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10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

88 ~-'*',

·i iRS beefs up.customer-friendly se
: By BRIAN TUMULTY
~ Gllnnett Newa Service
• · WASHINGTON- From the Willowbrook Mall in northern New Jersey
: to Aurora Public l,ibrary in Colorado, the Internal Revenue Service plans to
: staff 30 shopping centers and public libraries on selected Saturdays to offer .
· advice to confused taxpayers leading up to the April IS tax filing deadline.
Saturday hotirs for walk-in advice at a total of 250 locatiOIIS, a new 24: hour toll'free telephone service and a public service announcement on new
: tax credits for children are among the customer.friendly moves outlined by
· the IRS on Monday.
The initiatives highlight hQw far the agency has come since last spring,
when a series of Senate hearings disclo.sed how some taxpayers were hound·-ed by
overzealous IRS agents for infractions they never committed.
"Phone service is much better; busy signals have been reduced; electronic
filing bas increased very substantially," Treasury Secretary Robe&amp;Rubin said
at a press conference
IRS Commissione-r Charles Rossotti. who has been on the job one year
and began making internal changes even before Congress enacted a major
overhaul of the agency last summer, said he continues to m.ake field visits

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. Study targets
· cities tough on
homeless
By LAURA PARKER
USA
Today
·
The "meanest streets" for the
homeless are found in Atlanta,
, Chicago, New York, Tucson and
San Francisco, where homeless
people are ticketed, arrested or
swept from public places, according to a new survey of the nation's
50 largest cities.
The cities were singled out in a
new study by the Nau.·anal Law
Center on Homelessness &amp; Poverty, that concludes the crackdown
on the homeless, begun in the midl990s. continues to expand.
All 50 cities either have passed
laws restricting panhandling or
loitering or simply sweep homeless

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ilarly. rents in every city in the survey have risen so high during the
economic boom that an efficiency
apartment is too expensive for the
average laborer working full time
at minimum wage. · ·
•
,
The survey, taken every two
years by the Washington, D.C.·
based group, is expected to be
' made public Tuesday. The center,
one of the country's most vocal
advocates for the homeless, has
. often denounced the laws as an
ineffective way to deal with home', less ness.
But for the first time. said Maria
Foscarinis, the center's director,
sees a glimmer of hope.
As cities from Seattle to Miami
continue to adopt new laws penal·izing the behavior of the homeless,
several are experimenting with
new apJji'Oachr~ that would more
efficienlly coordinate services for
the homeless.
"It's too soon to say, but it could
be the beginning of a new trend,
with cities simply seeing that criminalizing people's presence on the
streets is not going to solve the
problem," Foscarinis said.
The " meanest" cities are considered most aggressive in their
attempts to rein in the homeless. In
San Francisco, home to 16,000 ·
homeless people, pol ice wrot"
16,000 tickets citing a range of violations last year..
, On the other hand, San FranCisco also has launched a a new
civil rights program aimed at
improvi ng services for the homeless.
·
"We are .a!"most at a cross- '
road&lt;," Foscarinis said. "The trend
could continue toward criminalizalion, or it could go in the other
a.;;,di;;;re;.;c;;;ti.;;on;;;·~"------..:.·_ 1

to I"S }OQiioils to emphasize customer service,
"There are no quick fixes or easy solutions," RosiOiti
refemnsto
problems that "had developed over years and, in
·
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Monday'sllllnounceinentcomes the same week 59
wpayen who
fill out their own returns are receiving their instruction booklell and fonns
in the mail. About30 percent of taxpayers do ilot receive the mailinss bec11111e
they use a paid tax-preparer.
,. ·
Regardless of who pn:pares the tax return, the IRS is continuinstocncourage the use of electronic filings ·to reduce erron, cut paperwork ud speed
the turnaround time for refunds.
·
The number of Americans receiving refunds will increase this year wllh
the implementation of two new tax 'credits for dependent children and thole
attending college.
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The S400-per-child tax credit is of particular note because !he plretlll or
an estimaied 48 million children under the age of 17 will be eligible. The
tax credit increases to $500 next year.
·
In a l'IIRI move that will reduce the amount of taxes the IRS holds on to,
the agency will publicize the child tax credit in new public service televlsion ads. One spot unveiled Monday features two children from "the (ldional First National Bank of Kids who tell their parents about the new \IX break.

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The sltunlly·/.IPUn for walk-in assistance;which. ma1'1c u ex~ion of

~ of loc:llions and times 'is expected to be available on the Internet at'
I. www.irs.ustreas.gov b~ .the a!d pf n~xt week..
.
; The same Internet site alf~w.s taxpayers to pnnt IRS forms and read oiJSIIUC.
~ lional publicatloils; · • , ·.
, ..
, Telephone options also hive iqcreased:
..-.
· • Sllrtins this weck, eallers to (800) 829·1 040 can obtain round-the-ctoc::k.
(. aeYen clays-a-weft!IICfVice from IRS customer representatives. , •.,
• • Taped lnfortn'ation on 140 tax subjecll is available at (800) 829-#'tt.
~ same number can be used to inquire about the status of refunds aftlir.
!!bey ~ve ~~~ file\1 by' calling between _1 a.m.~ I~ p.m. on weekdays &amp;b3;:
' 7 Lm. to 4 p.m. Od Sllllrdlys. Refund onfonnauon os updated once.~ wee&amp;;
llild the IRS suggesu that fileis wilt fbur weeks before making their liif.·
!(inquiry
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_.; • ~payen ~ p~lema 'thai cannot be resolv~ through normal c~:
"' nels will be able'!' call (877) 777-4778 toll-free for assistance from s~iiiJ·
:IIIXpayer'advocatesJ .: · '
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Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 20s; Low:30s
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challenge to Wisconsin's voucher
Milwaulfee's vouc~experiment;
program. That hands-off approach by is available to 15,000 of the city:s
the court led many to predict a surge poorest students .- those whose
in state activity.
family income is, 1." times the fed·
· Clint Bolick of the Washington- era! poverty level, about $26,1XXHor
based Institute for Justice, pi-edicts a family of four. Now a baHie is
"more legislative activity on school brewing over whether the program
choice in 1999 than any previous should be opened to those wllh hlpyear.·: Some say vouchers- already er incomes, since only 6,200 or the
one of the mllst contentious issue fac- available slots .are being used.
ing American public education today
Milwaukee Mayor John No(lluist
-will become lhecivilrightsstrug· and other Republicans favOr Jlflins
gle of the late 1990s, potentially as the income cap, but the voucher eremomentous as the 1954 Supreme ator, ·state Rep. Annette "Polly:•
Court decision that launched 'the era Williams, is diggins in her heels and
of public school integratiQn. ·
plans an early assault when the les·
"The same forces that wanted to islature gell ·into full swlna thla
' close the public schools (after courts month.
·
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onlered school desegregation) now
Williams said the program intendhave changed the ·name, but the ed to "help, a certain segment that is
game is still the game," U.S. Rep. not doing welL I'm trying to protect
Jesse Jackson Jr., D-111., told 1111 anti- the interest that we started out with."
voucher rally recently.
The arguments presented in the 'MilBolick lists states to watch:
waukee ibaule will echo across the
• Pennsylvania. Republican Gov. country as other districts and states
Tom Ridge has made vouchers a top weigh voucher initiatives. Kay
.legislative priority.
McCienney, vice president of the
• Florida. Recently elected Gov. Education Commission of the Slates,
Jeb Bush strongly . favors vouchers said the proposals are important
and some action is expected this leg- because "a lot of people would say
jslative session.
' that public education is getting its last
• Texas. Gov. George W. 'ush Jr. chance." But, she added, "It makes
had promised to press for avoucher a whole lot of difference how you
plan if re-elected.
design these things and these are
• District of ColufDbif. Congress issu~s that folks need to look at."
. last year. approved a $7 million plan
Among the key arguments:
that would have sent 2,000 children
• The loss of 1110ney to public
to private schools with a $3,200 schoob. In Milw'u~ee. only i'cre-,
vol!Cher. President Clinton vetoed the . ments of the total cost ofvouchers are
legislation, but another attempt is deduct~ over a period of years, a
expected this year.
system called "rolling . averases,"
Particular attention will be paid to said former Milwaukee Public
Madison, Wis., where the youcher Schools Superintendent Howard..
idea began in I
an4 has made Fuller, who now ~~cads a pro-vou~b·
~!til waukee. famous· for more than er center at Marquette University.
beer. The program, initially for·nonBut Paulette Copeland, preoident
se&lt;:tarian schools, was broadened to of the Milwaukee Teacher Education
include religious schools in 1995.·
Association, said the public school

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;system is: losing lll(lney in several
: ways. Besides the nearly' $5,000 paid
out for eic:h student on a voucher,
another $6,100 is talcetlllfo ~y for
. each student in chaner '!Chools public schools flee of many of the
·rules and rep lations required llf Ira·
.ditional schools. ·
''
' But if IIChools lose morley, Fuller's
response is "~o what?! YOii ought to
lose inoney. You shouldn't have mooey for kids who are not ''lhere. The
objective is to say 'if you don't want
to lose the money, then let's' start talking about what kind of alllnges do
you wut to make now so'·lhat peopie wori't leave."'
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·' • The sllisfaction of [IUents and
. students. Harris said witJillhet own
dauJhter's school"! feel I have more
inrut. I ,try to stay as active! as I can .
woth volunteer work. ! volUi\ieered a
lot when she (Eilsenia Wonders) was
in public · schools, but 'it wasn't
enough. )The environmenll was too
. impenphal."
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.. Research on how vookhers have
aff~ academic achievement has
been' lnconclusive. Most reports and
studies barely leave the ptlllting press
before they're accused of bias based
on · the political leti'nings of
researchers or those · funding the
study. ·.
''
Despite lhis, unusual· coalitipns
have formed around ·the issue.
Basimah Abullah and Brother Bob
,SlllitJ\.,:tbou&amp;h ~~renlsfo d_ifferent
reli&amp;ious 'failhs, vehem$o'lly sUpPort
usin1 taltl'doliars to send poor chi!:
dren.to ~lialous school~ .Both of the
elemel)laf)' schools .they head The &lt;:;!~ Muhammild School and
· Blcssed',[rinity Catholic School are uslnJi the voucher,. windfall to
male-:= "'ll~iqg improv~ents, boost
teacher pay, and offet I!JSurance and
other ~fi~ not usua!IY provided by

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
Sentinel. New1 Staff ·
Festivals and special activities for •1999 were
planned and new officers were elected at Tuesday's
meeting of the Middleport Community Association.
During the 111eeting held in the Peoples (\ank conference room, Myron Duffield, president, stressed the
importance of the village presenting an "enticing
image to shoppers, residents, investors and visitors."
"Every little thio;og done is one more thing to make
the village more attractive to others," said Duffi~ld,
who was re-elected pr~sident.
Other officers named were Steve Dunfee, secre·
tary, and Dick Owen, treasurer.
~
· Whether to continue the River Festiv I r change
to another type such as a Honey Bear Fes val, where
bears produced by the Ohio River Bear Co. would be
displayed and sold, and beekeepers would be brought
in to share vadous activities; was discussed.
No decisidn wa5'made.
Duffield reported that a stop in the village by the
Delta Queen Sternwheeler•this year is improbable. It
will be t~aveling up the ~hio on Au~. 21, t~e firyol day
of the Meigs County Faor, one of eoght tnps tlirough
the Bend area to be made by the three Queen sternwheelers, he noted .
The Fourth of July celebration, the Christmas
parade and candlelighting service will be continued
this year, it was decided.
, Mary Wise confirmed that noral beautification
projects started last summer will be continued this
year.
..
·
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Concerns about replacing trees in downtown Middleport were express,ed and Duffield reported that the
village must w.ait for another grant cycle.

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acres;
Right of way, .Brett and Regina L.
Carl to BREC, Scipio, 7· acres;
Right of way, Joseph and Dana.
Nicolini to BREC, Salem, 20.305
acres;
Right of way, James T. and Marilyn Ray to BREC, Columbia. 169
acres, 6.50 acres;
Deed, Randall G. ·and Darla I .
Hawley to Jackie P. Cremc!aps, Middleport;
Deed, Eula Proffitt to Roscoe and
Sandra). Mills, Lebanon parcels;
Deed, Steven E. Sr. and Sandra
Karen Bailey to JameS Allen and Hei-.
di Lynn Young. Columbia, 1.514
acres;
Deed, Steven E.. Sr. and Sandra .
Karen Bailey, Columbia;
Deed, Roscoe and Sandra J. Mills
to Harry W. and Genevieve M.
Richard, Lebanon;
Deed, Naomi R. Reed to Reed
Family Trust, Bedfonl parcels;
Deed: David Gorby to Macy Gorby, Mary Rossan, Salisbury;
Deed, Mary Gorby, Mary Rossan,
Steven Rossop, Mildred M, Pauley,
Mildred Miller and Paul J. Pauley to
Pauli. Mildred Pauley, Salisbury;
Deed. Paul J. and Mildred Pauley
to Paul J. and Milqred Pauley,
Chester;
Deed, Jeffrey C.. Deborah M.•
Charles R. and Waynita C. Harris to
~ci l Tyrone and Lori A. Bri nager,
Lebanon, 8.266 acres;
Deed, Gardner L. and Patricia L.
Wehrung to D'avid A. and Anne S.
Aetcher. Pomeroy lot;

Right of way, Michael and Kelly
' Kinnison to Leading Creek Conservancy District, Columbia;
Right of way, Karen Aspin tol
LCCD, Salem; •
Right of way, Wayne and Nellie
Michael to LCCD, Salem;
·Right of way, . Bobby and Joyce
White to·LCCD; Salem;
Right of way, Waid L. Nicholson
to LCCD, Salem;
,
Righ_t of way, John L. Ba.&lt;S to ·"
LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Mildred Jeffers to
LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Linda D. Beaver to
LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Orion and Virginia
Nelson to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Clarence E. and
Delores A. Evans to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Victor J. Morris Sr.
to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Robert K. and
Martha F. Hypes to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way. Mic11elle Watroba to
LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Robert L. and Judith
A. Markins to LCCD, Salem:
Right of way, Jettie Jewell to
LCCI), Salem;
Right of way, Joseph T. Bonus to
LcCD, Salem;
Right of way, Katrina Hart to
LCCD, Salem:
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Right of way, .Dwilin and Linda
Edwards to LCCD, Rutland;
·Right of .way, Bob Moore. to
LCCD. Salem; .
Right of way, Southern Oh.io Coal
Company to LCCD, Salem;

help.
.
"They just drop their kids off and
don't feel like they have to do anything else. When everybody was
paying tuition, parents wete a tor
more involved."
' ·
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At Blessed Trinity, Btother Bob,
as he is lcnown, ·said ''half the Sill·
dents wouldn't be at school wilhoot
vouchers." In the pas~ tuition was
$2,800, and the school then raised the
extra $1,600 it cost to educate each
child. This year's voucher, however,
covers the full cost of education.
"It's been a Godsend for tho
school and parents. We ·have waiting :
lists and plan to add six more cltl$8· :
es to the high school in anticipatioil :
of having 100 more kids next year.·~ :
Areisa McCarter, IJ,Iikes Blesse4 .
Triniry, but knows it comes · with :
restrictions: "You can't wear lingef. ·
nail polish over here. Earrings can't.
be bigger than a dime. So you can't
wear hoops, not extremely big. yolJ·
can't wear the kind that you want io·
wear:"
·'
But resiriclions on clothes is only'
one drawback, · said teacher union
leader Copeland. She said vouchers
give schools the choices,IO select stu•. ·
denll, not the opposite.
Fuller counters that "choice is not
a school.lt's mechanism that allows
a parent to choose n school. In the
end, you still got to work to develop
good schools. None of this is automatic."
,
Safiya Jones, a stu~nt at River; :,:
side University High School, agrees, ·
but views that as a reason to oppose
the ~dea. "The voucher progra 111 ,
comes across as a way to save our
schools. But you can'i solve the prob. .
tern by running away from it-Giving
money away can't help our schools." ·

Good Afternoon

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Plck3: 7-6-5; Plck4: 9-1-7-7
BuckeyeS: 1-4-21 -28-29 .
0 1999 Ohio .Valley Publhl•i•ta Co.

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Tad Strickland

WORK· BEGINS - Engtneera from Floyd Browne Anoclatas were In Middleport on
Monday to consider Improvements to tha village aewer syatem. First on the llat Is a way
to remedy dry weath•r overflow from the town'a combined aanltary and storm eewers,
which flows into the Ohio River during · dry weather conditions. Pictured with Mayor
Dewey Horton at Generai ·Hartiilger Park are Mike Wllllamaon and Chuck Collet.

1998: The Year in Review

(

Guaranteed No·Busy Signals!
,.. ·1-888-657-0977

Today's ceremonies included
the swearing-in of 435 ..House
Members and the election of the
nities."
Speaker of. the House.

Lotteries

Doors. She is the co~owner of a

D,ragon·Internet.
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as low as $12.50 per Mo.

NEW OFFICERS - New officers of the Middleport Community Association reviewing planli .lor
1m are I from the leftt Steve. Dunfee, secretary; Myron Duffield, prealdent;
and Dick Owen, trea·
.•
aurar.
Start building, and a new sign at Mill Street Books.
. memberships to new businesses.
The 1999 membership drive is currently underway.
Improvements reported included painting of the
Owen
reported a Jan. 5 balance of $1,156.71.
Humane Society building and lhe front of the Head

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. WASHINGTON D.C. - Congressman Ted Strickland took the oath
of office today that 'will begin his third te~m of service in the
House of Representatives. The House convet)"~d at noon for the swearlog-in ceremony, which officially began the 106th Congress.
"I am deeply honored to represent the Sixth Congressional District
in the House of Representatives, and I hope that this Congress will
make meaningful progress on the issues that matter-most to families in
southern Ohio." said Strickland. ·
, .
"During the ne)(ttwo years, I will work llllrd to improve the qpali.
.
· ty of our schools, increase access
to medical care, and guarantee
the soundness of Social Security
'for future generations. I will also
continue the fight to ensure that
southern Ohio gets its fair share
Today's ~elll.tutell of transportation resources and
1 Sections· 10 Pages
economic development opportu-

Melrou P/4ct co-IIW' Jaole Bt.ell ·
made her major-film debut in Tht

Right of way, Richard and Karen number of paieqll) la..,{year who came
SeattJe..are• ceramics studio.
Hatfield to LCCD, Salem;
up ·shon on tuitloii payments.
.
Right of way, Norman Hamilton
·Even with the posilives ofthe proAli lhe vehiclt; uaed in car ohucs in ·,
to LCCD, Salem;
gram, . ~bullalt still ·is ambivalent
Tl,. FBI (1963-74) were Forib. As
the aeries' aponsor, Font MOIOI'I apRight of way, Harlin A. and Aun- ., beciiUM she said lotmi of the parents
precialed lhe produco placement
dene B. Wheeler to LCCD. Salem;
dcln't .feel u .cominiued to the MusRighi of way, John W. Brosu Jr, lim ilchOot,now lhat'they have tllition
to LCCD Rutland·'
l, 1••
Right of way, Boneta Darst. Bone/ '
ta June Darst to LCCD, Rutlud;
Right . of ·way, Stanley,,, ~: ;ud;
'''
Doris Starchet to LCCD, R,Utland;·
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Right of way, Stanley R., Stanley '
Russell. Laura R. Starcher to LCCD,
Rutland;
Right of way, Charles B. Thomas
to LCCD, Rutland;
·
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Right or way. Robert Jenkins to
LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, John W. and Deloris
$150 for 12 montbs
J. Oaus to LCCD', Rutland;
Web 1V or Computers all at local call!
UNLIMITED
Personal Access, Personal E-Mail Account
Right of way, Sherwood, Beulalt,
4
10
meg
of.
Personal
Web Spaoe! Regular rate is St6.93 per mo.
Beulah M. Collier to LCCD. Rutland;
Right of way. Dennis E. and San·
dra Sergent to LCCD, Rutland;
.Right of way,.Wetzel T. Bailey Jr.
to LCCD, Rutland/Salem;
·
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•Nelsonville
'Pomeroy , . , •Gallipolis
Right of way, James E. Jr. and
•Middletown
•'-&lt;banon..
'Dayton
Constance Fish to LCCD, Rutland;
•washington CH
•wumingllln 'Hillsboro
Right of way, -Vicky Oflham to ·
'Sardlni~ : ,
'Springfield . •west Unipn
LCCD, Rutland;
,.
•Greenfield
•Clrclevllle
•Jamestown
Right of way, Stanley E. and .
Doris A. Starcher to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Ronald P. McKnisht
to ~CD, Rutland;
Right of way, , Eric Ritters to
LCCI;l;
Right of way, Kenneth anc! Cynthia M. Wheeler to LCCD, Salem.

He said lie is working 'With Ann Bonner of the Ohio
. Department of Forestry and plans are to ·request
$10,000 for purchasing trees.
·
The village would provide the required 50 percent
match of $5,000 with in-kind sources including labor.
· It will probably be another siK months to a year
before money is available, said Duffield.
·
Meanwhile, dead flowers planted last ·summer
where the trees were taken Out will be removed by
village workers.
Mayor Dewey Horton, meeting with the group,
announced that (unding has been set. aside this year
for village Christmas decorations.
.
Wise will continue to represent the association on
the selectidn committe~.
Plans were discussed for recognizing Robert
Evans, president of Peoples Bank, and presenting him
with a framed print of the Delta Queen in appreciat~n
of support gi'ven for the River Festival.
At that same time, the · Riverbend Arts Council
plans to give a framed historic print to Dr. Barry M.
Dorsey, president of the University of Rio Grande.
Duffield announced that new 46 American flags
have ·been provided by Feeney-Benne,tt Post 128 of
the American Legion for use along the streets of Middleport.
·
·
The green, yellow and white nags will tie put up in
the spring, and the orange and black ones for MHS .
alumni month.
·
11 was decided to hold the yellow nag yard sale
again in May and to invite Pomeroy to participate.
The planned opening of a new antique ·store by
Rod Pullins on the T between the Middleport Depart·
ment Store and Mill Street Books was announced, and
it
. was voted to continue the practice of giving free

