACUSE
·6:57 p.m.. Letart Falls, Edith Stobart,
~-

The Daily Sentinel
~

Ughting contest winners named

Katie Ellal Curfmaa, 77, Cheshire, died Wednesday, Dec. 16, 1998 at
her residence, followift&amp; an atcncled illllcss.
Born May 10, 1921 in c::IJcahR, daughter of die
Rev. Budd U..rmce and
Geltie Ward Danl, slle - • llkirobu oftbe Centapoint FRewill B1Joti11 Oturch.
Surviving lR&gt; &amp;RO bcr btMband, the Rev. William E. Cuofman, whom she
manicd Oct. 26, 1943 in Olcsloire; ~sons, William (Rulh Ann) Curfman
Jr. of Olcslli~e, L Richard (Vivian J.) Curfman of Columbus, and David
(Freda) Curfman of Muysville; six grandcbildml and 11 great-gJ3lldclrildren·
and four sisters, Dorolloy {Burdell) Rife of Lalteview, Ohio, Annie E. (Roy}
.Lemley of Vinton, Mary (Harry) .Stobart of Ldart, W.Va~ and Sarah ~
(Dayton) Speocer of Cbestcr.
She was also po eded in death by two brolhers, Budd Junior Darst and
Francis NCWIOII Dant.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Horne Wetherholt Cl18pel, Gallipolis, with ~ Rev. Alfred Holley officialing. Burial will be in
the Gravel Hill Qmdery. Friends may call• the chapel from 3-9 p.m. Friday.

'*

.l\a:uWeat1Je19 forecast for

I 0ey1on i2r""· I

'

By Morton Kondracke

Ohio weather

.'

Announcements:

Katie Ellen Curfman

Friday, Dec. 18

What does society owe those who paid . thei~ debt?

a

Death ·Notices

Nl

lion.
That agenda begins at age .12
yeah;, at which time the youngster
would invest $10 a month. Save $10
a month at that age?! Well, yes. OK,
perhaps with help from parents, but
also by not buying that funny video.
Or, for example, by foregoing the
consumption of a cquple of cans of

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OVB ""'"' '"'"'""""""'''f ''"''"''"'"41'h

~·

One Valley ...... :......................32'/o
Peoples ................................. 23'1.
Prem Flnl ............................... 17~
RockWell.............................47
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.Saara .................................... .41'1.
Shoney'a ................................ 1'1.
First Star....................... .......73 '),
Wendy's ........... ................. :... 19~
Worthington ...................... ,.11 '1.
.
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
..
·
of Gallipolis~

-·-·-

Dr. Phil J. Harbrecht
Dr. Phil J. Harb=bt, 79, Louisville, Ky~ died Saturday, Dec:. 12, 1998 at
his home.
··
·
He was a native of Pomeroy; retired chief of surgery 31 the former Veter·
ansAdministration Hospital; a U..S. Anny veteran of World WarD; professor
emeritus of the University of l..o!risville surgery department; a fellow of the
American College of Surgeons; and a member of St. Albert the GROat
Catholic OruKh.
Survivors include his wife, the former Terry Wasielewski; three sons, Dr.
Jeffn:)' Harbro:ht, Dr. Bri~n Harb'"':hl and Grant Harbro:ht; a daughter,
Valene McNaughton; and sox grandchildren.
Services were held today, Thursday, Dec:. 17, 1998 at St. Albert lhe Great
Catholic Orurch. Burial will be in.St. Francis Xavier Cemetery, McKtan, Pa.
Memorial contributions may be made to the University of Louisville,
Department of Surgery, Louisville Ky. 40292.

Elsie Margaret Hunnel
Elsie Margaret Huni)C1•.89, Bidwell, djed Tuesday, Dec:. 15, 1998 at her ROS·
idencc.
·
Born Nov. 8, 1909 in Bidwell, daughter of the late Luther and Nellie Margaret SpiROS Glassburn, she was a member of the Bidwell United Methodist
O.urch and the United Methodist Women.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Edwin Russell Hunnel, in
1951; and by three brothers, and four sisters.
Surviving three daughters, Maopret (Herbert) Oonch of Enon~ Diana June
(William) Safranek of Athens, and Martha (Harry) Bennett of Vinton; eight
grandsons, live great-grandsons and and a gn:al-gJanddaughter; a sister, Grace
Carter of Gallipolis; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in the Bidwell United Methodist Church,
~ith the Rev. Marvin Sallee and the Rev. Jack Berry officiating. Burial will be
on the Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, from 6-8 p.m Friday.
The body will lie in state one hour prior to the service at the church.

Virgil Glen Roush
Virgil Glen R.oush, 6S, New Haven, W.Va., died Wednesday, Dec. 16, 1998 in
Hober Medical Center.
·
Born Jan. 22, 1933 in Graham Station, W.Va., son of the late Hazen H. and Vannie E. Ohlinger Roush, he I'Ciited from the Gavin Plant in January 199S. He·was a
U.S. Army veteran, serving with the Fourth Anny, First Division from 1!1S6 until
1958.
Surviving are his wife, Narocy 0 . Scally Roush; a son, Steven G. R.oush of
Orarlcston, S.c.; !Me pdchildrm; a sister, Wanda L (E.Leroy)Jamcs of Mason,
W.Va.; and several nieces and nephews.
,
.
He wao1 also preceded in death by a brother; Harold E. Roush, in 1994.
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in the
New Haven United Methodist Orurch,
with the Rev. ~ry L Blair officiating. Burial will be in the Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the Foglellong
Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-9 &gt;
tonight.
The body will lie in state in the church
one hour prior to the services on Friday.
Militaoy graveside rites will be conducted by American Legion SmithCapehart Poet 140 of New Haven, and
the Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 of
~n.

In lieu of flowers, contributions can
be made to the New Haven United ·
Methodist Church, P.O. Box 327, New
Haven, W.Va. 25265.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Wednesday admissions - Anna .
Partlow, Middleport.
Wednesday discharges- none.
Holzer Medical Center
Dischaf)le!l Dec. 16- Mrs. Doyle
Games and daughter, Orristi Gilliam
Alexis Long, Harold Lcvoff, Thelm~
Shaver, La~ra Hawley, Yvonne Buck,
Mrs. Donovan Saunders and son.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Branham, son. Racine; Mr. and
Mrs.Ryan Harmon, son, Pomeroy.
(Published with pennission)

BABE : PIG IN THE CITY N
FAt THAU THUAS
JONATHAN TAYLOR THOMAS
WALT OISNEYS

BE HOME FOR ~HIII~1·u.a"'
WED. BARGAIN NIGHT

, The fol'-in~ ~holds w~ named first. second and thi rd-place
wonners, respec~ovc;ly• .'" the Racine Area Community Organization's
armual Christmas lrghtrng contest: Jim and Pat Moore. State Route 124
between Racine and Syracuse; Paul and Jan Cardone, Johns Road;
Jonathan and Missy Rees, Dudding Lane.

Program set
A Christmas program will be held at the Reedsv ille United Method is!
Church al 7 p.m. Wednesday night. A candlelight service will be held a1
7 p.m. at the church on O.riSimas Eve.

Racine Council to meet
Racine Village COuncil will meet in recessed session Monday at 7
p.m. al the Municipal building.
·

Dance to be held

A- rouold ~d square dance will be held Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m at the .
Tuppers Plaons VFW Post 9053 hall . True Country will play and Jim
Brown will be the caller.

Rutland celebrates 12 days
of Christmas with·activities
Evening entertainment, refreshments and other special events aRO a
part of Rutland's ·12 Days of Christmas Celebration,' which began ·last
weekeod and will continue through
Christmas Eve,
In addition, the village Christmas
parade, which wasc:anccled last weekend, will take place on Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m.
The Bradford Orurch ofOrrist will
perform music tonight 31 7 p.m., the
Rejoicing Llfe Orristian School ' on
Friday and the Rutland Oourch of the
Nazarene on Saturday.
In addition to Sunday's holiday ·
parade, w.hich will include Santa and a
variety of other floats and entries, the
Slreets will be filled with the sound of
recorded Oristmas music.
The celebration will continue on
Monday with music by the Rutland
OurchofGod,andonTuesdaybylhc
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.

Tuesday evening will also be set aside
for Christmas caroling. Residen~ are
encouraged to take time to visit their
neighbors while caroling.
'
Family night on Wednesday will
include a community sing-along at the
Civic Center, sponsored by the Civic
Caller CommillC&lt;:, and a live nativity
will take place on Gluistma• Eve. All
events for the "12 Days of Christmas
Celebration" will begin at 7 p.m.
Refreshments will be offered as a
part of each evening's program.
In addition to the activities contcred alound the civic ce nter, the Rutland Friendly Gardeners will hofd a
Oristmas lighting contest again this
year.
Judging will take place Sunday
from ~-9 p.m. in the categories of
doors or windows, religious and nonreligious. Prizes of $25 for first, $15
for second, and $10 for third will be
awarded.

Cornea donation gives sight to nurse
ONONNATI (AP) - A comca
taken from a teen-age accident victim
is.giving a nurse from Sidney a sec.ond chance to regain her sight.
Stephanie Weigel, 31, ~ived a
donated cornea six months ago and
was able to achieve 20-20 vision with
the help of eyeglasses. But two
months later, cells in the transplanted
cornea failed - and so did her eyesight.
A second transplant was performed following a Dec:. 1 crash that
killed the two sons of Orristine Frank.
Mrs. Frank said the pain over losing her sons was cased somewhat. by
knowing thai someone would benefit

from their dealh.
·
"When you're faced with no hope.
· you cling to another hope - that
another mother cao stand here and
·hear good news," she said at Universily Hospital, after her children,
James and Chris Frank, died. "They
are getting a great gift- my sons."
On TueSday, Mrs. Frank got confirmalion that the gift was received.
She talked to Ms. Weigel, who had
received one cornea of Mrs. Frank's
older son, James, 18.
"Just to know that people are surviving and living and families are
happy, just because of my boys, it
really helps a lot," Mrs. Frank said.

,~~,~~,,
Anderson's Christmas
Sale

I
;

ALL

nnanclng

GVJ'f

CABINETS
REDUCED

ZSo/o

'\m.
til

'

'1000 Down
'1 0" Per Month
0%APR

Christmas Sale
; Ci~IDER ROCKERS

'I

Starting
At

$20·9oo

'

.

;

CLEARANCE
CHRISTMAS JT~MS
*1hrt11111
*Cr11lll
• S111111111111

ALL SEATS $2.00 4411-111123

CHRISTMAS SALE
*Curio Cabinets
·*Roll-Top Desks
*Secretaries
*Hall Trees

*lllatllfllllfillfl

*Citrill111111 Cllr~tlt"
*Or111111111111

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
lrukle Mel&amp;s County
IJ Weeb ........................... .$27.30

1/Z Price

26 Week! ...... .. ................... .$.'1;\.82
:"i2 Week5 ...... ,............ ..... .. ,$1 O:"i.!'iri

Rain OutJide Mda• County
IJ Wteb ........................... .S29.2.&lt;1i
26 Wt.eb ............................$56.68

52 Wcelu ..... ........... ...... ....$109.72

Reader Services

;

ALL

RECLINERS

1/4 OFF

Correction Polley
in last Thursday's column that DeLay is
threatening moderate Republicans with loss
of "K Street (corporate PAC) mone( if they
fail to vote for President Clinton 's ompeach,
ment. They deny that DeLay is putting any
pressure on members on the impeachment
vote. The source I relied on for my assertion
now has become sufficiently equivocal about
it that I hereby withdraw it.
(Morton Kondracke Ia executive editor
of Roll Call, tht n-•P•I"r of Capitol
Hill,)
•
Coprrlght1 Ill NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Our main C"oncem In all 1torie• 11 to be

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ac.CIInale. It you know

or •n error In •

•tofy, call the newneom at -(740) 992·
11~5. We wiU check your lntonnation
and make a COI'I"fttlon IF warnnled.

News Department•
Tb~

moln number iJ 992-21!!. Depanlllent ntrnskJns aft:
General Manoger. ........................En 1101
New~ ...•...•.•......................... :....... •.ExL 1101
or Ext 11116
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Other Servlcu
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Cln:ulorlon ................................. .ExL 1103
Cla,lnod Ad&amp; ............................. ExL 1100

Berkline &amp;
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•see S!ore For Deta11s

MON.-5AT.
9:30TOs:oo

ANDERSON'S
FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE

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T~e Daily Sent~.,s!- _

Sports
.

,.

-

- ---

--

-&lt;ThUI"8dey, December 17, 1991 :

White, Rice return to Pro Bowl; Moss enters as sole rookie :.
lhe AFC team were Junior Seau of
San Diego and Ray Lewis of
Baltimore, DOl Thomas. wbo bas
overcome a Jack of beighliD become
the leader of a def~nse that bas
dale, but a .possibility for defensive allowed 40 fewer poiniS than any
lealll in the NFL
player of the year.
" You don' l rate your success on
Noc to Pro Bowl voter5.
Wben the. results were announced making the Pro Bowl." a disappointWei;lnesday, the inside linebackers on ed Thomas said. "I know . I had a
great year and I'm still playing welL
I look at the guys wbo made it.. and
lhey' re not playing any better than I
am."
As usual, lhe Pro Bowl voting
was often a case of rounding up the
usual suspects.
Reggie Wbite was selected for a
record 13th time; Jerry Rice, back
from a year off with knee injuries,
made it for the 12th; and Bruce
Smith and Bruce Matthews for the

By DAVE GOLDBERG

NEW YORK (AP) - Zacb
Thomas_ Miami 's middle linebacker,
appeared to eslablish himself in 14
games as noc only a Pro Bowl candi-

lith.

.

'

