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P.age 08 • ioanbap l!:imes -iotntinrl

840 Electrical and

630

Llvaatock

RtQiSIIfec:l Red PoU-.d Llmoutin
Bull For Salt Yearling . Phone

74o---80111 .

710 Autoa for Sale

730 Vena &amp; 4·WDa

1995 Chrysler Clrru•. XL, Au·
tomatlc. AJC, Suntoof, $9,300

t917 Atroatar Runt Well , NHdl
Transmission $900 080 740·
"1o0027.

-080,

Wild Turkeys For Sale, Evenings

()r-jy. 740-«8-:llM~

Ye.rllng AOHA Gray Coli. Broke
To Tie And Lead , Aak lng-$900.

T40-446-8081.

Days: HO·

740· 448·085~

446-8832 Evtinga And Wtt·

Refrigeration

Vorttc. Lotdtd, 87,000 MUll,
Alotng $9,000, 740·2!8·9244 Or

1998 Niann 300 ZX. rtd with
blaq&lt; lntolior, 29,052 mtlol. l·topl.
BoH stereo, 5 &amp;pHd, lrorll dam·
ago. seeoo. 740-992·1 106.

7~ .

640

Transmiss ion, Factory Chrome
Wheela, T·Topa , Fully Loaded,
500 wt Monsootl Stereo System

18.900 740'379-2133.

CO Changer In Trunk CIINtte In
Dash, Deep Navy Metallic With
Dark Grey Le~ther .l nttrlor, Arrt
Reasonable Otter Considered.
740-448-4!&gt;18 Or 7-737~ .

Looded19BK $18.900, 740·U6·

110011 Round balea of mixed hay
$25. • piece 304-675-7608.
Ear corn and square bales o1 hay,

oall740-985·4465.
Ground Ear Corn . your sacks .
PhOne alter 4PM

(3041675-2443.

Hay lor Sale . Located 18 Mite
Creek. (304).53·22••· Trailer Ac-

caS&amp;ible.
SQuare Bales For Sale, 7-40·446·
2075.

Square Bales of Hay for sale .

$2.25 per bate. (304je75-2741 .

LXI Van, .. 7,000 MillS, V-6 ,

Pow·

era, In Excellent Shipe! 740·388·

•x•

8358.

t996 Jeep £harokee
Drive ,
82,000 Milas, Air, Needs A Little

1999 Mltsublsl"'l Mirage , Green
Exterior, 38,000 Mllea, Eacellent

Body Work, Paln1e&lt;l: $6.000 080:
1993 Dodge Spirit 4 Cylinder. rwtomatlc, 100,000 Mll11. $1 .800
080. 740-256·1233.

Carll Will Take PI)I-Off, 740-24~0333.

2000 Ford E&amp;cort.·$10,000 OBO.

1997 Chevrolet Ta"oe 411:ot LT,

(3041675-~79 .

maroon, leather Interior, lully load-

740-742·3802.

1 304)675-~724.

94 Astra Van for sale, 7.(0·992~

8200.

, TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
'92 Pontiac Bonneville, four door,
e'X cellent condition. sharp. $4650,
74{)-949·2045 evenings.

CARS $100, $500 6 U~ POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,
Chevy&amp;, Jeeps, And -Sport l:J1111tles . Call Now! 800-772-7470;

EXT. 7832.

1979 'Pontiac Formula 400: Rebuilt .Engine, ·And T~ansmtss .ion,
$7 00 Firm, 740.446-1518.
·

1990 Cutlass 40rs, V·8, Autom .,
F!uns Good . $550.00 . 74()..256·
6933
1984 Ntuan 300 2X. runs but
needs Work, $750, 740·992·2222
days. 740·742·1507 eves.
1,986 Camaro. 355 HP Engine
With Approximately 3,000 Miles,
T· Tops, Good Body &amp; Paint. 4
Inch Hood Scoop, $3,500, 7ot0·

245-5443.

3242.

HONOA'o $100. $500 &amp; UP. .PO·
LICE IMPOUNO. Honda'o Toyo·

740

ta's, Cl'levys, Jaepa, And Sport

1981 Honda 150 Custom Motor·

Utllill11. Call Nowl 80().772·747~:
EXT. 6336.
I

·cycle.
$600,

CARS FROM Ut/MO • .lm·

Motorcycles

n ,600 Mites.

740-379-2853.

New Battery,

1985 Suzuki 230 .( Wheeler with
Reverse 4 Sti'oke Engine. Excel·

poundo IRepoo. Foe. SO l)cwn r.!4

Mos. 819.9% For Listings 1·60Qo
319-3323 X2156.

tent Condition. $1,500. (304)87~-

3824.

Ohlo·Valley Bank Will Ollar For
.Sate By Public Auction A 1984
Olds Flrenza 1312172, AI 10:00

1986 TAX 2~0R Honda. $2700.
(3041576-2711 .

ley Bank· Annex, 143 Third Ava ·

$1,200 OBO. 740·24~·~018 Or
352-4805 Leave Moosage.

A.M. On 4/1/0o At Tho Ohio Val·

1993 Suzuki 125 AM 2 Stroke,

nuo, Gallipolis. OH . Sold To Tho
Highest ,Bidder • As Is ·Where 1a•
Without Expresaed Or Implied

Warranty &amp; May

a,

1994 ZR 50. Excelle~t Condition:

(304)4_58·2214. Leave Mes'."ge;

Seen By

Calling The Collection Dept AI

1995 Honda 300 Four Trax.
Looks Good, Runs Goodl

740·441-1038. OVB Rooerves
The Right To Accept /Reject Any
&amp; -All Bids. &amp; Withdraw Items

$2,800.00.080. 740-446·3600.

From Sale Prior To Sale. Terms

1998 Honda Fourtrax 300 2x4
Runs Good, Has Mudshark Rear

Sate: CASH OR CEIITIFIED
CHECK.

01

Tires ""d Original Front Tires,

Comes With Blacl&lt; Helmet. 52.800

720 Trucka for Sale

080, 7o40.·379-2844 Or 741)-446·

4604

1977 Ford F-100 Plck·Up; Great
Engine, Great Work Ti'uek, $500,

740-446-2399 Alter 8:30P.M.
1987 Chevy 5·10, 2.5, 4 Cyl.
AC,PS.PB. Nice &amp; Straight.
$2,200. (3041675·3824.
1988 Chevy 1/2 ton pick-up, 4x4.
$6,000 or 4-wheeler as trade iri.

1987 Mercury Co.ugar, LS Good
Condition. $2,000 Or OBO. 740·

ed, eJCcellent condition, $14,500,

.

(3041773·5284.

1999 Honda

4~0

ES 4 Wheel

Oriv&amp; Excellent Condition. $4,800,

740-256-9244.

750 Boat11 &amp; Motors
for sale
'93 Stratos Fish &amp; S~l boat, 1.20
hp Evlnrude motor. Stratos Trail
Trailer, many options, 111ry good

1988 Ford F-150 XLT V-8, Au·

condition. $8500, call 740·742·
2249.

charged model, right side damage. SHOO. 740-992·1508 days.
740-949·2644 evenings &amp; weekends.

1991 Ford F·150 XLT 2 WO, 8'
Bed. 6 Cylinder. Automatic. AIC,
PS. PB, PW, AMIFM CO. 70.000
Mil.., $7,200, 740-446•3988.

20 foot. $12,000, Phone: (740)·

1989 Mercury Grand Marquis ,
Nice Car. Needs .Transmission,

1991 Nloslan Plck·Up 2 wo 5
Speed, 4 Cylinder With CD Player
Asking $1.800. 7~19.

388-8088.

1988 Toyota MR2, blue with blue
interior, T tops, 5 sp., super

$ 1,000,

740·441.0108.

1991 Buick Park Avenue, 95,206
Miles. GoOd Condlllon. Serious
Buyers Only, 740·446-8241 .
1991 Plymouth Blazer AS, 5
Speed, Premium SoUnd Package,
Sunroof, ~oaded, $3,200, 080,

740·446-8962.
199·1 Ponl. 6000 LE, 4-door.
5 1,000 miles . Excellent Condi· ··

lion . $2,800. (304)675-1204/
(304)675-2034.
1992 Chevrolet Camara, V~ 8 .
purple with black Interior, 77,632
IT)IIes. right front damage, $2550,

call 740·992- 1506 days Or 740·
949-~644 evenings and weekends.

1992 Chevy Cavalier 4 Cyl. AJC,
Pwr S!r. Pwr. Brakes, Looks Good,
Runs Good. Asking $1,800.00.
74tl-367-74~ Or 740-o446-9552.
199A Chrysler New Yorker,
72j000 Miles, Fully Loaded, CO
Player, 16' Aluminum Wheels,

$5,500:740-256.0169.

tomalic, 2 WO. 8' Bed, TOPI'et,
B&amp;dlinert $4,995, 740-38&amp;-9878

tl.... (7401245-9252. .

1994 GMC 1500 Serl11 SLE
LoaQed, V·8, Automatic , Low

Miles. Weekdays e:30 A.M. -5:00
P.M . Call 740·446·244~: Alter
7&lt;W-448-1309, Asl&lt; For Virgil.
1997 black Chevy S-1 0 Stopslda

lngs. $12.000. 740·949·204~ or
740-949-2203. .

1994 Dodge Intrepid, Good Con·

730 "

Windows . Pwr Seats,

Under Bdok
2
1995 Camara, Air, Tilt, Cruise,

co. Tinted Glass, 58,000 MileS,

Asking $6.500. 74Q· 446·8172,

740-256-9103.

SERVICES
Home

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional utall'me guarantee.

berglass bad cover, $8,999, 304·
ns-5305 an.r 6pm.

949-3117.

aluminum

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Soolod propoeela -will bt
roclovod by tho Boold ol
Educotlon ol the Melgo
Locol School Dlotrlct of
Po,.,.roy, Ohio, at tho
~eurer•a omco uiJ,III 1:oo
p.m. on Wod-y, Morch
22, 2000, ond 11 thot .tlmo
openod by lho Treuurer or
llld Baord lo{ one (1) now
olxty (110) · potoengor
hondlclpptd ICCIIIIblo
ochool bue . (Body end
Chnola con be bid
11p1rllely or together 11
one complete buo) .
Sptclllcellont · 1 nd
lnttructlone to blddera may
be obt81nod oi the olllco of .
tho Trnou,..., 320 E. Moln
Strwt, Pomeroy, Ohio 457ft
or by coiling 740-902-51150.
By order ol Melgo Local
Boerd of EduceUon, Cindy
J. RhOnomuo, Trooeurer.
(3) 5,12,19 3TC

1'997 Ford Ranger XLT, 2 whael
Local ret4rences furn(shed. Es·
drive, step side, excellent condl·
tabiahed 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (7401
'lion, 4 cyl., auto, ale, 'amttm CO,
446·0870. 1·81l0-267-0578. Rog50,000 mllea, custom wheels, fl.· . era Waterproofing.

ows. $6.200.00 740.379·2922.

U.ffilels. AIC. Till. Cruise. Pwr.

New Canvas &amp; Windows. $800

OBO. 740-2-7.

810

F-3~0

Supercob Dually,

loaded, 7.40·949·2355 or 7o40·

1979 Jetp , -4WO Truck. Auto
trans, low mileage, 380·4 Barrell,
new tlrea &amp; wtiMIII. Sharp Truck.

(3041675-1S84.

French City Maytag, 740·446·
7795.

General Home Main·
1enence·. Paln1ing, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chat, 740·992·

1979 Renegade CJ5 Jeep. 304·
actual .mills.

1985 Dodge 4x4 flatbed truck, .
minimum bid $2000. Contect Alan,

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing. all basement repairs
dona, free estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job expsrl·

.

1988 Ford F150 4x4 Short Bod

300 a Cylinder. 4 Speed, $2.500:

once. (304)69~·3887 .

25H694 Allar 8 P.M.

""" .., ,..,K't o........... """"

green with black top, 66K mites,
$13,400 080, CIU 740-742·3062.

IIU(f

nc(WJI' . .

·

. .

.Let the expe';t&amp; at RadioShack answer your
cell'\llar quesh~ns and clearly explain aU ,t he
c!"lhng plan options. 1;'hen you can choose what's
r1.ght :for you. Cho1.ces. Solutions. Answers.
Tliat's wl:ty we're the #1 wireleqs retailer in
America.

.:

\

IAftw,. ,.,.... ol....-flnt Ioiii

.

IIQAIWilJ•:~JII=
..
==I~t·CDJI 7 Itt.

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

.

,

-....rc;t"'Stt

210!ottMoln
- P~,

740-tii-11R

Store

OH 457611
·.304-773-11308

'*sit.
~Ott~

8

18

Demonstrator
- Bulcks Absolute
.
.
Best! Diamond White Finish With
Taupe Leather. Only 3, 780 Miles.
· Totally Loaded with Options,
Super Charged V6 Engine. ·

·lr l£ lu cfn l"rl' t'
(ig llll'llt'
J.iglzlt•r culaf'lt'T
Cltlt!llanchjit•c
kit.

Free Voice Mail
Free Activation

Fors32.95

·rc· .

.

I.

:~~ .

Motorola StarTAC-3000

Ullra-!ff1811 ceiiiNI fils easiY in 'your pocket, or
wear hilh lhe included hoistar. $17·$230

7 Ohio River Plaza • Gallpohs, Ohio

~US.Cellular.