Strickland takes oath of office for third term

TRIVIA

~

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Taking the first step

a

~~~e:~: •thoolvouchers
P.~ncipalrescued
since
last year, said
a

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport Community Association plans 1999 activities

Furor over vouchers splits parents·'dveredf.Jf;ational merits 'By TAMARA HENRY
USA Today
MILWAUKEE - Diane Harris
says the Milwaukee Parental-Choice
Program has given power to the parents. Not only did it allow her to send
her daughtc;r. Eugenia Wonders, to
Blessed Trinity Catholic School, she
says she finally has a say in the type
and quality of education her 13-yearold gets.
She thanks the controversial
choice program, which pays up to
$5,000 for Eugenia and 6,200 other
low-income public school children to
attend 122 private schools, 89 of
them parochial.
But parent Stephanie Sandy sees
it differently. She blames that same
program for creating a hardship for
public schools, taking away money
for books and other resources for the
more than 100,000 school children in
the city's public school system,
including her own. The public school
system is expected to lose up to $25
million.
"It means our classes will contin.
ue to have too many children, will
continue to lack needed space and
that my seventh grader will continue
to bring home books that should have
been replaced years ago," said Sandy.
Parents,'educators, politicians, students - virtually everyone - have
joined in the fray over vouchers,
.wHich lets poor parents use tax mooey to send c~ildren to private schools.
Although Economist Milton Friedman first noated the idea in 1955, it
ne.ver had a laboratory until it hit Milwaukee nine years ago. And now, a
hot debate is about to get even hotter.
The battleground is .expected to
shift to state legislatures in 1999, the
resu!~Pf the Nov. _9 Supreme Court
demo on not to hear a constitutional

Eastern Eag
beat Mel
Marauders
-Page4
.,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number xxx

drug cocktail. The rese~rs sf~
' "It's too expensive, it's too time- the drug therapy seems to tn~
cot\iUmitig. it's too c6mplicated," he the production of immune cells by.an
said.
·'
average of three odour times. ;
, · Another AIDS 'si\ld'i. a...-ring
s. orne scientists say Ibis research
,~ ......--·
·today in Nature Medicine JlOI. nts to a will intensify the search for ways of
second approach in 1J.'Ienishinsthe reviving the body's ability to fight
Immune system.
': ·
disease once it is damaged by AIDS.
Resean:hers founil"'that an HIV
The chiefauthor. Dr. Marc Heller~
:infection shortens tl\'el' life 's pu of . stein of the University of C~i~Offli&amp;.:
both·killer and helper''i'-cellr to less S.an Francisco, s.aid such -research
lhan a third or nonnal, and production ~D.I!,ld...il!ti'."&amp;!qly .si)OW"'J'Jtelher lat-:
of replacement cells~~ behind.
er•slliPAIDS patients I•Iyde&amp;re4
·
Many researchers MVe theorized ofinfection through dn!g·therapy can
I!JII HIV irreparably bl'!j~ dowri"the "really regenerate normalcy in thei(
bOdy's cell-replacement
capacity immune systems."
~
v
lhtoush overuse.
-.: ,
Michael McCune, another mem·
This study, howevi suggests that ber of the research team, suggested
the a:eplacement .c~(ty ·survives such approaches also might apply,!&lt;!
· iniact and seems to be l)ifnished by a cancer and other diseases.
' :-.
.standard lfiV ~n1, 1 known as a
,
it limits 'immCdiatc practical use.

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Meigs County's

Research holdS:-hopes for .k illing .H.IY rem·nants · · ~f

By JEFF DONN
appears to curb the virus at least tern- patient and-traced the migrating cella
Associated Press Writer
porarily in lymph nodes.
to lymph nodes.
Targeting HIV irt hard-to-reach
"An area :.ve want to consider is:
There, the new killer T-cella
lymph nodes, researchers for the Is it possible to rid somebody of kn~ked down the number of Infect·
first time have cuibed the AIDS virus infection?" said the study's chief ed helper T-cells, in some. cases
. to
'
by injecting patients with cells made author, virologist Scott .Brodie of the undetectable levels, accordong to the
from their own natural defense s~- University of WaShington.
researchers.
terns.
HIV propagates by attacking a
The effect was temporary; the neW
The research published today in kind of immune cell lcnown as a cells disappeamllyithin lhrce weeks.
the January issue of Nature Medicine helper T-cell. The researchers chose
Still, Dr. Roger Pomerantz, chief
could lead to new ways of attacking three patients and isolated frOm their o.f infectious·· dioetie
, s:;-at Jeffenon
f
·
f h" bl
d · ---'B
the AIDS virus in parts o the body . bodies another type o w ote ood Medical ollege IR ' Phil~lphia.
where it has eluded standard drug , cell, known as a killer T-cell, which who is famiUar with the research,
lreaiment.
. , destroys HIV.
called it an exciting early step toward
Researchers were able to suppress
By cloning and other means, they eradic~ting f.!IY "where it hi~."
HIV by giving a patient injec.tions of grew huge numbers of each patient's
Whole prRistng the lon.s·term val·
cells fashioned from his own immune · kille~ T-cells in a laboratory and • ue of the work, Dr. AnthO!IY F~U~Ci,
system. Though scientists say the · genetically engineeo'd:l some with who is working on his own treatment
new method can't be used immedi- markers to trace their movement to eradicate virus remnants,' cau·
ately to treat large numbers of within the body. They then reinject· tioned that the Univeisity of Wash·
patients, it is encouraging because it ., ed massiv~ amounts back into each ington technique is so lldvlfiCC!IIhat

,

Redwomen fall to Ohio pomini_can, Page 6.
Ovarian caytcer, ·Page 10 ·
Senior citize'ns ~ews, Page 5

. Today: Light snow
High: 30s; Low:20s

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January 11, 1ogg

' iMt yiW's Problein-Solvin&amp; Day, will be offered on 13 weeken&lt;!s from Jan.
!,16 to April 10, !llOIIIIy 11 ~~~ IRS offices in the morning. A CQIJIP!ete list

Meigs .County recorder posts recent land transfers
1loe following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed, Wilbur Ward to Donald
Ward, Evelyn Hobbs, Ruth Priddy,
Kay Schultz and Tammy Fry, Salem, '
56.06 acres:
·Deed, Albert and Joann McKitrick
, Ward to Donald War, Evelyn Hobbs,
· ;_ . ·Ruth Priddy, Kay Sh11ltz and Tammy
Fry. Salem, 56.06 acres;
Deed, George J _ Moore and
Frances.Ann Hewitt to Argyle and
Rick Deeter, Lebanon parcel ;
Deed, Jay Jr. and Lillian Marlene
Hall to JELM Enterprises, Middleport lots;
Deed, Larry I . and Kristie A.
Barnes to Joe D. Tritipo. Columbia;
· Deed, Michael ani! · Rhonda .
Sanders to Thomas L. and Sherri P.
Caplinger, Olive, 6.591 acres;
Deed, Robert E. ~nd I)' ina J.
Sanders to Deedrah L. and Thomas T.
Simmons. Olive, 1.580 acres;
: Deed, ll.obert E. and Nina J.
Sanders to Jonathan D. Sanders,
Olive parcels;
: Deed, Deedrah L. and Thomas T.
Simmons to Deieah L. Sanders,
·olive, I acre;
. Deed, Margaret Burri to Oscar and
Ljllian L. Maynard, Lori Ann May·
nard Gallfiel and Oscar Allen Maynlird, Let~'1· 10 acres;
.'
: Right of'way, Cynthia Burkhart to
Buckeye ftural Electric Cooperative,
·
s.;ipio, 3.353 acres;
: Right of way, Stanley R. and Lora
S!archer to BREC, Rutland. 2:54

Wednesday

J'
:One 'hild concludes.
"Cu we talk about my allowance7"
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Fire destroys landmark
New Haven building
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - A fire destroyed a
landmark building in New Haven late Tuesday,
leaving a family homeless and causing significant damage to a small .business, according to
Assistant Fire Chief Steven Duncan.
·Tim ·Roush· and· his wife, l.&amp;urr,escaped the
11:15 p.m: blaze with just the clothes on their
back when fire struck the old Mason County
1
·
Bank building.
Duncan said the building was fully involved
when the fire department arrived, jusl minutes
after the call came in.
•
Severely cold temperatures hampered the .
firefighters, according to Greg Kaylor, fire
department 'president. He said it was only 10
degrees when firemen arrived at the scene, and
5everal hydrants in the immediate area ~f the
blaze were frozen. Water had to be pumped
from distant hydraRis.
Firefighters wilhstood the cold temperatures
well, Kaylor said, and no injuries ~ere .reported. But he said the water formed a lot of tee and
fire equipment kept freezing to the groun~.
·
The building was owned by Phil Serevocz of
New Haven , and the arts and crafts business on
the first noor was owned by Becky Reed, also
of New Haven.
·
·
The .Roush family occupied the second noor,
where firemen beli'eve the blaze began,
although it ·is still under investigation, Kaylor
said .'
He added the contents of the second floor
were destroyed, and there .was heavy water
damage to the first-noor business.
Although the building is still standing, firefighters declared it a total loss as well.
Assisting New Haven were the Mason and
Middleport departments.
·
Firefigliters were on the scene until after 4
a.~. today.

pOiiticS .and ·more

0
ODOT announced its intentions to replace the Hob· Ted Strickland and Nancy Hollister f?ru.s·. rcprese.ntaand were recovered by their owner, the McGiness Co. of .
L.Bst In • asr/ss
(
son Bridge in Middleport.
.
tive, as the candidates debate~ tn Meo~ County.
:.
Politics was the keyword in Meigs County headlines South Point.
Taxpayers
prepare!!
to
face
a
17
percent
increase
on
.
Timothy
_
Compson
of
Racone
w~
kolle.
d
when
a
c~
The Meigs Local School Board was faced with an
during the final four months of 1998. Other hot topics:
.
overcrq:wding
problem in the kindergarten program at real estate taxes for the new tax year, following the reap- he was repamn~ fell and crushed htm at hos home.
water and sewer issues, and progress on road improvepraisal of property by the county.
. Perry Varnadoe_. former economtc developmet)t
Rutland Elementary School.
ments.
. Desks, shelving, books, and other items were auc- dorector for Was hm gton .County, was. .•p~mted , to
The Rev. Jesse Jackson toured the Southern Ohio
SEPTEMBER
tioned
by the Eastern Local School District, emptying replace Ron McDade 10 the same posttoon m Met~
The Ohio Department of Transportation announced Coal Co,.'s Meigs .Mines as part of his March for out the dis trict's three abandoned elementary schools at County.
plansto·construct a. new highway garage at Five Poi~ts , Appalachia, he.ld in Nelsonville on Sept. 27. UMWA Cheste~. Tuppers PlainS and Reedsville.
NOVEMBER
to· replace the exosllng garage on State Route 7, whtch President Cecil Roberts also'visited with Jackson.
Democrat
Mick
Davenport
was elected Meigs Coun· Highway funding was a hot topic in the race between
The Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society
was constructed in 1953. ·
ty commissioner in a rae~ again~t Patty Goeglein PicliThe Village of Rutland began purchasing homes as a and a group dedicated to·the preservation
ens. Other big winners With Meogs County vot ~rs: u.s.
of the Buffington Island battle site filed
part of'its nd,od hazard mitigation program .
Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasvtll e; Stale Sen. Mt~e
County.commissioners and other Meigs officials con- an appeal with the Meigs County Cou~
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville; and State Rep. John Carey,
tinued to discuss the county's ongoing financial strife, of Common Pleas in an attempt to pre·
R-Wellston. A proposed levy for Carleton School a~·d
climaxing in an attack from Howard Frank of spending vent the oWner · of the property, Shelly
Meigs Industri es failed , whjle a levy for the Meigs Loc~l
cuts proposed by Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton. No Materials Inc., from mining gravel at the
School Board was passed, but only a.fter the ~ard of
action was ever taken on Thornton's proposal for across- site.
elections' official count broke an Election Day toe.
Attempting to curb problems with loi·
· Meigs County received a $42,450 through the Recythe-board spending cuts.
'
Middleport Polic~ Department Sgt. PJ Richmond was tering by local youth, the Village of Midcle! Ohio pr{)gram, which is to be used for recychng a~
named as the defendant in a $200,000 wrongful arrest dleport toughened its curfew laws.
litter prevention education projects .
•
OCTOBER
and persmlal injury lawsuit by Thomas Andetson of
The Meigs Courlty Dislrict Public Library Board de&lt;!Outgoing Economic Development
icated its latest branch operation, the Eastern branc~ .
Pomeroy.
·
Director
Ron McDade was honore([ . as
The Delta Queen docked at Middleport's levee during
located at the new Eastern Elementary School.
.
Meigs County's Person of the Year at t"e
the community's River Fest.
,
The engineering firm of Burgess &amp; Niple present{&lt;:~
Possible &lt;;ontamination of Middleport's drinking anpual Southeastern Ohjo Regional Com·
the Meigs County Commissioners with its propo~al for
'
water was brought to light by a citizens' group at a meet- mittee dinner:
cleaning up an abandoned county -owned landfill m SalThe Meigs County Board of MIVDD
ing of Middleport Village Council. An EPA official later .
isbury Township. The Ohio EPA req'uires that the l~nd­
reported at a council, meeting that the water, while it announced its intention to request a livefill be repaired to eliminate the dtscharge of conta~mn at· . ,
showed traces of a volatile organ~ ·compound, was con- year, l.li·,!f!illlevy in the general Novem·
..
Sch~~t .waa
to ed W~~
ber,election.
·
Fifty-five student photographers from the School of
sidered safe to drink.
board hosted an open Visual Communications ~~Ohi o University converged
The Ohio Department of Transportation began work ' Meigs County schoolchildren joined ovarflowlng · August whan
hou1e
at
the
new
building,
consolidated
the· dlatrlct'a
ofi the repair of a slip on East Main Street in Pomeroy the world in watching U.S. Sen. John
\:...
Glenn return to space aboard the Space thrH elementary buildings into a new centrally-located buildnelf Kroger.
Continued
on
page
3
Ing on State Route 7.
,
·
Two coal barges ? ank in the Ohio River at Pomeroy, Shuttle Discovery.

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Commentary
\

The Daily .Sentinel
'Esta6flslid 1111948

or,.,., h•vo ,. - .,.,..

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SocSec-Wa/1 St. link far from sure
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a

Motel6.(c)EachroominNormanBates'motelisprovidedwithamini-bar.
(d)
The famous shower scene has been replaced by a Jacuzzi scene.
15. Bill Gates is (a) evil. (b) misunderstood. (c) just a con_fused boy from
Washington. (d) really really rich.
16. Who just doesn't get it? (a) Republicans. (b) Democrats. (c) Univer•
sal Studios. (d) the American people.
17. If you had to share a desert island with one of the following. who
would it be? (a) Augusto Pillochet. (b) Mick Jagger. (c) Michael Huffington.
·(d) Marilyn Manson.
18. If the House of Representatives is a deeply divided, highly partisan
legislative body, what is the United States Senate? (a) a model of decorum,
up to which the entire world looks. (b) ·the biggest bunch. of party animals
you ever saw. (c) D.C.'s answe! to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. (d) a
wacky bunch of nutty nutheads.
19. Which was the biggest waste of time in 1998? (a) Tom Wolfe's "A
~ Man In Full." (b) High Definition Television. (c) House Impeachment Hearings. (d) "Felicity."
,
· 20. What will our next hurricane be called? (a) Mitch 'II. (b) Son of a
Mitch .. (c) Psycho. (d) Furby.
21. If a train full of right-wing extremists is heading full steam on a collision course with destiny, and a bus half-full of mealy-mouthed Democrats
is busy hauling opinion polls across the bridge to tomorrow, how many mod. crate Republicans will it take to screw in a light bulb?
. '22. Why is Sean Penn angry? Discuss. ·
23. Who cares?
: 24. We stayed away from "Beloved" in droves, but turned out by the mil:lions to see "'The Waterboy." Is there something wrong with us, or what?
25. " W\lat Dreams May Come," "Meet Joe Black," "My Giant,"
. "Godzilla" --What wao.Hollywood thinking?
26. Bonus Question! Which of the following' will NOT make a comeback
:· in 1999. (a) dinosaurs. (b) moderate Republicans. (c) the dodo. (d) Qinton's
.'; reputation. (e) civil discourse. (f) Oprah Winfrey. (g) "I Know What You'll
, • Do Next Summer Too ..,.
~; Grade y01irself __ and good luck! ,
.
;.
(Ian Shoa!es' new book, "Not Wet Yet," is available from 2.13.61 Publications,
; : PO Box 1910, Los Angeles, CA 90078r The loll-free number is 1-800-992-1361.)
l• Copyrightl999 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .
••

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~~ Clinton

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for
area
tonight
Pretti
.
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The A••ocl•ted
·' •· Another 1-3 inches of snow should be on the gro~~ in Ohio tonight
.after a low pressure system pushes through the area tbe National Weath. Service said.
· '
· · Brisk winds could cause som~ blowing and drifting.
.
' .. ~e snow should end before daybreak Thursday, forecasters said. ,
Htgh pressure. on Thursday will create a mixture. of sunshine with
l'nlvns15-20 in the nol1h and around 25 in the south.
.
record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather
.
was 69 degrees in 1946 while the record low was 20 below zero
Jn 1884. Sunset tonight will be at 5:21 p.m. and sunri¥ Thursday at 7:53
a.m.
.
Wuther forecast: · .
• . Tonight ... Light snow. Total accumulation, 1 to 2 inches. Lows in the
.l~&gt;wer and mid 20s. West wind 10 to 1.5 mph. Chance&lt;&gt;f snow 90 percent.
Thursday... Becoming panty cloudy. Highs from. the upper 20s to near
'

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. Th~rsday nigilt. .. Cloudy. A chance of light snow after midnight.
Ntghttime temperatures nearly steady in the lower 30s.
·
.
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Extended forecasb
Friday... Rain likely.,Highs in the inid to upper 40s.
Saturday...Mostly cloudy wiih a chance of rain, then ·a chance of snow
l:sltowers. Cooler. Lows in the mid 30s and daytime temperatures steady
the mid 30s.
·
~ Sunday... Partly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Much ~lder.
~ws in the lower 20s and highs in the mid 20s.
·

maintained somehow. .
,
Lawmakers and J'I'Ominent economists are,
workina on a variety of ideas to resolve such concems.
. Democrats and Repul:!licans have agreed to
write a summary of the options that could be used
as the basis for future negotiations. Many are caw
tiously optimistic ihal compromise can be
reached despite the complexities.
,.
Making changes to Social Security, sending
checks to 44 million Americans as the nation's
biggest benefit program, always has been politi:
cally perilous, however.
·
"If we move too cjuicldy or these things aren't
fully Hcshed out, that could create.a huge baolflash," said Rep. Bob Matsui, D-Calif., a member
of Shaw's subcommitt~
·
'·
EDITOR'S NOTE: AW&amp;i Ann Love·Npora on
Socl•l Securlly.for 'the MIOCiated Pren. ~ ..

• How will President Clinton, in, Qr will Ointon's pre-impeach'
with soaring job approval ratings, ment bombing prove to be simply
survive an impeachment trial in the the wrong response to the Iraqi dfcSenate? As Clinton's approval rat- Iaior? With U.N. weapons inspectors'
ings climbed throughout the House no longer able to do their work, will
impeachment proceedings a! year's · we see an escalation of Saddam's
end, the joke became that the Senate defiance?
would re~im and h.is approval
• Will pro sports continue its lush
ratings would go over 100 perc~nt. into financial insanity?
"
What does this mess s~y . about what.
Minus· Michael Jordan, can the
Americans expect from their top .millionaire's clu~ that is the NBAleader?
its season· threatened by a labor
• Will Republicans in Congress lockout- ever regain the confidenCe
implode. around the impeachment of the paying public?
''
debate, giving their opponents reaAnd can baseball save itself? .,
sons to count the days to the 2000
In 1999, baseball was revived by
elections? Or will they recover and · two men in an liistoric home rtm
find new leadership in the House race. But Mark McGwire and
that takes them in a direction that the Sammy Sosa masked a worsening
public wants - into' education structural defect in the game that
reform.s, Social Security's salvation, could eventually kill.it.
tax reform and other issues?
·
Pro baseball is simply too div)d,
- Will the stock market continue ed, financially, between the haves
its year-end recovery? Will con- and liave-nots to survive at its c~rsumer coofidence continue to defy rent level. Some top-paid players
the predictions of th.c so-called now get more money than entire,
experts, fueling another year of mid- teams. As the rich teams continue to
die-class economic contentment? Or shell out big bucks, hoarding all the
will the millennium dooms ayers top talent, the teams at the bottom of
finally be right, and the economy t,he financial scale !Jecome less and
recoil fro
· es in Asia, Russia, less competitive, serving essentially
Brazil
elsew re? ..
as minor league feeders for the
• Will Saddam ssein be reined supeneams.

likely to get more acrimonious before it's ·nally decided :-

censure. And they have the votes to insist on this.
tion and removal. But can he be sure that 12 Democrats vail in the Senate. But they will be setting a precede~(
: • For all the sonorous noises abqut
Attention will then focus on the text of the resolution cannot be found, out of 45 in the Senate, who might vote that will discredit him forever, teaGh the American peo-·
:: cooperation and compromise .that
ef censure :. and it is precisely here that the devil is in to convict and remove him if he persists in refusing to pie that the laws don:J apply to the mighty, and haunt the
· : have been oozing out of the Senate
the details. Everybody knows that Mr. Clinton lied under admit that he committed perjury?
·
,
senators for the rest of their lives.
:: lately, the battle over the fate of
oath to the grand' jury, which is a felony. But Mr. ClinYou can be sure that the president and .his defenders Copyrlght11011 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
~· William Jefferson Clinton is likely to
ton, on the advi«'of his lawyers, has always steadfastly will do some very careful nose-counting on this ques- . Wtlllam A. Ru•h•r I• a Dlatlngulahed Fellow of the
:: get much more acrimonious before it
denied doing so. He has . repeatedly admitted having tion. And if conviction1ooms as a possibility, Mr. Clin- Claremont lnltltute for the Study of Slltelmanahlp
·
•: is finally decided. And in the end it is
"sinned. ~ ' and also ·to having deliberately "misled" his ton will come under very heavy pressure to consent to a •nd P~IIIICIII Phlloaophy.
:· all likely to come down to one key
family, his aide9, his Cabinet and the nation, not to men- resQ)ution that censures him for com· r-~----------~--;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;o;;.,..;w;;;:;;:~~·
:: question: Will the president agree to
.tion Paula Jones' lawyers in his deposition. But "lied milling perjury. It has been suggest- 1
.· admit that he lied under oath, or
under oath"? Never!
ed that steps could be taken to immuwon't he?
I
· The reason is obvious: Of all these misdeeds, only nize him against the use of such an
As the c·unain rises on his Senate trial, there simply lying under oath is a crime. Admitting to that would con- admission in any subsequent prosearen't 67 senators -- the required iwo-thirds -- ready to stitute at least prima facie grounds f~r his conviction and cution -- or even that Kenneth Starr
vote to convict and remove him from office. But most of removal as president, and would,_also open him to the might be persuaded to pledge that no
the Democrats are willing, even eager, to vote for a res- risk of prosecution for perjury once he ceases to be pres- attempt would be made to prosecute
olution of censure, and enough Republicans are ready to ident.
.
Mr. Clinton for perju"r, once he
go along with this to ensure the requisite 51 votes
Very well, then, but how is the Senate likely to view leaves office.' _ . .,
·'" '
(which is all cen·sure would require). Finally, the White his refusal ? If the.censure resolution fails to. assert that
But the president's vety admis·
House has made it clear that censure would be, at least he committed perjury, but simply condemns his behav- sion that he · committed perjury
. theoretically, acceptable to the president.
.
ior as "reprehensible," etc., many senators -- including would emphasize, in its starkest
The expectation, therefore, is that the trial will get a number of Democrats -- are (quite rightly) going to form, the central problem 'his defend~nder way, but that at some point the Senate {again, by
regard it as a meaningless slap on the wrist . .And yet, ers face : the fact that they are
a simple majority) will vote to suspend it pending con- confronted with a demand that he. admit to having com- · proposing to put the president outsideration of a resolution of censure. Note that word milled perjury, Mr. Clinton may refuse his consent to side the reach of the laws that apply
" suspend" &lt;The Republicans are not likely to end the any such motion of censure and, in effect, tell the Senate to e~eryone else. If
are 34 sentrial altogether: They will want to keep it hanging over to proceed with the trial.
ators -- one more
third -- who
Mr. Ointon's head, like the sword of Damocles, to be
In so doing, Mr. Ointon would~ belling that' t.here are prepared to go that
to save Mr.
revived and continued if no agreement is reached on will never be 67 senators willing to vote for his convic- Ojqton 's pr~sidency,
can

Jearold

Matheny Cain

~ay Je~kins

Jearold Ray Jenkins, 59, Pomona, Calif., died Sunday, Jan. 3, 1999 at his
residence.

Born Sept. 6, 1939 in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of the late Russell Jenkins,
and Ruth Mahaney Jenkins of Point Pleasant, W.Va., he was a self-employed
painter, and~ U.S. Navy veteran.
Surviving are his wife, Sharon Roush Jenkins; three sons, Russell W.
Jenkins, Jeffery Jenkins and Rodrick Jenkins, all of Pomona; two daughters,
Jearolyn Jenkins and Robyn Jen~ins, all of. Pomona; six grandchildren; and
two sisters, Barbara Thornton of Point Pleasant, and Patty Smith of Cheshire.
Services will be 2 p.m. Friday in the Deai ·Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
with ihe Rev. Carl Swisher .officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memo. rial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Thursday. ·

Lincoln

\

Financial aid meeting set

Levanchia L Matheny Cain, 84, Reedsville, died Monday, Jan. 4, 1999 in
St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Born April 23, 1914 in Reedsville, daughter of _the late Phillip "P.R.' and
Benha Rood Russell, she was relired from the Orient Institution for Children,
was a member of the Eden United Brethren Church, and attended the Orange
Christian Church.
•
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Marjorie and Marvin Keebaugh of Reedsville; and two ,gramllh\ughters and seven great-grandchildren.
