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                  <text>·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

Wed....UW:Cioe~
HJch: 101; \.aw: CO.

Moncley, March 20, 2000
I

State finals

.

.

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.

.

.

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
'

•

"

•

.. '

•

�.. r•

I

•

P . A 2 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuelday, March 21, 2000.
l'Ueld-r, M•rch 21, 2000

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Father, son die In cn~shes
AKRON (AP) - Donna L. Perry has lost a husband and a son in
accidents some eight years apart.
Sunday mo~ning, her husband, Rudo)ph J. Perry Jr., 49, died in a
fiery plane crash near Akron-Fulton Municipal Airport. ., .
In late ~991, her IS-year-old son was killed in a car accident
involving a drunken driver. Rudy Perry Ill had stopped with his
father on an Akron highway to help a smnc\ed motorist when the
boy was struck and thrown off an overpass.
The Summit County medical examiner confirmed to Donna
Perry on Monday it was her husband's burned body in his crumpled Beechcraft A-23 Musketeer plane. The Hudson man died alone
.in the small single-engine plane be had flown for years.
Perry's plane crashed shortly after takeoff into Cindy and Steve
Miller's house, less than a mile from the airport. The plane burst into
flames on impact. Cindy Miller and her 13-year-old daughter,Julie,
escape\~ their two-story home moments before it was consumed by
fire.
·
Despite their loss, the Millers sent their sympathy to the pilot and
his family. ·
.'

. Mayois sign irks coundl
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mayor Michaei R. White's face pictured
on ·signs greeting travelers at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport is less • hospitality gesture thap a political advertisement, a city
councilman said.
.·
Michael C. O'Malley has introduced a proposal to ban elected
officials' names and pictures from any signs or displays ·at the cityrun airport.
The proposal Monday is part of legislation, up for a vote next
week, to award a five-year contract for ihe airport's advertising.
"I believe it's political advertising:' O'Malley said of the postersized signs with White's picture that greet passengers in Hopkins'
main ter.minal and along concourses. "I don't know what other
purpose it serves."
Solomon Balraj, deputy director of the Department of Port Control, said there is no o~jection to banning such displays. He said
Whire favors prohibiting the names of Cleveland politicians from
appearing on city signs, banners and pamphlets.

Charges filed in teen slaying
WAPAKONETA (AP) -A man charged with killing a IS-yearold girl slashed her throat and Jeft ·her to bleed to death, an Auglaize
County prosecutor .said.
·
· But a lawyer for defendant Michael Anthony Brock, 28, said in a
trial that began Monday that prosecutors lack evidence to support
their charges.
Three judges in.Auglaize County Common Pleas Court are hearing the case against Brock on charges that he kidnapped and killed
Amber Nicole Williams.
·
Her body was found Nov. 27, 19%, in woods five miles northwest of the western Qhio community of St. Marys, Brock's home. town. The victim had been missing for two weeks.
.
Brock is charged with aggravated murder, murder, kicbiapping,
corruption of a mi11or and possession of criminal tools.
.
He could face the death penalty if convicted of aggravated pi,ui:der. If he is convicted of all charges but not senrenced .to death,
Brock could get up to 66 years in prison.
"The evidence in this case will show that Michael Anthony Brock
murdered Amber Nicole Williams. He had sex with litr;l\e'heldill!r·
and he slit her throat ~nd left her to bleed to death:' Amy Ouey Fox,
an assistant county prosecutor, said in her opening statement to
Judges Frederick Pepple, Randall Basinger and John Webb.
Defense lawyer Adrian Cimerman, oiToledo, said the prosec\lt!On
lacks evidence. He cited al an example the kidnapping charge, saying that the coroner who did an autopsy found no evidence that &amp;he
had ·been restmined.
·
.

Alrlln• to lfOUnd fllahta
. . AlU.INOTON, Va. (AP) ~ fllylng on US Airways this weekendt
.
You ltiiY want to make other arrangemenu.
US Airways Is preparing Cor i poalble strike by flight attendanta
on Saturday by making plans to pund fllllhll rather than allow
pa1111engers to (ace travel dltruptlona.
The flight attendants' union lw said It W9ulci target random
routes with impromptu walkouts tp cause maximum chaos, .I n
response, the airline has said it would shut down rather than subject
passengers to ·unpredictable travel.
· "It would be a great inconvenience to passengers if US Airways
didn't info~m them to look for alternatives," Joshua Javitz, an expert
on airline labor negotiations; said Monday.
for airijne passengers, predictability is everything, Javitz said. US
AirWays Would suffer greater losses in the long rerm if it tried to
operate through a strike and undermined customer loyalty, he said.
With a strike deadline of 12:01 a.m. EST Saturday, US Airways
Oight attendants are back at the bargaining table in a final attempt
to resolve a three-year contract dispute with the nation's ·sixth
largest airline:

didn't deserve'to die

Neighbor:
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Standing in his
front doorway with a cup of coffee, Paul
McGuire trembled at the thought that two of
four brutal murders occurred just across the
street.
· 'Tve got bad nerves anyway, and things like
this just don't help," McGuire, 34, said. "The
women over there, they didn't bother nobody."
On Sunday afternoon, police discovered the
bodies of Emogene Spradlin, 78, and her
daughter Pamela Edwards, 52, in their suburban
Sciotoville home. Portsmouth police Chief
Greg Ratcliff said Spradlin's son, who had been
upstairs at the time of the attack, called officers
to the home. ·
·
Police said the suspect, James R . Curry, ·42,
was taken into custody a few hours later after a
traffic stop in Puis, Ky.
A Kentucky State Police troOper saw Curry
driving ertatically in a van and arrested him for
driving under the influence of drugs. Kentucky
State Police Lt. AI Rich said Cun-Y suggested
that he knew about a quadruple homicide in
southern Ohio and police discovered he was
carrying a knife, leading them to alert

•

Infants killer back IIi Jail

'

.

MEDINA (AP) -A woman convicted two years ago of smothering her infant in the b.Sement of her family'$ home has returned
to jail after a judge revoked her. appeal bond.
· Audrey Iacona, 20, surrendered to police about 10:30 a.m. Monday, five days after the 9th Ohio District Court of Appeals rejected
her request for a new trial.
She was placed. under house arrest on friday and Medina County Comnion Pleas·Court Judge James Kimbler on Monday ordered
lacona held in the county jail until she is resentenced.
· Kimbler will schedule a resentencing dare if lacona fails to win a
new trial from the Ohio Supreme Court on her convictions for
involuntary" manslaughter, child endangering.and abuse ·of.a corpse.
lacona had been sentenced to eight years in prison but last week
the appeals court sai~ she must be resentence.d because Kimbler did
not provide :in adequate expianation for giving ·a first-time offender more than the minimum three-year t&lt;•rm.

Mary Ellzabella Roush

or

fl.eal }'tar 2000 orftdttillmoHey
Itt ultle f11r poor Cattillles. · .
. The apprtival bring~ to abt~ut
~57 o4 nilllfon Whit 't lit itate could
ape11d.thil

y.~ar fin cash

payments

to welrare redplinli along with
programs that help move people

off welfare and keep people from
returning to welfare rolls. . .
Couqties can use the· money
for everything from helping find
people transportation to jobs, to
buying people work~related
clothing, to providing counseling,
said Jon Allen, a }:iuman Servictl'
apoklilman. .
· "W~ re.Allze thAt ltlllny people
ire. jult o11e flHDntlill erllamlty
&amp;om hiving w return ttl tiiltlinee." Allen Iiid. "I(JliOplt baw
been t'fftlvlll(l WI!ICil'l! btndlli
fot many monthi, they'rw riot
likl!ly .ttl have i algnllleant
·amount o( money. stashed In a
bank aa:ount.''
·

l1l Court Street Pomeroy, OH 45769
Ghild's Name_ _ _~~-----·
From.~-~---------------~
Your Name.______~----------~
Address

.

The 'accounts listed were received in the previous year and are·
valued at SSO or more. Information concemina the amount of the ,
funds and how to claim them may be obtained by any person pos:
seuina a proprio~ interet! In the unclaimed funda. Prescribed
fo11111 will be furnilhcd by addreuiliB an Inquiry to the Ohio Departm.ent of Commeroe at the addreu below. Name and acldreaa
m1111 bt alven euoily u llatecl In the advertl~emtnt. ·
·
Ohio Department of Commeroe
Dlvltloti of Unclaimed l'unill
'17 !Iouth High Stttet, iOtll Flllor

'" POMEROY- Robert William l\1ahr Sr., 67, Pomeroy, died Sunday, March 19,2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
. ,He was born on June 3, 1932 in Columbus, so:n of the late Lester
and Ruby McCain Mahr. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during
~h~ Korean Conflict, and was employed as a carpenter.
Surviving are his wife, freda Heitger .Mahr; a daughter, Arlene
Whitten of Tell. City; Ind.; two stepsons, Bill Foley of Pomeroy, and
Gary and J'letty Foley of Syracuse; twO sist1"rs, Macy EDen Chester and
Carolyn Haaf, both of Florida; and nine stepg~ndchildten and 10
Jtepcgreat- grandchildren.
'
He was also preceded in death by his son, Robert William Mahr Jr.
Services will be 11 a.m.· Thursday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with Jesse Morris officiating. Burial will follow in Carleton
' . ,Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral lionie from 7-9 p.m. ,
'.W~dnesday.
·
,
·

·

~PIIpA1
internet should write to the Division of Unclaimed .fands and
provide the full name to be
· reaean:hed, along with the coun. tin in which the person may have
relided.
1.

.

,The division's address is · 77 S.

· High ~~-, 2Qdi Floor, Columbus,
Ohio 43266..0545. Moore point:S
· out that these individuals can also·

' ··

· City of Ch11ttr:. Heatlna 81. Coolin Leiter R, Unknown: Howard, Oary, nuo···,.
Svc Inc, 12593 Cblllocothe Rd; Johnston, SR 143; Lathey, Cllrence, RR 3 Boa II; .:
Clinton, Neptune St.
Laudermllt, Orland, 31701 Wolfeten; .
Melaa Health, 46520 Ea1le Rdl Rd; .
Cll)' of CooMIIt: Bous, Linda, R 2; Norman, Mark, 32087 Hyaell Run Rd;
ColUid, Patty L, Rt 2 Bo• 260; Euterlina, Oneil, Miohoel, 414 Unooln"Hl; Shaw, :
Nola M, RR 2 '886 SR 7; FouaJ!t, Kathy, Tonyo. 39141 SR 684; Stewart. Lila. 1679
"00 Null Rei; Orooiowakl, Frank, Rt 1 Lincoln Hta Rd; Story, Ooldle Marje, '
Boa 24454 Brimstone; Harper, Sanh A, 311436 Roc:kaprinp Rd.
. 1
IU I Bo• 191; Mopw, D, RR I; Mollud,
Kim! A, 1975 Youboridae Rd.
City of Portia••• Duhl, Miohael w. :
30B2S Barrinpr Rtt1 Rd.
City of Homlaek Grove: Gribble,
Learand c/o Jerome Atlantlo Cook, Un·
City of Raeln\n Croao, John clo We
known.
Crou A M F RIIUih, PO ·aox 158; C - : .
Sllnley M o/o W C Crou A M F RIIU1h :
Cll)' or Llnpvlll11 Bl~&lt;k, Ronold ·e, PO Boa ' 158; Doerfer, Henry, PO Bo•
31032 Red Hill Rd.
441; Leamond, Anno M, ~6715 Tannen
Run; Michael, Chaliea, 22714 Bucktowa
Cll)' of Leo1 Botto•• Beaver, Henry Rei; Rllc:ine Home Bonk Co Jividen Hein.
R, Rt I Bo• 45a; Hofllnan, Janet, 35161 Unknown; Riffle, Laura E, Boo 216; .
Ook Hill Rd; Hofllnan, Teoiy, m61 Ook Smith, Don, 48405 Momlna Star; · •
Hill Rd.
WallbnJwn, Oall, Rtl Box 319; Vou"'; ;
Ellen, PO Bo• 441; 1st 'N4tional Bank •
City of Middleport: Arnold, Judith Aceta Lm Jividen We Bo Unknown. ·., ;
A, 625 112 Ch.. hlut St; Bailey, Milclrod
.
•
L, Rt I: llrewer,; Nocha, 360 S 4th: '· City of
uit 1 Laupery, Ro; :
Cleland, Canoll, PO Bo• ·24: OtlJor, ·ert. $1948 IUoo Rd.
•
Latrenda. UrN 2nd· A•e; M1ttft•. Jan
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~
Mlc.haet; 645 Broadway St: Matico, . -. City oi 'Rotta••• DoiVldaoft, Doftfta. '
Miohatl A, 645 Broadwoy St; Miller, M, Rt I; H111110t1; hit,, 3~1 Dye Roi; :
Hamil, 661 N llid A.vi: Reyaolda,lomoo, Kal.,..ty, Clan. Oenenl Doilveoy.
.: '
276 Sycamm St; SIIQUrr... 011)', 112 N
·
2nd Ave: St ;llnloa, Donald, 657 S Seo- · CIIJ ·of.Syra-• Allen, Thoma, Po• ;
ond Ave.
·
Bo~ 14: Kmt'ld. 'Rita C, PO Box 20.1 r
fflftko, Shanyt L, PO Boa ....; lllllil"' i
, Cltr •I l'ol!ltrOYI Aah, lames, PO laclt, PO Box,72l, .
·· &gt;' . · ' .
Box 172\ Baober, Roloert H, Rt 4; llarkor,
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,iiol ~
1._ H, 362~ 'Klnpbii'Y Rei; a-on
City or hpioon .l'laiMI • - · ~ :
Cltao. '1547 Rye Avo: BroWn, A...... 204 W, Olllefll DoiiVII}'. ,
·
!
W Main St; lrown, Harold D, 110 W
• •·
Main St; llrownlna. Elvo. 422 W MaiD It:
.CIV
Lea. I &gt;W; Mldllotooi :
· Cantoiltury, loVIUiam, Front S~ Hawley, Doll Co, Main St 0,.;,., 11-4: "wnw ' •
,
,
Allptiol; Werner, WHillm C. .
; ' :

a.e. ..

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u.ue...,

, ·•. :

....
. ... .

-'

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Davld,Moore

Robert William Mahr,, Sr• .

'

~·

·List

In 111m11 1101 app•arlna on tboat !late. Send a lilt of
gompltle namea, alona with the Ohio co11nt~1 In whloh they may
have lived. We. wUI provide olalm forma for poulblt maloh...
.:-·

Director

DEATH NOTICE

..

contact their county treasurer's
office where ·advertisements for
previous . years and lists of
accounts under 450 are often
available for,review.
In addition to the a£counts
being advertised, the division is
holding a stalewide total of 2 mil·
lion accounts worth $216 million,
Individuals should follo"oY the
same steps described above to
determine·"if they.· or their friends
and relativep have unclaimed
funds waiting ro be claimed.

(tJSPS ZU·Hol

JVIIICRIPTION RATIS

JyCanlororM--.
Coo .............................................. $2.00
Ooo Mcnth ............................................ $8.70
Qort Year......................;....................$104.00

liNGLE COPY PRICI
Dally......:......................................... .35 Centa
Sublcriben 80t dulri• to pay lht earrter may
·remit In actvlftCI direct 10 The Dall7 Sentinel
o;n a·tl'lrle, ah1 or 12 montll bola. Credll will be
alvcn urrlet eldl week.
No tublcripllon by mail pennlued In area•
' .,... home canter Ntvlco lt aVIiltble;
' PubliabCir reurvu the d&amp;ht to adjust rates
durtna the tublalptlon period. SubterlptiO!I
1111 c:banpi ml)' be·l,..pltmented by c:btnlln&amp;
tM duration of tht •ublcri~n.
,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lingering showers will end
across the tri-county area tonight
as high pressure builds over the
region, bringing. with it a warming .trend.
By the end of the week, temperatures will reach the low · to
mid-60s, the National Weather
Service said.
Highs on Wednesday will be in
the upper 50s under cloudy skies,
Lows tonight will be 35-45.
Sunset.tonight will be at 6:45
p.m. and sunrise on Wednesday at
6:32a.m.

Weather wrecast:
Tonight... Cloudy until mid-

MAJL8UII8CIIIPI10NS
loaldt Mtlp Coaol)'
.,, Wetici ............................................. S27.JQ
UW1eici ........................:.................... S53.82

....

.

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Ootttldo Mtlp Coaol)'
13 W.Oicl ............. ,........... ;.................... $29,25.
UWotb ••:...............................,.......... SS6.68
!2
. Wotb ........................................... $1119.71

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.

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AEP- 30Yo
Akzo - 42%
AmTeci!/SBC .:... 44'1•
Ashland Inc, - 31\
AT&amp;T- 58\

ft'CNII Pip

60s.

.

Bank One - 27l.

8Qb Evena'-12\

· BorgWa"ntr !.;- ~.

77~

Kroger-'- 18).
· l.llndl End - ·54 ·
· •Lid.- 37'•
Oak Hll Flnanetal - 14.

,
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3'· ·

City Haldlng- 11.,.
Federal Mogul - 13'1.
.F iratar- 22~

amount

of

MIIIIM IUIIIY
~'~
(CotnldyiDI'Imt) K~n Spacey, Annelte

8:11

·

MY

Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard, Jeff'rey Thornton
and Mick Davenport ami Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

THE nGGER MOVIE •
W!D. 'liARGAIN NIGHT ALL

BEAn aa.oo ••• Bta

ALL AGES ALL TIMES 54.00

Protect the . . . rtant

peopiemva
·m [ roW
1~1

have the qJtion d protecting your family memben;

·a bu&amp;iness panner Mth low·CM

·

.

..ova30.,. 33ll
One
val~ -

Pooplae- 18%
~omler - 8'1.
Rockwell - 40'·

lnsumnce Cornpmy. Call us tOr rrqe

Rqcl&lt;y a0ot. - 4
RO Sholl- 58'/o
Sea(a-31
Shoney'a-"r.
Wai·Mllll- 55~

.

details and a axnpetidve
proposal. ·
.

Windy'a-17"1.
Worthington- 12.,.
DeNy ~ock ~ are11te
4 p.m. ctOiing quotot ol
lht p&lt;tYioua day'a trill..

ae119nt,

provided
AdYaat ol Gdlpolls.

==··:. .~-;1111.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

OOMrSt......

Subscribe today.
. 992~2156

•

v~u~o.o,,.,,

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L.l1e Home Car Buol,_

JA.~IW\.o.".W• .

by

&lt;. -

.214 Eaol Main
. Pomeroy

992..6687

.

•
r

the

• Approved Memorial Day ·
expenses for the Disabled American Veterans in the amount of
$300.

•

ltxt. 1112
ue1
--...:.orll:xt.IIM

Cll'nlltlla---.. ----~ 1113
ia
,,.,.._
&amp;nlltl

Harley Oavldaon K mart- 9')•

' .Champion·Ch8rming Shope- 8% ...

.~:··~"~tN;i:•:·=·

J\dl'tlllllri.... -,,,_;_,, __ ,N•ooollt.1104

abilities in
$142,000;

10- or 20-year.level tetllllife

Gannalt- 70~
General Electric - 140~.

,,
•

Housing

1lf CIIIIIIIUR IIWI lOIII 8:41, 8:11

(hnl) To!llj M!i~. Qlr.ize Theron, MthD Cll1

insurance from Au~-Owners

•

SUpennlaldent . :

said.
~
'
Cc;&gt;uncil held an extensive discussion on perso.nnel matters,
meeting with Police Chief Jeffrey
Miller in open session and meeting
in two e~utive sessions.
Council considered the establishment of a court clerk position,
to be filled ~ an 'existing employee, which would pay an additional
50 cents an hour, at 40· hours per
week, but tabled action until the
safety and finance committees ·can
meet . on Thursday to discus! the
.position further.
Prior to the decision to meet In
committee, council voted to
approve the creation of the position. Council members David Ballard, Larry Wehrung and George
Wright voting against, an4 Councilmen Viator Young III and Bryan
Shank voting in favor.
Council also authorized hiring
Floyd Hickman as a part-time ..
AI·
police officer, fo~ three da}'l a
week' Terry Powell as a part-time gram to be conducted at the
restored Chester Courthouse.
It will also be used as leverage
match funding for an Appalachian
Regional Commission grant for
courthouse projects.
Commissioner Jeffiey Thornton was one of the ·team memberi, and PoweU ' thanked him for
his participation .a nd the commisfo.r in-kind support of the
sioners
night, then fog developing. Lows in
the upper 30s. North wind 5 to 10 local ream's efforts.
The commissioners also:
mph.
. • Approved payment of bills in
. Wednesday... Mosdy
cloudy.
the
amount of$500,879.98, with
Highs around 60.
Wednesday
nigbt ... Partly 272 entries;
• Approved an advance in .
cloudy. Lows around 40.
appropriations to the Meigs
Extended forecut: '
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs County Board of Mental· Retardation and Developmental Disin the mid and .upper 60s.
Friday. .. Partly cloudy until mid. night, then cloudy with a chance
of sllowers. Lows in the mid 40s
and highs in the upper 60s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Lows in the
upper 4&lt;)s and highs in the upper

..........,...............................$111!.56

!2 -

• "

from PapAl

·Rain vvill end in area.tonight

dul pa111p pt;ld at Pon!troy, Ohio.
........, The Allocla1od Preu, and tlte Ohio
"-por~lotloo.
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.
POftlLU'I'IIli Sen~ addral concctlona '10
Tbe Dally S.nllnel, 111 Coul'l St., Pomeroy,
Olllo 45769

police dispatcher, pending 'the each.
potholes on Lincoln Hill, andanticipated resignation of a current
He .reported tha.t the depart- Blaettnar said that the holes would.
dispatcher; and accepted the resig- ment's new brush truck was now be repaired soon with the arrival
nation of custodian Ruth Robin- in the body shop and Will probably of hot mix paving material.
son.
. be. ready for use by April 1.
Also present was Clerk Kathy
After meeting in executive ses. Young . presented . information HyseU.
sion, council voted to rescind a about a new computer system for ~.:.;W;.;,h;;;en-di-.rect. _o_r_N_Omutn_...;..J_e~--previous action to dismiss Becky the tax adminislrator's office, but
showed his film The HurrlcaM
NeweU, a former police depart- no action was taken. Blaettnar sug·
ot the Toronto International Filin
ment dispatcher, anc! accepted her gested council wait until the real
Festival, it wasn't even finished.
,.
resignation.
.
estare settlement is completed and
Council approved the first read- funds received before: the sysrein is
ing of twO ordinances, o.t\e to purchased.
·
increase court costs from S20 to
Young also .complained of a li~~
$40, and another to establish a number of junked can in the vilthree-member parking violation lage. Blaettnar.said that Scott Pow- ·
board to hear·Jppeals on parking ell, village iolicitor, was about to ·
·
·
violations. · ·
begin legal proceecling:s in Meig:s
Fire · Chief ,Chris Shank met County Co11rt to deal with die
with council and received permis- problem.
'
sion to purchase· 3o' sections of 6re
Young an\1 Ballard noted p10b- .
hose at $80 per 1ection, and new !ems with burning on Butternut
Personal · Alert Safety Systein Avenue.
..
(PASS) monitors at a cost. of $147
Wehrung reported a n\llllber of

VALLEY WEATHER

··. The Dally Sentinel
Coal..alq NOWIJIIPirlloldltop,IDC.
l'llbllobact" lVII)' ftmoon, Monday lhrouah
P'rl4Ciy, Ill Coull St., Pomt!OJ, Oblo, by lilt
Ohio Volloy l'llbllohlftl Company. S.oond

Council

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Annual banquet slated

May gets probation

•·

for acoountt

Gaf)'·C. S•ht~dolalk

Divorce filed

?'''.,,. . .

Columbua, Ohlll o432M·O~.U
NOTIC:I: Namtl lllld addriiiH or unclalllltld llllOOW\11 advtr- .
tltlilln prior yeart art on file with your Cowity Trtlaurtr, u well u .
unadverdtlillccoullli of lt111han S,o, The Dl¥1alon wlllalao uarcll .

Phone#·~---~-----------

Humane Sodety to meet

Marriage licenses issued

Notice ofNames of Current
or l'ormer Residenta.ofMela• County
Appearing to be owliera of Unclailned Funds •

. ,STATEOFOHIO,DEPARlMENTOFCOMMERCE '
·
BobTaft
'
Oovcmor

RACINE - Mary Elizabeth Roush, 90, of.48360 Carmel Road,
POMEROY - Margaret Sinclair of Cherry ll:-idge Road reported
Ra"?C: passed away at 7:18p.m. Sunday, March 19,2000 in Holzer
to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department SuRday that her home bad
Medical Center, Gallipolis. .
·
been
enrered and that a number of tools had been stolen.
Born August 10,1909 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she was the daughter of the
late George Phillips Daniels and Arabella Skinner Daniels.
She was a .homemaker, and was a bookkeeper in her earlier years.
She and her late husband, Edson Roush, were prominent Sutton
Township farmers and were the owners of the Locust Grove Farms.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Local Board of Education
She was a member of the Carmel United Methodist Church, whe~ approved a number of personnel actions during its regular meeting
.
'
she served as a Sunday school teacher and the church treasurer. She was Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT - The OH K&lt;\N Coin Club will hold its regular
a. member of the farm Bureau. and was a former member of the
Elise Fields and Jennifer Harbeck were approved as substitute teachmonthly meeting on March 27 at the Trolley Station in Middleport. :
Daughters of the American Revolution.
ers; Lester Stewart as volunteer softbaU coach; Melissa Barker as tutor
The meeting is free and opeq to the public. There will be a. drawing
She married Edson Roush January 1936 at Locust GroVe, Ohio, for a health impaired student; and Roy Arms as a substitute bus driver.
and an open auction. Refreshments will be served. A membership
Tl)e board agreed to post an assistant track coach position, and
and h~ preceded her m death m 1988. She was also preceded in death
drive is now underway. Men:tbership dues are $10 for adults and $5 for'
b~ a uster, ~uth Daruels, and three brothers, Dr. Manning D,aniels, Dr. approved a community support position for grades K-4.The board also children under 16.
'
Roger Daruels, and Hugh Daniels.
,
approved an ihcrease in the hours for the on-board bus instructor •nd
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Honorable Judge Bar- additional hours required for re-certification. ·
bara R:oush and Dr.~alter Watson of Kent, Ohio, and Marilyn Roush
The board met in executive session with Marge 13enedum, Teresa
and DtckYoung ofS1dney, Ohio.
. ·Benedum and Joyce HiU, .
·
TUPPERS PL.AINS -All flowets.and other items on graves in the:
·"·Also surviving :ire siX grandchildren, Barbara Watson Moorhead of
Marvin Taylor, Eastern's alumni president, discussed class composites
Tuppers Plains Christian Cemetery must be removed before Apiil 1.
.A\Istin.' Texas, :Srigid Watson of Boston, Massachusetts, Edward Young With the board, and Sheila Taylor, board member, gave a legislative
Anything on graves at that time will be discarded. The annual mowof Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Mary Elisa Young ·of Athens, David report.
·
ing fee of $25 per g111ve is now due. Checks are to be made payable to
Vdung o~ Knoxville!Tennessee, and Erick Roush Young of Danbury,
A sixth-grade TAG trip to Canada was approved, and the board set Marvene Caldwell •.4to36 State Route 7, Reedsville, 45772.
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Connecucut; and seven great-grandchildren, Owen Moorhead, Ethan admission for spring sports events at St . ·
.
·Moorhead, and Oona Moorhead; all of Austin, Texas, JaneUa Young of
The board's next regular meeting will be .April19 at 6:30 p.m.
Knoxv~e, Tennessee, Erick Behymer of Athens, Heidi Young of
Knoxville, Tennessee, and Ebony Robinson of Danbury, Connecticut.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Hu::nane Society ·will hold at
~Memorial services will be conducted at a 'later 'date and will be
POMEROY
M .
li
.
d .
.
· general membership meeting on April 9 at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy'
,
arnage censes· were 1ssue m Me1gs County Library.
·
.
announced. Interment of the remains will be in the ~armel Cemetery.
A celebration of life will be at 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 21. 2000 Probat~ C~urt to Terry R~y Reuter, 27, Pomeroy, and Mandy ~liz~~
Old and new members a.re invited, along with anyone interested in
(ton_ight) in the felloW.hip hall at the Carmel Cl}urch. Friends and beth ftshking, 23, P1ckenng; Srephen Wesley Dunn, 23, Gallipolis working for animal welfare in Meigs County. The May Adoptathon,"
(amily are asked to bring a covered dish along wi~ pictures and sto- Ferry, W.Va., and Joy Mane Combs, 22, Ru~and; and tp Brady Lane spay and neuter coupons and additional community concerns will be
~~s to share.
· ·
1
Asburn, 28, and Rebecca L. Snuth, both ofVmton.
discussed.
'
:: In lieu of flowers memorial contributions can be made in Mary's
memory to the Carmel United Methodist Church, jp care of the Rev.
j
' 'f
. pewayne Studer, 4841 t State Route 124, Racine, Ohio, 45771 or to
tl)e United Nation in Ohio, in care of Elisa Young, 5200 West Bailey
POMEROY - A divorce was filed in Meigs County Common
POMEROY -The annual Meigs County Gra~ge banquet will b.;
Road, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764 .for the Elders Building Fund.
Pleas Court by Tyson R. Bolin .and Lydia M. Bolin, both of Albany.
April
7 at 7:15 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center.
'
I
Cremation arrangements are under the direction of the Cremeens
. State Grange Master Bernie Shoemaker will be the speaker. Enter-"
Fl\neral Home, Racine:
tainment will be by David Sutler and Rachel Pridemore. boor prizes
. will be awarded ..
· POMEROY - Todd Matthew May, charged With complicity to
Tickets are available from Ziba Midkiff, Opal and Patty Dyer, Rosconunit trafficking in crack cocaine, was sent10nced last we.ek to ·a sus- alie Story, Norman Will and Chuck Yost. Reservations are due by April
pended prison sentence and a p,e riod of probation. ·
2. to Ziba Midkiff or Opal Dyer.

Cemetery deanup slated

..

•Actual Size lx4
• l Person Per Ad
'
• Run Date
Fri., April 21st
• Deadline
~acharg Warth
Fri., April 14th
HappfJ E'~ter
12:00 Noon
}Kommfl di Daddfl .
Mail or Drop Off At The

Judge Fred W. Crow III of Meigs County Common Pleas Court
imposed the sentence, which included a 12-month suspended sentence, a five-year period of Community .Control participation, with
$50 per month administrative costs, and SSOO chuge for costs of prosecution.
A curfew was also ordered, and May is to participate in the Southeastern Ohio ~robationary Treatment Alternative program.

f

U~CLAIMED FUND~

We alto are on the lnlemet. Our web alte acldreula:
www.coin.allte.oh.UJ ·

I • E repoa ted

Coin aub to meet

"That's one of the reasons we sajo they don't want to be part·ot
COLUMBUS (AP) -· Public- the union, which has no inten, · employee unions won't have a lion of giving it.
want to privatize, so we can oper- any mining program for the ne'lli
presence in Ohio's two privately
The union long has opposed ate them without having to go . guards, who will perform work
run prisons, so expect them to privately run prisons, saying they through all the bells and whistles union members do at stare-run
prisons.
complain about it, say two are not as safe as state-run prisons. with the union contract.''
Republican lawmakers who favol'" Employees at the two privately
. Rep. Kevin Coughlin of Cuya"Our contract bars them froirt
run prisons have no union affilia- hoga Falls said the public employ- using union members for miti'~
. privatization.
Qfficials of the Ohi&lt;;&gt; Civil Ser- lion.
ees unio11 is unhappy because it ing:' Said Peter W ray, a urti.oit
vice Employees Association,
1\vo House Republicans, how-· won't be collecting dues from spokesman.
w.hich represents about 10,000 • ever, said union complaints are employees at 'the prisons in
"We are the bargaining agent:
· corrections workers, said Monday one reason they favor pdvatiza- Grafton and Conneaut.
They've got to go through us (for
they had filed a grievance. with lion.·
·
, . "They're going to · .Jose a approval).'' .
the Department ofRehabilitation
"The unions are upset about it potential $300,000 in dues. They
The North Coast Correctional
and Correction over the training because of the fact that · they're know it, they'c:e upset about it. I Treatment Facility hou.ses felony
of employees at the two private not necessarily · going to be . don't care," Coughlin said. "I care drunken- driving offenders and
prisons.
involved," said Robert Corbin of about protecting communities other inmates who have histones
The department is using union Dayton, a member of the Con- from crime and drugs."
of alcohol or drug abuse.
·· ,
members to train some of the trolling Bqard, which last year
The union says that's its goal,
The minimum-security prison,
workers, but the union says the approved operating contracts for too, and feels the private prisons . which opened Feb. 29, is in the
state must gei permission from . the new prisons.
won't accomplish that. OffiCials Lorain County village of Grafton:

COLUMBUS (AP) - A program established to help Ohio
. .callliMe._to, ~duce · its ' welfare
rolls gqt a remporary iinancial
boost that's expecred to 'allow
counties to provide better wei- .
fa~related services.
·The state Controllins Board on
Monday approved the Depmn"nt
H\lman S.rvic:et spendlnll in adtlltlonill 11!17 million In

The 0811y Sentinel • P•g• A 3

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF. ·

'

Personnel1dlon approved

GOP expects·union .complaints about prisons·.

Illness kills Sea .1Aforld dolphins
AUROR.A (AP) - Tl:lree of the eight Commerson's dolphins at
the Sea World amusement park in northeast Ohio have died recently of an illness.
·
.
Staffers are using antibiotics and feedings every two hours to save ·
two others that are also ill.
·
·
The black ~nd white dolphins died of colitis, an inflammation of
the large intestine. Lab test results might help ·d etermine how they ·
got sick, .said Sea World veterinarian Michael Renner.
. "They are small animals who live in salt water and are. easily
prone to dehydration·, because of th~ir size or the environment they
live in," he said." A' simple thing like colitis that you and I may get
over very easily can be pretty devastating to these guys."
The dolphins came to Sea World in 1996 when it opened Patagonia Passage.
·

OBTIUARY •,

County Coroner's Office in Cincinnati. for
Portsmouth police.
Officers then went to Curry's suburban New autopsies.
.
Neighbors
said
Pamela
EdWl\!d$
had
been
irr
Boston apartment, where they found the bodies of Lana Spndlin, 35, and ·her son, Daniel ill health and living with her mother, EmogeUe
'
Jones, 9, of Lucasville. Spradlin and Jones were Spradlin, who helped care for her.
On Monday, their two-story frame house 1M\&gt;
Emogene Spradlin's daughter and grandson.
Portsmouth police issued an arrest warrant sealed off with yeUow police tape. Twenty-one
charging Curry with four counts of aggravated white plastic butterflies were stuck in lhe
murder and sent officers to Kentucky to rerum ground, forming a border around the fropt
him to Ohio. Curry was being held Monday hedge. Cardboard cutouts of Santa Claus and
night in lieu ofS100,000 bond, awaiting extra- Frosty the Snowman still hung in tl)e windi:!'M.
Neighbors in neatly kept bunga!Qws along
clition to Scioto County.
Ratcliff said he did not know the motive for the street expressed disbelief at the slayings. ... :
Sally Cook, 45, described the neighborhood
the slayings, but that Curry had been dating
as quiet, with a mix of elderly residents apd
Lana Spradlin.
"Since you're tallcing about his girlfriend, his young families.
" I've lived in this community all my life;'
girlfriend's son, his girlfriend's mother, and his
Cook
said. "It's really :i shocker."
.•
girlfriend's sister, one probably is forced to look
McGuire, who has lived in the neighborho®
at an area of some type of domestic squabble;'
for five 'months , said he might move.
..·.
Ratcliff said.
" It could have been me. It could have ~en
He .said did not know when the victims were
killed or in what order, but called the cnme a neighbor. It could have been · anybo.dy.
scenes uhorrific."
through here. If he had been drunk, or on drug.~
"lill of the victims have multiple injuries;· he or something like that ... :· said McGuire, his
:
said. Tl)e bodies were taken to the Hamilton voice trailing off.

WeHare-related spending
to· · ·
in FY 2000

Pomeroy, Mldc:lleport, Ohio

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P . A 2 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuelday, March 21, 2000.
l'Ueld-r, M•rch 21, 2000

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Father, son die In cn~shes
AKRON (AP) - Donna L. Perry has lost a husband and a son in
accidents some eight years apart.
Sunday mo~ning, her husband, Rudo)ph J. Perry Jr., 49, died in a
fiery plane crash near Akron-Fulton Municipal Airport. ., .
In late ~991, her IS-year-old son was killed in a car accident
involving a drunken driver. Rudy Perry Ill had stopped with his
father on an Akron highway to help a smnc\ed motorist when the
boy was struck and thrown off an overpass.
The Summit County medical examiner confirmed to Donna
Perry on Monday it was her husband's burned body in his crumpled Beechcraft A-23 Musketeer plane. The Hudson man died alone
.in the small single-engine plane be had flown for years.
Perry's plane crashed shortly after takeoff into Cindy and Steve
Miller's house, less than a mile from the airport. The plane burst into
flames on impact. Cindy Miller and her 13-year-old daughter,Julie,
escape\~ their two-story home moments before it was consumed by
fire.
·
Despite their loss, the Millers sent their sympathy to the pilot and
his family. ·
.'

. Mayois sign irks coundl
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mayor Michaei R. White's face pictured
on ·signs greeting travelers at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport is less • hospitality gesture thap a political advertisement, a city
councilman said.
.·
Michael C. O'Malley has introduced a proposal to ban elected
officials' names and pictures from any signs or displays ·at the cityrun airport.
The proposal Monday is part of legislation, up for a vote next
week, to award a five-year contract for ihe airport's advertising.
"I believe it's political advertising:' O'Malley said of the postersized signs with White's picture that greet passengers in Hopkins'
main ter.minal and along concourses. "I don't know what other
purpose it serves."
Solomon Balraj, deputy director of the Department of Port Control, said there is no o~jection to banning such displays. He said
Whire favors prohibiting the names of Cleveland politicians from
appearing on city signs, banners and pamphlets.

Charges filed in teen slaying
WAPAKONETA (AP) -A man charged with killing a IS-yearold girl slashed her throat and Jeft ·her to bleed to death, an Auglaize
County prosecutor .said.
·
· But a lawyer for defendant Michael Anthony Brock, 28, said in a
trial that began Monday that prosecutors lack evidence to support
their charges.
Three judges in.Auglaize County Common Pleas Court are hearing the case against Brock on charges that he kidnapped and killed
Amber Nicole Williams.
·
Her body was found Nov. 27, 19%, in woods five miles northwest of the western Qhio community of St. Marys, Brock's home. town. The victim had been missing for two weeks.
.
Brock is charged with aggravated murder, murder, kicbiapping,
corruption of a mi11or and possession of criminal tools.
.
He could face the death penalty if convicted of aggravated pi,ui:der. If he is convicted of all charges but not senrenced .to death,
Brock could get up to 66 years in prison.
"The evidence in this case will show that Michael Anthony Brock
murdered Amber Nicole Williams. He had sex with litr;l\e'heldill!r·
and he slit her throat ~nd left her to bleed to death:' Amy Ouey Fox,
an assistant county prosecutor, said in her opening statement to
Judges Frederick Pepple, Randall Basinger and John Webb.
Defense lawyer Adrian Cimerman, oiToledo, said the prosec\lt!On
lacks evidence. He cited al an example the kidnapping charge, saying that the coroner who did an autopsy found no evidence that &amp;he
had ·been restmined.
·
.

Alrlln• to lfOUnd fllahta
. . AlU.INOTON, Va. (AP) ~ fllylng on US Airways this weekendt
.
You ltiiY want to make other arrangemenu.
US Airways Is preparing Cor i poalble strike by flight attendanta
on Saturday by making plans to pund fllllhll rather than allow
pa1111engers to (ace travel dltruptlona.
The flight attendants' union lw said It W9ulci target random
routes with impromptu walkouts tp cause maximum chaos, .I n
response, the airline has said it would shut down rather than subject
passengers to ·unpredictable travel.
· "It would be a great inconvenience to passengers if US Airways
didn't info~m them to look for alternatives," Joshua Javitz, an expert
on airline labor negotiations; said Monday.
for airijne passengers, predictability is everything, Javitz said. US
AirWays Would suffer greater losses in the long rerm if it tried to
operate through a strike and undermined customer loyalty, he said.
With a strike deadline of 12:01 a.m. EST Saturday, US Airways
Oight attendants are back at the bargaining table in a final attempt
to resolve a three-year contract dispute with the nation's ·sixth
largest airline:

didn't deserve'to die

Neighbor:
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Standing in his
front doorway with a cup of coffee, Paul
McGuire trembled at the thought that two of
four brutal murders occurred just across the
street.
· 'Tve got bad nerves anyway, and things like
this just don't help," McGuire, 34, said. "The
women over there, they didn't bother nobody."
On Sunday afternoon, police discovered the
bodies of Emogene Spradlin, 78, and her
daughter Pamela Edwards, 52, in their suburban
Sciotoville home. Portsmouth police Chief
Greg Ratcliff said Spradlin's son, who had been
upstairs at the time of the attack, called officers
to the home. ·
·
Police said the suspect, James R . Curry, ·42,
was taken into custody a few hours later after a
traffic stop in Puis, Ky.
A Kentucky State Police troOper saw Curry
driving ertatically in a van and arrested him for
driving under the influence of drugs. Kentucky
State Police Lt. AI Rich said Cun-Y suggested
that he knew about a quadruple homicide in
southern Ohio and police discovered he was
carrying a knife, leading them to alert

•

Infants killer back IIi Jail

'

.

MEDINA (AP) -A woman convicted two years ago of smothering her infant in the b.Sement of her family'$ home has returned
to jail after a judge revoked her. appeal bond.
· Audrey Iacona, 20, surrendered to police about 10:30 a.m. Monday, five days after the 9th Ohio District Court of Appeals rejected
her request for a new trial.
She was placed. under house arrest on friday and Medina County Comnion Pleas·Court Judge James Kimbler on Monday ordered
lacona held in the county jail until she is resentenced.
· Kimbler will schedule a resentencing dare if lacona fails to win a
new trial from the Ohio Supreme Court on her convictions for
involuntary" manslaughter, child endangering.and abuse ·of.a corpse.
lacona had been sentenced to eight years in prison but last week
the appeals court sai~ she must be resentence.d because Kimbler did
not provide :in adequate expianation for giving ·a first-time offender more than the minimum three-year t&lt;•rm.

Mary Ellzabella Roush

or

fl.eal }'tar 2000 orftdttillmoHey
Itt ultle f11r poor Cattillles. · .
. The apprtival bring~ to abt~ut
~57 o4 nilllfon Whit 't lit itate could
ape11d.thil

y.~ar fin cash

payments

to welrare redplinli along with
programs that help move people

off welfare and keep people from
returning to welfare rolls. . .
Couqties can use the· money
for everything from helping find
people transportation to jobs, to
buying people work~related
clothing, to providing counseling,
said Jon Allen, a }:iuman Servictl'
apoklilman. .
· "W~ re.Allze thAt ltlllny people
ire. jult o11e flHDntlill erllamlty
&amp;om hiving w return ttl tiiltlinee." Allen Iiid. "I(JliOplt baw
been t'fftlvlll(l WI!ICil'l! btndlli
fot many monthi, they'rw riot
likl!ly .ttl have i algnllleant
·amount o( money. stashed In a
bank aa:ount.''
·

l1l Court Street Pomeroy, OH 45769
Ghild's Name_ _ _~~-----·
From.~-~---------------~
Your Name.______~----------~
Address

.

The 'accounts listed were received in the previous year and are·
valued at SSO or more. Information concemina the amount of the ,
funds and how to claim them may be obtained by any person pos:
seuina a proprio~ interet! In the unclaimed funda. Prescribed
fo11111 will be furnilhcd by addreuiliB an Inquiry to the Ohio Departm.ent of Commeroe at the addreu below. Name and acldreaa
m1111 bt alven euoily u llatecl In the advertl~emtnt. ·
·
Ohio Department of Commeroe
Dlvltloti of Unclaimed l'unill
'17 !Iouth High Stttet, iOtll Flllor

'" POMEROY- Robert William l\1ahr Sr., 67, Pomeroy, died Sunday, March 19,2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
. ,He was born on June 3, 1932 in Columbus, so:n of the late Lester
and Ruby McCain Mahr. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during
~h~ Korean Conflict, and was employed as a carpenter.
Surviving are his wife, freda Heitger .Mahr; a daughter, Arlene
Whitten of Tell. City; Ind.; two stepsons, Bill Foley of Pomeroy, and
Gary and J'letty Foley of Syracuse; twO sist1"rs, Macy EDen Chester and
Carolyn Haaf, both of Florida; and nine stepg~ndchildten and 10
Jtepcgreat- grandchildren.
'
He was also preceded in death by his son, Robert William Mahr Jr.
Services will be 11 a.m.· Thursday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with Jesse Morris officiating. Burial will follow in Carleton
' . ,Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral lionie from 7-9 p.m. ,
'.W~dnesday.
·
,
·

·

~PIIpA1
internet should write to the Division of Unclaimed .fands and
provide the full name to be
· reaean:hed, along with the coun. tin in which the person may have
relided.
1.