@·
·

Authorized Retailer

~~~~~.~.

v••

50 CNlh

a random check is made by using an
Qhio Department of Health instructional manual and table of zip code numbers,
according to Norma Torres, · Health
· Dcparm1ent nursing director.
In the March 4 check, an underage.
female attempted lJ purchases ana was
· successful eight times, or 43 percent. An
un&lt;)e.rage male attempted 17 tobacco
purchases and was unsucc~sful in all.
The procedure us~d in the random
checks is for an underage youth from
another county or state to enter a business :done; followed by an adult selected

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

..

POMEROY - Of 30 Meigs County
:obacco vendors visited earlier this
1.1onth in a random check, eight sold cigtrettes' to teenagers under 18 in violation
&gt;fthe law.
Compliance checks of the 53 tobacco
"'ndors in the county have 'been carried
&gt;Ut over the past four years by the Meigs
2ounty Health Department in coopera:ion with th~ Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office.
'
Select(on of vendors to be included in

Fo11r oftlre eig!,t Meigs vendors

und ernge youth comes. when the names
Four of the eight had previous violaof
businesses
found
to
be
in
non-complitions,
acc-ording to Torres.
in violation had pret•iolls
are published in newspapers, and
Several programs geared to reducing
••iolatiom, ctccordi ng to N~&gt;rma ance
wh en individual owners and salespersons smo king among teenagers are being
Torres, Health Department
are fined .
carried out in Meigs County. The
nursin,(l director.
Violators "in the most recent random most recent one is aimed at junior high
by the healtb department or prosecutor's check were Tony's Carry Out in Mid- and elementary st udents' and is directed
dleport, Horner Hill Ca rry Out in to pto~iding a. consistent message
office to view the transaction.
Torres said that letters were .sent to all Pomeroy, Fruth's Pharmacy in Middle- ' about the health danger of tobacco use,
of the owners of the establishments who port, Chancey's Food Market in Syra- rai sing public .awareness about the risk
cuse; Little John's Food Center in Tup- of environmental tobacco smoke, whilepaJ;ticipated in the illegal sales. .
She also said the Ohio Department of pers Plains, Buckeye Farm Market in . targeting businesses wllo make it easy
Health suggests that the most success in Rutland, Waid Cross Sons in ll.acine, for young people to get tobacco proddeterring selling of tobacco products to and Pomeroy Food Shop in Pomeroy.
ucts.

Hall buys Riverview
Elementary buil.ding

Slip sliding·-away

..

Hariford ·residents
·keep eye on
slidin~ ltillside
OVP NEWS STAFF

Now Iil Stock!

2000 MONTANA
With Ionian• Yislo1 •YI4eo System!
•LCD Cokir Monitor
•Video ·e auette Player
. With Remote ,
•6 Hea,.pbone Outlets.
• OnStar Communications System

2000 SUNFIRE COUPE ·
S1n .&amp;Sound Package!
'18,31&amp;-

•

Option Pkg.' Disc.
Rebate

HARTFORD
Brenda
Warth is us~d.}o living by the
train tracks in Plartford.
The daily passing of freight
trains - complete with noise
and rumblings - have become
cm:nmonplace. 1\ut for the -past
tWo weeks, Warth has had a new
concern as she watches her
property fall into the creek
under the bridge. · ·
• Tho Slidingi;lill·Creek hill&gt;i~~
at the railroad bridge is falling
into the water, taking trees and
property with it at an alarming
rate, Warth said.
"I've watched it and just in a
few days, it took three lengths of
a lawn mower;• she said. "The
trees fell in the other day. Every
time a train goes by,. ! feel the
vibrations and see the dust rising
from the rocks as they fall down
into the creek."
Warth fears a small .storage
building near her house will be
· the next victin~ of the slide.
''I'm just 'a woman, and I can't
hold my building up," she said. "I
guess if it goes, it goes. I've ha.d
some people tell me they'll
come move it closer to the
house if need be. But how much
closer can it. get?"
As a lifelong resident of Hart- ·
ford, Warth lives on ·property
that was her late husband Floyd's
childhood home.
She recalls when her husband
\-ept farm animals down near the
stream. Years ago, it was easy to.
walk u~ and down the bank.
Floyd .kept a chair at the
propety's edf;e. bui the land
-under the chair broke off and fell
down riear the bottom of the ·
hill, resting on a· tangled mass of
dead trees, concrete pieces and
debris.'

I

'lbdly'.s ,

Sentinel
:i

J.

The Chester Elementary
'building was sold last spring to
REEDSVILLE -After 2-1/2 Tom Karr of Pomeroy, but the
years of sitting vacant on a hill- Riverview ·sale has been on hold
side near Reedsville, Riverview because the board's minimum
Elementary School has a new bid of$400,000 was not met.
owner.
It was later placed in the hands
The building was sold at auc- of an out-of-town , rea ItO(, a!!l-,
tion on Saturday to Jay Hall Jr. of with no results.
!Cheshire for $85,000. The sale
Earlier this year, the district
was approved at a special meeting lowered the ritinimum bid to
of the Eastern local Board of $85,000 and set Saturday's sak
Education, held immediately
The 'building and 7.7 acres of
afier the sale.
·
property are located on· Curtis
Pomeroy attorney Bernard V Hollow Road off State Route
Fultz placed Hall's bid at the auc- 124, and served students tium
tion. Accordipg to Superinten- Reedsville and long Bottom .
It was built ia.':, 1958, at the
dent Deryl WeU, there were no
· other bidd:ers on the property. · · Sart)e time ana in a si!l1ilar desigu
The- bwlding was vacated at as Eastern High School, whcu
the end of the 1997-98 school the Qlive•Orange and Central
year due to the consolidation of Rural school districts were conthe district's three elementary solidated.
buildings into the new Eastern
It . replaced old grade school
Elementary· building. built adja~
cent to Eastern High SchooL
PleaM-RII• .... PapA:J
BY BRIAN

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BY CATHERINE HAMM

2000 GRAND AM SE COUPE
Cruise Control, Rear Spoiler,
Automatic, AM/FM Compact
Disc Player

Hometown Newspaper

Check reveals eight non-compliance violations

.

C ' - fMI lludia ~ JIIIICIII&amp;.... apllaa, lncludtoiC.Sparb,

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number 200

51:1.... - 12 .....

300 MINUTES

.

GRIAT RIWAiiD·S : .

,.

Cellular Mad S mple. ••

a1
Melp County's

March lO, lOOO

••

•

'

1999 PARK AVENUE

14' Landau John Boat 1400. 740-

9a Mustang GT convertible, dark

SOUTHFIELD, Mic!L
Federal-Mocul Corp. !lid
·
day it will close moee
dozen North American facilities
and cut 1.500 join in an eff'ort to
improve its bottom line.
"We are working to reduce our
invested capital base to improve
economic value," said Dick Snell,
chief executive officer. "I am
pleased with the aggressive actions
identified by our team:•
In addition tci dosing 22 afterCall the office at 446-9696.
market branch warehouses, the
auto parts maker and distributor
plans to consolidate its aftermarket
gasket'. products irito the Skokie,
In 1965, the U.S: Congress passed the Highway Beautification Act,
IJJ., distribution facility, closing the
warehouse for the McCord gasket banning' many highway billboards.
line.
Federal-Mogul said it also will
~·
.·
.
'
....
close its Mooresville, Ind., manuDUll .III.IMISTAR CUSTOMIRr.
facturing facility to consolidate
•
IAIUI ADYHI&amp;el 011
.
heavy
wall
bearings
into
· McConnelsville, Ohio; dose its
IIOWI l
.
Milan, Mich., seal plant and con~
solidate its operations into other
Give uc_,.our PRIIMEST.II•R
facilities; and reduce administrative
bll and we'D give·you a
staffs.
. na DISH NEJWORK .
DtqJJAL SATELLRE TV SYSTEM,
McConnelsville is about 65
·. . INSTAWD"
mile-s southeast of Columbus.
· The company said it also would
make 19 other manufacturing
changes in North and South
6 . .UMONTHS
America and consolidate 18 man- .
01' AMIIICA'S TOP 40"
ufacturing and distribution operaPlOOIIAMMINO PACKAGE.
VAI.UED AT $19.99 JIIEII MONIHI
tions in Europe and Asia.

New Construction &amp; Aemodalf

4623 or (304)67«1155.

Details, A3

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $525-$1,1 10;
Bred Cows S275-$735 Baby
Calves $35-$150; Goats $15$110.
Upcoming specials: ·
Graded feeder sale March 27
at 7 p.m. Cattle will be weighed
in Sunday evening and Monday
morning.
Herd bull leasing program
available. High quality Angus
bulls.

Drywall, Siding, Aoofa, Addi·
Ilona, Painting, ·ate. (3d4)674-

$6.000. (3041882-3622.
740-949·3232.

Producen livestock Market
report from Gallipolis tor sales
~nducted
on Wednesday,
March 15.
Feeder Catde-Higher
200-300# St. $98-$118 Hf.
$88-$101, 325-450# St. $87$123. Hf $82-$101 47~25#
St. $84-$102 Hf. $73-$94 650800# St. $77-$85 Hf. $68-$83.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Aeshed $38$46; Medium/Lean $33-$37;
Thin/Light $29-$31; Bulls
$47-$52.

I.

6323.
Jims Dr~wall &amp; Construction.

v,s. 3spd. 100% Original. 2nd
owner. 34,500

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Exparlance All Work Guaranteed,

C&amp;C

.ana &amp; 4-WDa

=

LIVESTOCK PRICES

Monday

Man questioned in quadruple murder, A2
Buckeyes bounced from Big Dance, B1

HI~~~=

•

Public Notice

Nice Pop-up Camper S1eepa 7,

Extended Cab, 3 dOor, loaded,
25,000 miles, very sharp, full far·

89 Ford

Buick Lesabre Custom 4

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Are You Looking For Engines Or
Tranamlsslon&amp;? Give Me A Call

5:00 P.M . And Weekends Call

1994 Dodge Intrepid . V-6, Au-

3765.

760

1994 Ford Ranger XLT 2 WD. · Al740·44&amp;-0519. ·
790 I Campers &amp; ·
· Motor Homes
Bottom. ss.soo. 740-448-4109: ·
Alter 5. 740·379-2589.

88 Ford Ranger extend cab,

· 1994 Pontiac Grand Pre, 84,000
miles, loaded, p.w,4dr. 304·675·

V·Bottom 15 Feat Aluminum Boat,

Good shape. $275.00 Phone:
(740)-379-2380

New Tiros, 5 Speed, Looks Groat,
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tomatic, Aluminum Wheels, A/C,
TUI, Cruise, Pwr. LOcks, Pwr wind-

Loaded.

new

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1994 Chii)'Y Silverado Stepalde.
Loaded, excellent conctiUon,

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Bo~t

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down-sizing

NEWS RELEASE
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOLS
OFFERS BONDS TO ·
DISTRICT RESIDENTS
Molgo Schoolo Preporo lor
Bond S.lo
In Novombor, 19!19,
realdonto of tho Mllgo
loc.l Schoolo approvod tho
lotuonct of $5,726,000
School
Improvement
Bonde. Since thit tlmt,
olllclolo or the Dlatrtct have
boon working to prepare lor
the ult of the $6,726,000
Bond lnuo. Tht Bonde oro
now expected to be told on
Thureday, March 30, 2000.
The Dl.atrlct luued e
ahort term Noles eo that
projocta could begin while
tho long term Bond laaueo
wat prepared lor market.
Statongood &amp; Mayer. a linn
WhO IPICiallzea In public
finance, hao been en·g agod
by the 'Dietrtct to underwrite
tho laauo. They have
anlatod Dlatrlct olllclala
with the preparation of on
Olllctal Statement and tho
eatabllohment or a credit
rating lor the l11ua with
Moody'o lnv11tor Service.
Tho achool Dlatrlct hao
made tpeclal arrangomonto
to make Bonde to any locol
ruldento
who
are
lntttoatod In purchaolng
them. The bondo will be
Talent and words . .
' oold . In
mlnlm·um
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP)
denomination• or $5,000
Prolific novelist and playWtth maturltlee ranging from one to twenty-three wright Edna Ferber ( 1887-1968)
ynre. lntereat on tho Bonds
Ia exempt from bolh Foderal is best known.for her 1926 novel
and Ohio Income taxtt ror "Show Boat," adapted in 1927 as
Ohio rtlldentt. A apeclal
a Jerome Kern-Oscar Hammertemlnor will be held · on
Wodnooday, March 22, 2000 stein II musical and later filmed.
at 7:00 p.m. In the High Her other works included "So
School Ubrary.
Big" ( 1924). "The Royal FamiRotldontt are Invited to
ly"
( 1927), "Dinner- at Eight"
attend tho tpeclal aenilnar If
they have quettlont or (1932) and "StM'e Door"(l936). ·
would like epeclllc
lnlormallon about the
Bonde.
An Official
Statement that deacrlbea
the Bonde Ia exempted to
bo avellablo ot tho meollng
and may bt obtained from
the · Dlttrlct Treaaurer't
olllce on.r March 22nd. For
mort hlformallon contact
tho Dlttrtct Trnoure~ Cindy
R.honemua, or Seeaongood
&amp; Mayer at 800·767·7207
prtor to March 30th/
(3) 19 lTC

Loaded. $13,500. OBO 740·2561252. Homo: 740-2e&amp;-1e1a.

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Sundey, March 1e, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolla, Ohio • Point Pleaaan(wv

Ohio's public school
funding still in bad shape ·

SUDING -Tony Fields stand.s near ·sliding Hill Creek

at Hartford. The hillside is falling into the creek, ·

causing concern-for area residents. To compound matters, a CSX railroad bridge crosses the creek. CSX
officials have promised to fix the slide for reside~ts. (Catherine Hamm photo)

Neighbor Tony Fields shares ·
Warth's concern,
His house is nearby and he
often thinks about the danger of
living beside a railroad track.

Standing beside the track, he
points to a water mark on the
abutment ·and notes the amount
of concrete that has already fallen into the creek.

Ac rding to Fields, CSX
safety inspectors were at the site
over a week ago. For a few days,
trains crep~ by slowly, but were

Plane He Sllpp11p, Pep .U

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
doesn't spend enough money to
fix its pubtic schools, and the
· .buildings are among the nation's
worst, a new federal report
shows. •
Ohio, which in 1996 was
ranked worst in the country for
its public school facilities, ranks
poorly again in ·a U.S. General
Accounting ·Office report.
The latest study shows Ohiq's
effort to fix its school buildings
from 1990-97 was far below the
national ·aver•ge. Ohio was
among 15 states that offered lit- .
de or no construction aid to
local school districts.
The report says Ohio's
spending from both st~te and
local funds averrged only $27 4
per pupil for the period, placing

it 11th from the bottom and far
below the national average of
$473per pupil.
Virtually all of the 'construction money for Ohio schools
came from local districts. Ohio
was one of 15 states that provided little or nn state help for
school construction during the
eight years, the report said.
The report does not include
the money the state ha\ spent on
renovations and construction
since the 1997 Ohio Supreme
Court decisiorl that the state has
. inadequately funded public
schools.
The court is expected to rule
later this year on 'whether lawmakers have complied with its
order to change the way Ohio
funds educ~tion .

Theatre program instructs students on stage production
...

.

. IV MI!.USIIA RUSSELL
••

Dill' f'IEWS STAFF

RIO GRANDE - Explosions, ra peiling,
ci&gt;P. and fl~i aid - this is n t a
Calendpr
A6
· day in the 'life of a Marine, it's a daY. · the
CJapjfleda
·' life of~ Technical Theatre ma· at· the
BS
Comjca
Uhiversicy of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Editorials
A4
Community College.
Obituaries
Students from around the· country travBt-2 .
!!pOtts .
.el to the qpiverslty to participate in this
Al
two~ year progfam., the only one of its kind
irl the state.
1•
The program, which . is beginning its.
third year, . teaches students the basics Of
muo
the backstage, among them hgh ting,
Plek 3: 4-4-2; Pick 4: 4-6-5-9
sound, special effects, set design and stage
Sup.- l.Ouo: 15-17-22-24-30-47
nggmg.
Kidal!r. 9-4-1~5-5
"We matclled our program with other
\¥VA.
tbp notch programs in the U!!ited States;'
Ddy 3: 9-7-8 o.ily 4: 2-D-3-3 '
said Terrence Hopkins, technical director
C 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
of the Fine Arts program at the university.
"Mter Rio's Theatre Department had

BH

Lotteries

,.

I
I

made several trips to New York City, we
realized that there . was a· great need for
individuals who 'o/ere already prepared to
work in this field," Hopkins added.
"Most stagehands are educated on the
jo.b,'' he said. "The students who are participating in the program at Rio are given
a good fou11dation, and ·are well-educated
on every aspect of live theatre before they
.enter the workforce." .
"The students find out immediately that
theatre is' hard work,'' Hopkins noted. "But
after graduating from this progrant, they
are.almost guaranteed a job with any kind
of production company."
· Job opportunities for these students
·include movie and television production,
Broadway and off-BroadW.y productions,
and toudng with any kind of dance
music producti&lt;;m, !ncluding large rock or
country music concerts.
One graduate, Aaron Mays ·of Jackson,

or

had hoped to become an actor and moved
to las Angeles directly after graduation.
Mays took what he had learned about
building and set design and put it to good
use while waiting for acting jobs. Mays
now owns his own set building firm and
was contracted to build the set for · the
Emmys alid for the l,JSA Network show
"Pacific Blue,'' where he has alSo had
spealdng parts on the show.
"In our latest production, 'Taliesin; students were able to work with life-sized
puppets, elaborate wardrobes and ma~up,
· set explosive charges, and use 'special
sound effects as well as black lights," Hopkins added.
· In the upcoming Masterworks _Chorale
concert, scheduled for May 7 at :1 ·p.m.,
there will be no elaborate sets or loud
explosions, but the students will be using
special lighting and recording equipment
in the theatre.
I

•

GETTING TECHNICAL -

Rio Grande stu-.
dent Terry Chapman -works the boar~ dur- .
ing
1)roduction on the Gallla campus.
(MIIIissla Russell photo)

8

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..... AI• The Dally lentlntl

,......... Cll'l Cluslfts financial WOII

.

'

PORTSMQUTH (AP) - Police questioned a man suspected of killing four relatives whose bodies were found in two
neighboring towns along the Ohio River.
"It appears that the victims were related.
It appears that the suspect knew the victims," Scioto County Sheriff Marty Donini said Sunday night.
Authorities found two bodies in a
Portsmouth home about noon Sunday and
discovered two more bodies a few miles
away in an apartment complex in New
Boston about three hours later, he said.
Officials would not release the names or
ages of the victims or suspect this morning.
Donini would not say how the four
died. lie also would not comment on how
officials linked the two crime scenes or
whether a motive had been established.
Calls placed by The Associated Press to

· AKRON (AP) - Many Ohio hospitals are finding that par:ticit»ating in the state's managed-care program for Medicaid is making
them go broke, a newspaper noported Sunday.
AJ a result, some providers are dropping out of Medicaid healthmaintenance organizations altogether, the Akron Beacon Journal said
in a story Sunday.
: Since the program started, several Medicaid HMOs have gone
bankrupt or otherwise defaulted, leaving hospitals stuck with mote
than $30 million in unpaid claims, according to the 0 hio Associa~on for Hospitals and Health Systems. ·
Akron General Health System pulled out of in Medicaid HMO
contracn last year after losing $2 million on the program in 1998.
The hospital found that it actually could lose less money by dropping out of the program but continuing to provide cate for free, the
newspaper said.
Akron General PteSident Alan Bleyer said cun in reimbursement
rates, combined with a third party taking a cut of the payments, were
too costly.
Adding to the struggle wete requirements to provide services that
Akron General doesn't offer - things like dental and chiropractic
services and transportation.
.

LODI (AP) - · Dewey Hall, a farmer in northeast Ohio's Medina
County, will again plant high-tech soybeans this spring, aiong with
corn, on 1,300 acteS near Lodi.
· For the last two years, he's grown herbicide-resistant soybeans. That enables him to treat those fields with a weed killer wjth
no impact on,-llis genetically modified crops.
.
· Most Americans know little about what's been called the
.Green Revolution, which has changed American farming in the last
·:five years. It's estimated that up to 60 percent of processed food con;tains genetically modified crops.
· Proponents say the seeds are safely
.•

.

.

·· Fire causes damage to zoo building
• CINCINNATI (AP) -An electrical fire in a holding room for
small animals at the Cincinnati Zoo on Sunday caused about $7,500
'damage, authorities said. No people or animals were injunod . .
: The fire waa reported shortly after 4 a.m. in the holding area at the
·zoo's edu~ation department. It started when a cord to a lamp being
used to keep the animals warm short-circuited, catching a Styrofoam
conralner on fire, District Fire Chief Glenn Coleman said.
A smoke detector in the :uea waa activated and the fire was contained tc;J the room. ·
·
·
Approximately 70 children, along with zoo employees and chap,eliones, were in the building at the time of the fire."They were spend.ing the night at the zoo as part of a program that allows children. to
·observe animals at night, play games and take part in other educational activitiea.
Everyone left the buUdlns ufely when tht fire alarm sounded. ·
Zoo oftlclalt !lid the buUdin1i1 monltortd Cor firt and smoke by
an ouflidt Hrvleo and chtl'lllrt muhlpl• tmoa and.tiN dllte!On In

·
In ltpttmbtt, 11 lll'll denmytd th1 111p nnr an Ice rlnk lliellln cht
1110~ Ptetiwl or Lill\le, Dtmap wu rtpcmed it 1200,000, buc no
·

Pollee Chs.l

o,..

Rn:llll

· · POMEROY - Roberr William Mahr Sr., Pomeroy, died Sunday,
1\..iarch 19,2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
·
· . Arrangements will be announced by Fisher funeral Home i~
Pomeroy.

Mary E. Roush

was there," Donini said in an int·erview

Police Chief Greg Ratcliff's office, which
is leading the investigation with help from
Donini's department, went unanswere&lt;l
early this mQrning.
"There's no need for alarm in the community," Ratcliff told WPAY-Radio in
Portsmouth on Sunday. "As far as I know
there's just one suspect and he 's in custody
out of state."
WPAY reported that Kentu~ky authorities were holding a man in the deaths.
Donini wouldn't say in what state the
man was being he)d, but said he was jn

with The Associated Press.
He wouldn't say how the officer linked
the man to the Portsmouth deaths.
Donini said those authorities recove~ed
a weapon believed to have been involved
in the slayings, but he would not say wlut
type of weapon.
He said it's not known where the man
had been· headed.
Two detectives and an assistant county
prosecutor questioned the man Sunday
night, Donini said. The Ohio Bureau of
Identification and Investigation also was
brought in to assist.

RACINE - Mary E. Roush, 91, 48360 Carmel Road, R.acine, died
Sunday, March 19, 2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
There will be a dinner and time of remembrance at Carmel United
Methodist Church at b p.m. Tuesday, March 21,2000 in her memory.
Friends and family are asked to bring a covered dish along with pho. tegrap hs, stories and songs to share.
Memorial contributions may be made to Carmel United Methodist
Church or the United Nation in Ohio for the Elde.rs building fund, in
care ()f Elisa Young, 5200 West Bailey Road, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764.
• · Arrangemenn are being handled by Cremeens Funeral Home,
-Racine.
"

OBITUARIES

.

.

·PVH Health Foundation scholarships available .
POINT
PLEASANT
Pleasant Valley Hospital Health
Foundi1tion 's Scholars Program,
which provides financial assis"
lance to local students preparing
for careers in the field of health
. care", were p]aced in, Mason
County schools recently.
That announcement was made
by Mike Lieving, foundation
chairman. Applictions are also
available by calling Georgianna
Tillis at 674C7234, Lieving says.
The foundation initiated the
· financial aid program, recognizing the serious shortage of health
care professionals that exists
throughout the nation, including
.the Upper Ohio Valley and West
Virginia, as weD as the increasing
costs ol higher edueation.
To be eligible for financial

assistance from the PVH ·Health
Foundation; an· individual must ·
be a resident of Mason County,
W.Va., or Gallia County or
Meigs counties in Ohio; have
graduated from an accredited
high school or possess a GED
certificate, and been accepted for
admission and declaration of
study in a 'health care field at an
accredited institution of higher
education in either·West Virginia
or Ohio.
Applications must be received
by the foundation by April 10.
Letters of reference from two
people familiar with the ·applicant's acadernic or employment
history, as well as sehool transcripts, must also be sent to the
Foundation Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550 by that date.

PROVIDING APPUCATIONS - Georglanna Tillis recently visited area
high schools to provide applications for students who are Interested
In pursuing careers In ·health care. She is pictured here with Sherrie
Williamson, lett, guidance counselor at Wahama High School, as they
discuss the program.
·

to graduate and seniors take a
As thousands of fo11rth- and t '2 th-grade test.
·
sixth-graders across Ohio 'gear
Even with Gov, Bob Taft
up for another rO.!,I!ld of profi- ' acknow,ledgii}g that there are
ciency tests this ' week,, law- problems with .the tests, there
makers are becoming increas- is not much chance of any
ingly concer.ned abo\lt com- change for now. Taft, a backer
plaints that the tests are too of the tests, is forming a comhard, take away valuable teach- mission to review the tests and
ing time and cause too much make recommendations by
stress.
year's end.
"I think there's some ner"It is on the governor's radar'
vousness on the part of legisla- screen," Taft spokesman Scott
tors," said state Sen. Robert Milburn said.
Gardner, R-Madisc;~n, chair"The · entire state is in a
man ofJthe Senate Education furor:' said John ·Grossman,
Commitiee. "I've had some president of the Columbui
come · in · and ask me, 'Bob, Education . Association, the
what are we going to do about union for Columbus teachers.
this?' I say don't overreact. Let's
"They a-re putting the fear of
not rush to judgment."
God in the fourth-graders, like
Last week, three state sena- the college boards· used to &lt;'d o
tors called for a temporary halt us," said Ji!-ichard Hollis · of
to the tests and a fourth sena- Cleveland Heighu, whose
tor wants to repeal the law that fourth-arade dauahter will
calla · for retainins fourth- take the telll thla w.ek.
aradtrl who fall lht rtadlnl

PORTSMO'(,.JTH (AP) Congressmen from bhio and
l&lt;:entu~ky . on Saturday stressed
the econoinic benefits to both
states of a proposed St 94 million
project for the
extension
Greenup Lock and Dam' on the
Ohio River.
"If we're not going to shut
down traffic on the Ohio River,
this has got to be done:' ·U.S.
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, said
Saturday in · Greenup, Ky., at a
public meeting on the project.
Greenup is in northeast Kentucky, about 15 miles southeast of
Portsmouth.
U.S. Rep. Ken Lucas, D-Ky.,
said he is confident that funding
for the project that would extend
the dam from 600 feet to 1,200
feet ·will be approved.
"It's so essential that if any lock
and dam is going to be done, it
loob lik'e thia will be it/' he llid.
More than 70 million tom of

material, mostly coal, are shipped
through the dam each year, ma~­
ing it one of the most heavily
used locks on the Ohio River.
But the dam built in 1959 has
never had a m'\ior renovation, a:nd
traffic delays are increasiJ'lg.
Supporters of the project rec- .
ommended ·· by the · U.S. Arrriy
Gorps of Engineers say it would
eliminate the major delays that
occur when the 1 ,200-foot main
chal\lber is closed for maint~­
nance or accidents. When tlut
happens, . all river traffic has , to
lock through the.600-foot chamber,' resulting in long . delays for
commercial tows.
The congressmen say .the project would not. only help reduce
· transportation costs, but would
also boost the region's job
ket.
Officials estimate that the conatruction project would reault in·
500 new jobs for the area.
·

mar-

. pare nmlnaln 2001-2002.

'

.· The lolls eovur rlllllna,
wrltlna•.math, selenee and ell·
l••n•hlp. Hiah iehool nuclerita
mull p111 the nlnlh•l!flldt 1111

The Dally Sentln·el
dJallfpolil JBatlp Gtribune
tlotnt tlleasant 1\.egtltn

ather
•

·. '
'
•'•.
•

2000
Dining Guid~

.

'

Charged in accident
· CHESTER- A. Racine man was c~arged with failure to yie)d fol~
lowing a three-car accident on Wipple Road on Sunday.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Joseph B. Dillon of Pine Grove Road was southbound on SR 7, turning left on Wipple Road, · pulled into the path of a car driven by Shirley Smitb,
Pomeroy, and then struck a car driven by Lindsey K. Smith of Racin!',
I
.
.
w ho was stopped at a stop s1gn.
There were no injuries.

EMS units answer 9 "lis

Albert Em111ett Parker .

froiD

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_________.......
The

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.

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wiD cHck JO•r larort~~atlo• and ••U a
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Riverview
from

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

VALLEY WEATHER

Rain lingers in area tonight-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Rain: will linger across the triTuesday. .. Mostly cloudy with a
county area tonight. · ,
chance of rain showers. Highs. in ·
Showers will be .likely in the the mid 50s. Chance of rain 30
east on Thesday, and ~ere will be. . percent.
morning drizzle and fog in west- ' · Thesday night ... Partly cloudy.
ern parts of the region:
Lows in the !Ower 40s.
Highs will be · rnal,nly in the
.Extended foreca1t:
cloudy.
50s.
·Wednesday... Partly
Sunset today will be at 6:44 Highs in the mid and upper 60s.
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
Thursday...Mostly clear. Lows
6:33 a.m.
in the mid 40s and highs in the
Weather forecast:
mid a.nd upper 60s.
Tonight ... Cloudy · with
a
Friday. .. Increasing cloudiness.
chance ofrain. Lows in the' lower Lows in the mid 40s and highs in
40s.. East /wind 5 to 10 mph. the mid 60s.
·

lel11 Co. Voters

THANKS!
Robert H.
•aob" Eason
•

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,

POMEROY - Shaun King and Danny King, ages and addresses
unreported, were charged with domestic violence foUowing an incidedt
in 'Pomeroy over the weekend.
.
'
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported Monday that the
charges were filed after Sarah Lee of Brick Street in Pomeroy reported
·
a series of altercations at her home. ·

Slippage

..' .

,,

Deputies charge pair

: ANTIQUITY- Mildred T. Spencer, 89, of the Antiquity Community, passed away at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Marcti 19, 2000 in the Veterans
; Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility, Pomeroy.
; Born February 8, 191 1 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she was the daughter of the
late Thomas and Ida Mae RolerTerreU.
: · She was a hQmemaker, and a member of the Antiquity Baptist
: Church an9 the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
, She was preceded in death .by her first husband, Hobart Adams, on
• February 27, 1941, and by her second husband, Ben Spencer; on .Feb:.ruary. 23,1969.
·
POMEROY - Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered nine
: ·She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Betty Jean Ad~ Jackcalls for assistance over the weekend.
! son on August 28, 1973; three sisters. Edith Ryther, Helen Funk and
Units responded as follows:
~'Lola Bolen; and by two brothers; Norman Terrell and Thomas Terrell Jr.
CENTRAL ·DISPATCH
; Surviving are two grandsons and their wives, Daron apd Jackie JackSaturday, 7:04 p.m., Beech Street, Middlepo~t, Peggy Ellis, Holzer
;son, Leetonia, Ohio, and William and Renee Jackson, Dalzell, South
Medical Center; .
~ Carolina; two great-grandsons, Matth~w Jackson and Cody Jackson,
8:47 p.m:, Bailey Run Road, Ira VanCooney, treated not transported;
•.a nd two great~granddaughters, Misti Frank and Kayla Jackson.
ANTIQUITY - Mildred T. Spencer, 89, of the Antiquity ComrnuSunday, '8:52 a.m., Carmel Road, Mary Roush, Veterans Memorial ·
i.. Her son-in-law also survives, William Jackson of Leetonia, as well as ·ruty, passed away at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, March 19,2000 in the Wterans Hospital;
.
~everal nieces and nephews and a host of friends, including special Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility, Pomeroy.
10:31 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Joe Swain,VMH;
:friends, Terri and Dave Shain, and Maxine and Barney Shain, all of
Born February 8,1911 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she was the daughter of the
5:56p.m., Collins Road, Gayle Boynton ,VMH.
~Antiquity.
late Thomas and Ida Mae Roler Terrell.
POMEROY
• · Services will be held at 1 1 a.m. Saturday, March 25, 2000 in the
She was a homemaker, and a member of the Antiquity Baptist
Sunday,
5:50
p.m.,
SR
7,
Amber
Lawson and Shirley Smith, refused
.chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery. The Rev. Jesse Wingrove will officiate Church and the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
treatment.
and interment wiD follow on the family plot in Letart Falls Cemetery.
· She was preceded in death by her first husband, Hobart AdanlS, on
RutLAND .
.
.
I
.
l'riends may call from 7-9 p.m. friday, March 24,2000 at the Cremeens February 27, 1941, and by her second husband, Ben Spencer, on Feb.
Saturday,
2:52
p.m.,
County
Road
1,
with
assistance
from
Columbia
.
't:uneral Home, Racine.
ruary. 23, 1969.
·· ·
,
· She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Betty Jean Adams Jack- Townshio First Responder, Robert Peck, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
Sunday, 9:25 a.m., Coal Street, Ben Harris,VMH;
son on August 28, 1973; three sisters, Edith Ryther, Helen Funk and
SYRACUSE
·
'Lola Bolen; and ~y two brothers, Norman Terrell and Thomas Terrell Jr.
Sunday, tO:b6 a.m. , assisted by Centtal Dispatch, Union Alley, VMH.
:; . POMEROY- Albert Emmett J?arket, 73, Pomeroy, died on Friday,
Surviving are two grandsons and their wives, Daron an\1 Jackie JackMarch 17, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, after a lengthy son, Leetonia,, Ohio, and William and Renee Jackson , Dalzell, South
. illness.
Carolina; two great-grandsons, Matthew Jackson and Cody Jackson,
··.. l:le was born on February 15, 1927 in Chester, Ohio, son of the late and two great-granddaughters, Misti Frank and Kayla Jackson.
. l(a)ph Emmett Parker and Mary Philson $initi). Parker.
Her son-in-law also survives, William Jackson of Leetonia, as well as
·.. · He was a heavy equipment operator and a lifdong dairy farmer, still several nieces and nephews and a host of friends, including special
·. pperating the Parker Family Farm in Chester. He is loved and truly friends, Terri and Dave Shain, and Maxine and Barney Shain, all of
; missed. .
·
Antiquity.
.
., He is survived by his wife, Dorothy ~bble Parker of .Chester; six
Services wiU be held at I 1 a.m. Saturday, March 25, 2000 in the
· · ~c,ms;David Orville Watson of Chester, Byron Marquis Watson of Shade, chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery. The Rev. Jesse Wingrove will officiate
.Joseph Leon Wilson of Chester, George Albert P~ker of Chester, and interment will follow on the family plot in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Thomas Mathew Parker of Chester, and Francis Anthony Parker of Oak . Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. Friday, March 24,2000 at the C~meens
' Hill, West Virginia; four daughters, Iva Renee Richard of Chester, Usa Funeral Home, Racine.
· Anne Wil.s on Saunders of Fort Collins, Colorado, Teresa Marie McK·'etvey of Portland, and Mary Magdalene Brown ofTuppers Plains; 16
. 8fandchildren and one great-grandson; two brothers, Roy Franklin
on the side, residents, many of
· l'arker and Harry Leland Parker, both of Pomeroy; and one sister, Helen
whom are senior citizens, SOLD! -The Riverview Schoool property near Reedsville was sold for
'Aoy Hart of Shade.
would have a limited escape $85,000 on Saturday to Jay Hall Jr. of Cheshire. There are no immediate plans for the property, according to Hall's attorney. (Brian J.
. ' .. He was preceded in death by his parents; a son-in-law, Lester Ray
route.
PapAl
Reed photo)
' ffichard; and two brothers, George Herman Parker and Harold Vere
"I could crawl under a train
Parker.
·
.
were soon back to their normal car if I had do, but what about
· Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, March 21, 2000 at the speed.
someon,e older?" asked Fields.
property.
;.fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be John~ Long, and
"We have as rriany as 10 trains
When
contacted about the
,
Hall also ·owns the former War'·burial will follow in Mound Cemetery. Friends may call on Monday, a day going by, and Who knows problem, CS:X said there was a
.
ren
Pickens farm, a part of which
·.March 20, 2000 from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
what they're carrying! I can "t hill slide agsravated by weather
borders the Riverview lot, and
PapAl
imagine ·what we would do if conditions .
operates
a gravel mining operation
.... '·
there was a derailment:' said
Safety inspectors, according
Fields.
to Ga~y Wallenhaupt, made 1 a buildings in both Long Bottom from that properl)f.
Daily
If a train would jump the detailed visit to the site and and Reedsville, and was the only
(liSPS ZIJ.HO)
tra~k. Fields and nearly 50 other concluded that it posed no d,a n- property left to be sold by the di:·c-1111111 No•npeper Holdlap,lac.
homes, including a trailer park, ger to trains crossing the rail- trict following the 1997 building
Subscribe today.
Publllhcd. every 1ftemoon, Monday throuah
program.
.
would be trapped without a road bridge.
Prlday, 1U Court St•• Pomeroy, Oblo, by the
Eastern has retained the Tupway out. ·
,Ohio VIlle)' Publiahina Compuy. Second
44~-2342
CSX, which owns ~ portion
WED. BARGAIN .NIGHT ALL
cl• pollaJt paid 1t Pomeroy, Ohio.
Plains· building for use as an
.
pers
Blocked in by th~ Ohio River of the land affected by the slipSEATS 12.00 448-111123
Meaben The Auocl1ted PrGII, and the Ohio
page, plans to reinforce the administrative headquarters. The
NIWipope! "-llllon. '
POrrMASriR: Send -.ddras wrrecllons to
bank with rock and stone. Wal- Tuppers Plains building is also
The Dilly Sentinel, 111 Court Sl,, Pomeroy,
lenhhaupt iaid the U.S. Army occupied by ACCESS/Head Start,
-~ Ohio~769
suascsumoN RATES
Corps of Engineers will be which leases space from the dis11J Cllnter or Motor Route
contacted about the stream that trict.
One Wook ......................... .'................... ll.OO
Fultz, who represents Hall and
AE.P-30\
Flrstar ~ 22'A.
Premier - a\'.
empties into the Ohio River. .
One Monlb ............................................ S8.10
Akzo-42).
Gannett - 70'1.
Rockwell
40!.
One Yeu ......................... ,.................. SI04.00
"There may have been a his business enterprises, jncluding
AmTech/SBC- 45l.
Gen"'al Electric - 139~
RD Shell- i56'1t
SINGLE COPY PRICE
change in the course of the Jay-Mar Inc., said today that Hall
Harley Davldaon - 81.,.
Ashlan~ Inc.- 31 '· ·
Seel8- 30"·
llolly .................................................ll Ccnu
AT&amp;T -53),
Kmart-8~
Shoney'a - '!. .
stream, and that as well," he had "no immediate plans" for the
Sublaibcn not dairina to pay the carrier may
Bank
One
21~.
Kroger16')•
Wendy's
18.,,
1111nlt Ia advance dim:t to The Dally Schtinel
said. "But, the railroad bridge is
Bob Evans - 12'1t
Lan~s En~ - 58lo
WorthlngiOil - 12~
oa a three, six or 12 month basis. Credit will be
BorgWarn8t'- 36~
Lld. - 37\
Dally atock reporte are the not in any danger and the supII'RIIIr.V.',:IIY&lt;IIII ',\1,
af'lm curler uch week.
Champion - 3l•
Oak Hill Financial- 1:1\
4 p.m. cloelng qu- of port system abutment is in good
No 11"-criptlon by mall permlucd In areas
446·4524
'
.
.'
4
1
Charming Shopa- 6~
OVB-31
lhe previous day's trans·
wben~home carrier service Ia av.Uablc. ·
shape."
City
Holding
-12!.
One
Valley
33~
aotlono,
provided
by
FRI 3110 • THURS 311 et00
· ' hblllher racrvcs ltle rl&amp;ht to adjust rates
Federal Mogul- 13\
People&amp; -18~
Adveel of Galllpollo.
Brenda Warth's prayers will
darlnt the aubt&lt;:rlptlon period. Subscriplion
GIFT CERTFKAns AVAILAIL.E
nit c:hanpa may belln;iplemcnted by chanatna
be answered as repairs to fix the
lOX OIFKE WILL OPEN AT
the dvration ol the •u~ipllon.
slide will begin soon.
6:30 PMIOI MNIHG SHOWS
'...'
I2:30 PM FOR MADNIIS
"I just hope they do some~
MAIL sui8CRimoNs
I,... Molp
thing quick," .she said. "I've
13 w.eu .. ,................................:......... S27.30
prayed that they'd take care of
2 6 -.............................................1$3.82
it. I just keep asking what
52Woolot........................................... $1~.56
--MelpCoul)'
would they do if their wives
13 ............................................ 1~.:15
were here alone?"

.• •

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MIDDLEPORT - Hobart M.' Darst, 76,719 Maple St., Middleport,
was cited for failure to yield from a stop sign by the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highw:~y Patrol following a two-vehicle collision Sunday at
the intersection of State Route 7 and County Road 3i!5 (Story's Run).
Troopers said Darst, driving a pickup truck, turned left from Story:s
Run onto 7 to head northbound at 6:20 p.m., entered the path of ,a
northbound car' driven by Dale F. Bing, 40,Apartment 3, 895 BrowneD
Ave., Middleport, and. collided with Bing's car.
;
Damage to hoth vehicles was slight. ·

LOCAL . STOCKS

Pletwnt Valley Hospitaland medk41 staffmembers are PROUD
to be aparticipatingproviderfor Aetu U.S. Healtbeaf'e~

13

POMEROY- George S. Carper, 76, ofPomeJOY, died on Monday,
March 13, 2000 at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
Born January 2, 1924 in Meigs County. he w:~s the son of the late
Lowell Archie Carper and Helen Gilliland Carper. He owned Carper's
Nurseries near Pomeroy for over 50 years.
Mr. Carper receited his BSA from Ohio University in 1948. He
completed additional studies toward his master's in the area of landscaping. He was a Wodd War II veteran, having served in the Navy and
stationed in Australia for three years.
Mr. Carper was a member of the American Legion 0039 and the
Harrisonville Lodge Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus.
He is survived by his wife, Peg Humphreys Carper, two daughters
and sons-in-law, Dawn and Jay Miller ofWesterville, Ohio, and Wendy
and Michael Halar of Pomeroy, Ohio; and a son and daughter-in-law,
George R . Carper and Theresa Salser Carper of Houston, Texas; grandchildren, Marjorie Anka Halar,Jon Michael George Halar and Summer
Nicole Carper; and his brother and sister-in-law, Charles and Helen
Carper of Kirkersville, Ohio.
·
In lieu of flowers , contributions may be made tO Arthur G. James
Cancer Hospital and Research Institute, 300West 10th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210- 1228 and/or Holzer Ho~ice, 115 East Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769; Hospice of Hocking County/Appalachian Community, 280 East .State Street, Athens, Ohio 45701.
'· Funeral amngements are being handled bj Ewing funeral Home.
.
There will be no calling hours.
A memorial service will be held at the Hemlock Grove Church of
Christ on Friday, March 24, 2000 at 3:30 p.m. Prior to the service, the
American Legion 0039 and the Harrisonville Lodge Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus will conduct memorial services.
A celebration ofhis life will follow in the' Grange Hall.
Directions. from Athens: Route 33 south to the four lane, turn left
on County Road 19 (Peach Fork}, tljrn left on Rocksprings Road and
follow signs to the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center. Go past the
center and turn right on Hemlock Grove C-39 and follow the road
around the hill (approxi~ru~tely 2 miles). At the crossroads of Cook and ·
Hemlock Grove, the church will be on your left.

LOCAL BRIEFS
CJtatlon issued In aash

Mildred 1. Spencer

of proposed .lock and dam project

co
••
Wednesday, April II, 10•

.

r

·up fOr profidency tests
BY THE AsSOCIATED PRESS

.

Mildred 1. Spencer

The D"ly Sentinel • Page A3

OBITUARIES
Georp s. carper

Robat Mahr Sr.

custody out of state where he had been
stopped on an unrelated traffic charge.
"The officer that stopped him in the
other state wasn't aware at the' time that he
had been involved in murders. They had no
idea what they had and we had no idea he

' Elementary students gear Congressmen stress importance

High-tech aops still booming

lf\lllritl wtl'l r~porttd.

commtmity. A1 for {U I lmow thnt~
just ont ssuput arul ht~ in autody
out of state."

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Word of central Ohio's need for workers
has spread throughout Latin'America, many immigrants say, drawing
tho~e who have legal permission to work jn the United States ahd
those who come without documents. ·
"We're· experiencing a tnomendous influx of first-time immigrants" from Latin America, said ju)ja Arbini-Carbonell, director of
the Ohio Hispanic Coalition. "In the last two years, there has been
an explosion of new families:•
According to estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Latino
population in Franklin County increased 36 percent between 1990
and 1998, reaching more than 12,500. The county's overall population grew 6.2 percent.
· For the eight-year period, Franklin and Summit tied for the
.biggest percentage increase among Ohio counties with sizable Latino populations. ·
. ()fficers from several central Ohio police departments are raking a
new class in Spanish for law enfo~ement, and real-estate companies,
food-sel:vice companies and a large mal)ufacturer have taken classes
tailored to them.
Deputy Sheriff Claudia McKee, who has spent the past three years
on second-shift patrol in a Latino neighborhood, is stUdying Spanish
at a community college so she can do her job better on the city's
west side.
"There isn't a night that goes by... where they don't need a Span~
. ish-speaking officer:' she told The Columbus Dispatch for a story
Sunday.

cht blllldina.

of relatives

"17tne~ ·,.o need for alarm in tht

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

DEATH NOTICES

•

Immigrants flock to.central Ohio

.

Monclly, MII'Oh 10, 1000

Man questioned In

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

Monday, March 20, 2000

...

'

,,

.

.

,,

'·

,.

•

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..... AI• The Dally lentlntl

,......... Cll'l Cluslfts financial WOII

.

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PORTSMQUTH (AP) - Police questioned a man suspected of killing four relatives whose bodies were found in two
neighboring towns along the Ohio River.
"It appears that the victims were related.
It appears that the suspect knew the victims," Scioto County Sheriff Marty Donini said Sunday night.
Authorities found two bodies in a
Portsmouth home about noon Sunday and
discovered two more bodies a few miles
away in an apartment complex in New
Boston about three hours later, he said.
Officials would not release the names or
ages of the victims or suspect this morning.
Donini would not say how the four
died. lie also would not comment on how
officials linked the two crime scenes or
whether a motive had been established.
Calls placed by The Associated Press to

· AKRON (AP) - Many Ohio hospitals are finding that par:ticit»ating in the state's managed-care program for Medicaid is making
them go broke, a newspaper noported Sunday.
AJ a result, some providers are dropping out of Medicaid healthmaintenance organizations altogether, the Akron Beacon Journal said
in a story Sunday.
: Since the program started, several Medicaid HMOs have gone
bankrupt or otherwise defaulted, leaving hospitals stuck with mote
than $30 million in unpaid claims, according to the 0 hio Associa~on for Hospitals and Health Systems. ·
Akron General Health System pulled out of in Medicaid HMO
contracn last year after losing $2 million on the program in 1998.
The hospital found that it actually could lose less money by dropping out of the program but continuing to provide cate for free, the
newspaper said.
Akron General PteSident Alan Bleyer said cun in reimbursement
rates, combined with a third party taking a cut of the payments, were
too costly.
Adding to the struggle wete requirements to provide services that
Akron General doesn't offer - things like dental and chiropractic
services and transportation.
.

LODI (AP) - · Dewey Hall, a farmer in northeast Ohio's Medina
County, will again plant high-tech soybeans this spring, aiong with
corn, on 1,300 acteS near Lodi.
· For the last two years, he's grown herbicide-resistant soybeans. That enables him to treat those fields with a weed killer wjth
no impact on,-llis genetically modified crops.
.
· Most Americans know little about what's been called the
.Green Revolution, which has changed American farming in the last
·:five years. It's estimated that up to 60 percent of processed food con;tains genetically modified crops.
· Proponents say the seeds are safely
.•

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.

·· Fire causes damage to zoo building
• CINCINNATI (AP) -An electrical fire in a holding room for
small animals at the Cincinnati Zoo on Sunday caused about $7,500
'damage, authorities said. No people or animals were injunod . .
: The fire waa reported shortly after 4 a.m. in the holding area at the
·zoo's edu~ation department. It started when a cord to a lamp being
used to keep the animals warm short-circuited, catching a Styrofoam
conralner on fire, District Fire Chief Glenn Coleman said.
A smoke detector in the :uea waa activated and the fire was contained tc;J the room. ·
·
·
Approximately 70 children, along with zoo employees and chap,eliones, were in the building at the time of the fire."They were spend.ing the night at the zoo as part of a program that allows children. to
·observe animals at night, play games and take part in other educational activitiea.
Everyone left the buUdlns ufely when tht fire alarm sounded. ·
Zoo oftlclalt !lid the buUdin1i1 monltortd Cor firt and smoke by
an ouflidt Hrvleo and chtl'lllrt muhlpl• tmoa and.tiN dllte!On In

·
In ltpttmbtt, 11 lll'll denmytd th1 111p nnr an Ice rlnk lliellln cht
1110~ Ptetiwl or Lill\le, Dtmap wu rtpcmed it 1200,000, buc no
·

Pollee Chs.l

o,..

Rn:llll

· · POMEROY - Roberr William Mahr Sr., Pomeroy, died Sunday,
1\..iarch 19,2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
·
· . Arrangements will be announced by Fisher funeral Home i~
Pomeroy.

Mary E. Roush

was there," Donini said in an int·erview

Police Chief Greg Ratcliff's office, which
is leading the investigation with help from
Donini's department, went unanswere&lt;l
early this mQrning.
"There's no need for alarm in the community," Ratcliff told WPAY-Radio in
Portsmouth on Sunday. "As far as I know
there's just one suspect and he 's in custody
out of state."
WPAY reported that Kentu~ky authorities were holding a man in the deaths.
Donini wouldn't say in what state the
man was being he)d, but said he was jn

with The Associated Press.
He wouldn't say how the officer linked
the man to the Portsmouth deaths.
Donini said those authorities recove~ed
a weapon believed to have been involved
in the slayings, but he would not say wlut
type of weapon.
He said it's not known where the man
had been· headed.
Two detectives and an assistant county
prosecutor questioned the man Sunday
night, Donini said. The Ohio Bureau of
Identification and Investigation also was
brought in to assist.

RACINE - Mary E. Roush, 91, 48360 Carmel Road, R.acine, died
Sunday, March 19, 2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
There will be a dinner and time of remembrance at Carmel United
Methodist Church at b p.m. Tuesday, March 21,2000 in her memory.
Friends and family are asked to bring a covered dish along with pho. tegrap hs, stories and songs to share.
Memorial contributions may be made to Carmel United Methodist
Church or the United Nation in Ohio for the Elde.rs building fund, in
care ()f Elisa Young, 5200 West Bailey Road, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764.
• · Arrangemenn are being handled by Cremeens Funeral Home,
-Racine.
"

OBITUARIES

.

.

·PVH Health Foundation scholarships available .
POINT
PLEASANT
Pleasant Valley Hospital Health
Foundi1tion 's Scholars Program,
which provides financial assis"
lance to local students preparing
for careers in the field of health
. care", were p]aced in, Mason
County schools recently.
That announcement was made
by Mike Lieving, foundation
chairman. Applictions are also
available by calling Georgianna
Tillis at 674C7234, Lieving says.
The foundation initiated the
· financial aid program, recognizing the serious shortage of health
care professionals that exists
throughout the nation, including
.the Upper Ohio Valley and West
Virginia, as weD as the increasing
costs ol higher edueation.
To be eligible for financial

assistance from the PVH ·Health
Foundation; an· individual must ·
be a resident of Mason County,
W.Va., or Gallia County or
Meigs counties in Ohio; have
graduated from an accredited
high school or possess a GED
certificate, and been accepted for
admission and declaration of
study in a 'health care field at an
accredited institution of higher
education in either·West Virginia
or Ohio.
Applications must be received
by the foundation by April 10.
Letters of reference from two
people familiar with the ·applicant's acadernic or employment
history, as well as sehool transcripts, must also be sent to the
Foundation Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550 by that date.

PROVIDING APPUCATIONS - Georglanna Tillis recently visited area
high schools to provide applications for students who are Interested
In pursuing careers In ·health care. She is pictured here with Sherrie
Williamson, lett, guidance counselor at Wahama High School, as they
discuss the program.
·

to graduate and seniors take a
As thousands of fo11rth- and t '2 th-grade test.
·
sixth-graders across Ohio 'gear
Even with Gov, Bob Taft
up for another rO.!,I!ld of profi- ' acknow,ledgii}g that there are
ciency tests this ' week,, law- problems with .the tests, there
makers are becoming increas- is not much chance of any
ingly concer.ned abo\lt com- change for now. Taft, a backer
plaints that the tests are too of the tests, is forming a comhard, take away valuable teach- mission to review the tests and
ing time and cause too much make recommendations by
stress.
year's end.
"I think there's some ner"It is on the governor's radar'
vousness on the part of legisla- screen," Taft spokesman Scott
tors," said state Sen. Robert Milburn said.
Gardner, R-Madisc;~n, chair"The · entire state is in a
man ofJthe Senate Education furor:' said John ·Grossman,
Commitiee. "I've had some president of the Columbui
come · in · and ask me, 'Bob, Education . Association, the
what are we going to do about union for Columbus teachers.
this?' I say don't overreact. Let's
"They a-re putting the fear of
not rush to judgment."
God in the fourth-graders, like
Last week, three state sena- the college boards· used to &lt;'d o
tors called for a temporary halt us," said Ji!-ichard Hollis · of
to the tests and a fourth sena- Cleveland Heighu, whose
tor wants to repeal the law that fourth-arade dauahter will
calla · for retainins fourth- take the telll thla w.ek.
aradtrl who fall lht rtadlnl

PORTSMO'(,.JTH (AP) Congressmen from bhio and
l&lt;:entu~ky . on Saturday stressed
the econoinic benefits to both
states of a proposed St 94 million
project for the
extension
Greenup Lock and Dam' on the
Ohio River.
"If we're not going to shut
down traffic on the Ohio River,
this has got to be done:' ·U.S.
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, said
Saturday in · Greenup, Ky., at a
public meeting on the project.
Greenup is in northeast Kentucky, about 15 miles southeast of
Portsmouth.
U.S. Rep. Ken Lucas, D-Ky.,
said he is confident that funding
for the project that would extend
the dam from 600 feet to 1,200
feet ·will be approved.
"It's so essential that if any lock
and dam is going to be done, it
loob lik'e thia will be it/' he llid.
More than 70 million tom of

material, mostly coal, are shipped
through the dam each year, ma~­
ing it one of the most heavily
used locks on the Ohio River.
But the dam built in 1959 has
never had a m'\ior renovation, a:nd
traffic delays are increasiJ'lg.
Supporters of the project rec- .
ommended ·· by the · U.S. Arrriy
Gorps of Engineers say it would
eliminate the major delays that
occur when the 1 ,200-foot main
chal\lber is closed for maint~­
nance or accidents. When tlut
happens, . all river traffic has , to
lock through the.600-foot chamber,' resulting in long . delays for
commercial tows.
The congressmen say .the project would not. only help reduce
· transportation costs, but would
also boost the region's job
ket.
Officials estimate that the conatruction project would reault in·
500 new jobs for the area.
·

mar-

. pare nmlnaln 2001-2002.

'

.· The lolls eovur rlllllna,
wrltlna•.math, selenee and ell·
l••n•hlp. Hiah iehool nuclerita
mull p111 the nlnlh•l!flldt 1111

The Dally Sentln·el
dJallfpolil JBatlp Gtribune
tlotnt tlleasant 1\.egtltn

ather
•

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2000
Dining Guid~

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Charged in accident
· CHESTER- A. Racine man was c~arged with failure to yie)d fol~
lowing a three-car accident on Wipple Road on Sunday.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Joseph B. Dillon of Pine Grove Road was southbound on SR 7, turning left on Wipple Road, · pulled into the path of a car driven by Shirley Smitb,
Pomeroy, and then struck a car driven by Lindsey K. Smith of Racin!',
I
.
.
w ho was stopped at a stop s1gn.
There were no injuries.

EMS units answer 9 "lis

Albert Em111ett Parker .

froiD

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_________.......
The

Sentinel

c...,,

.

26 -

............................................1$6.68

52 -

........................................... IUJP.72

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know oftn ti'I"Dt'l•t110r1,
all·llll ......... 11 (140) ltl•ZI!J. We
wiD cHck JO•r larort~~atlo• and ••U a
cornc11oa lfwaiTIIIIed.

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Riverview
from

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

VALLEY WEATHER

Rain lingers in area tonight-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Rain: will linger across the triTuesday. .. Mostly cloudy with a
county area tonight. · ,
chance of rain showers. Highs. in ·
Showers will be .likely in the the mid 50s. Chance of rain 30
east on Thesday, and ~ere will be. . percent.
morning drizzle and fog in west- ' · Thesday night ... Partly cloudy.
ern parts of the region:
Lows in the !Ower 40s.
Highs will be · rnal,nly in the
.Extended foreca1t:
cloudy.
50s.
·Wednesday... Partly
Sunset today will be at 6:44 Highs in the mid and upper 60s.
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
Thursday...Mostly clear. Lows
6:33 a.m.
in the mid 40s and highs in the
Weather forecast:
mid a.nd upper 60s.
Tonight ... Cloudy · with
a
Friday. .. Increasing cloudiness.
chance ofrain. Lows in the' lower Lows in the mid 40s and highs in
40s.. East /wind 5 to 10 mph. the mid 60s.
·

lel11 Co. Voters

THANKS!
Robert H.
•aob" Eason
•

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POMEROY - Shaun King and Danny King, ages and addresses
unreported, were charged with domestic violence foUowing an incidedt
in 'Pomeroy over the weekend.
.
'
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported Monday that the
charges were filed after Sarah Lee of Brick Street in Pomeroy reported
·
a series of altercations at her home. ·

Slippage

..' .

,,

Deputies charge pair

: ANTIQUITY- Mildred T. Spencer, 89, of the Antiquity Community, passed away at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Marcti 19, 2000 in the Veterans
; Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility, Pomeroy.
; Born February 8, 191 1 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she was the daughter of the
late Thomas and Ida Mae RolerTerreU.
: · She was a hQmemaker, and a member of the Antiquity Baptist
: Church an9 the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
, She was preceded in death .by her first husband, Hobart Adams, on
• February 27, 1941, and by her second husband, Ben Spencer; on .Feb:.ruary. 23,1969.
·
POMEROY - Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered nine
: ·She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Betty Jean Ad~ Jackcalls for assistance over the weekend.
! son on August 28, 1973; three sisters. Edith Ryther, Helen Funk and
Units responded as follows:
~'Lola Bolen; and by two brothers; Norman Terrell and Thomas Terrell Jr.
CENTRAL ·DISPATCH
; Surviving are two grandsons and their wives, Daron apd Jackie JackSaturday, 7:04 p.m., Beech Street, Middlepo~t, Peggy Ellis, Holzer
;son, Leetonia, Ohio, and William and Renee Jackson, Dalzell, South
Medical Center; .
~ Carolina; two great-grandsons, Matth~w Jackson and Cody Jackson,
8:47 p.m:, Bailey Run Road, Ira VanCooney, treated not transported;
•.a nd two great~granddaughters, Misti Frank and Kayla Jackson.
ANTIQUITY - Mildred T. Spencer, 89, of the Antiquity ComrnuSunday, '8:52 a.m., Carmel Road, Mary Roush, Veterans Memorial ·
i.. Her son-in-law also survives, William Jackson of Leetonia, as well as ·ruty, passed away at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, March 19,2000 in the Wterans Hospital;
.
~everal nieces and nephews and a host of friends, including special Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility, Pomeroy.
10:31 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Joe Swain,VMH;
:friends, Terri and Dave Shain, and Maxine and Barney Shain, all of
Born February 8,1911 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she was the daughter of the
5:56p.m., Collins Road, Gayle Boynton ,VMH.
~Antiquity.
late Thomas and Ida Mae Roler Terrell.
POMEROY
• · Services will be held at 1 1 a.m. Saturday, March 25, 2000 in the
She was a homemaker, and a member of the Antiquity Baptist
Sunday,
5:50
p.m.,
SR
7,
Amber
Lawson and Shirley Smith, refused
.chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery. The Rev. Jesse Wingrove will officiate Church and the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
treatment.
and interment wiD follow on the family plot in Letart Falls Cemetery.
· She was preceded in death by her first husband, Hobart AdanlS, on
RutLAND .
.
.
I
.
l'riends may call from 7-9 p.m. friday, March 24,2000 at the Cremeens February 27, 1941, and by her second husband, Ben Spencer, on Feb.
Saturday,
2:52
p.m.,
County
Road
1,
with
assistance
from
Columbia
.
't:uneral Home, Racine.
ruary. 23, 1969.
·· ·
,
· She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Betty Jean Adams Jack- Townshio First Responder, Robert Peck, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
Sunday, 9:25 a.m., Coal Street, Ben Harris,VMH;
son on August 28, 1973; three sisters, Edith Ryther, Helen Funk and
SYRACUSE
·
'Lola Bolen; and ~y two brothers, Norman Terrell and Thomas Terrell Jr.
Sunday, tO:b6 a.m. , assisted by Centtal Dispatch, Union Alley, VMH.
:; . POMEROY- Albert Emmett J?arket, 73, Pomeroy, died on Friday,
Surviving are two grandsons and their wives, Daron an\1 Jackie JackMarch 17, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, after a lengthy son, Leetonia,, Ohio, and William and Renee Jackson , Dalzell, South
. illness.
Carolina; two great-grandsons, Matthew Jackson and Cody Jackson,
··.. l:le was born on February 15, 1927 in Chester, Ohio, son of the late and two great-granddaughters, Misti Frank and Kayla Jackson.
. l(a)ph Emmett Parker and Mary Philson $initi). Parker.
Her son-in-law also survives, William Jackson of Leetonia, as well as
·.. · He was a heavy equipment operator and a lifdong dairy farmer, still several nieces and nephews and a host of friends, including special
·. pperating the Parker Family Farm in Chester. He is loved and truly friends, Terri and Dave Shain, and Maxine and Barney Shain, all of
; missed. .
·
Antiquity.
.
., He is survived by his wife, Dorothy ~bble Parker of .Chester; six
Services wiU be held at I 1 a.m. Saturday, March 25, 2000 in the
· · ~c,ms;David Orville Watson of Chester, Byron Marquis Watson of Shade, chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery. The Rev. Jesse Wingrove will officiate
.Joseph Leon Wilson of Chester, George Albert P~ker of Chester, and interment will follow on the family plot in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Thomas Mathew Parker of Chester, and Francis Anthony Parker of Oak . Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. Friday, March 24,2000 at the C~meens
' Hill, West Virginia; four daughters, Iva Renee Richard of Chester, Usa Funeral Home, Racine.
· Anne Wil.s on Saunders of Fort Collins, Colorado, Teresa Marie McK·'etvey of Portland, and Mary Magdalene Brown ofTuppers Plains; 16
. 8fandchildren and one great-grandson; two brothers, Roy Franklin
on the side, residents, many of
· l'arker and Harry Leland Parker, both of Pomeroy; and one sister, Helen
whom are senior citizens, SOLD! -The Riverview Schoool property near Reedsville was sold for
'Aoy Hart of Shade.
would have a limited escape $85,000 on Saturday to Jay Hall Jr. of Cheshire. There are no immediate plans for the property, according to Hall's attorney. (Brian J.
. ' .. He was preceded in death by his parents; a son-in-law, Lester Ray
route.
PapAl
Reed photo)
' ffichard; and two brothers, George Herman Parker and Harold Vere
"I could crawl under a train
Parker.
·
.
were soon back to their normal car if I had do, but what about
· Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, March 21, 2000 at the speed.
someon,e older?" asked Fields.
property.
;.fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be John~ Long, and
"We have as rriany as 10 trains
When
contacted about the
,
Hall also ·owns the former War'·burial will follow in Mound Cemetery. Friends may call on Monday, a day going by, and Who knows problem, CS:X said there was a
.
ren
Pickens farm, a part of which
·.March 20, 2000 from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
what they're carrying! I can "t hill slide agsravated by weather
borders the Riverview lot, and
PapAl
imagine ·what we would do if conditions .
operates
a gravel mining operation
.... '·
there was a derailment:' said
Safety inspectors, according
Fields.
to Ga~y Wallenhaupt, made 1 a buildings in both Long Bottom from that properl)f.
Daily
If a train would jump the detailed visit to the site and and Reedsville, and was the only
(liSPS ZIJ.HO)
tra~k. Fields and nearly 50 other concluded that it posed no d,a n- property left to be sold by the di:·c-1111111 No•npeper Holdlap,lac.
homes, including a trailer park, ger to trains crossing the rail- trict following the 1997 building
Subscribe today.
Publllhcd. every 1ftemoon, Monday throuah
program.
.
would be trapped without a road bridge.
Prlday, 1U Court St•• Pomeroy, Oblo, by the
Eastern has retained the Tupway out. ·
,Ohio VIlle)' Publiahina Compuy. Second
44~-2342
CSX, which owns ~ portion
WED. BARGAIN .NIGHT ALL
cl• pollaJt paid 1t Pomeroy, Ohio.
Plains· building for use as an
.
pers
Blocked in by th~ Ohio River of the land affected by the slipSEATS 12.00 448-111123
Meaben The Auocl1ted PrGII, and the Ohio
page, plans to reinforce the administrative headquarters. The
NIWipope! "-llllon. '
POrrMASriR: Send -.ddras wrrecllons to
bank with rock and stone. Wal- Tuppers Plains building is also
The Dilly Sentinel, 111 Court Sl,, Pomeroy,
lenhhaupt iaid the U.S. Army occupied by ACCESS/Head Start,
-~ Ohio~769
suascsumoN RATES
Corps of Engineers will be which leases space from the dis11J Cllnter or Motor Route
contacted about the stream that trict.
One Wook ......................... .'................... ll.OO
Fultz, who represents Hall and
AE.P-30\
Flrstar ~ 22'A.
Premier - a\'.
empties into the Ohio River. .
One Monlb ............................................ S8.10
Akzo-42).
Gannett - 70'1.
Rockwell
40!.
One Yeu ......................... ,.................. SI04.00
"There may have been a his business enterprises, jncluding
AmTech/SBC- 45l.
Gen"'al Electric - 139~
RD Shell- i56'1t
SINGLE COPY PRICE
change in the course of the Jay-Mar Inc., said today that Hall
Harley Davldaon - 81.,.
Ashlan~ Inc.- 31 '· ·
Seel8- 30"·
llolly .................................................ll Ccnu
AT&amp;T -53),
Kmart-8~
Shoney'a - '!. .
stream, and that as well," he had "no immediate plans" for the
Sublaibcn not dairina to pay the carrier may
Bank
One
21~.
Kroger16')•
Wendy's
18.,,
1111nlt Ia advance dim:t to The Dally Schtinel
said. "But, the railroad bridge is
Bob Evans - 12'1t
Lan~s En~ - 58lo
WorthlngiOil - 12~
oa a three, six or 12 month basis. Credit will be
BorgWarn8t'- 36~
Lld. - 37\
Dally atock reporte are the not in any danger and the supII'RIIIr.V.',:IIY&lt;IIII ',\1,
af'lm curler uch week.
Champion - 3l•
Oak Hill Financial- 1:1\
4 p.m. cloelng qu- of port system abutment is in good
No 11"-criptlon by mall permlucd In areas
446·4524
'
.
.'
4
1
Charming Shopa- 6~
OVB-31
lhe previous day's trans·
wben~home carrier service Ia av.Uablc. ·
shape."
City
Holding
-12!.
One
Valley
33~
aotlono,
provided
by
FRI 3110 • THURS 311 et00
· ' hblllher racrvcs ltle rl&amp;ht to adjust rates
Federal Mogul- 13\
People&amp; -18~
Adveel of Galllpollo.
Brenda Warth's prayers will
darlnt the aubt&lt;:rlptlon period. Subscriplion
GIFT CERTFKAns AVAILAIL.E
nit c:hanpa may belln;iplemcnted by chanatna
be answered as repairs to fix the
lOX OIFKE WILL OPEN AT
the dvration ol the •u~ipllon.
slide will begin soon.
6:30 PMIOI MNIHG SHOWS
'...'
I2:30 PM FOR MADNIIS
"I just hope they do some~
MAIL sui8CRimoNs
I,... Molp
thing quick," .she said. "I've
13 w.eu .. ,................................:......... S27.30
prayed that they'd take care of
2 6 -.............................................1$3.82
it. I just keep asking what
52Woolot........................................... $1~.56
--MelpCoul)'
would they do if their wives
13 ............................................ 1~.:15
were here alone?"

.• •

·•

,I

MIDDLEPORT - Hobart M.' Darst, 76,719 Maple St., Middleport,
was cited for failure to yield from a stop sign by the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highw:~y Patrol following a two-vehicle collision Sunday at
the intersection of State Route 7 and County Road 3i!5 (Story's Run).