· ShC&lt; was also preceded in death by two husbands, Paul Matheny and Erwin
Cain; an' infant daughter; and a sister, qarestine Randolph.
Services. will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the White-Moquin Funeral Home,
CQolville, with the Rev. Charles Domigan officiating. Burial will be in ·the Randolph Cemetery. friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
today.

w. Smith

A financial aid meeting will be held in the Southern Higil School cafeteria tonight at 7 p,m. Parents of seniors should attend to complete
FAFSA forms for federal and state financial aid for college, announced
Shirley Sayre, guidance counselor, The public is invited to the meeting
which is sponsored by the Home National Bank and Southern High
School. For more information parents may contact Sayre at 949-2611 or
247-4322.
.

·Dinner planned

\

Th~ Racine American Legion Post 602 will have a public steak dinn~r
at the hall Sunday with serving to begi~ at 11 a.m. Cost .is $5,to eat in or
carry out.

Advisory lifted·

.

The Leading Creek Conservancy District has canceled the boil advisory for customers east of Rutland on State Route 124 including Bradbury Road, north on State Route 7 up to the Meigs Motet; includrng
Union Avenue, and north on State Route 143 up to Smith Run Road.
Leak repairs were completed withou1 having to interrupt service to customers, it was reported.

Chatnberluncheon
The Meigs County Cllamber of Commerce monthly luncheon meeting
will be held Tuesday at noon at Carleton School iiQSyracuse. Guest
speaker will be Cynthia King representing the Census Bureau.

Modern Woodmen
Burlingham Modern Woodmen will have its soup luncheon at the hall
Saturday, 2 p.m. Bring a dessert or sandwiches.

Alcoholics Anonymous

.

An alcoholics anon.ymous open discussion meeting will be held Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Carleton School, Syracuse.

Right to Life.group to tneet
The Right to Life meeting will be 'held Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.

· Lincoln W. Smith, 85, Middleport, died Tuesday, Jan. 5, 1999 in Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
·
Born Dec. 31, 1913 in Dorothy, W.Va., son of the late lsiah and Emma Hard·
wick Smith, he was formerly employed at the Covert Baking Co. aAd Heiner's
Bakery. .
Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered nine calls for assistance on
He was a member·of the Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
Tuesday. Units responding were: .
·
Sui'Viving'are three daughters and two sons-in-law, Dqnna V. and Don Roush
CENTRAL DISPATCH
•
Of Syracuse, and Bonnie S. and Robert W. Barton, and Penny L Smith and Rick
I :35 a.m., Langsville, Sam Williams, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
: ·Levanchia ~. Matheny Cain, 84, of Reedsvill~. died Monday, January 4, Ebersbach, all of Middlepon; three sons and two daughters-in-law, Eugene L.
10:00 a.m. , assisted by Middleport, Broadway Street, Robert Hoover,
}1}.)9 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, West Vi rginia.
·
Smith, and Paul F. and Gloria Smith, all of Middlepon. and Richard R. and Joan treated;'
:, Born on April 23, l9.14 in Reedsville, she was the daughter of the late Smith of Racine; a brother, Albert W. Smith of Lewisburg, N.C.; and 12 grand12:39 a.m., Holzer Clinic, Burdell Black, Holzer Medical Center;
J!hillip "P.R." Russell \lll"d Bertha Rood Russell.
children, nine great-grandchildren and a great-great granddaughter.
East Main Street, Helen McGraw, Veterans Memorial;
2:26p.m.,
: :She was retired from the Orient Institution for Children. She was a memHe was also preceded in death by his wife, Hilda V. Durst Smith; and three
5:17p.m.,
Holzer Clinic, Richard Adkins, Holzer;·
bq of the Eden United Brethren Church, and attended the Orange Christian siste~ Margaret Sheridan, Nettie Hunnel and Beulah Thelma Kapteina.
8:10 p.m., assisted by Middlepon, South Second Avenue., Mary Neut· Church.
·
·,
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in the Middle(iort Chapel of the Fisher Funer- · zling, Veterans Memorial;
·
: 'She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Marjorie and Marvin Kee- al Home;"'with the Rev. Lloyd Grimm and the Rev. Greg Cundiff officiating.
,
9
:38
'p.m.,
assisted
by
Middleport,
Overbrook
Center, Lincoln Smith, Vetbaugh, of Reedsville; two granddaughters, Debra Blick of Belpre, and Tony a Burial will be in the Riverview Cemetery, Middlepon. Friends may call at the
erans
Memorial.
aatser of Reedsville; a grandson-in•law. Robert E. Buck of Pomeroy; seven funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT
great-grandchildren, Jennifer Buck of Columbus, Julianne Buck Howard and
11:55
p.m.,
New
Haven,
W.Va.,
assisted with structure fire.
.,; her husband, Brian, of Pomeroy; Jacquelyn Buck of Pomeroy, Stacie Davis of
POMEROY
Columbus, Trenton 'T.J." Davis of Middleport. Bridget Balser of Reedsville,
10:15
p.m.,
Willow
Creek,
Richard
·DeMoss, Veterans Memorial.
and Kastle Balser of Reedsville. '
Fred Stewart, 71 , Middleport, died Wednesday, Jan. 6, 1,999 in the VeterShe was preceded in death by two husbands, Paul Matheny, y.oho was Mar- ans Affairs Medical Center, Chillicothe.
. .
jorie Keebaugh's father, and Erwin Cain; one infant daughter; imd a sister,
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Home,
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Ohio officially ended with no judge receiving
Oarestine Randolph.
Racine.
·
Supreme Court has resolved a feud · the four votes needed for victory. With
. · Funeral services ·will be held Thursday, January 7, 1999 at 1 p.m. at the
among judges by recogrtizing John W. no election winner, Fenreri said, the
White-Moquin Funeral Home in Coolville. The Rev. Charles Domigan will
Gallagher as chief judge of Cuyahoga judge with the moot seniority - himofficiate, and burial will be in the Randolph Cemetery. Friends may call at the
•
.
·
County Juvenile Coun.
self - automatically became chief
· funeral home today, Wednesday, January.6, 1999 from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
Betty J. Wiles, 74, )'omeroy, died Tuesday, Jan. 5, 199.9in the Rocksprings
The decision was a defeat for Judge judge.
•
·
d
t
th
ft
Rehabilitation
Center.
Robert
Ferreri, who had sought the .
ThOmas J. Moyer, chief justice of the
FOrmer PUtnam f81f secre
ea SQUI ·0 e
Born March 31, 1924 in Pomeroy, she was the daughter of .the late Harvey chief judge's position and itS' hiring and Ohio Supreme Court, arbitrated the dis'
. - OTTAWA (AP) - A former Put- to $45,000. Her attorney, Bill Kluge, and Lillian Hoffner Pierce. She was a member of the Pomeroy First Baptist administration responsibilities.
pule in a letter to Ferreri's attorney Monnam County Fair Board secretary has said the amount' was between $6,000 Church and the American Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
G~Ilagher won the annual chief
day. Moyer said that fourJuvenile Coun
pleaded guilty to stealing thousands and $42,000.
Pomeroy. She was a homemaker.
judge's election by a 4-1 vote, with one judges sign¢ a journal entry selecting
of dollars from her job.
She will be sentenced next month
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, l.,arry and Ann Wiles of judge abstaining. on Nov. 19. Ferreri Gallagher as the chief judge.
,
.. o Jacqueline L. Meyer entered .the by Judge Ran.dall Basinger. ·
.
Racine, and John Wiles of Pomeroy; a daughter arid son-in-law, Anna and questioned the legitimacy of the elecplea Thesday iwCommon Pleas Court
.The 'maximum sentence for the Craig Darst of Pomeroy;. five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, and tion, saying the deciding vote was cast
to a felony charge of theft as part of a charge is 18 months.
a sister, Ruth Canter of Syracuse.
too late . .
plea agreement.
.
Kluge said he plans to present eviShe was also preceded in death by her husband, Orval Wiles; a son, James;
Feneri contended that the election
• • A second theft count was dropped. dence to lessen his client's potential and a sister, Esther Wolfe.
(ter trial was to have started Monday. sentence. ·
·
Services will be W a.m. Thursday in·lhe Ewing Funeral Hoine. The Rev.
Prosecutor Daniel Gerschtz said · She has lio previeus criminal his- · Paul Stinson will officiate, and burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
his records show Meyer stole $43,000 lory.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.

Fred Stewart

Supreme Court rules in judges 'dispute

Betty J WileS

tary pJ

•Jty

Winter. Is
Here

1998:The year in review -politics and more
appointed to the district's board of
on
directors by Common Pleas Court
Pomeroy for a Dawn to·Dusk pho- · Judge Fred W. Crow III.
tograrhy project. .The photos were
The late Orval 'Curly." Wiles
later published in a tabloid insert in was honored by the Pomeroy comthe Athens News.
munity duri~g the Pomeroy Mer. Randy Kidder, an organizer of a chants A&amp;sociation .Christmas
community group opposed to rates parade, which was renamed in his
and connection fees in the Tuppers honor. Wiles, who passed away in .
Plains Regional Sewer District, was 1998, was a long-time Santa for the
community:
•
DECEMBER
A Lakewood man was injured
and a St. Mary's, Ga., nian was
(USPS ~13·'16G)
Communlt)' Ne~spapc:r Holdinp, Inc.
charged with .negligent hunting
after
a hunting acCident on the first
, • Published every afternoon, Monday lhrough
Friday, 111 Court St.J. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
day of deer. gun season. Injured was
Ohio Valley Publishirtg Company. Second cla:ss
Edward McCarthy, and · ~harged
j)Mtage paid at PomeroY. Ohio.
~ )!ember: The AwK:iat~d Press and tbe Ohio
with his •. injury was William
Newspaper AMocialion.
Weiman.
.
P01tmasler: Send addre!is co rrcdions to The
A statewide committee charged
.·Daily Senlinel. 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
• 45769.
with the ·selection of three sites for
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Correction Polley

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~te.ralc, U you knOW or IR error i.JI I
siOry, call the ncwsroo111 at (740) 992·
2155. We will .cheek your lnrormallon
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MATINEES

STEPMOM (PGt 3)
7:00 &amp; 9:30,DAILY

SPRINOEfU

9:10
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THE PRINCE OF EGYPT (G)

7:30 &amp;9:10 DAILY

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MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (PG)
7:00 &amp; 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT!SUN 1:00

a. :s:zo

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w.vA~

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1 ,I"

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Collection~

Closing date ·will be
March 8, 1999·
This will include·all
..

.

yennons~

Howard E. Frank,
Meigs County Treasurer.

P 0

I N T

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•TICKETS

PLIAIANT

~ATSTATEnEA'J'Rij

$5/PERSON
·
$3.50/SENIORS 8c Sl\JDENTS

Artist Series
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MASON,

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Penrrat Maltllger. ..': ............. .......ExL'llOl

Other ltervlcea
Ad•erllstpg. .................:...............Exl. 1t04
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PICKENS

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Alent CJilC'DiioDI 111::

Newl ..................... ............... .........Ex1.110l
or ExL 1106

We have
what you
need
•Rock Salt
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Tax Books will open on · ~
February s, 1999 lor the
rtrst hall1998 Real Estate

'

News Department•
main number Is 99l-USS. Dep•rl·

from local highway proponents.
'The Village of Middleport voted
to increase basic water rates by $5
per month, in an attempt to finance
'need~d improvements to the village
wale~ system .
A Board of Public Affairs, made
up of Middleport residents Jean
Craig, Don Stivers and Myron ·
Duffield, was appointed by the village council to oversee the operation
of and. improvements to the village
water system,
The Meigs COunty Commisisoners entered into a contract with the
Ohio Department of Human Services as a part of the statewide
attempt to revamp the state's welfare
,system.
1
7
1
An auction was held at the Meigs
County Home to sell furnishings and
appliances no longer needed [ [ ) DIG
•
"lnvu.' !i
because of the facility's closing.
· Meigs County Treasurer Howard
Frank· made two offers of $100,000
to the county commissioners, repre·
senting proceeds from the county's
investment program. Frank urged
the commissioners to use the funds
to retire two bank loans.

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Notices I An·n ouncements:

n

~: By Wllll•m A. Ruah•r

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3 •

Squads answer 9 calls

·1·9.99 pose· s·l•ts·ow.n·. q· u·es··tl•ons&lt;
By CHUCK RAASCH
ensuing rage against the machine
GNS PoliiiCIII Writer
would make Teddy Roosevelt's
WASHINGTON - By virtue of · trust-busting era that began the 20th
the calendar, it will be impo~ible to century look like a park picnic.
treat 1999 as just another year, no
But before we know t~e answer
matter how munaane its events turn to any Y2K computer carnage, the
out to be.
bet here is that by year's end, you
Yes, we, are referring to the "M" will be able to recite millennium
word. By now, you may be tired of moments in your sleep. The media
millennium hype, and the year has will compile virtually every list
only begun.
known to humankind. Every p~blic
It's a better bet a year from now event will be billed the last of the
you will be sick and tired of it.
millennium. The debate will rage
When a century turned in past about when the next century actualages, it was a cosmic event. In the . ly starts - 2000 or 2001. Already,
age of consumerism, it's a promo- they're worried · about champagne
tional event.
shonages on the eve of 2000.
One year from now, we. will
So the prediction here is that by
know if computers have returned us the Fourth of J~ly, the word millento the Dark Ages from the "Y2K nium will join elevator music, voice
plague," the threat of which has mail, potholes and second-hand
already sent survivalists scurrying to smoke as unique annoyances of life
the hills.
at the end of - excuse us - the mil·
If confused computers can dis• lennium.
rupt the world's · food supply and
But at the risk of winning the Ba~
shut down global stock markets, Humbug Award for 1999 before the
banking systems and power grids, year barely begins, there are a f~w
then the Information Age ' has key questions about the year that
become far more threatening than have nothing to do with the millenelectronic eavesdropping and smitrt nium.
bombs. The millennium will have
And collectively, they could
been a lot more consequential than a make this a momentous year, no
commemorative turn of an age. The . matter what it says on the &lt;alendar:

~evanchia

I

or defense.
• :
"We're aoina to have to talk about how much.
of the aurplus' could be used for Social Security;
without sttii'Vina other priorities," said Roaer;
Hickey of the l~titute for ~erica's .. Future,;
coordinating a grass-roo,ts campatan aa11nst prl•,
vate accounts.
· :
That opposition includes the AFL-CIO and;
civil rigilts aroups such as the NAJ\CP. They.
argue the accounts would leave indiViduals ·- ;
especially low-wage workers - at the mercy of;
the stock market .
.. · •
Rother said the AARP would be willing to sup-;
port personal accounts only if the current sys-;
tern's retirement income guarantees also arc•

Test your 1998 trivia /Q

I

I Death

Wedneed8y, J•nu.ry t, 1M~

Tooav

·•d

Pomeroy • Middleport, ·ohio

PegeA2

By AUCE ANN LOVE
favored by many Republicans and more r~ntly
Aaocllttd Pren Writer
won suppol1 from some key Democrats. Some
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
WASHINGTON (AP)- Using sl"l'k market government benefits likely still would be suaran740-002·21511 • Fu: 092·2157
irvestments to boost the supply of money for teed as a safety net, and supporters say the power
Social Security is a complex and controversial of Wall Street would leave most people better off.
idea that will not ·easily become a reality, even
But the shift would be tricky. The first problem
Community Newspaper-Holdings, Inc.
though President Clinton gave lawmakers the go- is where money for the ac~unts would come
ahead.
from initially - not to mention how much .it
ROBERT L WINGETT
·~This isn't as simple a questicn as it appears at
would
cost just to set up and maintain accounts
Publisher
first blush," said Rep. Clay Shaw, R-Fla., chair- for 148 million American workers.
man of a House subcommittee overseeing Social
Many supporters suggest filling the aocounts
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
Security.
by diverting some of the Social Security taxes
GeMI'III M•n.g.,.
. Controller
Many Republicans .long have favored plans that workers now·pay. But all those taxes-..and
that would try to fatten the retirement program by more- will be needed in coming decades to pay
investing
its money on Wall Street.
~nefits promised to aging baby boomers. Also,
n.. Sentinel aMomH ,..,.,. lo tM edltw'""" ,...,. etn • llnNtd,.,. ot .fopAt
a
meeting
with
lawmakers
on
,.._ , . , (31111 or l»&gt;nff , . , - .
Dec. 9, Clinton endorsed private
1)pN - - I W - ond 1/1 1111y1HJ od/10&lt;1. &amp;oh -ltH:I-•IIfiMhlre,
NtJNM, •nd daytime phone numbM. S,.ccty • d.,. If,.,. .• • ~ to • JXWSoCiaL 5ecuR!1Y
investment,
in general, as one way to
rixM Mf#CII tN ,_,.,._ ,.H to: t.,.,_ fo rita MIHol', 7J'te Sentinel, 111 Court, St.,
help prevent a cash shortfall expected
,..,_or, Ohio 457U; or, FAX to 7of0.62-2166.
'
T~r FVI4D f'eLL w2'f
after more than 75 million baby
Pat~Ts
nt ~m
boomers' retire and begin collecting
· ~IT iaKiNtio 8'/
benefits.
eata.Y Re1'iReES.
House Democratic leader Dick
Gephardt of Missouri and the Ameri: By I•n 8h011l"
can
Association of Retired Persons , Before we leap into More Monica Ali 'The Time, let's try to remember
the
nation's largest organization of
. 1998.
.
older
adul,ts - also are offering conLet's test our memories shall we?
'
ditional
suppon.
. 1. Complete the following phrase: It's 110t about (a) se&amp;. (b) neekties. (c)
The reason is simple: Using the
· Y2K. (II) the meaning of "is."
.
stock
market to try for higher invest2. It's about (a) perjury. (b) injury. (c) a hungjury: (d) my personal needs.
ment
returns
is more appealing than
3. (f/F) If you feed Viagra to a Tickle-Me-Elmo, you get a Furby.
the
alternatives
- deep retirement
4. Which does not belong? (a) Jesse "The Body" Ventura. (b) "Chainbenefit
cuts
or
sharp
tax increases.
saw" AI Dunlap. (c) Kenneth "Cud!lles" Starr. (d) Hulk Hogan.
"We're
all
counting
on these better
S. In the motion picture, "A Bug's
Life," how many legs do the insects returns," said AARP lobbying chief
Berry's World
·
have? (a) one. (b) a zillion. (c) six. (d) John Rother.
But
the
consensus
ends
there.
four. ,
·
Disagreements still to. be resolved
6. Which was the most fun couple
include
even the inost basic question:
of 1998? (a) Dennis Rodman and Car·
Who
would
do the Investing - indimen Electra. (b) James Brolin and
Barbra Streisand. (c) J.D. Salinger vidual Americans in personal
and Joyce Maynard. (d) George Will accounis or the government by investing people's Social Security contribuand Cokie Roberts.
7. What is the proper way to refer tions in bulk?
Clinton has taken no position on
to the beleaguered dictator of Iraq? (a)
this,
although some top advisers,
•
Buddy. (b) Saddam. (c) Mr. Happy
Treasury
Secretary
Robert
including
baby
boomers
do
not
have
enough
working
years
Head. (d) What's-his-name.
Rubin,
have
voiced
worries
about
both
choices.
left
to
get
much
out
of
new
private
accounts.
8. (f/F) If you feed fenility clrugs
Most Republican lawmakers· - along with
Most ideas to generate money to cover transi- .
to a Furby, you wi!l get quintuplet
Federal.
Reserve
Chairman
Alan
Greenspanare
tion
costs, including raising the retirement age or
beanie babies.
against
·
bulk
investr'(lents
that
would
mea.
n
govtax
increase for the wealthy, already are dr~w·
a
9. Where were you when you first
ernment
ownership
of
corporate
stock,
ing fi~e.
heard that Ginger had quit the Spice
"We don't want the federal government rullFor that reason, consensus is growing (or using
Girls?
ning
America's
corP.:,rations,
that's
socialism,
and
budget
surpluses, administration officials say.
10. If-you had invested a dollar In
.
·
we
sure
don't
want
politics
getting
involved
in
the
"With
the surplus and the possibility of higher
amazon.com, yahoo.com and ebay.com back in January, how much would
investments,"
Shaw
said.
returns,
we
increase the chance of having a Social
· you be wortiJ today? (a) 10 dolfars. (b) a jillion dollais. (c) 50 jillion dollars.
A
powerfullobby·
i
ng
coalition
of
business
and
Security
reform
package that keeps strong stan·
(d) I d!!n't want.to talk about it, it's. too depressing.
conservative
groups,
fr()m
the
National
Associadard of livfng for America's senior citizens and
11. Which does not belong? (a) Bub Dole. (b) Bob Byrd. (c) Bob Livtion
of
Manufacturers
to
the
Center
for
New
·could
be politically palatable enough Ia pass,"
ingston. (d) Sammo Hung.
·
Black
Leadership,
also
is
opposed.
said
Clinton's
top economic adviser, Gene Sper:
12. How many features on Calista Flockhart's alleged anorexia did you
Soine
Democrats
argue
it
would
be
possible
to
ling.
see last year? (I) one. (2) two. (3) too many. (4).Addis Ababa.
But no one can predict how much money the
13. What word best describes Dr. Jack Kevorkian? (a) creepy. (b) brave. set up a board of irustees to insulate Social Security's
investment
decisions
from
politics.
nation will have to spare in coming years, and
(c) really creepy. (d) Indonesia.
The alternative - a new system of individual already there is a clamor to spend any surpluses ·
14. In Gus VanSant's shot-for-shot replica of Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho," what minor alteration did he make to the movie? (a) Norman Bates is retirement savings accounts'. - long has been for other purposes - from 'tax cuts to education
killed by Michael Myers. (b) Norman Bates'. mother sells the property to

I

Wedneaday,.January 6, 1999

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January 6, 1999

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel o Page 5

.

Bissell, Smith, Brown SO«&lt;J for

in extra period

. Eastern tops Meigs 72-64 in.overtime
l

'

Matt Bissell scored six points in · Grant Abbott scored with '0 seconds , witli a steal for Meigs with 48 secthe final. I :05 of overtime ,to lead left to gi~c Meigs a 27-24 lead at the onds to go and Abbott was fouled
Eastern to a 72-64 win over Meigs, half.
·
with 35 ticks left on the clock. Grant
in Tri- Valley Conference basketball ·
Meigs held a 37-34 lead after a hit one of two to gi"e Meigs a 61&lt;59
aqion Tuesday evening at Eastern Rodriguez bucket with 2:34 left in lead.·
High School' Larry R. , Ritchie the third period. But Eastern _scored
But Bissell was fouled and nailed
Gymnasium. The Eagles score\! the six in a row and took a 40-37 lead botl) free throws to tie the game at
final eight points of the contest to, when Jeremy' Casto scored at the 61-all with 26 s~onds left. Steve
break a 64-alltie.
I: 17 mark.
. Beha tried a leaner .just inside the
The win is the third in a row for , , Rodriguez nailed ~ three pointer paint that wouldn't fall and tim~ ran
Eastern ·and gives coach Howie to tie the game at 40-all with a out as the two teams battled for the
Caldwell's Eagles a 3-3 mark overall minute left and a bucket by Hannan rebound sending the game into overand 2-3 · in the TVC's Hocking at the 21 second mark gave Meigs a . til)le.
· Division. The Marauders (3-6'&amp; 3-3 42-40 advantage. But Joe Brown hit · 'Eric Smith scored the first three
in the Ohio Division) suffered their a pair of free throws with 16 seconds points of the overtime to give
left and the Eagles tied the contest at Eastern a 64-61 lead. But a three
fourth loss in a row. ;·
The Eagles caine out and took a. 42-all heading.into the fourth period. point play by Hannan with 2:43 left
quick 6-0 lead on two Joe Brown
Meigs took a 53-4S lead on a Kyle tied the game at 64.
buckets and a bucket by Jeremy Smiddie three pointer with 4:07 left."
Brown scored to give Eastern the
Casto.· But the Marauders came'back but Bissell answered with one for the lead for good (66-64) with 1:54 left,
to pull to within 8-7 on a bucket by Eagles to pull Eastern te within 53- after that it was all Bissell whq
Angelo Rodriguez with 1:07 left in 51 with 3:58lcft.
scored on alay-up and was four of
the penod. ·
A technical on the Meigs bench at six from the .line to give EaStern the
Josh Will' scored with one minute the 3:35 mark sent Bissell to the line. 72-64 win. ·
to go in the period to give Eastern ·a Matt .hit one of two to cut the
'This was an excellent ball game,
I0-7 lead heading into the ·second Marauder lead to 53-52. Meigs built played well by two teams," Eagle
period.
·
a 57-52 lead when Beha pulled down coach Howie Caldwell said after the
Zack Meadows scored to start the a defensive re bound and went coast - game. "Having two weeks to prepare
second peiiod to pull Meigs to with- to-coast for the lay-in with 2: 15 left. and us getting to see them twice was
in I 0-9. Daniel Hannan nailed a thre e
But once again the Eagles came a big asset. I thought that we showed
pointer with at the 7:15 to give stormi ng back and tied !he game at a lot of poise in the overtime and late
Mei gs a 12- 10 advantage. Grant 57-all when Bissell came up with a in the fourth period when they went
Abbott came up with a steal but . steal on a loose ball, scored and was up three. From where we started, to
missed the 'shot at the other end. · fouled. Matt nailed )he fre e throws to where we are right now is a differHannan followed with a put back and tic the score with I :44 left.
ence like night and day. We needed _a
was fouled, the senior hit the free
After Beha hit one oT two from game like thi s tonigfit to show the
(brow to give t&gt;.:leigs a 15-10 lead at t~e line to give Meigs. a 58,57 lead kids we can pl ay with people,
the 7:0 I mark of the period.
witli I :42 left. Josh Will scored off a because Meigs is not a shabby club."
Eastern
stayed · ,with
the Brown ass is.t to give Eastern th e 59, I know that only five kids scored, but
Marauders stay u\g within fo'!r points 58 lead.
our bench had a lot to do with this
the rest of the period. An Eric Smith
Ahholl scdred off the offensive win , they were here practicing hard
bucket with 41 seconds left pulled boards with I :04 left and Meigs went over the break to help us gel ready."
the Eagles to within 25-24, before back on top 60-59. Hannan came up
Brown took game scoring honors

with 24 points. He was joined in dou- ·
ble figures by Bissell' with 21. Eric
Smith added nine imd Jeremy Ca5to·
and .Josh Will s.cored eight points
.
each.
Eastern hit 26 of 44 from the floor·
for 59%, including two for three .
from three point range. The Eagles
went to the line 27 times and hit 18
for 67%. Eastern unofficially pulled
down 15 rebounds led by Brown
with six. The Eagles has 12
turnovers, eight assists led by Bissell
with four and Brown added two
steals. Eastern was called for 15 per.sonal fouls.