Randy Moss earned what is likely
robethefirsrofmanysetections.and

~~~~~e~~)t:':~:rn:~(S-9)

Doug Flutie, back from Canada,

" I love tbal kid. a special guy,"
Slid Jets coach Bill hrcells, wbo
And the only four teams without coached Gash in New England,
where he tore up a knee and missed
rqnsentalives were clear losers Indianapolis (3-11), Chicago (3-11), the Patriots; Super Bowl against
Pbiladelpbia (3-11) and St Louis ( 4- Gn:en Bay_ ""There are some wbo are
10).
different, and he is one of them. It's a

Jed their conference with nine players each.

But the Dolphins (9-S) came
close. placing only defensive tackle
lim Bowens on the AFC squad lhat
will f=: the AFC Feb. 7 in
Honolulu. Tiiat 's compared with five
from Baltimore (5.9)
" As g®d as the defense bas been
playing, I fell we'd get some recognition," coach Jimmy Jobn59n said.
"'It always make you scraiCh your
head."
Still, lhere were a lot of pleasant
surprises, like Autie and Sam Gash,
his Buffalo teammate, who was
voted 10 the AFC team as the fullback.

greal tribute to SairL I think every-

body in the league knows thai now,
what kind of player and penon he
is."
· Moss was the only rookie voted to
the team.
.
Wbite, who leads tbe NFL with 16
sacks, vowed to break with a tradilion observed by many ve...rans who
decline to play onu they' re elec1ed.
If he does go to Honolulu, he :will sel
a record he shares with Ronnie Loll,
Lawrence
Taylor
and
Mike
Singlelary by actually playing in his
II th game.
Rice, out lasr season with knee

rum

COLUMBUS
Ptuladclplua .....

..... , .. 10
. ..... 8

2
4

.667
.300
.2JI
.1112

6
7':
7'·

.1! L 1'&lt;1.

Ia

...... 3

CM;aJo .....

7
...... 3 10
.. ... 2 9

Nashville
New En&amp;land .. .

.8 3 ~

-·- .
WESTERN CONFERENCE

Iua

San Jose ......................•....... ,9
Pon~Qnd ................................8
Sulik ................. ··--········· ······'
(OJorldo .. ,.,,~, , ,,_.,.,. ... ,., . .,.,,,,, )

4 692
4 .667
.583
8 .27)

s .

·~

Wickliffe 48. Newbury 37
Woodriqe 63, s-.boro .00
Wooster 52, c...orlcGaenoak 41

McNown led the Bruins on a 20wi~ning streak bef~re their
nauonal Ulle bopes ended w1th a loss
lo Miami in the season finale . The
left-hander threw for 3,130 yards
a~d 23 touchdowns and sel nearly
every school single-season and
career record .
Even in defeat, McNown . was
speclacular, lhrowing for a schoolrecord 513 yards, with five lauch.;!own passes and a rushing touchdown, in the 49-45 loss to lhe
Hurricanes . .He finished third in the

ToniKhl's game
Friday's pmes

Adldlk Dh·hion

NCAA Division I
nllm 's scores
Eut

New Jmey ............ ...........18 7 J

39 87

70

Philadelphia ................... ,.. ll 9
Pinsbuqh .,............ ........... 12 8
N.Y. Raaaen ......... ,.......;.. II 12
N.Y. hl'!"den ......,. ........... 11 II

32
31
29
ll

64
73
79
BJ

6
1
1
0

South..,.DIY!olon
C.cllna ........................... 1-4 II j 33 SO

67

-·-

t8

4 Cfl, AIR

7~

7~

Cinc:inn11i 62. Minnescta61 (Ql1

CaiJary .... .......................... 11 16
Vancouver ...................... 10 14

Ark.ansu 95, SE Louisi&amp;llll. S7
l..arMt 89. SW Louisiana 74
Samford 84, Teus-Arlinaton 76
Southern Meth. 80, Uberty 66

4 Cfl, ITERIO

$t0,950°

$9,950°0 .

0

69

25 66
ll 63

65
86

22 68

97

29 69
29 83

72
80

24 79
24 78

BS
83

19 81

S7

4 ~~ 7l
6 JO 71
J 19 60
7 19 57

44
67

l

..

Phoeni~ ............................. 17 4
Anaheim .......................... .12 11
Los Anaeltt ...................... .8 18
SanJo&amp;e .............................. 615

AIR COIDITIOI, CRIIII, POWIR,
IPOIUR, lOAtlt '

Sa.lftl LOUI! 6.l Chien!O Sr ~"

I '.

~

NE'l't999 ESCORT ZX 2
SPORT PKI, SRREO,
OWL TIRES

80

69

CaiJary Dt Philadelphia. 7::10 p.m.
· Phoeni11 al: St. louis, B p.m

WashinJion ill Chicaao. 8:30p.m

Colorado 111 Vancovvcr. 10 p.m.
. N.Y. hlandcrnl Los Angelts. 10:)() p.m.
Na!llhvil,le a1 Son Jo~. 10:]() p.m.

Friday's games
F..dmonlon :u Tampa Boy. 7 :0~ p.m.
Montreal at Buffa.J.o. 7JO p.m.
C11tolina at Onawa. 7 : ~0 p.m.
Cal!]:Dry at Nc"": krscy. 7::W p.m.
Dallas a1 Detro11. 7JO p.m.
N.Y. lslnndeu at Anaheim, 10::40 p.m.

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

RANGER SU
SPORTPKI, 4X4, NC

A1h1abula 60. Ashlabula Ed~r:wood 59 (OT)
Ashlabul:t Sl . John 66. lOfdstown ~0
Atvon 59, Oberlin ~7
~
Avon Lakl= 54, Westlake 34
. ' Bnrl:icrton 4.'1 . Cu y3hoga F~lls .J I
· Ba\1 Villa~c 59. Am~m1 52
· · Beachwood 44, Ri t hmond Hts. 40
Baseball
Beu.ve~reek. 8S, Xema ~I
"-merion Lt.,ue
Bedford 57. Pnrmn 45
ClEVELAND INDIANS: Agrtt:d 10 terms with
Brunswick 57. Breck.sviltc 46
RHP Jerry Spradlin on a two-year contrac1.
Burton 8erksh1re Sl . Aurora .10
I
OAKLAND ATHUTICS: Agreed to terms with
Cambndgc 61 , 1ndi411 Vall. 51
C Mike Macfarlane on a one-yc:ar contrac:t
Can~ I Fu11on NW 45, Carro1J1on .~6
SEATILE MARINERS: AJrted to terms wilh
Canton Cent Cnth. 5t AIU'on S1. V-St. M J2
LHP Bu1ch Hem~ to a one·yc:ar contracl. Claimed
Cenlcrville 84, Spring. North 50
OF Man Mieske off waiven from the Chicago Cubs.
ChMdon 56. Padua 44
Cle. Hci t hts. ~ l. Clev. St Jo$tph )6
N1tiooal Lope
Col". Wanmon 71 , Newa.rk Cath. 42
COlORADO ROCKIES: Aarecd to 1enns wilh
Conneaut62. Geneva 54
C Kirc Manwaring on a onc-)'ear eonlract.
Crestwood 85. Glll'r'C:usv•"lle 34
FLORIDA MARLlNS: Announced 1be resignaDay. Dunbar 80. Day. Belmont I?
tion of Don Smiley, president. elfec1ive at the end of
Dover 46. Uhrichsville Claymont 29
lhe ~ear.
Ea!llake N. 88. Madison )5 .
Euclid 38. Elyri11 ~~
,
Basketl)all
Fa.irbom 46, Spring. South 25
Womtn't N•tlonai11Jasketbll11 Arsodatlon
Garfield Ht! 71. Maple HI$. 52
. NEW YORK UBERTY: Named Pally Coyle
Gales Mills Gihnour 61 . Cuyahoga Hts. 40
~s1stan1 coach.
Grand Valle)' 79. Oranr .16
Oreenville 51 , p.qua ·'
Foolball
.
Huber HeiJhll Wa)'I"IC' 50. Ketlenng Fairmonl 45
Nationel FoMbal1 Lta&amp;ut
Hudson .56. Stow 43
CINCINNATI BENGALS : Si&amp;ned LB Tim
. Independence 56, Columbia 47
Teny and S lawrence: Wri.Jhllo the praclicc squad.
Jelfenon 71 . Alltra.bulll Harbor 22
GREEN BAY PACKERS : SiJiled FB Jim Kitu
. KeM Rooancil 54. Ravenm~ )8
Placed C Frank Winters on inju~ reserve.
· LaUrance Key"one 64. lorain 8tookside 42
· JNDI~NAPOLIS &lt;;QLTS: Waived RB Kanttoy
Lorain Ce1h. 68. Sandusky St. Mary 59
Barber. S1gned DB B1ll)' Ausun off me practiee
• Lornin Qclf"'o'iew 71 . Wellington 26
squad.
· Lor.»n KillJ 58. Cle. l.incoln-Well48
JACKSONVIlLE JAGUARS: Signed S Blaine
Macedonia Nordoma 62. Kenaton 44
McElmurry. Signed G Andrew Greene to lhe practice
F-ta6onll.l, W.Vt. 80. Sle\lbenvllle ]6

•
'
..•..:.

$tS,950°0

Transactions

M:ltliftl•oa 40. Akron SprinJneld J!'i
M.oyfoeld 67, Solon 49
1
Mcdiu ,.._ N. lf,idpille &lt;4S
Mentor 6.\. Orveland H11. 41
Mealor Lake C,.rh. 69 •. Gadicld H••·Trinity 28
Mkldlcburg HclJ.hiS Midpark 18. N, Royallon .U
Middlefield Ca,;linal S4. Cboarin flails 51
Minerva Jl. Ca~uon South 41
Mogadore 101. tfJindham 72
NorthrnoJ11 67. $idn&lt;y 52
NCirthwesc 4~. Carrollton J6
O~rlln 41. Lorain Midvkw 40
Olmsted Polls 60. Rod:y Rivl!l' .\l
Orwell G"""' Votl. 79. Ck. OranF ~
PMfnA Normandy 47, Warreruville tfts. J )
p...,. Volley lil&lt;i• 60. Lakewood 57
Perry 63. '""" lotill1 Hawk&lt;o ll
PymacuniU 111111. ~.jlli ... ~llt Hlf\'oy .17

Rlver View 5I. Shori""' 41
Rocky Ril'&lt;f tuiborlft '111111 Jf, Mrool&lt;lyn 2!
Rootlf(lwq ~7. Waterloo !0
,
S. Oatil• 7.1. Hao ..n. W.I'L l

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99 FORD FUO LARIAT,t.,IRCU. 414, LOADED .......: ........... 111 1988"
91 MERCURY SAllE lS, IVIRU,TIOM, 1001 ROOF, LIATHER 118,988"
91 FORD WINDSTAR. FULL POWER. REAR AIR, ..................... 118,988"
91 MERCURY SABLE. WAGOif, tRt tul, IIUPMOII ............ '15,988"
98 RANGER SUPERCAI 4 DR, AUTD,ILT,l0Atu ............... 117,981"
91 VILLAGER, QUADIIATI, FUll ,own. LOADED .................. 111,911"
91 CHEVY CONVERSION VAN, mo. lULl 10111, OILI160t IIUI ••• , 118,911"
97 FORD F2SO SUPERCAI, DIIIIL, ILT, AUTO................~...... LOADED
97 MUSTANG IT, IUTO, EVERY OPTIOI, u,ooo IlLES, ............ 117,911"
97 FORD RANGER SUPERCAI, m, m, mRY oPniui ........ 117,918"
97 LINCOLN TOWN CAR, LOADED, ........................... ,...... ..'24,981"
97 FORD CONTOUR, IUIO, lOADit ..................................... 110,981"
96 LINCOLN TOWN CAR. LEATMIR AND LOADU, .................. 119,981'"
95 FORD THUNDERIIRD, VI. AUTO. FUll PGWIR .• :.............. 110,911"
95 PONTIAC GRAND Alii, IUTO. IIR....................................18,911"
95 FORO CONTOUR, IUTO, IIR. lDAtED ..... :.......................... 18,911"
94 PLYMOUTH LAZER, ..................................................... 16,911"
94 TOYOTA ·SUPERCAI, AUTO, IIR, lOWIIIIU ••.•..•...•.....•.•..• 19,911"
92 CHEVY LUMINA EU,RO, iow IIlii, LOitEt ..............,.•...•. 16,411"

taf,98 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER

squDCI.

MIAMI DOLPHINS: Slgncd.QB Dan Gonuh:z.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Si&amp;ned FB Clif

LEATHER, EVERY OPTION

GJO(:e.
·
NEW YORK JETS : Placed RB-KR Leon
Johnson on in/ured reserve .
·
ST. LOU S RAMS : Signed QB Ron Powlus 10

$32,950°0

~~

practice ~quad .
-~
TENNESSEE OILERS : Re-signed G Evan
Pilt~~im . Re1umed RB Spencer George 10 the practite
tquad.

ing rusher with 1.726 yards and 14
louchdowns, joined Williams in lhe
ba~kfield. Cloud's rushing lotal were
school and Big Easl Conference
·re'cords. ·
.
.
· Torry Holt of Nor1h Carolina
State joineq Warrick as lhc olher
wide receiver and. Rufu s French of
Mississippi was tight end.
Hoi! sel ACC records wilh 88
catches for 1,604 yards . The senior
scored on a 68-yard punl rclurn and
·a : 63-yard reception . in lhe
Wolfpack's 24-7 upsel of Florida
Sfale on Sepl. 12. He averaged 145.8
y~rds receiving per game- second
in: the nation . ·
.
. Warm;k caught 6 I passes for
I ,:232 yards and 12 louchdowil s.
averaging 20.2 yards per .calch. Holt
a1id Warrick were threats on· reverses
aqd punt relurns.
· Fr~nch caughl 35 passes for 386
y:irds and lwo touchdowns , and was
atllong the learn's besl blockers this
season. ·
: The offensive line averages 314.6
pdunds . .Craig Page of Georgia Tech
was the center. The Olher linemen
were Outland Trophy winner Kris
Farris of UCLA, Aaron Gibson of
Wisconsin, Rob Murphy of Ohio
State and Matt Stinchcomb of
Georgia..
•
Janikowski, who won lhe Groza
Award, hil 27 of 32 field goal
attempts and 42 of 43 extra points.
·He sel an.ACC scoring record with
123 poinls.
· Kansas Slate's David Allen , wh·o
led the nalion with a 22.1-yard punt
· relurn average, was the all-purpose
player. He tied an NCAA record wilh
four punl returns for touchdowns
1his season.

0
.

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Hockey
N~l

DAllAS

Hotkey LNpr

STARS:

Anit:oed

0

Manny

Fernandez 10 Houston of 1he IHL.
MONTREAL CANAOIENS: Returned F AITon
A1hom to Fredericton or the AHL..

College
AMERICAN; Suspended (i Omar Vandt:rhont
And F Bryan Wynn indefinilel)' for academic 11!450M.
BRIGHAM YOUNG: Suspended RB Ranney
Jenkin• •nd DB Heshimu Robertson from the
Ube-rcy Bowl.

. ~urray called for "solid goahendmg on Tuesday, days after lhe
Panrhers lost4-2 to Calgary on several soft goals allowed by Kirk
McLean. .
"We need some ~peclacular slops
sometimes and in the last while, we're
just getting good slops," Murray said
Tuesday.
.
Bu~ke responded againsl lhe
Penguons, sloppmg Jarom1r Jagr, lhe
league's second leading scorer, on all
nine of his shots - several from up
close.
Only former ·Panthers forward
Martin Slraka got one pasl B~rk~.
w1th hrs 151h of lhe season lhat ued 11
at I al II :39 of lhe second period.

College
all-Americans...
.

USED VEHICLE LISTINGS

/

'

ToniKhl's games

SW Te•:a 51 . Tuas·P~n f\n"IC'rican 5J

$t2 ,950°

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Ottawa 111 Bonon. 7 p.m.

Southwest

HOT PJCI, AIR, AUTOMATIC,
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taEf999 RAMlER SPORT

New Jn&amp;ey 6. N.Y. Rona:ers ~
Toronto .5, Phoenix 2
f1or1d1 4, Plusburgh 1
De1rolt 5. Bo11on .~
Al\llheim 6, Nnshville I

• • Ttki'IJ M.a. l..:lmnr -41

a

I

Wednesday's scores

South

MidwrSt

j

: SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) - Sean
Burke got the message . .
: A day after Aorida coach Terry
fv!urray criticized his goalies, Burke
made 29 saves as !he Panthers beal
Pillsburgh 4-1 on Wednesday night. ·
· ~ Burke a~ the Panthers stopped
Pmsburgh's lop-rated road power
pl)ly all four times, and Ray Whimey
and Bill Lindsay scored goals 47 secmids apart in the 1hiru period.
.
: "Your bpt penalty killer is your
.gGaltender," Murray said. "Piusburgh
came in here as an offensive-minded
learn and you have lo have great goallending lo beat a team like thai and we
d~finilely gol great goaltending from
Burke tonight."

"~1998 MUSTAMI LX

PacMic Division
Dallu .... ......... .... .. ..... ...... 17

Alcorn St. 7.5. Prairie V1ew 60
Auburn 7J. Middlt Tennc:nee :U
(Jarcmoulh 75, Winthrop 61
Georai&lt;~ Tech 9". Ch:utanooga 60
Louimma Tc:ch 91 . Southc:rn Meth. 6~
Miami 91 . Florid:! Atlantic 57
Minne~ma 68: Sou1h Aonda 64 (QT)
Miuiu1ppi 6l. A!a.-Birminglum S6
SW Loui~inn.'l 62. MeN~esc St .'12

S011doeaar S7. 1oloa11411,. Plel4 49
SrronJavllle 41. Pt~ .0
Toi.C&lt;noroltiO. Tol. Wql,.l.l

con,

n1110

63 lOS

ll 92

Evansville 96. Tenne:-M:rech 56"'c· -, -Cclnrfdo .. ... ............ ... .......l3 12 3
Te:ut·SanAntonio 1.J, IUOUri· n.~~niU lly 8• EdmoniOD ........... .............. 13 14 J

Southwest

1999 RANGER XL

l! L I ell. l:il llA

De&lt;roh .... .................... ...... 17 10 I
St. LoWs ........... .... ..............9 10 1
Naoll'ille .......................... 10 IS l
Chlcaso .. ,. :: ...... .................9 16 4
'
Nortbwat Oh'IPon

Mldweot

•

ESCORT LX 4 DR

Centnl 'IJiotiMn

lDm

. r

•

By MIKE CARTER
SALT LAKE C ITY (AP) - Tax
fonns filed by Salt Lake 's Olympic

organiZers do not incl ude entries for
the sc holarship program that sparked
charges of wide spread corrupli on in
the Olympic movement.
Salt Lake Organizing C 0 mmittee
official s·have said $400,000 in scholarships were paid 10 13 Sludents.
including
six
relatives
of
Inte rnati o nal Olympic Comm illee
members. The fund was run by the
Salt Lake Ol ympic Bid Commmec,
the group 1ha1 sec ured the 2002
Winl.e r Ol ympics.
The docume nts - Form 990s I hal
nonprofit public charities musl file
with the Inte rnal Revenue Service obtained by KUER radi o, prov1de
the only peek into the financ in g of
Salt Lake's Ol ympic purs uit because
lhc $1 3 milli on spent on the hid was
p.rivate mo ney.

" II cen ai nly has raised a qucslion . ·
and we' re looking at the 1''ue." saic:i . :.,
l&lt;e lly Fli n1, SLOCs sen ior "icc pres·. ·1
iden1 for legal affairs and comme rce: ·
·' We've re ferred it to our !ooopcCial taX' ·
counsel 10 look. at 11 ...
"'
Olher dealings between Sah
Lake's Olympic organi zers and IOC ,
· members Continue to pi le \lP ~
On Wednesday, Sate Lake Cily . 1
Mayor Deedee Corradin i said
thro ugh a spokesman that the son
1
an IOC member was given an intern~ ::
shi p in cily government sometime lit
1he mayor' s firstlerm. helween IM
and 1996.
" He

worked

here

for

Sl::t ~

l

VICCS .

.

~

";i;-;:;;;;;;;p;ro;;;;;p7o:m;;;;;i;;"'7r~T-----------

mg
knock-ing off 'Preseason No. Duke
in Alaska last monlh .
But !he Gophers still came up
short.
"' We had chances IO cash in , we
had chances lo pu11hc game away,"
said Miles Tarver, who scored a season-high II points. " But you' ve go1
to give i1 to Cincinnali . They rook
lhose mislakes we mad e and lurncd
lhem · inlo opportunities for them .
That's why they cam• out on l&lt;ip ."

•

.[

•i
'i

1

u,

''

: The defeh se was anchored by
award-winning linebackers Chris
Claiborne of Southern California
and Dal Nguyen of Texas A&amp;M .
Claiborne, lhe Butkus Award
wjnner, led the Trojans wi,th I 07
lackles, J ive sacks and six interceplions, two of which he relurned for
1ouchdowns.
Nguyen, undersized for a linebacker at 5-fool-11 and 230 pounds,
WjiS a whirlwind all season. He avera~ed 11 .3 lackles _per game. including 20 stops for losses . The
Lombardi Trophy winner also had
foor sacks , four forced fumbles, two
inlerceplions and two fumble recov-

Park. From left -to · right are
American
Legion Pot~t Commander Eugene Fink, Racine
Youth League treasurer Gary' Norris and Post business manager DenDis McKinney.

(Conlinued from Page 4)

'

I

month s,"
said
Co rrad ini 'i ~ I
spokesman, Ken Connaugh10n. " If :
w as not (the mayor 's) initi ati ve.·· :: - ~
Connaughlon said the mayot '
·belic,;ed the intern worked fur the
~ i_ ty's director uf management. sc r..

ln each fi scal year between 1991
Conn aughton also said the mayor ·
lo 1997. lhc question. " Dncs the had a \'ag~e recoll cc1ion of a bricfmg
urganization make g:ralll ~ for srho l- on a Nati onal Olympic Com mille~:,.,S
arships. fell owships. student loans. assistance program when she joined
etc .. " is a nswered '' No." and lines lhe Salt . take O ly mpi c Bi~
used to rcpor't grants or ass1stam..:c to ~ommittee shortl y after takin g. office;:J
individuals are left blank.
10 1991 .
. .;.""'
Betwee n fiscal years 1992 and
Tom Welch. wh o spe arh e adc¢~ .
IY94 , the · bid wmmillec . reported Sail Lake's Olympi c hid . ag reed ;
expen ses for a · National Ol ympic Wednesday to help in an in ves ti ga..::..-:
. TAKES AIM ,-.:... Cincinnati's Ken\'on Martin (right) takes aim as
Minnesota's Kevin Nathaniel tries · to defel)d during Wednesday Committee program . SLOC officml s lion of bribery allegati ons amt "lit'
night's game in Minneapolis, Minn., where the fourth-ranked h;tvc said the scholarship prog ra~n encouraged SLOC 10 ''deal with lhi~ :.
wen! throu gh the
in a . prompt and open way."
&gt; NOCs.
Bearcats won 62-61. (AP).
.
·
.

. Lindsay added an open-net goal ,
•· his founh of the season .
Scou Mellanby had a goal and 1wo
assisls, including his 300th career
assisl, and Rob Niederinayer added
two assists for Florida.
Tied al I heading into the third
period, the Panthers look advanlagc
of Pillsburgh 's penalty -killir1g unit ranked last in the league -.- wilh
YOUTH LEAGUE DONATiON ,..... The
Whilney's power-play goal his nimh American Legion Post donated $600 to the Racine
of lhe season.
'
Youth League. Some of the money will be used to
Dino Ciccarelli ·shot 1he puck install a new flag pole at the ballfields in Star Mill
10ward the ne1 where Niedermayer
redirected it. Tom Barrasso made the
inilial save, but Whitney swept in lhc
. rebound al 6:58 of 1he third for a 2-1
lead.

cries.
The other .linebackers were AI
Wilson of Tennessee and Jeff Kelly
of Kansas Slate. Wilson anchored a
defen~e thai alll)wed just 93.9 yards
•rushing per game. Kelly had 87tackles - 23 for losses - wirh six
sacks. three interceplions and rwo
fumble recoveries.
Bailey was joined In lhe secondary by Chri s McAiislcr of
Arizona, Antoine Winfield of. Ohio
State and Anlhony .Poindexter of
Virginia.
·
·
Winlield won rhe Thorpe Award
as the besl defensive back, 'and was a
big reason the Buckeyes were second in the nalion in pass defense .
Joining Simon on the line were
.Tom Burke of Wisconsin, Anlhony

I

ot

Florida defeats Pittsbugh Penguins 4-1

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Soulll ~Jtbama IS. Alaboma ~&amp;M 70
Wake F0ret~73, COastal Carolina &lt;16