.

,The division's address is · 77 S.

· High ~~-, 2Qdi Floor, Columbus,
Ohio 43266..0545. Moore point:S
· out that these individuals can also·

' ··

· City of Ch11ttr:. Heatlna 81. Coolin Leiter R, Unknown: Howard, Oary, nuo···,.
Svc Inc, 12593 Cblllocothe Rd; Johnston, SR 143; Lathey, Cllrence, RR 3 Boa II; .:
Clinton, Neptune St.
Laudermllt, Orland, 31701 Wolfeten; .
Melaa Health, 46520 Ea1le Rdl Rd; .
Cll)' of CooMIIt: Bous, Linda, R 2; Norman, Mark, 32087 Hyaell Run Rd;
ColUid, Patty L, Rt 2 Bo• 260; Euterlina, Oneil, Miohoel, 414 Unooln"Hl; Shaw, :
Nola M, RR 2 '886 SR 7; FouaJ!t, Kathy, Tonyo. 39141 SR 684; Stewart. Lila. 1679
"00 Null Rei; Orooiowakl, Frank, Rt 1 Lincoln Hta Rd; Story, Ooldle Marje, '
Boa 24454 Brimstone; Harper, Sanh A, 311436 Roc:kaprinp Rd.
. 1
IU I Bo• 191; Mopw, D, RR I; Mollud,
Kim! A, 1975 Youboridae Rd.
City of Portia••• Duhl, Miohael w. :
30B2S Barrinpr Rtt1 Rd.
City of Homlaek Grove: Gribble,
Learand c/o Jerome Atlantlo Cook, Un·
City of Raeln\n Croao, John clo We
known.
Crou A M F RIIUih, PO ·aox 158; C - : .
Sllnley M o/o W C Crou A M F RIIU1h :
Cll)' or Llnpvlll11 Bl~&lt;k, Ronold ·e, PO Boa ' 158; Doerfer, Henry, PO Bo•
31032 Red Hill Rd.
441; Leamond, Anno M, ~6715 Tannen
Run; Michael, Chaliea, 22714 Bucktowa
Cll)' of Leo1 Botto•• Beaver, Henry Rei; Rllc:ine Home Bonk Co Jividen Hein.
R, Rt I Bo• 45a; Hofllnan, Janet, 35161 Unknown; Riffle, Laura E, Boo 216; .
Ook Hill Rd; Hofllnan, Teoiy, m61 Ook Smith, Don, 48405 Momlna Star; · •
Hill Rd.
WallbnJwn, Oall, Rtl Box 319; Vou"'; ;
Ellen, PO Bo• 441; 1st 'N4tional Bank •
City of Middleport: Arnold, Judith Aceta Lm Jividen We Bo Unknown. ·., ;
A, 625 112 Ch.. hlut St; Bailey, Milclrod
.
•
L, Rt I: llrewer,; Nocha, 360 S 4th: '· City of
uit 1 Laupery, Ro; :
Cleland, Canoll, PO Bo• ·24: OtlJor, ·ert. $1948 IUoo Rd.
•
Latrenda. UrN 2nd· A•e; M1ttft•. Jan
'
~
Mlc.haet; 645 Broadway St: Matico, . -. City oi 'Rotta••• DoiVldaoft, Doftfta. '
Miohatl A, 645 Broadwoy St; Miller, M, Rt I; H111110t1; hit,, 3~1 Dye Roi; :
Hamil, 661 N llid A.vi: Reyaolda,lomoo, Kal.,..ty, Clan. Oenenl Doilveoy.
.: '
276 Sycamm St; SIIQUrr... 011)', 112 N
·
2nd Ave: St ;llnloa, Donald, 657 S Seo- · CIIJ ·of.Syra-• Allen, Thoma, Po• ;
ond Ave.
·
Bo~ 14: Kmt'ld. 'Rita C, PO Box 20.1 r
fflftko, Shanyt L, PO Boa ....; lllllil"' i
, Cltr •I l'ol!ltrOYI Aah, lames, PO laclt, PO Box,72l, .
·· &gt;' . · ' .
Box 172\ Baober, Roloert H, Rt 4; llarkor,
'
.
,iiol ~
1._ H, 362~ 'Klnpbii'Y Rei; a-on
City or hpioon .l'laiMI • - · ~ :
Cltao. '1547 Rye Avo: BroWn, A...... 204 W, Olllefll DoiiVII}'. ,
·
!
W Main St; lrown, Harold D, 110 W
• •·
Main St; llrownlna. Elvo. 422 W MaiD It:
.CIV
Lea. I &gt;W; Mldllotooi :
· Cantoiltury, loVIUiam, Front S~ Hawley, Doll Co, Main St 0,.;,., 11-4: "wnw ' •
,
,
Allptiol; Werner, WHillm C. .
; ' :

a.e. ..

i

t-!1

u.ue...,

, ·•. :

....
. ... .

-'

•"'

Davld,Moore

Robert William Mahr,, Sr• .

'

~·

·List

In 111m11 1101 app•arlna on tboat !late. Send a lilt of
gompltle namea, alona with the Ohio co11nt~1 In whloh they may
have lived. We. wUI provide olalm forma for poulblt maloh...
.:-·

Director

DEATH NOTICE

..

contact their county treasurer's
office where ·advertisements for
previous . years and lists of
accounts under 450 are often
available for,review.
In addition to the a£counts
being advertised, the division is
holding a stalewide total of 2 mil·
lion accounts worth $216 million,
Individuals should follo"oY the
same steps described above to
determine·"if they.· or their friends
and relativep have unclaimed
funds waiting ro be claimed.

(tJSPS ZU·Hol

JVIIICRIPTION RATIS

JyCanlororM--.
Coo .............................................. $2.00
Ooo Mcnth ............................................ $8.70
Qort Year......................;....................$104.00

liNGLE COPY PRICI
Dally......:......................................... .35 Centa
Sublcriben 80t dulri• to pay lht earrter may
·remit In actvlftCI direct 10 The Dall7 Sentinel
o;n a·tl'lrle, ah1 or 12 montll bola. Credll will be
alvcn urrlet eldl week.
No tublcripllon by mail pennlued In area•
' .,... home canter Ntvlco lt aVIiltble;
' PubliabCir reurvu the d&amp;ht to adjust rates
durtna the tublalptlon period. SubterlptiO!I
1111 c:banpi ml)' be·l,..pltmented by c:btnlln&amp;
tM duration of tht •ublcri~n.
,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lingering showers will end
across the tri-county area tonight
as high pressure builds over the
region, bringing. with it a warming .trend.
By the end of the week, temperatures will reach the low · to
mid-60s, the National Weather
Service said.
Highs on Wednesday will be in
the upper 50s under cloudy skies,
Lows tonight will be 35-45.
Sunset.tonight will be at 6:45
p.m. and sunrise on Wednesday at
6:32a.m.

Weather wrecast:
Tonight... Cloudy until mid-

MAJL8UII8CIIIPI10NS
loaldt Mtlp Coaol)'
.,, Wetici ............................................. S27.JQ
UW1eici ........................:.................... S53.82

....

.

.•••.

Ootttldo Mtlp Coaol)'
13 W.Oicl ............. ,........... ;.................... $29,25.
UWotb ••:...............................,.......... SS6.68
!2
. Wotb ........................................... $1119.71

.

/,',

~,'r / \ 1 /l' l '..,

I 1, I

' . Ootr-.;...... .... Rorioo ..

to ... '

'......._.,,_ bn of•.•nwt. • ...,.,

.....

.,.. -. "'""- at &lt;1•l m-un. "''
wll-k· iMr t•...Odh ud ..U •

-"""-

,,..~

',..,. ..... - • • m4~. ~~eta,....,
.

• *

'lftl '

AEP- 30Yo
Akzo - 42%
AmTeci!/SBC .:... 44'1•
Ashland Inc, - 31\
AT&amp;T- 58\

ft'CNII Pip

60s.

.

Bank One - 27l.

8Qb Evena'-12\

· BorgWa"ntr !.;- ~.

77~

Kroger-'- 18).
· l.llndl End - ·54 ·
· •Lid.- 37'•
Oak Hll Flnanetal - 14.

,
•·

3'· ·

City Haldlng- 11.,.
Federal Mogul - 13'1.
.F iratar- 22~

amount

of

MIIIIM IUIIIY
~'~
(CotnldyiDI'Imt) K~n Spacey, Annelte

8:11

·

MY

Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard, Jeff'rey Thornton
and Mick Davenport ami Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

THE nGGER MOVIE •
W!D. 'liARGAIN NIGHT ALL

BEAn aa.oo ••• Bta

ALL AGES ALL TIMES 54.00

Protect the . . . rtant

peopiemva
·m [ roW
1~1

have the qJtion d protecting your family memben;

·a bu&amp;iness panner Mth low·CM

·

.

..ova30.,. 33ll
One
val~ -

Pooplae- 18%
~omler - 8'1.
Rockwell - 40'·

lnsumnce Cornpmy. Call us tOr rrqe

Rqcl&lt;y a0ot. - 4
RO Sholl- 58'/o
Sea(a-31
Shoney'a-"r.
Wai·Mllll- 55~

.

details and a axnpetidve
proposal. ·
.

Windy'a-17"1.
Worthington- 12.,.
DeNy ~ock ~ are11te
4 p.m. ctOiing quotot ol
lht p&lt;tYioua day'a trill..

ae119nt,

provided
AdYaat ol Gdlpolls.

==··:. .~-;1111.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

OOMrSt......

Subscribe today.
. 992~2156

•

v~u~o.o,,.,,

••

..

~

L.l1e Home Car Buol,_

JA.~IW\.o.".W• .

by

&lt;. -

.214 Eaol Main
. Pomeroy

992..6687

.

•
r

the

• Approved Memorial Day ·
expenses for the Disabled American Veterans in the amount of
$300.

•

ltxt. 1112
ue1
--...:.orll:xt.IIM

Cll'nlltlla---.. ----~ 1113
ia
,,.,.._
&amp;nlltl

Harley Oavldaon K mart- 9')•

' .Champion·Ch8rming Shope- 8% ...

.~:··~"~tN;i:•:·=·

J\dl'tlllllri.... -,,,_;_,, __ ,N•ooollt.1104

abilities in
$142,000;

10- or 20-year.level tetllllife

Gannalt- 70~
General Electric - 140~.

,,
•

Housing

1lf CIIIIIIIUR IIWI lOIII 8:41, 8:11

(hnl) To!llj M!i~. Qlr.ize Theron, MthD Cll1

insurance from Au~-Owners

•

SUpennlaldent . :

said.
~
'
Cc;&gt;uncil held an extensive discussion on perso.nnel matters,
meeting with Police Chief Jeffrey
Miller in open session and meeting
in two e~utive sessions.
Council considered the establishment of a court clerk position,
to be filled ~ an 'existing employee, which would pay an additional
50 cents an hour, at 40· hours per
week, but tabled action until the
safety and finance committees ·can
meet . on Thursday to discus! the
.position further.
Prior to the decision to meet In
committee, council voted to
approve the creation of the position. Council members David Ballard, Larry Wehrung and George
Wright voting against, an4 Councilmen Viator Young III and Bryan
Shank voting in favor.
Council also authorized hiring
Floyd Hickman as a part-time ..
AI·
police officer, fo~ three da}'l a
week' Terry Powell as a part-time gram to be conducted at the
restored Chester Courthouse.
It will also be used as leverage
match funding for an Appalachian
Regional Commission grant for
courthouse projects.
Commissioner Jeffiey Thornton was one of the ·team memberi, and PoweU ' thanked him for
his participation .a nd the commisfo.r in-kind support of the
sioners
night, then fog developing. Lows in
the upper 30s. North wind 5 to 10 local ream's efforts.
The commissioners also:
mph.
. • Approved payment of bills in
. Wednesday... Mosdy
cloudy.
the
amount of$500,879.98, with
Highs around 60.
Wednesday
nigbt ... Partly 272 entries;
• Approved an advance in .
cloudy. Lows around 40.
appropriations to the Meigs
Extended forecut: '
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs County Board of Mental· Retardation and Developmental Disin the mid and .upper 60s.
Friday. .. Partly cloudy until mid. night, then cloudy with a chance
of sllowers. Lows in the mid 40s
and highs in the upper 60s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Lows in the
upper 4&lt;)s and highs in the upper

..........,...............................$111!.56

!2 -

• "

from PapAl

·Rain vvill end in area.tonight

dul pa111p pt;ld at Pon!troy, Ohio.
........, The Allocla1od Preu, and tlte Ohio
"-por~lotloo.
'
.
POftlLU'I'IIli Sen~ addral concctlona '10
Tbe Dally S.nllnel, 111 Coul'l St., Pomeroy,
Olllo 45769

police dispatcher, pending 'the each.
potholes on Lincoln Hill, andanticipated resignation of a current
He .reported tha.t the depart- Blaettnar said that the holes would.
dispatcher; and accepted the resig- ment's new brush truck was now be repaired soon with the arrival
nation of custodian Ruth Robin- in the body shop and Will probably of hot mix paving material.
son.
. be. ready for use by April 1.
Also present was Clerk Kathy
After meeting in executive ses. Young . presented . information HyseU.
sion, council voted to rescind a about a new computer system for ~.:.;W;.;,h;;;en-di-.rect. _o_r_N_Omutn_...;..J_e~--previous action to dismiss Becky the tax adminislrator's office, but
showed his film The HurrlcaM
NeweU, a former police depart- no action was taken. Blaettnar sug·
ot the Toronto International Filin
ment dispatcher, anc! accepted her gested council wait until the real
Festival, it wasn't even finished.
,.
resignation.
.
estare settlement is completed and
Council approved the first read- funds received before: the sysrein is
ing of twO ordinances, o.t\e to purchased.
·
increase court costs from S20 to
Young also .complained of a li~~
$40, and another to establish a number of junked can in the vilthree-member parking violation lage. Blaettnar.said that Scott Pow- ·
board to hear·Jppeals on parking ell, village iolicitor, was about to ·
·
·
violations. · ·
begin legal proceecling:s in Meig:s
Fire · Chief ,Chris Shank met County Co11rt to deal with die
with council and received permis- problem.
'
sion to purchase· 3o' sections of 6re
Young an\1 Ballard noted p10b- .
hose at $80 per 1ection, and new !ems with burning on Butternut
Personal · Alert Safety Systein Avenue.
..
(PASS) monitors at a cost. of $147
Wehrung reported a n\llllber of

VALLEY WEATHER

··. The Dally Sentinel
Coal..alq NOWIJIIPirlloldltop,IDC.
l'llbllobact" lVII)' ftmoon, Monday lhrouah
P'rl4Ciy, Ill Coull St., Pomt!OJ, Oblo, by lilt
Ohio Volloy l'llbllohlftl Company. S.oond

Council

,
I

:I

I
I'

ij

·'

Annual banquet slated

May gets probation

•·

for acoountt

Gaf)'·C. S•ht~dolalk

Divorce filed

?'''.,,. . .

Columbua, Ohlll o432M·O~.U
NOTIC:I: Namtl lllld addriiiH or unclalllltld llllOOW\11 advtr- .
tltlilln prior yeart art on file with your Cowity Trtlaurtr, u well u .
unadverdtlillccoullli of lt111han S,o, The Dl¥1alon wlllalao uarcll .

Phone#·~---~-----------

Humane Sodety to meet

Marriage licenses issued

Notice ofNames of Current
or l'ormer Residenta.ofMela• County
Appearing to be owliera of Unclailned Funds •

. ,STATEOFOHIO,DEPARlMENTOFCOMMERCE '
·
BobTaft
'
Oovcmor

RACINE - Mary Elizabeth Roush, 90, of.48360 Carmel Road,
POMEROY - Margaret Sinclair of Cherry ll:-idge Road reported
Ra"?C: passed away at 7:18p.m. Sunday, March 19,2000 in Holzer
to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department SuRday that her home bad
Medical Center, Gallipolis. .
·
been
enrered and that a number of tools had been stolen.
Born August 10,1909 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she was the daughter of the
late George Phillips Daniels and Arabella Skinner Daniels.
She was a .homemaker, and was a bookkeeper in her earlier years.
She and her late husband, Edson Roush, were prominent Sutton
Township farmers and were the owners of the Locust Grove Farms.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Local Board of Education
She was a member of the Carmel United Methodist Church, whe~ approved a number of personnel actions during its regular meeting
.
'
she served as a Sunday school teacher and the church treasurer. She was Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT - The OH K&lt;\N Coin Club will hold its regular
a. member of the farm Bureau. and was a former member of the
Elise Fields and Jennifer Harbeck were approved as substitute teachmonthly meeting on March 27 at the Trolley Station in Middleport. :
Daughters of the American Revolution.
ers; Lester Stewart as volunteer softbaU coach; Melissa Barker as tutor
The meeting is free and opeq to the public. There will be a. drawing
She married Edson Roush January 1936 at Locust GroVe, Ohio, for a health impaired student; and Roy Arms as a substitute bus driver.
and an open auction. Refreshments will be served. A membership
Tl)e board agreed to post an assistant track coach position, and
and h~ preceded her m death m 1988. She was also preceded in death
drive is now underway. Men:tbership dues are $10 for adults and $5 for'
b~ a uster, ~uth Daruels, and three brothers, Dr. Manning D,aniels, Dr. approved a community support position for grades K-4.The board also children under 16.
'
Roger Daruels, and Hugh Daniels.
,
approved an ihcrease in the hours for the on-board bus instructor •nd
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Honorable Judge Bar- additional hours required for re-certification. ·
bara R:oush and Dr.~alter Watson of Kent, Ohio, and Marilyn Roush
The board met in executive session with Marge 13enedum, Teresa
and DtckYoung ofS1dney, Ohio.
. ·Benedum and Joyce HiU, .
·
TUPPERS PL.AINS -All flowets.and other items on graves in the:
·"·Also surviving :ire siX grandchildren, Barbara Watson Moorhead of
Marvin Taylor, Eastern's alumni president, discussed class composites
Tuppers Plains Christian Cemetery must be removed before Apiil 1.
.A\Istin.' Texas, :Srigid Watson of Boston, Massachusetts, Edward Young With the board, and Sheila Taylor, board member, gave a legislative
Anything on graves at that time will be discarded. The annual mowof Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Mary Elisa Young ·of Athens, David report.
·
ing fee of $25 per g111ve is now due. Checks are to be made payable to
Vdung o~ Knoxville!Tennessee, and Erick Roush Young of Danbury,
A sixth-grade TAG trip to Canada was approved, and the board set Marvene Caldwell •.4to36 State Route 7, Reedsville, 45772.
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Connecucut; and seven great-grandchildren, Owen Moorhead, Ethan admission for spring sports events at St . ·
.
·Moorhead, and Oona Moorhead; all of Austin, Texas, JaneUa Young of
The board's next regular meeting will be .April19 at 6:30 p.m.
Knoxv~e, Tennessee, Erick Behymer of Athens, Heidi Young of
Knoxville, Tennessee, and Ebony Robinson of Danbury, Connecticut.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Hu::nane Society ·will hold at
~Memorial services will be conducted at a 'later 'date and will be
POMEROY
M .
li
.
d .
.
· general membership meeting on April 9 at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy'
,
arnage censes· were 1ssue m Me1gs County Library.
·
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announced. Interment of the remains will be in the ~armel Cemetery.
A celebration of life will be at 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 21. 2000 Probat~ C~urt to Terry R~y Reuter, 27, Pomeroy, and Mandy ~liz~~
Old and new members a.re invited, along with anyone interested in
(ton_ight) in the felloW.hip hall at the Carmel Cl}urch. Friends and beth ftshking, 23, P1ckenng; Srephen Wesley Dunn, 23, Gallipolis working for animal welfare in Meigs County. The May Adoptathon,"
(amily are asked to bring a covered dish along wi~ pictures and sto- Ferry, W.Va., and Joy Mane Combs, 22, Ru~and; and tp Brady Lane spay and neuter coupons and additional community concerns will be
~~s to share.
· ·
1
Asburn, 28, and Rebecca L. Snuth, both ofVmton.
discussed.
'
:: In lieu of flowers memorial contributions can be made in Mary's
memory to the Carmel United Methodist Church, jp care of the Rev.
j
' 'f
. pewayne Studer, 4841 t State Route 124, Racine, Ohio, 45771 or to
tl)e United Nation in Ohio, in care of Elisa Young, 5200 West Bailey
POMEROY - A divorce was filed in Meigs County Common
POMEROY -The annual Meigs County Gra~ge banquet will b.;
Road, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764 .for the Elders Building Fund.
Pleas Court by Tyson R. Bolin .and Lydia M. Bolin, both of Albany.
April
7 at 7:15 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center.
'
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Cremation arrangements are under the direction of the Cremeens
. State Grange Master Bernie Shoemaker will be the speaker. Enter-"
Fl\neral Home, Racine:
tainment will be by David Sutler and Rachel Pridemore. boor prizes
. will be awarded ..
· POMEROY - Todd Matthew May, charged With complicity to
Tickets are available from Ziba Midkiff, Opal and Patty Dyer, Rosconunit trafficking in crack cocaine, was sent10nced last we.ek to ·a sus- alie Story, Norman Will and Chuck Yost. Reservations are due by April
pended prison sentence and a p,e riod of probation. ·
2. to Ziba Midkiff or Opal Dyer.

Cemetery deanup slated

..

•Actual Size lx4
• l Person Per Ad
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• Run Date
Fri., April 21st
• Deadline
~acharg Warth
Fri., April 14th
HappfJ E'~ter
12:00 Noon
}Kommfl di Daddfl .
Mail or Drop Off At The

Judge Fred W. Crow III of Meigs County Common Pleas Court
imposed the sentence, which included a 12-month suspended sentence, a five-year period of Community .Control participation, with
$50 per month administrative costs, and SSOO chuge for costs of prosecution.
A curfew was also ordered, and May is to participate in the Southeastern Ohio ~robationary Treatment Alternative program.

f

U~CLAIMED FUND~

We alto are on the lnlemet. Our web alte acldreula:
www.coin.allte.oh.UJ ·

I • E repoa ted

Coin aub to meet

"That's one of the reasons we sajo they don't want to be part·ot
COLUMBUS (AP) -· Public- the union, which has no inten, · employee unions won't have a lion of giving it.
want to privatize, so we can oper- any mining program for the ne'lli
presence in Ohio's two privately
The union long has opposed ate them without having to go . guards, who will perform work
run prisons, so expect them to privately run prisons, saying they through all the bells and whistles union members do at stare-run
prisons.
complain about it, say two are not as safe as state-run prisons. with the union contract.''
Republican lawmakers who favol'" Employees at the two privately
. Rep. Kevin Coughlin of Cuya"Our contract bars them froirt
run prisons have no union affilia- hoga Falls said the public employ- using union members for miti'~
. privatization.
Qfficials of the Ohi&lt;;&gt; Civil Ser- lion.
ees unio11 is unhappy because it ing:' Said Peter W ray, a urti.oit
vice Employees Association,
1\vo House Republicans, how-· won't be collecting dues from spokesman.
w.hich represents about 10,000 • ever, said union complaints are employees at 'the prisons in
"We are the bargaining agent:
· corrections workers, said Monday one reason they favor pdvatiza- Grafton and Conneaut.
They've got to go through us (for
they had filed a grievance. with lion.·
·
, . "They're going to · .Jose a approval).'' .
the Department ofRehabilitation
"The unions are upset about it potential $300,000 in dues. They
The North Coast Correctional
and Correction over the training because of the fact that · they're know it, they'c:e upset about it. I Treatment Facility hou.ses felony
of employees at the two private not necessarily · going to be . don't care," Coughlin said. "I care drunken- driving offenders and
prisons.
involved," said Robert Corbin of about protecting communities other inmates who have histones
The department is using union Dayton, a member of the Con- from crime and drugs."
of alcohol or drug abuse.
·· ,
members to train some of the trolling Bqard, which last year
The union says that's its goal,
The minimum-security prison,
workers, but the union says the approved operating contracts for too, and feels the private prisons . which opened Feb. 29, is in the
state must gei permission from . the new prisons.
won't accomplish that. OffiCials Lorain County village of Grafton:

COLUMBUS (AP) - A program established to help Ohio
. .callliMe._to, ~duce · its ' welfare
rolls gqt a remporary iinancial
boost that's expecred to 'allow
counties to provide better wei- .
fa~related services.
·The state Controllins Board on
Monday approved the Depmn"nt
H\lman S.rvic:et spendlnll in adtlltlonill 11!17 million In

The 0811y Sentinel • P•g• A 3

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF. ·

'

Personnel1dlon approved

GOP expects·union .complaints about prisons·.

Illness kills Sea .1Aforld dolphins
AUROR.A (AP) - Tl:lree of the eight Commerson's dolphins at
the Sea World amusement park in northeast Ohio have died recently of an illness.
·
.
Staffers are using antibiotics and feedings every two hours to save ·
two others that are also ill.
·
·
The black ~nd white dolphins died of colitis, an inflammation of
the large intestine. Lab test results might help ·d etermine how they ·
got sick, .said Sea World veterinarian Michael Renner.
. "They are small animals who live in salt water and are. easily
prone to dehydration·, because of th~ir size or the environment they
live in," he said." A' simple thing like colitis that you and I may get
over very easily can be pretty devastating to these guys."
The dolphins came to Sea World in 1996 when it opened Patagonia Passage.
·

OBTIUARY •,

County Coroner's Office in Cincinnati. for
Portsmouth police.
Officers then went to Curry's suburban New autopsies.
.
Neighbors
said
Pamela
EdWl\!d$
had
been
irr
Boston apartment, where they found the bodies of Lana Spndlin, 35, and ·her son, Daniel ill health and living with her mother, EmogeUe
'
Jones, 9, of Lucasville. Spradlin and Jones were Spradlin, who helped care for her.
On Monday, their two-story frame house 1M\&gt;
Emogene Spradlin's daughter and grandson.
Portsmouth police issued an arrest warrant sealed off with yeUow police tape. Twenty-one
charging Curry with four counts of aggravated white plastic butterflies were stuck in lhe
murder and sent officers to Kentucky to rerum ground, forming a border around the fropt
him to Ohio. Curry was being held Monday hedge. Cardboard cutouts of Santa Claus and
night in lieu ofS100,000 bond, awaiting extra- Frosty the Snowman still hung in tl)e windi:!'M.
Neighbors in neatly kept bunga!Qws along
clition to Scioto County.
Ratcliff said he did not know the motive for the street expressed disbelief at the slayings. ... :
Sally Cook, 45, described the neighborhood
the slayings, but that Curry had been dating
as quiet, with a mix of elderly residents apd
Lana Spradlin.
"Since you're tallcing about his girlfriend, his young families.
" I've lived in this community all my life;'
girlfriend's son, his girlfriend's mother, and his
Cook
said. "It's really :i shocker."
.•
girlfriend's sister, one probably is forced to look
McGuire, who has lived in the neighborho®
at an area of some type of domestic squabble;'
for five 'months , said he might move.
..·.
Ratcliff said.
" It could have been me. It could have ~en
He .said did not know when the victims were
killed or in what order, but called the cnme a neighbor. It could have been · anybo.dy.
scenes uhorrific."
through here. If he had been drunk, or on drug.~
"lill of the victims have multiple injuries;· he or something like that ... :· said McGuire, his
:
said. Tl)e bodies were taken to the Hamilton voice trailing off.

WeHare-related spending
to· · ·
in FY 2000

Pomeroy, Mldc:lleport, Ohio

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~fth~2~··!2~~

Tulldly, March 21,2000

_T_h_e_D_ail_·~y_Se__n_ti_n_ei______________________
'Estilbtufwf in 1948
111 Court St.,
7~62-2156

•

i

• Fax: 62·2157

NUMBER

ah"er•II•Mt

Chll1ene Hoeftlch
Generel M1n1ger

THREE?

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
D.lane Kay Hill

Larry Boyer
Aclvwtlslng Dlr.ctor

Controller

,,

L11wrr ro liN '«liior "fi1.. wdto.u. Tlu:J 1~ h lt11 lAM JMJ won:IJ. AU ldm.aiY 1Ujut
ID ~ W •liSt H •iJ"N .U iMIM1 flliflra1 Mil t.l.,,lollf
N. MIUic""' J.ttns wUI
.. pdlblut/.. Uturs dwdl 6. ill piW llul6, t~~Unlliltf i:IJIIII, liDl pB'IIJMlitJI:s.
.
opillioiU lqrtlltd bt till coiMmflllflow .,. ,,, WIUt'IIJMJ of de• Ollio ,_., P,U,U.,Idltr
Co. "I ftlitOrltd ~ ""'"" olll•rwin •old.

••lltHr:

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OUR VIEW:

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:TODAY IN HISTORY
·I

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.: Today is Tuesday, March 21, the 81st day of2000.There are 285 days
l!!ft in the year. .
.
Today's Highlight in History:
'...on March 21,1%5, more than 3,000 civil rights demonstrators led
liy the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. began their march from Se~ to
Montgomery; Alabama.
: On this date:
.
: In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach,
· ·
Germany.
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson reported to President Washington in
New York as the new secretary ofstate.
.
•In 1804, the French civil code, the "Code Napoleon," was adopted.
In 1806, Mexican stat~ Benito Juarez Was born in Oaxaca.
.In 1945, during World War II, Allied bombers began four. days of
r:Uds ~r Germany.
·
·
In 1946, 'the Urtited Nations set up temporary headquarters at
Hunter College ln New York.
In 1960, some 70 ,people were -killed in Sharpeville, South Africa,
. when police fired on demonstrators.
In 1963, the Akatraz fe&lt;leral prison island in San Francisco Bay was
emptied of its last inmates at the order 'of Attorney General Robert E
Kennedy.
.
·
.
In 1972, the Supreme Court ruled that states may not require at least
a year's residency for voting eligibility. ·
In 1979, the Egyptian Parliament unanimously approved a peace
treaty with Israel.
,
.
l'en years a~: S,oviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev increased pressure
On the breakaway republic of Lithuania, ordering its citizens to turn in
their guns. Secretary of State James Baker met black nationalist leader
Nelson Mandela in Namibia.
Today's Birthdays: Actor AI Freeman Jr. is 66. Actress KatWeen Widdoes ("As the World Turns") is 61. Actor Timothy Dalton is 56. Actress
Marie-Christine Barrault is 56. Singer-musician Rose Stone (Sly and
the Family Stone) is 55. Rock singer-musician Roger Hodgson
(Supertrainp) is 50. Rock musician Conrad Lozano (Los lob~s) is49. ·
Rhythm-and-blues siriger RuiSellThompkinsJr. (The Stylistic!) is 49r
Actress Sabrina Leijeauf is 42. Actor Gary Ol&lt;hhan is 42. Actor
Matthew Broderick is 38. Comedian-talk show host Rosie O'Donnell is 38. Actress Cynthia Geary is '34. Rock.musician Jonas 'Joker".
Berggren (Ace of Base) is 3~. Rock MC Maxim (Prodigy) is 33.

.

'

just won't go away;• said William Cheney,
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal ic expansion.
Given that, many economists p,redict the chief economist for John Hancock.
Reserve is prepared to keep boosting interest
Greenspan has warned in recent speeches
rates until the speecjing economy slows to a central bank is poised to boost rates by a quarthat
the strong consumer demand, which he
more sus\3inable pace that's not likely to spark ter of a percentage point, the fifth rate increase
said was being powered by the surge in wealth
inflation, private economists believe.
since June.
In recent speeches, Federal R:eserve Chair- · The Federal Reserve's Federal Open Mar- created by the stock market, cannot continue
man Alan Greenspan, has aised new worri.es ket Committee was scheduled to meet today to outstrip supply without triggering serious
that too-rapid growth could derail the record- to review interest rate policy, A midafternoon inflation ·problems.
To some Fed watchers, Greenspan's warnif!g
breaking economy, which entere.d 108 announcement of its decision wa&lt; expected.
seemed
to indicate rhe Fed was aiming . its
months of urtinterrupted growth in March.
The Fed has already raised rates four times
Many economists took those remarki as a sig- in quarrer-point steps, boosting . the federal interest rate increases squarely at rhe high-flynal that higher interest rates would be forth- funds rate, the interest that banlfs charge each ing stock market, promptipg some in Cm:gress to question what business the Fed has m
other, to 5.75 percent.
conring.
.
Commercial banks in turn have increased trying to jack up interest rates in order to
"Greenspan is behaving like a track coach,"
said Standard &amp; Poor's DRI econolnist David their prime lending rate in lockstep with the make stock prices fall.
.
Fed's moves, pushing the benchmark for mil- ·
But other.; beUeve Greenspan's comments
Wyss.
"He is telling us not to blow out. By rim- Uons of consumer and business loans to 8. 75 were misinterpreted and the point he was trying to m1.ke was that strong demand, from
ning a smoorh and steady pace, you can keep percent, its highest level since late 1995. ·
going a lot longer and a lot faster."
But, thus far, those higher rates have done . whatever source, needs to moderate in order
The economy grew by a breakneck 6.9 per- little to either slow the economy or its main to keep inflation under control.
c'o nsumer spending, which
The stock market has been on a wild ride
cent annual rate ~n the final three months of engine 1999 and many economists believe growth in accounts for two-thirds of all economic octiv- this year, with the hlow Jones Industrial Averthe current quarter will come in around 5 ity.
age posting huge declines from late January
percent, far above the 3.5 percent rate the Fed
"It seems as though the economy has an until last week, when it roared back to life
would like to see at this stage of the econom- incredible head of steam and the momentum with a 666-point gain for the week.

Inmate used.Rossin escape
HOUSTON (AP)- Prison officials believe an inmate used den·. tal floss or a similar coated string to painstakingly cut his way out of
his c;ell and kill a rival.
Antonio Lara was accused of crawling out from under his ceH bars
and killing Roland Rios, said Alfred M. "Mac" StringfeUow, texas
·Board of Criminal Justice chairman.
Stringfellow said he didn't know how many steel bars Lara managed to cut through at the Coffield Unit of the'Texas Department
of Criminal Justice near Palestine, or how long it took.
"He was very dedicated ar doing this;' Stringfellow told the
Houston Chronicle in today's edition!. "They are very resourceful
people. That's all they have is time, so they can sit there and saw ·
away until they finally are able to cut through it."
Lan, 26, was serving a 15-year sentence for attempted murder,
robbery and aggravatedassault, Rios, 41, was serving a tO-year term
for aggravated robbery and injury to a child.
·
·
·Stringfellow said Lara coated the nylon string with toothpaste or
anothenbrasive in order to cut through metal bars and attack Rios ·
as he was being escorted·by guards to the shower March 16.
Rios' stabbing death resulted in confinement of some . i22,000
Texas prison inmates to their cells in a rare systemwide lockdown
to collect contraband and try and prevent further gang warfare.

.'

Brief break on sales tax
worthy ·of consideration

H

SUV modifications sl.ted

·'

Holiday
ere's an idea with some merit: a one-week " holiday" on the
imposition of Ohio's sales and use. tax on clothing and
·
footwear Items up to $1 00.
· That's what Ohio Rep. John R.Williamowski, R-Lima, is propos-.
ing to, as he put it, "give the taxpaying cit. One werk of
izens of Ohio a break."Williamowski seeks
non-taxed sales in Substitute House Bill 293 to provide
is not lmou:g·h to the fit:St "holiday" on such ta,xes Aug. 1220 of rhis year.
.wreck any state
. Considering that's whe.n . parents and
. govern,ment 's
children mob retail srores in search of
economy, and a
back-to-school clothing and shoes, the
idea should be welcomed by that segment
tax break - no of the public. All it needs is to get some
matter how small public support, by writing to your legisla- is due the
tors and Gov. Bob Taft.
eitizenry of Ohio
Williamowski has two goals in mind: to
help w&lt;;&gt;rking families ·save a few bucks and
and »'est .
provide for their families; and increase the
Virginia.
dollars that would come into the state,
,
' especially among the border counties.
.. In a letter to Ohio media, the lawmaker uses Pennsylvania as an
example since it does not tax clothing and shoes. But along the
Ohio-West Virginia border, theidea gains more attractiveness since
5:1les taxes exist in both states.
.
:: lfWilliamowski's prop~sal gets the green light in Columbus, merchants on the Ollio side of the ·riVer, both big and small, stand to
benefit - and not only -from the clothing retail end. .
·
· :·service industry businesses (restaurants, gas stations and grocery
stores), all of which provide iaxable products and services, will benefit;' he said. "Consumers get more goods for their money, retailers
enjoy greater overall sales and the state economy grows."
But Ohio shouldn't be the only state to make hay from this proposal. West Virginia. should give the concept . som,e consideration,
since major shopping malls have staked a claim on this end of the
Ohio Valley at Huntington and Parkersburg.
·: One week of non-taxed s~les is not enough to wreck any state
government's economy, and 'a tax break- no matter how small is due the citizenry ·o f Ohio and West Virginia.
: The influx of business expecte!i to 'be spurred by this break, especially at a time of the year when department store sales are high, has
1he potential to offer a bonanza to businesses on both sides of the
Ohio River,
·
: It's worth a try.
· Anyone wishing to voice their opinion on the proposal, either yea
Of nay, can contact Ohio Rep. John A. Carey, Ohio House of Rep- .
resentatives, 77 S, High St., Columbus, Ohio 43266c0603; or Taft at
77 S. High St., 30th Floor, 'Columbus, Ohio 43266-0601.

to hike interest'rates~

YORK (AP) - Automaken plan to modify designs of
their sport utility vehicles to make them less hazardous to other
motorists, The New York Times reported today.
General Motors said it will manufacture the 2002 Oldsmobile
Bravada, GMC .Envoy a.nd Chevrolet Blazer with underbody steel
rails up to 2 inches lower than in current models to reduce the risk
of rheir smashing over cars bumpers and doonills.
Ford said it will do the same wirh its Explorer, Expedition and
Lincoln Navigator. And DaimlerChrysler said it will make several
changes to the 2002 Dodge Durango's front end so it is less likely
to override ca·rs in collisions.
. Foreign automake? also plan_to design their SUVs so they are l~s
li~ly to ~OJUre or kill people m other vehicles,during orashes, the
Trmes sa1d. The. toyota Sequoia will have impact-absorbing bars
below the bumpen, a feature recently added to the Ford Excunion.
Nissan, Honila and Mitsubishi either have made design changes
or said rhey plan to. · ·
SUVs are considerably heavier than cars. The vehicles, which will
continue to have high hoods that cause more. damage ·and injuries
when striking cars from the side, are almost three times as·Iikely as
c~rs to kill the other driver in a crash, the Times said.

AND WHAT~

fii'CIIr.4NtW1

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Chert.. w. Govey
Publisher

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.KONDRACKE'S VIEW:

Chances improving for trade with ·Chinese
Despite much misbehavior.by China's ComWhile the economic case for PNTR is cli:a.;
munist government, Congress should approve
" . on the political and strategic level Clinton and ,.
permanent normal trade relations -for Chinapro~PNTR Republicans .are making a gamble .
and chances are improving that it will.
::; that free trade will push China toward democThe Clinton administration is putting on a
racy and internatio,nal good citizenship, ·
full-court press to have PNTR enacted by
·• · There is a danger that China's ruler.; plan to
Memorial Day, and supporter.; are increasingly
•gain the benefits of world conm1erce- money, '
confident, despite earlier doubts, that the meatechnology and management know-how - J
sure will.pass the House.
and use them to dominate Asia militarily and to '
White House aides expect some - but not
"' keep tight control on China's population,
1
serious - fall-off from the 260 to 170 vote by
Certainly, China's 'persistent crackii1g down ''
which the . House renewed one-year normal
NEA COLUMNIST
on religious groups and political dissenters, mis- _
trade status to China in 1999, amid the flap over
' · sile buildup.. l\SC of prison labor, violation of'
1
alleged Chinese. nuclear espionage.
Clinton aides.say thatVice President AI Gore, ~~ agreement;; a?d recent th':'at t&lt;;&gt; use ~O~ce
This year, tbe administration is seeking votes who previously allowed his stance on PNTR to ' , 1fT:uwan does not move faster toward reumfi-,,
early enough -first in the Senate, then in the be. ambiguous,.will lobby for the measure, bol- canon are bad stgns.
: .
,
, ·, 1,
1
House - 'that election-year pressures don't. stering Democrats who fear retaliation from
On .the other hand•. It has happened elsel: ,,
cause opposition to build.
labor unions if they support it. .
. ·
"I where ~ fu1a - m T:u~n1 South Kqrea and ,
A complication is the insistence of GOP
House Mif1ority Leader Richard Gephardt, ·_ ·the Ph1l~ppmes, fo_r_example ~ that mtensJVe
1
leader.; that the White House guarantee 100 · D-Mo;, who's close to labor, is expected to vote 'econorruc and polincal contact w1th the rest of
Democratic votes for the measure. President no, but is not lobbying against PNTR: ·
the world helped to turn former dictatorshtps .,
Clinton's aides are hoping that Republicans will
Inst.ead, according to. aides, Gephardt is .' mto democractes.
. .,
.
1
settle for less and that business gmups will pres- telling Democrats to vote whichever way will
The prospect that China could follow . tbat
sure the GPP leadership to schedule an early help th'm win in November and recapture model su.rely would be preferable to a dec1110l1
vote.
.
Democratic control of the House.
now to tsolate Chma from U.S. mfluence - ,
In 1999, 150 Republicans .joined 110
Gephardt is also said to be urging th~ unions p&gt;;rtic~arly :"hen Europe won't fo~ow suit an·d '
Democrats to maintain China's trade status, not to punish Democrats who support PNTR: i wtll expand Its trade wtth China wtthout exertwith 91! Democrats and 71 Republicans voting If they follow that' advtce m the larger mtere8r&gt; . mg pressure for human nghts and democracy.
against. Clinton aides say opposition estimates of having a Democratic House, ·it will reduce .. , The best arguments ;tgainst PNTR - ' or for
, ' delaying it until next year - are that Cpngre15 .
that 30 Democrats have switched against China pressure on Democrats 'to vote no.
trade are "bogus:'
·
· The White House is pushing for an early shouldn't rewa{!! China just after it's threatened .
To achieve what he clearly regards as a major vote not only 'to lighten dection pr:essures but( TaiW,m and shouldn'i ·give ·l!p its power tQ ,:
item of his presidential legacy, C~nton is meet- also to force Members to focus quickly on the review Chinese behavior annually.
ing regularly with Members ·in the "Yellow merits of the issue, which favor PNTR.
.
However, Taiwan itself sl\pports PNTR. The,..•
Oval;' the f.unily room above the Oval Office. ·
The economic arguments for PNTR are 'a Uni'ted States should equip Taiwan with the
He has Cabinet secretaries calling wavering no-bpriner: China will have to lower its present weapons it needs tp defend itself from missile ,:
Members and delivering speeches almost daily. b.arriers to U.S. products, creating market attacks- especially Aegis missile destroyers and,,
The White House has set up a war room in the opportunities· for US. producers and jobs (or Patrior nlissiles- and create an alternate annuOid ExecutiVe Office Building to keep tabs on . American workers. U.S. markets are already al monitoring mechanism.
, ,
Members' concerns.
open to Chinese products.
Voting down PNTR would amount to " ,
And Clinton has a5!iigned Conunerce SecrePassage cifPNTR also will tighten the terms decision by Congress that Chin~ is a long-term ,
cary William Daley, who masterminded the ·, of China's entry into the World Trade Orgarti- strategic adyersary. It may become tha.t, l;mt the
effurt to pass the North American Free Trade zation and allow the l)nited-States to appeall'or United States should do what it can to push j1;1 ,;
Agreement in 1994, to direct the sales effort, enforcement if · (or, almost certainly, when) the opposite direction.
along with White House Deputy Chief ~f Staff Chipa. violates the terms of the · U.S.-Chfna
(Morton ·Kondracke is executiw editor 'If Ro,l!. ·
Steve Richetti, an eXperienced vo~e counter.
tra&lt;\e pact negotiated in November 1999.
Call, the newspaper 'If Capitol Hill.)

