Sanger Courier (Sanger, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 56, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1998 Page: 4 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 22 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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roaorvad Cartain cradit rastrictiona apply. ’
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carda accaptod Allow three to live buamett Myo
for delivery
English equitation.
Also on TeeCee she won the
“Halloween Costume Jackpot
Class” dressed as a dinosaur and
a cave woman. On AC again, she
won western pleasure under
both judges and took two fourth-
place honors in trail.
• menopausal and post-menopausal women
• women on hormone replacement therapy
• persons with a family history of osteoporosis
• persons with a thyroid disorder
• smokers
• long term users of steroid therapy
Hours
to 9pi
Beautification
(Continued from pg. 1)
OSTEOPOROSIS
Screening
Sanger 4-H News
By Lindsay Bennlngfleld
L i
■b.’
Denton Community Hospital offers bone
densitometry screenings, a sale, painless,
slate-of-lhe-arL technology to help assess
' your risk for osteoporosis. Your physl-
clan can use the results to reverse
the trend and prevent the occur-
rence of debilitating bone loss.
tbenlon Community Hospital uses the most sensitive
screening procedure available to detect bone loss In
the early stages of osteoporosis. A screening Is rec-
ommended for:
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management companies do so
because they couldn’t afford to
get their fleets up l»nd
operational. That is not a problem
In the past few months the
Sanger 4-H members have been
working hard. Many had great
accomplishments.
Emily Nindorf took her
horse, Harold, to a Texas
Palomino Exhibitors Association
Horse Show Oct. 31 in Shepard’s
Valley. In English pleasure, 13
and under, she received second
and third place. In western
pleasure she received two fourth
places.
Taylor Franks attended the
Chico show with her horse,
Lightening. Taylor received
reserve champion halter, first in
halter, second in western walk-
jog, second in.English walk-trot,
third in western pleasure, fourth
in showmanship, fourth in trail
and fifth in English pleasure.
Jessica Lawrence also went
to the Chico Open Horse Show in
Decatur Oct. 31. She won second
in halter, third in western
pleasure, fourth in trail, fifth in
barrels, fifth in poles, sixth in
showmanship and sixth in
horsemanship.
Stacy Stockard went to the
Chico Open Horse Show Oct. 31
and placed first in hunter under
saddle, green hunter and senior
showmanship. She also had four
second-place honors, one fifth-
Bone donsily measurement Is simple, safe, nonlnvaslve,
and painless and you don’t need Io undress. With an
order from your doctor your lest can be scheduled and we
file your Insurance.
For more Information or to schedule a
screening, call 898-7010
Den ton
(u ^Community
Hospital
i Acciediled with Commendation
Joint Commission on Accreditation ol Heallticare Organizations
207 North Bonnie Brae
Denton, Texas • 940-898-7000
I , -
Lindsay Bennlngfleld and TeeCee Mastercard in their first-
place costume at the TPEA Show Oct. 31.
The Sanger ISD will be
closed Monday, Nov. 23 through
Friday, Nov. 27 for the
Thanksgiving holiday.
School will resume Monday,
Nov. 30, and the administration
office will re-open that day as
well.
walk-jog (14-18), fifth in novice
western pleasure, first in western
pleasure (14-18), first in western
pleasure horsemanship novice,
third in 14-18 western
horsemanship, fourth in open
western horsemanship, first in
novice trail (all ages), second in
easy trail (all ages) and fifth in
open trail (all ages).
She also rode for Pat and
Gene Lackey of Sanger at a
Texas Palomino Exhibitors
Association Horse Show. She
received two second places in
showmanship with AC. On s she
received a third and a first place
in hunter under saddle, a second
and a third place in road hack
and a third and fourth place in
'I
Future Homemakers of America
(FHA) at Sanger High School
were participating in a special
project. The project, Earth 2000,
was designed to bring awareness
to the need to re-use, recycle and
respect and also includes an
Adopt-A-Spot program.
The group, Higgs said, plans
to sponsor a contest to see which
spot will be maintained the best,
and Beautification Board
members have been asked to
judge the spots.
The condition of Sanger
streets was discussed, and Trego
said that the board was made
aware of the “vast expense”
involved in putting in new streets.
“Being made aware of the fact
that the sales tax goes for streets
made us realize how important it
is to shop in Sanger,” she stressed.
The Beautification Board also
discussed the need for more
Benningfield decorations in the downtown
Sanger area, and board members
_______I to try and involve
merchants by putting Christmas
I
If
place award and won the
bareback “Ride-a-Buck” jackpot
class.
Lindsay
attended the Flower Mound
Equestrian Center Open Show/ decTded
with her horse, Cutter. Lindsay
got high point. She .received
sixth in halter geldings, fourth in
showmanship, first in walk only,
sixth in western pleasure walk-
jog, second in western pleasure Holiday School Closings
The United Methodist
Women of the First United
Methodist Church in Sanger
met Wednesday, Nov. 11 and
voted to send a cash contribution
to the people of Honduras to be
used for disaster relief.
Nel Armstrong presented an
informative program, choosing
the origin of adages that most
people have heard all their lives,
such as “She’s flipped her wig.”
Alice Madden delivered the
devotional, emphasizing the
importance of being thankful as
revealed in Psalms.
