<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7673" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7673?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-06T07:09:11+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18084">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/fbbf8feeda34d2d8fb0c547483bd1790.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b4fd4690a8faec6aeccf5126974d1e16</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24966">
                  <text>-,

Pomeroy, MkklltpOI""., Ohio

HIP: aos; lAM: •

Details, A3
•

ON

Officials
·approve
DHS hirings·

.

vs

WHITE OAK ~6-S
AT
OHIO UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION CENTER
.

.

TUESDAY MARCH 7TH
,.

.

. (jt.l"ff di 'Donna ~rrls

Bau.mlumber
· Che~ter

98S-ii01
'

Good Luck, Matt, #34 and Team~
Sam &amp; Ruth Shain

'jisher 3uneral Home .

Good Luck Tornadoes
Go Garret &amp; Laraine

The Shoe Place
and Locker 219

Bob &amp; .Jane Beegle

Love,

Dad~

'

. PGmerot~

Mom &amp; Brooke

Co Tornadoes ·.

992-5141
992-Siilili

}VIIddleport .

Middle rt

..'

992-5627
'.

Ewing Funeral Home
Pomeroy

Margie J. Lawson, D.D. S.
Purple Pride Prevails

992-2121

Carmel, Joe &amp; Grandma Ida
t----~------t---:::::-----:-~:--:-::-:....:
· =----::-~~__,..._-----_;_--~ ··
I

I

Play Hard! Keep the faith!
.

.

.

Cordon &amp; · Linda Fisher
good £uclc ttorna,does
Southern Jreshmcm &amp; ?'V
aslcetba/1 Cl'eams

·Downing Childs Mullen
Musnr Insurance

i4 eut i'lbove
Racine
9119-281~

Pomeroy

· rJrogan -Warner

Good Luck Tornadoes
at th~ Convo Go #2l

..

992-2!42

f]nsurance .
~

Geraldine Cross &amp; Della, Denise, Diane &amp; Debra

Ourbest'toafinegro'upofbo&gt;110land
~~ . Coa'ch'es

vou
c·a n do .,;t.,· Bo·y·.·s.'.'··'
~•

Go Southern

Cummins Dow.;, to Earth Fann

..

'0

992:6682 ·

. •' .

Swishei~ &amp;. Lohse

P

Pharmacy .
•

992 2955

~J~__&amp;_G_mn~y~~~e~s~M~mm~
· ~&amp;~~~ilieyn~~Whl~·re~.+---~~--~--~~~----~~--om~~r~o_r__~-----·-·--~~·..
Good Luck Hustling Tornadoes
Brogan Warner lnaura-.ee ·
Crow's Family Restaurant
H.ills (:itgo·
214 E. Main .
. Pomeroy . , . :Po~roy
992-5432

•
•

992-6687 .

Valley Lumber.

Good Luck Southern

good ~:~':hern

Melanie Weese O.D.

}Vlike, Shelia di. ?enny .

Mjddleport ·

.. Realize Your Dream Tornadoes
Go Chris #4
Love, Mom, Dad &amp; Craig

'Keep up the team spirit·

.

::

t---:-::--:.:--:::--::------::-..;__-:--___;,-+--.------~-~-;:._,-+~-,.:_~..-:----~-...,l ..

I

Southern Tornadoes!
..

R..ln• ~49-2210

Rand &amp; Frances Reiber

,. .
'

.

~.

Syracuse 992-6SJJ:; : .

t---:G:::-r_e_a_t o-:b:-.=ro:-m-a-:d:-o....;es~!~!.~'-::, -+~-S-t=a=y=. ~.::O..:.l!.!:~;::h~C.::h~.=a~d~!. ~+-":""". -..:... .....;...F~-ur-Bank-R'-SFo-Br~-.
~"...:..'."""......;__~ ~;·
J-:'
·

Keep Up The Good Work!!
Do"8fas D. Hunt,er, M.D., Inf:.

Southern ·1•"•1 the Oaks
Oary.&amp; Pat 01~••

:
. L.

from your faith/uifamily foUtiwe~s ·
,.

·

·

· ·

AU the way TornadeedU
8ood Luek ,Cha·d #121 ·,
Mom &amp; De~
•

'

.. ·

·

.Pomeroy 992-2136
·.
·
Gallipolis446-2265
'fuppersPiains985·3161
. .
.. , '

•

'

.

PQme~oy
.

..

.

........

.;.~...
~

/

•'

I,

'

.

.
Me1gs Pomona .Grange acts on
.'

'

.

·.

.

'

SALEM CENTER - The Meigs . primary reason for traflic stops.
Also opposed by the grange was the
County Pomona Grange is opposing sevCurrently, police caimot stop a driver elimination of non-conunercial lic~nses
eral proposed legislative changes indufling si~ply for f~ure to use a seat belt.. In a for religious broadcasten; by the , Federal
routine traflic stops for lack of seatbelt use, discussion, members contended that the Communications Commission.
taxation on e-J;llllil.to supplement the U.S. proposed change in · t~J,e law ·'wOu)d· allow
Dyer also noted that the U.S. House of
PostaL Service, ;~Ad sales taX. on. int~rnei small villages to Itarras$ motoris~ in order · Representatives has approved a U.S. flag
business. .
&lt; ~. ~. :·
h
·.&lt;' · ··"' , to gain more. tev.;nue "'froii;i' fines. Tliey protection amendment to the ConstituActiOn was taken at.a: m~eting Saturday · Voted~ oppose the 11roposed law and to. ·tion. It has been referred to the I,J.S. Sennight ai,,the St~ Grahge lWI after ·mem- direct letters to Rep.J.ohn Carey and SeJ;I. ate ' and should be voted on later this
hers hea'td reports on the 4!ues from Party Mike Shoemaker.
'·
month. Both of Ohio's US. senators are
Dyer, ~ter. .
,.
• .. .
· 'The gr.~nge also voted to .oppose die· proponents 'ofthe amendmerJt,she reportShe ~ad a message from the Ohio State taxation of e-mail on computers for !he ed. ·
Gr:mg,~.llllllng that legislation was repo~-· purpose of funding the U.S. Postal Ser·Water quality issues on farons was dis~ .
ed favol}PIY out o(committee to start vice, as well as lnternetsales ofborh new cussed at length, with Dyer pointing out
' alloWinglblice to u&amp;e·ladir;p f s~'atbel~ as a· · aJ1d used merchandise. ·
·
· that using e:Ven insecticides and herbicides

J!·.

•

I

~'

r

i

~

~~
F

'
•;

legislation.
•

not requiring a license to apply can still
result in a $10,000 fine by EPA if they go
.
into streams.
She said that any body of water without
a plastic or concrete liner such as a farm
pond is considered "public water" and OfSe
of water treatments can cause the owner ·
to be subject to fines in some situations.
Dyer then discussed the financial dam·
age being done by current legislation to·
southern Ohio farmers who grow tobacco. She said that new laws are further
damaging the already stressed economy of

Pin·•- Gl'llllp.,.. AS

•
lj

!

I

Voting in:: 16 states ~9d,ay .~ .supe~ Tues~ay

.
.
.·
· LOS ANGELES (AP) -john McO\in claime4
The Republic~ru;1ce bernreen McCain and Bush
inomentuni but still wondered whether .there was Vl(a$• tighter; th9ugh •SUrVeys 'in ·the 13 States with
"enough time" as presidential front-runners George GOP contests ·sliowe'd Bush with an ·advantage jn ·.
· W. Bush and AI Gore sounded 'themes suited for the some large' and inipottipt 'states. ·· ' ;
!&gt;attle bey&lt;;m d today's primaries. Bill, Bradley
Both ra.;es f&lt;:lr th~ )Vhite iiouse cp)Ud look dit; ,
marized his camp·aign, arguing it has reshap.e d' ih~; ferent·2fter today. There are 613 Republican dele- .
·,
· ~ gates and q.t5 Democratic delegates at stake - .. ·
debate.
· "The Democratic ~ has moved iri the dire~":. , more than half the nwn:ber · nee4ed to claim the
tion that I've pushed, it over the ye~," said Bradley. nomi11ation ip:either ,party,•Some .s~tes also predict-·
· Today is the busiest 'day yet 'of the primary se:l- ed record voter turnouts.
son. With virtually every n:gion of the nation in' · Bush and McCain continued their .acrimonious
play, the four candidates spent l\ionilay .racing fro'\1 battle with a 'final ' round pf complain~ from
state to state in a blinding whirl of ra)lies as tl!ey • McCain about .colJUnercials by ·Bush supporters
sOught to 'close the sale on their White House bids. criticizing McCain'! enviton~J~ental record.
• , '
Polls showed ViCe President Gore wi~h a broad · McCain filed a com{'laint ~th the.Fede~ Ele&lt;J-'
1
lead over Bradley i11 . eadi of the 15 states With" tion CommisSio,n, and staffers also sought to· have
• · Qemocratic contests, but the fotmer New Jersef . . the:Fetleral C6nun!lnicatio!l' C0nulrls5io~ fo~te the
·
.
senator made his case Monday in New York, where 1 commetcials off the air. '
he became famous as p1')fessional basketbill Sla!"o
"Then at least We caq have a level 'playing field,''
· .
· · . said McCain campaign manager Rick Davis. ·
. · and offered some hope.
• • • "I don't think in the end people~ going' to lis- • Bush
dismissive.
.
.
' '
ten to the polbters and the pundits;·· said Bradley,, · "My attitude is that this is a long march to•victo·
~ho Wll!' rising early ,again today to gt'\"et New ·.&lt;.
.
··
~ ·
·
Plnn--., .... AS ,
~· .. ,.,
. , Yorke~ on their~ 10 ~rk and the polls.
. '

.'

Todl'(s

~'

Sentinel
2 Sttlhlw -12 .....

suln.r

was

99~·~2155

&gt;

Moriday's spring~lke weather was made even
enjoyable' for students at Eastern Elementary
Schclol by the arrival of a new "Challenger" slide and gym set. The new equipment, valued at over
$16:ooo Installed, was paid for with funds from the district's piiiY(round fund, cash raised by the PTO,
and from Private cohtrlbutlo.ns. Parents and school staff have wol'\led since the school opened in :1.998
to supplement playgroond equipment moved from the Riverview, Tuppers Plair\s and Chester buildings.
Chester, Olive and. Or.~mge .T9wnship trustee$ h.elped install the equipment, and Davis Landscaping of
Portland donated· !I significant a'llOI!nt of time ahd · materials: (Brian J. Reed photo)

a

.Jtie·Daily Sentinel

out to those who still owe caxes,
and if there is no response, then
POMEROY - The fi~st action will be taken through
phase of planned improvements Meigs County Court.
to 'the municipal building was
The appeal of Becky Newell
approved by Pomeroy Village on · har termination as · 'a
Council at Monday night's Pomeroy police dispatcher was,
meeting.
at her request. heard in open sesCouncil reviewed three bids sion at the meeting.
for the neede!l structural work
The appeal was denied and
on the east side of the building her dismissal was upheld by a
.and acceptedthe bid of$18,880 vote of 4-2, with Bryan Shank
submitted by Robert Mash. The and Larry Wehrung casting the
other bids considered werdrom dissenting· votes. .
·
Gheen Construction, $68 an
The police chief charged that
hour for the work with no. total Newell violated both adminis. job cost being given, an!~ Joe trative and criminal regulations
Custer, S28, 160.
by using the LEADS computer
The area to be corrected is in an attempt to get iitforrnation
about 120 square feet near the on her former husband, Edwin
top of the building and involves Yankuns.
Asked about the specifics of
reinforcing the wall and. replacing the brick siding, which is the violation, Miller alleged that
pulling away from the s!:fucture. Newell was doing a backCouncil also approved funds ground check on her former
for replacement of several win- husband, . and · that she. had
dows on the third floor, large . recorded it under her son's
ones at $250 ·each and . small name in' the log book on a difones at $150, for labor only. ferent day than the occurrence.
He added that she was aware
Todd Norton was hired to do
the work with materials to be the LEADS equipment is · for
criminal justice purposes only
supplied by the village.
· Council also approved hiring 311d not to be used for securing
~ .full-time policr officer, an
personal information.
.recommendation of · Police
Newell contended that she
Chief Jeff Miller, employed s ply wanted to find out
Mark Bolin, now a part-tiJ:.lle s mething about her former
police employee.
husband whoni she had not
Council asked Miller to pre- heard from for 28 years, and that
sent at its next meeting his rec- she didn't get anything back
ommendation of an officer for when she ran the name.
the part-time position.
As for the entry in the log
Also hired during the meet-· book having the wrong name,
.ing was Sam Terzopplous for a she said that was simply a misfull-time ~osition with the street take in writing it down. Newell
department.
charged that she had been
harassed and mistreated on the
It was reported by Mayor
John Blaettner . that some job and asked council to recon. .
progress .is being made , in the sider her termination.
. Council moved into execucollection of delinquent taxes.
He said that letten; will be going PhUe - ~neiL Pep ld
BY CHARLENE Hoii'UCN
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

' t

.

992 ..6611

Home 'N'ati on.aI 8ank .

Christopher
Shank
were
hired as social progrun coordina- .
tors.
·. According to Swisher, the social
program coordinators are ·new
positions designed to assisf those
clients deemed "hard to serve."
The coordinators will work
with those clients who are
approaching the three-year' lifetime limit on cash assistance set ·
folth by the Ohio WorkS First ·
welfare reform legislation of 199'1.
The first group of clients subject
to the limits will reach the limits in
Qctober, Swisher said, and the
coordinators will .w ork with those .
clients to assist tliem in finding
work or job training.
In other action, the .comrnissionen; approved payme&gt;1t of the
county's first-half appropriation to
the Meigs County · Pioneer and
Historical Society, in the amount
of$4,00().They also approved payment of $1,750 for the- fin;t-half
2000 appropriation to Judy Sisson,
program administrator of the Juvenile Grant.
The
commissioners · also
~pprmled payment to the law firm
of Little, Sheets and Warner for
services involved in a recent transfer of property adjacent to the
DHS building in Middleport from
the Community Improvement
Corporation to the DHS.
Next week's' meeting was Set for .
Man:h 13 at 10:30 a.m., due to a ,
zoning plan variance board meeting at 10 a.m. ·
The
comnuss10ners
also
· approved payment of general fund
and other bills in the amount of
$145,094.35, with t2t entries. .
Present were · Coqunissioners
J;inet Howard, Jeltte}r Thornton
and Mick Davenport, ~d Clerk
Gloria Klfles.

.

'

1997.

(Jest of £uclc Southern
.(Je All You Can rJe.

Best WtShes Southern!

&lt; .

· work with Director
those cli~nts Michael
who are
Swisher before
h • ·filling three
approac mg pQsitions upon
the three- Swisher's rec:year lifetime ommendation. ·
limit on cash Candace
.
,
.
· Walker
was
assiStance set ·hired as a social
forth by the setvice. worker
Ohio Ulirks in the ChiiFirst welfare . dren's . Services
re1orm Ienis- deparanent,
&lt;I'
6
and
Lowry
lation of · Casci · and

'

•

Coundl OKs
building plan

POMEROY -- Meigs CounIY Commissioners approved personnel matters for the Depart. ment of Human Services during
Monday's regular me!'ring.
·
'
The board .
The coordi... met in execunators will tive session
DHS
with

•

l~ (•·nh

POMEROY

•

Bv BRIAN J. Rao ·.

..

Congratulations and Good Luck
Southern

J

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

Racli, Robert, JVI.om

l

'&gt;ongl•· (opy

'

SECTIONAL CHAMPS· The Southern Torn•does will head Into
District play Tuesday at Ohio University's Convocation Center. In
front are (L-R) Mat:t Warner, Brandon Hill, Kyle Norris, Chris
Randolph and Chad Hubbard. Behind them are Jonathan Evans,
Matt Shain, Russell Reiber, ·Nick Bolin, Jeremy Fisher and Garret
Kiser.
· ·•

Brian
(Jo ·S outhern, go Russ.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50 , Number 1 Y 1

------------ -- --

Dunk' em Uncle· Russell

.................,....

Melp County's

so

SOUTHERN TORNADOES 13·8

March 7, 2000

••

t

TO THE
SECTIONAL C

~esday

A look at Meigs County events, AS
Eastern wins district semifinal, B 1

IWidRIId1¥:SMDIY

A5 '