W11con1ln lUll Sh1l1l1

'

And the winners in this case are losers

another." .
Before Bill . .Qlinton took office, the
Republicari coalition of suburban yuppies, the
Religious Right and majnline conservatives
· succeeded in 'capturing the White House with ,
a peace-through-strepgth, free-enterprise,
anti-government, borrow-and-spend theme
that was right for the tirnes.
·.
Democ~ats, remembering the all-politicsis-local nature of the game succeed~d on the
congressional level where they failed on the
pr~idency, despite their McGovern era tax, and.spend, peace-at-any-price, anti-business
reputation.
But labels - disdained' by those they label

Gas additive to
be phased out

Jack
Anderson
·&amp; Dougias
Cohn ..::.: ..

'

..

.

•

'

'

'•

..

it out," said Sen. Byron Dorgan,
D-N.D.
Agriculture . Secretary Dan
Glickman agreed. "It is time to ·
rewrite that 1996 Freedom to
Farm bill," he said.
The legislation called for price
supports · to be gradually scaled ·
back ~ver seven years. The law,
· pushed by Republicans, was
intended to ·wean farmers from
federal support, but sihce its pas- ·
sage Congress has passed several
multibillion-dollar bailouts. Last
year, the package totaled $8.7 billion, with the bulk going to Midwestern Corn Belt farmers.
"It's made farmers more
dependent on Congress," said
Rep. Earl Pomeroy, D-N.D. "It's
wrong - it's just dead wrong!"
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.,

chairman of the Agriculture tingents frcim Minnesota and
Committee, has resisted holding North Dakota.
hearings on overhauling tbe law,
Farmers also complained abo.i't
agribusiness mergers. ·
~
which expires in 2002.
The resulting mega-companies
"We'll rewrite the farm policy
in 2002 - we have a seven-year dominate the marketplace, makcontract with American farmers, ing it harder.for family farmers to .
and it was something they want- get a good price for their crops,
,
·
ed;' Lugar spokesman Andy Fish- they .said.
Sen. Paul Wellstone, ·D-Minn.,
er said.
Farm income dropped from promised to re-introduce ·legisla'$53 billion in 1996 to $48 billion tion .calling for a moratorium on
last year, but .Fisher .said that was agriculture mergers, afte,r polling
due to cyclical changes, not fed- the crowd in a tent on the Capitol Mall.
eral farm policies.
"We'll bring it backr' hl'
The farmers, many wearing
baseball caps and few sporting ·yelled. "We'll do it!"
Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D.,
cowboy hats, were organized by
the National Farmers Union and used the rally to pitch legislation
a coalition of other organizations. calling.for the U.S. government to
They were bused in from all over match what European nations pay
the country, with the largest con- their farmers in subsidies.

a

Study: Physicians' empathy can
ease caregivers' depression · ·

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:

a

· WASHINGTON (AP)
Roger Winter lost $28,000 on his
wheat and dairy farm in Callaway,
Minn., last year, and is in Washington this week trying 10 make
sure that doesn't happen again.
''I'm here to be a voice for the
rest of the United States;' he said.
Winter is one of rpore than
1,000 farmers participating in the
Rally fpr Rural America this
Week, ·aimed at increasing crop
supports for struggling family
·
farmers.
The main villain for the mostly
Democratic gathering, dubbed
"Rally for Rural America," was
the 1996 Freedom to Farm law,
which reduced crop subsidies.
"Family farmers have been the
victim of bad public policy in this
country, and it's time tO straighten

IRVING, texas (AP) ~ Police were looking for a former car
wash employee suspected of fatally shooting five people and ,critically wouhding another during an apparent robbery a.t. the shop
three days after he was fired. ·
·
·
"We haven't seen anything this gruesome, this vicious in quite
.
some time," police spokesman D.Vid Tull said Monday.
. The suspect,, Robert Wayne Harris, 28, was fired Friday by Mi-TFine Car Wash. after he was arrested for exposing himself to two
·women at the busineiS.
'
Police identified three of the dead at .t he scene as car wash
employees Denrtis Lee, 48; Rhoda Wheeler, 45; and Augustin VilPHILADELPHIA (AP)' .caregivers with non-empathetic
lasenor, 36; all of Irving. Villasenor's brother, Benjamin, 32, and
how
to
heal
David
Grande
knows
doctors reported depressive
Roberto Jimenez Jr., 15, died at Parkland Memorial Hospital in
broken bones, prescribe powerful symptoms, compared to 27 per·
Dallas. ·An urtidentifiedman was in critical condition at Parkland.
drugs and · perform surgery. cent of those with an empathetic
Police declined to say if the other victims worked at the ca~ wash.
: Empathy, though, was . only doctor, the study showed.
Officen told The Dallas Morning News in today's editions thot
tou~hed on briefly at his medkal
Harris I! a suspect in the dbappearance of Sandra Gaye Scott, ·an ·
Helping doctors empathize
;ehool.
.. could be taught through a more
Irving woman who was last seen near tht car wash Nov. 29. Her
Yet dtlctors and student physl- ftlfmalited and · structured cUt·
vehicle was found Dec. 3.
.
.
tlafis like Grande who le11d an riculum eluting medical school,
'thet'l! ii ~ ";trtlhlf oonnettion" .between· the suspect and Scott's
empathetic eat to caregiVers for internships and residency thlindJsappe.irance, Irving pollee Lt. tim KeUy told the ftewspaper.
the ttttttinally ill can !hake 11 dif- inll!• the !tudy said.
fetefice, acctlrding to•a study pubSuch teachinJ!I .could make the
. llahed tochy.
. ,
dying el(pei:le!1ce more ple:ioatlt
"Docton who reilly lliten t11 ·
MADISON, Wli, (AI?) - Wlsconsi!1 and ltJ two major tranaplant
for everybody, Emanuel aald:
patien111nd caregivers and spend
centers aued U.S. Heiilch and Humatt. Setvltea Secretary Donna
Careglven With a good . attitude
time understanding, tqat le11ens
$halala on Monday over new rules Intended to change the way
· could , even . make terminally Ill
the burdens on . caregivers. They
organs are distributed for transplants:
.
patients feelle11 guilry about the
feel heard. It's a key element to
The rules order the. United Network for Organ Sharing to send
feeling supported," said lead pressures they may put othen
m(!te organs to the sickest patients,, regardless of where they live.
researcher Ezekiel J. Emanuel of under.
i Currently, organs are distributed locally fint. Wisconsin stands to
Better training for doctor.; may
the Department of Clinical
lase under the new system because its organ donation rates are high
also
reduce the chances caregivers .
Bioethics at the National Instiand its patients generally get organs faster than those in other states.
will undergo costly medical care
tutes of He}lth.
,
In its lawsuit, the State claims Shalala's agency stripped the UrtitWithout doctors' intervention, for their own depression, he said.
ed Network for Organ Sharing, the private agency running the
caregiven to patients with a lot of Too often, though, doctors aren't
nation's transplant program, of the power to' decide how organs
physical needs were significantly trained that way.
shonld be allocated.
·
"In the later yean, there were
more likely to be depressed,
It also claims Shalala's actions unlawfully substitute her personal
forced to take aut loans to pay for no role models practicing these
judgment for that of medical professionals.
·
health costs and deal with patients things, so it's difficult to expect
Wisconsin officials are seeking an injunction to· prevent Shalala
considering euthanasia or physi- students to learn it and put those
from enforcing the rules.
.
skills in action in their own praccian-assisted suicide.
· Health and Human Services officials disputed the lawsuit's claims.
In the study in today's issue of tice;' said Gtande, president of the
"The regulation is entirely grounded in the law as Congress
the Philadelphia-based Annals of Amefican Medical Student Asso· intended," said Jon Nelson, who oversees the department's transInternal Medicine, 42 percent of ciation in Reston,Va.
plant division.

,·

the first true worldwide economic war in his~'
tory. He just got the first and second plac~s
mixed up. Communism was .buried by capitalism and Keynes. . ,
·,
·
, , ·;·
i
· Finally, we come to the refocusing part o[,
the theory. With our minds off the Russ~, :·
the bomb, and the survival of the human race~ ,
.other issues looked more significant: Remen\~.,.
her Clinton's mantra, "It's the ecqnomy, seq:·
pid." Clin.ton and tlie Democratic Leadership .,
Council (DLC) . moved the party to th e cen~..'.
UFS COLUMNISTS ter ahd captur~d the White House.
.0
.·;
' .
) l
'
J;oday, Sen . .John M~Cain, R...Ariz~:~~
.attempted to do the.sa111e fqr, the Republican's,:
- are .not 'permanent.
,
~nd failed. The Cold 'War was won. tile Ecoii~;:.
· The Cold War leaders spent the~elves:!" om.y has been hanlfied. The focus is or! i&gt;.oli~ •
. Certainly, George Bush :di.d ~.~rordijs t~ . tiq iis~lf, Th]lt i• why, McCain's message of :
Broder.
·
, ,, J
.
reform resOnated so well with moderates an!J'".
. The utilization of Keynsian pump pt;Jming independents, and it is safe to say that' '
- · 'houg~ ' no Republican would invo'ke his 'whichever party captures that particular hig~ ·;~
nanie - brought the longest period of eco- ground wiD likely ·capture the White House,. ,
nomic expansion and prosperity _in the Cold wattiors and economic warriors have ~~
nation's 'history. That priming came iri ·the i had their day ·- " for riow - and the Broder ' '
'
\
•
h .,
form of massive deficit '!pending to fight .~e theory
holds fl\at the pubhe concentrates on .
.
.
Cold War, and it , worked, just as J'likit~ the next war,. not, the last
011~.
· ' .. ,
i(Jlrushchev said it would. "We will bury
. .
.
you," be Said, was meant in econorni~ ~terms.
aack Anderson tmd Dougas Cohn are colllmnlsf$ .'
And so he correctly labeled ·tht Cold.War. as for United Fe.atrms Syndiiaie)
. -~
,. •'

.. '

Farmers rally in D.C. for higher price supports

Car wash shooting susped sought

Morton
Kondracke

WASHINGTON -Syndicated columnist .
David S. Broder wrote of the electorate's lack
of gratitude: "When W.rs end, governments
change." He was referring in. this case to the
Cold War, and he. cited as examples the British
dumping o!Winston Churchill at the end of
World War II, of $imilar fate for Democrats
in the US. elections in the years following
that ~r and the preceding one.
He lists· as reasons: "exhaustion" of wartime
,leaders, "economic upheaval'' and a "shift of
public focus from one set of challenges to

The DillY Sentinel • Pqe A 5

Pomeroy, MldCIIeport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
\

~m ,_

The Daily Sentinel

•

j

~

WASHINGTON (AP) - · The
Clinton administration has decided
to phase out MTilE as a gasoline
· additive an gro~ds it poses a risk
to public health or the environment, sour:tes said today.
MTBE, a leading oxygenate and
oebne booster, reduces emissions
· of smog, but it has been linked to
groundwater pollutipn in California and elsewhere. It is used in
one-third of the gasoline sold in
the United States.
Carol Browner, administrator of
tbe Environmental Protection
Agency, was announcing 'this afternoon that her agency will seek to
"significantly .reduce or eliminate"
use of MTBEs under the J:oxic
Substance Control Act. That law
aUoo,vs EPA to ban cheniicals
"deemed to po5e an unreasonable .
risk to the public or the envjron- '
ment;• said ~ government official
who ,requested anonymity.

NOTICE:
Beginning April l, 2000, customers of MCI
World Com Communications; Inc. in the state of
Ohio will he charged a pew line item surcharge
equal · to .11% 'of t~eir i'nv9iced intrastate
ch~rges. This line item surchar,ge ~ conti~ue to
he billed to·· customers until modified or
discontinuea. If you have any .questions, ple'ase.
call MCI WorldCom Customer Service.
1

Pomeroy • Middleport Lions Club
P.O. Box 122 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Open Invitation
Membership·Drive
Special Meeting At Pomeroy
• McDonald's ·. .
.

·Luncheon ·Meeting
Wed., Mar. .22 -12:00-1:00 p.m.
. Public Welcome
'

.

OUR 1OTH. ANNUAL

PICK THE FINAL 4
In The 2000 NCAA Tournament And
SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
Will Glve You

I

No Olmml•h

No On•• Oul
-RULES1) tioe NewopliJer Coupon
~)Drop off your coupon
at 19111:aitern Avo.

3) Allellli')' fol'hio tnUot be received
before /J/2/J/00 by 5100 p.m.
4) One ehll')' per peroon •

·

r-F1ciC-iHE--N;;;------·---FINAL 4

Address_ _ __
•.I)_ _;__ __ Telephone____

1·

··2)·-----

____

3)'--:-----).

·Tie BreakerHo1" Many Pointo Will Be
Scored In Thla Yeara

Champlonohip Game?

Number of Points.____

LANE
Bedroom Suites
.Without T'ray

· Bedroom Suites
With Pull Down Tray
'

.1., 2.

8

Quafity !Furniture P{Us
!FurnitJ.tre, Carpet, J1l.pp{iances
42123 State g?j. 7. • IJ'uppers Plains, Q!}{
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Mon.· Thurs. 9·5

Fri. 9·6' ' Sat. 9·4

'

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II

�-

•

•
•
~geA4·0
~~!I!I~I!I~•~D-~~!I!IL-~--~----~L-------!~~··~·~·~~,..
~fth~2~··!2~~

Tulldly, March 21,2000

_T_h_e_D_ail_·~y_Se__n_ti_n_ei______________________
'Estilbtufwf in 1948
111 Court St.,
7~62-2156

•

i

• Fax: 62·2157

NUMBER

ah"er•II•Mt

Chll1ene Hoeftlch
Generel M1n1ger

THREE?

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
D.lane Kay Hill

Larry Boyer
Aclvwtlslng Dlr.ctor

Controller

,,

L11wrr ro liN '«liior "fi1.. wdto.u. Tlu:J 1~ h lt11 lAM JMJ won:IJ. AU ldm.aiY 1Ujut
ID ~ W •liSt H •iJ"N .U iMIM1 flliflra1 Mil t.l.,,lollf
N. MIUic""' J.ttns wUI
.. pdlblut/.. Uturs dwdl 6. ill piW llul6, t~~Unlliltf i:IJIIII, liDl pB'IIJMlitJI:s.
.
opillioiU lqrtlltd bt till coiMmflllflow .,. ,,, WIUt'IIJMJ of de• Ollio ,_., P,U,U.,Idltr
Co. "I ftlitOrltd ~ ""'"" olll•rwin •old.

••lltHr:

'

n,

OUR VIEW:

.." .
•• ,l

0

:TODAY IN HISTORY
·I

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.: Today is Tuesday, March 21, the 81st day of2000.There are 285 days
l!!ft in the year. .
.
Today's Highlight in History:
'...on March 21,1%5, more than 3,000 civil rights demonstrators led
liy the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. began their march from Se~ to
Montgomery; Alabama.
: On this date:
.
: In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach,
· ·
Germany.
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson reported to President Washington in
New York as the new secretary ofstate.
.
•In 1804, the French civil code, the "Code Napoleon," was adopted.
In 1806, Mexican stat~ Benito Juarez Was born in Oaxaca.
.In 1945, during World War II, Allied bombers began four. days of
r:Uds ~r Germany.
·
·
In 1946, 'the Urtited Nations set up temporary headquarters at
Hunter College ln New York.
In 1960, some 70 ,people were -killed in Sharpeville, South Africa,
. when police fired on demonstrators.
In 1963, the Akatraz fe&lt;leral prison island in San Francisco Bay was
emptied of its last inmates at the order 'of Attorney General Robert E
Kennedy.
.
·
.
In 1972, the Supreme Court ruled that states may not require at least
a year's residency for voting eligibility. ·
In 1979, the Egyptian Parliament unanimously approved a peace
treaty with Israel.
,
.
l'en years a~: S,oviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev increased pressure
On the breakaway republic of Lithuania, ordering its citizens to turn in
their guns. Secretary of State James Baker met black nationalist leader
Nelson Mandela in Namibia.
Today's Birthdays: Actor AI Freeman Jr. is 66. Actress KatWeen Widdoes ("As the World Turns") is 61. Actor Timothy Dalton is 56. Actress
Marie-Christine Barrault is 56. Singer-musician Rose Stone (Sly and
the Family Stone) is 55. Rock singer-musician Roger Hodgson
(Supertrainp) is 50. Rock musician Conrad Lozano (Los lob~s) is49. ·
Rhythm-and-blues siriger RuiSellThompkinsJr. (The Stylistic!) is 49r
Actress Sabrina Leijeauf is 42. Actor Gary Ol&lt;hhan is 42. Actor
Matthew Broderick is 38. Comedian-talk show host Rosie O'Donnell is 38. Actress Cynthia Geary is '34. Rock.musician Jonas 'Joker".
Berggren (Ace of Base) is 3~. Rock MC Maxim (Prodigy) is 33.

.

'

just won't go away;• said William Cheney,
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal ic expansion.
Given that, many economists p,redict the chief economist for John Hancock.
Reserve is prepared to keep boosting interest
Greenspan has warned in recent speeches
rates until the speecjing economy slows to a central bank is poised to boost rates by a quarthat
the strong consumer demand, which he
more sus\3inable pace that's not likely to spark ter of a percentage point, the fifth rate increase
said was being powered by the surge in wealth
inflation, private economists believe.
since June.
In recent speeches, Federal R:eserve Chair- · The Federal Reserve's Federal Open Mar- created by the stock market, cannot continue
man Alan Greenspan, has aised new worri.es ket Committee was scheduled to meet today to outstrip supply without triggering serious
that too-rapid growth could derail the record- to review interest rate policy, A midafternoon inflation ·problems.
To some Fed watchers, Greenspan's warnif!g
breaking economy, which entere.d 108 announcement of its decision wa&lt; expected.
seemed
to indicate rhe Fed was aiming . its
months of urtinterrupted growth in March.
The Fed has already raised rates four times
Many economists took those remarki as a sig- in quarrer-point steps, boosting . the federal interest rate increases squarely at rhe high-flynal that higher interest rates would be forth- funds rate, the interest that banlfs charge each ing stock market, promptipg some in Cm:gress to question what business the Fed has m
other, to 5.75 percent.
conring.
.
Commercial banks in turn have increased trying to jack up interest rates in order to
"Greenspan is behaving like a track coach,"
said Standard &amp; Poor's DRI econolnist David their prime lending rate in lockstep with the make stock prices fall.
.
Fed's moves, pushing the benchmark for mil- ·
But other.; beUeve Greenspan's comments
Wyss.
"He is telling us not to blow out. By rim- Uons of consumer and business loans to 8. 75 were misinterpreted and the point he was trying to m1.ke was that strong demand, from
ning a smoorh and steady pace, you can keep percent, its highest level since late 1995. ·
going a lot longer and a lot faster."
But, thus far, those higher rates have done . whatever source, needs to moderate in order
The economy grew by a breakneck 6.9 per- little to either slow the economy or its main to keep inflation under control.
c'o nsumer spending, which
The stock market has been on a wild ride
cent annual rate ~n the final three months of engine 1999 and many economists believe growth in accounts for two-thirds of all economic octiv- this year, with the hlow Jones Industrial Averthe current quarter will come in around 5 ity.
age posting huge declines from late January
percent, far above the 3.5 percent rate the Fed
"It seems as though the economy has an until last week, when it roared back to life
would like to see at this stage of the econom- incredible head of steam and the momentum with a 666-point gain for the week.

Inmate used.Rossin escape
HOUSTON (AP)- Prison officials believe an inmate used den·. tal floss or a similar coated string to painstakingly cut his way out of
his c;ell and kill a rival.
Antonio Lara was accused of crawling out from under his ceH bars
and killing Roland Rios, said Alfred M. "Mac" StringfeUow, texas
·Board of Criminal Justice chairman.
Stringfellow said he didn't know how many steel bars Lara managed to cut through at the Coffield Unit of the'Texas Department
of Criminal Justice near Palestine, or how long it took.
"He was very dedicated ar doing this;' Stringfellow told the
Houston Chronicle in today's edition!. "They are very resourceful
people. That's all they have is time, so they can sit there and saw ·
away until they finally are able to cut through it."
Lan, 26, was serving a 15-year sentence for attempted murder,
robbery and aggravatedassault, Rios, 41, was serving a tO-year term
for aggravated robbery and injury to a child.
·
·
·Stringfellow said Lara coated the nylon string with toothpaste or
anothenbrasive in order to cut through metal bars and attack Rios ·
as he was being escorted·by guards to the shower March 16.
Rios' stabbing death resulted in confinement of some . i22,000
Texas prison inmates to their cells in a rare systemwide lockdown
to collect contraband and try and prevent further gang warfare.

.'

Brief break on sales tax
worthy ·of consideration

H

SUV modifications sl.ted

·'

Holiday
ere's an idea with some merit: a one-week " holiday" on the
imposition of Ohio's sales and use. tax on clothing and
·
footwear Items up to $1 00.
· That's what Ohio Rep. John R.Williamowski, R-Lima, is propos-.
ing to, as he put it, "give the taxpaying cit. One werk of
izens of Ohio a break."Williamowski seeks
non-taxed sales in Substitute House Bill 293 to provide
is not lmou:g·h to the fit:St "holiday" on such ta,xes Aug. 1220 of rhis year.
.wreck any state
. Considering that's whe.n . parents and
. govern,ment 's
children mob retail srores in search of
economy, and a
back-to-school clothing and shoes, the
idea should be welcomed by that segment
tax break - no of the public. All it needs is to get some
matter how small public support, by writing to your legisla- is due the
tors and Gov. Bob Taft.
eitizenry of Ohio
Williamowski has two goals in mind: to
help w&lt;;&gt;rking families ·save a few bucks and
and »'est .
provide for their families; and increase the
Virginia.
dollars that would come into the state,
,
' especially among the border counties.
.. In a letter to Ohio media, the lawmaker uses Pennsylvania as an
example since it does not tax clothing and shoes. But along the
Ohio-West Virginia border, theidea gains more attractiveness since
5:1les taxes exist in both states.
.
:: lfWilliamowski's prop~sal gets the green light in Columbus, merchants on the Ollio side of the ·riVer, both big and small, stand to
benefit - and not only -from the clothing retail end. .
·
· :·service industry businesses (restaurants, gas stations and grocery
stores), all of which provide iaxable products and services, will benefit;' he said. "Consumers get more goods for their money, retailers
enjoy greater overall sales and the state economy grows."
But Ohio shouldn't be the only state to make hay from this proposal. West Virginia. should give the concept . som,e consideration,
since major shopping malls have staked a claim on this end of the
Ohio Valley at Huntington and Parkersburg.
·: One week of non-taxed s~les is not enough to wreck any state
government's economy, and 'a tax break- no matter how small is due the citizenry ·o f Ohio and West Virginia.
: The influx of business expecte!i to 'be spurred by this break, especially at a time of the year when department store sales are high, has
1he potential to offer a bonanza to businesses on both sides of the
Ohio River,
·
: It's worth a try.
· Anyone wishing to voice their opinion on the proposal, either yea
Of nay, can contact Ohio Rep. John A. Carey, Ohio House of Rep- .
resentatives, 77 S, High St., Columbus, Ohio 43266c0603; or Taft at
77 S. High St., 30th Floor, 'Columbus, Ohio 43266-0601.

to hike interest'rates~

YORK (AP) - Automaken plan to modify designs of
their sport utility vehicles to make them less hazardous to other
motorists, The New York Times reported today.
General Motors said it will manufacture the 2002 Oldsmobile
Bravada, GMC .Envoy a.nd Chevrolet Blazer with underbody steel
rails up to 2 inches lower than in current models to reduce the risk
of rheir smashing over cars bumpers and doonills.
Ford said it will do the same wirh its Explorer, Expedition and
Lincoln Navigator. And DaimlerChrysler said it will make several
changes to the 2002 Dodge Durango's front end so it is less likely
to override ca·rs in collisions.
. Foreign automake? also plan_to design their SUVs so they are l~s
li~ly to ~OJUre or kill people m other vehicles,during orashes, the
Trmes sa1d. The. toyota Sequoia will have impact-absorbing bars
below the bumpen, a feature recently added to the Ford Excunion.
Nissan, Honila and Mitsubishi either have made design changes
or said rhey plan to. · ·
SUVs are considerably heavier than cars. The vehicles, which will
continue to have high hoods that cause more. damage ·and injuries
when striking cars from the side, are almost three times as·Iikely as
c~rs to kill the other driver in a crash, the Times said.

AND WHAT~

fii'CIIr.4NtW1

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Chert.. w. Govey
Publisher

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

N\,w

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.KONDRACKE'S VIEW:

Chances improving for trade with ·Chinese
Despite much misbehavior.by China's ComWhile the economic case for PNTR is cli:a.;
munist government, Congress should approve
" . on the political and strategic level Clinton and ,.
permanent normal trade relations -for Chinapro~PNTR Republicans .are making a gamble .
and chances are improving that it will.
::; that free trade will push China toward democThe Clinton administration is putting on a
racy and internatio,nal good citizenship, ·
full-court press to have PNTR enacted by
·• · There is a danger that China's ruler.; plan to
Memorial Day, and supporter.; are increasingly
•gain the benefits of world conm1erce- money, '
confident, despite earlier doubts, that the meatechnology and management know-how - J
sure will.pass the House.
and use them to dominate Asia militarily and to '
White House aides expect some - but not
"' keep tight control on China's population,
1
serious - fall-off from the 260 to 170 vote by
Certainly, China's 'persistent crackii1g down ''
which the . House renewed one-year normal
NEA COLUMNIST
on religious groups and political dissenters, mis- _
trade status to China in 1999, amid the flap over
' · sile buildup.. l\SC of prison labor, violation of'
1
alleged Chinese. nuclear espionage.
Clinton aides.say thatVice President AI Gore, ~~ agreement;; a?d recent th':'at t&lt;;&gt; use ~O~ce
This year, tbe administration is seeking votes who previously allowed his stance on PNTR to ' , 1fT:uwan does not move faster toward reumfi-,,
early enough -first in the Senate, then in the be. ambiguous,.will lobby for the measure, bol- canon are bad stgns.
: .
,
, ·, 1,
1
House - 'that election-year pressures don't. stering Democrats who fear retaliation from
On .the other hand•. It has happened elsel: ,,
cause opposition to build.
labor unions if they support it. .
. ·
"I where ~ fu1a - m T:u~n1 South Kqrea and ,
A complication is the insistence of GOP
House Mif1ority Leader Richard Gephardt, ·_ ·the Ph1l~ppmes, fo_r_example ~ that mtensJVe
1
leader.; that the White House guarantee 100 · D-Mo;, who's close to labor, is expected to vote 'econorruc and polincal contact w1th the rest of
Democratic votes for the measure. President no, but is not lobbying against PNTR: ·
the world helped to turn former dictatorshtps .,
Clinton's aides are hoping that Republicans will
Inst.ead, according to. aides, Gephardt is .' mto democractes.
. .,
.
1
settle for less and that business gmups will pres- telling Democrats to vote whichever way will
The prospect that China could follow . tbat
sure the GPP leadership to schedule an early help th'm win in November and recapture model su.rely would be preferable to a dec1110l1
vote.
.
Democratic control of the House.
now to tsolate Chma from U.S. mfluence - ,
In 1999, 150 Republicans .joined 110
Gephardt is also said to be urging th~ unions p&gt;;rtic~arly :"hen Europe won't fo~ow suit an·d '
Democrats to maintain China's trade status, not to punish Democrats who support PNTR: i wtll expand Its trade wtth China wtthout exertwith 91! Democrats and 71 Republicans voting If they follow that' advtce m the larger mtere8r&gt; . mg pressure for human nghts and democracy.
against. Clinton aides say opposition estimates of having a Democratic House, ·it will reduce .. , The best arguments ;tgainst PNTR - ' or for
, ' delaying it until next year - are that Cpngre15 .
that 30 Democrats have switched against China pressure on Democrats 'to vote no.
trade are "bogus:'
·
· The White House is pushing for an early shouldn't rewa{!! China just after it's threatened .
To achieve what he clearly regards as a major vote not only 'to lighten dection pr:essures but( TaiW,m and shouldn'i ·give ·l!p its power tQ ,:
item of his presidential legacy, C~nton is meet- also to force Members to focus quickly on the review Chinese behavior annually.
ing regularly with Members ·in the "Yellow merits of the issue, which favor PNTR.
.
However, Taiwan itself sl\pports PNTR. The,..•
Oval;' the f.unily room above the Oval Office. ·
The economic arguments for PNTR are 'a Uni'ted States should equip Taiwan with the
He has Cabinet secretaries calling wavering no-bpriner: China will have to lower its present weapons it needs tp defend itself from missile ,:
Members and delivering speeches almost daily. b.arriers to U.S. products, creating market attacks- especially Aegis missile destroyers and,,
The White House has set up a war room in the opportunities· for US. producers and jobs (or Patrior nlissiles- and create an alternate annuOid ExecutiVe Office Building to keep tabs on . American workers. U.S. markets are already al monitoring mechanism.
, ,
Members' concerns.
open to Chinese products.
Voting down PNTR would amount to " ,
And Clinton has a5!iigned Conunerce SecrePassage cifPNTR also will tighten the terms decision by Congress that Chin~ is a long-term ,
cary William Daley, who masterminded the ·, of China's entry into the World Trade Orgarti- strategic adyersary. It may become tha.t, l;mt the
effurt to pass the North American Free Trade zation and allow the l)nited-States to appeall'or United States should do what it can to push j1;1 ,;
Agreement in 1994, to direct the sales effort, enforcement if · (or, almost certainly, when) the opposite direction.
along with White House Deputy Chief ~f Staff Chipa. violates the terms of the · U.S.-Chfna
(Morton ·Kondracke is executiw editor 'If Ro,l!. ·
Steve Richetti, an eXperienced vo~e counter.
tra&lt;\e pact negotiated in November 1999.
Call, the newspaper 'If Capitol Hill.)

W11con1ln lUll Sh1l1l1

'

And the winners in this case are losers

another." .
Before Bill . .Qlinton took office, the
Republicari coalition of suburban yuppies, the
Religious Right and majnline conservatives
· succeeded in 'capturing the White House with ,
a peace-through-strepgth, free-enterprise,
anti-government, borrow-and-spend theme
that was right for the tirnes.
·.
Democ~ats, remembering the all-politicsis-local nature of the game succeed~d on the
congressional level where they failed on the
pr~idency, despite their McGovern era tax, and.spend, peace-at-any-price, anti-business
reputation.
But labels - disdained' by those they label

Gas additive to
be phased out

Jack
Anderson
·&amp; Dougias
Cohn ..::.: ..

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it out," said Sen. Byron Dorgan,
D-N.D.
Agriculture . Secretary Dan
Glickman agreed. "It is time to ·
rewrite that 1996 Freedom to
Farm bill," he said.
The legislation called for price
supports · to be gradually scaled ·
back ~ver seven years. The law,
· pushed by Republicans, was
intended to ·wean farmers from
federal support, but sihce its pas- ·
sage Congress has passed several
multibillion-dollar bailouts. Last
year, the package totaled $8.7 billion, with the bulk going to Midwestern Corn Belt farmers.
"It's made farmers more
dependent on Congress," said
Rep. Earl Pomeroy, D-N.D. "It's
wrong - it's just dead wrong!"
Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.,

chairman of the Agriculture tingents frcim Minnesota and
Committee, has resisted holding North Dakota.
hearings on overhauling tbe law,
Farmers also complained abo.i't
agribusiness mergers. ·
~
which expires in 2002.
The resulting mega-companies
"We'll rewrite the farm policy
in 2002 - we have a seven-year dominate the marketplace, makcontract with American farmers, ing it harder.for family farmers to .
and it was something they want- get a good price for their crops,
,
·
ed;' Lugar spokesman Andy Fish- they .said.
Sen. Paul Wellstone, ·D-Minn.,
er said.
Farm income dropped from promised to re-introduce ·legisla'$53 billion in 1996 to $48 billion tion .calling for a moratorium on
last year, but .Fisher .said that was agriculture mergers, afte,r polling
due to cyclical changes, not fed- the crowd in a tent on the Capitol Mall.
eral farm policies.
"We'll bring it backr' hl'
The farmers, many wearing
baseball caps and few sporting ·yelled. "We'll do it!"
Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D.,
cowboy hats, were organized by
the National Farmers Union and used the rally to pitch legislation
a coalition of other organizations. calling.for the U.S. government to
They were bused in from all over match what European nations pay
the country, with the largest con- their farmers in subsidies.

a

Study: Physicians' empathy can
ease caregivers' depression · ·

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:

a

· WASHINGTON (AP)
Roger Winter lost $28,000 on his
wheat and dairy farm in Callaway,
Minn., last year, and is in Washington this week trying 10 make
sure that doesn't happen again.
''I'm here to be a voice for the
rest of the United States;' he said.
Winter is one of rpore than
1,000 farmers participating in the
Rally fpr Rural America this
Week, ·aimed at increasing crop
supports for struggling family
·
farmers.
The main villain for the mostly
Democratic gathering, dubbed
"Rally for Rural America," was
the 1996 Freedom to Farm law,
which reduced crop subsidies.
"Family farmers have been the
victim of bad public policy in this
country, and it's time tO straighten

IRVING, texas (AP) ~ Police were looking for a former car
wash employee suspected of fatally shooting five people and ,critically wouhding another during an apparent robbery a.t. the shop
three days after he was fired. ·
·
·
"We haven't seen anything this gruesome, this vicious in quite
.
some time," police spokesman D.Vid Tull said Monday.
. The suspect,, Robert Wayne Harris, 28, was fired Friday by Mi-TFine Car Wash. after he was arrested for exposing himself to two
·women at the busineiS.
'
Police identified three of the dead at .t he scene as car wash
employees Denrtis Lee, 48; Rhoda Wheeler, 45; and Augustin VilPHILADELPHIA (AP)' .caregivers with non-empathetic
lasenor, 36; all of Irving. Villasenor's brother, Benjamin, 32, and
how
to
heal
David
Grande
knows
doctors reported depressive
Roberto Jimenez Jr., 15, died at Parkland Memorial Hospital in
broken bones, prescribe powerful symptoms, compared to 27 per·
Dallas. ·An urtidentifiedman was in critical condition at Parkland.
drugs and · perform surgery. cent of those with an empathetic
Police declined to say if the other victims worked at the ca~ wash.
: Empathy, though, was . only doctor, the study showed.
Officen told The Dallas Morning News in today's editions thot
tou~hed on briefly at his medkal
Harris I! a suspect in the dbappearance of Sandra Gaye Scott, ·an ·
Helping doctors empathize
;ehool.
.. could be taught through a more
Irving woman who was last seen near tht car wash Nov. 29. Her
Yet dtlctors and student physl- ftlfmalited and · structured cUt·
vehicle was found Dec. 3.
.
.
tlafis like Grande who le11d an riculum eluting medical school,
'thet'l! ii ~ ";trtlhlf oonnettion" .between· the suspect and Scott's
empathetic eat to caregiVers for internships and residency thlindJsappe.irance, Irving pollee Lt. tim KeUy told the ftewspaper.
the ttttttinally ill can !hake 11 dif- inll!• the !tudy said.
fetefice, acctlrding to•a study pubSuch teachinJ!I .could make the
. llahed tochy.
. ,
dying el(pei:le!1ce more ple:ioatlt
"Docton who reilly lliten t11 ·
MADISON, Wli, (AI?) - Wlsconsi!1 and ltJ two major tranaplant
for everybody, Emanuel aald:
patien111nd caregivers and spend
centers aued U.S. Heiilch and Humatt. Setvltea Secretary Donna
Careglven With a good . attitude
time understanding, tqat le11ens
$halala on Monday over new rules Intended to change the way
· could , even . make terminally Ill
the burdens on . caregivers. They
organs are distributed for transplants:
.
patients feelle11 guilry about the
feel heard. It's a key element to
The rules order the. United Network for Organ Sharing to send
feeling supported," said lead pressures they may put othen
m(!te organs to the sickest patients,, regardless of where they live.
researcher Ezekiel J. Emanuel of under.
i Currently, organs are distributed locally fint. Wisconsin stands to
Better training for doctor.; may
the Department of Clinical
lase under the new system because its organ donation rates are high
also
reduce the chances caregivers .
Bioethics at the National Instiand its patients generally get organs faster than those in other states.
will undergo costly medical care
tutes of He}lth.
,
In its lawsuit, the State claims Shalala's agency stripped the UrtitWithout doctors' intervention, for their own depression, he said.
ed Network for Organ Sharing, the private agency running the
caregiven to patients with a lot of Too often, though, doctors aren't
nation's transplant program, of the power to' decide how organs
physical needs were significantly trained that way.
shonld be allocated.
·
"In the later yean, there were
more likely to be depressed,
It also claims Shalala's actions unlawfully substitute her personal
forced to take aut loans to pay for no role models practicing these
judgment for that of medical professionals.
·
health costs and deal with patients things, so it's difficult to expect
Wisconsin officials are seeking an injunction to· prevent Shalala
considering euthanasia or physi- students to learn it and put those
from enforcing the rules.
.
skills in action in their own praccian-assisted suicide.
· Health and Human Services officials disputed the lawsuit's claims.
In the study in today's issue of tice;' said Gtande, president of the
"The regulation is entirely grounded in the law as Congress
the Philadelphia-based Annals of Amefican Medical Student Asso· intended," said Jon Nelson, who oversees the department's transInternal Medicine, 42 percent of ciation in Reston,Va.
plant division.

,·

the first true worldwide economic war in his~'
tory. He just got the first and second plac~s
mixed up. Communism was .buried by capitalism and Keynes. . ,
·,
·
, , ·;·
i
· Finally, we come to the refocusing part o[,
the theory. With our minds off the Russ~, :·
the bomb, and the survival of the human race~ ,
.other issues looked more significant: Remen\~.,.
her Clinton's mantra, "It's the ecqnomy, seq:·
pid." Clin.ton and tlie Democratic Leadership .,
Council (DLC) . moved the party to th e cen~..'.
UFS COLUMNISTS ter ahd captur~d the White House.
.0
.·;
' .
) l
'
J;oday, Sen . .John M~Cain, R...Ariz~:~~
.attempted to do the.sa111e fqr, the Republican's,:
- are .not 'permanent.
,
~nd failed. The Cold 'War was won. tile Ecoii~;:.
· The Cold War leaders spent the~elves:!" om.y has been hanlfied. The focus is or! i&gt;.oli~ •
. Certainly, George Bush :di.d ~.~rordijs t~ . tiq iis~lf, Th]lt i• why, McCain's message of :
Broder.
·
, ,, J
.
reform resOnated so well with moderates an!J'".
. The utilization of Keynsian pump pt;Jming independents, and it is safe to say that' '
- · 'houg~ ' no Republican would invo'ke his 'whichever party captures that particular hig~ ·;~
nanie - brought the longest period of eco- ground wiD likely ·capture the White House,. ,
nomic expansion and prosperity _in the Cold wattiors and economic warriors have ~~
nation's 'history. That priming came iri ·the i had their day ·- " for riow - and the Broder ' '
'
\
•
h .,
form of massive deficit '!pending to fight .~e theory
holds fl\at the pubhe concentrates on .
.
.
Cold War, and it , worked, just as J'likit~ the next war,. not, the last
011~.
· ' .. ,
i(Jlrushchev said it would. "We will bury
. .
.
you," be Said, was meant in econorni~ ~terms.
aack Anderson tmd Dougas Cohn are colllmnlsf$ .'
And so he correctly labeled ·tht Cold.War. as for United Fe.atrms Syndiiaie)
. -~
,. •'

.. '

Farmers rally in D.C. for higher price supports

Car wash shooting susped sought

Morton
Kondracke

WASHINGTON -Syndicated columnist .
David S. Broder wrote of the electorate's lack
of gratitude: "When W.rs end, governments
change." He was referring in. this case to the
Cold War, and he. cited as examples the British
dumping o!Winston Churchill at the end of
World War II, of $imilar fate for Democrats
in the US. elections in the years following
that ~r and the preceding one.
He lists· as reasons: "exhaustion" of wartime
,leaders, "economic upheaval'' and a "shift of
public focus from one set of challenges to

The DillY Sentinel • Pqe A 5

Pomeroy, MldCIIeport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
\

~m ,_

The Daily Sentinel

•

j

~

WASHINGTON (AP) - · The
Clinton administration has decided
to phase out MTilE as a gasoline
· additive an gro~ds it poses a risk
to public health or the environment, sour:tes said today.
MTBE, a leading oxygenate and
oebne booster, reduces emissions
· of smog, but it has been linked to
groundwater pollutipn in California and elsewhere. It is used in
one-third of the gasoline sold in
the United States.
Carol Browner, administrator of
tbe Environmental Protection
Agency, was announcing 'this afternoon that her agency will seek to
"significantly .reduce or eliminate"
use of MTBEs under the J:oxic
Substance Control Act. That law
aUoo,vs EPA to ban cheniicals
"deemed to po5e an unreasonable .
risk to the public or the envjron- '
ment;• said ~ government official
who ,requested anonymity.

NOTICE:
Beginning April l, 2000, customers of MCI
World Com Communications; Inc. in the state of
Ohio will he charged a pew line item surcharge
equal · to .11% 'of t~eir i'nv9iced intrastate
ch~rges. This line item surchar,ge ~ conti~ue to
he billed to·· customers until modified or
discontinuea. If you have any .questions, ple'ase.
call MCI WorldCom Customer Service.
1

Pomeroy • Middleport Lions Club
P.O. Box 122 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Open Invitation
Membership·Drive
Special Meeting At Pomeroy
• McDonald's ·. .
.

