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Cloudy tonight, lowe In
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: Vol. 47, NO. 181

, 011188, Ohio Valley Publlahlni! Compeny

2 Sec1IOM, 16 l'llgee, 35 oenta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Decembers, 1996

A O.nnetr Co. _ . , . . .

Public hearing set for early January

'

for Winter Snowl
Alum.
V6
Cassene
Wheels,

FHA ·approves proposed draft document
on environmental assessment for US-33
relocation project from Darwin to Athens
By TOM HUNTER

AS

LOW
AS:

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Sant!nel re- s..tt

The projecl's high priority ranking
was due largely to irs downsizi ng
from a prop,osed four-lane project,
which could have cos! nearly $90
million, to a Super 11-lane on a four·
lane right of way costing roughly $50
1997~
million, according to ODOT District
The environmental assessment is 10 deputy director John Dowler.
then expected to be approved within
The project is ex peeled to be coma short time frame by the over 20 fed· pleted in two construction phases,
era! and state agencies which are pan with the first phase contraclto be sold
Fedenl Highways Administration, in the year 2000 and the final phase
Pedigo stated.
contract to be sold in lhe year 2001.
jonce the environmental assess- The construction phases are expectmont is granted full approval. we plan cd to be divided somewhere in the
toJadvenise for a contractor on the Shade area, a'icording to Dowler.
design phase of the project. That
. As a reqUirement of the public
should take place sometime early hearing process. ODOT is making
next spring. Baring any funher issues copies of lhe drafl environmental·
of J;oncern developing loward the assessment available for public view·
project. lhe ti.nal federal approval ing and comment. Copies of the draft
should be gmnted in a timely man- are available for viewing at the
ner," Pedigo said.
·
• Meigs County Commissioners office,
Once official federal approval has Meigs County Highway Department.
been granted on the projecl's envi- ·and Meigs County ProsecutingAttorronmental assessment, ODOT can pey's Office.
·
proceed with· the engineering and
Pomeroy attorney Sieve Story.
design phase of the proposed new 13· co-chairman of the Southeast Ohio
mite·strctch of Super 11-lane highway. Regional Council's Route 33 comThe proposed relocation ofUS-33 m·iuec, was among the several area
from Athens to Darwin ranked num· business and community leaders who
ber. 15 on lhc new highway project were pleased with Wednesday's
$0leclion priority lis! released by Ihe announcement.
-ohJo ~v.tofTI'IIISporbltil&gt;n1n · "I think .lt:a. wonderful, )hat arter
February.
' "
· ·, alllhis time we're linally seeing the

To wdrk'for City of

AS
LOW

firs! major 1h'urdle overcome in gel·
ting the Athens-Darwin projecl com·
plcred. I believe that il shows ·lhc
cffons of the Route 33 Committee
have been effective· in keeping this
projecl on the planning table. We are
pleased with the ellqns of the Ohio
Depanmenl of Transportation in getling lhis environmental document
completed," Story said.
Story noted that the federal envi·
ronmental approval is not only viral
to the actual construction work on the
projecl, bul also possible additional
funding for the new highway.
"It's vitally imponant that .you
have the environmental approval,
because lhc federal government
' requires federal approval before fed·
eraI highway monies can be spent on
the projecr. If funding would somehow increase, !here might be a possibilily lo complete it early because
the worst pan is done," Story said.
''I'm very hopeful that many of the
citizens residing along the Route 33
corridor will show up at the Alhens
hearing to show their support for lhe
complelion of the documenl and the
new Alhcns~ Darwin construction."
Story added.
•
Conslruclion oil the US 33
Athe~s-Dilrwin reconstruclion pro· Je~l .i~ •1ated · tq hl!sin .sometime
around 1he year 2000, accordin!l to
Pedigo.
·

The Federal Highways Administration has granted itnppri&gt;val to the
proposed draft environmental assess·
ment for the relocation and reconstruction of US 33 berween Darwin
and Athens, slate highway officials
.• announced Wednesday. ·
,
The approval of the draft document allows the Ohio Depanment of
Transportation ro proceed with the
final step in the environmental
approval process - a public hearing
which has been set for early January.
An open-house style public hear·
ing
will be held Wedne'l(lay, Jan. IS,
/bEER STUDY • Rod Stevens of the U.S. Department of Agri·
from
5-7 p.m., at the Ohio Universicuhure removee 1ieeue umplel from • deer, after 11 waa c~kad
ty
Inn,
Athens. officials from Dislricr
in by a hunter a Baum Lumber Company in Cheater Tueeday
10
of
the
Ohio Deplll1ment of1ransafternoon.'Stevena coilactad the sample for a Tuberculosis ,study
porlation
and the ODOT Cenlral
of Ohio'a D4ier population, which 18 being condi.lctad by the Ohio
offtce
in
Columbus
·will' be on hand ·
. Deparbr•11 of Agrlcuitura and thl U.S.D.A. Spot checka era being
· 10 answer questions and make com·
conductad and tiaeue umples are baing extracted from deer in
ments concerning progress on lhe
19 Ohio countiaa with the highaat deer populetior:~. (Tom
projecl, according to Nancy Pedigo;
Hunter/Sentinel photo)
public information officer, ODOT,
Marietta.
"Anyone interested in the project
is encouraged to stop by during the
designated hours 10 review the latest
project malerials, ask questions and
By TOM HUNTER
samples being raken as pan of a · make comments," Pedigo said.
Sentinel NeWs at.ff
Tubi:O:uiils;,s, stud of Ohio's deer
Once the he!uing is completed al\d
·· Otftcials from · the Ohio DeplU1&gt; .popular ion"'
' ... · "
public c,ontmeiits are ~icwed;'
Deer in rhe 1.9 Ohio counties wirh resulls fr9m tbe hearing will be
inenHif Agricuhure and U.S. Depart~·
m.ent of . Agriculture are making the highest deer population arc being
efforts lo ensure the 'state's deer pop- targeted by lhe sludy, in an atlempt lo
Toledo~
ulation will thrive for year's to come, determine the amounl of tuberculosis
. with a special tuberculosis case study _ cases. if any. in Ohio's deer populobeing conducted during the 1996 fall tlon. ·
deer gun season.
"We've been very fortunate that
TOLEDO (AP) - The mayor appears that Toledo would be the first be~ · · in any amounl would nol be contract if lhc city discovers thai its
Rod Srevens and Dr. William we have not had many cases oftubersays
deailbeal parents are going 1o city in Ohio witli such a law.
hir,
workers were behind in their pay·
Pahe of rhe U.S.D.A were in Meigs culosis in deer or other livestock anihave
lo pay up if they want to work
"We haven 't heard of anything
The city would verify the infor- ments and the company took no corCounty earlier lhis week to coll~t tis· mals here in Ohio. We did have problike ,this heing done in other Ohio mation with the Lucas County Child rccrivc acrion,
·sue samples from 30 deer in spol !ems tn rhe past wnh canle contract- for the city,
cilics,"
he said Wednesday.
The,
city
is
considering
an
ordiSupport_Enforcemcnl Agency.
The ordinance would apply only ·
che~ks throughout the county. The
ing TB. but managed to gel it under
Finkbeiner
introduced
tbe
measure
nance
!hat
would
force
new
employThe
city
docs
not
now
ask
job
·
·
to
new
employees and bidders.
,pair collected !issue samples from control. This sludy Js stnctly precauat
a
Cily
Council
meeting
Tuesday
ees,r.nd
contmctors
to
pay
upon
child
applicants about child suppon. City
The city already checks lhal curdeer at two county check stations tionary," said Dr. Palte.
nigHt. The council referred lhe pro- , officials say lhey are allowed to ask · rent employees arc complying with .
Tuesday. Baum Lumber in Chesler
The study is being conducted pri, support before being hired.
fThe Association for Children for posal to its Law and Public Safety , the question because failure In pay child-suppon orders throu11h a pro.' ·
and Forked Run State Park, with llie
Continued on page 3
Commiltcc for a public hearing. No child support is a crime.
E~forccment of Suppon Inc., a Tolegram wilh Ibe county enforcement '
qb-bascd nalional child suppon advo- dale was set.
Telephone messages seeking com· agency, Quintero said.
·
The proposed law says thai since mont were lcrt today wilh Local 8 of
qacy group. praised Mayor Cany
Finkbeiner said he proposed the
city workers and contractor&lt; are paid the American Feilcralion of State, measure ut the request of ACES.
Finkbeiner's proposal.
1 "This will address lhe increased
with public money. "it is especially County and Municipal Employees
Toledo's policy would be modeled · ·
.'burden placed on taxpayers who inequitable for lhcm lo obtain such and Tcamslcrs Local 20. bmh of after one adopted in Chicago, and
\;~ppon children whose parents fail 10 benelits while failing to pay coon- which represenl city workers.
would be similar 10 policies either in :
\neet !heir legal and moral obliga- ordered child support."
The
proposed
Jaw
would
give
sue'place
or under consideration at the ·
could slill be seen today inside the iiqn." said Andrea Morrissey, Ohio
' By Mindy Kearn•
Under the ordinance. the city ccssful bidders on city projects 30 federal and stale lev~Js, Ms. Morris·'
building. wh,ich also housed the cor- director of ACES.
: OVP Ne.wa Staff
·
would ask job applicaniS if they pay · days to make sure none of their work- scy said. .,
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. • porate offices Of the 20-storc drug
O,hio
Municipal
League
child
support'and. if so. whether they ers were dcadbe'al parents, said
Children nationwide &lt;ire owed
1
. Investigators arc continuing their chain .
spo_~esman Joe Mahoney said it
owe any money. An applicant who is Anuro Quintero. the mayor's ~xecu- more than $35 billion in unpaid sup- :
, Fire marshal officials did take
, ·search for the cause of a giganlic fire
tivc officer. A company could Jose a port, ACES said.
~ Ihat struck the Fruth Phannacy ware- interviews and said they found nothStudysays
.
. · house, S.R. 62 near Point Pleasant ing of a suspicious nalure. Bryant
; Tuesday evening.' causing over $3 staled. They arc slated lo retu.rn.
along with an insurance investigative
· million in damages.
, Reprcsentalivcs from lhe state team. at the end of lhe week. how. fire marshal's office visited the sile of ever.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The report listed reported · acci- methyl isocyanate in December 1984, slate and · local governments to
B&lt;&gt;th Jack. Fruth. chairman and Wesl Virginia had 304 reports of acci· dents involving toxic materials. .
the blaze Wednesday. but ·rhe warekilli'ng 3.500 people and injuring strengthen reporting and environhouse ponion of the building was still chiel' executive officer of the phar· dental leaks of toxic chemicals from
mental laws.
·
"Those could involve a chemical 200.000.
· too hoi to enter. according 10 John inacy. and Don Pullin. president and 1993 to 1995, according to an cnvi- leak inlo the air or water.- hul all of
Brenda Harper, director of chem- '
Melhyl isocyanate is produced at
: Bryant, assisrant direcror of the chief operatin~ officer, were out this ronmenlal group.
.
them arc toxic elcmcnls," said group a Rhonc-Poulcnc Ag Co. plant at ical affairs for lhe Wesl Virginia Man, Mason County 911 . Small flames
Continued on page 3
A repon released Wednesday by spokeswoman Kimberly Larson.
ufacturers Association. said the ·
Institute, Kanawha County.
lhe U.S. Public Interest Research
More than 23,000 toxic chemical
Toxic materials frequently Kanawha Valley chemical industry
· Group of Washington, D.C .• ranked . • accidents were reported lo the ff der- released from lhc reported accidcnls · has an excellent safety hislury.
.Wesl Virgini~ 24th among states for 111, government from 1993 to J995, the include: ethylene glycol,' ammonia, _ ,"The West ·Virginia chemical
·chemical leaks.
report said. . · .
,
sulfur dioxide, sulfuric acid: and industry has taken ils,commiumcnt In ·:
' Kanawha County and Ma.,on
Texas ranked first with 4.537. fol' polychlorinated biphenyls. known as protect .the safely, hcallh and cnvi· '
rnnmcnt very seriously," Harper said. · ·
County ranked first and second in the lowed by California. 2,19 I: . PCBs. Ms. Larson said.
•
slate. respectively. They were 41st Louisiana. I ,985 :' Pennsylvania, 695: · "Acddcnl~ that expose workers "The industry repons every incidenl
COLUMBUS (AP) The
and 54th nationally. Kanawha Coun- Ohio. 679: Illinois, 655: Georgia, and communities to chcm icals that whether reportable or nnl by regula- .
: DeplU1ment of Liquor Conlrol, which
ty had 77 ·reported accidcn(s and 561 ; Alaska, 522: Florida. 527; and may c:msc cancer or rcprcxJuc1ivc dis- tory standards. "
. was investigated by the state's inspecMason County had 66 during that Kenlucky was lOth with 513. the orders ~uppcn far lno often," she
Union Carbide spnkesmun Dwight
: lor general, has a new direclor, Gov.
period. the repon said.
reporl said.
said.
Shennan said the company Iukes care
: George Voinovich announced
- A~out a hulf- dot~ chemical
The report coincides with the
The U.S. Public Interest Research to prevent chemical leaks.
• Wednesday.
plants line the Kanawha River in I21h anniversary of the most cata- Group is funded by donations frum
" We have a special focus on minWilliam Vasil will replace Michael
Kanawha County. Mason County slrophic chemical accident in mndcm privaLc foundations and its one mil- imizing opportunities li&gt;r leaks and ·
; Akrouche, who is retiring Dec. 3 I. ·
has lwo chemical plants along the history. A Union Carbide Corp. plant lion mcmhcrs
accidents in all of our operating
In 1995, Inspector General
Ohio River.
in Bhopal, India. leaked lhe pesticide
The group wanls Congress and facilities," Shennan said.
, Richard Ward looked into allcgalions

Deer population study
to nip p~ssible. TB threat

AtL WHEEL DRIVE!

added to the draft environmental
assessment for final federal review
·and approval. The final dale for sub·
mission of comments on the draft
environmental assessmenl and ihe
proposed project will be January 30,

Deadbeat parents must pay up on child support

AS:

·c lues ·s ought for
cause of Fruth fire

West Virginia in top half for toxic leaks
.
.

.: Vasil named new
=state liquor director

Government looking for people owed pension funds

iT's ~~~ltD
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CHEVROlET.:DlDS• •BilE:• lEIIUS • TOYOTA

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TD DECORATE
A ROCK .•

Voinovich also announced that
!.!i:=:::=s~,_..:.,_::_.,pt.,~::~;~~:;~~ Public Safery Director
•
Shipley is going on disabil·
ily leave in January.
'
IS
Mitchell Brown. regiStrar of the
20ahopplng
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, will serve
d•y• to Chrlatmaa as acting director.

pee.
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CINCINNAU (AP) - Do you
where your pension money.is?
All of-it?
The federal government is 'rrying
ro locate people who worked for any
one of niore than 40 companies in
Ohio who are owed pension money.
The Labor Department's Pension
BC)lefit Guannty·Corp., which was
fanned in 1974, is now using the
lniernet' 10 try to link people with
their money in pen1ion funds that
were later terminated. In a new wrin·
kle, the government !s also tryin1 to
~now

..

let people know il is looking for
them.
"Instead of us searching f&lt;&gt;r people, we 're lelting people know we're
looking for them," depart men I
spokesman Carl Fillichio said
Wednesday.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corp. was formed to guaranlec payment of basic pension benefits earned
by. almost 42 million American
workers and retirees participating in
about SS,OOO private·secror defined
benefit pensi_on plans. The agency is
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supported by investment returns and
insurance premiums paid by eompa. nics lhat sponsor pension plans. .
The government is looking for
nearly 3.000 people who may be due
an average of $3.700.
That includes more than 120 people in Ohio. They worked for companies located anywhere from Akron
and Youngstown ltl Columbiar.3,
Toledo, Columbus and Cincinnati,
according to the government's list.
Their pension plans could have
ended because the company is no
--~------

•

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longer in business, or because it
merged with annlhcr company, Filiichin said.
Labor Secretary Robert · Reich
announced the new Pension Search
Directory, published hy 1he Pension · ·
Bcnefil Guaranty Corp.
The lisl tncludes workers
employed a1 565 companies, moslly
in thcaairlinc, steel,. transportation,
machinery, retail trade, apparel and
financial services Industries through·
· oul rhe United Sraics.

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ThUf8dlly, o.c.mber 5, 1118

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Commentary

Thursday, December 5, 1816

Much, but not all, of what is going
on in the realm of race is hard to
appraise.
-- On Election Day the California
Civil Rights Initiative (CCRl) passed
by 54 percent to 46 percent. Opponents say CCRJ will destroy affir- · motive action . Supporters (like me)
think it will de-emphasize preferences.
-- Earlier this year the Supreme
Coun ruled that cenain majority
black Congressional districts were
invalid and that race-conscious districting sent a "pernicious" message.
Many civil rights leaders said the
Court's decision was a disastl'r. that
whites won't vote for blacks, and that
the ·number of black members of
Congress would sharply decline. But
the five black members who were redistricted into majority white districts
-- all won. Civil rights leaders now
say they won only because affirmative action had first made them
incumbents. Others (like me) applaud
the result and nQte that every politiciao has to stan out as a nonincumbent.
--The only black member of Con-

'Est46fisftti in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGffi
Publisher
Genellll M1nqer

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Gingrich probe,
Reno pose PR

grcss who did lose in 1996 was a -- Some brass at Texaco swd
quite conservative Republican, Gary some very bad words, or used a nasty
Franks of Connecticut, whose loss tone, or both, about blacks. The
had nothing to do with racial red is- company is accused of obstruction of
justice in a race-discrimination law
suit. Black Texaco employees have
V
received a $176 million settlemen~.
tricting. Rep. William Clay, D-Mo.,
-· .The vast maJonty of whtte
who is black, bade Franks farewell, Amencans beheve O.J. Stmpson ts
calling him a "Negro Dr. Ker- guilty of double mwder. The rate of
vorkian.'' In response, Franks noted blacks who be~ieve him innocent h~
that Clay had not been one of his fallen substantially. alth?ugh tt os still
principal admirers.
more than half, accordmg to CNN--The titles oftwo rrew books tell USA Today.
you more than you wantto hear about
Hard to son out. Trends are not
the matter: "The Coming Race War apparent.
.
.,
in America: A Wake-up Call," by
But there ts some newly refined
columnist Carl Rowan, and "The data that docs seem to show at least
Con\in 2 Race War? And Other Apoe- a strong te~ency. There has been a
alyptie Tales of America Afie~ Affir- loilg argument about whether Amermative Action and Welfare," by law ica is a, "melting pot," or rather just
professor Richard Delgado.
a "mosaic," a . "salad bowl" or a
. __ E,xit polls on Election Da'y set "stew,'' whose definitions can range
up a hypothetical race for the presi- from.glorious groupism to tribal codency between Gen. Colin Powell existenoe.
and President Bill Clinton. Powell
Americans of European ancestry
won by II points. A new trial heat by have melted. Results from the 1990
Fox matched Vice President Albert Census show that 84 percent of all
tore and Powell. The general was up Polish Americans have married exogby 28 points.
amously (that is, JDarried to non-Pol-

Ben WatfenbBTff

conundrums
By JILL LAWRENCE

IToledo I 36" I

r

tsh Amencan panners). .
Euromeh has been ~otng for a
quite a whtle. But w. at o newer
tmmtgrants and nonwhiteQs_?
.
SoctologiSCZhen.chao oan ofArizona State Umversny has used c~nsus figures to calculate that. JUSt
underhalfofyoungAstanAmencans
had out-mamed 'as of 1980. In 1990
the proportiOn had chmbed to almost
two-thirds.
.
.
. Among young Lalmos, out-marna~e constituted. 30 percent of the
umons recorded m 1980 and 36 percent in 1990..
The trend ts blend, toward ·melt.
not mosaic.
The starkest change, from the
lowest base, has occurred among
African Americans. Writi'ng in the
New Democrat, Douglas Besharov 1lf ·
the American Enterprise Institute
and Timothy Sullivan of Southern
Illinois University have u.sed census
figures and data from the Nat.io~al
Center for Health Statistics to compute a time line for new marriages
involving at leas.! one black partner.
In 1970 just 3 percent married whites.
The rate v.as 7 percent in, 1980, II
perc~nt in i 1990 and 12 percent iq_
1993.
..
Does all this mean that as we'
move into the next century race will '
be much less of an issue? That we'
will all end up bland an'd blcnd\!(l''
That (as I believe) we will fulfill our'
difficult destiny as the lirst .univers'ai'

Goldia Swick·Shenefield Huson, 84, of Buckeye Lake, dieci Wednesday,

Occ. 4, 1996 at the Franklin Woods Health Care Center, Columbus:

~

Comments · on third parties

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reading about it in the newspaper.
" I always assumed, like many
motorists, that the police repon on the
scene and your insurance report certainly took care of the requirements
that you had to meet for the state of
Ohio," he said.
The law was adopted in 1953 but
wasn't widely enforced until 1992, r
when the Legislature initiated a
crackdown on uninsured drivers.
"It's time to change this law,"
Oelslager said.
Leo Skinner, spokesman for the
Depanment of Public Safety, which
oversees the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, said the agency supports
chan~es in - and possibly the abolition of - the crash-report law.
David Diroll, director of the sen'
tencing commission, said Wednesday
he expects to pre.sent to the Legislature in February a pr~sal to streamline the state's traffic laws and fine
collections.

Meigs announcements

sho~!~::d~sh~~ ~~~~:er ~row Marjorie·H..Jeffries·

'

Today in history

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Criminal Sentencing Commission
has agreed to work with state Sen. W.
Scott Oelslager to change a little:
known state law that has cost thousands of Ohioans their driver's licenses.
The •crash-report law requires
motorists involved in accidents with
injuries or more than $400 in damages to complete a one-page repon
for the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
In the past five years, the bureau
has suspended the licenses of II 0,000
drivers - including many who were
not at fault in accidents- for not fill ing out ·the report, The Columbus
Dispatch reported in a recent series of
articles.
Oelslager, R-Canton, chairman of
the Senate Highway and Transportation Committee, said on Wednesday
he is troubled that the law is snaring
otherwise law-abiding · citizens. He
said he was unaware of the law until

Born Feb. 28, 1912, in Meigs County, daughter of the late Joe and Minnie Barrett Swick, .she attended the Morgan Center Christina Holiness
Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Patricia Shenefield (Hanj) Maugans of London; three grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren; a brother, Paul M.
Swick of Columbus; a sister, Marjorie (John) McLaughlin of Gallipolis.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, RowDinner to be served
Friday... Partly cloudy. High in the land Huson in 1963; an ex-husband, Launce Shenefield in 1990; two grand. · Southeastern Ohio
Bethel 62, International Order of
children: three brothers and two sioters.
, · Today... Rain developing by mi~­ mid 40s.
Job's Daughters, chicken noodle dinExtended forecast
Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday at the McCoy"Moore Funeral Home, ner, serving to be held from II a.m.
day. High in the mid 40s. Southeast
Friday night...A chance of rain or Vinton. ·Burial will be in the Pine Grove Cemetery. Friends may call at the to 6 p.m. Friday at the Middlepon
wind 5 to 15 mph shifting to the
snow
showers. Low 35 10 40.
funeral home on Friday from 1-4 p.m.
·
southwest this afternoon. Chance of
. Masonic Temple. $3 .50 eat in or car' '
ram 90 percent; .
ry out
'
0
' Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a
.
Sunday...Windy and ,cold with.
.
cl:\ance of lingering light rain or
Church meeting tonight
Marjorie H. Jeffries, 80, Newark died Wednesday, ·Dec. 4, 1996 at Lickdrizzle early this evening ...Then a scattered snow showers. Morning
The Meigs County Churches of
ing Memorial Hospital, Newark.
·
chance of .flurries late. Low in the' low near 30. High around 40.
Christ will meet tonight at the Zion
Monday ...Partty cloudy. Low in . · Born Aprfltt, 1916 in Pomeroy, she was the daughter of the late James Church of Christ, 7 p.m. Rutland
lower 30s. West wind 5 to 15 mph.
the
upper 20s and tower 30s. High in Mcintosh and Mabel (Scott) Mcintosh. ~he was formerly employed at Church will have devotions.
Chance of precipitation 40 percent
the mid 40s.
Newark Hospital and moved to Licking Memorial Hospital. She retired from
Newar~ Health Care Center in 1990, where she had been an LPN.
She is survived by two sons and dallghters-in-law: Patrick M. and Lin- DemO&lt;ratic Party plans party
The Meigs County Democratic
da Jeffries of Newark, Don M. and Susan Jeffries of Newark: a sister, GloPuny wilt hold a Christmas party on
ria Kearns of Columbus, and five grandchildren.
Thursday, 6:30p.m at the Carpenters
She was preceded in death by her husband, W. Donald Jeffries.
Hall in P~erov. Those attending are
Services will be held Friday, II a.m., at Henderson, Van Alta and John· California and southern Utah and ston Funeral Home, 59 North Fifth Street, Newark with Rev. Thad McGeBy The A11oclated Prell .
·
'
hee ofliciating. Burial will follow in Concord Ce~tery, Grove .City. .
COLONY TH EATRE
· A mixture of snow and rain today · Nevada.
Calling
hours
will
he
observed
Thursday,
5-8
p.m.,
at
the
funeral
home.
·
l&gt;nows
across
the
Cascades
will
wili chf!ge to all snow tonight, foreTONIGHT ONLY
casters said. By Friday morning, accumulate to a foot. Nearly a foot of
VAL KILMER,
a,ccumulations will range from about . snow was also likely in western'
MICHAEL DOUGLAS IN
I Inch in the south to 2 inches in the Montana, Wyoming and northern
THE GHOST AND THE
Continued rrom page 1
nonheast and ·4 inches in the north- Utah. Snow showers were also forehunter who has killed the deer also
DARKNESS A
cast for Idaho.
west.
needs to usc rubber gloves when
·Moderate
snow
was
expected
marily
because
of
an
outbreak
of
ONE
EVENING SHOW 7:30
· The National Weather Service
doing
the
field
dressing.
as
a
precauSTARriNG FRIDAY
· is~ued a winter storm advisory for across the Great Lakes region and tuberculosis cases in Michigan's deer tion against Iyme disease. If they use
just
north
of
the
Ohio
River.
Rain
population
two
yeats
ago.
The
TB
ROMEO &amp; JULIET PG
northern Ohio tonight.
·
those few precautions, hunter's will
showers were predicted for south of cases in deer pose no threat to hunters enjoy the sport for year's to come,"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Lows tonight will be 25;30.
or
others
who
consume
vent·
son,
4&lt;16-0923
A weak high pressure system will the river. Heavier snows of up to 7 according to Palte.
Ward said .
build into the region on Friday, ~·ield, inches were likely across eastern ·
""'e're
.. , mon'to
1 n·ng the deer popuing mostly c)oudy but mainly dry Ohio and western Pennsylvania.
lation to . check to check for potential
. conditipn&amp;.across the stale. Highs·will '· Snow was expecteif"to arrive lat- - 'Tifcarrl'e rs. If there are deer TB cas''
he 35-45.' . .
..
er today in northern West Virginia; . es, then mere ts a great threat of
'
The record-high temperature for Maryland and northern Virginia. .
sprending the disease to other animals
this date at the Columbus weather
lit the Southeast, rain showers or farm livestock," Palte explamed.
station wa~ 67 degrees in 1909 while were forecast for the Carolinas and
As of Tuesday evening, officials
the record low was 8 in 1976. Sunset - northern Georgia.
had collected enough samples from
tonight will he at 5:06p.m. and sunA quiet danNas in S!qre for the deer in the 19 county study area to
rise Friday at 7:39a.m.
Northeast, but snow was, expected reach their goal for testing. The sam- ·
'.
Across the nation
late tonight in western New York and pies will now be tested, with results
It w~ gusiy arid' rainy in the Pacif- up 10 8 inches will fall in some pans expected back ~luring the springs,
ic Nonhwcst early this morning, of the Northe.ast. ·
according to Andy Ware of the Ohio
snow fell around the Great Lakes and
Snow was due to arrive in eastern Depann\ent of Agriculture.
rain showered tht! lower Mississippi parts of Minnesota and Iowa this
"It ·will be at least three months
Valley and Arkan sa~.
morning and end by the afternoon. before the cultures·are done. We don't
Rain and sn1)W showers were Western areas were expecting windy anticipate finding any tuberculosis
expected to continue in the Nonh"(est weathCr from the 'Dakotas 'to Okla- .cases in the deer tested. The study is
today and extend southward into homa.
just a step we are taking to ensure the
TB free status of Ohio's deer and livestock populations," said Ware.
Ware noted that all hunters should
take safety precautions while field
9:48p.m., Mechanic Street. Bren- dressing -and cooking deer. "The
Units of the Meigs County Emerda
Davidson,
Holzer Medical Center. meat should he cooked property,
.
gency Medical Service answered 9
with no pink or red showing. The
calls for assistance during Wednes!lay, including four transfer calls. Two vehicles are damUnits responding included:
aged wreck

Today.'s weather.forecast

Mrs. Clinton's ·'can't win' situ.ation·· ·:,

Cabinet, budget-are on tap for Clinton

DavidThomu Gowin, 53, of Wilkesville, died Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1996
at his raidenc:e.
·
Born July 9, 1943, at Akron, sonof the late Harry'and Jean Lee OowinMcFarrin, he.wu a retlrtd U.S. Marine and Air Force Veteran, having served
in Vietntun. A retired truek driver for Dairy Man in Akron and Dan Well of
Wilkesville, he was also a member. of the Wilkesville Joseph Freeman Amer·
ican Legion Post 476,
In addition to his mother and step-father, Theodore McFarrin, he is survived by his wife, Reatha Watters Gowin; two sons, David (Jodi) Gowin of
Manchester, New Hampshire and Scott Gowin of Lee, New Hampshire: one
grandson; twin brothers, Keith and. Kevin McFarrin of Akron; and a sister,
Susan Watters of Taylors, S. Carohna.
Services will be II a.m. at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton. Bwial witl be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral home
on Friday from 6-9 p.m.
·
Military gravoside services will be conducted by the Joseph Freeman
American Legion Post 476.
·