Troopers said Darst, driving a pickup truck, turned left from Story:s
Run onto 7 to head northbound at 6:20 p.m., entered the path of ,a
northbound car' driven by Dale F. Bing, 40,Apartment 3, 895 BrowneD
Ave., Middleport, and. collided with Bing's car.
;
Damage to hoth vehicles was slight. ·

LOCAL . STOCKS

Pletwnt Valley Hospitaland medk41 staffmembers are PROUD
to be aparticipatingproviderfor Aetu U.S. Healtbeaf'e~

13

POMEROY- George S. Carper, 76, ofPomeJOY, died on Monday,
March 13, 2000 at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
Born January 2, 1924 in Meigs County. he w:~s the son of the late
Lowell Archie Carper and Helen Gilliland Carper. He owned Carper's
Nurseries near Pomeroy for over 50 years.
Mr. Carper receited his BSA from Ohio University in 1948. He
completed additional studies toward his master's in the area of landscaping. He was a Wodd War II veteran, having served in the Navy and
stationed in Australia for three years.
Mr. Carper was a member of the American Legion 0039 and the
Harrisonville Lodge Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus.
He is survived by his wife, Peg Humphreys Carper, two daughters
and sons-in-law, Dawn and Jay Miller ofWesterville, Ohio, and Wendy
and Michael Halar of Pomeroy, Ohio; and a son and daughter-in-law,
George R . Carper and Theresa Salser Carper of Houston, Texas; grandchildren, Marjorie Anka Halar,Jon Michael George Halar and Summer
Nicole Carper; and his brother and sister-in-law, Charles and Helen
Carper of Kirkersville, Ohio.
·
In lieu of flowers , contributions may be made tO Arthur G. James
Cancer Hospital and Research Institute, 300West 10th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210- 1228 and/or Holzer Ho~ice, 115 East Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769; Hospice of Hocking County/Appalachian Community, 280 East .State Street, Athens, Ohio 45701.
'· Funeral amngements are being handled bj Ewing funeral Home.
.
There will be no calling hours.
A memorial service will be held at the Hemlock Grove Church of
Christ on Friday, March 24, 2000 at 3:30 p.m. Prior to the service, the
American Legion 0039 and the Harrisonville Lodge Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus will conduct memorial services.
A celebration ofhis life will follow in the' Grange Hall.
Directions. from Athens: Route 33 south to the four lane, turn left
on County Road 19 (Peach Fork}, tljrn left on Rocksprings Road and
follow signs to the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center. Go past the
center and turn right on Hemlock Grove C-39 and follow the road
around the hill (approxi~ru~tely 2 miles). At the crossroads of Cook and ·
Hemlock Grove, the church will be on your left.

LOCAL BRIEFS
CJtatlon issued In aash

Mildred 1. Spencer

of proposed .lock and dam project

co
••
Wednesday, April II, 10•

.

r

·up fOr profidency tests
BY THE AsSOCIATED PRESS

.

Mildred 1. Spencer

The D"ly Sentinel • Page A3

OBITUARIES
Georp s. carper

Robat Mahr Sr.

custody out of state where he had been
stopped on an unrelated traffic charge.
"The officer that stopped him in the
other state wasn't aware at the' time that he
had been involved in murders. They had no
idea what they had and we had no idea he

' Elementary students gear Congressmen stress importance

High-tech aops still booming

lf\lllritl wtl'l r~porttd.

commtmity. A1 for {U I lmow thnt~
just ont ssuput arul ht~ in autody
out of state."

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Word of central Ohio's need for workers
has spread throughout Latin'America, many immigrants say, drawing
tho~e who have legal permission to work jn the United States ahd
those who come without documents. ·
"We're· experiencing a tnomendous influx of first-time immigrants" from Latin America, said ju)ja Arbini-Carbonell, director of
the Ohio Hispanic Coalition. "In the last two years, there has been
an explosion of new families:•
According to estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Latino
population in Franklin County increased 36 percent between 1990
and 1998, reaching more than 12,500. The county's overall population grew 6.2 percent.
· For the eight-year period, Franklin and Summit tied for the
.biggest percentage increase among Ohio counties with sizable Latino populations. ·
. ()fficers from several central Ohio police departments are raking a
new class in Spanish for law enfo~ement, and real-estate companies,
food-sel:vice companies and a large mal)ufacturer have taken classes
tailored to them.
Deputy Sheriff Claudia McKee, who has spent the past three years
on second-shift patrol in a Latino neighborhood, is stUdying Spanish
at a community college so she can do her job better on the city's
west side.
"There isn't a night that goes by... where they don't need a Span~
. ish-speaking officer:' she told The Columbus Dispatch for a story
Sunday.

cht blllldina.

of relatives

"17tne~ ·,.o need for alarm in tht

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

DEATH NOTICES

•

Immigrants flock to.central Ohio

.

Monclly, MII'Oh 10, 1000

Man questioned In

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

Monday, March 20, 2000

...

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,,

'·

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�(

P-Inion

PageA4

_Th_e_o_ait"'-y_Se_ntm_·e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _O:::::!:

ElTA ®""* falf ~ ~:teR'.R.ttt. •

The ,Daily Sentinel

..~M~o~n!•9~~M!I~f~M~-~~!~~~!0------------------------~~~~--_!Po~m:a~r!~~·!M~Id~d~la~po~rt~1~0~h~~~----~----------------_!Th~a~CI~II~y!le~m~ln~ai~•!P~ag!a~AI!!

Mandllf, M1rdl 20. 2000

NA.T IONAL BRIEFS

-

tiU&amp;.M'f

Clinton could still face charces

'EstaDtiSktf i111948

.WASHIN~TO~ (~P) -The independent c~unsel wrap-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2158 • Fa11: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CII8Nnetloelllch
GIMnll ~nager

..

R. Shewn Lewle

Chartw W. Govey
Publleher

Maneglng Editor

Larry Boyer
Advwtlllng Dlrwctor -

Diane Kay Hill

Controlt.r

IJw....,
J01J
.n
,_.....,Mil...,
H •W,...tllllill iMW. .ainu
"""'4orr. No -.ipH
h , .....
I***· MlnaU., iuus, ,.I"SG
LtliiMr 4D

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pmg up the mvestlgatton of President Clinton says h~ has not
ruled out filing criminal charges and is bringing in investigators from the FBI and other agencies to help him decide.
In a television interview Sunday, Robert Ray sai4 he has not ·
determined Clinton's possible criminal liability. It was the first
time he publicly discussed the possibility tbat the president
might be prosecuted in the Monica Lewinsky matter.
· ,
A federal judge in Little Rock, Ark., has held Clinton in civil
corit~pt for 10 alleged lies in a sworn deposition that "no reasonable person would seriously dispute." The president's affair
with Lewinsky. a former White House intern, led to perjury
and obstruction of justice charges on which he was impeached
in 1998. The Senate vpted not to remove him from office. .
Ray announced last week that he found no evidence of crim-·
ina! wrongdoing by White House officials or first lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton in the 1996 "File gate" episode.
Ray said Sunday on ABC's "This Week" that he made that
decision after finding no evidence of "dissemination for partisan political purposes" of hundreds of files of Republican former White House employees that the FBI was ordered to deliver to Clinton staff members.
Despite that decision, Ray said the five-yeat, $50 million
investigation that be~an with former Independent Counsel
Kenneth Starr's look at the Clintons' Whitewater real estate
dealings is far from over.
Ray has sworn in two new attorneys, will be hiring others
and is bri·nging in investigators from the FBI and other agencies.

wtlc.r•. ,.., 1M.U k hu t1tu
Mil tftqluM•

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r' Ldlm MD..u .. ill

wor6. AU /dUn

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'i'ifl.
coUuu Hklw.,. IAe CIHIU'NIIU uf tA• Oltio MIIIIJ "'"'"'""'
C.. "I~~ "'""" OIA•rwilr lfDIH.
lfllf

.
Go1ngup
NATIONAL VIEWS:
'

Gas prices may be catalyst
for economic coqling
• The Daily (N.M.) Times, on economic effecu of esca' Jating gasoline prices:
It didn't take a news flash to let people know gas prices have gone
· up. All they had to do was drive to the nearest filling station.
'
.
After recovering from shock, some may
wonder why this is happening. Others
wonder how far it will go. With predictions calling for regular gas to be selling for .
$1.80 to $2 a gallon by summer, they may
not have long to wait to find out.
•
This is simple capitalism at work When
there was an pil glut and the price per bar•
·
rel fell to about $1 ! , consumers' reaped the
benefit. Now, with production being held back by OPEC, we are
see:ing drastic price increases because demand is outstripping. the
"';upply But it also may be a sign that we have relied too long on an
0\!c:th,eated economy that is now in for an adjustment.
·
have. predicted higher gas prices won't affect people pur- .
· fhasing larger, gas-guzzling ·vehicles or curtail movement in our
mobile society. But, it's doubtful they've seen fuel prices at their
·
highest - yet.
Whether the current gasoline shortage has long-term effects
remains to be seen, but it's certain tp force some to cut back on
. traveling or, at the very least, force folks to spend more on fuel and ·
less on other thinS' when they vacation.
·
.. It also could .well-fe gasoline price hikes will be the catalyst that
causes our overheated economy to cool down ....
• The Journal Gazette of Fort Wayne, Ind., on the Pope's
apology:
·
·
When you lead an organization that has 1 billion members and is
2,000 years old, it is ·wise to think in the long·term. Pope John Paul
II is thinking much.longer than many of his critics, and supporters,
· may realize.
·
·
His historic inclusion in Sunday's Lenten Mass of a sweeplng
apology. for the sins of Roman Catholicism demonstrated a mind
. ~hat not only thinks in terms of milleniria, but operates in them as
' well.
Even .his aid in the downfall of communism was only a temporal
· matter in the legacy John Paul seeks to build. Communism, after all,
has· been but a brief phenomenon in the life of the church, some. thing that will be almost forgotten a thousand years from now.
· The Roman Catholic church, however, will remain, ifJohn Paul's
successors follow his, challenging path with anything like his vigor.
He is attempting nothing less than the restoration of the church's
reputation for eternal credibility.

A look at
what U.S.
newspapers.
ate say_rng

··TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 20, the 80th day of 2000. There are 286
. Clays left in the yeat. Spring arrives at 2:35 p.m. Eastern time.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On March 20, 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel
about slavery, "Uncle Tom's Cabin;• was first published.
· On this date:
·
In 1413, England's King Henry IV died; he was succeeded by
HenryV.
·
·
·
~ In 1727, physicist, mathematician and astronomer Sir Isaac Newton
rued in J-ondon.
: l.rl 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte entered Paris, beginning his "Hun-

dred Days" iule.

.

.

Residents evacuated from scene
DUNDALK, Md. (AP) - Residenis were evac.u ated from a
suburban Baltimore neighborhood where a man suspected of
four ~urders was holding three people hostage for a .third day.
Pohce began escorting people out of the area in armored cars
Sunday after shots . were fired several times from the home
where Joseph Palczynski was holding the mother of his ex-girlfriend and two others at gunpoint.
,
Negotiations continued with Palczynski, who had been on
the run since March 7 when he allegedly .gunned .. down three
people and kidnapped his former girlfriend, Tracy Whitehead.
He killed another woman the next day while trying to steal a
car, police said.
.
· 1-le later Oed to Virgini'a where he allegedly stole guns but
torced a man to drive him back to Baltimore County. Whitehead escaped unharmed.
.
Police said Friday night he shoe his way into the home of
Lynn Whitehead, her boyfriend Andy ·McCord, and 12-yeart&gt;ld Bradley McCord. Police had cordoned off a four-block area
around the home and were not letting anyone in or out.
Hostage .negotiators had been speaking with Palczynski by
'phone and on Sunday a robot delivered a ~ooler offood' to the

,

HENTOFF'S VIEW: '

Should there be a chapla.in for Congress?
The rejection of Father Tim O'Brien, a .
Jesuit priest, as the next chaplain of the House
of Representatives by the Republican leadership - although he was the first choice of the
screening committee - has resulted in continuing accusations of anti-Catholicism, led by
the Catholic League for Religious and Civil
Rights.
Largely overlooked, however, are a number
of historical points that may add more context
to this controversy.
•
In 1790, the First Congress, voting for leg~
islative chaplains, ruled that •:two Chaplains of
different denominations... shall interchange
weekly." ·
·,.
That provision has been violated ever
since. The chaplain of the House has always
been a .Protestant. Therefore, he has always
been a Christian. (For one year, in the· 19ih
century, .t here was a Catholic chaplain in the
Senate.)
In 1983, the Supreme Court - in Marsh
vs. Chambers - decided that it is constitutional in the state of Nebraska, and therefore
in all our legislatures, to have tax-supported
legislative chaplains. The vote was 6-3.
In dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens ·noted
that from 1965 on, the same Presbyterian
minister had been the chaplain of the Nebraska legislature.' Stevens' point was that some
folks might feel there had been a clear preference of one faith over· another.
If, for 210 years; not . only Christians but
solely Protestants have had a lock on that post
in Congress, is it unreasonable for some Jews
and Muslims, among others, to feel a degree
of exclusion · from the spiritual side of that
branch of government?
The appearance of exclusion aside, there is
an argument, with which I agree, that Marsh
vs. Chambers was decided wrongly by the

.

..
.,

•

•

.,
. t}

'' i
of all of us, including non- Christians, should
be used to support any clergy in the Congress.
Furthermore, Article V! of the Constitution
states unequivocally: "No religious Test sh..U
ever be required as Qualification to any Offic¢
ar public Trust under the United States."
A congressional chaplaincy is not an ~le~,
tive office, but it is an official public post wifll
sufficient prestige as to be the cause of tl)e
continuing controversy over Father O'Brien .'
When James Madison opposed the hiring
NEA COLUMNIST
of chaplains in Congress, he emphasized that
paying them from the national treasury was ir\
Supreme Court because the law establishing violation of the First Amendment's Establishchaplains in the legislature had a religious t!Jent Clause. He . also made the enduriri~
rather than a secular· purpose, and so its pri- point that establishing the clergy in Congreis
maty effect was to establish religion. There- was an offense "to members whose creeds and
fore, the.result was to entangle the state with "fjnsciences forbid a participation in t~
religion. - ·.' '
·
majority."
,
.
During the First Congress, James Madison
There are, after all, Catholics and Jews in
moved unsuccessfully to forbid the appoint- , ,Congress; and quiet as it's kept, maybe .a, few
ment of chaplains in Congress. He had been atheists, or at least deists. But the presence of
the principal architect of the First Amend- only Christian chaplains ignores the beliefs
ment, including its clause that there shall be and nonbeliefs of millions of other Americans.
ll!J law "respecting an estal:)lishment of reli- r As noted in ~amnick and Moore's ."The
gion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Godless Constitution" (W.W. Norton, 1996)\
There have been fiercely different interpre- Thomas Jefferson, who believed in "the philations since then of what constitutes "an losophy of Jesus" and attended church ser•
establishment of religion," but 1 am not alone vices, ·thought "we should live without an
in agreeing with Justice Hugo Black's opinion ' order of priests and moralise for ourselves, folfor the .Court in Everson ys.BoardofEducac lowing the oracle of conscience." MostAmer~
tion (1973):
icans believe otherwise, but no one should ·
"The 'establishment of religion' clause of feel less of an American because he is com:;
the First Amendment means at least... that pelled to pay for .government support of a
neither a state or the Federal government..,: .. chaplain in Congress of a different faith.
or on thi~
can pass .laws which aid one religion, aid all · But who in Congress religions, or,prefer one religion over anotherJ' - Supreme Court - would dare to say that,
Whether Father Tim O'Brien .wa., rejected except for John Paul Stevens?
as chaplain of the Hou!e b_ecause of his
(Nat Hentqff is a nationally renowned authority
denomination- and I believe he was- is a or1 the First Amendment and th e rest of the Bill Of
less fundamental issue than whether the taxes 'Rights.)

Nat
Hentoff

~~

.
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:
.

.

.

.

-

~

.·

.

F-16 crashes during Texas air show
,. KINGSVILLE, Texas (AP) -An Air Force F-16· fighter jet
crashed Sunday afternoon whil~ performing maneuvers as pa.rt ·
of an air show near Kingsville Naval· Air Station, kiiling the
pilot, authorities said.
The pilot was identified as Maj. Brison Phillips. He was a
member of the 78th Fighter Squadron from Shaw Air Force
l!ase near Sumter, S.C.
·
· The plane crashed in a field about six miles north ·of the
naval base about 12:45 p.m., said Navy Master Chief jim Rostohar.
"It came down in an open field, basically in the middle of
nowhere," Rostohar said.
·
' Corpus Christi resident John Rubino saw the plane hit the
ground.
. .
. .
.
' "Thert was a bright, red and orange fireball," Rubino said.
"You could hear it and feel the shock of the concussion. It felt
Uke someone hitting you in the cheat.''
'
The rest of the air show, which was to Include a performance
by the Navy'l Blue An1ela, was canceled.
·: lnve1111aton wert 111rchln1 the wreckap f'or a reuon why
~h• plant w.nt down.
·
Klnpv!Ue 11 about 30 mUll llluthWII.tor Corpu1 Chrllll,

lx·lllck P1nther rtm1ln1 frt1

..'

,

.

; In 1816, the Supreme Court affirmed its right to review state court
jlecisions.
.
· ,
• In 1896, U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S. citizens
ln the wake of a .revolution.
'
: Iri 1899; Martha M. Place of Brooklyn, New York, became the first
~man to be executed in the electric chair, put to death at Sing Sing
for the murder of her stepdaughter.
.
.
: In 1956, union workers ended a 156-day str~ at Westinghouse
~ectric Corporation.
'
: In 1969,John Lennon marriedYoko Ono .in Gibraltar.
·
: In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was convicted of armed robbery f'or her part in a San Francisco bank holdup.
~ In 1987, the Food and Drug Admi!Jistration approved the sale of
l\ZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS patients.
. : Ten years ·ago: Namibia became an independent nation, marking
Jhe end o£75 years of South African nJ]e.
. ·
: Five years ago: In Tokyo, 12 people were killed, more than 5,500
others sid:.,ned . when paclciges containing the poisonous gas sarin
leaked on five separat~ subway trains. Commentator Pat Buchman
fOrmally launched his.presidential campaign in New Hampshire.
: Today\! Birthdays:· Actor Jack Kruschen is 7!l. Producer..director~omedian Carl Rein~ is 78: Cl!ildren's ·TV host Fred R~ is 72.
j\ctor Hal Linde.n is 69. Singer Jerry Reed is 63. Former' Canadian,·
prime minister Brian Mulroney is 61. Country singer Don Edwards•is ·
61. TV producer Paul Junger Witt is 57. Country. singer-musician
kangei Doug (Riders in the Sky) is 54. Hockey HaD-of-Farner Bobby
Orr is 52. Actor William Hurt is 50. Rock musician Carl Palmer
(Emerson, Lake and Palmer) is 50. Rock musician Jimmie VauShan
(furmerly with The Fabul~us Thundetbirds) is 49. Country mtisician
jjmrny Seales (Shenandoah) ~ 46. Movie director Spike Lee is 43.
~Theresa Russell is 43.
·
·

•I

WASHINGTON (AP) - Nevermind that
John McCain often joked with his campaign
audiences - in pride, not in sorrow - about
never winning a Miss CongenUlity award in the
Senate.
Public displays of graciousn5 will mark his
return to the Capitol this week, a more formidable political fooce ihan when he left it. It's the
Senare's way, even though he ran a reform-based
p~dential campaign that rocked the Republican
esttblishment and used fellow laW{IIakers a. foik.
"Senators
in conflict evety day with each
other, in committee, over issues, in letters, in the
media; on the f109r;' Said Sen. Paul Covetdell, RG.I., Senate point man for likely GOP pre.idential nominee George W. Bush."But it has a fi:aternal nature to it and you have to set the battles ...
as!'de"
•
'
Beyond the displays of senatorial courtesy, the

are

·

1

t

ATL~NTA (AP) ...;, After ttarohlnl tor three dayt, pollee and
fedenl •1•n11 on Sundt.y atiU had not found a , rarm•r llaclc
Panther In connection with the shooclna of cwo' depucln
Pollee have said aympathlllc admlren may be hldlna H. !lap
Brown, now known 11 jamll Abdullah AI-Amln. Authorities
said they believe Al·Amln h,as len Georgia,
.
fulton County ~heri!T's .deputies Ricky Kinchen and Aldranon Engllah trled 'to aerve Al-Amln, 56, an arrett warrant at his
ltore in southwelt Atlanta Thursday for failing · to appear in a
Cobb County court on theft charges and impersonating an
officer.
.
:
' . As ·the deputies approached a black Mercedes-Btnz, the driver got out and st,arted shooting a high-powered assault rifle.
l;nglish identified the shooter as 'Al~Amin.
.
'Kinchen, a !35-year-old Florida native, died Friday afternoon
•
I
from gunshot wounds.
·
·
:· English, 28, was shot in his chest, arms and both legs, but survived. His condition was listed as good Sunday. .

Two dead 'in
frat house fire

and senior adviser.
R epublican pollster
Goea. said a recent
national survey pointed in the same di=tion,and
that McCain can help GOP candidateS in terms
of fund raising and voter support.
"The congr=ional (campaign) corrimittee
ought to put him on right away to start doing

£4

rhete swing congreuional districts;' Goeas said.

"He can be a real asset in keeping Congress."
Duberstein pt'edicred McCain will be rhe
"No. 1 Republican" asked to campaign fo r
Republicans this fall.
"He still may not win Miss Congeniality, but
he will win a popularity contest;' Duberstein said.
McCain made repeated joking references to
Miss CongenUlity aw.uds while campaigning, in
part to rebut suggestions that he lacked the temperament to serve in the Oval Office. He has irri,
tated fellow lawmakers, in part with a personal
style that . can be brusque, and with public
remarks.
During a Senate debate on campaigu finance
legislation last year, he drew fire lor posting on his
campaign Web site examples 'o f "pork-barrel"
spending tl)at involved home-state projects eagerly sought by fellow Republicans.

nnseltown's newest hero · Ridge again veep prospect,
grabs a slew of Oscars
this time for Bush
·.
Police Capt. David Powers ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) Katherine Hepburn has four. said today that investigators
Tom Hanks has two. But, for a checked with ·the Motion Pic~
while at least, salvage man Willie · ture Academy and verified that
· Fulgear had more Academy Fulgear · had discovered at least
Awards thim· he could count.
53 of their missing statuettes. He
The 61-year-old man discov- sai~ a special mark proved they
ered scores of stolen statuettes were the true awards.
intended for next weekend's
Tfio of the stolen Oscars
awards show while · searching remained unaccounted for,
through ttash bins. in the city's Powers saic\, and it was unlikely
Koreatown neighborhood Sun- . any of the awards would be
day night,
returned in time for Sunday's
"I've got more Oscars than presentation.
any of the movie scars;· said Ful"If it were just ,a matter of
gear, who makes a .living .sal- recovering the Oscars · I'd say
Vaging and recycling discarded . let's open them up right now.
items.
But this is a theft, a criminal
Fifty-five of the gold-plated investigation, and we have to
statues vanished and were pre- proceed cautiously;' Powers said.
sumed stolen March 10 from · a
Regardless, the show will
Roadway Express Inc. loading likely go on. The Motiori Picdock in Bell, the Los Angeles- . ture Academy placed an emerarea .community where 4,000 gency . order last week for
·Oscar ballots were misplaced at dozens of replacement Oscars
a post office earlier this month. after the theft was discovered.
The 8 112-pound statues
Messages left before 'business
were packed . in 10 boxes and hours at the Academy of
wrapped together on one Motion Picture Arts and Scipalette, which weighed a total ~f ences were not immediately
about 4 70 pounds.
returned today.

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - · as a fall batcleground.
.As governor, Ridge has been
After Gov. Tom Ridge led George
W. Bush on an early morning run ·s~ccessful on economic develop, ,along the Susquehanna .River, the ment, welfare reform and enacting a
Texas governor was asked about his number of crime bills. He has won
Pennsylvania counterpart's fit as a limited changes,in education, seeing
"running mate."
charter schools and academic stanBush refused to take the .bait, dards approved but failing to gai,n
joking that Ridge was simply his legislative suppprt for tuitio n ·
vouchers.
'Jogging mate."
The governors' playfulness last
He also would be an interesting
summer was among the first signs of choice · because of his viev.' qn
election season "veepstakes" specu- abortion.
lation, with Ridge a strong RepubRidge is Roman Catholic, but
lican vice presidential prospect, just" he believes in abortion rights - a
as he was in 1996. ·
·
stance that could help Bush move
In addition to his friendship with to the political middle after courtBush - and with his father, (ormer ing conservative Republicans tio
P~dent Bush Ridge offe" defeat Arizona Sen . John McCain
some potential pluses for the White for the presidential nomination.
House ticket, but also a few draw- Bush opposes abortion, but he
hacks.
would allow exc'eptions in cases of
Most attractive would be Ridge's rape, incest or when continuing the
popular leadership in Pennsylvania, pregnan;:y would jeopardize •'a
,likely to be a major swing state ·in · woman's life. ·
·'
November, where he is serving his
Bartels said the differen ce of
second and final term as governor.
opinion could produce grumblirtg
·:Ridge would make. good polit- among GOP hatdlincrs bu t th~t ·
ical sense;' s;Ud Larry Bartels, a polit- Ridge's selection c.ould broaden tfte
ical science professor at Princeton ticket's appeal bY moving it away
University, who views Pennsylvania from the religious r,ight.

·-

· BLOOMSBUP..G,Pa. (AP) -:-A
in an off-campus fraternity
houSe killed two people early Sun- ·
clay while .othen jumped to safety
&amp;om a IICCond-story windo}v.
. The privately owned Tau Kappa
Bpiilon house two blocks fiQm the
Bloomsburg University campus .
was destroyed in the 6 a.m. blaze.
: •· '1\vo bodies were recovered
the wzeckage. Their identities
were unknown.

Some NRA allies renounce comments from group's leader
if

WASHINpTON (AP)
. "I stand by; my comments that this adminisfration Glock GmbH could follow
Some inOuential Republicans
Smith &amp; Wesson in acceptiiJ$
WDuld enforce the federal law they'd save lives, and
who have traditionally supported
government handgun restrictioils
·they're not doing it."
the National Rifle Association
in exchange for some legal prb- .
sought . to dissociate themselves
.
.
tections.
'
Wlyne LIPierre,
from recent remarks by .an NRA
•
Referring
to
the
Smith
·&amp;
NAA Exeoutlw VIce Preeldent
leader about President Clinton.
.Wesson plan, a senior executive
LaPierre discounted the deal's
But NRA Executive Vice . ularly the R,cpublicans .who are
with the U.S. unit of Glock sai'd
President
Wayne
LaPierre the NRA allies" to repui:liate importance, saying there was not the company hasn't signed op,
much new in it. Reed disputed
remained unrepentant Sunday LaPierre's remarks.
but ·is considering it.
the
administration
and credited the company
Meanwhile,
that
about his · contention last week
Pa\ll Jannuzzo said .. Glock )s
.
that Clinton is ·" willing to accept will "keep the pressure on in with a "c6urageous decision."
The NRA 's president, actor "still doing the balancit:~g test. We
a certain level· of killing to fur- · every possible way" to persuade
Congress to pass gun safety·mea- Charlton Heston, said the British are still weighing the idea of
ther his political agenda."
bleeding to death with legal bills
") stand by my comments that . sures, Clinton domestic policy owners of Smith &amp; Wesson do
vs. the cost of complying" with
· if this administration would aide Bruce Reed said on "Fox not place the same value on the
the
government demands.
Second Amendment's right to
enforce the federal law they'd Newa Sunclay."
. The Journal notel that Glock
Last week, the nation's larpat bear arm• 11 do Americans.
aave lives, and they're not doln1
"I am not comfortabl• about rello1 lar~tlY on nle1 tg poll~o
It," LaPierre aald Sunday on pn manufacturer, Smith &amp;
IOn, IIJI'I!td to makt it1 hJniliJIIHI the Drlt1 teUina 111 how to cltill dopartmtnll and would bo v\11NBC~ "Mill the Pn!!l."
Rtp. Henry Hyllt, ehillrm11n more ehlldproor by innan!na with our Dill of Rll!hu," Honon . norablo to 1 nuw l!llV~rnmtnl
of the HoYit JYillelary Commie- 1aftty loek1 and duwloplna told ABC. "!think wt 1oulud that Alfllllfi' of hBYiHIJ IBW•@flfilftll•
mtnt 1pnelt1 111w pl'l!funmee ~
Ill, 1ald LaPierrt1 remark abo\lt "1martpn" ttahnolcllfi' chat lim· In 1776, dldn~ wtl"
Tht W.U lltrttl
l!llftmlklfl th11 1lgn 11 wn!on
. the pretldenl wu not "terribly Itt I l\lftl \Ill to lei rilhtllll
thl
.
owner,
that
helpl'lllt!) tryln1 to reach 1 con·
ttnlul on • wry dlftleult lssllt"
that Con1re11 conclnu11 to ltrua-

w...

uf

Srncl ler, S•~1arter

11• with. ·

"I think It\ an extreltll statement:' Hyde, ~-IU., said on CBS'
"face the Nation." "I with It
hadn't been said."
.
On
ABC's
"Thla
Week"
.
.
' for'mer President Ford' said gun control requires "reasonable compro.mise;• adding: "You can't take the
hatd-line, NRA !lqsition- t)lat's
a loser." ·
·
White House spokesman Joe
Lockhart, traveling wit.h Clinton
in India, said there had been "an
appalling silence from political
leaders over the last week, partie-

even BeHer

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6:18.Eq~t .Main ~~..

)

•I

McCain

Arizona senator's allies szy fellow Republicans will ignore
his new political clout at their
own peril.
"There m only two United States senators who have a
truly national constituency.
One's name is Ted Kennedy
and one's .name is John
McCain," says former White
House chief of staff . Ken
Duberstein, a McCain friend

·,

.

Hindsight may ultimately vi~dicate NASA

'

' Palczynski at one point cut off contact with negotiators Sunflay morning, and opened fire through a fiindow. Five bursts of
J~Unfire occurred between 8:45 a.m. and .11:45 a.m.

.r

.

.

McCain
retums
to
Senate
after
presidential
run
.

.'

•

-·

�(

P-Inion

PageA4

_Th_e_o_ait"'-y_Se_ntm_·e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _O:::::!:

ElTA ®""* falf ~ ~:teR'.R.ttt. •

The ,Daily Sentinel

..~M~o~n!•9~~M!I~f~M~-~~!~~~!0------------------------~~~~--_!Po~m:a~r!~~·!M~Id~d~la~po~rt~1~0~h~~~----~----------------_!Th~a~CI~II~y!le~m~ln~ai~•!P~ag!a~AI!!

Mandllf, M1rdl 20. 2000

NA.T IONAL BRIEFS

-

tiU&amp;.M'f

Clinton could still face charces

'EstaDtiSktf i111948

.WASHIN~TO~ (~P) -The independent c~unsel wrap-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2158 • Fa11: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CII8Nnetloelllch
GIMnll ~nager

..

R. Shewn Lewle

Chartw W. Govey
Publleher

Maneglng Editor

Larry Boyer
Advwtlllng Dlrwctor -

Diane Kay Hill

Controlt.r

IJw....,
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"""'4orr. No -.ipH
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LtliiMr 4D

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pmg up the mvestlgatton of President Clinton says h~ has not
ruled out filing criminal charges and is bringing in investigators from the FBI and other agencies to help him decide.
In a television interview Sunday, Robert Ray sai4 he has not ·
determined Clinton's possible criminal liability. It was the first
time he publicly discussed the possibility tbat the president
might be prosecuted in the Monica Lewinsky matter.
· ,
A federal judge in Little Rock, Ark., has held Clinton in civil
corit~pt for 10 alleged lies in a sworn deposition that "no reasonable person would seriously dispute." The president's affair
with Lewinsky. a former White House intern, led to perjury
and obstruction of justice charges on which he was impeached
in 1998. The Senate vpted not to remove him from office. .
Ray announced last week that he found no evidence of crim-·
ina! wrongdoing by White House officials or first lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton in the 1996 "File gate" episode.
Ray said Sunday on ABC's "This Week" that he made that
decision after finding no evidence of "dissemination for partisan political purposes" of hundreds of files of Republican former White House employees that the FBI was ordered to deliver to Clinton staff members.
Despite that decision, Ray said the five-yeat, $50 million
investigation that be~an with former Independent Counsel
Kenneth Starr's look at the Clintons' Whitewater real estate
dealings is far from over.
Ray has sworn in two new attorneys, will be hiring others
and is bri·nging in investigators from the FBI and other agencies.

wtlc.r•. ,.., 1M.U k hu t1tu
Mil tftqluM•

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C.. "I~~ "'""" OIA•rwilr lfDIH.
lfllf

.
Go1ngup
NATIONAL VIEWS:
'

Gas prices may be catalyst
for economic coqling
• The Daily (N.M.) Times, on economic effecu of esca' Jating gasoline prices:
It didn't take a news flash to let people know gas prices have gone
· up. All they had to do was drive to the nearest filling station.
'
.
After recovering from shock, some may
wonder why this is happening. Others
wonder how far it will go. With predictions calling for regular gas to be selling for .
$1.80 to $2 a gallon by summer, they may
not have long to wait to find out.
•
This is simple capitalism at work When
there was an pil glut and the price per bar•
·
rel fell to about $1 ! , consumers' reaped the
benefit. Now, with production being held back by OPEC, we are
see:ing drastic price increases because demand is outstripping. the
"';upply But it also may be a sign that we have relied too long on an
0\!c:th,eated economy that is now in for an adjustment.
·
have. predicted higher gas prices won't affect people pur- .
· fhasing larger, gas-guzzling ·vehicles or curtail movement in our
mobile society. But, it's doubtful they've seen fuel prices at their
·
highest - yet.
Whether the current gasoline shortage has long-term effects
remains to be seen, but it's certain tp force some to cut back on
. traveling or, at the very least, force folks to spend more on fuel and ·
less on other thinS' when they vacation.
·
.. It also could .well-fe gasoline price hikes will be the catalyst that
causes our overheated economy to cool down ....
• The Journal Gazette of Fort Wayne, Ind., on the Pope's
apology:
·
·
When you lead an organization that has 1 billion members and is
2,000 years old, it is ·wise to think in the long·term. Pope John Paul
II is thinking much.longer than many of his critics, and supporters,
· may realize.
·
·
His historic inclusion in Sunday's Lenten Mass of a sweeplng
apology. for the sins of Roman Catholicism demonstrated a mind
. ~hat not only thinks in terms of milleniria, but operates in them as
' well.
Even .his aid in the downfall of communism was only a temporal
· matter in the legacy John Paul seeks to build. Communism, after all,
has· been but a brief phenomenon in the life of the church, some. thing that will be almost forgotten a thousand years from now.
· The Roman Catholic church, however, will remain, ifJohn Paul's
successors follow his, challenging path with anything like his vigor.
He is attempting nothing less than the restoration of the church's
reputation for eternal credibility.

A look at
what U.S.
newspapers.
ate say_rng

··TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 20, the 80th day of 2000. There are 286
. Clays left in the yeat. Spring arrives at 2:35 p.m. Eastern time.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On March 20, 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel
about slavery, "Uncle Tom's Cabin;• was first published.
· On this date:
·
In 1413, England's King Henry IV died; he was succeeded by
HenryV.
·
·
·
~ In 1727, physicist, mathematician and astronomer Sir Isaac Newton
rued in J-ondon.
: l.rl 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte entered Paris, beginning his "Hun-

dred Days" iule.

.

.

Residents evacuated from scene
DUNDALK, Md. (AP) - Residenis were evac.u ated from a
suburban Baltimore neighborhood where a man suspected of
four ~urders was holding three people hostage for a .third day.
Pohce began escorting people out of the area in armored cars
Sunday after shots . were fired several times from the home
where Joseph Palczynski was holding the mother of his ex-girlfriend and two others at gunpoint.
,
Negotiations continued with Palczynski, who had been on
the run since March 7 when he allegedly .gunned .. down three
people and kidnapped his former girlfriend, Tracy Whitehead.
He killed another woman the next day while trying to steal a
car, police said.
.
· 1-le later Oed to Virgini'a where he allegedly stole guns but
torced a man to drive him back to Baltimore County. Whitehead escaped unharmed.
.
Police said Friday night he shoe his way into the home of
Lynn Whitehead, her boyfriend Andy ·McCord, and 12-yeart&gt;ld Bradley McCord. Police had cordoned off a four-block area
around the home and were not letting anyone in or out.
Hostage .negotiators had been speaking with Palczynski by
'phone and on Sunday a robot delivered a ~ooler offood' to the

,

HENTOFF'S VIEW: '

Should there be a chapla.in for Congress?
The rejection of Father Tim O'Brien, a .
Jesuit priest, as the next chaplain of the House
of Representatives by the Republican leadership - although he was the first choice of the
screening committee - has resulted in continuing accusations of anti-Catholicism, led by
the Catholic League for Religious and Civil
Rights.
Largely overlooked, however, are a number
of historical points that may add more context
to this controversy.
•
In 1790, the First Congress, voting for leg~
islative chaplains, ruled that •:two Chaplains of
different denominations... shall interchange
weekly." ·
·,.
That provision has been violated ever
since. The chaplain of the House has always
been a .Protestant. Therefore, he has always
been a Christian. (For one year, in the· 19ih
century, .t here was a Catholic chaplain in the
Senate.)
In 1983, the Supreme Court - in Marsh
vs. Chambers - decided that it is constitutional in the state of Nebraska, and therefore
in all our legislatures, to have tax-supported
legislative chaplains. The vote was 6-3.
In dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens ·noted
that from 1965 on, the same Presbyterian
minister had been the chaplain of the Nebraska legislature.' Stevens' point was that some
folks might feel there had been a clear preference of one faith over· another.
If, for 210 years; not . only Christians but
solely Protestants have had a lock on that post
in Congress, is it unreasonable for some Jews
and Muslims, among others, to feel a degree
of exclusion · from the spiritual side of that
branch of government?
The appearance of exclusion aside, there is
an argument, with which I agree, that Marsh
vs. Chambers was decided wrongly by the

.

..
.,

•

•

.,
. t}

'' i
of all of us, including non- Christians, should
be used to support any clergy in the Congress.
Furthermore, Article V! of the Constitution
states unequivocally: "No religious Test sh..U
ever be required as Qualification to any Offic¢
ar public Trust under the United States."
A congressional chaplaincy is not an ~le~,
tive office, but it is an official public post wifll
sufficient prestige as to be the cause of tl)e
continuing controversy over Father O'Brien .'
When James Madison opposed the hiring
NEA COLUMNIST
of chaplains in Congress, he emphasized that
paying them from the national treasury was ir\
Supreme Court because the law establishing violation of the First Amendment's Establishchaplains in the legislature had a religious t!Jent Clause. He . also made the enduriri~
rather than a secular· purpose, and so its pri- point that establishing the clergy in Congreis
maty effect was to establish religion. There- was an offense "to members whose creeds and
fore, the.result was to entangle the state with "fjnsciences forbid a participation in t~
religion. - ·.' '
·
majority."
,
.
During the First Congress, James Madison
There are, after all, Catholics and Jews in
moved unsuccessfully to forbid the appoint- , ,Congress; and quiet as it's kept, maybe .a, few
ment of chaplains in Congress. He had been atheists, or at least deists. But the presence of
the principal architect of the First Amend- only Christian chaplains ignores the beliefs
ment, including its clause that there shall be and nonbeliefs of millions of other Americans.
ll!J law "respecting an estal:)lishment of reli- r As noted in ~amnick and Moore's ."The
gion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Godless Constitution" (W.W. Norton, 1996)\
There have been fiercely different interpre- Thomas Jefferson, who believed in "the philations since then of what constitutes "an losophy of Jesus" and attended church ser•
establishment of religion," but 1 am not alone vices, ·thought "we should live without an
in agreeing with Justice Hugo Black's opinion ' order of priests and moralise for ourselves, folfor the .Court in Everson ys.BoardofEducac lowing the oracle of conscience." MostAmer~
tion (1973):
icans believe otherwise, but no one should ·
"The 'establishment of religion' clause of feel less of an American because he is com:;
the First Amendment means at least... that pelled to pay for .government support of a
neither a state or the Federal government..,: .. chaplain in Congress of a different faith.
or on thi~
can pass .laws which aid one religion, aid all · But who in Congress religions, or,prefer one religion over anotherJ' - Supreme Court - would dare to say that,
Whether Father Tim O'Brien .wa., rejected except for John Paul Stevens?
as chaplain of the Hou!e b_ecause of his
(Nat Hentqff is a nationally renowned authority
denomination- and I believe he was- is a or1 the First Amendment and th e rest of the Bill Of
less fundamental issue than whether the taxes 'Rights.)

Nat
Hentoff

~~

.
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:
.

.

.

.

-

~

.·

.

F-16 crashes during Texas air show
,. KINGSVILLE, Texas (AP) -An Air Force F-16· fighter jet
crashed Sunday afternoon whil~ performing maneuvers as pa.rt ·
of an air show near Kingsville Naval· Air Station, kiiling the
pilot, authorities said.
The pilot was identified as Maj. Brison Phillips. He was a
member of the 78th Fighter Squadron from Shaw Air Force
l!ase near Sumter, S.C.
·
· The plane crashed in a field about six miles north ·of the
naval base about 12:45 p.m., said Navy Master Chief jim Rostohar.
"It came down in an open field, basically in the middle of
nowhere," Rostohar said.
·
' Corpus Christi resident John Rubino saw the plane hit the
ground.
. .
. .
.
' "Thert was a bright, red and orange fireball," Rubino said.
"You could hear it and feel the shock of the concussion. It felt
Uke someone hitting you in the cheat.''
'
The rest of the air show, which was to Include a performance
by the Navy'l Blue An1ela, was canceled.
·: lnve1111aton wert 111rchln1 the wreckap f'or a reuon why
~h• plant w.nt down.
·
Klnpv!Ue 11 about 30 mUll llluthWII.tor Corpu1 Chrllll,

lx·lllck P1nther rtm1ln1 frt1

..'

,

.

; In 1816, the Supreme Court affirmed its right to review state court
jlecisions.
.
· ,
• In 1896, U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S. citizens
ln the wake of a .revolution.
'
: Iri 1899; Martha M. Place of Brooklyn, New York, became the first
~man to be executed in the electric chair, put to death at Sing Sing
for the murder of her stepdaughter.
.
.
: In 1956, union workers ended a 156-day str~ at Westinghouse
~ectric Corporation.
'
: In 1969,John Lennon marriedYoko Ono .in Gibraltar.
·
: In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was convicted of armed robbery f'or her part in a San Francisco bank holdup.
~ In 1987, the Food and Drug Admi!Jistration approved the sale of
l\ZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS patients.
. : Ten years ·ago: Namibia became an independent nation, marking
Jhe end o£75 years of South African nJ]e.
. ·
: Five years ago: In Tokyo, 12 people were killed, more than 5,500
others sid:.,ned . when paclciges containing the poisonous gas sarin
leaked on five separat~ subway trains. Commentator Pat Buchman
fOrmally launched his.presidential campaign in New Hampshire.
: Today\! Birthdays:· Actor Jack Kruschen is 7!l. Producer..director~omedian Carl Rein~ is 78: Cl!ildren's ·TV host Fred R~ is 72.
j\ctor Hal Linde.n is 69. Singer Jerry Reed is 63. Former' Canadian,·
prime minister Brian Mulroney is 61. Country singer Don Edwards•is ·
61. TV producer Paul Junger Witt is 57. Country. singer-musician
kangei Doug (Riders in the Sky) is 54. Hockey HaD-of-Farner Bobby
Orr is 52. Actor William Hurt is 50. Rock musician Carl Palmer
(Emerson, Lake and Palmer) is 50. Rock musician Jimmie VauShan
(furmerly with The Fabul~us Thundetbirds) is 49. Country mtisician
jjmrny Seales (Shenandoah) ~ 46. Movie director Spike Lee is 43.
~Theresa Russell is 43.
·
·

•I

WASHINGTON (AP) - Nevermind that
John McCain often joked with his campaign
audiences - in pride, not in sorrow - about
never winning a Miss CongenUlity award in the
Senate.
Public displays of graciousn5 will mark his
return to the Capitol this week, a more formidable political fooce ihan when he left it. It's the
Senare's way, even though he ran a reform-based
p~dential campaign that rocked the Republican
esttblishment and used fellow laW{IIakers a. foik.
"Senators
in conflict evety day with each
other, in committee, over issues, in letters, in the
media; on the f109r;' Said Sen. Paul Covetdell, RG.I., Senate point man for likely GOP pre.idential nominee George W. Bush."But it has a fi:aternal nature to it and you have to set the battles ...
as!'de"
•
'
Beyond the displays of senatorial courtesy, the

are

·

1

t

ATL~NTA (AP) ...;, After ttarohlnl tor three dayt, pollee and
fedenl •1•n11 on Sundt.y atiU had not found a , rarm•r llaclc
Panther In connection with the shooclna of cwo' depucln
Pollee have said aympathlllc admlren may be hldlna H. !lap
Brown, now known 11 jamll Abdullah AI-Amln. Authorities
said they believe Al·Amln h,as len Georgia,
.
fulton County ~heri!T's .deputies Ricky Kinchen and Aldranon Engllah trled 'to aerve Al-Amln, 56, an arrett warrant at his
ltore in southwelt Atlanta Thursday for failing · to appear in a
Cobb County court on theft charges and impersonating an
officer.
.
:
' . As ·the deputies approached a black Mercedes-Btnz, the driver got out and st,arted shooting a high-powered assault rifle.
l;nglish identified the shooter as 'Al~Amin.
.
'Kinchen, a !35-year-old Florida native, died Friday afternoon
•
I
from gunshot wounds.
·
·
:· English, 28, was shot in his chest, arms and both legs, but survived. His condition was listed as good Sunday. .

Two dead 'in
frat house fire

and senior adviser.
R epublican pollster
Goea. said a recent
national survey pointed in the same di=tion,and
that McCain can help GOP candidateS in terms
of fund raising and voter support.
"The congr=ional (campaign) corrimittee
ought to put him on right away to start doing

£4

rhete swing congreuional districts;' Goeas said.

"He can be a real asset in keeping Congress."
Duberstein pt'edicred McCain will be rhe
"No. 1 Republican" asked to campaign fo r
Republicans this fall.
"He still may not win Miss Congeniality, but
he will win a popularity contest;' Duberstein said.
McCain made repeated joking references to
Miss CongenUlity aw.uds while campaigning, in
part to rebut suggestions that he lacked the temperament to serve in the Oval Office. He has irri,
tated fellow lawmakers, in part with a personal
style that . can be brusque, and with public
remarks.
During a Senate debate on campaigu finance
legislation last year, he drew fire lor posting on his
campaign Web site examples 'o f "pork-barrel"
spending tl)at involved home-state projects eagerly sought by fellow Republicans.

nnseltown's newest hero · Ridge again veep prospect,
grabs a slew of Oscars
this time for Bush
·.
Police Capt. David Powers ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) Katherine Hepburn has four. said today that investigators
Tom Hanks has two. But, for a checked with ·the Motion Pic~
while at least, salvage man Willie · ture Academy and verified that
· Fulgear had more Academy Fulgear · had discovered at least
Awards thim· he could count.
53 of their missing statuettes. He
The 61-year-old man discov- sai~ a special mark proved they
ered scores of stolen statuettes were the true awards.
intended for next weekend's
Tfio of the stolen Oscars
awards show while · searching remained unaccounted for,
through ttash bins. in the city's Powers saic\, and it was unlikely
Koreatown neighborhood Sun- . any of the awards would be
day night,
returned in time for Sunday's
"I've got more Oscars than presentation.
any of the movie scars;· said Ful"If it were just ,a matter of
gear, who makes a .living .sal- recovering the Oscars · I'd say
Vaging and recycling discarded . let's open them up right now.
items.
But this is a theft, a criminal
Fifty-five of the gold-plated investigation, and we have to
statues vanished and were pre- proceed cautiously;' Powers said.
sumed stolen March 10 from · a
Regardless, the show will
Roadway Express Inc. loading likely go on. The Motiori Picdock in Bell, the Los Angeles- . ture Academy placed an emerarea .community where 4,000 gency . order last week for
·Oscar ballots were misplaced at dozens of replacement Oscars
a post office earlier this month. after the theft was discovered.
The 8 112-pound statues
Messages left before 'business
were packed . in 10 boxes and hours at the Academy of
wrapped together on one Motion Picture Arts and Scipalette, which weighed a total ~f ences were not immediately
about 4 70 pounds.
returned today.

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - · as a fall batcleground.
.As governor, Ridge has been
After Gov. Tom Ridge led George
W. Bush on an early morning run ·s~ccessful on economic develop, ,along the Susquehanna .River, the ment, welfare reform and enacting a
Texas governor was asked about his number of crime bills. He has won
Pennsylvania counterpart's fit as a limited changes,in education, seeing
"running mate."
charter schools and academic stanBush refused to take the .bait, dards approved but failing to gai,n
joking that Ridge was simply his legislative suppprt for tuitio n ·
vouchers.
'Jogging mate."
The governors' playfulness last
He also would be an interesting
summer was among the first signs of choice · because of his viev.' qn
election season "veepstakes" specu- abortion.
lation, with Ridge a strong RepubRidge is Roman Catholic, but
lican vice presidential prospect, just" he believes in abortion rights - a
as he was in 1996. ·
·
stance that could help Bush move
In addition to his friendship with to the political middle after courtBush - and with his father, (ormer ing conservative Republicans tio
P~dent Bush Ridge offe" defeat Arizona Sen . John McCain
some potential pluses for the White for the presidential nomination.
House ticket, but also a few draw- Bush opposes abortion, but he
hacks.
would allow exc'eptions in cases of
Most attractive would be Ridge's rape, incest or when continuing the
popular leadership in Pennsylvania, pregnan;:y would jeopardize •'a
,likely to be a major swing state ·in · woman's life. ·
·'
November, where he is serving his
Bartels said the differen ce of
second and final term as governor.
opinion could produce grumblirtg
·:Ridge would make. good polit- among GOP hatdlincrs bu t th~t ·
ical sense;' s;Ud Larry Bartels, a polit- Ridge's selection c.ould broaden tfte
ical science professor at Princeton ticket's appeal bY moving it away
University, who views Pennsylvania from the religious r,ight.

·-

· BLOOMSBUP..G,Pa. (AP) -:-A
in an off-campus fraternity
houSe killed two people early Sun- ·
clay while .othen jumped to safety
&amp;om a IICCond-story windo}v.
. The privately owned Tau Kappa
Bpiilon house two blocks fiQm the
Bloomsburg University campus .
was destroyed in the 6 a.m. blaze.
: •· '1\vo bodies were recovered
the wzeckage. Their identities
were unknown.

Some NRA allies renounce comments from group's leader
if

WASHINpTON (AP)
. "I stand by; my comments that this adminisfration Glock GmbH could follow
Some inOuential Republicans
Smith &amp; Wesson in acceptiiJ$
WDuld enforce the federal law they'd save lives, and
who have traditionally supported
government handgun restrictioils
·they're not doing it."
the National Rifle Association
in exchange for some legal prb- .
sought . to dissociate themselves
.
.
tections.
'
Wlyne LIPierre,
from recent remarks by .an NRA
•
Referring
to
the
Smith
·&amp;
NAA Exeoutlw VIce Preeldent
leader about President Clinton.
.Wesson plan, a senior executive
LaPierre discounted the deal's
But NRA Executive Vice . ularly the R,cpublicans .who are
with the U.S. unit of Glock sai'd
President
Wayne
LaPierre the NRA allies" to repui:liate importance, saying there was not the company hasn't signed op,
much new in it. Reed disputed
remained unrepentant Sunday LaPierre's remarks.
but ·is considering it.
the
administration
and credited the company
Meanwhile,
that
about his · contention last week
Pa\ll Jannuzzo said .. Glock )s
.
that Clinton is ·" willing to accept will "keep the pressure on in with a "c6urageous decision."
The NRA 's president, actor "still doing the balancit:~g test. We
a certain level· of killing to fur- · every possible way" to persuade
Congress to pass gun safety·mea- Charlton Heston, said the British are still weighing the idea of
ther his political agenda."
bleeding to death with legal bills
") stand by my comments that . sures, Clinton domestic policy owners of Smith &amp; Wesson do
vs. the cost of complying" with
· if this administration would aide Bruce Reed said on "Fox not place the same value on the
the
government demands.
Second Amendment's right to
enforce the federal law they'd Newa Sunclay."
. The Journal notel that Glock
Last week, the nation's larpat bear arm• 11 do Americans.
aave lives, and they're not doln1
"I am not comfortabl• about rello1 lar~tlY on nle1 tg poll~o
It," LaPierre aald Sunday on pn manufacturer, Smith &amp;
IOn, IIJI'I!td to makt it1 hJniliJIIHI the Drlt1 teUina 111 how to cltill dopartmtnll and would bo v\11NBC~ "Mill the Pn!!l."
Rtp. Henry Hyllt, ehillrm11n more ehlldproor by innan!na with our Dill of Rll!hu," Honon . norablo to 1 nuw l!llV~rnmtnl
of the HoYit JYillelary Commie- 1aftty loek1 and duwloplna told ABC. "!think wt 1oulud that Alfllllfi' of hBYiHIJ IBW•@flfilftll•
mtnt 1pnelt1 111w pl'l!funmee ~
Ill, 1ald LaPierrt1 remark abo\lt "1martpn" ttahnolcllfi' chat lim· In 1776, dldn~ wtl"
Tht W.U lltrttl
l!llftmlklfl th11 1lgn 11 wn!on
. the pretldenl wu not "terribly Itt I l\lftl \Ill to lei rilhtllll
thl
.
owner,
that
helpl'lllt!) tryln1 to reach 1 con·
ttnlul on • wry dlftleult lssllt"
that Con1re11 conclnu11 to ltrua-

w...

uf

Srncl ler, S•~1arter

11• with. ·

"I think It\ an extreltll statement:' Hyde, ~-IU., said on CBS'
"face the Nation." "I with It
hadn't been said."
.
On
ABC's
"Thla
Week"
.
.
' for'mer President Ford' said gun control requires "reasonable compro.mise;• adding: "You can't take the
hatd-line, NRA !lqsition- t)lat's
a loser." ·
·
White House spokesman Joe
Lockhart, traveling wit.h Clinton
in India, said there had been "an
appalling silence from political
leaders over the last week, partie-

even BeHer

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6:18.Eq~t .Main ~~..

)

•I

McCain

Arizona senator's allies szy fellow Republicans will ignore
his new political clout at their
own peril.
"There m only two United States senators who have a
truly national constituency.
One's name is Ted Kennedy
and one's .name is John
McCain," says former White
House chief of staff . Ken
Duberstein, a McCain friend

·,

.

Hindsight may ultimately vi~dicate NASA

'

' Palczynski at one point cut off contact with negotiators Sunflay morning, and opened fire through a fiindow. Five bursts of
J~Unfire occurred between 8:45 a.m. and .11:45 a.m.

.r

.

.

McCain
retums
to
Senate
after
presidential
run
.

.'

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�IJ the

Page A~

_Th_e_D_a_il...:.y_S_e_nt_in_e_l_ _ _ _ _

Ann gets negative eedback over recent response:
Dear ADn Landers: I just read the letter from "Slow Burn in Ohio," and your
dimwitted response. It made me wonder
how many shingles have fallen off your
roof. Please tell me you were on vacation
and the cleaning lady wrote that answer.
The woman who complained said her
!)usband, "Waldo;• rides to and from work
five days a week with a friend. She
whined that she doesn't see a lot ofWaldo
because they both work long hours. Her
specific complaint was that Waldo would
sit in the car in front of the house,gabbing
and drinking beer with his friend, while
the dinner she had prepared for him got
cold. Your response was like - duh. You
asked if she would prefer that Waldo sit in
a tavern with his friend and drink beer.
You then suggested that she should
"sweeten up;' and cut back on her own
Working hours so she would be in a better mood for Waldo when he came home:
Tell me, Ann , diq you write that _·
response?
SHOCKED DISBELIEF

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
IN BALTIMORE
DEAR BALTIMORE: Yes, I did. I'm
ashamed of it, and am pleading t~mporary
inS.nity. Keep reading for more:
. From Alberta, Canada: Your advice
to Waldo's wife was terriple. I harkened
back. to the days when everything that
went wrong in marriage was the wife's
fault. If woman was raped, it was because
she wore clothes that were too provocative and she had "asked for it." When a
marriage failed, it was because ~he wife

wasn't "loving enough," and the husband
was forced to look elsewhere. Since you
are the one who always says, "Wake up
and smell the e !fee," I suggest you do just
that.
Minneapolis. To sit in a car and drink
beer for hours is an invitation to trouble.
After Waldo is through drinking, his
friend presumably drives home - drunk.
We don't need another impaired driver on
the streets.
Lansing, Mich.: Your defense. of
Waldo, who sat in the car gabbing and
drinking beer, was terrible. You should
have siCied with his wife, wha registered
the complaint. Waldo is the one who
needs to "sweeten up." How come you
never write about the raw deal women
get? Men get all the breaks, starting with
pregnancy. Yor don't see men gaining
weight and suffering with swollen ankles
backaches and stretch marks. If men had
to go through labor. the · huq~an race
would become extinct. ·

Manitoba, Canada: It wouldn' matter
one bit ifWaldo's wife sweetened up. It is
obvious he doesn't want to be with her. I
think Waldo sits in the car to escape doing
the husband-type chores around th house.
and it's been quite effective, don't you
think?
Ontario, Canada: My husband an I
work 12-hour shifts at a hospital. We both
drive about 60 miles round trip. If my
husband sat out front and drank beer with
his buddy, he woUld be looking for another house to live in.
Dear Readen: Enough about Waldo.
We've given 'him all the ink ·he's going to
get. And now an item by David Greising
of the Chicago Tribune, which appeared
in Curmudgeon's Corner. It was my
Laugh for the Day. Maybe it will be yours:
In 1895, a railroad customer com- ·
plained about a bedbug bite he suffered
while sleeping aboard a Pullman Palace
· Car. He received an apologetic letter from
the corresponding se~retary to Chicago

BY ED. PETIRION
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER IN ATHENS

" Here's a reminder from Social Security. If
you are one of the eight million people who
pay taxes on your Social Security benefits, you
can now have your taxes withheld from your
payments, automatically.
In fact, since it was first· offered a year ago,
more than 62,000 p'eople have signed up for
this convenient service offered jointly by
Social Security and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) .
To take advantage of automatic withholding, C(lmplete IRS Form W-4V, Voluntary
Withholding Request. Select the percentage
of your monthly benefit you want withheld:
7,"15, 28 or 31 percent. Only these percent:tges can be used; amounts in dollars are not
acceptable. After you've made your selection,
sign and return .the form to your local Social

RACINE - Spring money-making projects were discussed when
the Sonshine Circle met recenrly at Dorcas Bethany United Me!hodist
Church. :
Members voted to have a bake sale at the church on April15, starting at· 9 a.m. Also discusses was ·a homemade noodle sale along with
bake and yard sale in June. During the April 13 meeting further plans
will be made and members were asked to take a box lunch.
Plans were made for a kitchen shower for the church to be held at
the May meeting. Mary.Cleek rep?rted on the list of individuals that
she had sent "thinking of you" and sympathy cards the past month.
Members signed cards to be sent to other individuals in the commu"
nity.
·
Jo Lee made a flower arrangement from silk flowers that each member had·brought, and it was presented as a surprise to Esther West, the
oldest member of the group, on her 90th birthday. She was also given
a birthday cake and cards.
Lois Sterrett presided :it the meeting which opened with prayer
and inspirational readings. Melissa Smith and Kathryn Hart gave the
secretary and .treasurer's reports, and Martha Lou Beegle read an artiCle by Deacon Jones entitled "On the Ladies Aid Society". Hart presented information the customs and traditions of St. Patrick's Day and
had a prayer.
. .
.
A silent auction was held and refreshments served The. meeting
concluded with a silent auction. Refreshments were. served by Beegle
and Hart to those named and Edna Knopp, Peggy Hill, Ann Boso,
Sheila Theiss, Thelma Walton, Sally Gloeckner, Linda Russell, Bernice
Theiss, Sharon Birch, Janet Theiss, Letha Proffitt, Blondena Rainer,
Mildred Hart, Mattie· Beegle, Lillian Hayman. Martha Srutler, Mabel
Brace, Ruth Simpson, and a guest, Violet Fisher.
Thelma Walton won the .door prize. It was noted that the new
kitchen cabinets had been installed since the last meeting, and new
curtains and blinds had been purchased.

Civil war ladies gtOUp seeking 11;embas
MIDDLEPORT - Charter membership is still open to the Ladies
of the Grand Army of the Republic.
·
·Any female, age 12 or older who has a direct, male ancestor or
blood-related uncle. either of whom served in the Union Army or
Navy during the Civil War qualifies for membership.
·
. " Next meeting of the group will be held 7:15 p.m ., Tues&lt;fy at the
annex of Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant Strert,. Middleport. For
those interested in membership but not knowing whether or not they .
have a Union ancestor, assistance will be given with the. research.
The Ladies of the G.A.R . is an patriotic, educational, historical
$roup. 11 is not a reenacting group requiring women to dress in Civil

..

D~~

The local chapter called -a "circle" has chosen. the name of Maj.
Daniel McCook Circle named for the highest ranking Union soldier
who died as a result of the Battle of Buffington Island in Meigs County inJuly,1863.The application. fee is $10 and annual dues are $15.
The Ladies of the G.A.R. is one of five Civil War lineage groups ·
known as the "Allied Orders", and are closely aligned with the Grand
Army of the Republic, the largest Vnion veterans' group after the
Civil War.
·
·
There were posts of the G.A.R. after the war in Racine, Letart Falls,
Pomeroy, Middl~port, Rutland, Long Bottom,.Chester,Tuppers Plains,
Martinsburg (now Dyesville), and Syracuse. The Sons. of Union Veterans of the Civil War is ~nother of the Allied Orders. Plans are for the
Brooks-Grant Camp .No. -7 S.U.V. and the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle to work together on some projects.
.
There are over 1400 Union soldiers buried in Meigs County ceme- ·
teries. Those with questions concerning their ancestry may contact
Emma Ashley ar 992-7874.

'•

,.

The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio has set for public llearing
Case Nos. 99·101 and 99•102, to
review the fuel procurement
practices and policies of Ohio
Power. Company and Columbus
Southern Power c·ompany
respectively, the operation of their
Electric Fuel Component, and
related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at the.
Commission oHices at 10:00 a.m.
March 21, 2000.
All Interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard.
Further Information may be
obtained by contacting the
Commission at 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266·
0573 or PUCO website at
http:l/www.ouc.state.oh.us.

Sutb m

•Persoaallzed Announcements
•Open House Cilrds
..t •Thank You -Notes
and Much More!

''" .,,, Wlfll ,,.,,
larlt•tiOI Order ·
Now Open Saturday
9am·12 noon
"Since l948 ...Celebrotilrg
50 Yea,.. of Quality Serviee"

Tht Quality Prl1t Shap, Inc

-- -

255 Mill Strtet
Middleport, Ott 45780

740.992·3345

. POMER,OY- Volunteers and teachers involved with the Seniors
. in School Program were honored at a recep'tion held recently at the
,Meigs Senior Center.
This is th~ third year for the program that involves volunteers from
the Retired and Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) teaching children
in the third grade about Meigs County history.
·
Speakers at the reception were. Evelyn Clark and John Dudding,
RSVP volunteers; Sandy Needs and Kathy Smith, teachers.
Other volunteers attending were Betty Longenette, Abbie Stratton,
Margaret Calvin, Martha Bartley, Catherine Shenefield, Eileen Buck.
Polly Curtis, Maxine Litrle, Helen Bodimer, Rosalie Johnson, Marcia
Arnold, Carolyn Grueser, Joan Corder, Martha Dudding, Joan May,
Mary King, Rita Slavin, and Leafy Chasteen.
Other third grade teachers attending were Michelle Gillilan, Carolyn Snowden, Kim Roush, Debbie 'Pratt, Sheila Bevan, Matjorie
Gibbs, and Rebecca Zurcher.
Voluntee~s and teachers participating in the program bu ~ unable to
attend were Mary PoY(ell, Phebe. Roberts, Maxine Whitehead, Joy
Bentley, John Bentley, Mary Stobart, Ann Boso, Leah Ord, Frankie
Hurinei,'Andy Evans, Carol Ohlinger, Racheal Lefebre, Mindy Gardner, Sherry Hensley, Julie Vaughan, Pat Sllnvers, Roger Roush,
Kathryn White, Patry Struble, and Bill Downie.
Each volunteer and· teacher received a .pin as a thank you gift for
their involvem~nt in the Seniors in Schools &lt;program. ·
·

•Actual Size lx4
• 1 Person Per Ad
• Run Date
Fri.,Aprilllst
• Deadline ·
2aclttufl, W~rtli
Fri.,
April 14th . . Hap~Ecater
.
•

•

U:OONoon

Mommg di Daddfl
MaD -or Drop Oft At The Daily Sentinel
, · 111 Court Street Pomeroy, OH 4$,69

1

Also,
· like to thanlt the _otllti:fl
Clerk of Courts candidates ·
lthe:tr well r~ campat~ ~d efforts. . . . . '
I am proud to wqrk for the citizens of Meigs Co111ntv.
I wtll do my best to address the concern,s an!f m~dl
needs of our community.
·
Again, THANK YOU, and I hope for your corltlntuerlil
lsutpport In the November election.

Marlene

"'

•

•,

t;il •

'·

.

.
...,....

Page Bl
MD.'ld-,, March 10, :2000

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Miam~ ·ends

Buckeyes' run

BY TOM SHARP

SE Iowa. Tyler win
NJC basketbal aowns
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP)
- Johnnie Selvie had 24 points
and 12 rebounds as Southeastern
Iowa beat Calhoun (Ala) 84-70
Sarurday night in the championship game of the National
junior College tournament.
SALINA, Kan. (AP) - Jessica
Guild scored 16 points and twin
sister Nicole had five assists and
four steals as Tyler (Texas) beat
Southwestern Illinois 57-39 Saturday night to win its first
National Junior College championship.

Con'etja beats Enqvist.

-sters·

wins Tennis
Indian Wells title

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)
Spain's Alex Cor retj~ beat
1Oth-seeded Thomas Enqvist of
Sweden 6-4, 6-4. 6-3 Sunday in
the Tenni~ Masters-Indian Wells ·
championship.
Second-ranked Lindsay Davenport beat top-ranked Martina
Hingis for ·the fifth consecutive
time, 4-6, 6-4, ' 6-0 for the
women's title Saturday.

Norway's Aamodt
whips back pain, )Wins
World Cup slalom
BORMIO, Italy (AP)- Nor- .
way's Kjetil Andre Aamodt withstood back pain to win Sunday's
World Cup slalom crown.
He is the only non-Austrian
man to "win a title this ·season after·.
H ermann Mai er claimed the
other four - an achievement not .
donesince1987. ___ .,,
I'·
N o rwegian Chri stian Ole
Furuseth won Sunday's slalom for
his first .victory of the season, in 1
minute, 52.49 seconds, ahead of
Austria's Benjamin Raich, winner
of Saturday's giant slalom.
· Slovenia's 'Spela Pretnar caprured the women's World C up
slalom crown Sunday, with American Kristina Koznick winning
the race in 1 minute, 26.23 seconds Pretnar edged France's
Christel Saioni 645-626.
Austrian Renate Goetschl 'won
overall standings with I ,63 1
points. Compatrio t Micha ela
Dorfmeiste-r was seco nd · with
1,306.
.

CHESTER, W.Va . (AP) Jacqui Prazier-Lyde, daughter of
former heavyweight champion
Joe Frazier, won her second pro
bout Sunday night, stopping
rookie opponent . Annie Brooks·
21 seconds into the third of their
sthe&lt;juled four-round fight.
With her father watching and
brother Marvis working her carne ~. Frazier-Lyde, 38, can1e -out
s~nging against Bt9oks, who,
outweighed her opponent by 25
p(lunds.

00

I
to take this
to . THANK all of the
supported me In the Marcht ~~~~~~~
prlim~·lry election for Clerk of C
to thank the many people wh,ol
~~~~:~ :an~d supported me durtng