·Luncheon ·Meeting
Wed., Mar. .22 -12:00-1:00 p.m.
. Public Welcome
'

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OUR 1OTH. ANNUAL

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All· TVC teams, Page B6
District 13 All-Star boxes, Page B6

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\,

Deat Ann Landers: Recently, three '
of my daughter's best friends who were
16, 13 and 12 years of age died a senseless death. They were home alone in a
garage storage room that had very little
ventilation. A flash fire started, and they
died instantly. Police suspect the older
girl was huffing gasoline, and a spark
ignited gas that had spilled on the floor.
These three beautiful 'girls came from
middle-class homes, and went to very
good schools with excellent anti-drug
programs. Two of the girls were sisters.
They had their whole · lives ahead of
them. Please, Ann, warn young people
about the dangers of sniffing glue and
paint and huffing gas. If this letter can
save just one life, tlie death of these children will not be in vain. - KATHY IN
OKLAHOMA
.
DEAR KATHY: My heart goes ·out
to the parents .of the girls you wrote
about. I hope your letter will encourage
concerned family members to pay m.ore

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
attention to what is going on in the lives
of their children.
I have prin ted several letters about the
dangers of inhalants. While use of
inhalants has decreased nationally, some
states, including Oklahoma have actually
seen an increase. There has also been a
rise in the use of nitrous oxide Oaughing
gas) at college parties nationwide.
Inhalants include nitrous oxide, helium, aero.sols, paint, cleaning solvents and
gasoline. Inhalanis work directly on the

heart, the nervous system .and other vital
organs. The experts on the subject have
made it abundantly clear that inhalants
can be both addictive and deadly.
Nitrous oxide can produce permanent
damage to the nervous system - this
means the ability to see, hear, walk and
talk. Helium - especially when inhaled
from a tank or used long-term - can
cause asphyx.iation, . permanent brain
damage, massive pulmonary hemorrhaging and 'death.
Parents should discuss the dangers of
inhalants with their children. They also
should be alerted to obvious signs of
inhalant abuse, such as paint stains on a
child's hands or face; chemical odors on
breath, clothing or rags; and the rapid or
"mysterious'' disappearance of household
aerosol or cleaning products . Parents ·
should be careful about storing gasoline
and other dangerous products in poorly
. ventilated garages ·or storage sheds. If
inhalant use is suspected, parents should

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

'

T here ·are many banks, savings
and loans, credi t unions and
other financial businesses that
offer an assortment of monetary
services. They may provide saving~. che cking, certified and
cas hier's checks, .·loans, savings
bonds and various investment
opportuniti es. With so many .
cl;10ices, how do you know
whi ch type of 'financial institution is right for you ?
First of all consider safety. If
. you keep your money hidden
under your mattress, it is not
safe. A fire or thief can wipe out
your entire savings. Check to be
sure that the financial institution
that you choose has been
insu red by the federal government for protection against fire,
theft and bank" failure. Most
ban ks, credit unions and .savings
. and loans have been insured by
c·ither

the CFederal . Deposit
1nsurance
o rporat10n, the
. 1 C re d'tt U mon
· AssoCla.
N at wna
.
.
t1on ""'the-federal Savmgs an d
.
Lcans I nsu ran ce C.orporahon
r.
s. ' 000 ' Those lllS
. .
tlor. up tO 100
tut10ns, thae&lt;are federally msured
are th e only ones that are guar-

contact their local substance abuse or a video, teU them it's "potluck," and sug.
mental-health organization for help.
gest that they bring a casserole, potato
Match 19-25 is National inhalants and salad, fried chicken or a desserr. In other
Poisons Awareness Week. Anyone ·who is words, give them the opportunity to
interested in joining a local campaign or reciprocate. Some people need this kind
would like to receive additional informa- of"help." If they refuse to pitch in, cross •
tion on inhalants, should contact the them off your guest list, because they are
National Inhalant Prevention Coalition not guests, they are freeloaders.
at 1-800-269-4237 (www.inhalants.org).
What can you give the person who
· Dear Ann Landers: What should I
has everything? Ann landers' booklet,
do a\&gt;out friends who make more money
"Gems," is ideal for a nightstand or cofthan I do, but don't reciprocate when· it
fee table. "Gems" is a collection of Arin
comes to social invitations?
These same people are always happy to Landers' most requested poems arid
accept my invitations for dinner and an essays. Send a self-addressed, long, busic
evening of watching vidc;os, but they ness-size envelope and a check or
never offer to bring food or pay for the money order for S5.25 (this includ~s
movie rental. How should I handle this? postage and handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, IU.
- SMALL-TOWN LADY
60611-0562.
(In Canada, send S6.25.) To
.
DEAR SMALL-TOWN LADY:
You can take seriously that Ann Landers find out more about Ann Landers ·and
admonition, "Nobody can take advan- read l,ter past columns, visit the Creators ·
tage of you without your permission." Syndicate
web
page
at
When you invite friends for su~per and www.creators.com.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

price for your· deposits. A fra~ ­
tion of .a percentage point can
make a large difference in the
total amount accumulate.i.
Evaluate the costs associated
with checking accounts (they
may be free) , . money orders,
cashier's and ce rtified checks and
penalties for early withdrawal.
EXTENSION
How much interest will the ·
financial institution charge for a
anteed to be safe.
Next think about accessibili- loan? .
Look arourid before decidi ng
ty. In banking terms, this is
known as "liquidity." How easy which institution is right for
and convenient is it to get your you. It is possible that yo11 may
money? Do you have to wait a select several different ones,
certain length of time before based upon the types of services
that you want, their hours of
withdrawing?
operation,
interest rates, fees,
Are there Automated Teller
Machines nearby that can be convenience, requirements for
used twenty-four hours a day? Is openirig accounts or getting
your money in . a certificate of loans and accessibility. For
deposit that will incur a penalty instance, you may decide to put
if the money is taken out early?
Consider the amount . of money in certificates of deposits
-~
h
·u for a year in an out-of-town
return. How muc · .money
WI
.
. , bank. being near the bank is not
earn
n 1ntere•"
,. Y. ur· --monev
·&lt;·' &gt; ~
- • ~· v
..,
a top priority. However, you may
How often IS the mterest comchoose to have your checking
d d' C
1
poun e . ompare annua perCentage rateS tO det~rmine and I;egular savings account in a
&gt;·~,, h ms
" t~·
•i t'he b es
'' 't' local bank because of frequent
WulC
1t·u t.ton o ·l""liers
transactions.

The Community
Calendar is published as a
free service to non-profit
groups wishing to
announce meetings' and
spe~ial events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and
cannot' be guaranteed to
be printed a specific
number of days.

Becky
Baer

NEWS
.
SHORTS

.

Lupus/Fibromyalgia Support
Group, Tuesday, 6:30 to 8 p.m .
cafeteria, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

5andbul1(s ho1ne
FLAT ROCK, N.C. (AP) Poet Carl •Sandburg (18781967) lived the last 22 years pf
his life in Flat Rock in a white
Colonial-style home callea
Conneniara. The house, in the
area's foothills, was built in 1838.
It was in Flat Rock that Sand,.
burg wrote his autobiography
"Always _the Young Strangers" in
1953.

•••

THURSDAY, March 22
POMEROY
Meigs
County · Women's Fellowship
Churches of Christ, Thursday, 7
p.m. at Bradford Church of
Christ.

•••

TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at the haU.

TUESDAY, March 21
CHESTER
Chester
Township Board of Trustees,
regular
session,
Tuesday,
Chester town . hall, 7 p.m. ·
Appropriations
concerning
2000 will be discussed.
MIDDLEPORT- BrooksGrat;~t Camp, Sons of l/!)ion
Veterans of the· Civil War, 7:15
p.m. Tuesday, Hope Baptist
Church annex.

NEW YORK (AP) - StatesPOMEROY. -Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. at the home of Jane
Brown. Silver and golden circle
ceremonies·.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport High School alnmni
officers and executive officers,
Thursday, . 7 p.m. at the home
of Yvonne Scally., All MHS
alumni welcome.

POMEROY

Historic figure ,

roads on the
to the-

mlm and diplomat John Jay, born

in New York City, was a mem:
ber of the Continental Congres$
(177 4-89) and its presiilent in
1779. With Benjamin Franklin
and John Adams in 1783 he
negotiated the treaty ending the
,American Revolution. He later
served as Secretary for Forei!¢
Affairs. President George Washl
ington named him first Chief
Justice of the United States h!
1789.Jay died in 1829.

lead

.

gulf coast on I -10 there is incredible golf along the way::..
and somethi!lg Grand at the e~d of the Trail. ·

The ROBERT TRENT JoNES GOLF TRAIL is 378 holes of
championship golf Qn a series of eight spectacular sites
· sp~ing the length of Alabama's natural beauty. De~itned ·
.
by the master himself, the Tr:iil is what The NeiP York
'

Times called "some of the best public golf on Earth.?&gt;
GRAND

named one of the best places in the world to stay
by Conde NIMt maga~e, is waiting for you o~ the
Alabama coast. Enjoy
. yourself lounging by the
.

pool, sailing in the bay or exploring scenic trails·
on horseback. Ic's"wonderful dining. It's impeccable service. It's aJl here at the Grand Hotel, a
·''

grand resort on the Trail.

"LABAMA'S

-MARRIOTI'S--~---

\cq/(Dndf}&amp;.1el
.

, · RESORTANO ,qOLF, CWI

1 . 800.544.9933

The Grand Hotel ·
Point Clear

''

'
•

I

' '

JACKSON, Tenn. It'll be
Oklahoma City against .Sim,o n
·Fraser ·tonight in the championship game of the NAIA Divi"
sion I Women's National Tourna. ment.
Oklahoma City (31 -3) wiped
out Findlay 75"52 Monday in the
tournament semifinals at the
Oman Arena in Jackson, Tenn.
Patty Cantella led a trio of bCU
players in double digits with 16
points. Jhudy Gonzalez added 14
and .Mary Ogunsola had 13
points.
• .Mianda Watts led Findlay (274). with 18 . points and 14
rebounds. Molly Bolt had 14
points for the Oilers.
In the other semifinal, Simon
Fiaser
defeated
Southern
Na.arene in a battel of traditional ·
tournament powers, 77-62.Jessica
Kaczowca' led' Sim.o.n Fras~l' (302) with 26 , points. Teresa Kleindeist had 20 and Jennifer Van De
Walle added IS points. ·
Sasha Seriogina led Southern
Nazarene (22-9) with 18 points.
Sh~rri Lehring had 13.

'•

"

I

' NEWYORK (AP) -The new
union of baseball umpi~, the
World Umpires Association,
asreed to eliminate separate
American · and National league
;t:atfs as part of an int~rim agreement with . the commissioner's
office.
t
·· in 'addition, umpires agreed not
to strike through June 14, and
c&gt;Wnei-s agreeq. not ·to lock them
out through the same date.
.
Under the interim agreement,
iri effect until a new coUective
bargaining agreement is reached,
lf1e sides asreed pay scales iri the
next deal will be retroactive· to
the start of this season . .
•

.. '

"

NAtA women's
title ga• tonight

. makes moves

CLUB, re~en~y

'

TULSA, Okla. (..._P) - · Jimmie
Hunter scored 22 points and
made the game-winning shot
witlt four seconds remaining, lifting Life (Ga.) to a 61-59 victory
over Georgetown College for its
'
second straight NAJA title.
Hunter's game-winner came 20
seconds after teammate Mark
Williams drilled · a three-pointer
. that tied the game at 59-59. Carlos Jones added 13 points for the
Runnin' Eagles.
. Will Carlton led Georgetow,n
With 23 points and 16 rebounds.
Todd C ox had 13 points for tQe
Tigers'.
·

I

.."
..•

'

1.800.94$.4444

.. Moon re-ups
with lues

\

: TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The Buc~
oaneen re-signe4 tight end Dave
Moore to a three-yellll'conll)lct.
He had a career-high five touch- ·
d~wn catches and 276 yards on .
zj receptions.
•

.

./·

~

·••

L•..I ....

~ . "
' &amp;}&lt;·'' ~~/ ~.•\ .\.

Malik Allen 'looked up at the
scqreboard, realized the deficit
was in1urmountable, put his
head· down and walked off the
court for the last time in a Villanova uniform.
Allen, the Wildcats' leadi ng
scorer at 14.3 points, struggled
in his final game, scoring just
nine points .as Villanova lost to
Kent 81-67 in the second
round of the NIT on Monday
night.
. .
.
Kent (23-7) plays at Penn
State on Wegnesday.
Allen and Brian lynch, V,il•
lanova's o?I,v senior starters,
· combined for 11 points on 5for- 18 shooting. Allen was 4of-10. Lyn,eh was 1-of-8 for ·
two points,
Both received standing ovations as they went to the bench
with 1:17. jeft in the game and
Villanova trailing by 13.
Kent .preSsed Villanova intQ
six straight 'turnovers in 90 seconds en route to a 12-0 lead. ·
The Golden Flashes never
looked bal:k and led the entire
game. De~~tric Shaw came off
the bench to score 12 points,
including !!ight straight points
during a clinching run in the
second half.
· Kyrem 'Massey scored 17
points, John ·W horton added 15
and Andrew MitcheU had 14
for Kent.! 'Gary Buchanan led
Villanova· 'with 20 peints and
Jermaine Medley had 11 . .
Shaw nailed a 3"pointer from
the wing and sank a free throw
to · com~lete a 4-poiilt play to
give Kent 'its biggest lead of the
second half, 65-53, with 9:50
left in the ga~e.
After trailing the entire game,
Villanova got within three
points for the first time since
,the opening minute. A sreal by
Buchanan at;~d layup by Brooks
Sales made the score · 52-49
with 13:10 left in th.e game.
But Kent puUed away with a
,10-2 spurt minutes later as
Shaw scored six in a row.

....

Alter Villanova cut it to 6557, Shaw put back a miss to
give Kent a tO~point lead with
5:06 left. Villanova (20-13)
never got within single digits
the rest of the game.
"We shot the ball as well as
could," Kent coach Gary
Waters said. "We could see they
were exhausted at the end, so
..
we penetrate d .
At South Bend, Ind., while
trying to stave off a rally by .
Xavier, Notre Dame coach
Matt Doherty decided to share
a secret with his players: He was
a really bad drummer as a kid.
He was trying to keep the
Irish loose, and it worked, as
Notre Dame went 9-of-10
from the foul line in the final
79 seconds to hold . off the
Musketeers 76-64 Monday
night in the National Invitation
Tournament's second round.
"What can ~ou do for two
minutes in a timeo ut?" said
Doherty, who admitted he was
such a. bad drummer that he
came home from grade school
one day to find his patents had
sold his drum kit. "We talked
about st.u ff to keep guys loose
and have fun. It's a basketball
.
game.
Of course, Doherty wasn't
quite as relaxed when Maurice .
McAfee hit ·a three-pointer
with 2:09 left to cut Notre
Dame's lead down to 64-61.
But Irish All-American Troy
Murphy converted a three-.
point play on Notre Dame's
next possession, and the Irish
(20-14) hit their free throws
to seal the win.
Freshman Matt Carroll,
who finished with 13 pointS,
was 6-of-6 from the line duriug that stretch. The Irish
were 21 -of-27 from the foul
line, while Xavier (21-12) was
6-of-11.
"We were saying we're still
in this game; let's get it done/'
McAfee said of the 61-58
deficit. "We didn't get it done,
GOOD GAME- Kent's Demetrick Shaw (10) consoles Gary Buchanan of Villanova following the Golden
though, and it was over."
. Flashes' NIT second round win last night.' (AP)

..:e

..

Freshman's free throws lift la. Tech past Vandy
Bv CHUCK SIHOI'FNI!R
AP SPORTS WRITER

With 2.5 seconds left and his team trailing by a point, Leon Bar~t~ore's coaching
future hif!ged on the ner\Tes of a freshman.
Luckily for Barmore, she had plenty. .
Catrina Frierson calmly sank two free
throws, and 'Louisiana Tech escaped with. a
66-65 victory over Vanderbilt 'i n the -Midwest Regional on Monday night, keeping
Barmore as its coach for at least one more
game.
"That was pretty scary all right," Frierson admitte&lt;l. "But if you want to be a big
player, you have to make big plays."Frierson canie through after the topseeded Lady Techsters blew- an It-point
· second-half lead in the final home game

of Barmore's storied 18-year head .coaching career at Tech .
It almost was his last game, period, but
. the Lady Techsters (30- 2) survived to play
another day in the regional semifinals.
Barmore announced last week he would
retire when Tech's tournament run ends.
"Coach told me just to relax," Frierson
said. "He said he knew I could make
them, and I did."
The two other No. 1 seeds playing
Monday night, Tennessee in the Mideast
and Georgia in the West, also kept their
title hopes alive. But Purdue's run at a sec.ond consecutive championship is over,
ended by, a 76-74 loss at home to Ok.la~
homa, which trailed at one time by 17.

Tennessee, winner of six national championships. beat Arizona 75-60, and Georgia defeated Stanfurd 83-64. Connecticut,
the top seeded team in the East, advanced
with an 83-45 victory over Clemson on
Sunday night.
In other games Monday. Duke beat
Western Kentucky 90-70 in the East;
Texas Tech downed Tulane 76-59 in the
Mideast; Old Dominion defeated Southern Methodist 96-76 in the Midwest and
~~;:h Carolina beat Rice 83-50 in~the
Three . of the top 16 seeds failed o
advance. to the regional semifinals afte all
16 made it last year. Those losing ere
Purdue, seeded fourth in the East; third-

New limps

'

HOTEL RESORT AND
GoLF

Lih\wins NAIA
men's title

. NEW YORK (AP) ~ Ratings
for the first four days of the
NCAA men's basketball tournaJ;Ilent. were the highest since
1994, up an average of 6 percent
over last year. when CBS received
i~ lowest mark since showing it
in 1982. ·
·
Eight seGond-round games .
Sunday scored overnight ranngs
between 4.2 and 9.2 and shares
from 10 to 17, Nielsen Media
Research said.
The tournament- to-date averages were a 5.7 rnting and 12
share, a hike from the 5.4/12 for
the first four days of 1999's cover'
age.

l X]bether you're driving down I -65 ~rom the .Qhio
VV Valley, down I-85 from the Carolinas, or along the

And now the famous

Kelit moves on, Xavier falls
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ratings up
6 percent ·
'

, ,..

HIGHLIGHTS

NCAA men's TV

.

&gt;

'TuEsDAY's

l'uescbly, -.rch ]1, ]000

·~·" .. '

·!..

1 '

'

' '

.
1,.,,

..

t·~~ ~~

I''

"
'.,.

All-Stars
light it up .
"

bid for backup job

1
G. SPENCER 011011111~
· OVP STAFf WRITER

RIO GRAJtoiDE - Eastern's
Josh Wi!Jied all scorers with iS
points, and ·Southern's Chris
Randqlph and Ironton's Jason
Harmon had 13-point efforts to
help drive the Division III-IV
boys' all-star team to a 67-51
win over the Division 1-11 allstars Monday night at the University of Rio Grande's Newt
Oliver Arena.
Will's · 13-polnt first: half was
the only performance' of its kind
ill' either game. But when the Ill stars focused too much on the
6-foot-3 Will, . Randolph and
Harmon made .them pay with
deep' strikes from the perimete~.
Will created the game's first ne
·and had scored ~e last of t~e
.eight lead-chang~ng · ~aske~ m
the first half. Befm:e halftime,

PIUH 1H NCAA. Pllp 81

Santiago makes ·

Dist~ijq 13

BY

seeded Mississippi State in the West; and
fourth-seeded Cal Santa Barbara in the
West.
In ~he regional semifinals, all 'Sat'urday
night, it will be Connecticut vs. Oklahoma and Duke vs. lSU in th e East at
Richmond, Va.; Tennessee vs.Virginia and
Texas Tech vs. Notre Dame in th e Mideast
at Memphis; Louisiana Tech vs'. Old
Dominion and Penn State vs. Iowa State
in the Midwest at Kansas City; and Georgia vs. North Carolina and Rutgers vs .
Alabama-Birmingham in the West.
Louisiana. Tech fans saluted Barmore
when he walked onto the court Monday,
chanting his name and waving signs th at

IRON WILL- Eastern's Josh Will (right) takes the ball to the basket
during the District 13 All·Star GaJ;I~.e. (G. Spencer Osborne photo)
Gallia Academy's Brian Sitrui and
Jerem)' Payton Belpre's Brandon
Burnfield, Athens' · Andrew
· Coble, Ironton St. Joe's Eric and
John Wagi!Jger, Hatmon and

Rock Hill's Tanner' Heaberlin
would join WiU in scoring
game-tying. and/or lead-chang- ,

PI••• HI D-IJ. Pllp B2

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) The Cincinn'ati Reds were
looking for a No. 3 catcher
when they signed Benito Santiago to a minor league contract last month. He's making a:
strong bid for something better.
Santiago is challenging Jason
LaRue for the -backup job by
showing flashes of what he
could do earlier in his career.
He has retained some of the
swagger from 13 years ago,
when he was a brash, 22-yearold, catcher .for the San Diego
Padres on his way ,to .being
named the National League's·
Rookie of the Year.
The four-time All-Star has
· since bounced around the
league, including a stint with
Cincinnati in 1995. He broke
his pelvis and right knee in a
car accident in Fort Laud-

erdale, Fla., before the 1998
season, temporar,ily sidetracking his career:
Last season, Santiago threw
out 23 of 65 runners trying to
steal and batted .249 in 1'07
games for the c ·hicago Cubs.
When the Redf signed San·
tiago, 35, as a free agent on Feb.
24, they were 10 o"ing to add
some depth in case either
starter Eddie Taubensee or
LaRue got hurt.
Santiago is hitting .3211 this
spring, challenging for tile
backup job. If the Reds don't
keep him on the opening day
roster, he has the . option 'of
going to another team.
LaRue, 26, impressed the
Reds'Jast seas.o n, his first in th e
majors. He hit .211 in 36
· games but was solid defensively
and caught three of the Reds '
four one-hitters.

•..

.

'I

�Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

All· TVC teams, Page B6
District 13 All-Star boxes, Page B6

-

•

PageB1

'

\,

Deat Ann Landers: Recently, three '
of my daughter's best friends who were
16, 13 and 12 years of age died a senseless death. They were home alone in a
garage storage room that had very little
ventilation. A flash fire started, and they
died instantly. Police suspect the older
girl was huffing gasoline, and a spark
ignited gas that had spilled on the floor.
These three beautiful 'girls came from
middle-class homes, and went to very
good schools with excellent anti-drug
programs. Two of the girls were sisters.
They had their whole · lives ahead of
them. Please, Ann, warn young people
about the dangers of sniffing glue and
paint and huffing gas. If this letter can
save just one life, tlie death of these children will not be in vain. - KATHY IN
OKLAHOMA
.
DEAR KATHY: My heart goes ·out
to the parents .of the girls you wrote
about. I hope your letter will encourage
concerned family members to pay m.ore

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
attention to what is going on in the lives
of their children.
I have prin ted several letters about the
dangers of inhalants. While use of
inhalants has decreased nationally, some
states, including Oklahoma have actually
seen an increase. There has also been a
rise in the use of nitrous oxide Oaughing
gas) at college parties nationwide.
Inhalants include nitrous oxide, helium, aero.sols, paint, cleaning solvents and
gasoline. Inhalanis work directly on the

heart, the nervous system .and other vital
organs. The experts on the subject have
made it abundantly clear that inhalants
can be both addictive and deadly.
Nitrous oxide can produce permanent
damage to the nervous system - this
means the ability to see, hear, walk and
talk. Helium - especially when inhaled
from a tank or used long-term - can
cause asphyx.iation, . permanent brain
damage, massive pulmonary hemorrhaging and 'death.
Parents should discuss the dangers of
inhalants with their children. They also
should be alerted to obvious signs of
inhalant abuse, such as paint stains on a
child's hands or face; chemical odors on
breath, clothing or rags; and the rapid or
"mysterious'' disappearance of household
aerosol or cleaning products . Parents ·
should be careful about storing gasoline
and other dangerous products in poorly
. ventilated garages ·or storage sheds. If
inhalant use is suspected, parents should

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

'

T here ·are many banks, savings
and loans, credi t unions and
other financial businesses that
offer an assortment of monetary
services. They may provide saving~. che cking, certified and
cas hier's checks, .·loans, savings
bonds and various investment
opportuniti es. With so many .
cl;10ices, how do you know
whi ch type of 'financial institution is right for you ?
First of all consider safety. If
. you keep your money hidden
under your mattress, it is not
safe. A fire or thief can wipe out
your entire savings. Check to be
sure that the financial institution
that you choose has been
insu red by the federal government for protection against fire,
theft and bank" failure. Most
ban ks, credit unions and .savings
. and loans have been insured by
c·ither

the CFederal . Deposit
1nsurance
o rporat10n, the
. 1 C re d'tt U mon
· AssoCla.
N at wna
.
.
t1on ""'the-federal Savmgs an d
.
Lcans I nsu ran ce C.orporahon
r.
s. ' 000 ' Those lllS
. .
tlor. up tO 100
tut10ns, thae&lt;are federally msured
are th e only ones that are guar-

contact their local substance abuse or a video, teU them it's "potluck," and sug.
mental-health organization for help.
gest that they bring a casserole, potato
Match 19-25 is National inhalants and salad, fried chicken or a desserr. In other
Poisons Awareness Week. Anyone ·who is words, give them the opportunity to
interested in joining a local campaign or reciprocate. Some people need this kind
would like to receive additional informa- of"help." If they refuse to pitch in, cross •
tion on inhalants, should contact the them off your guest list, because they are
National Inhalant Prevention Coalition not guests, they are freeloaders.
at 1-800-269-4237 (www.inhalants.org).
What can you give the person who
· Dear Ann Landers: What should I
has everything? Ann landers' booklet,
do a\&gt;out friends who make more money
"Gems," is ideal for a nightstand or cofthan I do, but don't reciprocate when· it
fee table. "Gems" is a collection of Arin
comes to social invitations?
These same people are always happy to Landers' most requested poems arid
accept my invitations for dinner and an essays. Send a self-addressed, long, busic
evening of watching vidc;os, but they ness-size envelope and a check or
never offer to bring food or pay for the money order for S5.25 (this includ~s
movie rental. How should I handle this? postage and handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, IU.
- SMALL-TOWN LADY
60611-0562.
(In Canada, send S6.25.) To
.
DEAR SMALL-TOWN LADY:
You can take seriously that Ann Landers find out more about Ann Landers ·and
admonition, "Nobody can take advan- read l,ter past columns, visit the Creators ·
tage of you without your permission." Syndicate
web
page
at
When you invite friends for su~per and www.creators.com.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

price for your· deposits. A fra~ ­
tion of .a percentage point can
make a large difference in the
total amount accumulate.i.
Evaluate the costs associated
with checking accounts (they
may be free) , . money orders,
cashier's and ce rtified checks and
penalties for early withdrawal.
EXTENSION
How much interest will the ·
financial institution charge for a
anteed to be safe.
Next think about accessibili- loan? .
Look arourid before decidi ng
ty. In banking terms, this is
known as "liquidity." How easy which institution is right for
and convenient is it to get your you. It is possible that yo11 may
money? Do you have to wait a select several different ones,
certain length of time before based upon the types of services
that you want, their hours of
withdrawing?
operation,
interest rates, fees,
Are there Automated Teller
Machines nearby that can be convenience, requirements for
used twenty-four hours a day? Is openirig accounts or getting
your money in . a certificate of loans and accessibility. For
deposit that will incur a penalty instance, you may decide to put
if the money is taken out early?
Consider the amount . of money in certificates of deposits
-~
h
·u for a year in an out-of-town
return. How muc · .money
WI
.
. , bank. being near the bank is not
earn
n 1ntere•"
,. Y. ur· --monev
·&lt;·' &gt; ~
- • ~· v
..,
a top priority. However, you may
How often IS the mterest comchoose to have your checking
d d' C
1
poun e . ompare annua perCentage rateS tO det~rmine and I;egular savings account in a
&gt;·~,, h ms
" t~·
•i t'he b es
'' 't' local bank because of frequent
WulC
1t·u t.ton o ·l""liers
transactions.

The Community
Calendar is published as a
free service to non-profit
groups wishing to
announce meetings' and
spe~ial events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and
cannot' be guaranteed to
be printed a specific
number of days.

Becky
Baer

NEWS
.
SHORTS

.

Lupus/Fibromyalgia Support
Group, Tuesday, 6:30 to 8 p.m .
cafeteria, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

5andbul1(s ho1ne
FLAT ROCK, N.C. (AP) Poet Carl •Sandburg (18781967) lived the last 22 years pf
his life in Flat Rock in a white
Colonial-style home callea
Conneniara. The house, in the
area's foothills, was built in 1838.
It was in Flat Rock that Sand,.
burg wrote his autobiography
"Always _the Young Strangers" in
1953.

•••

THURSDAY, March 22
POMEROY
Meigs
County · Women's Fellowship
Churches of Christ, Thursday, 7
p.m. at Bradford Church of
Christ.

•••

TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
at the haU.

TUESDAY, March 21
CHESTER
Chester
Township Board of Trustees,
regular
session,
Tuesday,
Chester town . hall, 7 p.m. ·
Appropriations
concerning
2000 will be discussed.
MIDDLEPORT- BrooksGrat;~t Camp, Sons of l/!)ion
Veterans of the· Civil War, 7:15
p.m. Tuesday, Hope Baptist
Church annex.

NEW YORK (AP) - StatesPOMEROY. -Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. at the home of Jane
Brown. Silver and golden circle
ceremonies·.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport High School alnmni
officers and executive officers,
Thursday, . 7 p.m. at the home
of Yvonne Scally., All MHS
alumni welcome.

POMEROY

Historic figure ,

roads on the
to the-

mlm and diplomat John Jay, born

in New York City, was a mem:
ber of the Continental Congres$
(177 4-89) and its presiilent in
1779. With Benjamin Franklin
and John Adams in 1783 he
negotiated the treaty ending the
,American Revolution. He later
served as Secretary for Forei!¢
Affairs. President George Washl
ington named him first Chief
Justice of the United States h!
1789.Jay died in 1829.

lead

.

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and somethi!lg Grand at the e~d of the Trail. ·

The ROBERT TRENT JoNES GOLF TRAIL is 378 holes of
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'

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JACKSON, Tenn. It'll be
Oklahoma City against .Sim,o n
·Fraser ·tonight in the championship game of the NAIA Divi"
sion I Women's National Tourna. ment.
Oklahoma City (31 -3) wiped
out Findlay 75"52 Monday in the
tournament semifinals at the
Oman Arena in Jackson, Tenn.
Patty Cantella led a trio of bCU
players in double digits with 16
points. Jhudy Gonzalez added 14
and .Mary Ogunsola had 13
points.
• .Mianda Watts led Findlay (274). with 18 . points and 14
rebounds. Molly Bolt had 14
points for the Oilers.
In the other semifinal, Simon
Fiaser
defeated
Southern
Na.arene in a battel of traditional ·
tournament powers, 77-62.Jessica
Kaczowca' led' Sim.o.n Fras~l' (302) with 26 , points. Teresa Kleindeist had 20 and Jennifer Van De
Walle added IS points. ·
Sasha Seriogina led Southern
Nazarene (22-9) with 18 points.
Sh~rri Lehring had 13.

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' NEWYORK (AP) -The new
union of baseball umpi~, the
World Umpires Association,
asreed to eliminate separate
American · and National league
;t:atfs as part of an int~rim agreement with . the commissioner's
office.
t
·· in 'addition, umpires agreed not
to strike through June 14, and
c&gt;Wnei-s agreeq. not ·to lock them
out through the same date.
.
Under the interim agreement,
iri effect until a new coUective
bargaining agreement is reached,
lf1e sides asreed pay scales iri the
next deal will be retroactive· to
the start of this season . .
•

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NAtA women's
title ga• tonight

. makes moves

CLUB, re~en~y

'

TULSA, Okla. (..._P) - · Jimmie
Hunter scored 22 points and
made the game-winning shot
witlt four seconds remaining, lifting Life (Ga.) to a 61-59 victory
over Georgetown College for its
'
second straight NAJA title.
Hunter's game-winner came 20
seconds after teammate Mark
Williams drilled · a three-pointer
. that tied the game at 59-59. Carlos Jones added 13 points for the
Runnin' Eagles.
. Will Carlton led Georgetow,n
With 23 points and 16 rebounds.
Todd C ox had 13 points for tQe
Tigers'.
·

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1.800.94$.4444

.. Moon re-ups
with lues

\

: TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The Buc~
oaneen re-signe4 tight end Dave
Moore to a three-yellll'conll)lct.
He had a career-high five touch- ·
d~wn catches and 276 yards on .
zj receptions.
•

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Malik Allen 'looked up at the
scqreboard, realized the deficit
was in1urmountable, put his
head· down and walked off the
court for the last time in a Villanova uniform.
Allen, the Wildcats' leadi ng
scorer at 14.3 points, struggled
in his final game, scoring just
nine points .as Villanova lost to
Kent 81-67 in the second
round of the NIT on Monday
night.
. .
.
Kent (23-7) plays at Penn
State on Wegnesday.
Allen and Brian lynch, V,il•
lanova's o?I,v senior starters,
· combined for 11 points on 5for- 18 shooting. Allen was 4of-10. Lyn,eh was 1-of-8 for ·
two points,
Both received standing ovations as they went to the bench
with 1:17. jeft in the game and
Villanova trailing by 13.
Kent .preSsed Villanova intQ
six straight 'turnovers in 90 seconds en route to a 12-0 lead. ·
The Golden Flashes never
looked bal:k and led the entire
game. De~~tric Shaw came off
the bench to score 12 points,
including !!ight straight points
during a clinching run in the
second half.
· Kyrem 'Massey scored 17
points, John ·W horton added 15
and Andrew MitcheU had 14
for Kent.! 'Gary Buchanan led
Villanova· 'with 20 peints and
Jermaine Medley had 11 . .
Shaw nailed a 3"pointer from
the wing and sank a free throw
to · com~lete a 4-poiilt play to
give Kent 'its biggest lead of the
second half, 65-53, with 9:50
left in the ga~e.
After trailing the entire game,
Villanova got within three
points for the first time since
,the opening minute. A sreal by
Buchanan at;~d layup by Brooks
Sales made the score · 52-49
with 13:10 left in th.e game.
But Kent puUed away with a
,10-2 spurt minutes later as
Shaw scored six in a row.

....

Alter Villanova cut it to 6557, Shaw put back a miss to
give Kent a tO~point lead with
5:06 left. Villanova (20-13)
never got within single digits
the rest of the game.
"We shot the ball as well as
could," Kent coach Gary
Waters said. "We could see they
were exhausted at the end, so
..
we penetrate d .
At South Bend, Ind., while
trying to stave off a rally by .
Xavier, Notre Dame coach
Matt Doherty decided to share
a secret with his players: He was
a really bad drummer as a kid.
He was trying to keep the
Irish loose, and it worked, as
Notre Dame went 9-of-10
from the foul line in the final
79 seconds to hold . off the
Musketeers 76-64 Monday
night in the National Invitation
Tournament's second round.
"What can ~ou do for two
minutes in a timeo ut?" said
Doherty, who admitted he was
such a. bad drummer that he
came home from grade school
one day to find his patents had
sold his drum kit. "We talked
about st.u ff to keep guys loose
and have fun. It's a basketball
.
game.
Of course, Doherty wasn't
quite as relaxed when Maurice .
McAfee hit ·a three-pointer
with 2:09 left to cut Notre
Dame's lead down to 64-61.
But Irish All-American Troy
Murphy converted a three-.
point play on Notre Dame's
next possession, and the Irish
(20-14) hit their free throws
to seal the win.
Freshman Matt Carroll,
who finished with 13 pointS,
was 6-of-6 from the line duriug that stretch. The Irish
were 21 -of-27 from the foul
line, while Xavier (21-12) was
6-of-11.
"We were saying we're still
in this game; let's get it done/'
McAfee said of the 61-58
deficit. "We didn't get it done,
GOOD GAME- Kent's Demetrick Shaw (10) consoles Gary Buchanan of Villanova following the Golden
though, and it was over."
. Flashes' NIT second round win last night.' (AP)

..:e

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Freshman's free throws lift la. Tech past Vandy
Bv CHUCK SIHOI'FNI!R
AP SPORTS WRITER

With 2.5 seconds left and his team trailing by a point, Leon Bar~t~ore's coaching
future hif!ged on the ner\Tes of a freshman.
Luckily for Barmore, she had plenty. .
Catrina Frierson calmly sank two free
throws, and 'Louisiana Tech escaped with. a
66-65 victory over Vanderbilt 'i n the -Midwest Regional on Monday night, keeping
Barmore as its coach for at least one more
game.
"That was pretty scary all right," Frierson admitte&lt;l. "But if you want to be a big
player, you have to make big plays."Frierson canie through after the topseeded Lady Techsters blew- an It-point
· second-half lead in the final home game

of Barmore's storied 18-year head .coaching career at Tech .
It almost was his last game, period, but
. the Lady Techsters (30- 2) survived to play
another day in the regional semifinals.
Barmore announced last week he would
retire when Tech's tournament run ends.
"Coach told me just to relax," Frierson
said. "He said he knew I could make
them, and I did."
The two other No. 1 seeds playing
Monday night, Tennessee in the Mideast
and Georgia in the West, also kept their
title hopes alive. But Purdue's run at a sec.ond consecutive championship is over,
ended by, a 76-74 loss at home to Ok.la~
homa, which trailed at one time by 17.

Tennessee, winner of six national championships. beat Arizona 75-60, and Georgia defeated Stanfurd 83-64. Connecticut,
the top seeded team in the East, advanced
with an 83-45 victory over Clemson on
Sunday night.
In other games Monday. Duke beat
Western Kentucky 90-70 in the East;
Texas Tech downed Tulane 76-59 in the
Mideast; Old Dominion defeated Southern Methodist 96-76 in the Midwest and
~~;:h Carolina beat Rice 83-50 in~the
Three . of the top 16 seeds failed o
advance. to the regional semifinals afte all
16 made it last year. Those losing ere
Purdue, seeded fourth in the East; third-

New limps

'

HOTEL RESORT AND
GoLF

Lih\wins NAIA
men's title

. NEW YORK (AP) ~ Ratings
for the first four days of the
NCAA men's basketball tournaJ;Ilent. were the highest since
1994, up an average of 6 percent
over last year. when CBS received
i~ lowest mark since showing it
in 1982. ·
·
Eight seGond-round games .
Sunday scored overnight ranngs
between 4.2 and 9.2 and shares
from 10 to 17, Nielsen Media
Research said.
The tournament- to-date averages were a 5.7 rnting and 12
share, a hike from the 5.4/12 for
the first four days of 1999's cover'
age.

l X]bether you're driving down I -65 ~rom the .Qhio
VV Valley, down I-85 from the Carolinas, or along the

And now the famous

Kelit moves on, Xavier falls
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ratings up
6 percent ·
'

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HIGHLIGHTS

NCAA men's TV

.

&gt;

'TuEsDAY's

l'uescbly, -.rch ]1, ]000

·~·" .. '

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1,.,,

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All-Stars
light it up .
"

bid for backup job

1
G. SPENCER 011011111~
· OVP STAFf WRITER

RIO GRAJtoiDE - Eastern's
Josh Wi!Jied all scorers with iS
points, and ·Southern's Chris
Randqlph and Ironton's Jason
Harmon had 13-point efforts to
help drive the Division III-IV
boys' all-star team to a 67-51
win over the Division 1-11 allstars Monday night at the University of Rio Grande's Newt
Oliver Arena.
Will's · 13-polnt first: half was
the only performance' of its kind
ill' either game. But when the Ill stars focused too much on the
6-foot-3 Will, . Randolph and
Harmon made .them pay with
deep' strikes from the perimete~.
Will created the game's first ne
·and had scored ~e last of t~e
.eight lead-chang~ng · ~aske~ m
the first half. Befm:e halftime,

PIUH 1H NCAA. Pllp 81

Santiago makes ·

Dist~ijq 13

BY

seeded Mississippi State in the West; and
fourth-seeded Cal Santa Barbara in the
West.
In ~he regional semifinals, all 'Sat'urday
night, it will be Connecticut vs. Oklahoma and Duke vs. lSU in th e East at
Richmond, Va.; Tennessee vs.Virginia and
Texas Tech vs. Notre Dame in th e Mideast
at Memphis; Louisiana Tech vs'. Old
Dominion and Penn State vs. Iowa State
in the Midwest at Kansas City; and Georgia vs. North Carolina and Rutgers vs .
Alabama-Birmingham in the West.
Louisiana. Tech fans saluted Barmore
when he walked onto the court Monday,
chanting his name and waving signs th at

IRON WILL- Eastern's Josh Will (right) takes the ball to the basket
during the District 13 All·Star GaJ;I~.e. (G. Spencer Osborne photo)
Gallia Academy's Brian Sitrui and
Jerem)' Payton Belpre's Brandon
Burnfield, Athens' · Andrew
· Coble, Ironton St. Joe's Eric and
John Wagi!Jger, Hatmon and

Rock Hill's Tanner' Heaberlin
would join WiU in scoring
game-tying. and/or lead-chang- ,

PI••• HI D-IJ. Pllp B2

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) The Cincinn'ati Reds were
looking for a No. 3 catcher
when they signed Benito Santiago to a minor league contract last month. He's making a:
strong bid for something better.
Santiago is challenging Jason
LaRue for the -backup job by
showing flashes of what he
could do earlier in his career.
He has retained some of the
swagger from 13 years ago,
when he was a brash, 22-yearold, catcher .for the San Diego
Padres on his way ,to .being
named the National League's·
Rookie of the Year.
The four-time All-Star has
· since bounced around the
league, including a stint with
Cincinnati in 1995. He broke
his pelvis and right knee in a
car accident in Fort Laud-

erdale, Fla., before the 1998
season, temporar,ily sidetracking his career:
Last season, Santiago threw
out 23 of 65 runners trying to
steal and batted .249 in 1'07
games for the c ·hicago Cubs.
When the Redf signed San·
tiago, 35, as a free agent on Feb.
24, they were 10 o"ing to add
some depth in case either
starter Eddie Taubensee or
LaRue got hurt.
Santiago is hitting .3211 this
spring, challenging for tile
backup job. If the Reds don't
keep him on the opening day
roster, he has the . option 'of
going to another team.
LaRue, 26, impressed the
Reds'Jast seas.o n, his first in th e
majors. He hit .211 in 36
· games but was solid defensively
and caught three of the Reds '
four one-hitters.

•..

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'I

�Sentinel

Middleport Ohio
Public Nollce

Chesapeake s Katt Fulle r (nme p omts) Waugh
(fo ur) and no one else T hey also miSsed fo ur
A
o ut o f SIX free throws m the fir st half
B1
Eastern 5 Becky Davu Me1gs J enmfer Shnm
phn and Southern 5 Kim !hie got two pomts
lead changmg baske ts
each m the first half In th e second half Fuller s
But Wtll s lead-c hangmg stickback JUmper layup and Davu free throw p ulle d the b1 g
near the stx- mtnute mark wht c h put the III-IV school sta rs lead mro sm gle d1g1t la nd (38 30)
stars ahead 24 23 was the one that put the for the last t1me Then the I II stns went on a
small-school h e roes on the road to learuqg for 9 Q run fueled by three pomters from Matkms
good
Thompson and V mton County s Behnda H ayes
Harmon s seven pomts two more from Wtll to permanendy ktck thetr lead 10to double
and two from Randolph put the III IV stars on d1g1t country
thetr way to clatmmg a s1x pomt lead at half
Among the local all stars also seemg time m
ttme
the contest was Galha Academy s Lmdsey
As the I II stars found thetr second-half Mulhns
offense getllng only repeat efforts from Alexan
In a change from prevwu, years the clock
der s Enc Gabnel (stx pomts) Warren Locals was stopped only after fouls requmng foul
Shaun Coffman and South Pomt s B J Farrell shots or at five mmute mtervals ro allow for
(fGur each) Randolph found the three pomt subslltuhons
stroke to the tune of mne post halfllme pomts
Fatrland s Jay Capper held scoreless m the first
Southern s Kyle Norm Logan s Kahe McB
half CaJlle ahve offenstvely and scored all of hts room and Ironton s Jason Harmon were the
stx pomrs m the second half
Winners m the three pomt shootmg contests
Also seemg playmg ttme was the Me1gs and the slam dunk contest respectively dunng
Marauders Steve Beha
the three mterm1ss1ons of Monday mght s Dts
In a change from prev10us years the clock tnct 13 all star basketball doubleheader at the
was stopped only after fouls requmng foul Umvernty ofR1o Grande s Newt Ohver Arena
shots or at five mmure mtervals to allow for
Norns a JUmor guard for the Tornadoes sank
substJ tuttons
four out of five - the number of competitors
Double figure offense from the Logan Ch1ef. (19) prodded the tournament duecrors to 1 mit
tams Katte McBroom and Abbey Jennmgs and the shots m the boys competition to five per
Rock Htll s Mtchelle Matkms gave the D1vmon player - to lead the way
I II g1rls all star team most of what It needed
Seven sank three out of five 10dudmg East
to reguter a 77 52 wm over the DIVISion III IV ern s Matt Btssell Among other locals part1c1
all-stars
patmg m thts contest were Galha Academy s
McBroom working smoothly With Jenmngs J C Ohhnger and Southern s Chns Randolph
and teammate Kmtm Thompson repeatedly (both went 2 for-5)
worked the fast break as 1f the rest of theu
McBroom a semor guard for the Ch1eftams
teammates m purple were w1th them They had sank eight out of 10 to lead the 16 player guls
12 of the big school stars first 16 pomts m the field
first 13 13 before Jacksons Kmten Starkey
Alexander&amp; Natahe Bobo (7 of 10) was the
lobbed a three-pomter from the left wtng wtth only one to approach McBroom s effort
6 12 left m the first half
Among the local shooters m that competition
From that pomt forward the I-II stars never were Me1gs Brooke Wdhams (6-for-10) East
traded
ern s Amber Baker Galha Academy s Bnanna
The I-ll stars who repeatedly reaped pomts Johnson (both went 5-for-10) and R1ver Val
tn the pamt and at the foul hne (7 of 8 free ley s Cynthia Ward (1 - of-10)
throws m the first half) led by I 0 m the last
The 5-foot-11 Harmon a semor guard for
1 40 of the first half before South Galha s the Tigers was g1ven the most spmted applause
Rachel Waugh sank two foul shots wuh 1 20 for hiS dunks Among the competitors 10 the
left to tnm the lead to 29-21 But McBroom s field of e1ght were Eastern s Matt S1mpson
trey and Matkins buzzer beating layup fattened Galha Academy s Bnan S1ms and Metgs J P
the 1-11 stars lead to a 34 21 nft at halfttme
Staats
1
The Ill IV stars got repeat offense from

D-13

Lcwn .....