(See ALL-AMERICANS on Poge S)

IS

Ottawa ., .......................,.. .13 10 3 29 77
Monoeal ........................ _1 16 S 21 65

South

NCAA Division I
women's scores

78
79
80
70

4l
56
6C "
IS

limpo Bay ..... .. o......... ... .... . 8 19 2

: Ckmlan 70, South C110li11166
Ocoral• Tech 76, Wofford til
LSU l4, Prairie Vl~:w 62

1

.

Florida .............. .. .............. IO II 6 26 70
Washinaton ............ .............B 16 l 19 '7

~ 01rtmou1h 78, HarVard 59
. YOIUlJStown 51. 7-4. Flir~ah Dickio10n 71

16 seniors. eight juniors and two
sophomores.
Georgia's all-purpose star Champ
Bailey made lhe team as a defensive
back, although he did much more for
lhe Bulldogs. Bailey had three interceplions and a fumble recovery, but
also caught 47 passes for 744 yards
and five touchdowns and averaged
21.8 yards per kickoff return.
Boslon College running ·back
Mike Cloud, lhe nation's lhird-lead-

l! L, I fll. l:il liA

-DITot0lllo ............................. l7 H l . 36 91
Bul!alo .............................. ll S l ll 7)
Boo&lt;on .............................. ll 9 6 30 70

:Philadelphia at Chicaao. 8 p.m.
, San Jo.e at Colorado. 9 p.m.

Heisman balloting.
Florida Slate had three players on
the learn, the mosl by any school,
with wide receiver ·Peter Warrick,
kicker Sebastian Janikowski and
noseguard Corey Simon.
In a year loaded with record-setting quarterbacks. Kentucky's Tim
Couch made lhe second learn and
Kansas Slale's Michael Bishop the
third team. .
.·
·
The Allanlic Co~l Conference
was the top league, placing six players on the ream, which consisted of

EASTERN CONFERENCE

lDm

: Seattle 11 New En.cland, 1 p,m.

·

NUL standings

~

PMiand 72. NUhYille 67

1

Hockey

1',

Wednesday'• score

.

Minnesota Vikings, both 13-1, each Trophy wmner Ricky Withams, college fOOiball's career rushing leader,
and UCLA's record-selling quarterback Cade McNown were selecte~
to The Associated Press ' all-America
team on Tuesday.
Tol. Notte Dame Aradl:my 54, Tol. Bowsher 40
Williams, the Texas tailback wl!o
Tot Roaen 64. Tot Libky 40
•
Tol. Stott 62. Till. S1. UoolaAcademy,45
ran for 2,124 yards and 27 to'uchTol . S&amp;ar1 l4. Tol. Woodward 22
downs. was 1he only repeater from
TrOtWOOd Madison 80, Wtsl CGrToltton n
Troy jl, vandllit But~ •42
last year's leam. He finished his
Twinsbura 47. Lyndhurs1 Brush 46
career
wilh 6,279 yards, breaking
W. Br.nch 54, L.ouisville )$
w. Getup l J. Klnluld ll
~ny .Dorsett's rushing record.
·

1

of Detroit and Ganison Hearst of San
Francisco.
Favre, wbo bas been the NJ'L
MVP three seasons in a row, is having what for bim is a down year. He
couldn'l beat out Steve Young of San
Francisco. who will start, plus
Randall Cunningham of Minnesota
and Chris Chandler of Atlanta.
Denver's Jobn Elway, chOsen for
the ninth time, is. tbe AFC starter at
quarterback, backed up by two players wbo started lhe season as secondstringers - Vinny Testaverde of the
Jets and Flutie, who had played in
1he Canadian league fnr the last eight
seasons.

w·ll.
c
h
OS
u
·
'
w·
.
,
.
1 1ams, ouc ,
. s . 1n 1eld get hon~rs
NEW YORK ( AP) - . Heisman glll!le

EASTERN C01'/FERENCE ·
.
.w L 1'&lt;1. 1a

said. "'But it takes a supponiog cast
So I'm happy to gel tbae, but I'm
disappointed forTem:ll Owens. He"s
having a great season. so it leaves a
little had taste in your mouth ."
Maltbews, lhe Oilers' 37-year-old
guard, made it for the I hh straight
season, Smith returned 10 his regular
defensive end spot for the AFC and
' Deion Sanders of Dallas made the
team at two positions- cornerback
and kick returner, although Green
Bay's Roell Presion will also return
kicks.
In addition to Thomas, two
notable absentees are Dallas running
back Emniiu Smith and Green Bay

-...
SLOC's tax forms
..
provide only view
to alleged corruption ····

By RON LESKO
to run seconds off the clock, Clark
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Wben plowed ou1-of-control inlo Tate for&lt;t
you' ve. won .as many games in a row charge. Tale, who transferred from
as Alvm Mttchell , it starts to seem Ohio· Stale and played hi s firs! game
thai there just isn 'l any allema1ive.
in nearly two years Monday nighl,
Mnchell'~ personal winning then hil bolh ends of a one-and-one
sueai enlenng Wednesday nighl 's to put Cincinnati up 50-49 with 17
g:une al Mmnesota was 45 , spanning seconds left.
No:w the Bearcats were in control ,
a 38-0 season in junior college last
season and his firsl seven games for right?
No_ 4 Cincinnati.
N ope.
.
Teammate Pete Mickeal had won
Kyle Sanden, a 6-foot-10 backup
19 straighl, including two seasons at center and one of Minnesota's hesl
the same junior college, but he'll outside shooters, hil a lhree-pointer
have to lhank Mitchell for keeping wilh six seconds lefl 10 put' 1he
!he streaks alive.
Gophers up 52-50. But the Bearcars
· Mitchell scored eighl of his 12 had just enough time fpr Leven lo
pomts m overtime, including consec- squeeze off a jumper 10 tie 1he game
uuve
lhree-pointers that pul as the buzzer sounded, one of his few
Cmcmna11 ahead to stay in a wild 62- bright spots on a '3-for-13 shooling
61 vrclory over No. 17 Minnesola.
night.
.
The Bcarca1s (8-0) had to rally
In overtime, it was ·all Mitchell.
twtce m the lasl half· minute of regu- . f{e scored on a drive 10 lie it 54-all,
lauon JUst lo earn the exira session, 1he second-to-last of II lies in 1he
and then lhey needed Mitchell 's game, then hil conseculive lhreeshooting and one final defensive poinlers to put the Bearcats ahead to
sland to hold on.
· stay, 62-58 with I :04 lefl.
"I really didn'l lhink aboui los- · Cincinnati 1hen had 10 survive
ing," said Mitchell , who scored all Clark's driving, off-balance shot in
his points afler halflime. "'Me and lhe waning seconds.
Pete , we·ve been lhrough a lol of
"h was an up-and-down game,"
close games with each olher. Bul I said Tale, who had·nine poinls and 14
think lhis one was a lillie bil harder." rebounds. " And we picked a good
Minnesula
(6-1)
harassed lime lo make it an ' up' game."
C.incinnali into a shot-clock violalion
Quincy Lewis sl:ored 24 poinls to
with 39 seconds lefl in regulalion . lead Minnesola, wljich missed a
The Golden Gophers led 49-46 al chimcc a1 its best s1an since 1he
lhat poinl and had the ball coming 1976•771eam won its firsl II games. ·
oul of a limeout.
·
The Gophers are trying to return
· ' "I was thinking like, 'Oh, God, 10 national prominence afler failing
here we go,"' Cincinnali 's Melvin 10 make the NCAA tournamenl last
Levell said. "'I didn't want to lose, season - 1hey wenl on. to win lhe
but I had it in the back of my mind." NIT-- and they had been pointing to
:The Bearcals then forced ·a Cincinnali since the season·slaned.
They overcam~ a 1-for- 10 sho01turnover and closed to 49-48 when ..
Je,nnaone Tale dunked a rebound wirh ing stan to open the second half and
. 22.s ec&lt;;&gt;nds to go. The Gophers lhen a 3-for-12 night by Clark, who had
b[oke Cincinnati's press and had · averaged 27 points in the las! three
Kevin Clark breaking free on a 2-on- games. They came wilhin one second
I.
or one shot of knocking off a
. But instead of pulling !he ball oul Cincinnati team !hal became a lead-

AP names college football all-Americans

rew~d.:;s.~ ~~er ~~:.~osw:~ By RICHARD ROSENBLATT

NBA standings

injuries, capped his comeback with quanerback BMI Favn:.
•(
Smith simply lost by the n11111bers- •
bis 12th election, although leaJmnale
Terrell Owens, who bas 12 touch- He is fourth in the NFC in yards ·
downs to seven for Rice, missed out- rushing, and the ill= players ahead
Jamal
" II feels goocllhat your peers and of him were chosen everybody stil(respects you,"' Rice Andenon of Allanla, Bany Sa!ldm

..
The Daily Sentinel • Page 5 A
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fourth-ranked
Cincinnati slips by
No. 23 Minnesota

.

·- -·· - .

-

Thursday, December 17, 1998

••.
••

McFarland of LSU a nd Montae
Reagor. of Texas Tech. Burke led a
defense I hal allowed I 0.2 poinls ~
lops in lhe nalion.
Joe Kristosik of UNLY was. lhc
punter. He led lhc nalion wilh a 46 .2yard average on 76 punts.
~~
~·

The all-America team was selected by the following sporls wrile rs:
Andrew
Bagnato
(Chicago
Trihune), Mark Blaudschun (Boslon
Globe) , Chri s Dufres ne (Los
Angeles Times): Alan .Schmadtke
(Orlando Senlinel), Bob Biium (AP
PhoenixJ, Paul Newberry (AP
Atlanta). Alan Robinson (AP
Pittsburgh) , Dou g 'T ucker (AP
Kansas Cily) and Richard Roscnblall
(AP college football writer) ..

Home National
Bank Night.
Friday, December 18th

Waterford
at
Southern ·
*Free Admission
*5 Person Money Scramble

GREAT GIFT
IDE~ I

RED BYRON '49 OlDS ROCKET &amp;a

WORKBENCH

~e.(a !l Cclleooble. IRB490LDS88

099- 5 2 1 ~

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157 Walnut St. Mi~dleport ·
992-2131

�•
Thursday.~ber17,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

1998

RACO reviews activities;
accomplishments in '98
The Racine Area Community
Organization recently reviewed iL•
activities and

CHRISTMAS CASH- Joyce Hall, Pomeroy,
won $500 in Vaughan's Roundy's Christmas

Cash contest. She Is shown here with store
manager Michl King,

Shuttle operations chief points
to potential. space station ·pitfalls
.

.. By TODD HALVORSON

.

.

ler during the Oct 291aunch of shU I'

, tie Discovery and a crew that includFlorida Today
ed U.S: Sen. John Glenn. 77. who
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
NASA's first space station assembly made a' historic rerum to space 36
years after becoming the lirsl Amernight Wa'\ a .stunning SUCCC!SS, but the
ican lo orbit Earth.
agency's shuttle chief warned

Wednesday thai even minor problems
cou ld I rigger catastrophe during the

most complex construction project of
al~ lime .
Cilinu "'three close "calls" that
·could h:IVe led lo deadly shuule
accidents in the past 13 months.
,NASA progra'!' director Tommy Holloway ·called on project engineers.•

technician's and managers Ia rigorously focus un llighl safely.
Coupled with recent rocket explosions and airline crasheS. Holloway

Discovery's drag chute door broke
loose seconds before lift off, bouncing off one·of the shutlle's three liquid-fueled main engines. Had l.he 11 pound hatch severed engine cooling
lines filled with volatile fuel, a
launch-pad explosion could have
occurred. Investigators still are trying
to delennine the cause of the.mishap.
Just as troubling, Holloway said,
were two other recent mishaps:
• A pressure sensor in one of shut-

attempt a ris"-y ~mergency · landing in

Spain or North Af(ica.
• A small but crucial washer was

nol installed on one of three bolts
holding shun le Atlantis atop a Boeing 747 carrier aircrafl during a

November 1997 ferry !light to a California assembly plant.
In a worst-case scenario. the shut-

accomplishmenl~

ror

1998.
During the year. lhe group made
monetary disbursements totaling
$5.625 including scholarships and
donations.
.The group presented four $500
scholarships 10 Southern High School
· seniors and sponsored the Fifth
Annual RACO Flower Festival.
queen contest, and made an entertainment donation of $250 and neat
prizes totaling $150.
RACO also sponsored the Fifth
Annual Frog Jumping Contest al the
July 4 celebration with prizes totaling $300 in two age groups.
Two drop-off collections . of
canned food and monetary gifL• were
given Ia the Meigs County United
Methodist Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry. In addition, the group is &lt;currenlly ·sponsoring the Sixth Annual
Holiday Home Decorating Contest
with prizes lolaling $100 and poin·
settias for the judges.
The group also made the following donations: $200 Ia the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department Building
Fund; $100 for repairs on the sound
system al Star Mill Park:: $200 for
entertainment al the July 4 celebration: $200 lo the Racine VFD Fireworks Fund; $525 Ia extend lhe con·
ciete slab at Star Mi II Park; $150 lo
the Fal! Festival Ci&gt;mmiuee for enter·
talnment: $300 to the Racine VFD
Auxiliary; $300 10 the Racine VFD:
$300 to lhe Racine Volunteer Emergency Squad; $350 to the Southern
Local Music Department for the purchase ofT-shirts for the Pep Band:
$100 10 the Meigs United Methodist
Parish Food Pantry: $100 10 the Star
Mill Park Board for candy and fruit
treats distributed by Santa al "Christrna.• in the Park.''

lie could have broken loose and
crashed to the ground. dragging the
747 and its flight crew along with it
The polenlially disastrous consequences of such safety lapse&gt; are evi·
denllhroughoullhe ae·rospace indusRACO also 'presented "Welcome ·
· try. Holloway said.
to Racine" plaques to three new busiHe cited the August expiosions of nesses within the village and placed
unmanned Titan and Della rockets. banner5 throughout the town during
another Delta launch failure in Janu- the appropriate seasons.
ary 1997 and Ihe 1996 crash of a Val Purchases made by the group durue
Jet
airliner
in
South
Florida.
·
ing
1998 included: 12 soft animals
.
NASA in 37 years of piloted for the Racine Emergency Squad lo
space night has had only 1wo major distribute to children; holiday wreaths

lival. and by serving refreshments at
two local auctions and manning the
Meigs County Fair licket gate.&lt;.
RACO members expressed their
appreciation 10 the community for it\
generosity and suppon in making its

endeavors successful.
. The civic group originated in January 1993. and meetings are held on
the fourth Tuesday of each month,
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Parlt. New
members are welcome.

93 OLDS
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96LiNC:OLN

\flh.;hell. Lang~ville; James Edward

MARK VIII

Sharon R. Maynard. Pome roy : E.
David Averion. Middleport: Diana L.
Bing: Middleport: Barbara S. Gatrell.
Middleport: Robert Joseph Setlock
Jr.. Shade: Mary C. Eva ns, Portland;
Joshua Allen Phalin. Pomeroy ;
Ron~ld Wrilncr Cow&lt;lery. Long Bot·
lllfn: Ju anita D. Gerard. Middleport:
Brady M. lluffman Sr.. Middleport ;
ROBERT TRENT JONES GOLF lliAil.

Wesley H. Gilkey. Middleport: Mar-

WO~LD" EXPERIENCE TO THE PAR·

·BEGIN THE TRAIL TRIP AT HAMPTON

tili D. Andrew. Ru tlund: Montie R.
Sanders. Rcct.lwilh::. Harolt.l Ray

ENT AND CHILD ON YOUR HOLIDAY

CovE IN H UNTSVILLE AS YOUR CH ILD

Stewart. Middleport: Edna Pearl

LIST WHILE YOUR YOUNG PERSON

ENJOYS A THRILLING WEEK AT SPACE

ENJOYS A WEEK AT US SPACE

CAMP. THEN PARENTS CAN PLAY FIVE

Car-;cy. Pomeroy: Charles E. Wi se,
Cheshire; Euge ne: S. Morri son Jr ..

Middleport : Gladys M. Shields.
Racine: Carol J. Ramsburg. Middle·
pori: Orpha Della Rou se, Rutland;
CherylAnn Warth , Pomeroy: Linda
L Powell. Pomeroy: Nettie L Barnhan, Pomeroy; Charles R Lawrence,
Portland.

CAMP

IN H UNTSVILLE. ALABAMA,

WONDERFUL DAYS OF CHAMPIONSHIP GOLF.

MOM AND DAD CAN GOLF TO THEIR

THE TRAI L AND SPACE CAMP... STELLAR

HEARTS' CONTENT ON ANY OF TH,E 18

GOLF COMBINED WITH OUT-Of-THIS-WORLD

CHAMPIONSHIP COURSES ON ALABAMA' S

ADVENTURE.

Actions to end
marriages filed
I

llle following actions lo end mar·
riage were tiled recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry sp,ncer.
.
Dissolution asked- Amy Brown,
Long Bo1101n, and Jeff Brown, Middleport. Dec . 10.
Divorce asked - Tommy Nottingham. Vinton. from Linda Joyce
Nollingham, Kalamazoo, Mich.. Dec.

K.

'

FJVF&gt;DAY GOLf' (CART NOT INCLUDED) AND HOTEl. PA CK1\"GES nECINNJNG AT

CALl. 1.800.949.4444 FOR TEE TIMES A.ND INI'ORMATION.CALL

$329.

I 800 6.) SPACE FO R SPACE CA.'\\P INFOR,\\ATION.

' · If Superman is so clever, ~hy is ·
his underwear on the outs1de.
If a 7-11 is open 24 hours a day,
365 days a year,, why are there
locks on the doors .
.. You know ,~ow cartons say.
Open Here. . What are the .
~.hances of seemg one . ~~at says.
Ope!l.Somewhere Else . '
If II s a ~ITCular drive, bow do
you gel out .
.. Why .~oes ;our cream have a
use by . ~te.
. .
Why_ ts tt that whe~ .you dehver
somethmg by car, Its called a
shtpme~l, and when Y.o~ dehver
some~hmg by boat, 11 s called
cargo.
How do " Don ' I Walk on the

Grass" signs get there?
Why ace ctgarettes sold at gas
stations when smoking is prohibited there?
.
If toast always lands butler s1de
down. ~d cats. always land O!l
then feet, what would happen tf
you strapped the buuered toast on
the back of the cal and dropped
them b~th? .
.
If ohve ml comes from ohves,
where does baby oil come from?
Has anyone ever forgotten how
to nde a b1cycle'
.
.
Vof_hy do they call u a "garage
sale when the garage 15 not for
sa.le? .
.
.. .
If a word m the dictionary were
misspelled, how would we know?

,,,

.

4 cyl, auto, air

LINCO.LN TOWN

CAR

· CCL has Christmas party
The annual Christmas party of
the Middleport Child Conservation League held its annual
Christmas party .on Thursday at
lh.e home of Donna Ruth Pullins.
Helen Blackston had the blessing . There was an ornament
e xcha'nge and. a gift exchange
with the wrappings being judged .
Winners were Linda Broderick,
Donna Pullins, and Kathy Dyer.
Secret pals were revealed with
the gift exchange. "lingle , lingle

a Christmas" bingo, a game creat'
ec;l by Eloise White many years
ago, was played by the members .
Gifts and food for a needy
family were collected and will be
delivered before Christmas.
Those auending were Linda
Broderick , Helen Blackston ,
Peggy · Harris, Peggy Hous· ·
dashelt, Janet Duffy, Clarice
Kitchen, Kathy and Megan Dyer,
and Pullins .
Next ·meeting will be held in
February.

Dear AliD Landers: Can you Bride in All 50 States
stand yet another request to mfonn
Dear Parent: It is apparent that
your readers of wedding etiquette? you are plenty steamed, and I don 't
I am fed up with clods who don't blame you. Obviously, some folks
have a due. WiU y.ou !Jiea!IC ~ell lned to muscle thetr wapnto your
the readmg pubhc that an mv1ta- daughter 's wedding, and you
uon to a weddmg tncludes only resented it
those to whom it was addressed?
Your letter may not prevent
ThiS means:
clods from angling for an in vitaIt is not OK to bring a date.
lion, but it will surely encourage
h JS crude, tacky, tmproper and mothers of other brides to hold the
outrageous!~ nervy to phone and fan and nol be bulldozed into
~k for an mvtta110n tf you have mcludmg people who were not on
not received one.
the list. I'm with you.
It is even tackier and more
Dear Ann Landers: Inform
impolite to call and ask if your your readers that the Internet is not
failure lo receive atl invitation was a source of information . h is a
an "oversight.:·
means of communications. Saying,
Sign my leiter ~- The Parent of a "I read it on the Internet," is the

Anderson and his fiance, and
Jamie .Anderson and a friend, and
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Johnson.
and sons. Patrick , Hunter and
Blake, all of Racine .

Holiday dinner held at Nease
home
Mrs . Helen Nease entertained '
Sunday with a holiday dinner and
celehnuion at her home .
Following the dinner !he group Christmas Lighting contest .set
exchanged gifts. Auending were
The Rutland Friendly GardenMr. and Mrs . Carl Nease and John ers will hold a Christmas lighting
Nease of Westerville; Ruth Pow- contest again this year.
Judging will lake place Sunday
ers of Grove City; and Mr. and
Mrs. James Anderson. Brian evening from 7 to 9 p.m. in the

Community ·
Calendar