Goldia S. Huson

,,

Letters to.the editor

David T. Gowin

•

USATODAY
.
· Politicians in both parties are spending th~ holida~ season pondering
exactly how bad it will look if they change ethtcs watchdogs m Jllldstream.
nation'?
,
For President Clinton, the question is what to do about an attorney genNot so fast, says Professor·
eral prone to seeking independent counsels to investigate her own team.
Richard Alba of the State University'
House Republicans, meanwhile, are rethinking plans to change members of
of New York, and the dean of the
the House ethics panel during a continuing investigation of House Speaker
study of exogamy in America. lnt~;
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.
marriage. he says, is indeed a critical
Each party has roundly criticized the other for contemplating such moves.
step in the process of assimilation.
Each has come under editorial attack. And each may decide in the end that
But marriage rates arc generally lo~
it's not worth the political and public-~lations hassles to rna¥ the changes.
within the black community. The
Clinton is meeting with all members of his Cabinet in the ttansition periissue of race has been with America.
od. But he has not yet sat down with Attorney General Janet Reno to disfroll) day one, and it's not goirig'
cuss ·her future or said when that might happen.
·
'
.
away. He does note, ho\vever, that for
The House is examining whether Gingrich's political organization viotfie first time there is .serious evidence'
lated tax and campaign laws and whether the speaker misled investigators .
that blacks are becoming .a seriouS:.
House Majority Leader Dick Armey. R-Texas, and his Democratic couningredient of the melting pot 9f;
terpart. Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., are trying to reach agreement on the makeexogamy.
·
'·
up of the ethics panel. Seven of the 10 members have served the six-year
Ben Wattenberg, a senior reDow"
term specified by House rules and many are anxious to escape the awkward
at lhe American Enterprise lnsti-"
job of judging their peers. ·
.
tute, is the author or "Values Mal·
Kerry Knott, Armey's chief of staff, says House rules may not "allow
ter Most" and is the host of tbl!·1
you to compel someone to serve" if he or she doesn't want to. But those
weekly public lelevjsion program •
rules have been waived; and ethics terms extended, in the pa!l.
"Think Tank-"
·
.Gephardt "feels it would be more appropriate to reJOin the full committee until the conclusion ofthis case," says spokeswoman Laura Nichols. Rep.
.
'
David Boni,or, ·D-Mich., the No. 2 House Democrat. .is blunt. "The Republicans think they can get a betler shake if they charige the j~ry before the.
final vote, " he said TUesday.
In reality no one knows whether a new panel would be tougher or soft.
By TONY SNOW
First Feminist. "The firsl lady and "friends" dido 't treat her like a crazy thing but defend themselves. Sooneri:
er on Gingrich, or whether the Clinton administration would fare better under
Creators Syndicate
welfare reform go together," he said. aunt with a ·Mensa card. Every time or later, right-wingers will have to' ,
a different auomey general. But that doesn't 'affect political dynamics
WASHINGTON
-When
Wash"like a bicycle and a fish ."
she irics to wriggle out of the pigeon- find a high ground for their ·views ...
b!:tween the parties. Ethics, says former House historian Raymond Smock,
get
bored,
they
seek
diver-.
ingtonians
On
the
other
side
of
the
ramparts,
hole she so despises, her husband's Why not sharpen their arguments by ..
have become " the biggest political weapon tl)ey can wield at one another.''
in
sponin,
g
.events,
such
as
the
sion
Friends
of
Hillary
hissed
that
her
critminions
stuff her hack. If she wants taking on a determined. w~rthy foe '! ,,
Once a rare occurrence, independent counsels, also known as special prosritual
humiliation
of
powerful
men
ics
couldn't
stand
strong
women.
to
sunder
the chains of sexism, she
The tiff over Mrs. Clinton's future .:,
ecutors, are now "a political football like everything else," Smock says: "You
and
women.
This
is
the
only
way
to
Mrs.
Clinton
joined
the
fray
when
sbe
might
want
to begin by telling the ·ambitions is manna for a pundit
call for a special prosecutor to make it look like your political opponents
explain the recent ·hubbub about asked a group of Australian women: White House Press Oflicc to stop because both sides have behaved Iike~•
aren't doing their job."
crybabies. Republicans acted a• if the ..
Reno has sought fow independent counsels: three to investigate ethics Hillary Rodham Clinton's political " Will we stop pigeonholing women telling her what she thinks.
future.
·
and
invoking
stereotype's
that
limit
Rcpubli&lt;;ans
also
ought
to
lay
off
first lady might destroy them with a ,
allegations against Cabinet members and one, Kenneth Starr, to investigate
Mrs. Clinton told Time Magazine their potential?"
Mrs. Clinton, if not out of respect. lethal one-liner. Democrats, mean- ;
Whitewater. More recently, amid murmurs Clinton would like-to see her go, several weeks ago she would play a
An American woman in her posi- then out of self-interest.
while, treated Mrs. Clinton as if she
Reno rejected· for the time being Republican requests for a special prose"formal role" in repealing p~s of tion could survive, she said, only by
The lirst lady has many virtues. were an unstable compound. They ,
cutor to investigate alleged Democratic abuses of campaign-finance laws. ' the welfare-refotin bill her husband deciding " to totally withdraw imd but sound political judgment is not tried to shush her critics ·oy dcscrib- :
Democrats and some independent observers say Reno has named inderecently signed. "I want to travel perhaps put a bag over your head, or among them. If she traversed the ing even mild ·disagreements as
pendent counsels in cases her department could have handled.
around and talk to people about what somehow make it clearthat you have country, caviling about wei fare, she unspcakaplc assaults.
•.
Yet firing Reno would create a·new set of political problems for Clinton. is happening on the ground," she no opinions and no ideas about any- most likely would set off political
Fortunately, our Fouading Fathers :
The Chicago Tribune said it would be tantamount to a "Saturday night mas- conlcss~d . "I intend to speak out thing -- and never express them, even explosions everywhere --savaging anticipated spats of this son and ere- ~
sacre." And commentators such as conservative Terry Eastland, a former Jusabout it and write about it. "
privately."
.
reforms that hadn't hccn implement- 'ated a pcrfcct palliative. the First
tice Department official, say any nominee would face skeptical Republican
This \)'Ouldn 't seem like such a big
That wistful tantrum pretty much cd, questioning the motives of con- Amendment Here's the solution to
senators at confirmation hearings.
.
'
·
deal, given her long interest in the destroyed the strong-woman argu~ scrvativc reformers, showing a few the Hillary Problem: Let her say ~
House Republicans wouldn't face confirmation hearings for new ethics
issue. But in dull times. critics leap ment, and it also should have put aQ flashes of rage --that would send whatever she wants, however she '
committee members, but they may decide the status quo is preferable to hot
at anything. So the instant she spoke, end to the Hillary-hunting excursion. Democrats skittering for cover. ·
wants. The Bill of Rights protects ·';
rhetoric, negative publicity and potential delays. "I can't sec the advantage
the tongue-clucking commenced.
But no sooner had thofuror begun to
But there's a goOd Hillary tQ such speech.
to Gingrich. I would think they'd sooner haye it done with," says Charles
"I think it'd be a mislllkc .. . for the subside than the White House issued complement the bad. When she's on
But realize that the Constitutio~ ,,
.
Jones. a jX&gt;Iitical scientist at the University of Wisconsin.
president to empower the lirst lady as a "clardicallon.':
.
her game, she appeals to the millions · works in both directions. If .Hillary •
a roving ambassador," griped New
Presidential atdcs sa1d cunly the . of women who think of the GOP·as Rodham Clinton says things people .,
Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman. Missus wouldn 't play a .formal role - a congeries' of toads . whose hcans don't like. those pcoplc have a right '
Wisconsin's chief executive, Tommy - i.e.. she wouldn 't get a chance to heat without the hcnclit of blood and -- make thut a duty -- to remind her .
.
-Thompson', wax.cd even more sple- convene a mammoth commission of human warmth. She can speak with who scrv~s whnm.
netic: "We really don 't need the ten- dub1ous lcgahty and propose a era- fervor and fire about truly important
der loving care of Hillary Clinton .... " dlc-to' gravc system of "security" things -- such as the awful. dangers
Write Tony Snow, Crealon Syn· · rl
A charismatic figure who is a But the most anful slam of all came that would hankrupt t~e country.
Editor:
that
await
our
children
these
daY,s.
dicate,
5777 West Century Blvd., ·~
Mr. C.E. Evans November 29 let- telegenic glamour boy, peerless polit- from Newt Gingrich's outgoing pres.&lt;
ThiS
.act
~f diSr~spect sums up
When
Republicans'
run
into
•the
ter haS spurred me to comment on ical tactician, and incomparable secretary, Tony Blankley, who turned Mrs. Clmton s can 1-wth stt~~tJon . . faimcss and compassion arguments, Suite 700, Los Angeles, Callr. "
mediator. One .with these attributes an 'old feminist slogan again·st the She would .he a lot better off 1f her they leer and twitch and do every· 90045.
third parties.
Because both of the major parties might conceivably weld all the vari,
I
are controlled by the same New ·ous third party groups ipto a harm9York based clique of globalists.the nious whole, and bring millions of
people can reject one puny for the voters whom havc.renounccd the sys'
other until the cows come home and tem back into the booth to .vote third
l
Two urgent tasks face President Pryor, D-Ark., · long Clinto~'s ' best · and should stick to the promise, cspc- government or becomes director of 1
party.
· little will change.
now that he's back from Asia friend in Congress.
Clinton
Unless
and
until
·
s
uch
a
figure
cially for political reasons.
the Central Intelligence Agency.
' It would require victory by a uniand
Thanksgiving
weekend : Pick a
The budget dispute, meantime,
Not only will Republicans attack
, fie\! third party of historic dimensions enters the sccnc.the third panics arc
In this scenario, the NEC chairto route the free traders and put them fated to flounder along._, a collection first-rate Cabinet and settle an in- pits Treasury Secretary Bob Rubin, Clinton if he drifts from the target, ·
house
dispute
over
whether
to
probut
Gore
hopes
to
get
deficit-cutting
man~hip
-- currently held by Laura
of
largely
insignificant
cults
which
all to flight Pero's eccentric behav.
pose~
budget
that
balances
by-2002'.
are
capable
of
stirrintup1cacup
temMorton
KQnl/f/J--c/ce
pain
over
with
before
he
runs
for
D'Andrea
Tys~n -- would go to
ior has ruined his credibility ·with a
Clinton
1s
expected
to
start
late
president
in
2000.·
Gene
Sperling,
currently deputy NEC
pests,
but
little
more.
large segment or the voting public .
this
week
n~ming
a
new
foreign
polRubin
's
response
is
that
Clinton,
chief.
Another
White
House opening,
.
JefTrey
Fields
who thinks that near-balance -- i.e.,
What would it take to create an effecIcy
team,
wnh
former
Senate
Majorsince
he
won
the
election,
now
that
of
deputy
chief
of
staff, will go :
Middleport
a small deficit -- in 2002 is accepttive third party?
ity . Leader George Mitchell , D- able, and Budget Director Franklin should concentrate on economics to former staff secretary John PodesMamc, almost cenain to be secretary Raines, who's arguing that the admin- .instead of politics. He also argues that ta, aides say. ·
.
.
of State; former Sen. Bill Cohen, R- istration shouldn't fudge On the goal the he,althy economy -- made possi- · · While Clinton was in Asia, his ·
Maine, likely t!) be secretary of of strict balance.
blc by the r.rsl:tcrm deficit reduction White House staff and key advisers '
Defense; and deputy National SecuBy The Associated Pre"
·
.
policy
he pushed-- was more impnr- were circulating Cabinet names to
White House aides say that Rubin
· Today is Thursday. Dec. 5, the 340th day of 1996. Ther~ are 26 dayslefi rity Adviser Sandy Berger, chief of and Deputy Secretary Larry Sum- tant in getting Clinton re-elected Congress. Even though Mitchell' '
in the year. :rhe Jewish Festival of Lights, Hanukkah, begms at su~set ..
the National Security Council.
mers, looking at economic realilies, than J&gt;l&gt;litical maneuvering anyway. came in for criticism from RcpubliToday 's Highlight in Htstory:
·
Looking at other slots, some Clin- believe that the financial markets will
The Whttc House stafT is uncertain cans as too panisan and not· ex peri- '
On Dec. 5,. 1933, Nohibition came to an end as Utah beca:me the 36th ton advisers voice distress that can- · respond.just as favorably to·a bud~ct where Clinton stands on the dispute, cnced enQugh in foreign policy, he ;
state to ratify the 21 st Amendment to the Constitution, repeahng the 18th didates for a few Cabinet positions that yeduces the deficit to nearly zero but it'~ clear that Rubin will remain apparently survived the vetting .
are not as strong as their first-term as to one that is in exact balance.
the s(nglc most important economic process as the top candidate.
,:
Amendment.
predecessors and that Clinton 's new
On this date :
.
Retiring Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.. '
The Treasury iwosome also is policymakcr in the administration -In 1776, the first scholastic. fraternity in America, Phi Beta Kappa, was White House staff lacks a top officiJol arguing that the difference -- in the , so much so that the post' of director who has extensive foreign policy' •
anized at the College of Wtlliam and Mary m W•lhamsburg, Va.
.
with experience dealing with Con- tens of billions in 2002 and perhaps of the White House 'l; National Eco- experience, made it known on "Meet' '
f"1n 1782, the first native U.S. president, Martin Van_Buren; was born tn gress.
SIOO billion over five years-- could nomic Council has become Jess the Press" recently that Joe would be
Since
incoming
White
House
Kinderhook. N.Y.
. .
.
soften the blow that deficit-cutting sought-after than it was when Rubin available. Former Bosnia negotiator
In 1791, composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart d1ed tn Vienna, Austna, Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles isn't a will have on domestic programs, the had it early in Clinton's first term.
Richard Holbrookc campaiped for
fonjoer
member
of
Congress
as
is
outAs
a
result,
NSC
deputy
chief
the post and sq did various women's. ·
aides
say.
.
d
'de J h Adam
at age35.
In 1792, George Washington was re-electe preso nt; o n
s was going chief Leon Panetta, advisers · On the other side, they say, Raines Berger, a longtime friend of Clir
groups on behlilf of United Nations ·~
are casting about for a substitute to is arguing -- with support from Vice ton's, is no longer said to be inter- Am
re-elected vice president.
. bassador Madel' oe Albright.
'" 1848 President James Polk trigaered the Gold Rush of '49 by con- serve as counselor to tile president President AI Gore and Bowles-· that . ested in the NEC job, but rather will
. (Morton Kondracke Ia aecu· :
an~ to negotiate with the Hill. My · Clinton has pledged . to produce a
.
.
firming th~t gold had been discovered in California:
move up to the No. I NSC job if iu dve editor of Roll .cau, the • - '
In ·1901 , movie producer Walt Dtsncy w.as born 1n Oucag~.
own sug\restion is retiring Sen. David budget with • zero deficit by 2002 present occupant, Tony Lake, leaves paper or Capitol HIL)
·

l! ,...

&lt;

Senator wants
law repealed

OHIO VVl'&lt;llher

The Daily Sentinel .Today's trends ar~ hard to.sort out

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy •lllcldleport, Ohio

to take a cuvered dish and a gift for
the gift exchange. All Democrats and
their families are invited.

'

Northern Ohio expects
more rain, snow tonight-

Deer population..•

ln PUACIIUS
TOll CRUIII in ' .f. . .Y MNOUla~•

Glrr

C~lPICA~

AVAILABLII

.

~tom

.

. . . tume~sBMk

Meigs EMS logs ·g calls
In

Moderate damage was incurred to .
RACINE
two vehicles in an accident on North
12:36 a.m., Siate Route 338. Effie Second Ave., Mi4dlepon·. Wednesday
Pickens, Holzer Medical Center;
morning.
.
'· ·
According to the report of MidPOMEROY
dlepon Police, Clarence A. DaVIS, 70,
8:25 a.m., Village Green Apait- of Mason, W. Va.. turned from Walments. K;othy Evans, Veterans Memo- nut Street onto North Second as Manrial Hospital. Assisted by Middlepon Icy E. Christy. 87, Middlepon. pulled
Squad 1114: ·
from a parking space tnto ht~ path.
Christy was cited for. fathn~ to
yield the right of way. Ne~thcr·dnv~~
injured. The nght Side of Davts
TheDaily Sentinel was
1992 Chevrolet was damaged whole
Chri~ty's 1992· Ford had damage to
\USPS 213-9'0)
the left front fender.
Publi•hed ever) nrremoon, Monday :hrouJh
Friday. Ill Court St_.. PorMroy, ()J\io, by the
Otlio Valley Pub!iahliiJ Compony/Ginneu Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 43769. Pb. 992·21"- Second
cl111~ pMtqe pold, at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mttnben The

At.~odated Pre5R,

Stocks

and the Ohio

Am Ele Power ...................40 112

NrMptper Auodlllion.

Akzo ..................................67 112

Aehland 011 .._.................. ,.47 1/8
ATaT ............_.. , .... _,,,......38 518
Blnk One ............. _.. ..........45 318
Bob Ev1n1 ........................13 ·118
aorg-W..,., .........-...........39 1/4
Chli'nplon _............-...........22 314Chlnnlng Shop• ................4 718
~.!J.:Icllng ...................... 22 112
I Mogu1 ................... 221/4
Gannett •• ~ ..........................76 114

1"0S'nnASTER: Send oddteu correaionw 10
The Dolly Sencinel, Ill Coon St., Pomeroy,
Qhlo4j769.

'

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Doll) ................. ....................... .......... .35 Com

G~r .......................... 48 314

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Sublctitlen nllldl'~lrina to pay the carrier INIY
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.

No AUb.cripdon _by n,.n permitted in ucu
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.

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............ odjlll- dar·

ina dlt "'bocriplioo period. S.-prioo dlonpl . .r bo llllfl- b)' - .... ""

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MAILSUISCIUPTIONI

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sought ..

· c-f'his l(ttU I(OU cmt leiwe those
. .·
'~/ljepa.'ltment Stou eudlt eatds ~t~t .
home when I(OU shop this cl-(ollda.y ::&gt;e~~t~,.

Continued rroni page 1
morning looking for oflicc space, and
could not be reached for comment.
All employees at both the warehouse and corporate offices will keep
their jobs. but will he working at various locations. Some ~mployccs
worked oul of an Army National
Guard center Wednesday that was
located next to1he warehouse.
According to a release issued
. Wednesday afternoon by Fruth Pharmacy officials, a new distribution
facility will he rebuilt at the Point
Pleasant site. A temporary distribution point will continue the now of
merchandise to the stores.
Three of Jack Fruth's grown children, .Mike. Carol an&lt;LJoan were
working at the warehouse when the
fire began. They used fire extin-·
guishcrs in an attempt to put out the
names, but were unsuccessful. Several fire departments from both West •
Virginia and Ohio were called to the •
scene, which 1ook several hours to
bring under control.

With you'l "'g-a.'lme'ls Bank cl-(olida.l( ~oAHut
,-,.....,
I(OU won't 6e sho'lt 6o'l cl-(oliday '-~"'"'
You ca.tt 6o'l'lol\/ 6etwttJt $1,000
. .. • .
$3,00() oft a. two yea.'lloa.Jt. With .. .~ -~;::,,.,._
special loan 'late we wiU help clea'l ~
.
6ut!.,et to'l mo'le cl-(olida.l( ehm. .•
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Bank
&amp; Savings Company

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I.Otnt ~ 10 credrt approv1:111 Atie eflactiwlal d 111281QG and are ~t.~bjoct to ChllnQ8 APR shOwn it based on a ~.month loan ol L3.000 W11h a
$40 prepaid linenee et~arge 24 mon1tlly payment1 of 1138.91 . 10111 finltflco chwiJB ot $357 84 ana tocal Plvmems of S3.357 84 The sKJl)le lnleHISI
••• is lixed ta; lt\8 lf1Frl'1 ol me loan. Curn101 Farmert Bl_nii!Qal~ are not 11li(llbll. 01"!" IMiltS Ana term&amp; ~ro avaKablo_.
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Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

1--Local briefs-;'

Sheriff seeks information

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The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is seeking information
related to a Monday evening hillskip accident on Ponland Road (CR
35).
According to reports, an unlcnu~~on vehicle, possibly a Ford Thunderbird, was traveling east on County Road 35 around 7:30p.m. when
the driver lost cmitrol in a curve and went off the roadway. The vehicle then slrUck a fence and damaged a gate on propeny owned by James
Turner.
, As the vehicle exited lhe field, it also struck and damaged Turners mallboK. MJJTOrS and a hubcap from the vehicle were found at the
scene. according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Anyone with information concerning this crash is asked to contact
the Meigs County Sheriffs Deparuilent at 992-3371.

l

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I

NEW YORK (AP) - Nazi war
criminal Hermann Goering may have
used Swiss businessmen with diplomatic clearance to funnel his $20 mil·
lion fortune into Argentina, a 1946
State Depanment memo says.
The German Luftwafte head was
one of several top echelon Nazis who
sent assets to South America inside

are fined in:Mayor Horton's court

Wednesday's GPLA results·
'

Auction results from Wednesday's :
Gallipolis Producers Uvestock Association:
·
Total head: 430.
HOGS -II. Prices, steady,
$1 higher than last Wednesday's auction.
Butcher hogs, all weights, $48-53;
. SOWS, $38.
1
CATI'LE-419; Steers, nla heifers,
n/a.

choice, n/a; heifers, n/a; good, n/a;
heifers, n/a; holstein, n/a.
COWS • 80; Demand and price
trend, steady to SI higher; utility,
$29-$32; standard, $32.34.75; bulls,
steady; butchers, $30-48.
FEEDER CATTLE - 328;
steady • Yearling, steers, $42-56;
heifers, $38-53; calves- stee(s,
$47.57; heifers, $38-50; back to the
farm babies, $25 and down . .

An ·alleged suspect in a recent
string of bomb threats to the Gal·
lipolis Hills Department Store has
been detained by Gallipolis City
Police. .
John P. Holstein; 21, Gallipolis,
identified as a store employee, has
been placed into custody in connection with the threats and a Nov. 24
fire atttie store.
The fire. which caused in excess
· of $100,000 damage at the store, was
preceded by a bomb threat, ac~ord·
ing to p91ice.
.
Police expect formal charges to be
filed within the next few days. Federal authorities have been contacted
and discussions are being held to
determine whether to file federal or
state charges.
·
Holstein remains lodged in the
Gallia County Jail on an unrelated
charge of misuse of a credit card.
Police Chief Roger Brandeberry
said that the case has been an exccp·
tiqnally'long and complex investigation.
"Our officers depel)ded,heavily on

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allll3e

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December 7 8

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technology in th is in.vestigation,
phone traps, video surveillance, pin
registers, polygraphs and several Plher tools were utilized," Brandeberry
said.
Hills' management andAmeritech
Security were also credited for their
assistance in bringing the case to its
·current stage.

ALL vouR HouDAv

~EcoRATING AND ~~FT-GMNo NEEDs

IC~IOO!~E FONTANINI from I![~{Jnl:.

...NOW

·

selections all year at

Stahl's
Route 1, Box 221, Ultle Hocking, OH (&amp;14) 9811-2271

1------Ho-ur•'-·=._.~_on_..f_r_t._a.._.Sat.
__a-_~_a-:"su_"_·-t-_s_ _ _ _..;....J

19~5

1995 BUICK
SKYLARK

· The young and coming Meigs Miller three, two each from Melissa
Lady Marauders pui it all together to · Werry and Taryn DOidge two. Becky
QVercpme an II-7 first period deficit Smith added one.
For the Buckeyes (2·2), Heather
en route to posting a 64-56 Tri-Valfey Conference Ohio Division win Cagg led with 17 points, followed by
6ver the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes M. McClelland with 14 points and
Monday night, according to a report M. Johnson and Amy Adams each
released Wednesday.
had six.
. CheryiJewell .led the way for the
Adams added four and Cagg
Marauders (1-2) with 22 points, three as N-Y edged to an II- 7 first
~hile sophomore Tricia Davis added
period lead. Sparked by triple six·
12. Carissa Ash nine, Tracy Coffey point efforts from Coffey. Jeweii and
.!even, Ashley Roach six, Tanya

~onus · m~ney

.

Or 5J9.J,., .....

$11,995

A•to, 1ir~tereo,
Yo &amp;•ore

CliQI&amp;TML\0 GREETING EDITJON
Tuesday; December 24th
D'lfh '""':nfll!ll of bolly amllniNtlc•tn.-. illhJt•khif.(N hung by
1
fh .. fin• and Netmes. bln11keted ,wlt11 SilO\"• ( :briNhiiDN
enenmpa~ warmfh nnd (ltJttd ehee-r a1s we• t•herlsh the
blt"S.'IInj~N we've ~hn.-..1 thiN pnNf. ,'l'enr. J'ur us if 01..811111
Nn,,·lnf.( "dmnk.&lt;~'~ ••• you. uur many frie-nd"• uhl nml nt•w.
. \\'hUNt• kind NUpport w ..•n ni"'RYN f ":IISIII't•. Ut~inf.(
btiNineN.'I wltb -''••u is our f.(n•aft•st plemmrt•!

Crlise, •ch Mort.

$11,696 $11,359

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 24th

. ADVERTISING
ASK FOR 'DAVE or BOH
992-2156

IrS WORTH YOUR DRIVE/

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.'
All prices ilclude
rebates 1o dealer.

SUNDAY

1-5
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.must decide by Saturday whether to
offer · salary arbllratton to former
players wl)o hecat;ne free agents:

•
m

.The Daily Sentinel

.· -ONLY-

$1000
Per PicturePrepaid
Please encloee 611K·addressed,
stamped envelope to return your
·
,photo.

Official
Entry

Form

Dates·must be set for the new group
to file and for teams to make dcct·
sions.

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Butler agrees
to terms
with Dodgers

All Used Cars &amp;Trucks Must Go.

DON TAT~ MOTORS, Inc.

Monday, December 23rd

(,~'!

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subjecl to credit awrovaJ!

Will be published

...,®

su

·BE REnA TON CHEV PICKUP
5 •'-'"·Air latenilfllt Air, A1to, Cassette, ftlt,
wipers. Was 13,295
:~~

while hitting 27-38 at the line. Meigs
had 30 rebounds. led by Davis wit11
nine and ' Coffey with seven. Meigs
had 14 turnovers, 2 fumbles. 10
assists (Smith 5, Jewell 4); eight
stea1s and 27 fouls.
Reserve notes: N-Y won the
reserve game 24-18. Counney Cagg
led the way with eight. while Meigs .
was ted by Tangy Laudermih's six
points and three-point effons from
Jennifer Shrimplin and Ashley Rupe.

(16 years of age or.younger)

....
4NAPAt

OLDS

NEW·1996 CHEY NEW 1996 1/2
1

Davis, Meigs marched back with 16second quarter points to lead 23-20
at the half.
The game was decided at the end
of the third quarter when Meigs post·
ed an I 8-9 advantage. Jewell had
nine points in the march, including
5-7, at the free throw line. Meigs led
41 -29 . N· Y came back with a 27-23
edge in the finale, but Meigs held on
for the 64-56triumph.
. Meigs hit 18-46 for the game,

'

Our special page(s)
44
For Children Only"

flap stalls ·vote~ lor new labor deal

: . NEW YORK (AP) - A pair of rules for Alex Fernandez, Moises
~nags involving bonus money and Alou, Jimmy Key and 1t others. The
[ree agent rules is causing a delay in usual filing period is over, and teams
the rlltification vote by players on ,.., ·-- proposed bBS\'balllabor conlract.
Lawyers are working to resolve
problems in two areas: a $2.5 million
dispute in 1996 postseason bo.nus
money; and deadline dates for 14
players who wi II gain free agent
rights when the agreement is ratified.
''We,'re hoping to wrap it up
tomorrow,'.' New . York Yankees
pitcher David Cone, the AL player
representati•e. said Wednesday. "We '
hope to find a way to resolve things
amicably."
'
Union head Donald Fehr said he
expected a ratitication vole today,
scheduled to be the final session of
the players ' annual executive board
meeting in Dorado, Puerto Rico.
· However, he said, "We still have
a lot of stuff to cover."
Under )he proposed, agreement,
which is retroactive to the 1996 season. the players' share of ticket
money from the first three·games of
each first-round pltiyofl' series drops
from 80 percent to 60 percent, with
the difference going into an escrow
account
·u players exercise their option to
extent the agreement through the
2001 season, the money would go to
owners. lfplaycn; decline the option,
the union would get the money.
Because owncn; waited until last
week to ratify the deal. postsea.~on
checks already have hcen mailed,
with the extra 20 percent of the firstround money included in the player .
· pool.
·
.
The second area coven; free agent

CUTLASS

$9,549

averaged 10 points per gune last season and improved his game consid·
erably over the summer.
.
. Another returnee, that was a big
tmpact player coming in to this year
was 6-2 center Jeff Montgomery, a
three-year letter winner that blew his
knee out prior to the season and is
now limited in his skills, despite
being a good shooter. Mongtomery
ts very strong and was one of the
cen1ral district's top rebounders last
year.
At the other guard is sophomore
Brad Brooks, a 5-8 player making his
first varsity start. Brooks, who is
very athletic, was a pte!llier runnidg
back on the football Jllam. He gained
over 900 yards rushing this past foot· ·
ball season and adds some bulk to
the lineup.
Travis Cassidy, a six-foot sophomore forward. jumps well and is a
good rebounder. He will share time
with six-foot lefty Aaron Maxson,
although Cassidy is the better shoot·
er of the two.
Scott Arnett, a 5-11 senior is at
small forward . Arnett and Cassidy
are called the "Blue Collar" workers
of the Logan Elm team. Jason
Beavers, a 6-3 jr. cedter is a good
jumper and is also left handed .
Wolfe said, "We play much like
Southern and are very aggressive.
Saturday, we'll probably play ten
people and play full court defense.
How we play and how hard we play
are the trademark of our system .
We're better defensively, than most
teams.