NCAA
front Page 11
that read Thanks for the Memories Leon and
We love you Leon
Afterwards fans agam chanted Barmore s name
uptil he returned to the court to acknowledge
them
Fnerson led Lomstana Tech wuh 18 pomts
Chantelle Anderson scored 23 for mnth-seeded
Vanderbilt (21 13)
Ftfth seeded Oklahoma rallied agamst P1,1rdue
after trailing 42 25 m the first half and 59 46 With
1t mmutes left LaNe1shea Caufield who led Ok!a
homa (25 7) With 26 pomts sank two free throws
With 1 03 left to g1ve the Sooners a 73 32 lead and
they held on
They never lost fatth sud coach Shern Coale
who" turned Oklahoma mto a wmner after a 5 22
season m 1996-97 They never doubted they
would wm
Camille Cooper scored a career htgh 34 pomts
for Purdue (23-8)

EAST
At Durham, N C

Duke 90, Western Kentucky 70
Second-seeded Duke (28 5) the national runner
up last year got 25 pomts each from Georgta
Schweitzer and freshman Sheana Masch to make
the regtonal seffilfinals for the third stra1ght year
ShaRae Mansfield scored 21 for I Oth seeded Western Kentucky (22 9) wh1ch had only rune act1ve
players

MIDEAST
At KnOxville, Tenn
Tennessee 75, AriZona 60
All-Amencan Tannka Catchings scored 21 pomts
to lead Tennessee which never trailed after she

scored for a 4 3 lead The Lady Vols were so qmck
m transttlon that Anzona dtd not score a smgle fast
break pomt Angela Lackey had 13 pomts for
eighth seeded Anzona (25-7)
At Lubbock, Texas

Texas Tech 76, Tulane 59

SHERIFF'S SALE
A!ALESTATE
CASE NO IIICV072
UNITED COMPANIES
LENDING CORPORATION
PLAINTIFF
V8
SAMUEL A. GIBBS till
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
In pureuenct of tn Ordlr
ol Ball to '"' directed frGm
11ld Court In tht abD¥1
enthl•• •ollon I will l l q l to Hit at Public Auction at
,.,. CourthoU.. on Aprtl14,
2000 at 10 1a am of Hid
day IM following dMcrlbld

....
Public Notice
SHERIFFS SALE
REAL ESTATE

CASE NO tiCV071
UNITED COIIPAHIII

i.INDING COIII'OIIATIOH
PLAINTI'I'
yt
IAMUILA. GteU, ....

of Hit
.htmn M Souleby
8hellll MtJp County
Chrllltl111 M Utpokl
lAmer,
Stmpton
&amp;
AlllhfuH
120 E Fourth Street 8th

Floor
Cincinnati Ohio 41202
(113) .2 414100
OH 8up Ct 10070081
(3) 7 14 21 3TC

-

Situated In tM State of
Ohio County of Melgt
Bllltbury
TDM!Ihlp
Mlddl1part Vlll1g1 In the
Vlll191 o1 Hobeon Btctlon
28 In 100 ICfl Iota 314-3211
Town 1 Range 13 WMI end
11 recorded In Volu1111 3
Plfll I ol the Melp County
Plat recordt
Being the North helf
Lot 120 In btocM f1
Vllllgl of Hobeon Mlllgtl
County OhiO
Prior
lnetrumtnl
reference Volume 11
e13

Public Notice

Public Notice

March 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Public NoCice

Il·c~o~nzv~•v~•:nat!h~t·:::=~~~
'oar.

COURT OF COMMON
ltlng lht 11me rtll iOiilh-- o;; AOrth enc1
Romine toy deed
PLEAS
tttate conveyed by Miry of the following dtecrlbtd
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Dul4tnely to Albert Romine rttl Begtnnlng 40 flit E11t November 2 1MO,
In pu,..,...,. of an Order and Dore Romine by dtld and South I 3/4 dqre11 -ded Vol. 1154 II
E11t llvt (II) rode from lht •11 o1 tht
o1 Bait to ""' directed fl'om datad September 8 1130
llld Court In the tbove end recorded In Vol 133 II Southtaet comer ol Lot Ho of 11e1p County:
tnU- ectlon I will txpOM Ptge 331 of lht Recorda of
1 u ~rlbtd In tht pill of
Prlo r
I n1tru1 m~~.!J~;~
,.,..,_ 8e
to 11le 11 public IIUCIIoo 11 Dteda of Melg1 County Mertlntburg (now Dexter)
the &lt;:!lllrthoutt on AprN 14 Ohio Albert Romine leter thence Soutlf l-3/4 aor~~• 113.
Proparty Add200diWt 10 1 m ol eald conveying hie lnttreat to E11t 11 rode IMnct North
81 1/4 degrete Elll 10 eOWLES ROAD DEXTEj\
day tht following dttcrlbtd :o:a~I'II;~R~om~~:lne by dMd deltd rods lhtn.. North 40 1/2 OH 457211
'
,..ltatate
2 1840 and
Appqi-II$30000DO-::
PARCEL NO 1 Th• 1
In Vol 133 11 Plfll aorttl Will 12 rode tnd
Tt11!11 o f . , C11il
lollowlng dttcrlbed reel
llecorde ol o..dl 2 1/2 1 - thence Wnt 3
rods to the place of Jemu M Saoolaby
ealtte altueltd In the
Ohio
Shtrlfl Melgl County
Townehlp of Selem In tilt
3 Tht bttllnnlng
iltlng tht 11m1 roel M1llnd1 L. IAngeton
County of Mtlge and Stela
dtlcrlbtd rtll
Sempton
&amp;
of Ohio In Section No 5
In tilt eatete conveyed by 111ry lAmer
Town No 8 lltnge No 15 of
of Salem In tht Duleney to Albert Romine AolhfuM
the Ohio Compeny 1
of Melga and State end Dora llomlnt by deed 120 E Fourth Street ..h
dlltd September • 1830
Purchue In the Vlllegt ol
In SectiOn No 5
Dexter Beginning Ent 40
8 end flange No end recorded In Vol 133 11 Clnclnnltl Ohio 45202
Plfll 331 or tht IIICOrde Of (513)241-3100
feet and Soulh a 3/4
Ohio Company t
dtgrtea Etat 5 rode tram
In tht Vlllege of Dttdt of M1lg1 County OH Sup Ct fOOU75I
the Southtllt corner ol Lot
undtd end Ohio Albert Romine later (3) 7 14 21 3TC
No 1 In the VIllage or
1a follows Being
110 Help Wanted
MarUnaburg (now Dexter) lt tract of land IItty elx (56)
thence South 8-3/4 dtg,_ foot In width North and
E11t 11 rode thence North
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
81 1/4 dtgretl Eat! 10
rode thence North 40 1/2
CURRENTLY HAS OPENINGS IN MEIGS COUNTY
degrttl Weot 12 roda and
1) 40 hrs/Wk 3 pm Mon thru 8 am Sat sleep ovec
2 112 lnchta thence Weol 3
rode to the place of
required daytime hours off:
beginning
Excepting
Position tieneflts lnclude heallh/dentaltnsurance
thererram a percal of ltnd
and !vacation/sick t1me
58 IMI In width North and
South acro1a tM Norlh end
2) 33 hi'S/Wk B am Sat thru 8 am Mon sleoeo-cwerc1
of lht above deacrlbed real
requtred
oatatt
3)
Emergency
Rehel (Substitutes) hours
lolng the tame real
eatata o;onvayed by Jennie
scheduled as needed
L Murry to Albert llomlnt
We
are searching for compassionate pro,fesslot~Bill
and Dore Romine by deed
a
team vision and a desire to teach personal
dated September 2 1919
and recorded In Vol 120 at
997
comm1unl'ly skills to Individuals with mental retardation
Pegt 308 ol the Recorda of
In lovmg mtmory of
work environment s Informal and rewarding
Dttdl at Mtlgt County
rr:/
'R """
are high school d plomaJGED valid
Ohio Albert Romine later
lttrlv"''g
license
three years good driving experience
convoying hie lnter11t to
who paiMCI IWIY on
adequate automobile Insurance coverage B C S
Dora Romine by dttd dated
Mlroh 21 1•7
November 2 1840 end
looked around H a
I ~fers comprehensive training In the field of MR/00
garden and found an
recorded In Vol 1154 II Pega
I Startlr1g salary $5 50thors Interested applicants need
81 a o1 the Record• of Dnde
empty place
soaellv pos tlon of Interest and send resume to
of Mtlgl County Ohio
He then looked dOwn upon
PARCEL NO 2 Tht
thla earth and saw your
~0 Box604
following d..crlbtd rill
~red face
IIIII I IIIUIIId In
He put Hie erma around
OH 45640-0604
Townehlp of Selem In
you and lifted you to
applloatlons must be post marked by 3/2a/OO
County of Melgl lnd lh
rest
Equal Opportunity Employer
Stale ol Ohio Stctlan
God a garden mull be
Town No 8 and
beautiful He always
15 ol tht Ohio
takes the bell
Purchett In the
He knew that you were auf
Dolder Beginning
faring He knew you
Southaaet corner of Lot
were In pain
1 In VIllage of Martlneburg Ill ,And ·He knew you would
(now Dexter) thence Ea1t
n8\ler get well on earth
40 feat thence South 8 3/4
again
dagttel Eut 5 rode thence lie saw the road was gat
Eaet 3 rode tho beglnnlnJI
ling rough and the hllls
point of the land herein
were hard to c 1mb
conveyed
thence
Heclosedyourweary
Southeaat 12 rods and 21
eyel ds and whispered
llnka or to the Southeast
peace be thine •
corner of the lot known aa
b oke our hearts to loae
the Oscar Wllaon one half
you but you d dn t go
acre lot now or formerly
alone
owned by Oore llomlnt
part of us went wnh
RESIDENTIAU//f/1//COMMERCIAL
thence Eut to the etnter of
you the day God called
FREE ESTIMATES " FULLY INSURED N
the Croak Ia a point due
you home
E11t to the place of
Sndly miSsed by dnugliter
R
Brain Morrison I Raone, Oh1o
beginning thence Wtat to
'Rulli Strode nnd sons
y
t~e place of beginning
'1Jrl/ nnd 'Bob
containing one hall (1/2)
acre more c:Jr ••••

oo

,I

'-leanor

w•ng ett

Jackson,

\'8 And God Co ns P ootse a

C amonds An que Jew&amp;l y Gold
A nos Pre 930 u s Cur ency
Ste ng Etc Acqu sit ona JaM y
M T S Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipoll&amp; 740..wtl 2842

FREE Semp e Love Ta ot Bv
P~one L vt t On 1 Spec al Zll
Reun t ng lowers
GUAR
ANTEEO 24 Hra 877 LOVE

Wanted ea ly models Kawasaki
196940

a

mode a runn ng o

not, 740-896-1210

2811

Gentiaman Seeking Companakm
1~ l'lom Nco Fomalt Fo Tillks
Wolko &amp; F ond1h p Send Ae
Plflt To 553 Second Avenue
Aptrlmtnt U03 Go llpollt OH
45131

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

1:!!1'17315

0

f

l

REPORTER

QOT A CAMPGROUND Mom
bfrlh p 0 Timeshare? Well
TCkt ltl A.mtr ea 1 Moat Sue
e-.sru Campg ound And T me
1hare A11a 1 Ctea nghouae Call
R•aon Sales lnternatlonal 1 800
! t 5 : : 24 Houra www eso t
DO
FACIAL
EXERCISES
WORK?
DON T WANT TO
S~END A LOT TO FIND OUT
Fqr Bulc Exorclatl Send S3
SoH Add lOUd Stamped En..
OfiO To LAB ENTERPRISE PO
Bo• 3141 South Bend lnd ana
~ 9.014
FLORIDA MARCO ISLANO En
joy Tht Top ca Pa ad sa Of
Btachts And Relaxation Beach
Fl'bnt Condo• 0 Hom11 Fo
A_,l Salt Century 2 tat Sou h
ern Truat
1 800 255 9487
wwwc2tl1)arcocom

P/B CONTRACTORS. INC.

New To YouTh ft Shoppe
9 Wt&amp;t St maon Athens
740-592 842
0Ually C Olhlng and household
1tem1 $ t 00 bag salt every
Tllu Idly Monday th u Satu ~BY

starting

with ""'"'1•1 Are You Connected? Internet

40JK Plan

lnsttran&lt;:e, Paid Vacation
Pleasant

Interview coru;ldct~tlolnl
your resume and rm~••
letter telling us

Oh1o Valley
Pubbsh1ng Co

ARE YOU READY
FOR AN E.COMMERCE
BUSINESS?
$25 o$75/HR PT 1FT
I-IIHCIOo133t EKt 1211

A88EMBLY AT HOMIII Cratta
Toys Jewelry Wood Sew ng
JYp ng G eat Payl CALL 1 800
79&amp;-0380 Ext 120 (24 Hra)

Attention Publisher

825 2nd Ave
Galbpolis Ohio 45631

ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME
MY Ch ld en Como To My 011 ce
Everyday Ea n $500 $1 500 PT
$2 000 $4 500 FT
Cal eae 842 5078
ATTENTION WORK FROM
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Mo $2 000 $4 500 + PT Mo
www stayhomeb z com ~ 800
940-7424

6 Ml!&lt;ld Breid Puppies 4 Boy&amp; 2
Girls Very Cutel 740 245 9082
740-2~.0114

Found Lklla While &amp; Back Long
Ha .-ct Cog No Co a Ho ze C
n c l'arklng Lot 740 448 1884
Or 7A0-448-5260

Are You Connected'? Internet
U1o a Neodedl $350 1500 Per
Week VIII Our Webello AI
www ez ~ no t-888 32 7083

Home com

Giveaway

To Good Homea Full Blooded
Co) e Dogs &amp; Pups 740 448
41jAnyllmo

$7 HR FT +BONUS
2 ~M tl ~M
,
No Fundralslng
tl
No Cold CaiHng No Sa I ng:J'
Help Aocru~ VOlunteers
VA Tho Phone
AJ&lt;ed WOrl&lt; Schedule ~
l1W m&gt;nl Bt s.nt Rome
Fe Low Rdsu"s t
CAREER POTtNTIAL
..,1500 Employee Company
In BIAIIness IS Yeats
EXPANOING TO THE
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We Offer You
Weekly Pay &amp; Woel&lt;l)' BonUS'
Full Health Saner Is
401 K Plan Arta 3 Mos
\
(50% Co Matchl
1 Week Pad Vacat on
....

f!

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ATTN POMEROY Po&amp; al post
tons cle ks ca a &amp;I so tars No
experience equ red Benef ts For
exam salary &amp; testing Info matlon
calli (630) 838 9243 ex 7151
Bem 8pm 7 days
Ann Work From Home Earn Up
To $2 000 Pa 1 Tme $10 000
Full Time Fu Tra n ng Provided
Cal Fo A Free Bookltl 1 888
849-2256
AVONI All Areosl To Buy or Sa I
Shl ley Spears 304-67&amp;- 429

Qood Benefits

Own A Compulor
Put nowor1&lt;
$300 $800 F-. WMk
1-888-900-8065

AIM Neerltt1

00. for localagonl bullciWl;
domicile puling 'N1I, ftBII and

6 MO$

7 Pa d Ho ldays
Fo Mo e Informal on
CALL FOR AN INTERVIEW
1 888 237 5647 Ext 965

.. , •NPftrAA INWAY..
Bwwlru

•

OR IVERS Cannon E•p tiS
88% Orlvor No Touch Frt ghl
Start AI 341 M IB'Y + ~xp
33e M /4Yr 32&amp; M 13 Yr 311
M 12Y 301M
Y .28CM
te Mot 1 Vr 28C M Ill Mol Or
Leu 11'1 not 0 1 Mo E11p $350
Wk Pay Ralu Every 8 Months
Bonuua Rider Program Pa d
vacat ona Ina Ava I www can
nonexprtsa com Ca I Fo Detail•

ng No E~~portonee NHCftd Ea n
Up To $32 000 !Yr fu I Bontflll
Ca Todoy
1 877 230 1002
Sunday 9 II M I PM Mon Fr1 8
AM BPM PAMTran1port
www 123pam com
DRIVING POBITION8
AVAILABLE
CLAS8AOTR
SlngloOriVer Loll Modol Ken
worths W h RHNirl West Coati
Carrier
MUST BE
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A1LIU12 Ytor* Experience
GOOd MVA
Woo~y Pay
Htallft lnauranco Aval"bla
Wo k Well With Tho PlA&gt; lc
Fot Mo a lnlormstton Cal 800
4378764Hn 830AM 5PM
EARN $26 000 TO S50 000 IVA
Mad cal lnauranct 811 ng Ass a
ance Needed lmmed ate yt use
Your Home Computer Fo G eat
Po ant at Annual Income Call
Now Cal 1 800 281 46113 Dept I

109

EARN EKTAA MONEY
Qe lverlng Tho Ohio VaJty

To ephono D octory
You Mull Be 18 Ytora Or
Ode WthAnlnsu tdVehca
For More Info mat on Please Cal
HJOD-247-4708

On y Qua !fled Applicants Need

Apply To Holzer Cl n c Human
Re atlons Oepa tment 90 Jack
son P ke Ga pol a Ohio 45831
1562 F~• To 740 448 5532 Or
Call 740 446 5189 Equal Oppo
1un1ty Emp~

Help Wanted Mod cal
MLT
(ASCP Reglsered Or E lg
For
loca Laboratory 12 30 0
9 ooPm M fn carry Pagor a 3Ad
Weekend Resume To P 0 Box
33 GaJIIpoUe Ohio 45631

IHl

A1J. Ylld SaiH Mutt

h Plld In Advlnco
• QEAQLWE 2 00 p.m
• lht day - l h t td
•• •• to MJn 8unctoy

HONEST INCOME! Help People
Receive Government Refunds
From Home Fret Data ts 1 aoo
9611 3599 Ext 2601

-

200pm
• FfldiJ Mondly ICIIfon
: 1:30 1 m Saturdly

lnte asted In Buy 1'1g Or Selling
Avon? Cal Ma anle Your Loca
Independent Sales Ffepreaenta
tive At 74Q-258-9285.

Notice

825 2nd Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 45631

Property eddrtll 29157
LAGOON ROAD
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45780
Apprelltd 11$10.00000
Ttrml of Hie C11h
J111111 M Soultby
Sheriff Mtlga County
Chrllllnl M Utpald
Ltrntr
Sampeon
I
flolhfull
120 E Fourth Street
Floor

Plt111nt Va ley Nu 1 ng an&lt;! At
habll ration Center ha• an open
lng tor an Admlaalon Market ng
Coo dlnator RN with th 11 yeart
c nlca nu 1 ng txpe ltnce
long-term care ot thaD litat on
experlenct p eterred Competl
1 vt 11 ary and benet 1 Subm 1
re1umt to Pleaaant va ley Hoa
p tal c o Per1onnel 2520 Valley
Or Pt Plt111nt WV 255!50 a
futo (304)e7&amp;-6975 .WEOE

MEDICAL B LLING Groot Earn
lng Potentia Ful Training Com
p\Jter Aeq d 888 880 6693 E•l

4320

(513) 241-31,,00~..........
OH Sup Ct 10070015
(3) 7 14, 21 3TC

This 118W1paper w I not
"""""ng y accept
advertisements for raalastate
which 1 n vlo aUon of he
aw ou eadera are hereby
nformad that a dwel nga
adve~ sed n lhll nowspape
a e ava lablt on an aqua
opponunlty baa a

310 Home• for

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO
recommends tl'lat you do bull
neu with peop 1 you know and
NOT to aend money through tho
ma urm you have Investigated
the o lerlng
STAY HOMEI MAKE MONEY
HELP NG PEOPLE RECEIVE
GOVERNMENT
REFUNDS
FROM HOME FREE DETAILS!
(24 Ht Recorded M11sage1
1100-725 24t7 Ext 5046
TAKE IACI( YOUR LIFEI Bt
You Own Bout Earn .An bt a
$500 $1 600 PT 0 $2 000
$ 500 FT Per Mon h 100 335

0427

WWW

glablllllalllloO!II-CQm

UP TO $20 000 $45 000 II Per
Year Earn r1Q Potent a Or'e Need
People To Process C alma You
Can Wo k From Home We Train
MUST Own Computo Modem 1
888-332-50 5 Ext 1700 /Dally
URGENTLY NEEDED p aama
dOnora earn $35 o $45 1o 2 o 3
hou o wukly Cal Sara Toe 74o592 61151
WANTED 42 People To Loae Up
To 30 bs In 30 Cays All Nalu a
Ooctor Recommended 100%
Guaranteed Cell 1 877 4 4 TH ~
0 ww.. oz2Bth n com

150

Andrtw And Jot 1 Ltwnmow ng
And SMith Cltarlng Sorvlct 740-

IM8-17fl
Bobyallltr Neodod Thurodey
Through Sundoy My Homo Pro
It ob y Rtfo tncto Roqulrod
740-441 9511

Reduc· I

• Easy Qualifying
• Fast Sarvoce

PubUc Notice

• Low Payments

SHERIFF 8 BALE
III!AL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER lliCVOSI
CPNTIIIOIITAOE

1&gt;100-332 2411

MEDICAL BILL NG Un mlled n
come Potent a No Expe ence
Nncessa v F ee lnlo mallon &amp;
CO ROM Investment $4 995
$8 995 Financing Available Is
and Au oma ad Mad ca Sarv c
es Inc 800 322 1139 Exl 050
Vod InKY IN CT
Need A Loan? T y Debt Conaol
dalton $5 000 $200 ooo Bad
Cred I 0 K Fee 800 770 0092
EX12 5
NEW AUTOMATED HOME
BUSINESS Qu ckly EB n A Ful
T me ncome No Sell ng Unl m t
ad Income Vat h p www ell e
qu ck y ne cb To See &amp; Hea
Compte e Presenta on

~0 Money

to Loan

$$ Auto Loans Personal Loans
Deb Consol da on Mo gages
And Ref nanc ng C edit P oblems
OK Consume s F nancla 1 800
247 5 25Exl 134 Void OH KS
$$$ NEEO CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Rema n ng Pavmen s
On P op.er y So d Mo tgages
Annu t es Settlements lmme
dial&amp; Quotes I NobOdy Beats
Our Pr ces Nat one Cont act
Buye s 800 490 073 Ex 1QI
www na 10na contractbUve s com
$FREE CASH NOW$ F om
Wea thy Fam es Un oad ng. Mil
lions Of Do ars To Hep Mnmze
The Taxes w te lmnl'ed a e y
Wlndla s 847 A SECONO AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
100 7

Nco Btck Homo 3 BR 3 Bahs
Oak Cabinets Bull In D shwash
er Compacta Cen a A C Gas
Heat lng ound Poo 18M32 au at
Nelghbo hood F nlshed Base
ment 1 05 Teodo a Ave (7-40)
448-8181 $1 9000

CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TVI E ase Bad C odll Laga y
F ee n1o 888&lt;159-2560
FREE DEBT CONSOLIOATION
App cat on w Service Reduce
Poymenla To 55% IICASH IN
CENT VE OFFEAII Ca I 1 BOO
328-1510 Ext 29
FREE DEBT CONSOLID~TION
Rtduct lnleroal Stop Oolloct en
Cl 11 HIYI 1 Mont111y l'llymtnl
FREE Confldtnllol Ht p OCS
Non-Proflt t-800 ~rn 8812

Profeealonal

Strvloll

WE SHOP 4 U new thopplng/&lt;11&gt;llvtry tt vee 740 992 97118 or
www..,•hDP' •llltavlall com
Stnfor dlacou.
hrllllan llWt&lt;f

10

• Confidential

llE AL EST II TE:
'

Oh10 Valley
Publishmg Co
10
!ncloood corgo troller 4 x8 or
sa to In goOO Condition. cal ?40-

8411,2010

Roonng, plumb ng &amp; odd lobs
740-~501 Ilk lor-~

Log loa(tfl operator &amp; limber cu
tet needed mUtt havt exptrl
once oal 740-985..wtll

I

S NO OOWN HOMES NO CAEil
It NEEOED GOV T FORE
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
PROVALI 1 800 380 4820 EXT
8509

W llllntttl vlny tiding tnd gut
ttrt oxperlfrw:td Wtllllfat otn
or rtttt
Fftt txt moltt

3 BA 2BA 2 Cor Otragt on 1
Acre litlll'ump 8 Mllto from
Sporn Plant $57 ooo (30.)882

(304)875-~304)815-7083

'

310 Home• for Sale

Stay AI Home Mom wonting to
do bebya lllng n my homo Aot
trOnCIS Avl lobll (304)871

-

825 2nd Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 4S631

01 F 00 P ct Deduction

2000
Model 32 wde Ovo $5 000 00
Off Yoyr Pdce $45 478 00
011 Foo P co Deduction 1492
SQ F 2000 Modtl Over
$4 OOQ oo a
Vour Price

$42 817 00

Homes A e 3 Bedroom• 2 Batha
P ~d ncludes Complete St up
Otho Spoclalo
S ng e A&amp; Low As $ 49 00
Man h Sec onats Aa Low As
$269 00 Mon h Come In 0 Col
Fo P e App ova a 1 888 515
0167 Loca 1 740 885 011?
T ada ns A e Also Welcome

330 Farms for Sale
16 ACRES &amp; POND
Beau fu meadow w h pond h d
den n woods Nea Jackaon

t.

3618

Attent on Developers
33 Acres A.pp oxlmata y o Ac a
Lake Mob e Home Idea Fo
Hous ng Campg ound Estate
$99 500 A !10 5 AC e LOti
$32 000 74Q-388 8876

320 Mobile Homes

for Sale
RENTALS

(11
AMAZNG
D ywa I 4BA 32x80 ove 2348
sq tt Payments low as $406 pe
mo B00-948 5678
(2) F s T me Buye s Easy F
nanc ng 2 and 3 Bed oom A
ound $200 Po Mon h Ca l 1
BOO 948 5878

(31
LOOK
5 Bed ooms 2 Baths ove 2 000
sq II fo less han $450 mo
FREE Do Ivery &amp; Sa 1 OOQ-948
5678
14Ft X 7QFI Shu z 3 Bd m 2
Baths Wllft 7 X 20 Expando C A
Approx 7 Ac ea M nutes F om
Schoo • $42 000 00 740 446
6345

2 Bed oom Stove Re gera o
Wate T ash Pa d n Coun y
$350 Mo P us Oepos t Also 2
Bed oom Mob e Home 740 388
837
2 Bed ooms $400/Mo Dapos t -&lt;t

s Months Aen Refe ences Ae
qu ed n A o Grande 740 245
9188
1967 Alcon mob e home t 2x55
$1900 740-742 2852
98 Ventura 14x70 S nglew de
Deck 10x8 On en ed lo 2BA
1 BA Gas HeaUNew Fu nace
$6 000 (304)-875-831 9
1982 w ndsor 2 Bedrooms 2
Ba n 1 2 Ac e Land Smal Ou
building $27 000 740 446-07~5

230

resume and

MARCH MADNESS SALE

MEQ CAL BILLER $15 $45 H1
Med cal B ng Softwa 1 Co"l)anv
Seeks Peop e To Procaas Medl
ca Cams From Home Tra nlng
Prov dtd Must Own Compu er 1
800.434-5518 E111 667

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Crodll
OK Frtt App CIIIOn U S Ap
p-Ony 1 877 710-1831

Pubbsher

CORPORATION

PLAINTI,
V8
L.ARRY HINDIIICKI till
DII'INDANTt

IIK"u ,

FLEETWOOD HOIIE8
7764 Sl AI 7
PAOCTOIMLLE OH 4HII
(Next To Foodla r)

740 286 0081

1985 Nashua Mobile Home
14M70 W h 7X2 Fac 0 y Pu
Ou 3 BR 1 112 BA Ctn a A
Appliances To a E ac 2 porch
ea Excellenl Cond lon $10 000
neg (304)875 2034 Leave Mea

sago

180 Mantlon Mob Ia Homo
141180 2 bldroom 1 llflh Ctntrol
A r To111 E octrlc Alldy lo
$111500 (740)-M8-i011
I til mo Buytll L~ or flO CredU
Ok on~ 11 Olkwoocl , . _ Go 1
poll 7-3003

3 Bedrooms Wa To Wa Car
pet Cen a A Gas Furnace
N ce Ya d In Ga pols No Pels
Aefe ences 740 446 2003 740
44&amp;1409

709 V and S eet 3 Bed oom t
t 2 bath Rent $300 plus depoe
I
Contac Becke at ERA Town &amp;
Country Rea Estate Broker
304)876-5548

420 Moblla Hom11
for Rent
114 Condo St eet MOblt Home ,.
&amp; Lot Fo So e $14 000 W
Conaldtr Lllind Con act 740
709-0064 Or 740 388 8591

Abondontd Homt Nttdt Owne
Poy Smo I Trtntltr Ftt &amp; Move
In 740-44t-3013
Brtnd lllow 3 ltdrooma 2 Btthl
On y $233/Mo Won I Lilt Hurry
740-3013
Con T Wtllt Your Tlll)t auollly
By Phone Now sw Or ow 1
888 738-3332
Oldlr Modol Trt o for 11 e 1 1/2
Bedroom Muat go/btst ouer
Fl 11 tral or on loft Comp Coney

CASHLOANSI
• Bad Credit OK

16xBO $273 Per Mon h Low
Down Payment 1-800.e81-&amp;177

FRITO LAY PEPSI/HERSHEY
SNACK AND SOOA VEND NG
ROUTE $$ ALL CASH BUSI
NESSSS BU LD A BUS NESS
THAT IS ALL YOURS SMALL
INVESTMENT
EXCELLENT
PROF TS 1 800 731 7233 EXT
1203

School•

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GAEE QUICKLY Bacha o s
Maste s Doctorate By Corre
apondence Baaed Upon P or Education And Sho t S udy Cou:n
For FREE Informal on Book tl
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 8644318

14 Wide 3 Bedroom 2 Ba h
$209 Par Mon h Low Down Pay
mont 1-81»69 -em

FREE ANT AGING TAPE As
Seen On Nat anal TV Ret 1 In
( 1) Year Ca I 24 Hou Aeco dod
Mouage t 800 468 9222 Ext
1800

WILDLIFE JOBS To $2 60 IHA
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDEO FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL I 800 813
3585 EXT 142 1 8 A Ill 9 PM
70AVSMs nc

Golllpollo Ct- Collogt
(Caraers CION To Homtl
Ca1To&lt;tayl740 446-4367
11100-214.()452
Rog 190-05 2748

6777

llOD-SOD-3470

t) 40 H s /Wk 3 PM Mon Thru 8
A M Sal Sleep over Required
Day lmo Hours Off Posit on Bene
1ts nclude Health Dental In
surance And vacation S ck
Time 2) 33 Hrs IWk 8 A 1,1 So\
Thru a A M Mon Sleep Over
Aequl ed 3) Emergency Aallef
Substllu as) Hours Scheduled
As Needed
We A a Sea ch ng For Compoo
slana e P ofesalona a W ttl A
Team Vis on And A Desire To
:reach Pe sonal And Community
Sk 1a To lnd vldua a w h Mental
At a dation T~e Wo k Environ
ment Is lnforma And Reward ng
The Requirements Are High
School Diploma G~D Val d D lv
er a License Three valrs Good
o v ng Expe lenca And Ade
quatt Automoc le Insurance
Cove ago B C S Offers Compro
hon&amp; vo Tra nlng fn Tha Flo d Of
MA DO Start ng Sola y $5 50
Hour In erested App lcants Need
To Spec fy Position 01 ntereat
And Send Resume To P 0 Box
604 Jackson OH 45640 0604
A App leal ons Must Be PoSt
Marl&lt;ed By 3128 00 Equa Oppo
!lilly Employer

Bualneas
Training

A ZERO% DOWN LOAN!
No Down Payment Requ ed With
Governmen Sponso ad Loan
Good Cred t And Steady Income
Aequ ed Cai Fo Mo e lnforma
tlon Af'Jd Fo Other Finane ng Op
1 ons Independence Mo tgage
Sorv~1 1 800 84!1-0038

Ooub ew de S24P Pt Mon n
Low Down Paym•nl 1 800 691

AT&amp;T BELL PAYPHONE RTS
20 Eo Loco! ona (Local)
UpTo$1 IOOWk

nMo~County

140

Sale

AUT MCI SPRINT 1 Coni
PHONE CARD ROUTE Make
$1 000 $5 000 /Wk ALL CASH!
FREE lnlol 1 800 997 9888 Ex I
1155 (24 Hra)

WAioiTED Buclleya Community
Sarv oaa Current y Has Openings

flatU Brotntra AmUIII!IInl Co If
ntt tlttd to travel pleue cat
740 ~81 2950 Muot bt 11 tntt
18 yoara old

ClnoliiiiiU Ohio 41202

All rea eltate advettlalng n
this newspaf)8&lt; s subjecllo
tho Federal Fair Hou~ng Act
ofleee wh~h make• k toga
to advertlae anv p eferaooe
mltation or dlacrlm nation
b81ed on roco color ra lgton
nx fam I a! statUI or nat onal
orlg r,1 or any ntentlon o
make any such preference
limitation or dlacrtm nation

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I

Ke1tha Dickerson s runnmg 3 pomter at the half
time buzzer gave Texas Teclt (27 4) a 36 24 lead
and the th1rd seeded Lady Raiders kept Tulane at
bay m the second half Plenette P1erson led Tech
With 19 pomts Aleah Johnson Karma 0 Neal and
Tarusha Ellison each scored 12 Grace Daley had 24
for SIXth seeded Tulane (27-5)
MIDWEST
At Norfolk, Va
Old Domm1on 96, SMU 76
Luc1enne Berthieu scored 22 pomts and Ham
chetou Ma1ga grabbed 20 rebounds as fourth seed
ed Old Doffilmon (29 4) reached the round of 16
for the fifth straight year D dra Rucker s 27 pomts
led 12th seeded SMU (22 9) which upset fifth
seeded North Carolina State m the first round
WEST
At Athens, Ga
Georg1a 83, Stanford 64
The Lady Bulldogs (31-2) were s1mply too qu1ck
for e1ght seeded Stanford and set a school record
for v1ctones Deana Nolan led Georg~a w1th 20
pomts and Coco Miller scored 19 Jarrue Carey led
Stanford (21-9) With 15 pomts
At Santa Barbara, Calii
North Carolina 83, Rice 50
LaQuanda Barksdale scored 27 JlOints and l)ltkki
Teasley had 16 pomts and mne ass1sts as the Tar
Heels (20 12) won for the e1ghth tlme m mne
games Fifth-seeded North Carolina never trailed
and took control earl}l gomg on a 15-0 run to open
38 15 lead Marla Brumfield led 13th seeded Rice
(22 12) With 14 pomts

Public Notice

Tuesday,

or leove mtuogt 13041875
1138
Doubltwldl Rtpo Easy Ttrml
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3083

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�Sentinel

Middleport Ohio
Public Nollce

Chesapeake s Katt Fulle r (nme p omts) Waugh
(fo ur) and no one else T hey also miSsed fo ur
A
o ut o f SIX free throws m the fir st half
B1
Eastern 5 Becky Davu Me1gs J enmfer Shnm
phn and Southern 5 Kim !hie got two pomts
lead changmg baske ts
each m the first half In th e second half Fuller s
But Wtll s lead-c hangmg stickback JUmper layup and Davu free throw p ulle d the b1 g
near the stx- mtnute mark wht c h put the III-IV school sta rs lead mro sm gle d1g1t la nd (38 30)
stars ahead 24 23 was the one that put the for the last t1me Then the I II stns went on a
small-school h e roes on the road to learuqg for 9 Q run fueled by three pomters from Matkms
good
Thompson and V mton County s Behnda H ayes
Harmon s seven pomts two more from Wtll to permanendy ktck thetr lead 10to double
and two from Randolph put the III IV stars on d1g1t country
thetr way to clatmmg a s1x pomt lead at half
Among the local all stars also seemg time m
ttme
the contest was Galha Academy s Lmdsey
As the I II stars found thetr second-half Mulhns
offense getllng only repeat efforts from Alexan
In a change from prevwu, years the clock
der s Enc Gabnel (stx pomts) Warren Locals was stopped only after fouls requmng foul
Shaun Coffman and South Pomt s B J Farrell shots or at five mmute mtervals ro allow for
(fGur each) Randolph found the three pomt subslltuhons
stroke to the tune of mne post halfllme pomts
Fatrland s Jay Capper held scoreless m the first
Southern s Kyle Norm Logan s Kahe McB
half CaJlle ahve offenstvely and scored all of hts room and Ironton s Jason Harmon were the
stx pomrs m the second half
Winners m the three pomt shootmg contests
Also seemg playmg ttme was the Me1gs and the slam dunk contest respectively dunng
Marauders Steve Beha
the three mterm1ss1ons of Monday mght s Dts
In a change from prev10us years the clock tnct 13 all star basketball doubleheader at the
was stopped only after fouls requmng foul Umvernty ofR1o Grande s Newt Ohver Arena
shots or at five mmure mtervals to allow for
Norns a JUmor guard for the Tornadoes sank
substJ tuttons
four out of five - the number of competitors
Double figure offense from the Logan Ch1ef. (19) prodded the tournament duecrors to 1 mit
tams Katte McBroom and Abbey Jennmgs and the shots m the boys competition to five per
Rock Htll s Mtchelle Matkms gave the D1vmon player - to lead the way
I II g1rls all star team most of what It needed
Seven sank three out of five 10dudmg East
to reguter a 77 52 wm over the DIVISion III IV ern s Matt Btssell Among other locals part1c1
all-stars
patmg m thts contest were Galha Academy s
McBroom working smoothly With Jenmngs J C Ohhnger and Southern s Chns Randolph
and teammate Kmtm Thompson repeatedly (both went 2 for-5)
worked the fast break as 1f the rest of theu
McBroom a semor guard for the Ch1eftams
teammates m purple were w1th them They had sank eight out of 10 to lead the 16 player guls
12 of the big school stars first 16 pomts m the field
first 13 13 before Jacksons Kmten Starkey
Alexander&amp; Natahe Bobo (7 of 10) was the
lobbed a three-pomter from the left wtng wtth only one to approach McBroom s effort
6 12 left m the first half
Among the local shooters m that competition
From that pomt forward the I-II stars never were Me1gs Brooke Wdhams (6-for-10) East
traded
ern s Amber Baker Galha Academy s Bnanna
The I-ll stars who repeatedly reaped pomts Johnson (both went 5-for-10) and R1ver Val
tn the pamt and at the foul hne (7 of 8 free ley s Cynthia Ward (1 - of-10)
throws m the first half) led by I 0 m the last
The 5-foot-11 Harmon a semor guard for
1 40 of the first half before South Galha s the Tigers was g1ven the most spmted applause
Rachel Waugh sank two foul shots wuh 1 20 for hiS dunks Among the competitors 10 the
left to tnm the lead to 29-21 But McBroom s field of e1ght were Eastern s Matt S1mpson
trey and Matkins buzzer beating layup fattened Galha Academy s Bnan S1ms and Metgs J P
the 1-11 stars lead to a 34 21 nft at halfttme
Staats
1
The Ill IV stars got repeat offense from

D-13

Lcwn .....

NCAA
front Page 11
that read Thanks for the Memories Leon and
We love you Leon
Afterwards fans agam chanted Barmore s name
uptil he returned to the court to acknowledge
them
Fnerson led Lomstana Tech wuh 18 pomts
Chantelle Anderson scored 23 for mnth-seeded
Vanderbilt (21 13)
Ftfth seeded Oklahoma rallied agamst P1,1rdue
after trailing 42 25 m the first half and 59 46 With
1t mmutes left LaNe1shea Caufield who led Ok!a
homa (25 7) With 26 pomts sank two free throws
With 1 03 left to g1ve the Sooners a 73 32 lead and
they held on
They never lost fatth sud coach Shern Coale
who" turned Oklahoma mto a wmner after a 5 22
season m 1996-97 They never doubted they
would wm
Camille Cooper scored a career htgh 34 pomts
for Purdue (23-8)

EAST
At Durham, N C

Duke 90, Western Kentucky 70
Second-seeded Duke (28 5) the national runner
up last year got 25 pomts each from Georgta
Schweitzer and freshman Sheana Masch to make
the regtonal seffilfinals for the third stra1ght year
ShaRae Mansfield scored 21 for I Oth seeded Western Kentucky (22 9) wh1ch had only rune act1ve
players

MIDEAST
At KnOxville, Tenn
Tennessee 75, AriZona 60
All-Amencan Tannka Catchings scored 21 pomts
to lead Tennessee which never trailed after she

scored for a 4 3 lead The Lady Vols were so qmck
m transttlon that Anzona dtd not score a smgle fast
break pomt Angela Lackey had 13 pomts for
eighth seeded Anzona (25-7)
At Lubbock, Texas

Texas Tech 76, Tulane 59

SHERIFF'S SALE
A!ALESTATE
CASE NO IIICV072
UNITED COMPANIES
LENDING CORPORATION
PLAINTIFF
V8
SAMUEL A. GIBBS till
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
In pureuenct of tn Ordlr
ol Ball to '"' directed frGm
11ld Court In tht abD¥1
enthl•• •ollon I will l l q l to Hit at Public Auction at
,.,. CourthoU.. on Aprtl14,
2000 at 10 1a am of Hid
day IM following dMcrlbld

....
Public Notice
SHERIFFS SALE
REAL ESTATE

CASE NO tiCV071
UNITED COIIPAHIII

i.INDING COIII'OIIATIOH
PLAINTI'I'
yt
IAMUILA. GteU, ....

of Hit
.htmn M Souleby
8hellll MtJp County
Chrllltl111 M Utpokl
lAmer,
Stmpton
&amp;
AlllhfuH
120 E Fourth Street 8th

Floor
Cincinnati Ohio 41202
(113) .2 414100
OH 8up Ct 10070081
(3) 7 14 21 3TC

-

Situated In tM State of
Ohio County of Melgt
Bllltbury
TDM!Ihlp
Mlddl1part Vlll1g1 In the
Vlll191 o1 Hobeon Btctlon
28 In 100 ICfl Iota 314-3211
Town 1 Range 13 WMI end
11 recorded In Volu1111 3
Plfll I ol the Melp County
Plat recordt
Being the North helf
Lot 120 In btocM f1
Vllllgl of Hobeon Mlllgtl
County OhiO
Prior
lnetrumtnl
reference Volume 11
e13

Public Notice

Public Notice

March 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Public NoCice

Il·c~o~nzv~•v~•:nat!h~t·:::=~~~
'oar.