1
Meigs placed three players ina
double figures led by Hannan with
23. Rodriguez added 15.
Abbott, who played the fourth
period on a sprained ankle, added 10.
Smiddie added eight, while Beha had
six and Zach Meadows had two.
Meigs was 26 of 69 from the floor
for 38%, including five or2~ from
long ·range. Meigs went to the line
nine times and hit seven for 78%.
Meigs .had 29 rebounds • led by
Hannan's 15 and Abbott's seven.
Meigs had nine . stea,ls with
Rodriguez getting four and Hannan
TO THE RACK- Meigs guard Jeremiah Bentley gdes to the haop
three. Meigs tunied the ball over 18
in
quest
of some offense as Eaatern guard Matt Bissell (12) watch4
times. The Marauders were called for
es
during
Tuesday night's TVC game at Eastern High School, t~
26 fouls .
site
of
the
Eagles' 72-64 overtime victory:.
·
•.
Eastern made it a clean sweep
with a 52-41 win in the reserve co n0= 15, Zach Meadows 1-0-0=2, Graft!
test. Chris Lyons led the winners Quarter il!li!!§
with 20 points, .Garrett Karr added Meigs ...... .............. 7-20-15-19-3=64 :Abbott 4-0-2=10. Totals: 21·5·9=~
14. J.P. Staats led Meigs wijh 14.
Eastern ...... ..... ... 1})- 14-18-1 8-11=72
Eastern: Matt Bissell 4"2-9=21;
Meigs will travel to Belpre on .
Friday, while Eastern goes to
Meigs: Daniel Hannan 9-1-2=23, Joe Brown 9-0-6=24, Jeremy. CastG
Kyle Smiddie 0-2-2=8, Steve Beha 4-0-0=8, Josh \"ill 4-0-0=8, Eric
Trimble.
1-1"1=-6. Angelo Rodriguez 6-1- Smith '3-0-3=9. Totals: 24·2·18=72 : ·

;:rhe Senior Nutrition Program
e(ening meal will be served on
'tl!esday and Thursday with serving
f}'em 4:~5 to 5:30 p.m.
A·
s;Uggested donatign for the evening
~al is $4.00. The evening, meal is
ihtended to provide a nutritional
J!lial at a reasonable cost. Dollars
l\!'erated will be. used to support
existing lunch and home
4~ivered meal program. ·
.

ar,

I

.,
'j

li

with a 13-56 shooting night overall
for 23.2 percent, hitting 4-21 threepointers and 9-35 two-pointers,
mostly of which were in the paint.
Southern hit 9-13 at the line with 17
reboun.ds (Hoback 5, Mills 5).
Southern had eight ·steals, nine
turnovers, one ~ssist and 12 fouls.
Alexander had a 23-44 shooting
. night from the floor .for 52.3 percent
overall, hitting 2!'4 three-pointers and
21-40 two-pointers. Alex hit .S-13 at
the line with 34 rebounds (Kubachka
I0, McKee 7); 11 turnovers. six

3 2 4 ·H o· L e 's 0 F CHAMP I 0 N SHIP G 0 L F: ' :1.8 C 0 U R S E S 0 N 5 EVEN

Baseball Hall of Fame
· counts Ryan, Brett,
Yount as new members
By BEN WALKER
NEW YORK (AP) - The Hall of
Fame hit a rare ltiple in this at-bal .Nolan Ryan, George Brett and Robin
Yount
are
all
headed
to
Coopers]own.
. .
For the first time since the Babe
himself was chose n, three first-time
candidates were elected Tuesday to
the baseball shrine.
And what a class it is!
Ryan , the greatest power pitcher

against," he said on a con ference
call, his voice cracking, "probably
Robin is the guy I enjoyed playing
against the most."
Said Yount: "If there was one
player I ever wanted to be like, it was
George Brett. "
.
For election , players had to be
placed on 75 percent of the hallot s
cast by I0-year members of the

e ver. Brett, the gamer who al most hit

ballots cast- Rvan was named on a

.

:ALA 8 AM A

egetable.Soup
,fbnlled Cheese Sandwich
Crackers
reachy Creamy Pudding
~ookie
.

I

Macaroni ahd Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes
Green Beans
Bread
'
Pears

'

18

•

Chicken Patty
Mashect Potatoes
·Peas &amp; Carrots
Breact .
Creamy Fruit Salad

21

Salisbury Steak .
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Grayy
Lima Beans and . Com
.
. Roll
Cherry Chip Cake

.

28

26

.'

1s easy. ...
.

..

..

•

..

Name

Baked Porkette
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Plums

-

•

Several one-day trips will be
planned for 1999 if there is enough
interest. Tentative trips are to the
.Longaberger .Basket · factory,
Dresden and Roscoe Village,
Coshocton in early May; the Wilds
:near Cambridge in June; a tour of
:cincinnati sites with lunch and a
:c ruise on the · BB Riverboat in
September; . and the Festival of
Lights at Ogleby Park, Wheeling,
ln December. All trips wUI cost
.under $50.00. Call Alice Wamsley

Yesteryear 1999
·,.

•
'

,&lt;

.

. HAMPTON
C'OV£
Htmlsv/1/e

'

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I

SILVER
LAKES .
Allll/5/on;f;m/stlen

· : If you enjoy quilting, embroidery,
baking, candlemaking, iinptinch,
leathercrafl work or making rag
~askets, then we could use your
help and expertise at Yesteryear.
Call the RSVP office at 992-2161
ioday to let us know you're
interested in helping or for more
information concerning Yesteryear:

..

•
GRAND
. NATIONAL

CAMBRIAN
RIDGE

HIGHLAND
OAKS

MAGNOLIA
GROVE

Anhurn/Opelllta

Gre•m•lfle

Oolball

Mobile

'•
OX MOOR
VALLEY

Blrm/ttgbam .

.(

'

22
Salisbury Steak
Augratin Potatoes
L1ma Beans &amp; Corn
Bread
Pears in Lime Gelatin

.

.

'

.
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossect Salad
Garlic Bread
Fruit Coo tail
Cookie

21

28

27

Turkey and Dressing Roll
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Green Beans
'
Bread
Bananas .and Oranges

Ham ;md Scalloped
Potato Casserole
Cote Slaw
Butterect Peas
Bread
Apple Slicas and RaiSins

monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
be held from 9:30 a.m.-11 :00 a.m.
Blood sugar screening will be
available for $1.00.

Thursday, January 28-the
.monthly birthday
will be
held, seniors with1~~~:~~:~~y! during

'

Thursday, January 28-the
Caring and Sharing Support Gtoup
will meet at I :00 p.m. with Lenora
·
RNC, coordinatC&gt;r. .•

Academy Bell Choir played a program or Christmas music at the Christmas dinner. ·
was the seventh year the bell choir has entertained at the Senior Center.

·several ·Qf. the seniors assisted Rev. Bob Robinson .with telling a story about Thanksgiving at the
annual dinner attended by 150 persons.
·
·

·~&amp;~

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY ·:

~J~:ftelers
212 EAST MAIN

•

POMEROY, OH.

WE HONOR

~

ST.

992-3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

•.

WI

at 992-2161 if you are interested in
any of the trips. There mus.t be at ,
least 30 persons interested before
lo DOWNTOWN GALLIPOUS
final plans can be made .

o

00

I

.

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"Sewng Southern,Ohio for over 20

Lift Chairs
Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools '
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs .
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
DiabetiC Supplies
Feeding Pumps

year~"

Everything
for the
Patient
at
Home

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
.Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;
·
Supplies
BackSupports
Knee, Ankle Brace~
Nursing Supplies
.. Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
Dressings

THE ·MEDICAL SHO,PPE
.l-·1 .6-2206

.

Meigs Senior _
Center January Activities :

-TRIPS FOR 1999--

www. rtjgolf.com

.

Meatloaf
•
Parstieo uw aoa Potat.oes
Spinach
Bread
Applesauce

'

:o

•

•

tS ;

21

Sloppy Joe on Bun
Baked Beans
Skin-On Potato Wedges
Honey Bee Alt1brosia

.

Hamburger on Bun
Broccoli Soup
Orange Juica
Breed Pudding

.. '

·1-800-949-4444

'

..'

.

Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Harvard Beets
Bread
Banana

20

.

26

Township

· ALABAMA'S

'vegetable Beet Soup
Pimento Cheese
Bread - Crackers
Peachy Creamy Pudding
Cookie

Address

Phone Number

'

Fresn Aople
Rocky Road Pudding

14 .

Scalloped Chicken
Broccou w~h Cheese
Sweet Potatoes
Bread
Apricots

• 2&amp;

The first adhesive postage
stall!pa went on sale July 1, 1847.

.~~

'

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.

HEAP

•

...
,.

Each of our 18 courses is easy to reach by
interstate. And the best thing is, you can
get from one sit&amp;to the next.in about the
time it takes to play nine holes. It will be
the easiest drive you'll have all day.
One toll-free
call gels you championship ..
.
golf and hotel accommodations.

Con •.brnJd

.

.

.. ''

The golf isrit.

'

Beef Stew
ColeSlaw
Biscuit
Pineapple with
Cottage Cheese

activities are line dance team
practice with Paulette Harrison,
.''· .
instructor, every Monday from 1:00
• The Home Energy Assistance Program is a federally funded program p.m.-2:00 p,m, and the knitting
a~ministered by the Ohio Departmen.t of Development, Office of circle every Wednesday from 1Q:OO
Community $ervices (OCS). It is designed to help eligible low-income a.m.-noon. The Exercise Room is
Qhioans meet the high costs of home heating. HEAP pays a one-time · open daily from 8:00 a.m.-4:30
payment for most PUCO regulated utility customers reflecting their usage p.m. for people to use the exercise
for the current winter heating season. Vouchers are issued to non-regulated equipment. .
The winter session of the ~·over
utility customers, master-metered and ·other applicants who do not have a
50 Exercise Class" will be held on
utility bill in their name.
·
· A. household applying .for HEAP must report total household income for Monday and Wednesday at 3:30
the past 12 months for all persons 18 years~ age and older. Both p.m. beginning January 11 through
March 31. This class will consist
homeowners and renters are eligible for assistanc frol)l HEAP.
of stretching and bending exercises
.·
Income Guidelines
for strengthening and mild aerobics ·
Size or Household
.
Hou hold Income
for cardiovascular. exercise, cost is
1 Person
.,
up to 12,075
$.50 for each session attended.
2 Persons
·
up to $16,275 .
New
members are welcome.
3 Persons
up to$~
A representative from the Athens
4 Persons
up to $~!·~Z~
Social Security Office will be at the
S Persons
up to $28,875
Center ori Wednesday, January 13'
up to $33,075
6 Persons
For households with more than six members, add $4,200 for each· ·&amp; 27 from 10;00 a.m.-11:00 a.m.
Wednesday, January 13-the
individual member.
'
.
Stroke
survivors Support Group,
Applications will be accepted until March 31, 1999, and may be picked
up at the Multipurpose senior Center. Home visits to assist any .disabled or with Lia · Tipton, OT, Holzer .
Rehabilitation, coordinator, will
homebound person can be arranged.
meet from 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m.
If you have questions or need assistance, call Darla Hawley at 992;2161.
Friday, January 15-the Arthritis
1999 MEMBERSHIP
Support Group will meet from
Your paid memtiership to the Meigs County Council on Aging,
Hr.OO a.m.-11:30 a.m. with Sarah
Inc. is a measure of support for the Multipurpose Senior Center McGrew, RN, coordinator.
and the services provided to older adults residing in Meigs County. ' Wednesday, January 20-the
Each paid membership rece~ved verifies to regional, state and
national funding agencies that the Multipurpose Senior Center is
~ 'S~· uRp/"
.
providing needed senior programs.
The cost lor 1999 will be $3.00 per membershtp. You may
purchase your membership at ihe Senior Center or by mailing to:
Meigs County Multipurpost:t Senior Center, 112 East Memorial
Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, OH 45769. If possible, please
include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Thank you for your
support.

. '

...

Navy Beans and Ham
Cole .~t aw

13

"19

0

'.

'

-

.

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce Ham &amp; Scalloped Potatoes .
Buttered Peas .
Tossed Salad
The Meigs County Senior
'
Cole Slaw
Garlic BrE'ad
Citizens Center is open Monday
•.Texas Sh3et'' Cake
· Roll
through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to
4:30
p.m. Regularly scheduled .
'
Apple/Raisin Crisp
activities
are quilting, ~e"'ing,
.
'- cards, games,
•
and pool. Weekly

Getting he~
I

..

12

11

· Wiener
Mashact Potatoes
Sauilrkraut
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

Meat Loaf
Parslied Boiled Potat~s
Spinach
'
Roll
Carrot Cake

19

'
'

'

"

. .

Oven Baked Fish
, Lyonnaise Potatoes
Butlered Carrots
Bread
. Tropical Mixed Fruit
.

14

12

8

7

.

Navy Beans &amp; Ham Soup
Combrea!il,. ·
.
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Rocky Road Pudding

Scalloped Chicken
'Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
Roll
lemon Lush

Baseball Writers ' Associalion of

" Obviously. I was very, ver-y will hc .un Tues~ay . Jan . 12 at (1 p.m.
'pleased, " Brett said. " But in all' hon. at the Meigs Hi gh Sc hool Cafeteria.
esty, I was just as pleased for
Sign, up fcc i&lt; $ 15.
·
Robin ."
For mvrc in forma ti on, cal _
l 742~
" Of all' the guys I · played 2103 .
. \'

7

·V

unable to atte nd . th e first pnu.: li ce

'

IN

'

'

~

Klibachka3-0-3/4;=9, Delv'in Guthrit
1-0-0=2, Jeremy Johnson 1-0-0=2;
Eric (]abriel 2-1-0=6, Matt Simpso~
1-0-0=2, Nate Hutchinson 5-0. 4/6=14, Jon McKee 5-0-0=10, Shane
Moore 1-0-113=3. Totals: 21·2·
8113=56
. Southern: Mitchell Walker 0-2~
2/3=8. Troy Hoback 3-0-tn=7, Kyle
Norris 0-2-0=6, Josh Davis 0-0,
112=1, Adam Williams 2-0-212=6,
Adain Cumings 0-0-1/l= I. Jerr(\d
Mills 4-0-2/2= 10. Totals: 9·4·
9/i3=40

SITES

JANUARY MENUS ·

~

•

America . There were a record 497

,400. Yount, an MVP at shortstop and record 491, Brc1i 488 and Yount 385.
ce nter field .
. . Carlt on Fisk. another first-lime
" I think it 's the final chap ter of ca ndidate, fel l 43 votes shy of the
nly career, " said Ryan; who carne required 373 with 66.40 perce nt.
within one vote of se tt ing the record Tony Perez missed in his eighth try
for !he h1ghest percentage. "From an with 302 (60.76 perce nt)
indi v1d ual standpoint for a player,
Induct ion
cc rcmome s
at
it's the highest honor. "
Cooperstown are schedu led for July
. This was one of the most eagerly 25. The Hall of Fame cxhibJtion.wtll
·awa ited electiOns in Hall hi story: and be the nex t day, and it seems fitting
comin g off a thrilling 1998 season, that Ryan 's Texas Rangers will take
the first bi g husiness of I999 was on Brett's Kansas City Royals.
equally exciti ng. But the total s were
a bit surprising- in the last 44 elections, on~y: four limes have three
players been voted in.
And this, too: · Since B'abe Ruth ;
Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson , .Hanus
Wagner and Ch ri sty Mathewson
\\'ere selected in the original election
of 1936, only 29 players have been
. faken in their first year of eligibility,
yet never .more than two at once until now.
· · ·
"To be in this class, it's very difficult to imagine being in the same ·
breath as those people," Yount said.
Famed for a fastball that led .to
5,714 strikeou ts and seven no-hitters
in "27 seasons. the Ryan Express once
agai.n .almost clocked I00.
NOLAN RYAN
Ryan was named on 98.79 percent
of the ballots - nearly beating former teammate Tom Sea•er's 98.84 in Meigs Wrestling.
1992 for the highest total in history.
.
"It's certainly an honor that I was Club to ineet
thought of on that level," Ryan said . Thursday ..
"Tom was obvious ly' one of the best
pitchers I ever saw throw the baseThe. Meigs Wrestling Club"will
ball. "
have an ·organizalional mecling on
Brett, 13th on the career hits li st Thu"day at 6:30p.m. at the Rutland
with 3-,154. made it with 98.19 per- Vo!u·ntecr Fire Dcpartrhent
cent. the fourth-highest total. Yount, · The meeting is open to all Mc1gs
wit h 3, 142 hits and two i\L MVP County Youths ages 5- 15. Club Slle
awards, was elected wi th 77.46 per- 1s limited to the first 20 to register. If
cent.

steals. six blocks and 18 fouls.
South rn won the reserve game
59-49 after leading ar one point by 26
points. Chad Hubbard led with 21
points while Matt Warner added
twenty. Alexander was led by
Michael Hawk with I6.
Southern goes to Federal Hocking
Friday.
Quarter t2lllb ·
Southern ..... :........... :... 11 -5-9- 16=40
A1ex~.nder ................. 7-I ~-12-18=56
Alexander: 'John South 0-'1-0='3.
Chris D'Au~u stino 2-0-0=4. Kevin

THURSDAY

'-"'

Your Senior Center
IS Here For You!

"

•• TUESDAY

.

eighties as the nonn during tecent
seaso ns. Missed shots early cost
Southern . a pad that could have
changed the complexion of the game.
Instead, SHS was caught in a familiar game of playing catch-up.
Alexander came back with a 19-5
run in the second period to lead 3726 at the hall'.
Southern Zut the lead to 37-30 just
after half, but that run e¥aporated
and Alex led by as much as 15 much
of the frame.
·
Southern was frigid from the field

.

r

~'

Alexand~r kills early deficit, notch 56-40 win ·over So.uthern[
.
shot 10 percent better we'd have been
right in the game."
Southern missed 20 shots in the
paint according to the charts. Many
were layups.
Jerrod Mills led Southern with 10
points . Mitchell Walker added eight,
Troy Hobac~ s.even and Adam
Williams six. Alex was led by Nate
Hutchinson with ' 14. Jon McKee ha·ct
10.
rhe Tornadoes came back td lead "·
most of the first period" after
Alexander jumped out to a 3-0 lead
and later led 5-3. SHS led 11-8 after
t!Je first frame. Southern's shooting
woes struck early, but its defense was
able to contain the potentially deadly
Spartans, who have scored in the

Evening Meals :

...••

'

.
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Alexander Spartans utilized a
I 9-5 second quarter spread, sending
· them toward a 56-40 interdivsion
victory over the Southern Tornadoes
·. tn a boys' varsity Tri-Valley
Conference basketball contest
Tuesday in Rac:ne.
Alexander shot 29 percent better
from the field' and that was the difference in the game. Southern shot
icy 23.2 percent from the field and
Alex shot a warm 52.3 percent.
Southern coach Jay Rees said, "I
thGught our kids played ·their hearts
out the whole game. We drew up the
plays, got our shots, but we just
-couldn't put it in the hole. If we had

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER.

1480 Jackson Pike '
Gallipolis, 9H

" 11st Min11tes

m Holzer"

Toll Fr·4·1·
I -BOO- I I :i-:!:! 0(,

•

..

•
-- I

•

-

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

ELEC.TRIC WHEELCHAIRS
BATH SAFETY EQUIPMENT
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
HOSPITAL BEDS·
~. . .~
LIFT CHAIRS
STAIR GLIDES
OSTOMY
DIAPERS &amp; CHUXS

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Page 6 •The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

.
Wednesday, January

9hio Dom.inic~n women get 70-69 victory over Redwomen _:
I¥ ANDREW CARTER

RJO ~ S_ID

.
.
,
: After Jumpmg up to number 13 tn
die lat~t J':IAIA Division I ratings,
t)1e UnJvers1ty of Rtll Grande prompt·
I)" dropped tts firsr game m almost
two months, losing 70-69 to Ohio
D~minican College at ~he ' Newt
Ohver Arena on Tuesday n1ght. ODC
broke a two-game losmg sktd of tts
own with the victory.
' Rio Grande (12-2. AMC 1- 1)1
came out sluggish in the first half, but
still managed to hold the lead for
most of the penod . The Redwomen
built an 18· 8 cushion at the 13 :11
mark, but weren't able lo sustain the
~!&lt;~vantage against the swarming Lady·
Panther defense. ODC fought back to
tie the game at 33-33 thanks to a
tliree"point bomb by Erika Englund
wilh 3:21 remaining. Julie Mueller
!hen gave the Lady Panthers !heir
first lead of the contest with 2:49 left.
: : Ohio Dominican increased its lead
to 40-.35 w1th 1:05 to play, but RID
t}.rande piec~d together a mini r~n to
~lose the half trading only 40-39. The
(-MY Panthers blitzed Rio Grande on

lhe boards in the opening frame and
held a 29-18 advantag~. including a
13· 7 edge on the offens1ve glass.
The second half unfolded in much
the same fashton as the first with the
Redwomen snatching the early lead .
Ri o Grande led by as many JIS -seven
points, bul was unable lo deal lhe
death blo':" to the tenacious , Lady
Panthers, who rallied to take a 65-64
lead with 4:02 left to play.
Rio Grande's Mindy Pope hit two
free throws with 48 seconds lefl to
give Rio Grande a 68-67 lead then
Cindy Hopper connected on 1-of-2
charity tosses to pad the' Redwomen
advanlage. However, on the ensuing
-posocssion, OOC's Chris Altenberger
found teammate Englund wide open
on the left wing and Englund drilled
her second·lhree-poi nt bucket to give
lhe Lady Panthers a 70-69 lead with
nine seconds · left. Rio Grande was
unabl e to get a timeout .and ttie officials waved off Mindy Pope's basket
afler the buzzer, allowing ODC to
escape wilh the one-point vi~tory.
Englund led all scorers wjth 2 1
. points off tbe bench for Ohio

Dominican. She hit 8-of-13 field goal
auempts was 2-for-5 from three-point
range. Englund also co llected ~ine
rebounds ,
Dana Cummings scored II of her
19 poinls in the second half to help
fuel the late rally· by ODC. She fin·
ished 8-of-23 from the fie ld and was
3-for-9 from outside the ar~ ..
Mueller knocked down 7-of- 14
shOts from the field on her way to 17
points. She also snared a game-high
16 rebo unds . Team mine Elizabeth
Straka had siK. points and 12 boards.
Karley Mohler led . Rio Grande
with 17 points on an 8-for-14 performance from rhe field . However,
Mohler hadjust fou r points after the
intermiss ion. Mohler's score line
included si• rebound s, four below
her season average, and three
· blocked shots.
.'
Mindy Pope scored II points in
the second half and finished with 15
fo r the evening . Pope knocked dow n
5-of- 11 field goal auempts ·and was
5-for-6 at the fo ul·line. She had ni ne
rebounds along with two ass ists and
two blocked shots.

Scoreboard
Basketball

Otterbein 78. John Carro ll 61

N.Y. Islanders ............. .... !~ 2J J

American MideaSt Conference

NCAA Division '1 '

Mount Vernon Nazarenc'76. Cedarville 7 1
Ohi o Domini can 7Q. RIO GRANDE 69

men's scores

Shawnee St. 86. Urbnml3 6
Tiffin 71. Malone·56

r .

East
Army 78. Lehigh 60

.

.

South
Clem5on HO. N. Carolina St. 72
E. Tennessee St. 77. W. Carolma 48
High Point 9J. Puerto Rica 33
Kentucky 68. South Carol mEl 61
N.C.·Ashe\'ilie 75. Montreat 6;\

Midwest
Lo)'Ola , Ill. 80, Wright St. 67
Mi ami. Ohio 73, E. Michigan 49
Mi chigan 82, Indiana 70
N.otre Dame 87. Pittsburgh 64
"
SW Missouri St. 71, Illinois St . 68

NCAA Division I
women's scores
American U, 61, lames Madison 59
Boston Cpllege 76.~, · Syrac u se 62
Connecticut 84, Seton Hall 56
Georgetown 81, Providence 43
Holy Cross 84', Colgate S2
Maine 75, Boston U. S9
Robert Morris 71 , Fairleigh Dickinson 59
Rutgers 68, Miami 54
Siena 85, St Peter's 70

South
Belmont 63 , Auiilin Peay 54
Coli. of Charleston 65 , Wofford .59-0T
· Southern Miss. 94, New Orleans 90

Midwest ·
• DePaul 78, Loyola. Il l. 49
· E. Illinoi s 67, III.·Chicago 57
Illinois 75. Mi ch1gDn.M
Iowa 66. Minnesota 58
Iowa-St. 71. Te"as 68
Kansas 84, Baylor 74
Michigan St. 73, NorthweStern 64
Ohio St. 70, Wisconsin 55
&gt; Purdue SJ, Penn St . 48
Xavier 96, St. Bonaventure 64

Far West
Southern Meth. 80, Utah 69
UCLA ?,8.·Arizona St 85

Ohio men's college scores
Midwestern Collegiate
Loyol a. Ill . 80.•Wright St. 67

li
I

Michigan Intercollegiate
Calv in 84. Defiance

7~

North Coast Conrerence
Casc .Western 84-. Kenyon 65

I;

American Mideast Conference
Mount Vernon Nazart': ne R2. Cedarville 6CJ
Ri o Grandr.: SR. OHIO DOMINICAN 5 1
Urbana 58, Shilw nee SL 5-'i

Non ..conrerence
. TrnnsylvaniEI 70. central St. 49

I:
'

Southu st l)iv ision
Carolina ...
.. .. 18 14 7
Aoridn ........................ 1.~ 14 B
Wi15 hington .................. 12 20 -~
TnmfX1 ,8 ay .......:.... ......... A9 25 .l

Mount St. Joseph 68. Hano\'e ~ 66
Qberlin 81. Lake Erie 40
ThanHis More 5 I . Denison 45
Wa lsh SJ. Notre Dame. Ohio ~6

-·-

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Ohio women's college scores

112

Ill 109
1 0~
69
99
10()
!IS

-0 104
_q 91
27

!!0

~2

t{7
I~

95
91\
1) 1

21 79 128

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Alexnndcr 56, Racine Southern 40
B1oom-Carroll 50, Cin:h::ville 45
Can fiel d 67. G ir&lt;~rd 52
·
Chesapeake 73 . Coal Gmve 50
Ch e~ h ire River Val. 64. Marietta 59-0T
Ci n. Anderson 79. New Ri chmond 41
Cin . Country Day 68, Cin. Hilts OJr. Acad . 50
Cin L1 Salle 61 . Day. Chil.minade-Julienne 42
Cin. McNicholas 64, Cin. Purcell -Marian 47
Cin. N. College Hill 60, Cin. L..1ndmark Chr. 48
Cin. Norv.·ood 63, H&lt;1mihon R01&lt;s 47
Cin. Oak HiJis 4 1: Cin. Elder 4()
Cin. Summit Count ry D &lt;~y 62, Cin. Lockland 4R
Cin. Western Hil ls -72. Cin . Aiken 54
Cin. Winton Woods 76. Cin _Taft62
· Col. St. Cha rle ~ 72, Col. Ready 69
' Delaware 55 , Mount Vernon 49-0T
E.Mtem Pike 92, Portsmouth Clay,67
Eversreen 79, Fayeue 76
Fairlidd Union 74. Hamilton Township
Franklin 60. Waynes\'ille 53
Franklin Furnace Green 74, Symrne.~ Val. 64
Fran~lin Ht.~ . 58, Wntkins Memorial 43
Gallipolis 54, Jackson )7
Glenwood n. Portsmouth Notre Dame 64
Goshen 73. Wilmi ngt on 56
Grand Val. 74. Pymaruning Val. 53
Ironton 47. Spri ng (W.Va.) Valley 44
Ironton St. Joseph 61t Huntington (W.Va.) Sc
Joseph 65
Lancas ter 47. Galloway Westl and 44
i..A:bnnon 70. Kings Mil ls 39 •
Little M1ami 54. Loveland 36 .
Logan Elm 73. Amonda-Ciearcreck 36
Martins f'tryy 76. Indian Creek 44
Mc&lt;::l!lin 57. Paint Val. 35
McDermott NW 73. Oak Hill 51
Ohio Val. Chr. 71. S. Gll llia 67
Ptlden {W.Va.) City 58. Hannibal River 54
Phil o 58, Maysville 4 1
Poi m (W.Va .) Pleasant 59, Athens 55
Reedsville.Eastern 72, Meigs 64-0 T
S. Point 71, Fairland 63
S. Webster 74 , Minford 63 •
Trlllawanda 6.5, Fe'nwkk 46
Torom o 66, BridgepOrt 44
Tri-Valley 82, John Glenn 46
Trimble 71, Vinton Co. 67
Vince111 Warren 48. l ogan J B
~
W. Musk.insum 59, Crooksv ille 4 ~
Warsaw Ri ver View 75 , Morgan 70-0T
Waverly 76. Portsmouth W. 41
Welston 56. Fedeml Hocking 45
You. Ursuline 53. Shakr.:r PIK Uni\·ersity 42'

4J

East

I.

Dh·isinn
_ .12 14 ] J6
8)-l lf;I) O..
10 9 5 .15
Boston ..
. .. IR U fl 42
Onawa ...... ,. ............... IB 1.1 S JJ
Montreal.. ....
.. .. 12 I'J 7 _q

91

Nurthnlit

Toronto .".

Non~conference

Delaware 7S, 8 os ron U. 7.1-0T
Iona 77. Massachuseus 58
Penn ?J., lafayetlc 62
Providence 90. West Vir~ini;1 87-0T
Siena 107. Quinnipim: 90
51. Peter 's 60. Mari'~ r 46
Syrucuse 74, Vilhmovo1 52
Towson 61 . Nonhea5tem 52

29

Iwn

Cenlta ] hision

L I fu. !if lUI.

Detroit .................... 1 16
St . Loui 5
.. .... 1 12
Na slw illt' ............. 14 20
. 11 22
Chicago...

2
9
J
5

Nnrthwest Oh·ision
Co lorado .................... 17 II! 3
Edmonton ...................... 15 I I! .J
Vancou\'er .... ............. :.. l.l 21 · 4
Calgnry .
. .. :............ 1224 J
' Pacific [)h·ision
Dallas .......... 1..
• ... 14 5 6
l'hoenix
....... 21 8 5
Annheim ...................... 14 1.5 8
LQs Angeles .................... 14 21 ·'
Slln Jose ..........•................. I I 17 9

Thesday 's scores
San Jo se~. New l ersev ] -tie
Pittsburgh 5. Calgar)' i
Chicago I. N.Y. Islanders 1-tie
Los Angeles 4, Edmonton J-OT
Florida-2. Ph oeni x 2-ti e

.JO
37
31
27

.\7

11 6 102
97 R9
RR 114
f\1 112

92
102.

99
lUI

_q
JO 1}9 116
27 100 125

54
47
.\6
Jl

107
97
88

Jl

81

91

67
65
85
101

99

Misty Halley scored 13 points, but
was limited to just one rebound and
one assist. Halley had been ~veraging
better than four assists per game until
Tuesday.
Carrie Carson helped key the
Redw omen offense in the first half
with nine points. but went scoreless
in the second period. Cindy Hopper,
.,.

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'IOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, January 9,
1999, at 10:00 a.m., a public
aale will be hold at 40148
Laurel Cliff Road, Pomoroy,Ohl&lt;? 45769, to eelllor caah
the following collateral:
1986 Chevrolet S·l 0
1GCBS14E3G2117634 AND
1991
Ford ' Escort
1FAPP14J2MW253770