Ohio girls' basketball finals, Page B2
Today's &amp;oreboard, Page B6

Ex-chaiinp Fl'lzler's
daugl1ter wins bo,ut
in three rounds

Senior Center honors volunteers

MONDAY; March 20

•

LEGAL ·NOTICE

War period clothing though some do. It was formed in 1885 and is ·
Congressionally chartered. It is an older lineage society than the

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
1\\
risonville, Pomeroy, and Salisbury Schools, Monday,_ 6:30
·, POMEROY ·- Meigs Coun-·
p.m. at Harrisonville school.
ty Right to Life,' Monday, 7:30
C HESTER
. Chester
~.m., Pomeroy Library.
Township . Trustees, s.pecia1
POMEROY . Pomeroy meeting, Monday, 7 . p.m. at the
Chapter 186, OES, Monday,
town hall.
7:30 p.m. at 'the hall. Practice
, SY):l..ACUSE Pomeroy
for inspection ...
· Class of 1950, pl~nning meeting
HARRISONVILLE - Con- foi ·50th anniversary celebratinuous improvement planning tion, 7 p.m., Carleton School in
committee meeting for HarSyracuse.

heated
Southwest Scramble, a Mexi- · Flour or corri tortillas
can-inspired, egg-based dish, is a
Put the eggs, milk and chili
winner all the way around. It takes powder in a bowl and whisk lightabout 10 minutes to make and can ly.
.
, .
be eaten anytime. Make· it family
Heat the oil in a nonstick frying
fare or prepare it as early supper pan. Add the egg mixture. Cook:
for the kids on a night you're plan- the eggs, moving them around
ning a dinner party for grownups. with a sparula or wooden spoon,
Southwest Scramble
and folding an&lt;! liliing them aS
. Preparation and cooking time: they sei.
about 10 minutes
Stir in the shredded cheese and
.8 eggs (or 4·eggs and I cup egg continue cooking until the eggs
substitute)
are set but still moist.
i, cup nonfat or low-fat milk
.Spoon the eggs onto individual
2 teaspoons chili powder
plates and top with the salsa.
2 tablespoons canola or olive oil
Serve hot with the re4ied beans
~ cup Mexican-style low-fat or and warm tortillas.
regular shredded or crumbled
'Makes 4 servings.
cheese
·
~.cup mild salsa, bottled or fresh - . ; . . . - - - - - - - . . . . . ; .
1 can (16-ounces) refried beans,

Cl-.ss of 2000

SOCIETY NEWS
Church group discusses fund-raisers

letter explained bedbug bites were
extremely rare and that the car in question
had been fumigated and rerurned to service.
The effect was spoiled by a handwritten
note the Pullman official wrote to his secretary. "Sarah;' it read, "Send this S.O.B.
the bedbug letter."
.
Dnil!,S are everywhere. They're easy ·tO
get, easy to· use· and even easier to get ·
hooked on. lf you haVf"_ntions abodt
drugs, you need Ann ta2;1~rs' booklet,
"The Lowdown on Dope:" Send a self- ·
addresSed, long, business-size envelope al'\d
a check or Ii&gt;.oney order for $3.75 (this ·
includes postage and handling;) to: Lowdown,.c/ o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada,
send $4.55.) To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns, visit
th~ Creator Syndicate web page a
www.creators.com.