same as' saying. ·•1 heard it on the
telephone"
Chaui~g by e-mail is like goin~
to the barbe,&lt;shop. You might hear
the psychiatrist's opini on of
Prozac and the barber's opinion of
Brylcreem. But you are more like·
ly 10 hear 1he psychiatrist's opinion of Brylcreem and the barber's
opinion of Prozac . .. Joy in
Mudville
Dear 'J oy: Thani&lt;s for an astute
observation. I couldn 't have said it
better myself.
--·Send questions to Ann Lan·
den, Creaton Syndicate, 5777
W. Century Blod., Suite 700, Los
Angeles, Calif. 90045

THURSDAY
RACINE - Christmas dinner,
Racine Post 602, American Legion
and its Auxiliary, Thursday at the posl
hall, 6 p.m. Take covered dish.
STIVERSV!LLE - Stiversville
Church at Ponland, puppet show, .
Thursday, 7:30 p.m at the church,
l&gt;ublic is invited 10 anend. ·
POMEROY - State Representative John Carey (R· Wellston) open
door session Thursday, 3-4 p.m. al the
Meigs County Courthouse.
·

98 MERCURY
MYSTiQUE GS
4 cyl, auto, POL, P.W, cruise,
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RACINE - Fin&lt;l Baptisl Church
of Racine adult Christmas play and ,
program. Sunday. 7 p.m.

.. ;;.,; j: ."&gt;'.

GALLIPOLIS

'.

MIDDLEPORT

OPEN FRIDAY
9 AM UNTIL

.,

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SUNDAY 1·5

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99

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Jhree Carat Diamonds Reg, $3600 $2699
Five Carat Djamonds Reg. $1300 $3999

Allin Stock Pulsar and Seiko

LONG BOTIOM - Long Bottom United Methodist Church Christmas program, Sunday, 7 p.m. Scarfs,
millens and gloves being collected to
give to those in need.

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~ight

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Half Carat Diamonds $1399

SALE

$799

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POMEROY ;- Christmas pro·
gram. "Twinkle a~d the All-Star ·
Angel Band", a musical drama, will
be presented Sunday, 10:30 a.m. at
the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene.
LLoyd D. Grimm. Jr., pastor, invites
!he public.

.

Christmas story, Jeffers presented
" Unto Us a Child Was Born" bv
Helen Steiner Rice and Black:slo~
read "The Priceless Gift of
Christmas :·
Lenora Leifheit led members
Christmas party held
in group singing of " Silent:
The Rocksprings Beller Health Night" Jreals were prepared by
annual Christmas party was held the members for the sick ·and
recently al the Rock Springs' shutins of the community. Others
United Methodist Church .
auending were Frances Goeglein~
Doro'thy Jeffers gave the bless- Phyllis Skinner, and Nancy
ing preceding a dinner and gift Grueser. Jim Fry joined the group
exchange. Barbara Fry read a for the dirtner.

. RUTLAND - Rutland Christmas
parade rescheduled for .Sunday. 3 p.m.

POMEROY - "A Christmas
Legacy" will be presented by the
choir and cast of the Zion Church of
Christ, Stale Route 143, Sunday, 7
P·!"· Minisler Roger Watson invites
the public.
·

··'

categories of doors or windows,
religious and non-religious .·
Prizes of $25 for fir st. $15 for
second, and SIO for lhird will be
awarded.

White
Diamonds
1 Carat
Total

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Asbury
United Methodist Church choir will
present a cantata "All Through the
Night" Sunday, II a.m. during the
church service. The public is invited
to attend.

,,~

tne ewe

Tile Community Calendads pub-

lished as a free service to non-profit
groups·wishing to announce meetings
and special events. Tile calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
as space pennits and cannot be guarimtccd Ia run a specific number of
days.

'

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•

WHITE DIAMONDS IN 14K GOLD

22995
,

THI S YEAR, GIVE AN "OUT .OF TH IS

Dear AIID Laaders: A friend
sent· me this list of hypothetical
questions. and I hope you think it's
good enough.Ia print. I don' tlm~w
w.ho wrote it. but it really titkled
my funny bone. -- RPJ in the USA
Dear RPJ: Mine. too.-I'm sure
the readers will enjoy it. Thani&lt;s
for sending it my way.
Why is it' called "rush hour"
when your car. barely moves? ·

SUNDAY
,
MIDDLEPORT - Vietory Bap- ·
list Church. Middleport, will present
the caillata "Amazing Grace" Sunday,
10 a.m. 'lo noon . Rev. lames Keesee
invit~s the public.

Hi.Jll. Pomeroy:

Melba .lane Swban .: Lo nu B()uom:
Nathaniel Junior Cupente~. Rutland ;.

Ann
Landers

SATURDAY
,
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
8(8 regular Christmas dinner and fun
night activities on Saturday. 6:30p.m.
at the Salem Center Firehouse. All
inlercsled persons are invited. Bring
covered di sh. Meal will be provided.

V8, auto,
7,200 miles,
loaded

.L&lt;mgwli le; Ann M. Cozart. Portland:
l erry L Life,. Reed"ille: Julia K.

Hypothetical qu~stions give readers amusing.fo-od for thought

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Arthritis Support Group meeting Friday, 10-11 :30 a.m. in the conference
room of the Meigs County Senior Citi7.cn 's Center.

POL, PW, cruise, tilt, cassette

--···· · -······

••

,;_;

96 MERCURY SABLE
4 DR

Ectty,

Page 7

Thursday, December 17, 1998

•

4 cyl turbo, 5 sp,

.

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'\C~~~~r2f· &lt;·.·~,,·,··i·~·w:t;-}:·rr~J:~\ .. &lt;,'}'·
~
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f-~~~~)ilti~'~£G:·
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98 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GS· T

One owner,

The Daily Sentinel

•

$15' 995

Holloway pointed to a near-disas-

The following were named as
prospective members of the January
1999. term of the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court grand jury:
Terri . Lynn· Fife. Middleport;
Dav1d R. Stricklen. Middleport: Hope
E. Peck. Albany: Nicklois L Leonard
Jr.. Pomeroy: Darrell L Johnson.
Racine: Joseph K. Connolly,
Reedwille: James Forerpan. Portland: Dean A. Colwell. Pomeroy:
Linda L Mohler. Middleport; D. Jean
VanMeter. Pomeroy: Richard E.
Gibbs, Middleport; Aimee Leann
Jarrell. Racine; Anthony Kopec. Middleport: Ei leen V Polk, Portland;
Helen Margaret Williams. Middleport: Nancy. E. Carnahan, Racine;
John L Damewooil, Reedsville; Dale
L Davi1. Racine: Mary Jo M. Frank.

By The Bend

tilt, cassette

tle Discovery's engines failed about
20 seconds after a JUlie 2 launch on
said the shuttle near-misses should
serve as a wake-up call for those a mission to Russia's space station
responsible for the safety of astro- Mir.'
Investigators subsequenlly deternauts who fly aboard NASA space- .
mined
that a broken piece of lest accidents: Three astronauts were for lhe windows and doors at the
ships.
.
Coming just hou.s after shullle equipment had been inadvertently left killed in a 1967 launch pad tire and Cross Mill/Racine Museum building;
Endeavour's construction flight. Hal· inside an engine cooling lineal a Cal- seven others perished in the 1986 three RACO banners in the group's
Challenger explosion. ·
color with logo.
.
\oway~ s comments followed an interifornia manufaCturing plant:
The
agency,
however,
ca
n
ill
Funds
were
raised
from
dues,
nal NASA report that raised questions
Had the failure occurred later in
afford
another
catastrophe
during
..
yearly
yard
sales,
food
booths
al
speabout whether a downsized shuttle flight, an engine shutdown could
construction
of
its
long-planned
Intercial
evenls
i~cluding
the
newer
fes,
work force can keep up with a
have forced Discovery's crew to
national
Space
Station.
lival.
July
4
cel¢bration
and
fall
fesdemanding station l~unch schedule.

Local grand jury.
venire posted

'

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MONDAY
RACINE - Racine First Baptist
Church will have a live nativity on
Monday, 7 10 10 p.m. al the bam of
Ronnie and Cookie Salser on State
Route 124 near Bashan Road.
t

�P age

8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, December 17, 1998
--- ..... - ·

-

Thurwct.y, December 17, 1H8.:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel •

"

Page

9 . '.

DAR celebrates Christmas in song and history
The Ou1stmas spirit was alive in
song ltld history when the Raum
Jonathan Meigs Cbaper. DaughlerS
of the American Revolution. met at
the Meigs County Public Library Saturday.
·
A musiCal program was presented
by Hal Kneen, Meigs County Exten&gt;ion agen~ who opened with three trad tbonal carols "Deck the Halls".
··Holly and the Ivy"'. and "I Saw
l brce Ships."'
The program leader said that
"Deck The Halls'" is an old Welsh
tune with lyrics developed in America
during the 19th Century when there
was a resurgence of English customs
tueled by Washington lrvings' writmgs and the popular Chari~ Dickens'
""A Christmas Carol.'"
'"The Holy and Ivy'' carol, said
Kneen, is a centuries old English
carol and was first transcribed by
Joshua Sylvestris. The lyrics blend
the song·, Druid beginnings with the
No hcfs of Christianity.
He noted that the white holly blos'oms symbolizes Mary's purity; the
red holly berries Christ's blood; the
thums his crown; and the holly 's bitter bark Christ's Crucifixion agony.
The Ivy is said to .represem the femi·
nme side of Onistianity while the
holly the masculine side.
.. , Saw Three Ships:· was first pub-

1946, it only becatiie a pnpotl• hit a
So,onberWI)'tocbun:lubeplbdecade Iller when it was tecaded by en:d up some weeds she fOUiid a101J1
tinued.connectsi~toColumbus"voy·
Nat King Cole.
·
the mild. As she app••loed lbe aWir,
age in the Nina, Pinta, and Santa
The next carol KDeen inlroduced a miracle 'Ill;: : • The weeds blosM.via which opened the New World was '1 Head The Bells on OJriJimas soDICd iuto brillialll Dowen. T'boa
like Ovist who opened a new world Day", a carol OOiiiJlOii!:d by kthnny they were called Flores de Noche
to God through belief in him.
Marts during the SO's when the Cold Buena Flowers of the Holy Night.
At lhis point in the JliOZJ iltt. W~ was a daily reality. The lyrics Now they II'C called poinseuias.
Kneen inviled DAR tnembers to join were based on the words of Henry
To alleviate the public's fear conhim in singing the three songs Wadswonh Longfellow's poem. ccming lbe polnsetlia's foooty. the
described above. Abbie Straiten "Chrisanas Bells" was inspiml by the Ooral industry launched a scientific
accompanied the group at the piano.
hope of Orristmas after the tragic investigation to determine whether or .
The second group of songs intro- dealh of his wife at the beginning of · not thote is any .trudt to the charge lhat
duced by Kneen were chosen to tq&gt;- ' the Civil War.
the poinsetlia is poisonous. The Sociresent the changes in holiday music in
Kneen 's final ChriSiillas melody ety of·Atnerican Aorists cou.ixratcd
the United Slales during the 40's was "Have Yourself a Meny Lillie with The Olrill Stale Univ~ity on
which focused more on lbe joys and Christmas". This melody. Kneen said. lhis research project.
memories of Christmases past
was written in 1944 for "Meet Me In
The OSU research effectively dis·
Kneen noted that "I' ll Be Home StLouis."
proved the charge that the poinsetlia
For Christmas" was written in 1943
Being a horticulturi~ Kneen. dis- is hanitful to human 'and animal
and sung by Bing Crosby. II was ded· cussed some typical holiday plants, health if parts of the plant are ingesticated to all the men and women serv- including the poinsettia and holly. ed. Kneen also demonstrated how to
ing in World War II as they spent time The poinsettia Kneen said, gor it's stan a holly tree from a cutting.
away from their homes and fami ly, he name from Joel R. Poinsett, who · The speaker concluded his Christsaid.
became the first American Ambos- mas carol program with DAR memTwenty years later, on December sador to Mexico in 1825.
hers again joining with him in singing
17, 1965, Bing was requested to agai n
He ·introduced the plant to the carols.
sing il for the world astronauts. James United States on. one of' his trips
Regent Pautine Atkins conducted
lavelle and Frank Burmann as they home. The enhancing legend of the the business meeting prior to the
.·
poinsettia dates back several cen- musical presentalion at which time'\
encircled the Canit.
"The Christmas Song" highlights .. turies. -to a "Chrisunas Eve in Mexico delegates and alternates to the State
the indoor and outdoor joys of Christ· when a little gi.rl nanted Pepita had no and National DAR conferences were
mas with thoughts of chestnuts, carol- . gift to present to the Christ Child. Her elected . She announced that the JanuSONGS AND THEIR ORIGIN - A mualc8l program ori the songs :
ers, Eskimos, Jack Frost, etc., he said. cousin Pedro urged her to give a hum- ary meeting will be held on Jan. 9.
of Christmas was presented by Hal Kneen for members of Return :
·
Although wrinen by Mel Torme in ble gift.
Jonlltflan Meigs Chapter, DAR. He was accompanied at the plano by '&gt;
Abby Stratton.
. _ - ·
·.

lished in 1666 in Britain. One explanalion of its symbolism. Kneen con-

Custom Homes

voters freebies
with videotapes
promotional
, from giftand
baskets
to
more
giveaways. October
Films sent voters tapes or "Hilary and
Jackie" in a violin case.
"Actually, Jackie is a cellis~ but
we didn' tlhink a cello case would

inv~ntive

VIllage emploJIII for
BE IT ORDAINED 8Y
·
in the UPS liUcks," said Dennis Rice, Council of the VIllage of
October's president of wotrld~r ide: ll P-or. two-thlrde or all
m3Fketing.
·.
membera concurring
·A
ds
lhlflto·
U lik the Acad
n e
emy war •
SEcTioN 1: Thlt for the
Golden Globes honor
ye1 r 1tlll, the Vlllege Slllll
shows and split the movie awards
pey nch empto;n
best picture, actor and
.employ1111nt 11 of October
between two categories _ drama! 1, t 198, eech full·tlme
I .mplovae and ell
and comedy or musical. ·
employn tht aum of
Hundred dollera,
emptoyn In active pert-Ume
employment the eum of
Filly dolllra.
SECTION 11:
Thle
·ordinance ·elilllllkt effect
end be In fo•c• on
Decantblr 18M.
ATTES"Il Decanttrer 14, 1tlll
·Kat h y
H y 1 1 11,
Clerk/l'rellurer
John MUOHr, Preeldent or
Councl
Dlvtd Btlllrd, Scatt DHIOII,
Qerl
Welton, Lerry
IN STOCK &amp;
ORDER
WehiUI'If,
George Wright
P: -BERBER
-coMMERCIAL F.
(12) 11,21
'- .PLUSHES
•PAD
':0. •SCULPTURES •VINYL
:..
Public ..otlce
•LAMINATE FLOORING
F. · _ _:;...;;.;;;_:;.~==-'
IN THI! COMMoN PLEAS
Call For Free Estlmate
~ COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY.
P'
We Oller 90 Days ·
.:.til
· OHIO
,.
Same As; Cash
PA\JL EUGENE HARRIS,
Now 111112·31 ·98
~ PLAINTIFF VS THOMAS W.
J 0 NE S, · E T
AL,
DEFENDANTS
CaM No.III-CI/·104 · ·
9-5 M.,n.-Fri • 9-1 Sal,
9-lZ Thuro.
. :..1 LEGAL NOTICE SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
Thomee w. Jonea, If
living, II deeeettd tht
unknown helie, devlaeoe,
legelln, e.xecutore,
aealgne of Thom11 W.
Jonea deceated; Zelde J.
Jonet, ekl Zello Jonee, If
living, If de.cealld the
unknown halra; dtvl-t,
legatne, exicuton,
edilllnlatratore of Zelda J.
Jonea, diCIIIId; Louie
Jonee, If living, If decnled
the unknown helra,
dtvllle.s,
legatna,
axecutore, admlnlatratort or
Louie Jon eo, deceaaed;
Donie! Jonee, If living, If
ilece111d the unknown
helra, devlaeet, legetHI,
e~ecutcra, aclmlnlatratora of
Denial Jon11, deceated;
Eleeno( (Nell) Jonee.
Whllley,lf living, II d-a!Md
the unknown helrt,
devlnn,
legaten,
executore, admlnlttratora of
EIMnor (NeH) Jone1 Holey,
d101111d; Mary 1\imbull, II
living, II deca11od the
unknown helre, devl ...a,
legaten , executore, .
;odmlnletretore of Mery
il\imbull, deceaaed; Mattie
'l&lt;ltrr, If living, II ' deceeeed
the ·unknown helrt,
devl1111,
legateee,

In-.

1::'''''''':1
,_ IIGILI CARPET '~ - HOLIDAY~

~SAVINGS!

r.SALE r.

I

SPECI~

!;

r

---·
...., -.,,,,..

,.
'L

.....

B~~!!t~J~!~Y!
'?,

~--

......,,:,r

~ -.

"""'&lt;-·''"" '

•

All past purchases not included

Select Varieties &amp;
Llm[ted Q{.lantitfes on
Beanie Babies

-~

!i
!i

With Any Purchase ol $299
and up You Will Receive a FREE

·1'""£J!i
.
.
.
'
.
.

.cldltlonel

~~

ii.cutora, .cltitlntairatot'a o1

llaHia Karr, deceaaad;
Thomaa Jonn, If living, U
daca11ed the unknown
halra, dovl-•, legatNa,
--...., aclmlnlllntiOnl ol
Tho11111 JonM, decn!Md;
Annie FII'ICIIty, If living, .II
deceaeed the unknown
helra, devlaMa, legatea.
ll&lt;ecutora, admlnlllntonl of
Annie Fered8y, diCIItH;
G-g• J011e1, II living, If
decee..d, the unknown
helra, dovl-•, legatHI,
executore, admlnlatratora,
of George JCHIH, -led; ·
Earl Jonea If living, II
deceued the unknown
helra, devi-l, legetMI,
axeculora, admlnlat,.tora,
of Elrl Jon11, deceaeed; ·
Emmett Jonea, If living;
whose
lui
known
reeldence- Temo Hlute,
lndlena, II deceand the
unknown helre, devllln,
Ieguen, executon,
edmlnlatr.tore of Emmett
Jones, decnnd; Thom..
Hei.Y, II living, whoee lut
known r11ldence· wae
Chillicothe, OH, If - H d
the unknown helro ,
devleue;
legetne,
executora, admlnlltrtitn of
lhomae Haley, deceeaed;
Cleo Haley, If living, If
docoued the unknown
helra, dev11111, legeteel,
oxocutn, ldmlnlllntiOiil of
Thomae Heley, decee!Md;
Cleo He ley, II living, If
deooaaed the unknown
helra, devleaee, legeteoa,
executOR. eclmlnlltrtitn of
Cleo Haley, dtcto ..d;
Chart•• HallY. If living, If
dacea11d the unknown
helra, devlteea, legateee,
ettecutn,aclmlnlatratn of
Cherlee Holey, dooeaeed;
Ztldl Hiley Pollock, II
living, If deceaaed l~e
unknown halre, devl1111,
ltgetue, executor•,
idmlnletratore of Zelda
Holey Pollock, .deceaeed;
Ruth Haley Ceuy, If living,
If dec..aed. the unknown
halra, devl1111, legote11,
executora, admlnletratn or
Ruth Heley Ceaey; Mildred
Hal8y, If living, If deeea!Md
the unknown holra,
deviant,
lageteu,
ettecutora, edmlnlttratn of
Mildred Holey, deceand;
Florence Haley WlnwOOjl, If
living, II dece11ed the
unknown helre, devlaeaa,
legatua, eucutort,
odmlnlelretoro ot Florence
Haley Wlnwood, decea11d;
William Kerr, If living, If
deca11ed the unknown
holra, devl10ea, · helre,
devlaeea,
legateea,
executora, admlnlatretors of
"WIIIIom Kerr, dooeia11d;
Rolph Kerr, 11 living, If
dece11ed the unknown
holre, devlatee, legataoa,
executora, ldmlnlatrataf'8 of

.Ralph · Kerr, daceuad;
Norman f'lred-v, If JIVIng, If
daceaeed the unknown
~elra, devlean, legateea,
axecutora,lldmtnlltiatonl of
Norman F-.y, deceen;
Thelme Marla Faraday, 11
living, 11 deceeaed the
unknown holra, devt-.
'•"•ten, neoutore,
ad;.lnletretore of Thelml
Marie Fereday, decaeaed;.
the . unknown hetn,
dev11111,
leg 1 t . . 1 ,
. . - - , IKfnllnlltrllora o1
u-n- c J
d
_..,.
V:r~~n · A;•
living, II decetlld the
unknown helre, devlaHa,
legateea, executora,
tdmlnlatratora or Vernon·
Allan Jonee,. d-ect ere
hereby notified that they
heve
been
named
defiiiCIMW In elegal eetlon
enlflled Peul Eugane Harrta,
plelntlff VB Thom11 w.
Jo- II al, tlelandanll; 11111
aet1011 haa - n ..llgned
0111 No. 18-C\1·104 end Ia
pending In the Common
Plna Court, Malga County,
"Ohio, P - . Ohio 457110.
· The . ob!tct of . the
complaint Ia to .aequlra IItle
to the following deacr)bed
I'HI - t • by pertltlon, and
lo quite title thereto,
eccordlng to low.
Sold real 111111 Ia
Situated In the Vlllege of
SyriCUII, Townahlp of
Sutton, County of Malga
end alate ·of Ohio and
deaorlbed It followtt :" .
PARCEL ONE: Being
lilted on the lex dUPIICite
of 18117 and 18118· In tho
name or Matthew Mc8rkle,
to-wit: Being In 100 ocrelot No. 299, Range 12 Sutton
Townehlp; and being 231100