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reoervea the
right to bid •tthla aala, and
to withdraw tho above
collateral prior to aalo ,
Further, The Farmers Bank
and aavlnga Company
reaervea the right to reject
any or all bids submitted. .

making her fiflh start of the season,
had six points, seven rebounds and
three steals.
As in previous meetings between
these two squads, ODC controlled
the boards 58-41. The Lady Panthers
did most of their damage on the
offensive end, outboarding Rio
Grande 23-14. This is tbe third con··

Public Notice
Cheohlre Townohlp, Section
35, Townohlp 5N, Range
14W; on tho property of
Southern Ohio Coal
Company, Delbert end Opef
Metheney, Roaa and Beulah
Shular, Leon Pierce, Cecil
Stacey, Thomu Perone;
and Fronk Puckett, with
·underground worklngo In
Molgo County, Solem·
Townahlp, Soctlono 1, 6, 7,
11, 12, 13, 18,17, 18, 19, 23,

24, 26, 29, 30, 33, 34;
Fraction• 1, 13, 17, .18, 18, ·
23, 24, 31' 32, 33, 34, 35j
Melgo County, Columbia
Township, Sectlono 7, 1!, 13,
16, 19, Frlctlone1, 2, 4, 8, 7,
13, 17, 18, 19, 24, 25, 30, 3'1,

The 1pplicotlon Ia on fllo ·
11 tho offiCII of tho M'lgl
County Recordor, Molgo
County Court Houoo,
Socond Streit, Pomoroy,
·ohio 45781, Vinton County
Rocordor, VInton County
Court Houao, Main Street,
McArthur, Ohio 45651, and
Galll1 County Recorder,
Gallla County Court Houao,
Locu1t l!troot, Golllpollo,
Ohio 45631 lor public
vlawlng. Written CO!II,IIIInta
and/or requoetE46r an
Informal confono o may be
aent to tho D lolon of
Minoa and Re lamatlon, ·
1855 Fountain . Square
. Court, Building H-3,
Columbus, Ohio 432241387, within 30 daya of tho
lut date of publlcotlon of
thla notice.
(12) 16, 23,30
(1) 6 4TC

pl1n1 ind lpecllk:ltlona.
Each bid · muot 111
accompanied by elthtr.l bid
bond In an amount oil 00%
ol tho bid amount with a
auroty 11tlalactory to tho
atora1ald Molga County
Commlnlonora or by
· certlllod ·c~kVclahlora
check, or ~r of credit
upon a aolvont bank In tho
amount of not looo than
·to% of the bid amount In
favor of tho afonoaald Molgo
County Commlaalonoro.,
Bid Bonde. 1hall - bo
1ccompanled by Proof . !If
Authority of tho official or
agent elgnlng the bond. ·
Bide ahall be atelod and
markod aa Bid for "Council
On Aging Delivery Vehicle
Bid" and mailed or
dollvorod to:
Molga
County
Commloalonero
Courthouao
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
AUontlon ol blddora Ia
called· to all of tho
roqulremanta contained In
thlo bid packet, particularly
to tht Federal - Labor
Standorda Provlalona anct
Davlo-Bacon
Wagoa,
varloue
lnauranco
requlremonta, varlou1 equal_
opportunity provl1lona, and
the raqulromont lor 1
payment
bond and
performance bond for 100%
of the contract price.
'
No bidder may withdraw
hlo bid" within thirty (30t
doya after the actual dote of
the opening thereof. Molgo
County Commlaalonorl'
reaorvoa tho right to w1lvo
any Informalities or to reject
any or all blda.
·
Janet ttoward, Pretldont,
County
M'elga
Commltalonora
(1) 6,13,20 3TC

P-----------------~------------------

•

'

'

-·
''

11

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

off-peak minutes
·_until the year

Ci n. Colerain 51. Hmnilton 1.9
Ci n. Glen Este JJ. Western Brow n 28
· Ci n. Mariemont 52. Ci n. M'Meira -W
Ci n. Nort hwest 55 . Cin. Western Hill s J9
Ci n. St. Ui-su la 62. Cin. McNicholas Sg
Ci n. TLJrpin 42. Bethel-Tate 39
Cin. Wyoming ~I. Cin. lnd itln Hill J8
Danvi lle -t4. Buckeye V:l lley J~
1--'red cridaown 6 1. Lucas 18
" G:llloway Wes tland 5J, L:mc:\s!eJ' .J 2
Hillsboro 65. Wn shin£10n C. H. 58
N. Canton Hoover 50. Camon GlcJ10ak W
Notwa lk 62. Colli ns Western Re serve 53
Paim Val. 78. Wenf:J II 59
Po rt ~ muulh E. 46, Ohio V'JI. Chr. 4-1
Richmond Ot~l e SE 5.~ . Huntin f:!JUDJ 5
Tallnmdgc 55. M011Khem~r 4-9
Unioto 59, Adena 7
W&lt;~ tkin ( M crnorial 47. Frank lin Hu . .W •
7...anc Trace67. Piketon 52

Atlantic 10 Conference

Public Notice

33, 36; Malga County,
Rutland Townahlp, Sactlona
Further,
the
above ,31 &amp; 36; Gallla County,
collateral will be sold In the Morgan Townohlp, -Soctlona
condition It Ia In, with no 5, 11, &amp; 17; Galli a County,
axpreoa Of · Implied Cheshire
T-nahlp,
warranties given.
Soctlono 6 &amp; 35. Tho permit
For further Information, contains ·1040.4 acreo and
Public Notice
contact Tim at 740·985· Ia located on the Rutland
4289.
and Wilkesville 7 112 Minute NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoaalo for tho
(1) 6,7,8 3TC
Quadrangle
Mapa,
approximately 1.6 mll11 ' PurchaH ol a vehicle uiod
eaat of Salam Cantor, Ohio. for dollvery ol hot moalo In
Public Notice
The applicant hao obtained Melge County, Ohio will be
road pormlta to mine within received by tho Melga
• PUBLIC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal 100 feet of the tlght·OI·way - County Co_mmlaalonora at
Company, P.O. Box 490, ol Salam Townahlp Roada their olflce at tho
Alhena, Ohio ·45701 haa 34 (effective date 10•26·93), Courthouae, Pomeroy, Ohio
submitted a renewal 190 (effactlve dale 9·29·92), 45769 until! :00 P.M., Feb. B;
328 (affective data 8·28·87_~ 1999 and thon at 1:00 P.M.,
appllcatlct~ for coal mine
permit D·0354 to the Ohio Malga County Road 1 tit aald . office openod and
Department of Natural (affoctlvf date 10·20.93) and . .raad aloud for the following:
Resources, Dlvlelon of otata Routt · 124 (oHoctlvo Purchaae of "Hot Shot", or
Mlnea and Reclamation. date 10-24-94) at tho equivalent, dollvory vehicle
Tho permit area Ia located . location described above to Include rafrlg-lon and
In Malga County, Salem and which will rem•ln In oven . 1torage · are••·
blddera
Townohlp, Soctlona 8, 9,11, effect until coal mining and Prospective
12, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 25, 26, reclamation operallone are ', wishing further Information
32, 33, Fractions 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, completed under the coal concerning thlo vohlclo may
contact C. Suaan Oliver,
7, 12, 19, 33, 34, 36, mining permit laaued
Township 8N, Range 15W; pureuant to thla permit. Mtlga County Council on
Malga Cou_n ty, Salem Tho renewal application will Aging, Inc. at740-992·2161 .
Plana, Speclflcatlona, and
Township, Sectlona t 8 and allow Southern Ohio Coal
bid
forma may be aecured
32, Tciwnohlp 7N, Range Company to continue ·
15W;
VInton County, mining operatlono on D· at the olllca of Malga
Wll k e a v llle
Townohlp, . 035~ for up to live yaara County Commlulonora,
Section 3E, Township 8N, put the expiration date _of Cqurthouat, Pomeroy, Ohio.
A dopoalt ol 0 dollora will
Range 16W; Gallla County, Juno 10, 1999.
be required lor each aet ol

.-

and the

NEC

Hockey

Xavier 96. St. Bonave nture 64

Wednesday, January

secutive se'!Son that ODC has _won at ,
the Newt Oliver Arena. L1kew~se, t~•t:
Redwomen have been VICto~o.us tn.•
their last four trips to Columbus. Th.tS: :
season's rematch tS set for Jan . 26 .ttl; .
the Capitol City. . Rio Grande will host Mounr
Vernon Nazarene ('7-4,.overall &amp; 1·2
AMC) Saturday at 2 p.m.

Public Notice

,

·-

6, 1999

..._,..__ ,.-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Howell's Bookkeeping
· &amp; Tax Service

&amp;

•

SHOCKS

· 12/171981 mo. pd.

:CARPET
'

PLUS

.

Professional

Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES
'

RACINE, OH 45771
(MINERSV_JLLE)

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE .
29870 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2217

-

740-698-9114 ·.
or .

740-698-7231

5' x 10' .
10' x 30'
'

Sizes
to

Hours
7:00AM· BPM
1!41991

1/11/tl tfn

mo. pd.

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
.LEGION
BEECH GROVE .
ROAD
GUN SHOOT

Public Notice

PUBLiC NOTICE
OPEN WAITING UST
, Tho Melga Me1ropolltan
Slug &amp; Shot
Houol ng Authority Ia
Matches
announcing tho waiting llat
for Soctlon 8 Rental
Aoalatanco will be opened
Public Notlci
eHectlva Jenuary 12, 1999 ·
througll January 21, 1'999,
~ppllcatlona will be given
-and appointments will be
made lor tho 1ppllcat1on Tovvn_ahlp,
7, 11,
All ·houaoholda 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23, 24,
••view.
Interested In receiving 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, :)&amp;;
auletanco may obtain· an Fractions 1, 2, 4, 6, t, 12, 13,
application at our office 17, 18, 19, 23, 24, 25i 30, 31,
located at 117 E. Memorial 32 33; 34, 38; Salem
Drive, Room N7, Pomeroy, Townahlp, Soctlon1 11, 12,
(Direc11y , behind Holzer 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 29, 30,·34,
Clinic
In Pomeroy) 35, 36, Fractions 23 6 35;
TUESDAY S
AND Vlnl!ln Coupty, VInton
lJIURSDAYS ONLy, 9:00 Townahlp, Section• 2, 3, 7,
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. beginning 8; Fraction 3; Vinton
January 12, 1999.
County,
W llkeevllle
J11n Truuoll, executive Townahlp; Secttona 4E, 5E,
Director, MMHA
6E, 8, and 12. The perm)t
(I) 4,6, 11 3TC
contains 291 .3 acraa and Ia
' '
located on tho Valli Milia
Public NotJce
and Wllkoavlllo 7 112 minute
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle Mapa,
approximately 1,1 mlleo
PUBUC NOTICE
: Southern Ohio Coal aouthweat of Point Rock,
c!ompany, P.O. Box 480,' Ohio. The appllclnl haa
~thona, Ohio 45701, haa obtained a road permit to
oubmlttod a renewal mlno through and/or wHhln
application lor coal mine 100 lett of tha rlght·of·way
permit D-0355 to the Ohio of Melga Coun1y Roada 1
lilopartment of Natural (affective data 5-27-117 and
l'loaourcaa, Dlvlalon of 8·14,91), fA (offectlva date
Mineo and Roclamatlon'. 5-27-87), 4 (eifectiVo date 5The permit araa Ia located 27-87), 52 (offoctlve date 9·
on the PfOporty ol Soulhom 30·87), Columbia Townahlp
tilhlo Coal Company In Roads 8 (effective date 2·4·
Columbia Township, Melga 9t), 324 (effective date 6·1·
CoW!ty, Fraction• 17, 33, 87), 11 (effective data 3·3·
Sections 19,25,26,31,34, 97), 8 (eftectlve data 2·2·99),
Townahlp 8N, Range 15W; and Slate Route 689
Salam townahlp, · Meiga (effoctlve date 3-27·97), and
C:ounty, Sections 17, 23, 24, Salam Township Road 625
Townahlp 9N, Range 15W; (affective date 10·1·90) at
Salem Townahlp, Molga tho location daacrlbed
County, Froctlona 2, 6, 36; above, which will remain In
Sactlona·t8, 24, 28, 34, 35, allact until coal mining and
.- ~6 ; Towna~lp 8N, Range roclama11on operations are
f5W; Wllkoavllle Townahlp, completed under the coal
Vinton County, Section 4E, mining permit lstued
'township 8N, Range 15W; purauant· to this permit.
and on the property of Carol The renewal application. will
Phllllpa, Salam Townahlp, allow oouthern Ohio Coal
~olga County, Section 35, Company to continue the
Township 8N, Range 15W mining optretlon on D-0355
·o(nd Sue Whlta Smoke lor up to five yaara p11t the
Dolllla, Salem T~lhlp, oxplratlop date of June 10,
·
County, 'Soctlon 34, 1999.

SUN., 1:00 PM

Big Ten Con£ere.-.ce
' Ohio St. 70. Wi sconsin 55

NHL standings

North Coast Conference

,

AlhaRtlc Division

. Ohio Con£e'rence

· Baldwin-Wallnce 88. MounJ Union 59
Cnpi(al 77. M:iriel1a 49
Mu!lcingum 69. Hiram 65

Iwn

New Jersey ...

.1!C I. I &amp;

. .. ....... 21 10
Ph i l ~u.kl ph ia
......... 18 9
Pitl sburgh ...................... 17 10
N.Y. Rangers
... 15 IS

Gt: lUI.

5 4? 107
10 46 105
7 4 1 101
7 J7 102.

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1-888-657-0977
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l

Calls)

21121t2/tfn J

Po~~~o~~-OH

Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progre..lvetop line.

l!r.tl'iJ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding !f.!':
~
_ Commercial ~ Residential
f.;'

27 yrs. e)(p.
· Licensee! &amp; Insured ' -'
~
Phone 740·992·3987
;..,.
F.ree Estimates
~
lil!!l
Owner: John Dean
ill'~

f@

985-4473

L=====!:::'::l:7/:52S2/t:l:n~ ~~~~~fEf'&amp;~ ~"''!i' ~

Lie. II 00·50
K:::=;;:;;:;;:;1:1:1=n~
r
YOUNG'S
r

·

•

•

•

•

•

MOBILE HOME • " " " " ·~ .. !!.

CARPENTER SERVICE

·

PARTS

•Room Additions
•Remodeling &amp; Siding
' •Garages &amp; Decks
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting ·
•RoQfing &amp; Gutte rs
•Concrete Work

•

(Free Estimates)

lf,C. Young Ill

Discount Priess

•

(740) 992·6215

7 40-446·9416
1391 Safford
·School Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

"Fully Insured"
(Reduced Winter Rates

"

'

Public Notice
The application Ia on flit
at the offlcoa of tho Melga
County Rocorder, Melga'
Cpunty Court Houae,
Second Street; Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, and the Vinton
County Recorder, VInton
County Court tjouae, Main
Stroot, McArthur, Ohio
45851 lor public viewing.
Written ·comment• or'
requoata lor an Informal
conference may bo aent to
the Dlvlalon of Mlnea and
Reclamation, 1855 Fountain
Square Court, Building H-3,
Columbua, Ohio 43224
within thirty daya ollhe laat
data of publication of thla
notice.
(12) 1'6, 23, 30
(t)6 4TC

Fill

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Cousin's

, Joe Wilson
(614) 992·4277
1m .

Improvement and
Painting &amp; Coating
Residential &amp;
_C ommercial

"No 1011 too 1111 or
too••aU"
Free Estimates
(740) 367·0412
(740) 992·4232

lack's ·Roofing
&amp; Constr,uction
New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting,
Plumbing

'computer Graphics
Daslgl'\s
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chesler, Ohio
7 40-985-4422

John James, · r.,

My Dear One

Kevin Hoffman
&amp;Family

thanks to

everyone who
showed me such
kindness and
prayers during

WICKS
HAULING

Sadly miA•ed
· wife Ha:rl&gt;••r~•.l
ChiMren

_(614)

992~3838

Tues.-Fri; 10 to 6
. Sat. 10 to 4

Weekly Sales and Drawings
thru Christmas
,

Rt 124, Minersville, Ohio

..__ _ _ _ _·_1;.;21;.;1.;:;8/ll.;;;.;.".a .,

Snow
Removal
591-1897
Cellphone

992-3141
Home
Call Anytime
Grand Opening

Kam'• Caatrol

Dirt

I

12/14196 1 mood

THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
AND MORE

Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

Gravel, Sand,
Soil, Fill

740·742·3411

Limestone Hauling
Housit &amp; Trailer Siles
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Limestone,

Top

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Insured
Free. Estimates

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday

came suddenly
for you
12:30-pm ·
and to Heaven you
did depart
limit 680 sleeve
No one can take
.737 back-bore
the love and me1nories I
that .we have -'--------'
in opr heart.
Someday we will see
(Lima Stone·
you at Heaven's
Low Rates)
open door.
Then we will then
embrace you there to
live forevermore.
~od

"

New construction,&amp; Remodeling

....,

Joseph Jacks

74o-992-2068
•

SUNSET HOME
CONS,.RUCTION

DESIGNS

Free Estimates

of my husban·d,

Check us out at www.p.m·des(fn.com
Or phone (740) 991·6977
tttlll•, .... tHI-

-~NDSCAPB

Home

12,11198

Jan. 6, 1998.

Quality Affordable Web Pate Desltn
for Small Business In Me(ts, Athen•. and
Gallla Co. Ohio and Mason Co.
"Let us put your business oti the Internet"

"Build Your Dream"

Pick up discarded
appliances, batteries,
many motala &amp;
motor blocks
74D-992-4025 Sam-8 m

who passed away one
year ago on

~"' '-----.ll~;ai,li

wv.

Card of Thanks

I would like to
thank all my
customers who
gave gifts &amp;
cards during the
holidays.

20Yrs. Exp, •Ins. Q.wner:

Remodeling

Bennett Supply

(Owner-21 yrs)

:~

- " !I!!!!

"

• lfli1l.. ·
"

•

" M &amp;J

''Huge

l_nnntory"
~Rbof Coatings
"VVnyl Skirting ·
"Water Healers
•ooor/Windows
•Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps

•

Custom Homes

a ,. uu •«

740·992·4559

M: ao:w

.... , . . .

·BANKRUPTCY clio relieve a debtor of

'

·finan cial obligations and 1:1rr11nge a fair
distribution of ast~ets. Debtors in bankruptuy may

keep ~~exempt' ' proPerly for his ur her penwnal
use. This may include H car! a house, 'clothes, and
household goods ,
For Jn[ormution Regarding Bankruptcy contnct :

William_Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 AtJu:ns, Ohio

Dave's Garage

Quick Lube

Fonner-"Velvet Hammer"

Specials on ail
changes, tires ,
brakes, shocks.
7 40·992·9909

52954 State Rt. 124

Near the 338 &amp; 124 splil in the Great Bend

43370 St. Rt 124
Minersville, Ohio

-Complete Auto Service-

•

Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

1 monlh pd .

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN

$1.00 off any large pizza
••'.... ..
with coupon
Expires 2-28·99
,,

'

~

•

-

•

'

•

At. 7 Pizza Express
Sun.-Mon . 4-10 p.m.
· Fri.- Sal. 4-11 p.m.
18" 3 item
$12.99
992-9200
We Deliver-any weather

Glamour Shots
Jan. 11th.at
Shear Illusions
' 293 So. Second

Middleport

• 992-2550

TRUCKING

•

'

Antique high head board bed, Victrola , mah . desk &amp;
chair, Zenith 25" color console TV w/remote, RS .
Prussia chocolate set, Flo blue pitcher, beautiful set of
Valmont china, Lefton china, candlewick, sev. lamps,
sev, miniiJture oil_ lamps, pink dep. cracker jars, butter
dishes.~ rls &amp; Herringbone butter dish, old cookie jars,
Royal Copley vases, cobalt glass, ruby glass, milk
glass, opalesanl glass, tea sel Mp~oy 24K gold,
Alabastt!r Figurines Woman w/Uon. old carnival,
chalkware, crocKs, stone jars, books, old toys,
baskets, 2 Iron kettles. set of pewter candelabras,
dresser set: accordian, good early tinsware, iron
skillets, dehumidifier, picture, old knitting machine,
exercise equipment, bath tub whiM pool &amp; more. ·
Some items left from Antique Auction .

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Mason w. Va
Res . 773·5785 or Auction Center 773·5447
Terms: Cash or check w/10.
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of
'"

•

'

AgrJc;ulturaJ Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sahd
985·4422
Chester, Ohio

Located at the Auction Canter on Rt. 33 In
Mason, WV. We have moved two partial estates
In and will be 's elling the following.
-

•

LEGION
BE(CH GROVE
.ROAD
GUN SHOOT

DUMP .TRUCK
SERVICE.

1,0:00 A. ·M. _

Dine _In and Delivery .

• Dual-Mode:

Analog &amp; Digital

614-992-'1643

' I

New Homes &amp; Remode I'mg_

J/1:..

SATURDAY, JANUARY 9I 1999

949-4900

.

mmute

•Nelsonville
•Middle1own
•vyashinglon CH
•west Un ion
• Jamestown

;,

,, I

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Winter Hours
Mon.- Thurs. 4-9 p .m :
Fri.- Sat 4-10 p .m .
Located at the corner of Third
and Vine Street

purchase

• · No service contract

COMMERCIAL and -RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(No

4121/lllfn

R. L. HOLLON

-

.

't

Public Sale and Auction

95 CeUular phone
Audiovox ·440
'

• FREE Voice Mail
• FREE Caller ID
• F~EE 1st incoming

Web TV or Compulers all at local call !
UNLIM ITED Personal Access, Personal E- Mail Accounl
&amp; 10 meg of Personal Web Space! Regular rate isS 16.95 per-mo.

..

614·992-3470

. ·Digital PCS includes:

_ $150 for 12 months

Sewer Pipe: 3" tl'!ru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00·4:30 weekdays
' 9:00·12:00 Saturday

•New Homes .
. . •Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
. Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
'
ESTIMATEES

May Cod Bwss AU.
Henrietla Bailer

Free lighter/adapter for your car!

Dragon Internet
F.ull Unlimited Access
as low as $12.50 per Mo.

A'T 6:30 P.M.

"

illness.

only

l!i Cistern ianks

' l

Room Additions • Roofing

CONSTRUCTION

at home during

for$

·95
82
91
99

Garages • Replacement Windows

Of Water Storage Tanks •

Septic

' '

II

.OBERT BISSEll.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo on
Thursdays

My

· New Homes • \{lnyl Siding New

740:985-3813
Plastic Culvert In Stock

48"

·Full Line

33334 Hyeell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh 45789

hospitalization and

Digital phone

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Kenyon 66, Case Western 48

4" thru

Individual, Partnerohip and (:orporq,jion
Taor Relurm
Federal and aU otalea
' HoliJ'!I: Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 4t30
·•
Sat. 9 to 12
Evenings and Sat. afternoon by appt. only.
Jeanie Howell, EA
Phone 740.992·7036

The Daily Sentinel • Page

G&amp;W PLASTICS 4HD SUPPLY BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. :.
$t. At. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783.

BooiJceeplng and' PayroU

43370SR.124

~··

•

•

'

SPECIALS ON

TIRES
BRAKES

.

8, 1999

-

GRAND OPENING
KARlS's CASTROL
QUICK LUBE
992-9909
WE HAVE GIFT ~ERTIFICATES

'.

-

SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

1012SI96ft1n

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Ah· Conditione1·s &amp; Heat ~umps

j-.. -·--

LOfiG'S
COHSTROCTIOH
• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions ·
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Call

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

WORRYING!!!

"Ensy Or•er tlte Pl1011c Bnnk

Fir~nrlcillg"

Air Conditioners As Low As

128 a mgnth

Heat Pumps Aa Low Aa
. .. *f7ree

139 a

month

5 Parts WarrantY.

*Free Digital

12{8/98 1 mo.

CREDIT PROBLEMS

TRPPIIn

'

740·843~5426

No Embarrassment·...
You're Treated with Respect!

.

'

Call Now for Instant Approvalll"" ·

caw:l. MR. FORD
(740) 448 8800 OR

Thermos~at

.. 1400-272-8178

*Free Estimates

BENNETT'S :HEATING &amp; 6dO~ING
' "WIIere Qrlfrlity Doesrr 't Cost More"
740-446-9416
. ., ~ 1·800·872-5967

,,

Guidel ine•

�+

\

.'

•

'

•
t

Wedneact•y, J•nuary &amp;, 1en

Ohio

The D•lly Sentinel • P•ge

AU.EYOOP

NJ!:A CrOIIWord Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROII

....... unl1a

1 tlllby
7 Drfta

(lillbr.)

47 PhOIIIC

OOIICiualone

11=~·

~3PIIIIh!Y....._

.\NNO UN CE MENTS

005

Pert10nals

:·

Help Wanted

110

GET ANSWERS

..CAI.L AMERICA'S 11 PSY·
~s t-9{)(}-74Q.6500 E•t

.. .
3596.
.
~ I..Mtpag&lt;IS2.comlnslpsyotolc12!10291.hlm $3.99/Min. 18+

· • ; serv-u 6t9-645..a434.

Stltl Dating Tonight! Have fun

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429.
Casting - Movie EKtras Produ~ ·
tlon Trainees Fil m Studio, 6t4~

523-8992.

Quality clothing and household
Items. $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

Company Drivers - Steel Haulers.
Do you want to be one of the
highest paid 5 axle flatbed OTR
drivers In the Industry? New wage
and benefit package. Must have
1 year steel hauling experience,
be 23 years of ag8 and hllve
class A COL . benefits Include,
paid vacation, paid holidays, paid
pension plan, pai d life Insurance
and med ical insurance paid lor
driver and family. We have only'
late model conventional equip ~
ment. If you think you can qualify
tor lhe best, call 1·800~652·9057
for more Information . GREAT

9i!Q-5:30.

AMERICAN LINES, INC.

pla'91ng lhe Ohio Dating Game, 1·
800·AOMANCE, extension 9015.

30 Announcements
Conaolldatlan Regardless ot
Cr4dlt, loan debt, credit cards,

. for aH your financial needs, call1·

888·8-18-1518
New To You Thnft Shoppe
9West Stimson, Athens
740-592·1842

40

Giveaway

1 Male Puppy 8 Months Old Part
Collie. To Good Home. 740-441-

0192.
4 Adorable Kittens, 2 Solid Grey,
2 GreY Striped. 1 Male 1 Female
Each Needs Good Home 740·
446-4712

Puppies: Mixed Breed To Good

Home, 74().446-6941.

60 Lost and Found
Found, black dog Umon Camp·

Company Drivers • Steel l'faulers
Do You Want To Be One Of The
Highest Pa1d 5 Axle Flatbed OTA
Drivers In The Industry? New
Wage And B111efit Package .
Must Have 1 Year Steel Hauling
Expenence, Be 23. Years 01 Age,
And Have Class A COL .. Benefits
Include; Paid Vacallon, Paid Holidays, Paid Pension Plan, Paid Ule
Insurance. And Medical In-·
surance Pau1 For Driver And
Family. We Halie Only Late Model Conventional Equipment 11 You
Think You Can Qualify For The
Best Call 1-800-652-9057 For
More
Information.
GREAT

i!OOnd area. (304)882-3704.

AMERICAN UNES, INC.

Found- brown / black Shepherd
mix dog w1th collar, Dewetts Run
Rd., first trailer abOve cOOrch.

Computer Users Needed, Work

Lost dog, Dalmatian chocolate w/
spots with green eyes. Greer Ad.
area,ls wearing ID collar contact
owner, reward,304·67S.6282.
Lost, Siamese k1tten , 4 man. old
light In color, female, she's been
gone 2 wks . New Haven area
304-882-2774
Lost: 2 year ,pld male Beagle ,
Flatwoods/TaKas Ad , "Scutter•,
Mt pmk collar, 74G-992-5039
Lost: Black Lab 8 years old
Name Dakota! In&amp; around broad
rum area. !304) 882·2011

Hiring receplioJliSt for physicians
office, send resume to PO Box

741).446·8983

Be Paid In Advence.
QEADLINE: 2:00p.m.

1110 day before the od
11 to run. Sunday
edition - 2:00 p.m.

Frldoy. Mondoy oditlon
- 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Need 3 Ladies, To Sell\ Av,enl
740..446-3358

NOW HIRING
$170.00 PER WEEK/PT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY)

• College Students Welcome
• Previous Appl1cants Need
To Reapply
Apply In Person At.
11 Pine Street
r Ga1l1pobs, OH
Tues. Jan 5th,
Wed, Jan 6th &amp;
Thurs Jan 7th

3 PM .TII6 P.M. Only

1:OOpm F~doy.

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
Services, Little Hocking, Oh1o
AppraisalsFarmEs tateHousehold· CommerCial. Ol"tlo Ll·
cense lt7163. 740-989-2623.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer. complele
auction service
lice nsed
~66,0h10 &amp; West V1rg1nia, 304·

773·5785 Or 304·773-5447.
ervlce.

Wanted to Buy

Absolulo Top· Dollar . All U.S. Sri·

Now takmg applications for Drivers at Ga!ltpoils and Pomeroy
Store~ On~l740-146~

Permanent Part Time Nanny, 4
children, light housekeeping, send
resume to CLA · 460, 825 Th1rd
Ave., Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
Position Available For An Assts·
tan! Housemanage r To Work
Evenings And Weekends Provld·
mg Support Services To Women
And Children In A Residential
Setting High Sohool Diploma Or
GED Required. Must Have Reliable Transportation And Be Able
to Work Independently. Interested Applicants May Appn To
Personnel , P,O Box 454 , Gallipolis . Oh. 45631
·
Re ceptio nist Needed for Dental
Office. ·send Resume to CLA 461
%Ga llipolis Dally Tribune , PO.
Box 468, Gallipolis, Oh .. 4563t

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST Full

ver And Gold COins Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre·1 930 US Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
. M;TS Coin SMp, 151 Secon(f
A\o!Unue. GaU!polis, 740-446-28-42.

Time POs1t10n . Health Insurance
And Aettrement Benefits Avail ·
able . App ly In Person Or Send
Resume To · Bowmans Home·
care, 70 Pine St, GaUipolls. Oh.
45631 Attn· Lewte

Antiques, top prices paid , RiverIne Anliq ues, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740-992·

AN - parr lime , or PAN, contact

2526.
Anllque• &amp; clean used furniture,
wilt Duy one piece or co mple te
household, Osbv Martin. 740·

992-6576
clean Late Madel Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smtih Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, GallipoWs.
J &amp; 0 Auto Parts. Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles

304-773·S033.
Wanted To Buy. complete set of
twin beds , good condition,
(304)671&gt;~.

Medl horne heatth 741).441- 1779
SomeQfle To L1ve In &amp; Take Care
Ot House, To Do Cleaning &amp;
Laundry, Free Aoom &amp; Board ,
Possible Salary, Houaeo wner
Works Away Aklt, 740..446-7614.
Transport driver for Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center. ~ust have
good driving record, willing to
work llextble hours and be CPA
certllled and enjoy working with
elderly and rehab candidates In·
terested applicants should apply
In person at· Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, 36759 Rock springs ,Road , Pomeroy, Oh .

45769.
Wanted: Men To Work Tale .
Construction Must Have Burled