BY 1'11! AuoclmD PREss

• The first thtee digits of your Social Secu- .
Security office either by mail or in person . .
Each time you want to change or stop a rity cumber are assigned by the geographical
withholding, complete a new Form W• 4V · t~gion in which you were residing at the time
you obtained your number. The remaining six
and send ·it directly to Social Security.
If, for some reason, your benefits stop, your digits in your number are randomly assigned.
• From I 937 (when the first payments were
withholding will alsd stop and will not start
again until you complete a new Form W-4V made) through 1998, the Social Security proIf your benefits are temporarily suspended or gram has paid out more than $5.512 trilli? n
deferred, your withholding request. will be in cash benefits.
•· From . 1937 until 1940, Social Security
held and honored when your benefits resume.
To get a Voluntary Withholding Request, paid benefits in the form of a single, lumpForm W-4V, call IRS toll-free, at 1-800-829- ~um payment. The average lump sum payment
3676. Your local Social Security office does . during this period was $58.06; the smallest, 5
not have these forms. However, the forms are cents. Monthly benefits began iii 1942. ··
• Sixty-five ·was chosen as the retirement
available on the Internet at www.ssa.gov.
Keep in mind, automatic withholdings ·are age when the program was itarted in 1935.
totally voluntary. If you prefer, you can con- The federal Railroad Retirement. System and
tinue paying your taxes quarterly, without half of the state pension systems at that time
making any changes.
were using age 65. This decision was confirmed by
·
Did you know this about Social Security?
. actuarial siudies..

The Daily Sentinel

rail magnate George Pullman himself. The

QUICK COOKING

Is automatic withholding for you?

Inside: ·

Walker,.FI'Oiilnder,
Sloudno¥ iet world
marks In WSC races
, AT HENS, Greete {AP) AmeriCan Neil Walker, Swede
Lars Frolander and . Russian
Roman Sloudnov set wo~ld
records Sunday in the World
Short Course swinuning championships.
.
Walker's 50. 75-second clocking shaved nearly one second off
t!)e 100-rneter backspnke record.
Walker set' records in the 50- .
meter backstroke, 100 .medley,
•
•
:lnd with the U.S. 800 freestyle
relay team.
·
·
. Jenrty Thompson, who set a
reco.rd in Sarurday's s.emifinals of
the women's 100; butterfly, won
Su~day's final in 57.67.
Frolander swam 23.19 in 50. meter butterfly qualifiers, while
Sloudnov set the 200-meter
breasts~~Uke mark in 2 mimites,
7.59 seconds. Frolander took the .
fre~tYie in 46.80.
' l. f )

NASHVILLJi:, Tenn. (AP)
- Johnny Hc!nsley scored 24
points as Miami upset thirdseeded Ohio State 75,62 on
Sunday to advance to the
round of 16 for the first time.
Miami (23-1 0) had never
won an NC AA tournament
·game before last season, ' Jet
alone two in the same year.
The loss spoiled the Buckeyes
hopes for a tf,turn tfip to the
final Four.
Sixth-seeded Miami will
play seventh-seeded Tulsa in
the South Regional semifinals
Friday in _Af!stin, Texas. Tulsa
beat second-seeded Cincinnati
69-61.
Elton Tyler added 20 poirits
for Miami, 1rd John Salmons
had 13.
Scoonie Penn led the
Buckeyes , (23-8) with 19
points, eig~t of them in a 90~
second span late in the. game
after Mian,ll had taken a 13point le~d . Michael .1\edd
added 13:·'before fouling out
with 4:11 left to play, and
George Reese had J 1.
The sma.ller Hurricanes
scrapped '/heir way to a 41-26
'rebounding · advantage and
outshot the Buckeyes, hitting
26-of-Sf'(Sl percent) to Ohio
State's 20-of-56 (36 percent).
• Mianii never let Ohio State
get into ; the offensive flow i.t
use~ ttJ route Appalachian
State in the first round Friday.
back ~to -ba ck
Hemsley's
three-poiniers gave the Hurricanes a1 56-51 lead with 6:16
to play: ·

BY JOHN NICHOLION
M' SPORTS WRITER

o ne. He moved to the front for the first -time
o n lap 15, passing Gord\)n. He returned to
the front three other times and gradually
stretched out · to a two-second lead over
Dale Jarrett with 30 laps remaining.
When Ward dived into the pits with 40
laps to go and Jarrett right on his t3il, }:tis
crew zipped him out a good half-second
before the Winston C up champion.
"These guys work so hard, they're just
the best on pit road," said Burton's owner,
Bill Davis.
The win ended a 132-race drought for
Davis' team.'
"What an awesome ride that was,'' Burton said.
·
·

Mike Montgomery 's blank
look said it all .
"It's numbing to think the season is over," the Stanford coach
said after the 'topJseeded Cardinal
failed t6 reach the 'second week ·
of the wide-open NCM tournament.
A day after Wisconsin srunned
top-seeded Arizona and Gonzaga
upset second-seeded St. John's in
the West Regional, the Cardiflill
dropped out with a 60-53 loss to
North Carolina in the South.
Cincinnati, Temple, Ohio State
and defending champion Connecticut also lost Sunday, and
Duke needed a late basket and
steal from freshman Carlos Boozer to avoid yet another shocker
against Kansas.
Stanford's, loss left the tournament with as many No. 10 seeds
-. Gonzaga and Seton Hall - as
No. Is - Duke and Michigan
. State.
Since seeding .started in I 979,
the only other time rwo No. ls
didn't reach the round of I 6 ;.vas
1981, when DePaul and Oregon
State failed to survive.
Injuries played a big· role in
Sunday's games.
. Cincinnati ·couldn't overcome
the loss of Kenyon Martin, :ind
Connecticut was lost with Khaiid
EI-Ami.n slowed by ·an ·ankle
IDJUry.
.
With El-An1in hobbled, Tennessee beat Connecticut 65-51 in
the South.
" I kno--:. that I bring th e ener- .
gy and demeanor to this team,"
· the star point guard said. "And
without me, we weren't able to
go offensively like we are normally able to."
Seton Hall found a way to beat
second-seeded Temple in the East
after Shaheen Holloway, the hero
of the Pirates' first-round victory
over Oregon, injured his left
· ankle.
Ty Shine, Holloway's backup,
hit the deciding three-pointer
with 18 seconds left in overtime ·
as the Pirates beat the Owls 6765.
Seton fhll will play Oklahoma
State on Friday in the regional
semifinals in Syracuse, N.Y. Oklahoma State beat Pepperdine 7567. In the other semifinal, Plorida
will play ,111\Jke,. a 69-64 winner
over Kansas. Florida beat lllinois

Pluse see M•ILcom 400, Pap 11

PI•H- NCAA. Pap 81

LAYUP TIME comes for Miami's Johnny Helmsley, who gets to the basket ahead of Ohio State's Brian
Brown during SUnday's. NCAA South Regional second-round game inNashvillt;!, Tenn."(APJ
'

•'-",H', ' •

Ward Burton wins Mall.com 400
Bv PETE IACOBELLI

Three times last season, including the
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) -· There's . Southern 500 here, Ward wound up second
no beating the Burtons .rh ese days at Dar- to Jeff.
lington R.aceway. Ward Burton, following
"You got a younger brother?," the 38up brot~j'ot Jeff's sweep· here a year ago, year7old Ward asked rh etorically this- past
cruised to victory Sunday in th e Mall.com September about his 32-year-old brother's
400.
·,r
success. "Then you know how it feels."
Ward ~ Bu rton, who· qualified second
How does it feel now?
behind J~ff Gordon, took the lead ·from
"Well, those guys are pretty tough, along
Matt KeriS"eth with 36 laps to go and was · with some other teams ·out there," Ward
barely p"*ured the rest of the ·way. It was said. "But this was just our day. Didn't have
his second career Winston Cup victory, the any bad luck io slow us down."
other coonng in Rockingham, N.C., in
It was the first time Pontiac won at
Darlington since Joe Weatherly took th~
October of 1995.
. · .
·
In bet~en, Burton lived every older . R ebel 300 in 1963 and only the third time
watching Jeff's ·in 94 races that the manufacturer can claim
brother's 'lilghtmare Roush Racing team ris.e to die top of the a Darlington victory.
'
· sport.
Everything went right for Ward in ihis
Ll I

•

a

Langston ·
retires after
16 yel rs pro
.

.~ •

No. 1 seed
Stanford·
goes out

TUlsa upsets .uc 69·61 in South Regional
No. 2-seeded Bearcats stmer
another second-round meltdown

WINTER! HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) - Mark"t.angston knew
.. BY HAL BocK
how much of a differenc e Marit. He'd had enough. ·
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -·
tin would have made.
The four'11ime All-Star
This time, there was nothing
"If Ken's playing, he 's guardpitcher; had just ' given up four
Kenyon Martin could do.
ing Coley . and he gets 16 and
runs in the sev~nth inning of
The 'Cincinnati AU-Ameri- 16," he said. "It's certainly not an '
, Cleveland's 10-9 spring-traincan sat at the end of the bench, alibi or an excuse. We 've still got
ing loss to Kansas City, indudcrutches beside him on the good · enough players to win.
. ing a three-run nome run by·
fl oor. His leg was broken, and so Tulsa did a good job." ·
Mike Sweeney.
&gt;,yas th e Bearcats' season.
Still, Huggins could i:lot forWhen he CatiJe out of the
"It's hard when you can't get Martin, who broke his leg in
game, Langston asked Indians
help;' he said Sunday after sec- the Conference USA tourra- ·
pitche_r Ch~cki(jFiilier: his
ond-seeded Cincinnati lost 69- ment.
long-nme· &amp;tend, for his car
61 to Tulsa in the second round
"It's toug\1 seeing him sitting
..1
keys.
of
the
South
Regional.
"It
is
a
there
with a cast on," the coach
·~1 had left my fi.ell phone in
helpless
feeling.
It's
very
tough
said. " It's tough for the rest of
Chuck's car, alijl: he knew
in
this
room
right
now.
It's
our seniors. I'm going to ·coach
exactly why I wanted the
something
that
.
can't
be
some more, probably. This is it .
phone," LangstontJid. ·
explained
in
wo.
r
ds."
for those four guys and it's '
Lal)gstori went' to call his
There
was
nothing
the
tough."
wife, Michelle, to tell her he
injured center could do stop
was retiring after l6 seasons in ·
Two of Cincinnati\ seniors
· Eric C:oley and seventh-seeded tri~d to make up for Martin.
,the big l~agues . Sift ,had been
Tulsa from moving on to the P~te Mickeal, who fouled out,
list~ning to the game on the ·
round o06.As for Cincinnati, it had 16 points and 11 rebounds,
Internet, and she l&amp;tew what ·
was another second-round . and Ryan' Fle1cher, starting in ·
was coming.
111.
meltdown.
"The seven-tim,f Gold
:Martin's place, .had 13 points,
Coley had 16 points and . 16 including five straight that put
Glove Award wilmer and
rebol!nds, and Tulsa (31-4) went Cjncinnati (29-4) in front 50-.45
workhqrse left-hancWr for five ''
on a 14-0 tear over four minutes after the Bearcats wiped out an
· major-league
teams ·
late in the second half to wipe early 16-point Thlsa )ead.
announced his retirement after
'
giving up 12 earned runs over .
BEATEN TO THE RACK- Tulsa's Dante Swanson beats Cincinnati's o ut ~ five-point deficit.
But the Golden Hurricane
nine innin~ in six exhibition
Cincinnati · coach Bob Hug. ·Donald Little· (50) and Steve Logan (22) to the besket during Sunday's
games .
gins knows better than anyone PIJ•t- ..11Citi,.PtlpB1
NCAA South Rqlonal seconc:J..round game In Nashville, Tenn . (AP)

(I)

\.

�IJ the

Page A~

_Th_e_D_a_il...:.y_S_e_nt_in_e_l_ _ _ _ _

Ann gets negative eedback over recent response:
Dear ADn Landers: I just read the letter from "Slow Burn in Ohio," and your
dimwitted response. It made me wonder
how many shingles have fallen off your
roof. Please tell me you were on vacation
and the cleaning lady wrote that answer.
The woman who complained said her
!)usband, "Waldo;• rides to and from work
five days a week with a friend. She
whined that she doesn't see a lot ofWaldo
because they both work long hours. Her
specific complaint was that Waldo would
sit in the car in front of the house,gabbing
and drinking beer with his friend, while
the dinner she had prepared for him got
cold. Your response was like - duh. You
asked if she would prefer that Waldo sit in
a tavern with his friend and drink beer.
You then suggested that she should
"sweeten up;' and cut back on her own
Working hours so she would be in a better mood for Waldo when he came home:
Tell me, Ann , diq you write that _·
response?
SHOCKED DISBELIEF

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
IN BALTIMORE
DEAR BALTIMORE: Yes, I did. I'm
ashamed of it, and am pleading t~mporary
inS.nity. Keep reading for more:
. From Alberta, Canada: Your advice
to Waldo's wife was terriple. I harkened
back. to the days when everything that
went wrong in marriage was the wife's
fault. If woman was raped, it was because
she wore clothes that were too provocative and she had "asked for it." When a
marriage failed, it was because ~he wife

wasn't "loving enough," and the husband
was forced to look elsewhere. Since you
are the one who always says, "Wake up
and smell the e !fee," I suggest you do just
that.
Minneapolis. To sit in a car and drink
beer for hours is an invitation to trouble.
After Waldo is through drinking, his
friend presumably drives home - drunk.
We don't need another impaired driver on
the streets.
Lansing, Mich.: Your defense. of
Waldo, who sat in the car gabbing and
drinking beer, was terrible. You should
have siCied with his wife, wha registered
the complaint. Waldo is the one who
needs to "sweeten up." How come you
never write about the raw deal women
get? Men get all the breaks, starting with
pregnancy. Yor don't see men gaining
weight and suffering with swollen ankles
backaches and stretch marks. If men had
to go through labor. the · huq~an race
would become extinct. ·

Manitoba, Canada: It wouldn' matter
one bit ifWaldo's wife sweetened up. It is
obvious he doesn't want to be with her. I
think Waldo sits in the car to escape doing
the husband-type chores around th house.
and it's been quite effective, don't you
think?
Ontario, Canada: My husband an I
work 12-hour shifts at a hospital. We both
drive about 60 miles round trip. If my
husband sat out front and drank beer with
his buddy, he woUld be looking for another house to live in.
Dear Readen: Enough about Waldo.
We've given 'him all the ink ·he's going to
get. And now an item by David Greising
of the Chicago Tribune, which appeared
in Curmudgeon's Corner. It was my
Laugh for the Day. Maybe it will be yours:
In 1895, a railroad customer com- ·
plained about a bedbug bite he suffered
while sleeping aboard a Pullman Palace
· Car. He received an apologetic letter from
the corresponding se~retary to Chicago

BY ED. PETIRION
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER IN ATHENS

" Here's a reminder from Social Security. If
you are one of the eight million people who
pay taxes on your Social Security benefits, you
can now have your taxes withheld from your
payments, automatically.
In fact, since it was first· offered a year ago,
more than 62,000 p'eople have signed up for
this convenient service offered jointly by
Social Security and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) .
To take advantage of automatic withholding, C(lmplete IRS Form W-4V, Voluntary
Withholding Request. Select the percentage
of your monthly benefit you want withheld:
7,"15, 28 or 31 percent. Only these percent:tges can be used; amounts in dollars are not
acceptable. After you've made your selection,
sign and return .the form to your local Social

RACINE - Spring money-making projects were discussed when
the Sonshine Circle met recenrly at Dorcas Bethany United Me!hodist
Church. :
Members voted to have a bake sale at the church on April15, starting at· 9 a.m. Also discusses was ·a homemade noodle sale along with
bake and yard sale in June. During the April 13 meeting further plans
will be made and members were asked to take a box lunch.
Plans were made for a kitchen shower for the church to be held at
the May meeting. Mary.Cleek rep?rted on the list of individuals that
she had sent "thinking of you" and sympathy cards the past month.
Members signed cards to be sent to other individuals in the commu"
nity.
·
Jo Lee made a flower arrangement from silk flowers that each member had·brought, and it was presented as a surprise to Esther West, the
oldest member of the group, on her 90th birthday. She was also given
a birthday cake and cards.
Lois Sterrett presided :it the meeting which opened with prayer
and inspirational readings. Melissa Smith and Kathryn Hart gave the
secretary and .treasurer's reports, and Martha Lou Beegle read an artiCle by Deacon Jones entitled "On the Ladies Aid Society". Hart presented information the customs and traditions of St. Patrick's Day and
had a prayer.
. .
.
A silent auction was held and refreshments served The. meeting
concluded with a silent auction. Refreshments were. served by Beegle
and Hart to those named and Edna Knopp, Peggy Hill, Ann Boso,
Sheila Theiss, Thelma Walton, Sally Gloeckner, Linda Russell, Bernice
Theiss, Sharon Birch, Janet Theiss, Letha Proffitt, Blondena Rainer,
Mildred Hart, Mattie· Beegle, Lillian Hayman. Martha Srutler, Mabel
Brace, Ruth Simpson, and a guest, Violet Fisher.
Thelma Walton won the .door prize. It was noted that the new
kitchen cabinets had been installed since the last meeting, and new
curtains and blinds had been purchased.

Civil war ladies gtOUp seeking 11;embas
MIDDLEPORT - Charter membership is still open to the Ladies
of the Grand Army of the Republic.
·
·Any female, age 12 or older who has a direct, male ancestor or
blood-related uncle. either of whom served in the Union Army or
Navy during the Civil War qualifies for membership.
·
. " Next meeting of the group will be held 7:15 p.m ., Tues&lt;fy at the
annex of Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant Strert,. Middleport. For
those interested in membership but not knowing whether or not they .
have a Union ancestor, assistance will be given with the. research.
The Ladies of the G.A.R . is an patriotic, educational, historical
$roup. 11 is not a reenacting group requiring women to dress in Civil

..

D~~

The local chapter called -a "circle" has chosen. the name of Maj.
Daniel McCook Circle named for the highest ranking Union soldier
who died as a result of the Battle of Buffington Island in Meigs County inJuly,1863.The application. fee is $10 and annual dues are $15.
The Ladies of the G.A.R. is one of five Civil War lineage groups ·
known as the "Allied Orders", and are closely aligned with the Grand
Army of the Republic, the largest Vnion veterans' group after the
Civil War.
·
·
There were posts of the G.A.R. after the war in Racine, Letart Falls,
Pomeroy, Middl~port, Rutland, Long Bottom,.Chester,Tuppers Plains,
Martinsburg (now Dyesville), and Syracuse. The Sons. of Union Veterans of the Civil War is ~nother of the Allied Orders. Plans are for the
Brooks-Grant Camp .No. -7 S.U.V. and the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle to work together on some projects.
.
There are over 1400 Union soldiers buried in Meigs County ceme- ·
teries. Those with questions concerning their ancestry may contact
Emma Ashley ar 992-7874.

'•

,.

The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio has set for public llearing
Case Nos. 99·101 and 99•102, to
review the fuel procurement
practices and policies of Ohio
Power. Company and Columbus
Southern Power c·ompany
respectively, the operation of their
Electric Fuel Component, and
related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at the.
Commission oHices at 10:00 a.m.
March 21, 2000.
All Interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard.
Further Information may be
obtained by contacting the
Commission at 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266·
0573 or PUCO website at
http:l/www.ouc.state.oh.us.

Sutb m

•Persoaallzed Announcements
•Open House Cilrds
..t •Thank You -Notes
and Much More!

''" .,,, Wlfll ,,.,,
larlt•tiOI Order ·
Now Open Saturday
9am·12 noon
"Since l948 ...Celebrotilrg
50 Yea,.. of Quality Serviee"

Tht Quality Prl1t Shap, Inc

-- -

255 Mill Strtet
Middleport, Ott 45780

740.992·3345

. POMER,OY- Volunteers and teachers involved with the Seniors
. in School Program were honored at a recep'tion held recently at the
,Meigs Senior Center.
This is th~ third year for the program that involves volunteers from
the Retired and Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) teaching children
in the third grade about Meigs County history.
·
Speakers at the reception were. Evelyn Clark and John Dudding,
RSVP volunteers; Sandy Needs and Kathy Smith, teachers.
Other volunteers attending were Betty Longenette, Abbie Stratton,
Margaret Calvin, Martha Bartley, Catherine Shenefield, Eileen Buck.
Polly Curtis, Maxine Litrle, Helen Bodimer, Rosalie Johnson, Marcia
Arnold, Carolyn Grueser, Joan Corder, Martha Dudding, Joan May,
Mary King, Rita Slavin, and Leafy Chasteen.
Other third grade teachers attending were Michelle Gillilan, Carolyn Snowden, Kim Roush, Debbie 'Pratt, Sheila Bevan, Matjorie
Gibbs, and Rebecca Zurcher.
Voluntee~s and teachers participating in the program bu ~ unable to
attend were Mary PoY(ell, Phebe. Roberts, Maxine Whitehead, Joy
Bentley, John Bentley, Mary Stobart, Ann Boso, Leah Ord, Frankie
Hurinei,'Andy Evans, Carol Ohlinger, Racheal Lefebre, Mindy Gardner, Sherry Hensley, Julie Vaughan, Pat Sllnvers, Roger Roush,
Kathryn White, Patry Struble, and Bill Downie.
Each volunteer and· teacher received a .pin as a thank you gift for
their involvem~nt in the Seniors in Schools &lt;program. ·
·

•Actual Size lx4
• 1 Person Per Ad
• Run Date
Fri.,Aprilllst
• Deadline ·
2aclttufl, W~rtli
Fri.,
April 14th . . Hap~Ecater
.
•

•

U:OONoon

Mommg di Daddfl
MaD -or Drop Oft At The Daily Sentinel
, · 111 Court Street Pomeroy, OH 4$,69

1

Also,
· like to thanlt the _otllti:fl
Clerk of Courts candidates ·
lthe:tr well r~ campat~ ~d efforts. . . . . '
I am proud to wqrk for the citizens of Meigs Co111ntv.
I wtll do my best to address the concern,s an!f m~dl
needs of our community.
·
Again, THANK YOU, and I hope for your corltlntuerlil
lsutpport In the November election.

Marlene

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t;il •

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Page Bl
MD.'ld-,, March 10, :2000

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Miam~ ·ends

Buckeyes' run

BY TOM SHARP

SE Iowa. Tyler win
NJC basketbal aowns
HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP)
- Johnnie Selvie had 24 points
and 12 rebounds as Southeastern
Iowa beat Calhoun (Ala) 84-70
Sarurday night in the championship game of the National
junior College tournament.
SALINA, Kan. (AP) - Jessica
Guild scored 16 points and twin
sister Nicole had five assists and
four steals as Tyler (Texas) beat
Southwestern Illinois 57-39 Saturday night to win its first
National Junior College championship.

Con'etja beats Enqvist.

-sters·

wins Tennis
Indian Wells title

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)
Spain's Alex Cor retj~ beat
1Oth-seeded Thomas Enqvist of
Sweden 6-4, 6-4. 6-3 Sunday in
the Tenni~ Masters-Indian Wells ·
championship.
Second-ranked Lindsay Davenport beat top-ranked Martina
Hingis for ·the fifth consecutive
time, 4-6, 6-4, ' 6-0 for the
women's title Saturday.

Norway's Aamodt
whips back pain, )Wins
World Cup slalom
BORMIO, Italy (AP)- Nor- .
way's Kjetil Andre Aamodt withstood back pain to win Sunday's
World Cup slalom crown.
He is the only non-Austrian
man to "win a title this ·season after·.
H ermann Mai er claimed the
other four - an achievement not .
donesince1987. ___ .,,
I'·
N o rwegian Chri stian Ole
Furuseth won Sunday's slalom for
his first .victory of the season, in 1
minute, 52.49 seconds, ahead of
Austria's Benjamin Raich, winner
of Saturday's giant slalom.
· Slovenia's 'Spela Pretnar caprured the women's World C up
slalom crown Sunday, with American Kristina Koznick winning
the race in 1 minute, 26.23 seconds Pretnar edged France's
Christel Saioni 645-626.
Austrian Renate Goetschl 'won
overall standings with I ,63 1
points. Compatrio t Micha ela
Dorfmeiste-r was seco nd · with
1,306.
.

CHESTER, W.Va . (AP) Jacqui Prazier-Lyde, daughter of
former heavyweight champion
Joe Frazier, won her second pro
bout Sunday night, stopping
rookie opponent . Annie Brooks·
21 seconds into the third of their
sthe&lt;juled four-round fight.
With her father watching and
brother Marvis working her carne ~. Frazier-Lyde, 38, can1e -out
s~nging against Bt9oks, who,
outweighed her opponent by 25
p(lunds.