Calend11

C••••••

DH

Comi~;i

~~~
. A4

· E~t2rilll

AJ

QJlituariea
Sl!lltb

111-:l
AJ

It•tbK

Lotteries
OJUQ

READY·
ILEcmGN- Don FrYf'I1Yel', a volunteer with the Melp
County Board of Elections, helps Robin Bull:her, pictured With her husband, Randy, ""' &amp;r~ddi!U8hter Breanna, as she loads elections su~ •
plies lnto' her truck; She' Is pollworker at the Scipio Precinct, 'and
was one of n'!ai!Y \¥hO 'Came to the Board of Elections office on Sat·
urday to pick up voting booths, a ballot box and other supplies needad flir today' a ~ary alectlon. (Brian J.. Reed photo)

a

Plock 3: +1~2; Pick 4: ()..9-8-3
lh-' ,. 5: t()..2S..2B.Jt-33

W:VA.

· ,

. Didly 4: 8-4-+0' ' '
Deily 3: 6-5-4
c ·200001UuW~cy '.........._c ...

•

·s

•

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

TU11dey, March 7, 2000

Strickland lil.oums loss of.uranium jobs

....., ..... ..,suppress ........

CINCINNATI (AP) - Another ~und of
"It's just tltt most
help rhoS&lt; who will lose their jobs find new
employment cuts at ur2nium-enrichment
discouraging thing."
positions or obtain retraining.
. &amp;lONEY (AP) - Attorneys for a man. accused of killing three
But he questioned whether the governplants in -Ohio and Kentucky will. take good- ·
,teen-age girls and a Bible studies teacher want a judge to bar cerpaying jobs away from regions that already
Rep. Ted Bbh u Kl,
ment will be able to rehire for cleanup work
.. ~n evidence from being used at the trial.
are hurting economically, a congressman said.
as many of the employees as it hopes, particKort Gatterdam, attorney for Lawrence Michael Hensley, was to
"lt's just the most discouraging thing," said Stuckle said Monday from the company's ularly because there is no guarantee that
pretent his case before Shelby County Comm~n Pleas Court Judge
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, whose district headquarters in Bethesda, Md.
Congress will approve funding that the Enerincludes
the
Portsmouth
Gaseous
Diffusion
The
new
job
cuts
are
in
addition
to
500
gy
Department has requested for the proJohn Schmitt during a pretrial hearing today. Gatterdam's motion to
Plant in Piketon.
eliminated last y~ar at the two plants, Strick- gram.
supp.- evidence was among a flurry of defense motions filed sev.
Energy
Department
officials
said
Monday
land, who was at an Energy Department con~
Strickland said he thinks a rehiring of 4QO
' 'enl months IJO·
•
they hope to find jobs in cleanup programs at ference in Cincinnati, said Monqay,
to 450 of the employees is a more realistic
:·· Hensley, 30, of Sidney, is accused of killing neighbor Sherry Kimthe Piketon and the Paducah, Ky., plants for
The jobs being cut are a· mix of manage- estimate. The Piketon plant currently has
'bler, 16, her cousin Tosha Barrett, 16, and their friend Amy M.ike600
to
65\)
of
the
workers
who
are
to
be
laid
ment
and union posts that pay $40,000 to ' about 2.000 employees and Paducah about
scll, 14, 2t his home July 8. Authorities say Hensley then drove to
offby
U.S.
Enrichment
Corp.
starting
in
mid$60,000
annually in a region where the year- 1,700. ·
·
the home of Bible studies teacher Brett Wildermuth, 37, and shot
July.
.
.
ly average . inc.o me for a family Qf four is ~. Leah Dever and Gary King, the DOE offi~ ~~ _ _
~-- - and killed him.
USEC official5;;;id the work fo~~ ·reduc:::--:-$22,000, s:1id Strickland, who is running for cials who appeared with Strickland at a news
. Five qays later, Hensley wounded a motorist, fired a shot at the
lions and other cost-cutting measures are . re-election in his southern Ohio district.
conference, did not challenge the congress~ ,!tome of another Bible studies teacher and took three i)ostages at a
His area, which is struggling even as other mon's lower estimate .
needed to make the plants efficient in enrich. .gas station before surrendering, authorities· say.
ing uranium for use . as fuel in commercial regions thrive in the prosperous economy,
USEC. which is privately owned, has run
•·· Hensley has pleaded innocent to the charges. His trial is schedpower-gen~rating reactors in the United already had lost about 3,000 jobs during the the two plants since Congress got the govuled to begin April 4.
States and overseas.
past 18 months. Thos.e cuts occurred mostly ernmeitt out of the business during the 1990s
Management still ' is deciding whi~h · in the private sector because ofjob layoffs and on the theory that a private company would
employees will be laid off. and which will be . plant closings, he said.
. do a better job of enriching uranium for sale
1
Strickland co mplime n~cd DOE efforts to on the worldwide market.
retained, company spokeswoman Eli.zabeth
' COLUMBUS (AP) -A 14-year-'old boy pleaded guilty Monwy to fatally shooting his friend in the face while the two ,vere
supposed ,to be i.n school, a prosec.utor said.
Kyle Proffit pleaded guilty to reckless homicide in Franklin
, _C ounty Juvenile Court. At his April sentencing, Proffit could be
ordered held by the Department OfYouth Services until he is 21.
said county Prosecutor Ron O 'Brien.
. Proffit was playing with a gun owned by his former stepfather
BOWLING GREEN (AP) ranking 27th out of 007 school
when he accidentally shot Matthew Osborne, 13, on Jan. 18, police
COLUMBUS (AP) - Educa- part ofSenate Bill 55, a major eduA. state education official said he's districts in the state on the ninth"said.
tors
who promote a child to the cation refoml bill in 1997, and
not surprised by a study's finding grade proficiency tests this year,
fifih-grade even if the student rakes effect in 2001.
. The stepfather, Bill Gannon, was charged with negligent homithat students believe proficiency according to the Ohio Departfailed .Ohio's fourth-grade reading
There are two exceptions to the
cide and is scheduled for trial May I in Municipal 'Court, O'Brien
tests create extra stress at school.
ment of Education.
said.
.
.
.
·test couldn't i)e sued by parents mandate: if the student has a dis"Every state that has done this
The study involved giving 40dissatisfied with their child's ability that prevents him or her .
has experienced teacher anxiety. question surveys to students in
·,. Gannon is divorced from Proffit's mother, Kelley Gannon, but had
Pr;ogress in future years, a proposed from taking the test, or if the stu- ·
and student anxiety to some grades four and above. They )Yere
~~toved back into the home. He told police the gun was locked in a
law
sa~.
dent's principal and reading
degree;~ said Bob Bow~rs. associ- asked whether the · tes~ created
toolbox in tho garage, with a loaded cartridge hidden in a bedroom.
The bill introduced in the Ohio teacher agree that the ·student is
ate.superintendent for curriculum exceis stress during their s~liool
House would pro~ct. teachers and academically prepared for the fiftl1
. and assessment for the Ohio day, made them nervous; and put
principals wh9 take aciv&gt;ntaJ~e of grade anyway.
Department o(Education. ·
too much pressure on them.
an
exception to Ohio's Fourth- . "I don't think it's fair and right
The study at one school district
Two of every three Perrysburg
.
Grade Guarantee, Randall Gard- to promote· a child to the fifth- ·
near Toledo found that the exams elementary pupils surveye~ said
• LEBANON (AP) -A Dayton man got his 17th drunken driving
ner, the bill's sponsor, said Monday. grade who is not prep"'l'd for
add stress and also hurt monle the testing caused excess stress,
charge in the last 20 years when a Warren County grand jury indict_The guarantee generally pro- fifih-grade, but nor is it right to
among educators. In addition. the and three of four secondary stued him Monday.
hibits
schools from promoting retairi a child who is unquestionresearch found that older students dents agreed.
,.. , Curtis"Sears, 41, ~ arrested the night of'Feb. 5 when Lebanon
children who fail the' fourth-grade ably better off in the fifth-grade;'
had more negative opinions of the
"They do not feel it's a legiti- ·
'P.,Iice found him behind the wheel of an idling car. Sears failed a field
reading proficiency test. '
Gardner said
tests than younger pupils.
mate means of measuring wha~
. }obriety,test but refu1ed to take :i breathalyzer, county Prosecutor Tim
Gardner, R-Bowling Green,
Some educators have expressed
. Bowers said . that despite the they know," said Robert DeBard,
Oliver said.
said
he
bean!
6om
a
number
of
concern
that they'll be held liable
finding of increased stress, the test- an associate professor in Bowling
· ~achers and school board mem- for holding students back who WI
... The arrest came six weeks after Sears was convicted of drunken
ing is necessary·to ensure that stu- · Green's school of leadership and
bers concemed about the-liability the fourth-grade test, but most
'driving in Highland County as the result of a 1997 ~ase, Oliver said. .
dents are competent.
policy studies.
issue.
.
believe that such action falls well
Court reCords show that Sears' driving privileges . were suspended
"If we're going to h~ve quality
The state exams are designed
''The
bottom
line.
~
.
I
wa;,t
within their educatiorult privilege,
indefinitely.
,
,. .
· graduates, then we're going to to measure what children should
principals and teachers to be able said John Stanford of the Qhio
have standards uniform across the know about ~ading, writing,
:~ Records indicate that Sears has been charged with drunken drito make the ·best de.cisions they School Boards Association.
state of Ohio;: he sa~d.
,•
math, scien&lt;;e, and citizenship by
~g 17 times, authorities said. He faces tip to 18 months in jail if concan, ·and they should I)Ot feel
When it comes to promoting
Researchers at Bowling Green the time they are in certain
.""'•
· cted on the latest charge_.
·
.
threatened by a lawsuit -kheh they stUdents against the guarantee's
State University studied students, grades.
exercise rights that are cle:u:ly nundate, however, many feel they
teachers a!)d odministrators in the ·. ~tuden~ this wee.k are taking
•
sp&lt;;~ed out," he said.
would be going out on a limb, he
Perrysburg school district. Perrys- the ninth•grade tests, which aie
•
~d:
.
The
gua!-'3ntee
was
p~ed
as
.
'
burg has ha&lt;l . success in testing, required for graduation.
: CINCINNATI (AP) -A Hamilton County _grand jury returned
:!!:murder indictment Monday against a former deputy sheriff. ·
., ,Pomeroy *
· ~ . Owen Hobbs, 52, is accused in the Feb. 19 shooting death of
.
.
.
· ~hawn Berry, 25, outside an apartment building in suburban Sil:yerton. Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike ADen said a motive for
~lie shooting hasn't been determined.
·
: · Hobbs was fired from the Hamilton County sheriff's department
~n 1996 after he was accused of stealing "bait money" \ISed iJt an
internal investigation, Allen said. Hobbs pleaded guilty to one count
l'f theft in office and was sentenced to 19 months in prison.
FINDLAY (AP) -Two people
••
have pleaded guilty in the kidJ!ap•
•
ping and torturing of a 13-year•~
old
girl who was buried alive but
. .
'
: AKRON (AP) -A nun who stole a shotgun from -a Klitilrt store,
survived.
.
ltijacked a man and his pickup and then had a shootout with police
Five of the six suspects in the
sentenced to I 0 years in prison.
case now have been convicted and
four
have agreed to testifY ~gainst
: .Bakur Gegia, 26, originally troni "the Republic of Georgia, was senNathan Graham, 22, of Rawson.
~nced Monday in Summit County Common Pleas Court after
He
is charged with attempted
pleading guilty to aggravated robb~ry and kidnapping.
murder, rape and felonious assault.
: Police said Gegia took a shotgun and ammunition Nov. 23 from a
Philip Cramer, of Findlay, was
{&lt;mart store in Tallmadge where he worked with a cleaning crew. He
sentenced to 30 years in prison
~en jumped in a pickup and forced its owner to drive.
·
after pleading guilt"¥ Monday to
:. Surrounded by police, Gegia fired at law enforcement officers who
attempted . murder, felonious
*'turned fire, hitting Gegia in the shoulder. The pickup's owner manassault; kidnapping and tampering
.. '
.
~d to escape unharmed before the shootout.
with evidence.
•• Gegia's court-appointed attorney said his client was upset because
Kathy Emmons, of Findlay,
lte was denied three weeks of pay after being told his work was lousy.
pleaded guilty to complicity to
'
attempted murder, complicity to ·
rape, complicity to kidnapping and
.
felonious assault. Hancock County ·
Common Pleas Judge Reginald
: COLUMBUS (AP) -The state board -of education on Monday
Routson
sentenced Emmons to 24
i1&gt;proved a $15,000 performance bonus for State Superintendent
years in prison.
Swan Tave Zelman for 1999, then gave her a 20 percent raise for
The group of six was accused of
2000.
.
'
beating the girl 2t a party and then
: Citing performance stanwrds that Zelman m~ last year, the board
taking her to a 'remote 'wooded
Voted 6-0 to add $15,000 to her 1999 compensation package; givarea and leaving her in a 2-foot
.
ing her a total of$150,000.
wi.~ 6-foot deep pipe.
: The board then voted 16-0 to approve a S180,doo salary for 2006.
Authorities said on Feb. 13;
: Zelman replaced John Goff, who retired in December i 998 after 3
1999, the girl sh~d up at a party
112 y.;ars as superintendent of public instruction. He. earn~d
.\lihere there was /drinking • and .
&amp;136,000.
.
drugs.

Teen pleads guilty In shootin1 ·

Study: Proficiency test causes Fifth-grade promotion
stress for studentS, teachers

protected under

. .Dayton man gets 17th DUI charge

j
I
I

''

I

:3 .

Fonner deputy indicted

.'

Guilty pleas ·

entered in teen
torturing

~ 01110 VALLEY BANK.

Man sentenced for robbery
'

'

Salutes Members, Advisors,
Volunteers, and our 4-H
Schplarship Reci ient ·
durtn Ohto 4-H eek

rns

arch s~tt

.

·Board approves raise

.

l

r

•

'

DEATH NOTICES
.Joanna C. Allen

Highs in 80s on Wednesday

.'

\ ''

••

Religious leaders census.help

;i

·.

..~-~..'-------------------­

Protect . .
rtant
people in yo~e.

51-ki ........................................... $JQ5j6
Otlltldo Melp Coaii!J

'

:

WI aicdoa tlarnated.

~
.
Ntw1 Dtplrt..U
: 1lie .... ooaber II m·ll55. Doportmoot

~

•

•o-nt~r.:
•••nr ......- .............EIL not

Ntwt...._ _ _......- .................r.. IIL 1102 ·
- -....- ....- ........................ orld.lt~

'

.

OlliwStnkn
: ' A4hlltlllai-..- -.................. £11.1104
. • . Cbftlltltlt..- - - -..--Eit.l103

: a.,,.,..,Me ..--.--..- .. ~~t not

;' .....

••

Chapter to meet

:Grange .·

~~ MORE LOCAL NEWS.
t~:MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

'

•

POMEROY -Burlingham Modern Woodmen will have a potlu~k
dinner Saturday at 4 p.m. at the hall. Meat will be furnished, those .
attending are asked to wear green. Rosalie Story will give facts on St.
P~trick's Day, theme of the meeting. There wiU drawings for door
prizes. Friends of members are invited.

~

"'

"'

camp to meet

. LQCAL STOCKS

, • ·wtn cMck '"r laformttlon tnd 1111te a

••

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Youth League will have sign up on
Thursday at the fire' station from 6-8 p.m. and on Saturday at council
chambers from noon-3 p.m. The registration fee is $20 per child, not
to exceed $30 per family.
"

from

O.r aala e911Ctm Ia 111 ttorltt Ia 10 bl
Mftnte. UJW bow .raaerrorla • ...,.,
~ , 010 ... '"'!110010 11 (7.,) !ln-ll55. Wt

Member FDIC

Youth Leape meetin1

Masons plan meeting

Vote

~

Davia

LONG BOTTOM -A youth rally and hymn sing wiU be held at
the Long Bottom Faith Full Gospel Church, at 7 p.m . Friday.The Crusaders of Marietta will be there. fellowship will follow. Pastor SteVe
Reed invites the public.

Ball sipup at Syracuse

1

Trtr.,l•

Hymn sln1 set

DAY sets me~n1

VALLEY WEATHER

~

,19990VB
Scholar

EMS units answer nine calls

9 :34 p.m., Salem Street, Wilda Blaney, Holzer.

POMEROY · - Units of Meigs County Emergency Services
POMEROY· Pomeroy Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star 186,
answered nine calls for assistance on Monday.
practice.
for
inspection,
Monday ,7:30 p.m. at the hall.
U l)i(!i responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
..
5:59 p.m., Overbrook Nursing Center,' Maxine Darst, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
CHESHIRE - DAV Chapter 53, will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
10:59 p.m., Nye Avenue, with assistance from Pomeroy unit, Keith
hill.
28051 State Route 7. below M.iddleport. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Day. Veterans Memorial;
..
'·
· 9:59 p.m., Union Avenue, Charles Whittington, treated at scene.
COLUMBIA TWP.
5:34
a.m.,
rekindle
of
structure
fire. Timothy Walker residence.
BY THE AsSOCIATED PRESS
and the record low was 4 in
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville Lodge 411, F &amp; AM, special
MIDDLEPORT
The unseasonably warm 1960. Sunset tonight will be at.
meeting Satur&amp;y, breakfast at 8 a.m. Work in the E.A. degree, 9 a.m.
5:06 p.m., structure fire, Keith Harter residence.
weather wiU continue in Ohio 6:31 p.m. and sunrise on WednesREEDSVilLE
.
for another day or so· as a . high day at 6:54 a.m.
7:50
p.m.,
State
Route
124,
Susie Kerwin, Camden~Ciark MemorWeather forecaat:
pressure system keeps pulling
'·
Tonight... Mostly clear. Lows ial Hospital.
·Gulf air into the region.
RUTLAND .,
SYRACUSE - Signup fOr the Syracuse Youth Baseball League will
· Temperatures could crack the near 50. Southwest wind 5 to 10
be held on the next two Saturdays, March 11 and 18, 10 a.m.-noon ·:n
2:11 a.m:, Hutton Road, Howard Jeffers, treated at scene;
·
· ".\iO-degree inark in southeast mph.
'
7:09 p.m .• Meigs Mine ;2. Gary Woodruff, Holzer Medical Center; the mayor's office at Syracuse village hill.
Wednesday... Mostly
sunny
'\J)hio on Wednesday while the
test of t)le state wiU have readings · with neat record warmth. Highs
. in· the lower 80s.
in the 70s, forecasters said.
Lena" while McCain spent the
Wednesday night...Mild with a
'' · An approaching low- pressure
day rallying supporters. McCain
tell could bring shower&gt; and pos- chance of showers after midnight.
overnighted in the state and
:sibly thunderstorms to Ohio lows in the mid 50s.
planned to watch ihe returns
Extended
..
forecast:
to 75 percent in 1980, to 65 pq-Pip AI
WASHINGTON (AP)
Wednesday night and Thursday,
from Los Angeles. _
Thursday... A chance of brief
Father Francisco Gonzalez knows cent in 1990, and census officials
the National Weather Service
Polling showed him running the lengths some illegal immigrants ·estimate it will fall to 61 percent
1howers in the morning... Other- ry," ,.aid Bush, the Texas governor,
said.
Temperatu.res should return to wise partly cloudy. Highs near 70. who was tending to state business weU in the five · Ne.w England will go to hide their identities. so this year.
.'
states
that
.vote
today;
while
Bush
toqay
in
Austin
before
settling
in
Friday... Partly sunny and coolCensus data are used to redraw
lie says it may be up to the familiar
normal toward the end of the
had a clear edge in · California, face of a parish priest to sway the congressional artd legislative diS'Week, with highs in the 40s and er. Morning l~ws in the lower . to await the returns. '
McCain
claimed
some Georgia and Ohio. New York was wary to put their names arid tricts and to apportion billions ,of
40s. Highs 55 to 60. .
'50s.
:;
Saturday... A chance of show- momentum, but .still wondered . a competitive . battleground that addre~SCs on a census form and dollars m federal funds.
·' The record high temperature
McCain
in
particular
badly
need•
whether
it
was
sufficient
.
~ it back to the government. ,
:fQr this date at the Columbus . ers. Morning lows near 40. Highs
"
"The question Is; is there going to win.
While it won't guarantee that
weather station was 77 in 1983 in the lower 60s.
McCain strategists -conceded the Census Bureau wiU get a more
to be enough time:· he said,
The GOP contest has been their challenge is to expand their accurate count in this year's ·enuquirky, and McCain has shown an base beyond appealing to Nor~h­ meration, Gonzalez and another .
ability to recover when things eastern moderates in the face of religious leaders pledged Monday
look grim. "The only thing I'm Bush's strength among the GOP to do what they can to help, in and
Premier- 8Y. ·
AEP;_~.
Flrstar - 18l.
·
certain of is it's uncertain," said faithful.
out of the pulpit,
.
Rockwell- 45l• .
Akzo-39lt
Gannett - 65'·
McCain
was
heading
home
to
McCain.
·
is
part
of the
Their
involvement
General Electric - 137).
AD Shell - 52l. ·
AmTech/SBC- 43lo
Arizona
on
Wednesday
to
take
McCain and Bush both
Census Bureau's aggressive camSears-27~
Harley Davidson - 711. ,
, Hhl8nd Inc. - 30"Kmart-8\ · ·
Shoney'a - 1l.
· ~T&amp;T-53),
stock,
but
aides
said
it
would
be
a
focused
"Monday
on
the
biggest
paign to boost responses fo~ _the
Wendy's- '15'1•
Kroger- 14'•
:.lank One- 24 1 ~•
brief
respite.
·
·
prize of aU by campaigning in
2000 census.
Lands End - 33lo
Worthlng1on - 13'·
• flob Evans.- 12'·
A B)Jsh sweep of the three top
Dally stock reports are the California for its 162 delegates.
For Gonzalez, who is Episcopal
Ud.-33~
•llorgwamer- 32').
o8k Hll Financial - 13~ 4 p.m. .closing quotes of Bush courted Jewish voters and prizes of California, Ohio and Vicar for Hispanics for the Arch~ .Champion - 3')•
the previous day's trans·
OVB-31~
•"t:hannlng Shops- 6
actions, provided
by took another srab at comedy on New York would deal a body diocese of Washington, D.C., that
One Valley - 28~
il:lly Holding -12~
Advest
of
Gallipolis.
Peoples-18
"The Tonight Show With Jay blow to McCain's insurgent cam, means assuring illegal immigrants
,-Federal Mogul-14'•
t:,ol
·,,
patgn.
that census information is not
Gore
was
positioned
to
deal
a
•~....•
sh~red with any other federal
.
are $7.50 for adults and $6 for similar blow to Bradley, and there
agency.
.
children. They are 'available from were signs that both front-run"They wiD not come fc;&gt;rward
ill local granges. Each subordinate ners were beginning to think in unless they reilly trust that their
grange is asked to donate two generai election terms.
. faum Pap AI
names wiU not be given to 5ome
door prizes. .
Gore, addressing a rally Mon- other government organization,"
Subscribe today. 992-2156
Rick Macomber,. county day at the University of Missouri · Gonzalez said Monday at a news
the area.
grange
youth chaiiman, reported near Bradley's Crystal City. Mo., conference. "We are working to
· Another change in U.S. agriculture policy under considera- on a recent county youth ·meet- hometown, ignored his rival to insure their confidentiality."
'I ~
tion, according to Dyer, has' to do ing followed by a dinner at Gal- target Bush and remind voters of
Similar messages wiU be spread
; · The Daily Sentinel
with nianure and insecticide run- lipolis. Youth are being asked to · the budget deficits that accumu- in services at churches, mosques,
I
(USPS ll3·"4l)
off. Fanners are not financially work on upgrading the fair lated u.nder Presidents Reagan . temples and . synagogues around
i .
, Commually Newspaper Holdlnp,Joc.
able tq handle the problen_1 booth. It was noted that two · and Bush.
the country, said Rabbi David
t .Published· c.-~ry tfternoon. Monday throU"ah
young people will be attending
.because
,of
the
depressed
prices
Now,
the
GOP
is
again
"headSaperstein, director of the Union
f 1 Friday. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Obio, by the
evep though they are under con- the Mid-Atlantic Youth Confer- ed in the wrong direction, big of American Hebrew Congrega,, Ohio Vllley Publlshin' Comp1ny. Seeo.,d
~ cl1u postap paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
.stant threat from the EPA, it was ence in Gettysburg, Pa.. next · time," said Gore, whO was return- tions_.
: . Mttabtn The Assoclaled Preu, and tho Ohio
month.
pointed out. .
. ing to his own home state, TenMail response rates have
Ne.,....,.per Auocialion.
t
POS'TMASTER: Send addre1A comclion1 to
lnspf!Ction of the 'lecturer's nessee, . to quietly await the declined from 78 percent in 1970,
Dyer also said that the federal
'• The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, governmept is considering end- program will be at Hemlock returns in· Nashville.
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00
Ohio 4!1769
f .
ing subsidies for agreements to Grange in May, and degree work
SUISCRIPnON IIATES
•
. Pri.,tely, Gore strategists were
1)',Cll'lttr or MaiOr RINdt
stop agriculture production in inspection wiD be held at Star
One W.ck .............................................. $2.00
crafting a new message shifting
favM of financing conservatton Grange in July.
~ OM Moi'Jih ............................................ $8.70
One Year............................................s104.00
linda Montgomery, junior the focus to B)Jsh,labeling his tax
measures .fo.; farmers.
SINGLE COPY PRICE "
Whitney Ashley, the Ohio grang';' chairman, announced a cut proposals as "reckless" , and
•• Dally.................................................35 Cents
State Grange female ambassador, skating party at the Star Grange taking credit for a continued .
• Sublcrlbtl'l nOt dcsiriJ!IIft pay tile ca.rricr m1y
: rcrnil In ad\'tnCJ direct 10 'The Dilly Sentinel
was recognized and brought . haU on March 17. There will be a sttong economy.
• on 1 three, six or 12 moriah bUia. Crtdit will be
greetings from the Ohio State $1 fee and children are to • take
• &amp;lven carrier each Week.
: No subscription by m•il pcmlm:d in 1rc11
Grange. Opal Dyer. women's their own skates. Paul Ditty of
·• whore home ctrrier service I! available.
activiticis.. chairman, announced Racine Grange was accepted into ·
: Publlther ·rcaervet the ri&amp;ht to 1dju11 ratea
that ·the county Ibaking contest Pomona Grange membership.
~ durin&amp; llio subt&lt;:.r:lptlon period. Subscription
• rato cblnget mar be implemented by dlll'l8in&amp;
Athens County grangers,
will take place at the May meet: the durati&lt;m or Ihe ltlbsc'ription . .
gue.sts at.'the meeting, presented a
ing.
••
lecturer's
program on rural life. A
Th!!
grange
banquet
was
MAJLSUBSCRIPi'IONS
10- or 20-year level term life
:
illlldeMelpCouitl}' ,
announced for April 7 at the P,Otluck dinner was served by the ,
• 13 -kl ........... o...... :... ..... ........... .'...... $27.30
Seilior Citizens · Center. Tickets Meigs Pomona Grange members.
:· 26 \Yicb .................................... :........ ~3.82

f

·,

Accidents lnvesti1ated

PORTLAND - Oretha M. Durst, 78, Portland, died Monday,
March 6, 2000 in Veterans MemorialJiospital.
·· Arrangements will b¢ announced by Cremeens Funeral Home.
Racine.
'

1 26 Woob ............................................ $56.68
sz Woob ......................................... $109.72

'

'

Oretha M. Durst

: ' 13 - . . ............................................. 129,25

In

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

, MASON. WVa. -Joanna C. Allen, 55, Mason, died Monday,March
POMEROY -The Meigs County Sherifl's Department reported
' 6, 2000 at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, WVa.
three recent auto accidents.
llorn Dec. 11, 1944 in Parkersburg. WVa., she was a daughter of the
Bruce E. Cottrill, 41, of Syracuse, reported to the Meigs County
late Shirley M. and Goldie E. Thomas George. She was a homemaker Sheriff's Department that he struck a deer on Roy Jones Road in Sutand a member ofVFW Ladies Auxiliary Post 9926 .
ton Township on Saturday.
, · In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in. death by two
He reported moderate damage to his 1986 Chevrolet.
i'nfant daughters; an infant son; three brothers, Okey, Charles and Ira
Kim Sigman of Portland reported that an unidentified driver had
·Cecil George; and two sisters, Bessie Mullen an&lt;! Faye McCoy.
backed into the left rear of her vehicle while it was parked near Twin
Surviving are her husband, Glen K. ADen; a qaughter, Kimberly Oaks at Five Points.
J?awnTucker of Chillicothe; three stepdaughters, Glenda K. HightowShe reported light damage to her 1989 Oldsmobile.
er, Kathryn EDen Sullivan and Loretta Carol Combs, aU of Salem, Ill.;
Three deputies of the department witnessed an accident on East
IS grandchildren and a gre:t-grandchild; two sist~rs, Bernice Richards Second Street in Pomeroy, just across the street from the sheriff's office
·of Aeming, and Elladean I:. topen of Coolville; and a brother, Darrell on Saturday.
·E. George of Marietta.
Rick Patterson, Dave Reeds, Donald Mohler and Bill Gilkey had
Servi~ wiU be Lp.m. Wednesday in Foglesong Funeral Home,
just begun their shiffi wlien tliey heard a crash and saw a vehicle dri.
Masqn, with Pastor Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial will be in Sun- lien by Grant Reynolds hit another vehicle.
, rise Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6According to a report filed at the depmment, Patterson and Gilkey
9 tonight.
pun;ue.d the car on foot and administered a field sobriety test to
Reynolds, who vias charged with DUI; failure to control, and a seatbelt violation.

•

In Monday's Paper A Mistake
Was Made. The Em.e rgency
Room Levi Adv.e rtisement!.
· It -Should.Have··aeadthe
· .:
.
.
Hospital LOses About $700,000Per Year. The Dally Sentinel
.For This E'rror. ··.

The Deily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'IUMdey, March 7. 2000

••

Insurance O&gt;mpartY. Cill us kll' m:re

old building he owns .on West
Main in d9Wiltown Pomeroy; .
• ' Reviewed ways to control
flash flooding on Unjon Avenue,
faomPapA1
particUlarly around the hpme of
tive session to discuss the issue Gene Houdashelt;
. and then returned to open session ' • Heard the Pomeroy Fire
Department report on' six calls
for a vote on the appeaL
during February, two each for .
In other business, council:
• Discussed the'Thaford "shanty" brush fi~. auto accidents, and
on Butternut· Avenue and . action water rescues;
• And approved the mayor's
being taken to have it removed,
• Heard reports on repain to report of$6,120.
Besides those named, others
'Pleasant 'Ridge Road, and storm
sewer corrective work on Butter- attending were David Ballard.,
nut Avenue'; ·
George Wright, John Musser, Vic•
·• Discussed what can be done to tor Young, Ill, council members,
get Benny Ewing to tear down the and Kathy Hysell. clerk.

Coundl

.

..

,,.

.

.

.details and a competitive~- ·

..Aulo-0•.;••
.....
Llle Homo Cor ButJnM8
74"NIIIJ6M',.,..

214 Eaol Jllain

Pomero:r
992..6681

•
•

'

.

.

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

TU11dey, March 7, 2000

Strickland lil.oums loss of.uranium jobs

....., ..... ..,suppress ........

CINCINNATI (AP) - Another ~und of
"It's just tltt most
help rhoS&lt; who will lose their jobs find new
employment cuts at ur2nium-enrichment
discouraging thing."
positions or obtain retraining.
. &amp;lONEY (AP) - Attorneys for a man. accused of killing three
But he questioned whether the governplants in -Ohio and Kentucky will. take good- ·
,teen-age girls and a Bible studies teacher want a judge to bar cerpaying jobs away from regions that already
Rep. Ted Bbh u Kl,
ment will be able to rehire for cleanup work
.. ~n evidence from being used at the trial.
are hurting economically, a congressman said.
as many of the employees as it hopes, particKort Gatterdam, attorney for Lawrence Michael Hensley, was to
"lt's just the most discouraging thing," said Stuckle said Monday from the company's ularly because there is no guarantee that
pretent his case before Shelby County Comm~n Pleas Court Judge
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, whose district headquarters in Bethesda, Md.
Congress will approve funding that the Enerincludes
the
Portsmouth
Gaseous
Diffusion
The
new
job
cuts
are
in
addition
to
500
gy
Department has requested for the proJohn Schmitt during a pretrial hearing today. Gatterdam's motion to
Plant in Piketon.
eliminated last y~ar at the two plants, Strick- gram.
supp.- evidence was among a flurry of defense motions filed sev.
Energy
Department
officials
said
Monday
land, who was at an Energy Department con~
Strickland said he thinks a rehiring of 4QO
' 'enl months IJO·
•
they hope to find jobs in cleanup programs at ference in Cincinnati, said Monqay,
to 450 of the employees is a more realistic
:·· Hensley, 30, of Sidney, is accused of killing neighbor Sherry Kimthe Piketon and the Paducah, Ky., plants for
The jobs being cut are a· mix of manage- estimate. The Piketon plant currently has
'bler, 16, her cousin Tosha Barrett, 16, and their friend Amy M.ike600
to
65\)
of
the
workers
who
are
to
be
laid
ment
and union posts that pay $40,000 to ' about 2.000 employees and Paducah about
scll, 14, 2t his home July 8. Authorities say Hensley then drove to
offby
U.S.
Enrichment
Corp.
starting
in
mid$60,000
annually in a region where the year- 1,700. ·
·
the home of Bible studies teacher Brett Wildermuth, 37, and shot
July.
.
.
ly average . inc.o me for a family Qf four is ~. Leah Dever and Gary King, the DOE offi~ ~~ _ _
~-- - and killed him.
USEC official5;;;id the work fo~~ ·reduc:::--:-$22,000, s:1id Strickland, who is running for cials who appeared with Strickland at a news
. Five qays later, Hensley wounded a motorist, fired a shot at the
lions and other cost-cutting measures are . re-election in his southern Ohio district.
conference, did not challenge the congress~ ,!tome of another Bible studies teacher and took three i)ostages at a
His area, which is struggling even as other mon's lower estimate .
needed to make the plants efficient in enrich. .gas station before surrendering, authorities· say.
ing uranium for use . as fuel in commercial regions thrive in the prosperous economy,
USEC. which is privately owned, has run
•·· Hensley has pleaded innocent to the charges. His trial is schedpower-gen~rating reactors in the United already had lost about 3,000 jobs during the the two plants since Congress got the govuled to begin April 4.
States and overseas.
past 18 months. Thos.e cuts occurred mostly ernmeitt out of the business during the 1990s
Management still ' is deciding whi~h · in the private sector because ofjob layoffs and on the theory that a private company would
employees will be laid off. and which will be . plant closings, he said.
. do a better job of enriching uranium for sale
1
Strickland co mplime n~cd DOE efforts to on the worldwide market.
retained, company spokeswoman Eli.zabeth
' COLUMBUS (AP) -A 14-year-'old boy pleaded guilty Monwy to fatally shooting his friend in the face while the two ,vere
supposed ,to be i.n school, a prosec.utor said.
Kyle Proffit pleaded guilty to reckless homicide in Franklin
, _C ounty Juvenile Court. At his April sentencing, Proffit could be
ordered held by the Department OfYouth Services until he is 21.
said county Prosecutor Ron O 'Brien.
. Proffit was playing with a gun owned by his former stepfather
BOWLING GREEN (AP) ranking 27th out of 007 school
when he accidentally shot Matthew Osborne, 13, on Jan. 18, police
COLUMBUS (AP) - Educa- part ofSenate Bill 55, a major eduA. state education official said he's districts in the state on the ninth"said.
tors
who promote a child to the cation refoml bill in 1997, and
not surprised by a study's finding grade proficiency tests this year,
fifih-grade even if the student rakes effect in 2001.
. The stepfather, Bill Gannon, was charged with negligent homithat students believe proficiency according to the Ohio Departfailed .Ohio's fourth-grade reading
There are two exceptions to the
cide and is scheduled for trial May I in Municipal 'Court, O'Brien
tests create extra stress at school.
ment of Education.
said.
.
.
.
·test couldn't i)e sued by parents mandate: if the student has a dis"Every state that has done this
The study involved giving 40dissatisfied with their child's ability that prevents him or her .
has experienced teacher anxiety. question surveys to students in
·,. Gannon is divorced from Proffit's mother, Kelley Gannon, but had
Pr;ogress in future years, a proposed from taking the test, or if the stu- ·
and student anxiety to some grades four and above. They )Yere
~~toved back into the home. He told police the gun was locked in a
law
sa~.
dent's principal and reading
degree;~ said Bob Bow~rs. associ- asked whether the · tes~ created
toolbox in tho garage, with a loaded cartridge hidden in a bedroom.
The bill introduced in the Ohio teacher agree that the ·student is
ate.superintendent for curriculum exceis stress during their s~liool
House would pro~ct. teachers and academically prepared for the fiftl1
. and assessment for the Ohio day, made them nervous; and put
principals wh9 take aciv&gt;ntaJ~e of grade anyway.
Department o(Education. ·
too much pressure on them.
an
exception to Ohio's Fourth- . "I don't think it's fair and right
The study at one school district
Two of every three Perrysburg
.
Grade Guarantee, Randall Gard- to promote· a child to the fifth- ·
near Toledo found that the exams elementary pupils surveye~ said
• LEBANON (AP) -A Dayton man got his 17th drunken driving
ner, the bill's sponsor, said Monday. grade who is not prep"'l'd for
add stress and also hurt monle the testing caused excess stress,
charge in the last 20 years when a Warren County grand jury indict_The guarantee generally pro- fifih-grade, but nor is it right to
among educators. In addition. the and three of four secondary stued him Monday.
hibits
schools from promoting retairi a child who is unquestionresearch found that older students dents agreed.
,.. , Curtis"Sears, 41, ~ arrested the night of'Feb. 5 when Lebanon
children who fail the' fourth-grade ably better off in the fifth-grade;'
had more negative opinions of the
"They do not feel it's a legiti- ·
'P.,Iice found him behind the wheel of an idling car. Sears failed a field
reading proficiency test. '
Gardner said
tests than younger pupils.
mate means of measuring wha~
. }obriety,test but refu1ed to take :i breathalyzer, county Prosecutor Tim
Gardner, R-Bowling Green,
Some educators have expressed
. Bowers said . that despite the they know," said Robert DeBard,
Oliver said.
said
he
bean!
6om
a
number
of
concern
that they'll be held liable
finding of increased stress, the test- an associate professor in Bowling
· ~achers and school board mem- for holding students back who WI
... The arrest came six weeks after Sears was convicted of drunken
ing is necessary·to ensure that stu- · Green's school of leadership and
bers concemed about the-liability the fourth-grade test, but most
'driving in Highland County as the result of a 1997 ~ase, Oliver said. .
dents are competent.
policy studies.
issue.
.
believe that such action falls well
Court reCords show that Sears' driving privileges . were suspended
"If we're going to h~ve quality
The state exams are designed
''The
bottom
line.
~
.
I
wa;,t
within their educatiorult privilege,
indefinitely.
,
,. .
· graduates, then we're going to to measure what children should
principals and teachers to be able said John Stanford of the Qhio
have standards uniform across the know about ~ading, writing,
:~ Records indicate that Sears has been charged with drunken drito make the ·best de.cisions they School Boards Association.
state of Ohio;: he sa~d.
,•
math, scien&lt;;e, and citizenship by
~g 17 times, authorities said. He faces tip to 18 months in jail if concan, ·and they should I)Ot feel
When it comes to promoting
Researchers at Bowling Green the time they are in certain
.""'•
· cted on the latest charge_.
·
.
threatened by a lawsuit -kheh they stUdents against the guarantee's
State University studied students, grades.
exercise rights that are cle:u:ly nundate, however, many feel they
teachers a!)d odministrators in the ·. ~tuden~ this wee.k are taking
•
sp&lt;;~ed out," he said.
would be going out on a limb, he
Perrysburg school district. Perrys- the ninth•grade tests, which aie
•
~d:
.
The
gua!-'3ntee
was
p~ed
as
.
'
burg has ha&lt;l . success in testing, required for graduation.
: CINCINNATI (AP) -A Hamilton County _grand jury returned
:!!:murder indictment Monday against a former deputy sheriff. ·
., ,Pomeroy *
· ~ . Owen Hobbs, 52, is accused in the Feb. 19 shooting death of
.
.
.
· ~hawn Berry, 25, outside an apartment building in suburban Sil:yerton. Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike ADen said a motive for
~lie shooting hasn't been determined.
·
: · Hobbs was fired from the Hamilton County sheriff's department
~n 1996 after he was accused of stealing "bait money" \ISed iJt an
internal investigation, Allen said. Hobbs pleaded guilty to one count
l'f theft in office and was sentenced to 19 months in prison.
FINDLAY (AP) -Two people
••
have pleaded guilty in the kidJ!ap•
•
ping and torturing of a 13-year•~
old
girl who was buried alive but
. .
'
: AKRON (AP) -A nun who stole a shotgun from -a Klitilrt store,
survived.
.
ltijacked a man and his pickup and then had a shootout with police
Five of the six suspects in the
sentenced to I 0 years in prison.
case now have been convicted and
four
have agreed to testifY ~gainst
: .Bakur Gegia, 26, originally troni "the Republic of Georgia, was senNathan Graham, 22, of Rawson.
~nced Monday in Summit County Common Pleas Court after
He
is charged with attempted
pleading guilty to aggravated robb~ry and kidnapping.
murder, rape and felonious assault.
: Police said Gegia took a shotgun and ammunition Nov. 23 from a
Philip Cramer, of Findlay, was
{&lt;mart store in Tallmadge where he worked with a cleaning crew. He
sentenced to 30 years in prison
~en jumped in a pickup and forced its owner to drive.
·
after pleading guilt"¥ Monday to
:. Surrounded by police, Gegia fired at law enforcement officers who
attempted . murder, felonious
*'turned fire, hitting Gegia in the shoulder. The pickup's owner manassault; kidnapping and tampering
.. '
.
~d to escape unharmed before the shootout.
with evidence.
•• Gegia's court-appointed attorney said his client was upset because
Kathy Emmons, of Findlay,
lte was denied three weeks of pay after being told his work was lousy.
pleaded guilty to complicity to
'
attempted murder, complicity to ·
rape, complicity to kidnapping and
.
felonious assault. Hancock County ·
Common Pleas Judge Reginald
: COLUMBUS (AP) -The state board -of education on Monday
Routson
sentenced Emmons to 24
i1&gt;proved a $15,000 performance bonus for State Superintendent
years in prison.
Swan Tave Zelman for 1999, then gave her a 20 percent raise for
The group of six was accused of
2000.
.
'
beating the girl 2t a party and then
: Citing performance stanwrds that Zelman m~ last year, the board
taking her to a 'remote 'wooded
Voted 6-0 to add $15,000 to her 1999 compensation package; givarea and leaving her in a 2-foot
.
ing her a total of$150,000.
wi.~ 6-foot deep pipe.
: The board then voted 16-0 to approve a S180,doo salary for 2006.
Authorities said on Feb. 13;
: Zelman replaced John Goff, who retired in December i 998 after 3
1999, the girl sh~d up at a party
112 y.;ars as superintendent of public instruction. He. earn~d
.\lihere there was /drinking • and .
&amp;136,000.
.
drugs.

Teen pleads guilty In shootin1 ·

Study: Proficiency test causes Fifth-grade promotion
stress for studentS, teachers

protected under

. .Dayton man gets 17th DUI charge

j
I
I

''

I

:3 .

Fonner deputy indicted

.'

Guilty pleas ·

entered in teen
torturing

~ 01110 VALLEY BANK.

Man sentenced for robbery
'

'

Salutes Members, Advisors,
Volunteers, and our 4-H
Schplarship Reci ient ·
durtn Ohto 4-H eek

rns

arch s~tt

.

·Board approves raise

.

l

r

•

'

DEATH NOTICES
.Joanna C. Allen

Highs in 80s on Wednesday

.'

\ ''

••

Religious leaders census.help

;i

·.

..~-~..'-------------------­

Protect . .
rtant
people in yo~e.

51-ki ........................................... $JQ5j6
Otlltldo Melp Coaii!J

'

:

WI aicdoa tlarnated.

~
.
Ntw1 Dtplrt..U
: 1lie .... ooaber II m·ll55. Doportmoot

~

•

•o-nt~r.:
•••nr ......- .............EIL not

Ntwt...._ _ _......- .................r.. IIL 1102 ·
- -....- ....- ........................ orld.lt~

'

.

OlliwStnkn
: ' A4hlltlllai-..- -.................. £11.1104
. • . Cbftlltltlt..- - - -..--Eit.l103

: a.,,.,..,Me ..--.--..- .. ~~t not

;' .....

••

Chapter to meet

:Grange .·

~~ MORE LOCAL NEWS.
t~:MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

'

•

POMEROY -Burlingham Modern Woodmen will have a potlu~k
dinner Saturday at 4 p.m. at the hall. Meat will be furnished, those .
attending are asked to wear green. Rosalie Story will give facts on St.
P~trick's Day, theme of the meeting. There wiU drawings for door
prizes. Friends of members are invited.

~

"'

"'

camp to meet

. LQCAL STOCKS

, • ·wtn cMck '"r laformttlon tnd 1111te a

••

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Youth League will have sign up on
Thursday at the fire' station from 6-8 p.m. and on Saturday at council
chambers from noon-3 p.m. The registration fee is $20 per child, not
to exceed $30 per family.
"

from

O.r aala e911Ctm Ia 111 ttorltt Ia 10 bl
Mftnte. UJW bow .raaerrorla • ...,.,
~ , 010 ... '"'!110010 11 (7.,) !ln-ll55. Wt

Member FDIC

Youth Leape meetin1

Masons plan meeting

Vote

~

Davia

LONG BOTTOM -A youth rally and hymn sing wiU be held at
the Long Bottom Faith Full Gospel Church, at 7 p.m . Friday.The Crusaders of Marietta will be there. fellowship will follow. Pastor SteVe
Reed invites the public.

Ball sipup at Syracuse

1

Trtr.,l•

Hymn sln1 set

DAY sets me~n1

VALLEY WEATHER

~

,19990VB
Scholar

EMS units answer nine calls

9 :34 p.m., Salem Street, Wilda Blaney, Holzer.

POMEROY · - Units of Meigs County Emergency Services
POMEROY· Pomeroy Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star 186,
answered nine calls for assistance on Monday.
practice.
for
inspection,
Monday ,7:30 p.m. at the hall.
U l)i(!i responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
..
5:59 p.m., Overbrook Nursing Center,' Maxine Darst, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
CHESHIRE - DAV Chapter 53, will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
10:59 p.m., Nye Avenue, with assistance from Pomeroy unit, Keith
hill.
28051 State Route 7. below M.iddleport. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Day. Veterans Memorial;
..
'·
· 9:59 p.m., Union Avenue, Charles Whittington, treated at scene.
COLUMBIA TWP.
5:34
a.m.,
rekindle
of
structure
fire. Timothy Walker residence.
BY THE AsSOCIATED PRESS
and the record low was 4 in
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville Lodge 411, F &amp; AM, special
MIDDLEPORT
The unseasonably warm 1960. Sunset tonight will be at.
meeting Satur&amp;y, breakfast at 8 a.m. Work in the E.A. degree, 9 a.m.
5:06 p.m., structure fire, Keith Harter residence.
weather wiU continue in Ohio 6:31 p.m. and sunrise on WednesREEDSVilLE
.
for another day or so· as a . high day at 6:54 a.m.
7:50
p.m.,
State
Route
124,
Susie Kerwin, Camden~Ciark MemorWeather forecaat:
pressure system keeps pulling
'·
Tonight... Mostly clear. Lows ial Hospital.
·Gulf air into the region.
RUTLAND .,
SYRACUSE - Signup fOr the Syracuse Youth Baseball League will
· Temperatures could crack the near 50. Southwest wind 5 to 10
be held on the next two Saturdays, March 11 and 18, 10 a.m.-noon ·:n
2:11 a.m:, Hutton Road, Howard Jeffers, treated at scene;
·
· ".\iO-degree inark in southeast mph.
'
7:09 p.m .• Meigs Mine ;2. Gary Woodruff, Holzer Medical Center; the mayor's office at Syracuse village hill.
Wednesday... Mostly
sunny
'\J)hio on Wednesday while the
test of t)le state wiU have readings · with neat record warmth. Highs
. in· the lower 80s.
in the 70s, forecasters said.
Lena" while McCain spent the
Wednesday night...Mild with a
'' · An approaching low- pressure
day rallying supporters. McCain
tell could bring shower&gt; and pos- chance of showers after midnight.
overnighted in the state and
:sibly thunderstorms to Ohio lows in the mid 50s.
planned to watch ihe returns
Extended
..
forecast:
to 75 percent in 1980, to 65 pq-Pip AI
WASHINGTON (AP)
Wednesday night and Thursday,
from Los Angeles. _
Thursday... A chance of brief
Father Francisco Gonzalez knows cent in 1990, and census officials
the National Weather Service
Polling showed him running the lengths some illegal immigrants ·estimate it will fall to 61 percent
1howers in the morning... Other- ry," ,.aid Bush, the Texas governor,
said.
Temperatu.res should return to wise partly cloudy. Highs near 70. who was tending to state business weU in the five · Ne.w England will go to hide their identities. so this year.
.'
states
that
.vote
today;
while
Bush
toqay
in
Austin
before
settling
in
Friday... Partly sunny and coolCensus data are used to redraw
lie says it may be up to the familiar
normal toward the end of the
had a clear edge in · California, face of a parish priest to sway the congressional artd legislative diS'Week, with highs in the 40s and er. Morning l~ws in the lower . to await the returns. '
McCain
claimed
some Georgia and Ohio. New York was wary to put their names arid tricts and to apportion billions ,of
40s. Highs 55 to 60. .
'50s.
:;
Saturday... A chance of show- momentum, but .still wondered . a competitive . battleground that addre~SCs on a census form and dollars m federal funds.
·' The record high temperature
McCain
in
particular
badly
need•
whether
it
was
sufficient
.
~ it back to the government. ,
:fQr this date at the Columbus . ers. Morning lows near 40. Highs
"
"The question Is; is there going to win.
While it won't guarantee that
weather station was 77 in 1983 in the lower 60s.
McCain strategists -conceded the Census Bureau wiU get a more
to be enough time:· he said,
The GOP contest has been their challenge is to expand their accurate count in this year's ·enuquirky, and McCain has shown an base beyond appealing to Nor~h­ meration, Gonzalez and another .
ability to recover when things eastern moderates in the face of religious leaders pledged Monday
look grim. "The only thing I'm Bush's strength among the GOP to do what they can to help, in and
Premier- 8Y. ·
AEP;_~.
Flrstar - 18l.
·
certain of is it's uncertain," said faithful.
out of the pulpit,
.
Rockwell- 45l• .
Akzo-39lt
Gannett - 65'·
McCain
was
heading
home
to
McCain.
·
is
part
of the
Their
involvement
General Electric - 137).
AD Shell - 52l. ·
AmTech/SBC- 43lo
Arizona
on
Wednesday
to
take
McCain and Bush both
Census Bureau's aggressive camSears-27~
Harley Davidson - 711. ,
, Hhl8nd Inc. - 30"Kmart-8\ · ·
Shoney'a - 1l.
· ~T&amp;T-53),
stock,
but
aides
said
it
would
be
a
focused
"Monday
on
the
biggest
paign to boost responses fo~ _the
Wendy's- '15'1•
Kroger- 14'•
:.lank One- 24 1 ~•
brief
respite.
·
·
prize of aU by campaigning in
2000 census.
Lands End - 33lo
Worthlng1on - 13'·
• flob Evans.- 12'·
A B)Jsh sweep of the three top
Dally stock reports are the California for its 162 delegates.
For Gonzalez, who is Episcopal
Ud.-33~
•llorgwamer- 32').
o8k Hll Financial - 13~ 4 p.m. .closing quotes of Bush courted Jewish voters and prizes of California, Ohio and Vicar for Hispanics for the Arch~ .Champion - 3')•
the previous day's trans·
OVB-31~
•"t:hannlng Shops- 6
actions, provided
by took another srab at comedy on New York would deal a body diocese of Washington, D.C., that
One Valley - 28~
il:lly Holding -12~
Advest
of
Gallipolis.
Peoples-18
"The Tonight Show With Jay blow to McCain's insurgent cam, means assuring illegal immigrants
,-Federal Mogul-14'•
t:,ol
·,,
patgn.
that census information is not
Gore
was
positioned
to
deal
a
•~....•
sh~red with any other federal
.
are $7.50 for adults and $6 for similar blow to Bradley, and there
agency.
.
children. They are 'available from were signs that both front-run"They wiD not come fc;&gt;rward
ill local granges. Each subordinate ners were beginning to think in unless they reilly trust that their
grange is asked to donate two generai election terms.
. faum Pap AI
names wiU not be given to 5ome
door prizes. .
Gore, addressing a rally Mon- other government organization,"
Subscribe today. 992-2156
Rick Macomber,. county day at the University of Missouri · Gonzalez said Monday at a news
the area.
grange
youth chaiiman, reported near Bradley's Crystal City. Mo., conference. "We are working to
· Another change in U.S. agriculture policy under considera- on a recent county youth ·meet- hometown, ignored his rival to insure their confidentiality."
'I ~
tion, according to Dyer, has' to do ing followed by a dinner at Gal- target Bush and remind voters of
Similar messages wiU be spread
; · The Daily Sentinel
with nianure and insecticide run- lipolis. Youth are being asked to · the budget deficits that accumu- in services at churches, mosques,
I
(USPS ll3·"4l)
off. Fanners are not financially work on upgrading the fair lated u.nder Presidents Reagan . temples and . synagogues around
i .
, Commually Newspaper Holdlnp,Joc.
able tq handle the problen_1 booth. It was noted that two · and Bush.
the country, said Rabbi David
t .Published· c.-~ry tfternoon. Monday throU"ah
young people will be attending
.because
,of
the
depressed
prices
Now,
the
GOP
is
again
"headSaperstein, director of the Union
f 1 Friday. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Obio, by the
evep though they are under con- the Mid-Atlantic Youth Confer- ed in the wrong direction, big of American Hebrew Congrega,, Ohio Vllley Publlshin' Comp1ny. Seeo.,d
~ cl1u postap paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
.stant threat from the EPA, it was ence in Gettysburg, Pa.. next · time," said Gore, whO was return- tions_.
: . Mttabtn The Assoclaled Preu, and tho Ohio
month.
pointed out. .
. ing to his own home state, TenMail response rates have
Ne.,....,.per Auocialion.
t
POS'TMASTER: Send addre1A comclion1 to
lnspf!Ction of the 'lecturer's nessee, . to quietly await the declined from 78 percent in 1970,
Dyer also said that the federal
'• The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, governmept is considering end- program will be at Hemlock returns in· Nashville.
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00
Ohio 4!1769
f .
ing subsidies for agreements to Grange in May, and degree work
SUISCRIPnON IIATES
•
. Pri.,tely, Gore strategists were
1)',Cll'lttr or MaiOr RINdt
stop agriculture production in inspection wiD be held at Star
One W.ck .............................................. $2.00
crafting a new message shifting
favM of financing conservatton Grange in July.
~ OM Moi'Jih ............................................ $8.70
One Year............................................s104.00
linda Montgomery, junior the focus to B)Jsh,labeling his tax
measures .fo.; farmers.
SINGLE COPY PRICE "
Whitney Ashley, the Ohio grang';' chairman, announced a cut proposals as "reckless" , and
•• Dally.................................................35 Cents
State Grange female ambassador, skating party at the Star Grange taking credit for a continued .
• Sublcrlbtl'l nOt dcsiriJ!IIft pay tile ca.rricr m1y
: rcrnil In ad\'tnCJ direct 10 'The Dilly Sentinel
was recognized and brought . haU on March 17. There will be a sttong economy.
• on 1 three, six or 12 moriah bUia. Crtdit will be
greetings from the Ohio State $1 fee and children are to • take
• &amp;lven carrier each Week.
: No subscription by m•il pcmlm:d in 1rc11
Grange. Opal Dyer. women's their own skates. Paul Ditty of
·• whore home ctrrier service I! available.
activiticis.. chairman, announced Racine Grange was accepted into ·
: Publlther ·rcaervet the ri&amp;ht to 1dju11 ratea
that ·the county Ibaking contest Pomona Grange membership.
~ durin&amp; llio subt&lt;:.r:lptlon period. Subscription
• rato cblnget mar be implemented by dlll'l8in&amp;
Athens County grangers,
will take place at the May meet: the durati&lt;m or Ihe ltlbsc'ription . .
gue.sts at.'the meeting, presented a
ing.
••
lecturer's
program on rural life. A
Th!!
grange
banquet
was
MAJLSUBSCRIPi'IONS
10- or 20-year level term life
:
illlldeMelpCouitl}' ,
announced for April 7 at the P,Otluck dinner was served by the ,
• 13 -kl ........... o...... :... ..... ........... .'...... $27.30
Seilior Citizens · Center. Tickets Meigs Pomona Grange members.
:· 26 \Yicb .................................... :........ ~3.82

f

·,

Accidents lnvesti1ated

PORTLAND - Oretha M. Durst, 78, Portland, died Monday,
March 6, 2000 in Veterans MemorialJiospital.
·· Arrangements will b¢ announced by Cremeens Funeral Home.
Racine.
'

1 26 Woob ............................................ $56.68
sz Woob ......................................... $109.72

'

'

Oretha M. Durst

: ' 13 - . . ............................................. 129,25

In

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

, MASON. WVa. -Joanna C. Allen, 55, Mason, died Monday,March
POMEROY -The Meigs County Sherifl's Department reported
' 6, 2000 at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, WVa.
three recent auto accidents.
llorn Dec. 11, 1944 in Parkersburg. WVa., she was a daughter of the
Bruce E. Cottrill, 41, of Syracuse, reported to the Meigs County
late Shirley M. and Goldie E. Thomas George. She was a homemaker Sheriff's Department that he struck a deer on Roy Jones Road in Sutand a member ofVFW Ladies Auxiliary Post 9926 .
ton Township on Saturday.
, · In addition to her parents, she was also preceded in. death by two
He reported moderate damage to his 1986 Chevrolet.
i'nfant daughters; an infant son; three brothers, Okey, Charles and Ira
Kim Sigman of Portland reported that an unidentified driver had
·Cecil George; and two sisters, Bessie Mullen an&lt;! Faye McCoy.
backed into the left rear of her vehicle while it was parked near Twin
Surviving are her husband, Glen K. ADen; a qaughter, Kimberly Oaks at Five Points.
J?awnTucker of Chillicothe; three stepdaughters, Glenda K. HightowShe reported light damage to her 1989 Oldsmobile.
er, Kathryn EDen Sullivan and Loretta Carol Combs, aU of Salem, Ill.;
Three deputies of the department witnessed an accident on East
IS grandchildren and a gre:t-grandchild; two sist~rs, Bernice Richards Second Street in Pomeroy, just across the street from the sheriff's office
·of Aeming, and Elladean I:. topen of Coolville; and a brother, Darrell on Saturday.
·E. George of Marietta.
Rick Patterson, Dave Reeds, Donald Mohler and Bill Gilkey had
Servi~ wiU be Lp.m. Wednesday in Foglesong Funeral Home,
just begun their shiffi wlien tliey heard a crash and saw a vehicle dri.
Masqn, with Pastor Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial will be in Sun- lien by Grant Reynolds hit another vehicle.
, rise Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6According to a report filed at the depmment, Patterson and Gilkey
9 tonight.
pun;ue.d the car on foot and administered a field sobriety test to
Reynolds, who vias charged with DUI; failure to control, and a seatbelt violation.

•

In Monday's Paper A Mistake
Was Made. The Em.e rgency
Room Levi Adv.e rtisement!.
· It -Should.Have··aeadthe
· .:
.
.
Hospital LOses About $700,000Per Year. The Dally Sentinel
.For This E'rror. ··.

The Deily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'IUMdey, March 7. 2000

••

Insurance O&gt;mpartY. Cill us kll' m:re

old building he owns .on West
Main in d9Wiltown Pomeroy; .
• ' Reviewed ways to control
flash flooding on Unjon Avenue,
faomPapA1
particUlarly around the hpme of
tive session to discuss the issue Gene Houdashelt;
. and then returned to open session ' • Heard the Pomeroy Fire
Department report on' six calls
for a vote on the appeaL
during February, two each for .
In other business, council:
• Discussed the'Thaford "shanty" brush fi~. auto accidents, and
on Butternut· Avenue and . action water rescues;
• And approved the mayor's
being taken to have it removed,
• Heard reports on repain to report of$6,120.
Besides those named, others
'Pleasant 'Ridge Road, and storm
sewer corrective work on Butter- attending were David Ballard.,
nut Avenue'; ·
George Wright, John Musser, Vic•
·• Discussed what can be done to tor Young, Ill, council members,
get Benny Ewing to tear down the and Kathy Hysell. clerk.

Coundl

.

..

,,.

.

.

.details and a competitive~- ·

..Aulo-0•.;••
.....
Llle Homo Cor ButJnM8
74"NIIIJ6M',.,..

214 Eaol Jllain

Pomero:r
992..6681

•
•

'

.

.

�'

I

pJnlon

•

PageA4

_Th_e_D_ail..::..y_Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _....;:0::;

The Daily Sentinel

; Dear Ann Landen: I saw myself in
)lour column the other day. The woman
signed herself"Trying to Save My Marriage." Sbe laid her husband, 'Jim," oA:en
responded violently to minor disagreements, and sometim~. blew up at her
without provocation. She was always
~Icing on eggshells, trying to p.acifY
ftiln- exactly what I've been doing for

ChllrlesW.Oovey

PubiiiJher

DIMe Hill
' Conlrllller

Ctwtene Hoeflich

o....,., llaneger

~long.

';:).ast night, my "Jim" went on one of
-~ rampages while we were in the car.
H~ stepped on the gas, and began speeding on a wet road. He ground his teeth;
and his eyes were bulging out of his
head. I couldn't figure out what had set
him off: His rage lasted only a few minutes. He then apologized for overreacting.
The fact remains that during those
rages, he ·scares our dogs half to death,
b~aks things in the house, and acts like a
. maniac. !want this marriage to work, but
I can't do it alone. Any suggestions? NO NAME, NO . PLACE, NO
MORE PATIENCE

UUen to llr• .diuw .,. IHkMH. 1TH1 IAtHIU N 1m ,., J(J(J wcrnfr. AI lffNrr " ' •.t}«f .

•

~

/W IW'ip... ,.,.. ri1
k ,.MUW IAIIBI tltHU N IIIII ~ ..,,._ ..,.,..., la.a, ..., pn r: 'r
-"'":"· ft.- . .lcMI f.qrft.N iA 1M evl.""' Wlow . , . . CCNUinUU fi/1/N ~lo V.U.J hMiiJilar
~
Co. ., alilorMI ~. ,.,.,.n odlnwii•IIOIM.

OUR VIEW:

Court rnling creates new .
hurdles for utility industry

.....

W

.

PLAGENZ'S VIEW:

Graham made a·namefor himse!f·SO years ago

' .I ·

'

'; -~ I

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Ash Wednesday
· Mice slated

a

RYAN'S

BY THE AsiiOCIATED PRos
Today isTuesday,.March 7, the 67th day of2000.There are 299 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 7, 1850; in a three-hour speech to ihe U.S, Senate,
Daniel Webster endorsed the Compromise of I 850 as a means of preserving the Union.
On this date:
In 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in Lancaster, M;ISS. ,
In 1875, composer Maurice Ravel was-born in Cibourne, France.
In 1876, Alexander Graham BeD received a patent fur his telephone. .
In 1911, the United States sent 20,000 troops to the Mexican bor·
der as a precaution in the wake of the Mexican Revolution.
In 1926, the fir&lt;t successful trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversation took place, between New York and London.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered his troops to !llatth into the
. Rhineland, thereby breaking the Treaty ofVersailles and the Locarno
Pact.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. furces crossed the Rhine Ri11er ·;
at Remagen, Germany, using the damaged but still usable Ludendodf
Bridge.
In 1965, a march by civil rights demo115trators. was broken up in
Selma, Ala., by state troOpers anp a sheriff's posse.
··
In 1975, the Senate revised its filibuster rule, allowing 60 senators
to limit debate in most cases, instead of the previously reqUired twothirds of senators present.
·
In I 994, the Supreme Court ruled that parodies that poke fun at an
original work can be considered "fair ~" that doesn'~ require permission fiom the copyright holder.
.
· '
· , ..
Today's :Birthdays: Photographer Lord Snowdon is 70.J'\1 weather- ·
man Willard Scott is 66. Auto racerJulet Guthrie is 62.-Actor D!UJiel ·
J. Travanti is 60.Walt Disney Co. chairffian Mi~hael Eisner is 58. Rock
musician Chris White (The Zombies) is 57. Actor John Heard is 54.
Rock singer Peter Wolf is 54. Rock musician Matthew Fishe~ (Piocol
Harum) 'is 54. Singer Peggy March is 52:FootbaU Hall-of-Farner Fran-,
co. Harris is 50. Former football player Lynn SWanri is 48.Aftor Bryan , .
Cranston ("Malcolm in the Middle") is 44.Tennis playl:r I~ Lendl 'is
40..Singer-actress Taylor Dayne is 35. Rock musician . Randy Guss .
· (Toad the Wet Sprocket) is 33.Actress Rachel Weisz is 29.
·'

'

EW:

Counting the ·c~ualties of the homework wars

..: : hOspital levy .

BY Jo~ RYAN

. The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to
announce meetings and s~ial
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are,
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a.specific_number of days.

i

.. ·;

Evenings for most families of
• in the, 40s, we .abandoned rote learning 1in
school-age kids are a Roadrunner . favor of problem-solvi!\g, and homework
racefirom. after-school sports to. ·,, decreased: Then Sputnik took off and we
:1'
went in.to a panic about losing intellectual
homework to dinner to reading to r, ground to the Soviets, and the homework
bed. Gone are the hours when kids . increased again.
. .
could plot palace coups in the woodf.'' It subsided in the 1960s, .then ratcheted up
once more in 1983 when a governme'~
at the end of the street or find therif: report, called "A NatiQn . ai Risk," set oft
selves so ·bored·they'd submit to a \i alatrns that America\ schools were failing. · ·~·
gam~ of Parcheesi after dinner.
The rc:Search about homework, however,'ig
'
fairly clear. One well-regarded study found
progress, 1hould or shouldn't correct the that, for junior-higlt students, homework of
work, should .or shouldn't threaten the child . up to two hours a night improves achiever
with bodily harm if he.doesn't finish his mul- ment .. (But more than two hours has neglig;;: ·
tiplication tables now.
,e . ble or negative effects.) In high school, home~
Evenings for most families· of school-age w&lt;irk 'has the most positive effects; greaie~
lcids are a Roadrunner race from after-school amounts of .homework, translated to greater
sports to homework to dinner to reading' 10 : achievement.
· ·'
·
bed. Golle are the hours when kids could plot
aut the same University of Missouri studr
palace, coups in ilie Woods at the end ·of the . found that the correlati.o n between hom~:.'
street or find then1Selves so ~ored they'd sub- work and academic achievement in the cle;.;
mit to a game of Parcheesi after dinner. ( ..
mentary grades·is almost ietu. If anything, t~~
It's no sur~ris~ that the increase in ~orne- res.eaochers said, homework can turn you~W
work has comCided wtth two \)t~er ~~cu- children ofF from acade~cs.
.
. ,:
me11ted trends: Parents began working longer · Most parents wouldn t complam about lc;is\
hours because they were hap~ier at work.'
filft:lily tim~ . if homework were significantly
·
at home, and wine sales increased.
.;
"·
,.'
helpir!g. But enough alrea4y. Set our children
1 1
America h~ never figured out wh~t the , free..
. .
.
·
role ofhomewqrk shoUld be.Ai the besiljning ' .. Ooan.Ryan i5 d columnist for the Sa• Fr4ncisco,
Qf the ·20th century we piled on the work Chron,~k . Send comments to lrer in care ~f t~ii
unaer the theory that the mind ¥las lik~ any newspdper ' or send . her e-m4il
•I
muscle that needed repeti,tive exercis~ , 'l;'hen . joa~ryrms.fkate.colh.)
'
I'

:
..

•

•

.'111 .,

'

81., ....... ..,. Olllo
7401Ma111

.

'

100-

.,

'

t

•••
,
'

'

'

...

'

, POMEROY -·
Walk··'in
ilWnunization clinic, 1 to 7 p.m., .
M~igs County Health Depart-.
ment. Insurance, Medicaid inforilJ.tion and child's immunization
~cords to be provided at time of
~isit by parent or legal guardian.
Information
at 992-61i26.
,.. .

•I

,,

I

.

...

'

. POMEROY - Meigs County., Genealogical Society meeting
Thesday, 5 p.m . at the Meigs
. County Muset.~m.

•
••
WEDN.ESDAY

Dues are pay.able.

•••

..

I

'

•

•••

Quafit . !!urniture P{us
1ur,mture, Ca
42123 State t.

Financing Available

uppers £R ins, O:J{

(740} 667-7388 • 1-800-200-4005

90 Day Lay-Away

~s
OPS
0
INJUST2
110% SEMINAR GUARANTEE"'
HOURS

.

GALLIPOLI·S .

Plainandsiuijk,1be IKhnlqueupplled

•

Mon.-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9·6 • Sat. 9·4

SBIJJNAR~ .

••

•

I

.

~~:~
~~~~~
~f'l
i1use . . Frld
M
, · h 10th
PEN~ING. ~~ess . of y~ur past
,ecOl ~s\
8Y, . &amp;rc
l

expenence wtdt ttymg to qwt, other
p!ogJWIIS,or~yousrookedfor5or50

yeali, til.f*ogJ•!• is designed so~ can
stop Siillkinst mglit peuuanently, without
cravings;Witlioutwithdrawal or anxiety.
.
.Yes, tha~'s right. You can stop
smokmg. not Just cu~ down, but
smoking . I,Jy temlnar's en~.
Scmtn•r GurMW*l :J ,,
. With .the GOEN METHOD™ of
HYPNOStS, ·you enter a state of
wonderful physical and mental

the slightest effort; In o~ ~ent pending
. seminar bOth the phystolog.cal and th«:
. psyc.h?logifai addict!on are ~ by
nutnllOI!,' .h y,pnos•s, , prosramnung,
guided visual imagery, and other
powei:ful technologies. This is designed
so you never bave smoking as an fssue
Ia · life again. ·

\~~
\1-lQ!P-"
·

1·00
PM
- 9'30
PM
..
..
•

·H.QLID·AV
. .
1'\ I INN

577 State Route 7
j'ct

OH Rt V &amp; US

•

Alexander
Founder,
Author,
0527
C.Ht., C.Hy., .... n1v.
My pfltent pending . stop smoking
system ·is designed so you don 't gain
weight or · have withdrawals. Our
program is designed to 'work'. Come
down and end this habitife; lq:;:::."

.

..

- Warmly, -"''

Private clients have paid $225 each to
&gt;quit comfortably. Yilu can b«;nefit now from
this group semmar for only $49.•. Cash,
checks &amp;. credit cards accepted. Seminan
brought to you by Goen &amp; Asso&lt;aates.
This ..w.r dolll not traa ...
-

- Pomeroy
Mercba"ts meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday, Always and Forever.

.'•

today's youth.

POMEROY - "Fun for · POMEROY - Ash Wednes-.
· Jesus;, ~t .God's N.E.T., 106 W. · day breakfast' and . quiet hour,
Main St., Pomeroy, for youth 8 Trinity Church, Pomeroy. 7:45
through 12 years old. Open 3:30 a.m., Bethany Building. Service
to 5:30 . p.m. Free meal, fun, .open to anyonr:~
.
games, safe environment, and
For reservations caD Dianne
short lessons 'that teach about the Hawley, 992-2722 or Peggy Har. Bible,Jesus and how they relate to ris, 992-7569.

!•POMEROY . -

''•l

,I

.

.ALFRED - Orange Townshjp Trustees, regular . session,
'I'';'esday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Osie Folltod.
'

PI! W.,

81., Point
II,
30C-818-1331

'

It
!r

t,\'1

•.

nJESDAY

·•. MIDDLEPORT - A comIJiunity p12yer service will be held
Tbesday, 7 p.m. ~t the Middleport ·
~.fesbyterian Church. The service
is sponso_red by the Middleport
Ministerial
..
' Association.
.

.,

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
.

·:·

!!ian

•

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

,.

.

•( ' , 1

Inside a cabinet in our living room is a shelf
stacked with board games: Monopoly, Scrabble, Racko, Pictionary. We have played
Monopoly maybe once in two years. The others haven't seen much action, either. They' are
Cii!Ualties of the homeworiC wars. I can't quiie ·
tell who all the combatants are, but I knoW
my side is losing.
No one will dispute that today's 'elementary students are bringing home more . school ~ ·
work than · the' previous· generation's. One
stUdy fuund that grade-school students spent
85 minutes a week on homework in 1981; last
year they spent 134 minuies·- about 3~ minutes a night Monday through Tllursday. Time
' magazine recendy used this statistic to show
how overloaded today's children are.
Believe me, 33 minutes doesn't come close .
to telling the whole story.
· . MY gue~ iS the researchers didn't count the
· 3.0 minutes •spent finding the homework
pa~ket and sharpening four pencils down to
' ll)cacdy the right size. Or the 30 minutes spent
complail]ing about a) not understanding the
assignment, b) not having had nearly enough
· to eat for i snack, and c). not having the good
·' kind of eraser. Or the :30 minutes ·spent scourihg the garage for the shoe box, wire and
in'!$king tape for the environmental diorama.
' They cet'l:linly didn't count the hour and
30, minqt&lt;;s the parents spent Wl1rryiilg if they
should or shouldn't keep clo5e tabs on the

Chaptel: enclones

&lt;

... .
.

McKibbens
announce birth ·

·Carthage church
sets revival

G
R
'
eorge ·
Plagenz · '

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

his family members who live in another band's doctor - arid the sooner, the betstate. The man is extremely controlling, ter.
Do you have questions about se x, but
and last night, he SC!rearned at me to
"GET OFF THE PHONE" when I was no one to .talk to? Ann Landers' booklet,
talking to my sister. I have begged him to ·· "Sex and the Teenager; ' is franlc and to
the point. Send a self-addressed, long,
get help, but he llady refuses to do it.
I have known this man for 35 years, business-size envelope and a check or
lived with him for 20, and have been money order for S3.75 (this includes
married to him for 14. I now realize he postage and handling) to:Teens, c/o Ann
is not the same loving man· I married, · ~nders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago. Ill.
and the on!y sojution· for 1m. iu liYOrce. 606.11-0562. (In Canada, send $4.55.)J'o
Why isn't there a law that forces mentil- find out more about Ann unders and
ly ill ·people to get treatment when they read her past columns, visit the Creators
web
page
at
need it? This world would be a lot safer Syndicate
place, and the families would be gready www.creators.com.
•
. relieved. LONG-SUFFERING
WIFE
D~ WIFE: The "law" can mandate
treatment only if a penon is declared a
danger to himself or to society. If that
person is merely a nuisance to family
members, it is up to them to put that
person into treatment, but they cannot
Subscribe today.
force it.The condition you describe can
992-2156
be managed. with prope.r m~dication. I
urge you to suggest this to . your hus-

talks by Rhonda Dailey, vice pres- Peggy Harris, 992-7569 .
ident of nursing, and Bob Bowers, ·
VMH ex~tutive officer. ·
ThaM you notes from Dorothy
POMEROY -The U.S. Navy · Sayre aild Serenity• HoUSe' were
reek·band, "Electtic Brigade" will read at the meeting, and members
l'OMERQY - Jennifer and
perform for students at Meigs diStributed entry recipe forms for
Glen
McKibben . of Pomeroy
High School on March 22. ,
the national cookbook.
Electric Brigade; under the
A nomiqating ~onunlttee of announce.. the birth of a son,
direction of Chief Musician Bob Donna Byer, Carolyn Gru~cr and Austin Lewis, on Feb. 28 at O'BleStibbe, is the U. S. Naval Acade-. Carol McCullough was appointed ness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
my's premier Top 40 Band and and will present a slate of officers
. presents a versatile and ·dynamic at . the March 9 meeting. Vera
~wgram.
·
Crow and Rpse Sisson will be
The performances are used by hostesses for that meeting.
Ohio~s Navy to appeal to high
Attending were Jane Walton,
'
CARTHAGE
- Spring revival
s;,~ool students interested in fur- Clarice Krautter, Ann Rupe, Joan services will be · held at · the
t(ierlng their careers in music . by Corder/Velma Rue, Carol Adams, . Carthage Community Church,
:ii:qu'"'!ting them with what the Jane Brown, Donna Byer, Vera March 9-11, 7 p.m. each evening.
hmed Forces offers.
Crow, Carolyn · Grueser, Martha The church is located six miles
)ince debuting in 1979, the . McPhail, Rose Sisson, Margaret from Coolville. Sammy Anderson
seven-piece
ensemble
has · Stewart, and Eleanor Thomas.
of Middleport wiD be the speaker
remained on the cutting edge of
on March 9 and 10 with Steve
10jlay's popular music scene
Cremeans of Coolville to speak on
¢ljoosing approximately 30 selecMarch'11.
~qps each yeai: . fiom Billboard
There will be special music each
lll1!gaziqes "Hot 100", "R&amp;B and
evening. At the Matth 9 service, '
Dance" and "Modern Rock"
POMEROY -The traditional music will be by Randy Johns of
~)larts.
· Ash Wedne1day Lenien breakfast Long Bottom and Martha Minerd ·
and quiet hour will be held March ~d Josie Cremeans of Coolville.
8 at Trinity Church in the Bethany The March 10 service will feature
EducatiOnal Building. .
Jack Green, Earl Heft and Carl
The breakfast is open to anyone Pryor wiih Melanie Cutright on .
POMEROY ~ Preceptor Beta who w:l~ts to.share· the event with piano, and accordion music by 11- .'
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Trinity church members. It will year-old Andrew Prather of Park'so'n&gt;rity, FndloBed the three-year, begin at 7:45 a.m. in the Bethany ersburg. The March 11 service
.
.
operation ofthe building . on, Second Street in · music will be Heavenly Hqst o(
Marietta, and Calvin Ruble of
eniergency room at Veterans Pomeroy.
.
For more ,information or 'to CQolvil)e. There will be accordion
~~orial Hospital at its rec~rit
make reservations, residents · may playing each evening by Mary
meetmg.
·
· ' The endorsement followed call Dianne Hawley, 992-2722 or Ann Glideon of Coolville.
. '

. '·'i. '

'1 1

I·

Ann
Landers

.._ Rock Band
•-• J
fo visit Meigs

(Third of four parts)
job would be to help establish new brancH;~ ·
The success of the Billy Graham revival in
around the world. . .
·..
Los Angeles in 1949 was a surprise to every' '' In I 946, on a visit to Great Britain, Grah~m
b,ody. In Baltimore during May of that year,
tean1ed up with a 23-year-old singer nanlt~
G':"ham had . tro1,1ble filling the 2,800-seat
Cliff Barrows and his piano-playing wl(e;
Lyric Theater,.and Altoona, Pa., was a bust. For
Billy. Barrows is still with Graham.
. ·' ;
the firs~ .two weeks in Los Angeles in the fall,
The England tour was only moderatc:lY
the turnouts were good; but not great. Then;
successful, and the British press ignored BiHr..
for no discernible reason, the crowds began to
He was generally weD-liked, put his sermon'$
split the seams of the tent. The 6,000-seat
were considered thin.
"
capacity area had t\&gt; be enlarged to hold .
,In 1947, Graham was asked to becom~
NEA COLUMNIST· p'tesldent of a fundamentalist complex ~f
9;000. It still wasn't big enough for the final'
night's au&lt;ijence. .
!
.
scb9ols -, a·Bible school, theolog1c'a1 semi~
It was during this revival that newspaper
nary and a liberal arts college in Minneapolis.'
tycoon William Randolph Hearst gave his started in New York by a former dance band He acc.epted, but he left the management of
famous ·order to the editors of the .Hearst leader named Jack Wyrtzen, were now being the schools to others while he concentrated
papers across the country to "puff Graham." held in several U.S. cities.
on his evangelism.
.
the mines.
~
.
·
, From
that
moment
on,
Graham
was
frontThe
rallies
were
dc:signed
to
link
"clean
He·
continued
to
work
for
Youth
for
ChriJt,
.
Rathe.r than target Midwestern utilities, we suggest the EPA look
page news.
·excitement" with the Gospel message in order but he began to branch out and conduct
at the states complaining the most about polluted air.
Half a cent11ry later, he still. is .
to counteract the dislocation that was being . revivals of his own. llri 1949,he was invit~d by
Coal-fired p,lants "'"Y be responsible for part of their problem In 1944, only one year out of Wheaton felt by many youth in wartime America.
the Christ for Greater Los Angeles Commitit's not a scientifically proven fact. But what about industry in· their
College, the 25-year-old Graham was earning .
The rallies fe~tured syncopated hymn- . tee to cqnduct an autumn rev~val.
· ••
own back yards? How much of manufacturing, crowded urban cen- ·
S45 a week as minister of a Baptist church of singing, jazzy orchestral groups, singing stars
Originally sche'duled to last three weeK.,;
ters and increased traffic in the Northeast U.S. is behind poor air·· · 100 members in Western Springs, Ill. He also
and old-time Gospel.
the
Los 1\ngeles tent revival in the Canv~~
quality? .
·
conducted a Sunday night radio program at a
According to one of Graham's biographers; Cathedral at the corner ofWashington Boul~;~
If this is the case·, regulators should focus attention on those areas
Chicago station. A singer named George Bev- Youth for Christ leaders, including Graham, yard Am;l Hill Street went on for eight wee~~:
and allow Ohio.Valley utilities to continue on their useful course
erly Shea was the featured soloist.
"wore loud, hand-pai.nted ties and bright suits . · . The Los Angeles campaign is generallY,
which, by the way, is much cleaner today than it was, say, 10 years
Graham's radio ~ppearances were starring so that all the world might know Christianity considered to be the beginning of the Gr~~ .
ago.
.
to give him a reputation as an evangelist out- to be no dreary faith."
'ham crusades. '
Regulation is ·not always a bad thing and in some cases is defiside his own small parish. So when his friend,
When the various Youth for Christ organiThe term "crusade" was first used in 1950
nitely needed. ,But too much of it directed at certain businesses in
Rev. Torrey Johnson, organized a Chicagoland zations around the country voted to merge in Columbia, S.C.
certain parts of the country leaves us questioning EPA's judgment.
Youth for Christ Rally, he asked Graham to into Youth for Christ International, Graham
(George R. Plaget1z is a columt1ist for NewspilIs it fulfilling its mission to protect the environment, or wielding
be the first speaker. Youth for Christ rallies, was asked to .be its first field re resentative. His per E•terprise Association.)
. its power for the sake of being powerful?