Meigs varsity girls get 64-56 victory over N-V

1·800.837·1094

$6,995
Or

One game of local interest that Holiday tournament which featured are going to take the Federal Hockmay strike the fancy of area basket- some of the nation's finest teams. ing game first, try to get people in
ball fans is the meeting between the Additionally, Southern has made anil out to save our legs for Saturday,
Logan Elm Braves, led by former appearances there seven .different then set our sights at Logan Elm.
Southern standout Kent Wolfe, and years, including the original appear·
"We have strictly emphasized our
·the Southern Tornadoes, led by vet· ance in 1979-80, when Jiinmy defense this year," Caldwell said.
eran mentor Howie Caldwell.
O'Brien's last second 'heroics off a "We believe that our efense should
For Logan Elm, Saturday's game Jonathan Rees feed (assist) brought be able to take people out of their
(4: IS p.m. tip-off) will be the season Carl Wolfe's club to the regional.
offense. That's what we aim to do
opener and the first-ever appearance
Rich in tradition, Southern made both Friday and Saturday."
in Ohio University's Convocation appearan'ees there in 1980 and again
Maynard's speed helps spark the
Center.
SHS
press, while his tenacity is a
in 1982 'en route tothe state tourney.
The Braves will be making their Ironically, it was in the 1982 state spark on the off-guard position .
debut on the OU hardwood in hopes tournament against Windham that Evans fills in at an off-guard or forof someday making t baclc for a dis- Kent Wolfe seta state record that still ward; while Ryan Norris. who carne
trict or regional appearance, as this stands today; a string of .1S consec- on with somepotent pffensive spark
also marks the first year the Pick- utive free throws in a state tourna- at mid-season, hopes to provide
away County school is in the South- ment game.
some fireworks out front this year. ·
east District. Previously, the school
Adam Roush is ilnother capable
.
The Uaeups
had been in the tough Central District
'
guard,
who joins the lineup with
For Southern eight leuermen dot
and traveled the tournament trail to · the lineup, led by seniors Adam Greg McKinney and TYson Buckley
the Columbus Coliseum.
Roush, Ryan Norris, OregMcKinney, anchoring the post.
Wolfe said, "This game will be Jamie Evans, Billy Sheppard, Josh
Southern matches up well with
great experience for our kids. Com- Roush, TYson Buckley and Jesse Logan Elm except in the height
ing herein the spring is one of our Maynard. Maynard and Evans haye department. Experience-wise, Southlong term goals; it's the first chance been varsity mainstays for two years. em has an edge as two sophomores
we've had to experience a qualityfa- Additionally, Buckley saw sometime start; for the Braves."
·
cility such as this. Our first objective at the varsity level as a sophomore.
Southern should possess the same
will nol be the Tornadoes, but the ini- Evans was a first-team all-&lt;:onfer- style of play that area fans have seen
tial fear of thetonvo. Experiencing ence selection. Maynard was an all- over the past couple of decades.
the aunosphere there will bolster our . district selection .
Souther.n traditiqn omes in many .
desire to collie back."
· ·From last yelir's team, Southern forms and one of those is always a ·
' For Southern, the Convo is now lost the services of John Harmon, lack ofsize. Like most Southern
old hat. Still, Coach Caldwell cites Spike Rizer and Jay McKelvey. The teams, the 1996-97 team lacks
· the experience thereis inva)Jlable to · team posted a .9: u·record, the first height, but . possesses a good atti·
a team when tournament time comes. losing season since 1972.
tudeand uses its quickness well .
"Not many teams get this opportuAt guard Logan Elm has point
Southern teams have long been
nity,"said Caldwell.
man,
Lee Gunn, a 5-10 junior that
praised for their tenacious defense.
Excepting one ear, Southern has Caldwell said, "We expect to play Wolfe calls the "best point man I've
( been a regular at the Hoops Classic, with a lot of tenacity Saturday. We had here in seven years." Gunn
originally a part ofthe McDonald's

Open House

. Bomb suspe.ct arrest. ed in G
. alli'a

'

1995
CORSICA'S

Southern to face Logan Elm· Saturday

Fontanini•

I

'PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE •..

In the Kroger Hoops Invitational,

J'oday's livestock report

COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points ThurSday as provided
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Meigs County Sheriffs Deputies are investigating the report of a
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady,
may deer slug striking a Bentz Cemetery Road home Tuesday afterinstances
weak; demand and supplies
noon, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souls by.
were moderate on moderate offerAccording to reporU, Mrs. Minear notified authorities that her front
ings.
window had heen shot out around 4 p.m. Tuesday. When deputies and
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
Wildlife officers arrived on the scene, it was discovered that a deer
points 54.50-55.50. few at 54.00slug had struck and broke the outside pane of the double pane 48' x
48' picture window at the residence.
•56.00.
U,S. 2-3 , •210-230 lbs. 42.00Mrs. Minear advised that she only heard the glass break. She did
not hear any shots ncar the residence, located just across from the Bentz . 47.00; 230-260 lbs. 47.00-53.50.
Sows under 450 lbs. weak; over
Cemetery. The deer slug, which.had bounced back about five feet, was
450 lbs. 2.00-4.00 lower.
recovered by authorities . .
U.S. 1· 3, 300-500 lbs. 42.00"Hunters are cautioned to use care when firing their weapons in
44.00; 500-600 lbs. 44.50-46.00;
area's near dwellings," Soulsby stat~ .
·
over 600 lbs. 46.00-47.00, fe~ to
52.00.
'
Boars: 39.00-40.00.
Estimated receipts: 32,000.
Summary of Wednesday's Producers Livestock Association auctions at Gallipolis and Mount Vernon.

. Se~~n persons were fined and five street; ·Nicholas J. Goodwin, Mid)others forfeited bonds in the court of dleport, $10 and costs, fine suspend. ·Mayor Dewey Honon last week.
ed, improper display oOicenseplate ;'
i · Fined were Rona\d E. Haggy, Patricia L. Clark. Middlepon. $25
' Pomeroy, $ IOO and costs, possession and costs, no operator's license; Gary
.of marijuana; James R. Hensley, Rose, Middleport, $200 and costs for
Vinton, $300 and costs, contributing possession of drug paraphernalia.
to delinquency of a minor, $100 for
Forfeiting bonds were William M.
open container, and $100 for con- McMillion, Jr., Middleport, $51.
suming alcohol under the age of 21 ; speed; Richard R. Smith, Racine,
Helen M. Barker, Middleport, $25 $60, running a red light ; James P.
and costs, failure to control her vehi· Hayes, Pomeroy, $60, expired tags;·
cle, and $200 for driving under an Brad E. Haggy, Pomeroy. $6(;), run.·FRA insurance suspensiQn.
ning a red light ; Clint Stewart,
Max Geary, Middleport, $25 and La~gsville, $60, traveling the wrong
.costs, gom~ wron~ wav on one-wav way on ~ . one-way street.

$20 million of his personal fortune to e•plosive issue."
Diplomatic pouches from M)llrll
Argen1ina."
countries
such as Swilzerland were
David Vogelsanger, political
routinely
passed
without inspection
affairs and press officer at the Swiss
into
other
nations
during the war.
embassy in Washington, dism issed
the memo as "pure hearsay. No
source is quoted, anQ it's simply not
The memo cleared the Swiss govworthy of comment."
.
ernment of compliance in the asset
The long memo was found in the shuffling. but criticized the Swis_s for
National Archives and made public their "practice of entrusting dtplo. Wednesday by Sen . Alfonse D'Am· matic missions to its bankers and
ato, R-N.Y. In a·'Jettcr to the Swiss businessmen traveling to the Western
embassy, D' Amato urged an investiHogs: uneven, 1.00 lower to 1.00 gation to "get to th~ bottom of this Hemisphere ."
higher.
·
Butcher hogs: 48.00-55.10.
Cattle: steady.
Slaughter steers: choice 68.0078.00; select 62.00-68.00.
Slaughter heifers:I choice 67.00&amp;
75.00; select61.00-67.00.
Cows: steady to 1.00 higher; all
cows 39.00 and down.
off
Bulls: steady to 3.00 higher; all
bulls 48.00 and down.
.
Veal calves: steady; choice 41.00
Pickup 1996
and down.
Specllll Event
Sheep and lambs: 1.00 lower;
Piece "S11r11h"
choice wools 88.00-93 .50; choice
clips 89.00-94.50; feeder lambs Fc,nutnlrtl" Heirloom Nltlvltln... for th• true
of ChMimu
I 00.00 and down; aged sheep 45.00
• Bring families together for beloved custom of celebrating nativity
and down.
• Durable figures last for generations
Feeder caule: steady to 2.00 low1:;::~~ before all others,
er.
II
House of Fontanini has specialized in nativities since 1908. Todly,
Yearlings: steers 56.00 and down; IAmericat'~ familie's rely on open stock Fontanini, for their quality collectible
heifers 53 .00 and down.
Calves:· steers 57.00 and dowh; I ni1tivl1ty n•~un1s and Christmas accessories.
~:~~:~lnl nativity figures are available year-round In a variety of sizes and
heifers '50.00 and down.
Swiss diplomatic pouches during
World War II, according to the memo
relayed from Austria by American
Consul General Laurence G. Frank.
"It is reported that Reichmarshall
Goering )ately used this method to
lransfer personal funds," the memo
stated. "According to these reports,
Goering previously sent more than

~ seven

, l

·sports

Goering, others smuggled fortune in Swiss pouches

Stray deer slug strike home.
l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thureday, December 5, 189e

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I
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LOS ANGELES (AP) - Oulficlder Brett Butler, whose comc~ack
from cancer last September was cut
,short hy· a ·broken lefi hand, ha~
decided to play at least one mote season.
Butler, 39, agreed 10 terms of a
1997 contract with the Los Angeles
Dodaers, the team announced
VVednesday.
·
"Brett has heen a arcat contribu·
tor to the Dodger team and orsani·
zation, and we believe he can make
· a major contribution to the team next
season," Dod1en general manaser
Fred Claire said.
Butler played in just 34games for
the Dodgen last season, hltti.n1 .267
with eight RBis and eiaht s.tolcn
baaes. ·

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Dead..; Friday, Dec. 16.at 3 p.m.
Mall ~r bring the entry form:
Olfo&lt;, oood at Jh.,. pariicipolinu NAPA AUTO PARTS -

:

The Motor Parts £ompany_

Mld.ueport, 15711'111naa St., 18•1131
i82 Tlalrd Av~ U8 2881

The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�Thuradly, December 5, 1198

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Plge f • The Dlllly S111IIMI

'In the NBA,

.

worse if not for backup point JUard Darrell Annstrong.
Annstrona had Orlando's only field goal of the
fourth quarter and made a technical free throw with 33
seconds left for the Magic's 57th point.
Without it, tl1e Magic would have broken the NBA
record for fewest points.
"I gave it no thought," Hill said. "It's really no big
deal. If we tied it, we tied it. If we had broken it, it's
still a loss."
Terrell Brandon scored 22 points and Chris Mills 17 ·
for Cleveland. The lo.ss was the Magic's fifth in nine
games at Orlando Arena, surpassing their total from all
of last season when they began the year with 33 consecutive home victories and finished :&gt;7'4.
In other NBA games, Utah crushed the Lakers I 0175, Miami clobbered Dallas 101-79, Phoenix defeated Golden State 118-87, SjlllAntoniobeat Philadelphia
113-103, Indiana drubbed Vancouver 127-80, Houston
edged Boston 94-89, Detroit downed Atlanta I00-90
and New York defeated New Jersey 109-102.
Jazz 101, Lakers '75- At Salt Lake City, the Jau
won their 12th in a row with case.
· .John Stockton had three of his four three-pointers
and a2-pointer in a 13-2 run that broke a 24-24tie and
put Utah ahead for good. The Jazz led by at least to
the rest of the way.
Karl Malone scored 27 points and Jeff Hornacek had
13 as Utah moved within two victories of lying the fran.
chise record for consecutive wins.
·
"I've never felt better or had as much fun as I have

AI&gt; BMbtiNIII WI liar
Two things come to mind when the number 57 is
mentioned: Steak sauce and a Chevy.
Now there's a third: Orlando's latest point total.
The ) ' &amp;ic tied the NBA record for fewest points
in a pmc Wednesday night, slrut1erin1 though quarters c;&gt;f 16, 16, 14 and II points in an 84-57 loss tc;&gt; the
Cleveland Cavaliers.
It tied the record set by the 1954-SS Milwaukee
Hawks and matched by last season's Philadelphia
· 76ers.
"The bright spot," Orlando coach Brian Hill said,
"is we're 8-6 and not 2-12 right now."
It was a modest bit of humor from a coach on the
wrong side of a Iaugher, but there wasn't muc:h else Hill
could dC&gt; in the way of explaining. Aft~r all, his stan·
ing lineup included only one'player, Horace Grant, who
was in Orlando's startinslineup at the end of last season.
, · '~~'
.
.
Nick Anderson, Penny Hardaway and Dennis Scott
missed the game due to injuries, and Shaquille O'Neal
left to sign ·with the Los Angeles Laker~ .
, "It's all relativ~ when you tak~ their three top scorers away, put we ~new we had to take advantage of the
situation," Cleveland coach Mike Fratello said. "It's
-hard to.make up the points those guys score. Yoo just
can't manufacture 40. SO, 60 points. That's hard. Where
do you find those?"
Orlando's record-lying night could have been even

this season," said Malone, who sat out the founh quar·
ter.as the Jazz coasted.
Heat 101, Mavericks 79 - At Miami, the Heat
improved their winning streak to nine, also with ease.
Tim Hardaway scored a season-high 33 points, hitting II of 13 shots and going 6-for-6 from three-point
range. Miami tied a team record by making IS threepoint shots, arid Heat's 35 three-poiiu attempts broke
the team record.
"We were prese,nted with so many open shots thill
we had to take them. It was ridiculous," coach Pat Riley ·
said.
Suns ll8, Warriors 87 - At Phoenix, the Suns
won their second game of the season, opening a 27point halftime lead and staying ahead by at least 18 the
rest of the way.
A.C. Green and Michael Finley scored a season-high
21 points apiece and Danny Manning came off the
bench to add 20. · ·
The Suns made a trade earlier in the day,, picking
up swingman Darrin Hancock and a conditional second-round draft pick from Milwaukee Bucks for forward Chucky Brown.
Spun 113, 76ers 103 - At San Antonio, Avery
Johnson had 18 of his 24 points in the founh quaner
and seven in the final I :06 as the Spurs won their third
game of the season in 16 tries.
San Antonio had season-highs in points and field
goal percentage (53 percent). The Spurs also blocked
a season-high IS shots, including a career-high nine by
•

Flyers and Rangers tie 1-1 ; Penguins beat Senators 4-2
By KIN RAPPOPORT
AP Hooker Wtlw

goal by a fraction of a second when
his shot in the first period just
The Philadelphia Ayers waited missed beating the clock ft the end.
23 games for Eric Lindros to come "All five games I've had some
back, then waited four more for him good chances to score. l's going to
to roond into form.
happen. It's when you're not setting
Wednesday night, he finally ful- the chances when you worry."
filled their expectations.
Lindros broke up a shutout by
"I thoogh! he handled the puck Rangers goaltender Mike Richter at
well," Flyers coach Terry Murray 13:25 of the third period. He beat
said after Lindros' first goal of the .Richter on a slap shot afte~ Dale
season gave Philadelphia a 1-1 tie Hawerchuk won a faceoff in the
with the New York Rangers on Rangers' zone and passed the puck
Wednesday. night. "He's getting back.
~tronge~. Hts game conditioning is
The tie gave the Ayers a 2-2-1
tmprovmg,and that can only happen record since Lindros"retum.
through playing.".
Richter played a brilliant game in
The Ayers' captain had missed making 39 saves. Until Lindros
nearly two months of the season scored, he defended a 1-0 lead built
because of a groin injury. Since com- on a power-play goal by Brian Noomg back on Nov. 26 against Boston · nan at 12:40 of the first period.
Lindros had not scored a goal befo~
"When you've got guys as big as
Wednesday night. ·
Lindros, John LeClair and Mikael
. "I knew one would go in," said Renberg in (ront of you, if you don't
. Lmdros, who also missed another get position you can't move them out

Will Perdue.
•
P.ctt"' 127 GrizzliM 10- Reggie Miller scored
31 of his 36 polnts in the first half of the most lopsided
victory in Indiana's NBA history. The Pacers also tied
a club mark by hitting II three-point shot.&lt;.
Vancouver played without three starters as they_ set
new franchise-lows for 'l'argin of defeat at home, potnts
given up at home and fewest rebounds (24).
" It was bad. We were bad. Everybody," Shareef
Abdur-Rahim said. "(Injuries) aren't an excuse. I don't
care if' we were missing Wilt Chamberlain or Dr. J or
whoever, we still shouldn 'tlose that badly to anybody."
Rockets 94 Celti&lt;s 89 - At Houston, · ch~rles
Barkley had
points and 27 rebounds ..S the Rockets. bolstered by thy return of Olajuwon from a hean
problem, bounced back from a loss at Toronto.
Olajuwon played 40 minutes and had 16 pomls, five
blocked shots and seven rebounds as Houston 1mproved
to 16·2.
Pistons 100, Hawks 90- At Auburn Hills, Mich ..
Terry Mills scored 14 of his season-high 25 points in
a span of 4 112 minutes in the founh quaner and went
7-for-8 on three-pointers. Gr,ant Hill added 22 points,
II rebounds and eight assists and Joe Dumars also
scored 22 as Detroit improved to 13-3.
Knlcks 109, Nets 101- At East Rutherford·, N.J .,
Patrick Ewing reb'ounded from an awful game with 30
points and Buck Williams scored II of his 13 i~ the
final period for the Knicks, who lost by 24 to. Mmm•
on Tuesday night. Charles Oakley added 14 poonts and
12 rebounds, and Larry Johnson had 18 points .

t9

Bllsketball

A--

Texu T«h 17, New Mell.ico 68
Tcw·EI Puo 19, New Mclliico St. 7J

NBA standinp

Far West
E. WashinJIOD 80, UC Irvine

EASTERN CONFERENCE
lMa

:ll L fa.

....... ................... .14
Nnr York .............. 10
&lt;Jrt.do •................... 8
W......ton .....•.•.•....7

4
6
6
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.S71
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J:letroil... ............... ,.l3 3
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c::a.rlol1e .................. 8 8
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N.Y. Oi:mtsutMiami,! p.m.
St. Loui1 at Chi~:ago, I' p.m.
Sno Diego at PinWurgh. I p,m,
,Washinaton Ill Tumpa9ny, I P-11'1 ·
N.Y. Jeu n1 New. England. 4 p.m.

Heidclbcra 80. Ohio Northern 74

Mount Union 64. Baldwin-Wull11~;e
6I!On

Non-conference play

KilllSWI

indiannpolil 86, Centrul St 6M
't• JJ.tbnsas 72. Cindnnaa:i M
Mi3ITII, Ohio 92. Dayton 72
N. Illinois 8\, Bowlin&amp; Green 7~

Kcnjon -76. Ohio W.:sJq~~~t 60

~

Mustingum 76. Otterbein 66

New York JOY. New Jrney 102
a.£Vfl.AND 84, Orl;utdo ~7
Milnli 101, DIIJ1a~79
Qdroil 100. Al~ll CJ0

Nonaconference play
&amp;=ntr.U St . 61 , St. Fram:is. lnd. ~-'
Geneva 7~. W::llsh 6J
'
Michigan St. 80. Bowling Grwn :'il
Ohio ~ - IW. Kcntuck) 6b
Toledo 9~ . E":•m;vilk 614

Ut'b IOI ,L..A. Llkcn75
HcluiiM. 94, Bmton 89

WastlinJI(Ift al TOI~U, 1 p.m.
... .. L.A. Ch~fl ru Oucago. 8:30p.m.
Philadtlphil AI O.HM, 8:~ p.m.
Ponlllftd 11lknver. 9 )'l.m.

Ml•nesota 11 Se~tle'. 9 p.m.

Friday's pmes

New Ieney at Bolio•. 7 p.in.
New Veri: 3C Miami.JJO p.m.

CUVELAND :.1 Delmit.1:..a p.m.
Phoclik 11t Sa&amp;.-rornento, Kp.m.
V.-oouver t11 San Antooio. K : ~ p.m.
N~• ar Utah. 9p.m.
et.rkwtle at Pnrtlaad. 10 p.m.
0r1aM1J *L.A. I.Akm. 10: ~ f1.m.
,..... Ill Golden Sllllc. 10:.\ 0 r .m.

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.
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Danmoueh !13. Holy c,.s ~5
H:ln'l1hl77. Atm)' IN

IUM 91. Hal'l1f*'O 71
Loyola. Md. IC5. Anukan U ~9
Pin.t.rl,h Sf.. COMC"'.1M.'VI ~
Rhndt Island K6. Brown ~'I
Vilbnm·;&amp; 75, Providtni.'C b4
Wc:tl v;r,inia 101. Sym..:ll.*! 79
Wi-.-on5in 6-1. Ttmplc ~7 lOTI
Yule K2. lfbiJh 72

43

South

31

Midwest
&amp;.-ltr $6. A.adtrloR. In4. 47
Oc«JC~OWII 58. Mana:huKtts ~3
Uliaoi• St. 75. Dd'aul flO
lllllana &amp;. 7-4. E. llli-'• 68
K-... 12. Cilk.'i-.at:i 6~
Loyol;l.Ut'. 107. Oica,u St. K2
Miami. Ohio 92, 0;.)1on 72
Miuouri 81 . ArkarlDSt. 41
N. llliMis IU . BowliiiJtiretn 7.1
S. Oliaoi• 61. St. Lovi• ~~

Valpni10 92. fftdiw WtsleylU'I69
W. lllinoil10. Wi1.·Milw.wktc j8

Southwest

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Tol . Scuct•U , Tol. Waitt:~~

Tol. Stilt ~2. Tol. Ubber 42

Trotwood-MadiJOO 66. W. COIITUIIItlll

Vnndalin-Burkr 5.\. TI'O)' .oil

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W. MUJtlnJum ''· Ma)'fville 46
W11.lsh Jcsu11 3.1.1Att: Clllh. 45
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Northta&lt;~l

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fMf:1ln .............. D 12 I 27 17

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WESTERN CONFERENCE
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lot: L I til. !if liA

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Dull;a.~ ................. l6
ChiCIIIIL,. ....... ~. I l
St. Louis.. .......... I~
Toronru ..... ....... .II
Pfunia ................ ll

'I 4

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HI
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9 I
12 J . 27 71
1.1 0 26 78
I~ 0 • 72 76
l.t 4 20 ~~

53 •
60

fl7
7K
89
74

hclfkDiYI.......
Culorudo ............ l7 6 4 JK 97

~

YMP.-oum- ......... 14
Edmonton ........ I J
Lo1 A•Jelel .. ,.... ll
SanJose ............. IO
CaiJIII'1 .............. 10
AnAheim ..............9

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MARYLAND: Named Run Vandc.-r·
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~177

I ~2 II\6K

Red WiDgs l, CapiUls 0

Darren McCany and Sergei
Fedorov each scored a goal, and
Kevin Hodson made 19 saves as
Detroit won at Washington.
McCarty's goal was Detroit's
third consecutive on the power play
over the last two games. Fedorov
scored the other Red Wings' goal
short-handed, giving them their
fourth shon-handed scc;&gt;re of the
season and clinching, coach Scmty
BoWlJian's 990th career victory. ·
Hodson won his first game in his
second stan of the season following

Andreas Johansson·and Jagr scored
in the second period and Ron Francis completed the Penguins' run in
the third for the final margin.
Sharks 1.- Stars 1
Kelly tfiudey made 35 saves and
Many McSorley scored a shanhanded goal in the second period a:S
San Jose won at Dallas.
Hrudey needed to be sharp as t~e
Stars outshot the Sharks 36-18. San
Jose also had a good nigltl killing
penalties, holding the ·Dallas power
play scoreless on eight chances.
San Jose improved to 3-1-0 in ils
last four games after an 0-5-1 stretch
in its previous six. games.
Avalanche l, Oilers 0
At Denver, Patrick RC&gt;y established a franchise record with his
fifth shutout of the season as Colorado beat Edmonton.
Roy stopped 36 shots in his
record-selling shutout.

lmll~o:I'~&lt;Lch,

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Phil~~tll:ljlhia ....... l-1

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MIAMI DOLPHINS: TmnsferrL-d LB
M1u.: Lillihrid~e from the (1r.~&lt;:lice squad·
111 injured re~ervc . Sigocd DE Lilny l11ck·
~Uilltllhe fl.-.i(1icc WJ'Iill.l.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: f'la.:L-d S
Seun Lumpkinun injured rL~MII! . Si{!ltL'tl
· S l)..•rrick Hoskin.,_Signed DE Herl:l C11lcman to lite pm~1icc squad
NEW YORK JETS : Si~n~d· OD John
P11c1. Walv~U WR PIHilip Rlky lrt1m tht:
prn~ lice stiutt.d, S i ~ftcd WR Cturc nc c
Junes lo the JlrtiCiicc squall
OAKLAND RAIOERS : 'Signed P
Leo Aruguz.
SAN OlEOO CHARGERS: Signet!
RB Kt:vin Bouie.

i

HALL STATE: Suspended RU Justin

lJla.Dl.lnl.

JIM
1\lkn, Wtu~ .... .....2':10 liM
1-~ Smitb. On\. ..... 213 1049
Johnsnn,Car ...... 226 919

~7 .

Tol. St. Unula 11.1. Tol. Woodwanlll

26

Cpm

A11

S:UII.Ic~.IA.1 ....... 23M

Solon 60. Or.mJ.c 22

W, Ktail.-ky M . [)uqUelnt K2

(' An~un Curter t'rnm l'nrlland of
1hc AHL.

Quarttrbadu

Wnnci,, Phil .......m 1204

P-o11111a 40. Parma Nonrinndy 32
Philu :\~. Riwr View J.l
~marunin&amp; Y~ . 52. Berkshim J~
R1vmtdt 91. Geneva 60
Rocky Riwr 45, Fairview PaB .lK
Sidney .'i9. Day. Nunhmont47

.5oulh Aorida 76. AOridol Mbmk 611
T~ Tt\.-tt n. Ttnflillil« 62
'fcut.82. Flurid:t 64
T.a.r91, Prairie View 62
VMdcrtlik 66. Ala.·Binnin,hunl62
VirrJrua 7~. WiU1am &amp; Mary 6-1

WASHINGTON CAPITA LS : Rc ·

.: &lt;~lk-d

Detmcr.Phii.. ..... JOI . IK4 231~ 12 7
K. Ornhnm. Arb;,2C\ 122 1346 10 5

Lomin Southview !l!i. Sandusky -i-1
Lmolin Clcao-i1o'W 60, Keysl\tlle -'·'
Madison 69. C!•nncaur :tH
MOJnilieal Kll, Medina 50
M.:adowbruuk 6'1,.Sa . Clainwille -13
Midview -12. Obnlin J~
Mill'ord 49, Cin. Glen l~tc -IJ
MiPCrva 60. MarlinJlhln 57
Morllun ~7 . Tri V:tlk'y ~I
N. Olnutcd 5~ . turh.-ril ~2
Nl"W ~lint!ton 57. Sheridan .4
Olnu:u~d Fall' -lit Ba,. Villa~-'~
Paitn•Jville H01rvcy 6~. A~hlahula
lt,,

HOUSTON ASTROS: A~rct:d tu

tL'fms with OF Thonw; H_oward un a oneconlrlll:l.

.

Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
Detroit 2. WashingiOn 0: Vancouver
7, Buffalo 6 in ovenime; Boston 4,
Montreal ·3; Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 2;
San }c;&gt;se 2. Dallas I; Colorado 2,
Edmonton 0; and Anaheim 3, Tampa Bay I.

a 2-2 tie against Chicago on bet. iS. al.
Hodson now is 3-0-1 in his career.
DiMaio's goal gave Boston its
Canucu 7, Sabres 6
third win in four games. drawing the
At Buffalo, Martin Gelinas scored Bruins into a third-place tie with
two unassisted goals to help Van- Montreal in the Northeast Division .
couver overcome a hat trick by BufRookie goaltender Scott Bailey,
falo's Michal Grosek.
forced into the game in the first periMike Sillinger scored the winning .od when Bill Ranf0 rd was injured,
goal with I:221eft in ovenime when recorded his first NHL victory
he drove the puck between Buffalo despite allowing three goals on IS
goalie Dominik Hasek's legs from shots.
· the slot.
Penguins 4, Senators l
Jyrki Lumme, Donald Brashear,
NHL goal leader Jaromir Jagr
Troy Crowder and Esa Tikkanen also scored his 24th as Pinsburgh scored
scored for the Canucks, who won for four ·times within nine minutes to
the first time in four games. Rob beat Ottawa in front of the smallest
Ray, Donald Audeue, Michael· Peca crowd ~ver at the Corel Centre.
also scored for the Sabres, who had
A crowd of 11,679 watched the
a three-game winning streak game. breaking the previous low of
snapped.
12,237 set earlier this year when the
Bruins 4, Canadiens 3
Penguins were also the visiting tewn.
·Boston squandered a three-goal
The Penguins went the last 12
lead, but Rob DiMaio scored with minutes in .the lirst period 'and scv4: II remaining in the third period to en minutes into the second without
give the Bruins a victory at Moiltre- a shot on goal. But· Stu Barnes,

Invite You To ~hop Friday (9 .¢)aturday
December 6 (9 7
"A Victorian Christmas Along The River"

·~

75 1026 IJ.J

U. JohnMm.Min.21J

Gmnd V:•l. 6.1, F1lil')lon HMbor .W
Hannibal River M. Mnnn'C C('ntrul

f.d~WiMJd

Nario ...l Ltaaut

NaUon1l HO(key Lt1pt
BOSTON BRUINS : Re.:allcd LW
·Andre Ro)' from Prnvidc!nce ur lhc AHL.
LAlancd lW Tndd Elik 10 Providence.
NEW JERSEY DEVIlS; Rct:all-=11
LW P111rik Elia.~ fmm Albany of the AHL.
NEW YORK RANGERS: R.:callcd
LW Sylvo1ln BhlUin from. Bin!!h.·unhm 111'
the AHL.
PHOI:NIX COYOTES: AL1iYilleJ F
IJ;•IIu_~ !Jrakl' frum the injun.."ll li ~l. A~ ­
si~ncd C ('had Kii~L'I' lo Sprinitfidd 11f tht
AHI •.

llo.l'JII. Au.L!illl

S. VuunJt. S.F. ....22.~

l.ornin Ca~h . -18. SamJusky St. M;lfy 't

••

6

4.4 JK 5
lCJ 57 1.1 .

9~

FUYJ\:',0.8, ... ...451 274

Kinl•nd 64, NewhU!}' 41
lnlrewnod .U. Val. flM'F-C J2

ikdl1 72. S. Co..-ulina St. ~
C~ lUI. f~ Tcllil'fi O:tp~i-' 7~
~ K2. fumwt ~5

Ct*lal Caroli*l 70. r.loom Oliw ~
Ealt C•l))iu 64. Jill.'klorivilli: Sc. 49
Jari:Jon St. 1M. Tnur,uloo 70
Natylaftd 61. Md. - Balli~ Cm111Cy

fJuu

l'luU

lndi;m Vul, fl;\. C,lllh«:hton 5~ (2 OT)
J:k:bon MilitiA 54.1.utd"nwn 19
John Gknp 7!i. Croob... illc W '

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Sold thc

~;onlrao.:l of OF Nigel Wilsoo tu 1hc Cbibl:•
L;o11~ Murlnc1 nf th~ hpaneM: Pacific

'

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Oublin Cnffman ~~ - L.am.~.l!lh.-r 51
Fin:l0100J 6K, Avun 41
Golhanna fl~ . UPJll.'f Arlinl!lun 59
Gnrn.·un-ilk 67. MidUiclickfCIIdinal

'2

4.2 76

-·-

Col. Walkrson 59. c~\1. R.::ady -IK
l)l)vef 7-1, Cantbridr-.: J I

NCAA Division I
men's scores

4.7 711 II
4.5 SOl 10

I:tKJ
1141
1162
1104

ML-(lll'ddl . Ja..:...... J~ 9tJI D.1 ~2
T. Brown. Oak.. ....J!'i 91~ 12.2 ~2t
01rebct, N¥1 ........ 72 757 10 . ~ "'""

ter' s :n

•

.

S~.1Am.........

Akmn Spring. -42. Louisto'ille 26
Ashtl'lbula Harbor J I, Asht:tbulu·27
AvMLnkc67. WL~hlke-1.1
Bmoklide ~- W~lling1on 29
8Nnftwick RR, Cit. Rhodes 20
Buckeye Trail M. Shen.1mklnh .'\0
Canton Cath. 41. Mansfle'd St . Pe-

Carmlllon 6H, COWIIon S. 5 I
Cin. Hni'Ti!IOrl 62. f.aM Central 40
CK:. Ht:ir;hts 51. Shaw J~
Coal Grove U01w.um -8ryant
Purt1mouth -46
Col. LkSaks 70, Ros.;t:ran, "'9 ·

lntemutionul Lcag~.