of on ecre deecrlbad on the
tax duplicate •• 100 ft.
eq-•1-r alley.
Reference Vol. 88 pg 42
Melge County Deed
R.--u~ltor'a Perce!

1!H!B Martin Street
f'9maroy, Ohio 45769

: Uve Spruce, White
Pille with root bttll S6llt.
Plant alter Chrlllmesl
Or ci!Qosa 1 Cut Pine

. Or Spruce $2.50/ft.

'

more, choose one Free Beanie
Baby
+ With Purchase of $500. flj/ or
more, ch\ose ,two Free Beanie
Babies \
+ With Purchase of '1 00()0l or
more, choo•e three Free Beanie

·.

'
'

Babies

presents
"BiitzKreig"
'Fri &amp; Sat. Dec. 18·19
Auction All .Day Saturday
starting at 1 pm
All new merchandise
Old,American Legion Bldg.
Middleport

f

.
.
i
'
.
·

1111'S WIDSWE
.. NUISERY
. Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeroy,OH
Ph. 740-992.7285
(Sat, Sun. aves.)
'
Pomeroy Eagles
· Club Bingo On
· Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
• Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
~00.00 Starburet
Progressive top line.
Lie. 11 oo-sy1 1

OILER'S
:DEER SHOP
· S~ln, Cut;
Wrapped

&amp;

Freeze

740.742-2076

taxea

: You Kill 'em
· ·We &lt;Chill :em

I. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

*fill•
*992-?696

wv

Road

Wreaths • Swa4s
Roping&amp;
Grave Blankets

L

Agrtc;ultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
• Dirt • Sand
985 4422
Chester, Ohio

,_

•Maintenance
•Planting
•Design
•Lawn Care

$10&amp;Up

BOB SIIOWDEI'S Lft

I·

Garpges • Replacement Windows

PIB CONTRACfORS, INC.

0
N

c
R

• CONCRETE

.• MASONRY

E FREE ESTIMATES ......... FULLY INSURED

T

E

t

mo.

Grand Opening

QalckLuh

y ~

43370 St. At. 124
Minersville, Ohio

,,

,·month pd.

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

-Complete Auto Seroice-

Racine, Ohio &amp;
50 Waat, Albany Rd. , Athena, Ohio

·---·-

(lime Stonelow Rates)

Judy L. Stewart
992-1194

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
Now open for lhe

I

'
~e~CIAI.5 QN

' TIRES
:. BRAKES
&amp;

. · SHOCKS

..

11/2.&lt;11

mo. pel

Painting &amp; Cooling
Residential &amp;
Commercial

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

12/1198

HOWARD
EX(AVATING CO.

(614) 992-3838

CUI Chrl!lmos Trees
" G'lll'ltl Blank81s ·Wrealhs
Open Dally 11·5
Sunday 1-S

HUIURIS
GRIIIIHOUSI
Syracuse, Ohio
982-5778

Wt honor Gold an l111byt Canis

~

CARPET
PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or
740-698-7231
tf11/Wifn

HILl'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771 .
740-949-2217

5'x10'
to 10'x30'

Sizes
43370 SR. 124
RACINE, OH 45771
(MINERSVILLE)
1U17f8111 1 mo. pd.

Houra
7:00AM·8PM
11/1-1 mo. pd.

You

l ook Feu

' To Spy rhe 8esr 8"'~' Jn
rht Clou ifitds.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

~~alflO;el(t9

·Room Addition• 1
•New Gar1g11
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
· •Interior &amp; Ext8rlor
PslnHng
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C, YOUNG Ill
. 892-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

MoonUte

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CALL AMERICA 'S" PSY·
C~ ICS 1-!!00.740·6500 Ext.
3596,
www.thehotpages2.conv'n!Vpsychic1250291.htm $3.99 fMl n. 18+

2V. Miles South of
Tuppers Plains on
St. Rt. 7
(740) 667·3483 or .
(740) 667-3073
Open Evenings and
Weekends

Serv-U 619-645 -843(.

11!2311 mo.

Serving Po,...roy, Middleport &amp; Mooon

MOBILE HOME •

PARTS

992-0038
Charter Available

"Hugt

lnnnt11y"
L--------------.:.".:.:.~':.::mo:::;·l::;,l· · •Riiol Coatings
•vtnyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•Door/Windows
:I St. Rt. 7
·
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45763 ; •Electric/Plumbing
:
.
740.985-3813
: Suppll81
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
SteJ)a
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks •
Olscount Prices · .
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanka
1
113

: G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
DEER
PROCESSING
Skinned • Cut
Wrapped
Maplewood Lake
Racine, Ohio

! Sewer Pipe: 3'' thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulator•

I
'

mo.

Bennett Supply
741&gt;-446-941 6

Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekday•
9:D0-12:00 Saturday

1381 Safford
· School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH .

4121111 Hn

'

Personals

CONNOLLY'S

CHRISTMAS
TREES

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

tt/2(1{1

'I

12118/ltn

740·992-4559

949-2734

-

I

I

Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites ·
!,.!tnd Clearing &amp;
·.
Grading
.
Septic System &amp;
Ulllltles
Estimates

Weekly Sales and Drawings .
thru Christmas
Rt. 124, Minersville, Ohio

Computer Gr.aphlcs
Deslgf'\S
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle l:lollon
Chester, Ohio
740·985-4422

t4HI...U"
Free Estimates
(740) 367·0412
(740) 992·4232

Chri&amp;mM &amp;aron

Poinseltios in 6colors
Poinsellla Boskels
Holly Trees

GRAND OPENING
KARNS CASTR.OL
QUICK LUBE
992-9909
WE HAVE GIFT CERTIFICATES

. I'

. •Poinsettias

Tues.-Fri. 10 to 6
Sat. 10 to 4

614-992-3470

Santa's Gift
Wrapping Ser~ice

Trees

financial obligation• and arrange a fair
distribution of aaa'eta. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for his or her personal
use . This may include a car, a house, clothet~, a:nd
household good s.

138 1 month

• · ·, -~ *~rae· 5 Parts WarrantY.
*Free Digital Thermostat '
*Free Estimates
'

Dirt

J.ANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Cousin's Home
Improvement and

THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
AND MORE

Gravel, Sand,

Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday
.12:30 pm
Umlt 680 sleeve
: .737 bade bore

.&amp; Cut

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of

"Wiu1rc Quality Docs11 ~ Cost More"
. _740-446-94.1 .~ •1-800·872-5967

Radne

740·742·3411

NoJo.,tooMaor

;

Limestone,

Fill

•Live

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofa•• Decka • Garages ·
Insured
. Free Est/mates

11

Firrnnci••s':
1
Air Conditioners Ill Low As 28 I month
Bmtk

HAULING
Top Soil,

•Swags

$5 to $25

BENNm's :HEATiNG &amp; COOLING
.

WICKS

•Roping

. 74D-94NIJ&amp;

Heat Pumps As Low As
Checll ua out at w-.pomoduJtn.com
Or phone (1.60) ttl•lt17
or/Olio • ••· pol .

•Wreaths
•Grave Blankets

TRPPRn

''Easy Over tl1e Plao11e

..

New con1tructlon &amp; Remodeling

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Ait· Conditionet·s &amp; Heat Pumps
,

Quality Affordable Well P1•e Deaten
for Small Bualnu• In Metea. Athena, and
Gallla Co. Ohio and Muon Co. WV.
"Let ua put your butlneu on the Internet"

740.992-2068

SUNSftHOME
CONSTRUC,.ION

Fonner-''Velt&gt;et Harnnu!r"
5~954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

20 Yrs. EKp. • Ins~ Owner: Ro;:;nie Jones

New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting,
Plumbing
Free Est/mates
Joseph Jacks

SpecU.ll on oil
change•, ti1111,
brake•, shoclu.
740·992·9909

Brian Morrlaon I &amp;uboo, Oloio (740) 98S.S948

985-4473

-.

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

Karn'a Cutrol

No Emberraaamant ...
You're Treated with Respect!

N
R

2112/alltn

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut
Any Scotch or White Pine • $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 331o Darwin. East on Rl. 681 . 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1;1 miles to tree farm . Follow signs .
Daily 10 am Iii Dark
Nov. 28 thru Dec. 21

· WORRYING!!!

Q

RESIDENTIAU/11///1//CQMMERCIAL

(No Sunday Calls)

CHRISTMAS TREES
BRADFORo•s

Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo ; Divorced

A

s

. • BOBCAT SERVICES

614-992-7643

.CREDIT

M

• BACKHOE SERVICES

FREE ESTIMATES

1112&lt;&gt;iod.

Call 740·843·54261218.'11

1

c

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room.Additions
Over 20 yesrs experience.
Free Estlmstes

c~~c~~~Ctd 1it5~

..

Room Additions • Roofing

LOnG'S .
· COnSTROCTIOn

c

•New Homes .
.•Garages . •
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare ·
FREE
•
ESTIMATEES

.,_.ulchlng
•Retaining Wall &amp;
Brick Patio Construction

740-141-1701

m

"BERT BISSELl.
CONSTRUUION

· New Homes. • VInyl Siding New

Degree Certified Landscape Speclallat
fromOSU-An
Jeremy L Roush

RUTLAND, OH. ft~&amp;lt~~~~~C~ft
AMERICAN
.~
COIStRUCftOI . ~
·
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~~n..
· LEGION
ft Garages, Pole Buildings. Roofing, Siding !f.'!!
BEECH GROVE
Commercial &amp; Residential
f;t
27 yra. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured
ROAD
Phone 740~992~3987
ft
GUN SHOOT
' '
Free Estimates
~~n..
SUN., 1:00 PM . Alil!!l
Owner: John Dean
li.!!J
· S)ug &amp; Shot
Malches

·Lawn Care

Dave's Garage

::
:
·• ·
••

, 1/27 1 lnO

ROUSH LANDSCAPING .BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CHRISTMAS TREES

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

GUN SHOOT

•

3()4.576•2255 After 5 pm
2310

11117,. 1 mo. pet

110 . Help Wanted

+ With Purchase of ' 29t)!IJI. or

®==...~ Wood Heating

1/IIIJI
*U. P.S.

.

(HRISTMAS TREES

"-11.-Auclllor'l Parcel
120-00351.
Pr8yer of ulcl complaint
Ia that 1M • - delcrlbed
rut aetite be partitioned
acconllng to law, and thel
the Interest of the
· dlfendanta ba aet off to •
. them, that If thet Ia not
leaalble t1tat 1M real 1111111
be eold and thet each
defendenl be paid their .
. there eccordlng to' their
lntereat therein; thet 1'1tul
Eu·nene · Harrla
be
relmburted for the reel
e11111
which Paui
Eugene Herrle h.. peld In
the amount of $1,392.47;
thet the rae! eatete 11xaa
due and peyable •• of. the • .
dlte of the ·final order . ;
herein be paid; that the
coate or thle action " · .
Including plelrtllll'l 1111orney ,
r.ea, be pelclto the Clerk f)!
Courta, all of wltlch thlll ~ .
peld from the proc!Mda or · .
tald nle; that , the :· •
delandonte be required tci · : ·
111 forth any lnterut which : . ;
they m-v hove In 11ld ,.~ ;. :. .
eatete, and eny dtlenee ;
which th-v may hove, or tre. •
forover barred therefrom; ,
thet the plalnllff'l title be.. :
quletacl; and for ouch other .
end further relief 11 may be •
juatand.equltable.
:
The delendenta 111 ••
required to answer the ·
complaint within twenty'
eight daya after the laat
publlcetton of thla nollca,
which .will be publlahta
once IICh weak lor elx
conMcutlve weeki, thelall
publtcellon will be made on
the 7th dey of Jan, 1999,
and the twenty-eight daye
for anawer will commence •
on that dell.
In ceae of the failure of
the dtlendantt to anawer or
othtrwlet rttpond · a·e
required by Ohio Rut.. of
Civil Procedure Judgment
~58.
will be rendered agalnll . ·
PARCEL TWO: .Beginning them for tht .relief ·.
forty-five loll eaat or the demenclad In the complaint.
ebuth1111 corner of 1 lot Larry E. Spencer, Clerk of
d - l t y McBride to John Courta, Melgt County
A. Jenkins and In the IIOUih Common Plnl Court
part of a 100 ecre lot No.
,24,31
291 In Sutton Twp. Melge LJ.::t.;..:.:.:;;.,.-.,...,..,....--County, thenct eMt elong r
Plum Str11t one hundred
(.100) feet to lower eller;
in
thence t-1 8 112• W 100 feat
olong told alley Will one
• ilat Cl•ssifitd Stclion !
hundred (100) fell to an
Intended etrnt, thence s 1
114• E one hugdred (100)
feet to the place of
beginning.
Reference Vol. 42 pg 51

TRAINING ·ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE
Gallia·Melgs Community Action Agency currently
has available training and retraining funds for
unemployed and underemployed eligible resident so
Gallla and "'!eigs Counlies.
If you are currently attending school or planning to
attend in the near future you may qualify for
financial assistance.
You can obtain a Preapplication by calling 740·
446· 1018 ext. 99 or 740·992-2222 e KI. 99. Or you
can meet with GMCAA staH at the following times
and locations.
·
'December 14, 8:30 am- 12 pm, OBES Cenler, Rio
Grande
December 18, 1(}am, GMCAA Gallia Office, 859
Third Avenue, Gallipolis
.
December 16, 1 pm, GMCAA Meigs Office, 33105
Hiland Road, Pomeroy
·
•
December 21,8 :30 am- 12 pm, OBES Center, Rio
Grande
December 28. 8:30 am- 12 pm, ,OBES Center,
Rio Grande
You can pickup a Preappllcatlon at these GMCAA
facilities.
. .
Gaiii&amp;-Melge Community Action Agency
Central Office,. 8010 North State Route 7,
Cheshire, Ohio '45620·0272, 740· 367·7342 740·
992·6629, Fax: 746·3~7-7510
·
Gallla Office. 859 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631, 740-446-1018
.
Meigs Offtt;e, 331 05 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
4576g' 7 40·992·2222
-.gmcea.com
Equal Opport11nlty Employer
22AD1

Vickers

Joe Wilson

.

t,;;~~~C~o-tun~-t~y~d;,·a~e;dd,

J=.:'ii

llarfwstt

.II/IJi

:~~~~~~~E=t~~~~~~E~t:~~~~~~~1~~~~~~E:
1
Public Notice
Notice
· Public Notice
RECORD OF ORDINANCU
ORDINANCE 1151
An Ordlnenee to

"Best Prices of
the Season''

Mil

Wide-open field h.eightens importance, : ·.
surprise for the Golden Globe nods

BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (AP) With a wide-open Oscar race brewing, this year's Golden Globe nomi·
nations took on greater importanceand promised more surprises.
The nominations ror 13 film and
I I television categories were to be
announced today at the Beverly
Hilton Hotel in a pre-dawn ceremony
. featuring Elisabeth Shue, Dennis
Quaid. Christina Applegate and Noah
Wyle. ·
The movie front-runner for Golden Globe nods was Steven Spielberg.'s
World War ll epic "Saving Private
Ryan." which h!IS impressed critics
for its griuy depiction of war and for ·
strong performances by Tom Hanks, ·
TURNS EIGHT • Lian Marissa Tom Size more and Adam Goldberg.
· Hoffman was honored with a
But a number or other films were
dinner to celebrate her 8th birth· in the running for .multiple nomina- .
day on Nov. 22nd ~t the home of tions, including '"Shakespeare in
her parents David and Kathie Love," "The Thin Red Line," "EiizHoffman of Middleport. A "Gold· abeth," "The Truman Show, ·• " Pleas- ·
en Retrlev.er" theme was carried ant ville .. and "Waking Ned Devine."
out.
The Golden Globes, which are
Attending were her sisters decided by the 92 members of the
Marlee and Gracie; Grandpar- . Hollywood Foreign Press Associa..
ents Fred and Pauline Hoffman lion, are traditionally strong predic-.
and Nick a nil Ruth Wright; Mark tors for the Oscars and · provide a
and Markia Wright; Taml, Jon, · major promotional push for a movie
Trevor, and Jordan Buck; Mike
and Vicki Hoffman; Kim Duncan; or an 0 scar hopeful.
Brenton Barnette· and Nikki
This is particularly true this year
~cause w.~th the exceplron of
Roe.
'
.
Sending birthday wishes and-. . J'r!vate Ryan . - any ~umber or
gifts but unable to attend were films could be m the runnmg for an
Todd, Beverly, and Nathan . Academy Award. to be presented
Rothgeb· Mike Cindy, Mike, and March 21.
.
Jimmy ·smith; Randy Wright;
Studio~ waged vigorous lobbying ·
Brenda Wright; Manning Roe; campaigns. lavishing Golden Globe
and David Duncan.
·

Remodeling

'

.'

I'LL Tell your Future,

NOWt tt ·
1-IIOO.oi:Z0.3012
3.99 per min. Must be 18 yrs.
Sen&gt;·U(6 t 9)·645·B434 Ext. 2665

Single? Not lor longll!2-900-737- :
7888 Ext . 7394 $ 2.99 par. min.
must be 18 yrs .Serv - U 629-645·
8434.

, S!art Dati ng :onlghll Have 'lu n
playing the On10 Oallng Game. 1800-AOMANCE. eKlensiOn 9015.

30 Announcements
New To Vou Thrift $hoppe
9 West Stimson . Atnens
740-592-1842
Quality clothing aM ho1.1sehold
Items . $ 1.00 bag ·sale every
Thursday. Monday thr\.1 Saturday
9:1l0-5:30.

40

Giveaway

4 th ree month old sol id black kit·
tens, 7~Q-742 · t347 .

Free puppies, 112 chow 1/2 eskl·
.
mo s~ltz, child lrlendly 304·895- · .::
328
:.:;5:.:;.- - - - - - - • ..

,In Time For Christmas: Mixed : •
Breed Puppies, Will Be Medium • • •
Size, Color: While /Brown , 740· • '

448·06e1 Aner 5 P.M.

Kitten , 4 montns ol.d, gray le- ' •
mate. 304 ·675·7323
.
••

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mlddleoort. Ohio

-

Thursday, December 17, 1998

-

--Tlnnday, December 17,1998

Pomeroy•

Ohio

:u.u:v OOP

____
_
·--

NIA Cro••word Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1

~

lab mil puppies , 7 weeks old,
740 ~ 992-6614

days or 740-7.t21050 """*'!*S.... for Ka....

Sunday

M-F. Students that succusfully
co mplete the TCE class will be

Coma Pupp ies, frlt To Good
~. 740-367•7060.

eligible or emplcrymtnl. Al&gt;lolutoly
NO PHONE CALLS EOE

Lost and Found

Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Mlddlepo~ 1\al RN &amp; LPN
positions available. Please con·
tact A.ngle Halley for, more lnfor·

Lost Chihuahua In the town ol

Slr..l,

Mason $40.00 reward 30 4· 7739564.
'

me1i0f1. 740-992-6472. EOE

Lost chtld't pet, reward, female
cat. long haired graylsl'l tabby/
calico. a montl'ls old, recently
D.l
speyed. Rollin g Acres
Sind Htl Rd ., ~75-7886

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST Full
Time PoSition. Health Insurance
And Retirement Benerns Avail ·
able Apply In Person Or Send
Resume To Bowman• Home·
care, 70 Pine St. Gallipolis, Oh.,
45631 AHn Lewle
'

s

Lost goa t. blackl wl'ltte , Red·
mond Ridge , 3 Mtla &amp; 5 Mile
area. 304-875-7044

The Gallla Coun1y Board ol MR/
oo Is cuoen11y accep11ng appllcations lor lhe lollowlng posillon.

Lo&amp;t · one male . one female , on
lowe r 5 Milt Ad
German
Shepherd s, mostly black wltl'l
brown Rewardl304-675-1043.

Early InterventiOn instructor.

,
12 Month position , 8 hour day, I
4Q hours week Work ing with
children, ages birth to three, with
davelopmental delays or di&amp;ablll·

New floor mats. for a car ,call

lily 304-675-4331

be&amp; In lhe home oettlng.

Yard Sale

Requirements Bachelor' s De·
grea-Special EducaiiOniEariy
Childhood background preferred
Must be willing to met Ohio De·
parlment ol MA/00 Standards
Vlllid drivers license
,
Applications can bi! obtained at
lne GtHia Counly Boanl ol MR/00
located at 8323 North Stale Route
7. Cheshire, Oh 45620
Deadline for apptylng· January 8,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

AU. Yard seta Must
Be Paid In Advance
DEADLINE: 2.00 p.m.
lho day bok&gt;ro 11\t od
11 to run. Sunclly
•J
ediUon .. 2:00p.m .
Friday. Monday edition
- 10:00 o.m. Stturday.

1999
The Gallia County Board of MR/
DO IS an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

130

Insurance

Crap Insurance, Burley -Tomatoes, -Corn, Ken Bass In·
surance, 1-800...291 -6319.

All Yerd S.tes Must Be Paid In
Ad\llnce . D11dllne· 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Is ta run,
Sunday &amp; Mandsy edltlon1:OOpm Friday.

80

314 Aota, 74 Gtrflold Ave. ~­
duoodl $22.000. Toll Fr":1-(1771
7 - 3 ·(7401 oWS-7014

Con••

parson between lOam and 3pm,

Purebred Black l White Border

70

Rocksjlllngs Rehallilll01lon

3e759 Rod&lt;iprlnQO Rood, Pomor·
r1/. Ohio 45769. CIIIS size IS limIted Three relerence papers are
required with appliCation API)Iy In

2 E"Qiish Mastiff; 2 Purebred Labra!Jon With No Paper s, 7-'0·
256;6419, Mornings , Or All Oay

ard -

Houes with Lg Garage, Nearly

win be offering training CIIIMI In
the month of January Appllca·
tlons are now being acC41pttd at

PU91)1es F,.. To GOO&lt;! Hotnt, 11

60

Nurse Aida Training Program·

140

Auction
and Flea Marke~

Buslneas
Training '

GtlllpoHo C.reer Coll09e
Winter Quarter Starts January

4,1999.Call Todayl 74().4484367, 1·800·214-0452. R09 I0005-1274B.

Alck FJ&amp;arson Auction Company,
full Ume auctioneer. complete