.,

never feel any remorse for his actions.
She will live her life walking on
eggshells, trying to escape his wrath, hoping to please a man . who wiU never
appreciate her or treat her with respect.
She cannot save him, and will lose herself
tryin·g. Ann, teD her to get out now. WALKED IN THOSE SHOES IN
PALM SPRINGS, CAIJF.
ADVICE
DEAR PALM SPRINGS SHOES:
My mail supports what you and hunDEAR N.N N.P.: Do yourself and dreds of oth~ [s have; written. I hope she
Jim a big favor. Tell J¥m to GET HELP listens. Keep reading for one more: .
OR GET OUT: Keep reading for more
Dear Ann: I just read the letter in
that should strengthen your resolve:
· your column from "Trying to Save My
Dear Ann Landen: I was married to Marriage:• My situation is very similar.
one of those "ticking time bombs" for My husband, ·"Tom," has had several
almost seven years. As time went on, his surgeries in the . last five years, and is
mood swings became more. severe and physi&lt;:alJy fine, but mentaUy - I'm not
more frequent, and his temper more · so sure. He has fits of rage, and has
volatile. Eventually, illegal drug use accused me and other family members of
entered the picture, and his death threats drugging him. Although he has not actuagainst me began to sound serious. I can aUy hit me, he has· come'close. Last week,
tell you from experience that die woman he threw out all my beautiful plants and
who wrote co you will ·never get the my precious album of family pictures.
apology she is after, and her husband will Tom has cut off aU communication with

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

e're all for clean air, but a decision last week from the
,
federal Court of Appeals spells more difficulties for the
Ohio Valley's besieged utility industry.
The court approved a new rule for the
Rather than tar- Environmental Protectidn Agency to regget MidiVestern ulate the amount of smog-causing chemicals pr:oduced by coal-fired power plants
utilities, IVe sug- from drifting into neighboring states.
gest the EPA
· The rule will affect utilities from New
England
to Illinois, and the EPA will prolook at the states
with policing utilities in those states
complaining the ceed
that depend on those plants for the elecmost about pol- tricity they produce.
. A lawsuit and a temporary blocking
luted air.
order delayed the 1998 rule's implementa. tion until now. Utilities in Ohio and West Virginia relying on coal.burning plants will have to develop pollution reduction plans.
This decision can only create more headaches for utilities already
complying with state and federal regulations, and it gives the EPA.
too much power. .
We recall the furor that arose when the Clean Air Act prompted
the insta~ation .of coal-cleaning technology at the Gavin Plant. For
awhile in 1992-93, there was no assurance American Electric Power ·
would go .that route when the cost-effectiveness of sulfur-free west-'
ern coal seemed like an at.tractive option. ·
Through the efforts of many, AEP opted to install the technology at Gavin so jobs could be preserved at the Meigs Mines.
Having dealt with regulations handed down by dean air legislation, a question arises for these utilities: How much more can they
handle before 'finding alter'1atives to burning coal? Such alternatives .
may place them in compliance, but could lead to a loss ofjobs locally - a blow the area is already gearit:~g to a~orb when AEP closes

I

another Ann tvriter's letter

'

~ '

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ID Milillf ~ MIUf/N fttltH aM hlc,..tlil6fta Mil .. lfl.

.

~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-912·2156 • Fu: 912·2157

R. Shawn Lewle

.

.,,' .
..•
I'

'£sta6fis~tf Ill 1948

Managing EdHor •

.

IX!I!dilloi&amp;

or

�'

I

pJnlon

•

PageA4

_Th_e_D_ail..::..y_Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _....;:0::;

The Daily Sentinel

; Dear Ann Landen: I saw myself in
)lour column the other day. The woman
signed herself"Trying to Save My Marriage." Sbe laid her husband, 'Jim," oA:en
responded violently to minor disagreements, and sometim~. blew up at her
without provocation. She was always
~Icing on eggshells, trying to p.acifY
ftiln- exactly what I've been doing for

ChllrlesW.Oovey

PubiiiJher

DIMe Hill
' Conlrllller

Ctwtene Hoeflich

o....,., llaneger

~long.

';:).ast night, my "Jim" went on one of
-~ rampages while we were in the car.
H~ stepped on the gas, and began speeding on a wet road. He ground his teeth;
and his eyes were bulging out of his
head. I couldn't figure out what had set
him off: His rage lasted only a few minutes. He then apologized for overreacting.
The fact remains that during those
rages, he ·scares our dogs half to death,
b~aks things in the house, and acts like a
. maniac. !want this marriage to work, but
I can't do it alone. Any suggestions? NO NAME, NO . PLACE, NO
MORE PATIENCE

UUen to llr• .diuw .,. IHkMH. 1TH1 IAtHIU N 1m ,., J(J(J wcrnfr. AI lffNrr " ' •.t}«f .

•

~

/W IW'ip... ,.,.. ri1
k ,.MUW IAIIBI tltHU N IIIII ~ ..,,._ ..,.,..., la.a, ..., pn r: 'r
-"'":"· ft.- . .lcMI f.qrft.N iA 1M evl.""' Wlow . , . . CCNUinUU fi/1/N ~lo V.U.J hMiiJilar
~
Co. ., alilorMI ~. ,.,.,.n odlnwii•IIOIM.

OUR VIEW:

Court rnling creates new .
hurdles for utility industry

.....

W

.

PLAGENZ'S VIEW:

Graham made a·namefor himse!f·SO years ago

' .I ·

'

'; -~ I

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Ash Wednesday
· Mice slated

a

RYAN'S

BY THE AsiiOCIATED PRos
Today isTuesday,.March 7, the 67th day of2000.There are 299 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 7, 1850; in a three-hour speech to ihe U.S, Senate,
Daniel Webster endorsed the Compromise of I 850 as a means of preserving the Union.
On this date:
In 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in Lancaster, M;ISS. ,
In 1875, composer Maurice Ravel was-born in Cibourne, France.
In 1876, Alexander Graham BeD received a patent fur his telephone. .
In 1911, the United States sent 20,000 troops to the Mexican bor·
der as a precaution in the wake of the Mexican Revolution.
In 1926, the fir&lt;t successful trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversation took place, between New York and London.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered his troops to !llatth into the
. Rhineland, thereby breaking the Treaty ofVersailles and the Locarno
Pact.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. furces crossed the Rhine Ri11er ·;
at Remagen, Germany, using the damaged but still usable Ludendodf
Bridge.
In 1965, a march by civil rights demo115trators. was broken up in
Selma, Ala., by state troOpers anp a sheriff's posse.
··
In 1975, the Senate revised its filibuster rule, allowing 60 senators
to limit debate in most cases, instead of the previously reqUired twothirds of senators present.
·
In I 994, the Supreme Court ruled that parodies that poke fun at an
original work can be considered "fair ~" that doesn'~ require permission fiom the copyright holder.
.
· '
· , ..
Today's :Birthdays: Photographer Lord Snowdon is 70.J'\1 weather- ·
man Willard Scott is 66. Auto racerJulet Guthrie is 62.-Actor D!UJiel ·
J. Travanti is 60.Walt Disney Co. chairffian Mi~hael Eisner is 58. Rock
musician Chris White (The Zombies) is 57. Actor John Heard is 54.
Rock singer Peter Wolf is 54. Rock musician Matthew Fishe~ (Piocol
Harum) 'is 54. Singer Peggy March is 52:FootbaU Hall-of-Farner Fran-,
co. Harris is 50. Former football player Lynn SWanri is 48.Aftor Bryan , .
Cranston ("Malcolm in the Middle") is 44.Tennis playl:r I~ Lendl 'is
40..Singer-actress Taylor Dayne is 35. Rock musician . Randy Guss .
· (Toad the Wet Sprocket) is 33.Actress Rachel Weisz is 29.
·'

'

EW:

Counting the ·c~ualties of the homework wars

..: : hOspital levy .

BY Jo~ RYAN

. The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to
announce meetings and s~ial
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are,
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a.specific_number of days.

i

.. ·;

Evenings for most families of
• in the, 40s, we .abandoned rote learning 1in
school-age kids are a Roadrunner . favor of problem-solvi!\g, and homework
racefirom. after-school sports to. ·,, decreased: Then Sputnik took off and we
:1'
went in.to a panic about losing intellectual
homework to dinner to reading to r, ground to the Soviets, and the homework
bed. Gone are the hours when kids . increased again.
. .
could plot palace coups in the woodf.'' It subsided in the 1960s, .then ratcheted up
once more in 1983 when a governme'~
at the end of the street or find therif: report, called "A NatiQn . ai Risk," set oft
selves so ·bored·they'd submit to a \i alatrns that America\ schools were failing. · ·~·
gam~ of Parcheesi after dinner.
The rc:Search about homework, however,'ig
'
fairly clear. One well-regarded study found
progress, 1hould or shouldn't correct the that, for junior-higlt students, homework of
work, should .or shouldn't threaten the child . up to two hours a night improves achiever
with bodily harm if he.doesn't finish his mul- ment .. (But more than two hours has neglig;;: ·
tiplication tables now.
,e . ble or negative effects.) In high school, home~
Evenings for most families· of school-age w&lt;irk 'has the most positive effects; greaie~
lcids are a Roadrunner race from after-school amounts of .homework, translated to greater
sports to homework to dinner to reading' 10 : achievement.
· ·'
·
bed. Golle are the hours when kids could plot
aut the same University of Missouri studr
palace, coups in ilie Woods at the end ·of the . found that the correlati.o n between hom~:.'
street or find then1Selves so ~ored they'd sub- work and academic achievement in the cle;.;
mit to a game of Parcheesi after dinner. ( ..
mentary grades·is almost ietu. If anything, t~~
It's no sur~ris~ that the increase in ~orne- res.eaochers said, homework can turn you~W
work has comCided wtth two \)t~er ~~cu- children ofF from acade~cs.
.
. ,:
me11ted trends: Parents began working longer · Most parents wouldn t complam about lc;is\
hours because they were hap~ier at work.'
filft:lily tim~ . if homework were significantly
·
at home, and wine sales increased.
.;
"·
,.'
helpir!g. But enough alrea4y. Set our children
1 1
America h~ never figured out wh~t the , free..
. .
.
·
role ofhomewqrk shoUld be.Ai the besiljning ' .. Ooan.Ryan i5 d columnist for the Sa• Fr4ncisco,
Qf the ·20th century we piled on the work Chron,~k . Send comments to lrer in care ~f t~ii
unaer the theory that the mind ¥las lik~ any newspdper ' or send . her e-m4il
•I
muscle that needed repeti,tive exercis~ , 'l;'hen . joa~ryrms.fkate.colh.)
'
I'

:
..

•

•

.'111 .,

'

81., ....... ..,. Olllo
7401Ma111

.

'

100-

.,

'

t

•••
,
'

'

'

...

'

, POMEROY -·
Walk··'in
ilWnunization clinic, 1 to 7 p.m., .
M~igs County Health Depart-.
ment. Insurance, Medicaid inforilJ.tion and child's immunization
~cords to be provided at time of
~isit by parent or legal guardian.
Information
at 992-61i26.
,.. .

•I

,,

I

.

...

'

. POMEROY - Meigs County., Genealogical Society meeting
Thesday, 5 p.m . at the Meigs
. County Muset.~m.

•
••
WEDN.ESDAY

Dues are pay.able.

•••

..

I

'

•

•••

Quafit . !!urniture P{us
1ur,mture, Ca
42123 State t.

Financing Available

uppers £R ins, O:J{

(740} 667-7388 • 1-800-200-4005

90 Day Lay-Away

~s
OPS
0
INJUST2
110% SEMINAR GUARANTEE"'
HOURS

.

GALLIPOLI·S .

Plainandsiuijk,1be IKhnlqueupplled

•

Mon.-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9·6 • Sat. 9·4

SBIJJNAR~ .

••

•

I

.