Hockey

PILK!::NS.CIN .... K~ 1002 11.1161t 10

Akron Elms ~. St~t~boro H
Akron Hoban !i3. Padua, Fr.mcit-~An
:10

BOSTON RED SOX : A.:quired RHP
Robinson Perez Chtco rrnm Hirrn;hima
Tnyo Cnrp of rhe Japan League. Namel.l
Ken Mocha manu~n of Pawtu~;ket of lhc

•

RKrivtn
~

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

Tonlcht'spmes

1\merican lA•cue

LeuguC.

AU.l'JII. Au.L!illl .

OaVIM. Den ...... .29~
lktti~. pt1 .........295
GL'Or~ . Huu . .274
Mumll, NYJ .... 252
Mania. N.E-. ........ 267

Ohio Athleli&lt; Conferen&lt;e

Wednelday'oiiCOI'es

26\ :Wl~ 27 \4
262 :m76 25 I]
298 .U!i~ 24 9
159 2061 12 7.
120 1629 ~ 4

Rooh&lt;n

Wooster 65. Oberlin 52

• ...1Miilllll0 .............. 6

S. A.AioniD I B. f'tWiadclphia 10)
Phdcnil lilt, Ooklen Stak 87
IU-127, Vancoover80 .

r\IL0= XdL I.lllnl.

Testavmk. Ba\...441
EIWD.). Den ........ .424
Bl~dsoe . N.£....... 4~
M!trinu, Min ........ 264
frien, Sea. .........211

Case Wtstem.64, AlleP.:ny ~
Enrlham 57, Denison 46

12 .:t.U
P.bal:llix ................."' 12 14 . 12.~

Baseball
.

Canacllan FootbaU IAatut

CFL: Announced the r.:~i~natlnn l)r
Larry Smhh. COflunis-~ioncr. cffc.:tiwe m
th.! end .,r tht: iiea!ion.

College

S&lt;.JU&gt;Id.

Quarterbacb

llaw:

Football ·
NaUunal t'ootball Leapt
UALLAS COWBOYS : Sig ned DT
R11y Children.
GREEN B~ Y PAC.."KERS: Signet.! DE
Oscar Sturgis.
·
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Pl:1t:eil S
Dnvid Tnlc u11 injul'\.'\1 reserVe. Ao,;tiv:IIL'd
DB Rit:hanJ Jnncs from tho:: pnu: tkc

Transactions

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

North Coast Athleti&lt; Conf.

LA. Lottn ............ D 7 6:10
Ponlaftd ................. 10 IS · .556
LA. Cti....... ........... 7 10 .412
, GOidmSute ............6 ll .J:U

Monday's same
City al Oakland, 9 p. m.

NFL leaders

Ohio women's
·college scores

r.dllcot.w..

Anaheim at Buffalu, 7:30 p.111.
Tumnto nt N.Y .R&lt;Inf!ets. 7:JO r .m.
Pittsbur$hnl Wa ~hington, 7::\0 p.m
Montl'l!nlat Chkago, R:JO p.m.
Philadelphia.at Oallas.·8:)C) p.m.
Sr. Louis Ill Coloradu, 9_p.m.
Onaw~ 111 Edroontoo. 9::.0 p.m.

CiWolinu Ill San Fromcis..:o, 4p.m.
Dall:u ar Aritona, .J p.m.
Minnesol3 at De1roil. 8 p.m.

John CIUTOII88. Hirant 71

,Sanle ................... .l4 .. 5 .7:17

Friday's games

Buffalo ut Sean I~. 4 p.m.

C&lt;JTJ

N•tlonal Ba!lkrtball A.MMiation
CHICAGO BULLS: Activ;ucd C
Rnt~n Pllrish from 11'11.! injured li~t Pl:•\.1.-d
C Luc Lungley o111he mjured list.
PHOENIX SUNS: Traded F Chucky
Br.rwn 10: I~ Mifwookee Bucks fnr G-F
Darrin Hanl..'Ock and a !9&lt;.17 !le.:ond-rnund
dmft pick.

p.m.

Jackson\lille "'Houston. I p.ril.

Cdphal 6l 'Marietta 59

Basketball

Hanford :11 Bolton. 7::\0 p.m.
Calgary lll Nc:w Jem:y. JJO Jl.m.
N.Y. hl~ndcn al Aorid&lt;~. 7:30p.m.
Phvenit nl St. Louis. ~:30 p.rn
Tampa Bay nl tns Angeles. JO:JO

Sunday's JMnH
Allanta at New Orlean~. 1 p.m.
Ballimore M CINCINNATI. I p.m.
Denver 111 {i~n Bay. I p.m.
.I

SAN DIEGO PADRES: Nan~d Gre~

Booker buiiJll!n .:ooch. and Ken Nigrn di·
reL10f of media relalions.

Tonight's games

Phil*lphia at lodianllpOiis, 8 p.m .

Ohio Atbleti&lt; Conference

Iii

·

AnWleim J, TQJT\pa Bay I

Tonight's game

North Coast Athletic Conf.

7~

Vam;ouvC!r 7:' BU£falo 6 (0T)
Pillsburgh 4, OnawQ 2 '
Boston 4. Montreal) .
Philadelphia I, N.Y. Rnngm I (lie)
Detroit 1. Washington 0

Su.n Jose 1. Dallas I

NFL s Week 15 slate

Ohio men's
college scores
Ohio Westeyan 75, Keny~n ~b

LOS A.HGELES DODGERS: Agrt:o!d•
io terms Ji1h ·oF Bretl Butler ~n a oneyear co ntra Ct. OeJignuted RHP Eric
Weaver for ~~ iJIImenf .
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: A~recd tu
terms wilh bF Willie McGee un a one·
year con lra~.;l . Numed Gi\ylen Pius .mn::~g·
. cr of Lou1sville of the AnK""ncan Anodn·
lion.

Wednesday's scores

CoiUI'lldu 2, Edmonlon 0

Weber 51. 97, Brishmn Youns 1:10

Alleahen)' 8~. Case Western 74
Denison 84, Enrlh;un 75

WESTERN CONFERENCE
, IMa

Football

~D

UC Davis 74, Sacmnen1o S1. !,()
Ucah 60, S. Utah 40

8'~

.4&lt;i7
.313

3l

Ort:aon 8:'i. Portlo.nd S1 . 66

Iii

Ctn&amp;niDIY....
16 I '141

£1oi&lt;oJo.................

Andrc'fa21
w. Bmnch 72, Canal Ful1on NW J4
Wic;ktiffe 6.1, Tw~nsburg Chambc.rlnin

of the way," Richler said after the tie
IIIOppcd the Rattgers' winning streak
at~.
,

POMEQOY MEQCHANT'~

Scoreboard
. Ukaaboma St. II. M1ss. Valley S1. 74

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In theNHL,

•

Cavaliers blast Magic 84-57; Pacers, Suns &amp; Knicks .w1n
ly CHRIS SHERIDAN

~

Thuflday, ~ 5, 1198

.·CHAPMAN SHOES
Pomeroy's Quality ShOe Store

Size o to 3

.ALL HAIR BOWS :
&amp; SOCKS
.

.A.

luy One, Get One

(r

~
20%
OFF ....~~~!... ~.'.~)
0
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100 E. Main St.

992·5177

Pomeroy

( ) . . Shop Local; Shop Bullom &amp; 801111

Jr.~~(»~

I"'

M

~ rl~

�..
•

:Thursday, December 5, 1996

Pqe 8 • The Deily Bentlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Kansas beats uc·
72-65; WVU downs
Syracuse 101-79
Kansas looked a lot more like a
No. I team after halftime.
The Jayhawks trailed by as many
as 16 points in the first halfagainst
No. 4 Cincinnati ·on Wednesday
night before righting themselves in
a 72-65~ic:tory in the final game of
the Great Eight in Chicago.
"They intimidated us in the first
half. The way we played in the firsi
half we were soft, and ldon'tthink
we're a soft team," Kansas coach
Roy Williams said. "In the second
half, we became more aggressive
and got the ball to the basket instead
of dribbling from side to side like we
did in the first."
The Bearcats (2-2), who held the
preseason No. I ranking and stayed
on top for the first polls of the regular season, blew the 35-23 halftime
lead when they couldn't overcome
Danny Fortson's foul trouble and
some terrible shooting from their
veteran guards.
Fortson, who finished with 25
points and ·11 n:bounds, picked up
his third foul early in the second half.
While he sat out for 5:17, Kansas
. capped an 18·2 run.
"It was terrible, it was sickening
to watch," Fortson said. "That's the
No. I team .in the country and if we
· had played the second half as hard as
we played the first, we would have
won the game."
Paul Pierce had all.but two of his
17 points in the second half for the
Jayhawks, who shot 27 percent in the
first half while committing 12 of
their 16 turnovers.
"I knew we'd come out strong in
the second hlilf. We'ie a veteran club
and we '.n: not gQing to give up on
anybody," Pierce said. "I don't think
I was being aggressive enough like
I should have been in the first half.
I wasJosing the ball, I wasn't going
to the boards like I should have."
Damon flint was 3-for-14 from
the field and Darnell Burton was 2for-17 for Cincinnati, which lost the
No. I ranking after losing at home
last week to Xavier, Ohio. .
"We can't expect Fortson to score
qn every possession," Bearcats
' coach Bob Huggins said. "Kansas is
No.J ..TheydeservetobeNo. I. But,
, J'rp. con~~rnl,ld about us, not
Kansas.".

By JON FRANDSEN

"EvenNally, by winning the battle, we are losing the war," be said. "Fur"I think it is quite possible that many ordinary people wbo are reli1ious
thermore, we are coming off as the New Crusade, the New Inquisition, and or may have some inclination toward religion are made to feel uncomfort·
o.nnett New• Service
able with pri vale, let alone public, expression of religiosity because the
WASHINGTON - The pressure on Hollywood to produce entertain- that will leave a stain on the church for years to come."
Baehr, Sen. Joe Lieberman, [).Conn., and others critical of the media media makes them feel they are outside the normal course of fashionable ...
ment that better reflects traditional values is making great strides, but the
mo~em~nt nsks bemg labeled "the New Inquisition" if it embFaces tough spoke at a seminar sponsored by The Center for Jewish and Christian Val- behavior," Lieberman said.
But Baehr said there is strong evidence Hollywood is beginning to shi.ft
taches hke the proposed boycott of Disney, a leading media critic warned ues, chaired by Lieberman, an Orthodox Jew, and Sen. Dan Coats. R-Ind.,
Tuesday. ·
an evangelical Christian.
I
and that the movement should be encouraged.
The group advocates not just Jess violence and sex on the big and small
"There are only 270 movies released every year, only 60 prime-time tele·
Consistent criticism of offensive material mixed with active encourage·
screen,
but
decries
the
portrayal
of
religious
people
and
leaders.
.
vision
programs. Of the 270 movies, 17 reflected Christian values, about 3,0
ment ?f more wholesome. movies and television progmniming is far more
"There
is
no
proportionality
coming
out
of
Hollywood,"
said
Rabbi
to
40
percent
reflected biblical values," Baehr said. "That's a tremendous
el!'cchve than boycotts, sa1d Ted Baehr, chairman of the Christian Film and
Television Commission.
·. ·
Yechiel Eckstein, president of the center. Films routinely ''lampoon Chris- change from w))en we started, when only 6 )lercenl reflected biblical· values
. · and none represented Christian values."
.
·
:. "If we tell people not to go'see ... ' 101 DalmatianS,' or notto go see pos- tians and people of faith and morality."
Lieberman, too, complained about the "predominantly unfaithful por·
"for that growth to continue, that means' we are going to have to contintttve moral films, what we are basically telling Hollywood is 'don't make .
trayal of people of faith."
ue to support the good," he said.
those films anymore,' " Baehr said.

In other games involving ranked
teams on Wednesday, it was No. 3
Utah 60, Southern Utah 40; No. 5
Villanova 1S, Providence 64; Texas
Tech 77, No. II New Mexico 68;
No. 12 Clemson 82, Furman 55; No.
18 Texas 82, Florida 64; West Vir·
ginia 101, No. 19 Syracuse 79; No.
·20 Boston College 73, Rutgers 64;
Houston 79, No. 21 Thlsa 77; and
)'lo. 25 Virginia 75, William &amp; Mary
64.
No.3 Ut.h fiO
S. Ut.h SL 40
Keith Van Horn had 14 points and
15 rebounds as the Utes (4-0) struggled offensively (35 percent overll,
2-for-14 on 3s), but still cruised. Don
Faux had 13 points and eight
rebounds for the visiting ·Thunderbirds (2·2).
No. 5 Villanova 75
Providence 64
Freshman 11m Thomas made his
Big East debut with 29 points on 9for-J4·shooting, including 2-for-3 on
3s. Jason Lawson had 16 points, 13
OPPOSED TO PROGRESS- Clnelntwtl fronlrMn Danny F011a01!
rebounds and · five blocks for the
(left)
opp0111 !he prog~ll KllnNI' Reef LIFrentz II making to the
Wildcats (4-0), who led' by double
.
baekel
during Wednelcley nl9ht'1 contnt In Manhattan, Kan., wheN
figuresforthelastnineminutes.Der.
!he
Jeyhewkl
but the fourth-ranked Belrcatl 72-65. (AP)
·
. ·rick Brown had 20 points and Austin
'
.
Croshere 14 for the visiting Friars (42).
series.
· for the Eagles (3-0) in their Big East
Texas Tech 77
opener. Danya Abrams added 13
No. 18 Texas 82, Florida 64
No. 11 New Mexico 68
Reggie Freeman had 22 points for points and nine n:bounds for Boston
The Red Raiders (5-0) won their the visiting Longhorns (3·0), who College, which took control with a
33rd straight at home and their sec- are off to their best start since 1990. 14-3 second-half run that featured
ond over a ranked team in a live-day The Gators (3-3) closed to 63-53 consecutive threes by Granger. Geoff
span. Cory Carr had 25 points and with 5:37 left, but Freeman hit one Billet had 18 p&lt;iints for the Scarlet
seven assists for Texas Tech, which of his six three-pointers to end the Knights (1-2).
beat then-No. 25 George Washington rally. Greg Stolt had 20 points for
Houston 79
on Saturday. Kenny Thomas and Florida.
No. 211\dsa 77 (2 OT)
Charles Smith each had '9 pbirtts for
West Virginia 101
Damon Jones scored a career·
the Lobos (5-1), which closed to 60No. 19 Syracuse 79
high 35 points, including a short
58 with 10:08 left. New Mexico's
Gordon Millone had 25 points and jumper with 13 secQnds.lefl that put
starters scored aU but two its points. Damia~ Owens and·Adrian Pledger the Cougars (3-1) ahead 78-77.
Nt!. 12. Clemson 8l
each had 24 for the Mountaineers (2- Houston trailed by 14 points in the
FunnaoSS
1), who had an 18-0 second-halfrun . · &lt;econd half and six in the first'overThe Tigers (5: I) rebounded from .in matching the most points scored time. Shea Seals had 28 points for
.their loss to Minnesota on Sunday by an opponent in the Carrier Dome
the visiting Golden Hurricane (4-2).
with the easy home win. but staners (Notre Dame, 1992) and becoming
No. 25 VIJ'Iinia 75
Terrell Mcintyre and Harold Jamison just the fourth team reach the 100William &amp; Mary 64
were injured in the first half and did- point mark against the Orangemen in
Norman Nolan scored 22 points
n' t return. Mcintyre hun his right coach Jim Boeheim's 21 years. Jason for the visiting Cavaliers (4-1 ), who
fon:arm and Jamison twisted his Han had 22 points for Syracuse (3- closed the first half with a 10-2 run
righ! ankle. Coach Rick Barnes 2); which has lost two games by a to take a 33-31 lead and then opened
described the injuries as "not seri- combined 56 points.
the second half with a 28-8 burst.
ous." Greg Buckner had " points
No. 20 Boston College 73
Davi~ 'GrnbuloiTiuid ii;,hby Fitzgiblo&lt; Clemson, while Chuck Vincent .
Rutgers 64
bons led the Tribe (3-3) w.ilh 14 ·
had 14 for the Paladins (2·2), who
·Antonio Cmnger was 5-of-7 from
pomts each. .
.. •I
·, r" • ,
-.- •
have lost21 ·in a row in the intrastate three-point range and had 19 points

,------Installed· - - -.. . . --·Community calendar

OSU's ·Pace

..

tabbed to win
Lombardi
Award again
By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (APJ - Orlando
' Pace is anxious to make more history.
Last ye:tr the Ohio State player
became the first sophomore to win
the Lombardi Award as the nation's
top college lineman, and he's
favored to hecornc the lirsttwo-time
winner of the award tonight.
"It means a lot because it woul&lt;l '
be making history and anytime you
have a chance to make history it's
gratifying~" Pace said. "So, I'm
happy to he here two years in a row."
The other finalists foi the 27th
annual award arc Arizona State tackle Juan Roque, Nebraska defensive
end Jared Tomich and Virginia Tech
·defensive end Cornell Brown.
Pace, a tackle, helped the Buckeyes to a 10-1 record and their first
Rose Bowl .benh in 12 years.
The award. a 40-pound block of
granite ·· atop a silver pedestal, is
named after the late NFL football
coach Vince Lombardi.
Pace has even been mentioned as
a Heisman Trophy candidate.
"That's definitdy a longshot,"
Pace ,;oid. "I'm happy to be men. tioned in the Heisman race if it goes
to the best ~layer. we 'Hhavc to wait
and see. But it's liard to judge the
·best player."
Ohio State leads all teams with
four Lombardi winners. Nebraska
and Notre Dame have three each.
Ohio State's Jim Stillwagon won the
first Lombardi trophy in 1970.
Pace has been a starter since his
freshman year and may decide to
fore1o his senior year lnd enter the
NFL draft,' where he would be a
cinch firJt-round p~k.
"Thai's one of the lhings I'll talk
lboulllfter the seuon," he said, "I'll
sit down with my family and we'll
discun what's best."

..

TUPPERS PLAINS .. Ladies
·Auxiliary, Post 9053 VFW, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the hall.
. SYRACUSE -- The Meigs County Republican Party Central' Committee, 7 p.m. Thursday at Carleton
School.
REEDSVILLE -- The Coolville
Community Choir will present its
annual Christmas cantata, "Season
of Love" at lhe Reedsville United
Methodist Church, Thursday, 7 p.m.;

I,

FRIDAY
ATHENS -· Fourth quarter,
Regional . Advisory · Council, Area
Agency on agi~g. Friday, II a.m.,
Athens City Recreation Center, 733
E. State Street, Athens.
SATURDAY
.STIVERSVILLE
Sliversville
Word of Faith 'Church, hymn sing.
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE ·- · Harrisonville Lodge, F&amp;AM 411, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Open installation of
new officers. Installing marshall,
Roger Van Dyke, 33rd degree
mason. Refreshments. All master
masons invited.

SALEM CENTER .. Star Grange
778 and Junior Grange 878, Satur·
day, 6:30 pot lock, regular meeting,.8
p.m. Take items for food pantrjl;
third degree team to practice.
SUNDAY .
REEDSVILLE
Community
youth meeting, Sunday, 3 to 5 p.liJ..
at the Reedsville United Methodist
Church. All youth welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS ·· Annual
Christmas party. VF;W Post 9053, 6
p.m. Sunday. Take covered dish. '
RACINE .. RACO collection of
canned food and n\)n·perishables,
Saturday, 8 a.m. to noon, comer of
old Home Bank Building, or David
Zirkle residence. Food to go to loc&amp;i
church food pantries.
·
MIDDLEPORT -- Waid Hayml!D •
to speak at Hobson Christian Fellowship, Sunday, I/ p.m .
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT •· DAV Chapter
53, Christmas dinner and gift
exchange, 7 ~.m.
•

TOPS club prepares for holiday dinner
Plans for a Christmas dinl)er to be providing a can of food when they sented trophies for their weight lob
held Tuesday were made , when lost weight, and contributing change in October. Best TOPS loser was
TOPS OH 570 of Pomeroy met for a turkey purchase when they Shirley Van Meter with Cheryl Hat'
recently at the hall.
· gained wait. A basket was put field as runner up.
Co-leader Maggie Biggs gave ,a
· There will be a $5 gift exchange together and given to a family.
A penny march was held and program on enthusiasm.
at the dinner. Members are to take a
An upgraded catscenner unit haa been lnstllled .l n th•n~dlology dapartmant at Vetarane MamaBest loser at the Nov. 19 ·meting
covered dish. There will be no meet- items left over from the craft sale
riel Hoepltll. Th~ unit will operata twice aa quickly ·~ the previous eq\llpment replaced by the
ing Dec. 24 and only a weigh-in were auctioned 'off. At the Nov. 5 were McDonald with Juanita
upgn~dad unit, end Jhe re1ultlng Imagery w,ll. be lmprolitld. Pictured wlth ·thelnetllled cetlcan unit
meetina Julia Hysell the KOPS Humphreys as runner-up, MeDon~
only Dec. 31.
·
· ·~~~ s~~f~ r~dlology ·technolOQiet an~f'!" S~1111n, . eupervlaor of t~e n~dlology ""part· ·
Ai the· mee\ing Shirley Van Meter · queen, and Jeanette McDonald the read: "Thke Time to Be Thin" and a
' received a charm and a ribbon for TOPS queen were honored. Julia discussion on the article was held. It
six weeks of consecutive weight Hysell was the best KOPS loser with was noted that the membership fee
loss. It was reported that a bake and Linnie Aleshire runn'er-up, and will be raised to $20 effective Jan. I.
Each of the meetings opetied with
craft. sale held at Overbook was a McDonald was the best TOPS loser
with Phyllis McMillion as runner- the TOPS .prayer and KOPS pledge
success.
and included the ARD penny much.
The Thanksgiving project of up.
Officers'
reports were given and
At
the
Nov.
12
meeting,
Nellie
"Lose to Feed Someone in Need"
Finally, eat breakfast and lunch. contest was discussed with members Grover and Mary Roush were pre· members sang'to the lop losers.
for example); try io substitute fresh
fruits and vegetables for not-so- If you return home late in the day
healthful junk food; use low-fat ravenously hungry, you're more apt
broths and tomato rroducts to make to snack on high-fat, high-calorie
. PETER
sauces; avoid frozen dinners and foods · while dinner is being preother processed meals (they're full pared:·When you do eat out, considGOTT,M.D.
of salt as well as fat).
' er it a treat and realize that, in most
With respect to preparing health- instances, you're probably eating
ful meals, authorities suggest ' the three or four days' worth of fat"'following tips: Eat less meat; cook you could easily avoid by dining at
THE MOST BUVTlFUJ. Sa.BCTION OF TIIEBS
with low-fat or non-fat dairy foods; home.
Tasty, nutritious meals can easily
, steam, broil or microwave food in
INTHEMID-10HIOVALLE"
.
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
preference to. pan-frying; when bil prepared at home, after organiz·
Select from either Beautiful Sheared Fruier Fir
. Fast-food menus typically con- sauteeing, replace butter with olive ing the job of shopping and usin11
''The Elite: In Christmas Trees" or
tain high amounts of fat, largely the oil or use a non -stick pan; skim the common sense •• and imagination Tndlllonal Wblte Pine, Srokh Pine &amp; Douglas Fir
type derived from animal sources fat off the top ·of homemade stews in food pn:paration.
Also available Ball &amp; Burlap Trees
and, therefore, rich in •cholesterol. ami soups;· thicken gravies with
AU
trees
are
perfectly
shaped
and oeuonably priced. Slzeii range from 6' to 10'.
To give Jeaders more informaFats are a bonanza of calories and flour and water, rather than fat; sea- tion, they can request my Health
Supplies of tall b'ees are Umlted • .So, Shop Early.
should be avoided by people who son vegetables with herbs and Report "Eating Right for a Healthy
' AU Varieties rdaln needles ,..11 througboot thr,holldayl
are attempting to maintain a normal spices, not butter; make your own Heart" by sending $2 plus· a lon1.
body weight. In addition,.choli:sterol salad dressing · with .more ' vinegar self-addn:ssed, stamped envelope to
--------. -J~tAnwe'd~--------------~
bas been shown to .increase the risk and less oil -- or try just lemon juice P.O. Bo~ 2017, Murray Hill Station,
of heart attacks and strokes. Most and Italian herbs; modify baking New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
diet-watchei&gt; have come to disdain recipes by reducing by one-third the mention the title.
fast-food restaurants as unhealthy amount Of fat called for by the
Next week: Some comments on
eating places,. despite auempts by recipes (replace !he missing fat with Olestra, the new anificial fat substimany of the franchises to offer applesauce); for the meat in tute.
To Beautify Your HorruJ For The
"healthful" dishes that contain less casseroles, chili and lasagna, substiCopyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
fat.
tute more vegetables, beans and ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Get Orders In Now For Bob's Delicious
· I was surprised to learn, via a tofu.
recent TV news program, that the .
Fruit Baskets In A Variety Of Sizes
fQod served in "family restaurants" ,------:-----------------~-..
· and Fresh from the Greenhouse ...
is· also high in fat, in amounts that
niay even exceed those in food sold
by fast-food chains. Apparently, it's
. Available in Red, Pink, White,
not only the fried foods and cheese .
dishes that contain unacceptably TONIGHT, 6 P.M.
Marble and Jingle Bell Varietiee
high levels of fat. Other edibles are ·
6W'
BE.OPEN
also to blame. For example, salad WE
Large · $ , .
d~essings are a huge source of
8'' Pot
Pot
,unwanted dietary fat.
: If restaurant eating carries with it STOP IN AND SEE OtJR
Ducounta Available For churche• &amp; Other Orgunisatwm
.
.
sdrne' health risks, what is the poor
Remember Bob's For Fresh Delicious Florida Citrus
· PARADE SPEt:L\LS
consumer to .do?
Many nutritionists are taking the
Available By The Piece OJ" BoX
.position that food prepared at home \
Bulk Christmas Candy
cart be 'the most nutritious and
h~althful -- especially if consumers
Over 30 Varieties To Srdufy Your SU1eet Tooth!
,exercise basic principles of smart
shopping and smart cooking.
-lncludin,g EJJglish Walnuts, Hazel Nuts,
• · With respect to shopping, t)lese
Pecans Mixed Nuts and More •.•
' experts recpmmend the following :
..;boose IOI!I· fat (or non-fat) versions
At Bob's Gallipolis Garden Center.:.
e
of milk, yogurt, cheese, and salad
•Homemade Holiday Crafts •Candles
dressings; buy the leanest cuts of
e
•Holiday Ribbons &amp; Bows
meat and poultry (extra-lean ham•Decorated Wreaths •Holiday Cotton Throws
bMrgcr and skinless chicken breast,
e

Stay at home for realthy· eating
DR.GOTT

Kansas City (plus 2)
at Oakland) (Monday nllht)
The Chiefs have won seven
stmight from the Raiders. Why not
one more?
CHIEFS, 16-13.

Cl.ll

'I'll

Last Week: 6-9 (spread); 8-7
straight up).
Season : 98-97-1 (spread) 132-64
(straight up).

iQLEOO, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
quanerb!lck Karccm Wilson and Ball.
Stale punter Brad Maynard were
announced Wednesday as the players of the year on offense and
defense in the Mid-American Conference .
Wilson, a sophomore from Valdosta, Ga .. became the first qualterback in Ohio history to rush for
1,000 yards in a season. Running
hack Sieve Houklin also rushed for
I,000 yards - only the 24th time
that teammates h~ve topped that figure in NCAA hist'ory.
Against Bowling Green in little
more than a half, Wilson rushed for
a school-record 282 yards on 19 car·
ries and tied the school record with
four touchdowns. He fel.J just 27
yards short of the NCAA Division I
record for lll&gt;hing yards in a game by
a quarterback and his 282 yards were
the most ever given up by a Bowl'"¥ Green defense.
Ohio went6-6 overall and 5-3 in
the MAC for its best. season since
. 1982.
Maynard, a senior from Atlanta,
Ind., became the first punter ever
selected by the media as the MAC
defensive player of the year. He led
the league in punting and ranks sixth .
in the nation with an average of
46.84 yards. In 1996, Maynard had
one punt of 70 yards, eight of 60 or -..
more, 23 of 50 or 1110re and 40 punts
or 40 or more yards.
He i~ the all-time MAC,Ieider in
.punting yardale with 10,702 and
with a .44.22 IVenJC. Lilled • firstteam all-America by ThcAuociatcd
Press last year, he is a two-time firlt·
leam all-MA,C selection.

RACINE -- Southern Local
Schools. parent teacher conferences.
Thursday, 4 to 7 p.m. at schools.

RACINE .. Racine Post 602,
American Legion, 6:30 p.m. business mee\ing followed by di~ner.

TIE, 2,2 (ove.nime).

OU's Wilson
and BSU's
Maynard take
MAC honors

RUTI..AND -- Rutland Township
Trustees, regular session, Thursday;
6:15 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
·

~

Oddsmakers. pick Packers to beat Denver
Here is how. the professionals
look at Denver's trip to Green Bay.
When the line first carne out, they
treated it as a Super Bowl preview -

REEDSVILLE ·' The Olive
Township Trustees will meet Thurs·
day, 7:30 at the township ~all .

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- PERS-PERI meet·
ing, noon Thursday at the Senior
Citizens Center. Reservations by 9
a.m.