00

I
to take this
to . THANK all of the
supported me In the Marcht ~~~~~~~
prlim~·lry election for Clerk of C
to thank the many people wh,ol
~~~~:~ :an~d supported me durtng

Ohio girls' basketball finals, Page B2
Today's &amp;oreboard, Page B6

Ex-chaiinp Fl'lzler's
daugl1ter wins bo,ut
in three rounds

Senior Center honors volunteers

MONDAY; March 20

•

LEGAL ·NOTICE

War period clothing though some do. It was formed in 1885 and is ·
Congressionally chartered. It is an older lineage society than the

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
1\\
risonville, Pomeroy, and Salisbury Schools, Monday,_ 6:30
·, POMEROY ·- Meigs Coun-·
p.m. at Harrisonville school.
ty Right to Life,' Monday, 7:30
C HESTER
. Chester
~.m., Pomeroy Library.
Township . Trustees, s.pecia1
POMEROY . Pomeroy meeting, Monday, 7 . p.m. at the
Chapter 186, OES, Monday,
town hall.
7:30 p.m. at 'the hall. Practice
, SY):l..ACUSE Pomeroy
for inspection ...
· Class of 1950, pl~nning meeting
HARRISONVILLE - Con- foi ·50th anniversary celebratinuous improvement planning tion, 7 p.m., Carleton School in
committee meeting for HarSyracuse.

heated
Southwest Scramble, a Mexi- · Flour or corri tortillas
can-inspired, egg-based dish, is a
Put the eggs, milk and chili
winner all the way around. It takes powder in a bowl and whisk lightabout 10 minutes to make and can ly.
.
, .
be eaten anytime. Make· it family
Heat the oil in a nonstick frying
fare or prepare it as early supper pan. Add the egg mixture. Cook:
for the kids on a night you're plan- the eggs, moving them around
ning a dinner party for grownups. with a sparula or wooden spoon,
Southwest Scramble
and folding an&lt;! liliing them aS
. Preparation and cooking time: they sei.
about 10 minutes
Stir in the shredded cheese and
.8 eggs (or 4·eggs and I cup egg continue cooking until the eggs
substitute)
are set but still moist.
i, cup nonfat or low-fat milk
.Spoon the eggs onto individual
2 teaspoons chili powder
plates and top with the salsa.
2 tablespoons canola or olive oil
Serve hot with the re4ied beans
~ cup Mexican-style low-fat or and warm tortillas.
regular shredded or crumbled
'Makes 4 servings.
cheese
·
~.cup mild salsa, bottled or fresh - . ; . . . - - - - - - - . . . . . ; .
1 can (16-ounces) refried beans,

Cl-.ss of 2000

SOCIETY NEWS
Church group discusses fund-raisers

letter explained bedbug bites were
extremely rare and that the car in question
had been fumigated and rerurned to service.
The effect was spoiled by a handwritten
note the Pullman official wrote to his secretary. "Sarah;' it read, "Send this S.O.B.
the bedbug letter."
.
Dnil!,S are everywhere. They're easy ·tO
get, easy to· use· and even easier to get ·
hooked on. lf you haVf"_ntions abodt
drugs, you need Ann ta2;1~rs' booklet,
"The Lowdown on Dope:" Send a self- ·
addresSed, long, business-size envelope al'\d
a check or Ii&gt;.oney order for $3.75 (this ·
includes postage and handling;) to: Lowdown,.c/ o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada,
send $4.55.) To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns, visit
th~ Creator Syndicate web page a
www.creators.com.

BY 1'11! AuoclmD PREss

• The first thtee digits of your Social Secu- .
Security office either by mail or in person . .
Each time you want to change or stop a rity cumber are assigned by the geographical
withholding, complete a new Form W• 4V · t~gion in which you were residing at the time
you obtained your number. The remaining six
and send ·it directly to Social Security.
If, for some reason, your benefits stop, your digits in your number are randomly assigned.
• From I 937 (when the first payments were
withholding will alsd stop and will not start
again until you complete a new Form W-4V made) through 1998, the Social Security proIf your benefits are temporarily suspended or gram has paid out more than $5.512 trilli? n
deferred, your withholding request. will be in cash benefits.
•· From . 1937 until 1940, Social Security
held and honored when your benefits resume.
To get a Voluntary Withholding Request, paid benefits in the form of a single, lumpForm W-4V, call IRS toll-free, at 1-800-829- ~um payment. The average lump sum payment
3676. Your local Social Security office does . during this period was $58.06; the smallest, 5
not have these forms. However, the forms are cents. Monthly benefits began iii 1942. ··
• Sixty-five ·was chosen as the retirement
available on the Internet at www.ssa.gov.
Keep in mind, automatic withholdings ·are age when the program was itarted in 1935.
totally voluntary. If you prefer, you can con- The federal Railroad Retirement. System and
tinue paying your taxes quarterly, without half of the state pension systems at that time
making any changes.
were using age 65. This decision was confirmed by
·
Did you know this about Social Security?
. actuarial siudies..

The Daily Sentinel

rail magnate George Pullman himself. The

QUICK COOKING

Is automatic withholding for you?

Inside: ·

Walker,.FI'Oiilnder,
Sloudno¥ iet world
marks In WSC races
, AT HENS, Greete {AP) AmeriCan Neil Walker, Swede
Lars Frolander and . Russian
Roman Sloudnov set wo~ld
records Sunday in the World
Short Course swinuning championships.
.
Walker's 50. 75-second clocking shaved nearly one second off
t!)e 100-rneter backspnke record.
Walker set' records in the 50- .
meter backstroke, 100 .medley,
•
•
:lnd with the U.S. 800 freestyle
relay team.
·
·
. Jenrty Thompson, who set a
reco.rd in Sarurday's s.emifinals of
the women's 100; butterfly, won
Su~day's final in 57.67.
Frolander swam 23.19 in 50. meter butterfly qualifiers, while
Sloudnov set the 200-meter
breasts~~Uke mark in 2 mimites,
7.59 seconds. Frolander took the .
fre~tYie in 46.80.
' l. f )

NASHVILLJi:, Tenn. (AP)
- Johnny Hc!nsley scored 24
points as Miami upset thirdseeded Ohio State 75,62 on
Sunday to advance to the
round of 16 for the first time.
Miami (23-1 0) had never
won an NC AA tournament
·game before last season, ' Jet
alone two in the same year.
The loss spoiled the Buckeyes
hopes for a tf,turn tfip to the
final Four.
Sixth-seeded Miami will
play seventh-seeded Tulsa in
the South Regional semifinals
Friday in _Af!stin, Texas. Tulsa
beat second-seeded Cincinnati
69-61.
Elton Tyler added 20 poirits
for Miami, 1rd John Salmons
had 13.
Scoonie Penn led the
Buckeyes , (23-8) with 19
points, eig~t of them in a 90~
second span late in the. game
after Mian,ll had taken a 13point le~d . Michael .1\edd
added 13:·'before fouling out
with 4:11 left to play, and
George Reese had J 1.
The sma.ller Hurricanes
scrapped '/heir way to a 41-26
'rebounding · advantage and
outshot the Buckeyes, hitting
26-of-Sf'(Sl percent) to Ohio
State's 20-of-56 (36 percent).
• Mianii never let Ohio State
get into ; the offensive flow i.t
use~ ttJ route Appalachian
State in the first round Friday.
back ~to -ba ck
Hemsley's
three-poiniers gave the Hurricanes a1 56-51 lead with 6:16
to play: ·

BY JOHN NICHOLION
M' SPORTS WRITER

o ne. He moved to the front for the first -time
o n lap 15, passing Gord\)n. He returned to
the front three other times and gradually
stretched out · to a two-second lead over
Dale Jarrett with 30 laps remaining.
When Ward dived into the pits with 40
laps to go and Jarrett right on his t3il, }:tis
crew zipped him out a good half-second
before the Winston C up champion.
"These guys work so hard, they're just
the best on pit road," said Burton's owner,
Bill Davis.
The win ended a 132-race drought for
Davis' team.'
"What an awesome ride that was,'' Burton said.
·
·

Mike Montgomery 's blank
look said it all .
"It's numbing to think the season is over," the Stanford coach
said after the 'topJseeded Cardinal
failed t6 reach the 'second week ·
of the wide-open NCM tournament.
A day after Wisconsin srunned
top-seeded Arizona and Gonzaga
upset second-seeded St. John's in
the West Regional, the Cardiflill
dropped out with a 60-53 loss to
North Carolina in the South.
Cincinnati, Temple, Ohio State
and defending champion Connecticut also lost Sunday, and
Duke needed a late basket and
steal from freshman Carlos Boozer to avoid yet another shocker
against Kansas.
Stanford's, loss left the tournament with as many No. 10 seeds
-. Gonzaga and Seton Hall - as
No. Is - Duke and Michigan
. State.
Since seeding .started in I 979,
the only other time rwo No. ls
didn't reach the round of I 6 ;.vas
1981, when DePaul and Oregon
State failed to survive.
Injuries played a big· role in
Sunday's games.
. Cincinnati ·couldn't overcome
the loss of Kenyon Martin, :ind
Connecticut was lost with Khaiid
EI-Ami.n slowed by ·an ·ankle
IDJUry.
.
With El-An1in hobbled, Tennessee beat Connecticut 65-51 in
the South.
" I kno--:. that I bring th e ener- .
gy and demeanor to this team,"
· the star point guard said. "And
without me, we weren't able to
go offensively like we are normally able to."
Seton Hall found a way to beat
second-seeded Temple in the East
after Shaheen Holloway, the hero
of the Pirates' first-round victory
over Oregon, injured his left
· ankle.
Ty Shine, Holloway's backup,
hit the deciding three-pointer
with 18 seconds left in overtime ·
as the Pirates beat the Owls 6765.
Seton fhll will play Oklahoma
State on Friday in the regional
semifinals in Syracuse, N.Y. Oklahoma State beat Pepperdine 7567. In the other semifinal, Plorida
will play ,111\Jke,. a 69-64 winner
over Kansas. Florida beat lllinois

Pluse see M•ILcom 400, Pap 11

PI•H- NCAA. Pap 81

LAYUP TIME comes for Miami's Johnny Helmsley, who gets to the basket ahead of Ohio State's Brian
Brown during SUnday's. NCAA South Regional second-round game inNashvillt;!, Tenn."(APJ
'

•'-",H', ' •

Ward Burton wins Mall.com 400
Bv PETE IACOBELLI

Three times last season, including the
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) -· There's . Southern 500 here, Ward wound up second
no beating the Burtons .rh ese days at Dar- to Jeff.
lington R.aceway. Ward Burton, following
"You got a younger brother?," the 38up brot~j'ot Jeff's sweep· here a year ago, year7old Ward asked rh etorically this- past
cruised to victory Sunday in th e Mall.com September about his 32-year-old brother's
400.
·,r
success. "Then you know how it feels."
Ward ~ Bu rton, who· qualified second
How does it feel now?
behind J~ff Gordon, took the lead ·from
"Well, those guys are pretty tough, along
Matt KeriS"eth with 36 laps to go and was · with some other teams ·out there," Ward
barely p"*ured the rest of the ·way. It was said. "But this was just our day. Didn't have
his second career Winston Cup victory, the any bad luck io slow us down."
other coonng in Rockingham, N.C., in
It was the first time Pontiac won at
Darlington since Joe Weatherly took th~
October of 1995.
. · .
·
In bet~en, Burton lived every older . R ebel 300 in 1963 and only the third time
watching Jeff's ·in 94 races that the manufacturer can claim
brother's 'lilghtmare Roush Racing team ris.e to die top of the a Darlington victory.
'
· sport.
Everything went right for Ward in ihis
Ll I

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Langston ·
retires after
16 yel rs pro
.

.~ •

No. 1 seed
Stanford·
goes out

TUlsa upsets .uc 69·61 in South Regional
No. 2-seeded Bearcats stmer
another second-round meltdown

WINTER! HAVEN, Fla.
(AP) - Mark"t.angston knew
.. BY HAL BocK
how much of a differenc e Marit. He'd had enough. ·
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -·
tin would have made.
The four'11ime All-Star
This time, there was nothing
"If Ken's playing, he 's guardpitcher; had just ' given up four
Kenyon Martin could do.
ing Coley . and he gets 16 and
runs in the sev~nth inning of
The 'Cincinnati AU-Ameri- 16," he said. "It's certainly not an '
, Cleveland's 10-9 spring-traincan sat at the end of the bench, alibi or an excuse. We 've still got
ing loss to Kansas City, indudcrutches beside him on the good · enough players to win.
. ing a three-run nome run by·
fl oor. His leg was broken, and so Tulsa did a good job." ·
Mike Sweeney.
&gt;,yas th e Bearcats' season.
Still, Huggins could i:lot forWhen he CatiJe out of the
"It's hard when you can't get Martin, who broke his leg in
game, Langston asked Indians
help;' he said Sunday after sec- the Conference USA tourra- ·
pitche_r Ch~cki(jFiilier: his
ond-seeded Cincinnati lost 69- ment.
long-nme· &amp;tend, for his car
61 to Tulsa in the second round
"It's toug\1 seeing him sitting
..1
keys.
of
the
South
Regional.
"It
is
a
there
with a cast on," the coach
·~1 had left my fi.ell phone in
helpless
feeling.
It's
very
tough
said. " It's tough for the rest of
Chuck's car, alijl: he knew
in
this
room
right
now.
It's
our seniors. I'm going to ·coach
exactly why I wanted the
something
that
.
can't
be
some more, probably. This is it .
phone," LangstontJid. ·
explained
in
wo.
r
ds."
for those four guys and it's '
Lal)gstori went' to call his
There
was
nothing
the
tough."
wife, Michelle, to tell her he
injured center could do stop
was retiring after l6 seasons in ·
Two of Cincinnati\ seniors
· Eric C:oley and seventh-seeded tri~d to make up for Martin.
,the big l~agues . Sift ,had been
Tulsa from moving on to the P~te Mickeal, who fouled out,
list~ning to the game on the ·
round o06.As for Cincinnati, it had 16 points and 11 rebounds,
Internet, and she l&amp;tew what ·
was another second-round . and Ryan' Fle1cher, starting in ·
was coming.
111.
meltdown.
"The seven-tim,f Gold
:Martin's place, .had 13 points,
Coley had 16 points and . 16 including five straight that put
Glove Award wilmer and
rebol!nds, and Tulsa (31-4) went Cjncinnati (29-4) in front 50-.45
workhqrse left-hancWr for five ''
on a 14-0 tear over four minutes after the Bearcats wiped out an
· major-league
teams ·
late in the second half to wipe early 16-point Thlsa )ead.
announced his retirement after
'
giving up 12 earned runs over .
BEATEN TO THE RACK- Tulsa's Dante Swanson beats Cincinnati's o ut ~ five-point deficit.
But the Golden Hurricane
nine innin~ in six exhibition
Cincinnati · coach Bob Hug. ·Donald Little· (50) and Steve Logan (22) to the besket during Sunday's
games .
gins knows better than anyone PIJ•t- ..11Citi,.PtlpB1
NCAA South Rqlonal seconc:J..round game In Nashville, Tenn . (AP)

(I)

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Monday, March 20, 2000

•

The Dally Sentinel

• Page

B3

Monday, March 20, ~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..... 82 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Mason, Hartley, Regina, Hiland daim Ohio girls' cage crown~
BY TIM PUET
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) After 102 v1crones m four years

Mason won the game 1t wanted mgton 36-25 to wm the state for low sconng
The VICtory ended a frustranng
DIVISIOn I g1rls basketball champimost
The Comets defeated P1cker-1 onship m a game that set a record span KJ "hJCh the Comets seemed
to wm e""rythmg but a championship They lost 111 the ntle game
to Wadsworth 111 1997 and P1cker111gton last year and were beaten
by Dayton Chanunade-Juhenne
111 a 1998 reg1onal champ10nsh1p
game
The combmed 61 po111tS" by
both teams broke the DIVISIOn I
utle game record of 62, set 111
1979 when Akron St V111cent-St
Mary beat Barberton 35 27
We take a lot of pnde 111 our
defense and 1f ther&lt; s another team
that plays as good a defense as we

do 1t s P1cker111gton so we pretry
much expected a defens1ve battle"
Mason coach Gerry Lackey sa~d
The stlfhng defense combmed
w1th a sparkhng performance by
M1chelle Munoz, who rece1ved
the states Ms Basketball award
earlier m the week
Munoz was 9 for 13 from the
field and scored 18 pomts e1ght of
them m an 11-0 thud-quarter run
that put the No !-ranked Comets
(27-0) ahead for good
The s1xth-ranked T1gers (25-3)
who have won more g1 rls championships than any school were
demed what wmlid have been
thea seventh utle and thad m a

•
row M1llersburg West Holmes
won champ1onsh1ps from 1984 to
!986 and IS the only school With
three stra1ght guls btles
P1ckenngton
coach
Dave
Butcher was upbeat despite losmg
He sa~d no one had expected h1s
team to go so far this season
because 1t lacked a dommaung
ms1de player
I don t feel P1ckenngton lost
at all' h~ sa1d 'ThiS was a wm

w1n s1tuatxon
In Saturdays other championship games at Oh10 State Uru•
vermy's Value C1ry Arena Colum-

Piease see Finals, Pa1e 11

best tcan1 tsn t always the team the second stra1ght year
T he Gators (26 7) are 4 I m
that wms the 68 year-old con ch
the NCAA tournament under
Said
coac
h B1lly Donovan who S\ICOklahoma
St
75
Pagel1
ceeded Lon Kruger folio\\ mg h1s
Pepperdtne 67
93 76
Fred n k Jonzc n scored 2 1 pomts departure for Ilhnm s four seasons
In th e South RegiOnal 1n as thud seeded Oklah oma State tgo
Austlll Texos on Fnday North broke.: opc n :1. close ga. nu: m the
M1ke Mlikr led Flonda mth
Carolma "1ll pia) Ten neSS« Tulso second half
19 pmnts Con Bradford had 27
w1ll face SIXth seeded M1am1
Joe Adkms added 1~ pomts for pomts for Ilhnors
\\ h1ch beat th1rd se eded Olun the Cowbm s {26 b) ll randon
SOUTH
Sme 75-62
North Carohna 60,
Armstrong led l'eppetdme (15 9)
The West md M1dwcst scnufi- w1th I') pomts
Stanford 53
mls m Thursda\ In the West 111
Freshman Joseph Forte hJt two
Pc ppc rdme \\as 7-of-32 fro m
Albuquerque N M WJSconsm three pm nt range wlule Okla
hu ge th ree-pmnters 111 the closmg
w1Jl m eet LSU, and Gonzaga w1ll homa State m ade half of us 14 nunutes for e1ghth seeded North
play Purdue In the M1dwest 111 attempts
Carohna (20-13)
Auburn H1lls M1ch M1c h1gan
Forte fimshed With 17 po1nts
Duke 69, Kansas 64
State w1ll be matchep agamst
Shane Battler had 21 pmnts sparkmg a deciSive I 0-0 run and
Syracuse and Iowa State w11l face e111ht rebounds and a career-h1gh punctuatmg h1s e!Tort With a
UCLA
e1ght blocked shots for Duke (29- game-endmg dunk
EAST
Ed Cota added 10 a111m, seven
4) 111 a rematch uf the Blue DcvSeton Hall 67, Tlmple 65·0T ds' victory m the I 991 champl- po111t1 and 1even rebounda to help
Shsne wa1 7-for-11 from three- onlhlp game
the Tar Heels ~cord thesr 30th
posnt range, and Seton HaU finBoozer made the go-ahead Col· 1tmght 20-vlctory 1eason
Ished With I 5 three-pomters m 30 low 1hot w1th 53 5 1econds !eli
Dav1d Moseley 1cored 17
attempts
and stole N1ck Bradford'• pau 29 pomts for the Cardinal (27-4)
Rmm Kaukena1 added 18 second1 later to help seal coach Ttnntu" 65, Conntc:dc:u t 51
po1nts for the Pirates (22-9) Mark M1ke Krzyzewski s 50th NCAA
Tony Hams scored 18 pomts as
Karcher led Temple (27-6) w1th tournament VICtory
fourth-seeded Tennessee (26-6)
27 pomts
Kirk Hmnch had 12 po1nts for took advantage ofEI-Anun's ankle
Temple coach John Chaney Kansas (24-1 0)
InjUry
saw yet another season end WithEI-Arrun was largely meffect1ve
Flonda 93, Illinots 76
out reachmg hiS first fmal Four
Freshman Brett Nelson had 16 forth~ Huskies (25-10) He scored
"This team certamly had a lot pomts and three steals to help only three pmnts, and took JUSt
more talent and a lot more depth Honda advance to the final 16 for two shots m 13 mmutes
than any team I've had, but your

NCAA

from

WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS! - Mason basketball DIVISIOn I Ohio g1rts basketball championshiP game
players mob eac~ other on the floor 1n celebration of at Oh10 State Umvers1ty s Jerome Schottensteln
their 36 2b v1ctory over P1ckenngton Saturday 111 the Center 1n Columbus (AP )

Mall.com 400
from Pip 11

I

I

He led 188 of the 293 lap• and
fim1hed w1th an averaae 1peed of
128 076 mph Burton became the
fifth different w1nner In five race1
thll 1ea10n
Burton croued the !me 1 4 second1 ahead of Jarrett Dale Barnhardt a w1nner lm week 111
Hampton Ga was third m a
Chevrolet Tony Stewart fimshed
fourth m a Ponuac, JUSt ahead of
Jeff Burton, who talked hke a
proud brother
'Man when two members
from the same family can wm
races m Wmston Cup, that means
an awful lot Jeff md I JUSt feel
so good for Ward and those guys
Jarrett sa1d Ward Burton had
the best car most of the race
It looked like when the sun

was out we were JUSt as good,
md Jarrett who started 17th 'But
he was defimtdy stronger'
It looked hke a group of nerVOUI dr1vers early on \VOrrymiJ 1f
the cloudy 1k1es \VOU!d ram-delay
a th1rd 1tmght Darlmgton event
Jeff Burton won twice when ra1n
halted the Darbnaeon race~ lut
year
Ken Schrader, Terry Labonte
and Joe Nemechek tangled on the
first lap and, after a five-lap cautlon, Kenny Irwm spun out and
colle~ted Jeremy Mayfield and
Jerry Nadeau
In all, 15 of the first 22 laps
were slowed by caution
"People JUSt aren t usmg the1r
heads today," Nemechek sa1d
When the racers calmed down
the event was f:urly clean The
hardest h1t was taken by rookie
Dale Earnhardt Jr who lost trac
t1on commg • out of turn 3 and
tagged the mstde retammg wall

Dale Jr chmbed om unharmed
Three-tnue senes '1amp1011
Gordon had hoped that hiS pole
ru1t Fnday would s1gnal a return
to the top He fimshed e1ghth, h1s
be•t result of the ye~r. but
&amp;tretched h11 wmlen 1treak to 10
race1 heading to Bmtol, Tenn , for
the food C1ty 500 next Sunday
Earnhardt hnd hu fourth cop10 fim1h m five racc1 th11 1ea1on
and had generated a lot of excitement after last weeks VICtory by
two feet over Bobby Labonte So,
he sa1d hiS performal)ce should
have come as no surpr1se to anyone
"I don't know where anybody
sa1d I was gomg Earnhardt md
Were JUSt domg what we have to

do"
The results left few to complam
about the competition among
manufacturers There were five
Fords three Chevys and two Pont~acs m the top I 0

Bearcats
fromPagel1
showed great resolve gomg o n a
tear tha t was tou ched off by Dante
Swanson s three-pomter
In four nunu tes they reconstructed then lead to mne pomts
and C m cmnao ITever recovered
Wow d1d we play down the
stretc h
coac h B1ll Self sa1d
They re a te rn fie team eve n
W)th o ut Kenyo n There should
not be an lSteusk bcs1de th1s
Coley dommatcd th e board s
se mng a career h1g h \\lth the 16
tt:bounds
It se&lt; mni hke I \\as 111 the
nght p,hcc at tht.: n g-lu tune he

Chester deer contest winners

Buckeyes
from Page II
Hem sley fired another tluee
pmnt attempt on the next po"esSIOn to beat the shot dock and
Mano Bl and snared the long
rebound He passed to Tyler who
lut a 15 footer to m ake It 58 51
Redd

saJd I was JUSt attacking the
boards trymg to get my hands on
every ball
Enc s been domg that all year
long teammate Brandon Kurtz
sa1d Its JUSt that 1t s on a natwnal stage now
Greg Harnngton who was saddled w1th three early fouls and sat
most of the first half returned to
the ga me and energized Tulsa s
run beatmg Cmcninau s halfcourt trap on possesston after pas
semon and convertmg some easy
shots
The\ staJ t&lt;d solvmg 1t and we
got a httle tired Huggms sa1d
W&lt; had guvs not use d to playm g
th tt amou nt of mmut~.: s
It "1s the fourth stmght vear
that CuiClnn 1t1 h 1s fa1led to

advance past the first round of the
tournament Th1s time though It
was w1th Marnn seated at the end
of the bench
He was teary-eyed as Tulsa
charged to an early lead
The Golden Humcane ran off
13 stmght pmnts and bmlt a 19-7
lead That w1dened to 28-14 as the
Bearcm seemed lost under Tulsa s
barrage The Hurncane held a 2719 rebound1ng edge at halfume
but Cmcmnatl had shced the lead
to JUSt seven 31-24
Swanson and Dav1d Shelton
had 14 each for Tulsa and Tort.y
Heard added 10
After tim game people should
kno\\ who \H aru, Swanson sa1d
1 hey nught dunk of It as a fluke
We have to show 1t was not

sultel p1chd up two fouls m a
span of IH sc&lt;o nds and left Wi th
-1 ) 7 to play
A b1sket and two free throws
b) Salmons made 1t 6_~-"1 w1th

p1 ch d o ff a pass at nudcourt and
soared 111 for a dunk winch he
slammed off the back of the nm
Oh10 States Bnan Bro\\n, trallmg
the pl'y got the rebo111d a d
J
"
I
II
fnur minUte s to go md Tyler promptly ran over Hemsley for- a·
~~ded a fi eld goal to make lt 64- charge
The
Hurncanes
qu1ckly
M1anu closed the first half with mbounded and Salmons launched
a flurry
a long three pomter that beat the

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notlca
the Melge County Htllth
DeparSment, 112
E
Memorl•l Drive, Pomeroy
OH 48789
'
0. lltrgle S Lawson
Htlllh Commlttlontr
(3) 20 1 tc

PUIUC NOTICE
Tht Mtlgt County lollrd
ol HHitll Will .-lvt -led
bldt unlll 4 00 p m on
1\lesday, April 11 lor lht
ttlt of (1) Sharp SF 2035
copier, with tht following
IHtur..
20 bin tort trey
DupMX to Duplex
Simplex to Duplex
Alitomdc Fttd

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Stlltd llda will bt
.-hrtcl by tht VIllage ol
Rutllnd, Cllll'k 1 !;lfllct at
the following piAttn Chrlt Hutton, Box
420 1 M•ln Btrttt, Rutland,
OH 48775
Unlll 10.00 on Mondly,
April 3 2000
The bid Will bt opentcl on
April 4, 2000 It 12 00 p m
And rtld aloud tor tht
provlllon of work and/or

Sort

Group
Card of Thank8

Tile fmtliY ot Frank

Jll'ril willa to a:piCIII our
heulfcli dwlb for the
suJIIIOI'I a comforllhown
10 Ul duriDg the lllaas
ud loss ot our hubllld
ud father. 1'ltalW for
the llowm, cards, phoae
ails, food ud doatttloas

m1ttrl1l1 •• Itt forth In 1
bid p1ck1t which may bt
picked up at
Vllllge of Rutllnd, Cllll'kt
0111ct
Mtln Street
Rutlencl, Ohio 457711
Slid mlttrlalt •nd/or
work It In relation to 1
pro)tot to lnatlll llghUng it
the ball lllldl In Rutland,
Ohio
All Bide muat be mlrktd
"IIIID FQR BALL I'IELD
LIGHTS • The Vllllgt ql
Rutllncl rtttrvet lht rlghl
to rtJtol 1ny end/Or ell bldl
lnd/or any p1rt thereof 1nd
to Wllvt •ny lntorm1llty In
eny bid
•
II you hevt 1ny further
queellont contect Chrl*
Hutton al (740) 74,2-2554
(3) 20, 27

BICIQIIT DEER WINNERS - The Third Annyal Biggest Deer Contest sponsored by Baum Lumber of
Chester recently selected the three top winners First place went to Greg Roehrich of Copley (top photo),
with his deer weJ&amp;hln&amp;190 pounds He received a S100 gilt certificate Second place went to Tim Sm1th
of Chester (lower photo) with a deer welghmg In at 182 pounds He was awarded a $50 gift cert1f1cate
Robert Kerr of Maple Hel&amp;hts won third place (not pictured) w1th a deer we1ghmg In at 180 pounds and
was awarded a $25 g11t cert1f1cate

)

ver AM Gold Coins Proof&amp;ata

Pe1'801111ll

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F,oundl Black Female Lab No
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Otllldren Well Taken Care Of
7~9189
Found LIHII White &amp; Black Long

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nlc Parking Lot 740 446-1864

Or ?4o-«6-!5260
Lost Dogs White Lab M xed
Black /Tan Aott Weller Mix
Friendly Kids Pel Lincoln Pike

740-256-9194

70

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&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted
12 000 WEEKLY I Mailing 400
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anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Pro
~ldedt Ftush Self Add ruaad
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37011 1438 Slart lmmedlaiOiy
1501 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
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Working For Tht Government
From Home Part Time No Experl

onco Aoqulred 1 BOCH!5Nl753
$7 HR FT + BONUS
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No Cold Colling, No lo*nt~
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EX~OING TO THE
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CALL FOA AN INTEA'IIEW
t 888-237 15&amp;47 Ext 885

---

IMMEDIATE OPENIHQ
EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUIITY
Communlly SuPporl Conoultan1 In

t Ql)pl'(l Friday

.,

Al,l!lty WV clly wide sale 5/27
I 5/21 Aenl I0 xl 0 spaca on
CoUrthouse Lawn $10 or use
yoUr own Ripley location
GI'OUpllbusinessellildlvlduatsl
crafterslfood vendors Respond
ers by 411 Included In free map
marking salt locations Call R p
loy Main Stree~304)372 1637

80

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t~r: ume auct1on11r complete
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Sunday 9 AM 6 PM Mon Frl 8
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1cn Townthlp It Accepting Ap
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Al)pllctnlo Mu11 Bo At Laatl tl
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1 843-817-&lt;)522

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Income Opportunity Available 1

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Only Qualified Applicants Nttd
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32&amp; Point Pleasant wv 25550

EOE

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aurance And Vacallon fSick

ston ea!•ng center

We are now Httlng l4&gt;
lntarvlew appointments lor

oulbound loleservlca poiiiOn&amp;
No experience necessary
Earn up to $ t 5/hr

whh quanerly salery rtl'llews
Manogomontoppoo1Unmts ava i~
- 401K/Medicai/OenlaVPold
vacations avallab'e 3 Shifts daly
Flexible scheduling Start your
new career with usl

Call 800 929 5753

tor an appointment
We 1ootc lorwal'd to meattng you!
Night shift caring for elderly

Houro 7pm lo 9am Call 740 992
5023

Night lime janitor with a back
ground In stripping/waxing floors
and general office deanlng $5 40
per tlQur Must have a good drlv
lng record Responsible lor su
pervlslon of one person Experl
ence wotttlng with individuals wlth
developmental disabilities pre
ferr.ad but not a requlrtmtnt No
phone calls please Appllc.-uons
available at Meigs lndu1trles
1310 Carleton Street Syracuse

OhiO 45779
NURSES WANTED

Work Ftory'l Home tn Health Field

S500 $1 500 PT Calll88 242
15079

enllOr 740-258-1021
POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPEAI
ENCE FOA APP ANO EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT U210 8 A M 9 PM 7
OAYS ldt inc

Off Floor Price Deduction 2000
Modal 32 W•da Over $5 000 00
REAL ESTATE

eo.q

Garage Ltrgt Lot Finished
Beaemant Maintenance Frt~ l

-

*'117-IMI.

210

Buelneaa
Opportunity

''00 Per ~-tour Homeworker•
Ntodtdl Lorge Advorllolng Firm
Payo 14 For Every Volco Mall
Aotrllvtd Mako $400 $500 Evo
ryday In l'our Spo10 Tlma Llmlled
Spoco 1o888-831-84$1 (24 H11)
12 000 WMkly From Moma Pro
ClUing VIII /MitlttCird Pam
phltltl Wo Pay You S1 Por Pam
phletl Homeworktra Nttdld lm

Brochure&amp; AT HOME! Guar

recommends that you do bual
ne11 with people you know and
NOT to 11nd money lhrough the
mall until you havt lnvealfgated

lho olllrlng

ATa T • MCI • SPRINT 1 Cont

PHONE CAAD AOUTE I Maks
$1 000 S5 000 Nlk ALL CASHI
FAEE lnfol I 800 997 9888 Ex I
11 !55 (24 Hll)
AUT -BELL PAYPHDNE IITS
20 Esl Locallona (Local)
Up To $1 600 Wk
I 800-800-3470
FAEE ANT I AGING TAPE As
Seen On National TV Attire In
(1) Year Call 24 Hour Recorded

Mnaoge t 800 486 9222 Exl
1800
FRITO LAY /PEPSI /HERSHEY
SNACK ANO SOOA VENDING
ROUTE $$ All CASH BUSI
NESS$$ BUILO A BUSINESS
THAT IS All YOURS SMALL
INVESTMENT /EXCELLENT
PROFITS I 800 731 7233 EXT
1203.
MEDICAL BILLEA S1!5 $45/Hr
Medlelll Billing SOftware Company
Suk1 People To Process Medl
cal Claims From Home Training
Provided Must Own Computer 1

1100-434

5518 Ext887

MEDICAL BILLING Unllmltad In

We Are Searching For Compas

$8 915 Financing Available Is

CD ROM lnveatmsnl $4 995

slonale Prolesslonalo With A IOnd Aulomaled Msdlcal Senile
Team VIsion And A Desire To •• tnc 800 322 1138 EKt 050
Teach Personal And Community Void In KV IN CT
Skills To Individuals Wilh Menial Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli
.Aetardallon The Work Environ
dation $5 000 $200 000 Bad
ment Is Informal And Flewardlng
Cred"
0 K FH I 800 770 0092
The Requirement• Are High
EJCI
215
School Olploma /GED Valid Drlv
er's License Three Years Good NEW
AUTOMATED HOME
Orlvlng Experience And Ade
BUSINESS Ouiekly Earn A Full
quate Aulomoblle lna~rance Time Income No 5elllng Unlimll
Coverage BC S 011"" Compro tel Income Visit hrtp llwww rati,..
henslve Training In The Field Qf QUickly nollcb To See &amp; Hear
MAIDD Slarllng Salary $5 50 I Complell l'reiOnlllllon
Hour Interested Applicants Need
To Specify Position Of lnteflst
And Send R11ume To P 0 Box
All Applications Must Be Poar

Marked By 3128100 Equal Oppor
!Unlly E"!&gt;&gt;&lt;&lt;YYr
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 /HA
tNC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS SECURITY MAIN
TENANCE PAAK AANGEAS NO
EXP NEEDED FOA APP ANO
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 It 3
358S EXT f4211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS ldo inc.
WOAK FAOM HOME Are you
tired ot making your bon rich?

$600 S4 000 pVtumo I BOO 720
0326 www oz opporurnll)' corn

140

Bualneu
Trlllnlng
Clllllpollo Co- Colloga
(Cor"" CloiO To Homo)
Cell Todayl 740-448-4387
1 BOO 214 OA52
AOIJ !90*12748

150

School• /

lnatructlon
EAAN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GAEE OUICKLY Bacholora
Maatera Doctorate By Corra

IIPOndenco Based Upon Prior Ed

ucauon And Short Study Couraa
For FREE InformatiOn Booklet

Pnono CAMBRIOGE STATE
UNIVEASITY t -8()().-16

180 Wanted To Do

1492

Your

Starl Your Bustne11 Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate

740-«1-8329
3003 Brook Dr tn PT P'ltaaant 3
4 br f 800 tQ II Ill t lloor 11

lach•d gerage new roof new

httl pump now hoi tub $81 000
coli 304 174 1022{ dty1)or 304
875 11479 1 Mnlngol waokondtl

Government Sponaored Loan
Good Credit And Stead~ Income

247 512!5 Ext 1134 VOid OH KS
US NEEO CASH?? WE Pay

Caah For Remaining Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annuities! Selllemental imme
dtate Quoteslll "Nobody Beats
Our Prlcea • National Contract
Buyers 800 490 0731 Ell 101

Older Model Trataor lor ult 1 112
Bedroom Must go/beat offtr
Flratlrallor on leh Camp Conley

or IOivo m011100 (304)87!5
t83S

new

Apanment lor rent VIand Slmt
Pt Pleasant 1BA utllltlll paid

1275 per monlh (304)738-515&amp;4

.
J

t Bedroom With Llvlrtg Room .-J
Eat In Furnlar'ltd l&lt;ltcr'len Large

manta Upatllra

-'15B Second

appllanotl Mw car

pal $23 1!00 Clll 740 882 4514

1 Bedroom Near Holzer A/C

Economlcol Gu Hoal WID
Ttalltl' for n it two bedroom two Hookup Oultt Locallon $279/
bolh 14x70 7ol0 882 8U5 llltr Mo + UllhiM 740-«8-2957

tiona Independence Mor tgage

To Akl Grlndl Clmpuo 740 245
Dollvsry &amp; Sol Up ttl time Buy 5858
oro Lltlll or no Crtdll OK only ol
Oakwood Homot Citlllpollt (740)- Apartmant For Rtnl $37!5/Mo All
4-48 3093
Ulllllll! Paid Walking Olatanao

Services 1-800-84!5.0038

81Level In Spring vaney Area 3

Bodoooms 2 Balho Femlly Room
2 Cor Garage 740-448 8807
BriCk Aanch ol Bdrmo L/A ~~

Bath Baaament 2 Flreptacea
Gas Furnace C/A 3 Acraa 740

441-Q9113
Country Home 3 Bedrooms 2 112
Balhl Utlllly Flroplace Level Lol
Large Kitchen &amp; Dining Room

740 379 9887 Or 740 379 9000
For Sals By Owner 3BA 2BA

Put Your Tax Refund To Work

$499 Down Only AI Oakwood

Home1 In Barbouravll lt

304

738-3409

330 Farma for Sale
18 ACREB I POND
Beautiful meadow with pond hid
den In woods Near Jackson

360 acres +I Meigs County Sci
plo approximately 200 tillable 70
pasture 5 pond1 3 barns 2 grain
bins double wide garage Strl

0

Down I Go~n t Anld Bank Aepo s
Being Sold Nowl Financing Avail

ous calla only 740-898 82!54
I+ACAES

0.101111 800-719-3001 xtl85

House For Sale By Owner Brick
House on 2109 Mt Vernon Full
Baaement 3BFI Central Heal/Air

In the country oft SR 35 Land

Pature New 40 xSO Horae Barn
3/4 Mile Road Fronlage On 2
Roads Tractor &amp; Hay Equipment

N~e

Brick Home 3 BR 3 Balhs

Oak Cabinets Built In Dishwasher/Compaclor Central A/C Gas
Heat lnground Pool 16x32 Quiet
Neighborhood Finished Base
ment 1105 Teodora Ave (740)
448 8181 $119 000

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
(1) .....AMAZING• ...

Orywall 4BR 32x80 Ol/8r 2348
sQ It Payments low as $406 per

mo 1 1100-946 5878

(2) First Time Buyers Easy Fi
nanclng 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar
ound S200 Per Month Call 1

BOO 948

5678

(3) • •••LOOK

••

5678

(1) 1 Ooub lew de $249 Per
Month Low Down Payment 1
BOO 691-67n

(2) 14 Wlds $167 Per Monlh
Low Down Payment 1 800 691
6'].77
{3) 16x80 $254 Per Month Low
Down Pa~ment Free Air 1 BOO
14Ft X: 70Ft Shultz 3 Belrm 2

Appr01c 7 Acres Minutes From

Schools $42 ooo 00 740 448
6345

1967 Alcon mobile hOme 12x55

11900 740-742 2852

t9B1 Ventura 14x70 Smglewlde
Deck 10x8 On rented lot 2BR
tBA Gas Heat/New Furnace

$6 000

(304)-875-11319

Buildings
Build ng lor sale 114 West Sec
and Street Pomeroy 2 apart
ments 1 business fronl asking

$100 000 I 740-842 3342

Oue To Poor Health Owner• Must
Sell Ra inbow Bag Company 01

Gallipolis Selling Price $40 000

Purchaser Will Need Building
Atleast 30x30 Serious Qualified

Inquiries On~ 740-446--2359

65 acre levol lol lor sale bloCk oW
SR 7 In Tuppers Plains Includes
two rental trailers with water taps
and sewer hookups paid $30 000
74()-667 3487
5 Acres With Pbnd Partial
Woods Water &amp; Electric Avail

able $18 000 Aodnoy A"e 74D446-1951
33 Acres Apprqxlmatoly tO Acre
$99 100 Also 5 Acra LOIS
$32.000 740-388 8678

Ethica l Environmental ly Con
earned Hunter looking To Lease
Hunllng Rlghls Or Buy land 300
+Acres 304-744-1379

For Sele A Lot 200Ft By 210FI 2
114 Miloa On Sandhill Ad In PI
Pleasant Cell 740-387 7743
RENTALS
---

!4..eo

2 bedrootn 1 balh COntra!
~eady to

Moi'Oi St t 500 (740) 949-9018

.l.bandoned Home Needs Owner
Pay Small Transfer Fee &amp; Move
In 1st time Buyers Little or r\o
Crdll Ok only at OakWOOd Homes

Cltiii!OIIa 740-448-3093

Gracious living t and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Rl~eralde Apartments In Middle
port From $273 $336 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun lUes
Modern 1 Bedr oom Apartment

~

North 4th A~enue Middleport 2
room efficiency apartment depos
It and references no pe ts 740 t
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Town house
Apartmen ts
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 140 '

446 0008

•

One Bedroom furn1shed Apa rt
ment In Pt Peasant Very Clean
and N ice No pets Phone

(3041875 1386

One bedroom apartment In Mid :

74D-992 9191

Homoslead Aeally 304 675 !5540

·'

Twin Towe rs now accepting ap
plicatlons lor 1 BR HUO subsld ..
lzed apt lor elderly and handl '"'!
capped EOH (304)675-6679
;.

.

VIllage Green Apartments 2;
bedrooms total electric appllanc .,..1
es furnished laundry room facill ~
t es and close to school applies ~
lions available at off ce 740.992 ~~

--

Opponun 1y

All real estate advertls ng n
th is news~ II subject to

74().898,72«

lhe Federal F.Or Hous ng Act
of 1968 wloicn mal&lt;eo tt •lle(lal

2 Bedroom Stove Refrigerator
Water Trash Paid In Country

to advertlll "any ))reference
limitation or discrimination
based on race color rei giOn
sax familial status or national
origin pr any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or dsCfiminalk&gt;n •

Bedroom MObile Home 740 388-

Deposll +

9188

3 Bedrooms Wa ll To Wall Car
pet Central Air Gas Furnace
Nloa Yard In Gallipolis No Pets
References 740 446 2003 740
446-1409

55 Burdolle Addillon 2 Bed
s.coo piJJ&amp;

rooms 1 Bath Rent
dlposil

709 VIand Street 3 Bedroom 1

112 balh Rani S300 plus dtpos

II
Contact Beckie at E~A Town &amp;
Countr~ Real Estate Broker

(3041675-5548

ThrM bedroom lincoln Heights
1 112 baths sun porctl tease and
doi)OIII no IIOIS. 740-887 3988

420 Mobile Home•
lor Rent
1 till Condor Street Mobile Home
&amp; Lol For Sale St4 900 Will
Con1ldtr Land Contract 711l0

\.

-~

"

80().319-3323 Exl 1709

For sale or rent 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy $350 month
plus deposit will &amp;ell on contract
wlth good references no pels

'"

..r

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo • % Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details

708-00114 Or 740.388-8581

1

Rental Property Cottage Apt 2br
$250 Freshly painted eMterlor

410 Hou-lor Rent

sQ

1

Nice One Bdrm Un furnished
Apartment Range &amp; Refr g pro
vlded Water &amp; Garbage Paid
Deposit Requ red Call 740 446
4345 After 6 OOPm

1 TOO I 868 233 6694 EQual •'

1982 Wln asor 2 Bedrooms 2
Bath 1/2 Acre Land Small Out

Air iotal Electric

Furn ished 3 Roo m&amp; &amp; Ba th
Downstairs Clean No Pels Rei
erence&amp; &amp; Oaposlt Required

d~rt

Attention Developer~

Wealthy Famlliel Unloading Milt.

t991 Man1 lo n Mobile Home

Christy s Family Living apart
ments home &amp; trailer renta ls
740 99 2 4ei14 apartments a\'&amp; 1
able furnished &amp; unfurnished

992 0165

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

SFREE CASH NOWS From

Wlndlalls 847 A SECONO AVE
13150 NEW YOAK NEW YORK 1985 Na&amp;hua MobHe Home
.tx70 With 11121 Fa ctory Pull
10017
Out 3 8R 1 1f2 BA Central Au
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALl. TME Appliances Total Elec 2 porch
CAEDIT EXPEIITS LICENSED I 11 E11cetlen1 Condition $10 000
BONDED COAAECT /AEMOVE neg (304)675 2034 lea~• MesBAD CAEDIT BANKAUPTCY ltgl
LAWSUITS JUOQEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1 1$87 Oak d Mob le Homo
14x70 2BR ~BA on rented prl
1500-422 1588
vatt tot
Gallipolis Farr~
CAEOIT AEPAIAI AS SEEN ON 1304)878 n92 No Land Contract
TVI Erllt Bad Crodll Legally
Froa Info. 88W5f.2!5e0

Opportunlly

New Haven one bedroom fur
nlshed apartment depos1t and
references no pets 740 992
0165
....

6

building 127 000 740-44$-{)785

Hou~ng

340 Bualneaa and

$310/ Mo Pluo Oopoall Alao 2

Make Ollar 740 446- 2518 Aller

2888 Equa

740-44fH)390

lake Mobile Home Ideal For
Housing Campg ound Estate

5 Bedrooms 2 Baths over 2 000
sq ft for len than $450 mo
FAEE Delivery &amp; Sal 1 800 948

4/1/00 74().245-1100
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES !52 Wotlwood

740-388 9130

(3041875 2917

House for sate two story 2 3
bedroomS one bath Middleport
aslc:lng $29 coo No down pay
tnent financing available to quail
fled cant 800-388 8194

To Col lege Vary Nice Avall1b le

740 44&amp;-1519

aDit Cali Nowl 1 800 355 0024 Contract available 112 500+ 1
EJCI 8040
(BOO) 213-8385
HOMES FROM $188 30 /MO 1 Ideal Location 40 Acres Hay &amp;
3 SA Aepos / Foreclosures Fee
4% Down For Llsltings JPaymtn1

2 Bedroom Apartment Adja ce nt

Drive fro m $289 to $370 Walle to
shop &amp; mov ies Call 740 446

(740) 286-0081

large ramuy room &amp; office new
roof gutte ring t car garage
2912 Anniston Drive Pt Pleas

ant {304187!5 2608
FOAECLOSED HOMES Low Or

Bonk Aopo 1499 + Movo In Froo

1st Monii'IS Rent References Re
qu lred In Alo Grande 740 245-

lions 01 Oolll11 To Holp MlnlmTM'

:

Eeay :rarm1

8371
2 Bedrooms

Their Taxes Write lmmedlellly

Mason 2 b(t 2 ba 1ratter $295 a
mon +dep rei req Hud accept •

Encloud Porch S2801Mo 2
Bodroom Largo LIVII1fl Room Ell
Frtt Dtllvory I Stl Up 1tl Tlmt In Furnllh td Kllchtn $210/Mo
auy.,. Little or no Clldtt OK only Newly Oe cotratad loth AAartt

Doublawlde Atpo

198B 14x70 SchUlt 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths CA 1982 14Jx60 Man1lon
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath HP/CA

"""nalionolcon~ com

2br private lot near school nlca ~
clean Porche&amp; Good condition
1285 Hartlord (304)882 2389

llpm

220 Money to Loan

OK Consumera Financial 1 800

2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Inside VII
lage RIO Grande $300/Mo Wa ,j
lOr &amp; T""'h Pad 740 446-2422
~

AoQulrod Call For More lnlorma
tlon And For OlllOr Finane ng Ot&gt;

Balhs Wilh 7 X20 Expando CiA

Debt Consolidation Mortgagts

740-446-4107

440 Apartment•
Prlc8d lrd00e5 Complele SaiUp
Oltlsr Specials
for Rent
J
Single As Low AI $149 00
7
ed::roo=:m~apa:;:rt~mo~n::::l8~fur ~
Montn Sect onata AI Low As 71-::o:nd:;-:;-2-;:b:::
$289 00 Monlh Comt In Or Call nlshed and unfurntthed aacurttytt1
deposit rtqulred no ~111 ?40
Fo r Pre Approval• 1·111 Ill
992 2218
0187 Local
Trade-Ina Art Also

furnace

No Oown Peymon1 Aoqulrld With

891 6777

And Aellnanclng Crsdll Problems

218 740 256-8202

Avenue Qalllpo ll s Wl1tr &amp;
(740)-«1-3083
Tralh Furnllhtd Rtfertnce1 a.
ThrH btdroom IOIIIIy rtmodlltd curlly Dtpotll 740 742 2837 At
tnaldt and out tl'llltr and lot new lOr 5 PM

38A Homo For Salo or Aonl Gal
11!0111 Feny Aru {304)175-1106
AZEAO% DOWN LOANI

Spring Valley Pia,. Call 740-4-48
0101
SS Auto Loan• Personal Loans

:

2 Bedroom Furnished Mobile~
Holnt S3001Mo Plus Electric &amp;
Heat $100 Depos it located On
Hannan Trace Road t M1le Off 1

ed 304-875-7793

ar Otkwcod Homtl GIIIIPOIII

f INANCii\l

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes ~

S2e().S300 740-992 2167

Homes Are 3 Bedrooms /2 Baths

$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CAED
IT ~EEOED I GOV t FORE
CLOSUAESl GUAAANTEEO AP
::-~~;,;...:;.;...;;_;;.;.:;____ 1 PAOVALI 1 800 380 4620 EXT
Slay AI Homo Mom wtnllng 10 8508
do ballytllllng In my homo Ael
oroncot Available (304)575 3 Bedroom Brick Homo Ooubl•

Will lllr down old bullollngo lor
lu-ln 1111 Lton/1'1. PLaaHnt

2000 Model

$42 61700

"'-le
310 Homlll for ~

Will ln11111 vinyl oldlng ond gul
lOll U!"rlencod Wtll boll Olh
er ratll Fr 11 txUmatta
(304)171-791B1(304)175-7053

Fl

$41 000 00 Olf

Nud An Electrician Or Carpent

come Potential No Experience
Nec111ary Fret lnrormallon &amp;

As Needed

Sq

or? Beal High Prlcu All work
Gaurantaadl Free Estlm1tesl
740-448-2947
Aoollng, plumbing &amp; Odd jObl
740-9112-0501 alk lor Terry

Thru 8 A M Mon Sleep Over
Required 3) Emergency Relief
(Suballtutes) Hours Scheduled

804 Jackoon OH 45840 0604

MPienni,..TIs pleased to announce tiB
Gland opening of Ill now Wal

010 Saelca DriVer For Ttam Op--

DATA ENTAY Natlonwldt BUiing

Doyllme Hours Off Position BonaTlmo 2) 33 Hrs /Wk 8 AM Sal

Interested In Buying Or Selling
Avon? Call Malanie Your Local
lndeptndenl Sales Represents

"MARCH MADNESS SALE"

aniHd FAEE Supplioa 61011 lm
modiOioly t 800-489 9477 EJCI 88
(24 H11)
INOTICEI
OHIO VALI.EY PUBLISHING CO

Appoln1mant To Come Ta N11h

-.globolhoalthcorp com
UP TO $20 000 $45 000 II Par

lng

77&amp;t St Rt 1

PROCTDRVILU: OH 45118
(NexiTo Foodrow)

Off )byr Prq $45 478 00
OH Floor Price Oeduchon

•
•m==n:-rAt:::he~n,:,s,.;a,:,n::,d;.Po;,..,m.,.sr"oy-.,2•

2 BedfQO m Mobile Home In Ka ,
nauga $315/Mo Plus Utiltles

FLEET'f/OOD HOMES

TUIINED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unle&amp;s Wo Wlnl
1-8885823345

modlalolyl All Malorials SuAPIIadl
Ptychacko MtiiOd Frldlytl ,Ctll
f•B00-572-8485
U 000 WEEKLYI Moil ing 400

STAY HOMII MAKE MONEY
HELPING PEOPLE AECEIVE
GOVEANMENT
REFUNDS
FROM ~OME FAEE OETAILSI
(2A Hr Aecordod Monagt) t
800-725 2417 EICI 6048
TAKE BACK YOUR LIFEI Bo

Theraw Setting Compollllve Sal

Don T Waste Vour Time Quahfy
By Phone New SW Or OW 1
888 736 3332

Tlmo Apply Topol Furnlluro Co
151 5ocond A - Clllllpolla.
IINGEAII GOIPIL CLEAN
COUNTRY and EAIY LIITININGI Call t 100 488 8184 For

FllktPrtlemld

Shilley Speall 304 875 1429

JN!n Cnlolc 740-245 5747

2 Week Paid COL Train
lng No Experience NHdld Earn

Record Produc•r• And Concert
Prornotrta Internet www wc1n IC

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell

Pomeroy

Ori~ers

Overbrook Center hal part lima
poalllona avellable lor AN a &amp;
LPN 1 all 1hlfta tor more lntorma
lion P111110 11op &amp; Nl 0U1 an application Of can 7..0.982-8472 EOE

(740)-«6 3093

Gailipol~

Call (7401992 2451 lor mora in

arv

940-7424
ATTN POMEROY POSIII po!l

&amp; VIcinity

!ormation

$500 +IWk Plus Bonu&amp;~s Com
missions Benefits Retail Expert
ence And Women E.rcat ,Mini
mum 2 Years Collage Degree A
Plus We Train For Paraonal And

Opportunlly Slarllng Salary 01

www stayhomeblz com 1 800

Pt. Pleaunt

OAIVEAS TAKE HOME MOI'1E
BE HOME MOREl Avorago 1999

ville Al\d Audlllon For Mojor

My Children Come To My Olflce

Iunday a Monday odlllon-

Organist Wanted Small Epiaco
pa l Church seeking Competent
Musician to lead music program

ttanspo&lt;Lcom

Brand New 3 Bedroom• 2 Baths
Only S2331Mo Won 1 Laalt Hwry
1st time Buyers LitUe Of no Cradil
OK Only at Oakwood Home• In

lreeldrug lrao workplaoo

aiUon Available For Outpatient

Typing Groat Poyl CALL 1 800
795-0380 EJCI 1201 (24 Hrs)
ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME

dly before the •d 11 to run

Operations Manager for a CAble/
Communications Company Sue
ceaatul candidate muat have ex
perlence In both technical and
business fields good commun1
cation skllla and be able to mo
Uvate Olt'ltrs Pteaae submit re
1ume clo MU30 Point Pleaaant
Aagl&amp;tar 200 Main Street Polnl
Pleasant WV 25550 Succesalul
candidate will undergo drug
screening and background
check Excellent benertta aUtr
probation period EOE Smo ke

nonexpress com Call For Details

Wage Was $45 255 www roehl

lor Rent

for Sale

Position excelltnl Management

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEtt Crafla

All V.rcl Saln Must Be Paid In

Slart AI 34e Ml 15 Yr + Exp
33&lt; Ml /4Yr 32C Ml 13 Yr 31 e
Ml 12 Yr 30e Ml /1 Yr 29C Ml
16 Mos I Yr 28C Ml 16 Mos Or
L111 Trainee Or 1 Mo Exp $350

Your Home Compuler For Great

Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing

Advance Ooadllnt t OOpm tho

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And Assistant Manager Wanted
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JIIJebelle for the mal.
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This newspaper wit! not
knowingly accept
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which la In violation of thi!t
law Our readers are hereby
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are available on an equal
opponun~ basis

•
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Trailer lot for rent In Middleport

loklng appQcallons 740-992 8145

.norepm

'
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�•
Monday, March 20, 2000

•

The Dally Sentinel

• Page

B3

Monday, March 20, ~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..... 82 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Mason, Hartley, Regina, Hiland daim Ohio girls' cage crown~
BY TIM PUET
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) After 102 v1crones m four years

Mason won the game 1t wanted mgton 36-25 to wm the state for low sconng
The VICtory ended a frustranng
DIVISIOn I g1rls basketball champimost
The Comets defeated P1cker-1 onship m a game that set a record span KJ "hJCh the Comets seemed
to wm e""rythmg but a championship They lost 111 the ntle game
to Wadsworth 111 1997 and P1cker111gton last year and were beaten
by Dayton Chanunade-Juhenne
111 a 1998 reg1onal champ10nsh1p
game
The combmed 61 po111tS" by
both teams broke the DIVISIOn I
utle game record of 62, set 111
1979 when Akron St V111cent-St
Mary beat Barberton 35 27
We take a lot of pnde 111 our
defense and 1f ther&lt; s another team
that plays as good a defense as we

do 1t s P1cker111gton so we pretry
much expected a defens1ve battle"
Mason coach Gerry Lackey sa~d
The stlfhng defense combmed
w1th a sparkhng performance by
M1chelle Munoz, who rece1ved
the states Ms Basketball award
earlier m the week
Munoz was 9 for 13 from the
field and scored 18 pomts e1ght of
them m an 11-0 thud-quarter run
that put the No !-ranked Comets
(27-0) ahead for good
The s1xth-ranked T1gers (25-3)
who have won more g1 rls championships than any school were
demed what wmlid have been
thea seventh utle and thad m a

•
row M1llersburg West Holmes
won champ1onsh1ps from 1984 to
!986 and IS the only school With
three stra1ght guls btles
P1ckenngton
coach
Dave
Butcher was upbeat despite losmg
He sa~d no one had expected h1s
team to go so far this season
because 1t lacked a dommaung
ms1de player
I don t feel P1ckenngton lost
at all' h~ sa1d 'ThiS was a wm

w1n s1tuatxon
In Saturdays other championship games at Oh10 State Uru•
vermy's Value C1ry Arena Colum-

Piease see Finals, Pa1e 11

best tcan1 tsn t always the team the second stra1ght year
T he Gators (26 7) are 4 I m
that wms the 68 year-old con ch
the NCAA tournament under
Said
coac
h B1lly Donovan who S\ICOklahoma
St
75
Pagel1
ceeded Lon Kruger folio\\ mg h1s
Pepperdtne 67
93 76
Fred n k Jonzc n scored 2 1 pomts departure for Ilhnm s four seasons
In th e South RegiOnal 1n as thud seeded Oklah oma State tgo
Austlll Texos on Fnday North broke.: opc n :1. close ga. nu: m the
M1ke Mlikr led Flonda mth
Carolma "1ll pia) Ten neSS« Tulso second half
19 pmnts Con Bradford had 27
w1ll face SIXth seeded M1am1
Joe Adkms added 1~ pomts for pomts for Ilhnors
\\ h1ch beat th1rd se eded Olun the Cowbm s {26 b) ll randon
SOUTH
Sme 75-62
North Carohna 60,
Armstrong led l'eppetdme (15 9)
The West md M1dwcst scnufi- w1th I') pomts
Stanford 53
mls m Thursda\ In the West 111
Freshman Joseph Forte hJt two
Pc ppc rdme \\as 7-of-32 fro m
Albuquerque N M WJSconsm three pm nt range wlule Okla
hu ge th ree-pmnters 111 the closmg
w1Jl m eet LSU, and Gonzaga w1ll homa State m ade half of us 14 nunutes for e1ghth seeded North
play Purdue In the M1dwest 111 attempts
Carohna (20-13)
Auburn H1lls M1ch M1c h1gan
Forte fimshed With 17 po1nts
Duke 69, Kansas 64
State w1ll be matchep agamst
Shane Battler had 21 pmnts sparkmg a deciSive I 0-0 run and
Syracuse and Iowa State w11l face e111ht rebounds and a career-h1gh punctuatmg h1s e!Tort With a
UCLA
e1ght blocked shots for Duke (29- game-endmg dunk
EAST
Ed Cota added 10 a111m, seven
4) 111 a rematch uf the Blue DcvSeton Hall 67, Tlmple 65·0T ds' victory m the I 991 champl- po111t1 and 1even rebounda to help
Shsne wa1 7-for-11 from three- onlhlp game
the Tar Heels ~cord thesr 30th
posnt range, and Seton HaU finBoozer made the go-ahead Col· 1tmght 20-vlctory 1eason
Ished With I 5 three-pomters m 30 low 1hot w1th 53 5 1econds !eli
Dav1d Moseley 1cored 17
attempts
and stole N1ck Bradford'• pau 29 pomts for the Cardinal (27-4)
Rmm Kaukena1 added 18 second1 later to help seal coach Ttnntu" 65, Conntc:dc:u t 51
po1nts for the Pirates (22-9) Mark M1ke Krzyzewski s 50th NCAA
Tony Hams scored 18 pomts as
Karcher led Temple (27-6) w1th tournament VICtory
fourth-seeded Tennessee (26-6)
27 pomts
Kirk Hmnch had 12 po1nts for took advantage ofEI-Anun's ankle
Temple coach John Chaney Kansas (24-1 0)
InjUry
saw yet another season end WithEI-Arrun was largely meffect1ve
Flonda 93, Illinots 76
out reachmg hiS first fmal Four
Freshman Brett Nelson had 16 forth~ Huskies (25-10) He scored
"This team certamly had a lot pomts and three steals to help only three pmnts, and took JUSt
more talent and a lot more depth Honda advance to the final 16 for two shots m 13 mmutes
than any team I've had, but your

NCAA

from

WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS! - Mason basketball DIVISIOn I Ohio g1rts basketball championshiP game
players mob eac~ other on the floor 1n celebration of at Oh10 State Umvers1ty s Jerome Schottensteln
their 36 2b v1ctory over P1ckenngton Saturday 111 the Center 1n Columbus (AP )

Mall.com 400
from Pip 11

I

I

He led 188 of the 293 lap• and
fim1hed w1th an averaae 1peed of
128 076 mph Burton became the
fifth different w1nner In five race1
thll 1ea10n
Burton croued the !me 1 4 second1 ahead of Jarrett Dale Barnhardt a w1nner lm week 111
Hampton Ga was third m a
Chevrolet Tony Stewart fimshed
fourth m a Ponuac, JUSt ahead of
Jeff Burton, who talked hke a
proud brother
'Man when two members
from the same family can wm
races m Wmston Cup, that means
an awful lot Jeff md I JUSt feel
so good for Ward and those guys
Jarrett sa1d Ward Burton had
the best car most of the race
It looked like when the sun

was out we were JUSt as good,
md Jarrett who started 17th 'But
he was defimtdy stronger'
It looked hke a group of nerVOUI dr1vers early on \VOrrymiJ 1f
the cloudy 1k1es \VOU!d ram-delay
a th1rd 1tmght Darlmgton event
Jeff Burton won twice when ra1n
halted the Darbnaeon race~ lut
year
Ken Schrader, Terry Labonte
and Joe Nemechek tangled on the
first lap and, after a five-lap cautlon, Kenny Irwm spun out and
colle~ted Jeremy Mayfield and
Jerry Nadeau
In all, 15 of the first 22 laps
were slowed by caution
"People JUSt aren t usmg the1r
heads today," Nemechek sa1d
When the racers calmed down
the event was f:urly clean The
hardest h1t was taken by rookie
Dale Earnhardt Jr who lost trac
t1on commg • out of turn 3 and
tagged the mstde retammg wall

Dale Jr chmbed om unharmed
Three-tnue senes '1amp1011
Gordon had hoped that hiS pole
ru1t Fnday would s1gnal a return
to the top He fimshed e1ghth, h1s
be•t result of the ye~r. but
&amp;tretched h11 wmlen 1treak to 10
race1 heading to Bmtol, Tenn , for
the food C1ty 500 next Sunday
Earnhardt hnd hu fourth cop10 fim1h m five racc1 th11 1ea1on
and had generated a lot of excitement after last weeks VICtory by
two feet over Bobby Labonte So,
he sa1d hiS performal)ce should
have come as no surpr1se to anyone
"I don't know where anybody
sa1d I was gomg Earnhardt md
Were JUSt domg what we have to

do"
The results left few to complam
about the competition among
manufacturers There were five
Fords three Chevys and two Pont~acs m the top I 0

Bearcats
fromPagel1
showed great resolve gomg o n a
tear tha t was tou ched off by Dante
Swanson s three-pomter
In four nunu tes they reconstructed then lead to mne pomts
and C m cmnao ITever recovered
Wow d1d we play down the
stretc h
coac h B1ll Self sa1d
They re a te rn fie team eve n
W)th o ut Kenyo n There should
not be an lSteusk bcs1de th1s
Coley dommatcd th e board s
se mng a career h1g h \\lth the 16
tt:bounds
It se&lt; mni hke I \\as 111 the
nght p,hcc at tht.: n g-lu tune he

Chester deer contest winners

Buckeyes
from Page II
Hem sley fired another tluee
pmnt attempt on the next po"esSIOn to beat the shot dock and
Mano Bl and snared the long
rebound He passed to Tyler who
lut a 15 footer to m ake It 58 51
Redd

saJd I was JUSt attacking the
boards trymg to get my hands on
every ball
Enc s been domg that all year
long teammate Brandon Kurtz
sa1d Its JUSt that 1t s on a natwnal stage now
Greg Harnngton who was saddled w1th three early fouls and sat
most of the first half returned to
the ga me and energized Tulsa s
run beatmg Cmcninau s halfcourt trap on possesston after pas
semon and convertmg some easy
shots
The\ staJ t&lt;d solvmg 1t and we
got a httle tired Huggms sa1d
W&lt; had guvs not use d to playm g
th tt amou nt of mmut~.: s
It "1s the fourth stmght vear
that CuiClnn 1t1 h 1s fa1led to

advance past the first round of the
tournament Th1s time though It
was w1th Marnn seated at the end
of the bench
He was teary-eyed as Tulsa
charged to an early lead
The Golden Humcane ran off
13 stmght pmnts and bmlt a 19-7
lead That w1dened to 28-14 as the
Bearcm seemed lost under Tulsa s
barrage The Hurncane held a 2719 rebound1ng edge at halfume
but Cmcmnatl had shced the lead
to JUSt seven 31-24
Swanson and Dav1d Shelton
had 14 each for Tulsa and Tort.y
Heard added 10
After tim game people should
kno\\ who \H aru, Swanson sa1d
1 hey nught dunk of It as a fluke
We have to show 1t was not

sultel p1chd up two fouls m a
span of IH sc&lt;o nds and left Wi th
-1 ) 7 to play
A b1sket and two free throws
b) Salmons made 1t 6_~-"1 w1th

p1 ch d o ff a pass at nudcourt and
soared 111 for a dunk winch he
slammed off the back of the nm
Oh10 States Bnan Bro\\n, trallmg
the pl'y got the rebo111d a d
J
"
I
II
fnur minUte s to go md Tyler promptly ran over Hemsley for- a·
~~ded a fi eld goal to make lt 64- charge
The
Hurncanes
qu1ckly
M1anu closed the first half with mbounded and Salmons launched
a flurry
a long three pomter that beat the

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notlca
the Melge County Htllth
DeparSment, 112
E
Memorl•l Drive, Pomeroy
OH 48789
'
0. lltrgle S Lawson
Htlllh Commlttlontr
(3) 20 1 tc

PUIUC NOTICE
Tht Mtlgt County lollrd
ol HHitll Will .-lvt -led
bldt unlll 4 00 p m on
1\lesday, April 11 lor lht
ttlt of (1) Sharp SF 2035
copier, with tht following
IHtur..
20 bin tort trey
DupMX to Duplex
Simplex to Duplex
Alitomdc Fttd

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Stlltd llda will bt
.-hrtcl by tht VIllage ol
Rutllnd, Cllll'k 1 !;lfllct at
the following piAttn Chrlt Hutton, Box
420 1 M•ln Btrttt, Rutland,
OH 48775
Unlll 10.00 on Mondly,
April 3 2000
The bid Will bt opentcl on
April 4, 2000 It 12 00 p m
And rtld aloud tor tht
provlllon of work and/or

Sort

Group
Card of Thank8

Tile fmtliY ot Frank

Jll'ril willa to a:piCIII our
heulfcli dwlb for the
suJIIIOI'I a comforllhown
10 Ul duriDg the lllaas
ud loss ot our hubllld
ud father. 1'ltalW for
the llowm, cards, phoae
ails, food ud doatttloas

m1ttrl1l1 •• Itt forth In 1
bid p1ck1t which may bt
picked up at
Vllllge of Rutllnd, Cllll'kt
0111ct
Mtln Street
Rutlencl, Ohio 457711
Slid mlttrlalt •nd/or
work It In relation to 1
pro)tot to lnatlll llghUng it
the ball lllldl In Rutland,
Ohio
All Bide muat be mlrktd
"IIIID FQR BALL I'IELD
LIGHTS • The Vllllgt ql
Rutllncl rtttrvet lht rlghl
to rtJtol 1ny end/Or ell bldl
lnd/or any p1rt thereof 1nd
to Wllvt •ny lntorm1llty In
eny bid
•
II you hevt 1ny further
queellont contect Chrl*
Hutton al (740) 74,2-2554
(3) 20, 27

BICIQIIT DEER WINNERS - The Third Annyal Biggest Deer Contest sponsored by Baum Lumber of
Chester recently selected the three top winners First place went to Greg Roehrich of Copley (top photo),
with his deer weJ&amp;hln&amp;190 pounds He received a S100 gilt certificate Second place went to Tim Sm1th
of Chester (lower photo) with a deer welghmg In at 182 pounds He was awarded a $50 gift cert1f1cate