~~:~
~~~~~
~f'l
i1use . . Frld
M
, · h 10th
PEN~ING. ~~ess . of y~ur past
,ecOl ~s\
8Y, . &amp;rc
l

expenence wtdt ttymg to qwt, other
p!ogJWIIS,or~yousrookedfor5or50

yeali, til.f*ogJ•!• is designed so~ can
stop Siillkinst mglit peuuanently, without
cravings;Witlioutwithdrawal or anxiety.
.
.Yes, tha~'s right. You can stop
smokmg. not Just cu~ down, but
smoking . I,Jy temlnar's en~.
Scmtn•r GurMW*l :J ,,
. With .the GOEN METHOD™ of
HYPNOStS, ·you enter a state of
wonderful physical and mental

the slightest effort; In o~ ~ent pending
. seminar bOth the phystolog.cal and th«:
. psyc.h?logifai addict!on are ~ by
nutnllOI!,' .h y,pnos•s, , prosramnung,
guided visual imagery, and other
powei:ful technologies. This is designed
so you never bave smoking as an fssue
Ia · life again. ·

\~~
\1-lQ!P-"
·

1·00
PM
- 9'30
PM
..
..
•

·H.QLID·AV
. .
1'\ I INN

577 State Route 7
j'ct

OH Rt V &amp; US

•

Alexander
Founder,
Author,
0527
C.Ht., C.Hy., .... n1v.
My pfltent pending . stop smoking
system ·is designed so you don 't gain
weight or · have withdrawals. Our
program is designed to 'work'. Come
down and end this habitife; lq:;:::."

.

..

- Warmly, -"''

Private clients have paid $225 each to
&gt;quit comfortably. Yilu can b«;nefit now from
this group semmar for only $49.•. Cash,
checks &amp;. credit cards accepted. Seminan
brought to you by Goen &amp; Asso&lt;aates.
This ..w.r dolll not traa ...
-

- Pomeroy
Mercba"ts meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Wednesday, Always and Forever.

.'•

today's youth.

POMEROY - "Fun for · POMEROY - Ash Wednes-.
· Jesus;, ~t .God's N.E.T., 106 W. · day breakfast' and . quiet hour,
Main St., Pomeroy, for youth 8 Trinity Church, Pomeroy. 7:45
through 12 years old. Open 3:30 a.m., Bethany Building. Service
to 5:30 . p.m. Free meal, fun, .open to anyonr:~
.
games, safe environment, and
For reservations caD Dianne
short lessons 'that teach about the Hawley, 992-2722 or Peggy Har. Bible,Jesus and how they relate to ris, 992-7569.

!•POMEROY . -

''•l

,I

.

.ALFRED - Orange Townshjp Trustees, regular . session,
'I'';'esday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Osie Folltod.
'

PI! W.,

81., Point
II,
30C-818-1331

'

It
!r

t,\'1

•.

nJESDAY

·•. MIDDLEPORT - A comIJiunity p12yer service will be held
Tbesday, 7 p.m. ~t the Middleport ·
~.fesbyterian Church. The service
is sponso_red by the Middleport
Ministerial
..
' Association.
.

.,

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
.

·:·

!!ian

•

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

,.

.

•( ' , 1

Inside a cabinet in our living room is a shelf
stacked with board games: Monopoly, Scrabble, Racko, Pictionary. We have played
Monopoly maybe once in two years. The others haven't seen much action, either. They' are
Cii!Ualties of the homeworiC wars. I can't quiie ·
tell who all the combatants are, but I knoW
my side is losing.
No one will dispute that today's 'elementary students are bringing home more . school ~ ·
work than · the' previous· generation's. One
stUdy fuund that grade-school students spent
85 minutes a week on homework in 1981; last
year they spent 134 minuies·- about 3~ minutes a night Monday through Tllursday. Time
' magazine recendy used this statistic to show
how overloaded today's children are.
Believe me, 33 minutes doesn't come close .
to telling the whole story.
· . MY gue~ iS the researchers didn't count the
· 3.0 minutes •spent finding the homework
pa~ket and sharpening four pencils down to
' ll)cacdy the right size. Or the 30 minutes spent
complail]ing about a) not understanding the
assignment, b) not having had nearly enough
· to eat for i snack, and c). not having the good
·' kind of eraser. Or the :30 minutes ·spent scourihg the garage for the shoe box, wire and
in'!$king tape for the environmental diorama.
' They cet'l:linly didn't count the hour and
30, minqt&lt;;s the parents spent Wl1rryiilg if they
should or shouldn't keep clo5e tabs on the

Chaptel: enclones

&lt;

... .
.

McKibbens
announce birth ·

·Carthage church
sets revival

G
R
'
eorge ·
Plagenz · '

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

his family members who live in another band's doctor - arid the sooner, the betstate. The man is extremely controlling, ter.
Do you have questions about se x, but
and last night, he SC!rearned at me to
"GET OFF THE PHONE" when I was no one to .talk to? Ann Landers' booklet,
talking to my sister. I have begged him to ·· "Sex and the Teenager; ' is franlc and to
the point. Send a self-addressed, long,
get help, but he llady refuses to do it.
I have known this man for 35 years, business-size envelope and a check or
lived with him for 20, and have been money order for S3.75 (this includes
married to him for 14. I now realize he postage and handling) to:Teens, c/o Ann
is not the same loving man· I married, · ~nders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago. Ill.
and the on!y sojution· for 1m. iu liYOrce. 606.11-0562. (In Canada, send $4.55.)J'o
Why isn't there a law that forces mentil- find out more about Ann unders and
ly ill ·people to get treatment when they read her past columns, visit the Creators
web
page
at
need it? This world would be a lot safer Syndicate
place, and the families would be gready www.creators.com.
•
. relieved. LONG-SUFFERING
WIFE
D~ WIFE: The "law" can mandate
treatment only if a penon is declared a
danger to himself or to society. If that
person is merely a nuisance to family
members, it is up to them to put that
person into treatment, but they cannot
Subscribe today.
force it.The condition you describe can
992-2156
be managed. with prope.r m~dication. I
urge you to suggest this to . your hus-

talks by Rhonda Dailey, vice pres- Peggy Harris, 992-7569 .
ident of nursing, and Bob Bowers, ·
VMH ex~tutive officer. ·
ThaM you notes from Dorothy
POMEROY -The U.S. Navy · Sayre aild Serenity• HoUSe' were
reek·band, "Electtic Brigade" will read at the meeting, and members
l'OMERQY - Jennifer and
perform for students at Meigs diStributed entry recipe forms for
Glen
McKibben . of Pomeroy
High School on March 22. ,
the national cookbook.
Electric Brigade; under the
A nomiqating ~onunlttee of announce.. the birth of a son,
direction of Chief Musician Bob Donna Byer, Carolyn Gru~cr and Austin Lewis, on Feb. 28 at O'BleStibbe, is the U. S. Naval Acade-. Carol McCullough was appointed ness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
my's premier Top 40 Band and and will present a slate of officers
. presents a versatile and ·dynamic at . the March 9 meeting. Vera
~wgram.
·
Crow and Rpse Sisson will be
The performances are used by hostesses for that meeting.
Ohio~s Navy to appeal to high
Attending were Jane Walton,
'
CARTHAGE
- Spring revival
s;,~ool students interested in fur- Clarice Krautter, Ann Rupe, Joan services will be · held at · the
t(ierlng their careers in music . by Corder/Velma Rue, Carol Adams, . Carthage Community Church,
:ii:qu'"'!ting them with what the Jane Brown, Donna Byer, Vera March 9-11, 7 p.m. each evening.
hmed Forces offers.
Crow, Carolyn · Grueser, Martha The church is located six miles
)ince debuting in 1979, the . McPhail, Rose Sisson, Margaret from Coolville. Sammy Anderson
seven-piece
ensemble
has · Stewart, and Eleanor Thomas.
of Middleport wiD be the speaker
remained on the cutting edge of
on March 9 and 10 with Steve
10jlay's popular music scene
Cremeans of Coolville to speak on
¢ljoosing approximately 30 selecMarch'11.
~qps each yeai: . fiom Billboard
There will be special music each
lll1!gaziqes "Hot 100", "R&amp;B and
evening. At the Matth 9 service, '
Dance" and "Modern Rock"
POMEROY -The traditional music will be by Randy Johns of
~)larts.
· Ash Wedne1day Lenien breakfast Long Bottom and Martha Minerd ·
and quiet hour will be held March ~d Josie Cremeans of Coolville.
8 at Trinity Church in the Bethany The March 10 service will feature
EducatiOnal Building. .
Jack Green, Earl Heft and Carl
The breakfast is open to anyone Pryor wiih Melanie Cutright on .
POMEROY ~ Preceptor Beta who w:l~ts to.share· the event with piano, and accordion music by 11- .'
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Trinity church members. It will year-old Andrew Prather of Park'so'n&gt;rity, FndloBed the three-year, begin at 7:45 a.m. in the Bethany ersburg. The March 11 service
.
.
operation ofthe building . on, Second Street in · music will be Heavenly Hqst o(
Marietta, and Calvin Ruble of
eniergency room at Veterans Pomeroy.
.
For more ,information or 'to CQolvil)e. There will be accordion
~~orial Hospital at its rec~rit
make reservations, residents · may playing each evening by Mary
meetmg.
·
· ' The endorsement followed call Dianne Hawley, 992-2722 or Ann Glideon of Coolville.
. '

. '·'i. '

'1 1

I·

Ann
Landers

.._ Rock Band
•-• J
fo visit Meigs

(Third of four parts)
job would be to help establish new brancH;~ ·
The success of the Billy Graham revival in
around the world. . .
·..
Los Angeles in 1949 was a surprise to every' '' In I 946, on a visit to Great Britain, Grah~m
b,ody. In Baltimore during May of that year,
tean1ed up with a 23-year-old singer nanlt~
G':"ham had . tro1,1ble filling the 2,800-seat
Cliff Barrows and his piano-playing wl(e;
Lyric Theater,.and Altoona, Pa., was a bust. For
Billy. Barrows is still with Graham.
. ·' ;
the firs~ .two weeks in Los Angeles in the fall,
The England tour was only moderatc:lY
the turnouts were good; but not great. Then;
successful, and the British press ignored BiHr..
for no discernible reason, the crowds began to
He was generally weD-liked, put his sermon'$
split the seams of the tent. The 6,000-seat
were considered thin.
"
capacity area had t\&gt; be enlarged to hold .
,In 1947, Graham was asked to becom~
NEA COLUMNIST· p'tesldent of a fundamentalist complex ~f
9;000. It still wasn't big enough for the final'
night's au&lt;ijence. .
!
.
scb9ols -, a·Bible school, theolog1c'a1 semi~
It was during this revival that newspaper
nary and a liberal arts college in Minneapolis.'
tycoon William Randolph Hearst gave his started in New York by a former dance band He acc.epted, but he left the management of
famous ·order to the editors of the .Hearst leader named Jack Wyrtzen, were now being the schools to others while he concentrated
papers across the country to "puff Graham." held in several U.S. cities.
on his evangelism.
.
the mines.
~
.
·
, From
that
moment
on,
Graham
was
frontThe
rallies
were
dc:signed
to
link
"clean
He·
continued
to
work
for
Youth
for
ChriJt,
.
Rathe.r than target Midwestern utilities, we suggest the EPA look
page news.
·excitement" with the Gospel message in order but he began to branch out and conduct
at the states complaining the most about polluted air.
Half a cent11ry later, he still. is .
to counteract the dislocation that was being . revivals of his own. llri 1949,he was invit~d by
Coal-fired p,lants "'"Y be responsible for part of their problem In 1944, only one year out of Wheaton felt by many youth in wartime America.
the Christ for Greater Los Angeles Commitit's not a scientifically proven fact. But what about industry in· their
College, the 25-year-old Graham was earning .
The rallies fe~tured syncopated hymn- . tee to cqnduct an autumn rev~val.
· ••
own back yards? How much of manufacturing, crowded urban cen- ·
S45 a week as minister of a Baptist church of singing, jazzy orchestral groups, singing stars
Originally sche'duled to last three weeK.,;
ters and increased traffic in the Northeast U.S. is behind poor air·· · 100 members in Western Springs, Ill. He also
and old-time Gospel.
the
Los 1\ngeles tent revival in the Canv~~
quality? .
·
conducted a Sunday night radio program at a
According to one of Graham's biographers; Cathedral at the corner ofWashington Boul~;~
If this is the case·, regulators should focus attention on those areas
Chicago station. A singer named George Bev- Youth for Christ leaders, including Graham, yard Am;l Hill Street went on for eight wee~~:
and allow Ohio.Valley utilities to continue on their useful course
erly Shea was the featured soloist.
"wore loud, hand-pai.nted ties and bright suits . · . The Los Angeles campaign is generallY,
which, by the way, is much cleaner today than it was, say, 10 years
Graham's radio ~ppearances were starring so that all the world might know Christianity considered to be the beginning of the Gr~~ .
ago.
.
to give him a reputation as an evangelist out- to be no dreary faith."
'ham crusades. '
Regulation is ·not always a bad thing and in some cases is defiside his own small parish. So when his friend,
When the various Youth for Christ organiThe term "crusade" was first used in 1950
nitely needed. ,But too much of it directed at certain businesses in
Rev. Torrey Johnson, organized a Chicagoland zations around the country voted to merge in Columbia, S.C.
certain parts of the country leaves us questioning EPA's judgment.
Youth for Christ Rally, he asked Graham to into Youth for Christ International, Graham
(George R. Plaget1z is a columt1ist for NewspilIs it fulfilling its mission to protect the environment, or wielding
be the first speaker. Youth for Christ rallies, was asked to .be its first field re resentative. His per E•terprise Association.)
. its power for the sake of being powerful?

.,

never feel any remorse for his actions.
She will live her life walking on
eggshells, trying to escape his wrath, hoping to please a man . who wiU never
appreciate her or treat her with respect.
She cannot save him, and will lose herself
tryin·g. Ann, teD her to get out now. WALKED IN THOSE SHOES IN
PALM SPRINGS, CAIJF.
ADVICE
DEAR PALM SPRINGS SHOES:
My mail supports what you and hunDEAR N.N N.P.: Do yourself and dreds of oth~ [s have; written. I hope she
Jim a big favor. Tell J¥m to GET HELP listens. Keep reading for one more: .
OR GET OUT: Keep reading for more
Dear Ann: I just read the letter in
that should strengthen your resolve:
· your column from "Trying to Save My
Dear Ann Landen: I was married to Marriage:• My situation is very similar.
one of those "ticking time bombs" for My husband, ·"Tom," has had several
almost seven years. As time went on, his surgeries in the . last five years, and is
mood swings became more. severe and physi&lt;:alJy fine, but mentaUy - I'm not
more frequent, and his temper more · so sure. He has fits of rage, and has
volatile. Eventually, illegal drug use accused me and other family members of
entered the picture, and his death threats drugging him. Although he has not actuagainst me began to sound serious. I can aUy hit me, he has· come'close. Last week,
tell you from experience that die woman he threw out all my beautiful plants and
who wrote co you will ·never get the my precious album of family pictures.
apology she is after, and her husband will Tom has cut off aU communication with

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

e're all for clean air, but a decision last week from the
,
federal Court of Appeals spells more difficulties for the
Ohio Valley's besieged utility industry.
The court approved a new rule for the
Rather than tar- Environmental Protectidn Agency to regget MidiVestern ulate the amount of smog-causing chemicals pr:oduced by coal-fired power plants
utilities, IVe sug- from drifting into neighboring states.
gest the EPA
· The rule will affect utilities from New
England
to Illinois, and the EPA will prolook at the states
with policing utilities in those states
complaining the ceed
that depend on those plants for the elecmost about pol- tricity they produce.
. A lawsuit and a temporary blocking
luted air.
order delayed the 1998 rule's implementa. tion until now. Utilities in Ohio and West Virginia relying on coal.burning plants will have to develop pollution reduction plans.
This decision can only create more headaches for utilities already
complying with state and federal regulations, and it gives the EPA.
too much power. .
We recall the furor that arose when the Clean Air Act prompted
the insta~ation .of coal-cleaning technology at the Gavin Plant. For
awhile in 1992-93, there was no assurance American Electric Power ·
would go .that route when the cost-effectiveness of sulfur-free west-'
ern coal seemed like an at.tractive option. ·
Through the efforts of many, AEP opted to install the technology at Gavin so jobs could be preserved at the Meigs Mines.
Having dealt with regulations handed down by dean air legislation, a question arises for these utilities: How much more can they
handle before 'finding alter'1atives to burning coal? Such alternatives .
may place them in compliance, but could lead to a loss ofjobs locally - a blow the area is already gearit:~g to a~orb when AEP closes

I

another Ann tvriter's letter

'

~ '

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ID Milillf ~ MIUf/N fttltH aM hlc,..tlil6fta Mil .. lfl.

.

~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-912·2156 • Fu: 912·2157

R. Shawn Lewle

.

.,,' .
..•
I'

'£sta6fis~tf Ill 1948

Managing EdHor •

.

IX!I!dilloi&amp;

or

�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Gas .,..-.us • stll soaring
(AP) James McKenna isn't too worried that gas prices could go as
high as $1.80 per gallon this sunm1er.
That might sound odd coming fi:om the top tourism official in Lake
Placid, N.Y., a vacation spot that even he calls a "rubber-tire destination."
Yet McKenna estimates that tourists driving up froni New York City
would pay about $8 more in gas each \vay should prices increase. In
mday's booming economy, he said, that's still a bargain.
"You can't even get a glass of wine for eight bucks," he said.
The Energy Department on Monday predicted that gasobne prices,
already averaging about S1.50 for a gallon for unleaded, would spike at
$1 .75 to $1.80 this sununer because production isn't keeping pace with
demand.
.
The tiWng couldn't be worse. The period between Memorial Day
and Labor Day is typically the busiest driving se~son of the year, with an
estimated 270 million people hitting the road for vacation, according to
the American Automobile Association.

Music. nostalgia and far-flung family
NEW YORK (AP) - It was as rock and ro"u shoidd be, as rock and
t'Oll by definition must be: an evening of t1Jongrelmusic.
Motown, folk, jazz, rockabilly, gospel, rap, even ragtime - all claimed
bc·rtlJS both overt and sub~e at the Rock and Roll Hall offh mc inductions Monday night: And when Ray Charles dubbt:d it the "Rhythm
and Blues Hall of Fame,'' you could argue that it wasn't a n~stakc at all.
. "You can 't really call it one thing.'R ock and roll ' is too slim for what's
p:oi11g on tonight," Paul McCartney said as he hmtored James 'IJylor; ofH.'

of 14 musicians and groups tapped for the hall's 15th :1\lllllal inductions,
a paean to memories and changing tim&lt;'s. . .
· ·
.
The hall is about genealogy more than anything else - isolating a
d iaspora of sounds and inspirations and innova t~ons, tra.c ing them to

their sources, the!&gt; stitching them together into a feel-good tapestry of
the age.
·
It keeps track of a far-flung, sometimes rebellious f.1nril y of diflerer!r
hues and persuasions and prejudices -

and brings it'\ geneliltions ·

tot,&gt;ether.

'· ·

NEWYOR:,K (AP) - Pr6zac, perhaps the most· widely known prescription antidepressant of all time, is losing some of its lift.
Demand has declined as newer drugs promise greater effectiveness,
fewer side effects and the ability to treat additional ailments ..
In January, fot the first time in years, doctors wrote more new prescriptions for a competing drug, Zoloft. While Prozac remained slightly
ahead in total prescriptions, the statistics illustrate its peak is past.
"Prozac has had its day, or more accurately, had its decade," said Christine Hollidge, an analyst with Dat:amonitor in London.
Introduced in 1988, Prozac quickly became a metaphor for society's
obsession for quick fixes to problems. The pills not only helped tl1e
&lt;lcpressed, b4t became known for simply making people feel good.
They also helped ease the stigma surrounding mental illness. proving
to many that depression is a biological problem, not one caused by a
weak character or poor parenting
.
"It changed my whole life," said Elizabeth Wurtzel, 32, author of
"Prozac Nation,'' which .described her stnrggle with dep,ression and
experie1,1ce with Prozac and other drugs - and exposed the collective
bad mood of Generation X' ers.
.
·

.

Trimble moves on in D-IV, Page 82
MAC coaching carousel, Page B2

Despite promises, Congress' budget work lap.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Disputes among
Republicans have slowed Congre&gt;S' budget
work, despite promises by GOP leaders that
lawmakers would complete the task early this
election year so they could return home for reelection campaigns.
House and Senate leaders still want legislators to complete by April IS a budget for fiscal
2001 , which begins Oct. 1. But a full month
after President
Clinton introduced his own
'
$1.84 trillion proposal for next year, neither
chamber's budget committee has produced a
spending plan - increasing the chance for yet
another October spending battle with Clinton,
. this one just weeks before Election Day.
. "It's time (or them to ante up; kick in," Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., said
Monday.
.
The slow pace on the budget tracks Congress' leisurely start this year, in which recesses
have been frequent and lawmakers have
seemed distracted by the two parties' presidential pdmaries.

.

The two budget committees might write
initial spending plans as e:uly as this M:ek. The
budget is a tax and spending blueprint for
future, binding bills and does not require Clinton's signature.

But fint, House and Senate leaden will have
to resolve disputes between conservatives, who
want to hold overall spending for many programs to this year's level, and other Republicans, who say more is needed to bolster
.
defense, education and other areas.
The fight over spending has symbolic
impomnce for conservatives eager to sf~
that the GOP remains fiscally austere in this era
of budget surpluses .
But it has other implications as MOll. The
more money Congress spends now the smaller
projected federal surpluses will be, and .smaller
surpluses would leave less room for the tax cuts
many . Republicans want - including Texas
Gov. George W Bush, a leading GOP presiden-.
rial hopeful. ,
. When it ·ls'finally written, the House's bud-

Page B1

get is likdy to propose a five-year we cut 9f
about S200 billion, about double Clinton's p~
posal and half what Bush wants. I~ also will se~
about what the president proposed for educa; ·
tion, defense and' biomedical research, ir/·
Republican aides speaking on condition ?(
anonymity.
•:
' The Senate's budget will be similar but '1$ ·
likely t" offer a slightly smaller taX cut than th~
••...
'
H ouses.
The focus of the internal GOP fight is di.F
cretionary spending, the one-third of the bu\t.=get that Congre&gt;S and the president apportiq~
every year. It covers all federal spending, froni
troops' uniforms to cancer research, with
exception of Sodal Security, interest on the:
national debt and other payments the gave~~
.,
. all
ment rna kes automatlc y.
~...,
Conservatives would like to hold disc"*
tionary spending to about $586 billion, rough.~
ly what is being spent in the fiscal year that rur\1through Sept. 30. That is about $35 billio11 los}
than Cli~ton proposed.
.. .. ~

'IUesdlly. ~rdl 7, 2010

.,

TuffiDAY'S

}fiGHLIGHTS
Prep Basketbal

t¥

DlvliiOn II Dtllrtct Tournament
II l1ie Convo, Alfiii1il~
F~'aiiChedule

~lain v. Porlaroouth, 6:15
Hillsboro v. Sharipan, 8:15

, DlviiiOn Ill Dlllrtct'Tournement
It TIM Convo,.Aihina
Slturdey'a I'Multa

Chesapeake 64, Valley 47
Wheelersburg 68. Westfall 45
Eastern Brown 74, Oak Hill 59
Belpre 54, Huntil\gton 53

~

.
' .
..

Nutrients ·like those in breast milk appear to make-baby smarte~j- .

, Slturdoly'a schedui•

Chesapeake v. Wheelersburg, 6:15
Eastern Brown v. Belpre, 8:15

-...

WASHINGTON (AP) - . The
mental · develop!Hent of babies
improws significantly when ihfant
formul a is enri ched with two

essetJtial fatty acids that are found
n1other's milk, a study says.
Researchers at the Retina
Foundation of the So'uthwest in
Dallas said Monday that intellectual capacity increased by. about
· seven po,ints among 18-mont11olds who had · been fed the
enriched formula for four
months.
The study appears in .the
March issue of the joun1al Developmental Medicine and Child
Neurology.
Experts said the study is important because it is the first to compare formula supplemented with
the fatty acids with unsupplemcnted formula.
Eileen E. Birch, first author of
the study, said the research shows
that adding the fatty acids can
closely mimic the effect of mother's milk on brain deVelopment.
, The study adds · to growing
international support for adding
to commercia1 baby formula two
fatty acids, docos.hexaenoic
acid
.
111

.

''Tile test i~ not a perfect predictor of school age.intel- scored significantly higher th~ij:
control group, the study do~·
ligence. It does provide a good profile of mental devel- the
not prove that there will be a sir:ri~
,
opment at the early stage."
ilar IQ difference when the chi!~
dren are older,
:
en..., Birch
"The test is .not a perfect p;,;.:,
· (DHA) and arachidonic acid test used to gauge physical and dictor of school age intelligence:· ·
(AA), that are in breast milk.
mental progress of infants. A score said llirch. "It does provide a~
More than 60 countries have of 100 is considered the national profile of mental developmenC: ~_c;
approved supplementing formula average for mental development.
the early stage."
;~
with DHA and AA. Officials at
· BiJ:):h said infants receiving the
Children in the study will b&lt;::
the Food and Drug Administra- double supplement, both DHA tested again at age 4 and 9 to
tion said the issue is under review and AA, scored 105.6 on the . determine if the enhanced early
and new regulations for U.S. for- mental development index of the brain development translates inte:
mula makers may be issued with- Bayley Scales. She said this is vir- higher IQs ~mong school-age:
·
·
tually identi.cal to the I 06 score of children, she said.
;•
in eight months.
In 'the study, Birch and her col- a' separate group of babies, in ·
Dr. Karen K. Winer of the( ·
leagues divided 56 newborns into another study, who were breast National Institute of Child Health:
and Human Developp1ent said;
three groups and fed them differ- fed only.
ent formula for four months.
For the control group of the research was wj,ll-designedA control group received a infants, who received commercial study,'' but that the number &lt;Jf
commercial formula with no formula, the average score was 98. children is too small to draw fina)
addition. One test gro\ljl got for- This is within the statistical range answers about supplementing
·
;.
mula supplemented ·with DHA,. of normal, but seven points below bah}' formula.
while the third group got both the average for the test group,
"It is showing a ·trend, but w~.
DHA and AA. At the end of four
For the group that received would need to do further studies. .
months, all three groups began formula supplemented only with to draw. a definitive conclusion,'! .
•
"
receiving only commercial for- DHA, said Birch, the sco~;e was she said.
&gt;)mla.
.
. about I 02; a statistically insignifiBirch agreed . that more
At age ·18 months, the children cant difference from normal.
research is needed before the FD~;
were tested on the Bayley Sl::ileS'
·aiit:h said that altllougll die . approves DHA and AA supple-•
of Infant Development, a standard · infants on supplemented formula · ments for baby formula.
· '~

Dlvtalon IV Dlllrtct Tournament
It The Convo, A1hena
Monday'• schedule

Eastern 63, New Bostdn 46
Trimble 59, Leesburg Fairfield 54
Today'a schedule

· Green v. Beaver Eastern, 6·:15
Sou)hem·v. Whneoak, 8:00

Sltunlay'a schedule

Eastern v. Trimble, Noon
Today's winners, 2:00

Bearcats back
at No.1
NEW YORK
(AP)
Cincinnati moved back to the
t.op of the AP college basketball
poll, the Bearcats' third stint at
No. 1 this season.
·
Cincinnati (28-2) .received 66
first-place votes and 1,743
points from the national media
panel. Stanford, No. 1 the last
two weeks, received two firstplace votes and 1,634 points.
Duke moved up one to third,
while Ohio State, ·which

"a

••

UConnwomen
still No.1

•

NEW YORK (AP) - Connecticut (28-1) remained an
overwhelming No. t choice in
The AP women's basketball poll,
receiving' 40 first-place votes and
1,072 points.
Te.nnessee was second with the
other three fint-place votes and
1, 028 points. Georgia dropped
to fourth, while Louisiana.Tech
climbed one to third.
. Notre Dame moved up one to
fifth, followed by Texas Tech,
Penn State, Rutgers, UC .Santa
Barbara and Iowa State. .
Duke was 11th, followed by
Mississippi State, Purdue, · Old
Domini\}n, LSU,Auburn, Boston
. ~allege, Oklahoma, Virginia and
North Carolina Stale. •
.
· '· Tulane, Arizona, George Washingron, Oregnn and Michigan
completed the Top 25.
Marquette
and
Stanford
dropped out.

..

•

U766 LoU1n 7hrdor
• 16-hp V-1lvin engine
• 48-inch mower deck
• Automatic.transmission

SAVE$3QQ

during Deere Season 2000, we're offering 4.9% financing for 12 months ,,

on a full line ofJohn Deere tractors. So visit your participating John Deere dealer

Thomas signs
. with Miami .

~day: Offer expires July 5, 2000...and, no, yoci can't borrow the car.

Jac~n

MIAMI (AP) - Former Bills
r.unning back Thurman Thomas
agreed to a three-year, $3.6 million deal with the Dolphins.
Thomas had some of his best
days . against Miami, rushing for '
t ,620 yards in 20 regular-season
games and 371' yards in three
winning playoff games for Buffalo.
Thomas, a 12-year veteran,
ranks ninth in NFl .history with
Jl, 938 yards rushing.

WAKEFIELD GARAGE

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.·
Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital.
· Gallipolis, OH 45614
.
740-446-2412

/
I

US# 50 West, P.O. Box#. 639 ·
· ·Athens, OH 45701'
740~593-3815

I

j'

•

•orr.rero. JUI, 5, 2000. "-to llpprOI«1 Ctd on Jatln 0.. CNift ~Pt.n, for coniUmllrUit~. t.inpll: &amp;n.:l~ 1 Plfthiltol S3,299.00wllll .$0di:JiiiJn ,.,.....a Otii'ICIH\.,.,...,. ........ d t213.CJJb 12 .....11:'UI»!· ..... ~ . . . . ~ .......... , _ rnonltlfr. . . .. Oltllr .....,,_ ....
lllfmlll'll)'be ..........
'
I
.
'
.
'
. .I
.
'
.
lncfudlrC~fot()OjiMillldii.,.., Millbleatp.~........

•

1,!

.
)

.

''

.,•

••

~· :~

~-

.....:

can ride

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
ATHENS- Steadily creeping away·' from a 13-11 first
period·lead, Eastern turned a
sleeper into a blowout with a
17-for-19 shooting stint from ·
the foul line to claim its fint. ever district win.
The Eagles (20-2) .63-46 triumph over New Boston Tuesday night in
the first round of the Division IV district tournament.
Eastern also tied the school
' record for most wins, a mark
set by the 1965 club.
·
The Eagles now advance to
the district finals to ·face TVC
rival Trimble (13-9), which
defeated Leesburg Fairfield
59-54 in the nightcap.
Eagles coach Howie Caldwell said, '"The first year as
head coach I saw what I
· believed to be a very profound
quote. Coach Drummer at
Meigs said that any time you
can win 20 in a year it is something very special. This year
has been very special. Not too
many teams can say ihat they
have won 20 games. We've
reached that landmark.
"I thought we came out
focused, but did not play
exceptionally well," Caldwell
stated. '"We did what we had to
do though. Our foul shooting
was outstanding and we
rebounded the ball well. I was
really disappointed that when
they (New Boston) went man· TOUGH SHOT- Eastern's Joe Brown lays in· two of his game-high 20 points during the Eagles' 63-46

Pl••e -l!wtua. ..... 82

·district semi.flnal win over New Boston at the Convo. (Andrew Carter photo)

·

R d.·.H ks
t H d • MAC · · •
~l~th~i~~i:i~~~~~g~~n~~:a:~,~,- .~~-~ i -. '-r.~Y\!.:.... upse . er 1n
··sem1s

Temple ' dropped omi· to sixth
and Iowa State moved from No. .
lO to seventh. ·
Tennessee moved up three
· spots to eighth, while ·Arizona '
fell from third to ninth. LSU
·moved up two tQ No. 10.
Florida led the Second Ten,
followed \ly Syracuse, Texas,
Tulsa, Oklahoma, Kentucky,
Oklahoma State, Indiana, St.
John's and Maryland.
Connecticut, Purdue, Miami,
. Kansas and. lllinois completed
the Top 25.
Auburn, 19th last week,
dropped out.

SAVE$J0Q

GT235 LauJn ond Gorden 'lhzctor
• 18-hp V-Twin engine
, ·48-inch Convertible mower deck
• Automatic transmission.

ips ·New Boston

.

received the other two first-

455 Lawn and Gunia~ 'lluctor
• 22-hp diesel engine
• 54-inch mower deck
• Automatic transmission

SAVE S3QQ*

Eastern

Court says
Martin

BY Seem Wou:E

'

In77AWS Lawn 'Dactor
• 17hp, V-1l.vin engine
• 48-inch convertible mower deck.• Ail-wheel steering
• Automatic tranSmission ·

~ht now,

The Daily Sentinel

Tuucllly, Merch 7, ~;
•'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

.,'.,'
"'

·C LEVELAND '(AP) _: Jason Stewart
Mter draining his 1Oth trey - and third tourname1,1t records.
has a -bachelor's degree in physics and engi- on three straight possessions- to give the
MarshaU fotward Tamar Slay was held to
neering. But on Monday night, he mas- RedHawks a 52-35 lead with 9:00 remain- 12 points while being guarded mostly by
terea in three-pointers. ,
·
ing, . Stewart, a rangy left-bander who •. Stewart
· · · St~wart made a conference record 10 transferred from Furman, look,ed amazed
Travis Young had 15 points and Corthf!ie-pointen to send Miami of Ohio to by his own marksmanship and laughed .nelius Jackson 12 for the Thundering
anq1her uP,et and into the Mid-.(\merican when he got back down the floor to play Herd.
Conference Tournament championship defense.
·
Miami OJ'ened the second half by makwirlr a 69-63 semifinal· win Monday night
The next time he touched the ball, ing it first seven shots, including three 3s by
over Marshall.
\ Miami's fans began screaming, 'Shoot, Stewart and one by Grunkemeyer to open
Stewart made 10-of-12 threes and scored~· at Stewart, who was about 30 f~et a 43-27 lead. Slay's basket with 10:46 left
a c~er-high 32 points to lead the No. 9 from the basket. But he had already done brought Man hall within 10, but Stewart,
seeded RedHawks (15-14), who will play enough .damage to No. 5. seed Marshall who made seven threes m a loss to MarBall State in Wednesday night's title game. t21-9).
.
.
shall last month, drained three in a row
Ball State beat Ohio 70-67 in the &lt;;~ther
Miami coach .Charlie Coles probably over the next I :24 to put it out of reach.
semifinal.
wouldn't have minded if Stewart had
Miami, which shocked No. 1 Bowling
He •drilled threes from every angle on thrown another one up anyway.
.
Green in the quai:terfinals, will be making
the floor, keying a 33-5 ru'n that bridged
Jason Grunkemeyer added 17 points for its fourth straight MAC title game appearthe first and second half for the Red- the RedHawks, who made 14-of-20 3- ance. Last year's trip was expected with AllHawk$-;· who early in the game couldn't pointers but jusi 6-of-26 elsewhere. Stew- American Wally Szczerbiak leading the
buy a basket.
art's 10 threes were also school and MAC Red Hawks.

'

.

.

Redmen ....
sweep ·:.
'

'

.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Deciding in favor of Casey Martin, an appeals court created
precedent in nine Western states
by ruling that the PGA Tour is
covered by federal disabiliry I,aw
and must p,rovide carts to· disabled golfers.
The ruling Monday by the 9t~
U.S. Circuit Court of ~pp~al.s
entitles Martin, who suffers from
a painful leg condition, to continue using a cart during PGA
Tour~sa~ctioned events.
·
It was the first appellare level
ruling in the ' country that takes
up the issue of whether walking
is a fundamental part of the PGA
Tour's competition. It is binding
within the area covered by the .
9th Circuit, but not elsewhere.
The court's ruling upheld · a
magistrate's 1998 ruling that
allowed Martin to become the
first golfer to use a cart in PGA
Tour events. The court rejected .
the tour's argument that requiring competitors to . walk was an
essential part of professional golf.
"The central competition iii
shot-making would be unaffected by Martin's accommodation,"
Judge William Canby said in the
3-0. ruling.
"All that the cart does i! permit Martin access to a type cif'
. competition in which he otherwise could not ·engage because
of his disability. That is ·precisely
the purpose· of the ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)."
He also cited a federal magistrate's findings that Martin has to
walk to about 25 percent of each
course, which is not accessible by
cart, and that he suffers more
fatigue during a cart-assisted
round than his competitors
endure while walking.
Roy L. Reardon, a lawyer
. for Martin, called the ruling
"a great result for the millions
cif other disabled in the United . States who are simply
looking, 'through the Americans with Disabilities Act, for
an opportunity to just partie. ipate."
The PGA Tour said it was
studying the ruling, imd
declined further comment.
Martin has Klippel- Trenaunay-Weber Syndrome, a con"
clition . h'e has had sinc·e birth,
which restricts circulation in
the lower part of his right leg.
Amputation is a possibility
one day.

. .

State's Clemens·bums Bobcals:,

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ball
State came to the Mid-American Tournament with a singleminded goal - an NCAA bid. .
Duane Clemens got the CardiRIO GRANDE - The
nals a step closer to one.
home field was definitely an
Clemens scored a career-high
advantage Monday for the
35 points and Patrick Jackson
Universi!)l of Rio Grande
hit a late three-pointer as the
·
baseball ·~JJad. .
shot clock expired, sending Ball
The Redmen swept West
State into the MAC tourney
Virginia 'fech in their home
championship with a 70-67
opener fqr 2000 at Stanley
semifinal win over Ohio MonEvans Fiefd. Rio Grande pre~y night.
vailed 10-7 and 13-2, with the
Clemens got some help from
second contest shortened to
Jackson and reserve Rob Robfive innings ,due to the run
bins, who made three huge free
rule.
throws in the final25.6 seconds.
Keenan Perry went 3-for-7
Ball State, the No. 2 seed, will
with two ltQme runs and five
play No.9 seed Miami of Ohio ·
~I for t~e · Redmen in the
with the winner earning the
· twinbill. Pe ry had a three: run .
league's automatic NCM tourshot in game 011-e and also
nament bid. •
homered in ~e two..
·
Jackson's 22-footer had just
· Jason Kin~,!Was 3-for-4 with
left his hand when · the buzzer
two home runs and four RBI
s&lt;:&gt;l!nded,
but it swished through
'
with 1:02 remaining to give the
in ~e IYfO; Cory MaYnard- .
was 2-for-~ Vl(ith rwo home
Cardinals (21- 8) a five-point
lead. ·
runs. ·
~
· ·
Jonathan Emn (3-il) picked ·
Ohio (20-13)· cut it to 68-67
up the win iq g;une one, with
with 6.2 seconds left ol) Steve
Joe Thonlas earnin:g the win in
Esterhmp's basket. But Robthe second. game. Jamie l.am- ·
bins, who had attempted se~n
bert notched. his second save
'free throws all season, made two
of 2ooo in die first game. ·
and Bobcats forward Shaun
URG play~ a~ ~rshall
.GOING BAiiUNE - Ohio's Sanjay Adell (30) takes the ball by Ball Stonerook dribbled the ball of
Wednesday.
.· State's Theron Smith during Monday's MAC semifinals. (AP)
his foot and out of bounds with

W.Va. Tech

.

il·, '

.

,.'._',..

..

.

1.5 seconds to play.
Clemens had one of his worst
games of the reglilar season
against Ohio, but the senior
guard .more than made up for it
by slashing to the hole for some
spectacular layups.
'
However, his missed free
throws down the stretcb
allowed Ohio ·to stay close, and
the Cardinals hung on despite
shooting 20-of-35 from the
'
line.
Stonerook led th~ Bobcau
with 21 . points and . Hi
rebounds. Sanjay Adell added 18
for Ohio, which shot j'l's~ 34
percent from the floor but
grabbed 47 rebounds, including
19 on the offensive end.
Clemens, who didn't score in
the first half of Ball State's quar-·
terfinal win against Toledo, had
19 in the first 20 minutes as (he
Cardinals took a 31-27 lead at·
the break.
The Bobcats were lucky to be
that clos~. Ohio shot just 27
p'ercent from the floor and.
scrapped their way back in it by
concroUing the boards and mak•
ing Ball State work on every
offensive; possession,
· Ball State's Lonnie Jones suf,
fered an asthma attack in the
first half and required medical
assistance.

.;

•••

�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Gas .,..-.us • stll soaring
(AP) James McKenna isn't too worried that gas prices could go as
high as $1.80 per gallon this sunm1er.
That might sound odd coming fi:om the top tourism official in Lake
Placid, N.Y., a vacation spot that even he calls a "rubber-tire destination."
Yet McKenna estimates that tourists driving up froni New York City
would pay about $8 more in gas each \vay should prices increase. In
mday's booming economy, he said, that's still a bargain.
"You can't even get a glass of wine for eight bucks," he said.
The Energy Department on Monday predicted that gasobne prices,
already averaging about S1.50 for a gallon for unleaded, would spike at
$1 .75 to $1.80 this sununer because production isn't keeping pace with
demand.
.
The tiWng couldn't be worse. The period between Memorial Day
and Labor Day is typically the busiest driving se~son of the year, with an
estimated 270 million people hitting the road for vacation, according to
the American Automobile Association.

Music. nostalgia and far-flung family
NEW YORK (AP) - It was as rock and ro"u shoidd be, as rock and
t'Oll by definition must be: an evening of t1Jongrelmusic.
Motown, folk, jazz, rockabilly, gospel, rap, even ragtime - all claimed
bc·rtlJS both overt and sub~e at the Rock and Roll Hall offh mc inductions Monday night: And when Ray Charles dubbt:d it the "Rhythm
and Blues Hall of Fame,'' you could argue that it wasn't a n~stakc at all.
. "You can 't really call it one thing.'R ock and roll ' is too slim for what's
p:oi11g on tonight," Paul McCartney said as he hmtored James 'IJylor; ofH.'

of 14 musicians and groups tapped for the hall's 15th :1\lllllal inductions,
a paean to memories and changing tim&lt;'s. . .
· ·
.
The hall is about genealogy more than anything else - isolating a
d iaspora of sounds and inspirations and innova t~ons, tra.c ing them to

their sources, the!&gt; stitching them together into a feel-good tapestry of
the age.
·
It keeps track of a far-flung, sometimes rebellious f.1nril y of diflerer!r
hues and persuasions and prejudices -

and brings it'\ geneliltions ·

tot,&gt;ether.

'· ·

NEWYOR:,K (AP) - Pr6zac, perhaps the most· widely known prescription antidepressant of all time, is losing some of its lift.
Demand has declined as newer drugs promise greater effectiveness,
fewer side effects and the ability to treat additional ailments ..
In January, fot the first time in years, doctors wrote more new prescriptions for a competing drug, Zoloft. While Prozac remained slightly
ahead in total prescriptions, the statistics illustrate its peak is past.
"Prozac has had its day, or more accurately, had its decade," said Christine Hollidge, an analyst with Dat:amonitor in London.
Introduced in 1988, Prozac quickly became a metaphor for society's
obsession for quick fixes to problems. The pills not only helped tl1e
&lt;lcpressed, b4t became known for simply making people feel good.
They also helped ease the stigma surrounding mental illness. proving
to many that depression is a biological problem, not one caused by a
weak character or poor parenting
.
"It changed my whole life," said Elizabeth Wurtzel, 32, author of
"Prozac Nation,'' which .described her stnrggle with dep,ression and
experie1,1ce with Prozac and other drugs - and exposed the collective
bad mood of Generation X' ers.
.
·

.

Trimble moves on in D-IV, Page 82
MAC coaching carousel, Page B2

Despite promises, Congress' budget work lap.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Disputes among
Republicans have slowed Congre&gt;S' budget
work, despite promises by GOP leaders that
lawmakers would complete the task early this
election year so they could return home for reelection campaigns.
House and Senate leaders still want legislators to complete by April IS a budget for fiscal
2001 , which begins Oct. 1. But a full month
after President
Clinton introduced his own
'
$1.84 trillion proposal for next year, neither
chamber's budget committee has produced a
spending plan - increasing the chance for yet
another October spending battle with Clinton,
. this one just weeks before Election Day.
. "It's time (or them to ante up; kick in," Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., said
Monday.
.
The slow pace on the budget tracks Congress' leisurely start this year, in which recesses
have been frequent and lawmakers have
seemed distracted by the two parties' presidential pdmaries.

.

The two budget committees might write
initial spending plans as e:uly as this M:ek. The
budget is a tax and spending blueprint for
future, binding bills and does not require Clinton's signature.

But fint, House and Senate leaden will have
to resolve disputes between conservatives, who
want to hold overall spending for many programs to this year's level, and other Republicans, who say more is needed to bolster
.
defense, education and other areas.
The fight over spending has symbolic
impomnce for conservatives eager to sf~
that the GOP remains fiscally austere in this era
of budget surpluses .
But it has other implications as MOll. The
more money Congress spends now the smaller
projected federal surpluses will be, and .smaller
surpluses would leave less room for the tax cuts
many . Republicans want - including Texas
Gov. George W Bush, a leading GOP presiden-.
rial hopeful. ,
. When it ·ls'finally written, the House's bud-

Page B1

get is likdy to propose a five-year we cut 9f
about S200 billion, about double Clinton's p~
posal and half what Bush wants. I~ also will se~
about what the president proposed for educa; ·
tion, defense and' biomedical research, ir/·
Republican aides speaking on condition ?(
anonymity.
•:
' The Senate's budget will be similar but '1$ ·
likely t" offer a slightly smaller taX cut than th~
••...
'
H ouses.
The focus of the internal GOP fight is di.F
cretionary spending, the one-third of the bu\t.=get that Congre&gt;S and the president apportiq~
every year. It covers all federal spending, froni
troops' uniforms to cancer research, with
exception of Sodal Security, interest on the:
national debt and other payments the gave~~
.,
. all