COURT OF COMMON
ltlng lht 11me rtll iOiilh-- o;; AOrth enc1
Romine toy deed
PLEAS
tttate conveyed by Miry of the following dtecrlbtd
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Dul4tnely to Albert Romine rttl Begtnnlng 40 flit E11t November 2 1MO,
In pu,..,...,. of an Order and Dore Romine by dtld and South I 3/4 dqre11 -ded Vol. 1154 II
E11t llvt (II) rode from lht •11 o1 tht
o1 Bait to ""' directed fl'om datad September 8 1130
llld Court In the tbove end recorded In Vol 133 II Southtaet comer ol Lot Ho of 11e1p County:
tnU- ectlon I will txpOM Ptge 331 of lht Recorda of
1 u ~rlbtd In tht pill of
Prlo r
I n1tru1 m~~.!J~;~
,.,..,_ 8e
to 11le 11 public IIUCIIoo 11 Dteda of Melg1 County Mertlntburg (now Dexter)
the &lt;:!lllrthoutt on AprN 14 Ohio Albert Romine leter thence Soutlf l-3/4 aor~~• 113.
Proparty Add200diWt 10 1 m ol eald conveying hie lnttreat to E11t 11 rode IMnct North
81 1/4 degrete Elll 10 eOWLES ROAD DEXTEj\
day tht following dttcrlbtd :o:a~I'II;~R~om~~:lne by dMd deltd rods lhtn.. North 40 1/2 OH 457211
'
,..ltatate
2 1840 and
Appqi-II$30000DO-::
PARCEL NO 1 Th• 1
In Vol 133 11 Plfll aorttl Will 12 rode tnd
Tt11!11 o f . , C11il
lollowlng dttcrlbed reel
llecorde ol o..dl 2 1/2 1 - thence Wnt 3
rods to the place of Jemu M Saoolaby
ealtte altueltd In the
Ohio
Shtrlfl Melgl County
Townehlp of Selem In tilt
3 Tht bttllnnlng
iltlng tht 11m1 roel M1llnd1 L. IAngeton
County of Mtlge and Stela
dtlcrlbtd rtll
Sempton
&amp;
of Ohio In Section No 5
In tilt eatete conveyed by 111ry lAmer
Town No 8 lltnge No 15 of
of Salem In tht Duleney to Albert Romine AolhfuM
the Ohio Compeny 1
of Melga and State end Dora llomlnt by deed 120 E Fourth Street ..h
dlltd September • 1830
Purchue In the Vlllegt ol
In SectiOn No 5
Dexter Beginning Ent 40
8 end flange No end recorded In Vol 133 11 Clnclnnltl Ohio 45202
Plfll 331 or tht IIICOrde Of (513)241-3100
feet and Soulh a 3/4
Ohio Company t
dtgrtea Etat 5 rode tram
In tht Vlllege of Dttdt of M1lg1 County OH Sup Ct fOOU75I
the Southtllt corner ol Lot
undtd end Ohio Albert Romine later (3) 7 14 21 3TC
No 1 In the VIllage or
1a follows Being
110 Help Wanted
MarUnaburg (now Dexter) lt tract of land IItty elx (56)
thence South 8-3/4 dtg,_ foot In width North and
E11t 11 rode thence North
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
81 1/4 dtgretl Eat! 10
rode thence North 40 1/2
CURRENTLY HAS OPENINGS IN MEIGS COUNTY
degrttl Weot 12 roda and
1) 40 hrs/Wk 3 pm Mon thru 8 am Sat sleep ovec
2 112 lnchta thence Weol 3
rode to the place of
required daytime hours off:
beginning
Excepting
Position tieneflts lnclude heallh/dentaltnsurance
thererram a percal of ltnd
and !vacation/sick t1me
58 IMI In width North and
South acro1a tM Norlh end
2) 33 hi'S/Wk B am Sat thru 8 am Mon sleoeo-cwerc1
of lht above deacrlbed real
requtred
oatatt
3)
Emergency
Rehel (Substitutes) hours
lolng the tame real
eatata o;onvayed by Jennie
scheduled as needed
L Murry to Albert llomlnt
We
are searching for compassionate pro,fesslot~Bill
and Dore Romine by deed
a
team vision and a desire to teach personal
dated September 2 1919
and recorded In Vol 120 at
997
comm1unl'ly skills to Individuals with mental retardation
Pegt 308 ol the Recorda of
In lovmg mtmory of
work environment s Informal and rewarding
Dttdl at Mtlgt County
rr:/
'R """
are high school d plomaJGED valid
Ohio Albert Romine later
lttrlv"''g
license
three years good driving experience
convoying hie lnter11t to
who paiMCI IWIY on
adequate automobile Insurance coverage B C S
Dora Romine by dttd dated
Mlroh 21 1•7
November 2 1840 end
looked around H a
I ~fers comprehensive training In the field of MR/00
garden and found an
recorded In Vol 1154 II Pega
I Startlr1g salary $5 50thors Interested applicants need
81 a o1 the Record• of Dnde
empty place
soaellv pos tlon of Interest and send resume to
of Mtlgl County Ohio
He then looked dOwn upon
PARCEL NO 2 Tht
thla earth and saw your
~0 Box604
following d..crlbtd rill
~red face
IIIII I IIIUIIId In
He put Hie erma around
OH 45640-0604
Townehlp of Selem In
you and lifted you to
applloatlons must be post marked by 3/2a/OO
County of Melgl lnd lh
rest
Equal Opportunity Employer
Stale ol Ohio Stctlan
God a garden mull be
Town No 8 and
beautiful He always
15 ol tht Ohio
takes the bell
Purchett In the
He knew that you were auf
Dolder Beginning
faring He knew you
Southaaet corner of Lot
were In pain
1 In VIllage of Martlneburg Ill ,And ·He knew you would
(now Dexter) thence Ea1t
n8\ler get well on earth
40 feat thence South 8 3/4
again
dagttel Eut 5 rode thence lie saw the road was gat
Eaet 3 rode tho beglnnlnJI
ling rough and the hllls
point of the land herein
were hard to c 1mb
conveyed
thence
Heclosedyourweary
Southeaat 12 rods and 21
eyel ds and whispered
llnka or to the Southeast
peace be thine •
corner of the lot known aa
b oke our hearts to loae
the Oscar Wllaon one half
you but you d dn t go
acre lot now or formerly
alone
owned by Oore llomlnt
part of us went wnh
RESIDENTIAU//f/1//COMMERCIAL
thence Eut to the etnter of
you the day God called
FREE ESTIMATES " FULLY INSURED N
the Croak Ia a point due
you home
E11t to the place of
Sndly miSsed by dnugliter
R
Brain Morrison I Raone, Oh1o
beginning thence Wtat to
'Rulli Strode nnd sons
y
t~e place of beginning
'1Jrl/ nnd 'Bob
containing one hall (1/2)
acre more c:Jr ••••

oo

,I

'-leanor

w•ng ett

Jackson,

\'8 And God Co ns P ootse a

C amonds An que Jew&amp;l y Gold
A nos Pre 930 u s Cur ency
Ste ng Etc Acqu sit ona JaM y
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CALL FOR AN INTERVIEW
1 888 237 5647 Ext 965

.. , •NPftrAA INWAY..
Bwwlru

•

OR IVERS Cannon E•p tiS
88% Orlvor No Touch Frt ghl
Start AI 341 M IB'Y + ~xp
33e M /4Yr 32&amp; M 13 Yr 311
M 12Y 301M
Y .28CM
te Mot 1 Vr 28C M Ill Mol Or
Leu 11'1 not 0 1 Mo E11p $350
Wk Pay Ralu Every 8 Months
Bonuua Rider Program Pa d
vacat ona Ina Ava I www can
nonexprtsa com Ca I Fo Detail•

ng No E~~portonee NHCftd Ea n
Up To $32 000 !Yr fu I Bontflll
Ca Todoy
1 877 230 1002
Sunday 9 II M I PM Mon Fr1 8
AM BPM PAMTran1port
www 123pam com
DRIVING POBITION8
AVAILABLE
CLAS8AOTR
SlngloOriVer Loll Modol Ken
worths W h RHNirl West Coati
Carrier
MUST BE
A Least 25 Yea a Old
A1LIU12 Ytor* Experience
GOOd MVA
Woo~y Pay
Htallft lnauranco Aval"bla
Wo k Well With Tho PlA&gt; lc
Fot Mo a lnlormstton Cal 800
4378764Hn 830AM 5PM
EARN $26 000 TO S50 000 IVA
Mad cal lnauranct 811 ng Ass a
ance Needed lmmed ate yt use
Your Home Computer Fo G eat
Po ant at Annual Income Call
Now Cal 1 800 281 46113 Dept I

109

EARN EKTAA MONEY
Qe lverlng Tho Ohio VaJty

To ephono D octory
You Mull Be 18 Ytora Or
Ode WthAnlnsu tdVehca
For More Info mat on Please Cal
HJOD-247-4708

On y Qua !fled Applicants Need

Apply To Holzer Cl n c Human
Re atlons Oepa tment 90 Jack
son P ke Ga pol a Ohio 45831
1562 F~• To 740 448 5532 Or
Call 740 446 5189 Equal Oppo
1un1ty Emp~

Help Wanted Mod cal
MLT
(ASCP Reglsered Or E lg
For
loca Laboratory 12 30 0
9 ooPm M fn carry Pagor a 3Ad
Weekend Resume To P 0 Box
33 GaJIIpoUe Ohio 45631

IHl

A1J. Ylld SaiH Mutt

h Plld In Advlnco
• QEAQLWE 2 00 p.m
• lht day - l h t td
•• •• to MJn 8unctoy

HONEST INCOME! Help People
Receive Government Refunds
From Home Fret Data ts 1 aoo
9611 3599 Ext 2601

-

200pm
• FfldiJ Mondly ICIIfon
: 1:30 1 m Saturdly

lnte asted In Buy 1'1g Or Selling
Avon? Cal Ma anle Your Loca
Independent Sales Ffepreaenta
tive At 74Q-258-9285.

Notice

825 2nd Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 45631

Property eddrtll 29157
LAGOON ROAD
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45780
Apprelltd 11$10.00000
Ttrml of Hie C11h
J111111 M Soultby
Sheriff Mtlga County
Chrllllnl M Utpald
Ltrntr
Sampeon
I
flolhfull
120 E Fourth Street
Floor

Plt111nt Va ley Nu 1 ng an&lt;! At
habll ration Center ha• an open
lng tor an Admlaalon Market ng
Coo dlnator RN with th 11 yeart
c nlca nu 1 ng txpe ltnce
long-term care ot thaD litat on
experlenct p eterred Competl
1 vt 11 ary and benet 1 Subm 1
re1umt to Pleaaant va ley Hoa
p tal c o Per1onnel 2520 Valley
Or Pt Plt111nt WV 255!50 a
futo (304)e7&amp;-6975 .WEOE

MEDICAL B LLING Groot Earn
lng Potentia Ful Training Com
p\Jter Aeq d 888 880 6693 E•l

4320

(513) 241-31,,00~..........
OH Sup Ct 10070015
(3) 7 14, 21 3TC

This 118W1paper w I not
"""""ng y accept
advertisements for raalastate
which 1 n vlo aUon of he
aw ou eadera are hereby
nformad that a dwel nga
adve~ sed n lhll nowspape
a e ava lablt on an aqua
opponunlty baa a

310 Home• for

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO
recommends tl'lat you do bull
neu with peop 1 you know and
NOT to aend money through tho
ma urm you have Investigated
the o lerlng
STAY HOMEI MAKE MONEY
HELP NG PEOPLE RECEIVE
GOVERNMENT
REFUNDS
FROM HOME FREE DETAILS!
(24 Ht Recorded M11sage1
1100-725 24t7 Ext 5046
TAKE IACI( YOUR LIFEI Bt
You Own Bout Earn .An bt a
$500 $1 600 PT 0 $2 000
$ 500 FT Per Mon h 100 335

0427

WWW

glablllllalllloO!II-CQm

UP TO $20 000 $45 000 II Per
Year Earn r1Q Potent a Or'e Need
People To Process C alma You
Can Wo k From Home We Train
MUST Own Computo Modem 1
888-332-50 5 Ext 1700 /Dally
URGENTLY NEEDED p aama
dOnora earn $35 o $45 1o 2 o 3
hou o wukly Cal Sara Toe 74o592 61151
WANTED 42 People To Loae Up
To 30 bs In 30 Cays All Nalu a
Ooctor Recommended 100%
Guaranteed Cell 1 877 4 4 TH ~
0 ww.. oz2Bth n com

150

Andrtw And Jot 1 Ltwnmow ng
And SMith Cltarlng Sorvlct 740-

IM8-17fl
Bobyallltr Neodod Thurodey
Through Sundoy My Homo Pro
It ob y Rtfo tncto Roqulrod
740-441 9511

Reduc· I

• Easy Qualifying
• Fast Sarvoce

PubUc Notice

• Low Payments

SHERIFF 8 BALE
III!AL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER lliCVOSI
CPNTIIIOIITAOE

1&gt;100-332 2411

MEDICAL BILL NG Un mlled n
come Potent a No Expe ence
Nncessa v F ee lnlo mallon &amp;
CO ROM Investment $4 995
$8 995 Financing Available Is
and Au oma ad Mad ca Sarv c
es Inc 800 322 1139 Exl 050
Vod InKY IN CT
Need A Loan? T y Debt Conaol
dalton $5 000 $200 ooo Bad
Cred I 0 K Fee 800 770 0092
EX12 5
NEW AUTOMATED HOME
BUSINESS Qu ckly EB n A Ful
T me ncome No Sell ng Unl m t
ad Income Vat h p www ell e
qu ck y ne cb To See &amp; Hea
Compte e Presenta on

~0 Money

to Loan

$$ Auto Loans Personal Loans
Deb Consol da on Mo gages
And Ref nanc ng C edit P oblems
OK Consume s F nancla 1 800
247 5 25Exl 134 Void OH KS
$$$ NEEO CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Rema n ng Pavmen s
On P op.er y So d Mo tgages
Annu t es Settlements lmme
dial&amp; Quotes I NobOdy Beats
Our Pr ces Nat one Cont act
Buye s 800 490 073 Ex 1QI
www na 10na contractbUve s com
$FREE CASH NOW$ F om
Wea thy Fam es Un oad ng. Mil
lions Of Do ars To Hep Mnmze
The Taxes w te lmnl'ed a e y
Wlndla s 847 A SECONO AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
100 7

Nco Btck Homo 3 BR 3 Bahs
Oak Cabinets Bull In D shwash
er Compacta Cen a A C Gas
Heat lng ound Poo 18M32 au at
Nelghbo hood F nlshed Base
ment 1 05 Teodo a Ave (7-40)
448-8181 $1 9000

CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TVI E ase Bad C odll Laga y
F ee n1o 888&lt;159-2560
FREE DEBT CONSOLIOATION
App cat on w Service Reduce
Poymenla To 55% IICASH IN
CENT VE OFFEAII Ca I 1 BOO
328-1510 Ext 29
FREE DEBT CONSOLID~TION
Rtduct lnleroal Stop Oolloct en
Cl 11 HIYI 1 Mont111y l'llymtnl
FREE Confldtnllol Ht p OCS
Non-Proflt t-800 ~rn 8812

Profeealonal

Strvloll

WE SHOP 4 U new thopplng/&lt;11&gt;llvtry tt vee 740 992 97118 or
www..,•hDP' •llltavlall com
Stnfor dlacou.
hrllllan llWt&lt;f

10

• Confidential

llE AL EST II TE:
'

Oh10 Valley
Publishmg Co
10
!ncloood corgo troller 4 x8 or
sa to In goOO Condition. cal ?40-

8411,2010

Roonng, plumb ng &amp; odd lobs
740-~501 Ilk lor-~

Log loa(tfl operator &amp; limber cu
tet needed mUtt havt exptrl
once oal 740-985..wtll

I

S NO OOWN HOMES NO CAEil
It NEEOED GOV T FORE
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
PROVALI 1 800 380 4820 EXT
8509

W llllntttl vlny tiding tnd gut
ttrt oxperlfrw:td Wtllllfat otn
or rtttt
Fftt txt moltt

3 BA 2BA 2 Cor Otragt on 1
Acre litlll'ump 8 Mllto from
Sporn Plant $57 ooo (30.)882

(304)875-~304)815-7083

'

310 Home• for Sale

Stay AI Home Mom wonting to
do bebya lllng n my homo Aot
trOnCIS Avl lobll (304)871

-

825 2nd Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 4S631

01 F 00 P ct Deduction

2000
Model 32 wde Ovo $5 000 00
Off Yoyr Pdce $45 478 00
011 Foo P co Deduction 1492
SQ F 2000 Modtl Over
$4 OOQ oo a
Vour Price

$42 817 00

Homes A e 3 Bedroom• 2 Batha
P ~d ncludes Complete St up
Otho Spoclalo
S ng e A&amp; Low As $ 49 00
Man h Sec onats Aa Low As
$269 00 Mon h Come In 0 Col
Fo P e App ova a 1 888 515
0167 Loca 1 740 885 011?
T ada ns A e Also Welcome

330 Farms for Sale
16 ACRES &amp; POND
Beau fu meadow w h pond h d
den n woods Nea Jackaon

t.

3618

Attent on Developers
33 Acres A.pp oxlmata y o Ac a
Lake Mob e Home Idea Fo
Hous ng Campg ound Estate
$99 500 A !10 5 AC e LOti
$32 000 74Q-388 8876

320 Mobile Homes

for Sale
RENTALS

(11
AMAZNG
D ywa I 4BA 32x80 ove 2348
sq tt Payments low as $406 pe
mo B00-948 5678
(2) F s T me Buye s Easy F
nanc ng 2 and 3 Bed oom A
ound $200 Po Mon h Ca l 1
BOO 948 5878

(31
LOOK
5 Bed ooms 2 Baths ove 2 000
sq II fo less han $450 mo
FREE Do Ivery &amp; Sa 1 OOQ-948
5678
14Ft X 7QFI Shu z 3 Bd m 2
Baths Wllft 7 X 20 Expando C A
Approx 7 Ac ea M nutes F om
Schoo • $42 000 00 740 446
6345

2 Bed oom Stove Re gera o
Wate T ash Pa d n Coun y
$350 Mo P us Oepos t Also 2
Bed oom Mob e Home 740 388
837
2 Bed ooms $400/Mo Dapos t -&lt;t

s Months Aen Refe ences Ae
qu ed n A o Grande 740 245
9188
1967 Alcon mob e home t 2x55
$1900 740-742 2852
98 Ventura 14x70 S nglew de
Deck 10x8 On en ed lo 2BA
1 BA Gas HeaUNew Fu nace
$6 000 (304)-875-831 9
1982 w ndsor 2 Bedrooms 2
Ba n 1 2 Ac e Land Smal Ou
building $27 000 740 446-07~5

230

resume and

MARCH MADNESS SALE

MEQ CAL BILLER $15 $45 H1
Med cal B ng Softwa 1 Co"l)anv
Seeks Peop e To Procaas Medl
ca Cams From Home Tra nlng
Prov dtd Must Own Compu er 1
800.434-5518 E111 667

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Crodll
OK Frtt App CIIIOn U S Ap
p-Ony 1 877 710-1831

Pubbsher

CORPORATION

PLAINTI,
V8
L.ARRY HINDIIICKI till
DII'INDANTt

IIK"u ,

FLEETWOOD HOIIE8
7764 Sl AI 7
PAOCTOIMLLE OH 4HII
(Next To Foodla r)

740 286 0081

1985 Nashua Mobile Home
14M70 W h 7X2 Fac 0 y Pu
Ou 3 BR 1 112 BA Ctn a A
Appliances To a E ac 2 porch
ea Excellenl Cond lon $10 000
neg (304)875 2034 Leave Mea

sago

180 Mantlon Mob Ia Homo
141180 2 bldroom 1 llflh Ctntrol
A r To111 E octrlc Alldy lo
$111500 (740)-M8-i011
I til mo Buytll L~ or flO CredU
Ok on~ 11 Olkwoocl , . _ Go 1
poll 7-3003

3 Bedrooms Wa To Wa Car
pet Cen a A Gas Furnace
N ce Ya d In Ga pols No Pels
Aefe ences 740 446 2003 740
44&amp;1409

709 V and S eet 3 Bed oom t
t 2 bath Rent $300 plus depoe
I
Contac Becke at ERA Town &amp;
Country Rea Estate Broker
304)876-5548

420 Moblla Hom11
for Rent
114 Condo St eet MOblt Home ,.
&amp; Lot Fo So e $14 000 W
Conaldtr Lllind Con act 740
709-0064 Or 740 388 8591

Abondontd Homt Nttdt Owne
Poy Smo I Trtntltr Ftt &amp; Move
In 740-44t-3013
Brtnd lllow 3 ltdrooma 2 Btthl
On y $233/Mo Won I Lilt Hurry
740-3013
Con T Wtllt Your Tlll)t auollly
By Phone Now sw Or ow 1
888 738-3332
Oldlr Modol Trt o for 11 e 1 1/2
Bedroom Muat go/btst ouer
Fl 11 tral or on loft Comp Coney

CASHLOANSI
• Bad Credit OK

16xBO $273 Per Mon h Low
Down Payment 1-800.e81-&amp;177

FRITO LAY PEPSI/HERSHEY
SNACK AND SOOA VEND NG
ROUTE $$ ALL CASH BUSI
NESSSS BU LD A BUS NESS
THAT IS ALL YOURS SMALL
INVESTMENT
EXCELLENT
PROF TS 1 800 731 7233 EXT
1203

School•

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GAEE QUICKLY Bacha o s
Maste s Doctorate By Corre
apondence Baaed Upon P or Education And Sho t S udy Cou:n
For FREE Informal on Book tl
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 8644318

14 Wide 3 Bedroom 2 Ba h
$209 Par Mon h Low Down Pay
mont 1-81»69 -em

FREE ANT AGING TAPE As
Seen On Nat anal TV Ret 1 In
( 1) Year Ca I 24 Hou Aeco dod
Mouage t 800 468 9222 Ext
1800

WILDLIFE JOBS To $2 60 IHA
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDEO FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL I 800 813
3585 EXT 142 1 8 A Ill 9 PM
70AVSMs nc

Golllpollo Ct- Collogt
(Caraers CION To Homtl
Ca1To&lt;tayl740 446-4367
11100-214.()452
Rog 190-05 2748

6777

llOD-SOD-3470

t) 40 H s /Wk 3 PM Mon Thru 8
A M Sal Sleep over Required
Day lmo Hours Off Posit on Bene
1ts nclude Health Dental In
surance And vacation S ck
Time 2) 33 Hrs IWk 8 A 1,1 So\
Thru a A M Mon Sleep Over
Aequl ed 3) Emergency Aallef
Substllu as) Hours Scheduled
As Needed
We A a Sea ch ng For Compoo
slana e P ofesalona a W ttl A
Team Vis on And A Desire To
:reach Pe sonal And Community
Sk 1a To lnd vldua a w h Mental
At a dation T~e Wo k Environ
ment Is lnforma And Reward ng
The Requirements Are High
School Diploma G~D Val d D lv
er a License Three valrs Good
o v ng Expe lenca And Ade
quatt Automoc le Insurance
Cove ago B C S Offers Compro
hon&amp; vo Tra nlng fn Tha Flo d Of
MA DO Start ng Sola y $5 50
Hour In erested App lcants Need
To Spec fy Position 01 ntereat
And Send Resume To P 0 Box
604 Jackson OH 45640 0604
A App leal ons Must Be PoSt
Marl&lt;ed By 3128 00 Equa Oppo
!lilly Employer

Bualneas
Training

A ZERO% DOWN LOAN!
No Down Payment Requ ed With
Governmen Sponso ad Loan
Good Cred t And Steady Income
Aequ ed Cai Fo Mo e lnforma
tlon Af'Jd Fo Other Finane ng Op
1 ons Independence Mo tgage
Sorv~1 1 800 84!1-0038

Ooub ew de S24P Pt Mon n
Low Down Paym•nl 1 800 691

AT&amp;T BELL PAYPHONE RTS
20 Eo Loco! ona (Local)
UpTo$1 IOOWk

nMo~County

140

Sale

AUT MCI SPRINT 1 Coni
PHONE CARD ROUTE Make
$1 000 $5 000 /Wk ALL CASH!
FREE lnlol 1 800 997 9888 Ex I
1155 (24 Hra)

WAioiTED Buclleya Community
Sarv oaa Current y Has Openings

flatU Brotntra AmUIII!IInl Co If
ntt tlttd to travel pleue cat
740 ~81 2950 Muot bt 11 tntt
18 yoara old

ClnoliiiiiU Ohio 41202

All rea eltate advettlalng n
this newspaf)8&lt; s subjecllo
tho Federal Fair Hou~ng Act
ofleee wh~h make• k toga
to advertlae anv p eferaooe
mltation or dlacrlm nation
b81ed on roco color ra lgton
nx fam I a! statUI or nat onal
orlg r,1 or any ntentlon o
make any such preference
limitation or dlacrtm nation

~

180 wanted To Do

SALES &amp;

MARKETING

210

ln•tructlon

Pubbsher
Oh10 Valley

Pubhshmg Co

FINANCIAL

www lnxmr..wb ott

steps Pu 1'lt&gt;ura 01 aura
F nanclally IOOOd Company

HepWanttd
Managomen1/Soleti clerks for tho
ne'#l Smoker Fr-.ndly Store opening soon In tne wa mar Canter
Ful lime and Part time POsitions
available Aeta I experience hetprul but not nece58ary We are
ook ng lor Pjeisant trustworthy
people with a Friendly Sm to Now
accep11ng app ICatloqs Send re
su1110 to Smoke Friendly PO Bo•
4428 Parks Oburg wv 26104

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

•

,

Avon w a Your Own Paycheck
Unl mllad Eo n ngs Call 800
551 4801 Independent Rapre
sant•)'O

Yard Sale

70·

:••

Local Compeny IMI&lt;Ing drMrs
fo Companylru!:ko

Users Neededl $25 75 Hr PT
FT 888-491 9224 www wo k out
of you home com

www WOrii:OutOfYour

cot

Free To Good Home Very
Fr tndly Med um Sized Terrier
740-388 9357

0rtver1 a L.MN op

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

0 ve a 2 Wuk Po d COL Train

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS F eo
Sarnplta. Lose 3 5 Founds Eve y
Wtok At Seen On TV Me I&amp;
Ft} SIOPI Hunge Boos 8 Ent
gyl On y $ 9 95 Buy 2 FREEl
Fet Blockers $1 1 95 1 800 733
3~8 www unltedpha maceut
com COD SIC ed 1CardS

Adu t male OalrtJat an o good
homo 740-992 5.240

~ 00+ Phys c an Mul Specla ty
G oup Seeking Material; Men
~ger Bac'helor a Deg ee And
Ma e ala Managt'lli'J Expe I
ence In Healthca e Set11ng
Wo k ng knowledge 0 CIIA cal
Fun cl ~na St ong Manager al
Sk Ia And Leaderoh p Qualities
puallly Commun cat on Sk s
(0 al And W I ten] P ofesalonal
Bell ng And Appearance Com
pe ve Sa ary And Except onal
Fnngo Bent k Package

Help Wtmled

DR VERS TAKE HOME MORE
BE HOME MOREl Average 1999
Woge Wu $45 251 www roth
ranaport com

9 Q0-5 30

40

100 OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDEOI Lou 5 200+ lba Sale
Natu a Docto Re commended
Income Oppo tuniry Ava laC e
800-705-2348

A Own A Computer? Put It To
Workl 121 $71 /Hr PT 1FT 1
Ill 143 8788 www monty ge
Iori com

Announcement•

I

110

Only aua td App canta Need
App v To Holze Clln c Human
Rela ona Department 90 Jack
son P ko Gal po Ia Oh o 4563
582 Fax To 740 448 5532 Or
Ca 740 446 5169 Equal Oppor
lunlty EmplOye

STAAT DATING TONIGHT
Havo Fun. Muting El g ble S n
glja In Vou Arta Call Fo Mo e
loqormat on 1 800 ROMANCE

Business Services

(740) 985-3948

110

Absolute Top Oolla AI U 5 Sll

I Will am C Rift (ao of 3115 00)
wII no looger bt raapona b a for
any dobla other lhln my own

*CONCRETE *BACKHOE SERVICES
*~ONRY *BOBCATSERVICES

Wanted to Buy

90

I

Ke1tha Dickerson s runnmg 3 pomter at the half
time buzzer gave Texas Teclt (27 4) a 36 24 lead
and the th1rd seeded Lady Raiders kept Tulane at
bay m the second half Plenette P1erson led Tech
With 19 pomts Aleah Johnson Karma 0 Neal and
Tarusha Ellison each scored 12 Grace Daley had 24
for SIXth seeded Tulane (27-5)
MIDWEST
At Norfolk, Va
Old Domm1on 96, SMU 76
Luc1enne Berthieu scored 22 pomts and Ham
chetou Ma1ga grabbed 20 rebounds as fourth seed
ed Old Doffilmon (29 4) reached the round of 16
for the fifth straight year D dra Rucker s 27 pomts
led 12th seeded SMU (22 9) which upset fifth
seeded North Carolina State m the first round
WEST
At Athens, Ga
Georg1a 83, Stanford 64
The Lady Bulldogs (31-2) were s1mply too qu1ck
for e1ght seeded Stanford and set a school record
for v1ctones Deana Nolan led Georg~a w1th 20
pomts and Coco Miller scored 19 Jarrue Carey led
Stanford (21-9) With 15 pomts
At Santa Barbara, Calii
North Carolina 83, Rice 50
LaQuanda Barksdale scored 27 JlOints and l)ltkki
Teasley had 16 pomts and mne ass1sts as the Tar
Heels (20 12) won for the e1ghth tlme m mne
games Fifth-seeded North Carolina never trailed
and took control earl}l gomg on a 15-0 run to open
38 15 lead Marla Brumfield led 13th seeded Rice
(22 12) With 14 pomts

Public Notice

Tuesday,

or leove mtuogt 13041875
1138
Doubltwldl Rtpo Easy Ttrml
Free Dollvtry &amp; St Up 740-446

3083

2 Bedroom Furn lhed Mob t
Home 1300 Mo P Ul Etclr c &amp;
Hsol $100 Dtpoot Loctttd On
Ha nnan T ace Roa!l 1 Milt Ort
2 8 740 256-8202

2 Bed oom Mob te Homt In Ka
nauga $3 5 Mo Plua Utlllltt "
740 4411-0 07
~
!o

•

~~~~~~~~~ ~

2br prl\lale ot near school nice

o nn Po chea Good condition
$285 Hartlord (304)682 2388
Mason 2 bd 2 ba Ira It 128&amp; 1
mon +dep af req Hud accept 1
td 304 67H783
Two bedroom trai e uml fur
n shod $200 month p ua $175
dopoa 1 you pay gao !l&amp;ltr end
electlc ee alter 5pm 740 982

2808

440

Apartment•
for Rertt

1 and 2 bed oom IIQortmonll fur
n ahe&lt;t and unfurntahed aecnrlty
dtpos 1 rtqu od no po o 740
882 2211

�Pege 84 • The O.lly Sentinel
440

Apartments

POme1'9y?Middleport, Ohio

540 M~leneous

for Rant
1 Bedroom With Living Room,

Eat-In Furnished Kitchen. Large

$$BAD CREDIT? Got Cash
Loano To $5,000. Dobt Conaoll·
dation To $2QO.OOO. Crl&lt;lit Cords,

In Furnlohod Kitchen. $270/Mo..

Mortgagea, Attlnanclng And
Auto Loans Available. Meridian

EncJo11d PGrct'l , $280/ Mo., 2
- . . lallJO Living Room, Eo~

Newly Oaeotrated, Both Ap'arte-

mentt Ups tairs, -45 8 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis , Water &amp;
Tl'aah Furnished, Rtflfencl$ , SeC\dy Dopoalt, 74o-742·2837; At-

10r5 P.M.

1 Btdroom. Near Holz8r, A./C,
EconOmical Gas Hea t, WID
Hookup, Qulel Locati on . $279/
Mo.,+ unea, 740-4-ti-2957.
2 Bedro om Apartm ent Adjacent

To· Rio Gronde Campus, 140.245·
5158 . .
Apartment For Rent $375/Mo.. All

710

FAHr,1 SUPPLI E S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Men:handlae

Crodil Corp. 1-500...71-5119 Exl
1180.

22"X27" Cheat freezer, 8.1 cubiC
toot, $100, 1221 Co1ego Rd .. Syr·

acu&amp;e, 740..992·5008, leave mea·
sago. Oro Boss.
37 PeOple Need ed To Lose Up

To 30 Pounds in The Next 30
Days, Free Samples, 740·441·

1962.

WAN T A COMPUTER 11 BUT
NO CASH?? .MMX Technology
Will Finance Wl1h •o• Down. PaGt

· Furnished 3 Rooms· &amp; Bath
Downstairs, Clean, No Pets, Ref·
erence11 a Deposit Requ ired,

Utitkill. can Now! 800-772-7470:

Farm Equipment

EKT. 6336.

2 Hay Wagono $400 Each: I lnternttlonal Hly Rake $.700,
3B8-ll406.
•

101111 IISSILL
CONSTRUCTION

1•o-. 720 Trudia for Slle

2000 Ford Dleael Tractor; 3600
Ford With 01" Finis hed Mower;
13! Masae y Fergu aon Dlt1eJ;

1120 John Deere Diesel, 7"0·

286-e522.
For Sale : Toba ccO Sti cka. 7"0·

245-5i21.

1987 Chevy 6· 10. 2.5, 4 Cyl.
AC,PS, PB, Nleo l Streight .
$2,200. (304)875-~ .

Hog, Live Power, Hlghl Low

Range. Never been moltlttd.
$5,200. (30&lt;1)875-3824.

1888 Chevy 112 ton plel&lt;-up, 4x4.
$8,000 or • ·wheele r a s trade in.

Bed, e Cylinder, Aulornallc, AJC,

PS. PB, PW, AMIFM CO, 70,000
Mites. $7,200, 740-4-46-3888.

ESTIMATES
74().m·1671

1984 Chevy Silverado Stepslde,

We Are Buying Tobaeco Ba se &amp;

BIG SCREEN TV. Take On Small
Roqured.1 ·800-718·1657.

74o-446-1519.

· Complete DISH Netwt;? rk satellite
s ystem , brand new. $99, 740Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIUage Manor and · 992-' 1182 or 304· 773·S305 after
·
Rlve.rskSI Apartments In Middle- 6pm.
port From $273·$336. Call 740· COMPUTERS - Low Or $0 Down ..
992·5064. Equal Housing Opper·
Low Monthly Payments: )'2 K
llnilles. •
Compl,ant. Almost Everyone .Ap.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,
7~300 .

proved. t-800-611-3476 Ext. 330.
Diamond Ring for Sale, 0.51 Cai'•

New Haven· one bedroom fur-

nlshld apartm~nt 1 depo si t aM
references , no· pets, 740·992·

0165 . .

Nlee· One Bdrm Unfurn ished
Apartment. Range &amp; Refr tg. provided . Wate r I Garb8.ge Paid .
Deposit Required . Call 74Q-446·

4345 After 6:00Pm
Nort~

4th ~v e mJ:&amp; , Middleport- 2
room effldency apartment, depos·
it and references ; no pets, 740-'

992-!)165.

Now Taking· Appli cati ons - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartment s, Includes Water
· Sewage , Trash . $315/Mo., 740·

448-Q008.

One bedroom apartment in Mid·

dloporl. 740.992-9191.

Rental Property. Collage Apt. 2br'.
$250 . Freshly painted e xterior.

Homestead Realty 304-675-5540.
Twin Towers now accepting ap plications lor 1 BA . HUO subskf·
ized apt.' for elderly ~nd handl· .

cllj)J)ed. EOH . !:)041675-6679.

ats . Marquis Cut, E Color, s ~ t
Clarit y, '14 Carat While Gold
Mount, 20 Diamond Chips Total·
lng .45 Carats, Leave PhOne t AI
740·441 ·0;)53.
.
Grubb's Pl ano- tuning &amp; ,epalrs .
. Problems? N&amp;ed Tuned? Call the

plano Or. 7o40-446·4525

Hot Springs hot tubo 4 ."person ,
good condition. will nave new top.
has neW heater and new thermo·
stat, some chemicals included,
ceaar with biU(Io top. call 740-992·
5053 -aHer 5pm.

JANITROL HEATING AND

630

Livestock

10 Year Old AQHA Bay Mare,
Bred For . May Foal. Asking
$1,500 740-446-8081.

3 Ve"" O&lt;d, 740-388·8358.

88 Ford · Ranger ex tend cab ,
$2800. 7(0.74.2·2780.

Butc~

89 Ford F·350 Supereab Dually,

Hogs, 740.256--85!0.

Fair Pigs FOr Sale, 740-441 -0968

'

Reg istered Red Polled Limousln
Bull For Sa te Yearling, Phone
740-446·8081.

Y8arllng AOHA Grey Colt, BrOke

:64~0:.·_H_a;.y:....&amp;_G..,..ra.,.l_n...,.,.-

74o-446-442:i.

Tobacco Plants
Now taking orderS for this Spring.
.Firs) Orders will Guaranlae Best&amp;
Earliest
Plants.
Dewhurst

800 square feet olllce building ,
$350Jmo., mobile home spaces.
$120/ mo., 2 bedroom mobile
home, $300/mo., Rlverpark, Po-

New Tromborle ·And MOtorized

199~ Ford F-150 XLI, V·8. au ·
tomatic, 4WO, 1;1' bed, air, electric
windows, bedilner, fiberglass top·
per, excellent condition, $12,000,

Farms,(304)895·37o4011195-3789.

1.9,96 Chrysler Town &amp; Country .

meroy, 74Q-949-2093.

pllaneos. (740)·446·4039 (740}·
446-1004 Al)l'llmo.

Mobile Home Patk Lot Available.
$115/Mo., Addison Pike, Wise·
'1'11'1 ReeHy, 740-446-3844.
· ·
Trailer lot for rent in Middleport,
taking applications, 740-992-9145

atter6pm.

7795.
For Sale: _Recondltioned wasn ers , dryers and retrig&amp;r~;ttors .
Thompsons Appliance . 3407

Jacl1son Avenue, (304)675-1388.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer-&amp; , dryers , refrigerators .
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76

Vtno Stroot, Call 740·446-1398,
1-888-818-0128.
Mollohln Carpe.t 202 Clark Chap- ·
at ftoad , Porter

Ohio ~

NO MONEY DOWN !I I Compaq

888 ·479·2345

(ToiiFroo}

www.ejump-start.com

·

· Nordic Trac EKercise Machine,
$450 New; Same As New Sell

www.orvb.eol'nlbennett
Ron's Gun Snop, 74D-742·6412.

1991 Buick Park lw&amp;nue, 95,206
Miles. Good.Condltlon. Ser-Ious

Sawmill $3,795 , Saw Logs Into

Buyeri Onty, 740-448-8241 .

Boards, Planks, Beams . Large
Capacitu. Best Sawmill Value An''
ywhere. FREE Information. 1·80().

th 81
RS 5
1991 PI
ymou
azer
•
Speed,- Premium Soui1(J Pactc:age,
Sunroof, Loaded, $3,200, 080,

. N¥ '14225.

··

8273 IMI'IIngl.

560

Kiln dried red oak , UJiect &amp; • .,
common. somt char ~ y. 740·667-

AKC Labrador Pupploa, Black,
$175. 740-256--8733.

53()

Antlquaa

Buy· or sell. Riverine Antlquea ,

1124 Eut Main on SR 1~4 E. Pomorliy, 7•()-992-2! 28 or 74Q-9921538. Auu Moore. owner.
FanCy ·Oak Secretary Oes.k ~
Bookcase With IJalloty: Early
Bakoro Cablnol /Kitchen Cupboard, Stone Jara With Writing,

SpOrlgo Wear Pitcher; 740.3817571 , """' 5 ~M.
.

540 Mlscellll!neous
·

.Men:handlae

•Pint" C~I'L .H. 5 And 3 Wooda

e. 7, e. g lind Wodgo (lrono) Bag:
AIIO .2.' Adlml Tlg_ht Lfea S7n
hc:h: AQ 1400. 140·448-'0417 Aller ... . ,.,. . .
.

.

.

Babyllfcl'; otrolltr; car ooat, high
. choir. orolkor, playpen. 30·-~752801.
'

1987 M8rcury CouQar, LS Good

· Pete

for Sale

Over 75 Tanka of Fre Sh water
Fish, Locally Raised Parakeets/
Supplies. Fish Tank/Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson
Avenue ;/Pt .

OBO. (3fl&lt;i)675-2443.

.

.for Sale

199.3 Ford Probe GT, am~m CD,
air, crulao, pow••·atoll and aun-.' '93 Sliatoo Flah l Ski boot, 120
root, lealhor Interior, lhlrp, $(000 hp Evlnrudo motor, Strotoo Trail
080, ciii74P.992-0053. · .
Trallar, mani options, vary good
condition, $8500, eall . 740·7~2199i Do~ge Intrepid, Good Con· 2249.
·
dltlon, 82,000 Millo. $8,500, 74oeoat V-208 Rinker Cuddy Cabin ,
«e-t9~1.
20 toot. $1~ , 000, Phone: (140)· ·
1995 Buick Laaab&lt;e Custom 4 !:.251~·8;;;92:;;;8;.."'.,..--·--~-Wheals, AIC , Tilt, Crutoe. Pwr, 790 · Campara 6
Locks, Pwr Windows. Pwr Seats,
Motor Homet~ · ,
$8,~00 .00 : (2,000 Under Book
Valuo)l 74()-682-7512
,;,leo Pop-Up Camper Stoops 1 .
·

,

.

, Naw ·canvaa &amp; Windowa •.$100

1995 c amaro,. Air, Tilt, Clutse, 080 740-2!1e-6467
co. Tinted Glaos. 58,000 Mil.,,
'
•
ASking $8.500, 740-446 ·8172,
740·256·9103.
SERVICES

0

Ex·~ertor, 36,000 MHe~. ~xcellent

.Carll Will Take Poy-011, 740.245·
0333.
92 Booneville SE oadan, metal!~
blue, 80,000 mlloa, good condlf
lion . asking sa.ooo. 140·1•28200.
95 Mustang GT conVertible, daik
green with bl.ck top, 66K mites.

$.13,400080, eoll740-7-&lt;2·305~...

•

ars WaterprOOfing'.

No !Smbarraaemant...

You're Treated wlttt Respect! .
Wf\0

vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doora, windows, baths,
moblte home repelr and morenFor

CARS FROM' · Ut/110. lmo
pounda /Repos. Fee. $0 .Down 124' tree estimate
Mot. 019.9% For LIS11r1118 1·800- 8323.
319-3323 X2156.

eaii ~Chet,

740·992-

Wf\t-.1

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
Nsw Homes • VInyl
S iding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows

· • Room AdttKions

MYERS
PAVING.::
Henderson, WV
. ,. '
8711-2417 or 448-1428,:
Cell Phone 674- 3311 · Fax 304-675-2457

, •Driveways •Tennis Courts .
· •Parking Lots • . Playground~
.:; , ·. •Roads • Streets ·· · .
r--::H:-::OW::::J:-::R=-D........,,~
EXCAVATING CO. · 1'

,, hpla0.1Mftt
'juto Body Pci!N
All replacement
l
·
•J ·
parts .

uz '

SEE HOW 51-lE HOLDS 1-!ER ,
HANDS TCioETl-IER? GOD 15
PLEASED Wt;rH 1-!ER ..1 THINK

•lr•i• u

llmill"'

Brdldo•er &amp; Backhoe i•
Service•
(
House &amp; Trailer Sitee ;

.,'740-742.-9501
•• 1' 11"''

. lan~~~~~~" 9 &amp;

810

.Home
Improvement•

~

·

I

~

UtiUtie•

!740) 992·3131

I

-•

&amp; Consttuctlon.

Drywall, Siding, Rools, Addl·
.. lions; Palnllng, , ole . (304}874·
4623 or (:j04)67~-Dt55 . . .· . ·

livingston's

Basiment · Water
Proofing, all bailen,ent rtpajrs
dona, free . esllmates, llfttlrhe
guarantee. 12yrs ori job eXparltnce . i304)8~~3887 .

!MO

.

Electrical and
Refrlgar111tlon

Residential ci1 eommorc:tol wiring,

.

~ ! Middleport New Haven ) ·
992 ,.. 2635
882:.:. 36.66 ~:-'
'·

CIRPINTII SERIICI

.•Aobn) lddlllona &amp;Rlmodtilng ,1
•NtwlllfiVII ,' '

.

·Eioclilcal &amp;Pllimillng

•Rooftni &amp;Oultm ,
•VInyl Siding &amp;Pllritjng

•Polio &amp; Pord1 Dtctca

.HILL'S

2et70Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
. 45771

.
'

• Palnilng • Plumbing
. Free Eatlmatee

. 74q-948·2217

· .Sizes 5' x 1.0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7!00AM·8PM
'
'

.740-992-2068 1
212111001 ..;.. pd .

.I

·f1SI CONSTRUOION
.
• Remvdelid!J
. , ,Roofing,. f ;:..
, .-

..
• •
New A limns,.
~ · .:.
Pole Duildiris:•, .Eto. 1 J

free Eslirnates ·

eonasd ertetrlclen . 'Ridenour
Eloctrleal, WV000306, 304-875-

740-992 . 1709

.

''

t

'

'

,'992·$479

•

self to a birthday gifl· Send for

I

the year ahead by mailing $2 and
:,, SASE to 1\stro-Graph, c/o this
,. newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, MurHill Slation, New York: NY
, .. : 10"6. Be ·sure to state your
. ; . Zodiae sian.
· . ·
·
; . TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
; You're a welcome ttddition to any
,, JO!heri!IJ todoy because you '
· know how to ..Uoy younelf ond
odd Ultlo tlt!l altair. However, let

':;. ray

t

,
.

(

the plus side of the .ledser. ,
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) If
y011're asked to go a bit overt&gt;oard
for someooe you Jove today, don't
hold back on' showing how much
you care, but i( behig too goner·
•·., ous will send you into debt. that

~· · your Astro--Graph ·Pre:OictionS for

C~liula. r · • !,
Jeff·Warner;·lns. · ,
.

in check in order to come out .on

'

.

r...~~2-2;;;.r.,.r•.·.Lo""c""".o'....._,.,

·· •

Wednesdoy; March 22, 2000. .
/\It hough your eami~g abiliti~s
will be substanlial.ly enhanced m
\ he yeor- ahead, 5o will your
extravaaanr urses. Keep the latter

~ · is 1inother story. Aries, treat yout·

~w:a
.

Pomeroy, 0111o

'
'

J.oseph Jacks

.

. . 992·6215

so long

I

~ ·

as

lhey

.

are praclical and

plished. Otherwi&lt;e ,· dreams and
wishes should be left to slcep10g.
. and binhday cakes.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) .
Social plan• could misfire t\)(lay
. they encompass people who don t
necessarily set alOng pr are from
diverse groups. S!itk ·to a small,
computible bunch•1
,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Others
probably will come through for
,you today in helping to defray
•ome of rhe,expenf!tl,of ~n undertaking in which they re 1ftvo(ved,
but oniy up to a point. Think realIstically.
i
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
When it. comes to gettint along
with others today; p:;rhaps your
emotions 'Will steer you in a better direction than· will your l911ie
and reasoniiiJ. Let cQmplsslon
rule.
LIBRA.(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You

\f

possess possibilities for ..ocqui·si·
tlon bul not because of any l,..,k.
It
only happen ·in' situations
whoro you hlv•I!UI)' '"med the·
row~.
'

w'm

you 're

antiso-

cial today that lhings could gu .

. have a chance or being accom-

New RoDII • Rep1ira
• Coating • Gune~e.
• Siding; brywatl ·

won't be because

It's okay to have grandiose

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

SELF STORACE

V.C. YOUNG Ill

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 It

GEMINI

Ftot Etllnl.ttft

new service or repalra. Maattr1 4.

YOUNG'S

South
• J 9 2
• A K 10 9 5
• 'K 7 4 3
.. 6

2.
Pass

3•

36

Pass

Pass

57 Fiord

DOWN

27~

1 Wolkln2 v.v.
3 Send lor111

Dewbw

30 Army

commornd

4 Joltnoon or
Rlcklea
5 JFK vehicle
6 Art Deco nome
AnciNaa
7 Type of cooler
34 - quo
35 Poolol topping• I Concelta.

32~

I Femorlthogo
11 .Hovlce

.

amiss when involved with others.
U will occur if you show a ,lack.of
consideration for the other guy. ·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .

21) Nonnally you' re Johnny-orithe-spot :when it comes to getting

done what needs to be done, but
today this fine quality might :onl_y
~operative

where yo~r fam•ly 1s

concerned .

CAPRICORN (Dec . ·22-Jan .
19) The

vast

inventory

of know I~

ed8e you posse·ss is impressi_ve
iind usually cor:nmands.appliu.ise.

Today, however, you might be
smarter to m ak e modesty your

18rgest preS~ntation .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
If ydu take opportunities thai surround you f o r granted today, "

Jhey'll count fqr nothing. This will
· be especially true for ·you . in

career oriented situ.ntions. ·
PISCES (Feb. 20.Mah:h 20)
Chann and wit might be your best
friend• today, &lt;inceyourthinking
cap miaht not be oo too straisht
al this lime. Oct all the fact&lt; fi"t
Ahoqld you aet Involved In •ome~ .
thlnase,rloita. ·

13 Comp
pt.
11 Paller biH

20 FIMJ.elllllt.
IMP
21 Put out.

12 Obedient

lllUUU I pePI!r

,

22,_upMij .
23 StJnvlng
.
I2C "- -, Bru.."
25 Jump
· :
27 Purple ohllde :

288M.
29 Churah
....tee
.,
31 Gela ltfty
•.
33 Unerring
.
31111dlnl aufftx ·
40Texuohrlne '
41 "Now....;- ~~

-

me
........

clown to ·

.

42 Oklohom•
43

44

,/

....,.out
Deena••

.....

... Phllolopher
47
... lldn
Co&amp;yaun-t
hOme '·',,
10 W1r~an
12 ..........

-"'

-1......1.;.-'-...1.--' ' 113- FNM'I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campoa

j

.

Celebrity Cipher c~ms are Created from quotations by famous people, past and
·
pr...,t. Each letter In the Cipher stands for anoth'er.
.
TodsY'S clue: N IK/~11$ Y

'A W Z

L Y H.· Z W J 's V

YSV

H .E H G ' N L Y W T II

LCKDYHV

YH

'

LC

ZKIIMHGV. '

L C K D Y

-

V L HE H

LKGTV

GSWOMH,

CT
DCSDY
AWZ
BSMJ .HT ,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Like a lovely .woman late tor her appointment I She's
suddenly here .. ." - British poet Gerald Bullett. ol Spring. ·
.
.. '
'

.

tHAt DAILY dfrii'O

.i\:'1&gt; I

-

PUZZLII ·~~ ~crt! ~1- ·
.

.

.

1411ed

~r

....

.~·

f) 'C ~Q.e WOII

~ J:J~•i:J

·'

CLAY l , POllAN-....;;._ _ _ __

0

Rlorrongo lotlero of thi
lour si:romblod words be·
low 10 form four olmp&lt;e ·wordo.

..

FI' I. I I I
rrI rI
FOREF

_,Nr.U1 S,T:-iT;-ff
--'·-L-- L
_ __._.,...r

L...

My cousin had gotlen engaged.
Granny claims that love is a fan
club wilh only - : - - • · •.
··

·~-rW...,Y&lt;N...,A;-RrB"'T-il
0
I . 1 t I ., .

,. ;;

·:.•

flllln~

.

mluln~

Complete rhe chuckle quo1ed
by
In lho
words
L--.1..-.1.-,J--..1-'--...L.......r you develop from step No. 3 below..
6

',
,•

·'
••

SCRAM-LETS ·ANSWERS

·3""20-*00

·report, check the

Warmth· Bravo· Cream· Beaten · MOTHER

Sentinel

'The most automated appliance in a household, " the
·exhausted mom of three boys sighed, "is stil l the
MOTHER."
.

.l.TUESDAY

~' AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp; / ,
:BLACKBEAR PAGING'
·
· ,
·
··

'"

A 65
• 73 2
• AJ 9 2
• K 9 7 ·

to get a current weat~er

~

SepticSyole,..&amp;

1. "Toll Free

llll.lnd
Pallliray,.Obla. '

. 6'

a

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Ranges • Reft'igera tors .
Freezers ··Dish. Waoher "

1786.

.j

KNOW~

1\'t&gt;IPI\\f\Ot-IU"l~?

SUNDAY CALLS)

.

·(U

ovr

Tt4f HIGt4w AY
. Of L.IFE

www.sunsethome.com

We Se,lce AU Make•
, Washers - Dry~rs

w-