And Arleal Elperlence . Caii1 -

80D-541·5832.

130

Insurance

Crop Insurance, Burley ·Tomatoes, -Corn , Ken Bass Insurance. 1·800·291·6319.

View~

GeorQ'es Portabl~ Sawm11l, don'l
haul your logs to the mill just call

14

11 ConciMI
11 l!r1YIIIt'Y

t4x70 two bedroom trailer, total

electric. $250 m9nlh,.$150 de·
posit. no pets, 74().742-2714.

1988 Ford T-Bird, 740-245-Solol3.

2 &amp; 3 bedi'OOm mobile I'IOmes, air
conditioned, $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·

t 988 VW Goll Diosal, Gooq Con·

Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·

For Sale or Rent -12K65 Trailer,
Price on Inspection, Hud Ac~pt·

2 Bedroom Unfurnished $2e5/

od. (304)675-1088
Good selecu~n of used homes
w~ 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

2 Bedroomt, A,.lt Electric, Bath &amp;
1/2, Portar Area, Deposit Ae·
qulred, No Pet$. You Pav AII,Utlll-

$3995. Oulok delivery. Call 740385-9621.

Repa1rman 20 Years E~tptrlence,
Appliances, Plumbing, Electrical,
Heating, Anythlngt N'o Charge To

Taking Applications, On 3 Bed·
room Repo, Pre-Approval In 10
Miootesl 800-383-6862.

Now t4x70 $50D-Down $199·per

Will do housecleaning Point
Pleasant Area Call before 4 p.m.

(304)875-4857.

mo. Free air, skirt. 1-800-691·
8n1.

mo. Free air, skirt. 1·800·891 •
6777.

Business
Opportunity

New 1999 14K70 three bedroom,
includes 6 months FREE tonent.
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe ateps and aetup pnly
$200.74 per month with $1150

210

INOTIC~I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have investigated
the offering.
Investors Needed Td Participate
In Purchase Of Distressed Real
Estate In Ohio. Investment Sa·
cured By Mortgage Minimum
15% Return On Investment. 888·

796·3179.

230

~n.

Cai11-80Q.837·3238.

Oakwood Homea, Barboursville,
WI/. Tired Of No? We Say Yes!

304·736·3409.

1988 Honda XL, runs good, no :

New bank repos , only two left,
never lived 1n call 1·800-948-

5676.

Professional
Services

Factory goof Ill Save thousands.
cal\1-800-948-5678.

Llvlngaton'• B•aement WaterProofing, all basement ·repairs
done. free estimates, ll(etlme
guarantee. 12yrs on job experience. 304485-3887.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Used single wide, around $100 .
per. man. 1-BOQ-948-557~.
limited offer 1999 double wide, 3
br., 2 ba. $1,799. down , $275.00
per. mon , delivered and set up
cal\1 -800·948-5678.
We Finance Land &amp; Home With

No Fee Unless We Winl
1-888-582-3345

.

All real estate acrvertlslng in •
this newspaper Is subject to

the Fodera! Fair Housing Ac1
of 1988 which makes It Illegal
to actvertise •any preference,
Hmnatlon or dlscrlmlnalion
bated on race, color, religion,
nx familial status or national
origin, or any Intention 10
make any 1uch pmerence.
limitation or discrimination •

3 bedroom mobile home tor rentt

740-992-5858.

446-9935, Call After 2:30 P.M Or
WH~~~

Partly turnlshed trailer In Gallipo·
HS Ferry 304-675-1075.

t 993 Mercury Sabl~ QS 3.8 V·8, !

newspaper will not
knowingly- .tvertiHments for real estate
which MIn vlolallon ol tho
loY!· o.. reoders ate !*elry
inlonned lhat all dwolllngo
111~

ldvlfltsed In lnla MWiplp8f
are available on an equal

opprlftunlty balio.

Approximately 17 Acres In
Green/ City School Dlstrtct. Beautiful Home Silo. 740·446·3545.

LAND IN COUNTRY
5 To 1o Acre Residential Tracts,
Meadows, Pond, Barns, Woods
' Off SA 141 &amp; SA 233 Neer Gollla.
20 Acre Hunting Tracts Touching
Wayne National Forest Wooded,

Real Eatate
Wanted

We Buy Land. 30 -500 Acres,

We Pay Cash . 1·800·213·8385,
Anthony Land Co.
·

EXCELLENT CONOITIONII

RENTALS

Red Brick Ran ch Stv.le House,
Partially FiniShed Basement, 2
Car Garage, Serious Inquiries
On~ll740·446-338~.

By owner 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, wilt sell house without lots for $89 ,000, 740-992-

2704, 740·992-5696.

House lor sale on land contract,

740·992·5656

2 Bdrms, Full Basement, CIA,
washer, Drylf, Stove Provided. 1
Car Garage And Fenced Backyard. Available Immediately Deposh, Lease, Refrences Required.
$400.00 Month. Located At 109
Pleasant St. Pt Pleasant, W. 1/a •.

740·441-()128.

large family home for sale on ten
rovelv acres. Four bedrooms, tWo
and one half baths, two fireplaces,
formal living room and family
room, four car garage and two
. storage buildings, two apartments
which are completely furnished .
please call740-992·2292

2 br. house In country, partly furn .

WI ref. 304·1182·3970.

2br. large LR. &amp; Kitchen, $3251

Restored Victorian hOme situaled
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private, appo int·

Requlrod, $385/Mo., $250 Depos·
It, 740-146-1993.

'

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Downtown,
Location. No Pets, Aelerences

3 br. $300. a mon.. &amp; $300. dep. +
~··· 304·458-1728

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
$500 Down on any 14x70 In
stock, limited number, free deliv·
ery. Call t ·800-691-6777.
$999 Down on anv 98 model
Ooublewlde In stock Free Oeliv·

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom

message

mQ·

bile home. 740·992-5039.
1979 Fe~rmont 14Ft X 60Ft Can
Be Seen At K&amp;K Pt . Pleasant.
can 740-446-•310.

Beech Street, Middleport, 2 bed·
room furnished apt. Ulitltles paid
Deposit &amp; References . 1-(304)

882·2568

t ·004-675·7~ 16.

tion, $12,000 oo

Cali 740·245·

5332.

Jobe ara gonna be taken."

Mike reasonable offer- t990
Spruce Ridge 14x70 moblkl home,
verv good cond111on . 2 bedrooms,
1 &amp; 1/2 bat hs, wa she r &amp; dryer,
stove . refrig'&amp;retor. central air. 8x8
outside building, immediate pos·
sess10n. 740-992-6582
1991 , U.Ft )(70Ft. 2 Sdrms, 2
Baths. 1/tnyl Sldino. Great Condi-

toon, $17.000 00 740-4o46-81t3.

•

•

or 3 bedroom houtt In Pono pats, 740-992-5858

Nice 2-3 bedroom home located
at 197 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
no pets, remodeled bathroom, w/d
hookup, deposit &amp; references ra qulrea . rent discount. 740·992-

5502.

95 Monte Carlo hunter green with
tinted windows, !lBW tires, kept in
lOp condA3,100

~paniel

2 Black Females With

Ta11 Fuji Papers, Starting At

Campus, 740·245-5858.

1994 Pace

2bdrm. apts., total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room
facilllies, close 10 school In town.
Applications avall8ble at: Village

trailer, deluxe
with winch, used only on wee·
kend&amp;, rat!Jilled new for $8,100.

sell lor $4,995, call740-949-2045.

Green Apls. 149 or call740·992·
3711 EOH

Two wood burning stoves. one
jingwoood wood/coal. 9ne free
standing wlglau doors, wood/
coal burning. Call after ~ . oop.m .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS A'f
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

$275.00. Call Alter 4:00PM. 740·
441~.

AKC Ron Weller Puppies, Cham·
pionshlp Bloodline. Parents Great
Wtth Children, Excellent Temper·
ment &amp; Dleposition, $350, Each
740·245-5823.
\

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive

1304! 6~5·1660

lrom $279 lo $358. Walk lo shop

Happy h~althy puJ)pies part Oal·
matlan/ bird dog wil t be 7 wks.
old on Jan. 2, wormed $40.00

Antique spinning wheel, $300,

each 304,.75-4663.

&amp; movies . Call 740--446·2568 .

erence &amp; Oeposll Required; Also,
Furnished 2 Rooms, &amp; Bath, Up·
stairs, 740-446-1519.

$250.00ea . (304)675·3368

Buck Fireplace Insert, Used Very
little, Asking $650, 74Q·446·

Registered Rat Terrier, Female, 3
Months, Crate &amp; Toys lnciud8d,
Shots, Wormed . $125.00. 740 -

Churc::h pews for sale, 12 twelve
foot, 4 ten toot, $200 each, 740·

pori. From $249·$373. Call740·
992·5064 . Equal Houslni Oppor-

949·2217.

·

COMMERCIAL EOU!fMENT; 7
Door Watkin Cooler, Reachln
Cooler, Raachtn Freezer, 8 Ft.
Prep Table, 6 Ft Deli Case, Pizza
Oven, Shelving, Misc. Phone
740-898·2613

Ground floor aptartment. 2 bed·
room wltn washer &amp; dryer hook-

14'·1004)675-5162
Mpdern 1 Bedroom Ap4rtment,

North 3rd Middleport, 2 br. unfur.
apl dep. &amp; ref. 304-882·2566.
Now Taking Applications- ~6
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $295/Ma., 740441·1~16,

242·5077 Free Samples

8832.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used, Stairway Eleva~
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts. Bowman's Homecare, 740-

up Load, 740·245-9337.

446·6515.

Firewood For Sale, 740·388·8010

One bedroom apartment for rent
quiet ,d ep. &amp; ref required
$300 00, 304·671&gt; t 550

Firewood for sate, seasoned,
split &amp; delivered , well rounded

Wlli'OeMI~

load $45 00 304·875-7937.
Firewood, Seasoned Hardwood .
S40.00 A Pickup Load, Delivered .

304-736-7295.
Ria Grande Apartment, Close To
College. One Bdrm, All Utilities

740-256·6031.

Someone To Live In &amp; Take &gt;Care
01 House, To Oo Cleaning &amp;
laundry, Free Room &amp; Board,
Possible Salary, Houseowner

Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repaln.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

p~no

Floors, CA. 1 112 Balh,

Ful~

Car·

peted, Patio, No Pets, Lease Plus
Security Oepolit Required, 740·

-.348t .

UJ)stalrs efficiency with private
enlrance, completely· furnished,
qu et surroundings, tnrea mHes
from the Ravenswood Ritchie

Dr. 740-446-1525

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repailtld, New &amp; Rebull•ln Slock.
Call Ron Evans, HIOQ.537·9528.

Brldga In Cillo. Pertecl llrst apan-

ment for a single person or new
couple . If you are looklnb. It's a
must see It's $390 1!1 month, utili·
tiea are Included. A $300 deposit
is required. For more intorrnauon ,
or an appointment. call 740·8435343 and leaVe a message

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home site evallable betAthen,l and Pomeroy, call

741).365-1381.

510

Appliances :
Re con ditioned
Washera , Dryer&amp;, Ranges, Refr i~
gr.ators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740-448-

Mllchell Reale, Hat BoKts, Stet-

son, Bolli&gt; Malkl\', 740-146-2857.
New Years Special: Prlmestar t1

Satoll)le Dish Install For Only
gramming Call Pat t ·877·223·
2688 For Mora Detailed lnforma~
lion.

Prlme1t1r $.49 lnstallal!on. One
month free, free hOliday gift just for

calli)g, 800-263,2840.

Stock Car-Dirt LM Stock Car,
1993 Rocket Chassis, Track
Champion In 1997, some ex.tras;
WJO engine and transmission,
$3,400; steel block T&amp;H 436

Chevy, wiBrodlx heads all $8,500.

530

Now 5010, 6010, 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7.75% Fixed
Rate John Deere Credit Financing
Avallebte, New 4000 Series Compacts In Stock. New John Deere
McCos And Round Balers 0% 12 Mo. a~ 1.75% -24 Mos. 3.5% •
36 Mos, 4.5% ·48 Mos, 5.5% -60
Mos. Carmichael's Farm &amp; lawn.
Midway Between Gallipolis AnCI
Rio Grande On Jackson Pike.
740-4-46-2412 Ol 1-800-594-

1111.

Hours 9·00AM To 5:00PM. Salur·
0

Keroscene Heater Wics &amp; Ae·
pairs, Sidars Equipment Compa-

ny, :JD+e?5-742t .
New farmers tobacco wareho'\Jse
Is receiving tobacco everyday,

tsl ssle Jan. 1t, 1999 In Alp loy
Ohio, call 1011 free 1-888-844-

4385 ask lor Orville Whalen/ 304·
875·1858 Edison Mayes.

630

Pa'soflno Stutl 4 Years Old,
S5,000: 3 Year Old Arabian Mare
$1 ,ooo: 10 Year Old Mare , 112
Morgan. 1/ 2 Quarter Horae,
$1,100, Tenneuee Walking
Mare, 17 Years Ok1 $800; 2 Year
Old Arabina Stud $900, 740-388-

8358. Alter 5 P.M.

Male 6 Years Old , Aegistred
Ouarter Horse. EKcelient Trail
Horsa, 1 Years. 304-575·4137.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay for sale, 2nd cutting alfalfa&amp;
orchard grass . Rt 1 Letart 304·

882·2422

Hay for &amp;ale, round , $15, &amp;quare ,

$2, 740-992·2623.

Round Bale Hay, Orchard Grass

Clover 74().446.7787.

Round bakls ol hay lor saki, 74().
949-3069.

710 Autos lor Sale
1986 Chrysler N. 'Y. Clean Body,
Clean Interior Needs Engine

3 bedroom Trailer, electric
heal. $250,00 mon th . Bidwe ll.

Work $800 .00 080. 740-446 9911

(740) 368-9326

/

Relact Any And All Bids, And ,
Withdraw Property From Sale ~
Prior To Sale. Terms Ot Sale: t

P~OPL~

C=a~s~h~~C~er~d~~~C~oo~~~-------:
1979 CheVy 4x4, 350, Automatic, ~
Body Rough, Runs Good, Drove ~
Dal~

$1,200, OBO 740·441·0543.

1981 Ford pick up"Stepside , six
cylinder, runs great, $900, must ~
sell , call 740-992-7478 leave ,

meseago or 740·949·2045.

·OFf.

-

.:..:72:.:0~Tru:.:.:ck:.::s:..:f:.:or:..S.:.a:.::l.:.e-,... !

•

v
~
NOOI,t-lOW, ~-Tf\O~t,
f&gt;'\AAY PWPU. K~V£ FWJ~-e'~
r---;....,._.., OF I ~FE:~IO!i:.l TY!

,

1984 Chevy Pickup Silverado, 4 ·
Wheel Drive, Good Condltl,on,

,..

'

YEAA, WT fl\'( I N.FE:IQO~\TY
COI-\PL-0 I~'T 10 C:OOCI ~')

...,

TKf.l~l

tended Cab 4x.4, V-6, Auto, Air,
Loaded, Excellent Condition,
se.ooo Miles, 304·882-3256
t993 Dodge 314 Ton 4X 4. 740·

WHILE YOU WEltE OFF
GALLIVANTIN&amp; AIKlUND
IN S.I'NN. WE WERE
5TUCI&lt;. WITH HER AND
AI..L HER IDIOTIC

78 three quarter tan Chevy pick- '
up; 2 junk cars: appliances I

Iron, 740-667·3254.

91 Chevy S-10 5 sp. w/ topper
84,000 miles In good cond.

$3,800.00 304-675·51&lt;13

•rRO.lE.C.TS"!

READING
BETWEEN

.

THE

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa

L.INES.

EH?

1985 Dodge Custom van, 318

Engine, Raised Top, $1 ,800 Neg ..
74D-256-t707

1992 Ford Explorer, 4 door automatic, all extras, $9900; t 992
Ford E•plarer, 2 door, Eddie ~u·
er, automallc, $950d; manv more
to choose from, Riverside Motors.

Pomeroy, 74D-992·3490.

'

1994 .&lt;;travy Diesel 4 Wheel
Drive, 740-445-4537

36 IIOIId llgn .
31 OnlhiW8J'

a Walk-ly

Dl-(abbr.)

2 knot

3 Type of market
4

7 Medicinal root
I AllobbMy
twin
II Parity, glall

3e&amp;u.~

South

40 Dreiling

• A 6 3
¥A 7 t
•KQJ76
•KQ

•2 Seavoilld

--angle

5 Court dlvtder

gowns

.10 Unltl of energy
11 Arrivederci -

12

Featured

performer

Pass2t
P818 Pass

111 Spelling

contest

. ).1.

21 OodtNyor
Miller
• ,,
22 - of London , 'i
23 See aaclal),.. •q:
24 Black
., · 1
25 Crude .,..._ •

211Pr.rtxfor
bl

aphy .

281',:,_

29~1 .. :~~

P818
P818

30 Single

_ ·_

31 Companion of''
odd•

-.

37 City In Ohio • ·)
38 Subalde
_

PEANUTS

By Phillip Alder
In no-trump. when you have only
one top-trick stopper in lhe suit led
(usually the ace, but perhaps the king
if your right-hand opponent wins
trick one with the ace). upply the Rule
of Seven. Subtract from' seven the
number of card~ you have in that suit
in your hand and in lhe dummy combined. Then. hold up for that number
of rounds.
Is it perfect? No! Ignore it when
you know the opening lead is from a
four-card suit. or when you are more
frighte~ed of a switch to another suit.
In either·of these· cases, it is usually '
best to grab the first trick and go
about your business.
·
Well. with respect to this deal, is
. thad~tro a bluff? Against lhree notrump, West leads the spade four. Do
you win trick one? Why'/
Note West's lead. the spade four,
not the queen. Against no-trump. it is
.usually best to lead low from Q-J-xx. Lead the queen only if the higher
spot is lhe nine or 10•(or you know
panner is long in the suit).
South has seven top tricks. Yet
once the-diamond ace is out 'of the
way. four niore tricks opep up.
The Rule of Seven lells declarer to
hold up the spade uce for two round~.
(Seven minus live equals two.) However. here. that should be fatal. An
observant East will switch to the
heart king; at tri~k two. selling up live
tricks (one spade, three beans and
one diamond) for the defense.
What was West's lead? The spade
four. And declarer can see the two
and three. So if you assume that West
is a reliable citizen. he has led from
a four-card suit. With the spades split·
ting 4-4, snatch trick one and lead a
top diamond.

42

. .-,

43 Flying

cre1ture ' ·
44·The caama ' :
45 Dlatrlct

In · '.,

Garmany

: ·:

47 - .fiOIIIIICI ,

r

(Italian car) , ..;

tlllump

· -

49 European

• '"'
blackbird - •
50 Poker at.tike-o -.
52 Dakota IIICIIM •
54 Allen'a crafl- ~ ;
(-.)

:,,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campoa
Clltbrtty CipMr CI'WJtooi'MIIarw crwa.dlrom qootattone by famoua people, p.,.t •nd preeent
EIOh ren.fln thtcipherltande lor~ Tcxt.y'll c~w· 0 lfiUI/t U

HB

'CLPZ

KUPXHIE

NDZ

CPYZUK

SGIIIUKBPZHGI?'

BHYUIZ

.." ,.'",,,
-r,.,

B P II P E U - • r

. '.

'

VPIXGK

""

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'P

NGGY

EGGX

LPB

10

UIXHIE.'

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K.X.
BOTTHIE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Failure Is nol our only punishment for laziness: there
is also the success of others."- Jules. Renard
.

l'

FISYSO

I

1- I

I

3

1

.r I·

.'

I

NEWUD

.. '
.'

•

,.,.

__,N_o..,..c_,..u-..,..r--11~,

My s1ster iikes to study hu~~
man nature She once told me
L.....L--11....-..L..--l.....J~ thaht the sdtrabight _
adnd nfarrow
....-----'-----,pat wou 1 e WI er 1 more
E CCH I T
people · .- · · · - 1

..:.

I
I~-~~:;:5_::1,....:....;,16:--=.l-..,•lr-·--1 0
.

11M PAINTING WATER LILIES
LIKE CLAUDE MONET..

Helpa

_

.

_

Complete the chvckle quolod

-~y filling in the mlssmg words

L-....I.--...1..--L-....1.--':-.......o vpu de.,elop from step No. 3 be low.

TI-lE'( LOOK MORE
LIKE SU9MARINE5

' '
. "'

1996 Ford F-150 Supercab 4x4
XLT Package , Automatic, V-8,

Po&gt;ver, 740-367-o657.

740

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Motorcycles ·

Cha 1et. Abate Yout/7 - Embark· TEETH
"Never start an argument you can't wm," Granny
sa1d Smiling she added, "And if you can't b1te dqn't
show your TEETH !"

1992 Honda . Fourtrax 250X 4
Whaeler, lots' Of Ex.tras, $1,800,

74D-446-02t 1 After 5:30 P.M.
Spot On List For Harley David·

760

JANUARY6

Auto Parts 6
Acc:e~&amp;orles

-4-14' Wheels •. hubcaps, and"Ures
mou nted ready •to-go; For 5·10

Pick-up Truck. 1740) «6·3714 ar-·

ter 5:00.

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engtnes, Ali Types , ~cces1 •
To Over 10,000 Transmissions,

74().245-5877.

New gos tanks &amp; 1&gt;0&lt;ty parts. 0 &amp;'.
R Auto, Ripley, ·wv. 304·372·
3933 or 1-800-273-9329.

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnished Eaers Waterproofi1g

Appliance Parts And Service. Ali
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience Ail Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 740 -446-

7795

C&amp;C General Home Ma in ·
tenence- Painting , vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile horne repair q,nd mora. For
lrea estimate call Chet, 740-992·

6323.
Profesilonal. 20yrs experience
with all masonery, brick, block &amp;
Stone . Also room additlon1 , ga rages , etc. Free estimates. 304-

773-9550

•

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring ,
new sei'VIce ,or repairs. Master Li·
censed .electrician . Ridenour
Electrical, wvooo306, 304-675-

1786

.'

------'----------------~.;.._~ : :

son, Due In 1999. $500.00. 740·
446-9663.

tabi&amp;llod 1975 Call 24 Hro. (740)
RegiStered Australian Came Dog 446-0870. t-800-'287·0576 Rog·

Antiques

12~e65 ,

serves The Right To Accept Or :

· Livestock

TRANSPORTATION

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

~ :r.'i.J, .rAY!
. :t'M ALwAYS
TI,ICING

AI 740·441-1038 . .eve Re· •

448-1569 A«er 6:00PM. .

engine only $6,000, call 740·949·

$21.95
S37 oo Per
presok'&gt;n flltlnga
RON EVANS

741l-446-1782

PO~L !AIC~It1

Is · •

Where Is" WithOUt Ex.pressed Or :
Implied Warranty And May Be 1
Seen By Calling Kelf:h Johnson 1

$49 .00 Plus 2 MonthS Free Pro-

2045

New And U1ed Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga. Day
Beds, Bunk Beds, Beds, COflllUI·
er Desk, Entartalnment Centers,
Creasers, Couches, Dinettes,

enod $j.500. 304-937·2018.

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tractor&amp; In Stock . Financing As
Low As 6 .5% FiKed Rate On
Qualifying Tra ctors With John
Deere Credit Approva l, Car~
ml~hael'a Farm &amp; lawn , Midway
Between Gallipolis And Rio
Grande On Jackson Pika. 740446·2412 Or , -801).594-11 , 1.

dish, total purchase price $99
Ask about free programming, free
lnstaa kit, 1-800-779-8194.

Houeehold '
Goods

hokl e round bales $1,700. each.
New Holland 80 ft. barn elevaror
for square bates· can be short·

446-1039.(740)446·1004

Sotetil .. Syotemo· t 8' DlreciTV

MER CHANDI SE

(3) Pequea kicker feeder wagons,

wanted' ; Older Couple To Work
On Farm Salary, Utilities, Rent
Provided And Ect 740-446·1052.

Cela«er ~:oop.m.(304)882-3339

YOV'I&gt; ~~ A

OhiO. Th&amp; Above Will Be Sokl IO l

1992 GMC Sonoma S.L.E. Ex·

Johnson's Used Furniture: Beds·
new and used, manresses, Kitch en appliances, Dinettes, Wash·
ers, Oryers, Freezers, etc! (740)
Ladles Gold Diamond Jewelry

At 10:00 AM At The OVB An-~

2370.

610 Farm Equipment

dav Otoses At Noon

Works Away Alol, 740-446·7614.

FRANK &amp;: EARNEST

nex.143 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, ,
·~s

1 In llteeame

Is it infallible?

pm. cail304-675-3253.

The Hlghesl Bidder

23 Sllut out
'Do-.Mdow
320nor33 l'llry .....
34 Mollr, lor one

chariot

1

GEO Prism M07205t On 1116/99

• DOWN

21 a...t'a llaka

41 -Ancient

auto, runs good, $3,500, 740-742- ·

Fisher personal C/0 player, $60.

740o992·68B2

EVER ff

miles, l&gt;eionl

&amp;pm. cal130+773-5631 , after 6

11 FIIYII Of Fox
20 FIUNIIn , _

Opening lead: • 4

1986 Ford F 250, automatic 11

2847

And Oelivared. $40 .00. 740-446·

DID HE

~==~
- 7~4().99~2~-9~1~91~-----~ ·
1992 Chevy 1500 aeries, tull size,

FAf1M SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Clearance Sale- All New TractOr
Parts AI Oealers Cost Kessel's
Tractor, '1402 Jackson Pike, Galltpolls, Ohio . 740·446-7787.

FIREWOOD· Cui, Split, Stacked

Peld. $290.00 Monlh . 740·441·
1005

DID SNUFFY HAVE
A CSOOD TIME AT
TH'BARN
DANCE
LAST
NIGHT?

5I ISprlrlted
5I Eurlkln
57SOUndayIM! Peltormable.

Vulnerable: Eaai-West
Dealer! South
South
West Norlh East
It
3 NT

Everything Works. 740-256-1 117. ;

1961 Massey Ferguson Tractor
Gas With Blade, Good Condition,
ExCellent XeroK copier, llke .new '740-446-3844 Days: 740·446condition, under service contract. 9555 EvenlnQS.
Prints two sided, collates, du·
plexes, staples, does just about 6 Sols 01 Used Lilt Truck Forks.
everything Tired of poor cojMes? various Lengths, $75.00 To
Thla one makes perfect copies. .$100.00 Per Set 740-379-27~7 .
Contact Joe at Point Pleasant
Firewood For Sale, $35 Per Pick-

Renters Dream Come True! Call .

256-6162.

446·7283.

Pnnting.(304)675-3952.

740·446·0008, 740·

Jack Russell Terrier Puppies,
three mates, one female.
Wormed:
au 1st ihotsl

BARNEY

1

White Slar On Chest Bobbed

~upples,

Waterline

me~V;.

:

2 Bedroom Apartme.nt, Adlacent
To University Of Rio Grande

AKC RoiljiSiered Cocker

779!1

NICe 2

740-141Hl23t

$8,000. (304)578-2046.

Sale By Public Auction A 1992

rooms, 2 Balhs, Eie&lt;.. AC. t OWn·

Vr Old, Wilh Stove. 9ood Condi-

A Groom Shop · P.et Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets. '373 Georges Creek Ad .

each 304·773-5642

er, No Children , Cathedral CeJI·
Garden Tub, Hot Water Tank 1

93 Ford Taurus GL ~e.

Heal, WID Hook·Up, Near Cinema
$279/Mo.. Plus Utilities, Deposit &amp;
Leese Required, 740-146-2957.

1988 H•70 Manorwood, 2 Bed·

ings Wllh Ceiling Fan /Lights

Pets for Sale

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For '

1 Bedroom, Economical Gas

Clean 2 bedroom house In Po·
meroy, $350 per month plus deposit, no pets. land conrracr possible after a year, 740·698-7244.
House tor rent in the Reedsville
area. 4 br.• propane heat,attached
oarage, fenced yard, over looking
the river $400. per. mon . w/ $400.
dep. Nil ulll. rental rei. required,

560

•
Loaded, •

AKC bo~ar puppies, 4 females
left,tall docked, declawed,
wormed' &amp; had 1st shots $250.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'

capped. EOH 004~75-6679.

3034.
mo. $150 deposit, New Haven
area,
304-882-3274, Leave

·

t l)e(loom furnished apartment In

TWin Rivera Tower now aeCepttng
2306 Jefferson Ava. 5 room , applications for 1br. HUD subsidhouse, central t-eat &amp; air. IZed apt. for elderly and handl·
$375mo. plus deposit. 304·675-

ONLY $30,000 Fj xer Upper Otd·
er 2 Story Country Home . 2 -3
Bedrooms, 1 Bath, With 5 Acres,
Barns,· Greenhouse. Near Gallla &amp;
JaCkson Border. 740-286-Q081

ment, call 74D-992·5696

741l-992·5088.

Newly Remolded one bedroom
apartment. Prime location In
doWntown Gallipolis. No Pets!
$300.00 month plus utilities. Ref·
erences · &amp; Deposit Required .·
Call. (740) 446-3302 for appointment

360

32!3.

992·2218

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Co., LTD.t-800-213-8385.
3 Bedrooms, living Room, Dining
Room, Kitchen, Bath, Partial FinIshed Family Room. Call 740·441·

Charlie's old bottle shop has
moved to Rlverbend Antique Mall,
MiddltJ)ort , we buy Antique9,

741).446-0390.

Contract Available With As little
As 5% Down With Approved
Credit. Free Maps. Anthony Land

310 Homea for Sale

Antique~

530
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security
depo,slt required, no pels, 740-

door).

Prolly Nice. Only $22,000. Land

REAL ESTATE

1989 ford escort: 1988 Chevrolet :
Beretta, 4 Cylinder, 5 Speed, •
$550, OBO Each. 304·675-1930

Carpet, No PelS Or Smoking, Ret·

Commercial-Office or Retail, 87
Mill St Middleport 1,450 Sq Ft.
$400 mo.·Corner Building . 740992-6250 Acquisitions (nexr

~

Very Nice, New 70,000 Mile Fire- ,
stone Tires, 740-448-1759.
:

tunille~.

L---===------=-=-==:=.::~

Miles. 3.0 Engine , S1,500, 740·

Furnished 4 R"''ms &amp; Bath, Com·
pletely Redecorated, Clean, ~ew

2813.

,'

1991 Dodge Monaco 4 DoQrs, '

R·elocatlng? Take Over Pay-

Basement, Large Parking Aree ,
Also One Bedroom Apartment On
State Route 33 ln.New Haven ,
W.VA. For Sale, Rent, Trade, Or
land Contract, Phone· 740-698-

.

GOOd Tires, Runs Good, 102,000,1

Attention! New Years Resolution.
Loose Weight, Earn Moneyl 888·

Business and
Buildings

:

1991 Cadillac Saville 4 Q6or se- t
dan , loaded with accauorles, ;
great gas mileage, car phona, 1

741l-368·1t00.

Equal Housing Opportunity

Commercial Building 40xtoo Wllh

14x70 82 Schultz mobile home, 2
bedroom, 2 bathS, 740·949 ·308~.

"If 1kMp

'

304-675·2722.

As Lillie As $500 Down. t-606:
926·3426.

340

ery Caii1 ·80D-691·6777.

L~
going to school, all the best

goodl $21100.740-379-2467

·.

740-949-2202.

ments, 304-736·7295.

• A 9 '2
• 5 21

,

1989 Cutissa Supreme, runs ;

2 Bedrooms, Water And Trash
Paid. No Pets On Bulaville P1ke.

Mlddklporl, 74Cl-992·9191 .

Rent B1.11ter. new 1999 14J~:70 2or
3 Dedroams , only $995 00 down
,$195.00 per. man., tree delivery
and set up call1·800-948-5678.

.

rusl, $675, 740-742-237~.

New 16x80 $500-0own $245-per

FINANCIAL

.

1988 Bonneville LE. maroon, 4dr. :
new tires &amp; br8ke&amp;, good eond. '

lies. Cell740-388-8t62.

nope~.

.

• 7 z
• J 2
• 10 8 5 •
•AJ1097
Eut
• K 10 9 8
¥ K Q 10 9

EEK&amp;MEEK

$3,200. 304-675·5792 after ~m.

Mo.. $100 Oeposil, Includes Wa·
fer', &amp; Traeh 740-446-9569.

Professional Tree Service, Slump
Removal , Free Estlniatest In·
surance, Bidwell. Ohio. 740-388·
9648. 74o-367-701 a.

Look. 741).216--9212 .

741).256·1964.

2 pedroom In Hannan Trace

304-675-1957:
.

dltlon, 45 -50 Miles Per Gl!llloni..,

992-2187.
SChool otst. 740-256·t688

capped, 741l-441·1~36.

u=:ror

'fllllatlft lllrd

17=

420 Mobile. Homes
for Re11t·

up. HI00-691-6777.

LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

'HOMEMAKERS
ENCOURAGED TO APPLY

Ooublewlda Repo, Call For

Double Wide New $999-Down
S237 -per mo Free delivery &amp; set-

M8fl And Women Needed To Co
Telephone Operator Work For

Ask For Mr. Wiseman