ment rna kes automatlc y.
~...,
Conservatives would like to hold disc"*
tionary spending to about $586 billion, rough.~
ly what is being spent in the fiscal year that rur\1through Sept. 30. That is about $35 billio11 los}
than Cli~ton proposed.
.. .. ~

'IUesdlly. ~rdl 7, 2010

.,

TuffiDAY'S

}fiGHLIGHTS
Prep Basketbal

t¥

DlvliiOn II Dtllrtct Tournament
II l1ie Convo, Alfiii1il~
F~'aiiChedule

~lain v. Porlaroouth, 6:15
Hillsboro v. Sharipan, 8:15

, DlviiiOn Ill Dlllrtct'Tournement
It TIM Convo,.Aihina
Slturdey'a I'Multa

Chesapeake 64, Valley 47
Wheelersburg 68. Westfall 45
Eastern Brown 74, Oak Hill 59
Belpre 54, Huntil\gton 53

~

.
' .
..

Nutrients ·like those in breast milk appear to make-baby smarte~j- .

, Slturdoly'a schedui•

Chesapeake v. Wheelersburg, 6:15
Eastern Brown v. Belpre, 8:15

-...

WASHINGTON (AP) - . The
mental · develop!Hent of babies
improws significantly when ihfant
formul a is enri ched with two

essetJtial fatty acids that are found
n1other's milk, a study says.
Researchers at the Retina
Foundation of the So'uthwest in
Dallas said Monday that intellectual capacity increased by. about
· seven po,ints among 18-mont11olds who had · been fed the
enriched formula for four
months.
The study appears in .the
March issue of the joun1al Developmental Medicine and Child
Neurology.
Experts said the study is important because it is the first to compare formula supplemented with
the fatty acids with unsupplemcnted formula.
Eileen E. Birch, first author of
the study, said the research shows
that adding the fatty acids can
closely mimic the effect of mother's milk on brain deVelopment.
, The study adds · to growing
international support for adding
to commercia1 baby formula two
fatty acids, docos.hexaenoic
acid
.
111

.

''Tile test i~ not a perfect predictor of school age.intel- scored significantly higher th~ij:
control group, the study do~·
ligence. It does provide a good profile of mental devel- the
not prove that there will be a sir:ri~
,
opment at the early stage."
ilar IQ difference when the chi!~
dren are older,
:
en..., Birch
"The test is .not a perfect p;,;.:,
· (DHA) and arachidonic acid test used to gauge physical and dictor of school age intelligence:· ·
(AA), that are in breast milk.
mental progress of infants. A score said llirch. "It does provide a~
More than 60 countries have of 100 is considered the national profile of mental developmenC: ~_c;
approved supplementing formula average for mental development.
the early stage."
;~
with DHA and AA. Officials at
· BiJ:):h said infants receiving the
Children in the study will b&lt;::
the Food and Drug Administra- double supplement, both DHA tested again at age 4 and 9 to
tion said the issue is under review and AA, scored 105.6 on the . determine if the enhanced early
and new regulations for U.S. for- mental development index of the brain development translates inte:
mula makers may be issued with- Bayley Scales. She said this is vir- higher IQs ~mong school-age:
·
·
tually identi.cal to the I 06 score of children, she said.
;•
in eight months.
In 'the study, Birch and her col- a' separate group of babies, in ·
Dr. Karen K. Winer of the( ·
leagues divided 56 newborns into another study, who were breast National Institute of Child Health:
and Human Developp1ent said;
three groups and fed them differ- fed only.
ent formula for four months.
For the control group of the research was wj,ll-designedA control group received a infants, who received commercial study,'' but that the number &lt;Jf
commercial formula with no formula, the average score was 98. children is too small to draw fina)
addition. One test gro\ljl got for- This is within the statistical range answers about supplementing
·
;.
mula supplemented ·with DHA,. of normal, but seven points below bah}' formula.
while the third group got both the average for the test group,
"It is showing a ·trend, but w~.
DHA and AA. At the end of four
For the group that received would need to do further studies. .
months, all three groups began formula supplemented only with to draw. a definitive conclusion,'! .
•
"
receiving only commercial for- DHA, said Birch, the sco~;e was she said.
&gt;)mla.
.
. about I 02; a statistically insignifiBirch agreed . that more
At age ·18 months, the children cant difference from normal.
research is needed before the FD~;
were tested on the Bayley Sl::ileS'
·aiit:h said that altllougll die . approves DHA and AA supple-•
of Infant Development, a standard · infants on supplemented formula · ments for baby formula.
· '~

Dlvtalon IV Dlllrtct Tournament
It The Convo, A1hena
Monday'• schedule

Eastern 63, New Bostdn 46
Trimble 59, Leesburg Fairfield 54
Today'a schedule

· Green v. Beaver Eastern, 6·:15
Sou)hem·v. Whneoak, 8:00

Sltunlay'a schedule

Eastern v. Trimble, Noon
Today's winners, 2:00

Bearcats back
at No.1
NEW YORK
(AP)
Cincinnati moved back to the
t.op of the AP college basketball
poll, the Bearcats' third stint at
No. 1 this season.
·
Cincinnati (28-2) .received 66
first-place votes and 1,743
points from the national media
panel. Stanford, No. 1 the last
two weeks, received two firstplace votes and 1,634 points.
Duke moved up one to third,
while Ohio State, ·which

"a

••

UConnwomen
still No.1

•

NEW YORK (AP) - Connecticut (28-1) remained an
overwhelming No. t choice in
The AP women's basketball poll,
receiving' 40 first-place votes and
1,072 points.
Te.nnessee was second with the
other three fint-place votes and
1, 028 points. Georgia dropped
to fourth, while Louisiana.Tech
climbed one to third.
. Notre Dame moved up one to
fifth, followed by Texas Tech,
Penn State, Rutgers, UC .Santa
Barbara and Iowa State. .
Duke was 11th, followed by
Mississippi State, Purdue, · Old
Domini\}n, LSU,Auburn, Boston
. ~allege, Oklahoma, Virginia and
North Carolina Stale. •
.
· '· Tulane, Arizona, George Washingron, Oregnn and Michigan
completed the Top 25.
Marquette
and
Stanford
dropped out.

..

•

U766 LoU1n 7hrdor
• 16-hp V-1lvin engine
• 48-inch mower deck
• Automatic.transmission

SAVE$3QQ

during Deere Season 2000, we're offering 4.9% financing for 12 months ,,

on a full line ofJohn Deere tractors. So visit your participating John Deere dealer

Thomas signs
. with Miami .

~day: Offer expires July 5, 2000...and, no, yoci can't borrow the car.

Jac~n

MIAMI (AP) - Former Bills
r.unning back Thurman Thomas
agreed to a three-year, $3.6 million deal with the Dolphins.
Thomas had some of his best
days . against Miami, rushing for '
t ,620 yards in 20 regular-season
games and 371' yards in three
winning playoff games for Buffalo.
Thomas, a 12-year veteran,
ranks ninth in NFl .history with
Jl, 938 yards rushing.

WAKEFIELD GARAGE

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.·
Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital.
· Gallipolis, OH 45614
.
740-446-2412

/
I

US# 50 West, P.O. Box#. 639 ·
· ·Athens, OH 45701'
740~593-3815

I

j'

•

•orr.rero. JUI, 5, 2000. "-to llpprOI«1 Ctd on Jatln 0.. CNift ~Pt.n, for coniUmllrUit~. t.inpll: &amp;n.:l~ 1 Plfthiltol S3,299.00wllll .$0di:JiiiJn ,.,.....a Otii'ICIH\.,.,...,. ........ d t213.CJJb 12 .....11:'UI»!· ..... ~ . . . . ~ .......... , _ rnonltlfr. . . .. Oltllr .....,,_ ....
lllfmlll'll)'be ..........
'
I
.
'
.
'
. .I
.
'
.
lncfudlrC~fot()OjiMillldii.,.., Millbleatp.~........

•

1,!

.
)

.

''

.,•

••

~· :~

~-

.....:

can ride

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
ATHENS- Steadily creeping away·' from a 13-11 first
period·lead, Eastern turned a
sleeper into a blowout with a
17-for-19 shooting stint from ·
the foul line to claim its fint. ever district win.
The Eagles (20-2) .63-46 triumph over New Boston Tuesday night in
the first round of the Division IV district tournament.
Eastern also tied the school
' record for most wins, a mark
set by the 1965 club.
·
The Eagles now advance to
the district finals to ·face TVC
rival Trimble (13-9), which
defeated Leesburg Fairfield
59-54 in the nightcap.
Eagles coach Howie Caldwell said, '"The first year as
head coach I saw what I
· believed to be a very profound
quote. Coach Drummer at
Meigs said that any time you
can win 20 in a year it is something very special. This year
has been very special. Not too
many teams can say ihat they
have won 20 games. We've
reached that landmark.
"I thought we came out
focused, but did not play
exceptionally well," Caldwell
stated. '"We did what we had to
do though. Our foul shooting
was outstanding and we
rebounded the ball well. I was
really disappointed that when
they (New Boston) went man· TOUGH SHOT- Eastern's Joe Brown lays in· two of his game-high 20 points during the Eagles' 63-46

Pl••e -l!wtua. ..... 82

·district semi.flnal win over New Boston at the Convo. (Andrew Carter photo)

·

R d.·.H ks
t H d • MAC · · •
~l~th~i~~i:i~~~~~g~~n~~:a:~,~,- .~~-~ i -. '-r.~Y\!.:.... upse . er 1n
··sem1s

Temple ' dropped omi· to sixth
and Iowa State moved from No. .
lO to seventh. ·
Tennessee moved up three
· spots to eighth, while ·Arizona '
fell from third to ninth. LSU
·moved up two tQ No. 10.
Florida led the Second Ten,
followed \ly Syracuse, Texas,
Tulsa, Oklahoma, Kentucky,
Oklahoma State, Indiana, St.
John's and Maryland.
Connecticut, Purdue, Miami,
. Kansas and. lllinois completed
the Top 25.
Auburn, 19th last week,
dropped out.

SAVE$J0Q

GT235 LauJn ond Gorden 'lhzctor
• 18-hp V-Twin engine
, ·48-inch Convertible mower deck
• Automatic transmission.

ips ·New Boston

.

received the other two first-

455 Lawn and Gunia~ 'lluctor
• 22-hp diesel engine
• 54-inch mower deck
• Automatic transmission

SAVE S3QQ*

Eastern

Court says
Martin

BY Seem Wou:E

'

In77AWS Lawn 'Dactor
• 17hp, V-1l.vin engine
• 48-inch convertible mower deck.• Ail-wheel steering
• Automatic tranSmission ·

~ht now,

The Daily Sentinel

Tuucllly, Merch 7, ~;
•'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

.,'.,'
"'

·C LEVELAND '(AP) _: Jason Stewart
Mter draining his 1Oth trey - and third tourname1,1t records.
has a -bachelor's degree in physics and engi- on three straight possessions- to give the
MarshaU fotward Tamar Slay was held to
neering. But on Monday night, he mas- RedHawks a 52-35 lead with 9:00 remain- 12 points while being guarded mostly by
terea in three-pointers. ,
·
ing, . Stewart, a rangy left-bander who •. Stewart
· · · St~wart made a conference record 10 transferred from Furman, look,ed amazed
Travis Young had 15 points and Corthf!ie-pointen to send Miami of Ohio to by his own marksmanship and laughed .nelius Jackson 12 for the Thundering
anq1her uP,et and into the Mid-.(\merican when he got back down the floor to play Herd.
Conference Tournament championship defense.
·
Miami OJ'ened the second half by makwirlr a 69-63 semifinal· win Monday night
The next time he touched the ball, ing it first seven shots, including three 3s by
over Marshall.
\ Miami's fans began screaming, 'Shoot, Stewart and one by Grunkemeyer to open
Stewart made 10-of-12 threes and scored~· at Stewart, who was about 30 f~et a 43-27 lead. Slay's basket with 10:46 left
a c~er-high 32 points to lead the No. 9 from the basket. But he had already done brought Man hall within 10, but Stewart,
seeded RedHawks (15-14), who will play enough .damage to No. 5. seed Marshall who made seven threes m a loss to MarBall State in Wednesday night's title game. t21-9).
.
.
shall last month, drained three in a row
Ball State beat Ohio 70-67 in the &lt;;~ther
Miami coach .Charlie Coles probably over the next I :24 to put it out of reach.
semifinal.
wouldn't have minded if Stewart had
Miami, which shocked No. 1 Bowling
He •drilled threes from every angle on thrown another one up anyway.
.
Green in the quai:terfinals, will be making
the floor, keying a 33-5 ru'n that bridged
Jason Grunkemeyer added 17 points for its fourth straight MAC title game appearthe first and second half for the Red- the RedHawks, who made 14-of-20 3- ance. Last year's trip was expected with AllHawk$-;· who early in the game couldn't pointers but jusi 6-of-26 elsewhere. Stew- American Wally Szczerbiak leading the
buy a basket.
art's 10 threes were also school and MAC Red Hawks.

'

.

.

Redmen ....
sweep ·:.
'

'

.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Deciding in favor of Casey Martin, an appeals court created
precedent in nine Western states
by ruling that the PGA Tour is
covered by federal disabiliry I,aw
and must p,rovide carts to· disabled golfers.
The ruling Monday by the 9t~
U.S. Circuit Court of ~pp~al.s
entitles Martin, who suffers from
a painful leg condition, to continue using a cart during PGA
Tour~sa~ctioned events.
·
It was the first appellare level
ruling in the ' country that takes
up the issue of whether walking
is a fundamental part of the PGA
Tour's competition. It is binding
within the area covered by the .
9th Circuit, but not elsewhere.
The court's ruling upheld · a
magistrate's 1998 ruling that
allowed Martin to become the
first golfer to use a cart in PGA
Tour events. The court rejected .
the tour's argument that requiring competitors to . walk was an
essential part of professional golf.
"The central competition iii
shot-making would be unaffected by Martin's accommodation,"
Judge William Canby said in the
3-0. ruling.
"All that the cart does i! permit Martin access to a type cif'
. competition in which he otherwise could not ·engage because
of his disability. That is ·precisely
the purpose· of the ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)."
He also cited a federal magistrate's findings that Martin has to
walk to about 25 percent of each
course, which is not accessible by
cart, and that he suffers more
fatigue during a cart-assisted
round than his competitors
endure while walking.
Roy L. Reardon, a lawyer
. for Martin, called the ruling
"a great result for the millions
cif other disabled in the United . States who are simply
looking, 'through the Americans with Disabilities Act, for
an opportunity to just partie. ipate."
The PGA Tour said it was
studying the ruling, imd
declined further comment.
Martin has Klippel- Trenaunay-Weber Syndrome, a con"
clition . h'e has had sinc·e birth,
which restricts circulation in
the lower part of his right leg.
Amputation is a possibility
one day.

. .

State's Clemens·bums Bobcals:,

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ball
State came to the Mid-American Tournament with a singleminded goal - an NCAA bid. .
Duane Clemens got the CardiRIO GRANDE - The
nals a step closer to one.
home field was definitely an
Clemens scored a career-high
advantage Monday for the
35 points and Patrick Jackson
Universi!)l of Rio Grande
hit a late three-pointer as the
·
baseball ·~JJad. .
shot clock expired, sending Ball
The Redmen swept West
State into the MAC tourney
Virginia 'fech in their home
championship with a 70-67
opener fqr 2000 at Stanley
semifinal win over Ohio MonEvans Fiefd. Rio Grande pre~y night.
vailed 10-7 and 13-2, with the
Clemens got some help from
second contest shortened to
Jackson and reserve Rob Robfive innings ,due to the run
bins, who made three huge free
rule.
throws in the final25.6 seconds.
Keenan Perry went 3-for-7
Ball State, the No. 2 seed, will
with two ltQme runs and five
play No.9 seed Miami of Ohio ·
~I for t~e · Redmen in the
with the winner earning the
· twinbill. Pe ry had a three: run .
league's automatic NCM tourshot in game 011-e and also
nament bid. •
homered in ~e two..
·
Jackson's 22-footer had just
· Jason Kin~,!Was 3-for-4 with
left his hand when · the buzzer
two home runs and four RBI
s&lt;:&gt;l!nded,
but it swished through
'
with 1:02 remaining to give the
in ~e IYfO; Cory MaYnard- .
was 2-for-~ Vl(ith rwo home
Cardinals (21- 8) a five-point
lead. ·
runs. ·
~
· ·
Jonathan Emn (3-il) picked ·
Ohio (20-13)· cut it to 68-67
up the win iq g;une one, with
with 6.2 seconds left ol) Steve
Joe Thonlas earnin:g the win in
Esterhmp's basket. But Robthe second. game. Jamie l.am- ·
bins, who had attempted se~n
bert notched. his second save
'free throws all season, made two
of 2ooo in die first game. ·
and Bobcats forward Shaun
URG play~ a~ ~rshall
.GOING BAiiUNE - Ohio's Sanjay Adell (30) takes the ball by Ball Stonerook dribbled the ball of
Wednesday.
.· State's Theron Smith during Monday's MAC semifinals. (AP)
his foot and out of bounds with

W.Va. Tech

.

il·, '

.

,.'._',..

..

.

1.5 seconds to play.
Clemens had one of his worst
games of the reglilar season
against Ohio, but the senior
guard .more than made up for it
by slashing to the hole for some
spectacular layups.
'
However, his missed free
throws down the stretcb
allowed Ohio ·to stay close, and
the Cardinals hung on despite
shooting 20-of-35 from the
'
line.
Stonerook led th~ Bobcau
with 21 . points and . Hi
rebounds. Sanjay Adell added 18
for Ohio, which shot j'l's~ 34
percent from the floor but
grabbed 47 rebounds, including
19 on the offensive end.
Clemens, who didn't score in
the first half of Ball State's quar-·
terfinal win against Toledo, had
19 in the first 20 minutes as (he
Cardinals took a 31-27 lead at·
the break.
The Bobcats were lucky to be
that clos~. Ohio shot just 27
p'ercent from the floor and.
scrapped their way back in it by
concroUing the boards and mak•
ing Ball State work on every
offensive; possession,
· Ball State's Lonnie Jones suf,
fered an asthma attack in the
first half and required medical
assistance.

.;

•••

�I

I

II 2 • The DaHy Sentinel

,,

PorMroy,

Public Notice

•

BY Soo 11 WOIJIE

SENTJNa. CORRESPONDENT
ATHENS -Trimble Tomcats defeated Leesburg
Fairfield 59-54 Monday mght to advance to the distnct finals Saturday afternoon agamst Eastern. The
two teams split dunng regular sea.~on
Tnmble (13-9), the number SIX seed m the tournament draw, has put together a four- game wmrung
streak, including a wm that marked one of Eastern's
only two losses.
The Tomcats were led by Trent Patton and Bobby
Trace who turned m 19 and I S...pomt perfor!'l"nces, respecnvely. Trace paced Tnmble With 16
points in the first half, and when Leesburg sought to
contaln the red-hot guard, Trent Patton produced a
break-out second half.
Rolland Chalfant had a good game With 12
points. Jesse Richmond added e1ght and had a team
high seven rebounds.
: Justin Bennington had the Lions' first e1ght pmnts,

man-to-man that we turned
the ball over too m.:~ny llmes"
Eastern was led by JUmor
southpaw Joe Brown, who razzle
dazzled the New Boston defense
to the tune of 20 points. Brown
nUde several of his own buckets
on sheer deternunallon, but also
benefited from some great passmg
off the Eagle fast break Brown
himself made some great pawng
plays With three assists.
Josh Will had a great rught from
the floor With a 6-for-8 effort,
including one three-pointer, 15
pomts and eleven rebounds to
score a double-double. Will also
:)lad five ass1sts. Matt Simpson
agam d1d a great JOb runrung the
Eastern offense, notchmg 11
:J&gt;Omts
Matt Busell added seven, Chad
Nelson four, Garrett Karr four
and Enc Srmth two
Leesburg was led by Chris
McGraw WJth 17 pomts and 12
rebounds, whlie TJ. Caldwell
-added 10 and Jeremy Monk had
SIX pomts
Eastern took a 5-0 lead to start
the game on a Brown baseline
JUmper and an ensumg Brown
dnve and free throw. Jeremy
B1shop hit a three pomter, then
Josh Will drove home a follow-up
JUmper for a 7-3 tally. Buhop hit
his second consecutiVe threepomter for a 7-6 score.
B1shop notched a two pomter,
then never scored the remainder
of the game McGraw canned a
two to g~ve New Boston 1ts first

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

but ended the rught With oply 12 pomts Jerrod
Kiesling added rune and Jarrod Haines eight
Tnmble led by as much as seven pomts early, but
Leesburg cut 1t back to 19- 15 at the quarter buzzer.
The game see-sawed back and forth w1th Leesburg
taking leads of28-27 and 32- 31 before Bobby Trace
canned a long two for a 33-32 Tnmble lead Patton
nailed a three at the buzzer to g~ve the Tomcats a
36-32 halftime lead
•
Tnmble went uP18=3'"6"""
' m::o11he second half and
crmsed until the later stages of the game Leesburg
cut the deficit to three pmnts on several occas10ns,
but Trimble put the game away at the foul line
Trunble hit 22- for-41 from the field overall, hit 5of-12 threes, and was 10-for-13 at the line w1th 22
rebounds, 12 awsts, eleven turnovers and four steals.
Leesburg hit 22-for-58 from the field overall,
mcluding 3-of-14 from three-pomt range, and was
7 -of-13 at the hne With 32 rebounds

lead, then Brown scored a dnvmg
lay-up otf a Sunpson ~st New
Boston's Zak Howard sank a trey
to g~ve the T1gers an 11-9 lead
S1mpson and Chad Nelson
posted quiCk buckets m01de the
one-nunute mark to restore an
Eastern lead at 13-11
Eastern
commmed
some
uncharactensnc turnovers early
m the se€ond frame and fell
behind 15-13. However, after a
llmeout, the Eagles went on a 100 run to take a 28-17lead.
"The key to the game came
when we went on this 8-0 run
JUSt before the half," wd Caldwell. "That established momentum and allowed us to numtam
an e1ght to 12 pomt lead from
there on out. We forced them to
foul and put us at the line, and
thats one thing we do extremely"
Until this spurt both teams
were content to lay back m the1r
zones With both showmg a couple vananons of 2-3 and 1-3-1
Eastern momentarily went manto-nun m the sllnt, then after
New Boston called bmeout to
adJUSt to the defense the Eagles
fell back mto theu zone
Eastern led at the half, 28-19.
The second half was never closer
than a rune pomt game. Eastern
led 43-31 after three penods
Coach Caldwell concluded,
"This was a spec1al Win because 1t
was number twenty and put us m
the Dutnct finals. They always say
that the first game of the year, the
first secllonal wm, and the first
distnct games are the toughest to
Win. We have JUmped that hurdle
and can now look forward to Saturday."
Eastern hit 22-of-43 overall

from the field, and was 2-for- 7
from three-pomt range The
Eagles cleared 34 rebounds (Will
11, Brown 6)
Eastern had 12 ass1sts (Will 5,
Brown 3), IS turnovers and seven
steals
New Boston hit 18-of-54 overall from the field, but was JUSt 3of-19 from three-pomt range.
The T1gers hit 7 -of-11 foul shots.
New Boston had 13 turnovers,
four assuts and mne steals
Eastern now advances to the
Distrtct final Saturday at noon.
T1ckets will be sale at the h1gh
school through Fnday durmg
school hours
Dhllalon IV Dlllrlct Toumamant
Ill Athena

Eaat11m 13, New
Bolllon 40
Now Boston
11 8 12 15 • 46
13
15 15 20 • 83
Ets1om
1
1
- - i:lll.
.. :1:1&amp;
l!llal:
fl 1!11.
J....,. Bishop
o 1 210 o.o e

1,.,,

MtkeTaytor

CIYis Lewis
TJ caldwell
M1ka Pierce

1·1

01
5-17

O.Q ~

0~

0·2
0-4
0.0

0.0

rode; lfleMe North 411-1/2
....,_ Wett 12 rode and
2·1/2 lnchH; 111ence WHt 3
rode to the pliCa of
baglnnln1
Excepting
~ffotn 1 parcel of land
5I fMt In width North and
fOlloWing~·
1 - CHEVY ASTRO VAN
South - - the North and
Vln 110NDII15ZXJB111112 of thiiiiiOtlt dllcllbld raal
-·
I-MAZDA
Baing tho aamt r111
Vln IJM1~151210
eetata conveylld by Jennla
L. lluny to Albert Romine
and Dora Romine lly dlld
datlld Baptambltr 2, 11111,
t 1W2eCEK14NOG111303fl
and ~In Vol. 120 Ill
1 - CHEVY BLAZER
Paga 301 of thl RICDidt of
,_...
Dtldt
of Malga County,
8BXFOt54ttl
1
VI
~
' ; , of the 11111 .,. Ohio, Albert Romine Jatar

County of llhlp, and Illite
of Ohio, In leetiOn No. a.
Town No. I and Range No.
15 of Ohio Company:•
Purc"-e, In the Vlll"'ll of
o.-, bounded end
dHcrllled •• folloWI: llllng
a troct of l8nd flfty·alx (51)
fHt In width North and
Soutllaci'OIItha Not1h end
of the following daocrlbld
rill: BIJIInnlnll 40 IMI E"t
and Iouth t-3/4 degrHI
Elll fiYI (S) rodl from the
Soulheut of Lot No.
I II dllcrlllld In the pllll of
llartlnoburg (now Dtxtor);
thanca South 8-3/4 d"'lrHI
!alii 11 rode; thence North

~ Homa NaUonel Benk con¥1~::.'/n!'~Y ~=:!.: ~!i~4111:~~~e~'ort~•::,.1~

raaarwathe ""hi 10 rl(oct I.N•~v••ml)ar 2, 11140, and
-~~In "ol 154111 P-•
any or 111 bldl,,.
or to l'lmOVI l'fll
of lhllllcordl Of Dted1
any unit from 1111 aale at olllalga.COUnty,
any tlma.
PARCEL NO. 2: The
Arrangement• may be following de,crlbad rtll
made to lnapoct any of the aotata altuated In tha
lboYI ftllllld YlhlciH prior
to the 1111 by calling T40- Townahlp of Salam, In the
County of Molge, and In thl
114..2210,
oaorga
Lawrance, Stale of Ohio, Blctlon No.5,
Colllallon Olftolr
Town No. Rongo No.
15 of the
Company'•
Tc
(3) I, 3, T, 10 4
Vlllaga of
II the
Public Notice
south1111 corner Lot No.
SHEAIFI"B SALE
1 In Vlll"'ll of Martlnlburg
REAL ESTATE
(now Dexter), thence Eall
CASE NUIIBEA t18CV058
40 fMt; thonce South 8·3/4
CONTIMORTAOE
dllrlll Eaat 5 rods; thence
CORPORATION
Eoat 3 rodo; the beginning
PLAINTIFF
point of tho land herein
vs
conYayod,
thence
LARRY HENDR•ICKS ~ 1 1 Southoall 12 roda and 21
DEFENDANTS' ••
llnkt or to the Southeaat
COURT OF COMMON
corner of the lot known 11
PLEAS
the Oacar Wilton on•half
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO
acre lot now or formerly
In purauonca of an Order owned by Dora Romlno,
of Sale to me dlrtetld from thence Eaatlo the canlllr of
aald Court In the above the Creak to a point due
antllllld action I will 1Xp011 Elll tO thl PIICI Of
to 11 11 at public ouctlon 11 boglnnlng; thtnca Will to
tho Courthoull on April 14, the place of beginning,
2000 at 10:00 a.m of said containing ona·half (112)
day, tho following deacrlbld acre, more or ltaa.
realellllllt:
Baing tho aame reel
PARCEL NO. 1: The 111111 conveyed by Mary
following d11crlbtd real Dulonaly to Albert Romina
tlllll tlluatod In the and Dora Romina by d11d
Townthlp of Salom, In the doted Saptombar 8, 1930,
County of Molga and State and recorded In Vol. 133 at
of Ohio, In Section No. 5, Pogo 331 of the Recorda of
Town No.8, Range No. 15 of Dotdl of Molga County,
tho Ohio Company'a Ohio, Albert Romina later
Purchlll, In the VIllage of conveying hit lntartat to
Dexter; Beginning Ellt 40 Dora Romlnt by dllld dllllld
fall and South 8·3/4 Nonmber 2, 1840, and
degreaa Eaot 5 roda from rtcordlld In Vol. 133 at P11111
the South111t corner of Lot 331 altho Recorda of Dildo
No. 1 In tho VIllage of of Malge County, Ohl()
Martlnoburg (now Oexllr);
PARCEL NO. 3: Tho
thence South 11-3/4 degree• following dllcrlbad real
Eaet 11 roda; thence Nprth
alluatad In the

•-u- " ·

-·

and r-.llld In VDI. 133 4!1
..... 331 ofllll,._ol
OHd• of Malga County,
OhiO, Albert Romine ltllf
conveying hl1 lnlaraet .11)
Dart Romine by diad datoid
November 2, 11140, aitd
, _ In VDI. 154 Ill P11Ja
818 of the Recorda ol Ollda
of ...... County, Ohio. •
Prior
lnatruman'\
, . , . , _ , "IIOkMM . . . .

-

BOWLEI ROAD, DEXTEII,
OH45121
Appralllld 111130,000.00

005

........ II.!Jotlaby
Bharllf, llllp County
Mallndll L Llngaton
Lamar,
B1mpaon
&amp;
Rothfull
I 20 E. Fourth StrHt, 8th

Ftmtle For Talko
Walko I Frlondahlp Sond Re·

0
10

O.Q

0

DATING

TONIGHT!

Why will? Start meet ing OhiO
alng111 tonight Call toll lrte 1·

801).7118-2823, · - 6178
30 Announcementa

.J..._-r-------

-To 'obu Thrift Shoppe
9- Slimooo1 Alheno
740-592·1842

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lllcn Wright

Quality cloth ing and household
Items $1 DO bag 111e every

Tt\uraday Monday thru Saturda~
9 bo-5 30

RAPIO WEIGHT. LOSS Froo
Simploa Loae 3 5 Pounde Every

Oc&gt;r.l'"f f!.MMG" 1116'.

Weeki As Seen On TVI Melts

f/of /flY F.411J..1" "THt"

Fat, Stops Hunger Boosts Ener·

gyl Only $19 95 Buy 2 11 FREEl
Fat ·Bio&lt;l1oro $11 95 1 800.733-

~'&gt;1' A"'WAY!&gt; t...Wo:&gt;
Jt:~+'f-5/l::IC DcWI\I.

3288 www unitedp"armaceutl·

coiLoom COD'S /Crod~ Cardo

4b

Giveaway

1 full grown cockerapanlel mix

m9lher &amp; 2 Jli.IIS 304-458-1942

2 ·7mon old females part sheep-

dog/ pari collie good wi1h kids
30ol-937-3348
Black Collie Mix male to good

H0'110 (740)·4oiS·2141

El,ectrlc wheelchair needs bat
tery, tires and soma work, 7-40·

742·3078

60

Lost and Found

Lost Saturday 26 Beagfl Brown/

S'11.HIE
r. T1ME AND

Stwlng,

Typing Groat Payl GALL 1-800.
795-0380 EX1 1201 (2~ IQ)

Atln Work From Home Earn Up

To 12 ooo /Pan Time $10,000

Full·Time Full Training Provkttd,

Can For A Froe Booklo1 1·888
849-2256

AVONI All Aroasl To Buy or Sail
Sl&gt;lrley Spea"' 304-875-1429

CUSSIF1EDS ,
t

~~a~t-~1~14~d:•:g~r~e:•:•_:E:••:'~1~oi:::::.:~or~s·:l:•m::::.,~·n~th:'j_::~==========:=:=:=:=:=:=:~~

No Phone Calls Aceepted /Send
~esume To Christian's Const

1403 Ea11em Avo , Gallipolis, OH
45631
BURGER KING
Car11r QpportuniUOO
We Seek Career Oriented lndi·
viduals Who Will Strive To
Achieve The "BEST" In Customer
Satisfaction &amp; Team Work If Vou
Have A Oaslra To Succaed Wllh
A Goal Crtven, Team Oriented &amp;
Growing Company, We Offer
Health, Dental And Lift In·
aurance, Prescription Card Bo·
nus Program, Paid Vacations
Management Apparel Advance·
ment From Wlthln
Apply In Person At The Burger
King Restaurant Located In The

OhiO RNor Plaza Qr Mali Ra•ume
To Burgor King, 8S Uppar River
Road, Galipolls OH 45631

Frkley 1 1 - . y -

• tOOOO .... S.tuniey

,fJI_Yard IIIII Muat Bl Paid In
A«vt~nct.

Eallam (20-2)

Datd11ne. 1.00pm tho

. , before the ad Ia to run,

S,Undoy l Mondoy odlllon·
1oJ!Opm Frkley.

AT HOMEI
supplies Slart
Hrs) ORRUII~ l&gt;t&gt;lf·
Stamped Envelope
Broadway, SuHe 1338-AP,
NV 10025

CREDIT

~

Auction
and Flea Market

•
IJII Moodlspaugh Auc11oneorlng,

CARDS!
*NO CREDIT
*NO SI!CURIJT

w.

1

service
Licensed
tile,Ohlo &amp; Weo1 Virginia 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

•.DQIUDUn. . ., ... \1*..1

Herpee • EwrCLR

CALLNOW 1·800-ZS0.40!18

Slope Herpea 0ulbreakal
96% Succeea Rata.
Toll Free: 1-Bn·EVERCLR

910

wanted to Buy

Abaolu1a Top Dollar All US Sll

Ver

And Gold Coins, Prootseta

J:llamonds An11que Jowolry Gold
I'Ungs, Pre-1930 US Currency
Sterling. Elc Acqulsi11ona Jewalry
; M TS Coin Shop, 151 Second
Al&gt;onuo Gallipolis 7 - 2842
'1!111 oller $100 lor good 1844

AND Gel Homo MOST WEE
KENDSI All Aselgned '98 Or
Newer Sa1olllla Equipp0d Air

Ride, Convenuonals Tt'lat Go
Home With You Excellent Bene
Ills Packager 23 w 11 Vr OTR

080().727-2888 E&gt;&lt;t 14S

Drivers 35e Per Milo Flatbed.
OTR Home Waek&amp;nds, Fu~ Ben
o111s In 30 Oaye • FREEl Paid
Holidays &amp; Vacations With Bo·

"""'' CaiiiOQ.621·2437 NOWI
lng No Exp Needad Eam Up To
$32 000 Nr Full l!enofi1s Call Today 1 877 230 6002 Sunday 9
AM ·6 P II Mon ·Frl 8 AM -8
PM
P A M Tranaporl
EMERGING

Medical Insurance
tanca Immediately

PC You Can Earn S215.0&lt;00, To
$50,000 AnnuaKy
291-4883 DepL f 1119

eppy of The Gamtllara Mirror

lnl•net Marketing
$25-$75/lv

lor o1her books, old pam·

~·•h

pn1e11, ctlarlas, letters We also

Help Wanted

etatma From Home We Train
MUST Own Compu1er. 1-888·332·

lames canned at Eastem

El11701l.llally
&amp;100 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
ioSSI PRO(:ESSINQ GO\IERN·
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERI·
!NCE NECESSARY! (24 Hr
!tacor~ed Mtaoaga) 1-800 854
~15

64eiEl1.500

'I;

KALAMAZOO, M1ch (AP) - Bob Donewa!d
was 6red as men's basketball coach at Western
Michigan. The Broncos firushed 10-18 followmg a
first-round loss m the Mid-Amencan Conference
tournament. Donewa!d will be reass1gned w1thin
the athletr.c department

)

YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) - Milton Barnes was
fired as Eastern Michigan's men's basketball coach
The Eagles were 15-13m Barnes' fourth season,
which ended With a loss in the first round of the
Mid-Amencan Conference tournament.
Barnes was 62-53, mcluding an NCAA tournament appearance m 1998

..

•'jiOV'T POSTAL Jon•• ·UP
To. $1824 Hour, Hiring For 2000
f'" Cal For olppllcal~n !Exarnl·

• Fast Service
• Low Payments

• Conlldtnllal
1-100-132-.2411

Timely Submit Otllo EPA Reports
AppliCant Shall Be Committed To
The Protection OJ The Environ

oatlon lnformadon Federal Hire •
F~ll ~Ill

1·801).598-4!04 Ex·
,.nolon i522 (8 AM ·6 PM

II

No Lalor Thao Wod~oaday,
March 22, 2000 To Gallia County

Commissioners. Attn. Karen
Sprague County Administrator

16 Loculi Strati, Aoom 1292
Gaili&gt;ollo Ohio 45631

Part time poalllon available lor
parson with retail hardware ex
perience, -41 Main Street. Rutland,

OhiO

Part·Time Help Needed In Local
Upholstery Shop Sawing Necessary, ExJ]arlenced For Appoint-

men1740-446-3438

Part Time Registered MLT Or
CLA Apply In Person Medical
Piaza 936 State Route 160, Galli

polls

Part· Time Waltresa /Bartender
Needed Please Sand Resume

To CLA 497 clo Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 826 Third Avenue, Galli
polls, OH 45831
Perm ru111me lObS

-

Starting 5al8ry at 5 25 Hr
ApplylnParooil

AppllcatiQns At Jlmantt·
tis Pizza Plaasanl Vatiay ROTd,
Rio Granda Tuaaday Thru
Thursday

~Taking

URGENTLY NEEDED lor plaamo
donora, earned $35 to $45 tor 2
or 3 hours week tv Call Sera·Tee,

740-592-8651

lnlerVIew appoinlmon15 tor
ou1bound 181o&amp;erVIciiJOI!tons
No olqltriance nacoeaary
Earn up to S1Mlr
wMh quanerly salary revlawa
Managemanlopponun111os avail·
llble 401 Mo11ldcailltn181/Pilid
'IIICallona avaUabla 3 ohlfta dally
Flexible scheduling S1art your

new career with us!

140

Bu•lnen
Training

MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
Modica! Billing Softwalo Ccmpany

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE OE·
GREE QUICKLY Bacholore,

Mastera Doctorate By Correspondence eased Upon Prior Ed-

uca11on And Short S1udy Couraa

For FREE Information Booklet

Phone CAMBRIDQE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 8316
6142

180 WantadTo Do
Child care In My Home Reason
able Ratea Excellent Play Area
Nutritional Meal&amp; Provided 740

2-45-5823
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your logs to 1ha mUI!usl can
304-675-1957

Handyman maintenance service,

paln11ng aldlno. roofing,

dry-watt and electrical, 7.W·949·

1035

Excellent care for person In my
home non-smoker and Mobile

\lory Roosonabie 1304)882 3880
Free Estlmataa References 31&gt;'·

Loris Helping Hand Cleaning
Service, Win Co Flood Clean·Up
FrH Estimates Low Ratn 740·

387 5043
MOTHER OF 2 WILL BABYSIT IN
MY HOME CHRISTIAN NON·
SMOKING 1.4·F CALL 304 882
2552

8Cl0-434-5518 Ext 867
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmlled in

Inc 800-322·11311 Ex1 050
'fold In~ IN CT
Netd A Loan? Tly Dab! Conaole
d01ion 15 000 • $200 000 Bad
Crodl1 0 K Fee H00·770.Q092
El1 215
PEPSI /COKE /Fft1TO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS. S
• ALL CASH BUSINESS • S lN·
CRESE YOUR INCOME NOW I
SMALL INVESTMENT !EXCEl·
LENT PROFITS 1-800·731·7233
EXT 1057

11

Gauranteedl7~~7

Wanted To Do, Mounts Tree
Servfce, Bucket Truck Service
Top Trim Removal, Stump Grind·
ing, Futly Insured Free Esti

(!1a1es Bidwell, Ohio 1·800·838·
9588, Or 740.38811848
WIN Do Garden T1111ng (304)675
6538
Will ,..r down old l&gt;ulldlngo lor
lumllor In 1ho E!Mno~ Ambmall
.... 3CM-1137-3-

~:t~~~~~~~~

rently
cationsaccepllng
for a Fiscal
for Physician Practice
Must have an associate degree
In accounting or related field A
minimum ot lhrH years of .physi-

cian olllcolphyalclan billing ox·

Persannol 2520 Valley Drive. P1

(304)875-897S MIEOE

Pool manager needed. Syracuse
Village reaume sent to ClerkS Of·

fie' PO Box 286 Syracuae Oh
45779
Postal Jobs 1•8,323 oo Vr Now

Hiring ·No

E~perlonce

·Paid

Training Gflat Bentllla, Call 7

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17 21/Hr

Guaranteed Hire For AppliCation

And Exam 1n1ormatlon Call&amp; A.M
• 9 PM M-F 1 8BIHI9H827 EKt
24-1007
RN'o TO 830/HR
LPN'a TO S:ta /HR

Domino's Pizza, Gallipolis &amp;

merQ¥ Onl~ 740 4~6 ~040

PEPSI /COKE IFRITO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENOrNQ
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$$ALL CASH BUSINESSU$
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL
LENT PROFITS 1·800·731·7233

ext

10Qa

tlonal Companv Seeking Internet
Utera For E-Commeret Bualntn
Unlimited
Income

www tiCOimllrcanewstartC()m

Your Financial Future By Starting

Your Own GIFT MERCH4NDIS·

Oiatrlbutors

Needed NOW Call Toii·Frtol 1·&gt;
80().5115-0653 Ex1 101
DATA ENTRY ON YOUR PC· La·
gal Judgment Nollcu PT /FT
www avlalhorne com Or SASE To

AVI PMB 105, 7231 Boulder
Aw , H~ ...... CA 92348 2232
DQLLAR STORE INFORMATION
• FREEl Wo Own Fourl We Can
Pu1 You In Buolnua For Loasl
Send SASE PO Box 907428,
Galnoovllle, GA 30501 Fa• 770.
532 8055

fDmla Non-Proll1 ec.pora11on,

can

Poy Your Doble And You Don'1
Have To Pay Ua Baco ·EVEA
Sind SASE To DPC·(51156), P0B
-·Volley Vlfllgo, CA 81117.

!'

14x70 hOuse trailer &amp; 160 &amp; 100
lo1 Plymale Lano Golllpollo Forry
wv price 20.000 00 ph 304-5763033
17/t8 acrn on Lincoln Hts
$17 sao, finance available 9%·

10yr balloon, 740·992·2529 or
132 Bullornu1, Pomeroy.

Lakeview $32,000 Mora Acreage
Available 740-388-8878

1.110().~8

LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Several Locations In Gallla &amp;
Meigs Counties 8 Aerts Aa Low
As $5 000 Land Contract Avail
able $500 Oownl Call For Free

Maps An1hony Land Cc LTD 1·
80().213-8365
LAND NEAR RIO
Oil SR 35, 5+ Acre~ Gresl Home

(2) First Time Buyers Easy Fl·
nanclng, 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar
ound $200 Per Month Call 1

-

(3) "" .. "LOOK••.. •
5 Bedrooms, 2 Bath&amp; over 2 000
sq It for leas than $4!50 mo

GaUl• Co.: We va Got The

Sites Land Contract Available

Mapo 1-80().213-8385
BRUNER LAND
740-141·14D2

39 Lots In Gallla Cc . From 5 -47

Month Low Down Payment 1·

Ches"'lre, Jeaale Creak Rd , Big

1982 14x7o Fleetwood 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths, CIA, New Urlder·
pinning &amp; Block Front &amp; Back
Porches Excellent Condition

oppcrtunl1y baSI•

I 987 24 x-40 Ooublewlde New
Roof New Vln~l Windows Some
New Carpet In Good Shapel

REAL ESTATE

Mue1 Bo Mov.dl $10,500 740·
388 6743 Between 5 And 7 ~M
In Evonlngs
1191 Flemming 14x70, central

r

For rent HUO readr- Juat ramo'
deled three bedroom new fur.
naca, new appllancll, new cer·
pot $375 per monlll $375 dopoa
It lmmtdiatety avaNII:IIe, Pomeroy,

Chrloly'&amp; Fomlly Living, 740 992o
4514

For Rent Or LNII With Option 2
Bedroom MobUe Home On 314
Acre Furnished Or Unfurnished
WID Ctn1ral Air De&lt;* Bklo Ro1tr·

once IDopoell Required 74().441

o1n

Mason 2 bd 2 ba treiler S2SI5 a
man tdap ref raq Hud accept·
td :JOU75-n83

Nice Clean s Bedroom Mobile
Home In Ccunlry, 740-256-8574

440

AparJmenta
for Rant

t and 2 bedroom apanmentl fur"·
nl&amp;had and unfurnished, ltCU(Ity
deposit required, no pets, 740·
992 2218
'
1 Bedroom Apartment $400/Mo ,

EV8ry1hlng Paid 740-44e·2515

t Bedroom Apartment Furnlahed

Ulilllloo Paid On VIand S1rte1.

Pt Pleasant $27' per month

(304)738-5554

1 Bedroom, Near Arbor's Nursing
Home Economical Utllltlea Quiet
locatiOn $279/Mo + Utllltlel No

PolS 740446-2957

1 BR &amp; LIV1NGROOM ON MAIN
STREET UTIL PArD CALL 304·
448·2200 OR 304-875·2174
1 Or 2 Bedroom Downstairs
Apartment Vary Clean, Water

Paid No Pels, In Gallipolis 740·
388-1100
2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To Rkl Grant:te campus, 74()..2455858

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK•
&amp;ON ESTATES, 52 Wes1wood
Drive from $289 10 $370 Walk 1o
ohop &amp; movleo Call 740 · ~48
2888 Equal HoUSing Opportunity
Beech S1rea1 Middleport, 2 btd

room furnished apartment, utilltlea
paid, deposit &amp; references, no

74().992.()185

Cottage Apartment $250 month
Homestead Realty (304)675·

Molgo Co.: Ru11and, Whllaa Hill

Furnished 3 Aooms &amp; Bath
Downstairs Crean No Pats Ref
erences &amp; Deposit Required,

Rd Nice 9 Acres $12 000 Or 1 I
Acres $14,000, Water Danville,
SA 32! Nice 5 Acres $16 000
Water Or Briar Ridge Ad •7 Acr·

as $13 000

Cell Now For FREE Maps And
Financing Info I

5540

740-448-1519
Furnished one bedroom apart·
mant with air conditioning, no
pels deposit requlred.J40 9925833

~

One Large Lot Approx tOt x171'
City Water Sewer, Natural Gas
Electric All Are Available Lot

117ToVIew, 740-446-9539

30 To 100 Acre Tracts OJ Prime
Hunting Land Starting At

$18.500 97 Acres For $57,000

Gracious llv1ng 1 and 2 bedroo~
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartme1111 In Mlddl&amp;-

por1 From $273·$338 Call 740.
992 5064 Equal HouSing Oppoltunltiea

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

Can Combine Free Maps Land
Contract Available t·800·213·
8385

740-446-0390

360

month rem 7«&gt;-667·3516

Real Eatate
Wantad
We Pay CAIII:l

For LANDI
Ewn f1111 Lloled
20 -eoo Acres
C.URyan
1001213-1388

NICe 2 bedroom apartment tn Syr-

ocuso $200 dopool1 S28S por

TWo 2 bedroom &amp; one 1 bedroom
apartments, Mtddleport HUO ap-

proved, 740·928-4941 after BpnJ
c:olloc1

Now Taking Appllca11ons- 35

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, lncludea Water

AnlhOny Land COmpany LTD
wy.w rountortyme oom

Sewage, Trash I315!Mo, 740
448.Q008

RENTAL S

One Bedroom furniahad Apart·
ment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
and Nice No pets Phone

8509

1874 Lincoln Helghls basamon1,

410 Hou- for Rent

dock/porch $30,000 nog , 304·
7Z13187

875-8887

$37,000 Gallla Academy Just
Sou1h 01 Town, Friendly Aldge 15
Aa8s $11 soo Cash Price

or

kitchen. living room 4 bedrooms.

Dopool1 1300 No Ptlo Roltl·

anca Required Call aftlf
9PM(304)!576·•02•. or anvtlme

Christy s Family Living, apart
menta home &amp; trailer rentals
740·992·45~4. apartments avail·
able lurnlshod &amp; unlumlshod

$12 000, 15 Acres $19,000 Or 24
Acreo Wllh Large Barno $34.000

air new carpet 2 full baths

Oacka
(304)675 3955
(304)87S 3249

3BR Trailer In Hlnderaon $375 +

polS,

WY HUNTING LAND

oeo can7&lt;0-992-5886

•

Farm Homo On 47 Acreo $88,000

$10 000 740-367-7105

1983 14x70 Skyline, 2 3 bed
rocmo, one and ha~ Dalila_ Berber
carpet, lots ol extras, $10 000

740-448-1409

Cash Also Same Area 8 Acres

$20,000 Or 31 Acres With Born

ol1988 wtllch makoa hIllegal
1o adwrtsa •eny prer8f8008
$20 OQO Clll304-875-4153
ilmila11on or discrlmlna11on
basad on race coli&gt;'. rel~on.
t981 Patriot 2 bedroom t 112
sax lamNia1 s1a1us or na11onal
bath, 14x70, appliances Included,
origin, or arrtlntentlon to
' good shape 740 247 2011

1

Acres Ala Grande Quiet Dead·

end Rood 13 Acres $30 000 Or 8
Wl1h Pond $28 500 Caoh

Eureka, Marabat Rd ·I 1 Acres

1411:70 1998 fairmont, lived In 7
mon still has new small lg bath
raoma 3 br lots at closet epaee,
all elec cia poulble leave on
low rented lot Chars rd 132 2
decks under pinning&amp; block.

I

County Covered! Now Available

FREE DeWvery &amp; Sot 1·800.948
5878
(1) 1 Ooutilewlde, $249 Per
800-691 6777

All real oeta1t advertising In
this newspaper 11 subject to
1ha Federal Fair Housing Ac!

(304)875-1388

One bedroom apartment In Uld
dlopor1

With Qarage Ou1bulldlng 1 112

740-992·9191

Spring Valley Green One Bed·
room Apartments, Applla'ncea

Acras MIL Low Utlll1ill Many

EX1raol740-o446-0744

FurniBhod Caii74Q.446-151111

3BR Brick Ranch located on the
corner of Birch/Elm In Meadowbrook Addition, Pt Pleuant wl

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacloua. 2 Bedrooma 2

Flrt.Piaca. 2 FamllyAoom, 1Ba1h,

FuU-Sasament, Large Corner
~ole

CentraiAir, Fenced Baok·

yard New Hot-Water Tank fo.lew
carpal/lam room Dlgllatlhtrmoatat Newly retlnlshed Hardwood
Aooro $78 000 (740)5ell-9062

4 Bedroom House For Sale In
Middleport 12 Acraa Of Land,

Will Ccnsldor Land ConlraCI Wl1h
$5 000 Dcwn Paymon1 740·387·
7234

• 8edrooms 2 Baths, S Minutea

To Holzer Hoopl1al To Qa111pollo,
Ftmlly Room Sifting Room DOling

Room. Eat•ln Kitchen. Sunroom.

Largo U11111y Ream, 1 car Garego,
Work S~op On Aero Lol, Whl11
Vlnnel Ftnce. - U Siding And
Ntw Rcol, cai740-441Hie51
93 Chtvy Camaro Auto V·l,
Black, Runs and Looks Goodl

114,000 mloo $8,500 080 (740)448 1854

'oON'T BORROW MONEY The
Debt Peymtn1 Club. Inc • A CaiJ.

You Connected? Internet

Ad (304)5711-3033.

Heat lnground Pool 1Ox32 Oult
Nelg"borhOod Finished Base·

691-&amp;m

38R Homo For Sale or Rtn1 Ga~
llpoii&amp;FtrryArN (304)875-IIOS

BE YOUR OWN BOSSI&lt; Control
Buslnen

1·112 Acre, moralle1s, with
Hou11 Trailer &amp; Barn Millston•

Green Township 3 Bedrooms

I

AUT • IICI • 8PAINT Whal's
The Big Ssc,rot? Make SS2K •
S125K /Vr w /Phone Carda
Easyl FREE ln1ol 1·800 997·11888
Ex t115S(24 Hrs)
AliT, IICf, PAYPHONE RT1I.
24 HI Profit Loc $2 000 Wk
24 Hra 1-IIOQ.800·3470
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI lnttrnl·

lNG'

350 Lola &amp; Acreaga

992-7584
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;

Down Payment Free Air,

I NO DOWNIHOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDED! GOV'T FORE·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·
PROVALI 1·800·360·4620 EXT

992 2259

Qak Cabinets, Built In Dlahwasnar/Compactor Central AJC Gas

(3) 18xl0 $254 Por

310 Homes for Sale

Rental property lOr sate two commerclal buildings, both teaaed.

Nice Brick Homo. 3 BR 3 Balhs

em

Ex188 (24 IQ)

Buildings

Address $23.000 740-245-5776
37 2 acrea, e~eceltent small farm/
horae property, SIS 000, 7~0·

Low Down Payment, 1·800 691·

advertised tn this newspaper
are available on an equaJ

736-:3409

2 44 Acres Winding Crossroads
Subdivision, Very Nice Area
Convenient Locetlon Gallipolis

(2) 14' Wide $167 Per Monlh,

Informed 1ha1all-llnge

$4911 Down Only AI Oakwood

80().948·5678

TURNED 1Xrtm ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18817
NoFeeUnlosaWeWinl
Hl80.582·3345

make any such preference
llmllatlon or dlacrlminatton •

Furnace in Galllpollt 7•0·44&amp;·
T1)rll bedroom

Nice 3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch W11h
c
0 s
8 •-

mo

Services

law Ou• ......., am henlby

recommend&amp; that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to sand money lhrough the
mall until you "ave Investigated
lha olftrlng

good monlhly Income, call 740·
742·3304 or Cleland Reolty 740.

(1) ... .,.AMAZING•....
Drvwaii·-4BR , 32x80uover 2348
sq ft Payments low as $406 per

ProleBalonal

which IS In viOiadon Of the

1NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

$149 000 (304)675.5403

320 Moblla Homes
for Sale

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Crodi1
OK Free Appucauon u S Ap
pllcanls Only 1-877·180-1938

advoniSornents lor reel811118

$3 000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochuros 4T HOME! Guar·
an101d FREE Supplies Slar1 lm·
modlaloly Call 1 800 419·9477

340 Bualneu and

mon1 11 OS Toodora Avo (740)
448 9181 $119 000

-lnlo 888-869-25BO

knowingly llCC81ll \

Bualnen
Opportunity

call 741HI8S·3418 lor mort lnlor·
ma11cn.
Wei~Malnlllnod ~ BR Houte For
Sate 2 Garagea Excellent Loca·

t 7 ~"\\;rea In ountry n tate
Route 77!5, Paat 0 0 Mcintyre
Perk Call 7~0.441-1&amp;59 Allor s
P.M

TVl Erase Bad Credit Legally

Thls-wlllnot
FINANCIAL

Homea In Barboursville , 304 ·

Full Basement, Heat Pump On

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON

230

DlraQs. 1-80()..719-3001 xt18!i
House for sate In Chester area