'

the Packers were favorCd by six.
Minnesota
Now that the Broncos have no rea,(plus 2 112) at Detroit
son to win the game, 'it's 8 112.
At this lime of year, look at the
The original spn:ad was thr&lt;e team that's still alive.
·
points (maybe four) for the LarnbCau
VIKINGS, 31-28.
. Field tundra and a couple more
Buffalo (minus 5) at Seattle
because the oddsmakers still think
Buffalo lost to a backup quarterNFC teams generate more support back in a dome last week~Nott'cc
, than AFC teams,
·
'
tn a row.
,
But now that the Broncos have
BILLS, 24-13.
·
.
clinched home field for the AFC
Jacksonville
playoffs, who knows how they'll
(plus 6) at Houston
play. This game means nothing to
The 'Oilers are 5·2 on the road and
Denyer, so John Elway might rest his 2-4 at "home."
sore hamstring and some other
JAGUARS, 24-23.
banged-up Broncos may sit.
New York Giants
Here's Carmen Policy, the prcsi(plus 7) at Miami
denrofthe San Francisco 49ers ..who
How do you predict a game
would love to have the Packers lose between two unpredictable teams?
and allow his team a good shot at Go with.Jimmy.
wresiing home field in the pl~yoffs
DOLPHINS, 24-20.
from Green Bay. '
,
New York Jets (plus 13) ·
"From Denver's perspective,"
at New England
Policy says. "it would be a motivatThe perception is that the Jets
ing thing to beat one of the top teams have racked it in for the season. Did
in the NFC at their home field, where they ever have "it'~?
they're thought to be invulnerable."
PATRIOTS, 41 -13.
That sounds like a per talk.
SL Louis
·Still, Elway wants to play and the
(plus 6 1/l) at Chicago
-Broncos want to prove they arc not
All four of the Rams' wins have
just another soft AI'C team.
been in domes. Not here.
So go with the first instinct of the
BEARS. 27-10.
ptos.
Baltimore (plus 3)
PACKERS, 24-19 .
al Cincinnati
Philadelphia (minus 4 1/2)
The Baltimore Ravens .have nevat Indianapolis (tonight)
er won a road game.
Paul Justin gets an education.
BENGALS, 44'41. · .
.EAGLES, 20-6.
.Adanta (plus I)
Carolina (plus 9)
at New Orleans
at San Francisco
A game someone has to win? Or
Looks like the pros still don 'ttakc do they ? .
tpc Panthers seriously. Hey, they 're
'two for three lifetime against the
--Sports briefsNiners.
49ERS. 19-16.
Baseball
Dallas (minus 10)
DETROIT (AP) - Federal prosat Arizona
ecutors
say former Detroit pitcher
Now that Leon Lett is gone, the
Denny
McLain
and a business panDallas offense is talking about pickncr
ran
a
scheme
to take $3 million
ing up the defense. Why don'nhey
l'rom
the
pension
fund of a mealjust pick up the Cowboys and try
packing plant for business debts and
again next year?
personal usc.
·
. CARDINALS, 31-30.
But
defense
allomeys
said
Su Diego (plus 9 1/l)
McLain
and
partner
Roger
Smiaicl
at PltllhUI'Jh
Can things get any worse for the were used as fall suys by financial
Chargers?- Not only are the Steelers adviser Jeffrey Egan, who set up the
angry about last week's loss but they plan using a false name and hid
$5SO,OOO from them.
ICt Sean Salisbury rather than Stan
The two sides laid out their casHumphries.
es
during
opening arguments in U.S.
STEELERS, 24-6.
DQitrict Court. McLain, Smi1iel and
w...........
Bsan
were indicted i~ May on fed(lllitlal 3) at 'llllllpa Bay
eral
·
chirJes
of coospiracy, theft
Tilt Redskins have lost four of
from
a
pension
money launfive, but Jive them credit for the I() dering and mailplan,
fraud. Esan has
days they've 'had to rest.
pleaded
guilty
to
pension
plan theft.
· REDSKINS, .20-10.

Sue Matheney; director.

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is ·not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed aS· space
pennits and cannot be guaranteed
. to run a specffic number of days.

In regard to the NFL's 15th W~k,
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Wrftllr

.·

Push for_movies that reflect family values must not go too far :·:

In Top 25 college bllsketbllll,

By The Asloclnld Preu

The Dally Sentinel • Page t

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1995 MERCURY SABLE
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MIDDLEPORT £HBISTMAS
PARADE

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fam.lly.
• GUt (;ertlfteate Drawings .
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Free p8rldag year ..Ound
J.ayaways Welcome
Shop your local Merchanu%

In 1964, North Vietnam attacked
U.S. Navy ships in the Gulf of
Tonkin, and President Lyndon B.
Johnson ordered ,~ ,bombing of ·
l'(orth Vietnllft, ' aparldiiJ the first·
anti-war demonatnitions-in the Unit·· ·
ed States.

'·

BULK NUTS

•And Much More

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�•

Thunday, December 5, 1996
Thul'ldey, December 5, 1188

Custom-made home videos make great personalized gifts

Candles -light the holidays with strong traditions
By CINDY KRANZ
Rockford Register Star
Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanzaa are thn:e distinct holidays, but a common thread lhat links them is the use of candles in their celebrations.
Besides being decorative, the candles carry some significance in each
observance.
HANUKKAH
At sundown on Thursday Dec. 5, Jews will light the first candle of the
menorah, matking the beginning of the Jewish buliday called Hanukkah.
The story behind Hanukkah, the Festival of Lights, goes back more than
2,000 year&gt; when the Jews lived in what is now Israel under Syrian rule. 111o:
king would not let the Jews practice their religion and destroyed the temple
in Jerusalem. A small group of Jews started to revolt againSt the Syrians.
After three year&gt;, this small group .defeated the Syrian army and rebuilt the
temple. ·
·
Legend has it that there was only one small container of oil to light the
menorah to rededicate the temple. Although this was only enough oil to last
for one day, it lasted for eight, long enough for someone to get more oil
before it'went out.
Celebrants now li'g ht candles every year at Hanukkah to celebrate. the
dedication of the temple, the victory for religious freedom and the miracle
of the oil that lasted for eight days.
.
The Hanukkah Menorah, called a Hannukiyah, can be any. shape or style.
It holds eight candles and one helper candle called the shamash. It should he
lit after sunset each night of the holiday and placed near a window or door
so people passing by can see the lights. The shamash is lit first and then used

By IILL WOLFf!
The Loulavllle Courler..Journ.l
You will ne- see it on "Siskel &amp; Ebert," but the new video fearure on
Charles llld Catherine Brothers got 200 "thumbs up" last month l l its pre-

-Third: Shepherds' candle, which symbolizes people being the light of
to light the ocher candles because the holiday candles may not he used for
anything but enjoyment.
the world, and like shepherds, all have a responsibility to tell others about
On the first night the shamash and one candle are lit. Then on the second the true meaning of ChristmaS.
- Founh: Angels' candle, which is a reminder of the abiding presence of
night, the shamash and two candles are lit. This continues until the last eight
are lit. Tllo: candles are added to the menorah from right to left, but they are God.
lit in reverse order; the last candle added is the first one to he lit.
·Kwanzaa
While the candles are burning, no work is to be done. Everyone lllUSI
Kwanzaa
is
a
weeklong
African-American
holiday that is celebrated from
relllll and enj9y the lights and the holiday. In some homes it is the custom
Dec. 26 through Jan. I. Kwanzaa, which is Swahili for "first fruits," --:as
·
for each person to have their own menorah.
established in the United States in 1966 by Maulana Karenga, a umvers1ty
In others, people take turns lighting one.
professor.
.
Advent/Christmas
The event was intended to help African-American famili~s reded1cate
Advent is derived from the Latin word, adventus, which means "coming"
themselves to strong family values, recognize African-Amencan achieveor "arrival."
Advent helps us recall the religious reason for the season of Christmas. ments and spur cultural renewal.
The focus is on the binh of the baby Jesus and on his second coming and
During Kwanzaa. one candle is lit each day on a seven-~anch c~delabra
how people prepare for that.
The practice began in the 8th century and it gradually became a custom. in honor of one of seven principles (in Swahili): umoja (unnyl,. _kUJichaguha
(self-determination}, ujima (collective work and respo~sl.bllny), UJ_am~
Not all Christians observe Advent, however.
The season includes the four weeks before Christmas. A wreath made of (cooperative economics), nia (purpose) kuumba (creaUVIty) and 1mam
pine or holly is placed in the home, encircled wiih four purple or blue can- (faith).
dles, which represent the four Sundays prior to Christmas.
. The se\len c3ndles.- one black, three green and three ~d - represent
The·frrst candle· is lit on the first Sunday, the first and second on the second Sunday and so on. The candles s·ignify: ·
·
., .,''
blood, ancestors and Earth. The black one, lit 01i the first day, represents
- First: Prophecy candle, a reminder of statements in the Old Testament' ·unity and the past. The red symbolizes the past and green the future of
that Christ is coming.
,
.
African-Americans.
- Second: Bethlehem candle, which refers to the Messiah coming out of
'
Bethfchem.
Each day of the Kwanzaa is dedicated to one of the seven principles.

.

ritiere- a reception honorinsthe Ken!UCky couple's .50 years of marriage.
·. Unkn~ to the Brolhen, their niD&lt; children put •oaether a· personal
vtdeo bringtng to~ether images of the couple, their family and friends. They
showed the 20-rrunute production to their surprised parents - and a couple
of hundred &gt;Nell-wishers.
" There wasn't a dry eye in the house. It was quite emotional," says Karen
Crowdis, one of the children.
' More and more people are using the power of videotape to make person-

'

'

;

went to a Sanders fund-raising event
and asked him your question in person. We still have no answers.
We spoke to a spokesman ,at the
like to know about the perks Congress receives. How long do their Federal lnformation Center a couple
health benefits last? Do they carry of times. Everyone we have spoken
Into retirement? Aild if they do carry to has promised to get us the inforinto retirement, how long do you mation, yet no one has gotten back ·
ha•e to serve to receive them? Are 10 us. There must be a reason why all
you allowed to collect Social Securi- these normally responsive people
ty on top of your pension? What are stonewalling us.
We know the answers to your
determines the amount of the pension? Are members of Congress still questions are a matter Of public
allowed to keep campaign funds as record, but we haven 't been able to
personal property?
ARM- unearth them. Dear Readers, can
STRONG HUNI'ER, Weathersfield, you help us with this question?
Vt.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I live
DEAR ARMSTRONG: We've . iii South P~ena. Calif. I wonder
been trying to get the answers to where I c.an purchase the seeds to
your question for nearly two year&gt;. make my own sprouts. I'm looking
We 've called .both of our Vermont for spell, karnut, barley, etc . My son
senators·· offices as well as thai of . is allergic to wheat, and I would like
Congressman Bernard Sanders. We to try to make my own sprouted

bread.-- ELAINE OSMOND, South 3998.
Pasadena, Calif. ·
STUMPED: CLAXTON FRUITDEAR ELAINE: We fo'und spell CAKES -- Henry Alcott of Chino
and barley, but couldn 't turn up Valley, Ariz., is a member of the 1
kamut. Walnut Acres Organic Farms Marine Corps League. Their' organiin Penns Creek, Pa., has a splendid · zation is active in the "Toys For
·catalog .. They carry a variety of Tots" program. They want to sell
organic goods including grains for Claxton fruit cakes to raise funds,
sprouting. Spell is available in 3- but they don ' t know where the comand 5-pound bags (item 20803); the pany that makes the cake~ is located.
3-pound bag is $6.45 and the 5- Neithrr do we. Readers?
pound bag (same item number) is
UPDATE: SLEEP-MATE FAN
$10.15.
OR NOISE-MAKER -- When we
Walnut Acres doesn ' t recom- spoke to a gent at our local
mend sprouting barley, but they told RadioShack store, he told us the
us some people succeed in doing it. company carried a radio with the
"You need to experiment," we wer~ sleep-mate component. It allows the .
told.
listener to hear the sounds of surf, ..
Barley (item 20801) is available rai~ or a train. This radio was on
in !-pound bags ($2:99), 3 pounds sale, our source told us, for $19.97.
($7.99) or 5 pounds for $12.69. For
Unfonunately, the radio sells for
an order up to $16, delivery charges $29.97 and has been discontinued .
are $3.95. To order, call: 1-800-433- You may find it at your local

Time out for tips on receiving,
giving perishable Christmas gifts
By BECKY BAER

ing or receiving these special gifts
Meigs County Extension Agent by mail. ·
Famlly and C~aumer SolSendiliJ Perisll.able FO¢~: ,
encesl Community DevelopPerishable foods will stay at a safe
ment
·
temperature longest if frozen solid
With the holidays upon us, pack- first. After freezing the food, pack
ages and gifts may soon he arriving 1he item with 'a cold source such as a
- frozen gel pack that can he puriri the mail.
It is always fun to receive these chasea at supermarkets or buy some
gifts, especially if these packages dry ice from a local ice supplier listcontain food. Maybe you are receiv- ed in the yellow pages.
ing a package of Grandma's homeThe food should be placed in a
baked sugar cookies. If that is the sturdy mailing box made of foam or
case. you usually don't have to heavy corrugated cardboard. Check
worry about whether the food is still with your local post office for advice
on the packaging. Meat and poultry
safe to consume.
But Wbat if you receive a should·be cold or frozen and packed
smoked turkey, cheese and sausage with
cold source. Fill up any
gift set , or other perishable food '' empty spaces with cru•hed paper or
How can you be sure that perishable foam "popcorn." If there ' arc air
foods are all right to eat? Here are . spaces in the box. the food and the
some food safety tips shared by the cold source will stan to thaw. The
.U.S. Dcpanment of Agriculture that outside of the P.,ckage should be
l-'ou should keep in mind when giv- clearly labeled .- "Perishable Keep
&lt;
)'
•
Refrigerated."
Arrange a delivery date with the
1
recipient and ship the package by
overnight express delivery. You
II.
,
should alen tl1p rec1p1entto he on the
look~ut fori he package .and arrange
I
a delivery 11me Th1s w1ll help prevent the fond from sitting on the
·~xpenenc
front porch or at the post ~fficc too
·FIONA SOLTES
long. Do not send .food g1fts to an
The Nashville Tennesaean
office or other place of_ busmcss
• When it comes 10 a haircut, you · where the food may be dchvcred on
~ver know exactly what you're a non-work day or ~here there may .
going 10 get when you step out of not be available refn~erauon ._
that chair.
If you arc ordenng· penshable
' But when it comes 10 a young food th~ugh a mad order ~ompany,

a

d f'Irst
IT"
0 a ch II
!
trim can be a
hal· r-ral'sl· ng
1

'

'y

.

e

i

r

cflild's first haircut, you never know
actly what you're going to get
hen he or she steps into it.
.Tim Wondard, owner of the lnterdationaf Barber &amp; Style College in
Madison, Tenn., says it's impossible
tell bow a roun~ child will react
111 somoonc wtth chppers m hand \j'hether the child has been prepared
~forehand or not .
Some children are really, really
gixxt, he says. And some just have a

If
i

~-But

here are a few things that
ll)ight help anyway, straight from the
sehool owner's mouth:
• -First of all. try taking hair cut
o~t of your vocabulary. Kids don't
like cuts of any kind. So when you
t~lk to your child about what 's
phead, how about calling it a trim
instead?
- Help your child get used to
people playing with his hair. Comb
his hair, and talk to h1m about 11.
- Wondering when should your
child have that first trim? Most children get one at about I year. Luckily for ·you, small children can go
longer between cuts lhan adults can;
you'll probably end up laking the little tyl\e every six weeks or two
months.

packaged . It should be packed cold
or frozen in foam or.heavy corrugat.ed cardbOard will&gt; a told soutce·.
Also check with the company about
how the item will be delivered. It
should arrive as quickly as possible,
preferably overnight. Make sure the ·
package is labeled "KEEP REF RIGERATED." There should be storage
and preparation instructions included with the package on how to handie and prepare the food once the
package is opened.
Tell the recipient that the company has promised a delivery date.
This will al):rt the recipient that the
gift is in the mail , so they or a neighbor can be home to receive it.
Rccc1ving Perishable Foods:
When you receive a food item
marked "Keep Refrigerated" or
"Keep Frozen," open it immediately
and check the temperature. The food
should arrive fro1.cn or partially
frozen with icc crystals still visible,
or at least refrigerator cold to the
touch . If perishable food arrives
warm, notify the company. Do not
cat perishable food if it arrives
warm: lt is the shipper's responsibility to deliver perishable lOads on
time ; it is the consumer's rcsponsibihty to have someone at home to
receive the package.
Remember that the refrigerated
or frozen item must be sa'fcly stored
immediately. Even if the product is
partially thawed (as long as there are
ice crystals still present), it is safe to
refreeze; however, there may be a

ask t-he-co•m•pa•n•y•h•o•w•t•h•e•g•lf•t•w•ll•l•be••s•litlg•h•t,'o•ss•·•of•q•u•a•li.ity•.• • • •
I"

fJI..cquisitions !Fine Jewe{'!/

SEE OUR LARGE
HOLIDAY JEWE.LRY
CATALOGUE IN
TONIGHT'S SENTINEL
Wonderful Sa'vlngs On
Truly Fine lewelry
ONE YEAR NO INTEREST FINANCING

.9LCQ'l1ISITIO!l\[S
TWO LOCATIONI

:rIIJ{:J; J&lt;£W£1/R.9'

tl1iuanciM.

a FIFalll, 011
t1UIU

OPEN UNTIL 8 PM

RadioShack, but it's Rot in their catidog. To find the closest RadioShack
in .your area. call: 1-SOO·T.HE
SHACK. . •·
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hanland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interesl will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

News policy. · :

Anne B. Adams and Nancy NashCummings. are co-authors of "Ask
Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear Anne and ?-!an: Two Prize
Problem-Solve..S
Share
Their
Secrets" (Bjllltam). To order, call 1-·
800-888' 1220.
·'·
·

In an effort to pJovide our reader- :
ship with current ~ews, the Gallipo-:
lis Daily Tribune will not accept :
weddings after 60 days from the ;
{
date, of the event ·
All cltlb meetings and other news ;
articles in the society secti.on must !
be submitted within 30 days of;
occurrence. All birthdays must be :
submitted within 42 days of the •
•'
occurrence.

Copyriptl996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

SALE

Before
ChristJll(JS

alized gifts for anniversaries, binhdays, retirement parties, wedding receptions and Olh« occasions.
For as linle u $35, you can drag the photo album out of the bookcase,
pull your old 3Smm slides out of the closet - even rummage through the
attic for those old home movies - and transfer them to videotape.
You can wind up with somethin1 as simple as a slide show on video or as elaborate as professional film project. typical top-end prices shouldn't

exceed $200- bqt you can spend more for a long video that requires exten.
·
sive editing.
Best of all, you get to turn loose your inner Spielberg and direct.
You choose the photos, film or video clips to include, and you determine
the pace and arrangement of scenes. You can record a squndtrack- music,

.

Clearance Price

,

Queen
Anne Ulfl SofalotJe•eat..chair
Nor 12,399.95

Floral

Ckaru~ce

,

99995

6 Piece Bedroom

Sofa - Love•eat
Country Print

Not '1,899.95

Not '2,199.95

Clenmnce

Price 1899

,.

. .

,

,

,

Here are the answers to sorpe typical questions about video produclions.
Question: What kind of film or
pic!Ures can I use?
ANSWER; Just about any image
is fair game for a video - snapshots, old movie reels, newspaper
clippings, home _video. No matter
how old· or obscure the format, a
good production studio will find a
way to transfer it to tape . Bluegrass
Video, for example, . was looking
recently for a way to transfer images
from an old "View Master" reel for
one customer.
And even if your photos .are old and
crinkled. they may look fine in the
final product.
"If it's a photo that you like, go
ah~ and use it.:• Mike Kasbaum,
owner · of Excelsior Video in
Louisville. "It brings out character
in older photos if they do have a
crack in them or are a little bit yellowed."
Q: How long does it take to get
the work done?
A: Most jobs can be done in one
to two weeks. However, things may
take longer during the Chiistmas
shopping season- the busiest time
of the year for video-production
companies. To be sure that your project is ready by the holidays, make
. arrangem~nts with a production
company as soon as possible.
Q: How do I choose a production
company?
A; Companies are listed in the
Yellow Pages under "video production," but some work only with corporate clients. Look for ads that promote personal prOduction and transfers. If the company seems less than
enthusiastic about your small order,
look elsewhere. If you don't know
any one who has used a company's
services, ask for ll'ferences.

SAVE

BroiDn Leather
Sofa - Chair &amp;:
Oltoman

mjnimum

~";'nee '29995
Iryou
Qualify

Oak FW.h
Drop Leaf 'fable
&amp;: 4 cfia.,.
Nol .'999.95

Nol '2,799.95

19995
_C_h_e_rry-Fm-·-uh--1

io~~"'e

RoU Top De•h

•49995

.

nnancing

Reclinin. Sofa
Mull..colored
Not 11,499.95

~=;"""· '699' 5 '.

W"'8' Chair .&amp; OIIOIIIlln
Not '1,699. 95
1
95
Cleoranee Price

•

SAVE

Solid Cherry
Blue Print
Sofa &amp; Win,tr Chair
6 pc. bedrm •uite.
. Not '2, 799.95
No• '6,599.95
•
•
95
95
1
1
ct........ ,..,..
c........ ,.....

2, 999

Sofa
Lite Stripe
Not'999,95
Pri&lt;=o I

3 99 95

Free Delivery
Free Removal Old
Free Flnanelns
Delivery Even on Dec'. 24th

1 '199

Tappan DU.hwa•her
Not •699.95

c ...runc• "*'•. 24995

499

F~iro Sid. • S.,_llefriiJorotor

1

Wine'

..

1 '19995 ·:1.
'

"' I

Claab-o

Sbipe

••

Noa •s99.9S

.Ct.nrqne• Prk• .24995

112

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)

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••

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;u

••

AU
Lamp•
'

..

o•

H •

'

Ute-

'

"..

&amp; lfaler 26 ru ft
Not '1,899.95

~~~

Cl....... ,.....

; "The holidays arc a time for celebroting, but unfortunately, for-some
thts means overindulging in alcoh~l .
then getting behind the wheel of
vOhicle, endangering their lives and
yours," says Bill Ea11ley, Director of
Pllblic SafetY. programs of the American AuiOIJIObile Association, South ·
C.intral Ohio.
: This holiday season. AAA urges
e~ryone to protect themselves.
against. tbe people who drink and
drive.
: According to the National High·
WfY Transportation Safety Adminis·
tration (NHTSA),there were 17,274
algohol-rehKed fatalities in 1995.
ao4J: mOfllthan 300.000 people were
in.i,ured in crashes where alcohol was
· present.
·
· :Last year, over 1,300 people that
hall not been drinking at all were
ki~ed in alcohol' related crashes.
· ·Many people ask us what they
call do to protect themselves from
dnjnk drivers, Hanley said. "First
off, wearing·your seatbcll is the best
defense against an impaired driver."
~Second," continued Hanley. ·
''you Cll!l expect to see more .
im~red drivers at nisht and on the
wecke(lcls so you need t~ be even·

a

~~~~~~~~-White Wicker
Fle:uteel
1 ,199

.v

·!.·

'
"'

~ &gt;H

I'

'

la.;:;·-..,1
IEfl
il$:__1

I

Ill'S? . I

•

.,

Open Stock
Bedroom Piece•

p.m. or Saturday morning. Tables annual meeting held in. Columbus luncheon Dec . 10.
The UMW Christmas party will
arc still available for rent it was and attended by Lee.
Donations were approved by the beheld at the Racine Country
reported, and contacts should be
group for the Meigs County Cooper- Kitchen , Dec. 16, at6:30 p.m. Memmade with Lee, West or Hill.
ative
Parish, Red Bird Mission, bers may bring guests. There will be
Members brought in their
wrapped Christmas show boxes con- Good Works Building fund, and the a $5 gift exchange, with prayer parttaining gifts for Good Works in Racine RACO for Christmas treats. ners lo be revealed and new ones
The usual monthly donations to assigned. Martha Dudding will be
Athens. Bogard will deliver them.
·the program leader.
The angel tree project is ongoin. organizations were also approved.
A Thanksgiving motif was carIt
was
voted
to
change
the
penny
Gifts are to be at the church to be
ried
Out in decorations for refresh~
fund
collection
to
a
hat
and
mitten
given to Brian Harkness or Lee by
mcnls served by Margie West and
fund for needy school children.
Dec. 9.
An invitation was read from the Clara Mac Sargent. Get well cards
Bishop Judith Craig was one of
the speakers at the West Ohio Con- Athens First United Methodist were signed during the social hour.
ference United Methodist Women's • UMW to attend its annual Christmas

~Protect yourself against drunk drivers

~=;"""" I 34995

AU Refrigerators, Stoves, Freezers·,
Washers .&amp; Dryers, Microwaves,
TV's &amp; VCR's on Sale
Many Items Clearance Priced

Hutch, Table ·&amp; 6 ChaD:•
Not'2799.95
95
ct..,.••• ,..,., 1

C'-raneo

Oak (:omer
Hutch
Not '799.95

•

~:;:;::~·:~~~95
Queen Size
Mattre,. &amp;: Box
Symbol .
Not .'1,19'}.95

~:";"'·· '34995

EE

l}e''

program resources; Karen Walker,
social action; Melissa Harkness,
spiritual growth; Martha Dudding,
education and interpretation; and
Sharon Hall, membership.
Hill gave the secretary's repon
and read a thank you note containing
a donation ·from the Bailey family.
Lee gave the treasurer's report in the
absence of Clara Mae Sargent who
·.recently underwent knee surgery.
Plans were finalized fro the
Christmas bazaar to be held Saturday, 9 a.m: to 3:30 p:m. Craft items
and baked goods can be brought to
the church Friday cyening after 6 ·

. The Senior SainL• of the Rutl~nd ·Geraldine Sexton, Mary Romain. .cussed by Mrs. Preece following the
Church of God enjoyed a Thanks- Reva Walker, Birdie Hysell. Yvonne potluck dinner. Jerry Eads llad the
giving dinner at a Jackson Restau- . Sexton. Homer Preece. Ernest Lam- · blessing. and the group expressed
rant recently.
bert, Bob Eads, Chester Sexton and condolences to Chester and Geral. Jackie Preece announced a Jiggs Walker.
·.
dine Sexton whose son,in-law, Bill
Christmas dinner to be held Dec. 13
At another rocent mecung, Pastor Chapman recently d1ed.
at the church with senior citir.cns ·of Randy Barr was a guest and had a
~ttending that meeting were
the church area to be invited. It will special prayer for the sick. Poems those named and Alice Kitc!lcn,
bl: a potluck dinner with a special · were read by several members, Mary Romam, Lmda Marl, Mary
sP.,aker and singers. Following their . Louise Ead~ gave out ~ards for Lambert, B~rdie Hysell, Reva Walk'r.hank&amp;giving dinner, the Senior · ·birthday and weddmg anmversanes, er, N~lhe _ Hatfield, Geraldmc Sexand Rev. Carl Marr of Ravenswood, ton, LoUise Eads, l1ggs Walker,
Saints went shopping.
- Attending were Jackie Preece, W.Va. was guest speaker.
.
Ernest Lambert, Chester Sexton,
Mary Lambert, Nellie Hatfield,. _ Activities of the future were diS- Kay Barr and Homer Pree~e .

Reclinen
Not '699.95

,I

'399

Compare prices, of course -but print.
minutes of basic instruction includ·
basic price isn 't everything. Ask
If you've collected photos from ed. If you need more extensive
about charges for adding music, several family members, you may hand-holding, be prep~d to pay an
want to use color-coded stickers: extra $25 an hour foi an operator. ,
titles and special effects.
Find out whether the company green for sister Julie, brown for
The more advanced special
can perform the special effects you Uncle Bob, and so forth. That will effects may be beyond most people,
may need. Ask whether they . have a make returning the photos to their but standard editing techniques are
"Video Toaster" or other advanced owners much easier.
not that difficult .
&gt;
editing machinery.
Q: How do I "direct" the tape?
For people whose home VCR is
Basic editing machines allow you
A: Irs best to sit down with the still flashing 12:00, self-service may
to relirrange sections 9f ail existing video editor and describe just what not be realistic. Besides, a traine&lt;t
video and add titles and sound you want, scanning through the pho- . ~ideographer probably will do you~
tracks. Advanced editing stations tos, video or film you plan to use.
work in half the time that you could,
provide additional special effects,
Know in advance how you wont cutting any '!'Oiential sav ings.
Q: What will it cost?
such as "dissolvesj' of one scene to to arrange things and what kinds of
another and the addition of animated titles and music you'd like to !&gt;""'A_:.,;The cost depends on the
sequences.
But don' t be afraid to ask questions-nnglh and complexity of your mateWant a fairy to introduce your and make changes as you and the rials - •rid the special effects you
scene changes with the wave of her editor talk .through your project. He want.
magic wand? Special-effects editing or she may have m.ny good ideas
A simple slide-to-video or photo"
can add it. Want your photos to that would improve your production. 1b-video transfer: Most businesses
shrink and spin off of the scene? It's · Q: Can I change the sound on my we checked charged 40 .to 50 cents
a simple editing technique with .the video?
.
per slide. Photos ranged from 40 to!
right equipment.
-A: Sure. You can add music and 50 cents each.
'
.
You may want to ask the produc- narration. You can preserve the orig~
A collection of 100 sliqes or pho-•
lion company for .a demonstration of in~l soundtrack on previously tos (enough.for a 10-minute prcsenits work.
.
recorded vj&amp;Jeo, or delete that· track tation): ·$25 to $50. Some businesses'
Also ask if the work is done on- and start fr.6m Scratch.
charge a few dollars more for thet
A narrator will usually record the addition of a sound track and titles,
site, or is sent to another lab. On-site
work" hes1, because it ensures local "script" at the production studio, but such charges usually won 't addl
control and keeps your precious then editors will arrange images to more than $5 to $10.
photos and films in one location.
match the words. Music from a comTransferring home movies onto·
Finally, insist on a satisfaction- pact disc usually is added after the video: 8 cents to 10 cents per foot ·
guaranteed policy.
images are laid out- but if you're (A 200-foot length of film typically,
Q: How ·long should my tape be? lrying to match ·Particular images to plays for about 12 minutes.)
'
A: It depends on your audience. certain sections of the music, yoy
Editing: If y()ur production'
Vtdeographers recommend keeping . might record ,the music first.
involves editing previously recorded
things shon 10 minutes or so-· if
If you·'re shooting· home vjdeos '. film or video clips into a smoot~,l
your intended audience isn't closely for later' editing, avoid recording in spiffy final product, expect to pay .
related 'to or involved with the sui&gt;- stereo, Cadden advised. It's difficult from $25 to $45 an hour. A typical'
ject. But if you're dealing with farn- to erase later, if you want to add dif- production can be done in two hours •
ily and friends, you may want a tape ferent sound.
-but of course, eacli project varies.,
twice as long.
Q: What abOut' those self-service
Need several copies?.
Q: How do I submit the photos? · shops?
,
Expect to pay $6.50 to $7.50 per
A: It's best to have them in the
A: Some studios let you rent time copy, tape included, for small orders
order you want them shot. Number on their equipment. If that idea (five or fewer) . For larger quantities,
each photo by writing on a sticker appeals. you may be able to save you may get a discount of $1 or
allached to the back. Don't write money on simple projects.
more per tape, b~t Jll&gt;licies vary by
directly on the photo, because ink
Typical editing-station rentals business.
can bleed ihrough and damage the cost S14 to $20 an hour, with a few

.Senior Saints serve Thanksgiving dinner

Green or Blue

~:;;;nee '34995

~:;;;""&lt;•

ans and readers were Chris Hill and
Marilyn Bogard. Prayer concluded
the program.
Bogard presented ·a program and
video abOut China where she had
lived at one time.
Lee Lee· presided at the business
.meeting with members repeating the
c~plained.
lJMW purpose and saying the Lord's
- The World Thank offering boxes · Prayer.
were brought by members 10 the
The 1997 slate of officers was
Y/ors~ip center table, and 'the funds elected·. 'f!ley arc Lee Lee, prcs1dcnt;
collected will be used for missions Margie West, vice president; Christ
in the United States and around the Hill, secretary; Clara Mac Sargent,
treasurer..
world.
·: Scripture was read from CorinthiAppointed were Marilyn Bogard,

Oak
Open
Stoclr BedroO...
Piece•

Room Suite•, End ~Coffee Tables, Recliner, ·
Chairs, Mattresoes Sf Box opringo, Desks, Gun
Cabinet•; Curios &amp; Ete.
ALVON SALE

.