Robert Kerr of Maple Hel&amp;hts won third place (not pictured) w1th a deer we1ghmg In at 180 pounds and
was awarded a $25 g11t cert1f1cate

)

ver AM Gold Coins Proof&amp;ata

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30 Announcement•
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btrlhip Or Timeshare?" We 11
Take ltl Amtrlcaa Moll Sue
ceaaful Campground And Time
lhlre Atult Cltarlnghou11 Call
RtiOrt Sates International 1 8()0..
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740-592 11142
Ouall1y clolhlng and houoehold
lttml $1 00 bag tilt every
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F\iee Roltweller Pup Mala To

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740-2111-9123
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Beagle Aaccoon Aoad 740 « 1
0&lt;17
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homes only Will be ready In
till'" lor Eao10r (304)875-6048

F,oundl Black Female Lab No
Cpllar Very Friendly lo~es
Otllldren Well Taken Care Of
7~9189
Found LIHII White &amp; Black Long

Haired Cog No Collar Holw Cli
nlc Parking Lot 740 446-1864

Or ?4o-«6-!5260
Lost Dogs White Lab M xed
Black /Tan Aott Weller Mix
Friendly Kids Pel Lincoln Pike

740-256-9194

70

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&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted
12 000 WEEKLY I Mailing 400
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37011 1438 Slart lmmedlaiOiy
1501 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
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11500 E"!&gt;'- Compllny
In Butl- 18 '!Nil
EX~OING TO THE
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For MQrt lnlormellon

CALL FOA AN INTEA'IIEW
t 888-237 15&amp;47 Ext 885

---

IMMEDIATE OPENIHQ
EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUIITY
Communlly SuPporl Conoultan1 In

t Ql)pl'(l Friday

.,

Al,l!lty WV clly wide sale 5/27
I 5/21 Aenl I0 xl 0 spaca on
CoUrthouse Lawn $10 or use
yoUr own Ripley location
GI'OUpllbusinessellildlvlduatsl
crafterslfood vendors Respond
ers by 411 Included In free map
marking salt locations Call R p
loy Main Stree~304)372 1637

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Nowl Cell I 800 281 4ee3 Dllf'l I
lOll
IAIIN IXTAA MONIY
Dollvtrl"fj Tllo 01\lo \'lilly
Telephone Dlroctory
"'"
- An
..lnoulld
18 \WallVthlcle
Or
OldorWitl1
For Moro lnlormallon PIOIH Cell
1-8()().2&gt;17-4708
Full Time Aehabllltallon Aldo Po

Forma Mly Bl Ob~·~~~4'JI;hr1~~~;~1bwnthlp
Geragt
••
Ald,t Aoad
Bt~
Tllo Hou11 ol 00 AM And
I 00 A M Mondty Through Frl
dly Or 8y Calling 140 « t 5123
Or 740 &lt;148 9415 To Makl Olhor

-n

Arrlngementa
Dobbll Hl.!lhtt. Clorlc
1414 Qoor;tl CIIOk Aood
CitUj&gt;OIIt OH 45131

Saltlporton Notdtd RtiOII Fur
nlture Immediate OPining Part

.....

1 843-817-&lt;)522

}.

-

"QOV T POSTA~ JOIS" Up
To $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
Frse Call For Appllcallon IExaml
nation Information Federal Hire

Full Benelil8 I 800 598 41504 Ex

ten alan 1 522 (8 A M
CST)

~e

PM

I 00 OVEAWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDED! Lose 5 200+ Lbs Safe
Natural Doctor Recommended
Income Opportunity Available 1

Exceptional Fringe Benellt
Package E111perlenca In Maalth

Only Qualified Applicants Nttd
Apply To Holzer Clinic Human
Relations Department 90 Jack

aon Pike Gallipolis Ohio 45631
1562 Fax To 740 448 5532 Or
Call 740 448 !5189 Equal Oppor
IUrllly Employer
Full Time /Part Time 011k Clerk
Positions Available App~ In Per
son At Budget Inn 260 Jackson
Pika Gallipolis No Phone Calla

Your Own Bosal Earn An Extra

S500 $1 ~00 PT Or $2 000
$1 500 FT Per Monlh 100 331
OA27

Please

Hell&gt; Wanled
Managemeni/Sales clark&amp; lor lhe
new Smoker Friendly Slort CIP1lr&gt;

Year Earning Potential Dr's Nltd
People To Process Claims You
Can Work From Home We Train
MUST Own Computer /Modem 1

soon In me Walmart Center

Full liMe and Part lime Posll~no
available RIIOII lxperienCI llllp
lui bul not necoiiBr,&lt; We .,.
looldng klr Pllllaant UUSIWOrthy
people wilh a Friendly Smile Now
acoepllng epplicallona 5end re
sumo lo Smoloer Friendly PO eo.
4428 Parkersburg WV 26104

889-332 !l0t5 Ext 1700 /Dally
UAGENTLY NEEOEO plasma
donors eam $35 to $45 tor 2 or 3
hours wMkl~ Call Sara Tee 740592 8851
WANTED 42 People To Lou Up
To 30 lbs In 30 Days All Nalural
Doctor Recommended

100%

creation Oftlce 518 Second Ave

12 30 Or
9 OOPm M-trl Carry Pager 0 :!Ad
Weekend Resume To P 0 Bo)C

lions Must Be Turned In By Frl
day March 24th

GuaraniHd Call 1 877-&lt;114 THIN
Or 'lftiW IZ2Bihln eorn
WANTED Buckeyo Communlly
Services CurronUy Ha&amp; Openings
I~ MilOt Counly
1) 40 Hrs /Wk 3 ~M Mon Tllru 8

HONEST INCOMEI Help Paoplo

A M S•t Steep Over Required

Cerlilicalion Is Required For Lila

guards

Appllcallons May Be

Pocked Up AI The Parks And Ae
nue Gallipolis Ohio All Applica
Are You Connected? Internet
Users Needed I $25 75 IHr P1' 1

FT 888 491 9224 www work oul

ol your-home com.

Are You Connected? Internet
Users Needed ! $350 $500 Per

Everyday Earn S500 S1 500 PT
S2 000 $4 500 FT
Call 888 842 15078
ATTENTION WORK FAOM
HOME Earn $100 $1 100 PT I
Mo $2 000 S4 500 + PT /Mo

lions clerksl earner&amp;/ sorters No
exper ence rtqulred Benel1ts For
exam salary &amp; testing Information

can 1 (630) 838 9243 exl 71!51
Bem 8pm 7 days

Ann Work From Home Earn Up

To $2 000 /Pari Time SIO 000
Full Tim&amp; Full Training Provided

Call For A Froa Bookltl 1 888
11'9-2256

Avon Write Your Own Paycheck
Unlimited Earnings Call 1 800
551 4801 Independent Repre
santti\18

COL llflvar Nlltdad Part Time Local Wages Based On Experl
ence Send Resume To P: 0. Box
117 Bklwell OH 45814
Certified Nurte Aldea Rotaling
ahlfts Intermediate care center
West VIrginia certification r•
qulred Point Pleasant Center
State Routt 62 Route 1 Box
32&amp; Point Pleasant wv 25550

EOE

Help Wanted

Medical

MLT

(ASCP Aegillered Or Eligible) For

Local

Laboratory

33 Gallipolis Ohio 45831

Receive Government Refunds
From Home Free Detall1 1 890-

966 3599 Ext

260 I

live AI 740-256-9285

Landscaping laborer wanted
must have valid driver s license

can 740-949-1701

log loader operator &amp; tlmbtr cut
tar needed must have uparl

enco call740-985-4481

•

Manager /Sales Fine Jewelry
Full Time With Beneflll Retail
Sales And Computer E.11perlence
Preferred Apply Acqu isitions

151 5econd Awtnue Qalilpolis
MEDICAL BILLING Grsal Earn

ing Polen! all Full Training /Com

puler Aeq d 888 880 8893 Ext

4320

SarVice Staka A. Full /Part Time

Mt&lt;llcal BMier s,lory AI $481( Par
Year PC Required No Experl

onct NoodOd Will Train Call 1
888-&amp;10 5724

Uta Include Health fDental In
aurance And Vacallon fSick

ston ea!•ng center

We are now Httlng l4&gt;
lntarvlew appointments lor

oulbound loleservlca poiiiOn&amp;
No experience necessary
Earn up to $ t 5/hr

whh quanerly salery rtl'llews
Manogomontoppoo1Unmts ava i~
- 401K/Medicai/OenlaVPold
vacations avallab'e 3 Shifts daly
Flexible scheduling Start your
new career with usl

Call 800 929 5753

tor an appointment
We 1ootc lorwal'd to meattng you!
Night shift caring for elderly

Houro 7pm lo 9am Call 740 992
5023

Night lime janitor with a back
ground In stripping/waxing floors
and general office deanlng $5 40
per tlQur Must have a good drlv
lng record Responsible lor su
pervlslon of one person Experl
ence wotttlng with individuals wlth
developmental disabilities pre
ferr.ad but not a requlrtmtnt No
phone calls please Appllc.-uons
available at Meigs lndu1trles
1310 Carleton Street Syracuse

OhiO 45779
NURSES WANTED

Work Ftory'l Home tn Health Field

S500 $1 500 PT Calll88 242
15079

enllOr 740-258-1021
POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPEAI
ENCE FOA APP ANO EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT U210 8 A M 9 PM 7
OAYS ldt inc

Off Floor Price Deduction 2000
Modal 32 W•da Over $5 000 00
REAL ESTATE

eo.q

Garage Ltrgt Lot Finished
Beaemant Maintenance Frt~ l

-

*'117-IMI.

210

Buelneaa
Opportunity

''00 Per ~-tour Homeworker•
Ntodtdl Lorge Advorllolng Firm
Payo 14 For Every Volco Mall
Aotrllvtd Mako $400 $500 Evo
ryday In l'our Spo10 Tlma Llmlled
Spoco 1o888-831-84$1 (24 H11)
12 000 WMkly From Moma Pro
ClUing VIII /MitlttCird Pam
phltltl Wo Pay You S1 Por Pam
phletl Homeworktra Nttdld lm

Brochure&amp; AT HOME! Guar

recommends that you do bual
ne11 with people you know and
NOT to 11nd money lhrough the
mall until you havt lnvealfgated

lho olllrlng

ATa T • MCI • SPRINT 1 Cont

PHONE CAAD AOUTE I Maks
$1 000 S5 000 Nlk ALL CASHI
FAEE lnfol I 800 997 9888 Ex I
11 !55 (24 Hll)
AUT -BELL PAYPHDNE IITS
20 Esl Locallona (Local)
Up To $1 600 Wk
I 800-800-3470
FAEE ANT I AGING TAPE As
Seen On National TV Attire In
(1) Year Call 24 Hour Recorded

Mnaoge t 800 486 9222 Exl
1800
FRITO LAY /PEPSI /HERSHEY
SNACK ANO SOOA VENDING
ROUTE $$ All CASH BUSI
NESS$$ BUILO A BUSINESS
THAT IS All YOURS SMALL
INVESTMENT /EXCELLENT
PROFITS I 800 731 7233 EXT
1203.
MEDICAL BILLEA S1!5 $45/Hr
Medlelll Billing SOftware Company
Suk1 People To Process Medl
cal Claims From Home Training
Provided Must Own Computer 1

1100-434

5518 Ext887

MEDICAL BILLING Unllmltad In

We Are Searching For Compas

$8 915 Financing Available Is

CD ROM lnveatmsnl $4 995

slonale Prolesslonalo With A IOnd Aulomaled Msdlcal Senile
Team VIsion And A Desire To •• tnc 800 322 1138 EKt 050
Teach Personal And Community Void In KV IN CT
Skills To Individuals Wilh Menial Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli
.Aetardallon The Work Environ
dation $5 000 $200 000 Bad
ment Is Informal And Flewardlng
Cred"
0 K FH I 800 770 0092
The Requirement• Are High
EJCI
215
School Olploma /GED Valid Drlv
er's License Three Years Good NEW
AUTOMATED HOME
Orlvlng Experience And Ade
BUSINESS Ouiekly Earn A Full
quate Aulomoblle lna~rance Time Income No 5elllng Unlimll
Coverage BC S 011"" Compro tel Income Visit hrtp llwww rati,..
henslve Training In The Field Qf QUickly nollcb To See &amp; Hear
MAIDD Slarllng Salary $5 50 I Complell l'reiOnlllllon
Hour Interested Applicants Need
To Specify Position Of lnteflst
And Send R11ume To P 0 Box
All Applications Must Be Poar

Marked By 3128100 Equal Oppor
!Unlly E"!&gt;&gt;&lt;&lt;YYr
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 80 /HA
tNC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS SECURITY MAIN
TENANCE PAAK AANGEAS NO
EXP NEEDED FOA APP ANO
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 It 3
358S EXT f4211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS ldo inc.
WOAK FAOM HOME Are you
tired ot making your bon rich?

$600 S4 000 pVtumo I BOO 720
0326 www oz opporurnll)' corn

140

Bualneu
Trlllnlng
Clllllpollo Co- Colloga
(Cor"" CloiO To Homo)
Cell Todayl 740-448-4387
1 BOO 214 OA52
AOIJ !90*12748

150

School• /

lnatructlon
EAAN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GAEE OUICKLY Bacholora
Maatera Doctorate By Corra

IIPOndenco Based Upon Prior Ed

ucauon And Short Study Couraa
For FREE InformatiOn Booklet

Pnono CAMBRIOGE STATE
UNIVEASITY t -8()().-16

180 Wanted To Do

1492

Your

Starl Your Bustne11 Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate

740-«1-8329
3003 Brook Dr tn PT P'ltaaant 3
4 br f 800 tQ II Ill t lloor 11

lach•d gerage new roof new

httl pump now hoi tub $81 000
coli 304 174 1022{ dty1)or 304
875 11479 1 Mnlngol waokondtl

Government Sponaored Loan
Good Credit And Stead~ Income

247 512!5 Ext 1134 VOid OH KS
US NEEO CASH?? WE Pay

Caah For Remaining Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgages!
Annuities! Selllemental imme
dtate Quoteslll "Nobody Beats
Our Prlcea • National Contract
Buyers 800 490 0731 Ell 101

Older Model Trataor lor ult 1 112
Bedroom Must go/beat offtr
Flratlrallor on leh Camp Conley

or IOivo m011100 (304)87!5
t83S

new

Apanment lor rent VIand Slmt
Pt Pleasant 1BA utllltlll paid

1275 per monlh (304)738-515&amp;4

.
J

t Bedroom With Llvlrtg Room .-J
Eat In Furnlar'ltd l&lt;ltcr'len Large

manta Upatllra

-'15B Second

appllanotl Mw car

pal $23 1!00 Clll 740 882 4514

1 Bedroom Near Holzer A/C

Economlcol Gu Hoal WID
Ttalltl' for n it two bedroom two Hookup Oultt Locallon $279/
bolh 14x70 7ol0 882 8U5 llltr Mo + UllhiM 740-«8-2957

tiona Independence Mor tgage

To Akl Grlndl Clmpuo 740 245
Dollvsry &amp; Sol Up ttl time Buy 5858
oro Lltlll or no Crtdll OK only ol
Oakwood Homot Citlllpollt (740)- Apartmant For Rtnl $37!5/Mo All
4-48 3093
Ulllllll! Paid Walking Olatanao

Services 1-800-84!5.0038

81Level In Spring vaney Area 3

Bodoooms 2 Balho Femlly Room
2 Cor Garage 740-448 8807
BriCk Aanch ol Bdrmo L/A ~~

Bath Baaament 2 Flreptacea
Gas Furnace C/A 3 Acraa 740

441-Q9113
Country Home 3 Bedrooms 2 112
Balhl Utlllly Flroplace Level Lol
Large Kitchen &amp; Dining Room

740 379 9887 Or 740 379 9000
For Sals By Owner 3BA 2BA

Put Your Tax Refund To Work

$499 Down Only AI Oakwood

Home1 In Barbouravll lt

304

738-3409

330 Farma for Sale
18 ACREB I POND
Beautiful meadow with pond hid
den In woods Near Jackson

360 acres +I Meigs County Sci
plo approximately 200 tillable 70
pasture 5 pond1 3 barns 2 grain
bins double wide garage Strl

0

Down I Go~n t Anld Bank Aepo s
Being Sold Nowl Financing Avail

ous calla only 740-898 82!54
I+ACAES

0.101111 800-719-3001 xtl85

House For Sale By Owner Brick
House on 2109 Mt Vernon Full
Baaement 3BFI Central Heal/Air

In the country oft SR 35 Land

Pature New 40 xSO Horae Barn
3/4 Mile Road Fronlage On 2
Roads Tractor &amp; Hay Equipment

N~e

Brick Home 3 BR 3 Balhs

Oak Cabinets Built In Dishwasher/Compaclor Central A/C Gas
Heat lnground Pool 16x32 Quiet
Neighborhood Finished Base
ment 1105 Teodora Ave (740)
448 8181 $119 000

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
(1) .....AMAZING• ...

Orywall 4BR 32x80 Ol/8r 2348
sQ It Payments low as $406 per

mo 1 1100-946 5878

(2) First Time Buyers Easy Fi
nanclng 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar
ound S200 Per Month Call 1

BOO 948

5678

(3) • •••LOOK

••

5678

(1) 1 Ooub lew de $249 Per
Month Low Down Payment 1
BOO 691-67n

(2) 14 Wlds $167 Per Monlh
Low Down Payment 1 800 691
6'].77
{3) 16x80 $254 Per Month Low
Down Pa~ment Free Air 1 BOO
14Ft X: 70Ft Shultz 3 Belrm 2

Appr01c 7 Acres Minutes From

Schools $42 ooo 00 740 448
6345

1967 Alcon mobile hOme 12x55

11900 740-742 2852

t9B1 Ventura 14x70 Smglewlde
Deck 10x8 On rented lot 2BR
tBA Gas Heat/New Furnace

$6 000

(304)-875-11319

Buildings
Build ng lor sale 114 West Sec
and Street Pomeroy 2 apart
ments 1 business fronl asking

$100 000 I 740-842 3342

Oue To Poor Health Owner• Must
Sell Ra inbow Bag Company 01

Gallipolis Selling Price $40 000

Purchaser Will Need Building
Atleast 30x30 Serious Qualified

Inquiries On~ 740-446--2359

65 acre levol lol lor sale bloCk oW
SR 7 In Tuppers Plains Includes
two rental trailers with water taps
and sewer hookups paid $30 000
74()-667 3487
5 Acres With Pbnd Partial
Woods Water &amp; Electric Avail

able $18 000 Aodnoy A"e 74D446-1951
33 Acres Apprqxlmatoly tO Acre
$99 100 Also 5 Acra LOIS
$32.000 740-388 8678

Ethica l Environmental ly Con
earned Hunter looking To Lease
Hunllng Rlghls Or Buy land 300
+Acres 304-744-1379

For Sele A Lot 200Ft By 210FI 2
114 Miloa On Sandhill Ad In PI
Pleasant Cell 740-387 7743
RENTALS
---

!4..eo

2 bedrootn 1 balh COntra!
~eady to

Moi'Oi St t 500 (740) 949-9018

.l.bandoned Home Needs Owner
Pay Small Transfer Fee &amp; Move
In 1st time Buyers Little or r\o
Crdll Ok only at OakWOOd Homes

Cltiii!OIIa 740-448-3093

Gracious living t and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Rl~eralde Apartments In Middle
port From $273 $336 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun lUes
Modern 1 Bedr oom Apartment

~

North 4th A~enue Middleport 2
room efficiency apartment depos
It and references no pe ts 740 t
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Town house
Apartmen ts
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 140 '

446 0008

•

One Bedroom furn1shed Apa rt
ment In Pt Peasant Very Clean
and N ice No pets Phone

(3041875 1386

One bedroom apartment In Mid :

74D-992 9191

Homoslead Aeally 304 675 !5540

·'

Twin Towe rs now accepting ap
plicatlons lor 1 BR HUO subsld ..
lzed apt lor elderly and handl '"'!
capped EOH (304)675-6679
;.

.

VIllage Green Apartments 2;
bedrooms total electric appllanc .,..1
es furnished laundry room facill ~
t es and close to school applies ~
lions available at off ce 740.992 ~~

--

Opponun 1y

All real estate advertls ng n
th is news~ II subject to

74().898,72«

lhe Federal F.Or Hous ng Act
of 1968 wloicn mal&lt;eo tt •lle(lal

2 Bedroom Stove Refrigerator
Water Trash Paid In Country

to advertlll "any ))reference
limitation or discrimination
based on race color rei giOn
sax familial status or national
origin pr any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or dsCfiminalk&gt;n •

Bedroom MObile Home 740 388-

Deposll +

9188

3 Bedrooms Wa ll To Wall Car
pet Central Air Gas Furnace
Nloa Yard In Gallipolis No Pets
References 740 446 2003 740
446-1409

55 Burdolle Addillon 2 Bed
s.coo piJJ&amp;

rooms 1 Bath Rent
dlposil

709 VIand Street 3 Bedroom 1

112 balh Rani S300 plus dtpos

II
Contact Beckie at E~A Town &amp;
Countr~ Real Estate Broker

(3041675-5548

ThrM bedroom lincoln Heights
1 112 baths sun porctl tease and
doi)OIII no IIOIS. 740-887 3988

420 Mobile Home•
lor Rent
1 till Condor Street Mobile Home
&amp; Lol For Sale St4 900 Will
Con1ldtr Land Contract 711l0

\.

-~

"

80().319-3323 Exl 1709

For sale or rent 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy $350 month
plus deposit will &amp;ell on contract
wlth good references no pels

'"

..r

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo • % Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details

708-00114 Or 740.388-8581

1

Rental Property Cottage Apt 2br
$250 Freshly painted eMterlor

410 Hou-lor Rent

sQ

1

Nice One Bdrm Un furnished
Apartment Range &amp; Refr g pro
vlded Water &amp; Garbage Paid
Deposit Requ red Call 740 446
4345 After 6 OOPm

1 TOO I 868 233 6694 EQual •'

1982 Wln asor 2 Bedrooms 2
Bath 1/2 Acre Land Small Out

Air iotal Electric

Furn ished 3 Roo m&amp; &amp; Ba th
Downstairs Clean No Pels Rei
erence&amp; &amp; Oaposlt Required

d~rt

Attention Developer~

Wealthy Famlliel Unloading Milt.

t991 Man1 lo n Mobile Home

Christy s Family Living apart
ments home &amp; trailer renta ls
740 99 2 4ei14 apartments a\'&amp; 1
able furnished &amp; unfurnished

992 0165

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

SFREE CASH NOWS From

Wlndlalls 847 A SECONO AVE
13150 NEW YOAK NEW YORK 1985 Na&amp;hua MobHe Home
.tx70 With 11121 Fa ctory Pull
10017
Out 3 8R 1 1f2 BA Central Au
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALl. TME Appliances Total Elec 2 porch
CAEDIT EXPEIITS LICENSED I 11 E11cetlen1 Condition $10 000
BONDED COAAECT /AEMOVE neg (304)675 2034 lea~• MesBAD CAEDIT BANKAUPTCY ltgl
LAWSUITS JUOQEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1 1$87 Oak d Mob le Homo
14x70 2BR ~BA on rented prl
1500-422 1588
vatt tot
Gallipolis Farr~
CAEOIT AEPAIAI AS SEEN ON 1304)878 n92 No Land Contract
TVI Erllt Bad Crodll Legally
Froa Info. 88W5f.2!5e0

Opportunlly

New Haven one bedroom fur
nlshed apartment depos1t and
references no pets 740 992
0165
....

6

building 127 000 740-44$-{)785

Hou~ng

340 Bualneaa and

$310/ Mo Pluo Oopoall Alao 2

Make Ollar 740 446- 2518 Aller

2888 Equa

740-44fH)390

lake Mobile Home Ideal For
Housing Campg ound Estate

5 Bedrooms 2 Baths over 2 000
sq ft for len than $450 mo
FAEE Delivery &amp; Sal 1 800 948

4/1/00 74().245-1100
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES !52 Wotlwood

740-388 9130

(3041875 2917

House for sate two story 2 3
bedroomS one bath Middleport
aslc:lng $29 coo No down pay
tnent financing available to quail
fled cant 800-388 8194

To Col lege Vary Nice Avall1b le

740 44&amp;-1519

aDit Cali Nowl 1 800 355 0024 Contract available 112 500+ 1
EJCI 8040
(BOO) 213-8385
HOMES FROM $188 30 /MO 1 Ideal Location 40 Acres Hay &amp;
3 SA Aepos / Foreclosures Fee
4% Down For Llsltings JPaymtn1

2 Bedroom Apartment Adja ce nt

Drive fro m $289 to $370 Walle to
shop &amp; mov ies Call 740 446

(740) 286-0081

large ramuy room &amp; office new
roof gutte ring t car garage
2912 Anniston Drive Pt Pleas

ant {304187!5 2608
FOAECLOSED HOMES Low Or

Bonk Aopo 1499 + Movo In Froo

1st Monii'IS Rent References Re
qu lred In Alo Grande 740 245-

lions 01 Oolll11 To Holp MlnlmTM'

:

Eeay :rarm1

8371
2 Bedrooms

Their Taxes Write lmmedlellly

Mason 2 b(t 2 ba 1ratter $295 a
mon +dep rei req Hud accept •

Encloud Porch S2801Mo 2
Bodroom Largo LIVII1fl Room Ell
Frtt Dtllvory I Stl Up 1tl Tlmt In Furnllh td Kllchtn $210/Mo
auy.,. Little or no Clldtt OK only Newly Oe cotratad loth AAartt

Doublawlde Atpo

198B 14x70 SchUlt 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths CA 1982 14Jx60 Man1lon
2 Bedrooms 1 Bath HP/CA

"""nalionolcon~ com

2br private lot near school nlca ~
clean Porche&amp; Good condition
1285 Hartlord (304)882 2389

llpm

220 Money to Loan

OK Consumera Financial 1 800

2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Inside VII
lage RIO Grande $300/Mo Wa ,j
lOr &amp; T""'h Pad 740 446-2422
~

AoQulrod Call For More lnlorma
tlon And For OlllOr Finane ng Ot&gt;

Balhs Wilh 7 X20 Expando CiA

Debt Consolidation Mortgagts

740-446-4107

440 Apartment•
Prlc8d lrd00e5 Complele SaiUp
Oltlsr Specials
for Rent
J
Single As Low AI $149 00
7
ed::roo=:m~apa:;:rt~mo~n::::l8~fur ~
Montn Sect onata AI Low As 71-::o:nd:;-:;-2-;:b:::
$289 00 Monlh Comt In Or Call nlshed and unfurntthed aacurttytt1
deposit rtqulred no ~111 ?40
Fo r Pre Approval• 1·111 Ill
992 2218
0187 Local
Trade-Ina Art Also

furnace

No Oown Peymon1 Aoqulrld With

891 6777

And Aellnanclng Crsdll Problems

218 740 256-8202

Avenue Qalllpo ll s Wl1tr &amp;
(740)-«1-3083
Tralh Furnllhtd Rtfertnce1 a.
ThrH btdroom IOIIIIy rtmodlltd curlly Dtpotll 740 742 2837 At
tnaldt and out tl'llltr and lot new lOr 5 PM

38A Homo For Salo or Aonl Gal
11!0111 Feny Aru {304)175-1106
AZEAO% DOWN LOANI

Spring Valley Pia,. Call 740-4-48
0101
SS Auto Loan• Personal Loans

:

2 Bedroom Furnished Mobile~
Holnt S3001Mo Plus Electric &amp;
Heat $100 Depos it located On
Hannan Trace Road t M1le Off 1

ed 304-875-7793

ar Otkwcod Homtl GIIIIPOIII

f INANCii\l

&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes ~

S2e().S300 740-992 2167

Homes Are 3 Bedrooms /2 Baths

$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CAED
IT ~EEOED I GOV t FORE
CLOSUAESl GUAAANTEEO AP
::-~~;,;...:;.;...;;_;;.;.:;____ 1 PAOVALI 1 800 380 4620 EXT
Slay AI Homo Mom wtnllng 10 8508
do ballytllllng In my homo Ael
oroncot Available (304)575 3 Bedroom Brick Homo Ooubl•

Will lllr down old bullollngo lor
lu-ln 1111 Lton/1'1. PLaaHnt

2000 Model

$42 61700

"'-le
310 Homlll for ~

Will ln11111 vinyl oldlng ond gul
lOll U!"rlencod Wtll boll Olh
er ratll Fr 11 txUmatta
(304)171-791B1(304)175-7053

Fl

$41 000 00 Olf

Nud An Electrician Or Carpent

come Potential No Experience
Nec111ary Fret lnrormallon &amp;

As Needed

Sq

or? Beal High Prlcu All work
Gaurantaadl Free Estlm1tesl
740-448-2947
Aoollng, plumbing &amp; Odd jObl
740-9112-0501 alk lor Terry

Thru 8 A M Mon Sleep Over
Required 3) Emergency Relief
(Suballtutes) Hours Scheduled

804 Jackoon OH 45840 0604

MPienni,..TIs pleased to announce tiB
Gland opening of Ill now Wal

010 Saelca DriVer For Ttam Op--

DATA ENTAY Natlonwldt BUiing

Doyllme Hours Off Position BonaTlmo 2) 33 Hrs /Wk 8 AM Sal

Interested In Buying Or Selling
Avon? Call Malanie Your Local
lndeptndenl Sales Represents

"MARCH MADNESS SALE"

aniHd FAEE Supplioa 61011 lm
modiOioly t 800-489 9477 EJCI 88
(24 H11)
INOTICEI
OHIO VALI.EY PUBLISHING CO

Appoln1mant To Come Ta N11h

-.globolhoalthcorp com
UP TO $20 000 $45 000 II Par

lng

77&amp;t St Rt 1

PROCTDRVILU: OH 45118
(NexiTo Foodrow)

Off )byr Prq $45 478 00
OH Floor Price Oeduchon

•
•m==n:-rAt:::he~n,:,s,.;a,:,n::,d;.Po;,..,m.,.sr"oy-.,2•

2 BedfQO m Mobile Home In Ka ,
nauga $315/Mo Plus Utiltles

FLEET'f/OOD HOMES

TUIINED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unle&amp;s Wo Wlnl
1-8885823345

modlalolyl All Malorials SuAPIIadl
Ptychacko MtiiOd Frldlytl ,Ctll
f•B00-572-8485
U 000 WEEKLYI Moil ing 400

STAY HOMII MAKE MONEY
HELPING PEOPLE AECEIVE
GOVEANMENT
REFUNDS
FROM ~OME FAEE OETAILSI
(2A Hr Aecordod Monagt) t
800-725 2417 EICI 6048
TAKE BACK YOUR LIFEI Bo

Theraw Setting Compollllve Sal

Don T Waste Vour Time Quahfy
By Phone New SW Or OW 1
888 736 3332

Tlmo Apply Topol Furnlluro Co
151 5ocond A - Clllllpolla.
IINGEAII GOIPIL CLEAN
COUNTRY and EAIY LIITININGI Call t 100 488 8184 For

FllktPrtlemld

Shilley Speall 304 875 1429

JN!n Cnlolc 740-245 5747

2 Week Paid COL Train
lng No Experience NHdld Earn

Record Produc•r• And Concert
Prornotrta Internet www wc1n IC

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell

Pomeroy

Ori~ers

Overbrook Center hal part lima
poalllona avellable lor AN a &amp;
LPN 1 all 1hlfta tor more lntorma
lion P111110 11op &amp; Nl 0U1 an application Of can 7..0.982-8472 EOE

(740)-«6 3093

Gailipol~

Call (7401992 2451 lor mora in

arv

940-7424
ATTN POMEROY POSIII po!l

&amp; VIcinity

!ormation

$500 +IWk Plus Bonu&amp;~s Com
missions Benefits Retail Expert
ence And Women E.rcat ,Mini
mum 2 Years Collage Degree A
Plus We Train For Paraonal And

Opportunlly Slarllng Salary 01

www stayhomeblz com 1 800

Pt. Pleaunt

OAIVEAS TAKE HOME MOI'1E
BE HOME MOREl Avorago 1999

ville Al\d Audlllon For Mojor

My Children Come To My Olflce

Iunday a Monday odlllon-

Organist Wanted Small Epiaco
pa l Church seeking Competent
Musician to lead music program

ttanspo&lt;Lcom

Brand New 3 Bedroom• 2 Baths
Only S2331Mo Won 1 Laalt Hwry
1st time Buyers LitUe Of no Cradil
OK Only at Oakwood Home• In

lreeldrug lrao workplaoo

aiUon Available For Outpatient

Typing Groat Poyl CALL 1 800
795-0380 EJCI 1201 (24 Hrs)
ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME

dly before the •d 11 to run

Operations Manager for a CAble/
Communications Company Sue
ceaatul candidate muat have ex
perlence In both technical and
business fields good commun1
cation skllla and be able to mo
Uvate Olt'ltrs Pteaae submit re
1ume clo MU30 Point Pleaaant
Aagl&amp;tar 200 Main Street Polnl
Pleasant WV 25550 Succesalul
candidate will undergo drug
screening and background
check Excellent benertta aUtr
probation period EOE Smo ke

nonexpress com Call For Details

Wage Was $45 255 www roehl

lor Rent

for Sale

Position excelltnl Management

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEtt Crafla

All V.rcl Saln Must Be Paid In

Slart AI 34e Ml 15 Yr + Exp
33&lt; Ml /4Yr 32C Ml 13 Yr 31 e
Ml 12 Yr 30e Ml /1 Yr 29C Ml
16 Mos I Yr 28C Ml 16 Mos Or
L111 Trainee Or 1 Mo Exp $350

Your Home Compuler For Great

Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing

Advance Ooadllnt t OOpm tho

99% Driver No Touch Freight

GoodMVR

For Lew - I l l
CAREER POTENTIAL

Home com

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

G!(llpollt Ohio 740-379-2720

I

110

www WorkOutOfYour

UO o.m Btturday

1100-223-1149 Ex! "«)
DAIVEAS Cannon ExpreSS

t 800-845-9390

1 RIIOM331 EXT 1211

au.--Mul1
Be Paid In Advanco
Df•QlltE a oo p m
1111 day _,. tho ed
lotorunSUnday
edhlon 2 OOp.m
Friday Monday edition

cal ClaJma From Home Training
PrOYidod Must OWn Con'9ufer 1

Vacations Ins Avail www can

Week Viall Our Webaile At
""" ez pc net 1 888 321 7083
ARE YOU REAOV
FOA AN E.COMMERCE
BUSINESS?
S26 -$75 IHA PT 1FT

Yard Sale

OENTAL BILLER $15 $ol5 /Hr
0.0101 Billing Sotlwaro Company
NHds Poople To Proem Modi

Wk Pay Raise Every 15 Montha
Bonuaea Rider Program Paid

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Admission Conca&amp;slon Head
Lifeguard Lifeguards Manager
And Assistant Manager Wanted
AI The Gall polls Munk:lpal Pool

uq, Fundral&amp;lng Sl..., BoU

The flmlly of PllllkJama
111fe.'l'lllmy
SoJu. M!wel, eorey

nol 740-698 1210

Tg Good Homes Full Blooded 800-705-234a
Collie Dogs &amp; Pups 740 446 A Own A Computer? Put It To
4832 Anytime
Workl US S75/Hr PT /FT 1•
888 843 17118 www monay-ga~ Lo1t end Found
lore.com

~esalonal Auction Sarvlca
17'rtn Eatata Inventory Reduc

fwlenlhG~U

1969 80 all mQdel s running or

ConlldlnlialloUrvlew Coil

fiiael a Produce And Flea Mar
uraday Friday Saturday
Week 1354 Jackton Pike
Ia, 740-4467787

your
message

Wanted early models Kawasaki

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS FriO Local And Surrounding Area EnS.mplel LOH 3 I Pounds Every lry Lovol Saloo And Markellng

740-992 7!502

Jtlw~"-'-

949-2010

.,.,., c2t marco oom

t·-~
ii\l
Goble Auctlo~Hr

9'~ 4, i!J95.

Encloaed cargo trailer ,. xe or
1~10 In good eoodlllon. cau 740-

4!1631

tfjJylsell eatates consignment
~!on every Thursday 6pm
-lopon Ohio &amp; WV License

j

740-448 2&amp;12

AI'OntJO Gall&gt;olis

Walka &amp; Friendship Sand Re
~Ilea To 553 Second A~enue
Apartment 1403 Gallipolis OH

I@I ~M~odlspaugh Auctioneering

~20,i97-l

Rings Pre 1930 U S Currency
SIOrl•ng Elc AcquitiiJOns Jewelry
M T S Co1n Shop 151 Second

sNp From Nlco Female For Talks

Public Notice

Spedal tbmb to
Flsber Fuaenllloaie,

JIIJebelle for the mal.
'l'hlllkllo thwe who
CIIIIC ~II the

005

420 Mobile Home•

320 Mobile Homel
A.b10lut1 Top Oollar AH Us SU

~le::a:.:d~m;ig~ii:"';;:W;:I:;th;::J=U=st=se_c...,o=n=ds~l~efi~t~R~e~d;:d;;:b;u=z=z=er,...fo':r:a:3=;6;:-=:J;::l;::l=ea~d:=;:;:::==

the Buckeyes

Rev J - '-·In
Danny Watmcnelud ud
stall, ud salem (:eater

ANNOUNCE~1ENTS

This newspaper wit! not
knowingly accept
actvenisaments for realee•ne ·•
which la In violation of thi!t
law Our readers are hereby
!&gt;rmed that all dwellings
advonised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opponun~ basis

•
•

•

:

,.
•

:
•
•

~~!!!f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ;

460 Space lor Rent

•

•

600 square feet offi ce buJidlng •
$350/mo mob It home spac11 •
St 20/mo 2 bedroom mobile
home $300/mo Rlvarpark Po •

=

..roY 740.949-2083

•

::Mo:=-b::ll:-:.o"7Ho~me~l;;;oi::F::o:..r-:Re-.-,-~:-.-ke-1 :

Up To 16 Wide 711lO 411l6 0175 ~

.

$1251Mo $1 00 Deposll Refer •

ences 740.446-0
:::.:.:::-';:;:_..::-:-::,..-175

Mobile Home Park Lot Available

$1 15/Mo Addl1on Pike Wlao
man floal!y 740-«8 311«

Trailer lot for rent In Middleport

loklng appQcallons 740-992 8145

.norepm

'
I,

�P9 Be • The O.lly Sentinel

571-1313 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS 252 SonwMI Drlvo, Buffalo,
NV 14225.
For S.lt : Atcondilioned wa•h-

Small Suek Stove, Fireplace In·

ert, dryert and refrigerators .

sert. Blower with Thlfmostal.

Thompaons Appliance . 3407

Coal or Wood. S250. (304)7735213.
STEEL BUILDINGS : Faclory
Cancellallona 25x30, 30xolO,
45x100, 50xUO New Materials 1

Vlno str..l, Coil 740-441-7398.
t.-etl-0121.
.

Soiling At lnvolcol 1·800·211 ·
9394X_.7.

~ ca,.t 202 Ciorl&lt; Chapel Road, Porter Oh io, 740-U8·
7444 'on..AL/IIfeSa.. Aioli'

Corrugatld Ralnlorcld Pipe, With

New And lfsld Fu·r nlture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga .
Good Used Beds, Orenera,

CoUC'-s, Dlnelltl, Etc. Bill Sav-

Two 1 1· Sections Of The Ntw

Connector. Patd: $160 Sill: $110;
740.2~161.

VIAGRAIIII ORDER BY PHONEIII
Stay At Hornell! 1·800·21 1-1737
Dept F

4112.

Warerllnt Special: 314 200 PSI

$21.95 Per t 00; I' 200 PSI

Porch Furnllure: Rour,d Whlte
Wrought-Iron Table -,14 Marching
Chaira, $SO. I Black Wrought ·
Iron Cha ise lounge, $"5 .

$37.00 Per 100; AU Bra81!1 CompreS&amp;Jon Fillings In Slocl&lt;

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537·9528
WHITE'S METAL DETEClORS

Outtn Size Btd (White Iron
Headboard),
Mattress/Box
Springs. EJCce11ent Condillon .

$200, (304)458-2214.- -.

Ron Allison , 588 Wataon Road ,

Bidwel, Ohk&gt;, 740-448-•331.
Wolff Tanning Bad . Sunquest
Pro26AST Like New. 7"0·256-,
6339, Allor 4 P.M.

R&amp;D's Used Furniture Greai Selection, Priced To Sell! ·come
And Browse.· Corner Of Floute 7
&amp;. Addison Pike.
Buy. Furni-

550

Whirlpool Refrigerator Freezer

Block, brick, sewer pipta, wind·
owa, Hnteta. etc. Claude Winter~,
'Rio Grande, OH Call 700·2~5-

Building ·
Suppllea '

·we

lure' 74Q.367-o280.

Side 81 Sldt: Kirby Upright
Sweeper, Prac1ically NeW With All

AllaehmonlS, 740446-1304.

Whirlpool Wuher, $80; Dryer,

·'I

I
I

'·

$100; Zenith 27'TV, $100; All
Good CondHioo. (304)675-7889.

Antique•

530

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,

1124 Eail Main on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·992·2526 or 740.99~­
. 1&amp;39. ~USI Moore, owner.
Fancy Oak Secretary Desk . •
Bookcase With Gallery: Early
Bakera Cabinet /Kitchen Cup·
board, Stone Jars Wlt.h Writing ,
Sponge Wear Pitcher, 740·367-

5121 .

.

AKC Labrador Pupplea. ·alack,

$175, 740-256--8733.
AKC registered Ba11e11 pupa,
tlrst shOts &amp; wormed, 740·949·

2355 or 740-8411-3117.
Registered Border Coli/a Pupa.
Working Parenll, lrf1:10rted Blood
Lines , Good Markings·, Firat

SholS, 740-379·911Q.

7871. Aller 5 P.M.

: 540 Ml~etllaneoua
Merchandlae
' Ping' Clubs l .H. 5 And 3 Woods
8, 7, 8, 9 And Wedge (Irons) Bag;
Aloo 2 Adams Tight lies .$70
EICII ; All $400, 740-446-0417 A1·

....

~.

Credit Corp. 1-800-471-5119 Ext

1180.

.

37 People Needed To Loae ·Up
To 30 Pounds In The Next 30
Days, Free Samples. 740·44t ·
1962.

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
·NO CASH?? MMX Tachnolog1
Will Finance With

-o•

Down. Past

Crldlt Prollltms, No Prolllem. Coil
ll&gt;l Free 1-877-293-4082.

Poortlo1s Muo~ Inc.

FAm,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVES lOCK

810 Farm Equlpm1nt
2 Hay Wagon&amp; $400 Each; 1 lnlernpllonal Ha1 flako $700, .740·
388-0408.
2000 Ford Oiesel Tractor: 3800
Ford With 91•' Finished Mower;
135 Massey Ferguson Diesel ;
1120 John Deere Diesel, 740·
286-6522.

245-5121 .
International 275 manure apr8f.d•

or, $1800 080, 74Q.992-5071 ,

DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS Up Fronl. Call Jodre1 J. Farm t1·800-279-4300.
. 937· 373-4644 Can Call Collect
After 9:00 P.M.
IIQ SCREEN TV. Taka On Small

fl&lt;h, call 740-~·2644 .

Comptele DISH Network -satellite
system , brand new, $99, 740·
992· 1182 or 304·773-5305 alter

I

I

epm,

COMPUTERS • low Or

So Down.

Low Monthly Payments. Y2K
Compliant. Almost Everyone Approvod. 1-800-611-3418 Ext 330.
Craftsman lawn tractor, 15.5hp ..
Konler onglno, 42' CUI, IIO"f good

condition, $750,

7~0-985-4349 ,

-~

Grubb's Plano: tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Nted Tuned? Call the

.,_ Or. 740-441-4525

5pm,

JMITIIOI. HEliTIIG AND

COOL=-~lf~~MENT
• If You Don't Call us We Both
Lo,.. • ·Free EstimAtes I 740·446··

8308, HIOQ-291-Q098.

Wollla 740-949-3315 leave mea-

sago.

.

We Are Buying Tobacco Base &amp;

Lease, 937-695· 0697. (Belore
11 :00 A.M. &amp; Aller 6 P.M.)

Llveatock

630

10 Vear Old AOHA Bay Mara,
Bred For May Foal. Asking

$1.500 740-441l-80ill '
11 year old Palomino mere, child
safe, traffic safe, neek reins, has
won local horse shows, pleasure
horse, $1500; 19 nlon_th old bay
coli, gelded, $200; 740-992-1412,

2 Palnl Uarea : One 4 Years Old;
One 2 Years Old; 2 Arabian
Geldings; One 7 Years Old; One

2 Year Old Stud Colt $500, 740·
388-9265.

JET

Fair Pills For Sale. 740&lt;44Hl968
Or 740--4362.
Regilitt!'ld Rad Polled LlmoUsin
Bull For ~ale Yearling, Phone

740.446-50111.

:

.

Aopalrld, &amp; Rebu ilt In Stock.
Coli Ron EVIIM, 1·800·537·9528.

Yearling AOHA Grey CoU, Broke
To T,le And Lead , Asking $900 ,

IIOIILE HOME OWNERS

Yearling Jack Donkey, Asking

74Q.441-1108t .
$400. 740-44$808t.

Huge lrwentory.. Discount Prices,
On Vinyl Skirting , Doors, Wind·

840

owl, Anchors , Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps .- Bennetts

16001 Rqund bates of mixed hay

Mobile Home Supply,

7~0- 446-

Hay &amp; Grain

$25. a pteoo 304-675-7608.
Ear corn anct square bales ·of h8'j,

9418 www.oi'Vb.CO{nlbennett

call740-985-4&lt;65.

New Trombone And Motorized

Grou0d Ear Corn, your sacks.
Pnona aftor 4PM (304)675-2443.

~.

740-446-9849 . .

NIC.I Used Furniture and Ap·
pttsncas. (7~0)·4~6-4039 (740)..._1004 Anytima.

NO MONEV DOWN Ill Compaq
HP IBM Desktops /Laplops, E·
Comerce Webaites. Stan Your
HomaBualnesa Todavl Almost

eve,.,.... Awrovedt Low Month11

Payments, Fret Color Printer 1·

888·479·2345

www.ai~sran.com

(ToiiFree)

Nordic Trac Ex8rclst Macnjne,
S450 New ; Same As New Sell

$1110,740-446-11151.
Prom Dre~s • Faviana , SiZe 516:

ShOos and Jewo1r1. (304)6758757.

Square Bates For"

2075.

Sa1e: 7"0·44~·

Square Balu of Hay for sale.
$2.25 per bait. (304 )675-27 41 .
Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
'Round Dtliwery a Volume 01&amp;·
count Available. Heritage Farm.

(304)675-572• .

850 Seed &amp; Fer:tiiiZII'
Tobacco Plants
Now taking orders lor lhis Sprtng.
First Orders Mil Guarantee Best&amp;
Earliest
Planla.
Dewhurst

Farmo,i304i895'37o401895-3Y89.
THANSPORTAIION

Cooll~g .

t-800·872-5967

. , ..orvb.com'bennetl

Ron's Gun Shop, 740.742-8412.

age, $1700,

7~0-992·1506

992·6215

day,,

740-949 -2644 evenings &amp; wee-

710 Autos for Sale
'92 Pontiac Bonneville, four door,
e~tcellent condition, sharp, $4650,

740-949-2005 evenings.
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND . Honda's Toyota's,
. Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·
lies . Call Nowl 800-772·7470:

EKT. 7832.

FREE
ESTIMATES
I

22yn. Local

N.W a mille'
'

ALDER

'

Hlth &amp; Dry
Stlf-Stotttt
33795 Hilnnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

• 10 • 4 2
• A 7 8
+KB •742

••

740·992-5212

740-992-1671

Pomeroy, Ohio

kends.

•New Home•
•Gar.g•

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

V.C. YOUNG Ill

1,-.w t mo. pd.

7/22fTFN

$1 ,000,740-441.0108.

Shade River

1991 Buick Park. .4venue, 95,206
Miles, Good Condition, Serious

Buyers Only, 740o441-8241 .
1991 Plymouth Blazer AS, 5
Speed, Premium Sound Pad&lt;age.
Sunroof, Loaded , $3,200, 080,

740-446--6962.
1991 Pont. 5000 LE,

Ag. Service

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

740-742·8015

OpJd

$6.75/50 lb. bag

51 ,000 miles. Excellent Condl·

lion. $2,800 . (304)675·1204/
(304)675-2034.

.

S rin Seeds 8 Fertilizer

JI:,WICK"SC.

1992 Chov1 Cavalier 4 C11. A/C,
Pwr Sir. Pwr. llfokoa, Look&amp; Good.

HfiUUHG ancl .
EXCfWfiTIHCI

Runs Good. A1klng $1 1 800.00 .

1994 Dodge Intrepid, Good Condillon, 82,000 Mlloa, $1,500, 740441-11151.

Hauhng • U1111Sione •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
BuOdozer Services
(740) 992-3470

1995 Buick Leaabr8 Custom "'
Doors,
Loa ded,
aluminum
Wheels, A.IC, Tilt. Cruise, Pwr,
Locka, Pwr Windows, Pwr Seats,

·$8,200.00: (2,000 Under Book
Valua)t 740.882-7512

Asking S9.ooo. 740-256·9244
740-448-4423.

or

CD Chonger In Trunk Cltlettt In

.1 994 Mazda Mavaho 4 WD Ex·
cellent Condition, PW. POL. Lumbar Seating, Cruise Tilt, Sunroof,
CO Player, 94,000 Miles, Asking

Dash, Deep Navv Metallic With
Dark Grey Leather Interior-, Any
Reasonable Offer Considered,

1996 Chrysler Town &amp; Country

$8,900 740-379·2133.
LXI Van •. 47 ,000 · Miles, V· 6,

740o-.4508 Or 740.-.7375.

Loaded, $13,500, 080 740·2561999 BlaCk Monte Carta All Pow· · 1252, Home: 740-256-1618.
ora, In Excallonl Shapol 740-3851996 Jeep Cherokee 4x4 Drlvt.
8358.
82,000 Miles, Air, Needs A Little

Bod\1 Wort!, Painted. $6,000 OBO;

1999 Mitaubisrtl Mirage, Green

1993 Dodge Spirit 4 Cylinder, Automatic, 100 ,000 Miles. 11,800

ExteriOr, 36,000 Mites, E111cellent

Carll Will Taka Pay-On. 740-245-

080,740-256-1233.

•

2000 Ford Escort $10,000 OBD.
(304)875-5479.

740

92 Bonneville SE &amp;edan, metallic
blue. 80.000 miles, good condl·

1981 Honda 750 Custom Motor·
cycle, 77,600 ~llts, New Battery,
$600. 740-379-2853.

lion , asking $8 ,000, 740·742·
8200.
..

Motorcycle•

1985 Suzuki 230 4 Wheeler with
Reverse 4 Stroke Engine. EJte&amp;l·
lent Condition. $1,500. (304)675·

95 Mustang GT eonvef'llble, dark
green wl'h btaek· top, 66K miles,

3524.

HONDA's $100, $500 &amp; UP. PO-

1986 T~X 250R Honda . S2700 .
(304)576-2711 . .

$13,400 080. caii74Q-742-3062.

LICE IMPOUND. Honda'a Toyo•
ta's, Chevys, Jeeps, And Sporl

Utilities. Call Nowt 800-772-7470; t993 Suzuki 125 RM 2 Stroke ,
$1,200 OBO, 740·245-5018 Or
EXT. 6338.
352-4805 LIOY8 Message.
CliRS FROM $211/110. lm· 1i9-4 ZR 50. E111cellenl Condition.
pounds /Rapos. Fee. SO Down 124 (304)458-2214. Leave Message.
Moa. 019.9% For listings t-800·
319-3323X2156.
1995 Hon&lt;;la 300 Four Tru .
Looks

720 Trucka lor Sale

Good .

Runs

Good!

AT0:30 P.M.
Mlln St.;

Drive Excellonl Condition, $4,800,
740.256-9244.
·

1987 ChOV1 5· 10, 2.5, 4 Cyl,
AC,PS.PB, Nice &amp; Straight
$2,200. (304)875-3824,

750 Boats &amp; Motors

Fau:tory Authbriud

r-

....

East State Street
t\,thens, Ohio 45701
"A

,.....,

.

pll' glll)l
$300.00 COVII'III'

tire~,

740-741·3411

11/lt/trn

ow ... ow ... ow ...

· Bryan R~ves
www.sunsetho e com

PSI
CONSTRUOION
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions; ·Pole
Buildings, Etc.
· Free Estimates
211,JD01 mopd.

a;!~

·ro!&gt;rnoo .

IllC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Sid!ng • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room AddiUona
·Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIIliAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•I! Phone 674-;1 3ll

199~

810

Loaded. V-8, Automatic. Low

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Milos, Wo ...davs 9:30 A,M. -5:00
P.M. Call 740-446-2445 : Allor
5:00 P.M. And Weekends Call
740-446-t309, Alii ForVtrgl.

Uncondltionil lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnished . Es·

1975. Cal 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870, 1·800·287-0576. Rogers WaterprooHng .

lablished

199l black Chevy S-10 Stepslda
Extended Cab, 3 door, loaded,
25.000 mile&amp;, very sharp, lull larlngs, $12,000, 740·9•9·2045 or

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work, Guaranteed,
French City Maytag. 740·446·

740-849-2203.
1997 Ford Ranger XLT, 2 wheat
drive , st~p sicte, exc"ellent condl·
lion, ·4 cyl., aulo. ale. arnllm CO.
50,000 ml.tes, custom wneels,
bargl.aas bed coVer, $8,999, 304-

7795.

n.

773-5305 after epm. ,

Honil

. Improvements

GMC 1500 Sarli&amp; SLE

.

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painling. vinyl siding,
earpen!ry, doors, windows. bathS,
mobile home repair and more. For
free eslimate call Chat, 740-992·

'•

88 Ford Ranger extend cab,

$2800, 740-742·2780.

6323.

89 Ford F-350 Supercab Dually,
loaded . 740·949·2355 or 740- Jlms Or~wall &amp; Construction.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/
949·3111.
Drywall , Siding, Roofs. Addi ·
tions , Painting , etc . 1304)6744623 or (304)674-0155.
'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDI
1978 GMC 112 Ton Van, 350 Au··

llwingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basemenl repairs
done. lrae .eatfmates. lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job experl·

tomaUc, $1 ,200 Runs Good, 740.
446-6323.
1979 Jeep , 4WD Tru ck. Auto
trans, low .mileage, 360--4 Barren,
new tires &amp; whaels1Sharp Trude.

once. (~)885-3587 .

840. Ellctrlcal and
Refrlgenrilon

(304)675-1564.
1979 Rontlgade CJ5 Jeep, 304:
too,, Original. 2nd

v-a. 3spd.

Attention: New Healing ~d Cool·

lng Sllqp Oilers Great Rates And

$6.000. (304)882-3622.

Extentnt Serv~e. Let Our Expeli·
1985 Dodge 41114 llatbtd truck, ence Technicia n Give You A
minimum bid $2000. Contact Alan, . Free EStimate TOday Anct Beat
The Spring Rush. Call Advanced
740·849·3232.
Comfort Systems At 74 0·446·
1987 Aerostar Runs Well , ~ted&amp; 0988 .
Transmi ssion $900 OBO 740·
Residenllai or comme~cial wiring ,
441-0CI27,
new service or repairs. Master Ll·
censeel electrician . Ridenour
. Electrical. WY'000306. 304·675-

1788.

. ,.

Fax 304-675-2·457

';~•Pmking

lOIII'

Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

!!:'

WV Contractors

•

06

WO•calltv
·R•plcaoemtnt

-~••• ioclv Peart#

''''"d ••tr•·
Heulpp

rU ,l~,

B~tlldooer

·:·

Houl!ll &amp; Trailer Sitea

740-742-9501
'Toll Free

CHECK THE

WANT ADS F1RS17

f.IAI/E BROU614T MV NEW

'"l'litAV'INI'; DOLL ,r

&amp; Baelchoe
~

Se"'ke•

. parts

IFOit ,. SI~Olil AHD TELL' TO~V.

I

All replacement
·Fr11 Delivery

l

.

IIANDS.ARE HEL11 T06ElliER · ·
IN. A PRA'fiN6 POSITION BV

NO, I PO NOT BELIEVE

VELCRO 15 MENnOHEI7 AJ.II(WMEREIN

WANTED: BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
CURRENTLY HAS OPENINGS IN MEIGS COUNTY:
1) 40 hrs/wk: 3 pm Mon lhru8 am Sat; sleep-over
required; daytime hours off;
· ·
Position benefits include heailh/d!lntal Insurance
. and vacation/sick time;
1
2) 33 hrs/Wk; 8 am Sat thru 8 am !'-lon: sleep·over
req4ired:
3) Emergency Relief (Substitutes): hours
scheduled as needed;
We are searching for compassionate professionals
with a team vision and a desire to leech, personal and .
commuMy ski!IS to Individuals with mental rallrdatlori!
The work environm~nt , Is Inform$! and rewarding. Th!'
requ!rements are: high school d!plomatGEO ,. valid
driver's !lcense, three years good driVIng eKpi!rience
and adequate automob!le Insurance coverage, 8.C.S:
offers comprehenalve training in the field of MR/00.
Starting salary: $5.50/hDrs. Interested appllcsnts need
to specify posHion oi inierest and Hnd reaume to: .;ii· .

P.O. Box 804

:

Pus

Norlb

36
Past

......
•......,
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....

w~ Sm•i"~ All Mnk~•
t ... ,.•.

n.·y·····

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Hung•·• • llt·f..igt·o·uturo
Fo·t•t•z.•t·oi · l)i•lo Wu•f,..j. ·

~.

219 E. 2nd

' 992·1550

..,..

The Appliance

Eul

Opening lead: • Q

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll

!MONDAY

Campoe

Olilbrlly Olphtr OI'IDIOIII!lllll' -lid f - quototlonl by lomoul PIOPil, PIIIOnd
,
~. IIIOh llltlr In the ol_!ll\ir ltandllor anothtr. .
.
Ttlattf ctu.: lJ 11111111 M
·

V

'VGA!'

VMJI'VT

ZMDVI

NMI!I

VXXMGIIDPII

IIKIIPIVT

LPIP

XMPB

.. ,•

VVII'
I

CIG8GRL

CKYYP88, ,

~PBVVI

IILP'R

MN .

RIII!IOEF.
PREVIOUS .SOLUTION: 'She got her good looks from her father plaatk: surgeon.'- Oroucho Marx
0 2(tQ(J by NEA, Inc.
20

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Baahan

Road
..Racine, Ohio

JACKS
ROOFING.
.
'
&amp; CONSIRUOION.

O
Rearrange !Mters of
. four ,.romblod warda

ba-

low 1o form four tlmplo wordt.

cI

I

p Es T

I~IIIII' ..

_r
:

I

G I 4T E N 1·
1

I

I

_

N E M 0 V ~'
f-....,,;.:-..;1..:.:..,;1';-:.., ~p.

It's not enough to think about
doing something. In order to de·
'--~-'---'---''--'' velop positive feelings you must
.---------l.:lhaite positive • - . c. - ..
.
TRAFLE

I

I1

6

I

I' I I

I0

..;· ~;~;:;~;;~~·~~~
-

.

·Complete the chuckle quoled
by fillingfrom
in the
words
you pievelop
step missing
No, 3 bt
low.

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED LE TIERS
IN THESE SQUARES

6 g~iC:~~!~~ lETTERS TO I

3

•

III II II

SCfiAM.I.ITS ANSWERS
Embark· Oasis· Notch ·· Paqnch • _THINK
A new bumper sticker tickled my funny bone. It read:

' One's Brain
THINK:'
.. •.

Is

Only As Strong As One's Weakest

MARCH2ol

J

.

SIZII 5' X 10'

• Coating • Outt1r1 .
• Siding • Dryw•ll
• P•Inling • Plumbing
Fl'll Eltlmltea ·

Houre
7:00AM ·8 PM

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2088

45771

74().:949-2217

.

..
'

•••

NIW Roofs • Ref)lilrt

~lLLiL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
., )

'992-5479

'l

·••
! ,
:
•
:
:

Min:h 21, 2000 '
failh on the enterprising ideas in which you've ·
invested considerable effort. The
year ahead could grant you some
compensation and acknowledg-

•

ment for

Keep

your initiative.

:
ARIES (March 21·April 19)'
:. Jlecause of your willingness to
cooperate wilh others today, you
~ ~ ·could· receive some surprising
~ · support from one who, ~ntil now,
&gt;l has lleen rather indifferent about
your inte,.,sts. Trying to plleh up,
'1 a T&gt;roken romance? The ,AslrDG,.Ph Matchmaker can help you
:, understand 'I'hat to do 10 make lite
•I relationship )YOlk. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o Ibis newspaper,
.P.O. Box 1758, Mumy Hill Sta~: tlon, New York, NY I0156:
:•
TAURUS (April W.Mar 20)
Worthwhile endeavors wll ele• vole your self-eatoeat today in ·
; ways you could never Imaaine.
~ ··Find way1 to spend your dme pOductivcly intlead of with frlvol0111
punu.ita .

H

1!·

#; .

e•

1t

may occur at a time _when

•

you're

nol. looking.
LEO (July 23-Aug. '22) A last

· minute revision concerning an
agreemen1 .y ou're nejotiating
with another could acwally tum

trary

oul to be a blessing in dispise.
Don't be lao quick to reject it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23:sept. 22) ·
You could be obit like • ·111111net
todoy in IIIIIICtina thin1s to you
that could lrlllsllle 10 ,_~nonal
pin of some Kind. Of ~ne. it
wouldn't hurt to holp lhin1s olone

01little; eilher.

·

LIBRA (Sept.\23-0ct. 23) The
~lp qlllllnes you na11111111
~I lillY be Yll)l INICh in IYI•

dence today. ~could rum to
you 10 set the ccuno. etpoc:iolly in
aoclalliruations. .
.

,•,

1\1

SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24-Nov. 221
Today might produce a number of
reciprocal acts from others in
return ,for how well you've heen
lookina out for them latolr. What
yOU've doi'te has not .a;one unnoticed. · .
. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) Touch bases today wilh sev·
eral people with whom you
haven't had much contact lately.'\
These contacts could prove to be,
very beneficial for both you and
. them.
.
CAPRICOIU'/ (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) The bosier you are today, the
heller you'"' apt to perform, con•

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Situations that have•iolements of
chiiiiCC to lhem could prove to be
lucky for you today. However,
this does not give you license to
· take O'llllandish risks:
CANCER (June 2'1-July 22)
You could accidenlally slumble
onlo a solution to a Pl""lem
today that has been v"'ing you for
lhe greaier pail of last week . It

10 focusing in OJl only one

specific objective. Set as many .
goals as you think you can handle.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2i).Feb. 19)
Because ·your faith is so strona:
you'll !lOt only be able to stabilize
thinas for younelf todoy. but also
for those with whom you 'II be
involved.

PISCES (Feb. 20.Matth 20)

There's no need to be buhful
about requestina assistiiiiCe for
. tomethiiiJ wilh which you need
help today. Your frlendtare •"l•r
to find ways t~ balonce the
accounts of your good deeds.

L

he's a

TIIAT DAILY
PUZZLII

992-2635 882-3666:

2!211/00 1 mo. pd.

Parts • All Makes

9 100 aq. meter•
10 Nalghbor of Fr.

Middleport New Haven::·

rt

Pomet'f!Y· OJi.io
Usr;tt Appliances

7 Profound ..
8 Spouao

.RADIO SHACK DEALEl

to 10' x 30'

'

JFK llonder
Can. prov.
Actreoo Morkol
In oddHion
5 Rowo
8 Neck of woter

ILICTRIIICS:'

tile .,-pll,ance .. .''Weh.: Bac " ·

.

1
2
3
4

. Pan.
Pan

Sentinel

l
·~

Jackson, OH 45640..()804.

,II.

and Mo.
connector
llllurtng__, 5e Plnelool
Groek Tetter
Pronto (--)
DOWN

33 Enten.lnlng
36 MI. Heywortll

. BY PHILLIP ALDER
Ely Culbertson was an entrepreneur who put bridge onto the
U.S. map. One of his many interesting articles was reprinted in
this month's i~sue of The Bridge
World magazine. In "Attacking
Trump Entries," Culbertson
shows three ways in which the
defenders csn prevent the declar·
er from aeitina the benefit of key
trump entries in the dummy.
Aaalnst four spades, West
opena with the diamond queen:
1'/{0, ace, six. What card should
East lead at trick two?
Culbertson aave no biddina;
probably he couldn't think of a
way to reach four spades. In his
day, North would have raised to
two spades, and South would
have passed; reaching a contract
even I could make! .In my
sequence•. North makes a limit
raise, showing four-plus trumps
and 10-12 support points. When
·having at, least a nine-card fit,
count three points for a singleton
and .five .for a void . .
It looks obvious for East to
return a hea!(, but that lets the
contract make. The play goes:
Heart to dummy's, ace, club to
South's ace, club ruff in the dummy, trump to. South, club ruff,.
draw trumps, and claim I0 triCks .
(five spades, one heart, one diamond, one club and two club ruffs
in the dummy).
Now watch what happens if
East switche.s to a spade, a trumpenlry-killing_play that removes
one of dummy's spades prematurely. Declarer can ruff his two
club losers in the dummy, but
after the second ruff. lhere are no
spades left in the dummy. Declarer cannot get back to hand to draw
East's remaining trump. He must
lose two hearts and a diamond ruff
for one down.
'

j

., AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp;: .~
BLACKBEAR PAGIN :'

1

All appli~tions must lie post·~ed by 3/28/00.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

21
23
28
28

To get a current weather
report, check the .·

•'

:

Seplie Syolf!""' &amp;
V1iU1U.•
(7401 992·3·~·

VOU WILL Nq!E TilAT IIER

••
•
'

\

•

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Weal
Pass

';

Nice Pop-Up Camper Sleeps 7,
New Canvas &amp; Windows , $800

Bollom. $5.500 . 740·446-4109;
·After 5, 740-379-2589.

'YfJ-.1\,WTYOO CXltoli 00\H\CW""
fv\UC\-1 lI
1'\Uii!:.l!&gt; \0 ~II

IISSEL.LIUILDIRS

TREE SERVICE

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Stainle'as Steel Chrome Along

...
0\oJ ...

'l•Drivewoys • Tennis Courts

25H926

SERVICES

~

740·992·7599

740-992-1709

Boat V-205 Rinker Cuddy Cabin
.20 loot. $12,000, Phone: (740)·

1994 Ford Ranger XLT 2 WD,
.New Ttra~ 5 Speed, Look&amp; Great,

II

..

!N Tl-\1!&gt;

2249.

080, 7ojo-256-6457.

rooertte~

I

THE BORN LOSER

Evtnrude motor, Stratos Trail
Trailer, many options. ver~ good
condition, $8500, call 7"0·742·

(740)245-9252.

&amp;.IVINI

--

You•rs Tl'llted with R11pectl

I:'IP

790

LICfNft -·· MY C.Ait
.Alll&gt; .t Altt JUfT

Free Esilinatea

~-00 S11rbul'lt
progrelllva top line.

tMVt A ·

WDBRYIND!U
No Emblrl'lllment...

1988 Chevy 112 ton ptck·up, 4&lt;4, · '93 Slrolos Fish &amp; Ski boat. 120 ·

1991 Ford F·t50 XLT 2 WD, 8'
Bed, 8 Cylinder, Automallc. 11/C,
PS . PB, PW, AM/FM CD, 70,000
Miles, $7,200, 7oi0-446-398S.

.l PON'T

No Credit • Slow Credit • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

lor Sale

(304)773-5284.

Phone (740)

CREDrr

Remodelins - Kitchen
Cablnels· Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks • Garages

•v••

Monday, March 20, 2000

~;~~

11100 st "'· 7 South
Coolllllle, OH 467:13

group

The trump suit

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representativ"'''"
Larry Schey

New Construction &amp;:

Po1111roy, OH
Paying $80.00

ACUT

FIN411R .It

,.,...,a.,..
Comtrlletlon

Thur1daya

••

Pomeranian• &amp; Pet

Eqaipme~ PUIB

fft

I ill

Quality

DIPOYIII
PIRft

Dealers.

Uc. II 00-50

Aloo Show

39141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lOll rm 871·553·7122

Free E1tirrwte1
Centr~eter~ W•l••••
Albany, Ohio

Soulb

E-ra3~!r.~~!it~~ com

Dennis Bryant, Owner

C...,..JH PUIB

1977 Ford F-100 Plck·Up, Great . 1999 Honda 450 ES 4 Wheel

Engine, Greal.Work '!luck, $500,
740-446-2399 Aftor6:30 P.M.

experience
Free Ettimatei

1 Crouchn
T lldult ln-t
12 lllumln•lod
natU..Uy
13 TrotM
14 Puuii"'J
poobtem
11 Aqullllc:
IIWIUNIII
18118n-mouM
conMCtor
17 Singer

Vulnerable: Neitlier
Desler: South

•Bathi~ •Ea ra
•Nailo •Flea Batho
All Breed•

25 year•

1·800·311·3391

$2,800.00 080. 74Q.446-3600.

$6,000 or 4-wheeler as.trade ln.

75
• Qt 3 2

• 8 54
• 8 5
ill A 9 4

hw 0,.. For lroolllllfl
For Y01r hi's llel4s.

QualUy conc"rete 0111work
•nt1 all met11l buildinp

An Mdx r Tractor a:

Club Bingo On
1993 S·10 Blazer 4 WO, 4.3 .Litre
Vortec. Loaded, 87,000 Milas ,

Poms

llgl

WILLIS'
·sEAMLESS
GUnERS
Su«., &amp; Sttlte

Pomeroy Eagles

730 Van• &amp; 4·WDs

kn!

37 Rugged roc1c
38 Soup
Ingredient
40 Bok8ry buy
41 12/31, e.g.
42 Frought
.44 Poor M8rk
45 Sook, •• ltlx
4tllmltlll. . Wllto
51 Shipworm
55 Indian
longuoge

+A
.
S.averQ J 10 t 3
Sowyer
i11KIOB5· 2 . 29 "Vel•et"
QJ73
flnlah
Soulb
30 Socroment
31 Dig up
i11AKQJ8

My.Uc

h"''•*· •nc.

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed .$5.0~/50 lb. bag

. 1992 Chevrolet Camero, ·V-8,
purple 'll!ilh black lntertor, 77,832
·mnea, right front damagt~ , $2550,
eall 7"0·992·1 508 days or 740·
949·2644 evenings and w"·
kends.
·

ill'

3

Your Concrete
. Connection
Independent Dealer

~ - door.

1988 Ford F-150 XLT V-8, AU·
lomatlc, 2 WO, 8' Bod. Topper.
Badltnor, $4.995, 74~78

ACROSS

Peggyse or tne
18 BetwMn Cote. 57 Flohhoak

Eul

K J 10

Nice Car, Needs Transmlaaion,

owner. 34·,500 actual miles.

IIEIIDEHTIAL HOlE OWNERS
Tappan HI Ellicieney 90% Gas
Furntees, Oil Furnaces, 12, Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
S~altma FrH 6 Year Pans &amp; La·
bot' Warranty Bennetts Healing &amp;

1988 Toyota MR2, blue with tHue
Interior, T tops. 5 sp., super
eharged model. right side dam-

IOIIIIIISSIU.·
COIISTIICIIOI
•Complete

ofllllo.

1994 Chevy Silverado Slepatdt,
,Loaded, excellent condition, new

B!ll~ Hogs, 740-256--8510,

·wild Turke~s For Sale, Evenings
Only. 740-448-3945
.

AERATION MOTORS

I
p

Wanted· RCA or Hughea Direct
TV system, will pay fop dollar,

3Yoars Old, 740.388-8358.

Hot Springs hot tub, 4 person,
good condition, some chemicals
lncluded, call 740·992·5053 afte(

19&amp;7 Mercury Cougar, LS Good

For Sale : Tobacco Slicks. 740·

Wantld to 'Buy

Carpet for ule· teat color , one
12X20, one 9xl7(+), eskiMO $,00

•NtwOIIIQII
•EIIclrlcll • Plumlllllg
ofltloftng • Oulllnt
·~ llldlng • PPiillllnllolltna"
Pan:h Docb
Freebtiiilfl:a

Condition, $2,000 Or 080, 14Q.
388-8086.

0333.

Are You A Metal Building• Erector
!Contractor? We Have Faetory 1 820
.DII'tct Buildings With .NO Dealer·
TOBACCO Poundage Wanlad ·
sh~ FH Or Votume Commitment.
ALL SIZES /ALL LOADS. EL· To Lease For A Good Price Paid

Aoqulrad. 1·800-718-1657.

Inch Hood Scoop, $3,500, 7402•5-5ol43.

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am 350 V·8
'LS·1 Corvette Engine, Automatic
Tranamlnlon, Factory Chrome
Wheels , T· Tops, Fully Loaded,
SOO wt Monaoon Stereo System
With 10 Speaker, And 12 DIIC

ALL STEEl BUilOINGS. Factory
Llquldalk&gt;n. Up to 50% OFF. Musl Massey Ferguson 50 gas, BushSell . 40x60, 50x100, 70x100, Hog , live Power, tilgh&amp; . Low
Range. Never been molnted.
BOxl50, Doug 1-800·776-2578.
$5,200, (304)875-3824, '

Monthly Payments. Good Credit

Ull Comaro, 355 HP Englno
wnn ApprOJCIII\IIttty 3,000 Milet,
T-Topa, Good Body &amp; Paint , 4

OBO, 740-446·0855 Da1s: 7404~6-8832 Evelngs And Weekends.
·

UBAD CREDIT? Gel Cash
Loans To $5,000. Debt Consolidation To $200,000. Credit Cards,
Mortgages. Refinancing And
Auto loans Available . Meridian

lOIII'I
CIIPiml HIVICI
•Room lddllloi11 a ~~emoc~~~~,

_
1 995' Chrysler Cirrus, XL, Au ·
tomatlc. A./C , Sunroof, $9,300

Is Coming Soon To GallilOIII
Buy, Sell, Trade, Repairs,
740-441-7093

NBA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

1995 Camar~. Air, ·Tilt f Crull&amp; ,

AttontiOn ·AIIontlon

.

1814 Ninon 300 2X. run• but
n - WOrll, $750, 74Q.II82·2222
cloys, 740-742-1507-

CD, Tlnl1d Glaao, 58,000 Mile&amp;,
Asking $8,500, 740-448-8112,
74Q.256-9103.

Mullica!.
lnatruments

570

BBJDOJ:

$700 Firm, 7-1511.

74Q.367-7480 Or 74Q.446-11552.

Pit• for Sale

560

The Dally Sentinel • Page q5

Ohio

OOP

1989 Merc1.1.ry Grand Marquis

. inge: On New Furniture. 740·446·

(304)e15-2Q52.

Pomeroy,

bullt Engine, And Tranamltak&gt;n,

Boaraa, Pianka, Beams. Large
Capacity. Beat Sawmill Value An·
yw..re. FREE lnlormaliOn. 1-800·

Waahera, dryers, refrigerators,
ranv-a . Skagga Applillnc:es, 76

Mllrch 20, 2000

t t18 Pontiac Formulo 400; Ro-

Sawmill $3,715, Sow logo Into

GOOD UIID ""LIANCES

Monday, Mllrch 20, 2000

71 0 Autoe for 8111

540 Mlaceii11110UI
MarchandIll

- - . (:104)175-7381.

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\.

�P9 Be • The O.lly Sentinel

571-1313 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS 252 SonwMI Drlvo, Buffalo,
NV 14225.
For S.lt : Atcondilioned wa•h-

Small Suek Stove, Fireplace In·

ert, dryert and refrigerators .

sert. Blower with Thlfmostal.

Thompaons Appliance . 3407

Coal or Wood. S250. (304)7735213.
STEEL BUILDINGS : Faclory
Cancellallona 25x30, 30xolO,
45x100, 50xUO New Materials 1

Vlno str..l, Coil 740-441-7398.
t.-etl-0121.
.

Soiling At lnvolcol 1·800·211 ·
9394X_.7.

~ ca,.t 202 Ciorl&lt; Chapel Road, Porter Oh io, 740-U8·
7444 'on..AL/IIfeSa.. Aioli'

Corrugatld Ralnlorcld Pipe, With

New And lfsld Fu·r nlture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga .
Good Used Beds, Orenera,

CoUC'-s, Dlnelltl, Etc. Bill Sav-

Two 1 1· Sections Of The Ntw

Connector. Patd: $160 Sill: $110;
740.2~161.

VIAGRAIIII ORDER BY PHONEIII
Stay At Hornell! 1·800·21 1-1737
Dept F

4112.

Warerllnt Special: 314 200 PSI

$21.95 Per t 00; I' 200 PSI