TUrner Broi&lt;era1740-992·2888

CAEDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AM RATING 90 ·180 DAYS 1·
110().422· 1598

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Vou
Pay UUII11ea &amp; Depool1 In Ponor
Ares No Pall, 61 .. 388 91e2

Put You Tax Refund To work ,

witlil dining room, ltvlng room and
kllehan N,...r carpet and kllchen
cablnete makes the kitchen with
1011 ol windows very bright AlSO a
large lot Cute aa can be Re·
duced to $33,000 Please call
Cottle Turner Realty, 001111 s

Wlndlalls 8~7 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK, NEW YORK
10017

740-992·2187

-3 BR Aepos /Foreclosures Fee

Mlddlapon corner or High Str111
I Powell S1reol, 2 bedroom home

lions ot Dollars To Help Minimize
Their Ta~es Wnte Immediately

~$300

Being Sold Now1 Financing Avate
oble Call Nowl 1-800·35S·0024
El1 8040
HOMES FRO II &amp;118.30 IMO 1

Red C8ti1-800-3U-8194

Buyers 800·490 0731 Ex1 101
www nattonaloontraclbuyera eom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Woallhy Familiae Unloading Ml~

it

2003

bedroom&amp;, 001 bath Mlddioporl,
aoklng S29,ooo No down pay
ment financing available to quail·

Cash For Flemalnlng Paymenta
On Property Sold! Mortgageal
Annuities! Sattlemantal lmma·
dlata Quotaslll •Nobody Beata
Our Prices • National Contract

lalwlln A1ha~s and Pomeroy

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes,.

1olally romodoltd
inWde and ou1 lnlllor and lOt ,_
furnace new a:fl6aneeJ new e.•••
7••- ''1~
po1 - 500 •ca ~-~
Land Home Pacl&lt;ages All Artas
3583
AI Cradll FllokJ 7-

House for tale two story 2·3

247-5125 EX1 1134 Void OH KS
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Galllpoila, 740-4*31193
1 Lo11 $299/Mo , lnc1udao Lo1,

420 Mobile Home•
lor Rant

2 Bedrooms Air Nature! Ga&amp;

lion Owner will help finance

Proi&gt;lemo

And Financing 11'1 Progre11 Call
For Delillo 1-888-SIII-0117
2 Lot Models Muat Go, Extra
Nice Loaded Your Chotce SM
Down Hurry won~ 1.ao1 OlkwOOCI

Ptlot Program, Ranters NHdtd,
304-73&amp;-7295

304 736-7295

4% Down For Llolllngs /Paymonl

Need An Electrician Or Carpent·
er7 Beat High Prices All Work

boll limo 1o call jOU back ba&gt;
8am-5pm Mon •Frl IO Ml
up an lnllrvtow

Ploaaan1 Valley Hospllal

Large Kitchen &amp; Dining Room,
740'379-988"7 Or 140=319'li000:FORECI.OSEO HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Govn t And Bank Repo I

come Potential No Exper~nce
Ntctaaary Free Information &amp;
CO ROM Investment 1•.995 •
18 995 Financing Available 11
land Automated Medical Servlc·

Need An Electrician Or Carpent·
er? Beat High Prlcel All Work
Gauranteedl 7oWl-446-29&lt;f.7

I t - phont"numbtrl namo and

888-491-6131 B01WIIn 1 PM 5
PM

ani. $125 000 (304)875-899
Ccunlry Homo 3 llodtooml 2 112
l!elha Utility Fireplace, Llrltl lol

OK Consumers Financial 1 800

210

Person /Persona NHd To Maintenance Tile Floor In Pomero~.
Galllpolla &amp; Point Pleasant Area
Must Have Ekpertence With Propane Buffer !Driver License 1-

Area Fenced area far small
chlldrenlpets 1 2Acre, Pt Pitas·

N11ds People To Proceaa Madi·
cal Claims From Home Training
Provided. Must Own Compyter 1

Crod~

FLEETWOOD HOM II 01 Proc·
lorvlllo OhiO GRANO OPENING
Largol1 Now lnvtn1ory In SOulh-

ol Dooro. 2·Car Garage w/Work

S$ Auto Loans, Personal Loans.
Debt Consolidation, Mortgages

Schoola
Instruction

carpontty

www glolsmochanlx """'

And Re11nanclng

Largeg~upd~\!:-h~ly~~ ~~
;;::;:::;Raloca:::;::11ng7.,7:;40-44;;:;-1;.-1(1&amp;1;;;1

Stoneybrook Estates
3Bectrooma,/2Bathi,J0an 6-Pan·

220 Money to Loan

CaUTO&lt;Iayl7--4367,
1 BOQ-214-11452,
Reg 190.Q5-1274B

150

/Canado

Sj&gt;rlng Valley Plaza, CoN 740-4460101

GaiKpollo Ctrwr Cclloge
(Careen C1ou To Homo)

Brick Homt 3 Bedrooms FR LR

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

;;;'. 1ern Ohio Spaclall On Homes

In Wlndthlelda Free Video 1-

800·828·8523 US

Stan Your Bustnaaa Todav
Prima Shopping Canter Space
Available At Attordabla Rata

male. d111orenlahifll 00111nng 24
hr period col 1·304 788-7290

5275

Need Someone To Mow Grasa

$500·$4 ooo pl/1Vmo 1 800·720·
0326, www oz opponunl1y com

must live wllhln a 20 mlleo

caN 1 110().929-5753 Ul Dayo 800-429-3880 El1 J-385
lonn appoinlment
I POSTAL JOBS To $18 35/HR
We look lorward lo meeting jOUI
INC BENEFITS NO EXPER1·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
Mom 1 Wanted America's 11
INFO CALL 1·800·113·3585,
Home Buainess Moms Work At EXT 14210 8 AM ·9 PM, 7
Homo, Free Caaeetto, 1-886-813- DAYS fdo.lnc

on weekly easls &amp; 111m Hodges
Ao Naldtd WUI Take Blda Unlll
March 15, 2000 Send Bids To
PO Box 527 Kerr, 01145843
Now Taking Appllcallons

tired of making your boss rich?

31 0 Homn lor Sale

Bualnesa
Opportunity

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Ropolr·
ong NOT Aoplacing Long Cracl&lt;a

radlua of BUFFALO, male or le-

Utlro N - 125 ·78 /Hr PT I
fT ......11·1224 www work·out·

'

atds

40 hri/Weikl+ OYer time cleanIng buildings In 1ha BUFFALQ

Of Tht NEW MILLENIUM
lltvab1~ Faa1 Rtoullo 800
715-1053.

,,

Day Shill al Galllpolla MeDon

45.18112.

tunlty Employer Appllcallona &amp;
Resumes Should Be Submitted

People Needed For Hottest

I

Taking App!lcallons For Full
l imo InC! Par111me MornWig And

Gallla County lo An Equal ()ppor·

~--oom

•

lNG I Call 1 800 "69 8164 For
Appointment To Come To Nllh·
ville And Audition For Major
Record Producers And Concert
Promotres lnltf'net www wctn ac

lnlarl!lt.J!I1n EKporloncod

0.81:)

~rt

SINGERS! GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY. ond EASY LISTEN·

rnen1 And The Haallh Siloty, And
Wella"' Of The Ccm""nl1y

Pleasant. WV 25!550, or lax to

HI81H116-1 812

oloncaffing-

... 5.000 Near /Po18n11e11 Doeloro
l)lwtd Ptoplol Proceao Medical

Donewald out at Western

SkillS Mpllcan1 Shall

We ara now settlrv up

Fl~ochureal Satisfaction Guar·

• Eaay Qualifying

derstand Engineering Plana
Specifications, And Electrical
Schematics, As Well As Oversea
The lnalallatlon Of New Gravity
Sewer Connections Pressure
Sewer Connections, And STEP

[~IPLOYMENT

a(i1todi PoS1age &amp; Supplies Pro·
\'ldedl Ruah Solt-Addroosod
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
I~ Box 1438, ANTIOCH TN
31011·1438 Sblrt lmrneda1aiy

• Blld CredH OK

Shall Bo Ablo To Road And Un·

11 ploaHd 1o amounco 1ho
Grand opening o1 i1o ,_Wei~

,000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400

CAIHLOANII

Shall Possess A General Me
chanica! AP.tltude And Ability To
Diagnose Problema Knowledge
Ot Electrical Systems, Motors
Pumps Valves, flow Meters
Computers. Th«"r Function Main
tenance And Repair Applicant

perience Three yeara of multispecialty physician office management Please submit resume
to Pleasant Valley Hospital clo

0

photo)

charge Trtalmon1 Lagoono STEP
Unlis Ground Water Sampling
And SCAOA Syallm Appllcan1

wwwany-1-can-earn com

MIMIIMium TetwtroicH

· TEAM DEFENSE- Eastern's Er~c Smith (40) and Joe Brown combine to keep Chris McGraw of New
Boston rrNI!fY from the basket during last night's district semifinal game at the Conw. (Andrew Carter

Calls And To Dispatch Service
Peraonnel Applicant Should Poa·
ana Knowledge And Exp1rtence
Regarding Gravity Sewers Pump
Stations. And Wastewater Sam
piing And Laboratory Anal~ala
Applicant Will Be Trained On
Presaure Sewers Controlled Dis

-jly old on paon11ngs, 740·593·
!1115 II&gt;I80ing

SE RVICES

210

Liconoo Wllhln 8 Months Of Em·

Drivers 2 Week Paid COL Train

tioldemevar's Auction Service
Gallipolis OhiO 740-379-2720

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

Provided Mull Own Co/'pulor 1·
fl00.223-1149 Ext 480

DRIVERS Slar1 Up To 38cpm

aUction

..nil ~at . . . . ./
ffft/

DENTAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr

Dental Billing Software Company
Neede People To Process Medi
cal Claima From Home Training

With Bonuses All Mllea Paid
Average 2500 Miles Per Weak

FIW a

•Mere,..._~.,

once Needed Will Train Call 1·
888-646-5724

Proteuionat Aucllon Service
brm, Estate Inventory Reduc-

luU lime aucllonoor. comp1e1e

l...,IJI,_,.,,./

Year PC Raqulrad No Experl·

Cj!IO 74Q.992 7502

Alck Pearson Aue,.tlon Company

•A.fml M ...... hpt'l
•A f'I'MJ..,,

328, Poln1 Pleaaan1, WV 25550
EOE
DATA ENTAY • Na11oowlde BNiing
Sarvlee..S.t!&lt;&amp; A f-!1!1/Rart Time
Modlcol Bll~ Salary AI $46K Per

500pm

efo19

r'Wt*«

shifts Intermediate care center
W11t VIrginia cerlltleallon required Point Pleaaa'lt Center,
State Route 82 Route 1. Box

11Mv Goble Auctioneer. Pomeroy,

tSanauga, March 9th 6 PM Flnntl •fke• laaac Auctioneer
P~one 740-448--4927, 7-40 446-

.._,litw1H Mil.._

Ctnlnld Nurae Aldto: Rotanno

~1189-2623

AfiPROVAU
*CREDIT LIMIT OF
$1,000.00

System Applicant Shall Pouasa
An Ohio EPA Class I Operators
License Or Be Able To Obtain A

Proftfsaionally Repreaant The
Gallla County Commleslonera In
Responding To Public Service
Requests As Wall Aa Maintain
Operation And Maintenance
Schedules. Logs And Reports
Applicant Shall fJrepare And

Clstrlbutor Ship Ope(! Now for
Flowers Baking Company For
AppliCation come to 101 Jack·
son Pika, Gallipolis Oh Ask for
Don Watters Hrs between 2 00 •

FundraiBIOO, Steven Belz, AI
~Jan Crill&lt;. 740·245-5747
'ubllc Auc11on AmVa1s Pool 23

And 0&amp;10 Acqulslllon (SCADA)

cauo~s

bUy/sell eatates. consignment
aucllon everv Thuraday, Bpm,
Middleport Ohio &amp; WV License,

~n

2 Sanitary Sewer Pump Stattons
A 10 Acre Lagoon Treatment
Facility, And Supervlsorv Control

bleahoot SCADA Syatam Ramotetr Applicant Shall Pos~taa
Both WrtHen And Oral Communi

6IJ, Yerd 51111 Mull

•

Milo Gravity Sower SySiom, 4 12
Milo Pra!IUrt Syallm 167
5op11c Tonk Effluent Pump Unllft

Able To Check And Trou·

&amp; VIcinity

~"

allan And Ma intenance Of A 5

Unlla Appllcan1 Shall Be Rospon·

:~~~~7~-----------­
:Y"o
Yard Slle
·~·======;:::=========
I:Galllpoll•
laPaldlnAIIvMct.
QfAPfD!f: 2.00 p m
thadlly-rwthaad
lo to lUll SUndty
ld111on • 2.00 p.m

pal Rosponsbllllleo Include Qper

albia For Operating A Naw lnnovallve SCAOA Control System
And Shall Have Access To A
Computer With Modam To Be

•lolllo From Northup Bridge 740

'-:

missioners Ia Currently Seeking
An Operator For Their Gravlt~
Sewer Prasaure Sewer, And La
goon Treatment Facilities Prtncl·

110 Htlp W1nted

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 IHR
ployment Applicant Shall Also 1JIIC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
Have A Valid Ohio Drivers ll· DENS
SECURITY, MAIN
BOOKKEEPER WANTED - Min
cenae And Be Trained For Con· TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
01 2 Ytora On Tho Job Experl· lined Space En1ry And Flrol Aid
E~P NEEDED FOR APP AND
ence, Computer Friendly, KnowlE~AM INFO CALL 1 800·813·
edge Of Qu ~ckbooks Software, The SuccessfUl Cand idate Will 3585 E&gt;&lt;t 14211 8 AM ·9 PM
Payroll/Job Cooling lAP IAR • Work A 40 ·Hour Work Week 7 DAYS Ids, Inc
Ablll1y To Handle Mui11p1o ToskO l And Be Available Savon Day&amp; A
Construction Knowledge A Plua J Week To Receive Emergency WORK FROM HOME, Are you

1 Aaward Lost Dog Rolt Walter t

toto I FOI 10.

fl 1!11.
Garratt Karr
22
4
Man Blsoet1
s.e
1
Joe Btown
4·5 20
Josh'fl'ill
22 15
Btadley Brannon
O.Q
0
CMs Lyons
0-0
0
MaUSimpooo
4-4 11
Cl1ad N-..
O.Q
4
Eric Sml1h •
0-0
2
S1tMI Weeks
0-0
o
Jooh Brod.-lck
ll:ll
ll:ll 1M!
g
TDIIIa
20o3G 2·7 17-18 13
- · 12 (Will 5) Blockld oholo: 2
Foulo. 11 _ , . , 34 (Wil 11l -11: 7
(Biasell, Bmwn, Wll 2) T- fGo: 22-43
(512) T u -. 15

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crallo,
Toys Jewelry, Wood

,

Foul•· 15 Aebounct•: 26 lMcGraw 12)

i:lll. :1:1&amp;
1-2
01
1 2 0·2
a. r2 0.0
57
1·1
O.Q 0.0
O.Q 0.0
2-4
1-3
• 2-4 0.0
1-3 o.o
o 2 0.0

1

l,.eat· Keya. Has Letter "H" Key·
;enaln, Also Has Kroger 1 Card
, On Kaychaln, 741)..441.()401

SHOP 'I'UE
l U.

Kirkendall
1·1
0.0
0.0
2
Jeremy Monk
2 5 0.0
22
6
Zak Howard
0·1
1·3
O.Q
3
Chris McGraw
6-8 0.0
5 $ 17
Cave Uvlngs1on
1M! ll:ll
ll:ll
g
TO!Aia
111'35 3-111 t-11 40
AHiolo: 4 8lockod ohota. 2 (Monk 2)

~

wwwworkOUIOIYou..
H&lt;Mnocom

GALUA COUNTY
-ELL /POliTER
WASTEWATER COLLECTION
SYSTEM I TREATMENT
FACIUTY OPERATOR

Tho Gallla County Board Of Com-

Black!Tickod, While lipped Tall
can (304)o743-9236

Dan

8tMio: 9 (Bishop, McGraw 3)
54(333) Tu-13

1 IIIIQO.I33t EXT 1211

Have Fun M11tmg Ehglble Sin
gl11 In Your Area Call For More

lnlormallon 1 800·ROMANCE
'Eiot 973!5
•

net 1 188-321 7083

ARE YOU READY
FOR AN &amp;COMMERCE ,
BUIINEBS?
$25 -$75/ltR PT 1FT

Aptrtrntn1 U03 Gallipolis OH
4!5131

2

O.Q
O.Q

'ltWW OZi&gt;C

Hllp Wanted

110

Week VIsit Our Webs ite At

pll .. To· 553 Second A¥tnua

STAAT

Help WlnUcl

U1tn N11dedl &amp;3~0 $500 Ptr

Qion-n Staking Componsoon-

1----;______

1-r•?

110

Are You Connected? Internet

Per.onala

'lhip From Nb

T~m~~ofSIII:CIIh

degraaa W11112 rode and
2·'12 lnchaa·, thonca Wlll3
rodl tO I hi piiCI 61
llalllnnlng.
Flaor
ilalng the 11me rail Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
eallta conveyed by Mary (1113) 241-3100
Oulanay to Albert Romina OH Bup ct IOCMII7M
•• ~
and Oora Romine by d.... (3) 7, 14, 21 3TC
dltlld Soptamlllr II, 1830,

'

A r;IHJUNCEI.1HHS

.
Property Addr111: 311118

DEPOSITSI
*11J04J6 QUAMNTEED 1ma11on.

.

The Dally Sentinel • P898 B 3

Public NOIIc:e

' LEGAL N011CI!
On lllturclay, March 11 ,
2000 Ill 10:00 a.m. thl Home
National Bank ,... Ollel' lor
1111 Ill public IUCtlon on the
Bank parking lot the

rrimble upends Leesburg Fairfield,
Will meet Eastern in district final

fapmPapB1

TuMCiay, March 7' 2000 .:
•

DIVISION IV TOURNAMENT

Eastem

Middleport, Ohio

Tuudly, March 7, 2000

BI·Lavol In Spring Valloy Arta, 3
- . _ 2 1!81111, Famly Room,
2 c:ar 0 1 - 740 441 8107.

on z lola In srrecuM, 1o rooms

end balh wl1h river vtaw. $291100,
740-~--

- Homea
n84SlR1
7.
Proc1ol'lllle Oil 45889

JNOK11l&gt;Food1alr)
"MAIICH MADNESS SALE"
on Floor Price Doducl~n • 2000
Modo I 32 Wide Over $5 000 00

Off • Your Prh 145 4]8 00

Off Floor Price Doduc11on 1492
Sq F1 2000 Modal Over
S4,000 00 011 • Your Price

wonoo

H0'11tl Are 3 Bodroomo 12 Balllo
Prlcod lncludeo Con111f1B Siiup

Lease Plus Security Oepoalt At·
qiMrad 740-446-3481

152 Fourth Avenue Galllpo11&amp; 1 3

Twin Tower1 now accepting ap

840-0521

pllcauona lor 1 BR HUO oubold·
l11d apl lor tldtrll and handl·
capptd EOH (904)67~711

Bedroomo WID Hook·Up, $3751
Mo Depool1 Roqulrod 1·888·

For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy. 1350 month
plus deposit will Hit on contract
with good references no peta,

Upstairs Apartment $350/Mo

740-698-7244

Village Green Apartments- 2

2 br house laundry room, deck,
prlvelt $300 e mon • 11ep &amp; ral
304-ll7!5-8678

es furnished laundry room taelll·
tiel and CIOM 10 lchOol, lp()llca•

01har Specials

4 Bedroom House, In Middleport
Wl1h 1llg 'lllrd 740-387·7234

Month , Secuonata As Low As

FOR LIAII 011 SALI 5 Ytar
Old 2 ooo Sq F1 3 ladroome. 2
Ba1ho, E~argy Elflclon1 Home,
- r Ci- Golf Club $8851Mo.,

Single Aa Low Aa $149 oo'
$2~9

00 Mon1h Come In Or Call
For Pro· Appro..to 1' 888 !15·
0107 LOCII 1·740·1&amp;8·0167
'hdo-lno Are Allo\-•
MObile hcimo willl lull 1tng111 addl·
tion, thr11 bedroom two bath,

21 xes·. oo ono acrw. Jocaltd 1-11

3 milt 0u1 143 o11 R1 7, eel - .

lngo 740-11112-2517
Lcedtd Slnglawldao Mull QoJ

Thouaandtl No Lot Rant

Moe Onl~ e Oakwood
Ga1ilpollo, 740.148-31193.

Floors CA 1 112 Beth, FullY car·
pe1od Adul1 Pool &amp; Bo\&gt;Y Pool
Pallo, S1arl $350/Mo No Pall

1S2 Fourlh Avenue. Galllpoll&amp;, 3
Bedroomo WID Hook·Up, $3751
Mo Ooposl1 Required, 1·888·
840-0521

74Q.446.2857

For rontln Syracu... 4 bedroom,
1WO l&gt;l1h, an lppllenctl, 201 K58
lo(; lencod In ploy aroa, carptltd
throughout HUD available, $575
per monfl $578 dopoll1 c:hlklron
- · Chrioty o Family I.Mng,
7--4814
Pilot Program, Rantera NHdtd.
304-736-72K

• t

Plus Oopooll, No Polo, 740·258·
12-49
bedrooms, 10111 oloctrlc, IPI&gt;IIanc·
Uono avollabll at offlco 740-992
3711 TOO 1 888·233-8694 Equal
Hculng 0!&gt;9ortunl1y

460 Space for Rent
Adv.rtlae your bu1lne1s In lhll
visible locallon on well rrave11~
hlghwoy WMI put up lnd ma1n1oln

your sign Coli
740-1192·2272

7~0· 812

838t or

Mob~ Home Patk Lot AvallatMe,
$125/Mo, AftCIIaon Pilei, Will·

moh ~. 740 448 384~

Wanted To Rent Trallef lot For

181110' 1101111' 740-245-814&amp;

•

�I

I

II 2 • The DaHy Sentinel

,,

PorMroy,

Public Notice

•

BY Soo 11 WOIJIE

SENTJNa. CORRESPONDENT
ATHENS -Trimble Tomcats defeated Leesburg
Fairfield 59-54 Monday mght to advance to the distnct finals Saturday afternoon agamst Eastern. The
two teams split dunng regular sea.~on
Tnmble (13-9), the number SIX seed m the tournament draw, has put together a four- game wmrung
streak, including a wm that marked one of Eastern's
only two losses.
The Tomcats were led by Trent Patton and Bobby
Trace who turned m 19 and I S...pomt perfor!'l"nces, respecnvely. Trace paced Tnmble With 16
points in the first half, and when Leesburg sought to
contaln the red-hot guard, Trent Patton produced a
break-out second half.
Rolland Chalfant had a good game With 12
points. Jesse Richmond added e1ght and had a team
high seven rebounds.
: Justin Bennington had the Lions' first e1ght pmnts,

man-to-man that we turned
the ball over too m.:~ny llmes"
Eastern was led by JUmor
southpaw Joe Brown, who razzle
dazzled the New Boston defense
to the tune of 20 points. Brown
nUde several of his own buckets
on sheer deternunallon, but also
benefited from some great passmg
off the Eagle fast break Brown
himself made some great pawng
plays With three assists.
Josh Will had a great rught from
the floor With a 6-for-8 effort,
including one three-pointer, 15
pomts and eleven rebounds to
score a double-double. Will also
:)lad five ass1sts. Matt Simpson
agam d1d a great JOb runrung the
Eastern offense, notchmg 11
:J&gt;Omts
Matt Busell added seven, Chad
Nelson four, Garrett Karr four
and Enc Srmth two
Leesburg was led by Chris
McGraw WJth 17 pomts and 12
rebounds, whlie TJ. Caldwell
-added 10 and Jeremy Monk had
SIX pomts
Eastern took a 5-0 lead to start
the game on a Brown baseline
JUmper and an ensumg Brown
dnve and free throw. Jeremy
B1shop hit a three pomter, then
Josh Will drove home a follow-up
JUmper for a 7-3 tally. Buhop hit
his second consecutiVe threepomter for a 7-6 score.
B1shop notched a two pomter,
then never scored the remainder
of the game McGraw canned a
two to g~ve New Boston 1ts first

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

but ended the rught With oply 12 pomts Jerrod
Kiesling added rune and Jarrod Haines eight
Tnmble led by as much as seven pomts early, but
Leesburg cut 1t back to 19- 15 at the quarter buzzer.
The game see-sawed back and forth w1th Leesburg
taking leads of28-27 and 32- 31 before Bobby Trace
canned a long two for a 33-32 Tnmble lead Patton
nailed a three at the buzzer to g~ve the Tomcats a
36-32 halftime lead
•
Tnmble went uP18=3'"6"""
' m::o11he second half and
crmsed until the later stages of the game Leesburg
cut the deficit to three pmnts on several occas10ns,
but Trimble put the game away at the foul line
Trunble hit 22- for-41 from the field overall, hit 5of-12 threes, and was 10-for-13 at the line w1th 22
rebounds, 12 awsts, eleven turnovers and four steals.
Leesburg hit 22-for-58 from the field overall,
mcluding 3-of-14 from three-pomt range, and was
7 -of-13 at the hne With 32 rebounds

lead, then Brown scored a dnvmg
lay-up otf a Sunpson ~st New
Boston's Zak Howard sank a trey
to g~ve the T1gers an 11-9 lead
S1mpson and Chad Nelson
posted quiCk buckets m01de the
one-nunute mark to restore an
Eastern lead at 13-11
Eastern
commmed
some
uncharactensnc turnovers early
m the se€ond frame and fell
behind 15-13. However, after a
llmeout, the Eagles went on a 100 run to take a 28-17lead.
"The key to the game came
when we went on this 8-0 run
JUSt before the half," wd Caldwell. "That established momentum and allowed us to numtam
an e1ght to 12 pomt lead from
there on out. We forced them to
foul and put us at the line, and
thats one thing we do extremely"
Until this spurt both teams
were content to lay back m the1r
zones With both showmg a couple vananons of 2-3 and 1-3-1
Eastern momentarily went manto-nun m the sllnt, then after
New Boston called bmeout to
adJUSt to the defense the Eagles
fell back mto theu zone
Eastern led at the half, 28-19.
The second half was never closer
than a rune pomt game. Eastern
led 43-31 after three penods
Coach Caldwell concluded,
"This was a spec1al Win because 1t
was number twenty and put us m
the Dutnct finals. They always say
that the first game of the year, the
first secllonal wm, and the first
distnct games are the toughest to
Win. We have JUmped that hurdle
and can now look forward to Saturday."
Eastern hit 22-of-43 overall

from the field, and was 2-for- 7
from three-pomt range The
Eagles cleared 34 rebounds (Will
11, Brown 6)
Eastern had 12 ass1sts (Will 5,
Brown 3), IS turnovers and seven
steals
New Boston hit 18-of-54 overall from the field, but was JUSt 3of-19 from three-pomt range.
The T1gers hit 7 -of-11 foul shots.
New Boston had 13 turnovers,
four assuts and mne steals
Eastern now advances to the
Distrtct final Saturday at noon.
T1ckets will be sale at the h1gh
school through Fnday durmg
school hours
Dhllalon IV Dlllrlct Toumamant
Ill Athena

Eaat11m 13, New
Bolllon 40
Now Boston
11 8 12 15 • 46
13
15 15 20 • 83
Ets1om
1
1
- - i:lll.
.. :1:1&amp;
l!llal:
fl 1!11.
J....,. Bishop
o 1 210 o.o e

1,.,,

MtkeTaytor

CIYis Lewis
TJ caldwell
M1ka Pierce

1·1

01
5-17

O.Q ~

0~

0·2
0-4
0.0

0.0

rode; lfleMe North 411-1/2
....,_ Wett 12 rode and
2·1/2 lnchH; 111ence WHt 3
rode to the pliCa of
baglnnln1
Excepting
~ffotn 1 parcel of land
5I fMt In width North and
fOlloWing~·
1 - CHEVY ASTRO VAN
South - - the North and
Vln 110NDII15ZXJB111112 of thiiiiiOtlt dllcllbld raal
-·
I-MAZDA
Baing tho aamt r111
Vln IJM1~151210
eetata conveylld by Jennla
L. lluny to Albert Romine
and Dora Romine lly dlld
datlld Baptambltr 2, 11111,
t 1W2eCEK14NOG111303fl
and ~In Vol. 120 Ill
1 - CHEVY BLAZER
Paga 301 of thl RICDidt of
,_...
Dtldt
of Malga County,
8BXFOt54ttl
1
VI
~
' ; , of the 11111 .,. Ohio, Albert Romine Jatar

County of llhlp, and Illite
of Ohio, In leetiOn No. a.
Town No. I and Range No.
15 of Ohio Company:•
Purc"-e, In the Vlll"'ll of
o.-, bounded end
dHcrllled •• folloWI: llllng
a troct of l8nd flfty·alx (51)
fHt In width North and
Soutllaci'OIItha Not1h end
of the following daocrlbld
rill: BIJIInnlnll 40 IMI E"t
and Iouth t-3/4 degrHI
Elll fiYI (S) rodl from the
Soulheut of Lot No.
I II dllcrlllld In the pllll of
llartlnoburg (now Dtxtor);
thanca South 8-3/4 d"'lrHI
!alii 11 rode; thence North

~ Homa NaUonel Benk con¥1~::.'/n!'~Y ~=:!.: ~!i~4111:~~~e~'ort~•::,.1~

raaarwathe ""hi 10 rl(oct I.N•~v••ml)ar 2, 11140, and
-~~In "ol 154111 P-•
any or 111 bldl,,.
or to l'lmOVI l'fll
of lhllllcordl Of Dted1
any unit from 1111 aale at olllalga.COUnty,
any tlma.
PARCEL NO. 2: The
Arrangement• may be following de,crlbad rtll
made to lnapoct any of the aotata altuated In tha
lboYI ftllllld YlhlciH prior
to the 1111 by calling T40- Townahlp of Salam, In the
County of Molge, and In thl
114..2210,
oaorga
Lawrance, Stale of Ohio, Blctlon No.5,
Colllallon Olftolr
Town No. Rongo No.
15 of the
Company'•
Tc
(3) I, 3, T, 10 4
Vlllaga of
II the
Public Notice
south1111 corner Lot No.
SHEAIFI"B SALE
1 In Vlll"'ll of Martlnlburg
REAL ESTATE
(now Dexter), thence Eall
CASE NUIIBEA t18CV058
40 fMt; thonce South 8·3/4
CONTIMORTAOE
dllrlll Eaat 5 rods; thence
CORPORATION
Eoat 3 rodo; the beginning
PLAINTIFF
point of tho land herein
vs
conYayod,
thence
LARRY HENDR•ICKS ~ 1 1 Southoall 12 roda and 21
DEFENDANTS' ••
llnkt or to the Southeaat
COURT OF COMMON
corner of the lot known 11
PLEAS
the Oacar Wilton on•half
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO
acre lot now or formerly
In purauonca of an Order owned by Dora Romlno,
of Sale to me dlrtetld from thence Eaatlo the canlllr of
aald Court In the above the Creak to a point due
antllllld action I will 1Xp011 Elll tO thl PIICI Of
to 11 11 at public ouctlon 11 boglnnlng; thtnca Will to
tho Courthoull on April 14, the place of beginning,
2000 at 10:00 a.m of said containing ona·half (112)
day, tho following deacrlbld acre, more or ltaa.
realellllllt:
Baing tho aame reel
PARCEL NO. 1: The 111111 conveyed by Mary
following d11crlbtd real Dulonaly to Albert Romina
tlllll tlluatod In the and Dora Romina by d11d
Townthlp of Salom, In the doted Saptombar 8, 1930,
County of Molga and State and recorded In Vol. 133 at
of Ohio, In Section No. 5, Pogo 331 of the Recorda of
Town No.8, Range No. 15 of Dotdl of Molga County,
tho Ohio Company'a Ohio, Albert Romina later
Purchlll, In the VIllage of conveying hit lntartat to
Dexter; Beginning Ellt 40 Dora Romlnt by dllld dllllld
fall and South 8·3/4 Nonmber 2, 1840, and
degreaa Eaot 5 roda from rtcordlld In Vol. 133 at P11111
the South111t corner of Lot 331 altho Recorda of Dildo
No. 1 In tho VIllage of of Malge County, Ohl()
Martlnoburg (now Oexllr);
PARCEL NO. 3: Tho
thence South 11-3/4 degree• following dllcrlbad real
Eaet 11 roda; thence Nprth
alluatad In the

•-u- " ·

-·

and r-.llld In VDI. 133 4!1
..... 331 ofllll,._ol
OHd• of Malga County,
OhiO, Albert Romine ltllf
conveying hl1 lnlaraet .11)
Dart Romine by diad datoid
November 2, 11140, aitd
, _ In VDI. 154 Ill P11Ja
818 of the Recorda ol Ollda
of ...... County, Ohio. •
Prior
lnatruman'\
, . , . , _ , "IIOkMM . . . .

-

BOWLEI ROAD, DEXTEII,
OH45121
Appralllld 111130,000.00

005

........ II.!Jotlaby
Bharllf, llllp County
Mallndll L Llngaton
Lamar,
B1mpaon
&amp;
Rothfull
I 20 E. Fourth StrHt, 8th

Ftmtle For Talko
Walko I Frlondahlp Sond Re·

0
10

O.Q

0

DATING

TONIGHT!

Why will? Start meet ing OhiO
alng111 tonight Call toll lrte 1·

801).7118-2823, · - 6178
30 Announcementa

.J..._-r-------

-To 'obu Thrift Shoppe
9- Slimooo1 Alheno
740-592·1842

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lllcn Wright

Quality cloth ing and household
Items $1 DO bag 111e every

Tt\uraday Monday thru Saturda~
9 bo-5 30

RAPIO WEIGHT. LOSS Froo
Simploa Loae 3 5 Pounde Every

Oc&gt;r.l'"f f!.MMG" 1116'.

Weeki As Seen On TVI Melts

f/of /flY F.411J..1" "THt"

Fat, Stops Hunger Boosts Ener·

gyl Only $19 95 Buy 2 11 FREEl
Fat ·Bio&lt;l1oro $11 95 1 800.733-

~'&gt;1' A"'WAY!&gt; t...Wo:&gt;
Jt:~+'f-5/l::IC DcWI\I.

3288 www unitedp"armaceutl·

coiLoom COD'S /Crod~ Cardo

4b

Giveaway

1 full grown cockerapanlel mix

m9lher &amp; 2 Jli.IIS 304-458-1942

2 ·7mon old females part sheep-

dog/ pari collie good wi1h kids
30ol-937-3348
Black Collie Mix male to good

H0'110 (740)·4oiS·2141

El,ectrlc wheelchair needs bat
tery, tires and soma work, 7-40·

742·3078

60

Lost and Found

Lost Saturday 26 Beagfl Brown/

S'11.HIE
r. T1ME AND

Stwlng,

Typing Groat Payl GALL 1-800.
795-0380 EX1 1201 (2~ IQ)

Atln Work From Home Earn Up

To 12 ooo /Pan Time $10,000

Full·Time Full Training Provkttd,

Can For A Froe Booklo1 1·888
849-2256

AVONI All Aroasl To Buy or Sail
Sl&gt;lrley Spea"' 304-875-1429

CUSSIF1EDS ,
t

~~a~t-~1~14~d:•:g~r~e:•:•_:E:••:'~1~oi:::::.:~or~s·:l:•m::::.,~·n~th:'j_::~==========:=:=:=:=:=:=:~~

No Phone Calls Aceepted /Send
~esume To Christian's Const

1403 Ea11em Avo , Gallipolis, OH
45631
BURGER KING
Car11r QpportuniUOO
We Seek Career Oriented lndi·
viduals Who Will Strive To
Achieve The "BEST" In Customer
Satisfaction &amp; Team Work If Vou
Have A Oaslra To Succaed Wllh
A Goal Crtven, Team Oriented &amp;
Growing Company, We Offer
Health, Dental And Lift In·
aurance, Prescription Card Bo·
nus Program, Paid Vacations
Management Apparel Advance·
ment From Wlthln
Apply In Person At The Burger
King Restaurant Located In The

OhiO RNor Plaza Qr Mali Ra•ume
To Burgor King, 8S Uppar River
Road, Galipolls OH 45631

Frkley 1 1 - . y -

• tOOOO .... S.tuniey

,fJI_Yard IIIII Muat Bl Paid In
A«vt~nct.

Eallam (20-2)

Datd11ne. 1.00pm tho

. , before the ad Ia to run,

S,Undoy l Mondoy odlllon·
1oJ!Opm Frkley.

AT HOMEI
supplies Slart
Hrs) ORRUII~ l&gt;t&gt;lf·
Stamped Envelope
Broadway, SuHe 1338-AP,
NV 10025

CREDIT

~

Auction
and Flea Market

•
IJII Moodlspaugh Auc11oneorlng,

CARDS!
*NO CREDIT
*NO SI!CURIJT

w.

1

service
Licensed
tile,Ohlo &amp; Weo1 Virginia 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

•.DQIUDUn. . ., ... \1*..1

Herpee • EwrCLR

CALLNOW 1·800-ZS0.40!18

Slope Herpea 0ulbreakal
96% Succeea Rata.
Toll Free: 1-Bn·EVERCLR

910

wanted to Buy

Abaolu1a Top Dollar All US Sll

Ver

And Gold Coins, Prootseta

J:llamonds An11que Jowolry Gold
I'Ungs, Pre-1930 US Currency
Sterling. Elc Acqulsi11ona Jewalry
; M TS Coin Shop, 151 Second
Al&gt;onuo Gallipolis 7 - 2842
'1!111 oller $100 lor good 1844

AND Gel Homo MOST WEE
KENDSI All Aselgned '98 Or
Newer Sa1olllla Equipp0d Air

Ride, Convenuonals Tt'lat Go
Home With You Excellent Bene
Ills Packager 23 w 11 Vr OTR

080().727-2888 E&gt;&lt;t 14S

Drivers 35e Per Milo Flatbed.
OTR Home Waek&amp;nds, Fu~ Ben
o111s In 30 Oaye • FREEl Paid
Holidays &amp; Vacations With Bo·

"""'' CaiiiOQ.621·2437 NOWI
lng No Exp Needad Eam Up To
$32 000 Nr Full l!enofi1s Call Today 1 877 230 6002 Sunday 9
AM ·6 P II Mon ·Frl 8 AM -8
PM
P A M Tranaporl
EMERGING

Medical Insurance
tanca Immediately

PC You Can Earn S215.0&lt;00, To
$50,000 AnnuaKy
291-4883 DepL f 1119

eppy of The Gamtllara Mirror

lnl•net Marketing
$25-$75/lv

lor o1her books, old pam·

~·•h

pn1e11, ctlarlas, letters We also

Help Wanted

etatma From Home We Train
MUST Own Compu1er. 1-888·332·

lames canned at Eastem

El11701l.llally
&amp;100 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
ioSSI PRO(:ESSINQ GO\IERN·
MENT REFUNDS NO EXPERI·
!NCE NECESSARY! (24 Hr
!tacor~ed Mtaoaga) 1-800 854
~15

64eiEl1.500

'I;

KALAMAZOO, M1ch (AP) - Bob Donewa!d
was 6red as men's basketball coach at Western
Michigan. The Broncos firushed 10-18 followmg a
first-round loss m the Mid-Amencan Conference
tournament. Donewa!d will be reass1gned w1thin
the athletr.c department

)

YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) - Milton Barnes was
fired as Eastern Michigan's men's basketball coach
The Eagles were 15-13m Barnes' fourth season,
which ended With a loss in the first round of the
Mid-Amencan Conference tournament.
Barnes was 62-53, mcluding an NCAA tournament appearance m 1998

..

•'jiOV'T POSTAL Jon•• ·UP
To. $1824 Hour, Hiring For 2000
f'" Cal For olppllcal~n !Exarnl·

• Fast Service
• Low Payments

• Conlldtnllal
1-100-132-.2411

Timely Submit Otllo EPA Reports
AppliCant Shall Be Committed To
The Protection OJ The Environ

oatlon lnformadon Federal Hire •
F~ll ~Ill

1·801).598-4!04 Ex·
,.nolon i522 (8 AM ·6 PM

II

No Lalor Thao Wod~oaday,
March 22, 2000 To Gallia County

Commissioners. Attn. Karen
Sprague County Administrator

16 Loculi Strati, Aoom 1292
Gaili&gt;ollo Ohio 45631

Part time poalllon available lor
parson with retail hardware ex
perience, -41 Main Street. Rutland,

OhiO

Part·Time Help Needed In Local
Upholstery Shop Sawing Necessary, ExJ]arlenced For Appoint-

men1740-446-3438

Part Time Registered MLT Or
CLA Apply In Person Medical
Piaza 936 State Route 160, Galli

polls

Part· Time Waltresa /Bartender
Needed Please Sand Resume

To CLA 497 clo Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 826 Third Avenue, Galli
polls, OH 45831
Perm ru111me lObS

-

Starting 5al8ry at 5 25 Hr
ApplylnParooil

AppllcatiQns At Jlmantt·
tis Pizza Plaasanl Vatiay ROTd,
Rio Granda Tuaaday Thru
Thursday

~Taking

URGENTLY NEEDED lor plaamo
donora, earned $35 to $45 tor 2
or 3 hours week tv Call Sera·Tee,

740-592-8651

lnlerVIew appoinlmon15 tor
ou1bound 181o&amp;erVIciiJOI!tons
No olqltriance nacoeaary
Earn up to S1Mlr
wMh quanerly salary revlawa
Managemanlopponun111os avail·
llble 401 Mo11ldcailltn181/Pilid
'IIICallona avaUabla 3 ohlfta dally
Flexible scheduling S1art your

new career with us!

140

Bu•lnen
Training

MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
Modica! Billing Softwalo Ccmpany

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE OE·
GREE QUICKLY Bacholore,

Mastera Doctorate By Correspondence eased Upon Prior Ed-

uca11on And Short S1udy Couraa

For FREE Information Booklet

Phone CAMBRIDQE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 8316
6142

180 WantadTo Do
Child care In My Home Reason
able Ratea Excellent Play Area
Nutritional Meal&amp; Provided 740

2-45-5823
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your logs to 1ha mUI!usl can
304-675-1957

Handyman maintenance service,

paln11ng aldlno. roofing,

dry-watt and electrical, 7.W·949·

1035

Excellent care for person In my
home non-smoker and Mobile

\lory Roosonabie 1304)882 3880
Free Estlmataa References 31&gt;'·

Loris Helping Hand Cleaning
Service, Win Co Flood Clean·Up
FrH Estimates Low Ratn 740·

387 5043
MOTHER OF 2 WILL BABYSIT IN
MY HOME CHRISTIAN NON·
SMOKING 1.4·F CALL 304 882
2552

8Cl0-434-5518 Ext 867
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmlled in

Inc 800-322·11311 Ex1 050
'fold In~ IN CT
Netd A Loan? Tly Dab! Conaole
d01ion 15 000 • $200 000 Bad
Crodl1 0 K Fee H00·770.Q092
El1 215
PEPSI /COKE /Fft1TO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS. S
• ALL CASH BUSINESS • S lN·
CRESE YOUR INCOME NOW I
SMALL INVESTMENT !EXCEl·
LENT PROFITS 1-800·731·7233
EXT 1057

11

Gauranteedl7~~7

Wanted To Do, Mounts Tree
Servfce, Bucket Truck Service
Top Trim Removal, Stump Grind·
ing, Futly Insured Free Esti

(!1a1es Bidwell, Ohio 1·800·838·
9588, Or 740.38811848
WIN Do Garden T1111ng (304)675
6538
Will ,..r down old l&gt;ulldlngo lor
lumllor In 1ho E!Mno~ Ambmall
.... 3CM-1137-3-

~:t~~~~~~~~

rently
cationsaccepllng
for a Fiscal
for Physician Practice
Must have an associate degree
In accounting or related field A
minimum ot lhrH years of .physi-

cian olllcolphyalclan billing ox·

Persannol 2520 Valley Drive. P1

(304)875-897S MIEOE

Pool manager needed. Syracuse
Village reaume sent to ClerkS Of·

fie' PO Box 286 Syracuae Oh
45779
Postal Jobs 1•8,323 oo Vr Now

Hiring ·No

E~perlonce

·Paid

Training Gflat Bentllla, Call 7

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17 21/Hr

Guaranteed Hire For AppliCation

And Exam 1n1ormatlon Call&amp; A.M
• 9 PM M-F 1 8BIHI9H827 EKt
24-1007
RN'o TO 830/HR
LPN'a TO S:ta /HR

Domino's Pizza, Gallipolis &amp;

merQ¥ Onl~ 740 4~6 ~040

PEPSI /COKE IFRITO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENOrNQ
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$$ALL CASH BUSINESSU$
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL
LENT PROFITS 1·800·731·7233

ext

10Qa

tlonal Companv Seeking Internet
Utera For E-Commeret Bualntn
Unlimited
Income

www tiCOimllrcanewstartC()m

Your Financial Future By Starting

Your Own GIFT MERCH4NDIS·

Oiatrlbutors

Needed NOW Call Toii·Frtol 1·&gt;
80().5115-0653 Ex1 101
DATA ENTRY ON YOUR PC· La·
gal Judgment Nollcu PT /FT
www avlalhorne com Or SASE To

AVI PMB 105, 7231 Boulder
Aw , H~ ...... CA 92348 2232
DQLLAR STORE INFORMATION
• FREEl Wo Own Fourl We Can
Pu1 You In Buolnua For Loasl
Send SASE PO Box 907428,
Galnoovllle, GA 30501 Fa• 770.
532 8055

fDmla Non-Proll1 ec.pora11on,

can

Poy Your Doble And You Don'1
Have To Pay Ua Baco ·EVEA
Sind SASE To DPC·(51156), P0B
-·Volley Vlfllgo, CA 81117.

!'

14x70 hOuse trailer &amp; 160 &amp; 100
lo1 Plymale Lano Golllpollo Forry
wv price 20.000 00 ph 304-5763033
17/t8 acrn on Lincoln Hts
$17 sao, finance available 9%·

10yr balloon, 740·992·2529 or
132 Bullornu1, Pomeroy.

Lakeview $32,000 Mora Acreage
Available 740-388-8878

1.110().~8

LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Several Locations In Gallla &amp;
Meigs Counties 8 Aerts Aa Low
As $5 000 Land Contract Avail
able $500 Oownl Call For Free

Maps An1hony Land Cc LTD 1·
80().213-8365
LAND NEAR RIO
Oil SR 35, 5+ Acre~ Gresl Home

(2) First Time Buyers Easy Fl·
nanclng, 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar
ound $200 Per Month Call 1

-

(3) "" .. "LOOK••.. •
5 Bedrooms, 2 Bath&amp; over 2 000
sq It for leas than $4!50 mo

GaUl• Co.: We va Got The

Sites Land Contract Available

Mapo 1-80().213-8385
BRUNER LAND
740-141·14D2

39 Lots In Gallla Cc . From 5 -47

Month Low Down Payment 1·

Ches"'lre, Jeaale Creak Rd , Big

1982 14x7o Fleetwood 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths, CIA, New Urlder·
pinning &amp; Block Front &amp; Back
Porches Excellent Condition

oppcrtunl1y baSI•

I 987 24 x-40 Ooublewlde New
Roof New Vln~l Windows Some
New Carpet In Good Shapel

REAL ESTATE

Mue1 Bo Mov.dl $10,500 740·
388 6743 Between 5 And 7 ~M
In Evonlngs
1191 Flemming 14x70, central

r

For rent HUO readr- Juat ramo'
deled three bedroom new fur.
naca, new appllancll, new cer·
pot $375 per monlll $375 dopoa
It lmmtdiatety avaNII:IIe, Pomeroy,

Chrloly'&amp; Fomlly Living, 740 992o
4514

For Rent Or LNII With Option 2
Bedroom MobUe Home On 314
Acre Furnished Or Unfurnished
WID Ctn1ral Air De&lt;* Bklo Ro1tr·

once IDopoell Required 74().441

o1n

Mason 2 bd 2 ba treiler S2SI5 a
man tdap ref raq Hud accept·
td :JOU75-n83

Nice Clean s Bedroom Mobile
Home In Ccunlry, 740-256-8574

440

AparJmenta
for Rant

t and 2 bedroom apanmentl fur"·
nl&amp;had and unfurnished, ltCU(Ity
deposit required, no pets, 740·
992 2218
'
1 Bedroom Apartment $400/Mo ,

EV8ry1hlng Paid 740-44e·2515

t Bedroom Apartment Furnlahed

Ulilllloo Paid On VIand S1rte1.

Pt Pleasant $27' per month

(304)738-5554

1 Bedroom, Near Arbor's Nursing
Home Economical Utllltlea Quiet
locatiOn $279/Mo + Utllltlel No

PolS 740446-2957

1 BR &amp; LIV1NGROOM ON MAIN
STREET UTIL PArD CALL 304·
448·2200 OR 304-875·2174
1 Or 2 Bedroom Downstairs
Apartment Vary Clean, Water

Paid No Pels, In Gallipolis 740·
388-1100
2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To Rkl Grant:te campus, 74()..2455858

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK•
&amp;ON ESTATES, 52 Wes1wood
Drive from $289 10 $370 Walk 1o
ohop &amp; movleo Call 740 · ~48
2888 Equal HoUSing Opportunity
Beech S1rea1 Middleport, 2 btd

room furnished apartment, utilltlea
paid, deposit &amp; references, no

74().992.()185

Cottage Apartment $250 month
Homestead Realty (304)675·

Molgo Co.: Ru11and, Whllaa Hill

Furnished 3 Aooms &amp; Bath
Downstairs Crean No Pats Ref
erences &amp; Deposit Required,

Rd Nice 9 Acres $12 000 Or 1 I
Acres $14,000, Water Danville,
SA 32! Nice 5 Acres $16 000
Water Or Briar Ridge Ad •7 Acr·

as $13 000

Cell Now For FREE Maps And
Financing Info I

5540

740-448-1519
Furnished one bedroom apart·
mant with air conditioning, no
pels deposit requlred.J40 9925833

~

One Large Lot Approx tOt x171'
City Water Sewer, Natural Gas
Electric All Are Available Lot

117ToVIew, 740-446-9539

30 To 100 Acre Tracts OJ Prime
Hunting Land Starting At

$18.500 97 Acres For $57,000

Gracious llv1ng 1 and 2 bedroo~
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartme1111 In Mlddl&amp;-

por1 From $273·$338 Call 740.
992 5064 Equal HouSing Oppoltunltiea

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

Can Combine Free Maps Land
Contract Available t·800·213·
8385

740-446-0390

360

month rem 7«&gt;-667·3516

Real Eatate
Wantad
We Pay CAIII:l

For LANDI
Ewn f1111 Lloled
20 -eoo Acres
C.URyan
1001213-1388

NICe 2 bedroom apartment tn Syr-

ocuso $200 dopool1 S28S por

TWo 2 bedroom &amp; one 1 bedroom
apartments, Mtddleport HUO ap-

proved, 740·928-4941 after BpnJ
c:olloc1

Now Taking Appllca11ons- 35

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, lncludea Water

AnlhOny Land COmpany LTD
wy.w rountortyme oom

Sewage, Trash I315!Mo, 740
448.Q008

RENTAL S

One Bedroom furniahad Apart·
ment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
and Nice No pets Phone

8509

1874 Lincoln Helghls basamon1,

410 Hou- for Rent

dock/porch $30,000 nog , 304·
7Z13187

875-8887

$37,000 Gallla Academy Just
Sou1h 01 Town, Friendly Aldge 15
Aa8s $11 soo Cash Price

or

kitchen. living room 4 bedrooms.

Dopool1 1300 No Ptlo Roltl·

anca Required Call aftlf
9PM(304)!576·•02•. or anvtlme

Christy s Family Living, apart
menta home &amp; trailer rentals
740·992·45~4. apartments avail·
able lurnlshod &amp; unlumlshod

$12 000, 15 Acres $19,000 Or 24
Acreo Wllh Large Barno $34.000

air new carpet 2 full baths

Oacka
(304)675 3955
(304)87S 3249

3BR Trailer In Hlnderaon $375 +

polS,

WY HUNTING LAND

oeo can7&lt;0-992-5886

•

Farm Homo On 47 Acreo $88,000

$10 000 740-367-7105

1983 14x70 Skyline, 2 3 bed
rocmo, one and ha~ Dalila_ Berber
carpet, lots ol extras, $10 000

740-448-1409

Cash Also Same Area 8 Acres

$20,000 Or 31 Acres With Born

ol1988 wtllch makoa hIllegal
1o adwrtsa •eny prer8f8008
$20 OQO Clll304-875-4153
ilmila11on or discrlmlna11on
basad on race coli&gt;'. rel~on.
t981 Patriot 2 bedroom t 112
sax lamNia1 s1a1us or na11onal
bath, 14x70, appliances Included,
origin, or arrtlntentlon to
' good shape 740 247 2011

1

Acres Ala Grande Quiet Dead·

end Rood 13 Acres $30 000 Or 8
Wl1h Pond $28 500 Caoh

Eureka, Marabat Rd ·I 1 Acres

1411:70 1998 fairmont, lived In 7
mon still has new small lg bath
raoma 3 br lots at closet epaee,
all elec cia poulble leave on
low rented lot Chars rd 132 2
decks under pinning&amp; block.

I

County Covered! Now Available

FREE DeWvery &amp; Sot 1·800.948
5878
(1) 1 Ooutilewlde, $249 Per
800-691 6777

All real oeta1t advertising In
this newspaper 11 subject to
1ha Federal Fair Housing Ac!

(304)875-1388

One bedroom apartment In Uld
dlopor1

With Qarage Ou1bulldlng 1 112

740-992·9191

Spring Valley Green One Bed·
room Apartments, Applla'ncea

Acras MIL Low Utlll1ill Many

EX1raol740-o446-0744

FurniBhod Caii74Q.446-151111

3BR Brick Ranch located on the
corner of Birch/Elm In Meadowbrook Addition, Pt Pleuant wl

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacloua. 2 Bedrooma 2

Flrt.Piaca. 2 FamllyAoom, 1Ba1h,

FuU-Sasament, Large Corner
~ole

CentraiAir, Fenced Baok·

yard New Hot-Water Tank fo.lew
carpal/lam room Dlgllatlhtrmoatat Newly retlnlshed Hardwood
Aooro $78 000 (740)5ell-9062

4 Bedroom House For Sale In
Middleport 12 Acraa Of Land,

Will Ccnsldor Land ConlraCI Wl1h
$5 000 Dcwn Paymon1 740·387·
7234

• 8edrooms 2 Baths, S Minutea

To Holzer Hoopl1al To Qa111pollo,
Ftmlly Room Sifting Room DOling

Room. Eat•ln Kitchen. Sunroom.

Largo U11111y Ream, 1 car Garego,
Work S~op On Aero Lol, Whl11
Vlnnel Ftnce. - U Siding And
Ntw Rcol, cai740-441Hie51
93 Chtvy Camaro Auto V·l,
Black, Runs and Looks Goodl

114,000 mloo $8,500 080 (740)448 1854

'oON'T BORROW MONEY The
Debt Peymtn1 Club. Inc • A CaiJ.

You Connected? Internet

Ad (304)5711-3033.

Heat lnground Pool 1Ox32 Oult
Nelg"borhOod Finished Base·

691-&amp;m

38R Homo For Sale or Rtn1 Ga~
llpoii&amp;FtrryArN (304)875-IIOS

BE YOUR OWN BOSSI&lt; Control
Buslnen

1·112 Acre, moralle1s, with
Hou11 Trailer &amp; Barn Millston•

Green Township 3 Bedrooms

I

AUT • IICI • 8PAINT Whal's
The Big Ssc,rot? Make SS2K •
S125K /Vr w /Phone Carda
Easyl FREE ln1ol 1·800 997·11888
Ex t115S(24 Hrs)
AliT, IICf, PAYPHONE RT1I.
24 HI Profit Loc $2 000 Wk
24 Hra 1-IIOQ.800·3470
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI lnttrnl·

lNG'

350 Lola &amp; Acreaga

992-7584
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;

Down Payment Free Air,

I NO DOWNIHOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDED! GOV'T FORE·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·
PROVALI 1·800·360·4620 EXT

992 2259

Qak Cabinets, Built In Dlahwasnar/Compactor Central AJC Gas

(3) 18xl0 $254 Por

310 Homes for Sale

Rental property lOr sate two commerclal buildings, both teaaed.

Nice Brick Homo. 3 BR 3 Balhs

em

Ex188 (24 IQ)

Buildings

Address $23.000 740-245-5776
37 2 acrea, e~eceltent small farm/
horae property, SIS 000, 7~0·

Low Down Payment, 1·800 691·

advertised tn this newspaper
are available on an equaJ

736-:3409

2 44 Acres Winding Crossroads
Subdivision, Very Nice Area
Convenient Locetlon Gallipolis

(2) 14' Wide $167 Per Monlh,

Informed 1ha1all-llnge

$4911 Down Only AI Oakwood

80().948·5678

TURNED 1Xrtm ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18817
NoFeeUnlosaWeWinl
Hl80.582·3345

make any such preference
llmllatlon or dlacrlminatton •

Furnace in Galllpollt 7•0·44&amp;·
T1)rll bedroom

Nice 3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch W11h
c
0 s
8 •-

mo

Services

law Ou• ......., am henlby

recommend&amp; that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to sand money lhrough the
mall until you "ave Investigated
lha olftrlng

good monlhly Income, call 740·
742·3304 or Cleland Reolty 740.

(1) ... .,.AMAZING•....
Drvwaii·-4BR , 32x80uover 2348
sq ft Payments low as $406 per

ProleBalonal

which IS In viOiadon Of the

1NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

$149 000 (304)675.5403

320 Moblla Homes
for Sale

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Crodi1
OK Free Appucauon u S Ap
pllcanls Only 1-877·180-1938

advoniSornents lor reel811118

$3 000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochuros 4T HOME! Guar·
an101d FREE Supplies Slar1 lm·
modlaloly Call 1 800 419·9477

340 Bualneu and

mon1 11 OS Toodora Avo (740)
448 9181 $119 000

-lnlo 888-869-25BO

knowingly llCC81ll \

Bualnen
Opportunity

call 741HI8S·3418 lor mort lnlor·
ma11cn.
Wei~Malnlllnod ~ BR Houte For
Sate 2 Garagea Excellent Loca·

t 7 ~"\\;rea In ountry n tate
Route 77!5, Paat 0 0 Mcintyre
Perk Call 7~0.441-1&amp;59 Allor s
P.M

TVl Erase Bad Credit Legally

Thls-wlllnot
FINANCIAL

Homea In Barboursville , 304 ·

Full Basement, Heat Pump On

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON

230

DlraQs. 1-80()..719-3001 xt18!i
House for sate In Chester area

TUrner Broi&lt;era1740-992·2888

CAEDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AM RATING 90 ·180 DAYS 1·
110().422· 1598

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Vou
Pay UUII11ea &amp; Depool1 In Ponor
Ares No Pall, 61 .. 388 91e2

Put You Tax Refund To work ,

witlil dining room, ltvlng room and
kllehan N,...r carpet and kllchen
cablnete makes the kitchen with
1011 ol windows very bright AlSO a
large lot Cute aa can be Re·
duced to $33,000 Please call
Cottle Turner Realty, 001111 s

Wlndlalls 8~7 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK, NEW YORK
10017

740-992·2187

-3 BR Aepos /Foreclosures Fee

Mlddlapon corner or High Str111
I Powell S1reol, 2 bedroom home

lions ot Dollars To Help Minimize
Their Ta~es Wnte Immediately

~$300

Being Sold Now1 Financing Avate
oble Call Nowl 1-800·35S·0024
El1 8040
HOMES FRO II &amp;118.30 IMO 1

Red C8ti1-800-3U-8194

Buyers 800·490 0731 Ex1 101
www nattonaloontraclbuyera eom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Woallhy Familiae Unloading Ml~

it

2003

bedroom&amp;, 001 bath Mlddioporl,
aoklng S29,ooo No down pay