: Opal Diddle led the World Thank
offering service at the recent meeting of.!he Racine United Methodist Church Women held at the church.
The thank offering is an opportunity for individuals ·to respond to
dod's abundance and grace with
spontaneous gifts of gratitude, she

95 Ckamru:e
. . . Price '90995
7

'
.
All Living Room Suites, Bedroom Suites, Dining

Wa•hedPine
Armoire
Not '999.95

"You can be as creative as you want. You can be the director," says
EIIUIIII Cadden, owner of Copy Cat Video in Louisville, which made the
Brothers· tape.
"Combining photos with music is powerful in itself," says Mike Kashaum, owner of Excelsior Video in Louisville. But when you can provide
professional-looking special effects, he said, "it's almost cinematic as far as
the emotional impact that it can have on audience."
.
"Most people would enjoy something like this as a gift if they are nos·
talgic at all about any pan of their life," Kasba~m says.

Racine'·United 'Methodist Women observes .World Thank Offering s'ervice

OakFinUh

'399 95

book.

'

.The Lou18YIIIe Courler..Joumal

'

Sofa. - Chair
Country Floral
Not '999.95

narration, or both- and add special effects, such as those that dissolve .one
scene to another, generate titles or seemingly rum the pages of your v1deo

Making a personal video doesn't need to be an enormous production

Reader wants to know the word ori perks for Congress?
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I'd

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

PomerOy • Middleport, Ohio

more careful then."
"The thi'rd defense against an
impaired driver is learni~g how to
identify an impaired driver so you
can stay away from·him and the danger he represents.
Hanley listed the signs to distinguish between ·drunk and sober drive'rs."
• Driving too fast or too slow for
CQP.ditions
• Crossing the centerline repeatedly
*-Driving hunched over the steering whCcl .
·
·
• Weaving between lanes and the
sides of the road
• Accelerating -.nd braking erratically
• Drivillg with headlights off
~ Making wider turns than neceosary
· • Responding· slowly to traffic
signals (sudden stops, delayed
starts)
. • Driving with an open window
in cold weather
If you suspect tl)c driver in frpnt
of you .is impaired, stay behind him
dntil you can tum off the roadwll)'. If
the person's drivins is en'lllic, 11ay
o~ of the way by droppjng far

behind him on the roadway, Hanley
advised. 'If you suspect tl,Je driver
behind you of being impaired, U1C
the rear9iew mirror to keep track of
him and turn off at the next intersection. If possible, let the driver gel in
front of you where it's easier t.o sec
him . Reduce your speed gradually to
keep from · startling the impaired dri-

IW.:&gt;. I
I.

,,
HoHo
This year buy ·a gift thai is
custom made lor anyone on
your list W~h home delivery,
subscription Is ideal for
lhoae w~h a buik·in curioshy.. ,
Give a gift that comes more
- than once a year. ,

a

Send In the following coupon

and $83.20 and 'g el

20% off

the subscription price.

ver."
If you really want to protect yourself and your family from impaired
drivers," Hanley added, "help law·
enforcement officers get the
impaired driver off the road. It's as
easy as a phone call from your cellular. Give police the description of
ihe car including the mode.!, color,
license number, etc.; the mahner in
which it's being driven; and the
exact location (identify the road and
direction). Whatever you do, don't
stop the vehicle, follow the vehicle,
or act in the capacity of a law
enforcement officer."

Special Holiday offer ends
December 31, 1996.

• • ,___ ·Holiday Gift S'-'bscription Coupon • - • • •
SU"-Ipllon ordorocl bf:

Gilt to:

WWE--~------------------~
ADDRESS---------------------CnY _ __:__ _ _ STATE- ZtP---"'-

~E---------------------

~----~--~-----------______________________

AOOR~S

CnY·-----------STATE ---ZIP----

~E----------------------

12 Months $83.20 _ _

&lt;A simple phone call is all it
takes," Hanley conoluded. "Protect
yourself before you become the
impaired drive~s next victim."

START DEliVERY DATE----

The Daily Sentinel
'111 COURT ST., POMEROY, OHIO 46768

•
,'

'I

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel
"

70

Several factors,., can cause·false postive syphilis testing
Ann
Landers
lf95. I..DI AAfelea

n.. s,.-. ud CJt&gt;.
MOtiS~

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: My husband,
"Hank," and I have been married
five years. Six months aner our
wedding, he gave blood at a local
blood drive and everything was fine.
So wha.-s the problem? ·
Last year, Hank was scheduled to
undergo surgery and donated his
own blood in advance. It tested pos·
itive for syphilis.
Needless to say, I was stunned.

Hank has been treated with peni- ably telling you the truth. It's noc
cillin, and the doctor says he's fine. uncommon for a syphilis test to regMy tests were negative from the ister a false positive. He should have
b.;ginning. Is it possible he had it been teSied again.
before we married and it didn't show
Accordin1 to the Americ~n
up the first time he donated blood? Social Health Association, several
Could Hank have gotten syphilis factors can cause a false positive,
some way other than through sexual including such simple things as
transmission?
mumps, bronchitis, pneumonia,
He swears he has been faithful to pregnancy, a cold, tuberculosis,
me, and I want to helieve him, but epilepsy, rheumatoid arthritis and
these doubts are tearing me apart. even chicken pox. (For more inforWe have not had sex since the first mation, call the national STD hot
test results carne in. Hank hasn't had line: 1·800-227-8922.)
any desire for it. I think it's because
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
of guilt. We don't even sleep in the married lor 20 years to a woman
same bed anymore. Please help me who has two daughters from a previfigure this out. •· Heartbroken in ous marriage. I have loved and
Texas
raised these girls as my own.
Dear Heartbroken: Hank is prob\ oldes~ age 26, has been see-

Skunk lovers will smile when
they get a whiff of this product
lly BARBARA HOOVER

The Detroit News
"I lo-o-ove the smell of skunk,"
my grandmother's friend would
say as she gulped great whiffs of
it on a country road near the
southern Michigan hamlet where
she lived.
A widow who had acquired
the title of Lady by marrying a ·
low-ranking British nobleman,
she employed a chauff!ur both to
signal her status and, more
Important, to drive her on skunk
expeditions to track down the
alluring scent.'
It turns out she wasn't alone
in her craving, but she was born
too soon. Today, lovers of
skunky smells can stay home and
sniff any-time, thanks to Marilyn
Meissler of Schaumburg, Ill.,
who .founded Whiffy Inc, The
company ' makes skunk gift
items; including a stuffed skunk
named Whiffy that comes with a
boUle of skunk scent for deep
sniffing.
'"There· are so many people
who love the skunk scent," says
Meissler, an admilled skunkaholic.
She discovefed she had company when ber I ~9 ad in the
USA TODAY personals requesting letters from skunk-smell
lovers brought nearly 600 '-------'-~----::--,.;..,_ _...,......,_,_,....,--....J
replies. It took her until last year,
WHIFFY. Today, l~ara of akunky amalia can stay hom~ and sniff •
though, to get Whiffy products. any time, thanks'to Marilyn Meiaaler of Schaumbur9, Ill., who foundincluding T-shirts, sweat shirts, eel Whiffy Inc. The company 1111kea skunk gift Items, including a
hats, tote bags and a children's a_!u!fed skunk named Whiffy, above, that COI'JI!IS with a bottle of
book, on the market.
akunk scent for deep sniffing.
,
Now, thanks to her web site
on the Internet, she says gets orders Meissler, since · skunkatiolism is I counce bottle ·of scent. is $19.95.
from as far away as Japan, " even hardly universal. The bonle is for For a product list, call (800)
though people aren't always sure "customers to smell when they get SWHIFFY or visit Whiffy on the
the craving,'.' she says.
what they 're ordering," she says.
Internet
at
A word of warning, though: The .
http:(slash)(slash)www.astrawow.c
om( slash )7si sters(slash )whiffy
little bottle of scent is not to be
A Whiffy the skunk toy,_with a
dabbed on like perfume says

Gllllpolll

form. 'Unfortunately, it has slipped,
ing a man for about eight years. He -- Just Askins in Toronto
Dear Toronto: If my arithmetic is from its moorings and folks are
now pniCtieally lives in our home.
He is a nice guy, but 'it's gone from correct, this human sponge has been incorrectly exclaiming "I could care
an occasional visit to eating all his sopping up your hospitality since less," which is "'ffng and actually
meals with us, using our shower and your stepdaughter was 18. What's means "I care a lot" -- the exact
spending every weekend with us. the matter with her that she tolerates opposite of what they intend IO say.
The message is "Hey, who cares? ·
For the last four years, he's been it? Where is her pride?
Romeo will never marry the girl Not I." The expression is "I could
sleeping here (in my daughter's
room) almost every night.
as long as this-situation exists . Why NOT care less." Thanks. Ann. -This guy pays for nothing and should he? He gets free hed and Frank J. Kolk, Newark, N.J.
does nothing to help out. I feel as if board, plus a sleeping companion.
Dear Frank: I've flown that flag
I am running a hotel. You ·can't Your wife does the girl no favor by
more
than once in ·this space, liut
imagine what it's like to' have some defending the freeloader. Show her ·
this column, and tell her to wake up here it is again for those who need to
outsider take over your home.
see it. As for me, I couldn't careless.
My wife says I'm being petty. My and smell the coffee.
daughter refuses to discuss it. The
Dear Ann Landers: My reason for
Send queotlons to Au Landers;
boyfriend loves all the freebies and writing is to ask you to fly the flag to
acts as if he has these perks coining. correct the badly abused expression, Creators Syndleate, 5777 W. Cen·
He has yet to say "thank you" for " I couldn't care less." That is the tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
anything. Am I wrong to complain? correct expression in its original Calif. 90045

Cover your mosquito infested drains
with gllllnmteed-lnde•fnlcllble

CULVERT DRAINS
made from the sidewalls o1 scrap tires,
manufactured In 4 feet lengths wHh IDs of 13, 14
or 15' and an average OD of 22'.
(Larger sizes also available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, Impervious to
attacks from sah or other f11lnet'als, lasts forever!
$5.00 per linear fool, F.d.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:

warn them against trusting an
unidentified stranger in holiday costume, who may not be the friendly
Santa employed at the store.
You can't really keep track of
children when you've got "package
overload," so make frequent trips
back to the car to unload, Johnston
says. "That way, parents can free
their hands and have better c(lntrol
of children."
, Some other t_ips f(om Johnston:
- Tell children not to play on
Untied shoelaces,
escalators.
scarves, mittens and even fingers
can become trapped in the escalator
mechanism ~Teach them to face for·
ward and hold the handrail .
- If you bring your toddler,
bring a stroller and use the lap and
crotch straps. Never walk away from
the stroller, even for a second.
- Follow safely instructions on

ST. LOUIS (AP)- You're more vulnerable to fraud
and financial mishaps in the frenzy of getting your holi·
day shopping done. notes Michael Greenfield, Walter D.
Coles prof~ssor of law at Washington University.
His suggestions for not gelling socked financially :
- Budget your purchases to avoid finance charges
on your credit card account. Pay balances off each
month if you can. Greenfield estimates an annual
finance charge of $500 on a $2.000 balance for some
cred.it card plans. "If you need to carry a balance, hy all
means pay it off as quickly as you can. Never pay just
the minimum monthly payment amount."·
.
-Watch out for !clemarketcrs, he warns. Beware of
alleged "surveys'' !hill turn into sales pitches. Never .
give out your credit card number unless you are the one

who places the call. "You could be talking t.o someone
who is after your card number. not your business."
-Keep track of credit card rcceipts,and carbons so
that no one can pick up your account numbers. If someone docs get your account number, you will only be
liable for the first $50 of the fraudulent credit card use,
but it's a big hassle gcliing fraudulent charges removed
from your acc'ount. Check your credit. card receipts
against your bill, he advises. , ·
-Check your credit card statements· for erroneous
charges as soon as they arrive . Errors can be made by
lmsinesses. or they can point to fraudulent use by someone else, The sooner you discover the problem. the easier it is to deal with.

Companies team up to restock pantries
The region's Foodland Stores and
WSAZ News Channel 3 have
teamed up for Project Restock, a
massive food drive to help food
banks stoek up to meet the needs of
hungry families throughout the area.
Food donations will be accepted
at Foodland Stores Sunday, Dec. 8
.through Saturday, Dec. 14.'
Each holiday season the demand
on area food banks increases and
each year it gets harder meeting the

f

needs of those asking for assis!ancc.
Food banks need our help. Those
wishing to donate non-perishable
food items can take them to their
local Foodland.

jcct Restock."
WSAZ and Foodland arc counting on the public's help in making
sure that all of our area food banks
have 'plenty of stocked shelves this
holiday season .and that this is the
According to Foodlanjl Advertis- · most successful . food drive ever.
ing Manager Gary Ya&gt;oll, "W.:'rc Food collected through Project
encouraging customers to take Restock will be distributed through
advantage of rlumcrous specials dur· area food banks to the region's
ing the week and donate their non· needy this holiday sea$&lt;llJ.
perishable 'free' items to benefit Pro·

researchers say.
minutes for six hours.
But. since about a quarter of postResult : In the women taking
menopausal women usc cstrpgen estrogen, but not ·the other women,
and many drink, finding answers is estrogen levels rose and fell with
important. says Dr. Elizabeth Gins- blood alcohol levels, peaking at ·
burg. who led the study at Brigham · more than 300 percent of baseli nc
levels.
.
and Women's Hospital. Boston.
, The study .included 12 postOf special concern : Both alcohol
menopausal women taking estrogen and estrogen therapy are indepenand 12 not taking the honnonc. Each dently linked to small increases in
woman checked into a hospital for breast cancer risk. The question is
48 hours at a time and, on one morn- whether re~ularjy combining the
ing during her stay, each got a con- IWO' would m'c~e the mk further.
coction of pineapple jujce and "That's a leap l wouldn 't want to
vodka. On the other morning, each make,' bur it's certainly food for
had a similar nonalcoholic drink. thought," Ginsburg says.
Then, blood was drawn every 10
'

~New Homes

•Garage a
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; CoQipllri
985 4473

"'*"'

Forked Run
Sportsman
· Club
Gun ·Shoot

before recommending irbrbadly;" said Dr.' l'ctcr McNa.l-:
ly of the American College of Gastroenterology.
The appendix is a .vestigial organ that serves no
known purpose, McNally said. B~t the cost savings
potential of avoiding unnecessary appendectomies "is
of a very steep magnitude . If you could save 20 percent
of these surgeries, it would he a huge chunk of money."

Friday, Dec. 6

·6 p.m.
-----

--··-

..

I

•

814-9112-411g

CHRISTMAS TREES

-

--

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U

Danrhl
611 _, 1/2 •II•
H2-6073

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

.s.-vE

949,057

MIKE BING

50%·75%

'IMII'W....... .._

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

mo. pd.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Ju•t off Bradbury Rd.
(loOk for elgna)
Mrilclleport, OH
814-9112-5379
D.y a Evening Hre.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

1ftWtMO.

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

---------

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

l

TV TIMES.:

DAVIS
CONTRAOING
&lt;Rooting
&lt;Remodeling
tHew Construction

tOecka

992-6711

MIDDLEI'ORT

MIDDLEPORT, OH

1:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

·446-2342

......_.WW.ws

.....
o...
leShllll Diors &amp;

wtwl•••leprlcee.

(Plant aiW Ch"--J
Spruce end Whn. Pine
Sift.
BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sttt.'• aSun.'• tin Chrlltmll
st At. 32S. o.nvtMe, 011.
Ph. 742.:11411 or 182-7215

992-2156
'

.

~

f

'

EMPLOYMENT
' RVI ES

!
in::!~P;:-:Ie::'a::':sa::'n:':'I,-::P::'OI~tal f
..

p'

Construction. ~ I :.-;AT;;T;;:N;o:-:';;'po:7·
Positions. Permanent lull time for ~
Co.
cletkfSor ters .. Fu II Bentlits. For ~
We specialize in:
exam, appllcat1on and salarr lnlo .

t:z:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

REWARD : 'For the conviction
IHdlnO 10 who otole ltmllt Dal·
JMtl•n pup In .CIIhan. 30o4-773·

52111 .

30 Announcements

call : (630)906· 235DE•t.3670 .
Bam-l!pm,
'

1
AVON I
Areas ' I Shirley t . ..1
Spears. 304-675·1429.
All

~

Able Avon Repreaentatives [
needed. Earn money lor Chriat· :.
mas bill1 at homefat work. 1·800· :

992-8356 or 304-882·2845, Ind. (
Rep.

',

•t

Baby tiller needod ttanmg Jan
hi. 2 or 3 da~s a we~~tk , must be 1,
a non-smoker, .references re - ,
~uifed . Call:iCM-875-8646.
1

~

CIRClE liE!
Gel A HUd Start On Cflriatmas,
Apply Today, Starr Tomorrow,
$240 ·1325 Weekly. Call Uta Toll
Free AI888-432-737S.

~

~

~ ·
•·

Computer Uaera Needed. Work •
own hOurs. S20k to S50klyr 1· ~
800·348·l188 x1508.
~