Canned good were collected
and delivered to the Crisis
Center, and lap pads, made by
the members, were donated to
Care Inn for patient use.
The transportation review
was listed as a discussion item
have h:jd to for the Sanger school bdard. No
I ii /i n n t nntmn u/nc' tnl/zin
Monday, November 23
through Friday, November 27:
Thanksgiving Break!
Mon. Nov. 30: Breakfast;
Fruit/Juice, Pancakes (2)
and Milk. Lunch; Steak
’Fingers or Sandwich, Mashed
Potatoes/Gravy, Green Beans,
Hot Roll and Milk.
Tue. Dec. 1: Breakfast;
Fruit/Juice, Pig N Flapjack
and Milk. Lunch; Taco
Salad, Pinto Beans, Fruit and
Milk.
Wed. Dec. 2: Breakfast;
Fruit/Juice, Cheese Toast and
Milk. Lunch: Super Corn
Dog, Tator Tots, Cole Slaw
and Milk.
Thur. Dec. 3: Breakfast;
Fruit/Juice, Ham & Cheese
Biscuit and Milk. Lunch;
Tony’s Pizza or Chef Salad,
Corn, Fresh Fruit and Milk.
Fri. Dec. 4: Breakfast;
Fruit/Juice, Cinnamon Roll,
Peanut Cup and Milk. Lunch;
Sloppy Joe/Cheese, Lettuce &
Pickles, French Fries, Cookie
and Milk.
Sanger ISD
School Menu
FURNITURE MARKETS,.*
THAT’S WHy WE CALL IT......
Your
F urniture
Are You at Risk?
More than 20 million Americans - mostly
women over 40 - have osteoporosis. Their
is weak and brittle bones put them at risk tor
fe^hip, spine and wrist fractures.
ACROSS
1. Italian towen
5. Uses the mJ
10. Hanker
14. Milit. brancti
15. Nobel econi
Kenneth I
16. Foil’s kin I
17. Spat I
18. Fall precedl
19. Scripture pa
20. Minaret I
22. TakesawaJ
24. Like many I
dormitories I
25. Select I
26. On the houl
29. Expert fliers
31. Rancid I
34. Leslie Carol
35. Granada ml
37. Infantry I
38. Miscellany I
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for disaster relief
City (Continued from pg. 1)
officer would be respqnsible for
policing the ordinande. In the
past, he said, the code
enforcement officer spent only
20 hours a month identifying
code violations. Now, however,
the code enforcement officer is
spending 20 hours a week, 80
hours a month, enforcing city
codes.
Nevertheless, he agreed that
certain parts of the ordinance
needed further evaluation.
The ordinance will not be
retroactive.
Also approved Monday
night was a tougher metal
building ordinance. The
ordinance requires that '100
percent of the exterior walls of
any metal building visible from a
designated street to be
constructed of a material other
than metal, including stone, cast
stone, stucco, brick, granite,
native stone veneer and various
woods.
In addition. 50 percent of a
building visible from an adjacent
street would have to be made of a
material other than metal.
The; Council tabled
discussion on the purchase of
five-and-a-half acres of property
formerly owned by Santa Fe
Railroad.
'Die city has announced that
local trash collection service will
not be available on Thursday as
has been customary during past
Thanksgiving holidays. Instead,
trash pick up will be resumed on
the following Monday.
Explosive jt
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41. Frijolf—
42. Reason
44. CBer’s won
45. Sullivan anl
Flanders I
46. Run of god
Nathan Del
47. Rising star]
49. Vetoing vol
50. Asian cuisl
Bus (Continued from pg. 1)
I
Transportation, for their busing,
he explained. And, while he said
there were both positive and
negative aspects to using such a
service, he felt that the negatives for Sanger, he said,
far outweigh the positives. Crutsinger maintained that
“The buses that we own he is just trying to keep school
would revert to or become the board members apprised of the
property of the management situation. He also said that he
company, and if we had a bus in plans to continue gathering
the district that was only two information that he can take back
years old, they could take it and to the board in the spring,
use it in Sanger or elsewhere,”
Crutsinger said.
Districts which 1
turn to i ndependent action was taken.
Armstrong plan to contact the
Sanger Chamber of Commerce to
enlist its help in the project.
Already, merchants have
agreed to contribute money
toward the purchase of the trees,
and the board will pay for the
lights and decorations.
“It is the desire of the board to
start a new annual decoration of
the downtown each year,” Trego
said.
And while speaking of
decorations, thp board decided
Dec. 14 would be the night that
members would view the
Christmas lights around town
and select the best holiday yards.
Trego said that awards will be
presented for best decorations on
the west and east sides of the city
(with 10th street being the
dividing line) and for the best
neighborhood decorations.
In other matters,
Administrator Jack Smith
updated the board on several
things into which he had been
checking, and with excitement in
the air, not only for holidays, but
the future projects of the board,
the meeting was adjourned.
trees on each corner of the UMW sends money
downtown blocks.. Trego stated
that she and board member Nel
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733 FT. WORTH DR-DENT ON-76201
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Hardy, Lisa. Sanger Courier (Sanger, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 56, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1998, newspaper, November 19, 1998; Sanger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1337715/m1/4/: accessed June 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sanger Public Library.