All Yard Salel Mult Be P(lld In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday l Monday edition·

Wedemeyer 's AuctiOQ
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-

'

All Electric Appliances, Porches,
Carport, . 740-256-&amp;336.
"

lng, 800·383-6862.

220 PI Pleasant Wv. 25550,I Want A Mature· ComPanion.

1992 Norris, 16FI X 70FT, Vinyl
With Shingles. 2 Bdrm• .. 2 S.lhs,

Phillips, 740·992·6576.

Shifts Available ...
• Full And Part Time Opemng
:No Experience NeededWe Train

AU. Yard Sale• Must

80 .

Furniture repair rerlnish and restoration, also cuslom orders. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry

·Day And Evening

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

90

Own Hrs. $20K ·$75K fir. t-800·
348-7186 Ext 1173 www.amp·
Inc. com

Yard Sale

70

Electric maintenance servic•.
Wiring, breaker boKfJS, light fix·
lure, heating systems, and Ae-

""""'ling 004-674-0126

ASK QUESTIONS,

'

EM PLOYMENT
SERVICES

320, Mobile Hornet
•
for Sale
. .

A$TRO-GRAPH
Thunday. Jan . 7, 1999
In the year aheud. many of yoor

stronger lrnit~ and a.~pectli or your

perso'lfllily could begin to lake prcce·
de nee over your more moderate one:s.
This is fine a.~ long a.' you don ' t make

steps later. Remember, what YDII
doo ' l have in your head. you'll have
to have in your feet.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) As an

Aries, there aren't too many things
you can't do once you set your mimi

unreasonable.,and• on othen.
to it However, ;r somelhing beyond
CAPRICORN iDeo. 22-Jan. I91
your scope needs fixins 1oday, alii in
It's quite possible that you mightlllke
an expert.
it upon you,...lf to champion an _ _:_::_TAURUS (April 20-May-20)-'Un"'popu lar' ~icw and uy to impo~ - · · Unless you pul a lid on it. a big dent
these idea.• on others loduy. Forget rt,
in your bank b!&gt;ok of some extra ca.&lt;h
you're not likely to be very ~u~ce~!lyou·ve accumulated i~ likely to occur
ful. Know where to look [or romance
today.' Don't squander what you· ve
and vou'll find it. The Astro--Orap_h
ed
'
l
h
h
sav.
Matchmaker inslllntly revea&lt; w tc
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Before yoo rell11ll1ge today's evenL&lt;
signs are rornanlically perfect for
you. Mail $2.75 to Malchmaker. c/o
or schedule, ifs best to .fint check
this newspaper. P.O. Box 1758. Mur·
willl your opouse. Even though yoor
ray Hill Station, New York. NY
inlentions mi&amp;ht be good, your pri·
10156. • .
orities could be mil., opan.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. _19)
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You have an ability IO apprectate
There's 1 llroRJ chance today 1bat
unusual lhinss. but when shopping
you &lt;'nuld develop a lendency 10
today, you could clfl} this 8 bil too
focus on insigniftcant details. It'll 8~
far and pun:ha.'!Ct ilems you'll con·
10 1 point where it obliterates die bi&amp;
•icier to be white elephanL&lt;tomonow.
picture. and you may find you,..lf at
PISCES (Feb. 20, Man:h 20&gt;
odd.• with companions. Slow down.
Faulty judgment or inutional deci·
LE9 (July 23-Aug. 22) Oelu·.

siOns could force you to retrar;:e your
•

-

sions of grandeur could cause you to
11y to matcll the exlrava,ance of

"'me big spenders you'll

t

POnd·

ing your day with. and tha• • .,ld be
just plain foolish.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) By all
means seek counsel and advice from
intelligent friend! if you have on
important decision to make. However, reserve the riaht 1o make the final _
judament yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If you
view the ample opportunities lha.t
exist around you today with indifference. chances are their lrUe WOIIh will
be wa.&lt;ted. Tilke the time to evaluate
what's goi"' on.
SCORPIO (o.:t. 24-Nov. 221 You
mu.111t take cue not to blow lhinss out
of proponi011 If yoo ohould have ia
difference of opinion with a friend or
a serious rival today. Be tolennt. and
live and let live.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) How you conduct you...,lftoday
in situati0111 that brins you bef""' die
public will make all the difference
between 1 good impression and • poor one. The latter will be difficult
to eradicate.

..

�..
•

~

..

'

.

_

.

,

.

,

.

•
~

._- ........· ·_____
.. .T

. ..

. BY The Bend

-

-

.•..
.•.
•
,·..

~

The Daily Sentinelf
.

.

· Page1Q.

ports

Weather

,~

Wedneaday; January 6, 1999 ,

·· "

"':"":K:-n-ow~th:--e-. ~w-a-rn-=-in-g-s~ig_n_s_o_f:--o_v_a~ria_ n-ca_n_c...;...e_r-_.-an-d-.g.. ;. e_t__t-he--~C-A____1_2_5-.b...:.;.lo_o_d~t-e~sti
.

Ann
Lan derS
;:,·,,'::; ~:::"~.J.::".:::
''""'""

•

Dear Ann Landers: I feel compelled to respond to the letter from
" M.J . in Sarasota," who decided to
have a hysterectomy to mak e
absolutely certain she would never
get ovarian cancer. Stie still needs to
be careful.
I was diagnosed with fibroid
tumors in' -1988. Even though there
was no family hi story or ovarian
cancer. I decided not to take any
chances and had a complete hys-·
Jerecwmy. Ei ght years later, I was
.

shocked to discover I had Stage III
ovarian cancer.
Many women do not realize that
malignant cells -in the ovaries can
spread through the surroundi ng tissue. Eve n if the ovaries are
removed, ovanan cancer can sti ll
develop elsewhere. It is important to
continue watching for· signs of the
disea.,e. I am enclosing a. list of the
symptom s of ovarian cancer, and I
hope you wi ll print •it for all -the
women in yo~r reading audience .

Shirley in Orlando, Aa.
D!!£::-Shirley: . Thank you for
ed~catihg my readers today. According to the Ovarian Cancer National
Alliance, a national education and
advocacy organi zation, ovarian ca ncers. occur in one out of 55 women at
any age. Most women are di~gnosed
when the chance for survival for five
years is about 20 percent. Early
detec(ion improves survival rates.
Symptoms are subtle at first but
become more persistent and identili-

able as time goes on.
·
Any woman who experiences the
following symptoms for more than
two 'or three weeks should see her
doctor and ask for a combination
pelvic/rectal exam, a CA-125 blood
test and a transvaginal sonogram:
-- Bloating , a feeling of fullness
or gas.
-- Frequent or urgent urination.
· -- Nausea, indigestion, constipation or,diarrhea.
-- Menstrual disorders or pain

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local Board of Educati on organi za• tiona! meetin g Wedne sday. 6:30
p.m. at the admin istrative office at
Tuppers Plains. Regular mee tin g
wi ll foll ow.

Monday thrlf ·
Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

WE . ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

2/$
USDA CHOKE IOIELEs5 BEEF -:OM ~

Round Steak........... .;-: ~
'

POMEROY
, Alcoholics
Anonymous open discussion meeting, 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, Mulberry Avenue.

POMEROY
Alcoholi cs
Anonymous study group meeti ng, 8
p.m. at Sacred Heart Cath oli c
Church, Mulberry Avenue.
SUNDAY ·
: POMEROY
Alcoholi cs
Anonymous study group n1cetin g, 7
p.m. at Sac red Heart Catholi c
Church, Mulberry Avenue .

'

'

SUPERIOR'S

·

·

.

9

C

Frankies. •••••••••.!!:~~7
FAMILY PA~ .C~ICKEN .
C
Drumst1cks.••.•••L:~. 69
'

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Women 's AA .
meeting, 7 p.m. 1608 Nyc Ave.,.
Pomeroy.

Brin g a dessert or sandwiches. ·

179

.

USDA CH~QNE~ESS NEW YORK STRIP

Steak •••••••••••••••L:.

.FAMILY PAK ASSORTED . . . L~
.Pork Chops •••••••••• ~.
CENTER CUT
.

$

3·

' '·

99 C

·Th hs •••••••••••• J~.st

OLD COURTHOUSE

ES

LB,

CAT FOOD

•••••••

(ASS'T. VAR.)

3/.,C

5.5 oz.

Open auditi ons for the Little
. Buckeye Theater production of.
"Goldiloc ks" The Whole Story" wi ll
be held Monday, 6 p.m. in the John
W. Berry Fine and Performing Ans
on the University of Ri o Grande
campus.
For the original script written by
Rio Grande faculty member, Jack
Hart. the. roles to be cast are
Goldilocks. her parent•, the three
bears, the sheriff, prosecuting attorney, bailiff, and the deputy hound to
name a few. All roles are open, it
was reported.
Performances will beheld Feb.
II , i 2, 18, 19 and 20. Double casting of roles is possible. For more
information. residents may call Connie M cNcrlin at I , 800282-720 I.
ex tension 7364.

FRESH #I

.

A Biblical dramatist, Norman
Arrington from Princeton, W. Va.
will be · at the White 's Chapel Wesleyan Church at Coolville on Sunday, for the Hi:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
serv1ces.

'

Arri rfgton has written and produced a number of dramas and also
does Biblical monologues . Phillip
Ridenour, pastor. invi tes· the public
to attend. '

•

$149
Potatoes.............. ~ ·
DEW FRESH SPREAD
.
$ .· .19
Margarine ••••••• !~b:~..
BORDEN . . • . .
.
$ 149
Buttermllk•••••••1:.G:~ .. ~ ·
.

.

101ba.

1·

1601.

2/$

•••••••••••

Salmon ••••••••••••••
14.75 oz.

'

TREND LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

LY'S
VEGETABLES

PURE••

SUGAR

I .

2i89J)

UNITED FAMILY PAl

~

·ICe.. Cream .· •••••s.a.r:·...

$

·

399
. ·

3--.D•n,n,ers••••••••••••••
FR~~:~ 8 9

ET
'BLENDED

. 29~. ~ .J J39

)Ut.IIT 12 PLEASE ADD PUACH

1

MO.RTON (ASST. VAR.)

STOKELY'S
TOMATO JUICE

79c

' 460Z.

'

4ROLLS

,,.
F

UCH
FABRIC •
SOFTNER
640Z.

$189

·C

UGU ·SPAGHETTI
. SAUCE

-~/$3

. SOFT.'N .
GENTLE BATH
TISSUE ·

Win A

BANKROLL
.This Week
Powell's Super

Value

$300.

.

Sunday marks new .hike in postage rate
.

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

$)99

Auditions planned · for ·
theater production .

presented ~

·-·

Pork Chops ••••••••••••

B on

Clerk of Co urts, $110,0~1.95; County Court,
A $4.5 million county budget 'prepared this mer.
Commissioner Jeffrey · Thornton said that $94,311 ; Board of Elections, $1 27,254; Ma inweek by the Meigs County Commissioners
1999 includes $3.3 million in general fund . ihe commissioners based their apppropria- tenance and Operations, $276,000.'
seeking help for stricken hus- for
Sheriff,
$611,569,39;
Re co rder,
tions to county offices on what those offices
·
appropriations.
$81
675.46;
Disaster
Services,
$7,000;·
Publ ic ,
The calculations were completed on spent in 1998.
1
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A suburoan Whitehall woman is accused offail$40,000;
Agriculture
(Ex
tens
ion,
Defender,
Wednesday, but not approved by the board at
The · general - fund appropriations, by
ing 10 call for medical help for her stricken and unconscious disabled huSband
Me igs Fair Board, Alban y Fai r Board),
department, are as follows:
presstime.
.
because her house was filthy.
·
· County Commissioners -and econumic $124, 15.2; Vital Statistics, $220.
,The county's entire budget of $il.5 million
An assistant Franklin County prosecutor said Wednesday that Gwenith Puckett
Children 's Services Board, $36,450; So lS176,393;
Auditor,
also includes special revenue funds such as development,
wall afraid she would be arrested because her home was filled with trash and
the auto license and gasoline fund, which is $200,651 .36; Treasurer, S104, 164; Buckeye dier's Relief, $67,800; Veterans Services,
galbage.
used to finance the County Highway Depart· · Hills/Hocking Valley Regional Development $37,561.74; Public Assistance, $105, 2 78 ;
Her husband, FanelfPuckett, died Dec. 13 after suffering a "heart or di.~c
ment's"operations, the dog and kennel fund, District (other financial admi.nislr~tion), Postage, $3 I ,OOOr Fringe Benefits (Ge neral
event" at his residence, assistant prosecutor Marl&lt; Hunt said. ..
Prosecuting ·
Attorney, Fund employees), $190,212.67; Plat Map
M R/DD and other funds used by county agen- $2,298.70;
After an
Mrs. Puckett was·arrested on a charge of failure to pro$221,390.50; Bureau of Inspection, $53,000; Office, $50,200;-Law Library, $Z,400.
cies.
vide for a
a fourth-&lt;legrc:e
f~lony. The crime carries
Histori ca l SoCiety, $8,000; In sura nce on
·
The
~qmmissioners
were
faced,
with
the
Court of Appeals, $7,000.
·
.
. .,..
.. .
'
Properly,
$172,687. 16; Miscellaneous (debt
task
·
o.f
shavi
n&amp;:.nearl;a'
half·millioii
.l:l&lt;1ll~rs
.
&lt;;:?mm~n·
Pie~,
!:1'~r!;
$,9l,8~8j,
Cordner,
1
may be one of the ~ bit.arR chllrges· ~ fiilfill'tl!e i~ questli' o'( officeholders and depart- · $26,660.29;· Domesilc ltelaiions an~ Juvenile retirement, fees; grant mat ches, Soil and
o. Nieoolf, who.is representing Mls. Puckett. ment heads which are submitted each s,um- Court, $65,522; Probate 'Court, $29,02i .41; Water, Council on Aging, etc.), $204,116.21.
.
.
Mrs. Puckett, 51, was
the county jail Wednesday after Municipal.
Court Judge Janet Grubb set a $10,00l personallealgl1i7ance bond.
Hun~ using a Whilehall police repcl!1, told the court Wednesday that Mrs. Puckett tried 10 offer assistance 10 her hus.
band and tq remove him from the home
The price of a first-class stamp is on the rise.
after he lapsed into unconsciousrt&lt;SS.
Effectjve Sunday, the cost of mailing a first-class letter will increase
to 33 cents, up a penny.
, . - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , Having no sua:ess on her own, she
sought help from neighbors.
According to the U.S. Postal Service, th·e price hike is the first in
"The neighbors questioned her as 10
four years. In a news release, the service also emphasized that the
why she did not call 91 I," Hunt said
increase of 2.9 percent is the smallest in the history of the postal ser1 Sections • 10 Paces
"She stated she would be anested if she
vice.
.
·
did"
11so
included
in
the
11ew
postage
rates
are
decreases
in
rates
for
each
Calendar
10
additional ounce up to 13 ounces. The post card rate remains the same
Classlfteds
7&amp;8
at 20 cents.
.
Comle~
9
The postal service said that the additional revenue will be used to
continue efforts to automate the processing of mail, modernize local
Editorials
2
Approximately one to two inchpost o'ffices and improve customer and postal information systems.
Local
_3
es of snow fell throughout the coun&lt;;onsumer groups, including "The Coalition to Make. Our First Class
Soorts
4&amp;5
ty overnight, giving all Meigs· Mail First Class," say. that the $1 billion in increased revenue which th~
County students a ·day off from
price hike will generate is unnecessary, citing the postal service's
school.
advertising campaigns, the sponsorship of a bike t•:.am in th~ French
Lotteries
No traftic accidents were reportTour de France, and the sale of non-postage retail items, which has
ed this morning by the Meigs Counresulted in an $85 million loss.
OHIO
ty Sheriff's Office or Pomeroy and
. The coalition is made up of over 200 organizations, including the
Pi&lt;k3: 1-4-7; Pick 4:6-8-1-2
Middleport police departments . . . American Farm Bureau Association, the National Association of RealSuptr Lotto: 8· 19-20-27-30-46
One accident was investigated by
tors and the National Federation of the Blind.
.. ,
Kicker: 4-8-0-8-6-3
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
The ne~. P?,Stagewill be represented ~y .a non-denomin.ational st~mp,
_The cost of mailing a flrst~Iass letter
a
W.}fA.
Highway Patrol, but no details were
called
.the.
H
stamp,
until
st.amps
beann!l
the
33-cent
pnce
are
prtnted
penny
to
cents
Monday.
According
to
Charles
Grimm,
PomeroY
Daily 3: 0-2-9; Daily ,4: 7-7-3-1
33
011
available as of press time this morn·
and d1stnbuted t~ post off1ces, accordmg· to a spokesman for the ~. pictured assisting a cuatonier on . Wedne!Jday, · some
0 1999 Ohio :V•II('y 1\lblblling Cu.
•
._~..;........,..-.....;.;...~..:....;........1 mg.
Pomeroy Post Offtce.
·poatage ralll8 will decreaae.
.
·
' ·

band because home is dirty

12 PK. ·12 OZ. CANS

LB.

'

' t!Jat p10cess, and then if there were the
unexpectedly summoned four membeis nesses 10 testify would push the date back.
need for witnesses, it could be on a very
of the White House le8111 team to the
Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, one ·of the House· prosecunarrow focus on a very narrow subject
Capitol to discuss proposals for eonduct- tors;said "five to 10 witnesses puts on·a case. I suspect we
and perltaps not at all," said Kay Bailey
ing the bial.
will want more."
Hutchison of Texas.
.Lott, who consulted separately
He and others on the prosecution team said the House
Outside the Capitol, a long line of
Wednesday with Hyde and Democratic might try to summon women who have provided statcmeni,S
tourists formed, hoping to get a glimpse .
'leader Tom Daschle, said he expected · in the Paul•llones case "IO'the degree they go to obstruction
of the pl\)CCedings. ·
opening statements i,fthe case sometime of justice and perjury."
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lou,
next week.
·
Ms. Lewinsky must be called "because she is right in the.
R·Miss., told reporters Wednesday that if
The crucial question was whether 10 middle of this," Cannon said. But he added that he'd "never
agreement could be n:ached to call witallow witnesses, as demanded by the seen Linda Tripp as essential," referring_ to Ms. Lewinsky's
nesses, he would want the White House
House but opposed by Senate Dcmoc- onetime friend who taped their private telephqne conversaand the House to justify the need for each
rats.
tions .
person summoned. The Senate also
Among Senate Republicans, accordJordan, a prominent Washington attorney and longtime
would have 10 approve each witness by
ing to sources who spoke on condition of Ointon friend, "is a player" and should be summoned, Canmajority vote.
·
.anonymity, one proposal was 10 give non said.
Lott expressed optimism that agreeeach side in the bial, the House and the
But while other prosecutors wanted to cal l presidential
ment was near on a procedure for a "full ·
White House, three to five days to pre· secretary Betty Currie, Cannon said he would be reluctant to
trial .... and votes on arlides of impeachsent evidence, most likely begiMing do so.
He said the president placed her in a vulnerable position
ment at the end of the process." One Bill Clinton today beComes the next week. At the end of that time, a vote
by
involving her in the Lewinsky affair, adding "It was a
GOP soul1lC, speaking on condition of flrat prealdant to face an would be permitted 10. adjourn the trial,
anonymity, said it would likely be Feb- Impeachment trial since Andrew or either side could seek pennission ·to rotten, nasty thing to do 10 a career civil servant"
Rep. Asa Hutchinson, R-Ark., said Ms. Lewinsky should
ruary at the earl.iest before .votes were Johnaon In 1868.
'
summon witnesses.
·
taken on the pesident's fate.
11le Senate would have to approve be questioned "in limited fashion," but "we don't have to go
A bipartisan ifO'JP of senators me\ Wednesday night with each witness to be called by majority vote.
into all the (sexual) details. Much of the questioning could be
the lead House prosecutor, Rep. Henry ·Hyde, R-111., and
Without witnesses, the timetable would place final votes on obstruction of justice issues, such as the attempt to find
three other lawmakers on his team. Then the lawmakers on the articleS in the first week of February. Summoning wit- her a job." .

woman

93 OZ. POWDER OR
128 o;z. UQUID

COOLVILLE - Wh ite's C,hape l
Wesleyan Church, Coolvi lle. Biblical dramatist ,Norman Arringt on.
Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Also
does Bib lical monologues.

Drama to be

R.C •.COLA
PRODUCTS

~

, C

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Commissioners complete budget proc.ess

.

FAMILY PAK CHICKEN

Middleport· Pomeroy, Ohio

By LARRY. MARGASAK
Aaaoclat8d Preaa Wrllw
WA~HINGfON (AP) ~ In a solemn moment for Presi-.
deot Omton ·and the nation, the Senate convened today to
begin the first presidential impeachment trial since the ease
( ·
~f Andrew Johnso
_ n in 1868. The ceremonial opening came
\....-amid intense, last-minute bargaining over ground rules.
With House prosecutors pressing Senate leaders to allow
·
testimony from witnesses such a5 Monica Lewinsky, there
were increasing. indications that a bial of some weeks' duralion was in the offing.
.
Senators today were taking an oath to "do impartial justice," aitd Chief Justice William Rehnquisl was assuming his
role as presiding officer for Ointon's trial on charges of per·
. jury and obstruction of justice. The 13-member House prosecution team was to read ·the two articles of impeachment on
the Senate Hoor.
Beyond those public sessions, the House "managers"
were negotiating for the right to summon a number of witnesses, most notably Ms. Lewinsky, the former White House
intern w,h~ affair with Ointon triggered the impeachment
investigation, and'presidential friend Vernon Jordan.
A White House offer not to challenge the grand jury testimony gathered by prmecutor Kenneth Starr al)d 10 allow it
as evidelll:e in the trial was welcomed today by one Repub·
. lican se.F.
, "That'would be very helpful. Stipulating to facts will help

·2 LITERS

. THURSDAY
, MIDDLEPORT
Evangeline
Chapter 172 OES meeting Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic Lodge.
·

'Hometown Newspaper

Clinton impeachment trial begins today

PEPS,I ONE

FOR DETAILS

Meigs County's

Vo lu me 49, Numb er 172

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU January 9, 1999

RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy' District, annual organizational meeting, Wednesday, 4
p.m. to be foll owed by contract
negoti ations.

SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen will have its so up
luncheon at the hall Saturday, 2 p.m.

.'

Accepts Credit Cards

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday at
the ho,me of Betsy Parsons. Pat
Holter will review "The Golden
Urchin" by Madel ine Brent.

HARRISONVILLE
Me igs
County Grange, Friday, 7:30 p.m
Scipio firehouse in Harrisonville.
The H!'rrisonville Grange will host
the meeting.

•

291 SECOND ST.

WE

a1

·'

PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW .
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS

Community
Calendar

•

re sponselo t1te woman·who couldn't ~ .
understand why her husband never:·
called her by her first name, you;:
quoted Dr. ·Will Menninger, who":
said, "The sweetest sound in any ::
lan guage is the spimd of your own :•
name." Actually, it was Dale ·:
Carnegie who said that. You added ::
that your former husband, an accom, :•
pli shed salesman, found that usi)lg::
the customer's first name was• a-:
good sales ploy. Please be aware,::
Ann , this practice is not acc:eptable:;

during intercourse.
•• Fatigue or backaches.
· For more information on ovarian
cancer, contact the Ovarian ~ancer
National Alliance, P.O. Box 33107;
Washington,
D.C.
20033
(www.ovariancancer.org), or assess
your risk at the Women 's Cancer
Network web site (www.wc'n.org):
For a free brochure, call the National Oyarian Cancer Coalition at 1888-0VARIAN (www.ovarian.org).
Dear Ann" Landers: .Jn your

'

Snowfall closes
area schools today

. .

Cooperation with U.N. we~pons inspectors question~d Air For~e f!ght~r atta~ks
By LAURA. MYERS
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Intelligence
cooperation between the United States
and U.N. inspectors has blurred the line
between gathering information to cou~ter
lra,q 's secret weapons work and usmg 11 to .
target Saddam Hussein, intelligence
experts say.
.
.
.
Part of the overlap rests w1th the l(aql
president's use .of special Republican
Guard troops both to protect himself. and
to conceal chemical, biological and
nuclear weapons programs.
Also a factor· is the dual missions of
ng information for the
the CIA:
U.N.
Commission, or UNSCOM..
for ways to undermine the
which President Ointon

feedback, too." .
'
. they've learned.
At the United Nations, Butler told a
"Did tbe U.S. intentionally use ·
But Rubin disputed reports published news conference that none of the U.S.
UNSCOM for its own national intelli- Wednesday in The Washington Post and intelligence equipment used to help U.N.
gence gathering? I don't think that they the Boston Globe suggesting U.S. intelli· weapons inspectors included eavesdropdid, but . it's a close
IITI..
7!'0/JJ.
gence directly used ping devices.
"
line, no question," he
', U 'lfl ~~
UNSCOM to peneUN.SCOM first s?ug.ht intelligence
added.
sup~ Irate. Iraq's secunty help from other countrtes 10 1995 because
Th e Clint(Jn adminl_:l . ' '
•
. forces and undermine U.N. inspectors " had been flagrantly
istration and . U.N. PO.s!Ji:lt/,~.J~~
·
thelraqiregime.
deceivedbylraq,"Butlersai?.
.
ch1ef weapons mspect ··
" Our support was
Some 40 countnes, tncludmg the Untl·
tor Richard Butler on
kJ,
:r,;:,)'l;.. •-!:' '
.• specifically tailored to ed .States, have provided information to
Wednesday
denied WBji'SttO
Of facilitate the U.N. UNSCOM with the sole purpose of
using UNSCOM for
~!' I$
.
,, , Special Commission's uncovering weapons, Butler insisted.
11;;,
U.S. spying purposes,
• (fl
mission and for no
"We have ne)'er accepted or used any
but American officials
other . purpose... he of that assistance for any other purpose,
acknowledged gaining
•.
. ' said.
·
not for any member state's national purvaluable information
'Rubin noted that poses," Butler said, denying'· persistent
about Iraq as a
U.N. Security Council Iraq i accusations that U.N. weapons
of coopera - • U
~ •·
resolutions call for inspectors, especially Americans, are
~~~T~~~i*i~SU'i;p;;irtfiii'.Jl~m~~;Jiiii
- Ml~haal
1 .1!!, member nations to spies,
_
.
' --~=~ ,.
publi shed expert .on tlfehlracil. mlllt•ry assist the
United
Saddam agreed to destroy Iraq's
UNSCOM and on finding ways to get
reports . by
U.N . ' With the Waa lngton lnatl• Nations in carrying · weapons of mass destruction as part of the
of the guy (Saddam), which is causing a weapons teams protuta for Ntar l!eat Polley. out its work in Iraq cease' fire that ended the ·1991 Gulf War.
· blurring 11t boundaries," said Michael vide plenty of detailed _ .__.:;..:...:;;;.~...::..--.....:-"----_. and that U.NSCOM
Eight-year-old economic sanctions
Eisenstadt, expert on the Iraqi military information about Iraq's weapons pro- requested intelligence help after Iraq tried caQ' t be lifted until the United Nations
with the Washington Institute for Near grams, military and internal security to' "obstruct and deceive" weapons 'affirms that Iraq is free of such doomsday
structure.
, inspectors.
devices. . .
,
'
East Policy.
"As.a practical matter, the UNSCOM
"Anybody who's shocked- shocked
U.S. intelligence provided technital
U:N. arms experts pulled out of Iraq
inspection regime could not have opera!- - that people who go into Iraq come out and logistical support to U.N. teams, said Dec. 16 after Butler declared that Iraq was
ed without intelligence provided by the hopefully better understanding th e Iraq i Rubin, who would not confirm published not cooperating with his inspectors.
United States and other countries,''· said regime I think are naive in the extreme," reports that the assistance included eaves·
The report led to four days of U.S. and
Vincent Cannistraro, a former CIA offi - Stale Department spokesman James p, . dropping on sensitive Iraqi comm unica- British missile attacks and .airstrikes
cial no longer in the government.
Rubin said, noting that diplomats from tions among Saddam's 'Republican against Iraq.
: " But it's a symbiotic relationship. other countries who visit the United Guards.
Now, the fate of UNSCOM remains
'They
're (U.N .· inspectors)
giving
you States also file cables home about what
The CIA refused to comment.
uncertain.
.
.
.