't

Computer Users Needed , Worlt ~

~~~~~~~/~~ 1~. $50K /Yr.

1·

Cruise Ship Jobs! Earn 1300 1 :
$900 Wkly. Year Round Position. •
H1ring Both Men /Women . Fr•c t
Room And Boar(!. W1\1 Train. Can •

7 Days 407·875·2022 Ext. 05~8 -1
C46
.
i.

Earn S1,000 Weokfy Stuffing En-

or ffetpt~-'na on the
FIW prol)trtV located ar

No hunting

Mict'llel

Side H~ Rd., Ru~ltl&lt;l, Ot!.
NO hunting or treapiltaing on the
Charlet 'lbtr firms. Vlolalors wilt
b4l prosecuttd. Stay oH day and

n9'1.
We proceu deer. make hickory
smoked hama, treil bologna, pepperoni , Jerky, aummer sauaage.
Cooler kepi, d~. sanl111ry. Hunt- .
lng euppl!••· llc.ense &amp; game
ehtek tll.lton. cagmaqe Hendttton WV.

40

Gl Vtaway

velopes At Home. Start Now. No
Experience. Free Supphea, Into.
No Obligation. S&amp;nd lSASE To :
ACE, Dep1: 1351., Bo• 5137, Dill·

I

mord Bar. CA 91785.

Earn 1000's weekly stulfina &amp;n·
velopes at home. Be YOU( bos"t.

S1ar1 now. NQ e•perience. Fr&amp;e 1
suppli&amp;s into, no obligalion.
Stnd S.A.S.E. to Nugget Un it
364-6, 10151 UnTVers1ty Blvd. Or·
lando Fl. 32817

HOME

COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. 145,000 1ncomt po tantiiiL 1-800·513 ·43•3 E1:1. B· t
1.
9368 Call Fo r Oela'tIs.
l•c&amp;~sed Managing Cotmetoto·

gill And E.perienced Nail Tech,

112 Spri"Dftr Spaniel 1 , 2 1.,rier Send Resume To : P.O. Box 741, 1
, puppies, to good home, cute, Gallipolis, OH ~ 5631 ·
. ~
fluffy &amp; furry. 304·875-5&amp;3), .
Long Term Care Nursing Fac11ny
Seeking Emhustutic Ohio State
· 2 Yellow Kinens, ' Mal&amp; , 1 Fe- Teated Nurse Aldea: Excellent
male, 8 To 8 w,ekt Old, Liner Benefit Packaoe Including: vaca·
Trtined, 814·4-46·4019 After 5 lion, Christmas Club, .401K Plan,
PW.
Insurance, And More. Sign On
_
.,..
Bonus Plaase Appl~ AI Pinecrest
30
53
3 Ca II. 4-6ra- '"·
Care Cenler 170 Ptnec.rest Drive,
• Month old, cute BOrdtf Collie, Gallipolis.
~
milftd, mot I PUPP)' I hOI I . 304· -Nt_O.;..dt.,..
,d-l-nl-lr-.C-IO_r_l-ln_T_h_t_F-ol· r
17&amp;-8012.
tow ing Areas: BusinHI Adminit·
e Pupplea, mixed breed, 5 fe· tration, Otlict Education /OIIice
males, Wlrioua colort, 3 m&amp;les, e Technotoo)', Economics, Polltlcal
wettcs okl. Xl4-875-1217,
Science, SOc.lolog1, Legal Tran·
wiplion, Send Reaumu To: P.O.
Australian RaQISier&amp;d , Shepherd Box 542, Kerr, OH o45CM3,

Dog, 61o4·4-40.415&lt;41 .

Outstanding opportunity tor a
h1ghly motlvliltd Individual to
8627.
serve 'u Attlttant Director ol
Nurtln~. The qualified candidate
Elghl mtxed bret&lt;l pupplts, 7 will jotn. a proQ'enlve health
weetl.t Old, some black , 'btlek and care tQm, pro"idlng '""lett lri
_wt&gt;_.....;,._l&gt;_om~l,8':-1_4·9-:6-S.-:34_5_7.~-:- 1he geriatric, high IC.UII)' level
~

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

Carefully

Pine 4' &amp; Up wltllapal
selection ol laraer lftft.

I

Call742-2143 or
742-at79

GRUE$ER'S
GAUGE
.,

Body worll, car, truck

'fl!nHips, Oil ChlnQe,

wex, Buffing

Long St., Rutflnd, Oh.
74Nt31, Alit for Kip

""!.

711-

1'

1:
I,

t

OnMNoVDIII

OWner:
RomleJonaa...;

(Ume • ....,.
Low Rllel)

1

.

Um'latone,
Gravel, Sand,

Top Soli, Fill Dirt
61+992-3470

BISSELL BUILDERSI IN( • ,
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replactment Wlndo WI
Room AdditiOns • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.
fREE ESTIMATES

WICKS
,HAULING,

61 't";!!lillili•7843
.1 -

areat or health

Loat and
Found
Lab PUPJJV,
Appto•.
10
·12
Wooko
Old,
Fwnole,
Vi·
clnllr: Tht WOO&lt;Io, 011 01 GrHn
TrM - · 014·387-7785.
Found: coon hound, •.,, lhln,

AN. DON.
Point Jill
Plooooni·NurolnQ
l)leuo
con1a01
B•moardnor,
6 Rthabililalion Ctnltr, Slatt
Ro~to
02, Roult 1,. Box 321, ..
Poinl. Pleounl,
Will Vlrginlo 1
2S550, a Glenmork·Mulllcort
Focllhy, EOE.(30•) OlS-3005.

Sumner RdJ Alfred vlcinily, eeli 10

Pin·Time Blbrsitter JNIInn)l,

522:·1077.

ton. No e:rptrlenct necenery.

Found: .Black

Ill, 014-115-3877.

.

Po·

silion Available, Plr Negolloble,
. LOST: lliocl! Lab, brown &amp; while Rolooonc••
Rtquirod, 014·251·
Englllll Seller. Ploln Voller Rd. 1558·
:
REWARD! 304-1115-3333 or 30·· Pooplo 10 work during d- ....
Loot: Wo•ld Tho Ptroon Who

· Plckl&lt;l
Up M1 Dog A• lb. 'lbrklt
In Vlnlon Aroo, Ptuoo Return

--·

Fomlly Do•aotaliod. WiN Olvoo Ro·
ward No ouu11ono, Aokod 014·

Sunday Cails)

,..

a,nd rthtbililllion

1·.

Fi rewood, Already Cut And In care. The candidate mual ba a
,Link.....,o,~OI-'4-'3,88'--84-7-:2.-:--:--:- Aegi&amp;tered Nurse with a valid
Fre Chrialmas Pupplet, To A West Virginia nuraing license re. Good Home! 814-311-81l6.
qujred. ·Two or more ~tan ot
nurting experience and a pro\len
HouttDroktn Cat Female, Free track record in geriatric nur1lng
To Good Homt, 8,4-~-4&amp;80.
ldmmistration r•qulred. Knowl ·
tclge or 1\alt, lederal reguladons
We1maranerl8oxtr pups, 1 'malt, and OBRA guideline• a muat. II t"
1 lemalt. Will be ready 12121 . )'OU have the geriatric back· ,
304·875-1801.
groul"'d required Dr the challena· 1 '
Ina and rewarding poaillon,

=~~;~~~=~ f~;.;;.t.~~;;~~;;~~~~~l' 60.

~

'

Wanted: Fool Powered Scroll

. '+..

c~y

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Yean Experience •

SJMered Scotch "' White

rtp~lr.

••

We will wor1&lt; within your budget.
Ph. T73-9173
FAX 773-5881
108 Pomeroy.Street
Muon, WV.

RUTLAND, Ott

Homeg1 OW II•

,I

'

"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Smsll"

4

~ '
~.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Salas &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainleu • Tool 0119lng • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumijure, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuffll

eheared trHa up to 1411.
Prleft $10420. c.tlfor

WEIR'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

'

POMEROY-IUDDLEPORT

~

Auto's ~

Any CDndiliOii, 614·388·9062, Or .
61 ... 46·PART.
;

Calico Type Kitten, 614 ..446·

6 truck painting,
minor mecheniQI

675-1333

A!tcM~ tffe-tal.r

ulectlon of bteuiHully

LandllcepeStoctt

' 812·2772

Racine Methodist Church
Craft Tables Available
Call949·2454

'

. Wanted To Buy : We Buy

. ......_~o..-4':

E!venlngs end
Weekends

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES. .
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPEAWARE PRODUCTS.
LIVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETTIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
2.MU.. Nortll of Sll- Brldga on BR 7
1o.fl M-F; 1'5 Sunday
PhOne ~530

Chrlatmae Trees

INSULATION

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
Dec. 7, 9 am-3:30pm

''' :

Small dozer, diesel, 8·RJ" blade, i
1
•
.'
Top dollar· anliques, lurnilure, •
glass, china, clocks, gold, allver,
c.oint, watchet, ealatn, old alone

614·992-8035.

I ,I'

CHRISTMAS iri the COUNTRY
at IVYDALE

we have en ••cellenl

•
I

713-5003.

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

121'2/Q8 1 ma. pd

J&amp;L

thru Sat 9-5.
448 0322
3 mileB out ButaYIUI Pike, Galllpolte

-'

11111111(1-.

RIGGS TREE FARM

949-2734

FfH E11i11111N

Amt ...................................... $95
Amt ........................... $105
uw111• Size Sets ....... $295 &amp;
Size Sets ........... $350 &amp; Up
Mattress ............. $48 &amp; Up
Frames ....,...... $25·$35·$50
'

00·&amp; I II
•
Mf-2115

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

Skin-Cut-Wrap

•VInyl Siding

o·.

"'

15

Riggs Christmas Trees

Deer Cut
at
Maplewood
·Lake

(

AUlD Parll. Buytna sal· ;
vaoe wNei&amp;S. Selllno pana. 304- t

J &amp;·

-ryoiiFC

Monument Sprays .....
.......... ............. $18.95
OPEN DAILY
!I a.m.· 5 p.m.
Sunday ·1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Free Coffee &amp; Cookl88
Curing Christmas
Season

MATIRESS or BOX SPRINGS
Regular............................... :.

,.. j

ern Aweoot, Gallpolla.

ask for Rick

992·5776

WWows

·•

Clean . Late Uodel C1r1 Or
Truekt, 1eeo Modtlt Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1800 Eatt·

fFN

WAYNE'S PLACE
Sat.Night 10-3

.'

· U.T.S.. Coin Sho~J, 151 S~eond ,
Avenue, Gall ipoMa, 6 1o4-448-28A2. ~

RBildenlial
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Cu8tom Deaign
'We treat your home like
our home'
Call 614-949·2600

Cemelary Vases.$9.95

137 BRYAN PLACE

Presents "FLINr

2Y. Miles
South of
Tuppers
Plains on St.
Rt. 7
Open

6 1/2' Poinsettias. (6
colors) ................ $3-$5
Poinsettia
Baskets .. $7.95·$17.95
• Christmas Cactus
............. $1.75 or 21$3
CUI Trees........$8-$18
.Small Holly Trees ......
......... :............... $2.50
Wrealhs .. $4.95-$9.95
Grave
Blankets ..... :....$19.95

&lt;Insured

ADVERTISING IN THE

. Slllrllng, Etc. Acqul~dona JIIWII~J!·

ja rs, old bl•e &amp; while dishes, old
Morning Star RdJ
wood !&gt;&lt;&gt;xt•. milk bcnleo, M,lga
Co•n1r Adverusemenl, Oat&gt;r
CR 301 Aac l"~, Ohio
Martin; D1C-992·7441 .
. t
•Roping •W1'81thS
Wanted To our : ~lillt Trkea !
oSwagl
KiiChen Sll. Workohop, Plav · ·
houae, Pouible An~ Other Lillie ~
oGrave Blankets
Trke Toys, Please can 81&lt;-245- ,
;
•Artificial Polneettla · &amp;aa7.

Chrletmaa season

' REPAIR'

Dl.,onda. Antique J..,.,ry, Gold..
Rinas, Pre-1830 U.S. Curranc.r,i

SUE'S ·
GREENHOU.SI

(614) 667·3483

CHRISTMAs

nr And Gold CDint, Prooftett,

102 854-7420

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE
Now Open For

BING'S
AUTO .

15-110

-

•

90 wanted to Buy
At&gt;sot•to Top DoMar: All U.S. Sll·

1 (800) 37H3881
Ext.1951
!12.118/mln. Muotbe18+
Toua1&gt;411ne PhDnll
PROCALLCO.

1-800-291"5800

&amp; CONNOLLY'S

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Uve
fvly Scotch or While Pine- S15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681. 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm, Foil~ signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
·
Nov. 29th thnu Dec. 24th

1-900-990-9330·
Ext. 1553
.

IUDFORD'S

•

PVHMEDICAL
EXPLORER MEETING
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 7 p.m.
Topic
"D,abetes Education"

PT. PLEASANT, WV

IS RUSH
11-AUGH
GOOD FOR THIS
COUNTRY?

110 Court St.

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

GAIJ.IPOLIS

,UIUP
AIIIIICAI

Hlghnt "R Value"
Blocks 99.5%
otUVRaya

Athens, Ohio

:.J 111111 I1111111111111 I111111 II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL:

.

THE LATEST IN RIPLICEMENT WINDOW
TECINOLOIY
...UT MIRROR" 'pattltetl syste&amp;

QUALITY
··WINDOW
SYSTEMS
Call for Demon1tratlon a Free Ettlmat.P

(619) 645-8434
-

applllneu, ~~mter~..,
metal• a
motor bloei!J.

effectiveness needs , to be proven i,., larger numbers

.

Rick
full lime auetioneet, complete
" ' "lee.
Lleeneed
auction
161,0hlo • Wttt Virginia, 304h

by

DATF;LINE
The Girls of
your dreams

Pick up dtacardlld.

The method "could be very imponant, but its clinical .

CAtLNOW
•••
.

Public S.le
and Auction
Pearaon AuetWln Compeny,

ottlred Exluslvely

CHRISTIW TilES

Precision is enhanced by a liquid contrast agent : ,
inserted into the colon, and imaging is limited just to the .
appendix region; exposing patients to one-third the radi- 'at ion of traditional CT exams, Rap ·said.
The technique idcntifie.d 100 percent of true appendicitis and falSely detected the problem in only two of 59
patients, he said. The charge for an appendectomy is
about $10,000. Rao's test: $950. Most U.S. hospitals
have acquired spiral CTs in the past few years, he said.

"

Friday.
80

1

FREE
ESTIMATEES

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURES.
EVERY WEEK lN THE
TV TIMES

$10 &amp; Up

IMIIEOIA'Il! INITAUATIONI.

'

r

713-57850r30&lt;·na-5«7. '

Mr.lrlleMF.-s,
Air Cnltlrurs . .
Atld .. Htat ,_,..

1tJMI1 mo.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

&amp; VIcinity

Advance. Deadline : 1:oopm t~

Rt.124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3061
OPEN NOV. 23-10 TO 9:00

Attorney William Safranek
Attorney At Law
(614) 592·5025 '

I

qay, balare the ad 11 10 run, .Sun·
day &amp; Monday edition - 1 :DOpm

IIUYERa
'LAROE INVENTORY FOA

can . relieve a debtor ·of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
keep •exempr property f9r their personal use.
Tliis may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Pomeroy.
Middleport

All Yard Sales Mutt Be Pai d In

l"''-10 QUALII'IED

BANKRUPTCY

!

Wreatlu - Sw~~g~~ &amp;
Grave Blankets

10, SNOWDEN'S LOT

'ONTHESPOTFIIANCINO .
on

.'

'

•

~porta

1-8()0.273-3385

sh'opping carts. Use safely StrapS
provided, and never allow children
to stand in the back of the cart,
which could cause it to tip over.
- If your children become bored, take.a few minutes to tour the :
toy or pet' store they want to J;ee. ·
, Briefly yielding to their agenda will
lessen the temptation (or them to go
exploring alone.
- When returning to the parking
lot, make sure your hands are not too·
full to .hold yo.ur children's hands.
Before. stepping into the lot, make ·
sure all of you look in every direc- ·
tion.
-Put all pack?gcs in the trunk if
you can. Anything that must be carried in the passenger compartment
should be secured so it won't
become a dangerous missile in the :
event of a sudden stop.

Alcohol with estrogen may elevate hormone levels
By KIM PAINTER
USA TODAY '
Postmenopausal women who
drink alcohol while taking estrogen
may inadvertently raise the honnone
level in their blood. a new study
shows.
In the study. a heavy alcohol
dose, the equivalent of three to five
~uick drinks. caused estrogen levels
to briefly triple, says Wednesday's
Journal of the American Medical
Association.
· 1be study doesn't show whether
the alcohol-induced estrogen spike
has any special risks. And study
conditions may nol reflect real· life,

nre Recycling Center

· National

·stopping unneeded appendix removal .
By MARILYN EUAS
USA TODAY
Nearly half a billion dollars a year might be saved
with a new high-tech diagnostic method that rules out
needless appendix surgery, suggests a repon out Tuesday.
About· 20 percent of the 250,000 ~ppendectomies
done yearly are avoidable, said Dr. Patrick Rao of Massachusetts Gen~ral Hospital, Boston. Several other comm~n problem's cause the same symptoms as appendici·
tis. X-rays and ultrasound do a poor job of excluding
patients who don't need their appendi• removed, Rao
told ~ Radiological Society of.North America meeting
in Chicago.
In his studr. of 100 patients, Rao tried a "spiral" com·
putcd tomography (CT) scan technique. Patients arc
placed in a large, doughnut-shaped machine that pro·
duces "razor-sharp, multiple cross-section images of the
appendix area, as . though someone was sliced up like
bread," he said.

Plulk: Culvert - Dual wan and Regular f1' thru 36"
4' S&amp;O • perf. • solid pipe
4' &amp; 6" Fill&lt;~
4' &amp; 8" Sch 35 pipe .
'/,' &amp; 'I•' C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/." thru 4' Seh -40 pipe
'I.' &amp; 1' 200 p.a.l. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolle)
'/.' U.L approved Condu~
8" QraveieBB Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1' thru 2' - fillings • Regulat018 • Risers
.
Full ~nt of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; W.tar fittings
Futl line of Clslem, Septic &amp; water storage tanks

fiJI'frllllt

~.

CHRISTMAS TREES

St. Rt. 7
TUppen ,..., Ohio
81•..eas:3113 or 81MI7....,.

We CMf help you, lllld you CMf , . , the
enviMnuent.

Remember to .shop .· safely this season ·
ATLANTA (AP) - The crowds
and distractions at the mall and its
parking lots can be potential dangers
to your children, advises a child
safety ex pen for Egleston Children 's
Hospital at Emory University.
"An excited young child can spot
a fun toy or holiday display and
wander away in an instant," says
Maryann Johnston, a registered
emergency center nurse and specialist in child safety. "And even older
children who know not to talk to
strangers can' be tempied to trust
characters in costumes."
There's always a chance you and
your children will become separated
duriny shopping trips. Johnston rec·
ommends teaching your chilpren to
approach a properly identified store
clerk if they become lost; tell them
to remain with the clerk until security personnel makes contact Also,

&amp;VICinlly
ALL V.nl Soleo ll•ot le P111d lo
Aclwonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 l1
·
the dol beloro "" 1&lt;111 10 ••
S..ndolr · 2:00 p.m. F .
llondiJ edlllan · I 0:00 o.m. S.,.

I&amp;W PUSIIU AID SUPPLY

Keep holiday finan~es straight

l

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13 ~

Pomeroy •lllddltport, Ohio

Thursday, December 5, 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'•

~~:~~=~·o. Honderoon
Pottll Jobt 3 Potltiont AVIII·

ablt, No Eaptrience Nec:etlaf)l,
For lntormadon, Call .1· 111·714·

1011 EXL 31211.

.,

�NEA Cro11word Puzzle

~

,~\!~.

Help Wanted

T1111 OU Comparty Urgently

l IMidt
Dependable Penon In
GalliPOIII Area. Regardlus 01
•

: Wafttrtd llcanAd Towboat Op-

t Wo ""' Up To 1205 Por Day

Dt. ......,. 011 Exporitnco. Wt Dllor

450

A 401K Program At Wt\1 AI A

Cl,.ltfia StYle Benelil Package.
Towl Are Seldom Mora Thin
Ttwee L~t A.t One Ti11111. Y..,

Lilt Chaira, Electrte WhMk:halrt,
Stair llha, Yin lifts, Scooters,
,.... fUNd, Bowman's Homec~ra,

Rooms for rent · week or month. 81--7283.
S11r11ng at $120fmo. Galtia Hotel.
Manre11 and boJI springs lull
61-4·448-9580.

Round Work With A Growing
Company. Send Resume

=:1

Pro"""' Salary And .loll
HloiOrJ' o: CLA 398 C/o Galtlpo&lt;ll
g:~tbuno, 125 Tnlr&lt;S A-uo.
a. OH •5631 . Alllnqulrloo
Wll8o Hold In Conlidor)co. .,

••• $50, 614·1•2·2153.

Sleep i n~

•

rooms with cooking.
Also tra•le_r space on river. All MoYin'g· Mull Sell :2 Piece betge,
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m., tt&lt;:tfonal sola with hlde-a·Ded. 2
living ra:om glass top oak tables
3:14·773-5651, MuonWV,
&amp; lamps. like New! 3 Piece •"'

460 Space for Rent

Truclc Drivw • Ruming Extra Man
Jab Oponlng Golllpo&lt;ls Ar•, Ap-

•

Mobile Home Space, On 141,
1991 Toyota Celica Automatic,
Excellent Condition, 8U·:f48·

P'DXImatoly UO,OOO - $35,000

V..r, Muat Have: ·1 Vear Exptrl·

..,.. (Minimum) Cion A - COL,
Good MYR No DWI'a Pon Dot
~tical I Drug Screen, Send
Rltumo To: P.O. Box 788, GaiiiPDh.OH•5e31 .

16'10. '

.

tertainment center. Flberglan
ral"d lfUCk topper with sliding
blclt giiiL 4 Saara super guard
GT radial tlrea. Size P205 75

R1•. Col 30-H75-2359.

Went To Go Into Bualnall For
lblir Soli? No Copital l,...tmon\
Free Training, Will Pay Vou To

HousehOld
Goods

Blctrictln foaking for anw.ll alae•
,...... 81.._.

Gla11

Table,

11115-3121.

Rtcfill·

Goo&lt;80I PortobM S.Wmln, don't
Nul your loG• D one mill jull call
30-H'/5-1857.

Trying To Got Noricod On l'lpor?
You Tell It, t Create Itt 81-4·245·
1013.
Stump

Set of bunk beds and mattresses
with baseball comforter, $125,
814-1192-301~

Slab Wood Cut To Preferred

Length $35 Truck load, Delivered, 814·2S6·1602.

r ltjAriCIAL
-------

Slide In Camper Ring And Piruon
GearaiAxle Housings Ell.erctse
Machine (8 Statians): 1977
CheYron 112 Ton Pick Up: Single
Width Trailer lot Requlrlno. Some
Work For Readiness [Will Con·
ll.der Lieu Of Rent Optlo.n} Cau

BullneiS
Opportunity

For OotoiU1 .. o016-8945. ,

Sofa &amp; loveseat, excetfent condi·

lion. 81ot-949·2454.

Special: New Sepric Tank Aeration Moton · $399. lnstallalion
135., Plus Material. 814-448-o4782

·~--tl-2011.

Steel Beams : Misc . Sires And
Lengths . 10c Per lb. l&amp;L Recy·
cling, ~1-4·446-7300.

PIRIOH WANTED To OWN
Alld Operato Rota!l Condy Shop
In Gallipolis Are•. Low Invest~
tneflt. For lr'llorm~~tion Call w,..
_
.. Goun1111 Coody Compo-

Th• One You'n B•an looking
410_..10-

Professional
Services

HARTS MASONARV - Block,

brick &amp; 1tona .ark, 3Q ,..,, 811·
peritnee, reasonable rates. 304·

-3501 oftor 8:oopm, no Job oo
- o r to BIG. WY-021208

Yenlless gas l'lea1ers, ktrCsene
heaters &amp; wood stoyes in stock.
Siders Equipmeni304·S75· 7421 .

;ke'tKn·,;;;~~ I Wtlirlpoot .dishWasher, hke

new,

$125. 304-675-5733.

MINI -10 ""'or1loilog In

Wl'llte &amp; btue sola. lair cond . call
aft9f &gt;1pm, 304-675-5288.

. . i4t iJ4IP8f II~ lo

Flllr Houolng Act
c41llogot
told 4 ... .....,po ........

wlllch-"

&amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
2,000 Gallons Ron Ron Allison, 1210 Second Ave Jlckson, OH nue, Gallipolis, Ohio 814·••6 ·
&lt;1336.
Uade Ash C•binet,
Wolff Tanning Beda
Solid A5h, Crow" Decor,
, TAN AT HOME
IG~l'!_tf1 Oak Jacobean. 8•" Wide.
buy OIR£CT end SAVEl
ComrnerciaVHoma units from
24 ·Deep, Enrtftainment.
$199.
Den, loYetwo Any. Room
For CMatmasl 814·
lew manlhiV payments
FREE color analog

5 'I ordiiCJtiUIMIIOn

-on,_, oolor, religion,

---ornattonol
""""'ot...,io

flf1- pooiOIOt.,.,

•• h II: • or ciiCtln*\ation.•
Thll ra !IIIIPI" wtll not
lo-ogly
acctpt
_
_ lor...,_

wll ch kl tn violation c4 lllo taw.
O u r - ... iiOfUCy

. tltfon'Md 1hlt .. dw ... lgl
8CN1111td~thlauew :••

•re...,.onant4'11

-""*"-· '

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
1 Bedroom House 1n A10 Q,an&lt;lt
1235 month plus depo 111 will be
ava1lableDec. 10.814·388·9948

2 Bearoom Fu;n1lhed 1-iouse No
Inside Pets, Countv water Fur ·
nished $450fMo., Oepos 1t &amp; Rei·
8fantel ReQuired, Ofl State Route

850, eu .u6 -.t111 Evenings,

H~AL ESTATE

814. zc5-0380.

tn Gatlipoijs: 1 BR t2051Mo., 1 BA
S,?851Mo., 2 SA $280/Mo ., 614·
388·17.08 Fot AppoinD'T*l!.

..__for 5ale
310 ,""''..-.

.
Earn Chrtatm11. Hoa1 a Tupper·

N. 3rd. Ava Mltldlepon, OH . 2
Bedroom, furnished apt Oepoa1t
&amp; rettren&lt;:ll raq'ulted, 304·882·
2516.

ca•1·80048+1112S.C.277i.

81.t-.t4d-03QO.

.

ware demonttrallon. ErtrJ giltt.

Bedroom houl8, 2123lincoln . Nict rwo bedraam aparunent Jn
Ave. 1350/mo. Pius references &amp; flOrnlt'ort, no Plfl.. tl1.t-992·5858.

depoail, 304-815-2740 ·
2 Bedroom in Pl. Pleesanr, $2001
mo. ReJerences &amp; security de·

-cHRISTMAS SPECIAL'" tMw in
tlock. doublewidet, moYt In
88;:2.:·222=.:1;..
now. no payment&amp; lor 00 d•y•. :PD_•,..·•_-"'&lt;~_:_
._;__;
· 304
..:..._·.:_
· __
Onlv1 11 OlkWOod
Homes,
Hilro,
·
sees
2 Btdrooms. furnished, loc•ted
WV.304-~
· ·
in Middlepor t. References ra·
- Bath AC Jtn Nf qutred. depo•it
75
2oo.
2

'.ellodAc~oam,.Cuato~
Kib:hen n. Ap-'
2

,_,..., s.cludod, • Minuon to
Hatzlt. 014 111 tM
• Bodrooma. 3 Boino, Olllco,
Ftlonl!t Aoom, 1.Mng Room, 2 F,.._
. . . . OfMd 2 ,.,. Home On 3
Joint Cloy Until. lluat Soil
For Bonl&lt; Poy OK. N - Somo
WDrk.
Of' 11.........

1111o1.

••••·1704,

NIW 2 ••

~ ~ log Homl ea.,.

ltf lening, ..,.,, Porter, land
c..-r Ot LooN. To Ouall•od

•
- 11 ..2411-511•'
_,...,

Cltl=.,- ,...,Llwlne

1111 ..Zt~•Waom~

,...,.,........,C/A;n.ww·

porl.~-lldng. ..,_ 131,000080,e14412-4514.

-..

CatiTOOAVl ·fi00-842·1305

Ltodarn 2 Bedroom Apartment,.

::;::;::;::,--~~~--~2

:

SPECIALS:

One btdrOOm apartment in Mid·
~ 11 uti'"IIOI
' _.., s 2 ~-..

"
,_..., '\M"""
t
depolir, c.ll6t•-882·7a.
One btdroam apsrtmenl in Pt
no~~ ..,.,t •1•
I'"'_
u ·~2
- •5151. .
...

FALL SPECIAL
High E"lliclency fLirnace,
00,000 8TU ·1715: 10.000 BTU •
Sh5: 100.000 BTU -1005. The
Abave Prlcat ~ri For Furnace
On11. Frt• E111ma1a To Install
furnace, Duct Work, Etc. 5 Year
w&amp;m~nty ·IJI Partl. ll'-'lrne War·
raniJ On Hear E • = • r ~14·

Ztntth 27 Inch Stereo Console
T.V. $279 .95 , S~lvania :26 Inch
Stereo ConsOle T.V. 1289.95:
Small Kenmore Microwe~&gt;"e
$49.95: large Kenmore Ui·
crowave $7~. 95; Ouasar Mi·
CIOWIYe S6Sll.95; Home C.D. Plaw ·
er $54.95: Kicker Box $69.85; 8
Milimetef RCA Camcorder
$295.95: 200 Channel Scanner,
SO Channel Scanner, 2 Hand
Held Scanners; Caller 1.0. 2 Car
s 00
BT
J~"' Gale~,? logy,
37'"2's uueARmpa.
oute ~-.
..~IS.

550

Building

ue . _ 1-eoo.:ze,
Supplies
fir• WOOd lor tale. :JCM-175-1831
or30H75-5053. .
Bloc~. t1r1Ck, sewer ·pipes. wind·
s
sz One bedroom furnished apart· J::---....:_;_:.:.:;;.;.;._____ 1 owa, lintels, etc. Cllllude Winters,
Month, no in aide pets. 30:... 773• meru in Middleport, c.ll e 14·4•&amp;- Firewood lor 1111', •3011oad, you Rio Grande, OH Call 8 14-245 ·
30V1, e14-002-2178 01 8,.·11112- l!iekup.l1•-043027
.5:,:12;:,t·' - - - - - - - 5 tIS ·
5304or01&lt;-llll2-5231 .
·
'
··
2 Btdroomt. Upt.rairt, Dupler t 5
112 Vintl. Ntar flrat •vonuo, Vary tlnn two bedroom apart•
"
,
mon~ 138 Bu_.., Annuo, Po1340/Mo., Water Pold, Girojge, meroy. Ront fl090tlllllo, HUO lpDtpoalt Rtltrences, 614·448·
-I2D5
2&lt;18.
f"'"od, 81.-687
.
Very lico QIOund lloor oportnllnl
8 Wook Fullllloodod'CIIow Cllow
far rent or salt· two bedroom, in qu Jel IUf'fOUndinG.I focattd
- yord. lull bOooman\ 81 &lt;-1182- lhrH miln lrom lht ~-od.
Pupptoa, $50 Each , 8U·440·
230o1.
Rilchie Bridoo tn 0tt1o. Compte•' •..cc_,,-.,:.::~-8172.
SmiU 2 btdroam hoUH in Wldo fumilhad wih w.Jhlr, G-ylf'. dish-~~~~~~~~=-~= A Groom Stlop -Pal Grooming.
dl•porl, carpeltd 1 curtained, Wllstw' and iargl klll:f'len wilh all
applioncoa.· Nico beth with Ioree - 1 Eloctrlc Video C1moro Ftaluring Hydro Bltl'l . Oon
-hook-up,
&amp; riiiiQorltor,
w.-lotryor
ho wtr, I1r9• matter •-•
$F'I..II. 373 Gtorgea Crttk. Rd.
~to plus uriUUea, d• I
v.araom w/1 .., _ , ond COir•l~
, ··• c•ao
,..
ptoono e1..1192- with o workong flroplaco. Llvln~ ...!pod. CoW 30&lt;-875-5100 Ill)'· 81•-••·0231.
5212,...1i'D&amp;.
area his lots Df room. Atl48
inJe.tao.
ABA ~llttod A"*lcon bull&lt;log
por IIIIWllh with ulllllklltndudod. A G
lem111, first ahott &amp;
Small I rooma, •z:zs plul ullli· .._oslt of •400 Ia r~qulrad. For
rubb'a .Piano- tuning &amp; repairt. pu
-•
Prvllloma? Hood '11tnod1·Colltllo
like
In movlt,
dol, 1100 dopoai11r•torono", no IY*Ointormouon coli 81&lt;-e&lt;a- piona0r. 814.......szs.
BoUI'II.
81&lt;-5112-1625.
-8711-3757.
53&lt;3ond-IIIHM90-

pooiW.,.,.,,...,

·c-·

,.

.IIOOOY II
I'Ll60 PLAY
HIM SOMe
CHECKERS

TRICKY
FIMALIII

ltd . 92,000

1981 Buiclt Regal Rebuilt Engine,
Trans., Nice Car, $1,200, OBO
814·379-2723.
1984 Dodge Aries, runs good,
new banery, $425. 814-992·5529.

1985 Olds 98 Regency PW, POL,
OalmatiOn: AKC ColorJi:l1.iver &amp;. PS, 90K Actual Mllto, $2,500,
While. ·Sex female, '!'a•: 5
Months, Housebroken, I.J4·441· S14·245-5887.
035&lt;.
1987 Buid!. Grand NaUonal, 3000
actual miles, This car !a new, 814·
'Dalmationa, Shots, No Papers, 9&lt;9-31)87 altor 5pn_
1100, 148 Chamberlane Bidwell,
S1•-388-8922.
1987 Ford Tempo, • door, needs
~ulch.
$800.304-875-7740.
Min iature Schnauzers, A.KC.
shots and wormed: also toy Poo· 1988 Chevr Beretta GT, one
dies, cl'lampion bloodlines. 614 · owner, high mileage, 5spd.
887-340..
$1,750. 3:14-882·2•84.
Olds

,088 Pontiac Fiero 2.5. 4cyl ,
· 5spd, S2.500.
.
Ptts Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza . 1979 Plymouth Horizon TC·3,
transmission, ha,s new cv ,(10'1. Oft Everj Thing, EvelY Day I) needs
shafls 8.0. Fot mora into, 304·
81o4-o441..0770.
.
e75-..aso Leave message. · '
Puppy Palace Kennels,. Boardirlg,
T·Bird ·Tul-bo, mlht condi·
Stud Service Puppies, Grooming, ·19il8'
tlon, .t9,000 miles, one owner,
Buy, Sell &amp; trade, All Breeds . new tires, all power. Call 30-4·
Payments Welcome, 614-388· 675·7396 between 5:30 ·8pm or
0.211.
leave message,
Yellow Co&lt;:katiel, 6 112 months ;
1.989 Beretta GT Red Sunroof, 2
blue Cockatiel, 8 1/2 month: talk· Doors
. Engine &amp; Transmission ,
ing Mynah bird : large cages, ask
lor details at Adull Care Home, 15K 1•.900 513-574-2539.
614 -992-50&lt;2.
198G Okls Cutla!ll, high mil"gt,
power everyll'ling. $2,900 . 304·

Musical

576-2778.

Instruments

1991 Oodga Carayan LE. loaded,
great cOn"dition. sharp, higjl
miles, need to sell, reduced
price. $6,900. 614-441.0t35.
1992 ·cl'lttvy ·Silverado -4WO, one
owrier, 73,000 miles, 8U·GO~·
2069.
. •

-

B One of lhat

,:,:y.•

·

lllllo WOIMtn
9 Welldng odck
1D Nolt-jh oftt·arg.

" Actol

7lnclon

UAct

17 Folkelnger

22 Calrndlr
lbbr.

C"lill

23Whlll

North
Pass

Pass

2NT

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

I 6

n-+-+---1

~Meal
ln181~

' 211 capoiCIIy
Dl8trict·

211=

~t.tct::·

21FIICIIUW.

31 C h , _ ,
Item .

•-•••c
.=:;:,or
37TMM

..44
-·

Deception is delightful

41 c-lruCIIon

P.M. ·

'

.,

One of the hardest parts of'the
game to master is deception. Perhaps
-46 Chlld"e coni
this is because, for most players, it ,
goes against the grain to "waste" high 1
48=..
cards unnecessarily. Also, when you b-+........~­
~ ··
50 Bolly'l
, are on defense, there is lhe danger
· that partner will be the one fooled, not
p;ulsctar
. declarer. And it can be difficult 10 fore- '
see lhe effect of a falsecard .
. Some help is al hand in "Step by
Slep: Deceptive Declarer Play" by
by Lule Campos
· Barry Rigal &lt;Batsford: $19.50 , poslCelebnly Cipher.cfYP(ograms are created !rom quotations by famous ~. p.~a1 and present
paid. from The Bridge World, 39 West
Each letter In thct c!pher standi for inothtlr. Tod.ty's clue: p SQtM~s R
94th Street. New York, NY 101125-7124&gt;.
In a workman-like examination of the
'C
BJ. NCA'X
' HBJ
LGAH ,X
BJP. H. Y
· subject, Rigal also discusses points of
'
.~.'
, good technique,. ·
Z X
B J P H V. H B J
H Y 0:1.
'
. L G A H X ' •' Z A
. In this deal from the book, plan the
play in three no-trump alter. West' has
- NT X Z L
UTXZAGXX.'
IJ. PGHHc
led I he heart king.
'
'
If the opposing clubs are .splitting 3IDA A.
3. you have· eight top tricks . tll the
clubs aren'l 3-3, you are probably goPREVIOUS SOLIJTION: "LHe is a moderately gOod play Witn a badly written
ing down.&gt; So, if the diamond finesse
lhord acl."- Truman Capote.
is working, you're safe . But if il's losing and you take the first trick. you'll
surely lose five red-suit tricks .
YlUTUILT. d~-a ,5\,. .(- /)'f:1 f:hQ.o WOI.
Perhaps you should duck the firsl
PUZJlll p~ J.'QU ~~
'fit
tAMI
trick, hoping Wes t ·will lead anolher
14HH ~r aAT I. POllAN
.
heart. fl 's fine if he does. but il's big
Rearrange ,leHers of th•
trouble if he swilches to spades . How
four
scrambled word• becan you encourage West to continue
low to form four word1. .
. hearts?

~K&amp;EARNEST

...,-+-+--

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AL£.

TEMP$.

.

,,

1998 Jeep Cherokee Span 4x4
Auto, Cruise. Tilt, AC, 7,500
Miles, $1 7,500, 614·379-2726.
89 Bronco II XLT 4x4, 15895

080..8t4-B43·5151

DEER HUNTER SPECIAL
1978 Ford Econoline Yan
lnlerior customized,. couch makea
double bed, remoyatJie table, Co·
Ieman buiiHn unil Includes 2
burner stolfe and heater, sink and
Ice box, windows haye privacy
cur1a1ns, manv otner A•traS, ac.tu·
·
68,750, $2500, call

J;l&lt;r.,

0

1.

740. ·. Mototcycles

BIG NATE

1987 Honda XRBOR looks Goad,
Runs Good, $750, OBO 614·4•6·

r JU!&gt;T
r ur TWO

6651 .