~~~"'Jv.,

:

28Vutage

We are looking at three ways to
.undermine dummy's trump holding .to a contract's detriment.
They were highlighted by Ely
Culbertson in an article that was
reprinted in this month's issue of
The Bridge World magazine ..
How can 'the defense defeat
L.eT's 6o -- MAYle
this four-heart contract?
TtttY'L'- TeL.L IJ~ §m
Culbertson gave no bidding.
. tiOw TO
1s t And I had difficulty devising a
sequence · to four · hearts. Still,
GtT
over West's weak jump overcall
Of Ttll$
ll'•
(which .shows a decent six-card .
and 6-10 high-card points), it
t~o.ove~r,.tAF. ~ ~ ~ .issuitacceptable
for- North, with a
. . 3•2./
good side suit and a singleton, to
. To-~~&gt;-1&lt;£,bid three hearts. Then, after East
raises spades, marking North with
.'
a
there; it is reasonable
... forshortage
South to gamble on four (
ONf. OFTt\0~
hearts.
~I .M.~ITS L.ll(£
West leal!s the spade king. ·
\fiE ''SPOKfS
East can see that .if South has a
iL.L.US\1:.~\E.O" singleton
club, there is a great
MODEL..S
· danger that dummy's suit will be
WE"-R- 1.
established and run, . However,
fo~ that to happen, declarer needs
to· have· three. dummy entries,
which he has: the heart queenjack and club ace. And he must
draw trumps ending in the dum' my, which he 9an do unless ...
To make sure his partner can·
~ OKA.Y , lET'S FORGET
not go wrong, East should over·
~· g THE WHOLE "T111E
take with the spade ace and return
~ ~ 1 111\CHINE" FA~TA~Y.
a spade, fprcing dummy to ruff. ·
As Culbertson ·wrote, "The,
mechanism of this play is at once
pretty and complex. It is ·one of
the m0st · paradoxical .plays in
bridge. To superfiCial mind, the '
play is sheer suicide, violating aU
....., the.rules of common sense. Actu. ally, it is a superlatively effective
stratagem, am! is used only by
experts and dubs : the former:
because they know so much, the
latter beta\Jse they know so lit.
tle."

~==~~.~.,~ou=c~.. INOELIILICTRINICS:·. •• . .RADIO SHACK DEALER .

Appliance Parta An~f Service: All · Attention: Now Hoollng And Coo~
lng Shop Olio(l Groat Rates And
Name ·Brands Ove~ 25 Yeara ExExeatlonl Soi1(fea.. Lel Our E&gt;IJ)t~·
perience All Work Guaranteed,
ence Techn{ctan Give You A
French City May.tag,. 140·448·
'7795 . ..
Free . Estimate Today And Bett
Tho Spring Rush. Call Advanced
Coii!IOr f .Syslem ; AI. 740·44810
0988. .
:
C&amp;C General Home Main.'

tenenca- Painting,

·

•

WORRYING!!!

Nu~~;!!(:e~:!·n~cte

New Conatruollon 1 Remodel!

1995. ChryshJr Cirru s. XL, ~u -

L.EGTU~f
TONiti~T

••

Repo • DlvDrded

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets- Vinyl Siding- .
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free Estimates o
740-742-3411
Bryan Ret:ves ·

s

Eut

l~ =being

.Tap the, dummy

.
, ,
12% Sweet .Feed $5.00/50 lb. bag .
S · Seeds 8 Ferttlizer
~

~lms ·Drywall

tomatle, AIC , Sunrool, $9.300 810
Home ',
Improvement•
Pleasant. (304)675.1!063. Sun . I- .oeo. 740·446-0855 D0ys : 740· .
.448· 8832 Evelngs And Wee4PM, Mon·Soi1 .1~M'GPM.
kends.
.•
IIABEMENT,
Reglater,ed B o r~er Collie P.ups,
1.999
Black
Monta
Carlo
All
PowWATERP~OOFING
Working Parents, Imported Blood
·Lines, Good· Ma'r kings, First ers. in E~~:cellan! Shape! 740·388· Unc'ondlttonalllfeUme guarantee.
8358
· local references furnfat'ied." Es·
Slw&gt;ll, 1(0.379-91 10.
'
tablla111&lt;1 1975, Colt 24 Hr1. (740)
·1999 Mitsublshl Mirage, Gr~.on 448-0810, 1-800·281-0578. Rog'
570
Musical
lnatruments

'

Ntitrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

aluminum ·

Loaded,

SumetRome
Construetfon

lc·
8
Ag
S.rv
.
• .
. .

1998 Yamaha Kodiak 400, warn

1982 Chevrolet camaro, V-1,
purple with black'lntorlor. 71,832
milia. right lronr damego, $25!0,
eall740·992·150~ dayo or 740·
949·2844 ovonlnga and wookendo.
1892 Chovy Cavalier. Cyi,. AIC,
Pwr S~. Pwr. B10kll, Looko Good,
Runa Qood. Aaklng S1.8oo .oo.
7o40-3eH&lt;180 Or 7-·9~52.

Phone (740) :&gt;~~1-otl/

PROBLEMS???

Shade River

$2,800.00 OBO. 740-448·3600.
winch, Big Fool kit, Pro Design air
tiller, 189 miles. s4soo. 30H73·
·
5715 daya,' 740·992·302• evan•
_tng
~
· •..· -..,..~--...__ _
1991 Honda .Foroman, ~WD, axcellon! condition, 600 mlloa,
$4000, 740-991!·5085.
1999 Honda 4~0 ES 4 Whtal
Ortvo
Exeallont Condition, $4,800,
74o,2156•9244 .
~:::::~:;:::;.~~~--­
750 BOlli 6 Motors ..

..;

NQ Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

2PYrs.

1995 Honda 300 Four' Tru .
Looks Good, Runs Goodi

~1 . 000 mlleo. E•cellent Condllion. $2,8qO. (304}875-120•/
(304)675-2034.

Doors,

~-

• f'e1'1'1o"•'

2214.LeavaMessage.

1991 Pont. 6000 LE, 4·door.

'

-~-~. ~

East State Street
I~t~tens, Ohio 45701

·"fOP

1994 Hond~. ZR 50 . Excelle.nl ·
Condllion, Hardly used. (304}458·

77·4~o-~·~46~69~8~2·~----

I

I.

1991 Honda 4 TraX; 4wd. Runds
'good, in good shape. Onty used
for Deer Hunting. (:llot}57&amp;-27St :

41 ..,....
North ot OkiL
4t
51 Fntneh r-.glan

BY PHILLIP ALDER

r-

I

740521. . .

(NO

"'"'"'*

Opening lead: • K

LIKE HIM II

Lm¥ S r; hey . ·

JOlES'

tent Condition. $1 ,500. (304}875·
3824.
.

t990 HarleY Sportster, 883 ,
Black. Exeellent Condition . Hy·
percharger, Saddlebags, Lots of
chrome . 14,000 miles. $6,200.

Calloway Big Bertha tron•. 3-PW
plua X·l·2 A.S,L wodgas, all

0111 or740-587-3562.

1985 Suzuki 230 4 Wh&amp;&amp;ler with
Reverse 4 Slroke Engln~. Excel-

Inch Hood Scoop, $3,500, 740·
245-5443.

•

PintS

$600, 740-379-2853. .

1988 Honda ACcord, perfect condltlon, to ml~s. one previous owner; automatic, loaded. 740 ·9922866
... :
1989 Mercury Grand Marqula ·
Nice Car, .Needs Transmission,
$ 000 740-441 .0108 .
1· •
.
·

518-1363 .NORWOOD SAWMILLS 252 Sonwlll Drive, Buflalo,

'

AD Maloes Tractor Br

1981 Honda 750 Custom Motorcycle, -77,600 Milas, Ne~ Battei-y,

1988 Carrtaro, ,355 HP Engine
With Approximately 3,000 MUes.T-Tops, Good Body &amp; Paint •. 4

~EST

$ ,top .I n And 'Se'e .
'
Steve Riffle
SaJe·s. Re(lr.esentat1ve

~

• Roofing·
992·1550
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
The Appliance FREE ESTIMATES
Man
.740·992·7599

Ken You"B'

1988 TRX 2SOR Honda . $2700·.
(304}576-2111 ;

Tappan HI Elf!cieney 90% Gas
Furnaces. Oil Furnaces. 12 seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 6 Year Parts &amp; La·
bor Warran'ty BenneHs Heating &amp;
Cooling,
1-'800-872-5967

DIPDYIAG
. Plllft

Uc. 11110-50 nn"""

Motorcycles

Condition, $2.000 Or 080, 740·
388·6086.

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121 ..

graphite thahs. 1550. 740·992-

740

days, 7o40-7-&lt;2-1507 eves.
·

Block, briek, sewer pipes, Wtnd·
ows, lintels:, etc. Glaude W.tntera,

GOQds

3.242. .

Today! ·Almost
Everyohe Approved! Low Monthly 1984 Nissan -300 2X, runs but
Payments, Free Cplor Printer 1- . needs work, $750. 740.992·2222

740· 446·

Sporting

94 Astro Van lor sale, 740-992·

· HomeBu~iness

BUILDINGS: Fac'tory
7444 'OM A llnto Sovo Alotl"
. STEEL
Cancellatlona 25i30 , 30x40,
•5•100, 50x140 Now Matorlalo 1
New And used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga. Selling At Invoice! 1-800-211 ,
.. Good Used Beds, Dre.-ae.rs , · 9311-4X-47. .
·Couehoo, Dlnolln, Etc. Big ~av· VIAGRAIIII ORDER BY PHONEIII
lngo On New Furniture. 740-445- Stay AI Homolll 1-600·211-1737 .
•712.
Dept. F
Klr111 Stze Bod (Whllo Iron Haod· Wattr II no Spoeta I: 31•• cOO
" PS I
boord), Matlrooa/Box Springe. $21 .9! Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
E•eallant Condition . $200. · $37.00 Per 100: All Braa1 Com(304~51-2214. afllr 4PM.
preoalon Fltttngaln StOCk
RON
EVANS ENTEIIP111118
Wl'llrlpoOI Refrlger.:tor Freezer
. Sldt By Slda: Kirby Upright . Jaekeon, Ohio, 1·800-537-9528
S - r. Praollcally Now With All · WHITI'I METAL DETECTORS
Attacnmanll, 7~1001.
· Ron Alila on. 588 Walaon Road,
Whirlpool Waahtr, $80: Dryer, Bktwoll; Ohio. 740-.448-43311. ·
1100: ·Zonlth 21' TV, 1100: All 550 ·
8ulidlng
Good Condition. (001}(!75-7889.
Supplles

s20

tomatlc. 1OO,OdO 'Miles. $1 ,BOO

080. 740·256·1233.

Chevys , Jeeps, And Sport UIIII-

RESIDENTIAL HOM.E OWNERS

French City Maytag, 740·446 -

1993 Dodge Spirit 4 Cylinder. Au·

HP IBM Desktops /Laptops , E- 'ties . .Call Now! 800- 772· 7470;
Comerce Web sites·. Start Your . EXT. 7832. · -,
·

6757.

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Wa&amp;hers,.Oryers, Ranges. Aefrigrators, 9.0 · Day Guarantee!

Body WOrk, Painted, $6,000 OBO:

&amp; Ul' POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,

Prom Dress • Fa~o~iana, Size e!/6:
Shoes and Jewelry.' (304)675-

Housallold
Go~ a

19~6 Jeep CherOkee 4x4 Drive,
82,000 Miles, Air, Needs A Little

CARS $100, $500

$150. 740-44lH951.

MERCHANDI SE

510 ·

'92. Pontiac BonneVille, four door,
excellent condition, sharp, $4650,
740.949-2045 evenings. ·

•-IF 1 DON'.T·M
.
MY WAYS-- l'LL END UP

SHE SAY?

lull'"'" 877· 55l· 782Z

line.

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy; Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts ~ All Mak~s

WHAT DID

Also Show Qua lity
P mm,er·anian· s &amp; P et

39 141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 457f:f9

' 1.000St. Rl. 7 SOuth
Coo/vii,., OH 45723

"Were Back"

4•

Ji-m11il - mmyetlcpomll CAOL.c~;~ll)

Ctntrutor• Welnmt

.

1.

All ·Breede ·

'740o94..MJ:6 '

0e11n1s Bryant, Owqer

$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst

LXI Van, 41,000· Miles. V·6 ,
Loaded, $13,500, OBO 740-2561252, Homo: 140-256-1818.
·

Ni!==&amp; Used ·Furniture and .Ap·

'25 ye.n exp el-ienee

, free E stimates

Dealers.

AltWel • Pacul • Puat. .

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Soutla' West Nortb Eut

• B a thi!!g ..E ars
• Nails • l'"le a Bath.s

and all meta l buildings

Pomeroy, OH
Paying $1io.oo
per g&amp;ITJI

740.992-5065,

TRANSPORTATION

Treadmill, 740-446-9849.

Quality concrete flatwork

Free Estimate&amp;

Prograalve top

, I

Opt• For'Groo•lng
· For Yovr Pet'aii.Ua.

c-.IH Parts

AT8:30 P.M.
Ml!n St.,

.

Poms

740-742-8015

To Tt.e And load, Asking $900, · (304)615-1564.
:...:.c"-:---::--~::-:-~:740.44H081 .
441-0027.

• Q 6
• Q J 3

Gold " • ' stm
, Bnlldlpft. IAA.

1-800·311-3391

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
·Thursdays

• K Q 10 8 f
• 8 8

lndependent Dealer

Albany, Ohio

·1987 Aerostar R4ns Well, Needs
.Transm ission $900 080 740 -

Weol

Mystic

Factory Authorized

um- 31 Iron (clcoll.-)
40 Humin being
42 II.P.'a q..-.y

20 Sotllel
23 Sour.....,

.• Q J .
• 10 8 5
AA I 08 5 42

conneftlon·

Equip~nt

03-21.00

• 7

·~Your
~~~~~
··r-------Concrete

~~~1/il

a 4·WD.s

trans , low mileage, 380·4 Barrell ,
new tires &amp; wh~ela. Sharp Truck .

for

Up To 16' Wide , 740·446-0115,

Vans

1987 Ghevy Van, Full Si ze,
l. osB. • Free Estimates! 740-446· . Ear corn and ,sQuare bates of hay, · .Raised Roof, Conversion. 350 V
8 . Auto·. PS, PB, PW. 66,000
6308, 1-1100.291-0098.
call740-985-4465. .
mites. Good condition . $5,000 .
JET
Ground Ear' Corn, your sacks . (304)372-9240.
AERATION MOTORS
Phon&amp; after 4PM 1304}875-2443.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoctt.
1987 FOrd Aerostar XLT Good
Call Ron·Evans, 1-80().537·9528.
Straw: Bright Wire Tie' StraW Ye8r Condition, 41 ,750 , Price Negotl·
·
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Cis· able. 740.388-D'U5.
count Available . Heritage Farm.
Jewelry Sale: 30 Year Colleclien
1993 s~ 10 Blazer 4 WD, 4.3litre
(304)675-5724.
Avon Jewelry, Most Stiii ·Boxed,
Vortec . Loaded, 87 .000 Miles .
Ney•r Worn To See Call 740650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer . . Asking $9,000, 0~•0 · 256·9244 Or

Village ·Green Apartment s- 2
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
bedrooms, totat electric, appllanc·
es furnished,· laundry room tacill; 'Huge· lhWntory, DiscOUnt Prices,
ties and close to school, applica- On Vlny.l Skirt ing, Doors , Wind·
tions available at ollice. 740·992- , ows, An chors,1 Water Heaters,
3711 TDD 1-888-233·6694. Equal Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
Housing Opponuntty
naceS &amp; Heat Pumps. eennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 740·'U 6460 Space
Rent
9416 www.orvb.cdmlbennett

$12,5JMo., $100 Deposit, Refer·
ences, 74().4.46.()175.

730

Wjld Turkeys For Sale, Ev'enings
Only. 740-446-3945

446-0639.

Mobile Home lot For Rent,· Takes

loaded , 740· 9,.9·2355 or 7_.0·
949-3117.

1978 GMC 112 TQn Va,: 350 AuIOmatic, $1 ,200 Runs Good, 740·
44&amp;- 6323·
1979 Jeep , 4WO Truck. Auto

I400, 740·446-IIQ8 1.

You,o~~.rt~,~~. we eorn

WILLIS'
. SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

773-5305 alter 6pm.

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

Or 740'446·4362.

Haubng • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-34.,0

No

112MJD 1 mo. pd.

HfiCILinG and ..
EXCfiVATtnG

1997 blade .Cheyy s-10 Stepsl~e
Extended Cab, 3 door, toadect .
25,000 miles, very sharp, lull far- , .
ings, $12.000. 740-949·2045 o,r
740-949-2203.

1997 Ford Ranger XLT, 2 wheel
drive, step side, excellent condi·
2 Paint Mares:· One 4 Years Old; lion , 4 cyt .. auto, ale. amlfm CD.
On.e 2 Year&amp; Old; 2 Arabian 50,000 miles, custom wheels, fiGeidings; One ·7 Y,ars Old: O~e · berglass bed cover, $8,999, 304·

Yearling Jack Donkey, Asking

COOUNG EQUIPMENT
"If

Lease , 937-895·0897 . (Btloro
11:00 A.M. &amp; After 6 P.M.)

JlbWICK'S.

1 N!tle
1 FHII Willi
revaMWA
10 ~

15 City11 lied. apec:'-lly 54 Ill Will

740-992-StH

7122/TFN

a,.,..

37 Author

14 Fo8tldloua

33795 fli.Wnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE

38 Young pqodle

ACROSS

12 l'lre-IHMIII!ng 45 Chum

Hlth &amp; Dry·
Self-Stotatt

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

(304)773-5254.

P.M. Call 7·0-448 -~445 ; Allor
5:00· P.M. And Weekends Call
74Q-441l-1 309, ASk For VIrgiL

sago.

Now Reatlll8

• New l:'lomea
•Garagea

1991 Ford, F-150 XLT 2 WD, 8'

Maney Ferguaon 50 gas. Bush-

NBA Cro11Word Pussle

PHILLIP
ALDER

ta' a, Chevyt, Jatpa, And Sport

610

The Dally Sentinel • Page B S

'ALLEYOOP

HONDA's S100, $500 l UP. PO·
LICE IMPOUN D. Honoa'o Toyo-

Miles, Weekdays 9:30 ,( M. -5:00

Mo ntnty Payments. Good Credit

Pomeroy, Mlddlepoit, Ohio

BRIDGE

shlg Fee Or Volume Commitment · Wolfie 740·949·3315 leave ' mes-

.ALL SIZE S /ALL LOADS. ELDORADO BUILDING SY STEMS
1-800-27'9-4300.

Tuesday, March 21 , 2000

Autoa for Site

Credit Problems, No Problem. CaU
loaded, t J&amp;:cellant condition. new
Utlllllea Paid, Walking Distance . To" Froo 1-877-293'4082.
620
Wanted to Buy
diOS, (7'!())245-9252.
To College , Very Nice, Availabte
(11/00, 7&lt;1().245-5100.
ALL STEEL BUILDINGS. Factory TOBACCO Poundage Wanted 1994 Ford Ranger ).( LT 2 WD ,
Liquidation. Up to 50% OFF. Must To _lease For A Good Prk:e Paid · New nres; 5 Spud, Looks Great,
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sel L 40K60 , SOJC100 , 70lC1 00 , Up Fiont , Call Jodf8Y J. Farm 1·
Stalnlen Steel Chrome Along
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK· 80~150, Doug 1·800-716-2578.
937-373·4644 Can Call Collect Botrom, $5,500 , 740·446· 4109 ; .
&amp;ON ESTATES, 52 Wes twood
Mer 9:00 I'M.
~n.r 5, 7(0.3711-25119.
· Drive from S289 ro $370. Walk ro Are You A·Metal e·uildlng Erector
shop &amp; ·movies. Call 7 40 -44e/Confraclor? We Have Fac tor ~ f Wanted- RCA or Hughes Dire ct · 199• GMC 1500 Series SLE
~- Equal Hou~ ng Opporlunlty.
Direct BuUd ings With NO Oealer- TV system , will pay top dollar,
loaded, V-8. Automatic, low
Christy's 'Family Llv-ing , aparl•
ment a, .home &amp; trailer rentals,
7~-992~5111&amp; , apartments a ~a ll ·
~ · furnished &amp; unfurnished.

•

Tueedlly, March 21 , 2000

,,

MARCH 21

.,
,.

I

•

'

�Pege 84 • The O.lly Sentinel
440

Apartments

POme1'9y?Middleport, Ohio

540 M~leneous

for Rant
1 Bedroom With Living Room,

Eat-In Furnished Kitchen. Large

$$BAD CREDIT? Got Cash
Loano To $5,000. Dobt Conaoll·
dation To $2QO.OOO. Crl&lt;lit Cords,

In Furnlohod Kitchen. $270/Mo..

Mortgagea, Attlnanclng And
Auto Loans Available. Meridian

EncJo11d PGrct'l , $280/ Mo., 2
- . . lallJO Living Room, Eo~

Newly Oaeotrated, Both Ap'arte-

mentt Ups tairs, -45 8 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis , Water &amp;
Tl'aah Furnished, Rtflfencl$ , SeC\dy Dopoalt, 74o-742·2837; At-

10r5 P.M.

1 Btdroom. Near Holz8r, A./C,
EconOmical Gas Hea t, WID
Hookup, Qulel Locati on . $279/
Mo.,+ unea, 740-4-ti-2957.
2 Bedro om Apartm ent Adjacent

To· Rio Gronde Campus, 140.245·
5158 . .
Apartment For Rent $375/Mo.. All

710

FAHr,1 SUPPLI E S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Men:handlae

Crodil Corp. 1-500...71-5119 Exl
1180.

22"X27" Cheat freezer, 8.1 cubiC
toot, $100, 1221 Co1ego Rd .. Syr·

acu&amp;e, 740..992·5008, leave mea·
sago. Oro Boss.
37 PeOple Need ed To Lose Up

To 30 Pounds in The Next 30
Days, Free Samples, 740·441·

1962.

WAN T A COMPUTER 11 BUT
NO CASH?? .MMX Technology
Will Finance Wl1h •o• Down. PaGt

· Furnished 3 Rooms· &amp; Bath
Downstairs, Clean, No Pets, Ref·
erence11 a Deposit Requ ired,

Utitkill. can Now! 800-772-7470:

Farm Equipment

EKT. 6336.

2 Hay Wagono $400 Each: I lnternttlonal Hly Rake $.700,
3B8-ll406.
•

101111 IISSILL
CONSTRUCTION

1•o-. 720 Trudia for Slle

2000 Ford Dleael Tractor; 3600
Ford With 01" Finis hed Mower;
13! Masae y Fergu aon Dlt1eJ;

1120 John Deere Diesel, 7"0·

286-e522.
For Sale : Toba ccO Sti cka. 7"0·

245-5i21.

1987 Chevy 6· 10. 2.5, 4 Cyl.
AC,PS, PB, Nleo l Streight .
$2,200. (304)875-~ .

Hog, Live Power, Hlghl Low

Range. Never been moltlttd.
$5,200. (30&lt;1)875-3824.

1888 Chevy 112 ton plel&lt;-up, 4x4.
$8,000 or • ·wheele r a s trade in.

Bed, e Cylinder, Aulornallc, AJC,

PS. PB, PW, AMIFM CO, 70,000
Mites. $7,200, 740-4-46-3888.

ESTIMATES
74().m·1671

1984 Chevy Silverado Stepslde,

We Are Buying Tobaeco Ba se &amp;

BIG SCREEN TV. Take On Small
Roqured.1 ·800-718·1657.

74o-446-1519.

· Complete DISH Netwt;? rk satellite
s ystem , brand new. $99, 740Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIUage Manor and · 992-' 1182 or 304· 773·S305 after
·
Rlve.rskSI Apartments In Middle- 6pm.
port From $273·$336. Call 740· COMPUTERS - Low Or $0 Down ..
992·5064. Equal Housing Opper·
Low Monthly Payments: )'2 K
llnilles. •
Compl,ant. Almost Everyone .Ap.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,
7~300 .

proved. t-800-611-3476 Ext. 330.
Diamond Ring for Sale, 0.51 Cai'•

New Haven· one bedroom fur-

nlshld apartm~nt 1 depo si t aM
references , no· pets, 740·992·

0165 . .

Nlee· One Bdrm Unfurn ished
Apartment. Range &amp; Refr tg. provided . Wate r I Garb8.ge Paid .
Deposit Required . Call 74Q-446·

4345 After 6:00Pm
Nort~

4th ~v e mJ:&amp; , Middleport- 2
room effldency apartment, depos·
it and references ; no pets, 740-'

992-!)165.

Now Taking· Appli cati ons - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartment s, Includes Water
· Sewage , Trash . $315/Mo., 740·

448-Q008.

One bedroom apartment in Mid·

dloporl. 740.992-9191.

Rental Property. Collage Apt. 2br'.
$250 . Freshly painted e xterior.

Homestead Realty 304-675-5540.
Twin Towers now accepting ap plications lor 1 BA . HUO subskf·
ized apt.' for elderly ~nd handl· .

cllj)J)ed. EOH . !:)041675-6679.

ats . Marquis Cut, E Color, s ~ t
Clarit y, '14 Carat While Gold
Mount, 20 Diamond Chips Total·
lng .45 Carats, Leave PhOne t AI
740·441 ·0;)53.
.
Grubb's Pl ano- tuning &amp; ,epalrs .
. Problems? N&amp;ed Tuned? Call the

plano Or. 7o40-446·4525

Hot Springs hot tubo 4 ."person ,
good condition. will nave new top.
has neW heater and new thermo·
stat, some chemicals included,
ceaar with biU(Io top. call 740-992·
5053 -aHer 5pm.

JANITROL HEATING AND

630

Livestock

10 Year Old AQHA Bay Mare,
Bred For . May Foal. Asking
$1,500 740-446-8081.

3 Ve"" O&lt;d, 740-388·8358.

88 Ford · Ranger ex tend cab ,
$2800. 7(0.74.2·2780.

Butc~

89 Ford F·350 Supereab Dually,

Hogs, 740.256--85!0.

Fair Pigs FOr Sale, 740-441 -0968

'

Reg istered Red Polled Limousln
Bull For Sa te Yearling, Phone
740-446·8081.

Y8arllng AOHA Grey Colt, BrOke

:64~0:.·_H_a;.y:....&amp;_G..,..ra.,.l_n...,.,.-

74o-446-442:i.

Tobacco Plants
Now taking orderS for this Spring.
.Firs) Orders will Guaranlae Best&amp;
Earliest
Plants.
Dewhurst

800 square feet olllce building ,
$350Jmo., mobile home spaces.
$120/ mo., 2 bedroom mobile
home, $300/mo., Rlverpark, Po-

New Tromborle ·And MOtorized

199~ Ford F-150 XLI, V·8. au ·
tomatic, 4WO, 1;1' bed, air, electric
windows, bedilner, fiberglass top·
per, excellent condition, $12,000,

Farms,(304)895·37o4011195-3789.

1.9,96 Chrysler Town &amp; Country .

meroy, 74Q-949-2093.

pllaneos. (740)·446·4039 (740}·
446-1004 Al)l'llmo.

Mobile Home Patk Lot Available.
$115/Mo., Addison Pike, Wise·
'1'11'1 ReeHy, 740-446-3844.
· ·
Trailer lot for rent in Middleport,
taking applications, 740-992-9145

atter6pm.

7795.
For Sale: _Recondltioned wasn ers , dryers and retrig&amp;r~;ttors .
Thompsons Appliance . 3407

Jacl1son Avenue, (304)675-1388.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer-&amp; , dryers , refrigerators .
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76

Vtno Stroot, Call 740·446-1398,
1-888-818-0128.
Mollohln Carpe.t 202 Clark Chap- ·
at ftoad , Porter

Ohio ~

NO MONEY DOWN !I I Compaq

888 ·479·2345

(ToiiFroo}

www.ejump-start.com

·

· Nordic Trac EKercise Machine,
$450 New; Same As New Sell

www.orvb.eol'nlbennett
Ron's Gun Snop, 74D-742·6412.

1991 Buick Park lw&amp;nue, 95,206
Miles. Good.Condltlon. Ser-Ious

Sawmill $3,795 , Saw Logs Into

Buyeri Onty, 740-448-8241 .

Boards, Planks, Beams . Large
Capacitu. Best Sawmill Value An''
ywhere. FREE Information. 1·80().

th 81
RS 5
1991 PI
ymou
azer
•
Speed,- Premium Soui1(J Pactc:age,
Sunroof, Loaded, $3,200, 080,

. N¥ '14225.

··

8273 IMI'IIngl.

560

Kiln dried red oak , UJiect &amp; • .,
common. somt char ~ y. 740·667-

AKC Labrador Pupploa, Black,
$175. 740-256--8733.

53()

Antlquaa

Buy· or sell. Riverine Antlquea ,

1124 Eut Main on SR 1~4 E. Pomorliy, 7•()-992-2! 28 or 74Q-9921538. Auu Moore. owner.
FanCy ·Oak Secretary Oes.k ~
Bookcase With IJalloty: Early
Bakoro Cablnol /Kitchen Cupboard, Stone Jara With Writing,

SpOrlgo Wear Pitcher; 740.3817571 , """' 5 ~M.
.

540 Mlscellll!neous
·

.Men:handlae

•Pint" C~I'L .H. 5 And 3 Wooda

e. 7, e. g lind Wodgo (lrono) Bag:
AIIO .2.' Adlml Tlg_ht Lfea S7n
hc:h: AQ 1400. 140·448-'0417 Aller ... . ,.,. . .
.

.

.

Babyllfcl'; otrolltr; car ooat, high
. choir. orolkor, playpen. 30·-~752801.
'

1987 M8rcury CouQar, LS Good

· Pete

for Sale

Over 75 Tanka of Fre Sh water
Fish, Locally Raised Parakeets/
Supplies. Fish Tank/Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson
Avenue ;/Pt .

OBO. (3fl&lt;i)675-2443.

.

.for Sale

199.3 Ford Probe GT, am~m CD,
air, crulao, pow••·atoll and aun-.' '93 Sliatoo Flah l Ski boot, 120
root, lealhor Interior, lhlrp, $(000 hp Evlnrudo motor, Strotoo Trail
080, ciii74P.992-0053. · .
Trallar, mani options, vary good
condition, $8500, eall . 740·7~2199i Do~ge Intrepid, Good Con· 2249.
·
dltlon, 82,000 Millo. $8,500, 74oeoat V-208 Rinker Cuddy Cabin ,
«e-t9~1.
20 toot. $1~ , 000, Phone: (140)· ·
1995 Buick Laaab&lt;e Custom 4 !:.251~·8;;;92:;;;8;.."'.,..--·--~-Wheals, AIC , Tilt, Crutoe. Pwr, 790 · Campara 6
Locks, Pwr Windows. Pwr Seats,
Motor Homet~ · ,
$8,~00 .00 : (2,000 Under Book
Valuo)l 74()-682-7512
,;,leo Pop-Up Camper Stoops 1 .
·

,

.

, Naw ·canvaa &amp; Windowa •.$100

1995 c amaro,. Air, Tilt, Clutse, 080 740-2!1e-6467
co. Tinted Glaos. 58,000 Mil.,,
'
•
ASking $8.500, 740-446 ·8172,
740·256·9103.
SERVICES

0

Ex·~ertor, 36,000 MHe~. ~xcellent

.Carll Will Take Poy-011, 740.245·
0333.
92 Booneville SE oadan, metal!~
blue, 80,000 mlloa, good condlf
lion . asking sa.ooo. 140·1•28200.
95 Mustang GT conVertible, daik
green with bl.ck top, 66K mites.

$.13,400080, eoll740-7-&lt;2·305~...

•

ars WaterprOOfing'.

No !Smbarraaemant...

You're Treated wlttt Respect! .
Wf\0

vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doora, windows, baths,
moblte home repelr and morenFor

CARS FROM' · Ut/110. lmo
pounda /Repos. Fee. $0 .Down 124' tree estimate
Mot. 019.9% For LIS11r1118 1·800- 8323.
319-3323 X2156.

eaii ~Chet,

740·992-

Wf\t-.1

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
Nsw Homes • VInyl
S iding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows

· • Room AdttKions

MYERS
PAVING.::
Henderson, WV
. ,. '
8711-2417 or 448-1428,:
Cell Phone 674- 3311 · Fax 304-675-2457

, •Driveways •Tennis Courts .
· •Parking Lots • . Playground~
.:; , ·. •Roads • Streets ·· · .
r--::H:-::OW::::J:-::R=-D........,,~
EXCAVATING CO. · 1'

,, hpla0.1Mftt
'juto Body Pci!N
All replacement
l
·
•J ·
parts .

uz '

SEE HOW 51-lE HOLDS 1-!ER ,
HANDS TCioETl-IER? GOD 15
PLEASED Wt;rH 1-!ER ..1 THINK

•lr•i• u

llmill"'

Brdldo•er &amp; Backhoe i•
Service•
(
House &amp; Trailer Sitee ;

.,'740-742.-9501
•• 1' 11"''

. lan~~~~~~" 9 &amp;

810

.Home
Improvement•

~

·

I

~

UtiUtie•

!740) 992·3131

I

-•

&amp; Consttuctlon.

Drywall, Siding, Rools, Addl·
.. lions; Palnllng, , ole . (304}874·
4623 or (:j04)67~-Dt55 . . .· . ·

livingston's

Basiment · Water
Proofing, all bailen,ent rtpajrs
dona, free . esllmates, llfttlrhe
guarantee. 12yrs ori job eXparltnce . i304)8~~3887 .

!MO

.

Electrical and
Refrlgar111tlon

Residential ci1 eommorc:tol wiring,

.

~ ! Middleport New Haven ) ·
992 ,.. 2635
882:.:. 36.66 ~:-'
'·

CIRPINTII SERIICI

.•Aobn) lddlllona &amp;Rlmodtilng ,1
•NtwlllfiVII ,' '

.

·Eioclilcal &amp;Pllimillng

•Rooftni &amp;Oultm ,
•VInyl Siding &amp;Pllritjng

•Polio &amp; Pord1 Dtctca

.HILL'S

2et70Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
. 45771

.
'

• Palnilng • Plumbing
. Free Eatlmatee

. 74q-948·2217

· .Sizes 5' x 1.0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7!00AM·8PM
'
'

.740-992-2068 1
212111001 ..;.. pd .

.I

·f1SI CONSTRUOION
.
• Remvdelid!J
. , ,Roofing,. f ;:..
, .-

..
• •
New A limns,.
~ · .:.
Pole Duildiris:•, .Eto. 1 J

free Eslirnates ·

eonasd ertetrlclen . 'Ridenour
Eloctrleal, WV000306, 304-875-

740-992 . 1709

.

''

t

'

'

,'992·$479

•

self to a birthday gifl· Send for

I

the year ahead by mailing $2 and
:,, SASE to 1\stro-Graph, c/o this
,. newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, MurHill Slation, New York: NY
, .. : 10"6. Be ·sure to state your
. ; . Zodiae sian.
· . ·
·
; . TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
; You're a welcome ttddition to any
,, JO!heri!IJ todoy because you '
· know how to ..Uoy younelf ond
odd Ultlo tlt!l altair. However, let

':;. ray

t

,
.

(

the plus side of the .ledser. ,
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) If
y011're asked to go a bit overt&gt;oard
for someooe you Jove today, don't
hold back on' showing how much
you care, but i( behig too goner·
•·., ous will send you into debt. that

~· · your Astro--Graph ·Pre:OictionS for

C~liula. r · • !,
Jeff·Warner;·lns. · ,
.

in check in order to come out .on

'

.

r...~~2-2;;;.r.,.r•.·.Lo""c""".o'....._,.,

·· •

Wednesdoy; March 22, 2000. .
/\It hough your eami~g abiliti~s
will be substanlial.ly enhanced m
\ he yeor- ahead, 5o will your
extravaaanr urses. Keep the latter

~ · is 1inother story. Aries, treat yout·

~w:a
.

Pomeroy, 0111o

'
'

J.oseph Jacks

.

. . 992·6215

so long

I

~ ·

as

lhey

.

are praclical and

plished. Otherwi&lt;e ,· dreams and
wishes should be left to slcep10g.
. and binhday cakes.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) .
Social plan• could misfire t\)(lay
. they encompass people who don t
necessarily set alOng pr are from
diverse groups. S!itk ·to a small,
computible bunch•1
,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Others
probably will come through for
,you today in helping to defray
•ome of rhe,expenf!tl,of ~n undertaking in which they re 1ftvo(ved,
but oniy up to a point. Think realIstically.
i
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
When it. comes to gettint along
with others today; p:;rhaps your
emotions 'Will steer you in a better direction than· will your l911ie
and reasoniiiJ. Let cQmplsslon
rule.
LIBRA.(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You

\f

possess possibilities for ..ocqui·si·
tlon bul not because of any l,..,k.
It
only happen ·in' situations
whoro you hlv•I!UI)' '"med the·
row~.
'

w'm

you 're

antiso-

cial today that lhings could gu .

. have a chance or being accom-

New RoDII • Rep1ira
• Coating • Gune~e.
• Siding; brywatl ·

won't be because

It's okay to have grandiose

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

SELF STORACE

V.C. YOUNG Ill

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 It

GEMINI

Ftot Etllnl.ttft

new service or repalra. Maattr1 4.

YOUNG'S

South
• J 9 2
• A K 10 9 5
• 'K 7 4 3
.. 6

2.
Pass

3•

36

Pass

Pass

57 Fiord

DOWN

27~

1 Wolkln2 v.v.
3 Send lor111

Dewbw

30 Army

commornd

4 Joltnoon or
Rlcklea
5 JFK vehicle
6 Art Deco nome
AnciNaa
7 Type of cooler
34 - quo
35 Poolol topping• I Concelta.

32~

I Femorlthogo
11 .Hovlce

.

amiss when involved with others.
U will occur if you show a ,lack.of
consideration for the other guy. ·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .

21) Nonnally you' re Johnny-orithe-spot :when it comes to getting

done what needs to be done, but
today this fine quality might :onl_y
~operative

where yo~r fam•ly 1s

concerned .

CAPRICORN (Dec . ·22-Jan .
19) The

vast

inventory

of know I~

ed8e you posse·ss is impressi_ve
iind usually cor:nmands.appliu.ise.

Today, however, you might be
smarter to m ak e modesty your

18rgest preS~ntation .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
If ydu take opportunities thai surround you f o r granted today, "

Jhey'll count fqr nothing. This will
· be especially true for ·you . in

career oriented situ.ntions. ·
PISCES (Feb. 20.Mah:h 20)
Chann and wit might be your best
friend• today, &lt;inceyourthinking
cap miaht not be oo too straisht
al this lime. Oct all the fact&lt; fi"t
Ahoqld you aet Involved In •ome~ .
thlnase,rloita. ·

13 Comp
pt.
11 Paller biH

20 FIMJ.elllllt.
IMP
21 Put out.

12 Obedient

lllUUU I pePI!r

,

22,_upMij .
23 StJnvlng
.
I2C "- -, Bru.."
25 Jump
· :
27 Purple ohllde :

288M.
29 Churah
....tee
.,
31 Gela ltfty
•.
33 Unerring
.
31111dlnl aufftx ·
40Texuohrlne '
41 "Now....;- ~~

-

me
........

clown to ·

.