nr\IICe
~tcensed
aucti o n
t88.0hlo &amp; West Vl rgm la, 304·

180

773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

Wanted To Do

Furniture repair, refinish and restoration . also custom orders Ohio
\/allay Rellnlsh lng Shop, Larry

Wedemeyer's Auction Ser\llce,

Gallipolis, Ohio 740-379-2720

Phillips, 740-992-6576
90

Wanted to Buy

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mUI just call

Absolute Top Dollar All U S. Sll·
\ler And Gol tl Coins, Prootsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pra- 1930 US. Currency,
Sterling , Etc Acqu isitions Jewelry
- M T.S Coin Shop, ~51 Second
Awnua, GallipOliS, 74CJ.446-284~

304-675-1957
Professional Tree Servlct, Stump
Aemo\lal, F~ea Estimates! In·
surance. 81dweu, 01110 740-388·

9641!, 740-367-7010.
Repairman 20 Yean Experience,
Appliances, Plumbing, Electrical,
Heating, Anything! No Charge To

Antiques , top prices paid, RiverIne Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Auss Moore owner. 740-992·

LOok, 74Q-256-9212.

2526

Someone To Care For An Elderly
Couple In Tntlr Home, Full /Part·
Time. 740-446·3117. 740 -446·
4051 .

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture,
will buy one piece or complete
• household , Osby Martin , 740 -

992-6576
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, , 990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern :.V.nue, Gallipolis

FINANCIAL
210

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts . Buying
· wrecked, or salvaged vehicles.

304·773-5033

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Permanent Part Tim8 Nanny, 4
children. IIQhl hOusekeeping, send
resume to CLA. &lt;460, 825 Third

Ave..

Galllpol~ .

recommends that you do busi·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 until you have Investigated
the o"erlng

Oh 45631

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11

o

Business
Opportunity

230

Professional
Services

Livingston' s B11tm1nt Water·
Proofing, all basement repairs
done. free estimates . lifetime
guarante~ 12yrs on job exper1 ·
ence. 304-815-3117,

Help Wanted

AVON I Ail Areas I Shirley

Speers »&gt;-675-1429

TURNED Oa.YN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IBSI?

Baby si tter needed In home 4
days a week 9·5 Mercar\lllle
, Area Days · 740-256·1252. E\le:
74Q-256· 1618

No Fee Unless We Win!

1-888-58.2-3345

HotrH And Lol For

Sa~.

4 Bed-

rooms , 2 Batha, $1 ,000 Down
w A C. Easy Terms Contact Da·

wt. can 1-800-448-6909

FOr

St~

By OWner, Broad
RunArN.304-882·2647.
Hc)uoo

Houst On State Aoute 7 So uth
Lest Than 10 Minu.. s From
DowniOwn GaJIIpot~. Prtvale 2 112
Acre Lot With Breathtaking River
Vtew AQprox , 2,000 Sq F1. 3 Bedrooms, 2 1f2 Baths, Family Room, '
2 Areplaee&amp; , Hardwood Floors, 2
Car Garage, Loti Of Extrul
$95,000 Ready For Immed iate
Occupancy. 740·448·3248, 740·
446-4514
R8$10red VlctOrtln hOme SII~IBied
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private, appolfll·
ment, call7&lt;40-992-5696.

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Iii::ooii.Oci'Giiii'C::ri~;;;Q,Loi
""'' ""'' """" From Us Betand 12131/98 1·

$411t DOWN
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
FAEE DELIVERY
&amp; SET-UP
ONLVAT
OliKWOOO HOliES
',, NITRO, WV
304-755-51185

fll 1IOI8r 40 lsdf dN

E

:r;a•-:;
a40E I : t -

12170

Llmllad Offor
$500 Down on any t 4X70 in
atoek, limited number, free dell\1·

ory Cell 1-800-691-6777,
$899 Down on any 98 model
Doublewlde Jn stock. Ffee Dell\1·
ary: Call 1-800-691-67n
Abandoned Home Take 0\ler
Payment&amp;. Or Make Offer 1·800·

363-11862.
1978 Bayview new floors, new
carpets, fireplace, All the ap pllanots lo wllh H, $8,500.00 OBO
1979 Fairmont 14Ft)( 60Ft Can
Be Seen At K&amp;K Pt. Pleasant

Coli 740-446-431 0.

1988 14x70 Manorwood, 2 Bed·
rooms, 2 Baths, 7~245-5332
t992 Norris, ~8Ft X 70FT, VInyl
With Shingles, 2 Bdrms., 2 Baths,
All Electric, Appliances, Porches,
C.rporl, 740-256-6336.
199• Commander LTD. please
conlael

Kim, 740-992·2481

1994 Norris Clayton l4X70, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 Decks, CA,

8X10 MOlal Building, 740·258·
6851 .After 8 00 Pm.

Local Company Needs Drt\ler
Loader Wtlh COls PartTime
Send Aesume To PO Box 11 7,

advertisements for real ettate
whlcl'l ts In \llolatlon of the
law Our readers 11/e hereby

Bidwell. OhiO. 45614
Local Trucking Company Seeking
Qualil!ad Truck Driver s Good
Pay And Benellts Send Re sume
To· PO Box 109 Jackson Oh1o
45640 , Or Call 1·740·286 · 1463
To Schedule An Interview.
Needed Eto:perienced Tree Climb·
trt And Bucket Operator In The
MerceNille Area , For .lnforma tlon

Call 740-592-4585
Progrenlve,
growing Bank
seeks self· moti'&lt;lated , lnnovatl\le
manager to O\ltrsee 6 banking
locat/O(ll In Meigs, Galha and
Mason counties. Respon sible for
assisting office managers In sal·
tlnQ and meeting sales and str\1·
Ice goals. de..,eloplng sales and
markttlng strategies , ensuring
profitability of office . as well as
business and staff de\lelopment
MtuJt be a fleJdble team player
wllh excellent communications
skills and a foc us on achle..,lng 1
desired results . 3-!! year$ of
banking experience preferred 1
Competitive salary with excellent
benefit package. Send resume to
Human RISOUtcea Dept OM , PO.

l

lnk&gt;nned,., all -tngs
In thiS ntWIPiptr

~l'llsed

are available on an equal

opportunlly bull

3 br 1 oa new heat pump, new
roof ,wilh corner lot , close to
&amp;chool &amp; stores at 621 4th ST
New Haven WV 304-882-3845

736-Jo109.

-

Double Wide New S999·Down
$237-per mo ,Free dehvery &amp; set·

up. 1-8D0-691-6777.

By owner, 725 Page Street , Middleport, Muse &amp; 3 tots, must &amp;ae
to appreciate, will sell house without lo ts for $89.000, 740·992·

2704, 7&lt;10-992·5696.
By owner· three bedroom, lanced
yard, pool, double lot, In Gallipolis Ferry, call 304-67!!-1105 after

6pm.
Home &amp; lot for sale, 4 bedrooms.

Sox 738, Marltlla , OH 45750 ~ 2 bath s, $1 ,000 down, WAC .
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM- , easy terms, localed near Rutland,
PLOVER
contact David, 1·800 4~8 6909,

b,a1h plus atllc house, you pay

51

uttlltles, available Jan 10th, 740-

O

6777
New 16to:60 $500-Down $245-per
mo Free air. skirt 1·600 -691·

6777.

Goods

City Maylag , 740-4&lt;48Never U&amp;ed Mat2 tnner Spring
$295, Proc-

GOOD

SINGLE PARENT PAOGRAM
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
NEW &amp; USED REPO'S
CREDIT HOTLINE
304-75!5-7191
We Finance land &amp; Home With
As little As $500 Down 1·606 -

928-3426
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths. W1th A!C
S~n

$229/Mo, 1·8D0-383-6862

340

Business and
Buildings

2 Bedroom Unfurni shed Mobile
Home $285/Mo Includes Water,
&amp; Tresh 74Q-446-9569

Uvlng Room Suite, 2 PieCe. Nl'v'8t

~:: dro~ms In Kerr, 740- 446·

New Boll Springs 4 Mattress, Not
Used, tO Year warranty Stlil In
Plastic, $195 00 Proctorville. 740.

2 br mobile home, 1 112 bati'IS,
screened In porch, In tM country
Can Somerville Reality 304·875·

866-6373

Used $275, Call 740·886 -6373

Proct"""lle, OhiO

Used Furniture Store Below Hall·
day Inn, Kanauga, Day Beds,
Bunk Beds . Beds, Computer
Desk, Ente rtainment Center,
Dressers. Couches. Dinettes,

3030
Brand New Mobile Home, 3 Bed·
rooms, Furnished Except Bed·
room Furntture. No Pets , Aeter·
ences Required, 740-446-96UI.

740-446-4762 .
530

Three bedroom, all electric, $375
per month pl us . deposO S:nd
lease. 304-675-3424.

e

BeautUuJ River VIew 198 River
Str&amp;el, Kanagua. Deposit. References , No Pels, 740·441·0181
Folterlraller Park.

6 00 p,m 740-992· 2528, Russ
Moore owner

540

Two (2) Bedroom Mobile Home,
Routt 218, Deposit + References
Required, 740-983-4607

Mlddleporl , no pets, 740·992·
5039.

74Q-446-8306, 1·600·291 oQ098.

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur-

992-2218

qulrod, 74Q-oi&lt;W-2477
1 br. apt. new. pnvale, quiet. with
deck over looktng the Oh10 R!\ler

Cliffside Golf Club membership,

$500, 740·949-2537.
Craftsman to• Table Saw 12"
Band Sew 6" Pla ner 6" Sander.
Router W1th Table 20 Blade S250
Each Or All $1,000. 740 · 446 -

1319
Diamond cluster nng, approK 1!3'
carat. 14K. $300 . te lescope In

line • hape, $150 740-949-2202

464 , Buffalo W\f 25033
30 + Acres , 2 Milas, Rio Grande,
Secluded , Beautiful Homesltes,
Lake Site, Farm Land Thru With
County Water Line Along sid e,

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We B uy Land 30 ·500 Acres.

Wo Pav Cos h t -800·21 3-8365,
Anlhony Lerd Co

RENTALS

Nice 2 bedroom apartment in Po·
merov. all ~tilifl'is paid, no pets.

Do Your la st Minute Christmas
Shopping At Keeler 5 Se r vtce
Center. State Route 87, lots Of
Great G1ft ideas To Choose From
Farm Toys, Tractor Radio's AM
Umbrella's, Raddy Hearers
Homellte Saws And Trtmme rs
Pre ssure Washers , ~ 2 Volt Pow·
er Pac&amp; And Mu ch Moral 304 ·

895·3874
Dog house lor' sale 540 00 304 ·

675-6132
Electric Scooters, wneelcl'la lrs,
New And Used , Stairway Elavator,s, Wheelcha ir And Scooter
lifts , Bowman's Homecare, 740·

446-7283

740-992-5658

FIREWOOD· Cut, Split , Stacked
And Delivered $40 00. 74Q·446·
2847

Now Accepting Applicallons For
All Electric, One Bedroom ~pari ·
nlents, Washer /Dryer Hook-Up,
Water Trasn /Sewage Pa 1d,
$279/Mo, 740-446-9611

Fishe r Price Tovs. li111a l')lke
Toys, Play Pen, Baby Beo, Bas sinet. Htgh Chair, 304·675-4548

Now Taking Applicat ions- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apanments , Include s Water
Sewage, Trash, $295/Mo, 7&lt;40·
44 1·16 16, 740-446· 0957, 740·
446-65 15

For sale· 5 piece breakfast set. In
good co ndition , ca ll 740 · 99 2-

One bedroom apartment for rent
qu ie t ,dep . &amp; ref re quired
$300 00, 304-675-1550

G1 1bb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
PIIOO Or 7~0-446-4525

Pomeroy &amp; Middlepor t· nice two
&amp; three bedrooms , equipped
kitchens, references and deposit

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoc;:k

5624
Furbvs 5 In Boxes . New, $150

Each, Cash Only, 3p4-743-0944

410 Houses lor Rent

required, 740-985-4373 aHer 6pm

2 Bedroom Houae North Park
Drive , $350/Mo , With OtP.OSit &amp;

Tara Townh ouse Apartments, ·
1
Very Spacious 2 Bed rooms, 2
Johnson's Ua&amp;d Furniture; Beds, CA. 1 1/2 Bath, Fully Car·
new and used. mait1isses, Kitch-

Aolerancos, 304-675-2749
2 br. $350 + dep and you pey

Ulll 304-675·2535

1 Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9526.

No Pets.
Prus "
""'' "''' '"Pallo,
Deposll
RequLease
ired, 740·

1100-779-8194

un111 Chnsomas, 740·992·2232.

2699

Solid Oak 12 Gun Cablneo, w/Pistot display, E-.c co ndtiiOn. $250 00
SKS A1le $150 00 (7401 367-7577

590

720 Trucks for Sale

Starting lme-ups, football basketball, baseball, hockey &amp; Nascar the re ts just a lew, Emmett
Sm1th, M Jordan, K Grlflev. K
Earnhar t, J Gordon . W Graztey,
M. Johnson, 0 Rodman. M McGuire We sa\fe you Ume &amp; mon ey, call 740-742-25 1~. 1-"600-837·
8217, Rutland Bott!e Gas, ask for
David

New Manco Go Kart. 9hp B&amp;S .
electric start llgl'lls, wHI sell or
trade , 740-742·2&lt;455 , 7.. 0..742·

Waterline Special

3/4 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100; All Brass ComPf'8S&amp;Ion FittingS In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, OhiO, 1-8IJ0-537·9528
Wooden doll hOuse fully fur·
nlshed 304-882·2436

550

Building
Supplies

Block , brlc,~, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·

5121

560

ff:j~~~~j·~or1n~e~11e~s~elcl. ~w~·:·h~
1740)·

For Sale
or lirade

2580

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIV ESTOCK

Pets lor Sale

446-0080

5087
4 mon old black female cocker
spanie l full blooded no papers

24,00000.

256 rakes 1n erste 3,050 oo
"51 r mowers 3,250.00

472 7"1\ayblnc 8,395.00
634 A bater&gt; 650 110,500 00
644 R. llaters 10001strlngtle
auto wrap, wide pickup 13,900.00

740-696-1085.
AKC Golden Retrte\lers 7 Weeks
Old, 1s1 Shot s &amp; Wormed, $225,
Will Hol d For Christm as With A
Deposit, 140-256-1686
AKC Pomerania n pupptes, black,
also cream/sable, vet checked,

pedigree, 74Q-696-1085
AKC Registered Chinese Sharper
pups , excellent blood li ne, $300 ,

740-949·2126
AKC
reg istered
mint
Dachshunds, mini Shalttes, and
Maltese puppies. 304-675·5460.
AKC Regtstered Shih-tzu pup s
$250 each, CFA Registered Himalayan kitten s, $150 each , lu ll
blooded Stamese ktll ens $100
each, AKC Pek1ngese pu p, $250
all shO ts and wo rmed, 740·6673090
AKC Regtstered , Shih-tzu pups .
$250 eacn, CFA Registered Himalayan ~itten s. S150 each, l ull
bl oo ded Siamese kill ens St 00
each, AKC Reg istered Peklnge5e
pup, $250, all shots and wormed.
740-667·3090
AKC Roll Wetler Pupp!es, Champtonshlp Bloodline. Paren ts Gre at
W1th Children, Read y For Wee kend Of January 9th , $350, Deposit Will Hold One Christmas.
74Q-245·5823 Mer 5 PM
AKC Shel t1a pupp ies. sable &amp;
whtte . also Blue Merl~s champion b loodlines . vet checked,
5350. 740-696·1085
AKC Sheltie pups (miniature collies). two male s, 4 months old,
$200 each, tort019 e she ll Persian,
lull blooded , no papers, $100, ca n
be CFA reg istered , will cnarge

15,900 00
565 square baler wagon ·hllch

9,70000
Keafers SeiVICe Center

ST AT. 87 PT. Plea6~nl &amp; Rlp~y AD 304·895-3874
We Have From 25 To 30 Usad
Tractors In St oc ~ . Financing As
Low As 6 ,5% Ftxed Rate On
Qualllvmg Tractors With John
Dee re Credit Approval Carmichaels Farm &amp; lawn, Midway
Between Ga llipolis And Rio
Gra nde On Jac ~so n Pike 74,0446-2412 Or 1-600·594-1I 11

630

Livestock

~ 0 Year Old

Geld ing Horse,

Children Broke, 7.C0-446-~ 179.
2 Pony Colts a Months. L1¥ er
Chestnul With Bald Face &amp; Blue
Eyes, Black Bay Pinto With EK ·
tellent Markings, 740.388-0321.
Chrlstmu Pony Small Black

Baauoy, 10 Veer Old Gelding, Well
Bloke, 1600. OBO 740.379-2701
Registered Angus Bulls, 740·245·

1984 Dodge Ram 150, Full Size; '
6 Cylinder, 4 Speed, Runs,
Looks Good, S 1.800. 304·675~

Hay

&amp; Grain

Hay for sa le- one mile north on
AI 2, Square Bales, $1 00$2 00 ' 304-675·4869
Hay for sa le - llrst &amp; second cut·
ling . squa re bales, call 740-992·

5533

TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos lor Sale

'9t Gao Metro, red, low ml!&amp;s,
passenger window broken, damaged hood, ask1r1g $2CJO; '9G Ea gle Talon . fully loaded, red with
gra~ Inte rior. books $5000, Will sell
lor $4000, 740-742·3197.
1950 Pontiac Silver Streak, 4
Door Coupe, Runs Good. Needs
Restored $2,000 OBO. 304·895·

5tt..~GTION.

dr.

1987 Ford Ranger Extended Cab,
4x4 6-cyUnder, 5sp., 71n' lift kl~ .
aluminum wheels, sun-\ll&amp;or, tinted windows, roll-bar. Eel.

Fox temers- 3 males, 1 female ,
S too: Bo ston bull babies , 3
males , 2 females, ca n be registered, $150 wl1hout papers, $300
with papers All aDOve puppies
1atl docked, dew claws removed ,
will hold 1111 Chnstmas with depos-

11, Rr~e negobal&gt;lo, 740-992·4581

304-875-2722,
1991 Che\ly Lumina Euro, \lery
. good condition, IVC. PW. loaded,

asking $5100, 304-675-373e.

~ LI~Tit-1&amp; F~ "-~CAW~

'ffiE.P!'.ONE.
Nllfo\eU.I!l

35 mualc:
Fwil'll

7 -Bnlnlt.onns
I'C1tel-

~=-

311 SOul (Fr.l

-

Nortla

East

I •

Pass
All pass

3NT

K

Don't show him
which way to go

304-675-373e.

_JU_,.'_z:'_~~-'

555-3207!

1995 Plymouth Grand Vovage[
wltl'l Rally package, runv toaded ~
56,000 mlles, asking $12 ,000:

1996 Chevy Silverado 4X4 Z 7 (
EKtended Cab, 3RO Door, 95G
Vortec Engine, Autom ., Loaded:
Bedllner, Toneau Cover. 39,000
Ml~s

7&lt;10-256-6160.

Vampire Tires. $3.995 00 (.740J
245·58.24

IO.o•ioT ADOIUNiio FAI'i!&gt;. ..

'97 XR 100 Hontla dirt bike. ex- ·
cellent condtUon, 11200. 304 - ,

X t&gt;ON'T

.

~&gt;!tAW

f11001 t'IOI&gt;EL'&gt;.

•

1985 Polaris· Trail Boss 4 Wheel - ·

To get a current weather
~eport, check the

er 250 $1.500.00 Call (3041 675- ·
5612 AFTER 5 00

&lt;

1988 Kids Honda Z-50 Dlrtblke ,:
Good Condition , $400 080, 740· •

Sentinel

379-2695
94 Honda dirt bike, pro action .
suspension $2,000. OBO 304· .

675-2984
750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1

1M WRITING TO SANTA
Ct.AUS .•WHICH SI-IOVLD I ASK
FOR,A BICVC!.E OR A DOG'?

Summers not over l Kawasak i
STS Jet sk1 1 still under warranty,
l fhrea seater, 83 horsepower,
1bought new July of '97 , three ·
matching Kawasaki ski 'vests and
trailer all go with It Priced to sell,

-

.

I Tf.llt-IK MA'&lt;BE

--

A DOG ..

A DOG ..

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ITHURSDAY

3933 or 1·800-273-9329
Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

· 1982 Terry Tarus 28 Air Awning
2 Doors, Full Bed 1699 Bob McCormick Road, Gallipolis. Ohio
740-446·1511 .
1983 Motor Home, GOOd Condl·
lion. 2 gasl tanks, air &amp; Furnace

740-367-7070 or 74Q-387-1093

SERVICES
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ASTRO·GRAPH
Fnday, Dec. 18,1998 ,
,. =

C&amp;C General Home Main ·
te nence- Palnllng . vinyl sidin g
carpentry doors, windows, baths,
mol;lile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chat, 7•0·992·

6323.

Professional 20yrs e•pe rie nce
with all masonery, brick, bloc~ &amp;
stone Also room additions , garages . etc. Free estimates. 304·

773-9550

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residen tial or commercial wiri ng, ·
~ew serv1ce or rep airs Master ll·
censed electrician Rideno ur
Electrical, WV000306, 304 -575·

1786

In the year ahead, you will find many
ways to prottt trom what you'W teamed,
especially lrom knowledge you 've
acquired 1ho hard way over tho past
Handlom8 dividendO could be In the onlog.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) This
could tum Into a fun, soctal day tor you.
Share It w11h old trlendo and acqualn·
tances. Don't tum down any lnvhatlona
that come your way. Sagltta~ue , 1rali
yourself to 8 birthday gilt. Sa od iha
required "1iund toon and for your As1r0Graph poedlclionS lof the year ahead by
mailing S2 and aeii-addraued stamped
envErlope to Aa1r0-G,.ph, c/o thil newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
StatiOn, New York, NY 10158. Be aure to
stale your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..JM, 11) Every·
body ~ protective of their aall-interelll.
Including you. But what makee you a
standqUI today Ia 111a1 you'M be ihe ftrot 10
, recogniZe the olhef person'a IIHdl. and

help him or her achle .. lhem.

someone.

AQUARIU8 (Jan. 20·Fab. 11) CANCER (~una 21,.July 22) Because
Leadership could be· your slron~ sull you believe In your talents and what
today. Subuy direct olherl' ~ BWWf you're doing, the possibility ol tullllllng
lrom petty peer polltiC8 to thlnlllng more -yoUr ambitious objec1lves-look extremely
encouraging today. SUCC898 comeatrom
In line with ihe eplr1t ol ihe
being
bold.
PISCES (Feb. 20·11ercil 20) The
LEO
(July
23-Aug. 221 A1 a social ga1h·
chances tor personal gain lookS good
ering
or
function,
you oould meet some-. ·
today. Because you'N be materiaHy moll·
vated, you could reap benellls fro m one who Is very cha~smailc loday. You
and lhls Individual may 1t1t H on In a big
a1mos1 oveoythlng you put together at this
way.
Ume.
ARIES (ll8rcil 21·Aprll 11) You won'i
have any compllcalion8 due iD l~lslve­ e . - day "" you to llniah up projecla
neu or lletlng against your
Judg- you've had on the drawing boanf. Focus
menl as you aomellmu do. Assessing your efforts and energies on things that