AND T\.10

1993 Yamaha 100 Motorcycle,
$800 ; Fue Oil Sigler StoYo $100.

lUGETHER. ..

The answer is to drop lhe jack al
trick one. Win lhe second heart and
lake the diamond finesse, safely setling up your ninth trick. ·
As I expec1 y'ou are aware. ducking
lhe firsllrick with this heart holding is
called the Bath Coup. This play of the
jack is apparenlly known - though it
is news to me - as the Dirty Coup.

814-446-4025.

.

Budget Pr!ee Transmlulo"'·
Used !Rebuilt, All Typ11, Over
10,000 Transmisaions, Clurches
Flywtieels, Overhual Kita, 6142•5-5677 ..
late Model Naw &amp; LbWMJte'Bge
Used Auto &amp; Truck Part Motors,
Transmissions. Body &amp; Suspen.
sion Pafts. DomeSTIC &amp; fore1gn .
W1de Select1on Towerline Auro '
Systems. 614 · 532 ·0139. Or 1.
800-482-e;!fiO.

ta••

·s4o

.. .
G E M A 0 I:::,'

~.,. . ,.-:·16i'-v-i-1°:. . :,FI. :.R:. ,I:=:E7. :.R;. I-1l·e:~~mpleoe-

Auto Parts &amp;

rm

'.

AVELIB

.

Accessories

4

I

One very tired woman sitting
in the park with her friend
IL~L-.JI_s_l_L_,_
_
_ _ _ - sighed, "Those who sleep like
.--------~ a baby usually' don't • - - -

200 Honda B•g Red 3 wheeler,
shalt dnve, reverse, electric stan,
axe. cond $750. 304·675-2074.

760

.........

1

T~fY A~e G.A£.£.EI&gt;
tt ~VMAN5 •;.
T~fY',e

'

43 Colcli !light ol
FIMhy lrult
46 Ungeiie

.

p

1981 Harley Oalfidson FlT, rub·
ber mount, 5 speed transmission,
AM/FU stereo, nice bike, asking
$8 ,000, SU-742·1365 or 614·
7-42·9530 leave message.

ri¥11

By Phillip Alder

1993 Jeep- Grand Cherokee limIted. 4K4, low Mileage, Excellent
Condillon, 814 ·448·4180 Alter

New gas tanks, 1 ron truck
1995 New Style Cavalier, 4 Door, wt'leels &amp; radiators . D &amp; R Auto ,
AutO. .Air, 11,500 Miles, $7,300 Ripley, WV. 304·372-3933 or ,~
'
'78 John 'Deere 2846, 82 hp. , 090, 614·258 ·6340, 814-258- 800·273-9329.
1657 hrs. wilh 148 JO endload9r 6467.
bucket and larks. $13,500, call
790
Campers &amp;'
2 Rebuildable Beretta's 1990 GTZ
614·992~ 7..21 .
·
Motor
Homes
1992 11,800 FDr Both; 1989 Pty'
300 International tractor wldown mou1h C~lt Wagon, 3 Doors,
87,000 Mtles . 5 Speed. St.SOO 32' 1964 Skylark with stroontd tn
power. 304 ·~75-3206.
pore~. and ~tUit)' Wilding, on lot in
OBO 614·256·1233.
beautiful tra1ler caun, Arcadia, FL34 Horse Power 414 Diesel Trac·
•
tor S8. 795, Massey F9fguson 135 48 Chevy 2 dr. Sedan, good 61&lt;-949-2253.
Diesel $4,995: Ford 8 N $2,595; shape, 12,400: 89 Grand Prix, 2
Gravit~ Bed Wagon. $295. 614· dr., auto, nice , $3,950, 2 large
SERVICES
show cases, good shape, 61•·
Z88·B522.
9o49-2CM5 or 614:949-2836.
BtO
Home
'Agco -AIIis rractor specials . .t660
2wd, 52PTO hp, radial tlrta, 1 89 Honda CAX St. black. sun root,
Improvements
remote vaiYe, 12 speed Syncho 6 t&lt;-992·39115.
BASEMENT
;,
tn1n1, 4 year ar 4,00f' hour drlw
WATERFAOoFtNG ·
rrain wauanty. World1 famoua air Auto loans : Auto Dealer Will Artooled diesel. $15,900. 4wd range Financing Even · If You Unconctilional lifetime guarantH.
equipped same way $19,000. Did Have Been. Turned Down Befot'e. local references turnlahec:t Ea- ~
you know tl'lll il lakes 1 .uaabl8 Loans AYallable For No CreCtit t~blisnod t975. Call (6 141 "••s· :
hp to run a watch pump tooling Bad Credit Ahd Bankruptcy But: 0870 Ot ':100·287·0578. ROQerj .
,
· wa1erproof1ng.
system? Kaele(s Service Center ers, Call Diane 614·446·8172.
SoRt 17 loon,WV 304 805 317o4.
CARS FOR $100 ! Trucks, boats
810 SAYINGSI 0'11. Financing 011 4-wheelers, motor homes , lu rnt:· Apptill'lce Parts And Strvict: An ·,
New John DMI'e Hay Equipment ture, electronics, computer11 etc. Name Brands Over 25 Years E• For 38 Months. Purchase A New by FBI, IRS. OEA. Ava ilable' your penence All Work Guaranteed
· City Uaytag eu-ue :
5000 Series 40 To 73 HP John atea now. Call 1·800·513-43•3 French
7795.
•
Oeete Tractor At The- Same Time E". 5-9368
And Get 0' For 38 Monttts Or
General Home Main.·
3.9% For 80 Montha. C•r· Two 1991 Ford Fe1$tiva·s $1,895 C&amp;C
miehatl'a Farm &amp; lawn Gallipoh, Eoch: 1990 Mere. Coull"' $2,995: tenence· Painting, vinylsldiAet
.OhiO 8~4 ·ot48·2•12 Or 1·800 1~80 Pont. Gran Prtx $2,905; carpentry, door••.windows, bttlhl
1888 Pont. Ttana Am 13,195; mobile """"" •epow One! ....,.,
514·111 1. '
.
1989 Ford Tempo $1 ,305; t G94 ''" estimate call Chat et4·DIIt2F1rmall CUb with cultlvlito'rs and Geo Marro 12,905: 1SI90 PonT. 6323.
aide drestere: 1110 two grttn· Grand Am 11 ,005 : 1988 Toyota
hau .. aa• furnactt: 614·e41· Ctllca $1,005: 1988 Ford Ctown Hane. finish, DRYWALL
rtpoolr.
3420.
.
Vic . $1,995 : 1988 Cnev. Borella Celllnos rtxtl.lred,
plltsrer tepair:
$1,295 : 1966 Dodee Aties s . w.
Ftrguaon 30 With New s· Bush $1,095: BID Auto Sotu . Hwj. Call Tom 30-4 -e7S-4~88 . 20
.
Hog Scraper Bladt, And Discs, 180 N., 4 Milas N. Of Holzef. Galli· txPBtlence.
' Excellellt Cor,dltlan et(, 4"11·
81•-••s-6885.
Electrlcal.and
1ne.
•
'
Upton Uted C1ra R1. 62·3 Miles
Relrlgerauon
Gehl grinder mixer, JOhn\Otatt South or Leo:n. W'!l. Flnancm;
grain drill. 12ftlfansport disk. .flvailai:H. 304·458-108Sll.
RSES CERTftEO DEAtER
Owalonna hay blne. lnt«Mtlonal
LAWREIICE ENTEFIPRISES
808 F•rm AI di111l lraclor, •II Want.ct to buy· 87 or newer C• · Heat Pumps, Air Candltlonlng H
price Clatlic, must be o4 c:!oor, v. 'll&gt;u Don't Colt Uo Wo Both Loio1
good cand. -2n-.215.
a. loacMd, Brougham or lS, 814· Fra Eorimooo~ t-100-2111-0Ctea
Husqverna modtl 51 chlln iaw 7&lt;2·3102.
~1 • .-8301.WV-.s.
' ;
an sale S33i thll month only.
lr•• cue I frtt chain I fret 720 'lhlcka lor Sale
RnldanHii or oonwnorctot wiring
glovtl. Sidett Equipment 304·
, _ HrYice or rtpaH's. Master at·
87S-7.21.
1877 GMC Truc:ll3110 Auto, 81•- ctnted alacrrtclar'l. Ridenour ~~
7.
Etacklcal, W\1000301 :IIW-87" .
Hydraulic Oil f12 .110-lltlal pall.
17.,
'
r ·~
Sidoti Equlpmanl. Hondoroon. tllle ~100 Good Condition, ~~~-~ ~
WV.30+e71-t&lt;21.
$850, ~11032
RNidtnttll Or Comn\erciii•Wir• .~ 1
ing, Naw lotVico 0( !lopolrl. Ll· &gt;
I.H. Cub with bolly - r, r112" ti82 l~uzu ttuck, •ely., 5sp., conoOd
Eltctrlcton. Woton ~loc· 1'
111114&lt;, 2 ••,... 304·805-3..1 a~ 71,000 mi~a. nice,
&amp;14: rrl~ 8t&lt;· 4•ft-IDSO, Goltt~olla, • \
to&lt;4;00pm.
J92·254'1toor8tom.
Ohio.
(' 1
I

38-pupll

West
Pass
1.

.

_

.

.

•

_

•h• chutklo quoood

by ftlling in lhe . missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCJtAM.LETS ANSWIIS
Burrow· Young -Above • Endure. YOUNGER
I sal watching the people in the department store al)d
concluded that teenagers use cosmetics to look older ,
Adults use cosmetics to look YOUNQER!
'

'610 Farm Equipment

••.•so.

otllce

32 Air-quality org. 4 Acqulm
5Uicoooma
331.1eullfl 34DinthMdclrna
31Gu..-.

42T~'a

FO[d Bronco, lull size, .t
drrYe, auto trans, complete
710 AutOS for Sale
lengur'e rebuild, front &amp; rear -lUI·
1970 Cad illac Convertible, W1
·
rebuild , new paint, new
Owners Manuel, Projecl Car,
heels &amp; tires, exc cond1t~on .
Ver~ Restorable, Drlveable, Top SS,/00. 304-895·3874.
Works Best, Needs CoYer. Have 19g1 Ctlevy s. 10 Blazer, Tal'lot.
A -Glass And Boot. Full"tSII
4~ Cu. ' 4 0oo r,4W 0 , 4.3,·8,,..to,~•·
v
'"
••
'TboNSI
n. ur · o a rage, MUS 8
Cruise, Tilt, Power .loctl.s &amp; Wind· ·
Or Trade, $500 OBO, 614-388· ows, 79,000 Mile!:, 6U-44e-U58
9181 Anvtime.
Call Alter 5 I'M. . -.:
Electro

1 RIIOit of New
. Mexico
2 Companion
3 Public HrVicH

Openi')g lead: • K

TRANSPORTATION

CoupDf!
·
'"MERRY CHRISTM~"'

570

South

SILAS?

~

Pan Rotowe1 1er 1993
Acl'lieva 614 ·379-2658.

BARNEY

LONESOME

milts, 455 engine, restorable.
$500. 210 4rh St. 304·875-5133.

Wonderful Life
54 Bridge of San
Lull55 Spool

2A

DOWN AT TH' STORE PAW tt
WHY DoN'T YOU GO '
..
VISIT PORE 01..'

1975 Buick

53--

Vulnerable: Neither
Deal.er: West

..

t 978 Ford F-250 • · WD 314 Ton
Truck, $3,000, 614-•46·8159.

52-m-

DOWN

211S4oll-h
30 Retumto

., 9 4 I
t K 10 8 2
• 10 6 5

61 ..-2.. 5-5824.

1, north of A:unercy.

-

·

1990 Mustang ·GT Extellenl ConFOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO dition, Power Everylhing; Asking:
Respons ible Party Wanted To 15,500, 8t4-256-8270.
81-4--446-7300.
Make low Monthly PawiT\•nts On
·
See Locally. CaM: 1-800· 1991 Plymouth Sundance AAJ·
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon Piano.
tomat!c. Air Conditioned, AMIFM
268-8218.
.
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Cinelli, 4" Doors, 73,000 Miles,
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-,S37-9528
Martin Gibson Harmony Yamaha, 12.650 o·r Best Otter, 814-258·
.
Grammet", Guitart, Banjo,' Mando· 8189.
Super Single 4 Poster Waterbed· lina, Fiddles, Electdc &amp; Up Right
For Sale, 614·4.443· 7123.
1992 CheV Camero RS V-6, 5
Base, 61 4-o4.46·1158.
·
Speed, 25tn Anniversary Modal
Toy piano. $9.95: amllm cassene
65,000 Miles, S5.50D, 61&lt;4·4118·
590
For
Sale
stereo with CD, $69.50: Base CB,
8050.
$19 .95: llat lOP gu itar. $125; roy
or Trade
lire trucks: tractor; metal trucks;
1993 Sunbird, 5 speed, 2 door.
Indian compound bow with hunt· · 3 Cows. bred, 3 calfs. 1 bull. 304· au. POL , easy on gas, asking
lng arrows. $29.50; buck hunting 576·3150 after 6:00pm.
$1900, call 61-4·992-6975.
knife, $24.95; 50 caliber ~n~zzte ri·
199S'Monte Carlo lS, Stlerwood
lie, 1120; 22 magnum rine, $89.50;
FARM SUPPliES
Green. Rear Spoiler, loaded, AMI
new Crallsman 58 P.ieca socket
!5Bt, 132.95. Dave's Swap Shop,
FM Caasene. Clolh Seats, 34,000
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Ftve Poinls, Flatwoods Rd. &amp; SR
Mila1 $15,80(1, BU-441·0753,

W.A-11-T-E-D

••

Hay &amp; Grain

Long 112 Ti&lt;* Steel SBOO Each Or
All 5 For $2,500 l&amp;l Recycling,

A" You lntarellad In A REAL
Horne Based Buaine111' Thll Is

..-

080, 814-742-2648.

East
• "-K J 10 5

soao-Mu-

&amp;1_._

sew_.

leonard-

, 23 Coolldge'e
nlckn..,.
25 CompoMr
Dvorak

6
• Q 6 4
AAK872

BltNESS IS RIAL SLOW

2-1a.

0

Steel Culverts 7Ft. Dia . 15Ft.

..,, Doltu. TX (V72) Wl-82».

230

$10 tor pet bllh &amp; condtion.
(dogs or cats), can for ar'l appoint·
mtnL
·
20% off olav&amp;ryttlng in 1s10re!l
"Great Gilt Ideas."

Saara Refrigerator, $100, 814·
446·8172, 8.14-256-6251.

Sa--

:mo.

RCA 2r Stereo COlor T.V. $300
Entertainment Canter Cabinel.
$75; EJI&amp;rCite Bike 1200; Tachn·
lcs Turntable $~5. All EJicellent

Will Deliver: S14-8811-8441.

WIH do bollrllUina In my homo,
U or port -or Wyou nood 1mo
- t o Clwloloo•-· MOnell)
tluu Frlcl;i::oy or ·nil'"' anth,
any. Co JooiWio,
11. . . . .

FeN. For FrM Book Call

814-448· 274 1,

Refrigerators, Stovea, Washer&amp;
'And Or~ers, All Reconditioned
And Gauranteed! 1100 And Up,

FReEIIONEV
Cash givftwayt. privata grants,
loana, minton• avalteble. Source

'86 S· 1D Chevy Blazer 4x4, V-6
automatic. 94 .000 miles, $3500

after 4:00pm.

Chrt.ty'a Peta,_.'lf
271N.9oc:andAMiddlaport, Oil; r~

CondiiDn, S1H.a.tt5S.

tho olloring.

White A.ppalooaa colt, 17 Months
old, 55 inches ~ 1500, 814·992·

GroUnd air corn, 30-4·675·2443

AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD P&lt;Jps,
$50, NSDR, ""' lo,..lo, one mate.
·Ready .now. 014·94$·2128 even·
tngs.

E-..nings.

Naad A Resume? Or Are You

IN011CEI
OHIO YALLEV PUBLISHING CO.
FHOII'IIMftdl rf'lat )'GU dO bull·
· to
- Ht1d
,......
youlhrouall
knoW. ond
HOT
ononey
tho
mall until you havelrw"tfgattd

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDI

640

gollablo, 81•'-« t-OtMt2.

II•·H:I-4514
We will be open 22nd, 23rd, 24th,
ot Oecomt&gt;er 1

~ccenoriea,

- . ...._7-70111
.
'
WlllobJoit In Itt Homo, Oayo:
aU-4&lt;8-7835, lfvonlnoo: 81•4&lt;1.oee7.

1729.
8313.

AKC Regiltered Ctlow Chow
Puppies, With 30 Generation
~dlgrea, 8 Weeki 01 Age, Par·
enta On Premises. 1st Shots I
~rmed, Asking 1225, Price N•

O~o~een Size Waterbed With All

304-875-1013..

210

1?50. S14-448.()229.

Spring• t25, Compaq, o488 Computlf' $500, 614·~571.

Remowal, Fret Eatimattll In·
aurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 514·318-

'

'Registered Quarter Horae Geld·
1ng Sound &amp; Genua, 6U-6.t3·

AKC Registered Chocolate Lab
Pupa, Ready December 5th, 111
.Shots Wormed. Vet Checked,

Queen Size Mattreu &amp; Box

ln"'icw and Extlrior finishes car·
pentry, firept,ce refinishing, acldhlons, porchea, decks, have

s.rv~.

ind wormed, 614=949·21.26. ·

AKC Regittered Glden Retnever
Pup1, 6 Weeks ttl Sholl &amp;
Wormed $225 , SU -&lt;448 ·8651 ,
814-448-2899.

t180 ·wanted to Do

Prafoo-t TrM

A109.

AKC Registered female white Siberi•n Husky, 1 112 years old ,
-good naourod, $75, 81&lt;-992·
3085 OYenO!go.

- · · Writo To CLA 399, C/o Gel·
lipct1U1 OaiiV Trlbun., 825 Third
lloorw, Goltlpo4i~ OH 45831.

-

Nubm buck t8mo1. old, gentle,
good breeder. $100 , 304·578·

AKC Registered Chinese Sharpei
pups, !ots a! wrinkles, lirst ahot&amp;

21 Ac:lor

•Q4
Q 7 2
K Q tO 8 5
95
J 9 3
South
• 8 3
• A J

lout (Fr.)
...... ou1
TUiefUIIuxury
Ac:lor Mineo
Couple

ao Decipher

• A 9 6 4

• '7 3 2
t AJ 7 3

AKC R&amp;Qistered Dalmatian pupplea, I8Y8n wee«• otd, first thots
and wonntd1 $200, 6.14-992-5116
- opm 01 onytimo wooi&lt;ondl.

MERCHANDISE

510

l125oa. 304-895-3678.'

46T47 1\IPe 1NI

13-

9192.

A.KC Reglattred Basset Puppies.

Furnished
Rooms

·-

44-....-.
or

u car

,,

i era1ora To Join Our Company.

40 SllaUd
41 'l'ou,
"' I
&lt;)$

a.1r

14
15
16
11
19

-·-"'"*

31YW

&amp;f181

0

Chocolate fWhlle, Call 0 A..N . •fi
Tw1n Rivera Tower, now &amp;ccepling Irregular new jeans, SB.OO; alio 9065.
P.M. 614·o4o46·9.t16; Ore P.M. -10
applications lor 1br. HUD subaid- used work pants anG shirll,
P.M. S14-446-3887.
ized apt for elderly and handl- · $1 .00. Guido, 132 Bun..-:nut. Po- . Adorable Boston Tarrier Puppies.
IMfO)',Ohio.
Juat In Time For Christmas! Now AOHA Stallion Brood Marti
capped. El:lH 30-4-875-6879.
Taking Deposit, 614 ·388·9325 Or Weallnga, And Vearllng1, otO
JET
81-4·388·94 13.
Two bedroom apartment In Po·
Acre Farm, Wlrh Barn1, 814·28eAERATION UOTORS
moroy, $190tmo., $100 deposit,
S522.
-irod, &amp; Rlbulltln StOCk. A.KC German SMpha rd Puppies,
oo pet&amp;, 614-667·3083 aftM 5pm.
Col Ron Evono, 1-800-537-9528.
S1SOea. 304-e75- 7771 .
Gelding Horse For Sale, 814·388·

f 'bolooo!PIIooo

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2 Female Goats , 9 Months Old,
Great With Kid• Or 4·H Proj~ttll

ABA Regiatered Anter l[;an Bu ll
DoG. 15 Weeks Of~ 614· 388·

\ Training, Write T. I. Hopkini, TRC
• Dept. S-•5831, Box 711, Ft.
• Ward~. TX 111101-0111 .

rical joba,

ALDER

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PHILLIP

ITHURSDAY

~

DECEMBER 5 ·I

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KEEP TALKING, SIR ..

I CAN'T SEE W"ERE
'(OU A~E ..

ASTRb·ORAPH

Aarro·Graph. clo thla newspaper, P .O. believe everything you hear, especially H
Box 1158, Murray Hill S1ation, New Vorl&lt;, you are involved with unlamiliar people or
. NV 10158. Ma~e aure you lllale dMireCI flnns.
zodiac signa.
i!ANCER (June 21·Julf'22) Listen 10
•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 12..Jan. 11) A kay your intuition 1oday. Do no1 make a comBERNICE
objoctlva mighl nol ba achieved today; mllment if you feel uncomfonable. Your
BEDE OSOL and II 'IIIII be your fault , Vou will know P.,cep1ions mlgh1 ba more accurate' than
Wha1 you hive to do to IUCCeld, but you . your logical asaesamenla.
mlgh1 no1 want to pay 1110 price.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Ignoring an
AQUARIUS (.llli'o. 20-l'ell. 11) Try no1 to aulgnmem today bac.tluu ybu llopa to
feel10ny tor youtHII IOdly. II wiN 'ba an gel around to 111ombrrow will noll ba wlae.
· exarctH In Mltlly, beelillll your friends Procrastination could cause compitca·
are dealing wl1l\ their own problema,
tlona In the luture.
PIICEI (M. 20 llallll 20) Keep your · . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) When shop·
curiollty In chide 11 IIIII Ume, ~~!*lilly ping Ieday, gUild alialnal 1110 Inclination
peratlnlng to a m11tor a friend Ia re1uc11n1 to buy merchandise you do not need .
Friday, Dec.&amp;, 1e&amp;e
to d l -' ._ lillgM ba trying 1o aparo Make 8 lilt In adv~nce. and raatriCI M10
Thlngll could woott out fol 1110 bell In 1110 your l1111nge.
·
-tiata.
year ahaid If you continua along 1hl , AIIIEI (IIMoll 21-Aprtttl) Aloocialea • LIIRA (Sapl. 23-0at. 2a) Do no1 llfl1ici.
111M coulll. Do no1 11111(1 ~ until · mlghl nalloleo... your behlvlor 1oclly " pate dll8pp0intman11odly. look on tile
you _.,. 11y of N lind.
' they .,.. lhll you n1nconl1111nt. Make bright ttlde; 1110 ptOOeblllty ol """*'~~ will
UQITTARIUI (Nov. 23 1110 21) H you _: -to flnlah whll you IWI.
be«!UUIIO the poobebillly of loling.
go out w111t frllnda 1oclly, kllp ...tllll'lttg TAURUI (April 20 lllr 20) Do no1 be SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Hov. 12) You Me a
on aMI p(lnl. Do na1 11111(1 uro1111DII- ' ltldllleoli~ ••CIIt'l IOgillll ltNIIh hllllltl comp~_olonate person , bul today you .
lble roq.,.te. Altro·Oreplt predlellona · todlly., Rlmlmber, 1n OUnctl ot ~- ntlghl auppma 1hlo nobltllnatinct. 1.118&lt;,
for tho yoiT ahead 1111111 wonderful liolllo- I pound
you will feel gull1y about 10meone you
ChlltlllnU ttlbcking 1tu11era for all.ligna ol GEMINI (lol8y II ..June 101 When dNIIng could heve helped bul·didnt
1he ZOCIIIC. Mall S2 lor IMit and SAlE 10 W~h bull~oll 1-11111 todlly do no1

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�Ohio Lottery

Pace wins
Lombardi
award •

Pick 3:
1-4-4
Pick 4:
9-3-7-7
Buckeye 5:
7-8·14-20.28

Sports on Page 4

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Vol. 47, NO. 1152 •
01•, Ohio v.lley Publl1hlng Company

Chance of light rein
tonight, lows In the m1d
30•. Saturday, pertly
cloudy. Highs In the 401 •

2 Sactlono, 12 Pot!**, 35 conta
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy·Middl.rt, Ohio, Frld•y, December 6, 1996
'

Child beating allegation r--Ringing in Christmas----submitted to grand jury
AS
LOW
'AS:

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel New• Steff
The case of a Middleport woman
accused of severely beating her 9year-old son has been boUnd over to
the Meigs County grand jury, following a decision by County Court
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien at '1. pre1iminary hearing Thursday.
Tammy J. Bush, age unreported,
186-1/2 Second Ave., Middleport,' is
. ac.cused of severely beating her 9. year-old son, Joseph Bush, Nov. 29
at !heir residence.
Bush appeared during Thursday's
preliminary hearing with her courtappointed attorney, Pat Story, from
the public defender's office. She
appeared to be emotionally distraught, at times looking as if she
could break down at any moment
during the hearing.
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes presented nearly 35 photographs taken by. investigators,

ALL WHEEL DRIVEl
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showing a bloody, ransacked apartment after the. fight and showing a
young boy, covered with swollen
bruises and abrasions to tl\e face and
back.
"During this hearing today, the
state will prove that Tammy Bush
severely beat, tortured and abused her
9-year-old child over nearly a 30minute period," Lentes said during
opening statements.
Several law enforcement authorities testified during the hearing,
including patrolmen from the Middleport Police Department who
investigated the beating.
Middleport Police Capt. James
Ash delivered testimony concerning
the crime scene the night of the beatmg.
'The bathroom virtually had blood
splatters on every wall, espe&lt;;ially
around the tub. There was also a trail
of blood from the living room ,
through the kitchen, to the bath- .

room," Ash said.
.
Middleport Police Capt. Bruce
Swift said· under oath tha.t Bush
admitted to the incidents surrounding
the be~ting during Mirandized statements delivered 10 investigators the
morning af1er the incident:
"In nearly 20 years on the bench,
this is the worst abuse case that I have
ever seen. I not only have found probable cause that Ms. B·ush committed
these offenses, but J .believe that
beyond a reasonable doubt that she
committed lhe offenses," O'Brien
said during closing statements.
A motion by Story for bond reduction on Bush's behalf was denied by
O'Brien, with the judge indicating the
request could again be pursued in the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
after initial grand jury action.
Bush remains in the Athens County Jail, where she.is being held pending a $100,000 bond. The case is
expected to·be presented to the grand
jury in Ja~uacy.

Slip repair on Syracuse
street ·m ay begin soon
By KATHRYN CROW
ing on village property at the comer
Sentinel Correspondent
of Bridgeman and Water streets.
If all goes well, repair wrn:k on a
Council members felt that the bid
slip on Lee Circle will get \lnderway package, when advertised, was not
this week, Mayor, George, Connolly e~plicit enough and as a result the
told Syracuse Village Council Thurs- bids were in e~cess of what council
dily night.'
. _ ~nticipated. It was decided to readThe work will be done by Bob Jef- vcrtise for bids.
fers of Jeffers Excavating and. ConSubmitting bids and the. amount of
nolly. .
.
each were: Richard Davis, Syracuse,
The mayor also reported that $34,741.44; Precision Posts of
through the efforts of Bob Winget(, Pomeroy. $31 ;135; and Home C.reek
grants administrator, funds in the Enterpnses of Pomeroy, $49, 678.
amount of $118,000 to repairthe slip
· Thanks was extended to Jerrod
on Bridgeman Street have been Clay for work in leveling the lot
obtained. II was reported, however, where the pole building will be conthat the money will nol be available structed.
until July 1997.
·
&lt;;:ouncilman Bill Roush reported
Connolly also noted that a low thai the spreac;ler box for ·~• village
band radio will not be placed in the truck is to be in nexl week.
village truck as was earlier disIn other business, council is now
cussed. .
.
.
accepting sealed bids for the sale of
Fol!ow~ng a lengthy dtscusSJon, several items: Warm Morning room
counctl rejected three btds submtl.ted heater, 85,000 BTIJs; Frigidaire elecfor the constructtop of a pole botld- tric stove, four-burner wiih small ·

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oven, and two Smith &amp; Wesson .38
calibc;r spe&lt;;ials with holsters. The
sealed bids must be submitted by
Dec . 18. Th~y will be opened that
night at 7.
·
~
Connolly announced that the University of Rio Grande, in conjunction
with Racine H01te National Bank,
have proclaimed Jan. 4 as Meigs
.County Day. Activities will be held at
Lyne Center at Rio Grande. The event
is to promote sports and is open to the
public.
Police Chief Jim Gillilan reported
thai he issued 19 citations, investigated one complaint in which charges .
were filed against two juveniles.
assisted the sheriff in a domestic violence inc'ident involving a shooting,
installed a low band radio in the village cruiser, and filed charges against
a juvenile for possession of marijuana.

The mayor's report sh.owing
receipts of $1 ,30 I was approved.

Albright's nomination tops roster
of Clinton's cabinet replacements

I

'By ROBERT BURNS
Associated PreM Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton's new .national secl!rity team
has· much in common with his old
one: Three of the four appointees
served in "his first term. For !heir
familiarity, or otherwise, the choices
were greeted warmly on Capitol Hill.
"With this group, he's clearly hit
· the mark" in aiming for a group that
can speak with one voice on national security and foreign policy, Sen.
Tom Daschle, D·S.D.. the Senate
minority leader, said after Clinton's
announcement Thursday.
By naming U.N. ambassador
Madeleine Albright as secretary of
state and GOP Sen. William Cohen as
defense secretary, Clinton is breaking
new ground with the first woman to
hold the nation's top diplomatic post
and with a Republican at the Pentagon in a Democratic administratir:,.
Clinton also announced t~•t his
national security adviser, Anthony
Lake, was his choice as CIA director
and that Sandy .Berger, Lake's deputy,
would move up to his boss's former
spot. John·Deutch. the currenl CIA
director, apparently will leave tbe
administration .
The picks drew immediate praise
from Republicans and Democrats
alike. ·
,
"The JIRSident's new ream brings
fresh insights," said Rep. Benjamin
Gilman, R-N.Y., chairman of the
House International Relations Committee. Fellow Republican Rep.
Floyd Spence of South Carolina. who
is chairman of the House National
Security CommUtee, pra~ Clin-

Ablillln Wheels va Vortec
Power Locks,
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CHEVIIDlfl

lfKUS•TDYDia

ton's courage in putting a Republican
in the Pentagon who will help ensure
bipartisan support for the military.
One of the Clinton administration's toughest critics, Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C. , called Albright "a
tough and courageous lady," and he
predicted that she as well as Cohen
and Lake would be confirme~. by the
Senate. Berger does nol requtre Senate confirmation.
Senate. Majority Leader Trenl
. Lou, R-Miss., was more circumspect
He praised Cohen as "one of the
smartest members of the Senate, but
besides calling Albright's nomination
"historic," had little positive to &lt;ay
about her.
Thursday's Oval Office announcements marked the first step in Clinton's transition to a second-term
Cabinet The president, who sometimes agonizes over personnel choices, still must fill at least five of his
Cabinet's 14 seats. Aides said he
would tum to picking a new economic team, including new faces at
the Commerce and Labor departments, as well as a new chief economic adviser.
Also, fanner State Department
official Richard Holbtooke, who
helped broker lhe Bosnia peace
accords last year, emerged Thursday
as a strong candidate to teplace
Albright at the United Nations,
according to administration sources·
speaking on condition they not be
named Rep. Bill Richsndson, DN.M .. also 1w been mentioned for
the post. .
Some details about the nominees:
• Albright, S9, is a naturalized

American citizen, the daughter of a
Czech diplomat. Her family fled
communist Czechoslovakia when she
was II . Clinton noted that Albright
was "raised in the shadow of Nazi
aggression."
As U.N. ambassador, she has been
fiercely loyal to Clinton- a hawk on
Bosnia intervention and NATO
expansion. She is deft with sound
bites, ,and Clinlon hopes she can artie·
ulate his global vision, convincing
Americans that their lives are touched
by evenls beyond the nation :S bor·
ders.
'· .
• Cohen, 56, is a Republican
·moderate who retired from the Senate this year after ~terms. Known
as an independent thinker, he rose 10
national prominence when he cas!
one the first GOP voles to impeach
President Nixon.

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• Lake, 57, is a reserved New Englander and former professor who has
eschewed tbe spotlight as Clinton's
national security adviser. Lake served
in the State Department in both the
Nixon and Carter administrations.
Some aides . have •wondered
whether Lake's mild manner .is suited for the rough and tumble 9f the
U.S. intelligence community.
• Berger. SI, worked in Lake's
shadow as deputy national' security
adviser but benefited from his '25year friendship with Clinton. He is
known for his ·ability to straddle the
inrerseclion of politics and foreip
affairs, but there are questions about
his credentials for molding foreign
policy.

Jolly Old St. Nlcholn
arrived In the Middleport
Christmas parade Thursday
night accompanied by Legionnaires of Feeney-Benn•tt Post
128, middle photo. Open house .
waa observed by many ator. .,
and following a tradhlon of
several ·yaara, Peoples Bank
photographed children with
Sllniil. Trellts ware provided for
the children by the Middleport
Community Anoclation, sponsors of the holiday parade. The
rain failed to dampen the lplr·
ita of the crowd which gathered
to vlaw tha parade uahering In
the holiday seeson. The float of
Overbrook Center in the
parade, top photo, depleted an
· old-fitshloned Chriatmaa. Sev·
eral Overbrook reeidenta eat In
rocker!l around a fireplace
inside a hut outlined with
Christmas lights while children gathered outside around
a Christmas tree. Meanwhile,
Santi! waved to the crowd,
right, as the holiday season
was uah•red In for Middleport.

November retail sales reported brisk
The retailer results marked ' the
By RACHEL BECK
freshesl evidence of a healthy U.S.
AP Business Writer
Consumers did plenty of shopping economy. Other economic data
in November, lured Into the nation's released by the government today
stores by sales promotions that got painted a more mixed piclure, but the
them spending before t,he officilil Slart information was more dated.
The Labor Department said workof·the Christmas season.
Many of the large U.S. retailers place pt'Qductivity, an il)lpbrtant meawho J:Cieased sales figures today said surement of economic well-being,
business was brisk in November, fell 0.3 percent in the July-September
despite the.late Thanksgiving week- quarter, the first drop since last 1995.
end that fell in lhe last few days of the The departmenl also reported a drop
month. A year ago, Thanksgiving was in weekly unemployment claims last
week, but that reflccled the short
almosl a week earlier.
.
"Despile the calendar, which has work week because of Thanksgiving.
After dismal sales a year ago, a
I~ of distortions from last year to
this year, the season is off to a good relatively slrong economy and low
start," said N. Richard Nelson Jr., a inflation are sending consumers into
retail analyst at Nesbitt Bums Secu- ·stores this season ready to buy. That's
. rities Inc. "The early scorecard for making retailers more confident
about the prospe~ts for the holidays,
Christma.• i&amp;oCncouraging.'.'

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which historically accounts for about
hitlf their sales and profits.
"Many retailers said sales gained
as they got to Thanksgivi ng," said
. Jeffrey· Edelman, a retail analyst al
DeuL•che Morgan GrenfelL "That
bodes well for lhis Christmas."
Beside a healthier economy, consumers have been auracted to stores
offering better merchandise than in
years' past, including more fashionable and higher-quality producls,
said Jeffrey Feiner. an analyst al
Salomon Brothers Inc .
The Salomon Brothers retail
index, the investment firm's barometer of sales performance, rose 3.9
percent afrer a 4.8 percent gain in
October. In November 1995, the
index rose 2.9 percent.

•

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