42 Oklohom•
43

44

,/

....,.out
Deena••

.....

... Phllolopher
47
... lldn
Co&amp;yaun-t
hOme '·',,
10 W1r~an
12 ..........

-"'

-1......1.;.-'-...1.--' ' 113- FNM'I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campoa

j

.

Celebrity Cipher c~ms are Created from quotations by famous people, past and
·
pr...,t. Each letter In the Cipher stands for anoth'er.
.
TodsY'S clue: N IK/~11$ Y

'A W Z

L Y H.· Z W J 's V

YSV

H .E H G ' N L Y W T II

LCKDYHV

YH

'

LC

ZKIIMHGV. '

L C K D Y

-

V L HE H

LKGTV

GSWOMH,

CT
DCSDY
AWZ
BSMJ .HT ,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Like a lovely .woman late tor her appointment I She's
suddenly here .. ." - British poet Gerald Bullett. ol Spring. ·
.
.. '
'

.

tHAt DAILY dfrii'O

.i\:'1&gt; I

-

PUZZLII ·~~ ~crt! ~1- ·
.

.

.

1411ed

~r

....

.~·

f) 'C ~Q.e WOII

~ J:J~•i:J

·'

CLAY l , POllAN-....;;._ _ _ __

0

Rlorrongo lotlero of thi
lour si:romblod words be·
low 10 form four olmp&lt;e ·wordo.

..

FI' I. I I I
rrI rI
FOREF

_,Nr.U1 S,T:-iT;-ff
--'·-L-- L
_ __._.,...r

L...

My cousin had gotlen engaged.
Granny claims that love is a fan
club wilh only - : - - • · •.
··

·~-rW...,Y&lt;N...,A;-RrB"'T-il
0
I . 1 t I ., .

,. ;;

·:.•

flllln~

.

mluln~

Complete rhe chuckle quo1ed
by
In lho
words
L--.1..-.1.-,J--..1-'--...L.......r you develop from step No. 3 below..
6

',
,•

·'
••

SCRAM-LETS ·ANSWERS

·3""20-*00

·report, check the

Warmth· Bravo· Cream· Beaten · MOTHER

Sentinel

'The most automated appliance in a household, " the
·exhausted mom of three boys sighed, "is stil l the
MOTHER."
.

.l.TUESDAY

~' AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp; / ,
:BLACKBEAR PAGING'
·
· ,
·
··

'"

A 65
• 73 2
• AJ 9 2
• K 9 7 ·

to get a current weat~er

~

SepticSyole,..&amp;

1. "Toll Free

llll.lnd
Pallliray,.Obla. '

. 6'

a

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Ranges • Reft'igera tors .
Freezers ··Dish. Waoher "

1786.

.j

KNOW~

1\'t&gt;IPI\\f\Ot-IU"l~?

SUNDAY CALLS)

.

·(U

ovr

Tt4f HIGt4w AY
. Of L.IFE

www.sunsethome.com

We Se,lce AU Make•
, Washers - Dry~rs

w-

~~~"'Jv.,

:

28Vutage

We are looking at three ways to
.undermine dummy's trump holding .to a contract's detriment.
They were highlighted by Ely
Culbertson in an article that was
reprinted in this month's issue of
The Bridge World magazine ..
How can 'the defense defeat
L.eT's 6o -- MAYle
this four-heart contract?
TtttY'L'- TeL.L IJ~ §m
Culbertson gave no bidding.
. tiOw TO
1s t And I had difficulty devising a
sequence · to four · hearts. Still,
GtT
over West's weak jump overcall
Of Ttll$
ll'•
(which .shows a decent six-card .
and 6-10 high-card points), it
t~o.ove~r,.tAF. ~ ~ ~ .issuitacceptable
for- North, with a
. . 3•2./
good side suit and a singleton, to
. To-~~&gt;-1&lt;£,bid three hearts. Then, after East
raises spades, marking North with
.'
a
there; it is reasonable
... forshortage
South to gamble on four (
ONf. OFTt\0~
hearts.
~I .M.~ITS L.ll(£
West leal!s the spade king. ·
\fiE ''SPOKfS
East can see that .if South has a
iL.L.US\1:.~\E.O" singleton
club, there is a great
MODEL..S
· danger that dummy's suit will be
WE"-R- 1.
established and run, . However,
fo~ that to happen, declarer needs
to· have· three. dummy entries,
which he has: the heart queenjack and club ace. And he must
draw trumps ending in the dum' my, which he 9an do unless ...
To make sure his partner can·
~ OKA.Y , lET'S FORGET
not go wrong, East should over·
~· g THE WHOLE "T111E
take with the spade ace and return
~ ~ 1 111\CHINE" FA~TA~Y.
a spade, fprcing dummy to ruff. ·
As Culbertson ·wrote, "The,
mechanism of this play is at once
pretty and complex. It is ·one of
the m0st · paradoxical .plays in
bridge. To superfiCial mind, the '
play is sheer suicide, violating aU
....., the.rules of common sense. Actu. ally, it is a superlatively effective
stratagem, am! is used only by
experts and dubs : the former:
because they know so much, the
latter beta\Jse they know so lit.
tle."

~==~~.~.,~ou=c~.. INOELIILICTRINICS:·. •• . .RADIO SHACK DEALER .

Appliance Parta An~f Service: All · Attention: Now Hoollng And Coo~
lng Shop Olio(l Groat Rates And
Name ·Brands Ove~ 25 Yeara ExExeatlonl Soi1(fea.. Lel Our E&gt;IJ)t~·
perience All Work Guaranteed,
ence Techn{ctan Give You A
French City May.tag,. 140·448·
'7795 . ..
Free . Estimate Today And Bett
Tho Spring Rush. Call Advanced
Coii!IOr f .Syslem ; AI. 740·44810
0988. .
:
C&amp;C General Home Main.'

tenenca- Painting,

·

•

WORRYING!!!

Nu~~;!!(:e~:!·n~cte

New Conatruollon 1 Remodel!

1995. ChryshJr Cirru s. XL, ~u -

L.EGTU~f
TONiti~T

••

Repo • DlvDrded

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets- Vinyl Siding- .
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free Estimates o
740-742-3411
Bryan Ret:ves ·

s

Eut

l~ =being

.Tap the, dummy

.
, ,
12% Sweet .Feed $5.00/50 lb. bag .
S · Seeds 8 Ferttlizer
~

~lms ·Drywall

tomatle, AIC , Sunrool, $9.300 810
Home ',
Improvement•
Pleasant. (304)675.1!063. Sun . I- .oeo. 740·446-0855 D0ys : 740· .
.448· 8832 Evelngs And Wee4PM, Mon·Soi1 .1~M'GPM.
kends.
.•
IIABEMENT,
Reglater,ed B o r~er Collie P.ups,
1.999
Black
Monta
Carlo
All
PowWATERP~OOFING
Working Parents, Imported Blood
·Lines, Good· Ma'r kings, First ers. in E~~:cellan! Shape! 740·388· Unc'ondlttonalllfeUme guarantee.
8358
· local references furnfat'ied." Es·
Slw&gt;ll, 1(0.379-91 10.
'
tablla111&lt;1 1975, Colt 24 Hr1. (740)
·1999 Mitsublshl Mirage, Gr~.on 448-0810, 1-800·281-0578. Rog'
570
Musical
lnatruments

'

Ntitrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

aluminum ·

Loaded,

SumetRome
Construetfon

lc·
8
Ag
S.rv
.
• .
. .

1998 Yamaha Kodiak 400, warn

1982 Chevrolet camaro, V-1,
purple with black'lntorlor. 71,832
milia. right lronr damego, $25!0,
eall740·992·150~ dayo or 740·
949·2844 ovonlnga and wookendo.
1892 Chovy Cavalier. Cyi,. AIC,
Pwr S~. Pwr. B10kll, Looko Good,
Runa Qood. Aaklng S1.8oo .oo.
7o40-3eH&lt;180 Or 7-·9~52.

Phone (740) :&gt;~~1-otl/

PROBLEMS???

Shade River

$2,800.00 OBO. 740-448·3600.
winch, Big Fool kit, Pro Design air
tiller, 189 miles. s4soo. 30H73·
·
5715 daya,' 740·992·302• evan•
_tng
~
· •..· -..,..~--...__ _
1991 Honda .Foroman, ~WD, axcellon! condition, 600 mlloa,
$4000, 740-991!·5085.
1999 Honda 4~0 ES 4 Whtal
Ortvo
Exeallont Condition, $4,800,
74o,2156•9244 .
~:::::~:;:::;.~~~--­
750 BOlli 6 Motors ..

..;

NQ Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

2PYrs.

1995 Honda 300 Four' Tru .
Looks Good, Runs Goodi

~1 . 000 mlleo. E•cellent Condllion. $2,8qO. (304}875-120•/
(304)675-2034.

Doors,

~-

• f'e1'1'1o"•'

2214.LeavaMessage.

1991 Pont. 6000 LE, 4·door.

'

-~-~. ~

East State Street
I~t~tens, Ohio 45701

·"fOP

1994 Hond~. ZR 50 . Excelle.nl ·
Condllion, Hardly used. (304}458·

77·4~o-~·~46~69~8~2·~----

I

I.

1991 Honda 4 TraX; 4wd. Runds
'good, in good shape. Onty used
for Deer Hunting. (:llot}57&amp;-27St :

41 ..,....
North ot OkiL
4t
51 Fntneh r-.glan

BY PHILLIP ALDER

r-

I

740521. . .

(NO

"'"'"'*

Opening lead: • K

LIKE HIM II

Lm¥ S r; hey . ·

JOlES'

tent Condition. $1 ,500. (304}875·
3824.
.

t990 HarleY Sportster, 883 ,
Black. Exeellent Condition . Hy·
percharger, Saddlebags, Lots of
chrome . 14,000 miles. $6,200.

Calloway Big Bertha tron•. 3-PW
plua X·l·2 A.S,L wodgas, all

0111 or740-587-3562.

1985 Suzuki 230 4 Wh&amp;&amp;ler with
Reverse 4 Slroke Engln~. Excel-

Inch Hood Scoop, $3,500, 740·
245-5443.

•

PintS

$600, 740-379-2853. .

1988 Honda ACcord, perfect condltlon, to ml~s. one previous owner; automatic, loaded. 740 ·9922866
... :
1989 Mercury Grand Marqula ·
Nice Car, .Needs Transmission,
$ 000 740-441 .0108 .
1· •
.
·

518-1363 .NORWOOD SAWMILLS 252 Sonwlll Drive, Buflalo,

'

AD Maloes Tractor Br

1981 Honda 750 Custom Motorcycle, -77,600 Milas, Ne~ Battei-y,

1988 Carrtaro, ,355 HP Engine
With Approximately 3,000 MUes.T-Tops, Good Body &amp; Paint •. 4

~EST

$ ,top .I n And 'Se'e .
'
Steve Riffle
SaJe·s. Re(lr.esentat1ve

~

• Roofing·
992·1550
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
The Appliance FREE ESTIMATES
Man
.740·992·7599

Ken You"B'

1988 TRX 2SOR Honda . $2700·.
(304}576-2111 ;

Tappan HI Elf!cieney 90% Gas
Furnaces. Oil Furnaces. 12 seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 6 Year Parts &amp; La·
bor Warran'ty BenneHs Heating &amp;
Cooling,
1-'800-872-5967

DIPDYIAG
. Plllft

Uc. 11110-50 nn"""

Motorcycles

Condition, $2.000 Or 080, 740·
388·6086.

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121 ..

graphite thahs. 1550. 740·992-

740

days, 7o40-7-&lt;2-1507 eves.
·

Block, briek, sewer pipes, Wtnd·
ows, lintels:, etc. Glaude W.tntera,

GOQds

3.242. .

Today! ·Almost
Everyohe Approved! Low Monthly 1984 Nissan -300 2X, runs but
Payments, Free Cplor Printer 1- . needs work, $750. 740.992·2222

740· 446·

Sporting

94 Astro Van lor sale, 740-992·

· HomeBu~iness

BUILDINGS: Fac'tory
7444 'OM A llnto Sovo Alotl"
. STEEL
Cancellatlona 25i30 , 30x40,
•5•100, 50x140 Now Matorlalo 1
New And used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga. Selling At Invoice! 1-800-211 ,
.. Good Used Beds, Dre.-ae.rs , · 9311-4X-47. .
·Couehoo, Dlnolln, Etc. Big ~av· VIAGRAIIII ORDER BY PHONEIII
lngo On New Furniture. 740-445- Stay AI Homolll 1-600·211-1737 .
•712.
Dept. F
Klr111 Stze Bod (Whllo Iron Haod· Wattr II no Spoeta I: 31•• cOO
" PS I
boord), Matlrooa/Box Springe. $21 .9! Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
E•eallant Condition . $200. · $37.00 Per 100: All Braa1 Com(304~51-2214. afllr 4PM.
preoalon Fltttngaln StOCk
RON
EVANS ENTEIIP111118
Wl'llrlpoOI Refrlger.:tor Freezer
. Sldt By Slda: Kirby Upright . Jaekeon, Ohio, 1·800-537-9528
S - r. Praollcally Now With All · WHITI'I METAL DETECTORS
Attacnmanll, 7~1001.
· Ron Alila on. 588 Walaon Road,
Whirlpool Waahtr, $80: Dryer, Bktwoll; Ohio. 740-.448-43311. ·
1100: ·Zonlth 21' TV, 1100: All 550 ·
8ulidlng
Good Condition. (001}(!75-7889.
Supplles

s20

tomatlc. 1OO,OdO 'Miles. $1 ,BOO

080. 740·256·1233.

Chevys , Jeeps, And Sport UIIII-

RESIDENTIAL HOM.E OWNERS

French City Maytag, 740·446 -

1993 Dodge Spirit 4 Cylinder. Au·

HP IBM Desktops /Laptops , E- 'ties . .Call Now! 800- 772· 7470;
Comerce Web sites·. Start Your . EXT. 7832. · -,
·

6757.

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Wa&amp;hers,.Oryers, Ranges. Aefrigrators, 9.0 · Day Guarantee!

Body WOrk, Painted, $6,000 OBO:

&amp; Ul' POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's,

Prom Dress • Fa~o~iana, Size e!/6:
Shoes and Jewelry.' (304)675-

Housallold
Go~ a

19~6 Jeep CherOkee 4x4 Drive,
82,000 Miles, Air, Needs A Little

CARS $100, $500

$150. 740-44lH951.

MERCHANDI SE

510 ·

'92. Pontiac BonneVille, four door,
excellent condition, sharp, $4650,
740.949-2045 evenings. ·

•-IF 1 DON'.T·M
.
MY WAYS-- l'LL END UP

SHE SAY?

lull'"'" 877· 55l· 782Z

line.

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy; Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts ~ All Mak~s

WHAT DID

Also Show Qua lity
P mm,er·anian· s &amp; P et

39 141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 457f:f9

' 1.000St. Rl. 7 SOuth
Coo/vii,., OH 45723

"Were Back"

4•

Ji-m11il - mmyetlcpomll CAOL.c~;~ll)

Ctntrutor• Welnmt

.

1.

All ·Breede ·

'740o94..MJ:6 '

0e11n1s Bryant, Owqer

$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst

LXI Van, 41,000· Miles. V·6 ,
Loaded, $13,500, OBO 740-2561252, Homo: 140-256-1818.
·

Ni!==&amp; Used ·Furniture and .Ap·

'25 ye.n exp el-ienee

, free E stimates

Dealers.

AltWel • Pacul • Puat. .

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Soutla' West Nortb Eut

• B a thi!!g ..E ars
• Nails • l'"le a Bath.s

and all meta l buildings

Pomeroy, OH
Paying $1io.oo
per g&amp;ITJI

740.992-5065,

TRANSPORTATION

Treadmill, 740-446-9849.

Quality concrete flatwork

Free Estimate&amp;

Prograalve top

, I

Opt• For'Groo•lng
· For Yovr Pet'aii.Ua.

c-.IH Parts

AT8:30 P.M.
Ml!n St.,

.

Poms

740-742-8015

To Tt.e And load, Asking $900, · (304)615-1564.
:...:.c"-:---::--~::-:-~:740.44H081 .
441-0027.

• Q 6
• Q J 3

Gold " • ' stm
, Bnlldlpft. IAA.

1-800·311-3391

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
·Thursdays

• K Q 10 8 f
• 8 8

lndependent Dealer

Albany, Ohio

·1987 Aerostar R4ns Well, Needs
.Transm ission $900 080 740 -

Weol

Mystic

Factory Authorized

um- 31 Iron (clcoll.-)
40 Humin being
42 II.P.'a q..-.y

20 Sotllel
23 Sour.....,

.• Q J .
• 10 8 5
AA I 08 5 42

conneftlon·

Equip~nt

03-21.00

• 7

·~Your
~~~~~
··r-------Concrete

~~~1/il

a 4·WD.s

trans , low mileage, 380·4 Barrell ,
new tires &amp; wh~ela. Sharp Truck .

for

Up To 16' Wide , 740·446-0115,

Vans

1987 Ghevy Van, Full Si ze,
l. osB. • Free Estimates! 740-446· . Ear corn and ,sQuare bates of hay, · .Raised Roof, Conversion. 350 V
8 . Auto·. PS, PB, PW. 66,000
6308, 1-1100.291-0098.
call740-985-4465. .
mites. Good condition . $5,000 .
JET
Ground Ear' Corn, your sacks . (304)372-9240.
AERATION MOTORS
Phon&amp; after 4PM 1304}875-2443.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stoctt.
1987 FOrd Aerostar XLT Good
Call Ron·Evans, 1-80().537·9528.
Straw: Bright Wire Tie' StraW Ye8r Condition, 41 ,750 , Price Negotl·
·
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Cis· able. 740.388-D'U5.
count Available . Heritage Farm.
Jewelry Sale: 30 Year Colleclien
1993 s~ 10 Blazer 4 WD, 4.3litre
(304)675-5724.
Avon Jewelry, Most Stiii ·Boxed,
Vortec . Loaded, 87 .000 Miles .
Ney•r Worn To See Call 740650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer . . Asking $9,000, 0~•0 · 256·9244 Or

Village ·Green Apartment s- 2
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
bedrooms, totat electric, appllanc·
es furnished,· laundry room tacill; 'Huge· lhWntory, DiscOUnt Prices,
ties and close to school, applica- On Vlny.l Skirt ing, Doors , Wind·
tions available at ollice. 740·992- , ows, An chors,1 Water Heaters,
3711 TDD 1-888-233·6694. Equal Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
Housing Opponuntty
naceS &amp; Heat Pumps. eennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 740·'U 6460 Space
Rent
9416 www.orvb.cdmlbennett

$12,5JMo., $100 Deposit, Refer·
ences, 74().4.46.()175.

730

Wjld Turkeys For Sale, Ev'enings
Only. 740-446-3945

446-0639.

Mobile Home lot For Rent,· Takes

loaded , 740· 9,.9·2355 or 7_.0·
949-3117.

1978 GMC 112 TQn Va,: 350 AuIOmatic, $1 ,200 Runs Good, 740·
44&amp;- 6323·
1979 Jeep , 4WO Truck. Auto

I400, 740·446-IIQ8 1.

You,o~~.rt~,~~. we eorn

WILLIS'
. SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

773-5305 alter 6pm.

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

Or 740'446·4362.

Haubng • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-34.,0

No

112MJD 1 mo. pd.

HfiCILinG and ..
EXCfiVATtnG

1997 blade .Cheyy s-10 Stepsl~e
Extended Cab, 3 door, toadect .
25,000 miles, very sharp, lull far- , .
ings, $12.000. 740-949·2045 o,r
740-949-2203.

1997 Ford Ranger XLT, 2 wheel
drive, step side, excellent condi·
2 Paint Mares:· One 4 Years Old; lion , 4 cyt .. auto, ale. amlfm CD.
On.e 2 Year&amp; Old; 2 Arabian 50,000 miles, custom wheels, fiGeidings; One ·7 Y,ars Old: O~e · berglass bed cover, $8,999, 304·

Yearling Jack Donkey, Asking

COOUNG EQUIPMENT
"If

Lease , 937-895·0897 . (Btloro
11:00 A.M. &amp; After 6 P.M.)

JlbWICK'S.

1 N!tle
1 FHII Willi
revaMWA
10 ~

15 City11 lied. apec:'-lly 54 Ill Will

740-992-StH

7122/TFN

a,.,..

37 Author

14 Fo8tldloua

33795 fli.Wnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE

38 Young pqodle

ACROSS

12 l'lre-IHMIII!ng 45 Chum

Hlth &amp; Dry·
Self-Stotatt

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

(304)773-5254.

P.M. Call 7·0-448 -~445 ; Allor
5:00· P.M. And Weekends Call
74Q-441l-1 309, ASk For VIrgiL

sago.

Now Reatlll8

• New l:'lomea
•Garagea

1991 Ford, F-150 XLT 2 WD, 8'

Maney Ferguaon 50 gas. Bush-

NBA Cro11Word Pussle

PHILLIP
ALDER

ta' a, Chevyt, Jatpa, And Sport

610

The Dally Sentinel • Page B S

'ALLEYOOP

HONDA's S100, $500 l UP. PO·
LICE IMPOUN D. Honoa'o Toyo-

Miles, Weekdays 9:30 ,( M. -5:00

Mo ntnty Payments. Good Credit

Pomeroy, Mlddlepoit, Ohio

BRIDGE

shlg Fee Or Volume Commitment · Wolfie 740·949·3315 leave ' mes-

.ALL SIZE S /ALL LOADS. ELDORADO BUILDING SY STEMS
1-800-27'9-4300.

Tuesday, March 21 , 2000

Autoa for Site

Credit Problems, No Problem. CaU
loaded, t J&amp;:cellant condition. new
Utlllllea Paid, Walking Distance . To" Froo 1-877-293'4082.
620
Wanted to Buy
diOS, (7'!())245-9252.
To College , Very Nice, Availabte
(11/00, 7&lt;1().245-5100.
ALL STEEL BUILDINGS. Factory TOBACCO Poundage Wanted 1994 Ford Ranger ).( LT 2 WD ,
Liquidation. Up to 50% OFF. Must To _lease For A Good Prk:e Paid · New nres; 5 Spud, Looks Great,
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sel L 40K60 , SOJC100 , 70lC1 00 , Up Fiont , Call Jodf8Y J. Farm 1·
Stalnlen Steel Chrome Along
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK· 80~150, Doug 1·800-716-2578.
937-373·4644 Can Call Collect Botrom, $5,500 , 740·446· 4109 ; .
&amp;ON ESTATES, 52 Wes twood
Mer 9:00 I'M.
~n.r 5, 7(0.3711-25119.
· Drive from S289 ro $370. Walk ro Are You A·Metal e·uildlng Erector
shop &amp; ·movies. Call 7 40 -44e/Confraclor? We Have Fac tor ~ f Wanted- RCA or Hughes Dire ct · 199• GMC 1500 Series SLE
~- Equal Hou~ ng Opporlunlty.
Direct BuUd ings With NO Oealer- TV system , will pay top dollar,
loaded, V-8. Automatic, low
Christy's 'Family Llv-ing , aparl•
ment a, .home &amp; trailer rentals,
7~-992~5111&amp; , apartments a ~a ll ·
~ · furnished &amp; unfurnished.

•

Tueedlly, March 21 , 2000

,,

MARCH 21

.,
,.

I

•

'

�c./\ ......,~··-

-..........

"*"

•

·Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.Environmentalists challenge bond, A2
NIT roundup, Meigs sports banquet, B1

Tu11dly, Mnrt 21,2000

March 22, 200'

•
Melp~ldy's

Brown

lhle

Cummine

Cnldwell
Midd~eport

Volume SO , Nurn!:&gt;&lt;-• 2v1

• Pomoo,, Ohtr

'-1 , ,.,,:·.

.

.

-Meigs team completes Kellogg project
Randolph.

Simpson

Staats

.Logan

Williams

Shrlmplln

$15} 000 grant to be
awarded for genealogy
.program

·"
···:

:.;...

Meigs County teams see_16 receive AII•TVC bas~etball _· honors ~:f
ATHENS - The 1 999- ~1!00 All-Tn- Valley Conrerence baskt·tball tea ms in the Ohio · and Hocking
lltvlStons were recently subtilitted by the confer,·nc,•'s coac hes.
Here ar,• .the honoreos.
· · Boys-Ohio Divisipn
First team: Hranoon Burnfidd, Sr.. G, Belpre;
~teve Beha, Sr., G, Meigs; Pmrick KlineSo., G,
' Hdpre; N ick Mi&gt;rey,. So., C, Belpre; Josh Patterson,
Jr. , F. Vinton County; Eric Gabriel, Sr., G, Alexander;
Jo n McDonald, Sr. , G,Wellston ;justin Brooks, So., G,
Alexander.
· ·
Second team: Jamie Church, Sr., G, ·wellston;
J.P. Staats, Jr., C, Meigs; Brent Ewing, Sr. , Wellc

'

f::ocal scoring summaries .
~

1v

Httftfme score; Di vision 1: 11 34, Division Ill·
21

Division III•IV Boys

Division III·IV Girls

Kati Fulle r (Chesapeake) 5·1·317=16, Ra chel
Henneman {Wellston) 2-1 -0!3= 7, Rachel Waugh
(South Gallia) 2:-0-212=6, Natalie Bobo (Atexantt&amp;r) 1-1-0/2=5, Cierra Sparling (Waterford) 2-Q"9.'0=4, Heather Compston {Miller) 1-Q-1/2=3,
Katie Crabtree (Wellston) 0-1-0/():.,3, Becky
Davis (Eastern) 1-0-112=3, Renae Donahoe
(!;lymmes Valley) 0-1.010=3, Kiril lhle (Southern)
'1-0-0/0=2. Totals: 15-5-7/19=52.
i

Coach of the year: Howie Caldwell, Eastern Ooseck, Alexander
·
'
.·~ ·
ft
~\
,.
Girls-Hocking Division
.
:
: Girls~Ohio Division
' First team: Jamie linscott,Jr.,' C , Federal Hoc· k~
First team: Kelly West, Sr., G, Alexander ; , ing; Amber Baker, Jr., G, •Eastern; Cierra Spar:
Amber Vining, Jr., G, Meigs; Jennifer · Shrim- ling, Sr., G, Waterford; Juli Bailey, Jr., F, Easter!);
plin, Sr., C, Meigs; Josie Carr, Sr., F, Alexander; Terdla Waderker, Sr., F, Federal Hocking; K~i·
Mi chelle Brown, F, Belpre; Natalie Bobo, Sr., F. Cummins, Jr., G, Southern; Heathor Compstoi,:
Akxander; Brooke Williams, Sr., F, Meigs; Emily Sr., F. Miller; Kim lhle, ·sr., ·G, Southern.
;;.
Hill, So., G, Nelso,wille- York
Second team: Shawna Judso n, Jr. , F. Trin\ble.;.
Second . team: Afton Thornhill, Sr., F, Belpre; Heather liulmer, Fr., F, Waterford; Jantzen !(jng, Jr;;
Katie C rabtree, Sr., G, Wellston; Belinda H ayes, Sr. , . G,Waterford; Becky Davis, Sr., G, Eastern.
·;
· C, Vinton County;Jenni Bush, Jr., G,Aiexander.
· MVP: Linscott
·';
MVPs:Vining, West .
.
· Coach of the year: Jennifer Pierson, Federal
. Coaches of the year_: Ron LOgan, Meigs; Dan Hocking
"
.
••

TODAY'.S·. SCOREBO'ARD

.·
..
.

sro n; Kevlll 'Lindsey, Sr , c;, Ndsonville-York.
MVP: Burnfidd
Coach of the year: Joe Garretr, Hdpre
Boys-Hocking Division
First team: Joe Brown, Jr., F, Eastern; Trem
P.mon , Jr., G,' Trimble; Jos h An1old, Jr., G/ F, Wate rford; Stacy Gilchrist , Sr., F. Federal Hockm g; Matt
Simpson, Jr., G, Eastern; R andy Nelson , Jr., G,
Miller; Chris Randolph, Sr., G, Southern; Mark
Waller, Jr., C, Waterford.
.
Second•team: Josh Will, Sr., F, Eastern; Matt
Bissell, Sr., G, Eastern; Roland C halfant', Sr., C ,
Trimble; Dust)i Bond, Sr:, C, Federal Hocking.
MVP: Patton

Josh Will (Eastern) 7·0·114=15, Jason Harmon {Ironton) 3-1-4/4=13, Chris Randolph
(Southa m) 2-3-0ID= 13, Brandon Burnlield (Bel- '
pre) 0·2·0/0=6; Jay Capper (Fairland12·0·
2/2=6, Eric Waglnger (Ironton St. Joe 2-0212=6, Adam Per'('lberton (Chesapeake 1-Q2/2=4, Jon McDonald (Wellston) 1-Q- /0::2,
John Wagfnger (Ironton St. ~oe) . 1·0..0/0=2,
Totals: 19-6· 11/16=67
·

Helftlme 1core: Division III-IV 35, Division t-

1129.

Wedne1dty
Kent (23·7) at Penn State (17·15), TBA

Brigham Young (22·1 O) at Notre Dame (20- ·

' 14). TBA

NIT slate
Monday's second-round. scores
Notre Dame 76, Xavier 64
Penn State 105, Siena 103
Kent 81 , Villanova 67
Srighilm Young 82, Southern Illinois 57

Tonight's second-round games

Arlzona State (19-1.2) at North Carolina
Division 1-11 Boys
Stale (18·12). 1 p.m.
Division 1-11 Girls
B.J. Farrell (South Poini) S·&lt;I-112=11, Andrew
New Mexico (18·1 3) al \'fake Foresl (18·14),
Katie McBroom {Logan) 4-4 -0/0=20, Abbey Coble (Athens) 3·1-010=9, Eric G~briet (Alexan- 7:30 p.m.
dennmgs (logan) 4·0·6/7::14, _MicheHe Matkms dar) 3·1·010=9. Tanner Heaberlin (Rock Hill) 3-0·
· Southwest Missouri State (23·10) at Mlssis(Rock Hill) 4-1·3/4=14, Knst1n ThomP,son 0/0=6, Brian Sims (Gallia Academy) 1·1 -111=6, . sippi (18·1 3), Sp.m.
·
(Logan) 3-1-010=9, Knsten Starkey \Jackson) 1· Shaun Coffman (Warren .Local) 2..0..010=4 JereGeorgetown {19-14) at Gal!fomia (17-1 4), 9 '
2·010=8, Jennller Shnmplln (Meigs 1·0·4/4~, my Payton (Gallia Academy) 1·0·212.-4,' Brent p.m.
Belinda Hayes (Vinton County .· 0·2-0/0=6:
MCCoy (Rock Hill) 1·0·010=2, Totals: 19·3·
Tota ls: 17-10·1 3117::77.
·
.
Third round
1 4/5=51.

Wednesday, Thuraday or Friday
Arizona State-N.C. Stale Wlflner vs. Sw

Missouri St.-Mississippi winner, T8A
New Mexico-Wake Forest winner vs.
Georgetown-C allfomla winner, TBA

Comoctlcut (32·1) va. OklahOma (25·7)
LSU (24-e) va. Duke (28·51

Saltlnlay-e.-~lnlla

At KlniU Cltj, Mo.
Iowa St (27·5) vs. Penn Sl. \28-4}
Old Dcminlon (29-4) va. Lou Iiana Tech (30·

Monday, Morch :U.ftnol
Semifinal winners
2)

Mideltst Regional

Monday, MM&lt;:h 27-llnal

MandQ'I MGOnd-raund ecoNe
Texas Tech 18, Tulane 59'.W
· Tennessee 75, Arizona 6Qtf.:~

Semlfll)al winners

,.

· West Regional

Srornlnnai•Sat~r

NCAA women's
tournament .

.

At Mamohla, Tlii,it.

Virginia (25-8) VI. 'reMeSSII!I (30-3)
Notre Dame (27-4) vs. Te"' Tech (27-4)

East Regional

Monday, March
Semifinal winners

Monday's eec:onf".found.ICONI

Oklahoma 78, Purdue 74
Duke 90, Western Kentucky 70

ti

..

Autgen;

Sllurda,...,..Hinalo
At Portland, Or..

•
1;

vs. Alabama-Birmlngham(21-12)
Georgia (31-3) vs. Nonh Cerollna (2&lt;1-12) •

M-ay'a ucond-nltlildOid Dcmlnkln 11(1, SMU !6'!,l/
LouiSiana Tech e6, llandeoblh 85

At Richmond, va.

so

·

nal

.
,
."a\1'
Midwest Regl-1

Saturdly-aemlflnllt

· Monday'a IIRGf1d.fllUnd OCOJH
Georgia 83, Slanford 64
·
North caoolm 83. Rlc:e

(24-7)

Monday, MM&lt;:h 27-llnal

Samlflnal winners

,

"II

JS60 lHrlt-Behlnd ~
• 6 hp i 21-inch steel deck

CHESTER - A team from Mei~
~Unty recendy completed training ses..
sions for the Managing Information for
Rur'!i Areas program, funded by the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich.
The group's work has qualified the

.

:Progr~m's
.,
'•
~

BY CHARI.Bfl! HoEFLICH

~.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

: · POMEROY -The first client to
luccessfully complete the prenatal
l moking cessation program through
1he "Make Yours a Fresh Statt FamilY" program of the Meig.; County
!'lealth Department w.as given spe~
cia! recognition t.his·week
Lisa King qualified to receive the
entire incentive package that
amounted to a total of $60 in gift
certificates from K mart to be used
· to purchase baby items.
Funded through the M~h of
Dimes, the progr;un is c6o\-ilih;ttelt,
...by , Shlorry Wilcox, R.N . .She .pro- ·
vides enroUees. with counseling and
incentives based on their nicotine
lewis. that are . obtamed. by tltine '
samples throughout the-pregnancy.
Some of the greatest risks involved
with smoking during pregnancy a!'e
premature birth, low birth weight, ·
miscarriage and . Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome, explained Wilcox..
· King said that she had been smok- ·
lng more than a pack of cigarettes a
day for several years. Through the
program, she was able to quit. She
gave birth to a healthy little girl on
March 3. Samantha Nicole weighed
nine pounds, thre~ punces.

,.

procedure, known medically as dilation
and ·
i' done in ·the last three
a pregnancy.
.
ct_gc:tor· drains the skull of a fetus
betor~
fetus !• fully delivered. Ol'ponents
to ihe procedure as partialbitth
that. Ohio's bill could be a
for constitutio,nat way for
ta.tllorimg legislation to prohib-

.

a

~ ''!/.~'· "'-'~ '~'"""' abortio~ . p~cedure,"

US# 50 West, P.O.
639 ·
AthenS, OH 45701
740-593-3815.
.
.,

"Any ban on a single :procedure ·
could jeopardize women's health
and it's not up to the leoislature
"
to make this decision that ·
should be a private decision :.
between a woman and a doctor.''

ban in : Nebraska is constitutional. A rive courisel for Ohio Right to Life. .
decij)On is elq.ectedby July.
The bill .makes it clear that it doesn't
The , ~uppnrters of Ohio's bill, spon- attempt to ban other forms of abortion,
sorecl by Rep. Jerome Luebbers, D'- Lally. said, including dilation and evacuCincinnati, say they ' drafted it as , o~r- · arion _,;, 'o ne of the most common
rawly as pos5ible in order to withstand Corms of' abortion. Courts found that
cqns,tirutio~ chall.&lt;:'l-~· . ·
the previous law could have been inter. For epmple, the legislation is ·careful preted as banning other types of abort\) de·~c'ribe only the partial-birth ptoce- tion. '
·
·
Julie Pi..:hili
Nldional Abortl011 rond ~ ,Righla
dure, ,.which involve~ intentionally caus- . "The re3¥ln for the ·o pposition to this
,
Action '-!~,.
irig' !lt least half of the fetus to emerge particular .procedure is that it severely ·
before the U.S. Supreme Court hears before .killing it; usually by draining the · blun the distinction betWeen abortion
argumen~ in April ori whether a·iimilar cranid c9ntents, sai!I Mark Lally, le~a- and infanticide," LaDy said.

I

More tfian1215} 000
has been raised for projeir

Joi#

DISCUISING CAMPAIGN -

Tl;le Rev. Gene Armstrong, Bernice BOr·
Matthews discuss the new alum-,
ni mem.orlal bell tower Friday to be liullt ·on the University of Rio
Grande campus. Behind tt!em is a sample of. the w
r1&lt; and
stairied glass being 4sed IR the project. (Kris Dotsc;m ~~oto)

den, Elalhe Armstrong, and

'

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'

Es~ivaun

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~

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•'··--

..
inscribed

Rio ·Gmnde CoUege, established 1876'
~rashed to the gt'Qund. The beD sounded its last 'bong'
~- ' as it plunged into the flames beneath. The clock hurtled face down:WIItdlana smashed on the stone· steps;'
BY KRIS DemoN
said Jerry Kirkendall, editor-in-chief ofThe Cardinal,
OVP NEWS STAFF
Rio Grande's then-!tudent ne-Wspaper:
RIO 'GRANDE, Ohio - · Mo~ than 1~15,000
The audience was filled with alumni from those
IWbeenraiSedtowardaprojectedgoalofS417,tJ90to ' early years who were· moved ·by the memories, as
lluild
alumni memorial bell tower Oil the Univer- .were then filled with joy an the thought they were
, sity of Rio Grande campus, Rio Grande officials,said. 'helping restore its memory through the bell tower.
From the beginning of th~ cainPalgn to the end of
At a fund-raising campaign gathering friday, Chair' man Richard Munyon read several quo~es from peo- · construction, the bell tower project is dependent on
pie who actually watched the fateful burning of the direction of, and support from Rio Grande alumAtwood Hall, a signature building fqr the campus that rii, according ,to Susan Haft, director of alumni reb-· .
,burned in· 1937. The design .of the new tower is a tions. .
rqllica of Aiwood.
.
"Each gift made to the ·Bell Tower project 1s an indill(tunyoil quoted from then-Rio , Grande President
·
·
.;..~ 1
th
· William Allen lewij, who said "the face o(,the old cillipn of that alum's pride in, and 1v 7-.ty to, e
dock no ·more will greet the rerurnllig students.
·. URG:' she added. "Each gift says, 'I believe in Rio
"l'ilo moni'shall the great beD from the tower sum- Grande and its mission:"
·
There were three special announcements of gifis to
trion students to class arid to chapel;' Lewis,said.
..."EinOiions
werdaised to their
highest pitch wlien • ,
PlaiN . .·• ....,, .... All
.
.

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Sentinel

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Comjc1
fdirorjph

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Obltnem•.
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Wti•h•r

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Al

, Lotteries
omo

Pick 3:7-7-9

Pick 4: 9-}-4-Q
Buc I 1* Fhro:-2-9-lS-22-31

'WA. ·

'

n.l1y 3: 7-9-9 o.a,. 4: 6-0-5-9

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flarnes;jl\~ licking the tower. The plate,

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Jackson Pike - 2mi West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412 '' .

1

-RJO Grande hathvay-(0 WI ·

Cut a path to your John Deere dealer's store today.

WAKEFIELD GARAGE

County officials·

Governor to get bill that bans late-term abortion procedure

empty pockets and walk out with a John Deere-now through July 5, 2000. Get your laWil in shape for the season..·.

CARMICHAErS FARM ·&amp;·LAWN, INC. ·

Chester.

mates for Meigs County:
POMEROY Esti- county
highway,
mates of more than $247 ,111.84;
Leading
$475,000 have been sub- Creek Conservancy Dismitted to the Ohio Emer- trict, S28,110.60;Village of
gency
Management Middleport,
$1.1,400;
Agency by the Meigs Township of Chester,
County Highway Depart- $30,806.50;
Orange,
ment, the Village of Mid- 119,550; Rutland, $85,235:
dleport, and six · of the Salem, $15,064.82; Bedtownships which sustained ford, $17,210; and Olive,
damage during · the flash $19,833.
.
flooding on Feb: 18-19.
The various entities h~VJ'
According· to Acting ·
,six months to complete the
Meig.; . · EMA Director regular ·~ork ':ind tQ submit
"·Seiie· · Lyons; ·repair cqst
thei~ pal:k.~ to the state
estimates Were due by vara11ency t~1,1_8h the \ocal
ious county subdivisions
EMA office, for reimburseno later than Monday if
'
. ment up to 75 percent of
they intended to apply for
assistance from ' the. State the eligible costs.
Packets are available at
Disaster Relief Program,
fprmerly the Ohio Con- the EMA office for those
who did not receive one at
trolling .Board.
Lyons said she has asked the loci! EMA briefing on
for an extension until Fri- March 13. (That meeting
•.
.
•
.
, '
,
. I,
day on behalf of other sub- was conducted by Greg
HONORED- Richard Russell was named Legionnaire·of the Year for his service to Drew Webster Post 39 at a .
divisions who may ·have Keller of the Ohio EMA.)
dinner held in observance of the Slst birthday of. the American Legion. Tuesday night at thf! :Meigs 9ounty Senior
Those officials with
had damage but have not
Citizens Center. Russell , sergeant at arms; was commended for his role In arranging military rites for ,deceased
veterans. Commander George Hanis; 'right, made the tropt)y presentation. Others given special recognition
submitted an estimate to questions are asked to conincluded George K. Harris, district commander; Mick Williams, past district commander; and Cheryl Cox, Eighth
tact ~yons at 992-6617, or
the local EMA offl,ce.
District Auxiliary .president. On 'behalf of the auxiliary, Gladys Cummings presented a gift of money·to the post .
Estimate totals showed Robert Byer, LEPC chaircommander. About a hundred.leglonnaires and guests attended the dinner. (Charlene Hoeflich photo) · ·
the following damage esti- man, at 992-5123.
·
1
I
l
.

/S169H

.

courthouse at .

FROM STAFF REPORTS

• 180-mph air velocity
• Weighs 10.7 pounds

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,
·estimates to state

I'

,.

lllllClr'e the mellibefs,
ofthe Meigs County
l&lt;elklgg/MIRA Jeade!ship
tean. The group rece!rtly
completed their 1'10111 and·
the county has
qualified for a $15,000
grant from l&lt;ellogg, to
benefit Ohio's oldest

.Piun see Kelloa, Pllp AJ

f .

'

'

-

su~mit damage

I.'

Whether you're looking to trim it up, cut it ddWn, or just
. green up your 'lawn, you can walk in with

'O IQlEAMJoe Slftre, Wilma and
tiOw!nl Parlier, Archie
Rose and Pat Holter, left,

KB I

first client
quits smoking

COLUMBUS (AP) - · Ohio lawmakers have 'passed a bill banning a form of
late-term abortion, the second attell)pt
in five years to outlaw the procedure.
The Ohio House approved the bill ·
77-15 oriTuesday creating the offense of ·
partial birth. feticide against a doctor ·
who performs the ·abortion. The bill
does not hold the mother responsible. It
S.ts penalties up to eight yean in prison
and fines up •tO $15,000.
.
.
'. Gov. Bob Taft said he will sign tthe bill,
which the· Senate passed last week. The
'

Make your first~cut of the season at your John Deere dealer's
· store with -big sqvings and no money down*.

and research and development.
MIRA provided a number of speaker;
for the progr.un, from Wyoming, Kentucky, Iowa, Colorado, Idaho, Nebraska,
Aorida and other areas. ·
"The program is designed as ·a spring"
boatd to improve the community, to train
members of the community to develop
projects, and, especially to involve young
. people in ihe conmtu'nity in these projects;' said Mary Powell, a member of the
local team .
Funds awarded as · grants through the

Legionna_ire of the Year

. P I - - SIIIGidn~o ..... Al

SAVE $50
.NOW$2J9•

I'
i'
i

BY BII!AN J. REED
SENilNU NEWS STAFF

county for a $15,000 -grant from Kellogg,
to be used to purchase computer equip. ment and other resources to help start a .
genealogy program at the restored Chester
Courthouse.
The Institute for Local Government
and Regional Development (ILGARD),
based at Ohio Univenity, applied for a
grant to p~"esent the six informational ses.
SIOns.
The sessions concentrated on a nwnber
of skills and concepts necessary to further
.causes ln the local community, including
·gtant writing, teamwork, strategic planning, goal setting, formulating · proposals,

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