aituallonl ntelllliCIIIy will be your &amp;110&lt;111 ... within close range ,
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The standards
ault1oday.
,
and
coda of cooduct by which you abide
TAURUS(Aprll 20-llay 201 Strong 11811·
assurance will make you reasonably
will serve you well today. Your actions
lhrewd In your busiMR dealings loday. could make you the moet popular mem- .•
ft'l be lh!a poalllve lhlnldng that will giVe bar In lite CIIOWII.
;,
you ihe adg8 over your compeiltion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Because
OEIIINI (llay 21-Juna 201 Persona you have honored your coomlitmenls wen iJ
you've made COI'Iiillitmerlla to In the peal
wll! dlacovar ioday that you take your
you . This could be ihe day when large
poomla89 very ll8rl0ully. You alwayt foi.
ret1,1ms from • Job wei done may come '
low througil on one_lila! (a·~m.!~Cl_rlant_ 10 yourway.
J

....on. .

-r

I

•

•

_

-

_

...

•

I

I,.:D~OT-1...:T,r......l• ~~~P~:~ -,~,

I

I-......
. N;.;_;;
· E[;,..':;E
_

•

;r

•

_

•

by

flllmg In

'-~-..l..-.l..;...I-.L..-1 you develop from

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

. ·'

..' '
,,

chvckle qvoltd
the mtlllng words
step No. 3 below

1111111'11

Pseudo - Quail- No1sy- Jostle - QUESTIONS

New gas tanks &amp; body parts D &amp;
R Auto , Fllptey, WV 304 ·372·'"

810

_

My aunt can't keep her. own
affa1rs 1n order, but she knows
how to solve lhe problems of

SCRAM Lm ANSWERS

2045, will consider trade Jor a
good pontoon boat

790

. l5~1M. . .~.UI_,H. lr_o. Jr,- l ~.~
e

'(OU CAN'T FALL

$4200, 740-949-2203 or 740-949-

760 ·

.

I, t I I .I

110DeLS
.•. YOU GET TO

Motorcycles

675·3738

.
.

rI I I I

·

1998 Big Bear 4K4 + Winch., '

7 40

-·

~c!l~\-9~s· ••••
:: "

0

'

$6.500, 74Q-388-9916

199 1 Cadillac Se\llile • door ae dan , loaded with acceasori11,
great gas mileage, car phone ,

YE~. ~ E:l./1\
!&gt;T~\...

1993 Chovy 4 WO Z500 $11 ,000
740-379-2451.
'

949-2709

Cond .. 65 ,838 Miles, $5,800 00.
740 -446-()669.

=== . ..·
s a•

,..

r-

rf\(.LL(), I~ICJt.l7 P0"1W AA'A::""'

$3,800 00 (7401.446-2124

AKC . Yo r kte

740-256-6449

THE BORN LOSEJl

$1,800, 740-2511-6430

Appliance Parts And Service AH
Name Br ands 0\ler 25 Years Experience All Work Guaran tee d'
Fr ench City Maytag , 7 40·4 46: ·
7795.

Border Co111e Pups, Full Blooded ,
First Shots &amp; Wormed. $75 Each,

••

4Aon-102

~

Wheel Drl\le, Aluminum Wheels.,

1987 V·8 Old&amp; Cutlass Supreme,
142K, runs good. $1,500 . 198a VB Olds Custom Cru1ser SW,
1 12K, runs good. $2,000 740·

199t BuJCk Skylark V-6 Custom 4
Or Sedan , One Owner, Eto:cell

d

27"'---Z
30 EgoJt

..

1978 Ford F-250 400 Aulo, 4

AKC Sl Bernard pups ready 12/
t 4, depOSit Wi ll hOld until ~2124 .
$350/ea , 740·696·6176 or 740698-3001

1990 New Vork Filth Avenue, Et~: ·
oallent Cond!t1on, l ow Mileage,

.

~

ers Waterprooling.

$3,200 304-675·5792 aHer 5pm

·I
...

S200, 740·992-5073

Now Open Sundays 1-4 Mon Sat
11·6 Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop ,
241 3 Jackson Ave Pomt Pleasant, 304·675·2063

FO~ ·

Vans &amp; 4·WDs

730

labllsl\ad 1975 CaU 24 Hrs (7401
446·0870, H00-287-0576 Rog-

1988 Bonnevtlle LE, maroo n, 4dr,
new ltres &amp; brakes, good cond

""-..

er. Phone (7401 256-1638

1987 Old&amp; Cutlasa, overhauled
engine, new radiator, ru ns good,
good family car, asking $800, 740985-3610.

$300 ,lemale $350 00 304-895·
3926

VIM•••It
•"--

We have been looking at covering 'b..-1-+--11-,' an honor with an honor - pr, lo be
· more accurate, when not to cover an
honor with an honor.
How woul'd you plan lhe play in
three no-trump after a spade lead?
! Remember toat you cannot see t~e
I defenders' hands.
Perhaps you are thinking t~tt to
CELEBRITY CIPHER
. make five of a minor would r~quire
' one of two ftnesses: approximately a
by Lui• C.mpoa
• •
c...tlyapNrc=•••.,.crMiedlfOmq~ee1 1 •DJIIrnoul....,,s-f.,.....--.t
· 75 percent chance. And to make six of
Each
inthtclpNr.._.tor....,._. T.,...ct.M:N~M
• a minor would need two finesses :
•• .:1
about a 25 percent shot. Three notrump is more sweaty. Yet how can • p. c c
R. G G F A L IPLEPLE J I
Nortb sensobly investigate five of a minor, given that a three-&lt;liamond rebid J I
p
ZA
ZIIO
1ZJEEOD
SJL
is nonforcing? I've no idea, so I agree
''"
• with the three-no-trump rebid.
JLY
PX p S J L 'Z
NPSDAFIIALO,
'...
· South bas three major-suit winners.
'
'
So, he gets to nine with eilher five ella· IZJLY,
p . c c
IPLIL'
I P Z
JLY
• • .r
mood or five club tricks. But if he
... takes a losing finesse, surely the deI
SC A A L 0 V
•' •. ""...
1\c.TON.L'f, 1-l~T [ W~Cli.U~
. fenders will cash too many spade D A I G N ~ D V
," PREV.IOUS SOLUTION: 'Kerouac opened a million coffee bars and sold a • :::
tricks. Whieh finesse to take?
~\oo.l~ f\.~Ji:.t:MN.L I\~~~ I
• million palre of Levit to both aexu.· - William Bunoughs
The technical play is to cash the dia,
-' ··--......,,
mond ace - the suit with the greater
number of cards - then, if the king
WOII
'
doesn't drop, to finesse in clubs Here,
...:CO_@.;:
as you can see, this worts.
However, South went with an alternative approach, playing the defender,
:'::':m~~~--~·
-/~~-*"-"'!
,,
not the textbook. After winning trick
low to form four Jlmpht words.
.'
j two with dummy's spade ace, he
.
·'
called for the club queen. When East
R0 BER0
played low, apparently without a care
' '•
in the world, South won with the ace
and took the diamond tineue. Now he
_....
went two down.
.
C L I G0
• How did East know what to do?
,From the point count. If West had the
.•r.ade honors, South had to have the
1C ub ace. So, East could anticipate the
8flual position. Well defended!

POTATO, TviO POTATO....

NOSTAL.GIG

Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local rererences lurnlshed Es.

male

23

DOWN
.
.
.__
1
2 Lftlotl
3 P8i6d'n

Lo.-l-c-+,...-+--+-+--

~ N~V~ T~OIJG~T

$2,000 Fwm, 740-44Hl482.

3971

pupp tes

20 e,;t_
PltMI't

By Phillip Alder

(JN~

1990 Ford Ranger With Topper
New Tires, EKcellent Shape,

5064 Call AHer 5 P.M

640

00

~

Opening lead: ~

LONe II

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

parts.740-742-828a

S-10 Pick-Up Caps Small camp- ·

5030 same specs, 303 hrs
22,500 00 •830 55 pto hp, 2wd.
same specs, 57 nrs $17,900 oo
4630, 4wd, 16x4 dual power tran,

1 WAS OFF
PL.AYIN' CARDS
ALL Nt8HT ~~~

ME?

ll

1982 F100. $1100, many new

grader blade $2,500 00 304·576·
3033

24,00000.

t'.i.~

r.':"':.

manv new pans. $500, 740·949·

$45,000 304-675-3954 ovenlngo : •

654 A. baler 1500N same specs.

AKC Collie pupp ies, sable &amp;
white, eyes certifie d, $200-$350,

MY SISTER Z:ONIE SAID
SHE REALLY ENJOYED
HER VISIT
I..AST NIGHT
THANKS
' TOYOV

87 Plymouth Gran Furv. 318,

9 In Ford tractor, brush hog &amp;

Bx8 shuttle trans . 129 hrs.

We11l

!NT

con-:

610 Farm Equipment ·

62 PTO HP. 4 wd, 2 pump hyd,

Souib

HARNEY

truck,2' 8, Y·8 , 5 sp, ale , 7&amp;,ooo '·
mlles,new t1res. very good cond .

Ford new Holland December specials , mode l 5030 renta l tractor

~~

~

Dealer: North

_,

86 Camero Z·28, 350 V-8 , auto,'

93 Chevy S-10, 2, wh

New 5010 6010, 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7.75% FiKed
Rate John Deere Credit Financing
Available New 4000 Sarles Compacts In Stock New Jol'ln Deere
McC os And Round Balers 0% •
12 Mo s, 1 75% ·24 Mos . 3 5'Yo36 Mos , 4 5% -48 Mos • 5 5% -60
Mos. Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn ,
M1dway Between Gallipolis And
Rio Grande On Jackson Pike

=

11 ~ ....

:~::,.

'

2074

740-446·24 12 Or I -600-594·
1111

A Gro om Shop -Pet Grooming .
Featuring Hyd ro Ba th. Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd
740·446-0231

949-2217

New Ha\len 2 Bedro oms, Furnished Or Unfurnished, Oepostt &amp;
References, 304-882-2566.

St Bernard pupplel, purebred .
$150, w11t be 7 weeks old Cl'lrlstmas, pick ot the utterSSO will hold

51tiii•S J

Vulnerable: Both

1996 Plymouth Neon Sport Low :
Miles (21 ,0001 Rooall $8.200 WilL
Sell For $7 ,500 304-675-2728. 304-576-4559

dHion, $3,100, 740-376-6396

43

s

1994 Shadow E.S. 2 ·Door, V-6..
A~ $2,9!50.00 (7401 258-1738, •
(740)2!6-1373
.

ps, pb, tilt &amp; crulaa, exceHent

J(

• 10 9
aAJI06 5

Chevy caprtce. ...,. groaU

Sltellltt Syttemt- 18" DlrectTV
di sh . total purchase price S99
Ask about free programmmg, 1-

1998 Mcd onalds 12 beanie ba·

Church pews tor sale, 12 twelve
foot, 4 ten foot, $200 each, 740·

1127

•

Sou ill
• 7 4
• K 7 6

S900.00 1967 Vol&lt;awagon Fox.
Runo GOO&lt;! $1.!500.00 Cal: (7401 •
882·1324

Automatic 22 Caliber Rifle, EK·
cell Condition! $55 00 740-4461127

992·306Q

(740)44 1-1 982

z

1993 Grand AM. GT Loedl1968

Restaurant plzu oven, Hobart ,
electriC, $650, 740· 992 ·4087 ask
tor Wayne or 740-992·451 4 ask
for Chnsty.

8193

Natural, Or Recommended.

Furnlsl'lecl 4 Rooms &amp; Bath , Completely Rede co rated , Clean, New
Carpet, No Pets Or SmoKing , Ref·
erence &amp; Deposit. Req uired, Also,
Furnished 2 Rooms, &amp; Ba11'1 , Up·
stalra, 740-446-1519

Pups, 3/Monlhe, Bloodline Of
Gaurd Dog&amp;; $25.00 740·446·

1998 Kirby sweeper. used very
little, some equipment has never
been used , will sell cheap, 740-

THIRTY DAY MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE!

Fo r Lease. Unfurn is hed One
Bedroom Apartment s Co rner of
Second And Pme $250 00 Per
Month Plus Uttllties Security And
Key Deposit Refe re nce s Re·
qulflid 740-446·4425

monlh 1rae, 1rae holiday giH )u&amp;1 tor
caJNng, 800-263·2840,

8 Months Old Bassen Hound,
Very Gentle Disposition, Male Trl
Colored Hat Papers 740·388·

LOSE up-to-30 lbs,

Country Side Apartment · Large 2
Bedrooms , 2 Baths, WID Hook·
Up, CIA, $435/Mo . Including Water , Sewage, Garbage, Call TollFree 888-840-852~

Solid Black German Shepherd

$40 00 304-675-1070

BOTTLED WILL POWERI

Apartments
MlddieporVPomer"i
Call740·992-4514
Monday-Saturday 9-9
Has opemngs, apartments aw1l·
able now, Hud accepted
Ask lor Chnsty

Prlmettlr $49 Installation. One

4617

742-2511 , 1-600 -837-8217, Au-

IR.;ji;;;;;i';;;;i;Shih.U;;:;;
mole Snlh-ttu pup; 1eShettle, female Siamese kit·
len, can 740-992·2607

2 \lery Qentle Ponys {740} 245·

Uand Bottle Gas, ask for 08\lld

. Reg is tered English Setter Pups.
Excellent Hunting Bloodlines. 2
Female&amp;, 3 Males 13 Weeks old
$300 00 &amp; Up 7&lt;10-256-1671.

9616

675-7298

Beame Baby 's, $1 0 &amp; up, 740·

fro m $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740-446 -2568
EQual Hous1ng Opportunity.

Satea &amp; Servtce Work , 74G-..46-

condlllo n. 5200 00 (7401 446 2340

4 Piece Badroom Sutte $225
Good Condition 304 · 675-~865
After 5.00

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 W8S1WO Od OliVO

dredt 01 Dollars On Thosel Also,

2 Cockatiel's &amp; Cage, Breeding
8011, Also , 1 Small Cage, 304 -

304·682-2438.

(7401 446·3945

PratiCauv New Heating Sto\le,
65,000 BTU 's. Wood Or Coal,
Se'&lt;leral late Model Vaccum
Cleaners For Sale, Kirby's, Ratn•
bow's, Hoover's, Etc Save Hun·

1O~t-7 1t Clopay Metal Garage Door,
Hardware, Torsion Sprmg Bar
Su&amp;pension, 5 windows, excellent

Sears treadmill, etec . ,hke new
$300 Longaberger - call lor list

3 Rooms and bath. furnished effl·
clancy: all utility paid! Down stairs
9t9 Second Ave $275 Month

• 8

Aulo. Aoktng $3,500.00 (740) ·
256-173&amp;{7401 256-1373
•

1 Year Old Male Registered, English Setter, All Rea dy Tra ined;
Also , 10 Week Ol d AKC Regis·
tared Male Slack Lab, A.n Shots-,
Wil l Hold Till Christmas I 740·

bVS 1\Miopenad $125.00

.

'

1992 LeBaron Con\lertlble V· S

, Paid Jensen Concert Series
Home Stereo Speakers. 15·
Bass , Hi's And Midrange 220
Wan Handling Capacity New Still
In BoK $300; Kltcl'len Cabinets ,
Countertop, 30&lt;4-675-6574

1940's Waterfall Bedroom Group,
Full Size Bed , Chest Vanity &amp;
Stool , Call Aller 6' 00 304-675·

Downtown . Ftr st Floor Office
Space, Second A\lenue Proles stonal Or Retail 740·446-0 t39 Or

350 Lots &amp; Acreage·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

"WAAMUpt•
Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air COnditioning . Free Eslimatesllf YoU
Don 't Call Ua, We Both Lose!

Two bedroom mobile home In

Gracious liVIng i and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llage Manor and
Riverside Apartments IM Mtddleport From $249-$373 Call 740992·5064 Equal Housing Opportunities

-

Antiques

Buy or sell R iverine Antlgues ,
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt: 124,
Pomeroy. Hours . M TW. tO:OO
a.m. to 00 p.m . Sunday 1:00 to

Commerclai -OIIIce or Retail, 87
Mlll St Middleport 1,450 Sq Ft
$&lt;400 mo Corner Bulldtng 7.40 992-625 0 ACQUI Sillons (neto:t

-·1

USED APPLIANCES

Wa sh ers , dryers, re frigera tors ,
ra nges Skaggs Appliance !I , 76
Vine Street, Call 7•0-446 -7398,
1-B88-616-&lt;l 128

Chrloty'o Family Living

New 1999 1&lt;4x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes wasP'Ier &amp; dr,oer, s~lrt l ng,
deluto:e steps and setup Only
$200 74 per montn w1th $1 150
down Call 1·BOQ-837·3238.

pusehold

14x70 two bedroom trailer, total
electric, $250 mo nth, $150 de·
posit. no pets, 740-742·2714

3711 EOH

New 14K70 $500-Down $~99 - per
mo. Free a1r, skirt. 1-800 -6 9 1-

H

Oryero, Rongos, Relrt90 Day Gueranleet

2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
pllances furnished , laundry room
lacllltles, close to school 1n town
Applicati ons avatlable at VIllage
Green Apls t49 or cell 740·992 -

385-9621

Rent

l.~:~~:j~~iii;~

992·3790.
420 Mobile Homes
. for Rent

2 br. lurn. OJ unfurn apt dep &amp;
ref. required j().J-882·2586

Good selection of used homes
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740-

for

MERC HANDI SE

304·675-6876
DOWN PAVIIENT BLUES?
OAKWOOD HOliES
, NITRO,WV
WILL MATCH YOUA
DOWN PAYMENT
CALL FOR DETAILS
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304-76!5-51185
Llmllad Offer

218-495-2360
6yr, 2·3 bedrooms, loft, Jonguef
groove, pe ll et stove, HP/C A, ap·
pllances. garage, spa. acre, BulaVIIIe Pike, 740.367.0286.

Space

SA.2oo; ·

1992 Honda Accord, LX. 2 DoOr
Coupe. 5 Sp~ed , A/C , Cruise.,
$5.000 080, 740-3BIHIB78
·

740-:!M-43e7.

Taking applications for 3 room &amp;

1 Bedroom, Including Utilities.
$350/Mo., 2 BeCrooms, Including
Ulllltlea, $450/Mo , Deposit Re·

8, automatk:,a/c,plw,plb

Mobile home site available bel·
ween Athans and Pomeroy, call

Nice two bedroom house In Pomeroy, S350 per month plus deposit, no pets. will consider land
contract aner one year, 74G-8987244.

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
wv, $500 Down Low Aatea. 30&lt;4·

220 acres 5 miles lrom Toyota.
Vttry prl\late $3.50 000 , PO BOK

310 Homes for Sale

460

meroy, oo pels. 74Q-992-56M.

440

---

•AQJss•
• Q0 7
Woot
East
aKQJ 96
8108 52
•Qto53
• J 08 4
• K 6
• 7:

1991 Mercuoy Cougar us 302 yo :

740-441·5698, 740-441 -5167.

Ntce 2 or 3 bedroom house In Po-

nlsl'led and unlurnlshed, security
deposit re~ulred, no pe,&amp;, 740·

740-446-4383

REAL ESTATE

tnt Inside, tull baument ,fenced
yard 304-675-6676.

1996 Clayton 18K80 3 Bedroom&amp;,
SKirting, Central Air, Nice, 304875-8165

ThiS newspaper will no1

knowingly accep1

5 room house. freshty palnlad on

~

·EEK&amp;MEEK

1991 Ford Taurus Statton Wag:
on, Wl'lltt, Loaded , Third Seatl ·
good a&gt;ndilion (7401 367-(1500
.

Cfrcle Motel Loweat Rates In
Town. Ne.,wly Aemodtlad, HB0 1
Clnemax, Showllme &amp; Disney.
Weekty Aates, Or Monthty Aates,
Constructi on Worker&amp; Welcome

qulrtd 304-67!5-8808.

r-:----..,N"'ortlo_,,_..--•..,~--·7"..
':=-,

Smokod ln. $4.500 740-3869916

Furnished"
Rooms

304-675-~ .
3 br. hOuse llv, din, kit, located
on Lincoln A\18. comer lot, ref. ra·

New

Tk'tl, t Owner, Never Seen

non~l-

450

:: .

1991 Chryaltr New Yorker 5th

~ ~~~~~~~~!;___

3 tledroorn house tor rent on
Sandhill Rd , $400 plus dtposll,

992-2 167.

6862.

Easy Work' Excelle nt Pay I As ·
semble Pro ducts At Home. Call
Toll Free ~-80 0 - 4 67· 5566 Eto: t

F

2 or 3 bedroom hOuse tn Pomer·
oy, "'Pill. 740-992-5858.

40Prncr 0 1 J

• • - tsC'!:

c

A-.E-tenl Cond-.

41

toai
12n· ljudga
' 14Utw

Autos for Sale

710

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
oppl&lt;all~na tor 1bt HUD tul&gt;ald-

conditioned. S260·S300. sewer.
water and trash Included. 740·

992-7363

Computer UserS Needed . Work
Own Hrs $20K ·575 K fYr 1-800·
348·71 86 Ext ~ 173 www am p
Inc com

1)1 .... 304-675-3218.

Apal biMh1tS
for Rent

r.r:

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobfle homes a1r

3 Be(lrooms , 2 Baths, 800-383-

this newspaper 15 subtectto
1~ Federal Fat!' Housing Acl
of 1968 whiCtt makes It Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
limitation or dlscriminaUon
based on race, color retlgkln,
se11 familial status or national
Dfigln, or any Intention to
make any sucl'l preference,
Mmltatlon or di!CflmlnatiOn •

2 bt. """"· In lhO Gtllipoltt

2 &amp; 3 Bedrm , Stove, Aafng .. Wa·
tar. Tra&amp;h Paid Very Nice No
Pets Deposit 740-38&amp;-8:171

PAIVATE SETTING

All real estate advenlslng In •

440

Rent

Lot

6 Months When

Co·Oriver Needed· for ElectronIc&amp; &amp; high prlor1ty, clean ltcanse,
will l'lelp to certify, wages negoh·
able, start by 1st ol year 740Computer Tecnnotogv Spectallst.
send resume lo George Mtller
Mason County Schools
307 8th ST ,PT Plea sant WV
25550 . by noon on 1-4-99 lor m·
formatiOn call 304·675-4540 e•t
28.

Hou- for

.,.,

_,_,

--Y..42a.o..

1~ t:] ';:r..
410

-·

The

.. .....
- --.
'

.

..

'

.

..

'

,.

":Jusl when I think I have all the answers," my teenage son complained, • I find a whole new set of QUES-

., ' ,....,

TIONS I"

'

--- - -·

...· '·'(,

�Page

12 • The Daily Sentinel

"

Thu~.~bert7,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Friday

Weather

2nd A••••

~hefle5

oeals

Meigs girls beat Eastern, Page 5
Understanding stroke victims, Page 7
Iraq bombing protests. Page 6

Today: P.Cioudy
High: 50s; Low:30s
Tomorrow: Rain
High: 50s; Low:40s

Year-End·Sales

everf

ports

December 18, 1998

Marshall
pounds
Redmen 85-62
-Page4

The Gallipolis Big 3 will offer: The widest selection of

New and Used
vehicles!

House begins historic impeachment debate

GAlli!

·-t.i\S NORTH.~

ill£WII' 998 Chevy Malibu LS

Fully Equipped- "Demo"
loiSRP .......................................$191405
S.le .........................,•., ..............$18,0116
LA.. Rebllte ........................... ·1250.00
BUY NOW •.•,.............:.......... $17,846

446-0842.
1998Tacoma
4x4
Club Cab,·V6, 5 ep, atr.
Pwr 8,000 mlln
119,888

19941suzu
Rodeo4x4

1995Tacoma
4x4

5 opel,mltn.llr
- · 86,000
'12,800

'12,400

It'·-

1992 Grand
Caravan LE

1979GMC
vs, moiOr home,

1998 Chevy Sportslde
Ex1 Ceb, 3 Dr pickup, fully loaded
w/MWk II package
MSAP .............................- ....... $31 ,512
Dlscount.........................~ .......... $4373
.... ·GM' Rebete ............................. •1000.00

-. 40,A)OO-.

1993 Dakota 1996 Cherokee
1991 G-20
~ cy1, country, 4lc4,
Club Cab
g...,, 43,000 mllea, Conversion
VB, 318,auto, 2 WD, all
Vl,outo,,...,runa~
all pwr
pwr, 52 K miles,
WAS$59115
'3,995
1
Just 16,895
was $11,995 '10,495

"Next door to Wai-Mart"

1998 Chevy Camaro
2 dr., "Demo". Loaded. Slack 11473
MSRP ..................~ ................... $21,646