ment financing available to quail·

Cash For Flemalnlng Paymenta
On Property Sold! Mortgageal
Annuities! Sattlemantal lmma·
dlata Quotaslll •Nobody Beata
Our Prices • National Contract

lalwlln A1ha~s and Pomeroy

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes,.

1olally romodoltd
inWde and ou1 lnlllor and lOt ,_
furnace new a:fl6aneeJ new e.•••
7••- ''1~
po1 - 500 •ca ~-~
Land Home Pacl&lt;ages All Artas
3583
AI Cradll FllokJ 7-

House for tale two story 2·3

247-5125 EX1 1134 Void OH KS
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Galllpoila, 740-4*31193
1 Lo11 $299/Mo , lnc1udao Lo1,

420 Mobile Home•
lor Rant

2 Bedrooms Air Nature! Ga&amp;

lion Owner will help finance

Proi&gt;lemo

And Financing 11'1 Progre11 Call
For Delillo 1-888-SIII-0117
2 Lot Models Muat Go, Extra
Nice Loaded Your Chotce SM
Down Hurry won~ 1.ao1 OlkwOOCI

Ptlot Program, Ranters NHdtd,
304-73&amp;-7295

304 736-7295

4% Down For Llolllngs /Paymonl

Need An Electrician Or Carpent·
er7 Beat High Prices All Work

boll limo 1o call jOU back ba&gt;
8am-5pm Mon •Frl IO Ml
up an lnllrvtow

Ploaaan1 Valley Hospllal

Large Kitchen &amp; Dining Room,
740'379-988"7 Or 140=319'li000:FORECI.OSEO HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Govn t And Bank Repo I

come Potential No Exper~nce
Ntctaaary Free Information &amp;
CO ROM Investment 1•.995 •
18 995 Financing Available 11
land Automated Medical Servlc·

Need An Electrician Or Carpent·
er? Beat High Prlcel All Work
Gauranteedl 7oWl-446-29&lt;f.7

I t - phont"numbtrl namo and

888-491-6131 B01WIIn 1 PM 5
PM

ani. $125 000 (304)875-899
Ccunlry Homo 3 llodtooml 2 112
l!elha Utility Fireplace, Llrltl lol

OK Consumers Financial 1 800

210

Person /Persona NHd To Maintenance Tile Floor In Pomero~.
Galllpolla &amp; Point Pleasant Area
Must Have Ekpertence With Propane Buffer !Driver License 1-

Area Fenced area far small
chlldrenlpets 1 2Acre, Pt Pitas·

N11ds People To Proceaa Madi·
cal Claims From Home Training
Provided. Must Own Compyter 1

Crod~

FLEETWOOD HOM II 01 Proc·
lorvlllo OhiO GRANO OPENING
Largol1 Now lnvtn1ory In SOulh-

ol Dooro. 2·Car Garage w/Work

S$ Auto Loans, Personal Loans.
Debt Consolidation, Mortgages

Schoola
Instruction

carpontty

www glolsmochanlx """'

And Re11nanclng

Largeg~upd~\!:-h~ly~~ ~~
;;::;:::;Raloca:::;::11ng7.,7:;40-44;;:;-1;.-1(1&amp;1;;;1

Stoneybrook Estates
3Bectrooma,/2Bathi,J0an 6-Pan·

220 Money to Loan

CaUTO&lt;Iayl7--4367,
1 BOQ-214-11452,
Reg 190.Q5-1274B

150

/Canado

Sj&gt;rlng Valley Plaza, CoN 740-4460101

GaiKpollo Ctrwr Cclloge
(Careen C1ou To Homo)

Brick Homt 3 Bedrooms FR LR

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

;;;'. 1ern Ohio Spaclall On Homes

In Wlndthlelda Free Video 1-

800·828·8523 US

Stan Your Bustnaaa Todav
Prima Shopping Canter Space
Available At Attordabla Rata

male. d111orenlahifll 00111nng 24
hr period col 1·304 788-7290

5275

Need Someone To Mow Grasa

$500·$4 ooo pl/1Vmo 1 800·720·
0326, www oz opponunl1y com

must live wllhln a 20 mlleo

caN 1 110().929-5753 Ul Dayo 800-429-3880 El1 J-385
lonn appoinlment
I POSTAL JOBS To $18 35/HR
We look lorward lo meeting jOUI
INC BENEFITS NO EXPER1·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
Mom 1 Wanted America's 11
INFO CALL 1·800·113·3585,
Home Buainess Moms Work At EXT 14210 8 AM ·9 PM, 7
Homo, Free Caaeetto, 1-886-813- DAYS fdo.lnc

on weekly easls &amp; 111m Hodges
Ao Naldtd WUI Take Blda Unlll
March 15, 2000 Send Bids To
PO Box 527 Kerr, 01145843
Now Taking Appllcallons

tired of making your boss rich?

31 0 Homn lor Sale

Bualnesa
Opportunity

EARN $90,000 YEARLY Ropolr·
ong NOT Aoplacing Long Cracl&lt;a

radlua of BUFFALO, male or le-

Utlro N - 125 ·78 /Hr PT I
fT ......11·1224 www work·out·

'

atds

40 hri/Weikl+ OYer time cleanIng buildings In 1ha BUFFALQ

Of Tht NEW MILLENIUM
lltvab1~ Faa1 Rtoullo 800
715-1053.

,,

Day Shill al Galllpolla MeDon

45.18112.

tunlty Employer Appllcallona &amp;
Resumes Should Be Submitted

People Needed For Hottest

I

Taking App!lcallons For Full
l imo InC! Par111me MornWig And

Gallla County lo An Equal ()ppor·

~--oom

•

lNG I Call 1 800 "69 8164 For
Appointment To Come To Nllh·
ville And Audition For Major
Record Producers And Concert
Promotres lnltf'net www wctn ac

lnlarl!lt.J!I1n EKporloncod

0.81:)

~rt

SINGERS! GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY. ond EASY LISTEN·

rnen1 And The Haallh Siloty, And
Wella"' Of The Ccm""nl1y

Pleasant. WV 25!550, or lax to

HI81H116-1 812

oloncaffing-

... 5.000 Near /Po18n11e11 Doeloro
l)lwtd Ptoplol Proceao Medical

Donewald out at Western

SkillS Mpllcan1 Shall

We ara now settlrv up

Fl~ochureal Satisfaction Guar·

• Eaay Qualifying

derstand Engineering Plana
Specifications, And Electrical
Schematics, As Well As Oversea
The lnalallatlon Of New Gravity
Sewer Connections Pressure
Sewer Connections, And STEP

[~IPLOYMENT

a(i1todi PoS1age &amp; Supplies Pro·
\'ldedl Ruah Solt-Addroosod
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
I~ Box 1438, ANTIOCH TN
31011·1438 Sblrt lmrneda1aiy

• Blld CredH OK

Shall Bo Ablo To Road And Un·

11 ploaHd 1o amounco 1ho
Grand opening o1 i1o ,_Wei~

,000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400

CAIHLOANII

Shall Possess A General Me
chanica! AP.tltude And Ability To
Diagnose Problema Knowledge
Ot Electrical Systems, Motors
Pumps Valves, flow Meters
Computers. Th«"r Function Main
tenance And Repair Applicant

perience Three yeara of multispecialty physician office management Please submit resume
to Pleasant Valley Hospital clo

0

photo)

charge Trtalmon1 Lagoono STEP
Unlis Ground Water Sampling
And SCAOA Syallm Appllcan1

wwwany-1-can-earn com

MIMIIMium TetwtroicH

· TEAM DEFENSE- Eastern's Er~c Smith (40) and Joe Brown combine to keep Chris McGraw of New
Boston rrNI!fY from the basket during last night's district semifinal game at the Conw. (Andrew Carter

Calls And To Dispatch Service
Peraonnel Applicant Should Poa·
ana Knowledge And Exp1rtence
Regarding Gravity Sewers Pump
Stations. And Wastewater Sam
piing And Laboratory Anal~ala
Applicant Will Be Trained On
Presaure Sewers Controlled Dis

-jly old on paon11ngs, 740·593·
!1115 II&gt;I80ing

SE RVICES

210

Liconoo Wllhln 8 Months Of Em·

Drivers 2 Week Paid COL Train

tioldemevar's Auction Service
Gallipolis OhiO 740-379-2720

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

Provided Mull Own Co/'pulor 1·
fl00.223-1149 Ext 480

DRIVERS Slar1 Up To 38cpm

aUction

..nil ~at . . . . ./
ffft/

DENTAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr

Dental Billing Software Company
Neede People To Process Medi
cal Claima From Home Training

With Bonuses All Mllea Paid
Average 2500 Miles Per Weak

FIW a

•Mere,..._~.,

once Needed Will Train Call 1·
888-646-5724

Proteuionat Aucllon Service
brm, Estate Inventory Reduc-

luU lime aucllonoor. comp1e1e

l...,IJI,_,.,,./

Year PC Raqulrad No Experl·

Cj!IO 74Q.992 7502

Alck Pearson Aue,.tlon Company

•A.fml M ...... hpt'l
•A f'I'MJ..,,

328, Poln1 Pleaaan1, WV 25550
EOE
DATA ENTAY • Na11oowlde BNiing
Sarvlee..S.t!&lt;&amp; A f-!1!1/Rart Time
Modlcol Bll~ Salary AI $46K Per

500pm

efo19

r'Wt*«

shifts Intermediate care center
W11t VIrginia cerlltleallon required Point Pleaaa'lt Center,
State Route 82 Route 1. Box

11Mv Goble Auctioneer. Pomeroy,

tSanauga, March 9th 6 PM Flnntl •fke• laaac Auctioneer
P~one 740-448--4927, 7-40 446-

.._,litw1H Mil.._

Ctnlnld Nurae Aldto: Rotanno

~1189-2623

AfiPROVAU
*CREDIT LIMIT OF
$1,000.00

System Applicant Shall Pouasa
An Ohio EPA Class I Operators
License Or Be Able To Obtain A

Proftfsaionally Repreaant The
Gallla County Commleslonera In
Responding To Public Service
Requests As Wall Aa Maintain
Operation And Maintenance
Schedules. Logs And Reports
Applicant Shall fJrepare And

Clstrlbutor Ship Ope(! Now for
Flowers Baking Company For
AppliCation come to 101 Jack·
son Pika, Gallipolis Oh Ask for
Don Watters Hrs between 2 00 •

FundraiBIOO, Steven Belz, AI
~Jan Crill&lt;. 740·245-5747
'ubllc Auc11on AmVa1s Pool 23

And 0&amp;10 Acqulslllon (SCADA)

cauo~s

bUy/sell eatates. consignment
aucllon everv Thuraday, Bpm,
Middleport Ohio &amp; WV License,

~n

2 Sanitary Sewer Pump Stattons
A 10 Acre Lagoon Treatment
Facility, And Supervlsorv Control

bleahoot SCADA Syatam Ramotetr Applicant Shall Pos~taa
Both WrtHen And Oral Communi

6IJ, Yerd 51111 Mull

•

Milo Gravity Sower SySiom, 4 12
Milo Pra!IUrt Syallm 167
5op11c Tonk Effluent Pump Unllft

Able To Check And Trou·

&amp; VIcinity

~"

allan And Ma intenance Of A 5

Unlla Appllcan1 Shall Be Rospon·

:~~~~7~-----------­
:Y"o
Yard Slle
·~·======;:::=========
I:Galllpoll•
laPaldlnAIIvMct.
QfAPfD!f: 2.00 p m
thadlly-rwthaad
lo to lUll SUndty
ld111on • 2.00 p.m

pal Rosponsbllllleo Include Qper

albia For Operating A Naw lnnovallve SCAOA Control System
And Shall Have Access To A
Computer With Modam To Be

•lolllo From Northup Bridge 740

'-:

missioners Ia Currently Seeking
An Operator For Their Gravlt~
Sewer Prasaure Sewer, And La
goon Treatment Facilities Prtncl·

110 Htlp W1nted

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 IHR
ployment Applicant Shall Also 1JIIC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
Have A Valid Ohio Drivers ll· DENS
SECURITY, MAIN
BOOKKEEPER WANTED - Min
cenae And Be Trained For Con· TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
01 2 Ytora On Tho Job Experl· lined Space En1ry And Flrol Aid
E~P NEEDED FOR APP AND
ence, Computer Friendly, KnowlE~AM INFO CALL 1 800·813·
edge Of Qu ~ckbooks Software, The SuccessfUl Cand idate Will 3585 E&gt;&lt;t 14211 8 AM ·9 PM
Payroll/Job Cooling lAP IAR • Work A 40 ·Hour Work Week 7 DAYS Ids, Inc
Ablll1y To Handle Mui11p1o ToskO l And Be Available Savon Day&amp; A
Construction Knowledge A Plua J Week To Receive Emergency WORK FROM HOME, Are you

1 Aaward Lost Dog Rolt Walter t

toto I FOI 10.

fl 1!11.
Garratt Karr
22
4
Man Blsoet1
s.e
1
Joe Btown
4·5 20
Josh'fl'ill
22 15
Btadley Brannon
O.Q
0
CMs Lyons
0-0
0
MaUSimpooo
4-4 11
Cl1ad N-..
O.Q
4
Eric Sml1h •
0-0
2
S1tMI Weeks
0-0
o
Jooh Brod.-lck
ll:ll
ll:ll 1M!
g
TDIIIa
20o3G 2·7 17-18 13
- · 12 (Will 5) Blockld oholo: 2
Foulo. 11 _ , . , 34 (Wil 11l -11: 7
(Biasell, Bmwn, Wll 2) T- fGo: 22-43
(512) T u -. 15

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crallo,
Toys Jewelry, Wood

,

Foul•· 15 Aebounct•: 26 lMcGraw 12)

i:lll. :1:1&amp;
1-2
01
1 2 0·2
a. r2 0.0
57
1·1
O.Q 0.0
O.Q 0.0
2-4
1-3
• 2-4 0.0
1-3 o.o
o 2 0.0

1

l,.eat· Keya. Has Letter "H" Key·
;enaln, Also Has Kroger 1 Card
, On Kaychaln, 741)..441.()401

SHOP 'I'UE
l U.

Kirkendall
1·1
0.0
0.0
2
Jeremy Monk
2 5 0.0
22
6
Zak Howard
0·1
1·3
O.Q
3
Chris McGraw
6-8 0.0
5 $ 17
Cave Uvlngs1on
1M! ll:ll
ll:ll
g
TO!Aia
111'35 3-111 t-11 40
AHiolo: 4 8lockod ohota. 2 (Monk 2)

~

wwwworkOUIOIYou..
H&lt;Mnocom

GALUA COUNTY
-ELL /POliTER
WASTEWATER COLLECTION
SYSTEM I TREATMENT
FACIUTY OPERATOR

Tho Gallla County Board Of Com-

Black!Tickod, While lipped Tall
can (304)o743-9236

Dan

8tMio: 9 (Bishop, McGraw 3)
54(333) Tu-13

1 IIIIQO.I33t EXT 1211

Have Fun M11tmg Ehglble Sin
gl11 In Your Area Call For More

lnlormallon 1 800·ROMANCE
'Eiot 973!5
•

net 1 188-321 7083

ARE YOU READY
FOR AN &amp;COMMERCE ,
BUIINEBS?
$25 -$75/ltR PT 1FT

Aptrtrntn1 U03 Gallipolis OH
4!5131

2

O.Q
O.Q

'ltWW OZi&gt;C

Hllp Wanted

110

Week VIsit Our Webs ite At

pll .. To· 553 Second A¥tnua

STAAT

Help WlnUcl

U1tn N11dedl &amp;3~0 $500 Ptr

Qion-n Staking Componsoon-

1----;______

1-r•?

110

Are You Connected? Internet

Per.onala

'lhip From Nb

T~m~~ofSIII:CIIh

degraaa W11112 rode and
2·'12 lnchaa·, thonca Wlll3
rodl tO I hi piiCI 61
llalllnnlng.
Flaor
ilalng the 11me rail Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
eallta conveyed by Mary (1113) 241-3100
Oulanay to Albert Romina OH Bup ct IOCMII7M
•• ~
and Oora Romine by d.... (3) 7, 14, 21 3TC
dltlld Soptamlllr II, 1830,

'

A r;IHJUNCEI.1HHS

.
Property Addr111: 311118

DEPOSITSI
*11J04J6 QUAMNTEED 1ma11on.

.

The Dally Sentinel • P898 B 3

Public NOIIc:e

' LEGAL N011CI!
On lllturclay, March 11 ,
2000 Ill 10:00 a.m. thl Home
National Bank ,... Ollel' lor
1111 Ill public IUCtlon on the
Bank parking lot the

rrimble upends Leesburg Fairfield,
Will meet Eastern in district final

fapmPapB1

TuMCiay, March 7' 2000 .:
•

DIVISION IV TOURNAMENT

Eastem

Middleport, Ohio

Tuudly, March 7, 2000

BI·Lavol In Spring Valloy Arta, 3
- . _ 2 1!81111, Famly Room,
2 c:ar 0 1 - 740 441 8107.

on z lola In srrecuM, 1o rooms

end balh wl1h river vtaw. $291100,
740-~--

- Homea
n84SlR1
7.
Proc1ol'lllle Oil 45889

JNOK11l&gt;Food1alr)
"MAIICH MADNESS SALE"
on Floor Price Doducl~n • 2000
Modo I 32 Wide Over $5 000 00

Off • Your Prh 145 4]8 00

Off Floor Price Doduc11on 1492
Sq F1 2000 Modal Over
S4,000 00 011 • Your Price

wonoo

H0'11tl Are 3 Bodroomo 12 Balllo
Prlcod lncludeo Con111f1B Siiup

Lease Plus Security Oepoalt At·
qiMrad 740-446-3481

152 Fourth Avenue Galllpo11&amp; 1 3

Twin Tower1 now accepting ap

840-0521

pllcauona lor 1 BR HUO oubold·
l11d apl lor tldtrll and handl·
capptd EOH (904)67~711

Bedroomo WID Hook·Up, $3751
Mo Depool1 Roqulrod 1·888·

For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy. 1350 month
plus deposit will Hit on contract
with good references no peta,

Upstairs Apartment $350/Mo

740-698-7244

Village Green Apartments- 2

2 br house laundry room, deck,
prlvelt $300 e mon • 11ep &amp; ral
304-ll7!5-8678

es furnished laundry room taelll·
tiel and CIOM 10 lchOol, lp()llca•

01har Specials

4 Bedroom House, In Middleport
Wl1h 1llg 'lllrd 740-387·7234

Month , Secuonata As Low As

FOR LIAII 011 SALI 5 Ytar
Old 2 ooo Sq F1 3 ladroome. 2
Ba1ho, E~argy Elflclon1 Home,
- r Ci- Golf Club $8851Mo.,

Single Aa Low Aa $149 oo'
$2~9

00 Mon1h Come In Or Call
For Pro· Appro..to 1' 888 !15·
0107 LOCII 1·740·1&amp;8·0167
'hdo-lno Are Allo\-•
MObile hcimo willl lull 1tng111 addl·
tion, thr11 bedroom two bath,

21 xes·. oo ono acrw. Jocaltd 1-11

3 milt 0u1 143 o11 R1 7, eel - .

lngo 740-11112-2517
Lcedtd Slnglawldao Mull QoJ

Thouaandtl No Lot Rant

Moe Onl~ e Oakwood
Ga1ilpollo, 740.148-31193.

Floors CA 1 112 Beth, FullY car·
pe1od Adul1 Pool &amp; Bo\&gt;Y Pool
Pallo, S1arl $350/Mo No Pall

1S2 Fourlh Avenue. Galllpoll&amp;, 3
Bedroomo WID Hook·Up, $3751
Mo Ooposl1 Required, 1·888·
840-0521

74Q.446.2857

For rontln Syracu... 4 bedroom,
1WO l&gt;l1h, an lppllenctl, 201 K58
lo(; lencod In ploy aroa, carptltd
throughout HUD available, $575
per monfl $578 dopoll1 c:hlklron
- · Chrioty o Family I.Mng,
7--4814
Pilot Program, Rantera NHdtd.
304-736-72K

• t

Plus Oopooll, No Polo, 740·258·
12-49
bedrooms, 10111 oloctrlc, IPI&gt;IIanc·
Uono avollabll at offlco 740-992
3711 TOO 1 888·233-8694 Equal
Hculng 0!&gt;9ortunl1y

460 Space for Rent
Adv.rtlae your bu1lne1s In lhll
visible locallon on well rrave11~
hlghwoy WMI put up lnd ma1n1oln

your sign Coli
740-1192·2272

7~0· 812

838t or

Mob~ Home Patk Lot AvallatMe,
$125/Mo, AftCIIaon Pilei, Will·

moh ~. 740 448 384~

Wanted To Rent Trallef lot For

181110' 1101111' 740-245-814&amp;

•

�The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BRIDOII:

110
API&gt;IIInc.. :

PHILLIP

Rtcondlllonecl

~. ~. ~. Rot~

•••ora, to Day Guarantee! ·

Pomeroy Eltgln

8ert&gt;er Slit In Stock ltemo Mot-

Club Bingo On
Thuradtlye

Fronoh Clly M1yt1g, 74q·4417115.

klllln Corpot, 202 Clark Chl~l . SAV GOODBYE To Pound a
NOW! Fortw~, I Guttlnlte You.
Ol&gt;lo. 740-441-7444.
FREE 2 Wotkt Supply (45 Tlbltll With Sdonllllc Proal) Sind
For S1le: ~econdltlontd Wllh·
trl, dryers and refrlgtratora.
$4.11$ S IH: OAF Inc. lOlA Broad
Thompeona Appliance. 3407 Sffett, Dopt 1029, Sullo 1741,
- - NJ 07102
- · (304)875-7381.
0000 USED APPLIANCES SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Wathert, dryert, rtlrlgtretora, CIIIm Denied? We Specialize In

Rood,- ·

ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 71

VIne Stroot, Clll 740-448-7398,
1-888-1I 8-0 128.
New And Uaed Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanaug1 .

Good Used Beds, Ortsaers ,
CO..,.,.., Dlnllleo , Etc. Big SavIngs On New Furniture. 740.U6·

4782.

Appeals And Hearings. F~EE

CONSULTATION . Btnetlt Taam
ServlciS, Inc . Toll-Free : 1·888·

lection , Prieed To Sam

·come

And Browse. • Corner 01 Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike, ·we Buy Furnt-

luno' 740-367-0:IBO.

Washer .$95.00 , ·Dryer $95 .00

Electric range $95.00. Froal tree

Ratrlgerator S125.QO, Like new
Retrlv. $250.00. Deep Frearer-

nlct $175 .00. Washer like new
$250.00 One Year Wa"anly, Dryer Like New $250.00 One year
warranty. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio.

(740l-4'fl,7398:

530

1(888)-el~l28

Antiques

540

Mleciellaneoua
Merchandlae
C~EDIT?

UBAD

$21 .95 Por tOO; f• 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 100: All Brass ComPfiSilon Fllllngsln Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISE'S
Jadcson, Ohio. 1-100-537-9!528
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Down! Past
Credll Proble ms OKII Even If
Turned Down Belori!l Reastabti&amp;h

-CredHit 1-800-659-0359.
550
Building
Suppllea
Block , brick, sewer pipes, windows, llntela, etc. Claude Winters,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 East Main oo SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740-992-2526 Of 74().9921539. RUII MoOft, OWflff.

Gel Cash

loans To $5,000. Debt Consoli·

dalton To $200.000. Crodil CaRls,
Mortgages, Refinanc ing And
Auto Loans Available. Meridian
Credit Corp. 1·800·47H5119 Ext.

1180.

(3) All Steel BUildings. 25x30
Wae $7,800 Sell $3,900: 30x48
Was $11 ,700 Sell $5.850; 50x60

Waa $16,500 Sell $7,900. Tom t800-392-7806.
.
While metal Twin Bed $50 .00,
matching Dresser wUh Bookcase.·

8 Piece Sectional COUCII $250.00
Girls Name Brand Clothes (0-2T)
Boys Name Brand Clothes (0·
tmo.) (740)·44H349
2 White Dryars, Kenmore &amp; ·Hotpoint $65 Each; 2 White Wash·

"'· $75 Each Bolh Whlfl&gt;ool Call
After 5:30P.M. 740-446-9066.
WANT .A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Finance With •o• Down. Past
Credit Problem!, No Problem. CBII
Tal Free 1-877-293-4082.
I
Are You A Metal Building Erector'
/Contractor? We Have f=actory I
Direct Buildings Wilh NO Daalershlp Fee Or Volume CDmmi~rntnt.

All SIZES IALL LOADS. ElDORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS
1-800-279-4300.
Complete DISH Network sarelllte
system, brand ntw, $99, 740·
992·1182 or 304·773· !!i305"etter
6pm.

COMPUTER BLOWOUTII HP,

COMPAQ Desktops , Laptops,
Merchant ·A(;counta. Websltes
Start Your Home Business To·
daytl Almost Everyone Ap ·
proved!! No Money Down!/ Low

Monthly Paymentsll t-888-47Q,-

5121.

FLOIUDA. MARCO ISLAND. Enjoy The Tropical Paradise Of
Beaches And Relaxation. Beach
Front Condos Or Homes. For
Rent /Sale. Century 21 1st. SOUthern Truat. 1·800·255·9487

www.c21marw.com

Got M 18' Mini -Dish?

A._,_

Want 320 Chlmels?
One
Fee.
No -lhly Chorgesl .
1-204·1192·2841 .

Orubb's Plano- lu~lng &amp; repairs.
Prob4ems? Need Tuned? Cal the
planO Dr. 740-448-4525

HOt Springs hot tub, 4 person,
good condition. soma chemicals
Included, call 740·992-5053 oiler
6pm.

COOLING EQUIPMENT

INSTALLED

' llll&gt;u Don'l Call Us Wo Borh

Eatlmatesl 740-448·
8308, I-I00-291-tl098.
LOll. • Frte

. . JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repolt'ed, New &amp; Rebut~ In Stocl&lt;.
Call Roo Evano, 1-800-537-9528.
Longaberger baskets tor sale,
1992- 1995, all types. Contact

Mary 81740-949-2809.

Performs 5200 CO
Computer Wilh Bunt In -Color
Monitor. MAC OS 7.5 System nnternet ~eady Y2K -01&lt;/C_olor ·Stylawrller 2400 Prlnle;r. Internal Mo-

Macintosh

. · dem/MicrophonefSame

Kind

Used AI Till SChools. $600, 740.
448-2151 le... MeSS891f.
MOBILE - E OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prieta,

On VInyl Skirting, Doo11. Wlndo
ows, AnchOre, Water Heatert,
Plumbing &amp; EleclfiCII Parts, FUI·
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps. 8tnnttta
Mobile Home Supply, 740-448·
9418.
NEED A COMPUTE~? 'llo
Finance Bad ~rodlt - Bankruptcy
OK ! No Tlrmdowne - FREE INTERNET 888·827·7502 """·P&lt;·

......oom

New Mlllenlum 01111 Eat All D1y
And Melt Away, Call Tracy At
740-441-1982.

5

appredcite, 741).992-7212.

1990 Buick leSabre, 4 door, all
powor, ucolltnl oondlllon. $3995,

740·1192·2529'" 740-448-7194.
1990 Nlllan Maxima Accepting .
Sealed Bids Thru March 81h,
Ptoue Phont: 740·387-5055,
Between 7:30 &amp; 4 P.M.
1990 Otdsriloblle 88 Royale V·6,
4 Doors, Automatic, Power Evtr)'·
llllnpl New Blllef)', $2,700, OBO ·
740-367-7281.
.
19th lauzu PICk-Up Convtrtable
351 Windsor Engine, C·6 Trani·
mlllllon, 5 SIN Whtolo, $2,500.
(740)-258-1547.

Ford Probe, 2.0, 18 Valve

1994

Fuel Injection , A.T., A.C. , $3200.

6733.

(304)576-2887

AT 8 :30P.M.

llalnSt.,
"-oy, OH
PIYingS80.00
Jill' ..,.
$300.011 eov.r.ll
PGO.OO Swtlul'lt

Prog,...,,. top line.
Uc.f ~

_

un-

.Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

'IISSEU IUILDEU
IIC.
New .Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMEIOAL III!IIESIDEIIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES

740.· 992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

..,.•.••..
RIIO~alt1

AKP St. Bernard Pups, 6 Weeks

1.995 ST Blazar LS, 40R, 75,000

Old, Vel C~ocked, lol Shots, &amp;
Wonned. $300, 304-272-e852.

mt..s, full power extra nice, Ilk·

All replacement
parts

Over 75 Tanks ol freshwaler
Fish. Locally Raised Parak!JelsJ
Supplies. Fish Tank/Pet Shop,
2413
Jackson
Avenue,/Pr.

1998 Mustang,

Pleasant. (304)675-20B3.'sun. 1-II'M. Mon-Sat II AM-6PM.
Golden Retriever Puppies
$100.00 Each. 740-682-7762.
Miniature Collll

74().441-0885.

570

Puppies, $75,

1997 Grand Prix • GT, Stack, 2
door. loaded, Good Condition.
(304)182-2625.
1998 Pontiac Trans-Am 3!i0 V· l
LS-1 Corvette Engine, Automatic

Chromt
Wheels. T-Tops. Fully loaded,

Transmission; Factory

500 wt Monsoon Sler.o System
With 10 Speakers And 12 Olac
CO Changer In Trunk CaiMtte In

Muelcal

lnatrumenta
10 piece Tama drum sat, black,
HI·Hat, two Crash cymbals , one

·. Ride cymbal. $1000, 740-9927014.
A - ·Attention
Poorlloys Muolc Inc.
Is Comfn1l Soon To Ga..,_.lo
Buy, SOl, Trade, Ropalfl,
740-441-7093

Dash , Deep Navy Metallic With
Dark Gray Leather Interior, Any
~eaaonable Offer Considered,

74().4411-4548 Or 740-446-7375.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1O' John Deere transport disk,
$850; John Deere-148 front end

loader (Ills 3010·4230), $3250;
twush hog, 8', $550; tOmato waa~-­
erlaorter, (like new), $2500; call

74().992-3985 Of 74().992-5866.
12 Hundred Lbs. of Round Bales
Hey: lor Sale; $20,00 Each .
(740)-379-2194
2 Unclaimed -

llulldlngtl

Cancellations! Brand
New, 81111 Eratedt Urgent Must
Sen . Quonoet Arch Style. One lo
40x60. SeiUng For Balance OnlY!
t-800-825·51l59 Ellon.
.
Factory

Baler. Vermeer 805C Wllh Extra

SOt Of Tension Springs: Excellent
Condition, $3.000. Coli 740·8828892.
245-5121 .

Ford 800 Tractor, Live Hydraulics, Grader Blade . Better Than,

Vlagral $3,800. (304~75-3824 .
Gehh Hayblne, 9 FQDt Cut. Very

Goo&lt;l Condition. (304)675-2145.
Indianapolis Moline tractor. 52·
hp.. IMI poMtr &amp; 3 pt. hitch: bnJIIh
hog, grader .blade; boom pole;

manure spreader; $5000 tor all,
740-742-2050.
Massey Ferguson· 261 207 Hra.
Duel Remote, $13,000, 740·3888036.

830

Llveetock

2 Quarter Horses Broke, SOund I

Slit Trail Ridden Or 4-H PrD)ecl,

740-388-11504 .

APHA Black /White Paint Mare

Fold AI Side AOHA Sorrel Mare
Rlaft;To Fold. 740-388-9130.
ButdllfHoge, 740-2-10.

Pea Fowl, ( B1by Peacockl), 8
Monthe Old. $30.00 Eech. 7402!18--!203.

Regilt- Anguo Bulls For Slit,
740-245--5084 ..
Hay • Qral{l
Alfalfa &amp; Orchard Grass Ml.lled
Hay 1st, 2nd &amp; 3rd, Cuttings,

llquarwBolea. 740-245-5815.
Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Discount Avall,ble. Heritage Farm.
(304)875-8724.

PSYCHIC AEADINGs By Soplllol
~ RMdngl Amulng
-·1-AI-11
Clll1 ~· 181 4159.

Now lal&lt;lng lor lhla Sjlflna,
Flrll DrdOf1 w11 ~ Beoi&amp;
Earlltlt Planta. Dewhurst
-.(304)895-37-3781.

Fertlllzar

1bboceo ""'""

.

f RAW; P[!flf AT ION

710 AutO. for Sale
'92 Pontile Bonnovmt, tour door, ·

excellent oondltlon •.• ...,. $4850,
740-MI-2045~-

• J

750 East State Street
I.Attlens, Ohio 45701
"A

23~
Olnlnel

•AK87 42

Eul

JOID'
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

·-""

992-5479
YOUNG'S

CARPIIRI SlmCE

•Room ttddNiont ARlrnodelng
'NiwGirlget

20 Yrs. Exp. •Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones ·-

·aoulb

·

f3
8unHfRom•
740-742-3411
Bry10 Reeves

22 Y"'· Local

ww-N.sunsethame.com

Myltlc

.Pom•

o,..,.,
.....
For YOir Pet's IIIIIs.

,~~ql

WILLIS'
'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

No Credit • Slow Credit • Blnlcruptcy
Repo • Dlvordtd

No l'mbarntllmtnl...

n

You're TrHtad with Rnpectl

1-800-311-3391
Free Eatimatea
Ctlfrllftrl Wtlllmt

THE BORN LOSER
,.WAAT Kl ND Of' VEC£TI\&amp;.E. .,
l':l TI-l\~ '?
;

s•

Cli:U.RD.IETI\E.'(
&lt;.ro~~

'_J;l'1:Io,WI11\~I

tlflo.tal 1\ • ,..,...,...,,....,,,(louol11110111 ...... ~ ..... iolotlinoglt ~moyrtllln- ,.,ry. laron ·
· IS 'mtll(ll" PfOII"'t (w his .-ltor piiiOflli U!folitis may iodudt 0Ill, 0 .._,
....... .Whotsoltollgaols. You ....
il.ltjtO
........ l ......

tinct...,.,...
.........
t,

. . . . . . . . . . . .1(1

For lnlonnetton reganllf1i1
llllnkruptvyconiKt

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

Pu~llc Notice

Trucks lor Sale

171-1417or
Cell Phone 674-3311

•• Drl"'"' St•••

•r., s,u &amp;....,... c.,m

• B•••d

•Lis•• 01••"••

Fax

wv

BURKE'S

CARPET SERVICE

ROIIRT IISSILL
CONSTRUCIIOII

......

IlliG~ ~NTY,

...r..._,.

·

I~Caplllnl"

10 Commtrelala

Pass

DDIDII
Pllft

AB.N..._

, •• »....

tea-

11SU-for
flftlllng
IIF..,20 Unfold
22 AfrlclnAreblan

Pass
AU pass

3tfltNIIt
wwriOr
43 .......
45 Sollr tlllk

I

SELF STORAH

29870 Baahan- •
Road
I
Racine; Ohio :

Wi-l'r'
VOU 6ET OUT
,, ,.,... IN RI614T FIELD, AND
'r'OU A FEW FLIES..

45771

740-JM&amp;-2217 \
Sizes 5' x 10' •
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8

I I 1

I

90405.

To get a current weather
report, check the.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWIRS
. Ocular - Antic • Matte - Adroit - Ef?,UCA TION
· A quote from a very famous wnter: I have. never let
my schooling interfere wtlh my EDUCATION . ·

New Roofl • Rtp~llre-~·
• Coating • GutterS~"
• Siding • Dtyw1H '
• Painting • Plumb!"
FriiEetlmette

Joseph Jaclkl

,.

... '--'f:

BulldoHI'
- - Semkel
Hou.., &amp; '&amp;ailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;

•

-~

8

~.·

.

,.

·~

Seplit: Sy.te,.. It
UdlJU.t

.'llrt"'
_A ,Irhday
_· .
-"'""'~-:-~

.

1

'

Grading

TAUiiUS .(Aprit :!0-May 20)
.-

1 1,y,Mudll,2000

· , _ Ia a """" ll...ihood io

..
,_...., .....-•will
'*"a tum for the-. io
Wl)'l

1'·

(7401ft2·1111

'\..-

!

Now .........

:
'

High " _Dty ·

1 ,,
1
t
•
• •
•

Stlf'!'Sitfl.l t

,

33795· Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, .Ohio

740·99t·SIII

11111-ld enhMce yoor fi-ltl
oltulllon.' Yoo'Umabllqwltllti
the SUn lhiMI.
PI!CI!S (Fob. 20-Mr!r&lt;h 20)
'lb your IUIIIrise. ....-~q COltllrdoe will be dme todt)'...
coml,. 10 old ollllpb dtlllo
owed "'"'· 'l1te ·w[ll """'
' to find I WIY to replY
wjth yoa
~l'llcol. . - younolf 1o 1
...,. Send f'or
•....
,.,._
Orlpll fiOdic:tionl for tk ,_
:::::::l;;:lln, S2 ... SASE IS
r;1o IIIII •w~.o ,
P.O.
7,., Murny IIUI'Sflo
tloil, New -Yoot. NY 10156. S.
-to-)'M'Zodtlcolp.
ARJES(Mm21-Apri119)1t

lox

-bed

: lfhollldnot-•eny--10
yaulf Y'"' a
to"*~

. t/IIWO 1 mo. pd.

leadenhlp n&gt;lo In I.JIDIIP In
' _ y , .'rolo......._Thty_
fUdl tn )'OU.

·''' 1

'

hi;t.iy".~

c'·'lv. 1·n 8 ·-r·al••nins. will be

v... eould
fool"!""'
t1t11 you
hive..,..
,;you. at-es
10 mw,....;. ~--~~ n It will be members·
extn
relf0f1le
whiCh
of the
lodoy tliil oilieis,oc:~. irid yoa'il
opposite gender who display this
befi&amp;ht You mar eyen rell!h alk·
rle competiticm iO poovc i&lt;Nnelf.
thes~~IO (Oct. 24-Nov. ll)
OBMINI (Moy 2t-Jane 20)
lnotead&lt;lfwast\niY~'li!'"""i!l&gt;
Ellperienceistbebest-hetaod, ..
'ivlio iliiir't oppm:ille tbe
in yoor in"'"":hb~::..."'!;d"',!
,..
you,
lhiJe your "day with
1
1
beoue.Yoo'll
•lhosewholnolytove~ooandwont
you're not likely to ..,ell old
10 be wlrS yoo. Time is too pre·
miolal&lt;ea.
clout to lqUUnder.
.
CANCER (June 2I-Jaly 22l
SAOI1'tARlUS(Nod:l-Oc&lt;.
~ Your ad&gt;Jeruriel coaW be ill for
. 21) Business and pleuure should
1 rude 1Wikenin1 todly thould mix welllodoy if you pot enjoylhey stteqJt lo push or shove you
ment first and cuttinaa deal set·
lfOifnd. They won'tlbe l""fll"d
ond. Ever; lhlng will happen notlor how much •he~ uflflernted
· 0 ,.ny when evef)'one Is ln e
you.
· •
'
··
relucd mood.
LEO (July, 23-A· ...__..._
22).Even
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·1an. ·
of
thouth YOI! ,. qalli ....-19} Thi• ;, on ex&lt;ellt,. day for
mol&lt;"I
-ld"
_.__ involved in 1011\tlhi-·
do
·--..
~
yoe feel, the
to
ao,
thllcoold molcO .. Slvt ''"' monc.W.. . . tlltlthe _ . yoa'll
ey. Ywr finoncial as)ftl:IJ . .
follow today will be ..,. IIIII ·
'
veoy -"""'IIOJ, ,. JiV&lt; theoe
uy;~;.,or.al!h.!lept.·. 221
types of projects maximum anen...._
tioo.
Offer your oervlcel ~, · on
AQUARIUS(Jon. 20-Feb. i9)
purely buii-'IU -·Don't
loyallyourcardsoutonlllellble
1lve t n y - rOf' ·lhosetodly withoutheollllioo. Ailoci·
ooli&lt;lt your okill• to tltlnt you'll&gt;
... will IJIIWIOiate you Ill the
iOi•l to pve·tltem • f!eeble. •
'"""'f'or youroandor . t bowUBRA(!iept. 23-oct. l3)Peoi•w-youlltnd.
pie yoa CIIWWIW todly, ape-

lraod=,

°

·

. i
.'

.'
•

.\

.,

.j '

•

il

.

·--

Pasa

. Pass

- 11 ~ow~r ·~tro .
13 ....,...

(2 wde.)
23 AI lilt tip
24Chnte
25 Anc~t
27 Cepuchln
mank8y
32Dirllng
34 Sl,..,.
35A.....I

Eaal

l

. #00350.6

'74' n7.42·2706
74n446 1141

co&amp;:f~oN

304-6

·-Driveways •Tennis Courts
·•Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
1986 Ford F-1 50 pickup, $900,
CASE NO IICV072
"""-740-992-3184.
UNITED COMPANIES
LENDINQ CORPORATION
1987 Toyota Truck 4 Wheel
la•4"~P• Mlttrl.e l
Drive, New Tires, Exc,llent
PLAINTIFF
Sh"'", 740-245-5991 .
VS
Oon'l tst..,g by hit~ priers!
• SAMUEL A. QIBBI!, llal
1998 Dodge Ram 1500. 4x4, 5
DEFENDANTS
Servlet
speed, manual, AIC, AMIFM • Shop the douJ(rd SKtlon.
COURT OF COMMON
Cassette wllh topper, 19,000
PLEAS,
miles, $ts.ooo. Call (304)675· 760 Auto Partl &amp;
Upaoe·..,.
MEIQS
COUNTY,
OHIO
4288.
·
Accaeaorle•
-In pur~uance of an O_nler
1988 Ford Ranger 2.0 , 4 cyl. ~B-ud""g-et-P"'r'"ic-ed-Tr:"-en-s-m'"tsa-io_n_s..,...AII
of Sale to me directed from
n tc~~ straight $2,300. 304·675·, Typea, Access To Over 1o.ooo · said Court In the lbove
Clean &amp; Scotch
382
TransmiSSions , CVC 'JOints, 740·
entttltt action I Will expon
G;uard $40 - Any
1986 Ford Ranger, good condl· 245-5677.
to ule at Public Auction at
Pul!llc Notice
lion, $1500, 740-992-3224- .
the
Courthoult
on
Aprll14,
Motor From '85 Ponllac Flreblrd
Normal Size Room.
2000 at 10:15 a.m. ol aafd
1988 GMC 2 Ton Cattle Truck , 2.8 Litre Fuel Injected, Recently
Situated In lht Stale of
day, the following deac~bed
RebuHI Call 740-441-0335, 740·
Edloon Mayos. (304)875-1858.
Ohio, County of Malga and
V"
446-3232.
real eatllle:
In
the
VIllage
of
Ho.,_:
.
'
1994 - 1500 Sorles, Chovy PldcSituated In lht Slate of
Campere&amp;
Up. IOIK Milos. Auto · Air. Naw 790
Being the South half of
Ohio, County of Melga,
, V"
• ·
BF !foodrlch Tlret &amp; Alum. Cei.n ·
Motor Homea
Sallabury .
Townthlp, Lot No~ 20 In block 111 In lht
tar Line Rims. Red w/Biack
VIllage of Hobaon, Melga 1........;'~------'
Middleport Village, In the County,
Ohio.
Taunly Cover. $6,900. (304)675- 11198 Nomad Cam~r. 2211. VIllage of Hobaon, SICIIon
2029.$8.900.
SIOipe 7-1. Only UIU 8 limo,.
Prior · lnatrumant
29,
In
too
acrelott
314-328
,$7,!100 linn. Coli: (304)e7l!-5TII . .
reference: Volume 25 Page
1995 5-10
Town 1, Range 13 Weal, and
113
.
4 cyl. 5 SP,P.S,P.B,Nico Truck
•• recorded In Volume 3,
SERVICE~,
Property atldr111: 29138
$4500.304-675-36.24.
Peg• 6 of the Mtlga County
LAGOON ROAD
Pllll recorda:
·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45780
Baing the North half of
1997 black Chevy 5-to Stopslde 810
Home
AppraiHCI 11$10,000.00
Lol 120 In block It ln the
E11tended Cab, 3 door. loaded ,
Terms of ule: Cult
Improvement&amp;
qf
Hobaon,
Melga
VIllage
25,000 miles, very sharp, full far·
Jamta M. Soulaby
lngs, $12,000. 740-948-2045 or
County, Ohio.
BAIIEMENT
Sherif!, Mllga County
74().949-2203.
WATERPROOFING
Prior
lnalrument
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. reference: Volume 65 P•tJ• CMtUne M. Uepold
' Lerner,
Sampeon
lo
Local references furnished . Es·
813
Rolhfuu
·
1975. Col 24 Hra. (740)
Property addre11: 29t57
730 Vane &amp; 4-WDs
120 E. Fourth Street, llh
448-0870, 1-600-287-0578. Rog- LAQOONROAD
Floor ·
'
1987 Chevy 5·10 Blazer, 4~t4, nwa... p.w"'n~g .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45710
Clnclnnllll, Ohio 45202
2.8.l, A.T., ,t,.C. , High Miles, '
AppraiHCI at$10,000.00
~.000. (304)576-2887.
(513) 24!-3100
Appliance Parts And Service: All
Term• of Hit: C~ah­
OH
SUp Cl10070085
1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4 8 Cylin- • Name Branda OVer 2!5 Veara EK· Jamta M. Soulaby
(3)
7,
14,21 3TC ·
perlence
All
Work
Guaranteed.
der, 5 Spood, Loadld, 88,000
Shlrtff, Melga County
French
Clly
Maytag,
740-446Miles. Stt ,000 OBO 740·448Chrlatlna M. Utpold
77115.
1900.
Lamer,
Sa'm paon
1o
..
1996 Dodge Grand Caravan ES, . CIC Qeneral Home Main · · RothfUII
All Power llotht! lntoriD! Excel' te.nence - Painting, vinyl siding, 120 E. Fourth St-. 8th
New Homes
lent Condition, 740-448-2107 carpenlfy. doQfl, wlndowo, baths, Floor
• Garilgea
home ..,... and more. For
Daya; 740-245-918-INIIf 8.
Clnolnnllll, 01tto 4UO:Z
''" estimate call Chit, 740-992- (513) 241--3100
•
Complete
6323.
740 M0torcycl81
OH Sup Cl10070015
Rerllodellng
1988 Hondo 70 4 Whtotor Good Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction: (3) 7,14, 21 3TC
'
a.
Remodel/
'
.
'
Stop &amp; Compare
New
Can·structton
Shlpo, 740-446-8189.
Drywall, Siding, Roolo, AddlPublic Notice
FREE .
111¥3 S~zukl 125 ~M 2 Slrokt, llona, Painting, etc. (304)674$1.200 080, 740·245-5018 Or 4823 .. (304)874.0155.
ESTIMATES
IHt!RIFF'I BALE
.352-4805l- Mellege.
RIAL ESTATE
llvlngstonts Basam8~1 water
740-982-1871
,,.,
tt94 Ha~oy Do•ldaon Sporlsler Prooltng, all basement repairs
CAll NO IICV071
883, Pearl · Black ~ Lora or done, free tisumaree, lifetime
!Jijf1l!D COMPANIES .
Chrome.- oarage Kept. Excellent guaranlee. 12yrs on job axperlLENDINQ CORPORAnON
Condition. 13,015 mllaa. $0,500. enoe. (30&lt;)895-3887.
PLAINTIFF
(304)875-28117.
VI
840 Elecldcal and
1fe7 Honda Foreman 400, 4
' SAMUEL A. 01888, 1111
Refrigeration
wheel driYa, 831 mlloo. 14500,
740-982-.
· Alle,.lon: New Halting And CoolTrac:tor A:
Ing Sftot&gt; 91ftfl Groat Rltet And
Eqafp_ _ , __
EIICIIItnt servtce. Lot OUr e,q,.,~
OHIO
tnce Technician Clive You A
750 Boats &amp; Motors
In pu,..,ana. of ail OrderFree Etllmate Today And Beat of Bale to me dlncttct from
for Sale
Faetary Authorized
The Spring Rush . Coli Ad•aneed
aal~ Cour:t In the above
Comtofl
System•
AI
740-44612 Ft. Aluminum V Russ Trailer,
- c--JH Piuta
entlllta ecUon I wlfl ·~
Trou Motor. 155().00 (740)-4411- 0188. to aale 111 Publlo AuctiOn 111
Dealen.
2380
~llldtnlllt or c:ommorclal wiring,
lhl CourtltouH on Aprtl14,
16tl0
St. 1ft. 7 Soullr
1892 Vemahs Wave Runner, ,_ eervlce or fllllll'l. Mastei l~ 2000 ·fl 10:30 a.m. of· ..lei
cenaed
electrician:
Ridenour
Ccurl&gt;lfll.
OH «~m
BXR, 850 CC 'lltlllar. llll """kot,
cllty, lhllollowl... dleorlbed
c ..... Wei Suit. SI ,IOO.OO (740)- Eloctrlcal, WV000308, 304·875·
171111.
44!.0138'

Ctll Alittle 0..

r• Coke
llltlaCIY
tW

.

. II':&gt; CN.LED
•k:i'\RP\1101{ • I
K.l'lO'N 1-\aN TI\E'&lt;

It

592·5025 Athena

4 Conotrucllon
bNm
5 Bovlnei\IIM
llllecotnemore
profound

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CRillY PRIILIMI???

~&amp;S.Jpt

William Safranek, Attorney

1 UK medle co.

2 Swlaa~3 Cll. box

Eddie Kantar has P,enned many
47 Eltvllol
· humorous bridge articles. Now he . b--1---llnYMttor
has pu! his best together in one
41 Dt-1111 org.
4t And•c&gt;on
volume, "Classic Kantar" (Mas(tbbl.)
ter Point Press).
·
eo Mra.ln
Madrid
Kantar often cleverly -- and
52 SUltry
with apparent modesty -- decries
113Fcnfgnttudenl'a
his own play. Yet at the same time
IIUdy (abbr.)
he leaves the reader in no doubt
S4Femelt
undplper .
that what he did was technically
correct; he was just unlucky.
He plays in a regular game
with three wonderful ' people,
.
·
by Lula Campoa
.
.
Yvonne (Eddie's wife), Judy (an
c.ltbrity Cipher cryptogf8ffl8 110 ...,.ltd !rom~~- by famous people, past and
ex-girlfriend of Eddie) and Roy
pnrsent. Each ltttor In lhe clphef otandt tor another .
Today's clue: o equals Y ·
(Judy's husband) . They encourage
claiming so that they can speed up
the game, but sometimes .. .
I K 0
WXKMR
NBX
' SDKWXTXM
When the dummy appeared,
Yvonne claimed II tricks : four
KYSKOR
NBX
XBP
W DX
VB
R D X P.
hearts, five diamonds and two
B N R X. '
N B X' R
JVNBR
clubs. Eddie, the dummy, wondered what to do if neither oppoDXYBIIVGD
DXVBX
.
nent noticed the blocked suits and
PREVlOUS SOLUYfON: "I owe a lot lo my parents. especially my mother and
entry problems. He didn't need to
lalher.• -~ Greg Norman
.
..
woiTy, because both Judy and Roy
were lhere. So, play had to continue.
WOlD
tAM I
Afler winning with dummy's
heart queen, Yvonne cashed the
ace-king of. clubs, noting the
luc.ky 2-2 , split. (It they ,are 3-1,
you s hould unblock lhe diamond
honors, then exit with a club, hoping lhat the opponents cannot -- or
do not -- take four spade tricks.)
Then Yvonne cashed one top diamond before crossing to hand '_.
.P A G R H
with a club .for those three bean .
winners. Back to dummy wilh a
diamond, Yvonne finished the .
o
~ • lrom the have you ever noclubs and had · 12 tricks: four
D A R R A · ~ : ticed department: Few things prehearts, two ·diamonds and six
4 , vent us from being natural as
3
1
clubs.
;::::-=-==-==·=:_~much as the desire to " - - -- -so.
Yvonne said, "l claimed only
11 tricks . Wasn't that good
KAPINN
enough? I thought we were trying
1-:.......-:15~~~;:..!
. "T~.:._,~~~rl A _Complore rhe chuckle quoted
V by fiUing In th' mlulng wordo
to save time."
. •
you develop from steP No. 3 below.
·
The book, autographed on
A PRINT NUMBEREO lETTERS IN
request, is available for $1 ~post­
l::r THESE SQUARES
paid from Kantar at 2700 Ntelson
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
Way, 334, Santa Monica, CA
TO GET ANSWER

Cabinels- Vinyl Siding-

992·6215

DOWN

. BY PHILLIP ALDE)!.

Roofs - Decks - Oaraaes
Free Estlm1tes .

. Pomeroy, Ohio

55 -..........
541 lneffectlve
571111111'
5I Snuggle

.Classic comedy

New Conslruct_ion rl

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-

Ope!Jinli lead; • 9

Remodeling - Kitchen

F'"E.,....,_

West

1+
2NT

ConstruetJn

•Eieclrlcll ' fllurnblng
•Rooflttg &amp; Oullere
•VInyt Siding &amp; P11ntlng
•PIIllo A Porch Dtcltl

Alhlna

6 53

Vulnerable: Both
. Dealer: North

(7 40) 367-0266 • s\uca9· .
1-800-950-3359 • Gf\~\~

C..l

30
wild ox
3133 Fallht
31 Outelde
{comb. form)

37'1!1-~'·

• A KJ 5
tQJ742
,.

2t Gune an
........
21 Promontoly
29 WOOden

.• K 10 t 8 5
• 10 6 3
• ' 8 3
• Q 10

.. s

BlJRkFS

~Sernc:e
Scrubbed &amp;
cleaned
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 -Any

7.'

Weal
• AQ2
• •, 8 7 4 2

allert.l 9 Pert ole
~
51 llrlngetl

c_.
21 UJICIMY

•Q
t AK

Albany, Ohio

740-742-2706
740-446-1141

720

,~-

,,,......

40tlauthA-

Outch
1 '1111""41 • .. . _ , 7 -~ ......
Elbtl"
12 T 42 Pttpll
13-ofLondon
m uree
14 Fold
44 Atty.'l dig.
15 Mollencilrrt
'5 One (Scol)
16 T..,
41111t. Idllnae
11 "Hell.

South

'Toll Free

ta's, Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport
Ullllllte. Call Nowl 800-7~2-7470:

FIIOII $281110 . lmpoundo IRepoo. Fee. $0 Down 124
Mos. 019.9% For Listing&amp; 1-800'
319-3323 X2156.

.,.'..'''

·"'f."-..

ACROSS

17 Aoo~

• 10 6 5
• J 8

740-742~9501

Normal Size Room.

CARS

1-888-521-()916

·Fr" Dtllverr

HONDA's $100, $500 &amp; UP. PQ-.
LICE IMPOUND. Honda's ToyoEXT. B336.

I.

2/17100 1 mo

(304)458-1577.

mltea, Tlnled Windows. $10,900.
(304)675-4154.

(740) 742-8888

740.992·1709

.... loci' ,.,.,

Purple. 35000

Tru_c k seats, car seats. headUners.
truck tarps, converUble &amp; vinyl tops •
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frt 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

CONSTRUOION

1994 Grand Prix, S.E.. SunRoof,
Loaded. Good Condition. $8!100.

lng $12.800.00 304-675-7642.

Rultland, Ohio

_lSL

. AKC St. 8emaro pups, tlnll shots
and wormed , $300 each, 740·
698-6176.

850 Seed •

Tappan HI Efllclency 90% Gao
Fu,_., 011 FUiniCet, 12 Boor
Heat Pump I Air Carldltlonlng
Syaltmo F1M I - Ptrtl &amp; labof Wtfflnl)' lonnolll Healing &amp;
Clollng,l-800-172·!1887.

V

AKC Labrador Retrievers Yellow

Nloe Used Furniture and Appllancoe. (740)·448-4031 (740)·
440-1004 Anytlmt. '

,Rlllr;&amp;HTfAL ~OWNERS

ZX

&amp; Black $225 -$250, 740-256-

For Sale : Tobacco Sticks. 740·

JANITROL HEAnNO AND

° ' 'e'

1986

1993 Ford p....., GT, V-6, al op- ·
tlono, ""Y cloM, $3000, can 74().
992-5868 or 740-1192-38115.
'

- low Or SO Down.

Low MontHly Payments. V:i!K
Compliant. Almost Everyone Ap ·
pr&lt;Ned. 1-100-617-3476 Ext. 330.

99:2-5807 """'*'~~·
N
30

Rool Trusses: 9·2.2' Trusses ·$20
Each: 9·23'5" Trus9es $20 Each;
8·28'4" Trunes $30 Each; 2·
1983 Grand Am 2 Doors, 82K
28'4" Gable Truses ·$35 Each; $3,995; 1991 lumina Euro 2
tt-34'5' Trusses $50 Each: 9- Ooora 88K $3,995: 1995 S-to
40 '2" Pole Barn Trusses - $60 &amp;OK $5,495; Other 3·10 Trucks
Each; Miscellaneous lumber,. And Cars Starling At $1,795,
Good For Farm Projects, Sold By Cook Motofl, 740-446-0103.
The Bundle Only - Save $$$ Call
199.- Cadillac Designer Edition,
74().992-6496.
89 k milts, alllealller, all options,
pearlized cream color, tan cloth
560 Pela for Sale
top. exceliel1t condition. garage
AKC Black Male Po odle $100
kept, $12,000 flrm , call 740·1192·
Blue &amp; Gold Yorkshire Female
7508. teave message or call alter
6pm.
(f-lo Papers) $SO 74().441-9575.

2345(To1Free)
COMPUTE~S

-n

llllln
Speed, Runs I Drivea. No Tltt.,
. Make Ott01, AIIO 1114 Chovy C•
:836-4052::....:=:..
· - - - - - - 20 Truck 6 Cylinder. 4 Spood.
Wanted· RCA or Huges Direct Runs Good, Cab No Good Btlt
TV system , will pay lop dollar, Offer. 7~1-1013.
Wolllt 740-949-331~ le1ve mn- 1989 Della 18 !'\OV@! Otdlf!!Qb!loaage.
e11ceuen1 condition, must aeelo ,
Waterline Spetlal: 3/4 20~PSI

R&amp;D's Uaed Furniture Great Se-

1880...80 Honda1 from $21/MO.,
Impounds! 0 Down. 24 •
18.9% lltllngo. 800-3111-3323 Ert.
:380::,::1·-------~
C"-- ee
305 • •-1
1184 ·~·· milO,
• '~ ,,
IUIO, -point,
RICing
flms, good c:ondlllon, 12200. 740-

ALDER

Stop In And See :'~:
Steve Riffle
.'1"J
.
Sales Representitiv,e j
Larry Schey
::~ ;

-- ,_.....

NEA Cro••word Pu:n:le

II

�The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BRIDOII:

110
API&gt;IIInc.. :

PHILLIP

Rtcondlllonecl

~. ~. ~. Rot~

•••ora, to Day Guarantee! ·

Pomeroy Eltgln

8ert&gt;er Slit In Stock ltemo Mot-

Club Bingo On
Thuradtlye

Fronoh Clly M1yt1g, 74q·4417115.

klllln Corpot, 202 Clark Chl~l . SAV GOODBYE To Pound a
NOW! Fortw~, I Guttlnlte You.
Ol&gt;lo. 740-441-7444.
FREE 2 Wotkt Supply (45 Tlbltll With Sdonllllc Proal) Sind
For S1le: ~econdltlontd Wllh·
trl, dryers and refrlgtratora.
$4.11$ S IH: OAF Inc. lOlA Broad
Thompeona Appliance. 3407 Sffett, Dopt 1029, Sullo 1741,
- - NJ 07102
- · (304)875-7381.
0000 USED APPLIANCES SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Wathert, dryert, rtlrlgtretora, CIIIm Denied? We Specialize In

Rood,- ·

ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 71

VIne Stroot, Clll 740-448-7398,
1-888-1I 8-0 128.
New And Uaed Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanaug1 .

Good Used Beds, Ortsaers ,
CO..,.,.., Dlnllleo , Etc. Big SavIngs On New Furniture. 740.U6·

4782.

Appeals And Hearings. F~EE

CONSULTATION . Btnetlt Taam
ServlciS, Inc . Toll-Free : 1·888·

lection , Prieed To Sam

·come

And Browse. • Corner 01 Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike, ·we Buy Furnt-

luno' 740-367-0:IBO.

Washer .$95.00 , ·Dryer $95 .00

Electric range $95.00. Froal tree

Ratrlgerator S125.QO, Like new
Retrlv. $250.00. Deep Frearer-

nlct $175 .00. Washer like new
$250.00 One Year Wa"anly, Dryer Like New $250.00 One year
warranty. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Street, Gallipolis, Ohio.

(740l-4'fl,7398:

530

1(888)-el~l28

Antiques

540

Mleciellaneoua
Merchandlae
C~EDIT?

UBAD

$21 .95 Por tOO; f• 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 100: All Brass ComPfiSilon Fllllngsln Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISE'S
Jadcson, Ohio. 1-100-537-9!528
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Down! Past
Credll Proble ms OKII Even If
Turned Down Belori!l Reastabti&amp;h

-CredHit 1-800-659-0359.
550
Building
Suppllea
Block , brick, sewer pipes, windows, llntela, etc. Claude Winters,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 East Main oo SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740-992-2526 Of 74().9921539. RUII MoOft, OWflff.

Gel Cash

loans To $5,000. Debt Consoli·

dalton To $200.000. Crodil CaRls,
Mortgages, Refinanc ing And
Auto Loans Available. Meridian
Credit Corp. 1·800·47H5119 Ext.

1180.

(3) All Steel BUildings. 25x30
Wae $7,800 Sell $3,900: 30x48
Was $11 ,700 Sell $5.850; 50x60

Waa $16,500 Sell $7,900. Tom t800-392-7806.
.
While metal Twin Bed $50 .00,
matching Dresser wUh Bookcase.·

8 Piece Sectional COUCII $250.00
Girls Name Brand Clothes (0-2T)
Boys Name Brand Clothes (0·
tmo.) (740)·44H349
2 White Dryars, Kenmore &amp; ·Hotpoint $65 Each; 2 White Wash·

"'· $75 Each Bolh Whlfl&gt;ool Call
After 5:30P.M. 740-446-9066.
WANT .A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Finance With •o• Down. Past
Credit Problem!, No Problem. CBII
Tal Free 1-877-293-4082.
I
Are You A Metal Building Erector'
/Contractor? We Have f=actory I
Direct Buildings Wilh NO Daalershlp Fee Or Volume CDmmi~rntnt.

All SIZES IALL LOADS. ElDORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS
1-800-279-4300.
Complete DISH Network sarelllte
system, brand ntw, $99, 740·
992·1182 or 304·773· !!i305"etter
6pm.

COMPUTER BLOWOUTII HP,

COMPAQ Desktops , Laptops,
Merchant ·A(;counta. Websltes
Start Your Home Business To·
daytl Almost Everyone Ap ·
proved!! No Money Down!/ Low

Monthly Paymentsll t-888-47Q,-

5121.

FLOIUDA. MARCO ISLAND. Enjoy The Tropical Paradise Of
Beaches And Relaxation. Beach
Front Condos Or Homes. For