Porch Furnllure: Rour,d Whlte
Wrought-Iron Table -,14 Marching
Chaira, $SO. I Black Wrought ·
Iron Cha ise lounge, $"5 .

$37.00 Per 100; AU Bra81!1 CompreS&amp;Jon Fillings In Slocl&lt;

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537·9528
WHITE'S METAL DETEClORS

Outtn Size Btd (White Iron
Headboard),
Mattress/Box
Springs. EJCce11ent Condillon .

$200, (304)458-2214.- -.

Ron Allison , 588 Wataon Road ,

Bidwel, Ohk&gt;, 740-448-•331.
Wolff Tanning Bad . Sunquest
Pro26AST Like New. 7"0·256-,
6339, Allor 4 P.M.

R&amp;D's Used Furniture Greai Selection, Priced To Sell! ·come
And Browse.· Corner Of Floute 7
&amp;. Addison Pike.
Buy. Furni-

550

Whirlpool Refrigerator Freezer

Block, brick, sewer pipta, wind·
owa, Hnteta. etc. Claude Winter~,
'Rio Grande, OH Call 700·2~5-

Building ·
Suppllea '

·we

lure' 74Q.367-o280.

Side 81 Sldt: Kirby Upright
Sweeper, Prac1ically NeW With All

AllaehmonlS, 740446-1304.

Whirlpool Wuher, $80; Dryer,

·'I

I
I

'·

$100; Zenith 27'TV, $100; All
Good CondHioo. (304)675-7889.

Antique•

530

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,

1124 Eail Main on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·992·2526 or 740.99~­
. 1&amp;39. ~USI Moore, owner.
Fancy Oak Secretary Desk . •
Bookcase With Gallery: Early
Bakera Cabinet /Kitchen Cup·
board, Stone Jars Wlt.h Writing ,
Sponge Wear Pitcher, 740·367-

5121 .

.

AKC Labrador Pupplea. ·alack,

$175, 740-256--8733.
AKC registered Ba11e11 pupa,
tlrst shOts &amp; wormed, 740·949·

2355 or 740-8411-3117.
Registered Border Coli/a Pupa.
Working Parenll, lrf1:10rted Blood
Lines , Good Markings·, Firat

SholS, 740-379·911Q.

7871. Aller 5 P.M.

: 540 Ml~etllaneoua
Merchandlae
' Ping' Clubs l .H. 5 And 3 Woods
8, 7, 8, 9 And Wedge (Irons) Bag;
Aloo 2 Adams Tight lies .$70
EICII ; All $400, 740-446-0417 A1·

....

~.

Credit Corp. 1-800-471-5119 Ext

1180.

.

37 People Needed To Loae ·Up
To 30 Pounds In The Next 30
Days, Free Samples. 740·44t ·
1962.

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
·NO CASH?? MMX Tachnolog1
Will Finance With

-o•

Down. Past

Crldlt Prollltms, No Prolllem. Coil
ll&gt;l Free 1-877-293-4082.

Poortlo1s Muo~ Inc.

FAm,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVES lOCK

810 Farm Equlpm1nt
2 Hay Wagon&amp; $400 Each; 1 lnlernpllonal Ha1 flako $700, .740·
388-0408.
2000 Ford Oiesel Tractor: 3800
Ford With 91•' Finished Mower;
135 Massey Ferguson Diesel ;
1120 John Deere Diesel, 740·
286-6522.

245-5121 .
International 275 manure apr8f.d•

or, $1800 080, 74Q.992-5071 ,

DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS Up Fronl. Call Jodre1 J. Farm t1·800-279-4300.
. 937· 373-4644 Can Call Collect
After 9:00 P.M.
IIQ SCREEN TV. Taka On Small

fl&lt;h, call 740-~·2644 .

Comptele DISH Network -satellite
system , brand new, $99, 740·
992· 1182 or 304·773-5305 alter

I

I

epm,

COMPUTERS • low Or

So Down.

Low Monthly Payments. Y2K
Compliant. Almost Everyone Approvod. 1-800-611-3418 Ext 330.
Craftsman lawn tractor, 15.5hp ..
Konler onglno, 42' CUI, IIO"f good

condition, $750,

7~0-985-4349 ,

-~

Grubb's Plano: tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Nted Tuned? Call the

.,_ Or. 740-441-4525

5pm,

JMITIIOI. HEliTIIG AND

COOL=-~lf~~MENT
• If You Don't Call us We Both
Lo,.. • ·Free EstimAtes I 740·446··

8308, HIOQ-291-Q098.

Wollla 740-949-3315 leave mea-

sago.

.

We Are Buying Tobacco Base &amp;

Lease, 937-695· 0697. (Belore
11 :00 A.M. &amp; Aller 6 P.M.)

Llveatock

630

10 Vear Old AOHA Bay Mara,
Bred For May Foal. Asking

$1.500 740-441l-80ill '
11 year old Palomino mere, child
safe, traffic safe, neek reins, has
won local horse shows, pleasure
horse, $1500; 19 nlon_th old bay
coli, gelded, $200; 740-992-1412,

2 Palnl Uarea : One 4 Years Old;
One 2 Years Old; 2 Arabian
Geldings; One 7 Years Old; One

2 Year Old Stud Colt $500, 740·
388-9265.

JET

Fair Pills For Sale. 740&lt;44Hl968
Or 740--4362.
Regilitt!'ld Rad Polled LlmoUsin
Bull For ~ale Yearling, Phone

740.446-50111.

:

.

Aopalrld, &amp; Rebu ilt In Stock.
Coli Ron EVIIM, 1·800·537·9528.

Yearling AOHA Grey CoU, Broke
To T,le And Lead , Asking $900 ,

IIOIILE HOME OWNERS

Yearling Jack Donkey, Asking

74Q.441-1108t .
$400. 740-44$808t.

Huge lrwentory.. Discount Prices,
On Vinyl Skirting , Doors, Wind·

840

owl, Anchors , Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps .- Bennetts

16001 Rqund bates of mixed hay

Mobile Home Supply,

7~0- 446-

Hay &amp; Grain

$25. a pteoo 304-675-7608.
Ear corn anct square bales ·of h8'j,

9418 www.oi'Vb.CO{nlbennett

call740-985-4&lt;65.

New Trombone And Motorized

Grou0d Ear Corn, your sacks.
Pnona aftor 4PM (304)675-2443.

~.

740-446-9849 . .

NIC.I Used Furniture and Ap·
pttsncas. (7~0)·4~6-4039 (740)..._1004 Anytima.

NO MONEV DOWN Ill Compaq
HP IBM Desktops /Laplops, E·
Comerce Webaites. Stan Your
HomaBualnesa Todavl Almost

eve,.,.... Awrovedt Low Month11

Payments, Fret Color Printer 1·

888·479·2345

www.ai~sran.com

(ToiiFree)

Nordic Trac Ex8rclst Macnjne,
S450 New ; Same As New Sell

$1110,740-446-11151.
Prom Dre~s • Faviana , SiZe 516:

ShOos and Jewo1r1. (304)6758757.

Square Bates For"

2075.

Sa1e: 7"0·44~·

Square Balu of Hay for sale.
$2.25 per bait. (304 )675-27 41 .
Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
'Round Dtliwery a Volume 01&amp;·
count Available. Heritage Farm.

(304)675-572• .

850 Seed &amp; Fer:tiiiZII'
Tobacco Plants
Now taking orders lor lhis Sprtng.
First Orders Mil Guarantee Best&amp;
Earliest
Planla.
Dewhurst

Farmo,i304i895'37o401895-3Y89.
THANSPORTAIION

Cooll~g .

t-800·872-5967

. , ..orvb.com'bennetl

Ron's Gun Shop, 740.742-8412.

age, $1700,

7~0-992·1506

992·6215

day,,

740-949 -2644 evenings &amp; wee-

710 Autos for Sale
'92 Pontiac Bonneville, four door,
e~tcellent condition, sharp, $4650,

740-949-2005 evenings.
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND . Honda's Toyota's,
. Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·
lies . Call Nowl 800-772·7470:

EKT. 7832.

FREE
ESTIMATES
I

22yn. Local

N.W a mille'
'

ALDER

'

Hlth &amp; Dry
Stlf-Stotttt
33795 Hilnnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

• 10 • 4 2
• A 7 8
+KB •742

••

740·992-5212

740-992-1671

Pomeroy, Ohio

kends.

•New Home•
•Gar.g•

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

V.C. YOUNG Ill

1,-.w t mo. pd.

7/22fTFN

$1 ,000,740-441.0108.

Shade River

1991 Buick Park. .4venue, 95,206
Miles, Good Condition, Serious

Buyers Only, 740o441-8241 .
1991 Plymouth Blazer AS, 5
Speed, Premium Sound Pad&lt;age.
Sunroof, Loaded , $3,200, 080,

740-446--6962.
1991 Pont. 5000 LE,

Ag. Service

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

740-742·8015

OpJd

$6.75/50 lb. bag

51 ,000 miles. Excellent Condl·

lion. $2,800 . (304)675·1204/
(304)675-2034.

.

S rin Seeds 8 Fertilizer

JI:,WICK"SC.

1992 Chov1 Cavalier 4 C11. A/C,
Pwr Sir. Pwr. llfokoa, Look&amp; Good.

HfiUUHG ancl .
EXCfWfiTIHCI

Runs Good. A1klng $1 1 800.00 .

1994 Dodge Intrepid, Good Condillon, 82,000 Mlloa, $1,500, 740441-11151.

Hauhng • U1111Sione •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
BuOdozer Services
(740) 992-3470

1995 Buick Leaabr8 Custom "'
Doors,
Loa ded,
aluminum
Wheels, A.IC, Tilt. Cruise, Pwr,
Locka, Pwr Windows, Pwr Seats,

·$8,200.00: (2,000 Under Book
Valua)t 740.882-7512

Asking S9.ooo. 740-256·9244
740-448-4423.

or

CD Chonger In Trunk Cltlettt In

.1 994 Mazda Mavaho 4 WD Ex·
cellent Condition, PW. POL. Lumbar Seating, Cruise Tilt, Sunroof,
CO Player, 94,000 Miles, Asking

Dash, Deep Navv Metallic With
Dark Grey Leather Interior-, Any
Reasonable Offer Considered,

1996 Chrysler Town &amp; Country

$8,900 740-379·2133.
LXI Van •. 47 ,000 · Miles, V· 6,

740o-.4508 Or 740.-.7375.

Loaded, $13,500, 080 740·2561999 BlaCk Monte Carta All Pow· · 1252, Home: 740-256-1618.
ora, In Excallonl Shapol 740-3851996 Jeep Cherokee 4x4 Drlvt.
8358.
82,000 Miles, Air, Needs A Little

Bod\1 Wort!, Painted. $6,000 OBO;

1999 Mitaubisrtl Mirage, Green

1993 Dodge Spirit 4 Cylinder, Automatic, 100 ,000 Miles. 11,800

ExteriOr, 36,000 Mites, E111cellent

Carll Will Taka Pay-On. 740-245-

080,740-256-1233.

•

2000 Ford Escort $10,000 OBD.
(304)875-5479.

740

92 Bonneville SE &amp;edan, metallic
blue. 80.000 miles, good condl·

1981 Honda 750 Custom Motor·
cycle, 77,600 ~llts, New Battery,
$600. 740-379-2853.

lion , asking $8 ,000, 740·742·
8200.
..

Motorcycle•

1985 Suzuki 230 4 Wheeler with
Reverse 4 Stroke Engine. EJte&amp;l·
lent Condition. $1,500. (304)675·

95 Mustang GT eonvef'llble, dark
green wl'h btaek· top, 66K miles,

3524.

HONDA's $100, $500 &amp; UP. PO-

1986 T~X 250R Honda . S2700 .
(304)576-2711 . .

$13,400 080. caii74Q-742-3062.

LICE IMPOUND. Honda'a Toyo•
ta's, Chevys, Jeeps, And Sporl

Utilities. Call Nowt 800-772-7470; t993 Suzuki 125 RM 2 Stroke ,
$1,200 OBO, 740·245-5018 Or
EXT. 6338.
352-4805 LIOY8 Message.
CliRS FROM $211/110. lm· 1i9-4 ZR 50. E111cellenl Condition.
pounds /Rapos. Fee. SO Down 124 (304)458-2214. Leave Message.
Moa. 019.9% For listings t-800·
319-3323X2156.
1995 Hon&lt;;la 300 Four Tru .
Looks

720 Trucka lor Sale

Good .

Runs

Good!

AT0:30 P.M.
Mlln St.;

Drive Excellonl Condition, $4,800,
740.256-9244.
·

1987 ChOV1 5· 10, 2.5, 4 Cyl,
AC,PS.PB, Nice &amp; Straight
$2,200. (304)875-3824,

750 Boats &amp; Motors

Fau:tory Authbriud

r-

....

East State Street
t\,thens, Ohio 45701
"A

,.....,

.

pll' glll)l
$300.00 COVII'III'

tire~,

740-741·3411

11/lt/trn

ow ... ow ... ow ...

· Bryan R~ves
www.sunsetho e com

PSI
CONSTRUOION
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions; ·Pole
Buildings, Etc.
· Free Estimates
211,JD01 mopd.

a;!~

·ro!&gt;rnoo .

IllC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Sid!ng • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room AddiUona
·Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIIliAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•I! Phone 674-;1 3ll

199~

810

Loaded. V-8, Automatic. Low

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Milos, Wo ...davs 9:30 A,M. -5:00
P.M. Call 740-446-2445 : Allor
5:00 P.M. And Weekends Call
740-446-t309, Alii ForVtrgl.

Uncondltionil lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnished . Es·

1975. Cal 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870, 1·800·287-0576. Rogers WaterprooHng .

lablished

199l black Chevy S-10 Stepslda
Extended Cab, 3 door, loaded,
25.000 mile&amp;, very sharp, lull larlngs, $12,000, 740·9•9·2045 or

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work, Guaranteed,
French City Maytag. 740·446·

740-849-2203.
1997 Ford Ranger XLT, 2 wheat
drive , st~p sicte, exc"ellent condl·
lion, ·4 cyl., aulo. ale. arnllm CO.
50,000 ml.tes, custom wneels,
bargl.aas bed coVer, $8,999, 304-

7795.

n.

773-5305 after epm. ,

Honil

. Improvements

GMC 1500 Sarli&amp; SLE

.

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painling. vinyl siding,
earpen!ry, doors, windows. bathS,
mobile home repair and more. For
free eslimate call Chat, 740-992·

'•

88 Ford Ranger extend cab,

$2800, 740-742·2780.

6323.

89 Ford F-350 Supercab Dually,
loaded . 740·949·2355 or 740- Jlms Or~wall &amp; Construction.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/
949·3111.
Drywall , Siding, Roofs. Addi ·
tions , Painting , etc . 1304)6744623 or (304)674-0155.
'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDI
1978 GMC 112 Ton Van, 350 Au··

llwingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basemenl repairs
done. lrae .eatfmates. lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job experl·

tomaUc, $1 ,200 Runs Good, 740.
446-6323.
1979 Jeep , 4WD Tru ck. Auto
trans, low .mileage, 360--4 Barren,
new tires &amp; whaels1Sharp Trude.

once. (~)885-3587 .

840. Ellctrlcal and
Refrlgenrilon

(304)675-1564.
1979 Rontlgade CJ5 Jeep, 304:
too,, Original. 2nd

v-a. 3spd.

Attention: New Healing ~d Cool·

lng Sllqp Oilers Great Rates And

$6.000. (304)882-3622.

Extentnt Serv~e. Let Our Expeli·
1985 Dodge 41114 llatbtd truck, ence Technicia n Give You A
minimum bid $2000. Contact Alan, . Free EStimate TOday Anct Beat
The Spring Rush. Call Advanced
740·849·3232.
Comfort Systems At 74 0·446·
1987 Aerostar Runs Well , ~ted&amp; 0988 .
Transmi ssion $900 OBO 740·
Residenllai or comme~cial wiring ,
441-0CI27,
new service or repairs. Master Ll·
censeel electrician . Ridenour
. Electrical. WY'000306. 304·675-

1788.

. ,.

Fax 304-675-2·457

';~•Pmking

lOIII'

Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

!!:'

WV Contractors

•

06

WO•calltv
·R•plcaoemtnt

-~••• ioclv Peart#

''''"d ••tr•·
Heulpp

rU ,l~,

B~tlldooer

·:·

Houl!ll &amp; Trailer Sitea

740-742-9501
'Toll Free

CHECK THE

WANT ADS F1RS17

f.IAI/E BROU614T MV NEW

'"l'litAV'INI'; DOLL ,r

&amp; Baelchoe
~

Se"'ke•

. parts

IFOit ,. SI~Olil AHD TELL' TO~V.

I

All replacement
·Fr11 Delivery

l

.

IIANDS.ARE HEL11 T06ElliER · ·
IN. A PRA'fiN6 POSITION BV

NO, I PO NOT BELIEVE

VELCRO 15 MENnOHEI7 AJ.II(WMEREIN

WANTED: BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
CURRENTLY HAS OPENINGS IN MEIGS COUNTY:
1) 40 hrs/wk: 3 pm Mon lhru8 am Sat; sleep-over
required; daytime hours off;
· ·
Position benefits include heailh/d!lntal Insurance
. and vacation/sick time;
1
2) 33 hrs/Wk; 8 am Sat thru 8 am !'-lon: sleep·over
req4ired:
3) Emergency Relief (Substitutes): hours
scheduled as needed;
We are searching for compassionate professionals
with a team vision and a desire to leech, personal and .
commuMy ski!IS to Individuals with mental rallrdatlori!
The work environm~nt , Is Inform$! and rewarding. Th!'
requ!rements are: high school d!plomatGEO ,. valid
driver's !lcense, three years good driVIng eKpi!rience
and adequate automob!le Insurance coverage, 8.C.S:
offers comprehenalve training in the field of MR/00.
Starting salary: $5.50/hDrs. Interested appllcsnts need
to specify posHion oi inierest and Hnd reaume to: .;ii· .

P.O. Box 804

:

Pus

Norlb

36
Past

......
•......,
• .....
....

w~ Sm•i"~ All Mnk~•
t ... ,.•.

n.·y·····

w...

Hung•·• • llt·f..igt·o·uturo
Fo·t•t•z.•t·oi · l)i•lo Wu•f,..j. ·

~.

219 E. 2nd

' 992·1550

..,..

The Appliance

Eul

Opening lead: • Q

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll

!MONDAY

Campoe

Olilbrlly Olphtr OI'IDIOIII!lllll' -lid f - quototlonl by lomoul PIOPil, PIIIOnd
,
~. IIIOh llltlr In the ol_!ll\ir ltandllor anothtr. .
.
Ttlattf ctu.: lJ 11111111 M
·

V

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VMJI'VT

ZMDVI

NMI!I

VXXMGIIDPII

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LPIP

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VVII'
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CKYYP88, ,

~PBVVI

IILP'R

MN .

RIII!IOEF.
PREVIOUS .SOLUTION: 'She got her good looks from her father plaatk: surgeon.'- Oroucho Marx
0 2(tQ(J by NEA, Inc.
20

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Baahan

Road
..Racine, Ohio

JACKS
ROOFING.
.
'
&amp; CONSIRUOION.

O
Rearrange !Mters of
. four ,.romblod warda

ba-

low 1o form four tlmplo wordt.

cI

I

p Es T

I~IIIII' ..

_r
:

I

G I 4T E N 1·
1

I

I

_

N E M 0 V ~'
f-....,,;.:-..;1..:.:..,;1';-:.., ~p.

It's not enough to think about
doing something. In order to de·
'--~-'---'---''--'' velop positive feelings you must
.---------l.:lhaite positive • - . c. - ..
.
TRAFLE

I

I1

6

I

I' I I

I0

..;· ~;~;:;~;;~~·~~~
-

.

·Complete the chuckle quoled
by fillingfrom
in the
words
you pievelop
step missing
No, 3 bt
low.

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED LE TIERS
IN THESE SQUARES

6 g~iC:~~!~~ lETTERS TO I

3

•

III II II

SCfiAM.I.ITS ANSWERS
Embark· Oasis· Notch ·· Paqnch • _THINK
A new bumper sticker tickled my funny bone. It read:

' One's Brain
THINK:'
.. •.

Is

Only As Strong As One's Weakest

MARCH2ol

J

.

SIZII 5' X 10'

• Coating • Outt1r1 .
• Siding • Dryw•ll
• P•Inling • Plumbing
Fl'll Eltlmltea ·

Houre
7:00AM ·8 PM

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2088

45771

74().:949-2217

.

..
'

•••

NIW Roofs • Ref)lilrt

~lLLiL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
., )

'992-5479

'l

·••
! ,
:
•
:
:

Min:h 21, 2000 '
failh on the enterprising ideas in which you've ·
invested considerable effort. The
year ahead could grant you some
compensation and acknowledg-

•

ment for

Keep

your initiative.

:
ARIES (March 21·April 19)'
:. Jlecause of your willingness to
cooperate wilh others today, you
~ ~ ·could· receive some surprising
~ · support from one who, ~ntil now,
&gt;l has lleen rather indifferent about
your inte,.,sts. Trying to plleh up,
'1 a T&gt;roken romance? The ,AslrDG,.Ph Matchmaker can help you
:, understand 'I'hat to do 10 make lite
•I relationship )YOlk. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o Ibis newspaper,
.P.O. Box 1758, Mumy Hill Sta~: tlon, New York, NY I0156:
:•
TAURUS (April W.Mar 20)
Worthwhile endeavors wll ele• vole your self-eatoeat today in ·
; ways you could never Imaaine.
~ ··Find way1 to spend your dme pOductivcly intlead of with frlvol0111
punu.ita .

H

1!·

#; .

e•

1t

may occur at a time _when

•

you're

nol. looking.
LEO (July 23-Aug. '22) A last

· minute revision concerning an
agreemen1 .y ou're nejotiating
with another could acwally tum

trary

oul to be a blessing in dispise.
Don't be lao quick to reject it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23:sept. 22) ·
You could be obit like • ·111111net
todoy in IIIIIICtina thin1s to you
that could lrlllsllle 10 ,_~nonal
pin of some Kind. Of ~ne. it
wouldn't hurt to holp lhin1s olone

01little; eilher.

·

LIBRA (Sept.\23-0ct. 23) The
~lp qlllllnes you na11111111
~I lillY be Yll)l INICh in IYI•

dence today. ~could rum to
you 10 set the ccuno. etpoc:iolly in
aoclalliruations. .
.

,•,

1\1

SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24-Nov. 221
Today might produce a number of
reciprocal acts from others in
return ,for how well you've heen
lookina out for them latolr. What
yOU've doi'te has not .a;one unnoticed. · .
. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) Touch bases today wilh sev·
eral people with whom you
haven't had much contact lately.'\
These contacts could prove to be,
very beneficial for both you and
. them.
.
CAPRICOIU'/ (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) The bosier you are today, the
heller you'"' apt to perform, con•

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Situations that have•iolements of
chiiiiCC to lhem could prove to be
lucky for you today. However,
this does not give you license to
· take O'llllandish risks:
CANCER (June 2'1-July 22)
You could accidenlally slumble
onlo a solution to a Pl""lem
today that has been v"'ing you for
lhe greaier pail of last week . It

10 focusing in OJl only one

specific objective. Set as many .
goals as you think you can handle.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2i).Feb. 19)
Because ·your faith is so strona:
you'll !lOt only be able to stabilize
thinas for younelf todoy. but also
for those with whom you 'II be
involved.

PISCES (Feb. 20.Matth 20)

There's no need to be buhful
about requestina assistiiiiCe for
. tomethiiiJ wilh which you need
help today. Your frlendtare •"l•r
to find ways t~ balonce the
accounts of your good deeds.

L

he's a

TIIAT DAILY
PUZZLII

992-2635 882-3666:

2!211/00 1 mo. pd.

Parts • All Makes

9 100 aq. meter•
10 Nalghbor of Fr.

Middleport New Haven::·

rt

Pomet'f!Y· OJi.io
Usr;tt Appliances

7 Profound ..
8 Spouao

.RADIO SHACK DEALEl

to 10' x 30'

'

JFK llonder
Can. prov.
Actreoo Morkol
In oddHion
5 Rowo
8 Neck of woter

ILICTRIIICS:'

tile .,-pll,ance .. .''Weh.: Bac " ·

.

1
2
3
4

. Pan.
Pan

Sentinel

l
·~

Jackson, OH 45640..()804.

,II.

and Mo.
connector
llllurtng__, 5e Plnelool
Groek Tetter
Pronto (--)
DOWN

33 Enten.lnlng
36 MI. Heywortll

. BY PHILLIP ALDER
Ely Culbertson was an entrepreneur who put bridge onto the
U.S. map. One of his many interesting articles was reprinted in
this month's i~sue of The Bridge
World magazine. In "Attacking
Trump Entries," Culbertson
shows three ways in which the
defenders csn prevent the declar·
er from aeitina the benefit of key
trump entries in the dummy.
Aaalnst four spades, West
opena with the diamond queen:
1'/{0, ace, six. What card should
East lead at trick two?
Culbertson aave no biddina;
probably he couldn't think of a
way to reach four spades. In his
day, North would have raised to
two spades, and South would
have passed; reaching a contract
even I could make! .In my
sequence•. North makes a limit
raise, showing four-plus trumps
and 10-12 support points. When
·having at, least a nine-card fit,
count three points for a singleton
and .five .for a void . .
It looks obvious for East to
return a hea!(, but that lets the
contract make. The play goes:
Heart to dummy's, ace, club to
South's ace, club ruff in the dummy, trump to. South, club ruff,.
draw trumps, and claim I0 triCks .
(five spades, one heart, one diamond, one club and two club ruffs
in the dummy).
Now watch what happens if
East switche.s to a spade, a trumpenlry-killing_play that removes
one of dummy's spades prematurely. Declarer can ruff his two
club losers in the dummy, but
after the second ruff. lhere are no
spades left in the dummy. Declarer cannot get back to hand to draw
East's remaining trump. He must
lose two hearts and a diamond ruff
for one down.
'

j

., AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp;: .~
BLACKBEAR PAGIN :'

1

All appli~tions must lie post·~ed by 3/28/00.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

21
23
28
28

To get a current weather
report, check the .·

•'

:

Seplie Syolf!""' &amp;
V1iU1U.•
(7401 992·3·~·

VOU WILL Nq!E TilAT IIER

••
•
'

\

•

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Weal
Pass

';

Nice Pop-Up Camper Sleeps 7,
New Canvas &amp; Windows , $800

Bollom. $5.500 . 740·446-4109;
·After 5, 740-379-2589.

'YfJ-.1\,WTYOO CXltoli 00\H\CW""
fv\UC\-1 lI
1'\Uii!:.l!&gt; \0 ~II

IISSEL.LIUILDIRS

TREE SERVICE

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Stainle'as Steel Chrome Along

...
0\oJ ...

'l•Drivewoys • Tennis Courts

25H926

SERVICES

~

740·992·7599

740-992-1709

Boat V-205 Rinker Cuddy Cabin
.20 loot. $12,000, Phone: (740)·

1994 Ford Ranger XLT 2 WD,
.New Ttra~ 5 Speed, Look&amp; Great,

II

..

!N Tl-\1!&gt;

2249.

080, 7ojo-256-6457.

rooertte~

I

THE BORN LOSER

Evtnrude motor, Stratos Trail
Trailer, many options. ver~ good
condition, $8500, call 7"0·742·

(740)245-9252.

&amp;.IVINI

--

You•rs Tl'llted with R11pectl

I:'IP

790

LICfNft -·· MY C.Ait
.Alll&gt; .t Altt JUfT

Free Esilinatea

~-00 S11rbul'lt
progrelllva top line.

tMVt A ·

WDBRYIND!U
No Emblrl'lllment...

1988 Chevy 112 ton ptck·up, 4&lt;4, · '93 Slrolos Fish &amp; Ski boat. 120 ·

1991 Ford F·t50 XLT 2 WD, 8'
Bed, 8 Cylinder, Automallc. 11/C,
PS . PB, PW, AM/FM CD, 70,000
Miles, $7,200, 7oi0-446-398S.

.l PON'T

No Credit • Slow Credit • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

lor Sale

(304)773-5284.

Phone (740)

CREDrr

Remodelins - Kitchen
Cablnels· Vinyl SidingRoofs • Decks • Garages

•v••

Monday, March 20, 2000

~;~~

11100 st "'· 7 South
Coolllllle, OH 467:13

group

The trump suit

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representativ"'''"
Larry Schey

New Construction &amp;:

Po1111roy, OH
Paying $80.00

ACUT

FIN411R .It

,.,...,a.,..
Comtrlletlon

Thur1daya

••

Pomeranian• &amp; Pet

Eqaipme~ PUIB

fft

I ill

Quality

DIPOYIII
PIRft

Dealers.

Uc. II 00-50

Aloo Show

39141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lOll rm 871·553·7122

Free E1tirrwte1
Centr~eter~ W•l••••
Albany, Ohio

Soulb

E-ra3~!r.~~!it~~ com

Dennis Bryant, Owner

C...,..JH PUIB

1977 Ford F-100 Plck·Up, Great . 1999 Honda 450 ES 4 Wheel

Engine, Greal.Work '!luck, $500,
740-446-2399 Aftor6:30 P.M.

experience
Free Ettimatei

1 Crouchn
T lldult ln-t
12 lllumln•lod
natU..Uy
13 TrotM
14 Puuii"'J
poobtem
11 Aqullllc:
IIWIUNIII
18118n-mouM
conMCtor
17 Singer

Vulnerable: Neitlier
Desler: South

•Bathi~ •Ea ra
•Nailo •Flea Batho
All Breed•

25 year•

1·800·311·3391

$2,800.00 080. 74Q.446-3600.

$6,000 or 4-wheeler as.trade ln.

75
• Qt 3 2

• 8 54
• 8 5
ill A 9 4

hw 0,.. For lroolllllfl
For Y01r hi's llel4s.

QualUy conc"rete 0111work
•nt1 all met11l buildinp

An Mdx r Tractor a:

Club Bingo On
1993 S·10 Blazer 4 WO, 4.3 .Litre
Vortec. Loaded, 87,000 Milas ,

Poms

llgl

WILLIS'
·sEAMLESS
GUnERS
Su«., &amp; Sttlte

Pomeroy Eagles

730 Van• &amp; 4·WDs

kn!

37 Rugged roc1c
38 Soup
Ingredient
40 Bok8ry buy
41 12/31, e.g.
42 Frought
.44 Poor M8rk
45 Sook, •• ltlx
4tllmltlll. . Wllto
51 Shipworm
55 Indian
longuoge

+A
.
S.averQ J 10 t 3
Sowyer
i11KIOB5· 2 . 29 "Vel•et"
QJ73
flnlah
Soulb
30 Socroment
31 Dig up
i11AKQJ8

My.Uc

h"''•*· •nc.

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed .$5.0~/50 lb. bag

. 1992 Chevrolet Camero, ·V-8,
purple 'll!ilh black lntertor, 77,832
·mnea, right front damagt~ , $2550,
eall 7"0·992·1 508 days or 740·
949·2644 evenings and w"·
kends.
·

ill'

3

Your Concrete
. Connection
Independent Dealer

~ - door.

1988 Ford F-150 XLT V-8, AU·
lomatlc, 2 WO, 8' Bod. Topper.
Badltnor, $4.995, 74~78

ACROSS

Peggyse or tne
18 BetwMn Cote. 57 Flohhoak

Eul

K J 10

Nice Car, Needs Transmlaaion,

owner. 34·,500 actual miles.

IIEIIDEHTIAL HOlE OWNERS
Tappan HI Ellicieney 90% Gas
Furntees, Oil Furnaces, 12, Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
S~altma FrH 6 Year Pans &amp; La·
bot' Warranty Bennetts Healing &amp;

1988 Toyota MR2, blue with tHue
Interior, T tops. 5 sp., super
eharged model. right side dam-

IOIIIIIISSIU.·
COIISTIICIIOI
•Complete

ofllllo.

1994 Chevy Silverado Slepatdt,
,Loaded, excellent condition, new

B!ll~ Hogs, 740-256--8510,

·wild Turke~s For Sale, Evenings
Only. 740-448-3945
.

AERATION MOTORS

I
p

Wanted· RCA or Hughea Direct
TV system, will pay fop dollar,

3Yoars Old, 740.388-8358.

Hot Springs hot tub, 4 person,
good condition, some chemicals
lncluded, call 740·992·5053 afte(

19&amp;7 Mercury Cougar, LS Good

For Sale : Tobacco Slicks. 740·

Wantld to 'Buy

Carpet for ule· teat color , one
12X20, one 9xl7(+), eskiMO $,00

•NtwOIIIQII
•EIIclrlcll • Plumlllllg
ofltloftng • Oulllnt
·~ llldlng • PPiillllnllolltna"
Pan:h Docb
Freebtiiilfl:a

Condition, $2,000 Or 080, 14Q.
388-8086.

0333.

Are You A Metal Building• Erector
!Contractor? We Have Faetory 1 820
.DII'tct Buildings With .NO Dealer·
TOBACCO Poundage Wanlad ·
sh~ FH Or Votume Commitment.
ALL SIZES /ALL LOADS. EL· To Lease For A Good Price Paid

Aoqulrad. 1·800-718-1657.

Inch Hood Scoop, $3,500, 7402•5-5ol43.

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am 350 V·8
'LS·1 Corvette Engine, Automatic
Tranamlnlon, Factory Chrome
Wheels , T· Tops, Fully Loaded,
SOO wt Monaoon Stereo System
With 10 Speaker, And 12 DIIC

ALL STEEl BUilOINGS. Factory
Llquldalk&gt;n. Up to 50% OFF. Musl Massey Ferguson 50 gas, BushSell . 40x60, 50x100, 70x100, Hog , live Power, tilgh&amp; . Low
Range. Never been molnted.
BOxl50, Doug 1-800·776-2578.
$5,200, (304)875-3824, '

Monthly Payments. Good Credit

Ull Comaro, 355 HP Englno
wnn ApprOJCIII\IIttty 3,000 Milet,
T-Topa, Good Body &amp; Paint , 4

OBO, 740-446·0855 Da1s: 7404~6-8832 Evelngs And Weekends.
·

UBAD CREDIT? Gel Cash
Loans To $5,000. Debt Consolidation To $200,000. Credit Cards,
Mortgages. Refinancing And
Auto loans Available . Meridian

lOIII'I
CIIPiml HIVICI
•Room lddllloi11 a ~~emoc~~~~,

_
1 995' Chrysler Cirrus, XL, Au ·
tomatlc. A./C , Sunroof, $9,300

Is Coming Soon To GallilOIII
Buy, Sell, Trade, Repairs,
740-441-7093

NBA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

1995 Camar~. Air, ·Tilt f Crull&amp; ,

AttontiOn ·AIIontlon

.

1814 Ninon 300 2X. run• but
n - WOrll, $750, 74Q.II82·2222
cloys, 740-742-1507-

CD, Tlnl1d Glaao, 58,000 Mile&amp;,
Asking $8,500, 740-448-8112,
74Q.256-9103.

Mullica!.
lnatruments

570

BBJDOJ:

$700 Firm, 7-1511.

74Q.367-7480 Or 74Q.446-11552.

Pit• for Sale

560

The Dally Sentinel • Page q5

Ohio

OOP

1989 Merc1.1.ry Grand Marquis

. inge: On New Furniture. 740·446·

(304)e15-2Q52.

Pomeroy,

bullt Engine, And Tranamltak&gt;n,

Boaraa, Pianka, Beams. Large
Capacity. Beat Sawmill Value An·
yw..re. FREE lnlormaliOn. 1-800·

Waahera, dryers, refrigerators,
ranv-a . Skagga Applillnc:es, 76

Mllrch 20, 2000

t t18 Pontiac Formulo 400; Ro-

Sawmill $3,715, Sow logo Into

GOOD UIID ""LIANCES

Monday, Mllrch 20, 2000

71 0 Autoe for 8111

540 Mlaceii11110UI
MarchandIll

- - . (:104)175-7381.

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\.

�·Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

flomPapBl
bus H artley beat Hamilton Badin
52- 44 in Division II, So uth Euclid
Regina won the Division Ill ride
with a 56- 35 v ictory over
Bluffton and Berlin Hiland completed an unbeaten season by winning the Division IV crown 46-30
over Maria Stein Marion Local.
Hardey's championship was its
third, but the first for the Hawks
since 1978. They also we,..: one of
three champions at the inaugural
·· state tourna/nent in 1976.
Hardey·· coach Jessica Smith
.
said that with th e score tied at 39
midway through the fourth quar-

ter, "' I told the girls we really
needed to attack th em. We were
settling for outside sho ts and
thin gs like th at. After that, there
was more inside stuff, more penetrati on." ,
Slashing inside moves by Jackie
Richardson resulted in a pair of
three-point plays that put Hartley
ahead for good.
Ri chardson scored 16 points
and had 11 rebo und s. Mimi
Haynes added 13 points fo r Hartley, while Caitlin Wolf sc ored It
for Badjn, which also lost to Hartley 44-35 in the Te!,'lllar season.
Hartley's only defeat in 27
games this sc..•ason came..• against
Our l ady of lourdes from Fort
Myers, Fla ., in a holiday tourna-

me nt.
T he umanked R ams (23- 5)
were trying for th eir seco nd
c hampionship in three year!\,
T he Blufft(! n-Reglna game
esse ntiall y was decid ed · when
Bluffton's Caity Matter, the twotime state player of the year in
Division Ill, sprained her left
ankle with 4:47 left in the first
quarter.
~
She continued to play, but the
injury limited her mobility and
the No. !- ranked Pirates (26-1)
had no one who could adequately
replace her.
" I went to take a step and it
rolled and I felt the sharpest pain I
think I've ever had," she said. " I
tho ught I wo uldn't be able to get

up and wa l~ •t first ."
Matter was held to fiw pointJ
after sccriniJ 32 Jg:linst Sardinia
Easrem Brown twu niJhll earlier.
Regina'' Ke~ Allen broile a
firiger in prac~ eerlier in the
day, and her tnmmalft, two of
·whom are Division I college
recruits, were able to adjust.
Allen, a Univenity of -C incinnati recruit, said she was inspired
by Matter's continuing to play.
"It motivated me more," she
said. "I saw Matter go down and
keep on playing, so I knew !'had ·
to stand tall and be strong."
Allen led Regina with six assists
and G ' Ann Lauder scored 14
points for Regina.
The c hampionsh~ was the first

for the seco~ranked Royals (27I), making
' r fint state tournament appea ce, but _the fourth
for coach Pat Diulus.
He won titles at Gaineld
Heights Trinity in 1990, 1994 and
1996 and brought four of Regina's
five starten frdm Trinity with him.
Oiulus is the lint Ohio coach
to lead two schools to girls' championships.
Erin Hostetler, the Division IV
co-player of the year, scored 22
points for top-ranked Hiland.
The championship is its first in
four state tournament appearances. The Hawks lost in the 1989
title ~me and were ~eaten in the
semifinals in 1990, 1997 and last
year.
'\

.

MLB exhibitions
AMERICAN LEAGUE

w

rum
Oakland ... .

L

..13
Tampa Bay .. ....... .... .. ... . 12
Toronto ....
.... . .. 11
Baltimore .
.. _____ .9

f&lt;l.

3
7
7 ,
7

.813
.632
6 11
.563

CLEVELAND . .......... 10

B

.556

Oetr011 ..... . .... ............ -9
Minneso ta ....... .. ...... . 11

B
10

.529
.524

Texas............
Chicago ..

·9
12

.471
.454

. ........... 8
.... ..... 10•

SeatUe .

. .. 7

9

.438

. ..... 8
·8
. .... 7

11
12
11

421
.400
.389

New Yo rk .................. ..5

16

238

Anaheim . ..
Kansas City

Boston... .. ......

lilam

NATIONAL LEAGUE

w ·

L

f&lt;l.

Arizona
............. 14
Montreal ........ .. .......
t1
Houston.... .......
.12
San Di ego .....................10

.6
6
7
6

.700
.647
.832
..625

St.louls ............. ............ 11

7

.611

Pittsburgh ........... .......... .10
7
.588
Chicago ........... .'........... ,•. 11
8
.579
Philadelphia ..................~. 11
.8
.579
New York ............ ...... ...... 12
10
.545
CINCI~NATI ................. ..11
11
.500
Allanta .
...............9
9
.500
Colorado ........................... 6
12
.333
MMwaukee ....................... 6
12
.337
Florida ..............................6
13
.316
San Frarlcisco .......... ....... .s
11
313
los Angeles ............. ..... ..4
14
\ 222
(NOTE: Split-squad games count in the
standings, ties do not; games against non-major
league teams do not.)

Saturday's scores
CINCINNATI 5, Philadelphia 3
New York Mets. 3. Houston 1
Montreal 3, St. Louis 2, 11)
Fk&gt;rtda (ss) 6, Kansas Cily (ss) 4
Los Angeles 4, Detroit 1
Te)(as 7, Pittsburgh 5
Baltimore 3, Minnesota 2
Toronto 3, Boston 2, 5)
Kansas City (ss) 11. NeW York Yankees (ss)

3
New Vorl&lt; Mets (ss) 7, florida (ss) 6
CLEVELAND 4, New York Yankees (ss} 1
Milwaukee (ss) 15, San Francisco 6
Chicago White Sox (ss) 8, Chicago Cubs
(ss) 7
.
Colorado 3, Oakland (ss) 2
Arizona (ss) 9, Anaheim (ss) 3
San Diego 10, Chicago White SoiC (ss) 5
Oakla~ {ss) 6, Milwaukee (ss) 0
Seanle 16, Chicago Cubs (ss) 8
Alla·nta 13, Tampa Bay 5
Arizona (ss) 11, Anaheim (ss) 3

Sunday's scores
St Lou is 2, Houston t (6 inn.-ralnl

Toronto 3, Minnesota 2 (6 inn.·rain)
Boston vs. Ba)timore, ccd., rain
Tampa Bay 6, Atlanta 4
Philadelphia 5, Texas '4
New York Mets.3, Florida 2
Kansas Cit~ 10, (;lEVELAND 9
Detroit 5, Pitlsburgh 4
CINCINNATI 3, New.York Yankees 1
Montreal 9. Los Angeles 5
Arizona 5, San Francisco (ss) 4 (11 )
Chicago Cubs 8, Colorado 6

Ohio H.S. boys'
state tournament slate

Today's games
Los Angeles vs. Florida al Viera, Fla .. 1:05
p.m.
Philadelphia vs. St. Louis ·at Jupiter. Fla ..
1:05 p.m.
Detroit vs. Kansas City at Haines City, Fla.,
1:05 p.m. ·
Boston vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
CLEVELAND vs. New York Mets at Port St.
Lucie, Fla., 1:10 p.m.
Milwaukee (ss) vs. Arizona at Tucson, Ariz.,
3;05 p.m.
Milwaukee (ss) vs, Chicago Cubs at Mesa,
Ariz., 3:05 p.m.
Anahefm vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale.
Ar~ .. 3:05 p.m.
San Diego vs. Oakland at Phoenix, 3:05
.p.m.
. ChiCago While S'Jx vs. Seattle at Peoria,
Ariz., 3:05p.m.
·. Tawas va. CINCINNATI at Sarasota, Fla.,
7:05p.m.
Plhsburgh vs. New York Yankees at Tampa,
Fla. , 7:15p.m. ·

Bedford ~:Kl-5) vs, Tol. Libbey (25·0). Friday,
9p.m1
'
Hilliard Davidson (22·4) · vs. Cin. St. Xav.ier
{ 25 ~2) , Frida~. 9 p.m.
Final: Saturday. 8:30p.m.

Saturday's final•
OMolon I

Bedfold 77 . Cie. South 71
Cin. St. Xa\ller 48, Beavercreek •2
Hilliard Davidson n, Can . McKinley 59
Tol. Libbey 74. Mansfield Sr. 52
Dlvl1lon II
Cambridge 45. Millersburg West Holmes 31
Cin. Purcell Marian 58, Day-. Christian 45
Lima Shawnee 69, Avon Lake 52
Warrens~ille Hts. 63, Wooster Triway 53
DMIIan Ill

'I

$34.665.

Volume

BY BRIAN

Sunday, March 26-final
Semifinal winners

POMEROY - The second Pllblic
hearing on funding for a federal housing
program in Meigs County was conducted at Monday's regular meeting of the
M eigs County Commissioners:
·
Housing Director Jean Trussell said
the county will seek $75,000 in funding
through the U.S. Department of Agriculture, USDA Rural Housing Preservation
·
Grant Program.
The county received a similar grant
two years ago, and if the newest round -is
received, it will be used to supplement a
Community Housing Improvement Program (CHIP) housing rehabilitation pro-

Baseball
BOSTON RED SOX: Oplooned INF Darnell
Stenson, INF David Eckstein and LHP nm
Young to Pawtucket of the International League.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Optioned OF. Scott
Morgan· to Buffalo of the -International League.
Reassigned INF·OF BUI Selby ~ nd C Mandy
Romero to their minor league ca mp. Re leased
OF Ruben Sierra outright. Announced the retirement of LHP Mafi!: Langston.
MINNESOTA TWINS' Oplloned RHP Jack
Cressend, LHP Benj Sampson, 18 Doug Mlentkiewlez and C Chad Moeller to Sak Lake ol the
Pacific Coast · league. Reassigned 38 Bria n'
Richa·maon to m·elr minor league camp.

Jon and Carolyn Jacobs, Owners
Living Rooms By Coffee/End Tables Dining Room by
Ashley
Caldwell
England Cordalr,
Mlaslon Bay
Grand Estates
Bean Station
Locally Handmade CorDa Classics·
Futuristic
It .
Bedding: Spring Air
Washington
·
ems
· Belcrest

South Regional
Sunday's second-round scores
Tulsa 69, CINCINNATI 61 "
Miami 75, OHIO STATE 62
"North Carolina 60, Stanford 53
Tennessee 65. Connecticut 51
Frlday-awnlflnala
A1 Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Te)lll
Tulsa (31·4) vs. _Miami (23·10)
North Carolina (20·13) vs . Tennessee (26·6)
Sunday, March 26-final
Semifi nal winners

,

Midwest Regional
Saturday'• aecond·round •cores
Syra cuse 52, Kentucky 50
Michigan State 73. Utah 61
Iowa State 79, Auburn 60
UCLA t 05, Maryland 70

Thurldav-••mHinala
At Tha "PIIIca of Auburn Hilla .
Auburn Hllll, Mich.
Michigan State (28·7)"v8. Syracuse (26·5)
Iowa State (31-4) vs. UCLA (21·11)
Saturday ~tlnlll

SemUinal winners ·

At Thunderdome, Sent• Barbara, Calif.
North Carolina (19; 12) vs. Al.~e (22·9},
12:07 a.m.
Satui"day-aemlflnals
At Portland, Ore.

Rutge rs (24·7) vs .. Alabama-Birmingham
(21-12)
.
Georgia-Sta nford winner vs: North CarolinaRice winner
Monday, Marc:h. 27·final
Semifinal winners .

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantle Division

IHm

· Thuraday~Hmiflnllll
At The Pit, Albuquerque. N.M.
Wisconsin (20· t 3) vs. LSU (28-5)
Gonzaga (28-8) vs. Purdue (2 3·9)

Saturday-final
Semifinal winners

NCAA women's
tournament
EMt Raglonal

Saturday'&amp; firtt•round acorN
Oklahprna 86, Brigham Young 81
Purdue 70, Dartmouth 66
Western Kentucky 68, Marqueue 65 ·
Duke 7t . campb&lt;lll 42

Tonlgh1'1 aecond-round gam11
At Mockoy Arono, _Woot Loloytllo, Ind.
.
Oklahoma (24·7) vs. Purdue (23-7). 8:05

p.m

.

At Cameron Indoor Stldlum, Durham, N.C.
Westem Kentucky (22·9) vs. Duke (27-5),
8:35p.m.
Saturdly·semlflnlll
At Richmond, Va.
Connecticut (32·1) vs. Oklahoma·Purdue
winner
LSU (24·6) vs. Wes1em Kentucky-Duke win·
ner
Monday, M1n:h 27-flnll
Semlllnal winners

Mlde..t Regional

23
25
28
36
36
37
45

Central Dlvialon
lndiana ........................... ..46 21
Toronto ., .... .-..... ....... ... .. .'.... 39 26
Charl011e ........... .:............ .35 30
Detroll.. ............ ..... ... •..... .33 32
Mllwaukee ... .................... .31 36
CLEVELAND ..... ....... ,.... .25 40
Adanta ~.............................24 , 41
Chlcago ............................ 13 52

Weal Regional
Saturdav'a second-round acorn
LSU 72, Texas 67
Wisconsin 66, Arizona 59
Purdue 66, Oklahoma 62
Gonzaga 82, St. John's 76

W L ~

Miami .. ...................... .... 42
New Yo ric: .............. .. ,........ 40
Philadelpl1lli ....................37
Orlando ............ ............'.... 31
Boston ....................... ....... 30
New Jersey ................... .. .28
Washington ...................... 22

.646
.615
.569'
.463
.455
.43 t ~
.328

.687

.600
.538
·.506
.463
.365
.369
.200

A SPECIAL ·sECTION
In T~he

NBA.standings
lil!
2
5
12
12',
14
21

• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
•GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE

6
10
12
15
20
21
32

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw111 Division

IHm

W L 2ct.

Utah ....... ......................... 44
San Antonio ..................... -42
Minnesota ................ ........ 39
Oallas ............................ ... 28
Denver .. ....... .... ................ 27
Houston ........................... 24 '
Vancouver .......... .. ..... ....... 18

21
24
26
38
39
42
49

Pacific Division
x·L.A. takers ....... ............65 12
x-Portland ........................ 50 16
P~oenlx ... ........•...•............42 23
Seanle ....................... .......40 27
sacramento .................... .38 27
Golden Stale .. ..................17 49
L.A. Cllppars .................... 14 53
x~cllnched pldlyo~ berth

677
.636
.600
.424
.409
.364
.269

lill
2\1
. ~
18\'r
17~
20 ~

27

.821
.758 , 4 ~
.648 · 12
.597
1~
.585
16
.258 37:r,
.209
41

Saturday's •conia
New JOfley 92, Milwaukee 90.0T
Washlnglon 101, Chicago 88
indiana 11 3, Charlotte 99 ·
Bolton 104, Dallas 99
Miami 92, CLEVELAND 90·0T
San Antonio 102, Cenver 82
Portland 97, Seattle 96
. Sacramento 104, L.A. Clippers 83

. Sunday's icoi'ee
L.A. Lake'rs 92, .New York &lt;85
utah 92, New Jer1ey 88 .
Toronto 1QO. Houston ~a
· 0e1ro11 101 , Vancouver 99
Dallal 89, Atlanta 85
;
Philade~h la 89, Onando 85
Minnesota 109, Milwaukee 82
Phoerux 99. Golden Slale 62'

Tonight's games
Houston at CLEVELAND, 7:30 p.m.
PllHadelphla at Charlone, 7:30p.m.
L. A. L8kers vs. Miami, B p.m.
Orlando _at Chicago, 8:30p .m.
Basion at PhOenix. 9 p.m.
Wesllingt~n at L.A. Clippers. 10:30 p.m.

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
. '
MONDAY, APRIL 17, 2000 -.
.1 2:0d NOON
'
INSERTION .DATE:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 2000
.I

'

.:

l&lt;nt •

.

gram, That program provides funding for · Plains residents who received funding for Church met with the commissioners to
those families deemed very low income, sewerage system hookups through the · d~scuss an upcoming all-night ~rayer serto finance needed housing improve- county have been asked to provide proof VIce, to be held at the church on April 7.
ments.
of income as part of follow-up work by
The event, sponsored by the MiddleThe extra funding for rehab work will the Ohio Department. of Development.
port Ministerial Association, is titled
be used to repair five homes, in addition · Trussell :isked that anyone receiving a "Transforming the Community,'' will
to the 33 homes now targeted for rehab letter frvm her asking for .information concentrate on prayers for the cominuni~
under the CHIP project. The total pro- provide it as soon as possible; and that ty and community leaders and elected
gram will 9e funded 8.0 percent through anyone with questions contact her · for officials.
CHIP and 20 percent through the Rural assistance.
Barnhart invited the commissioners to
Housing Preservation Program. ··
·failure by residents to comply with attend the service, and asked them to .
Funding will be available in July if .t he , the request for informfltion could result submit their prayer requests for the comcounty'~ ,application is approved. Trussell in the county's being required to reim- munity and for the needs of county govnoted·dlat the average grant through this burse part · of the funds used for the ernmenn
latest program is $50,000 io $65,000.
. hookups, Trussell said.
· Mar)r Powell of the C hester/Shade
TrusseD said a number of Tuppers
Brenda Barnhart of Rejoicing life Historical Association met with the

commissioners to discuss the completion·
of .the Management Information lor
Rural America training program, sponsored by the .Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich.
A team made up of association members and other conm1unity members
have attended a series of meetings relating to community development issues in
order to qualify for a $15,000 gnmt from
Kellogg.
T hat grant, now that the county has
qualified, will be us ed to purchase computers and related equipment, cameras
and other hardware for· a genealogy pro-

American Lu,ue

p.m.

FridiY-Itmltinlll
At The Carrier Dame, SyFacuu, N. v. .
Seton Hall(22·9) vs. Oklahoma State (26·6)
Duke (29·4) vs. Florida (26·7)

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Floral desltas, wr..ths and gift Items
Thomas ICink•ld !hrows, pillows, and wall ha~~glngs .

Duke 69, Kansas 64

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 101

.

POMEROY

,.

Coundl
discusses
rMarket
Day'.event
. BY BRIAN

FROM STAFF REPORTS

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
.

POMEROY - Activities to
attract visitors to Pomeroy's
downtown shopping district were
discussed when Pomeroy Village
Council met in regular session
Monday.
Mayor John Blaettnar asked
council io coniidei: establishing-a .:, .;
monthly "Market Day" on the
Pomeroy Parking lot this spni;;ner.
Blaettnar said that he envisioned
the event as an "expanded farmers'
market," which woul&lt;! include
•. I
locally-grown produce and How. ers, quality craft items and
im.phitheater entertairunent.
In conjunction with.the monthly events, to be held on Saturdays,
the village would free parking
GETTING READY - .;ij!!s!em
' Bowl Coach -JijNd Spencer, round between Eastern and Miller during last week's TVC lnvitameters as a further incentive for
standlng
right,
a
junior
hlgl\'
sch
.o&lt;il.
math teactief, prepares for a .tlonal Quiz Bowl . (Brian J. Reed photo)
visitors to . attend the "Market
.
'
.y'
J
.
Day" and to shop in Joe'!~ stores.
Councilman George Wright
said he believes it would be. difficult to instill interest in the event,
but Sarah Fisher, who represented
the Pomeroy .Merchants Associa8v BRIAN J, REED
Eastern Elementary School wis the site 'of moderators, but the students seemed to ·
tion, encouraged council to conSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
a
Tri-Valley
Conference Invitational Quiz enjoy , themselves, even when · they were
sider the plans; and said that she felt
'TUPPERS PLAINS- "Ronald Bowl on Thursday, hosting teams from five ·• stumped. (Paul McCartney formed what
the amphitheater should be used
group after leaving The Beatles?)
more ofterl to encourage visitors.
Reagan : was born and ·raised in · other schools in the region. ·
According to Jewett, who hosted similar
Molly Jewett, Eastern's principal, ·issued
She also suggested that local
hat stat e.?"
w
.,
events
at New lexington, the events are
invitations
to
all
of.the
schools
in
the
conartists be invited to attend the
"Wha(are
the
two
most;popumore
for
entertainment than for official
ference, inViting chem ·to . participate in the
events.
competition, which pitted teams of students results - students at the junior. high level
.lous state$?"
Blaettnar also suggested thar the
do not compete in or~nized events like
. village consider new "welcome"
"Whalh·is the function of the in a double-elimination tournament.
high school and college· students - but it is
The
yo~ng
Eagles
were
joined
in
·
the
signs at the village limits and on
predicate~~n
a
sentence?"
·
·
good
training, and lots of fun.
by
their
rival
students
.from
competition
the river, at the amphitheater, for
"What ' 2, cubed?"
(Incidentally, Reagan is a nati~e of IlliSo.uthern Junior High School, as weil as stuboaters.
.
If
you
want
to
do
well
in
a
junior
high
nois;
California and NewYork are the two
from
Waterford,
Miller,
CrookSville
dents
The riverfiont ·sign· might also
qniz bowl, ~ should know the answers to and NelsQnville- York.
·
most populous states in-the nation ,'the predinclude a locator map for local
icate tells the action of the ·sqbject of a senthese
and,o~rquestions,
relating
to
histoStudent
reams
traveled
from
room
·
to
busineSses and a mile marker, he
ry, ge~ph}i~Eng!ish grammar, and mathe- room, j)u~ng in with answers to questions t~nce, 2 cubed is 8, and· McCartney and hls
lnatics.
1f;~.
·
thar would challenge even the judges and wife, Linda, for.m ed "Wings" in.[he 19705.)
PIHH ... CoundL Ptlp A3
t

,_

•

Eastern Elementary hosts quiz bowl

Eating o' the
2 Sa

-12 .....

A6

. C!at~jfjedt
Comics
Editorials

Call

.Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
For More.' lnformation ·

Objluiriet
Sporta
· Weather

BH
85
M
A3
· Bl-2. 6
A3

Lotteries

992'-2156

.

.

.

'

POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Conunerce will
publish its annual list of Meigs
County unclaimed funds owners
in today's edition of The Daily
Sentinel.
"This advertisement will be a
quick and easy way for current' or
former Meigs County · residents
to check their names / for
unclaimed funds ," Director Gary ·
C. Suhadolnik said.
." Our newspaper advertising
C'!'"RaigtJ is o?-r;,of ~mr n1~st sucoutreach effo~ and it
helpe d the division returns $21.7
million to more than 27,000 people last fiscal year;' he added.
T hese accounts consist of
monies or the right to . monies
· ·that have been dormant or forgotten, usually for five yt'ars .
Some common examples of
unclaimed funds include dormant
bank accounts, forgotten rent and
utility deposits, uncashed checl&lt;s,
undelivered stock certificates,
uncashed insurance policies and
forgotten layaway deposits.
Today's local advertisement
will include 73 unclaimed funds
accounts of $50 or more for individuals whose ·last known address
was in Meigs County, with those
atcoun~ totaling $13,932.
The listed accounts were
turned over to the state within
the past year. The names will
appear in alphabetical order by
the owner's last known city and
then in alphabetical order by the
owner's last name.
Those whose names are listed
·in the ad to visit the Department
of
Commerce's
website
(www. com.srate.oh .us) to initiate
the claims process by printing off
an online claims form.
T hose without access to the

eeruw.

PIHH"' Ust. .PIIp A3

Sisters wait for week for peek at stars

Today's

Sentinel
diNs

oHid·
Pick 3: 1-0-9; Pick 4: S-7-9-8
J!o•l "'5: 4-12-16-19-32

Middleport MayOr Sandy Jan·narellll ]olne.d Acces!l Head Start young·
1

PIHse see Housln., Pllp A3

Unclaimed
funds list
·inside today

I

v 992-7508
Open 6 p.m. ,- 9 p.m. M-F; 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Sat.

NCAA men's tournament

so.

Hometown Newspaper

Commissioners,·public discuss housing

CfJ Furniture
28001 St. Rt.t
Cheshire, Ohio

Ohio H.S, girls'
state tournaments

•

Melp County's

p .m.

Nemecne1

lunday'a IRond..,ound ac:orea
LSU "57. Stephen F. Austin • s
Connecticut 83, Clemson 45

Ohio H.S. boya'
regional tournaments

Tonight's second-round gemea
At United Spirit Artna, lubboch, Texas I
Tulane (27-4) vs. Texas Tech (26-4) . 9:05

March l 1, 2000

a1

Lap Leaders: Jeff Gornon 1·t4,'Ward Burton
15·36, Bobby Hamilton 37·55 , Jeff GD&lt;don 58·
63, Bobby Labonte 6•·72, Ward Bunon 73-119 1
Bobby lif;bonte 120· 144, ward Burton 145·178,
Kevin Lepage 179, Dale Jarrett 180·204, Ward
Burton 205·252. Dale Jarrett 253·, Man Kenseth
254~256 and Ward Burton 257·293 .
Point Standings: Bobby Labonte 794, Mark
Martin 785. Oale Earnhardt 762, Ward Burton •
733, Da l~ Jarrett 721 , Tony Stewart 663 , Bill
Elllort 663. Ricky Rudd 647, Jeff Bunon 621 and
Rusty Wallace 595.

Mallcom 400 results

Tuesday's games
Philadelphia vs. Montreal al Jupiler, Fla.,
1-:05 p.m.
·
St. Louis ~s . Baltimore at Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.. 1:05 p.m.
, CLEVELAND vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
.
· · Tampa Say vs. Texas at Pon Chartone, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
San Francisco vs. Colorado at Tucson, Ariz.,
3:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs vs. San Diego at Peoria,
t\rlz.., 3:05p.m.
· Ananeim vs. Chicago White Sox. at Tucson,
Artz., 3:05p.m.
·
. Florida vs. Atlanta (55) at Kissimmee, Fla.,
7:05p.m.
·
·
Kansas City (ss) vs. HoU!Uon at Ki!llimmee,
Fla., 7:05 p.m.
New York Meta vs. Los Angelu at Vero
Beach, Fla., 7:05p.m.
·
Atlanla {ss) va. KC (ss) al Halnea City, Fla.,
.7:05p.m. ·
Toronto vs. New York YankHS at. Tampa,
Fla., 7:15p.m.
Al1zona VB. Oakland 11 PhOenh(, 9:05p.m.

Sunda~'a se&lt;:and-raund a~;Or11
Virginia 74, Boston College 70
Ne!re Da me 95, George Washing1on 60

New Jersey at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
New York at Indiana, 8 p.m.
CLEVELAND at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Dallas, 8:3;0 p.m.
Denver at Utah, 9 p.m.
. Golden State at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Detroit a1 seattte, 10:30 p.m.
Washington at Sacramento. 10:30 p.m.

26. (13) Rol)by Go ~, Ford, 269.$25,095.
29. (9) Slacy Campion. Ford. 288, $28.590.
· 30. (41) RICk Mast. Chevrolet, 288,$28,260.
31 . (,.) DICk Trickle, Ford, 287, $24,605 .
32. (7) Michael Wallr~ , Chevrolel. 282,
. $35,475.
.
33 . (~1) Oav,e Mar ·s, Chevrolet, 281 ,
$24.295.
34. (12) Jerem y Mlylield, Ford, 281 ,

35. (55) Kenny W&amp;Hace, ChevroiSI, 255,
engine failure, $32,035. 7
,
36. (27) Jeff Fuller. Ponllac. 232. $23.905.
At Thompson-Boling Arena
37 . (25) Jerry NaOeau, Chevrolet, 2_32,
KnoxviUe, Tenn.
,
$31 ,800.
.
Arizona (27-6) vs . Tennessee (29·3), 9:07
· 38. (42) Kenny lrwl!'t; Chevrolet, 219,
p.m.
$31 ,675.
•
39. (1) Sieve Parl&lt;, Chivrolet, 218, engine
Division II
.Saturd8y-aem\flhals
failure. $31.550.
P
Cin. Purcell Marian (23·3) vs. Cambridge
At Memphis, Tenn.
DARLINGTON , S.C. (AP) - Results of Sun- .
40. (B) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chevrolet, 213,
(21-4), Thursday, 11 a.m
Virginia 125·8) vs. Arizona-Tennessee IMn- day's Mall.com 400 NASCAR Wlristoo Cup handling, $23,375.
Lima Shawnee (20·5) liS. Warrensville Hts. ner
·
Seri.es race at Darlington Raceway with finishing
41 . (33) Joe
Chevrolet, 186,
{24-2), Thursday, 2 p.m
·
Notre Dame (27·4 ) vs. Tulane ·Te~eas Tech · poSIIioo, stanlng position (in parentheses), drl· $31,250.
Final: Saturday,..11 a.m.
winner
.ver, type ot ca r, laps completed, reason out (I f
42. (60) Ted Musgra • Chevrolel, 135,
any) and money won:
engine failure1 $31,125 .
Monday,
March
27
-fin81
Division III
1. _(22) Ward Burton, Ponuac, 293,
43. {88) Darrell Wallrip, Ford, 116, handling,
Semifinal winners
$132,725.
lima Cent. Cath. (21-4) vs. JamestOwn
$23,271 ..
'
Greeneview (22·4) , Friday-, 11 a.m.
·
2. (88) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 293. $90,905.
Statistics
Akron SVSM (25-Q) vs. canal Winchester
3.
(3)
Dale
Earnhardt,
Chevrolet,
293,
Midwest Regional
Time of Race: 3 hrs, 1 min., 30 sec.
(24· 1), Friday, 2 p.m.
$68,590.
Saturdar'a tll"ft•round tcorel
Margin of Victory: 1.420 S~o nds
Final: Saturday, ? p.m.
.t. (20) Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 293, $68,230.
Southern Methodist64, North Carolina State
Average Speed: 128.076 rrii&gt;tl
63
.
5. (99) Jeff Burton, Ford. 293. $65,925. ,
· Lead Changes: 13 &amp;R;~ong 1 drtvers
6.
(17)
Man
Kenselh,
Ford,
293,
$47,575.
Division IV
Old Dominion 94, Wisconsin-Green Bay 85
CautiOn laps: 5 tor 30 laps
7. (4) Bobby Hamlllon, Chevroltl, . 293,
Louisiana Tech 95, Alcom State 53
Worthington Christian {26·0) vs. St. Henry
$45,820.
Vailderblll 71 , Kansas 69, 20T
(23·2), Thursday, 6 p.m.
8. (!24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 293,
Fort Jennings (22·3) vs. Berlin Hiland 125·1),..
$56,915.
Sunday'• aacand-round •cores
Thursday, 9 p.m.
9. (6) Marte Manln, FOrd, 293, $48,010.
Iowa State-79, Illinois 68
Final: Saturday, 2 p.m.
10. (18) Kevin Lepage, Ford, 293, $54,830.
Penn State 75 , Auburn 69
11. (5 ) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 293,
$47,250.
Tonight's IKoncf..round gam•
12. (21) Ellioll Sadler, Ford. 293,$41,945.
At ODU FNtldhouae, Norfolk, Va.
13. (18 Bobby Labonte, Pontiac, 292,
SMU {22·8) vs. Old Dominion (28·4) , 7:05
$48,290.
p.m.
Saturday's finale
14. (3:t) Mike Skinner, Chevrolet, 292,
At Thomas Aaaembly Center, Ruaton, La.
O.vl1lon I
Louisiana Tech (29·21 vs. VanderbiM(2H2). $40,410.
Mas~ 36, Pickerington 25
15. {97) Chad Little, Ford. 292. $43,t30.
9:37 p.m.
. 16. (2) Rusty Wallace, Ford, 292, $4$,885.
17. (28) Ricky Rudd, Ford, 292, $39,440.
.
Dlvlolon II
Satu~d,ay-semttlnala '
Col. Hartley 52, HamiMon Badin 44
18. 1771 Robert Pressley, Ford, 292,
At Kanus City, Mo.
$31 ,020.
Iowa Sli27·5) vs. Penn 51. (2 8-4)
Division IU
.
. t9. (94) Bill EIUott, Ford, 292, $36,890.
SMU-Oid Dominion winner vs. Louisiana
S. Euclid Regina 56, Bluffton 35
.?0. (43) John Andren!, Pontiac, 291, ,
· . Tech-vanderbitt wlnne~ ·
$49,220. .
.
Divlolon IV
21. (40) Stoning Martin. Chevrol01, 291,
M;onday, ·, .rch 27·flnal
$41 ,805. .
. .
.
Berlin Hiland 46 , Maria Stein Marion Local
Semifinal winners
30
22. (36) Ken Schrader, Pontiac, 291,
$29.790.
.
West Regional
23.
(26)
Jimmy
Spencer,
Ford, 291,
Saturday'a flrat-round acorta
$37.975.
Georgia 74, Montana 46
24. (10) Johnn~ Benson, Pontiac, 290,
Slanlord 81, Michigan 74
$~9, 160.
Nonh Carolina 62, Maine 57
• 25. {44) Kyle Peny, Pontiac, 290. $37,245.
Atee 67, UC Santa Barbara 64
26. (93) Dave Blaney, Pontiac, 290,
. $25.435.
Sundly'a aeconfil·round score•
Rutgers 59, St. Joseph's 39
East Regional
Alabama-Birmingham 78, MissisSippi Sl. 72
Sunday'a ..c:ond-round 1coree
AI HSBC Arena, Buffalo, N.Y.
Tonight'l aecond~round gain••
Oklahoma State 75, .Pepperdlne 67 At st-seman Coliseum, Athens, G•.
Seton Ha\167. ITemple 65..0T
Georgia (30·3) vs. Stanford (21·8) , 7:37
Florida 93, lllinois 76

Division I

Oakland 4, Milwaukee 1

San Diego B. S~attte (ss).7
San Francisco (ss) 6, Seattle (ss) 5
Chicago White SoiC 16, Anaheim 3

21 . (11 ) Bran Bodin~~&gt; Ford , 290, $25,250.

Tue,day's gam••

Penn State, Kent to .meet in NIT, 81
'

•

S.aturday's flrsl·round scarea
Tulane 65. Vermont so
Texas Tech 83, TenneSsee Tech 54:
Arizona 73, KENT 61
Tennessee 90 . Furman 38

.

Details, A3

"We didn't really want to leave
the floor after it was over," said
Hiland coach Dave Schlabach .
."You talk about something for so
long and now it's reality. Every day
at practice, we ask the girls whal
they tv:lnt to be and they repeat,
'State champs.' It was just a matter
of actually getting here and getring the job done."
Beth Everman and Kelly
Pohlman led the unranked Flyers
(17-9) with 11 points apiece.
.
Hiland's boys will be attempting to duplicate the girls' effort
this weekend in the boys' state
tournament. McGuffey Upper
Scioto Valley in 1993 is the only
school to win girls and ·boys
championships in the same year.

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
•
, Akron SVSM ·sa. Cle. Villa·Angela/St.
Joseph 51
•
·
Canal Winchester 87, Malvern 67
Jamestown Greeneview 58, Versa iMes 49
Lima Cent. Cath. 38, Cuyahoga Valley Chr.
. .
Acad. 36

Fed expected
. to hike interest rates, As

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Moncley, March 20, 2000
I

State finals

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P~ge Be • The Dally Sentinel

sters and staff members at the Gingerbread House In I'!llddteport Fri-

'£VA.

day for a little ·eating of the green/ Head Start statfers prepared
green eggs and hllll) in belated birthday honors for .Dr. .Seuss. The
&amp;1J!8n fare also served double duty for St. Patrick's Day. (Jim Freeman
pl)oto)

D.iJy 3; 1-0-8 Daily 4: 0..9-6-t .
C 2000 Ohio Wlcy PubliJhi"' Co.

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lOS ANGELES (AP) -They're the best seatsA few years ago, C hurchill came even' though sh~
just not in the auditorium, And competition for the had lost her hair during chemotherapy after cancer
bleachers that line·the red. carpet for the Oscan gets surgery. Stratton came the next year despite two
broken ribs, she said.
tougher every year.
:
.
Sisters Glenice "Babe" Churchill and Sandi StratThis year, seven younger fl'latives and friends are
ton have been· claiming a pair of those seats for 31 helping the sisters hold their spots in line, sleeping
years. ln 1970, t~ey arrived on Oscar day and had no in a tent and lounging on an inflatable sofa and chai r
while' the older Women go to a nearby motel.
problem _getting seats.
This year, they had to show up on Saturday, eight
Churchill said her biggest thrill over the years wa.&lt;
days before the ceremony, just to ensure a place in "seeing Paul Newman and liz Taylor."
line for one of the 200 bleacher seats.
Tina Hernandez publishes a newsletter and runs a
By Monday, they had been joined by about 20 Web site for the hardy btiuch of bleacher fans. She
people who had pitched tents and supplies of food, was taking a b~ak to get a shower Monday, but left
clothes and Oscar memorabilia on the sidewalk ouj- her place in line under a friend's guard.
side the Shrine Auditorium.
The early bird fans won't be able to claim their
Over .the years, Churchill and Stratton· have blea.c her seats until the day of the Os.cars, about 11·
braced the elements and ill health for the opportu- houn before t4e sf.ars arrive in their limousines.
nity to stargaze· before and afl:er Hollywood's most
"These are the veterans, the four-star generals of
elegant party.
·
. the bleacher section;' said Chris· Bergland, a securi~
· "Welve sat through rain, cold, heat, wind, a little ty officer. "We really don't ·have any security probbit of everything," said Churchill, 69, a Chino· hair- lems with the bleacher people.
dresser. Her 57 -year-old sister is a housewife from
"They're always cooperative. The lint 20 people'
Escondido. '
'
·
in line know each other."

Black
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