Dlacounta .............................. ·2,8114.00
.
18,752.00
GM Rebe1e .....................1........1,500:00
Buy Now ............................$17 ,252

1995 Mercury
Villager GS
V6, rear air, Green,

1 owner, 20,000 ml,

40,000 mt; Perfect van

Nb fruek

like new '20,500

'12,500

'13,800

Laredo's, as low as
7,000 miles, factory
warranty, all power, 4x4,
extra clean.

.

'

Starting at

4 Dr, auto, clean car,
V6, red, all power

48,000

;11,200

nice

tocet owner car
112,800

;=
•-c::
•n

i

•

'998 Old.s Aurora
BUYNOWFOR

~

oC

Ill

1997 Chevy Malibu
. 4 Door, Sedan, low mile•, fully

equipped. WAS $12,995
r

SALE

$9998°0

1'1

=
il•
rn

1990 Chevy Coralca
4 Dr, Ju1t Traded

Special '2998
1996 Chevy Cavalier
2Dr

1992

' Selo'9098
3000 GT

~

-

'8598

Woo 18.995 Sole 15,998

WAS $11M

a

Cavalier trade

Salt ·17

1996 Chevy Cavalier
4 Dr

L, V&amp;, program car,

tully equipped, teal,

4 Dr, Blut, air, nice c.ar.
WAS S1G,IIts

29K miles,

NOW'9,495

Just'15,500

Woo

Sale '7,398

~~

97 Chevy Silverado Ext Cab
3 Dr, tUlly equi~ped, :J50, VI, WI
SOld II

1986 Buick Perle Avenue

$13,995 Sale '12,098
1997 Che~ Monto Corio

91 Ponfioc lemons, Rebuih tide, nice .c ar·-----sl900

Woo
1991

92 Eagle Talon· Re~ 5spd, air-·-

li
1:"
1'1

=
••

Quad Cab, 4x4, v,,

11,933

now only

1 ton, dltMI, dually , SL'T,

'24,933

'29,845

1

chro'""

b

1999 Ram 3500
4x4

Dr, Htghttne
WAS $14,265

rn

••

loodoel

. Come See:· Mi~e Northup, Dwight Sleven, Pete SomervUie, AI.Dtmt. Neal Peifer,
Tim.(01111011, Jamie Ad&lt;rmson, Joe lilis, Ted Brock

1995 Otdo Cullaaa
98

..,... ••at

Oldl Achieve 4 Dr

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE, INC.
252 Upper River Rd.
1614)446·0842

· ft... a.._ IPVInlf

2 Dr
Black, Sunroof,
nlc:tlnaldt &amp; out
Woo $10,1M15 Silo '9,598

•

Ol-DSMOBILE

GaUipol~, Oh.

Or Toll Free 1-800-446-0842

..
RN AVE. ·.
446-3672

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
1-800-521-0084

'

.

8Ri

Special Low Pay111ent
Leases on Gralld AM,
S•llfirt, and Pn Avenutl

%
·0.99%
•

S..fln, Gruel All,

.Park lweaHI Ceatary,l

Moataaa

leS.Itnl R..all

--~~~------~~ &lt;

i

I....

•

JS

•••

Tiffin man enters Innocent
plea In throMl-baby case

Flouting fines
may land Racine
offenders in jail
People wro fail to pay police finci in .
Racine may soon find themselves in jail.
Racine Villa!,oc Council. at iu; r=nt
session, approved a rtquc;t from Mayor
Scot1 Hill for additional money to tx.'gin
jailing pooplc who arc not paying t!k:ir
fines and court costs.
He reported thai of the 23 wlx1 still
. &lt;Y&gt;Ye tines, some have boasted they will
001 pay their fines.
Cooncil also approved a resolution
31!1htxiDng Ocric ~ ~ons to make
yeru-etJd adjustments in the general fund
acoou~t.

Chuncil also awr;uved an cmCijlency
ordinance authorizing the Board of 1'\Jblic
Affairs to pay the annual loan payment 10

...a time for ~epeating
child born in a Bethlehem manager. Talented
Wesley Thoene created this nativity scene In
miniature for a small cave-like structure near
the Pomeroy United Methodist Church. The fig·

TIFFIN (AP) -A Tiffin man
pleaded innocepl in Seneca OJunly
Olmmon Pleas OJurt to a charge !hat
he threw down a 15-month-old baby
because Ihe child wouldn't stop cry~
in g.
The Eastern Local School District Board of EducaA grand jury on Wednesday indict·
'lion
approved several per,;onnel acrions when lheyit in
ed Joshua Gray, 19, on one count
regular
session on Wednesday.
child endangering.
Patrice Circle Beegle, Laura Ellis, Stephanie
Sheriff's deputies said he threw
down his girlfriend's son, Austin Hysrhith and Krisren Bond were employed as subslilule
Prcnzlin, at lhe woman's home. The ' teachers, Susan Parsons as elemcnrary choir and high
school choir director, and Emily Bobo as National Art
boy's head hit a coffee table.
Honor Society advisor.
·
The child's molhcr, Healhcr Prcn·
Joann Calaway was employed as Parcnl Resource
zlin, 21, of1iffin, allegedly wailed 18
hours to rake the boy ro the hospiral. Ccnler coordinalor for the remainder of lhe school year
because she was afraid l[c would be on a purchase service conlract, ro be paid from 1ille I
funding.
removed from her home.
The board also accepted the resignation of Gary Dill,

ures of Mary, Joseph
herds, wiseman, and the angel are constructed
of wood ·and painted In tradltlonal ·costume for
the display. The scene Is enhanced by strings
of clear lights extending from a star above. '

Personnel actions approved by Eastern .Local Board
who will retire as a district bus driver.
· In oth~r achon, Ihe board arprovcd a contract with
MGM Dnve Rrghl as the prov1der of dnver cducatron
services ar a cost of $169 per student. .
.
The board approved lhe pu~chase of flood ~nsurancc
in the amounl necessary to satiSfy FEMA rcqutremcnts.
The board too~ action on 'several financial matters,
approving a budger revision for the band acr.ivity fund,
approving a. payroll request for General Tempe~ature
Ccinrrol and csrablishing a new fund for the opc.ratron of
an elementary school store lhrough the dislrict's School·
Continued on page A3

the Ohio Vhtcr Development AIJthority
for the iru;lallalion of water meters.
Bob Gum, rwrcscnting National Ga&lt;;
&amp; Oil, met at council's request. He said if
the wate&lt; department has a leak and
comes across an abandoned ga.' line, that
they should call lhc !!i'S company to
remove the section of old pifX'.
· 1lte !!i'5 company will also meet with
the water supervisor in the futun: when
they are installing new !!i'S Iincs.
Streer OJmmissioncr Glenn Rizer
reponed thai through the effort' of George
Neigler an old "Bell" skiff ha' bu;n
oQiaincd from Joe Swain. He re[XJrted lhal
Ncigler and Gordon Winebrenner arc
going to make oome n:pairs lo the skill
Gary Basham, owner of the Racine
Piz:zn Express. thanked council and Hill
for thcir &lt;Niistaoo: in b'CI1ing the business
started. He is renting the tire house annex
on Vine Street for he&gt;pi= busincs., .
Hill reported colle&lt;.1ing $756 lor
November.
·
Council went into cxoculivr.; ~""tion lo
discuss personnel.
1lte next meeting will be held Mon·
day at7 p.m. at the municipal building,
Others' attending wen: council mc.:mbc!l&lt; Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz. John
Dudding, Joe Evans and Henry Lyons.
and village resident Denne' \\bit-.,.

Iraq newspapers denounce bombings, calling it 'Operation Monica'

·a

il•

4

0 199B Ohin Valley Publishing Co

E
...z

. Ave. VI, .auto gray~-- .......... :s1,200
87 Chrysler F1hh

3

Daily 3: 6-3·4; Daily 4: 3·9-9-4

I

-·--53,300

4&amp;5

W.YA,

0

89 Chevy 5·1 0pickup, 4.3 auto, dub cab----~- s1800

2
3

BuckeyeS: 1·7·8·23·37 •

oC

Fully Equipped, Dark Green
Waa $12,995 Salt ~1 u,.,.,ut

8-10
11

U:HI
Pick 3: 9-8·3; Pick 4: 9·2·9·0

••

Air, auto, Red

7

Lotteries .

E
•

12,498

1997 Ch,vy Cavalier
Convertible

87 Caddlac Deville V8, runs goo4 _ _ _ _ _s 1SOO

Editorials
Local
Sports
Weather

•

·Come and ' " It· Today!

Wao $3795 Sale

Comjcs

I;•

Mid Blue

1996 Grand Am

Calendar
Cla·ssifieds

I....z

4 Or, Lldy Drlvtn, Ntw

Ser,;tinel

2 Sections • 12 Pages

Ill

1996 Chevy Cavalier "

•

Today's

=

·Rebuilt ntl ..

The House Judicimy OJmmiuee last week approved
impeachmenl articles that accused Ointon of perjury in the
Paula Jones civil lawsuit, perjury befon: a grand jury, obstruc·
tion of justice and abuse of power.
The case of Andrew Johnsoo in 1868 is the only other lime
the House voted to impeach a president.
Johnson was acquiued by a single vote in the Senale.
The commiuee resolulion presenls the aniclcson behalf of
the House "and of the people .of the United Stares of America, against William Jefferson Oinlon. president of the United
States."
·
With nine television networks expected to provide the
debate live. House Mioority · Leader Dick Gephardt said
Democrats "strongly object to lhis maller roming up ... any
day in which our young men and women in the military arc
in harm's way.''
l..ivingston counlcrcd, "There's no way to know when the
troops will have compleled their mission. We cannot ref111in
from advancing the people's business on this critical issue.''

Good Afternoon

rn
rn
rn

Whitt, air, auto, low mile•

Chri&lt;Btma&lt;B

ships "were not with employees on my staff, and I have never
been asked 10 testify under oath about them."
Deroocrats today look sharp aim at l.ivingston. " The only
wOrd that &lt;;ames to mind is hypocrite." said Rep. Maxine
Waters, D-Calif. "The hypocrisy is abolutcly stunning."

BELPRE (AP)- Shell Oemical OJ. plans to conlinue opemtions at a 38year-old soulhcaslem Ohio plant while a new owner is sought.
.
The Belpre plant's 450 employees were informed this week lhal the manag·
ing director of Royal Dutch Shell had announced lhalthe oompany's plans lo
increase future profitability include a major restructuring.
"The Belpre plant was infonned ir no longer fils into the international slrale·
gic plant aud is for sale," company spokesman Mike White said.
'
"We are hopeful a new owner for the plant can be found wirhin the next year.
The planl has been very su=ful and we'reconfidentthere are many compa·
nies thai will be inlerested in obtaining the operations in Belpre," he s&lt;iid.
Washinglon OJunty OJmmissioner larry Sleinel said ihe rounty will have
to take a wait and see attitude regarding liM: future of the.plant.
.
"It obviously all depends on who buys it and whaltb9y de&gt; with it. Hopeful·
ly lbey will keep production up, r;ontinue to e~pand and will continue to be the
good neighbor,; Shell has been over the Y1'81'5." he said.
In addition to the 450 employees, the plant employr. about 100 contractors.
Payroli is about $40 million. White said.
·
The planr was the site of an explosion in 1994 thai killed three workers. Hundreds of residenls in Ohio alld West V'uginia had lo be evacualed for several
hours after rhe blast, which senltoxic fumes inro the air.
..
The plant produres Kraton polymers, which are used as perfonnance
enhancers in food packaging, toys,
sponing goods. adhesives aud lubri·
canis. The. compapy said that human
enur and an aboonnal chemical mix·
lure conlribut~ ro the explosion.

••
"'a
a
;
•....
a
•
.P

"NEW"
531,570

BUY NOW .......................... $23,800

We 1old It new ·

NOW '4,995

selling southeast

rn

$24,100.00 .
GMReba~ .............. ,.......,... ~~~~

VI, air,

ve. auto. otr, rattobta cor.

rn
rn

1:"
1'1

1999, Chev.
Blazer
MSRP .....:...........................t$26,525.00
Discount ...............:................. 1725.00

4 Dr,ltr, auto. Hfghllne,
program car low mUM,

M~"1ii5Trrtrei~t1992 Dynasty LE

•b
•

-c·

See Our Sales Staff
. For Details

1998 Dodge
Neon

'4,500

i

a

23,995

Pwr.._ooi,CD
ptayer, whhe, runt good

12 wouldn't answer. The tolals include
members who said thc;y were leaning
By LARRY MAhGASAK
they must 001 do that in lhe parliamenr of
toward a position. The undecided and
Assoclatad Press Writer
the United Slates," said Rep. Tom l.anthose oot ·responding included 15·
WASHINGfON (AP)-Operung only lhe second debale 106, 0-Calif, a Hung;u:ian inunigr.ml. .
Democrats and 29 Republicans.
in history on removing a president from offioe, lhe Hoose
Today's history-making debate would
Republicans, suspicious oflhe timing of
t')day weighed four articles of impeachment against Presidelll be extraordinary enough just for ils legal
lhe bombjng in Iraq. had delayed the
Ointon. The debate wenl forward amid U.S. mililary action argumenls on whether Oinron commit·
debale one day and insisted thai rhe
in Iraq and after a lop Republican lawmaker made a sluMing ted impeachable offm;es in lrying lo
House no1 winr any longer to ronsider rhe
confession of intideliry.
·
cover up his sexual relationship wilh a
articles.
In a somber voice; House reading cleric Paul Hayr. read lhe White House intern half his age. The
But in laying out lhe case against Oin·
resolution of impeachrnenr: "Remlved, thai William Jeffer- attacks in Iraq and incoming Speaker
ron for concealing his affair with Monica
son Oinron, president of rhe Uniled Stares, is impeached for Bob Livingston's oonfession of exira·
Lewinsky, Republicans have on their
high crimes and misdemeanors."
marilal affairs clouded the picture.
minds lhe astonishing admission 'ThursHouse Judiciary OJmmittee Otairman Heruy Hyde, R·
The White House waged a last-dilch
day night from l.ivingston. rhe man due
Dl., called. up the four articles against Oinron thai his com· anli-imptachmenl lobbying campaign,
to become House speaker on Jan. 6.
mittee had aPPIOved last week despite Democralic objections but presidential allies said they .expected
The J..ouiSiana Republican, just hours'
to moving forward during rhe Iraqi military action.
ar least one of four proposed articles ro
after announcing rhe debare would no1 be
Dernocrnls forced a failed vole to adjourn and stepped up pass, triggering only rhe ~nd presi·
ingston admltll, "I have on oc:ca- · postponed, told a stunned Republican
demands that majoriry Republicans allow a vole on censuring dential impeachmenllrial in rhe Senate in
sion strayed from my marriage.'' caucus - convened for the impeach·
'Ointon as an altemalive to impeachment
·
US. history.
menl issue - that "I have on occasion
"II js, fundamentally unfair to deny member of this body
An Associated Press relephone survey of House member,;
strayed from my marriage."
to vote on a reasonable option. They would do thai in Hitler's found 1981awmakers said lhey would suppon impeachment,
OJntrasting his own case with Ointon's misleading court
parliament. And rhey would de&gt; that in Stalin's parliament. Bur 193 s8id they would oppose it, 32 remained undecided, and lestimony in the Lewinsky affair, l.ivingston said his relation·

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e

· Incoming Republican Speak~ admits to his own maritallnficjelity

I

I

By LOUIS MEIXLER
Thursday. an Iraqi lnfonna·
Associated Press Writer
.
lion Ministry official said,
BAGHDAD, 1mq (AP)- Deafen,lng explosions rocked speaking on condition of
Baghdad today in the lares! wave of U.S ..and British air anonymity.
raids thatlmq says have killed atlea't 25 people in the two
The' largely Shiite Muslim
days. The fresh strikes covered the iraqi eapital with smoke . south rebelled against Sad_.
and set rhc skyline aglow in orange.
dam li&gt;llnwing.lhc 1991 Gulf
Baghdad came under a brief but intense mis.,ilc attack War, hullhe uprising wa' hruhours before dawn, following a barrage of airstrikes late .tully suppressed by Iraqi
Thursday night in which al lca't a dozen exp~"ions li1rccs.
resounded.
The homhing wa' making
Anti-aircraft fire and tracer bullets lit the sky over the Iraq's neighhnrs ~rvous.
city. air-mid sirens blared again and again, and the rhud of Tu~key closed its border wi.th
explosions could be fell in downtown buildings.
Iraq. Saud1 armored umts
As a new day dawned. there was lillie evidence of ten· brielly moved close to the
sion. Today's traffic was lighl as nonnal, in keeping with lr•qi border Thursday, appar·
rhe Muslim sabbath. Some worried motorists lined up al enlly on a survctllancc mrs·
gasoline stations, making sure their tanks were full in ca&lt;;e sion, the Iraqi official said.
U.S. officials make good on their promise of a sustained
The acrtal allack began
effort ro demolish President . Saddam Hussein's milirary early Thursday, when Ihe
United States fired hundreds
· ·
po7:;.rqi newspapers urged Ihe public Ieday to rally behind of 1,000-pound Tomahawk
Saddam.
.
cruise missiles from warships
"God bless Iraq and Saddam," Babil newspaper sai~ in i~ rhe Gulf. On Thursday

~af~::~~:·~~~~nf~~~~~~~~;;.~h~as;~~~~~ ~~~/n~~~:r!~~j~!s~h~

while horse hurling a spear ala black, hissing snake.
blilz, firing 2,()()().pound
11 urged Iraqis ro "show their readiness for ,sacrifice and cruise missiles. British Torna·
their readiness lo face the evil aggressors." ·
do jels joined lhe operation,
AI·Thawra, rhe newspaper of Saddam's ruling Baath named "Desert Fox."
Party ran a large headline in Arabic and English: "Opera·
Smoke drifted from rhe
tion Monica.''
.
stare Military Industrial Olr·
In an apparent efft&gt;rt to "arouse lhe people" againsr Sad- , poration in Baghdad. where
dam, U.S. aircraft droppel) leaflets over sourhem Iraq on one missile appeared to ha'e

1 .•

.

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.
cH

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·

....

Q ....
,.

PLACING BLAM~- Some 200 demonstrated
outsld• Hong Kong a biggest mosque Friday In
proteat against American alrstrlkes on Iraq.
(See page six for more on the Anti"Amerlcan
proteata.)

.'

'

hrt. The rompl~x ts tn charge
of Iraq 's factoncs.
Early today. 106
U.N. humamlanan worker,;
were e~aC1Jatcd by. bus to the
Jordaman cap1tal of Amman,.
a U .N. offictal toldThcAsso·
c~ated Press, speakmg on con·
drl~o~ of anonymrty. U.N .
ofttcrals had hoped to keep
the workers mIra~, b~t apparently cha~ged lhetr mmd after
t~c feructty of the Th.ursday
ntghl auack.
. .
·About 28 U.N. humanrlan·
an ,;vorker,; de.emed "essen·
hal remamed r~ Baghdad.
To protest the atrstnkcs, Rus·
sta Ieday rc~lled tis ambas-.
sador to Bnta&gt;n,JUsl like tt drd
a day earher for 1ts ambas·
sador lo
,
At the Unrted Natrons, Iraq s
dem.and for a cease-fire

The Pentagon sard more than 200 mrss.rl.es ~~~50 scnsttrvc
sttcsm the firsr allack Thursday. mcludmg Saddam 's m•h·
tary rnrclhgencc headquarters 1n Baghdad .and lou~ bamcks
for Srx:&lt;;tal sccunly gu.ards wh~ prolct.1 weapons Sites. .
lmqt Health MmiSter Omed Medhal Mubarak sard
lbursday that at kast 25 people had been killed and 75
InJUred and a hosprtal1n Baghdad was damag~d.
U.S. Defense Secretary Wilham Cohen sard there have
been no Amcncan ca,uallres.
. .
An as.~ent ?f the damage from the second mght of
attacks wasn I avarlablc. Forc1gn reporter,; ~n .Baghdad arc
based at a press center rn the lnforma110n Mmtstry and ca n·
not freely move ~round the sprawlmg c1,ty of 5 m1llion.
Among the Sil"': hrl rn the first wave of auacks was the
hou':" of Saddam s youngesr daughter, Hala, Baghdad
Rad1o .reported.
.
.
..
. .
She was.s:nfe but her house was demol~&gt;hcd, 11 sa1d. The
prestdent VISited her house and some of the orher targclcd
Sties Thursday.
.
.
. . .
.
Saddam taunted the Unrted Slates and Brttarn rn a rad 1o
address, sayrng lhey were cowards for no1 fightmg "face In
face" but "depending on a long technological arm.' '
.
Pres1dent Ch~ton ordered Ihe slrtkc., to pumsh Iraq for rts
allegc;d obstruc11?n of UNSCOM, whtch ts respons•blc tor

ter Igor Ivanov satd Russta
would mstsl on the d•s'!'•ssal
of Richard Butler, chauman
o~ lhe U.N. Specml. OJmmts·
ston whose. negattve report
llh?~llraq-rnggered the U.S.·
Bnttsh actton.

weapons, lhe U.N. Secunty Olunctl wtll not hti econ\lmic
sancMns tm~S:d on lraq for rls 1990 t~vaston of Kuwuil.
Chnton sa•d •t would have been a d•saster" if the Unired .States had allow~d Saddam to defy UNSCOM without
any penalty.
.
.
Iraq's ambas.'\ador to the. Unned Nahons, Nizar Ham.
doon, satd lhe real U.S. atm "to topple Saddam.

~ingt~n.

~~:adn~u~~:.rom Ru&amp;S:•· ~~:O~~~~~o~~da~ ;.:a~.": a~~ 7o~-~~~~~:ites chem•·
In Moscow, Forer!l" M•nrs·
Unttl UNSCOM certtfies that l~q ~~free of the banned

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