Rent /Sale. Century 21 1st. SOUthern Truat. 1·800·255·9487

www.c21marw.com

Got M 18' Mini -Dish?

A._,_

Want 320 Chlmels?
One
Fee.
No -lhly Chorgesl .
1-204·1192·2841 .

Orubb's Plano- lu~lng &amp; repairs.
Prob4ems? Need Tuned? Cal the
planO Dr. 740-448-4525

HOt Springs hot tub, 4 person,
good condition. soma chemicals
Included, call 740·992-5053 oiler
6pm.

COOLING EQUIPMENT

INSTALLED

' llll&gt;u Don'l Call Us Wo Borh

Eatlmatesl 740-448·
8308, I-I00-291-tl098.
LOll. • Frte

. . JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repolt'ed, New &amp; Rebut~ In Stocl&lt;.
Call Roo Evano, 1-800-537-9528.
Longaberger baskets tor sale,
1992- 1995, all types. Contact

Mary 81740-949-2809.

Performs 5200 CO
Computer Wilh Bunt In -Color
Monitor. MAC OS 7.5 System nnternet ~eady Y2K -01&lt;/C_olor ·Stylawrller 2400 Prlnle;r. Internal Mo-

Macintosh

. · dem/MicrophonefSame

Kind

Used AI Till SChools. $600, 740.
448-2151 le... MeSS891f.
MOBILE - E OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prieta,

On VInyl Skirting, Doo11. Wlndo
ows, AnchOre, Water Heatert,
Plumbing &amp; EleclfiCII Parts, FUI·
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps. 8tnnttta
Mobile Home Supply, 740-448·
9418.
NEED A COMPUTE~? 'llo
Finance Bad ~rodlt - Bankruptcy
OK ! No Tlrmdowne - FREE INTERNET 888·827·7502 """·P&lt;·

......oom

New Mlllenlum 01111 Eat All D1y
And Melt Away, Call Tracy At
740-441-1982.

5

appredcite, 741).992-7212.

1990 Buick leSabre, 4 door, all
powor, ucolltnl oondlllon. $3995,

740·1192·2529'" 740-448-7194.
1990 Nlllan Maxima Accepting .
Sealed Bids Thru March 81h,
Ptoue Phont: 740·387-5055,
Between 7:30 &amp; 4 P.M.
1990 Otdsriloblle 88 Royale V·6,
4 Doors, Automatic, Power Evtr)'·
llllnpl New Blllef)', $2,700, OBO ·
740-367-7281.
.
19th lauzu PICk-Up Convtrtable
351 Windsor Engine, C·6 Trani·
mlllllon, 5 SIN Whtolo, $2,500.
(740)-258-1547.

Ford Probe, 2.0, 18 Valve

1994

Fuel Injection , A.T., A.C. , $3200.

6733.

(304)576-2887

AT 8 :30P.M.

llalnSt.,
"-oy, OH
PIYingS80.00
Jill' ..,.
$300.011 eov.r.ll
PGO.OO Swtlul'lt

Prog,...,,. top line.
Uc.f ~

_

un-

.Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

'IISSEU IUILDEU
IIC.
New .Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMEIOAL III!IIESIDEIIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES

740.· 992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

..,.•.••..
RIIO~alt1

AKP St. Bernard Pups, 6 Weeks

1.995 ST Blazar LS, 40R, 75,000

Old, Vel C~ocked, lol Shots, &amp;
Wonned. $300, 304-272-e852.

mt..s, full power extra nice, Ilk·

All replacement
parts

Over 75 Tanks ol freshwaler
Fish. Locally Raised Parak!JelsJ
Supplies. Fish Tank/Pet Shop,
2413
Jackson
Avenue,/Pr.

1998 Mustang,

Pleasant. (304)675-20B3.'sun. 1-II'M. Mon-Sat II AM-6PM.
Golden Retriever Puppies
$100.00 Each. 740-682-7762.
Miniature Collll

74().441-0885.

570

Puppies, $75,

1997 Grand Prix • GT, Stack, 2
door. loaded, Good Condition.
(304)182-2625.
1998 Pontiac Trans-Am 3!i0 V· l
LS-1 Corvette Engine, Automatic

Chromt
Wheels. T-Tops. Fully loaded,

Transmission; Factory

500 wt Monsoon Sler.o System
With 10 Speakers And 12 Olac
CO Changer In Trunk CaiMtte In

Muelcal

lnatrumenta
10 piece Tama drum sat, black,
HI·Hat, two Crash cymbals , one

·. Ride cymbal. $1000, 740-9927014.
A - ·Attention
Poorlloys Muolc Inc.
Is Comfn1l Soon To Ga..,_.lo
Buy, SOl, Trade, Ropalfl,
740-441-7093

Dash , Deep Navy Metallic With
Dark Gray Leather Interior, Any
~eaaonable Offer Considered,

74().4411-4548 Or 740-446-7375.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1O' John Deere transport disk,
$850; John Deere-148 front end

loader (Ills 3010·4230), $3250;
twush hog, 8', $550; tOmato waa~-­
erlaorter, (like new), $2500; call

74().992-3985 Of 74().992-5866.
12 Hundred Lbs. of Round Bales
Hey: lor Sale; $20,00 Each .
(740)-379-2194
2 Unclaimed -

llulldlngtl

Cancellations! Brand
New, 81111 Eratedt Urgent Must
Sen . Quonoet Arch Style. One lo
40x60. SeiUng For Balance OnlY!
t-800-825·51l59 Ellon.
.
Factory

Baler. Vermeer 805C Wllh Extra

SOt Of Tension Springs: Excellent
Condition, $3.000. Coli 740·8828892.
245-5121 .

Ford 800 Tractor, Live Hydraulics, Grader Blade . Better Than,

Vlagral $3,800. (304~75-3824 .
Gehh Hayblne, 9 FQDt Cut. Very

Goo&lt;l Condition. (304)675-2145.
Indianapolis Moline tractor. 52·
hp.. IMI poMtr &amp; 3 pt. hitch: bnJIIh
hog, grader .blade; boom pole;

manure spreader; $5000 tor all,
740-742-2050.
Massey Ferguson· 261 207 Hra.
Duel Remote, $13,000, 740·3888036.

830

Llveetock

2 Quarter Horses Broke, SOund I

Slit Trail Ridden Or 4-H PrD)ecl,

740-388-11504 .

APHA Black /White Paint Mare

Fold AI Side AOHA Sorrel Mare
Rlaft;To Fold. 740-388-9130.
ButdllfHoge, 740-2-10.

Pea Fowl, ( B1by Peacockl), 8
Monthe Old. $30.00 Eech. 7402!18--!203.

Regilt- Anguo Bulls For Slit,
740-245--5084 ..
Hay • Qral{l
Alfalfa &amp; Orchard Grass Ml.lled
Hay 1st, 2nd &amp; 3rd, Cuttings,

llquarwBolea. 740-245-5815.
Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Discount Avall,ble. Heritage Farm.
(304)875-8724.

PSYCHIC AEADINGs By Soplllol
~ RMdngl Amulng
-·1-AI-11
Clll1 ~· 181 4159.

Now lal&lt;lng lor lhla Sjlflna,
Flrll DrdOf1 w11 ~ Beoi&amp;
Earlltlt Planta. Dewhurst
-.(304)895-37-3781.

Fertlllzar

1bboceo ""'""

.

f RAW; P[!flf AT ION

710 AutO. for Sale
'92 Pontile Bonnovmt, tour door, ·

excellent oondltlon •.• ...,. $4850,
740-MI-2045~-

• J

750 East State Street
I.Attlens, Ohio 45701
"A

23~
Olnlnel

•AK87 42

Eul

JOID'
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

·-""

992-5479
YOUNG'S

CARPIIRI SlmCE

•Room ttddNiont ARlrnodelng
'NiwGirlget

20 Yrs. Exp. •Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones ·-

·aoulb

·

f3
8unHfRom•
740-742-3411
Bry10 Reeves

22 Y"'· Local

ww-N.sunsethame.com

Myltlc

.Pom•

o,..,.,
.....
For YOir Pet's IIIIIs.

,~~ql

WILLIS'
'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

No Credit • Slow Credit • Blnlcruptcy
Repo • Dlvordtd

No l'mbarntllmtnl...

n

You're TrHtad with Rnpectl

1-800-311-3391
Free Eatimatea
Ctlfrllftrl Wtlllmt

THE BORN LOSER
,.WAAT Kl ND Of' VEC£TI\&amp;.E. .,
l':l TI-l\~ '?
;

s•

Cli:U.RD.IETI\E.'(
&lt;.ro~~

'_J;l'1:Io,WI11\~I

tlflo.tal 1\ • ,..,...,...,,....,,,(louol11110111 ...... ~ ..... iolotlinoglt ~moyrtllln- ,.,ry. laron ·
· IS 'mtll(ll" PfOII"'t (w his .-ltor piiiOflli U!folitis may iodudt 0Ill, 0 .._,
....... .Whotsoltollgaols. You ....
il.ltjtO
........ l ......

tinct...,.,...
.........
t,

. . . . . . . . . . . .1(1

For lnlonnetton reganllf1i1
llllnkruptvyconiKt

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

Pu~llc Notice

Trucks lor Sale

171-1417or
Cell Phone 674-3311

•• Drl"'"' St•••

•r., s,u &amp;....,... c.,m

• B•••d

•Lis•• 01••"••

Fax

wv

BURKE'S

CARPET SERVICE

ROIIRT IISSILL
CONSTRUCIIOII

......

IlliG~ ~NTY,

...r..._,.

·

I~Caplllnl"

10 Commtrelala

Pass

DDIDII
Pllft

AB.N..._

, •• »....

tea-

11SU-for
flftlllng
IIF..,20 Unfold
22 AfrlclnAreblan

Pass
AU pass

3tfltNIIt
wwriOr
43 .......
45 Sollr tlllk

I

SELF STORAH

29870 Baahan- •
Road
I
Racine; Ohio :

Wi-l'r'
VOU 6ET OUT
,, ,.,... IN RI614T FIELD, AND
'r'OU A FEW FLIES..

45771

740-JM&amp;-2217 \
Sizes 5' x 10' •
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8

I I 1

I

90405.

To get a current weather
report, check the.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWIRS
. Ocular - Antic • Matte - Adroit - Ef?,UCA TION
· A quote from a very famous wnter: I have. never let
my schooling interfere wtlh my EDUCATION . ·

New Roofl • Rtp~llre-~·
• Coating • GutterS~"
• Siding • Dtyw1H '
• Painting • Plumb!"
FriiEetlmette

Joseph Jaclkl

,.

... '--'f:

BulldoHI'
- - Semkel
Hou.., &amp; '&amp;ailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;

•

-~

8

~.·

.

,.

·~

Seplit: Sy.te,.. It
UdlJU.t

.'llrt"'
_A ,Irhday
_· .
-"'""'~-:-~

.

1

'

Grading

TAUiiUS .(Aprit :!0-May 20)
.-

1 1,y,Mudll,2000

· , _ Ia a """" ll...ihood io

..
,_...., .....-•will
'*"a tum for the-. io
Wl)'l

1'·

(7401ft2·1111

'\..-

!

Now .........

:
'

High " _Dty ·

1 ,,
1
t
•
• •
•

Stlf'!'Sitfl.l t

,

33795· Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, .Ohio

740·99t·SIII

11111-ld enhMce yoor fi-ltl
oltulllon.' Yoo'Umabllqwltllti
the SUn lhiMI.
PI!CI!S (Fob. 20-Mr!r&lt;h 20)
'lb your IUIIIrise. ....-~q COltllrdoe will be dme todt)'...
coml,. 10 old ollllpb dtlllo
owed "'"'· 'l1te ·w[ll """'
' to find I WIY to replY
wjth yoa
~l'llcol. . - younolf 1o 1
...,. Send f'or
•....
,.,._
Orlpll fiOdic:tionl for tk ,_
:::::::l;;:lln, S2 ... SASE IS
r;1o IIIII •w~.o ,
P.O.
7,., Murny IIUI'Sflo
tloil, New -Yoot. NY 10156. S.
-to-)'M'Zodtlcolp.
ARJES(Mm21-Apri119)1t

lox

-bed

: lfhollldnot-•eny--10
yaulf Y'"' a
to"*~

. t/IIWO 1 mo. pd.

leadenhlp n&gt;lo In I.JIDIIP In
' _ y , .'rolo......._Thty_
fUdl tn )'OU.

·''' 1

'

hi;t.iy".~

c'·'lv. 1·n 8 ·-r·al••nins. will be

v... eould
fool"!""'
t1t11 you
hive..,..
,;you. at-es
10 mw,....;. ~--~~ n It will be members·
extn
relf0f1le
whiCh
of the
lodoy tliil oilieis,oc:~. irid yoa'il
opposite gender who display this
befi&amp;ht You mar eyen rell!h alk·
rle competiticm iO poovc i&lt;Nnelf.
thes~~IO (Oct. 24-Nov. ll)
OBMINI (Moy 2t-Jane 20)
lnotead&lt;lfwast\niY~'li!'"""i!l&gt;
Ellperienceistbebest-hetaod, ..
'ivlio iliiir't oppm:ille tbe
in yoor in"'"":hb~::..."'!;d"',!
,..
you,
lhiJe your "day with
1
1
beoue.Yoo'll
•lhosewholnolytove~ooandwont
you're not likely to ..,ell old
10 be wlrS yoo. Time is too pre·
miolal&lt;ea.
clout to lqUUnder.
.
CANCER (June 2I-Jaly 22l
SAOI1'tARlUS(Nod:l-Oc&lt;.
~ Your ad&gt;Jeruriel coaW be ill for
. 21) Business and pleuure should
1 rude 1Wikenin1 todly thould mix welllodoy if you pot enjoylhey stteqJt lo push or shove you
ment first and cuttinaa deal set·
lfOifnd. They won'tlbe l""fll"d
ond. Ever; lhlng will happen notlor how much •he~ uflflernted
· 0 ,.ny when evef)'one Is ln e
you.
· •
'
··
relucd mood.
LEO (July, 23-A· ...__..._
22).Even
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·1an. ·
of
thouth YOI! ,. qalli ....-19} Thi• ;, on ex&lt;ellt,. day for
mol&lt;"I
-ld"
_.__ involved in 1011\tlhi-·
do
·--..
~
yoe feel, the
to
ao,
thllcoold molcO .. Slvt ''"' monc.W.. . . tlltlthe _ . yoa'll
ey. Ywr finoncial as)ftl:IJ . .
follow today will be ..,. IIIII ·
'
veoy -"""'IIOJ, ,. JiV&lt; theoe
uy;~;.,or.al!h.!lept.·. 221
types of projects maximum anen...._
tioo.
Offer your oervlcel ~, · on
AQUARIUS(Jon. 20-Feb. i9)
purely buii-'IU -·Don't
loyallyourcardsoutonlllellble
1lve t n y - rOf' ·lhosetodly withoutheollllioo. Ailoci·
ooli&lt;lt your okill• to tltlnt you'll&gt;
... will IJIIWIOiate you Ill the
iOi•l to pve·tltem • f!eeble. •
'"""'f'or youroandor . t bowUBRA(!iept. 23-oct. l3)Peoi•w-youlltnd.
pie yoa CIIWWIW todly, ape-

lraod=,

°

·

. i
.'

.'
•

.\

.,

.j '

•

il

.

·--

Pasa

. Pass

- 11 ~ow~r ·~tro .
13 ....,...

(2 wde.)
23 AI lilt tip
24Chnte
25 Anc~t
27 Cepuchln
mank8y
32Dirllng
34 Sl,..,.
35A.....I

Eaal

l

. #00350.6

'74' n7.42·2706
74n446 1141

co&amp;:f~oN

304-6

·-Driveways •Tennis Courts
·•Parking lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
1986 Ford F-1 50 pickup, $900,
CASE NO IICV072
"""-740-992-3184.
UNITED COMPANIES
LENDINQ CORPORATION
1987 Toyota Truck 4 Wheel
la•4"~P• Mlttrl.e l
Drive, New Tires, Exc,llent
PLAINTIFF
Sh"'", 740-245-5991 .
VS
Oon'l tst..,g by hit~ priers!
• SAMUEL A. QIBBI!, llal
1998 Dodge Ram 1500. 4x4, 5
DEFENDANTS
Servlet
speed, manual, AIC, AMIFM • Shop the douJ(rd SKtlon.
COURT OF COMMON
Cassette wllh topper, 19,000
PLEAS,
miles, $ts.ooo. Call (304)675· 760 Auto Partl &amp;
Upaoe·..,.
MEIQS
COUNTY,
OHIO
4288.
·
Accaeaorle•
-In pur~uance of an O_nler
1988 Ford Ranger 2.0 , 4 cyl. ~B-ud""g-et-P"'r'"ic-ed-Tr:"-en-s-m'"tsa-io_n_s..,...AII
of Sale to me directed from
n tc~~ straight $2,300. 304·675·, Typea, Access To Over 1o.ooo · said Court In the lbove
Clean &amp; Scotch
382
TransmiSSions , CVC 'JOints, 740·
entttltt action I Will expon
G;uard $40 - Any
1986 Ford Ranger, good condl· 245-5677.
to ule at Public Auction at
Pul!llc Notice
lion, $1500, 740-992-3224- .
the
Courthoult
on
Aprll14,
Motor From '85 Ponllac Flreblrd
Normal Size Room.
2000 at 10:15 a.m. ol aafd
1988 GMC 2 Ton Cattle Truck , 2.8 Litre Fuel Injected, Recently
Situated In lht Stale of
day, the following deac~bed
RebuHI Call 740-441-0335, 740·
Edloon Mayos. (304)875-1858.
Ohio, County of Malga and
V"
446-3232.
real eatllle:
In
the
VIllage
of
Ho.,_:
.
'
1994 - 1500 Sorles, Chovy PldcSituated In lht Slate of
Campere&amp;
Up. IOIK Milos. Auto · Air. Naw 790
Being the South half of
Ohio, County of Melga,
, V"
• ·
BF !foodrlch Tlret &amp; Alum. Cei.n ·
Motor Homea
Sallabury .
Townthlp, Lot No~ 20 In block 111 In lht
tar Line Rims. Red w/Biack
VIllage of Hobaon, Melga 1........;'~------'
Middleport Village, In the County,
Ohio.
Taunly Cover. $6,900. (304)675- 11198 Nomad Cam~r. 2211. VIllage of Hobaon, SICIIon
2029.$8.900.
SIOipe 7-1. Only UIU 8 limo,.
Prior · lnatrumant
29,
In
too
acrelott
314-328
,$7,!100 linn. Coli: (304)e7l!-5TII . .
reference: Volume 25 Page
1995 5-10
Town 1, Range 13 Weal, and
113
.
4 cyl. 5 SP,P.S,P.B,Nico Truck
•• recorded In Volume 3,
SERVICE~,
Property atldr111: 29138
$4500.304-675-36.24.
Peg• 6 of the Mtlga County
LAGOON ROAD
Pllll recorda:
·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45780
Baing the North half of
1997 black Chevy 5-to Stopslde 810
Home
AppraiHCI 11$10,000.00
Lol 120 In block It ln the
E11tended Cab, 3 door. loaded ,
Terms of ule: Cult
Improvement&amp;
qf
Hobaon,
Melga
VIllage
25,000 miles, very sharp, full far·
Jamta M. Soulaby
lngs, $12,000. 740-948-2045 or
County, Ohio.
BAIIEMENT
Sherif!, Mllga County
74().949-2203.
WATERPROOFING
Prior
lnalrument
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. reference: Volume 65 P•tJ• CMtUne M. Uepold
' Lerner,
Sampeon
lo
Local references furnished . Es·
813
Rolhfuu
·
1975. Col 24 Hra. (740)
Property addre11: 29t57
730 Vane &amp; 4-WDs
120 E. Fourth Street, llh
448-0870, 1-600-287-0578. Rog- LAQOONROAD
Floor ·
'
1987 Chevy 5·10 Blazer, 4~t4, nwa... p.w"'n~g .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45710
Clnclnnllll, Ohio 45202
2.8.l, A.T., ,t,.C. , High Miles, '
AppraiHCI at$10,000.00
~.000. (304)576-2887.
(513) 24!-3100
Appliance Parts And Service: All
Term• of Hit: C~ah­
OH
SUp Cl10070085
1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4 8 Cylin- • Name Branda OVer 2!5 Veara EK· Jamta M. Soulaby
(3)
7,
14,21 3TC ·
perlence
All
Work
Guaranteed.
der, 5 Spood, Loadld, 88,000
Shlrtff, Melga County
French
Clly
Maytag,
740-446Miles. Stt ,000 OBO 740·448Chrlatlna M. Utpold
77115.
1900.
Lamer,
Sa'm paon
1o
..
1996 Dodge Grand Caravan ES, . CIC Qeneral Home Main · · RothfUII
All Power llotht! lntoriD! Excel' te.nence - Painting, vinyl siding, 120 E. Fourth St-. 8th
New Homes
lent Condition, 740-448-2107 carpenlfy. doQfl, wlndowo, baths, Floor
• Garilgea
home ..,... and more. For
Daya; 740-245-918-INIIf 8.
Clnolnnllll, 01tto 4UO:Z
''" estimate call Chit, 740-992- (513) 241--3100
•
Complete
6323.
740 M0torcycl81
OH Sup Cl10070015
Rerllodellng
1988 Hondo 70 4 Whtotor Good Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction: (3) 7,14, 21 3TC
'
a.
Remodel/
'
.
'
Stop &amp; Compare
New
Can·structton
Shlpo, 740-446-8189.
Drywall, Siding, Roolo, AddlPublic Notice
FREE .
111¥3 S~zukl 125 ~M 2 Slrokt, llona, Painting, etc. (304)674$1.200 080, 740·245-5018 Or 4823 .. (304)874.0155.
ESTIMATES
IHt!RIFF'I BALE
.352-4805l- Mellege.
RIAL ESTATE
llvlngstonts Basam8~1 water
740-982-1871
,,.,
tt94 Ha~oy Do•ldaon Sporlsler Prooltng, all basement repairs
CAll NO IICV071
883, Pearl · Black ~ Lora or done, free tisumaree, lifetime
!Jijf1l!D COMPANIES .
Chrome.- oarage Kept. Excellent guaranlee. 12yrs on job axperlLENDINQ CORPORAnON
Condition. 13,015 mllaa. $0,500. enoe. (30&lt;)895-3887.
PLAINTIFF
(304)875-28117.
VI
840 Elecldcal and
1fe7 Honda Foreman 400, 4
' SAMUEL A. 01888, 1111
Refrigeration
wheel driYa, 831 mlloo. 14500,
740-982-.
· Alle,.lon: New Halting And CoolTrac:tor A:
Ing Sftot&gt; 91ftfl Groat Rltet And
Eqafp_ _ , __
EIICIIItnt servtce. Lot OUr e,q,.,~
OHIO
tnce Technician Clive You A
750 Boats &amp; Motors
In pu,..,ana. of ail OrderFree Etllmate Today And Beat of Bale to me dlncttct from
for Sale
Faetary Authorized
The Spring Rush . Coli Ad•aneed
aal~ Cour:t In the above
Comtofl
System•
AI
740-44612 Ft. Aluminum V Russ Trailer,
- c--JH Piuta
entlllta ecUon I wlfl ·~
Trou Motor. 155().00 (740)-4411- 0188. to aale 111 Publlo AuctiOn 111
Dealen.
2380
~llldtnlllt or c:ommorclal wiring,
lhl CourtltouH on Aprtl14,
16tl0
St. 1ft. 7 Soullr
1892 Vemahs Wave Runner, ,_ eervlce or fllllll'l. Mastei l~ 2000 ·fl 10:30 a.m. of· ..lei
cenaed
electrician:
Ridenour
Ccurl&gt;lfll.
OH «~m
BXR, 850 CC 'lltlllar. llll """kot,
cllty, lhllollowl... dleorlbed
c ..... Wei Suit. SI ,IOO.OO (740)- Eloctrlcal, WV000308, 304·875·
171111.
44!.0138'

Ctll Alittle 0..

r• Coke
llltlaCIY
tW

.

. II':&gt; CN.LED
•k:i'\RP\1101{ • I
K.l'lO'N 1-\aN TI\E'&lt;

It

592·5025 Athena

4 Conotrucllon
bNm
5 Bovlnei\IIM
llllecotnemore
profound

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CRillY PRIILIMI???

~&amp;S.Jpt

William Safranek, Attorney

1 UK medle co.

2 Swlaa~3 Cll. box

Eddie Kantar has P,enned many
47 Eltvllol
· humorous bridge articles. Now he . b--1---llnYMttor
has pu! his best together in one
41 Dt-1111 org.
4t And•c&gt;on
volume, "Classic Kantar" (Mas(tbbl.)
ter Point Press).
·
eo Mra.ln
Madrid
Kantar often cleverly -- and
52 SUltry
with apparent modesty -- decries
113Fcnfgnttudenl'a
his own play. Yet at the same time
IIUdy (abbr.)
he leaves the reader in no doubt
S4Femelt
undplper .
that what he did was technically
correct; he was just unlucky.
He plays in a regular game
with three wonderful ' people,
.
·
by Lula Campoa
.
.
Yvonne (Eddie's wife), Judy (an
c.ltbrity Cipher cryptogf8ffl8 110 ...,.ltd !rom~~- by famous people, past and
ex-girlfriend of Eddie) and Roy
pnrsent. Each ltttor In lhe clphef otandt tor another .
Today's clue: o equals Y ·
(Judy's husband) . They encourage
claiming so that they can speed up
the game, but sometimes .. .
I K 0
WXKMR
NBX
' SDKWXTXM
When the dummy appeared,
Yvonne claimed II tricks : four
KYSKOR
NBX
XBP
W DX
VB
R D X P.
hearts, five diamonds and two
B N R X. '
N B X' R
JVNBR
clubs. Eddie, the dummy, wondered what to do if neither oppoDXYBIIVGD
DXVBX
.
nent noticed the blocked suits and
PREVlOUS SOLUYfON: "I owe a lot lo my parents. especially my mother and
entry problems. He didn't need to
lalher.• -~ Greg Norman
.
..
woiTy, because both Judy and Roy
were lhere. So, play had to continue.
WOlD
tAM I
Afler winning with dummy's
heart queen, Yvonne cashed the
ace-king of. clubs, noting the
luc.ky 2-2 , split. (It they ,are 3-1,
you s hould unblock lhe diamond
honors, then exit with a club, hoping lhat the opponents cannot -- or
do not -- take four spade tricks.)
Then Yvonne cashed one top diamond before crossing to hand '_.
.P A G R H
with a club .for those three bean .
winners. Back to dummy wilh a
diamond, Yvonne finished the .
o
~ • lrom the have you ever noclubs and had · 12 tricks: four
D A R R A · ~ : ticed department: Few things prehearts, two ·diamonds and six
4 , vent us from being natural as
3
1
clubs.
;::::-=-==-==·=:_~much as the desire to " - - -- -so.
Yvonne said, "l claimed only
11 tricks . Wasn't that good
KAPINN
enough? I thought we were trying
1-:.......-:15~~~;:..!
. "T~.:._,~~~rl A _Complore rhe chuckle quoted
V by fiUing In th' mlulng wordo
to save time."
. •
you develop from steP No. 3 below.
·
The book, autographed on
A PRINT NUMBEREO lETTERS IN
request, is available for $1 ~post­
l::r THESE SQUARES
paid from Kantar at 2700 Ntelson
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
Way, 334, Santa Monica, CA
TO GET ANSWER

Cabinels- Vinyl Siding-

992·6215

DOWN

. BY PHILLIP ALDE)!.

Roofs - Decks - Oaraaes
Free Estlm1tes .

. Pomeroy, Ohio

55 -..........
541 lneffectlve
571111111'
5I Snuggle

.Classic comedy

New Conslruct_ion rl

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-

Ope!Jinli lead; • 9

Remodeling - Kitchen

F'"E.,....,_

West

1+
2NT

ConstruetJn

•Eieclrlcll ' fllurnblng
•Rooflttg &amp; Oullere
•VInyt Siding &amp; P11ntlng
•PIIllo A Porch Dtcltl

Alhlna

6 53

Vulnerable: Both
. Dealer: North

(7 40) 367-0266 • s\uca9· .
1-800-950-3359 • Gf\~\~

C..l

30
wild ox
3133 Fallht
31 Outelde
{comb. form)

37'1!1-~'·

• A KJ 5
tQJ742
,.

2t Gune an
........
21 Promontoly
29 WOOden

.• K 10 t 8 5
• 10 6 3
• ' 8 3
• Q 10

.. s

BlJRkFS

~Sernc:e
Scrubbed &amp;
cleaned
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 -Any

7.'

Weal
• AQ2
• •, 8 7 4 2

allert.l 9 Pert ole
~
51 llrlngetl

c_.
21 UJICIMY

•Q
t AK

Albany, Ohio

740-742-2706
740-446-1141

720

,~-

,,,......

40tlauthA-

Outch
1 '1111""41 • .. . _ , 7 -~ ......
Elbtl"
12 T 42 Pttpll
13-ofLondon
m uree
14 Fold
44 Atty.'l dig.
15 Mollencilrrt
'5 One (Scol)
16 T..,
41111t. Idllnae
11 "Hell.

South

'Toll Free

ta's, Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport
Ullllllte. Call Nowl 800-7~2-7470:

FIIOII $281110 . lmpoundo IRepoo. Fee. $0 Down 124
Mos. 019.9% For Listing&amp; 1-800'
319-3323 X2156.

.,.'..'''

·"'f."-..

ACROSS

17 Aoo~

• 10 6 5
• J 8

740-742~9501

Normal Size Room.

CARS

1-888-521-()916

·Fr" Dtllverr

HONDA's $100, $500 &amp; UP. PQ-.
LICE IMPOUND. Honda's ToyoEXT. B336.

I.

2/17100 1 mo

(304)458-1577.

mltea, Tlnled Windows. $10,900.
(304)675-4154.

(740) 742-8888

740.992·1709

.... loci' ,.,.,

Purple. 35000

Tru_c k seats, car seats. headUners.
truck tarps, converUble &amp; vinyl tops •
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frt 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

CONSTRUOION

1994 Grand Prix, S.E.. SunRoof,
Loaded. Good Condition. $8!100.

lng $12.800.00 304-675-7642.

Rultland, Ohio

_lSL

. AKC St. 8emaro pups, tlnll shots
and wormed , $300 each, 740·
698-6176.

850 Seed •

Tappan HI Efllclency 90% Gao
Fu,_., 011 FUiniCet, 12 Boor
Heat Pump I Air Carldltlonlng
Syaltmo F1M I - Ptrtl &amp; labof Wtfflnl)' lonnolll Healing &amp;
Clollng,l-800-172·!1887.

V

AKC Labrador Retrievers Yellow

Nloe Used Furniture and Appllancoe. (740)·448-4031 (740)·
440-1004 Anytlmt. '

,Rlllr;&amp;HTfAL ~OWNERS

ZX

&amp; Black $225 -$250, 740-256-

For Sale : Tobacco Sticks. 740·

JANITROL HEAnNO AND

° ' 'e'

1986

1993 Ford p....., GT, V-6, al op- ·
tlono, ""Y cloM, $3000, can 74().
992-5868 or 740-1192-38115.
'

- low Or SO Down.

Low MontHly Payments. V:i!K
Compliant. Almost Everyone Ap ·
pr&lt;Ned. 1-100-617-3476 Ext. 330.

99:2-5807 """'*'~~·
N
30

Rool Trusses: 9·2.2' Trusses ·$20
Each: 9·23'5" Trus9es $20 Each;
8·28'4" Trunes $30 Each; 2·
1983 Grand Am 2 Doors, 82K
28'4" Gable Truses ·$35 Each; $3,995; 1991 lumina Euro 2
tt-34'5' Trusses $50 Each: 9- Ooora 88K $3,995: 1995 S-to
40 '2" Pole Barn Trusses - $60 &amp;OK $5,495; Other 3·10 Trucks
Each; Miscellaneous lumber,. And Cars Starling At $1,795,
Good For Farm Projects, Sold By Cook Motofl, 740-446-0103.
The Bundle Only - Save $$$ Call
199.- Cadillac Designer Edition,
74().992-6496.
89 k milts, alllealller, all options,
pearlized cream color, tan cloth
560 Pela for Sale
top. exceliel1t condition. garage
AKC Black Male Po odle $100
kept, $12,000 flrm , call 740·1192·
Blue &amp; Gold Yorkshire Female
7508. teave message or call alter
6pm.
(f-lo Papers) $SO 74().441-9575.

2345(To1Free)
COMPUTE~S

-n

llllln
Speed, Runs I Drivea. No Tltt.,
. Make Ott01, AIIO 1114 Chovy C•
:836-4052::....:=:..
· - - - - - - 20 Truck 6 Cylinder. 4 Spood.
Wanted· RCA or Huges Direct Runs Good, Cab No Good Btlt
TV system , will pay lop dollar, Offer. 7~1-1013.
Wolllt 740-949-331~ le1ve mn- 1989 Della 18 !'\OV@! Otdlf!!Qb!loaage.
e11ceuen1 condition, must aeelo ,
Waterline Spetlal: 3/4 20~PSI

R&amp;D's Uaed Furniture Great Se-

1880...80 Honda1 from $21/MO.,
Impounds! 0 Down. 24 •
18.9% lltllngo. 800-3111-3323 Ert.
:380::,::1·-------~
C"-- ee
305 • •-1
1184 ·~·· milO,
• '~ ,,
IUIO, -point,
RICing
flms, good c:ondlllon, 12200. 740-

ALDER

Stop In And See :'~:
Steve Riffle
.'1"J
.
Sales Representitiv,e j
Larry Schey
::~ ;

-- ,_.....

NEA Cro••word Pu:n:le

II

�••

I

•

••••

•

.I

•

P8ge B 8 • The Dell)' Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddllport, Ohio

1\lee•y. March 7, 2000 :

Health Department addressed low-cost services
BY CHARLENE

HOEFLICH

Hlp; 70s;

1.999....:

The program includes computerizing
all childhood immunization records to
decreose the possibility of error wheil
clients seek care from more than one
health provider.
Again last year, rhe Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine Community Outreach Program continued to
assist with immunizing Meigs County
children on its childhood immunization
program mobile val). ·
The department continued specialty
clinics coordinated by T.C. Ervin, RN,
BSN, who-is th~ssiltant nursing director. The clinics were attended by out.of-county physician specialists who
assess children from birth to 21 years of
age for visual, hearing, neLtrology, car-

Developmental Screening tests, vmon,
hearing and speech screenings, social
POMEROY - Emphasis of activimd nutritional assessments, and diagties at the Meigs County Heal~h
nostic services with appropriate referDepartment in 1999 continued to be on
rals.
providing low-cost health care services
. Dr. Margie Lawson, DDS, and
with programs geared to disease prevenRhonda Davis, RDH, offered their dention, early detection and treatment, and
tal services to the clients. Maureen Henhealthy lifestyle education.
nessy, speech and language pathologist,
The department's philosophy is to
counseled parents after evaluating their
increase access to health care through
children's hearing and speech patterns.
providing~ wide-range of services to all
Brenda Curfman, LSW, performed the
residents, many of whom are uninsured
social assessments, and Carol Tannehill,
or underinsured.
retired RN , continued volunteer serThe extensive health services at the
vices to the program.
departmen t are made possible with
WIC Program
funds generated from a local tax levy,
The Women, Infants and Children
along with stiue and federal grant
(WIC) program continues to be directed by Debbie Babbitt, RN, who is
assisted by P~m Sharp, BS. The program
offers nutritional supplementation,
counseling and referral services. Dortha ·
· Riffie and Bccki Ball are the computer
·
coordinators far the program.
Last year, a total of 1,879 visits ·for
•
services were recorded. These were 'for · BOARD OF HEALTH- The Meigs County Department of Health operates under~lifi
hemoglobin
sc reemngs,
heights, appointed Board of Health. On the board are, from left, seated, Jim Clifford Jr., vic~ .
weights, nutritional assessments, and president, and Gene Jeffers; president: and standing, Ann Haning, member; .klll :
group and individualized counseling.
Jacobs, secretary; Dr. Margie Lawson, health commissioner, and Joanne Cri61!;:
Other WIC staff members are Elaine member.
·
;&lt;
Matheny, la ctation consultant; Janet
'
sonnel visited 108 sites, and were sewage disposal systems.
. ',:,.
· Bolland, dietitian; Linda King, family
. involved with or did presentations at
Little and Hodge regularly conductand nutrition educator from the Ohio
eight ather facilities.
'
ed
inspections at all landfill areas, mobile
State University Meig. County ExtenStatistics
home parks, camps and schools, al)d
sion Office; and Norma Torres, RN,
Edwina Bell, registrar and vital statis- investigated 58 animal bites. wl)ere
BSN, MSEd., nursing director. ·who .
tician, reported that there were 't89 injured in,!ividua)s received · medical
offered specialized part-time nutritio,,
. deaths recorded in 1999. The majority attention.
'.
services to the clients.
of deaths .were heart (cardiovascular sysPersonnel
Speech/hearing clinics
tem) and cancer-related deaths.
·
Dr.
Margie
Lawson ·is the health
Susie Heines, hearing and speech
A total. of 308 birth and 845 death commissioner and Jon Jacobs, RS, is th~ .
pathologist, continued to coordinate the
certified certificates were issued, as well deputy health commission.er.
'
evening hearing and speech clinics with
as, 2,091 uncertified copies for genealo· The health.department's nursing per~ ..
the assistance of therapists and students
gy research.
·
sonnel
consists of Norma 1'orres, nurs-;
from Ohio University.
.
FAMILY/CHilDREN FIRST COUNCIL- Funded by a wellness block grant, this proPublic awareness
ing director;TC. Ervin, assistant nursing
They made 441 total contacts with
~everal health or program-related director; &lt;;onnie Little, director o!
gram for health department staff members to participate in school and community clients in 1999, with 179 hearing tests
ev1mts. Norma Torres, left, is· the project director. and works with Margie Skidmore, r.ert:ormed, 6 7 referrals made, and SS
consultant, center, and Brenda Curfman, youth service coordinator. Jon Jacobs is the
clients receiving individualized therapy.
fiscal agent.
Other health services
Home visits were made byT.C. Ervin
monies.
.
diac and plastic surgery problems. ·
under the auspices of the Ohio DepartScreenings for health problems have
Th.e clinics continue to be free ·to ment of Health Bureau ·a ! Children
always been an importa{lt part of the
Meigs Cqunty residents , but appoint- Medical H.andicaps Program (BCMH),
department's programs and special ments are necessary to participate. Last which served over 60 children during
emphasis over the past year has been on year, a total o£'119 children were seen the year.
·
detecting cancer in both men and during these specialty clinics. ·
BCMH is a state-funded program to
wo men in its earliest stages.
·
Prenatal services .
ensure medical care to children, with
Mammography services were offered
Prena-tal services were offered by qualifying conditions and income eligiby the local health .department. each Connie Little, RN, BSN, and Jill Darst, ble families. It provides for medical care
month last year through either
LPN. Services included social assess- · at no cost for those determined eligible
(; rant/ Riverside or Ohio State Univerments, nutritional counseling, blood for the treatment program as long as
sity mbbile units:
'\'Ork, cultures. height, weight andphys- certain criteria is followed. ·
A total of 1t/9 women .took advari- ical exam. During physician clinics, . The Wel.lness Block Grant program is
t~ge of the low-cost screenings. In addi-'
which are .held two times a month, 86 coordinated by Nancy Aldridge, BA, BS.
tio n, 78 women were screened during
eli ems were scheduled and attended by She is assisted by Brenda Curfman, .
111011thly ce rvical cancer clinics. These
Dr. Wilma Mansfield.
·
LSW, and the program also employs
were provided at the Health DepartEach client · was seen an average of Margie Skidmore, RN, .BSN, as a partment by area providers at half-day clin- five visits with ultrasound scheduling time consultant.
io held each month,.
The personnel teach abstinence eduand other services performed that are
,.
cation to middle school and elenientary
'
students within the county by attending CHilDREN/FAMILY HEALTH SERVICES - A total of 405 children ages birth to 21:
classes at the schools.
·
were seen in the child health clinic in 1999. The staff consists of seated left to righi,
An active interest is taken in the Norma Torres, chairman; Margie Skidmore, well-child clinic nurse; Connie Uttie, chi]·
county's youth by 'also attending several dren and family health services director; and standing, Jill Parst, LPN, staff assis: .
·. '
community organizations, such as God's tant, and Jon Jacobs, fiscal agent.
Net. This grant· is coordinated by thl!
TricCounty Family and Children's First presentations w~re made at public ser- Child and · Family H.ealth Services~ ·
vice organizations during the year ..Ohio Margie Skidmore, child health project .
lntersystems Coordinator Robin 'H arUniversity medical students, nursing nurse; Jill Darst, LPN, Child and Family
ns.
students and other ancillary health 'ser- Health assistant; Sherry Wilcox, !AI:
New programs in '99
vice students were given the opport)lni- Welcome Home, and prenatal smoking
Two new programs started last year
ty to have short-term internships at th~ cessation nurse.
'·
by the Meigs County Health Depart~
Meigs County Health Department. ·
The Vital Statistics Department co~
ment are the prenatal smoking cessation
Staff members Norma Torres, Connie sists of Edwina Bell and Courtney Sini;
program, and the Welcome Home
Little, T.C. Ervin, Sherry Wilcox, and BSC. The environmental departmeni
Mother and Baby Program, both of
Bethany Gaul shared preceptorships and includes Keith Little, director, Doli
.which are coordinated by Sherry
other
student instruction.
Hodge aod Jon Jacobs.
.
· ::··
Wilcox,RN.
Environmental' se~rvices ' ..
The
WIC
staff
includes
Debbie
Bah':
Funds are· provided by the Ohio
Keith Little, RS, director of Environ- bitt, director; Pam S~arp, nutritionist;
Department of Healt~ and ,the Family
mental l:fealth, and Don Hodge, SIT, Dortha Riffie, Automated Data Proces'~
and Children First Council for the Welcompleted 313 ,insp'ections
215 . sor (ADP); and · Becki .-Ball, assistaat
come Home· Mother and Baby . Pro.
:. .:·
licensed food service op.erations ·auring · ADP. .
gram.
the year.
AnciUary personnel includes Carol
Fifty-seven home visits were made to
Five permits to install private water · Little, administrative assistant, Courtney
first time and/ or teen moms, that live in
systems were issued, 49 wat.er .samples Sim, BCS, nursing clerk, · receptionist;.
ACTION PROGRAMS -Among the action programs carried out at the Health Depart- Meigs County, bath in the last trimester were collected for testing, and 241 perdeputy registrar; and El,i.Zabeth Bearhs,
ment to improve children's health are smoking cessation for pregnant women, home and after the infant came. home follow- mits were issued to install private custodian.
·
· · .,:t
,
visits for prenatal clients, and immunizations for young children. Active in those pro- ing birth, for a total of 195 contacts.
Inforgrams are. from left, seated, Sherry Wilcox, Jon Jacobs and Margie Skidmore; and
mation
is
given
to,
the
new
mother
on
standing, Courtney Sim, Nancy Aldridge and Norma Tories.
what to expect during labor aod delivrequired by the American Academy of ~ry, prenatal care, post-partum care and
Again last year, the Southeast Ohio Obstetrics aiid Gynecology.
·
infant care, as well as doing height,
Breast and Cervical Cancer Project
A total of 315 pregnancy tests were . weight and ~ l)rief physical exam of the ·
helped with the cost for women taking performed with referrals and counseling
advantage of the screenings. Receiving provided. At the department, the prena- newborn. Ten referrals were made for
additional services.
assistance ;~fter establishfrig income eli- ul patients were followed through their
.' The Prenatal Smoking Cessation
gibility were 138 women. ·
26th week of ,pregnancy, at which time Program is funded by the March of
The annual prostate screeping served ' referral was made to the hospital chosen
Dimes, and 37 expecting, 'c lients
71 men 10 1999.
for delivery.
enrolled in the program to receiv~ supImmunization
Children's services
port and encouragement to stop smokand other clinics
The Health Department conducted ing, as well as inform~tion an the harmImmunizations for both adults and ·free blood lead ·screenings on 11 chilful effects smoking has on the fetus.
children as a key- to disease pravemion . dren during an annual lead probe to
Incentives were given to clients who
was again dominant in the Health determine how '1""Y six-month to sixdecreased and/or quit smoking, deterDepartmen c's. services.
year-ol&lt;;l
. .. children were at .risk for lead mined ~hrough tP.e use of urine,samples
At-cost influenza . vaccines were pmsomng.
to check .t he level of nicotine present. ' ·
administered to 1,683 Meigs counti'ans,
While annti&lt;Il screenings are no
Nutrition program
with 89 .of those
also .receiving the longer held, such. routine testing is done
.
· Th~ Ohio Departnient of Healthi
pneunu;mta vacctne.
through services offenid to children by Preventive Health Grant Funds, were
The· hnmunization Action Plan pro- the Well-C hild Clinic. (WCC) cond(tctused to emp,loy Jackie ·Starcher, DT, as ·
gram (lAP) for children is headed by ed.by Dr. James Witherell and Dr. Doucoordinator, and b,ter Rebecca Grueser,
Sherry Wilcox, RN and Courtney Sim; glas Hunter every month.
· as apart-time educator for .the nutrition
BSC, lAP assistant, who conduct four From birth to 21 years of age, 401 childaytime and evening cllnics in addition dren received scryices, indnding a phys- progr~m. A newspaper colun:'n, "Fun, WIC PROQRAM ..:. The calleiOad for the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Prograil} ~
Food and Fitness," is a part of the com- at the Mei&amp;s County Health Department reached 963 last year. Debbie Babbitt~ :
to . regul~r appointment schedules. Last ica] exantination ; bJood iron screeriing,
munity education program.
standing right, ,(s director of the program; with Norma Torres, as fiscal director. Oth~i,.:
year, 3,256 vaccinations were adminis- blood pressure measurement, lead
The grant also promotes physical fit- personnel working with Wit; clients .~re from the left seated, Pam Sharp, Dortha R , ;
tered during the ·clinics.
·
screenings, dental services, Denver ness for school aged .children. The perfie and Becky Ball. .
· .
• &gt;::;::,'·
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

-

.

DeWine, Celeste to face .off, A7
Southem falls to VVhiteoak, Rio eams NAIA bid,

'111ursd~
Cloullr

•

•

: 4GS

Details, A3

•
•

Wednesday
March .8, 2000

•·
M•la• County's

Hometown News,.,.,

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

v,,Jume so. Numb .. , 1n

' ·.- · ·

'

•

.:aush, Gore·
favored
. ~Y voters

Voters' decision .mea·ns j
ER will close by July
•
•'
•

•

BY 8RtAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meig. County
voters gave the nod to Geotge W.
Bush and Vic,f President A1 Gore in
Tuesday's presidential primary.
Mike Azinger won the county's
nomination as the Republican
~andidate for u.s, representative,
and Mike De Wine and Theodore
Celeste the Republican and
Democratic nominations for U.S.
Senate.
'Gore was easily the choice of
Meigs County. Democrats in the
presidential race, receiving 1,460
votes to Bill Bradley's 493 and
Lyndon H. Larotich~ Jr.'s 68 ..
. Bush took 61 percent .of the
county's Republican votes, 2,787
in all. Jo~ McCain received 1,503
V,Otes; Alan Lee Keyes 137; Steve
Forbes 74; and Gary Bauer 56.
, Azinger received 2,217 votes in
the Republican congressional {ace,
de~'!_tiES, Ji~Yt S5ewart, ,who ...
.took
votes.'·
;·
U.S~ Rep. Ted. Strickland, DLucasvi!le, was unopposed on the

r.Mo

PluM-·tah,PIIpAl .

Bv JIM ·I'Ra;MAN

room care.
.
.
"We pray that all will be able to
POMEROY .- · Plans will be reach an out-of-county hospital in'
·made "i~ediatelf' to shut down time.
"Loss of our county'S'&lt;&gt;nly hasthe Veterans Memorial Hospital
emergency room ·and inpatient pital will also hamper economic
' care facility after a levy for the development in Meigs County,
operati~n of the facilities was since few companies want to move ·
rejected by Voters on Tuesday.
their business to an ·an;a lacking
That is according to a statement even basic emeriency and hospital
released 'by hospital . officials fol- care for employeeS and their farni lawiilg the .Ound defeat of a fou r- lies.
· 1·
tnill, three•year property tax levy
"But the · voten ·\lave spoken,
to support the emergency room And we will comply (with) their
and hospital facility.
.
wishes. We will begin immediately
Unofficial results from the Meigs to plan the emergency mom's and
County Board of Elections showed the inpatient hospital's · closing.
th.e levY' was defeated 3,653-2,147. That information will be comnm~
As the levy's defeat appeared nicated to the .community and
. "' ip\mirient, James Witherell, M.D., soon as a closing schedule is deterchairman of Friends of Veterans · · mined:
.
Memorial Hospital, released the
"I would like oo 1thank those
foUOwing statement:
·
~ho supported the levy through
"This is a sad day for Meigs their 'yes' vote and their tirelesS
County.
.
efforts to spread the wi:lrd through·~The levy's defeat signals the end put the county. Campaign volun~
of Veterans Memorial Hospital's teers Worked diligendy to tell the
EmergenqRoam l!"d acute mpa- ER and hospital story to all who
tient care unit. By July, people who would be affected by today's vote.
"We will now abide by the
.. , experienc.o: a h"''f[ attack, an injury
. vatat. home or Wt!r'Tt, a traffic accident ers', decision, and we wish .Very. or
i!fuess that requires emer- · .one the best of health."
gency treatment•wiD have to leave
The three-ye:ir levy, if passed,
Meigs County for emergency
Please see ER. Pllp Al
SENTINEL CORRESPONDEJIIT

·an

'

"'

'

Howard, Fisber;~Sheets win,.Commissioner contests
'

'

Harrison, Trussell
and Triplett also
•
•
pnmary
wtnners
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Republicans Jim Sheets
and John Fisher Jr. wiD challenge Democratic County Commissioners Janet
Howard and JetiThornton, respectively, in
November, and Republican Ralph TrusseD

•

'

'

... -:; 1·

.,

•

'

.

I

.

and Democrat" jeffiey Mmer,~·face off votes, Bobby Arnold with 794, and Ernest
, ,. ·
. E. Spencer with 6 7 4.
in the sheriff's race.
, Those were · the winners ~t the top of
Sheets defeated Joe Stobart 2,863-1,338
the local tickets inTu,esday's .pri.rilary ~ec- in the Republiilan rnce for the cmnmistion, a;;.;ording to ·tinofficial results C!Jm- sioner's term commencingJan. 3,2001.
puted by the Board of Elections at the
In the primary's closest contest; Marlene
· close of.polls. .
'
. ·.
Harrison was the winner in a three-way
Board figures show a 42-percent-voter Republican race for the open ~lerk of
turnout.
·
·
courts' seat, defeating Andy Baer and Blair
··
Republicans.
Windon. Harrison received 1,7.96 votes,
In the race for the commissioner~ term Baer 1,755, andWindan·1,118.
co'mmencing Jan.· 2, .2001, Fisher carried
Eugene Triplett will be unopposed in
the race with 1,615 votes. Other candi- . November as the county engineer race,
dates were Richard Bailey with ' 1,136 defeating incumbent , ~ab Eason in the

Republican primary 2,754- 1,770.
Ralph Trussell received 2,27 4 votes in
the sheriff's race on the Republican ticket,
defeating Tim Gillilan, .'who took 1,567
votes.
Unopposed Republicans and their vote
totals were: Recorder Judy King, 3,41.8;
Treasurer HoWard E. Frank; 3,532; Coroner Douglas D. Hunter, 3,876; and Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III, 3,399.
Pat Story. who ian unopposed for the
Republican nomination for pmoecuting
attorney, received 3,330 votes. Al)other
Republican, P.tricia Jamison, withdrew

from that race.
Democrats
Yesterday's race between Howard and
Charles Williams, who received 70 I Votes
to Howard's 1,233, was the only contested
local race on the Democratic ballot.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton received
1,540 votes, Miller 1,287, Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes, 1,475, Clerk of
Courts candidate Betsy Herald Nicodemus, 1,399, Th:asun!r Candidate Ron P.
Casci, 1,400, and Recoi;der candidate A.
Tam Lowery. 1,528.

J!IIHH- Whln.,., PapAl

at'

'

...

•

'

' "

.

\'

v

••

'

lr

·.

..•.v

•

.. ,,,-\1:~

."' ,•....

.•.~..

. . ~·....,.
~

.r

~.

..

..

.Southern Ohio
·:get disaster

'

.

nties
.
'

'

.· , 'lbcla(s

·Sentinel
'

.

'

M

~i11Jud11

B~-li

ctaaaitiidl

ll'Z
M

CQmis;l

Edit2dals

AJ

Ol!ibiHi~

DH

S&amp;!!!lll

A.l

Ylt1the[

Lotteries
1'

,.

' ,'

OHIO

PidL3.: 7-2-4 ,

Pld! 4: 3-2-3-11 ·
"'•I

)O

Fhe: I-7..J0..31-33 .

lEVA.

~ 3:

.

.4-5-6' Dally 4:. 5-7-8-2
..
'

MeA to clean street, sidewalks:
He also repqrted on recent action by village.coun-;
cil to purchase more Christmas decorations for the
downtown business district. The additional snowflake
during its regUlar l)leeting on Tuesday morning.
Merchanis. attending the monthly_meeting com- lights and banner.; will be placed on Mill Street art~
plained of litter on 'sidewalks, dilapidated trash CO[!- General Hartinger Parkway. A lighted swag to comtainers ana the · need for more regular cleaning of plement the snowflake theme will also be purchased,
streets by the village. .
·
.
and Will be hung an the balcony of the Mill Stree~
In particular, the merchants noted problems y;ith Books building on the "T.''
.
·
cigarette butts m streets and sidewalks, and trash recep· A completed calendar of events for holiday obser~
tacles on corners which are often overrunning.
.vances, festivals and contests was distributed to mem.;
While me~bers acknowledged that sidewalk main- bers. it was noted that spring flags will be installed otl ·
tepan€e is the resporisibility of business owners, Asso~ · 'light poles in the business district around April I, an4
dation ~!resident M}oron .Duffield said that he ,would . that the annual "YeDow Flag" community yard sal~
approach· Village council abOl.!t .the ~ty._of lolil- will be held on M:iy 5 and 6.
lage s~ crcwa ~the village's new leafvacuuil\ to
Duffield announced that the renovation of the AI!
sweep streets more ~Y·
Wars Monument, adjacent to the post office, h~
In other business, Duffield noted that the Assq~ia- begun. Crews began working on the roof of the:'
tion's membership drive was still underway, with only building on Mol).day. The roof of the gazebo, includ•
· 26 of over 50 members renewing their membership ing the distinctive red clay tiles, will be replaced, and
fur 2000. He urged members''who have nat renewed new steps, sidev,:-Uks and landscaping wiD also be
their dues to do so al soon as possible, and said that a included in the project.
. ,
reminder l~er will be mailed to thqse members who .
.,
~ not paid d!jes 'to date.
PIMH'" MCA. .. . . . Al ·
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Conunun,ity

Association dlSciiSSed cleaning of streets and sidewalks

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="437">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9876">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24968">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24967">
              <text>March 7, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="191">
      <name>allen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="563">
      <name>durst</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1095">
      <name>george</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