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an

radar Stte tn northern Iraq

By ROBERT BURNS
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
.
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A U.S. A1r F~rce _F- I 6 fighter attacked an air-defense radar mstall at1on '" northern
Iraq today after the pilot determined he was about to ~e
fi red on by a surface-lo-atr miSsile, U .S ~ off1C1al ~sa~d.
The F-16 launched a h1gh-speed anti -radar m1ss lie at
the s1te atabo~t 11 :15 a:m., Iraq t1me, -accord1ng to~
statement 1ssue~ by U.S. European Com mand, the U.S.
headquarters for Ai r Force planes inv olved in enfo rcing a
" no-fl y" zone over norther.n Iraq. There was no 1mmed1·
ale indication wheth er the mi ssile damaged the radar.
The F- 16 was not [~red upon and returned safel y to
base, officials said.
.
The U.S. European Command statement, made avali able in Washington, said the F-16 pilot acted in selfdefense.
The U.S. missile firing was intended to :· preve nt any
offensive fire " from the Iraqi air-defense site, the state·
ment said. It was aimed at a track ing radar for Iraqi surface -to-air missile launchers.
The incident was the latest in a se ri es of confrontation&amp;
with Iraq si nce the Dec. 16-19 U.S. -British ~mbardm en t
known as Operation Desert Fox. Earlier this week four
U.S. warplanes fired on Iraq i planes in a' "no-fly" zone
over southern Iraq.
.
.
In those confrontations, said Pentagon spokesman
Kenneth Bacon, 13 to 15 Iraqi aircraft attempted to vio-·
late the no-fly zone in a rash of eight suspicious ' incursions.
Today 's incident was the fourth military confrontation
with Iraq within the past two weeks over enforci ng the
no-fly zones in northern and south ern Iraq . Iraq considers
the restrictions illegal and has vowed to defy them .

Free Cash!
.,

,1

.·
.,) •

I

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